^ 


An  Index  to  Poetry  and 
Recitations 


sv  "- 


AN   INDEX 


TO 


Poetry  and  Recitations 


BEING  A  PRACTICAL 

REFERENCE  MANUAL  FOR  THE  LIBRARIAN 

TEACHER,  BdOKSELLER 

ELOCUTIONIST 

ETC. 


INCLUDING    OVER    THIRTY    THOUSAND    TITLES 
FROM  THREE  HUNDRED  AND  SIXTT-NINE  BOOKS 


EDITEP   BY 

EDITH   GRANGER,  A.  B. 


CHICAGO 
A.  C.   McCLURG   &   COMPANY 

1904 


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15. 


CONTENTS 

PAGE 

Explanatory  Note          --....  g 

Key  to  Symbols        -             -             -             .             -  '          -             .             .  9 

Title  Index         .--...._  ^7 

Author  Index            -             -             -  ,           .             .             .             .             .  335 

First  Line  Index            -------  537 

Appendix        -----....  955 


^^P, 


<inix 


ri.6 


KEY  TO  SYMBOLS 


CDs Choice  Dialogues Penn  Pub.  Co.. Paper,  .30,  cl.,  $0  50 

■^  CDV 0.  .  Choice  Dialect  and  Vaudeville  Stage  Jokes.  A.  J.  Drake  &  Co 50 

CEL Choice  English  Lyrics.     J .  Baldwin Silver,  Burdett  &  Co net        .  72 

~  GG  1  5!?(/H.519.C.Cap  and  Gown.     J.  La  R.  Harrison L.  C.  Page  &  Co 1 . 25 

CO  2  Pi  i  i .  K75\Cap  and  Gown.     F.  L.  Knowles . .  .<rr>x.  •  •  L.  C.  Page  &  Co 1 . 25 

CG3^.5«;^J':V.'^..  (Cap  and  Gown.     R.  L.  Paget. />^ud.  .Ci^. .  .L.  C.  Fage  &  Co 1.25 

CGd  ..  .9 1.8.  ..  .Children's  Garland  from   the  Best  Poets. 

C.  Patmore The  Macmillan  Co 1 . 00 

"^  CGV.  .  .?.55 Child'sGarden  of  Verse.     R.  L.  Stevenson.  .Chas.Scribner'sSons,  .35, 1 .00, 1 .50 

Also  other  editions. 

CH Choice  Humor Penn  Pub.  Co.  .  .  Paper,  .30,  cl.,  .  50 

COS Child's  Own  Speaker Penn  Pub.  Co Paper       .  15 

CP Commencement  Parts.     H.  C.  Davis Hinds  &  Noble 1 .  50 

CPL Choice  Pieces  for  Little  People T.  S.  Denison Paper      '.25 

CR Cumnock's  Choice  Readings.      R.  M.  Cum- 
nock  •: A.  C.  McClurg  &  Co 1.50 

CRR Comic  Recitations  and  Readings.     Charles 

Walter  Brown A.  J.  Drake  &  Co. 50 

V^  P' ,  CS  1-37 Choice  Selections,  One  Hundred  (37  num- 
bers)   Penn  Pub.Co. £^acA, paper,.30,cl.,  .50 

CSS w  .  .Cumnock's  School  Speaker.  R.  M.  Cumnock.  A.  C.  McClurg  &  Co 75 

CW  .aSS.'KBI^cChild  World,  A.     J.  W.  Riley Bobbs-Merrill  Co 1 . 25 

DCD Dick's  Comic  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  30 

DCP Dick's  Choice  Pieces  for  Little  Children ....  Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  15 

DCR Dick's  Comic  and  Dialect  Recitations Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  30 

DDD Dick's  Diverting  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  30 

DDM Dick's  Dialogues  and  Monologues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  30 

DDR Dick's  Dramatic  Reciter Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  15 

DE Dick's  Ethiopian  Scenes,  Variety  Sketches 

and  Stump  Speeches Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  30 

DES \  .  .Diehl's  Elocution  Studies  E.  S.  Werner    Paper       .35 

DFR Dick's  Festival  Reciter Dick  &  Fitzgerald Paper       .30 

DFY Dick's  Dutch,  French,  and  Yankee  Recita- 
tions   Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  30 

DI   Dick's  Irish  Dialect  Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .30 

DJS Dick's  Juvenile  Speaker Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  15 

DLD  Dick's  Little  Dialogues  Dick  &  Fitzgerald Paper  .  15 

DLF Dick's  Little  Folks'  Reciter Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  15 

DLS Dick's  Little  Speeches  for  Little  Speakers.  .  Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  15 

DM Drills  and  Marches Penn  Pub.  Co Paper  .  25 

DR Delsarte  Recitation  Book.     E.  M.  Wilbor  .  E.  S.  Werner 1 .  25 

DRR Dutch  Dialect  Recitations,  Readings  and 

Jokes A.  J.  Drake  &  Co 50 

DS Delsarte  Speaker.     //.  D.  Northrop National  Pub.  Co .75 

DSS Dick's  Stump  Speeches  and  Minstrel  Jokes.  Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  30 

DST Dick's  Speeches  for  Tiny  Tots Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  15 

DT Drawing  Room  Theatricals Dick  &  ^Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  30 

EA Elocution  and  Action.     F.  T.  Souihwick. . .  E.  S.  Werner j^ 75 

10 


KEY  TO  SYMBOLS 


EAO . ' .  Early  American  Orations.     L.  R.  Heller  .  .  .The  Macmillan  Co net  $0 .  25 

ED Excelsior  Dialogues  Penn  Pub.  Co. .Paper,  .30,  cloth,  .50 

EDY   Every   Day   in    the   Year.     James   L.  and 

Mary  K.  Ford Dodd,  Mead  &  Co **net  1 .  60 

EE Easy  Entertainments Penn  Pub.  Co Paper  .  25 

-  EF Eugene  Field  Book.    M.  E.  Burt  and  M.  B. 

Cable Charles  Scribner's  Sons  ..net  ...50 

EHT   English   History   Told   by    English   Poets. 

K.  Bates  and  K.  L.  Coman The  Macmillan  Co net  .60 

~  ELP  ..  .9}.L$.  .  .  .Enghsh    Lyric    Poetry,    L500-1700.     F.    I. 

Carpenter  (Warwick  Library) Charles  Scribner's  Sons  ....  1 .50 

EP ?./.^.  .  .English  Pastorals.     E.  K.  Chambers  (War- 
wick Library) Charles  Scribner's  Sons  ....  1 .  50 

EPs  ....  ^.(3.  .  .Emerson's  Parnassus.     7?.  W  Emerson.  .  .  '.Houghton,  Mifflin  &  Co 1 .50 

-i  ES  3.\8.  Gr2."5 a  .Elizabethan  Songs.     E.  H.  Garrett Little,  Brown  &  Co 2.00 

■^  ESs Enghsh  Satires.      O.  Smeaton  (Warwick  Li- 
brary)   Charles  Scribner's  Sons  ....  1 .  50 

EuE Eureka  Entertainments Penn  Pub.  Co.,  Paper,  .30,  cloth,  .50 

FAD Friday  Afternoon  Dialogues T.  S.  Denison Paper  .25 

FAS Friday  Afternoon  Speaker T.  S.  Denison Paper  .  25 

FD  1-2 Five  Minute  Declamations,  2  parts.    W.  K. 

Fobes Lee  &  Shepard Per  vol. ,  .  50 

FDY Frost's  Dialogues  for  Young  Folks Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  30 

FEP Fire,side   Encyclopedia  of   Poetry.     Henry 

T.  Coates H.  T.  Coates  &  Co 3.50 

FHE  Frost's    Humorous    and    Exhibition    Dia- 
logues   Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  30 

FHS For  His  Sake.     A.  E.  Mack Lee  &  Shepard.  .' 1 .00 

FLS For  Love's  Sweet  Sake.     G.  H.  Westley  .  .  .Lee  &  Shepard 1 .50 

FMR Five  Minute  Readings.     W.  K.  Fobes Lee  &  Shepard 50 

FND  Frost's  New  Book  of  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .30 

FP  .  .  .  .  f/.  i^.  .  .  .  Favorite  Poems T.  Y.  Crowell  «fe  Co 1 .00 

Astor  ed 60 

Gladstone  ed 75 

A  Iso  other  editions 

FR Five  Minute  Recitations.     W.  K.  Fobes.  .  .Lee  &  Shepard 50 

FS  Favourite    Speaker,  The.     La  Moille    and 

Parsons T.  S.  Denison Paper       .  25 

FTA For  Thee  Alone.     G.  Hartshorne Dana  Estes  &  Co 1 .  50 

FTR  .  .^5  .:>....  Fulton  and  Trueblood's  Choice  Readings. 

R.  I.  Fulton  and  T.  C.  Trueblood Ginn  &  Co net     1 .  50 

FTT From  Tots  to  Teens.     C  J .  Denton T.  S.  Denison Paper        .  25 

GG Golden  Gleams  of  Thought.     S.  P.  Linn  .  .  A.  C.  McClurg  &  Co 1 .  00 

GH Good  Humor Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  cloth, .  50 

'     GMS Graded  Memory  Selections.      S.  D.  Water- 
man   Educational  Pub.  Co .25 

GN  ,^.  .^._ Golden  Numbers.     K.  D.  Wiggin  and  N.  A. 

\  ■'^"'  Smith McClure,  Phillips  &  Co.**net     2.00 

GP Golden  Poems.     Francis  F.  Browne A.  C.  McClurg  &  Co 1 .00 

11 
\ 


.\ 


fc.o, 


<J.?. 


IDD Alartine's   Droll  Dialogues  mitl   Laughable 

Recitations Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  $0 .  30 

rIFD  .  .  : McBride's  Funny  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  30 

ilHD  .  .      McBride's  Humorous  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ..  .  .Paper  .30 

tlHR Monroe's  Humorous  Readings  L  B.Monroe .  Ijee  &  Shepard 1 .  00 

vIMR Monroe's   Miscellaneous  Readings.      L.  B. 

Monroe Lee  &  Shepard 1 .  00  . 

VTN Monologues  and  Novelties Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  cl(  th,  .50 

vIND  .  .  f McBride's  New  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  30 

ViPD Monroe's  Public  and  Parlor  Readings,  Dial- 
ogues and  Dramas.     L.  B.  Monroe Lee  &  Shepard 1 .  OOi 

VlR My  Recitations.      C.  U:  Polt&fk J.  B.  Lippincott  Co 1 .00; 

VIRS .  .'s  .  ( '.;...  Modem  Reader  and  Speaker.     G.  Riddle  .  .  Herbert  S.  Stone  &  Co 1 .  50i 

MTD  .  .' McBride's  Temperance  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  .. .  .Paper  .30 

MYP' Monroe's  Young  Folks'  Readings.      L.  B. 

Monroe Lee  &  Shepard 1 .  00 

NA Nonsense  Anthology.     C.   Welh Charles  Scribner's  Sons.**7ie/  1 .25 

NC New  Century  Speaker.     H.  A.  Frink.' Ginn  &  Co net  1 .00 

NDP New  Dialogues  and  Plays.    B.  Gunnison  .  .Hinds  &  Noble 1  50 

NE                    .  .  .  National  Epics.     K.  M.  Rabb A.  C.  McClurg  &  Co 1 .  50 

N 1'                New  Pieces  that  will  Take  Prizes,  H.  Black- 
stone Hinds  &  Noble 1 .  25 

NPS          New  Popular  Speaker.     //.  D.  Northrop.  .  . National  Pub.  Co 1..00 

NV                        .  Nature  in  Verse  for  Children.    M. /.LOT'e/oy .Silver,  Burdett  &  Co. ...  .ne^  .60 

OB Oxford  Book  of  English  Verse.    A .  T.  Quil- 

ler-Couch .  .'. Oxford  Univ.  Press nM  1 .  90 

OEB.  .  .  :  .  .  .' Old  English  Ballads.     H.  W.  Mabie The  Macmillan  Co net  1 .25; 

OEL  •^(-^•A^--  •  --Old  English  Love  Songs.     H.  W.  Mabie.  .  .The  Macmillan  (^o 2.00 

OES  .'.  "T , .  1  .  :  .  .  Old  English  Songs.     A .  Dobson The  Macmil]3,n  Co net  1  .  25 

OH    Gut  of  the  Heart.      J.  W.  and- A.  II.  Chad- 
wick  .! L.  C.  Page  &Co 1 .25, 

OM Orators'  Manual.     G.  L.  Raymond ........  Silver.  JJurdett  &  Co net  1.12 

OS  1-2-3, Open  Sesame,  3  parts.  B.  W.  Bellamy  and 

M.  W.  Goodwin Ginn  &  Co Per  vol.,  net  .  75 

PAP Poems  of  American   PoiJriotism.     Brander 

XU'tthews Charles  Scribner's  Sons  .  .  net  .  501 

PAPm                    Poems  of  American  Patriotism.  R.  L.  Paget.  L.  C.  Page  &  Co 1 .  25; 

PC     Poetry  for  Children.     S.  'Eliot "...  Houghton,  Mifflin  &  Co.. .  net  .80; 

Pl^> Popular  Dialogues Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  ck)th, .  50 

I'EB  1-2-3-4!.    .Popular  Englisli  Ballads..   (4  vols.)     R.  B.  ' 

Johnson .  J.  B.  Lippincott  Co set  3. 00' 

PEO  . :              ...  Pieces  for  Every  Occasion.  C.  B.  Le  Row . .  Hinds  &  Noble 1  25 

PIP Pieces  for  Prize  Speaking  Contests.,  A.  H. 

Craig  and  B.  Gunnison  ......; Hinds  &  Noble 1   25j 

PGT 1-2                Palgrave's  Golden  Treasurj'  of  Songs  and  'i 

Lyrical  Poems.  (2  vols.)  F.  T.  Palgrave.. The  Macmillan  Co.  . Per  vol.,  ^ 

PUS  Poetry  for  Home  and  School.  A.C.Brackett 

and  I.  M.  Eliot G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons  . . 

P1>D  .  Point  Lace  and  Diiimoudg.  G^A.  Bakar.  ./r^iL^A^iltotes  ( V. 


KEY  TO  SYMBOLS 


Poll  Posy  Ring,  The.      K.  D.  Wiggin  and  N.  A . 

♦       Smith McClure,  Phillips  &  Co.  .  .net  $1  ^25 

POS  Poetry  of  the  Seasons.     M.  I' Lovejoy  . .  .  .Silver,  Burdett  &  Co net       .60 

PP  Prose  and  Poetry  for  Young  People  ....;.  Penti  Pub.  Co 1 . 00 

-  PPh  .  Pipe  and  Pouch.     /.  Knight L.  C-  Page  «fe  Co 1 .  25 

PP8  .  Practical  Public  Speaking.    S.  II.  Clark  and 

F.  M.  Blanchard Charles  Scribner's  Sons.. . net     1  00 

^  PPHr  Prize  Poetical  Speaker H.  A.  Dickerman  &  Son 75 

-J  PR  .  I'eerless  Recit«r.     //.  D.  Northrop National  Pub.  Co 1 . 00 

PRR      Patriotic   Recitations  and    Readings.      Jo- 
sephine Stafford A.J.  Drake  &  Co .50 

PS  Progressive  Speaker National  Pub.  Co 1 .25 

■  PSR Poetry  for  School  Readings.     M.  White.  .  .The  Macmillan  Co net       .40 

•  FrS  Pieces  t9  Speak.  Harlan  H.  Ballard C.  W.  Bardeen 1 .  00 

PYO  Poems  You  Ought  to  Know.    i?.  W^.PeoWte.  Fleming  H.  Revell  Co. ..  .ne<     1.50 

1  V  P/  R(Tl  Riley  Child  Rhymes.     J.  W.  Riley Bowen-Merrill  Co 1 .25 

SA Science  and  Art  of  Elocution.   F.  H.  Fenno.  Hind.s  <t  Xoble   1 .25 

SAE Shoemaker's    Advanced  -Elocution.     Mrs. 

./.  TT^.  Shoemaker .  Penn  Pub.  Co 1 .  25 

SAP Stories  and  Poems  for  Children.  C.  T/tax/er. Houghton.  Mifflin  &  Co 1 .  50 

SC School  and  College  Speaker.    W.  B.  MitchellHoli  &  Co .net     1 .00 

-  SCS  .Spencer'^  Comic  Speeches  .' Dick  &  Fitzgerald  .  .  .Paper        .30 

SD Standard  Dialogues Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  cloth,  .50 

SDD School  Daj'  Dialogues  Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  cloth. .  50 

SDR .'Soper's  Dialect  Readings T.  S.  Deni.son Paper       .  25 

SE  .     ?H.i.^^  .SwetJ,'s  School  Elocution.     J.  Swett American  Book  Co net     1 .00 

SSlC Steele's  Exhibition  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper       .  30 

ST  I  Smiles.     A .  L.  Richards Caldw  11  Co i»       75 

SM  .      Selections  for  Memorizing.    L.  C  Foster  and 

S.  Williams Ginn  &  Co net        .  10 

SN SoTA^s  of  Nature.     J.  Burroughs McClure,  Phillips  &  Co 1 .  50 

fi»V  SO Steps  to  Oratory.     F'.  T.  Southwick American  Book  Co net     1  Oo 

SOC Songs  of  Childhood.     Walter  Ramal Longmans,  Green  &  Co  **net     1 .20 

SPC School  and  Parlor  Comedies Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .:-"  fl.^iii    'w» 

"'  SPE  895  f?5.5 9. Shoemaker's    Practical    Elocution.    J'.  V/ 

Shoemaker Penn  Pulx  Ooi.. ,1 .  25 

SR  1    i:5  Soper's  Scrap  Book  Recitations.  (13  nos.)  .T.  S.  Denison  . .  .Each,  paper        .25 

Sargent's  Standard  Speaker.    E pes  Sargent. .  David  MacKay net     1   60 

SSU  .      Select  Sp>eeches  for  Declamation  Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper.  .30,  cloth,  .iV 

V(  '\, Speaker's  Garland,  The.     {Containing  CS  1- 

36)  9  vols Penn  Pub.  Co Per  vol.,     2  00 

odK  Sunday  School  Entertainments     Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  cJoth,  50 

'  SSS .  Sunday  School  Selections  Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  cloth,  .50 

StD  Sterling  Dialogues Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  clot^,  .51)  ^ 

■^      s  Smiles  Yoked  with  Sighs.    7?.  J.  Burdette .  .  Bobbs-Merrill  Co .'....;...  .     1 . 2,5 

Treasury  of  American  Sacred  Hong.     W .  G. 

'Horder Oxford  T'niv.  Press 3 .  '10 

t"i.y\v   Trcasurvof  Annfriran  Vf>r.«e.  WnUer Learned.  F.  .4.  Stokes  Co 1  .00 


/5' 


KEY  TO  SYMBOLS 


TCP Tableaux,  Charades,  and  Pantomimes  ....  .PennPub.Co.Paper,  .30,  cloth,$0.50 

TCV Treasury  of  Canadian  Verse.     Theodore  H. 

Rand : Wm.  Briggs  &  Co net  1 .  25 

TDT Tony  Denier's  Book  of  Tableaux Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  25 

TFS Tommy's  First  Speaker M.  A.  Donohue  &  Co .30 

TFY This  is  for  You.     W  S.  Lord Fleming  H.  Revell  Co. .  **net  1 .  00 

THP Treasury    of    Humorous    Poetry.       F.  L. 

'  Knowles Dana  Estes  &  Co **net  1 .  20 

TIP Treasury   of   Irish   Poetry.      S.  A.  Brooke 

and  T.  W.  Rolleston The  MacmlUan  Co 1 .  75 

TK Talks.     Gegrge  Thatcher Penn  Pub.  Co Paper  .  25 

TL'dfS.L'j;!.Z.t .Taken  from  Life Doubleday,  Page  &  Co  .... .  .75 

TMD Three    Minute    Declamations    for    College 

Men.     H.  C.  Davis  and  J.  C.  Bridgman.  .  Hinds  &  Noble 1 .  00 

TMR Three    Minute  Readings  for  College  Girls. 

H.  C.Davis.  . Hinds  &  Noble 1.00 

TS  ,  .  .Temperance  Selections Penn  Pub.  Co.  .Paper,  .30,  cloth,  .50 

TT Tiny  Tots'  Speaker Penn  Pub.  Co Paper  .15 

VA  .  .  .   ' Victorian  Anthology.     E.  C.  Stednian Houghton,  Mifflin  &  Co 2.50 

VS Victorian  Songs.     E.  H.  Garrett Little,  Brown  &  Co ^ .  00 

VSG .Voice,    Speech,    and    Gesture.     Campbeli, 

Brewer,  and  Neville G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons 3 .  00 

WCL Whittier's    Child     Life    in    Poetry.     J.  G. 

Whittier. Houghton,  Mifflin  &  Co 2.00 

WCLG  1 Williams's    Choice    Literature,     Grammar. 

Book  1.     S.  Williams American  Bk.  Co Jiet  .  40 

WCLG  2 Williams's    Choice    Literature,     Grammar. 

Book  2.     S.  Williams American  Bk.  Co net  .50 

WCLI  1   Williams's  Choice  Literature,  Intermediate. 

Book  1.     S.  Willia7ns American  Bk.  Co .net  .28 

WCLI  2   Williams's  Choice  Literature,  Intermediate. 

Book  2.     S.  Williams American  Bk.  Co net  .  35 

WDM Wilson's  Drills  and  Marches Dick  &  Fitzgerald ....  Paper  .  30 

WEP  l-2-3^.f .  Ward's  English  Poets.  (4  vols.).  T.  H.  Ward  .The  Macmillan  Co.  Per  vol.,  net  1. 00 

WGS  9Z.Q  C  !*7) .  World's  Greatest  Short  "Stories.     S.  Cody .  .  A.  C.  McClurg  &  Co net  1 .  00 

WLO When  the  Lessons  are  Over.     C.  J.  Denton.^.  S.  Denison Paper  .25 

WN Winks.     A.  L  Richards Caldwell  Co 75 

WR  1-26  Werner's      Readings       and       Recitations. 

(26  numbers) E.  S.  Werner  .  .  .Each,  paper  . 35 

WRD Wilson's  Recitations  and  Dialogues Dick  &  Fitzgerald  ....  Paper  .  30 

WTD With  Trumpet  and  Drum     E.  Field Charles  Scribner's  Sons 1 .00 

YA Y'oung  American's  Speaker.  H.D.  Northrop.  National  Pub.  Co Paper  .60 

YBF Y'ear  Book  of  Famous  Lyrics.  F.  L.  Knowles.  Dana  Estes  &  Co 1 .  50 

YBT Year  of  Beautiful  Thoughts  for  Boys  and 

Girls      J.  A.  B.  Greenough George  W.  .Jacobs  &  Co.**ne^  1  20 

YFD   Young  Folks'  Dialogues Penn  Pub.  Co Paper  .  25 

YFE Young  Folks'  Entertainments Penn  Pub.  Co Paper  .25 

YFR   Y^oung  Folks'  Recitations Penn  Pub.  Co Paper  .  15 

YP Y^oung  People's  Speaker.    //.  D.  Northrop. .  National  Pub.  Co ■.  .  .  1 .  00 

YPS Young  People's  Speaker Penn  Pub.  Co Paper  .  15 

15 


'7 


TITLE  INDEX 


TITLE    INDEX 


A,  B,  C— Anon.— PC 

A.  B.  C.  of  Literature.— Carolyn  Wells.— TL 

A'  aboot  it.— W:  Lyle.— DR 

A  la  Mode.— Clara  M.  Greene.— WR  2 

A  ma  Future. — Edwin  Arnold. — FTA 

Aaron.— G:  Herbert.- WEP  2 

Abandoned  Troop    Horse,    The. — Mary    A.    Rooke. — 

WR4 
Abbess's  Story,  Th''  — H:  W.  Longfellow.      See  Chris- 

tus;  A  My^    jry. 
Abbot    Joachim,    .D'r.    sel.    jr.    (Finished.)  —  H:    W. 

Longfellow.— BS  11 
Abbot  M'Kinnon,  The. — Jas.  Hogg. — SeeQueen's  Wake, 

The. 
Abbot  of  Inisfalen,  The.    {SI.  abr.) — W:  AUingham.— 

GN 
(For  another  vers,  see  Legend  of  Innisfallen,  The. — 

M.  D.  Bateham.) 
Abbot  of  Waltham,  The.— Anon.— WRD 
Abbot's  Blessing  on  the  Bruce,  The. — Walter  Scott. — 

See  Lord  of  the  Isles,  The. 
Abbotsford,  Sel.  jr.  (Sir  Walter  Scott  and  his  Dogs.) — 

Washington  Irving. — FTR 
Abdelazar,  Song  from. — Aphra  Behn. — WEP  2 

(Song:     "Love  in  Fantastic  Triumph  Sate.") — OB 
Abdel-Hassan. — Anon. — CS  10 
Abdication    of    Napoleon. — W:    M.   Thackeray.     See 

Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The. 
Abhrain  an  Bhuideil. — Jos.  S.  Le  Fanu. — TIP 
Abide  in  me,  and  I  in  you.     The  Soul's  Answer.     (C) 

— Harriet  B.  Stowe. 
(Soul's  Answer,  The.)— TAS 
Abide  with     Me.— H:     F.     Lyte.— FEP  —  GP  —  VA 

{Sel.)  HDL— LLC 
(Abide  with  Me;  Fast  Falls  the  Eventide — sel.) — 

GG— SAE 
"Abide  with  Me."— S.  H.  Thayer.— CS  33 

{Sel.—w.  music.)     NPS— YP 
Abide  with  Me ;  Fast  Falls  the  Eventide. — H :  F.  Lyte. 

— See  Abide  with  Me. 
Abide  with  Us. — Horatius  Bonar. — VA 
Abigail  Becker.— Amanda T.  Jones. — BS2 — CS26  {sel.) 
Abigail  Fisher. — Delia  A.  Heywood. — BS  18 
Abnegation. — Christina  G.  Rossetti.      See  Monna  In- 

nominata. 
Abner  and    the    Widow  Jones. — Rob't    Bloomfield. — 

CS25 
Abner's  Second  Wife.— P.  C.  Fossett.— CS  29— NPS— 

YP 
Aboard  the  "Sea-swallow." — E:  Dowden. — TIP 
Abolition  of  African  Slavery. — A.  G.  Haygood. — FD  2 
Abolitionism. — W:  L.  Garrison. — OS  2 
Aboriginal  Chant,  An. — Anon. — GH 
Aboriginal  Mother's  Lament,  An. — C:  Harpur. — VA 
Abou  Ben  Adhem  [and   the  Angel]. — Jas.    H:  Leigh 

Hunt.— BNL  —  BR— BSP— CGd— CR— CS  3 

— EPs— FEP— FP— GMS  —  GP— HBP— HNS 

— KNE— LC— LLC— MR— OS  1— GN— PC— 

PHS— PPSr— PSR— P  YO— SM— SS— WCLG 1 

— YBF 
("Angel  wrote  and  vanished.  The" — hr.  sel.) — BNL 
Abou  El  Mahr  and  His  Horse. — Anon.  {tr.  by   Rounse- 

velle  Alger).— MMR 
About  a  Brakeman. — Morris  Waite. — SR  6 
About  Barbers. — Anon. — W'R  7 
About  Contributions. — Anon. — WR  12 
About  Daniel. — Anon. — DSS 
About  Dish-washing. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
About  Fire-crackers. — Clara    J.    Denton. — DFR — LL 
About  Freddie. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
About  Katharine. — Anon. — MCS 
About  Our  Folks.— H:  F.  Wood.— GH 
About  the  Billikinses. — Anon. — MCS 
About  the  Fairies.— Anon.— CSS— NV—PPSr 
About  theSizeofit.    {Dial.) — Lizzie M.  Hadley. — DLD 

(Bug-a-boo,  The— al.  abr.)— DCP—WR  17   (dial.) 
Above  St.  Ir^n^e. — Duncan  C.  Scott. — TCV — VA  (al. 

abr.) 
Above  Two  Feet. — Anon. — DSS 
Abraham  and  Ephraim. — Sam  W.  Foss. — AWH 


Abraham  Cowley. — Sir    J.     Denham.     See   Elegy    on 

Cowley. 
Abraham  Davenport.     (In  The  Tent  on  the  Beach.) — 

J:  G.  Whittier.— BFV 
Abraham  Lincoln. — Anon. — CP 
Abraham  Lincoln,  Se/s.  fr. — H:  W.  Beecher. 

Abraham  Lincoln  [,  the  Martyr]. — BS  1 — PEO 
(Death  of  Lincoln,  The — a6r.)— OS  3 
(Sermon  on  the  Death  of  Abraham  Lincoln.) — 
CS3 
Martyr  and  the  President,  The.      {Ptly.  same  as 

PPS)— LLC 
Martyr    President,  The.       {Ptly.  same    as    BS   1, 
etc.)— PPS 
.\braham  Lincoln. — Joel  Benton. — EDY 
Abraham  Lincoln,  Sel.  fr.  (Lincoln  the  Shepherd  of  the 
People.)— PhiUips  Brooks.— SR  8 
(Shepherd  of  the  People,  The.)— CS  5 
Abraham  Lincoln.     (Sel.) — H:  H.  Brownell. — GN 
Abraham  Lincoln. — W:  CuUen  Bryant. — HB 
Abraham  Lincoln. — Emilio  Castelar. — MRS — TMD 

(Tribute  to  Lincoln.)- FD— SO 
Abraham    Lincoln,  Sel.    fr.      (Death    of    Lincoln.) — 

Ralph  W.  Emerson.— FD  2 
Abraham  Lincoln.— C:  H.  Fowler.— CS  20 
Abraham  Lincoln. — Jas.  A.  Garfield.      See  Memory  of 

Abraham  Lincoln,  The. 
Abraham  Lincoln. — J ;  M.  Langston — SR  8 
Abraham  Lincoln. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Ode  Recited 

at  the  Harvard  Commemoration. 
Abraham  Lincoln.     (Prose  easay.) — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — 

APr— MAL 
Abraham  Lincoln.— J:  P.  Newman.— BLP—PFP 
(Abraham  Lincoln's  Place  in  History.) — PEO 
(Majestic  in  his  Individuality.) — LLC 
Abraham  Lincoln. — Goldwin  Smith. — LLC 
Abraham  Lincoln.    (Sonnet.) — R:    H:    Stoddard. — GN 
Abraham  Lincoln.— M.  W.  Stryker.— TMR 
Abraham  Lincoln.— Tom   Taylor.— BNL— EPs— FEP 
— HB— LLC— VA 
(SI.  a6r.)— SO— WR4 
(On  the  Assassination  of  Lincoln — sel.) — GG 
(Patriot  President,  The — se?.)— BLP 
Abraham  Lincoln.     (Sel.) — H:  Watterson. — SR  11 

(Secret  of  Lincoln's  Power,  The — ptly.  some.)— SC 
Abraham  Lincoln  [.  A  Horatian  Ode].     (C.) — R:  H: 
Stoddard.— AA— EDY  (nbr). 
(Burial  of  Lincoln — sel.) — MRS 
Abraham  Lincoln,  the  Martyr. — H:  W.  Beecher.     See 

Abraham  Lincoln. 
.\braham  Lincoln's  Place  in  History. — J:  P.  Newman. 

See  Abraham  Lincoln. 
Abram  and  Zimri. — Clarence  Cook. — CS  8 — FMR 
Absalom.     (C.)— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— CS  1— NPS— 
YP 
(David's  Lament  for  Absalom — si.  abr.) — BS  15 — 

OM— PS— SAE  (sel.) 
(David's  Lament  over  Absalom — br.  sel.) — KNE 
(Lament  for  Absalom — si.  abr.) — LLC 
(Patriot  King  in  Mourning,  The — abr.) — BLP 
Absalom  and  Achitophel,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Drydsn. 
Achitophel.— WEP  2 

Character  of  the  Duke  of  Monmouth. — EDY 
Character  of  the  Earl  of  Shaftesbury. — BNL 
Doeg  and  Og.— WEP  2 
Malcontents.  The.     Zimri. — WEP  2 

(Character  of  Zimri,  The— 6r.  se^)- EDY  , 

(Zimri- seL)— BNL 
Absalom's  Vision. — Jas.  Abraham  Hillhouse. — TMD 
Absence. — Anon.  (at.  to  Rob't  Burns). — FTA— GP— 
PGT  1— YBF 
("When  I  think  on  the  happy  days.") — BNL 
Absence. — Matthew  Arnold. — FLS 
Absence. — J:  A.  Blaikie. — VA 
Absence. — Rob't  Bridges. — OB 
Absence. — Rob't  Burns.     See  Absence. — Anon. 
Absence.— J:  Donne(?).— YBF  (nbr.) 

("Absence:  hear  thou  my  protestation.") — ELF 
(Presence  in  Absence — abr.) — PGT  1 
(That  "Time  and  Absence  Proves  rather  Helps,  etc.) 
—OB 
Absence. — R:  Jago. — OB 
(To  Mabel— (Kf.)— FLS 


17 


Absence 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Absence. — Frances  A.   Kemble. — BIL — BNL — CS  5 — 

FEP— FLS— FTA— HBP— MRS— TFY 
Absence.  (Poems  and  Epigrams,  LII. — C.) — Walter  S. 

Landor.^-©B 
Absence.      (Sonnet   LVII. — C)  —  W:    Shakespeare. — 

PGTl 
(Sonnet  VII.)— OB 
Absence. — W :  Shakespeare. — GP 
(Garden  of  Love,  The.)— OH 
(Sonnet.)— EPs— HBP— OB  (XIII.) 
(Sonnet  XCVIII.— C.)— WEP  1 
Absence. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.    See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Absence.— (rr.  by)'E.  Taylor.— FTA 
"Absence,  Hear  Thou  my  Protestation." — J:  Donne. 

See  Absence. 
Absence  of  Little  Wesley,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— ASL 
Absence  Stronttthens  Love.  {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Absent,  yet  Present.     (A6r.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.    FLS 
Absent-mindedness. — Anon. — DE 
Absolution.— E.  Nesbit.— BS  18— DR  (diff.  vers.) 
Absolution. — E.  W.  Watson. — AA 
Abstemia. — Gelett  Burgess. — NA 
Abstract  of  a  Grand  Army  Speech. — Anon. — CP 
Abstract  of    a     Response     to     a     Toast:     "Noblesse 

Oblige."— Anon.— CP 
Abstract  of  an  Address  at  the  Dedication  of  a  Hall  of 

Science  and  Art. — Anon. — CP 
Abstrosophy. — Gelett  Burgess. — NA 
Abt  Vogler.— Rob't  Browning.— HDL  (.<!eZ.)— VA 
Abuse   of    Authority. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    Meas- 
ure for  Measure. 
Abused  Boy,  An.     (C. — m  They  All  Do  it.)— Jas.  M. 

Bailey. 
(She  Cut  his  Hair.)- BS  12 
Abuses  Stript    and   Whipt,   Sel.   fr.    (Weakness.) — G: 

Wither.— WEP  2 
Academy  Episode,  An. — R.  Neish. — WR  20 
Acadian  Exiles,  The. — G:  Bancroft.    See  History  of  the 

United  States. 
Acadie. — Arthur  J.  Lockhart. — TCV 
"Accept,  my  love,  as  true  a  heart." — Matthew  Prior. — 

FTA 
Accepted  and  will  Appear. — Parmenas  Mix. — AWH 
Access  to  God. — Jas.  Hamilton. — KNE 
Accommodating  Office  Boy,  The. — Anon. — WR  20 
Account  of  a  Negro  Sermon. — J:  B.  Gough. — WR  21 
Accounts  of  W.  Canynge's  Feast,  The. — T:  Chatterton. 

—WEP  3 
Accursed.     (.Sacramento  Union.) — HP 
Achilles  Tatius. — Sappho.    See  Song  of  the  Rose. 
Achitophel. — J:  Dryden.    See  Absalom  and  Achitoiihel. 
Acis  and  Galatea,  Sel.  fr.  (Song — fr.  Pt.  II.) — J:  Gay. — 

OB 
Acorn  and  Chestnut. — Anon. — AD 
Acorn  and  the  Pumpkin,  The. — Anon. — AD 
Acorn  Lesson,  An. — Clara  Doty  Bates. — YBT 
Acquiescence  of  Pure  Love,  The. — W :  Cowper. — WEP  3 
Acquittal  of  the  Bishops,  The.— T:  B.  Macaulay.— VSG 
Acquittal  of  the  Bishops. — W:  Wordsworth. — EDY 
"Across  a   chasm    of   eighteen    hundred    years  Jesus 

Christ   makes   a   demand." — Napoleon   Bona- 
parte.— GG 
Across  the  Dykes.— J:  F.  Herbin.— TCV 
Across  the  Fields. — Walter  Crane. — VA 
Across  the  Fields  to  Anne. — R:  Burton. — TAV 
"Across  the  Lot."— CS— HP 
\cross  the  River. — Lucy  Larcom. — CS  8 — TAS 
Across  the  Sea. — -W:  Allingham. — VS 
Across  the  Wheat. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — HSS  3 
Acrostic,  An.     (Electricity.)— F.  A.— FP 
Acrostic.     (Tobacco.)— J.  H.— PPh 
Acrostic  Plaint,  An.— R.  S.  P.— TL 
Actaeon,  Sel.  fr.—W:  Wilkins. — TIP 
Actea. — Rennell  Rodd. — VA 
Acting  Drunk.— H.  E.  McBride.— MTD 
Acting  Proverbs. — Anon. — EuE 
Action.— J:  (7)  Webster.— KNE 
Actions  Speak  Louder  than  Words. — Anon. — YFD. 
Actor,  An.— J:  Wolcott.— THP 

(On  an  Artist.) — HPE 
Actor's  Story.  The.— G:  R.  Sims.— PR 

(Old  Actor's  Story,  The.)- CS  23— PFP— WR  26 

(si.  nhr.) 
Acts  of  the  Apostles,  Sels.Jr.     Bible. 

Paul  at  Athens.     (Ch.  XVII.,  22-31.)— BS  9 
Paul  before  King  Agrippa.     (XXVI.)— BS  7— SPE 
(Paul's  Defense  before  Agrippa.) — SO 
(Paul's   Defense   before    Festus   and    Agrippa — 
2-23.)— SS 
Ad  Bellonam.— Frank  L.  Pollock.— PAPm— TCV 
Ad  Impudentissimam. — Anon.— CO  1 


Ad  Majorem  Dei  Gloriam. — F.  G.  Scott. — VA 
Ad  Nicotina.— E.  H.  S.— PPh 

Adalina's  Arrival;  or.  There's  no  Place  like  Old  Con- 
necticut.—H.  E.  McBride.— CS  29 
Adam  and  Eve. — J:  Milton. — See  Paradise  Lost. 
Adam  Bede.  Sel.  fr.  (Mrs.  Poyser"Has  her  Say  out." — 

Ch.  XXVI.)— George  Eliot.— VSG 
Adam  Bel,  Clym  of  the  Clough,  and  William  of  Cloud- 

esle.     (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — PEB  1 
Adam  Describing  [the  Creation   of]  Eve. — J:   Milton. 

<See  Paradise  Lost. 
Adam  Never  Was  a  Boy. — T.  C.  Harbaugh. — CRR — 

CS  34— DLF 
Adam  O'Fintry.     (Fr.  The  Wise  Women  of  Inverness.) 

W:  Black.— VSG 
Adam  o'  Gordon.    (A  br. — in  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 
— BFV 
(Captain  Car— diff.  vers.)— TEB  1 
(Edom  o'  Gordon.)— OB 
(SI.  o6r.)— BB— WEP  1 
Adam  to  Eve. — J:  Milton. — See  Paradise  Lost. 
Adam's  Account    of    His    Creation. — J:    Milton.     Se« 

Paradise  Lost. 
Adams  and  Jefferson. — E:  Everett.     Se^  Eulogy  on 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Adams  and  Jefferson,  Sels.  fr. — Dan'l  Webster. 
Adams  and  Jefferson. — CS  3 — EA  (abr.) 
Duty  to  our  Country. — SSD 

(America  s  Greatness — sel.) — SR  8 

(Our  Duties  to  our  Country— abr. )— SE— SPE 
(Future  of  America,  The.) — SE 
Eloquence  of  John  Adams. — PPS 

(Character  of  True  Eloquence — sel. ) — SE 
(Eloquence.)— FD  1 

(Eloquence  of  Action.)— OS  2  (afcr.)— PS— SS 
(Nature  of  Eloquence,  The.)— KNE 
(Nature  of  True  Eloquence.) — LLC; 
(A6r.)— AE— BS  2— SPE— TMR 
("War  must  go  on.  The  " — br.  sel.) — SE 
Supposed  Speech  against  the  Declaration  of  Inde- 
pendence.— FD  1 
Supposed  Speech  of  John  Adams  on  the  Declaration 
of  Independence.— BS  11— OS  3— SPE 
(Declaration  of  Independence,  The — cond.) — OM 
(Supposed    Speech     of     John    Adams.)  —  FTR 
— LLC— SM  (cond.)— WCLG  1 
(Abr.)— KNE— SS 
(Supposed  Speech  of  John  Adams  for  the  Dec- 
laration of  Independence — cond.) — FD  1 
(Supposed  Speech  of  .lohn  Adams  in  Support  of 
the  Declaration  of  Independence—  cond.) — SE 
(Independence — br.  sel.) — SE 
(True  Eloquence.)- BLP— BS  23  (at.  to  LovellV 
—FAS— HSS  2  (aftr. )—IR 
Adam's  Morning  Hymn  in  Paradise. — J:  Milton. — <See 

Paradise  Lost. 
Adam's  Warning  and  Persuasion  of  His  Young  Master 
Orlando.— W:  Shakespeare.— See  As  You  Like 
It. 
Add  Ryman's  Celebrated  Fourth  of  July  Oration. — 

Anon. — DE 
A<ldifon.— Eliz.  J.  Fames. — EDY 

Addison. — Alex.  Pope.      See  Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot. 
Addition  to  the  Capitol,  The,   Sels.  fr. — Dan'l  Webster. 
Apostrophe  to  Washington. — SS 

(Washington.)— CS  29— PRR  (abr.) 
Fourth  of  July,  The.— BLP— SE  (a/)r.)— SS 
Additional  Verses  (C). — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

(New  Hail  Columbia.)— LLC 
Address  at  Bunker  Hill. — Dan'l  Webster.    See  Bunker 

Hill  Monument,  The. 
-Address  at  Cooper  Institute,  New  York,  Feb.  27,  1800. 
(C.) — Abraham  Lincoln. 
(Cooper  Institute  Address.) — .AI 
Address  at  Gettysburg. — Abraham  Lincoln.     See  Ad- 
dress at  the  Dedication,  etc. 
Address  at  the  Dedication  of  a  Memorial  Tablet,  An. — 

Anon.— CP 
Address  at  the  Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at  Gettys- 
burg.— Abraham  Lincoln. — CR — CS  2 — LLC — 
^     OS  2— PEO— PRR— TMR— WRD 
(Address  at  Gettysburg.)— BLP 
("Brave  men,  living  and  dead,  who  struggled  here,^ 

The"— se/.)— HSS  1 
(Dedication  of  Gettvsburg  Cemetery.) — BS  5 — EA 

— FD  1— GG— SC— SO— SR  2— TMD 
(Gettysburg  Address.)- SM— WCLG  1 
(Gettysburg  Speech.) — AI 

(Remarks  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Ceme- 
tery, etc.) — III 
(Speech  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Cemetery 
at  Gettysburg.)     GMS— MAL— PPS 


IS 


■^  i: 


'  '*fti 


TITLE    INDEX 


Adonais 


Address  at  the  Harvard  Alumni  Dinner. — Booker  T. 
Washington.— MRS 
(On  Receiving  the  Master's  Degree  from  Harvard.) 
— SC 

Address  at  the  Peace  Congress,  1849,  Sel.  fr.  (United 
States  of  Europe,  The.)— Victor  Hugo.— SS— 
SSD 

Address  at  the  Raising  of  the  Union  Flag  over  Fort 
Sumter,  Sel.  fr.  (Raising  the  Flag  at  Sumpter.) 
— H:  W.  Beecher.— SR  2 

Address  at  the  Unveiling  of  the  Statue  of  Rufus  Choate. 
—Jos.  H.  Choate.— MRS 

Address  at  Unveiling  Hale  Statue,  Sel.  fr.  (Martyr-spy, 
The.)— C:  D.  Warner.- TMR 

Address  before  the  Congress  of  the  United  States  in 
1851,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Roman  Senate  and  the 
American  Congress,  The.)  —  L:  Kossuth. — 
BLP 

Address  before    the    New    York    Historical    Society. 
(C— «eZ.)— Dan'l  Webster.— MRS— SR  13 
(Anniversary  Address — longer  sel.) — LLC 

Address  before  the  Order  of  Elks,  An:  A  Memory. — 
Anon.— CP 

Address  before  the  Springfield  Washingtonian  Temper- 
ance Society,  1842,  Sel.  fr.  (Two  Revolutions.) 
— Abraham  Lincoln. — TS 

Address  before  the  28th  Graduating  Class  of  the  Pierce 
School  of  Business  and  Shorthand,  Philadelphia, 
1893,  Sel.  fr.  (Critical  Conditions  of  Labor,  The.) 
— B:  Harrison.— BLP 

Address  Delivered  at  the  Independence  Day  Celebra- 
tion, Woodstock,  Conn.,  1888,  Sel.  fr.  (New 
Declaration  of  Independence,  A  [or  The].) — 
Clinton  B.  Fisk.  — CS  28— TS  (si.  diff.  and 
abr.) 

Address  Delivered  at  the  Prohibition  Party  Conven- 
tion, Sel.  fr.  (Blue  and  the  Gray,  The).— 
Frances  E.  Willard.— TMR 

Address  Delivered  before  the  New  England  Society,  in 
New  York  City,  Dec.  22,  1892,  Sel.  fr.  (Teach- 
ing of  the  Colleges,  The.)— Seth  Low.— TMR 

Address  Delivered  in  South  Danvers,  at  the  Dedica- 
tion of  the  Peabody  Institute,  Sept.  29,  1854, 
Sel.  fr.  (Consolations  of  Literature,  The.) — 
Rufus  Choate.— MRS 

Address,  in  the  Character  of  "Hope." — Anon. — MDD 

Address  of  Black  Hawk  to  Gen.  Street. — Black  Hawk. 
See  Speech  of  Black  Hawk. 

Address  of    Caradoc    the    Bard. — E:   Bulwer-Lytton. 
—BLP 
(Caradoc,  the  Bard  of  the  Cymrians.) — SS 

Address  of  Death  to  Tomas  de  Roiste,  The. — Douglas 
Hyde.— TIP 

Address  of  General  Wolfe  before  Quebec. — Jas.  Wolfe. 
—BLP 
(To  the  Army  before  Quebec,  1759.)— PS— SS 

Address  of  I.,eonidas. — Richard  Glover.     See  Leonidas. 

Address  of  Nicias  to  His  Troops. — Thucydides. — PS 

Address  of  Serjeant  Buzfuz. — C:  Dickens.  See  Pick- 
wick Papers. 

Address  of  Spott.vcus. — Anon. — CS  12 

Address  of  Welcome.  An. — M.  G.  Kennedy. — SD 

Address  of  Welcome  at  an  Alumni  Dinner,  An. — Anon. 
— CP 

Address  on  Closing  a  Performance. — Anon. — BC 

Address  on  Receiving  the  Degree  of  Doctor  of  Laws, 
An. — Anon. — CP 

Address  on  Temperance,  Sel.  fr.  (Intemperance.)— W: 
E.  Channing.— FAS 

Address  on  the  Landing  of  the  Pilgrims,  Sel.  fr.  (Glori- 
ous New  England.)— S.  S.  Pr.ntiss. — CS  1 
(New  England.)— FD  1 

Address  on  the  Occasion  of  a  New  Pastor. — Anon. 
—PS 

Address  Spoken  at  the  Opening  of  Drury  Lane  Theatre, 
Saturday,  Oct.  10,  1812.    (C.)— Lord  Byron. 
(Reopening  of  the  Drury  Lane  Theatre.) — EDY 

Address  to  a  College  Graduating  Class,  An. — Anon. — 
CP 

Address  to  a  Graduate  Class  of  Nurses. — Anon. — CP 

Address  to  a  Graduating  Class  by  a  Teacher. — Anon 
— CP 

Address  to  a  Lady. — Rob't  Bums. — HBP 

(O  [tvr.  Oh],  Wert  thou  in  the  Cauld  Blast — C.) — 
BPB— MBL— WEP  3— YBF 

Address  to  a  Robin. — Louisa  M.  Alcott. — A.  D. 

Address  to  a  School  Graduating  Class  by  a  Clergyman. 
Anon.— CP 

Address  to  a  Skeleton. — Anon. — WRD 
(Lines  on  a  Skeleton.)— HBP— PPSr 
(To  a  Skeleton.)— BNL—CS  4— FEP— PR— PS— 
TMR 


Address  to  Certain  Gold-fishes. — Hartley  Coleridge.— 

FEP 
Address  to  his  Troops. — G :  Washington. — BS  24 — OS  2 
(To  the  American  Troops  before  the  Battle  of  Lonic 

Island.)— SS— SSD 
(Washington  to  his  Soldiers.) — PS 
Address  to  Lafayette. — Henry  Clay. — EAO 
Address  to  Northern    and    Southern  Veterans,  An. — 

Anon.— CP 
Address  to  Schoolboys,  An. — Anon. — MCS 
Address  to    the    Assembly    of    Noblesse. — Honors    de 

Mirabeau. — MRS 
Address  to  the  Chamber  of  Peers. — Trelat. — SS 
Address  to  the  Class  of  1877. — Rachel  H.   Shoemaker 

— SR3 
Address  to  the  Comet. — Anon. — FP 
Address  to   the   Deil. — Rob't  Bums. — HPE — WEP  3 

(si.  abr.) 

(To  the  Devil— 6r.  sel.)— EPa  

Address  to  the  Graduating  Class  of  Knox  College,  1877. 

— Newton  Bateman. — SR  2 
Address  to  the  Indolent. — Jas.  Thomson.      See  Castle 

of  Indolence,  The. 
Address  to  the  Jury. — Norman  Leslie. — DDR 
Address  to  the  Mummy  at  [or  in]  Belzoni's  Exhibition, 

—Horace     Smith.— BNL — CS  6 — FEP — HBP 
(Mummy,  The— at r.)— PPSr 
(To  a  Mummy.)— OS  3— SO  (abr.) 
Address  to  the  New  Year. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — PEO 
Address  to   the   New   Year. — Dinah  M.    Craik.      Set 

also  Psalm  for  New  Year's  Eve,  A. 
Address  to  the  Nightingale. — Richard  Bamfield.    iSee 

Cynthia. 
Address    to  the  Ocean.  —  Lord   Byron.      See    Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Address  to  the  Ocean. — Bryan  Waller   Procter. — See 

Ocean,  The. 
Address  to  the  People  of  England. — R;H:Lee. — EAO 
Address  to  the  Soldiers. — Jacob  M.  Manning. — C;S  1 
Address  to  the  Sun.     (Sel.  fr.  Carthon. — Jas.  McPher- 

son.— CS  22 
(Ossian's  Address  to  the  Sun.) — HSS  2 — PTS 
Address  to  the  Swiss. — Friedrich  Schiller.      See  Wil- 
liam Tell. 
Address  to    the    Toothache. — Rob't    Burns. — BNL — 

BS  19— FEP— HPE— THP 
Address  to  the  Unco  Guid ;  or,  the  Rigidly  Righteous. 

(O— Rob't  Burns.— ESs 
("Then  gently  scan  your  brother  man — abr.) — GO 
(To  the  Unco  Guid;  or,  the  Rigidly  Righteous.) — 

BNL— EPs 
Address  to  the  Woodlark.     (O,  Stay,  Sweet  Warbling 

Woodlark—C.)— Rob't  Bums.— WEP  3 
Address  to  the  Young  Men  of  Italy. — Jos.  Mazzini. — 

PS— SS— SSD 
Addressed  to  Haydon.     (Addressed  to  Benjamin  Rob- 
ert Haydon — C.)— J:  Keats. — WEP  4 
Adela  Cathcart,  Sel.  fr.  (Sir  Lark  and  King  Sim:  A 

Parable— rerses  fr.  Ch.  XVI.)— G:  Macdonald. 

— GN 
Adelaide  Anne  Procter. — Edwin  Arnold. — AVP 
Adelaide  Neilson.     ( C. )— W :  Winter.- A  A 

(Fidele.)— FEP 
Adelgitha.— T:  Campbell.— CGd— FEP 
Adhesive  Poem,  An.^G :  Thatcher. — TK 
Adieu. — Edmund  J.  Armstrong. — TIP 
Adieu.— T:  Carlyle.— GP— VA 
Adieu. — Minnie  Gilmore. — TAS 
Adieu!  Adieu!  My  Native  Shore. — Lord  Byron.     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Adieu  to  France. — J :  Hunter-Duvar.    See  De  RobervaL 
Adieux  k  Mary  Stuart.     (Br.  sel.) — Algernon  C.  Swin- 
burne.—EDY 
Adirondack  Adventures,  Sel.  fr.     (Crossing  the  Carry 

—abr.  fr.  Ch.  VI.)— W:  H.  H.  Murray.— CS  5 

— MHR 
(Abr.)— BS  1— NPS— YP 
Adirondacs,  The. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — AP 
Admiral  Dewey. — F.,A.  Marshall. — PAPm 
Admire  Not,  Shepherd's  Boy. — G:  Wither. —  See  Fair- 
Virtue,  the  Mistress  of  Philarete. 
Admonition   to   a   Traveller.     (Admonition — C.) — W 

Wordsworth.— PGT  1— YBF 
Admonition  to  Coming  Generations. — Rob't  C.  Win- 

throp     See  Centennial  Oration. 
Adolphus,  Duke  of  Guelders. — Rob't,  Lord  Lytton  — 

WR  1 
Adonais. — Percy  B.  Shelley. — FEP — WEP  4 
(Adonais — br.  sel.) — OS  3 

(Eternal,  The.)— GP 
(Elegy  on   the   Death  of    Keats,    An — br.   sel.) — 

EDY 


19 


Adonais 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Adonais. — W.  W.  Harney. — AA 
Adoon  the  Lane. — C :  Sibley. — BS  3 

(Piaidie,  The.)— BNL— GP— THP 
Adopted  Child,  The.*-Felicia  D.  Hemans.— HBP 
Adoration  of  the  Wise  Men,  The. — C.  F.  Alexander. — ' 

PoR 
Adown  the  Years. — Ada  Simpson  Sherwood. — CS  34 
Adsum.— R:  H:  Stoddard.— AA— ED Y—T AS 
Adulteress,  The.     (C.) — Edwin  Arnold. 

(Clemency  of  Salah-ud-Deen,  The.)— WR  24 
"Advance." — Frank  H.  Gassaway. — WR  5 
(Grand  Advance,  The.)— BS  25— TMD 
Advance  of  Science,  The.— W.  Sapte,  Jr.— CS  27 
Advancement  of    Learning,  The,   Sel.   jr.  (Worth    of 
Knowledge — sel.  fr.  Bk.  1.)— Fs.  Bacon. — LLC 
Advantage  of  Knowing  French,  The. — Anon. — DSS 
Advantages  of  Adversity  to  the  Pilgrim  Fathers. — E: 
Everett.     See  First  Settlement  of  New  Eng- 
land, The. 
Advantages  of  Truth  and  Sincerity.  (C) — ^J :  Tillotson. 

(Truth  and  Integrity — in  2  pts.) — KNE 
Advent  Carol,  An,  Sd.  fr. — Anon. — GG 
Advent  of  the  Ballot  Reform,  The. — Grover  Cleveland. 
— FD2 
(Ballot  Reform — ptly.  same.) — BS  18 
Adventure,  An. — Amelia  B.  Edwards. — WR  1 
Adventure    of    Baron    Munchausen    with    his    Horse. 
— Rudolph  E.  Raspe.       See  Travels  of  Baron 
Munchausen. 
Adventure  of  Baron  Munchausen  in  a  Fight  with  the 
Turks. — Rudolph  E.  Raspe.      ,See  Travels  of 
Baron  Mimchausen. 
Adventures  in  the  Wrong  House. — Mrs.  E.  W.  Brown. 

— HD 
Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown,  Sels.  fr. — W:  L.  Alden. 
Ghost  Scene,  The.     (Our  New  Walk— C.)— SR  10 
Jimmy    Brown's    Attempt  to    Produce    Freckles. 

(Freckles— C.—o6r.)—BS  23 
Jimmy  Brown's  Prompt  Obedience  (Prompt  Obe- 
dience— C.)— BS  17 
Jimmy  Brown's  Sister's  Wedding  (Sue's  Wedding 

— C.).— BS  14— PR— YA 
Jimmy  Brown's  Steam  Chair  (A  Steam  Chair — C. 
—si.  o6r.  ).—BS  12 
Adventures    of    Telemachus,  Sel.  fr.  (Telemachus  to 
the  Allied  Chiefs — sel.  fr.  Bk.  XV.) — Francois 
de  S.  de  la  M.  Fenelon.— SS 
Adventurous  Daring.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Adversity. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
Advertisement  Answered,   The. — Frank  M.  Thorn. — 

CS  17— MYF 
Advertisement  of  a  Lost  Day. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — 

FP 
Advertising  for  a  Companion. — Anon. — MC 
Advertising   for   a    Husband. — H.  Elliott  McBride. — 

MCD 
Advertising  for  a  Servant. — Anon. — HVD 
Advice. — Anon. — HSS  3 
Advice. — Anon. — PHS 

Advice.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Advice.     L.  L.  H.— TL 

Advice.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  CXXVI. — C.)— Wal- 
ter S.  Landor. — VA 
Advice  to  a  Fire  Company. — Anon. — CS  1 — DS 

(Fuss  at  Fires. )—SS 
Advice  to  a  Girl.— T:  Campion.— PGT  1— YBF 
Advice  to  a  Lover. — Anon. — PGT  1 — YBF 
Advice  to  a  Reckless  Youth. — Ben  Jonson. — FP 
Advice  to  a  Young  Lawyer. — Jos.  Story. — KNE 

(Advice  to  Young  Lawyers.) — FTR 
Xdvice  to  a  Young  Man. — Anon. — FAS 
Advice  to  a  Young  Man. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — NPS — 

PP— PS— SR  4— YP— YPS 
Advice  to  Amateurs. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 
Advice  to  an  Advocate. — Jos.  Story. — KNE 

(Eloquence  or  Oratory.) — SR  2 
Advice  to  Boys. — H:  Downton. — KNS 

(Brave  and  True.)— DS— PP— YA— YFR 
(To  the  Boys.)— FAS  ■ 

Advice  to  Marry  Betimes. — .Jos.  Hall. — WEP  1 
Advice  to  My  Country. — .Tas.  Madison. — HS 
Advice  to  the  Young. — Anon. — CS  15 
Advice  to  Young  Lawyers. — Jos.  Story.      .See  Advice 

to  a  Young  Lawyer. 
Advice  to  Young  Men. — Noah  Porter. — PS 

("Young  men,  you  are  the  architects  of  your  own 
fortunes" — si.  abr.) — GG 
Advice  to  Young  Women. — J:  Wolcott. — HPE 
Ae  Fond  Kiss.     (C.)— Rob't  Bums.— OB— YBF 
(Ae  Fond  Kiss  before  We  Part.)— BNL— GP 
(Farewell  to  Nancy.)— FEP— HBP— WEP  3 


iEglamour's   Lament. — Ben   Jonson.     See   Sad   Shep- 
herd, The. 
iElla,  Sels.  fr.—T:  Chatterton. 

Minstrel  8  Marriage  Song. — WEP  3 
Minstrel's  Roundelay.— WEP  3  (si.  abr.) 

(Minstrel's  Song  [in  EUa].)— BNL— CGd  (abr.) 

—FEP— HBP 
(My  Love  is  Dead.)— GP 
(Song  from  JElla—sl.  abr.)— OB 
^neid.  The,  Sels.  fr. — Virgil  (tr.  by  Gawain  Douglas). 
Destiny  of  Rome,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.VI.,  Pt.  XV.)— 

WEPl 
Destruction  of  Troy,  The.  (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II. — diff.  tr.) 

— PR— WRll 
Dido's  Hunting.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.,  Pt.  IV.)— WEP  1 
Ghost  of  Creusa,  The.     (Bk.  II.,  Pt.  XII.,  abr.)— 

WEPl 
Nisus  and  Euryalus.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IX. — Coning- 

ton's  tr.) — NE 
Sleep.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.,  Pt.  II.)— WEP  1 
Tribes  of  the  Dead,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VI..  Ch.  XI.) 
—WEPl 
^neid.  The,  Story  of  the.— Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
^olian  Harp.— W:  Allingham.— TIP 
^olian  Harp.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  diff.  poem.) — W :  Allingham. 

— EPs 
iEolian  Harp,  An. — Michael  Field. — VA 
^sop. — Andrew  Lang. — VA 
.(Esthetic  Craze,  The.— Virginia  McGill. — BS  16 
^Esthetic  Drill. — Marguerite  W.  Morton. — ID 
^Esthetic  Housekeeper,  An. — Anon. — DCR 
^Estivation. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — NA 
.(Etate  XIX.— Herman  C :  Merivale.— VA 
Afar  in  the  Desert.— T:  Pringle.— BNL— FEP— HBP 

—LLC 
Afeared  of  a  Gal.— Anon.— AWH— HP— TAV— WR  4 
Affaire  d'Amour. — Marg.  Deland. — BNL 
Affairs  in  Cuba.— J:  M.  Thurston.— PPS 
(Cuba— seZ.)— FAS 
(Plea  for  Cuba,  A— si.  cond.)—SC 
Affectation  in  the  Pulpit. — W:  Cowper.    See  Task,  The. 
Affection  of  the  Heart,  An. — Paschal  H.  Coggins. — 

CS37 
Affectionate  Letter,  An.  —  Anon.  —  HR  (  cond.  and  si. 
diff.) 
(Bridget  O'Hooligoin's  Letter.) — DI 
(Irish  Letter,  An.l— C«  5— PTS 
Affinity.— Anon.— TL 
Affliction.— G:  Herbert.— EPs 

Affliction  of  Margaret,  The.     (C.) — W:  Wordsworth. — 
PGT  1 
(Mother's  Lament,  A.)— SAE 
Affray  in  King  Street,  Boston,  1770,  The. — Nathaniel 

Hawthorne.     See  Grandfather's  Chair. 
Afoot.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— VA 
Afore  yo'  Daddy  Comes. — Lalia  Mitchell. — WR  24 
Afraid  of  the  Dark. — Anon. — HVD 
"Afraid?  of  whom  am  I  afraid?"     (C.) — Emily  Dick- 
inson. 
(Needless  Fear.)— TAS 
African  Mother,  The. — Anon. — WR  16 
African  Slave  Trade,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Barbarism  of  our 
British  Ancestors.) — W:  Pitt,  the  younger. — SS 
After. — Theodora  Bates.— CG  3 
After  a  Dance. — J:  Moran. — WR  12 
After  a  Fashion.— Mrs.  E.  B.  Duffy.— StD 
After  a  Lecture  on  Keats. — Oliver  W,  Holmes. — AA 
After  a  Match. — Anon.— BS  20 
After  All!— G.  Butt.— FLS 
After  All.- W:  Winter.— ASL—AWB— LLC— PAP— 

PAPm 
After  a  Summer  Shower. — Andrews  Norton. — FEP — 

POS 
After  an  Interval. — Walt  Whitman. — AA 
After  Aughrim. — Arthur  G.  Geoghegan. — TIP 
After  Awhile. — Anon. — KNE 

After  Blenheim.— Rob't  Southey.— CGd— EHT— LC— 
PGT  1— PHS— PSR 
(Battle     of     Blenheim,    The.— C.)— BNL— CS  8— 
ED  Y  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  HSS  1  —  LLC— 
OS  1— PC— WCL— WEP  4 
After  Ck)nstruing. — Arthur  C.  Benson. — VA 
After  Corunna.—C:  Wolfe.— LH 

(Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore  [.The].)— B LP— BNL— 
BPB— BSP— CS  8— ED Y— EHT— FEP— FP 
— GN— GP— HB— HBP— LC—  LLC  —  MR  — 
OS  2— PC— SAE  (a5r.)— SE— SS  —  TIP — 
WCLGl 
(Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore  after  Corunna,  The.) — OB 
(Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore  at  Corunna,  The.) — 
BFV— CEL— EPs  —  PGT  1  —  PHS  —  PSR— 
WEP  4— YBF 


20 


TITLE    INDEX 


Against 


After  Death.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
After   Death. — Edwin   Arnold.     See   After   Death   in 

Arabia. 
After  Death. — Frances  I.  Pamell. — VA 

(Post  Mortem. )—TIP 
After  Death. — C :  F.  Richardson. — AA  , 

After  Death. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
After  Death  in  Arabia.     (C.) — Edwin  Arnold. — CS  31 

— FEP— VA 
(After  Death. )— BS  8— OS  3  , 

(He  who  Died  at  Azan.)— HBP— HDL 
(Resurrection  of  Abdullah.) — LLC 
After  Frost.— Anon.— WR  7 
After  Grace.— Anon.— WR  22 
After  Love. — Arthur  Symons. — FLS 
After  Many  Days. — Philip  B.  Marston. — FLS 
After  Many  Tears.— H.  C.  Kendall.— PGT  2 
After  Music. — J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 
After  Rain. — Archibald  Lampman. — TCV 
After  Rain.— W:  Wordsworth.— CEL 
(In  March.)— PC 

(March.)- BFV— HBP— OS  1— PHS— PoR 
(Written  in  March.— C.)—AE—CGd—LC 
After  Reading  Austin  Dobson. — E. — CG  1 
After  School,  What?  (Diai.)— Anon.— DS— MPD— YA 
After  so  Long.— Howell  L.  Finer.- WR  23 
"After  Sorrow's  Night."— R:  W.  Gilder.— MR 
After  Summer. — Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
After  the  Accident. — F.  Bret  Harte. — BS  1 
After  the  Ball.— Nora  Perry.— CS  15— FEP— GP 
After  the  Battle.— Anon.— CS  2— PPSr— PRR 
After  the  Battle.— Anon.— CS  9— DS— PRR 

(Dying  Captain,  The.)— SR  7 
After  the  Battle.— Anon.— HSS  1 

(Searching    for    the    Slain.)— CS  3— FIR- NPS— 

PS— YP 
After  the  Battle.— Mary  E.  Braddon.— OS  2 
After  the  Battle.— Robert  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
After  the  Battle.— Annie  R.  Christie.— TCV 
After  the  Battle. — Jas. Dawson. — PFP 

(By  the  Alma.)— BS  22 
After  the  Battle.— T:  Moore.— TIP 
After  the  Battle. — V.  Stuart  Mosby.— CS  29 — NPS— 

YP 
(War's  Sacrifice.)— WR  3 
After  the  Battle. — R :  C.  Trench. — VA 
After  the  Burial. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — AA 
After  the  Charge  at  La  Quasina. — E:  Marshall. — SO 
After  the  (jircus. — Clara  J.  Denton. — ASD 
After  the  Cows. — J:  Vance  Cheney. — TAV 
After  the  Darkness — Light. — Anon. — SSS 
After  the  Explosion.     (Tab.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 

YFE 
After  the  Fourth  of  July. — M.  Phelps  Dawson. — BS  26 
After  the  Game. — (Columbia  Spectator.) — CG  2 
After  the  German. — G :  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
After  the  Lecture  on  Spion  Kop. — Jos.  I.  C.  Clarke. — 

EDY 
After  the  Opera. — Ben  W.  Davis.— CS  35 
After  the  Play. — Burton  E.  Stevenson. — CG  1 
After  the  Rain.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— BNL— GP 
After  the  Skirmish.— Sir  Alfred  Lyall.— AVP 
After  the  Soiree.— F.  R.  D.  B.— CG  2 
After  the  Storm. — Harriet  M.  Kimball. — HDL 
After  the    Storm.— W:    M.     Thackeray.     See    White 

Squall,  The. 
After  the  Summer  Storm. — Sarah  H.  Whitman. — POS 
After  the  Theater.— Anon.— CS  22 
After  the  Waltz.— Ben  W.  Davis.— CS  36 
After  the  Wedding.— Anon.— WR  25 
After  the  Wedding.— W:  L.  Keese.— BS  18 
After  Twenty  Years.— Anon.— NPS— YP 

(Noble  Revenge.  The.)— CS  6— PS 
After  Twenty  Years. — Helen  Booth.— CS  14 
After  Vacation. — Anon. — EEO 
After  Wings.— Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — AA 
After-comers,  The.— Rob't  T.  S.  Lowell. — AA. 
After-dinner   Speech. — Sir   H:   Lytton   Bulwer,   Lord 

Dalling.— MRS 
After-dinner  Speech  before  the  Harvard  Club  of  New 

York.— H.  E.  Howland.— MRS 
After-dinner    Speech    by    a    Frenchman. — Litchfield 

Moseley.    <See  Charity  Dinner,  The. 
After-dinner  Story,  An. — Anon. — CP 
Afterglow.— C:  G.  Blanden.— TFY 
Aftermath. — Mrs.  M.  E.  Banta.— WR  14 
Aftermath,  The.— Jas.  Hendry.— HP 
Aftermath.— R.  W.  Walker.— CG  3 
Afternoon.     (Fr.  Post-meridian.) — W.  P.  Garrison. — 

AA 
Afternoon  Call,  An. — W:  Cowper. — See  Conversation. 
Afternoon  in  a  Hotel  Room,  An. — J:  K.  Bangs. — NP 


Afternoon  in  February. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — GMS — 

HBP 
Afternoon  Nap,  The.— C:  G.  Eastman. — WCL 

(Farmer  Sat  in  his  Easy  Chair,  The.)— GP— TAV 
(Midsummer  Day  Scene,  A. — CS  7 
(Picture,  A.)— BNL— FEP 
Afternoon  Tea,  An.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— MN 
Aftemote  of  the  Hour,  The. — C.  Tennyson-Turner. — 

PGT  2 
After-song.   (In  The  New  Day.)— R :  W.  Gilder.— AA— 

BIL— TAS 
Afterthought,  An.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
After-thought.     (C.)— W :  Wordsworth.— WEP  4 

(Valedictory  Sonnet  to  the  River  Duddon.) — OB 
Afterward. — Mary  Montgomerie,  Lady  Currie. — AVP 

(Afterwards.) — VA 
Afterwards.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Afterwards. — Burton  E.  Stevenson. — CG  1 
Afterwhiles,  Proem  in. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — SAE 
Afton    Water.     (Sweet    Afton — C.)— Rob't    Bums. — 

BNL— GP— SN— YBF 
(Flow  Gently,  Sweet  Afton.)— FEP— IR— LLC— 

MBI.— SO— WCLG  1 
Again   Brethren   and   Equals. — Jas.   W.   Patterson. — 

BLP 
"Again  Rejoicing  Nature  Sees."    (Composed  in  Spring. 

—O— Rob't  Bums.— SN 
"Again  to  Thy  dear  Name"  (Grant  us  Thy  Peace). — J. 

Ellerton.— LLC 
"Again  we   lift  the  veil    amid    our  tears."  —  Thorpe 

Greenleaf.— DFR 
Against  a  Compromise  of    Principle,     Sel.  fr.    (Com- 
promise of  Principle.) — H :  W.  Beecher. — NC — 

PEO 
Against  Bribery. — Demosthenes.     See  Philippics,  The. 
Against  Caius  Verres. — Cicero.     See  Verres  Denounced. 
Against  Catiline. — Cicero.      See  First  Oration  against 

Catiline. 
Against  Centralization. — H:  W.  Grady. — PPS  (cond.) 
(Centralization  in  the  United  States — more  cond.) — 

NC— PFP 
(Love  of  Home,  The— s^-Z.)— TMR 
(Opportunities  of  the  Scholar— 8eJ.)—BS  18— PFP 

—PS 
(University  the  Training  Camp  of    the  Future, 

The— sZ.  coTwi.)- NC— PEO 
Against  Curtailing  the  Right  of  Suffrage. — Victor  Hugo. 

— OM— PPS 
Against  Duelling. — Anon.     See  In  Favor  of  a  State 

Law  Against  Duelling. 
Against  Employing  Indians  in  War. — W :  Pitt,  Earl  of 

Chatham,     ^ee  American  War,  The. 
Against  Expansion. — H :  U.  Johnson. — SC 
Against  Flogging  in  the  Na\-y. — Rob't  F.  Stockton. — 

SC— ss 

(Against  Whipping  in  the  Navy — abr.  and  si.  diff.) 
EA— FD  1 
("Shall  an  American  citizen,"  etc. — br.  sel.) — SO 
(American  Sailor,  The — si.  abr.) — OM 
Against  Foreign  Conquest. — De  Witt  Clinton. — SS 
Against  Foreign  Entanglements. — G :  Washington. — SS 
Against  Imperialism. — G:  F.  Hoar. — SC 
Against  Indifference. — C:  Webbe. — OB 
Against  License. — G :  G.  Annable. — CS  36 
Against  Lord  John  Russell's  Motion. — G:  Canning. — SS 
Against  Love. — Sir  J:  Denham. — WEP  2 
Against  Mr.  Pitt,  1741.— Sir  Rob't  Walpole.— PS— SS 
(Against  William  Pitt.)— SSD 
(Sir  Robert  Walpole  against  Mr.  Pitt.)— KNE 
(Walpole's  Attack  on  Pitt.)— BS  17— FTR 
Against  Philip. — Demosthenes.     Sfe  Philippics,  The. 
Against  Political  Jobbing. — R:  B.  Sheridan. — PS 
Against  Quarreling  and  Fighting,  Sd.  fr. — Isaac  Watts. 

—BNL 
Again.st  Religious  Distinctions. — J.  P.  Curran. — SS 
Against  Search-warrants  for  Seamen. — W:  Pitt,  Lord 

Chatham.— PPS 
Against  Secession. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Constitution 

and  the  Union,  The. 
Against  the  Embargo,  1808. — Josiah  Quincy. — OM — 
SS 
(Embargo,  The — si.  abr.) — SO 
Against  the  Force  Bill,  1833.— J:  C.  Calhoun.— PS  (si. 
abr.)—SS  (si.  abr.) 
(Force  Bill,  The.)— MRS 
Against  the  Fugitive-slave  Law. — Theodore  Parker. — 

SC 
Against  the  Nobility  and  Clergy  of  Provence,  February 

3,  1789.— Honors  de  Mirabeau.— PS— SS 
Against  the  Spoils  System. — H :  Van  Dyke. — SC 
Against  the  Stamp  Act. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. — 
FTR 


21 


Against 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Against  the   Succession   of   Richard   Cromwell   to  the 

Protectorate. — Sir  H :  Vane. — SS 
Against  the   Terrorisnw  of   the    Jacobins. — Pierre    V. 

Vergniaud.— PS— SS— SSD 
Against   them   who    Lay    Unchastity   to   the   Sex   of 

Women. — W:  Habington.     See  Castara. 
Against  War,    January    13,    1792. — MaximiUen  M.  I. 

Robespierre.— PS— SS 
Against  Whipping  in  the  Navy. — Rob't  F.  Stockton. 

See  Against  Flogging  in  the  Navy. 
Against  William      Pitt.— Sir      Rob't      Walpole.      See 

Against  Mr.  Pitt,  1741. 
"Agar,"  The.— (Boston  Gazette.)— BS  5 
Agassiz.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— EDY 
Agassiz. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — AP 
Agatha. — Alfred  Austin. — VA 
Agatha.— Will  H.  Kernan.— WR  2 
Agathon,  SeZ.  fr.    (Song  of  Eros— /r.    So.    L)— G:  E. 

Woodberry. — AA 
Age,  The. — Herbert  E.  Clarke.— VA 
Age.— R:  Gamett.— VA 

Age. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Morituri  Salutamus. 
Age  and  Song.     (C. ) — Algernon  C :  Swinburne. — FEP 

(New  Year's  Eve.)— OS  3 
"Age  is  tempestuous  with  speculation.  The." — Anon. 

— GG 
Age  of  a  Dream,  The. — Lionel  Johnson. — TIP 
Age  of  Children  Happiest,  The. — H:  Howard,  Earl  of 
Surrey.     See  No  Age  Content  with  his  Own 
Estate. 
Age  of  Improvement,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Bun- 
ker Hill  Monument,  The. 
Age  of  Miles  Standish,  The.— F.  T.  Greenhalge.— FD  2 
Age  of  Progress,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FHE 
Age  of  Progress. — C :  Sumner.     See  Incentives  to  Duty. 
Age  of  Queen  Anne,  The. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Rape  of 

the  Lock,  The. 
Age  of  the  Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History, 
The,  Sels.  fr. — Rufus  Choate. 
Heroic  Age,  The.    ( Br.  seH— OS  2 
Heroism  of  the  Pilgrims,  The.— NPS— YP 
(Pilgrim  Fathers,  The— ?>r.  sel.)—SE 
(Spartans  and  the  Pilgrims,  The.)— TMD 
Pilgrims  of  New  England,  The.— BLP 
Age  of  Trees. — Anon. — AD 
Age   of   Wisdom,   The. — W:   M.   Thackeray. — BNL — 

FEP— GP— HBP— VA— YBF 
Age  of  Work,  The.— J:P.  Kennedy.— BLP 

(Mechanical  Epoch,  The.)— SS 
Age  We  Live  in.  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Aged  Cities.— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 
"Aged  man  who  loved  to  doze  away.  An." — Walter  S. 

Landor.— WEP  4 
Aged  Man-at-arms,  The.— G:  Peele.— FEP 

(Farewell  to  Arms,  A.)— ELP— OB— YBF 
Aged    Prisoner,     The.— Anon.— CS     18— DS— NPS— 

YP 
Aged   Stranger,   The.     (C.)— Fs.   Bret   Harte.— AA— 
BS  9— PTS 
(I  Was  with  Grant.)— CS  7 
Agencies  in  our  National  Progress. — Alex.  K.  McClure. 

— SC 
Ages,    The,    Sel.    fr.    (America). — W:    C.    Bryant. — 

CS  17— WR  10 
Aghadoe. — J:  Todhunter. — OB 

Agincourt. — Michael  Drayton. — HB — LH  (w.  Shakes- 
peare.)—OB 
(Ballad  of  Agincourt  [Thel.)— BNL— BPB— EDY 

— FEP— HB— HBP— HSS  1— PSR 
(Battle  of  Agincourt,  The  — C.)  — BFV  — CEL  — 

EHT— GN— OS  3 
(To  the  Cambro-Britains  and  their  Harps,  etc.) — 
ELP— WEP  1 
Agincourt. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Aglaura,  Sel.fr.  (Encouragements  to  a  Lover.) — Sir  J: 
Suckling.— PGT  1 
(Orsames'     Song    [in    "Aglaura"].) — ELP — ES — 

WEP  2 
<Song— C.)— HBP 
<To  a  Lover.)— YBF 

(Why  so  Pale  [and  Wan,  Foud  Lover]?)— BNL— 
FEP— GP— OB— OEL— PYO 
Agnes.— H.  F.  Lyte.— PGT  1 
Agnes  and  the  Years. — Celia  M.  Burr. — WRD 
Agnes  Hotot.— Walter  K.  Fobes.— FMR 
Agnes,  I  Love  Thee.— Anon.— CH—CRR—SR  5 

(Lofty  Faith.)— CS  8 
Agnes  the  Martyr. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  26 
Agnostic,  The.     {Ahr.)—C.  M.  Snyder  {at.  also  to  A.  T. 
Worden).— SR  13 
(Mullins  the  Agnostic.) — CS  35 
Agony  Bells.— Allie  Wellington.— CS  7 


Agricultural  Editor's  Poem,  The.     (C.) — Sam  W.  Fosa. 
(City  Man's  Dream  of  the  Country.) — BS  24 
(Country  Summer  Pastoral,  A.) — WR  14 
Agriculture  and  Love  of  Country. — Jos.  Holt. — FD  1 

(Loveof  Country.)— CS  20 
Agriculture  as  Affected  by  the  War,  Sel.  fr.  (Nature.) 

— E:  Everett.— TMR 
Agra-dolce.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— FTA— OH 
"Ah,  be  not  false."— R:  W.  Gilder.— AA 
Ah,  Bring  It  Npt.- Dollie  Radford.— VA 
"Ah,  dear  papa,  did  you  but   know."      (Petition — C. 

—abr.)— Jane  Taylor.— BVC 
Ah,  how  Sweet  it  is  to  Love.     (Fr.  Tyrannic  Love.) — 

J:  Dryden.— BNL— OB 
Ah,  Lassie  Fair!— S.  G.  Tenney.— CG  1 
"Ah,  Love!  let  us  be  true!" — Matthew  Arnold.     See 

Dover  Beach. 
Ah,  Me.— Anon.— HP 

"Ah  me!   for  aught    that    ever  I   could   read." — W.- 
Shakespeare.    See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
"Ah,  mel  How  dark  the  discipline  of  pain."     (Br.  ael. 

fr.   President  Garfield.) — H :  W.  Longfellow. — 

HDL 
Ah,  Sunflower.      (C. — in  Songs  of  Experience.) — W: 

Blake.— WEP  3 
(Sunflower,  The.)— EPs 
"Ah,  there  be  souls  none  understand." — JoaquinJMiller. 

See  Ship  in  the  Desert,  The. 
"Ah,  what  avails  the  sceptered   race!"    (Poems  and 

Epigrams,  LXXX.—C.)— Walter  S.  Landor.— 

WEP  4 
(Rose     Aylmer— O— BFV— BPB— FEP— OB— 

VA— VS— YBF 
"Ahl  when  shall  all  men's  good." — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  Golden  Year,  The. 
"Ahl  when  the  infinite  burden  of  life  descendeth  upon 

us." — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Children  of  the 

Lord's  Supper,  The. 
"Ahl  When  will  all  be  ended." — W:  Morris.     See  Life 

and  Death  of  Jason,  The. 
Ah!  Yet  Consider  it  Again. — Arthur  H.  Clough. — VA 
Ah  Yet's  Christmas.— Paul  P.  Davis. — BS  22 
Ahab  Mohammed. — J.  M.  Legar^. — AA 
"Ah-goo!"— C:  F.  Adams.— CS  4— SR  12 
Ahkoond   of   Swat,    The.— G:   T:    Lanigan.— AWH— 

THP 
(Threnody,  A.)— AA— EDY— NA 
Ahmed. — Jas.  Berry  Bensel. — AA 

"A-hunting  we  will  go."      (Fr.  Don  Quixote  in  Eng- 
land.)—H:  Fielding.— BNL— FEP 
(Diff.  vers.)— OES 

(Hunting  Song— seZ. )— BVC 
Aideen's  Grave,  Sel.  fr. — Sir  S:  Ferguson. — TIP 
Aidenn. — Katrina  Trask. — AA 

Aim  at  Perfection. — Philip  D.  Stanhope,  Lord  Chester- 
field.—BLP 
Aim' High. — B:  Harrison. — BLP 
Aim  of  Life,  The. — Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Festus. 
Ain't     he     Cute.— Anon.— CS  21— DS— NPS— YA— 

YP 
Air  and  Sea,  The.— M.  F.  Maury.— LLC 
Air  Castles.— Clara  H.  Bradner. — CS  27 
Aired  Her  Knowledge. — (Detroit  Free  Press.) — CS  37 
Airly     Beacon.— C:     Kingsley.— OB— VS— WEP  4— 

YBF 
Airs  of  Spring,  The.     (Fr.  Upon  Master  W.  Montague, 

his  Return  from  Travel.)- T:  Carew. — FEP— 

HBP 
("Sweetly  breathing,  vernal  air.") — BNL 
Airy  Nothings. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Tempest,  The. 
Ajax.— Phoebe  Gary.- BLF 
Akbar's  Dream,  Sel.  fr.  (Hymn.) — Alfred  Tennyson. — 

WEP  4 
Akinetos. — R:  Hengist  Home.      See  Orion:  An  Epic 

Poem.' 
Akond  of  Swat,  The.— E :  Lear.— ED Y— NA 
Al  Fresco. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — AD, 
Alabama,  The.— Maurice  Bell.— EDY 
Aladdin.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— ASL— BFV 
Aladdin ;  or.  The  Wonderful  Lamp.     (Fr.  The  Arabian 

Nights'  Entertainments.) — Anon. — WCI-G  1 
(Diff.  vers.  )—WGS 
Alaham,  Sel.  fr.     (Chorus  of  Good  and  Evil  Spirits.) — 

Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke.— WEP  1 
Alamance. — Seymour  W.  Whiting. — BLP 
Alameda.— Mary  Stewart.— CS  36 
Alarmed  Skipper,  The.     (C.)— Jas.  T.  Fields.— MHR 
(Nantucket   Skipper,   The.)— BNL— CS   5— CSS— 

FEP— GP 
Alarming  Prospect. — (Punch.) — HPE 
"Alas!  how  bitter  are  the  wrongs  of  love." — Anon. — 

GG 


22 


TITLE    INDEX 


All 


"Alas!  how  few  of  nature's  faces  are  left  to  gladdeD  us 

with  their  beauty." — C:  Dickens. — GG 
Alas!     How   Light   a  Cause  May  Move. — T:   Moore. 

See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Alas  the  Songs!— J :  W.  De  Lys.— FLS 
Alasco  to  his  Countrymen.     (Fr.  Alasco.) — Sir  Martin 

A.  Shee.— PS 
Alastor;  or,  the  Spirit  of  Solitude,  Sel.  jr. — Percy  B. 
Shelley.— WEP  4 
(Invocation  to  Nature — briefer  sel.) — GP 
Albatross.— C:  Warren  Stoddard.— AA — SN 
Albatross,  The. — Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Albert  Drecker.— T:  J.  Hyatt.— SR  2 
Albert  Graeme's  Song. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lay  of  the 

Last  Minstrel. 
Albert  Sidney  Johnston. — Kate  Brownlee  Sherwood. — 
EDY 
•  Albert  the  Good. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the 
King. 
Albert's  Rehearsal. — Anon. — MFD 
Albino. — Ambrose  Philips. — EP 

Albion's  England,  Sel.  fr.     (Before  the  Battle  of  Hast- 
ings.)—W:  Warner.— WEP  1 
Alborak.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Album  Quilt,  An. — Anon. — EuE 
Album  Verses.  (C.) — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 
(Why  They  Twinkle.)— DCP—SAE 
Album  Verses. — Washington  Irving. — GP 
Alciphron  and  Leucippe. — Walter  S.  Landor. — OB 
Alcoholic    and    Tobacco    Habit,    The. — Neal    Dow. — 

BLP 
Alcyone. — Frances  L.  Mace. — AA 
Alec  Dunham's  Boat.— C:  H:  Webb.— TAV 
Alec  Yeaton's  Son.— Thos.  B.  Aldrich.— BFV 
Alex  tells  a  Bear  Story. — Jas.  W.  Riley.— CW 

(Bear  Story,  The.)— RCR 
Alexander. — Alexander  Geddes. — CS  37 
Alexander,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Nath.  (?)  Lee. — AE 
Alexander  and  Campaspe  (or  Campaspe),  Sets.  fr. — 
J:  Lyly. 
Animate  Nature  (Song — C. — fr.  Act  III.,Sc.  6.). — 
BNL 
(Songs  of  Birds,  The.)— FEP 
(Spring,  The.)— YBF 

( Spring's  Welcome.  )—ELP—EP—ES— OB 
(Song:    "What  bird  so  sings,  yet  does  so  wail?") 
— OEL 
Apelles'    Song    (Song    by    Apelles — C). — ELP — 
WEP  1 
(Cards  and  Kisses.) — OB 
(Cupid      and      Campaspe.)— BNL— CEL—ES— 

FEP— GP— PGT  1— YBF 
(Cupid  and  my  Campaspe  Played.) — OEL 
Alexander  and  the  Robber. — J:  Gower.     See  Confessio 

Amantis,  The. 
Alexander    Breaking    Bucephalus. — G:    L.    Taylor. — 

WR5 
Alexander  Mackenzie. — Elizabeth  S.  Macleod. — TCV 
Alexander  II.     (Sonnet:     Czar  Alexander  the  Second 

—C.)— Dante  G.  Rossetti.- EDY 
Alexander  Selkirk. — W :  Cowper. — OS  2 

(Solitude  of  Alexander  Selkirk,  The.)— BPB 

(Sel.)— TGT  1— PSR 
(Verses   Supposed    to    be    Written    by   Alexander 
Selkirk— C.)—  BNL  —  CGd  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 
MBL— WCLG  2 
Alexander    Taming    Bucephalus. — Park    Benjamin. — 

CS  15 
Alexander  the  Great  to  his  Men. — Quintus  Curtius. —  PS 
Alexander  Ypsilanti. — Anon. — EA 
Alexander's    Feast ;    or.    The    Power    of    Music. — J : 
Drvden.— BFV  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  BS  17— 
EDY—  ELP  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  LH— 
PGT  1— WCLG  2— WEP  2 
(Sel.)— GN— OS  3— SE 
Alexander's  Store. — Marietta  Holley.      See  My  Opin- 
ions and  Betsey  Bobbet's. 
Alexandra. — Alfred  Tennyson. — SE  (aej.) 

(Welcome  to  Alexandra,  A.— C.)— EDY— SO 
"Alexis,  here  she  stay'd;    among    these  pines." — W: 

Drummond.     See  Spring  Bereaved,  III. 
Alfred,  Sel.  fr. — Jas.  Thonison.     See  Rule  Britannia. 
Alfred.- — -W-  Wordsworth.     See  below. 
Alfred  and  his  Descendants.      (Ecclesiastical  Sonnets, 
Pt.  I.,  Sons.  XXVI.  and  XXVII.)— W:  Words- 
worth.—EHT 
( Al  f  red— XX  VI . )— ED  Y 
Alfred  the  Great;  or.  The  Patriot  King,  Sel.  fr.  (Alfred 
the  Great  to  his  Men — br.  sel.  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  3; 
.•e«.   fr.  v.,   2.)— Jas.   S.   Knowles.— PS— SS— 
TMD 


Alfred  the  Great  to  His  Men. — Jas.  S.  Knowles. — See 

foregoing. 
Alfred  the  Harper.- J :  Sterling.— BNL— EPs— HBP 
Alhama. — Anon.  (tr.  by  Lord  Byron). — LH 
(Siege  and  Conquest  of  Alhama — sel.) — EPs 
(Very  Mournfu  IBallad  on  the  Siege  and  Conquest 
of  Alhama,  A.— C.).— FEP— HBP 
Alhambra,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Washington  Irving. 
Governor  and  the  Notary,  The. — WCLG  1 
Governor  Manco  and  the  Soldier. — WCLI  2 
Legend  of  the  Enchanted  Soldier,  The. — WCLG  1 
Legend  of  the  Moor's  Legacy. — WCLG  1 
Moonlight    on  the  Alhambra.    (Fr.  The  Author's 
Chamber) . — I R 
Alice  Ayres. — Emelia  A.  Blake. — DES 
Alice   Brand. — Walter  Scott.     See  Eady  of  the  Lake 

The. 
Alice  Du  Clos.  (SeZ.)— Samuel  T.  Coleridge.— WR  9 
Alice  Fell;  or,  Poverty. — W:  Wordsworth. — CGd 
Alice  Maude. — Anon. — WR  7 

Alice  of  Monmouth,  Sels.  fr. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. 
Alice  of  Monmouth,  Sel.  fr. — BIL 
Cavalry  Song.—  AWB  —  BNL  —  MRS  —  PAPm— 
PEO 
Alice     of   Old   Vincennes,   Sel.    fr.     (Alice's   Flag.)— 

Maurice  Thompson. — NP 
Alice  Ray. — Sarah  Josepha  Hale. — AA 
Alice's  Adventures  in  Wonderland,  Sfi.  fr. — Lewis  Car- 
roll. 
Lobster  Quadrille,  A.    (Whiting  and  the  Snail,  The 
—C.—fr.  Ch.  X.)— PoR 
Alice's  Choice. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Alice's  Flag. — Maurice  Thompson.      See  Alice  of  Old 

Vincennes. 
Alice's  Party.— Eliza  Doolittle.— StD 
Alicia's  Bonnet. — Elisabeth  J.  (C.)  Pullcn. — AA 
Aline's  Love  Song. — Emma  Dunnmg  Banks. — BR 
Alison. — Anon. — OB 
Alison  Gross. — Anon. — BB 
AIL— Fs.  A.  Durivage.— PYO 
All   about  the  Weather.— Anon. — CS  26 
All  about  Two  Dolls. — Anon.— HVD 
All  at  Sea.— H.   G.  Fiske,  G:  Vandenhoff  and  C.  L. 

Burnham.- DDM 
All  Before.— Anon.— GP 

(Grief  for  the  Dead.)— BNL 
All     Earthly  Joy   Returns  in   Pain. — W:   Dunbar. — 

HBP 
All  Ending  in  "O."— A.  F.  Caldwell.— WR  17 
All  for  a  Man.— Helen  M.  Winslow.— WR  22 
All  for  Love.— Lord  Byron.— PGT  1— YBF 
(Stanzas:     "O  talk  not  "  etc.)— FEP— HBP 
(Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road  Between  Florence 
and  Pisa— C.).— BPB— WEP  4 
All  for  You.— S:  M.  Peck.— FTA 
All  Good-night.- Anon.— YBT 
"All     great    ages   have    been    ages    of   belief."     (Fr. 

Worship.)- Ralph  W.  Emerson.— FHS 
All  Happy  in  Spring. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
All  HoUow.— Anon.— BS  16 

All  in  der  Family. — McDermott  and  Trumble. — DSS 
All  in  the  Wind.— R.  E.  Gibbs.— CG  3 
All  is  Vanity,  Saith  the  Preacher.     (In  Hebrew  Melo- 
dies.)— Lord  Byron. — FP 
All  is  Well. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
All  Mankind  are  Trees. — Anon. — WR  4 
All  Mother.— Eliza  S.  Turner.— OH 
All  on  One  Side. — Harry  Romaine. — TL 
"All  Other  Joys." — G:  Meredith.     See  Modern  Love. 
All  Quiet  along  the  Potomac.     Ethel  L.  Beers. — AA— 
FEP 
(Picket    Guard,    The.)— AWB— BNL— CR— CS  2 
(at.  to  L.  Fontaine)— HSSl— MR  — PAP  — 
PAPm— WRD 
All  Right  at  Last.— E.  H.  Trafton.— MD 
All  said,  still  say  the  same. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See 

Astrophel  and  Stella. 
All  Saints.     See  All-Saints. 
All  Saints'  Day.     (In  The  Christian  Year.) — J-  Keble. 

—WEP  4 
All  Sorts.— Anon.— GH 

All  Souls'  Day. — Rosamond  M.  Watson. — EDY 
All  Souls'  Night.— Dora  Sigerson.— TIP— VA 
All  that  Glitters  is  not  Gold. — S.  A.  Frost.     See  Pro- 
verb, A. 
All  the  Children.— Anon.— CS  26 
"All  the  Comforts  of  a  Home."     (Dial.) — F.  Crosby.— 

PD 
All  the  Good  We  Can.— G:  Cooper.— HSS  2 
"All  the  rich  treasures  of  the  past  are  appropriated  by 

Christianity." — Prof.  —  Cocker. — GG 
All  the  Same.— F.  E.  Weatherly.— CS  36 


23 


All 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


All  the  Same  in  the  End. — Isaac  Ross. — HP 

(Song    on     King     William    III.,  A. — Anon. — diff. 

vers.) — NA 
All  the  World's  a  :^aud. — Anon. — FAS 
All  the  World's  a  Stage. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  As 

You  Like  It. 
All  the  Year  Round.— Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — BIL — 

FTA 
All  Things.— Cecil     F.     Alexander.     See    All    Things 

Bright  and  Beautiful. 
All  Things   Beautiful.— Cecil   F.   Alexander.     See  All 

Things  Bright  and  Beautiful. 
All  Things  Bright  and  Beautiful. — Cecil  F.  Alexander. 

— PoR 
(All  Things— scZ.)—DST 

(All  Things  Beautiful— seZ.)— AD— HSS  2— WCL 
AU  Things  Bright  and  Beautiful.^J :  Keble.— YBT 
"All  things  have  something  more  than  barren  use." — 

Alexander  Smith. — GG 
All  Things  Love  Me. — "A."  See  Little  Girls'  Fancies,  A. 
All  Things    Shall    Pass    Away. — Theodore    Tilton.— 

BS  20— TMR 
(Even  This  shall  Pass  Away.) — DR — HBR 
(King's  Ring,  The.)— OS  2 
All  Things  to  All  Men.— Robert  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
All  Things  Wait  upon  Thee. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — 

GN 
AU  Together.— Alice  M.  Eddy.— YBT 
All  Upset.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
"All  we    Ask  is  to  be  Let  alone." — H:  H.  Brownell. — 

CS  1 
(Let  us  Alone.— O— AWH 
(Old  Cove,  The.)— EPs 
All  Well.— Horatius  Bonar.     See  All's  Well. 
All  Yellow. — Anon.— AD 
Allah's  House.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— TAS 
Allan  Percy. — Caroline  Norton. — HBP 
All-around  Intellectual  Man,  An. — Tom  Masson.     See 

All-round  Intellectual  Man,  An 
AUen-a-Dale. — Walter  Scott.     See  Rokeby. 
"Allow  for  the  Crawl."     A  Homily. — J:  G.  Saxe. — 

SR  1 
All-round  Intellectual  Man,  An. — Tom  Masson. — PR — 

YA 
(All-around  Intellectual  Man,  An.) — CS  31 
All's  for  the  Best. — Martin  F.  Tupper. — CS  6 
All's  Well.    (O— Horatius  Bonar. 

(All  Well.)— HBP 
All's  Weill— W:  A.  Butler.— HBP 
All's  Well.     {Fr.  The  British  Fleet).— T:    Dibdin.— 

BNL 
All's  Well.— Harriet  M.  Kimball.— AA—CS  8—  FEP— 

TAS 
All's  Well.     (O— Celia  Thaxter. 

(Shadow  of  Doom,  The.)— BS  11 
All's  Well.— Davis  A.  Wasson.— TAS 
All's  Well  that  Ends  Well,  Sels.  fr.—W:  Shakespeare. 
Mother's  Blessing.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  1.) —  EPs 
True  Love  {Sel.  fr.  I.,  1.).— EPs 
(Love's  Memory — abr.) — BNL 
All-Saints.  (C.)— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— TAS 

(All-Saints  Day.)— EDY 
All-Saints'  Day.     See  also  All  Saints. 
Alma. — Sir  Franklin  Lushington. — AVP 
Alma.— R:  C.  Trench.— EDY 
Alma  Mater. — Anon. — CP 
Alma  Mater's  Roll.— E:  E.  Hale. — AA 
Almighty  Love,  The. — Theodore  Parker.— TAS 
AlmiryAnn. — Anon. — WR  12 
Almon  Keeper. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Almond  Blossom.  (April — C.) — Edwin  Arnold. — BNL 

— CEL— FEP— GN 
Almost  a  Man.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— COS— PP— PS 
Almost  a  Mormon.  (Dial.) — C:  S.  Wayne. — CDs 
Almost  a  Runaway. — Clara  Denton. — I/PD 
Almost  a  Tragedy.     (Dial.)— "Boh  o'Link."— DDD 
Almost  a  Tragedy. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Almost  Time. — Anon. — NV 
Alms,  An. — Ivan  Tourgenieff. — WR  9 
Alnwick     Castle.  —  Fitz  -  Greene     Halleck.  —  AA  — 

BNL  (a6r.)— FEP 
Alone. — Anon. — NA 
Alone.     (O— Edgar  A.  Poe. 

("From  childhood's  hour    I    have    not    been    as 

others  are.") — FP 
Alone  by  the  Bay. — Louise  Chandler  Moulton. — GP 
Alone  by  the  Hearth. — G:  Arnold. — GP 
Alone  with  God. — Anon. — SSS 
Along  Shore. — Herbert  Bashford. — AA 
"Along  the  Line." — Irwin  RuRsell. — WR  21 
Alonzo  the  Brave  and  the  Fair  Imogine. — Matthew  G. 

Lewis.— BNL— CS  7— FEP— PEB  3— SA 


-CPL 


Aloof. — Christina  G.  RossettL — OB 

(Thread  of  Life,  The— C.)— VA   • 
Alphabet  of  Summer,  The. — ^Mrs.  J.  M.  Dana. 
Alphabet  Practice. — Anon. — DLD 
Alphabetical  Sermon. — G.  Kyle. — WR  3 
Alpheus  and  Arethusa. — Eugene  H.  Daly. — AA 
Alpine  Heights. — Friederich  W.  Krummacher  (tr.   by 

C.  T.  Brooks).- BNL 
Alpine   Minstrelsy. — Friedrich  Schiller.     See  William 

Tell. 
Alpine  Sheep,  The.— Maria  W.  I-owell.— FEP— TAS 
Alps,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  Montgomery. 
Alps,  The.     (Pt.  I.— Day.— aftr.)- POS 
Evening  in  the  Alps.     (Pt.  II.— Night.)— HBP 
Alps,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Italy.)— S:  Rogers.— BNL 
Alp's  Decision. — Lord  Byron.     See  Siege  of  Corinth, 

The. 
Alter  Ego.— J :  B.  Tabb.— TAS 
Alton  Locke,  Sel.  fr. — C:  Kingsley.     See  Sands  of  Dee. 

The. 
Altruism. — Robertson  Trowbridge. — BS  2 
Alulvan.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Always  in  a  Hurry.^Priscilla  Leonard. — PS 
Always  Learning. — Anon. — SSS 
Always  Some  One  Below. — Ella  Higginson. — HSS  3 

(Helping  Hand,  A.)— WR  15 
Always  too  Late. — Anon. — FAD 
"Am  Life  Wuf  de  Libin."       (Detroit  Free  Press.) — 

SR3 
Amala's  Bridal  Song. — ^T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Death's 

Jest  Book. 
Amantium  Irae. — S:  Butler. — See  Hudibras. 
Amantium     Irae.     (Fr.     The     Paradyse     of     Dainty 

Devises.)— R.  Edwards.— OB— WEP  1  (abr.) 
Amariah  and  his  Boys. — Anon. — MC 
Amaryllis. — Anon. — CS  .34 

Amaryllis  [or  Amarillis]. — T :  Campion. — EP — OEL 
Amateur  Farming. — Anon. — FHE 
Amateur  Flute-player,  The.     (Parody   on  Poe's  The 
Bells.)— Anon.— CH 
(That  Amateur  Flute.)- HP 
Amateur  Orlando,  The.— G:  T:  Lanigan.— THP 
Amateur  Photography. — Nathan    H.    Dole. — BS  19 — 

WR  2 
Amateur  Rehearsals;  or,  the  Detectives'  Dilemma. — 

Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KH 
Amatory  Sonnets  of  Abel  Shufflebottom,  The. — Rob't 
Southey. 
Delia  at  Play.     (Sonnet  I.)— HPE 
Poet  Expresses  his  Feelings  Respecting  a  Portrait, 

etc.     (Sonnet  III.)— HPE 
Poet  Proves  the  Existence  of  a  Soul,  etc.     (Sonnet 
IV.)— HPE 
Amaturus. — W.  Johnson-Cory — PGT  2 
A-Maying. — Anon. — ELP 

Amazing,   Beauteous    Change! — Philip    Doddridge. — 
BNL 
(Wilderness  Transformed,  The.)— HBP 
Ambition. — Anon. — DLS 
Ambition.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FDY 
Ambition. — Anon. — TT 

Ambition.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Ambition. — Lord    Byron.     See    Childe    Harold's    Pil- 
grimage. 
Ambition. — Horace  Greeley. — OS  2 

(Self-sacrificing  Ambition.) — BLP 
Ambition.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Tamburlaine  the  Great,  Pt.  I., 
Act  II.,  Sc.  7.) — Christopher  Marlowe.— KNE 
Ambition  of  a  Statesman.     (Sel.  fr.  Speech  at  the  Bar- 
becue at  Lexington  in  Honor  of  Mr.  Clay.) — H  • 
Clay.— FTR— OM— WR  26 
(My  Ambition.)— SO 
Ambitious. — Silvia  Manning. — DJS 

(Concert  Recitation.) — DLS 
Ambitious  Marguerite,     The. — Agnes     Carr     Sage. — 

WR  7 
Ambitious  Sophy. — Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 
Ambitious  Youth,  The.     (SI.  diff.  versions.)  —  Elihu 
Burritt.— WRD 
(One  Niche  the  Highest.)— CS  7— PFP— SC 
(Scene  at  the  Natural  Bridge.) — CR 
Amboyna;  or.  The  Cruelties  of  the  Dutch  to  the  Eng- 
lish Merchants,  Prologue  and  Epilogue  to. — J: 
Dryden. 
(Satire  on  the  Dutch — abr.) — ESs 
Amelia. — Coventry  Patmore. — PGT  2 
Amen.     F.  G.  Browning. — SSS 

("I  do  not  see  why  God  should  e'en  permit  some 
things  to  be" — br.  sel.) — HDL 
Amen  of  the  Rocks,  The. — Chr.  Gellert  (tr.  by  Rosegar- 

ten).— CS  2— PEO  (diff.  tr.) 
Amende  Honorable,  The.     (Punch.)— BPE 


24 


TITLE    INDEX 


American 


Amendment  to  the  Address  of  Thanks  on  the  King's 

Speech  at  the  Opening  of  the  Session,  Nov. 

27,   1781,  Sel.  Ir.      (Results  of  the  American 

War.)— C:J.  Fox.— SS 
Amendment  to  the  Address  on  the  King's  Speech  at 

the  Opening  of  the  Session,  Nov.  26,  1778,  Sel. 

jr.     (On  War  with  France  or  America,  1778.) 

— C:  J.iFox.— PS 
America.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
America.     (Fr.  The  Torch   Bearers.)— Arlo   Bates. — 

AA 
America. — G:  Berkeley. — SS 
(American  Destiny.) — BLP 
(Old  World  and  the  New,  The.)— FP 
(On  the  Prospect  of  Planting  Art  and  liearning  in 

America.)— BNL— FEP— HBP— YBF 
(Verse:  Westward  the  Star  of   Empire — br.  sel.) — 

EPs 
(Westward  the  Course  of    Empire — abr.) — GP 
America.— W:  C.  Bryant.— AA— BNL 

(O  Mother  of  a  Mighty  Race— C.)— HBP 
America.     (Fr.  The  Ages.)— W:  C.  Bryant.— CS  17— 

WR  10 
America.— S:  S.  Cox.— FS 
America.     (2  sonnets.) — Sydney  Dobell. — WEP  4 

(2nd  son.  only.) — VA 
America. — Timothy  Dwight. — LLC 
America. — Sidney  "Lanier.     See  Centennial  Meditation 

of  Columbia,  The. 
America. — J:  E.  McCann. — BS  15" 
America.— C:  Phillips.— CS  6— PRR 
(American  Republic,  The.)— LLC 
(Destiny  of  America.)— BS  14 — OM  (abr.) 
(Panegyric  on  America — sel.) — FD  1 
America. — -Jeremiah  E.  Rankin. — BLP 
America. — S:  F.  Smith. — PAPm 

(SeZ.)- AA— CP— FEP— SM— TAV— WCLI  2 
(My  Country  'tis  of    Thee— seZ.)- BS  6— LLC— 

SAE— SPE 
(National  Hymn — sel.) — OS  1 
America,  Sel.  fr.     (Taxes  [the  Price  of  Glory].) — Syd- 
ney Smith.— SS—SSD 
America. — Barry  Straton. — TCV 
America. — Bayard  Taylor.     See  National  Ode,  The. 
America  an  Aggregate  of  Nations. — Martin  F.  Tupper. 

—BLP 
America  and  England. — Washington  Irving. — SO 
America  and    England    in    Danger    of    War. — G:    E: 

Woodberry.     See  America  to  England. 
America  in  Pinafore. — Julia  A.  Walcott. — SR  11 
America  the   Child   of   Destiny. — Cassius   M.    Clay. — 

BLP 
America  to  England.     (America  and  England  in  Dan- 
ger of   War— C— Pt.  II.)— G:  E:  Woodberry. 

— AA 
America  to    Great    Britain. — Washington    Allston. — 

AA— BNL— SS— WR  10 
America  Unconquerable. — W:    Pitt,    Lord    Chatham. 

See  American  War,  The. 
American   Absent-minded     Beggars,     The. — Anon. — 

BS26 
American  Age,  The. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop.     See  Centen- 
nial Oration. 
American  and  the  Corsican,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  John  Quincy 

Adams.)— W:  H.  Seward.— NC 
(Corsican  not  Content,  The— a6r.)— WCLG  1 
American  Battle-flags. — Carl  Schurz.     See  Eulogy  on 

Charles  Sumner. 
American  Boy,  The. — Caroline  Oilman. — PS 
American  Citizenship,  its  Privileges,  Rights  and  Duties. 

— E.  I.  Galvin.— SR  8 
American  Constitution,    The. — Alex.  Hamilton.      See 

Speech  on  the  Compromises  of  the  Constitution. 
American   Constitution   no   Experiment,   The. — Hugh 

S.  Legare.— BLP 
(Constitution  of  the  United  States  not  an  Experi- 
ment, The.)— SS 
American    Constitution    Tested,    The. — J:    Adams. — 

BLP 
American  Courage. — Sherman  Hoar. — MRS 
American  Destiny. — G:  Berkeley.     See  America. 
American  Eagle,  The. — Anon.^PTS 
American  Eagle,  The.     (Abr.?) — C:  W.  Thompson. — 

CS28 
(Br.  sel. — not  in  foregoing.) — DFR 
American  Education.     (Sel.  fr.  Free  Schools  and  Free 

Governments.) — Rob't  C:  Winthrop. — BLP 
American  Example. — Rob't  C:  Winthrop.     See  Hun- 

dreth  Anniversary  of  the  Surrender  of  Lord 

Cornwallis,  The. 
American  Exile,    An.— I.    H.    Brown.— BS  19— CS  22 

—PRR 


American  Experiment  of  Self-government,  The.     (Sel. 
fr.  The  Circumstances   Favorable  to  the  Pro- 
gress of  Literature  in  America.) — E:  Everett. — 
SS— SSD— TMD 
(Our  Republic.)— SO 

(Prospects  of  the  Republic,  The — longer.) — BS  11 — 
SR4 
American  Flag,   The.     (Concert   rec.) — Anon. — LPS — 

PP 
American  Flag,  The. — H:  W.  Beecher.     See  National 

Flag,  The. 
American  Flag,    The.    (C.) — Jos.    R.    Drake. — AA — 
BNL— BS  3  — CS  1  — DFR  — EDY  — FEP  — 
FTR— GMS— GN  (aeZ.)- GP— HBP  — LLC- 
OM- PAP— PPSr-SE— SM— SS-WCLG  1  — 
WRD 
(Br.  sel.)— OS  1— SAE 
(Flag  of  the  Free— br.  «eZ.)— PRR 
(Ode  to  the  American  Flag.)— PEO— SR  8 
American  Flag,  The.— Lena  E.  Faulds.- WR  17 
American    Flag,    The.— A.    P.    Putnam.— PP—YFR 
American  Flag,  The. — C :  Sumner.  See  Are  we  a  Nation? 
American  Forest    Girl,    The. — Felicia   D.    Hemans. — 

CS37 
American  Freedom. — Jeremiah    W.    Cummings.     See 

Song  of  the  Union. 
American  Girl,  An. — Brander  Matthews. — AA 
American  Giri,  The.— S.  F.  P.— CG  2 
American  Government,  The. — J :  Bright.     See  Strength 

of  the  American  Government,  The. 
American  History. — Gulian  C.  Verplanck. — SR  8 

(Our  History— abr.)— BLP 
American  Home,  The.— G:  W.  Bain.— WR  18 
American  Hymn. — Matthias  Keller. — BLP 
American  Ideals. — Anon. — CP 
American  Independence. — S :  Adams. — EAO 

(Necessity  of  Independence,  The — sel.) — TMD 
American  Indian,  The. — C :  Sprague.    See  North  Amer- 
ican Indians. 
American  Indians,  The. — Jos.  Story.    See  Indians,  The. 
American  Innovations. — Jas.  Madison. — SS 
American  Laborers. — C.  C.  Naylor. — SS 

(Northern  Laborers — abr.) — OM 
American  Liberty. — S :  Adams. — OS  2 
American  Merchant  Vessels. — R :  Cobden. — SS 
American  Nationality,  Sels.  Jr. — Rufus  Choate. 

American  Nationality.     (2  diff.  sels.) — BLP — TMR 
Love  of  Country.— FD  2 
National  Life.— TMR 
(Nationality.)— PRR 
American  Notes,  Sel.  fr.  (Impressions  of  Niagara — fr. 
Ch.  XIV.)— C:  Dickens.— CS  20 
(Niagara  Falls— abr.)— BS  15 
American  Partridge,  The.  (Southern  Collegian.) —  CG  2 
American  Patriotism. — Horace  Porter. — TMR 
American  Patriot's  Song,  The. — Anon. — PPSr 
American  Republic,  The. — C:  Phillips.     See  America. 
American  Republic:  its  Dangers  and  Responsibilities, 
The,  Sel.  fr.   (Liberty.)— H:  George.— SSD— 
TMD  (ptly.  same.) 
American  Rights. — Jos.  Warren. — TMD 
American  Sailor,  The. — Rob't  F.  Stockton.  See  Against 

Flogging  in  the  Navy. 
American  Sam  Weller,  An. — Anon. — SR  3 
American  Scholar,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 

—MRS 
American   Shipbuilding.     (Set.  fr.  Encouragement  to 
American    Ship-budding    and  the  Revival    of 
American  Commerce  on  the  Ocean.) — Jas.   G. 
Blaine.— NC 
American  Specimen,  An. — S:  L.  Clemens.    See  Tramp 

Abroad,  A. 
American  Taxation.     (Fr.  Speech  on  American  Taxa- 
tion.)—Edmund  Burke.— PPS 
(On  American  Taxation — sel.) — SS 
American  to    His    Mother,    An.     (Boston    Journal.) — 

PAPm 
American  Tract  Society,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Slavery.) — Jas. 

R.  Lowell.— OS  3 
American  Traveler,   The. — Rob't  H.    Newell. — AWH 

— CS  16— THP 
American  War,  The.— W:  Pitt,  Lord  Chatham.— BS  7 
— SR8 
(Speech  on  the  American  War.) — IR — SO 
(On  the  American  War — si.  abr.) — SSD 
(Against  Employing  Indians  in  War — sel.) — SS 
(American  War,  The— seZ.)- SE— SPE 
(Employment  of  Indians  in  the  American  War— 

sel.)— OM 
(Horrors  of  Savage  Warfare — abr.) — FTR 
(America  Unconquerable — sel.) — LLC — SS 

(Consequences  of  the  American  War — sel.) — OM 


25 


American 


AN  II^DEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


American  War,  The  (continued). 

(Lord  Chatham  against  the  American  War — »«Z.) 

— KNE— TMD 
(On  Conquering  America — fcr.  «eZ.) — PP — YFR 
(On  the  American  Revolution — ael.) — OS  3 
(On  the  American  War — ael.) — FD  1 
(War  with  America,  The— 8cZ. )—SC 
American  War. — C:  J.  Fox.     See  Results  of  the  Amer- 
ican War. 
American  War   Denounced,  The,   1781.— W:  Pitt,  the 

younoer.—FS—SS 
Americanism.— H:  C.  Lodge.— NC—PEO—PFP 
Americanism.      (Fr.   True    Americanism.) — Theodore 

Roosevelt.— TMR 
American's  Farewell,  The. — G:  M.  Vickers. — PS 
America's  Contributions   to    the    World. — Gulian    C. 
Verplanck.— SS 
(Land  of  Benedictions.) — LLC 
America's  Duty  to    Greece. — H:    Clay.     See  On  the 

Greek  Revolution. 
America's  Gifts    to    Europe.  —  Dan'l    Webster.     See 

Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument. 
America's  Greatness.  —  Dan'l  Webster.     See    Adams 

and  Jefferson. 
America's  Mission. — Albert  J.  Beveridge. — SC 
America's  Obligations  to  England . — Colonel  Barr^. — 
SS 
(SeL)— PP— YFR 
America's  True  Greatness.     (Sel.  fr.  The  True  Great- 
ness of  our  Country.) — W:  H.  Seward. — SR  8 
(Home  and  School  the  Bulwark  of  our  Country.) — 
FD  2 
Amico  Suo. — Herbert  P.  Home. — VA 
Amnesty  of  Jefferson  Davis,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Shall  Jef- 
ferson Davis  be  Restored  to  Full  Citizenship?) 
— Jas.  G.  Blaine.— NC 
Among  Green,    Pleasant  Meadows. — Johann  G.  von 
Herder  (tr.  by  Howitt).— WCL 
(Ballad.)— PHS 
Among  my  Books. — Mark  Houston. — CG  3 
Among  my  Books.- S:  M.  Peck.— LBB— MBB 
Among  my   Books. — Fs.    St.    Clair    Erskine,    Earl   of 

Rosslyn.— LBB— MBB 
Among  my  Books. — Alexander  Smith. — LLC 
Among  the  Animals. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — COS — 

PP— PS 
Among  the    Beautiful    Pictures. — Alice    Gary. — FP — 
HBP 
(Little  Brother,  The.)— WCL 
(Pictures    of    Memory— C.)—BNL—CR—CS    4— 

FTR— GP— HNS— SAE  (br.  seZ.)- SM— SPE 
(Sweetest  Picture,  The.)— BS  14 
Among  the  Heather.— G:  Arnold.— BIL— FT  A— TFY 
Among  the  Hills.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AP— SN  (sel.) 
(Sketches— Prelude. )— LLC 
(Wife,  The— seZ.)- CS  2 
Among  the  Millet. — Archibald  Lampman. — TCV 
Among  the    Mountains. — W :    Wordsworth.     See    Ex- 
cursion, The. 
Among  the  Redwoods.— E:  R.  Sill.— BNL 
Among  the  Sand-hills. — W:  Alexander. — TIP 
Among  the  Trees.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Among  the  Trees.     (SI.  abr.)—W :  C.  Bryant.— AD 
Amor  Omnia    Vincit. — W:    Shakespeare. — FTA — OH 
(Consolation,  A.)— PGT  1— PHS 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (II.) 
(Sonnet  XXIX.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
(When  in  Disgrace.)— BS  25— PYO— WR  23 
Amoret.     (Ode  VIII.  C.—abr.) — Mark  Akenside.— OB 
Amoret.  (C.)— W:  Congreve.— FEP— WEP  3 
(Hue  and  Cry  after  Fair  Amoret,  A.)— OB 
Amoretti  and  Epithalamion,  Sel«.  fr. — Edmund  Spen- 
ser. 
Easter.- OBI 

(Easter  Morning.) — CEL— EDY 
(Sonnet  LXVIIL— C.)— ELP 
Her  Eyes.     (Sonnet  IX.)— CEL 
Herself  all  Treasure.     (XV.)— CEL 
"Like     as     the     culver    on    the    bar6d    bough." 

(LXXXVIII.)— FEP 
Our  Love  shall  Live.     (LXXV.)— HBP 
Sonnet:  "Fayre  is  my  love,"   etc.     (LXXXI.) — 

PHS 
Sonnet:  "Fresh  Spring,  the  herald,"  etc.     (LXX.) 
—ELP 
(WhUst  it  is  Prime.)— OB 
Sonnet:  "Joy    of    my    life,"    etc.     (LXXXII.) — 

WEP  1 
Sonnet:  "Lackyng  my  love,"  etc.     (LXXVIII.) — 

PHS 
Sonnet:  "Like  [or  Lyke]  as  a  ship,"  etc.    (XXXIV.) 
— ELP— WeP  1 


Amoretti  and  Epithalamion  (continued). 

Sonnet:  "Men  call  you  fair,"  etc.     (LXXIX.) — 

ELP 
Sonnet:  "More   than   most   fair,"   etc.     (VIII.)— 

ELP 
Sonnet:  "Sweet      Smile!     the     daughter,"     etc. 

(XXXIX.)— WEP  1 
Sonnet:  "The    doubt    which    ye    misdeem,"    etc. 
(LXV.)— HBP 
("Doubt   which  ye  misdeem,  fair    love,   The.") 
—FEP 
Sonnet:  "Thrise  happie  she,"  etc.     (LIX.) — PHS 
Sonnet:  "What  guyle  is  this,"  etc.     (XXXVII.) 

—WEP  1 
Sweet  and  Bitter.     (XXVI.)— CEL 

("Sweet  is  the  ro8e[,  but  grows  upon  a  brere].") 
—FEP— OS  3 
To  his  Book.     Of  his  Lady.     (I.)— LBB 
Amos  Cottle.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Amoure  Laments   the    Absence  of  La  Belle  Pucel. — 
Stephen  Hawes.    See  Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The. 
Amours  de  Voyage,  Sela.  fr. — Arthur  H.  Clough. 
Claude  to  Eustace.     (Sel.  fr.  Can.  I.,  5.)— AVP 
Epilogue.— AVP 
Juxtaposition.     (III.,  6.) — VA 
Amphibian. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Fifine  at  the  Fair. 
Amphion.— Alfred  Tennyson.— AD  (br.  sel.)— V/Chl  2 

— WR25 
Amulet,  The.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— OH 
Amusement  Circle,  .The. — Anon. — FAD 
Amy. — Jas.  M.  Legar^. — AA 
Amy  Robsart    and    Richard    Varney. — Walter    Scott. 

See  Kenilworth. 
Amy  Wentworth.     (Sel.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— EPs— OH 
Amynta.— Sir  Gilbert  Elliot.— FEP 
Amyntasj  or,  The  Impossible  Dowry,  Sel.  fr.  (Song  ot 
Fairies    Robbing    an  Orchard — C.) — T:  Ran- 
dolph (tr.  by  Leigh  Hunt).— BVC 
(Fairies'  Song.)— BNL 
(Song  of  Fairies.)— FEP— HPB 
An'  thou  Were  my  Ain  Thing,     (/n  Tea  Table  Miscel- 
lany.)—Allan  Ramsay.— WEP  3  (abr.) 
Anacreontic.     (Anacreontike — C.) — Rob't    Ilerrick. — 

ELP 
Anacreontics  (Anacreontiques  —  C),  Sels.  fr. — Anac- 
reon  (tr.  by  Abraham  Cowley). 
Drinking.— FEP— HBP— OB— WEP  2 

("Thirsty  earth  soaks  up  the  rain,  The" — si.  abr.) 
— LC 
Epicure,  The.— OB 
Gold.     See  Change,  The. 

Grasshopper,  The.- BNL— CGd— HBP— LC— PHS 
Swallow,  The.— OB  (seZ.)- WEP  2 
Anacreontique.   (Anacreontic — C.) — T:  Moore.^ — ^.^.^E 
Analysis  of  the  Character  of  Bonaparte. — C:  Phillips. 

See  Napoleon  Bonaparte. 
Anastasis. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — PGT  2 
Anathemata. — Franklin  B.  Sanborn. — EPs 
Anatomical  Tragedian,  The— G:  Kyle.— WR  3 
Anatomy  of  the  World.  Second  Anniversary:    Of  the 
Progress  of  the  Soul,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Elegy  on  Mis- 
tress Elizabeth  Drury.V — J :  Donne. — EPs 
Ancestral  Ideals. — H.  J.  Van  Dyke. — TMD 
Ancestress,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Letitia  E.  Landon. —  BIL 
Ancestry.     (The  Black  Riders,  Poem  XXII.) — Stephen 

Anchorsmiths!  The.— C-  Dibdin.— HBP 

Ancient  and  Modern  Muses,  The. — Fs.  T.  Palgrave. — 

VA 
Ancient  and  Modern  Oratory. — Benson  N.  Wyman. — 

NPS— YP 
Ancient   Greek   Chant  of  Victory.     (C) — Felicia    D. 

Hemans. — SAE 
(Greek's  Return  from  Battle,  The.)— SS 
(Return  from  Battle,  The.)- PP— YFR 
Ancient  Mariner,  The. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Rime  of 

the  Ancient  Mariner,  The. 
Ancient  Miner's  Story,  The.— Will  Carleton.— BS  13 
Ancient  of  Days. — W :  C.  Doane. — AA 
Ancient  Prophecy,  An. — Philip  Freneau. — AWB 
Ancient  Race,  The. — Michael  Tormey. — TIP 
Ancient  Spanish  Lyric. — Anon. — WR  7 
"And  as,  in    sparkling    majesty,    a    star."     (Fr.    To 

Hope.)— J:  Keats.— HP 
And  Doth    not   a   Meeting   Like  This. — T:   Moore. — 

HBP 
"And  every    village  graveyard    will    have   its   green 

mounds." — Putnam. — HSS  1 
"And  I  made  a  rural  pen." — W:  Blake.      See   Intro- 
duction to  "Songs  of  Innocence." 
"And  in  that  twilight  hush,  God  drew  their  hearts." 

Lucy  Larcom. — BIL 


26 


TITLE    INDEX 


Angler's 


And  Joe  Went.     {Denver  Post.)— PAPm 

And  Makes   Nursery   Rhymes. — Jas.    W.    Riley.     <Se« 

Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
"And  now  we  only  ask  to  serve." — M.  E.  Townsend. — 

FHS 
"And  perched  the  glittering,  icy  boughs  among." — 

G.  H.  D.— FHS 
"And  present  gratitude     insures  the  future's  good." 

{Fr.  My  Triumph.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— FHS 
"And  said  I  that  my  limbs  were  old." — Walter  Scott. 

See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel,  The. 
And  She  was  His.— Anon.— WR  20 
"And    shall    the    mortal    sons    of    God."  —  Ebenezer 

Elliott.— AE 
And  the    Band    Played. — Maurice    E.    McLaughlin. — 

CS32 
"And  the  frost,  too,    has   a   melodious    ministry." — 

Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— AE 
And  the    Hammock    Swung    On. — Hamilton    Grey. — 

CG2 
"And  the    newspaper    is    also    the    great    agency    of 

progress." — C.  C.  Bonney. — GG 
"And  this  is  life;  to  live,  to  love,  to  loael" — Anon. — 

GG 
"And  this  man  is  nowbecomea  god." — W :  Shakespeare. 

See  Julius  Caesar. 
And  this,  O  Spain!  is  thy  return." — Marie  J.  Jews- 
bury.     See  Columbus  in  Chains. 
"And  this  thought  will  be  our  comfort." — Charlotte 

Murray.— FHS 
And  Thou  art  Dead,  as  Young  and  Fair.    (C.) — Lord 

Byron.— FEP—WEP  4 
(Elegy  on  Thyrza.)— PGT  1 
(Stanzas.)— FEP 
"And  we,  poor  waifs,  whose  life-term  seems." — Paul 

Hamilton  Hayne. — GG 
"And  while,  some  books,  like  steps,  are  left  behind 

us." — H:  W.  Beecher.— GG 
And  Yet— and  Yet! — Omar  Khayyam  (E:  Fitzgerald). 

See    Rubaiy&t,  The. 
Andalusian  Sereno,  The.^Fs.  S.  Saltus. — AA 
Andr^  and     Hale. — Chauncey     M.     Depew. — CS  36 — 

NC  (d.  obr.)— PR 
(Captain  Hale  and  Major  Andr^.) — FD  2 
(Two    Spies,    Andr^    and    Hale,    The.)— SR  12— 

TMD 
Andre's  I^ast   Request. — Nathaniel  P.  Willis.     See  fol- 
lowing. 
Andre's  Request  to  Washington.  (C.) — Nathaniel  P. 

Willis. 
(Andrew's  Last  Request.) — OS  2 
Andrew. — T:  W.  Parsons. — AA 
Andrew  Hofer. — Julius  Mosen. — EDY — OS  1 

(Death  of  Hofer,  The— <r.  by  Mangan.)— CS  14 
(Hofer  the  Tyrolese- «Z.  a6r.)— PS 
Andrew  Jackson. — G:  Lippard. — BS  2 — SR  8 
Andrew  Rykman's Prayer,  Br.  scls.  Jr. — J:  G.  Whittier. 
"Scarcely  Hope  had  shaped  for  me." — HDL 
"Yet  with  hands  by  evil  stained." — FHS 
Andromeda. — T:  B.  Aldrich. — AA 
Andromeda,  SeU.  fr. — C:  Kingsley. 

Andromeda  and  the  Sea-nyiAphs. — VA 
Pallas  in  Olympus.— WEP  4 
Andromeda. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — AA 
Andronike,  Sel.  fr.     (Last  Night  of  Missolonghi,  The.) 

— Anon.  (Ir.  by  Edwin  A.  Grosvenor). —  NC — 

PFP 
Ane  Satyre  of    the  Threi  Estaitis,  Sets.  fr. —  Sir  D : 

Lyndesav. 
Pardoner.- WEP  1 
Pauper.— WEP  1 
Veritie.— WEP  1 
Anemone. — Frank  D.  Sherman. ^-LFL 
Angel,  The.— Anon.— CS  27 
Angel,  The.     (/n  Songs  of  Experience.) — W:  Blake. — 

WEP  3 
Angel,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.- TDT 
Angel,  The.— Jeannette  B.  Gillespy.— CG  3 
Angel  and   the  Shepherds,  The. — Lew  Wallace.     See 

Ben-Hur. 
he  Ford,  The.— W:  J.  Dawson. — VA 
irt.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— TFS 
ith.  The.— W:  Winter.     See  Angel  of  Death, 

Ihe. 
"Anijel  face: — its'  sunny  wealth  of  hair,  An. "    (Br  sel. 

fr.  Woman's  Trust.)  —  Frances  S.  Osgood. — 

BNL 
Angel  Fiices. — Dinah  M.  Mulock. — LLC 
Ange!  Ferry,  The.— H.  S.  Cornwell.— CS  4 
Ansel  in  a  Saloon,  An.     (Western  Temperance  Herald.) 

CS  14 
An«e]  in  the  House,  An.— Leigh  Hunt.— FEP— HBP 

— OH— YBF 


Angel  in  the  House,  The,  SeU.  fr. — Coventry  Patmore. 
Angel  in  the  House,  The.    (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  L,  Can.  4— 

The  Morning  Call.)— BIL 
Dean's  Consent.  The.     (I.,  6— The  Dean.)— VA 
Going  to  Church.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  10.)— BIL— FTA 
Honoria.      (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  3,  and  sel.  fr.  I.,  2— The 

Dance.)— EPs 
Honoria's   Surrender.     (I.,    12 — The   Abdication.) 
— VA 
(Sweet  Meeting  of  Desires — sel.) — BNL 
Joy.     (II.,  7,  Prelude  I.,  abr.)— YBF 
Love  Ceremonious.     (II.,  3,  Prel.  I.) — OH 
Married  Lover,  The.     (II.,  12,  Prels.  I.  and  II.)— 

OB  (abr.)— VA 
Night  Thoughts.     (Sel.  fr.   II.,  5  —  The  Queen's 

Room.)— FTA— OH 
Nunc  Amet  qui  nunquam  Amavit.     (II.,  7,  Prel. 

I.,  afcr.)— PGT  2 
Paradox,  The.     (IL,  6,  Prel.  I.)— OH 
Queen,  The.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  I.,  3 — Honoria,  and  II., 

4 — Love  in  Idleness.) — EPs — OH 
Rose  of  the  World,  The.     (I.,  4,  Prel.  I.)— BNL— 

EPs 
Sentences.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  I.,  11,  Prel.  IL,  and  I.,  V., 

Prel.  III.)— EPs 
"She  was  Mine."     (I.,  7,  Prel.  II.)— BIL' 
Sly  Thoughts.     (I.,  8,  Prel.  lU.—sl.  dt^.)— BNL 

Qg  20 

Tribute,  The.     (I..  4,  Prel.  IL,  si.  abr.)- BNL— 

EPs 
Wisdom.     (I.,  10,  Prel.  I.,  o6r.)— EPs 
Angel  of  Dawn,  The.— J.  S.  Cutler.— PEO  _ 

Angel  of  Death,  The.    (C.—or  Death's  Angel— C.)—W: 
Winter. 
(Angel  Death,  The.)— TAS 
Angel  of  Pain,  The.— Rush  Ellis.— TAS 
Angel  of  Patience,  The. — Anon. — SSS 
Angel  of  Patience,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BNL 
Angel  of  the  Rain.— Harriet  McE.  Kimball. — FP 
"Angel  with  great  joy  received  his  guests.  The." — 
H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  King  Robert  of  Sicily. 
"Angel  wrote  and  vanished.  The." — Leigh  Hunt.     See 

Abou  Ben  Adhem. 
Angelic  Song,  The.— Ivy  English.— PP—YPS 
Angelic    Songs    are   Swelling.  —  (SI.    abr.)   Frd'k  W. 
Faber.— LLC 
(Pilgrims  of  the  Night— C.—«i.  abr.)— HDL 
Angelina. — Anon. — CS  37 
Angelo.     (Sei.)- StuartlSteme.— WR  5 
Angels,  The.— W:  Drummond.— EPs— GN 
Angels. — Gertrude  Hall. — AA 
Angels. — Gerald  Massey. — SSS 
"Angels  Can  Do  no  More." —  Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KJ 
Angels  in  the  House,  The. — Anon. — FP 
Angels  of  Buena  Vista,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.- BS  4— 
CS  3— FEP— FMR— FTR— MRS— SO  (abr.)— 
TMR 
Angels  of  Grief,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  To  my  Friend  on 
the  Death  of  her  Sister.) — J:  G.  Whittier. — 
HDL 
Angels'  Song,  The. — Edmund  H.  Sears. — AA 
(Glorious  Song  of  Old,  The.)— OS  2 
(It    Came    upon    the    Midnight  Clear.)  —  FEP  — 

LLC  (abr.) 
(Peace  on  Earth.)— TAS 
Angel's  Sophistrie. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel 

and  Stella. 
Angel's     Story,     The.     (Abr.) — Adelaide     Procter. — 

MYF 
Angel's     Whisper,     The.— S:     Lover.— BNL— FEP— 
HBP  — LC— OS  1— PC— PoR— TCP  (w.  tab.) 
— VS 
Angelus,  The.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— TAS 
Angelus,  The. — Frances  L.  Mace. — PEO 
Angelus,  The. — Freeman  E.  Miller. — HDL 
Angelus    Song. — Austin    Dobson.     See    "Good-night, 

Babette. " 
Anger   and    Enumeration.     (In  Life  in  Danbury.)  — 

Jas.    M.    Bailey.— CS  9— KNE— MYF 
Angler,  The.     (In  Izaak  Walton's  Compleat  Angler.) 

—J:  Chalkhill.— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Angler,  The.     (Br.  sel.   fr.  A  Summer'  Story,  Pt.   I.) 

— T:  B.  Read.— BNL 
Angler's  Invitation,  The.— T:  T.  Stoddart.— GN 
Angler's  Reveille,  The. — H:  van  Dyke.— GN 
Angler's  Song,  The.      (In  Izaak  Walton's  Compleat 

Angler.)— W:  Basse.- OES 
Angler's  Trysting-tree,  The.— T:  T.  Stoddart.— BNL— 

FEP— HBP 
Angler's  Wish,  An  [u/r.  The].  —  H:  Van  Dyke.  —  AA. 
— SN 


27 


Angler's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Angler's  Wish,  The.  (/n  The  Compleat  Angler.) — Izaak 

Walton.— BNL—FEP— HBP— YBF 
Angling.  (Frags,  fr.  Various  authors.) — BNL 
Angling.     (Br.  ael.  fr.  Windsor  Forest.) — Alex.  Pope. — 

BNL 
Angling. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Anglo-French  Alliance,  The. — Anon. — MRS 
Anglo-Norman  Days. — Walter  Scott.     See  Ivanhoe. 
Angry  Words. — Anon. — CS  25 

(Don't  Speak  when  Angry — sel.) — PS 
Animate  Nature.    (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Animate  Nature. — J:  Lyly.     See  Alexander  and  Cam- 

paspe. 
Anita.— Frd'k  S.  Camp.— CG  1 
Ann     Hathaway. — W:     Shakespeare — C — See     Anne 

Hathaway. 
Ann  Jane's  Mother  at  a  Classical  Concert. — Anon. — 

WR  15 
Ann  Rafferty's  Evidence. — Annie  S.  Shields. — WR  12 
Anna  Karenma,  Sel.  fr.  (Race,  The — sel.  fr.  Chs.  XXIV. 

and  XXV.)— Lyof  Tolstoi.— PR— WR  11 
Annabel    Lee.— Edgar    A.    Poe.— AA— ASL— BFV— 

BNL  —  BPB  —  CR  —  CS  5  —  FEP  —  FTA  — 

GP  —  HBP  —  HBR  —  MMR  (abr.)  —  MR  — 

OB— PYO— TAV— WCLG  1 
Annabel's  First  Party. — Josephine  Pollard. — KJ 

(First  Party,  The.)— BS  9— CS  14— DS 
Annals,  Sel.  fr.     (Germanicus  to  his  Mutinous  Troops 

—fr.  Ch.  I.)— Tacitus.— PS 
A.nnan  Water.    (In  Border  Minstrelsy— a6r.) — Anon. — 

BB— OEB 
(A6r.)— BFV— BPB 
Annapolis  Royal. — E:  Blackadder. — TCV 
Anne. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — TAV 
Anne  Boleyn's  Rejection  of  Henry  VIIL's  First  Gift. 

(Toft.)— Anon.— BS  15— TCP 
Anne  Bullen. — W:    Shakespeare.      See    King    Henry 

VIIL 
Anne  Clough. — Edmund  Gosse. — EDY 
Anne  Hathaway. — Anon.     {At.    to   C:  Dibdin  and  to 

W:  Shakespeare.)— BNL— BS  23— FEP 
(Ann  Hathaway.) — OH 
Anne  Hathaway. — Anon. — DR 
Anne  Hathaway. — Edmund  Falconer. — CS  29 
Anne — Sudbury    Meeting-house,    1653. — Lizette     W. 

Reese. — AA 
Annetta    Jones — her    Book. — Frank     L.    Stanton. — 

BS21 
Annie    and    Willie's    Prayer. — Mrs.  Sophia    P.  Snow. 

—  BS  1—  CS  5  —  CSS  —  FTR  —  HR  —  PPSr 

— SA 
(Santa  Claus  and  the  Motherless  Children.) — MYF 
Annie  in  the  Graveyard. — Caroline  Oilman. — HBP 
Annie  Laurie.     {Orig.  vers.) — W:  Douglas. — BNL — GP 
(Later    and   longer   uerg.)— BFV— BIL— FEP— ON 

—HBP  —  LC  —  LLC  —  WCLG  1  —  YBF 
{Sometimes  at.  to  Lady  J :  Scott. 
Annie  O'Brien.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  21 
Annie  Pickens. — Eugene  J.  Hall. — CS  28 
Annie  Protheroe. — W:  S.  Gilbert. — CS  15 
Annie's  Party.— L.  A.  B.  C— SDD 
Annie's  Ticket.— Anon.— CD— CS  14 
Annihilation.— G:  Chinn.— SR  12— WR  4 
Anniversary,  An. — W:  K.  Johnson. — TIP 
Anniversary  Address.  (Sel.). — Dan'l  Webster. — LLC 
(Address  before  the  New  York  Historical  Society — 

C— briefer  sei.)— MRS— SR  13 
Anniversary  Meeting,  The. — Anon. — FAD 
Annover,  The.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis. — HBP 
Annuity,  The.— G:  Outram.— BS  4— CS  12— SA 
Annunciata. — Mary  A.  Fanton. — WR  22 
Annunciation,  The.     (SI.  abr.) — Adelaide  A  Procter. — 

WR6 
Annunciation,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— EDY 
Annus  Mirabilis,  the  Year  of    Wonders,  Sel.  fr. — J: 

Dryden. 
Attempt  at  Bergen,  The.— WEP  2 
Fire  of  London,  The.— WEP  2 
Anonymous. — J:  B.  Tabb. — AA 
Another  Arrangement. — H.  E.  McBride. — MHD 
Another  Complaint  against  Cupid. — F:  L.  Knowles. — 

CG2 
Another  Day.— Alice  Arnold.— BS  24 
Another  Enigma. — Matthew  Prior. — HPE 
Another  Match. — {Cope's  Tobacco  Plant.)— FPh 
Another  Plum-cake. — Ann  and  Jane  Taylor. — BVC 
Another  Way. — Ambrose  Bierce. — AA 
Another  Year.— T:  O'Hagan.- BS  16— PEO 
Anselmo,  the  Priest. — Constante  F.  L.  R.  Runcie. — 

WR9 
Anster   Fair,   Sel.    fr.     (Rab    the    Ranter's    Bag-pipe 

Playing.)— W:  Tennant.— WEP  4 


Answer.      (Motto  fr.  Old  Mortality,  Ch.  XXXIV.)— 
Walter  Scott.— OB 
(Sound,  Sound  the  Clarion.) — YBF 
Answer,  An.— Fs.  H.  Williams.— TAS 
Answer  of  "Belzoni's"  Mummy. — Anon. — CS  6 
Answer  of   Pitt   to   Walpole,  The.— W:  Pitt,  Earl  of 
Chatham.— OS  3 
(Pitt's  Reply  to  Walpole.— FTR— HNS 
(Reply  of  Mr.  Pitt.)— KNE 
(Reply  of  Mr.  Pitt  to  Sir  Robert  Walpole — cond.)-~ 

TMD 
(Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole.)— CS  4 
(Reply  to  Sir  Robert  Walpole,  1741.)— PS— SS 
(Reply  to  Walpole.)— LLC 
Answer  of  the  Gardener,  The. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — 

TAS 
Answer  to  a  Child's  Question. — S:  T.  Coleridge. — LC 
(Abr.)— Blh  —  BNL  —  BVC  —  CGD  —  FEP  — 
OS  1— PHS— PoR 
Answer  to  a  Puzzle,  An. — Susan  Coolidge. — YBT 
Answer  to  "Cui  Bono,"  An. — Jane  W.  Carlyle. — OS  2 
Answer  to  "Five  O'Clock  in  the  Morning.  "—Anon. — 

CS7 
Answer  to  "I  Am  Dying." — W:  Laurie. — CS  6 
Answer  to  "Leona. " — Anon. — CS  7 
Answer  to  "The  Hour  of  Death." — Mrs.  C.  B.  Wilson. 

CS2 
Answered. — Phoebe  Gary. — TAS 
Answered  Prayers.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— CS  23 
Answering  to  Roll-call. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — PAPm 
Ant,  The.— (Ant  or  Emmet,  The— C.)— I:  Watts.— PC 
Ant  an  Engineer,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Ant    and    the    Cricket,    The.— Anon.— CSS— OS  1— 

PoR— PPSr 
Ant  and  the  Grasshopper,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Anthology.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Anticipation  and  Retrospection.     (C.) — J :  Keble. 

(Rainbow,  The— abr.)— CGd 
Antigone. ^Sophocles. — IR 

Antinous    Praises    Dancing    before    Queen    Penelope. 
{Fr.  Orchestra;  or,  A  Poeme  of  Dauncing.) — 
Sir  J:  Da  vies.— WEP  1 
(Dancing  of  the  Air,  The. — sel.) — BNL 
Antipater,  the  Sidonian,  to  Anacreon.     (C.)     Antipa- 
ter  of  Sidon  {naranhrase  of  T:  Moore). 
(On  Anacreon.)- HBP 
Antiphony. — W:  Morris.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 
Antiquary,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Walter  Scott. 

Elspeth's  Ballad.     (Fr.  Vol.  II.,  Ch.  XIX.)— PEB  3 

(Red  Harlaw,  The.)— LH 
Omnipotent,  The.     (Fr.  Vol.  I.,  Ch.  X.)— LH 
(Time.)— FEP 
Antique  at  Paris.     (Abr.) — Friedrich  Schiller. — OS  3 
Antiquity  of  Freedom,  The. — W:  C.  Bryant. — AA — 
LLC 
(Antiquity  of  Freedom,  The — br.  sel.) — ^AD 
(Freedom.) — SE 
Antiquity  of  the  Roman  Catholic  Church,  The. — T:  B. 

Macaulay. — VSG 
Anti-railroad  Meeting,  An. — Anon. — MAD 
Anti-slang  Society,  The.— Anon.— PTS 
Anti-union  Speeches,  Sel.  fr.  (Union  with  Great  Brit- 
ain.)—H:  Grattan.— OM— SS 
Anton  Seidl.— J:  H.  Ingham.— EDY 
Antonina. — H.  A.  Boyne. — CG  1 
Antonio  Oriboni. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — CS  18 
Antony  and  Cleopatra. — W:   H.   Lytle. — AE   (sel.) — 
BNL— CS  9— FEP— HP— HR— MR— PYO 
(Antony  to  Cleopatra.)— AA 
("I  am  Dying,  Egypt.")— SR  4 
Antony  and  Cleopatra,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Antony  and   Cleopatra.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  III.,  So. 

13.)- EPs 
Antony  and  the  Soothsayer.     (Sel.   fr.   II.,  3.) — 

EPs 
Cleopatra  and  the  Messenger.     (II.,  5.) — NDP 
Cleopatra's  Barge.      (Sel.  fr.  II.,  2.) — CS  9  (set.) — 
MRS 
(Cleopatra.)— BNL  (o6r.)— EPs  (sel.) 
Cleopatra's  Resolution.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  IV.,  lo  and 

v.,  2.)— EPs 
"Come,  thou  monarch  of  the  vine."     (Song   -C.— 

fr.  II.,  7.)— YBF 
Courage.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  13.)— EPs 
"I  see  men's  judgments."     (Br.  ael.  fr.  III.,  13.) — 

EPs 
Oracle:  "Mine  honesty  and  I,"  etc.      (hr.  sel.  fr. 

III.,  13.}— EPs 
"When  we  in  our  viciousness,"  etc.     (Br.  lel.  fr. 
III.,  13.)— EPs 
Antony  and  the  Soothsayer. — W:  Shakesp*»arp,     Sf:e 
Antony  and  Cleopatra. 


28 


TITLE    INDEX 


April 


Aobri 
^ — Apoci 


Antony   on   the   Death   of   Caesar. — W:   Shakespeare. 

See  Julius  Ctesar. 
Antony  over  the  Dead  Body  of  C»sar. — W:  Shakes- 
peare.    See  Julius  Csesar. 
Antony  to  Cleopatra. — W:  H.  Lytle.     See  Antony  and 

Cleopatra. 
Antony's  Address  to  the  Romans  [on  the  Death  of 

Ctesar]. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Antony's  Lament  over  Csesar. — W:  Shakespeare.    See 

Julius  Csesar. 
Antony's    Oration    oyer    [the    Body    of]    Csesar. — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Csesar. 
Anxiety  (The  Early  Bird— C.).— G:  Macdonald.— NV 
Anxious  Inquirer,  An. — Anon. — DLD 
Anxious  Leaf,  The. — H:  W.  Beecher.     See  Norwood. 
Any  One  Will  Do.— Anon.— AWH— HP— THP 

{.For  another  vers,    of  same  story,  see  Old  Maid's 
Prayer,  The.) 
Ape  and  the  Thinker,  The.— Owen  Wister.— BS  25 
Apelles'    Song. — J:   Lyly.     See  Alexander   and   Cam- 
paspe. 
odite. — Lewis  Morris.    iSee  Epic  of  Hades,  The. 
pocalypse. — R:  Realf. — EDY 
(SI.  a6r.)— GP— PAP 
Apollo. — Matthew  Arnold.     See  Empedocles  on  Etna. 
Apollo    Belvidere,    The. — Lord     Byron.     See     Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Apollo's  Edict.— Jonathan  Swift.— WEP  3 
Apology,  An. — W:  Morris.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 
Apology  for  Having  Loved  Before. — Edmund  Waller. 

— EPs 
Apology  for  Kings.    (Two stories.) — J:  Wolcott. — HPE 
Apology  for  Plagiaries,  An.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Satire  upon 

Plagiaries.)— S:  Butler.— WEP  2 
Apology  for  Socrates,  Sels.  jr.  — Plato. — OS  3 
Apostrophe  to  Cold  Water. — Paul  Denton.     See  Apos- 
trophe to  Water. 
Apostrophe  to  Light. — -J:  Milton.     iSee  Paradise  Lost. 
Apostrophe  to  Niagara,  Sel.  fr. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. 

— GG 
Apostrophe  to  the  Mississippi. — Mrs.  A.  M.  Wilcox. — 

CS31 
Apostrophe  to  the  Ocean. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Apostrophe  to  the  Oyster,  An. — J.  W.  Gesnard. — CS  25 
Apostrophe  to  the  Queen  of  France.  {Br.  sel.  fr.  Reflec- 
tions  on   the   French    Revolution.)— Edmund 
Burke.— PS 
(Marie  Antoinette.)— OS  3  (ofcr.)— SS 
(Marie  Antoinette,  Queen  of  France.) — VSG 
(Queen  of  France  and  the  Spirit  of  Chivalry,  The.) 
— TMD 
Apostrophe  to  the  Volunteers,  The. — Rob't  Hall. — CR 
(Farewell  to  Departing  Volunteers,  A — vHy-  same.) 
— KNE 
Apostrophe  to  Washington. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Ad- 
dition to  the  Capitol,  The. 
Apostrophe  to  Water. — A.  W.    Arrington   {at.  also  to 
J:  B.  Gough  aTid  to  Paul  Denton).— LLC— SSD 
(Apostrophe  to  Cold  Water.) — SA 
(Glass  of  Cold  Water,  A.)— CS  2— HSS  3— SR  2— 

WRD 
(Tribute  to  Water,  A.)— PP— YFR 
(Water— scZ.)—SE 

("Water!  look  at  it,  ye  thirsty  ones" — sel.) — GG 
{SI.  diff.  versions.) 
Apothecary  Man,  The.— Anon. — CS  20 
Apparent. — Albert  E.  Thomas. — CG  2 
Apparition,  An. — Anon. — -WR  24 
Apparition,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Manfred. 
Apparition  on  the  Lake. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Pre- 
lude, The. 
Appeal,  An.— Anon. — WR  7 
Appeal,  An. — Florence  Henniker. — FLS 
Appeal,  The.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  L. — C.) — Walter 
S.  Landor.— VA 
(Remain!)— OB 
Appeal,  An. — T:  Wyatt. — CEL 
(Forget  Not  Yet.)— ELP— OB 
(Lover  Beseecheth  his  Mistress  not  to  Forget,  The. 

— O— WEP  1 
(Supplication,  A.)— PGT  1— PHS 
Appeal,  The.— T:  Wyatt.— OB 

(Earnest  Suit  to  his  Unkind  Mistress  not  to  For- 
sake Him,  An.)— BNL— ELP 
(Lover's  Appeal,  The.)— CEL— PGT  1 
Appeal  for  Ireland. — H:  Grattan. — BLP 
Appeal  for  Liberty,  An.— Jos.  Story.— BS  16 — PPS 
Appeal  for  Prohibition,  An. — J:  B.  Gough. — CS  16 
Appeal  for  Temperance.— H :  W.  Grady.— BS  18— PS 
Appeal  for  the  Cause  of  Liberty,  An. — J:  Harrington. 
— FD  1 


Appeal  in  Behalf  of  Ireland. — S.  S.  Prentiss.     See  Re- 
lief for  Starving  Ireland. 
Appeal  of  the  Missagans. — Anon. — CS  9 
Appeal  to  Arms,  An. — ^Patrick  Henry.     See  Speech  in 

the  Virginia  Convention,  1775. 
Appeal  to  Harold,  The. — H :  C.  Bunner. — AA 
Appeal  to  Ireland. — T:  F.  Meagher. — SR  6 
Appeal  to  Lord  Avonmore. — J.  P.  Curran. — SS 
Appeal   to   the   Georgia  Convention   of   1860   against 

Secession. — Alex.  H.  Stephens. — SR  8 
Appeal  to  the  Goddess,  An. — T:  Ybarra. — (3G  3 
Appeal  to  the  Himgarians,  1849. — L:  Kossuth. — PS — 

SS— SSD 
Appeal  to  the  Jury. — C:  Phillips. — PS 
Appeal  to  the  Kind  Symmetrie  of  Our  Nature. — Anon. 

— MHR 
(Bombastic  Appeal  to  the  Jury. ) — CS  4 — SR  10 
Appeal  to  the  Patriotism  of  South  Carolina,  An. — 

Andrew  Jackson. — SR  8 
Appeal   to   the   People,   An. — J:   Bright. — OM — SC — 

TMD 
Appeal  to  the  Romans. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.  See  Rienzi. 
Appeal  to  the  "Sextant"  for  Air,  An. — Arabella  M. 

Willson.— BS  4  {at.  to  "A.  Gasper.")— CS  4 
(To  the  "Sextant.")— BNL— MHR 
(To  the  Sexton.)— PTS 
Appeal  to  Yoiuig  Men. — Lyman  Beecher. — CS  15 
Appeal  to  Yoimg  Men,  An.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Democratic 

Party  and  Public  Opinion.) — Jas.  A.  Garfield. 

— NC 
Appearances  Deceptive. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Apple  Blossom,  The. — Anon. — HSS  1 
Apple  Blossom,  An. — Anon. — TT 
Apple  Blossoms. — Anon. — NV 
Apple  Blossoms. — Anon. — TT 
Apple  Blossoms. — Susan  Coolidge. — YBT 
Apple  Blossoms. — Amanda  T.  Jones.— SA 
Apple  Blossoms.— W:  W.  Martin.— HBR— HSS  1 

(Apple  Orchard  in  the   Spring,  An — ahr.) — GN — 

POS 
Apple  Blossoms.     {SI.  o6r.)— Eliz.  S.  Phelps. — GP 
Apple  of  Discord,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Apple  Orchard  in  the  Spring,  An. — W:  W.   Martin. 

See  Apple  Blossoms. 
Apple  Pie.     (The  Poetical  Cookery-book. — Punch.) — 

HPE 
Apple  Seed,  The.— C.  A.  M.  Webb.— PP— YPS 
Appledore. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Pictures  from  .\pple- 

dore. 
Appledore  in  a  Storm. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Pictures 

from  Appledore. 
Apple-dumplings  and  a  King,  The. — J:  Wolcott.     See 

below. 
Apple-dumplings    and    George    the    Third,    The. — J: 

Wolcott.— TMD 
(Apple-dumplings  and  a  King,  The — diff.  vers.) — 

FEP 
Apple-howling  Songs,  Two. — Anon. — BVC 
Apples. — Anon. — CD 

(Brudder  Brown  on  "Apples.") — CS  26 
Apples,  The.     (DtoZ. )— Anon.— WR  17 
Applied  Astronomy. — Esther  R.  Tiffany. — AWH 
Applied  Mathematics.     {Lehigh  Burr.) — AWH — CG  2 
Appointment,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Appreciation. — T :  B.  Aldrich. — AA 
Apprenticed.     {Introd.  to  Songs  of  the  Night  Watches.) 

— Jean  Ingelow. — CEL 
Approach  of  Age,  The. — G:  Crabbe.     See  Tales  of  the 

Hall. 
Approach  of  Age,  The. — Walter  S.  Landor. — YBF 
Approach  of  Age,  The.     (Sonnet   XII.)— W:  Shakes- 
peare.— BNL 
Approach  of  Night,  The.— W:  H.  Powell.— CS  35 
Approach  of  the  Fairies,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.    See 

Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
Approach  of  the  Presidency,  The.     {Fr.  A  Letter  to 

Col.  Henry  Lee.) — G:  Washington. — HS 
Approach  of  the  Storm,  The.     {Vassar  Miscellanv.) — 

CG3 
Appropriate  Keepsake,  An. — H.  M.  Stone. — CG  1 
AprSs. — Arthur  J.  Munby. — BNL 
April.     (C.) — Edwin  Arnold. 

(Almond  Blossom.)— BNL — CEL— FEP— GN 
April. — O.  C.  Auringer. — AA 

April. — Ralph  W.  Emerson.     See  April  and  May. 
April.— W:  P.  Foster.— HDL 
April. — Mary  Howitt. — POS 
April.— J:  Keble.— HBP 

(First  Sunday  after  Epiphany — C — «e/.) — AVP 
April. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  April  Day,  An. 
April. — S:  Longfellow.     See  November  and  April. 


29 


April 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


April. — Rob't  Loveman. — AA 

April. — Jessie  McDermott. — AD 

April.     (The  Fields  of  J)awn.  I.)— Lloyd  Mifflin.— SN 

April. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 

April. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 

April. — Edmund  Spenser.  See  Shepheard's  Calender, 
The. 

April. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 

April.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AD— POS  {sel.) 

April.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— POS 

April — and  Dying. — Anne  R.  Aldrich  — AA 

April  and  May.     (Fr.  May-day.) — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 
— GN 
(April.)— POS 

April  and  May.— Celia  Thaxter.— AD— SAP 

April  Day,  An. — (Arr.  by)  Helen  E.  Brown. — WR  9 
(/nciudes  Shelley's  Cloud,   The;  Brown's   Showers, 
The;  Rainbow,  The;  Sunbeam,  The.) 

April  Day,  An .     ( C. )— H :  W.  Longfellow.— AD 
(April.)- HSS  1 

April  Day,  An.— Caroline  B.  Southey.— HSS   1— PEO 

April  Days. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 

April,  ever  Frail  and  Fair.  (Fr.  Spring  ) — Oliver  W. 
Holmes.— POS 

April  Fantasie. — Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — AA 

April  Flower-song. — Harold  Kellock. — CG  3 

April  Fool,  An.— Anon.— DST 

April  Fool,  An.     (Z)iaZ.)— Anon.— FAD 

April  Fools. — Kate  Masterson. — WR  15 

April  Fools.— Emily  H.  Miller.— NV 

April  Fools.     (Br.  seJ.)- Winthrop  M.  Praed. — OS  1 

April  in  England. — Rob't  Browning. — GN — OS  1  (sel.) 
("Hark,  where  my  blossomed  pear-tree  in  the  hedge" 

ggl") AD 

(Home  Thoughts  from  Abroad— C.)— A VP—BFV 
CGd— LC;— OB  —  PGT  2  —  POS  —  SN  —  VA 
— WEP  4— YBF 

"April  sun  shines  bright  above.  The." — R.  L.  Eaton. 
— CG2 

April  Time. — Anon. — LLC 

April  Pastoral,  An. — H;  A.  Dobson. — LC 

April  Shower. — Anon. — NV 

April  Showers.— Mary  E.  Wilkins.— COS— PP 

April's  Fools.— Mrs.  A.  G.  Park.— TMR 

Aquarius. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 

Arab,  The.— C:  S.  Calverley.— BNL— THP 

Arab  Song.— R:  H:  Stoddard. — A  A 

Arab  to  his  Favorite  Steed,  The. — Caroline  E.  S.  Nor- 
ton.—BNL 
(Arab's  Farewell  to  his  Horse,  The.)— FEP 
(Arab's  Farewell  to  his  Steed,  The.)— BVC 

Arab  to  the  Palm,  The.— Bayard  Taylor.— BNL— 
HBP 

Arab  Welcome,  An.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— OS  2 

Arabella  and  Sally  Ann. — Paul  Carson.^ — CS  25 — DS 
— YA 

Arabella's  Poor  Relations. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 

Arabian  Nights'  Entertainments,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Alad- 
din; or.  The  Wonderful  Lamp.) — Anon. — 
WCLG  1— WGS  (diff.  vers.) 

Arabian  Tale,  An.— Anon.— NFS— YP 

Arab's  Farewell  to  his  Horse,  The. — Caroline  E.  S. 
Norton.     See  Arab  to  his  Favorite  Steed,  The. 

Arab's  Farewell  to  his  Steed,  The. — Caroline  E.  S. 
Norton.     <See  Arab  to  his  Favorite  Steed,  The. 

Araby's  Daughter. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Arachne. — Rose  T.  C!ooke. — AA 

Arathusa's  Torment. — Anon. — CH 

Arbitration  and  Civilization. — Sir  C:  Russell. — TMR 

Arbor  Day.  (3  sels.) — Anon. — AD 

Arbor  Dav.— G :  W :  Curtis.— HSS  1 
(New  Holiday,  A.)— AD 

Arbor  Day. — Lewis  Halsey. — AD 

Arbor  Day. — Warren  Higley. — AD 

(What  Arbor  Day  has  Already  Done.) — DFR 

Arbor  Day.  Its  Educating  Influence. — B.  G.  North- 
rop.—AD— DFR  (br.  sel.). 

Arbor  Day. — J:  B.  Peaslee. — AD 

Arbor  Day. — Seymour  S.  Short. — AD 

Arbor  Day.    (W.  music.) — E.  F.  Steams. — AD 

Arbor  Day.     (  The  Student.  y^AD 

Arbor  Day.     ( Vick's  Magazine.) — AD 

Arbor  Day  Acrostic. — (^Arr.  by)  E:  C.  Delano — AD 

Arbor  Day  and  the   Children.  —  E.    E.    Higbee. — AD 
(abr.) 
(Nature  and  the  Children.) — LLC 

Arbor  Day  Greeting. — Park  Harlow. — AD 

Arbor  Day  History.— K.  G.  Wells.— PEO 

Arbor  Day  Invocation. — Emma  S.  Thomas. — AD 

Arbor  Day  March. — Ellen  Beauchamp. — AD — DFR 

Arbor  Day  Ode. — Parr  Harlow. — AD 

Arbor  Day  Poem. — Lillian  E.  Knapp. — AD 


Arbor  Day  Poem. — Anna  R.  Pride. — AD 

Arbor  Day  Tribute.     (W.  mus.) — Jared  Barhite. — AD 

(Nature's  Tribute  Suggests  Ours — sel.) — AD 
Arbor  of  Amorous  Devices,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Cradle  Song, 
A.)— Anon.— OB 
(Sweet  Lullaby,  A.)— WEP  1 
Arbutus. — Anon. — AD 
Arbutus,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Arbutus. — Elaine  Goodale. — AD 
Arbutus. — Anne  Hall. — AD 
Arbutus,  The.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— DCP— HSS  1 

(Maiden  Spring,  The,  also  Arbor  Day  Acrostic,  in- 
clude this  poem.) — AD 
Arcades,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Milton. 

Arcades,  Sel.  fr.     (2d  song.)— OB 

Song:     "Nymphs   and  Shepherds."     (3d  song.) — 

ELP 
Two  Songs.     (2d  and  3d  songs.)— EP 
Arcadia,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Philip  Sidney. 
Bargain,  The.     (XLIX.— a6r.)— OB 

(Ditty    r,A]— a6r.)— FEP— FTA— OH  — PGT  1 

— PYO— YBF 
(My  True  Love  [or  True-love]  Hath  My    Heart 
[and  I  Have  his]— abr.)— BNL— GP— OEL— 
OS  3— TFY 
(Sonnet:  Heart-exchange — mod.) — ELP 
Country  Song,  A.     (LXVIII.)— EP 
Dorus  to  Pamela.     (XIV.)— EP— WEP  1 
Nico  and  Dorus.     (XXIX.)— EP 
Night.     (LXXIII.)— WEP  1 

Song  from   the   Arcadia.     (LXXVII. — Musidorus 
Song— C.)— LLC 
Arcadian  Club:  or.  Theory  versus  Practice,  The. — A. 

F.  Bradley.— PD 
Arcadian  Flirtation,  An. — Anon. — TL 
Arcady. — Mary  L.  Newton. — 0(3  3 
Arcana  Sylvarum. — C:  de  Kay. — AA 
Archaeological    Congress,    An. — Rob't   J.    Burdette. — 

SYS 
Archbishop  and  Gil  Bias,  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — 

CS20 
Archbishop's     Christmas     Gift,     The.     (Abr.) — Rob't 

Barr.- NP 
Archer,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Archery  Contest,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Ivanhoe. 
Archfiend  of  Nations,  The.— Rev.  T.  DeWitt  Talmage. 

— WR  18 
Archie    Dean.— Gail  Hamilton— BS  5— CS  14— SA— 

SR  11  (si.  abr.) 
Archie's  Mother. — Rose  H.  Thorpe. — WR  4 
Arctic  Aurora,  An. — Anon. — BS  11 
Are   the   Children   at   Home? — Marg.    E.   Sangster. — 

BNL— CS  6 
'  'Are   there   not   lofty   moments   when   the   soul. " — 

Josiah  G.  Holland.     See  Kathrina. 
Are  These  God's  Children 7— Sara  M.  Chatfield.- BS  14 
Are  They    not     All    Ministering    Spirits? — Rob't    S. 

Hawker. — OB 
Are  we  a  Nation?,  Sel.  fr.    (Our  Nation  and  Flag.) — C: 
Sumner.— FD  2 
(National  Flag.  The— seZ.)— HS— OS  2— PTS 
(American  Flag,  The — arr.  as  dial.) — WR  17 
(See  also  Flag  of  the  Nation,  The — by  Rob't  C. 
Winthrop). 
"Are  You  a  Mason?" — Rev.  Mr.  Magill. — CS  8 
Are  You  Glad?— D.  C.  Dandridge.— TAS 
Are  You  Ready? — L:  Eisenbeis. — CS  35 
Aren't  You  Ashamed  of  Yourself?     (Tab.) — Anon. — 

TCP 
Arethusa,  The. — Prince  Hoare. — LH 
Arethusa.— Percy    B.    Shelley.— BPB—CEL— FEP— 

GN— HBP— PHS 
Aretina's  Song. — Sir  H :  Taylor. — VA 
Argonauts,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Anon. — GG 
Argument. — Anon. — KNE 

Argument.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Argument  of  his  Book.     (C.) — Rob't  Herrick. — EPs 
(Argument     of    the     Hesperides,     The.) — ELP — 
WEP  2 
Argument   of  the   Hesperides,   The. — Rob't   Herrick. 

See  foregoing. 
Argumentative  Theology. — S:  Butler.     iSee  Hudibras. 
Ariadne. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  Legende  of  Goode 

Women. 
Ariadne's  Farewell. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — EPs 
Ariana. — Franklin  B.  Sanborn. — AA 
Arid  Lands,  The. — Herbert  Bashford. — AA 
Ariel  in  the  Cloven  Pine. — Bayard  Taylor. — AA 
Ariel's  Song[s]. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Tempest,  The. 
Aristarchus   Studies   Elocution. — Susan   A.    Bisbee. — 

BS13(ad.)— WR24 
Aristocracy.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 


30 


TITLE    INDEX 


Artist 


Aristocracy. — T:  Carlyle.     See  Past  and  Present. 
Aristocracy. — Rob't  R.  Livingston. — SS 
Aristocracy  of  France,  The,  Sel.  fr. — G.  Smythe,  Vis- 
count Strangford. — AVP 
Arithmetic.     {St.  Nicholas.)— PS— TT 

(Harry's  Arithmetic.)— DLS— LPS— PP 
Arithmetic  in  Life. — M.  T.  Cooper. — CS  34 
Arithmetic  Lesson,  The. — Anon.— WR  17 
Arizona  Jim. — C:  F.  Lummis. — WR  2 

(Jim,  Arizona,  1885.)— BS  19 
Arkansas  Farmer,  The.— Anon. — WR  25 
Arkansas    Traveller,    The.      (Arkansaw    Traveller.)  — 

CRR 
Arkansaw  Pete's  Adventure. — T.  Sheppard. — PS 
Arlington. —  Jas.  A.  Garfield.     <See  Strewing    Flowers 

on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers. 
Arlington  Heights    Oration.  —  Jas.  A.    Garfield.      S«e 

Strewing   Flowers  on    the    Graves    of    Union 

Soldiers. 
"Arm  of  aid  to  the  weak.  An." — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord 

Houghton.— FHS 
(Finis.)— LLC 
Arma  Virumque. — Harold  Kellock. — CG  3 
Armada,  The.      (C.)— T:  B.   Macaulay.— AVP— BPB 

—  CEL  — EDY  — EHT— GN— HB  — LH  — 

WRl  (al.  abr.) 
(Spani-sh  Armada,  The.)— BS  2— CGd 
Armada,  The,  Sd.  jr.   (England— br.  sel.  jr.  Pt.    II., 

Can.  VII.) — Algernon  C.     Swinburne. — LH 
Armado    and    Moth. —  yf :    Shakespeare. — iSee    Love's 

Labour's  Lost. 
Armageddon. — Edwin  Arnold. — BS  10 
Armenian  Lullaby.— Eugene  Field.— TD—WTD 
Armenian  Mother,  The. — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
Armgart.     {SI.  oftr. )— George  Eliot.— HBR 
Armies  in  the  Fire. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Arming   of    Pigwiggen,  The. — Michael  Drayton.     .See 

Nymphidia. 
Arminius  to  his  Soldiers. — Arthur  (?)  Murphy. — PS 
Armistice. — Sophie  Jewett. — AA 
Armorer's  Errand,  The. — Julia  C.  R.  Dorr. — WR  5 
Armorer's  Song,  The. — Harry  B.  Smith. — AA 
Armory,  The. — H :    W.    Longfellow.      See   Arsenal  at 

Springfield,  The. 
Arms  and  the  Muse. — J:  Milton. — LH 

(When  the  Assault  was  Intended  to  the  City — C) — 

EDY— EPs— FEP— HBP— PGT  1 
Armstrong's  Good-Night.      {In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — 

Anon.— FEP 
Army  and  Navy,  The. — Anon. — FND 
Army  Bean,  The. — Anon. — EuE 
Army  Correspondent's  Last  Ride. — G.  A.  Townsend. — 

AA 
Army  ^f  Applicants,  An. — Anon. — DCD 
Army  on  the  Potomac,  The.— Chauncey  M.  Depew. — 

NC 
(SeZ.)— BS  17— TMD 
Army  of  the  Potomac.  —  Joaquin  Miller.  —  BS  17 — 

PEG  {abr.) 
Army  Overcoat,  The. — Mrs.  G:  Archibald. — WR  2 
Arnold    at    Stillwater.  —  T:     D.     English.  —  BAB 

(Afer.)— FR— WR  6 
Arnold  the  Traitor. — G:  Lippard.      See  Benedict  Ar- 
nold. 
Arnold  Winkelried. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See  Patriot's 

Pass-word,  The 
Arraignment. — Helen  G.  Cone. — AA 
Arraignment  of     a     Lover,     The. — G:     Gasgoigne. — 

WEP  1 
Arraignment  of  Ministers. — Edmund  Burke. — FTR 
Arraignment  of  Paris,  The,  Sela.  fr. — -G:  Peele 
Handiwork  of  Flora,  The.— EP 
Song  of  Paris  and  CEnone,  The.— ELP— EP 
(Fair  and  Fair.)— OB 
Arraignment  of  Rum,  The. — R.  S.  Foster. — CS  26 
Arraignment  of  the  Rum  Traffic,  An. — R.  S.  Foster. — 

T8 
Arranmore.  (Oh!  Arranmore,  loved  Arranmore — C) — 

T:  Moore.— HBP 
Arrest  Alcohol  and  Liberate  Man. — Anon. — TS 
Arresting  the    March    of    Intemperance. — H.    E.    Mc- 

Bride.— MTD 
Arrival,    The. — Alfred    Tennyson.      See    Day-dream, 

The. 
Arrow  and  the  Song,  The.  (C.) — H:  W.  Longfellow. — 

AA— BS  8— GMS— TAV 
(Arrow  and  Song.) — LLC 
Arrow  and  Song. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  foregoing. 
Arrows  for  Love. — J:  Lyly.     See  Sapho  and  Phaos 
Ars  Victrix. — Austin  Dobson. — VA 
Arsenal,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  following. 


Arsenal  at  Springfield,  The.     (C.) — H:  W.  Longfellow. 

— FEP— GP— HBP— PYO— SO 
(Armory,  The— aeZ.)- SE 

("Were  half  the  power  that  fills  the  world,"  etc.) 

— GG 
(Arsenal,  The— 2  seis.)— SE 
Art.  {Sel.)—K.  W.  Emerson.- PEO 
Art.     (2  sons. — fr.  A  Lover's  Diary.) — Gilbert  Parker. 

— VA 
Art. — Lilla  C.  Perry.— AA 
Art.- C:  Sprague.— SS 

(Ode  on  Art— o6r.)— FP 
Art  above  Nature.— Rob  t  Herrick.— ES— WEP  2 
Art  and  Artifice. — Anon. — CS  1 

(Painter's  Studio.)— SED 
Art  and  Nature. — Anon. — CH 
Art  and     Nature. — W:     Shakespeare.     See     Winter's 

Tale,  A. 
Art  Artistic— HoWell  L.  Piner.— WR  23 
Art  Critic,  The.     {Dial.)—L.  J.  and  E.  C.  Rook.— CDs 
Art  Critic.     See  also  Art-critic. 
Art  Master,  An.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— AA 
Art  of  Book-keeping,  The. — Laman  Blanchard. — LBB 

— MBB 
{Diff.  and  shorter  vers. — at.  to  T:  Hood.) — BNL — 

BS  24— FEP— OS  3— SS 
Art  of  Conversation,  The.     {Punch.) — MYF 
Art  of  Kissing,  The.— Anon.— CDV 
Art   of    Preserving    Health,  The,  Sels.  fr. — J:    Arm- 
strong. 
Art  of  Preserving  Health,  The,  Bk.  III.,  Sel.  fr.— 

WEP  3 
Art  of  Preserving  Health,  The,  Bk.  IV.,  Sel.  fr.— 

WEP  3 
Building  a  Home. — BNL 
Art  of  Reading  Well,  The.— Mrs.  Ellis.— FMR 
Art  of  Thinking,  The.— Anon.— KNE 
Art  thou  Already  Weary. —  Frances  Anne  Kemble. — 

AVP 
Art  thou  Living  Yet 7— J:  G.  Clark.— CS  13— LLC— 

SR  1 
Art  thou  the  Same. — Frances  D.  (S.)  Tatnall. — AA 
Art  thou  Weary? —  St.  Stephen  {tr.  by  J:  Mason  Neale). 

—BNL— FEP— HDL— LLC 
"Art  tired?"     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Dominion.) — Jean  Ingeiow. 

—HDL 
Art-critic,  An.— S:  W.  Foss.— WR  24 
Artemus  Ward. — Josh  Billings^SR  4 
Artemus  Ward  at  the  Tomb  of  Shakespeare. — C:  F 

Browne.— CS  3— PS 
Artemus    Ward     Crossing    Dixie's    Line.       (Thrilling 

Scenes  in   Dixie — C. — abr.) — C:  F.  Browne. — 

CS2 
(Mr.  Artemus  Ward  Crossing  Dixie's  Line.) — SCS 
Artemus  Ward  on  Woman's  Rights. — C:  F.  Browne. — 

CS6 
.\rtemus  Ward  Visits  the  Shakers. — C:  F.  Browne. — 

CSS— PS(seZ.) 
Artemus  Ward's  Advice  to  Husbands. — C:  F.  Browne. 

-DE 
Artemus  Ward's    Fourth    of    July    Oration. — C:    F. 
Browne.— MHR 
(Fourth  of  July  Oration.)— FAS 
Artemus  Ward's  London  Lecture. — C:  F.   Browne. — 

BS  6— SR  10 
(Artemus  Ward's  Mormon  Lecture.) — CS  17 
Artemus  Ward's    Mormon    Lecture. — C:    F.    Browne. 

See  foregoing. 
Artemus  Ward's  Panorama — "Among  the  Mormons." 

— C:  F.  Browne.— BeR—DE 
Artemus  Ward's  Trip  to  Richmond. — C:  F.  Browne — 

BS— CS  1 
Artevelde. — Sir  H:  Taylor.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde 
Artevelde's  Vision. — Sir   H :   Taylor.     See  Philip   van 

Artful  Ant,  The.— Oliver  Herford.— DCP 

Arthur.— W:  Winter.— AA 

Arthur  Bonnicastle,  Sels.  /r.— ^Josiah  G.  Holland. 

Brought  to  Trial  for  "Blowin'."     {Sel.  ad.  fr.Ch.  V. 

by  Hattie  Herbert.)— HD—NPS—YP 
Death  of  the  First  Born.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXVII.)— 

CS24 
Arthur  Henry    Hallam. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See    In 

Memoriam. 
Arthur  in  "King  John." — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

John. 
Arthur's  Farewell. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of 

the   King. 
Articles  of  Confederation,  The. — Anon. — AI 
Artie's    "Amen."— Paul  H.  Hayne. — CS  21— PP — PS 

— SR  7— YPS 
Artist,  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 


31 


Artist 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Artist,  The. — Arthur  Grissom. — AA 

Artist's    Dream,    The.     (ra6.)— Anon.— BS  14— TCP 

Artist's  Prayer,  The.— W.  D.  Lighthall.— TCV 

Arts  and  Letters. — A.  H.  Everett. — FD  2 

Arts  Lough.— G.  A.  Gfcene.— TIP 

Arts  of  Love.     (.Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

"As  a  beam  o'er  the  face  of  the  water  may  glow,"  Sel. 

fr.     (Grief.)— T:  Moore.— KNE 
As  a  Bell  in  a  Chime. — Rob't  U.  Johnson. — AA 
As  by  the  Shore  at  Break  of  Day. — T:  Moore. — BNL 

FEP— HBP 
As  Dies  the  Year. — Alfred  Austin. — BS  26 
As  for   Me,    I    Have   a   Friend. — Ernest    McGaffey. — 

TFY 
As  I  Came  down  from  Lebanon. — Clinton  Scollard. — 

AA 
As  I  Came  down  Mount  Tamalpais. — Clarence  Urmy. — 

AA 
••As  I  have  Loved  You."— G.  Y.  HoUiday.— SR  9 
As  I    Lay    a-Thynkynge.— R:    H.    Barham.— AVP— 

CEL 
As  I  Stood  by  yon  Roofless  Tree.     (C.) — Rob't  Burns. 

(Vision,  The— sZ.  abr. )—EPs 
As  in  a  Looking-glass. — Grace  Dinkelspiel. — CS  35 
•'As  It  is  in  Heaven." — L  E.  Jones. — CS  30 
As  Jacob  Served  for  Rachel. — Anon. — CS  29 
As  Johnny  Walked  Out.— Anon.— PEB  2 
As  Lucy  Went  a-Walking.^Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
As  "Old  Giles"  Saw  It.— D.  S.  Cohen.— CS  7 
••As  other  men   have  creed,  so  have  I  mine." — Theo- 
dore Tilton.— GG 
As  Pebbles  in  the  Sea. — Anon. — ^HP 

(How  a  Man  should  be  Judged.) — CS  2 
(Souls,  not  Stations.) — BLP 
As  Seen  in  Later  Years. — Delia  A.  Heywood. — CS  35 
As  she  Says.— Jos.  B.  Smiley.— CS  34 
As  Slow    Our  Ship.   (C.)— T:    Moore.— BNL— BPB— 
TIP 
(Journey  Onwards,  The.)— HBP— PGT  1— YBF 
As  some   Mysterious  Wonderer  of  the  Skies. — H:   J. 

Stockard. — AA 
As  the  Day  Breaks. — Ernest  McGaffey. — AA 
"As  the  highly  colored  birds  do  not  fly  around  in  the 

dull."— David  Swing.— GG 
As  the    Pigeon    Flies.— C.    B.    Lewis.— CS  23— DS— 

PFP— WR  19 
As  the  Sun  Went  Down. — Waldron  W.  Anderson. — SO 
As  the  Twig  is  Bent.— Kate  H.  Cleveland. — SR  13 
As  thro'  the  Land. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Princess, 

The. 
"As  thro'  the  land  at  eve  we  went." — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  Princess,  The. 
As  thy  Days  thy  Strength  shall  Be.— H.  B.  C— BLP 

— PEO 
As  Toll.— J:  Barker.- CG  2 
As  Usual.     (Harvard  Lampoon.) — CG  2 
As  ye  Came  from  the  Holy  Land.  (In  Percy's  Reliquea.) 

—Anon.— OB 
••As  ye  Sow."— J.  J.  Mack,  Jr.— CG  2 
As  ye  Would.— Edith  Virginia  Bradt.— CS  36 
As  yonder  Lamp. — C:  Whitehead. — VA 
As  you  Came  to  the  Holy  Land.     (C.) — Sir  Walter 
Raleigh. 
(Pilgrim  to  Pilgrim.)— ELP 
As  You  Like  It,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

Adam's   Warning  to   Orlando.     (Sel.   fr.   Act   II., 
Sc.  3.)— SAE 
(As  You  Like  It— br.  sel.)—WR  18 
(Old  Age  of  Temperance — br.  sel.) — BNL 
Adversity.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  1.)— KNE 

("Sweet  are  the  uses  of  adversity.") — HDL 
All  the  World's  a  Stage.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  7.)— HSS  3 
(Seven  Ages,  The.)— EPs— OS  2 
(Seven  Ages  of  Man,  The.)— BNL— BS  3— CS  5 
— KNE— SE— SO— WCLG  2 
As  You  Like  It.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  II.,  1  and  II..  7.)— 

AE— BNL 
Blow,  Blow,  thou  Winter  Wind.     (Song  fr.  II.,  7.) 
—BNL— ELP  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  OB 
— OEL— PC— PGT  1— PHS— POS— YBF 
(Man's  Ingratitude.) — BS  5 
(Song  of  the  Holly.)— OS  2 
Forest  of  Arden,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  2.)— SR  12 
Greenwood  Tree,  The.     (Songfr.  II.,  5.)— OS  1 
(In  the  Greenwood.)— WEP  1 
(Song.)— BFV— CGd— FEP— HBP— OB 
(Song:  The  Greenwood  Tree.) — LC 
(Under    the     Greenwood     Tree.) — AD — CEL— 
ELP  —  EP  —  EPs  —  GN  —  NV  —  OEL  — 
PC— PGT  1— PHS— YBF 
It  was  a  Lover  and  his  I^ass.     (Song  fr.  V.,  3.) — 
EP— ES— OB— PGT  1  (abr.) 


As  You  Like  It  (crmtinued). 

Love  Dissembled.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  5.)— BNL 
Meeting  of  Orlando  and  Rosalind.    (Sel.  fr.  III.,  2.) 

—SAE 
Orlando's  Wooing.     (IV.,  1— a6r.)— BS  14 
Tongues  in  Trees.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  1.)— AD— LLC 

(As  You  Like  It,  Sel.  fr.—sl.  abr.)- SAE 
Wedlock  Hymn,  A.     (Song— C.—/r.  V.,  4.)— ES 
Ascent   of     Japan's     Sacred     Mountain,  Fusi-Yama. 

— Dora  Schoonmaker  Soper. — SR  2 
Ascent  of  Snowdon. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Prelude. 

The. 
Ascription.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— TCV 
Ascutney.     (Fr.  Asculney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Ascutney  Charades,  The. — Julia  A.  Sabine. — TCP 
Ash  Pool,  The.— Anon.— HP 
"Ashamed  of  Me." — .los.  Grigg. — FEP 
Ashamed  to  Toil? — Orville  Dewey.     jSee  Nobility  of 

Labor. 
Ashby. — J.  R.  Thompson. — AA 
Ashcake.— T:  N.  Page.— AA 
Ashes.— De  Witt  Sterry.- BS  21— PPh 
Ashes  of  Roses.— Elaine  Goodale  Eastman. — AA — GP 
Asian  Birds. — Rob't  Bridges. — VA 
Ask  Mamma.— A.  M.  Bell.— CS  18 

Ask  me  No  More. — Alfred  Tennyson.    See  Princess,  The. 
"Ask  me  no  more  where  Jove  bestows." — T:  Carew. — 

FEP— OEL 
(Song— C. )  —  ELP  —  ES  —  HBP—  OB  —  WEP  2 

—YBF 
"Ask    thyself    at    evening:  What    that    is  immortal 

have  I  done  to-day?" — Johann  C.  Lavater. — 

GG 
"Ask  you  where  the  place  of  religious  might  is?" — 

Frd'k  W.  Robertson.— GG 
Asking. — Anon. — HP 
Asking  a  Blessing.     (Tab.)— Anon. — TCP 
Asking  Mother.— H:  Davenport.— PR — SR  12— YA 
Asking  the  Gov'ner. — Anon. — GS  13 
Asleep. — Stockton  Bates. — CS  2 
Asleep. — W:  Winter. — AA 
Asleep   at   the   Switch.     (Ahr.) — G:   Hoey. — CS   16 — 

FR— PR 
Asleep  in  Jesus. — Marg.  Mackay. — FEP 
A-soakin    "Wum    Barrels." — Delia    A.    Heywood. — 

CS35 
Asolando,    Sel.    fr.    (Epilogue    to   Asolando.) — Rob't 

Browning.— HGT  2— WEP  4— YBF 
(Epilogue.)— VA 
Aspatia's  Song. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher.     See  Maid's 

Tragedy,  The. 
Aspect  of  Death,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Giaour,  The. 
Aspecta  Medusa.— Dante  G.  Rossetti. — SO 
Aspects  of  the  Pines. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — AA 
Aspen. — Anon. — AD 

Aspirant  for  Fame,  An.— G :  C.  Graham. — GS 
Aspiration.— W:  H.  Birckhead.— TAS 
Aspiration,  The. — J:  Norris.— YBF 
Aspiration. — E:  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Aspirations. — Anon. — CS  11 

Aspirations  for  America. — Cassius  M.  Clay. — SSD 
Aspirations  of  the  American  People. — R.  M.  T.  Hunter. 

—PFP 
Aspire    to    Higher    Things. — Sir    Philip    Sidney.     See 

Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Ass  and  his  Master,  The. — Tomas  de  Yriarte  (fr.  by 

G.  H.  Devereux).— HPE 
Assault  on  Fort  Wagner,  The. — Anna  E.  Dickinson. — 

SC 
(Fort  Wagner.)— NC— PFP 
Assisting  a  Poetess. — Anon. — CS  21 
Assisting  Hezekiah. — H.  E.  McBride. — MND 
Assumption,  The.— J:  B.Tabb.— EDY 
Astonished  Tippler,  The. — Anon. — CS  4 
AstonLshing  the  Natives. — G :  C.  Graham. — GS 
Astraea. — J:  G.  Whittier. — AA 
Astral  Romance,  An. — Gustav  V.  Drake. — TL 
Astrological   Tower,   The.  —  Friedrich    Schiller.      See 

Wallenstein. 
Astrologie. — Sir    Philip    Sidney.     See   Astrophel    and 

Stella. 
Astronomer's  Vision,  The.     (Tr.  by)   Ormsby  M.   (?) 

Mitchel.— SAE— SE 
Astronomical.     (Daily  Graphic.)— -HP 
Astrophel  and  Stella,  Sels.  fr. — Philip  Sidney. 
Songs : 

Seventh  Song.— WEP  1 

Tenth  Song.     (SI.  abr.)- WEP  1 

(Absence.) — ES 
Eleventh  Song.  (Voices  at  the  Window — sel.) — 

EP 


32 


TITLE    INDEX 


At 


Astrophel  and  Stella  (coniinued). 
Sonnets: 

I.     (Looke    in    thy    Heart,    and    Write — C) — 

WEP  1 
V.     (True  Beautie  Vertue  is— C.)— WEP  1 
XVIII.     (Bankrout— C.)— WEP  1 
XXIII.     (Pensiveness— C.)— WEP  1 

XXVI.  (Astrologie— C.)— WEP  1 

XXVII.  (Most  Alone  in  Greatest  Company— C.) 
("Because  loft  in  dark  abstracted  guise.") — 

FEP 

XXX.  (Questions— C.)— WEP  1 

XXXI.  (Moone,  The— C.)— WEP  1 
(His  Lady's  Cruelty.)— OB 
(Sonnet.)— BNL— HBP    . 
(Sonnet:  To  the  Moon.)— ELP 

(To  the  Moon.)— CEL— FEP— YBF 
("With  how  sad  steps,"  etc.)— PGT  1 

XXXII.  (Morpheus— O— WEP  1 

XXXIII.  (I  Might— O— WEP  1 

XXXVIII.  (Unkinde  Guest,  The— C.)— WEP  1 

XXXIX.  (Sleepe— O— WEP  1 
(Come,  Sleep.) — LLC 

(On  Sleep.)— FEP 

(Sleep.)— BNL— BPB— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 
(To  Sleep.)— OSS 
XLI.     (Stella  Lookt  on— C.) 

("Having  this  day  my  horse,  my  hand,  my 
lance.")— FEP 
XLVIII.     (Sweete  Cruell  Shot— C.)— WEP  1 
LIII.     (What  Now,  Sir  Foole!—C.) 
(Overcome  by  Love.) — YBF 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 
LIV.     (They   Love  indeed  who  Quake  to    Say 
they  Love — C.) 
(Love's  Silence.) — BNL 
LXI.     (Angel's  Sophistrie- C.)— WEP  1 
LXIV.     (Do  not  Will  Me  from  my  Love  to  Flie 
— O— WEP  1 
(Sonnet:  Love  is  Enough.) — ELP 
LXVI.     (Hope  to  Feede— C.)— WEP  1 
LXVIII.     (Planet  of  my  Light— C.) 

("Stella,  the  only,"  etc.)— OEL 
LXIX.     (Covenant— C.)— WEP  1 
LXXIV.     (I  am  no  Pickpurse  of  Another's  Wit 
— O— WEP  1 
(Sonnet:  Inspiration.) — ELP 
LXXXI.     (Still,  Still  Kiss— C.) 

(Nobler  Exercise,  A.) — OH 
LXXXI V.     (My  Muse— O— WEP  1 
(Highway,  The.)— OB 
(Via  Amoris.)— PGT  1— YBF 
LXXXVII.     (Dutie  to  Depart— C.)— WEP  1 
XC.     (Fame— C.)— WEP  1 

(To  Stella.)— YBF 
XCII.     (All    Said,    Still    Say   the   Same— C.)— 

WEP  1 
XCIII.     (Tho'  Worlds  'quite   Me,  shall  I  Myself 

Forgive?— C.)— WEP  I 
GUI.     (Golden  Haire— C.) 

("O  happy  Thames,  that  did  my  Stella  bear.") 

—FEP 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 
CVII.     (See  What  it  is  to  Love— C.)— WEP  1 
ex.     (Aspire  to  Higher  Things— C.) 

(Splendidis  Longum  Valedico  Nugis.) — OB 
(Sonnet:  Eternal  Love.)— ELP 
At  a   Birthday    Festival.     (C.) — Oliver   W.   Holmes. 
(James    Russell  Lowell's  Birthday  Festival — abr.) 
— PEO 
At  a  Dinner  Party. — Anon. — WR  7 
At  a  Funeral. — (C.) — Reginald  Heber. 

(Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  a  Friend.) — FEP 
•      (Thou  art  Gone  to  the  Grave.)- HBP 
At  a  Rural  Gate. — Anon. — CDV 

At  a  Solemn  Musicfk].- J:  Milton.— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
At  a  Women's  Club. — Lawrence  K.  Russell. — CS  37 
At  Altenahr.— T:  Ashe.— VS 

(Meet  we  no  Angels,  Pansie?) — OB 
At  Aunty's  House. — Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
At  Bedtime.     (Youth's  Companion.) — WR  17 
(Two  Little  Girls  I  Know.)— DJS— HSS  2 
At  Best.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— AA—GP 
At  Bethlehem. — Edwin    Arnold.      See    Light    of    the 

World,  The. 
At    Bethlehem. — R:    Crashaw.     See    Hymn    of    the 

Nativity. 
At  Bethlehem.— N.  W.  Rand.— CS  34 
At  Bethlehem.— J:  B.  Tabb.     See  Child,  The. 
At  Boarding-school. — Mary  Chahoon. — WR  17 
At  Chappaqua. — Joel  Benton. — AA — EDY 


At  Christmas  Time. — Anon. — HS 

(When  willyou  Come  Home  Again?) — CS  19 
At  Christmas  "Time.     {Dial.) — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
At  Church.— S.  T.  Livingston.— CG  1 
At  Coruna.— Rob't  Southey.— EHT 
At  Court.  (Sel.  jr.  Prosopopoia:  or,  Mother  Hubberd's 
Tale.)— Edmund  Spenser.— OS  3 

(Spenser  at  Court.) — EPs 
At  Cross  Purposes. — Anon. — DDM 
At  Dame  Nature's  Feet.     {Arr.  by)  Clara  J.  Denton. — 

ASD 
At  Easter  Time.— E.  E.  Hewitt.— YBT 
At  Eastertide. — S.  H.  Adams. — CG  1 
At  Edgewater.— Helen  M.  Merrill.- TCV 
At  End.— Louise  C.  Moulton.— BIL— TAS 
At  Evening. — Anon. — POS 
At  Eventide. — Joe  Lincoln. — -CCB 
At  Florence.     Michelangelo  (<r.  by  W:  Wordsworth). 

See  To  the  Supreme  Being. 
At  Fontainebleau. — Arthur  Symons. — VA 
At  Four-score. — R:  W.  Gilder. — OH 
At  Fredericksburg,  Dec.   13,   1862.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— 

CS21 
At  Gettysburg. — Anon. — AWB 
At  Gibraltar.— G:  E:  Woodberry.- AA— ASL— BNL— 

GN 
At  Graduating  Time. — Anon. — PEO 
At  her  Grave. — Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. — VA 
At  her  Window.      (Mabel,    Pt.     I.)  —  Frd'k    Locker- 

Lampson.— OB— YBF 
At  his  Grave.— Alfred  Austin.— EDY— VA  {si.  abr.) 
At  Home. — Bernard  Barton. — HP  {sel.) 

(Home.)— BLP 
At  Home.     (C) — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — VA 

(Unseen  World— at  Home,  The.)— FEP 
At  Home  in  Heaven.     (Pt.  I.) — Jas.  Montgomery. — VA 

(Forever  with    the  Lord.) — BNL  (ai«o  sel.  jr.  Pt. 
II.)— FEP 
At  Husking  Time.— E.  Pauline   Johnson. — TCV — VA 
At  Last. — Anon. — HP 
At  Last. — Stopford  Brooke. — OH 
At  Last. — Clarkson  Clothier. — CS  7 
At  Last. — Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
At  Last. — Tom  Masson. — TL 
At  Last. — Sir  Lewis  Morris. — VA 
At  Last.— R:  H:  Stoddard.— ASL 
At  Last. — Katrina  Trask. — AA 
At  Last.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BS  13— FEP— TAS 
"At  least  to  pray  is  left,  is  left"     (C.) — Emily  Dickin- 
son. 

(Prayer.)— TAS 
At  Les  Eboulements. — Duncan  C.  Scott. — VA 
At  Life's  Best. — Alfred  Tennyson  (?)— OH 
At  Lincoln. — Oscar  F.  Adams. — AA 
At  Little  Virgil's  Window. — Edwin  Markham. — GMS 
At  Luther's    Grave,    Wittenberg. — R:    W.    Gilder. — 

EDY 
At  Magnolia  Cemetery. — H :  Timrod. — AA 

(Decoration  Day  at  Charleston.) — GP 

(Ode  on  Decorating  the  Graves  of  [the]  Confederate 
Dead  [or  Soldiers].)— HSS  1— OS  3 

(Ode  Sung  on  the  Occasion  of  Decorating  the  Graves 
of  the  Confederate  Dead.) — EPs 

("  Sleep  sweetly  in  your  humble  graves.'') — BNL 
At  Marshfield.     {Fr.   Webster,  an  Ode.)— W.  C.  Wil- 
kinson.— AA 
At  Midnight. — Frank  Dempster  Sherman. — AA 
At  Mother's  Knee. — ^Anon. — SSS 
At  my  Father's  Grave. — W:  H.  Hayne. — HDL 
At  my  Mother's  Grave. — G:  D.  Prentice. — SR  1 
At  Night. — G.  E.  Montgomery. — AA 
At  Nightfall.— Lucy  Larcom.— DCS 
At  Noey's  House. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
At  Noon  and  Midnight.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BTL—FTA 
At  One  Again,  Sel.  fr.  (VI.  Lovers.) — Jean  Ingelow. — 

BIL 
At  Play.— Eugene  Field.— LS 
At  Port  Royal.— J:  G.  Whittier.- EPs— PAP 

(Song  of  the  Negro  Boatman — sd.) — GN 
At  Quebec— Jean  Blewett. — TCV 
At  Queen  Maude's  Banquet. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
At    Rugby. — T:   Hughes.     See  Tom    Brown's    School 

Days. 
At  St.    Peter's   at    Rome. — Lord   Byron.     See   Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
At  School. — Bessie  Chandler.^HSS  3 
At  Sea.— Fs.  W.  Bourdillon.— HP 
At  Sea.— Allan  Cunningham.— BFV—PSR 

(Sea  Song,  A.)— GN— LH— PYO 
(A6r.)— EPs— LLC 

(Wet  Sheet  and  a  Flowing  Sea,  A.)— BNL— BVC— 
FEP— HBP— LC— OS  2— PC— PGT  1  — YBF 


33 


At 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


At  Sea.— J:  T.    Trowbridge.— EPs—FEP—GP— HBP 

— MYF— TAS 
At  Set  of  Sun.     (Mail  and  Express.) — CS  14 

(Our  Daily  ReckowneO— HSS  2 
At  Set  of  Sun. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — AA 
"At  setting  day  and  rising  morn." — Allan  Ramsay.  See 

Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 
At  Shakespeare's  Grave.     (Ignatius  Donnelly  Loq.) — 

— Irving  Browne. — AA 
At  Spencer  Grange.— W:  Kirby.— TCV 
At  Stratford-on-Avon. — Mackenzie  Bell. — VA 
At  Sunset.— Mattie  A.  W.  Clark.— NV 
At  Sunsetting.— G:  Wither.— FEP 
At  the  Altar.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
At  the  Atlantic  Dinner.     (Br.  sel.) — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

— SE 
At  the  Back  of  the  North  Wind,  SeZs.  fr. — G:  Maodon- 

ald. 
Baby[,  The].   (C— verses  fr.  Ch.  XXIIID— BNL— 

CS  16  — CSS— DLS— GMS— OS  1— PPSr— VA 

— WCL 
(Where  Did  You  Come  from  [,  Baby]?)— FEP— 

PP— YFR 
Little  Diamond  and  the  Drunken    Cabman.     (Ch. 

XVIII.)— MYF 
What  Would  you  See?  (Up  in  the  Tree — C. — verses 

fr.  Ch.  XXy.—sl.  diff.  fr.  poems.)— PoR 
At  the  Ball.— H.  G.  Dunham.— CG  1 
At  the  Barricade. — Victor  Hugo. — TMR 
At  the  Book  Counter. — Anon. — WR  7 

(Girl  at  the  Book  Counter,  The.)— CS  33 
At  the  Boston  Banquet,  Seh.  fr. — H:  W.  Grady. 
Negro  Problem,  The.— FD  2 
Regard  for  the  Negro  Race. — PS 

(Love  and  Loyalty  of  the  Negro — si.  abr.) — FD  2 
(Southern  Negro,  The— sZ.  di#.)— NC— SC 
At  the  Camp-fire. — Sarah  Meader. — CS  36 
At  the  Cedars.— Duncan  C.  Scott.— VA—WR  13 
At  the     Church     Gate.     (Fr.     Pendennis.) — W:     M. 

Thackeray.—  AVP  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  FTA  — 

HBP— OH— PGT  2— PYO    (si.     abr.)~YA— 

VS— YBF 
At  the  Club.— R:  Hovey.— CG  2 
At  the  Concert. — Jas.  L.  Gordon. — WR  15 
At  the  Council.— Lord  De  Tabley.— AVP 
At  the  Court-house  Door. — Anon. — HP 
At  the  Dance. — Augusta  de  Gruchy. — FLS 
"At  the  devil's  booth  all  things  are  sold." — Jas.  R. 

Lowell.     See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 
At  the  Door.— Eugene  Field.— EF—WTD 
"At  the  end  of  life  a  man  finds  himself  rich." — Theo- 
dore Tilton.— GG 
At  the  Farragut  Statue. — Rob't  Bridges. — EDY 
At  the  Funeral.     (C.) — Reginald  Heber. 

(Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  a  Friend.) — FEP 
("Thou  are  gone  to  the  grave.") — HBP 
At  the  Garden  Gate. — Anon. — -CS  18 
At  the   Grave  of   Burns. — W:   Wordsworth. — EDY — 

WEP4 
At  the  Grave  of  Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti. — Mackenzie 

Bell.— VA 
At  the  Grave  of  Keats. — Oscar  Wilde. — GG 

(Grave  of  Keats,  The.)— EDY 
At  the  Grave  of  Walker.     (Fr.  With  Walker  in  Nica- 
ragua.)— Joaquin  Miller. — AA — EDY 
At  the  Grindstone;  or,  A  Home  View  of  the  Battle- 
field.— Rob't  Buchanan. — MMR 
At  the  Hacienda. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — AA 
At  the  Hearthside. — J:  Vance  Cheney. — TAV 
At  the  Hospital  Window.— Carl  Smith.— CS  37 
At    the    Junior    Promenade.  —  Carey     Culbertson.  ^- 

CG2 
At  the  Last. — Jas.  B.  Bensee. — LLC 
At  the  Last. — Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
At  the  Last.— Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton.— CS  20— HSS  3 
At  the  Loom.     (Pvblic  Opinion.) — HP 
At  the  Masquerade. — Anon. — CH     . 
At  the  Mermaid  Inn. — C.  L.  Hildreth. — AA 
At  the   Mid   Hour  of  Night.   (C.)— T:   Moore.— OB— 

TIP— WEP  4 
(At  the  Mid  Hour  of  Night,  when  Stars  are  Weeping, 

I  Fly.)— PGT  1 
At  the  Mid  Hour  of  Night,  when  Stars  are  Weeping, 

I  Fly.     See  foregoing. 
At  the  Mt.  Holly  Camp-meeting. — Anon. — WR  14 
At  the  Ninth  Hour. — J:  L.   Spalding.     See  God  and 

the  Soul. 
At  the  North  Avenue  Fire.— A.  M.  White,  Jr.— CG  2 
At  the   Old   Home   Again.     (Lines   on    Revisiting  th» 

Country— C.)—W:  C.  Bryant.— BLP 
At  the  Opera. — Anon. — TL 
At  the  Opera.— G:  H.  Jessop.— CS  22 


At  the  Opera. — Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton.  See  Aux  Ita- 
liens. 

At  the  Opera. — E.  De  Lancey  Pierson. — TL 

At  the  Oratorio. — Anon. — CS  23 

At  the  Party.- E.  S.  Phelps.— SR  2 

At  the  Piano. — Anon.^HP 

At  the  President's  Grave.— R:  W.  Gilder.— EDY 

At  the  Race.     (Yale  Record.)— CG  2 

At  the  "Red  Lion."— Helen  Booth.— CS  19 

At  the  Restaurant. — Anon. — WR  7 

('Twas  at  Manhattan  Beach.) — DCR. 

At  the  Rock.— W:  S.  Pettit.— CG  3 

At  the  Rug  Auction.— H:  Baldwin.— DCR— WR  3 

At  the  Sea-side. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 

At  the  Shrine. — R:  K.  Munkittrick. — AA 

At  the  Skating  Rink. — Anon. — KNS 

At  the  Stage  Door.— Jas.  C.  Harvey.— BS  18— CS  30 

At  the  Stake  (Steak).     (Tafe.)- Anon.— TCP 

At  the  Stamp-window. — Anon. — CS  21 

At  the  Tavern.— Alice  Cary. — BLF 

At  the  Tomb  of- Napoleon.  (Fr.  The  Liberty  of  Man, 
Woman,  and  Child.) — Rob't  J.  Ingersoll. — 
CS  30— SC 

"At  the  top  of  his  mind,  the  devout  man  has  a  holy 
of  holies." — Alger. — GG 

At  the  Tunnel's  Mouth.— Fred  Lyster.- DR 

At  the  Unveiling  of  the  Gray  Memorial. — Jas.  R. 
Lowell.— MRS 

At  the  Window. — Anon. — DLF 

At  the  Window.— H:  R:  Foster.— CG  1 

At  the  Window. — Alfred  Tennyson.  See  Enoch 
Arden. 

At  the  Window.— Agnes  E.  Wetherald.— TCV 

At  Tiber  Mouth.— Rennell  Rodd.— HBP 

At  Twilight. — Peyton  Van  Rensselaer. — AA 

At  Uficle  Dock's.— Elsie   Malone  McCollum.— WR  26 

At  Vespers. — Jared  Van  Wagenen,  Jr. — CG  1 

At  your  (Sate. — Barton  Gray. — FLS 

Atalanta  Conquered. — W:  Morris.  See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 

Atalanta  in  Calydon,     Sels.    fr. — Algernon    C.    Swin- 
burne. 
Chorus  [from  'Atalanta']. — OB — VA 

("When  the  hounds  of  Spring.")— BNL— FEP— 
HBP 
Chorus:  "We  have  seen  thee,  O  Love!"  (Sel.)  — VA 

(We  have  Seen  thee,  O  Love!)— YBF 
Making  of  Man,  The.— AVP 

("Before  the  beginning  of  years.") — FEP 
(Soul  and  Body.)— HBP 

Atalanta  Victorious. — W :  Morris.  See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 

Atalanta's  Defeat. — W:  Morris.  See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 

Atalanta's  Race. — W:  Morris.  See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 

Atalanta's  Victory. — W:  Morris.  See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 

Athanasia. — C.  G.  Ames. — TAS 

Atheism.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Atheism. — Arthur  H.  Clough.     See  Dipsychus. 

Atheist,  The.— W:  Knox.— CS  5 

Atheist  and  Acorn,  The. — Anon. — HR 

Atheistical  Government  Impossible,  An. — R:  B.  Sheri- 
dan.—SS 

Athenian  Patriotism. — Demosthenes.  See  Oration  on 
the  Crown,  The. 

Athens.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Athens:    Its    Rise    and    Fall,    Sels.    fr. — E:    Bulwer- 
Lytton. 
Marathon.— TMD 
Olympic  Crown,  The.— TMD 

Athulf  and  Ethilda.— H:  Taylor.— BNL— EPs 

Athulf's  Death  Song. — T:  L.  Beddoes.  See  Death's, 
Jest  Book. 

Athulf's  Song. — T-  L.  Beddoes.  See  Death's  Jest 
Book. 

Atkinson's  Mill. — Andrew  Ramsay. — TCV 

Atlantic  Cable,  The.— Jas.  T:  Fields.— TMR 

Attack  of  the  Cumberland. — G:  H.  Boker. — SA 

(On  Board  the   "Cumbedand"— C.)— AWB— CS  1 
— WR  10      ■ 

Attainment. — Algernon  Tassin. — AA 

Attempt  at  Berghen,  The. — J:  Dryden.  See  Annus 
Mirabilis,  the  Year  of  Wonders. 

"Attempted  Suicide."— T:  Frost.— CS  34 

Attempts  to  Bias  Judgment  in  Case  of  Wilkes. — Lord 
Mansfield.— SS 

Attendance.     (Char.)— Anon. — TCP 

Attitudes  Illustrated  in  Verge. — (Arr.  by)  Martha  E. 
Barbour.- WR  26 

"Au  Revoir." — 'Austin  Dobson. — DR 


34 


TITLE    INDEX 


Autograph 


Aubade. — Sir  W:  Davenant. — OB 
( Dawn- song.  )—CEL 
(Morning.)— YBF 
(Song— O— FEP— WEP  2 
Aubade. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Cymbeline. 
Auction  Extraordinary,  The. — Lucretia  M.  Davidson. 

PPSr 
("Auctioneer  then,  in  his  labor  began,  The" — br. 

8el.)—CS  1 
(Bachelor  Sale.  The.)— OS  17 
Auctioneer  and  the  Lawyer,  The. — Smith. — BC 
"Auctioneer  then  in  his  labor  began.  The." — Lucretia 

M.    Davidson.     See    Auction    Extraordinary, 

The. 
Auctioneer's  Gift,  The.— Sam  W.  Foss.— BS  18— CS  30 

— HSS  3— PR 
Auctioning  Off  the  Baby. — Anon. — DR 
Auf  Wiedersehen.— S.  Abbott. — CG  1 
Auf  Wiedersehen. — Harr.v  Safford  Candee. — CG  I 
Auf  Wiedereshen !  (Summer  and  Autumn.) — Jas.   R. 

Lowell.— AA—FEP 
(Auf  Wiedersehen— Summer. )— BNL — FTA 
Augury.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— BNL 
August.— W:  D.  Gallagher.— SN 
August. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
August. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
August. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
August. — Celia  Thaxter. — SN 
August. — Helen  M.  Winslow. — POS 
August  Afternoon,  An. — J.  P.  Irvine. — SN 
August  Weather. — Katha.  Tynan-Hinkson. — TIP 
Auld  Daddy  Darkness. — Jas.  Ferguson. — PoR — WR  24 
Auld  Laird's  Secret,  Thae. — Mrs.   Findley  Braden. — 

WR21 
Auld  Lang  Syne.— Rob't  Bums.— BNL— BS  7— GEL 

— EPs— FEP  — GP  — HBP  — LLC  {al.  ahr.)— 

MBL— OB— WEP  3— YBF 
(Goal  of  Life,  The.)— LH 
Auld  Lang  Syne.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— TAS 
Auld  Licht  Idylls,  Sel.  fr.     (Courting  of  T'nowhead's 

Bell,  The— /r.  Ch.  VIII.)— Jas.  M.  Barrie.— 

BS24 
Auld  Robin  Gray. — Lady  Anne  (Lindsay)  Barnard. — 

CS  15 
(1st.  pt.)— BFV  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  CEL  —  CR  — 
•  EPs  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HSS  2  —  OB  — 

PGTl 
Auld  Wife,  The.— C:  S.  Calverley.— NA 

( Ballad— C. )— THP— VA 
Aunt  Bethiah's  Journey. — Anon. — FHE 
Aunt  Betsey  and  Little  Davy.     {Play  ad.  fr.  David 

Copperfield,  Ch.  XIII.) — C:  Dickens  (dram,  by 

Mrs.  J.  W.  Shoemaker).- BS  13— CDD 
Aunt  Betsey  on  Marriage. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Aunt  Debby's  Speculation. — Mrs.  J.  E.  McConaughy. 

— StD 
Aunt  Deborah  Hears  "The  Messiah." — Anon. — WR  25 
Aunt  Eliza. — Col.  D.  Streamer. — NA 
Aunt  Ellen's  Hatchet.     (Dial.). — Anon. — NDP 
Aunt  Hannah's  Letter. — Elsie  M.  McCoUum. — WR  21 
Aunt  Hetty  on  Matrimony. — Anon. — DFY 
Aunt  Hitty  Tarbox.    (Sel.  fr.  Timothy's  Quest,  Sc.  X.) 

—Kate  D.  Wiggin.— MRS 
Aunt  Jemima's  Courtship. — Anon. — CS  17 
Aunt  Jemima's  Money. — J.  D.  Bellows. — MD 
Aunt  Jerusha's  Mistake. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KH 
Aunt  Kindly.— Theodore  Parker.- BS  4— CS  18— SR  1 
Aunt    Kitty's   Shopping.     (Dial.) — E.    C.    and   L.    J. 

Rook.— YFE 
"Aunt  'Mandy." — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Aunt  Maria  at  the  Eden  Musee. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — 

CS31 
Aunt  Melissa's  Money. — Anon. — MC 
Aunt  Melissy  on  Boys. — J :  T.  Trowbridge. — BS  17  (abr.) 

— CS  30 
Aunt  Parsons's  Story.     (Presbyterian  Journal.) — CD 
Aunt  Patience's  Doughnuts.     (Springfield  Republican.) 

— CRR— CS  21 
Aunt  Peggy  and  High  Art. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  2 
Aunt  Phillis's  Guest.— W:  C.  Gannett.— BS  20 
Aunt  Phoebe's  Remonstrance. — R.  F.  Williams,  Jr. — 

CGI 
Aunt  Polly  Green. — G:  Vickers. — PS 
Aunt  Polly's  "George  Washington."     (YotUh'a  Com- 
panion.)— BS  13 
Aunt   Pullet's   Bonnet. — George    Eliot.     See  Mill  on 

the  Floss,  The. 
Aunt  Rhody's  Dream. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Aunt  Shaw's  Pet  Jug. — Holman  F.  Day. — THP 
Aunt  Sophronia  Tabor  at  the  Opera. — Anon. — CD — 

CS  36— DCR— SR  7 


Aunt  Susan  Jones. — Anon. — CS  20 

Aunt  Susan's  Quilt. — Eugene  Wood. — WR  26 

Aunt  Sylvia's  First  Lesson  in  Geography. — Anon. — 

BS  17— SR  4 
Aunt  Tabitha.— Oliver  W.  Hohnes.— CS   10— FTR— 

PR— TMR— YA 
Aunt  Virginia's  Ear  Trumpet. — Anon. — MC 
Auntie  Dimple. — Anon. — YFD 
Auntie's  Courtship. — Anon. — SR  10 
Auntie's  Education. — May  R.  McNabb. — PS 
Auntie's  Parlor. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Auntie's  Skirts. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Aunty   Doleful's   Visit.— Mary   K.    Dallas.— BS    12— 

CS  13— NPS— SA— SO— SR  7— WR  3— YP 
Aunty's  Lesson. — Anon. — WR  17 
Aurelian,  Sel.  fr.  (Christian  Martyr,  The — ael.  fr.  Letter 

XI.)— W:  Ware— WR  5 
Aurelian  aiid  Zenobia. — W :  Ware.     See  Zenobia. 
Aurelia's  Unfortunate  Young  Man. — S:  L.  Clemens. — 

BeR— CS  16— SR  4 
Aurelia's  Valentine. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Aureng-Zebe ;  or.  The  Great  Mogul,  Sela.  fr. — J :  Dryden. 
Aureng-Zebe.     (Br.  sel.) — BNL 
Prologue  to  Aureng-Zebe. — WEP  2 
Aurora,  Sels.fr. — W:  Alexander,  Earl  of  Stirling. 
Aurora — OB 

Sonnets  fr.  Aurora.— WEP  2 
Aurora,  Sel.  fr.  (Banquet,  The.) — Mary  A.  Tincker. — 

WR24 
Aurora  Borealis,  The. — Jos.  K.  Foran. — TCV 
Aurora  Borealis,  The.— H.  F.  Gould.— FP 
Aurora  Leigh,  Sels.  fr. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. 
Aurora's  Home.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— WEP  4 
Beauty  of  England,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— WEP 4 
("But  then  the  thrushes  sang" — br.  ael.) — HDL 
( England— afcr. )— V  A 
Books.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— VA 

( Reading — sel. ) — GN 
"By  Solitary  Fires."     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  V.)— VA 
Ferment  of  New  Wine,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— VA 
"Get  leave  to  work."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.)     GG 
Journey  South,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VII.)— WEP  4 
Marian's  Child.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VI.)— WEP  4 
Motherless.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— VA 
Poets,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— VA 
Romney  and  Aurora.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IX.) — VA 
Simile,  A.     (S^l.  fr.  Bk.  V.)— WEP  4 
Aurora's    Home. — Eliz.    B.    Browning.     See    Aurora 

Leigh. 
Auspex.— Jas.  R.  Lowell. — ASL— YBF 
Austerity  of  Poetry. — Matthew  Arnold. — WEP  4 
Austerlitz.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— EDY 
Australian  Girl,  An. — Ethel  Castilla. — VA 
Author  and  the  Statesman,  The. — Fielding. — HPE 
Author  of  the  "Pobble,"  The.— E:  Lear.— BVC 

(Lines  to  a  Young  Lady.) — NA 
Authority.— S:  Butler.— KNE 
Authority. — W:  R.  Huntington. — AA 
Authors.     (.Frags,  fr.  varioits  autfiora.) — BNL 
Authors.     (Literary      Recreations.) — Eliz.      Lloyd. — 

BS13 
Author's    Chamber,    The. — Washington    Irving,     See 

Alhambra,  The. 
Author's  Resolution  in  a  Sonnet,  The.     (Fr.  Fidelia.) 
— G:  Wither.— CEL— ELP— WEP  2 
(Lover's  Resolution,  The.)— OB 
(Manly  Heart.The.)- EPs— FTA— OEL— PGT  1 
(Shall  I,  wasting  in  despair  [e].)— ES— YBF  (abr.) 
(Shepherd's  Resolution,  The— C.)— BNL— FEP— 
HBP— PYO  (abr.) 
Autobiographical. — W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Autobiographical  Fragment,  An,  Sel.  fr.   (My  Books.) — 

Bryan  W.  Procter.- LBB— MBB 
Autobiography,  An. — Phillips  Brooks. — TMD 
Autobiography,  An. — Ernest  Rhys. — VA 
Autobiography  of  Leigh  Hunt,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Lesson 
in  Reading — sel.  fr.  Ch.  III.) — L«igh  Hunt. — 
MHR 
Autochthon.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— SN—VA 
Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast-table,  The,  Sela.  /r.— Oliver 
W.  Holmes. 
Cubes  and  Spheres.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  V.) — LLC 
Hats.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  VIII.)— MMR 
Human  Voice,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  IX.) 
Letting  in  Light.     (5eZ.  fr.  Ch.  V.)— OS  3 
Rudolph   the    Headsman.      (Sd.  ft.  Prologue.) — 

BNL— EPs 
Talks  on  Trees.     (Sels.  fr.  Chs.  X.  and  XII.)— AD 
(Old  Hemlock,  An— seZ.)— LLC 
Auto-da-fd. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Autograph,  An. — Jas.  R.  Lowell  (7). — AA 
Autograph,  An. — J  •  G.  Whittier. — AA 


35 


Autograph 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Autograph  Book   of   Blue,    The. — H.  W.   Jakeway. — 

WR22 
Automatic  Cradle,  The. — Anon.^CS  20 
Automatic  Woman,  "Hie. — Saidee  V.  Milne. — WR  15 
Autumn. — Anon. — CP 
Autumn. — Anon. — PTS 
Autumn. — Anon. — YBT 
Autumn.     (Blackwood). — HP 
Autumn.     (SeZ.)— Alice  Gary.— POS 
Autumn. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA — LC 
Autumn,  The. — W:  D.  Gallagher.     See  Autumn  in  the 

West. 
Autumn.— T :"  Hood.— BNL— HBP— OB 

(Ode:  Autumn— C.)—VA 

(Ode  to  Autumn.)— CEL 
Autumn. — J:  Keats. — POS 

(Ode  to  Autumn.)— PGT  1— SN 

(To     Autumn— (;.■)— CEL— FEP— HBP— OB— 
WEP  4— YBF 
Autumn. — Albert  Laighton. — NV 
Autumn.    (Poems  and  Epigrams,  LXII. — C.) — Walter 

S.  Landor.— OB 
Autumn.     (The    Fields     of    Down,    XXIX.)— Lloyd 

Mifflin.— SN 
Autumn. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Autumn :   A  Dirge. 
Autumn. — Edmund     Spenser.     See     Faerie     Queene, 

The. 
Autumn. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Autumn. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Autumn:    A  Dirge.     (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— CGd— 
HBP— LC 

Autumn.  —CEL— FEP— FP 
Autumn  Breeze,  An. — W:  H.  Hayne. — AA 
Autumn  Cry,  The.     (Cornell  Widow.)~CG  3 
Autumn  Day,  An. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — PEO 
Autumn  Evening,  The.— W:  B.  O.  Peabody.— TAS 
Autumn  Fires. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Autumn  Flitting,  An. — G:  Cotterell. — VA 
Autumn  Flowers. — Caroline  B.  Southey. — ^HBP 
Autumn  Haze.— R :  K.  Munkittrick. — POS 
Autumn  in  the  West. — W :  D.  Gallagher. — AA 

(Autumn,  The — ael.) — AA 
Autumn  is  Ended. — J.  Hazard  Hartzell. — POS 
Autumn  Leaf,  An. — Harry  E.  Fosdick. — CG  3 
Autumn  Leaves,  The. — Anon. — AD 
Autumn  Leaves,  The. — Anon. — NA 
Autumn  Leaves. — G:  Cooper. — GMS  (abr.) — NV 

(Leaves  and  the  Wind,  The.)— TAV 

(Wind  and  the  Leaves,  The.)— SM 
Autumn  Leaves. — T:  W.  Higginson. — AD 
Autumn  Memories. — G:    F.     Savage- Armstrong. — VA 
Autumn:  or,   Hylas  and  ^gon. — Alexander    Pope. — 

EP 
Autumn  Song.— M.  E.  C— HSS  2 

Autumn  Song    (C.) — Edmund    Clarence    Stedman. — 
NV 

(Going  a-Nutting.)— GN 
Autumn  Song  of  a  Little  Girl.— H.  C.  B.— PHS 
Autumn  Sunset,  An. — Anon. — POS 
Autumn  Thoughts.— Bill  Nye.— SR  4 
Autumn  Tourists. — Anon. — MRS 
Autumn  Voices.— F.  W.  B.— AD— LLC 
Autumn  Wedding-song,  An. — Algernon  Tassin. — CG  1 
Autumn's  Mirth.— S:  Minturn  Peck.— GN— POS 
Autumn's  Processional. — Dinah  M.  Craik.  See  October. 
Autumn's  Sighing.— T:  B.  Read.— HBP 
Aux  Italiens.    (C.) — Rob't  Bulwer-Lytton. — AVP  (al. 
ai>r.)— BNL  —  BRR  —  BS  12  —  CR  —  CS  20 
—  FEP  —  HBP  —  LLC  —  MR  —  SR  5  —  VA 

(At  the  Opera.)— VSG 

(One  isn't  Loved  every  Day — br.  sel.) — FLS 
Avalanche,  The. — Anon. — CS  15 
Avalanche  of  Drugs,  An. — C:  H.  Clark.     See  Out  of  the 

Hurly  Burly. 
Avalanches  of  Jungfrau  Alp. — G.  B.  Cheever. — OM 

(Avalanches  of  the  Jungfrau.) — PPS 
Avalanches   of   the   Jungfrau. — G.    B.    Cheever.     See 

foregoing. 
Avaro  (Epigram — C). — G.  Lessing  (tr.  by  S.  T.  Cole- 
ridge).—HPE 
Ave.— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— WEP  4 
Ave  atque  Vale. — Algernon  C:  Swinburne. — EDY  (sel.) 

—OB 
Ave  atque  Vale. — Rosamund  M.  Watson. — VA 
Ave  Imperatrix. — Oscar  Wilde. — HBP — VA 
Ave  Maria. — Alfred  Austin. — BS  6 

(SI.  abr.—arr.  al.  diff.)~FMll—SO 
Ave!     Nero  Imperator. — Duffield  Osborne. — A  A 
Avenged!— Alfred  Verlyn.— WR  13 
Avenging  Childe,    The. — Anon.   (tr.    by   J:    G.    Lock- 
hart.)— MMR—WR  8 
Average  Boy,  The.     (Detroit  Free  Preaa.) — CS  37 


Average  Boy,  The.— Pauline  Phelps.— WR  21 
Average  Modern  Traveler,  The. — Anon. — SR  1 
Avis.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— WCL 
A-visitin'  the  School. — Anon. — CS  35 
Await  the  Issue. — T:  Carlyle.     See  Past  and  Present. 
Awake.— Torn  Dutt.— FLS 

Awake,  my  Heart !— Rob't  Bridges.— V A — YBF 
"Awake,  my  soul,  stretch  every  nerve."     (The  Chris- 
tian Race — C. — sl.  abr.) — Philip  Doddridge. — 

SAE 
Awakened,  The. — Eliz.  Hazard. — FLS 
Awakening. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — AA 
Awakening  of  Endymion,  The. — Lsetitia  E.  (Landon) 

Maclean.— FEP— HBP 
Awakening  of  Uncle  Sam,  The. — Sam  W.  Foss. — PAPm 
Awakening  Song. — J:  Ford.     See  Lover's  Melancholy, 

The. 
Awakening  Year,  The.— T:  B.  Read.— AD 
Awaking,  Sel.  fr.  (Morning.) — W:  Allingham. — EPs 
Awaking  a  Boy.     (C. — in  Life  in  Danbury.) — Jas.  M. 

Bailey.— MYF 
(Calling  a  Boy  in  the  Morning.)— CS  10— KNE— 

SO 
Away.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— HDL 
Away,   Delights!     (Fr.    The   Captain — Song  of   Love 

Despairing    and    Prepared    to    Die — C). — J: 

Fletcher.— OB 
Away  from  the  Wine-cup,  Away.     (New  York  Weekly.) 

— CS9 
Away  to  School. — T:  Hughes.  See  Tom  Brown's  School 

Days. 
Awful  Boots.— H.  E.  McBride.— MCD 
Awful  Boy,  An. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Awful  Fly,  An.— W.  T.— KNS 
Awful  Responsibility,  An. — Anon. — DSS 
Awful  Squirt,  An.     (Rockland  Courier.) — CS  20 
Awful  State,  An.— Anon.— DSS 
Awful  Story,  An. — Anon.— DCP 
Awfully  Lovely  Philosophy.— Anon.— BS  9  —  CS  20— 

DCR— FTR— PR— SR  7— YA 
Awkward. — J.  C.  Goodwin.— CS  26 
Axe,  The.— Isabella  V.  Crawford.— VA 

(Axe  of  the  Pioneer,  The — seZ.)- TCV 
Axe  of  the  Pioneer,  The. — Isabella  V.  Crawford.     See 

foregoing. 
Axe  to  (jrind.  An. — Anon. — PS 
Aylmer's  Field.     (5eZ.)— Alfred  Tennyson.— WR  1 

(Leolin  and  Edith — sel.) — GN 
Aztec  City,  The. — Eugene  F.  Ware. — AA 


B 

B.  B.  Romance,  The. — Edgar  Fawcett.— DR 
Babe,  The.— Calidasa     (tr.    by   Sir   W-   Jones).— EPs 
— FEP— GP 
(Baby,  The.)— BNL 
Babe  Christabel,  Sd.  fr. — Gerald  Massey. — FP 
Babes  in  the  Wood,  The.     (Dial. — burlesque  on  follow- 
ing.)— Anon. — MDD 
Babes  in  the  Wood,  The.     (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — 
Anon.— BVC 
(Babes  in  the  Woodfs],  The. — Mother  Goose  vera. — 

6r.)— BVC— SM 
(Children     in      the       Wood — C. — ballad    vers.) — 
AD  (seZJ- BB  — CGd  — EPs— FEP— HBP— 
PC— PEB  1— WCLI  1 
Babie,  The. — Jeremiah  E.  Rankin  (wr.  at.  to  Hugh  Mil- 
ler).- AA— BNL— FEP— LC  (abr.) 
(NaeShoon.)— OS  1 
Babie  Bell.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— See  Baby  Bell. 
Babies,  The.     (Speech  on  the  Babies — C. — sl.  abr.) — 

S:  L.  Clemens.— CS  18— SR  1 
Babies.     (Abr.) — Jerome  K.  Jerome. — BS  21 

(On  Babies— C.)—H  BR 
Babies  all  are  Grown,  The.— Ethel  M.  Colson.— BS  22 
Babies'  Reception,  The. — Anon. — EuE 
Babyf,  The].  — Anon.— FP— TFS 
Baby,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Baby,  The. — Calidasa   (tr.    by    Sir    W:    Jones).      Sea 

Babe,  The. 
Baby. — Elaine  Goodale  Eastman. — AA — OH 
Baby[.  The].    G:  Macdonald.     See  At  the  Back  of  the 

North  Wind. 
Baby,  The.— Eliz.  W.  Townsend.— WR  1 7 
Baby  and  Mary. — Anon. — NA 

Baby  Bell.  (C.)—T:  Bailey  Aldrich.— BNL— FEP 
(Babie  Bell.)— FMR— MYF  (a6r. )—SE  (br.  aels.) 
(Ballad  of  Babie  Bell,  The.)— BRR— CS  13— CSS— 

FP— WCL 
("O  babie,  dainty  babie  Bell" — br.  sel.) — SE 


36 


TITLE    INDEX 


Baker's 


Baby  Bye.— Theodore  Tilton.— OS  1 

(Fly,  The.)— AWH 
Baby  Com. — Anon. — PoR 
Baby  Dear.     (Cradle  Song  of  the  Buccaneer's  Wife.) — 

(At.  to)  S:  Lover.— LC 
Baby  Faith.     (Christian  Observer. y-^MYF 
Baby  in  Church. — Minnie  [or  Winnie]  M.  Gow. — BS  16 

— CS  24— HP— NPS— PFP— PR— YP 
Baby  in  the  Library,  The.— E:  D.  Anderson. — MBB 
Baby  is  a  Sailor. — Anon. — TFS 

(Cradle  Song.)— PR 
Baby  is  Dead,  The. — Emma  A.  Browne. — CS  17 
Baby  Logic— Eliz.   W.   Bellamy.— COS— DCP—PP— 

WR  12 
(Baby's  Logic.)— NPS— YP 
Baby  Logic. — Helen  M.  Winslow. — WR  9 
Baby  Louise.— Marg.  Eytinge.— BNL— TFS 
Baby  May .—W:    C.    Bennett.— BNL— FEP— HBP— 

VA 
Baby  Mine.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Baby  Mine. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson. — OH 
Baby  Nell.— Anon.— CPL  (sel.) 

(How  Did  It  Happen?)— COS— PP 
Baby  of  the  Future,  The.     (Outlook. )— BS  23 
Baby  Over  the  Way,   The. — Washington   Gladden. — 

HP 
(My  Neighbor's  Baby.)— CS  13— SSS 
Baby  Seed  Song.— E.  Nesbit.— BVC— PoR 
Baby  Sister.— Lucy  S.  Ruggles.— TFS 
Baby  Sleeps.— Anon.— CS  20— DLS 

(Little  Tyrant.)- TFS 
Baby  Sleeps,  The.— Anon.— TFS 

(Don't  Wake  the  Baby.)— PS— TT 
Baby  Sleeps.— S:  Hinds.— BNL 
(Sleeping  Baby,  The.)— FEP 
Baby  Zulma's  Christmas  Carol. — A :  J.  Requier. — BNL 
Babyhood. — Josiah  G.  Holland.     See  Bitter-sweet. 
Baby-land.— G:  Cooper.— CPL— HP— PS 
Babylonia,  Sel.  jr.  (Tempora  Acta.) — Robert,  Earl  of 

Lytton.— VA 
Baby's  Correspondence. — Alice  P.  Carter.— WR  4 
Baby's  Cradle  is  Green. — Anon. — TFS  (sel.) 

(Lullaby.)— CS  23— TFS  (sei.) 
Baby's  Day. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Baby's  Dead. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Baby's  D^but,  The.— Jas.  Smith.- EDY— FEP— HPE 

— THP 
Baby's  Drawer.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Baby's  Dreams. — Edgar  Fawcett.— TAV 
Baby's  Eyes. — Algernon    C.    Swinburne.      See    Etude 

R^alist($. 
Baby's  Feet  [,A]. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne.     See  Etude 

R&listd. 
Baby's  Feet, and  Hands,  A. — Algernon   C.  Swinburne. 

See  Etude  Rdalist^. 
Baby's  First  Tooth.— Anon.— DLS 
Baby's  First   Tooth,   The.     (Harbisons'  Baby,    The — 

C. — in  They  All  Do  it.)— Jas.  M.  Bailey.— BS  3 

— CS  10— DR  (al.  longer.) 
Baby's  IJands    [,  A]. — Algernon     C.    Swinburne.     See 

Etude  R^alist(5. 
Baby's  Kiss,  The.— G.  R.  Emerson.— BS  9— CS  19 
Baby's  Letter.— Anon.— DCP  (sel.)— HP 
Baby's  Logic. — Eliz.  W.  Bellamy.     See  Baby  Ix)gic. 
Baby's  Lullaby. — Anon. — PS 
Baby's  Name,  The.— Anon.— WR  24 
Baby's  Ofifering. — Anna  Burnham. — CS  37 
Baby's  Rattle.  A. — Anon. — HP 
Baby's  Reflections,  A.     (London  Figaro.) — DLS — DS 

— YA 
Baby's  Remarks. — Anon. — DCP 
Baby's  Reply. — Anon. — HP 
Baby's  Ring.— Phoebe  Gary.- BLF 
Baby's  Shoes.- W:  C.  Bennett.— BNL— HBP— OS  1 
Baby's  Skies.— Mary  C.  Bartlett.— OH— TFS 
Baby's  Soliloquy  [,  A].— Anon.— CS  18— DST— NPS— 

PP— YFR— YP 
Baby's  Thoughts,  The. — Anon. — WR  7 
Baby's  Thoughts,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Baby's  Visitor.     (Atlanta  Constitution.) — BS  9 
Baca.— S:  D.  Robbins.— TAS 
Bacchanalia;  or.  The  New  Age. — Matthew  Arnold. — 

HBP 
(  Evening — sel.) — LC 
Bacchanalian    Song,    A. — Bryan    W.    Procter. — VS — 

WEP4 
Bacchic  Lyric,  A. — H.  L.  Doggett.— CG  1 
Bacchus. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — HBP — OB 
Bacchus. — J :  Keats.     See  Endymion. 
Bacchus. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — TAV 
Bacchylides. — G:  M.  Whicher. — AA 
Bachelor  and  the  Bride,  The. — Anon. — BC 


Bachelor  Coat,  The.— G :  A.  Baker,  Jr.- CS  37 

("Le  Dernier  Jour  d'un  Condamnd" — C.) — PLD — 

TAV 
Bachelor  Sale,  The. — Lucretia  M.  Davidson — CS  17 
(Auction  Extraordinary,  The.) — PPSr 
(Auctioneer,  then,  in   his   labor  began,  The" — br. 

sel.)— CS  1 
Bachelors,  The.     (.A6r.)— Anon.— BS  15— CS  9 
Bachelor's  Cane-bottomed  Chair,  The. — W :  M.  Thack- 
eray.—HPE 
(Cane-bottomed    Chair,  The— C.)— BS  6— CS  17— 

DDR— TMR 
Bachelor's  Dream,   The  — T:   Hood.— CS   35— FEP— 

HPE— THP— WR  12 
Bachelor's  Growl,  A.— Anon.— CS  23— FAS 
Bachelor's  Hall.— J:    Finley.— BNL— CS    24— FEP— 

MYF  (sel.) 
Bachelor's  Hope,  The. — Malcom  M.  Luzader. — CS  32 
Bachelor's    Invocation,    A.        (Pall    Mall    Gazette.) — 

PPh 
Bachelor's  Love  Song,  A. — J.  H.  Ryan. — WR  7 
Bachelor's  Pipe,    A.     (Cigar    and    Tobacco    World.) — 

BS  21  (si.  abr.) 
(Bachelor's  Soliloquy,  A.)— PPh 
Bachelor's  Reasons  for  Taking  a  Wife,  The. — Anon. — 

BC 
Bachelor's  Reverie,  A. — Anon. — CS  31 
Bachelor's  Soliloquy,  The.— Anon.— CRR—CS  1 

(Parody  on  Hamlet's  Soliloquy.) 
Bachelor's  Soliloquy,  The.— Anon.— OM—SR  13 

(^Another  parody  on  Hamlet's  Soliloquy.) 
Bachelor's  Soliloquy,  A.  (Cigar  and  Tobacco   World.) 

See  Bachelor's  Pipe,  A. 
Bachelor's  Views,  A.— Tom  Hall.— PPh 
Bachelor's  Wedding  Trip,  A,  Sel.  fr.    (The  Spirits   of 

Fire.)— C:  P.  Sherman.— BS  18 
Back  Again.-— Celia  Thaxter. — HS 
Back  from  the  War. — T.  DeWitt  Talmage.— BS  16— 

PS 
Back  in  War  Days. — Pauline  Phelps.— BS  25 
Back  Where  They  Used  to  Be.     (Griggsby's  Station — 

O— Jas.  W.  Riley.— CH 
Back-log,  The;  or.  Uncle  Ned's  Little  Game. — Innes 

Randolph.— CS  18 
Backlog  Studies.     (Sets.  fr.  Studies  I.,  III.,  and  VII.) 

— C:  D.  Warner.— WCLG  2 
Backward.     (Char.) — Anon. — TCP 
Backward  Glance,  A.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Back-work  Club,  The.— H.  S.  Chamberlain,  Jr.— CG  3 
Bacon's  Philosophy. — T:  B.  Macaulay. — SE 
Bad  Boy    and    the    Limburger  Cheese,   The.     (Peck's 

Sun.)— BCR 
Bad  Boy's  Diary,  A.     (New  York  Weekly.)— BS  18 
Bad  Child's  Book  of  Beasts,  The,  Set.  fr.  (Introduction.) 

Hilaire  Belloc— BVC 
Bad  Cold,  A.— H.  Elliott  McBride.— CS  26 
Bad  Habit  Cured,  A.— Anon.— DDM 
Bad  I  Can't.— Anon.— SM 

Bad  News.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Bad  Orator,  The.— Gotthold  E.  Lessing.— HPE 
Bad  Poets.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— HPE 
Bad  Prayers. — Brohson  Alcott. — BS  16 
Bad  Squire,  The. — C:  Kingsley.     See  Rough  Rhyme 

on  a  Rough  Matter,  A. 
Bad  Wife,  The.— Gotthold  E.  Lessing.— HPE 
Bad  Writers.— S:  Butler.— HPE 
Bad  Year,  The.— E:  W.  Thomson.— TCV 
Badger's  D^but  as  Hamlet. — -Litchfield  Moseley. — BeR 
Baffled  Biiight,  The;  or.  Lady's  Policy.     (In  Percy's 

Reliques.) — Anon. — HPE 
Bag  of  the  Bee,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— LC— WEP  2— 

YBF 
Baggage,  Sel.  fr.  (Bell,  The— Ch.  V.,  si.  abr.)—B:  F. 

Taylor.— TMR 
Baggage  Fiend,  The. — Anon. — CS  8 
Bagged  the  Wrong  Bird.— J:  P.  Lyons.— TL 
Bagman's  Dog,  The.— R:  H.  Barham.— HPE 
Bailiff's  Daughter  of  Islington,  The.     (In  Percy's  Rel- 
iques.)—Anon.— GN— HBP— OEB—PEB  2— 

WEP  1 
(Mod.  vers.)— BB—1.C 
"Baimies,  Cuddle  Doon." — GP 

(Cuddle  Doon.)— BRR— BS7— CR  — CS  13  — CSS 

— FTR— (JN— HBP— OS  1— PPSr— SDR— VA 
(Vers,  vary  si.  in  dialect.) 
Bait,  The. — J:  Donne. — EP 
Bait  of  the  Average  Fisherman. — H.  C.  Dodge.— -AWH 

—THP 
Baitsy  and  I  are  Oudt.— G:  M.  Warren. — CS  24 

(Fritz  and  his  Betsy  Fall  Out.)— SR  4 
Baker's   Reply  to  the   Needle-pedler,   The. — Anon. — 

MHR 


37 


Baker's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Baker's  Tale,  The. — Lewis  Carroll.     See    Hunting   of 

Snark,  The. 
Balaam's   Parables.  .^  Bible.     See  Numbers. 
Balaam's  Prophecy  in  Behalf  of  Israel.     Bible.     See 

Numbers. 
Balade:    "Hyd,  Absojon,  thy  gilte  tresses  clere."  (Bal- 
lad Sung  to  Alceste.) — Geoffrey  Chaucer. — OB 
Balaklava.— Alex.  Smith  [or  Alex.  B.  Meek].— BNL — 

BS  10 
Balance  Due. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Balance  of  Power,  The. — G :  Canning. — SS 
Balance  Wheel,  The.— Elmer  R.  Coates.— CS  5 
Balcony    Scene    from    Cyrano    de    Bergerac,    The. — 

Edmond  Rostand.     See  Cyrano  de  Bergerac. 
Balcony  Scene  from  Romeo  and  .Juliet.     W :  Shakes- 
peare.    jSee  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Balder.— Anon.— HBP 
Balder,  Sela.  fr. — Sydney  Dobell. 
Dante,  Shakespeare,  Milton. — VA 

(England— scZ.)—WEP  4 
Sea  Ballad.— VA 
Balder     Dead,     Sel.     fr.     (Incremation.)  —  Matthew 

Arnold.— VA 
Balder's  Wife. — Alice  Cary. — AA 
Bald-headed  Man,  The.     {Little  Rock  Gazette. )— BS  8— 

CS  19— FTR— HNS  {abr.y 
Bald-headed  Tyrant,  The. — May  E.  Vandyne. — HP 
Balky  Horse,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Ball    at    Brussels,    the    Night    Before    the    Battle    of 
Waterloo,    The.  —  Lord    Byron.     See    Childe 
Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Ballad  (C):     "The  auld  wife  sat  at  her  ivied  door." — 
C:  S.  Calverley.— THP— VA 
(Auld  Wife,  The.)— NA 
Ballad:     "Good  Christmas  bells,  I  pray  you." — A.  B. 

De  Mille.— TCV 
Ballad,  A  (C):     "'Twas    when   the  seas,"  etc.     (Fr. 
"  The  What  d'ye  CaU  It,"  Act  II.,  Sc.  8.)  —J. 
Gay.  . 
(Ballad  from  "  The  What  d'ye  Call-It.")  —WEP  3 
('Twas  when  the  Seas  were  Roaring.) — FEP 
Ballad,  A:     "Turn,  gentle  hermit,"  etc.— Oliver  Gold- 
smith.    See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 
Ballad,    A:     "Among    green,    pleasant    meadows." — 
Johann  G.  von  Herder  {tr.  by  Mary  Howitt). — 
PHS 
(Among  Green,  Pleasant  Meadows.) — WCL 
Ballad  (C):     "It  was  not  in  the  winter." — T:  Hood 
— VA 
(A6r.)— HBP— VS 
("It  was  not  in  the  winter" — ahr.) — YBF 
(Time  of  Roses— air.)— OB 
Ballad:     "She's  up  and  gone,  the  graceless  girl." — 

T:  Hood.— BFV— VS 
Ballad:     "Sigh  on,  sad  heart,  for  love's  eclipse." — T: 

Hood— HBP 
Ballad     (C):     "Spring,  it  is  cheery."— T:  Hood— VA 

("What  can  an  old  man  do  but  die?") — BNL 
Ballad    (C):     "Der     noble     ritter     Hugo."— C:    G. 
Leland.— HBP 
(Ballad  of  the  Mermaid.)— AWH— THP 
(Ritter  Hugo.)— BNL 
Ballad:     "In  the  summer  even." — Harriet    P.    Spof- 
ford.— ASL 
(Night  Sea,  The.)— EPs 
Ballad:     A.  D.  1400.— C:  Kingsley.— GN 

(Ballad  of  Earl  Haldan's  Daughter— C.)—PEB  3 
Ballad  for  a  Boy,  A.— W:  Cory.— PEB  3 

(Two  Captains.) — LC 
Ballad  from  Rokeby. — Walter  Scott.     See  Rokeby. 
Ballad   from   "The  What  d'ye  Call  It,"  A.  — J:  Gay. 

See  Ballad,  A:     "  'Twas  when  the  seas,"  etc. 
Ballad:  Lorraine,  Lorraine,  Lorr^e.     (C) — C:  Kingsley. 
(Lorraine.)— CR—CS  20— OS  1— SR  5— VA 
(Lorraine,  Lorraine,  Lorree.) — PEB  3 — VSG 
(Lorraine,  Lorree.) — MR 
Ballad  Made  in  the  Hot  Weather.     (C.)— W:  E.  Hen- 
ley. 
(Made  in  the  Hot  Weather.)— GN 
Ballad:     Noting  the  Difference  of  Rich  and  Poor,  A. — 

C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Ballad  of  a  Bridal.— Edith  N.  Bland.— VA 
Ballad  of  a  Butcher  and  the  Dear  Little  Children,  The. 

— Anon.— CS  17 
Ballad  of  a  Little  Fun,  The. — Maurice  Thompson. — 

BAB 
Ballad    of    Admiral    Hosier's    Ghost.  —  R:    Glover. — 

WEPl 
Ballad  of  Agincourt  [,  The]. — Michael  Drayton.     See 

Battle  of  Agincourt,  The. 
Ballad  of  Alice  Brand,  The.— Walter  Scott.     See  Lady 
of  the  Lake,  The. 


Ballad  of  Athlone,  A ;  or.  How  They  Broke  Down  the 

Bridge.— Aubrey  De  Vere.— PEB  4 
Ballad  of  Babie  Bell,  The.— T:  B.  Aldrich.     See  Baby 

Bell. 
Ballad  of  "Beau   Brocade,"  The. — Austin  Dobson. — 

AVP— BS  24  (o6r.) 
Ballad  of  Bedlam  [.A].     (Fundi.)— HPE—NA 
Ballad  of  "Bonny  Portmore" ;  or.  The  Wicked  Revenge, 

The.— Aubrey  De  Vere.— PEB  4 
Ballad    of  Bouillabaisse,  The.— W:  Thackeray. — FEC 

— HBP— VA 
Ballad  of  Brave  Women,  A. — Philip  B.  Marston. — PR 
Ballad  of  C!alnan's  Christmas,  The. — Helen  G.  C!one. — 

BAB 
Ballad  of  Capri,  A.     {Harper's  Weekly.)— CS  22 
Ballad  of  Carmilhan,  The.     (Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn: 

The  Musician's  Tale.) — H:  W.  Longfellow. 
(Musician's  Tale,  The— abrj— SR  2 
Ballad  of  Cassandra  Brown,  The. — Corcebus  Green. — 

BS  12— CS  24 
Ballad  of  Charity,  The.— C:  G.  Leland.— AWH— THP 
Ballad  of  Chevy-Chase,  The.— R:  Sheale(?).— FEP 
(Chevy-Chase  [Chace].)— BNL  —  GN  —  HB  — 

HBP— LH— MR— OEB— PHS 
(Hunting   of   the    Cheviot,    The — diff.    and    older 

Ders.)- BB— PEB  1 
Ballad  of  Ck)llege  Days,  A.     {Swarthmore   Phmnix.) — 

CG3 
Ballad  of   Dead   Ladies,   The   (C). — Frangois    Villon 

(,tr.  by  Dante  G.  Rossetti). — VA 
(Ballad  of  Old  Time  Ladies.)— PYO 
Ballad  of  Dead  Men's  Bay,  The. — Algernon    0.   Swin- 
burne.—PEB  4 
Ballad  of  Dorothy,  A.— Arthur  Ketchum. — CG  2 
Ballad  of  Earl  Haldan's  Daughter.  (C.) — C:  Kingsley. 

—PEB  3 
(Ballad,  A.  D.  1400.)— GN 
Ballad  of  East  and  West,  The. — Rudyard  Kipling. — 

PEB  4— VA 
(SI.  air.)— LH—TMR—WR  7 
Ballad  of  Eliza  Davis,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— HPE 
Ballad  of    Fisher's    Boarding-house,    The. — Rudyard 

Kipling.— PEB  4 
Ballad  of  Heaven,  A. — J :  Davidson. — VA 
Ballad  of  Hell,  A.— J:  Davidson.— PEB  4 
Ballad  of  Heroes,  A. — Austin  Dobson.— HSS  1 — PEG 
Ballad  of  High  Endeavor,  A. — Anon. — NA 
Ballad  of  Hiram  Hover,  The. — Bayard   Taylor.     See 

Echo  Club,  The. 
Ballad  of  Human  Life. — T:  L.  Beddoes. — VA 
Ballad  of  Ishmael  Day,  The.— Anon.— CS  1 
Ballad  of  Jenny,  the  Mare,  The.     (Fr.  Euphranor.) — 

E:  Fitzgerald.— BVC 
Ballad  of   Judas    Iscariot,    The. — Rob't    Buchanan. — 

HBR— PEB  4— VA 
Ballad  of  Keith  of  Ravelston,  The. — Sydney  Dobell. — 

AVP— OB— PGT  2 
(Keith  of  Ravelston.)— FEP— PEB  3 
Ballad  of  McCarty's  Trombone,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — 

CCB 
Ballad  of  Manila  Bay,  A.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.- BAB 
Ballad  of  Mariorie,  A. — Dora  Sigerson. — TIP 
Ballad  of  Nathan  Hale,  The.     T:  Moore.— AWB 
Ballad  of  Old    Time    Ladies. — Francois    Villon.     See 

Ballad  of  Dead  Ladies,  The. 
Ballad  of  Oriana,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— BFV 
Ballad  of  Oriskany,  The. — O.  C.  Auringer. — AA 
Ballad  of  Orleans,  A. — A.  Mary  F.  R.  Darmesteter. — 

VA 
Ballad  of  Paco  Town  [,The].— Clinton  ScoUard.— BAB 

— EDY 
Ballad  of  Roncesvalles,  A. — Felicia  D.  Hemans.     See 

Siege  of  Valencia,  The. 
Ballad  of  St.  Swithun's  Day,  A.— E.  H.  Hickey.— OS  1 
Ballad  of  Sarsfield;  or.  The  Bursting  of  the  Gun,  A. — 

Aubrey  De  Vere.— PEB  4 
Ballad  of  Sir  John  Franklin,  A.— G:  H.  Boker.— AA— 

EDY 
(Sir  John  Franklin.)— CS  1 
Ballad  of  Splendid  Silence,  The.— E.  Nesbit.— VS(]I — 

WR2 
Ballad  of  Sweet  P,  The.— Virginia  W.  Cloud.— WR  22 
Ballad  of  the  Afternoon  Tea.— H.  P.  Huntress. — CG  3 
Ballad  of  the  Armada,  A. — Austin  Dobson.    See  Ballad 

to  Queen  Elizabeth  of  the  Spanish  Armada,  A. 
Ballad  of  the  Bier  that  Conquered,  The. — Aubrey  De 

Vere.— PEB  4 
Ballad  of  the  Bird-bride.— Graham  R.  Tomson. — BS  19 
Ballad  of  the  Boat,  The.— R:  Gamett.— AVP— CGd— 

PYO— VA 
Ballad  of  the  Brides  of  Quair,  The. — Isa  C.  Knox. — 

PEB  4 


38 


TITLE    INDEX 


Banner 


Ballad  of  the  Brook,  The.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— OR 
Ballad  of  the  Colors,  The.— T:  D.  English.— BS  21 
Ballad  of  the  Conemaugh  Flood,  A. — H.  D.  Rawnsley. 

— EDY 
Ballad  of  the  Faded  Field.— Rob't  B.  Wilson.— AA 
Ballad  of  the  Fleet,  A. — Alfred  Tennyson. — LH 

("Revenge,  The":     A  Ballad   of  the  Fleet— C.)— 

BS  21  —  CR  —  EDY  — EHT  — GP— HB  — 

MRS— OS  3— PGT2— PSR— WEP  4 
Ballad  of  the  French  Fleet,  A.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— 

AA— EDY 
Ballad  of  the  Green  Old  Man,  The.— C:  G.  Leland.— 

AWH 
Ballad  of    the    "Laughing    Rally,"    The.— C-    G.    D. 

Roberts.— ^O 
Ballad  of  the  Mad  Ladye. — Kate  S.  Maclean. — TCV 
Ballad  of  the  Mermaid. — C:  G.  Leland       See  Ballad: 

Ballad  of  the  Midnight  Sun,  The. — H.  E.  Hamilton- 
King.— PEB  4 
Ballad  of  the  Overconfident  Polliwog,  The.— F.  R.  Du 

Bois.— CG  3 
Ballad  of  the  Oysterman,  The.  (C.)— Oliver  W.  Holmes. 
— CR— CSS— PPSr— SO— THP 
(Oysterman,  The.)— SR  10 
Ballad  of  the  Past  Meridian.     (C.) — G:  Meredith. 

Past  Meridian. — WRD 
Ballad  of  the  Pipe,  The. — Hemiann  Rave. — PPh 
Ballad  of  the  Shamrock,  The. — Fitz  James  O'Brien. — 

CS  22— FMR  (abr.) 
Ballad  of  the  Spanish  Armnda. — Austin  Dobson.     See 
Ballad  to  Queen  Elizabeth  of  the  Spanish  Ar- 
mada,   A. 
Ballad  of  the  Tempest  f.The].     (C.)— Jas.  T.  Fields.- 
,  CS  19— FEP— HBP— LC 
(Captain's  Daughter,  The.)— CSS— DJS  (d.  abr.}— 

PPSr— WCL 
(Isn't  God  upon  the  Ocean,  etc. — abr.) — TFS 
(On  the  Ocean— 8/.  abr.)— YBT 
(Tempest,  The.)—  BNL  —  FP  —  GP  —  TAV  — 
WCLG  1 
Ballad  of  the  Thrush,  The.— Austin  Dobson.— OS  1 
Ballad  of  the  Unattainable. — Andrew  Lang. — FEP 
Ballad  of    the    Wayfarer,    The. — Rob't    Buchanan. — 

BS  19 
Ballad  of  the  Were-wolf,  A. — Graham  R.  Tomson. — 

WR2 
Ballad  of    the   Wicked    Nephew.— Jas.    T.    Fields.— 

BS  14 
Ballad  of  Titus  I^abienus,  The. — Laura  E.  Richards. — 

TMR 
Ballad  Uvr  Ballade]  of  Trees  and  the  Master,  A.  (C.) — 
Sidney  Lanier.— AA—TAS— TAV 
(Trees  and  the  Master,  The.)— LLC 
Ballad  of  Virginia. — T:  B.  Macaulay.      See    Virginia 

(Fate  of  Virginia,  The). 
Ballad  of  War,  A.— Menella  B.  Smedley.— CS  25 
Ballad  Stanzas.     (C.)--T:  Moore. 
(Home  of  Peace,  The.)— CS  20 
("I  knew  by  the  smoke  that  so  gracefully  curled.") 
— BNL— TFY 
Ballad  Sung  to    Alceste.  —  Geoffrey    Chaucer.     See 

Balade:  "Hyd,  Absalon,"  etc. 
Ballad,  A:     The  Lake  of  the  Dismal  Swamp.      (C.) 
— T:  Moore. 
Lake  of  the  Dismal  Swamp,  The. — EPs 
Ballad  to  Queen  Elizabeth  [of  the  Spani.sh  Armada,  A 
—C.].— Austin  Dobson.— EDY 
(Ballad  of  the  Armada,  A.) — LH 
(Ballad  of  the  Spanish  Armada.) — SO 
Ballad    upon     a     Wedding,    A. — Sir    J:    Suckling. — 
LC  (o^r.)- OEL— PYO  (se«.)— WEP  2 
(Bride,  The— scZ.)— BNL— EPs 
Ballad  with  an  Ancient  Refrain. — Anon. — NA 
Ballade.— "Stylites."—CG  3 

Ballade  in   Commendation   of  Honour,   A.     (Fr.   The 
Palice  of  Honour.) — Gawain  Douglas. — WEP  1 
Ballade  of  Banville. — Edmund  Gosse. — EDY 
Ballade  of  Biblinclasts. — Graham  R.  Tomson. — LBB 
Ballade  of  Blue  China.     (C.)— Andrew  Lang.— OS  2 

(Of  Blue  China.  )—VA 
Ballade    of    College    Girls,    A.— F.    R.    Batchelder.- 

CG2 
Ballade  of  Dead  Friends. — E.  A.  Robinson. — AA 
Ballade  of  Forgotten  Loves. — Arthur  Grissom. — TL 
Ballade  of  Islands,  A. — Lucy  C.  B.  Robinson. — AA 
Ballade  of  Justification,  A.— Guy  W.  Carry!.— CG  2 
Ballade  of  Laura's  Fan.     (Harvard  Lampoon.) — CG  2 
Ballade  of  Nicolete. — Graham  R.  Tomson. — PYO 
Ballade  of  Playing  Cards.  A. — Gleeson  White. — VA 
Ballade  of  the  Alumna.— Edith  Child.— CG  2 


Ballade  of  the    Book-hunter.     (C) — Andrew    Lang. — 
LBB— MBB 
(Of  the  Book-hanter.)— VA 
Ballade  of  the  Bookman's  Paradise. — Andrew  Lang. — 

LBB— MBB 
Ballade  of  the  Bookworm. — Andrew  Lang. — MBB 
Ballade  of  the  Dream-ship,  The. — .Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Ballade  of  the  Nurserie,  A. — J :  Twig. — NA 
Ballade  of  Tobacco,  The. — Brander  Matthews. — PPh 
Ballade  of  Trees  and  the  Master,  A.— Sidney  Lanier. 

See  Ballad  of  Trees  and  the  Master,  A. 
Ballade  of  True      Wisdom. — Andrew      Lang. — LBB — 

MBB 
Ballade  to  Theocritus  in  Winter.    (C.) — Andrew  Lang. 

(To  Theocritus  in  Winter.)— VA 
Ballet-girl,  The.     {Lippincott's  Magazine.) — BS  11 
Ballot.'The.     (^6r.)— E.  H.  Chapin.— SE 

(Ballot-box,  The. )—CS  3— FD  1 
Ballot,  The. — J :  Pierpont.    See  Word  from  a  Petitioner, 

A. 
Ballot  Reform. — Grover  Cleveland.— BS  18 

(Advent  of  the  Ballot  Reform,  The — plly.  same.) — 
FD2 
Ballot-box,  The.     {Frags,  fr.  various  axdhors.) — BNL 
Ballot-box,  The.— Edwin  H.  Chapin.— CS  3— FD  1 

(Ballot,  The— a6r. )—SE 
Ballot-box,  The.— J:   G.  Whittier.     See  Eve  of   Elec- 
tion, The. 
Ballotville  Female  Convention,  The. — Anon. — CS  14 
Ball-room  Madrigal,  A.— W.  C.  Nichols.— CG  1 
Balow.     {In  Percy's    Reliques.)  —  Anon. — OB    {mod. 
vers.) 
(Lady  Ann  Bothwell's  Lament.)— BNL— HBP 
(Lady  Anne  Bothwell's  Lament— C.)— FEP 
Balow,  my  Bonnie. — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
Balthazar  and  the  Quack. — J:  Tobin. — SS 
Bamberg.— F.  W.  Faber.— AVP 
Bambino.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Bamboozling  Grandma. — Anon. — WR  17 

(Flattering  Grandma.)— PEO 
Banana.— G:  Thatcher. — TK 

Band  in  the  Pines,  The.— J:  E.  Cooke.— A  A— EDY 
Bandage.     {Pantomime  char.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Bandit's  Fate,  The.     (PwncA.)- HPE 
Banford's  Burglar-alarm.- — Anon. — BS  13 
Banging  a  Sensational  Novelist. — Anon. — CS  27 
Bangs  Family  Tells  a  Story,  The.— Sam  W.  Foss.— 

CS34 
Banish  the  Snakes.— H.  E.  P.— WR  18 
Banished  Bejant,  The.— R.  F.  Murray.— THP 
Banishing  the  Bitters.— H.  E.  McBride.— MTD 
Ban^o  Fiend,  The.— Willard  G.  Bleyer.— CG  2 
Banjo  Mine. — Anon. — CG  1 
Banjo  of  the  Past,  The. — Howard  Weeden.-^AA 
Bank-notes  and  Coin. — G:  Canning.^ — SS 
Bankrout. — Sir    Philip    Sidney.     iSee    Astrophel    and 

Stella. 
Bankrupt's  Visitor,  The.— T:  D.  English.— CS  18 
Banks'  Babies. — Anon. — SR  10 
♦Banks    o'[wr.   of]  Doon,  The — {1st  vers.)     {2nd  vers. — 
Sweet  are  the  Banks;  3rd  vers. — Ye  Flowery 
Banks.)— Rob't  Bums.— (ls<  vers.)— CR — EPs 
FEP— PYO— WCLG  1— WEP  3 
(3rd  rer«.)— BPB— CEL— GP 
{1st  and  3rd  vers,  comb.) — BNL 
{2nd  and  3rd  vers,  comb.) — OB 
(Bonnie  Doon — 1st  vers.) — LLC — SN 

(3rd  vers.)— MBL—YBF 
(Ye  Banks  and  Braes  o'  Bonnie  Doon — 3rd  vers.) — 
PGT  1 
Banks  o'  Yarrow,  The.    {In  Border  minstrelsy.) — Anon. 
— BB— OEB 
(Dowie    Dens    of    Yarrow,    The.)— FEP— HBP— 

PEB  2  {si.  abr.) 
(Dowie  Houms  of  Yarrow,  The — sl.abr.) — OB 
( Versions  vary  slightly  in  wording.) 
Bank-swallows,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Bannatyne  Club,  The.     (C.)— Walter  Scott. 

(One  Volume  More.)— LBB 
Banner  Betsey  Made,  The.— T.  C.  Harbaugh,— PRR 
Banner  of  Freedom,    The. — Jeremiah    W.  Cummings. 

See  Song  of  the  Union. 
Banner  of  the  Covenanters,  The.    {Abr.) — Caroline  E. 

Norton.— MMR 
Banner  of  the  Cross,  The. — G:  W.  Doane.— TAS 
Banner  of  the  Jew,  The. — Emma  Lazarus. — AA 
Banner  of  the  Stars,  The. — R.  W.   Raymond. — AWB 

— PAPm 
Banner  that    Welcomes    the  World,  The. — Hesiekiah 
Butterworth. — CS  34 


*  Based  on  Cambridge  ed.  of  Burns'  Poems 

39 


Slight  variations  in  wording  not  noted. 


Bannockburn 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Bannockburn.   (C.)— Rob't  Burns.— BS5— EDY— EPs 
— FEP— GN— HB— HBP— LC  — OS  1  —  PHS 
— WEP  3— ^«»F 
(Later  vers. )~BFB 

(WUh  2  add.  «<.)— BLP— BNL— GP— HSS  1 
(Battle  of  Bannockburn — later  vers.) — CEL — EHT 
(Bruce's  Address  to  his  Army].) — LC 

(Later  vers.)— CSS— PPSr 
(Scots.  Wha  H&e—also  C.)— PYO 
Bannockburn. — Walter   Scott.  See  Lord   of   the  Isles, 

The. 
Banquet,  The. — Landon. — FP 
Banquet,   The.     (Fr.   Aurora.) — Mary   A.   Tincker. — 

WR24 
Banquet  of  Sense,  The.   (Song  fr.  The  Poetaster,  Sc.  V. ) 

— Ben  Jonson. — ES 
Banquet  Song,  A. — Edwin  O.  Grover. — CG  2 
Ban-shee,  The.— W:  AUingham.— TIP 
Banshee,  The.— J :  Todhunter.— VA 
Banty  Tim.— J:  Hay.— BNL— HR— SC— SDR 
Baptism  Defended. — Anon. — CS  18 
Baptismal  Hymn.— H :  Alford. — FEP 
Barbara. — Alex.  Smith.— MMR— OB 

(Somewhat  diff  vers. ) 
Barbara  Allen's  Cruelty.   (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 
—CEL 
(Abr.)— BB— FEP— OB— OEB 
(Bonny  Barbara  Allan — diff.  rers.  V—PEB  2 
Barbara  Blue.— Alice  Cary.— BLF— WR  16 
Barbara  Frietchie.     (Parody.) — Anon. — DRR 
(Latest  Barbara  Frietchie,  The.)— DCR— SR  4 
(Parody  on  "Barbara  Frietchie" — si.  diff.  vers.) — 
BDD— GH 
Barbara  Frietchie.— J:    G.    Whittier.— AWB— BAB— 
BNL  —  CS  1  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HB  —  HBP  — 
LH  (a6r.)— MR— PAP— PPSr— PRR— WRD 
Barbara  S— .     (Fr.  Essays  of  Elia.)— C:  Lamb.— MBL 
Barbarism  of  our  British  Ancestors.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Afri- 
can Slave  Trade.) — W:  Pitt,  the  younger. — SS 
Barbarity  of  National  Hatreds. — Rufus  Choate. — SS — 
SSD 
(Enmity  towards  Great  Britain.) — OM 
(Old  Grudge  against  England,  The— a6r.)— MRS 
Barbarous  Chief,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— PEO 
Barberry-bu.sh,  The. — Jones  Very. — EPs 
Barber's  Shop,  The.— Anon.- SCS 

(Jones at  the  BarberF's] Shop.)— BNL— HPE—THP 
Barcarole.— E.  G.  B.— (JG  1 
Barcarolle.— Ben  W.  Davis.— CS  35 
Barclay  of  Ury.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AP— BNL— HBP 

—SO 
Bard,     The.— T:     Gray.— BNL  (br.  «ete.)— BPB— EPs 
— FEP— HBP— LH— PGT  1— PHS— WEP  3 
(Curse  upon  Edward,  The — sel.) — OB 
Bard  and  the  Cricket,  The. — Rob't  Browning.    See  Two 

Poets  of  Croisic,  The. 
Bard  Ethell,  The.  (A6r.)— Aubrey  De  Vere.-TIP 
Bard  Speaks,   The.     (Fr.   the  Epistle  to  my   Brother 

George.)- J:  Keats. — WEP  4 
Bardell    and    Pickwick.— C:    Dickens.     See    Pickwick 

Bards,  The.— f:  B.  Read.— CR 

Bards'    Epitaph,    A.— Rob't    Bums.— BNL— MBL— 

WEP  3— YBF 
Bards  of  Passion  and  of  Mirth. — J:  Keats. — OB 
(Ode— O— HBP— WEP  4 
(Ode  on  the  Poets.)— PGT  1— PHS 
(Tothe  Poets.)— FEP 
Bard's  Summons  to  War,  The. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — 

SS 
Bare  Boughs  and  Buds. — Celia  Thaxter.- YBT 
Bare-bosom'd  Night. — Walt  Whitman.     See  Song  of 

Myself. 
Barefoot  Boy,  The.— J;  G.  Whittier.— AA—BFV— BNL 

— GN— SN— TAV— WCL— WCLI  1 
(46r.)— GMS— LC 
Bargain,  The. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     <See  Arcadia,  The. 
Bargains  in  Hearts. — Maud  Horsford. — TL 
Bark  "  True  Love  "Jiw.  Bark  of  True  Love],  The,   Br. 

sel.  fr.—B:  F.  Taylor.- HDL 
Barking  up  the  Wrong  Tree. — Anon. — DCD 
Barley  Broth.     (Fr.  Poetical  Cookery-book — Punch.) 

— HPE 
Barley  Water.     (Fr.  Poetical  Cookery-book — Punch.) 

—HPE 
Barmecide's  Feast,  The. — Dalton. — SCS 
Barn  Window,  The.— Lucy  Larcom.- BS  2— LCS 
Barnaby  Rudge,  Sel.  fr.  (Cheerful  Locksmith,    The — 

sel.  fr.  Ch.  XLI.)— C:  Dickens.— IR 
Barney  O'Hea.— S:  Lover.— TIP 

Barney  O'Linn  and  the  Leeches. — Anon. — CS  27 — PR 
Barney'?;  Resolution. — H.  Elliott  McBride. — MTD 
Barnyard  Melodies.— Fred  E.  Brooks.— CS  28— DES 


Baron  and  the  Jew,  The. — Walter  Scott.     jSee  Ivanhoe. 
Baron  Grimalkim's  Death. — Will  M.  Carleton. — SR  1 
Baron  of  Bracklev,  The.— Anon.— BB—PEB  2  (si.  abr.) 
Barons  Bold,  The.— W:  J.  Fox.— EHT— VA 
Baron's  Last  Banquet,  The. — Albert  G.  Greene. — AA 

— BNL— BS  3— CS  3— FEP— HNS— HSS  2— 

NPS— OM— SS— YP 
Barren  Moors,  The. — W :  E.  Channing. — AA 
Barry  Lyndon,  Sel.  fr.  (Princess's  Tragedy — eel.  fr.  Ch. 

XII.)— W:  M.  Thackeray.— WGS 
Barry's  Attack  upon  Sir  Joshua  Reynolds. — J :  Wolcott. 

—HPE 
Bar-tender's  Story,  The.— D:  L.  Proudfit.— CS  13— HP 
Bartholdi  Statue,  The. — Julian  Hawthorne. — BS  15 
Barthram's  Dirge.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy.)— R.  Sur- 

tees.— BFV— BPB 
Bartol. — Amos  B.  Alcott. — AA 
BasBleu.     (Punch.)— HPE 
Bascomb's  Baby. — Anon. — CS  11 — DS 
Base  Ball.— Anon.— MHR 
Bashful  Boy's  Piece,  The.— Anon.— DCP 
Bashful  Earthquake,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Oliver  Herford. 
Earth.— THP 
(Proem.) — AA 
Bashful  Johnny.— G:  H.  Gillette.— CG  2 
Bashful  Man,  The.— Jas.  Smith.— DDR  (at.  to  Math- 
ews)—WR  16 
Basia.— T:  Campion.— PGT  1 
Basket  of  Flowers,  A.     (Abr.) — Sarah  B.  Stebbins. — 

BRR— CS  22  (longer.) 
Basking.— Sydney  Dobell.— GP  (sel.) 

(Home,  Wounded.)— BNL 
Bastille  and  the  Starling,  The. — Laurence  Sterne. — OS  3 
Basting  Thread,  A. — Anon. — BR 
(Harry's  Mistake.)— LPS— PP 
(Rogue,  A.)— DS— YA 
"Bathed  in  unfallen    sunlight."      (Sel.   fr.  The  New 

Jerusalem.) — Horatius  Bonar. — GG 
Bathers,    The.— Arthur    H.    Clough.     See    Bothie    of 

Tober-na-Vuolich. 
Bathing. — Arthur  H.  Clough.     See  Bothie  of  Tober- 
na-Vuolich. 
Bathing.— Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Battery  in   Hot   Action,   A.     (Detroit   Free  Press.) — 

Anon.— PFP— PR 
(Supporting  the  Guns.) — CS  25 — EA  (abr.) 
Battle.     (^Frags.  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Battle. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage 
Battle. — J :  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Battle,  The.— T:  Moore.— CEL 
Battle,  The. — Friedrich  Schiller  (tr.  by  Bulwer-Lvtton). 

— CS  4— HSS  1- KNE— MMR— SE  (sel.)—SS 

— TMD 
Battle,  A.— C:  Sumner.- HSS  1— PEO 
Battle  above   the   Clouds,   The.  —  Theron    Brown.  — 

WR  10 
Battle  Autumn  of  1862,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— HBP 
Battle  Bunny— Malvern  Hill. — Fs.    Bret    Harte.— PP 

— YFR 
Battle  Cry. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Battle  Flag     at     Shenandoah,     The.     (C) — Joaquin 

Miller.— BS  12 
(Flag  at  Shenandoah,  The.)— BS  21 
Battle  Hymn.     (Gustavus  Adolphus.) — Michael  Alten- 

burg.— HDL 
(Battle  Song  of  Gustavus  Adolphus,  The.) — BNL 
(Swedish  Battle-song.)— OS  2 
Battle  Hymn  [.  The].— Karl   T.  Komer.- BS  16— SS 

(Komer's  Battle  Hymn — diff.  tr.) — HDL 
Battle  Hymn  of  the  Republic. — Julia  W.  Howe. — AA 

—  ASL  —  AWB  —  BNL  —  BS  4  —  BSP  — 

CR  —  CSS  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  GMS  —  GN  — 

GP  —  HB  —  HDL  —  HSS  1  —  OS  3  —  PAP— 

SM  —  SO  —  SR  8  —  TAS  —  TAV  —  WCLI  2 

—YBF 
(With  ch.orus.)~L,LC—FAFm 
Battle  in  the  Clouds,  The.— W:  D.  Howells.— EDY 
Battle  of  Agincourt,  The.     (C.) — Michael  Drayton. — 

BFV— CEL— EHT— GN— OS  3 
(Agincourt.) — HB — LH  (w.  Shakespeare) — OB 
(Ballad  of  Agincourt  [.The].)—  BNL  — BPB— EDY 

— FEP— HB— HBP— HSS  1— PSR 
(To  the  Cambro-Britains  and  their  Harps,  etc.) — 

ELP— WEP  1 
Battle  of  Albuera. — Lord  Byron.    See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Battle  of  Alexandria,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — EDY 
Battle  of  Ardnocher,  The.— A.  G.  Geoghegan.— PEB  4 
Battle  of  Bannockburn,  The.     (Ad.  fr.  The  Days  of 

Bruce,  Chs.  XXXVI.  and  XXXVII.)— Grace 

Aguilar.- BS  24 
Battle  of    Bannockburn. — Robert    Bums.     See    Ban- 
nockburn. 


40 


TITLE    INDEX 


Battle-field 


Battle  of  Bamet. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry 

VI.,  Pt.  III. 
Battle     of   Bear   an   Duine. — Sir  Walter  Scott.     See 

Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Battle  of  Bennington,  The. — W:  C.  Bryant. — EDY 
Battle  of  Bennington,  The. — E:  J.  Phelps. — TMR 
Battle  of    Blenheim,    The.     (C.)— Rob't    Southev.— 

BNL  —  CS  8  —  EDY  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP— 

HSS  1— LLC— OS  1— PC— WCL— WEP  4 
(After  Blenheim.)—  CGd  —  EHT  —IX:  —  PGT  1 

— PHS— PSR 
Battle  of  Bloody  Brook,  The,  Sel.  jr.  (Indian,  The.)— 

E:  Everett.— OS  3 
(Indian  Chief  to  the  White  Settler,  The.)— BS  3— 

CS4 
(Indian  Chieftain,  The— o6r.)— LLC 
(Plea  of  the  Pocomtuc  Chief— air.)— BLP 
(Supposed  Speech  of  a  Chief  of  the  Pocomtuc  Ind- 
ians—abr.)— PS— SS 
Battle  of  Bothwell  Bridge;  a  Lay  of  the  Covenanters, 

The.— Allan  Curr.— FR 
Battle  of  Brandywine,  The,  Sel. Jr. — G:  Lippard.     See 

Battle  of  Germautown,  The. 
Battle  of    Bunker    Hill,    The.     (Fr.    Battles    of    the 

American  Revolution.) — Anon. — SR  8 
Battle  of  Bunker  Hill,  Sels.  fr.—E:  Everett. 
Dizzy  Activities  of  the  Times,  The. — SS 
Peace  Congress  of  the  Union,  The. — SS 
Battle  of  Bunker['s]  Hill  [,The].— F.  S.  Cozzens.— BS  4 

(sel.  ad.)— CS  10— NPS— YP 
Battle  of  CannsE,  The.— Eben  H.  -Wells.— SR  3 
Battle  of  Charleston  Harbor,  The. — -Paul  H.  Hayne. — 

AWB  (w.  2  add.  8<s.)— BAB— EDY 
Battle  of  Dundee,  The.— Anon.— BS  26 
Battle  of  Eylau,  The.— Isaac  McLellan.— EDY 
Battle    of     Fontenoy.— T:    O.    Davis.— CR—CS   4— 

FR  (al.  abr.) 
(Fontenoy.)— EDY— FEP  — HBP— MMR—PEB  4 
Battle  of  Fontenoy. — Bartholomew  Dowling.^ — FEP 

("Irish  Brigade"  at  Fontenoy,  The.)— CS  4 
Battle  of  Fredericksburg,  The. — Kinahan  Comwallis. — 

EDY 
Battle  of  Germantown,  The,  Sels.  fr.     (In  Washington 

and  his  Generals.) — G:  Lippard. 
Battle  of  Germantown,  The.    {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  V.)— TMR 
Heroes  of  the  Land  of  Penn.    (Pt.  V.,  Ch.  I.,w.  add. 

fr.  The  Battle  of  Brandywine,  Ch.  I.)  — BS  5— 

CS  19— PR 
Battle  of  Gettysburg,  The. — Howard  Glyndon. — CS  1 
Battle  of  Gettysburg.— C:  F.  Ward.— SR  2 
Battle  of  Harlaw.— Walter  Scott.— EPs 
Battle  of     Hohenlinden     [,The]. — T:     Campbell.     See 

Hohenlinden. 
Battle  of  Inkerman,  The.— G:  W.  Bungay.— CS  25 
Battle  of  Inkerman,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Gerald  Massey. 

— SAE 
Battle  of  Ivry,  The.— T:  B.  Macaulay.— OM  (br.  sel.)— 

OS  2— SA— SE  (sel.  ad.) 
(Abr.)  —  BS  6  —  CEL  —  CRR  —  CS  5  —  FR  — 

GP— HSS  1— SO— SS— TMD 
(Ivry:     A   Song  of   the   Huguenots— C.)— BPB— 

EDY— FEP  — GN  — HB  — HBP— LC  (abr.)— 

PPSr— VA 
Battle  of    Kossovo,    The,     Sels.    fr. — Anon.     (tr.    by 

Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton).— OS  2 
Battle  of  La  Prairie,  The.— W.  Schuyler-Lighthall.— 

VA 
Battle  of    Lake  Champlain,  The. — Philip  Freneau. — 

EDY 
Battle    of   Lake  Regillus,  The.   Sel.  fr.     (The  Death 

of  Herminius.) — T:  B.  Macaulay. — SO 
Battle  of  Lepanto,  The.— Anon.— WR  6 
Battle  of  Lexington,  The.— G:  W.  Bungay.— CS  11 
Battle  of  Lexington,  The,  fir.  «eZ.  fr.  (Flag,  The.)— E: 

Everett.— SO 
(National  Banner,  The.)— CS  6— KNE 
(Our  National  Banner.) — LLC 
(Stars  and  Stripes,  The.) — CP 
Battle  of  Lexington,  The. — (Fr.  Psalm  of  the  West.) — 

Sidney  Lanier.— GP— PAP 
Battle  of  Le.xington,  The. — Mason  L.  Weems — BLP 
Battle  of  Life,  The.— Anon.— FAS 
Battle  of  Life,  The.— W.  C.  Bryant.     See  Battle-field, 

The. 
Battle  of  Life,  The.— S.  Olin.— CS  7 
Battle  of  Limerick,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— EDY— 

HBP 
Battle  of    Linden,    The.— T:    Campbell.     See   Hohen- 
linden. 
Battle    of     Lookout      Mountain.     (SI.    abr.) — G:     H. 

Boker.— BS  4— CS  2— WR  10 
Battle  of  Lookout  Mountain,  The. — Kinahan  Comwal- 
lis.—EDY 


Battle  of  Maciejowice,  The. — T:  Campbell.     See  Pleas- 
ures of  Hope,  The. 
Battle  of  Manila,  The.— Amelia  Burr. — WR  24 
Battle  of  Manila. — Sarah  B.  Kennedy. — BS  26 
Battle  of   Mission    Ridge,    The.— B:    F.    Taylor.     See 

Storming  of  Mission  Ridge,  The. 
Battle  of  Moncontour,  The.— T:  B.  Macaulay.— EDY 
Battle  of  Morat,  The.— W:  W.  Story.- EDY 
Battle  of  Morgarten. — Felicia  Hemans. — BS  14 — NPS 

— YP 
(Song  of  the  Battle  of  Morgarten— C.)— EDY 
Battle  of  Murfreesboro,  The. — -Kinahan  Cornwallis.— 

EDY 
Battle  of  Naseby,  The.    (C.)— T:  B.  Macaulay.— BPB— 

CEL— EHT— VA— WEP  4 
(A  br. )— CSS— E  A— PSR 
(Naseby.)—  AVP  —  BNL  —  EDY  —  FEP  —  HB 

—HBP 
Battle  of  New  Orleans,  The.— T:  Dunn  English.— EDY 

—PAP 
Battle  of  New  Orleans,  The.— Wallace  Rice. — EDY 
Battle  of  Otterburn    [or   Otterbume  or  Otterboume], 

The.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy  and  Percy's  Re- 

liques.) — Anon.— OEB 
(Shorter  and  diff.  vers.) — BPB — EHT  (si.  abr.  and  si. 

diff.)— FEB  1 
"Battle    of    our    life    is    won.    The."     (Fr.    Praying 

Always.) — Lucy  Larcom. — HDL 
Battle  of  Pultowa,  The.— Rob't  Southey.— EDY 
Battle  of   St.    Albans. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    King 

Henry  VI.,  Part  II. 
Battle  of  St.  Crispian's  Day. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

King  Henry  V. 
Battle  of    Salamis,    The. — ^schylus     (tr.    by    J.    S. 

Blackie).— CS  15— SO  (al.  abr.) 
Battle  of  Santiago.— Winfield  S.  Schley.— PRR 
Battle  of  Shrewsbuiy,  The.      (Sel.  fr.  Harry  of  Mon- 
mouth, in  Historic  Boys.)— Elbridge  S.  Brooks. 

— WR22 
Battle  of    Shrewsbury. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Battle  of    Tewksbury. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    King 

Henry  VI.,  Part  III. 
Battle  of  the  Angels. — J:  Milton.     See  Pai:adise  Lost. 
Battle  of  the  Baltic,  [The].— T:  Campbell.— BPB— CEL 

—EDY  —  EHT  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  GN  —  GP— 

HB— HBP— OS  2— PEB  3— PGT  1  —  PSR— 

WEP  4 
(Abr.)— LU— OB 
Battle  of  the  Boulevard,  The.     (In  Lays  of  the  Scot- 
tish Cavaliers.  )—W:  Aytoun.— HPE 
Battle  of  the  Boyne,  The. — Anon.     See  Boyne  Water, 

The. 
Battle  of  the  Cowpens,  The. — T:  Dunn  English.— PAP 

— SR  5— WR  10  (si.  abr.) 
Battle  of  the  Frogs  and  Mice. — Anon. — WR  1 1 
Battle  of  the  Kegs,  The.  — Fs.  Hopkinson.  — AWB  — 

CS12 
Battle  of  the  Plains  of  Abraham,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Mont- 
calm and  Wolfe,  Ch.  XXVII.)— Fs.  Parkman. 

— WCLG  1 
Battle  of  the  Strong,  The,    Sel.   fr.   (The    Scaling  of 

Perc^  Rock— seZ.  fr.  Bk.  V..  Ch.  XI.)— Gilbert 

Parker.— PFP 
Battle  of    the    Summer's    Islands,     The,     Sel.    fr. — 

Edmund  Waller.— WEP  2 
Battle  of  Tippecanoe,  The. — Anon. — WR  10 
Battle  of  Towton. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry 

VI.,  Pt.  III. 
Battle  of  Trenton.— Anon.— AWB— EDY— PAP 
Battle  of  Waterloo  [,The].— Lord  Byron.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Battle  of  Waterloo,  The. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Les  Mis^ 

rabies. 
Battle  of  Zaraila. — Louise  de  la  Ram^e.     See  Under 

Two  Flags. 
Battle  Poem,  A— B-  F.  Taylor.— WR  10 
Battle  Song.— Ebenezer  Elliott.— CEL— OB— WEP  4 
Battle  Song  for  Freedom,  A. — Gail  Hamilton. — CSS 

(Battle  Song  of  Freedom,  A.)— PS 
Battle  Song    of    Gustavus    Adolphus,    The. — Michael 

Altenburg.     See  Battle  Hymn. 
Battle  with  the  Tramp,  The.— Howell  L.  Piner.— WR  23 
Battle-call  of  Anti-Christ,  The.— Fs.  B.  Crofton.— TCV 
Battle-cry  of  Freedom,  The. — Anon.— A.WB— PAPm 
Battle-eve  of  the  Brigade,  The. — T:  Davis.— AVP 
Battle-field,  The.  (C.)—W:  C.  Bryant.— AA—ASL— 

BLP  (sel.)— B'SL—BS  25— FEP— HB— HBP 

—PRR  (sl.abr.)—SE—SS 
(Battle  of  Life,  The— seZ. )— PPSr- PS. 
(Be  Truthful— 6r.  sel.)— FS 

("Yet  nerve  thy  spirit  to  the  proof" — br.  sel.) — GG 
Battle-field,  The.— Emily  Dickinson.— AA—TAS 


41 


Battle-flags 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Battle-flags,     The. — Carl     Schurz.     See     Eulogy     on 

Cnarles  Sumner. 
Battle-hymn  of  the  Republic. — Julia  W.  Howe.     See 

Battle  Hymn  of  the  Republic. 
Battles  of  the  American  Revolution,  Sel.  fr.   (  Battle  of 

Bunker  Hill,  The.)— Anon.— SR  8 
Battle-ship  and  Torpedo-boat.— J.  W.  M.  — PAPm 
Battle-song  of  the  Oregon. — Wallace  Rice. — EDY 
Baucis  and  Philemon. — Jonathan  Swift. — FEP — HPE 

(Seis.)- CGd— GN— OS  1— WR  11 
Bay,  The.— Eliza  Cook.— HSS  1 
Bay  Billy.— Frank  H.  Gassaway. — MR 

(^6r.)— BRR— BS  8— CS  20— FR— SPE— SR  2 
Bay    Fight,    The.— H:    H.    BrowneU.— AWB— EPs— 

PAP  (abr. )—WR  10  {sel.) 
Bay  of  Biscay,  The. — Andrew  Cherry.— BNL — PC 
Bayadere,  The.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— AA 
Bayard  Taylor.— Craven  L.  Betts.— EDY 
Bayard  Taylor.— J.  G.  Whittier.— GP 
"Bayard    Taylor    and    the    school    he    represents." — 

Anon.— GG 
Bayonet   Charge,   Th6.— Nathan   D.   Umer.— CS   4— 

HSS  1— KNE 
Bazaar  Girl,  The.— Sir  Edwin  Arnold.— WR  8 
Be  a  Helper. — Anon. — YBT 
Be  a  "Try"  Boy.— Anon.— WR  17 
Be  a  Woman. — E:  Brooks.— BS  14 
Be  as  Thorough  as  you  Can. — C:  (T)  Mackay. — BS  10 
( Bit  of  a  Sermon,  K—abr. )— YBT 
(Vicar's  Sermon,  The — abr.) — SM 
Be  Brave. — May  Cooper. — PR — YA 
"Be  careful  that  you  do  not  commend  yourself."— Sir 

Matthew  Hale.— GG 
Be  Careful  what  you  Say. — Anon. — CS  36 
Be  Comprehensive. — Anon.— KNE 
Be  Considerate. — Anon. — TT 
Be  Content. — Anon. — CD 
Be  Content. — Anon. — CSS  (o/w.  )—PPSr 
(Carriage  and  Couple,  The.— )MYF 
(True  Source  of  Contentment.) — CS  9 
Be  Content. — Anon.— YBT 

(I  would  I  were  a  Note.) — PC 
Be  Good.— Anon.— YBT 

"Be    good,    sweet    maid."     {Ahr.) — C:    Kingsley. — 
HSS  2 
(Farewell,A— O— VS 

(A6r.)— AVP— BNL— CS  13— FEP— GN— GP— 
LC— PHS— VA— WEP  4— WR  2— YBF 
(Farewell  Advice — ahr.) — OS  1 
Be  in   Earnest.— E:   Bulwer-Lytton.— DS— PP— PS— 

YA— YFR 
Be  in  Time.— Anon.— DS—YA 
Be  Just,  and  Fear  Not.— H :  Alford.— CS  1 1 
(Be  True— o6r.—a<.  to  Collyer.)— TMR 
Be  Just,  and  Fear  Not. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

Henry  VIII. 
Be  Kind — A  Quartet  {rec.)  for  Four  Little  Children. — 

Anon.— TFS 
Be  Lovely  Within. — Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Be  Mine,  and  I  will  Give  thy  Name. — W:  C.  Bennett. 

— VA 
"Be  near  when  I  am  dying." — H.  W.  Baker. — HLD 
Be  not  Deceived.     (Galatians,  Ch.    VI.,    7-9.)     Bible. 

—LLC 
Be  Patient. — Anon.— TFS 

Be  Patient. — R:  C.  Trench.  See  Patience — W:  J.  Linton. 
Be  Polite.— Anon.— TT 
Be  Polite.— E.  C.  and  J.  L.  Rook.— YFE 
Be  Prompt    in  What   You   Do. — Mrs.   Russell    Kava- 

naugh. — KC 
"Be  quiet;  fear  not." — Frances  R.  Havergal. — HLD 
Be  Strong.— Cora  M.  Eager.- SSS 
Be  thou  a  Bird,  my  Soul.— A.  G.  C. — CG  2 
Be  True.— Anon.— CS  26 
Be  True.— Anon.— HSS  2 

(Bird's  Song.  The.)— TT 
Be  True.— H:  Alford  (at.  to  Collyer).— See  Be  Just  and 

Fear  not. 
Be  True.    (C.)— Horatius  Bonar.— CSS— DLF— GN— 
SSS 
(True  Teaching.  )—CS  19 
Be  Truthful.— W :  C.  Bryant.     See  Battle-field,  The. 
Be  Useful.— G:  Herbert.— GN 

Be  ye  in  Love  with  April  Tide? — Clinton  Scollard. — AA 
Be  ye  Ready.— J.  B.  Walter.— CS  31 
Beacon,  The,  SeU.  fr. — Joanna  Baillie. 

Fisherman's  Song.       {Song  fr.  Act  II.,  So.   1.) — 

WEP  4 
Morning  Song.     {Song  fr.  I.,  1.)— FEP 
("Up,  quit  thy  bower.") — BNL 
Beacon  Light,  The. — Julia  Pardoe.— SS 
Beal'  an  Dhuine.— Sir  Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the 
Lake,  The. 


Beam  of  Light,  A. — J.  J.  Rooney. — AA 
Bean  Socials. — Anon. — EuE- 
Bean-blossoms.     {St.  James  Gazette.) — HP 
Bear  at  Appledore,  The. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Bear  Butte  Mountain. — D:  Wilson. — CS  21 
Bear  Family,  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Bear  Story. — Joaquin  Miller. — WR  2 
Bear  Story,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 

(Alex  Tells  a  Bear  Story  J— CW 
Beard  and  Baby. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Beasts'    Confession,    The. — Jonathan    Swift. — HPE — 

WEP  3 
Beasts  in  the  Tower,  The. — Charles  and  Mary  Lamb. — 

LPC 
Beat!  Beat!  Drums!— Walt  Whitman.— LH 
Beata  Beatrix.— S:  Waddington.— AVP 
Beating   a   Conductor.     {Detroit   Free   Press.) — CH — 

CS35 
Beatitudes,  The. — Bible.     See  St.  Matthew. 
Beatitudes  in  Broad  Scotch,  The. — Anon.— SR  13 
Beatrice.— Anon .  — CP 

Beatrice. — Dante  Alighieri.     See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 
Beatrice  Descending  from  Heaven. — Dante  Alighieri. 

See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 
Beau  Tibbs,  his  Character  and  Family. — Oliver  Gold- 
smith.—ESs 
Beau's  Reply. — W :  Cowper. — Poll 
Beauteous  Flower,  The. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe.   See 

Fairest  Flower,  The. 
Beauties  of  Nature,  The. — Anon. — -CP 
Beauties  of  Nature,  The. — Rob't  Burns. — FP 
Beauties  of  Nature. — Moodie. — LLC 
Beauties  of  the  Law. — Anon. — PS 
Beautiful,  The. — Burrington.— FP 
Beautiful,  The. — J.  A.  Dorgan. — AA 
Beautiful,  The,  Sel.  fr.     ("Handsome  is  that  hand- 
some does.")— J:  G.  Whittier. — TMR 
(True  Beauty— «p«.)—SO 
Beautiful   are   the   Mountains.     {W.   music.) — W.    D. 

Gallagher. — AD 
Beautiful  Artist,  The.— Pamelia  V.  Tule.— TCV 
Beautiful  Belles. — Mrs.  R.  Kavanaugh. — KNS 
Beautiful  City,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— TAS 
Beautiful  Dreams. — Anon. — CS  8 
Beautiful  Dudes. — Mrs.  R.  Kavanaugh. — KNS 
Beautiful  Feet.— Anon.— WR  17 
Beautiful  Gate,  The.— Anon. — CS  25 
Beautiful  Grandmamma.     {Standard  of  the   Cross. ) — 

HP— MYF— PHS— SSS 
Beautiful  Hands.— Ellen     M.     H.     Gates.— BS     15— 
HSS  3  {abr.) 
(My  Mother's  Hands.)— HP 
Beautiful  Hands.— David  Swing.— HSS  2 
Beautiful  in     Creation,      The. — Timothy      Dwight.— 

BS  17— PEO 
Beautiful  Island  of  Ceylon,  The. — Phillips  Brooks. — 

NV 
Beautiful  Lady  of  the  May,  The.     (C.) — J:  Dryden. 

(Lady's  Song,  The.)— EP 
Beautiful  Land  of  Nod,  The.     (C.)— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— 
TAV 
(Land  of  Nod,  The.)— BS  22 
Beautiful  Legend,  A. — Anon. — KNE 
Beautiful  May.     {W.  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Beautiful  Mind,  The.— Anon.— BS  19 
Beautiful  Old  Story,  The.— Louisa  M.  Alcott.— YBT 
Beautiful  Snow,  The. — -Carolina  Griswold. — CS  3 
Beautiful  Snow. — Major  Sigourney. — HP 
Beautiful  Snow    [,  The].— J:  [wr.  Jas.]  W.   Watson.— 
FEP  —  FTR  —  HP  —  LLC  {abr.)  —  MMR  — 
PPSr— WRD 
(SeZ.)- POS— YBT 
{Wording  varies  si.  in  diff.  entries.) 
Beautiful  Sprig.— J.  P.  Welsh.— CG  2 
Beautiful  Spring,  Haste,  oh.  Haste! — Max  (7)  Miiller. 

—YBT 
Beautiful  Spring  Time.     {W.  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Beautiful  Things.— Anon. — AD 
Beautiful  Things.— Ellen  P.  Allerton.— SSS— TFS(a6r.) 

—YBT 
Beautiful  Trees.— A.  L.  R.— AD 
Beautiful  World.     {SI.  abr.)— J:  S.  Blackie.— HSS  3 
Beauty,  Sel.  fr. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — IR 
Beauty.— Theodore  A.  Haultain.— TCV 
Beauty. — J:  Keats.     See  Endymion. 
Beauty.— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
Beauty. — Alex.  Smith. — VA 
Beauty. — Edmund  Spenser.     'See  Hymn  in  Honor  of 

Beauty. 
Beauty.— E:  Hovel,  Lord  Thurlow.— BNL— YBF 

(SonneO— HBP 
Beauty.— W:  Winter.— BNL 
Beauty  and  Time.— J.  C— ELP 


42 


TITLE    INDEX 


Behind 


Beauty,  Arise! — T:  Dekker.    See  Pleasant  Comedy  of 

Patient  Grissell,  The. 
Beauty  at     the     Plough.— Arthur     J.     Munby.     iSee 

Dorothy:     A  Country  Story. 
Beauty  Bathing. — Anthony  Munday. — OB 
(Colin.)— PGT  1 
(To  Colin  CloutO— EP— WEP  1 
Beauty  Clear  and  Fair.     (Fr.  The  Elder  Brother.)— 

J:  Fletcher.— ELP— HBP— OB— OEL 
(To  Angelina.)— ES 
Beauty  Everywhere. — W.  L.  Smith.— TFS 
Beauty  Fades. — W :  Drummond. — FEP 

("Trust  not,  sweet  soul,  those  curled  waves  of  gold.") 

— OEI. 
Beauty  of    England,    The. — Eliz.    B.    Browning.     See 

Aurora  Leigh. 
Beauty  of  Face  and  Beauty  of  Soul. — Abbie  J.  Thom- 

ton.— SDD 
Beauty  of  Nature. — Hugh  Miller. — LLC 
Beauty  of  Piety,  The.— S.  C.  Edgarton— CS  16 
"Beauty  of  St.  Giles,  A."— W.  A.  Bradley.- CG  3 
Beauty  of  Terror,  The.     (/n  Songs  of  Experience.) — 

W:  Blake.— LH 
(Tiger,  The— C. )— BFV— BNL— BVC— EPs— FEP 

—  GN  —  HBP  —  HSS  2  —  OB  —  PYO  —  SN 

— WEP  3— YBF 
(SI.  a6r.)— CEL— PSR 
(Abr.)~-CGd—OS  1 
Beauty  of  the  Clouds. — J :  Ruskin.    See  Modern  Paint- 
ers. 
Beauty  of  the  Sea,  The.— Anon.— CS  32— DS 
"Beauty,  sweet  love!  is  like  the  morning  dew." — S: 

Daniel.     See  Sonnets  To  Delia. 
Beauty,  Time  and   Love. — S:  Daniel. — See  Sonnets  to 

Delia. 
Beauty,  Wit  and  Gold.— T:  Moore.— PPSr— PS 
Beaver,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— POS 
Becalmed.— S:  K.  Cowan.— BS  15— CS  25 

(Becalmed  at  Sea— a6r.)— WR  26 
Becalmed.— J.  B.  Tabb.— AA  ' 

Becalmed  at  Sea. — S:  K.  Cowan.     See  Becalmed. 
Because.— Anon.— BS  21— WR  20 
Because. — Edward  Fitzgerald. — THP 
Because. — Adelaide  Anne  Procter. — BIL 
Because. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
"Because  I  oft,  in  dark  abstracted  guise." — Philip  Sid- 
ney.    See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Because  you'lLove  me,  Dear. — "Viola." — FLS 
Becket,  Sels.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

Becket,  Selected  Scenes.     (Sels.  fr.  Act  I.,  Scs.  1 

and  3,  and  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  2.)— EHT 
Bower  Scene  from  Becket.    (Ad.  fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  2.) 

— CR 
(Becket  Saves  Rosamond.) — NDP 
Murder  of  Thomas  k  Becket,  The.    (Ad.  fr.  Act  V., 

Sc.  3.)— BS  13— CDD 
Becky  Miller. — Anon.— DRR 
Beclouded. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA 
Bed  during  Exams.— Clara  W.  Vail.— CG  2 
Bed  in  Summer. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV — DLS— 

GMS— HSS  2— LC 
Bedlam  Town.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— TFS 
Bedouin  Love  Song. — Bayard  Taylor.     See  following. 
Bedouin  Song.    (C.)— Bayard  Taylor. —  AA  —  ASL  — 

FEP— FTA— TAV 
(Bedouin  Love  Song.)— BNL— PYO 
Bedouins  of  the  Skies,  The. — Jas.  B.  Kenyon. — AA 
Bsdroom. — (Fr.  Asoutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Beds    of    Fleur-de-lys,    The. — Charlotte    P.    Stetson 

Oilman. — AA 
Bed-time. — Anon. — DLF 
Bedtime. — Anon. — HSS  3 
Bed-time. — Fs.  Rob't  St.  Clair-Frskine.  Earl  of  Rosslyn. 

— PoR— VA 
Bedtime.     (YoiUh's  Companion.) — TT 
Bedtime  Fancies. — Anon. — DST 
Bee,  The.— Emily  Dickinson.— GN 
Bee   and  the  Butterfly,  The.— TFS 

(Work  and  Play.)— COS— PP 
Bee  and  the  Fly,  The.— Phil.  Robinson.— HSS  2 
Bee  and  the  Rose,  The.— Anon.— TFS— HSS  2 
Beech    Tree's    Petition,    The. — T:    Campbell. — AD— 

PGT  1— SN 
Beecher  on  Eggs. — H :  W.  Beecher. — BS  8 
Bee-hunt  in  the  Far  West,  A. — Washington  Irving. — 

FTR 
Beelzebub  and  Job.     (Job's  Luck — C.) — S:  T.  Cole- 
ridge.—HPE 
(Epigram:  "Sly  Beelzebub,"  etc.) — BNL 
(Epigram  on  Job  and  the  Devil.) — FEP 
(Job.)— THP 


Beer.     (C.)—G:  Arnold.— AA 

(Cigars  and  Beer.)— PPh 
Beer  Drinker's  Courtship,  A.— H.  E.  McBride.— MTD 
Bees.— Anon.— DST 

Bees,  The. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Bees. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Bees  in  the  Meadow.— Anon. — HSS  2 
Bees  of  Myddelton  Manor,  The. — May  Probyn. — VA 
Bee's  Sermon,  The. — Anon. — WR  6 
Bee's  Wisdom,  The.— Anon.— PPSr— TT—YBT 
Beethoven.— R:  W.  Gilder.— EDY 
Beethoven. — J:  H.  Ingham. — EDY 
Beethoven. — Arthur  J.  Stringer. — TCV 
Beethoven. — J:  Todhunter.— TIP 
Beethoven's  Moonlight  Sonata. — Anon. — CS  33 
Beethoven's  Third  Symphony. — R:   Hovey. — BNL — 

TAS 
Before  a  Collection  Made  for    the  Society    for    the 

Propagation  of  the  Gospel.      (C.) — Reginald 

Heber. 
(Missionary  Hymn.)— FEP— LLC 
Before  and  After. — Anon.— WR  20 
Before  and  After. — Oliver  M.  Brown. — VA 
Before  and  after  School. — Anon. — WR  7 
(School — Before  and  After.) — LLC 
(School  Children.)- HSS  2 
Before  and  Behind. — Abbott  Lawrence. — WR  18 
Before  Parting  (Silver  Tassie,  The — C.). — Rob't  Burns. 

— LH 
(Bonnie  Mary.) — GP 
(Farewell,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
(My  Bonnie  Mary — also  C.) — OB 
Before  Sailing.     (All  the  Year  Round.) — HP 
Before  Sedan.— Austin    Dobson— AVP— BNL— CS  16 

— EDY— GP— OS  1 
Before  she  Thought. — Moses  Gage  Shirley. — WR  7 
Before  Sleep.— Sir  T:  Browne.— EPs 
.     (Evening  Hymn.)— CEL— FEP— YBF 
Before  Sunrise  in  Winter. — E:  R.  Sill. — AA 
Before  the  Battle   of    Hastings.     (Fr.    Albion's    Eng- 
land.)—W:  Warner.— WEP  1 
Before  the  Bay  State  Club,  Sel.  fr.    (Homes  of  the  Peo- 
ple, The.)— H:  W.  Grady.— FD  2— PPS 
(Home,  The— 8^.  abr.)— TMD 
(Home  in  the  Government,  The — si.  diff.  vers. — fr. 

The  Farmer  and  the  Cities.)— BS  18— PFP 
"Before  the  beginning  of   years." — Algernon  C.  Swin- 
burne.    See  Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
Before  the  Convent  of  Yuste,  1556. — August,  Count 

Platen-Hallermunde.— EDY 
Before  the  Curfew.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— TAV 
Before  the  Explosion.     (Tab.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Before  the  Gate.— W:  D.  Howells.— GP— OH— WR  2 
Before  the  Mirror. — Anon. — WR  2 
Before  the  Rain.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— BNL— GN— GP— 

LC— POS 
Before  the  Rain. — Am^lie  Troubetzkoy. — AA 
Before  the  Toy  Shop  Window.— J:  K.  Bangs.— WR  25 
Before  Vicksburg.—G :  H.  Boker.— EDY— PEO 
Beggar,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell— PC— PHS 
Beggar,  The.— T:  Moss.— BNL 

(Beggar's  Petition,  The.)— CS  12— FEP 
Beggar  and  the  King,  The.— J.  C.  Goodwin.— SSS 
Beggar  Baby,  The.— Anon.— DS—YA 
Beggar  Maid,  The.     (C.)— Alfred    Tennyson.— CGd— 

YBF 
(Beggar  Maid  and   King  Cophetua,  The — w.  tab.) 

—TCP 
Beggar  Man,  The. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Beggars. — Ella  Higginson. — AA 
Beggar's    Daughter    of    Bednall-Greene,  The. — Anon. 

See  Blind  Beggar's  Daughter  of  Bednall  Green, 

The. 
Beggar's  Gift,  The.— S.   D.    Smith,   Jr.— BS  26 
Beggar's  Opera,  The,    Sel.  fr.     ("How  happy  could  I 

be  with  either" — br.  sel.  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  II.) — 

J:  Gay.— OES 
Beggar's  Petition,  The. — T:  Moss.    See  Beggar,  The. 
Beginners. — Walt  Whitman. — AA 
Beginning  Again. — Anon. — CS  10 
Beginning  Right.— E.  H.  Trafton.— MD 
Begum  Speech. — R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  Impeachment 

of  Warren  Hastings,  The. 
Begun  at  Last. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Behave   Yoursel'  before  Folk. — Alexander  Rodger. — 

BNL  (si.  o*r.)— THP 
Behavior. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — APr — MAL 
Behind  the  Mask.— Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney. — TAS 
Behind  the  Scenes. — Mrs.  M.  L.  Rayne. — SD 
Behind  the  Times.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MPD 
Behind  the  Veil,  Sel.  /r.— Jas.  De  Mille.— TCV 


43 


Behind 


AN  INDEX  TO  POJi:TRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Behind  Time.— Freeman   Hunt.— CS  22— FR  (abr.)— 

WCLG  1 
"Behold  a  woman!"      (.Fr.  Faces.) — Walt  Whitman. 

—HBP  ♦ 

Behold,  I  Stand  at  the  Door  and  Knock.- W:  Wal- 

sham  How. — FEP 
Behold  the  Deeds!     H:  C.  Bimner.— THP 
Beignet   de   Pomme.      (Fr.   Poetical    Cookery-book.) 

(Punch.)  — HPE 
Being  a  Boy.     (Sefe.)— C:  D.  Warner.— PP—YFR 
Being  Thankful. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Belagcholly  Days.— Anon.— BNL— THP  (abr.) 
Belated.— J:  G.  Whittier.- AD 
Belated  Violet,  A.— Oliver  Herford.— AA 
Beleaguered  City,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BPB— 

CGd  (air.)— WCLG  2 
Belfry  of   Bruges,   The.     Sel.    fr.    (Carillon.)— H:  W. 

Longfellow. — BNL 
Belfry  of  Ghent,  The.— Rob't  Maguire.— CS  12— SA 
Belfry  Pigeon,    The.— Nathaniel    P.    Willis.— BNL— 

HBP  > 

Belial's  Address,  Opposing  War. — J :  Milton.  '  See  Para- 
dise Lost. 
Belief  and  Doubt.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Belief  in   Astrology,    The.— Friedrich    Schiller.      See 

Wallenstein. 
Believe  and  Take  Heart. — J:  L.  Spalding.     See  God 

and  the  Soul. 
Believe  Me,  if  All  Those  Endearing  Young  Charms. 

— T :   Moore.- 'BNL  —  FEP  —  FTA  —  PYO  — 

WEP4 
"Believe   me    still,     as    I    have  ever  been." — J:   G. 

Whittier.— BNL 
Belinda. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Rape  of  the  Lock,  The. 
Belinda's  Recovery  from  Sickness. — W:  Broome. — OB 
Bell,  A. — Clinton  Scollard.— AA 
Bell,  The.— B:  F.  Taylor.     See  Baggage. 
Bell  and  the  Gong,  The.— Jos.  (?)  Barber.- MDD 
Bell  of  Atri,  The.     (Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn:      The 

Sicilian's  Tale.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— CS  14 
Bell  of  Innisfare,  The.— Anon.— DR 
Bell  of  Liberty,  The.— Joel  T.  Headley.— WR  10 

(^6r.)— FD  1— SR  7 
Bell  of  St.  John's,  The.     (Youth's  Companion.)— CS  37 
Bell  of    the  Angels,    The.— Rose   Osborne.— CS  29— 

YBT  (abr.) 
(Legend,  A.)— FHS 
Bell  of  the  "Atlantic,"  The. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — 

Bell  of  Zanora,  The.— W.  R.  Rose.— BS  12 
Bella's  Visit  to  Camp. — Anon. — FHE 
Belle  of  the  Ball,  The.     (Every-day  Characters,  III.: 
The  Belle  of  the  Ball-room— C.)—Winthrop  M. 
Praed.— BNL— DDR— FEP— HPE— THP 
(End  of  the  Romance,  The— sei.)— FLS 
Bell-flower  Tree,  The.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Bell-founder,   The,   Sel.   fr.   (Labor  Song.)— Denis  F. 

MacCarthy. — BNL 
Belligerent     Non-combatants.  —  W:    T.     Sherman. — 

BLP 
Bellman's  Song,  The.     (Fr.  Melismata.) — Anon. — ELP 
Bell-ringer  of  '76,  The.— Anon.- SC 
Bells,  The  (C.)— Edgar  A.  Poe.— AA— BNL— BS  12— 
CS  1—  FEP  —  FP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  KNE  — 
MMR— PPSr- PS— PSR— SA— SR  3— VSG 
(46r.)— FTR— HNS 
(Bells,  The— First  Stanza— 6r.  seZ.)- HNS 
(Bells,  The— Third  Stanza— 6r.  sel.)— HNS 
(Brazen  Bells,  The— 6r.  sei.)— SE 
(Iron  Bells,  The— &r.  sel.)— SB 
(Silver  Bells,  The— &r.  sel.)— SB 
(Wedding  Bells,  The— br.  sel.)— SB 
Bells,   The,   Sel.   fr.     (Burgomaster's   Death,   The.)— 

(Ad.  by)  T:  F.  Wilford.— DES 
Bells,  The. — W:  Young.     SeeWishmakers'  Town. 
Bells  across  the  Snow. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — BS  12 

—FEP 
Bells  at  Midnight,  The.— T:  B.  Aldrich.- EDY 
Bells  of  Brookline,  The. — Andrew  Downing.— BS  23 
Bells  of  Lynn,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— AA 
Bells  of  Lynn,  The.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— CSS 
Bells  of  Notre  Dame,  Th*e.— Anon.— CS  35 
Bells  of  San  Bias,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— EDY 
Bells  of  Shandon,  The.— Fs.  S.  Mahony.— BNL— BS  2 
—  CR  —  CS  3  —  EA  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  — 
HR  —  HSS  3  —  LC  —  MMR  —  OB  —  OS  2  — 
PSR  —  PYO  —  SA  —  SR  2  —  TIP  —  VS 
(Shandon  Bells,  The.)— AVP— VA— VSG 
Bells  of  Yule. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Beloved,  it  is  Mom. — Emily  H.  Hickey. — VA 
Beloved    Syracuse.     (Syracuse    University   Herald.) — 
CG  3 


Below  the  Heights.— Walter  H.  Pollock.— VA 

Below  the  Old  House.— W.  B.  Scott.— AVP 

Belshazzar.— G:  Croly.— CS  4 

Belshazzar. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — PHS 

Belshazzar  Smith's  Cure  for  Somnambulism. — Anon. — 

CS  16 
Belshazzar's  Downfall. — Heinrich  Heine. — CS  23 
Belshazzar's  Feast. — T.  S.  Hughes. — SS 
Belshazzar's  Feast. — Minnie  L.  Sellers. — CS  37 
Ben  Bluff.- T:  Hood.— THP 
Ben  Bolt.— W:  H.  Edwards.— WCLG  1 

(Diff.  vers.  fr.  the  following.) 
Ben  Bolt.— T:  D.  English.— AA—TAV 

(W.  OTtMtc.)— NPS— YP 
Ben  Fisher. — Frances  D.  Gage. — CS  8 
Ben  Hafed.— W:  Whitehead.— CS  21 
Ben  Hafiz,  the  Muezzin. — R:  H.  Savage. — BS  26 
Ben  Hassan's  Dream. — Waldo  Messaros.- — CS  36 
Ben  Hazard's  Guests. — Anna  P.  Marshall. — CS  16 
Ben  Isaac's  Vision. — Annie  M.  Lawrence. — CS  18 
•Ben  Jonson.     (Fr.  Letter  to  Ben  Jonson.) — Fs.  Beau- 
mont.— BNL 
Ben  Jonson's  Commonplace  Book. — Lucius  Cary,  Lord 

Falkland.— BNL 
Ben  Karshook's  Wisdom,  II.     ("Quoth  a  young  Sad- 

ducee.")  —Rob't  Browning. — SO 
Ben,    the    Orphan    Boy;   or,    "Honesty   is   the    Best 

Policy."— H.  E.  McBride.— SD 
Bench-legged  Fyce,  The. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Bended  Bow,  The.— Felicia  D.  Hemans.— BLP 
Bender  Buys  a  Delephone. — Anon.— DRR 
Bending  of  the  Bow. — Homer.     See  Odyssey,  The. 
Beneath  her  Window. — Anon. — C!H 
Beneath  the  Beam. — W.  E.  Manning. — WR  13 
Beneath     the     Flag.     (Cleveland     Plain     Dealer.) — 

PAPm 
Beneath  the  Surface.— W.  F.  Fox.— CS  9 
Beneath  the  Violets.— T:  W.  Higginson.— TAS 
Beneath  the  Wattle  Boughs.— Frances  T.  Gill. — VA 
'  'Beneath  this  starry  arch." — Harriet  Martineau.    Set 

On,  On  Forever. 
Benedicite. — Anna  C.  Brackett. — AA 
Benedicite.— J:     G.     Whittier.— BIL— BNL— FTA— 

TFY 
Benedick's    Soliloquy. — W:     Shakespeare.     See  Much 

Ado  about  Nothing. 
Benedict  Arnold.  Sela.  fr.      (In  Washington  and  his 

Generals.) — G:  Lippard. 
Arnold  the  Traitor.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXIV.)— CS  17 
Benedict  Arnold's  Death-bed.     (Ch.  XX.VI.— abr.) 

— SR3 
(Death-bed    of    Benedict    Arnold.)  —  CS  2  — 

TMD  (abr.) 
(Patriot  and  Traitor — si.  diff.) — FR 
(Traitor's  Deathbed,  The— o6r.)— NC— PFP 
Black  Horse  and  his  Rider,  The.  (Sel.fr.  Ch.  VIII.) 

— BS  4  (at.  to  C:  Sheppard.)— CS  12  (at.  to  C: 

Sheppard.) 

(A6r.)— PR— PTS  (at.  to  C:  Sheppard.)— TMD 
(Rider  of  the  Black  Horse,  The— «f.  a6r.)— SC 
(Unknown  Rider,  The— ««.  abr.)— NC— PFP 
Benedict  Arnold's  Death-bed. — G:  Lippard.     See  Ben- 
edict Arnold. 
Benediction,  The.^Frangois  Copp^e. — CS  18 
(Abr.y-fiS  21— PFP— SC— SO— WR  26 
Benediction,  The. — Clifford  Harrison. — VSG 
"Benefits  of    college  training  are    five-fold.  The." — 

J.  H.  Vincent.— GG 
Benefits  of  Laughter. — Anon. — KNE 
Benefits  of  the  Civil  War.— C:  M.  Busbee.— BLP 
Benefits    of    the    Constitution. — Dan'l  Webster.     See 

Public  Dinner  at  New  York. 
Benevolence.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Benevolence. — Beattie. — CS  10 
Benevolence  and  Charity. — R :  (  ?)  Steele. — AE 
Ben-Hur,  Sels.  fr. — Lew  Wallace. 

Angel  and  the  Shepherds,  The. — (Ad.  fr.  Bk.  I., 

Ch.  11.)— BS  16— NP 
(First  Christmas,  The— ad.  fr.  Chs.  10  and  11.) — 

SR3 
Ben-Hur  and  Iras.     (Dial.  ad.  fr.  Bk.VIII.,Ch.  6.) 

— NDP 
Chariot  Race,  The.     (Bk.  V.,  Ch.   14.)— BS  16— 

PFP  (ad.) 

(Ad.  fr.  Chs.  13  and  14.)— SC— SR  6 
(Race,  The.— (ad.  fr.  Chs.  13  and  14.)— NC 
Crucifixion,   The.     (Ad.  fr.  Bk.  VIII.,  Ch.  10.)— 

WR12 
Song  from  Ben-Hur.     (Bk.  II.,  Ch.  6.)— AA 
Ben-Hur  and  Iras. — Lew  Wallace.     See  Ben-Hur. 
Benjamin  Harrison. — C.  E.  Russell. — EDY 
Bennie's  Penny. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 


44 


TITLE    INDEX 


Beyond 


Benny. — Annie  C.  Ketchum. — WCL 
(Little  Bennie.)— CS  3 
(Little  Benny.)— FMR—MYF 
Benny's  Questions.     (Dial.) — Anon. — WR  17 
Beowulf,  Sel.  fr.  (Grendel's Mother, /r.  Pts.21  and  24.) 

—{Tr.  by)  J.  L.  Hall.— NE 
Beowulf,  The  Story  of.— Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
Beppo,  Sel.  fr,     (Matrons  and  Maids.) — Lord  Byron. — 

THP 
Bequest  of  His  Heart,  A. — Alex.  Scott. — OB 
Bereaved.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— AA—ASL— HDL 
Bereaved  Editor's  Speech,  The. — Anon. — PS 

(Widower's  Speech,  The.)— DE 
Bereavement. — W:  L.  Bowles. — WEP  4 
Berganao. — S:  Rogers.     See  Italy. 
Bergetta's  Misfortunes. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Berlin — the  Sixteenth  of  March. — Matthew  Arnold. — 

AVP 
Bermudas  [,  The].  — Andrew   Marvell.  —  GN  —  OB  — 

WEP  2 
(Emigrants  in  [the]  Bermudas,  The.)— FEP— HBP 
(In  Exile.)— LH 
(Song  of  the  Emigrants  in  Bermuda,  The.) — BNL 

— BPB— EPs— PGT  1 
Bernardine  du  Bom. — Sigourney. — PPSr 
Bernardo    and    King    Alphonso. — J:    G.    Lockhart. — 

CS  2— PPSr 
Bernardo  del  Carpio. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — CS   2 — 

FR  (otr.)— FTR— HNS— KNE  — NPS— OS2 

— SS— VSG— YP 
Bernardo's  Revenge.— Anon. — CS  13 — KNE 
Berrying  Song. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Bertha  in  the  Lane. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — BS  9  {abr.) 

—HBP 
{Br.  «eb.)— SAE— SE 
Bertie's  Philosophy. — Eva  M.  Tappan. — HP 
Beruria. — Anon.  {ad.  by  Elsie  M.  Wilbor).— WR  24 
Beside  the  Bonnie  Brier  Bush,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Watson. 
Death   of  the   Country   Doctor,  The.— (Sei   fr.  A 

Doctor  of  the  Old  School,  Ch.  IV.)— SR  12 
His  Mother's  Sermon. — HBR 
Through  the   Flood.     (Sel.  fr.  A  Doctor  of  the  Old 

School,  Ch.  II.)— NP  (ra6r.)— WR  21 
(Doctor  of  the  Old  School,  A— se?.)— TMR 
Beside  the  Martyr's  Memorial. — Arthur  J.  Stringer. — 

TCV 
Beside  the  Railway  Track. — Anon. — PEO 
Beside  the  Sea. — Ella  Higginson. — LC 
Besieged  Castle,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Ivanhoe. 
Bess.— Alfred  T.  Chandler.— WR  13 
Bessie.— W.  Wetherbee.— CG  1 
Bessie  Bell  and  Mary  Gray.— Anon. — BB 
Bessie  Bo  Peep  of  Engle  Steepe. — T.  W.  Handford. — 

TFS 
Bessie  Brown,  M.  D.— S:  M.  Peck.— AWH 
Bessie    Kendrick's     Journey. — Anne     A.     Preston. — 

BS8— CS20 
Bessie's  Christmas  Dream. — Anon. — CS  35 
Bessie's  Dilemma.— Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Bessie's  First  Party. — Belle  M.  Locke. — CS  35 
Bessie's  Letter.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— COS— PP— 

SS 
Bessie's  Secret. — Anon. — ^PS 
Bessie's  Text. — Anon. — DLF 
Bessie's  Troubles. — Anon. — TT 
Best. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — BIL 
Best.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— TAV 

Best  Beauty,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — COS— PP 
Best  Cow  in  Peril,  The.— ^non.- CS  10— PPSr 
Best  of  All,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Best  of  the  Dollies.— Kate  Allyn.— COS— PP 
Best  Policy,  The.     {Dial.)—C:  S.  Wayne.— CDs 
Best  Policy  in   Regard  to   Naturalization. — Lewis  C. 

Levin.— BS  21— PFP 
"Best  Room,"  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— TMR 
Best  Season,  The. — Anon. — DLF 
Best  Sewing-machine,      The.— Anon. — CS  21 — NPS — 

YP 
Best  Spare  Room,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Best  that  I  can.  The.     {SI.  abr.) — Margaret  Sangster 

CPL  {sel.)— 8SS 
(Do  all  that  you  Can.)— SM 
Best  Thing  in  the  World,  The. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — 

CS  15— TFS 
"Best  thoughts  of  the  day  ought  to  be  in  the  daily 

papers.  The."— E.  C.  Babb.— GG 
Best  Times,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Best  Tribute,  The.— Anon.— DJS 
Beth  G^lert;  or,  the  Grave  of  the  Greyhound. — W:  R. 

Spencer.— BNL  (abr.)— CS  12— FEP— FR  (sZ. 

abr. )— HBP— LLC— MR— VSG 
(Llewellyn  and  his  Dog — at.  to  Southey — abr.) — PC 


Bethel.— A.   J.   H.   Duganne.— AWB— BAB— EDY— 

WR  10  {sel.) 
Bethlehem-town.— Eugene  Field. — TAS 
Betrayal.     {Fr.  The  Jaquerie.) — Sidney  Lanier. — AA 
Betrayal  of  the  Rose,  The. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — AA 
Betrothed,    The.— Rudyard    Kipling.— BS  21— PPh— 

WR22 
Betrothed  Anew. — Edmund    C.    Stedman. — BNL    (si. 

abr.)— OK 
Betsey  and  I  are  Out.— W:  Carleton. — CS  4 — MMR 

{SI.  a6r.  )—BS  1— CR— FTR— HR— SA 
Betsey  and  I  are  out  Once  More. — Anon. — MCS 
Betsey  Destroys  the  Paper. — D.  R.  Locke. — CS  4 — HR 
Betsey  and  I  are  Out. — Will  M.  Carleton.     See  Betsey 

and  I  are  Out. 
Betsev  Hawkins  Goes  to  the  City. — Anon. — WR  14 
Betsey  imd  I  Hafe  Bust  Ub. — J.  S.  Burdett.— BDD— 

DFY 
Betsey's  Battle  Flag. — Minna  Irving. — EDY 
Better  Answer,  A. — Matthew  Prior. — WEP  3 
Better  Country,  The. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Trav- 
eller, The. 
Better  in   the    Morning. — Leander   S.    Coan. — BS  8 — 

CS  15— FTR— SR  2 
Better  Land,  The.— Anon.— CS  12 
Better  Land,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — PC 
Better  Part,  The.— Matthew  Arnold.— YBF 
Better  Part,     The.— Booker    T.     Washington.— IR— 

MRS 
Better  Resurrection,  A. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — YBF 
Better  than  a  Doctor. — Mary  A.  Leach. — MD 
Better  than  Diamonds. — Anon. — FMR 
Better  than   Gold. — Alexander  Smart. — BLP — HSS  2 

—LLC 
Better  than  Gold.— Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton.— CS  11— DS 

(Somewhat  diff.  and  si.  longer  vers,  of  the  foregoing.) 
Better  than  the  Miser's  Gold. — Virgil  A.   Pinkley. — 

BS  16 
Better  Things.— Leigh  Hunt.— BIL— TFY 
Better  Things.— G:  MacDonald.— BS  13— CS  14— CSS 

—HSS  3  (el.  a?>r.)— PPSr 
(Somewhat  diff.  vers,  of  the  foregoing.) 
Better  to  Climb  and  Fall. — Anon. — HP 
"Better  to  mourn  a  blossom  snatched  away." — Ella 

W.  Wilcox.— GG 
"Better    trust    all    and    be    deceived." — Frances    A. 

Kemble.— GG 
(Faith.)— BNL— EPs— FEP— VA 
(Trust.)— CS  19 
Better  Way,  The. — Anon. — LLC 
Better  Way,  A.— Anon.— YBT 

Better  Way,  The.     (Fr.  Honors.) — Jean  Ingelow.— GP 
Better  Whistle    than    Whine.  —  Anon.  —  PR  — 

WR  17  (dial.)— Y A 
Bettles,  Sel.  fr.  (In  his  Way  a  Hero.) — Edwin  Pugh. 

— WR  19 
Betty  and  the  Bear. — Anon.— CS  3 — PS 
Betty  Lee.— E.  N.  Gunnison.— CS  5— DS— YA 
Betty  Zane.     (Abr.)- T:  D.  English.- FMR 
Between  the  Acts.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— SPC 
Between  the  Battles. — Fs.  Sherman. — TCV 
Between  the  Galop  and  the  Lanciers. — F.  K.  Curtis. — 

CG  1 
Between  the  Graves.— H.  S.  Spofford. — PEO 
Between  the  Lights. — Anon. — FEP — HDL 
Between  the  Lines. — Susan  K.  Phillips. — HDL 
Between  the  Rapids. — Archibald  Lampman. — VA 
Between  the  Showers. — Amy  Levy. — VA 
Between  the  Sunken  Sun  and  the  New  Moon. — Paul 

Hamiilton  Hayne. — AA 
Between  Two  Stools.^Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KH 
Between  Winter  and  Spring. — Lucy  Larcom. — YBT 
"Bevare  of  the  Vidders." — Anon. — CD 
(Shacob's  Lament.)— CS  25— PR— YA 
(Widow,  The.)— CDV 
Beware! — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Beware!     (Fr.   the   German.) — H:   W.    Longfellow. — 

BS19 
Beware! — Walter  Scott.     See  Bride  of  Lammermoor, 

The. 
Beware  of  the  Flatterer. — Anon. — DJS 
Bewildered  Conductor,  A.— W:  H.  Head.— SR  11 
Bewildering  Emotions. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Bewitched  Clock,  The.— Anon.— CS  15— DFY— MHR 

—SDR 
Beyond.     (Cleveland  Plain  Dealer.) — CS  34— SSS 
Beyond.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— CS  25 
Beyond. — Hannah  P.  Kimball. — AA 
Beyond.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.— TAS 
Beyond  Recall. — Mary  E.  Bradley. — AA 
"Beyond  the  farthest  glimmering  star." — G:  D.  Pren- 
tice.— GG 


45 


beyond 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITaTIONS 


Beyond  the  Gate. — Anon. — DCP 
Beyond  the  Haze.     (Cornhill  Magazine.) — HP 
Beyond  the  Mississippi. — Richardsort. — BS  12 
Beyond    the    Smilihg    and    the    Weeping. — Horatius 
Bonar.— BNL— GP 

(Little  While,  A— C.)— FEP— HBP— VA 
Beyond  the  Veil.— H :  Vaughan.— ELP— WEP  2 

(Friends  Departed.) — OB 

(Friends  in  Paradise— ofrr. )—HDI.—PGT  2— YBF 

(They  are  All  Gone.)— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Biah  Cathcart's  Proposal. — H:  W.  Beecher.    <See  Nor- 
wood. 
Bible,  The.     (.Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Bible,  The.— Newell  D.  Hillis.— SC 
Bible,  The.— T.  De  Witt  Talmage.— CS  29 
Bible  and  the  Iliad,  The.— Fs.  Wayland.— LLC 
Bible  and  the  Liquor  Traffic,  The.— J:  P.  St.  John— 

sss 

Bible  in  Harmony  with  Temperance,  The. — Anon — CS  4 
Bible  Legend  of  the  Wissahickon,  The. — Anon.  {.ad.  by 

Cora  Lee  llagsdale).- WR  19 
Bible  Reading.— J.  W.  Shoemaker.— BS  2 
Bible  Reading  on  "Rock  of  Ages,"  A. — C:  A.  Jones. 

—SSS 
Bibliolatres. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — TAS 
Bibliomania,  The.— J:  Ferriar.— LBB— MBB 
Bibliomaniac's  Prayer,  The. — Eugene  Field. — AA 
Bibo  and  (Dharon. — Matthew  Prior. — HPE 
Bicycle  and  the  Pup,  The.— Anon.— CRR—DS—NPS 

— YP 
Bicycle  Girl,  The.— Alfred  Ellison.— SR  10 
Bicycle  Ride,  The.— Jas.  C.  Harvey.— CS  30 
Bicycling  in  the  Sky.— Arthur  L.  Tubbs. — BS  25 
Bicycling  Song. — H :  C.  Beeching. — GN 

(Going  down  Hill  on  a  Bicycle.) — OB 
Biddy  McGinnis  at  the  Photographer's. — Anon. — CD 
Biddy  O'Brien  has  the  Toothache. — Louise  H.  Savage. 

— CS25 
Biddy's  Trials  among  the  Yankees.  {Harper's  Bazar.) 

— CD— CDV— SDR 
Biddy'sTroubles.— Anon.— CRR— DI— GH— PS 
' '  Bide  a  Wee,  and  Dinna  Fret."— S.  E.  G.— HP— WR  21 
Bienseance. — J:  Wolcott. — HPE 
Biftek  aux  Champignons. — H:  A.  Beers.— AA 
Big  Ben  Bolton. — Eugene  J.  Hall.— CS  22 
Big  Bob  Simpson. — Zenas  Dane. — CS  32 
Big  Enough  Family,  A.     {Columbus  Sun.  Morn.  News.) 

— BS  22— DCP 
Big  Mistake  A. — Anon. — CS  33 
Big  Oyster,  The— G:  Arnold.— MHR 
Big  Shoe,    The.— Adeline   D.    T.    Whitney.— CS  22— 

PP— PS— YPS 
Big  Trees  and  the  Yosemite,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Fallen 

Monarch,  'The.) — Isaac  H.  Bromley. — AD 
Biglow  Papers,  The.    Sels.   fr. — Jas.    Russell   Lowell. 
1st  Series,  Introduction,  Sels.  fr. 
Courtin',  The.    {Early  briefer  vers.) — HPE  {sel.) — 
SO 

(Zekle.)— BS  0 
(Lo<er  Ders.)- AA— AWH— BNL— CR— CS  4— 
DFY  {si.  afcr.)— FEP— HBP— MHR— THP 
(A6r.)— EPS— PTS 
Revolutionary  Hero,  A.   (  Verses.) — HPE 
School-house,  The.    (Sel.  fr.  «erses.)— HPE— SCS 
1  St  Series,  No.  1 — -Letter  from  Mr.  Ezekiel  Biglow, 

A.— AWH— BNL  {br.  sel.) 
"       "         "  2 — Letter  from  Mr.  Hosea  Biglow  to 
the    Hon.    J.    T.   Buckingham. 
(^6r.)— HPE 

' 3 — What     Mr.     Robinson    Thinks. — 

AA  —  AWH  —  BNL  —  FEP — 
HBP— THP 

6— Candidate's    Creed,     The.       (The 

Pious    Editor's     Creed  —  C)- 
HPE 
"       "  (Newspaper,  The — sel.) — LLC 

"       "         "  7 — Letter  from  a  Candidate,  A.  (C) — 
BNL  {br.  seZ.)- HPE 

(Candidate's   I>etter,   The.) — 
AA 
2nd    "         Introduction.     See  Courtin',  The. 
•'       "  No.  2— MasonandSlidell.    {Sel.)— EPa 

"       "  "    6 — ^Biglow  Papers,  No  6  (Sunthin' 

in    the    Pastoral     Line— C). 
— EPs  {si.  afcr.)— SN  {sel.) 
(Spring— hr.  sel.)—SE 
"       "         "  10 — Mr.  Hosea  Biglow  to  the  Editor 
of  the  Atlantic  Monthly  (C). 
— AA  {sel.)— BNL,  {br.  sel.) 
Hosea    Biglow's  Lament — 
{not    dialect    vers.  —  sel.) 
—EPs 


Bijah.— C:  M.  Lewis.— WR  16 

(Bijah's  Story.  )—CS  23 
Bill.— Anon.— WR  25 
BiU.— Max  Adeler.— GH 
Bill  an'  Me.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
Bill  and  Bell.— Arden  S.  Fitch.— WR  15 
Bill  and  I.— G.  H.  Miles.— CS  10 
Bill  and  Joe.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AA— BNL— BS  14 

—CSS 
Bill  Arp  on  the  Rack.— C:  H.  Smith.— CS  8 
Bill  Jepson's  Wife.     (Z>iaZ.  )—Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— 

CS6 
Bill  Mason's    Bride.  —  Anon.  {at.   to  Bret   Harte). — 

CS  6— HR— KNE— SR  4 
(Bill  Mason's  Ride.)— MR 
Bill  Nye    on    Hornets.- Edgar    W.    Nye.— CS    28— 

PS 
Bill  Nye's  Hired  Girl.— Edgar  W.  Nye.— SR  6 
Bill  of  Items,  A.— Anon.— CS  18 
Bill  Smith.— Max  Adeler.— BS  21— SR  12 
Bill  the  Engineer. — Bettersworth. — PR 
Bill      Wainwright's      Adventure.     {Dial.) — Anon. — 

MPD 
Billet-doux,  A.— Anon.— CS  26 
(Billet  Doux,  The.)— DCD 
(William  Did.)— WR  14 
Billie.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
Billings  on  "The  District  Schoolmaster." — H:  G.  Shaw. 

—CSS 
Billington's  Valentine,  Sel.  fr.     (Valentine  Verses.) — 

T:  N.  Page.— ED Y 
Billows    and    Shadows. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Les  Mise- 

rables. 
Bill's  in  Trouble. — Anon.     See  Billy,  he's  ir  Trouble. 
Billy.— FitzHugh  Ludlow.— BS  20 
Billy  and  his  Drum.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Billy  Grimes,  the  Drover.— Anon.— CS  16 — KJ 
Billy,  he's  in  Trouble.— Anon.— BS  26 
(Bill's  in  Trouble— «i.  a6r.)— CRR 
Billy  K.  Simes.— Elmer  R.  Coates.— CS  27 
Billy  the  Bilk;  or.  The  Bandits  of  the  Bowery. — Anon. 

— GH 
Billy's  First  and  Last  Drink  of  Lager.    (Fr.  A  Strange 

Sea  Story.)— Anon.— CS  16— PTS 
Billy's  Pets.— G:  Kyle.— WR  3 
Billy's  Rose.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  31— HP 
Billy's  Santa  Claus  Experience. — Cornelia  Redmond. 

— GH 
Bimi.— Rudyard  Kipling.— WR  21 
Bind-weed. — Susan  Coolidge. — GN 
Bingen  on  the  Rhine. — Caroline  E.  S.  Norton. — BNL 

—  CS  1  —  DDR  —  FEP  —  FP  —  LLC  —  MR 

—  OS  2  —  PPSr  —  WRD 
(Soldier  from  Bingen,  The.)— SS 

Binley  and  "46."— Anon. — CS  9 
Binnorie. — Anon. — OB  {cond.) 

(Cruel  Sister,  The.)— FEP— HBP 

(Twa  Sisters,  The.)— CEL— PEB  1 

(Twa  Sisters  o'  Binnorie,  The— «cZ.)— BB— WR  9 
Biologic  Face,  The.— L.  B.— CG  3 
Birch  Stream,  The.— Anna  B.  Averill.- BNL— SN 
Birch  Tree,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— AD— HBP 
Birch  Tree,  The.— Addie  V.  McMullen.— AD 
Birched  Schoolboy,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Anon.— BVC 
Birch-tree,  The.— E.  A.  H.— CG  2 
Bird,  The.— W:  Allingham.— EPs— OS  1 
Bird,  The. — T:  Moore.     See  Bird  Let  Loose  in  Eastern 

Skies,  The. 
Bird  among  the  Blooms. — Marion  Short. — DR 
Bird  and  the  Baby,  The.     {Fr.  Sea  Dreams.) — Alfred 
Tennyson .— PP— PPSr— YFR 

(Birdie  and  Baby.)— DCP 

(Cradle  Song.)— LC— PS— PGT  2 

(Little  Birdie.)— OS  1— PC— WCL 

(Morning  Song.) — GMS 

(What    Does   Little   Birdie   Say?)— BNL— PHS— 
PoR— TFS  {sel.) 

(What  the  Birdie  and  the  Baby  Say.)— HSS  2 
Bird  Dialogue,  The.— Abby  M.  Diaz.— ASD 
Bird  in  the  Hand,  A.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— VA 

(Maids  of  Lee,  The— si.  abr. )—FEF 
"Bird  in  the  Hand  is  Worth  Two  in  the  Bush,  A." — 

Anon.— WCL 
Bird,  Let  Loose,  The.    (C.) — T:  Moore. 

(Bird,  The.)— YBT 

(Bird,  Let  Loose  in  Eastern  Skies,  The.) — GP 
Bird  of  Passage. — Edgar  Fawcett. — GP 
Bird  on  the  Telegraph  Wire,  The. — Anon. — HP 
Bird  Song.— Kate  S.  Maclean.— TCV 
Bird  Songs. — Kathie  Moore. — AD 
Bird  Talk.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 


46 


TITLE    INDEX 


Black 


Bird  Talk,  Sel.  fr.     (Busy  and  Happy.)— Adeline  D.  i . 

Whitney— YBT  ,  ,     ,   „     ,       r,^c. 

Bird  that  Sings,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— COb— 

PP 
Bird  Trades.— Anon.— AD— LLC— NV 
Bird  with  Bosom  Red.— Anon.— NV  „      „        ,. 

Birdcatcher's  Song.— W:  J.  Courthope.     See  Paradise 

of  Birds,  The.  „      t,-  j         > 

Birdie  and  Baby.— Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Bird  and 

the  Baby,  The. 
Birdie's  Secret. — Anon. — DJS 

(Secret,  The.)— COS— PP  ,        ^.  ^  ^ 

Birdies  with  Broken  Wings.    (C.)— Mary  M.  Dodge.— 

PoR 
(It's  Good  to  Have  a  Mother.)— TFS 
Birds,  The.     (Sei.)— Aristophanes.— WR  11 
Birds.— Jas.  Montgomery.     See  Pelican  Island,  Ihe.^ 
Birds.— W:    Shakespeare.     See    Midsummer    Nights 

Birds.     (cT— R :  H  :  Stoddard.— A  A— ASL—FEP 
(Birds  are  Singing  round  my  Window.) — Ob  2 
Birds  and  the  Children,  The.— E.  T.  Sullivan.— AD 
Birds  are  Singing  Round  my  Window.— R:  H:  Stod- 
dard.    See  Birds. 
Birds,  Beasts  and  Fishes. — Ann  and  Jane   lay  lor. — 

BVC 
Birds  Choose  the  Maple,  The.— Susan  F.  Cooper  —AD 
Birds'  Convention,  The.— Miller  Hageman.— WR  l.") 
Bird's  Cradle-song,  A.— Evelyn  M.  Worthley.— CG  2 
Birds'  Departure,  The.— Anon.— WR  4 
Bird's  Experience,  A. — Anon. — FAS 
Bird's  Funeral,  The.— Anon.— YFD 
Birds'  Good-night,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Birds  in  Spring,  The.— T:  Nashe.— PoR 

(Spring.)— BPB  —  CEL  —  CGd  —  FEP  —  LC  - 

OB— OEL— PGT  1— YBF 
(Spring,  the  Sweet  Spring.)— BNL—ELP—EP 
Birds  in  Summer. — Mary  Howitt. — LLC  (.sel.) — PoR 

(^6r.)— AD  (at.  to  Hemans.)— POS 
"Birds  in  the  high  hall-garden."— Alfred  Tennypon.- 

PGT2 
Birds'  Lawn  Party,  The.     (Child  Garden.)— NY 
Birds'  Music. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Bird's  Nest,  A.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— NV— YBT 
Bird's  Nest,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Bird's  Nest,  The.— H.  J.  Westcott.— YBT 
Birds'  Nests.— Anon.— AD— LLC 
Birds'  Nests.— Lydia  M.  Child.— TFS 
(I  Love  the  Birds.)— PS 
(If  Ever  I  See.)— AD  (w.  wus.)— NV 
Birds  of  Bethlehem,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.- AA 
Birds  of  Killingworth,  The.     (Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn : 
The  Poet's  Tale.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— EPs— 
HBP— YBT  (sel.) 
(Song  of  Birds— 6r.  sel.)— BS  5 

(Birds  of  Killingworth,  The— «ei.)— HDL 
Birds  of  Passage. — Anon. — PTS 
Birds  of  Scotland,  The.— Hugh  Macdonald.— SN 
Birds'  Orchestra,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Birds'  Party,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Bird's  Song,  The. — Anon.     See  Be  True. 
Bird's  Song  at  Morning. — W:  J.  Dawson. — VA 
Bird's  Song  in  April. — Clinton  Scollard. — PEO 
Bird's  Song  in  Spring. — E.  Nesbit.     See  Child's  Song 

in  Spring. 
Bird's  Song,  the  Sun,  and  the  Wind,  The.— C:  G.  D. 

Roberts.— VA 
Bird's-eye  View,  A.— Anon.— MYF— WCL 
Birds'-nesting  Time. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
"Birkenhead,"  The.— Hattie  T.   Griswold.— BS  20— 

WR  19 
Birkenhead,  The. — Sir  Henry  Yule. — LH 
Birks  of  Aberfeldy,  The.— Rob't  Bums.— WEP  3 
Biron's  Canzonet. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Love's  La- 
bour's Lost. 
Birth. — Annie  R.  Stillman. — AA 
Birth  and  Death.— T:  Wade.— VA 
Birth  of  Australia,  The. — Percy  Russell. — VA 
Birth    of    Christ,    The.— Alfred    Tennyson.     See    In 

Memoriam. 
Birth   of   Dombey,   The. — C:   Dickens.     See  Dombey 

and  Son. 
Birth  of  Galahad,  The,  Sel.  fr.      (Ylen's    Song.)— R: 

Hovey. — AA 
Birth  of  Ireland,  The.     (National  Teacher's  Monthly.) 
— BRR— CSS— PPSr 
(Origin  of  Ireland,  The.)— HBP— THP 
Birth  of  Little  Paul,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  Dombey 

and  Son. 
Birth  of  Paris,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Birth  of  Robin  Hood,  The.— Anon.— BB—PEB  2  (si. 
diif.  tiers.)- FEB  2 


Birth  of  St.  Patrick,  The.— S:  Lover.- BNL  —  CR  — 

CS  19— CSS— DI— FEP— THP 
Birth  of  Speech,  The.   (Sonnet  V.)— Hartley  Coleridge, 
— VA 
(First  Man,  The.)— FEP  ,   ,   ^     ^,     ^       ,     . 

Birth  of  the  Harp,  The.     (Tr.   by)  J:  M.   Crawford. 

See  Kalevala,  The.      ^  „   ^     .  c^  c 

Birth  of  the  Rainbow,  The.— T.  S.  Demson.- SR  5 
Birth-bond,  The.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XV.)— 

Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2— WEP  4 
Birthday,  A.— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— OB— TiY 
Birthday,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Cuckoo  Clock,  The.)— Caroline 

B.  Southey.— BNL 
Birthday  Box,  The.— Anon.— MD 
Birthday  Doll,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— LL 
Birthday  Gift,  A.— Christina  G.  Rossetti.    SeeChristmas 

Carol,  A. 
Birthday  Gifts.— Anon.— SRI 
Birthday  Greeting,  A.— H:  Edlin.— FLS 
Birthday  Greeting,  A.— M.  E.  F.— HP  ^   ^     .     .^     , 
Birthday  Ode.     (Fr.    The    Progress   of   Curiosity.)— 

J:  Wolcott.— HPE  ^  .        „,  „  , 

Birthdav  of  Daniel  Webster.    (C.)— Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

(Daniel  Webster.)— BNL  (seU—SE 
Birthday  of  the  Republic,  The.— T:  Paine.— WR  10 
Birthday  of  the  Stars  and  Stripes.- Anon.— DFR         ^ 
Birthday  of  Washington,  The.— Rufus  Choate.— CS  1 
— FD  2— HS— PEO— PS— SE— SR  8— SS 
(Washington's  Birthday.)— DFR— PS  (sen 
Birthday  of     Washington     ever    Honored,     Ihe. — G- 

Howland.— DFR— SR  8 
Birthday  Week,  The.— Anon.— OS  1 

(Days  of  Birth— sL  diff.  vers.)- BVC 
Birthday  Wish,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton.— LL 
Birthdays.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP  ^    t^-  i 

Births.- Mrs.  Meek,  of  a  Son.     (SI.  ahr.)—C:  Dickens. 

gg  9 

Bisclaveret.     Sel.     fr.     (Epic     of     Women.)— Arthur 

O'Shaughnessy.— WEP  4 
Bishop  Benno  and  the  Frogs.— Sabine  Baring-Gould.— 

Bishop  Hatto.— Rob't  Southey.— BVC— CGd 

(God's  Judgment  on  a  Wicked  Bishop— C.)— BNL 
—FEP  (ahr.) 
Bishop  Orders  His  Tomb  at  Saint  Praxed's  Church,  The 
*^  (O— Rob't  Browning.— AVP—V A— WEP  4 
(Bishop  Orders  His  Tomb,  The— si.  a6r.)— WR  15 
Bishop  Patteson. — Menella  Smedley. — AVP — EDY  ' 
Bishop's    Silver    Candlesticks,    The— Victor    Hugo. 

See  Les  Mis^rables. 
Bishop's  Visit,  The.— Emily  H.  Nason.— BS  12 
Bismillah.— David  L.  Proudfit.— OS  2 
Bison,  The. — Hilaire  Belloc. — NA 

Bit  of  a  Sermon,  A.— C:  (7)  Mackay.     See  Be  as  thor- 
ough as  you  Can. 
Bit  of  Human  Nature,  A— C:  W.  Coleman.— CG  2 
Bit  of  Lace,  A.     (Red  and  Blue.)— CG  2 
Bit  of  Pottery,  A.— Anon.— TFS 
Bit  of  Shopping  for  the  Country,  A. — Anon. — CS  29 — 

NPS— YP 
Bite,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— COS— PP 
Bite  Bigger. — Anon. — GP 

Biter  Bit,  The.— W:  Aytoun.— HPE— SCS— THP 
Bits  of  Things. — Anon. — AD 
(Growing.)— CPL 
(Oak,  The.)— YBT 
Bitter  Cry  of  the  Outcast  Choir  Boy,  The.     (London 

Punch.)— GH 
Bitter  Disappointment. — G:  Croly.     See  Catiline. 
Bitter-sweet,  Sels.  fr. — Josiah  G.  Holland. 
Babyhood.— AA—PYO 

(Cradle  Song.)— BNI.— GP 
Bitter-sweet,   Fr.      (Fr.    1st    movement-     "I   ask 

what  He  would  have  this  evil,"  etc.) — HDL 
Bluebeard.— CS  20— TCP  (w.  tab.) 
Thanksgiving    Ode,  A.     (The    Hymn— C.)— TFS 
(si.  ahr.) 
("Here  on  this  blessed  Thanksgiving  night" — 
br.  seZ.;— BNL 
Bivouac  bv    the    Rappahannock. — Grace    D.    Roe. — 

WR7 
Bivouac  of  the  Dead,  The. — Theodore  O'Hara. — AA 
— AWB— CS  l.'^— GP— PAP 
(^6r.)— LLC— PAPm— PPSr 
(SeZ.)— BLP— HBP— HSS  1— OS  1  (hr.  sel.) 
(Muffled  Drum's  Sad  Roll,  The— 6r.  seZ.)— LC 
Bivouac  on  a  Mountain  Side. — Walt  Whitman. — AA 
Black  and  Blue  Eyes.— T:  Moore.— BNL 
Black  and  White.     (Pwncft.)— HPE 
Black  Cock,  The.     (C.)— Joanna  Baillie.— HBP 

(Heath-cock,  The.)— BNL 
Black  Death  of  Bergen,  The. — Frd'k  W:  Blackwood, 
I  Lord  Dufferin.— BS  26 


47 


Black 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Black  Horse  and  his  Rider,  The. — G:  Lippard.     See 

Benedict  Arnold. 
Black  Killer,  The.— Alfred  Ollivant.     See  Bob,  Son  of 

Battle. 
Black  Prince,      The. — W:     Shakespeare.     See      King 

Heniy  V. 
Black  Ranald.— Phoebe  Gary.— BS  2 
Black  Regiment,  The.— G:  H.  Boker.- ASL— AWB— 

BAB  —  BNL  —  CS  1  —  EDY  —  GN  —  HBP 

— PAP— PAPm 
(Prose  vera^ — FR 
Black  Riders,  The. — Stephen  Crane. — AA 
Black  Rock,    Sel.  fr.  (Winners  by  their  Own  Lengths.) 

—Ralph  (ionnor.- NP 
Black  Sheep. — R:  Burton. — A  A 
Black  Veil,  The.— C:  Dickens.- WR  8 
Black  Wall-flower,  The.— Frances  A.  Kemble.— VA 
Black  Zeph's  Pard.— Anon.— BS  24 
Blackberry-bush,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Blackbird.     {Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.)  —  Julia  A.  Sa- 
bine.—TCP 
Blackbird,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— POS—SN 
Blackbird,  The.— Frd'k  Tenny-son.- BNL— VA 
"Blackbird  Snow,"  A.— Fanny  B.  Bates.— YBT 
Blackbird's  Song,  The.— H:  Kingsley.— PEB  3 
Blackbird's  Song,  The.— G:  Sigerson.— TIP 
Blackeyed  Susan.— J:  Gay.— BNL— PGT  1— WEP  3 
{SI.  air.)— CEI^— PC 
(Sweet  William's  Farewell  to  Black-eyed  Susan — 

O— FEP— HBP 
Blackmwore  Maidens.— W:  Barnes.— PGT  2— VA 
Blacksmith  of  Bottledell,  The. — Jas.  M.  Thompson — 

MYF— SR  3 
Blacksmith  of  Limerick,  The. — Rob't  D.  Joyce.— TIP 
Blacksmith  of    Ragenbach,    The. — Anon.— CS  5 — CSS 
Blacksmith  of  Ragenbach,  The.     (Poet.  vers,  of  /ore- 

ffoinj;.)— Frank  Murray. — CS  12 
Blacksmith's  Story,  The.— Frank  Olive.— BS  2— CS  5 

— FTR— HNS— MYF 
Blaine  of  Maine.— Eugene  F.  Ware. — EDY 
Blame  not  my  Lute.— Sir  T:  Wyatt.— FEP 
Blanche  of  Devan. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The. 
Blanche  of  Devan's  Last  Words. — Walter  Scott.     See 

Lady  of  the  Lake.  The. 
Blancheflour  and  Jellyflorice. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Blank  Verse  in  Rhyme.— HBR—HR 

(Nocturnal    Sketch,    A— C.)— BNL— CS  17— OS  2 

— SR7 
Blasted  Hopes. — Anon. — CRR 
Blazing  Heart,  The.— Alice  W.  Brotherton. — A.\ 
Bleak  House,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens 

Death  of  Little  Jo.     {Sel  fr.  Ch.  XLVII.)— BRR— 

BS  1— CS  3— DS— FR  (sZ.  ofer.)— NPS— YP 
(Death  of  Poor  Jo.)— MMR 
Tulkingham,  the  Lawyer,  and  Mademoiselle  Hor- 

tense.    {Fr.  Ch.  XLIl.)— CR 
Visit  to  Belle  Yard,  A.     {Ad.  Jr.  Ch.  XV.)— SAE 
Bleak  House:     {Fr.    Ascutney    Charades.) — Julia  A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Bless  the  Dear  Old   Verdant   Land. — Denis  Florence 

MacCarthy.— VA 
Blessed  are  de  Peacemakers. — T.  S.  Denison. — SDR 
Blessed  are  the  Dead. — C.  F.  Smarius. — CS  10 
Blessed  are  they  that  Mourn. — W:  C.  Bryant. — GP — 

HDL 
Blessed   are    They    that  Mourn. — W:  H.  Burleigh. — 

TAS 
Blessed  Damozel,  The. — Dante  G.   Rossetti. — AVP — 

FEP— PGT  2— VA— VSG 
{Diif.  vers.  w.  1  add.  st.) — OB 
ISl.  diff.  vers.  )— WEP  4 
(SeL)— BNL— GP 
Blessed  Name,  The.— G:  W.  Bethune.— YBT 
Blessed  Ones,  The.— Anon. — PS 
Blessing  for  the  Blessed,  A. — Laurence  Alma-Tadema. 

— PoR 
Blessing  of  Song,  The.— Anon. — CS  35 
Blessings  in  Disguise. — Anon. — SSS. 
Blessings    of    Liberty,   The.     {Fr.   The    Letter    from 

ItalyO — Joseph  Addison. — WEP  3 
BWssings  of  To-day,  The.— May  Riley  Smith. — SSS 

(If  we  Knew— C.)— CS  3— HP— LLC— SM 
Blest  as  the  Immortal  Gods. — Sappho  {tr.  by  Ambrose 

Phillips).— BNL— HBP 
(Fragment  from  Sappho.) — FEP 
Blest  be  the  Tie. — J :  Fawcett. — LLC 
Blest  be  Thy  Love,  Dear  Lord. — J:  Austin. — FEP 
Blest  Spring  Time.     {W .  music.) — Anon.  {tr.  by  E.  R. 

L.)— AD 
Blifkins,  the  Bacchanal. — B.  P.  Shillaber. — CS  10 
Blifkins  the  Ruralist.— B.  P.  Shillaber.— CS  11 


Blighted  Love. — Luis  de  Camoens  {tr.  by  Lord  Strang- 
ford).— BNL 

Blind  Archer,  The.— A.  Conan  Doyle.— HBR 

Blind  Beggar,  The.— M.  E.  M.  Davis.— TL 

Blind    Beggar's    Daughter   of    Bednall    Green,    The. 
(/n  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — PEB  1 
(Beggar's  Daughter  of  Bednall-Greene,  The — C. — 
cond.  and  si.  diff.  vers.) — WR  1 

Blind  Bird's  Nest,  The.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.— TAS 

Blind  Boy,   The.— Colley  Cibber.— BNL— BFV— CGd 
—FEP— OS  1— PGT  1— PoR 
(Contented  Blind  Boy,  The.)— PS 

Blind  Boy's  Pranks,  The.— W:  Thom.— OB 

Blind  Communicant,  The. — Mary  E.  Lee. — HS 

Blind  Fiddler,  The.  (Power  of  Music— C.)—W: 
Wordsworth.— FTR— LLC 

Blind  Flower  Girl  of  Pompeii,  The. — Ella  L.  Matchett. 
— CS31 

Blind  Girl  of  Castel  Cuille.  The.— (C.)— H:  W.  Long- 
fellow. 
(Rustic  Bridal,  The— a6r.)— BS  17 

Blind  Highland  Boy,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.— FTR 

Blind  Lamb,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— BS  10— SAP 

Blind  Louise. — G:  W.  Dewey. — AA 

Blind  Love.  (Sonnet  CXLVIII.)— W:  Shakespeare. 
—PGT  1 

Blind  Man,  The.— Anon.— HVD 

Blind  Man  and  His  Candle,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— SR  3 

Blind  Man's  Testimony,  The.— J:  Hay.— BS  18 
(Religion  and  Doctrine — C.) — CS  13 

Blind  Mary  of  the  Mountain. — Anon. — CS  31 

Blind  Men  and  the  Elephant,  The. — J:  G.  Saxe. — 
CS  4— CSS— MHR 

Blind  Poet's  Wife,  The.  (A6r.)— Edwin  CoUer.— 
BS  12— NPS— YP 

Blind  Preacher,  The.— W :  Wirt.— CS  14  {si.  a6r.)— SR  5 

Blind  Psalmist,  The.— Eliz.  C.  Kinney. — AA 

Blind  Spinner,  The.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— HSS  3 
(Spinning— C.)—FP— HBP— HDL— TAS 

Blind  Student,  The.— E.  J.  Armstrong.— TIP 

Blind  Weaver,  The.— Beth  Day.— YBT 

Blindman's  Buff.— Horace  Smith.— MYF— SS  {si.  abr.) 

Blind-man's-buff.— Gertrude  Hall.— WR  4 

Blindness.— H:  W.  Beecher.— BS  3— PS 

Blindness.— J:  Milton. — GP 

(On      his      Blindness— O— BNL— CEL— EDY— 
FEP— GN— HBP—  HDL—  LH  —LLC— OB- 
OS  3— PGT  1— PHS— WEP  2— WR  1— YBF 
( Sonnet :     On  his  Blindness. )— ELP— EPs 

Blissful  Day,   The.     (Day  Returns,   The— C.)— Rob't 
Bums.— HBP 
(Day  Returns,  my  Bosom  Bums,  The.) — BNL — 
YBF 

Bloated  Bigt»aboon,  The. — H.  Cholmondeley-Pen- 
nell.— NA 

Block  City.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 

Blondel.— Clarence  Urmy. — AA 

Blondel's  Song  under  the  Prison  Window  of  Richard 
Coeur-de-Lion.  {Fr.  Richard  Cceur-de-Lion.) — 
Michel  J.  Sedaine. — OS  2 

Blood  Horse,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— BNL— FEP 
— GN— HBP— VA 

Blood  is  Thicker  than  Water.- Wallace  Rice.— BAB 

Blood  Will  Tell.— Anon.— KNS 

Blood-red   Ring  Hung  Round  the   Moon,   A. — J:   E. 
Logan. — VA 
(Indian  Maid's  Lament,  The.) — TCV 

Blood-root.— E.  S.  F.— SN 

Bloody  Brother,  The,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Fletcher. 

Drink  To-day.    {Song— C.—fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  2.)— ELP 
"Take.  O  take  those  lips  away."    {Song  fr.  V.,  2.) — 
BNI.— GP— HBP 
{See  also  Measure  for  Measure. — W :  Shakespeare.) 

Bloom  hath  Fled  thy  Cheek,  Marv,  The. — W:  Mother- 
well.—HBP 

Blossom,  The. — J:  Donne.-^ELP 

Blossom,  The.  See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. — W: 
Shakespeare. 

Blossom  of  the  Soul,  The. — Rob't  U.  .lohnson. — .\A 

Blossom  Time. — Mary  M.  Dodge.  See  There's  a  Wed- 
ding in  the  Orchard. 

Blossom  Time. — Wilbur  Larremore. — AA 

Blossoms. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 

Blot  in  the  'Scutcheon,  A,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Browning. 
Death  of  Mildred,  The.— WR  19 
Earl  Mertoun's  Song.— FEP— OB 
(Her  Perfect  Praise.)— OH 
(There's  a  Woman  like  a  Dewdrop.) — TFY 

"Blow,  blow,  thou  winter  wind." — W:  Shakespeare. 
See  As  You  Like  It. 

Blow,  Bugle[,  Blow]. — Alfred  Tennyson.  See  Princess, 
The. 


48 


TITLE    INDEX 


Bondage 


Blow,  Northern  Wind. — Anon. — OB 

Blowing  Bubbles. — W:  Allingham.     See  Bubble,  The. 

Blowing  Bubbles. — Eugene  H.  Munday.— CS  25 

Blowing  Bubbles.— O.  F.  Starkey.— PP— YFR 

Blucher  on  the  Rhine. — August  Kopisch. — EDY 

Bludy  Serk,  The.— Rob't  Henryson.— OB 

Blue.— A.  B.  Rutledge.— SD 

Blue  Alsacian  Mountains. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 

Blue  and  Gray.     {New  York  Sun.) — CS  37 

Blue  and  Gray.     (Springfield  Republican.) — CPL 

(Two  Colors.)— TMR 

(United  at  Last.)— CS  20 
Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. — Anon. — DJS 
Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. — Anon. — HP 

(One  in  Blue  and  One  in  Gray.) — CS  12 
Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.     (Dial,  on  Finch's  The  Blue 

and  the  Gray.) — Anon. — NDP 
Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.— Fs.  M.  Finch.— AA—AWB 

—  BNL  — BS  1— CR— CSS  — EDY  — FS— 
GP  —  HB  —  HBP  —  HP  —  HSS  1  —  MMR  — 
PAP  —  PAPm  —  SM  —  SO  —  WCLG  1 

(SI.  a6r.)— LLC— SR  8 
(Decoration  Day.)— OS  2 
Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.— Ellen  H.  Flagg.— LLC  (abr.) 

— PFP 
(Death  the  Peacemaker.)— BLP — HSS  1  (abr.) 
Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.     (Fr.  Speech  to  Rob't  E. 

Lee  Camp  Confed.  Vets.)— H:  C.  Lodge.— NC 

— SC  iabr.) 
Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.     (.Fr.  Address  Delivered  at 

the  Prohibition  Party  Convention.) — Frances 

E.  WiUard.— TMR 
Blue  Bird.     See  Bluebird. 
Blue  Closet,  The.— W:  Morris.— VA 
Blue  Eyes  and  Brown  Eyes. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Blue  Flower,  The.— Helen  M.  Merrill.— TCV 
Blue  Hills  beneath  the  Haze. — C.  G.  Whiting. — AA 
Blue  Jay.     See  Blue-jay. 
Blue  Moonshine. — Fs.  G.  Stokes. — EA 
Blue  Sky  Somewhere.— Vara.— BS  8  (o6r. )—SR  2 
Bluebeard. — Josiah  G.  Holland.    See  Bitter-sweet. 
Bluebeard's  Closet. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — AA 
Bluebell,  The.— Julia  A.  Eastman.— AD— YBT 
Blue-bells.     (Fr.  Flower  Songs.) — Mary  G.  Crocker. — 

CPL 
Bluebells.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Bluebells   of    New   England,   The.— T:   B.    Aldrich.— 

HSSl 
Bluebird,  The.     (Fr.  Spring  in  New  England.)— T:  B 

Aldrich.— SN 
Blue-bird.     (W.  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Blue-bird,    The.     (Fr.    Wake    Robin,    Ch.    VII.)— J 

Burroughs. — AD 
Bluebird,  The.— C.  F.  Gerry.— AD 
Bluebird,  The.— Emily  H.  Miller.— PoR—WCL 

(Bluebird's  Song,  The.)— AD— GMS  (hr.  seZ.)— LLC 
Bluebird,  The.— Eben  E.  Rexford.— POS 
Blue-bird,  The.— Alex.  Wilson.— AA—FEP— POS  (bI. 

abr.) 
Bluebirds  in  Autumn. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Bluebird's  Message,  The. — L.  F.  Armitage. — TT 
Bluebird's  Song,  The.— Emily  H.   Miller.     See  Blue- 
bird, The. 
Blue-bottle  Fly,  The.— Anon.— HSS  3 
Blue-jay,   The.— Susan    H.    Swett.— AD— CPL— PoR 

—POS 
Bluntness. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Lear. 
"Blush,    happy   maiden,    when   you   feel." — Eliz.    A. 

Allen.— FTA 
Blushing  Maple  Tree,  The. — Anon. — AD 
"Blyther  than  the  Burnie."— Marion  Hubbard. — CG  1 
Bo.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  34 
Boa  and  the  Blanket,  The.     (Punch.)—HPE 
Boadicea.  An  Ode.— W:  Cowper. — BLP  —  BNL  — 

BPB  —  CGd  —  EHT  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HB  — 

HBP  —  LH  —  LLC  —  OS  2  —  PR  —  WEP  3 

—  WR  U 

Board  School  Pastoral,  A. — May  Kendall. — VA 
-'Boarding  'Round."— Phila  H.  Case.— StD 
Boarding-school  Curriculum. — T:  Hood. — SE 
Boast  Not.     (The  Morals  of  Marcus  Aurelius,  V. — C.) — 

R:  H.  Stoddard.— YBT 
Boaster  Rebuked,  The. — Anon.— FAD 
Boastful  Boy,  The.— Anon.— FAD 
Boasting  Pair,  A. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Boat,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Boat  o'  Dreams. — -Loren  Palmer. — CG  3 
Boat  of  Grass,  The. — Annie  L.  F.  Wister.  —  MMR  — 

PPC  (si.  abr.) 
Boat  of  Kinsale,  The.— T:  O.  Davis. — VA 
Boat  of  my  Lover,  The. — Dinah  M.  M.  Craik. — BTL — 

FTA 


Boat  Race,  The.— Anon.— BS  17 

Boat  Race,  The  [or  A].     (Sel.  fr.  Jack  Hall;  or.  The 

School  Days    of    an    American  Boy,  Ch.  IX.) 

—Rob't  Grant.— MRS— SC  (al.  abr.) 
(Jack  Hall's  Boat-race — ad.  by  E.  M.  Wilbor.) — DR 
Boat   Race,  The.     (Fr.  Tom  Brown  at  Oxford.) — T 

Hughes.— NC— PFP 
Boat  Race.     See  also  Boat-race. 
Boat   Song. — Walter   Scott.     See  Lady  of   the  Lake. 

The. 
Boat  Song.     See  also  Boat-song. 
Boat-building  in  Spain. — Ray  I^edyard. — CG  1 
Boat-horn,  The. — Anon. — HP 
Boatie  Rows,  The.— J:  Ewen.— FEP 

(Abr.  and  si.  diff. )—EFs 
Boating-song. — Albert  M.  Freeman. — CG  1 
Boat-race,   The.     (Fr.   Queen  Hynde.) — Jas.  Hogg. — 

SAE 
Boat-race.     See  also  Boat  Race. 
Boat-song,  A. — C:   Kingsley.     See   Hypatia. 
Boat-song.     See  also  Boat  Song. 
Bob.— H :  W.  Grady.      See  "Bob."    How  an  Old  Man 

"Came  Home." 
Bob  and  his  Sister. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Bob  and  the  Bible.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
Bob  Cratchit's  Dinner. — C:   Dickens.     See  Christmas 

Carol,  A. 
"Bob."     How  an  Old  Man  "Came  Home."  (C.) — H: 

W.  Grady. 
(Bob— cond.  )—NP—WR  22 
Bob  Johnston's  Visit  to  the  Circus. — Andrew  Stewart. 

— CS  28— GH 
Bob,  Son  of  Battle,  Sels.  /r.— Alfred  OUivant. 

Black  Killer,  The.     (Abr.  fr.   Chs.  XXVIII.  and 

XXIX.)— NP 
Shepherd's  Trophy,  The.     (Ch.  XXV.— a6r.)— NP 
"Bob  White."— G :  Cooper.— POS 
Bob  White.— Marion  F.  Ham.— SR  12 
"Bob  White."— Eleanor  Kirk.— LPS— PP 
Bob  White.— Fs.  C.  McDonald.— CG  2— WR  22 
Bobby.— Rob't  Chambers.— MYF 
Bobby  Shaftoe. — Homer  Greene. — CS  33 
Bobolink,  The.— Anon.— LLC 
Bobolink,  The.     (Aldine.)—BS  11— HNS 
(Abr.  ■)- AD— CSS— PPSr 
(Little  Telltale,  The.)— FTR 
(Telltale,  The.)— BNL— PR— TMR— YA 
( Versions  vary  slightly. ) 
Bobolink,    The.— t:    Hill.— BNL— FMR    (si.    abr.)— 

HBP— POS  (o6r. )—SN 
Bobolink.— Alex.  M'Lachlan.— TCV 
Bobolink  and  Chick-a-dee,  The.     (St.  Nicliolas.) — AD 
Bobolinks,    The.  —  Christopher    P.  Cranch.  —  AA  — 

BS  20  (si.  diff.  vers.)- GN  (abr.) 
Bobolink's  Song,  The. — Stanley  Waterloo.— WR  7 
Body,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Boggs's  Dogs. — Anon. — BC 

Bohemians  of  Boston,  The. — Gelett  Burgess. — THP 
Boil  It  Down.— Anon. — FAS 
Boiled      Chicken.     (Fr.      Poetical     Cookery-book.) — 

(Punch.)— HFE 
Bois  Ton  Sang,  Beaumanoir. — Fs.  S.  Osgood. — EDY 
Boke  of  the  Duchesse,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Geoffrey  Chaucer 

— WEPl 
Bold  Dragoon,  The.— Anon. — CS  25 
(Gasper  Schapp's  Exploit.) — SCS 
Bold  for  the  Right.     (Dial.)—C:  S.  Wayne.— CDs 
Bold  Predictions.— J:  Wilkes.— SS 
Bolehill  Trees. — Jas.  Montgomery. — AD 
Bolingbroke's    Entrance   into    London.  —  W:    Shake- 
speare.    See  King  Richard  II. 
Bolivar  (Build   a  Column   to    Bolivar — C).  —  Bryan 

W.  Procter.- EDY 
Bombast. — Anon. — KNE 
Bombastes  Furioso. — W:  B.  Rhodes. — MDD 
Bombastic  Appeal  to  a  Jury. — Anon. — CS  4 — SR  10 
(Appeal  to  the  Kind  Symmetrie  of  our  Nature.) — 

MHR 
Bombastic  Description  of  a  Midnight  Murder. — Anon. 

— CSl 
(Vivid  Description  of  a  Midnight  Murder.) — SR  10 
Bon  Jour,  Bon  Soir. — Anon. — WR  1 
Bonaparte  to  his  Army  in    Italy. — Napoleon.  —  BLP 
(Proclamation  to  the  Army  of  Italy — diff.  tr. — ahr.) 

—OS  3 
(To  the  Army  of  Italy— si.  8awe.)—PS— SS—SSD 
Bonaventure,     Sel.     fr.    (Spelling-match    at    Grande 

Pointe,  The— /r.  Chs.  X.  and  XI.)— G:    W. 

Cable.— WR  25 
Bond  of  Blood,  The.— Will  H :  Thompson.— BAB 
Bondage. — Lucy  W.  Jennison. — AA 
Bondage  of  Drink,  The. — Anon.— CS  12 


49 


Bondman 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Bondman,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Hall  Caine.— NDP 

Homeless  Old  Man.  The.     (Dial.  ad.  Ir.  Ch.  II.)— 

NDP 
Mount  of  Laws,  Th'e.     {Br.  set.  fr.  Ch.  XXVIII.)— 
NP 
Bonds  of  Affection.— Landon. — FP 
Bonduca. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. — EPs 
Bones  and  His  Baby. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  and  the  Doctor. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  and  the  Ladies. — Ai^on. — DSS 
Bones  as  a  Doctor. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  as  a  Geologist. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  as  a  Traveller. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  as  an  Artist. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  at  a  Free-and-easy. — Anon. — DE 
Bones  at  a  Pic-nic. — Anon. — DE 
Bones  at  a  RafHe. — Clipper. — DE 
Bones  at  a  Soiree. — Anon. — DE 
Bones  at  School. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones'  Discovery. — Anon. — DE 
Bones'  Discovery. — Anon. — DSS 

(.Diff.  dials.) 
Bones'  Dream. — Anon. — DE 
Bones'  Examination. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones'  Experience  at  Sea. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  Goes  a-Hunting. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  his  Own  Grandfather. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  in  Luck. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  Keeping  a  Hotel.— Anon. — DSS 
Bones  Not  to  be  Caught. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Adam  and  Eve. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Astronomy.— Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Bad  Weather. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Courting. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Early  Closing. — -Anon.- DSS 
Bones  on  Education. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Family  Discipline.— Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Kissing. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Mensuration. ^Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Money. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  Polygamy. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  on  the  Theatre. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones'  Opinion  of  Matrimony. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones  Serenades  his  Sweetheart. — Anon. — DSS 
Bones'  Wife.— Anon.— DSS 
Bones  Working  on  a  Farm. — Anon. — DSS 
Bonie  Lesley. — Rob't      Bums.     See     Bonnie     Lesley. 
Bonivard. — Alexander  Dumas. — OS  3 
Bonnet  for  my  Wife,  A.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  28 
Bonnets  of  Bonnie  Dundee,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See 

Bonny  Dundee. 
Bonnie  Bessie  Lee. — Rob't  Nicoll. — VA 
Bonnie  Blue  Flag,  The. — Annie  C.  Ketchum. — AWB 
Bonnie  Doon. — Rob't    Bums.     See    Banks    o'    Doon, 

The. 
Bonnie  Dundee. — Walter  Scott.     See  Bonny  Dundee. 
Bonnie  George   Campbell. — Anon. — BB — CEL — HBP 

(Bonny  James  Campbell — si.  diff.  vers.) — PEB  2 
Bonnie  House  o'  Airlie,  The. — Anon. — OB 

(Bonny  House  o'  Airly,  The — diff.  vers.) — PEB  2 
Bonnie  Lasses. — Anon. — TFS 
Bonnie  Lesley     [or     Leslie]. — Rob't     Bums. — FEP — 

HBP— OB— PGT  1 
(O,  Saw  ye  Bonnie  Lesley)— BNL — GP 
Bonnie  Mary. — Rob't  Burns.     See  Before  Parting.   '' 
Bonnie  Prince  Charlie. — Jas.  Hogg.— FEP 
Bonnie  Sweet  Jessie. — Anon. — CD 
Bonnie  Wee  Eric. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — BS  17 
Bonnie  Wee  Thing.— Rob't  Burns.— YBF 
Bonniest  Bairn  in  a'  the  Warl',  The. — Rob't  Ford.- 

GN 
Bonny  Annie. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Bonny  Barbara  Allan,     (/n  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 

—PEB  2 
(Barbara  Allen's  Cruelty — diff.  vers.) — CEL 
(Abr. )— BB— FEP— OB— OEB 
Bonny  Dundee. — Walter  Scott.     See  Doom  of  Devor- 


goil.The. 
Ea  '      '  " " 


Bonny  Earl  of  Murray,  The.     {In  Percy's  Reliques.) — 

Anon.— OB— PEB  1 
Bonny  Hind,  The.     (/n  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — 

PEB  2 
Bonny  House  o'  Airly,  The. — Anon.    See  Bonnie  House 

o'  Airlie,  The. 
Bonny  James  Campbell. — Anon.     See  Bonnie   George 

Campbell. 
Bonny  Lass  of  Anglesey,  The. — Anon. — PEB  1 
Bonny  Wee  Hoose,  The.— W:  Lyle.— DES 
' '  Booh !"— Eugene  Field.— EF—LS— PR— YA 
Book,  A. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA 
Book,  The.— Louise  Hensel.— YBT 


Book  and    the    Building,    The. — R:    Salter    Storrs. — 

TMD 
Book  Battalion,   The.— G:   P.   Lathrop.— LBB— MBB 
Book  Canvasser,    The.— C:    H.    Clark. — BS  12— CR— 

CS25 
;;Book  in  a  Bustle,  A."     {Punch.)— HPE 
"Book  is  good  company.  A." — H:  W.  Beecher. — GG 
"Book  Larnin'".— M.  H.  Turk.— CD 
Book  of  Day-dreams,  Sels.  fr.—C-  L.  Moore 
Disenchantment. — AA 
Or  Ever  the  Earth  was. — AA 
Soul  unto  Soul  Glooms  Darkling. — AA 
Then  shall  We  See.— AA 
Thou  Livest,  O  Soul!— AA 
Book  of  Gold,  A.— J :  J.  Piatt.— TFY 
Book  of    Joyous    Children,    The. — Jas.    W.    Riley. — 

BJC 
Book  of  Life,  The.— R;  Thomson.— LBB— MBB 
Book  of  Love,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Edwin  Arnold.     See  With 

Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Book  of  Orm,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Dream  of  the  World  with- 
out Death,  The.— Pt.  III.)— Rob't  Buchanan. 
— VA 
Book  of  Snobs,  The,  Sels.  fr.—W:  M.  Thackeray. 

Music   at   Mrs.    Ponto's.       {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXV.)— 

MHR 
Snobs.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XLIV.)— OS  3 
Book  of  Thanks,  The.— Anon.— WR  17 
Book  of  the  New  Year,  The. — Anon. — PEO 
Book-hunter,     The.— Frank     D.     Sherman.— LBB— 

MBB 
Book-peddler,  The.— G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Book-plate's  Petition,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — LBB — 

MBB 
Bookra. — C:  Dudley  Warner. — AA 
Books.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Kal^der  of  Sheperdes,  1628.) 

—Anon.— BNL 
Books.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Books.     (Essay  L.)— Fs.  Bacon.— CR  {abr.) 
(Of  Studies— C.)— LLC  {si.  o6r. )—MBL 
(Studies— afer.)— OS  3 
Books.— H :  W.  Beecher.— BS  7 
Books. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 
Books. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — APr 

("  There  are  books  which  take  rank  in  our  life  with 
parents  and  lovers" — hr.  sel.) — GG 
Books.— E.  J.  Goodfellow.— COS— PP 
Books.— Mrs.  Hale.— KNE 
Books.— J:  Higgins.— BNL 

Books.       (Occasional     Pieces,    XVIII.  —  C.)  — Rob't 
Southey.— BNL 
(His  Books.)— OB 
(Library,  The. )— LBB— MBB 
(My  Days  among  the  Dead.)— HBP— YBF 
(My  Days  among  the  Dead  are  Passed.) — FEP 
(Scholar,  The.)— PGT  1 
(Stanzas  Written  in  his  I/ibrary.) — WEP  4 
Books  and  Libraries. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — APr — MAL 
Books  and  Reading.— Rob't  Southey. — LLC 
Books  and  Reading.     {Br.  sels.  fr.  many    authors.) — 

WCLGl 
Books  I   Ought  to   Read,   The.— Abbie   F.  Brown. — 

TL 
Book-stall.  The.— Clinton  Scollard.— BNL 
Bookworm,  The.— Theodore  Beza  {tr.  byT:  Pamell).— 

LBB— MBB 
Bookworms,  The. — Rob't  Bums. — LBB — MBB 
Boot  and      Saddle.     {Fr.      Cavalier      Tunes.) — Rob't 

Browning.— EHT—LC— MRS— VA 
Bootblack,  The.— Anon.— CS  10 
Bootblack  Drill,— Anon.— WDM 
' '  Boots." — Anon. — NP 
Bo-Peep.     {Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — JuUa  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Bo-Peep's  Party.     {W.  vantomime.) — Anon. — TCP 
Border  Ballad.     {Fr.  The  Monastery,    Ch.    XXV.)— 
Walter  Scott.— FEP— GN— HBP— LC  — OS  2 
— PYO 
(Border  Song.)— GP— LLC  {si.  abr.) 
Border  Land,  The. — Anon. — SSS 
Border  Land,  The.— Marie  L.  Moffatt. — CS  25 
Border  Minstrelsy,  Ballads  fr. — Edited  /)?/ Walter  Scott. 

See  Minstrelsy  ot  the  Scottish  Border. 
Border  Song. — Sir  Walter  Scott.     See  Border  Ballad. 
Borderers,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Skeptic,  The — hr.  sel.  fr.  Act. 

IV.,  Sc.  2.)— W:  Wordsworth.— EPs 
Bore.  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— KNE 

(My  Familiar— C.)—AWH—THP 
Bores,  The. — Anon. — CS  28 
Bom  Dumb. — Norman  Gale. — PR 
Born  Inventor,  A. — Harry  S.  Edwards. — WR  21 
Born  to  the  Purple. — Jas.  W.  Riley. 


50 


TITLE    INDEX 


Boy's 


Borough,  The,  Sels.  fr.—G:  Crabbe. 

Convict's    Dream,  The.      (Fr.    Letter  XXIII.) — 

WEP3 
Evening  Sail,  The.     (.Fr.  IX.) 
Founder  of  the   Almshouse,   The.     (Fr.  XIII.) — 

WEP3 
Practical  Charity.     {Br.  ad.  fr.  XVII.) 
Quack  Medicines.     (Letter  VII.,  cond.) — BNL 
Storm  on  the  East  Coast,  A.     {Fr.  I.)— WEP  3 
Strolling  Players.     (Fr.  XII.)— WEP  3 
Borrioboola  Gha. — Orrin  Goodrich. — CS  7 — MMR 
Borrowed  Baby,  The.— Edson  W.  B.  Tatlow.— CS  27 
Borrowed      Child,      The. — Howard      Weeden. — AA — 

WR25 
Bos'n  Hill.— J   Albee.— AA 

Bo's'n  Jack  of  the  "Albatross." — E.  S.  Jackson. — CS  31 
Bosom  Sin. — G:  Herbert. — LLC 
(Life's  Lessons.)— CEL 
(Sin— C.)— EPs— YBF 
Bossuet   and    the  Duchess  of  Fontanges.— Walter    S. 

Landor.     See  Imaginary  Conversations. 
Boston. — Ralph  W.  Emerson.— PAP 
Boston    {lecture),  Br.  ael.  fr.     ("It    is    the   property 

of  the  religious  spirit.") — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 

— GG 
Boston.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— EDY 

Boston  Grasshopper,  The. — Lucinda  J.  Gregg. — POS 
Boston  Hymn.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— BNL— EDY— 

MAL 
Boston  Lullaby,  A. — Anon. — TL 
Boston  Lullaby,  A. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — AWH 
Boston,  Mass.,  and  Charleston,  S.  C. — W:  A.   Court- 

enay.— FD  2 
Boston    Massacre,    The. — J:    Hancock. — BLP   {sel.) — 

EAO 
Boston  Massacre,  The. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne.     See 

Grandfather's  Chair. 
Boston  Massacre,  The.     (Fr.  Crispus  Attucks.) — J:  B. 

O'Reilly.— EDY 
Botanic  Garden,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Loves  of  the  Plants.) — 

Erasmus  Darwin. — GP 
Both  Sides.— Gail  Hamilton.— MYF 
Both  Sides  of  the  Story.— G:  A.  Baker.- SR  7 

(Idyl  of  the  Period,  An— C.)— CH— HNS— PLD 
Bothie  of  Tober-na-Vuolich,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Arthur  H. 

Clough. 
Bathers,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  III.)— VA 
(Bathing.)— EPs 

(Highland  Stream,  The.)— WEP  4 
Elspie  and  Philip.     {Sel.  fr.  VII.)— WEP 4 
Philip  to  Adam.     ( SeZ.  fr.  IX.)— WEP  4 
Bothwell,  Sel.  fr.     (The  Murder  of  Damley.)— W:  E. 

Aytoun.— EDY 
Bothwell,  Sel.   fr.     (John   Knox's  Indictment  of  the 

Queen,  fr.  Act.  IV.,  Sc.  7.) — Algernon  C.  Swin- 
burne.— VA 
Bottle— Beggary,  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier. — TDT 
Bottle— Brutality,  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier. — TDT 
Bottle— in  Debt,  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Bottle— its  Effects,  The.     (  Tab. )— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Bottle— Madness,  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Bottle— Murder,  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier. — TDT 
Bottle— Poverty,  The.     (Tai.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Bottle— the  First   Glass,  The.     {Tab.) — Tony  Denier. 

—TDT  ■ 

Bottle  Tree,  The. — Eugene  Field.— LS 
Bottom  Drawer,  The. — Mary  A.  Barr. — HPJ! 
"Bottoms  Up"  ad  Finem. — P.  A.  Hutchinson. — CG  3 
Botts  Twins,  The.— P.  R.  Stansbury.- WR  14 
Boum-boum. — Jules  Claretie. — WR  4 
Bound  for  Detroit.     (DioZ.)— Anon.— MPD 
Bound  Girl,  The.— Anon.— FDY 
Bound  upon   th'   Accursed  Tree. — H:   H.   Milman. — 

FEP 
Bounding   the   United   States.     {Toa^t.) — J:   Fiske. — 

CR— OS  3 
Bouquet,  A.     {Concert  rec.) — Anon. — KNS 
Bouquet.  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Bouquet  of  Flowers,  A. — Anon,  {comp.) — AD  {si.  abr.) 

— DFR 
Bourne,  The.— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— PGT2 
Bower  of  Bliss,  The. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie 

Queene,  The. 
Bower  Scene  from  "Becket,"  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  Becket. 
Bowge  of  Courte,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Picture  of  Riot.) — 

J:Skelton.— WEPl 
Bowl,  The.— J:  Wilmot,  Earl  of  Rochester.— WEP  2 
Box  and  Cox.     (F'7rce.)— T:  Morton  (?).— DSS 
(Rival  Lodgers,  The — abr.  -diff.  vers.) — SCS 
Box  of  Cigarettes,  A.     {Camell  Widow.)— CG  3 
Boy,  The.     {In  Night  Songs.)— W:  Allingham.— PoR 


Boy,  The.— Eugene  Field.— NA 

Boy,  A.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.- CS  11— LLC 

(Tom  Hat,  The— C.)— AA 
Boy  and  Bee. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Boy  and  Girl.— Mary  E.  Bradley.— WR  15 
Boy    and    his    Conscience,    The. — Anon. — YBT 

(Over  the  Fence — longer  and  si.  diff.) — PS 
Boy  and  his  Mother,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaueh. 

— KER 
Boy  and  Snake,  The. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — IvPC 

(Child  and  the  Snake,  The— si.  longer.) — BPB 
Boy  and  the  Angel,  The. — Rob't  Browning. — HBR — 
Qg  2 go 

Boy  and  the  Bird,  The.— Anon. — SM 

Boy  and  the  Bird,  The.— Eben  E.  Rexford.- YBT 

Boy    and    the    Boot,    The.      {Hearth    and    Home.) — 

TFS  {si.  abr.) 
(Stubborn  Boot,  The.)— MYF 
Boy  and  the  Brook,  The.— H :  W.  Longfellow.— POS 
Boy  and  the  Frog,  The.— Anon.— CH—PP—YFR 
Boy  and  the  Pedant,  The. — Anon. — PS 
Boy  and  the  Ring,  The.— Anon.— CSS— PPSr 
Boy  and  the  Sheep,  The. — Ann  Taylor. — PoR 
Boy  and  the  Skylark,  The. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb.— 

LPC 
Boy  and  Wolf. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Boy  Brittan. — Forceythe  Willson. — AWB 

(Boy  Britton— sZ.  diff.  vers.) — SA — WR  10 
Boy  Captives,  The.— J :  G.  Whittier.— APr 
Boy  Decides,  The. — Rickman  Mark. — BVC 
Boy  Hero,  A.— Anon.— CS  24— NPS— YP 
Boy  I  Love,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Boy  in  a  [or  the]  Dime  Museum,  A  [or  The].     {Arkan^ 

saw  Traveler.)— T>CK  {si.  o6r.)— WR  20  {si.  abr.) 
(In  the  Dime  Museum — si.  abr.)— CS  30 
(Little  Johnny  Visits  the  Dime  Museum.) — SR  7 
(  Versions  vary  slightly. ) 
Boy  in  Blue,  The.— J :  D.  Long.— PFP 
Boy  Kept  Step,  The.— Opie  P.  Read.— WR  26 
Boy  Life  on  the   Prairie,  Sel.   fr.     (Sport.) — Hamlin 

Garland.— SO 
Boy  Lives  on  our  Farm,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — RCR 
Boy  Lost. — Anon. — MMR 
Boy  of  Egremond,  The. — W.  Wordsworth. — EPs 

(Force  of  Prayer,  The— C.)— PEB  3 
Boy  of  Ratisbon,  The. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Inci- 
dent of  the  French  Camp,  An. 
Boy  of  the  House,  The. — Jean  Blewett. — TMR 
Boy  Orator  of  Zepata  City,  The. — R:  H.  Davis.— CR 
Boy  Patriot,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Boy  that  Laughs,  The. — G :  Cooper. — TT 
Boy    to    the    Schoolmaster,    The. — E.    J.    Wheeler. — 

QQ  23 TAV 

Boy  Wanted.— Anon. — WR  24 

Boy  Who  Went  from  Home,  The. — Emma  M.  John- 
ston.—CS  7 
Boyhood. — Washington  Allston. — BNL — FEP — HBP 
Boyish  Ambition.  {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Boyne  Water,  The. — Anon.  (Abr.)— EDY— TIP  r- 
(Battle  of  the  Boyne,  The.— BNL  {br.  sel.)— FEB4 

{ad.  and  arr.  by  A.  P.  Graves.) 
Boy-poet,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.— EPs  {abr.) 

(There  was  a  Boy— C. )— SN— WEP  4 
Boys,  The.— Oliver  W.   Holmes.— BNL  —   BS   1   — 

CS  4  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  LLC  —  SO  —  SPE— 

TMD  {si.  abr.)—WKD 
Boys,  The.— Ethel  Lynn.— CS  9— MYF 
Boy's  Address  to  Young  Ladies,  A. — Anon. — MCS 
Boys  and  Girls.     {Dial.) — E.  C.  and   L.   J.   Rook.— 

COS— PP 
Boys  and  the  Apple  Tree,  The. — Ann  and  Jane   Tav- 

lor.— BVC 
Boys — and  the  Bottle. — Theodore  L.  Cuyler. — TS 
Boy's  Apology,  A. — Anon. — DST 
Boy's  Belief,  A.— Anon.— DCP 
Boys'  Candidate,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley. — RCR 
Boy's  Complaint,  The. — Anon.  -KNS 
Bov's  C!omplaint,  A. — Anon. — LPS— PP 
Boy  s  Complaint,  A.— Anon.— PP— YFR 
Boy's  Composition  on  Breathing,  A. — Anon. — WR  6 
Boy's  Composition  on  Physiology,  A. — Anon. — WR  4 
Boy's  Composition  on  Washington,  A. — Anon. — WR  7 
Boy's  Conclusion,  A. — Anon. — DR 
Boy's  Debate,  A. — Anon. — MC 
Boy's  Dream,  A.     (Dream  of    a    Boy  who  Lived    at 

Nine-elms.  The— C. — abr.)  —  W:  B.   Rands. — 

TFS 
Boy's  Essay  on  Girls,  A. — Anon. — CS  23 — PR 
Boy's  Hymn,  A. — Marianne  Famingham. — YBT 
Boy's  Idea  of  Girls,  A.— G.  L.  Durke.— WR  17 
Boy's  .loumal,  A. — Anon. — MYF 
Boy's  King,  A.— S:  E.  Kiser.- WR  24 


51 


Boy's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Boy's  Last  Request,  The. — Anon. — CS  11 

Boys'  Meeting,  A. — H.  E.  McBride. — MAD 

Boy's  Meeting,  A.— H.  E.  McBride.— MHD 

Boy's  Mercy,  A.— Bessie  G.  Hart.— WR  2 

Boy's  Mother,  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— DST—TAV 

Boye  of  the  Bible.— Eliz.  Lloyd.— SSE 

Boys'  Play   and   Girls'   Play. — Mrs.    Hawtrey. — PC — 

WCL 
Boy's  Pocket,  A.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
Boy's  Poem    on    Washington.    A. — H-    Davenport. — 

PR— YA 
Boy's  Prayer,  A.     (SeZ.)— H :  C:  Beeching.— GN 

(Prayers.)- LH— OB— VA 
Boy's  Promise,  A. — G:  Cooper.— YBT 
Boys'  Rights.     (Prose.)— Anon. — LPS— PP 
Boys' Rights.     ( Verse. )— Carrie    May.— CPL— DLS— 

FS— HP  (si.  abr.) 
Boy's  Sermon,  The.— Anon.— DST 
Boy's    Song    [.A].- Jas.      Hogg.  —  BFV  —  BPB — 

BVC  (abr.^— CEL—LO-NV  — OB— PoR  — 

WEP4 
(Way  for  Billy  and  Me,  The.)— OS  1 
Boy's  Story,  The. — Eben  E.  Rexford. — CH 
Boy's  Temperance  Speech,  A. — Anon. — PS 
Boys  Wanted.— Anon.— DS—HSS  2— NPS— PP— SM 

— YA— YFR— YP 
Boys  Wanted.    (.Chicago  Post.)—BS  20— TFS— WR  17 
Boys  we  Need,  The. — Anon. — KNS 
Boys  we  Want,  The.— A.  Sargent.— TS 
Boys  will  be  Boys. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Brace  Up.— Anon.— NPS— YP 
Bracelet,  The:     To  Julia. — Rob't  Herrick.— OB 
Braes  of  Balquhither,  The.— Rob't  Tannahill.— FEP 
Braes  of  Yarrow,  The.— W:  Hamilton.— EPs— FEP— 

GP— HBP 
Braes  of  Yarrow,  The.    (Song — The  Braes  of  Yarrow — 

O— J:  I-ogan.— EPs  (a&r.)— FEP— PGT  1 
(  Song— si. abr. )— HBP 
(Thy  Braes  were  Bonny — si.  abr.) — BNL 
Brag.— "Bob  o'Link."— DLD 
Brahma.— Ralph  W.   Emerson.— AA— BNL— HBP— 

OB 
Brahman's  Son,  The.     (C.)— R:  H:  Stoddard. 

(Brahmin's  Son,  The — cond.) — WR  5 
Brahma's  Answer. — R:  H:  Stoddard. — BNL 
Brahmin  and  the  Tiger,  The. — Anon. — MYF 
Brahmin's  Son,  The. — R :  H :  Stoddard. — <See  Brahman's 

Son,  The. 
Braid  Claith.— Rob't  Fergusson.— WEP  3 
Brakeman  at  Church,  The. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — CR 

— CS  19— FTR 
(Brakeman  Goes  to  Church,  The.) — SR  2 
Brakeman's  Sweetheart,  The. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — 

SYS 
Bramble. — Ebenezer  Elliott.     See    Bramble     Flower, 

The. 
Bramble  Flower,     The.— Ebenezer     Elliott.— HBP— 

WCL 
(  Bramble — sel. )  — A  D 
Brandy  and  Soda. — Hugh  Howard. — HP 
Branksome  Hallj — Walter  Scott.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 

Minstrel,  The. 
Brave  and  True.— H :  Downton.— DS— PP— YA— YFR 
(Advice  to  Boys.)- KNS 
(To  the  Boys.)— FAS 
Brave  at  Home,  The.     T:  B.  Read.    See  Wagoner  of 

the  Alleghanies,  The 
Brave  Aunt  Katy. — Nellie  Eyster. — BS   15 
Brave  Boston      Boys.     (Dial.) — Morris     Harrison. — 

CDs 
Brave  Boy,  A.— Anon.— CS  24— NPS— SR  6— YP 
Brave  Earl  Brand,  The.   (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 

— PEB  1 
(Child  of  Elle,  The— di^.  vers.)— FEP 
(Douglas  Tragedy,  The— diff.  vers.)— BB—CEL — 

HBP— OEB— WEP  1 
Brave  Kate  Shelley.— Mrs.  M.  L.  Rayne.— DS— NPS 

— YP 
(For  another  version  of  the  story  see  Kate  Shelly,  by 

E.  J.  HaU.) 
Brave  Little  Boy,  A. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Brave  Little  Flower,  The. — Miss  Warner.— PPSr 
( Daff  y-down-dillv.>— PoR 
(Ready  for  Duty.)— AD— PHS 
Brave  Little  Girl,  A. — Anon. — TMR 
Brave  Little  Maid,  The.— Anon.— PR— YA 
Brave  Little  Mary. — Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Brave  Little  Sister,  The.— Anon.— WR  17 
Brave  Lord  Willoughby.      (In  Percy's  Reliques.)  — 

Anon. — LH 
Brave  Love.     (C.)— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  4 
(He'd   Nothing  but  his  Violin — abr.) — AA 


Brave  Man,  The. — Joanna  Baillie. — KNE 

"Brave  men,  living  and  dead,  who  struggled  here. 
The." — Abraham  Lincoln.  See  Address  at  the 
Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at  Gettysburg. 

Brave  Old  Oak,  The.— H:  F.  Chorley.— AD  (w.  mus.)— 
BNL 
(Song  to  the  Oak,  A— seZ.)- HSS  1 

Brave  Old  Ship,  the  Orient,  The.— Rob't  T.  S.  Lowell. 
— AA 

Brave  Peasant,  The. — Anon. — CSS 

Brave  Woman,  A.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MFD 

Brave  Woman,  A.— J:  F.  Nicholls.— CS  30 

Bravest  Battle,  The.— Joaquin  Miller.     HSS  3  (abr.) 
(Bravest  Battle  that  Ever  was  Fought,  The.)— BS  17 

Bravest  Battle  that  Ever  was  Fought,  The. — Joaquin 
Miller.     See  Bravest  Battle,  The. 

Bravest  of  the  Brave.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
(SI.  abr.)- CD— SDR 

Bravest  Sailor  of  All,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— CRR 

Bravest  Thing,  The.— Anon.— DLS  (sel.) 
("No.'O— TFS 

Brawn  of  England's  Lay. — J :  Hunter-Duvar. — VA 

Brazen  Bells,  The.— Edgar  A.  Poe.     See  Bells,  The. 

Bread.- Elsie  M.  Wilbor.— DR 

Bread  and  Wine.— Eliz.  R.  Cutter.— CG  2 

Bread  Crusts. — Anon. — DLF 

Bread  of  Life,  The.— Mary  A.  Lathbury.— TAS 

Bread  on  the  Waters. — Anon. — MND 

Break,  Break,  Break. — Alfred  Tenny.son. —  BFV  — 
BNL  —  BS  1  —  BSP  —  CEL  —  CR  —  FEP  — 
FP  —  FTR  —  GMS  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HDL  — 
HNS  —  HP  —  HSS  3  —  LC  —  LLC  —  OS  2  — 
PGT  2  —  PHS  —  POS  —  PYO  —  SN  —  SO  — 
SR  6  —  VA  —  VS  —  WCLG  1  —  WEP  4  — 
YBF 
(Sea,  The.)— SE 

Break  of  Day,  Sel.  fr.  (Daybreak.) — J:    Donne. — OB 

Break  the  Bottle.— J :  G.  Woolley.— WR  18 

Breakfast. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb.— LPC 

Breakfast.  (Acting  char.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 
YFE 

Breaking  Home  Ties.— A.  O.  Frazier.— SR  12 

Breaking  the  Colt. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 

Breaking  up  the  Exhibition.     (Dial.) — -Anon.— MND 

"Breaking  waves  dashed  high.  The." — Felicia  He- 
mans.  See  Landing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers  in 
New  England,  The. 

Breath,  A. — Mary  A.  De  Vere. — AA 

Breath  of  Avon,  The. — Theodore  Watts. — VA 

Breath  of  Hampstead  Heath. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — 
AA 

Breath  of  the  Spirit,  The.— Anon.— CP 

Breathe  Balmy  Airs.— S.  F.  Smith.— HSS  1 
(Patriot  Dead,  The.)— BLP 
(Precious  Lives.) — WR  17 

Breathes  there  the  Man. — Walter  Scott.  See  Lay  of 
the  Last  Minstrel,  The. 

"Breathes  there  the  man  with  soul  so  dead." — Walter 
Scott.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel,  The. 

Breathings  of  Spring. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — AD 

Brechva's  Harp  Song. — Ernest  Rhys. — VA 

Breeding  Lark. — Arthur  Boar. — EPs 

Breeze  in  the  Church,  The. — Miss  —  Hinxham. — FP 

Breezes,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — TFS 

Breitmann  in  Maryland. — C :  G.  Leland. — BRR 

Brer  Rabbit  and  the  Little  Girl.  (Nights  with  Uncle 
Remus,  Ch.  III.  afcr.)— Joel  C.  Harris.— WR  7 

Bresca. — Lucy  B.  Ewing.- — CS  34 

Brewing  of  Soma,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Voice  of  Calm,  The.) — 
J:G.  Whittier.— TAS 

Briar-bloom. — Eliz.  A.  Allen.— AD 

Bric-a-brac— Ed.  H.  Cahill.— DCR 

Bricklayers,   The.  — G.   H.    Barnes.  — CS    16—  DS  (  w. 
rmis.) 
.  Bridal  Dirge,  A.— Bryan  W.  Procter.-^HBP 

Bridal  Feast,  The.— F.  C.  Long.— CS  4  (a6r.)— SA 
(Bridal  Wine-cup,  The — prose  vers.) — WRD 
(Dram,  by  A.  F.  Bradley.)— CS  14— ED 
(Dram,  by  Sidney  Herbert.)— BS  4— CDD 
(Pledge     with      Wine  —  prose      vers.)  —  CS  2  — 
FMR  (abr.)- PS 

Bridal  Hour,  The,  Sel.  fr.  ("Love!  blessed  love,"  etc.) 
— Alice  Cary. — BIL 

Bridal  in  Eden,  The.— F.  J.  Otterson.— CS  24 

Bridal  of  Andalla,  The. — Anon.  (tr.  by  J:  G.  Lock- 
hart).— EPs  (si.  o6r.)— FEP— HBP 

Bridal  of  Malahide,  The.— Gerald  Griffin.— PEB  4 
(ilbr.)— BS  21— FMR 

Bridal  Pair,  The. — W:  Young.  See  Wishmakers' 
Town. 

Bridal  Song. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher.  See  Little 
French  Lawyer,  The. 


52 


TITLE    INDEX 


British 


Bridal  Song. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher.    See  also  Maid's 

Tragedy,  The. 
Bridal  Song.     (Sel.  fr.  song  in  Hero  and  Leander,  5th 

Sestyad.)^G:  Chapman. — OB 
Bridal  Song.     (Fr.  The  Fall  of  Jerusalem.)— H :  H. 
Milman.— FEP  (sel.) 
(Hebrew  Wedding  [,  The].)— BNL— HBP 
Bridal  Song  [,A]. —  Shakespeare    and    Fletcher.      See 

Two  Noble  Kinsmen,  The. 
Bridal  Song  and  Dirge. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Death's 

Jest  Book. 
Bridal   Wine-cup,    The    [or    A.]. — Anon.     See    Bridal 
Feast  The 
/    Bride,  The.— H :  Alford.— OB 

("  'Rise.'  said  the  Master,  'come  unto  the  feast.'  ") 
—BNL 
Bride,  The. — Ambrose  Bierce. — AA 
Bride,  The. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — FP 
Bride,    The. — Edmund    Spenser.     See    Epithalamion, 
The. 
-      Bride,    The. — Sir    J:    Suckling.     See    Ballad    upon    a 
Wedding,  A. 
Bride  Cake,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— WEP  2 
Bride  o'  the  Sun,  The. — Blanche  Bishop.— TCV 
Bride  of  Abydos,  The,  Sel.  fr.— Lord  Byron.- BNL 
(br.  seZs.)— WEP  4 
(Orient,  The.)— BNL 
Bride  of  Lammermoor,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Walter  Scott. 
Beware.     {Song  fr.  Ch.  III.)— EPs 

(Lucy  Ashton's  Song.)— BPB— OB 
Ravenswood  and    Lucy    Ashton.      (Selt.  fr.  Chs. 
XXXIL  and  XXXIIL)— MMR 
Bride  of  the  Greek  Isle,  The. — Felicia  Hemans. — BS  5 
— SA— SR  11  (abr.) 
(Bride's  Farewell,  The— seZ. )—FP 
i     Bride  Song.     (Fr.  The  Prince's  Progress.) — Christina 
G.  Rossetti.— OB 
(Too  Late.)— AVP 
Bride's    Farewell,     The. — Felicia     D.     Hemans.     See 

Bride  of  the  Greek  Isle,  The. 
Brides  of  Enderby;  or,   the   High  Tide,   The. — Jean 
Ingelow.— CS  2 
(High    Tide  on  the  Coast  of  Lincolnshire,  The — 
O  — BNL  — EPs— FEP— FR  (obr.)— GN— 
OS  2— PEB  4— VA— WCLG  1 
(SI.  a6r.)— AVP— CR 
(High  Tide  [;  or  The  Brides  of  Enderby],  The.)— 
BS  2— LLC— MMR  (abr.)—SA  (si.  abr. )—WRD 
Bride's  Toilette,  The.— Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz.— AA 
Bride's  Tragedy,  The,  Songs  fr. — T :  L.  Beddoes. 
Hesperus  Sings.— VA 

(Hesperus'  Song.) — WEP  4 
Love  Goes  a-Hawking. — VA 
Song,  by  Two  Voices.— VS—YBF 
(Song.)— BFV 
Bride's  Tragedy,  The.— A.  C.  Swinburne.— PEB  4 
Bridge,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BS  1— FS— FTR— 
LLC  —  PS  (abr.)—  PYO  —  SA  —  SN  —  SR  1 
— WCLI  2 
Bridge  Keeper's  Story,  The.— W.  A.  Eaton  —CS  29 
Bridge  of  Glen  Aray.  The.— C:  Mackay.— CS  32— DS 
Bridge  of  I,ife,  The.— Anon.— HP 

Bridge  of  Sighs,  The  (1st  part).— T:  Hood.— BNL— 
BS6  — CSl  — FEP  — FP  — HBP  — MMR  — 
MR  — OB  — OM  — PGT  l-PPSr- SO  (o6r.) 
— VA— VSG— WEP  4 
Bridge  of  Truth,  The.— Anon.— CS  8 
Bridget  and  the  Matinee. — Elmer  R.  Coates. — CS  2 
Bridget  as  a  School-teacher.— C:  H.  Clark. — SA 
Bridget  O'Flannagan  on  Christian  Science  and  Cock- 
roaches.— M.  Bourchier. — BS  19 — CRR 
Bridget  O'  Hoolegoin's  Letter. — Anon. — DI 

(Affectionate  Letter,  An — cond.   and  si.  diff.) — HR 
(Irish  Letter,  An.)— CS  5— PTS 
Bridget's  Investment.     (Dial.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

—CDs 
Bridget's  Mission  Jug. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Bridget's  Soliloquy. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — BS  20 
Brief  Burlesque,  A.     (Munsey's  Magazine.) — WR  22 
Brief  Description,  A. — Harry  Romaine. — TL 
Brief  Puff  of  Smoke,  A.— Selim.— PPh 
Brief  Remarks  to  a  Class  of  Young  Ladies  on  Gradu- 
ation Day  by  a  Visitor. — Anon, — CP 
Brief  Tragedy,  A.— Anon.— SR  10 
Briefless  Barrister,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— FEP — HPE 
Briefness  of  Joys.    ( Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Brier.— E.  Pauline  Johnson.— TCV 
Brier,  The.— Walter  S.  Landor.— HBP 
Brier-Rose. — Hjalmar  H.   Boyesen. — BS  9 — CS  20 — 
CSS— PR 
(.46r.)— FR  (arf.)— SC— TMR 
Brier-wood  Pipe,  The.— C:  D.  Shanly.- BNL— EDY 


Brigands,  The.     ( Tab.)— Tony  Denier.- TDT 
Brigand's  Death,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Bright  Days  in  Winter.— J:  G.  Whittier.— POS 
(Dream  of  Summer,  A — C.) — AD 
(Hope  on — br.  sel.) — PS 
Bright  Hours.— Marg.  Husted.— CS  29 
Bright  Little  Dandelion.— Anon. — TFS 

(Dandelion,  The.)— G MS 
Bright  Side.  The.— M.  A.  Kidder.— CS  4— HSS  3— LLC 
Bright  Sparkles  in  de  Churchyard. — Anon. — AA 
"Bright  star!  Would  I  were  steadfast  as  thou  art." — 
J:  Keats.— PGT  1— YBF 
(Last  Sonnet— C.)—CEL— OB— WEP  4 
Brightest  and  Best. — Reginald  Heber.     See  follounng-. 
Brightest  and  Best  of  the  Sons  of  the  Morning. — Regi- 
nald Heber.— ON 
(Brightest  and  Best.)- LLC 
(Epiphany— O— EDY— FEP— HBP— OS  1 
Brightest  Gift,  The.     (Presbyterian  Journal.) — CS  34 
B  rignall  Banks. — Walter  Scott .     See  Rokeby . 
Bring  Back  my  Flowers. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Bring  Flowers. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — AD  (sl.abr.) — 

FP 
"Bring  out  your  Dead." — Marg.  H.  Lawless. — WR  24 
Bring  them  not  Back. — Jas.  B.  Kenyon. — AA 
Bringing  our  Sheaves. — Eliz.  A.  Allen. — GP 

(Bringing  our  Sheaves  with  us.) — FP 
Bringing  our  Sheaves  with  Us. — Eliz.  A.  Allen.     See 

foregoing. 
Bristol  Figure,  A. — Cosmo  Monkhouse. — WR  9 
Bristowe  Trtigedy. — T:  Chatterton. — EPs 
Britannia,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  Thomson. 
Peace.— HSS  1 

(Britannia — 6r.  sel.) — BNL 
War  for  the  Sake  of  Peace. — BNL 

("Oh,  first  of  human  blessings,"  etc. — br.  sel.) — 
HSS  1 
Britannia  to  Columbia. — Alfred  Austin. — PAPm 
(To  America.)— GN 
(Voice,  A.)— WCLG  1 
Britannia's  Pastorals,  Sels.  fr. — W :  Browne. 

Carpe  Diem.     (Song  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Song  3.)— ELP 
Comparison,  A.     (Fr.  Bk.  III.,  Song  2.)— WEP  2 
Complaint  of  Pan,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  11.,  Song  4.)— 

WEP  2 
Country  Danger,  A.     (Fr.  Bk.  II.,  Song  2.)— EP 
Description    of    a   Musical    Consort    of    Birds,  A. 

(Fr.  Bk.  I.,  Song  3.)— EP 
Description  of  Walla.  The.  (Fr.  Bk.  II..  Song  3.)— 

WEP  2 
Dirge,  A.     (Fr.  Bk.  II.,  Song  1.)— EP 

(Lament  for  his  Friend,  A.)— WEP  2 
Landscape,  A.     (Fr.  Bk.  I.,  Song  2.)— EP 
Marina  and  the  River-god.     (Fr.  Bk.  I.,  Song  1.) 

—WEP  2 
Metamorphosis,  A.     (Fr.  Bk.  I.,  Song  5.)— WEP  2 
Music  Lesson,  The.     (Br.sel.fr.  Bk.  I.,  Song  5.) — 

WEP  2 
My  Choice.     (Song  fr.  Bk.  II.,  Song  2.)— BNL 
(Shall  I  Tell?)— HBP 

("Shall  I  tell  you  whom  I  love?")— FEP— FTA 
Poet's   Ambition.   The.     (Fr.    Bk.   I.,    Song  5.1— 

WEP  2 
Praise  of  Sydney,  The.     (Fr.  Bk    II.,  Song  2.)— 
WEP  2 
(Sir  Philip  Sidiiej — br.  seZ.)- BNL 
Praise  of  Spenser,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  II.,  Song  1.) — 
WEP  2 
(Edmund  Spenser — br.  sel.) — BNL 
Riot's  Climbing  of  a  Hill.     (Fr.  Bk.  I.,  Song  5.)— 
EP 
Hunted  Squirrel,  The— seZ.)- LC— WEP  2 
Scented  Grove,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  I.,  Song  2.)— WEP  2 
Shepherdesses'  Garlands,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  II.,  Song 
3.)— EP 
(Colour  Passage,  A— «d.)— WEP  2 
Song  of  Celadyne,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  III.,  Song  1.)— 

OEL— WEP  2 
Song  of  Tavy,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  II.,  Song  3.)— WEP  2 
Brita's  Wedding. — W.  W.  Marsh.— DR 
British  Aggressions. — Josiah  Quincy,  Jr. — SS 
British  Fleet,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (All's  Well.)- T :  Dibdin.— 

BNL 
British  Grenadiers,  The. — BVC 

British  Influence,  1811.— J:  Randolph.— OM— PS— SS 
British  Lion   and   American   Hoosier,   The. — Anon. — 

FND 
British  Oak,  The. — Bernard  Barton. — LLC 
British  Soldier  in  China,  The.— F.  H.  Doyle.— PGT  2 
(Private  of  the  Buffs,  The— C.)— BNL— HB— HBP 
— LH— VA 
British  Treaty,  The.— Fisher  Ames.— SS 


53 


Broad-minded 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Broad-minded  selection  of  noble  passages.   A." — J: 

B.  Peaslee.— GG 
Broadswords  of  Scotland,  The.— J:  G.  Lockhart. — HBP 
Broadway  Pageant,  A,  Sel.fr.     (Expansion.) — Walt 

Whitman.— SR  13 
Broken  Banjo.  The.— Wkrren  F.  GreRory. — CG  i 
Broken  Chains. — Eugene  A.  Cox. — CG  2 
Broken  Doll,  The.— C  and  Mary  Lamb.— LFC 
Broken  Dreams.- Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Broken  Heart.  The.— W.  Barnes.- PGT  2 
Broken  Heart,  The,  Sela.  fr. — J :  Ford. 
Calantha's  Dirge.— ELP—WEP  2 

(Love  and  Death.)— FEP 
Penthea's  Dying  Song.      (Fr.  IV.,  3.)— CEL— ELF 

— WEP2 
Broken  Hearts. — Washington  Irving. — P.S 
Broken  Home,  A. — Anon. — SR  1 
Broken  Music.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XLVII.) 

—Dante  G.  Rossetti.— VA 
Broken  Pitcher.  The.— C:  D.  Shanly  (or  E-  Lysaght.)— 

CS  14 
(Kitty  of  Coleraine.)— BNL— OR— FEP— HBR— 

THP— TIP 
Broken  Promises. — Anon. — MFD 
Broken  Sonnet,  A.^lllo  Graves. — FLS 
Broken  Token,  The.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Broken  Wing,  The.— Anon.— LLC 
Brook,  The.— Eugene  Field.— LS 
Brook.  The.— Sophia  V.  G.  Lee.— TCV 
Brook,  The.— W:  W.  Lord.— A  A 
Brook,  The.     {Song  fr.  The  Brook:    An  Idyl.)— Alfred 

Tennyson.— AE    fseZ.)- BFV— BS    .5— CGd— 

CS    12— GMS— GN    (si.    abr.)— LC— OS    1— 

PGT  2— PHS— POS  (ahr.  )—PSR—SC  (si.  abr.) 

— SM— SN— WCL— WCLI  1— WEP  4 
(Song  of  the  Brook.)— BNL— CR— FEP— FTR— 

HBP— LLC— SAE  (br.  sels.) 
Brook,  The,  Sel.  fr.—W  ■  B.  Wright.— AA 
Brook  in  Winter,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     iSee  Vision  of 

Sir  Launfal,  The. 
Brook  of  Lappington,  The.— H  •  Gillman. — CSS 
Brook  Rhine,  The. — Augusta  Webster. — AVP 
Brook  Song,  A. — Eugene  Field. — HP 
Brook  Song. — Jas.  H.  Morse. — AA 
Brook  that  Ran  into  the  Sea,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — 

LCS 
Brooklet,  The.— W:  G.  Simms.— POS 
Brooklyn  at  Santiago,  The.— Wallace  Rice. — EDY 
Brooklyn  Bridge,  The.— A.  S.  Hewitt.— TMD 
Brooklyn  Bridge,  The.— Seth  Low.— SSD 
Brooklyn  Bridge,  The.— Edna  D.  Proctor.— BNL 
(Brooklyn)  Bridge.  The.— H  ■  F.  Wood.— GH 
Brook's  Song.  The  —Mrs.  M.  F.  Butts.— CPL 
Brookside,   The. — R:   M.    Milnes,    Lord   Houghton. — 

BNT.— CR— FEP— FTA— GP— HBP— OH— 

PGT  2— TFY— VA— VS— YBF 
(I  Wandered  by  the  Brookside — w.  mvMc.) — NPS — 

YP 
(Song.)- CGd— FP 
Broom  Drill,  The.— Anon.— DS 
Broom  Drill.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
Broom  Flower,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— HBP— OS  1 
Broomfield  Hill,  The.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. 

—PEB  1 
Brother  and  Sister.     (Sel.)—G:  Eliot.— GN 
(Diff.  sel.)—OU 
(Br.sel.—ad.)—08  2 
Brother  Anderson. — T :  K .  Beecher.     See  following. 
Brother  Anderson's  Sermon. — T:  K.  Beecher. — BS  6 — 

CS  13— CSS 
(Brother  Anderson.) — BRR 
Brother  Antonio. — Eliz.  A.  Allen. — SR  7 
Brother  Ben.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  25 
Brother  Gardner  on  de  Human  Race.     (Detroit  Free 

Press.)— W :  B.  Dick.— DSS 
Brother  Jim.— May  R.  McNabb.— PS 
Brother  Jonathan's   Birthday. — Clara   Denton.— LPD 
Brother  Jonathan's    Lament    for    Sister    Caroline. — 

Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AWB—PAPm 
(Union,  The— «ei.)— SAE 
Brother  of  Mercy.  The.     (In  The  Tent  on  the  Beach.) 

—J:  G.  Whittier.— AP 
Brother  Robin. — Mrs.  Anderson. — NV 
Brother  Toper.— R.  B.  Kirk.— CG  3 
Brother  Watkins.— J:  B.  Gough.— CS  7  —  HR  —  OM 

—SO 
(Brother  Watkins— Ah!)— FS 
Brotherhood.— Josiah  G.  Holland.— CS  11 
Brothers.  The. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — BNL 
Brothers.  The.— Marietta  Holley.— DES 
Brothers.  The. — C:  Sprague. — AA 
Brothers,  The. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — PEB  4 


Brotherp  and  a  Sermon.  Stls.  fr. — Jean  Ingelow. 
Brothers  and  a  Sermon,  Sel.  fr. — HDL 
Goldilocks.— EPs 
Old  Fisherman,  The.— KNE 

(Old  Fisherman's  Prayer,  The.)— HSS  3 
(Old  Man's  Prayer,  The.)— MM R 
Wreck  of  "  The  Grace  of  Sunderland."— EPs 
Brothers;  Henry  and  John  Shears,  The. — Lady  Wilde. 

—PEB  4 
Brothers  Once  More.— W.  J.  C.  Train.— DFR 
Brother's  Reply.  The.— C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Brother's  Tribute.  A.— Anon.— BS  12— NPS— YP 
Brought  Back.— J:  F.  Nicholls.— CS  31— PR 
Brought   Back  by  the  Butcher's  Boy.     (Washington 

News.)-&R  11 
Brought  to  his  Senses. — Anon. — MC 
Brought  to  Trial    for  "Blowin'." — Josiah  G.  Holland. 

See  Arthur  Bonnicast.le. 
Brown  Adam.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — BB 

(SI.  diff.  vers.— si.  abr.)— PEB  2 
Brown  Girl,  The  —Anon.— PEB  2 
Brown    of    Ossawatomie. — J:    G.    Whittier. — BNL — 

FEP 
Brown  Robin.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Brown  Robyn's  Confes«ion. — Ano.i. — BB 
Brown  Sociable,  A. — Anon. — EVE 
Brown  Stout. — Anon. — CS  34 
Brown  Thrush,  The —Lucy  Larcom.—  AD  —  GMS  — 

LCS— SM— WCL— YBT 
Brownies'  Drill,  The. — A.  E.  Hurst. — ID 
Browning. — Irene  E.  Morton. — TCV 
Browning  at  Asolo. — Rob't  U.  Johnson. — AA 
Browning's  First  Manuscript.     (Fr.  Robert  Browning 

Personalia.) — Edmund  Gosse. — MRS    " 
Browns,  The.— T;  D.  English.— CS  12 
Bruce,  The,  Br.  sel.   fr.     (Freedom.) — J:  Barbour. — 

FP  (si.  abr.)— OB 
Bruce  and  the  Abbot. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lord  of  the 

Isles,  The. 
Bruce  and  the  Spider. — Bernard  Barton. — BNL  (abr.) 

(Robert  Bruce  and  the  Spider.)— CS  24 
Bruce's  Address  to   His   Army. — Rob't    Burns.     See 

Bannockburn. 
Brudder  Bones  as  a  Log-roller. — Anon. — DE 
Brudder  Bones'  Duel. — Anon. — DE 
Brudder  Bones  in  Clover. — Anon. — DE 
Brudder  Bones  in  Hard  Luck. — Anon. — DE 
Brudder  Bones  in  Love. — Anon. — DE 
Brudder  Bones  on  de  Raging  Canawl. — Anon. — DE 
Brudder  Bones'  Sweetheart. — Anon. — DE 
Brudder  Brown  on  "Apples." — Anon. — CS  26 

(Apples.)— CD 
Brudder  Gardiner  on  Music. — Anon. — CH 
Brudder  Johnson  on  "  'Lectricity."— Anon. — DCR 

(Brudder  Johnson's  Lecture  on  'Lectricity.) — DSS 
Brudder    Johnson's    Lecture    on    'Lectricity. — Anon. 

iSee  foregoing. 
Brudder  Jones  as  a  Carpet-bagger. — Anon. — DE 
Brudder  Jones's  Heterodoxy. — Anon. — WR  21 
Brudder  Yerkes's  Sermon. — .Tas.  M.  Ludlow. — BS  14 
Brushwood.— T:  B.  Read.— CR 

(Br.  seZ«.)— AE— HDL 
Brute  Neighbors. — H:  D.  Thoreau. — APr 
Brutus.     (Fr.   Pindarique   Odes.) — Abraham   Cowley. 

—WEP  2 
Brutus  and  Cassius.  —  W:    Shakespeare.      See    .Tulius 
Caesar  (Speech  of  Cassius  Instigating  Brutus, 
etc.). 
Brutus  and  Titus.     (Fr.  Lucius  Junius  Brutus — plai/.) 

—Nathaniel  Lee.— SS 
Brutus'  Harangue  on  the  Death  of  Caesar. — W :  Shakes- 
peare.    See  Julius  Csesar. 
Brutus  Justifying  the  Assassination    of    Caesar. — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Caesar. — W :  Shakespeare.     See 

Julius  Caesar. 
Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Lucretia. — J;  H.  Payne.     See 

Brutus;  or.  The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Brutus;  or.  The  Fall  of  Tarquin,  Sels.  fr.—J:  II.  Payne. 
Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Lucretia  (Act  III.,  Sc.  4). — 
FR 
(Brutus  over  the  Body  of  Lucretia.) — PS 
(Brutus  over  the  Dead  Lucretia — si.  abr.)— CS  3 
(Brutus's   Oration  over  the  Body  of  Lucretia — 

si.  a6r.)— BNL 
(Lucius  Junius  Brutus's  Oration  over  the  Body  of 
Lucretia. — si.  abr.)— -WKD 
Roman  Father,  The.— WR  6 
Brutus  over  the  Body  of  Lucretia. — J:  H.  Payne.     See 

Brutus;  or.  The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Brutus   over   the   Dead    Lucretia.       (Prose  comp.) — 
Anon.— PS— SS 


54 


TITLE    INDEX 


Burgoyne's 


Brutus  Over  the  Dead  Lucretia. — J:  H.  Payne.     See 

Brutus;  or,  The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Brutus    to    Cassius. — W :     Shakespeare.     See    Julius 

Caesar. 
Brutus's  Oration  Over  the  Body  of  Lucretia. — J:  H. 

Payne.     See  Brutus ;  or,  The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Bryant  Alphabet,  A.     (Comp.  fr.  Bryant.) — PEO 
Bryant  Dead!— Paul  H.  Hayne.— EDY 
Bryant,  Extract  concerning. — H:  W.  Bellows. — PEO 
Bryant,  Extract  concerning. — J:  Bigelow. — PEO 
Bryant,  Extract  concerning. — G:  W:  Curtis. — PEO 
Brvant,  Extract  concerning. — Edwin   P.    Whipple. — 

PEO 
Bubble,  The.  (C.)— W:  Allingham. 

(Blowing  Bubbles.  )—GN 
Bubble,  The.— W:  Drummond.— YBF 
fMadrigal.)— ELP 

("  This  Life  which  seems  so  fair.") — POT  1 
Bubble.  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— AA 
Buccaneer,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Island,  The.)— R:  H.  Dana.— 

BNL 
Buccaneer,  The. — Sir  Walter  Scott.     See  Rokeby. 
Buck  Fanshaw's  Funeral. — S:  L.  Clemens.   See  Rough- 
ing It. 
Bucket,  The.— S:  Woodworth.—  AA  —  ASL  —  HBP 
(Old  Oaken  Bucket,  The.)  —  BLP  —  BNL  — CS  25 

FEP  — GP  — LLC  — OS  1  — PPSr  — PYO  — 

SE— TAV— WCLG  1 
Buckingham's  Address  on  his  Way  to  Execution. — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Buckle,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— vSOC 
"Bucks."^ — Frank  H.  Spearman. — SR  13 
Bucolick  betwixt  Two,  A.     (C.) — Rob't  Herrick. 

(Lacon  and  Thyrsis.) — EP 
Bud,  The.— Edmund  Waller.— WEP  2 
"Bud  of  Promise"  Racket,  The.— Anon.— CS  34 
"Bud  will  soon  become  a  flower,  The  " — Jones  Very. 

— HSS  3  {sel.) 
(Now  is  the  Time.)— AD 
Budd  Wilkins  at  the  Show.— S:  E.  Kiser.— WR  24 
Budding-time  too  Brief. — Evaleen  Stein. — AA 
Budge's  Version    of    the  Flood. — J:  Habberton.     See 

Helen's  Babies. 
Budget  of  Blunders,  A. — Anon. — DCD 
Budget  of  Paradoxes,  A.— J:  Hartley. — TIP 
"Bud's  Charge."— L:  E.  Van  Norman. — WR  22 
Bud's  Fairy-tale.- Jas.  W.  Riley.— CW 
Buena  Vista.— Albert  Pike.— AWB— PAPm 
Buffalo  Herds,  The. — C:  Mair.     See  Tecumseh. 
Bug-a-boo,  The.— Lizzie  M.  Hadley.— DCP  {al.  abr.) 
(.Dial.)—WR  17 
(About  the  Size  of  It— rftaZ.)— DLD 
Bugle,  The.— M.  Irving.- PAPm 
Bugle,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Princess,  The. 
Bugle  Song  [,The].     Alfred  Tennyson.     See   Princess, 

The. 
Build  a  Column  to  Bolivar!  (C) — Bryan  W.  Procter. 

(Bolivar.)— EDY 
"Build   thee   more   stately   mansions,    O   my  soul." — 

Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Chambered  Nautilus, 

The. 
Builder,  The.— Fs.  Sherman.— TCV 
Builders,  The.— Ebenezor  Elliott.— VA 
Builders,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.—  GMS  —  PHS  — 

SE— WCLI  2— YBT 
(^J>r.)— BS  7 
Builder's  Lesson,  A,  Sel.  fr.    (How?)— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— 

YBT 
Building.— Susan  Coolidge.— CS  33 
Building.— I.  E.  Diekenga.— FHS— YBT 
Building  a  Home. — J :  Armstrong.     See  Art  of  Preserv- 
ing Health,  The. 
Building  of  S.  Sophia,  The.— S.  Baring-Gould.— VSG 
Building  of  the  Barn,  The.— C:  L.  Bingham.— WR  25 
Building  of  the  House,  The.— C:  Mackay.— WR  1 
Building  of  the  Ship,  The.— H :  W.  Longfellow.— AP— 

LH 
Building  of  the  Ship,  The.     (Sel.)—  AD  —  BNL 

(br.  sel.) 
(Launch  of   the    Ship,  The— se/.)— BS  1— SA— 

SRI 
(Launching  of  the  Ship,    The— srf.)— CR— CS  4 

— FR— FTR  —  GMS  —  HNS  —  OM  —  SAE 

Republic.  The.     (Br.  seZ.)- AA— ASL 
(Lines.)— SS 

(Ship  of  State,  The— 6r.  sei.)— PAP— SM 
Building  the  Chimney. — Anon. — CS  11 

(Worsted  Stocking,  The.)— MYF 
Building  the  Ladder.- Eliz.  Lloyd.— SSE 
Building  upon  the  Sand. — Eliza  Cook. — FP 
Bulb,  A.— R    K.  Munkittrick.— AA 


Bulbul,  The. — Owen  Seaman.— NA 

Bulgarian  Horrors. — Wr  E.  Gladstone. — MRS 

Bull,  The.— Marg.  Johnson.— WR  24 

Bull  Fight,  The.— Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Bull  of  Bashan,  A. — Adeline  Knapp. — BS  26 
Bull  Run.— Alice  B.  Haven.— WR  10 
Bull-fight,  The.— Anon.   (tr.  by  J:  G.  Lockhart).     Sef 

following. 
Bull-fight  of  Gazul,  The.— Anon.  (tr.  by  J:  G.  Lockhart). 

—FEP— HBP 
(Bull-fight,  The.     Sel.)~OS  2 
Bullfrog  Serenade,  The. — ^Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Bull-head,  The.— Josh  Billings.— FAS 
Bullum  versus  Boatum. — G.A.  Stevens. — BS  1 
Bumble  Bee,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Bumble  Bee,  The.— Mrs.  E.  J.  11.  GoodfeUow.— TT 
Bumblebee,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Bumboat    Woman's    Story,    The.— W:  S.    Gilbert.— 

BS  9  (si.  a6r.)— THP 
Bumpkin's  Courtship,  The. — Anon. — CS  10 
Bumps. — Anon . — FH  E 
Bunch  of  Cowslips,  A. — Anon. — PEO 
Bunch  of  Flowers,  A.    Anon.     (Concert  piece.) — YFD 
Bunch  of  Flowers,  A.     (Concert  piece.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J. 

Rook.— COS— PP 
Bunch  of  Primroses,  A. — G:  R.  Sims.— CS  36 
Bunch  of  Roses,  A.— J:  B.  Tabb.— PoR 
Bunches  of  Grapes. — Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Buncombe  Speech. — Anon. — DE 
Bundle  of  Loves,  A. — Mary  L.  Gaddess. — WR  4 
Bungtown  Lyceum,  The. — Anon. — MAD 
Bunker  Hill.— G:  H.  Calvert.- WR  10 
Bunker  Hill. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — See  Grandmother's 

Story  of  Bunker  Hill  Battle. 
Bunker  Hill.— G.  Mellen.— EPs 
Bunker  Hill— J:  Pierpont.— BLP 
Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (What  Good 

will  the  Monument  Do?) — E:  Everett. — SS 
Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. — l/ouis  Kossiith.— TM R 
Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The.     (C.)— Dan'l  Webster.— 

MAL 
(Age  of  Improvement,  The — br.  sel.) — TMR 
(Bunker  Hill  Speech.)— AI 
(First  Bunker  Hill  Monument  Oration.) — IR  (br. 

sel.)— WCLG  2  (si.  abr.) 
(Foundation  of  Bunker  Hill  Monument — br.  sel.) — 

FD  1 
(Oration  at  the  Laying  of  the  Corner-stone  of  the 

Bunker  Hill  Monument— sei.)—PPS 
("That  motionless  shaft  will  be  the  most  powerful 

of  speakers" — br.  sel.) — GG 
(To  the  Revolutionary  Veterans — sel.) — SS 
(To  the  Survivors  of  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill — 

«eZ.)— BS  10 
Bunker  Hill    Monument. — Dan'l    Webster.     See    tlso 

Completion  of    the    Bunker    Hill    Monument. 

The. 
Bunker  Hill  Monument  Completed,  The. — Dan'l  Web- 
ster.    See    Completion    of    the    Bunker    Hill 

Monument,  The. 
Bunker  Hill    Speech. — Dan'l    Webster.     See    Bunker 

Hill  Monument,  The. 
Bunker's  Hill.— J:  Neal.—WR  10 
Bunny  Did  It.— Anon.— COS— PP 

Buonconte  di  Montefeltro. — Dante.     See  Divine  Com- 
edy, The. 
Buoy-bell,  The.— C:  T.  Turner.— V A 
Burd  Ellen.— Anon.— BB 
Burd  Helen.      (Fair    Helen   of   Kirconnell,  Pt.   II. — 

in  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — CEL 
(Fair      Helen.)— EPs      (si.      air.)- FEP— HBP— 

PEB  1— PGT  1— VS(J— WR  21 
(Helen  of  Kirkconnel[l].)— BB— BPB— LH— OB— 

OEB 
(John  Mayne's  vera.) — FEP 
Burd  Statue.     (Taft.)- Anon.— TCP 
Burden  of  Love,  The. — Lucy  W.  Jennison. — AA 
Burden  of  Night,  The.— S.  R.  Elliot.— TAV 
Burdock's  Goat. — Anon. — CS  16 
Burdock's  Music-box. — Anon.— CH— CS  27 — SR  5 
Burgher's  Battle,  The.— W:  Morris.— VA 
Burghers  of  Calais,  The. — Emily  A.  Braddock. — BS  20 

— TMD 
Burglar  Alarm,  The.— Birch  Arnold.— CH 

(Mrs.  Fillisy's  Burglar  Alarm — si.  abr.) — WR  20 
Burglar  Alarm,  The.— G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Burglar  Bill.— F.  Anstey.— CD— HBR 
Burglar's  Grievances,  The. — G;  Kyle. — WR  3 
Burgomaster  Gull,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Burgomaster's  Death,  The.— T:  F.  Wilford.- DES 
Burgoyne's  Surrender.— G.  W.  Curtis.— NC—PFP 


55 


Burial 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Burial  Hymn.— H :  H.  MUman.— FEP— VA 

(Hymn.)— HBP 
Buria]  March  of  Dundee,  The.     (In  Lays  of  the  Scot- 
tish Cavaliers.) — W:  E.  Aytoun. — CR  (si.  abr.) 
—FEP  ^ 

(S«i.)-EDY— Olt 
(Killiecrankie— sZ.  o6r.)— CEL— EHT  (abr.) 
Burial  of  an  Infant,  The.— H :  Vaughan.— WEP  2 
Burial  of  Arnold,  The.— N.  P.  Willis.     See  Burial  of 

the  Champion  of  his  Class  at  Yale  Co'lege. 
Burial  of  Beranger,  The.— Alfred  Watts.— EDY 
Burial  of  John  Brown,  The.— Wendell  Phillips. — OS  2 
Burial  of  King  Cormac,  The.—  Sir  S :  Ferguson. — TIP 
Burial  of  Latan.^,  The.— J  :  R.  Thompson.— AWB 
Burial  of    Lincoln.— R:  H:  Stoddard.     See  Abraham 

Lincoln  [.  A  Horatian  Ode]. 
Burial  of  Little  5fell.—C- Dickens.     See  Old  Curiosity 

Shop,  The. 
Burial  of  Love,  The.— W :  C.  Bryant.— HBP 
Burial  of  Moses  1,  The]. — Cecil  F.  (Humphrey)  Alex- 
ander.—BNL—CR-  CS  3— EPs— FEP— FR 
— GN— HP— LLC— SA— SO  (obr. )—WCI.I  2 
(SI.  abr.)— BS  1— OM 
(Burial  of  the  Deliverer,  The— «eZ.)— BLP 
Burial  of  Robert  Br<  wning.  The. — Michael  Field. — VA 
Burial  of  Sir  .John  Moore  [,The].— C:  Wolfe.— BLP — 
BNL— BPB— BSP— CS  8— EDY— EHT— FEP 
— FP— GN— GP— HB— HBP—  LC  —  LLC  — 
MR— OS  2— PC— SAE  (a6r.)— SE— SS— TIP 
— WCLG  1 
(After  Corunna.) — LH 
(Burial  of   Sir  John  Moore  after  Corunna,  The.) — 

OB 
(Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore  at  Corunna,   The.) — BFV 
— CEI — EPs— PGT  1- PHS— PSR— WEP  4 
— YBF 
("Slowly  and  sadly  we  laid  him  down" — br.  sel.) 
— CSl 
Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore  after  [or  at]  Corrunna,  The. — 

C :  Wolfe.     See  foregoing. 
Burial  of  the  Cat,  The.— R.  K.  Hutchinson.— LPS— 

PP 
Burial  of  the  Champion  of  his  Class,  at  Yale  College. — 
Nathaniel  P.  WiUis.- WRD 
(Burial  of  Arnold,  The.)— HNS 
Burial  of  the  Dane,  The.— H :  H.  Brownell.— AA— CS  8 

—FEP 
Burial  of  the  Dead.— J :  Keble.— OB 
Burial  of  the  Deliverer,  The. — Cecil   F.   (Humphrey) 

Alexander.     See  Burial  of  Moses,  The. 
Burial  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington — Alfred  Tennyson. — 
See  Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Welling- 
ton. 
Burial  of  the  Linnet,  The. — Juliana  H.  Ewing. — BVC 

— PoR 
Burial  of  the  Minnisink. — H:  W.   Longfellow. — PC — 

PHS 
Burial  of  the  Old  Flag,  The.— Mary  A.  Barr.— BS  15 
Burial  of  the  Poet,  The.— H  •  W.  LongfeUow.— HBP 
Burial  Place,  The,  Sel.  ft.     (The  Yew.)— W  :  C.  Bryant. 

—AD 
Burial-march.     See  Burial  March. 
Buried  Gold.— Alice  Cary.- BLF 
Buried  Life,  The. — Matthew  Arnold. — VA 
Buried  To-day.— Dinah  M.  Craik.— BNL-  HDL 
Burlesque  Challenge  to  America,  A. — Mark  Lemon. — 

BLP 
Burlesque  Lecture  on  "Sound." — Anon. — DSS 
Burlesque  of  the  Following  Lines  of  Lopez  deVega. 
(C.)—S:  Johnson. 
(On  some  Lines  of  Lopez  de  Vega.) — HPE 
Burlesque  on  Fan  Drill. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — DM 
Burlesque  Oration  on  Matrimony. — Anon. — DE 
Burlesque    Temperance    Speech.  —  Gus    W'illiams.  — 
DSS  (si.  ahr.) 
(Temperance  Speech.) — BDD 
"Burn  and  destroy  the  idols  of  party  you  have  wor- 
shiped."— Dan'l  Dougherty. — GG 
Burning  Babe,  The.— Rob't  Southwell.— EI-P— EPs— 

OB— WEP  1— YBF 
Burning  of  Chicago,  The.— Will  M.  Carleton. — SA 
Burning  of  Chicago,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Fort  Defirbom.) — 

B:  F.Taylor  .—PR 
Burning  of  Moscow,  The. — Joel  T.  Headley.    See  Napo- 
leon and  his  Marshals. 
Burning  of  the  Lexington.— J:  Loffland.- CS  14 — NPS 

— YP 
Burning  Prairie,    The.— Alice    Cary.— BS    4— CS    3— 

NPS— YP 
Burning  Ship,  The.— Anon.— BS  3— NPS— SA— YP 
Burning  Ship,  The.    (Fr.  Onnalinda.) — J.  H.  McNaugh- 
ton.— DES 


Burns. — Ebenezer  Elliott.— BNL 

(Poet's  Eoitaph,  A.)— EDY— FEP— HBP— VA— 

WEP'4  (si.  abr.) 
Bums.     (To  a  Rose  Brought  from  near  Alloway  Kirk, 

in     Ayrshire.) — Fitz-Greene     Halleck. — AA — 

BNL— FEP 
Burns.     (On  Receiving  a  Sprig  of  Heather  in  Blossom.) 

J;  G.  Whittier.- BNL— HBP 
Burnt  Corkers. — Harry  S.  Sargent. — DE 
Burnt  Lands.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.- VA 
Burnt  Out.— Anon.— FLS 
Burnt  Ships. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — BIL 
Burr  and  Blennerhassett.— W :  Wirt.- CS  16— LLC— 

PS— SS 
Burst  of  Indignation,  A. — Anon. — MCS 
Burton.    (Br.  sel.  fr.  On  the  Death  of  Richard  Burton.) 

— Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — EDY 
Burton's  Curtains.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  33 
Bush  aboon  Traquair,  The. — J.  C.  Shairp. — A  VP 
Bush  Study,  k  la  Watteau.— Arthur  P.  Martin.— WR  9 
"Business"  in  Mississippi. — Irwin  Russell. — SDR 
Business  Man's  Political  Obligations,  A. — Anon. — CP 
Business  Side  of  Prohibition,  The. — H :  W.  Grady.     <Se« 

Prohibition  in  Atlanta. 
Bust  of  Dante. — T:  W.  Parsons. — FP 

(On  a  Bust  of  Dante.)— AA—ASL— BNL— FEP— 

HBP— PYO  (abr.)— TAV 
Buster,  The.— Sam  W.  Foss.— CS  34 
Busy.- Edmund  J.  Burk.— BS  23— CS  34 
Busy  and  Happy.     (Fr.  Bird  Talk.)— Adeline  D.  T. 

Whitney.— YBT 
Busy  Bee,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Busy  Bee.— Anon.— TT 
Busy  Bee,  The.     (Song  XX.)— Isaac  Watts.— NV— PC 

—PS 
Busy  Children    at    the  Farm.     (Concert  rec.) — Anon. 

—HSS  2  (abr.) 
(Little  Helpers.)— COS— PP 
(Diff.  vers. — man. — abr.) — DST 
"Busv,  curious,  thirsty  fly." — W:  Oldys. — FEP 
(Fly,  The.)— CEL— HBP 
(On  a  Fly  Drinking  out  of  his  Cup.) — OB 
(To  a  Fly.)— LC 
Busy  Little  Housekeeper,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — 

SL 
Busy  Lives. — Anon. — LI.,C 
Busy  Mule,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
But— .—Belle  Hunt.— WR  7 
"But  ah!  'twas  hard  to  have  him  go." — Celia  E.  Gardi- 

ner.— BIL— FTA 
"But  all  through  life  I  see  a  cross." — Olrig  Grange. — 

.  GG 
"But  in   his  eyes  a  mist  unwonted  rises." — Fs.  Bret 

Harte.— HP 
But  Little  Folks.— Marie  E.  Kunkler.— TT  (sel.) 

(We  are  but  Little  Folks,  you  see.) — KC 
"But  man  is  higher  than  his  dwelling-place." — Jean 

Paul.— AE 
But  Once. — Theodore  Winthrop. — A  A 
But  Once  a  Year. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
But    One    Flag  for  our  Country. — C;   I^.  Holstein. — 

FD  2 
"But,  sirrah,  henceforth,"  etc. — ^W:  Shakespeare.    See 

King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
"But  the  higher  departments  of  moral  and  religious 

thought."— H:  C.  Minton.— GG 
But  the  Villain  Still  Pursued  Her.— Anon.— DE 
"But  then  the  thrushes  sang." — Eliz.   B.   Browning. 

See  Aurora  Leigh. 
"But  there  is  a  limit,  both  to  the  necessity  and  to  the 

capacity  of  this  power  of  invention." — H:  C. 

Minton. — GG 
"But  three  feet  good  of  that  old  wood." — Martin  F. 

Tupper.— HP 
"But  time  would   fail  to  attempt   to  catalogue  the 

grand  women." — Mary  A.  Livermore. — GG 
Butcher-bird,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Butcher's  Boy  and  the  Baker's  Girl,  The. — Anon. — 

GH 
Buttercup,  A.— K.  C— AD 
Buttercup,  Poppy,    Forget-me-not. — Eugene    Field. — 

EF— WR  17— WTD 
Buttercups.     (In  Flower  Songs.) — Mary  G.  Crocker. — 

CPL 
Buttercups     and     Daisies^ — Mary    Howitt. — HSS  1 — 

WCL  (abr.) 
Butterflies,  The.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  GoodfeUow.— TT 
Butterfly  The.— Anon.— CPL 
Butterfly,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Butterfly,  The.— Alice  A.  (S.)  James.— AA 
Butterfly,  The.— Jos.  Skipsey.— VA 
Butterfly  and  the  Bee,  The.— Anon.— WR  17 


56 


TITLE    INDEX 


California 


Butterfly  and  the  Snail,  The.— J :  Gay. — CGd 
Butterfly  Drill. — Marguerite  W.  Morton. — ID 
Butterfly  on  Baby's  Grave,  A. — Anon. — TFS 
Butterfly's  Ball,  The.— T:  Roscoe  {or  Mrs.  H:  Roscoe). 

— BVC— FTR— WR  16 
{Vers.sl.diff.) 
Butterfly's  Lesson,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Butterfly's  Revenge,  The.— W:  R.  Alger.— POS 
Butterwick's  Weakness. — Anon. — DCR 
Button  Off',  A.     (C. — in  Life   in  Danbury.') — Jas.  M. 

Bailey. 
(How  a  Married  Man  Sews  on  a  Button.) — BS  4 — 

CRR 
(Sewing  on  a  Button.)— CS  14— PS 
Buy  a  Broom. — Anon. — KNS 
Buy  my  Dolls.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
"Buy  your  Cherries." — M.  F.  Rowe. — WR  14 
Buying  a  Cow. — Anon. — CS  19 
Buying  a  Feller.     {Sel.  fr.  Sweet  Cicely,  Ch.  XIII.)— 

Marietta  HoUey.— WR  15 
(For  a'  that;  or,  Selling  a  Feller— a6r.)—BS  20 
Buying  a  Sewing  Machine. — Anon. — FND 
Buying  and  Shopping. — Anon. — WR  12 
Buying  Gape-seed. — G.  W.  Bungay  (or  J:  B.  Gough). — 

PS 
(Gape-seed.)— CS  5— MHR 
Buz  [or  Buzz],  Quoth  the  Blue  Fly.     (Br.   ael.  fr.  The 

Masque  of  Oberon.)  —  BenJonson. —  ELP  — 

NA 
Buzby's  Coat.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  35 
Buzfuz    versus  Pickwick. — C:  Dickens.    See  Pickwick 

Papers,  The. 
"Buzzl"     Quoth     the    Blue    Fly. — Ben   Jonson.     See 

Buz,  Quothe  the  Blue  Fly. 
Buzzard,  The. — J :  Dryden.    See  Hind  and  the  Panther, 

The. 
Buzzard  Point.— G:  M.  Vickers.- CS  28— PS 
By  and  By.     (Concert  rec.) — Anon. — DLF 
By  and  By. — Anon. — HP 
By  and  By.— Grace  D.  Boylan.— BS  25 
By  and  By.     See  also  By-and-by. 
By  Cool  Siloam.     (First  Sunday  after  Ephipany — C.) 

— Reginald  Heber. — LLC 
(By  Cool  Siloam's  Shady  Rill— scZ. )—PoR 
(Hymn  for  First  Sunday  after  Epiphany.) — FEP 
(Siloam's  Shady  Rill— a6r.)— TFS 
By  Memory  Inspired. — Anon. — TIP 
By  Ned!— Howell  L.  Finer.- WR  2.3 
By  Order  of  the  King,  Sel.  fr.  (King  and  People — sel. 

fr.  Bk.  I.,  Pt.  I.,  Ch.  V.)— Victor  Hugo.— OS  2 
By  Solitary   Fires. — Eliz.   B.   Browning.     See   Aurora 

Leigh. 
By  Special  Request.— Frank  Castles.— CS  27— DCR 
By  Summer  Woods.     (Hours  at  Home.) — AD 
By  Telephone. — Anon. — CR 
By  that    Lake,    whose   Gloomy   Shore. — T :    Moore. — 

PEB  4— WEP  4 
By  the  Alma. — Jas.  Dawson. — BS  22 

(After  the  Battle.)— PFP 
By  the   Alma   River. — Dinah   M.    M.    Craik. — BNL— 

CS  10 
By  the  Autumn  Sea.— Paul  H.  Havne.— FEP 
By  the  Cross  of  Monterey.— R :  Edward  White.— CS  29 
By  the  Firelight.— Isidore  G.  Ascher.— TCV 
By  the  Fireside. — Rob't  Browning. — SN 
By  the  Fireside. — Lucy  Larcom. — BNL 
By  the  Gaspereau.— Burton  W.  Lockhart. — TCV 
By  the  Margin  of  the  Great  Deep. — A.  E. — OB 
By  the  Pacific. — Herbert  Bashford. — AA 
By  the  Pacific  Ocean. — Joaquin  Miller. — AA 
By  the  Roadside  —rLouise  L.  Loomis. — CG  2 
By  the  St.  John.— Marg.  G.  CHirrie.— TCV 
By  the  Salp^tri^re.— T :  Ashe.— VA 
By  the  Sea.— Anon.— HP 
By  the  Sea. — Mary  Clemmer. — BNL 
By  the  Sea.— Philip  H.  Welsh.— CS  23— CS  34 
By  the  Sea.     (Miscellaneous  Sonnets,  Pt.  I.,  30.) — W: 

Wordsworth.— PGT  1— YBF 
(Evening  on  Calais  Beach.) — OB 
(It  is  a  Beauteous  Evening,  Calm  and  Free.) — FEP 

— MBL 
(On  the  Beach  at  Calais.)— WEP  4 
By  the  Shore.- Anon.— SR  9 
By  the  Shore  of  the  River. — Christopher  P.  Cranch. — 

CS  7 
By   the  Swinging  Seas.     (Echoes,    XXVII.)— W:  E. 

Henley.— OH 
By-and-by.— Anon. — SM 
By-and-by.— Anon.— SSS 
By-and-by.     See  also  By  and  By. 
Bylo  Land.     (New  York  Disvatch.) — BS  19 
Byron.— Craven  I-.  Betts.— EDY 


Byron.—  Rob't  PoUok.     See  Course  of  Time,  The. 
Byron. — W :  Watson.     See  following. 
Byron  the  Voluptuary. — W :  Watson. — VA 

(Byron.)— YBF 
Byron's  Grave. — Roden  Noel. — AVP 
Byron's  Last  Poem. — Lord  Byron. — CEL 

(Hail  and  Farewell.)— LH 

(On  my  Thirty-seventh  Birthday.)— EDY 

(On  this  Day  I  Complete  my  Thirty-sLxth  Year — C.) 
FEP— WEP  4 


Ca'  the  Yowes. — Isabel  Pagan.     See  follounng. 
Ca'  the  Yowes  to  the  Knowes. — Rob't  Burns. — BNL — - 
—HBP— YBF 
(Hark!  the  Mavis.)— OB 

(Ca'  the  Yowes,  etc. — diff.   vers. — claimed  also  by 
Isabel    [or    Isobel]     Pagan.) — OB 
(Ca' the  Yowes.)- WEP  3 
Cabin  Love-song. — J.  A.  Macon. — CD 
Cabin  Philosophy.— Anon.— WR  21 
Cabman's  Story,  The.— Re.  Henry.— CS  29 
Cacoethes  Scribendi. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — AA 
Cadences. — J:  Payne. — VA 
Cadenus    and    Vanessa,    Sel.    fr. — Jonathan    Swift.— 

WEP  3 
Cadet  Grey,  Sel.  fr.     ("Not  yet,  O  friend,  not  yet" — 
song  /r.Can.  II., St.  13.)— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— GG 
Cadmus      and      Harmonia. — Matthew      Arnold.     See 

Empedocles  on  Etna. 
Cadwalader  Fry  and  his  Theory. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. 

— CS32 
Caelica,  Sels.  fr. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke. 
Cffilica  and  Philocell.— EP 

Elizabetha  Regina.     (Sonnet  LXXXII.)— WEP  1 
Seed-time  and  Harvest. — WEP  1 
Sonnet:     "Sion    lies   waste,  and  Thy  Jerusalem.  ' 
(Sonnet  CX.)— WEP  1 
Caelica  and    Philocell. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord    Brooke. 

See  Cselica. 
Caesar.  Sel.  fr.—T:  C.  Irwin.— TIP 
Caesar.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— EDY 

Caesar  Passing  the  Rubicon. — Jas.  S.  Knowles. — CS  4 
— OM 
(Caesar's  Passage  of  the  Rubicon.) — SS 
(Crossing  of  the  Rubicon,  The.— )OS  2 
(Crossing  the  Rubicon.) — ^LLC 
(Passing  of  the  Rubicon,  The.)— KNE— PS  (si.  diff. 
vers.)— SK 
Caesar  Rodney's  Ride. — Elbridge  S.  Brooks. — TMD 
(Rodney's  Ride.)—  CS  29  —  NPS  —  PRR  —  WR  6 
YP 
Caesar's  Death  Justified. — Caius  Cassius. — BLP 
Caesar's  Message  to  Cato. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Cato. 
Caesar's  Passage  of   the    Rubicon. — Jas.  S.  Knowles. 

See  Caesar  Pas.sing  the  Rubicon. 
Caged. — Caroline  A.  Mason. — TAS 
Caged  Bird,  A. — Sarah  Orne  Jewett. — SN 
Cailleach  Bein-y-Vreich. — J :  C.  Shairp. — VA 
Cain,  Ancient  and  Modern. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  4 
Caius  Gracchus,  Sel.  fr. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  below. 
Caius   Gracchus,  Cited    before    the    Censors,    Appeals 
to  the  People.     (Sel.  fr.  Caius   Gracchus,  Act 
II..  So.  3.)— Jas.  S.  Knowles.— SS 
Caius  Marius  to  the  Romans  on  the  Objections  to 
Making  him   General.  —  Sallust.     See  Jugur- 
thine  War,  The. 
Cake  Walk,  The.— Anon.— GH 
Cakes  and  Pies. — Emeroy  Hayward. — WR  17 
Clalais  Sands. — Matthew  Arnold. — BIL 
Calantha's  Dirge. — J :  W.  Ford.  See  Broken  Heart,  The. 
Caldwell  of  Springfield.  —  Fs.    Bret  Harte.  —  BeR  — 

KNE  (si.  aftr.)— MYF— PRR 
Caleb  Krinkle,     Sel.  fr.  (How  Randa  Went  over  the 

River.)— C:  C.  Coffin.— CS  23— DS 
Caleb  West,    Master    Diver,     Sel.     fr.       CEquinoctial 
Storm,  The— Ch.  XIX.,  o6r.)  — Fs.  Hopkinson 
Smith.— NP 
Calendar,  The.— Anon.— OS  1 

(Days  of  the  Month. — diff.  vers.) — BVC 
Calf  Path,  The.— Anon.— BS  25 
Calf's    Heart.     (Fr.    The    Poetical    Cookery-book.) — 

(Punch.)— UFB 
Calgacus  [or  Galgacus]  to  the  Caledonians.     (Fr.  Life  of 
Cnseus  Julius  Agricola — sel.  fr.  Calgacus'  Ad- 
dress to  the  Britons.) — Tacitus. — PS— SS 
Caliber  Fifty-four.— Will  Carleton.- SR  4 
California. — T:  L.  Harris. — A  A 


57 


California 


AN  INDEX  TO  POKTRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


California  Flea,  The— Fred  E.  Brooks.— CS  30 
California's  Giant  Trees. — Anon. — AD 
Caliph  and  Satan,  The.     (  Versified  fr.  Tholuck's  Trans- 
lation   out  of  the  Persian.) — Jas.   F.  Clarke. 

— BNL 
Caliph's  Draught.  The.-««ir  Edwin  Arnold.— VA 
Caliph's    Encampment,    The. — T-    Moore.     See    Lalla 

Rookh. 
Call,  The.— Anon.— OB 
Call,    The.— G:    Darley.— See    Sylvia:    or,    The    May 

Queen. 
Call,  The.— G:  Herbert.— HBP 
Call  of  Duty,  The.— R.  C.  Robbins.— CG  2 
"Call    me   not    dead,    when    I,    indeed,    have   gone." 

(ScrUmer's.)—GG 
Call  of  the  Bugles,  The.— R:  Hovey.— AA 
Call  on  Sir  Walter  Raleigh,  A.— Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt.— AA 
Call  to  Arms,  The — Patrick  Henry.     See  Speech  in  the 

Virginia  Convention . 
Call  to  the  Colors,  The.— .\.  Guiterman.— PAPm 
Called  Back. — Emily  Dickinson. — A  A 
Caller  Herrin'.    (Sei.)— Carolina,  Lady  Nairn.- WR  21 
Caller  Water,  Sel.  fr.—Rob't  Fergusson.— V.'EP  3 
Callicles  beneath   Etna. — Matthew  Arnold.     See  Em- 

pedocles  en  Etna. 
Callicles'  Song. — Matthew  Arnold.     See  Empedocles  on 

Etna. 
Callicles'    Song    of    Apollo. — Matthew    Arnold.     See 

Empedocles  on  Etna. 
Callimachus,  Sel.  fr. — W:  Cory-Johnson. — AVP 

( Heracleitus. )— OB— VA 
Calling,  The. — G:  Sigerson.— TIP 
Calling  a  Boy  in  the  Morning.     (In  Life  in  Danbury.) 

—Jas.  M.  Bailey.— CS  10— KNE— SO 
(Awaking  a  Boy— C.)— M  YF 
Calling  the  Angels  In.— Anon.— BS  20— SR  4 
Calling  the  Roll.— Nathaniel  G.  Shepherd.- HSS  1 
(Roll-call.)  —  AA  —  AWB  —  CS  4  —  CSS  —  HB  — 

HBP  —  HP  —  KNE  —  LLC  —  PAPm  —  PPSr 

—  PRR 
Calling  the  Violet. — Lucy  Larcom. — L(DS 
Calling  them  Up. — G :  Cooper. — AD 
"Calls."— Anon.— BS  16— CS  35 
Calm.— T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Calm  and  Storm  on  Lake  Leman. — Lord  Byron.     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Calm  on  the  Ear  of  Night.— E.  R.  Sears.— LLC  (.abr.) 
(Christmas  Hymn. — abr.)- BS  3 
(Christmas  Song.)— HS— OS  3 
Calmest  of  her  Sex,  The.— Rob't  H.  Newell.— WR  5 
Calpurnia. — Hjalmar  H.  Boyesen. — WR  5 
Calumny. — Frances  S.  Osgood. — AA — HP  {abr.) 
Calvary— W.  J).  HoweUs.- TAS 
Cambyses  and  the  Macrobian  Bow. — Paul  H.  Hayne. 

CS  18 
Camel's  Nose,    The. — Lydia    H.    Sigourney. — OS  1 — 

PoR 
Cameronian's  Dream,  The. — Jas.  Hyslop. — HBP 
Camilla.— C:  A.  Keeler.— AA 
Camp,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marniion. 
Camp  at  Night,  The.— Homer.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Campaign,  The,  Sela.  fr. — Jos.  Addison. 
Campaign,  The.     (Br.  seZ.)- BNL 
Marlborough  at  Blenheim. — WEP  3 
Campaspe. — J:  Lyly.     See  Alexander  and  Campaspe 
CJamp-bell.      (Charades   and     Enigmas,  XXX.  —  C.) 

Winthrop  M.  Praed.— BNL 
(Charade.)— FEP—GN— HBP— PC 
(Charade  on  the  Name  of  Campbell,  the  Poet.) — SS 
Camp-fire,  The.— W.  H.  Caemons— CG  3 
Camping    and    Campers. — W:    H.    H.    Murray.      See 

Cones  for  the  Camp  Fire. 
Can  the  Coimtry  Sustain  the  Expense  of  the  War  and 

Pay  the  Debt   which  it  will  Involve,  Sel.  fr. 

(Elements  of  National  Wealth,  The.) — Jas.  G. 

Blaine.— NC—PFP 
Can  this  be  True?— Anon.— DCR 
Can  you  CJount  the  Stars? — Anon.— NV 
Cana.— Jas.  F.  Clarke.— BNL— TAS 
Canada.— Anon.— BS  13 
Canada.— C-  G.  D.  Roberts.— VA 
Canada  not  Last.— W:  D.  Lighthall.— BNL 
Canada  to  Columbia. — Lyman  C.  Smith. — TCV 
Canada  to  England. — Arthur  J.  Stringer. — TCV 
Canadian  Boat  Song,  A.— T:  Moore.— BFV—BNIi — 

CGd— EPs- FEP— FP— HBP— L(3— OS  2 
Canadian  Folk-song,  A.— V,'.  W.  Campbell.— VA 
Canadian  Hunter's  Song. — Susanna  S.  Moodie. — VA 
Canadian  Streams.- C:  G.  Roberts.- TCV 
Canadians  on  the  .Nile,     The.— W :  W.  Smith.— TCV 
Canal-boat,  The.     (SI.  abr.)— Harriet  B.  Stowe.— MMR 
Canary,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 


Canary  at  the  Farm,  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— WR  2 

Canary's  Storv,  The.— E.  V.  S.— NV 

Candida.— B.  A.  Gould,  Jr.— CG  1 

Candidate,  The.— Anon.— CS  36 

Candidate's  Creed,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Biglow 

Papers,  The. 
Candidate's  Letter,   The. — Jas.   R.   Lowell.     See  Big- 
low  Papers,  The. 
Candle-light's  Lament,  The.     (Punch  Bawl.) — CG  3 
Candlemas.     (In  Two  Promises.) — Anon. — BVC 
Candlemas. — Alice  Brown. — AA 
Candlemas. —  Rob't    Herrick.        See   Ceremonies     for 

Candlemasse  Eve. 
Candlemas   Eve. — Rob't   Herrick.    See  Ceremonies  for 

Candlemasse  Eve. 
Candor.— H  •  C.  Bunner.— AWH— CH— CS  35— DR— 

HBR— TAV— THP 
Candor.— T:  Otway.— KNE 

Cane-bottomed  Chair,  The.  (C.)— W:  M.  Thackeray.— 
BS  6— CS  17— DDR— TMR 
(Bachelor's  Cane-bottomed  Chair,  The.) — HPE 
Cannibal  and  the  Skeleton,  The. — Hector  Fezandi^. — 

MN 
Cannon  Song.— Harry  T.  Peck.— PPh 
Canoe,  The.— Isabella  V.  Crawford.— VA 
Canoe  Song. — E.  Fr6re  Champney. — CG  2 
Canst  Thou  Count  the  Stars?— Anon. — YBT 
"Canst  thou  not  minister  to  a  mind  diseased." — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Canteen,  The.— Miles  O'Reilly.— CS  19 
Canterbury    Pilgrims,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.      See 

following. 
Canterbury  Tales,  The,  SeU.  fr. — Geoffrey  Chaucer. 
Prologue : 

Canterbury  Pilgrims,  The.     (Cond.) — BNL 

Knight,  The.     (SeZ.V- OS  3 

Portraits  from  the  Canterbury  Tales:  The  Monk 

and  the  Friar.     (Sel.) — ESs 
Prologue    [to    the    Canterbury   Tales],    The.  — 
BNL  (br.  sete.)- PHS  («ei.)— WEP  1  (abr.) 
Clerkes  Tale,  The. 

(Griselda— abr. )— EPs 

(Clerkes  Tale,  The— sei.)- WEP  1 
Frankeleynes  Tale,  The.     (A6r.)— WEP  1 
Knightes  Tale,  The. 

(Destiny — br.  sel.) — EPs 
(Knightes  Tale,  The— seZ.)- WEP  1 
(Morning  in  May — br.  sel.) — BNL 
(Palamon     and     Arcite  —  tr.     by     Dryden.)  — 
WEP  2  (sel.    fr.    Bk.    III.)— WRll    (sel.    fr. 
Bk.  I.) 
Nunnes  Preestes  Tale,  The. 

(Fox  and  Cock — br.  sd.) — EPs 
Phisiciens  Tale,  The. 


(Virginia — br.  sel.) — EPs 
ale  of  the  Man  of  Lawe,  The.- 


Tale  of  the  Man  of  Lawe,  The.— WEP  1  (sel.) 
(Emperor's  Daughter  Stands  Alone,  An — sel.) — 
PYO 
Wife's  Tale,  The. 

(Gentility — br.  sel.) — EPs 
Canuleius  again.st  Patrician  Arrogance.  —  Livy.      See 

History  of  Rome. 
Canute  the  Dane. — Michael  Field.     See  following. 
Canute  the  Great,  Sel.  fr. — Michael  Field. — VA 

(Canute  the  Dane — sel.  fr.  above.) — EHT 
Canvassing  under  Disadvantages. — C:  B.  Lewis. — CS  14 
Caoch,  the  Piper.— J.  Keegan.— CS  4— PEB  4 
Cape  Cod,   Sel.  fr.   (Highland   Light,   The.)— H:   D. 

Thoreau.— APr 
Cape   Cod    Folks,    Sel.    fr.     (Grandma    Keeler    Gets 
Grandpa  Keeler  Ready  for  Sunday  School.) — 
Sarah  P.  McL.  Greene.- NP 
Cape-cottage  at  Sunset. — W:  B.   Glazier. — BNL  (abr.) 

—HBP 
Capers  et  Caper.- Eugene  F.  Ware.— THP 
Capital  Punishment. — Myra  Townsend. — CS  1 
Cap'n  Peleg  Bimker  Describes  a  Game  of  Base  Ball. — 

E:  F.  UnderhiU.— CS  32 
Capping  Quotations.     (Literary  Recreations.) — Eliz 

Lloyd.— BS  13 
Caprice. — Anon. — GPL 
Caprice.- W :  D.  Howells.— OH 
Capriciousness. — F.  T.  Cooper. — CG  1 
Captain,  The.— J:  G.  C.  Brainard.- TAV 
Captain,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Away,  Delights.) — J:  Fletcher 

—OB 
Captain,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— SO 
Captain  Car;  or,  Edom  o'  Gordon.     (In  Percy's  Re 
liques.) — Anon. — PEB  1 
(Adam  o'  Gordon — diff.  vers.  — abr.) — BFV 
(Edom  o'  Gordon — C. — diif.  vers.) — OB 
(SZ.abr.)- BB— WEP  1 


58 


TITLE    INDEX 


Cassamen 


Captain  General,  The. — Anon.-— PS 

Captain  Gold  and  French  Janet. — A.  M.  F.  (Robinson) 

Darme.steter. — FEB  4 
Captain  Hale  and  Major  Andr^. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. 

See  Andre  and  Hale. 
Capt.  Hurricane  Jones  on  the  Miracles. — S:  L.  Clemens. 

— DFY 
Captain  Jinks  of  the  Horse  Marines,  Sel.  jr.    (Di's  Mit- 
ten.)—W:  Clyde  Fitch.— CG  1 
Captain  Joe. — F.  Hopkinson  Smith. — CS  37 
Captain  Kempthorn.     {Play — ad.  fr.  John  Endicott.) — 

H.  W.  Longfellow.— NDP 
Captain  Lean. — Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Captain    Molly  at   Monmouth. — W:   Collins. — PRR — 

WR  10 
(Irish  Molly. )—SR  9 
(Molly  Maguire  at  Monmouth.) — PAP 
Captain   (of  Militia)   Sir    Dilberry  Diddle. — Anon. — 

OES 
Captain  Reece.     (C.)— W:  S.  Gilbert.— BNL—FEP- 

GN— THP 
(Captain  Reece  of  the  Mantlepiece.) — CS  19 
Captain  Reece  of  the  Mantlepiece. — W :  S.  Gilbert.     See 

foregoing. 
Captain   Stood  on  the   Carronade,  The. — Frd'k    Mar- 

ryat.— BVC 
(Old  Navy,  The. )—LH 
Captain  Sword.— Leigh  Hunt.— A VP—GN 
Captain  Ward  and  the  Rainbow. — Anon. — FEB  2 
Captain's    Daughter,    The.— Jas.    T.    Fields.— CSS— 

DJS  («/.  a6r.)— PPSr— WCL 
(Ballad  of  the  Tempest— C.)—CS  19— FEP— HBP 

— LC 
(Isn't  God  upon  the  Ocean,  etc. — ahr.) — TFS 
(Tempest,  The.)— BNL— FP— GP— TAV— WCLG  1 
(On  the  Ocean— 8i.  a6r.)— YBT 
Captain's  Feather,  The.— S:  M.  Peck.— AA 
Captain's  Ladv,  The. — Rob't  Burns. — LC 
Captain's  Well,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BS  18 
Captive,  The.— Guy  W.  Carryl.— CG  2 
Captive  Bird,  The.— Anon.— LLC 
Captive  Humming-bird,  The.— Joel  T.  Hart.- HP 
Captivity,  The,  Sela.  fr. — Oliver   Goldsmith. 

"Good  man  suffers  but  to  gain.  A."     (Air  fr.  Act 

I.,Sc.  1.)— HDL 
Wretch  Condemned  with  Life  to  Part,  The. — (Br. 

eel.  fr.  Act  II.)— FEP 
Capture  of  Andr^,   Tne. — Chavmcey  M.   Depew.     See 

Capture  of  Major  Andr^,  The.  " 

Capture    of    Lookout    Moimtain,    The.     (Sel.) — B:  F. 

Taylor.— NC 
Capture  of  Major  Andr^,  The. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. — 

WR22 
(Capture  of  Andr^,  The— ahr.)— NC 
Capture  of  Quebec,  The.— Jas.  D.  McCabe.— PRR 
Capture  of  Quebec,  The.— W :  Warburton.— WR  10 
Capture  of  the  Guerri^re  by  the  Constitution,  The. — 

Philip  Freneau.— EDY 
Capture  of  the  Whale. — Jas.   F.   Cooper.     «See  Pilot, 

The. 
Capture  of  Ticonderoga,  The.— Ethan  Allen.— WR  10 
Captured  Bumble-bee,  The.— Nellie  Wood.— WR  17 
Caractacus. — Bernard  Barton. — BNL 
Caractacus. — A.  J.  H.  Duganne. — CS  32 
Caradoc,  the  Bard  of  the  Cymrians. — Sir  E:  Bulwer- 

Lytton.—  SS 
(Address  of  Caradoc  the  Bard.) — BLP 
Caravans. — J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 
Carcamon. — H:  A.  Beers. — FEP 
Carcasonne. — Gustave  Nadaud  (tr.  by  Fs.  F.  Browne). 

HBR 
(Tr.  by.  M.  E.  W.  Sherwood.)— CR— MR— MRS 
(Tr.  by  J.  R.  Thompson.)— BFV—BS  17— OS  3-^ 

SM 
Card  Houses.     (New  York  Graphic.) — HP 
Cardinal  Bird,  The.— W:  D.  Gallagher.— A  A— SN 
Cardinal  Manning. — Aubrey  T:  DeVere. — VA 
Cardinal  Manning.     (London  Punch.) — EDY 
Cardinal  Wolsey. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry 

VIII. 
Cardinal  Wolsey,  on  Being  Cast  Off  by  King  Henry 

VIII. — W;     Shakespeare.     jSe«     King     Henry 

VIII. 
Cardinal  Wolsey's  Soliloquy. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

King  Henry  VIII. 
Cardinal's  Godson,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KH 
Cardinal's  Soliloquy. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.     See  Riche- 
lieu* or  The  Conspiracy. 
Cards  and  Kisses. — J :  Lyly.     See  Alexander  apd  Cam- 

paspe. 
Care. — Virginia  W.  Cloud. — A  A 


Care  of  God,  The.— Anon.— BS  7— CS  18 
Care-charmer  Sleep. — S:  Daniel.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 
"Care-charmer  Sleep,   son   of  the   sable   Night." — S 

Daniel.     <See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 
Care-charming  Sleep. — J:  Fletcher.     <See  Valentinian. 
Career  of  Gordon,  The.— Frd'k  J.  Swift.— NC 
Careless  Childhood.   (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Careless  Content.— J:  Byrom.— FEP— WEP  3 
Careless  Doll,  A.— Anon.— DCP 
"Carest  Thou  not?     O  Thou  that  giveth  life." — Anon. 

— GG8K*(r 

Carey,  of  Carson.— C:  G.  Leland.— THP 

Carillon.  (Fr.  The  Belfry  of  Bruges.)— H:  W.  Long- 
fellow.—BNL 

Carl.— Anon. — BS  8 
(For  Love.)— CS  12 

Carl  Pretzel's  Lecture  on  Man. — Anon. — DRR 

Carl  Pretzel's  Ride.— Carl  Pretzel.— FAS 

Carl  Springel. — Anon. — FR 

Carlo  and  the  Freezer. — T.  DeWitt  Tahnage. — WR  6 

Carl's  Menagerie.     (The  Nursery.)- — HSS  2 

Carlyle.- Paul  H.  Hayne.— EDY 

Carlyle  and  Emerson. — Montgomery  Schuyler. — A  A 

Carman's  Account  of  a  Lawsuit,  A. — Sir  David  Lynd- 
say.— GP 

Carmelita. — Julia  M.  Dunn. — WR  15 

Carmen  Bellicosum. — Guy  H.  McMaster. — AA — AWB 
—  BNL  —  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  —  HB  —  HBP— 
jn QQ  2 

(Old  Continentals,  The.)— BS  13— PAP— PAPm— 
SE 

(Song  of  the  War.)— KNE 
Carnival  of  Sports,  A  .     (J?n<.)— Verend  Minster.- EE 
Carol:     "I  Sing  of  a  Maiden." — Anon. — OB 
Carol:     "We   bring  the  holly,"  etc.      (W.    music.) — 

Anon. — HE 
Carol,  A:  Standard  of  the  Cross. — Harriet  Brewer. — 

CGI 
Carolan  and  Bridget  Cruise. — S:  Lover. — PEB  4 
Carolina.— R.  W.  Page.— CG  3 
Carolina.— H :  Timrod.— ASL 

Carolina  and  Mecklenburg. — Jas.  A.  Delke. — BLP 
Caroline,  Sel.  fr.    (Pt.  II.— To  the  Evening  Star.)— T: 

Campbell.— PGT  1 
Carpe  Diem. — W:  Browne.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Carpe  Diem. — Th^ophile  Marzials. — VA 
Carpe  Diem. — W:  Shake.speare.     See  Twelfth  Night. 
Carpe  Diem.     (In  The   House  of  a  Hundred  Lights.) 

— F:  R.  Torrence.— AA 
Carpenter  and  his  Apprentice,  The. — Anon. — SED 
Carriage  and  Couple,  The. — Anon. — MYF 

(Be  Content.)— CSS  (abr.)— PPSr 

(True  Source  of  Contentment.) — CS  9 
Carrie's  Birthday  Cake. — Anon.— PS — TT 
Carronade,  The. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Ninety-three. 
Carrying  the  Clothes  to  the  Wash.     (Tab.) — Anon. — 

TCP 
Carthage  in  Peril. — Livy.     See  History  of  Rome. 
Carthon,  Sel.  fr.  (Address  to  the  Sun.) — Jas.  McPher- 
son.— CS  22  ^^  ■ 

(Ossian's  Address  to  the  Sun.)— HSS  2— PTS 
Cartwheels.— Madge  Elliot.— CS  34 
Carven  Shores,  The.— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
Carving  a  Name.— Horatio  Alger.— CSS— PPSr 
Casa  Guidi  Windows,  Sels.  fr. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. 

Casa  Guidi  Windows,  Sels.  /r.— WEP  4 

Death  of  Savonarola. — EDY 

Juliet  of  Nations. — VA 

Sursum  Corda. — VA 
Casa  Wappy.— D:  M.  Moir.— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Casabianca. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — BNL — CGd  (abr.) — 
EDY  —  FEP  —  HB  —  HBP  —  LH  —  OS  1  — 
PC— SS— WEP  4 
Casa's  Dirge. — D:  M.  Moir. — VA 
Case  Altered,  The.— Anon.— SCS 
Case  of  Go  Hang. — Anon. — TMR 
Case  of  Indigestion,  A. — Anon. — PS 
Case  of  Pedigree,  A. — Anon. — CS  28 
Case  of  Spoons  and  Brother  Tom,  A. — Anon. — WR  24 
Case  of  Young  Bangs,  The.— C:  H.  Clark.— BeR 
Casey  at  the  Bat. — Phineas  Thayer  [at.  also  to  Jos.  Q. 
Murphy].— THP— WR  14 

(SeZ.)— CDV— CS  35— DSS— GH— PS 

(Versions  vhry  si.) 
Casey's  Little  Boy. — Nixon  Waterman. — WR  21 
"Cash."— Anon.— GH— PS 
Cashel  of  Munster. — Sir  S :  Ferguson. — OB 
Casket  Scene,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Merchant 

of  Venice,  The. 
Casquettes,   The,   Sel.   fr. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — 

AVP 
Cassamen  and  Dowsabel. — Michael  Drayton. — EP 


59 


Cassandra 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Cassandra  Brown. — Anon. — SR  6 

Cassio's  Lost  Reputation. — W:  Shakespeare.  See 
Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. 

Cassius. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Caesar. 

Caasius  against  Csesar.— jW :  Shakespeare.  See  Julius 
Caesar. 

Cassius'  Complaint  of  Cesar. — W:  Shakespeare.  See 
Juliu^  Csesar. 

Cassius  Instigating  Brutus  against  Cffisar. — W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Julius  Csesar. 

Cassius    to   Brutus. — W:     Shakespeare.     See     Julius 

Cassius'  Whistle.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  9 
Cassy. — Harriet  B.  Stowe.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 
Cast  thy  Bread  upon   the  Waters. — Bernard   Barton. 

—HDL 
Castara,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Habington. 

Against  them  who  Lay  Unchastity  to  the    Sex  of 

Women.     {Fr.  Pt.  II.)— WEP  2 
Cogitabo  pro  Peccato  Meo.     {Fr.  Pt.  III.)— ELP 
Description  of  Castara,  The.     (C. — fr-   Pt.    II.) — 
OEL— WEP  2 
(Castara. )— FEP— HBP 
Nox   Nocti    Indicat    Scientiam.     {Fr.   Pt.   III.) — 

ELP— OB— PGT  I— WEP  2 
To  Castara  in  a  Trance.     {Fr.  Pt.  II.)— WEP  2 
To  Castara.     Of    True    Delight.     {Fr.    Pt.    II.)— 

WEP  2 
To  Castara.     The  Reward  of  Innocent  Love.   (C — 
fr.  Pt.  II.)— ELP 
(Reward  of  Innocent  Love,  The — »l.  abr.) — ES 
("  We  saw  and  woo'd  each  other's  eyes" — si.  abr.) 
— YBF 
To  Castara,  upon  the  Death  of  a  Lady.     {Sel.  fr. 

Pt.  II.)— WEP  2 
To  Cupid,  upon  a  Dimple  in  Castara's  Cheek.     {Fr. 

Pt.  I.)— ES— WEP  2 
To  Roses  in  the  Bosom  of  Castara.     {Fr.  Pt.  I.) — 

ES— OB— WEP  2 
To  the  Moment  Last  Past.     {Fr.  Pt.  11.)— ELP 
Castaway,  The.— W:  Cowper.— PGT  2— WEP  3 
Castell  Gloom. — Carolina,  Lady  Nairn. — FEP 
Casting  Bread  upon  the  Waters. — Mrs.   E.   J.   Good- 
fellow.— SSE 
Castle  by  the  Sea,  The.— Ludwig  Uhland  {tr.  by  B.W. 

Longfellow).— HBP— PHS 
Castle  in  the  Air,  The— T;  Paine.— BNL 
Castle  in  the  Air,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  —  R:  H.  Stoddard. — 

BIL 
Cattle  of  Indolence,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  Thomson. 

Address  to  the  Indolent.— (Sei.  fr.  Canto  II.) — KNE 
Castle  of  Indolence,  Canto  I.     {Sel.) — BNL 

{SI.  diff.  arr.)— WEP  3 
Castle  of  Indolence,  Canto  I.     {Br.  sel.) — BNL 
Freedom  of  Nature.     (Br.    sel.  fr.    Canto    III.) — 

GP 
Stanza    for    Thomson's     CaStle  of    Indolence  {in 
Can.  I.— by  Lord  Lyttelton).— BNL 
Castle  Ruins,  The. — W:  Barnes. — VA 
Castle-builder,  The.— La  Fontaine.— BVC 
Castles  in    the    Air.— Jas.    Ballantyne.— FEP— FP— 

WCL  {Ang.  vers.) 
Cast-off  Garments. — W :   A.   Butler.     See  Nothing  to 

Casualty,  A.— Anon.— BS  20— WR  6 

Cat  and  Canary.— Mrs.  Clara  D.  Bates. — TT 

Catacombs,  The. — Emilio  Castelar. — OS  3 

Catacombs,  The.     {Golden  Hours.)— FS 

Catalectic  Monody,     A.     {Cncikshank's     Omnibus.) — 

HPE 
Catalogue.    (Fr,  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Catalogue  of  Dickens'  Works. — Anon. — CS  16 
Cataracket,  A.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Cataract  of   Lodore,   The. — Rob't    Southey  . — BNL — 

FEP— GN— IR— KNE— MRS— SO 
(Abr.)- PEO— SA— SPE 
Catastrophe,  A. — Anon. — CS  6 — OM 
■Catastrophe,  A.— David  L.  Proudfit.— CS  15— DLS 
Catawba  Wine.— H :  W.  Longfellow.— AE 
Catch,  A.— R:  H.  Stoddard.— AA 
Catch  the  Sunshine.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Catching  a  Whale.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Catching  the  Cat. — Marg.  Vandegrift. — WR  3 
Catching  the  Colt.— Annie  D.  G.  Robinson.— BS  11 
Catching  the  Morning  Train. — Max  Adeler.     See  Out 

of  the  Hurly  Burly. 
Cat-eater,  The.^Anon.— CS  15— MDD  {diff.  vers.) 
Categorical  Courtship. — Anon. — SCS 
Cathedral. — W:  Congreve. — EPs 
•Catherine  de  Medicis. — W:  M.  Punshon. — NC 
•Catholic  Love.— C-  Wesley.— WEP  3 


Catholic  Psahn,  The.— Eliz.  I.  Hubbard.'— CS  18 
Catholic  Question,  The,  Feb.  22,  1793,  Sel.  fr.     (Dis- 
qualification of  Roman  Catholics.) — H:  Grat- 
tan.— SS 
Catholic  Question,  The,    May   13,   1805,  Sel.   fr — H: 

Grattan.— SS 
Catholic  Question,  The,  May  31,  1811,  Sel.  fr.     (Relig- 
ion Independent  of  Government.) — H:  Grattan. 
— SS 
Catholic  Question,  The,  April  23,  1812,  Sel.  fr.     (Sec- 
tarian Tyranny.  1812.)     H:  Grattan.- PS— SS 
Catholicity. — Anon. — CP 
Catholics  of  Ireland,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (On  Charges  against 

Roman  Catholics.)— R:  L.  Shell.— SS 
Catiline,  SeU.fr.—G:  Croly. 

Catiline's  Defiance.     (Act  III.,Sc.  2 — abr.)- BS  5 
—  CR  — CS  3  — FR  — FTR  — HNS  — KNE— 
OM(a6r. )— PPSr— SO— SPE— SS 
(Srf.)— PS— SC  {shorter  sel.)— WRD 

(Catiline  on  Hearing  his  Sentence  of  Banish- 
ment—«eZ.)— OS  3 
Catiline  to  his  Friends,  after  Failing  in  his  Election 
to  the  Consulship.     {Sel.  fr.  I.,  2.) — SS 
(Bitter   Disappointment  —  sel.  —  ptly.  same.)  — 
KNE 
Catiline  to  the  Gallic  Conspirators.     {Sel.  fr.  II., 

2.)— OM— PS— SS 
Catiline  to  the  Roman  Army.    {Sel.  fr.  V.,  2.) — 
BNL 
(Catiline's  Last  Harangue  to  his  Army — abr.) — 
CS  5— KNE— PS— SS 
Catiline  Denounced. — Cicero.     See      First      Oration 

against  Catiline. 
Catiline  Expelled.     {Fr.  Second  Oration  against  Cati- 
line.)—Marcus  T.  Cicero.— CS  5— OS  3— PS— 
SS 
Catiline,  on  Hearing  his  Sentence  of  Banishment. — G : 

Croly.     See  Catiline. 
Catiline  to  his  Army   near  Fsesule   [or  Fsesulte] — Ben 

Jonson.— PS— SS 
Catiline  to  his  Friends,  after  Falling  in  his  Election  to 

the  Consulship. — G :  Croly.     See  Catiline. 
Catiline  to   the   Gallic    Conspirators. — G:   Croly.     See 

Catiline. 
Catiline  to  the  Roman  Army. — G:  Croly.     See  Cati- 
line. 
Catiline's  Defiance. — G:  Croly.     See  Catiline. 
Qatiline's  Last    Harangue    to    his    Arm.v. — G-    Croly. 

See  Catiline. 
Cato,  Sels.  fr. — Jos.  Addison. — SS 

Caesar's  Message  to  Cato.     (Act  IV.,  Sc.  2.) — PS 
Cato  on  Immortality.     (V.,  1.) — SO 

(Cato  on  the  Immortality  of  the  Soul.) — VSG — 

WCLG  2 
(Cato's     Soliloquy.)  —  DDR  —  HNS  —  LLC  — 

SAE  (sel.) 
(Cato's  Soliloquy  on  Immortality.)— CS  1 — FR — 

KNE— OS  3— PPSr— SS 
(Cato's  Soliloquy  on  the  Immortality  of  the  Soul.) 

—FTR 
(Immortal  Part,  The— sei.)— GP 

(Soul,  The.)— FP 
("It  must  be  so;  Plato,  thou  reasonest  well" — 

sel.)— GG 
(Soliloquy  on  Immortality.) — BNL 
Cato  over  the  Dead  Body  of  his  Son.  {Sel.  fr.  IV.,  4.) 

—PS 
Death  of  Cato.    {Br.  sel.  fr.  V.,  4.)— EDY 
Sempronius's  Speech  for  War.     (Sel.  fr.    II.,  1.) — 
BNL 
(Speech  of  Sempronius  [for  War].)— LLC— PPSr 
Cato  on  [the]  Immortality  [of  the  Soulj. — Jos.  Addison 

See  Cato. 
Cato  over  the  Dead  Body  of  his  Son. — Jos.  Addison. 

See  Cato. 
Cato's  Soliloquy  [on  the  Immortality  of  the  Soul]. — 

Jos.  Addison.     See  Cato. 
Cat-questions. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Cats.— Anon.— FND 
Cats,  The.— Anon.— WR  14 

Cat's  Bath,  The.— Anon.— DS— NPS— YA— YP 
Cat's  Serenade,  The. — Anon. — DLS 
Cat's  Tea-party,  The.— F:  E.  Weatherly.- BVC 
Cat's-cradle.— Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Cat-tails.— Anon.— WR  17 
Cat-tails.— Annie  W.  Whitnev.— BS  1 
Cattle  of  his  Hand,  The.— Wilbur  Underwood.- AA 
Catullus  to      his      Book.     Caius      Valerius     Catullus 

{tr.  by  A.  Lang).— LBB— MBB 
Caudle  has  been  Made  a  Mason.     (C. — abr.) — Douglas 
Jerrold.— CS  3— OM 
(Mr.  Caudle  has  been  Made  a  Mason.) — MDD 


60 


TITLE    INDEX 


'Ceptin' 


Caudle,  whilst  Walking  with  his  Wife, has  been  Bowed 

to  by  a   Younger   and  even  Prettier  Woman 

than  Mrs.  Caudle.     (C.) — Douglas  Jerrold. 
(Trouble  about  Miss  Prettyman — arr.  as  dial.) — 
MPD 
Caudle's    Wedding    Day.     (Mrs.    Caudle  Thinks  "it 

would  Look  well  to  Keep  theii  Wedding-day  " 

—C.)— Douglas  Jerrold.— CS  9 
Caught.— K.  E.  Barry.- CS  31— WR  3 
Caught  in  the  Maelstrom. — C :  A.  Wiley. — CS  16 
Caught  in    the    Quicksand. — Victor    Hugo. — BS  10 — 

CS  15— CSS— PS— SA— SO 
Caught  in  their  Own  Trap. — "  Bob  o'Link." — DDD 
Cauldron  of  Ceridwen,  The.— T:  L.  Peacock.— PEB  3 
Cause,  The.     {Punch.)— HFE 
Cause  and  Effect. — Anon. — PR — YA 
Cause  for  Complaint. — Anon. — WR  12 
Cause  of  Bunker  Hill,  The.  (  Sel.  fr.  The  Good  Fight.) 

— G:  W:  Curtis.— NC 
Cause  of   Temperance,    The. — J:    B.    Gough. — BS  4 — 

CS  9— OM  {si.  obr.)— PS 
Cause  of  the  South,  The. — Abram  J.  Ryan.   See  Senti- 
nel Songs. 
Cause  of  the  Union ,  The.— Rob't  C.  Winthrop.   See  Flag 

of  the  Union,  The. 
Caution. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Cautious  Wooer,  A. — Miller  Vinton. — WR  7 
Cavalier,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Rokeby. 
,  Cavalier  Tunes. — Rob't  Browning. 

Boot  and  Saddle.— EHT—LC— MRS— VA 
Give  a  Rouse.— EHT  (a«w.)— HBP— MRS— VA 
Marching  Along.— EHT— FEP— MRS— VA 
Cavalier's  Choice,  The. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — WR  8 
Cavalier's  Escape,    The. — Walter    Thombury. — GN — 

HB— OS  2 
Cavalier's  Song,  The.— W:  Motherwell.— BNL  {sel.)— 

GN— HBP— OS  3— YBF  ^^ 

Cavalry  Charge,    The.— Fs.  A.  Durivage.— AWB— BS  2 
Cavalry  Charge,  The.— G :  P.  Lathrop.— WR  5 
Cavalry  Charge,  The.— Edmund  C.  Stedman.— OS  2 
Cavalry  Charge,  The.— B:  F.  Taylor.— AWB— BS  26— 

LLC— PAPm 
Cavalry  Crossing  a  Ford. — Walt  Whitman. — AA 
Cavalry  Scout,  The. — Edmundus  Scotus. — WR  10 
Cavalry  Song.— W:  H.  Hayne.— BS  26 
Cavalry  Song.— Rossiter  W.  Raymond. — AWB 
Cavalry  Song. — Edmund   C.    Stedman.     See  Alice   of 

Monmouth. 
Cave  of  Mammon,  The. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Fae- 
rie Queene,  The. 
Cave  of   Sleep,    The. — Edmund    Spenser.     See   Faerie 

Queene,  The. 
Cave  of  Staffa  [  (after  the  crowd  had  departed) — C.J. 

(Sonnet  XXIX.)— W:  Wordsworth— EPs 
Caw!  Caw!  Caw!— E:  Carswell.— DLS— LPS— PP— PS 
Caxtons,   The,  Sel.  fr.  (London  House-tops — cond.  jr. 

Pt.  XIV.,  Ch.  II.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— TMR 
Caxtoniana,  Sel.  fr.  ("Truth,  as  humanity  knows  it," 

etc. — hr.  sel.  fr.  Essay  XXII.,  Motive  Power.) 

— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— GG 
C^ad,  Mile  FAilte,  Elim!     {Fr.  The  Invasion.)— Gerald 

Griffin.— TIP 
Cean  Dubb  Deelish. — Sir  S:  Ferguson. — OB 
Cean  Duv    Deelish. — Dora    Sigerson      (Mrs.     Clement 

Shorter).- TIP 
"Cease  to  Do  Evil."— Denis  F.  McCarthy.— TIP 
Ceaseless  Aspirations. — Rob't  C.  Waterston. — TAS 
Cecil.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Cecil  Rhodes.— Rudyard  Kipling.— EDY 
Cedar  Mountain.— Annie  Fields. — EDY 
Cedars  of  Lebanon,  The. — Letitia  E.  Landon. — PEO 
Celebrated  .lumping  Frog,  The. — S:  L.  Clemens.     See 

Jumping  Frog,  The. 
Celebration  of  Charis,  A,  Sels.  fr. — Ben  Jonson. 

Celebration  of  Charis,  A.  (Her  Triumph— C.) — ELP 

— GP 
(Charis'  Triumph.)— ELP— LC—WEP  2 
(Devil  is  an  Ass,  The,  Sel.  fr. )—SS 

{2nd  and  3rd.  sis.   only  are  fr.  "Devil,  The," 

etc.— Act  II.,  Sc.  2.) 
(So  Sweet  is  She— seZ.)- GN 

(Of  his  Love's  Beauty.)— YBF 
(Song.)— EPs 
(Triumph,  The.)— OB 

(Triumph    of   Charis.)— ES— FEP— HBP— PHS 
Discourse  with  Cupid.     (His  Discourse  with  Cupid 

— C.)— HBP 
Celestial  Army,  The.— T:  B.  Read.— KNE 
Celestial  Country,  The. — Bernard  de  Morlaix  {tr.  by  J : 

M.  Neale.)— BNL  (abr. )— FEP 
(Jerusalem  the  Golden — abr.) — LLC 
(SeZ.)— HDL— PYO 


Celestial  Love,  The.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— TAS 

Celestial  Passion,  The,  Sels.  fr.—R:  W.  Gilder. 
Celestial  Passion,  "The.    (Prelude.) — AA 
Holy  Land.     (Part  II.,  6.) 
Morning  and  Night.     (Pt.  III.,  5.)— TAS 
Song  of  a  Heathen,  The.     (Pt  II.,  5.)— AA— TAS 
Voice  of  the  Pine,  The.     (Pt.  III.,  4.)— SN 

Celia  Singing.     (C.)— T:  Carew.— ES— WEP  2 
(To  Celia  Singing.)— OEL 

Celia  Singing.— T:  Stanley.— WEP  2 

Celia's  Home-coming. — A.  M.  F.  (Robinson)    Darme- 

Celinda.— E:,  Lord  Herbert.— EPs 
Cello,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.— AA 
Celtic  Cross,  The.— T:  D'A.  McGee.— VA 
Celts  and  Saxons.- T:  Davis.— TIP 
Cenci,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Percy  B.  Shelley. 

Fear.     (Br.sel.fr.   Act  IV.,  Sc.  4.)— KNE 
Italian  Ravine,  An.    {Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  1.) — BNL 
Cenotaph,  A.— P.  Dana.— TL 
Census  Enumerator,  The. — G :  Thatcher. — TK 
Census  Taker,  The.— Millie  M.  Olcott. — StD 
Census-taker's  Experience,  A. — Anon.^ — CS  6 
Centennial  Address  delivered  at  Valley  Forge,  1878, 
Sels.  fr.- — H:  A.  Brown. 
Valley  Forge.— BLP  {cond.)— BS  6— CS  16 

{SI.  cond.)— DS—SR  8 
ValleyForge.— SR  10 
Centennial  Cantata. — Sidney  Lanier.     See  Centennial 

Meditation  of  Columbia,  The. 
Centennial  Celebration  of  Concord  Fight,  Sels.  fr. — G: 
W.  Curtis. 
Changes  of  a  Hundred  Years. — FD  2 
Father  of  the  Revolution,  The.— FD  2 

(Samuel   Adams   and   the   New   England   Town 
Meeting — abr.) — NC 
Heroes  of  '76.— PRR 

(Minute  Men  of  '75,  The.)— BS  2 

{Abr.)— FD  1— TMD 
(Minute  Men  of  '76,  The— 6r.  seZ. )—SC 
Our  Worst  Foes.— FD  2 

("Wherever  party  spirit  shall  strain  the  guaran- 
tees of  freedom" — sel.) — GG 
Paul  Revere's  Ride. — NC 

{SI.  di/jf.)— FD  2— PPS 
Who  Was  the  Minute-man?— FD  1— WCLG  2 
"Centennial"  Echoes.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Centennial  Hymn.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AA— BNL  {sel.) 

— BS  5— CS  13— SM— SR  8 
Centennial  Meditation  of  Columbia,  The  {A  Cantata), 
Br.  sel. Jr. — Sidney  Lanier. 
America. — OS  2 

(Centennial   Meditation  of  Columbia,  The,  Sel. 

^•.— air.)— BNL 
(Dear  Land  of  All  my  Love — abr.) — GN 
Centennial  Ode,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Sprague. 

Fathers  of  New  England,  The.— WR  10 
Indians,  The.     {Br.  «eZ.)— EPs— GN 
Our  Fathers.— MYF 
Centennial  of    1876,    The.— W:    M.    Evarts.— TMD — 

WR  10 
Centennial  Oration.     (Peroration  fr.  Oration  delivered 
on  Centennial  Anniversary.) — H:  A.  Brown. — 
BS  4— CS  12— PRR 
("My  countrymen!   The  moments  are  quickly  pas»- 

ing" — sd.) — GG 
("My  countrymen!   This  anniversary  has  gone  by 
forever" — sel.) — GG 
Centennial  Oration,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop. 
Admonition  to  Coming  Generations. — FD  2 
American  Age,  The. — FD  1 
Effect  of  American  Example. — FD  2 
Glorious  Destiny  of  England,  The. — FD  1 
John  Hancock. — FD  2 
Thomas  Jefferson  and  John  Adams. — FD  2 
Who  and  What  are  Great  Men?— FD  I 
Centennial  Speech. — C:  C    Albertson. — SR  8 
Centennial  Speech. — J:  H.  Barrows. — SR   8 
Centennial  Speech. — Nelson  Blake. — SR  8 
Centennial  Speech.     (Abr.) — Chauncey  Depew. — SR  8 

(Washington's  Inauguration — diff.  abr.) — MRS 
Centennial  Speech. — Frank  W.  Gunsaulus. — SR  8 
Centennial  Speech. — Emil  G.  Hirsch. — SR  8 
Centennial  Speech. — Rob't  Mclntyre. — SR  8 
Centennial  Speech. — W:  E.  Mason. — SR  8 
Centennial  Speech. — J:  M.  Thurston. — SR  8 
Central  American  Treaty,  The.— W:  H.  Seward. — MRS 
Centralization  in  the  United  States. — H :  W.   Grady. 

See  Against  Centralization. 
Century  from   Washington,   A. — Dan'l   Webster.     See 

Character  of  Wa.shington,  The. 
'Ceptin'  Ike.— W-  Devere.— WR  24 


61 


'Ceptin' 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AKD  RECITATIONS 


"'Ceptin'  Jim." — Lewis  R.  Clement. — WR  21 

Ceremonies  for  Candlemasse  Eve.    (C.) — Rob't  Herriok. 
(Candlemas.)— EDY 
(Candlemasse  Eve.) — WEP  2 

Ceremonies  for    Christmas.     (Ceremonies    for    Christ- 
masse — C.)— Rob't  Herrick. — GN 

Certainties.     {Fraga.  fr.  varioua  avihora.) — BNL 

Certainty. — Emily  Dickinson.     See  Chartless. 

Cervantes.— W:  C.  Bryant.^EDY 

Chain,  A.— Adelaide  A.  Procter.— FTA 

Chalcedony. — Emma  P.  Greenough. — HP 

Challenge,  A.— Jas.  C.  Harvey.— BS  23— CS  30 

Challenge,  A. — Jas.  B.  Kenyon. — AA 

Challenge,  The. — Fitz-James  O'Brien   (tw.  at.  to  R.  A. 
Pryor).— FEP— WR  6 

Challenge,  The.— R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  Rivals,  The. 

Challenge,  A. — Willard  Snowden. — CG  1 

Challenge  and  Defiance.     (Fraga.  fr.  varioua  authora.) 
—BNL 

Challenging  the  Foreman. — Anon. — HR 

Chamber  over  the  Gate,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — 
— TAS— TAV 

Chamber  Scene,  Br.  ad.  fr.  ("She  rose  from  her  un- 
troubled sleep.")— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— BNL 

Chambered  Nautilus,  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — AA 
—  ASL  —  BFV  —  BNL  —  BSP  —  EA  — 
FEP  — FP  —  GMS  —  GN  —  HBP  —  LLC  — 
MAL  —  MRS  —  PHS  —  PYO  —  SE  —  SR  2 
— TAS— TAV— TMR— WCLG  2 
("Build  thee  more  stately  mansions,  O  my  soul" — 
br.  seZ.)— FHS— GG 

Chameleon,  The.     (A  Fable— fr.   M.  de  La  Motte.) — 
^  Jas.  Merrick.— CS  12— FEP— WRD 

Chameleon,  The. — Matthew  Prior.— HPE 

Chamouni.— Sydney  Dobell.— WEP  4 

Chamouny.— S:  T.  (Coleridge.- OM— SS 
(God  in  Nature — br.  ad.) — SE 

(Hymn  before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni — 
O— BNL—  BS  25  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  — 
IR— OS  3— PHS 
(Hymn  to  Mont  Blanc.)— AE  (br.  seZ.)— CR— FTR 

— SE 
(Mont     Blanc     before    Sunrise.)  —  BS  7  —  EA  — 
SAE  (abr.) 

Champagne  Rose. — J:  Kenyon. — HBP — VA 

Champion  Liar,  The. — C:  B.  Lewis. — DCR 

Champion  Snorer,  The.     (Burlington  Hawkeye.) — CS  16 
— DS— FTR— KNE— SR  11 

Chance,  A. — Anon. — NV 

Chancellor's  Garden,  The. — J.  W.  Courthope. — AVP 

Change,  The,  Sd.  fr. — (Fragment.  A.) — Abraham  Cow- 
ley.—FEP 
(Love  m  her  Sunny  Eyes.) — ES 
(Pain  of  Love,  The.— lo.  add.  fr.  Anacreontiques, 

VIL,  Gold.)— FLS 
(Without  and  Within.)— YBF 

Change.     (Urania,  I. — C) — W:  Drummond. — LLC 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 

Change.— W:  D.  Howells.— AA 

Change.— W:  O.  Partridge.— TAS 

Change  of  Base,  A.— Albion  W.  Tourg^e.— WR  10 

Change  of  Heart,  A.— Anon.— BS  24 

Change  of  Heart,  A. — Henrietta  L.  StadtmuUer. — CG  2 

Change  of  Local  Coloring,  A. — Anon. — BS  24 

Change  of  System,  A.     ( Comedy. ) — Howard  Paul.  — BC 

Change  of  Toys.— S.  J.  Smith.— DLD 

Change  should  Breed  Change. — W:  Drummond. — OB 

Changed  Cross,  The.— Hon.  Mrs.  C:  Hobart.— BNL— 
CS  3— FEP 

Changed  her  Mind. — Anon. — WR  15 

Changed  Housewife,    A.     (Dial.) — Mrs.    S.    L.    Ober- 
holtzer. — CDs 

Changeless,  The.— Arthur  H.  Clough.— YBF 

(With  Whom  is  no  Variablenessf,  neither  Shadow 
of  Turning]— (7.)— HDL— WEP  4 

Changeless. — Alice  Meynell. — VA 

Changeless  World,  The,  Sd.  /r.— Sarah  S.  Jacobs.— AD 

Changeling,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— TAS— WCL 

Changeling  Grateful,  A. — J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 

Changelings.— M.  F.  B.— NV 

Changelings. — Maiy  T.  Higginson. — AA 

Changes.— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton.— FLS— HBP 

(Changes. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 

(Changes  of  a  Hundred  Years. — G:  W:  Chirtis.    See  (Cen- 
tennial C!elebration  of  Concord  Fight. 

Changing  Oilor.— Hattie  G.  Canfield.— WR  4 

Changing  her  Mind.— Alfred  P.  Graves.— WR  26 

Changing  Servants. — Milotus  J.  Wine. — SD 

Changing  the  Hundred  Dollar  Note ;  or.  False  Preten- 
sions Rebuked. — A.  F.  Bradley. — ED 

Channing. — Amos  B.  Alcott. — AA 

(Chanson  de  Roland. — Anon.    See  Song  of  Roland,  The. 


Chansonette. — Will  L.  Graves. — CG  2 

Chant  of  the  Cross-bearing  Child,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley. 

— DES 
Chanted  Calendar,  A.— Sydney  Dobell. — OB 

(Procession  of  the  Flowers,  The.) — GN 
Chanticleer. — Celia  Thaxter.— PoR— SAP 
Chanting  (3herubs — a    Group    by    Greenough,    The. — 

R:  H:  Dana.— A  A 
Chapelet  of  Laurell,  The. — J:  Skelton.    See  Garlands 

of  Laurell,  The. 
Chaperon,  The. — H :  C.  Bunner. — AA 
Chappie's  Lament. — Ferris  Greenslet. — CG  2 
Character,  A. — Charlotte  F.  Bates. — AA 
Character.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— EPs 

(Good,    Great    Man,    The— C.)— BLP    (al.    abr.)— 
BNL— FEP— HBP— LLC— YBF 
Character. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — AA 
Character,  A.— T:  C.  Irwin.— TIP 
Character  and  a  Question,  A.     (The  Spectator.) — HP 
Character  and  Service. — Phillips  Brooks. — FD  2 
Character  of  a  Happy  Life,  The.  (C.)—S\t  H.Wotton. 
—BNL  —  GEL  —  ELP  —  FEP  — OB  —OS  2 
— PGT  1— PHS— WEP  2— YBF 
(Happy  Life,  The  [or  A].)— EPs— GP— HBP 
(Lorcf of  Himself.)— LH 
Character  of  a  Small  Poet,  The. — S:  Butler. — ESs 
Character  of  a  True   Knight,  The. — Stephen   Hawes. 

See  Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The. 
Character  of  Henry  Clay.     (Sel.  fr.  Henry  Clay.)— W:  , 

H.  Seward.— CS  7 
Character  of  Hudibras,  The. — S :  Butler.    See  Hudibras. 
Character  of  Justice. — R:  B.  B.  Sheridan.    See    Im- 
peachment of  Warren  Hastings. 
Character  of  Lucile. — Rob't  Bulwer-Lytton.  See  Lucile. 
Character  of  Mr.  Pitt.  (C.)— H:  Grattan.— LLC   (abr. 
— at.  to  W:  Robertson.) 
(First  Earl  of  Chatham,  The.)— VSG  (al.  abr.) 
Character  of  Napoleon,  The. — Alphonse  de  Lamartine. 

—WCLG  1 
Character  of  Napoleon  Bonaparte. — C:  Phillips.     See 

Napoleon  Bonaparte. 
Character  of  our  Savior,  The. — Anon. — AE 
Character  of  the  Bore,  The. — J :  Donne.^ESs 
Character  of    the    Declaration    of    Independence. — G : 
Bancroft.      See  History  of  the  United  States. 
Character  of  the  Duke  of  Monmouth. — J:  Dryden.     See 

Absalom  and  Achitophel. 
Character  of   the    Earl    of    Shaftesbury. — J:    Dryden. 

See  Absalom  and  Achitophel. 
Character    of  the    Happy    Warrior,    The.     (C.) — W: 
Wordsworth. 
(Happy  Warrior,  The.)— EPs— HB  (ael.) 

(Character  of  the  Happy  Warrior,  The — br.  ael.) 
—BNL 
Character  of   True    Eloquence. — Dan'l   Webster.     See 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Character  of  War,  The. — Anon. — HSS  1 
Character  of  Washington,  The,  Sela.  fr. — E:  Everett. 
Character  of  Washington,  The. — IR  (ael.) — MAL 
Character  of  Washington. — CR 

(Memory  of  Washington,  The. — si.  same.) — BS  1 
— FD  1— PEO 
Character  of  Washington,  The.— H:  C.  Lodge.— PEO 
Character  of  Washington. — C :  Phillips.  See  Washington. 
Character  of  Washington,  The,  Sela.  fr. — Dan'l  Webster. 
Century  from  Washington,  A. — FD  1 — SR  7 
Constitution  the  Safeguard  of  Liberty,  The. — SSD 
(Evil  of  Disunion.)— FD  1 
(Union  of  the  States,  The.)— PRR 
Name  of  Washington,  The. — FD  1 

(Washington — pts.     of     "Century,"     etc.,     and 
"Name,"  dc.j—PEO 
Spirit  of  Human  Liberty. — FD  1 
Washington  and  the  Union. — FD  1 
Character  of  Washington,  The. — Edwin  P.  Whipple. — 

SO 
Character  of  Washington,  The. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop. 
See  Completion  of  the  National  Monument  to 
Washington. 
Character  of  Washington,  The. — Zebulon  B.  Vance. — 

BS8 
Character  of  Webster. — T:  F.  Bayard.— FD  1 
Character  of  Will  Wimble. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Spec- 
tator, The. 
Character  of   Zimri. — J :   Dryden.     See  Absalom   and 

Achitophel. 
Character  Sketch,  A. — Anon. — WR  22 
Character  Stories. — Anon. — CDV 
(Character  the  Basis  of  Credit. — Anon. — CP 
Characteristic  Address. — W.  T.  Moncrieff. — MDD 
Characterization,  A.  (Fr.  Lines  on  the  Hon.  E:  Villers.) 
Sir  H:  Taylor.— VA 


62 


TITLE    INDEX 


Chatterbox 


Characters  and  Sketches. — W :  Cowper.  See  Conver- 
sation. 

Characters  of  Actors.  {Sela.  fr.  The  Rosciad.) — C: 
Churchill.— WEP  3 

Charade. — Anon.— CPL 

Charade.— M.  C.  D.— CPL 

Charade.     (Soapstone.) — A.  W.  Holmes. — CPL 

Charade. — Winthrop  M.  Praed.  See  Charade  on  the 
Name  of  Campbell,  the  Poet. 

Charade.     (Robin  Hood.)— Anna  M.  Pratt. — CPL 

Charade  for  Little  Folks.— Cleveland.— CPL 

Charade   on  the  Name  of  Campbell,  the  Poet. — Win- 
throp M.  Praed.— SS 
(Campbell.)— BNL 
(Charade.)— FEP—GN— HBP— PC 

Char-co-o-al.— Anon.— BS  2— CS  5 

Charcoal  Man,  The.— J:  T.  Trowbridge— BS  1— CR— 
CS  6— FTR— HNS— MHR— PR— SA— SE 

Charcoal-burner,  The.— Edmund  Gosse. — AVP 

Charge  at  Santiago,  The.— W:  H.  Hayne.— BAB— 
EDY 

Charge  at  Waterloo,  The.— Sir  Walter  Scott.  See 
Field  of  Waterloo,  The. 

Charge  by  the  Ford,  The.— T:  D.  English.— AWB— 
BAB— CS  17 

Charge  of  a  Dutch  Magistrate. — Anon. — WRD 

Charge  of  "De  [or  the]  Dutch  Brigade,"  The. — C:  M. 
Connolly.— BDD—CRR 

Charge  of  the  Heavy  Brigade  lat  Balaclava — C.],  The. 
— Alfred  Tennyson. — FR 
(Heavy  Brigade,  The.)— LH 

Charge  of  the  liight  Brigade  [at  Balaclava — C],  The. 
Alfred  Tennyson.—  BNL  —  BS  1  —  CEL  — 
CGd  —  CR  —  CS  2—  EA  —  EDY  -  FEP  — 
FR  —  FTR  —  GN  —  HB  —  HBP  —  HNS  — 
LC  —  LLC  —  MBL  —  MR  —  OM  {si.  abr.) 
—  OS  1  —  PGT  2  —  PPSr  —  PS  (si.  al,r.-)  — 
PSR  —  SA  —  SM  —  SO  —  SPE  —  TMD  — 
VA— WCLG  2— WEP  4 

"Charge  of  the  Lightning  Judge,  The." — Ray  Porter. — 
SR  3 

Charge  on  "Old  Hundred,"  The.— Anon.— CS  31— 
PR 

Charge  to  the  Jury. — Anon. — KNE 

Chariot,  The.— Emily  Dickinson.— ASL—TAS 

Chariot  Race,  The.     (Fr.  Electra — prose  tr.) — Sopho- 
cles.—MRS 
(Verae  tr.  by  E:  Bulwer-Lytton.)— TMD 

Chariot  Race,  The. — Lew  Wallace.     See  Ben-Hur. 

Chariot  Race    in    Alexandria.     (Serapis,    Ch.    XXV., 
a/jr.)— Georg  Ebers.— PFP 
(Hippodrome   Race,  The — arr.  by  Wilbor — abr.) — 
WR4 

Chariot-race  in  the  Time  of  Christ,  A. — Edgar  Saltus. — 
WR  16 

Charis'  Triumph. — Ben  Jonson.  See  Celebration  of 
Charis,  A. 

Charity.— Anon.— FP 

Charity. — Anon. — PS 

Charity.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Charity.     Bible.     See  First  Corinthians. 

Charity.- R.  W.  Lanigan.— WR  6 

Charity.— T:  (?)  Middleton.— KNE 

Charity. — Jas.  Montgomery. — HBP 

Charity.— Mary  Morgan.— TCV 

Charity.— Barry  Stratton.— TCV 

Charity.— T :  N .  Talf ourd.— CS  9— SS 

Charity.— Eliz.  Whittier.— HDL 

Charity.- Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton.— CS  19 

Charity  Children  at  St.  Paul's.     (In  Songs  of   Inno- 
cence.)—W:  Blake.— FEP 
(Holy  Thursday— C.)—BVC—YBF 

Charity  Collector,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  27 

Charity  Dinner,     The. — Litchfield     Mosely. — BeR — 
CS  16 
(Frenchman      Proposes      the     Ladies,    A — sel.) — 
VSG 
(After-dinner  Speech  by  a  Frenchman — shorter 

sel.)— BS  13— HSS  3— SE 
(Speech  of  M.  Hector  de  Longuebeau.) — OM 

Charity  Grinder  and  the  Postmaster  General. — Mary 
K.  Dallas.- BS  18 

Charity's  Meal.— Anon.— NPS—YP 

Charles  Dickens  and  the  Reader.  (Fr.  Pen  Photo- 
graphs of  Dickens'  Readings.) — Kate  Field. — 
MRS 

Charles  Edward  at  Versailles.  (In  Lays  of  the 
Scottish  Cavaliers — sel.) — W:  E.  Aytoun. — 
EDY 

Charles  H.  Spurgeon.     (London  Punch.) — EDY 

Charles  Lamb. — Pakenham  Beatty. — EDY  (ab^.) — 
VA 


Charles    O'Malley,    the    Irish  Dragoon,     Sets.  fr. — C: 

Lever. 
Mickey  Free  and  the  Priest.     (Sel.  fr.  Vol.  I.,  Ch. 

XIIJ— DI 
Mickey  Free's   Letter  to   Mrs.   O'Gra.      ( Sel.  fr. 

Vol.  II.,  Ch.  XXVII.)— DR 
Miss  Judith  Macan.     (Vol.  I.,  Ch.  XIX. — abr.  and 

ad.  as  dial.) — NDP 
Charles  II.,  Sel.  fr.  (Refrain.)— Douglas  B.  W.  Sladen. 

— VA 
Charles  II.  of  Spain  to  Approaching  Death. — Eugene 

Lee-Hamilton. — VA 
Charles  Sumner.— G :  W :  Curtis.— SC 
Charles  Sumner.     (Abr.) — H:    W.    Longfellow. — PEO 
Charles     Sumner. — Carl      Schurz.      See     Eulogy     on 

Charles  Sumner 
Charles  Sumner  Attacked  in  the  Senate. — Anson  Bur- 

lingame. — OS  3 
Charles  the     First.     (Fr.    Gotham.) — C:    Churchill. — 

WEP  3 
Charles  the  First. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  Milton 
Charles  the  First,  Sel.  fr.     (Widow  Bird,  A  [or  The] — 

song  fr.  Sc.  V. — abr.) — Percy  B.  Shelley — CGd 

— LC— YBF 
Charles  the   First,   Sel.   fr.   (Cromwell   and  Henrietta 

Maria.)— W:  G.  Wells.— VA 
Charles  the  Second. — W:  Wordsworth. — EDY — EHT 
Charles  XII.  [of  Sweden] — S:  Johnson.     See  Vanity  of 

Human  Wishes. 
Charleston. — H :  Timrod. — AA 

Charley  Machree.--W:  J.  Hoppin.  See  Charlie  Machree. 
Charley,  the  Story-teller. — Anon. — WCL 
Charley's  Butterfly. — Anon. — CPL 
Charley's  Opinion  of  the  Baby. — Anon. — PR — PS 

(Variation  on  Nose  out  of  Joint — Adams.) 
Charlie.— Fanny  F.  Clark.— DES 

Charlie  and  the  Possum. — Harry  S.  Edwards. — WR  14 
Charlie  Boy.— Anon.— WR  17 
Charlie,  he's  my  Darling. — Rob't  Burns. — YBF 
(Charlie  is  my  Darling.)— HBP 
(Jas.  Hogg's  vers.  )^FEP—LC 
Charlie  is  my  Darling. — ^Jas.  Hogg.     See  foregoing. 
Charlie  Machree. — W:      J.      Hoppin.— BNL— BS  3— 

CS  11— FTR— HNS— MMR— SA 
(Charley  Machree.)— CSS 
Charlie's  Speech. — Anon. — MAD 
Charlie's  Speech. — Eliza  Doolittle — FAS — SD 
Charlotte  Bronte. — Charlotte  Becker. — EDY 
Charlotte  Corday.— Anon.— EDY 

Charlotte  Corday. — T:  Carlyle.     See  French   Revolu- 
tion, The. 
Charm.  The. — [Beaumont   and]   Fletcher.     See   Little 

French  Lawyer,  The. 
Charm,  The. — W :  Browne.     See  Inner  Temple  Masque. 

The. 
Charm,  The.— T:  Campion.— ELP 
Charm,  The.— Alice  E.  Egbert.— CG  3 
Charm  of  Voice. — Anon. — LLC 
Charm  to  Call  Sleep,  A. — H:  Johnstone. — PoR 
Charmer.  The.— Harriet  B.  Stowe. — LLC 
Charming  Month  of  May,  The.      Rob't  Bums.     See 

Chloe. 
Charming  Woman,     A. — Jerome  K.  Jerome. — VSG 
Charming  Woman,  A.-^J:  G.  Saxe. — (5S  11 
Charms  of  Rural  Life,  The.     (Fr.  Rural  Life  in  Eng- 
land.)— Washington  Irving. — IR 
(English  Scenery — sel..) — SE 
Charnel  Ship,  The. — Lucretia  M.  Davidson. — FP 
Charter  Oak,  The.— G:  D.  Prentice.— WR  10 
Chartist  Song.— T:  Cooper.— EDY— EHT— V A 
Chartless. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA — GN 
(Certainty.)— TAS 
(Poems.— XVII.)— BNL  (Snd  poem.) 
Charybdis.— C:  K.  Bolton.— SR  2 
Chase,  The.— G.  A.  Burger  (tr.  6y  Walter  Scott.) — BS  13 

(Wild  Huntsman,The— C.)— CGd  (o6r.)— EPs 
Chase,  The.— Theodore  Roberts.— TCV 
Chase,  The. — Walter  Scott.  See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Chase,  The.    (Sels.  fr.  Bks  I.  and  II.).— W:  Somerville. 

—WEP  3 
Chase  after     Love. — Edmund     Spenser.     See     Shep- 

heardes  Calender,  The. 
Chase  of  the  Laurel  Wreath,  The. — Jessie  M.  Wood. — 

TL 
Chastelard,  Sel.    fr.    (Chastelard    and  Mary  Stuart — 

Act  V,  Sc.  2.)— Algernon  C.  Swinburne.— VA 
, Chastity,  Sel.  fr. — W.  ChamberlaArne.- BNL 
Chftteau   Papineau.  —  Mrs.    S.    Frances    Harrison.  — 

TCV  (sel.)—VA 
Chatterbox. — Anon. — DLS 
Chatterbox,  The. — Anon. — FHE 
Chatterbox,  The. — Jane  Taylor. — OS  1 


63 


Chatterton 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Chatterton.     (.In  Seven  Sonnets  to  Julia  Marlowe.) — 

C:  E.  Russell.— ED Y 
Chatterton  at  Bristol. — C:  E.  Russell. — EDY 
Chaucer.     (Frags,  jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Chaucer.— Craven  L.  Betts.— EDY— TCV 
Chaucer. — H :  W.  Ldngfillow. — AA 
Cheap  Jack,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  Doctor  Marigold' 
Cheap  Physician,  The.     ( In  Praise  of  Lessius,  his  Rule 
ofHealth— O— R:  Crashaw.— BNL 

(Temperance;  or.  The  Cheap  Physician.)— HBP 
Cheat  of  Cupid;  or.  The  Ungentle  Guest,  The.     (Ode 
III.)— Anacreon  (tr.  by  Rob't  Herrick).— HBP 

(Ungrateful  Cupid,  The— tr.  by  J:  Hughes.)— CGd 

Chediock  Ticheborne.     (Verses  Written  in  the  Tower.) 

— Chediock  Ticheborne  [or  Tychbornl. — EDY 

(Lines  Written  by  One  in  theTower.)— BNL— FEP 
Cheeg. — Anon — DRR 
Cheer  Up. — Anon. — CS  7 
Cheerful  Heart,  The.— Anon.— HP 
Cheerful   Locksmith,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Barnaby  Rudge, 

Ch.  XLI.)— C:  Dickens.— I R 
Cheerful  Song,  A.     (Wrinkle.)— CG  3 
Cheerful  Voice,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
Cheerfulness.— Anon.— HNS— KNE  (si.  abr.) 
Cheerfulness. — Eliz.   B.  Browning.      See  Cheerfulness 

Taught  by  Reason. 
Cheerfulness. — Marian  Douglas. — YBT  (abr.) 

(Who  is  She?)— CSS 
Cheerfulness  Taught  by  Reason.    ( C.)—Eliz.  B.  Brown- 
ing 

(Cheerfulness.)— HDL 
Cheiron,  the  Centaur. — Anon. — LLC 
Chemist  and  his  Love,  The.     (Punch.) — SCS 

(Chemist  to  his  Love.)— HPE— THP 
Chemist  to  his  Love,  The.     (Punch.)     See  foregoing. 
Cherish  Kindly  Feelings.— M.  A.  Kidder.— KNS 
Cherished  Letters.— Mrs.  Alex.  McV.  Miller.— CS  30 
Cherished  Names.— S:  F.  Smith.— WR  17 
Cherokee  Roses. — Anon. — BS  25 
Cherries. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Cherries.- F:  E.  Weatherly.- BVC 
Cherry  Cheeks.— Anon.— PS— TT 
Cherry  Pie.     (Fr.      The      Poetical      Cookery-book.) 

(Punch.)— HPE 
Cherry  Ripe. — Kate  L.  Brown. — AD 
Cherry  Ripe.     (Fourth  Book  of  Airs,  VII.)— T:  Cam- 
pion.—BPB— ES—GP  (at.  to    R:  Alison.)— 
OB— OEL— PGT  1— PYO— YBF 

(There  is  a  Garden    in    her    Face — at.  to  R:   Ali- 
son.)—BNL— FEP— TFY 
Cherry  Time.— Sydney  Dayre.— COS— PP 
Cherry-ripe.- Rob't    Herrick.  —  BNL  (abr.)—  ELP  — 

ES— FEP— OB— WEP  2 
Chess  and  Whist. — Anon. — DSS 
Chess-board,    The.— Rob't,  Earl  of    Lytton.— BNL— 

FEP— TFY— V  A— YBF 
Chestnut.      (Fr.      Ascutney     Charades.)  —  Julia     A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Chestnut  Burr,  The.— Anon. — NV 
Chestnut-tree,  The. — Jane  Campbell. — HS 
Chevy-chase  [or  chace].— R:  Sheale  (?).— BNL— GN— 
HB— HBP— LH— MR— OEB— PHS 

(Ballad  of  Chevy-chase,  The.)— FEP 

(Hunting  of  the  Cheviot,  The — diif  and  older  vers.) 
— BB— PEB  1 
Chez  Brabant. — Fs.  A.  Durivage. — AA 
Chibouque.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— PPh 
Chicago.— Fs.  Bret  Harte  (7)7— EPs 
Chicago.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— EDY 
Chicago.— Dwight  Williams.— CS  5 

((Chicago  in  Flames — abr.) — DS 
Chicago  in  Flames. — Dwight  Williams.     See  foregoing. 
Chicago  Lawsuit,  A. — Anon.— KNE 
Chicago's  Greeting  to  Atlanta  and  the  South  Land. — 

Alexander  H.  Revell.— SR  12 
Chick-a-de-dee.— Fs.  C.  Woodworth.— PS 

(Snow-birds'  Song,  The.)— LLC— NV 
Chickadee. — Anon. — DLS 

Chickadee,  The.— Sydney  Dayre.— BS  23— POS 
Chickadee,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Chickamauga. — Anon. — BS  10 
Chickamauga. — G.  F.  Ferris. — PAPm 
Chickamauga — 1898.     (Baltimore  News.) — PAPm 
Chicken  on  the  Brain. — Anon. — MHR — SDR 
Chickens,     The.— Anon.— DS—NPS—TFS—YA—YP 

(Five  Little  Chickens.)— DES 

(We  Must  all  Scratch.)- PP— YFR 
Chickens.— Gail  Hamilton.— WCLG  2 
Chickens  Come  Home  to  Roost. — Anon. — CS  27 
Chicken's  Mistake,  The.— Phoebe  Cary.—BLF— LPS— 

NV— PHS— PP— PS 
Chide  Mildly  the  Erring.— B.  W.  Bradbury.— LLC 


"Chief  agency  in  the  progress  and  development  of  the 

law,  The."— C.  C.  Bonney.— GG 
Chief  Bread-baker  to  the  King,  The. — Valentine  Adams 

— DCP 
Chief  Justice  Mar.shall.— E;  J:  Phelps.— TMD 
Chief  Mourner,  The.— Fs.  S.  Smith.— CS  34 
Child,  The.— Sara  Coleridge.— OB 
Child,  A.— R:  W.  Gilder.— AA 
CJhild,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Stage  Land. 
Child,  A.— Mary  Lamb.— OB 
(In  Memoriam.) — PGT  1 
(Parental  Recollections.) — WEP  4 
Child,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— AA 

(Pt.  I.     At  Bethlehem.)— PoR 
Child,  The.— G:  E.  Woodberry.— AA 
Child  and  Maiden.     (Fr.  The  Mulberry  Garden.) — Sir 
C:  Sedley.— PGT  1  (abr.) 
(Song  from  "The  Mulberry  Garden.")— WEP  2 
(Song  to  Chloris.)— CEL 
(To  a  Very  Y'oung  Lady.)— BNL— FEP 
(To  Chloris— a6r.)—OB 
Child  and     Mother.— Eugene     Field.— BS     21— EF— 

WR  15— WTD 
Child  and  Mother.— T:  Hood.— OS  1— WCL 
(Love  thy  Mother,  Little  One!— abr.)- TFS 
(To  a  Child  Embracing  his  Mother— C.)— FEP— 
HBP 
Child  and  Sea-shell. — -Anon. — LLC 
Child  and  the  Angels,  The.— C:  Swain.— PC— YBT 
Child  and  the  Fairies,  The.— "A."— PoR 
Child  and  the  Flowers,  The.— Anon.— FMR 
Child  and  the  Lily,  The.     (Innocent  Child  and  Snow- 
white  Flower— C.)—W:  C.  Bryant.— HSS  1 
Child  and  the  Piper,  The.— W:  Blake.— CGd— LC 
("And  I  made  a  rural  pen" — br.  sel.) — PoR 
(Introduction  [to  Songs  of  Innocence] — C.) — FEP 

—HBP— WEP  3 
(Piper,  The.)— BNL— CEL— WCL 
(Piping  down  the  Valleys  Wild.) — PoR 
(Reeds  of  Innocence.) — OB 
Child  and  the  Snake,  The.— Mary  Lamb.— BPB 

(Boy  and  Snake,  The— a6r.)— LPC 
Child  and  the  Sunshine,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson  (?). — 

—HSS  3 
Child  and  the  Watcher,  The. — Eliz.  Barrett  Browning. 

—FEP— HBP 
Child  and  the  Worid,  The.— Kate  D.  Wiggin.— NV— 

YBT 
Child  and    the    Year,    The.— Celia    Thaxter.— CPL— 

PEO— YBT 
Child  and  Tree.— E.  A.  Holbrook.— AD 
Child  Angel,  The.— Hannah  M.  Kohaus.— HS 
Child  Asleep,    The.— Clotilde    de    Surville.     (Tr.    by. 

H:  W.  Longfellow.)— HBP 
Child  Dyring.- Anon.  (at.  to  Walter  Scott).— EPs  . 
Child  in   [or  on]  the  Judgment    Seat,  The. — Eliz    R. 
Charies.— BS  9— LLC— PEO  (abr.) 
(Child-judge,  The.)— WCL 
Child  in  the  Story  Awakes,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Child  in  the  Story  Goes  to  Bed,  The. — Walter  Ramal — 

SOC 
Child  in  the  Street,  The.— J:  J.  Piatt. — A  A 
Child  in  the  Wilderness,   The.     (Fr.  Prefatory  Note  to 
The  Wanderings  of  Cain.)— S:  T.  Coleridge.— 
LC 
Child  is  Father  to  the  Man,  The. — Louisa  Bigg. — BS  14 
Child  Lost.— Anon.— CS  18 
Child  Martyr,  The. — May  M.  Anderson. — BS  11 
Child  Musician,    The. — Austin    Dobson. — BS  8 — FEP 
— GN— OS  1 
(Child  Violinist,  The.)— CPL— DCP 
Child  of  a  Day.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  LXXXI.) — 

Walter  S.  Landor.— VA— YBF 
Child  of  Bethlehem,  The.— Phillips  Brooks.— TAS 

(O  Little  Town  of  Bethlehem.)— A  A— FEP— GN 
Child  of  Earth,  The.— Caroline  E.  S.  Norton.— CS  11 
Child  of  Elle,  The.     (In  Percy's  Reliques.)— Anon.— 
FEP 
(Brave  Earl  Brand,  The — diff.  vers.) — PEB  1 
(Douglas  Tragedy,   The — diff.  vers.) — BB— CEL— 
HBP— OEB— WEPl 
Child  of  Promise,  The.— Evan  MacColl.— TCV 
Child  of  To-day,  A. — Jas.  Buckham. — AA 
Child  of  Twelve,  A.     (Fr.  The  Revolt  of  Islam,  Canto 

II.)     Percy  B.  Shelley.— GN 
Child   on  the  Judgment-seat,  The. — Eliz.  R.  Charles 

See  Child  in  the  Judgment  Seat,  The. 
Child  Once  More,  A.— Anon.— PR 
Child  Praying,  A.— Rob't  A.  Willmott.— HBP 
Child  Samuel,  The.— J.  D.  Burn.s.- YBT 
Child  Tired  of  Play.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— WCLI  2 
(Tired  of  Play.)— OS  1 


64 


TITLE    INDEX 


Child's 


Child  to  a  Rose,  A.— Anon.— AD— NV  (sei.)— PC 

^Diff.   and  longer  vers. )^OS  1 
Child  Violinist,     The. — Austin     Dobson.     See     Child 

Musician,  The. 
Child  Vyet.— Anon.     See  Childe  Vyet. 
Child  Waters.     {In  Percy's  Reliques.)— Anon.— PEB  1 
Childe  Harold's   Farewell   to    England. — Lord   Byron. 

See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage,  SeU  jr.  —Lord  Byron. 
"Adieu,  adieu,  my  native  shore."    {Song  fol.  Can.  I., 
St.  13— br.  seL)— BNI^-YBF 
(Childe  Harold's  Farewell  to  England — sel.)—LC 
Apostrophe  to  the  Ocean.     (Fr.  Canto  IV.)— BS  11 
(St.  179,  181-184)— CR  (178,  179,  181-184)— 
FTR  (178,  179,  181-184)— HNS  (179,  183)— 
HSS  2  (178,   179,   181-184)— IR  (179)— LLC 
(179-184)— POS   (179,    181-184)— PSR   (178, 
179,   181-184)— SE  (178,   179,   181-184)— SM 
(179,    181,    182)— SO    (178,    179,    181-184)— 
WCLG  2  (178,  179,  181-184) 
(Address   to  the  Ocean.)— PPSr  (179-183)— PS 

(179,  183,  184) 
(Ocean[,  The].)— GP  (179,  182-184)— OS  3  (178, 
179,    181,    182)— SE    (179)— SE   (181)— VSG 
(177-184)— WEP  4  (178-184) 
("  Roll  on,  thou  deep  and  dark  blue  ocean,  roll.") 

— CS  1  (179,  183)— SC  (179) 
(Sea,  The.)— BNL  (178-184) 
(Solitude.)— EPs  (178,  179)— FP  (178)— SN  (178, 

179) 
(To  the  Ocean.)— GN  (179-183) 
Battle  of  Albuera.     (I.,  43.)— EDY 
Bull  Fight,  The.     (I.,  73-79.)— CS  8 
Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage.     {Br.  seZs.)- BNL 
Coliseum,  The.— BNL     (IV.,  128,  129,  139-145.)— 

WR  14  (145,  140-144,  128). 
Death  of  Gen.  Marceau.     (III.,  56,  57.)— EDY 
Death  of  the  Princess   Charlotte.     (IV.,  167-172.) 

—EDY 
Dying  Gladiator,  The.     (IV.,  138-141.)— LLC 
(IV.,  140,  141)— CSl  ~0S2— SS 
(Gladiator,  The— IV.,  140,  141.)— EPs 
Fall  of  Terni,  The.     (IV.,  119— «i.  ahr.)  -BNL 
Filial  Love.     (IV.,  148-151.)— BNL 
Girl  of    Cadiz,   The.     ( Song  fol.    I.,   84.    in    Ut. 

draught  of  poem.) — HBP 
Greece.     (II.,  73-76.)— BNL 

("Fair  Greece,  sad  relic  of  departed  worth" — 
II.,  73,  76.)— GP 
"Hark,  heard  ye  not  those  hoofs  of  dreadful  note." 

(I.,  38.)— HSS  1 
Harold  the  Wanderer.     (III.,  1-15.)— WEP  4 

(Outward  Bound— III.,  1,  2.)— EPs 
"I  do  believe  though  I  have  found  them  not.  "(III., 

114— si.  ahr.)— GG 
I-onging.     {Song  fol.  III.,  55.)— WEP  4 

(Rhine,  The.)— BNL 
Love  of  England.     (IV.,  8,  9,  pt.  of  10.)— EPs 
Marathon..    (II.,  88-91.)— EDY 
Napoleon.     (III.,  36-45.)— BNL 
(Ambition— III.,  45.)— KNE— SO 
(Defeat  of  Napoleon— III.,  36-41.)— EDY 
Night.     (II.,  23-26.)— BNL— SN 
Night  and  Tempest.     (III.,  85-97.)— WEP  4 

(Calm  and  Storm  on  Lake  Leman — III.,  85-87,  92, 

93.)— BNL 
(Imaginative  Sympathy  with  Nature — III.,  96.) 

— GP 
(Night— III.,  89,  93.)— GP 
(Poet's  Impulse,  The— III.,  96,  97.)— BNL 
(Solitude— III.,  89.)— BNL 
(Stars— III.,  88.)— GP 
(Storm,  The— III.,  92.)— EPs 

(Thunder-storm  in  the  Alps,  A.) — GP 
Pantheon,  The.     (IV.,  146,  147.)— BNL 
Petrarch's  Tomb.     (IV.,  30-32.)— EDY 
Ruins  of  Rome,  The.     (IV.,  78,  79,  80,  82.)— PS 

(Rome— 78.  79.)— OS  3— SO 
St.  Peter's   Church  at   Rome.     (IV.,  153-158.)— 
FTR 
(At  St.  Peter's  at  Rome— 153,  154.)— AE 
(Childe     Harold,     Br.     ««■?.— -156,    157— a6r.)— 
BNL 
Skull,  The  [or  A].      (II.,    pt.  of  5,  6,  8.)— EPs— 

KNE  {sel.) 
Sunset.     (IV.,  27-29.)— EPs 
Tasso.     (IV..  39.)— EDY 

Temple  of  Clitumnus.     (IV.,  66,  67— aftr.)— BNL 
Venice.     (IV.,   1-3.)— OS  3 

Waterloo.— BNL  (III..  21-33.)— EPs  (21-25.)— GP 
-  (21,  22,  24-26.)— OS  3  (21,  22,  24,  25,  pt.  of  28.) 
'    —SO  (21,  22,  24-28.) 


Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  {continued). 

(Ball  at  Brussels,  the  Night  before  the  Battle  of 

Waterloo,  The— 21-26,  28.)— SS 
(Battle    of    Waterloo,  [The].)— AE    (27.)— BLP 
(21,  22,  24,  25,  28.)— LLC  (21,  22,  24,  25,  28.)— 
—PPSr   (21,   22,   24-28.)— PSR   (21-28.)— SE 
(21-2.5.  28.)— WCLG  2  (21-32.) 
(Eve  of  Quatre  Bras— 21-28.)— EDY 
(Eve  of  Waterloo,  The.)— EHT  (21,  22,  24,  25.) 
— HB  (21-25)— MR  (21,  22,  24,  25,  27,  28.)— 
TMD  (21,  22,  24,  25,  27,  28.) 
(Field  of  Waterloo,  The.)— CS  1  (17,  21-25,  28.) 

—KNE  (17,  21-28.) 
(Night    before    Waterloo,    The.)  — GN   (21,    22, 

24-28.)— LC  (21-24.) 
(Unreturning  Brave,  The— 27-30. "i-GP 
Childe  Maurice.      (Gil  Morrice  —  C. — in    Percy's  Re- 
liques.)— Anon. — BB  {diff.  vers.) 
"Childe  Roland  to  the   Dark  Tower  Came." — Rob't 

Browning — VA 
Child[e]  Vyet ;  or.  The  Brothers.— Anon.— BB 

{SI.  diff.  and  longer  vers.)— PEP  2 
Childhood.— C:  Lamb.— BNL 
Childhood.— J:  B.  Tabb.— ASL 
Childhood  Fanciee. — Anon. — NV 
Childhood's  Country. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — FAS 
Childhood's  Scenes. — Anon. — BS  15 
Childish  Days.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Childish  Fancy,  A.— Anon.— WR  6 
Child-judge,  The.— Eliz.  R.  Charles.     -See  Child  in  the 

Judgment  Seat^  The. 
Childless.— Ben  W.  Davis.— CS  24— NPS— YP 
Childless  Father,  The.     (C.)— W:  Wordsworth.— YBF 

(Timothy.)— CGd 
Child-philosophy.— H.  A.  Duncan.— SDD 
Children,  The. — C:  M.  Dickinson  Cut.  at.  loC:  Dickens). 
— AA— BNL— BS  15— CS  4— FEP— FTR— 
HSS  2— MYF— PPSr— SM— TFS  {br.  sel.) 
Children.— Walter  S.  Landor.— FEP— HBP 
Children,  [The].     {Abr.)—H:  W.  Longfellow.— AD 
Children  Band,  The.— Sir  Aubrey  De  Vere.— OB 
Children  Gathering  Palms. — Eliz.  B.   Browning.     See 

Vision  of  Poets,  A. 
Children  in  the  Moon,  The.— Anon.— PC  (afer. )-^WCL 
Children  in  the  Wood,  The. — Anon.   See  Babes  in  the 

Wood,  The. 
Children  in  the  Wood,  The;  or,  The  Brave  Carpenter. 

(Piat/.)- Anon.— SED 
"Children  must  be  Paid  for."     {Punch.)— UFF. 
Children  of  the  Bible,  The.     (.Bnt.)- Anon.— EuE 
Children  of   the   Bonnet    Rouge. — Victor   Hugo.     See 

Ninety-three. 
Children  of  the  Heavenly  King. — J :  Cennick. — FEP 
Children  of  the  Lord's  Supper,  The,  2  diff.  sets.  fr. — 
H:  W.  Longfellow.— BIL—WR  12 
"Ah!  when  the  infinite  burden  of  life  descendeth 

upon  us."     {Diff.  sel.) — HDL 
"Love  and  believe:  for  works  will  follow  spontane- 
ous."    {Diff.  Sei.)- FHS 
Children  of  the  Poor,  The.— Theodore  Parker.— SSD 
Children  on  the  Shore. — Anon. — OS  1 
Children  Playing  in  a  Churchyard. — Walter  S.  Landor. 

—WEP  4 
Children  Should  be  Seen  and  not  Heard. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H. 

Goodfellow.— TT 
Children,  Thank  God.— Anon.— PC— YBT 
Children   we  Keep,  The.— Anon.— CS  22 
Children's  Appeal.  The.— Mary  Howitt.— PC 
Children's  Arbor  Day  March. — E.    A.  Holbrook. — AD 
(March   for   the   Children — si.    ahr. — w.    music.) — 
AD 
"Children's  Day"    Service,    A. — Clara    J.    Denton. — 

HE 
Children's  Friend,  The.— Mary  J.  Jacques. — YBT 
Children's  Hour,     The.— H:    W.     Longfellow.— AA— 
BNL— BS   6— EPs— FEP— FP— GP— HBP— 
OH— WCL 
Children's  Music,  The.— F.  M.  Owen.— HP 
Children's  Offering,  The.— Louisa  M.  Alcott.— HSS  2 
Children's  Offering,      The. — Nellie      G.      Gerome     [or 

Jerome].— PS— TT 
Children's  Praise  Song.— W.  B.  Downer.— AD— DFR 
Children's  Rights.— Kate  D.  W.  Riggs.— TMR 
(Children's  Voices. — An    Easter  Ode. — Sara   M.   Chat- 
field.— SSE 
Children's  Vow,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox  (?).- WR  17 
Children's  Wishes,  The.— Sara  M.  Chatfield.— SSE 
"Children's  world    is  full   of  sweet  surprises.  The." — 

Sarah  Doudney. — GG 
Child's  Desire,  The. — Jemima  T.  Luke. — PC  {sel.) 

{"  I  think  when  I  read  that  sweet  story  of  old  " — 

si.  afer.)— OS  1 
("Of  Such  is  the  Kingdom  of  Heaven.")— FEP 


65 


Child's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Child's  Dream    of   a   Star,    A.— C;  Dickens— BS  13— 

CS  5— CSS— FTll— PR— WGS 
Child's  Easter,  A. — Annie  T.  Slosson. — TAS 
Child's  Evening     Hymn.     (A6r.) — Sabine     Baring- 
Gould.— VA—YBF  (si.  diff.  abr.) 
(Day  is  Over.)— YBT  {same  as  VA). 
(Now  the  Day  is  Over — set.) — NV 
Child's  Evening  Hymn,  A.— G:  H.  Clarke.— TCV 
Child's  Evening  Prayer,  A. — Mary  L.  Duncan. — COS — 

DLS— PP— SSS 
(Evening  Hymn.)— YBT 
(Tender  Shepherd,  The.)— TFS 
Child's  Fancies,  A. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — TFS 
Child's  Fancy,  A.     "A."— PoR  («/.  abr.) 
(AU  Things  Love  Me— 6r.  eeZ.)— TFS 
(Little  Girl's  Fancies,  A.)— HSS  2— WCL 
(Little  Things— br.  «eJ.)— AD 
Child's  First  Grief,  The.— Felicia  D.  Hemans.- SSS— 

YBT 
Child's  Good-bye  to  the  Old  Year,  A.— Anon.— WR  17 
Child's  Good-night,  The.— Sidney  E.  Holmes.— YBT 
Child's  Grace,    A.     (The    Selkirk    Grace— C.)— Rob't 

Burns.— PoR 
Child's  Grace,  A.— Rob't  Herrick.— OB 

(Grace   for   a   Child.)— BVC— ELP— OH— WEP  2 

— YBF 
Child's  History  of  England,  Sel.  fr.     (Death  of  Harold 

— /r.  Ch.  VII.)— C:  Dickens.— OS  2— WR  22 
Child's  Hymn,  The.       (Poor  Child's  Hymn,  The— C.) 

—Mary  Howitt.— PC 
Child's  Laughter,  A. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — PoR 

— WR  15 
Child's  Love,  A.     (Dio/.)— Anon.— NDP 
Child's  Mirror,  The.— Abbie  Kinne.— CS  32 

(TrueStory,  A.)— BS24 
Child's  Plea,  The.— Sarah  H.  Palfrey.— TAS 
Child's  Portrait,  A. — W:  J.  Dawson.— VA 
Child's  Prayer,  The.— Anon.— DCP 
Child's  Praver,  A.— Matilda  B.  Edwards. — PoR  (o&r.) 

(Hymn.)— YBT 
Child's  Prayer.     (New  England  Primer.) — BNL 
Child's  Prayer,  The.— Hodges  Reed.— CS  35 
Child's  Question,  A. — Emma  H.  Nason. — AA 
(Child's  Song. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — OS  1 
Child's  Song  in   Spring.     (Bird's  Song  in  Spring.) — 

E.  Nesbit.— BVC— PoR 
Child's  Talk  in  April. — Christina  C.  Rossetti. — GN 
Child's  Tear,  A.— Teignmouth  Shore.— CS  34 
Child's  Thought    of    God,    A.— Eliz.    B.    Browning— 

BS  14— GMS— OS  1— PoR— WCL— YBT 
Child's  Thoughts  about  God,  A. — Kate  Lawrence. — 

YBT 
Child's  Time  Table.— E.  Elton.— CPL 
Child's  Troubles,  A.— Anon.— DLS 
Child's  Wisdom,  A.— Anon.— PP— YFR 
Child's  Wisdom,  A.— Alice  Cary.— BI;F 
Child's  Wish.  A.— Abram  J.  Ryan.— AA 
Child's  Wish  Granted,  The.— G:  P.  Lathrop.— AA 
Child's  Wish  in  June.— Caroline  H.  (7)  Gilman.— WCL 
Child's  Wonder,  The.— Marg.  .Johnson.- LPS— PP 
Child's  World,   The.     (Great    Wide,    Beautiful,   Won- 
derful World— C.)—W:  B.  Rands  (iw.  at.  to  M. 

Browne).— SM—WCI — YBT 
<Sl.  diff.  vers.)- POS 
(Wonderful  World,  The.)— GMS— PoR 
(World,  The.)— OS  1 
Child-song,  A.— Caroline  A.  Mason. — YBT 
Child-wife,  The.— C:  Dickens.     See  David  Copperfield. 
Child-world,  The.— .Tas.  W.  Riley.— CW 
Chill,  A. — Christina  G.  Rossetti.— OS  1— PoR 
(!;hillon. — Lord  Byron.     See  Prisoner  of  Chillon,  The. 
Chimes  of   Amsterdam,    The. — Mrs.    G:    W.    PauU. — 

CS36 
Chimes  of  Old  England,  The.— Arthur  C.  Coxe. — HP 
Chimney  Nest,  The.— Mary  B.  Dodge.— HP— NV 
Chimney  Swallows. — Horatio  N.  Powers. — GP 
Chimney's  Melody,   The.     (What   the   Chimney   Sang 

— C.)— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— BS  10 
Chimney-sweep,  The. — E.  S.  Hooper. — EPs 
Chimney-sweeper,  The.    {In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W: 

Blake.— BPB— BVC 
Chimney-tops. — Marion  Douglas. — CPL 
Chimpanzee,  The. — Oliver  Herford. — NA 
Chimpanzor  and  the  Chimpanzee,  The. — Edwin  Ham- 
ilton.—THP 
Chin  Wee.— L.  Warner.— CG  3 
Chinaman's  Prodigal.  The. — Anon. — CS  31 
Chinese  Dinner,  The.— Anon. — CS  12 
Chinese  Excelsior,  The. — Anon. — CS  20 

(Excelsior — abr.^-sl.  diff.) — CDV 
Chinese   Immigration  [to  the   Pacific  Slope — (7.],  Sel. 

/r.— Jas.  G.  Blaine.— NC 
Chinese  Lanterns. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 


Chinese  Lilies. — Myra  E.  Pollard. — SR  6 

Chinese  Proverbs. — Anon. — CDV 

Chinese  Story,  A. — Christopher  P.  Cranch — CS  11 

Chinese  Version  of  Jonah  and  the  Whale,  A. — W:  H. 

Head.— SR  11 
Chinese  Version     of     "Maud    Muller,"     A. — Jos.     B. 

Smiley.— CS  30 
Chinese  Wedding,  A.     (.Pantomime.) — Bertha  M.  Wil- 
son.— MN 
Chinook.— Ezra  H.  Stafford.- TCV 
Chip  Supper. — Anon. — EuE 
Chiquita.— Fs.    Bret    Harte.— AA— CSS— EPs— HBP 

HBR 
Chivalrie.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Chivalry.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Speeches  at  Prince  Henry's 

Barriers.) — Ben  Jonson. — EPs 
Chloe.     (It   was   the   Charming    Month    [of  May],  or 

Charming    Month  of    May,  The — C.) — Rob't 

Burns.- GN— LC 
Chloe  Divine.— T:  D'Urfey.- OB 
Chloris  in  the  Snow. — Anon.  (at.  to  T:  Carew  and  to 

R.  Herrick  )— OB— OEL 
(On  Chloris  Walking  in  the  Snow.) — ES 
Cho-che-bang   and    Chil-chil-bloo.     (Graham's    Maga- 
zine.)—CS  11— DS 
Chocolataire.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Choice. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA 
Choice.  The— G:  Wither.— OB 

Choice  Friends.     (Frags.  Jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Choice  of  Arms,  The. — Marquis  De  Leuville. — WR  13 
Choice    of   Occupation.      (For  four  boys.) — Anon. — 

DLF 
Choice  of  Occupation.    (For  six  girls.) — Anon. — DLF 
Choice  of    Trades.— Mrs.    M.    B.    C.    Slade.— DLS— 

HSS  3 
(SI.  diff.  rers.)- LPS— PP 
Choicest  Goods,     The. — Mrs.     Russell    Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Choir   Invisible,  The.— George    Eliot.— HDL  (abr.) — 

LLC— OS  3 
("O  may  I  join  the  choir  invisible" — C.) — BNL — 

EDY— FEP— GG— GP— HBP— HBR— VA 
Choir  Practice. — Ernest  Crosby. — AA 
Choir's  Way  of  Telling  It,  The.     (Good  Housekeeping.) 

— CS  30 
Choose  Your  Words. — Barbara  Broome. — SDD 
Choosing  a    Building    Spot. — Emily    A.    Braddock. — 

— HS 
Choosing  a  Declamation. — Anon. — PTS 
Choosing  a    Name.— Mary    Lamb. — BFV— BNL— GP 

—HBP— OS  1  (si.  abr.)— WCL, 
Choosing  a  Profession. — Mary  Lamb. — BVC_ 
Choosing  a  "State  Tree." — 'The  Ash. — Jennie  Pierson. 

—AD 
Choosing  a  "State  Ti-ee."— The  Black  Walnut.— J:  W. 

Ripley.— AD 
Choosing   a  "State  Tree."— The  Elm.— F.  C.  Stewart. 

—AD 
Choosing    a  "State  Tree." — The  Hemlock. — May  I. 

Bachelder. — AD 
Choosing  a    "State    Tree." — The    Hickory. — Florence 

Painter. — AD 
Choosing  a   "State   Tree." — The   Maple. — Everett   L. 

Tindall.— AD 
Choosing  a  "State  Tree." — The  Oak. — Jos.  Brobeck. 

—AD 
Choosing  a   "State   Tree." — The   Pine   Tree. — Louise 

Youngs. — AD 
Choosing  a  "State  Tree." — The  Tulip    Tree. — Madge 

Vail.— AD 
Choosing  a  Trade. — Anon. — FDY 
Choosing  a  Trade  or  Profession. — G :  D.  Hunt. — SDD 
Choosing  Occupations. — Anon. — WR  17 
Choosing  Vocations. — Anon. — YFD 
Choosing  a  Tree.— W.  H.  Benedict.— DFR 
Choosing  a  Wife  by  a  Pipe  of  Tobacco. — (Gentleman's 

Magazine. ) — PPh 
Chopper's  Child,  The.— Alice  Cary.— BS  13 
Choral  Song  of  lUyrian  Peasants. — S:  T.  Coleridge.  See 

Zapolya. 
Choric  Song. — Alfred     Tennvson. — See     Lotos-eaters, 

The. 
Chorus:  "Spring    all    the    graces,"  etc. — Bpn  Jonson. 

See  Fortunate  Isles  and  their  Union. 
Chorus:     "King  of  kings!  and  Lord  of  lords!" — H:  H. 

Milman.— HBP 
Chorus:     "We  have  seen  thee,  O  Love!" — Algernon 

C:  Swinburne.     See  Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
Chorus:     "When  the  hounds  of  Spring." — Algernon  C: 

Swinburne.     See  Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
Chorus  from  'Atalanta' — Algernon  C:  Swinburne.     See 

Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
Chorus  of  Anglomaniacs. — Edgar  Fawcett. — AWH 


66 


TITLE    INDEX 


Christmas 


Chorus  of  Flowers. — Leigh  Hunt.  See  Songs  and 
Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

Chorus  of  Good  and  Evil  Spirits.  {Fr.  Alaham.) — 
Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke.— WEP  1 

Chorus  of  Islanders.  {Chorus  fr.  Look  Seaward,  Sen- 
tinel, Pt.  IV.)— Alfred  Austin.— TMR 

Chorus  of  Priests. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke.  See 
Mu«tapha. 

Chorus  of  Spirits. — George    Darley.     <See    Sylvia;    or, 
the  May  Queen. 

Chorus  of  Tartars. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke.  See 
Mustapha. 

Chorus  of  the  Flowers. — Leigh  Hunt.  <See  Songs  and 
Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

Chorus  of  the  Flowers.  —  Lucy  Wheelock. — AD — 
NV  {si.  abr.) 

Chorus  of  Women.  (.Fr.  The  Thesmophoriazusse.) 
— Aristophanes. — WR  20 

Chosen  Lessons. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — HDL 

Chosen  Path,  The.— H :  Vaughan.— ELP 

Chosen  Princess,  The. — Marion  Douglas. — ASD 

Chosen  Tree,  The.— "  Estelle."— HSS  1 

Chough  and  the  Crow,  The.     (Songfr.  Orra,  Act  III., 
Sc.  1.)— Joanna  Baillie.— CEL— WEP  4 
(Outlaw's  Song,  The.)— OB 

Christ  and  the  Little  Ones.— Julia  Gill.— CS  24— WCL 
(Hannah,  the  Mother.) — LLC 

Christ  and  the  Mourners. — Kathe.  E.   Conway. — TAS 

Christ  Calming  the  Tempest.— H.  B.  Durant.— CS  30 

Christ  Child,  The.— Elsie  M.  Wilbor.— WR  6 

Christ  (I!hild.     See  also  Christ-child. 

Christ  Crucified. — R:  Crashaw. — OB 

Christ  Crucified.— H :  H.  Milman.— FEP 
(Ride  on  in  Majesty — si.  abr.) — VA 

Christ  our  Example.— C:  Wesley.— CEL— WEP  3 

Christ  our  Example  in  Suffering.  (C) — Jas.  Montgom- 
ery. 
(Gethsemane.)— FEP— HBP 

Christ  Risen.  (Hymn  III.,  For  Easter  Sunday — G.) — 
Anna  L.  Barbauld.— FEP 

Christ,  the  Refuge  of  the  Soul.- C:  Wesley.— WEP  3 
(Jesu[s],   Lover    of     my    Soul— a6r.)— FEP— LLC 
(SI.  a6r.)— HBP— SPE— YBF 

Christabel.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— BNL  (2  br.  geZ«.)— FEP 
— PEB  3 
(1st  pt.)— BPB— SAE  (set.)— WEP  4 
(Lady's  Chamber,  A — sel.) — BNL 
(Quarrel  of  Friends,  The— seZ.)— BNL 

Christ-child  Alone,     The.— Hannah  P.  Kimball.— TAS 

Christening,  The.— E.  T.  Corbett.— BS  16 

Christening,  The.     (7'a6.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 

Christening,  The.— C:  Lamb.— HBP 

Christening,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 

Christening,  The. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — HDL 

Christening  Dolly.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— HE 

Christian  Charity. — Reynell  Coates. — FEP 

Christian  Citizenship. — C:  H.  Parkhurst. — NC 

Christian  Citizenship. — Wendell  Phillips. — TMR 

Christian  Exaltation.— Paul  H.  Hayne. — TAS 

Christian  Forgiveness.     (Play.) — Anon. — NDP 

Christian  Inheritance,     The. — J:     Keble.     See    Third 
Sunday  in  Lent. 

Christian  Life,  The.  (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 
—BNL 

Christian  Life,  The.     (In  Dr.  Doddridge's  Character.) 
— CS  18— SS 
(Epigram:     "Dum  Vivimus  Vivamus.") — FEP 
(Epigram  on  his  Family  Arms.) — BNL 

Christian  Maiden  and  the  Lion,  The. — Fs.  A.  Duri- 
vage.- CS  19 

Christian  Martyr,  The.  (Sel.  fr.  Aurelian,  Letter  XI.) 
— W:  Ware.— WR  5 

Christian  Militant  [,  The— C.]. — Rob't   Herrick. — EPs 

Christian  Orator,  The.  —  Abel  F.  Villemain.  — 
BLP  (si.  afrr.  )—SS 

Christianity  as  a  Political  Force. — J:  A.  Dix. — BLP 

"Christianity  is  strong  in  its  unity,  strong  in  its  sim- 
plicity."— Anon. — GG 

"  Christianity  now  stirs  men's  thoughts  more  than 
ever.'' — Anon. — GG 

Christian's  Mistake,  Sel.  fr.  (Winning  and  Losing — ver- 
ses heading  Ch.  XIII.) — Dinah  M.  Craik  (7) — 
OS! 

Christie's  Portrait. — Gerald  Massey. — VA 

Christine. — .1:  Hay. — AA 

Christine.— T:  B.  Read.— SR  5 

Christkindlein. — Friedrich  Ruckert. — HS 

Christmas. — Anon. — OS  1 

Christmas. — Anon. — YBT 

Christmas.     (C.)— Marv  M.  Dodge. 
(Christmas  Morning.)— LPS— PP 

Christmas. — Harriet  M.  Lothrop. — SR  9 


Christmas. — J :  Milton.     See  On  the  Morning  of  Christ's 

Nativity. 
Christmas.     (The  Nursery.)— 'PF—FS—YPS 
Christmas. — Marg.  E.   Sangster  (?).— WR  26 
Christmas. — W :  Sawyer.— CS  35 
Christmas. — Walter  Scott.     iSee  Marmion. 
Christmas.- Nahum  Tate.— FEP 

(While  Shepherds  Watched.)— LLC 
(While     Shepherds     Watched     their     Flocks     by 
Night.)— GN— OS  1 
Christmas. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Christmas.-G:  Wither.— BNL  (br.  seZ.)— HBP 

(Christmas  Carol,  A.)— LC  (seZ. )— WEP  2  (abr.) 
Christmas  a  Hundred  Years  to  Come. — Louis  Eisen- 

beis.— CS  30 
Christmas  Acrostic— Anon.— PP— PS — YPS 
Christmas  Again. — Anon. — DFR 
Christmas  Angel,     The. — Rossiter     W.     Raymond. — 

CS33 
Christmas  Angel's  Message,  The. — Clare  B.  Coffey. — 

CS37 
Christmas  at   Bob  Cratchit's,    A. — C:    Dickens.     See 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 
Christmas  at    Fezziwig's    Warehouse. — C:    Dickens. — 

See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 
Christmas  Baby,  The,— Will  Carleton.— CS  22 
Christmas  Ballad,  A. — Mary  A.  Dennison. — BS  9 
Christmas  Bells. — Anon. — DJS 
Christmas  Bells. — Anon. — HP 
Christmas  Bells.— Mary  D.  Brtne.— HSS  3 
Christmas  Bells.     (SeZ.)— J:  Keble.— OS  1 
Christmas     Bells.  —  H:    W.    Longfellow.  —  PEO  — 
WR  26  (abr.) 
(Sel. )— DLS— LPS— PP 
Christmas  Bells.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Christmas  Bells.— G:  L.  Taylor.— HS 
Christmas  Bells. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See    In    Memo- 
riam. 
Christmas  Blessing,  A. — Anon. — CS  25 — SR  3 
Christmas  Bounded. — Anon. — WR  26 
Christmas  Camp  on  the  San  Gabr'el,  A. — Amelia  E. 

Barr.— HP— TMR— WR  2 
Christmas  Carmen,  A. — J:  G.  Whittier. — AE  (sel.) — 

SR4 
Christmas  Carol,  A. — Anon.— FEP 

(God  Rest  You,  Merry  Gentlemen.) — BVC 
Christmas  Carol.     (Br.  sel.) — Anon. — GG 
Christmas  Carol.— Anon.— GN— OS  1— PSR  (si.  abr.) 
Christmas  Carol. — Anon. — OS  1 
Christmas  Carol. — Anon. — OS  2 
Christmas  Carol,  A. — Phillips  Brooks. — WR  26 
Christmas  Carol. — J:  Byrom. — FEP 
Christmas  Carol. — Millie  W.  Carpenter. — SSS  ' 

Christmas  Carol,  A.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— HS 
Christmas  Carol. — Arthur  C.  Coxe. — FEP 
Christmas  Carol.— Dinah  M.  Craik. — FEP— OS  1 

(God  Rest  ye.  Merry  Gentlemen. )^GN 
Christmas  Carol,  A,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 

Bob    Cratchit's    Dinner.— MMR— SAE— SE—VSG 
— WCLG  1— WGS 
(Christmas  at  Bob  Cratchit's,  A — si.  longer  and 

ad.)— IR 
(Christmas    Goose    [at    the  Cratchits'],  The.) — 

OS  2  (abr.) 
(SeZ.)— PP— YPS 
Christmas  Carol,  Sels.  fr.  (2)— SE  , 

Christmas   Party   at   Scrooge's   Nephew's,    The. — 
EA 
(Christmas  Carol — br.  sel.  fr.) — SE 
Old  Fezziwig's  Ball— SO 
(Christmas  at  Fezziwig's  Warehouse — si.  abr.) — 
OSS 
Scrooge  and  Marley. — BS  1  (sel.) — SE 
(Christmas  Invitation,  A — sel.) — IR 
(Miser,  The— seZ.)— WCLG  1 
(Two  Views  of  Christmas— 8eZ.)—E A — SR  3 
Scrooge  Fulfils  his  Vow.     (SI.  abr.  fr.  original.) — 
VSG 
(Scrooge's  Reformation — abr.) — SR  6 
Christmas  Carol.     (C.) — Felicia  Hemans. — OS  1 

(Hymn  for  Christmas — abr.) — GN 
Christmas  Carol,  [A]. — Josiah  G.  Holland. — AA — BS  2 

—GN— LLC— TAS  (abr.) 
Christmas  Carol,  A.     (C. — si.  diff,  fr.  poems.) — Jas.  R. 
Lowell.— TAS 
(Peace  on  Earth — si.  abr.) — LLC 
Christmas  Carol. — W:  Morris.     See  Earthly  Paradise, 

The. 
Christmas  Carol. — May  Probyn. — AVP 
Christmas  Carol,   A. — Christina  C.    Rossetti. — OS  1 — 
YBT  (ahr.)  >  "^  .  -,     4,^. 

(Birthday  Gift,  A— 6r.  8cZ.)—PoRl?^M»e^ '■ 


67 


Christinas 


AM  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Christinas  Carol,  A.  (Abr.) — Abram  J.  Ryan. — BS  8 — 

SR  6  («/.) 
Christmas  Carol,  A.— H.  Sells.— PS 
Christmas  Carol,  A.— Annie  T.  Slosson.— TAS 
Christmas  Carol,  The.  .  (To  the  Rev.  Dr.  Wordsworth 

— C— afer.)— W:  Wordsworth.— EPs— OS  3 
Christmas  Cat,  The.— Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Christmas  Chant,    A. — Alfred  Domett.     See  Christmas 

Hymn,  A. 
Christmas  Chimes. — Anon.     See  Christmas  Chimes  in 

Boston,  etc. 
Christmas  Chimes,  The.— Anon.— CS  20 
Christmas  Chimes,  The. — Susan  Coolidge — HS 
Christmas  Chimes  in  Boston,  Philadelphia,  New  York, 

and  Chicago. — Anon. — CS  37 
(Christmas  Chimes.)— WR  20 
Christmas  Comin'. — Anon. — TFS 
Christmas  Day. — Alice  W.  Brotherton. — HS 
Christmas  Day.— J:  Keble.— AVP 
Christmas  Day. — C:  Kingsley. — HS 
Christmas  Day.— S:  Richards.— FTR 
Christmas  Day.     (^6r.)— C:  Wesley.— OS  2 

(Hark!  the  Herald  Angels.)— LLC 
Christmas  Dialogue. — Anon. — SR  3 
Christmas  Dialogue,  A.— Anon. — YFD 
Christmas  Dream,  A. — H.  A.  Foster. — SR  3 

(Christmas  Eve.)— CS  9 
Christmas  Eve.     (Sel.  fr.  Some  were  Empty.) — Anon. 

— GMS 
Christmas  Eve. — Hamilton  A'id^. — VSG 

(Christmas-eve  Redemption,  A.) — WR  16 
Christmas  Eve.— A.  W.  Bellaw  [or  Belaw].— SR  10 
(Christmas-tide — dial. — ad.  by  J.  W.  Shoemaker.) — 

CDD 
Christmas  Eve. — Eugene  Field. — TAS 
Christmas  Eve. — H.A.Foster.  SeeChristmasDream, A. 
Christmas  Eve. — Violet  Fuller. — HS 
Christmas  Eve.     {Pantomime.) — Jennie      [or     Jenny] 

Joy.— DS— NPS— TCP  (anon.)— YA—YP 
Christmas  Eve.  {London  Public  Opinion.) — EDY 
Christmas    Eve     Adventure,     A.      {Dial.)  —  Ella    H. 

Clement. — CDs 
Christmas  Eve  Adventure,  A.— M.M.— DS — PP— YA 

— YFR 
Christmas   Eve   in   the   Olden   Time. — Walter   Scott. 

See  Marmion. 
Christmas  Eve  Redemption,  A. — Hamilton  Ai'd^.     See 

Christmas  Eve. 
Christmas  Exercise,  A. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — SSE 
Christmas  Exercises. — Anop. — WR  26 
Christmas  Flowers. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — WR  6 
Christmas  Folk   and   Children. — Lizzie   M.    Hadley. — 

HE 
Christmas  Gathering. — H :  Ware,  Jr. — TAS 
Christmas  Gift,  A.— Ella  M.  Powers.— WR  26 
Christmas  Gift,  A.— David  L.  Proudfit.— DE8 
Christmas  Gift  that  Came  to  Rupert,  The.     (C.)— Fs. 

Bret  Harte. 
(Doctor's  Story,  The— cond.) — BS  20 
Christmas  Gifts.— Anon.— WR  26 
Christmas  Good-night,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Christmas  Goose  [at  the  Cratchits'],  The. — C :  Dickens. 

See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 
Christmas  Green. — Lucy  Larcom — LCS 
Christmas  Greens. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Christmas  Guest,  The. — Helen  A.  Goodwin. — BS   15 
Christmas  Guest,  A.— Ruth  McE.  Stuart.— HBR 
Christmas  Guests  [.The]. — Lindsay  Duncan. — CS  32 — 

WR8 
Christmas    Holly,  The.  — Eliza   Cook.— OS  1  (abr.)— 

PoR  {set.) 
(Holly,  The.)— POS 
Christmas    Hymn,  A. — Anon. — CS  17 
Christmas  Hymn,      A.     (C.) — Alfred      DomcH      (tmr. 

Dommet  o»-  Dommett).— EDY— FEP— GN— 

HBP— OS  2— PGT  2 

{Old  style  ) VA 

(Christmas  Chant,  A.)— CS  16— PTS  (abr.) 
(Nativity,  The.)— AVP 
Christmas  Hymn,  A.— R:  W.  Gilder.— HS 
Christmas  Hymn. — J:  Milton.     See  On  the  Morning  of 

Christ's  Nativity. 
Ohri.stma«  Hymn. — Edmund  H.  Sears. — BS  3  {abr.) 
(Calm  on  the  Ear  of  Night— a6r.)— LLC 
(Christmas  Song.)— HS— OS  3 
Christmas  Hymn.— C;  Wesley.— WEP  3 

(Hark!     How  all  the  Welkin  Rings.)— FEP 
Christmas  in  Chicago. — A.  M.  White,  Jr. — CG  2 
Christmas  in  England. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marmion. 
Christmas  in  Sweden  — Anon. — YBT 
Christmas  in    the    Olden    Time. — Walter    Scott.     See 

Marmion. 


Christmas  in  the  Snow. — Anon.     See  Under  the  Snow. 
Christmas  Invitation,  A. — C;  Dickens.     iSee  Christmas 

Carol,  A. 
Christmas  Joy. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Christmas  Legend,  A. — Anon. — CS  34 
Christmas  Letter,  A. — Jas.  C.  Challiss. — WR  24 
Christmas  Letter  from  Australia,  A. — Douglas  B.  W. 

Sladen.— VA 
Christmas  Lullaby,  A. — J:  A.  Symonds. — PoR 
Christmas  Lullaby,  A.— Arthur  Weir.— TCV 
Christmas  Memory,  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC—TL 
Christmas  Morn. — Blanche  Bishop. — TCV 
Christmas  Morning.— Dora  Greenwell. — HS 
Christmas  Morning.— Mary  M.  Dodge.     See  Christmas. 
Christmas  Night. — Clifton  Johnson. — ASD 
Christmas  Night   in   the   Quarters. — Irwin    Russell. — 

BRR  {si.  abr.)— C8  16  (seZ.)- FTR  {abr.)— SA 
(De  Fust  Banjo — sel.) — AA 

(Christmas-night  in  the  Quarters,  sel.  fr.) — AWH 
(First  Banjo,  The)— FTR 

{SI.  a6r.)— DR— PTS 
(Origin  of  the  Banjo,  The.)— THP 
Christmas  Night  of  '62.— W:  G.  McCabe.— AA— EDY 
(Christmas  Outcasts.     {New  York  Sun.) — HP 
Christmas  Pantomime.     {Popular  Educator.) — DCP — 

DFR 
Christmas  Party    at    Scrooge's    Nephew's,    The. — C: 

Dickens.     <See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 
Christmas  Pastime.  A. ;  or  the  Crying  Family. — Mrs. 

L.  A.  Bradbury.— HE 
Christmas  Peal,  The.— Harriet  P.   Spoflford  (?).— PEO 
Chri.stmas  Pictures. — D.  B.  Williamson.- — HS 
Christmas  Pudding,  The.    {Fr.  Poetical  Cookery-book.) 

(Pwnc^.)- HPE 
Christmas  Question,    A. — Minot  J.  Savage. — PEO 
Christmas  Repentance,  A. — Sarah  Bernhardt. — WR  7 

(Repentir  de  Noel — French  vers.) — WR  7 
Christmas  Rose,  The. — Sue  S.  Morton. — HE 
Christmas  Roses.— May  R.  Smith. — PEO 
Chri.stmas  Shadows. — Anon. — HP 

Christmas  Sheaf,    The.— Phoebe    Gary.- BS  4— FMR 
Christmas  Sheaf,  The. — Mrs.  A.  M.  Tomlinson. — WR  6 
Christmas  Silence,  The. — Marg.  Deland.— NV— PoR 
Christmas  Song,  A.— Tudor  Jenks.— EDY— TAS 
Christmas  Song,  A. — Mrs.  Hattie  S.  Russell. — HP 
Christmas  Song,  A.— Abram  J.  Ryan. — SR  4 
Christmas  Song. — Edmund  H.  Sears.     See  Christmas 

Hymn. 
Christmas  Star,  The. — Bertha  M.  Wilson. — MN 
Christmas  Story,  A. — Alice  Cary. — BLF 
Christmas  Story,  A. — Jane  Kavanaugh. — CS  31 
Christmas  Thought,  A. — Lucy  Larcom. — PEO 
Christmas  Thought    about     Dickens,    A. — Bertha    S. 

Scranton. — PEO 
Christmas  Thoughts.— T.  De  Witt  Talmage.— SR  3 
Christmas  Tide.— Eliza  Cook.— HS 
Christmas  Tide.     See  also  Chri.stmas-tide. 
Christmas  Time.— Kate  N.  Festellis.— HS 
Christmas  Time,— Mrs.  F.  Spangenberg.— LPS— PP 
Christmas  Times. — Clement  C.  Moore.     See  Visit  from 

St.  Nicholas,  A. 
Christmas  Treasures. —  Eugene      Field.  —  EF  —  HP  — 

WR  2— WTD 
Christmas  Tree,  The.     (DiaZ.)- Anon.— DFR— KJ 
Christmas   Tree,   A.    (C. — in  Reprinted   Pieces.) — C: 

Dickens. 
(Recollections   of    my  Christmas  Tree.) — CS  8 — 

Lj^Q SAE 

Christmas  Tree,  The. — Marg.  E.  Sangster  (7). — CS  16 
Christmas  Tree,  The.— Lucy  Wheelock.— HS 
Christmas  Trees,  The.— Mary  F.  Butts.— PoR 
Christmas  Week.— Emma  S.  Stillwell.- BS  18 
Christmas  Welcome,  The. — Anon. — WR  26 
Christmas-day.     See  Christmas  Day. 
Christmas-eve  Redemption,  A. — Hamilton  .Vid^.     See 

Christmas  Eve. 
Christmastide. — Anon. — BS  24 

Christmas-tide. — A.  W.  Bellaw.     See  Christmas  Eve. 
Christmas-tide  Shadow,  A. — Norman  Howard. — CS  33 
Christopher  C— .— Anon.— CS  31— WR  10 
Christopher  Columbus. — Anon. — GH — PS 
Christopher  Columbus. — Anon. — MYF 
Christopher  Marlowe.      {Frags,   fr.   various  authors.) 

— BNL 
Christ's  Birthday. — Anon. — YBT 
Christ's  Coming  to  Jerusalem   in  Triumph.     (Second 

Hymn  for  Advent,  The — C.) — Jeremy  Taylor. 

— CEL 
Christ's  Giving. — Anna  E.  Hamilton. — FHS 
Christ's  Love.— Philip  Doddridge.— YBT 
Christ's  Triumph  on  Earth,  Sel.   fr.     (Lady  of  Vain 

Delight,  The.)— Giles  Fletcher.— WR  11 


68 


TITLE    INDEX 


Class 


Christ's  Victory  in  Heaven.     {Sel.) — Giles  Fletcher. — 

WEP2 
Christus:  A  Mystery,  Sels.  fr. — H:  W.  Longfellow. 

Abbess's  Story,  The.— (SeZ.  fr.  Ft.  II.— The  Golden 

Legend,  IV.)— BS  13 
"Poor    sad    humanity."       (Br.  ad.,   fr.  Finale.) — 

HDL 
Story  of  the  Monk  Felix,  The.    (Sel.  fr.  Ft.  II.— The 

Golden  Legend.  II.)— VSG 
"There  are  two  angels,  that  attend  unseen.'      (Br. 
sel.  fr.  Ft.  II.— The  Golden  Legend,  VI.)— FHS 
Chronicle,  A. — Anon. — NA 
Chronicle,    The.      A    Ballad.  —  Abraham    Cowley.  — 

BNL(a6r.)— FEP— HBF— WEP  2 
Chronicle  of  the  Cid.   (Tr.  6y)  Robt.  Southey.   »:Je«Cid, 

The. 
Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The. — W:  M.   Thackeray. — 
FEP 
(^6r.)— AVF— PSR 
Abdication  of  Napoleon.     (Sel.) — EDY 
Execution  of  Louis  XVI.     (Se/.)— EDY 
Execution  of  Marie  Antoinette.     (Br.  sel.) — EDY 
Execution  of  the  Princess  de  Lamballe.     (Sel.) — 
EDY 
Chrysalis,  A. — Mary  E.  Bradley. — AA — SN 
Chrysalis  of  a  Bookworm,  The. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — 

MBB 
Chrysanthemum,  The. — Frank  S.  Pixley — BS  25 
Chrysanthemums. — Mrs.  Mary  E.  Dodge. — PEO 
Chrysanthemums. — Roberta  K.  Elliot. — BS  21 
Church,  The. — Nathaniel  L.  Frothingham.— TAS 
Church  and  State.— T:  Moore. — HPE 
Church  Dedication.     (Hymn — for     the     Opening     of 
Plymouth  Church,  St.  Paul,  Minnesota — C.) — 
J:  G.  Whittier.— TAS 
Church  Fair,  The.— L:  Eisenbeis.— CS  27 
"Church  in  debt  feels  that  prudence  demands,  The." — 

Sylvanus  Stall.— GG 
Church    in    Lucre    Hollow,  The. — Louis    Eisenbeis — 

CS33 
Church  Kitchen,  The.— Louis  Eisenbeis.— CS  32 
Church  of  a  Dream,  The. — Lionel  Johnson. — TIP 
Church  Militant,  The.— H.  S.  Cutler.— LLC 
Church  of  Brou,  The.— Matthew  Arnold. — WR  1  (abr.) 
Hunters,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ft.  I.)— CSS— PPSr 
Tomb  in  the  Church  of  Brou,  The.     (Ft.  III.:    The 
Tomb.)— AVP 
* 'Church  of  Christ,  if  called  to  pass  again  through  the 

age  of  martyrdom,  The." — J:  F.  Hurst. — GG 
Church  of  Ireland,  The,  .S'eZ.  fr.     (Established  Church 

of  Ireland,  The.)— T:  B.  Macaulay.— SS 
Church  of  Ireland,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Established  Church 

of  Ireland.  The.)— R:  L.  Sheil.— SS 
"Church  of  the  living  God!  in  vain  thy  foes."    W:  L. 

Garrison. — GG 
Church  Porch,  The.    (Abr.)~G:  Herbert.— BNL—EPs 
Church  Reveries  of  a  School-girl. — Mrs.  Enoch  Taylor. 

— CS20 
Church  Scene,  A. — Anon. — DS 
Church  Spider,  The.— Anon.— CS  13— DST 
Church  Spider.  The.— Anon.— CSS 
Church  Steps,  The.— G:  T.  Foster.— HP 
Church  Universal.  The.— S:  Longfellow.— TAS 
Churches  and  Saloons. — J :  F.  Hurst. — WR  18 
Churchill's  Grave. — Lord  Byron. — EDY 
Church-raffles.— Anon.— PTS 
Churchyard,  The. — Rob't  Buchanan. — VA 
Churning,  The.— B :  F.  Taylor.— PPSr 
Churning  Song,  The. — Silas  Dinsmore — HP 
Cicely  and  the  Bears.     (Shock-headed  Cicely  and    the 

Two  Bears— O—W:  B.  Rands.— MYF 
Cicely  Croak.- Emma  C.  Dowd.— BS  16 
Cicero  against  Verres. — Cicero.     See  Verres  Denounced. 
Cicero  and   Demosthenes  Compared. — F.  de  S.  de  la 

M.  F(«nelon.— PS 
Cid,  The,  Sels.  fr. 

Cid  and  Bavieca,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  IX.,  Lockhart's 

verse  tr.) — CS  7 
Cid  and  the  Leper,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  I.,  do.)— WR  8 
Count    Raymond    and    my    Cid.     (Fr.    Bk.    IV., 

Ormsby's  Poem  of  the  Cid). — NE 
My  Cid's  Triumph.     (Fr.  Bk.  X.,  rfo.)— NE 
Poem  of  the  Cid,  Story  of. — Kate  M.  Rabb. — NE 
Siege   of   Zamora,   The.     (Fr.    Bk.   II.,   Southey's 
Chronicle  of  the  Cid.)— WR  11 
Cid  and  Bavieca,  The. — Anon. — See  Cid,  The. 
Cid  and  the  Leper,  The. — Anon.     See  Cid,  The. 
Cigar,  The.     (SI.  abr.)—T:  Hood.— PPh 
Cigarette  and  Pipe,  A.     (Cornell  Widow.) — CG  3 
Cigarette  Rings. — J.  Ashby-Sterry. — PPh 
Cigars  and  Beer. — G:  Arnold. — PPh 
(Beer— O— A  A 


Cinderella;  or,  the  Glass  Slipper.  (Dial.) — Mrs.  G: 
McDonald.— MPD 

Cinderella's  Slipper.     (Tab.).— Anon.— PR— TCP 

Cinkante  Balades,  Sel.  fr.  (Opening  of  the  thirteenth.) 
— JrGower.- WEP  1 

Cipher  Dispatch,  The,  Sel.  ad.  fr.  (Love  Conquers 
Revenge.)— Rob't  Byr.— NDP 

Circe.     (Columbia  Spectator.) — CG  2 

Circe.— J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De  Tabley.— VA 

Circle  Day. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 

Circulating  Library  Social. — Anon. — EuE 

Circumstance. — T-  B.  Aldrich. — AA 

Circumstance. — Alfred  Tennyson. — AVP 

Circumstances  Alter  Cases. — Anon  . — FHE 

Circumstances  Favorable  to  the  Progress  of  Literature 
in  America,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Prospects  of  the  Re- 
public, The.)— E:  Everett.— BS  11— SR  4 
(American  Experiment  of  Self-government,  The — 

abr.)— SS—SSD—TMD 
(Our  Republic— a6r.)— SO 

Circumstantial  Evidence. — Anon. — KNE 

Circus  Boy,  The.— A.  A.  V.  Thomson.— CS  33— NFS 
— YP 

Circus  Clown,  The.— Nathan  D.  Urner.— CS  15 

Circus-day  Parade,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 

Cities  of  the  Bible. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — SSE 

Citizen  and  the  Saloon  System,  The. — S:  Dickie. — 
WR  18 

Citizen  and  the  Thieves,  The. — Anon. — BC 

Citizen's  Responsibility,  A.  (Fr.  a  Speech  delivered 
at  Canton,Ohio,  May  30,  1894.) — W:McKinley. 
— SC 

City,  The.— R:  Burton.— TAV 

City  and  the  Country,  The. — By  "A  Member  of  the 
Baltimore  Bar." — ED 

City  and  the  Sea,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— PEO 

City  Bells.     (Fr.  The  Lay  of  St.  Aloy's.)— R:  H.  Bar- 
ham.— BNL 

City  Child,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— HSS  2— PoR 

City  Contrasts. — Anon. — HP 

City  in  the  Sea,  The.— Edgar  A.  Foe.- AA— ASL 

City  Man's    Dream    of    the    Country.     (Agricultural 
Editor's    Poem,    The— C.)— Sam  W.  Foss.— 
BS24 
(Country  Summer  Pastoral,  A.) — WR  14 

City  Men  in  the  Country.  (Lines  Recited  at  the  Berk- 
shire Jubilee,  Pittsfield,  Mass.,  Aug.  23,  1844 
—O— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— SS 

City  Mystery,  A. — Amy  Randolph. — WR  7 

City  of  Dreadful  Night,  The,  Sel/fr.    (Sts.  I..  XVII., 
XXI.)— Jas.  Thomson.— WEP  4 
(Melencolia— XXI.)— VA 

City  of  God,  The.— S:  Johnson.— A  A— TAS 

City  of  Is,  The.— M.  J.  Savage.— BS  15 

City  of  New  York,  The.— F:  Ren^  Coudert.— SC 

City  of  the  End  of  Things,  The. — Archibald  Lamp- 
man. — VA 

City  of  the  Living,  The.— Anon.— KNE — LLC  (abr.) 

City  or  Country.— Anon. — LPS — PP 

City  Sportsman,  The.— W:  H.  Hills.— PP—YPS 

City  Tale,  A.— Alfred  H.  Miles.— CS  35 

Civil  War.— C:  D.   Shanly.— AWB— BNL— CS  4— GP 
MMR— PS— SR  4 
(Fancy  Shot,  The.)— PAPm 

Civil  War.     An    Episode    of    the    Commune. — Victor 
Hugo  (tr.  by  Lucy  H.  Hooper).- CS  32— DR 
(si.  abr.) 
(Relenting  Mob,  A.)— BS  18— PFP 

Civil  War  in  America,  The.— J:  Bright.— OS  2 

Civil  War  the  Greatest  National  Evil. — J:  H:  Temple, 
Viscount  Palmerston. — OM — SS 

Civility  Never  Lost. — Anon. — FDY 

Civilization  of  Africa. — E:  Everett. — SS 

Claim  was  Met,  The.— Anon. — CS  37 

Claims  of  Mutability  Pleaded  before  Nature. — 
Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Clam-soup.— W:  A.  Croffut.— HBP— THP 

Clan  Alpine.— Walter  Scott.  See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 
The. 

Clansman  to  his  Chief,  The. — C:  Mackay.  See  Mac- 
laine's  Child. 

Clarabel's  Valentine. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 

Clara's  Gifts.— Anon.— HVD 

Clarence's  Dream. — W:  Shakespeare.  See  King  Rich- 
ard III. 

Clari,  the  Maid  of  Milan,  Sel.fr.—3:  H.Payne.  See 
Home,  Sweet  Home. 

Claribel.— Alfred  Tennyson.— WEP  4 

Claribel's  Prayer.— M.  L.  Parmelee.— CSS— GP— PPSr 

Clarissa  Laughs. — Ruth  P.  Milne. — CG  2 

Class  Meeting,  1875.  (For  Class  Meeting,  1875— C.) 
—Oliver  W.  Holmes.— SE  (sel.) 


69 


Class 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Class  Song. — Anon. — CP 

Class  Tree,  The.— Emma  S.  Thomas.— AD 

Class  Will.— Anon.— CP 

Class-day  Hamlet,  A,— H.  P.  Hvmtress. — CG  3 

Classic  Ode,  A. — C:  B.  Loomis. — NA 

Classical  Criticism. — G?  L.  Richardson. — AA 

Classical  Music— G:  Kyle.— WR  3 

Claude  Melnotte  to  Pauline. — E;  Bulwer-Lytton.  See 
Lady  of  Lyons,  The. 

Claude  Melnotte's  Apology  [and  Defence]. — E:  Bul- 
wer-Lytton.    See  Lady  of  Lyons,  The. 

Claude  to  Eustace. — Arthur  H.  Clough.  See  Amours 
de  Voyage. 

Claud ian,  SeL  fr.  (Curse,  The.) — Herman  and  Wills. — 
WR  13 

Claudius  and  Cynthia. — Maurice  Thompson.  See 
Doom  of  Claudius  and  Cynthia,  The. 

Cleanliness.— Anon.— TFS 

Cleanliness. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC — PoR 

Cleansing  Fires. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — HDL — SSS 

Clear  and  Cool. — C :  Kingsley.     See  Water  Babies.iThe. 

Clear  Case,  A.— Wade  Whipple.— CS  29 

^lear  the  Way.— C:  Mackay.— CS  16— FP— HSS  3— 
SM— TMD 

Clearing  up  Technicalities. — Anon. — WR  4 

Clematis. — Dora  Read  Goodale. — AD 

Clemency  of  Salah-ud-Deen,  The.  (Adulteress,  The 
—C.—8l.  a6r.)— Edwin  Arnold.— WR  24 

Clemont's  Day  Dream. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 

Cleon  and  I.— C:  Mackay.— BNL— CSS— GP— HSS  2 
PPSr— SS 

Cleone  to  Aspasia. — Walter  S.  Landor.  See  Pericles 
and  Aspasia. 

Cleopatra. — W :  Shakespeare.  See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra.— W:  W.  Story.— AA— MR— SR  7 

Cleopatra  and  the  Messenger. — W :  Shakespeare.  See 
Antony  and  Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra  at  Actium. — T:  K.  Hervey. — OS  3 

Cleopatra  to  Antony. — Sarah  Doudney. — HP 

"Cleopatra,  who  thought  they  maligned  her."  {Lim- 
erick.)— Newton  Mackintosh. — NA 

Cleopatra's  Barge. — W:  Shakespeare.  iSee  Antony 
and  Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra's  Dream. — J.  J.  Owens. — HP 

Cleopatra's  Protest. — E:  L.  Keyes. — WR  3 

Cleopatra's  Resolution. — W:  Shakespeare.  See  An- 
tony and  Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra's  Soliloquy. — Mary  B.  Clark. — HP 

Clergy  and  the  Pulpit,  The. — {Frags,  fr.  various 
authors.) — BNL 

Clergyman  had  to  Explain,  The. — Anon. — SR  10 

"Clergyman  while  speaking  in  the  pulpit." — David 
Swing.— GG 

Clerical  Wit.— Anon.— CS  4— SCS 
(Wonderful  Mosquitoes.) — KNE 

Clerk  Colvill;  or,  the  Mermaid.— Anon.— PEB  1 

Clerk   Saunders.     {In    Border    Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — 
WEP  1 
{SI.  air.)- BB— OB 
{Diff.  and  shorter  vers.)— PEB  2 

Clerkes  Tale,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.  See  Canter- 
bury Tales. 

Clerks,  The.— E.  A.  Robinson.— AA 

Clever  Idiot,  The.— Anon.— BC 

Clever  Trick,  A.— Anon.— MYF 

Clifford's  Way.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 

Cliflfs  of  Dover,  The.  (C.)— Felicia  D.  Hemans. 
(Rocks  of  my  Country^)— BLP—SS 

Climatic  Sorcery. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 

Climax,  The.     {Boston  Courier.)— BSS 

Climbing. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 

Climbing  up  the  Hill.— Anon.— DCP 

Cling  to  those  who  Cling  to  you. — Anon. — SSS 

Clippings  from  the  Press. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 

Clito. — Anon.     See  foUounng. 

Clito's  Address  to  the  Men  of  Athens.  {Fr.  Clito.) — 
Anon.— WR  13 

Clive.     (Abr.)— Rob't  Browning.— BS  21 
(Lord  Clive.)— DR 

"Clock  at  Berne.  The."— Sidney  Grundy.— WR  13 

Clocking  Hen,  The.— "Aunt  Effie."— WCL 

Clock's  Song,  The. — Rose  H.  Lathrop. — AA 

Clock-tinker,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 

Cloister,  The.— Lydia  M.  Child.— TAS 

Cloistered. — Alice  Brown. — AA 

Clorinda  and  Damon. — Andrew  Marvell. — EP 

Clorus'  Song.— W:  Basse.— EP 

Close  at  Hand. — Susan  Coolidge. — HDL 

Close  of  a  Rainy  Day,  The.— Nathan  H.  Dole.— POS 

Close  of  Defense  of  Dartmouth  College.  {Fr.  The 
Dartmouth  College  Case.) — Dan'l  Webster. — 
FD  1 


Close  of  Impeachment  of  Hastings. — Edmund  Burke. 

iSee  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 
Close  of  School. — Anna  Morgan. — SD 
Close  of  the  Battle  of  Waterloo. — Victor  Hugo.     See 

Les  Mi8(?rables. 
Close  Shave,  A.— "Bob  o'Link."— DDD 
Close  to  Ninety.— J.  H.  Bryant.— TMR 
Closet  Scene    from    Hamlet. — W:    Shakespeare.     See 

Hamlet. 
Closing  Address.— Anon.— DCP— SSS 
Closing  Address. — Anon. — PS 
Closing  Address.- M.  E.  Cornell.  —HE 
Closing  Day. — Anon. — 'KC 

Closing  of  the  "Eagle,"  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— MTD 
Closing  Scene,  The.— Anon.— CS  31— TS 
Closing  Scene,  The.— T:  B.   Read.— AA— BNL — CS  2 

FEP— GP— SE  {br.  eeZ.)- SN 
Closing  Song  for  School  Exhibition. — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 

anaugh. — DLD 
Closing  Speech. — Anon. — DLF 

(Good-bye.)— DLS 
Closing  Year,   The.— G:   D.   Prentice.-rrBNL— BS  3— 

CS  1  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  HNS  —  LLC  —  SA  — 

SAE  {hr.  «eZ.)— WRD 
Cloud,  The.— Anon.— HP 
Cloud,  The.— Anon.— SM 
Cloud,  The.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— AE  {hr.  «eZ.)— BNL 

BS  13  —  EPs  {sel.)  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  — 

HSS  3— LLC— SN— SO— VSGt— WEP  4 
(A6r.)— LC— POS 
{Ind.  in,  "An  April  Day"— sZ.  oZw.)- WR  9 
Cloud  Beauty. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Modern  Painters. 
Cloud  Castles.— W:  H:  Withrow.- TCV 
Cloudland. — {Columbia  Literary  Monthly.) — CG  2 
Clouds,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Clouds,  The.— W:  Croswell.— AA 
Clouds,  The. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Modem  Painters. 
Clouds.— Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL— PoR 
Cloud-visions. — W : Wordsworth.     See  Excursion,  The 
Cloudy  Day,  A.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— SPC 
Clover,  The. — Marg.  Deland. — AA 
Clover.     Dora  R.  Goodale. — AD 
Clover,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— HP 
Clover.- J:  B.  Tabb.— AA 
Clover     Blossoms,      The. — Oscar      Laighton. — BIL — 

FTA  ' 

Clown's  Baby,  The.— Marg.  T.  Janv  er— BS  11— CS  23 

FEP— FR— PPSr— SPE 
Clowns'  First  Rehearsal,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     <Se« 

Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
Clowns'  Horn  Drill. — Anon. — WDM 
Clown's  Lament,  The. — Clement  Scott. — WR  13 
Clowns'  Second     Rehearsal,     The. — W:     Shakespeare. 

jSee  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
Clown's  Story,  The.— Vandyke  Browne. — CS  8 — SA 
Club,  The. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Spectator,  The. 
Clue,  The.— Charlotte  F.  Bates.— AA 
Coaching  the   Rising  Star. — Stella  De  Lorez. — BS  20 

— WR  20 
Coal  Digger,  The.— Jessie  F.  O'Donnell.— DES 
Coasters,  The.— T:  F.  Day.— AA 
Coast-guard,  The.— Emily  H.  Miller.— PEO 
Coasting  New  Year's  Eve. — Anon. — HS 
Coast-wise  Lights,  The.     {Fr.  A  Song  of  the  English.) — 

Rudyard  Kipling. — BNL 
Cob  House  [si,  The.— Kate    P.    Osgood— HP— WR  17 
Cobbe's  Prophecies. — Cobbe. — NA 
Cobbler,  The.— Anon.— DCP— DS—PP—YA—YFR 
Cobbler  and  hhe]  Stork  [The].— Eugene  Field.— EF— 

— WTD 
Cobbler  Keezar's  Vision. — J:  G.  Whittier. — AP 
Cobbler  of  Lynn,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  26 
Cobbler's  Secret,    The. — Mrs.    Russell    Kavanaugh. — 

KJ 
Cobra,  The. — Miller  Hageman. — DR 
Cobweb  Party,  The.— Anon.— EuE 
Cock  and  Hen  Story,  A.     (Legend,  The— C.—/r.  The     «■ 

Pilgrim   to   Compostella.) — Rob't    Southey. — 

HPE 
Cock  and  the   Bull,  The.— C:   S.  Calverley.— BNL— 

NA 
Cock  up  your  Beaver. — Rob't  Burns. — LC 
Cock-a-doodle-doo. — Anon. — PC 
Cockatoos,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Cockayne  Country. — A.  M.  F.  (Robinson)  Darmesteter 

— VA 
Cockle  vs.  Cackle. — T:  Hood.— ESs 
Cockney  Wail,  A.— Anon.— CS  11  {si.  a6r.)— HP  _ 
Cockscomb.      {Fr.    Ascutney    Charades.)  —  Julia    A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Cocoa-tree,  The.— C.  W.  Stoddard.— AA 
Codfish,  The.— H:  M.  Shaw.— SR  5 


70 


TITLE    INDEX 


Come 


Cod-fisher,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 

CcbIus  to  Hyperion. — J;  Keats.     See  Hyperion. 

Coeur  de   Lion   at   the    Bier  of    his   Father. — Felicia 

D.  Hemans.— CS  4— ED Y— PS 
Cceur  de  Lion  to  Berengaria. — Theodore  Tilton. — AA 
Coffee  my  Mother  Used  to  Make,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — 

CD— SR  17 
(Like  his  Mother  Used  to  Make — C.)— HP 
Coffee  Slips,  The.— C:  and  Mary  Lamb.— LPC 
Cogitabo    pro    Peccato     Meo. — W:    Habington.     See 

Castara. 
Cohen  at    the    Seashore. — J.    W.    Ransome. — CDV 
Coin  of  Pity,  The. — G:  Meredith.     See  Modem  Love. 
Coincidence,  A. — F.  T.  Cooper. — CG  1 
Cold.— Theodore  Roberts.— TCV 
Cold,  Hard  Cash.     {Chicago  Herald.)— BS  19 
Cold  in  the  Head,  A. — Mrs.     Russell     Kavanaugh. — 

DDD 
Cold  in    the    Head,    A.     (Letter   to    Bernard   Barton, 

Jan.  9th,  1824— C— a6r. )— C :  Lamb.— OS  3 
Cold  Water.— H:  H.  Holloway.— SSS 
Cold  Water.- Lydia  H.  Sigourney.— PPSr- TS 
Cold  Water  Boys.— Anon.— COS— POS 
Cold-water  Cross.     {Dial.) — Anon. —  CSS 
Cold-water  Man,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— CSS— THP 
Coleridge.— G.  S.  Hellman.— AA 
Coleridge. — Theodore  Watts. — VA 
Colin.— Anthony  Munday.— PGT  1 
(Beauty  Bathing.)— OB 
(To  Colin  Clout.)— EP—WEP  1 
Colin  and  Lucy.— T:  Tickell.— CGd  (si.  abr. )—FEP 
Colin's  Complaint. — Nicholas  Rowe. — FEP 
Colin's  Lay   of   Elisa. — Edmimd   Spenser.     See  Shep- 

heardes  Calendar,  The. 
Coliseum,    The. — Lord    Byron.     See   Childe    Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Coliseum,    The.     (Fr.    Rome    in    Summer.) — H:    W. 

Longfellow.— OS  3 
Coliseum  [by     Moonlight],     The. — Lord     Byron.     See 

Manfred. 
Collar,  The.— G :  Herbert.— ELP—WEP  2 
College  and  the  Nation,  The. — Grover  Cleveland.    See 

Political  Duties  and  Responsibilities  of  Univer- 
sity Men. 
College  Colonel,  The. — Herman  Melville. — AA 
College  Days. — Carleton  Hunneman. — CG  1 
College  "Oil  Cans."— Will  Victor  McGuire.— CS  27 
College  Rowing-song,  A.— W.  J.  H.— CG  1 
College  Training,  A. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
College  Verse.     (Williams  Argo.) — CG  1 
College  Widow,  A. — Anon. — CG  1 

Collegian  and  the  Porter,  The.— J.  R.  Planche. — CS  3 
Collegian  to  his  Bride,  The.     (Punch.)— BNL 
"Collegiate  education  has  this  distinction  and  privi- 
lege, A." — Theodore  Woolsey. — GG 
Collision  of  Vices  [,A1.— G :  Canning— PS— SS 
Colloquial  Powers  of  Dr.  Franklin.— W:  Wirt.— BS  17 
Colloquy  between    Portia   and    Nerissa   regarding  the 

Suitors. — W:  Shakespeare.     See   Merchant   of 

Venice,   The. 
Colloquy  on  a  Cab-stand.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Colloquy  with  Myself,   A. — Bernard  Barton. — WRD 
Collusion  between  a  Alegaitor   and  a  Water-Snaik. — 

J.  W.  Morris.— BNL—EPs—NA 
Cologne.     (O— S:  T    Coleridge.— FEP— HBP— THP 
(Epigram:  Cologne.) — BNL 
(Expectoration  the  Second.) — HPE 
Colonel  Burnaby. — Andrew  Lang. — EDY 
Colonel  Carter   of    Cartersville,  Sel.  jr.     (One-legged 

Goose,  The— sel.   jr.  Ch.  III.)— F.  Hopkinson 

Smith.— BS  24— CS  31— HBR— WR  4 
(One-legged  Duck,  The— arr.  byVi:  H.  Head.)— 

SRll 
Colonel  Ingersoll's   Remarkable   Vision.     (Fr.   Speech 

at     Indianapolis,     Ind.,     Sept.    21,     1876.) — 

Rob't  G.  Ingersoll.— FS 
(Vision  of  War,  The.)— SC 
Colonel's  Experiment,    The. — Will     Lisenbee. — CS  37 

— WR26 
Colonel's  Orders,  The. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  29 
Colonel's  Story,  The.— Rob't  C.  Rogers.— TMR 
Colonization  of    America,    The. — W:    H.    Prescott. — 

WR  10 
Colonna  to  the  King.— R:  L.  Shiel.— SS 
Colonos.— H:  Alford.— VA 

Colorado.     (Acting  char.) — Millie  M.   Olcott. — StD 
Colorado  Hotel  Rules. — T.  Sheppard.— PS 
Colored  Man's    Disco'se    on    Different    Subjects,  A. — 

Anon.— MCS 
Colored  Philosophy. — W.  E.  Cochran. — BS  24 
Colors  of  the  Regiment,  The.     (Sels.) — F.  W.  Robert- 
son.—OS  2 


Colour  Passage,     A. — W:     Browne.     See     Britannia's 

Colubriad,  The.— W :  Cowper.— BFV— CGd 

Columbia. — E;  Chapman. — TMR 

Columbia.— Timothy   Dwight.— AWB— BNL— BS  4— 

CS  12— PAPm— PKR  (si.  abr. )—SR  8 
Columbia.— P.  S.  Gilmore.— CS  18— PRR 
Columbia. — F.  L.  Knowles. — PAPm 
Columbia  and  Liberty. — Rob't  Treat  Paine. — -WR  10 
Columbia  and  Mr.  "They  Say." — Clara  J.  Denton — 

WLO 
Columbia  and  the  Boys  — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Columbia,  •  the  Gem    of  the  Ocean. — David  T.  Shaw 

(also  at.  to  Timothy  Dwight). — CP  (si.  abr.)— 

LLC— PAPm  (si.  diff.  vers:) 
(Columbia,  the  Land  of  the  Brave.) — BLP 
(Red,  White  and  Blue,  The.)— WCLI  2 
Columbia,  the  Land  of  the  Brave. — David  T.  Shaw. 

See  Columbia,  the  Gem  of  the  Ocean. 
Columbian  Exposition    Opened,    The. — Grover   Cleve- 
land.—BLP 
Columbian  Legend,  A. — Walt  Mason. — WR  12 
Columbian  Oration. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. — SC 
(Columbus.)— SO 

(Columbus  the  Discoverer  of  America.) — BLP 
(Dedication  Exercises.) — BLP 

Sels.  in  SC  and  SO  partly  same  as  those  in  BLP. 
Columbian    Oration. — H :    Watterson.     See   Our    Ex- 
panding Republic. 
Columbia's  Banner. — Edna  D.   Proctor. — TMR 
Columbia's  Centennial  Party.     (Play.) — Mrs.  M.  B.  C. 

Slade.— BS  4 
Columbia's  Emblem.— Edna    D.    Proctor.— GN— POS 

— WR  10 
Columbia's  Jubilee. — GranviUe  B.   Putnam. — CS  33 
Columbine. — H:  H.  Rusby. — AD 
Columbus.— T:  C.  Adams.— WR  10 
Columbus.     (C.)— Arthur  H.  Clough. 

CColumbus  Crossing  the  Atlantic.) — OS  3 
Columbus.— Olive  E.  Dana.— CS  31 
Columbus.— Ben  W.  Davis.— CS  33 
Columbus. — Chauncey     M.     Depew.     See    Columbian 

Oration. 
Columbus. — Aubrey  Devere. — WR  10 
Columbus.     (Ahr.)—i&s.  R.  Lowell.— WR  10 
Columbus.     (C. )— Joaquin  Miller.—  AA  —  CR  —  EDY 

— GN— WR  10 
(Columbus — Westward.)— GMS 
(Port  of  Ships,  The— sZ.  a6r.)— ASL— YBF 
(Tribute  to  Columbus,  A.)— DS 
Columbus.— Lydia  H.  Sigourney.- AA— EDY— WR  10 
Columbus  at  the  Court  of  Spain. — Mrs.  L.  E.  Boyd. — 

SD 
Columbus  Before   Ferdinand   and    Isabella.     (Tab.) — 

Anon.— BS  14— TCP 
Columbus  Crossing  the  Atlantic. — Arthur  H.  Clough. 

See  Columbus. 
Columbus  in  Chains. — Marie  J.  Jewsbury. — PS 

("And  this,  O  Spain  1  is   thy    return" — br.  sel.) — 

CS  1 
(Columbus    Landing   in    the    New    World.     (Life    and 

Voyages  of    Christopher  Columbus,  The — sel. 

fr.  Vol.  I.,  Bk.  IV.,  Ch.  I.)— Washington  Irving. 

— WR5 
(Discovery  of  America.  The — w.  introductory  mat- 
ter.)—WR  10 
Columbus  the  Discoverer  of  America. — Chauncey  M. 

Depew.     See  Columbian  Oration. 
Columbus    the     World-giver. — Maurice     F.     Egan. — 

TAS 
Columbus  to    Ferdinand. — Jonathan    Mason. — WR  10 
Columbus — Westward. — Joaquin  Miller.  See  Columbus. 
Column  of  July,  The.— G:  G.  McCrae.— EDY 
Colyn  Cloute,  Sel.  fr.—J:  Skelton.— WEP  1 
Comal  and  (jalbina.     (Sel.   fr.  Fingal,  Bk.    II.) — Jaa. 

McPherson  (Ossian).— CS  36 
Comanche. — Joaquin  Miller. — WR  14 
Combat,    The. — Matthew    Arnold.     See    Sohrab    and 

Rustum. 
Combat  between    Fitz-James    and    Roderick    Dhu. — 

Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Combat   between  Paris  and  Menelaus. — Homer.     See 

Iliad,  The. 
Combat  of  Fitz-James  and  Roderick. — Walter  Scott. 

See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Combat  with  the  Octopus,  The.     (The  Toilers  of  the 

Sea,    Bk.    IV.,    Chs.     I.-III.—con<i.)— Victor 

Hugo.— WCLG  2 
Combine,  A. — Anon. — WR  2 

"Come  and  Be  Shone."     (Detroit  Free  Press.) — BS  18 
Come  and  Go. — Sharpe. — BC 
Come  and  Hug  Mel — J.  C.  McDonough. — DE 


71 


Come 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


CJome,  and   Welcome,  to  Jesus  Christ. — Jos.  Hart. — 

FEP 
Ck>ine  Away  I — T:  Campion. — ELP 
Come  Away,   Come  Away,   Death. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Twelfth  Night. 
Come  Away!  Come,  Sw«et  Love! — Anon. — ELP 
Come  Away,  Death. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Tempest, 

The. 
Come  Back. — Arthur  H.   Clough.     See  Songs  in  Ab- 
sence 
Come  Back.— T:  D.  English.— CS  15 
Come  Back.— H:  W:  Herbert.— AA 
"Come,  dance,  elfins,  dance!  for  my  harp  is  in  tune." 

— Anon. — AE 
Come  down,  O  Maid. — Alfred  Tennyson.    See  Princess, 

The. 
Come  for  Arbutus. — Sara  L.  Oberholtzer. — SN 
"Come,  for  thy   day,    thy   wasted    day,   is   closing." 

Anon.— GG 
Come  here.  Little  Robin. — Anon. — NV 
Come,  Holy  Spirit,  Heavenly  Dove.    (Hymn  XXXIV.) 

— Isaac  Watts— FEP 
(Come,  Holy  Spirit — si.  abr.) — LLC 
"Come,  Howard,  from  the  gloom  of   the   prison,  and 

the     taint     of     the  lazar-house."— Chapin. — 

GG 
Come  into  the  Garden,  Maud. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

Maud. 
Come,  Let  us  Kisse  and  Parte.     (Ideas,  LXI. — C.) — 

Michael  Drayton. — BNL 
(Let  us  Kis.s  and  Part.)— HBP 
(Love's  Farewell.)— FT  A— PGT  1— YBF 
(Parting,  The  [or  Al.)— CEL— GP— OB 
(Since  tnere's  no  Help.) — OH 
(Sonnet.)— ELP— FEP— WEP  1 
Come  Love  or  Death. — Will  H:  Thompson. — AA 
Come  Morir.— S.  G.  W. — EPs 
Come  not,    when    I    am    Dead. — Alfred   Tennyson. — 

YBF 
Come  o'er  the  Sea. — T:  Moore. — CEL 
"Come  out   from   among   them." — Mary  T.  Lathrap. 

— WR  18 
Come  out.  Love.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— HPE 
Come,  Poet,  Come!— Arthur  H.  Clough.— A VP 
Come,  Rest  in  this  Bosom— T:    Moore.— BNL — FEP 

—YBF 
Come,  Send  round  the  Wine. — T:  Moore. — HBP 
Come,  Sign  the  Pledge.— W.  M.  Frazer.— CS  31 
Come,  Sleep. — Philip     Sidney.     See     Astrophel     and 

Stella. 
Come  Slowly,  Paradise. — J.  B.  Kenyon. — AA 
C!ome  Strike  Me  the  Harp  with  its  Soul-stirring  Twang. 

(Punch.)— RFE 
Come,  Sweet  I-ass. — Tom  D'Urfey.— OES 
Come,  Thou  Fount  of  every  Blessing. — Rob't  Robin- 
son.—FEP 
Come,  Thou  Monarch  of  the  Vine. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 
Come  to  Jesus,  Br.  ael.  fr.     ("There's  a  wideness  in 

God's  mercy.") — Frd'k  W.  Faber. — GG 
Gome  to  me.   Dearest. — Jos.   Brennan  [or  Brenan]. — 

BNL— FTA— TFY 
(Exile  to  his  Wife,  The.)— CS  8— FEP 
Come  to  the  Forest. — Anon. — AD 
Come  to  these   Scenes  of   Peace. — W:   L.    Bowles. — 

BNL— HBP 
Come    unto  Me.       (Hymn  VII. — C.)  —  Anna  L.  Bar- 

bauld.— HBP 
"Come  unto  Me." — L.  L.  Benson. — CS  35 
"Come  unto  Me." — Horatius  Bonar. — FEP 

(Voice  from  Galilee,  The— C.)— VA 
Come  unto  Me. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
"Come  unto    these   yellow  sands." — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Tempest,  The. 
Come  up  from  the  Fields,  Father! — Walt  Whitman. — 

MMR 
Come  with  the  Ring. — T:  Hood  (ut.  at.to^:  Lover), — 

CS  21 
(Maiden's  Request,  The.)— MHR 
(Please  to  Ring  the  Belle— C.)—BS  24 
Come,  ye  Disconsolate. — T:  Moore. — HDL — LLC 

{Varies  si.  fr.  Poems.) 
Come,  ye  Lofty. — Archer  Gumey. — FEP 
Comedian's  Last  Night,  The. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — 

EDY 
Comedy.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— FLS 

{Contains  1  more  st.  than  in  Poems.) 
Comedy    of    Errors,    Sels.    fr. — W:     Shakespeare. — 

BNL  {hr.  sel.  fr.  Act  V.,  Sc.  1.)— WR  11  (II.. 

2 — tl.  abr.) 
Comet,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Comet.  The.— T:  Hood.— CS  3 


Comet,  The.— C:  Sangster.— BNL 

Comfort. — Anon. — CS  19 

Comfort.     {All  the  Year  Round.)— FTA 

("If  there  should  come  a  time,  as  well  there  may.") 
— GG 

Comfort. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — HDL 

Comfort. — Mortimer  Collins. — BNL 

Comfort.- C:  E.  Merrill,  Jr.— CG  2 

Comfort  in  Affliction. — W:  Aytoun. — HPE 

Comfort  of  the  Trees,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.— EDY 

Comfort  One  Another. — M.  A.  Sangster. — SSS 

(I!omfort  to  a  Youth  That  had  Lost  his  Love. — Rob't 
Herrick.— OB 

Comforter,  The.— R.  R.  Kirk.— CG  3 

(Comforter,  A.     {Abr.) — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — WCL 

Comforting  Reflections  of  a  Nonentity. — S.  M.  Will- 
iams.—CG  2 

Comic  Lovers,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.  See  Stage 
Land. 

Comic  Man,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.  See  Stage 
Land. 

Comic  Miseries. — J:  G.  Saxe. — HPE 

Comical  Dun,  A. — J:  McKeever. — CS  5 

Comin'  through  the  Rye. — Anon.  See  Coming 
through  the  Rye. 

Comin'  through  the  Rye.  {Tab.) — Anon. — BS  5 — 
DS— TCP— YA 

Coming. — Anon. — HDL 

C!oming  and  Going. — H :  W.  Beecher. —  See  Norwood. 

Coming  from  the  Picnic.     (Brandon  Banner.) — GH 

Coming  Home. — Anon. — CS  37 

"Coming  Man,  The."— Anon.— CS  37  (a6r.)— HP 

Coming  of  Arthur,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.  See 
Idylls  of  the  King. 

Coming  of  Charlemagne.  (Paraphrase  of  a  Passage 
in  the  Chronicle  of  the  Monk  of  St.  Gall — C.)— 
T:  B.  Macaulay.— CEL 

Coming  of  his  Feet,  The.— Lyman  W.  Allen. — HDL — 
SSS 

Coming  of  Santa  Claus,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 

Coming  of  Spring,  The. — Anon.— CEL 
(Cuckoo  Song — si.  diff.  wording.) — OB 

Coming  of  Spring,  The. — Anon. — NV 

Coming  of  Spring,  The.— Wilhelm  Miiller.— PEO 

Coming  of  Spring,  The.— Nora  Perry.- PoR— POS 

Coming  of  the  Mom,  The. — C :  Heavysege. — TCV 

Coming  of  the  Rain,  The. — Jas.  Thomson.  See  Sea- 
sons, The. 

Coming  out  of  Church. — Anon. — WR  24 

Coming  Round. — Phoebe  Gary. — CS  19 

Coming  [or  Comin']    through  the  Rye. — Anon. — BNL 
FEP— HBP— LC— YBF 
(Ad.  fr.  Burns'  poem  of  same  name.) 

Coming  to  an  Understanding. — Anon. — MFD 

"Coming  to  Jesus  is  the  desire  of  the  heart  after  Him." 
— Newman  Hall. — GG 

Coming  Woman,  The.     (Christian  Union.) — MYF 

CJoming  Woman,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 
KJ 

Commemoration  Ode. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.  See  Ode  Re- 
cited at  the  Harvard  Commemoration. 

Commemoration  Ode,  World's  Columbian  Exposition, 
Sels.  fr. — Harriet  Monroe. 
Democracy. — AA 
Lincoln. — AA 
Washington. — A  A 

Commencement. — Sarah  W.  Kellogg. — PFP 
(Second  Trial,  A.)— BS  14— HBR 

Commencement  Day. — W.  D.  Porter. — PEO 

Ckimmencing  to  Work.— H.  E.  McBride. — MTD 

Commerce. — E:  Everett. — BS  15 

Commit  to  Memory. — E:  Brooks. — LLC 

Common  Bond,  The.— H.  C.  Hunt.— SD 

Common  Citizen-soldier,  The.  Sel.  fr.  (Republic  of 
New  England,  The.)— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— FD  2 

Common  Duties. — Anna  R.  Brown.- — CS  37 

Common  Grave,  The.— Sydney  Dobell— CEL— WEP  4 

Common  Inference,  A. — Charlotte  P.  (Stetson)  Gil- 
man. — AA 

Common  Lot,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — BNL — CEL 
FEP(a6r.)— SS(8;.  abr.) 

Common  Offering,  The. — Harriet  M.  Kimball.— FHS 

Common  Question,  The. — J:  G.  Whittier — OS  1 

Common  Sense. — Jas.  T.  Fields. — AA — SR  1 

Common  Sense.  (Sonnet  CXXX.) — W:  Shakespeare. 
—EPs 

Common  Thought,  A.— H:  Timrod.— HDL 

Commonplace  Woman,  The. — Anon. — DS 

Commonwealth  of  Lunatics,  The.  (Tatler,  No.  125.) 
—Sir  R:  Steele.— ESs 

Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts,  The. — W.  E.  Russell. 
— SC 


72 


TITLE    INDEX 


Concerning 


Commonwealth  of  the   Bees,   The. — W :   Shakespeare. 

See  King  Henry  V. 
Communion  Hymn. — Nathaniel      L.     Frothingham. — 

TAS 
Communion  of  Saints,  The. — S.  G.  Bulfinch.— TAS 
Como. — Joaquin  Miller. — SR  9 
Companions.— C:  S.  Calverley.— NA— THP— VA 
Companions.— R:  H:  Stoddard.— LBB—MBB 
"Company  Manners." — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Comparison,   A. — W:   Browne.     See  Britannia's   Pas- 
torals. 
Comparison,  A.     Addressed  to  a  Young  Lady.     (C.) — 
W:  Cowper.— WEP  3 
(Sweet  Stream,  that  Winds.) — BNL 
(To  a  Young  Lady.)— PGT  1 
Comparison  of   George  Washington  with  George  the 
Fourth,  Called  the  First  Gentleman  of  Europe. 
(Fr.  The  Four  Georges — George  the  Fourth.) 
— W:  M.  Thackeray.— OS  3 
Comparison  of  Washington  and  Napoleon. — Frangois 

R.  A.,  Vicomte  de  Chateaubriand. — OS  3 
Compass,  The.— S:  D.  Robbin.s.— TAS 
Compassion. — Marion  P.  Riche. — CS  33 
Compensation. — Anon. — CS  5 

(Railroad  Car  Scene,  A. — prose  vers.) — CS  5 — SR  4 
Compensation. — Anon. — CS  15 
Compensation. — Anon. — HP 
Compensation,  Sel.  fr. — PhcBbe  Cary. — HDL 
Compensation. — T:  S.  Collier. — A  A 
Compensation. — Christopher  P.  Cranch. — TAS 
Compensation,  (2  diff.)  br.  sela.  fr. — Ralph  W:  Emer- 
son.—PEO—SE 
"  Great  man  is  always  willing  to  be  little.  A."  {Br. 

sel.)— GG 
"  Wise  man  always  shows  himself  on  the  side  of  his 
assailants,  The."  (Br.  sel.) — (3G 
Compensation,  Sel.  fr.  ("Then  hush!  oh,  hush!  for  the 
Father  knows   what    thou    knowest    not.") — 
Frances  R.  Havergal. — FHS 
Compensation. — F :  R.  Torrence.     See  House  of  a  Hun- 
dred Lights,  The. 
Compensation. — Eliza  S.  Turner. — OH 
Compensations  of  the   Imagination. — Mark  Akenside. 

— SS 
Competing  Railroads,  The.   (Dial.) — Anon. — BS5 — PR 
Complaining  March. — Susan  H.  Swett. — YBT 
Complaint,  The. — Mark  Akenside. — OB 
Complaint,  A. — Tudor  Jenks  [or  B.  A.  Pennypacker]. 

— DST— PR— WR  24— YA 
Complaint,  The. — E:  Young.      See  Night  Thoughts. 
Complaint  by  Night  of  the  Lover  not  Beloved,  A. — 

H:  Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey.— WEP  1 
Complaint  of  a   Forsaken   Indian   Woman,   The. — W: 

Wordsworth.— MRS 
Complaint  of  a  Lover  Rebuked. — H:  Howard,  Earl  of 

Surrey.— ELP 
Complaint  of  Age,  The. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Shep- 

heardes  Calendar,  The. 
Complaint  of  Pan,  The. — W:  Browne.     See  Britannia's 

Pastorals. 
Complaint   of  Rosamond,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Sorrow.) — S: 

Daniel.— KNE 
Complaint  of  Thalia.     (Fr.  The  Teares  of  the  Muses.) 

—Edmund  Spenser.— WEP  1 
Complaint  of  the  Absence  of  her  Lover  Being  upon 

the  Sea. — H:  Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey. — OB 
Complaint  of    the    Bird    in    a    Dark    Room. — J.    P. 

Richter.-i-OS  2 
Complaint  of  the  Duke  of  Buckingham. — T:  Sackville, 

Lord  Buckhurst.— WEP  1 
Complaints  of  the  Poor,  The.— Rob't  Southey.— FEP 
Compleat  Angler,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Izaak  Walton. 

Angler,  The.   (By  J:  Chalkhill.)  —  BNL  — FEP  — 

HBP 
Angler's  Song,  The.  (By  W:  Basse.)— OES 
Angler's  Wish.  The.    (By  I.  Walton.)— BNL— FEP 

— HBP— YBF 
Coridon's  Song.  (By  J:  Chalkhill.)— OES 
On  a  Bank  as  I  Sat  a-Fishing.     (C. — by  H:  Wot- 
ton.)— EP 
(Spring  Idyll,  A.)— CEL 
Completely  Sold. — Anon. — DCD 
Completeness. — Irene  E.  Morton. — TCV 
Completing  de  Spell. — Anon. — DSS 
Completion.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The.  (C), 
Br.  sels.  fr.. — Dan'l  Webster 
America's  Gifts  to  Europe. — PS 
Bunker  Hill  Monument. — SE 
Bunker  Hill  Monument  Completed. — SR  8 
Dedication  of  Bunker  Hill  Monument. — FD  1 
Duties  of  American  Citizens. — SE 


CoEopletion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument  (continued). 
Elements  of  the  American  Government.  -  SE 
Second  Bunker  Hill  Monument  Oration. — IR 
"That  motionless  shaft  will  be  the  most  powerful 
of  speakers." — GG 
Completion  of  the  National  Monimient  to  Washington, 
Sels.  /r.— Rob't  C.  Winthrop. 
Character  of  Washington,  The.— FD  2 

(Washington  Monument   Completed,  The — ptly 
same.) — SR  8 
Washington  Needle,  The.— FD  2 
Compleynte  of  Chaucer  to  his  Purse,  The. — Geoffrey 
Chaucer.— BNL 
(To  my  Empty  Purse.)— HPE— OS  3 
Complication,  A.     (Cornell  Widow.) — CG  3 
Compliment,  The.     (C— seZ.)— T:  Carew.— BNL 

("I  do  not  love  thee  for  that  fair.")— YBF 
Compliment  to    Queen    Elizabeth. — W:    Shakespeare. 

See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
Compliments.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Compliments  from  Nature.    (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Composed  at  Cora  Linn. — W:  Wordsworth. — FTR 
Composed  at  Neidpath  Castle,  the  Property  of  Lord 

Queensberry. — W:  Wordsworth. — PGT  1 
Composed  in  Spring.     (C.) — Rob't  Bums. 

(Again  Rejoicing  Nature  Sees.) — SN 
Composed  upon  Westminster  Bridge,   Sept.  3,   1802. 
(O— W :  Wordsworth.— WEP  4 
("  Earth  has  not  anything  to  show  more  fair.") — 

HBR 
(Morning  in  London.)— HBP— OS  3 
(Sonnet  Composed  upon  Westminster  Bridge.) — 

BNL— FEP— MBL 
(Upon  Westminster  Bridge[,  Sept.  3,  1802].)— OB 

—PGT  1-  YBF 
(Westminster  Bridge.)— LLC — WR  1 
Composite  Maiden,  A. — Anon. — CS  28 
Composition,  The.— Lulu  C.  Hillyer.— CS  26 
Composition  Day. — L.  H.  Bruce. — SR  13 
Composition  on  Animals. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — YFE 
Compromise  Bill  of  1850,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.     See 

Compromise  Measures. 
Compromise    Measures,    The,    Sels.    fr. — Dan'l  Web- 
ster. 
Compromise  Bill  of  1850,  The.— FD  1 

(Constitution  and  the  Union,  The — sel.) — SE 
(Justice  to  the  Whole  Country— abr. )— KNE— SS 
Massachusetts  and  the  Union. — FD  1 
Compromise  of  Principle.     (Sel.  fr.  Against  a  Compro- 
mise of  Principle.)— H :  W.  Beecher.— NC— PEO 
Comradery. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 
Comrades. — H:  A.  Blood. — AA 
Comrades!  Join  the  Flag  of  Glory. — Anon. — AWB 
Comus.     (A  Masque.)— J:  Milton.— EPs— FEP— HBP 
Comus.     (SeZ.)— WEP  2 

Comus.     (SeZ.)— BNL  (br.)- OB 
Echo.     (SeZ.)- OB 
(Song.)— ELP— EPs 
(To  Echo.)— CEL 
Hunt  of  the  Sorcerer,  The.     (SeZ.)— BNL 

(Spirit-shepherd,  The.)— EP 
Lady  in  Comus,  The.     (Sel.  ptly.  like  WEP  2.)— 
WR  1 
(Ladv  Lost  in  the  Wood,  The— seZ.)- BNL 
Land  of  Eternal  Summer,  The.     (SeZ.)— ELP 

("To  the  ocean  now  I  fly.") — OB 
Light.     (Br.  sel.)— OS  2 

(Comus,  Br.  sel.  fr.) — BNL 
Nymph  of  the  Severn,  The.     (S«Z.)— BNL 
(Sabrina.)— EP 

(Spirit's  Song  to  Sabrina.) — LC 
Sabrina.     (Sel.) — OB 

(Comus,  Br.  sel.  fr. — sel.) — BNL 
(Incantation — abr. ) — ELP 
(Sabrina  Fair.)— GN 
Conceipt  of  Diabolical  Possession,  A.  (C. — Fragments 
of  Burton,  Extract  III.) — C:  Lamb. 
(Hypochondriacus.) — HBP 
Conceit,  A. — Mortimer  Collins. — HP 
Conceited  Grasshopper,  The. — Anon. — DLS 
Concensus  of  the  Competent,  A. — Dorothea  Lummis. 
V  See  Consensus  of  the  Competent,  A. 

Conception  and  Execution.  (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Concerning  Chambermaids.     (C.) — S:  L.  Clemens. 

(Mark  Twain's  Opinion  of  Chamber-maids.) — CS  2 
Concerning  Kisses.— Anon. — WR  2 

(If  you  Want  a  Kiss,  why.  Take  It.)— HP 
Concerning  Sisters-in-law.     (^Punch.) — HPE 
Concerning  'Tabitha's    Dancing    the    Minuet. — Arthur 
W.  Colton.— CG  1 


73 


I^       r.         V,    I  .   .. 


Concerning 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


-S:  Daniel.— LBB 


-Anon.     iSe«    Con- 


Conoeming  the  Hono[u]r  of  Books. 

MBB 
Concert  Given  by  Mr.  Spring,  A.- 

cert  in  the  Wood,  The. 
C!oncert  in  the  Wood,  The.— Anon.— KER—WR  4 
(Concert  Given  byTtfr.  Spring,  A — abr.) — TFS 
(Mr.  Spring's  Concert — a6r.)-— AD 
Concert  Recitation. — Silvia  Manning. — DLS 

(Ambitious. ) — D  JS 
Concert  Rehearsal,  The. — Wolstan  Dixey. — PEO 
Conciliation  Preferable  to  War. — W:  Pitt,  Lord  Chat- 
ham.—SSD 
Conciliation  the  Best  Policy. — W:  Pitt,  Lord  Chatham. 

— SR8 
Conclusion,  The.— Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— OB 
(Death  of  Sir  Walter  Raleigh.)— EDY 
(Even  Such  is  Time.)— EHT— ELP 
(Last  Lines.)— CEL 
(Lines  Found  in  his  Bible.) — BNL 
(Lines  Written  the  Night  before  his  Execution.) — 

FEP— YBF 
(Verses   Found  in  his  Bible  in  the  Gate-house  at 
Westminster— C.)—WEP  1 
Conclusion  of  the  Whole  Matter,  The. — F:  R.  Torrence. 

See  House  of  a  Himdred  Lights,  The. 
Concord. — J :  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Concord.     {Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Concord  Fight. — Ralph    W.    Emerson.     See    Concord 

Hymn. 
Concord  Hymn.     (C) — Ralph     W.     Emerson. — AA — 
ASL— EDY  —  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  —  PAP  — 
SM— YBF 
("By  the  rude  bridge  that   arched  the  flood" — br. 

«ei.)— SE 
(Concord  Fight.)— BSP—HB— PEO  {ahr.) 
(Concord  Monument  Hymn.) — BNL 
(Hymn  on  the  Fight  at  Concord.) — GMS 
(Hymn  Sung  at  the  Completion  of  Concord  Monu- 
ment.  )—H  BP—TAV 
Concord  Love  Song,  A. — Jas.  Jeffrey  Roche.— BS  15 — 

SR6 
Concord  Monument  Hymn. — Ralph  W.  Emerson.     See 

Concord  Hymn. 
Concord  River. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — SE 
Condemned,  The. — E:  Howland. — AA 
Condemned  King,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Condensed  Novel,  A. — Anon. — SR  3 
(Condensed  Telegram,    The.     {Burlington   Hawkeye.) — 

BS20 
Condition  of  Ireland,  The.— T.  F.  Meagher.— OM 
Conditionally.— W:  F.  Collins.— CG  1 
(Conditioned. — (Brunonian.) — CG  2 
Conditions  of  Life.    (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Conductor  Bradley.— J:  G.  Whittier.- CS  11 
Conductor's   Story,  The. — Maurice    E.    M'Loughlin. — 

WR7 
Conemaugh.— Eliz.  P.  Ward.— HSS  2 
Cones  for  the  Camp  Fire,  Sel.  fr.   (Camping  and  Camp- 
ers— sela.  fr.  Camping  and  Dedication.) — W:  H. 
H.  Murray.— BS  19 
Coney  Island  down  der  Pay.— H:   F.  Wood.— BS  8— 

CS  20 
Confederate  Sergeant,  The. — Anon. — NC 

(Pathetic   Incident   of  the   Rebellion,   A — si.   diff. 
»er«.)— PFP 
Confederate  Soldier,  The.— H:  W.  Grady.     See  New 

South,  The. 
Confessio  Amantis,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Gower. 
Alexander  and  the  Robber. — WEP  1 
Nebuchadnezzar. — EPs 
Opening  of  the  Original  Prologue. — WEP  1 
Story  of  Constance,  The.— WEP  1 
Confessio  Amantis. — R:  Le  Gallienne. — BNL 
Confession. — Anon. — WR  24 
Confession,   The.— R:   H.  Barham.— CS  1— DS— HPE 

.— THP 
Confession.     (Br.   sel.   fr.   Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — 

S:  Butler.— HPE 
Confession.     {Abr.) — G:  Herbert. — EPs 
Confession  and  Avoidance. — J:  A.  Hamilton. — CG  2 
Confession  of  a  Cigar  Smoker. — Anon. — PPh 
Confession  of  a  Drunkard. — Anon. — CS  13 — SR  2 
Confession  of  Love,  A. — J :  Tobin.  See  Honeymoon,  The. 
Confessional,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  ("I've  thought  of  thee, — 
I've  thought  of  thee.")— Nathaniel  P.  Willis. 
^FTA 
Confessions. — Rob't  Browning. — WEP  4 
Confessions  of  a  Drunkard,  Sel.  fr. — C:  Lamb. 
Cry  from  the  Depths,  A.— TS 
(Warning,  A.)— CPL 
(Warning  to  the  Intemperate.) — CS  11 


Confided.— J:  B.  Tabb.— ASL— TAS— YBF 
Confidence  versus  Merit. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Confirmation  Hymn.    (Entering  into  Covenant — C.) — 

Philip  Doddridge.— FEP 
Conflict,  The.— Mary  E.  Topping.— SD 
Conflict  of  Trains,  A. — Anon. — CS  15 

(Woman's  Love.)— CS  37 
Conflicting  Claims. — E.  L.  Beers.— SR  12 
Confused  Dawn,  The.— W.  D.  Schuyler-Lighthall.— VA 
"Confusion  Worse  Confounded."— Anon. — KNS 
Congal,  Sels.  fr.— Sir  S:  Ferguson.— TIP 
(Congress  of   Nations,   The.     {Chicago    Inter-Ocean.) — 

BI  P 
Coningsby,  Sel.  fr.  (Hebrew  Race,  The— /r.  Ch.  XV.)— 

B:  Disraeli,  Lord  Beaconsfield. — VSG 
Conjecture,  A. — C:  F.  Richardson. — A  A 
Conjugal  Conjugations. — Americus  W.  Bellaw. — AWH 
Conjugal  Conundrum,  A.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Conjugal  Lament. — S:  N.  Pond. — TL 
Conjugal  Love. — R.  S.  Sharpe. — MHR 
(Love's  Strategy— sZ.  abr.)— CS  32 
Conjugating  Dutchman,  The. — T:  Holmes. — CS  33 
(Conjugating  German,  The — arr.   as  dial,   by  Vale 

Chester.)— StD 
Conjugating  German,  The. — Vale  Chester.     See  fore- 
going. 
Conjunction  of  Jupiter  and  Venus,  The.     (C.) — W:  C. 

Bryant. 
(Those  Glorious  Stars.) — LLC 
Conjure  Woman,  The. — Anon. — WR  25 
Connla's  Well.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 
Connor.— Anon.— BS  9— CS  19— DI— SR  7 

(SI.  abr.)— CR—FTR 
Conn's  Description  of  the  Fox  Hunt.— Dion  Boucicault. 

See  Shaugraun,  The. 
Connubial  Eclogue,  A.— J:  G.  Saxe.— SCS— SR  2 
Connubial  Life. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Conundrum  Social,  The. — Anon. — EuE 
Conquered  at  Last. — Maria  L.  Eve. — HP 
Conquered  Banner,  The.  (C.) — Abram  J.  Ryan. — AA — 

AWB— EDY— FEP— WRD 
(Trailed  Banner,  The.)— HSS  1 
Conquerer  Conquered,  The. — G:  S.  Burleigh. — CS  8 
Conqueror  Worm,  The. — Edgar  A.  Poe. — AA 
Conqueror's  Grave,  The. — W:  C.  Bryant. — AA 
Conquest. — (Cornell  Widow.) — CG  3 
Conquest,  A.— Walter  H.  Pollock.— VA 
Conquest  of    Mexico,    The,    Sel.    fr.     (Launching    of 

Cortez'    Ships,  The.) — Kinahan  Cornwall  is. — 

EDY 
Conquest  of  the  Americans  Impracticable. — J :  Wilkes. 

—PS  (si.  abr.)— SS 
Conscience.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Conscience. — W ;  Shakespeare.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Conscience  and     Future     Judgment. — Anon. — CS  6 — 

KNE' 
Conscience  and  Remorse. — Paul  L.  Dunbar. — TAS 
Conscience  in  Politics. — I.  K.  Funk. — WR  18 
Conscience-keeper,  The. — W:  Young.   See  Wishmakers* 

Town. 
Consecration  Hymn. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — HDL 
Consensus  \wr.  Concensus]  of  the  Competent,  A.  (Play.) 

—Dorothea  Lummis.— PR— WR  12 
Consequences. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Consequences  of  the  American  War. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of 

Chatham.— SS 
Consequences  of  the  American  War. — W:  Pitt,  Lord 

Chatham.     See  also  American  War,  The. 
Consequences  of  the  Reformation.     (Fr.  St.  Stephen's.) 

— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.- AVP 
Conservative,  A. — Charlotte  P.  (Stetson)  Oilman. — AA 
Conservative  Innovator,  The. — W:  Huskisson. — SS 
Consider.— Christina   G.    Rossetti.— GN— OS  1— TMR 
Consider  the  Lilies. — Marianne  Farningham. — CS  24 
Consider  the  Lilies. — Charlotte  Murray. — FHS 
Consider  the  Lilies,  how  They  Grow. — W:  C.  Gannett 

—TAS 
Considering  the  Lilies. — Anon. — WR  20 
Consolation. — Matthew  Arnold.— PGT  2 

(Lovers — br.  sel.) — BIL 
Consolation. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — HDL — OB 
Consolation. — W:  Larminie. — TIP 
Consolation.— Walter  Learned.— TAV—YBT 
Consolation,  A.— W:  Shakespeare.— PGT  1— PHS 
(Amor  Omnia  Vincit.)— FTA— OH 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (II.) 
(Sonnet  XXIX.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
(When  in  Disgrace.)— BS  25— PYO— WR  23 
Consolation. — E:  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Consolation  even     on     a     Mixed     Train.     (Traveler'9 

Magazine. ) — CH 


74 


TITLE    INDEX 


Conundrum 


Consolation  in  Adversity.  {Frag».  fr.  various  authors.) 
— BNL 

Consolations  in  Bereavement. — J :  H.  Newman. — 
PGT  2— SSS 

Consolations  of  Literature,  The.  (Fr.  Address  De- 
livered in  South  Danvers,  at  the  Dedication 
of  the  Peabody  Institute,  Sept,  29,  1854.) — 
Rufus  Choate.— MRS 

Consolatory  Stanza,  A. — J:  Wolcott. — HPE 

Consolers,  The.— S.  G.  W.— EPs 

Conspiracy  of  Charles,  Duke  of  Byron,  The,  Sel.  fr. 
(Master  Spirit,  The— fer.  sel.  fr.  Act.  III.,  Sc.  1.) 
— G:  Chapman. — EPs 

Constance  de  Beverley. — Walter  Scott.  See  Mar- 
mion. 

Constance's  Denunciation  of  King  Philip  of  France  and 
Lymoges  of  Austria. — W:  Shakespeare.  See 
King  John. 

Constancy. — Anon. — BNL 

Constancy.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Constancy. — C:  Dibdin. — LH 

Constancy. — G :  Herbert. — EPs 

Constancy.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— AWH—THP 

Constancy. — J:  Wilmot,  Earl  of  Rochester. — OB — 
PGT  1— WEP  2 

Constancy.— Sir  C:  Sedley.— YBF 

("Not,  Celia,  that  I  juster  am.")— FEP— FTA— 

PGT  1 
(To  CeliaO— ELP— OB 

Constancy  (Sir  J.  S.— C.).— Sir  J:  Suckling.— BNL— 
CEL— ELP— ES— OEL— WEP  2— YBF 
(Constant  Lover,  The.)— FEP— OB 
(Moods.)— EPs 

Constancy.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— TAV 

Constancy  in  Absence. — Anon. — FLS 

Constant.— Emily   Dickin.son. — AA— TFY 

Constant  Dove,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 

Constant  Friend,  The. — Eugene  F.  Ware.  See  Wash- 
erwoman's Song,  The. 

Constant  Heart,  A.— F.  Clay. — CG  1 

Constant  Lover,  The. — Sir  J:  Suckling. — See  Con- 
stancy. 

Constant  Lovers,  The.  (Fr.  Wit  Restored,  1658.)— 
Anon.— YBF 

Constant  Reader,  A. — Parmenas  Mix. — CS  12 

Constantius  and  the  Lion.      (Sel.  fr.  Tarry  Thou  till  I 
Come;  or,  Salathiel  the  Wandering  Jew,  Bk.  I., 
Ch.  XXI.)— G:  Croly.— BS  24— PFP 
(Thrilling  Sketch.)— CS  8 

"Constellation"  and  the  "Insurgente,"  The. — AWB 

Consternation. — Anon. — WR  6 

Constitution.— W:  W.  Henry.— TMR 

Constitution,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.  See  Constitution 
and  the  Union,  The. 

Constitution  and  By-laws  for  Lyceum. — Anon. — DS 

"Constitution"  and  "GuerriSre." — Anon. — AWB 

Constitution  and  the  People,  The. — Abraham  Lincoln. 
See  First  Inaugural  Address. 

Constitution    and    the    Union,   The,    Sels.    fr. — Dan'l 
Webster. 
Against  Secession.    (Plly.  fr.  Remarks  on  the  Po- 
litical Course  of  Mr.  Calhoun  in  1838.) — SSD 
(On  Mr.  Clay's  Resolution — sel.) — ^SS 
(Constitution,  The — shorter  sel.) — SE 
Peacable  Secession.     (P%.  di/f. /r.  SSD.)— FD  1— 
SR  5— SS  (vtly.  diff.) 

Constitution  and  the  Union,  The.  (Diff.  fr.  foregoing.) 
— Dan'l  Webster.  See  Compromise  Measures, 
The. 

Constitution  not  Unalterable,  The. — Dan'l  Webster. — 
FD  1 

Constitution  of  the  United  States,  The. — AI 

Constitution  of  the  United  States. — Alex.  Hamilton. 
See  Speech  on  the  Compromises  of  the  Consti- 
tution. 

Constitution  of  the  United  States  not  an  Experiment, 
The.— Hugh  S.  Legar^.— SS 
(American    Constitution    no    Experiment,  The.) — 
BLP 

Constitution  the  Safeguard  of  Liberty. — Dan'l  Web- 
ster.    See  Character  of  Washington,  The. 

Constitutional  Convention  of  1787,  The. — Chauncey 
M.  Depew.— TMD 

Constitutional  Liberty    and    Arbitrary    Power. — Jos. 
Warren.— EAO 
(Scorn  to  be  Slaves — sel.) — BLP — OS  2  (longer.) 

Constitutional  Prohibition. — J :  B.  Finch.   See  following. 

Constitutional  Prohibition  the  Great  Remedy. — J:  B. 
Finch.— TS 
(Constitutional  Prohibition.) — WR  18 

Constitution's  Last  Fight,  The. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — 
EDY— PAPm 


Contemplate   all   this  Work. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

In  Memoriam. 
Contemplation  upon    Flowers,    A. — H:    King. — OB — 

YBF 
Contemplations,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Anne  Bradstreet. — BNL 
Contempt. — Walter  Scott^     See  Lady  of  the  Lake  The. 
Content. — Anon. — AE 
Content. — Anon. — HP 
Content.— Anon.— TT 

Content. — Sophie  M.  Almon-Hensley. — TCV 
Content. — Stephen  Crane. — AA 
Content. — T :  Dekker.     See  Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient 

Grissell,  The. 
Content. — Norman  Gale. — VA 

Content.     (Sel.  fr.  Farewell  to  Follie.) — Rob't  Greene. 
— BNL— EP— FEP 
(Contentment.)— YBF 
(Song    (C):       Sweet  are  the  thoughts,"  etc.)  — 

WEP  1 
(Sweet  Content.) — OEL 
Content. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Essay  on  Man. 
Content.     A  Pastoral.— J:  Cunningham. — FEP 
Content  and  Discontent. — R;  C.  Trench. — OS  1  (sel.) 
(Different  Minds.)— BNL— FEP 
("Some  murmur,  when  their  sky  is  clear.") — GG 
Contentation.     (Ahr.) — C:  Cotton. — -BNL 
Contented. — Carmen  Sylva. — HSS  1 
Contented  Blind  Boy,  The.— CoUey  Gibber.— PS 

(Blind  Boy,  The.)  — BFV  — BNL  — CGd— FEP— 
OS  1— PGT  1— PoR 
Contented  John. — Jane     [or     Emily]     Taylor. —  PC — 

PPSr 
Contented  Mind,  A  [or  The]. — Joshua  Sylvester. — CEL 
—FEP— HPE 
(Contentment. )— BNL— YBF 
Contention   of  Ajax  and  Ulysses,   The,  Sel.   fr. — Jas. 
Shirley.     See  Dirge,  A,  "The    glories   of   our 
blood,"  etc. 
Contentious  Community,  A. — "Eureka." — SDD 
Contentment.— H:  Alford.— BS  4 

("I  know  not  of  the  dark  or  bright.") — GG 
(Life's  Answer.) — HDL 
(Trust.)— HSS  3— SPE 
Contentment.— M.  B.— YBT 
Contentment.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Contentment. — Eugene  Field. — EF 
Contentment. — Rob't  Greene.     See  Content. 
Contentment. — Will  S.  Hayes.— HP 
Contentment. — Oliver      W.      Holmes.— BNL— EPs— 
SE  (br.  sel.) 
(^br.)- PP— YPS 
Contentment.     (Br.  sel.) — Horace  (tr.  fey  W:  Cowper). 
Contentment. — Eva  W.  McGlasson. — BS  21 
Contentment.— S.  C.  Peabody.— DJS— PS— TT 
Contentment. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queen, 

The. 
Contentment. — Joshua      Sylvester.      See      Contented 

Mind,  A. 
Contentment  of  Europe,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Speech  at  Man- 
chester,   Nov.    11,    185i.) — Louis    Kossuth. — 
SS 
Contest,  A. — Michael   Drayton.     See  Muses'  Elysium, 

The. 
Contest  in  the  Arena,  The.     (Fr.  Quo  Vadis,  Ch.  LXV., 
afer.)— H:  K.  Sienkiewicz.— TMD 
(Fight  with  the  Aurochs,  The.)— BS  25— PFP 
(Rescue  of  Lygia.  The — shorter.) — SC 
(Ursus  and  the  Aurochs.) — WR  19 
Contesting  for  a  Prize.     (Dial.) — Adeline  B.  Avery. — 

CDs 
Continuity  and   Differentiation.     (University  Herald.) 

— CG2 
Contradiction.     C!onversation. — W.Cowper.    See  Con- 
versation. 
Contrast,  The. — Helen  G.  Cone. — AA 
Contrast,  A.— Eleanor  C.  Donnelly.— BS  14— CS  24— 

DS— YA 
Contrast. — Hannah  P.  Kimball. — TAS 
Contrast,  The. — Horace  Smith.— FEP  (abr.) 

(On  the  Death  of  George  the  Third — C. — si.  abr.) 
EDY— HBP 
Contrast  of  Tact  and  Talent.     (London  Atlas.) — SE 
(Tact  and  Talent.)— PPS  (si.  afer.)— SE  (br.  sel.)— 
SPE— WCLG  2 
Contrasted  Soliloquies. — Jane  Taylor. — LLC 
Contrivances,  The,  Sel.  fr. — H:  Carey. 
Maiden's  Choice,  The.— FEP— HBP 

(Maiden's  Ideal  of  a  Husband,  A.)— BNL— TFY 
Conundrum,  A.     (The   Hands  of  a  Clock.) — Eliz.   P. 

Allen.— CPL 
Conundrum.     (Fr.    Ascutney    Charades.)  —  Julia    A. 
Sabine.— TCP 


75 


Conundrum 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Conundrum  of  the  Workshops,  The. — Rudyard  Kip- 
ling.—VA 
ConvaJescenoe. — Edgar  A.  Poe. — GP  («ei.) 

(For  Annie— C.)—BNL— OB 
Convalescent. — Anon.-J)LS 
Convent  Scene    from    Marmion. — Walter    Scott.     See 

Marmion. 
Convention  of  Cintra.     (Sonnet  (Composed    while  the 
Author    was    Engaged    in    Writing    a    Tract, 
Occasioned    by    the    Convention    of    Cintra — 
C.y-Vf:  Wordsworth.— EDY 
Convention  of  Michigan  Trees. — Arr.  by.  A.  W.  J.  Beal. 

—AD 
Convention  of  Realistic  Readers.     (Play.) — Mrs.  Find- 
ley  Braden.— BS  12— HD 
Convention  of    1787,    The. — Chauncey    M.    Depew. — 

FD2 
Conversation. — Anon. — KNE 

Conversation.     (Frags,  fr.  varioxia  authors.) — BNL 
Ck)nversation,  Sels.  fr. — ^W:  Cowper. 

Afternoon  Call,  An.     (Br.  «rf.)— WEP  3 
Characters  and  Sketches.    (Sei.)— WEP  3 
(Contradiction — shorter  sel.) — BNL 
(Conversation — br.  sel.) — BNL 
(Duelling— 6r.  sel.)— BUh 
Conversation.     (Br.  sel.) — BNL 
Excessive  Modesty.     (Br.  sel.) — KNE 
Pernicious  weed.     (Br.  sel.) — PPh 
Conversation  under  Difficulties. — Anon. — SE 
Conversational. — Anon. — CRR — DR — HP 
Conversion,  The. — R.  W.  Bergengren. — CG  2 
Conversion  of  Colonel  Quagg. — G :  A.  Sala — DCR 
Convert,  The.— Guy  W.  Carryl.— CG  2 
Convict  and  Soldier. — Anon. — WR  7 
Convict  Joe. — Alexander  G.  Murdock. — CS  28 
Convict  of    Clonmel,   The. — Jeremiah  J.   Callanan. — 

TIP 
Convict's  Complaint,  The.— Adair  Welcker. — BS  24 
Convict's  Death,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  Sketches  by 

Boz. 
Convict's  Dream,    The. — G:    Crabbe.     See    Borough, 

The. 
Convict's  Soliloquy    [the    Night     before    Execution], 
The.— E.    H.    Trafton.— BS  11— CS  26— SD— 
SR4 
Coogee.— H :  C.  Kendall.— VA 
Cook  of  the  Period,  A. — Anon. — CS  10 
Cooking  and  Ck>urting. — Anon. — BNL 
Coon's  Lullaby,  The.— Anon.— WR  22 
Cool  Reason. — R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  Rivals,  The. 
Cooper  Institute  Address.     (Address  at  Cooper  Insti- 
tute, New  York,  Feb.  27,  1860— C.) — Abraham 
Lincoln. — AI 
Coopers,  The.— C.  White.— DE 
"Cooper's  Hill,"  Sels.  fr. — Sir  J:  Denham. 
Praise  of  the  Thames— WEP  2 
(Cooper's  Hill— fcr.  srf.)- BNL 
(River  Thames,  The— »eZ.)— BNL 
View  of  London  from  Cooper's  Hill. — WEP  2 
Coplas  de  Manrique,  Sels.  fr. — Don  Jorge  Manrique. 
Relentless  Time.     (Longfellow's  tr.) — BS  6 

(Footprints  of  Decay — anon.  tr. — shorter  sel.) — 
C8  11 
(Life— afer.)— HP 
Copyright.     (Abr.)—r:  B.  Macaulay.— MRS 
Coquette  Punished,  A. — Anon. — CS  8 
Coral  Grove,  The.— Jas.  G.  Percival.- AA— BNL— EPs 
—  FEP  — GN  — HBP  — HSS  3  — LLC  — PHS 
— POS 
Coral  Insect,  The.— Anon.— POS 
Coral  Insect,  The. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — BNL 
Coral    Reef,   The. — Jas.    Montgomery.     See    Pelican 

Island,  The. 
Corda  Concordia,  Sel.  fr.   (Quest.) — Edmund  C.  Sted- 

man. — AA 
Cordelia.- Brother  Paul.— WR  6 

Cordial  Relations. —  Anthony  Hope.     See  Dolly  Dia- 
logues, The. 
Corianna's  Wedding. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Coridon's    Song.      (In  Izaak  Walton's  The  Compleat 

Angler.)— J:  Chalkhill.— OES 
C!orinna,  from  Athens,  to  Tanagra. — Walter  S.  Landor. 

See  Pericles  and  Aspasia. 
CJorinna's  Groing    a-Maving.     (C.) — Rob't    Herrick. — 
EP— EPs— FEP— OB— WEP  2 
(Corinna's  Maying.)— OEL—PGT  1 
(Going  a-Maying.)— GN— LH 
(May-day.)— CEL 
Corinne  at  the  Capitol,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (To  Corinne.) — Feli- 
cia D.  Hemans. — EPs 
Coriolanus.— Will  V.  McGuire.- CS  34 


Oriolanus,  Sels  fr. — W :  Shakespeare. 

Anger.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  3.)— SE 
Coriolanus.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  1.)— BNL 
Coriolanus.     (Sel.  fr.  II..  2.)— EPs 
Coriolanus  and  Aufidius.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  6.)— MPD 
(Coriolanus — br.  sel.) — SE 
(Coriolanus — sel. ) — EPs 
Martial  Friendship.     (Sel.  fr.  IV.,  5.)— BNL 
Coriolanus  and  Aufidius. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Corio- 
lanus. 
Coriolanus  at  Antium. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  C!orio- 

lanus. 
Com.— Anon.— COS— NV—PP 

Corn.     (SeZ.)— Sidney  Lanier.— BNI>—WR  5  (longer.) 
Com  and  the  Lilies,  The.— Anon.— HDL— SSS 
Com  Banquet,  A.     (ErU.)— Anon. — EuE 
Corn  Law.     See  also  Corn-law. 
Com  Laws.     (A6r.)—T:  B.  Macaulay.— MRS 
Comelian,  The. — Lord  Byron. — FP 
Comfields.— Mary  Howitt.— HBP— HSS  3— PoR— SN 

— VA— WCL 
Comisken  Sonnets,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Buchanan. 
We  are  Children.     (III.)— VA 
When  we  are  all  Asleep.     (IV.) — VA 
C!om-law  Hymn.— Ebenezer  Elliott. — BNL 
Corn-laws.     See  also  Corn  Laws. 
Com-song,  A. — Paul  L.  Dunbar. — AA- 
Com-song,  The.  (SI.  diff.  fr.  Poems.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— 

GN 
Coronach. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Coronation.      Helen     (Hunt)    Jackson. — AA — ASL — 

EPs— FEP— GN— TAV 
Coronation,  The. — Eliz.  W.  Mainwaring. — SR  13 
Coronation. — E :  Perronet. — FEP 
Coronation   of   Anne   Boleyn,   The. — Jas.   A.  Froude. 

See  History  of  England. 
(Pronation  of  Inez  de  Castro,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans, 

— CS  36 
Coronation  Pageant   of   Anne   Boleyn,   The. — Jas.   A. 

Froude.     See  History  of  England. 
Coronemus     nos     Rosis     antequam     Marcescant. — T: 

Jordan. — OB 
Coronet    for    his    Mistress'    Philosophy,     A,    Sd.    fr. 

"Muses  that  sing  love's  sensual  empirie." — L) 

— G:  Chapman. — BNL 
Corporal  Dick's  Promotion. — A.  Conan  Doyle. — BS  26 
Corporal  of  Chancellorsville,  The.— J :  R.  Paxton— PFP 
Corporal  Punishment.     (Dial.) — (Young Folks'  Rural.) 

—PR 
Corpse's  Husband,  The. — Anon. — DES 
Correct  Habits. — W.  C.  Munson. — SD 
Corregio. — "Kruna." — WR  12 
Corruption  of    Municipal    Government,    The. — C:    H. 

Parkhurst. — NC 
Corrymeela.— Moira  O'Neill. — TIP 
Corsair,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Lord  Byron. 

Corsair,  The,  Can.  I.,  Br.  sel.  fr. — EPs 
Song  of  the  Rover.     (Fr.  Can.  I.)— BNL 
(Sea,  The— br.  «eZ.)— EPs 
Corsican    not    Content,    The.       (Sel.    fr.    J:    Quincy 

Adams.)- W:  H.  Seward.— WCLG  1 
(American  and  the  Corsican,  The — longer.) — NC 
Corsican  Vendetta ;  or.  Love's  Triumph,  The. — Anon — 

WR7 
Corydon,  a  Pastoral. — J.  Cunningham. — EDY 
Corydon  and  Amaryllis,  Sel.  fr. — Phillips  Stewart.— TCV 
Cosmic  Egg,  The.— Anon.— BNL— EPs 
(Cosmopolitan  Woman,  A. — Sam  W.  Foss. — WR  15 
C)ospatrick.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — PEE  1 
C!ossimbazar. — H:  S.  Leigh. — NA 
Cost  of  Liberty,  The.— H :  Giles.— BLP 
Cost  of  Writing  Well.— Anon.— KNE 
"Cotswold    Eclogue,"    The,    Sel.    fr.—T:    Randolph. 

—WEP  2 
Cottager  to  her  Infant,  The. — Dorothy  Wordsworth. 

— LC— PoR 
Cotter's     Saturday     Night,    The.  —  Rob't     Bums.  — 

BIL  (si.  abr.)  —  BNL  —  EPs  —  FEP—  FP  — 

HBP— MBL— MR— WCLG  1— WEP  3  (abr.) 
(Abr.  and  arr.  w.  tab.)— BS  7— TCP 
Cotton.    (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. — 

—TCP 
Cotton  Boll,  The.— H :  Timrod.— AA 
Cotton  Plant,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Could  I  have  Borne  It?— May  E.  Dustin.— TS 
"Could  I  obtain  a  hearing  of  the  young  men  and  young 

women    who   thus    seek  the    city." — H:    W. 

Beecher.- GG 
Could  it  Be? — Harry  Romaine. — TL 
"Could  love  forever  run  like  a  river." — Lord  Byron.— 

BPB 
(Stanzas— C.)— WEP  4 


76 


TITLE    INDEX 


Courting 


Couldn't  Keep  a  Secret.     {All  the  Year  Round.) — HP 
Council  of  Horses,  The.— J:  Gay.— CGd— GN 
Council  of   the   Rats,    The. — Jean   de    la   Fontaine. — 

WR  11 
Counsel.— Mary  E.  M.  Davis.— TAV 
Counsel  to  Girls.— Rob't  Herrick.— PGT  1— YBF 
(Counsel  to  Virgins.)- PYO— YBF 
(Gather  ye  Rose-buds  as  ye  May.) — HBP 
(To    [the]   Virgins,    to    Make  Much  of    Time— C.) 

— BNL— ELP— ES— FEP— WEP  2 
Count  Albert  and  the  Fair  Rosalie.     (Fire-king,  The — 

C— a6r.)— Walter  Scott  .—WR  1 
Count  Candespina's  Standard. — G:  H.  Boker. — CR — 

CS  10— FTR— HNS— KNE— MYF 
Count  Gaultier's  Ride. — E:  Renaud. — CS  19 
Count  Gismond. — Rob't  Browning. — BS23 — DR  (.abr.) 

PEB3 
Count  Ludwig  and  the  Wood-spirit. — Dinah  M.  Craik. 

— WR8 
Count  Me.— E.  Murray.— SSE 
Count  Raymond  and  my  Cid.     (Tr.  by)  Ormsby.     See 

Cid,  The. 
Count  Ugolino. — Dante  (,tr.  by  Wilstach).     iSee  Divine 

Comedy,  The. 
Counterfeit  Money.     (Tab.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook — 

YFE 
Countermarch,  The. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Countersign,  The.— Anon.— AWB— CS  17  (abr.) 
Countersign  was  Mary,  The. — Marg.  Eytinge. — HP 
Countess  Amy  and  her  Husband,  The. — Walter  Scott. 

<See  Kenilworth. 
Countess  Laura. — G:  H:  Boker.— BNL — WR  5  (abr.) 
Countess  of  Anglesey  Lead  Captive  by  the  Rebells,  at 

the   Disforresting  of    Pewsam — Song.     (C.) — 

Sir  W:  Davenant. 
(On  the  Captivity  of  the  Countess  of  Anglesey.) — 

WEP  2 
Countess  of  Manchester,   The.     (On   the   Lady   Man- 
chester— C.) — Jos.  Addison. — HPE 
Countess   of    Pembroke's    Arcadia,    The. — Sir    Philip 

Sidney.     See  Arcadia,  The. 
Counting. — Harriot  Brewer. — TT 
Counting  Eggs.     (Texas  Sifting8.)—Gli—FS—SR  6 

(How  Mose  Counted  the  Eggs.) — CS  29 
Counting  the  Chickens   before  they  were   Hatched. — 

Anon.— YFD 
Counting  the  Seeds. — Anon. — CS  35 
Countless.    (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Country  and  Patriotism. — Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Festus. 
Country  Child,  The.— Marian  Douglas.— WCL 
Country  Children.— Anon.— TFS 
Country  Clergyman's  Trip  to  Cambridge,  The. — T:  B. 

Macaulay. — ESs 
Country  Cousin,  The;  or,  the  Rough  Diamond. — J:  B. 

Buckstone.— SED 
(Rough  Diamond,  The.)— CS  15 
Country  Cousins. — Anon. — FDY 
Country  Cousins.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Country  Cousins,     The.     (Dial.) — H.     M.     Garrett. — 

CS  21— ED 
Country  Courtship.— W.  D.  Kelly.— WR  15 
Country  Courtship,  A. — Fs.  O'Connor. — CS  17 
Country  Dance,  The. — Joe  Jot.  Jr. — CS  13 

(Country  Dancing.) — BR 
Country  Dancing. — Joe  Jot,  Jr.     See  foregoing. 
Country  Danger,    A. — W:    Browne.     See    Britannia's 

Pastorals. 
Country  Faith,  The. — Norman  Gale. — VA 
Country  Fellow  and  the  Ass,  The.     (C.) — J:  Byrom. 

(Countrymen  and  the  Ass,  The.) — BC 
Country  Girl,  The,  Scenes  fr. — Anon. — WR  20 
Country  Girl,  A.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Coimtry  Glee. — T:  Dekker.     See  Sun's  Darling,  The. 
Country  Justice,  The. — H :  Reeves. — WRD 

(Green    Mountain    Justice,     The.) — BS  6 — CS  6 — 

HNS— MHR 
Country  Kisses. — Arthur  J.  Munby.     See  Dorothy;    a 

Country  Story. 
Country  Lasses,  The.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 
Country  Lassie,  The. — Anon. — FP 
Country  Life.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Country  Life. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — HSS  1 
Country  Life,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— EPs 
Country  Life.— Rob't  G.  IngersoU.— TMR 
Country  Maid  and  her  Milk  Can,  The. — Maop. — OS  1 
Country  Meeting  Talk. — Anon. — KNS 
Country  or  City. — Anon. — FND 
Country    Pedagogue,   The.  —  E:  A.  U.  (?)  Valentine. 

— scs 

Country  Post-office,     The.     (Tab.)— Tony     Denier.— 
TDT 


Country  Quiet. — Anon. — FHE 

Country  Scenes  in  Old  Days. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Faith- 
ful Shepherdess,  The. 

Country  School,  The.— Anon.— BS  12 

Country  Schoolmaster,  The. — Anon. — HR 

Country  Sleighing.— Edmund  C.  Stedman. — CS  16 

Country  Song,  A. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Arcadia. 

Country  Squire,  The. — Anon.^MHR  (abr.) 

(Unsuccessful  Plan,  The — diff.  vers.) — WR  15 

Country  Squire,  The. — T:  Yriarte. — LBB— MBB 

Country  Summer      Pastoral,     A.     (The     Agricultural 
Editor's     Poem,     The— C.)— S:     W.     Foss.— 
WR  14 
(City  Man's  Dream  of  the  Country.) — BS  24 

Country  Thanksgiving,  A. —  Anon.  —  PP— PS — YPS 

Countrymen  and  the  Ass,  The.     (Country  Fellows  and 
the  Ass,  The— C.)— J:  Byrom.— BC 

Country's  Greatest  Evil,  The. — H:  Wilson.— CS  12 

Countrywoman  of    Mine,  A. — Elaine   G.   Eastman. — 
AA 

County  Guy.     (Song  fr.  Quentin  Durward,  Ch.  IV.) — 
Walter  Scott.  —  BFV  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  EPs 
— FEP— LC— WEP  4 
(Serenade,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 

County  of  Mayo,  The.— G:  Fox.— OB— TIP 

Coup  de  Grace,  The.— E:  R.  SiU.— AA 

Coupon  Bonds.     (Abr.  and  ad.) — J:  T.  Trowbridge  — 
— DES 

Courage. — Anon. — FS 

Courage.- W:  E.  Channing.— WR  5 

(True  Courage  in  Life — si.  abr.) — BS  21 

Courage. — Arthur  H.  Clough. — OS  3 
(Despondency  Rebuked.) — HBP 
(Say   not,    the    Struggle    Naught   Availeth — C.) — 
AVP  —  GP  —  HDL  —  OB  —  PGT  2  —  SO  — 
WEP  4— YBF 

Courage.— G:  (?)  Farquhar.— HSS  3 

Courage. — Horace  Porter. — TMD 

Courage.- Bryan    W.  Procter. — BLP  (a6r.)— KNE— 
SS 

Courage. — W:    Shakespeare.     See   Antony   and   Cleo- 
patra. 

Courage. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  also  King   Richard 

Courage. — Celia  Thaxter. — HDL 

Courage  and  Fear.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Courageous  Boy,  The. — Anon. — TFS 

(Fellow  who  is  Game,  The.)— KER 
Coureur-de-Bois,  The.— S:  M.  Baylis.— TCV 
Course  of  Love,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Othello, 

the  Moor  ot  Venice. 
"Course  of  Love"  too  "Smooth,"  The. — Anon. — BS  5 

— CS  14 
Course  of  Time,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Rob't  Pollok. 
Byron.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— BNL 

(Lord  Byron — longer  sel.) — WCLG  2 
Happiness.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  V.) — FP 
Hypocrite,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VIII.)— KNE 
"It  was  an  eve  of  Autumn's  holiest  mood."     (Sel: 

fr.  Bk.  V.)— AE 
Miser,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.)— KNE 
Ocean.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  VII.)— BNL— EPs 
Course   of   True    Love,    The. — W:    Shakespeare.     See 

Midsummer  Night's  Dream,  A. 
Course  of  True  Love  never  did  Run  Smooth.  The,  Sel. 
fr.     (Disillusionizing  of  Alexander  Oldworthy, 
The— seZ.  fr.  Pt.  III.)— C:  Reade.— WR  26 
Court  Lady,   A.— Eliz.    B.    Browning.— BNL— BSP— 

FEP— TMR— VA 
Court  of    Berlin,    The.     (Frankfort   Yeoman.) — CS  28 

—HP 
Court  of  Bojrville,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (King  of  Boyville, 

The— arf.  fr.  Ch.  III.)— W:  A.  White.— NP 
Court    of    Love,    The,    Sel.    fr. —  (At.    to)  Geoffrey 

Chaucer.— WEP  1 
Court  of  the  King,  The.— Florence  M.  Alt.— CS  31 
Court  of  the  Year,  The.     (£?7i<.)— Mrs.  E.  C.  Whitney. 

— EE 
Court  Scene. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Winter's  Tale. 
Courteous  Mother,  A.— Helen  Hunt. — CS  14 
Courtesies  of    War,  The. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See   On 

Mitford's  History  of  Greece. 
Courtiers.— S:  Butler.— HPE 
Courtin',  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Biglow  Papers, 

The. 
Courtin'  Call,  A.— J.  E.  V.  Cooke.— SR  12— WR  24 
Courtin'  in  the  Country. — H.  E.  McBride. — CS  1 
Courting.     (On  Courting — C. — longer  than  rev.  vers,  in 
Works.)— H:  W.  Shaw.— KNE 
(Josh  Billings  on  Courting.) — CS  1 
Courting  and  Science. — Anon. — BS  17 
(Girl  of  Culture,  A— «Z.  obr.  )—DCR 


77 


Courting 


AN   INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Courting  in  French  Hollow. -^Robb. — SCS 

Courting  in  Kentucky. — Florence  E.  Pratt  [orPyatt]. — 

AWH— BS  19— THP 
(Kerrected.)— SR  7 

(School-ma'am's  Courting,  The.) — CRR — DR 
Courting  of  Mother  Goo«e,  The.     (.ErU.) — H.  D.  Castle. 

— EE 
Courting  of  T'nowhead's  Bell,  The.     (Fr.  Auld  Licht 

Idylls,    Ch.    Vin.— se/.)— Jas.    M.    Barrie.— 

BS24 
Courtship.     (Punch.)     See  following. 
Courtship  and    Matrimony.     (Punch.) — HPE — SCS 

(Courtship.)— CS  19 
Courtship  Fair  and  Square. — Anon. — SR  4 
Courtship,  Marriage,      Separation     and      Re-union. — 

Anon. — MCS 
Courtship  of  Larry  O'Dee.— W.  W.  Fink.— PPSr 

(Larrie      O'Dee.)— AWH— BS  10— CRR— CS  26— 

— CSS— DS— SDR 
Courtship  of  Miles  Standish,  The. — H :  W.  Longfellow. 

— AP 
(Miles  Standish's  Encounter  with  the  Indians. — 

Pt.  VII.,  otr. )—CR 
("So  these  lives  that  had  run  thus  far  in  separate 

channels"— 6r.  ael.  fr.  Ft.  VIII.)— BIL 
Courtship  of  Mr.  Bumble  and  Mrs.  Comey,  The. — C: 

Dickens.     See  Oliver  Twist. 
Courtship  under   DiflSculties.     (Dial.) — ^Anon. — CS  11 

— DS— FTR— HD— MPD— NPS— YA— YP 
Courtships  of  Adolphus  McDuff,  The. — Anon. — DES 
Cousin  Bell's  Visit.— Anon.— YFD 
Cousin  Floy.— David  L.  Proudfit.— TAV 
Cousin  from  the  City,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Cousin  Rufus'  Story.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— CW 
Cousin  Sally  Dilliard.— H.  C.  Jones.— CS  5 
Covenant,  The. — Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel   and 

Stella. 
Covenanters  and   Charles    Stuart,  The.     (Fr.  Ringan 

Gilhaize.)— J:  Gait.— FD  1 
Covenanters'  Battle-chant,    The. — W:    Motherwell. — 

FEP— HBP 
Cover  Them  Over.     (SeZ.)— Will  Carleton.— FAS 
Coverly  Hall. — Jos.Addison.     See  Spectator,  The. 
Coverly  Household,  The. — R:  Steele.     See  Spectator, 

The. 
Coves  of  Crail,  The.— W:  Sharp.— VA 
Coville  Convalesces.     (C. — in  They  All  Do  It.) — Jas. 

M.  Bailey. 
(Mr.  Coville  on  Danbury.)— BS  2 
(Mr.  Coville's  Easy  Chair.)— CS  9— DDR 
Cow,  The.— Anon.— WR  2 
Cow,  The.— Oliver  Herford.— NA 
Cow,  The.— Rob't     Louis     Stevenson. — CGV — DST — 

HSS2 
Cow  and  the  Bishop,  The.— G:  A.  Townsend. — BS  4 — 

NPS— YP 
Cow  in  the  Garden,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Coward,  A.     (Inlander.) — CG  3 
Coward,  The. — J.  N.  Matthews.— WR  4 
Coward,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  35 
Cowboy,  The. — J:  Antrobus. — AA 
Cowboy's  Sermon,  The.— Emma  G.  Curtis.— BS  18 
Cow-boy's  Song,  The.— Anna  M.  Wells.— PoR—WCL 
Cowboy's  Tale,  The.— "Wyoming  Kit."— AWH 
Cowpens.    (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Cowper's  Grave. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — EDY — FEP — 

HBP— LLC  (sel.) 
Cows — A  Composition. — Anon. — CS  17 
C!owslips.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades. ) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Cowslips.^ — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 
Coxcomb,  A.— Jos.  Hall.— WEP  1 
Coyote,  The. — S:  L.  Clemens.     See  Roughing  It. 
Crab  Village  Lyceum.— Anon.— DS— MPD— YA 
Crabbed    Age    and    Youth.      (Paraphrase   of    Shake- 
speare's.)— Anon. — AE 
Crabbed  Age  and   Youth.     (Fr.   The   Passionate   Pil- 
grim.)—W  :     Shakespeare.- FEP— HBP— OB 
(Madrigal,  A.)— LC— PGT  1— PHS 
(Youth  and  Age.)— EP 
Crack-mouthed  Family,  The. — Anon. — WR  16 

(Facial  Family,  The.)— SR  10 
Cradle,  The.— Austin  Dobson.— GP— VA 
Cradle,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Cradle  Hymn. — Martin  Luther. — PoR 
Cradle  Hymn,  A.— Isaac  Watts.— FEP— OB  (si.  abr.) 

—OS  1  (sel.) 
(Ahr.)—BNh—PoR 
(Cradle  Song,  A— a6r.  )—BFV— HBP 
Cradle  Song.— Anon.— BNL—POS 
Cradle  Song.— Anon.— CS  20 


Cradle  Song. — Anon. — OB 

Cradle  Song,  The.     (W.  music.) — Anon. — PR 

(Baby  is  a  Sailor.)— TFS 
Cradle  Song.  (2.)— W:  C.  Bennett.— VS 
Cradle  Song  [,AJ.  —  (In    Songs   of   Innocence.)  —  W-: 

Blake.— LC— OB— PGT  1  — YBF 
Cradle  Song,  A.     (Fr.  Arbour  of  Amorous  Devices.) — 

Nicholas  Breton  (?).- OB 
(Sweet  Lullaby,  A.)— ELP— PGT  1— WEP  1 
Cradle  Song. — Caris  Brooke. — NV 
Cradle  Song.— Pauline  F.  Camp.— POS 
Cradle  Song.— R:  W.  Gilder.— OS  1 
Cradle  Song. — Josiah   G.    Holland.     See   Bitter-sweet. 
Cradle  Song.    (Anon. — tr.  by)  Eliz.  Prentiss.     See  Lul- 
laby Song. 
Cradle  Song. — Rowan  Stephens. — TAV 
Cradle  Song.     (Fr.  Sea  Dreams.) — Alfred  Tennyson. — 

LC— PGT  2— PS 
(Bird  and  the  Baby,  The.)— PP— PPSr— YFR 
(Birdie  and  Baby.)— DCP 
(Little  Birdie.)— OS  1— PC— WCL 
(Morning  Song.) — GMS 
("What    does   little  birdie  say?") — BNL— PHS — 

PoR— TFS  (sel.) 
(What  the  Birdie  and  the  Baby  Say.)— HSS  2 
Cradle  Song.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Cradle  Song,  A. — Isaac  Watts.     See  Cradle  Hymn,  A. 
Cradle  Song.— Merle  St.  C.  Wright.- OH 
Cradle  Song  of  the  Buccaneer's  Wife.     (Baby  Dear.) — 

S:  Lover  (7).—LC 
Cradle  Song  of  the  Fisherman's  Wife. — Ella  Higgin- 

son. — LC 
Cradle  Tomb   in    Westminster   Abbey,    The.  —  Susan 

Coolidge.— EDY 
Craft.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Cranes  of  Ibycus,  The. — Emma  Lazarus. — AA 
Cranes  of  Ibycus,  The.     (Abr.) — Friedrich  Schiller. — 

FR 
Cranmer.— W:  Wordsworth.- EDY 
Crape  on  the  Door. — Anon. — CS  5 
Craven.— H :  Newbolt.— BAB 
Craven  Knight,  The.— Anon. — SR  11 
Crazy  Kate.    The    Gipsies. — W:    Cowper.     See    Task, 

The. 
Crazy  Nell.— Jos.  Whitton.— BS  14 
Cream  Puff  Story,  The.— Anon.— CDV 
Creation. — Ambrose  Bierce. — AA 
Creation  of  Man,  The.— J:  H.  Hewitt. — CS  27 
Creator,  The.— Anon.— KNS 

Creator  and   Creatures,    The. — Isaac    Watts. — HBP 
Credo.     (Abr.)—^:  W.  Gilder.— HDL 
Credo,  Sel.  fr.  (Love's  Belief.) — Mary  A.  Townsend. — 

HP 
Creeds. — Anon. — SSS 
Creeds  of   the   Bells,    The.— G:   W.    Bungay.— CS  4— 

PPSr  (seZ.)— SA  (si.  abr.) 
(Abr.)~BS  1— FTR— HNS 
Creek-road,  The. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 
Creeping  up  the  Stairs. — W.  S.  McFetridge. — BS  21 — 

HP 
Creole  Slave-song,  A. — Maurice  Thompson. — AA 
Crescent  and  the  Cross,  The.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— BS  7 
Crescentius. — Lsetitia  E.  L.  Maclean. — FEP 
Cressid. — Nora  Perry. — AA 
Crew  of  the  Long  Serpent,  The.     (Fr.  The  Saga  of 

King  Olaf— Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn.)— H:  W. 

Longfellow.— BVC 
Crew  Poem,  A. — E:  A.  Blount,  Jr. — AA 
Cricket,  The. — Vincent  Bourne  (tr.  by  W:   Cowper). — 

BNL— HBP— LC  (o&r.)- NV  (seZ.)— SN 
Cricket,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Cricket,  The.— H  :  B.  Watterson.- WR  25 
Cricket  Bat   Sings,   The.     (Fr.   Songs  of  the  Bat.) — 

Anon.— BVC 
Cricket  on  the  Hearth,  The. — Anon. — OS  2 
Cricket  on  the  Hearth,  The,  Sel.  fr.   (Tea-kettle  and 

the  Cricket,  The  —  sel.  fr.  Chirp  the  first.) — 

C:  Dickens.— PR 
Cricket  Songs.— E.  Whitney.— TT 
Crickets,  The.— Harriet  M.  Kimball.— SN— TAV 
Crime. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Csesar. 
Crime  against  Kansas,  Sel.  /r.  (Kansas.) — C:  Sumner. 

—OS  3  ^ 

Crime  its  Own  Detector. —  Dan'l  Webster.     See  Mur- 
der of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
Crime  Revealed  by  Conscience. — Dan'l  Webster.     See 

Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
Crimean  Incident,  A. — Bavard  Taylor. — HSS  1 

(Song  of  the  Camp,  Tfee— C.)— AA— ASL— BIL— 

BNL  —  BS  9  —  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  —  HB  — 

LLC  —  OM  —  OS  2  —  PYO  —  TAV  —  TMR 

— WCLG  1 


78 


TITLE    INDEX 


Cuba 


Criminality  of  Duelling.  —  Eliphalet  Nott.     See  Dis- 
course Delivered  in  the  North  Dutch  Church, 

A. 
Criminality  of  War.    {Frags,   fr.   various    authors.) — 

BNL 
Crimson  and  the. Blue,  The. — F.  W.  Loring. — MR 
Crimson  House,  The. — Bliss  Carman. — TCV 
Crimson  Shroud  of  Olaf  Guldmar,  The.    {Sel.  fr.  Thel- 

ma,  Ch.  XXXII.)— Marie  Corelli.— PFP 
(Passing  of  Olaf,  The  —  shorter  and  si.  diff.  sel.)— 

WR  19 
Crimson  Throne,  The.    (C.)— G:  Macdonald. 

(Waif.)— BS  1 
Cripple  Ben.— G:  L.  Catlin.— CS  20 
Cripple  Tim.— Frank  Hastings.— WR  23 
Crippled  for  Life.— J:  F.  Nicholls.— CS  27 
Crippled  Joe.— Rose  H.  Thorpe.— WR  16 
(irispian's  Day. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Crispus  Attucks,   Sel  jr.     (Boston   Massacre,   The.) — 

J.B.  O'Reilly.— ED Y 
Cristina. — Rob't  Browning. — ESs 
Critic,  The.— S.  F.  Batchelder.- CG  2 
Critic,  A. — Harry  Romaine. — TL 
Critic,  The     (Tr.  by)  J:  O.  (?)  Sargent.— EC 

(Great  Musical  Critic,  The.)— SS 
"Critic  is  now  aware  that  his  personal   taste   has  no 

value.  A."— H.  A.  (?)  Taine.— GG 
Critic,  The;   or,   A  Tragedy   Rehearsed,  Sel.  fr.  (Mr. 

Puff's   Account   of    Himself     -  ad.   fr.  Act  1., 

Sc.  2.)— R:  B.  Sheridan.— SS 
Critical  Conditions  of   Labor,  The.     {Fr.  Address  be- 
fore   28th    Graduating    Class    of    the    Pierce 

School  of  Business  and  Shorthand, Philadelphia 

Dec.  20,  1893.)— B:  Harrison.— BLP 
Critical  Moment,  The.— Theron  Brown. — CS  34 
Critical  Situation,    A. — S:    L.    Clemens.     See    Tramp 

Abroad,  A. 
Criticism    and    Satire.     (.Frags,    fr.    various    authors.) 

—BNL 
Critics.     {Fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S:  Butler. 

HPE 
Critics,  The.— G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Croaker,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Croakers  of  Society  and  Literature,  Sel.  fr.  (Sniveler, 

The.)— Edwin  P.  Whipple.— KNE 
Crocus. — Anon. — DLF 

Crocus,  The.— Harriet  E.  H.  King.— SN— VA 
Crocus. — Longfellow  (7). — AD 
Crocus.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Crocus's  Soliloquy,   The. — Hannah   F.    Gould. — NV — 

YBT 
Cromwell. — Sir  H:  Vane.     See  Against  the  Succession 

of  Richard  Cromwell  to  the  Protectorate. 
Cromwell  and     Henrietta    Maria.     {Fr.    Charles    the 

First.)— W:  G.  Mills.  — VA 
Cromwell  and  King  Charles. — Andrew  Marvell.     See 

Horatian  Ode  upon  Cromwell's  Return   from 

Ireland,  A. 
Oomwell  on  the  Death  of  Charles  the  First. — E:  Bul- 

wer-Lytton.— PS— SS— TMD 
Croodlin'  Doo.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Croppy  Boy,  The.— W:  B.  McBurney.— TIP 
Croquet. — Anon. — WR  7 
Cross  at  Santa.— Mae  R.  McNabb.— PS 
Cross  Betsy.— Sarah  M.  Chatfield;— LPS— PP 
Cross  Firing.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MPD 
Cross  of  Gold,  The.— David  Gray.— AA 
Cross  of  War,  The.— Anon.— CP 
Cross  Purposes.     {Dial.) — Anon. — FHE 
Cross  Purposes.     See  also  Cross-purposes. 
Crossed  Swords,  The. — Nathaniel  L.   Frothingham.— 

AA 
Cross-eyed  Lovers,  The. — J:  H.  Johnston. — CS  20 
Crossing  Brooklyn  Ferry.  Sel.  fr. — Walt  Whitman. — 

AA  '    * 

Crossing  of  the  Rubicon,  The. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.i   See 

Crossing  the  Rubicon. 
Crossing  the  Bar. — Alfred  Tennyson. — BS  21— BSP — 

—  CEL  —  CS  32  —  DS  —  EDY  —  FEP  — 

HDL  —  HSS  3  —  LLC  —  MBL  —  OS  2  — 

PGT  2— PYO— VA— WEP  4— YBF 
Crossing  the  Blackwater. — Rob't  D.  Joyce. — VA 
Crossing  the  Carry.     {Abr.  fr.  Adirondack  Adventures, 

Ch.  VI.)— W.  H.  H.  Murray.— CS  5— MHR 
{Abr.)— BS  1— NPS— YP 
Crossing   the    Plains. — Joaquin    Miller. — AA — GN 
Crossing  the  Rubicon. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.^LLC 
(Caesar  Passing  the  Rubicon.) — CS  4 — OM 
(Caesar's  Passage  of  the  Rubicon.)- — SS 
(Crossing  of  the  Rubicon,  The.)— OS  2 
(Passing   of   the    Rubicon,    The.) — KNE  —  PS  — 

SE  {si.  diff.  vers.) 


Crossing  the  Tropics. — Herman  Melville. — AA 
Cross-purposes.— F.  T.  Cooper. — CG  1 
Cross-purposes.     See  also  Cross  Purposes. 
Crotalus. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — AA 

Crotchet  Castle,  Sel.  fr.  (Llyn-y-Dreiddiad-Vrawd;  or. 
The  Pool,  etc.— Ch     XVI.)— T:  L.  Peacock.— 

Crow,  The.— Anon.— SDR 

Crowded  Street,    The.— W ;     C.    Bryant— ASL— FEP 
— HBP— LLC— SE— SM— WCLG  2 

Crowing  of  the  Red  Cock,  The. — Emma  Lazarus. — AA 

Crown,  The.— Ray  Palmer.— HS 

Crown  of  Wild  Olive,  The,  Sel.  fr.   (Princes  —  sel.  fr. 
Lecture  III.,  War.)— J:  Ruskin— OS  3 

Crown   our      Washington. — Hezekiah       Butterworth. 
BLP— PEO 
(Washington — abr.) — CS  35 

Crowne  of  Lawrell,  The. — J:  Skelton.      See  Garlande 
of  Laurell,  The. 

Crowned  and  Buried,  Sel.  fr.  (Napoleon's  Final   Re- 
turn.)— Eliz.  B.  Browning. — OS  3 

Crowned  and  Discrowned. — W:  Bright. — AVP 

Crowned  and  Wedded. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — EHT 

Crowned  Poet,  A. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — AA 

Crowning  of    Arthur,     The. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See 
Idylls  of  the  King. 

Crowning  of  the  King,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Joanfof  Arc,  Bk. 
X.)— Rob't  Southey.— CS  35 

Crowning  the  May  Queen.     {Tab.) — Anon. — TCP 

Crowning  the  May  Queen.     (Dial.) — Clara  Denton. — 
LPD 

Crowns  for  Children. — Anon. — OS  1 

Crow's  Children,    The.— Phoebe   Gary.— BLF— PHS— 
SM— WCL 

Crucifixion,  The.— G:  Croly.— SS 

Crucifixion,  The.— F:  H.  Hedge.— TAS 

Crucifixion,    The.     (Sonnet:     The    Crucifixion — C.) — 
Jas.  Montgomery. — PS 

Crucifixion,  The. — Lew  Wallace.     See  Ben-Hur. 

Cruel  Boy,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 

Cruel  Brother,  The. — Anon.— BB 
{Diff.  vers.)— FEB  1 

Cruel  Deception,  A. — Anon. — WR  12 

Cruel  Maid,  The.— A.  Bradley.— CG  2 

Cruel  Mistress,  The  [A— C.].— T:  Carew.— WEP  2 

Cruel  Sister,  The.— Anon.— FEP— HBP 
(Binnorie — si.  abr.) — OB 
(Twa  Sisters,  The.)— CEL— PEB  1 
(Twa  Sisters  o'  Binnorie,  The — «e/.)— BB— WR  9 

Cruelty  of  Legree,  The. — Harriet  B.  Stowe.     See  Uncle 
Tom's  Cabin. 

Cruise  of  the  "Monitor,"  The. — G:  M.  Baker. — WR  10 

Cruise  of  the  Mystery,  The.  (C.)— Celia  Thaxter. 
(Phantom  Ship,  "rhe.)— BS  10 

Cruise  of  the  "P.  C."  The.— Anon.— NA 

Cruiskeen  Lawn,  The. — Anon.^ — TIP 

Crusader  Chorus. — C:  Kingsley.    See  Saint's  Tragedy, 
The. 

Crusaders,  The. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  13 

Cruse  that  Faileth  Not,  The.— Eliz.  Charles.— SSS 
("Is  thy  cruise  of  comfort  failing?" — sel.) — GG 
(Unfailing  Cruise,  The.)— HDL 

"Crush  the  dead  leaves  under  thy  feet." — Anon. — GG 

Crushed  Hero,  A. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 

Crushed  Tragedian,  The.— E:  L.  McDowell.— GH 

Crusoe's  Fight  with  Wolves. — Dan'l  Defoe.    See  Robin- 
son Crusoe. 

Cry,  A.— Herbert  E.  Clarke.— VA 

Cry  for  Life,  A.— W.  W.  Harding.— PTS 

Cry  from  the  Depths,  A.     {Fr.  Confessions  of  a  Drunk- 
ard—8cZ.)—C:  Lamb.— TS 
(Warning,  A.)— CPL 
(Warning  to  the  Intemperate.) — CS  11 

Cry  from  the  Shore,  A. — Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — A  A — 
HBP 

Cry  in  the  Darkness — the  Sentinel's  Alarm.     {Detroit 
Free  Press.)— BS  21 

Cry  of  Personal  Liberty,  The. — J:  Ireland. — PEO 

Cry  of  the  Children,  The.— Eliz.  B.  Browning. — EHT 
—FEP— PYO  {sel.)—\A 
{Abr.)— BeR—FGT  2 

Cry  of  the  Dreamer,  The.— J:  B.  O'Reilly. — BS  21 

Cry  to  Arms,  A.— H:  Timrod.— AWB 

Crystal,  The.— Titus  M.  Coan.— AA 

Crystal  Palace,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— HPE 

Cuba.— W.  P.  Frye.— SC 

Cuba. — J.  Gardner. — PAPm 

Cuba.— J.  B.  Hope.— PAPm 

Cuba. — J.M.Thurston.     See  Affairs  in  Cuba 

Cuba  and  Armenia. — H:  C.  Lodge. — NC 

Cuba— 1897.— H.  Bashford.— PAPm 

Cuba— 1898.— H.  R.  Vynne.— PAPm 


79 


Cuba 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Cuba  in  War  Time,  Sel.  fr.     ( Death  of  Rodriguez,  The. ) 

— R:  H.  Davis.— MRS— SC 
Cuba  Libra.— Joaquin  Miller.— BS  25— PAPm 
Cuba  Libre.     {Red  and  Blue.)— CG  3 
Cuban  Refugee,  The.— Howell  L.  Finer.— WR  23 
Cuba's  Appeal. — C.  Sj»Rice. — PAPm 
Cuba's  Banner. — Heber  De  Long. — SR  12 
Cuba's  Maiden  Martyr.— Eugene  B.  Harding. — WR  19 
Cubes  and  Spheres. — Oliver  W.    Holmes.     See    Auto- 
crat of  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Cuckoo,  The.— Anon.— OS  1 

(Cuckoo's  Habits,  The.)— BVC 
Cuckoo,  The. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson. — HBP— VS 
Cuckoo,  The.— J:  Logan.— WCL 

(Messenger  of  Spring,  The.) — POS 
(Ode  to  the  C\ickoo-^at.  to  Bruce.) — CEL — CGd 
(To  the  Cuckoo— C.J— BNL—FEP— HBP— OB— 
PYO  (afer. )—SN 
Cuckoo,  The.     (IF.  mmic.)~E:  R.  Sill  (?).— AD 
Cuckoo,  The.— G:  W.  Thornbury.— VS 
Cuckoo    (Cuckow  —  C.)    and    the    Nightingale,    The. 
(A6r.)— Geoffrey  Chaucer.— HBP 
(Cuckow  and  Nightingale — sel.) — EPs 
Cuckoo  Clock,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Cuckoo  Clock,    The.     (.Fr.    The    Birthday.)— Caroline 

B.  Southey.— BNL 
Cuckoo  Song. — Anon. — OB 

(Coming  of  Spring,  The — al.  diff.  wording.) — CEL 
Cuckoo's  Character,  The. — Anon. — BVC 
Cuckoo's  Habits,    The. — Anon.     See   Cuckoo,    The. — 

Anon. 
Cuckoo's  Voice,  The. — J:  Hey  wood. — BVC 
Cuckoo's  Wit,  The.— R.  S.  Hawker.— BVC 
Cuckow  and      Nightingale. — Geoffrey     Chaucer.     See 

Cuckoo  and  the  Nightingale,  The. 
Cuddle  Doon.     Alexander   Anderson.— BRR — BS  7 — 
CR  —  CS  13  —  CSS  —  FTR  —  GN  —  HBP  — 
OS  1— PPSr— SDR— VA 
("Baimies,  cuddle  doon.") — GP 
( Vers,  vary  si.  in  dialect.) 
Cudgeled   Husband,   The.     (Epigram — C.) — Jonathan 

Swift.— HPE 
Cudjo's  Cave,  Sel  Jr.  (Pomp's  Story— ad.  fr.  Ch.  XIV.) 

—J:  T.  Trowbridge.— NP 
"Cui  Bono?"— T:  Carlyle.— OS  2 
Culdee.    (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. — 

TCP 
Culprit,  A.— Marg.  Vandegrift.— BS  14— SR  5 

(They  will  never  Do  so  Again.)— CS  36— WR  14 
Culprit  and  the  Judge,  The. — Horace  Smith. — SS 
Culprit  Fay,     The. — Jos.     Rodman     Drake. — BNL — 
FEP— GN  (sels.—sta.,  3,  4,  6-10.)— HBP— IR 
3,  4,  25,  26)— WR  5  (cond.) 
Elfin  Song.     (Song  fol.  36.)— AA 
Fay's  Sentence,  The.     (Pt.  of  6,  7-9.)— AA 
First  Quest,  The.     (10-15.)— AA 
Gathering  of  the  Fairies,  The.     (1-4.) — POS 
Second  Quest,  The.     (Pt.  of  24,  25-29.) 
(Fairy  in  Armor,  A — 25.) — PoR 
Culture  and  Service.— Anon. — CP 
Culture  in  Emergencies. — Anon.     (Ad.)-— NC 
Culture  of  the  Imagination,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Culture  of  the  Moral  Virtues. — Jos.  Baldwin. — BLP 
Culture  the  Result  of  Labor.- W:  Wirt.— CS  11— DS 

(No  Excellence  without  Labor.)— BLP— PEO 
Cultured  Daughter  of   a   Plain   Grocer,   The. — Anon. 

—CD 
Cumberbunce,  The. — Paul  West. — NA 
Cumberland,  The.— Anon.— FEP 

Cumberland,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— AA— A WB— 
—BAB  —  CS  2  —  EPs  —  HB  —  LH  —  PAP 
—PAPm 
Cumberland  Road,  The.— T:  Corwin.— MRS 
Cumnor  Hall.— W:  J.  Mickle.— FEP 

(A6r.)— BPB— BS  17— MR— VSG 
Cunnin'  Little  Thing,  The. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Cunning  Jew,  The. — Anon. — CDV 
Cunning  of  Old  Crow,  The.     See  following. 
Cunning  Old  Crow,  The. — Anon. — LLC 
(Cunning  of  Old  Crow,  The.)— AD 
(Jolly  Old  Crow,  The— di^.  vers.)— CSS— PPSr 
Cup,  The.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.- SN 
Cup  and  Saucer  Episode,  A. — ^Bert  Ross. — CG  2 
Cup  of  Tea,  A.— Anon.— DST 
Cup  of  Water,  A. — Julia  M.  Bennett.— WR  18 
Cup  of  Youth.  The,  Sel.  fr.—S.  Weir  Mitchell.— BIL 
Cup-bearer,  The. — Anon. — TS 

(Little  Cup-bearer,  The— sZ.  abr.) — CS  18 
"Cupid  abroad  was  latedin  the  night." — Rob't  Greene. 

iSee  Cupid's  Ingratitude. 
"Cupid  among    the     Strawberries."      (W.      Tab.) — 
Helen  Mowat.— SR  7 


Cupid  and  Campaspe. — J :  Lyly.     <S'ee  Alexander  and 

Campaspe. 
Cupid  and  Death,  Sel.  fr.     (Might  of  Death,  The.)— 

Jas.  Shirley.— WEP  2 
(Last  Conqueror,  The.)— FEP— PGT  1— YBF 
(Victorious  Men  of  Earth.)— HBP 
Cupid  and    Mercury,    or    the    Bargain. — Gotthold    E. 

Lessing.— HPE 
"Cupid  and    my    Campaspe    play'd." — J:    Lyly.     See 

Alexander  and  Campaspe. 
Cupid  and  the  Bee.     (Epigram — C.) — Edmund  Spen- 
ser.— LC 
Cupid  Arraigned.     (Sel.  fr.  Gallathea,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  2,) 

— J:  Lyly. — ES 
Cupid  at  Court.— S:  M.  Peck.— WR  20 
Cupid  Mistaken.— Matthew  Prior.— WEP  3 
Cupid  Peeped  in  through  the  Blinds. — R:  C.  Dillmore. 

— CS35 
Cupid  Swallowed.— Leigh     Hunt.— BNL— BS  21— CR 

—YBF 
Cupid's  Alley.— Austin  Dobson.— WR  22 
Cupid's  Arrows.     (Fr.  Plain  Tales  from  the  Hills.) — 

Rudyard  Kipling.— WR  16 
Cupid's  Blunder. — Gertrude  Jones. — CG  2 
Cupid's  Easter  Composition. — Anon. — TL 
Cupid's  Garden.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Cupid's  Ingratitude.     (Sonnet — C.) — Rob't  Greene. — 

ES 
("Cupid  abroad  was  lated  in  the  night.") — OEL 
Cupid's  Metamorphosis. — M.  S.  W. — CG  3 
Curate's  Story,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome. — CS  31 
Cure  for  Homesickness.— Holman  F.  Day.— THP 
Cure  for  Obstinacy ;  or.  How  Charlie  Won  a  Wife,  A. — 

Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KH 
Cured. — Anon. — MAD 
Cured  in  a  Minute.— Anon. — DJS 
Cure's  Progress,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — LC — OS  2 — 

VA 
Curfew.- H:  W.  Longfellow.— AA—WR  26  (abr.) 
Curfew  Chimes,  The.— V.  L.  Collins.— CG  1 
Curfew  Must  Not  Ring  To-night.— Rose  A.  H.  Thorpe. 

BNL— CS  9— FTR— HB— HNS— MR 
(A6r.)— BS  4— FEP— FR— MYF— SA 
Curing  a  Cold.— Anon.— CS  10— KNE 
Curing  a  Pedant. — Anon.— FND 
Curing  an  Invalid. — Anon. — StD 
Curing  the    Borrowers.     (Dial.) — H.    E.    McBride. — 

MHD 
Curiosities  for  a  Museum. — Anon. — DE 
Curiosity,  The.— Anon.— YFD 
Curiosity,  Sels.  fr. — C :  Sprague. 
Fiction. — AA 
News,  The.— AA 
Curious  Life  Poem,  A. — (Comp.  by)  Mrs.  H.  A.  Deming. 

— CS  15 
(Life.)— FEP— HP— SR  2 
Curious  Want,  A. — Marc  Cook. — AWH 
Curlew's  Call,  A. — Jane  Barlow. — -VA 
Curly  Locks.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Curly-head.— B.  S.  Brooks.— SR  5 
Current  of  Life,  The.— Anon.— CS  31— SR  9 
Curry.     (Fr.      Poetical      Cookery-book.)     (Punch.)— 

HPE 
Curse  for  a  Nation,  A. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.— MRS 
Curse  from  "Claudian,"  The. — Herman  and  Wills. — 

WR  13 
Curse  of  Cain,  The.— J:  (?)  Knox.— SS 
Curse  of  Drink,  The.— T.  D.  Talmage.— WR  18 
Curse  of  Hungary,  The.— -J:  Hay. — SO 
Curse  of  Kehama,  The.  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Southey. 
Curse  of  Kehama,  The.     (Can.  II.,  St.  14.)— AE 
Immortality  of  Love.     (X.,  8-10.)- FTR 
(Curse  of  Kahama,  The— X.,  11.)— BNL 
(Love's  Immortality- X.,  10.)— FTA 
("They  sin  who  tell  us  love  can  die" —  X.,  10, 

11.)— GG 
Kehama.    (XIII.,  9-13.)— WEP  4 
Curse  of    Marino    Faliero,    The. — Lord    Byron.     See 

Marino  Faliero,  Doge  of  Venice. 
Curse  of  Regulus,  The  —Elijah  Kellogg.— CS  2— KNE 
(Regulus  to  the  Carthaginians — diff.  vers.) — CS  11 
— DS— OM— PPS 

(Abr. — but  speech  comp.) — BS  13 — PS 
(Return  of  Reguhis,  The — speech  abr.) — TMD 
(Supposed  Speech  of  Regulus.)— NPS—YP 
Curse  on  the  Traitor,  A. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Curse  to  Labor,  The.— T.  V.  Powderly.— BS  16 

(Greatest  Curse  to  Labor,  The.)— FD  2 
Curse  upon  Edward,  The.— T:  Gray.     See  Bard,  The. 
Curtain,  The.— Anon.— SR  9 
Curtain  Falls,  The.— Jos.  Verey.— HP 
Curtain  Fixture,     The —.Tan.  M.  Bailey.— CS  23— SR  5 


80 


TITLE    INDEX 


Datue 


Curtain  Lecture  of  Mrs.  Caudle,  A.     (Mr.  Caudle  has 
Lent  an  Acquaintance  the  Family    Umbrella 
—C.)— Douglas  Jerrold.— SO  (.si.  abr.) 
(Mrs.  Caudle's  Umbrella  Lecture.)— CS  1— DDR 
Curtsy,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  31 
Cushions. — Anon. — GH 

Cushla  Gal  Mo  Chree,  A.— Michael  Doheny.— TIP 
Custer's  Last    Charge.— Frd'k    Whittaker.  —  CS  IS- 
PS 
Cut  Behind.— T.  De  W.  Talmage.— CS  12 
"Cut,  Cut  Behind."— C:  F.  Adams.— DCR 
Cut  off  from  the  People. — Hall  Caine.     See  Deemster, 

The. 
"Cut  the  Cables."— R.  B.  Wilson.— PAPm 
Cutting  oflf  the  Forests. — Warren  Higley. — AD 
Cyclamen,  The. — Arlo  Bates. — AA 
Cycle,  A.— C.  Brooke.— FLS 
Cyclone  at  Sea,  A. — W:  H.  Hayne.— AA 
(Dyclopeedy,  The. — Eugene  Field. — HBR 
Cymbeline.  Seh.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

Cymbeline,  Act  III.,  Sc.  1.     (/16r.)— EHT 
Dirge  of  Imogen,  The.     (Song  —  C.  — /r.  IV.,  2.) 
—HBP 
(Cymbeline,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  2,  Sel.  /r.)— ELP 
(  Dirge— a6r. )— FEP— YB  F 
(Fear  no  more  the  Heat  o'  the  Sun — abr.) — BNL 

—EPS 
(Fidele.)— OB 

(Abr.)  —  BPB— OEL— POT  1— PHS 
Inborn  Royalty.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IV.,  2.)— EPs 
Slander.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  4.)— KNE 
Song.     (.C.—fr.  II.,  3.)— BFV— PYO 
(Aubade.)— OB 

(Cymbeline,  Act  II.,  Sc.  3,  Sel.  fr.)— ELF 
(Hark.)- OS  1 

(Hark,  Hark!  the  Lark.)— BNL— EPs— YBF 
("Hark,  hark!  the  lark  at  heaven's  gate  sings.") 

— GP— OEL 
(Morning.)— FEP— HBP— LC 
(Morning  Song  [for  Imogen],  A.) — CEL — GN — 

WEPl 
(To  Imogen.) — ES 
Cymon  and  Iphigenia,  Br.  sel.  fr. — .1:  Dryden. — BNL 
Cynic,  The.— H:  W.  Beecher.     See  Portrait  Gallery. 
Cynic  of  the  Woods,  The.— Arthur  P.  Martin.— VA 
Cynthia,  Sels.  fr. — R :  Barnfield. 

Address  to  the  Nightingale.— BNL — HBP 
(Ode,  An.)— EP— WEP  1 
( Nightingale,      The— seZ. )— BPB— CEL— CGd— 

EPs— FEP— LC— PGT  1— YBF 
(Philomel— seZ. )— OB 
Sonnet  from  Cynthia.— WEP  1 
Cynthia.— Sir  E:  Dyer.— EP 
Cynthia's  Bridal  Evening. — J:  Keats.      See  "I  stood 

tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill." 
Cynthia's  Revels;  or.  The  Fountain  of  Self-love,  Sels. 
fr. — Ben  Jonson. 
Echo's   Lament  of  [or  for]  Narcissus.     (Fr.  Act  I., 
Sc.  1.— mod.)— ELP— WEP  2— YBF 
(Echo's    Song.)— OEL 
(Song  of  Echo.)— EPs 
Hesperus'  Song.     (Fr.  V.,  3.)— GN 
(Hymn  to  Cynthia.)— SN 
(Hymn    to    Diana.)— BFV— BPB— ELP— LC— 

OB— PGT  1— PHS— YBF 
(To  Cynthia.)— FEP— OS  3 
Kiss,  The.     (Fr.  IV.,  1.)— ES 
To  a  Glove.     (Fr.  IV.,  1.)— ES 
Cyrano  de  Bergerac,  Sels.  fr.  — Edmund  Rostand. 
Balcony  Scene.     (Fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  6.)— WR  22 
(Scene  from  Cyrano  de    Bergerac-^sZ.  diff.  sel.) — 
CS37 
Scene    from    Cyrano    de    Bergerac.     (Fr.  I.,  4.) — 
MRS 
Czar,  The.     (Punch.)— BPE 

Czar  Alexander  the  Second.     (Sonnet:     Czar  Alexan- 
der the  Second — C.) — Dante  G.  Rossetti. 
■■      (Alexander  II.)— EDY 


Dad    Says    so.  Anyhow.     (Dial.). — H.  E.  McBride. — 

— CS  36 
Daddy  Benson  and  the  Fairies.     (Detroit  Free  Press.) 

— BS19 
Daddy  Dumm. — Alice  A.  Coale. — MD 
Daddy  Flick's  Spree.— David  L.  Proudfit.— BRR 
Daddy  Worthless.— Eliz.  W.  Champney. — CS  13 
Daddy's  Boy.— Anon.— CS  14 
Dad's  Little  Fiddle.— Fred  W.  Sibley.— WR  12 


Daedalus.— J:  Sterling.— EPs  (sel.)— HBP 

Dsemon  Lover,  The. — Anon.     See  Demon  Lover,  The. 

Daffodil.     (Fr.     Pastorals,     Eclogue     IX.) — Michael 

Drayton.— EP 
Daffodil. — Mary  E.  Sharpe.     See  Dainty  Lady  Daffo- 
dil. 
Daffodil.— Katha.  Tynan-Hinkson.— TIP 
Daffodils.— Rob't  Herrick.— BNL— PEO  (sel.) 

(To  Daffodils.)— BPB  —  CEL  —  CGd  —  ELP  — 

EPs  —  FEP  —  FP  —  GN  —  HBP— LC— OB— 

OEL  —  PGT  1  —  PHS  —  POS  —  WEP  2  — 

YBF 
Daffodils. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 
Daffodils     [,The].— W:     Wordsworth.— BNL— BSP— 

CR  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  FP  —  FTR  —  GMS  — 

GN  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HSS  1  —  LLC  —  MBL  — 

OB  —  PGT  1  —  POS  —  PYO  —  SN  —  YBF 
(I  Wandered  Lonely.)— BPB— WEP  4 
(I  Wandered  Lonely  as  a  Cloud — C.)— LC — OS  3 
Daffy-down-Dilly. — Anon. — AD 
Daffy-down-Dilly. — Anna  B.  Warner. — PoR 
(Brave  Little  Flower,  The.)— PPSr 
(Ready  for  Duty.)— AD— PHS 
Daft  Days,  The.— Rob't  Fergusson.— WEP  3 
Daft  Jean.— Sydney  DobeU.— PEB  3 
Dagger  of  the  Mind,  A. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Mac- 
beth. 
Dagger  Scene,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Dagger  Soliloquy. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Dagmar. — Elna  Harwood. — WR  24 
Dagmar  Cross,  The. — Anon. — CS  10 
Daguerreotype,  The. — Eva  W.  McGlasson. — BS  21 
Daily  Counsellor,    The,   Sel.    fr.    ("Give  words,   kind 

words,  to  those  who  err" — sel.  for  Deo.  24.) — 

Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — GG 
Daily  Dying. — Anon. — CS  16 
Daily  Governess,  The. — Anon. — FND 
Daily  Strength. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — HDL 
Daily  Task,  The. — Marianne  Farningham. — PEO 
Daily  Work.— C:  Mackay.— SM— WCLI  2 
Dainty    Lady    Daffodil.— Mary    E.    Sharpe.— DCP— 

HSSl 
(Daffodil— in     Maiden    Spring,    The,    and    Arbor 

Day  Acrostic.) — AD 
'Dairy"  Maid,  A. — Anon. — GH 
Dairymaid,  The.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Dairy-maids'  DriU,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
Daisies.— Anon.— PP—YPS 
Daisies.     (In   Flower   Songs.) —  Mary    G.    Crocker. — 

CPL 
Daisies.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— DLF—LFL—TT 
Daisy,  "The. — Anon. — AD 
Daisy,  The. — Anon.— NV 
Daisy,  The.— Anon.— TT 
Daisy,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  Legend  of  Good 

Women,  The. 
Daisy,  The.— J:  M.  Good.— HSS  1— PEO— YBT 
Daisy,  The. — J:  Leyden. — BNL 
Daisy,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery.  —  BNL  —  NV  (set.)  — 

SN 
(Field  Flower,  A— C.)— POS 
Daisy,  The. — J:  Henry  Newman. — YBT 
Daisy,  The. — Rennell  Rodd. — VA 
Daisy,  The.— Mrs.  B.  C.  Rude.— AD 
Daisy,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. — VA 
Daisy. — Fs.  Thompson. — VA 
Daisy.— Emily  Warren.— TMR 
(Our  Little  Queen.)— WCL 
Daisv  and  Snow-drop.     (Dial.) — Anon. — AD 

(What  the  Daisy  Said— seZ. )— TFS 
Daisy  Drill. — Jean  Halifax. — WR  17 
Daisy  Fair.     (Motion  song.) — Annie  Chase. — AD 
Daisy  Follows  Soft  the  Sun,  The. — Emily  Dickinson. 

—OH 
Daisy  in  India,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — POS 
Daisy  Nurses. — Anon. — DJS — GMS  (sel.) 
Daisy  Time.— Fleta  Forrester.— COS— PP 
Daisy's  Dimples. — J.  A.  Sterry. — VS 
Daisy's  Faith. — Joanna  H.  Mathews. — BS  7 — CS  18 — 

CSS— SR  10 
Daisy's  Song,  The. — J:  Keats. — PoR 
Daisy's  Story. — Anon. — SR  7 
Daisy's  Thanksgiving. — Anon. — HS 
Dakin'  a  Shweat. — H.  M.  Seymour. — DRR 
Dalliance  of  the  Eagles,  The. — Walt  Whitman. — AA 
Damsetas'  Jig  in  Praise  of  His  Love.— Sir  J:  Wotton  (T). 

—ELP 
Damaris  Brown.     (Youth's  Companion.) — COS — PP 
Damascus. — S:  L.  Clemens.     See  Innocents  Abroad. 
Dame   Duck's   First   Lecture   on   Education. — "Aunt 

Effie."— BVC— PC— WCL 


81 


Dame 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dame  Fredegonde.— W :  E.  Aytoun.— CS  22— HPE— 

MHR— SCS 
Dame  Hickory.— Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Dame    Nature    Crowns    the    Scottish    Lion    King    of 
Beasts. — W:    Dunbar.     See    Thistle    and    the 
Rose,  The.         * 
Dame  Partington  and  the  Atlantic  Ocean. — Sydney 

Smith.— PS 
Damelus'  Song  to  his  Diaphenia. — H ;  Constable. — EP 

(  Diaphenia. )— FEP— LC 
Damelus'  Song  to  his  Flock. — H :  Constable. — LC 
Damiel  versus  Dishcloth. — G.  A.  Stevens. — CS  21 
Damon  and  Pythias,  Sels.  fr.     (Play.) — J:  Banim. 
Damon  to  the  Syracusans. — CS  7 — SS 
Scene  from  Damon  and  Pythias. — BS  10 — CDD 
Damon  and  Pythias.   (Abr.) — Friedrich  Schiller. — SS 

(Hostage,  The— a6r.)— WR  16 
Damon  and  Pythias;  or.  True  Friendship. — W:  Peter. 

— CSl 
Damon  the  Mower.— Andrew  Marvell. — EP 
Damon's  Lament. — W:  Drummond. — EP 
Damsel  of  Peru,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— CS  19 
Dana.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 

Danac,  Sel.  fr.     (Lullaby.)— T:  Davidson.— TMR 
Danae.— Simonides  {tr.  by  W:  Peter).— HBP 
Dance,  The. — Anon. — AWB 

Dance,  The.     (Song— C.)— Sir  J :  Suckling.— WEP  2 
Dance  Light.— J:  F.  Waller.— BNL 
(Irish  Melody,  An.)— HBP 
(Kitty  Neil.)— CS  22— TIP— VA 
Dance  of  Death,  The.— Walter  Scott.— BS  23 
Dance  of  the  Daisies,  The. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — AD 
Dance  of  the  Months. — Anon. — NV 
Dance  of  the   Seven   Deadly   Sins  [or,   Sevin   Deidly 

Synnis],  The.— W:  Dunbar.- ESs— WEP  1 
Dance  Song. — F.  W.  L.  Adams. — FLS 
Dancer,  The. — Ednah  P.  (C.)  Hayes. — AA 
Dancers,  The. — Michael  Field. — VA 
Dancing  Faun,  The. — Rob't  C.  Rogers. — AA 
Dancing  Girl,  A. — Frances  S.  Osgood. — AA 
Dancing  Girl.     See  also  Dancing-girl. 
Dancing  in  the  Flat  Creek  Quarters. — J:  A.  Macon. — 
WR7 
(Terpsichore  in  the  Flat  Creek  Quarters.) — BS  9 
Dancing  of  the   Air,  The.— Sir  J:  Davies.     See  Anti- 
nous  Praises  Dancing  before  Queen  Penelope. 
Dancing  the  Minuet.— F.  E.  E.  Hamilton. — CG  1 
Dancing-girl,  The.— Sir  Edwin  Arnold.— WR  8 
Dancing-girl.     See  also  Dancing  Girl. 
Dandelion. — Anon. — CPL 
Dandelion  [,The].— Anon.— DJS— TT 

(Dandelion's  Hair.) — CPL 
Dandelion,  The. — Anon. — GMS 
Dandelion,  The. — Anon.— GMS 

(Bright  Little  Dandelion — «eZ.)— TFS 
Dandelion. — Kate  L.  Brown. — NV 
Dandelion.  — Nellie     M.     Garabrant.  —  AD  — COS  — 

NV  (abr.)— PP 
Dandelion  and  Clover-top.     {Dial.) — May  R.  Smith. — 

DES 
Dandelions. — Anon. — GMS 
Dandelions. — J :  Albee. — AA 
Dandelions  [,The].  —  Helen  G.  Cone.  —  PoR  —  SN  — 

TAV— WR  6 
Dandelion's  Hair. — Anon.     See  Dandelion,  The. 
Dandy  and  the  Boor,  The. — Anon. — FND 
Dandy   Fifth,   The. — Frank   H.   Gassaway. — CS  21— 

FR 
Danger   of   Exclusive   Devotion   to   Business. — G.    S. 

Hilliard.— FAS 
Danger  of  the  Spirit  of  Conquest. — T:  Corwin.     See 

Spirit  of  Conquest,  The. 
Danger  Signal,  The.— S.  B.  McBeath.— WR  4 
Dangerous  Legislation. — Jas.  McDowell. — OM — SC 
Dangers  of  our  Prosperity. — Timothy  Walker. — PS 
Dangers    of    Peace.      {Frags,    jr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Dangers   to    our   Republic. — Horace    Mann. — SAE — 

WRIO 
Daniel  Gray.— Josiah  G.  Holland.— AA—BS  14— GP 
Daniel  in  the  Lion's  Den.— E.  E.  Ten  Eyck.— CH 
Daniel  O'Connell.   (A  Nation's  Test— Pt.  VI.,  abr.)— J: 

B.  O'Reilly.— EDY 
Daniel  O'Connell,  Sels.  fr.— Wendell  Phillips. 
Daniel  O'Connell  the  Orator.— NC 
(Daniel  O'Connell— jj/ij/.  diff. )—CR 
(Eloquence      of      Daniel      O'Connell  —  abr.) — 
CS30  {ptly.  diff.)— FT)  1— PPS— WCLG  2 
Daniel  O'Connell's  Power  over   the   Irish   People. 

— NC 
Necessity  of  Outside  Agitation,  The. — MRS 


Daniel  O'Connell,  SeU.Jr.—Vf:  H.  Seward. 
Daniel  O'Connell's  Epitaph. — NC 
Eulogy  on    O'Connell.— FD  1— SPE  {ptly.  diff.)— 

Daniel  O'Connell  the  Orator.— Wendell  Phillips.     See 

Daniel  O'Connell. 
Daniel  O'Connell's    Epitaph.  —  W:   H.    Seward.      See 

Daniel  O'Connell. 
Daniel  O'Connell's  Humor. — Anon. — WR  7 
Daniel   O'Connell's   Power  over  the   Irish    People  — 

Wendell  Phillips.     See  Daniel  O'Connell. 
Daniel  Periton's  Ride. — Albion  W.  Tourgee. — BS  18— 

CS  29— NPS— YP 
Daniel  versus  Dishclout. — G.  A.  Stevens. — CS  21 — SCS 
Daniel  Webster.     {Two  diff.  sels.)—G:  F.  Hoar.— SC — 

TMR 
Daniel  Webster.  (Birthday  of  Daniel  Webster — C.) — 

Oliver  W.  Holmes.— BNL  («eZ.)— SE 
Daniel  Webster.— J:  G.   Whittier.     See  Ichabod. 
Daniel  Webster's  Eloquence. — Rufus  Choate. — FD  1 
Daniel  Webster's  First  Plea. — Anon. — KNE 
Danish  Barrow,  A. — Fs.  T.  Palgrave. — VA 
Danny  Deever.     (C) — Rudyard  Kipling. — VA 

(Files-on-Parade.)— WR  16 
"Danny  Deever"  up  to  Date. — Anon. — GH 
Dans    I'Alcove    Sombre     (The    Watching     Angel). — 
Victor  Hugo. 
(L'Ange  qui  Veille.)— WR  25 
Dan's  Wife.— Kate  T.  Woods.— CS  26 — HP 
Dante.— H :  W.  Longfellow.— AA 
Dante  Alighieri. — Dante  G.  Rossetti.     See  following. 
Dante  at  Verona,  Sel.  fr.     (Dante  Alighieri.) — Dante 

G.  Rossetti.- OS  3 
Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti. — Edmund  Gosse. — EDY 
Dante,    Shakespeare,    Milton. -^Sydney    Dobell.     See 

Balder. 
Danube  River,  The. — Hamilton  Aid^. — VA 
Daphnaida,  Sels.  fr.    (An  Elegy.)— Edmund  Spenser. — 

ELP— OB  {ptly.  same.) 
Daphne. — J:  Lyly.     See  Midas. 
Dappledun. — Phcsbe  Cary. — BLF 
Darby  and  Joan.— St.  John  Honeywood. — A  A 
Darby  and  Joan. — F:  E.  Weatherly. — LC — VA 
Dare.— Anon.— HSS  2 
"Dare  to  be  Right."— Anon.— HSS  2 
Dare  to  Do  Right. — Anon. — YBT 
Dare  to  Stand  Alone. — Anon. — TS 
Darest  thou  now,  O  Soul. — Walt  Whitman. — AA 
Daring  Princte,  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.     See  Session  with 

Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
Darius,  Sel.  fr. — Sir  W :  Alexander. — WEP  2 
Darius  Green  and  his  Flying-machine. — J:  T.  Trow- 
bridge.—BS  2— CS  3— FTR— HNS— MHR 
(SeZ.)— SAE— SE 
Darius  Green  Parodied. — Anon. — PTS 
Darius  to  his  Army. — Quintius  Curtius. — PS 
Dark,  The. — George  Eliot.     <See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The 
Dark  Angel,  The. — Lionel  Johnson. — TIP 
Dark  Forest  of  Sorrow,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.    See 

Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
"Dark  Girl"  by  the  "Holy  Well,"  The.— J:  Keegan.— 

TIP 
Dark  Glass,  The.  (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XXXIV.) 

— Dante  G.  Ro.ssetti. — VA 
Dark  Man,  The. — Nora  Hopper. — TIP 
"Dark     Noight's     Business,     A." — McDermott     and 

Trumble.— DSS 
Dark  Rosaleen. — Jas.  C.  Mangan. — OB — TIP — VA 
Dark  the  Day  but  Bright  the  Heart. — Dora  R.  Goodale 

—YBT 
Darkey  Debating  Society,  The.— White. — MDD 
Darkey  Photographer,  The. — Anon. — SCS 
Darkey  Preacher,  The.     {Congregationalist.)  —  CDV 
— SDR 
(Learned  Negro,  The.)— AWH— CS  11— THP 
Darkey's   Counsel   to   the   Newly   Married. — Edmund 
Kirke.— CS  5 
(Uncle  Pete's  Counsel  to  the  Newly  Married.) — 
BSl 
Darkness.— Lord  Byron.— FP— HNS— PPSr 
{Br.  seZs.)- AE— SE 
(Dream  of  Darkness — br.  sel.) — SE 
Darkness. — Jas.  N.  Rosenberg. — AA 
Darkness  is  Thinning. — St.  Gregory  the  Great  {tr.  by 

J:  M.  Neale).— BNI.— HBP 
Darktown  Lullaby,  A. — Anon. — BS  26 
Darktown  Nine,  "The.- E.  B.  Mason.— CG  3 
Darky  Bootblack,  The.— Anon.— CS  13— DS 
Darky's  Ideal  Wife,  A.— Belle  R.  Harrison.— SR  11 
Darling  Jennie.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— MN 
Darling  Little  Girl,  The.— Anon.— YBT 


82 


TITLE    INDEX 


Daybreak 


Darling  of  the  Year,  The.— Anon.— DFR 
D'Artagnan's  Ride. — Gouverneur  Morris. — AA 
Dartmouth  College  Case,  The,  Sel.  jr.     (Close  of  De- 
fense of  Dartmouth  College.) — Dan'l  Webster. 

— FDl 
Dartmouth  Winter-song. — R:  Hovey. — A  A 
Darwin. — Mortimer  Collins. — BNL 
Darwinism. — A.  M.  F.  R.  Darmesteter. — SN — VA 
Darwinism  in  the  Kitchen. — Anon. — HP 
Darwinity. — Herman  Merivale. — NA 
Das  Krist  Kindel.     (C— «eZ.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— HDL 

(Kingly  Presence,  The.)— TAS 
Das  Licht  des  Auges. — Friedrich  Schiller.    jSee  William 

Tell. 
Dash  for  the  Colors,  The.— Frd'k  G.  Webb.— WR  2 
Dat  Gawgy    Watahmillon.  —  Edmund    V.    Cooke.  — 

WR22 
Dat  Yaller  Gown.— C:  H.  Turner.- CD— SR  7 
Datur  Hora  Quieti.     (The  Sun  upon  the  Lake — C. — 

fr.  The  Doom  of  Devorgoil.) — Walter  Scott. — 

PGTl 
(Evening.)— BPB 
(Leonard  Tarries  Long.)— YBF 
Daughter  of  Herodias,  The. — Anon. — SR   10  {sel.) — 

WR16 
Daughter  of  Mendoza,  The. — M.  B.  Lamar. — AA 
Daughter    of    the    Desert,    The. — Jas.    C.    Harvey. — 

WR22 
Daughter's  Love  and  Heroism,  A. — Walter  K.  Fobes. 

— FMR 
Daughters  of  Philistia.     {Fr.  Olrig  Grange.) — Walter 

C.  Smith.— VA 
Daughters  of  the  King.— Anon. — SSS 
Daughters  of  the  Regiment  Drill. — Mrs.  A.  G.  Lewis. — 

WR17 
Dauntless. — Arthur  Weir. — WR  13 
Dave  Flint's  Temptation. — Anon. — BS  26 
David  and  Goliath.     (First  Samuel,  Ch.  XVIL,1-51.) 

— Bible.— ^K  25 
David  and  Saul.     (Taft.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
David  Copperfield,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 

Aunt  Betsey  and  Little  Davy.     {Fr.  Ch.  XIIL— 

dram,  by  Mrs.  J.   W.   Shoemaker.) — BS   13 — 

CDD 
Child-wife,    The.     {Fr.    Ch.    XXXIIL)— BS    1  — 

CR  (aln-.) 
(David  Copperfield  and  his  Child-wife.) — CS  6 
Death  of  Dora.     {Fr.  Ch.  LIIL)— CS  12 
Death  of  Steerforth.     {Fr.  Ch.  LV.)— BS  14  {abr.) 

— CS34 
(David  Copperfield,  Fr.  —br.  seZ.)— SAE 
(Tempest,  The.)— SR  12 
(Wreck,  The— obr.)— CSS— NPS—YP 
Disastrous  Announcement,  A.     {Dial.  ad.  fr.  Ch. 

XXXVIL)— NDP 
Housekeeping.     {Fr.  Ch.  XLIV.)— WCLG  1 
Rosa  Dartle's  Revenge.     {Fr.  Ch.  L.)— WR  19 
"Whatever  I  have  tried  to  do  in  my  life,  I  have 

tried  with  all  my  heart,"  etc.     {Br.  ael.  fr.  Ch. 

XLII.)— GG 
David  Copperfield  and  his  Child-wife. —  C:  Dickens. 

See  David  Copperfield. 
David  Exorcising  Malzah,  the   Evil    Spirit  from  the 

Lord. — C:    Heavysege.     See  Saul. 
David  in  the  Cave  of  AduUam. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — 

LPC 
David,  King  of  Israel.— E:  Irving.— CS  8 
David   Playing   before    Saul. — Rob't    Browning.     See 

Saul. 
David  Shaw,  Hero. — Jas.  Buckham. — TMR 
David     Singing     before     Saul.     {Fr.     Saul.) — Rob't 

Browning.     See  Saul. 
David,  the  Patriotic  King. — Cunningham  Geikie. — BLP 
Davideis,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Invocation.) — Abraham  Cow- 
ley.—BNL 
(Lover  to  his  Lyre,  The.) — CEL 
(Supplication,  A.)— EPs— FEP— PGT  1 
David's  Lament  for  [or  over]  Absalom. — Nathaniel  P. 

Willis.     See  Absalom. 
David's  Soliloquy .-»— Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Davie  Gellatley's  Song. — Walter  Scott.    See  Waverley. 

See  also  Fause  Lover,  The. 
Davy  and  Goliar.— W:  E.  Penney.— CS  30 
Davy,  the  Teamster. — Estelle  Thomson. — CS  10 
Dawn.— Jas.  M.  Carroll.— TCV 
Dawn. — J:  Ford.     See  Lover's  Melancholy,  The. 
Dawn.     (Prelude— C.-^-.    The    New    Day.)— R:   W. 

Gilder.— BNI.—GP—SN 
Dawn.— Frd'k  G.  Scott.— TCV 
Dawn. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Dawn  and  Dark. — Norman  Gale. — VA 
Dawn  of  Peace,  The.— J:  Ruskin.— SR  13 


Dawn  of  Redemption,  The. — Jas.  G.  Clark. — SA 
Dawn  of  the  Centennial,  The. — Sara  L.  Oberholtzer. — 

CS12 
Dawn  of  the  Century. — Anna  H.  Thorne. — PEO 
Dawn  on  the  Irish  C;oast. — J :  Locke. — WR  3 
Dawn-angels. — A.  M.  F.  R.  Darmesteter. — VA 
Dawning  Future,  The. — W;  P.  Johnson. — BLP 
Dawning  o'  the  Year,  The. — Mary  E.  Blake. — AA 
Dawning  of  the  Day,  The. — Jas.  C.  Mangan. — TIP 
Dawning  of  the  Day,  The.— E:  Walsh.— TIP 
Dawn-song. — W:  Davenant. — CEL 

(Aubade.)— OB 

(Morning.)— YBF 

(Song— C.)— FEP— WEP  2 
Day,  A. — Emily  Dickinson. — LC — PoR 
Day. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See  Alps,  The. 
Day  After,  The.     {Harper's  Young  People.) — TT 
Day  after  the  Fourth,  The. — Ella  W.  Ricker  — CPL 
Day  and  Night!     (DiaZ.)— Anon.— DSS 
Day  and  Night. — T:  Campion. — ELP 

(Sic  Transit.)— PGTl 
"Day  and  night  my  thoughts  incline."     (C.) — R:    H: 
Stoddard. 

(Jar,  The.)— AA 
Day  and  Night  Songs.     (Dedication.) — W:  Allingham. 

— VA 
Day    at    Niagara,   A.     (Visit   to    Niagara,   A   —  CI 
— S:  L.  Clemens.— BS  6— SA  ' 

(Mark  Twain  Visits  Niagara.) — CS  16 
Day  before  Christmas,  The. — Alice  P.  Carter. — SR  3 
Day  before  Thanksgiving,  The. — Frank  S.   Pixley. 

Day  before  the  Wedding,  The. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. 

Day  Conceals  what  Night  Reveals. — J.  P.  Nichol  — SS 
Day  in  June,  A. — H :  S.  Washburn. — POS 
"Day,  in  melting  purple  dying." — Maria  G.  Brooks  — 
BNL— FEP 
(Song.)— HBP 
(Song  of  Egla.)— AA 
Day  in  the  Lord's  Courts,  A.     (C.) — Jas.  Montgomery 

("  To  Thy  temple  I  repair.")— FEP 
Day  in  the  Pamfili  Doria,  A. — Harriet  B.  Stowe. — 

Day  in  the  Woods,  A. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — BS  20 
Day  is  Coming,  The.     {Sel.) — W:  Morris. — EHT 
Day  is  Dead.     {Fr.  Songs  from  Dramas.) — Augusta 

Webster. — VA 
Day  is  Done,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — ASL — BPB — 

BS  14  —  FEP  —  FP  —  GMS  —  LLC  —  NV  — 

PYO— SE— SO— TAV 
Day  is  Dying.  —  George  Eliot.     See  [Spanish  Gypsy, 

The. 
Day  is  Over.     {A  br. ) — Sabine  Baring-Gould. — YBT 
(Child's  Evening  Hymn — abr.) — VA — YBF  {si.  diff. 

abr.) 
(Now  the  Day  is  Over — sel.) — NV 
Day  of  Atonement,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Kol  Nidra.) — Jos. 

Leiser. — AA 
Day  of  Days,  The. — Anon. — PEO 
"Day  of  Judgment,   The."     (Trotty's  Wedding  Tour, 

Ch.  XIIL,  cond.)— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.— BS  16 
Day  of  Judgment,  The.^— (C.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 

—WEP  3 
(Jove  and  the  Souls — abr.) — EPs 
Day  of  Judgment,  The. — I:  Watts. — OB 
Day  of  Misfortunes,  The. — Anon. — FDY 
Day  of  our  Country,  A. — J :  D.  I>ong. — FD  1 
Day  of  Rest,  The.— Anon.— DSS 
Day  of   Thanksgiving,   The. — H:    W.    Beecher.      See 

Family  as  an  American  Institution,  "The. 
Day  of  the  Indian  Summer,  A. — Sarah  H.  Whitman. — 

■POS 
Day  of  the  Lord,  The.— C;  Kingsley.— HBP 
Day  Old  Bet  was  Sold,  The.— Frank  H.  Gassaway.— 

MR 
Day  Returns,  my  Bosom  Bums,  The.     (Day  Returns, 

The— O— Rob't   Burns.— BNL— YBF 
(Blissful  Day,  The.)— HBP 
Day  too  Late,  A. — Magdalen  Rock. — WR  6 
Day  we  Do  not  Celebrate,  The.  —  Rob't  J.  Burdette. — 

SYS 
Day  with    Homer,    A,   Sel.    fr. — Lyman   C.    Smith. — 

TCV 
Day  without  a  Sermon,  A. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Daybreak.     {Sel.  fr.  Break  of  Day.) — J:  Donne. — OB 
Daybreak. — J:    Fletcher.     See    Faithful    Shepherdess, 

The. 
Daybreak. — H:   W.    Longfellow.— BFV— BNL— PC — 

SN— SR  1 
Daybreak.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— GN— POS 
Daybreak  in  the  Camp. — Anon. — CS  33 


83 


Day-dream 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Day-dream,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

I.  Sleeping  Palace,  The.— HBP  _ 

II.  Sleeping   Beauty,    The.— BNL— HBP— WR  8 
(Sleeping  Beauty,  The,  I.  The  Magic  Sleep.) — 

CGd 

III.  Arrival,  The.^HBP— WR  8 

(Sleeping  Beauty,  The,  II.  The  Fairy  Prince's 
Arrival.)— CGd 

IV.  Revival,  The.— BNL— HBP— WR  8 

V.  Departure,       The.— BNL— GP— HBP— OH— 
WR8 

Moral.— PYO 
Day-dream,  A.— E:  W.  Thomson.— TCV 
Day-dreams,  Sel.  fr.— Jos.  A.  Allen.— TCV 
Dayrise  and  Sunset. — G :  W.  Thornbury. — VS 
Days.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— AA—ASL—YBF 
Days  and  the  Year,  The.— Harriet  F.  Blodgett.— YBT 
Day's  Eye,  The.— Anon.— GMS 
Days  Gone  By  [.The].— Jas.  W.  Riley.— POS—RCR— 

TAV 
"Days  Keep  Coming,  The." — Anon. — CPL 
Days  of    Absence.    {W.  mtisic.)  —  Jean- Jacques  Rous- 

seau.- NPS— YP 
Days  of  Birth.— Anon. — BVC 

(Birthday  Week,  The— «Z.  diff.  vera.)— OS  1 
Days  of  Bruce,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Battle  of  Bannockburn, 

The— ad.  fr.  Chs.  36  and  37.)— Grace  Aguilar. 

— BS  24— PFP 
Days  of  my  Youth. — ^St.  George  Tucker. — AA 
Days  of  Rest.— Harriet  P.  Spofford.— TAS 
Days  of  the  Month. — Anon. — BVC 

(Calendar,  The— diff.  vers.)— OS  1 
Days  of  the  Week.— Mary  E.  Page.— PS— TT 
Days  of  Yore,  The. — Douglas  Thompson. — FP 
Day's  Oration  is  in  Flowers,  The. — E.  L.  Hall. — DFR 
Days  that  are  Gone,  The. — C :  Mackay. — SS 
Days  that  are  No  More,  The. — Anon.— HP 
Days  that  are  No  More,  The.  —  Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

Princess,  The. 
De  Candy  Pull.— A.  B.  Luce.— BS  21 
De  Fust  Banjo. — Irwin  Russell.     See  Christmas  Night 

in  the  Quarters. 
De  Goneness  ob  de  Past. — Anon. — GH 
"De    Gustibus."— Rob't    Browning.— A VP—PGT  2— 

VA 
De  Gustibus. — J:  Erskine.— CG  3 
De  Lay  ub  de  Last  Minstrel. — Anon. — DSS 
De  Libris. — Cosmo  Monkhouse. — I>BB — MBB 
"De  Lord  am  Coming." — Ellen  Murray. — CS  34 
De  Lunatico. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
De  Massa  ob  de  Sheepfol'. — Sarah  P.  M.  Greene. — SR  6 

—TAV 
(De  Sheepfol'.)— AA—ASL—YBF 
(Lost  Sheep,  The.)— HP 
De  Necessary  Consequences. — Anon. — DSS 
De  Nice    Leetle   Canadienne. — W:    H.    Drummond. — 

HBR— WR  26 
De  Ole  Elder's  Mistake. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  35 
De  Ole  Plantation  Mule. — Anon.— CRR  (si.  abr.) 

(Solium  Fac',  A.)— PP— YFR 
De  Oratore,  Sel.  fr.  (Study  of  Eloquence,   The — Bk. 

I.,  Sec.  VIII.— sZ.  afcr.)— Cicero.— CS  21 
"De  Pen  and  de  Swoard."      (Harper's   Magazine.)  — 

CS  18— SR  1 
"De  Pervisions,  Josiar." — Anon. — SR  2 
De  Pint   wid  Ole   Pete.— Anon.— BeR—CS  12— DE- 
PS 
De  Preacher  an'  de  Hants. — W :  H.  Hayne. — CD 
De  Profundis. — Anon. — FLS 
De  Profundis.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— GP— HDL 
De  Profundis. — Kathe.  T.  Hinkson. — VA 
De  Profundis,  Sel.  /r.— Phillips  Stewart.— TCV 
De  Regimine   Principum,    2   sels.    fr.' — T:   Oc(5leve. — 

WEPl 
De  Rev.  Plato  Johnson  on  Free  Cirkelatin'  Liberies. 

( Independent. ) — CRR 
De  Rosis  Hibernis.— Edmund  Gosse. — VA 
De  Sheepfol'. — Sarah  P.  M.  Greene.     See  De  Massa  ob 

de  Sheepfol'. 
De  'Sperience  ob  de  Reb'rend  Quacko  Strong. — Anon. 

— CS22 
(SI.  obr.)— DCR— SR2 
De  Tired    Pickaninny's    Star    Song. — Mary    Baillie. — 

WR26 
De  Trop.— LW— TL  ' 
De    Valley   an'  de    Shadder,  Sel.  fr.    (Trial    of    Ben 

Thomas,  The— Ch.  IV.)— Harry  S.    Edwards. 
(General's  Client,  The — abr.  and  ad.) — NC 
(Not  Guilty— od.)— PFP— SC 
De  Yaller  Chinee. — Anon. — CD — PS 
Deacon  Adams  to  His  Son. — Anon. — WR  26 


Deacon  Brodie.     (Play — sel.  ad.  fr.  Deacon  Brodie;  or. 

The  Double  Life.)— W:  E.  Henley  and  Rob't 

L.  Stevenson. — NDP 
Deacon  Giles's  Distillery.— G :  B.  Cheever. — WR  18 
Deacon  Hezekiah. — Anon. — CS  6 — HR 
Deacon  Kent  in  Politics. — A.  L.  Frisbie. — SR  3 
Deacon,  me  and  him.  The. — L:  Eisenbeis. — CS  30 
Deacon  Munroe's  Story;  or.  Church  Discipline. — N.  S. 

Emerson. — BS  4 — CS  6 
(Deacon's  Confession,  The.) — WR  16 
(Deacon's  Story,  The.)— KNE 
Deacon  Stokes.— T:  Quilp.—CS  2— HR 
Deacon    Thrush     in     Meeting.     (Harper's    Bazar.) — 

DFY 
Deacon's  Call,  The.— Orella  L.  Kimball.— SR  1 
Deacon's     Confession,     The. — N.     S.     Emerson.     <See 

Deacon  Monroe's  Story. 
Deacon's  Courtship,  The. —  Mrs.  L.  D.  A.  Stuttle  [or 

Suttle].— CS  22 
(Wife-hunting  Deacon,  The.)— NPS— YP 
Deacon's  Downfall,  The. — Lansing. — BS  21 
Deacon's  Masterpiece,  The;   or.  The  Wonderful  One- 

hoss  Shay.     (C.)— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AWH 

— EPs— FEP— THP 
(One-hoss  Shay;  or.  The  Deacon's  Masterpiece.) — 

BNL— CR— MHR— SE  (sel.) 
(Wonderful  "One-hoss  Shay,"  The.)— AD  (sel.)— 

CS  2 
Deacon's  Prayer,  The.— W:  O.  Stoddard.— CS  19 
Deacon's  Story,  The. — N.   S.   Emerson.     See  Deacon 

Munroe's  Story. 
Deacon's      Sunday-school      Sermon,      The. — Jas.      C. 

Ambrose. — TS 
Deacon's  Week,  The.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— BS  22 
Dead,  The.— Mathilde  Blind.— VA 
Dead,  The. — Jones  Very. — AA 
Dead  Antiquary  O'Donovan,   The. — T:  D.   McGee. — 

TIP 
Dead    Astronomer,    The. — C:    W.    E.   Chapin,    Jr. — 

CG  1 
Dead  at  Clonmacnois,  The. — T.  W.  Rolleston. — OB — 

TIP 
Dead  Babe,  The.— Eugene  Field.— LS— TAS 
Dead  Bird,  The.     (DmZ.)— Anon.— HVD 
Dead  Bird,  The.     (Dial.)—E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— COS 

— PP 
Dead  Calm  at  Sea. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Rime  of  the 

Ancient  Mariner. 
Dead  Cannoneer,  The. — Jas.  R.  Randall.— EDY 

(John  Pelham.)— AA— AWB 
Dead  Child,  The.— G:  Barlow.— VA 
Dead  Christ,  The.— Julia  Ward  Howe.— HBP 
Dead  Church,  The.— C:  Kingsley.— BS  4— VA 
Dead   Coach,  The. — Kathe.  T.  Hinkson. — VA 
Dead  Comrade,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.— HS— OS  2 
Dead  Czar,  The.     (C.)— Dinah  M.  Craik.— EDY 

(Dead  Czar  Nicholas,  The.)— BNL 
Dead  Czar  Nicholas,  The. — Dinah  M.  Craik.     See  fore- 
going. 
Dead  Doll,    The.— Marg.    Vandegrift.— CS  22— CSS— 

DS— FTR— HBP— HNS— HSS  2— YA 
Dead  Drummer-boy,  The.     (Harper's  Weekly.) — WRD 
Dead  Friend,  A.— Edgar  Fawcett. — TAV 
Dead  Friend,  A. — Norman  Gale. — VA 
Dead  Friend,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memo- 

riam. 
Dead  Grenadier,  The.— B:  F.  Taylor.— BS  17 
Dead   Heroes. — Lord  Byron.      See   Siege    of   Corinth, 

The. 
Dead,  in  a  Foreign  Land. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In 

Memoriam. 
Dead  in  his  Bed.— A.  L.  Ballou.— HP 
Dead  in  the  Sierras. — Joaquin   Miller. — AA — OS  2 
Dead  in  the  Street. — Anon. — CS  3 
Dead  Leader,  The.— I.  E.  Jones.— CS  32 
Dead  Letter,  A.— Austin  Dobson.— VA— WR  8  (abr.) 
Dead  Light-house  Keeper,  The.— J.  R.  Ware.— CS  9 
Dead  Love. — Anon. — WR  7 
Dead  Love. — Mary  M.  Adams. — AA 
Dead  Man's  Gulch.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  35— PS 
Dead  March,  The.— Mary  T.  Lathrop.— BS  17 
Dead  March,  A. — Cosmo  Monkhouse. — FS — VA 
Dead  Men's  Holiday. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — EDY 
Dead  Millionaire,  The. — Joaquin  Miller. — FAS 
Dead  Miser,  The.— Gotthold  E.  Lessing. — HPE 
Dead  Moon,  The. — Danske  Dandridge.— AA 
"Dead!     Name    Unknown." — Horace    B.    Durant. — 

CS28 
Dead  on  the  Field  of  Honor. — J.  L.  Chamberlain. — 

BLP 
Dead  on  the  Field  of  Honor.— E.  H.  Chapin.— BS  17 


84 


TITLE    INDEX 


Death 


Dead  Past,  A. — Adelaide  A.  Procter.       See  Old  and 

the  New  Year,  The. 
Dead  Player,  The.— Jas.  J.  Meehan.— EDY 
Dead  Player,  The.— Rob 't  B.  Wilson.— A  A 
Dead  Pussy  Cat,  The.— J:  Bennett.— BS  23— WR  2.5 
Dead  Rose,  A.     (SI.  abr.)—Eliz.  B.  Browning.— PGT  2 
Dead  Singer,  A. — J:  E.  Logan. — VA 
Dead  Singer,  The.— J:  Boyle  O'Reilly.— EDY 
Dead  Singer,  The. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — AA 
Dead  Soldier,  A.- — G.  E.  Montgomery. — AA 
Dead  Soldier-boy,  The.— W:  Mason  Turner.— CS  22 
Dead  Solomon,  The. — J.  A.  Dorgan. — AA 
Dead    Student,    The.     (Vera.   diff.   fr.  Poems.) — Will 

Carleton.— CS  19 
Dead  Trumpeter,  The.— T.  K.  Hervey.- HS 
Dead  Volunteer,  The.— J.  W.  Barker.— HS 
Dead  Wife,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— TAS 
Deadly  Cup,  The.— Anon.— WR  17  (6r.  «eZ.)— WR  18 
Deadly  Weapon,  A.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  28 
Deaf.— H:  C.  Bunner.— AA 
Deaf  and  Dumb. — "A." — PoR 
Deaf  as  a  Post. — Anon. — CS  6 
Deaf  as  a  Po.st. — Anon. — FND 
Deaf  Uncle  Zed.— Anon.— SD 
Deakin  Brown's  Way.— G;  Horton.— CS  30 
"Deal  gently  with  us,  ye  who  read."     (Sel.  fr.  To  my 

Readers.) — Oliver  W.  Holmes.- — GG 
Dean  Stanley.— Paul  H.  Hayne.— EDY 
Dean's  Consent,  The.- — Coventry  Patmore.     <See  Angel 

in  the  House,  The. 
Dear  Country  mine!— R:  W.  Gilder.— LLC 
Dear  Dandelion. — Laura  D.  Nichols. — AD 
Dear  Elm,  it  is  of  Thee. — Anon. — AD 
"Dear  Grandma."     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Dear  Harp  of  my  Country.— T:  Moore. — WEP  4 
Dear  Lads  and  Lasses. — Anon. — TFS 
Dear  Land    of   all    my    Love. — Sydney    Lanier.     See 

Centennial  Meditation  of  Columbia,  The. 
Dear  Little  Violets.— J:  Moultrie. — PoR 

(Violets.)— CGd—LC— OS  1 
"Dear  Love,  I  sometimes  think  how  it  would  be." — 

^(opestill  Goodwin.— FTA 
Dear  Old  Ireland.— Timothy  D.  Sullivan.— TIP 
Dear  Old  Toiling  One,  The.— D:  Gray.— VA 
Dearest  Love!     Believe  Me.— T:  Pringle.— FTA 
Dearest  Spot,  The.— W.  T.  Wrighton.— LLC 
Death.— Anon.— KNE 

Death.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Death. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 
Death.     (Holy  Sonnets,  X.)— J:  Donne.— OB— YBF 

(Sonnet:     "Death,  be  not  proud.") — ELP 
Death.— T:  Hood.— OB 
Death.     (The  Last   Fruit  off  an   Old  Tree,   XIX.)— 

Walter  S.  Landor.— YBF 
(Death  Undreaded.)— VA 
Death.— G :  Pellew.— AA 
Death,  Sel.  fr.—B.  Porteus.— BNL 
Death.— Amdlie  Rives.— TAS 
Death.     (^6r.)— Percy  B.  Shellev.— AE 
Death.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— CEL 

(Diff.  -poem  fr.  foregoing.) 
Death.— Horace  Smith.— SS 
Death.— C;  Wesley.— HBP 
Death. — Edward  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Death  and  Dying  Words  of  Poor  Mailie,  The. — Rob't 

Burns.— WEP  3 
Death  and  Life. — Anon. — SSS 
Death  and  Night. — J.  B.  Kenyon. — AA 
Death  and  Sleep.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Death  and  the  Drunkard. — Anon. — CS  15 
Death  and  the  Grave. — Anon. — CS  23 
Death  and  the  Youth. — Letitia  E.  Landon. — BNL 
Death  as  the  Fool.— Frank  T.  Marzials.— VA 
Death  as  the  Teacher  of  Love-lore. — Frank  T.  Marzials 

— VA 
Death  at  Daybreak. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — AA 
Death  Bed.     See  Death-bed. 
Death  Carol.— Walt  Whitman.— HBP 
Death — Conventional  and  Natural.     (Frags,  fr.  various 

authors. ) — BNL 
"Death  has  Crowned  him  as  a  Martyr."     (Death  has 

Crowned  him  a  Martyr — C.) — Ella  W.  Wilcox. 

— WR26 
Death  in    Life's    Prime. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See    In 

Memoriam. 
Death  is  Compensation. — Jean-Jacques  Rousseau. — SS 
Death  Makes  all  Men  Brothers. — Louise  S.  Upham  — 

CS13 
Death  of  a  Firstborn.^Christina  G.  Rossetti. — EDY 
Death  of  a  Mad  Dog. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Vicar  of 

Wakefield,  The. 


Death  of   Ajax,   The.       (Fr.    Metamorphoses.) — Ovid 

(tr.  by  Winthrop  M.  Praed).— OS  2 
Death  of  Alexander  Hamilton. — Eliphalet  Nott.     See 
Discourse    Delivered    in    the    North   Dutch 
Church,  A. 
Death  of  an  Inebriate. — Anon. — CS  5 
Death  of  an  Infant. — Dirk  Smits. — WCL 

(On  the  Death  of  an  Infant.)— HBP 
Death  of     Amkel,     The.— Edmund     Gosse.— VSG— 

WR16 
Death  of  Artemidoia,  The. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 

(SI.  diff.  and  si.  abr.  vers.)— WEP  4 
Death  of  Azron,  The. — Alice  W.  Rollins.' — AA 
Death  of  Bertram,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Rokeby. 
Death  of   Bill   Sikes,   The.— C:    Dickens.     See   Oliver 

Twist. 
Death  of  Bumaby,  The. — Hereward  K.  Cockin. — TCV 
Death  of   Cardinal   Beaufort. — W:    Shakespeare.     See 

KingHenry  VI.,Pt.  II. 
Death  of  Cardinal  Mazarin,  The. — Lydia    H.  Sigour- 

ney.— EDY 
Death  of  Carver  Doone. — R :  D.  Blackmore.     See  Loma 

Doone. 
Death  of  Cato. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Cato. 
Death  of  Charles  I.,  The. — Andrew  Marvell.    See  Hora- 

tian     Ode      upon     Cromwell's     Return     from 

Ireland,  A. 
Death  of  Charles  the  Ninth,  The. — Maude  Moore.— 

SC 
Death  of  Cleopatra,  The. — Anon.— WR  24 
Death  of   Cleopatra,   The.     (Bk.    I.,    Ode   XXXVII.) 

—Horace  (tr.  by    Sir    S.  E.  De  Vere).— EDY 
(Diff.  tr.—wr.  called  Ode  I.)— WR  8 
Death  of  Cock  Robin  and  Jenny  Wren,  The.— Gerda 

Fay.— PC 
Death  of  Coleridge,  The.     (On  the  Death  of  Coleridge — 

O— C:  Lamb.— LLC 
Death  of  Copernicus,  The.— E:  Everett.— CS  2— OM 
Death  of  Daniel  Webster,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Last  Hours  of 

Webster.)— E:  Everett  .—CS  3 
Death  of  Dr.  Morrison,  The.     (Bentley's  Miscellany.) — 

HPE 
Death  of  Dora. — C:  Dickens.     See  David  Copperfield. 
Death  of  Elizabeth,  The.— J :  R.  Green.— WR  9 
Death  of     Friends,     The. — E:     Yoimg.     See     Night 

Thoughts.  ^       ^  . 

Death  of    Garcia,    The. — (Fr.    Running    the    Cuban 

Blockade.)— W:  O.  Stoddard.— SR  13 
Death  of  Garfield  [,The].— Jas.  G.  Blaine.     See  Memo- 
rial Address    on   the    Life  and  Character  of 

James  A.  Garfield. 
Death  of  Gaudentis.— "Harriet  Annie."— CS  6— WRD 
Death  of  General  Marceau. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Death  of   Goethe.— Matthew   Arnold.     See    Memorial 

Verses. 
Death  of  Grant,  The. — Ambrose  Bierce. — AA 
Death  of  Guinevere,  The. — H.  L.  Koopman. — WR  15 
Death  of  Hamilton,  The.— Eliphalet  Nott.     See  Dis- 
course Delivered  in  the  North  Dutch  Church,  A. 
Death  of  Hampden,  The. — Pakenham  Beatty.— EDY 

— VA 
Death  of  Harold.     (Sel.  fr.  A  Child's  History  of  Eng- 
land, Ch.  VII.)— C:  Dickens.— WR  22 
Death  of  Harrison  [,The—C.].— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— 

WR  10 
Death  of  Henry  Clay.— Rev.  Dr.  Butler.— CS  11 
Death  of  Herminius,  The.     (Fr.  The  Battle  of  Lake 

Regillus.)— T:  B.  Macaulay.— SO 
D»ath  of  Hofer,  The.— Julius  Mosen  (tr.  by  Mangan.) 

— CS14 
(Andrew  Hofer.— diff .  «r.)— EDY— OS  1 
(Hofer  the  Tyrolese — Mangan's  tr.,  si.  abr.) — PS 
Death  of  Hope.^ — Mary  Evered. — PR 
Death  of  Huss,  The.— Alfred  Austin.— VSG 
Death  of    Jack    Cade. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    King 

Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II. 
Death  of  Jefferson,  The. — Anon. — BS  17 
Death  of  Jezebel,  The. — Anon.— BS  15 
Death  of  John  Quincy  Adams. — I.  E.  Holmes. — CS  1 — 

KNE— LLC— OM 
Death  of  Julius    Csesar,  The. — W :  Shakespeare.     See 

Julius  Csesar. 
Death  of  King  Bomba,  The.     (Pwnc;i.)— EDY 

(Death-bed  of  Bomba,  King  of  Naples.)— BNL 
Death  of   King  Conor   Macnessa. — T.    D.   Sullivan. — 

CS23 
Death  of  King  Edmund,  The. — Lydia  H.  Sigoumcy. — 

WR  18 
Death  of  King  Philip.     (Sel.  fr.  Philip  of  Pokanoket— 

in  Sketch  Book.)— WR  10 


85 


Death 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Death     of     Leonidas      [.The].— G:     Croly.— BNL  — 

CSS  (a6r.)— MM  R—SS 
Death  of  Lincoln,  The. — H :  W.  Beecher.     See  Abraham 

Lincoln.  . 

Death    of    Lincoln.      (Set.   fr.   Abraham   Lincoln — in 

Miscellanies. )^Ralph  W.  Emerson. — FD  2 
Death  of  Lincoln,  The.— Parke  Godwin.— PRR 

(Speech  on  the  Death  of  President  Lincoln,  Sd.  fr.) 

— CSl 
Death  of  Little  Hacket.— (Fr.  An  Iron  Crown.)— T.  S. 

Denison. — SR  4 
Death  of  Little  Jim,  The. — Anon.— HNS 
(Little  Jim.)— CS  2— SA 
(  Poor  Little  Jim. )— BS  3 
Death  of  Little  Jo. — C:  Dickens.     See  Bleak  House. 
Death  of  Little  Nell.— C:  Dickens.     See  Old  Curiosity 

Shop,  The. 
Death  of    Little    Paul  [Dombey].— C:    Dickens.     See 

Dombey  and  Son. 
Death    of    Livingstone,  The.      (Sel.) — Roden    Noel. — 

EDY 
Death  of  Louis   Napoleon.     (Fr.   Louis  Napoleon.) — 

Christopher  P.  Cranch.— EDY 
Death  of  Lyon,  The. — Anon. — EDY 

( Ly  on . )— A  W  B— P  A  Pm 
Death  of  Mme.  Defarge,  The.  —  C:  Dickens.     See  Tale 

of  Two  Cities,  A. 
Death  of  Marlborough,  The.— G:  Walter  Thombury*- 

EDY— VA 
Death  of  Marmion. — Walter  Scott. — See  Marmion. 
Death  of  Mary  Stuart. — Jas.  A.  Froude.     See  History 

of   England. 
Death  of  Master  Tommy  Rook,  The. — Eliza  Cook. — 

PC 
Death  of  Mildred,   The.— Rob't   Browning.- See   Blot 

in  the  'Scutcheon,  A. 
Death  of  Minnehaha.     ( Tab. — based  on  sd.  fr.  Longfel- 
low's   Song   of    Hiawatha.) — Anon. — BS    9 — 

TCP 
Death  of  Minnehaha,   The.— H :   W.   Longfellow.     See 

Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 
Death  of  Mr.  Bertram,  The.— Walter  Scott.     See  Guy 

Mannering.  _ 
Death  of  Morris.— Walter  Scott.     See  Rob  Roy. 
Death  of  Moses,  The. — George  Eliot. — HBR 
Death  of  Moses,  The.— Jessie  G.  M'Cartee. — CS  9 
Death    of    Moses,    The.  —  J:    Ruskin.      See    Modern 

Painters. 
Death  of  Napoleon. — I:  MacLellan. — BS  16  (si.  abr.) — 

EDY 
Death  of  Nelson,  The.— (?)  Arnold.— PC 
Death  of  Nelson,  The.— Rob't  Southey.— BS  7    ---# 
Death  of  Oberon.— Walter  Thornbury.— OS  1 
Death  of  Osceola,  The. — Alfred  B.  Street. — BLP 
Death  of  our  Almanac.  The.     (Experiences  of  Nature, 

XVII.)— H:  W.  Beecher.— PEO  (abr.) 
Death  of  Parcy  Reed,  The.— Anon. — BB 
Death  of  Paul    Dombey.— C:    Dickens.     See   Dombey 

and  Son. 
Death  of  Philarete,  The.— W :  Browne.    See  Shepherd's 

Pipe,  The. 
Death  of  Poe's  Wife,  The.— J.  Mount  Bleyer. — WR  19 
Death  of  Poor  Jo. — C :  Dickens.     See  Bleak  House. 
Death  of  Prince  Arthur. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

John. 
Death  of  Queen    Carolina,    The. — T:    N.    Talfourd. — 

EDY 
Death  of  Queen  .lane.  The. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Death  of  Queen  Mary,  The. — Anon.— EDY 
Death  of  Robespierre,  The.     (Place  de  la  Revolution — 

C.j—B. :  H.  Brownell.— ED Y  » 

Death  of  Robespierre,  The. — G :  Lippard.     See  Fourth 

of  July,  1776,  The. 
Death  of  Rodriguez,  The.     (Fr.  Cuba  in  War  Time.) 

— R:  H.  Davis.— MRS— SC 
Death  of   Roland,   The.      (Tr.  by)  J:   O'Hagan.      See 

Song  of  Roland,  The. 
Death  of  Roland,  The.     (Cond.)—Roh't  Buchanan.— 

WRl 
Death  of  Samson,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Samson  Ago- 
nist es. 
Death  of  Savonarola.     See    Casa    Guidi    Windows. — 

Eliz.  B.  Browning— EDY 
Death  of  Schiller,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— EDY 
Death  of  Sir  Roger  de  Coverley. — Jos.  Addison.     See 

Spectator,  The. 
•Death  of    Sir    Walter    Raleigh.— Walter    Raleigh.— 

EDY 
(Conclusion,  The.) — OB 
(Even  Such  is  Time. )— EHT— ELP 
(Last  Lines.) — CEL 
(Lines  Foimd  in  his  Bible.) — BNL 


Death  of  Sir  Walter  Raleigh  (continued). 

(Lines  Written  the  Night  before  his  Execution.) 

FEP— YBF 
(Verses  Found  in  his  Bible  in  the  Gate  House  at 

Westminster— C.)—WEP  1 
Death  of  Slavery,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.- AA— CS  2 
Death  of  Sohrab,  The. — Matthew  Arnold.     See  Sohrab 

and  Rustum. 
Death  of  Steerforth,    The. — C:  Dickens.     See   David 

Copperfield. 
Death  of  Stonewall  Jackson. — Harry  L.  Flash. — AWB 

—EDY 
(Stonewall  Jackson.) — AA 
Death  of  Talbot,  The.     (Fr.  History  of  the  Civil  War, 

Bk.  VI.— «e«.)—S:  Daniel.— WEP  1 
Death  of  the    Country    Doctor,    The. — Tan    Maclaren. 

See  Beside  the  Bonnie  Brier  Bush. 
Death  of  the  Duke  d'Enghien,  The.— H:  Kirke  White. 

—EDY 
Death  of  the  Duke  of  Buckingham,  The. — Alex.  Pope. 

See  Moral  Essays. 
Death  of  the    First-born. — Josiah    G.     Holland.     See 

Arthur  Bonnicastle. 
Death  of  the    Flowers,   The. — W:   C.    Bryant.— AA— 

BNL  —  CR  —  EPs  —    FEP  —  FMR  —  FP 

—  GN  (si.  abr.)—  GP  —  HBP  —  LLC  —  PHS 

— POS— SM— TAV— WCLG  1 
Death  of  the  Old  Clock,  The.— C:  C.  Marsh.— CG  1 
Death  of  the  Old  Squire,  The.— Anon.— BRR—CS  14 

— DS— FR— NPS— YP 
(Death  of  the  Owd  Squire,  The.)— BS  7— CR 
Death  of  the   Old   Year   [.The].— Alfred   Tennyson.— 

CS3  — EPs  — FEP  — MBL   I 


-Anon.     See  Death  of 


BNL  —  BS  7 

— SE(8eZ.)— WCLG  2 
Death  of  the  Owd  Squire,  The. 

the  Old  Squire,  The. 
Death  of  the    Princess    Charlotte. — Lord    Byron.  See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Death  of  the  Reveller,  The.— W.  A.  Eaton.— CS  19— TS 
Death  of  the  Savage,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Deerslayer, 

Ch.  VII.)— .Jas.  F.  Cooper.— WCLI  2 
Death  of  the    Virtuous,    The. — Anna   L.    Barbauld. — 

FEP— HBP  I 

Death  of  Uncle  Tom,   The. — Harriet   B.   Stowe.     See 

Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 
Death  of  Wallace,      The. — Rob't     Southey.— EDY — 

EHT  (abr.) 
Death  of  Wallenstein,  The. — Friedrich  Schiller.      See 

Wallenstein. 
Death  of  the  White  Fawn. — Andrew  Marvell. — BNL 
(Girl  Describes  her  Fawn,    The  —  sel.)  —  BPB  — 

PGT  1— YBF 
(Nymph  Complaining  for  the  Death  of  her  Fawn, 

The— C. )— FEP— HBP 
(Nymph  Mourning  her  Fawn,  The — sel.) — EPs 
Death  of  Wolfe,  The.— Duncan  Anderson. — TCV 
Death  of  Yajnadatta.     See  Ramayana,  The. 
Death  of  Zerbino,    The.     (Sels.   fr.  Orlando    Furioso. 

Can.    XXIV.,    sts.    49-91.)  — Ariosto    (tr.    by 

Rose).  — NE 
Death  or  Liberty.— Theodore  D.  Weld.— BLP 
Death  Penalty,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  a  sneech  at  the  trial  of 

his  son.)— Victor  Hugo.— SC— SS 
(Diff.  sel.)— CS  4 
Death  Penalty  for  New  Offences,  The. — Lord  Byron. 

— SS 
Death  Song,  A. — Paul  L.  Dunbar. — .\A 
Death  Song,  A.    (SI.  abr.)—W:  Morris.— VA 
Death  Struggle,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The. 
Death  the  Leveller. — Jas.  Shirley.     See  Dirge,  A. 
Death    the  Peacemaker. — Ellen   H.   Flagg. — BLP  — 

HSS  1  (abr.) 
(Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.)— LLC  (abr.)— PFP 
Death  the  Revealer.— Albert  E.  S.  Smythe.— TCV 
Death  Typified  by  Winter. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Sea- 
sons, The. 
Death  Undreaded. — Walter  S.  Landor.     See  Death. 
Death-bed,  A.— Jas.  Aldrich.- AA  —  ASL  —  CS  11  — 

FEP— HBP— TAV— YBF 
Death-bed,  The.— T:  Hood.—  AVP  —  CS  3  —  FEP  — 

FP  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HNS  —  OB  —  PGT  1  — 

PYO  —  SE  (sel.)—  VA  —  WCLG  2  —  WEP  4 

—YBF 
Death-bed  of  Benedict  Arnold. — G :  Lippard.   See  Ben- 
edict Arnold. 
Death-bed  of  Bomba,  King  of  Naples.     (Punch.)  See 

Death  of  King  Bomba,  The. 
Death-beds.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Death-bridge  of  the  Tay,  The.     (Abr.)— Will  Carleton. 

— BS  18— CS  25— SC 
Death-child,  The.— W :  Sharp.— VA 


TITLE    INDEX 


Dedication 


Death-fire,  The.— Ann  S.  Stephens.— PPSr 
Deathless,  The.— Ednah  P.  (C.)  Hayes.— AA 
Death-ride,  The. — Westland  Marston. — CS  8 
Death-ride,  The.— Gerald  Massey.— OS  2 
Death's  Alchemy. — W:  S.  Walker. — VA 

(Thou  Wert  Lovely  on  thy  Bier.)— HBP 
Death's  Angel. — W :  Winter.    See  Angel  of  Death,  The. 
Death's  Blunder. — Helen  A.  Goodwin.— CS  22 
Death's  Choice.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Death's  Choice.— G:  Halse.—CS  17 
Death's  Epitaph.     {Fr.  The  House  of  Night.) — Philip 

Freneau. — AA 
Death's  Final  Conquest. — Jas.  Shirley.     .See  Dirge,  A. 
Death's  Head,  The.— W.  H.  Freeman.— HR 
Death's  Jest  Book,  Sels.  fr. — T :  L.  Beddoes. 

Amala's  Bridal  Song.     {Fr.  Act.  IV.)— WEP  4 
Athulf's  Song.— WEP  4 

(Athulf's  Death  Song.)— VA 
(Bridal  Song  and  Dirge.)— HBP 
Dirge.     {Fr.  Act.  II.)— FEP— HBP— VA 
(Dirge  for  Wolfram.)— WEP  4 
(If  thou  wilt  Ea.se  thine  Heart.) — BNL 
(Wolfram's  Dirge.)— OB 
Sailors' Song.     {Fr.  Act.  I.)— BFV— WEP  4 
(Sea,  The.)— CGd— LG— PHS 
(Song  from  the  Ship.)— VS 
(To  Sea.)— BNL 
(To  Sea,  to  Sea !)— VA 
Second  Dirge. — VA 

Wolfram's  Song.     (Fr.  Act.  V.)— WEP  4 
Deaths  of  Myron  and  Klydone,  The.     {Fr.  In  a  Day.) 

— Augusta  Webster. — VA 
Death's  Ramble.— T:  Hood.— HPE 
Death's  Summons. — T:  Nash. — ELP 

(In  Time  of  Pestilence.)— FEP— OB 
Death's  Triumph.— Anon.— CS  30 
Death's  Triumph. — Jas.  Shirley.     See  Dirge,  A. 
Death-scene,  A. — Emily  Bronte. — WEP  4 
Debate,  A. — Anon. — PS 

Debatin'  S'ciety,  The.— E.  F.  Andrews.— CS  30 
Debating  Society,  The.     {Dial.) — Anon. — FAD 
Debating  Society,  The.— Eugene  J.  Hall.— CS  28 
Debating  Society,  The. — Dr.  Valentine. — HR 
Debil,  Mighty  Debil.— Anon.— WR  14 
Deborah    Doolittle's    Speech    on    Women's    Rights. — 

Anon.— MCS 
Deborah    Lee — A  Parody  [on  Poe's   Annabel  Lee]. — 

W.  H.  Burleigh.— BNL— CS  5 
Debt  in  two  Cogtumes. — Wood  L.  Wilson. — TL 
Debtor,  The.— Anon.— SE 

Debtor  and  the  Dun,  The. — Jean  B.  Moli^re. — PS 
Debutante.— Howell  L.  Piner. — WR  23 
Debutante's  Bouquets,  A. — M.  D.  Hatch. — TL 
Decameron,  Sel.  fr.    (Patient  Griselda.) — Boccaccio. — 

WGS 
Decanter  of  Madeira,   aged  86,  to  George  Bancroft, 
aged  86,  Greeting,  A. — S.  Weir  Mitchell. — AA 
Decay  of  a  People,  The. — W:  G.  Simms. — AA 
Deceit. — Joanna  Baillie.     See  De  Monfort. 
Deceitful  Mistress,  The.— T:  Lodge.— ES 
Deceitfulness  of  Love. — Anon. — HBP 
December. — Anon. — DST 
December. — Joel  Benton. — SN 
December.— H.  S.  Comwell.— TAV 
December.— W.  C.  Doane.— WR  6 
December. — Louisa  P.  Hopkins. — PEO 
December. — J.Keats. — GN 

(Happy  Insensibility.)— OH— PGT  1 
(Stanzas— C.)— OB 
(Winter.)— BPB 
December. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
December.— Frank  D.  Sherman.- I>FL— YBT 
December. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Shepheardes  Cal- 
ender, The. 
December  Prayer,  A.— G.  C.  Wing,  Jr.— CG  3 
Deception.     {Yale Record.) — CG  2 
Decidedly  Cool.— (Douglas?)  Jerrold.— SCS 
Decision,  A.— Arthur  L.  Eno.— CG  2 
Decisive  Battle  of  the  Rebellion,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Decisive  Integrity.— W :  Wirt.— TMD 
Declamation  by  a  Little  Tot.— Emily  H.  Miller.— SD 
Declaration,    The.— Nathaniel     P.     Willis.— CS  4— 

HPE— SCS 
Declaration  of  Independence,  The. — J:  Q.  Adams. — 
PEO— PS— SS 
(Nation  Born  in  a  Day,  A.)— DFR— WR  10 
Declaration  of  Independence,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Liberty  or 

Death.) — Rob't  G.  Ingersoll. — FS 
Declaration    of    Independence,    The. — T:    Jefferson. — 
AI  {ahr.)—  BS  4  —  OS  2  (seZ.)— SR  8— WR  10 
(Original  Draft  of  the  Declaration  of  Independence, 
The.)— MRS 


Declaration  of  Independence,  The. — J:  D.  Long. — FD  2 
Declaration    of    Independence,    The. — Carl    Schurz. — 

SSD— TMD— WR  10 
Declaration   of   Independence,   The. — Dan'l   Webster. 

See  Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Declaration  of  Irish  Rights,  Sels.  fr. — H:    Grattan. 
Declaration  of  Irish  Rights.— PS— SS—TMR  {some- 
what diff.  sel. ) 
National  Gratitude.     {Br.  sel.) — SS 
Wrongs  of  Ireland.     {Br.  sel.) — PR 
Decline  and  Fall  of  the  Roman  Empire,  The,  Sel.  fr. 
(Description  of  the  Amphitheatre  of  Titus.) — 
E:  Gibbon.— AE 
Decoramenta. — H :  S.  Ely. — CG  3 
Decorated  Donkey,  The. — Anon. — KNS 
Decoration. — T-  W.  Higginson. — AA — HB 
Decoration  Day.— Susie  M.  Best.— TMR— TT 
Decoration  Day. — Wallace  Bruce. — BS  16 — PEO 
Decoration  Day. — Hezekiah  Butterworth. — TMR 
Decoration  Day. — Jane  Campbell. — HS 
Decoration  Day.     {Abr.) — W.  Bourke  Cochran. — SO 
Decoration  Day. — Fs.   M.   Finch.     See  Blue   and  the 

Gray,  The. 
Decoration  Day.     {Sel.  fr.  Oration  in  New  York  City, 

1882.)— Rob't  G.  Ingersoll.— PS— SR  3 
Decoration  Day.     (C.) — H:     W.  Longfellow.— BLP— 
BS  11 
(Sleep,  Comrades,  Sleep.)— PEO 
Decoration  Day.— S.  F.  Smith.— HSS  1 

( Our  Honored  Heroes. )— PEO 
Decoration  Day.— Dr.  E.  P.  Thwing.— DES 
Decoration  Day. — Eugene  F.  Ware. — EDY 
Decoration  Day.     (Memorial  Day,  1892— C.)— Ella  W. 

Wilcox.— WR  4 
Decoration  Day  Address. — Anon. — CP 
Decoration  Day      Address. — Jas.      A.      Garfield.     See 
Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Sol- 
diers. 
Decoration  Day  Address,  A. — H.  Stone  Richardson. — 

SR4 
Decoration  Day  at  Charleston. — H:  Timrod. — GP 
(At  Magnolia  Cemetery.) — AA 

(Ode  on    Decorating  the   Graves   of   [the]  Confed- 
erate Dead  [or  Soldiers].}— HSS  1— OS  3 
(Ode  Sung  on  the  Occasion  of  Decorating  the  Graves 

of  the  Confederate  Dead.) — EPs 
("  Sleep  sweetly  in  your  humble  graves.") — BNL 
Decoration  Day  Oration. — E.  G.  Cheverton. — SR  6 
Decoration  Hymn.— W.  H.  Randall.— PEO 
Decoration  Ode. — Ben  W.  Davis. — CS  35 
Decorative  Mania,  The.     {Chicago  Rambler.) — FS 
Dedication,  A. — Rudyard  Kipling. — OB 
Dedication. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Dedication  Exercises. — Chauncey  M.  Depcw. — BLP 
(Columbian  Oration.) — SC 
(Columbus.)— SO 

(Columbus,  the  Discoverer  of  America.) — BLP 
{Sels.  in  SC  and  SO  partly  like  those  in  BLP.) 
Dedication  Hymn.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— TAS 
"Dedication"  in  Don  Juan,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See 

Don  Juan. 
Dedication  of    a    Church,    The. — Andrews    Norton. — 
TAS 
(Hymn  for  the  Dedication  of  a  ChurchO — A  A 
Dedication  of  a  Public  Library. — Anon. — CP 
Dedication  of  a  School  Building. — Anon. — CP 
Dedication  of  a  School  House. — Louisa  Simes. — FP 
Dedication  of  Bunker  Hill  Monument. — Dan'l  Webster. 
See  Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument, 
The. 
Dedication  of  Columbian  Exp->sition. — H:  Watterson. 

See  Our  Expanding  Republic. 
Dedication  of  Gettysburg  Cemetery. — Abraham  Lin- 
coln.— BS  5  —  EA  —  FD  1  —  GG  —  SC— SO— 
SR  2— TMD 
(Address  at  Gettysburg.)— BLP 
(Address  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Ceme- 
tery at  Gettysburg— C.j—CR—CS  2— LLC— 
OS  2— PEO— PRR— TMR— WRD 
("Brave  men,  living  and  dead,  who  struggled  here, 

The"— seZ.)— HSSl 
(Gettysburg  Address.)— SM—WCLG  1 
(Gettysburg  Speech.) — AI 

(Remarks  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Ceme- 
tery, etc.) — IR 
(Speech  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Ceme- 
tery at  Gettysburg.)— GMS—MAL—PPS 
Dedication    to    Dante's   Divine    Comedy.      (Sonnet: 

Vita  Nuova.)— E:  H.  Plumptre.— FEP 
Dedication  to  Harriett.    {C. — in  Miscellaneous  Poems 
and  Ballads.) — Rob't  Buchanan. 
(To  Harriett.)— BIL 


87 


Dedication 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dedication  to  the  Idylls  of  the  King. — Alfred  Tenny- 
son.    See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Dedication  to  "The  Ring  and  the  Book." — Rob't 
Browning.     See  Ring  and  the  Book,  The. 

Dedicatory  Exercise.s  \for  Arbor  Day].  (2  seta.) — 
Arr.  by  W.  H.  Benedict .—DFR 

Dedicatory  Ode  for  the  Gettysburg  National  Ceme- 
tery (Gettysburg  Ode — C),  Sel.  fr.- — Bayard 
Taylor.— CS  2 

Dedicatory  Poem  to  the  Princess  Alice.      (C)  — Al- 
fred Tennyson. 
(To  the  Princess  Alice.)— EDY 

Deed  and  a  Word,  A. — C:  Mackay.  See  Little  and 
Great. 

Deed  of  Grace,  A. — Harriet  L.  Childe-Pemberton. — 
VSG 

Deeds,  not  Words. — Anon. — KNE 

Deeds  of  Kindness.— Anon.— DLS—KNS 

Deeds  of  Kindness. — Epes  Sargent. — BLP 
(Lines  for  a  Little  Lassie — al.  nbr.) — YBT 
(Little  Cowslip,  The— seZ.)- TFS 
(Little  Things— 8eZ.)—DLF 
(Suppose.)— GMS—NV—SM—TFS  (sel.) 

Deeds  of  Valor  at  Santiago. — Clinton  Scollard. — PRR 

Deeds  versus  Creeds. — Annie  I.  Muzzey. — CS  5 

Deemster,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Hall  Caine. 

Cut  off    from  the  People.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXVI.) 

— NP 
Father  and  Son.     (Ad.  fr.  Ch.  XXXI.)— WR  19 

Deep,  The.— J:  G.  C.  Brainard.— AA 

Deep  Waters. — W.  G.  Van  T.  Sutphen. — AA 

Deepening  the  Channel.— Arthur  W.  H.  Eaton. — TCV 

Deerslayer,  The.  Sel.  fr.  (Death  of  the  Savage,  The- — • 
fr.  Ch.  VII.)— Jas.  F.  Cooper.— WCLI  2 

Defalcation  and  Retrenchment. — S.  S.  Prentiss. — 
BS  25— SS 

Defeat.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Defeat  of  Burgoyne.  The.— W.  Case. — PjDY 

Defeat  of  General  Braddock,  The. — Jas.  D.  McCabe. — 
PRR 

Defeat  of  Hector  and  Ajax,  The.— Homer.  See  Iliad, 
The. 

Defeat  of  Napoleon. — Lord  Byron.  <See  Childe  Har- 
old's Pilgrimage. 

Defence  against  the  Charge  of  Corruption. — Honors  de 
Mirabeau. — PS 

Defence  from  the  Charge  of  Tyranny. — Maximilien  M.' 
I.  Robespierre.— NPS—YP 

Defence  of  Abel  F.  Fitch  and  Others,  Sel.  fr.  (De- 
fence of  Alleged  Conspirators  against  the  Mich- 
igan Central  Railroad  Company.) — W:  H. 
Seward.— NC 

Defence  of  Alleged  Conspirators  against  the  Michigan 
Central  Railroad  Company. — W:  H.  Seward. 
See  foregoing. 

Defence  of  Hofer,  the  Tyrolese  Patriot,  The. — Anon. — 
FD  1— MYF— SR  5 

Defence  of  Jefferson.     1813.— H:  Clay.— PS— SS 

Defence  of  Lawrence,  The.     (Abr.) — R:  Realf. — BAB 

Defence  of  Lucknow,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. — BS  8 
— CS  19— EDY— GP— SR  2 

Defence  of  Mr.  Rowan,  1794.— J:  P.  Curran. — SSI) 
(Description  of  Mr.  Rowan.) — SS 

Defence  of  M.  Peltier  for  a  Libel  on  Napoleon. — Sir  J. 
Mackintosh. — SS 

Defence  of  Pitt.  (Sel.  fr.  Regency  Resolutions,  Dec. 
31,1810.)— G:  Canning.— SS 

Defence  of  Poetry.  (Sel.  fr.  Remarks  on  the  Character 
and  Writings  of  John  Milton.) — W:  E.  Chan- 
ning. — SE 

Defence  of  Poetry,  A.— C:  Wolfe.— SS 

Defence  of  the  Alamo,  The. — Joaquin  Miller. — EDY — 
PAPm 

Defence  of  the  Bridge,  The.  (Sel.  fr.  The  Sword  of 
Damocles.) — Anna  K.  (Green)  Rohlfs. — BS  18 
— WR4 

Defence  of  the  Irish  Party,  A.— C.  Russell.— TMD 

Defence  of  the  Kennistons. — Dan'l  Webster. — PPS 

Defence  of  William  Freeman,  Sel.  fr.  (Plea  for  William 
Freeman,  A.) — NC 

Defence  of  Xantippe,  A. — Anon. — CS  25 

Defenders,  The.     (C.)— T:  B.  Read. 
(Our  Defenders.)—  CS  1 

Defiance. — Rob't  Burns. — LH 

(MacPherson's  Farewell— C.)— HBP 

Defiance. — Walter  Scott.  See  Lav  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel, The. 

Defiance  of  Hector  and  Ajax. — Homer.    <See  Iliad,  The. 

Defiance  to  Love. — Michael  Drayton  (?). — ES 

Defiant  Seminole  Chief,  The.— G.  W:  Patten.— BLP 
(Seminole's   Defiance,   The.)— HNS— LLC   (sel.)— 

DM— OS  1 
(Seminole's  Reply,  The.)— CS  1— FTR— PPSr— SA 


Defile  of  Gondo.— W:  Wordsworth.     See  Prelude,  The. 

Defiled.— Medora  Clarke.— CS  27 

Definite  Training. — J:  Ruskin. — LLC 

Deformed  Transformed,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Invocation  to 

the  Spirit  of  Achilles — fr.  Pt.  I.,  Sc.  I.) — Lord 

Byron.— CEL—WEP  4 
Degeneracy    of    Athens.  —  Demosthenes.     See  Philii)- 

pics.  The. 
Degeneracy  of  Greece. — I.,ord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Deid  Folks'  Ferry. — Rosamund  M.  Watson. — VA 
Deitsche  Advertisement.— C.  T.  Wolfe.— BDD—DFY 
Deity.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Dejection:    An  Ode.— S.  T.  Coleridge.- FEP— HBP— 

WEP4 
Dejection  and  Retirement.     The  Retired  Statesman. — 

W:  Cowper.     See  Retirement. 
Delancey  Stuyvasant  and  the  Horse-car. — G:  Kyle. — 

WR3 
(Swell  Fm  a  Horse-car],  The.)— BRR— CS  29— FTR 
Delay. — Charlotte  F.  Bates. — AA 
Delayed    in    Transmission. — Mabel    Quiller-Couch. — 

BS25 
Delectable  Ballad  of  the  Waller  Lot,  The. — Eugene 

Field.— LS 
Delectable  Day,  The,  Br.  sel  fr.     (Home  Comfort.)— 

C:Kingsley— OH 
Delia  at  Play.- — Rob't  Southey.     See  Amatory  Sonnets 

of  Abel  Shufflebottom,  The. 
Delicious  Interruption,  A. — .Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Delight   in   Disorder.     (C.) — Rob't   Herrick. — BNL — 

ELP  —  ES  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  OB  —  OEL  — 

PYO  —  WEP  2 
(Poetry  of  Dress,  The.)— EPs— PGT  1  (I.)— YBF 
Delight  in  God. — Fs.  Quarles.     See  following. 
Delight   in   God   Only.— Fs.   Quarles.— FEP— HBP— 

YBF  (sel.) 
(Delight  in  God.)— BNL 
Delightful  Custom,  A.— Anon. — TT 
Delights  of  Camp  Life. — Anon. — HP 
Delights  of  Fancy. — Mark  Akenside.     See  Pleasures  of 

Imagination,  The. 
De  Long. — Andrew  E.  Watrous. — EDY 
Delsarte  Entertainment,  A. — Anon. — WR  17 
Delsartean    Plea,    A.     (Boston    Courier.)— GTH — PS — 

SRIO 
Delsartian  Physical  Drill. — Lizzie  White. — WR  17 
Dem    Ole    Dimes    Habbiness    and    dem    New. — Nick 

Slaeter.— BDD— GH 
Dem  Shickens.— T:  S.  Denison.— SR  13 
Demagogue,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Portrait  Gallery.)— H:  W. 

Beecher.— BS  2— KNE 
(Dishonest  Politician,  The — ptly.  sameA — CS  8 
Demeanor  of  Books,  The.— J:  Milton. — OS  3 
Demerits  of  High  License,  The. — President — Seelye. 

— TS 
Demetrius. — Constance  F.  Le  Roy  Runcie. — WR  2 
Demmy  Jake.— D:  L.  Proudfit.— CS  23— GH 
Democracy. — C :  A.  Dana. — FD  2 
Democracy.        (Sel.)— Jas.     R.     Lowell. — AI— OS     3 

(longer.) 
Democracy. — Harriet  Monroe.      See    Commemoration 

Ode. 
Democracy,  Sel.  fr. — J:  G.  Whittier. — BNL 
Democracy  Adverse  to  Socialism.— Alexis  de  Tocque- 

ville.— PS— SS— SSD 
Democracy   Hateful  to   PhiHp,   A   [or  The]. — Demos- 
thenes.    See  Philippics,  The. 
Democratic  Governments. — C:  J.   Fox.     See  Vigor  of 

Democratic  Governments. 
Democratic  Party  and  Public  Opinion,  The,    Sel.  fr. 

(Appeal  to  Young  Men,  An.) — Jas.  A.  Garfield. 

— NC 
Demon  Kittens,  The. — Anon. — WR  15 
Demon  Lover,  The.— Anon.— BPB—WR  21  (si.  ahr.) 
(Daemon  Lover,  The— si.  a6r.)— CGd— PEB  2 
(Ship  o'  the  Fiend,  The — diff.  vers.,  si.  abr.) — BB 
Demon  Lover,  The.     (  Fr.  Hadad — drama. ) — Jas    A. 

Hillhouse. — AA 
Demon  of  the  Gibbet,   The. — Fitz-James  O'Brien. — 

PEB  4 
Demon   of   the   Mirror,    The. — Bayard   Taylor   (?). — 

WR2 
Demon  of   the  Study,   The,    Sel.    fr.    (Voice   of  the 

Reader,  The.)— JiG.  Whittier.— LLC 
Demon  on  the  Roof,  The. — Josephine  Pollard. — PEG 
Demon  Ship,  The.— T:  Hood.— CS  11— SA 
Demon  Ship,  The.— Lloyd  Mifflin.— CS  16 
De  Monfort,  Sels.  fr. — Joanna  Baillie. 

Deceit.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  2.)— KNE 
Jane  de  Monfort.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  1.)— VSG 
Demons  of  the  Glass,  The.     (Dial.) — W:    T.  Adams. — 

CS  8— SDD 
Demosthenes. — E.  S.  Creasy. — PS 


TITLE    INDEX 


Despoiler 


Demosthenep  Denounced. — ^schines. — PS — SS 
Demosthenes    not     Vanquished    by    Philip.  — Demos- 
thenes.    See  Oration  on  the  Crown,  The. 
Dentist  and  Patient. — G:  Kyle. — WR  3 
Denunciation,  Sel.  fr. — T:  M^oore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Departed,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— AA 
Departed.     (Poems   of    the   Imagination — XI. — C) — 

W:  Wordsworth. — EPs 
(Lucy.)— OB  (V.)— WEP  4  (III.) 
r"Slumber  did  my  spirit  seal,  A.")— PGT  1— YBF 
Departure. — Coventry  Patmore. — OB — PGT  2 
Departure. — May  R.  Smith. — AA 
Departure,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     jSee  Day-dream, 

The. 
Departure  from  Paradise,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Para- 
dise Lost. 
Departure    of    the    Cuckoo,    The. — Matthew    Arnold. 

See  Thyrais. 
Departure  of  the  Pilgrims  for  Holland. — Daniel  Web- 
ster.    See  First  Settlement  of  New  England. 
Departure  of  the  Swallow,  The. — W:  Hewitt. — BNL — 

VA 
Departure    of    the    Swallows. — Theophile    Gautier. — 

MRS— POS 
Dependence.     (Hymn    LXIII.) — W:  Cowper. — EPs 
Deposed. — -Anon.^DLS 

(Lulu's  Complaint — diff.  vera.) — PR — YA 
(New  Baby,  The.)— HP 
Deposition  from  Love,  A. — T:  Carew. — WEP  2 
Depot  Incident,  A. — Gertrude  Garrison. — CS  24 — NPS 

— YP 
De  Quincey's    Deed.— Homer   Greene. — BS  20 — CS  30 

—SO  (sZ.  abr.) 
Der  Baby.— Anon.— BDD—CS  8— MYF 
Der  Coming  Man.— C:  Follen  Adams.— BS  1— CS  28— 

SDR 
Der  Deutscher's  Maxim. — C:  F.  Adams. — CD — CS  30 
"Der  Dog  und  der  Lobster." — Saul  Sertrew. — BDD — 

CH— DFY— DRR— SR  2 
Der  Drummer.— C:  F.  Adams.— BDD— CRR— DFY— 

PS 
Der  Good      Lookin'      Shnow. — Anon. — BDD — BeR — 

DFY 
Der  Letzte  Gast.— Theodor  Drebisch. — WR  20 
Der  Loddery  Dicket.— Carl  Pretzel.— DRR 
Der  Moon.— Wade  Whipple.— BDD 
Der  Mule. — J.  S.  Burdette.     See  following. 
Der  Mule    Shtood    on    der    Steamboad    Deck. — J.    S. 

Burdette.— BDD— DFY— SR  10 
(Der  Mule.)— DRR 
Der  Nighd  behind  Grisdmaa  [or  Christmas]. — Sidney 

W.  Wetmore.— BDD— CRR— DFY 
Der  Oak  und  der  Vine.— C:  F.  Adams.— AWH—BS  15 

— CRR— CS  27— DCR 
Der  Schleighride.— Wade  Whipple.— BDD 
Der  Schwartz   Egsberience   mit   a   Bogsing   Lesson. — 

Anon.— DRR 
Der  Shoemaker's  Poy. — Anon. — DRR 
Der  Shpider  und  der  Fly.— C:  F.  Adams.— CRR— CS  32 

— SR5 
Der  Vater-mill.— C:    F.    Adams.— CS  27— DCR— SR  9 
"Der  Wreck  of  der  Hezberus," — Esse  Phoster. — BDD 

—DFY 
Derby  Dav.— Fanny  F.  Clark.— DES 
Derelict,  the.— L.  H.  Foote. — AA 
Derelict.— Eliz.  J.  (C.)  Pullen.— AA 
Dermot  O'Dowd. — S:  Lover. — DI 
Dermot's  Parting. — Anon. — CS  6 
De  Roberval,  Sela.  fr.     (Drama.) — J:  Hunter-Duvar. 
Adieu  to  France. — VA 
Gallant  Fleet,  The.— VA 
OhnAwa. — VA 
Twilight  Song.— VA 
Derwentwater's  Farewell. — Anon. — EDY. 
Descend,    ye   Nine. — Alex.  Pope.     See    Ode    on    St. 

Cecilia's  Day. 
Descent,  The.— S :  Rogers.— BNL 

Descent    of   the    Ganges,  The.     See  Ramayana,  The. 
Description  and  Praise  of   his    Love  Geraldine. — H: 

Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey. — CEL 
(Sonnet:    Geraldine.)— ELP 
Description  of  a  City  Shower,  A. — Jonathan  Swift. — 

HPE 
Description   of  a  Musical   Consort   of  Birds,   A. — W: 

Browne.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Description  of  a  Religious  House  [and  Condition  of 

Life— C.l— R :  Crashaw.— WEP  2 
Description  of  a  Summer's  Eve.  (C.) — H :  Kirke  White. 

(Summer  Evening,  A — si.  abr.) — BVC 
Description   of   Castara   [,The]. — W:   Habington.     See 

Castara. 
Description  of  Dulness,  The. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Dun- 

ciad.  The. 


Description  of  Elizium,  The. — Michael  Drayton.     See 

Muses'  Elysium,  The. 
Description  of  his  Muse. — (Br.  sel.  fr  The  Prophecy  of 

Famine.)— C:  Churchill.— WEP  3 
Description  of  Holland.     (C.) — S.  Butler. 

(Holland.)  HPE 
Description  of  Johnson.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Ghost,  Bk.  II.) — 

C:  Churchill.— WEP  3 
Description  of  La  Belle  Pucel. — Stephen  Hawes.     See 

Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The. 
Description  of  Maying. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Shep- 

heardes  Calender,  The.— WEP  1 
Description  of   Mr.  Rowan. — J.  P.  Curran.     See  De- 
fense of  Mr.  Rowan. 
Description  of  Spring. — H:  Howard,  Earl  of    Surrey 
— FEP— HBP— LC— OB— PHS— WEP  1 
(Sonnet :     Description  of  Spring.) — ELP 
Description  of  the  Amphitheatre  of  Titus.     (Sel.  fr. 

Decline  and  Fall  of  the  Roman  Empire,  Vol.  I.. 

Ch.  XII.)— E:  Gibbon— AE 
Description  of  the  Chase. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  Love 

Chase,  The. 
Description  of  the  Country's  Recreations,  A. — H:  Wot- 
rton.— EP 
(In  Praise  of  Angling.) — BNL 
(Verses  in  Praise  of  Angling.)— FEP— HBP 
Description  of  the  Golden  Age.     (Fr.  Falls  of  Princes, 

Bk.    VII.) — Boccaccio  (tr.  by  J:    Lydgate). — 

WEPl 
Description  of  the   Morning,    A.  —  Jonathan   Swift. — 

WEP  3  («Z.  abr.) 
(Morning  in  London.) — OES 
Description   of   the   Shepherd   and    his  Wife,  The.  — 

Rob't  Greene.     See  Mourning  Garment,  The. 
Description  of  the  Venus  of  Milo.     (Sel.  fr.  The  New- 
comes,  Ch.  XX.)— W:  M.  Thackeray— OS  3 
Description  of  Walla,  The. — W:  Browne.     See  Britan- 
nia's Paistorals. 
Description  of  Webster's  Speech  in  Reply  to  Hayne. — 

C:  W.  March.— CR 
Desert  Terrible,  A. — Gawain  Douglas.     See  Palice  of 

Honour,   The. 
Deserted. — Anon. — HP 
Deserted. — Ethel  de  Fonblanque. — FLS 
Deserted  City.  The.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— VA 
Deserted  Garden,    The. — Eliz.    B.    Browning. — OB — 

PGT  2 
Deserted  House,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.— BS  6— EPs 

PHS— VA— YBF 
Deserted  Mansion,  A. — Jos.  Hall. — WEP  1 
Deserted  Mill,  The.— August  Schnezler.— CS  10— CSS 
Deserted  Nest,  The.— Jos.  Howe.— TCV 
Deserted  Village,     The.— Oliver     Goldsmith.— BNL— 

FEP— HBP— MBL— PSR  (abr.)— WCLG  I 
(ScZ.)- FP— WEP  3  (longer.) 
(Br.  sels.)—S AE—SE 
(National  Decay — br.  sel.) — GP 
(Schoolmaster,  The— se/.)— LC 

(Village  Schoolmaster,  The.)— PPSr— SO 
(Village    Preacher,    The.)— CS  15— FP— LLC— SO 
Deserter,  A. — Mary  A.  Barr. — SR  7 
Deserter,  The. — J:  P.  Curran.     See  Deserter's  Medita- 
tion, The. 
Deserter  from  the  Cause,  The.— Gerald  Massey. — VA 
Deserter's  Meditation,  The.— J:  P.  Curran.— TIP 

(Deserter,  The.)— LH 
Desideria.     (Poems  of  the  Imagination,  Miscellaneous 

Sonnets,    XXVII.)  — W:    Wordsworth.  —  OB 

— PGTl 
(Shock  of  Bereavement,  The.)— WEP  4 
Desirable  Objects    of    Attainment. — J:    Stoughton. — 

BLP 
Desire. — Matthew  Arnold. — -BNL 
Desire,  A.     (Fr.  Sonnets  to  George  Sand.) — Eliz.  B. 

Browning. — BNL 
Desire,  A.     (Br.  sel.) — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — OS  1 
Desire  of  all  Nations,  The.— Arthur  C.  Coxe.— TAS 
Desiring  to  Love. — C:  Wesley. — HBP 
Desolate  City,  The.— Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— OB 
Desolation. — Tom  Masson. — DR 
Despair.     (Frags.  Jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Despair. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Les  Mie^rables. 
Despair.     (In  Give  me  not  Tears.) — Rose  H.  Lathrop. 

\j^ 

Despair.     (SI.  afer.)- Alfred  Tennyson. — BS  10 

Despair  and  Hope. — Israel  Zangwill. — VSG 

Despair  is  never  quite  Despair. — Felicia  Hemans. — 

(Lights  and  Shades— C.)—CS  10 
Despairing  Lover,  The.— W:  Walsh.— WEP  3 
Desperate  Encounter,    A. — Rob't    C.     V.     Meyers. — 

CS20 
Despoiler  Doomed,  The. — Bible.     See  Isaiah. 


Despondency 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Despondency  Rebuked. — Arthur  H.  Clough. — HBP 
(Courage.)— OS  3 

(Say    not,    the    Struggle    naught    Availeth — C.) — 
AVP  —  GP  —  HDL  —  OB  —  PGT  2  —  SO  — 
WEP  4— YBF 
Despondent  Inventor,  The. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.     See 

Last  of  the  Barons,  The. 
Desponding  Soul's  Wish,  The.     (C) — J:  Byrom. 

(My  Spirit  Longeth  for  Thee.) — HBP 
Despotism  Incompatible  with  Right. — Edmund  Burke. 

<See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 
Destiny.     (C.)— T:  B.  Aldrich.— ASL 

(Three  Roses.)— GP 
Destiny.— Edwin  Arnold.— FTA 
Destiny. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.      See  Canterbury  Tales, 

The. 
Destiny.     (2  sonnets.) — Emma  Lazarus. — EDY 
Destiny.     (Poems  dedicated  to  National  Independence 
and  Liberty,  Pt.  I.,  16.)— W:  Wordsworth. — 
LH 
(Faith  and  Freedom — br.  sel.) — GN 
(Sonnet.)— EPs 
Destiny — A.  D.  1899. — Harrison  S.  Morris. — AA 
Destiny  of  America.— C:  Phillips.— BS  14— OM  (abr.) 
(America.)— CS  6— PRR 
(American  Republic,  The.) — LLC 
(Panegyric  on  America — sel.) — FD  1 
Destiny  of  our  Country. — .los.  Story. — OS  3 

(Our  Duties  to  the  Republic.)— FTR—KNS—SS 
(Our  Duty  to  the  Republic.) — LLC 
(Our  Future.)— BLP 

(Responsibilities  of  our  Republic.) — HNS 
(Responsibility  of  American  Citizens.) — WRD 
(Shall  America  Betray  Herself  ?)—FD  1— SR  5 
(Sels.  vary  somewhai.') 
Destiny  of  Rome,  The. — Gawain  Douglas.     See  iEneid, 

The. 
Destiny  of  the  Empress  Josephine,  The. — Fs.  F.  Bar- 

,  ritt.- NPS— YP 
Destroyer,  The.— H.  M.  Scudder.— CS  17— TS 

(What  Intemperance  Does — al.  diff.) — WR  18 
Destruction  of  Jerusalem,  The. — Frank  D.  Budlong. — 

NC 
Destruction  of      Pompeii. — £•      Bulwer-Lytton.     <See 

Last  Days  of  Pompeii,  The. 
Destruction  of  Sennacherib.The.  (In  Hebrew  Melodies.) 
—  Lord  Byron.— AE  —  BFV—BNL  — BPB  — 
CEI.— CGd— CS  14— EPs—  FEP— GN— HB— 
HBP  —  LLC  —  MBL  —  MR  —  0S2  —  PHS— 
PPSr  — PSR— PYO— SS— YBF 
(Sennacherib.)— LH 
Destruction  of  the  Forests. — Anon. — AD 
Destruction  of  the  Philistines. — J:  Milton.     See  Sam- 
son Agonistes. 
Destruction  of  Troy,  The. — Virgil.     <See  .iEneid,  The. 
"Desultory  Reading."— F.  M.  P.— MBB 
Detective,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.    <See  Stage  Land. 
Determination. — W:  C.  Fitch.— CG  1 
Dethe  of  Blaunche,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Duchesse  Blanche — 

mod.) — Geoffrey  Chaucer. — EPs 
Deuteromelia,  Sel.  fr.  (Martin  to  his  Man.) — Anon. — NA 
Deuteronomy,  Sela.  fr.     Bible. 

First  Civil  Code,  The.    (Sel.  verses.)— BLF 
Great  Commandment,  The.     (Ch.  VI.,  5-7.) — LLC 
Devil,  The.     (.Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Devil,  The.— Alfred  .1.  Hough.— CS  23 
Devil  and  the  Lawyers,  The. — Anon. — KNE 
Devil  at  Home,  The.     (Fr.  The  Devil's  Progress.) — T: 

K.  Her\'ey.— BNL 
Devil  in  Search  of  a  Wife,  The. — Annie  Porter. — MR 
Devil  is  an  Ass,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Ben  Jonson.   See  Celebra- 
tion of  Charis,  A. 
Deviled      Biscuit.      (Fr.      Poetical      Cookery-book.) 

(Punch.)— BFF. 
Devil's  Law-case,  The,  Sels.fr.      (Vanitas  Vanita- 

tum.)— J:  Webster.- ELP— OB— YBF 
Devil's  Progress,  The,  Sel.  fr.   (The  Devil  at  Home.) 

— T:  K.  Her^ey.- BNL 
Devil's  Thoughts,  The.— S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Devil's 

Walk   The. 
Devil's     Walk,    The. — S:    T.    Coleridge     and     Rob't 
Southey. — ESs  ((Coleridge's    later   vers.) 
(Southey's  later  vers. — abr.) — BNL 
(Devil's  Walk  on  Earth,  The — Southey's  later  vers.) 

— HPE 
(Devil's  Thoughts,  The — Cktleridge's  earlier  vers.) — 
FEP— HBP 
Devil's  Walk  on   Earth,   The. — Rob't   Southey.     See 

Devil's  Walk,  The. 
Devotion.     (Tab.)— Anon.— BS  13— TCP 
Devotion. — Anon. — OB 

(In  Laudem  Amoris.) — ELP 
(Omnia  Vincit.)— PCiT  1 


Devotion. — Rob't  Bums. — LH 

(Mary      Morison— C.)— BNL— CEL— FEP— GP— 
MBL— OB— PGT  1— WEP  3— YBF 
Devotion.— T:  Campion.— OB  (2d  poem.) — YBF 

(Follow  your  Saint.)— ELP 
Devotion.     (A  Book  of  Airs,  4th  Song.) — T:  Campion. 
— OB  (1st  poem.) 

(In  Imagine  Pertransit  Homo.) — PGT  1 

(Shadow,  The.)— ELP 
Devotion  to  Duty.— D.  N.  Shelley.— CS  28— PS 
Devotional  Incitements.     (SI.  abr.) — W:  Wordsworth. 

— FTR 
Devout  Lover,  A. — T:  Randolph. — OB 

(His  Mistress.)— YBF 
Dew,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Dew-drop,   The    (Paraphrase    fr.). — H.    F.    Amiel. — 

Dewdrop,  A. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Dewdrop,  The. — Jos.  Skipsey. — VA 
Dew-drop,  The.— R:  C.  Trench.- OS  1 

(Dewdrop  Falling,  A.)— PHS 
Dewdrop  Falling,  A. — R:  C.  Trench.     iSee  foregoing. 
Dew-drop  Inn,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.- CS  28 
Dewdrops. — Anon. — DS — YA 
Dewdrops. — Mary  F.  Butts. — AD 

(Million    Little    Diamonds,    A— C.)— AA— GMS— 

HSS2 
(Winter  Jewels.)— COS— CPL—DLS—PP 
Dewey  at  Manila. — Rob't  U.  Johnson. — BAB — PAPm 
Dewey  in  Manila  Bay.— R.  V.  Risley.— EDY— PAPm 
Dhoulkamain.     (Sel.    fr.    the    Koran,    Ch.    XVIII.— 

The  Cave.)— Anon.— WR  11 
Dhree  Shkaders.— Anon .— BDD— BeR— DF Y 
Dial,  The.     (C) — Jas.  Montgomery. 

(Sun-dial— a&r.)— EPs 
Dial  of  Time,  The.— Clarence  Hawkes. — BS  24 
Dialect  Medley.— G.  A.  Baker.— SDR 

(Pyrotechnic  Polyglot.)— PLD 
Dialogue,  A. — Emily  Dickinson. — TAS 
Dialogue,  A.— G:  Herbert.— OB 
Dialogue  between  a  Catholic  Delegate  and  his  Royal 

Highness,  the  Duke  of  Cumberland.    (Epigram 

— O— T:  Moore.— HPE 
Dialogue  between  a  Mother  and  Child. — C:  and  Mary 

Lamb.— LPC 
Dialogue  between    Graunde   Amoure   and    La   Pucel. 

See     Pastime     of     Pleasure,     The. — Stephen 

Hawes. 
Dialogue  between     King     John     and     Hubert. —  W: 

Shakespeare.     See  King  John. 
Dialogue  between  the  Soul  and  the  Body,  A. — A.  W. — 

ELP 
Dialogue  between  Thyrsis  and   Dorinda,  A. — Andrew 

Marvell.— EP 
Dialogue  for  a  Boy  and  Girl. — Mrs.   Russell  Kavan- 

augh. — KJ 
Dialogue  for    a    Little    Boy    and    Girl. — Mrs.    Russell 

Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Dialogue  for   Bands    of    Hope. — Mary    G.    Crocker. — 

CPL 
Dialogue  for  Five- Boys. — C.  A.  Keife. — KC 
Dialogue  from  Plato,  A. — Austin  Dobson. — THP 
Diamond,  A. — Rob't  Loveman. — AA 
Diamond,  The. — J.  J.  G.  Wilkinson.— EPs 
Diamond  Cut  Diamond.  (W.  music.) — EmmaD.  Banks. 

—BR 
Diamond  Wedding,  The.— Anon.— CS  15— NPS— SR  3 

— YP 
Diana.     (Tob.)— Anon.— BS  13— TCP 
Diana. — Ernest  Rhys. — VA 
Diana's  Valentine. — Rob't  Bridges. — HS 
Diaphenia.— H :  Constable.— FEP— LC 

(Damelus'  Song  to  his  Diaphenia.) — EP 
Diary  of  a  Sea-voyage. — Anon. — CS  13 
Dibdin's  Ghost.— Eugene  Field.— AA— THP 
Die— Jonathan  Swift  (?).— HPE 
Dick  Johnson's  Picture. — Anon. — BS  10 
Dick  Swiveller    and    the    Marchioness. — C :    Dickens. 

See  Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The. 
Dick,  the  Apothecary's  Apprentice. — Anon. — SCS 
Dickens  Gallery,  The.— M.  J.  Farrah.— CS  31 
Dickens  in    Camp.— Fs.    Bret    Harte.— BNL — CS  7— 

EDY— FEP— GP— LLC— TAV 
Dickey-bird,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— COS— PP 

—PS 
Dickey's  Christmas. — Anon. — SSS 
Dickie-bird !  Dickie-bird !— Anon.— TFS 
Did  not  Pass.— Mary  E.  Burnett.— TFS 
Did  you  Ever  See  a  Ghost? — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— 

CSIO 
Did  you  Think  to  Pray?— Anon.— DLS 
Did  you— Will  you?— Howell  L.  Finer.- WR  23 
Didactic  Poem,  The. — R:  Garnett.— V.\ 


90 


TITLE    INDEX 


Dirge 


Didn't  Think.— Phcebe  Gary.— CPL  {sel.) 

(Thev   Didn't   Think.)— BLF— HSS  2    (si.    abr.)— 

NV 
"Didn't  Think  o'  Losin'  Him." — Frank  L.  Stanton. — 

WR21 
Didn't  we,  Jim?     (C.) — Ben  King 
(Two  orphans,  The.)— WR  14 
Dido's  Hunting. — Virgil  (Gawain  Douglas).    SeeMneid, 

The. 
Die  Down,  O  Dismal  Day. — David  Gray. — BNL 

(Sonnet.)— HBP 
Die  Fi?cherin,  Sel.  fr. — Johann  W.  von   Goethe.     See 

Erlking,  The. 
Die  Herz  Blume.— T:  Hood  (?).— POS 
"Died  Poor." — Anon. — KNE 
Dies  Irae. — Anon. — PAPm 
Dies  Irae.     {Orig.     Latin.)—!::     de    Celano.— BNI.— 

FEP 
{Tr.  of  Abraham  Coles.) — A  A 
{Tr.  of  John  A.  Dix.)— BNL— FEP 
(.Tr.  ofW-.J.  Irons.)— FEP 
(Paraphrase  of  Walter  Scott — in  Lay  of    the  Last 

Minstrel.)— FEP 
(Hymn  for  the  Dead.)— BPB 
Dietary,  The,  or.  Rules  for  Health,  Sel.  fr. — J:  Lyd- 

gate.— WEP  1 
Difference,  A. — Anon. — WR  4 
Difference  between  Taste  and  Genius,  Sel.  fr.     (Taste 

and  Genius.) — Hugh  Blair. — AE 
Difference,  The. — Anon.^WR  17 
Difference,  The.      (It   is   the  Season  now  to  Go — C.) 

— Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — OH 
(In  the  Season.) — VA 
Difference,  The.— H.  K.  Webster.— CG  2 
Difference  of  Opinion. — Anon. — PS 
Differences. — C:  Mackay. — FEP 
Different  Kind   er   Boy,   The. — Alice   L.    Richards. — 

WN 
Different  Minds.— R  :  C.  Trench.— BNL— FEP 
(Content  and  Discontent — sel.) — OS  1 
("Some  murmur  when  their  sky  is  clear.") — GG 
Different  Tastes. — Anon. — CS  1 
Different  Ways  of  Saying  Yes. — Anon. — WR  3 
Differing    Tastes.     (Frags,     fr.     various     authors.) — 

BNL 
Difficult  Love-making. — Anon. — CS  20 
Difficult  Love-making. — Will  Carleton. — WR  3 
Difficult  Problem.      A.— Charlotte      W.      Thurston.— 

TMR 
Difficulties. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Difficulty,  The. — Heinrich  Heine  (tr.  by  Jas.  F.  Clarke). 

— FTA— OH 
Difficulty  about     that     Dog,     The. — Anon.— CS  6— 

MHR 
Difficulty  of    Rhyming,    The.— Joe    Jot,    Jr.— BS  1— 

CS  13 
Diffidence.— Wade    Whipple.  —  CD  —  CS  16  —  DS  — 

FAS  (sel.)—SR6 
("Don't  be  Tazin'  Me.")— SDR 
Digger's  Grave,  The. — Sarah  Welch. — VA 
Digging  for   Hidden  Treasure. — C:  Reade.     See  It  is 

never  too  Late  to  Mend. 
Dignified  Courtship. — Anon. — CS  29 
Dignity  in  Labor. — Newman  Hall. — PP — YFR 
Dignity  of  Labor,  The. — Anon.— PFO 
Dignity  of  Labor,  The.— Newman  Hall.— CS  8 

(.4br.)— FDl— HSS  3— PFP 
Dignity  of  Man,  The.     (C.)— Sir  J:  Da  vies. 

("  Oh!  what  is  man,  great  maker  of  mankind  ") — 

HBP 
Dignity  of  our  Nation's  Founders. — W:  M.  Evarts. — 

FD2 
Dikkon's  Dog.— Dorothy  Lundt.— WR  26 
Dilemma,  A.— Anon.— PGT  1 

rMadrigal.)— ELP 
Dilemma,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— WR  16 
Diligent  Bessie.— Lizzie  J.  Rook.— PS— TT 
Dillv  and  the  D's,  The.     (Punch.)— HPE 
Dime  Supper,  A.— Oscar  F.  Hewitt.— CS  34 
Dimes  and  Dollars.— H:  Mills.— CS  12— WRD 
Dimes     for     Turnips'     Blood. — Howell    L.    Piner.^ 

WR23 
DimesJ  Oh,   Dimes!     Give  me  Dimes! — Anon. — KNS 
Dimple  and  Dumoling. — Acton  Davies. — BS  20 
Diners    in    the    Kitchen,    The. — .las.    W.    Riley.     See 

Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
Dinkey-bird,  The.— Eugene  Field.— AA—LS—NA 
Dinna  Ask  Me.— J.  Dunlop.— BNL — FTA— YBF 
"Dinna  Chide. "-^Marg.  E.  Sangster.     See  following. 
Dinna  Chide  the  Mither  ("Dinna  Chide" — C.) — Marg. 

E.  Sangster.— CS  22 
Dinner  at  the  House  of  Dugal  Stewart,  A.     (SI.  abr.) 

—Rob't  Burns.— EDY 


Dinner  Discussion,  A. — Anon. — BS  19 

Dinner-hour,     The. — Rob't,     Earl     of     Lytton.     See 

Lucile. 
Dion.     (SeZ.)—W:  Wordsworth.— EPs 
Dipsvchus,  Sels.  fr. — Arthur  H.  Clough. 

Atheism.       (Sel.    fr.    Pt.  I.,  Sc.  5:    The  Lid.)  — 

EPs  (si.  abr.)— TUP 
In  Venice;  Dipsychus  Sneaks.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Sc. 

5:  The  Piazza  at  Night.)— WEP  4 
Isolation.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Sc.  2:  In  a  Gondola.) 

—WEP  4 
Spectator  ab  Extra.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Sc.  2.)— ESs 
Difce.— Walter  S.  Landor.— OB— VA 
Director's  Visit,  The:  or,  A  Warning  to  School-masters. 

—Anon.— KNE 
Dirge:    "Lay  a  garland  on  my  hearse." — Beaumont 

and  Fletcher.     .See  Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Dirge:    "If  thou  wilt  ease  thine  heart." — T:  L.  Bed- 
does.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Dirge,  A:    "Glide  soft,  ye  silver  floods." — W:  Browne. 

See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Dirge:       "What    shall    her    silence    keep." — Madison 

Cawein. — AA 
Dirge,  A:     "Earth  to  earth  and  dust  to  dust." — G: 

Crolv.- CS  8 
(Dust  to  Dust — br.  sel.) — SE 
Dirge:    "Softly!  she  is  lying." — C:  G.  Eastman. — AA 

— CS  6— FEP— HBP— TAS 
Dirge:    "Knows    he    who    tills    the   lonely   field"  f"  I 

reached  the  middle  of  the  mount" — C.].     (SI. 

a/w.}— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— TAS 
Dirge:     "Oh,  thy  stream,  Amalete,  who  reaches  the 

shore."— Howard  W.  Gilbert.— LLC 
Dirge,   A;   "Calm   on   the   spirit   [bosom — C.]  of  thy 

God." — Felicia  D.  Hemans.     See  Siege  of  Va- 
lencia, The. 
Dirge:   "Where  shall  we  make  her  grave." — Felicia  D. 

Hemans.— HBP 
Dirge,    A:       "Naiad,    hid    beneath    the    bank." — W: 

Johnson-Cory.— PGT  2 
Dirge:     "Oh,  dig  a  grave,  and  dig  it  deep." — W:  S. 

Roscoe.— HBP 
Dirge:     "He   is   gone — is  dust." — Friedrich   Schiller. 

See  Wallenstein. 
Dirge:        "Come    away,    come    away.    Death." — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Twelfth  Night. 
Dirge:    "Fear   no    more   the   heat    o'  the   sun." — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Cymbeline. 
Dirge,  A:    "Rough  wind,  that  moanest  loud." — Percy 

B.  Shelley.— PGT  1 
Dirge,  A:    "The  glories  of  our  blood  and  state."     (Fr. 

The  Contention  of  Ajax  and  Ulysses.) — Jas. 

Shirley.— ELP— WEP  2 
(Death  the  Leveller.)— BNL  —  BPB  —  OB  — 

PGT  1— YBF— 
(Death's  Final  Conquest.)— EPs  (br.  sel.)— FEP— 

HBP— OS  2— SS 
(Death's  Triumph.)— CEL 
(King  of  Kings,  The.)— LH 
Dirge,  A:   "Ring  out  your  bells,"  etc. — Sir  Philip  Sid- 
ney.    See  Sidera. 
Dirge,  A:      "Now  is  done  thy  long  day's  work." — 

Alfred  Tennyson.— HBP— WEP  4 
Dirge,  A:   "Call  for  the  robin  redbreast  and  the  wren." 

(Fr.  The  White  Devil.)— J:  Webster.— ELP— 

FEP— OB 
(Land  Dirge,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Dirge   Concerning   the    Late   Lamented    King   of   the 

Cannibal  Islands,  A.— W:  A.  Croffut  — THP 
Dirge  for  a  Soldier.— G:  H.  Boker.— AA— ASL— BNL 

—  EDY  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HSS  1  — 

PAP  —  PAPm  —  PYO  —  YBF 
(Dirge  for  the  Soldier.)— BLP— LLC 
Dirge  for  a  Young  Girl.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— HBP— TAS 
Dirge  for  Dorcas.     (Abr. — The  Widdowes  Teares,  or 

Dirge  of  Dorcas — C.) — EPs 
Dirge  for  One  who  fell  in  Battle. — T:  W.  Parsons. — 

AA— GN— LLC 
Dirge  for  Summer,  A. — Sebastian  Evans. — VA 
Dirge  for  the  Soldier. — G:  H.  Boker.     See  Dirge  for  a 

Soldier. 
Dirge     for  the   Year.  —  Percy    B.    Shelley  —  CEL  — 

GN  (seZ.)- HBP— HS— YBF 
Dirge  for  Two  Veterans.     (C.) — Walt  Whitman. 

(Two  Veterans.)- GN— LH 
Dirge    for    Wolfram. — T:    L.    Beddoes.     See    Death's 

.Test  Book. 
Dirge  from  Cymbeline. — W:  Shakespeare.    See  Cymbe- 
line. 
Dirge   from   "The   White   Devil." — J:   Webster.     Sec 

Dirge,  A:    "Call  for  the  robin,"  etc. 
Dirge     from     Wallenstein. — Friedrich    Schiller.       See 

Wallenstein. 


91 


Dirge 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dirge  in  Cymbeline  [.The].— W:  Collins.— EPs—FEP 

— HBP— PHS— WEP  3 
(Fidele.)— OB 
Dirge  in  Woods. — G:  Meredith. — AVP 
Dirge  of  Alaric   the    Visigoth. — E:  Everett.— BNL — 

FEP  * 

Dirge  of  Gael,  The.— G:  Sigerson.— TIP 
Dirge  of  Imogen,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Cym- 
beline. 
Dirge  of  Jephthah's  Daughter,  The. — Rob't  Herrick. — 

HBP— WEP  2 
Dirge  of  Love. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Twelfth  Night. 
Dirge  of  O'Sullivan   Bear. — Jeremiah  J.   Callanan.-7 

TIP 
Dirge  of  Rorv  O'More. — Aubrey  De  Vere. — TIP 
Dirge  of  the  "Drinker,  The. — W :  Aytovm. — HPE 
Dirge  of  the  Householder,  The.— R:  S.  Powell.— TI. 
Dirge  of  the  Moolla  of  Kotal. — G:  T.  Lanigan. — NA 
Dirge  of  the  Three  Queens.-^W:   Shakespeare   or  J: 

Fletcher.     See  Two  Noble  Kinsmen,  The. 
Dirty  Old  Man,  The.— W:  Allingham.— BNL— CS  35 

—MRS 
'Dis  Den  I'll  Dink  of  Dou.— Oofty  Gooft.— DRR 
Di's  Mitten.     (Fr.   Captain  Jinks  of  the   Horee  Ma- 
rines.)—W:  C.  Fitch.— CG  1 
Disagreeable  Meddler,  The.— J :  Poole.— PS 
Disappointed  Ambition.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Disappointed     Heart,     The.        (Frags,     fr.     various 

authors. ) — BNL 
Disappointed  Lover,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Triumph  of 

Time.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — BNL 
Disappointed  Snowflakes,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Disappointment.       (Frags,     fr.     various     authors.) — 

BNL 
Disappointment. — Maria  G.  Brooks.     See  Zophiel;  or. 

The  Bride  of  Seven. 
Disappointment. — T.  S.  Collier. — AA 
Disappointment. — Kate  Kellogg. — DCP 
Disappointment. — .las.  R.  Lowell  (?). — LLC 
Disarmed. — Laura  R.  Searing. — AA 
Disaster.— C:  S.  Calverley.— BNL 

Disasters. — H:    W.    Longfellow.     See    Song    of    Hia- 
watha, The. 
Disastrous     Announcement,      A. — C:      Dickens.     See 

David  Copperfield. 
Disciples.   The,    Sel.    fr.     (Palermo.) — Harriet    E.    H. 

King.— VA 
Discipline.- — Anon. — CS  23 
(Soul  Sculpture.)— LLC 
Discipline.— G:  Herbert.- OB— YBF 
Discipline  of  Life  and  Character,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Discontent.  —  Sarah      O.       Jewett.  —  AD  —  CPL  — 

GMS  (abr.)  —  NV  (at.    to    Goolidge)  —  PoR  — 

TMR— WR  15  (sel.) 
(Discontented  Buttercup,  The.)— MYF 
Discontented  Girls,  The. — Mrs.  J.  E.  McConaughy. — 

StD 
Discontented  Leader,  The. — "Kathrina." — SR  10 
Discontented  Penduhim,  The. — Jane  Taylor. — EA 
Discontentment.     (7'a6.)— Anon. — BS  12— TCP 
Discord. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Disco'se  by  a  Colored  Man. — Anon. — MCS 
Discouraging. — D.  C.  Brewer. — CG  1 
Discourse  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Bosan.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Hoosier 

Schoolmaster,     Ch.     XII.) — E:     Eggleston. — 

BeR 
Discourse  Commemorative  of  Daniel  Webster,  A,  Br. 

sel.  fr.     (Eulogy  on  Webster.) — Rufus  Choate. 

— SE 
Discourse  Delivered  in  the  North  Dutch  Church,  1804, 

A.  SeU.  /r.— Eliphalet  Nott. 
Criminalitv  of  Duelling. — LLC 
Death    of   [Alexander]    Hamilton[,  The].  —  CS4  — 

HNS 
Discourse  on  Trees,  A.     (Walk  among  Trees.  A — C. — 

Experiences     of     Nature,     XXIV.)  — H:   W. 

Beecher. — AD  (abr.) 
(*'First  in  our  regard  as  it  is  first  in  the  nobility  of 

trees"— 8e;.)—HSS  1 
(Love  of  Trees— 8eZ.)—HSS  1 
(Motion  of  the  Leaves,  The— «ei.)— H8S  1 
Discour.«e  with  Cupid. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Celebration 

of  Charis,  A. 
Discourses    by    Way    of    Essays,    The,    Sel.    fr.     (On 

Solitude.)— Abraham  Cowley.— WEP  2 
Discovered. — Paul  L.  Dunbar. — AWH 
Discoverer,  The. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA — ASL — 

GP— TAS 
Discoverer  of  the   North   Cape,   The. — H:   W.   Long- 
fellow.—BFV—I,H 
Discoveries  of    Galileo. — E:    Everett.      See   Uses    of 

Astronomy,  The. 


Discovering  a  Leak.     (Tab.)- .\non.— BS  15— TCP 
Discovery  Day. — Hezekiah  Butterworth. — BLP 
Discovery  in  Biology,  A. — Mary  E.  Leverett. — CG  2 
Discovery   of   San    Francisco   Bay. — R:    E.    White. — 

CS28 
Discovery  of  the   Hudson   River,   The. — Washington 

Irving.     See   Knickerbocker    History    of    New 

York. 
Discovery  of  the  Mississippi,  The. — G:  Bancroft.     See 

History  of  the  United  States. 
Discovery    of    Tobacco,    The.     (Cigar    and    Tobacco 

World.)— FPh 
Discriminating    Love.      (Frags,   fr.  various    authors.) 

—BNL 
Discussion,  The. — Anon. — DR 
Discussion  at  the  "Rainbow,"  A. — G:  EHiot.     See  Silas 

Marner. 
Disdain  Returned— C.—T:  Carew.— FEP— HBP 
(SI.  obr.)- ELP— ES— WEP  2 
( Abr.)— EVa—OEh 
("He  that  loves  a  rosy  cheek" — abr.) — BNL 
(Proper  Woman,  A — abr.) — CEL 
(True  Beauty  [,The]— a6r.)— BFV— FTA— PGT  1 

—YBF 
(Unfading  Beauty,  The— a6r.)— OB 
Disenchantment.     (Fr.  Book  of  Day-dreams.) — C:  L. 

Moore. — AA 
Disenthralled,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— TS 
Disgusted    Dutchman,    The.     (Abr.    fr.    The    White 

Horse   of   the   Peppers,    Act    II.,    Sc.    3.) — S: 

Lover— SCS 
Dishonest  Politician,  The. — H:W.  Beecher.    See  Dem- 
agogue, The. 
Disillusion.— W :  Wilkins.— TIP 
Disillusionizing  of  Alexander  Oldworthy,  The.   (Sel.  fr. 

The    Course   of    True    Love    never   did   Run 

Smooth,  Pt.  III.)— C:  Reade.— WR  25 
Disobedience    of    Magistrates,    The. — Honors   G.    Ri- 

quetti,  Comte  de  Mirabeau. — PS 
Disobedience  to  the  Assembly. — Honor^  G.  Riquetti, 

Comte  de  Mirabeau.    See  On  the  Refusal  of  the 

Chamber  of  Vacations  of  Rennes  to  Obey  the 

Decrees  of  the  National  Assembly. 
Dispensary,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Sir  S:  Garth.— WEP  3 
Dispute,  A.— A.  L.  Mitchell.— PS— TT 
Disqualification   of   Roman   Catholics.     (Sel.   fr.   The 

Catholic  Question,  Feb.  22,  1793.)— H:  Grat- 

tan. — SS 
Dissertation  upon  Roast  Pig,  A.     (C. — in  Essays  of 

Elia.)— C:  Lamb.— MBL 
(Origin  of  Roast  Pig,  The.)— WCLG  1  (abr.) 

(SeZ.)— P:A— MHR— WR  1 
(Roast  Pig— seZ.)- OS2 
Dissibation." — Mark  Quencher. — DRR 
Dissolution  of  the  Union. — H :  Clay. — SSD 
Distance.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Distichs  and  Saws.     (Fr.  Hudibras  and  Miscellanies.) 

—S:  Butler.— WEP  2 
Distinction.- — Mark  A.  D.  Howe. — AA 
Distraught  for  Merop^. — R:  H.  Home.     See  Orion:  An 

Epic  Poem. 
"District  No.  9." — Frank  M.  Imbrie. — WR  13 
District    School,    The.— Edwin    H.    Chapin.— FD    1— 

PFP 
District  Schoolmaster,  The,  Billings  on. — H:  G.  Shaw 

District  Telegraph  Boy,  The. — L:  J.  Magee.— CG  2 
Distrust  of  laberty. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  Milton. 
Distrust  of  the  People. — Wendell  Phillips.     See  Scholar 

in  a  Republic,  The. 
Disturbance  in  Church,  A. — Anon. — CS  22  ' 

Disturbed    Reverie,    A.— Anon.— CS   2— DS— NPS— 

YA— YP 
Ditty[,  Al— Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Arcadia,  The. 
Ditty,  in  Praise  of  Eliza,  Queen  of  the  Shepherds,  A. — 

Edmund  Spenser.    See  Shepheardes  Calendar, 

The. 
Diva,  The.— S.  F.  Batchelder.— CG  2 
Divan,  The.— R:  H:  Stoddard.— A  A 
Dive,  The.— Cornelin  B.  Gould.— CG  2 
Diver,  The.— Felicia  D.  Hemans.— FP 
Diver,  The.— J:  F.  Herbin.— TCV 
Diver,  The.— Friedrich  Schiller.— CS  10— FR  (abr.)— 

HSS  3— MMR— MR— SPE  (seZ.)— SR  7 
Diversities  of  Judgment. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Essay  on 

Criticism. 
Diverted  Tragedy,  .\.— -Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Diverting  History    of    John    Gilpin,    The.     (C.) — W: 

Cowper.- BNL  —  BVC  —  FEP  —  GN  — 

HBP— MBL— PEB  .3— TUP 
(Facetious  Storv  of  John  Gilpin,  The.) — MHR 
(John  Gilpin.)— BPB  —  CGd  —  CS  7— PC— PHS— 

PSR— WCL 


92 


TITLE    INDEX 


Dolly's 


Divided. — David  Gray. — ^AA 

Divided.— Jean    Ingelow.— BIL    (6r.  sel.)—BS  19  (al. 

afrr.)— EPs— HBP— LLC 
Divina    Commedia. —  H:    W.     Lougfellow.  —  BNL  — 

YBF  {br.  sel.) 
Divination  by  a  Daffodil  [Daffodill— C.].     Rob't  Her- 

rick.— ELP 
Divine  Awe. — G :  E.  Woodberry. — AA 
Divine  Comedy,  The,  Sela.  fr. — Dante  Alighieri. 

Beatrice  Descending  from  Heaven.    (Wilstach's  tr.) 

— NE 
(Beatrice — tr.  unknown.) — WR  11 
Buonconte   di    Montefeltro.     (Wilstach's   tr.) — NE 
Count  Ugolino.     (Wilstach's  <r.>— NE 
Exquisite  Beauty  of  Beatrice.     (Wilstach's  tr.) — 

NE 
Divine  Comedy,  Story  of  the. — Kate  M.  Rabb. — NE 
Divine  Ejaculation. — .7:  Quarles. — HBP 
Divine  Love. — Gerhard  Tersteegen  (tr.  by.  J:  Wesley). 

EPs— HBP(se;.) 
(Love  of  God  Supreme,  The— seZ.')— BNL 
Divine  Providence  in  Nature. — Saint  John  Chrysostom. 

— FTR 
Divine  Rapture,  A. — Fs.  Quarles. — OB 

(Mystical  Ecstasy,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF       * 
Divinity.— Anon.— BS  22 
Dixie.— Albert  Pike.— AA— AWB 
Dizzy  Activities  of  the  Times,  The. — E.  Everett.     See 

Battle  of  Bunker  Hill,  The. 
Dizzy  Girl,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 
Djinns,  The,  Br.  ael.  fr. — Victor  Hugo  (tr.  by  J:L.  O'Sul- 

livan).— BNL 
Do  All  that  you  Can. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — SM 
Do  Good.— Anon.— HSS  2 
Do  Good.— Anon.— TFS 
Do  I  Love  Thee?— J:  G.  Saxe.— FLS— FTA 
Dome  Right,  and  Do  me  Reason.     (Fr.  A  Looking- 
glass  for  London  and  England.) — T:  Lodge. — 

ES 
Do  not  Sing  that  Song  Again. — H.  F.  TVIcDermott. — 

CS17 
Do  not  Tattle. — Annie  R.  White.— CPL 
'Do  not  will  me  from  my  love  to  flie." — Philip  Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Do  Right.— Anon.— PP—YFR 
Do  Right.— Anon.— YBT 
Do  Something.     (Three    Old    Saws- — C.) — Lucy    I^ar- 

com.—HP(ab/-.)— PP—YFR 
("If  the  world  .seems  cold  to  you" — sel.) — HSS  2 
Do  the  Duty  that  Lieth  nearest  thy  Hand. — Anon. — 

HS&3 
Do  You.— Anon.— FLS 

Do  you  Fear  the  Wind? — Hamlin  Garland. — AA 
Do  you  Know  how  many  Stars? — Anon. — PP — YFR 
Do  your  Best. — Anon. — KNS 

(A  br. )— DS— LPS— NPS— PP— PS— YA— YP 
Do  your  Best. — Anon. — TFS 
Do  your  Best. — Phoebe  Cary.     See  Obedience. 
Doctor  and  his  Apples,  The. — Anon. — CS  6 
Doctor  and    the    Lampreys,    The. — Horace    Smith. — 

CS26 
Dr.  Arnold's     Prescription.     (Dial.) — Anon.     (Ad.) — 

MPD 
Dr.  Birch  and  his  Young  Friends,  Sel.  fr.  (End  of  the 

Play,  The.)— BNL— EDY— FEP— GN(a6r.)— 

GP— HBP— OS  3— VA 
Dr.  Brown.     (Dial)— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— PS 

— TT 
Doctor  bv  Proxy,  A. — G:  C.  Graham. — GS 
Doctor  Cure-all.     (Plaii.)—S.  J.  Smith.— EE 
Doctor  Faustus.     (Faustus's  Last  Speech  on  Earth — 

sel.    fr.    Sc.    XVL)  —  Christopher  Marlowe. — 

WR  19 
(Last  Soliloquy  of  Faustus,  The.)— MRS 
Dr.  Hale  on  Emerson.- E:  E.  Hale.— MRS 
Doctor  in  Love,  The. — A.  McFarland.^GP 
Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr.  Hyde,  Sel,  fr. — Rob't  L.  Steven- 
son.    See  Dr.  Lanyon's  Narrative.  ■ 
Dr.  Johnny's  Visit. — Anon. — ASD 
Dr.  Jotham  Tindale's  Cue  a  Cure.— W:  W.  Tumbull. — 

CS23 
Dr.  Lanyon's  Narrative.     (Sel.  cond   fr.     The  Strange 

Case  of  Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr.  Hyde.  I— Rob't  L. 

Stevenson.— BS  2.5 
(Dr.  Lanyon's  Story— si.  diff.  cond.)— WR  16 
Dr.  Lanyon's  Story. — Robt'  Ly.  Stevenson.     See  fore- 
going. 
Dr.  Marigold,  Sels.  fr.—C:  Dickens.— BS  6 
(Cheap  Jack,  The— spZ.  /r.)— BS  6— SDR 
(Dr.  Marigold  and  his  Dumb  Girl — sel.  fr.) —  BS  6 

— FMR 
Dr.  Marigold  and  his  Dumb  Girl. — C:  Dickens.      See 

foregoing. 


Doctor  of  the  Old  School,  A. — J:  Watson.      See  Beside 

the  Bonnie  Brier  Bush. 
Dr.  Sevier,  Sels.  fr.—G  ■  W.  Cable. 
Fall  in!  I860.— BS  15 
Mary's  Night  Ride.— BS  13— SR  4 
Doctor's  Choice,  The.— Alice  M.  Ball.— StD 
Doctor's  Diploma  in  Court,  A. — Anon. — BS  19 
Doctor's  Story,  The.     (Cond.  fr.  The  Christmas  Gift 

that   Came   to    Rupert.) — Fs.    Bret    Harte. — 

BS20 
Doctor's  Story,  The  [or  A].     (Medical  World.)— BS  19 

— DCR 
Doctor's  Story,  The. — ^Bryan  W.  Procter. — VSG 

(Surgeon's  Tale,  The.)— CS  13— DS 
Doctor's  Visit.     (7)?ai.)— Anon.— PS— TT 
Dodge  Club,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Jas.  de  Mille.     See  Senator 

Entangled,  A. 
Doeg  and   Og.— J :   Dryden.     .See  Absalom  and  Achit- 

ophel. 
Does  a  Two-year-old  Baby  Pay? — Anon. — WR  4 
Does  it  Pay  to  Smoke? — Anon. — PTS 
Does  .lesus  Know? — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Does  the  Pearl  Know? — Helen  Hay. — AA 
Dog  and  his  Shadow,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KER 
Dog  and  the  Tramp,  The. — Eva  Best.— CS  .30 
Dog  and   the   Water-lily,   The.     (C.)—W:   Cowper.— 

BPB— CGd 
(Dog  (Beau)  and  the  Water-lily,  The.)— YBT 
Dog  (Beau)  and  the  Water-lily,   The. — W:  Cowper. 

See  foregoing. 
Dog  Days.    (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Dog  in  the  Manger,  The. — Mrs.   Russell  Kavanaugh. 

—KER 
Dog  Kindergarten,  The. — Anon. — CS  36 
Dog  of  Flanders,  A. — Louise  de  la  Ramd. — WR  ,S 
Dog  Partnership  Case,  A. — Anon. — WR  12 
Dog  Star.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Doge  of   Venice. — Lord   Byron.     See   Marino  Faliero, 

Doge  of  Venice. 
Doge's  Sentence,     The. — Lord     Byron.     See     Marino 

Faliero,  Doge  of  Venice. 
Dogmatic  Philosophy. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Dog's  Cold  Nose,  The.— Marg.  Eytinge.— SR  13 
Dog's  Confession,  The.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— WR  17 
Doing  and  Giving.     (Harper's  Mag.) — HSS  2  (sel.) 
(Gentle  Hints— sZ.  abr. )—DLS 
(Resolution.)— PTS 
Doing  for  Others.— E.  Schaeffer.- LLC 
Doing  Nothing. — Anon. — KNE 
Doing  Nothing. — Anon. — TFS 
Doketor's  Drabbles,  A.— G-  M.  Warren.— CS  1? 
Dolce  far  Niente.— C:  G.  Halpine.— HP 
Dolcino  to    Margaret. — C-     Kingsley. — BNL — FEP — 

TFY— WEP  4 
Doll  Babies.— Anon.— TT 
Doll  Drill.— A.  E.  Hurst.— ID 
Doll  Drill,  The.— Adelaide  Norris.— DR 
Doll  Drill.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
Doll  Poems.— W:  B.  Rands. 

DoUadine.     (I.  The  Picture— C.)—PoR 

Dressing     the     Doll.     (III.   Dressing     Her — C.) — 

PoR— VA 
Doll  Rosy's  Bath.— Anon.— LPS— PP— PS 
Doll  Show,  The.— Anon.— YFD 
Dolladine.     W:B.  Rands.     See  Doll  Poems. 
Dollar,  The. — Walter  S.  Logan.— WR  22 
Dollar.     (Fr.   Ascutney   Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Doll-baby  Show,  The.— G-  Cooper.— COS— PP 
DoUie.— S:  M.  Peck.— AWH 

DoUie  Harris  at  Greencastle,  Pa. — J.  H.  West. — SR  8 
Dolls'  Hospital,  The.     (Dial.)—E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— 

COS— PP 
Doll's  Lullaby,  The.— Anon.— WR  17 
Doll's  Sash,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Doll's  Tea-party,  The.— Anon.— DJS 
Doll's  Wedding,  The.— Kate  AUyn.— COS— PP 
Doll's  Wooing,  The.— Eugene  Field.— LS 
Dolly  and  Me. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Dolly  Days. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Dolly  Dialogues,  Sels.  fr. — Anthonv  Hope  Hawkins. 
Cordial  Relations.     (Ch.  II.)— WR  20 
Matter  of  Duty,  A.     (Ad.  fr.  Ch.  V.)— NDP 
Mv  Last  Chance.     (Ch.  VI.)— MRS 
Retribution.     (Ch.  III.)— WR  20 
Slight  Mistake,  A.     (Ch.  XVIII.)— WR  22 
That  Little  Wretch.     (Ch.  XVII.)— WR  19 
Dolly's  Bath.— Anon.— PS— TT 
Dolly's  Bedtime.^Anon.— PS— TT 
Dolly's  Broken  Arm. — Anon.— DST 


93 


Dolly's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dolly's  Doctor.  (Tafc.)— Anon.— COS— NFS— PP—YP 
Dolly's  Lesson.     (Youth's  Companion.) — TT 

(Teaching  Dolly.)— PS 
Dolly's  Lessons.— Anon.— DCP—DJS 
Dolly's  Mother,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Dolly's  Pocket.— Anoir—D-IS 
Dolly's  Toilet.— Anon.— TT 

Dolly's  Vaccination.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Dolly's  Wedding.— Anon.— WU  17 
Dolly-town. — Anon.— liSS  2 
Dombev  and  Son,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 
Birth  of  Dombey,  The.     (Fr.  C;h.  L) — CR 

(Birth  of  Little  Paul.  The.)— CS  37 
Death  of  Little  Paul  Dombey.     {Fr.  Ch.  XVI.)— 
BSll 
(Death  of  Little  Paul— a6r. )—CS  4 
(Death  of  Paul  Dombey.)— CR— CSS 
(Last  Hours  of  Little  Paul  Dombey,  The.) — PR 
Scene  at  Doctor  Bliniber's.     {Fr.  Ch.  XL)— CR 
Dome  of  the  Republic,  The.— Andrew  D.  White.— TMD 
Domestic  Asides;  or.    Truth   in    Parentheses.     (C.) — 
T:  Hood. 
(Truth    in    Parenthesis  \or  Parentheses]). — CS  4 — 
HSS  3— MHR— OM' 
Domestic  Birds. — .Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Domestic  Chaplain,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  A  Satire  Addressed 
to  a  Friend  that  is  about  to  Leave  the  Univer- 
sity, etc.)— J:  Oldham.— WEP  2 
Domestic  Economy.— Jas.  M.  Bailey. —  BS  14  —  CS  23 

— DS— SR  5 
Domestic  Economy.     {Punch.) — HPE 
Domestic  Episode,  A. — Anon. — WR  12 
Domestic  Event,  A. — F.  Fertiault. — LBB 
Domestic  Love.  (Woman  Contemplating  a  Household 

God.  A— C.)— G:  Croly.— FP 
Domestic  Mutual  Improvement. — Andrew  Stewart. — 

CS29 
Domestic  Poems. — T:  Hood. 

Good-night.    (No.  II.:  "The  sim  was  slumbering.") 

—HPE 
Parental  Ode  to  my  Son,  Aged  Three  Years  and 
Five  Months.     (No.  III.— C.)— HPE— THP— 
WEP  4 
(Ode  to  an  Infant  Son.)— WRD 
(Ode  to  my  Little  Son  )— CS  1— FEP 
(To  my  Infant  Son.)— BNL 
Serenade,  A.     (No.  IV.)— CS  26— HPE 
("Lullaby,  oh,  luUaby.")— FEP 
Domestic  Scene,  A. — Anon. — MYF 
Domestic  Tempest,  A. — Anon. — CS  18 — SR  1 
Domestic  Tutor's  Position,  The. — Jos.  Hall. — ESs 
Domestic  Wanted,  A.- — Anon. — FAD 
Domicile  Erected  by  John,  The. — Anon. — MHR 
(House  that  Jack  Built,  The.)— PTS  (a6r.)— SO 
(Modem   House  that   Jack   Built,   The.)— BNL— 

CS  3 
(Old,  but  Good.)— SR  2 
Domine,  qui  Simt  Pleiades  Curse. — C :  G.  D.  Roberts. — 

VA 
Domine,  quo  Vadis? — W:  Watson. — HBR 
Dominion,  Br.  sel.  fr.    ("Art  Tired?") — Jean  Ingelow. 

—HDL 
Dominion  Day. — J:  Reade. — TCV 
Dominion  of  Australia,  The. — Jas.  B.  Stephens. — VA 
Dominus  Illuminatio  Mea. — Anon. — OB 
Don  Carlos.     {SI.  aJbr.  fr.  Act  III.,  Scs.  9,  10.)— Fried- 
rich  Schiller  {tr.  by  Boylan).— FTR 
Don  Crambo.- Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  28 
Don  Garcia.    {In  Italy — the  book.) — S:  Rogers. — WRD 
Don  Juan,  Sels.  fr. — Lord  Byron. 

Daniel  Boone.     (Can.  VIII.,  sts.  61-66.)— BNL 
Dedication. — ESs 

Donna  Julia's  Letter.— WEP  4  (I.,  192-197.) 
(Don  Juan,  Sel.  fr.  Canto  I.)— BNL  (I.,  194.) 
(Man's  Love.)— FLS 
Evening.     (III.,  pt.  of  101,  102-108.)— BNL 
First   Love. —  BNL    (I.,    122-124,    126,    127.)  — 

GP  (»ame)— WEP  4  (I.,  122-127.) 
Haid^e  and  Juan.     (IV.,  1-16.)— WEP  4 
Isles  of  Greece,  The.     {Song  fol.  III.,  186.)— CEL 
— OB— PHS— PYO  («eZ.)— WEP  4 
(Degeneracy  of  Greece,  The — sel.) — SB 
(Glory  that  was  Greece,  The.) — LH 
(Song  of  the  Greek  Bard.) — AE 
(Song  of  the  Greek  Poet.)— BNL— FEP— HBP 
—OS  2 
Matrons  and  Maids.     (III.,  8.)— THP 
No  More.     (I.,  214,  215.)— GP 

(Nevermore — 214.) — EPs 
Rainbow,The.— (II.,  91,  92.)— EPs 
Shipwreck,  The.— (II..  49.)— VSG  (II.,  49,  51-53.) 
Twilight.— (III.,  102,  108.)— POS 


Don  Juan. — L.  H.  Foote. — AA 

Don   Pedro  and  Fair  Inez. — Rob't    C.   V.  Meyers. — 

CS30 
Don  Quixote. — Craven  L.  Betts. — AA 
Don  Quixote,  Sels.  fr. — Miguel  de  Cervantes-Saavedra. 
Don  Quixote  and  the  Huntress.     {Abr.  fr.  Pt.  II., 

Ch.  XXX.)— WRll 
Don  Quixote  and  the  Windmills.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I., 

Ch.  VIII.)— OS  2 
Sleep.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Ch.  LXVIII.)— OS  3 
Don  Quixote  and  the  Huntress. — Miguel  de  Cervantes- 
Saavedra.     See  Don  Quixote. 
Don  Quixote  and  the  Windmills. — Miguel  de  Orvantes- 

Saavedra.     See  Don  Quixote. 
Don  Quixote  in  England,  Song  fr. — H :  Fielding. 
A-JIunting  We  will  Go.     (C.)— OES 
{Diff.  vers.)- BNL— FEP 

(Hunting  Song,  A— seZ.)— BVC 
Donald.— H:  Abbey.— AA 
Donald. — Rob't  Browning. 

(Donald  and  the  Stag — cond. )—WR  1 
Donald  and  the  Stag. — Rob't  Browning.    See  foregoing. 
Donation  Party,  The. — Anon.— FAS 
(Parson's  Sociable,  The.)— CS  17 
Doncaster  St.  Leger,  The.— Fs.  H.  Doyle.— FEP 
"Don'd   Feel  too   Big!" — C:   F.   Adams.     See   Don't 

Feel  too  Big!" 
Done  For. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — AA 
Donkey  and  his  Panniers,  The. — T:  Moore. — HPE 
Donkey's  Dream,  The. — Anon. — SR  5 
Donna  Diana,  Sel.  ad.  fr.       (Pride  Against    Pride — 

diaZ.)- West  land  Marston. — NDP 
Donna  Julia's  Letter. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Donne. — Hartley  Coleridge. — EDY 
Donovans,  The.— Fs.  A.  Fahy.— TIP 
Don't.— E.  C.  Rook.— LPS— NPS—PP—YP 
Don't.— Nixon  Waterman.— DLF—TT—WR  21 
Don't  be  Afraid.— Dinah  M.  Craik.— YBT 
Don't  be  in  a  Hurry. — Anon.— NPS— YP 
Don't  Be  Mean,  Boys.— Rob't  J.  (?)  Burdette. — BS  14 
Don't  be  Sorrowful,  Darling. — Rembrandt  Peale. — GP 

(Faith  and  Hope.)— BNL 
Don't  Be  Sorry. — Anon. — BS  24 

"Don't  be  Tazin'Me."  —  Wade  Whipple.     See  Diffi- 
dence. 
Don't  Call  a  Man  a  Liar. — Anon. — DE 
"Don't  \(yr  Don'd]  Feel  too  Big!" — C:  F.  Adams. — 

BDD— CS  22 
Don't  Fret.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.- SYS 
Don't  Give  too  Much  for   the  Whistle.  {Sel.  fr.  The 
Whistler— a  better,  Nov.  10,  1779.)— B:  Frank- 
lin.— BLP  {si.  abr.  and  si.  diff.  fr.  others.) 
(Too  Dear  for  the  Whistle.)— LLC 
(Whistle,  The.)— WCLI  2 
Don't  Give  Up.— Phoebe  Gary.- BLF— GMS— TMR 
"Don't  Give  up  the  Ship." — Hester  Hunt. —  DS — YA 
Don't  Hesitate. — Anon. — SR  13 
Don't  Kill  the  Birds.— J.  Colesworthy. — NV 
Don't  Look  Sad. — Anon. — SSS 
Don't   Marry   a   Drunkard   to   Reform   Him. — H.    E. 

McBride.— MTD 
Don't  Say  It.— Anon.— PS— TT 
Don't  Speak  when  Angry. — Anon. — PS  {sel.) 

(Angry  Words.)— CS  25 
Don't  Stop  at  the  Station  Despair. — Joaquin  Miller. — 

FAS 
Don't  Talk  of  September.     (C.)— T :  H.  Bayly. 

(Hunting  Season,  The.)— THP 
Don't  Tell.— Eva  Best.— COS— PP 
Don't  Use  Big  Words.— Anon. — CS  25 
Don't  Wake  the  Baby.— Anon.— PS— TT 

(Baby  Sleeps,  The.)— TFS 
Don't  Worry. — Anon. — BS  26 

Don't  you  Think  So,  Bill?— Fred  E.  Brooks.— BS  25 
Don't  you  Wish  You  Knew?- A.  H.  B.— CG  2 
Doom  of  Claudius  and  Cynthia,  The.     (C.) — Maurice 
Thompson.— CS  22  (abr.)- SR  1 
(SeZ.)- FR— NC 
(Claudius    and    Cynthia— a6r.  )—BS    3— FTR— SC 
{diff.  abr.) 
Doom  of  Devorgoil,  The,  Sels  fr. — Walter  Scott. 

Bonny  [or  Bonnie]  Dundee.     (C) — LH — OS  2  {si. 
abr). 

(Sei.)- EPs— PYO 

(Bonnets  of   Bonnie   Dundee.) — FEP — HB— 
HBP— SO 
Datur  Hora  Quieti.      (Sun  upon  the  Lake,  The — 
O— PGT  1 
(Evening.)— BPB 
(Leonard  Tarries  Long.) — YBF 
Doom  of  King  Alcohol,  The.     {Tab.) — Clara  J.  Den- 
ton.— SSE 


94 


TITLE    INDEX- 


Drake's 


Doom-bar,  The.— Alice  E.  Gillington. — VA 
Doom-well   of   St.    Madron,    The. — R.   S.    Hawker. — 

PEB3 
Door  must  be  either  Open  or  Shut,  A,  Dial.  ad.  fr. 

(Open  or  Shut.)— Alfred  de  Musset.— NDP 
Door  of  Heaven,  The. — Anon. — CS  18 
Door  to  Memory's  Hall,  The. — Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton. — 

CS  19 
Doors,  The.— Lloyd  Mifflin. — AA 
Doorstep,  The.— Edmund  C.  Stedman.— AWH— CS  9 

— FP— FTA— OH— TAV 
(On  the  Doorstep.)— FEP 
Doorway  of  Sleep,  The.— Ethel  L.  Beers.— POS 
Dora.- T:  E:  Brown.— OB 
Dora.— Alfred  Tennyson.— AE  (6r.  seZ.)— BS  4— CGd 

— CS  5— HBR 
(Sobbing— 6r.  seZ.  )—SE 
Dora  versus  Rose. — Au.itin  Dobson. — THP 
Dorcas  and  Gregory.     (The  Physician  in  Spite  of  Him- 
self, Act  I.,  Scs.  1-4.) — Jean  B.  P.  de  Moli^re. 

— WRll 
"Dorinda's  sparkling   wit  and  eyes." — C:  Sackville, 

Earl  of  Dorset.— FEP 
(Song.)— WEP  2 
Doris. — C!larence  S.  Harper. — CG  .3 
Doris:  a  Pastoral.— Arthur  J.   Munby.— FEP— GP— 

HBP— VA 
Dormouse.    (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Doron's  Description  of  Samela. — Rob't  Greene.     See 

Menaphon. 
Doron's      Eclogue     Joined     with     Carmela's. — Rob't 

Greene.     See  Menaphon. 
Doron's  Jig. — Rob't  Greene.     <See  Menaphon. 
Dorothy. — Rose  H.  Lathrop. — AA 
Dorothy. — Arthnr  J.  Munby.     <See  Dorothy:  A  Coun- 
try Story. 
Dorothy :  A  Country  Story,  Sels.  fr. — Arthur  J.  Munby. 
Beauty  at  the  Plow. — VA 
Country  Kisses. — VA 
Dorothy. — VA 
Dorothy's  Room. — VA 
Dorothy  in  the  Garret.— J:  T.  Trowbridge. — BNL — 

MMR 
Dorothy  Q.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AA—BFV—EPs 
Dorothy's  Auction. — A.  G.  Plympton. — WR  9 
Dorothy's  Mustn'ts.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— TMR 
Dorothy's  Room. — Arthur  J.  Munby.     See  Dorothy: 

A  Country  Story. 
Dorry  Learns  to  Sew. — Sydney  Dayre. — CPL 
Dorus  to  Pamela. — Philip  Sidney.     See  Arcadia. 
Dost  thou   Look   Back?  —  Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In 

Memoriam. 
Dost  thou  not  Care?  —  Christina  G.  Rossetti. — HDL 
Dost  thou  Remember? — T:  Moore. — FTA 
Dot  and  Dolly.— Minnie  W.  Patterson.— CS  32— DS— 

YA 
Dot  Baby  off  Mine.— C:  F.  Adams.— AWH— BS  10  — 

CDV— CS  15— DRR— PTS— SDR 
Dot  Dutchman  in  der  Moon. — E.  C.  Thorpe. — BS  22 
"Dot  Funny  Leetle  Baby."— C:  F.  Adams.— BDD— 

DFY 
(Fred   Englehardt's   Baby — al.   abr.   and  al.   diff.) 

—HP 
Dot  Lamb.s  vot  [or  what]  Mary  haf  Got. — C:  F.Adams. 

— BDD— BS  4— CDV  (al.  a&r. ) —DFY— DJS 

—DRR— PS 
"Dot  Leedle  Loweeza." — C:  F.  Adams. — BDD — CH — 

CS20 
Dot  Leetle  Tog  under  de  Vagon. — Anon. — CDV 
Dot  Loaf  of  Bread. — "Carl  Pretzel."— BDD 
Dot  Long-handled  Dipper. — C:  F.  Adams. — AWH — 

GH— SR  12 
Dot  New  Song.— W:  H.  Head.— SR  11 
"Dot  Quied  Lotgings." — McDermott  and  Trumble. — 

DSS 
Dot  Shly  Leedle  Raskel. — Anon. — BDD 
Dot  Sunflower.— "Oof ty  Gooft."— DRR 
Dot  Surprise  Party.— Anon.— BDD— DFY 
Dot  Vinder  Dime. — Anon. — WR  14 
Dot  Young  Viddow  Clara. — "Carl  Pretzel."— BDD— 

DRR 
"Doth  then  the  world  go  thus,  doth  all  thus  move?" — 

W:  Drummond.— PGT  1 
Dot's  Christmas;  or,  the  Sober  Hat. — Emma  D.  Banks. 

—BR 
Dot's  New  Leaf. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SIj 
Dot's  Version  of  the  Text. — Anita  M.  Kellogg. — WR  2 
Double  Bed,  The.— Anon.— CS  7 
Double  Meaning. — Anon. — KNE 
Double  Play.     (Dial.)—C:  S.  Wavne.— CDs 
Double  Sacrifice,  The.— Arthur  W.  Austin. — CS  10 


Double  Sunflower,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 

Double-faced. — Anon. — MD 

Doubt. — Mary  B.  Chapman. — FLS 

Doubt.— Marg.  W.  Deland.— TAS 

Doubt— Helen  H.  Jackson. — TAS 

Doubt. — Rob't  C.  Rogers. — AA 

Doubt  of  Martyrdom,  A. — Sir  J:  Suckling. — OB 

Doubt  Resolved,  The.— Anon. — FLS 

"Doubt  which  ye  misdeem,  fair  love,  The." — Edmund 

Spenser.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Doubtful  Bank  Note,  The.     (Tab.) — Anon.— BS  15 — 

TCP 
Doubting. — Gertrude  M.  Downey. — LLC 
Doubting  Heart,    A. — Adelaide    A.    Procter. — BNL — 

BS  14— FEP— HBP— HDL— VA 
Douglas,  Sels.  fr.     (Trag.) — J:  Home. 

Norval.     (Sel.  fr.  Act  IL,  Sc.  1.)— BNL 

(Douglas'    Account    of    Himself — shorter   ael.) — 

LLC 
Scene  from  Douglas.     (Sel.  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  1  )— 

CSll 
Soliloqi^  of  Douglas — Solemnity. — AD 
Douglas. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Douglas,  Douglas,  Tender  and  True. — Dinah  M.  Craik 

— BNL— FP— PYO 
(Douglas,  Tender  and  True.) — LLC 
(Too  Late— C.)  — FEP  — FTA— HBP— VA—VS— 

YBF 
Douglas  Gordon. — F:  E:  Weatherly. — VA 
Douglas,    Tender   and   True. — Dinah   M.    Craik.     See 

Douglas,  Douglas,  Tender  and  True. 
Douglas  to  the   Populace  of  Stirling. — Walter  Scott. 

See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Douglas  Tragedy,  The.      (In  Border  Minstrelsy  and 

Percv's  Reliques.) — Anon. — BB — CEL — HBP 

— OEB— WEP  1 
(Brave  Earl  Brand,  The — diff.  vers.) — PEB  1 
(Child  of  EUe,  The— di^.  vers.)— FEP 
Dbuglas's  Account      of      Himself. — J:      Home.     See 

Douglas. 
Dove,  The.— J:  Keats.— OS  1 

(Song— C. )— CGd— LC— PoR 
Dove  of  Dacca,  The. — Rudyard  Kipl  Og. — GN 
Dover  Beach. — Matthew    Arnold. — AVP — SN — VA — 

WEP  4 
("Ah,  Love!  let  us  be  true!" — sel.) — BIL 
(Dover  Beach,  Sel.  /r.)— BNL— POS 
Dover  Cliff.— F.  Wyville  Home.— VA 
Dover  CliffTsl. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Lear. 
Doves  at  Mendon,  The. — Julia  C.  R.  Dorr. — FMR 
Doves  of  Venice,  The. — Laurence  Hutton. — AA 
Dowie  Dens    of    for    o']   Yarrow,    The.      (In  Border 

Minstrelry.) — Anon.'— FEP — HBP — PEB  2  (si. 

abr.) 
(Banks  o'  Yarrow,  The.) — BB — OEB 
(Dowie  Houms  of  Yarrow,  The — si.  abr.) — OB 
(  Versions  vary  si.  in  wording. ) 
Dowie  Houms    of    Yarrow,    The. — Anon.     See    fore- 
going. 
Down  a  Woodland  Way. — Mildred  Howells. — AA 
Down  around  the  River. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — RCR 
Down  by  the  Salley  Gardens.    (C.) — W:  B.  Yeats. 

(Old  SongResung,  An.)— VA 
Down  Grade,  The. — T:  R.  Thompson. — TS 
Down  in    the    Strawberry    Bed.— Clinton    Scollard. — 

TMR— WR  6 
Down  on  the  Farm. — G :  Thatcher. — TK 
Down  the  Bayou. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — AA 
"Down  the  dimpled  greensward  dancing." — G:  Dar- 

ley. — AE 
(Gambols  of  Children,  The.)— BNL— HBP 
Down  the  Little  Big  Horn. — Fs.  Brooks. — BAB 
Down  the  Road  to  Sally's. — C :  C.  Marsh. — CG  1 
Down  the  Stream. — Ellen  W.  Carey. — SR  6 
Down  the  Track.— Rose  H.  Thorpe.— FMR 
"Down  to  Sleep." — Helen  H.  Jackson. — GN — POS — 

YBT  (sel.) 
Down  with  the  Traffic. — Dwight  Williams. — CS  17 
Down-adown-Derry. — Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Downfall  of  Poland,  The.— T:  Campbell.     See  Pleas- 
ures of  Hope,  The. 
Dow's  Flat— 1856.— Fs.   Bret  Harte.— BNL— BS  2— 

CS  3 
Drafted. — Mrs.  H.  L.  Bostwick. — CS  5 
Dragon,  The.— Anon. — LPS— PP 
Dragon  Drink,  The. — E.  Murray. — WR  18 
Dragon  of  Wantley,  The. — Coventry  Patmore. — CGd 

—HBP 
Dragonfly,  The.— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
Dragon-fly,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Two  Voices.)— Alfred 

Tennyson. — SN 
Drake's  Dnun. — H:  Newbolt. — EDY— EHT 


95 


Drama 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Drama  for  Every-day  Life.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Drama  of  Exile,  A,  SeU.fr. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. 
"Live  and  love." — CS  1 
Tribute  to  Women,  A.— SAE 
Drama  of  Three,  A. — Anon. — CS  21 
Dramatic  Styles.     (Blqckwood's  Mag.) — SS 
Dramshop  or  the  Republic,  The. — Alary  T.  Lathrop'. — 

WR18 
"Draper  in  his  last  book  tries  to  prove."     (New  York 

Sun.)— GG 
Draw-bridge   Keeper,  The.— H:  Abbey.— CS  3— PEO 
Drawing  a  Long  Bow.^ — Ellen  Pickering. — MDD 
Dread  of  Death,  The.— (?)  Belford.— SR  9 
Dream,  A. — W:  Allingham. — VA 
Dream,  The.— Aphra  Behn.— WEP  2 
Dream,  The.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— VSG 
Dream,  The.— Lord      Byron.— BNL—FEP— HBP— 

WEP  4 
Dream.  A.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Dream,  The. — J:  Donne. — OB 
Dream,  A.— Ellen  S.  Hooper.— HSS  3 

(Duty.)— TAS 
Dream,  A. — Eliz.  C.  Kinney. — AA 
Dream,  A. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — FEP 
Dream  Children :  a  Reverie.     {Fr.  Essays  of  Elia.)— 

C:Lamb.— MBL 
Dream  Life,  Sel.  fr.  (Rain  in  the  Garret  —  br.  sel.  fr. 

Dreams  oi  Boyhood,  I.) — Donald  G.  Mitchell. — 

OS  2 
Dream  of  a  Blessed  Spirit,  A.— W:  B.  Yeats^— TIP 
Dream  of  a  Boy  who  Lived  at  Nine-elms,  The.     (C.) 

— W:B.  Rands. 
(Boy's  Dream,  A.)— TFS 
Dream  of  a  Smart  Boy,  The. — Anon. — CS  33 
Dream  of  Autumn,  A. — Frd'k  Tennyson. — PGT  2 
Dream  of      Clarence. — W:     Shakespeare.      See    King 

Richard  III. 
Dream  of  Darkness. — Lord  Byron.     See  Darkness. 
Dream  of  Death — Helena,  A. — Lucy  W.   Jennison'. — 

AA 
Dream  of  Easter,  A. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Dream  of    Eugene    Aram,    The. — T:    Hood. — BNL — 

CGd  —  CR  —  EDY  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  PEB  3 

SR  1— VA— VSG 
(Eugene  Aram — br.  sel.) — SE 
(Eugene  Aram's  Dream.)— CS  3 
Dream  of  Fair  Women,  A.     (Abr.) — Alfred  Tennyson. 

— BS19 
Dream  of  Flowers,  A. — Titus  M.  Coan. — AA 
Dream  of  Gerontius,   The.     (Sel.  fr.   Pt.   II.)— J:   H. 

Newman . — A  VP 
Dream  of  Home,  A. — Alice  Cary. — TAS 

("I  hear  a  dear,  familiar  tone" — sel.) — BIL 
Dream  of  Sister  Agnes,  The. — Anon. — DES 
Dream  of  Summer,  A.     (C.) — J:  G.  Whiitier. — AD 
(Bright  Days  in  Winter.)— POS 
(Hope  On— br.  «eZ.)— PS 
Dream  of  the  Boats,  The. — Helen  I.  Walbridge. — CG  3 
Dream  of  the  "Fat  Contributor." — A.  M.  Griswold. — 

CS6 
Dream  of  the  Prehistoric,  A.— Frd'k  G.  Scott.— TCV 
Dream  of  the  Reveler,  The.— C :  Mackay.— SR  2— TS 

(Reveler's  Dream,  The.)— WR  18 
Dream  of  the  Spani-sh  Admiral,  The. — S.  Dorman. — 

PAPm 
Dream  of  the  Universe,  A. — Jean  P.  Richter. — CS  21 
Dream  of  the  Unknown,  A.— Percy  B.  Shelley. — PGT  1 

(Question,  The— C.)— FEP— HBP— OB 
Dream  of  the  World  without  Death,  The.     (The  Book 

of  Orm,  Pt.  III.)— Rob't  Buchanan. — VA 
Dream  Peddler,  The.— Lucy  M.  Blinn.— CPL— SM 
Dream  Power,  The. — Anon. — LLC 
Dream  Rambles. — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  35 
Dream  that  Came  True,   The.     (Sel.   fr.  The  Dreams 

that  Came  True.) — Jean  Ingelow. — HS 
Dream  Tryst. — Fs.  Thompson. — VA 
Dreamer,  The.     (Fr.  Poems  by  a  Seamstress.) — Anon. 

—BNL 
Dreamer,  The.— Anon.— DST 
Dreamer,  The. — Alice  Furlong. — TIP 
Dreamer  and  Reaper,  The. — Jas.  H.  Ecob. — AD 
Dreamers,  The.     (Dia;.)— Anon.— DSS 
Dreamers. — Joaquin   Miller.     See  Ship  in  the  Desert, 

The. 
Dreamer's  Pipe,  The.     (New  Orleans  Times-Democrat.) 

— PPh 
Dreamin'  o'      Home.     (Dreaming     of     Home — C.) — 

Frank  L.  Stanton.— BS  21 
(SI.  diff.  v>ordino  fr.  Poems.) 
Dreaming. — Anon. — CG  1 

Dreaming  in  the  Trenches. — W :  G.  McCabe. — AA 
Dreaming  of  Home. — Frank  L.  Stanton.     See  Dream- 
in'  o'  Home. 


Dreaming,  Sweetly  Dreaming. — Alice   L.   Richards.— 

SL 
Dream-land. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — HBP 
Dream-love.— S:  M.  Peck.— FTA 
Dream-march. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Dream-pedlary.— T:  L.  Beddoes.— OB— VA— VS 

(Sel.)— WEP  4— YBF 
Dreams. — Anon. — HP 
Dreams. — Cecil  F.  Alexander. — TIP 
Dreams. — Alice  Cary — TAS 
Dreams. — S.  W.  Norris.     See  Dreams  for  Sale. 
Dreams. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Dreams. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Dreams  and  Realities. — Phoebe  Cary. — BNL — CS  6 
Dream's  Awakening,  A. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — TAS 
Dreams  for  Sale.— S.  W.  Norris.— WR  2 

(Dreams.)— CS  37 
Dreams:     On  the  Hunting  Ground. — D.  C.  Brewer. — 

CGI 
Dreams  that   Came   True,   The. — Jean    Ingelow.     See 

Dream  that  Came  True,  The. 
Dream-ship.  The. — Miriam  R.  Edmondson. — CG  3 
Dream-ship,   The.  — Eugene    Field.  — BS  25  — EF  — 

WR26 
Dreme,  The,  Sel. Jr.     (Prologue.)  —  Sir  David  Lynde- 

say.— WEP  1 
Dresden  Shepherdess,  A. — A.  B.  Houghton. — CG  1 
Dressed  for  the  Party.     (Taft.)- Anon.— COS— DS— 

NPS— PP— YA— YP 
Dressed  Turkey,  The.— Anon.— PP— PS— YPS 
Dressing  the  Doll. — W :  B.  Rands.     See  Doll  Poems. 
Dreyfus.— J:  H.  Ingham.— EDY 
Dried-up  Fountain,  The. — Rob't  Leighton. — VA 
Drifted  Out  to  Sea.— Rosa  H.  Thorpe.— HP 
Drifting.— H.  H.  Chamber! in,  Jr.- CG  2 
Drifting.— H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Seaweed. 
Drifting.— T:  B.   Read.— AA— AE  (br.  seZ.)- BNL— 

BS  10  —  CR  —  CS  1  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  GN  — 

GP— HBP— PYO— SA— SE— TAV 
Drifting  Away. — Barton  Gray. — FLS 
Drifting  Petal,  A. — Mary  McN.  Fenollosa. — AA 
Drill  of  the  Little  Patriots.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— 

DM 
Drimin  Donn  Dilis. — J:  Walsh.— TIP 
Drink!  Drink!  Drink !— Louise  S.  Upham.—CS  9 
Drink  to  me  only  with  thine  Eyes.     (The  Forest,  IX.) 

— Philostratus  (tr.  by  Ben  Jonson). — BNL 
(Song:— To  Celia— C.)— ELP— WEP  2 
(To  Celia. )— EPs— ES— FEP— FTA— HBP— OB— 

OEL— PGT  1— PYO— YBF 
Drink  To-day. — J :  Fletcher.    See  Bloody  Brother,  The. 
Drinking.     (C. — Anacreontiques,    II.) — Anacreon   (tr. 

by  Abraham  Cowley).— FEP  — HBP— OB  — 

WEP  2 
("Thirsty  earth  drinks  up  the  rain.  The" — si.  abr.) 

— LC 
Drinking  a  Farm. — H.  L.  Hastings. — PP— PS — SR  4 

—YPS 
Drinking  a  Tear. — Anon. — SR  4 
Drinking  Song. — Anon. — CG  1 
Drinking  Song,  A. — H:  Carey. — OB 
Drinking  Song.— B.  A.  Gould,  Jr.— CG  2 
Drinking  Song,  A. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — VS 
Drinking-house  over  the  Way,  The. — M.  L.  Nutting. 

— CS33 
Drink's  Doings. — Anon.- — TS 
Drive  On!  Drive  On!— W:  M.  Thayer.— CS  28 
Drive  the  Nail  Aright. — Anon. — SM 

(Persevere. ) — DI.,F 
Driving  a  Hen.     (Mobile  Register.) — SR  4 
Driving  Home  the  Cows. — Kate   P.   Osgood. — AA — ■ 

AWB  —  ASL  —  BNL  —  CS  1  —  FEP  —  HP— 

LLC— PAPm— TAV— TMD 
Driving  the  Cow.     (Burlington  Hawkeye.) — SR  3 
Drones  of  the  Community,  The. — Percy  B.   Shelley. 

See  Queen  Mab. 
Drooping-willow,  The. — I>etitia  E.  Landon. — HSS  1 
Drop,  Drop,  Slow  Tears. — Phineas  Fletcher. — BNL — 

FEP— YBF 
(Hymn,  A.)— HBP 
(Hymn,  An— C.)— ELP 
(Litany,  A.)— OB 
Drop   of   Dew,    A. — Andrew    Marvell. — BNL — EPs — 

HBP— POS  (sel.)— WEP  2 
Drop  of  Ink,  A. — Jos.  E.  Whitney.^AA 
Drop  of  Water,   The.— Harry  Stackpoole.— BS   19— 

TMR 
Drops.^Peter  Robertson. — DR 
Drops  of  Honey. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Drowned     Lovers,     The. — Anon. — EPs     (si.     ahr.) — 

PEB  2  (ahr.) 
(Willie  and  May  Margaret.) — BB 
(Three  diff.  vers,  of  same  ballad.) 


96 


TITLE    INDEX 


Dutchman's 


Drowned  Mariner,  The. — Eliz.  O.  Smith. — AA 
Drowne's  Wooden  Image.     (Sel.  fr.  Mosses  from  an 

Old  Manse.) — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — APr 
Drowning  Singer,  The.     (W.  music.) — Marianne  Farn- 

ingham.— PR 
(^br.)— NPS— YP 
(Last  Hymn,  The  —  no    music.) — BS  5 — CS  14 — 

FTR— SR  5 
Drug  Clerk's  Trials,  A.— Anon.— WR  7 
Druid,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— AA 
Druid  Song  of  Cathvah,  The.— J:  Todhunter.— TIP 
Drum,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Drum,  The. — Anon. — SE 
Drum,  The. — ^Eugene  Field. — LS 
Drum,  A. — Stanley  Waterloo. — CS  30 
Drum-call    in     1861,     The.  —  Elbridge   J.    Cutler.— 

MMR  (cond.) 
(Rising  of  the  People.)— WR  10 
Drumhead  Court-martial,  The. — Anon. — CS  32 
Drummer  Boy,  The.— Anon.— CS  4— HSS  1— LLC— 

PR— PS— TMD 
Drummer  Boy,  The. — Anon.— CS  32 
Drummer  Boy,  A.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Drummer  Boy  of  Kent,  The. — Anon. — WR  6 
Drummer  Boy  of  Mission  Ridge,  The. — Kate  B.  Sher- 
wood.—BS  14— WR  4 
Drummer  Boy's  burial.  The.     (Harper's  Magazine.) — 

BNL— DDR— WRD 
Drummer  of  Company  C,  The. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — 

CS33 
Drummer's  Bride,  The. — Anon. — CS  8 
Drunkard,  The.     (Real  Life.)— SR  1 
Drunkard,  The. — J.  O.  Rockwell. — LLC 
Drunkard,  The. — Jerome  Taylor. — SO 
Drunkard  and  His  Wife,  The. — Jean  de  la  Fontaine. 

— BC 
Drunkard's  Daughter,  The. — Eugene  J.  Hall.— BS  18 
Drunkard's  Death,  The. — C:  Dickens.     .See  Sketches 
.  by  Boz. 

Drunkard's  Death,  The.— I.  E.  Jones.— CS  17 
Drunkard's  Dream,  The. — Anon. — WR  18 
Drunkard's  Dream,  The. — C:  W.  Denison.— CS  11 
Drunkard's  Dream,  The.— Fs.  S.  Smith;— CS  10 
Drunkard's    Home,    The.     (Tab.)- Anon.— BS    12— 

TCP 
Drunkard's     Home,     The.     (Tab.) — Tony     Denier. — 

TDT 
Drunkards  not  all  Brutes.— J:  B.  Gough. — CS4— KNE 
Drunkard's    Repentance,    A.     (Arr.    fr.    Timothy    S. 

Arthur's   Ten  Nights   in    a    Bar-room,    Night 

the  Third;     Morgan's  Child.)— W:  W.  Pratt. 

— WR  18 
Drunkard's    "Ten    Commandments,"    The. — Anon. — 

CS15 
Drunkard's  Thirst,  The.— Anon.— CS  25 
Drunkard's  Wife,  The.— Elihu  Burritt.— CS  15 
Drunkard's  Wife,  The.— Ruth  Cooper.— CS  25 
Drunken  Engineer,  The.     (Occident.)— CS  36 
Drunken  Soliloquy  in  a  Coal  Cellar,  A.— Alf  Burnett. 

— CS2 
Drunkenness.— T:  (?)  Randolph.— KNE 
Drury's  Dirge. — Horace  Smith. — HPE 
Dry  be  that  Tear.— R:  B.  Sheridan.— TIP 
Dry  Experiment,  A. — J:  Neal.- — MHR 
Dryad  Song. — Marg.  Fuller. — AA 
Dryads,  The.— Leigh  Hunt.— PHS 
Dryburgh  Abbey. — C:  Swain. — FEP 

(Tribute  to  Sir  Walter  Scott.  A— sel.)— BS  11 
Dryden. — Craven  L.  Betts.— EDY 
Du  Bist  wie  Eine  Blume.     (Fr.  Pictures  of  Travel,  49 

— tr.) — Heinrich  Heine. — FTA 
Duality. — Arthur  S.  Hardy. — AA 
Dubious  "Old  Kriss,"  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Duchess  May. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Rhyme  of  the 

Duchess  May. 
Duchess  of  Malfi,The,  Sel.  fr.  ("  Hark,  now  everything 

is  still"— 6r.  sel.  fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  2.)— J:  Webster. 

— ELP 
(Shrouding  of  the  Duchess  of  Malfi,  The.)— OB 
Duchesse  Blanche.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Dethe  of  Blaunche — 

m.od. ) — Geoffrey  Chaucer. — EPs 
Ducks,  The.— Anon.— CPL 

Dude,  The.     (Acting  tab.)— Anon. — BS  12 — TCP 
Dude,  A.— Jos.  B.  Smiley.— CS  32 
Duel,  The.— Eugene  Field.— DJS—EF—LS 
Duel,  The.— T:  Hood.— EA— WRD 
Duel,  The. — R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  Rivals,  The. 
Duel  between  Mr.  Shott  and   Mr.  Nott,  The.     (Har- 
per's Weekly.) — CH 
(Mysterious  Duel,  A.)— CS  20— SR  5 
(Wonderful  Duel,  A— si.  abr.) — FS 
Duel  on  a  High  Tower,  A.— Anon.— CS  32— DS 


Dueling. — W :  Cowper.     See  Conversation. 
Duelist's  Honor,  The.— J:  England.— CS  5— SS 
Duelist's  Victory,  The.— G:  T.  Lanergan.— BS  12 
Duenna,  The,    Sel.  fr.     (Song:     "  Had  I  a  heart  for 

sorrow  framed" — Air  (C.)  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  I.) — 

R:  B.  Sheridan.— TIP 
Duet,  A.-^T.  S.  Moore.— OB 
Duet,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— PPh 
Duke  of  Gloster,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

Richard  III. 
Duke  of  Gordon's  Daughter,  The. — Anon. — BB 
Duke    of    Wellington,    The. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See 

Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. 
Dukite  Snake ;  an  Australian  Bushman's  Story,  The. — 

J:  B.  O'Reilly.— BS  6— CS  16— FR— SA 
Dule's  i'  this  Bonnet  o'  Mine,  The. — Edwin  Waugh. — 

BNL— FEP— HBP— VA 
Duluth. — Proctor  Knott.— CS  34 
Dum  Vivimus  Vigilamus. — C:  H.  Webb. — AA 
Dumb  Child,  The.— Anon.— CS  13— FEP 
Dumb  Savior,  The.— Mary  E.  Bryan.— BS  19 
Dumb    Soldier,    The.— Rob't  L.    Stevenson.— BFV— 

CGV— HSS  2 
Dumb  Wife,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Dumb-bell  Drill.— A.  E.  Hurst.- ID 
Dumb-bell  Drill.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
Dumb-waiter,  The.— F:  S.  Cozzens.— CS  7— MHR 
Dumpsy-Frumpsy. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Dumpy  Ducky. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Duncan  Gray.— Rob't  Burns.— FEP— PGT  1— WEP  3 

— YBF 
(Duncan  Gray  Cam'  here  to  Woo.) — BNL 
Duncan  Gray  Cam'  here  to  Woo. — Rob't  Bums.     See 

foregoing. 
Dunciad,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Alex.  Pope. 

(Description   of   Dulness,    The — sel.   fr.    Bk.    I.) — 

ESs 
(Dunciad,  The— sels.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— BNL  (br.  sel.) 

—WEP  3  (2) 
Dunderburg  Jenkins's  "Forty-graf  "  Album. — G:  Kyle. 

— WR3 
Dundreary  in  the  Country. — Anon. — CS  15 — SE  (sel.) 

(Lord  Dundreary  in  the  Country — sel.) — BS  13 
Duomo,  The. — Anon.— OS  2 
During  Music. — Arthur  Symons. — VA 
During  the  Quarrel. — Anon. — CG  1 
Dusky  Philosophy,    Sel.    fr.       (I.    A  Story  of   Seven 

Devils— C.) — Frank  R.  Stockton. 
(Uncle     Peter's    Masterly    Argument  —  cond.)  — 

WR15 
Dust,  The. — Gertrude  Hall.— AA 
Dust.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Dust  to  Dust. — G:.Croly.     See  Dirge,  A. 
Dusty  Miller,  The.    (C.)— Robt.  Burns. 

(Hey,  the  Dusty  Miller— afeo  C.)— LC 
Dutch  Advertisement . — Anon . — DCR — DR R 
Dutch  Flirtation:  Handkerchief  Drill.— Anon. — WDM 
Dutch  Governor,    The. — Washington       Irving.         See 

Knickerbocker  History  of  New  York,  The. 
Dutch  Lullaby    [.A].- Eugene     Field.— ASL— BNL— 

BVC— DCP— DR— NV 
(Wynken,     Blynken    and     Nod— C.)— AA— EF— 

GMS— HBR— PoR— WTD 
Dutch  Lullaby. — Howard  A.  Plummer.— CG  3 
Dutch  Oration  on  Women,  A. — Gus  Williams — DSS 
Dutch  Picture,  A.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BVC— LH 
Dutch  Recruiting  OflBcer,  A. — Anon — BDD 
Dutch  Security.— Anon.— CDV— DCR— SDR 
Dutch  Sermon,  A. — Anon. — BDD — DRR 
Dutchman    and    the    Raven,    The.- — Anon. — BDD — 

DCR 
Dutchman  and    the     Yankee,     The. — Anon — BDD — 

DFY 
Dutchman  in     England,    A. — Alex.    M.     Bell. — MHR 
Dutchman  in  the  Police  Court,  The. — Anon. — DRR 

(Yacob's  Losing  Deal.) — BDD 
Dutchman  who   Gave   Mrs.    Scudder   the   Small-pox, 

The.— Anon.— BeR— DFY 
(Dutchman's  Shmall  Pox,  The.)— DDR 
Dutchman's  Answer,  A. — Anon. — DFY — SDR 
Dutchman's  Cheese,  The. — Anon. — DS 
Dutchman's  Dog  Story,  A. — J:  T.  Brown. — AWH 
Dutchman's  Dolly  Varden,  The  [or  A]. — Anon. — BDD 

—BeR 
Dutchman's  Equal  Rights,  The. — Julia  B.   Nelson. — 

SR13 
Dutchman's  Experience,    The. — Anon. — BDD — DE 
Dutchman's  Family,  The. — C:  F.  Adams. — DRR 

(Mine  Vamily— sZ.  diff.  wording.)— BS  9— CS  21 
Dutchman's  Serenade,      The. — Anon. — BDD — CDV— 

CS  19— SDR 
(A6r.)— BS3— CRR 


97 


Dutchman's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dutchman's  Shmall    Pox,    The. — Anon.     iSee    Dutch- 
man who  Gave   Mrs.  Scudder  the  Small-pox, 
The. 
Dutchman's  Snake,  The. — Anon. — BDD — CS 11 — CRR 

— DFY 
Dutchman's  Speech  at  an  Institute,  A. — Anon. — BS  2 
Dutchman's  Telephone,  The.     (Detroit  Free  Press.) — 

BDD— CS  19 
Dutchman's  Testimony   in    a    Steamboat    Case,    A. — 

Anon.— BDD— CD— CDV— DFY— SDR 
Dutie  to     Depart. — Philip    Sidney.      See    Astrophel 

and  Stella. 
Duties  of   American   Citizens. — Daniel   Webster.     See 
Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 
Duties  of  Christianity,  The. — Louis  Kossuth. — MRS 
Duties  of  Massachusetts  at  the  Present  Crisis:  Foun- 
dation   of    the    Republican     Party,     Sel.  fr. 
(Judicial  Tribunals.) — C:  Sumner. — CS  3 
Duties  of  the  Scholar.     (Sel.  fr.  Sweetness  and  Light.) 

—Matthew  Arnold.— OS  3 
Dutifuls.  The.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Duty.     (Sel.  fr.  Voluntaries,  IIL)— Ralph  W.  Emer- 
son.—GN— OS  1 
("So  nigh  is  grandeur  to  our  dust.") — HSS  3 
Duty.— Ellen  S.  Hooper.— BNL—TAS 

(Dream,  A.)— HSS  3 
Duty.     (A6r.)— Friedrich  Schiller.— CS  27 

(Fame— dt#.  abr.)—GP 
Duty.— C.  M.  Sheldon.— SSS 
Duty. — W :  Wordsworth.     See  Ode  to  Duty. 
Duty  and  Fame. — Alex.  Smith. — HDL 
Duty  and  Inclination. — Anon. — YBT 
Duty  of  America  to  Greece. — H :  Clay.     See  On  the 

Greek  Revolution. 
Duty  of  Labor,  The.— Anon.— HSS  3 
Duty  of  Literary  Men  to  America. — T-  S.  Grimke. — 
PFP 
(Duty  of  Literary  Men  to  their  Country.) — HNS 
(Our  Country— «eZ.)—CP— FAS— OS  2 
Duty  of  Literary  Men  to  their  Country. — T:  S.  Grimke. 

See  foregoing. 
Duty  of  the  American  Scholar. — G :  W.  Curtis. — CS  6 

(4br.)— KNE— SO 
Duty  of  the  Enlightened  Classes.— J:  D.  Long. — FD  1 
Duty  of  the  Hour,  The.      (Sel.  fr.  a  speech  delivered 
before  the  National  Association  of  Manufac- 
turers, New  York,  Jan.  27, 1898.)— W:  McKin- 
ley.— SSD 
Duty  to  One's  Country.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Inflexible  Cap- 
tive.)— Hannah  More. — SS 
(Patriotism.)— TMR 
Duty  to  our  Country. — Dan'l    Webster.     See   Adams  ' 

and  Jefferson. 
Duty's  Reward. — Anon. — HP 
Dux's  Speech.     (The  Phoenix.)— CF 
Dwainie.     (Song  fr.  The  Flying  Islands  of  the  Night, 

Act  I.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— AA 
Dwarf,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Dyin'  Vords  of  Isaac— Anon. — BDD— BeR — DFY — 

DRR 
Dying. — Roden  Noel. — VA 

(Old,  The.)— OB 
Dying  Actor,  The.— Edgar  Fawcett. — CS  15 
Dying  Alchemist.  The.     (C.)— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— 
CS  6— FP 
(Xbr.)- FR— PS 
(Soliloquy    of    the    Dying    Alchemist — si.    abr.) — 
WRD 
Dying  Bard,  The.— Walter  Scott.— EPs 
Dying  Boy,  The.— Anon.— CS  5 
Dying  Boy,  The.— J:  B.  Gough.— DS— NPS— YP 

(Poor  Little  Boy's  Hymn,  The.)— CS  19 
Dying  Brigand,  The. — Anon. — CS  5 
Dying  Captain,  The. — Anon. — SR  7 

(After  the  Battle.)— CS  9— DS— PRR 
Dying  Chief,  The.— W:  Sawyer.— CS  35 
Dying  Child,  The.— Dora  Greenwell.— PC 
Dying  Child,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.- CS  24 
Dying  Christian,  The. — Alex.  Pope.     See  following. 
Dying  Christian  to  his  Soul,  The.    (C.) — Alex.  Pope. — 
BNL  —  CEL  —  CR  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  — 
OB  —  OM  —  SAE  («e/.)—  SO  —  SS  —  WR  26 
— YBF 
(Dying  Christian,  The.)— BS  1— CS  14 
Dying  Day,  The.— Mary  A.  Lathbury. — TAS 
Dying  Fireman,   The. — Walt  Whitman.     See  Song  of 

Myself. 
Dying  Girl.  The.— R:  D.  Williams.- TIP 
Dying  Girl  to  her  Lover.  The.     (Last  Words  —  C.) — 

Winthrop  M.  Praed.— AVP 
Dying  Gladiator,     The. — Lord     Byron.     See     Childe 
Harold's  Pilgrimage. 


Dying  Hymn.     (C.)— Alice  Cary.—  BNL  —  CS  8  — 

GP— HDL— TAS 
(Her  Last  Verses.)— FEP 
Dying  in  Harness.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— AE—TAV 
Dying  Kid,  The.— W:  Shenstone.— WEP  3 
Dying  King,    The.     (Sei.)— Alex.    Smith.— OS  2 
Dying  Lover,  The.— R.  H.  Stoddard.— ASL 
Dying  Man  in  his  Garden,  The.— G:  Sewell.— FEP 
Dying  Patriot's    Request,    The. — C.    M.    Brosnan. — 

SR8 
Dying  Saviour,  The.— Paul  Gerhardt. — BNL 
Dying  Soldier,  The.— R:  Cox.— HR 
Dying  Speech  of  Marino  Faliero. — Lord  Byron.     See 

Marino  Faliero,  Doge  of  Venice. 
Dying  Street  Arab,  The.— Matthias  Barr.— CS  8 
Dying  Trumpeter,  The. — Julius  Mosen. — BLP 
Dying  Words    of    Stonewall    Jackson,    The. — Sidney 

Lanier.— EDY 
Dynamite  Plot,  A.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  32 
Dynamiter's  Daughter,   The. — E.   S.   Jackson. — CS  29 

NPS— YP 
Dynmouth  Fisherman,  The. — Anon. — MYF 


E.  B.  B.     (O— James  Thomson.— AVP 

(To  E.  B.  B.)— EDY 
E    Pluribus    Unum.— G:    W.   Cutter.- CS  3— KNE— 
PPSr 
(Sel. )— BLP— DFR— LLC 
Each  and    All.— Ralph    W.    Emerson.— AA— BNL— 
FEP— FP— GMS— HBP— LLC— OS  3— PHS 
—SO 
Epch  and  All. — Minot  J.  (7)  Savage. — LLC 
Each  and    All.     W :    Shakespeare.     See    Measure    for 

Measure. 
"Each  Day  and  Every  Day." — Anon. — HSS  2 
"Each  Moment  Holy  Is."— R:  W.  Gilder.— TAS 
Each  Sorrowful    Mourner. — Aurelius    Prudentius    (tr. 

by  J:M.  Neale).— HBP 
Eagle,  The.— G:  W.  Doane.— TFS  (sel.) 

(What  is  that.  Mother?)— WRD 
Eagle,  The.     A   Fragment. — Alfred   Tennyson. — BNL 

— CS  14— EPs— GN— OS  1— SN— SO 
Eagle  and  the  Spider,  The.— Ivan  A.  Kriloff.- MYF 
Eagle  of  Corinth,  The.  (Co»ui.)— H :  H.  Brownell.— BAB 
Eagle  of  the  Blue,  The. — Herman  Melville. — AA 
Eagle  Screams,  The. — Anon. — CS  31 
Eagles.     (Sel.  fr.  Songs  of  the  Voices  of   Birds — Intro- 
duction.)— Jean  Ingelow. — BVC 
Eagle's  Fall.  The.— C.  G.  Whiting.— AA 
Eagle's  Flight,  An.— H.  Bedinger.— BS  21 
Eagle's  Nest,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Nests— Lecture  VIII.,  Sec. 

205,  «/.  abr.)- JrRuskm.- OS  1 
Eagle's  Rock,  The.— Anon.— BS  3— CS  8— FMR  (ahr.) 
Eagle's  Song,  The.— R:  Mansfield.— MRS  (si.  ahr.)— 

PAPm 
Ear  of  Com,  The.     (Tr.  by)  Blanche  W.  Bellamy  and 

Maud  W.  Goodwin.— OS  1 
Earine. — Ben  Jonson.     See   Sad  Shepherd,  The. 
Earl  March  Look'd  on  his  Dying  Child.     (Song — C.) — 

T:  Campbell.— PGT  1— YBF 
Earl  Mar's     Daughter. — Anon.     See     Earl    of    Mar's 

Daughter,  The. 
Earl  Mertoun's  Song. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Blot  in 

the  'Scutcheon,  A. 
Earl  Norman  and  John  Truman. — C:  Mackay. — VA 
Earl  o'    Quarterdeck,    The.       (C.) — G:    Macdonald. — 
BNL— EPs— HBP— HSS  2 
(Yerl  o'  Waterydeck,  The— diff.  vers.)— FEB  3 
Earl  of  Marlborough.       (Frags,   fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Earl  of  Mar's  Daughter,  The. — Anon. — PEB  2 
(Earl  Mar's  Daughter— «i.  afer.)- BB— GN 
(Lang,  varies  somewhat  in  diff.  versions.) 
Earl  of   Richmond    to    his    Army,    The. — W:   Shake- 
speare.    See  King  Richard  III. 
Earl  of  Strafford's  Defence,  The,  Sel.   fr. — T:  Went- 
worth.  Earl  of  Strafford. — SS 
(Strafford's  Defence   against  the  Charge  of  High 
Treason — ptly.  same.) — OS  3 
Earl  of  Warwick,  The.      (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Earl  Richard. — Anon.— PEB  1 
Earl   Richard.    (Diff.    ballad.)  —  Anon. — See    Young 

Redin. 
Earl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve.— ^Hjalmar  H.  Boyesen. — 
BS  23  (si.  abr.) 
(Jarl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve.) — WR  8 


TITLE    INDEX 


Ecclesiastical 


Earliest  Recollection.      (Terrible    Infant,    A  —  C.) — 

Frd'k  Locker-Lampson. — DCP 
Earliest  Spring.— W:  D.  Howells.— OB 

(In  Earliest  Spring — C.) — AA 
Early  Autumn. — Dart  Fairthorne. — PEO 
Early  Bird,  The.— Anon.— DCR 
Earlv  Bird,  The.     (C.)— G :  Macdonald. 

(Anxiety.)— NV 
Early  Bluebird,  An. — Maurice  Thompson. — AA 
Early  Christmas  Morning. — Mary  B.  Peck. — BS  7 — HS 
Early  Death.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Early  Death.  (Sel.  fr.  Reply.)— Hartley  Coleridge.— OB 
Early  Fly,  The.— Anon.— DSS 

Early  Friendship. — Aubrey  De  Vere.— BNL — HBP 
Early  Goldenrod.— Abbie  F.  Judd.— POS 
Early  Love. — S:  Daniel.     See  Hymen's  Triumph. 
Early  Love  of  the  Country  and  of  Poetry. — W:  Cow- 

per.     See  Task,  The. 
Early  Miss  Crocus. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow. — PS — 

TT 
Early  News. — Anna  M.  Pratt. — AA 
Early  Primrose,  The.— H:  Kirke  White.— BNL 

(To  an  Early  Primrose.)— FEP 
Early  Rising.— J:     G.     Saxe.— AWH— CS  4— HBR— 

KNE— SO— SR  13— THP 
Early  Spring. — Alfred  Tennyson. — SN 
Early  Spring. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Early  Start,  An.— Helen  Chaffee.— BS  20 
Early  Work.— Sarah  K.  Bolton.— TAS 
Earnest  Cry,  An.— Mrs.  F.  D.  Gage.— TS 
Earnest  Suit  to  his  Unkind   Mistress  not  to  Forsake 
Him,  An.     (C.)— Sir  T:  Wyatt.— BNL— ELP 
(Appeal,  The.)— OB 
(Lover's  Appeal,  The.)— CEL— PGT  1 
Earnest  Views  of  Life.     (Ad.) — Austin  Phelps. — BS  12 
Earning  a  Dinner. — Matthew  Prior. — HPE 
Earth,  The. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — A  A 
Earth.     (Br.    eel.    fr.    The       Bashful    Earthquake.)— 
Oliver  Herford.— THP 
(Proem.) — A  A 
Earth.— W:  C.  Roscoe.— VA 

Earth  and  Man,  The.— Stopford  A.  Brooke.— TIP 
"Earth  has  not   anything  to  show   more   fair." — W: 
Wordsworth.— HBR 
(Composed    upon    Westminster   Bridge,    Sept.    3, 

1802— O— WEP4 
(Morning  in  London.)— HBP— OS  3 
(Sonnet  Composed  upon  Westminster  Bridge.) — 

BNL— FEP— MBL 
(Upon  Westminster  Bridge  [,Sept.  3, 1802].)— OB— 

PGT  1— YBF 
(Westminster  BridgeJ— LLC— WR  1 
Earth  Spirit,  The.— W:  E.  Channing.— EPs 
Earth  to  Earth. — Michael  Field. — VA 
"Earth  with    its    bright  and  glorious   things,  The." 

— H:  N.  Oxenham.— AVP 
Earthly   Paradise,  The,  SeU.  fr.—W:  Morris 

Antiphony.     (Song  fr.   August:  Ogier  the  Dane.) — 

VA 
Atalanta's  Race.     (March:  title  C.) — HBP 
(Atalanta  Conquered — sel.) — BNL 

(Atalanta's  Defeat.) — VA 
(Atalanta's  Victory — sel.) — VA 

(Atalanta  Victorious — shorter  sel.) — BNL 

Christmas  Carol.     (Song  fr.  September:  Land  East 

of  the  Sun  and  West  of  the  Moon.)— CEL 

(Minstrels  and  Maids.) — GN 

Earthly  Paradise,  The.     (Apology,  An — C.) — AVP 

(Singer's  Prelude,  The.)— VA 
King's  Visit,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  March:     The  Man 

Bom  to  be  King.) — VA 
Land  across  the   Sea,  A.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  July:     Th& 

Watching  of  the  Falcon.) — VA 
March.  (Br.  sel.  fr.  March.)— BNL 
Song:     To     Psyche.     (Song    fr.     May:     Story    of 

Cupid  and  Psyche.  J — VA 
Writing  on  the  Image,  Tne.     (May — title  C. — cond.) 
WR6 
Earthquake  in  Egypt,  The. — Anon. — CD 
Earthquake  Prayer,  The.     (C.)— Will  Carleton. 

(Prayer,  The.)— CD 
Earth's  Angels. — Anon. — CS  24 
Earth's  Axis,  The.— Anon.— DSS 
Earth's  Burdens. — Ernest  C:  Jones. — VA 
Earth's  First   Mercy,   The.     J:   Ruskin.     See   Modern 

Painters. 
Earth's  Noblemen. — G:  S.  Bungay. — CS  20 

(Noblest  Men,  The— si.  diff.  uers. )—HSS  3 
Earth's  Tribute.— J:  B.  Tabb.— TAS 
East. — Anon. — CP 

East  and  the  West  One,  The. — Lyman  Beecher. — BS  2 
East  Wind,  The.— H:  S.  Washburn.— POS 


Easter.- G:  Herbert.— EPs  (seZ.)- HBP 

(Sel.— si.  diff.)— OB 
Easter.— Frank  D.  Sherman.- TAS 
Easter. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Amoretti  and  Epitha- 

lamion. 
Easter. — David  Swing. — FS 
Easter.— J:  B.  Tabb.— TAS 

Easter  Altar-cloth,  The.— Julia  H.  Thayer. — HS 
Easter  Angels. — Phillips  Brooks. — FHS 
Easter  Bells. — Ninette  M.  Lowater. — DFR 
Easter  Buds.— Wood  L.  Wilson.— TL 
Easter  Dawn. — Lucy  Larcom. — TAS 
Easter  Day.     (2   poems.) — Arthur  H.   Clough. — AVP 
Easter  Drill.— Alice  C.  Fuller.— ID 
Easter  Eve  at  Kerak-Moab. — Clinton  Scollard. — BS  23 
Easter  Even. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — EDY 
Easter  Exercises. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — SSE 
Easter  Flowers. — Anon. — FHS 
Easter  Flowers. — Clara  J.  Denton — DFR — LL 
Easter  Greeting. — Anon. — TFS 

("May  the  glad  dawn" — abr.) — FHS 
Easter  Hymn,  An.— T:  Blackburn.— HBP— OS  3 
Easter  Hymn.  —  C:   Wesley.  —  CEL  —  FHS  (sel.)  — 
WEP3 
(Lord  is  Risen,  The.)— FEP 
Easter  in  a  Hospital  Bed. — Nym  Crinkle. — DES 
Easter  Island.— Frd'k  G.  Scott.— TCV 
Easter  Joy. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Easter  Lilies.— G:  W.  Crofts.— FHS 
Easter  Lilies.— Emily  H.  Miller.— TFS 
Easter  Lily.An.- A.  W.  Hawks.— CS  34 
Easter  Memory,  An.— W:  C.  Roberts.— TCV 
Easter  Mom.— R.  W.  Wright.— TCV 
Easter  Morning.     (C.)—G :  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 

(Reverie  in  Church.)— BS  3— CS  10— NPS— YP 
Easter  Moming. — H:  W.  Beecher. — BS  17 
Easter  Moming. — Fs.  L.  Mace. — BS  6  , 

Easter  Morning.— Louise  C.  Moulton. — DFR 

(For  Easter  Moming.) — TAS 
Easter    Morning. — Edmund    Spenser.      See   Amoretti 

and   Epithalamion. 
Easter  Music. — Marg.  W.  Deland. — TAS 
Easter  Phantasy,  An. — W.  T.  Mclntyre.— CG  3 
Easter  Poem,  An. — Marion  Riche. — CS  28 
"Easter  praise  may  falter.  The." — Mary  L.  Dickinson. 

—FHS 
Easter  Service,  An. — Clara  J.  Denton. — SSE 
Easter  Song,  An. — Susan  Coolidge. — SR  7 
Easter  Song,  An.— T.  W.  Handford.— TFS 
Easter  Song,  The.— Alice  C.  Steele.— YBT 
Easter  with  Parepa,  An. — Myra  S.  Delano. — BS  22 
Easter  Wreath,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— SSE 
Eastern  Apologue,  An. — Anon. — WCLG  2 
Eastern  Legend,  An. — Grace  D.  Goodwin. — WR  17 — 

YBT 
Eastertide.     (Splendor  of  Lilies,  The — C.) — Marg.  E. 

Sangster.— SR  13 
Easter-tide  Deliverance,   An.    A.D.    430. — Maria    H. 

Bulfinch.— BS  12— SR  4 
Easy  Charade. — Anon. — EuE 
Easy  Lessons. — Phoebe  Cary. — BLF 
Easy  Life,    The.     (Paranseticall,    or    Advisive    Verse, 
to  his  Friend,  Mr.  John  A.  Wicks — C.) — Robt. 
Herrick.— CEL 
"Easy  thing,  O  Power  Divine,  An." — T:  W.  Higgin- 

son.     See  Things  I  Miss,  The. 
Easy  Wife,  The.— Anon.— CS  23 
Eating  Song.     (Punch.)— HFE 
Eavesdropper,  The. — Bliss  Carman. — ASL 
Ebb  and  Flow.— G:  W.  Curtis.— AA— ASL 
Ebenezer  on  a  Bust. — Anon. — DFY 
Ebo.— A.  C.  Gordon.— WR  7 
Ecce  in  Deserto. — H :  A.  Beers. — AA 
Ecclesiastes,  Sel  fr.  (Remember  now  thy  Creator — Ch. 

XII.)— BiWe.— BS  4— LLC  (1-7.) 
Ecclesiastes.— G:  H.  Clarke.— TCV 
Ecclesiastical  Sonnets,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Wordsworth. 
Alfred  and  his  Descendants.     (Pt.  I.,  Sons.  XXVI. 
and  XXVII.)— EHT 
(Alfred— XXVI. )— EDY 
Laud.     (Pt.  11.,  Son.  XLV.)— EDY 
Pilgrim    Fathers,  The.      (Pt.  III.,  Son.  XIII.— 
Aspects  of  Christianity  in  America,  I.) — EDY 
—EHT 
Walton's  Book  of  Lives.     (Pt.  III.,  Son.  V.)— BNL 
Wicliffe.     (C— Pt.  II.,  Son.  XVII.)— EDY 

(John  Wickliffe— «eZ.)— BNL 
William  the  Third.     (Pt.  III.,  Son.  IX.)— EDY 
Within  King's  CoUeee  Chapel,  Cambridge.  (Pf .  II., 
Son.  XLIII. — Inside  of  King's  College  Chapel 
— O— PGT  1 
(Ecclesiastical  Sonnets,  Sel.  fr.) — BNL  (br.  sel.) 


Ecclesiasticism 


AJ^  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Ecclesiasticism.      (Frags,  jr.  various  authors.)  — BNL 

Echo,  The.— Anon.— CPL 

Echo.— L.  V.  Hall.— AD 

Echo. — J :  Milton.     See  Comus. 

Echo.     (O— T:  Moore.— TIP— WEP  4 

(Echoes.)— PGT  1  * 
Echo.— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— FTA— PGT  2 
Echo. — J :  G.  Saxe.     See  Ego  et  Echo. 
Echo,  An.     (Riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
Echo  and  Narcissus.     (SI.  abr.)—T:  Bulfinch.— SPE 
Echo  and  Silence.— Sir  S:  E.  Brydges.— BNL— FEP— 

GP 
Echo  and     the     Ferry.  —  Jean     Ingelow.  —  BS  11  — 
CR  (si.  abr.)—EA  (abr.  and  arr.)— PR— WR  1 
Echo  and  the  Lover. — Anon. — BNL 
Echo  Club,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Bayard  Taylor. 
Ballad  of  Hiram  Hover,  The.— AWH 
Ode  on  a  Jar  of  Pickles.)— AWH 
Palabras  Grandiosas. — AWH — THP 
Echo  Dell.— Mrs.  H.  M.  Miller.— PR 
Echo  from  the  17th,  An.— Frank  T.  Easton. — AWH — 

CG2 
Echo  from  Willowwood,  An. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — 

VA 
Echoes. — T:  Moore.     See  Echo. 
Echoes  from  Bethlehem. — Anon. — HS 
Echoes  from    the    Sabine    Farm,    Sels.    fr. — Eugene 
Field.— AA 
To  Leuconoe  (2  poems). — AA 
To  the  Fountain  of  Bandusia. — AA 
Echoing  Green,  The.  (In   Songs  of  Innocence.) — W: 

Blake.— LC 
Echo's  Lament    for   [or   of]    Narcissus. — Ben    Jonson. 

See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
Echo's  Secret.     (Trinity  Tablet.)— CG  1 
Eclipse,  The.— J.  S.  Cutler.— CG  1 
Eclipse  of  Faith,  The. — Theodore  D.  Woolsey. — AA 
Eclipse  of  the  Sun,  The.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Eclogue,  December  26,  1613,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Donne. 
Love.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  St.  9.)— EPs 
Recluse  Hermit,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Introd.) — EPs 
Eclogue  the  First.       (Fr.  Rowley  Poems.) — T:  Chat- 

terton.— WEP  3 
Eclogue  the  Third.     (Fr.  Rowley  Poems.)— T:  Chat- 

terton.— WEP  3 
Eclogues. — G:  Wither.     See  Shepherd's  Hunting,  The. 
Economical  Boomerang,  An. — W.  H.  Neall. — CS  32 
Economy.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE— SCS  (si.  abr.) 

(Overdone  Economy.) — CS  34  (abr.) 
Economy  is  Wealth. — Anon. — FND 
Ecstasy,  The.— J:  Donne.— EPs— OB  (sel.) 
Ecstacy. — Eric  Mackay. — VA 
Eddie  Visits  the  Barber. — E.  C.  and  L.   J.   Rook. — 

COS— PP 
Edelweiss. — Mary  L.  Dickinson. — BS  23 — PFP 
Eden.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Edgar  W.  Nye.— Marion  F.  Ham.— EDY 
Edgeworth.      (Fr.   Ascutney    Charades.)  —  Julia    A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Edifying  Reflections  of  a  Tobacco-smoker. — Anon. — 

PPh 
Edinburgh  after  Flodden.     (In  Lays  of  the   Scottish 
Cavaliers.)- W:     E.     Aytoun.— FEP— HB— 
MR 
(^br.)- CS  12— CSS— EHT 
(SeZ.)— EDY— FR  (shorter.) 
(James  IV.  at  Flodden— «eZ.)—AVP 
Edith.— W:  E.  Channing.— AA 
Edith,  Br.  sd.  fr.  ("  O  love  and  death.")  —  Felicia  D. 

Hemans. — BIL 
Edith's  Complaints. — Anon. — WR  17 
Edith's  Secret.— J.  K.  Ludlum.— LPS— PP 
Editor's  G  lests.  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Makin'  an  Editor  outen 

o'  him.)— Will  Carleton.— CS  13 
Editor's  Trials,  An. — Anon.— DCD 
Editor's  Wooing,  The.— Rob't  H.  Newell.— THP 
Edmund  Burke. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Retaliation. 
Edmund  Burke. — Emma  M.  Prindle. — SR  7 
Edmund  Burke  and   his  Son's  Horse. — Anon. — KNE 
Edmund  Burke's    Attack    on    Warren    Hastings. — J: 

Wolcott.— HPE 
Edmund  Spenser.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Edmund  Spenser. — W;  Browne.     See  Britannia's  Pas- 
torals. 
Edmund's  Song. — Walter  Scott.     See  Rokeby. 
Edna's   Birthday.— E.   C.   and    L.   J.   Rook.— COS— 

PP 
Edom  o'  Gordon.     (C. — in  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 
—OB 
(SI.  o6r.)— BB— WEP  1 
(Adam  o'  Gordon — abr.) — BFV 
(Captain  Car — diff.  vers.) — PEB  1 


Educate  the  Masses. —  Wendell  Phillips.     iSee  Scholar 

in  a  Republic,  The. 
Educating  to  a  Purpose.- — T:  P.  Montfort. — GH 
Education. — Schuyler  Colfax. — CS  7 
Education. — T:  Huxley.     See  Liberal  Education  and 

where  to  Find  It,  A. 
Education.     (2    diff.    sels.) — Horace    Mann. — SAE — 

SSD 
Education. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Stones  of  Venice,  The. 
Education,  Sel.  fr.  (Poetry  of  Science,  The  —  fr.  What 
Knowledge    is   of   most    Worth?)  —  Herbert 
Spencer.— CS  26 
Education  as  Related  to  Civic  Prosperity. — Anon. — 

CP 
Education  of  Nature,  The.— W-  Wordsworth.— PGT  1 
(Lucy.)  —  BFV  —  GN  —  HBP  (II.)  —  IR  (II.)  — 
OB  (IV.)— PHS— WEP4(II.) 
(SeZ.)— EPs— OS  3 
(Three     Years    She     Grew.)— BNL— FEP— GP— 

MBL 
("  Three  years    she  grew  in  sun  and  shower.") — 
SN 
Educational  Courtship.     (Somerville  Journal.) — CS  25 
— DS 
(What  he  Called  it.)— GH 
Educational  Power. — Anon. — SE 

Edward,    Edward.      (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — 
BB— OB— PEB  1 
(Antique  s^e.)— FEP— HBP 
(Edward  of  the  Bloody  Brand — si.  diff.  vers,  by  Sir 

David  Dalrymple,  Lord  Hailes.) — CEL 
(Sometimes  regarded  as  part  of  The  Twa  Brothers.) 
Edward  Gray.— Alfred  Tennyson.— CR— CSS 
Edward  of  the  Bloody  Brand. — Sir  David  Dalrymple, 

Lord  Hailes.     See  Edward,  Edward. 
Edward  Rowland  Sill.— Anon.— CP 
Edward  the  Second,  Sels.  fr. — Christopher  Marlowe. 
Edward    II.      (Sel.    fr.    Act    I.,    Sc.    2;    Sc.    4— 

cond.)— WR  11 
King  Edward  the  Second.     (I.,   1 — abr.;  V.,   1 — 
3,  abr.)- EHT 
Edward  VI.— W:  Wordsworth.- EDY 
Edwin  and  Angelina.  —  Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Vicar 

of  Wakefield,  The. 
Edwin  and  Paulinus. — Anon. — BNL 
Edwin  Booth.— Parke  Godwin. — MRS 
Edwin  the  Fair,  Sels.  fr. — Sir  H :  Taylor. 
Scholar,  The.     (Br.  scZ. )— BNL 
Voice  of  the  Wind.     (Br.  sel.)— FOS 
(Wind  in  the  Pines,  The.)— VA 
Effect  at  a  Distance. — Johann  W.  von  Go°the.    (Page 

and  the  Maid  of  Honour,  The.)— WR  8 
Effect  of    American    Example. — Rob't    C.  Winthrop. 

See  Centennial  Oration, 
Effect  of  Example.     (C.)— J:  Keble. 

(Example.)— BNL— CS  7— SM— SSS  (abr.) 
Effect  of  Intemperance,  The. — Anon.- — WR  25 
Effect  of  Oratory  on  a  Multitude.  (?)  Croly.— FP 
Effective  Narration,  An. — Anon. — CS  37 
Effects  of    Crime    and    Grief.      (Frags,    fr.    various 

authors.) — BNL 
Effects  of  Spring.     J:  (?)  Wilson.— AD 
Effects  of  War,  The.— "Ceria."— SDD 
EfBe's  Reasons.- — Phcebe  Gary. — BLF 
Effigy,  The.— P.  P.  S.— CG  2 
Effort  of  Memory,  An.     (Fr.  The  Jest  Book.) — Anon. 

—MRS 
Effusion  by  a  Cigar  Smoker. — Horace  Smith. — PPh 
Egeria. — W:  Winter. — TAS 

Egg  a  Chicken,  An.     (Youth's   Companion.) — LPS — 
PP— PS 
(Miracle  of  the  Egg,  The.)— CS  34 
Egg  Himting. — T:  Hughes.     See  Tom  Brown's  School 

Days. 
Eggs,  The. — Tomas  de  Yriarte  Or.  by  G.  H.  Devereux). 

—HPE 
Eggs  and  Birds.— W:  B.  Rands.— HSS  2— PCJ— TFS 
Eggs  and  the  Horses,  The. — Anon. — BNL 
(Who  Rules  the  Household?) — CS  26 
Eggs  that  never  Hatch,  The. — Anon. — DS — YA 
Ego  and  Echo. — J :  G.  Saxe.     See  following. 
Ego  et  Echo.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— BS  13— TMR 
(Echo.)— BNL— CS  20— PTS 
(Ego  and  Echo.)— SA  (si.  abr.)— SR  1 
Egotism. — E.  S.  Martin. — AA 

Egyptian  Debate.     (Dial.)—A]i.     Burnett.- HD— SD 
Egyptian  Lotus,  The.— Arthiu-  W.  H.  Eaton.— AA— 

TCV 
Egyptian  Serenade.— G:  W:  Curtis.— GP — HBP 
Egyptian  Slippers. — Edwin  Arnold. — WR  16 
Eh!      What  is  It?     (DtaZ.)- Anon.— KH— MPD 
Eheu  Fugaces.— R :  H.  Barham.— HPE 


100 


TITLE    INDEX 


Elizabeth 


Eidola.— S:  Daniel.— ES—OEL 

(Song.)— ELP 
Eight  Hours.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Eight  Hundred  Leagues  on  the  Amazon,  Sel.  jr.  (Joan 

Docasta — ael.  fr.  Ch.  XVII.) — Jules  Verne. — 

NP 
Eight  Volunteers.— Lansing  C.  Bailey.— ED Y—PAPm 
1898—  and  1562.— Sam  W.  Foss.— PAPm 
Eighteenth-century  Fan,  An. — Raymond  W.  Walker. 

— CG3 
Eileen  Aroon.— Gerald  Griffin.— OB— TIP 
Eileen  aRoon.— Carol  O'Daly.— FEP 
Ein  Deutsches  Lied.     (Parody  on  Excelsior.) — Anon — 

BDD— DFY— DRR 
Ein  Traumbild.— C.  W.  Yeomans.— CG  1 
Ej  Blot  Til  Lyst.— W:  M.  Payne.— AA 
El  Camilo.— Minna  Irving.- WR  2 
El  Canalo.— Bayard  Taylor.— WR  2 
El  C^apitan-General.— C:  G.  Leland.— AA 
El  Dorado. — Grant  Showerman. — CG  2 
El  Vaquero. — L.  H.  Foote. — AA 
Elaine. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Elam  Chase's  Fiddle.— R.  C.  Tongue.— CS  32 
Elder    Brother,    The,    Sel   fr.      (Toby  Tosspot.)— G: 

Colman,  the  i/ounger. — BNL — CS  15— -SCS 
Elder  Brother,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Beauty  Clear  and  Fair.) — 

J:  Fletcher.— ELP— HBP— OB— OEL 
(To  Angelina.)— ES 
Elder  Lamb's     Donation. — Will     Carleton. — AWH — 

WR4 
Elder  Mr.   Weller  Delivers  Some  Critical   Sentiments 

Respecting    Literary    Composition,    The. — C: 

Dickens.     See  Pickwick  Papers. 
Elder  Scripture,  The.     (Septuagesima  Sunday — C.) — 

J:  Keble.— HBP  (seZ.) 
(Who  Runs  May  Read.)— VA 
Elder  SnifHe's  Courtship.— Frances  M.  Whitcher. — SR  6 
Elderly  Gentleman,  The.^G :  Canning. — NA 
Eldorado.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— HBR— OS  2 
Eleanor. — J.  H.  Boynton. — CG  1 
Eleanor  of  Castile. — -Anon. — EDY 
Eleanore. — Alfred  Tennyson. — WEP  4 
Elective  Course,  An.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— HBR 
Electra,  Sel.  fr.  (Chariot  Race,  The — poet.  tr.  by  E :  Bul- 

wer-Lytton.) — Sophocles. — TMD 
(Prose  tr.)— MRS 
Electra.— F.  H.  Williams.— AA 
Election  of  the  Future,  The.     (Detroit  Free  Press.) — 

BS20 
Election  Stump  Speech. — Sam  Sharpley. — MDD 
Electric  Episode,    An.     (Dramatic.) — Helen    Booth. — 

CS6 
Elegiac.     (C.) — Jas.  G.  Percival. — AA 

(It  is   Great  for    our    Country    to    Die.) — FEP — 

HBP 
Elegiac  Stanzas  rSuggested  by  a  Picture  of  Peele  Cas- 
tle in  a'Storm- C.]— W:  Wordsworth.— FEP 

(si.  abr.) 
(Nature  and  the  Poet.)— PGT  1 
(On  a  Picture  of  Peel  Castle  in  a  Storm — si.  abr.) — 

HBP 
Elegy:    "I  have    lov'd    flowers   that    fade."  —  Rob't 

Bridges. — VA 
Elegy:  "Oh,  snatched  away  in  beauty's  bloom."     (In 

Hebrew  Melodies.)— Lord  Byron.— PGT  1 
(Oh  [wr.  Ol,  Snatched  away  in  Beauty's  Bloom — C.) 

—BNL— FEP— HBP— WEP  4— YBF 
Elegy,  An:     "Though  bsauty  be  the  mark  of  praise." 

— Ben  Jonson. — OB 
Elegy  in     a     Country     Churchyard. — T:     Gray.     See 

Elegy  Written  in  a  Country  Churchyard. 
Elegy  on  a  Friend's  Passion    for  his  Astrophill,  An. 

(C.) — Matthew  Royden. 
(Lament  for  Sir  Philip  Sidney.)— EDY 
(On  Sir  Philip  Sidney— «eZ.)—EPs 
(Sir  Philip  Sidney— a6r.)— BNL 
Elegy  on   Captain  Matthew  Henderson.     ("O  Death 

thou  tyrant    fell    and    bloody!" — C) — Rob't 

Burns.— BNL  (abr.)— FEP— HBP  (si.  abr.) 
(He's  Gane— sei.)- EPs 
Elegy  on  Cowley  (Mr.  Abraham  Cowley's  Death  and 

Burial  amongst  the   Ancient  Poets — C),  Sel. 

/r.- Sir  J:  Denham.— WEP  2 
(Abraham  Cowley — br.  sel.) — BNL 
Elegy  on  De  Marsay. — .Tas.  K.  Stephen. — AVP 
Elegy  on    Madam[e]   Blaize. — Oliver   Goldsmith.     See 

Elegy  on  the  Glory  of  her  Sex,  etc. 
Elegy  on  Mistress  Elizabeth  Drury.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Anat- 
omy of  the  World — Second  Anniversary:  Of 

the  Progress  of  the  Soul.) — J:  Donne. — EPs 
Elegy  on  Mrs.  Mary   Blaize. — Oliver  Gold.smith.     See 

Elegy  on  the  Glory  of  her  Sex,  etc. 


Elegy  on  my  Muse,  Sel.  fr.  (Pleaturos  ctf.  Hsa^fjn,  The 
— Eupheme,  IX.) — Ben  Jonson. — FP 

Elegy  on  Partridge.  (A  Grub  Street^  Elegv  on  the 
Supposed  Death  of  Partridge 'the  .\lmar-a'!k. 
Maker,  1708 — C.) — Joiiiohan^^'JY'fV-— ^"5?-       ' 

Elegy  on  Sir  Philip  Sidney,  An. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord ' 
Brooke.— WEP  1  (abr.) 
(On  Sir  Philip  Sidney.)— EPs 

Elegy  on  the  Death  of  a  Mad  Dog  [An]. — Oliver  Gold- 
smith.    See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 

Elegy  on  the  Death  of  Dr.  Channing. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. 
—TAS 

Elegy  on  the  Death  of  John  Keats,  An. — Percy  B. 
Shelley.     See  Adonais. 

Elegy  on  the  Death  of  Lady  Penelope  Clifton,  An,  Sel. 
fr.  (Lady  Penelope  Clifton.) — Fs.  Beaumont. 
—EDY 

Elegy  on  the  [tw.  that]  Glory  of  her  Sex,  Mrs.   Mary 
Blaize  [wr.   BlazeJ,    An.      (C.)— Oliver    Gold- 
smith.—NA—PPSr—THP 
(Elegy  on  Madam[e]  Blaize,  An.)— BNL— LLC 
(Elegy  on  Mrs.  Mary  Blaize,  An.)— FEP— HBP 

Elegy  on  Thyrza.- Lord  Byron.— PGT  1 

■  ("And  thou  art  dead,  as  young  and  fair" — C.) — 

WEP  4 
(Stanzas.)— FEP 

Elegy  on  William  Cobbett.— Ebenezer  Elliott.— EDY— 
VA 

Elegy  to  the  Memory  of  an  Unfortunate  Lady. — Alex. 
Pope.— FEP— OB— WEP  3 

Elegy  Written  in  a  Country  Churchyard.  (C.)—T: 
Gray.—  BFV  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  CS  8  —  EPs 
— FP  —  FTR  (w.  1  add.  st.)  —  GMS  —  GN  — 
GP  —  HBP  —  LLC  —  MBL  —  OB  —  OS  3  — 
PGT  1- PHS— PSR— SE— WCLG  2— WEP  3 
(Elegy  in  a  Country  Churchyard.)— FEP— MRS 

Elegy,  Written  in  a  Railway  Station.  (Punch.) — 
HPE 

Elegy — Written  in  Spring.     (Sel.) — Michael  Bruce. — 
FP 
(Spring  Pointing  to  God— vtly.  same  sel.) — AD 

Element  of  Justice,  The.— G:  W.  Curtis. — LLC 
(Ideas  the  Life  of  a  People.) — CS  3 

Elements,  The. — J:  H:  Newman. — VA 

Elements  of  National  Wealth,  The.  (Sel.  fr.  Can  the 
Country  Sustain  the  Expense  of  the  War  and 
Pay  the  Debt  which  it  Will  Involve?) — Jas.  G. 
Blaine.— NC—PFP 

Elements  of  Success.  (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.)  — 
BNL 

Elements  of  the  American  Government. — Dan'l  Web- 
ster. See  Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill 
Monument. 

Elena's  Song. — Sir  H:  Taylor.  See  Philip  van  Arte- 
velde. 

Elephant,  The.— Hilajfe  Belloc— BVC 

Eleventh  Hour,  The.— Anna  L.  Ruth.— CS  6 

Eleventh  Song. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.  See  Astrophel  and 
Stella. 

Elf  and  the  Dormouse,  The. — Oliver  Herford. — AA — 
PoR 

Elf-child,  The.— Jas.   W.   Riley.— AWH— BR— BS  16 
SR  6— THP 
(Little  Orphant  Annie— C.)— AA— CS  33— OS  1— 
RCR— TMR 

Elf-child  and  the  Minister,  The.     (Arr.  fr.  The  Scarlet- 
Letter,  Ch.  8.)— WR  2 
(Sel.  fr.  Ch.  7,  8.)— CR 

Elfin  Cruise,  An.— J.— CG  1 

Elfin  Lamps. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 

Elfin  Song.— Jos.  R.  Drake.     See  Culprit  Fay,  The. 

Elia.— E.  J.  McPhelim.— PYO 

Eliab  Eliezer. — Jas.  Roann  Reed. — CS  32— HP 

Eligible  Situation,  An. — T:  Archer  and  J.  C.  Brough. — 
DT 

Elijah,  Br.  sel.  fr.  ("What  is  ministerial  success?") — 
Frd'k  W.  Robertson.— GG 

Elijah  and  the  Prophets  of  Baal.  (First  Kings,  Ch. 
I.,  17-40.)— B*Ze.—BS  13 

Elijah  and  the  Rain.— E.  Murray. — SSE 

Elijah  Brown.- Anon.— WR  22 

Eliot's  Oak.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— AD 

Elisha  Kent  Kane.— G:  H.  Boker.— EDY 

Elixir,  The.— G:  Herbert.— EPs— FEP 
(A6r.)— GN— HDL 

Elixir  of  Life,  The.— W :  McGill.— WR  6 

Elizabeth. — Lizette  Woodworth  Reese. — TAV 

"Elizabeth,  Aged  Nine."     (C.) — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — 
OSl 
(Old  Sampler,  The— sZ.  afer.)— CS  13 

Elizabeth  at  Tilbury.— Fs.  T.  Palgrave.— OS  3 


101 


Elizabeth 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


:  •.    •  Elizabath  of  Bchomia.— Sir  H :  Wotton.— BPB— EPs 
.   '^  '— OB— PGT  1— YBF 

.    (On,  his,  Mistress,  the    Queen  of  Bohemia — C.) — 
1,..  ;  .  •",  KLP-WP?2     • 
;-  t  . '  t  W"  his.Mis^^pe&s,  'Elizabeth,  Queen  of    Bohemia.) 

— BNL 
(To  his  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohemia.) — FEP 
'  (You  Meaner  Beauties.) — HBP 
Elizabetha   Regina. — Fulke    Greville,    Lord    Brooke. 

See  Caelica. 
Elizabethan  Poets.     (Fr.  Essays  on  the  English  Poets.) 

— E.  B.  Browning.— MRS 
Ella.— T:  Chatterton.     ^ee^Ua. 

Ella  Wheeler   Wilcox.      (Lecture    recital,    with   recita- 
tions.)—Gr&ce  B.  Faxon.— WR  26 
Ellen  Brine  of  AUenburn.— W:  Barnes.— PGT  2 
Ellen  Irwin;  or,  the  Braes  of  Kirtle. — W:  Wordsworth. 

— PEB3 
Ellen  McJones    Aberdeen.— W:    S.    Gilbert.— CS  24— 

THP 
Elm,  The.— H.  H.  B.— AD 
Elm.  The.— N.  S.  Dodge.— HSS  1 

(In  Convention  of  Michigan  Trees.)— AD 
Elm  Blossom.     (Hours  at  Home.) — AD 
Elm  versus  Apple. — May  R.  Smith. — AD 
Elmer  Brown. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Elocution.— N.  H.  Gillespie.— CS  9 
Elocution  Class,  The.— G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Elocution  Lesson,  The.— Fs.  Nash.— BS  23 
Elopement  in  Seventy-five. — Anon. — B&20 
Eloquence. — Lewis  Cass. — KNE — SC  6 
Eloquence. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Adams  and  Jeffer- 
son. 
Eloquence.     (Br.  sel.) — Amelia  B.  Welby.— KNE 
Eloquence  and  Logic— W:  C.   Preston.— CS  7 — KNE 

— SS 
(On  Eloquence — si.  abr.) — BS  15 
»        Eloquence     of     Action,     The. — Dan'l     Webster.     iSee 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Eloquence  of  John  Adams,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.     See 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Eloquence  of  Nature,  The.— S:  F.  Smith.— POS 
Eloquence  of  O'Connell. — Wendell  Phillips.     See  Dan'l 

O'Connell. 
Eloquence  of  Revolutionary  Periods,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — 

Rufus  Choate.— WR  10 
Eloquence  or  Oratory. — Jos.  Story. — SR  2 

(Advice  to  an  Advocate.) — KNE 
Eloquence  that  Persuades. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — 

(vS  22 
Elsie's  Burglar.     (DiaZ.)— NDP 
Elsie's  Child.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.- CS  26 
Elsie's  Soliloquy.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— COS— PP— 

PS 
Elsinore.— B.  A.  Gould,  .Jr.— CG  1 

Elspeth's  Ballad. — Walter  Scott.     See  Antiquary,  The. 
Elspie  and    Philip. — Arthur   H.  •  Clough.     See    Bothie 

of  Tober-na-Vuolich,  The. 
Elswitha. — Mary  Barry. — HP 
Elusive  Dollar  Bill,  The.— H.  L.  Wilson.— GH 
Elusive  Nature.— H:Timrod.—SN 
Elves'  Dance,  The.— Anon.— ELP 
Elvira,  Sel.  fr.     (Song:  "See,  O  see!")— G:  Digby,  Earl 

of  Bristol.— ELP 
Elwood's  Decision.— H.  E.  McBride.— DDD 
Emancipation  from  British  Dependence. — Philip  Fre- 

neau. — AWB 
Emancipation  of    Man,    The. — Rob't    J.    Burdette. — 

CRR— CS  24— NPS— SR  5— YP 
Emancipation  Proclamation,  The      (Proclamation   of 

Emancipation  ). — Abraham  Lincoln. — AI 
Emancipation     Proclamation,     The.  (Sels.) — Carl 

Schurz.- OS  2 
Embargo,  The. — Josiah  Quincy. — SO  (si.  abr.) 

(Against  the  Embargo.) — OM — SS 
Embarkation,  The. — Lizzie  Doten. — FMR 
Ember  Picture,  An. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — WR  25 
Emblem  of  Peace,  An.— J:  Wilson.— CS  21 

(Evening  Cloud,    The.)— BNL— FEP— POS    (abr.) 
Emblem  Service,  An. — Anon. — EuE 
Emblems.— R:  Coe.— CS  6 
Embryo. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — AA 
Emergency,  An. — Marie  M.  Marsh. — BS  21 
Emerson. — Amos  B.  Alcott. — AA 
Emerson. — Craven  L.  Betts. — EDY 
Emerson. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — AA 
Emerson.— E:  E.  Hale.— MRS 

Emerson  Alphabet,  An.     (Camp.  fr.  Emerson.) — PEO 
Emerson,  Extract  Concerning. — A.  C.  Bartol. — PEO 
Emerson,  Extract  Concerning. — G:  W.  Cooke. — PEO 
'         Emerson,  Extract    Concerning.     (Br.    sel.    fr.     Ralph 

Waldo  Emerson,  Ch.  16.)— Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

—PEO 


Emerson,  Extract  Concerning. — Protap  Chiuder  Mo- 

soomdar. — PEO 
Emerson,  Extract  Concerning. — Horace  E.  Scudder. — 

PEO 
Emigrant  Lassie,  The. — J:  S.  Blackie. — VA 
Emigrants  in  [the]  Bermudas,  The. — Andrew  Marvell. 

—FEP— HBP 
(Bermudas  [,  The].)— GN— OB— WEP  2 
(In  Exile.)— LH 
(Song   of   the    Emigrants   in    Bermuda.) — BNL — 

BPB— EPs— PGT  1 
Emigrant's  Return,  The. — Anon. — GH 
Emigrant's  Story,  The.— J :  T.  Trowbridge.— BS  8 
Emigravit. — Helen  M.  F.  (Hunt)  Jackson. — AA 
Emir's  Game    of    Chess,    The.     (London    Speaker.) — 

BS  26— HBR 
Emma  and    Eginhard.     (Tales    of    a    Wayside    Inn: 

The    Student's  Tale.)— H:  W.    Longfellow.— 

XJ'pt> 

Emma  Lazarus.— R:  W.  Gilder.- EDY 
Emma's  Ideal. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Emmeline.— C:  P.  Mulvany.— TIP 
Emmet's  Epitaph.     (Written  immediately  after  Read- 
ing  the    Speech    of    Robert    Emmet — C.)  — 
Rob't  Southey.— BNL 
Emotions  on  Returning  to  the  United  States. — Hugh 

S.  Legar^.— SS 
Empedocles  on  Etna,  Sels.  Jr. — Matthew  Arnold. 
Apollo.     (Song  fr.  Act  II.)— LH 
(Callicles  Beneath  Etna.)— PGT  2 
(Callicles'  Song.)— WEP  4 
(Callicles'  Song  of  Apollo — abr.) — LC 
(Song  of  Callicles.The.)- OB— PYO 
Cadmus  and  Harmonia.     (Song  fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  2.) — 
AVP 
(Song  of  Callicles  in  Sicily.)— PGT  2 
Empedocles  on  Etna.     (Sel.  fr.  Act  II.) — VA 

(Song  of  Empedocles,  The— sfiZ.)— PGT  2 
Hymn  of  Empedocles.     (Fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  2.) 
Emperor  and  the  Deserter,  The.     (Dial.) — NDP 
"Emperor       Evermore."  —  Emily    M.    P.    Hickey. — 

AVP 
Emperor  of  China.     (Fr.   The  Jest   Book.) — Anon. — 

MRS 
Emperor's  Bird's-nest,  The.     (SI.  abr.) — H:  W.  Long- 
fellow.—PC 
Emperor's  Daughter     Stands     Alone,     An. — Geoffrey 

Chaucer.     See  C!anterbury  Tales,  The. 
Emperor's  Return,  The.      (Sel.  fr.  Les  Burgraves,  Pt. 

II.,  Sc.  6.)— Victor  Hugo.— SO 
Empire  and  Liberty. — W :  E.  Gladstone. — SO 
Empire  State,  'The. — Grover  Cleveland. — SSD 
Employ  your  Own  Intellect. — Anon. — PEO 
Employment.     (Abr.)—G:  Herbert.- WEP  2 
Employment  of  Indians  in  the  American  War. — W :  Pitt, 

Earl  of  Chatham.     See  American  War,  The. 
Empty  Bottle,  The.— W:  Aytoun.— HPE 
Empty  House,  The.— G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Empty  Nest,  The.— Eliz.  Y.  Case.— BS  1 
Empty  Nest,     The.— Emily     H.     Miller.— CR—SR  5 

(sel.) 
Empty  Pocket,  The.— C:  F.  Lummis.— WR  2 
Empty  Prayer,  An.— Katha.  C.  Penfield.— BS  24 
En  Garde.- W.  T.  Mclntyre.— CG  3 
En  Garde,  Messieurs. — W:  Lindsey. — AA 
"En  Voyage." — Caroline  A.  Mason. — HP — TAS 
"Enamoured  architect   of  ditty   rhyme." — T:   B.   Al- 

drich. — AA 
Enchainment.      ("I  went  to  her  who  loveth  me  no 
more" — C.) — Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. — YBF 
(Song.)— HBP 
Enchanted  Island,  The.— Luke  A.  Conolly.— TIP 
Enchanted  Oak,    The.— Oliver    Herford.— HS— WR  9 
Enchanted  Shirt,   The.— J:   Hay.— CS  23    (si.    abr.)— 

GN 
Enchantment,  The.     (C.)— T:  Otway.— FLS— OB 

(I  Did  but  Look.)— YBF 
Enconium  on  Tobacco,  An. — Anon. — PPh 
Encore. — Anon. — HP 
Encore. — Anon. — WR  6 
Encore ;  Encore ! — Anon. — CS  32 

(Encore!)— BS  21 
Encounter  with  a  Panther.  An. — J.  F.  Cowper. — NP 
Encounterwith  an  Interviewer,  An.     (C.) — S:  L.  Clem- 
ens.— CR 
(Mark  Twain  and  a  [or  the]  Reporter — si.  abr.) — 

PTS— SE 
(Mark  Twain  and  the  Interviewer.) — BS  2 — CS  12 
— KNE— SR 1 
Encouragement  to  American  Ship-building  and  the 
Revival  of  American  Commerce  on  the  Ocean, 
Sel.  fr.  (American  Shipbuilding.)  —  Jas.  G. 
Blaine.— NO 


102 


TITLE    INDEX 


Ensign 


Encouragements  to  a  Lover.     (Fr,  Aglaura.) — Sir  J: 

Suckling.— PGT  1 
(Orsames'  Song  [in  "Aglaura"].)  —  ELP  —  ES  — 

WEP2 
(Song— O— HBP 
(To  a  Lover.)— YBF 
(Why  so  Pale  [and  Wan,  Fond  Lover]?)- BNL— 

FEP— GP— OB— OEL— PYO 
Encouraging  Self-murder. — Anon. — GH 

(Obliging  Druggist,  The.)— PS 
End,  The.— Wallace  Rice.— AA 
End  Gag,  An.— Anon.— DSS 
End  Gags  (3).— Anon.— DE 
End  of  Elfintown,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Flitting  of  the  Fairies, 

The.)— Jane  Barlow. — TIP 
End  of  Government.  The.— J:  Pym.— SS 
End  of  King  David,  The.— Anon.— CS  26 
End  of  the  Day,  The.— Duncan  C.  Scott.— TCV—VA 
End  of  the  Play,  The.     {Fr.  Dr.  Birch  and  his  Young 

Friends.)— W:  M.  Thackeray.— BNL— ED Y— 

FEP— GN  (grf.j- GP— HBP— OS  3— VA 
End  of  the  Romance,  The. — Winthrop  M.  Praed. —  See 

Belle  of  the  Ball,  The. 
End  of    the    Siege,    The. — Eliz.    B.    Browning.     See 

Rhyme  of  the  Duchess  May. 
End  of  the  Way,  The.— Anon.— CS  24 
Endeavours  of  Mankind  to  Get  Rid  of  Their  Burdens. 

— Jos.  Addison.     See  Spectator,  The. 
Endicott  and  the  Red  Cross,  Sel.  fr. — Nathaniel  Haw- 
thorne.—BS  26 
Endimion,  Sel.  fr.  (Fairy  Revels — third  song  by  fairies 

fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  3.)— J:  Lyly— ELP 
Endless  Procession,  The. — Anon. — CS  23 
Endurance.— Eliz.      A.      Allen.— CS  8— FEP— GP— 

WR14  , 

Endurance. — G :  Macdonald. — HDL 
Enduring  Influence. — Anon. — LLC 
Endymion,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Keats. 

Beauty,      (fir.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— SO  (longest)— WEF  4 
("Thing  of  beauty  is  a  joy  forever.  A.") — BNL — 

GG  (shoHest.) 
Hymn  to  Pan.  {Fr.  Bk.  I.)— HBP  (seZ.)— WEP  4 

{br.  sel.) 
Song  of  the  Indian  Maid.    {Sel.  fr  Bk.  III.)— OB 
(Bacchus— 8eZ.)—WEP  4 
Endymion. — J:  Keats.     See  I  Stood   Tiptoe    upon   a 

Little  Hill. 
{Diff.  fr.  foregoing.) 
Endymion. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — AA — CR 

(How  Love  Comes — sel.) — FLS 
Enemies  Meet  at  Death's  Door. — Willa  L.  Jackson. — 

CS30 
Energy. — Alexander  H.  Stephens. — HSS  2 
Energy  and    Industry. — Mrs.    Russell    Kavanaugh. — 

KC 
Enforcement  of  the  Liquor  Law,  The.     {Sel.  arr.  fr. 

The  Maine  Liquor  Law.) — Wendell  Phillips. — 

MRS 
(Temperance.)— CS  20 — TS 

(Temperance  Question,  The.) — BS  8 — PS  {shoHer.) 
Engaged.— F.  H.  Curtiss.— WR  15 
Engaged. — J.  L.  Pennypacker. — CH — CS  20 
Engaging  Manners. — Anon. — KNE 
Engine,  The. — Anon. — SA 

(Locomotive,  The — arr.  as  dial.) — FS 
Engine  Driver's    Story,    The.— W.    Wilkins.— CS  29— 

NPS— YP 
Engineer  Connor's  Son. — Will  A.  Dromgoole. — NP 
Engineer's  Last  Run,  The. — Anon. — PFP 
Engineers'  Making  Love  [,The]. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — 

BS  12— CS  23  {si.  abr.) 
Engineer's  Murder,  The. — H:  Morford. — CS  19 
Engineer's  Signal,  The.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— TAV 

(Guild's  Signal— O— NPS— OS  2— YP 
Engineer's  Story,  The. — Eugene  J.  Hall. — CD 
Engineer's  Story,  The.— Rosa  H.  Thorpe.— CS  6 

{SI  o6r.)— FR— MR— PR 
England.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
England. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 
England. — W :  Cowper.     .See  Task,  The. 
England.— R:  E.  Day.— AA 
England. — Sydney  Dobell.     iSee  Balder. 
England. — Ebenezer  Elliott. — SS 
(Old  England— sZ.  o6r.  )—BLP 
England. — Jas.  Lincoln. — EHT 
England. — G:  E.  Montgomery. — AA 
England. — J-  H;  Newman. — VA 
England. — Grace  E.  C.  Stetson. — AA 
England.^ — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — LH 
England.    (Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Independence 

and  Liberty.  Pt.  I.,  XIV.)— W:  Wordsworth. 

— GP 


England  {continued). 
(Ideal.)— LH 

(London,  1802— C.)— PGT  I  (II.)— YBF  (II.) 
(Milton.)— LLC— WEP  4 
("Milton!  thou  shouldst  be  living  at  this  hour.") 

— GG  {abr.) 
(Sonnet:     London,  1802.)— HBP 
(To  Milton.)— BNL— CEL—EPs— FEP 
England  against  War.— H:  W.  Beecher.- SSD 
England  and  America. — Sir  Jas.  Mackintosh. — SS 

(England's  Relations  to  America.)— BLP 
England  and  America. — C :  Sangster. — TC V 
England  and    America    [in  1782 — C] — Alfred  Tenny- 
son.—EDY 
England  and     her     Colonies. — Edmund    Burke.     See 

Speech  on  Conciliation  with  America. 
England  and  her  Colonies. — W:  Watson. — VA 
England  and  Switzerland,   1802. — W:  Wordsworth. — 
PGT  1— SC— YBF 
(Thought  of  a  Briton  on  the  Subjugation  of  Switz- 
erland—C.  )—EP8— WEP  4 
England  and  the  United  States. — Chauncey  M.  Depew . 

— FD2 
England,  1802.     (Written     in     London,     September, 
1802— C.)—W:  Wordsworth.— OB 
(London,  1802.)— PGT  1  (I.)— YBF  (I.) 
England,    my    England.     (Rhymes    and     Rhythms, 

XXV.— O— W:  E.  Henley.— OB 
England,  with  all  thy  Faults,  I  Love  Thee  Still.— W: 

Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
England's    Misrule  of   Ireland.     {Sels.  fr.  Tithes  and 

fr.     The  Irish  Church.)— R:  L.  Sheil.— SS 
England's  Parnassus:     Descriptions  of  Beaut.v  and  Per- 
sonage, 5ei. /r.     (Her  Coming.) — G:  Chapman. 
—ELP 
England's  Relations     to    America. — Jas.    Mackintosh. 

See  England  and  America. 
England's  True  Greatness.     {Set.  fr.  Foreign  Policy.) 
—J:  Bright.— SO 
(Greatness  Based  on  Morality — abr.) — OSS 
(National  Greatness — sel.) — SAE — SE 
English  Ballad  on  the  Taking  of  Namur  bv  the  King  of 
Great  Britain,  An,  Sel.  fr.      (On  the  Taking  of 
Namur,  etc.) — Matthew  Prior. — EDY 
English  Bards  and  Scotch  Reviewers,  Sels.  fr. — Lord 
Byron. 
{Br.  sels.)—BT<lh 
Robert  Southey.— EDY 
Sir  Walter  Scott.— EDY 
Wordsworth.— EDY 
English  Buccaneer,  The. — Anon. — NP 
English  Channel.     (September,    1802.    Near    Dover — 

O— W:  Wordsworth.- EPs 
English  Giri,  An.— F.  W.  Home.— VA 
English  History  in  Rhyme. — Anon. — TFS 
English  Language,  The. — Anon. — SR  13 

(Our  Glorious  Language.) — WR  26 
English  Language,  The.     {Sels.)—W:  W.  Story.— GN 
English  Robin,  The.— Harrison  Weir.— BNL— POS  vj» 
English   Scenery. — Washington    Irving.     See  Charms 

of  Rural  Life,  The. 
English  Shell,  An.— Arthur  C.  Benson.— VA 
English  Sparrow,  The. — Mary  I.  Forsyth. — SN 
Englishman,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Englishman's  Sea-dirge,  An. — Anon. — CS  26 
Enid. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Enid's  Song. — Alfred  Tenny.son.    See  IcH^lls  of  the  King. 
Enigmas,  Two. — Matthew  Prior. — HPE 
Enjoyment  of  the  Present. — R:  C.  Trench. — CS  16 
Enj'yin'  Poor  Health.— G:  Horton.— WR  7 
Enlisted.— Eugene  C.  Hall.— PAPm 
Enlisting    as     Army     Nurse. — Louisa     M.    Alcott. — 

MMR 
Enmity  toward  Great    Britian. — Rufus    Choate. — OM 
(Barbarity  of  National  Hatreds.)— SS— SSD 
(Old  Grudge  against  England,  The— obr.)— MRS 
Enoch  Arden. — Alfred      Tennyson. — BS  8      (cond.) — 
MBL— WCLG  1— WR  11  {cond.) 
At  the  Window.     (SeZ.)— CS  5 
(Enoch  Arden — br.  sel.) — SE 
(Enoch  Arden  at  the  Window.) — PS 
Farewell  of  Enoch  Arden,  The.  {Sel.)— IR 

(Enoch  Arden.)— BIL  {br.  sel.)—CR 
'  'Too  hard  to  bear!     Why  did  they  take  me  hence?" 

{Br.  sel.)— AE 
Tropical  Scene,  A.     (Br.  sel.) — SE 
Enoch  Arden  at  the  Window. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

Enoch  Arden. 
Enough. — Anon. — DLF 
Enough. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — SSS 
Ensign  Bearer,   The.     {Commercial   Weekly   Times.) — 
CS  9— SR  7 


103 


Entanglement 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Entanglement,    An. — G:    Crabbe.    See   Tales    of    the 

Hall. 
Entering  into  Covenant.     (CJ — Philip  Doddridge. 

(Confirmation  Hymn.) — FEP 
Enterprise  of    American    Colonists,     1775.— Edmund 

Burke.     jSee    Speech     on     Conciliation     with 

America. 
Enthusiasm.—  (?)  Hall.— LLC 

Enthusiast,  The.     An  Ode.— W:  Whitehead.— WEP  3 
"Entombed  within    a    nation's     reverent     love."- — E: 

Crapsey. — GG 
Entrance  of  Columbus  into  Barcelona. — G.  Mellen. — 

EPs 
Entre  Nous.— Sophie  Jewett.— TFY 
Entreat  Me    not    to    Leave    Thee.     (Tab.) — Anon. — 

TCP 
Enviable  Isles,  The. — Herman  Melville. — AA 
Envious  Wren,  The.— Phoebe  Cary.— BLF 
Envoy. — Bliss  Carman. — VA 
Envoy.      (In  A   Lover's   Diary.) — Gilbert   Parker. — 

VA 
(Reunited.)— OB 
Envoy.— Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt.— AA 
Envoy.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Envoy.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Envoy  to  an  American  Lady,  An. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord 

Houghton. — VA 
(Our  Mother  Tongue.)— GN 
Envoy — to    "More    Songs     from    Vagabondia." — R: 

Hovey. — AA 
Envy. — Anon.— DLS 
Envy. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Envy. — Adelaide  A.  Procter.— WR  19 
Envy  and  Avarice.— Victor  Hugo. — SO 
Eolian  Harp,  The.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— FEP— WEP  4 
Eos,  Sel.  /r.— Nicholas  F.  Davin.— TCV 
Eos. — R:  H.  Home.     See  Orion:  An  Epic  Poem. 
Eothen,  'Sel.  fr.      (Sphynx,  The— Ch.  XX.)— Alex.  W. 

Kinglake.— VSG 
Ephibol  on  my  Dear  Love  Isabella. — Marjorir  Fleming. 

— BVC 
Ephraim's  Storm  Lullaby.— C.  H.  CoUester.— CG  3 
Epic  of  Hades,  Sels.  fr. — Lewis  Morris. 
Aphrodite.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.)— AVP 
Marsyas.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— VSG 
Epic  of  Women.  (Fr.  Bisclaveret.) — Arthur  O'Shaugh- 

nessy.— WEP  4 
Epicede. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — EDY 
Epicedium. — Horace  L.  Traubel. — AA 
Epicharis. — Arthur  Palmer. — TIP 
Epicoene  [or  Epicaene];  or.  The  Silent  Woman,  Sel.  fr. 

(Freedom    in    Dress — song  fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  1.) — 

Ben    Jonson.— BNL— EPs— YBF 
(Simplex  Munditiis.) — OB 
(Song.)— FEP— HBP— WEP  2 
(Sweet  Neglect,  The.)— ES— OEL 
Epicure,  The.     (DtaZ.)— Anon.— FDY 
Epicure,  The.     (In  Anacreontiques. ) — Anacreon  (tr.  by 

Abraham  Cowley). — OB 
Epicurean. — W:  Jas.  Linton. — VA 
Epicurean  Reminiscences  of  a  Sentimentalist.     (C.) — 

T:  Hood.— FEP 
(Reminiscences  of  a  Sentimentalist.) — HPE 
Epicurean's  Epitaph,  An. — Aubrey  T:  DeVere. — VA 
Epigram.     "Hoarse     Maevius     reads,"     etc.     (On     a 

Reader  of  his  Own  Verse — C.) — S:  T.  Coleridge. 

—BNL 
Epigram:     "Sly  Beelzebub  on  all  occasion.^." — S:  T. 

Coleridge.     See    Epigram    on    Job    and    the 

Devil. 
Epigram:     "Swans    sing    before    they    die." — S:    T. 

Coleridge.     See  Epigram  on  a  Bad  Singer. 
Epigram:     "Pest  of  the  muses,"  etc. — Evenus   (tr.  by 

Andrew  Lang). — MBB 
Epigram:     "Uvedale,  thou  piece  of  the  first  times." — 

Ben  Jonson.     <See  Epigram  to  Sir  William  Uve- 
dale. 
Epigram.     (C)     "There    comes    from    old    Avaro's 

grave." — Gotthold   Lessing  (tr.  by  S:  T.  Cole- 
ridge). 
(Avaro.)— HPE 
Epigram:     "When  first  my  true  love  crowned  me," 

etc. — Gerald  Massey. — FLS 
Epigram  (C):     "Said    his  Highness  to  Ned,"  etc. — 

T:  Moore. 
(Dial.)— HPE 
Epigram:     "As  late  the  Trades'  Unions,"  etc. — Jas. 

Smith.— FEP 
Epigram  (C):     "Upon   a   day,   as   Love,"   etc. — Ed- 
mund Spenser. 
(Cupid  and  the  Bee.)— LC 
Epigram:     "All  Saints."— Edmund  Yates.— FEP 


Epigram:     Cologne. — S:  T.  Coleridge. — BNL 
(Cologne— C. )— FEP— HBP— THP 
(Expectoration  the  Second.) — HPE 
Epigram :  Dum  Vivimus  Vivamus. — Philip  Doddridge. 

See  Epigram  on  his  Family  Arms. 
Epigram  on  a  Bad  Singer.     (On  a  Bad  Singer — C.) — 
S:  T.  Coleridge.— FEP 
(Epigram:  "Swans  sing  before  they  die.") — BNL 
Epigram  on  a  Club  of  Sots.     (C.) — S:  Butler. 

COn  a  Club  of  Sots.)— HPE 
Epigram   on   a    Painted    Lady    with    111   Teeth.   An. 
(C.)— Edmund  Waller. 
(On  a  Painted  Lady  with  111  Teeth.)— HPE 
Epigram  on  Bishop  Attcbury.     (C.) — Matthew  Prior. 

(On  Bishop  Atterbury.)— HPE 
Epigram  on  Francis  Drake. — Abraham  Cowley  (tr.  by 
Ben  Jonson).— EDY— OS  2 
(Epigram  on  Sir  Francis  Drake.) — EPs — FEP 
Epigram  on  his    Family  Arms.     (In  Dr.  Doddridge's 
Character.) — Philip  Doddridge. — BNL 
(Christian  Life,  The.)— CS  18— SS 
(Epigram:  Dum  Vivimus  Vivamus.) — FEP 
Epigram  on  Job  and  the  Devil.     (Job's  Luck — C.) — 
S:  T.  Coleridge.— FEP 
(Beelzebub  and  Job.)— HPE 
(Epigram:     "Sly  Beelzebub,"  etc.)— BNL 
(Job.)— THP 
Epigram  on    Sir    Francis    Drake.— Abraham    Cowley 
(tr.  by  Ben  Jonson).     See  Epigram  on  Francis 
Drake. 
Epigram  on   the  Death  of  Edward   Forbes. — Sydney 

Dobell.— VA 
Epigram  on  Two  Monopolists.  (On  Two  Lean  Millers — 

C.—sl.  diff.  fr.  Poems.)— J:  Byrom.— FEP 
Epigram  on  Waller.— T:  Middleton.— EDY 
Epigram  to  a  Young  Lady  who  Asked  for  his  Name 

in  her  Album.— C:  G.  Halpine.— AWH 
Epigram  to  Sir  William  Uvedale.     (C.) — Ben  Jonson. 

(Epigram.) — EPs 
Epigram:     Treason. — Sir  J:  Harrington. — FEP 
Epigram:     Vox  et   Praeterea   Nihil.     (Punch.) — FEP 

(Voice  and  Nothing  Else,  A.)— BNL— HPE 
Epigram.    Written  in  the  Last  Reign.    (C.) — CiLamb. 
(On  the  Disappointment  of  the  Whig  Associates  of 
the  Prince  Regent  at  not  Obtaining  Office.) — 
HPE 
Epigram  Written  on  the  Bed-chamber  Door  of  Charles 
III. — J:     Wilmot,     Earl    of     Rochester.     See 
Epitaph  on  Charles  II. 
Epigram  written  to  the  Duke  de  Noalles,  An.     (C.) — 
Matthew  Prior. 
(To  the  Duke  de  Noalles.)— HPE 
Epigrams,  Seh.  fr. — Sir  J :  Harrington. 
(Br.  sels.)— BiiL, 
Of  the  Warres  in  Ireland.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV..  Ep.  6.) 
—BNL 
Epigrams  against    Carthy,     Sel.  fr.     (On  One  Dela- 
court's  Complimenting  Carthy  on  his  Poetry.) 
— Jonathan  Swift— HPE 
Epilogue:     "And  now,  dear  friends,"  etc.     Anon. — 

DLS 
Epilogue:     "Dear   friends,  before   you    go  away." — 

Anon.— DJS 
Epilogue:    "Dear    papas    and    mammas." — Anon. — 

DLS 
Epilogue:     "The  best  of  things,"  etc. — Anon. — DST 
Epilogue.     (3.)— "Bob  o'Link."— DCP 
Epilogue. — Rob't    Browning.     See   Epilogue   to    Aso- 

lando. 
Epilogue:     A  Closing  Address. — Anon.— DCP 
Epilogue  at  Wallack's,  An.^J:  E.  Wayland. — AA 
Epilogue  for  a  Boy  and  a  Girl. — Anon. — DLF 
Epilogue  for  a  School  Performance. — Anon. — BC 
Epilogue  for  a  Tot. — Anon. — DJS 
Epilogue  for  a  Tot .     (  Prose. )— DST 
Epilogue:  Suitable  for  the  Conclusion  of  an  Entertain- 

ment.— J.  B.— SCS 
Epilogue  to  Amours  de  Voyage. — Arthur  H.  Clough. 

See  Amours  de  Voyage. 
Epilogue  to    Asolando. — Rob't    Browning. — PGT  2 — 
WEP  4— YBF 
(Epilogue.)— VA 
Epilogue  to  Fand. — W:  Larminie.     See  Fand. 
Epilogue  to  Hannah  More's  Play,  The  Fatal  Falsehood, 
Sel.  fr.     (Literary  Lady,  The.)— R:  B.  Sheri- 
dan.—HPE— THP 
Epilogue  to    the    Breakfast-table    Series. — Oliver    W. 

Holmes. — AA 
Epilogue   to  the    Satires,  Sel.  Jr.  (Dialogue  I. — abr.) 

—Alex.  Pope.— ESs— WEP  3  (abr.) 
Epilogus. — G :  Gascoigne.     See  Steel  Glass,  The. 
Epimetheus.— H :  W.  Longfellow.— WCLI  2 


104 


TITLE    INDEX 


Epitaph 


Epiphanv.— W:  C.  Dix.— FEP 

Epiphany.— Reginald     Heber.— EDY— FEP— HBP— 

OSl 
(Brightest  and  Best  [of  the  Sons  of  the  Morning]). — 

GN— LLC 
Epipsychidion,  Sel.  /r.- Percy  B.  Shelley.— WEP  4 
Episode,  An. — J:  A.  Symonds. — VA 
Episode  in  the  Life  of  Miss  Tebitha  Trenoodle.     (Bel- 

gravia . )— M  H  R 
Epistle  Dedicatory  to  his  Royal  Highness  Prince  Pos- 
terity, The. — Jonathan  Swift. — ESs 
Epistle  from  Lord  Borington  to  Lord  Granville. — G: 

Canning. — ESs 
Epistle  to  a  Friend  to  Persuade  him  to  the  Wars,  Br. 

sel.  fr. — Ben  Jonson. — EPs 
Epistle  to  a  Young    Friend  [Anl.  —  Rob't  Bums.  — 

BNL  (6r.  se«8.)— MR— WCLG  2— WEP  .3 
Epistle  to  Augusta.     (C.)— Lord  Byron.— WEP  4 

(To  Augusta. )~BNL 
Epistle  to  Davie,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Good  Heart.) — Rob't 

Burns.- EPs 
Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot  (Prologue  to  the   Satires). 

—Alex.    Pope.— WEP  3 
Addison.     (SeZ.)— BNL 

(Portrait  of  Addison.)— EPs 
Scandal.     (SeZ.)- BNL 
Sporus, — Lord  Hervey.     (Sel.) — BNL 
Epistle.     To  Elizabeth,  Countess  of  Rutland,  Sel.  fr. 

(To  the  Countess  of  Rutland.) — Ben  Jonson. 

—EPs 
Epistle   to    James  Smith,     Sels.  fr. — Rob't    Bums. 
Epistle  to  James  Smith,  Br.  sel.  fr. — BNL 
Writing  Verses. — EPs 
Epistle  to   John  Lapraik,  An.     (Sel.  fr.  Third  Epistle.) 

—Rob't  Bums.— WEP  3 
Epistle  to     Joseph    Hill,     An. — W:  Cowper. —  MR  — 

WEP  3 
Epistle  to  Mrs.   Scott  of  Wauchope.     (To  the  Guid- 

wife    of    Wauchope    House- — C.)     Sel.    fr. — 

Rob't  Bums.— WEP  3 
(Scotland— 6r.  srf.)— EPs 
Epistle  to   my   Brother   George,    The.   Sel.   fr.    (Bard 

Speaks,  The.)— J:  Keats.— WEP  4 
Epistle   to   the    Right   Hon.  the   Earl  of  Burlington. 

(O— J:Gay. 
(Journey  to  Exeter,  A — si.  abr.) — OES 
Epistle  to  the  Whigs.     (The  Medal— C.)— J:  Dryden. 

—ESs 
Epitaph:     "Beneath  this  stone  two  David  Hallidays." 

Anon.— EDY 
Epitaph,   An:     "Like  thee   I   once   have   stemmed," 

etc.     (Epitaph   Intended   for   Himself — C.) — 

Jas.  Beattie. — OB 
Epitaph:     "May!   be  thou  never  graced,"   etc. — W: 

Browne.— ELP 
(Tn  Obitum  M.  S.  X°  Maij,  1614.)— OB 
Epitaph  (C):     "Stop,    Christian    Passer-by."— S:    T. 

Coleridge.     See  Epitaph  on  Himself. 
Epitaph:  "Here — for  they  could   not  help  but  die." 

(Fr.  The  Fading  Rose.) — Philip  Freneau.— ,\D 
Epitaph:     "Underneath     this    sable    hearse." — Ben 

Jonson.     jSee  Epitaph  on  the  Countess  of  Pem- 
broke 
Epitaph:     "Underneath  this  stone  doth  lye." — Ben 

Jonson.     See  Epitaph  on  Elizabeth  L.  H. 
Epitaph,  An:     "Enough:  and  leave  the  rest  to  fame!" 

—Andrew  Marvell. — OB 
Epitaph,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  31 
Epitaph,  An:     "Interr'd  beneath  thi»  marble  stone." 

(C.)— Matthew  Prior. 
(Jack  and  Joan.) — HPE 
Epitaph:     "Where  is  Timarchus  gone?" — Simonides. 

—EPs 
Epitaph  Extempore. — Matthew  Prior.— FEP 
Epitaph  for  a  Husbandman,  An. — C:  D.  G.  Roberts. — 

TCV 
Epitaph  for  a  Sailor  Buried  Ashore. — C:  G.  D.  Roberts. 

— TCV— VA 
Epitaph  for   [on — C.l   Levi    Lincoln    Thaxter. — Rob't 

Browning. — VA 
Epitaph  for  [or  on]  the  Tombstone   Erected  over  the 

Marquis  of  Anglesea'^  Leg,  Lost  at  the  Battle 

of  Waterloo.)— G:  Canning.— BNL— FEP 
Epitaph  for  William  Pitt.— Lord  Byron.— EAY 
Epitaph  in     Fahan     Churchyard.— W:     Alexander. — 

AVP 
Epitaph  in  the  Cathedral  of  Derry. — W:  Alexander. — 

AVP 
Epitaph  Intended  for  Himself.  (C.) — Jas.  Beattie. 

(Epitaph,  An.)— OB 
Eoitaph  of  Dionysia. — Anon. — VA 
Epitaph  on  a  Candle.     (Punch.) — HPE 


Epitaph  on  a  Celebrated  Rtding  Elder.     (C.) — Rob't 

Burns. 
(On  a  Celebrated  Ruling  Elder.)— HPE 
Epitaph  on  a  Child.— T:  W.  Parsons.— TAS 
Epitaph  on     a     Hare.— W:     Cowper.- BFV— BPB— 

BVC— CGd— MBL— WEP  3 
Epitaph  on    a    Jacobite.     (C.) — T:    B.    Macaulay. — 

AVP— VA— WEP  4 
(Jacobites'  Epitaph,  A.) — LH — OB 
Epitaph  on  a  Locomotive.     (Punch.)— HFE 
Epitaph  on   a    Robin    Redbreast,   An. — S:    Rogers. — 

CGd— LC— OS  1— PoR 
Epitaph  on  a  Tuft-hunter.     (C.) — T:  Moore. 

(On  a  Tuft-hunter.)— HPE 
Epitaph  on  a  Wag  in  Mauchline.     (C.) — Rob't  Burns 

(On  a  Wag  in  Mauchline.)— HPE 
Epitaph  on  a  Well-known  Poet.     (Rob't  Southey.) — 

T:  Moore.— HPE 
Epitaph  on  a  Young  Lady  Who  Desired  that  Tobacco 

might   be   Planted   on    her    Grave. — Anon. — 

PPh 
Epitaph  on  Algernon  Sidney. — Rob't  Southey. — EDY 
Epitaph  on  an  Infant. — S:  T.  Coleridge. — FEP 
Epitaph  on  Charles  II. — J:  Wilmot,  Earl  of  Rochester. 

— EHT— WEP  2 
(Epigram  Written  on   the    Bed-chamber    Door  of 

Charles  II.)— OS  2 
Epitaph  on  Clere,  Surrey's  Faithful  Friend  and  Fol- 
lower. An.     (Epitaph  on  Sir  Thomas  Clere — 

C.)— H:  Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey.- WEP  1 
Epitaph    on    Demar    the    Usurer.     (C.)  —  Jonathan 

Swift. 
(On  a  Usurer.)— HPE 
Epitaph  on    Elizabeth    L.    H.     (C.) — Ben    Jonson. — 

WEP  2 
(Epitaph:     "Underneath  this   stone   doth   lye" — 

si.  abr.)— EPa 
(On  Elizabeth  L.  H.)— OB 
Epitaph  on     General     Gordon. — Alfred     Tennyson. — 

EDY 
Epitaph  on  Himself.   (Epitaph — C.) — S:    Coleridge. — 

EDY 
Epitaph  on  Holy  Willie.     (C— On  Holy  Willie— aZso 

O— Rob't  Burns— ESs— HPE 
Epitaph  on  John  Adams,  of  Southwell,  a  Carrier  who 

Died  of  Drunkenness.     (C.) — Lord  Byron 
(On  a  (Carrier  who  Died  of  Drunkenness.) — HPE 
Epitaph  on  Master  Philip  Gray,  An. — Ben  Jonson. — 

WEP  2 
Epitaph  on  Peter  Staggs.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 
Epitaph  on  Prince  Frederick. — Anon. — EDY 
Epitaph  on    Salathiel   Pavy,    An. — Ben    Jonson.     See 

following. 
Epitaph  on  Salathiel  Pavy,  a  Child  of  Queen  Eliza- 
beth's    Chapel,     An.      (C) — Ben     Jonson. — 

FEP— WEP  2— YBF 
(On  Salathiel  Pavy.)— OB 
Epitaph  on    Shakespeare. — J:    Milton.     See    Epitaph 

on  the  Admirable   Dramatic  Poet,  W.  Shake- 
speare, An. 
Epitaph  on  Sir  Thomas  Clere. — T:  Howard,  Earl  of 

Surrey.     See  Epitaph  on  Clere. 
Epitaph  on  Sir  Thomas  Fairfax. — G:  Villiers,  Duke  of 

Buckingham. — EDY 
Epitaph  on  the  Admirable  Dramatic  Poet,  W.  Shakes- 
peare,   An.— J:    Milton.— BNL— EDY— HBP 

—WEP  2— YBF 
(Epitaph  on  Shakespeare.)— EPs— FEP 
Epitaph  on  the  (Countess  of  Pembroke. — W:  Browne 

[or  Ben  Jonsonl.— BFV— BNL  (w.  add.  st.)— 

EDY— ELP— FEP— WEP  2— YBF 
(Epitaph:  "U«demeath  this  sable  hearse.") — EPs 
(On  the  Countess  Dowager  of  Pembroke.) — OB 
Epitaph     on     the     Earl    of     Leicester. — Sir    Walter 

Raleigh.— EDY 
Epitaph   on   the    Lady    Mary    Villiers.     (C.)      (First 

Epitaph.)— T:  Carew.— FEP— OB 
(Epitaph    on    [the]    Lady  Mary    Villers.)— ELP — 

WEP  2 
Epitaph  on  the  Lady  Mary  Villiers.     (Third  Epitaph.) 

— T:  Carew.— OB 
Epitaph  on   the  Tombstone  Erected  over  the  Marquis 

of  Anglesea's  Leg. — G :  Canning.     See  Epitaph 

for  the  Tombstone. 
Epitaph  on  W  *  *  ■"     (On  William  Graham  of  Moss- 

knowe—O— Rob't  Burns.— HPE 
Epitaph  on  Washington,  An. — Anon. — SR  10 
Epitaph  upon  a  Child  that  Died. — Rob't  Herrick. — OB 

(Upon  a  Child  that  Died— C.)— ELP 
Epitaph  uDon  a  Child   that  Died. — Rob't  Herrick. — 

OB— YBF 
(Upon  a  Child— O— ELP 


105 


Epitaph 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Epitaph  upon  a  Virgin,  An. — Rob't  Herrick. — YBF 
Epitaph  upon  Colonel  Chartres. — J :  Arbuthnot. — ESs 
Epitaph  upon  Husband  and  Wife  [, An]. — 11 :  Crashaw. 

— FEP— OB 
Epitaph  upon  the  Right  Honourable  Sir  Philip  Sidney, 

An.— Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— FEP 
Epithalamion. — Edmund   Spenser. — ELP — HBP — OB 
— WEP  1  (abr.) 
Bride,  The.     (Br.  seZ.)- BNL— EPs— LC  (sel.) 
Wake  now — my  Love.     (Br.  sel.) — OP 
(Song.)— LC 
Epithalamium. — J:     G.     C.     Brainard.— AA— FEP — 
HBF 
("I  saw  two  clouds  at  morning.") — BNL — GP 
(To  a  Friend.)— BS  6 
Epithalamium. — S:  Sheppard  (?). — ELP 
Epode,  Sel.    fr.     (The    Forest,    XL)— Ben    Jonson.— 

WEP  2 
Eppie  Morrie. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Equality  at  Home. — Anon. — OS  2 
Equestrian  Courtship. — T:  Hood. — TMD 
Equinoctial,  The.— Mary  Eliz.  Blake.— POS 
Equinoctial. — Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney. — GP 
Equinoctial   Storm,    The.     (Fr.    Caleb    West,    Master 
Diver— Ch.  XIX— abr.)— F.  Hopkinson  Smith. 
— NP 
Equivocal. — Ben  Jonson. — CG  2 
Ere  the  Sun  Went  Down. — G :  Weatherly. 
Erin.— W:  Drennan.- TIP 
Erin  and  the  Days  of  Old. — T:  Moore. — BLP 
Erinna. — Andrew  Lang  (paraphrase  fr.  Antipater  of 

Sidon).— VA 
Erin's  Flag. — Abram  J.  Ryan. — CS  7 
Erl-king.    The.     (Gcr. — fr.    Die    Fischerin.) — Johann 
W.  von  Goethe.— DES 
(Tr.  by  Walter  Scott.)— BS  26— MRS 
(Diff.  <r.)— DES— PHS 
Erl-konig,  The.     (In  German  and  in  English,  with  his- 
tory of  Schubert's  composition  and  its  first  presen- 
tation.) — Mabelle  B.  Biggart.— DES 
Erminie,  Sel.  fr.     (Lullaby — w.  music.)      Arranged  by 

O.  E.  McFadon.— DR 
Ernest  Maltravers,  Sel.  fr.     (Night  and  Love — C. — 
song  fr.  Bk.  IIL,  Ch.  I.) — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. 
(Song.)— CR— FLS  (br.  sel.) 

("When  stars  are  in  the  quiet  skies.") — FEP — 
FTA— VA 
Eros.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— BIL— OH 
Esau  and  Jacob. — Ellen  Murray. — GS  16 
Escape.  The. — Harriet    B.    Stowe.     See   Uncle   Tom's 

Cabin. 
Escape  at  Bedtime. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Escaping  a  Shower. — Anon. — DST 
Escurial,  The. — Th^ophile  Gautier.— OS  3 
Eskimelodrama ;  or,   the  Eskapade  of  an   Eskamaid. 

(ComeU  Widow.)— CG  3 
Essay    on     Criticism,    An,    Sels.    fr. — Alex.    Pope. — 
BNLffcr.  sels.)— WEF  3  (sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.) 
Diversities  of  Judgment.    (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— CS  10 
Horace.     (Br.  sd.  fr.  Pt.  III.)— EDY 
Essay  on  Man,  An,  Sela.  fr. — Alex.  Pope. 
Content.     (Sel.  fr.  Epis.  I.,  Pt.  6.)— KNE 
Essay    on    Man. —  BNL    (br.    sel.    fr.    IV.,    2.)  — 

WEP  3  (Epis.  I.,  abr.;  Epis.  IV.,  abr.) 
Fame.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IV.,  6.)— BNL 
Greatness.     (Sel.  fr.  IV..  6.)— BNL 
Happiness.     (Sel.  fr.  IV.)— BNL  (Prel.  and  Pt.  1.) 
—LLC  (Prel.,  Pts.  1  and2.) 
(Road  to  Happiness  Open,  The — Prel.,  Pts.  1  and 
2.)— BLP 
Happiness.     (Sel.  fr.lV.,  7. )— KNE 
Nature's  Chain.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  1.)— BNL 
Order  of  Nature,  The.     (I.,  9,  abr.,  10.) 
Poet's  Friend,  The  [Lord  Bolingbrokel     (Sel.  fr. 

IV.,  7.}— BNL 
Reason  and  Instinct.     (III.,  2.) — BNL 
Essay  on  Necks. — Laura  M.  Bronson. — DES  (abr.) 

(Necks — a  Boy's  Composition.) — GH — SR  10 
Essay  on  the  Understanding,  An. — Anon. — HPE 
Essay  on  the  Wheelbarrow. — Anon. — DE 
Essay  on  Translated  Verse,  The,  Sel.  Jr. — Wentworth 

Dillon,  Earl  of  Roscommon. — WEP  2 
Essence  of  Opera,  The. — Anon. — HBP 
Established  ehurch    of    Ireland,    The.     (Sel.    fr.    The 

Church  of  Ireland.)— T:  B.  Macaulay.— SS 
Established  Church  of    Ireland,  The.     (Sel.   fr.— The 

Church  of  Ireland.)— R:  L.  Sheil.- SS 
Establishment    of     the     Republic,    The.  —  Alphonse 
de  Lamartine. — SS 
(Republic  Defined,  A.)— BLP 
"Estrangement." — C.  N.  Coggswell. — GH 
Estray,  The.— B.  F.  WiUson.— ASL 


Et  Mori  Lucrum. — J.  L.  Spalding.     See  God  and  the 

Soul. 
Eternal,  The. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Adonais. 
Eternal  Burden,  The.— Anon.— MYF 
Eternal  Clockwork   of   the    Skies. — E:    Everett.     See 

Uses  of  Astronomy,  The. 
Eternal  Goodaess,  The.— J:   G.    Whittier.— AA— TAS 

(Sel.)— HDL— SSS  (longer.) 
Eternal  Justice,  The. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — AA — TAS 
Eternal  Justice. — C:  Mackay. — CS  12 
Eternal  Light.— W:  H.  Fumess.- HDL 
(Evening  Hymn — si.  diff.  vers.) — A  A 
(Nightfall— ZiAe  AA.)— TAS 
Eternal  London.     (Rhymes    on    the    Road,   IX.) — T: 

Moore.- HPE 
Eternal  Poem,    An.     (To    Mr.    Pye — C. — «/.    diff.    fr. 

Poems.)— S:  T.  Coleridge.— HPE 
"Eternal  spirit  of  the  chainless  mind." — Lord  Byron. 

iSee  Prisoner  of  Chillon,  The. 
Eternal  Spring,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Eternity. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA 
Eternity,  Sel.  fr.—T:  Gibbons.— AE 
Eternity  of  Music,  The.— Patrick  J.  (7)  Ryan.— CS  31 
Ethan  Allen.     (Abr.  and  ad.) — G.  L.  Raymond. — DES 
Ethelinda's  Recitations. — Anon. — WR  25 
Ethel's  Birthday  Party.— Lizzie  J.  Rook.— TT 
Ethics  of  the  Dust,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Faults  and  Virtues 
— br.  sel.  fr.  Lecture  V.) — John  Ruskin. — OS  1 
Ethiopiomania. — H :  Tyrrell. — CH 
Etin  the  Forester. — Anon. — BB 
Etiquette.— W:  S.  Gilbert.— CS  19— FEP 
Eton  College. — T:  Gray.     See  Ode  on  a  Distant  Pros- 
pect of  Eton  College. 
Etruscan  Ring,  An. — J:  W:  Mackail. — VA 
fltsi  Omnes,  Ego  Non. — Ernest  Meyers. — VA 
Etude  R^alist^.     (Baby's  Feet;  Baby's  Hands;  Baby's 
Eyes.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — GN — LC — 
VA 
(Baby's  Feet,  A;   Baby's   Hands,  A— a6r.)— OS   1 
(Baby's  Feet  and  Hands,  A.)— TFS 
Eucharist  of  Affliction. — Julia  W.  Howe. — HDL 
Eugene  Aram. — T:    Hood.     See    Dream    of    Eugene 

Aram.  The. 
Eugene  Aram's    Dream. — T:    Hood.     iSee    Dream    of 

Eugene  Aram,  The. 
Eugene  Field. — Marion  F.  Ham. — EDY 
Eugene  Field  to  his  Children. — Eugene  Field. — EF 
Eulalie.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— HBR 
Eulogium  on    Franklin. — Honor^   G.    R.    Mirabeau. — 

PS— SSD 
Eulogium    [Eulogy — C]    on    Henry    Clay. — Abraham 

Lincoln.— PTS 
Eulogium  upon  St.  Paul. — Jaques  B.  Bossuet. — FTR 
Eulogy  of    Walt    Whitman. — Rob't    G.     Ingersoll. — 

WR13 
Eulogy  of  Wendell  Phillips.- G:  W:  Curtis.     See  Wen- 
dell Phillips.     A  Eulogy,  etc. 
Eulogy    on    Adams    and    Jefferson,   Sels.  fr. — Edw. 
Everett. 
Adams  and  Jefferson. — OM 

(Fathers  of  the  Republic,  The— seZ.)— PP— PS 

— YFR 
(Great  Lives  Imperishable — abr.) — PTS 
(Immortals,  The — si.  abr.) — OS  2 
(imperishability  of  Great   Examples — abr.) — SS 
(Men  who  Never  Die.) — PR 
Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner,  Sels.  fr. — Carl  Schurz. 
American  Battle-flags.— FD  1 — SC — TMD 
(Battle-flags,  The.)— PRR 

(Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner — longest  sel.) — CR 
Charles  Sumner.— CS  16— FD  1  (si.  diff.  sel.) 
Eulogy  on  Emmet. — J:  P.  (?)  .Jones. — FS 
Eulogy  on  Garfield.     (Memorial  Address  on  the  Life 
and  Character  of  James  A.  Garfield — C.) — Jas. 
G.  Blaine.— BS  10  (abr.) 
Death     of     Garfield    [.The].     (Sel.)— FT)  1— NC— 
PPS— SC— SSD  (si.  afcr.)- TMD— WCLG  1 
(Eulogy  on  President  Garfield.) — LLC 
(Oration  on  James  A.  Garfield,  Sel.  fr.) — CS  21 
Garfield's  Early  Life.     (Sel.)— FI)  2 
Eulogy  on  General  Grant,  Sel.  fr. — H:  W.  Beecher. — 

BS  14— PS 
Eulogy  on  General  Grant,  Sel.  fr. — J.  P.  Newman. — 

SPE 
Eulogy  on      Henry     Clay. — Abraham     Lincoln.     See 

Eulogium  on  Henry  Clay. 
Eulogy  on  Henry  Ward  Beecher.     Jos.  Parker. — NC 
Eulogy  on  .John  Bright,  A.— W:  E.  Gladstone.— SSD— 

TMD 
Eulogy    on     Lafayette,    Sel.    arr.   fr. — E:   Everett. — 
FTR— OM  (abr.) 
(Oration  on  Lafayette.) — CR 


106 


TITLE    INDEX 


Evening 


Eulogy  on  Lafayette. — C :  Sprague. — CS  6 
Eulogy  on   Laughing.— ( ?j  Sewall.— DDR— MDD 
Eulogy  on   O'Connell. — W:  H.  Seward.      See    Daniel 

O'Connell. 
Eulogy  on   President   Garfield. — Jas.   G.   Blaine.     See 

Eulogy  on  Garfield. 
Eulogy  on  the  Death  of  Congressman  James  N.  Burnes 
of  Missouri.     (C) — J:  J.  Ingalls. 
(Senator  Ingalls'  Great  Speech  on  Death  of  Burnes, 
of  Missouri — abr.) — SR  7 
Eulogy  on  U.  S.  Grant. — E.  B.  Sherman. — SR  6 
Eulogy  on  Washington. — Rob't  T.  Payne,  Jr. — HS 
Eulogy  on    Webster.     (Discourse   Commemorative   of 
Daniel      Webster,      A — C. — br.      eel.) — Rufus 
Choate.— SE 
Eulogy    on    Wendell    Phillips.— G:    W.    Curtis.     See 

Wendell    Phillips.     A  Eulogy,  etc. 
Eunice.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  28 
Eupheme,  IX.:     Elegy  on  my  Muse,  Sel.fr.     (Pleas- 
ures of  Heaven,  The.) — Ben  Jonson. — FP 
Euphranor,  Sel.  fr.     (Ballad  of  Jenny  the  Mare,  The.) 

— E:  Fitzgerald.— BVC 
Euphrosyne.    (C.) — Matthew  Arnold. 

(Indifference.)- HBP 
Euphues,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Tongue,  The— /r.  Of  the  Edu- 
cation of  Youth — paraphrased  fr.  Plutarch.) — 
J:  Lyly.— OS  1 
Eureka.— Stockton  Bates.— CS  29 
Eureka.— Josiah  G.  Holland.— BIL—FTA 
Europa. — Stephen  H.  Thayer. — AA 
European  Struggles  for  Freedom. — Reverdy  Johnson. 

— SS 
Eurydice. — Fs.  W.  Bourdillon. — VA 
Eutaw  Springs.— Philip  Freneau.- AA— AWB— EDY 
(To  the  Memory  of  the    Americans  who  Fell  at 
Eutaw.)— PAP 
Euterpe's  Visit.— E.  E.  Cook.— SR  12 
Euthanasia.— G:  McKnight. — TAS 
Euthanasia. — H :  More. — EPs 
Euthanasia. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — TMR 
Evanescence. — Harriet  P.  Spofford. — AA 
Evangeline.  —  H :    W.     Longfellow.  —  AP  —  MAL  — 
WR  5  (cond.) 
Evangeline,  Sels.  fr.—Blh  (.br.  sel.  fr.   Pt.   I.,  5; 
sel.  fr.  II.,  1.) — WCLG  2  (opening  and  close.) 
Evangeline  in  Acadie.     (Sel.  p:  I.,  1.) — A  A 
Evangeline  on  the  Prairie.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  3.) — CR 

(Moonlight  on  the  Prairie — si.  abr.) — BNL 
Exile  of  the  Acadians.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  4.)— SO  (arr.) 

(Evangeline,  Sel.  fr.)—SC 
Finding  of  Gabriel,  The.     (II.,  5— abr.)— AA 
(Lost  Found,  The— si.  cond.)—BS  10 
(Meeting  of  Evangeline  and  Gabriel,  The — sel.) — 
BS22 
On  the  Atchafalaya.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  2.)— AA 
Primeval  Forest,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  IrUrod.)— BNL 
(Evangeline,  Sel.  fr.) — AD 
Evangeline     in     Acadie. — H:     W.     Longfellow.     See 

Evangeline. 
Evangeline  on  the  Prairie. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See 

Evangeline. 
Eva's  Death. — Harriet   B.   Stowe.     See  Uncle  Tom'.-! 

Cabin. 
Eve  and  the  Serpent. — Anon.— BS  6— SDR 
Eve  of  Crecy,  The.— W:  Morris. — AVP 
Eve  of  Decoration  Day,  The.— S:  F.  Smith.— BLP 
Eve    of     Election,     The.      (C.)—J:    G.    Whittier. — 
FEP  — SE  (br.  sel.) 
Ballot-box,  The.     (SeZ.)- BNL 
Indian  Summer.    (Br.  «eZ.)  — BNLJdst.)  — PEO  — 
PYO  PP- 

(Eve  of  Election.)— SE  ^ 
Eve  of  Mary,  The.— Nora  Hopper. — EDY 
Eve    of     Quatre     Bras. — Lord    Byron.       See    Childe 

Harold. 
Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The.— J:  Keats.— BNL— FEP-HBP 
Flight,  The.     (Sel.)— WEF  4 
Music.     (Br.  «eZ.)— EPs 
Penitent,  The.     (Br.  sel.)— GF 
Eve  of  St.  Agnes. — Alfred  Tennyson. — AVP 

(St.  Agnes'  Eve— C.)— EDY— FEP— OB— OS  3— 
PGT  2— WEP  4— WR  25— YBF 
Eve  of  St.  Bartholomew,  The. — Walter  Thombury. — 

OS  2 
Eve  of    St.    John,    The.      (In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — 

Walter  Scott.— BPB—PEB  3— WEP  4 
Eve    of    Waterloo,    The. — Lord    Byron.     See    Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Eve  to  Adam. — J:  Milton.     iSee  Paradise  Lost. 
Evelyn. — Rossiter  Johnson. — AA 

Evelyn  Hope.- Rob't  Browning.— AVP— BNL— FEP 
— FP— GP— HBP— MR— VA 


"Even  from  this  brief  review  it  is  manifest  that  the 
nation   is   resolutely   facing   to   the   front." — 
Jas.  A.  Garfield.     See  Inaugural  Address. 
Even    in  a    Palace.     (Worldly    Place— C.) — Matthew 

Arnold.— OS  2 
Even  in  a  Palace. — Marcus  Aurelius  Antoninus.     See 

Thoughts  of  Marcus  Aurelius. 
Even  in  Death.— Helen  C.  Bergen.— WR  19 
Even  Such  is  Time.— Walter  Raleigh.— EHT—ELP 

(Conclusion,  The.)— OB 

(Death  of  Sir  Walter  Raleigh.)— EDY 

(Last  Lines.) — CEIi 

(Lines  Found  in  his  Bible.) — BNL 

(Lines  Written  the  Night  before  his  Execution.) — 
FEP— YBF 

(Verses  Found  in  his  Bible  in  the  Gate-house  at 
Westminster— O— WEP  1 
Even  this    shall  Pass   Away.— Theodore  Tilton.— DR 
— HBR 
•    (All  Things  shall  Pass  Away.)— BS  20— TMR 

(King's  Ring,  The.)— OS  2 
"Evenin'  Hymn,  The." — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Evening. — Ai)on. — HBP 

Evening.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Evening. — Matthew  Arnold. — LC  (sel.) 

(Bacchanalia;  or.  The  New  Age.)— HBP 
Evening. — Rob't  Bulwer-Lytton. — CEL 
Evening.— Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Evening. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Evening.     (Chambers'  Journal.) — POS 
Evening.— W:  Collins.— CEL— EPs— FEP 

(Ode  to  Evening— C.)— EPs— FEP— HBP— OB— 
PGT  1— WEP  3 

(To  Evening.)— BPB 
Evening. — (?)  Croly. — LLC 
Evening. — G:  W.  Doane. — AA 

(Evening  Contemplation.) — FEP 

("Softly  now  the  light  of  day.")— LLC— SAE 
Evening.— Jos.  R.  Drake.'— POS 
Evening. — J:     Fletcher.     See    Faithful    Shepherdess, 

The. 
Evening.     (Fr.  Post-meridian.) — W.  P.  Garrison.^AA 
Evening.     (C.)—J:  Keble.— FEP 

(Sun  of  my  Soul.)— LLC  (abr.)— YBT  (sel.) 
Evening. — Frances  A.  Kemble. — AVP 
Evening. — Archibald  Lampman. — BNL 
Evening. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Evening.     (Sun    upon    the    Lake,    The— C— fr.    The 
Doom  of  Devorgoil.)— Walter  Scott.— BPB 

(Datur  Hora  Quieti.)— PGT  1 

(Leonard  Tarries  Long.) — YBF 
Evening.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— POS 
Evening. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Evening  at  Home,  An. — Anon. — MAD 
Evening  at   the   Farm. — J:   T.   Trowbridge.— BS  1— 
FTR— GN— HNS— SA— SR  1 

(Farm-yard  Song.)— BeR— CS  4— WCL 
Evening  Brings  us  Home. — Anon. — CS  17 — LLC 
Evening.     By  a  Tailor. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.— HPE 
Evening     Cloud,     The.— J:     Wilson.- BNL— FEP— 
POS  (abr.) 

(Emblem  of  Peace,  An.)— CS  21 
Evening  Company,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Evening  Contemplation. — G :  W.  Doane.     See  Evening. 
Evening  Doze,  An. — Albert  E.  Hunt. — CS  31 
Evening  Hymn,  The.— Anon.— TFS  ,^_^ 

Evening  Hymn.— Sir  T:  Browne.— CEL— FEP— YBF 

(Before  Sleep.)— lEPs 
Evening  Hymn. — Mary  L.  Duncan. — YBT  

(Child's    Evening   Prayer   [,A].)— COS— DLS— PP 
ggg 

(Tender  Shepherd,  The.)— TFS 
Evening  Hymn.— Frd'k  W:  Faber.— FEP— SSS  (sel.) 
Evening  Hymn. — W :  H :  Furness.     See  Eternal  Light. 
Evening  Hymn.— T:  Ken.— FEP 
Evening  Hymn. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — FEP 
Evening  Hymn. — Chandler  Robbins. — TAS 
Evening  Hymn  for  a  Child. — J:  Pierpont. — TAS 
Evening  Hymn  of  the  Alpine  Shepherds. — W :  Beattie. 

—FEP 
Evening  Idyl,  An. — Anon. — CS  20 

Evening  in  Paradise. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Evening  in  the  Alps. — Jas.   Montgomery.     See  Alps, 

The. 
Evening  in  Tyringham  Valley. — R :  W.  Gilder. — AA 
Evening  Melody.— Aubrey  De  Vere. — PGT  2 
Evening  on  Calais  Beach.     (Misc.  Sonnets,  Pt.  I.,30.) 
— W:  Wordsworth. — OB 

(By  the  Sea.)— PGT  1— YBF 

("It  is  a  beauteous  evening,  calm  and  free.") — 
FEP— MBL 

(On  the  Beach>t  Calais.)— WEP  4 


107 


Evening 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Evening  on  the  Campus. — C:  K.  Field. — CG  2 
Evening  Prayer,  An. — Bernard  Barton. — WCL 
Evening  Prayer.     (Tab.)— E.   C.   and   L.  J.   Rook.— 

YFE 
Evening   Rest,   The.     ( University  of   Virginia  Maga- 
zine.)—CG  3   • 
Evening  Reverie,  An,  Sel.  fr. — W:  C.  Bryant. — AA 
Evening  Sail,  The.— G:  Crabbe.     See  Borough,  The. 
Evening  Scene,  An.     (fir.  sel.  fr.  The  River — si.  diff. 

vers.) — Coventry  Patmore. — PGT  2 
Evening    Song. — J:     Fletcher.     See    Faithful    Shep- 
herdess, The. 
Evening    Song. — Sidney    Lanier. — ASL — BIL — GP — 

PYO 
(On  the  Shore.)— TAV 
Evening  Song,  An. — Rob't  L.  Hunger. — CG  2 
Evening  Song  on  the  Plantation. — J.  A.  Macon. — CD 
Evening  Songs. — J:  V.  Cheney. — AA 
Evening  Star,  The.— T:  Campbell.— BNL 

(Song  to  the  Evening  Star.}— PGT  1— YBF 
(To  the  Evening  Star.)— FEP— HBP 
Evening  Star,  The.     W:  Wordsworth.— EPs 
Evening     Voluntary.     (IX.) — W:     Wordsworth. — 

WEP4 
Evening    Wind,    The.     (C.)— W:    C.    Bryant.— AA— 

BNL— GP— HBP— LLC  {si.  airr.) 
(To  the  Evening  Wind— «Z.  a6r.  )—PHS 
{Abr.  vers,  is  like  Poems.) 
Evening  with  Art,  An.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Evening    with    Helen's    Babies,    An. — J:    Habberton. 

See  Helen's  Babies. 
Evensong.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Eventide.— T:  Burbidge.— VA 
Eventide.— C.  A.  Mason.— TAS 
Even-time.— J:  S.  Thomson. — TCV 
"Events,  with  trumpet-call,  summon  us  to  our  post." 

— J.  A.  James. — GG 
Ever  a  Song  Somewhere. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — YBT 

(Song,  A— O— GMS 
Ever  so  Far  Away. — A.  Von  Boyle. — DR 
Ever  so  Long  Ago. — Anon. — WR  14 
"Ever  so  Long  Ago." — T.  P.  Sanborn. — CG  1 
Everett.— T:  W.  Parsons.— ED Y 
Everlasting  Memorial,  The. — Horatius  Bonar. — BS  8 — 

CS  31— LLC 
Everlasting  No,  The.     (Sartor  Resartus,  Ch.  VIII. — 

abr.)—T:  Carlyle.— BS  19 
Everlasting  Talker,  The.— Anon.— FDY 
"Every  calling  is  constantly  making  a  silent,  invisible 

draft."     (Nation,  The.)— GG 
"Every  Flower  is  Sweet  to  Me." — Caroline  May. — AD 
Every  Little  Helps. — Anon. — TFS 
Every  One  to  his  Own  Way. — J :  V.  Cheney. — AA 
Every   Year.  —  Albert    Pike    [or  Jas.   W.   Covert]. — 

CS  17  (si.  diff.  vers.)— SM—8R  4 
Every-day  Botany.— Kathe.  H.  Perry. — PEO 
Every-day  Case,  An.     (Fr.  Mr.,  Miss,  and  Mrs.) — C: 

Bloomingdale,  Jr. — BS  26 
Every-day  Characters,  Seis. /r. —  Winthrop  M.  Praed. 
Belle  of  the  Ball,  The.     (III.— Belle  of  the  Ball- 
room, The— O— BNL— DDR— FEP— HPE— 

THP 
(End  of  the  Romance,  The — sel.)— FLS 
My  Partner.     (IV.)— HPE— THP 
Quince.     (II.)— FEP 
Vicar,  The.     (I.)— FEP— HBP— HPE— THP— VA 

— WEP4 
Every-day  Occurrence,  An. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — DLD 
Eve's  Daughter.— E:     R.     SilL-JASL— AWH— OH— 

THP 
Eve's  Lament. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Eve's  Lamentation. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  lyost. 
Eve's  Mirror. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Eviction. — W:  J.  Linton. — VA 
Evidence.— B.  O.  H.— CG  2 
Evil  of  Disunion. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Character  of 

Washington,  The. 
Evil  Thought.— Charlotte  F.  B.  Rog^.— TAS 
Evil, Times.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Evils  of  Gossip. — Anon. — KNE 
Evils  of  Ignorance,  The. — Horace  Mann. — BS  3 
Evils  of  Tight  Lacing,  The. — "Charlotte  Elizabeth." — 

FMR 
Evils  of  War,  The.— Dan'l  S.  Dickinson.— HSS  1 
Evolution.— J:  B.  Tabb. — AA 
Evolution  of  Dodd,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Other  Fellow,  The — 

sel.  fr.  Ch.  XIII.)     W:  H.  Smith.— SC 
Ex  Libris.— Arthur  J.  Munby.— LBB— MSB 
"Ex  Ore  Infantium." — Fs.  Thompson.— HBR 
Examination  Day. — Eliza  Doolittle. — SD 
Examination  Day. — S.  .lennie  Smith. — DLD 
Examination  in    History,    An. — Anon. — CD — CDV — 

SDR 


Examination  in    Natural    History.     (Dial.) — Anon. — 

DE 
Examination  of  a  Candidate  for  Position  as  Teacher. — 

Anon.— PTS 
Examination  of  Shakespeare,  Sel.  fr.  (Maid's  Lament, 
The.)— Walter   S.    Landor.— BNL— FEP— FP 
HBP— OB— PGT  2— VA— WEP  4— YBF 
Examining  de  Bumps. —  (?)  White. — MDD 
Example. — Annie  D.  Hanks. — TAV 
Example.     (Effect     of     Example — C.) — J:     Keble. — 

BNL— CS  7— SM— SSS  (abr.) 
Example  of  America,  The. — Fs.  Jeffrey. — SS 
Example  of  Christ,  The.     (Hymn  CXXXIX.)— Isaac 

Watts.— HBP 
Example  of  Washington,  The. — C:  F.  Adams. — FD  1 
Examples  for    Ireland. — T.    F.    Meagher. — CS  6 — 

OM  (si.  abr.) 
Excel.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. — 

TCP 
Excellent  Ballad   of   Charity,   An. — T:   Chatterton. — 

WEP  3 
Excellent  Man,  The. — Heinrich  Heine. — PS 
Excelsior. — Anon. — CDV  (abr.) 

(Chinese  Excelsior — si.  diff.  vers.) — CS  20 
(For  other  varodies  see  Ein    Deutsches   Lied   and 
Proclivior.) 
Excelsior.— H :  W.  Longfellow.— BNI>—BS  2— CS  1— 

FEP— HBP— LLC— SS— WCLI  2 
Excessive    Modesty. — W:     Cowper.      See     Conversa- 
tion. 
Exchange,  The.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— BNL 
Exchange,  The.— Sarah  H.  Palfrey.— TAS 
Excitement    at    [or    in]    Kettleville,    The.     (Dial.) — 

Epes  Sargent.— ASD— PR 
Exclamatory. — Anon. — MHR 
Exclusive's  Broken  Idol,  The.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Excursion,  The,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Wordsworth. 

Among  the  Moimtains.     (Fr.  Bk.  IV.) — WEP  4 
Excursion,  The.     (Br.  sels.) — BNL 
God  in  Nature.     (Fr.  Bk.  III.)— FTR 

"I  cannot  doubt  that  they  whom   ye  deplore." 
(Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— HDL 
Mind's  Eye,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Prelude.)— BNL 
Mist  Opening  in  the  Hills.     (Fr.  Bk.  11.)— WEP  4 
(Cloud-visions — br.  sel.) — BNL 
(Vision  of  Mist  splendours,  A — si.  abr.) — FTR 
Moon  among  Trees,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)  — 
WEP  4 
(Imagination — shorter  sel.) — BNL 
Mountain  Ash,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  VII.)— HSS  1 
Sea  Shell,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  IV.)— WEP  4 

(Sea-shore,  The— br.  seZ.)— BNL 
Sunrise.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.j— IR 
Sunset.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IX.)— IR 
Twin  Peaks  of  the  Valley.     (Fr.  Bk.  II.)— WEP  4 
Unknown  Poets.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— BNL 
Excursion  to  the  Mountains,   An.     (Fr.   The   Village 

Patriarch.)— Ebenezer  Elliott.— WEP  4 
Excuse.     (Urania — C.) — Matthew      Arnold. — HBP — 

OH 
Execution,    The.     (  C. — Hon.    Mr.   Sucklethumbkin's 
Story.)- R:  H.  Barham.— BS  25— FEP 
(My  Lord  Tomnoddy.)— CS  1 
Execution,  The.— Lord  Byron.     See  Parisina. 
Execution  of  Andr(5,   The.     (Fr.  Pemberton,  Pt.  III., 

Ch.  XIII.)— H:  Peterson.- BS  3— PFP 
Execution  of  Charles  I. — Andrew  Marvell.     See  Hora- 
tian  Ode  upon  Cromwell's   Return   from   Ire- 
land, A. 
Execution  of  Joan  of  Arc. — T:  DeQuincey.     <Sec  Joan 

of  Arc. 
Execution  of  Lady  De  Winter,  The.     (Three  Musket- 
eers,  The,  Ch.  XXXVI.)— Alexandre  Dumas. 
— BS24 
Execution  of  Louis  XVI.,  The.     (Fr.  Marie  Antoinette 

— play.) — Anon.— DES 
Execution  of    Louis    XVI. — W:    M.    Thackeray.     See 

Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The. 
Execution  of  Madame  Roland.     (Sel.  fr.   The  Giron- 
dists, Vol.  III.,  Bk.  LI.)— CS  13 
Execution    of   Marie   Antoinette. — ,T:   Carlyle.      iSee 

French  Revolution,  The. 
Execution  of   Marie   Antoinette. — W:   M.   Thackeray. 

See  Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The. 
Execution  of  Montrose,  The.     (In  Lavs  of  the  Scottish 
Cavaliers.)- W:E.Aytoun.— ^NL— EDY(8eZ.) 
— EHT— FEP— HB— MR— VA 
(SZ.  abr.)- CSll— DS 
(^6r.)— FR— HSS  2— OS  2— SS 
Execution  of  Queen  Mary.     (Sel.  fr.  Mary  Stuart,  Ch. 

XXXIV.)— Alphonse  de  Lamartine.— BS  11 
Execution  of  Sir  Thomas  More,  The. — Jas.  A.  Froude. 
See  History  of  England. 


108 


TITLE    INDEX 


Face 


Execution  of  Sydney  Carton,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See 

Tale  of  Two  Cities,  A. 
Execution  of    the    Princess    de    Lamballe. — W:    M. 
Thackeray.     See  Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The. 
Execution  of  Ugo  Bassi.— H.  E.  H.  King.— EDY 
Executive  Power  to  be  Dreaded. — Dan'l  Webster.     See 

Presidential  Prote.st,  The 
Exequy,  The.     (^6r.)— H:  King.— HBP 

(Exequy  on  his  Wife — si.  diff.  abr.) — OB 
Exequy  on  his  Wife. — H :  King.     See  Exequy,  The. 
Exercise  around  the  Christmas  Tree. — Anon. — CP 
Exercise  for  Washington's   Birthday. — Anon. — DFR 
Exercise  of  the  Fan. — Jos.  Addison.    See  Spectator, 

The. 
Exercise  Recitation,   An. — E.   C.   and   L.   J.   Rook. — 

COS— PP 
Exhibition  Day. — Eliza  Doolittle. — SD 
Exhortation. — T :  Hastings. — AA 
Exhortation  to  Courage.— W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

John. 
Exhortation  to  Praise  God.     (Psalm  CXLVIII.)— SS 
Exhortation  to  Prayer. — Marg.  Mercer. — AA — HBP — 

LLC 
Exhortation  to  the  Greeks. — Lord  Byron.     See  Giaour, 

The. 
Exile  at  Rest,  The. — J:  Pierpont. — AA  (abr.) 

(Napoleon  at  Rest.) — SR  3 
Exile  of  Erin  [.The].— T:  Campbell.— BNL—FEP 

(Abr.—w.  mitstc.)- NPS— YP 
Exile  of  the  Acadians,  The. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See 

Evangeline. 
Exile  to  his  Wife,  The. — Jos.  Brennan   [or  Brenan]. — 
CS  8— FEP 
(Come  to  me,  Dearest.)— BNL—FTA—TFY 
Exiled.— Mary  McGuire.— CS  34 
Exiles,  The.     (Chambers'  Journal.) — HP 
Exiles.— W:  H.  Hayne.— AA 
Exile's  Devotion,  The.     T:  D'A.  McGee.— VA 
Exile's  Hope,  The.— Victor  Hugo.— OS  3 
Exiles  in  Egypt,  The.— H :  B.  Carrington.— BLP 
Exile's  Song,   The.— Rob't   Gilfillan.— FEP— FP— VA 
Existence  of  a  God,  The.— Anon.— CS  5— KNE— SA 
Exit.— W:  Watson.— VA 
Exmoor  Harvest  Song. — R:  D.  Blackmore.     SeeLorna 

Doone. 
Exodus,  Sels.  fr.     Bible. 

Song  of  Israel.  (Ch.  XV.,  1-18.)— AE 

(Song  of  Moses— 1-19.)— BS  3 
First  Constitution,  The.     (Ch.  XX.,  2-17.)— BLP 
(Ten  Commandments,  The— 3-17.)— LLC 
Exordium. — Demosthenes.    See  Oration  on  the  Crown, 

The. 
Expansion.     (Set.   fr.   A   Broadway   Pageant.) — Walt 

Whitman.— SR  13 
Expectation. — Theodore  Wratislaw. — VA 
Expected  Visitors,  The. — G:  C.  Graham. — GS 
Expecting  to  Get  Even.     (Boston  Post.) — SR  4 
Expectoration,  An.     (On  my  Joyful  Departure  from 
the  Same  City  [Cologne]— C.  )—S :  T.  Coleridge. 
— HPE 
Expectoration  the  Second. — S:  T.  Coleridge. — HPE 
(Cologne— C.j— FEP— HBP— THP 
(Epigram:     (Jologne.) — BNL 
Expensive  Chicken,  An. — Anon. — SR  1 
Experience. — Edith  Wharton. — AA 
Experience.     (Williams  Weekly.) — CG  1 
Experience  and  a  Moral,  An. — Frd'k  S.  Cozzens. — BNL 
Experience  of  the  McWilliamses   with    Membranous 
Croup.     (C.) — S:  L.Clemens. 
(Membranous  Croup  and  the  McWilliamses.) — BS  5 
— SR  10 
Experience  with    a    Refractory     Cow. — Anon. — CH — 

NPS— YP 
Experience  with   European    Guides. — S:   L.  Clemens. 

See  Innocents  Abroad. 
Experiences  of  Nature. — H :  W.  Beecher.     See: 
Death  of  our  Almanac,  The. 
Walk  among  Trees,  A. 
Explanation,  An. — Walter  Learned. — HP 
(In  Explanation.) — A  A 
(What  Else  Could  he  Do.)— BS  21 
Exploit  of  Hector,  The. — Homer.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Expostulation.    (C.) — J:  G.  Whittier. 

(Our  Countrymen  in  Chains — si.  abr.) — TMD 
Expostulation  and  Reply. — W:  Wordsworth. — FTR — 

LLC— WEP  4 
Expulsion  of  Catiline  from  the  Senate. — G :  Croly.     See 

Catiline. 
Expunging  Resolution,   The.     (Abr.) — H:   Clay. — OM 
— SS 
(On  the  Expunging  Resolution — C.) — PS 
Exquisite  Beauty  of  Beatrice.  The. — Dante  Alighieri. 
See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 


Extempore  Effusion  upon  the  Death  of  James  Hogg. 
(O— W:  Wordsworth.- MBL 
(On  the  Death  of  James  Hogg.)— EDY 
(Passing  of  the  Elder  Bards,  The — sel.) — VA 

Extending  Credit. — Anon. — BS  25 

Extension  of  the  Term  of  Copyright. — T:  N.  Talfourd. 
— SS 

Extent  of  Country  no  Bar  to  Union. — Edmund  Ran- 
dolph.—SS 
(Union  of  the  States,  The — ptly.  same.) — SR  8 

Extracting  a  Secret.  (Dial.) — Fs.  Marion  Crawford. — 
NDP 

Extracts  from  a  Poem  Delivered  at  Brown  University 
in  1830,  Sel.  fr.  (What  is  Ambition?)— Na- 
thaniel P.  Willis.— BLP— SR  3  (longer.) 

Extraordinary  Phenomenon,  An. — Anon. — BeR 

"Extras."- — R:  Burton.- — AA 

Extravaganza,  An. — Victor  Hugo. — BIL 

Extreme  Unction. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — SR  1— TAV 

Extremes. — Jas.  W.  Riley.- — BJC 

Extremes  Meet. — G:  C.  Graham. — GS 

Eyeless  at  Gaza. — J:  Milton.     See  Samson  Agonistes. 

Eyes  and  no  Eyes.  (Sel.  ad.  fr.  preface  to  Madam  How 
and  Lady  Why.)— C:  Kingsley.— WCLI  2 

Eyes,  Hide  my  Love.^S:  Daniel.  See  Hymen's 
Triumph. 

Ezra  and  Me  and  the  Boards. — Mary  H.  Field. — BS  24 


Fabius  Jo  ^Emilius. — Livy.     See  History  of  Rome. 
Fable.     (C. }  —  Ralph  W.  Emerson.  —  AWH  —  HBP  — 
LC— PoR— THP 
(Mountain  and  the    Squirrel,  The.)— AD— BVC — 
CGd  —  CS  29  —  GMS  —  OS  1  —  PC  —  PHS  — 
POS  —  PS  —  PTS  —  WCL 
Fable,  A.     (Popular  Educator.) — NV 
Fable  for  Critics,  A,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. 
On  Himself. — AA 
"To  his  Countrymen.- — AA 
Fable  of  the  Boy  that  Stole  Apples.     (Webster's  Spell- 
ing Book.) — AD 
Fable  of  tlie  Oak  and  the  Briar. — Edmund  Spenser. 

See  Shepheardes  Calender,  The. 
Fables. — .lEsop. 

Fables  from  iEsop  (25).— LLC 
Ass  in  the  Lion's  Skin,  The. 
Bald  Knight,  The. 
Boy  and  the  Filberts,  The. 
Boys  and  the  Frogs,  The. 
Bull  and  the  Goat,  The. 
Charcoal-burner  and  the  Fuller,  The. 
Dog  in  the  Manger,  The. 
Eagle  and  the  Arrow,  The. 
Fisherman,  The. 
Fox  and  the  Grapes,  The. 
Fox  and  the  Lion,  The. 
Gnat  and  the  Bull,  The. 
Hare  and  the  Tortoise,  The. 
Hen  and  the  Golden  Egg,  The. 
Hercules  and  the  Waggoner. 
Mischievous  Dog,  The. 
Old  M^n  and  Death,  The. 
Rivers  and  Sea. 

Shepherd's  Boy  and  the  Wolf,  The. 
Three  Tradesmen,  The. 
Trumpeter  Taken  Prisoner,  The. 
Viper  and  the  File,  The. 
Widow  and  her  Little  Maids,  The. 
Wild  Ass  and  the  Lion,  The. 
Wolf  and  the  Goat,  The. 
Farthing  Rushlight,  The  (Lamp,  The).— OS  1 
Goose  with  the  Golden  Eggs,  The.— OS  1 
Jtipiter  and  the  Bee. — OS  1 
Wind  and  the  Sun,  The.— OS  1 
Fabricius  Refuses  Bribes. — Pliny. — BLP 
Face,  A. — Rob't  Browning. — VA 
Face,  The. — Ebenezer  Jones. — VA 
Face,  A.— W:  T.  Washburn.— BIL 

Face  against  the  Pane,  The. — T:  B.  Aldrich. — CS  19 — 
FR— MMR 
(Mabel;  or.  The  Face  against  the  Pane.) — SA 
Face  in  the  (Cathedral,  The. — Mary  J.  K.  Lawson. — 

TCV 
Face  in  the  Tongs,  A. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Face  of  a  Demon,  The.— C:  B.  Lewis. — WR  19 
Face  on  [or  upon]  the  Floor,  The. — H.  A.  D'Arcy. — 

CS  33— DS— NPS— YP 
Face  upon  the  Floor,  The. — H.  A.  D'Arcy.     See  Face 
on  the  Floor,  The. 


109 


Faces 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AMD  RECITATIONS 


Faces,  SeZ.  fr.     ("Behold  a  Woman  I")— Walt  Whit- 
man.—HBP 
Faces  in  the  Fire. — Anon. — SR  1 
Faces  we  Meet,  The.— Allie  Wellington.— CS  13 
Facetious  Story  of  John  Gilpin,  The. — W:  Cowper. — 
MHR 
(Diverting    History    of    John    Gilpin,    The — C.) — 
BNL  —  BVC  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  MBL 
—  FEB  3  —  THP 
(John  Gilpin.)—  BPB  —  CGd  —  CS  7  —  PC  — 
PHS  —  PSR  —  WCL 
Facial  Family.  The.— Anon.— SR  10 

(Crack-mouthed  Family,  The.)— WR  16 
Facilis  Descensus.     {Congregationalist.) — EA 
Factory  Girls'  Last  Day,  The. — Rob't  D.  Owen  (7). — 

CS7 
Facts  Concerning  "Jay  Gould." — Anon. — CS  27 
Facts  in  the  Case  of  the  Great  Beef  Contract.     (C.) — 
S:  L.  Clemens. 
("Great  Beef  Contract,"  The.)— BS  4  {si.  abr.)— 

MHR 
(Mark  Twain's  "Great  Beef -contract" — si.  abr.) — 
CS4 
Fad  Obsolete,  The. — Maude  Andrews. — TL 
Faded  Flowers.— Ida  M.  Buxton.— CS  25 
Faded  Leaves.— Alice  Cary.— PEO— POS 
Fading.— G:  Howland.— SR  4 
Fading  Leaf,  The.— Gail  Hamilton.— BS  15— CS  22— 

JJPS— YP 
Fading  Rose,   The,   Sel.   fr.     (Epitaph.)— Philip  Fre- 

neau. — AA 
Fading  Summer.— T:  Nash.— ELP 
Faerie  Queene,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Edmund  Spenser. 

Bower  of  Bliss,  The.— BNL     (Bk.  II.,  Can.  XII., 
St.   58-62,   70,   71.)— WEP   1   (42-44,   70-72, 
74-76.) 
Faerie  Queene,  The.  (St.  70.)— SE 
Cave  of  Mammon,  The.     (II.,  Can.  VII.,  1-30.)— 

WEPl 
Cave  of  Sleep,  The.     (I.,  Can.  I.,  39,  41.)— BNL 
Claims    of     Mutability     Pleaded    before     Nature. 
(VII.,  Can.    VII.,  17-19,  44-47,  56-59;    VII., 
Can.  VIII.)— WEP  1 
Mutability.     (VII.,  Can.  VIII.)— GP 
Contentment.     (VI.,    Can.    IX.,    29,    30— abr.)— 

BLP 
Gardens    of    Venus.     (IV.,    Can.     X.,    21-30.)— 

WEP  1 
Gloriana.     (V.,  Can.  IX.,  27-40.)— EHT 
House   of   Busyrane.     (III.,    Can.    XL,   46-54.)— 

EPs 
House  of  Pride,  The.     (I.,  Can.  IV.,  8-14,  16,  17.) 

—WEP  1 
Ministry  of  Angels,  The.     (II.,  Can.  VIII.,  1,  2.)— 

BNL— GP 
Months   and   Seasons.     (VII.,   Can.   VII.,   28-43.) 
— GP 
August.     (St.  37— abr.)- GN— POS 
Autumn.     (30.)— GN— POS 
Faerie   Queene,   The,   Sela.   fr.     (28,   30,   31.)— 

BNL 
May.     (34.)— GN— POS 
Seasons,  The.     (28.)— GN  (aeZ.)- POS 
Summer.     (29.)— GN  (a6r.)— POS  {sel.) 
Winter.     (31.)— GN— POS 
Phsedria  and  the  Idle  Lake.     (II.,  Can.  VI.,  1-18.) 
—WEP  1 
Faerie    Queene,    The,   Sel.    fr.     (St.    12— sel.)— 
BNL 
Quelling  of  the  Blatant   Beast,  The.     (VI.,   Can. 

XII^  23-28,  31-38,  40,  41.)— WEP  1 
Song  of  Enchantment,  The.     (I.,  Can.  IX.,  39,  40, 

43,  44.)— ELP 
Sunrise.     (I.,  Can.  V.,  2— sel.)— GP 
Trees.     (I.,  Can.  I.,  7-9— sZ  abr.)- EPs 
(In  Praise  of  Trees— abr.)— AD — LLC 
(Kinds  of  Trees  to  Plant— a6r.)—HSS  1 
Una  and  the  Lion.     (I.,  Can.  III.,  4-9.)— BNL— 

EPs 
Una  and  the  Red  Cross  Knight. — BNL  (I.,  Can.  I., 
1-7.)— WR  11  (1-13,28.) 
(Red    Cross    Knight    and    Una,    The.     1-10.)— 
WEP  1 
Una's  Marriage.     (I.,  Can.  XII.,  21-23,  37-42.)— 

WEP  1 
Wooing  of  Amoret.     (I.,  Can.  X.,  37-39,  42,  43, 
47-58.)— WEP  1 
Faery  Foster-mother,  The. — Rob't  Buchanan. — VA 
Faerv  Song.     (C.)— J:  Keats.- LC 

(t'airy  Song.)— BNL— FEP— HBP— OS  1— YBF 
Fssulan  Idyl.     (Poems    and    Epigrams,    LXVII. — si. 
flbr.)— Walter  S.  I-.andor.— WEP  4 
(Fiesolan  Idyl.)— VA 


"Fail — yet    rejoice;   because    no    less."     (fir.    sel.    fr 

Light  and  Shade.) — Adelaide  Procter. — CS  1 
Failed.— Phillips  Thompson.— PEO 
Failure. — Anon . — HP 
Failure.— Charles  Quiet.— TS 
Fain  I  Would. — Alfonso  Ferrabosco. — ELP 
"Fain  would  I  Climb." — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
Faint  Heart. — Harlan  C.  Pearson. — CG  2 
Faint  Heart  ne'er  Won  Fair  Lady. — C :  P.  Hine. — CG  2 
Fair  and  Fair. — G:  Peele.  See  Arraignment  of   Paris, 

The. 
Fair  Annie.     (Lord  Thomas  and  Fair  Annie — in  Bor- 
der    Minstrelsy.)  —  Anon.   —  BB  — OB  — 
PEB  2  (si.  din.  vers.— abr.) 
(Walter  Scott's  vers. — si.  diff.) — EPs 
Fair  Annie  of  Lochroyan. — Anon. — BB  (abr.) — FEP 
(Lass  of  Lochroyan — abr.) — BFV — OB 
{All  si.  diff.  versions.) 
"Fair  are  the  flowers  and  the  children,  but  their  subtle 
suggestion  is  fairer." — R:  Realf. — GG 
(Indirection— C.)—AA—BS    18   {si.   abr.)— CS    18 
— GP 
Fair  Circassian,  The. — Rr  Gamett. — VA 
Fair  Copy-holder,  The.— C:  H.  Crandall.— TFY 
Fair  Easter  Lilies. — Ellen  K.  Vincent. — SR  12 
Fair  Eleanor.— W:  Blake.— PEB  3 
Fair  England. — Helen  G.  Cone. — AA 
Fair  Enthusiast,  A. — Anon. — CS  33 
Fair  Exchange,  A. — G:  Birdseye. — AWH 
Fair  Exchange     no     Robbery.      {Frags,     fr.    various 

authors.) — BNL 
Fair  Fight ;  or,  the  Wife's  Allowance,  A. — Mrs.  Russell 

Kavanaugh. — KH 
"Fair   Greece!   sad   relic   of   departed   worth." — Lord 

Byron.     See  Childe  Harold  s  Pilgrimage. 
Fair  Helen.    (Fair  Helen  of  Kirconnell,  Pt.  II.) — Anon. 
—EPs  {si.  abr.)- FEP— HBP— PEB  1— PGT  1 
— VSG— WR  21 
(Burd  Helen.)— CEL 

(Helen  of  Kirkconnel[l].)— BB— BPB— LH— OB— 
OEB 
(John  Mayne's  vers.) — FEP 
Fair  Helen  of  Kirconnell. — Anon.     See  foregoing. 
Fair  Hills  of  Ireland,  The.— Sir  S:  Ferguson.— OB- 
TIP 
Fair  Ines.— T-  Hood.— FP— HBP— OB— VA 
Fair  Janet. — Anon. — ^PEB  1 
Fair  Maid  and  the  Sun,  The. — Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. 

— VA 
Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Go,  Pretty 
Birds.)— T:  Heywood.— FEP 
(Message,  The.)— OB 
(Phillis.)- EP 
(To  Phyllis.)— ES—OEL 
("Ye  little  birds  that  sit  and  sing.") — ELP 
Fair  Margaret   and   Sweet   William.     {In  Percy's  Re- 
liques.)— Anon.— OEB— PEB  1 
(Fair  Margaret's  Misfortimes — si.  diff.  vers.) — BB 
Fair  Margaret's  Misfortunes. — Anon.     See  foregoing. 
Fair  Play  for  Women.     {Sel.)—G:  W:  Curtis.- BS  7 

(Woman's  Rights— «eZ.)—TMR 
Fair  Rosamund.— T.  Delone.— CGd— OEB  {abr.) 
"Fair  ship,  that  from  the  Italian  shore." — Alfred  Ten- 
nyson.    See  In  Memoriam. 
Fair  Sufferers. — Anon. — MMR 
Fair  Tree! — Lady  Winchelsea. — AD  {sel.) 

(Tree,  The.)— WEP  3 
Fairest    Flower,    The.     {Diff.    tr.    of   The    Beauteous 

Flower.) — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — WR  9 
Fairest  Thing  in  Mortal  Eyes,  The. — Charles.  Duke  of 
Orleans  {tr.  by  H:  F.  Cary).- BNL  {si.  abr.) 
—HBP 
Fairie  Queene,   The. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie 

Queene,  The. 
Fairies.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Fairies,The.(C.)— W:Allingham.— BFV— BNL— BVC 
—CGd— CSS  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  HBR  —  LC  — 
OB— PHS— PPSr- TIP— VA— WR   16   {abr.) 
(Fairy  Folk,  The.)— GN— OS  1— WCL 
Fairies.     {Sel.  fr.  Little  Garden  of  Roses.) — T:  War- 
ton. — EPs 
Fairies'  Dance,  The. — Anon. — ELP 
Fairies'  Dance,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Fairies  Dancing,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Fairies'  Farewell,  The. — R:  Corbet. — HBP 

(Farewell  to  the  Fairies.)— BNL  (abr.)— FEP 
Fairies'    Lullaby,    The. — W:    Shakespeare.     See   Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream. 
Fairies    of    the    Caldon-Low,   The. — Mary    Howitt. — 
BFV  —  FEP  —  FMR  —  HBP  —  OS  1  —  PC 
—  PHS  —  PoR  —  WCL 
Fairies'  Shopping,  The. — Margaret  Deland. — PoR 
Fairies'  Song,  The.— Anon.— HBP 


110 


TITLE    INDEX 


Fallen 


Fairies'    Song.      {Fr.    Amyntas;    or,   The    Impossible 

Dowry.) — T:  Randolph  (<r.  by  Leigh  Hunt). — 

BNL 
(Song  of  Fairies.)— FEP— HBP 
(Song  of  Fairies  Robbing  an  Orchard — C.) — BVC 
Fair- Virtue,   the   Mistress   of   Philarete,   Sela.   fr. — G: 

Wither. 
Admire  not.  Shepherd's  Boy. — EP 
Love-poems  (3).— WEP  2 

Song  to  her  Beauty,  A.     (Love-poem,  I.) — ES 
Shepherd's  Swain,  A. — EP 
Fairy. — Anon. — CP 

Fairy  and  Child.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Fairy  Barcarolle,  A.— W:  H.  Eddy.— CG  2 
"Fairy  beam  upon  you.   The."  —  Ben   Jonson.      See 

Masque  of  the  Metamorphosed  Gipsies,  A. 
Fairy  Bell.— Marion  Short.- WR  7 
Fairy  Bread. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Fairy  Child,  The.— J:  Anster.— BNL— HBP 
Fairy  Dance,  The. — Anon.     iSee  Fairy  Queen,  The. 
Fairy  Faces. — Anon. — HB 
Fairy  Fiddler,  The.— Nora  Hopper.— TIP 
Fairy  Folk,  The. — W:  AUingham.     See  Fairies,  The. 
Fairy  Folk,  The.— Rob't  Bird.— PoR 
Fairy  Folk.— Alice  Cary.— BLF 
Fairy  Gold.— J:  Todhunter.— TIP 
Fairy  in    Armour,    A. — Jos.    R.    Drake.     <See    Culprit 

Fay,  The. 
Fairy  Jewels. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Fairy  Jokes,  A.     {Play.) — Anon. — EuE 
Fairy      Land. — W:      Shakespeare.     See     Midsummer 

Night's  Dream  and  Tempest,  The. 
Fairy  Life,  The.       W:    Shakespeare.     iSee    Tempest, 

The. 
Fairy  of  the  Dell,  The.— Alice  Cary  (?).— WR  5 
Fairy  Queen,  The.     (C — in  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 

— CEL  (abr.)- FEP— HBP— PTS  (se/.) 
(Fairy  Dance,  The— «eZ.— ad.)— ASD 
(Fairy  Song,  A.)— BVC 
Fairy  Queen. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene, 

The. 
Fairy  Queen's  Decision,  The. — Louise  E.  V.  Boyd. — 

StD 
Fairy  Revels.     {Fr.   Endimion,   Act   IV.,   Sc.   3.) — J: 

Lyly.— ELP 
Fairy  Shipwreck. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Fairy  Song,    A. — Anon.     <See    Fairy    Queen,    The. — 

Anon. 
Fairy  Song. — J:  Keats.     See  Fairy  Song. 
Fairy  Song.       {Sel.   fr.  The  Legend  of    the  Haunted 

Tree.) — Winthrop  M.  Praed.— OB 
Fairy  Songs.  —  W :      Shakespeare.     See     Midsummer 

Night's  Dream  and  Tempest,  The. 
Fairy  Story.  A. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Fairy  Tale,  A.— E:  F.  Turner.— CS  29— NFS— YP 
Fairy  Thorn,  The.— S:  Ferguson.— PEB  4— TIP— VA 
Fairy  Thrall,  The. — Mary  C.  G.  Byron.— VA 
Fairy  to  Puck,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Midsum- 
mer Night's  Dream. 
Fairy-land.— Eliz.  Y.  Case.- BS  5 
Fairy's  Love  Song,  A. — Ella  Higginson. — LC 
Fairy's  Revenge,    The. — Mrs.    Russell    Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Fairy's  Song,  A. — W:    Shakespeare.     See  Midsummer 

Night's  Dream. 
Faith.— Anne  C.  L.  Botta.— TAS 
Faith.— Frances  A.  (Kemble)  Butler. — BNL — EPs— 

FEP— VA 
("Better  trust  all  and  be  deceived.") — GG 
(Trust.)— CS  19 
Faith.— T:  Chatterton.— PYO 

(Resignation  [,  The— C.].)— FEP— HBP 
Faith.— J:  V.  Cheney.— TAS 
Faith.— Ray  Palmer.— AA— TAS 

(My   Faith    Looks    up    to   Thee.)— FEP— SAE— 

TAV 
Faith.— Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt.— TAS 
Faith. — G:  Santayana. — BNL 
Faith  and  a  Heart. — J :  L.  Spalding.   See  God  and  the 

Soul. 
Faith  and  Freedom. — W:  Wordsworth. — See  Destiny. 
Faith  and  Hope. — Rembrandt  Peale. — BNL 

(Don't  be  Sorrowful,  Darling.) — GP 
Faith  and    Reason. — Eliz.    Y.    Case. — BS  4    {ahr.) — 

CS13 
Faith  and  Works.— Anon.— CS  15 
Faith  and  Works. — Alice  Cary.— CS  8 
Faith  and  Works. — W :  H.  Montgomery. — DR 
Faith,  Hope    and    Charity.     {Tab.) — Tony    Denier. — 

TDT 
Faith  in  God.— Fs.  L.  (?)  Hawks.— PC 
Faith  of  Washington,  The.— F:  R.  Coudert.— PEO— 

TMR 


Faith  Trembling.^ — Mary  A.  De  Vere. — AA 
Faithful  Angel,  The. — J :  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Faithful  Bird,  The.     (A6r.)— W:  Cowper.— CGd— LC 

PHS 
Faithful  Dog,  The.— Lydia  H.  Sigourney.— FP 
FaithfuLFriends.     {Frags,  fr.  various  atUhors.) — BNL 
FaithffflTiittle    Wife,    A.— Oliver    W.    Holmes.     See 

Professor  at  the  Breakfast  Table,  The. 
Faithful  Lovers,  The.— Anon.— BNL— CS  6— SR  10 
Faithful  Promises.     (C.) — Frances  R.  Havergal. 

(New  Year's  Hymn.^- BS  18 
Faithful   Shepherdess,  The,  SeZs.  fr. — J:  Fletcher    [or 

Beaumont  and  Fletcher]. 
Country  Scenes  in  Old  Days  (includes  Daybreak — 

fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  4;  Unfolding  the  Flocks— /r. 

v.,  1— obr.- Evening— /r.  II.,  2.)— PHS 
Evening. — CGd 

(Evening  Song.)— CEL— GN—POS 

(Folding  [of]  the  Flocks.)— BNL— FEP— HBP 
— LC— OS  3— YBF 

(Priest's  Evening  Song,  The.) — EP 
Hymn  to  Pan.     {Fr.  I.,  2.)— OB— OEL 
Hymn  to  Pan.     (Fr.  V.,  5.)— EP 

(To  Pan.)— FEP— HBP— LC— PHS 
Morning.     {Inc.     Daybreak   and   Unfolding   the 

Flocks— «eZ.)—POS 
Priest  's  Morning  Song.     (Unfolding  the  Flocks.) 

— EP 
River    God    to    Amoret,    The.     {Fr.    III.,     1.) 

—WEP  2 
Satyr,  The.     {Fr.  I.,  1.)— WEP  2 
Satyr,  The.     {Fr.  V.,  5.)— WEP  2 

(Satyr's  Service,  The.) — EP 
Song,  The.     {Fr.  III.,  1.)— WEP  2 
Faithful     unto     Death.— Clifford     Harrison.— VSG— 

WR16 
Faithful  unto  Death.— R.  N.  Titherington.— EDY 
Faithless  Knight,  The.— W:  AUingham. — PEB  4 
Faithless  Nelly  [tw.  Nellie]  Gray.— T:  Hood.— BNL— 

FEP— HBP— HPE— NA— PEB  3— THP 
Faithless    Sally    Brown.— T:      Hood.— BNL— FEP— 

HBP— PEB  3— THP 
Faithless  Shepherdess,  The. — Anon. — OB 

(Unfaithful  Shepherdess,  The.)— PGT  1 
Faith's  Vista.— H :  Abbey.— AA 
Fakenham  Ghost,  The.— Rob't  Bloomfield.— BVC 
Falcon,  The.     ("I  am  a  white  falcon,  hurrah!" — C.) — 

R:  H.  Stoddard.— A  A 
Falcon,  The.     {SI.  a6r.)— Alfred  Tennyson.— HBR 
Fall  Fashions. — Edith  M.  Thomas.— AD — LLC — PP— 

YPS 
Fall  In!— F.  N.  Scott.— PAPm 
Fall  In.— Kate  B.  Sherwood.— BS  22 
Fall  in!  I860.— G:  W.  Cable.     See  Dr.  Sevier. 
Fall  of  a  Soul,  The.— J:  A.  Symonds.— VA 
Fall  of  Antwerp,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Rise  of  the  Dutch 

Republic,  Bk.  II.,  Ch.  V.)— J:  L.  Motley.— I R 
Fall  of  Corydon,  The.— W.  B.  A.— TL 
Fall  of   D'Assas,  The.     {SI.  o6r.)— Felicia  Hemans.— 

SO 
Fall  of  Greece,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See    Giaour,  The 
Fall  of  J.  W.  Beane,  The.— Oliver  Herford.— TL 
Fall  of  Jericho,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Spell  of  Ashtaroth.) 

— Duffield  Osborne.— CS  28 
Fall  of    Jerusalem,  The,    Sel.  fr.     (Hebrew  Wedding 

(,  The].)— H :  H.  Milman.— BNL— HBP 
(Bridal  Song— scZ. )— FEP 
Fall  of    Jock     Gillespie,     The. — Rudyard     Kipling. — 

PEB  4 
Fall  of  Niagara,  The.— J:  G.  C.  Brainard.- BNL — TAV 

(Niagara.)— BS  6— FEP 
Fall   of  Pemberton  Mill,  The.— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.    See 

Fall  of  the  Pemberton  Mill,  The. 
Fall  of  Temi,  The.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Fall  of  the  Indian,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.       (Conclusion.) — 

Isaac  McLellan. — FP 
Fall  of  the  Oak,  Sel.  fr.    (Oak,  The.)— G:  Hill.— AD— 

HSSl 
Fall  of  [the]  Pemberton  Mill,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Tenth 

of  January.)— Eliz.  S.  Phelps. — BRR — BS  12 

{shorter)— CS  15 
Fall  of  Warsaw.     1794. — T:  Campbell.     See  Pleasures 

of  Hope,  The. 
Fall  of  Wolsey. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry 

VIII. 
Fall  Song; — Anon. — AD 
Fallacy  of  High  License,  The. — Frances  E.  Willard. — 

WR18 
Fall-Crick    View    of    the    Earthquake,    A. — Jas.    W. 

Riley  (?).- GH 
Fallen,  The.— J:  V.  Cheney.— HS 
Fallen.— G:  E.  Montgomery.— HP 
Fallen  Asleep. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — HDL 


111 


Fallen 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Fallen  Monarch,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Big  Trees  and  the 

Yosemite.) — Isaac  H.  Bromley. — AD 
Fallen  Star,  The.— G:  Darley.— OB— TIP 
Fallen  Star,  A.— Arthur  W.  Pinero.— VSG 
Falling  in  and  Falling  out. — Elmer  R.  Coates. — CS  28 
Falling  Leaves,  The.— C:  Q.  D.  Roberts-^TSfcV 
Falling  Snow,  The.— Anon.— DLS—PP—\«W* 
Falling  Stars. — Bayard  Dominick,  Jr. — CG  1 
Falling  to  Sleep.— Anon. — WCL 
Fallow  Field,  The.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.— AA— CS  22— 

WR5 
Falls  of   Princes,  Set.  fr.  (Description   of  the   Golden 

Age — /r.  Bk.  VII.) — -Boccaccio  {tr.hy  J:  Lyd- 

gate).— WEP  1 
False  Accusation,  The. — Mrs.  R.  M.  Swander. — ED 
False  Alarms. — Ann  and  Jane  Taylor. — BVC 
False  and  True. — Anon. — HP 
False  Coloring  Lent    to  War. — T:  Chalmers. — SS 
False  Faces. — Elmer  R.  Coates.— CS  24 
False,  Fickle  Man!— Anon.— WR  2 
False  Friends-like. — -W:  Barnes. — -CGd 
False  Hope.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
False  Kiss,  The.— Anon.— WR  20 
False  Love    and    True    Logic. — Laman    Blanchard. — 

HBR— THP 
False  Notions. — Anon.- — -MC 
False  Notions  of  Government  Vigor. — Sidney  Smith. — 

SS 
False  One,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Look  out.  Bright  Eyes — Song 

— C. — fr.    Act     I.,     Sc.    2.) — Beaumont    and 

Fletcher.— FEP 
False  Step,  A.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— FLS 
False  though  she  Be. — W:  Congreve. — OB 

("False  though  she  be  to  me  and  love.") — FTA 
(Song.)— WEP  3 
False  Witness  Detected. — Jas.  S.  Knowles. — CS  15 
Falsehood.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Falsehood. — W:  Cartwrigbt. — OB 
Falsehood  "Corrected."— Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 
Falstaff.— H:  GUes.— SE 
Falstaff  and  Prince  Hal. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Falstaff 's   Boasting. — W:      Shakespeare.      See      King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Falstaff's   Honor. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry 

IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Falstaff's  Instinct. — W:  Shakespeare.    See  King  Henry 

IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Falstaff's  Song. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA 
Fame.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Fame.     (Br.  sel.) — Ben  Jonson. — BNL — EPs 
Fame. — J :  Milton.     See  Lycidas. 
Fame. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Essay  on  Man,  An. 
Fame. — Friedrich  Schiller.— GP  (si.  abr.) 

(Duty— afer. )—CS  27 
Fame.— Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Fame.— J:  B.  Tabb.— AA 
Fame.     (Wrinkle.)— CG  3 

Fame,  Wealth,  Life,  Death.— W.  W.  Skeat.— BS  18 
Familiar  Epistle,  A. — Austin  Dobson. — VA 
Family  as    an  American    Institution,    The,    Sel.  Jr. 

(Thanksgiving  Day.)  — H:  W.  Beechor.— OS  3 
(Day  of  Thanksgiving,  The— seZ.)— PEO 
Family  Drum  Corps,  A. — Malcolm  Douglas. — WR  4 
Family  Financiering. — Anon. — CS  37 
Family  Flurry,  A. — Anon. — DCD 
Family    Government.       (Sel.   fr.  Plain  and   Pleasant 

Truths  about  Fruit,  Flowers,  and  Farming.) — 

H :  W.  Beecher.— SR  4 
Family  Jar,  A. — Anon. — CS  20 

Family  Jar,  A. — Louisa  M.  Alcott.     See  Little  Women. 
Family     Meeting,     The.— C:    .Sprague.— FEP— GP— 

HSS2 
Family  Poetry.— R:  H.  Barham.— HPE 
Family  Quarrel,  The. — Anon. — HR 
Family  Quarrels. — J:  G.  Saxe.— HPE 
Famine,     The. — H:     W.     Longfellow.     See    Song    of 

Hiawatha,  The. 
Famine  Year,  The.— Jane  F.  Elgee,  Lady  Wilde.— TIP 
Famished  Heart,  A.     (Advance.) — BS  18 

(Women's  Complaint,  A.)— FLS  (si.  abr.)— KP 
Famous  and  Curious  Trees. — Anon. — AD 
Famous  Ballad  of  the  Jubilee  Cup,  The. — Arthur  T. 

Quiller-Couch. — NA 
Famous  History  of  Sir  Thomas  Wyatt,  The,  Sel.  fr. 

(Lady   Jane  Grey — dial.)— J:  Webster.— EHT 
Fan,  A.     (On  a  Fan — C. — riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. — 

HPE 
Fan  Brigade,  The.— Ella  S.  Cummins.— WR  7 
Fan   Drill,   The. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Spectator.  The. 
Fan  Drill.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
Fan  Fitzgerl.— Alfred  P.  Graves.— TIP 


Fan  Painted  by  Watteau,  A.— B.  B.  W.— CG  1 

Fancies.— J:  Ford  (7).— GP 

Fancy.     (C.)—J:  Keats.— BNL-^FEP— HBP— OB 

(Realm  of  Fancy,  The.)— PGT  1 
Fancy. — W:   Shakespeare.     See  Merchant   of   Venice, 

The. 
Fancy  and  Desire. — E :  Vere,  Earl  of  Oxford. — EP 
Fancy  Concert,  The. — Leigh  Hunt. — MRS 
Fancy  Costume  Drill. — Alice  C.  Fuller. — ID 
Fancy  from  Fontenelle,  A.     (C) — Austin  Dobson. — 
AVP— BNL 

(Rose  and  the  Gardener,  The.) — OS  2 
Fancy  in  Nubibus.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— BNL— CEL— 

FEP 
Fancy  Shot,  The.— C:  D.  Shanly.— PAPm 

((5ivil  War.)  —  AWB  —  BNL  —  CS  4  —  MMR  — 
PS  —  SR  4 
Fancy  Work  Maiden.  The.— Sam  W.  Foss.— NPS— YP 
Fancy-dress  Ball,  The.— J.  P.  Denison.— CG  1 
Fand,  Sets.  fr. — W:  Larminie. 

Epilogue.— TIP 

Speech  of  Coner,  The.— TIP 
Fanny,  Sels.  fr. — Fitz-Greene  Halleck. 

Fortune. — BNL 

Weehawken  and  the  New  York  Bay. — BNL 
Fanny  Gray. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Fanny's  Mud  Pies.— Eliz.  Sill.— TFS 
Fanny's  Secret. — Anon. — YFD 
Fantasy,  A.     (Detroit  Free  Press.)— BS  21 
Fantasy. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Vision  of  Delight,  The. 
Far,  and  yet  Near. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — OH 

("Go  from  me,  yet  I  feel."  etc.)— PGT  2 

(Sonnet.)— FTA 

(Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese — BNL — OB  (III.)  — 
YBF 

(Sonnets    from    the    Portuguese,    VI. — C.) — VA — 
WEP  4 
Far  awa'  Lan',  The. — Anon. — CS  18 
Far  Away. — M.  Lindsay. — LLC 
Far  Away.— G:  Sigerson.— TIP 
Far  Away  the  Camp  Fires  Burn. — Anon. — LLC 
Far  Cry  to  Heaven,  A. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — AA 
Far — far — away. — Alfred  Tennyson. — PGT  2 
Far  from  Home  and  Country. — M.  E.  Townsend. — HDL 
Far  from  the  Madding  Crowd,  Sel.  fr.  (Sword  Exercise, 

The— Ch.  XXVTII.)— T:  Hardy.— WR  13 
Far  in  the  Woods  in  May. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — YBT 
Fare  thee   Well.     (C.)— Lord   Byron.- EPs— FEP— 
MBL— WEP  4 

(Farewell  to  his  Wife.)— BNL 
Fare  Thee  Well,  Thou  Lovely  One!— T:  Moore.— FTA 
Farewell,  A. — Anon. — FLS  . 

Farewell.  A.     (Dial.)— Anon.— WR  14  ^ 

Farewell,  The.— Anon.— WR  12 
Farewell.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Farewell,  A.— G:  Arnold.— BIL 

Farewell,  A.  (Siher  Tassie,  Ihe  — C.)  —  Rob't  Burns. 
—PGT  1— YBF 

(Before  Parting.)— LH 

(Bonnie  Mary.)— GP 

(My  Bonnie  Mary — also  C.) — OB 
Farewell,  The.     ("It  was  a'  for  our  rightfu'  king" — 
O— Rob't  Burns.— BFV—BPB— OB 

(True  until  Death.)— LH 
Farewell,  A. — Mary  A.  DeVere. — AA 
Farewell.     (Harper's  Young  People.) — CPL 
Farewell,  The.— C:  F.  Hoffman.— FTA 
Farewell,  A.— C:  Kingsley.— VS 

(Abr.)  —  AVP  —  BNL  —  CS  13  —  FEP  —  GN  — 
GP  — LC— LLC— PHS— VA— WEP  4— WR  2 
—YBF 

("Be  good,  sweet  maid.") — HSS  2 

(Farewell  Advice — abr.) — OS  1 
Farewell,  A. — Harriet  Monroe. — AA 
Farewell,  A.   (In  The  Unknown  Eros.) — Coventry  Pat- 
more.— OB— PGT  2 
Farewell,  Sel.  fr.  (In  Italy,  the  boofc.) — S:  Rogers. 

("Nature  denied  him  much.") — GG 
Farewell.     (Song  fr.  The  Pirate.)— Walter  Scott.— LH 
Farewell,  A. — Duchess  of  Sutherland. — VSG 
Farewell. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — GP 
Farewell. — J:  A.  Symonds. — VA 
Farewell,  A.— Alfred  Tennyson.  —  PGT  2  —  PHS  — 

SN— YBF 
Farewell. — Maurice  Thompson. — TAV 
Farewell.— G:M.  Vickers.- PS 
Farewell,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.- AA 
Farewell  Address. — G:  Washington. — AI — IR  (sel.) 
(Sel.— 8horter.)—SO— WR  5 

(Maxims  of  George   Washington  —  br.  sels.  fr.  this 
and  fr.  First  Inaugural  Address.) — DFR 

(Our  Relations  with  England — sel.) — SO 


112 


TITLE  INDEX 


Fate 


Farewell !  but  Whenever  [You  Welcome  the  Hour — CI. 
— T:  Moore.— BNL—FEP— HBP— OS  3 
(Sweet  Remembrances — ael.) — FP 
Farewell!  if    ever    Fondest    Prayer. — Lord    Byron. — 

BNL— YBF 
Farewell,  Life.— T:  Hood.— BNL 

(Stanzas— C. )— FEP— VA 
Farewell   of    Enoch    Arden,    The. — Alfred    Tennyson. 

See  Enoch  Arden. 
Farewell  of  the  Birds.— H.  K.  P.— PP— YFR 
Farewell!  Thou  art  too  Dear. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

following. 
"Farewell !  thou  art  too  dear  for  my  possessing."  (Son- 
net LXXXVII.  —  C.)  —  W:    Shakespeare.  — 
PGT  1 
(Farewell!  Thou  art  too  Dear.)- BNL 
(Sonnet.)— HBP— OB  (IX.) 
Farewell  to  America,  A. — R :  H.  Wilde. — AA 
Farewell  to  Arms  [,  A].— G:  Peele.— ELP— OB— YBF 

(Aged  Man-at-Arms,  The.)— FEP 
Farewell  to  Cuba. — Maria  G.  Brooks. — AA 
Farewell  to  Departing  Volunteers,  A. — Rob't  Hall. — 
KNE 
(Apostrophe  to  the  Volunteers,  The — ptly.  same.) — 
CR 
Farewell  to  England,  Set.  fr.—E:  J:  Phelps.— TMD 
Farewell  to  FoUie  hor.  Folly],  Sel.  fr. — Rob't  Greene. 
(Content. )— BNL— EP— FEP 
(Contentment.)— YBF 
(Song  (C):  "  Sweet  are  the  thoughts,"  etc.)— HBP 

— WEPl 
(Sweet  Content.)— OEL  . 

Farewell  to  France. — Mary  Queen  of  Scots. — EDY 
Farewell  to  his  Wife. —  Lord  Byron.     See  Fare  thee 

Well! 
Farewell  to  Italy. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 
Farewell  to  Nancy. — Rob't  Burns. — HBP 
(Ae  Fond  Kiss— C.)— OB— YBF 
("Ae  fond  kiss  before  we  part.") — BNL — GP 
Farewell  to  Salvini.— H:  C.  Bunner.— EDY 
Farewell  to  Sir  John  Norris  and  Sir  Francis  Drake,  A. 

—G:  Peele.— WEPl 
Farewell  to  Summer. — G :  Arnold. — AA 
Farewell  to  the  Army  at   Fontainebleau. — Napoleon 

Bonaparte. — PS 
Farewell  to  the  Fairies. — R:  Corbet. — BNL  {abr.) — 
FEP 
(Fairies'  Farewell,  The.)— HBP 
Farewell  to  the  Farm. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV — 

DJS 
Farewell  to  the  Old  Year.- Sarah  Doudney.— POS 
Farewell  to  the  Vanities  of  the  Wo^,  A,  Br.  set.  fr. 
(Thoughts  on  the  Forest.)— Sir  H:  Wotton  (?). 
—AD 
Farewell  to  the  World,  A.   (To  the  World— C— The 

Forest,  IV. — abr.) — Ben  .Jonson. — OB 
Farewell  to  thee,  Araby's  Daughter.  —  T:  Moore.    See 

Lalla  Rookh. 
Farewell   to    Tobacco,    A.— C:    Lamb.— BNL — ESs— 

FEP— HBP— HPE— PPh— THP 
Farm  Boys'  Song,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Farm  on  the  Links,  The. — Rosamund  M.  Watson. — VA 
Farm  Walk,  A.  (C.) — Christina  G.  Rossetti. 

(Milking  Maid,  The.)— BNL 
Farmer,  The.     (Motion  rec.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 

COS— DS— NPS— PP— YA— YP 
Farmer  and  the  Cities,  The,  Sel.  fr.  —  H:  W.Grady. 
Home  in  the  Government,  The.— BS  18— PFP 
(Homes  of  the  People,  The — si.  abr.  and  si.  dijf. 
vers. — fr.     Before  the  Bay  State  Club) — FD  2 
— PPS 

(Home,  The— sZ.  abr.)- TMD 
Farmer  and  the  Counsellor,   The. — Horace   Smith. — 

BC— CS  2— SS— THP 
Farmer  and  Wheel;  or,  the  New  Lochinvar.     (SI.  abr.) 

—Will  Carleton.— CS  25 
Farmer  Ben's  Theory. — Anon. — CS  22 
Farmer  Boffin's  Equivalent. — Anon. — CS  32 
Farmer  Boy  and  the  City  Dude,  The. — Mrs.  Russell 

Kavanaugh. — KNS 
Farmer  Feedeth  all.  The. — Anon. — HSS  3 
Farmer  Gray. — Anon. — KNE 
Farmer  John. — Anon. — PR 
Farmer  Nick's  Scarecrow. — Nora  E.  Crosby. — LPS — 

PP  » 

Farmer  Sat  in  his  Easy  Chair,  The. — C :  G.  Eastman. — 
GP— TAV 
(Afternoon  Nap,  The.)— WCL 
(Midsummer  Day  Scene,  A.) — CS  7 
(Picture,  A.)— BNL— FEP 
Farmer  Stebbins  at  Football. — Will  Carleton. — CS  34 
Farmer   Stebbins   at    Ocean   Grove.     (SI.    abr.) — Will 
Carleton.— CS  21 


Farmer  Stebbins'  First  and  Last  Appearance  on  Roll- 
ers.— Will  Carleton.  — SR  4     See  following. 

Farmer    Stebbins  on  Rollers. — Will  Carleton. — CH — 
CS26 
(Farmer  Stebbins'  First  and  Last  Appearance  on 
—Kollers.)- SR4 

FarmersTRunder,  The. — Anon. — CS  1 

Farmer's  Boy. — Anon. — PEB  2 

Farmer's  Boy,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Fr.  Spring.) — Rob't  Bloom- 
field.— BNL 

Farmer's  Conclusion,  The.     (Omaha  World.) — SDR 

Farmer's  Kitchen      before      Thanksgiving.     (Tab  ) — 
Anon.— TCP 

Farmer's  Life,  The.— G:  P.  Beard.— BS  7 

Farmers'  Meeting,  A. — H.  E.  McBride. — MHD 

Farmer's  Pipe,  The. — G :  Cooper. — PPh 

Farmer's  Round,  The. — Anon. — BVC 

Farmer's      Song-bird,    The. — G:     Horton. — CS    35 — 
WR12 

Farmer's  Well,  The.— Anon.— CS  37 

Farmer's  Wife,  The.— Anon.— CS  16 

Farm-yard   Song. — J:   T.   Trowbridge. — BeR — CS  4 — 
WCL 
(Evening  at  the  Farm.)- BS  1 — FTR — GN — HNS 
— SA— SR  1 

Far-off  Rose,  A. — J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 

Farragut. — W:  T.  Meredith. — AA — ASL — BAB — EDY 
OS  2— PAPm 

Farther. — J:  J.  Piatt.— AA 

Farther  On. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 

Farthing  Rushlight,     The.     (Lamp,     The.) — .iEsod 

OS  1  J  t'. 

Fashionable.     (Merchant  Traveler.) — BS  18 
Fashionable  Call,  A.    (Dial. — ad.   fr.)    Harper's  Bazar 

— MPD  (abr.) 
(Female  Gossip.)— BS  3 
Fashionable  Hospitality. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Fashionable   Piano   Music. — Oliver    W.   Holmes.     See 

Poet  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Fashionable  School  Girl,  The.     (Albany  Chronicle.) 

(Intensely  Utter.)— CRR— SR  4 
(Too  Utterly  Utter.)- CS  21 
Fashionable  Singing.     (Baltimore  Elocutionist.) — BS  5 

— SR  10 
Fashionable  Vacation,  A. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Fashions  at  the  Court  of  Queen  Flora. — Lydia  H.  Far- 
mer.— NV 
Fashion's  Folly. — S.  W.  Chamberlain. — CG  2 
Fast  Asleep. — Anon. — TT 

Fast  Mail  and  the  Stage,  The. — J:  H.  Yates. — CS  12 
Fastidious. — Harriet  B.  Sterling. — COS — PP 
"Fat  Contributor"  on  Insurance  Agents.  The — A    M 
Griswold.— CS  9  s        .  .     a.  ivi. 

Fatal  Arrow,  The. — Anon. — WR  12 

Fatal  Bait,  A. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KNS 

Fatal  Falsehood,  The. — Amelia  Opie. — CS  13 

Fatal  Glass,  The. — Laura  U.  Case. — CS  12 — SR  2 

Fatal  Sisters,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — T;  Gray. — BNL 

Fate. — Anon. — HP 

Fate.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Fate. — L:  J.  Block. — AA 

Fate.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— OH 

Fate. — Leslie  Harrison. — CG  3 

Fate.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— CS  22— FEP— OS  2 

Fate. — Susan  M.  Spalding. — AA — CS  31 — FLS — HBP 

— HBR  (si.  diff.  vers.)- PYO— TAV— WR  13 
Fate.— W.— CG2 
Fate.— Merle  St.C.  Wright.- OH 
Fate  of  a  Fast  Young  Man,  The. — Anon. — SR  2 
Fate  of  Charles  the  Twelfth. — S:  Johnson.     See  Vanity 

of  Human  Wishes,  The. 
Fate  of  Charlotte  Russe,  The. — Eleanor  C.  Donnelly. 

CS  25 
Fate  of  European  Kings,  The. — T.  F.  Meagher. — FD  1 
Fate  of  John  Burgoyne,  The. — Anon. — AWB 
Fate  of  Macgregor,  The.  —  Jas.   Hogg.     See  Queen' 

Wake,  The. 
Fate  of  Mackay,  The. — Noah  Little. — DES 
Fate  of  Sin  Foo ;  or.  The  Origin  of  the  Tea  Plant.  The 

S:  M.  Peck.— PP— YPS 
Fate  of  Sir  John  Franklin,  The. — Eliz.  Doten  — BS  22 

(Song  of  the  North,  A.)— FEP 
Fate   of    the   Butterfly,    The   (Muiopotmos;    or.    The 

Fate  of  the  Butterflie — C. ),  Br. sel.  fr. — Edmund 

Spenser. — BNL 
"Fate    of    the    man-child,    The."     (Br.    sel.    fr     The 

Sphinx.)— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— HBP 
Fate  of  the  Reformer,  The. — H :,  Lord  Brougham  — SS 
Fate  of  the  Sons  of  Usna,  The.     (Fr.  The  First  Duan  • 

The    Coming   of    Deirdre.)— J:    Todhunter — 

TIP 
Fate  of  Virginia,  The. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  Virginia. 


113 


Fate's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


(O— Sam  W.  Foss. 

-wr 


Fate's  Frustrated  Joke. 

(Jest  of  Fate,  The.)— WR  22 
"Father,  The." — G:  F.  Savage-Armstrong. — VA 
Father  and  Child.— R:  W.  Gilder.- TAS 
Father  and  Son. — Hall  Caine.     See  Deemster,  The. 
Father  Blake's     Collection. — S:     Lover.     See,  Father 

Phil's  Collection. 
Father  Christmas. — Norman  Gale. — BS  25 
Father  Damien.— J:  B.  Tabb.— EDY 
Father  Francis.— Walter  H.  Pollock.— VA 
Father  Gilligan.— W.  B.  Yeats.— PEB  4 
Father  in  Heaven. — W:  Ashbury. — BS  2 
Father  is  Coming. — Mary  Howitt. — WCL 
Father  John.— David  L.  Proudfit.— CS  19— HP  (abr.) 
Father  Land    and    Mother    Tongue. — S:    Lover.     See 

Father-land  and  Mother-tongue. 
Father,  Lead  On. — Anon. — CS  12 
Father  MoUoy  [;  or,  The  Confession — C.]. — S:  Lover. 

— CS  16— DI— THP 
Father  of  All!  in  Death's  Relentless  Claim. — Oliver  W. 

Holmes.— HDL 
Father  of  his  Country,  The. — H:   Lee.     See  Funeral 

Oration  on  the  Death  of  General  Washington. 
Father  of  his  Country. — Marion  West. — SR  1 
Father  of  the   Revolution,  The. — G:  W:    Curtis. — See 

Centennial  Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 
Father  O'Flynn.— A.  P.  Graves.— TIP 
Father  Paul.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Father  Phil's   Collection  — S:  Lover  (?).— BS  6— CS  10 

— MHR 
{SI.  aftr.  )—BRR—DI 
(A6r.)— CDV— SDR 
(Father  Blake's  Collection.)— HR 
(Subscription  List,  The — abr.) — CR 
Father  Roach.— S:  Lover.— CS  14— DI 
"Father,   Take  my   Hand."— H:   N.   Cobb.— CS  10— 

SSS  (abr.) 
(Incl.  in  (Gracious  Answer,  The.)^SA 
Father,  Thy  Will  be  Done.— Sarah  F.  Adams.— FEP 

(Hymn.)— VA 
Father  Time's      Granddaughters. — Nathaniel      Haw- 
thorne (7).—NDP 
"Father,  whate'er  of  earthly  bliss." — Anne   Steele. — 

LLC 
Father  William. — Anon. — NA 
Father  William.— Lewis  Carroll.- THP 
Father  William.— Rob't  Southey.— PC— PPSr 
(Old  Man's  Comforts,  The.)— BNL— FP 
(Old  Man's  Comforts  and  how  he  Gained   Them, 

The— O— CGd 
Fatherland. — Ernst  M.  Amdt. — BLP 
Fatherland,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BLP— GN 
Father-land  and  Mother-tongue. — S:  Lover. — BLP — 

BNL— CSS— HSS  2 
Father's  Blessing,  A.— R:  R.  Corbet.— YBF 

(To  Vincent  Corbet,  my  Son.)— FEP 
Father's  Choice,  The.— S.  B.  Parsons.— CS  31 
Father's  Counsel,  The.— Ellen  Murray.— CS  27 
Father's  Curse,  The.     (Sel.  fr.     The  King's  Diversion 

&«    Roi    s' Amuse],   Act    I.,    Sc.    4.) — Victor 
ugc— SO 
Father's  Hymn  for  the  Mother  to  Sing,  The.     (C.) — G: 

Macdonald. 
(Like  a  Little  Child— si.  abr.)  — OH 
Father's  Letter. — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
Fathers  of  New  England,  The. — C:  Sprague. — See  Cen- 
tennial Ode. 
Fathers  of     the     Republic,     The. — E:     Everett.     See 

Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Father's  Voice. — Anon. — TMR 
Father's  Way.— Eugene  Field.— HBR—WR  4 
Fathoming  Brains. — Stockton  Bates. — CS  30 
Fatima     and    Raduan. — (Tr.    62/)W:    C.    Bryant. — 

BNL 
Fault  is  not  Mine,  The.     (Last  Fruit  off  an  Old  Tree, 

XXVII.)— Walter  S.  Landor.— VS 
"Faultless." — Mrs.  Herrick  Johnson. — CS  33 
Faults. — Anon.— DLF 
Faults  and  Virtues.     (Br.  sel.   fr.   The  Ethics  of  the 

Dust,  Lect.  v.,  Crystal  Virtues.) — J:  Ruskin. — 

OSl 
Faun  of  Praxiteles,  The. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne.     See 

Marble  Faun,  The. 
Fauntleroy. — Benjamin  F.  Butler,  Jr. — CS  31 
Fauntleroy  and  the  Earl.     (Dial. — ad.  fr.  Little  Lord 

Fauntleroy,  Chs.  IV.  and  V.) — Frances  H.  Bur- 

nett.— NDP 
Fauntleroy's  Wail.— Julia  T.  Riordan.— WR  20 
Fause  Lover,  The.— Anon.— OEB— PEB  2 

(Davie  Gellatley's  Song — fr.  Scott's  Waverley — Uf 

st.rev.fr.  this.)— FEB  3 
(Young  John  and   his  True  Sweetheart — si.  shorter 

and  si.  diff.  vers. ) — BB 


Faust,  Sels.  fr. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. 

King  of  Thule,  The.     (Margaret's  Song  fr.  Pt.  I. 

Sc.  8— B.  Taylor's  tr.)— BNL 
Speech  of  the  Erdgeist.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.,  Sc.  1— T. 

Carlyle's  <r.)— AVP 
Faustus's    Last    Speech    on    Earth.     (Sel.   fr.  Doctor 

Faustus,    Sc.    XVI.) — Christopher  Marlowe. — 

WR19 
(Last  Soliloquy  of  Faustus,  The.)— MRS 
Fawcett's  Fame. — Campbell  Rae-Brown. — WR  13 
Fawnia.     (Praise  of  Fawnia,  The— C. —  fr.  Pandosto.) 

Rob't    Greene.— ELP— OB— WEP  1— YBF 
Fay's  Sentence.    The. — Jos.    R.    Drake.     See    Culprit 

Fay,  The. 
Fear.     (Fr.    Miscellaneous    Thoughts.) — S:    Butler. — 

HPE 
Fear. — Langdon  E.  Mitchell. — AA 
Fear. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Cenci,  The. 
Fear  and  Doubt.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
"Fear  no  more  the  heat  o'  th'  Sun." — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Cymbeline. 
Fear  Not.— Anon.— YBT 

Fear  of  Death.     (Frags Jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Fear  of  Death,  Tne.- — (Sonnet:  "When  I  have  fears," 
etc.— O— J:  Keats.— YBF 
(Sonnet— Written  in  January,  1818.)— WEP  4 
(Terror  of  Death,  The.)— PGT  1 
("When  I  have  fears  that  I  have  ceased  to  be.") — 

OB 
Fearful  Fright,  A.— Anon.— WR  4 
Fears  in   Solitude,   Br.    sel.    fr.—S:    T.    Coleridge. — 

BNL 
Feast,  The.— H:  Vaughan.— HBP 
Feast  of  Roses,  The. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Feast   of  Vegetables,   and  the   Flow   of  Water,   The. 

(Punch.)— ViPE 
Feast-time  of  the  Year,  The. — Harriet  M.  Kimball. — 

TAS 
Feathered  Name-speakers.     (Young  Idea,  The.) — POS 
Feathers. — Phoebe  Cary. — BLF 
Feathers.     (Last  Fruit  off  an  Old  Tree,  II.)— Walter 

S.  Landor.— YBF 
("There  falls  with  every  wedding  chime.") — VA 
Feather's  Message,  A. — Frd'k  A.  Dixon. — TCV 
Featherstone's  Doom. — Rob't  S.  Hawker. — VA 
February. — Anon. — CPL 
February.- Jas.  B.  Bensel.— POS 
February.- H.  S.  Cornwell.— TAV 
February. — Alice  L.  Richards.- — SL 
February. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
February.- Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— HDL 
February  Rain.— C:  T.  Dazey.— POS 
February  Twenty-second. — Joy  Allison. — PP — YFR 
Federal  Constitution,  The.     (Speech  in  the  Convention 

at  the  Conclusion  of  its  Deliberations,  1787 — 

C.—abr.)—B:  Franklin.— SS 
Federal  Constitution. — Alexander  Hamilton.    See  Con- 
stitution of  the  United  States. 
Feed  my  Sheep. — Anon. — CS  17 
Feeding  the  Black  Fillies. — Anon. — BeR 

(Peter  Mulrooney  and  the  Black  Filly.)— CS  32 — 

DI— SR  11 
Feeling  the  Way.— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.— TAS 
Feigned  Courage.— Mary  Lamb.— BVC— GN— LPC 
Felicia  Hemans. — L.  E.  Maclean. — AVP 
Felicia  Hemans.     To  L.  E.  L.    (C.)— Eliz.  B.  Brown- 
ing. 
(To  L.  E.  L.,  on  the  Death  of  Felicia  Hemans.) — 

AVP 
Felinaphone,  The.— G :  Kyle.— WR  3 
Feline.     (Fr.  Ascutnev  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. — 

TCP 
Felise,  Sel.  fr.     (Song.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — VS 
Fell  from  Aloft.— Brandon  Thomas.— VSG 
Fellow  in  Greasy  Jeans,  The. — C:  F.  Lummis. — WR  1» 
Fellow  who  is  Game,  A. — Anon. — KER 

(Courageous  Boy,  The.)— TFS 
Fellow   with   the   Grippe,    The. — Howell    L.    Piner. — 

WR23 
Fellow's  Mother,  A.— Anon. — WR  24 
Felon's  Cell,  A.— Anon.— BS  12 
Female  Convict,  The. — Letitia  E.  Landon. — BNL 
Female   Frailty,   Sel.   fr.     (Song  of  Thyrsis.)— Philip 

Freneau. — AA 
Female  Gossip.     (Harper's  Bazar.) — BS  3 

(Fashionable  Call,  A— abr.)- MPD 
Female  Tenderness.- — Douglas  Jerrold. — MHR 
Feminine. — H :  C.  Bunner. — AA 
Feminine  Arithmetic— C :  G.  Halpine.— AWH— HPE 

THP 
Fence  o'  Scripture  Faith,  The. — Mrs.  Findley  Braden. 

— CS  27— SR  6 
F^nelon's  Prayer. — Virginia  B.  Harrison. — BS  23 


114 


TITLE  INDEX 


Finding 


Ferdinand    and    Miranda.     (Sel.    fr.    The    Ordeal    of 
Richard  Feverel,  The,  Chs.   14  and  15.)— G: 
Meredith.— MRS 
Ferdinando  and  Elvira;  or,  The  Gentle  Pieman. — W: 

S.  Gilbert.— NA  (seZ.)— THP 
Ferment  of  New  Wine,  The. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.    See 

Aurora  Leigh. 
Fern  and  the  Moss,  The.— Eliza  Cook.— CS  35— HSS  1 
Fern  Song.— J:  B.  Tabb.— PoR— TMR 
Ferns.— Anon. — PEO 
Fern-seed. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Ferry,  The.— G:  H.  Boker.— AA 

Ferry  for  Shadowtown,  The.— Lilian  D.  Rice. — CS  37 
— GMS— NV 
(Shadow-town  Ferry,  The— ofer.) — OS  1 
Ferry  of  Galloway,  The.     {SI.  diff.  vera.  fr.  Poems.) — 

Alice  Gary.- SR  9 
Ferryman  The.     {The  Atheneum.) — SO 
Ferryman,  Venus,  and  Cupid,  The. — Michael  Drayton. 

iSee  Muses'  Elysium,  The. 
Fertility.     (Prelude,    A — C.) — Maurice    Thompson. — 

ASL 
Festal  Day  has  Come,  The. — Hezekiah  Butterworth. — 

BS20 
Festina  Lente. — Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Festival  of  Days,  A.     {Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Festival  of  Mars,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Marcus  of  Rome,  in 
Historic  Boys. )— Elbridge  S.  Brooks.— WR  22 
Festival  of  the  Supreme  Being,  The. — Ivan  Tourge- 

nieff.— WR  8 
Festival  of  the  Year,  The. — Edith  L.  W.  Linn.— HE 
Festus,  Sel».  fr. — Philip  J.  Bailey. 

Aim  of  Life,  The.     {Br.  aeZ.)- BNL— GP 
(How  to  Live— a6r.)— PS 
(True  Measure  of  Life,  The — abr.) — FP 
Country  and  Patriotism.     {Br.  sel.) — FP 
Forecast.     {Br.  sel.) — EPs 
Helen's  Song^^ — VA 
Lucifer  and  Elissa.     {Sel.) — VA 
Poet,  The.     {SeU—YA 
Poet  of  Nature,  The.     {Br.  sel.) — BNL 
Sabbath  Morning  in  the  Country.     (Br.  sel.) — FP 
Thoughts.     {Br.  set.)— FP 
Time  and  its  Changes.     {Br.  sel.) — FP 
Waning  Spirit.     {Br.  seZ. )—FP 
Woman's  Four  Seasons.     {Br.  sel.)— -FP 
Worldly  Treasures.     {Br.  sel.)— FP 
Youth,  Love,  and  Death.     {Sel.) — VA 
Fetching  Water  from  the  Well.— Anon. — BNL — CS  20 

— MMR 
F6te  Champetre,  The.     See  Palice  of  Honour,  The. — 

Gawain  Douglas.— WEP  1 
Fever  Dream,  A. — J:  M.  Harney. — PPSr 
Few  Old  Proverbs,  A. — Anon. — AD 
Few  Remarks  on  Pants,  A. — G :  Thatcher. — TK 
Few  Rules  for  Tree  Planters,  A. — Anon. — HSS  1 
Fiat  Lux. — Lloyd  Mifflin. — AA 
Fickle  Heart,  A.— Guy  W.  Carryl.— CG  2 
Fickle  Hope. — Harrison  S.  Morris. — AA 
Fiction. — C :  Sprague.     See  Curiosity. 
Fiction,  A;  How  Cupid  made  a  Nymph   wound    her- 
self with  his  Arrows. — Anon.  (at.  to  A.  W.). — 
EP— WEP  1 
Fiddle  Told,  The.— Nora  C.  Franklin.— BS  25— NP 
• '  Fiddle-dee-dee. '  '—Eugene  Field.— EF—LS 
Fidele.—W:  Collins.— OB 

(Dirge    in     Cymbeline— C.)— EPs— HBP— PHS— 
WEP  3 
Fidele. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Cymbeline. 
Fidele.—W:  Winter.— FEP 

(Adelaide  Neilson — C.) — AA 
"Fidele's"  Grassy  Tomb.— H:  Newbolt.— HBR 
Fidelia. — G:    Wither.        See    Shepherd's    Resolution, 

The. 
Fidelis.— Adelaide  A.  Procter.- FTA 
Fidelity.— M.  F.  B.— YBT 

Fidelity.— W :  Wordsworth.— CGd— EPs— HBP 
Fidelity   to   God   is   Fidelity   to    Man. — Adoniram   J. 

Gordon.- FD  2 
Field  Battery,  A.— W:  R.  Hamilton.— SR  7 
Field  Flower,  A.     (C.) — Jas.  Montgomery. — POS 

(Daisy,  The.)— BNL— NV  (aeZ.)- SN 
Field  Flowers. — Anon. — NV 
Field  Lilies.— Anon.— LLC— YBT 
Field  of  CuUoden,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Old  Shrines  and  Ivy.) 

— W:  Winter.- TMR 
Field    of   the    Grounded    Arms,    The,    Sel.    fr. — Fitz- 

Greene  Halleck.— EDY 
Field  of  the  World,  The.     (C.) — Jas.  Montgomery. — 
HBP 
(Sower,  The— si.  abr.)- FHS 
Field  of  Wagram,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  L'Aiglon,  Act  V.)— 
Edmond  Rostand  (tr.  by  L.  N.  Parker).- EDY 


Field   of    Waterloo,    The. — Lord    Byron.     See   Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Field  of  Waterloo,  The.     (C.)     (Sts.  IX.-XII.,  XXII.) 

—Walter  Scott.— EHT 
(Charge  at  Waterloo,  The— XL,  XII.)— PEO 
Field  Preaching.— Phoebe  Cary. — TAS 
Field  Sweet-brier,  The,  Br.  sel.  /r.— Alice  Gary.— HSS  1 
Field-lily,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
Field-mouse,  The.— Anon.— PTS 
Field.o  in  May,  The.     (Sel.)—W:  Allingham.— AD 
Fields  of  Com,  The.— J.  H.  Hartzell.— POS 
Fields  of  Dawn,  The,  Sonnets  fr. — liloyd  Mifflin. 
April.     (I.)— SN 
Autumn.     (XXIX.)— SN 
Summer.     (XV.)— SN 
Fields  of  War,  The.— Isaac  M'Lellan,  Jr.— WR  10 
Fiery  Ordeal,  The.— Anon.— WR  16 
Fiesolan  Idyl. — Walter  S.  Landor.     See  Fssulan  Idyl. 
Fife,  The.— Gilbert  F.  Eberhart.— CS  32 
Fife  and  Drum. — J:  Dryden.     See  Song  for  St.  Cecilia's 

Day,  A. 
Fifer  and  Drummer  of  Scituate,  The. — S.  H.  Palfrey. — 

WRIO 
Fifine  at  the  Fair,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Browning. 
Amphibian.     (Prologue.)— PGT  2 
Householder,  The.     (Epilogue.)— WEP  4 
"Fiff  Ward  J'int  Debate,  The." — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Fifteenth  of  April,  The. — Duncan  C.  Scott. — TCV 
Fifteenth  of  February,  The.— C:  E.  Russell.- EDY 
Fifteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity.   (C. ) — Reginald  Heber 
(God  Provideth  for  the  morrow — abr.) — AD 
(Providence.) — GN 
Fifteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity:    The  Lilies  [Flowers — 

C]  of  the  Field.     (Fr.  The  Christian  Year.) — 

J:Keble.— WEP4 
(Flowers.  "I— FEP 

(Lilies  of  the  Field,  The— si.  abr.)— CEL 
Fiftieth  Birthday  of  Agassiz.  The.     (C.)— H:  W.  Long- 

fellow.— BNL— GMS— PHS 
(On  the  Fiftieth  Birthday  of  Agassiz.) — EPs 
Fifty  and  Fifteen.— Anon.— OS  2 
Fifty  Years  Apart.     {Parlor  Magazine.) — HP 
Fifty-dollar  Milliner's  Bill,  A.— Helen  Booth.— CS  12 
Fight.  The.— T:  D.  English.     SeefpUorving. 
Fight  at  Lexington,  The.     (C.)— T:  D.  English. 

(Fight,  The— abr.)- HS 
Fight  at  [the]  San  Jacinto    The. — Jas.  W.  Palmer. — 

AA— BAB— EDY 
Fight   of    Faith,    The.  —  Anne    Askewe.  —  BNL  — 

EDY  (sel.) 
Fight  of  HeU-Kettle,  The.— Tyrone  Power.— DI 
Fight  of  Lookout,  The.— R:  L.  Cary,  Jr.— WR  10 
Fight  of  Paso  Del  Mar,  The.— Bayard  Taylor— HSS  3 

— TMR— WR  2 
Fight  of   the   "Armstrong"    Privateer,    The. — Jas.  J. 

Roche.— BAB— SO 
Fight  of  the  Forlorn,  The,  Sd.  fr. — G:  Darley.— TIP 
Fight  off    Santiago,    The.     (Sel.    fr.    The    War    with 

Spain,  Ch.  VII.)— H:  C.  Lodge.— SC 
Fight  over  the  Body  of  Keitt,  Ths.— (Punch.)— F^Ph 
Fight  with  the  Aurochs,  The. — (Abr.  fr.  Quo  Vadis, 

Ch.  LXV.)— H:  Sienkiewicz.— BS  2.5— PFP 
(Contest  in  the  Arena,  The.) — TMD 
(Rescue  of  Lygia,  The — shorter^ — SC 
(Ursus  and  the  Aurochs.) — WR  19 
Fighting. — T:    Hughes.     See    Tom    Brown's    Schoo 

Days. 
Fighting  Fire. — Marg.  H.  Lawless. — CS  32 
Fighting  Parson.  The.— H:  A.  Blood.— HS 
Fighting  Race,  The.— Jos.  J.  C.  Clarke.— AA— EDY 
Fighting  T^m^raire.  The.— H:  Newbolt.— A VP 
Fighting  the  Rum-fiend. — Julia  M.  Thayer. — CS  11 
Figures  Sometimes  Lie. — Anon. — DSS 
Files-on-Parade. — Rudyard  Kipling. — WR  16 

(Danny  Deever- O— VA— WR  16 
Filial  Love. — Lord   Byron.     See  Childe   Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 
Filiolse  Dulcissimie. — H:  Alford. — AVP 
Fill  the  Bumper  Fair.— T:  Moore.— HBP 
Fin  de  Siecle. — Newton  Mackintosh. — NA 
Fin  de  Si&cle  Angel,  The. — Anon.— TL 
Fin  de  Siecle  Girl,  A.     (Concordiensis.) — CG  2 
Final  Day  Dialogue,  A. — W.  J.  Lampton. — TL 
Final  Word,  A. — Austin  Dobson. — LBB 
Finale. — Anon. — BC 

Find  the  Favorite. — Jas.  W.  Rilev. — BJC 
Find  your  Level. — I.  E.  Jones.— CS  28 
Finding   of    Gabriel,    The.— H:    W.    Longfellow.   See 

Evangeline 
Finding  of  the  Book,  The,  and  other  Poems,  Preface 

to. — W:  Alexander. — AVP 
Finding  of  the  Cross,  The. — Jessie  H.  Brown. — BS  14 

— SR7 


115 


Finding 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Finding   of  the  Lyre.  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— TMD 

Finding  the  Sunset. — Anon. — CS  21 

Fine  Arts.  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 

Fine  Battle  Picture. — Anon. — SR    11 

Fine  Dav,  A.— Michael  Drayton.— CGd—GN 

Fine  Feathers.— Anon.*-PTS 

Fine     Flowers    in     the     Valley.  —  Anon.  —  BB   — 

FEB  2  {si.  abr.) 
Fine  Old  Dutch  Gentleman,  The.— Anon.— BDD 
Fine  Old  English  Gentleman,  The. — Anon.— BNL 
Fineen  the  Rover. — Rob't  D.  Joyce. — TIP 
Fingal,  Sel.  fr.     (Comal  and  Gambina — «e/.  fr.  Bk.  II.) 

— Jas.  McPherson  (Ossian). — CS  36 
Finger  Exercise,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
FinLs. — Anon. — FLS 
Finis.- Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Finis. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. — LLC 

("Arm  of  aid  to  the  weak.  An.") — FHS 
Finis.     {Fr.  Last  Fruit  off   an  Old  Tree. )— Walter  S. 

Landor. — OB 
(On  himself.)— VA—WEP  4— YBF 
(On  his  Seventy-fifth  Birthday.)— A VP 
Finished.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Abbot  Joachim.)— H:  W. 

I^ngfellow.— BS  11 
Finished  Education. — Anon. — WR  14 
Finished  Education,    A.     {Journal    of     Education.) — 

CS31 
Finished  Nest,  A.— Anon.— YBT 
Finland  Love-song. — Anon. — CG  1 
Finland  Love-song. — {Tr.  bxi)  T:  Moore. — MR 
Finnigin  to  Flannigan.— S.  W.  Gillilan.— BS  25— TL— 

TMD 
Fionnuala,  Sel.  fr. — Edmund  J:  Armstrong. — TIP 
Fionula.— J.  S.  Le  Fanu.— TIP 
Fir  Tree.     See  Fir-tree. 
Fire,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  John  Ward,  Preacher,  Ch.  XI.)— 

Marg.  Deland.— WR5 
Fire. — Sydney  Flowers.— CS  37 
Fire,  The.— Hugh  F.  McDermott.— BS  4— PR 
Fire  by  the  Sea,  The.— Alice  Cary.— SAE 
Fire!  Fire!— W.  A.  Eaton.— CS  25 
"Fire  in  nature  is  not  a  substance." — M.  W.  Jacobus. — 

GG 
Fire  of  Drift-wood,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.- BPB— 

HBP 
Fire  of  Frendraught,  The.— Anon.— PEB  1 
Fire  of  London,  The. — J:  Dryden.     See  Annus  Mira- 

bilis,  the  Year  of  Wonders. 
Fire  of  Love,   The. — C :   Sackville,   Earl  of   Dorset. — 

BNL 
Fire  Worshippers,  The. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Fire-bells.— M.  R.  .Johnson.— WR  12 
Fire-bell's  Story,  The.— G:  L.  Catlin.— BS  8— CS  17 
Fire-fiend,  The.— C.  D.  Gardette.— CS  2 
Fire-fiend,  The.— Jessie  Glenn.— CS  18— NPS— YP 
Fireflies. — A.  Mary  F.  R.  Darmesteter. — POS 
Fireflies. — Horatio  N.  Powers. — TAS 
Fireflies.— A.  C.  S.— TFS 

Fire-hangbird's  Nest,  The. — Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Fire-king,  The.     (C.)— Walter  Scott. 

(Count  Albert  and  the  Fair  Rosalie — ahr.) — WR  1 
Firelight.— R.  H.— CG  3 

Firelight. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Snow-bound. 
Fireman,  The.— G:  M.  Baker.— SA 

(Red  Jacket,    The.)— BS2— CS  11— DS— FR   {si. 

abr.)— NPS— YP 
Fireman,  The.— Rob't   T.    Conrad.- CS  3— HR— NPS 

— WR  3— YP 
Fireman  O'Rafferty. — ^Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Fireman's  Prayer,   The. — Russell   H.   Conwell. — CS  19 

—PS 
(True  Hero,  A — si.  abr.) — FR 
Fireman's    Prize,    The.      {Golden    Days.) —  CS    31  — 

WR7  {si.  abr.) 
Fireman's  Wedding,  The.— W.  A.  Eaton.— CS  29 
Fireside,  The.— Nathaniel  Cotton.— BNL  —  FEP  — 

HBP— TFY 
Fireside  Colloquy. — Jos.  W.  Leatherman. — SDD 
Fireside  Saints,  The.— Douglas  .Jerrold. — CS  17 
Firetown's  New  Schoolhouse. — Pauline  Phelps. — WR  2 
Fire-worshippers,  The. — T:  Moore.     See  Thalia  Rookh. 
First  Adventures  in  England. — Anon. — CH 
First  American   Congress,    The. — Jonathan    Maxcy. — 

BLP 
First  and  Last. — Anon. — HBP 
First  and  Last. — Harriet  P.  Spofford. — TAS 
First  and  Last  Dinner.  The. — Anon. — CS  9 
First  Appearance  in  Type. — Anon. — BS  2 

{SI.  abr.)—CS  6— KNE 
First  Banjo,     The.^Irwin     Russell.     See    Christmas- 
night  in  the  Quarters. 
First  Battle  of  the  Revolution,  The. — Anon. — TMD 


First  Battles  of  the  Revolutionary  War,  The,  Sel.  fr. 

(On  National  Character^ — E:  Everett. — SSD 
(Our  National  Character.) — FD  1 
First,  Best    Country,    The. — Oliver    Goldsmith.     See 

Traveller,  The. 
First  Blue-bird,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BNL 
First  Boston  Thanksgiving,   The. — July  1630. — Heze- 

kiah  Butterworth.- PEO  {abr.) 
(Thanksgiving    in    Boston    Harbor,    The.) — AA— 

BS16 
First  Bunker   Hill   Monument    Oration. — Dan'l    Web- 
ster.    See  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 
First  Christmas,  The.— Anon.— DCP 
First  Christmas.  The. — Lew  Wallace.     See  Ben-Hur. 
First  Christmas  in  New  England,  The. — Hezekiah  But- 
terworth.— HS 
First    Christmas    Night,     The. — Clara    J.    Denton. — 

FTT 
First  Christmas  Tree,  The. — Myra  A.  Goodwin. — CS  35 
First  Christmas-tree  in  New  England.     {St.  Nicholas.) 

— PP— YPS 
First  Civil  Code    The.     {Sel.  verses,  fr.  Deuteronomy.) 

BibU.—BhP 
First  Client,    The.— Irwin    Russell— CS  15— NPS— YP 
First  Cloud,  The.— Anon.— CS  24 
First  Constitution,  The.     Bible.     See  Exodus. 
First  Corinthians,  Sels.fr.     Bible. 

First  Corinthians,  XIII.— Charity. — BS  2 

(Thirteenth  Chapter  of  First  Corinthians.) — LLC 
First  Corinthians,  XV.— BS  5 
First  Crocus,  The. — Kate   Brownlee  Sherwood. — POS 
First  Day  nf  School,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
First  Dog,  The.     (C. — in  Life  in  Danbury.) — Jas.  M. 

Bailey. 
(Mr.  Perkms  Buys  a  Dog.)— CS  8 
First  Duan,    The:     The    Coming   of   Deirdre,    Sel.    fr. 

{  Fate  of  the  Sons  of  Usna,  The. ) — J :  Todhunter . 

—TIP 
First  Earl     of     Chatham,    The.— H:    Grattan.— VSG 

{si.  abr.) 
(Character  of  Mr.  Pitt— C.—ofer.)— LLC  {at.  to  W: 

Robertson.) 
First  English  Thanksgiving  in  New  York,  The. — Anon. 

—PEO 
First  Epistle  of  the  Second  Book  of  Horace.     (C.) — 

Alex.  Pope.— WEP  3 
(Horace  Imitated— a6r.)— WEP  3 
First  Flowers,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AD 
First  Footsteps. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — OS  1 
"First  in  our  regard,  as  it  is  first  in  the  whole  nobilit.v 

of  trees." — H:  W.  Beecher.     See  Discourse  on 

Trees,  A. 
First  Inaugural  Address. — T.Jefferson.     See  Inaugu- 
ration Address. 
First  Inaugural  Address. — Abraham  Lincoln. — AI 
(Constitution  and  the  People,  The — sel.) — PRR 
(Inaugural  Address,  Sel.  fr. — shorter  sel.) — LLC 
(War  or  Peace?— 6r.  sel.)— OS  2 
First  Inaugural  Address. — G:  Washington. — EAO 
(Maxims  of  George  Washington — includes  br.  sel.  fr. 

this.)— DFR 
(Washington's  Inaugural  Address — sel.) — OS  3 
(Washington's  Inaugurals,  Apr.  30,  1789.) — AI 
First  Interview  with  Artemus  Ward,  Mark  Twain's. — 

S:  L.  Clemens.— CS  4— DDR 
(My  First  Interview  with  Artemus  Ward.) — MHR 
First  Kings,  Sel.  fr.     (Elijah  and  the  Prophets  of  Baal 

— Ch.  XVIII.,  17-40.)     Bible.— BS  13 
First  Kiss,  The.— T:  Campbell.— BNL— FTA 

(Song— O— HBP  {si.  a6r.)— YBF 
First  Kiss,  The. — Norman  Gale. — VA 
First  Kiss,  The.— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton  (7").— FLS 
First  Kiss,     The.— Theodore      Watts-Dunton. — VA— 

YBF 
First  Lesson,  The. — Emily  Dickinson. — OH 
First  Letter,  The.     {Youth's  Companion.)— LFS—FF 
First  Love. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
First  Love.— C:  S.  Calverley.— PEB  4— THP 
First  Man,  The.       (Sonnet  V.)— Hartley    Coleridge. — 

FEP 
(Birth  of  Speech,  The.)— VA 
First  Meeting,   The. — Christina  Rossetti.     See  Monna 

Innominata. 
First  Meeting  of  the  Cucumber  Hill  Debating  Club,  The. 

— Anon.— MND 
First  National  Thanksgiving,  The. — Anon. — PEO 
First  News   from   Villafranca. — Eliz.    B.   Browning. — 

EDY 
First  Nowell,  The.— Anon.— BVC 
First  of  April.— Anon.— YFD 
First  of  April,  The.— Mortimer  Collins.— EDY 
First  of  April,  The,  Sel.  fr.-T:  Warton.— WEP  3 
First  of  May,  The.— Anon.— BVC 


116 


TITLE  INDEX 


Five 


First  of  May.  (Ode : — Composed  on  May  Morning — C. 

— si.  abr.) — W:  Wordsworth. — EPs 
First  or  Last? — Marg.  Veley. — VA   « 
First  Oration   Against   Catiline,   Sels.   fr. — Marcus   T. 
Cicero. 
Against  Catiline. — PS 
Catiline  Denounced. — PS— SS 

(Oration  against  Catiline.) — CS  3 — LLC — SO 
Separation  from  Traitors. — BLP 
First  Parting,  The. — Marian  Douglass. — CS  8 
First  Party,  The.— Josephine  Pollard.— BS  9— CS  14— 
DS 
(Annabel's  First  Party.) — KJ 
First  Piano  in  the  Mining  Camp,  The. — Anon. — SR  7 
First  Predicted   Eclipse,  The. — Ormsby  M.  Mitchel. — 

FR— TMD  (si.  diff.  vera.) 
First  Problem,  The.— Anon.— SR  10 

(Rationalistic  Chicken,  The.)— BS  34— CR 
First  Pussy  Willows,  The.— L.  F.  Armitage.— TT 
First  Quarrel,    The.     (SZ.    abr.) — Alfred    Tennyson. — 

BS  8— WR  9 
First  Quest,  The. — Jos.  R.  Drake.     See  Culprit   Fay, 

The.— AA 
First  Revolution  of  the  Heavens  [Witnessed  by  Man], 
The.— Ormsby  M.  Mitchel.— CS  22 
(Abr.)- BS  16— OM— PPS— TMD 
First  Robin,  The.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
First  Samuel,  Sel.  fr.     (David  and  Goliath— Ch.  XVII., 

1-51.)     Bible.— WR  25 
First,  Second,  Third. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — OH 

(Sonnets  from  the    Portuguese.)  —  BNL  —  FEP — 

BHP 
(Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese,  XXXVIII. — C.) — 

VA 
(Three  Kisses.)— BIL— FTA— GP 
First  Sensible  Valentine,  The.     (Punch.)— 'R'P'E 
First  Settlement  of  New  England,  The,  Sela.  fr. — E: 
Everett. 
Advantages  of  Adversity  to  the  Pilgrim  Fathers. 
— WR26 
(Mayflower,  The— «ei.)— LLC 
(Sufferings  and  Destiny   of   the    Pilgrims — abr.) 

— CS  1— OM 
(Sufferings  of  the  Pilgrims — abr.) — FD  1 
Land  of  our  Forefathers,  The. — PS 

(Our  Relations  to  [w  with]  England — ptly.  same.) 
—BLP  (si.  abr.)— BS  13— OM— SS 
First  Settlement    of    New    England,    Sels.    fr. — Dan'l 
Webster. 
Departure  of  the  Pilgrims  from  Holland. — FD  1 
Future  of  America,  The.— TMD 

(Peroration  of  Webster's  Plymouth  Rock  Oration 
— seZ.)— SE 
Influence  of  Great  Actions,  The. — BS  23 
Plymouth  Rock.— FD  1— PPS 
First  Settlers'  Story,  The.— Will  Carleton.— SR  3 

(SI.  abr.)— CS  20— FTR— SC 
First  Sight  of  Green  Fields,  The. — C :  and  Mary  Lamb. 

LPC 

First  Skylark  of  Spring,  The.— W:  Watson.— FEP— 

VA— WCLG  2 
First  Snow,  The.— Anon.— NV 
First  Snow,  The.— J.  B.  Benton.— CO  1 
Fir.st  Snow,  The.— Madeline  S.  Bridges.— POS 
First  Snow,  The.— Ella  Dietz.— DES 
First  Snowdrop,  The. — Julia  M.  Dana. — NV 
First  Snow-fall,  The.— Jas.   R.   Lowell.— A  A— BNL— 
CS  14  —  FEP  —  PEO  —  SAE  (sel.)  —  TAV  — 
WCL— WCLI  2 
First  Song,  The. — R:  Burton. — AA 
First  Speech,  A. — Anon. — TT 

(Speech  for  a  Small  Girl.)— KJ 
First  Speech  in  Public. — Anon. — SD 
First  Spring  Day,  The.— J :  Todhunter.— FEP 
First  Spring  Flowers. — Mary  W.  Rowland. — BNL 
First  Step,  The. — Andrew  B.  Saxton. — AA 
First  Step    to    Reconciliation    with    America,    The. — 

W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham.— SS 
First  Sunday  after  Epiphany.     (C.) — Reginald  Heber. 
(By  Cool  Siloam.)— LLC 
(By  Cool  Siloam's  Shady  Rill— geZ.)- PoR 
(Hymn  for  First  Sunday  after  Epiphany,  or  Early 

Piety.)— FEP 
(Siloam's  Shady  Rill— a6r. )—TFS 
First  Sunday  after  Epiphany[:The  Nightingale — C.]. — 
J:  Keble.— AVP(8eZ.) 
(April.)— HBP 
First  Sunday  after  Trinity  [:  Israel  among  the  Ruins 

of  Canaan].- J:  Keble.— AVP 
First  Swallow,    The.— Charlotte     Smith.  —  CGd  —  LC 
(si.  abr.) 
(Swallow,  The.)— BNL 
First  Swallow,  The.— W:  Wordsworth  (?).— POS 


First  Tangle,  The.— Anna  F.  Bumham. — YBT 

First  Te  Deum,  The.— Marg.  J.  Preston.— BS  1— CS  20 

(diff.  vera.) 
First  Thanksgiving,    The. — Hezekiah    Butterworth. — 

BS  17 
First  Thanksgiving    Proclamation    Issued    by    George 
Washington,    The.    (For  a    National   Thanks- 
giving—C.)— PEO 
First  Thing  that  Turn'd  Up,  The. — Anon. — DSS 
First  Timothy,  Sel.  fr.     (Godliness  with  Contentment 

—Ch.  VI.,  6-13.)     Bible.— LLC 
First  Tooth,  The.— C:  and  Mary  Lamb.— LPC 
First    Tragedy,  The.      (Frags,   fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
First  Trowsers,  The.— W:  B.  Rose.— SR  5 
First  Valentine,  The. — Anon.— WR  26 
First  Viqlet,  The. — Marie  B.  Williams.— GP 
First  Voyage  of  John  Cabot,  The. — Anon. — EHT 
First  Week  of  School,  The.— Clara  Denton.— LPD 
Fir-tree,  The.— Luella  Clark.— AD— YBT 
Fish  Family,  The.    (Motion  rec.) — M.  S.  H.  Putnam. — 

TT 
Fish  Story,  A.—(rab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Fish  Story,  A.— J:  Brownjohn.— SR  3 
Fish,  the  Man,  and  the  Spirit,  The. — Leigh  H;mt. — 

WEP4 
Fisher,  The. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe    (Ir.  by   C:   T. 

Brooks).— BNL 
Fisher   Song. — J:  G.Whittier.     See  Fishermen,  The. 
Fisherman,  The. — .^sop.     See  Fables. 
Fisherman,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.- CGd 
Fisherman,  The. — J :  G.  Whittier.    See  Fishermen,  The. 
Fisherman  Jim's  Kids. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Fisherman  Job. — Jas.  R.  Reed. — HP 
Fisherman's  Hut,  The.— Chas.  T.  Brooks.— TMR 
Fisherman's  Hymn,  The. — Alex.  Wilson. — AA 
Fisherman's  Light,  The. — Susanna  S.  Moodie, — TCV 
Fisherman's    Song.  —  Joanna    Baillie.  —  See  Beacon, 

The. 
Fisherman's  Song,     The.— Fs.    Davis.— FEP  —  PPSr 

(al.diff.) 
Fisherman's  Summons,  The. — Anon. — BeR — CS  11 
Fisherman's  Wife,  The.— Anon.— WR  3 
Fisherman's  Wife,     The.     (SI.     abr.) — Alice     Cary. — 

BS9 
Fishermen.  The.— C:   Kingsley— CSS— HBP— PPSr— 
YBF 
(Three  Fishers,  The.)— BNL— BS  3— BSP— CGdr- 
CS  10  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HSS  3  —  LC  —  LLC  — 
OS  2— PYO— VA— WCLI  2— WR  26 
(Three  Fishers  Went  Sailing.) — VS 
(For  tableau  see  Three  Fishers,  The. ) 
Fishermen,  The.     (C— a6r.)— J :  G.  Whittier. 
(Fisher  Song.) — OS  3 
(Fisherman.  The.)— CSS 
Fishermen  of  Wexford,  The.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— EDY 
Fisher's  Boy,  The.     (C.)— H:  D.  Thoreau.— AA 

(Upon  the  Beach.)— GP 
Fisher's  Cottage,  The.     (Pictures  of  Travel:     The  Re- 
turn Home — VII.)— Heinrich  Heine.     (Tr.  by 
C:  G.  Leland.)— BNL— HBP 
Fishin'.— David  L.  Proudfit.— CS  19 
Fishing.— Anon.— FAS— PTS 
(They  Went  a-Fishin'.)— CS  23 
(They  Went  Fishing.)— HBR 
(Two  Fishers.)— A WH—THP 
Fishing.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Fishing.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— DES 
Fishing  Party,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— WR  4 
Fishing  Song[,  Thel— Rose  T.  Cooke— GP— HBP 
Fish-women  at  Calais. — Anon. — FTR 
Fishy  Joke,  A.— Anon. — DSS 

Fitz-Greene  Halleck.     (Read  at  the  Unveiling  of  his 
Statue  in  Central    Park.) — J:    G.  Whittier. — 
BNL 
Fitz  James   and   Roderick   Dhu. — Walter   Scott.     See 

Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Fitz-James  O'Brien. — Andrew  E.  Watrous. — EDY 
Fitz-Traver's  Song. — Walter  Scott.     See   Lay   of   the 

Last  Minstrel. 
Five  Chapters  of  Real  Life. — Anon. — PS 

(Tale  ofa  Dog.)— GH 
Five  Things  to  Observe. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Five  Little    Brothers.- Ella    W.    Wilcox.— PS— TT— 

WR24 
Five  Little  Chickens. — Anon. — DES 

(Chickens,  The.)— DS— NPS— TFS— YA 
(We  Must  all  Scratch.)— YFR 
Five  Little  Tadpoles. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Five  Little  White  Heads. — Walter  Learned. — TAV 
Five  Lives.— E:  R.  Sill.— A  WH—THP 
Five  Minutes   with   a   Mad    Dog. — W.    Pocklington. — 
TMR 


117 


Five 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Five  Senses,  The. — Anon. — DE 

Five  versus  Twenty-five. — Anon. — KNS 

Five  Wishes,   The. — Mrs.   Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 

Fix.— Anon.— FND 

Flag,  The.— Anon.— CP 

Flag,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Jhe  Battle  of  Lexington.)— E: 

Everett.— SO 
(National  Banner,  The.)— CS  6— KNE 
(Our  National  Banner.) — LLC 
(Stars  and  Stripes,  The.)— CP 
Flag,  The.— H.  L.  Flash.- PAPm— PEO 
Flag,  The.— Julia  W.  Howe.— EPs 
Flag,  The.     (Life.)— FAS 
Flag,  The.— M.  W.  S.— PAPm 
Flag  at  Half-mast,  The.— Helen  M.  Cooke.— DES 
Flag  at  Shenandoah.  The. — Joaquin  Miller. — BS  21 

(Battle  Flag  at  Shenandoah.  The— C.)— BS  12 
Flag  Dav.— Martha  B.  Banks.— WR  17 
Flag  Drill.- A.  E.  Hurst.— ID 
Flag  Goes  By,  The.— H:  H.  Bennett.— AA—BS  25— 

GN— PAPm  (si.  ofcr. )—PRR 
Flag  in  Nature,  The.— S:  F.  Smith.— POS 
Flag  of  England,  The. — Rudvard  Kipling. — LH 
Flag  of  Old  England,  The.— Jos.  Howe.— TCV 
Flag  of  our  Country,  The.  —  Rob't  C.  Wintlirop.     See 

Flag  of  the  Union,  The. 
Flag    of    our    Union,   The.— G:    P.     Morris.- DFR— 

PRR  (af>r.) 
Flag  of  the  Constellation,  The.— T:  B.  Read. — AWB 
Flag  of  the  Free. — Jos.  R.  Drake.     See  American  Flag, 

The. 
Flag  of  the  Rainbow.     (SI.  abr.)—T:    D.   English.— 

BS  15— CS  32 
Flag  of  the  Union,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Rob't  C.  Winthrop. 
Cause  of  the  Union,  The. — SR  8 
Flag  of  our  Country,  The.     (Inel^ides  sel.  fr.  Sum- 
ner's Are  We  a  Nation?) — PEO 
National  Ensign,  The.— BLP 
Flag  of    Washington,    The.— F.    W.    GiUett.— DFR— 

WRD 
Flag  that    has    never    Known    Defeat,    The. — C.    L. 

Benjamin  and  G.  D.  Sutton. — PAPm 
"Flag  the  Train."— W:  B.  Chisholm.— CS  30— NPS— 

YP 
Flaming     Heart.      The.  —  R;    Crashaw.  —  EI.P  — 

WEP  2  (si.  abr.) 
(Upon   the   Book   and   Picture   of   the   Seraphical 

Saint  Teresa — si.  abr.) — OB 
Flamingo,  The.— L.  G.  Clark.— NA 
Flash.— The  Fireman's  Story.— Will  Carleton.— BS  11 

— SR3 
"Flat"  Contradiction,  A. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — CS  35 
Flat  Story,  A.— Anon.— WR  7 
Flattering  Grandma. — Anon. — PEO 

(Bamboozling  Grandma.) — WR  17 
Flattery.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Flattery.— Sir  C:  H.  Williams.— HPE 
Flax  Flower,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— NV— PoR 
Fledglings. — T:  L.  Harris. — AA 
Flee  as  a  Bird.— Mrs.  S.  B.  Dana. — LLC 
Flee  fro'  the  Press. — Matthew  Arnold.     See  Scholar- 
Gipsy,  The. 
Fleece,  The,  Sel.  fr.—J:  Dyer.— WEP  3 
Fleet  at  Santiago,  The.— C:  E.  Russell.- EDY 
Fleet    under    Sail.  The. — Sir    Franklin  Lushington. — 

AVP 
Fleeting  Good.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Fleeting  Show  of  Hen,  A. — Anon. — WR  20 
Fleurange,    Scene    fr. — Mme.     Augustus     Craven. — 

WR8 
Flibbertygibbet  and  Me. — May  R.  Mackenzie. — BR 
Flicker  on  the  Fence,  The.— S:  B.  McManus. — CS  37 
Flies,  The.— Matthew  Prior.— HPE 
Flight. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 

Flight,  The.— Jr  Keats.     See  Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The. 
Flight,  The.— IJoyd  MifBin.— AA— ASL— YBF 
Flight.— Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Flight  for  Life,  The.— W:  Sawyer.— CS  17  (si.  abr.)— 

NPS— YP 
Flight  from  Glory,  A. — Eugene  L.  Hamilton. — VA 
Flight  from  the  Convent.  The. — Theodore  Tilton. — AA 
Flight  into  Egypt,  The.— Fs.  Mahony.— BNL 
Flight  of  Love,  The.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— PGT  1— YBF 
(Lines— C.)— OB— WEP  4 
("When  the  lamp  is  shattered.") — BNL 
Flight  of  Malzah,  The. — C:  Heavysege.     See  Saul. 
Flight  of  the  Arrow,  The.— R:  H:  Stoddard.— AA 
Flight  of  the  Birds,  The.— Harriet  M.  Kimball.— HDL 

—POS 
(Trusting.)— YBT 
Tlight  of  the  Birds,  The. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — GN 

—POS 
Tlight  of  the  Duchess,  The.— Rob't  Browning.— HBP 


Flight  of  the  Geese,  The.— C-  G.  D.  Roberts.— SN— 
VA 

Flight  of  the  Gods,  The.— Adelaide  Biddies.— CS  18 
Flight  of  the  Heart,  The. — Dora  R.  Goodale.— AA 
Flight  of  the  War-eagle,  The. — O.  C.  Auringer.- AA 
Flight  of  the  Wild  Geese.— W:  E.  Channing. — EPs 
Flight  of  the  Wild  Swans.  The.     (Prince  Amadis,  Sts. 

33-37.)— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 
Flight  of  Time,  The.— (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Flight  of  Time,  The.— J.  K.  Blake.— CG  1 
Flight  of  Xerxes,  The. — Marie  J.  Jewsbury. — CS  15 — 

PTS 
Flight  of  Youth,  The.     (C.)— R:  H-  Stoddard.— AA— 

ASL— YBF 
(It  Never  Comes  Again.)— BNL— LLC— MRS 
(Lost.)— FP 

(Never  Again.)— FEP—TAV 
(There  are  Gains  for  All  our  Losses.) — HBP 
Flight  Shot,  A. — Maurice  Thompson. — AA 
Flirtation. — Anon.— CS  25 
Flirtation.— Frd'k  S.  Camp.— CG  1 
Flirtation  on    the    Cars,    A.     ( University    of    Chicago 

Weekly.)— CG  2 
Flitch  of    Dunmow,     The. — Jas.     Carnegie,     Earl    of 

Southesk.— VA 
Flitting  of  the  Fairies,  The.     (Fr.  The  End  of  Elfin- 

town.) — Jane  Barlow. — TIP 
Flock  of  Birds,  A.— Annie  Chase. — AD 
Flock  of  Doves,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Flock  of  Sheep,  A.— Duncan  C.  Scott.— TCV 
Flodden. — Walter  Scott. — See  Marmion. 
Flodden  Field.     (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — OEB 
Flodden  Field. — Walter  Scott. — See  Marmion. 
Flood  and  the  Ark,  The.— Anon.— CH—CS  19— SR  2 
Flood  of  Years,  The.— W:  C.   Bryant.— AA— BNL— 

BS  5—  CS  13  —  LLC  —  SAE  (br.  sel.)  —  SR  6 
Flood  on  the  Floss,  The. — G:  Eliot.     See  Mill  on  the 

Floss,  The. 
Flood-time  on  the  Marshes. — Evaleen  Stein. — AA 
Floral  Birthday  Greeting,    A. — E.  Maude  Jackson. — 

VSG 
Floral  Drill.— Marg.  W.  Morton.— ID 
Floral  Guide,  The.     ( Tofe. )— Millie  M.  Olcott.— StD 
Floral  Offerings.— Anon.— NPS— YP 
Ploral  Rainbow,  The.— Anon.— DFR 
Florence  (in  Italy),  Sel.  fr.  (Night  and  Day.The.)— S: 

Rogers.— AVP 
Florence  Vane.— Philip  P.   Cooke.— AA—FEP— HBP 
Florentin. — Louis  I.  Guiney. — TAS 
Florentine  Juliet,  A. — Susan  Coolidge. — BS  3 
Floretty's  Musical  Contribution. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
noa  Florum. — Arthur  J.  Munby. — VA 
Flo's  Letter.— Eben  E.  Rexford.— DST 
(Little  Flo's  Letter.)— COS— PP 
(Oversight  of  Make-up,  An.) — WR  2 
Flossie.— L.  R.  Hamberlin.— WR  12 
Flossie  Lane's  Marriage. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Flossy  (with    her   own    Portrait)    to   her   Mistress. — 

Goldwin  Smith.— TCV 
Flotsam  and  Jetsam.     (All  the  Year  Round.) — BNL— 

HP 
Flow  Gently,  Sweet  Afton.     (Sweet  Afton— C.)— FEP 

IR— LLC— MBL— SO— WCLG  1 
(Afton  Water.)— BNL— GP—SN— YBF 
Flower,  The.— G:   Herbert.^BNL— CEL— EPs— FEP 

—HBP 
Flower,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.- AD— VA 
Flower  and  Leaf,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Geoffrey  Chaucer  (?). 

— WEPl 
Flower  and  the  Song,  The.— Anon.— PPSr 
Flower  Bed,  The. — Anon.— NV 
Flower  Dances.     (Tr.  by)     Mrs.  Anderson. — NV 
Flower  Dreams. — Anon. — PEO 
Flower  Drill,  A. — Marg.  W.  Morton. — ID 
Flower  Faces.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
" 'Flower  fadeth,'  but  the  seed  and  the  fruit  come. 

The."— C:  Wadsworth.— GG 
Flower  from  the  Catskills,  A.— E.  W.— HP 
Flower  (Flour)  Giri,  The.    JTab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Flower  Girl,  The.— Edith  Wordsworth.— CS  33 
Flower  Girls.— Lucy  Larcom.— LCS— PHS 
Flower  in  the  Crannied  Wall. — Alfred  Tennyson. — OS  1 

— PHS— VA— YBF 
Flower  Mission,  The. — Anon. — AD 
Flower  o'  Dumblane,  The.— Rob't  Tannahill.— BNL 

(Jessie,  the  Flower  o'  Dumblane,  The.) — FEP 
Flower  of  Beauty,  The. — G:  Darley. — VA 
(Love  SongJ— HBP 
(Song.)— OB 
Flower  of  Liberty,  The. — Oliver  W.   Holmes. — AD — 

BLP— CS  14— PEO— PRR— PS 
("Thy  sacred    leaves,   fair  freedom's   flower" — br. 

«eZ.)— BNL 


118 


TITLE  INDEX 


For 


Flower  of  Love,  The.— Ruth  W.  Kahn.— SR  9 
Flower  of  Love,  The.  (Fr.  Melincourt.) — T:  L.  Peacock. 

— WEP4 
Flower  of  the  Desert,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans  (?). — 

AD 
Flower  of  Virtue,  The.— G:  Wither.— ELP 
Flower  Service,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — HE 
Flower  Social. — Anon. — EuE 
Flower  Songs.     (Daisies  —  Buttercups  —  Blue-bells  — 

WUd  Roses.)— Mary  G.  Crocker.— CPL 
"Flower  that's  bright  with  the  sun's  own  light,  The." 

Anon.— HSS  1 
{Incl.  in  Maiden  Spring,  The.) — AD 
Flower-girls.     See  Flower  Girls. 
Flowers.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Flowers,  The.— H:  Bacon.— FP 
Flowers. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — YBT 
Flowers.— T:  Hood.— BNL— VA 
Flowers. — Leigh  Hunt.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of   the 

Flowers. 
Flowers. — J:     Keble.     See    Fifteenth     Sunday     after 

Trinity. 
Flowers.     (Literary      Recreations.) — Eliz.      Lloyd.  — 

BS  13 
Flowers.     (C.)— H:  W.  T^ngfellow.  —  AD  —  BS  22— 

HBP— HSS  1— SE 
(Stars  and  the  Flowers,  The.) — GMS 
Flowers. — J:  Milton.     See  Lycidas. 
Flowers. — T:  P.  Moses.— FP 
Flowers.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— POS 
Flowers. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Winter's  Tale. 
Flowers,  The.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Flowers,  The.— E:  Youl.— HSS  1 

(Song  of  Spring.)— HBP— TFS  (seZ.) 
Flowers  and  Foliage. — Anon. — AD 
Flowers  and  Weeds.— G:  Cooper.- YBT 
Flowers  at  the  Cave  of  Staffa. — W:  Wordsworth.  — 

EPs 
Flowers'    Convention,    The. — A.     L.    Jack. — DFR — 

DLD 
Flower's  Easter    Message,    The. — Emilie    Poulsson. — 

HS 
Flowers  for   the  Brave.— E.   W.  Chapman.— HSS  1— 

LLC 
(Flowers  for  the  Fallen  Heroes.)— PEO 
Flowers  for  the  Brave.— Celia  Thaxter.— FS— PEO 
Flowers  for  the  Fallen  Heroes. — E.  W.  Chapman.     See 

Flowers  for  the  Brave. 
Flowers   I  Would  Bring. — Aubrey  T :  DeVere. — VA 
Flowers  in  Winter.— S:  F.  Smith.— POS 
Flowers  Know  their  Time  to  Go,  The. — Susan  Coolidge 

—YBT 
(Time  to  Go.)— GN 
Flower's  Name,  The.     (Garden  Fancies,  Pt.  I.) — Rob't 

Browning.— BNL— WR  9 
(Garden  Fancies— PtL)— OH 
Flowers  of  [or  o']  the  Forest,  The.     (Pt.  I. — in  Border 

Minstrelsy.)  —  Jane   Elliot.  —  BPB  —  FEP— 

WEP."? 
(Lament  for  Flodden  [Field,  A].)— CEL— EHT— OB 

— PGTl 
Flowers  of  the  May. — Anon. — AD 
"Flowers  Open,  Smile." — Anon — HSS  1 
Flowers'  Sleep,  The. — Annie  Moore. — WR  17 
Flowers  without     Fruit. — J:     H:    Newman. — BNL — 

HBP 
Flower-seller,    The.  —  W :  Young.     See    Wishmakers' 

Town.  _  ^ 

Flower-spider,  The. — Alice  Cary. — BLF 
Flown  Soul,  The.— G;  P.  Lathrop.— AA— TAV 
Flute,  The. — Jos.  R.  Taylor. — AA 
Fluttered  Wings. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Fly,  The.— Anon.— WR  4 
Fly,  The.— W:  Oldys.— CEL— HBP 

("  Busy,  curious,  thirsty  fly.") — FEP 
(On  a  Fly  Drinking  out  of  his  Cup.)— OB 
(To  a  Fly.)— LC 
Fly,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Fly,  The.— Theodore  Tilton.— AWH 

(Baby  Bye.)— OS  1 
Fly  and  the  Lamb,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KC 
Fly  Leaf.     {Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A,  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Fly.  Little  Letter.— W.  C.  C— CG  1 
Fly  not  Yet.— T:  Moore.— HBP 
Fly  to  the  Desert  [,  Fly  with    me]. — T:    Moore.     See 

Lalla  Roohk. 
Fly-away  Horse,  The.— Eugene  Field. — LS 
Flying  Dutchman,  The.     {SI.  ahr.)—3:  Boyle  O'Reilly. 

SR5 
Flying  Fish. — Mary  M.  Fenollosa. — AA 
Flying  Fish,  The.— Florian.— OS  1 


Fljnng  Islands  of  the  Night,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Dwainie — fr. 

Act  I.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— AA 
Mying  Jim's   Last    Leap. — Emma   D.    Banks. — BR — 

CS19 
Fbnng  Kite. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Flying  Mist,  The. — Edwin  Markham. — SN 
Flynn  of  Virginia. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — PYO 

(In  the  Tunnel— O— BAB 
Fly's  Cogitations,  A. — Anon. — BS  12 — PR — YA 
Foes  United   in    Death.— Anon.— CS  3— KNE— SR  12 

(United  in  Death.)— SO 
Fog,  The.     {Mother  Truth's  Melodies.) — NV 
Fold,  The.— Emily  Dickinson.— TAS 
Folded  Hands,  The.— Anon.— CS  33 
Folding   the    Flocks. — Beaumont   and    Fletcher.     See 

Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
Folk  of  the  Air,  The.— W:  B.  Yeats.— VA 
"Follow  Me.'     {Sel.  fr.  A  Thought.)— Abram  J.  Ryan. 

— GP 
Follow  the  Golden  Rule. — Anon. — PS 
Follow  your  Saint! — T:  Campion. — ELP 

(Devotion.)— OB  (2d  poem)—YBY 
Following  the  Advice  of  a  Physician. — "  Dakota  Bell." 

— BS20 
Folly  and  Wisdom.    {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Folly  of  Pride,  The.— Sydney  Smith.— PS 
Folly  of  Religious  Persecution,  The. — Anon. — SS 
Fontenoy.— T:  O.  Davis.— ED Y— FEP— HBP— MMR 

— PEB4 
(Battle  of  Fontenoy.)— CR — CS  4— FR  {si.  abr.) 
Food  of  Love. — Harry  Romaine. — TL 
Fool  and  the  Poet.  The.— Alex.  Pope  (?).— HPE 
Fool  Youngens.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Foolish  Flowers.  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Foolish  Harebell,  The.— G:  Macdonald  — PP— YFR 
Foolish  Little  Maiden.  A.— M.  T.  Morrison. — CS  26 
(What  the  Choir  Sane  about  the   New  Bonnet.) — 

CH 
Foolish  Little  Robin. — Anon. — AD 
Foolish  Maid,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Foolish  Virgins,   The. — Alfred   Tennyson.     See   Idylls 

of  the  King,  The. 
Fool's  Errand,  A,  Sel.  fr.     (Lily  Servosse's  Ride — arr. 

fr.  Chs.  XXXVI  and  XXXVII.)— Albion  W. 

Tourg^e.- BS  IG 
'^Fool's  Prayer,    The.— E:    R.    Sill.— AA— ASL— BS  23 

{si.  abr.)  —  CS  19  —  CSS  —  FEP  —  HDL  — 

HP— MR  S— P  YO— SC— TAS— TMD 
Fool's  Revenge,  The.,  Sel.  fr.   (Jester and  his  Daughter, 

The.)— Tom  Taylor.— VA 
Foot-ball  Game,  The.— Rob't  Copland.— PR 
Football  Girl,  The.— Raymond  W.  Walker.— CG  3 
Football  Maiden,  The.     {Lake  Forest  Student.) — CG  3 
Foot-ball  Player,  A.— E:  C.  Lefroy.- VA 
Football  Tragedy,  A. — {University  of  Chicago  Weekly.) 

— CG2 
Footman    Wanted,     A.— {Dial.) — G:    (7)    Colman. — 

MPD 
Footnote  to  a  Famous  Lyric,  A. — Loui'^e  I.  Guiney. — 

AA 
Footprints  in  the  Snow. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — SN 
Footprints  of    Decay. — Anon.     See    Coplas    de    Man- 

rique. 
Footsteps  of    Angels.  —  H:    W.    Longfellow. — BNL — 

FEP— HBP— LLC— SSS— TAS 
("  When  the  hours  of  day  are  numbered"  —  ael.) — 

HP 
Footsteps  on  the  Other  Side. — Anon. — CS  3 
Fop,  The. — W:   Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  IV. 

Pt.  I. 
For  a  Birthday  Celebration. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
For  a  College. — Anon. — CP 
For  a  College  Commencement. — Anon. — CP 
For  a  Copy  of  Theocritus. — Austin  Dobson. — BNL — 

VA 
For  a  Dental  College. — Anon. — CP 
For  a  Girl  Ten  Years  Old.— W.  T.— KNS 
For  a  Grotto. — Mark  Akenside. — WEP  3 
For  a    National    Thanksgiving.     (C.) — G:    Washing- 
ton. 
(First  Thanksgiving  Proclamation  Issued  by  George 

Washington. )— PEO 
For  a  Portrait  of  Felice  Orsini. — Anon. — EDY 
For  a  School. — Anon. — CP 
For  a'  That  and  a'  That. — Rob't  Bums. — BNL — CR — 

FP— HSS  3— MBL— WCLG  2— YBF  {abr.) 
(Honest  Poverty. )— EPs— HBP 
(Is  there  for  Honest  Poverty— C.)—PHS 
(Man's  a  Man  for  a'  That,  A.)— BS  4— FEP—  OS  2 

— SM— SPE— WEP  3 
For  a'  That;  or.    Selling   a    Feller. — Marietta  HoUey. 

See  Sweet  Cicely. 
For  a  Tiny  Girl.— Anon.— SD 


119 


For 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


For  a  Venetian  Pastoral,  by  Giorgione.  (C.)  —  Dante 

G.  Rossetti. 
(Venetian  Pastoral,  A.) — VA 
For  a  Very  Little  Girl. — Annie  Chase. — KG 
For  a  Warning. — Caroline  B.  Le  Row. — PEG 
For  a  Wedding  Anniv^jrsary. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
For  a  Widower  or  Widow. — G:  Wither. — HBP 

(Widow's  Hymn,  A— «eZ.)— OB 
For  all  These.— Juliet  W.  Tompkins.— PYO 
For  all  who  Die.— Anon.— BS  18 
For  an  Autumn  Festival,  Sel.Jr. — J:  G.  Whittier. 
Harvest  Hymn.     (Sel.)—PEO 
Thanksgiving  Ode.     (Abr. )— PEO 
For  an  Epitaph  at  Fiesole. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 

— WEP4 
For  an  Old  Poet.     (To  Richard  Henry  Stoddard.)— 

H:  C.  Bunner.— BNL 
For  Annie. — Edgar  A.  Poe.— BNL — OB 

(Convalescence— «eZ. ) — GP 
For  Another's  Sake. — Clara  J.  Denton. — HE 
For  Arbor  Day. — G :  Adams. — AD 
For  Believers. — C:  Wesley. — HBP 
"For  Better,  for  Worse."— Ellen  T.  Fowler. — TFY 
For  Charlie's  Sake.— J:  W.  Palmer.- BNL— HBP 
For  Christmas   Day. — Hezekiah   Butterworth. — WR  5 
For  Christmas'  Sake.— Rob 't  C.  V.  Meyers.- HE 
For  Christmas  Time.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
For  Class  Meeting,  1875,  Sel.  fr.  (Class  Meeting,  1875.) 

—Oliver  W.  Holmes.— SE 
For  Cuba.— Rob't  M.  Bell.— PAPm 
For  Decoration  Day. — Rupert  Hughes. — AA 
For  Decoration    Day.— S.    M.    Kniel.— DFR — DLS— 

LPS— PP 
(Let  Little  Hands.)— DJS 
For  Decoration  Day.— C.  Phillips. — WR  17 
For  Divine  Strength. — S:  Johnson  (7). — HDL 
For  Easter  Morning. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 

(Easter  Morning.) — DFR 
For  ever.  See  also  Forever. 
"For    ever.  Fortune,  wilt  thou  prove."     (To  Fortune 

— C. — abr.) — Jas.  Thomson.— PGT  1 
For  ever  with  the  Lord. — Jas.  Montgomery.     .See  At 

Home  in  Heaven. 
"For  every  sunny  hour." — Anon. — HSS  2 
For  Expansion. — Jos.  C.  Sibley. — SC 
For  Freedom. — Edna  D.  Proctor. — WR  10 
For  Grandpa's  Sake. — Anon. — DLF 
For  her  Sake.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— CS  37 
"For  I  trust,  if  an  enemy's  fleet  came  yonder  round  by 

the  hill." — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Maud. 
For  Independence,  1776.— R:  H:  Lee.— PS  (al.  abr.)— 

SS 
For  Lack  of  Gold.— Adam  Austin. — WEP  3 
For  Life  and  Death. — Anon. — HP 
For  Love. — Anon. — CS  12 

(Carl.)— BS8 
For  Love's  Sake. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — CS  21 
For  Love's  Sweet  Sake. — E.  Matheson. — FLS 
For  Memory's  Sake.— Floyd  W.  Jefferson.— CG  3 
For  my  Own  Monument  . — Matthew  Prior. — OB 
For  Music. — Lord  Byron. — OB 
(Nature's  Daughter.) — MR 
(Stanzas  for  Music.)— CEL—FEP— HBP— WEP  4 

— YBF 
("There  be  none  of  Beauty's  daughters.") — PGT  1 
For  Music. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — WEP  4 
For  New- Year's  Day. — Philip  Doddridge. — HBP 
"For  not  in  quiet  English  fields." — Oscar  Wilde. — GG 
For  One  Retired  into  the  Country. — C:  Wesley. — SN 
For  our  Dead. — Clinton  Scollard.— PEO 
"For  Sale."— Pitts  Duffield.— TL 
For  Sale,  a  Horse.— C:  E:  Taylor.— A  A 
For  Summer  Time. — G :  Wither.     See  Hallelujah. 
For  the  Avery  "Knickerbocker."     (C.) — Au&tin  Dob- 
son. 
(Knickerbocker.) — PPh 
For  the  Baptist.     (Fr.  Flowers  of  Sion.) — W:  Drum- 

mond.— FEP— WEP  2 
(Saint  John  [the]  Baptist.)— EDY— OB— PGT  1— 

YBF 
(Sonnet:  Repent,  Repent!)— ELP 
For  the  Chief's  Daughter. — Anon. — SR  5 
For  the  Fourth.     (  B«<. )— Anon  .—EuE 
For  the  Giver. — G:  Cooper. — YBT 
For    the    Moore    Centennial    Celebration. — Oliver  W. 

Holmes.— GP 
For  the  Picture. — Jos.  M.  W.  Turner. — EDY 
For  the  Picture,  "The  Last  of  England."— Ford  M. 

Brown. — VA 
For  the  Sewing  Circle.     (Evt.) — Anon. — EuE 
For  the  Slumber  Islands,   Ho!— Eben   E.   Rexford.— 

BR— BS  24 
("Ho,  for  Slumberland!")- NV 


For  the  War  of  1813.— H :  Clay.     See  Mr.  Clay  and  the 

War  of  1812. 
For  Thee  Alone. — Anon. — FT  A 
"For  there    are    two    heavens,    sweet."      (Sel.  fr.  A 

Heaven  upon  Earth.) — Leigh  Hunt. — BIL 
(Two  Heavens.)— GN 
' '  For  they  alone  have  need  of  sorrow." — Mary  Clemmer, 

— BIL— FTA 
"For  Thoughts."— Celia  Thaxter.— BIL 
For  Vacation. — Anon. — FAS 
"For  who  would  bear  the  whips  and  scorns  of  time." — 

W :  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
For  You.— G  :  W.  Bungay.— FTT 
Foraging  or  Stealing. — Anon. — SR  13 
Foray  of    Con    O'Donnell,    The,  Sel.  fr.  (Irish    Wolf- 
hound, The.)— Denis   F.  Mac    Carthy.— SN— 

VA 
Forbearance. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — AA — GN 
Forbearance. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KG 
Forbidden. — Anon. — FLS 
Forby  Sutherland.— G:  G.  M'Crae.— VA 
Force.— E:  R.  Sill.— AA 
Force  Bill,  The.— J:  C.  Calhoun.— MRS 

(Against  the  Force  Bill,  1833— sZ.  a6r.)— PS— SS 
Force  of  Habit,  The.— Anon.— CS  15 
Force  of  Imagination,  The. — Anon.— FND 
Force  of  Prayer;  or,  "The  Founding  of  Bolton  Priory. — 

W:  Wordsworth.— PEB  3 
Force  of  Satire,  The.— Anon.— MRS 
Forced    Recruit,    The.     (C.) — Eliz.    B.    Browning.— 

EDY— HSS  1— WEP  4 
(Forced  Recruit  at  Solferino,  A.) — FEP 
Forced  Recruit  at  Solferino,  A. — Eliz.   B.   Browning. 

See  foregoing. 
Forcing  a  Way. — Anon. — NA 
Fore  i'  the  Flint,  The. — Lucy  Robinson. — AA 
Foreboding,  A. — Mary  M.  Lamb,  Ladv  Currie. — VA 
Foreboding,  A.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— FTA— OH 
Forecast. — Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Festus. 
Forecast. — Geoffrey    Chaucer.      See  House  of    Fame, 

The. 
Forecast,  A. — Archibald  Lampman. — VA 
Foreclosure  of  the  Mortgage,  The. — Mrs.  E.  T.  Corbett. 

— CS17 
Forefather,  The.— R:  Burton.- AA 
Forefathers'  Day. — J.  D.  Long. — SC 
Foreign  Children.     (C.)— Rob't    L.    Stevenson.— CGV 

(Other  Children.)- HSS  2 
Foreign  Influence.  —  G :    Washington.       See    Against 

Foreign  Entanglements. 
Foreign  Influence  upon   American   University  Life. — » 

Anon.— CP 
Foreign  Lands. — Rob't    L.    Stevenson. — AD — CGV — 

DJS— VA 
Foreign  Policy,  Sel.  fr.     (England's  True  Greatness.) 

—J:  Bright.— SO 
(Greatness  Based  on  Morality — nbr.) — OS  3 
(National  Greatness — sel.) — SAE — BE 
Foreign  Policy  of  Washington,  The.— C:  J.  Fox. — SS 
Foreign  Tongue,  A. — Anna  H.  Branch.— OG  2 
Foreign  Views  of  the  Statue. — Fred  E.  Brooks. — CS  27 

— SR  11 
(SI.  abr.)— BS  24— WR  21 
Foreigners  at  the  Fair. — Fred  E.  Brooks. — WR  25 
Forelookings.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Forepledged. — J:  L.  Spalding. — AA 
Forerunners. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — AA 
Forerunners. — Alex.  Smith.     See  Life-drama,  A. 
Foreshadowings. — Julia  C.  R.  Dorr. — BS  23 
Foresight. — W :  Shakespeare.    See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
Forest,  The.— R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton.— POS 
Forest,  The.— W:  J.  Pabodie.— HSS  1 

(Thoughts  on  the  Forest.)— AD 
Forest  Flowers. — Gusta\'us  Frankenstein. — AD 
Forest  Glade,  The. — C :  Tennyson-Turner.— VA 
Forest    Hymn    [,  A.].     (C.)—W:   C.    Brvant.     AA— 

AD  (sZ.  abr.)- BNL— CS  8— FP  («ei.)— HSS   1 

—LLC  (a6r.)— WR  5 
(God's  First  Temples.)— FTR— HNS— SPE 
(Groves,  The— 6r.  sel.)— TFS 
("My  heart   is   awed  within   me  when  I  stand — 

br.  sel.)— GG 
Forest  King's  Race. — Louise  de  la  Ram^e.     See  iJnder 

Two  Flags. 
Forest  of  Arden,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  As  You 

Like  It. 
Forest  Scene,  A. — Edith  May. — AD 
Forest  Silence.     (Harper's  Magazine.) — AD 
Forest  Song  — W.  H.  Venable.— AD— DCP— HSS  1 
Forest  Trees.     (Fr.  Mother  Truth's  Melodies.) — Anon. 

— NV 
Forest  Trees,  The.— Eliza  Cook.— AD— PEO 


120 


TITLE  INDEX 


Four 


Forest  Trees.     (C — in  Bracebridge  Hall.) — Washing- 
ton Irving. — AD  (6r.  ael.) 
(True  Nobleman,  A — partly  same.) — HSS  1 
Foresters,  The,  Sela.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

King  Richard  in  Sherwood  Forest.     (Sets.  fr.  Act 
'  II.,  Sc.  1,  and  Act  IV.,  Sc.  1.)— EHT 
(Song  in  "The  Foresters" — National  Song — C. 

fr.  II.,  1.)— VA 
Forethought  of  Murder.     {Frags,  fr.  W:  Shakespeare.) 

— BNL 
Forever. — Anon. — HP 
Forever. — Anon. — LLC 
Forever. — Eliz.  Berrv. — FLS 
Forever.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— CS  27— GP— SR  4 
Forever  and  Forever. — C.  C.  Converse. — LLC 
Forever   with  the   Lord. — Jas.  Montgomery.      See  At 

Home  in  Heaven. 
Forget  Me  Not.— Amelia  Opie. — FEP 
Forget  not  the  Field.— T:  Moore.— HSS  1 
Forget  not  Yet.— Sir  T:  Wyatt.— OB 
(Appeal,  An.) — CEL 
(Lover  Beseecheth  his  Mistress  not  to  Forget,  The. 

— O— WEP  1 
(Supplication,  A.)— PGT  1— PHS 
Forget  Thee?— J:  Moultrie.— BNL— FLS— TFY 
Forget  Thee,  No,  Never' — Alaric  A.  Watts. — FTA 
Forgetful  Tommie. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Forgetfulness. — Anon. — D.IS 
Forget-me-not.— Anon.—  AD  —  DLS  —  QMS—  NV— 

YBT 
Forget-me-not,  The. — Anon. — MYF 
Forget-me-nots.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— SPC 
Forging  of  the  Anchor,  The. — S:  Ferguson. — BNIy — 

BS  24  (seZ.)— CR— CS  21— EPs— FEP— HBP— 

PGT  2— WRD 
Forgive.     (Twenty-second  Sunday  after  Trinity — C.) 

—Reginald  Heber.— SS 
Forgive  me  Now. — Anon. — FLS 
Forgiven? — .leannette  B.  Gillespy. — AA — CG  3 
Forgjven. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — BIL 
Forgiveness.     (2  poems.) — Anon. — YBT 
Forgiveness. — J.  Edmundston. — AD — SS 
Forgiveness. — Jane  Taylor. — YBT 
Forgiveness.     (C.) — J:  G.  Whittier.     ("My  heart  was 

heavy,  for  its  trust  had  been.") — GG 
Forgiveness    and     Resentment.     (.Frags,    fr.     various 

authors.) — BNL 
Forgiveness  I>ane. — Martha  G.  Dickinson. — AA 
Forgiveness  of   Sins   a   Joy    Unknown. — Augustus    L. 

Hillhouse. — AA 
Forgiving. — Cecil  F.  Alexander. — YBT 
Forgotten  Books,  The.— T    S.  Collier— LBB—MBB 
Forgotten  Grave,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — VA 
Forgotten    Poet,  The.— Albert  E.  S.  Smyth.— TCV 
Forma  Bonum  Fragile. — Matthew  Prior. — HPE 
Formal  Call,  The. — C:  G.  Halpine.     See  Quakerdom. 
Formopoe  PupIIop. — Herbert  P.  Home. — VA 
Fors  Clavigera,  Sel.  fr.  (Saint  Ursula — si.  abr.  Jr.  The 

Story  of    St.  Ursula,  in  Letter  LXXI.)— J: 

Ruskin.— WR  6 
Forsaken,     (/n  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — PGT  1 
(Waly,  Waly.)— BB— ELP— OB— WEP  1 
(Waly,  Waly.  [but]  Love   be  Bonnv— C.)— BNL— 

EPs  —  FEP  —  GP   {sel.)  —  HBP  —  OEB  — 

FEB  1 
Forsaken,  The.— Hamilton  Aid^.— VA 
Forsaken. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VS 
(Margaret.)— VA—YBF 
("Mother,  I  cannot  mind  my  wheel.") — OB 
Forsaken   Garden,  A    [wr.   The]. — Algernon   C.   Swin- 
burne.—HBP— SAE  (si.  abr.)—YA 
Forsaken  Merman,    The. — Matthew    Arnold. — AVP — 

BNL— CGd— FEP— GN— HBP— OB— OS  1— 

PGT  2— VA— WEP  4 
"Forsaken  of  all  comforts  but  these  two." — Sir  Rob't 

Ayton.— PPh 
Fort  Dearborn,  Sel.  fr.   (Burning  of  Chicago,  The.) — 

B:F.  Taylor.— PR 
Fort  Wagner. — Anna  E.  Dickinson. — NC — PFP 

(Assault  on  Fort  Wagner,  The.)— SC 
Forthfaring.— Winifred  Howells. — AA 
Fortitude. — Marcus  Aurelius  Antoninus.  See  Thoughts 

of  Marcus  Aurelius. 
Fortitude  amid  Trials. — Anon. — SS 
Fqrtunate  Isles  and  their  Union,    Sel.  fr.  (Song  before 

the  Entrance  of  the  Masquers — Chorus — C.) — 

Ben  Jonson.— WEP  2 
Fortunate  One,  The. — Harriet  Monroe. — AA 
Fortunati  Nimium. — T:  Campion. — PGT  1 
(Jack  and  .loan.) — EP 
(Rustic  Joys.)— YBF 
Fortune. — Fitz-Greene  Halleck.     See  Fanny. 


Fortune  Hunter,  The.     (Dial.)— (7)  Pickering.— MDD 
Fortune  Hunter,  The.     (Dram,  proverb.) — Ellen  Pick- 
ering.— DDD 
Fortune  my  Foe. — Alfred  P.  Graves. — HP 
Fortune  of  jEschines. — Demosthenes.     See  Oration  on 

the  Crown,  The. 
Fortune  Teller,  The.     (^ab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Fortune  Teller,  The.     (Dial.)—M.  D.  S.— ASD 
Fortune-teller  and  Maiden. — Mrs.  Mary  L.  Gaddess. — 

WR3 
Fortunes  of     War,     The.     (Abr.      and      ad.) — Leigh 

Younge.— BS  20 
Fortune's  Wheel. — J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De  Tabley. — 

VA 
Forty  Little  Ducklings,  The.— Anon.— DCP 
Forty  to  Twenty.— Kate  Field.— CS  14 

(Heads  not  Hearts  are  Trumps — si.  abr.) — WR  1.5 
Forty  Years  After.— H.  H.  Porter.— TL 
Forty  Years     Ago.— Anon.— BS  1—FTR  —  KNE  (sZ. 

abr.) 
(Twenty    Years    Ago.)— CS  3  — FEP  — HSS  3  (si. 

a6r.)— LLC 
Forty  Years  On.— E:  Bowen.— AVP 
Forty-acre  Farm,  The. — Anon. — SSS 
Forum  Scene,     The. — W:     Shakespeare.     See     Julius 

Forward.— Susan  Coolidge.- CS  24— PEO 

Forward,  March! — Anon.— AD 

Fought  and  Won.— M.  A.  Maitland.— WR  18 

(True  Victorv.)- TS 
Found.— Frd'k  L.  Hosmer.— TAS 
Found  Dead.— Albert  Lai? hton.— CS  2— FP 
Foundation  of  Bunker  Hill  Mouument. — Dan'l  Web- 
ster.    See  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 
Foundations. — Martha  M.  Schultze.^ — CS  29 
Founder  of    the    Almshouse,    The. — G:    Crabbe.     See 

Borough,  The. 
Foundering  of   the   Dolphin.— C.    E.    Reed.— CS  24— 

NFS— YP 
Fount  of  Castaly,  The.— Jos.  O'Connor. — PYO 
Fountain,  The. — W:  C.  Bryant. — WR  5 
Fountain,    The.— Jas.    R.    Lowell.— CGd— FP—I.C— 

OS  1— PHS— PoR— WR  26— YBT 
Fountain,  The  [.A  Conversation]. — W:  Wordsworth. — 

HBP— PGT  1— WEP4 
Fountain  of  Crime,  The.— Albert  H.  Horton— WR  18 
Fountain  of  Mercy!  God  of  Love! — Alice  Flowerdew. — 

FEP 
Fountain  of  Tears,  The. — Arthur  W:  O'Shaughnessy. 

—OB— PGT  2 
"Fountains  mingle  with  the  river.   The." — Percy   B. 

Shelley.— HP 
(Love's  Philosophy— O— BIL— BNL— FEP— GP 

—HBP— PGT  1— YBF 
Four  Ages  of  Man,  The. — Anne  Bradstreet. — WR  5 
Four  Brothers,  The.— David  Macrae.— CS  27 
Four  Celebrated   Characters.     (Dial.) — Clara  J.   Den- 
ton.—LPD—NPS—YP 
Four  Flies,  The. — A  Boarding  House  Episode. — E.  D. 

Pierson.— GH— SR  6 
Four  Judges,  The.     (DtaZ. )— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Four  Kisses,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  35— PS 
Four  Knights,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  25 
Four  Little  Rose-buds. — Anon. — KNS 
Four  Lives. — Garnet  B.  Freeman. — CS  12 
Four  Misfortunes,  The.— J :  G.  Saxe.— CSS 
Four  Mottoes. — Alice  F.  Palmer.- CS  34 
Four  Musicians,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Four  Outlines. — Anon. — LLC 
Four  Photographs,  The.     (Dial.) — Clara  J.  Denton. — 

FTT 
Four  Pictures.- Harriett  E.  Durfee.— CS  34 
Four  Queens,     The.     (Speaking    tab.) — Mrs.     Russell 

Kavanaugh. — KER 
Four  Scenes. — Millie  C.  Pomeroy. — CS  18 
Four  Seasons.  The.     (DiaZ.)— Anon.— ASD 
Four  Seasons,  The.— Anon.— DJS—DST 
Four  Seasons,    The.     (Dial.) — Louise  E.    V.  Boyd. — 

SDD 
Four  Sisters,  The. — Anon. — AD 
Four  Sunbeams,  The.— M.  K.  B.  [or  M.  R.  B.]— CS  34 

— NV— YBT 
Four  Things.— H:  Van  Dyke.— A  A 
Four  Valentines, — C:  K.  Field.— CG  2 
Four  W's.— Anon.— TT 
Four  Winds,  The.— Anon.— BVC 
Four  Winds,  The.     (DtaZ. )— Clara  Denton.— LPD 
Four  Winds,  The.— C:  H.  Liiders.- AA— ASL 
Four  Winds,  The.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL—NV 
Four  Words.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— BIL— FTA— TFY 
Four  Year  Old. — Eliza  Doolittle.— SD 
Four  Year  Old.     See  also  Four-year-old. 


121 


Four 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Four  Years.— Dinah  M.  Craik.— AVP 
Four  Years. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Four-leaf  Clover. — Ella  Higjtinson. — AA — LC 
Four-leaf  Clover.— G:  Houghton.— BIL—FTA 
Four-leaved  Clover. — ^on. — OS  2 
Four-o'clocks. — Ijllian  B.  Quimby. — CG  2 
Four-year-old,  A. — Anon. — WR  17 
Four-year-old.     See  also  Four  Year  Old. 
Fourth  Act  of  "The  Merchant  of  Venice." — W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Fourth  of  July,  The.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) — PRR 
Fourth  of    July.— G:    W.    Bethune.— CS  22— PRR— 

WRIO 
"Fourth  of  July."— J:  Pierpont.— PEO 
Fourth  of  July,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Addition 

to  the  Capitol,  The. 
Fourth  of  Julv  at  Ripton.— Eugene  J.  Hall.— CS  35 
Fourth  of  July,  1776,  The,  Sels.  fr.     (In  Washington 

and  his  Generals.— -G:  Lippard. 
Death  of  Robespierre,  The.     (Ch.  XIV.— «md.  )— 

BS25 
Signing  of  the  Declaration,  The.     (Ch.  I. — cond.) — 

NC— PEO 
Unknown  Speaker,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Ch.  I.,  sel.  fr. 

Ch.  II.)— CS  35— SC  (si.  a6r.)— SR5— TMR— 

WR5 
Fourth  of  July,  1876.— W.  F.  Fox.— CS  13 
Fourth  of  July  in  Jonesville. — Marietta  HoUey.     See 

My  Opinions  and  Betsey  Bobbett's. 
Fourth  of  July  Oration. — Anon. — CS  2 
Fourth  of  July  Oration,  The.     (DiaZ.)— Anon.— FND 
Fourth  of  July  Oration.— C:  F.  Browne.— FAS 

(Artemus    Ward's    Fourth    of    July    Oration.) — 

MHR 
Fourth  of  July  Record,  A.— Lilian  D.  Rice.— PP— PS 

— YPS 
Fourth    Sunday    after    Epiphany,    I.  (C.) — Reginald 

Heber. 
("Help,  Lord,  or  we  perish.") — FEP 
Fowl  Proceedings,  A.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Fox. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— AVP 
Fox  and    Cock. — Geoffrey   Chaucer.     See   Canterbury 

Tales,  The. 
Fox  and      Geese. — (Dial.) — Anna     M.      Ford. — DS — 

PR— YA 
Fox  and  the  Cat,  The. — J.  Cunningham. — CGd 
Fox  and  the  Crow,  The.— Jane  Taylor.— OS  1 
Fox  and  the  Goat,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Fox  and  the  Grapes. — .lEsop.     See  Fables. 
Fox  and  the  Lion,  The. — ^Esop.     jSee  Fables. 
Fox  and   the    Ranger,    The.     (DtaZ.)— S:  (?)  Lover. — 

scs 

Fox  at  the  Point  of  Death,  The.— J:  Gay. — CGd  — 

EA  (si.  abr.) 
Fox  in    the    Well,    The.— J:    T.    Trowbridge.— CSS— 

MYF 
Fox  who  Lost    his  Tail,    The.  —  Mrs.    Russell    Kava- 
naugh.—KER 
Foxes' Tails ;  or,    Sandy    Macdonald's    Signal,    The. — 
Leo  Ross.— BS  1 1— CDV 
(Partly  arr.  as  dtaZ.)— SDR 
(Sandy  Macdonald's  Signal — si.  abr.) — CS  22 
Fra  Angelico. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — TAS 
Fra  Fonti.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  26 
Fra  Giacomo.     (Longer  than  in  Poems.  —  Rob't   Bu- 
chanan.—BNL—CS  24 
Fra  Luigi's  Marriage. — H.  H. — WR  8 
Fra  Moreale.— S.  B.  R.— CG  1 
Fractious  Man,  The.— D:  A.  Brueys. — SS 
Fragility  of  Love.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — ^BNL 
Fragment,  A. — Anon. — CPL 
Fragment,  A. — Anon. — KNE 

(Night's  Adventure,  A — si.  diff.  vers.) — SCS 
Fragment,  A.     (iSeZ. /r.  The  Change.) — Abraham  Cow- 
ley.—FEP 
(Love  m  her  Sunny  Eyes.) — ES 
(Without  and  Within.)— YBF 
Fragment.     (In    England's    Parnassus.) — Christopher 

Marlowe.— WEP  1 
Fragment,  A.     (Pwncft. )—HPE 

(His  eye  was  stem  and  wild.)— CS  3— SCS— SR  6 
(Madman,  The.)— KNE 
Fragment  from  Sappho,  A. — Sappho  (tr.  hy  Ambrose 
Philips).— FEP 
(Blest  as  the  Immortal  Gods.) — BNL— HBP 
Fragment  of  a  Character.    (C.) — "T:  Moore. 

(On  Factotum  Ned.)— HPE 
Fragment  of  a  Sleep-song. — Sydney  Dobell. — VA 
Fragment  of  an  Ode  to  Maia. — J :  Keats. — OB 
Fragments    (by   a    Free-lover).     (Blackwood's   Maga- 
«tn«.)— HPE 


Fragments  of  Burton,    Extract  III. — A    Conceipt  of 
Diabolical  Possession.     (C.) — C:Lamb; 
(Hypochondriacus.) — HBP 

Fragments  on  Nature  and  Life,  Sel.  ft.  (Waves.) — 
Ralph  W.  Emerson. — AA 

Fragrant  Air.     (W .  music.) — Anon. — AD 

Fragrant  Timber  of  her  Fan,  The. — H:  H.  Hay.— 
TMR 

France.  (Fr.  The  Wayside  Vir  •  ) — Langdon  E. 
Mitchell.— AA 

France:  An  Ode.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— FEP 

France  and  the  United  States.  (Fr.  Reply  to  Address 
Presenting  Colors  of  France  to  United  States.) 
— G:  Washington.— SS 

Frances  Anne  Kemble.  (Fr.  Essays  in  London  and 
Elsewhere.) — H:  James. — AIRS 

Frances  E.  Willard.— May  P.  Slosson.— WR  18 

Frances  E.  Willard  Exercise.— W.  O.  Phillips.— WR  18 

Frances  Edwena. — Frank  E.  Dunn. — BS  20 

Frances  Keeps  her  Promise. — Ann  and  Jane  Taylor. — 
BVC 

Francesca.— H.  S.  Clark.— WR  13 

Francesca  da  Rimini. — W:  Aytoun. — HPE 

Francesca  da  Rimini,  Sel.  fr.  (Act  I.,  Sc.  2 — si.  abr.) 
— G:  H.  Boker  (arr.  by  Elsie  M.  Wilbor).— WR  2 

Francesco's  Angel. — Florence  M.  Alt. — WR  13 

Francis  Parkman. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — EDY 

Frangipanni.^ — Anon. — NA 

Frank  Hayman.—  (7)  Taylor.— CS  32 

Frank,  the  Fireman. — T:  Frost.— WR  15 

Frankeleynes  Tale,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.  See  Can- 
terbury Tales. 

Franklin  and  the  Gout. — Benjamin  Franklin  (?). — 
WR20 

Franklin  as  a  Christian. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop.  Sb* 
Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Franklin. 

Franklin  as  a  Philanthropist. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop. 
See  Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Franklin. 

Franklin  as  a  Philosopher. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop. 
See  Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Franklin. 

Franklin  as  a  Printer. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop.  See 
Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Franklin. 

Franklin's  Toa.'^t.— Anon.— OS  2 

Franz.— Wells  T.  Hawks.— WR  22 

Frater  Ave  atque  Vale. — Alfred  Tennyson. — PGT  2 

Fraternity. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — AA 

Fratricide,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 

Fraudulent, Party  Outcries. — Dan'l  Webster.  See  Nat- 
ural Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich,  The. 

Fray  o'  Suport,  The.  (In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. 
— BB 

Freckled-faced  Girl,   The.     (Boston   Globe.)— BS  11— 
CRR 
(Startling  Revelations.) — SR  5 
(What  the  Little  Girl  Said.)— CS  24— DS— NPS— 
YP 

Freckles. — W:  L.  Alden.  See  Adventures  of  Jimmy 
Brown,  The. 

Fred  Englehardt's    Baby.— C:    F.    Adams.— HP    (si. 
abr.) 
("Dot  Funny  Leetle  Baby" — si.  diff.  vers.) — BDD 
— DFY 

Freddie  and  the  Cherrv-tree. — "Aunt  Effie." — PC 

Frederick  III.— Ina  D.  Coolbrith.— EDY 

Fredericksburg.— T:  B.   Aldrich.— HBP— PAP— YBF 

Fredericksburg. — W:  J.  Bryan. — TMD 

Fredericksburg.- W.  F.  W.  — AWB 

Fred's  Experiment. =— Anon. — WR  17 

Fred's  First  Speech. — Eliza  Doolittle. — SD 

Free  America.— Jos.  Warren  (?).— AWB — HS 

Free  Mind,  The.— W:  L.  Garrison.— TAV 
(Freedom  for  the  Mind.) — AA 
(LibertyJ— OS  2 
(Sonnet  Written  in  Prison. >;— BNL 

Free  Navigation  of  the  Mississippi. — Gouvemeur  Mor- 
ris.—SS 

Free  Press,  A.— E:  D.  Baker.— SSD 

(Liberty  of  the  Press— 8eZ.)—B LP— SE  (si.  abr.) 

"Free  Puff   A."— Arthur  I.  Gray.— PPh 

Free  Schools. — Horace  Mann. — SE 

Free  Schools  and  Free  Governments,  Sel.  fr.  (Ameri- 
can Education^ — Rob't  C.  Winthrop. — BLP 

Free  Silver  Coinage.— W :  J.  Bryan. — SSD 

Free  Smoke,  A.—(Tab.)—E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— 
YFE 

Free  Speech.— Gerrit  Smith.— OS  3 

Free  Speech  and  Constitutional  Liberty. — G:  F.  Hoar. 
— AI 

Freedom.     (Frags,  fr.  various  autfiors.) — BNL 

Freedom.  (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Bruce.)  —  J:  Barbour. — 
FP  (si.  abr.)— OB 

Freedom.— E.  D.  Baker.— SE 

Freedom. — J:  Barbour. — FP  (si.  abr.)— OB 


122 


TITLE  INDEX 


Frightened 


Freedom. — W:  C,  Bryant.     See  Antiquity  of  Freedom, 

The. 
Freedom.     Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Stanzas  on  Freedom. 
Freedom   and    Patriotism. — Orville   Dewey. — CS    8 — 

PFP  (6r.  ael.) 
Freedom  for  the  Mmd. — W:   L.   Garrison.     iSee  Free 

Mind,  The. 
Freedom  in  Dress.     (Sona  fr.  [Epicoene;  or,]  The  Silent 
Woman,  Act  I.,  Sc.  I.) — Ben  Jonson. — BNL^ 
EPs— YBF 
(Simplex  Mun<litiis.) — OB 
(Song.)— FEP— HBP— WEP  2 
(Sweet  Neglect,  The.)— ES— OEL 
Freedom  must  Triumph.     {Fr.  The  Rebels  of  Boston 
before   the  Revolution.) — Lydia   M.    Child. — 
SR8  {at.  <oOtis.) 
(Speech  against  the  Stamp  Act — ahr.) — BS  15  {at. 

to  Otis.) 
(Supposed  Speech  of  Jas.  Otis.)— OS  2  (obr.)— SC 
— SS 
Freedom  of    Nature. — Jas.    Thomson.     See    Castle    of 

Indolence,  The. 
Freedom  of  the  Press,  The. — Thomas,  Lord  Erskine. — 

— CR 
Freedom  of  Thought. — Emilio  Castelar.— OS  2 
Freedom  or  Slavery.— Patrick  Henry.— SSD—TMD 
(Appeal  to  Arms,  An — -sel. )— SO 
(Liberty  or  Death.)— SO  (sei.)— WCLG  1 
(Resistance  to  British  Aggression — sel.) — OM — PS 

— SS 
(Speech  before  the  Virginia  Convention.) — KNE 
(Speech  in  the  Virginia  Convention,  1775.) — FTR 
(Speech  of  Patrick  Henry.)— CS  25— SR  5 
(War  Inevitable,  The.)— LLC. 
(SeZ.)— OM— OS  2— PP— TS— PTS— SE  — SS  — 
YFR 
Freedom's  Ahead. — Rob't  Buchanan. — SAE 
(Old  Politician,  The.)— HBP 
(Tom  Dunstan;  or,  The  Politician— C.)— FEP 
Freedom's  Flower. — Marion  Douglas. — AD 
Freedom's  Natal  Day. — Eliz.  M.  Griswold. — PEG 
Freedom's  Standard. — Anon. — PRR 
Freeman,  The.— W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Freeman's  Defence,     The. — Harriet     B.     Stowe.     See 

Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 
French  Account  of  Adam's  Fall. — Anon. — CS  29 

(Frenchman's  Account   of    the  Fall,  A.) — DFY — 

HR 
(Mme.  Eef— dtf.  rers.  )—DES 
French  and  En^clish. — Thomas,  Lord  Erskine. — HPE 
French  Army    m    Russia,    The. — W:    Wordsworth. — 
EDY 
(Snow—  seZ.)— EPs 
French  Duel,  The. — Mark  Twain.     See  Tramp  Abroad, 

A. 
French  Ensign,  The. — Alphonse  Daudet. — DES 
French  by  Lightning. — C:  Barnard. — CS  26 
French  Lesson,  The.     CPiaZ.)- Anon.— FDY 
French  Market,  The.— W.  P.  J.— WR  8 
French  National  Hvmn. — Roget  de  L'  Isle. — GP 
(Marseillaise,  The,)— OS  2 

(A6r.)— BNL— BS24 
(Marseilles  Hymn.)— SR  8 
♦French  Revolution,  The,  Sela.  fr. — T:  Carlyle. 

Charlotte    Corday.     {Sel.  ad.  fr.  Vol.  III.,  Bk.  IV., 

Ch.  I.)— MRS— WR  1  {longer.) 
Marie  Antoinette.     (Vol.  III.,  Bk.  IV.,  Ch.  VII., 
o&r.  )—WR  1 
(Execution  of  Marie  Antoinette — hr.  sel.) — SAE 
French  with  a  Master.— Theodore  Tilton. — HP— WR  2 
Frenchman  and  the  Flea  Powder,  The. — Anon. — CS  3 

—DFY— FTR 
Frenchman  and  the  Landlord,  The. — Anon. — DFY^ 

HR 
Frenchman  and  the  Mosquitoes,  The. — Anon. — DFY — 

SCS 
Frenchman  and  the  Rats,  The. — Anon. — CS  6 — DDR 

— DFY— MHR— SCS 
Frenchman  and  the  Sheep's  Trotters,  The. — (?)  Prest. 
— DFY— MDD 
(Frenchman's  Dinner,  A — si.  abr.) — CS  2 
Frenchman  on   Macbeth,   A. — Anon. — BS  10 — CDV — 

CR— FTR— HR— MHR— SDR 
Frenchman  Proposes  the  Ladies.  A. — Litchfield  Mosely. 

See  Charity  Dinner,  The. 
Frenchman's  Account    of    the    Fall,    A. — Anon.     See 

French  Account  of  Adam's  Fall. 
Frenchman's  Dilemma,    The. — {Ad.    by)     J:    A.    Mc- 

Nulty.— DFY 
Frenchman's  Dinner,  A. —  (?)  Prest.     See  Frenchman 
and  the  Sheep's  Trotters,  The. 


Frenchman's  Malady,  The.     {Dial.) — Anon. — MPD 
Frenchman's  Mistake,  The. — Anon. — DFY 

(Slight  Misunderstanding,  The.) — CS  5 
Frenchman's  Patent  Screw,  The. — Anon. — DFY 
Frenchman's  Revenge,  The. — Anon. — DFY 
Fresh  Set  of  Teeth,  A. — Anon. — DSS 
Freshman's  Vacation,     The.     {University     Herald.)— 

CG2 
Fretting  Jennie. — Anon. — LLC 
Friar  of  Orders  Gray,  The.     {In  Percy's  Reliques.) — 

Anon.— BNL— FEP— HBP— PC— PEB  3 
Friar  of  Orders  Gray. — Walter  Scott. — See  Rokeby. 
Friar  Philip.— Anon.— CS  7 
Friar  Servetus. — Clififord  Lanier. — WR  6 
Friar  Tuck.— Sidford  F.  Hamp.— CS  34 
Friar's  Christmas,  The.— H.  G.  Blake.— SR  5 
Friday  Evening  Meetings. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Friday's  Frolic  with  a  Bear. — Dan'l  Defoe.     See  Rob- 
inson Crusoe. 
Friend,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Lord  Helpeth  Man  and  Beast, 
The — sel.  fr.  The  Second  Landing-place,  Essay 
IV.)— S:  T.  Coleridge.— LLC 
Friend,  A. — Lucy  Larcom. — BIL 
Friend  after  Friend  Departs. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See 

Friends. 
Friend  and  Lover. — Mary  A.  De  Vere. — AA 
Friend  at  Court,  A. — Anon.— DDM 
Friend  at  Court,  A. — Marg.  W.  Morton. — HE 
Friend  Death.— Stockton  Bates.— CS  36 
Friend  of  All.— C:  Wesley.— HBP 

Friend  of  Humanity  and  the  Knife-grinder,  The. — G: 
Canning.— BNL  —  ESs  —  FEP  —  HBP— HPE 
— THP 

(Knife-grinder,  The.)—  EPs— MHR 
Friend  of  my  Heart,  The.— Anon.— HSS  2— PEO 
Friend  of  the  Fly,  A.— Anon.— CS  25 
Friend  or  Foe?— F:  E.  Weatherly.— HP 
"Friend  who  holds  a  mirror  to  my  face,  The."     {Scrib- 

ner's  Monthly.) — GG 
Friends.— Guy  W.  Carryl.— CG  2 
Friends.— Walter.  S.  Landor.— WEP  4 
Friends.     (C.) — Jas.   Montgomery. 

(Friend  after  Friend  Departs.)— FEP 

(Parted  Friends.)— BNL— GP 
Friends. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — SDR 
Friends.— L.  G.  Warner.— PHS 
Friends.- S:  Wood.— FLS 
Friends  and  Enemies. — Anon. — DLS 
Friend's  Burial,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— TAS 
Friends  Departed. — H :  Vaughan. — OB 

(Beyond  the  Veil.)— ELP— WEP  2 

(Friends  in   Paradise— aZw. )— HDL— PGT  2— YBF 

(They  are  All  Gone— C. )— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Friend's  Greeting,  A. — Bayard  Taylor. — GP 
Friends  in  Paradise. — H:  Vaughan.     See  Friends  De- 
parted. 
"Friends,   in   this  world  of  hurry." — C:   Kingsley. — 

FHS 
Friends  Old  and  New.— Anon. — HSS  3 
Friends  to  be  Shunned.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Friendship. — Anon. — HP 

Friendship.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Friendship. — Lord  Byron. — LH 

("My  boat  is  on  the  shore.") — PYO 

(To  Thomas  Moore- C.)— BNL— GP— HBP— YBF 
Friendship.     (Sonnet  I. — To   a  Friend — C.) — Hartley 

Coleridge.— OB 
Friendship,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (On  Friendship.) — W:  Cowper. 

—BNL 
Friendship.— Ralph    W.    Emerson.— BIL— BNL— OH 
Friendship,  A. — -Sonhie  Jewett.^BIL 
Friendship. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Friendship. — W :  Shakespeare. — TFY 

(Memory.)— PGT  1— YBF 

(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP 

(Sonnet  III.)— OB 

(Sonnet  XXX.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 

("When  to  the  sessions  of  sweet  silent  thought.")^ 
BNL 
Friendship. — Socrates. — OS  2 

Friendship  (To C).  —  Alfred    Tennyson. — 

WR  1 
Friendship.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BIL 
Friendship  and  Love.     {Frags,   fr.   various    authors.^ 

—BNL 
Friendship,  Love  and  Truth. — Anon. — HP 
Frightened  at  Nothing. — Anon. — StD 
Frightened  Birds. — Anon. — WB  17 
Frightened  Lodger,  A. — Anon. — StD 
Frightened  Traveler.  The.— Anon.— SCS  i 


"■  Centenary  edition  used  for  reference. 
123 


Frightened 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Frightened  Woman,  A.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 

Fringed  Gentian. — Emily  Dickinson, — A  A 

Fringed  Gentian. — Horatio  Ford. — CG  3 

Fringilla  Melodia,  The.— H :  B.  Hirst.— AA 

Fritz.— Gotthold  E.  I^ssing.— HPE 

Fritz.— Anna  Randall-»iehl.— DES 

Fritz  and    his    Betsy    Fall    Out. — G:   M.    Warren. — 
SR4 
(Baitsy  and  I  are  Gudt.)- CS  24 

Fritz  and  I. — C   F.  Adams.     See  Fritz  und  I. 

Fritz'  Courtship. — Eugene  J.  Hall. — CRR 

Fritz'  Troubles.- Anon.— SR  1 

Fritz  und    [or  and]   I.— C:   F.    Adams.— BDD— CD- 
Fritz  Valdher  is  Made  a  Mason. — Fritz  Hoofnagle. — 
DRR 

Frivolous  Girl.  The.     (^Steubenville  //eraW.)— HP 

"  'Froebelii^m:'  or  The  Kindergarten  Svstem  of  Edu- 
cation."— J.  B.  Bittinger. — GG 

Frog,  The.— Hilaire  Belloc— BVC— NA 

Frog  Hollow  Lyceum,  The.  (P/oi/.)- H.  E.  McBride. 
— HD— PR 

Frog  in  the  Throat,  A. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  GoodfoUow.— 
TT 

Frog  Story,  A. — Anon.— WR  15 

Froggies'  Fate. — Anon.— CPL 

Frogie  on  the  Log. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 

Frogs  at  School. — Anon. — WR  17  (abr.) 
(Queer  Scholars,  The.)— COS— PP 

Frogs  at  School.— Anon.— CSS— FAS— PPSr 
(Twenty  Frogs  at  School.)— TFS 

Frog's  Good-bye,  The.— "Aunt  Clara."— NV 

Frolic  at  the  Old  Homestead,  A.  (Tab.) — Anon. — 
TCP 

Frolic  of  the  Carnivale,  A. — Nathaniel  Ha\^'thome. 
.Sfee  Marble  Faun,  The. 

Frolicksome  Duke,  The;  or,  The  Tinker's  Good  For- 
tune.   (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — BB 

From  a  Future  Novel. — Anon. — WR  17 

From  a  Greek  Epigram.  (C.) — Leonidas  of  Alexandria 
(tr.  by  S:  Rogers). 
(On  a  Picture  of  an  Infant  [Playing  near  a  Preci- 
pice].)—BNL— HBP 

From  a  Railway  Carriage. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — 
CGV 

From  Afar. — Anon. — FLS 

From  an  Italian  Sonnet. —  (?)  Rogers. — FP 

From  Captivity  to  Power.  (Play.) — Clara  J.  Denton. 
— SSE 

"From  childhood's  hour  I  have  not  been  as  others 
were."  (Alone— C.)— Edgar  A.  Poe.— GG 

From  Down  East.     (PZa?/.)— H.  E.  McBride.— HD 

From  Exile. — Anon. — BS  3 

From  Generation  to  Generation. — W:  D.  Howells. — 
AA 

"From  Greenland's  icy  mountains." — Reginald  Heber. 
See  Missionary  Hymn. 

From  Hand  to  Mouth.— Anon.— CS  24 

From  India.— W.  C.  Bennett.— CS  9 

From  June  to  June. — Norman  S.  Dike. — CG  2 

From  Love  and  Nature. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Hough- 
ton.—VS 

From  my  Arm-chair. — H :  W.  Longfellow. — GMS 

"From  my  lips  in  their  defilement." — St.  Joannes 
Damascenus  {tr.  by  Eliz.  B.  Browning). — 
HBP 

From  my  Window.— Edith  T.  Ames.— CG  2 

From  One  to  Six.— Esther  Fleming.— PS— TT 
(Six  Years  Old.)— KC 

From  One  who  Went  Away  in  Haste. — Sophie  W. 
Weitzel.— TAS 

From  Prison. — R:  Lovelace. — LH 
(To  Althea.)— EPs 
(To  Althea  from  Prison— C.)— BNL— BPB—CEL 

—  EHT  —  ELP  —  ES  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP 

—  OB  —  OET,  —  PGT  1  —  PHS  —  PYO  — 
WEP  2— YBF 

From  Punkin  Ridge.— H.  E.  McBride.— MCD 
"From  Shadow-sun." — Agnes  L.  Pratt. — CS  33 
"From  that  time  until  the  period  of  arrival."     (Br. 

sel.  jr.  A  Voyage,  in  Sketch  Book.) — Wa.shing- 

ton  Irving. — SO 
From  the  Arabic.     An  Imitation. — Percy  B.  Shelley. 

—OB 
From  the  Depths. — Anon. — FLS 
From  the  Eton  Magazine,  1848. — Anon. — AVP 
From  the  Fly-leaf  of  the  Rowfant  Montaigne  (Florio, 

1603).~Frd'k  Locker-Lampson.— LBB— MBB 
From  the  French.— T:  Moore  (?).— HPE 
From  the  Iron  Gate.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  32 
From   the  Old  World  to  the  New.     (Dial.) — Lizzie  M. 

Hadley.— WR  10 
From  the  Persian.— J.  B.  B.  Nichols.— FLS 


From  the  Recesses  [of  a  Lowly  Spirit]. — J:  Bowring. — 

BNL  (sel.)—YA 
From  the  Spanish  of  Villejas.  (C.)—W:  C.  Bryant. 

("  'Tis  sweet  in  the  green  spring" — »l.  abr.) — AD 
From  the  Valley  o'  the  Shadder. — Carrie  B.  Morgan. — 

BS25 
From  the  Window. — Marie  M.  Marsh. — BS  21 
From  the  Wreck.— Adam  L.  Gordon.— CS  24— NPS— 

YP 
Front  Gate.  The.— Anon. — BS  11 
Frontier  Bridal — almo.st     a      Tragedy,     A  — Michael 

Lvnch.— SR  5 
Frost,    The.  —  Hannah    F.    Gould.  —  BNL  —  NV  — 

TFS  (si.  abr.) 
(Jack  Frost.)— PoR—WCL 
Frost.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— AA—ASL 
Frost  at  Midnight.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— WEP  4 
Frost  Pictures.— Anon.— NV—YBT 
Frost  Work.— Mary  E.  Bradley.— PEO 
Frost  Work.     See  also  Frostwork. 
Frost-bitten.— G    A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Frosted  Pane,  The.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— SN 
Frost -elves.  The. — Mary  L.  Wolverton. — CG  1 
Frost-work.— T:  B.  Aldrich.- POS 
Frost-work.     See  also  Fro.^t  Work. 

Froward  Duster,  The. — Rob't  J.   Burdette.— BS  ll— 
CS21— SR4 
Frowns  and  Sneers. — ^Anon. — TFS 
Frowns  or  Smiles.— Sydney  Dayre.— COS— PP 
Fruit  of  the  Spirit,  A  Lesson  from.     (.-Ir.-.  6//)— P.  Gar- 
rett.—CS  16 
Fruitionless. — Ina  Coolbrith. — AA 
Fruits  of  Labor,  The.— S:  P.  Bates.— BS  6 
Fruits  of  IJherty,  The. — T:  B.  Macaulay.    iSee  Milton. 
Fruits  of  the  War  with  France. — G-  Canning. — SS 
Frustra. — W:    Shakespeare    [and    J:    Fletcher].      See 

Measure  for  Measure. 
Fudge  Family   in    Paris,   The,   Sel.   jr.    (Letters  from 

Miss   Biddy    Fudge   to   Miss    Dorothy in 

Ireland  —  I^etters  V.,  X.,  XII.)— T:    Moore.— 

HPE 
(Miss  Biddy's  Epistle— seZ.  fr.  V.)— THP 
Fugitive  Slave's  Apostrophe  to  the  North  Star,  The. — 

J:   Pierpont. — AA 
Fugitives,  The.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— MRS— PEB  3 
Fulfilment.— Anon.— WR  21 
Full  Edition,  A.— Jos.  Lilienthal.— CG  3 

(Large  Edition,  A.)— BS25 
Full  Fatnom  Five  thy  Father  Lies. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Tempest,  The. 
Full  Suite,  The.—  (?)  Metcalfe.— TL 
Fulness  [or  Fullness]  of  Love. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — 

FTA— OH 
("If  I  leave  all  for  thee,"  etc.)— GG— PGT  2 
(Sonnets  from   the  Portuguese.)  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 

VA(XXXV.— C.) 
Fulton's  Invention. — Ogden  Hoffman.     See  Merits  of 

Fulton's  Invention. 
Fun  that  Adam  Mis.sed,  The.— Anon. — CS  37 
Funeral,  The.   (Negro  Funeral,  The— C.)— Will  Carie- 

ton.— TD 
Funeral,  The.— J:  Donne.— EI-P— OB 
Funeral,  A, — -F:  I,.  Knowles. — CG  1 
Funeral  Custom  in  Egypt. ^Anon. — CS  19 
Funeral  Hymn,  A. — Davit  Mallett. — HBP 
Fimeral  Hymn. — Jas.  Montgomery  (?"). — CR 
Funeral  Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Princess  Charlotte. — 

Rob't  Southey  (?).— WEP  4 
Funeral  of  the  Mountains,  The. — Fred  E.   Brooks. — 

WR6 
Funeral  of  Time,  The.— H :  B.  Hirst.— AA 
Funeral  Oration  by  the  Dead  Body  of  Hamilton.  (C.) 

— Gouvemeur  Morris. — MRS  (abr.) 
(Oration  on  Hamilton.) — EAO 
Funeral  Oration  on  Abraham  Lincoln. — H:  W.  Beecher. 

See  Abraham  Lincoln. 
Funeral  Oration  on  the  Death  of  General  Washington. 

— H :  Lee.— EAO 
(Father  of  his  Country,  The— 6r.  «e/.)— HS 
(Washington's  Birthday — sel.) — OS  2 
Funeral  [Funerall—C]  Rites  of  the  Rose,  The. — Rob't 

Herrick.— OB 
Funeral  Sermon  on  the  Death  of  a  Good  Man. — Anon. 

— FS 
Funeral  Tree  of  the  Sokokis,  The,  Sel.  fr.—3:  G.  Whit- 

tier.— AD 
Funny  Fellow,  A. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Funny  isn't  it?— Anon.— TFS 
Funny  Little  Fellow,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Funny  Man,  A.— C:  D.  Stewart.— PS 

(Her  Grandpa.)— TMR 
Funny  Old  Clown,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Funny  Old  Man,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 


124 


TITLE  INDEX 


Oastibeiza 


Funny  Old  Woman,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Funny  Story,  The. — Josephine  Pollard. — BR  (abr.) — 

GH— PS 
Fuss  at  Fires. — Anon. — SS 

(Advice  to  a  Fire  Company.) — CS  1 — DS 
Future,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  variotia  avthors.) — BNL 
Future,  The.— Matthew  Arnold.— PGT  2  i 

Future,  The.— E:  R.  Sill.— ASL— TAS— YBF 
Future  Empire  of  our  Language,  The. — G :  W.  Bethune. 

See  Future  of  our  Language,  The. 
"Future  hides  in  it,  The."     (Symbol,  A — C. — abr.)  — 

Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — GG 
Future  in  Front  of  Him,  A.  (Jim's  Future — C.) — Sam 

W.  Foss.— SR  9 
Future  Life,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— BNL— GP 
("How  shall  I  know  thee,"  etc. — sel.) — GG 
Future  of  America,  The.— Dan'l  Webster.     See  Adams 

and  Jefferson. 
Future  of  America,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  First 

Settlement  of  New  England. 
Future  of    our    Language,    The. — G:   W.    Bethune. — 

BLP  (si.  abr.) 
(Future  Empire  of  our  Language,  The.) — SS 
Future  of  the  Nation,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Future  of  the  Philippines.     (Fr.  an  address  before  the 

Home  Market  Club,  Boston,  Feb.  16,  1899.)— 

WiMcKinley.— PFP 
(Our  Duty  to  the  Philippines — partly  diff.  fr.  PFP.) 

IR— SC 
(Our  New  Relations — abr.) — CS  37 
Future  of  the  South,  The.— H :  W.  Grady.     <See  South 

and  her  Problems,  The. 
Future  of  the  United  States,  The.— C:  (?)  King.— SS 
Future  of  the  CTnited  States,  The.  —  Jos.  Story.      See 

Our  Future. 
Future  Peace   and    Glory   of   the    Church,    The. — W: 

Cowper.- HBP 
Futurity. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — HDL 
"  Fuzzy- Wuzzy."—Rudyard  Kipling.— THP—VA 


Gabe  and  the  Irish  Lady. — Mary  E.  C.  Wyeth. — CD 

Gabe's  Christmas  Eve. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  26 

GabrieUe.— W:  P.  McKenzie.— TCV 

Gaetano  Donizetti.— (Tr.  by)  Fs.  S.  Saltus.— EDY 

Gaffer  Gray.- T:  Holcroft.— FEP 

Gage,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 

Gage  d'Amour,  A. — Austin  Dobson. — VA 

Gain  of  Loss,  The. — Horatius  Bonar. — LC 

Gaining  Ground.— Ella  W.  Wilcox(7).— TS 

Gains  of  Restraint,  The.     (Miscellaneous  Sonnets,  Pt. 

I.,  l.)—W:  Wordsworth.— WEP  4 
(Sonnet,The,  I.)— OB 
Galatea  (Gallathea — C),  Sel.  fr.     (Cupid  Arraigned — 

fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  2.)— J:  Lyly.— ES 
Galatians,  Sel.  fr.    (Be   not    Deceived— Ch.  VI.,  7-9.) 

Bible.— L,l.C 
Galesburg  Fire  Department. — Jos.  B.  Smiley. — CS  33 
Galgacus  (or  Calgacus)  to  the  Caledonians.     (Fr.  Life 

of  Cnaeus   Julius    Agricola   sel.    fr.    Calgacus' 

Address  to  the  Britons.) — Tacitus. — PS — SS 
Galileo. — E:  Everett.  See  Uses  of  Astronomy,  The. 
Galileo  Galilei. — E:  Everett.     See  Uses  of  Astronomy, 

The. 
Gallant  Fleet ,  The. — J :  Hunter-Duvar.     See  De  Rober- 

val. 
Gallant  Grahams.  The.  (In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. 

—HBP  (sel.) 
Gallant  Wescue,  A.— W.  Sapte,  Jr. — CS  27 
Gallathea. — J:  Lylv.     See  Galatea. 
Galley  Slave,  The.    (SI.  diff.  fr.  Poems.)— H:  Abbey.— 

CS  7— MMR 
Gallop  of  Three,  The.— Theodore  Winthrop.— WR  5 
Gambler's  Last  Deal,  The. — Elliott  Preston. — CS  23 
Gambler's  Son,  The. — Anon.— PS 
Gambler's  Tale,  The.— W:  V.  McGuire.— CS  30 
Gambler's  Wife,  The. — Revnell  Coates.— BS  4 — CS  17 

— FMR— FTR— PS— SR  2 
Gambols  of  Children,  The.— G:  Darley.— BNL— HBP 

("Down  the  dimpled  greensward  dancing.") — AE 
Gambrel-roofed  House  and  its  Outlook,  "The. — Oliver 

W.  Holmes.     See  Poet  at  the  Breakfast  Table, 

fhe. 
Game  Knut  Played,  The.— T:  D.  English.— CS  16 
Game  of  Chess,  A. — Mortimer  Collins. — VS 
Game  of  Chess,  A. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  29 
Game  of  Chess,  A.— Rob't  P.  St.  John.— CG  2 
Game  of  Choice  —J.  H.  Clark.— FAS 
Game  of  Life,  The.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— MDD— PPSr 
(Go  it  Alone.)— BS  2 


Game  of  Marbles,  A.— R.  W.  Mitchell.— BS  21 
Game  of  Tag,  A.— Anon.— DJS— WR  17 
Gamin,  The. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Les  Mis^rables. 
Gamut  of  Merry  Momus,    The. — Howell   L.   Piner. — 

WR23 
Ganderfeather's  Gift.— Eugene  Field. — EF— WTD 
Gane  were  but  the  Winter  Cauld. — Allan  Cunningham. 

—FEP— HBP— YBF 
Ganges,  The.— Mary  McGuire.— CS  27 
Gape-seed.— G:  W.  Bungay.- CS  5— MHR 

(Buying  Gape-seed.)— PS  (at.  to  J :  B.  Gough  ) 
Garci  Perez  de  Vargas. — J:  G.  Lockhart. — EPs 
(Lord  of  Butrago,  TheJ— BNL— HB— OS  2 
Garden,  The.— Abraham  Cowley.- HBP 
Garden,  The.— W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Garden,  A. — Andrew  Marvell(?). — OB 
Garden,  The.     (C.) — (Tr.  by)  Andrew  Marvell. — EP — 
EPs— HBP— WEP  2 
(Garden  Scene,  A — sel.) — HS 

(Poet's  Retirement,  The.)— BNL 
(What  Wondrous  Life  is  this  I  Lead?)— LC 
(Partly  same  sels. ) 
(Thoughts   in   a   Garden.)— FEP— OB— PGT    1— 
SN 
Garden,  The.— Jas.  Shirley(7).— WEP  2 
Garden  and  Cradle.     Eugene  Field. — AA — LS 
Garden  and  Summer  House,  A.     (Fr.   The  Story  of 

Rimini.)— Leigh  Hunt.— WEP  4 
Garden  Fairies. — Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
Garden  Fancies.     (Pt.  I.,  The  Flower's  Name.) — Rob't 
Browning. — OH 
(Flower's  Name,  The)— BNL— WR  9 
Garden  Idyll,  A.     (C.) — Frd'k  Locker- Lampson. 
(Garden  Lyric,  A.)— VS 
(Geraldine  and  I — diff.  vers.) — VSG 
Garden  Lyric,  A. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson.     See  fore- 
going. 
Garden  of  Love,  The.     (Abr.)—W:  Blake.— HBP 
Garden  of  Love,  The. — W:  Shakespeare. — OH 
(Absence.)— GP 

(Sonnet.)— EPs— HBP— OB  (XIII.) 
(Sonnet  XCVIIL— C.)— WEP  1 
Garden  of  Proserpine,  The. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — 

AVP— CEL 
Garden  on  the  Sands,  The. — Anon. — AD 
Garden  Path,  The.— J.  B.  Smiley.— CS  36 
Garden  Scene,  A. — Andrew  Marvell.     See  Garden,  The. 
Garden  Song,  A. — Austin  Dobson. — OB 
Garden  Song  [,  The]. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Maud. 
Garden  where  there  is  no  Winter,  The. — L:  J.  Block. — 

AA 
Gardener,  The.— Anon.— BB—LC  (sl.  abr.)— FEB  2 
Gardener,  The. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Gardener's  Burial,  The. — (?)  Johnstone. — AVP — LLC 

(Our  Gardener's  Burial.) — BLP 
Gardener's  Daughter,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Alfred  Tenny- 
son.— BIL 
Gardener's  Song,  The.     (C. — in  Sylvie  and  Bruno.) — 
Lewis  Carroll. 
(Some  Hallucinations — sel.) — THP 
(Strange  Wild  Song^  A.)— BVC 
Gardens    of    Venus. — -Edmund    Spenser.     See    Faerie 

Queene,  The. 
Gareth. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Gareth  and  Lynette. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of 

the  King. 
Garfield.— Frank  Fuller.— WR  22 
Garfield  at  Chattanooga.     (Boston  Transcript.) — LPS 

Garfield  at  the  Wheel.— Anon.— BS  11 

Garfield  Memorial  at  Cleveland,  Ohio,  The. — Jacob  D. 

Cox.— FD  2 
Garfield   Statue,   The. — Grover  Cleveland. — BS    17 — 

FD2 
Garfield's  Early  Life. — Jas.  G.  Blaine.      See  Memorial 
Address  on  the  Life  and  Character  of  James  A. 
Garfield. 
Garland  I  Send  Thee,  The.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
Garlande  of    Laurell,    The   [or,  Chapelet  of  Laurell, 
or,  Crowne  of  Lawrell],  Sels.  fr. — J:  Skelton. 
To  Maystress  Margaret  Hussey. — WEP  1 

(To  Mistress  Margaret  Hussey.) — BNL — FEP — 

GN— LC— OB— OS  2 
(Versions  vary.) 
To  Mistress  Isabel  Pennell.     (SI.  a&r.  )—ELP 
To  Mistress  Margery  Wentworth. — ELP — OB 
Garmond   of   Fair  Ladies,   The. — Rob't   Henryson. — 

WEPl 
Garret,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— PYO 
Garrison. — Amos  B.  Alcott. — AA 
Caspar  Schnapp's  Exr»loit. — Anon. — SCS 

(Bold  Dragoon,  The.)— CS  25 
Gastibelza  (Guitare). — Victor  Hugo. — WR  9 


125 


Gate 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Gate  of  Camelot,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls 

of  the  King. 
Gates  Ajar.     Anna  L.  Ruth. — CS  4 
Gather  this  Up. — Anon. — DSS 

"Gather  ye  rose-buds  as  ye  may." — Rob't  Herrick. — 
HBP 
(Counsel  to  Girls.)— PGT  1— YBF 
(Counsel  to  Virgins.)  —PYO 

vTo  [the]  Virgins,  to  Make  much  of  Time — C.) — 
BNL— ELP— ES— FEP— WEP  2 
Gathering,  The.— H.  B.  Swett.— PAPm 
Gathering  Flowers. — Anon. — TFS 
Gathering  Grasses. — Anon. — WR  17 
Gathering  of  the  Church,  The.     (Fr.  Lyra  ApostoHca.) 

— J:Keble.— AVP 
Gathering  of  the  Clans,   The. — Jas.   W.    Riley.     See 

Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
Gathering  of  the  Fairies,  The. — Jos.  R.  Drake.     See 

Culprit  Fay,  The. 
Gathering  Song  of  Donald  Dhu  [or  the  Black]. — Walter 

Scott.     See  foUowinp. 
Gathering  Song  of  Donuil  [or  Donald]  Dhu. — Walter 
Scott.— BPB—CEL—GN 
(Gathering  Song  of  Donald  the  Black.)— PGT  1 
(Highland  War-song. )— PS 
(Pibroch.)— LH 
(Pibroch  of   Donuil  Dhu — C.)  —  BNL  —  BS  25— 

EPs— FEP— HBP— LC— OS  2— PHS 
(Summons,  The — br.  »el.) — SE 
Gay  Christmas  Ball,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Gay  Gos  [or  Goss]-hawk,  The.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy. ) 
— Anon.— GN— PEB  2  (si.  diff.  vers.) 
(Walter  Scott's  «ers. — diif.  and  longer.) — EPs 
(Jolly  Goshawk,  The— sL  diff.  fr.  GN,  etc.)— BB 
Gay  Lady  that  Went  to  Church,  The. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Gay  Little  Dandelion  (w.  music). — Anon. — AD 
Gay  Old  Man  am  I,  A.  (Musical  monologue.) — (Arr.  by) 

Alfred  B.  Sedgwick.— DSS 
Gay  Provence. — G.  F.  Savage-Armstrong. — TIP 
Gazelle,  A.— R:  H.  Stoddard.— A  A 
Gazelle  and  Swan.— Howell  J,.  Finer.- WR  23 
Gebir,  Sels.  fr. — Walter  S.  Ltindor. 

Prayers.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  K.)— WEP  4 
Shell.  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  /.)— WEP  4 

(Inscription  on  a  Sea  Shell — hr.  sel.) — EPs 
Tamar  and  the  Nymph.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  /.)— VA 
Tamar  and  the  Nymph.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VI.)— WEP  4 
Geist's  Grave. — Matthew  Arnold. — VA 
Gemini  and  Virgo.     (C. ) — C :  S.'  Calverley. 

(Tommy's  First  Love.)— CS  24 
General    Albert     Sidney    Johnston. — Mary    Jervey. — 

EDY 
General  Amnesty. — Carl  Schurz. — MRS 
General  George  H.  Thomas:     His  Life  and  Character, 
Sels.Jr. — Jas.  A.  Garfield. 
General  Thomas  at  Chickamauga. — NC 
Memorial  Address  on  Gen.  George  H.  Thomas,  Br. 
sel.  fr.—GG 
General  Government  and  the  States,  The. — Alex.  Ham- 
ilton.    See  Speech  on  the  Compromises  of  the 
Constitution. 
General  Grant. — Anon. — DLS 
General  Grant. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. — WR  23 
General  Grant,  the  Silent  Captain. — G:  W.  Curtis.    <See 

Major-General  John  Sedgwick. 
General  Grant  to  the  Army — 1865. — Ulysses  S.  Grant. 

— CS2 
General  Grant's  English. — S:  L.  Clemens. — BS   16 — 

DES— PFP 
General  John.— W:  S.  Gilbert.- NA 
General  Joseph  Reed;  or.  The  Incorruptible  Patriot. — 

E.  C.  Jones.— CS  1 
General  Joseph  Warren's  Address. — J:  Pierpont.     See 

General  Warren  to  his  Troops,  etc. 
General  Thomas  at  Chickamauga. — Jas.  A.  Garfield. 
See  General  George  H.  Thomas:     His  Life  and 
Character. 
General  Warren  to  his  Troops  at  the  Battle  of  Bimker 
Hill.— J:  Pierpont.— HSS  1 
(General  Joseph  Warren's  Address.) — SR  8 
(Stand!     The  Ground's  your  Own.)— WR  5 
(Warren's  Address  [at  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill].)— 
AWB  —  BNL  —  CR  —  CS  8  —  CSS  —  EDY  — 
—  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  —  OS  1  —  PAP  —  PAPm 
— PS— PSR— SM— TMD— WCLG  2 
(Warren's  Address  before  the  Battle  of   Bunker's 

Hill.)— PPSr 
(Warren's  Address  to  the  American  Soldiers.) — AA 
(Warren's  Supposed   Address  at    Bunker   Hill.) — 
BLP 
General  Warren's  Death.    (Tab.) — Tony  Denier. — TDT 
General  Washington's  Resignation. — G:  Washington. — 
BLP 


General  Wheeler  at  Santiago. — Jas.  Lindsay  Gordon. — 

PRR 
General's  Client,   The. — Harry  S.    Edwards.     See  De 

Valley  an'  de  Shadder. 
General's  Death,  The. — Jos.  O'Connor. — AA 
Generosity.  (Dial.) — Anon. — FDY 
Generosity.     (Dial.) — Anon. — WR  26 
Generous  Frenchman,  The. — Anon.  — DFY — SCS 
Generous  Little  One. — Anon. — PS 
Genesis,  Sel.  fr.     (Tree  of  Life,  The— Ch.  II. ,  8-25 ;  Ch. 

III.)  Bible.— WR  11 
Genesis. — J:  H.  Ingham. — AA 
Genesis  of  Science,  Sel.  fr.     (Mathematics  and  Physics 

— ad.) — Herbert  Spencer. — SE 
Genevieve.— S :  T.  Coleridge. — EPs 

(Love— C.)— BNL  — FEP  — HBP  — OB— PGT  1 

—WEP  4— WR  8 
(Love's  Flame — br.  sel.) — FLS 
Genevie%-e.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— FEP— FTR 

(Diff.  poem  fr.  foregoin-j.) 
Genevra. — Emma  S.  Stilwell.     See   Mistletoe   Bough, 

The.— T:  H.  Bayly. 
Genius.— Elmer  R.  Coates.— CS  27 
Genius.— R:  H.  Home.— VA 
Genius,  A. — Jas.  N.  Johnson. — WR  7 
Genius.— E.  L.  White.— AA 
Genius  and  Application. — Anon. — KNS 
Genius  and  Common    Sense.     (Fr.    Table    Talk.) — W: 

Hazlitt.— MRS 
Genius  for  the  Stage,  A.     (Dial.). — Carey. — MPD 
Genius  Loci. — Marg.  L.  Woods. — OB 
Genius  of  Christianity,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Francois  R.  A. 

de  ChAteaubriand. 
Mysteries  of  Life,  The.      (Pt.  I.,  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  III.— 

airr.y-BS  21 
Nature  Proclaims  a  Deity.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.,  Bk.  V., 

Ch.  II.)— CS  11— SS 
Genius  of  Death,  The.— G:  Croly  — BNL 
Genius  to  her  Poet. — Maude  B.  Dutton. — CG  3 
Genoa.     (SI.  abr.  )—Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 
Genteel  and  Polite. — Mrs.  J.  E.  McConaughy. — MD 
Gentian. — Kate  L.  Brown. — NV 
Gentian. — Eliz.  G.  Crane. — AA 
Gentility. — Anon. — SR  1 
Gentility. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  Canterbury  Tales, 

The. 
Gentle  Alice  Brown.- W:  S.  Gilbert.— N A— THP 
Gentle  Child,  The.— Anon.— DLS— WR  17 
Gentle  Echo   on   Woman,   A. — Jonathan   Swift  (7). — 

HPE 
Gentle  Hints.     (Harper's  Magazine.) — DLS  (si.  abr.) 
(Doing  and  Giving— seZ. )— HSS  2 
(Resolution.)— PTS 
Gentle  Mule,  The.— Anon.— DCR 
Gentle  Shepherd,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Allan  Ramsay. 
"At  setting  day  and  rising  morn." — BNL — FEP 

(Song.)— GP  (at.  to  J:  Gay.) 
Jenny  and  Peggy.— WEP  3 
Patie  and  Peggy.— WEP  3 
Patie  and  Roger. — EP 

(My  Peggy— 8eZ.)—GN  (8hoHer)—hC 
(Peggy — same  as  LC.)— -OB 
Gentle  Words.— C.  D.  Stuart.— YBT 
Gentle  Words.— M.  J.  Taylor.— DCP 
Gentle-breath. — Annie  C.  Huestis. — TCV 
Gentleman,  A.— Anon. — CS  20 
Gentleman,  The.— G:  W.  (or  W:  C.)  Doane.— LLC 
Gentleman,  A. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Gentleman,  The.— R:  Steele. — OS  2 
Gentleman,  A. — G:  M.  Vickers. — PS 
Gentleman  Jim.— Dan'l  O'Connell.— CS  36— HP 
"Gentlemen,    the    King!" — Rob't   Barr. — NDP  (play 

ad.  fr.  story)— ^F  (Ch.  I.— abr.) 
Geoffrey  Barron. — Kathe.  (Tynan)  Hinkson. —  PEB  4 
Geography  Demon,  The. — Anon.— CS  33 
Geoloijy. — J.  D.  Dana. — TMD 
Geordie  to  his  Tobacco-pipe. — G:  S.  Phillips.    See  Gjrp- 

sies  of  the  Dane's  Dike. 
Georga  Washingdone. — Anon. — GH 
George  and  the  Chimney-sweep. — Ann  and  Jane  Tay- 

lor.- BVC 
George  Birthington's  Washday. — Florence  E.  Homer. 

— CG2 
George  Du  Maurier. — Arthur  Ketchum. — CG  2 
George  Eliot. — Jas.  A.  Noble. — EDY 
George  Lee.     (C. — si.  abr.) — Hamilton  Aid^. — CS  26 

(Story  of  George  Lee.) — DS 
George    Nidiver.— E.    H.— BAB— EPa— HB — HBP— 

PC 
George  the  Third    (fr.  The   Four  Georges).     (Cond.) 

— W:  M.  Thackeray.— CR 
George    III.     f  November,      1813.— C.)— W:    Words- 
worth.—EHT 


126 


TITLE  INDEX 


Gil 


George  the  Fourth  {in  The  Four  Georges).  (Compari- 
son of  George  Washington  with  George  the 
Fourth,  called  the  First  Gentleman  of  Europe.) 
— W:  M.  Thackeray.— OS  3 

George  Washington. — Anon. — BNL — EPs 

George  Washington.     (Concert  rec.) — Anon. — DLF 

George  Washington. — Anon. — PEO 

George  Washington.     (Concert  rec.) — M.  A.  Bryant. — 
DLS— PP— PS— YPS 
(Washington's  I-ife.)— DFR 

George  Washington.  (Harper's  Young  People.) — SR  12 
— WR24 

George  Washington. — J:  H.  Ingham. — AA  (si.  abr.) — 
EDY 

"George  Washington  was  once  a  Boy."  —  Anon. — 
DLS 

George  Washington's  "Bufday."  (Youth's  Compan- 
ion.)—SR  13 

George  Washington's  Little  Hatchet.  (W,  panto- 
mime. ) — Anon. — TCP 

George's  Eixample. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 

George's  Letter. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 

Georgia  Volunteer,  A. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — AA — 
AWB— CS  18 

Gerald  and  his  Mother.  (Fr.  A  Woman  of  no  Impor- 
tance^—Oscar  Wilde.— VSG 

Geraldine. — Ef:  Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey.  See  Sonnet: 
Geraldine. 

Geraldine  and  I. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson.  iSee  Gar- 
den Idyll,  A. 

German  Anniversary  Speech  of  Herr  Hans  Yager. 
(Kentucky  State  Journal.) — BDD 

German  Favors.— F.  C.  Clarke.— CG  1 

German  Fire-eater,  A. — Theodore  S.  Fay. — WR  19 

German  Professor  on  Hypnotism,  The. — A.  T.  Worden. 
— GH 

German  Trust  Song. — Lampertus. — SSS 

Germanicus  to  his  Mutinous  Troops.  (Sel.  fr.  Annals, 
Ch.  I.)— Tacitus.— PS 

German's  Fatherland,  The. — Anon. — GP 

Germs  of  Greatness. — Eliza  Cook. — CS  30 

Geronimo. — Ernest  McGafifey. — AA — EDY 

Gertrude. — J.  H.  Scranton. — CG  2 

Gertrude  of  Wyoming,  Sel.  fr.  (Oneyda's  Death-song, 
The— /r.  Pt.  III.)— T:  Campbell.— WEP  4 

Gertrude's  Necklace. — Fred'k  Locker-Lampson. — VS 

Get  Acquainted  with  Yourself. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — 
CS28 

"Get  at  the  root  of  things." — Anon. — GG 

"Get  into  some  good  library  and  read." — J;  A.  Mur- 
phy.—GG 

"Get  leave  to  work." — Eliz.  B.  Browning.  See 
Aurora  Leigh. 

"Get  out  of  my  Shop!" — Jennie  E.  Munson. — 
WR  18 

Get  Up.— Anon.— PPSr 

Gethsemane  (Christ  our  Example  in  Sufifering — C). — 
Jas.  Montgomery.— FEP — HBP 

(3ethsemane.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— GP 

Gets  Dhere.- C:  F.  Adams.— BS  18 
(He  Gets  There.)— SR  7 

Gettin'  On.— Anon. — BS  19 

Getting  Acquainted. — Sydney  Dayre. — BS  20 

Getting  at  the  Point. — Anon. — DLF 

Getting  Even. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 

Getting  in  the  Wrong  Room. — C:  Dickens.  See  Pick- 
wick Papers. 

Getting  Letters. — Anon. — CH 

Getting  Rid  of  her  Daughter's  Beau.  —  Anon.  — 
WR  26 

Getting  Supplies  from  the  Wreck. — Dan'l  Defoe.  See 
Robinson  Crusoe. 

Getting  the   Right   Start.     (Fr.   Timothy    Titcomb's 
Letters,  I.)— Josiah  G.  Holland.    BS  24  (cond.) 
(^6r.}— BLP— PEO 

Getting  <o  be  a  Man.— S:  E.  Kiser. — WR  21 

Getting  under  Way. — S:  L.  Clemens.  See  Innocents 
Abroad,  The. 

Getting  Up.— H:  S.  Leigh.— CS  27 

Getting  up  a  Picnic. — Anon. — FAD 

Gettysburg. — Anon. — DLF 

Gettysburg.  (Br.  sel.  fr.  National  Cemetery  at  Gettys- 
burg.)—E:  Everett.— OS  2 

Gettysburg. — Ernest  W.  Shurtleff.— BS  14 

Gettysburg. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AWB 

Gettysburg:  A  Mecca  for  the  Blue  and  Gray.  (Sel.  fr. 
Address,  July  3,  1888.)— J:  B.  Gordon.- BLP 

Gettysburg     Address.  —  Abraham      Lincoln. —  SM  — 
WCLG  1 
(Address  at  Gettysburg.) — BLP 
(Address  at  the  Dedication  of  the  Cemetery,  etc.). 
—  CR  —  CS  2  —  LLC  —  OS  2  —  PEO  — PRR 
— TMR— WRD 


Gettysburg  Address  (continued). 

("Brave    men,    living    and    dead,     The." — sel.) — 

HSS  1 
(Dedication  of  Gettysburg  Cemetery.) — BS  5 — EA 

— FD  1—GG— SO-SO— SR  2— TMD 
(Gettysburg  Speech.) — AI 

(Remarks  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Ceme- 
tery at  Gettysburg.) — IR 
(Speech  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Ceme- 
tery, etc.)— GMS— MAL— PPS 
Gettysburg   Ode,   Sel.    fr.     (Dedicatory   Ode   for  the 
Gettysburg  National  Cemetery.) — Bayard  Tay- 
lor.—CS  2 
Gettyshurg^peech. — Abraham  Lincoln.      See  Gettys- 

nSig  Address. 
Gheber  to  his  Followers,  The. — T:  Moore.     iSce  Lalla 

Rookh. 
Gheber's   Bloody   Glen.   The.— T:   Moore.     See  Lalla 

Rookh. 
Ghost,  The.— Anon.— BS  4— CS  1— KNE 

(Ghost  of  Abel  Law,  The.)— SR  1 
Ghost.  The.— R:  H.  Barham.— HPE 
Ghost,    The,   Sel.    fr.     (Description    of    Johnson — fr. 

Bk.  II.)— C:  Churchill.— WEP  3 
Ghost  Fairies. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Ghost  Flower,  The.— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
Ghost  in  Hainlet,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.    See  Hamlet. 
Ghost  in  the  Closet,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Ghost  in  the  Kitchen,  The. — Anon. — FAD 
Ghost  of  Abel  Law,  The. — Anon. — See  Ghost,  The. 
Ghost  of  an  Old  Continental,  The. — Fred  E.  Brooks. — 

CS27 
Ghost  of  Creusa,  The. — Virgil  (tr.  by  Gawain  Douglas). 

See  ^neid.  The. 
Ghost  of  Crooked  Lane,  The.     (Dial.) — G:  M.  Vickers. 

—CDs 
Ghost  of  Goshen,  The.— Anon.— CS  11— DS 
Ghost  of  Lone  Rock,  The.— Clara  M.  Howard.— WR  7 
Ghost  of  Sensation,  The. — S.  Weir  Mitchell.— KNE 
Ghost  Scene,  The. — W:  L.  Alden.     See  Adventures  of 

Jimmy  Brown,  The. 
Ghost   Scene  from   Hamlet. —  W:    Shakespeare.     See 

Hamlet. 
Ghost  Story,  A. — S:  L.  Clemens.  See  Golden  Arm,  The. 
Ghost  Story,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Ghost-flowers. — Mary  T.  Higginson. — AA 
Ghosts. — Anon. — CG  1 

Ghosts,  The.— H:  W.   Longfellow.     See  Song  of  Hia- 
watha, The. 
Ghosts. — R:  K.  Munkittrick. — AA' 
Ghosts  in  the  Library. — Andrew  Lang. — MBB 
Ghosts  of  the  Dead.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Giannone,  Sei.  fr.     (Government  Spy,  The — arr.) — W: 

W.  Story.— DR 
Giaour,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Lord  Byron. 
Giaour,  The.     (Br.  seZ.)— BNL 
Greece.— BNL— LLC 

(Fall  of  Greece,  The— a?>r. )—GP 
Idleness.     (Br.  se/.)— KNE 

(Giaour,  The,  Sel.  /r.)— BNL 
Love.— BIL— FTA 
Picture  of  Death,  A.— BNL 
(Aspect  of  Death — abr.) — AE 
(Greece— afer.) — OS  3 
"Such  is  noy  name,  and  such  my  tale." — HP 
Transient  Beauty. — BNL 
Gibraltar.     (In  Love  Sonnets  of  Proteus.) — Wilfrid  S. 

Blunt.— OB— V  A 
Giddy  Girl,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 
Gift,  A.— Eliz.  R.  Cutter.- CS  2 
Gift  of  Tears,  The.— Sarah  M.  Piatt.— TAS 
Gift  of  Tritemius,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.- AP— CS  16 
Gift  of  Water,  The.— Hamlin  Garland.— AA 
Gift  that   None  could  See,  The.— Mary  E.   (Wilkins) 

Freeman.— HBR—WR  4 
Gifted  for  Giving.— W:  H.  Burleigh.— TAS 
Gifts.— Juliana  H.  Ewing.— FLS 
Gifts.— Emma  Lazarus.— BNL— OS  3— TAS 
Gifts. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Sunday  up  the  River. 
Gifts  for  All.— Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Gifts  of  Age,  The.— Anon.— BS  22 
Gifts  of  Fortune  and  Cupid,  The.— T:  Dekker.— ELP 
Gifts  of  God,  The.— G:  Herbert.- BNL— FP— OS  2— 
PGTl 
(PuUev,  The— O— CEL  (w.  3  sfs.  fr.  Misery)- EPs 
—FEP— OB— WEP  2— YBF 
Gifts  of  God,  The.— Jones  Very.— AA 
Gifts  Returned.- Walter  S.  Landor.— TTIP 
OiiTglety  Girl,  The.— (Judge.)— GH—Pfi 
Gil  Morrice.     (C. —  in  Percy's   Reliques.) — Anon. — 

CChilde  Maurice — diff.  vers.) — BB 
Gil,  the  Toreador.— C:  H.  Webb.— A  A 


127 


Gilded 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Gilded  Age,  The,  Sels.   fr.—S:  L.  Clemens  and  C:  D. 

Warner. 
Steamboat     Race,     The.       ( Ch.     IV. )  —  BRR  — 

SR  2  iarr.  and  cond.) 
Uncle  Daniel's  [or  DanTsl  Apparition  [and  Prayer]. 

(Ch.  III.)— CS  10— FTR— SA 
(Uncle    Daniel's  Introduction  to  a   Mississippi 

Steamer.  )— BS  5 
(Uncle  Dan'l's  Prayer.)— SDR 
Washington   Hawkins  Dines  with  Colonel  Sellers. 

(.Sela.  fr.  Chs.  VII.,  VIII.,  and  XI.)— BS  10 
Oile  Machree.- Gerald  Griffin.— TIP 
Giles  and  Abraham.— Elmer  R.  Coatcs. — CS  6 
Gillyflower  of  Gold,  The.— W:  Morris.— VA 
Gimlet  vs.  Corkscrew. — Anon. — SR  13 

(Matrimonial  Controversy,  A.) — WR  16 
Ginevra.— Susan  Coolidge.— BS  16— SR  11 
Ginevra.     (Fr.  Italy.)— S:  Rogers.— BNL—FEP 
(SI.  obr.)- NPS— TMR— WEP  4— YP 
(SI.  diff.  vers.)—CS  3 

(Lost  Bride,  The.)— WR  26 
(Far  another  vers,  of  the   same   story,  see   Mistleote 

Bough,  The.— T:  H.  Bayly.) 
Ginger  and  the  Preacher. — Anon. — WR  14 
Gingerbread  Land. — Anon. — DLF 
Gingerbread  Tree,  The.— Harriet  P.  Spofford.— AD 
Gipsie  Laddie,  The.— Anon.— PEB  1 
Gipsies  Metamorphosed,  The     (Masque  of    the  Meta- 
morphosed  Gipsies,    A — C),   Sels.     Jr. —  Ben 

Jonson. 
"Faery  [or  Fairy]  beam    upon  you.  The." — ELP 

(Song    from   "Gypsies'   Metamorphoses" — 2d 

song.) — EPs 
(Wish,  A.)— LC— OS  1 
Song  ("The  owl  is  abroad.") — EPs 
Gipsy  Bride,  The.— Emma  D.  Banks.— WR  19 
Gipsy  Camp.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Gipsy  Children's  Song. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Gipsy  Fortune-teller,  The.     (Tab.  and  dial.) — Anon. 

_BS  9— TCP 
Gipsy  Song.     (Williams  Literary  Monthly.) — CG  3 
Gipsy.     See  also  Gypsy. 
Gipsy's  Malison,  The.— C:  Lamb— HBP 
Gipsy's   Warning,   The.     (Fr.    Martha — w.    music.) — 

Flotow  and  St.  Georges. — KER 
Girdle,  A. — Edmund  Waller.- GP 

(On  a  Girdle— C.)—BNL— ELP— EPs  (o6r.)— ES 

— FEP  —  FTA  —  OB  —  OEL  —  PGT  1  — 

PYO— WEP  2— YBF 
Girdle  of  Friendship,  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — BIL 
Girl  atthe  Book  Counter,  The. — Anon. — CS  33 

(At  the  Book  Counter.) — WR  7 
Girl  Describes  her  Fawn,  The. — Andrew  Marvell.    See 

Nymph    Complaining   for   the    Death    of    her 

Fawn,  The. 
Girl  in  Gray,  The.— W:  Merritt.— SR  4 
Girl  of  all  Periods,  The. — Coventry  Patmore. — VA 
Girl  of  Cadiz,  The.     (Song  included  in  first   draft  of 

Childe    Harold's    Pilgrimage,    Can.    I.) — Lord 

Byron.- HBP 
Girl  of  Culture,  A.— Anon. — DCR  (si.  abr.) 

(Courting  and  Science.) — BS  17 
Girl  of  Dunbwy,  The.— T:  Davis.— TIP 
Girl  of  our  Town,  The.— R.  R.  Kirk.— CG  3 
Girl  of  Pompeii,  A. — E.  S.  Martin. — AA 
Girl  of  the  Period,  A.— Anon.— CH— CS  25 
Girl  of  the  Period,  The.     (Dial.)—G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Girl  of  the  Red  Mouth. — Martin  MacDermott. — TIP 
Girl  that  I  Didn't  Get,  The.— Anon.— WR  7 
Girl  who  is  Always  Good,  The. — Anon. — DLS 
Girl  with  the  Cows,  The,  Sel.  fr.—A.  P.  Graves.— TIP 
Girl  with  "Thirty-nine  Lovers,  The.     (London  Graphic.) 

— WR8 
(Thirty-nine  Lovers,  The.)— TMR 
Girlhood. — Anon. — BNL 
Girl's  a  Girl  for  a'  That,  A. — Anon. — HP 
Girl's  Address  to  Boys,  A. — Anon. — MCS 
Girl's  Bucksaw  Exercise. — Anon. — EuE 
Girls,  Don't  Marry  a  Drunkard. — Anon. — WR  18 
Girl's  Essay  on  Boys,  A. — Anon. — DST — WR  7 
Girls  of  the  Period,  The.     (End  groff.)- Anon.— DSS 
Girls  that  are  Wanted,  The. — Anon.     See  following. 
Girls  who  are  in  Demand. — Anon. — HSS  3 

(Girls  that  are  Wanted,  The— abr. )—YBT 
Girondists,  The,  Sel.  fr.      (Execution  of  Madame  Ro- 
land—/r.    Vol.    III.,    Bk.    LI.)— Alphonse    de 

Lamartine. — CS  13 
Girt  Woak  Tree  that's  in  the  Dell,  The. — W:  Barnes. — 

PGT  2 
Girt  Wold  House  o'  Mossy  Stwone,  The. — W:  Barnes. 

—PGT  2 
Give  a  Rouse.     (Fr.  Cavalier  Tunes.) — Rob't  Brown- 
ing.—EHT  (abr.)- HBP— MRS— VA 


Give  All  to  Love. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — BIL  (6r. «e/.) 

—OB 
Give  and  Take.— "Bob  O'Link."— DLD 
Give  Beauty  all  her  Right     (C.) — T:  Campion. 

(Measure  of  Beauty,  The. — ELP 
Give  me  a  Wish.— Rose  (Terry)  Cooke.— PC 

(Wish,  A.)— WCL 
Give  me  Back  my  Boy. — Jasper  Garnet. — DES 
Give  me  Back  my  Husband. — Anon. — CS  5 
Give  me  Back   my   Youth  Again. — Johann     W.     von 

Goethe.— GP 
Give  me  More  Love  [or  More  Disdain].     (Song:    Medi- 
ocrity  in    Love    Rejected — C.) — T:  Carew. — 
BNL— FI-S— FTA— ^6BF 
Give  me  not  Tears. — Rose  H.  Lathrop. 
Despair. — AA 
Joy. — AA 
Give  me  Rest. — Anon. — HP 
Give  me  Rest.— G:  E.  Grisham.— WR  15 
Give  me  the  Hand. — Goodman  Barnaby. — CS  11 — PS 

(Hand  for  me.  The.)— PTS 
Give  me  the  Old. — Rob't  H.  Messenger. — BNL — EPs 
— FEP— TAV 
(Winter  Wish,  A.)— AA— HBP 
Give  me  the  Splendid  Silent  Sun. — Walt  Whitman. — 

AA  I 

"Give  me  the  Town." — Mary  H.  Ritchie. — CG  2 
Give  me  "Three  Grains  of  Corn,  Mother. — Amelia  B. 

Edwards.— BNL— CS  2 
Give  Place,  ye  Lovers. —  H:  Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey. — 
BNL 
(Praise  of  his  love.  A.)— FEP— WEP  1 
Give  Thanks.— Anon.— PEO 
Give  Thanks,  All  ye  People.— Anon. — SSS 
Give  Thanks  fer  [or  for]  What?- W.  F.  Croffut.- CS  21 

— DFR— HP— NPS— YP 
"Give  the  Children  Holidays." — Anon. — HSS  1 
Give  the  Little  Boys  a  Chance. — Anon. — TFS 
"Give  the  Youngsters  a  Chance." — Anon. — DS — YA 
Give  to  the  Wind  thy  Fears. — Paul  Gerhardt. — HDL 
Give  up  the  Union?  —  Dan'l  S.  Dickinson.     See  Shall 

we  Give  up  the  Union? 
Give  us  a  Call.— Anon.— CS  22— SSS 
Give  us  Men.  (Wanted— C.)—Josiah  G.Holland.— CS  26 

(True  Men.)— SR  7 
"Give  us,  O  give  us,  the  man  who  sings  at  his  work." 

— T:  Carlyle.— SO 
"Give  words,  kind  words,  to  those  who  err."       (The 
Daily  Counsellor,  Dec.  24.) — Lydia  Sigourney. 

Given  Over. — T:  Woolner. — VA 

Giver's  Reward,  The.— Anon.— CS  18 

Giving. — Anon. — HSS  3 

Giving    in   Marriage. — Jean    Ingelow.     See   Songs    of 

Seven. 
Giving  Thanks. — Anon. — DFR 
Giving  to  God. — Christopher  Wordsworth. — VA 
Glacier-bed,  The.— E.  A.  Blake.— BS  19— CS  33— DS 

— NPS— YP 
Glad  Autumn  Days. — Anon. — YBT 
Glad  Surprise,  A. — Jennie  Joy. — MD 
Glad  Tidings.— W :  Wordsworth.— EHT 
Gladiator,   The.— Anon.— CS   15— NPS— SA— TMR— 

YP 
Gladiator,   The. — Lord   Byron.     See   Childe   Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Gladiator,  The.— J.  A.  Jones.— BS  3— CS  7  (si.  abr.) 
Gladiators,  The. — Emilio  Castelar.— OS  3 — WR  19 
Gladness  of  Nature,  The.  (C.)— W:  C.  Bryant.— AD— 
POS— SM— SN— WCL— WCLG  1 
(Spring— a6r.)—HNS 
(Summer — br.  sel.) — SE 
Glance  Backward,  A. — Mary  E.  Blanchard. — CS  22 — 

WR  19  (si.  abr.) 
Glasgerion.    (In    Percy's    Reliques.)  —  Anon. —  BB  — 
PEB  1— WEP  1 
(SI.  diff.  versions.) 
Glass  of  Cold  Water,  A. — J:  B.  Gough  (at.  also  to  A.  W. 
Arrington  and  to  Paul  Denton).— CS  2— HSS  3 
— SR  2— WRD 
(Apostrophe  to  Cold  Water.)— SA 
(Apostrophe  to  Water. )— LLC— SSD 
(Tribute  to  Water,  A.)— PP— YFR 
(Water— «eZ.)—SE 

("Water!  look  at  it,  ye  thirsty  ones" — sel.) — GG 
(SI.  diff.  versions.) 
Glass   Railroad,   The.— G:   Lippard.— CS    14— SPE— 

SR2 
Glaucus  and  the  Lion.-^E:  Bulwer-Lytton.     See  Last 

Days  of  Pompeii. 
Gleaner,  The.— Jane  Taylor.— PC 
Gleaners,  The.— G:  Weatherlv.— HSS  3 
Glee  for  Winter.  A.— Alfred  Domett.— SN—V A— VS 


128 


TITLE  INDEX 


God 


Glen,  The.— Charlotte  Whitcomb.— SO 
Glen  Allen's  Daughter. — Anon. — Wll'15 
Glen  Ellis  Falls.— S:  Longfellow.— HDL 
Glen-Almajn,    the    Narrow    Glen. — W:    Wordsworth. 

— PGTl 
Glenara.— T.Campbell.— BFV—EPs—LC—PHS—SS 
Glenkindie.— W:  B.  Scott.— VA 
Glenlogie.—  Anon.—  BE  —  EPs—  FEP  —  GN  (si.  diff. 

vers.) — LC 
Glenorchy.— Evan  MacColL— TCV 
Glimpse.  The.— W:  Watson.— YBF 
Glimpse  of  Youth,  A,     Br.  sel.  fr.     ("So  every  little 

child  I  see.") — Josiah  G.  Holland. — HP 
Glimpses. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — TAS 
Glimpses    into  Cloudland. — H:    W.    Longfellow.     See 

Hyperion. 
Gloria  Bell.— W:  J.  Benners,  .Jr.— CS  30 
Gloriana. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
Glorious  Constitution.  The. — Dan'l  Webster.    See  Pub- 
lic Dinner  at  New  York. 
Glorious  Destiny   of    England,   The. —  Rob't  C.  Win- 

throp.     See  Centennial  Oration. 
Glorious  Fourth,  The.— Anon.— PR— YA 
Glorious  New  England.     (Sel.  jr.  Address  on  the  Land- 
ing of  the  Pilgrims.)— S.  S.  Prentiss.— CS  1 
(New  England.)— FD  1 
Glorious  Song  of  Old,  The.— Edmund  H.  Sears.— OS  2 
(Angels'  Song,  The.)— AA 
(it    Came    upon    the    Midnight    Clear.) — FEP  — 

LLC  (ahr.) 
(Peace  on  Earth.)— TAS 
Glory.— Fs.  Wayland.— LLC— SSD 
Glory  Hallelujah!  or,  John  Brown's  Body. — Anon. — 

AWB 
Glory  in  the  Northwest. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Glory  mit  ter  Stars  und  Sthripes. — Yawcob  von  Splut- 

termann. — DRR 
Glory  of  Athens. — Thucydides.     See  History   of  the 

Peloponnesian   War. 
Glory  of  God  in  Creation,  The.— T:  Moore.- POS 

("Thou  Art,  O  God— C.)— FEP 
Glory  of  Motion,  The.— R:  St.  J.  Tyrwhitt.— HBP— VA 
Glory  of  Nature,  The. — Timothv  Dwight. — BS  23 
Glory  of  Nature,   The.— Frd'k   Tennyson.— PGT  2 
Glory  of  Washington,  The. — H :,  Lord  Brougham. — DFR 
Glory  that  was  Greece,  The. — Lord  Byron.  See  Don  Juan. 
Glorying  in  the  Cross.     (Hymn  VIL) — Isaac  Watts. — 

FEP 
Glory-roses.- Theodore  H.  Rand. — TCV 
Gloucester  Harbor. — Eliz.  S.  (Phelps)  Ward. — AA 
Glove,  The. — Rob't  Browning.— BP 
Glove,  The. — Leigh  Hunt.    See  Glove  and  the  Lions, 

The. 
Glove,  The. — Friedrich  Schiller  {tr.  by  E:  Bulwer-Lyt- 
ton).— HSS  3. 
(Diff.  <r.)— SS 

(For  diff.  vers.,  see  Glove  and  the  Lions,  The,  beloiv. 
Glove  and  the  Lions,  The.— Leigh  Hunt.— BeR — BNL 
—  BS  7  —  BVC  —  CR  —  CS  8  —  CSS  —  FEP 
— GN— MR— OS  2— PPSr 
(Glove,  The.)— HSS  3 
Gloverson,    the    Mormon.     (Mormon    Romance,     A : 
Reginald    Gloverson — C.) — C:    F.    Browne. — 
BeR— CS  16 
Gloves  were  never  Made  to  Sell. — Anon. — DSS 
Glow-worm  and  Star. — J:  J.  Piatt. — TAS 
Gluggity  Glug.     (Fr.  The  Myrtle  and  the  Vine.)— G: 

Colman  (the  younoer). — BNL — GP 
Glvcine's  Song. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Zapolya. 
Gnomies,  The.— Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Gnosis. — Christopher  P.  Cranch. — TAS 
( Knowing. ) — LLC 

(Stanzas. )— ASL— FEP— HBP— TAV 
(Thought.  )-^BNL—GP 

("Thought  is  deeper  than  all  speech" — hr.    sel.) — 
CS  1 
Go.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  33 
Go  Feel  what  I  have  Felt.— Anon.— BNL— PS— SM 
(Hate  of  the  Bowl.)— CS  2— HS       - 
(Woman's  Answer  on   being  Accused   of  being  a 
Maniac,  etc.) — PPSr 
Go  Forth  in  Life  not  Seeking  Love. — Anne  C.  (Lynch) 

Botta.— BIL 
Go  Forward. — Ellen  Murray.— CS  33 
Go  Forward  to  Victory. — I.  K.  Funk.— WR  18 
"Go  from  me.     Yet  I  feel  that  I  shall  stand." — Eliz. 
B.  Browning.- PGT  2 
(Far  and  yet  Near.) — OH 
(Sonnet.)— FTA 
(Sonnets  from  the    Portuguese.) — BNL— OB(III.) 

—YBF 
(Sonnets   from   the    Portuguese,    VI. — C.) — VA — 
WEP4 


Go,  Happy  Rose! — Rob't  Herrick. — CEL 

(To  the  Rose— O— ELP— ES— OEL— WEP  2— 
YBF 
Go,  Heart. — Jas.  Wedderburn.— ELP 
Go  it  Alone. — J:  G.  Saxe.     See  Game  of  Life, The. 
Go,  Lovely  Rose.— Edmund  Waller.— BFV— BNL  (w. 
add.  St.  by  K.  White)— EPs— FEP— OB— OEL 
—PGT  1— PYO— YBF 
(Rose,  The.)— HBP 
(Rose's  Message,  The.)— CEL 
(Song— C.)— ELP— ES— WEP  2 
Go,  Pretty  Birds.     (Fr.  Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange.) — 
T:  Hey  wood.— FEP 
(Message,  The.)— OB 
(PhiUis.)— EP 
(To  PhyUis.)— ES— OEL 
("Ye  little  birds  that  sit  and  sing.") — ELP 
Go  Sleep,  ma  Honey. — E:  D.  Barker. — AA 
Go  Slow.— Madge  Elliot.— FAS 
Go  to  thy  Rest. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — BNL 
"Go  to  work!     Nothing  is  more  salutary  to  the  human 

soul."- H:  W.  Beecher.— GG 
Go  vay,  Becky  Miller,  Go  vay! — Anon. — BDD — CS  24 

— DFY 
Go  where  Glory  Waits  Thee!— T:  Moore.— BNL— FEP 

—HBP 
Goal  of  Life,  The. — Rob't  Burns.     See  Auld  Lang  Syne. 
Goal  of   Life,   The.     (Sel.    fr.    The    Longest    Life.)— 

Archibald  Lampman. — TCV 
Goat  and  the  Swing,  The.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.— CSS— 

PR— YA 
Goblet,  The.— Bayard  Taylor  (?).— FP 
Goblet  of  Life,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BNL  (hr. 

sel.)— OS,  3 
Goblin    Market,    Br.  sel.    fr.     (Good    Sister,    The.) — 

Christina  G.  Rossetti. — OH 
Goblins,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pickwick  Papers. 
God. — Gabriel   R.    Derzhavin   (tr.   by  J:   Bowring). — 
AE  (br.  sel.)— CS   4  —  FTR  —  GP  —  HBP  — 
HNS  (abr.) 
(Ode  to  the  Deity.)— BS  4 
God  after  All,  A.— Anon.— WR  14 

(Little  Outcast's  Plea,  The.)— BS  25— PFP 
God  and  Nature.    (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
God  and  the  Soul,  Sels.  fr. — J:  L.  Spalding. 
At  the  Ninth  Hour.     (Fr.  Bk.  IV.)— AA 
Believe  and  Take  Heart.    (Faith  and  a  Heart — C. — 

fr.  Bk.  I.)— AA 
Et  Mori  Lucrum.     (Fr.  Bk.  I.)— .\A 
God  and  the  Soul.  (  Sel.  fr.  Sursum  Corda — fr.  Bk.  I.) 

— SR  9 
Nature  and  the  Child.    (Visions  of  Childhood — C. — 

fr.  Bk.  II.)— AA 
Silence.     (Fr.  Bk.  IV.)— A  A 
Starry  Host,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  I.)— AA 
Void  Between,  The.     (Fr.  Bk.  II.)— AA 
God  and  the  Universe. — Alfred  Tennyson. — WEP  4 
God   Bless  our    Father  Land. — Oliver  W.  Holfries. — 
FP 
(International  Ode— C.)— PEO 
God    Bless    our    Native    Land.^— Timothy   Dwight. — 

LLC 
God  Bless  our  School. — Anon. — CS  13 
"God    bless    the    cheerful  .people — man,    woman     or 

child."— A.  A.  Willits.— GG 
God  Bless  You.— Anon.— SSS 
God  Bless  you.  Dear,  To-day!; — J:  Bennett. — AA 
"God  can  and  does  render  sinners  happy  in  spite  of 

their  sins." — C:  Hodge. — GG 
God  Cares. — Anon. — HDL 
God  Careth.— Anon.— SSS 

God  Everywhere  in  Nature. — Carlos  Wilcox. — BNL 
God  Governs.     (Motion:   For  Prayers  in  Convention — 

O— B:  Franklin.— SS 
"God  has  made  this  world  very  fair." — Anon. — GG 
God  in  Everything.— Eliza  Cook.— YBT 
God  in  Government. — Mary  T.  Lathrop. — WR  18 
God  in  History.— G:  Bancroft.— BS  2 
God  in  History. — J:  Lanahan. — SR  6 
God  in  Nature. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Hymn  before 

Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. 
God    in    Nature. — W:    Wordsworth.    See    Excursion, 

The. 
God  is  Everywhere. — Anna  A.  Ballam. — YBT 
God  is  Good. — Anon.— YBT 
God  is  Good.— Eliza  L.  Follen.— YBT 
God  is  Love. — Anon. — HBP 
God  is  Love. — Anon. — HDL 
God  is  Love— Eliz.  A.  (?)  Allen. — CPL 
God  is  Love. — J:  Bowring. — FEP 
God  is  Near. — Anon.— YBT 
"God  is  Nowhere."— Olive  Leaf. — CS  12 
(Little  Reader,  The.)— MYF 

129 


God 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


God  is  There.— Anon.— YBT 
God  Keep  You. — Mary  A.  De  Vere. — AA 
God  Knoweth. — Mary     G.     Brainard. — LLC     (.at.     to 
Mary  A.  Bridgman). 

(Not  Knowing— C.)—AA— HDL— SSS—TAV 
God  Knoweth  Best.     See  Sometime. — May  R.  Smith. 
God  Knows.— Anon.— CS  24 
God  Knows. —  Anon. — SSS 
God  Loves  Me.— Anon.— YBT 
God  Lvseus. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Valentinian. 
God  made  all  Thing.s.— Jane  Taylor.- TFS 

(Works  of  God.)— NV 
God  made  them  for  ine. — Mary  P.  Hale. — YBT. 
God  Moves  in  a  Mysterious  Way. — W:  Cowpfer. — LLC 
— YBF 

(Light  Shining  out  of  Darkness— C.)—FEP— HBP 

(  P^o^'ideface. )— EPs— H  DL 
"God  never  meant  that  we  should  call  thi.s  home." — 

M.  E.  K.— GG 
God  of  Abraham  Praise,  The.— T:  Olivers.— FEP 
God  of  mv  Childhood,  The  (abr. )—Frd'k  W.  Faber.— 

God  Provideth   for  the  Morrow.     (Fifteenth  Sunday 

after  Trinity — C.) — Reginald  Heber. — AD  {abr 
(Providence.) — GN 
God  Rest  ye.  Merry  Gentlemen. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — 

GN 
(Christmas  Carol,  A.)— FEP— OS  1 
God  Rest  you.  Merry  Gentlemen. — Anon. — BVC 

(Christmas  Carol.)— FEP 
God  Save  our  Native  Land. — Julius  H.  Seelye. — BS  23 
God  Save  our  Pre.sident. — Fs.  De  H.  Janvier. — CS  13 
God  Save  the  Flag.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— GMS 
God  Save  the  King.— H:  Carey.— BNL  (abr.)— FEP— 

GP— HBP 
God  Save  the  King!^— Theodosia  Garrison. — EDY 
Crod  Save  the  Nation. — Theodore  Tilton. — AA 
God  Save  the  State.— C:  T.  Brooks.— BLP—DFR 
God  Sees.— Marv  M.  Dodge.— TFS 

(Night  and  Day— C.)— POS 
God  Sees  me. — Anon. — DLF 
God  Sees  me. — Anon. — DLS 
God  the  Everlasting  Light  of  the  Saints  above.     (.In 

Doddridge's  Character.) — Philip  Doddridge. — 

HBP 
CYe  Golden  Lamps  of  Heaven,  Farewell — C.) — FEP 
God  the  Father.— H:  W.  Beecher.— OS  1 
God  the  True  Source  of  Consolation.     (Oh  Thou  who 

Dry'st  the  Mourner's  Tear — C.) — T:  Ml)ore. — 

HNS 
(Resignation.) — KNE 
God  Watcheth.     (My    Child    woke   Crying   from    her 

Sleep— C.)—G :  Macdonald.— HDL 
God  Wills  it  so.— A  Plea.— Anon. — SR  3 
God  with  Us.— Anon.  -YBT 
Goddess  of  Liberty,     The.     (Tab.) — Tony     Denier. — 

TDT 
Goddess  of  Slang,  The.— Anon.— DDR— SCS 
Godiva.     (SI.  abr.)— Alfred  Tennyson.- BNL— CS  13 
Godliness  with  Contentment.     (I.  Timothy  VI.,  6-13.) 

(Bible.)— LLC 
Godly,  The.     (Fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.)— S:  But- 
ler.—HPE 
God's  Acre.— C:  K.  Field.— CG  2 
God's  Acre.— H:  W.  Longffellow.— BNL— BS  19— CSll 

—LLC 
God's  Anvil. — Julius  Sturm  (tr.  by  G:  W.  Doane). — 

BS  14— CS  1 1 
(I  Hold  Still.)— GP—MMR 
God's  Beverage. — Jas.  S.  Watkins. — CS  17 
God's  Clock  Strikes.- G:  F.  Pentecost.— WR  18 
God's  Country.— O.  C.  Auringer.— CS  27 
God's  Father-care. — (Hey,  tr.  by)  C.  M.  Harris. — NV 

—  YBT 
God's  First  Temples.— W:  C.  Bryant,— FTR 
(SI.  obr.)— HNS  farr.  )—SPE 
(Forest   Hymn,  A.)— AA— AD   (si.   «6r.)— BNI,— 

CS  8— FP  (br.  8d.)—nSS  1— LLC  (abr.)—WR  5 
(Groves,  The— 6r.  sel.)— TFS 
("My  heart  is  awed  within  me  when  I  stand" — br. 

sel.)— GG 
God's  Garden.— R:  Burton.— TAV 
God's  Hand.     Horatius  Bonar.     <See  Master's  Touch, 

The. 
God's  Hou.se.— Frd'k  G.  Scott.— YBT 
Gods  in  Council,  The.    (Dial. — arr.  by)  Emily  Radcliff. 

—CDs 
God's   Judgment    on  a  Wicked  Bishop.     (C.) — Rob't 

Southey.— BNL— FEP  (abr.) 
(Bishop  Hatto.)— BVC— CGd 
God's  Love.— Gerald  Griffin.— AD — YBT 

("There's  not  a  flower   that  decks  the  vale.") — 

HSS3 


God's  Love. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Incident  in  a  Rail- 
road Car,  An. 
God's  Love  to  Man. — H:  W.  Beecher.— BS  12 
God's  Mark  on  all  Things.— Amelia  Opie.— TFS  (abr.) 

(Hymn.)— YBT 
God's  Miracle  of  May. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — YBT 
,  God's  Music— F:  E.  Weatherly.— CS  31 
God's  Ownership  of  the  Sea. — Leonard  Swain. — FD  1 
God's  Ragamuffin  Army.- G.  L.  Taylor.— WR  19 
God's  Rest. — Anon. — SSS 
God's  Support  and  Guidance. — Anon. — KNE 
God's  Time. — Jean  Ingelow.-     See  Scholar  and  Carpen- 

God's  Will.'— Rob't  L.  Munger.— AA 
God's  Wisdom  and  Power. — Anon. — .\D 
God's  Wonders.— Eliza  L.  Marlyn.— CS  33 
God's  Work.— Percy  Brooke.- YBT 
God's  Work.— EUa  W.  Wilcox.— TS 
"Goe,  Little  Booke!" — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — LLC 
Goin'  Home  To-dav.— Will  Carleton.— CS  10 
Goin'  Somewhere.— C:  B.  Lewis.— CS  13— DCR 

(Rural  Infelicity.)— BS  22 
Goin'  to  der  Races. — Honnas. — DRR 
Going  after  the  Cows. — Anon. — PR 
Going  a-Maying. — Rob't  Herrick. — GN — LH 

(Corinna's  Going  a-Maying— C.)—EP— EPs— FEP 

— OB— WEP  2 
(Corinna's  Maying.  )—OEL—PGT  1 
(May-day.)— GEL 
Going  and  Coming. — E:  A.  Jenks.-^BNL 
Going  a-Nutting. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — GN 

(Autumn  Song— C.)— NV 
Going  Away.— T:  Frost.— WR  2 
Going  Down  Hill  on  a  Bicycle. — H:  C:  Beeching. — OB 

(Bicycling  Song.) — GN 
Going  Down  to  Mary's. — Anon. — WR  4 
Going  for  the  Cows. — Eugene  Hall. — BS  14 
Going!  Going!  Gone!— G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Going  Home.— B:  F.  Taylor.— TAV 
Going  Home.— C:  Tennyson-Turner.— PGT  2 
Going  Home. — Nathaniel   P.    Willis.     See    Lines    on 

Leaving  Europe. 
Going  Home  in  the  Morning. — Wayne  Douglas. — HP 

— WR  2  (si.  ahr.) 
Going   into   Breeches. — Mary   Lamb. —  BVC —  LPC — 

PoR 
Going  on  an  Errand. — Anon.— CS  30 — PR — YA 
Going  Out  and  Coming  in. — MoUie  E.  Moore. — CS  3 
Going  Softly.— Anon. — HP 
Going  to  a  New  Home. — H.  E.  McBride. — HD 
Going  to  Aunt  Ruth's  to  Tea. — Anon. — TFS  * 
Going  to  be  an  Orator. — Kate  E.  Forbes. — SD 
Going  to  Church. — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel  \d 

the  House,  The. 
Going  to  School.     (Prose.) — Anon. — CS  22 
Going  to  School.     (Concert  rec.) — Anon. — LPS — PP 
(jloing  to  see  the  Actors. — Anon. — MC 
Going  to  the  Comer. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Going  to  the    Dentist's.     (Dial.) — Mrs.    S.    L.    Over- 

holtzer. — CDs 
Going  to  the  Train.     (Tab.) — E.  C.  and  Iv.  J.  Rook.- 

YFE 
Going  to  the  Wars.     (Song:    To  Lucasta,  going  to  the 

Warres— O— R:  Lovelace.  —  ELP  —  ES  — 

LH— WEP  2 
(To  Lucasta.)— FT  A— OH 
(To  Lucasta  Going  to  the  Wars.)- OB 
(To  Lucasta,  on  Going  to  the  Wars.)— BFV— BNL 

—  BPB  —  CEL  —EPs— FEP— HBP—  OEL  — 

OS  3— PGT  1- PHS— PYO— YBF 
Going  to  Washington. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Gold.— Anon.— KNS 
Gold.  —  Anacreon    (tr.    by    Abraham    Cowley).      See 

Change,  The. 
Gold.     (Epilogue  to  Overheard  in  a  Garden.) — Oliver 

Herford.- THP 
Gold. — T:  Hood.     <See  Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her  Pre- 
cious Leg. 
Gold  and  Love  for  Dearie.— Eugene  Field. — EF — WTD 
Gold  Locks  and  Silver  Locks.— Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Gold  Louis,  The.— Anon.— NP 
Gold  of  Hope,  The.— H:  Burton.— SSS 
Gold  Spinner,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton.— WLO 
Gold-bug,  The.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— WGS 
Golden  Age,  The.— Ernest  F.  Fenollosa.— AA 
Golden  Age,  The.— Jos.  Hall.— WEP  1 
Golden  Arm,  The.     (C.)— S:  L.  Clemens. 
(Ghost  Story.  A. — diff.  vers.) — WR  5 
Golden  Bridge,  The.— G:  T.  Lanigan.— BS  115 
Golden  City,  The,  Sel.  /r.— C:(7)  Mackay.— SPE 
Golden  City,  The.— Frd'k  Tennyson.— WR  1 
Golden  Crown  Sparrow  of  Alaska. — J:  Burroughs. — SN 
Golden  Fish,  The.— G:  Arnold.— BNL— TFY 


130 


TITLE  INDEX 


Good 


Golden  Flower,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— PEO 
Golden  Girl,    A.     (Lucy— C.) — Bryan    W.    Procter.— 

BNL 
Golden  Glove,  The.— Anon.— PEE  2 
Golden  Grains.     (.Br.  seh.  fr.  various  orations.) — J  as. 

A.  Garfield.- CS  20 
Golden  Haire. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     jSee  Astrophel  and 

Stella. 
Golden  Key,  The.— Anon.— DST 
Golden  Keys.— Anon.— TT— YET 
Golden  Legend,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Chris- 

tus:  A  Mystery. 
Golden  MU<»-8tone,  The.     (SeZ.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— 

OH 
Golden  Orioles,  The.— J.  H.  Hartzell.- POS 
Golden  Pippins.     (Dial.) — Anon,  (ad.) — MPD 
Golden  Rain. — Anon. — BS  18 
Golden  Robin's  Nest.  The.     (C.)— J:  W.  Chadwick.— 

AA 
(Yellow-hammer's  Nest,  The.)— HP 
Golden  Rod. — Anon. — AD 
Golden  Rod.  The.— Eve  J.  Beede.— AD 
Golden  Rod,  The. — Hopestill  Goodwin. — AD 
Golden  Rod,  The.     (Vick's  Magazine.) — AD 
Golden  Rod.     See  also  Golden-rod. 
Golden  Rowan. — Bliss  Carman. — VA 
Golden  Rule,  The.— Anon.— DLF— OS    1    (br.    sel.)— 

PS  (sel.) 
Golden  Rule,  The.— Anon.— PTS 
Golden  Rule,  The.     (Dial.)— "Boh  O'Link."— DLD 
Golden  Rule,  The.     (Dial.) — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

—KG 
Golden  Rule.     (New  England  Primer.) — OS  1 
Golden  Rules  lor  the  Young.     (Boy's  Own  Paper,  The.) 

— BVC 
Golden  Scei.ter,  The.— Mabel  S.  MerriU.— CS  34 
Golden  Shoes. — Anon. — CS  5 
Golden  Side,  The.— Anon.— BS  26— HP 
Golden  Silence,  The.— W:  Winter.— GP 
"Golden   Speech,   The."     (SeZ.)— Queen   Elizabeth.— 

OSS 
Golden  Sunset,  The.— S:  Longfellow.— T AS 
Golden  Street,  The.— W:  O.  Stoddaid.— CS  11 
Golden  Supper,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Lover's 

Tale,  The 
Golden  Text,  The.— G:  F.  Cameron.— TCV—VA 
Golden  Vanitee. — Anon. — PEE  2 
Golden  Wedding,  The.— David  Gray.— HBP 
Golden  Wedding,  The.— W.  E.  Minshall.- SR  12 
Golden  Whatsoevers.     (Philippians  IV.,  8.) — Bible. — 

LLC 
Golden  Year,  The,  sel.  fr.     ("Ah!  when  shall  all  men's 

good.")— Alfred  Tennyson.— HBP 
Goldenrod. — Anon. — NV 
Golden-rod. — Carrie  W.  Bronson. — DCP  (sel.) 

(Lady  Golden-rod.^— AD  (sel.)— TF9 
Goldenrod. — Elaine  (Goodale)  Eastmaji. — AD  (sel.) — 

BNL 
Golden-rod.— W:  E.  Hunt.— TCV 
Golden-rod.     (Abr.) — Lucy  Larcom. — PEO 
Goldenrod.— Mrs.  F.  J.  Lovejoy.— COS— NV— PP 
Golden-rod. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Golden-rod.     See  also  Golden  Rod. 
Golden-tressdd  Adelaide. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — FEP — 

PHS— VA— VSG 
Goldfinches. — J:  Keats.     See  I  Stood  Tiptoe  upon  a 

Little  Hill. 
Goldilocks. — Jean  Ingelow.     See  Brothers  and  a  Ser- 
mon. I 
Gold-of-Ophir  Roses. — Grace  A.  Dennen. — AA 
Gold-seekers,  The. — Hamlin  Garland. — AA 
Goldsmith's    Daughter,    The. — Johann  •  Ij.    Uhland. — 

HSS2 
(Diff.  <r.)— WR  9 
Goldyn  Targe,  The,  Sel.  fr.—W:  Dunbar.— WEP  1 
Golf  Fiend,  The.— R.  F.  B.— TL 
Go-Morrow;  or.  Lot's  Wife. — Anon. — BeR — DCR 
Gondibert,  Sels.  fr. — Sir  W:  Davenant. 

Gondibert,  Bk.  I.,  Can.  VI.,  Sel.fr.— WEP  2 
Praise  and  Prayer.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  VI.)— OB 
Gondolieds. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — ASIj 
Gondoline.     (Abr.)—B.:  Kirke  White.— WR  19 
Gone. — Anon. — HP 
Gone.— W:  D.  Howells.— BIL 

Gone. — Jean  Ingelow.     See  Star's  Monument,  The. 
Gone.— C:  Mackay.— BIL— TFY 
Gone.     (Abr.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— LLC 
Gone  Before.— B:  F.  Taylor.— CS  12— HNS  (abr.) 
Gone  Forward. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — EDY 
Gone  in  the  Wind.— J.  C.  Mangan.— TIP 
Gone  out  Forever. — Anon. — KNE 
Gone  with  a  Handsomer  Man. — Will  Carleton. — CSf  11 

— FTR— PS 


Gonello.— Anon.— WR  9 
Good,  The.— J:  B.  O'ReiUy.— BS  18— CS  30 
(What  is  Good?— O— DLF 
(What  is  the  Real  Good?)— YET 
Good  Advice.     (Motion  song.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Good  Advice  to  Talkers. — Anon. — DLS 
Good  Ale.— J:  Still.— BNL— HBP 

f  Jolly  Good  Ale  and  Old.)— FEP— GP— OB 
Good  All  Day.— Anon.— YBT 
Good  and  Bad  Children. — Roh't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 

— TFS 
Good  and  Bad  Spelling.     (Fr.  a  letter.) — Benj.  Frank- 
lin.—WR  5 
Good  and  Better. — Anon. — CS  16 — FP 
Good  and  not  Stupid. — Anon. — PTS 
Good  Bet,  A.— Anon.— CDV 
Good  Boy.  A. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Good  By.      See  Good-by. 
Good  Bye.     See  Good-bye. 

Good  Cheer.     (Sel.  fr.  Life.)— Charlotte  Bronte.— OS  1 
Good  Cigar,  A.— Norris  Bull.— PPh 
Good  Company.     (Harper's    Young    People.) — COS — 

PP 
Good  Conscience,  A. — Sir  E:  Dyer. — FTR  (air.) 

(My  Mind  [or  Minde]  to  me  a  Kingdom  is.) — BNL 
—FEP 
(Abr.;- ELP— SM— WEP  1 

(AUrib.  to  W:  Byrd.)- ES  7— EPs— HBP— LLC 
(Peace  of  Mind.)— PHS 

(Old  style  spelling  in  BNL— FEP— HBP.) 
Good  Counsail.— Geoffrey  Chaucer. — FP 

(Good  Counsail  of  Chaucer— C.)— FEP— WEP  1 
(To  Life's  Pilgrim— a6r.  )—CEL 
Good  Counseil  of  Chaucer.     Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See 

foregoing. 
Good  Counsel.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors^ — BNL 
Good  Countrv,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — DFR — LL 
Good  Dav.— Anon  — CP 
Good  Deeds.— Sir  Edwin  Arnold. — WR  9 
Good  Deeds.- 1 :  Chalmers.— PP—YFR 
Good  Deeds  Past. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Troilus  and 

Cressida. 
"Good  Enough  fer  me." — Anon. — WR  16 
Good  Fight,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Cause  of  Bunker  Hill,  Tne.) 

— G:W:  Curtis.— NC 
Good  for  Evil.     (Dia/.)— Anon.— DJS 
Good  for  Evil.     (Prose.)- Anon.— WR  17 
Good  for  Evil.     (Dial.)— Ca.pt.  Howard.— SD 
Good  Friday. — Girolamo  Savonarola. — OR  3 
Good  Great   Man,   The.— S:  T.   Coleridge.— ELP  (si. 
abr. )— BNL— FEP— HBP— LLC— YBF 
(Character.)— EPs 
Good,  Great  Name.  A.— Frances  E.  Willard.— WR  18 
Good  Hean.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Eoistle  to  Davie.) — Roh't 

Bums.- EPs 
Good  in  All. — <:!lara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Good  Joke  on  Maria,  A. — Anon. — CS  31 
Good  Library  Gone  up  in  Smoke.  A. — E.  H.  Trafton. — 

MD 
Good  Life,  A.— Hora+ius  Bonar.— HSS  2 

("He    liveth    long  who   liveth   well" — C.) — GCa — 

KNE 
(How  to  Live.)— GP— SSS 
Good  Life,  Long  lAin. — Ben  Jonson.     See  To  the  Im- 
mortal Memory  and  Friendship  of  that  Noble 
Pair,  Sir  Lucius  Gary  and   Sir  Henry  Morri- 
son. 
Good  Little  Bov  and  the   Bad   Little   Bey,  The.— G: 

Kvle.— WR  3 
Good  Little  Sister,  The.— Phrpbe  Gary  —ELF 
Good  Luck  and  Bad  Luck.     (After  Heine.) — J:  Hay. — 

TFS 
"Good   man   suffers  but   to   gain.  A." — Oliver  Gold- 
smith.    See  Captivity,  The. 
Good  Manners.     (Dial.) — Anon. — PTS 
Good  Manners. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — HSS  2 

(Whole  Duty  of  ChUdren— C.)— BVC- CGV— DLS 
Good  Maxims. — Anon. — StD 
Good  Measure. — Anon. — WR  12 — WR  25 
Good  Memory  Work. — Anon. — LLC 
Good  Morning. — Anon.— ^ET 
Good  Morning. — Mrs.  H.  E.  Bingham. — CPL 
Good  Morning.  —  Rob't  Browning.     See  Pippa  Passes. 
Good  Morning,  Merry  Sunshine. — Anon. — DST — NV 

(Merry  Sunshine.) — NV 
Good  Morrow.     See  Good-morrow. 
Good  Name,  A. — Anon. — TT 
Good  Name.  A.— Joel  Hawes.— ELP— PEO 
Good  Name. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Othello,  the  Moor 

of  Venice. 
"Good  name  in  man  and  woman,  dear  my  lord." — W: 
Shakespeare.     See  Othello. 


131 


Good 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Good  Name  more  Desirable  than  Riches,  A. — Louis  B. 

Coley.— WR  24 
Good  Nature  and  Recklessness.     (Fraga.  fr.  various 

arUhors.) — BNL 
Good  News. — Rob't  Browning.     iSee  Ho^they  Brought 

the  Good  News  from  Ghent  to  Aix. 
Good  News  from  Ghent. — Rob't  Browning.     See  How 

they  Brought  the  Good  News  from  Ghent  to 

Good  Night'.— Anon.— FEP 

Good  Night.— Anon  — FTA— TAV 

Good  Night.— Anon.— TFS 

Good  Night. — Hester  A.  Benedict. — HP 

Good  Night. — Sydney  Davre. — NV 

Good  Night.— M.  E.  H.  Everette.— CG  1 

Good  Night.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  GoodfeUow.— PS— TT 

Good  Night.— G:  Hill.— POS 

Good  Night.     (Domestic  Poems,  II.:    "The  sun  was 

slumbering."— T:  Hood— HPE 
Good  Night. — Victor  Hugo. — OS  1 
Good  Night. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
"Good  Night."— Reginald  W.  Kaylor.— WR  26 
Good  Night. — Theodore  Korner  {Ir.  by  C:  T.  Brooks). 

BNL 
(Diif.  tr.~abr.)—FOS 
Good  Night. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Good  Night.— Rob't  Sands.— FEP 
Good   Night.     (Fr.  North-west  Passage.)  —  Rob't  L. 

Stevenson.— CGV—DLS 
Good  Night  and  Good  Morning. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord 

Houghton.  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  HSS  2  —  LC  — 

LPS  —  OS  1  —  NV  —  PoR  —  PP  —  PPSr  — 

PTS— TFS— WCL— YBT 
"Good    Night,    Babettel" — Austin    Dobson. — AVP — 

VA 
(Angelus  Song — sel.) — GP 
Good  Night,  Good-by. — Dora  Greenwell. — PC 
Good  Night,  Good  Morning. — C:,  Lord  Bowen. — AVP 
Good  Night    in    the    Porch.     (Br.  ael.) — Rob't,   Lord 

Lytton.— AVP 
Good  Night,  Little  Star.— Anon.— TFS 
"Good  Night,  Papa."     (American  Messenger.) — BS  3 

— CS  10— NPS— PS— YP 
Good  of  it,  The.— Dinah  M.  Craik.— SAE 
Good  Old  Man,  The. —  Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Stage 

Land. 
Good  Old  Souls.— Earl  of  Southesk.— VSG 
Good  Old  Way,  The.— Anon.— CS  22 
Good,  Old-fashioned  People,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — 

BJC 
Good  Omens. — W:  Shakespeare. — EPs 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 

(Sonnet  CVIL— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
Good  Play,  A.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV 
Good  Queen  Bess. — Flora  N.  Montgomery. — TFS 
Good  Reading  [the  Greatest  Accomplishment]. — J:  S. 

Hart.— BS  5— CS  12 
Good  Rule,  A  (Three  GatesJ.— Anon.— CS  37 
Good  Rule,  A.— Anon.— WR  17 
Good  Rule,  A.— Alice  Gary.— BLF 
Good  Ship  Castle  Down.  The. — W:  B.  McBirney.— TIP 
Good  Sister,  The. — Christina  G.  Rossetti      See  Goblin 

Good  Son,  The.'— R:  H.  Dana.— FTR— SAE  (abr.) 
Good  Strong  Heart,  A. — E.  H.  Chapin. — LLC 

(Strong  Heart,  The.)— HSS  3 
"  Good  that  never  satisfies  the  mind,  A."      (Flowers 
of  Sion,  II.)— W:  Drummond— FEP 

(Human  Frailty.) — LLC 

(Illusions.)— CEL 

(Sonnet.)— HBP 
Good  Tidings.— Anon.— BVC 

Good  Tidings.     (St.  Luke  II.,  8-15.)— Bible.— OS  1 
Good  Time  Coming,  The — C:  Mackay.— FEP    (abr.)— 
HBP 

(SI.  a6r.  )—PEO—SM 
Good  Time  Going,  A.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— HBP 
Good  Way  to  Play  a  Joke,  A. — Anon.— YFD 
Good  Wife,  The.— Anon.— MHR 
Good  Writing.     (Fr.      Miscellaneous     Thoughts.) — S: 

Butler.— HPE 
Good-by. — Anon. — BNL 
Good-by.— Anon.— FLS 
Good-bv,  A.— Ednah  P.  (C.)  Hayes.— AA 
"Good-by."— Grace  D.  Litchfield.— HP 
Good-by. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Good-by,  Sweet  Day.— Celia  Thaxter.— POS 
Good-by,  Sweetheart. — Marv  Clemmer. — BIL 
Good-by,  Winter!— C.  S.  Stone.— AD 
"Good-bye."     (Prose.) — Anon. — BS  12 
Good-bye. — Anon. — DLS 

(Closing  Speech.)— DLF 
Good-bye. — Anon. — FLS 


Good-bye,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — Lly 
Good-bye.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.- FEP— HBP 

(Good  By.)— BNL 
Good-bye.     (Sailor's   Farewell,  The  —  C.)  —  Ruthven 

Jenkyns. — TFY  (at.  to  Moore.) 
(Sweetheart,  Good-by  !)—FI,S 

("Sweetheart,  Good-bye!  that  flut 'ring sail.") — GG 
(Though   lyost   to   Sight,   to   Memory  [or  Mem'ry] 

Dear.  —  CS  13  —  FTA  —  HP  —  PYO   (at.   to 

Moore.) 
Good-bye.     (Concert  rec.)—E.  O.  Peck.— LPS— PP 
Good-bye,  Old  Church.— Millie  C.  Pomeroy.— CS  28 
Good-bye,  Old  House.— Millie  C.  Pomeroy.— CS  23 
Good-bye,  Sweet  Day. — Susan  Coolidge. — YBT 
Good-bye  to  Dolly. — Anon. — WR  17 
Good-children  Street. — Eugene  Field. — EF— LS 
Goodest  Mother,  The. — Anon. — HP 
Good-morning.     See  Good  Morning. 
Good-morrow    [Song], — T:  Heywood.     See    Rape    of 

Lucrece,  The. 
Goodness. — Marcus  Aurelius  Antoninus.  See  Thoughts 

of  Marcus  Aurelius. 
Goodness  and   Greatness.     (Br.  sets.  fr.  Essay  XVII.: 

Of  Goodness,  and  Goodness  of  Nature,  and  fr. 

Essay  XL:  Of  Great  Place — ad.) — Fs.  Bacon. 

— BLP 
Goodness  and  Greatness  of  God. — C:  Spurgeon. — BS  3 
Goodness  of  God. — Anon. — KNE 
Good-night.     See  Good  Night. 
Goody    Blake   and    Harry   Gill. — W:   Wordsworth. — 

CGd— CS  24— LLC— SE  (sel.) 
Goody  Grim  versus  Lapstone.     (Scene.) — Matthews. — 

BC 
Googly-Goo. — Eugene  Field. — LS 

Goose  Hollow  Farmers'  Club.— H.  E.  McBride.— MCD 
Goose  with  the  Golden  Eggs,  The. — ^Esop. — OS  1 
Goosey    Lucy's    New    Year's    Calls.     (Youth's    Com- 
panion. ) — CPL 
Gordon. — Ernest  Myers. — VA 
Gordon.— Bertram  Tennyson.— ED Y—TCV 
Gordon's  Reprieve.     (Ad.) — Anon. — NP 
Gory  Gambols.     (Lehigh  Burr.) — CG  2 
Gosling's  Wife  Snores. — Fritz  Gosling. — BDD 
Gospel  of  Mystery,  The.— Saxe  Holm.— TAS 
Gospel  of  Peace,  The.— Jas.  J.  Roche.— EDY 
Gossip. — Anon. — KNE 
Gossip. — May  Cooper. — PR — YA 
Gossip  of  the  Nuts,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Gossips,  The.     (DioZ.)- Anon.— WR  17 
Gossips,    The.  —  Ella    W.  Wilcox.  —  PP  —  PS  — 

WR  17  (arr.  as  dial..)— YPS 
Gotham.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— C:  Churchill.— WEP  3 
Gottingen  Barber,  The.— J.  E.  Carpenter.— CS  24 
Gougane  Barra. — Sir  Aubrey  De  Vera. — TIP 
Gougaune     Barra. — Jeremiah    J.     Callanan. — BNL — 

CS  10— TIP 
Gourd  and  the  Palm,  The.  —  (Tr.  by)  C:  Mackay.  — 

AD— OS  1 
Gouty    Merchant    and    the    Stranger,    The. — Horace 

Smith.— BNL— CS  2— SS— THP 
Government    by   Epigrams.       (»SieZ.  fr.  Sur  I'Eau.) — 

Guy  de  Maupassant. — OS  2 
Government  of  the  People,  The. — G:  Bancroft. — SR  8 
Government  should  Grow  with  the  People.  A.     (Sel. 

fr.  Parliamentary  Reform.) — T:  B.  Macaulay. 

— SS 
Government  Spy,  The. — W^:  W.  Story.     jSee  Giannone. 
Government  Vigor. — Sydney  Smith.    See  False  Notions 

of  Government  Vigor. 
Governor  and  the  Notary,  The. — Washington  Ir\'ing. 

See  Alhambra,  The. 
Governor  Manco  and  the  Soldier. — Washington  Irving. 

See  Alhambra,  The. 
Governor's   Last     Levee,  The. — Sara    B.   Kennedy. — 

NP 
Gowansunder  her  Feet. — Frances  W.  Gibson. — CS  24 
Gowk's  Errant  [and  what  Cam'  o't],  A.  —  J:  Ferguson. 

— BS  22— CR— CS  34 
Gowns  of  Gossamer. — Lucy  Larcom. — liCS 
Grace  and  Dolly.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Grace  and  her  Friends. — Lucy  Larcom. — WCL 

(Grace's  Friends.)— LCS 
Grace  and  the  World.     (Sel.fr.  Hope.) — W:  Cowper. — 

WEP  3 
Grace  Darling. — Anon. — CS  25 
Grace  for  a  Child,  [A].     (Another  Grace  for  a  Child — 

O— Rob't  Herrick.  —  BVC  —  ELP  —  OH  — 

WEP  2— YBF 
(Child's  Grace,  A.)— OB 
Grace  of  Beauty,  The. — Anon. — ELP 
Grace  of  Fidelity,  The.— Dr.  Nlccolls.— BS  12 
Grfece  Vernon  Bussell. — H.  S.  Drayton. — CS  27 
Grace's  Choice. — C:  B  Loomis. — TL 


132 


TITLE  INDEX 


Grave 


Grace's  Friends. — Lucy  Larcom.     See  Grace  and   her 

Friends. 
Gracie  of  Alabama. — Fs.  O.  Ticknor. — BAB 
Gracie's  Cake.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Grade's  Kitty. — Anon. — BS  14 
Gracious  Answer,  The. — H:  N.  Cobb. — SA 

Father,  take  my  Hand.     iSel.)—CS  10— SSS  (abr.) 
Gracious  Answer,  The.     (,Sel.)—CS  10 
(Promise,  The.)— BS  3 
Gracious  Time,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Gra.latim.     (C.)— Josiah  G.  Holland.— BS  6— CS  6— 

GMS— GP— SO  (si.  abr.) 
(Gradation — si.  a6r.)— KNE 
(Only  in  Dreams — si.  abr.) — PEO 
(Way  to  Heaven,  The.)— LLC— OS  2— SM 
Gradation. — Josiah  G.  Holland.     See  foregoing. 
Gradgriiid's  Idea  of  Education.     (Sel.  fr.  Hard  Times, 

Chs.  T.  and  II.)— C:  Dickens.— HSS  2 
Graduating  Essay,  A.— H.  G.  Dodge.— WR  15 
Graduation. — Phillips  Brooks. — TMR 
Graeme  and  Bewick.     (Fr.  Scott's  Border  Mipstrelsy.) 

— Anon.— EPs— FEB  2 
Grain  of  Com,  A. — Anon. — AD 
Grain  of  Truth,  A.— G:  M.  Vickera.— CS  28 
Grammar  fOT  the  Court  of  Berlin.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Grammar  ii»"Rhyme. — Anon. — PPSr — PS 

(Nine  Parts  of  Speech,  The.)— TFS 
Grammar  Lesson,  A. — Helen  W.  Grove. — CS  33 
Grammarian's  Funeral,  A. — Rob't  Browning. — AVP 

—MRS 
Grampy  Sings  a  Song. — Holman  F.  Day. — THP 
Grand  Advance,  The. — Frank  H.  Gassaway. — BS  25 — 

TMD 
("Advance")— WR  25 
Grand  Old  Day,  The.     (Earlier  vers,  of  The  Thursday 

Sabbath  Day,  w  City  Festivals.) — Will  Carle- 
ton.— BS  18 
Grand  Ronde  Valley,  The. — Ella  Higginson. — AA 
Grand  Scheme  of  Emigration. — Anon. — PP — YFR 
Grandame,  The.— C:  Lamb.— WEP  4 
Granddad's  Polka.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  29 
Grandeur  of  the  Ocean. — Walter  Colton. — CS  23 
Grandfather  Stiueers.- Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Grandfather  Watts'  Private   Fourth. — H:  C.  Bunner. 

— BVC— DR 
Grandfather's  Bam.— Anon.— PP— PS— YPS 

(In  the  Bam.)— WR  14 
Grandfather's  Barn. — Eben  E.  Rexford. — FS 
Grandfather's  Chair,  Seta.  fr. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. 
Affray  in  King  Street,  Boston,  1770,  The.     (Baaed 

on  The  Boston  Massacre.) — MYF 
Pine  Tree  Shillings,  The.     (Ch.  VI.)— WCLI  1 
Sunken  Treasure,  The.     (Ch.  X.,andsel.  fr.  Ch.XI.) 

—WCLI  1 
Grandfather's  Clock.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  33 
Grandfather's  House. — Mary  McGuire. — CS  24 
Grandfather's  Pants.— G:  Thatcher. — TK 
Grandfather's  Reverie. — Theodore  Parker. — SR  2 
Grandfather's  Rose. — Mary  A.  Denison. — CD 
Grandfather's  Story. — Mary  H.  Field.— CS  36 
Grandfather's  "Summer  Sweets."- Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Grandma. — Anon. — DST 
Grandma  Doll,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Grandma  Keeler  Gets  Grandpa  Keeler  Ready  for  Sun- 
day School.     (Sel.  fr.  Cape  Cod  Folks,  Ch.  V.) 

— Sarah  P.  McI-.  Greene. — NP 
Grandma  Robbins'  Temperance    Mission. — Emma   D. 

Banks.— BR 
Grandma  that's  Just  Splendid,  A. — Emma  A.  Opper. 

— WR  17 
Grandma's  Advice  to  the  Girls. — Anon. — SD 
Grandma's  Angel.— Sidney  Dayre. — LPS— PP— WR  5 
Grandma's  Garden. — Anon. — WR  4 
Grandma's  Mistake. — Anon. — PS — TT 
Grandma's  Pocket. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Grandma's  Prayer. — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
Grandma's  Schooldays.     (Tab.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Grandma's  Shamrocks. — E.  A.  Sutton. — CS  27 
Grandma's  Spectacles. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow. — 

TT 
Grandma's  Story  and  Mine. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow. 

— TT 
Grandma's  Surprise. — Anon. — CS  35 
Grandma's  Talk. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Grandma's  Tea.— lazzie  J.  Rook. — TT 
Grandma's  Wedding  Dav.     T.  C.  Harbaugh. — CS  33 — 

NPS— WR  7— YP 
Grandmamma's   Fan. — Edith  S.   Tupper. — WR   15 — 

WR  26 
Grandmother,  The. — Victor  Hugo. — FP 
Grandmother  Gray. — Mary     K.     Boutelle. — CS     16 — 

MYF 


Grandmother  to  her  Grandson. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Grandmothers. — Anon. — LI/C 

(Johnny's  Opinion  of  Grandmothers.) — BS  2 — SD 

— WR  17  (sel.) 
Grandmother's  Apology,  The.     (Abr.) — Alfred  Tenny- 

son.- BS  11  • 

Grandmother's  Beau. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Grandmother's  Bible. — Hattie  A.  Cooley. — CS  23 
Grandmother's  Hour  with  the  Hymns. — Mrs.  Mary  E. 

Lee.— WR  14 
Grandmother's  Sermon. — Ellen  A.  Jewett. — CS  22 

(Sermon  in  a  Stocking,  The.) — HP 
Grandmother's  Spectacles. — T.  De  W.  Talmago. — CS  13 
Grandmother's  Stitches.— A.  F.  Caldwell.— YBT 
Grandmother's  Story.     (The  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill.)— 

Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  belov:. 
Grandmother's  Story     of     Bunker     Hill. — Oliver    W. 

Holmes.     See  following. 
Grandmother's  Story  of  Bunker  Hill   Battle.     (C.) — 

Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AP— MAI,— PAP 
(Bunker  Hill.)— FMR  (aftr. )—SE  (br.  seta) 
(Grandmother's  Story  [of  Bunker  Hill].)— BS4  (si. 

abr.)—SE 
Grandmother's  Valentine. — Minna  Irv^ing. — EDY 
Grandpa  and  Baby.     (Boston  Transcript.) — CS  36 
Grandpa  and  Bess.— Emily  H.  Miller.— PEO 
Grandpa  and  Pet. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SI, 
Grandpapa.— Dinah  M.   Craik.— PC— WR   17   (sel.)— 

YBT 
Grandpapa's  Spectacles.— Anon.— CPL—DS—PP — 

YA— YFR 
Grandpa's  Courtship. — Helen  W.  Clarke. — CD 
Grandpa's  Spectacles. — Anon. — DI,F 
Grandpa's  Way. — Anon.-— DST 
Grandsire,  The.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Granger's  Wife,  The.— J.  W.  Donovan.— CS  10— NPS 

— YP 
Gran'ma  Al'aa  [or  Al'us]  Does. — A.  H.  Poe. — BS  8 — 

DST— FAS— HP 
Granny.- -J as.  W.  Riley.— WR  15 
"Granny,  Where  you  Gv/ine?'' — Anou. — DCR 
Granny's  Trust. — Anon. — SA 
Grant.— Melville  W.  Fuller.—  CS  29 
Grant.- Frank  W.  Gunsaulus.— SR  13 
Grant.     (Fr.  a  Speech  made  at  Galena,  111.,  Apr.  27, 

1893.)— W:  McKinley.— SC 
Grant  at  Appomatto.x. — Eugene  H.  I,evy. — TMR 
Grant  at  Reist.— Jas.  J.  Mcehan.— EDY 
Grant,  the  Soldier  and  Statesman.      (Fr.  an  Oration 

delivered  at  the  dedication  of  the  Grant  Monu- 
ment, New  York,  1897.)— W:  McKinley. —TMR 
Grant  us  thy  Peace. — J.  Ellerton. — LLC 
Grant's  Place  in  History. — Anon. — BS  15 
Grant's  Strategy. — Judge  Vea^ey. — BS  16 
Grape-vine  Swing,  The.— S:  M.  Peck.— HSS  .3— WR  15 
Grape-vine  Swing,  The  — W:  G.  Simms. — BNL 
Graphic  Story  of  the  IJght  Brigade,  A. — Anon. — SR  7 
Grasp  of  the  Dead,  The.— Letitia  E.  Landon.— HSS  1 
Grass,  The.— Erailv  Dickinson  —  GN  —  LC  —  NV  — 

PYO 
Grass.— Edgar  Fawcett.— AD— POS  (at.  abr.) 
Grass  and  Rose.-*. — Jati.  F.  Clarke. — HDL 
Grasshopper,  The.     (Independent.) — NV 
Grasshopper,  The.      (In  Anacreontiques.) — Anacroon 

(tr.  by  Abraham  Cowley).— BNL— CGd— HBP 

— LC— PHS 
(On  the  Grasshopper — tr.  by  W:  Cowper.) — HBP 
Grasshopper  rGraasehopper— C".],  The.     (To  my  Noble 

Friend,  Mr.  Charles  Cotton.    Ode.) — R:  Love- 
lace.—EPs— HBP 
(Sris.)— LC— OB— OEL— WEP  2  (lonoest.) 
Grasshopper,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. — POS 
Grasshopper,  The. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — SN 
Grasshopper  and  [the]  Cricket,  The. — Leigh  Hunt.  — 

— CEL— HBP— I,C— OS  2 
(To  the  Grasshopper  and  [thej  Cricket.) — BNL — 

FEP— GN— POS— WEP  4 
Grasshopper  and  Cricket,  [The]. — J:  Keats. — BNL — 

LLC 
(On  the  Grasshopper  and  Cricket- C.)— FEP — GN 

— HBP— LC— OS  2— WEP  4 
(Poetry  of  Earth,  The.)— WR  1 
Grateful.     (Charade.) — Anon. — FAD 
Grateful  Preacher,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.- CS  14— DLS 
Grateful  Swan,  The.     (Sel.)— Alice  Caiy.— BI,F 
"Grateful  to   Drink   Life's  Cup." — J.    Bowring.     See 

Our  Duty  Here. 
Gratefulness. — G:  Herbert. — EPs 
Graliana   Dancing.     (Sel.  fr.  Gratiana  Dauucing   and 

Singing.) — R:  Lovelace. — OB 
Gratitude  of  the  World.  The  — Anon.— KNS 
Grattan.— A.  T.  De  Vere.— EDY 
Grave,  The.     (Fraga.  fr.  varioua  authors.) — BNL 


133 


Grave 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Grave,  The,  Sola,  /r.— Rob't  Blair. 
Grave,  The.     (Br.  ,.e/.)— BNL 
Omnes  eodem  Coprimur. — WEP  3 
Pride.     (Br.  «ri.)— KNE 
Resurrection.  The.— WEP  3 
Sfelf-murder.— WEP  3 
Grave,  The.— H:  Davefiport.— PR 
Grave,  The. — Washington  Irving.     5e«  Rural  Funerals. 
Grave  bv  the  Sorrowful  .Sea,  The. — L.  M.  L.  Bayley. — 

.CS30 
Grave  in  Holl>'wood  Cemetery,  Richmond,  A. — Marg. 

J.  Preston. — AA 
Grave  in  Samoa.  A.— .T:  Macfarlane.— EDY— TCV 
Grave  of  Bonaparte,  The. — Lyman  Heath. — FEP 
Grave  of  Charles  Dickens,  The. — Anon. — CS  3 
Grave  of  Keats,  The.— Oscar  Wilde.— EDY 

CAt  the  Grave  of  Keats.)— GG 
Grave  of  Lincoln,  The.— Edna  D.  Procter. — SR  8 
Grave  of  Love,  The.— T:  L.  Peacock.— FEP— OB— 

WEP  4 
Grave  of  Mrs.  Judson,  The. — M.  Remick. — FP 
Grave  of  Shellev,  The.— Oscar  Wilde.— EDY 
Gravedigger,  T6e.— Bliss  Carman.— TCV 
Grave-digger's     Song. — Alfred     Austin.     See     Prince 

Lucifer. 
Graves  of  a  Household,  The. — Felicia  D.   Hemans. — 

CGd— CSS— FEP— FP— GP— PC— WCL 
Graves    of    the    Patriots,    The. — J.    G.    Percival. — 

BNL  (br.  ««/.)— CS  7 
Graves  of  Uiiion  Soldiers  at  Arlington,  The. — Jas.  A. 

Garfield!     See  Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves 

of  Union  Soldiers. 
Gravestone,  A. — W:  Allingham. — TIP 
Graveyard  Rabbit,  The. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — AA 
Graveyard  Scene.  The. — W:  Shakespeare.  S«e  Hamlet. 
Gray  Champion,  The.     (Set.  fr.  Twice  Told  Tales,  Ch. 

11.)— Nathaniel  Hawthorne.— BS  15 
Gray  Day,  The.— Rcb't  J.  Burdette.— SO 
Gray  Forest  Eagle,  The.— Alfred  B.  Street.— MMR— 

WR  10 
(SI.  diff.  rer...)— FMR 
Gray  Hair  in  Youth.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— TAV 
Gray   Honors  the  Blue,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Nation's 

Dead.)— H:  W.  Watterson.- BS  7 
Gray  Mare   is  the   Better   Horse,   The. — Mrs.  Russell 

Kavanaugh. — KER 
Gray  Swan.  The— Alice  Gary.— CS  7— GN— WCL 

(SI.  a6r.)— CSS— PPSr 
Great  Adventurer,  The. — Anon. — See  Truth's  Integrity.  • 
Great  American  Republic  a  Christian  State,  The.    (Fr. 

Our  Christian  Heritage,  ch.  on  The  Religious 

Element  in  our  American  Civilization.) — Jas., 

Cardinal  Gibbons.— BLP—PFP 
Great  and  Noble  Man,  A.— W:  1'.  Vilas.— FD  2 
Great  are  the  Myths. — Walt  Whitman.     See  Leaves  of 

Grass. 
Great  Art.     (Br.  sH.Jr.  Two  Paths  on  Art,  Lee.  I.) — 

J:  Ruskin.— SO 
Great  Beef-contract,  The.     fFacts  in  the  Case  of  the 

Great     Beef    Contract— C.) — Mark    Twain.— 

BS4  (al.  ahr.  )—MHR 
Great  Bell  of  Cologne,  The. — Anon. — FR 
Great  Bell  of  Pekin,  The.— Jessie  W.  O'DonnelL— 

WR  12 
Great  Bell  Roland,  The.— Theodore  Tilton.— CS    1— S 
Great  Blue  Heron,  The. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Great  Breath,  The.— G:  W.  Russell.— OB— VA 
Great  Britain  and  America. — Newmann  Hall. — OM 
Great  Britain  and  America. — Edwin  O.  Wolcott. — SC 
Great  Britain  and  her  American  \wr.  English]  Colonies. 

— G:   Bancroft.      See  History   of  the  United 

States. 
Great  Commandment,  The. — Bible.    See  Deuteronomy. 
Great  Consummation,  The. — Edwin  Arnold.    See  Light 

of  the  World,  The. 
Great  Distinction  of  a  Nation,  The. — W:  E.  Chauning. 

iSee  Spiritual  Freedom. 
"Great  end  of  education  is  not  information,  but  per- 
sonal vigor  and   character.  The."     (Philadel- 
phia Press.) — GG 
Great  Examples. — Lord  Byron.     See  Marino  Faliero. 
Great  Examples. — E:  Everett.     See  Eulogy  on  Adams 

and     Jefferson     (Imperishability     of     Great 

Examples). 
Great  Expectations.     (Tah.) — Anon. — TCP 
Great  Expectations,  Sel  fr.    (Pip's  Fight — sel.  fr.  Ch. 

II.)— C:  Dickens.— CS  13 
Great  Fit,  A.— Rob't  H.  Newell.— NPS—YP 
Great  Ideaf<.     (Sel.  fr.  On  the  Elevation  of  the  Labour- 
ing Classes.) — W:  E.  Channing. — SS 
"Great    indeed    is    the    task    assigned    to    woman." 

(Blackwood's. ) — GG 
Great  Issue,  The.— E:  Everett.— BS  14 


Great    Journey,    The. — Eklwin    Arnold.       See   Maha- 

Bharata,  The. 
Great  Lives  Imperishable — E:    Everett.     See   Eulogy 

on  Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Great  Man,  A.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Great  Man,  A.     (On  the  Death  of  the  Right  Hon. 

—O— Oliver  Goldsmith  — NA 
Great  Man,  A.— J:  D.  Long.— FD  2 
"Great  man  down,  you  mark  his  favorite  flies.  The." 

— W:  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
"Great  man  is  always  willing  to  be  little.  A." — Ralph 

W.  Emerson.     See  Compensation. 
Great  Minds   in  their  Relations  to  Christianity. — T; 

Erskine.— SS— SSD 
Great  Misgiving,  The  — W:  Watson.- OB 
Great  Musical  Critic,   The. — Anon. — (Tr.  by  J:  O.  (T) 

Sargent.— SS 
(Critic,  The.)— BC 
Great  National  Scourge,  The. — Anon. — PEO 

(Great  Scourge,  The.)— TS 
"Great  Nature  is  an  Army  Gay." — R:  W.  Gilder. — SN 
Great  Naval  Battle  of  Manila,  The.— Anon.— PRR 
Great  Peril  of  Unrestricted  Immigration,  The. — H:  C. 

Lodge.— NC 
Great  Question  Settled,  The.     (SeXs,  fr.  The  Society  of 

the  Army  of  the  Potomac.) — G;  W;  Curtis. — 

BLP 
Great  Remembrance,  The.     (Abr.) — R:  W.  Gilder. — 

TMR 
Great  Renunciation,  The. — Edwin  Arnold.    See  Light 

of  .Asia,  The. 
Great  Scourge,     The. — Anon.     See     Great     National 

Scourge,  The. 
Great  Stone  Face,  The. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — APr 

— MAL— WGS 
Great  Treasure,  A. — -CXaxa,  J.  Denton. — LL 
Great  Voices,  The.— C:  T.  Brooks.— T AS 
Great  White  Owl,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Great,  Wide,  Beautiful,  Wonderful  World.     (C.)— W: 

B.  Rands 
(Child's  World,    The  —  i/t.   at.   to   M.   Browne.)— 

POS  (8/.  diff.  ver*.)- SM— WCL— YBT 
(Wonderful  World,  The.)— GMS— PoR 
(Worid,  The.)— OS  1 
Greater  Memory. — Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. — PGT  2 
Greatest  Curse  to  Labor,  The. — T.  V.  Powderly. — FD  2 

(Curse  to  Labor,  The.)— BS  16 
Greatest  Fruit  of   the  Declaration. — C:    F.  Adams. — 

FD2 
Greatest  Party,  The.— Frances  E.  Willard.— WR  18 
Great-grandmama  and  I. — Kate  L.  Watson. — BS  20 
Great-grandmother's  Garden. — M.  F.  Jacques. — NV 
Gireatness. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Essay  on  Man,  A. 
Greatness  Based  on  Morality.  (Sel.  fr.  Foreign  Policy.) 

—J:  Bright.— OS  3  (abr.) 
(England's  True  Greatness.)— -SO 
(National  Creatness — se?.)— ^AE — SE 
Greatness  of  his  Simplicity. — H.  A.  Delano. — LLC 
Greatness  of  Obedience,  "The. — F:  W.  Farrar. — NC 
Greatness  of  the  Poet,  The. — (Br.  sel.  fr.  Rob't  Bums.) 

— G:  W.  Curtis.— SSD— TMD 
Grecian  Fable,  A. — Anon. — MYF 
Grecian  Festival,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Greece. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage 
Greece. — Lord  Byron.     See  Giaour,  The. 
Greediness  Punished. — Friedrich  Riickert. — WCL 
Greedy  Boy,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 
Greedy  Fox,  The.— Anon.— CSS— PPSr 
Greedy  Richard. — Ann  and  Jane  Taylor. — BVC 
Greek  and  Turkman,  The.— G:  Croly.— SS 
Greek    at  Constantinople,  The. —  R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord 

Houghton. — AVP 
Greek  Idyl,  A. — Mortimer  Collins. — VA 
Greek  Mother's  Lullaby.— Zitella  Cocke. — POS 
Greek  Reverie,  A. — Jas.  C.  Hodgins. — TCV 
Greek  Revolution. — H:  Clay.    See  On  the  Greek  Revo- 
lution. 
Greeks'  Return  from  Battle,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. 

— SS 
(Ancient  Greek  chant  of  Victory — C.) — SAE 
(Return  from  Battle,  The.)— PP— YFR 
Green  be  the  Turf.     Fitz-Greene  Halleck. — LLC 
(Joseph  Rodman  Drake.)— BNL— EDY— GP 
(On  the  Death  of  Joseph  Rodman  Drake — C.)— 

AA— ASL— FEP— HBP— TAV— WCLG  2 
(To  a  Friend— «eL)— GMS 
Green  Broom. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Green  Dove   and   the   Raven,   The. — R.    D.   Joyce. — 

PEB  4 
"Green  earth    has    her    sons    and    her    daughters." — 

(Scattered  frans.) — Algernon   C.   Swinburne. — 

GN 
Green  Fields  of  England.— Arthur  H.  Clough.— GP 


134 


TITLE  INDEX 


Gulistan 


Green  Gnome,  The.— Rob't  Buchanan.— CR— HBP 
Green  Grass  under  the  Snow,  The. — Annie  A.  Preston. 

—HP 
Green  Grow  the  Rashes  [O]. — Rob't  Bums. — BNL — 

WEP  3— YBF 
Green  Hill  Far  Away,  The.— Cecil  F.  Alexander.— TFS 
(There  is  a  Green  HiU  [far  away].)— FEP— LLC— 

VA 
Green  Isle  of  Lovers,  The. — Rob't  C.  Sands. — AA 
Green    Linnet,    The. —  W:    Wordsworth. —  PGT  1 — 

WEP  4 
Green  Mountain   Justice,    The. — H:    Reeves. — BS  6 — 

CS  6— HNS— MHR 
(Country  Justice,  The.)— WRD 
Green  Pea    Soup.      {Fr.     Poetical      Cookery-book)  — 

Punch.)— nVE 
Green  River.- W:  C.  Bryant.— PEG  (seZ.)- POS 
Green  Things    Growing. — Dinah    M.    Craik. — GN    («Z. 

a6r.  )—SN 
{Arr.  by  C:  H.  Fuller  as  concert  rec.) — AD 
Greencastle  Jenny. — Helen  G.  Cone. — BAB 
Greenland  Whale  Fishery. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Greenwood,  The.— W:      L.      Bowles.— BNL— HBP— 

OSS 
Greenwood  Cemetery. — Crammond  Kennedy. — BNL 
Greenwood  Cemetery. — W:  Wallace. — CS  17 
Greenwood  Greetings.     {Arr.  by)  W.  H.  Benedict. — 

DFR 
Greenwood  Shrift,  The. — Rob't  and  Caroline  Southey 

— BNL— CS  9— HBP 
Greenwood  Tree.  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  As  You 

Like  It. 
Greeting. — Anon. — DS — YA 

Greeting,  A. — T:  Heywood.     See  Rape  of  Luorece,  The. 
Greeting,  A. — Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
Greeting  from  England.     (London  Chronicle.) — PAPm 
Greeting  from  Far  Away. — Friedrich  Riickert. — FTA 
Greeting  of  the  Roses,  The. — Hamlin  Garland. — AA 
("ireeting  to  the  "George  Griswold."     (Punch.) — EPs 
Greetings  to  my  Love. — T:  Heywood.     See    Rape    of 

Grendel's  Mother.     (Sel.  fr.  Beowulf,  Pts.  21  and  24.) 

(Tr.  hv)  J.  L.  Hall.— NE 
Gretchen.     (DtaZ.)— Anon.— YFD 
Grey  Head,  The.     (C. )— Douglas  Jerrold. 

(Helpless  Gray  Head,  The.)— CS  18 
Grey  Linnet,  The.— Jas.  McCarroll.— TCV 
Grey  Wolf,  The.— Walter  Ramel.— SOC 
Greyport  Legend,  A. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — GN— OS  2— 

SRI 
Gridiron,      The.     (Srf.)— S:      Lover.  —  MHR  —  PTS 

(shorter)— ^'E, 
Grief.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— OB— WEP  4— YBF 

("I  tell  you,  hopeless  grief  is  pas.sionless. ")— PGT  2 
Grief.     (Br.  sel.)— 3:  Dryden.— KNE 
Grief.     (Sel.  fr.  "Asa  beam  o'er  the  face  of  the  waters 

may  glow.") — T:  Moore.— KNE 
Grief. — W :  Shakespeare.     (See  Hamlet. 
"Grief  fills  the   room   up   of  my   absent   child." — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  King  John. 
Grief  for  the  Dead. — Anon. — BNL 

(AH  Before.)— GP 
Grief  of  Achilles  for  the  Slaying  of  Patroclus,  The. — 

Homer.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Grief  of  Bereavement,   The. — Friedrich  Schiller.     See 

Wallenstein. 
Grief  Unspeakable. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memo- 

riam. 
Griffith  Hammerton. — Joy  Vetrepont. — BS  13 
Griggsby's  Station.     (C.) — Jas.  W.  Riley. 

(Back  where  they  Used  to  Be.)— CH 
Grimalkin.     (Fr.      Ascutney      Charades.) — Julia      A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Grind's  Dream,  The.— Arthur  F.  Gotthold.— CG  3 
Griper  Greg.— Anon.— CS  7— MYF 
Griselda. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  Canterbury  Talcs. 

The. 
Griselda  Goose. — Phoebe  Gary. — BLF 
Grizzly.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.- AA— ASL— OS  a^SN 
Grizzly  Grumbler's  Advice — Anon. — CS  3 
Grongar  Hill.— J:  Dyer —BNL— FEP— HBP— WEP  3 
Groomsman  to  his  Mistress,  The. — T:  W.  Parsons. — 

HBP 
(Groomsman  to  the  Bridesmaid,  The.) — FEP 
Groomsman   to  the  Bridesmaid,  The. — T:  W.  Parsons. 

See  foregoing. 
Ground  Hog.     (Fr.     Ascutney    Charades.) — Julia    A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Ground  Laurel,  The.— H.  F.  Gould.— NV 
Grounds  of  the  Terrible. — Harold  Begbie. — PYO 
Grove  of  Curious  Trees.  A.— W.  H.  Benedict. — DFR 
Grove  of  Historic  Trees,  A. — Anon. — DFR 
Grove  of  Pines,  A. — Anon. — HSS  1 


Groves     of     Blarnev,    The. — Richard    A.    Milliken. — 

CS24(ii.  aor.)—B.BP 
Growing. — Anon. — CPL 
(Bits  of  Things.)— AD 
(Oak.The.)- YBT 
Growing. — Anon. — D.IS  * 

Growing. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — CPL 
Growing  Gray — Austin  Dobson. — BNL 
Growing  Old. — Matthew  Arnold. — CEL 
Growing  Old.— Mrs.  M.  W.  Chase.— CS  37 
Growing  Old.— Louisa  J.  Hall.— TAS 
Growing  Old. — Lucy  Larcom. — TAS 
Growing  Old.— Albert  Pike— HDL 
Growing  Old.— Marg.  Sallume  (?).— CS  24 
Growing  Old. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — HP 
Grown-up  Birthday,  A. — Susan  Coolidge. — BS  19 
Grown-up  Land. — Anon — YBT 
Grown-up  Land.     (St.  Nicholas.) — FS 
Growth. — Anon. — CP 
Growth. — Emily  J.  Bugbee. — AD 
Growth  of  International  Sympathies. — FS — SS 
Growth  of   the   American   Republic. — G:  Bancroft. — 

BSl 
Grub  Street  Elegy,  A;  on  the  supposed  Death  of  Par- 
tridge,   the    Almanack    Maker.     (C.) — (Elegy 

Partridge.) — Jonathan  Swift. — ESs 
Grub-street  Opera,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Pipe  of  Tobacco,  A  — 

«onff/r.  Act  III.,  Sc.  1.)— H:  Fielding.— PPh 
Grumble  Comer   and    Thanksgiving  Street. — Anon. — 

CS  30— DST 
(Where  do  you  live?)— WR  14 
Grumbler,  The.— Dora  R.  Goodale.— LPS— PP— PS 
Grumbling  over  Lessons.     (Dial.) — Hattie  Herbert. — 

SD 
Gualberto's  Victory. — Eleanor  C.  Donnelly. — CS  16 — 

NPS— YP 
(SI.  abr.)—FR—SO 
Guard  on  the  Rhine,  The. — Max  Schneckenburger  (tr. 

by  G.  F.  Dunning).— HSS  1— SM 
(Watch  on  the  Rhine,  The — diff.  tr.)—OS  2 

(A6r.)  — LLC    (wr.    at.     to    Carl     Wilhelm.)  — 

WCLG  1 
Guard  the  Tongue. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Guard  Thine  Action. — Sallie  A.  Vance — CS  3 
Guardian-angel,  The.    (Sel.)— Roh't  Browning.— PGT  2 
Guard's  Story,  The. — Anon.— CS  11 
Guardsman,  The. — F.  X.  Finnegan. — PAPm 
Gucom  and  the  Back-log. — Haliburton. — SCS 
"Gude  and    Godlie   Ballates,  The,"  Poem    fr.     James 

the  First  of  Scotland.— WEP  1 
Guenn.     (Sel.    fr.  Ch.    IX.)— Blanche   W.    Howard.— 

WR26 
Guerdon,  The. — J:  J.  Piatt. — AA 
Guerillas,  The.— S.  T.  Wallis.- AWB 
Guess,  The. — Anon. — HR 
Guess!     (Z)miZ.)— Anon.— HVD 
Guess  Again.     (Dial.) — Anon. — DSS 
Guess  what's  in  my  Pocket.     (Dial.) — Anon. — YFD 
Guessing  Nationalities. — S:  L.  Clemens.     See  Tramp 

Abroad,  A. 
Guessing  Song. — H:  Johnstone. — PoR 
Guest,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Guest,  The.— Harriet     McE.     Kimball.— AA—SR  7— 

TAS— WR  12 
Guidance. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Guide  Me,  O  Thou  Great  Jehovah!— W:  Williams. — 

FEP— SPE  (si.  abr.) 
Guide  Post,  The.— Anon.— CS  32 
Guided  by  a  St  ar.— Carlotta  Perry.— SR  9 
Guido  Ferranti.     (DtaZ. )— Oscar  Wilde.— WR  4 
Guild's  Signal.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— NPS— OS  2— YP 

(Engineer's  Signal,  The.)— TAV 
Guileless  Witness.  The.— Anon. — KNE 
(Hard  Witness,  The.)— DCR 
(Witness,  The.)— PR 
Guilielmus  Rex.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 
Guillotine,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  Tale  of  Two  Cities, 

A. 
Guilt   Cannot    keep  its   own  Secret. — Dan'l  Webster. 

See  Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
Guilt  its  own  Betrayer. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Murder 

of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
Guilty  or  not  Guilty— Anon.— CS  9— FR— HP— MYF 

— NPS— TMD— YP 
Guinea  Pig,  The. — Anon. — NA 
Guinevere.  —  Alfred    Tennyson.      See    Idylls    of     the 

King. 
Guitare  (Gastibelza).— Victor  Hugo.— WR  9 
Guiteau  the  Assassin. — J:K  Porter. — NC 
Gulf  Stream.— Sarah  C.  Woolsey.— .A.A 
Gulf-weed.— Cornelius      G:      Fenner.— BNL— FEP- 

HBP 
Gulistan,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Reginald  Heber.— BNL 


135 


Gum  town 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Gumtown  Woman's    Association,    The. — H.     E.    Mc- 

B'ide.— MCD 
Giuinar,     Sel.  fr.  (Skee-race,  The.— Ch.  IX..  abr.)— 

Hjalmar  H.  Boyesen. — TMR 
Gunner  and  the  Bird,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP 

(Mean  Man.  A.)— ES 
Gunns  I,eK.— Anon— re  24— DS— NPS— YP 
Gunpowder  Plot. — W:  Wordsworth. — EDY 
Guns  of  Peace.— Dinah  M.  Craik.- EDY 
Gustatory  Achievement.  A. — .las.  W.  Riley. — B.JC 
Gustavus.   King  of  Sweden,  to  his  Soldiers. — Pierre 
F.  Lefevre.— BLP 
(Gu.-itavus  Vasa  to  the  Dalecarlians — si.  air.) — PS 
Gustavus  A'asa  to  the  Dalecarlians. — Pierre  F.  I>efevre. 

See  farefjoing. 
Guy. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — HBP 
Guy  Mannering.  Sels.  fr. — Walter  Scott. 

Death  of  Mr.  Bertram.  The.     {Sd.fr.  Ch.  XIII.)— 

FTR 
Lucy  Bertram  and  Dominie  Sampson.      {Sel.  fr. 

Chs.  XIV.  and  XV.)— FTR 
Twist  ye.  Twine  ye.     {Song  fr.  Ch.  IV.)— BPB 
Guy's  Ideal. — Alice  L.  Richards. — W.N 
Gwendolen  —Hat tie  T.  Griswold  — WR  24 
Gyda  of  Varsland. — Anne  V.  Culbertson. — WR  12 
Gymnastic  Drill. — A.  E.  Hurst. — ID 
Gypsies  of  the  Dane's  Dike,  Sel.  fr.  (Geordie  to  his 

Tobacco-pipe.)— C:  S.  Phillips.— PPh 
Gypsy  Flower  Girl,  The.— Ed.  T,.  McDowell.— DES 
Gypsy  Wedding,  A.     {Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Gypsy.    See  also  Gipsy. 


H 

H.  W.  L.— J:  Nichol.— VA 

"H  was  an  Indigent  Hen." — Bruce  Porter. — NA 

Habeas  Corpus. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — AA 

Habeas  Corpus  Act,  The. — J.  P.  Curran.— SS 

Habet.— W.  B.  Hooker.— CO  3 

Habitant,  The— W:  H:  Drummond.— HBR 

Habitant's  Jubilee  Ode.  The. —  W:  H:  Drummond. — 

TCV 
Hack  and  Hew.— Bliss  Carman.— TCV— VA 
Had  I  but  Known. — Clement  Scott. — FLS 
Had  I  Wist.— Algernon  C.  Swinburne.— OS  2 
"Had  the  great  truths  waited  until  the  majority  voted 

in  their  favor." — Paul  Cassel. — GO 
Hadad,  Sel.  fr. — J  as.  A.  Hillhouse. — A  A 
Hag,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— FEP— HBP 
Hagar.— Eliza  P.  Nicholson.— BS  22— WR  16 
Hagar  and  Ishmael.     {Tab.) — Tony  Denier. — TDT 
Hagar  in  the  Wilderness.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— CS  21 
Hagar's  Farewell. — Augusta  Moore. — CS  33 
Haidee  and  Juan. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Hail.  America. — F.  L.  Knowles. — PAPm 
Hail  and  Farewell. — Lord  Byron. — LH 
(Byron's  Last  Poem.)— CEL 
(On  my  Thirty-seventh  Birthday.)— EDY 
(On  this  Day  I  Complete  my  Thirty-sixth  Year — 

O— FEP— WEP  4 
Hail.  Arbor  Day. — Lizzie  D.  Roosa. — AD 
Hail.  Bonny  September! — Dora  R.  Goodale. — WR  25 
Hail    Columbia. —  Jos.    Hopkinson.  —  AA  —  AWB  — 

BNL  {br.  8eL)— CP— LLC  {si.  abr.)- PAPm— 

SM— TAV— WCLI  2 
(Hail  Columbia.  Happy  Land — sel.) — BLP 
Hail  Columbia.  Happy  Land. — Jos.  Hopkinson.     See 

foregoing. 
Hail,  Holy  Light. — J:  Milton      See  Paradise  Lost. 
"Hail,  old  patrician  trees  so  great  and  good!" — Abra- 
ham Cowley.     See  Of  Solitude. 
Hail,  Thou  once-despised  Jesus!— J:  Bakewell. — FEP 
Hail  to  the  Veterans. — N.  K.  Richardson. — CS  1 
Halbret  and  Hob.— Rob't  Browning.— BS  20 
Half  an  Hour  before  Supper. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — CS  11 
Half  an  Hour  with  the  Poets.— Ellen  O.  Peck.— PTS 
Half  Truth.— R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton.— FTA  — 

PGT2 
Half  was  not  Told  me,  The.— T.  De  W.  Talmage.— 

CS  31— SSS 
Half-asleep,  The.— T:  Wade.— OB 
Half-hearted     (Macmillan's  Magazine.) — FLS 
Half-waking.— W :  Allingham.— LC— VA 
Half-way  Doin's.     (C.)— Irwin  Russell.- CDV— CS  19 

—SDR 
(Uncle  Pete's  Sermon.)— DE — PS 
Half-way  in  Love.— J.  B.  B.  Nichols. — FLS 
Halibut  in  Love,  The. — Anon. — HR 
Halifax. — Constance  Fairbanks. — TCV 
Hall  of  Sleep,  The. — Theodore  Bates.— CG  3 


Hallelujah.  Sels.  fr.—G:  Wither. 

For  Summer  Time.— LC—OEL— WEP  2 
Prayer  of  Old  Age,  The.     {Fr.  3d  p<.)— WEP  2 
When  we  are  upon  the  Seas. — WEP  2 
Halliday   Hunt    Breakfast.   The. — Alfred   Stoddart.— 

WR22 
Hallo,  my  Fancy.     {Ptly.  same  as  in  Percy's  Reliques.) 

— W:  Cleland.— BNL  {sel.)— FEP 
Hallowed  be  Thy  Name.     (7'a6.)— Anon.— TCP 
Hallowed  Ground.     (C.)— T:  Campbell.— BNL— CS  4 
—FEP— HBP 
(What's  Hallowed  Ground?— 6r.    «e/.)— KNE— SS 
— TMD 
Hallowe'en.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Halloween. — Rob't  Burns. — FP 
Hallow-e'en. — Nora  Hopper.— EDY 
Hal's  Birthday. — Lucv  Larcom. — LCS 
"Halt!     Who  passes,  friend  or  foe?"- A.  H.  S.— GG 
Hamadryad,  'The.- Walter  S.  Landor.— AVP  {abr.)— 

VA 
Hame,   Hame,   Hame! — Allan   Cunningham. — HBP — 
OB— YBF 
(It's  Hame  and  it's  Hame.)— FEP— GP 
(Loyalty— seZ.)—GN—LH 
Hamilton.     {Fr.    Ascutney   Charades.) — Julia  A.   Sa- 
bine.—TCP 
JIa,inlBi,  Tab.  based  on.  (Ophelia.)  {Scribner's  Monthly.) 

— BS  8— TCP 
Hamlet.  Sels.  fr.—W:  Shakespeare. 

Friendship.     {Sel.  fr.  Act  III..  Sc.  2.)— BNL 
Gracious  Time,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  I..  1.)— GN 

(Hamlet,  Br.  sel.  fr.— sel.)— BtiL 
Graveyard  Scene.     {Sel.  fr.  V..  1.)— SO 
"Great  man  down,  you  mark  his  favorite  flies.  The." 

{Sel.  fr.  III..  2.)— GG 
Grief     {Sel.  fr.  I.,  2.)— BNL 
Guidance.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  V.,  2.)— EPs 
Hamlet,  Br.  sels.  fr.—AE  {fr.  III.,  4)— BNL  {Jr. 
ActsL.  1;  L.3;L.  5;III..  2;  IIL.4;V..  1;V.. 
2.) 
Hamlet.     (I..  4.)— IR 

(Hamlet  [to  the  Ghost]— 8eL)—AE  (6r.)— SE 
Hamlet.     (II.,  2— si.  o6r.)— BS  7 
(Hamlet— 6r.  seZs.)- BNL 

(Soliloquies  from  "Hamlet" — 2nd. — sel.) — MRS 
Hamlet,  Act  III.,  Sc.  IV.  (4i!>r.)— HNS 
(A6r. )—BS  9— CDD 
(Closet  Scene  from  "Hamlet" — abr.) — CS  11 
(Gentleman.  A — br.  sel.)— KNE 
(Hamlet— 6r.  seZ.)— BNL 
(Hamlet — Closet  Scene— afcr. )—SR  12 
(Scene  between  Hamlet  and  the  Queen — abr.) — 
>S 
Hamlet.     {Song  fr.  IV..  4.)— ELP 

("How  should  I  your  true  love  know?") — LC 
(Song. )— HBP— YBF 
Hamlet  to  the  Players.     {Sel.  fr.  III..  2.)— LLC 
{SI.  o6r.)— CSS— OS  2 
(Hamlet's  Advice  to  the  Players — abr.) — HNS — 

HSS  2  (a6r.)— IR— PPS 
(Hamlet's    Instruction   to   the   Players — abr.) — 

BS  1— CS  1— EA— SO— SR  12— SS 
(Hamlet's  Instructions  [to  the  Players] — abr.) — 
CR— OM 
Hamlet's  Ghost.     {Sel.  fr.  I.,  5.)— BS  1— CS  7 
(Ghost  in  Hamlet.  The— 6r.  sels.) — SE 
(Hamlet.  Br.  sel.  fr.—br.  sel.  ) — BNL 
Hamlet's  Soliloquy.     {Sel.fr.  III.,  1.)— BS  2— EPs 
— FP— GMS— HNS— KNE— SO— WCLG  2 
("For  who  would  bear  the  whips  and  scorns  of 

time" — sel.) — GG 
(Hamlet's  Soliloquy  on  Death.)— CS  1— SS 
(Soliloquies  from  "Hamlet" — 3rd.) — MRS 
(Soliloquy  on  Death.)— BNL 
(To  Be  or  not  to  Be.)— OS  3— PYO 
Polonius  to  Laertes.     {Sel.  fr.  I.,  3.)— OS  2 
{SI.  abr.)— KNE— LLC— SO— SS 
(A6r.)— GG— GN 
(Polnnius'  Advice  to  Laertes — abr.) — GMS 
Scene  from  "Hamlet."     {Sel.  fr.  I..  2.)— KNE 

(Hamlet— br.  seZ.)— SE 
Scene  from  "Hamlet."     (II..  1 — abr.) — AE 
Soliloquies  from  "Hamlet."     {1st. — sel.  fr.  I..  2.) — 
MRS 
(Hamlet,  Br.  sels.  fr. — br.  sels.) — BNL 
(Hamlet's  First  Soliloquy-r-a6r.) — IR 
Soliloquies  from  "Hamlet.       {ith. — sel.  fr.  III.,  3.) 
—MRS 
(Hamlet,  Br.  sel  fr. — br.  seZ.)— BNL 
(King's  Repentance.  A — abr.) — SR  13 
(Remorse  of  King  Claudius — abr.) — SAE 
Soliloquies  from  "Hamlet."     {5th. — sel.  fr.  III.,  3.) 
—MRS 


136 


TITLE  INDEX 


Hare 


Hamlet  (continued). 

Soliloquies  from  "Hamlet."     (,6th. — sel.  fr.  IV.,  4.) 

—MRS 
("This  army  led  by  a  delicate  and  tender  prince" 

— seZ.)— EPs 
Hamlet  at  the  Boston. — julia  W.  Howe. — MRS 
Hamlet — Closet  Scene. — W:  Shakespeare.   See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet  to  the  Ghost. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet  to  the  Players. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet's  Advice   to   the    Players. — W:   Shakespeare. 

See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet's    First     Soliloquy. — W:    Shakespeare.       See 

Hamlet. 
Hamlet's  Ghost. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet's  Instruct ion[s]  [to  the  Players]. — W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet's  Soliloquy  [on  Death].     W:  Shakespeare.     See 

Hamlet. 
Hampton  Beach.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BNL— HBP 
Hand,  The  — Tr  DeW.  Talmage.— TMD 
Hand  for  Me,  The.— Goodman  Barnaby.— PTS 

(Give  me  the  Hand. )—CS  11— PS 
Hand  in  Hand.— (?)  Lowell.— LLC 
Hand  of  Lincoln.  The. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA 
Handefull  of    Pleasant    Delites,    A,   Sel.    fr.  (Proper 

Sonnet,  A.)— Anon.— WEP  1 
Handful  of  Wool,  A.— Anon.— FMR 
Handiwork  of  Flora,  The. — G:  Peele.     See  Arraign 

ment  of  Paris,  The. 
Handkerchief  Drill,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— WLO 
Hand-organ  Ball,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Hand-organ  Man's  Little  Girl,  The.— H.  H.— <3PL 
Hands  and  Fingers.— Anon.— DLS— LPS— PP 
Hands  Drop  off;  the  Work  Goes  on.  The.— S.  F.  K. 

Bradley.— CS  33 
Handsel  Ring,  The.— G:  Houghton.— AA 
"Handsome  is  that    Handsome  Does." — (Sel.  fr.  The 

Beautiful.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— FMR 
(True  Beauty— seZ.)— SO 
Handy  Andy,  Sel.  fr.     (Handy  Andy's  Little  Mistakes 

—fr.  Ch.  D— S:  Lover.— DI—MDD 
(Handy  Andy  and  the  Squire — sel.) — PS 
Handy  Andy  and  the  Squire. — S:  Lover.     See  Handy 

Andy. 
Handy  Andy's  Little  Mistakes. — S:  Lover.     See  Handy 

Andy. 
Hang  Sorrow.      (Frags,  fr,  various  authors.) — BNL 
Hang  up  the  Baby's  Stocking. — Anon. — HSS  2 — SR  3 

— WR  17 
"Hangin'  On."— Frank  L.  Stanton.— WR  2.5 
Hanging  a  Picture. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Three 

Men  in  a  Boat. 
Hanging  of  the  Crane,  The,  Seh.  fr. — H:  W.  Long- 
fellow.—BIL 
Household  Sovereign. — BNL 
New  Household,  A — GN 
Hannah  Beasley.—G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Hannah  Binding  Shoes. — Lucy  Larcom. —  BS  7  — CS  9 

—  FEP— GN  —  GP  —  LLC  —  MMR  —  NPS 

—OS  2— YP 
Hannah  Jane. — D.  R.  Locke. — DCR 
Hannah,  the  Mother.— Julia  Gill.— LLC 

(Christ  and  the  Little  Ones.)— CS  24— WCL 
Hannah  Tripe  in  Court. — Anon. — SR  10 
Hannele,  Scene  fr. — Gerhart  Hauptmann. — WR  13 
Hannibal  on  the  Alps. — E.  M.  Swan. — CS  25 

(Hannibal's  Address.) — SR  5 
Hannibal   Pleads  for   Peace. — Livy.     See  History   of 

Rome. 
Hannibal  to  his  Army. — Livy.     See  History  of  Rome. 
Hannibal  to  the  Carthaginian  Army — .Livy.     See  His- 
tory of  Rome. 
Hannibal's  Address. — E.  M.  Swan.     See  Hannibal  on 

the  Alps. 
Hannibal's  Address  to  his  Army. — Livy.     See  History 

of  Rome. 
Hans  and  Fritz.— C:  F.  Adams.—  BDD  —  BS  5  —  CDV 

— CS  14— DFY— PS— SDR 
Hans  Bleimer's  Mool. — 1.  H.  Brown. — CRR 
Hans  Breitmann  and  the  Turners. — C:  G.  Leland.  — 

BDD— DFY 
Hans  Breitmann's  Party. — C:  G.  Leland. —  AWH  — 

BNL  —  CRR  —  DFY  —  GP  —  HBP  —  SCS  — 

THP 
Hans  Christian  Andersen. — Edmund  Gosse. —  EDY  — 

VA 
Hans  in  a  Fix.— Anon.—  BDD  —  DFY  —  HR— MHR 
Hans'  Midnight  Excuses. — Anon. — BDD 

(Waste  not.  Want  not.)— CS  18 
Hans  Sourcrout  on  Signs  and  Omens. — Anon. — BDD 
(Signs  and  Omens.)—  BS  3— CDV  —  CS  10  —  MHR 

—SDR 
Hans,  the  Useless. — Walter  K.  Fobes. — FR 


Hans  Vogel.— Rob't  Bi-hanan.— VSG— WR  4  (abr.) 
Hans  von  Speigel'a  Fourth  of    July  Oration. — Gris. — 

DRR 
H'Anthem,  The.— Anon.— BS  21 
Happiest  Days. — Anon. — FTA 
Happiest  Girl  in  the  World,  The. — Augusta  Webster. — 

OH 
Happiest  Heart,  The.— J:  V.  Cheney.— AA—TAS 
Happiest  Hour,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Queen 

Mary. 
Happiest  Land,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— OS  1 
Happiest  Time  in  Life,  The. — R.  S.  Storrs. — TMR 
Happiness. — J:  Keble.     See  St.  Matthew. 
Happiness. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Essaj;  on  Man,  An. 
Happiness  and  Duty. — Edith  L.  Swain. — CS  37 
Happiness  of  Animals. — W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Happy    are    they    who    Kiss    Thee.     (Sonnet — C.) — 

Aubrey  De  Vere. — BIL 
Happy  Beauty  and  the  Blind  Slave,  The. — E:  Bulwer- 

Lytton.     See  Last  Days  of  Pompeii,  The. 
Happy  Bird,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Happy  Child,  The.— W:  B.  Rands.— OH 

(Love  and  the  Child — diff.  end.) — PoR 
Happy  Christmas,  A.  (Dial.) — Anon,  (ad.) — MPD 
Happy  Couple,  A.— H.  E.  McBride.— CS  27 
Happy  Family,  A.— Anon.— CS  28 
Happy  Family,  A.— H.  E.  McBride.— MHD 
Happy  Farmer,  The. — Anon.— BS  26 
Happy  Farmer,  The. — Laura  M.  Haughwout. — WR  14 
Happy  Heart,  'The. — T:  Dekker.  See  Pleasant  Comedy 

of  Patient  Grissell,  The. 
Happy  Household,  The. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Happy  Insensibility. — J:  Keats. — OH— PGT  1 
(December.)- GN 
(Stanzas— O— OB 
(Winter.)— BPB 
Happy  Land,  The. — Ivan  Turgenief. — FS 
Happy  Life,  A.— S:  Smiles.— HSS  3 
Happy  Life,  The  [or  A].- Sir  H :  Wotten.— EPs 

(Character  of  a  Happy  Life,  The— C.)  —  BNL  — 

CEL  —  ELP  —  FEP  —  OB  —  OS  2  —  PGT  1 

PHS— WEP  2— YBF 
(Lord  of  Himself.)— LH 
Happy  Little  Cripple,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR— 

WR  14 
(Little  Hunchback,  The— air.)- NPS— YP 
Happy  Little  Wife,  The.— Phoebe  Cary.— BLF 
Happy  Lot,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  OM<Aor«.)— ^BNL 
Happy  Love.     (Burlington  Hawkeye.) — CH 
Happy  Love. — C:Mackay. — FTA 
Happy  Man,  The.— W :  Cowper.     See  Task.  The. 
Happy  Man,  The. — Annie  M.  L.  Hawes. — TL 
Happy  Marriage,  The. — E:  Moore. — FEP 
Happy  Miller,  The.— (7)  Hood.— PS 
Happy  Smoking-ground,  The. — R:  Le  Gallienne.—  PPh 
Happy  Thought. —Rob't  I;.  Stevenson.- BVC— CGV 
Happy  Trees. — Anon. — DCP 

("Oh,  happv  trees  which  we  plant  to-day.") — HSS  1 
Happy  Trio,  The.— Rob't  Bums.— WEP  3 
Happy  Wanderer,  The. — Percy  Addleshaw. — VA 
Happy   Warrior,    The.  —  W:    Wordsworth.  —  EPs  — 

HB  (scZ.) 
(Character  of  the    Happy   Warrior,  The  —  C.)  — 

BNL  (6r.  sel.) 
Happy  Woman,  A. — Anon. — MND 
Happy  Worid,    A     (Sel.    fr.    Natural    Theology,    Ch. 

XXVI.).— W:  Palev— FMR 
Harbison's  Baby,  The.     (C.—in  They  All  Do  It.)— 

(Baby'sFirst  Tooth,  The.)— BS  3— CS  10— DR  (si. 
longer.) 
Harbor  Mine,  The.— F.  McK.— PAPm 
Harbor  of  San  Francisco. — Anon. — PS 
Hard  Earned  Wages. — Anon. — SR  13 
Hard  Lines. — Anon. — BS  23 
Hard  Luck.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Hard  Shave,  A.     (Tai).)- Anon.— BS  6— TCP 
Hard  Times. — Anon.— WR  21 
Hard  Times,  Sel.  fr.  (Gradgrind's  Idea  of  Education — 

fr.  Chs.  I.  and  II.)— C:  Dickens.— HSS  2 
Hard  to  Beat.— W:  A.  Thompson.— CG  2 
Hard  to  Please. — Anon. — WR  17 
Hard  Witness,  A. — Anon. — DCR 

(Guileless  Witness.  The.)— KNE 

(Witness,  The.)— PR 
Hard  Word,  A.— Anon.— WR  17 
Hard  Words  to  Spell.— E.  P.  Dyer.    See  Spelling  Class, 

The. 
Hardest  Time  of  All.  The.— Sarah  Doudney.— HP 
Hard-shell  Sermon,  A. — Anon. — PS 

(Where  the   Lion   Roareth,   and  the  Wang-doodle 
Moumeth.) — DE 
Hare,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 


137 


Hare 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Hare  and  Hounds. — T:  Hughes.  See  Tom  Brown's 
School  Days. 

Hare  with  Many  Friends,  The.— J:  Gay.— WEP  3 

Harebell,  A. — I-ucy  I.arcom. — LCS 

Harebells.- Emily  M.  P.  Hickey.— AVP 

Hark! — W:  Shakespeaiy.     See  Cymbeline. 

Hark!  Hark!  the  I^ark. — W:  Shakespeare.  <See  Cym- 
beline. 

"Hark!  Hark!  the  lark  at  heaven's  gate  sings." — W: 
Shakespeare.     <Sce  Cymbeline. 

"Hark,  heard  ye  not  those  hoofs  of  dreadful  note." — 
I-ord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Hark!  How  all  the  Welkin  Rings!— C:  Wesley.— FEP 
(Christmas  Hymn.)— WEP  3 

"Hark,  now  everything  is  still."  (Br.  sel.fr.  The 
Duchess  of  Malfi,  Act.  IV.,  Sc.  2.)— J:  Webster. 

T^T  p 

(Shrouding  of  the  Duchess  of  Malfi,  The.)— OB 
Hark,  the  Glad  Sound.     (Savior's  Message,  The — C.) 

— PhUip  Doddridge.— FEP  (w.  3  add.  sta.) 
Hark!  the  Herald  Angels.— C:  Wesley.— LLC 

(Christmas  Day — ahr.) — 0S2 
Hark!  the  Mavis. — Rob't  Burns.     See  Ca'  the  Yowes 

to  the  Knowes. 
"Hark  to  the  solemn  bell." — Anon. — GG 
"Hark,  where  my  blossomed  pear  tree  in  the  hedge." 

— Rob't  Browning.     See  Home  Thoughts,  from 

Abroad. 
Harlequin  of  Dreams,  The. — Sidney  Lanier. — AA 
Harley's    Trip    to  Dreamland. — Alice  L.  Richards. — 

WN 
"Harm  is  done  by  everything  which  tends  to  vulgar- 
ize religion." — Anon. — GG 
Harmodius  and  Aristogeiton. — Callistratus  (fr.  by  Lord 

Denman).— HBP 
Harmony  of  Love,  The.— T:  Lodge.— ELP— WEP  1 
Harmosan.— R:  C.  Trench.— CS  5— FEP— HBP— MR 

— MMR— OS  2 
Harold,  Seh.  fr. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. 

King  Harold's  Speech  to  his  Army  before  the  Bat- 
tle of  Hastings.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  XII.,  Ch.  VII.) 

— BS  14— OS  2 
Search  for  Harold's  Body,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  IX.) 

— WR  24 
Harold,  Sels.  /r.— Alfred  Tennyson.— BIL  (fr.  Act  III., 

Sc.  2.)— EHT  (fr.  Acts  I.,  II.,  V.) 
"  Love  is  come  with  a  song  and  a  smile."    (Song  fr. 

I.,  2.)— BIL 
Harold  the  Dauntless,  5e7.    fr.  (Fr.  Can.  II.) — Walter 

Scott. — AD 
Harold  the  Valiant. — Mary  E.  (Hewitt)  Stebbins. — AA 
Harold  the  Wanderer. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Har- 
old's Pilgrimage. 
Harold's  Song. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 

Minstrel,  The. 
Harp,  The.     (Sel.   fr.  To  Himself  and  the  Harp.)— 

Michael  Dras^ton. — EPs 
Harp  of  a  Thousand  Strings  [,a  Hardshell  Baptist  Ser- 
mon], The.— Anon.— CS  9— DS— FS 
Harp  that  once  through  Tara's  Halls,  The. — T:  Moore. 

BNL  —  BPB  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  — 

PYO— YBF 
Harpalus'  Complaint  of  Phillida's  Love  Bestowed  on 

Corin.— H:  Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey  (?).— EP 
Harper,  The.     (C.)—T:  Campbell. 

(Poor  Dog  Tray.)— CGd— LC 
Harriet  Beecher  Stowe. — Paul  L.  Dunbar. — AA 
Harry  of  Monmouth  (iro  Historic  Boys),  Sel.  fr.    (Battle 

of  Shrewsbury,  The.) — Elbridge  S.  Brooks. — 

WR  22 
Harry's  Arithmetic.     (St.  Nicholas.)— BhS — LPS— PP 

(Arithmetic. )— PS— TT 
Harry's  Dog.— Anon.— COS— PP— PS 
Harry's  Lecture.— L.  J.  Rook.— LPS— PP— PS 
Harry's  Logic— L.  L.  Phelps.— TFS 
Harry's  Mistake. — Anon. — liPS — PP 
(Basting  Thread.  A.)— BR 
(Rogue,  A.)— DS— YA 
Harry's  Wish. — Anon. — HVD 
Hart-leap  Well.— W:  Wordsworth.— BNL— CGd    — 

FEP 
Harvard  Commemoration  Ode. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.    See 

Ode  Recited  at  the  Harvard  Commemoration. 
Harvard- Yale  Football  Game,  A. — Waldron  K.  Post. 

See  follovnng. 
Harvard- Yale  Football  Match,  A.     (Sel.  ad.  fr.  Jack 

Rattleton  Goes  to  Springfield   and   Back.) — 

Waldron  K.  Post.— BS  23 
(Harvard- Yale  Football  Game,  A— dt/f.  ad.)— TFF 
Harvest,  The.     (Good  Housekeeping.) — CS  30 
Harvest. — Ellen    M.    (Hutchinson)    Cortissoz. — AA — 

HBP 
Harvest  Drill.— Sara  S.  Rice.— WR  6 


Harvest  Home,   Sels.  fr.  (Thanksgiving  Day.)  —  H: 

Alford.— OS  1 
(Thanksgiving  Hymn — ptly.  same.) — FEP 
Harvest  Home. — (Song  fr.  King  Arthur;  or.  The  British 

Worthy,  Act.  V.',  Sc.  1.)— J:  Dryden.— ELP 
Harvest  Home  Jubilee. — Anon. — EuE 
Harvest  Home  Song. — J:  Davidson. — VA 
Harvest  Hymn.— G:  D.  Prentice. — SSS 
Harvest  Hymn. — J:  G.  Whittier.    See  For  an  Autumn 

Festival. 
Harvest  Moon,  The.     (Sel.)—B.:  W.  Longfellow.— GN 
Harvest  of  Rum,  The.— Paul  Denton.— CS  17— SA 
Harvest   Song,  A.  —  R:   D.   Blackmore.      See  Lorna 

Doone. 
Harvest  Song. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — HSS  3 
Harvesters,  The.     (Tab.)     (Scribner's  Monthly.) — BS8 

—TCP 
Harvester's  Song,  The.     (Fr.  The  Old  Wives'  Tale.)— 

G:  Peele.— EP 
(Harvestmen  a-Singing.) — ELP 
Harvestmen  a-Singing. — G:  Peele.     See  foregoing. 
Harvest-time. — Jonann  G.  von  Salis. — HSS  3 
Has  it  Come  to  This? — Marie  Reimer. — CG  2 
"Has  not  Since  Been  Heard  of.'' — Anon. — MYF 
Has  Summer  Come  without  the  Rose?      (In  Lays  of 

France. ) — Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. — VA 
(Song).— FTA— PGT  2— WEP  4— YBF 
Hassan  Ben  Khaled. — Bayard  Taylor.     See  Tempta- 
tion of  Hassan  Ben  Khaled. 
"Hast  thou  a  charm  to  stay  the  morning  star?"      (Br. 

sel.)—B:  T.  Coleridge.— SO 
Hast  thou   Forgotten   Me.  —  Philip   J.    Holdsworth. — 

FLS 
Hast  thou  Heard  the  Nightingale?— R:  W.  Gilder.— 

AA 
Haste  not!    Rest   not!  —  Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — 

BLP  (hr.  seZ.)- FP— OS  2 
Hasty  Opinions. — T.  S.  Denison. — FAS 
Hasty  Pudding,  The.     (Abr.)— Joel  Barlow.— AWH 
Hat,  The.— Anon.— CS  23 
Hat  Drill,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— WLO 
Hate  and  Revenge. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Hen- 
ry VI.,  Pt.  IL 
Hate  of  the  Bowl.— Anon.— CS  2— HNS 

(Go,  Feel  what  I  have  Felt.)— BNL— PS— SM 
(Woman's  Answer  on  Being  Accused  of  Being  a 

Maniac,  etc.) — PPSr 
Hatred. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Hatred  of  the    Poor!  to  the   Rich. — Daniel  Webster. 

See  Natural  Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich, 

The. 
Hats. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.    See  Autocrat  of  the  Break- 
fast-table, The. 
Hattie's  Views  on  House-cleaning. — Anon. — COS — DS 

— NPS— PP— PS— YA— YP 
Haunt  of  the  Sorcerer,. The. — J:  Milton. — See  Comus. 
Haunted. — Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Haunted  by  a  Song. — Anon. — DR 
Haunted  Chamber,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — DS— YA 
Haunted  Chambers. — Anon. — HP 
Haunted  House,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— T:  Hood.— 

AVP— BS  3— DS— HSS  3— NPS— YP 
Haunted  Houses.- H:  W.  Longfellow.— WCLI  2 
Haimted  Palace,  The. — Edgar  A.   Poe. — AA — ASL— 

BPB— FEP 
Haunted  Smithy,  The.— W.  A.  Eaton.— CS  26— DS 
Haunted  Spring,  The. — S:  Lover. — PC 
Haunting  Eyes. — Caroline  Norton. — FTA 
Haunts  of  the  Halcyon,  The. — C:  H.  Luders. — AA 
Have  a  Shine,  Sah?     (Dial.) — Mrs.  S.  L.  Oberholtzer. 

—CDs 
Have  Charity. — Anon. — CS  7 
Have  you  a  Desire? — P:  Hausted. — YBF 
Have  you  been  at  Carrick? — E:  Walsh.— TIP 
"Have  you  ever  seen  those  marble  statues  in  some 

public  square  or  garden?"  —  Frd'k  W.  Rob- 
ertson.— GG 
"Have  you  got  a  brook  in  your  little  heart?"  —  Emily 

Dickinson. — OH 
Have  you  Planted  a  Tree?- H:  Abbey.— WR  17 
(Dedicatory  Exe'  cises  include  this.) — DFR 
(Planting  the  Tree.)— YBT 
(What  do  we  Plant — C.  [when  we  Plant  the  Tree]?) 

— AD— PEO 
"Having  this  day  my  horse,  my  hand,  my  lance." — 

Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Hawkbit,  The  .— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.- SN 
Hawke.— H:  Newbolt.— EDY 
Haworth  Churchyard.      (Sel.)  —  Matthew  Arnold. — 

EDY 
Hawthorn. — Anon. — FLS 
Hawthorn.     (All  the  Year  Round.) — HPj 
Hawthorne. — Amos  B.  Alcott. — AA 


138 


TITLE  INDEX 


Heart 


Hawthorne.     {Br.  seZ.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BNL 
Hawthorne  Chihlren,  The.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Hawthorne.  Nathaniel.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authora.) — 

BNL 
Hay  Field,  The.— Agnes  E.  Wetherald.- TCV 
Hay-fever. — Anon.— CS  18 
Hayloft,  The. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Haymaker's  Song,  The. — Alfred  Austin. — VA 
Hayseed's   Impression   of  the  Snap    Shot    Man,  The. 

—Howell  L.  Finer.- WR  23 
Hazards  of  our  National  Prosperity. — W.  R.  Smith. 

— SS 
Haze.     ( Verses  fr.  A  Week  on  the  Concord  and  Merri- 
mack Rivers:   Tuesday.) — H:    D.    Thoreau. — 
EPs 
He  and  She.— Anon.— DLF 

"He    and    She."  —  Edwin    Arnold.  —  BIL  —  MR— 
SR    11  {si.  abr.) 
(Secret  of  Death,  The.)— BNL 
(She  and  He.— C.)— GP 
He  and  She. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
He  and  She;  or,  A  Poet's  Portfolio,  Sels.  fr.—W:  W. 
Story. 
lo  Victis.     (C.)— AA— FEP 
(Sayings  and  Doings.) — KNE 
(Song  for  the  Conauered,  A.)— BS  15— SR  6 
O  Filia  Pulchra.— FTA— OH 
He  Came  too  Late.     (Parody.) — Anon. — CS  20 
He  Came  too  Late. — Eliz.  Bogart. — AA 
He  Came  to  Pay.     {After  The  Aged  Stranger,  by  Bret 

Harte.)— Andrew  V.  Kelly.— AWH—THP 
He  Came  Unlooked  for. —  Sara  Coleridge.     See  Phan- 

tasmion. 
He  Careth. — Faith  Tennyson. — CPL 
He  Careth  for  Us.— W:  Newell.— YBT 
"He  did  not  notice  that  I  never  spoke  to  her  in  the 
same  key  of  voice." — Nathaniel  P.  Willis. — GG 
He  Didn't  Amount  to  Shucks.— Sam  W.  Foss. —  CS  32 
He  Didn't  Ask.— Anon.— WR  14 
He  Didn't  Want  a  Coffin.— Anon.— CS  11 
He  Didn't  Want  the  'Scription. — Anon. — CRR 
He  Doeth  his  Alms  to  be  Seen  of  Men. — Anon. —  CS  11 
He  Fell  among  Thieves.— H:  Newbolt.— OB 
He  Gave  him  a  Start. — R.  J.  Terwilliger  — SR  5 
He  Gets  There.— C:  F.  Adams.— SR  7 

(Gets  Dhere.)— BS  18 
He  Giveth  His  Beloved  Sleep. — Anon.     iSee  He  Giveth 

His  Loved  Ones  Sleep. 
He  Giveth  His  Beloved  Sleep. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — 
BS  6— LLC— OS  3 
(Sleep  r.  The— C.].)— AVP— BNL  (si.  abr.)— FEF— 
HBP— VA 
He  Giveth  His  Loved  Ones  Sleep. — Anon. — CS  26 

(He  Giveth  His  Beloved  Sleep.)— SR  9 
He  Guessed  he'd  Fight. — Anon. — CD — SR  4 
He  Had  Changed  his  Mind. — Anon. — DSS 
He  Had  Faith.— Anon.— CS  31— WR  20  {si.  diff.  vers.) 
He  Had  to  Speak.— Anon.— WR  12 
He  Has  Been  there  Himself. — Welby  Walker.— CG  1 
He  Heard  her  Sing.     {Set.) — Jas.  Thomson. — VA 
He  Held  her  Hands.— Anon.— WR  24 
"He  is  a  Brick." — Anon. — KNS 
He  Kissed  Me. — Anon. — WR  2 
"He  Laughed  at  Five."— W:  H.  Head.— SR  11 
He  I>eadeth  Me.— H:H.  Barry.— HDL 
He  Let  her  Know. — {Arr.  by)  Marion  Short. — WR  20 
He  Lives  Long  who  Lives  Well. — T:  Randolph.     See 

Precepts. 
He  Liveth  Long  who  Liveth  Well.     (C.)  —  Horatius 
Bonar.— GG — KNE 
(Good  Life,  A.)— HSS  2 
(How  to  Live.)— GP  {si.  ofcr. )—SSS 
He  Loved  a  Cross-eyed  (jirl. — J.  A.  Waldron. — SDR 
He  Loved  to  Steal. — Anon. — SR  12 
"He  Loves  me;  he  Loves  me  not."     {Tab.) — E.  C.  and 

L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
"He  Loves  me,  Loves  me  not." — Anon. — CG  1 
He  Made  the  Stars  Also. — Lloyd  Mifflin. — A8L 
He  Made  us  Free. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — AA 
He  Never  Said  he  Loved  me. — Alaric  A.  Watts. — FTA 
He  Never  Smiled  again. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — EDY 
He  Never  Told  a  Lie. — Anon. — CS  15 

(Not  George  Washington — abr.) — DST 
He  Pays  License  on  a  Dog. — Anon. — DES 
He  Prayeth  Best. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Rime  of  the 

Ancient  Mariner,  The. 
He  Prayeth  Well  who  Loveth  Well.— S:  T.  Coleridge. 

See  Rime  of  the  Ancient  Mariner,  The. 
He  Said  that  he  was  not  our  Brother. — J:  Banim. — TIP 
He  that  Believeth  Shall  not  Make  Haste.  —  Sarah  C. 

Woolsey.— TAS 
"  He  that  loves  a  rosy  cheek." — T:  Carew.     See  Dis- 
dain Returned. 


He  Told  me  So.— G:  Grossmith.- VSG 

He  Tried    to  [  Tell   his  Wife.— Anon.— CS   32— PR— 

YA 
He  Understood.— Anne  V.  Culberton.— BS  25— HBR 
He  Vas  Dhinkin'.— "Oofty  Gooft."— DRR 
He  Wanted  it  Let  Alone. — Anon. — CS  21 
He  Wanted  to  Know.— S:  W.  Foss.— WR  21 
He  Was  almost  There. — Anon. — SDR 
"He  was  a-weary,  but  he  fought  his  fight." — R:  Realf. 

See  Written  on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide. 
He  Was  never  Known  to  Smile. — C:  Barnard. — CS  14 
"He  Wasn't  in  it."     {Detroit  Free  Press.) — SRll 
He  Wasn't  Ready. — Anon. — SR  2 

He  who  Died  at  Azan. — Edwin  Arnold. — HBP — HDL 
(After  Death.)— BS  8— OS  3 

(After  Death  in  Arabia— C.)—CS  31— FEP— V A 
(Resurrection  of  Abdullah.) — LLC 
He  who  Hath  Loved. — Walter  Malone. — AA 
"He  who  plants  a  tree." — Lucy  Larcom.     See  Plant  a 

Tree. 
He  Woke  the  Dead.— Anon.— SR  6 
He  Worried  about  it.— Sam  W.  Foss.— BS  20 

{Wr.  at.  to  L.  Abbott.)— NPS—YP 
He  Wouldn't  Hush.— Anon.— SR  3 
(Irrepressible  Boy,  The.)— BS  10 
Head  and  the  Heart,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— BS  14 
Head  of  Bran,  The.— G :  Meredith.- LH 
Heads,  Hearts  and  Hands. — G.  W.  Bungay. — HP 
Heads,  not  Hearts,  are  Trumps. — Kate  Field. — WR  15 
{si.  abr.) 
(Forty  to  Twenty.) — CS  14 
Healing  of  the  Daughter  of  Jairus.  (C.) — Nathaniel  P. 
Willis.— FP 
(Healing  the  Daughter  of  Jairus — abr.) — FMR 
Healing  the  Daughter  of  Jairus. — Nathaniel  P.  Willis. 

See  foregoing. 
Health,  A.— E:  C.  Pinkney.—  AA  —  ASL  —  BNL  — 

FEP— FP— FTA— HBP— TAV 
Health  Alphabet.— Anon.— TFS 
Health  at  the  Ford,  A. — Rob't  G.  Rogers. — AA 
"Health  is  nerve  and  nerve  is  man." — H:  W.  Beecher. 

— GG 
Hear  him  Rave. — Anon. — CDV 
Hear  it  and  Wish.— Hope  Whittier.— YBT 
Hear  the  Voice.     {Introd.  to  Songs  of  Experience.) — 

W:  Blake.— OB 
Hear,  ye  Ladies. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Valentinian. 
Heard  are  the  Voices. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe  {tr.  by 

TiCarlyle),— GP 
Heard  ye  o'  the  Tree  of  Liberty?     (Tree  of  Liberty. 

The — C.)— Rob't  Bums.— HS  {abr.) 
Heiire,  The.— W:  Barnes.— V A 
Hearsay.     {Dial.) — Anon. — NDP 
Heart,  The.— Anon.— CPL 

Heart  and  Soul.     (Verses— C.—Fr.  Pansies  from  Pens- 
hurst  and  Wilton.) — Sir  Philip  Sidney. — OEL 
Heart  and  Will.— W:  J.  Linton.— VA 
Heart  Deaths. — Anon. — HDL 
Heart    for   Every  One,  A. — C:    Swain. — FLS  {sel.)— 

FTA 
"Heart  may  often  be  cheered  by  observing.  The.'  — 

D:  Livingstone. — GG 
Heart  never  Grows  Old,  The.  —  Josiah  R.  Adams. — 

WR14 
Heart  of  all  the  Scene.  The.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.     See 

Woodnotes. 
Heart  of  Bruce,  The. — W:  E.  Aytoun.     See  Heart  of 

the  Bruce,  The. 
Heart  of  Midlothian,  The.  Sels.  /r.— Walter  Scott. 

Jeanie  Deans  and   Queen  Caroline.     {Set.   fr.  Ch. 

XXXVII.)— MMR 
Pride  of  Youth.  The.     (Madge  Wildfire's  Song,  fr. 
Ch.  XL.) 
(Proud  Maisie.)— BFV— BPB— OB— YBF 
("Proud  Maisie  is  in  the  wood.")— FEP— HBP 
Heart  of  Oak. — C:  H.  Luders. — AA 
Heart  of  Old   Hickory,   The. — W:  A.   Dromgoole.  — 

NP  (abr.)— SC  (ad.)— WR  21  {arr.  as  man.) 
Heart  of  Princess  Osra,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Sin  of  the  Bishop 
of  Modenstein,  The — sel.  fr.  Ch.  V.) — Anthony 
Hope.— NP 
Heart  of  Stone,  A. — J:Haryngton. — ES 

(Lines  on  Isabella  Markham— C.)— BNL— FEP 
Heart  of  the  Bruce,  The.     (C. — in  Lays  of  the  Scottish 
Cavaliers.)  —  W:      E.     Aytoun.  —  BNL  — 
EDY  (se/.)— HB— MR— SO  {abr.) 
(Heart  of  Bruce,  The— cond. )—WR  1 
Heart  of  the  War,  The.— Josiah  G.  Holland.— CS  1— 

FEP 
Heart  to  Let,  A. — Anon. — SR  2 
Heart  Ventures.     {Boston  Cult.) — CS  22 
(Sad  Ventures.)— HP 
(Sea  Ventures.)— SSS 


139 


Heart 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Heart,  we  Will  Forget  him. — Emily  Dickinson. — -AA 
"Heart,  when  broken,  is  like  sweet  gums  and  spices 

when  beaten,  The." — J:  Bunyan. — GG 
"Heart-affluence  in  discursive  talk." — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  In  Memoriam. 
Heartbreak  Hill.— Celift  Thaxter.— CS  12 
Heart-exchange. — Sir    Philip    Sidney.      See    Arcadia, 

The. 
Heartless.— W.  H.  Smith,— CG  1 
Heartrending  Affair,  A.     (Mon.) — Nellie  M.  Locke. — 

MN 
Heart -rest. — H:  Taylor.     See  Philip  Van  Artevelde. 
Hearts.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.) — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — 

BNL 
Heart's  Call,  The.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— BIL—FTA— 

TFY 
Heart's  Charity,  The. — Eliza  Cook.— CS  24 
Heart's  Fine  Gold,  The.— W.  O.  Bourne.— FP 
"Hearts  more  or  less,  I  suppose  we  have." — H:  W. 

Beecher.— GG 
"Hearts  of  Gold."— Anon.— FS 
Hearts'  Pictures,  The.— H.  H.  Bice.— CG  1 
Heart's  Resolve,  The.     fTat.)— Anon.— BS  15— TCP 
Heart's  Summer,  The. — Epes  Sargent. — AA 
Heart's  Song,  The.— Arthur  C.  Coxe.— FEP 
Heart 's-ease. — Anon. — HP 
Heart 's-ease. — Mary  E.  Bradley. — WR  2 

(Pansy— frr.  «e/.)— AD 
Heart's-ease.- Walter  S.  Landor. — VA— YBF 
Heart's-ease,  The. — Fannie  Williams. — CS  32 
Heat. — Archibald  Lampman. — VA 
Heat  Lightning. — Jas.  W.  Riley.— CW 
"Heath  this  night  must   be  my  bed,  The." — Waller 

Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Heath-cock.  The. — Joanna  Baillie. — BNL 

(Black  Cock,  The— O— HBP 
Heathen  Chinee,  The.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— CS  3— HR— 

SE 
(Plain  Language  from  Truthful  James — C.) — AWH 

— BNL— EPs— FEP— HBP— THP 
Heathen  Chinee's  Reply,  The. — Anon. — CS  4 
Heather  Ale  [:   a   Galloway   Legend — C.]. — Rob't    L. 

Stevenson.— PEB  4— VA 
Heaven.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Heaven. — Martha  G.  Dickinson. — AA 
Heaven.     {Br.  sel.)— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— PC 
Heaven.— M.  S.  Holmes.— CS  3 
Heaven. — Jeremy  Taylor. — BNL 

(Of  Heaven— C.)— HBP 
Heaven.— Nancy  P.  Wakefield.— BNL— GP—TAS  (br. 

sel.) 
Heaven  a  Refuge  for  the  Wretched.    {Frags,  fr.  various 

authors.) — BNL 
Heaven  Fights  on  the  Side  of  a  Great  Principle. — H: 

Grattan.— PS— SS 
Heaven,  O  Lord,  I  cannot  Lose. — Edna  D.  Proctor. — 

AA 
"Heaven  overarches  earth  and  sea."     (Heaven  Over- 
arches—C.)— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— PGT 2 
Heaven  upon  Earth,  A,  Sel.  fr.      (Two  Heavens.) — 

Leigh  Hunt.— GN 
("For  there  are  two  heavens,  sweet.") — BIL 
Heavenly  Canaan,  The. — Isaac  Watts. — HBP 
("There  is  a  land  of  pure  delight.") — FEP 
Heavenly  Dove,  The. — Frederika  Bremer. — OS  1 
(Mother's  Hymn.) — WCL 
(Swedish  Mother's  Hymn.)— YBT 
Heavenly  Foundations. — Orrie  M.  Gaylord. — CS  16 
Heavenly  Guest,  The.     {Metrical  vers,  of  Where  Love  is, 

there  God   is  Also.) — Leo  Tolstoi  {tr.  by  Celia 

Thaxter).— BS  17 
Heavenly  Guide,  The. — Anon. — HDL 
Heavenly  Jerusalem,  The. — Anon.    See  New  Jerusalem, 

The. 
Heavenly  Wisdom. — J:  Logan. — FEP 
Heavenward. — 1.  E.  Dickenga. — CS  28 
Heavens  are  our  Riddle,  The. — Herbert  Bates. — AA 
Heaven's  Magnificence. — W :  A.  Muhlenberg. — AA 
Heavier  the  Cross. — B :  Schmolke. — CS  6 
Heaviest  Cross  of  All,  The. — K.  E.  Conway. — AA 
Heaving  of  ( he  Lead,  The.— C:  Dibdin.— BNL 
Heavy  Brigade,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. — LH 

((jharge  of  the  Heavy  Brigade  [at  Balaclava — C.j, 

The.)— FR 
Heavy  Shower,  A. — Anon. — MND 
Hebe.— Anon.— WR  15 
Hebe.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— AA—ASL— HBP 
Hebraism  and  Culture. — Anon. — CP 
Hebrew  Capital  Despoiled,  The. — Reginald  Heber.— 

BLP 
Hebrew  Children,  The.— G :  Thatcher.— TK 
Hebrew  Codes  Developed,  The.     {Nero  Testament  Rec- 
ords.)—Bl.P 


Hebrew  Melodies. — Lord  Byron.     See: 
"All  is  Vanity,  saith  the  Preacher." 
Destruction  of  Sennacherib,  The. 
Oh!     Snatch'd  Away  in  Beauty's  Bloom. 
She  Walks  in  Beauty. 
Song  of  Saul  before  his  Last  Battle. 
Vision  of  Belshazzar. 

When  Coldness  Wraps  this  Suffering  Clay. 
Hebrew  Minstrel's  Lament,  The.     (A''eu'  England  Maga- 
zine, 1832.)— BLP 
Hebrew  Mother,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — CS  10 — 

FMR 
Hebrew  Race,  The.     {Sel.  fr  Coningsby,  Ch.  XV.)— 

B:  Disraeli,  Lord  Beaconsfield.— VSG 
Hebrew  Tale,  A. — I^vdia  Sigoumey. — CS  8 
Hebrew  Wedding  [,  the].     {Fr.  The  Fall  of  Jerusalem.) 

— H:  H.  Milman.— BNL— HBP 
(Bridal  Song— se^.)— FEP 
Hecatompathia,    The,    Sels.    fr.     (Passions    II.,  XL., 

LXV.)— T:  Watson.- WEP  1 
Hector  O'Halloran,  Sel.  ad.  fr.    (Matrimonial  Adven- 
tures of  Dick  Macnamara.) — W.  H.  Maxwell. 

— DI 
Hector  Slain  by  Achilles. — Homer.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Hector's  Exploit  at  the  Barriers  of  the  Grecian  Fleet. — 

Homer.     See  Uiatl,  The. 
Hector's  Farewell  to  Andromache. — Homer.    See  Iliad, 

The. 
Hector's  Rebuke  to  Polydamus. — Homer  See  Tliad,  The. 
He'd  Had  no  Show.— Sam  W.  Foss.— PYO 
He'd    Nothing  'but    his   Violin. — Mary   K.   Dallas. — 

AA  {abr.) 
(Brave  Love.)— WR  4 
Hedgerow.     {Fr.    Ascutney   Charades.) — Julia   A.    Sa- 
bine.—TCP 
Heigh-ho!    Daises    and    Buttercups. — Jean    Ingelow. 

See  Songs  of  Seven. 
Heigho,  My  Dearie. — Eugene  Field.     WTD 
Height  of  the  Ridiculous,  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — 

AA  —  AWH  —  BNL  —  FAS  —  HPE  —  SR  10 

—THP 
Heine's  Grave. — Matthew    Arnold. — BNL  {si.    abr.) — 

EDY  {hr.  sel.) 
Heir  of  Linne,  The.  —  Anon.     {In    Percy's    Reliques.) 

—EPs— FEP— HBP  {mod.  vers.) 
Heiress'  Ruse,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KH 
Held  by  a  Thread,     (r-tft.)- Anon.— TCP 
Helen. — C:  and  Marv  Lamb. — LPC 
Helen.— E.  A.  U.  Valentine.— AA 
Helen. — Sarah  C.  Woolsey. — AA 
Helen  and  Modus. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  Punchback, 

The. 
Helen  at  the  Sevan  Gates. — Homer.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Helen  Hunt  J.ackson. — Ina  Coolbrith. — AA — EDY 
Helen  in  Argos.- F.  M.  Clanp.— CG  3 
Helen  Keller. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA 
Helen  MacTrever.— H.  S.  Kent.— PD 
Helen  of  Kirkconnel[l].     (Fair   Helen  of    Kirconnell, 

Pt.  II. — in  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — BB — 

BPB— LH— OB— OEB 
(John  Mayne's  vers.) — FEP 
(Burd  Helen.)— CEL 
(Fair    Helen. )^— EPs  (s?.    abr.)  —  FEP  —  HBP — 

PEB  1— PGT  1— VSG— WR  21 
Helen  on  the  Rampart. — Homer.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Helena  and  Hermia. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Midsum- 
mer Night's  Dream,  A. 
Helen's  Babies. — Anon. — DLF 
Helen's  Babies,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Habberton. 

Budge's  Version  of  the  Flood.— BS  5 — CS  14 

(Evening  with  Helen's  Babies,   An — sel.) — PTTl 

— MYF 
Helen's    Epithalamion. — Theocritus    {tr.    by    Sir    E: 

Dyer).     See  Sixe  Idillia. 
Helen's  Song. — Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Festus. 
Heliodore  Dead.     (Meleager — paraphrased  by)  Andrew 

Lang — VA 
Helios. — Joel  Elias  Spingarn. — AA 
Heliotrope. — Anon. — HP 
Heliotrope.— Harry  T.  Peck.— A  A— HBP 
Hell.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors/) — BNL 
Hell,  The.— Dante.     See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 
"Hell  is  the  infinite  terror  of  the  soul,  whatever  that 

may  be." — Frd'k  W.  Robertson. — GG 
"He'll  see  it  when  he  wakes." — Frank  Lee. — AWB 
Hellas,  Sel.  fr.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— OB 
(I>ast  Chorus  of  "Hellas.")— WEP  4 
Hellvellyn.     (C.)— Sir  Walter  Scott.— FEP 
(Helvellyn.)— BNL— CS  6— EPs— FHS 
Helot,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Isabella  V.  Crawford  — TCV 
Help  for  my  Sisters.      ( Tab. )— Clara  J.  Denton.— SSE 
"Help,  Lord,  or  we   perish."     (Fourth   Sunday  after 

Epiphany,  I.— C.)— Reginald  Heber.— FEP 


140 


TITLE  INDEX 


Here 


'Help  me  Across.  Papa."— Anon.— CS    24— DS— NFS 

— SR  4— YP 
Help  One  Another.— G:  F.  Hunting.— NV—YBT 
Help  Thou  mv  Unbelief! — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
Helping  Hand,  A.— Ella  Higginson.— WR  15 

(Always  Some  One  Below.)— HSS  3 
Helping  Hand,  A. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Helping  Mamma. — Anon. — WR  17 
Helping  Mamma.     {Motion  rec.) — Anon. — COS — PP 
Helping  Rule,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Helpless  Gray  Head,  The.     (Grey  Head,  The  — C.)— 

Douglas  Jerrold.— CS  18 
Helpmate,  A —A.  Melville  Boll.- CS  12— MHR 
Helvellyn. — Walter  Scott.     See  Hellvellvn. 
Hemlock  Tree,  The.     (Tr.  by)  H:  W.   Longfellow.— 

AD  (br.  M.) 
Hen.  The.— Claudius.— BNL 
Hen,  The.— Oliver  Herford.— NA 
"Hen  that  cackles  loudest,  The." — Anon. — WR  22 
Hence  all  ye  [or  you]  vain  delights.     (Song  jr.  The  Nice 

Valour,    Act    III.,    Sc.    3.) —[Beaumont    and] 

Fletcher.— BNL— HBP 
(Meiancrh]o!ia. )— CEL— FEP 
(Melancholy.)- OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(Poet's  Mood.)— EPs 
(Song,  A.)— WEP  2 
(Sweetest  Melancholy.) — ELP 
Hence  Care!- T:  Morley.— ELP 
Hen-hussey,  The. — Anon.— DES 
Henry  Clay,  Sel.  fr.     (Character  of  Henry  Clay.) — W: 

H.  Seward.— CS  7 
Henry  George.— Bli.ss  Carman. — EDY 
Henry  IV.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— EDY 

Henry  the  Fourth's  Soliloquy  on  Sleep. — W:  Shakes- 
peare.    See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II. 
Henry  V. — W:  Shakespe.irc.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.  at  [the  Fiegeof]  Harfleur. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  King  Henrj'  V. 
Henry  the  Fifth  Encouraging  his  Soldiers. — W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.  to  his  Soldiers  [at  the  Siege  of  Harfleur]. — 

W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.  to  his  Troops. — W :  Shakespeare.    See    King 

Henry  V. 
Henry  V.'s   Audience  of  French  Ambassadors. — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.'s     Wooing. — W:     Shakespeare.     See     King 

Henry  V. 
Henry  VI. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  VI. 
Henry  W.  Grady  as  an  Orator. — J.  W.  Leo. — FD  2 
Henry    Wadsworth     Longfellow. — W;    W.     Story. — 

PEO 
Henry  Ward  Beeeher. — C:  H.  Phelps. — A.\ 
Henry's    Speech     before     Agincourt    [Harfleur]. — W: 

Shakespeare.  See  King  Henrv  V. 
Hepatica,  The.— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
Hepsy  at  the  State  Contention. — Harriet  F.  Crocker. 

— SR  10 
Hepsy's  Ambition. — Estelle  Thomson. — CS  10 
Heptalogia,  Sel.  fr.  (Nephelidia.) — Algernon  C.  Swin- 
burne.— NA 
Her  Answer. — Anon. — BS  21 
Her  Answer —C.  H.— CG  2 
Her  Answer. — Anon. — DR 
Her  Answer. — .1:  Bennett. — A  A 
Her  Answer. — MUry  B.  Chapman. — FI^S 
Her  Answer    to   his    Verses. — Raymond    Bi:rnham.    - 

CG3 
Her  Bonnet. — Mary  E.  Wilkins.— TAV 
Her  Brother's  Cigarette. — Anon. — PPh 
Her    Coming.     (England's    Parnassus:    Descriptions 

of  Beauty  and  Personage — C.) — G:  Chapman. 

—ELP 
Her  Confirmation. — Selwvii  Imaae. — VA 
Her  Creed.— Sarah  K.  B^lfon.- TAS 
Her  Dairy.— P:  Newell.— N A 
Her  Daring  Protector. — Anon. — WR  14 
Her  Death. — T:  Hood.     See  Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her 

Precious  Leg. 
Her  Dilemma.— Paul  B.  MeVey.— CG  3 
Fer  $  Shoes.- Anon.— TL 
Her  Epitaph.— T:  W.  Par.sons.— AA— ASI> 
Her  Excuse. — Anon. — PR — YA 
Her  Eyes. — Edmund     Spenser.     See     Amoretti     and 

Epithalamion 
Her  Eves.— "Viola."— FLS 
Her  Eyes  are  Wild. — W:  Wordsworth. — HBP 
Her  Fifteen  Minutes. — Tom  Masson. — WR  3 
Her  First  Appearance.     (Cond.) — R:   H.    Davis. — CR 
Her  First  Baby.— Anon.— CS  35 
Her  First  Railroad  Ride.— Anon. — SR  9 
Her  First  Shot.— Anon.— WR  2 
Her  First  Steam-engine. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 


Her  First  Train.— A.  E.  Walrous.— TAV 
Her  First-born. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — VA — YBF 
("It  was  her  first  sweet  child,  her  heart's  delight.") 

—PGT  2 
"Her  fittest  triumph  is  to  show  that  good."     (Br.  sel. 

fr.  A  Legend  of  Brittany,    2nd  pt.) — J  as.  R. 

Lowell.— BIL—FTA 
Her  Flower.— G:  A.  Soper.— CG  1 
Her  Gifts.     (The    House    of    Life,    Sonnet    XXXI.) 

— Dante  G.  Rossetti^VA 
Her  Golden  Hair.     (Song:     ToAmarantha:     that  she 

would  Dishevel  her  Haire — C.) — R:  Lovelace. 

—CEL  (sel.) 
(To  Amarantha-    that  she,  etc. — longer  sel.) — OB 
Her  Grandpa.— C:  D.  Stewart.— TMR 

(Funny  Man,  A.)— PS 
Her  Heart  was  False,  and  Mine  was  Broken. — Mary  K. 

Dallas.— WR  3 
Her  Helpfulness. — Dante.    See  Vita  Nuova. 
Her  Horoscope. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — A  A 
Her  Ideal.— Kate  Masterson. — CS  31 
Her  Laddie's  Picture. — Mary  B.  Brainerd. — BS  14 
Her  Last  Lines. — Emily  Bronte. — VA 
(Hymn.)— OS  3 
(Last  Lines.)— OB— WEP  4 
Her  Last  Verses. — Alice  Cary. — FEP 

(Dying    Hymn    [,    A].— C.)— BNL— CS    8— GP— 

HDI.— TAS 
Her  Last  Words. — Anon— FLS 
Her  Last  Words  at  Parting. — T:  Moore. — FTA 
Her  Laugh — in     Four     Fits.     (Washington     Post.) — 

BS  19— SR  11— WR2 
Her  Leghorn  Hat.     (Yale  Record.) — CG  2 
Her    Letter.— Fs.    Bret    Harte.— BNL— BS  8— CR— 

CS  10— CSS— EPs— FEP— MR 
Her  Likeness. — Dinah  M.   Craik. — BNL 
Her  Little  Feet.— W:  E.  Henley.— THP 
Her  Little  Glove.— F:  L.  Knowles.— CG  2 
Her  Lover.— Mrs.  S.  C.  Hazlett.— WR  2 
Her  Lovers. — "Bachelor  Ben." — CH — DR 
Her  Majesty.— Edgar  W.  Abbott.— TMR 
Her  Moral. — T:  Hood.     See  Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her 

Precious  Leg. 
Her  Music. — Martha  G.  Dickinson. — AA 
Her  Name. — Anon. — DJS 
Her  Name. — Anna  [or  Anne]  F.  Bumham. — BR — BS  11 

— DCP— HP— SR  10— WR  15 
Her  Name  was  Smith. — Anon. — WR  7 
Her  No.— Anon.— CH 
Her     Passing.       (Madrigal — C.) — W:     Drummond. — 

OB 
Her  Perfect  Lover. — Madeline  S.  Bridges. — BS  21 
Her  Perfect    Praise. — Rob't    Browning.     See   Blot    in 

the  'Scutcheon,  A. 
Her  Photograph.— Frank  McHale.— BS  23 
Her  Picture.— Ellen  M.   (Hutchinson)  Cortissoz. — AA 
Her  Pity.— Philip  B.  Marston.— VA 
Her  Polka  Dots.— Peter  Newell. — NA 
Her  Preference. — Anon. — WR  3 
Her  Present.— F.—CG  2 

Her  Programme  of  Dance. — Alfred  L.  Spencer. — CG  1 
Her  Reason. — Jas.  P.  Sawyer. — CG  2 
Her  Reply. — Lena  Lathrop  (ivr.  at.  to  Eliz.  B.  Brown- 
ing).—SR  7 
(Woman's  Question,  A.)— CS  13— MR— WCLG  2 
Her  Reply  (Reply     to      Marlowe — C.) — Sir      Walter 

Raleigh.— OB 
(Milk-maid's  Mother's  Answer  [,  The].) — FEP  (w. 

add.  «<.)— HBP 
(Nymph's    Reply    [to    the  Passionate  Shepherd], 

The.)— BNL— GP— PHS 
(Reply  to  Marlowe,  A.) — EP 
(Reply  to  Marlowe's  "The  Passionate  Shepherd  to 

his  Love.)— WEP  1 
(Shepherdess's  Reply,  The — w.  add.  at.) — CEL 
Her  Roses. — Owen  Innsly. — FLS 
Her  Satin  Fan. — Jas.  Goodwin. — CG  1 
Her  Shadow.— Eliz.  J.  (C.)  Pullen.— AA 
HerShpacial-i-ty.— Anon.— SR  13 
Her  Sofa.— M.  E.  W.— TL 
Her  Soliloquy.— Frd'k  B.  Opper.— TT 
Her  Thanks.— M.  D.  Follansbee.— CG  2 
Her  Vision. — Anon.— CS  30 
Her  Wedding.— Anon.— CS  28 
Her  Winsome  Smile. — Harry  K.  Munroe. — CG  2 
Her  Wish.— E.  H.  G.  Dewey.— TL 
Her  World.- Emily  H.  Miller.— HBR 
Heracl[e]itus.     (Sel.    fr.    Callimachus.) — W:  [Johnson] 

Cory.— OB— VA 
(Callimachus,  Sel.  /r.)— AVP 
Herald  Crane,  The.— Hamlin  Garland.— SN 
Here  am  L— Jas.  F.  Clarke.— HDL 
Here  and  There.— Alice  Cary.— TAS 


141 


Here 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Here,  haply   too,   at   vernal   dawn." — Rob't   Bums. 

See  Humble  Petition  of  Bruar  Water,  The. 
Here  is  the  Tale. — .\ntony  C.  Deane. — NA 
"Here  on  this  blessed  Thanksgiving  night." — Josiah  G. 

Holland.     See  Bitter-sweet. 
Here  she  Goes  —  an*  there  she  Goes. — Jas.  Nack. — 

BO— CS  2— MHR— THP 
"Here  we  Are!"— Mrs.  M.  F.  Butts.— CPL 
Hereafter.— C.  F.  Ramsay.— SR  13 
Hereafter.— Harriet  P.  Spofford.— GP 
Hereafter — Rosamund  M.  Watson. — VA 
Hereditary   Policy   of   America,  Sel.  fr.     (In   a  Just 

Cause.)-— L:  Kossuth. — SS 
Heredity.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 
Herein  is  Love.— Susie  M.  Best.— BIL — FTA 
Here's  a  Health  to  Ane  I  Lo'e  Dear. — Rob't  Burns. — 
HBP 
(.lessy.)— FEP 
Here's  a  Health  to  them  that's  Awa. — Rob't   Bams — 

HBP 
Heritage,  The.     (C.)— Jas.  R.  LoweU.—  CS  8  —  FEP— 
GMS— LLC— PYO— WCLG  2 
(Our  Heritage — al.  abr.) — BLP 
(Poor  and  the  Rich,  The.)— BS  17 
Hermann  and   Dorothea.     (Cond.) — Johann   W.    Von 

Goethe.— WR  11 
Hermes  in  Calypso's  Island. — Homer.     See  Odyssey, 

The. 
Herraion^. — Rob't  Buchanan. — FEP 
Hermion4.— Bryan  W.  Procter.- HBP 
Hermit,     The.— Jas.     Beattie.— BNI.— FEP— FTR— 
HBP 
(Night— 8eZ.)—EPs 
Hermit ,  The.— G :  Eliot.     See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 
Hermit,  The. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Vicar  of  Wake- 
field. The. 
Hermit,  The.— T:  Pamell.— FEP- WEP  3 
Hermit  Thrush.  The.— Nelly  H.  Woodwnrth.--SN 
Hero.  The.— Cardwill.— LLC 
Hero,  A.— C:  K.  Field.— CG  2 
Hero,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Stage  Land. 
Hero,The.— Rob't  NicoU.—VA  - 

Hero,  The.— Sir  H :  Taylor.- VA  ' 

(What  Makes  a  Hero?)— PS— SS 
Hero  and  Leander,  Sel.  fr.     (Bridal  Song — fr.   Fifth 

Sestyad.) — G:  Chapman. — OB  (sel.) 
Hero  and  Leander. — Leigh  Hunt. — CS  1.5 
Hero  and  Leander.    (,Sel.  fr.  the  First  Sestiad.) — Chris- 
topher Marlowe. — WEP  1 
Hero  of  the  Commune,  The. — Margaret  J.  Preston. — 

AA— CS  17 
Hero  of  the  Day,  The.— Anon.— NP 
Hero  of  the  Gun,  The. — Margaret  J.  Preston. — BAB — 

TMD 
Hero  of  the  Rank  and  File,  The. — Michael  Scanlan. — 

WR12 
Hero  President,  The. — Horace  Porter.- TMR 
Hero  to  Leander. — Alfred  Tennyson. — BNL — EPs  («Z. 

abr.) 
Hero  Woman,  The.     (The  Wissahikon,  Ch.  VI.,  abr.— 
in  Washington  and  his  Generals.) — G:  Lippard. 
— CS25 
Herod.— Alice  Brooks.— BS  21 
Herod,  Sel.  fr.    {Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  III.)— Stephen  Phillips. 

— AVP 
Herodias.— Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. — PGT  2 
Heroes. — Anon. — OS  1 
Heroes.— J:  B.  Goue;h.— OS  2 
Heroes.- Edna  D.  Proctor. — OS  3 
Heroes.- Fs.  A.  Shaw.— CS  21 

Heroes. — Wal*  Whit  man.     See  Song  of  Myself,  The. 
Heroes     and    Hero-Worship. — T:    Carlyle.      See    On 

Heroes  and  Hero-Worship. 
Heroes  and  Martyrs.- E.  H.  Chapin.— HSS  1 
Heroes  and  the  Flowers,  The. — Rose  Hill.  {Cond.) — B: 

F.  Tavlor.— SR  4 
Heroes'  Day.  The.— Anon.— PEG 
"Heroes  have  gone  out;  quacks  have  come  in." — T: 

Carlyle.     See  On  Eferoes  and  Hero-worship. 
Heroes  of  Greece. — Lord  Byron.     See  Siege  of  Corinth, 

The. 
Heroes  of  Inkerman. — Rob't  Overton. — CS  31 
Heroes  of  '76,  The. — G:  W.  Curtis.     See  Centennial 

Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 
Heroes    of    the    Land  of    Penn.  —  G:    Lippard.     See 

Battle  of  Germantown,  The. 
Heroes  of  the  "Maine  Disaster." — Rob't  G.  Cousins. — 
CP 
(Tribute  to  the  Men  of  the  Maine,  A.) — SC 
Heroes  of  the  Mines. — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  18 
Heroic   Age,   The. — Rufus   Choate.     See   Age   of   the 
Pilgrims  t  he  Heroic  Period  of  our  Historv.  The. 
Heroic  Age,  The.— R  :  W.  Gilder.— AA 


Heroic  Courage. — Phillips  Brooks. — TMD 

Heroic  Death,  A.— (Spe-^to/or. )— FAS 

Heroic  Deed,  The.— G.  D.  Emery.— PAPm 

Heroic  Love. — Jas.  Graham,  Marquis  of  Montrose.     See 

My  Dear  and  Only  Love,  1  Pray. 
Heroic  Medley. — Herman  Page. — SR  4 
Heroic  Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  Oliver  Cromwell,  Br. 
Bel.  fr.  (Oliver  Cromwell.)— J:  Dryden. — BNL 
Heroine  of  St.  John,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Pierce  S.  Hamilton. — 

TCV 
Heroism. — Friedrich  Schiller.   See  Wallenstein. 
Heroism  and  History. — Newton  Bateman. — NP 
Heroism  in  Housekeejjing.     {Sel.  fr.  A  Letter  to  Miss 
Smith  of  Carlisle,  about    1856,  in  Mrs.  Alex. 
Ireland's  Life  of  Mrs.  Carlyle.) — Jane  W.  Car- 
lyle.—OS  3 
Heroism  of  Elizabeth  Jane,  The  (w.  tab). — Anon. — TCP 
Heroism  of  Horatio  Nelson,  The. — Frank  V.  Mills. — NC 
Heroism  of  the  Hungarian  People.     {Sel.  fr.  Speech  at 
Birmingham,  Nov.  12,  1851.) — L:  Kossuth. — 
SR  8— SS— SSD 
Heroism  of  the  Pilgrims,  The. — Rufus  Choate.     See 
Age  of  the  Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our 
History,  The. 
Hero-worship. — W:  B.  Scott. — VA 
Herr  Slossenn   Boschen's  Song. — Jerome   K.   Jerome. 

See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Herring  is  King. — A.  P.  Graves. — TIP 
Herself  all  Treasure, — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Amoretti 

and  Epithalamion. 
Herself  and  Myself.— Patrick  J.  McCall.— TIP 
Hertha. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — OB — VA 
Herv6  Riel.— Rob't  Browning.  —  AE  {br.  «e/.)— BNL— 
BS  10— CR  — CS  7— EA— EDY— GN  — HBP 
— KNE— LH— MMR— MR— OS  3— PGT  2— 
PSR— SC— TMD  (ahr.)— TMR  {si.  abr.) 
He's  Gane.     (On  Captain  Matthew  Henderson — C.) — 
Rob't  Bums.- EPs  {sel.) 
{  Elegy    on     Caotain     Matthew     Henderson,  )  — 
BNL  (air.)— FEP— HBP  {si.  abr.) 
Hesitation. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Hesperia. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — VA 
Hesoerus  Sings. — T:  L.  Beddoes.    See  Bride's  Tragedy, 

The. 
Hesperus' Song.     T:L.  Beddoes.     See  Bride's  Tragedy, 

The. 
Hesperus'  Song. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
Hess.— Howell  L.  Finer.- WR  23 

Hester.— C:  Lamb.—  BNL  —  BPB  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 
LPC  —  OB  —  OS  3  —  PGT  1  —  WEP  4  — 
YBF 
Hetty  McEwon. — Lucy  Hamilton  Hooper. — CS  2 
Hey  Nonny  No!— Anon.— ELP— OB 
Iley  Nonnv  No. — Marguerite  Merint?ton. — AA 
Hey,  the  Dusty  Miller.     {C. — also  Dusty  Miller,  The. 

— O— Rob't  Bums. — LC 
"Hez"  and  the  Landlord.— Anon.— CS  9— DFY 

(How  Hezekiah  Stole  the  Spoon?.)— BeR—BS  22 
Hezekiah    Bedott.  —  Frances    M.    Whitcher.        See 

Widow  Bedott  Papers. 
Hezekiah  Stubbins'   Oration,  July  Fourth. — Anon. — 

CS  1— MDD 
Hezekiah's  Arrival. — Anon. — MFD 
Hezekiah's  Art. — Joe  I^incoln. — CCB 
Hezekiah's  Proposal. — Anon. — MCS 
Hiartville  Shakespeare  Club,  The. — Belle  M.  Locke. — 

CS35 
Hiawatha. — H:    W.    Longfellow.     See   Song    of    Hia- 

,  watha,  The. 
Hiawatha,    Tableaux    from,    with    Readings. — Anon 

See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 
Hiawatha's  Brothers. — H:  W.Longfellow.    SeeSongof 

Hiawatha,  The. 
Hiawatha's  Chickens. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Song 

of  Hiawatha,  The. 
Hiawatha's  Childhood. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Song 

of  Hiawatha,  The. 
Hiawatha's  Sailing. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Song  of 

Hiawatha,  The. 
Hiawatha's  Wedding-feast. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See 

Songof  Hiawatha,  The. 
Hiawatha's  Wooing. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Song  of 

■   Hiawatha,  The. 
Hie  Jacet. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — AA 
"Hie  me.  Pater  Optime,  Fessam  Deseris." — Lucy  C.  B. 

Robin  son . — A  A 
"Hie  Vir,  hie  Est."— C:  S.  Calverley.— ESs 
Hidden.— S.  T.  Livingston.— CG  1 
Hidden  Brightness. — Anon. — CS  16 
Hidden  Flame.     {Sonn  fr.  The  Maiden  Queen — C.) — 

J:Drvden.— OB 
Hidden  Life.— C.  G.  Ames.— TAS 
Hidden  Joys. — Laman  Blanchard. — VA 


142 


TITLE  INDEX 


His 


Hid<]en     Love,     The.— Arthur     H.    Clough.— AVP— 

WEP4 
Hidden  Menus.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Hidden  Path;  or,  the  Atlantic  Cable,  The.— Eliz.  H.  J. 

Cleaveland. — BS  23 
Hidden   Rose-tree,  A.      (,Sel.  fr.  Virginia's  Hand.) — 

Marguerite  A.  Power. — TIP 
Hidden  Songster,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Hidden  Sweets.— Anne  C.  L.  Botta.— POS 

(Sonnet.)— CS  1 
Hidden  Uses  of  Plants.— Martin  F.  Tupper.— HSS  1 
Hide  and  Seek.— Alice  Gary.- BLF 
Hide  and  Seek. — Julia  Goddard. — OS  13 
Hide-and-seek. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL — NV 
Hiding    the    Skeleton. — G:    Meredith.       See    Modern 

Love. 
Hie  Away. — Walter  Scott.    See  Waverley. 
High  and  Low. — Dora  R.  Goodale. — PoR 
High  and  the  Low,  The     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
High  Art  and  Economy.- G :  Kyle. — WR  3 
High  Art — Music. — Max  Adeler. — CS  6 
High  License. — Mrs.  Clara  Hoffman. — WR  18 
High  License.-^T.  DeW.  Talmage.— TS 
High  School  Girl,  The.     (Merchant  and  Manufacturer.) 

— FS 
High  Tide,  The.— Anon.— FMR—MYF 
High  Tide,  The. — .Jean  Ingelow.     See  High  Tide  on  the 

Coast  of  Lincolnshire,  The. 
High  Tide  at  Gettysburg,  The.— Will  H.  Thompson.— 

AA— ASL— BAB— BLP— EDY— OS  3 
(Afer.)— TMD— WR  10 
High  Tide  [;  or,  the  Brides  of  Enderby],  The. — Jean 

Ingelow.     See  High  Tide  on  the  Coast  of  Lin- 
colnshire, The. 
High  Tide  on  the  Coast  of  Lincolnshire,  The. — (C)  Jean 

Ingelow.—  BNL  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  FR  (abr.)— 

GN— OS  2— PEB  4— VA— WCLG  1 
(SI.  o6r.)— AVP— CR 
CBrides  of  Enderby,  The.)— CS  2 
(High  Tide  [;  or.  The  Brides  of  Enderby],  The.)— 

BS  2  —  LLC  —  MMR  (abr.)  —  SA  (si.  abr.)  — 

WRD 
High-backed  Chair,  The.— T.  P.  Sanborn.— CG  1 
High-born  Lady,  The.— T:  Moore.— PEB  4 
Higher!     (Prose.)- Anon.— CS  23 
Higher. — Anon. — MHR 
Higher  Education,  The. — Anon. — CP 
•  Higher  Education  for  Women. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. 

— TMR 
Higher  Good.  The.— Theodore  Parker.— A  A— HSS  3 
Higher  Pantheism,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. — HDL — 

YBF 
Higher  Pantheism  in  a  Nutshell,  The. — Algernon  C. 

Swinburne. — NA 
Higher  Views  of  the  Union.     (Sel.  fr.  Lincoln's  Elec- 
tion.)—Wendell  Phillips.— MMR 
(Is  this  AH?)- FD  1 
Highgate  Butcher,  The.— Anon.— HR 
Highland  Cattle —Dinah  M.  Craik— GN 
Highland  Chase,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The. 
Highland  Light,  The.     (Fr.  Cape  Cod.)  — H:  D.  Tho- 

reau. — APr 
Highland  Mary.— Rob't  Burns.—  CEL  —  FEP  —  FTA 

— GP  —  HBP  —  MBI.  —  OB  — PGT  1— P  VO 

—WCLG  1— WEP  3— YBF 
Highland  Stranger,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Ladv  of 

the  Lake,  The. 
Highland    Stream,    The.     Arthur    H.     Clough.     See 

Bothie  of  Tober-na-Vuolich,  The. 
Highland  War  Song. — Walter  Scott.— PS 
(Gathering  Song  of  Donald  Dhu.)— BPB 
(Gathering  Song  of  Donald  the  Black.)— PGT  1 
(Gathering  Song  of  Donuil  Dhu.)— CEL— GN 
(Pibroch.)— LH 
(Pibroch  of  Doniiil  Dhu.— C.)  —  BNL  —  BS  25  — 

EPs— FEP— HBP— LC— OS  2— PHS 
(Summons,  The — br.  sel.) — SE 
Highly  Evangelical  Osculation. — -.^non. — WR  2 
High-mettled  Racer,  The.— C:  Dibdin.— FEP 
Highway,  The.— W:  C.  Gannett.— TAS 
Highway,  The.— W:  C.  Husted  — BS  2.5 
Highway,  The. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and 

Stella. 
Highway  Cow,  The.— Eugene  J.   Hall.— HP  (abr.)— 

PPSr 
Highwayman's  Ghost,  The. — R:  Gamett. — PEB  4 
Hik-tee-dik.— Jas.  W.-Rilev.— BJC 
Hilda.— Jas.  II.  Ravhill.— BS  22— PFP 
Hilda,  Spinning— Anon. —  CS  21— FMR  —  PP  —  PR 

— PS— YPS 
Hilda's  Little  Hood. — Hjalmar  H.  Boye.sen. — BS  22 


Hill  of  Science,  The.— J :  Aiken.— BLP 

Hills  Were  Made  for  Freedom,  The.     (Fr.  Vermont .) — 

W:G.  Brown.— GP 
Hillside  Cot ,  The.     ( Frag. )— W :  E.  Channing.— EPs 
Hinc  Tlla>  Lachrymse.— F^rd'k  A.  Dixon.— TCV 
Hind  and  the  Panther,  The.  Sels.  fr. — J :  Dryden. 
Buzzard,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  III.)— WEP  2 
Sects,  The.     Private  Judgment.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Ft.  I.) 

—WEP  2 
Unity  of  the  Catholic  Church,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr. 
Pt.  II.)— WEP  2 
Hind  Horn. — Anon.     See  Hynd  Horn. 
Hindoo  Died,  A. — G:  Birdseye.     See  Hindoo's  Death, 

The. 
Hindoo  Sceptic,  The.     (The  Spectator.)— HP 
Hindoo's  Death,  The.— G:  Birdseye.— HP 
(Hindoo  Died,  A.)— MR 
(Hindoo's  Paradise,  The.)— CS  22 
(Paradise.)— A WH—BS  7 
Hindoo's  Paradise,  The. — G:  Birdseve.     See  foregoing. 
Hindoo's  Search  for  Truth,  A. — Alfred  C.  Lyall. — GP 
(abr.) 
(Meditations  of  a  Hindu  Prince  [and  Skeptic].) — 
AVP— HBP— VA 
Hindrances  to  Happiness.     ( MercharUTraveler. ) — SR  7 
Hint,  A.— Anon.— CS  28— HP 
Hint,  A.— Henrietta  R.  Eliot.— YBT 
Hints. — Lucy  Larcom. — TAS 
Hints  for  Thanksgiving. — Anon. — EuE 
Hippodrome  Race,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Serapis.  Ch.  XXV.) 
— G:  Ebers.— WR  4  (arr.  by  Wilbof.) 
(Chariot  Race  in  Alexandria — longer  seL)- — PFP 
Hippopotamus,  The. — Oliver  Herford. — NA 
Hired  Man  and  Floretty,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— CW 
Hireling  Swi.ss  Regiment,   The.     (Swiss  Mercenaries, 

The— O— Victor  Hugo.— MMR 
Hiring  Help. — F.  Crosby. — ED 
His   Answer    to    "Her    Letter." — Fs.  Bret   Hartc. — 

EPs 
His  Banner  over  me. — Gerald  Massey. — HDL — VA 
His  Birthday.— G.  C.  Reid.— CG  3 
His  Books.     (Occasional  Pieces,  XVIII. — C.) — Rob't 
Southey.— OB 
(Books.)— BNL 
(Library,  The. )— LBB— MBB 
(My  Days  among  the  Dead  [are  Passed].) — FRP — 

HBP— YBF 
(Scholar,  The.)— PGT  1 
(Stanzas  written  in  his  I,ibrary.) — WEP  4 
His  Book's  Patron. — Martial  (tr.  by  Andrew  Lang). — 

LBB 
His  Bookseller's    Address. — Martial    (tr.    by    Andrew 

Lang).— LBB 
His  Care.— J:  Parker.— HDL 

His  Choice  and  his  Destiny. — F.  M.  Bristol. — LLC     •* 
His  Enemy's  Honor.     (Play.) — Anon. — NDP 
His  Epitaph. — Stephen  Hawes. — OB 
His  Eye  was  Stem  and  Wild.     (Punch.)— C&>  3— SCS 
— SR6 
(Fragment,  A.)— HPE 
(Madman,  The.)— KNE 
His  Father  took  him  Home. — S.  J.  R. — CG  2 
His  Finish,     (/.i/e.)— BS  26 

His  First  and  Last  Drink.— Anon.— PP— PS— YPS 
His  First  Brief. — Sidnev  Daryl.— DT 
His  First  Case.— B.  C.  L.  Griffith.— MN 
His  Flying-machine  — Anon. — NPS — YP 
His  Grange;   or.    Private   Wealth. — Rob't    Herrick. — 

BVC 
His  Guiding  Star.— Fs.  W.  Moore.— WR  13 
His  Idea  of  it. — Susie  M.  Best. — TT 
His  Lady's  Cruelty. — Sir  Philip   Sidney.     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 
His  Lady's  Praise. — Dante.     See  Vita  Nuova. 
His  Last  Court.— Anon.— CS  23— DS 
His  Letanie  to  the  Holv  Spirit.     (C.) — Rob't  Herrick. 
(Holy  Spirit,  The.)— BNL 
(Litany,  The  )— CEL— ELP— WEP  2 
(Litany  to  the  Holy  Spirit.)— EPs— FEP— HBP— 
OB  (abr.) 
His  Letter.— W.  R.  Hereford.— CG  2 
His  Limitation. — Anon. — SR  13  • 
His  Love. — Anon. — CRR 
His  Majesty. — Theron  Brown. — AA 
His  Majesty  the  King.     (Cond.) — Rudyard  Kipling. — 

WR25 
His  Majesty's   Escape  at   St.   Andrews.     (Br.   ■<<el.   fr. 
Of   the   Danger   his  Majesty— being  Prince — 
Escaped    in    the    Road    at    Saint    Andero.) — 
Edmund  Waller.— WEP  2 
His  Messenger. — Anon. — HP 
His  Mi.otress.— T:  Randolph.— YBF 
(Devout  T,over,  A.)— OB 


143 


His 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


His  Mot  her's     Cooking. — Lizzie     M.     Hadley. — BR — 
CS  28 
(Just  Like  a  Man.)— CS  36 
His  Mother's  Joy. — J:  W.  Chadwick. — A  A 
His  Mother's  Sermon. — J:    Watson.     See   Beside    the 

Bonnie  Brier  Bush. 
His  Mother's  SonfHs].— Mrs.  E.  V.  Wilson  (?).— CS  31 

— HS— TMll 
His  Name. — Mary  Coleman. — FAS 
His  Name. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — BAB 
Hie  Names.— Josephine  Pollard.— CS  32  (abr.) 

(One  of  his  Names.)— SR  13— TFS 
Hi.s  Neighbor's  Wife. — Anon. — DLF 
His  New  Brother— Joe  Lincoln.— CCB—CS  37 
His  New  Suit.— S:  E.  Kiser.— PAPm 
His  Oath.     (Yale  Record.)— WR  7 
(Uncertain  Pledge.  An.)— BS  21 
His  Own  Pills.     (DVa^)— Anon.— NDP 
His  Pilgrimage  (Sir  Walter  Raleigh's  Pilgrimage — C.) 
—Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— OB  (a5r.)— WEP  1 
(Pilgrim,  The— abr.)— OS  3 
(Pilgrimage.  [The].)— BNL— EPs  (oftr.)— FEP 
His  Poem.     ( Yale  Record.)— CG  3 
His  Poets. — Rob't  Herrick. — LBB 

(To  Live  Merrily,  and  to  Trust  to  Good  Vierpes — C.) 
— ELP— EPs 
His  Poets.— Leigh  Hunt.— LBB 

(Sonnet.)— MBB 
His  Prayer  to   Ben  Jonson.     (C) — Rob't   Herrick. — 
ELP— WEP  2 
(Prayer  to  Ben  Jonson.) — EPs 
His  Profession. — Anon. — DST 
His  Quest. — Lewis  F.  Tooker. — A  A 
His  Reverie. — Lily  A.  Long. — TFY 
His  Riches.— Lilian  Grey.— CS  28 
His  Sentence.— H:  W.  Eiiot,  Jr.— CO  3 
His  Sign.— Anon.— CH 
His  Sister.— Anon.— BS  22 
His  Speech.— Anon.— PS— TT 
His  Statement  of  the  Case. — Jas.  H.  Morse. — AA 
"His  study!  with  what  authors  is  it  stored?" — Alex. 

Pope.     See  Moral  Essays,  Epistle  IV. 
His  Sunday  (Dlothes. — Anon. — GH 
His  Sweetheart's  Song. — Fred.  C.  Dayton. — CS  30 
His  Time  for  Fiddling.— C:  B.  Lewis.— CS  16 
His  Wedded   Wife.     (^Sl.  abr.)  —  Rudy ard  Kipling.— 

WR20 
His  Wedding  Mom.— B.  C.  L.  Griffith.— MN 
His  Winding-sheet.     (C.)— Rob't  Herrick.- OB 

(To  his  Winding-sheet — abr^ — EPs 
His  Last  Verses.— J:  Clare.— FEP 
("I  am!  yet  what  I  am.") — EDY 
(Lasciate  Ogni  Speranza.) — PGT  2 
(Written     in    Northampton    County    Asylum.) — 
•  OB 

Hi-Spi. — Eugene  Field.     .See  follovnng. 
Hi-Spy.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 

(Hi-Spi.)— EF 
Historic  Boys,  sels.  jr. — Elbridge  S.  Brooks. 

Battle   of   Shrewsbury,    The.     {Sel.    fr.    Harry    of 

Monmouth.)— WR  22 
Festival  of  Mars,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Marcus  of  Rome.) 
— WR22 
Historic  Codfish,  The.— R:  W.  Irwin.— NC 
Historic  Tree    of    Chicago,    The.       {Chautauguan.) — 

AD 
Historic  Tiees. — E:  C.  Delano. — AD 
Historic  Trees. — Alex.  Smith. — HSS  1 
Historical  Associations. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Historical  Butcher,  The. — Anon. — MYF 
Historical  Trees. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — AD 
History-.- Anon.— BVC 
(King  Arthur.)— NA 
History,  k. — Anon. — DLF 

History.     (Br.   sel.    fr.   Scientific  Method   Applied   to 
"  History,  in  Short  Studies  on  Great  Subjects, 
Vol.  II.)— Jas.  A.  Froude.— FTR 
Hi.story.— W:  C:  Roberts.- TCV 
History  of  a  Life.     (C.)— Bryan  W.  Procter.— BNL 

(Life,  A.)— GP 
Histon'  of  a  Pretty  Girl  —Anon. — WR  7 
History  of  En/land,  Sd».  fr. — .las.  A.  Froude. 

Coronation  Pageant  of  Anne  Boleyn,  The.     (Sel.  fr. 

Vol.  I.,  Ch.  V.)— OS  15— DS— NPS— YP 

(Coronation  of  Anne  Bolevn,  The — abr.) — TMD 

Death  of  Mary  Stuart.     (Sel.  fr.  XII.,  XXXIV.)— 

WR  1 
Execution  of  Sir  Thomas  More,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  II., 
IX.)— OS  2 
History  of  France,  Sel.  fr.      (Joan  of  Arc — sel.  fr.  Bk 

IX.,  Ch.  III.)— Jules  Michelet.— WR  8 
History  of  John  Day.     (John  Day — C.) — T:  Hood. — 
CM  (si.  abr.) 


"History  of  mankind   as  well  shows  forth  the  uni- 
formity of  law.  The." — H:  C.  Minton. — GG 
History   of   our   Flag. — Albert    B.    Putnam. — PRR — 

WR  10 
History  of  Rome,  Sels.  Jr. — Livy. 

Canuleius  against   Patrician   Arrogance.     (Sel.   fr. 

Bk.  IV.,  Chs.  III.  and  V.)— SS 
Fabius   to    ^.milius.      (Sel.    fr.    Bk.    XXII..    Ch. 

XXXIX.)— SSD 
Hannibal  Pleads  for  Peace.     (Cond  fr.  Bk.  XXX., 

Ch.  XXX.)— BLP 
Hannibal  to  his  Army.     (Cond.  fr.  Bk.  XXL,  Chs. 
XLIIL,  XLIV.)— PS— SS 
(Hannibal    to    the    Carthaginian    Army — abr.) 

—SSD 
(Hannibal's  Address  to  his  Army — Carthage  in 
PerU.)— BLP 
Publius  Scipio  to  the  Roman  Armv  before  the  Bat- 
tle of  Ticin.    (Bk.  XXL.  Chs.  XL.,  XLL,  cond.) 
—SSD 
(Roman  Liberty  in  Peril — sels.  arr.  fr.  Chs.  XL. 
and  XLL)— BLP 
(Scipio  to  his  Army.)- PS — SS 
Scipio  Declines  Hannibal's    Overtures    for  Peace. 

(Bk.  XXX.,  Ch.  XXXI.— sZ.  a6r.)— BLP 
Titus  Quintius  against  Quarrels  between  the  Senate 
and  the  People.     (Bk.  III..  Ch.  LXVII. ;  sel.  fr. 
LXVIII.)— SS 
Virginius,  as  'Tribune,  Refuses  the  Appeal  of  Appius 
Claudius.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IIL,  Ch.  LVII.)— SS 
History  of  Rome,  Set.  fr.     (Monarchy  of  Cipsar.  The — 
sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXVIII.)— Theodore  Mommsen. 
—TMD 
History  of  the  Civil  War,  SeZ.  fr.     (Death  of  Talbot. 

The— se/.  fr.  Bk.  VI.)— S:  Daniel.— WEP  1 
History  of  the  Conquest  of  Mexico,  Sp?«.  fr. — W:  H. 
Prescott. 
How  Montezuma  Lived.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.,  Ch.  I.) 

— WCLG  2 
Venice  of  the  Aztecs,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IIL,  Ch. 
VIII.)— CS  29— NPS— YP 
History  of    the  Peloponnesian  War,  Sels.  fr. — Thucy- 
dides  (tr.  by  Benj.  Jowett). 
Glory  of  Athens.     (Sel.  fr.  Speech  of  Pericles — Bk. 

II.,  Ch.  LXIV.— a6r.) 
Speech  of  Pericles.— (Bk.  II.,  Ch.  LX.— abr.)— OS  2 
History  of  the  Reign  of  Ferdinand  and  Isabella,  Sel.  fr. 
(Return  of  Columbus,  The— scZ.  fr.  Pt.  I.,  Ch. 
XVIII.)— W:  H.  Prescott.— WR  10 
History  of  the  Restoration  of  Monarchy  in  France, 
Sel.    fr.     (Reign    of    Napoleon,    The — Bk.   I., 
Ch.  I. — ahr.) — Alphonse  de  Lamartine. — TMD 
History  of  the  United  States,  Sels.  Jr. — G:  Bancroft. 
Acadian  Exiles,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  American  Revo- 
lution, Epoch.  I.,  Ch.  VIII.)— WR  5 
Character  of  (he  Declaration  of  Independence.  The. 
(Sel.  fr.  Amer.  Rev.,  Epoch  IIL,  Ch.  XXVIII.) 
— BS  23 
Discovery  of  the  Mississippi,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  His- 
tory of  the  Colonization  of  America,  Pt.  IIL. 
Ch.  X.)— WR  10 
Grea*  Britain  and  her  American  Colonies.     (Sel.  fr. 

Amer.  Rev..  Epoch  II.,  Ch.  XXXVI.)— SR  8 
News  from  Lexington,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Amer.  Rev., 
Epoch  III.,  Ch.  XL)— OS  2 
(Revolutionary   Alarm,   The — longer.) — FD    1 — 
TMD 
History  of  the  World,  Sel.   fr.   (Province  of  History, 
The— sei.  fr.  Ch.  CLXXII.)— J:  C.  Ridpath.— 
PFP 
History  of  William  Penn.  Sel.  fr.  (Monument  of  Will- 
iam Penn,  The.)— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— TMR 
(Penn's  Monument.)— BS  17— CS  29— FD  1— NPS 
— SR  8— YP 
Hitchen  May-day  Song.  The. — .\non. — CGd 
(Kitchen  May-day  Song — a6r.) — EDY 
(May-day  Song.)— OS  2 
Hither.  Meadow  Gossio.  Tell  me!— H.  P.  Beach.— NV 
Hive,  The,  Sd.  fr.     (Why.  Lovely  Charmer? )— Anon. 

—BNL 
Hives  and  Home.'. — Phoebe  Gary. — BLF 
Ho,  Boat  Ahoy!— Emma  S.  Stilwell.— BS  14 
Ho,  every  one  that  Thirst  eth! — Bible.     See  Isaiah. 
"Ho,  for  Slumborland!"— Eben  E.  Rexford.— NV 

(For  the  Slumber  Islands,  Ho!)— BR— BS  24 
Ho!  for  the  Holidays!     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
"Ho,  Reapers  of  Life's  Harvest!" — Anon. — HSS  3 

(Reaper  of  Life's  Harvest.) — GP 
Ho,  the  Harvest  Home.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Hobbies.— T.  DeW.  Talmage.— OM 
Hobbledy  Hops.— Anon.— TFS 
Hobson  and  his  Men. — E.  F.  Burns. — PAPm 
Hobson  and  his  Men. — Rob't  Loveman. — EDY 


144 


TITLE  INDEX 


Homeless 


Hobson's  Daring  Deed. — Anon. — PRR 

Hock-cart ;  or.  Harvest  Home,  The. — Rob't  Herrick. — 

Hod-fellow,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 

Hoe  out  your  Row. — Anon. — DLF — DS — YA 

Hoe  your  Own  Row.— Alice  Gary.— CPL — TFS(frr.  sel.) 

(Old  Maxims— C.)—BLF 
Hoeing  and  Praying. — Anon. — CS  36 
Hofer,  the  Tyrolese. — Julius  Mosen  (<r.  by  Mangan). — 

PS  {si.  abr.) 
(Andrew  Hofer— di^.  <r.)— EDY— OS  1 
(Death  of  Hofer,  The.— Mangan's/r.)— CS  14 
Hoffenstein's  Bugle.     (New  Orleans  Times-Democrat.) 

— CH 
Hohenlinden.     (C.)  — T:  Campbell.  — BFV  —  BNL  — 

BPB  —  CEL  —  EDY  —  EPs  —  FAS  —  FEP 

—  GN  — GP  — HB  — HBP  — HSS  1  —  LC  — 

PGT  1  —  PHS  —  PSR  —  SO  —  WCLG  2  — 

WEP  4— YBF 
(Battle    of    Hohenlinden    [,The].)— CS  14— LLC— 

OS  2— PPSr— PS— SS 
(Battle  of  Linden,  The.)— BLP 
Hold  dot  Fort  for  ve   vas  Coming. — H.  Von   Dunker 

foodie.— PAPm 
Hold  Fast  to  the  Dear  Old  Sabbath. — G:  M.  Vickers. — 

CS28 
"Hold  Fast  what  I  Give  you." — Lily  Warner.— WCL 
Hold  the  Light.— Anon.— CS  12 
Hold  Thou  me. — Horatius  Bonar. — HDL 
Hole  in  the  Carpet,  The, — Anon. — CS  9 
Hole  in  the  Floor,  The.— Lizzie  C.  Hardy.— CS  17 
Hole  in  the  Patch,  The.— Anon.— CS  17 
Holiday.     (Dramatic  char.) — Phila  H.  Case. — MD 
Holiday,  A. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 
Holiday  Acrostic,  A. — Eliz.  Lloyd. — HE 
Holiday  Convention,  The. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 

HE 
Holiday  Gobbler's  Address,  The. — Anon.— SR  13 
Holiday  Home.— H:  C.  Bunner.— TAV 
Holiday  in  Arcadia.     (Sel.  fr.  The  School  of  Compli- 
ments.)— Jas.  Shirley. — CEL 
(Pan's  Holiday. )—EP 
Holiday  Speech. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Holiday  Task,  A. — Gilbert    A.    a'Becket    (cr.    also   to 

Barclay  Philips). — NA 
(Polka  Lyric.)— HPE 
Holidays.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— OH 
Holiness. — Anon. — SSS 
Holland  (Description  of  Holland — C). — S:   Butler.— 

HPE 
Holland  House.     (SeZ.)- T:  B.  Macaulay  — VSG 
Hollow  Hospitality.     (Satires,    Bk.    III.,  Satire  3.) — 

Jos.  Hall.— WEP  1 
Holly,  The.— Eliza  Cook.— POS 

Christmas  Holly,  The.)— OS  1  (o6r.)— PoR  (sel.) 
Holly. — Susan  Hartley.— NV 
Holly,  The.— R.  S.  Hawker.— BVC 
Hollyhock,  A. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — AA 
Hollyhocks,  The.— Craven  L.  Betts.— AA 
Holly-tree,  The.— Rob't   Southey.— AD— BNL— FEP 

—HBP— WEP  4 
Holmes  Alphabet,  A. — (Comp.  fr.)  Oliver  W.  Holme 

— PEO 
Holmes,  Extract  concerning. — G:  W.  Curtis. — PEO 
Holmes,  Extract  concerning. — C:  W.  Eliot. — PEO 
Holmes,     Extract     concerning. — W:    S.     Kennedy. — 

PEO 
Holmes,  Extract  concerning. — Ray  Palmer. — PEO 
Holmes,  Extract  concerning. — Frances  H.  Underwood 

—PEO 
Holy  Bible,  Book  Divine.— J:  Burton.— FEP 
Holy  Cross  Day.  —  Rob't    Browning." —  AVP  (sel.)  — 

EDY 
Holy  Fair,  The.     (ScZ.)— Rob't  Bums.— WEP  3 
Holy,  Holy,  Holv! — Reginald  Heber.     See  Hymn  for 

Trinity  Sunday. 
Holy  Land.     (Celestial   Passion,   Pt.   II.,  6.)— R:  W. 

Gilder.— TAS 
Holy  Matrimony. — J:  Keble. — VA 
Holy  Nation,  A.     (Sel.  fr.  Of  Liberty  and  Charity.) — 

Richard  Realf.— PYO 
Holy  One,  The.     Bible.     See  Isaiah, 
Holy  Spirit,  The.— Harriet  Auber.— YBT 
Holy  Spirit,  The. — Rob't   Herrick.     See  His  Letanie 

to  the  Holy  Spirit. 
Holy  Thursday.      (C. — in  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W: 
Blake.— BVC— YBF 
(Charity  Children  at  St.  Paul's.)- FEP 
Holy  Tide,' The.— Frd'k  Tennvson.— OB 
Holy  Willie's  Praver.     (SI.  abr.)- Rob't  Burns.— EPs 

— ESs— HPE— THP 
Home. — Anon. — CP 
Home.     (Prose.)— Anon.— CS  24— NPS— YP 


Home. — Bernard  Barton. — BLP 

(At  Home— sei.)- HP 
Home. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Traveller,  The. 
Home,  The.  —  H:    W,    Grady.      See    Homes    of    the 

People,  The. 
Home.— Dora  Greenwell.— BIL— FTA 
Home.     (Echoes,  XXXIL— To  D.    H.— C.)— W:   E. 

Henley.— GN 
Home. — Leonidas  (tr.  by  Rob''t  Bland). — BNL 
Home.     (Sel.  fr.  The  West  Indies,  Pt.  III.)— Jas.  Mont- 
gomery.— WRD 
(SeZ.)- FP— WCLG  2 
(Love  of  Country  and  Home.) — PPSr  (br.  sel.) — 

SS  (abr.) 
(My  Country— a&r.)— BNL— SM 
Home.— E:  R.  SiU.— HBR— TAS 
Home.— T.  DeW.  Talmage.— CS  26 
Home.     (Early  vers,  of  Home  they  Brought  her  War- 
rior Dead,  in  The  Princess.) — Alfred  Tennyson. 

— OSl 
Home.     ("I  grieved  for  Buonaparte" — C. — Sonnet  IV. 

in  Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Independence 

and  Liberty). — W:  Wordsworth. — EPs  (abr). 
Home  Again.— Anon.— BDD—DFY 
Home  Again.— M.  S.  Pike.— LI,C 
Home  and  Mother. — Anon. — TFS 
Home  and  School  the  Bulwark  of  Our  Country.     (Sel: 

fr.  The  True  Greatness  of  our  Country.) — W. 

H.  Seward.— FD  2 
(America's  True  Greatness.) — SR  8 
Home  at  Last.— G:  J.  Romanes.— FTA— PGT  2 
Home  by  the  Warm  Southern  Sea,  A. — Mrs.   B.   C. 

Rude.— AD 
Home,  Can  I  Forget  theet — Anon. — LLC 
Home  Charades. — Anon. — EuE 
Home  Comfort.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Delectable  Day.) — 

C:  Kingsley.— OH 
Home  Concert,  The.— Mary  D.  Brine.— BS  21— PFP— 

SR6 
Home  Guard,  The.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Home  in  the  Government,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Farmer 

and    the    Cities.)  —  H:  W.  Grady.- BS  18  — 

PFP 
Home  in  View.— J:  Newton. — FEP 
Home  in  War-time. — Sydney  Dobell. — VA 
Home  is  where  the  Heart  is. — Anon. — HP 
Home  Life.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Home  of  my  Childhood. — Anon. — HSS  3 
Home  of  Peace,  The     (Ballad  Stanzas — C.) — T:  Moore. 

— CS20 
("I  knew  by  the  smoke  that  so  gracefully  curled.") 

— BNL— TFY 
Home  of  the  Soul.— Philip  Phillips.— BS  22 
Home  Picture,  A.— Fs.  D.  Gage.— CS  6 
Home  Picture  (in  Two  Scenes),  A.     (Tab.) — Anon. — 

TCP 
Home  Pleasures.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Home  Protection.     Frances  E.  Willard. — WR  18 
Home  Rule  for  Ireland. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. — NC 
Home  Rule  for  Ireland.— W:  E.  Gladstone.- SR  8 
Home  Song.     (Song— C.)— H:  W.    Longfellow.- BS  6 

— GN— OH 
Home  Song.— Duncan  C.  Scott.— TCV 
Home,  Sweet  Home.     (Fr.  Clari,  the  Maid  of  Milan.) — 

J:  H.  Payne— AA— HSS  3— LLC  (abr.,  w.  diff. 

2nd  St.) 
(Sei.)-BNL— FEP— GP— OS  1— SM— TAV— 

WCLGl 
(Home!  Sweet,  Sweet  Homel)— BLP 
(Sweet  Home — sel.) — PC 
Home,  Sweet    Home.  —  C.   C.   Somerville  (at.  also  to 

C:  H.  Tiffany).— CS  22 
(On  the  Rappahannock.) — PR 
Home,  Sweet  Home.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Home !  Sweet !  Sweet  Home ! — J :  H.  Payne.     See  Home, 

Sweet  Home. 
Home  they  Brought  her  Lap-dog  Dead. — C :  S.  Brooks. 

—THP 
Home  they  Brought  her  Warrior. — Alfred  Tennyson 

See  Princess,  The. 
Home  Thoughts  from  Abroad.     (C.) — Rob't   Brown- 
ing.- AVP  —  BFV  —  CGd  —  LC  —  OB  — 

PGT  2— POS— SN— VA— WEP  4— YBF 
(April  in  England.)— GN— OS  1  (sel.) 
("Hark,  how  my  blossomed  pear-tree  in  the  hedge" 

— seZ.)- AD 
Home  Thoughts   from   the   Sea. — Rob't    Browning. — 

LH— OB 
Home  to  Rest  in.  A.— H:  M.(?)  Morford.- FP 
Home,  Wounded. — Sidney  Dobell. — BNL 

(Basking— 8eZ.)—GP 
Home-coming. — Anon. — HP 
Homeless. — Anon. — CS  34 


145 


Homeless 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Homeless  Old  Man,  The. — Hall  Caine.     See  Bondman, 

The. 
Home-made  Fairy  Tale,  A.— Jas.  W  Riley— RCR 
Homes  of  England,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — BNL 

— CGd  (abr.)— FEP— PC 
Homes  of  the  People.— jParke  Godwin. — NC 
Homes  of  the  People,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Before  the  Bay 

State  Club.)— H:  W.  Grady.— FD  2— PPS 
(Home,  The—al.  ofrr.)— TMD 

(Ptly.  like  Home  in  the  Government,  The — above.) 
Homesick.— Anon.— PP—YFR 
Homesick. — David  Gray. — BNL 
Homesick  in  Heaven. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Poet  at 

the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Homeward.— Anon.— CS  18— HDL— POS 
Homeward  Bound.     (S/.  abr.) — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — 

WR13 
Homeward  Bound.      (In  Wild  Eden.)— G:  E.  Wood- 
berry. — AA 
Homeward  Road,  The.— C:  C.  Marsh.- CG  1 
Homing,  The. — J.  J.  Rooney. — AA 
Homoeopathic  Soup. — Anon. — PP — YFR 
"Honest  and  Honorable." — Alice  A.  Coale. — MD 
Honest  Autolycus,  An. — Anon. — PGT  1 
Honest  Deacon,  The. — Anon. — CH- CS  19 
Honest  Man,  An.  (C.) — Dinah  M.  Craik. 

(To  the  Memory  of  Fletcher  Harper.) — BNL 
Honest  Man's  Fortune,  An.     (Upon  an  Honest  Man's 

Fortune — C.)—3:  Fletcher.- EPs 
(Our  Acts  our  Angels  are — br.  sel.) — OS  2 
Honest  Money,  Sel.  Jr.     (Macaulay's  Prophecy — arr.) 

—Jas.  A.  Garfield.— NC 
Honest  Poverty.— Rob't  Burns.— EPs— HBP 

(For  a' That  and  a'  That.)— BNL— CR— FP— HSS3 

— MBL— WCLG  2— YBF  (abr.) 
(Is  there  for  Honest  Poverty— C.)—PHS 
(Man's  a  Man  for  a'  That,  A.)— BS  4— FEP— OS  2 

— SM— SPE— WEP  3 
Honest  Old  Toad,  The.— Anon.— HSS  2 
Honest  Rum-sellers'     Advertisement,     An. — A.     Mc- 

Wight.— CS  14 
Honest  Whore,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.  Act  L,  So.  12.) 

— T:  Dekker.- BNL 
Honesty.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Honesty  and  Economy.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Way  to  Make 

Money  Plenty   in  Every  Man's   Pocket.) — B: 

Franklin.— HSS  3 
Honesty  is  the  Best  Policy. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KJ 
Honesty  is  the  Best  Policy. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — DLD 
Honey  Dripping  from  the  Comb. — Jas.   W.   Riley. — 

AA 
Honeymoon,  The,  Sets.  fr. — J:  Tobin. 

Confession  of  Love,  A.     (Act  II.,  Scs.  2,  3.) — NDP 

(Honeymoon.  The.)— WR8 
Taming  a  Wife.— NDP 

(Honeymoon,  The — sel.) — SE 
Zamora.     (Act  I.,  1,  III.,  1,  IV.,  2,  V.)— WR  8 
Honez  Joseph  Unglesteiner. — Anon. — DRR 
Honk!  Honk!— Edmtmd  J.  Burk.— CS  35 
Honor. — S:  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Honor.     (Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Independence 

and  Liberty,    Pt.  II.,  17.)— W:  Wordsworth. 

—EPs 
Honor  all  Men. — Martha  P.  Lowe. — TAS 
Honor  in  Bud. — Ben  Jonson.     See  To  the  Immortal 

Memorj'  and  Friendship  of  that  Noble  Pair,  Sir 

Lucius  Cary  and  Sir  Henry  Morrison. 
Honor  of  Bristol,  "The. — Anon. — llH 
Honor  of    Labor,    The. — T:   Carlyle.     iSee   Past    and 

Present. 
Honor  of  t  he  Woods,  The.     (The  Story  of  the  Man  who 

Didn't  Know  Much,  Ch.  \ll.—cond.) — W:  H. 

H.  Murray. — NP 
Honor  thy  Father  and  thy  Mother. — Clara  J.  Denton. 

— SSE 
Honor  to  the  Hammer.     (Lortxion  Economist.) — HSS  3 
Honor  to  the   Laborer. — T:   CarlyJe.     iSee  Past  and 

Present. 
Hon.  Mr.  Sucklethumbkin's  Story. — R:  H.  Barham. 

See  Execution,  The. 
Honored  Dead,  The.— H:  W.  Beecher.- BLP  (si.  diff.) 

—HSS  1  (seZ.')— SPE 
(Invisible  Heroes,  The.) — TMD 
(Our  Honored  Dead.)— FD  1— LLC— WCLG  1 
(Tribute  to  our  Honored  Dead,  A.) — BS  24 — CS  2 

— DFR— HR 
Honoria. — Coventry  Patmore.    See  Aneel  in  the  House, 

The. 
Honoria's  Surrender. — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel 

in  the  Honne,  The. 
Honors,  5«i.  fr.     (Better  Way,  The.) — Jean  Ingelow.— 

GP 


Hooker's  Across.- G :  H.  Boker.— EDY 

Hoolahan  on  Education. — G:  Kyle. — WR  3 

Hoop  Drill  and  March. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 

Hoop  Skirt,  The.— Anon.— GH 

Hoosier  and  his  Banner,  The. — W.  W.  Fink. — CDV— 

SDR 
Hoorier  Describes  Rubenstein's    Playing,  A. — G:    W. 

Bagby.     See  How  "Ruby"  Played.  i 

Hoosier  School-master,  The,  Sh.  fr.     (Discourse  by  the 

Rev.  Mr.  Bosan- seZ.  fr.  Ch.  XII.)— E:  Eggles- 

ton. — BeR 
Hope.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Hope.— Sarah  F.  Adams.— SS 

Hope. — T:  Campbell.     See  Pleasures  of  Hope,  The. 
Hope,  Sel.  fr.  (Grace  and  the  World.) — W:  Cowper. — 

WEP  3 
Hope.— W:  D.  Howells.— AA 
Hope,  A.     (O— C:  Kingsley. 
(Twin  Stars  Aloft.)— FTA 
Hope. — Emma  Lazar\is. — TAS 
Hope.     (Abr. )— Joaquin  M Uler.— TAS 
Hope. — W:  Shen.stone.     See  Pastoral  Ballad,  A. 
Hope.— Phillips  Stewart.— TCV 
Hope  and  Fear. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — VA 
Hope. — E:  Young.     Sec  Night  Thoughts. 
Hope  Deferred. — Anon.—  IIP 

Hope  Deferred.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Hope,  Faith,  [and]   Love. — Friedrich  Schiller. — GP — 

OS  2 
(Three  Words  of  Strength.)- HDL 
(Words  of  Strength.)— BS  9— KNE 
Hope  in  Misery.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
"Hope  is  like  a  harebell,  trembling  from  its  birth." — 

Christina  G.  Rossetti. — PoR 
Hope  of  an  Hereafter,  The. — T:  Campbell.     See  Pleas- 
ures of  Hope,  The. 
Hope  of   Immortality,   The. — Sir  David   Lyndesay. — 

WEPl 
Hope  of    the    Nation,    The. — Jacob  G.  Schurman. — 

TMR 
Hope  On. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Dream  of  Summer,  A. 
Hope  Overtaken.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XLII.) 

— Dante  O.  Rossefti.— WEP  4 
Hope  to  Feede. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and 

Stella. 
Hopeful  Youth,  A. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavan.augh. — KER 
Hopefully  Waiting. — Anson  D.  Randolph. — BNI, 
Hopeless  Serenade,  A. — Anon. — SR  6 
(Serenade,  The.)— BS  12 

(Youth  who  Plaved  before  he  Looked,  The.)— FS 
Hopes  and  Fears.— T.  H.  G.— CG  3 
Hope's  Song. — Helen  M.  Winslow. — PEO 
Hora  Christ i. — Alice  Brown. — T.^S 
Horace. — .^lex.  Pope.     See  Essay  on  Criticism,  An. 
Horace. — J.  O.  Sargent. — AA 
Horace,  Bk.    IV.,    Ode   9.    Addressed    to   Archbishop 

King. — (Tr.  by)  Jonathan  Swift. — WEP  3 
Horace  Greeley.     (Spoken   at  the  Funeral  of  Horace 

Greeley.  Nov.,  1872.)— H:  W.  Beecher.— SC 
Horace  Greeley. — Edmund  C.   Stedmati. — GP 
Horace  Imitated  (First  Epistle  of  the  Second  Book  of 

Horace— C.).— Alex.  Pope.— WEP  3  (abr.) 
Horatian  Ode  upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ireland, 

A.     (O— Andrew      MarveU.— FEP— HBP — 

OB— PGT  1— WEP  2 
(Cromwell  and  King  Charles — sel.) — EPs 
(Death  of  Charles  L— «eZ.)— EHT 

(Execution  of  Charles  First — sel.) — EDY 
(Two  Kings.)— LH 
Horatii  and  Curiatii,  The. — T.  D.  Suplee. — CS  36 
Horatius.     (C.)— T:    B.   Macaulay.  —  FEP  — HBP  — 

LH  (cond.)—MBJ, 
(SI  a«/r.)— HB— PSR— WCLG  2 
(SeZ«.)— BS  9— SO 
(Horatius  at  the  Bridge.)— BNL — CS  2  (sl.  abr.) 
(Sei.)- BLP— CR— FR— FTR— HSS  2— LLC— 

OM— OS  2— SA— SS 
Lays  of  Ancient  Rome,  seZ.  fr.  (Sel.) — FP 
Muster,  The.     (Sel.)— AVF 
Horatius  attheBridge. — T:B.Mactilay.    See  Horatius. 
Horn,  The. — (Tr.  by)  Leonce  Rabillon.      See  Song  of 

Roland. 
Horn,  The.— Walter  Ramal.—SOC 
Hornet,  The.— .losh  Billings.— BeR 
Horrors  of  Savage  Warfare. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chat- 
ham.    See  American  War,  The. 
Horrors  of  W^ar.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Horrors  of  War,  The. — C:  Sumner.     See  War  System 

of  the  Commonwealth  of  Nations. 
Horse,  The — A  Boy's  Composition. — Anon. — CS  18 
Horse  Auctioneer,  The. — Anon. — BS  19 
Horse  Business,  The.— G:  Thatcher. — TK 
Horse  that  Wins  the  Race,  The. — Anon. — DCR 


146 


TITLE  INDEX 


How  are 


Horseback  Ride,   The. — Sara  J.    Lippincott. — BNL — 

FEP— FMR— MMR 
Horse-car  Incident,  A. — B:  P.  Shillaber. — CS  21 
Horsemanship.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Horseradish. — Anon. — SR  I 
Horse's  Petition  to  his  [or  the]  Driver,  A. — Anon. — PP 

— YFR 
Horse-thief  .Tim.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  36 
Hortense. — Frank  J:  Urquhart. — CG  I 
Hosanna! — Joshua  King. — TFS 
Hosea  Biglow's  Lament. — .las.  R.  Lowell.     See  Biglow 

Papers,  The. 
Hospitality.     (Frags,  fr.  various  autfiors.) — BNL 
Hoss.— Sarah  P.  McL.  Greene.— BS  19 
Hostage,  The.— Helen  Booth.— CS  27 
Hostage,  The.    (A6r.)— Friedrich  SchiQer. — WR  16 

(Damon  and  Pythias — longer.) — SS 
Hosting  of  the  Sidhe.  The.— W :  B.  Yeats.— TIP 
Hotel  in  the  Storm,  A. — Julia  N.  Stickney. — WR  15 
Hotspur. — W:  Shakespeare.     <Sec    King    Henry    IV., 

Pt.  I. 
Hotspur  and  the   Fop. — W:  Shakespe.ire.     iSee  King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Hotspur  to  Worcester. — W:  Shakespeare."  See   King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Hotspur's  Defence. — W :  Shakespeare.    See  King  Henry 

IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Hotspur's  Description  of  a  Fop. — W:  Shakespeare.  See 

KingHenry  IV.,Pt.  I. 
Hotspur's  Quarrel  with  Henry  IV. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  King  Henry  IV..  Pt.  I. 
Hotspur's  Soliloquy  on  the  Contents  of  a  Letter. — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pi.  I. 
Hound,  The.    (  Sel.  fr.  The  Jaquerie.) — Sidney  I^anier. 

— AA 
Hour  has  Come,  The. — Anon. — FTA 
Hour  in  School,  An. — F.  Crosby. — ED 
Hour    of    Comfort,    The.— -Frances     R.    Havergal. — 
SSS  (sel.) 
(Secret  of  a  Happy  Day,  The— C.)— HDL 
Hour  of  Death,  The.— Felicia    D.  Hemans.— CS  2— 

GP— WCLG  2 
Hour  of  Horror,  An. — Anon. — CS  26 
Hour    of    Peaceful     Rest,    The. — W:    B.    Tappan.— 

AA 
Hour  of  Prayer. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — CPL — LLC 
Hour  of  Trial,  An.— Anon.— WR  2 
Hour  with  Whittier,  An.— Phebe  A.  Holder.— CS  .32 
Houre's  Recreation  in  Musicke,  An.SeZ.  fr.     (There  is  a 
Garden  in  her  Face.) — Richard  Allison. — BNI< 
FEP— TFY 
Hours,  The.— Mrf..  Gordon.— CPIi 
Hours  of  the  Night,  Sel.  fr.     (Peace  in  God — Third 

Hour.)— Harriet  B.  Stowe.— BS  8 
House,  The.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— PHS 
House  Beautiful,  The. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — BNL 
House  Full  of  Wine,  The.— Johnson  Barker.— TS 
House  is  Dark  and  Dreary,  The. — R:  H:  Stoddard. — 

FEP 
House  not  Made  with  Hands,  The. — H.  E.  Go.''don. — 

CS33 
House  not    Made   with   Hands,   A. — Earle   Marble. — 

CS  15 
House  of  a  Hundred  Lights,  sel.  fr. — F.  R.  Torrence. — 

AA 
House  of    Bus.yrane. — Edmund    Spenser.     See    Fairie 

Queene,  The. 
Hou.se  of  Clouds,  The.— Eliz.  B.  Browning. — WR  15 
House  of  Death,  The. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — ASL 
House  of  Fame,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Geoffrev  Chaucer. 
Forecast.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Proem.) — EPs 
House  of  Fame,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— WEP  1 

(Poet.  The— 6r.  scZ.)- EPs 
Milky  Way,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— EPs 
Prayer  to  Apollo.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.)— EPs 
House  of   God,   The.     (Hymn— Sung   at   the   Second 
Church,   Boston,   at   the   Ordination   of   Rev. 
Chandler  Robbins — C.) — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 
— TAS 
House  of  Life,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Dante  G.  Rossetti. 

Birth-bond,  The.     (Sonnet  XV.)— PGT  2— WEP  4 
Broken  Music.     (Sonnet  XLVII.)— VA 
Dark  Glass,  The.     (Sonnet  XXXIV.)— VA 
Her  Gifts.     (Sonnet  XXXI.)— VA 
Hope  Overtaken.     (Sonnet  XLII.)— WEP  4 
Inclusiveness.     (Sonnet  LXIII.) — ^VA 
Introductory.     (Tntrod.  Sonnet.) — VA 
Lost  Days.     (Sonnet  LXXXVI.)— PGT  2 
Love  Enthroned.     (Sonnet  I. )— WEP  4 
Love-letter,  The.     (Sonnet  XL)— FTA— OH 
Love's  Lovers.     (Sonnet  VIII.) — WEP  4 
Lovesight.     (Sonnet  IV.)— PGT  2— VA— YBF 
Monochord,  The.     (Sonnet  LXXIX.)— WEP  4 


House  of  Life,  The  (continued). 

Newborn  Death,  I.  and  II.    (Sonnets  XCIX.  and  C.) 

—WEP  4 
One  Hope,  The.     (Sonnet  CI.)— PGT  2 
Parted  Love.     (Sonnet  XLVI.)— WEP  4 
"Retro  me  Sathanal'-'     (Sonnet  XC.)— PGT  2 
St.  Luke  the  Painter.     (Sonnet  LXXIV.)— EDY 
Silent  Noon.     (Sonnet  XIX.)— OH— PGT  2— YBF 
Soul's  Beauty.     (C— Sonnet  LXXVII.)— PGT  2 

(Sibylla  Palmifera.)— WEP  4 
Sun's  Shame,  The.     (Sonnet  XCII.)— PGT  2 
Superscription,  A.     (C— Sonnet  XCVII.)— VA 

(Nevermore,  The.) — BNL 
Willow-wood,  I.     (Sonnet  XLIX.)— PGT  2 
Without  Her.     (Sonnet  I.III.)— VA 
House  of  Night,  Tho, Sel.fr.  (Deathls Epitaph.)— Philin 

Freneau. — AA 
House  of  Pride,  The. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie 

Queene,  The. 
House  of  Representatives,  The. — H:  C.  Lodge. — FD  2 
House  of  the  Trees,  The.— Agnes  E.  Wetherald.— TGV 

— VA 
House  of  the  Wolfing?,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (War-hom  of  the 
Elkings  — 8eZ«.    fr.    Ch.    II.)— W:     Morris.— 
BS  19 
House  of  too  Much  Trouble,  The. — Albert  B.  Paine. — 

WR22 
House  on    the    Hill,    The. — Edgar    Fawcett. — MR — 

WR  \6(al/r.) 
House  on  the  Hill,  The. — E.  A.  Robinson. — AA 
House  that  Jack  Built,  The.— Anon.— PTS  (o6r.)— SO 
(Domicile  Erected  bv  John.  The.)— MHR 
(Modern  House  that  Jack  Built,  The.)— BNL— CS  3 
(Old,  but  Good.)— SR2 
House  that  was  just  lake  its  Neighbors,  The. — Anon. 

— BS16 
House  where  I  was  Born,  The.— T:  Hond.— BLP 

(I   Remember,   I   Remember — C.)— BNL— BPB— 
EDY— FEP— FP—GP— HBP— LC— MR- 
OS  1  —  PoR  —  PSR  —  PYO  (abr.)—\S— 
WCL— WCLG  1— YBF 
(Old  House  at  Home,  The— afer.)- TFS 
(Past  and  Present.)— PGT  I 
House  with  the  Cross.  The. — Florence  W.  Snedeker. — 

WR5 
House-cleaning. — Franklyn  W.  Lee. — WR  24 
Household  Fairv,  A.— Fs.  Talfourd.— DT 
Household  Jewels,  The.— Anon.— CS  19 
Household  Sovereign,  The. —  H:  W.  Longfellow.     See 

Hanging  of  the  Crane,  The. 
Household  Woman,  The. — Caroline  Oilman. — FEP 
Householder,  The. — Rob't   Browning.     See    Fifine    at 

the  Fair. 
Houfiekeeper,    The.  —  (Vincent     Bourne  —  tr.  bv)   C: 

Lamb.— BNL— GN— LC— OS  1— POS— SN 
Housekeeper's  Soliloquy,    The. — Frances    D.    Gage. — 

CS2 
Housekeeper's  Tragedy,  A.   [or  The]. — Anon. — GP — 

PPSr 
Housekeeper's  Troubles,  A. — Anon. — DST 
Housekeeping. — C:  Dickens.     See  David  Copperfield. 
How?     (Sel.     fr.    A    Builder's    Lesson.)  —  J:      Boyle 

O'Reilly.— YBT 
How  a  Blacksmith  was  Converted. — Anon. — CS  24 
How  a  Dutchman  was  Done. — .Anon. — BDD — CDV — 
DFY 
(How  Pat  Swindled  Hans.)— SDR 
How  a  Frenchman  Entertained  John  Bull. — Anon. — 

BeR  (si.  aftr.)— DFY— SDR 
How  a  Man  Puts  Things  away. — Anon. — SF?  11 
How  a  Man  Should  be  Judged. — Anon. — CS  2 
(As  Pebbles  iu  the  Sea.)— HP 
(Souls,  not  Stations.)— BLP 
How  a  Married  Man    Sews    on    a    Button.     (Button 
Off,  A — C. — in    Life  in    Danbury.) — J  as.  M. 
Bailey.— BS  4— CRR 
(Sewing  on  a  Button.)— CS  14— PS 
How  a   Song  Saved   a  Soul. — -Prank    L.   Stanton.— 
SR4 
("Rock  of  Ages.")— FMR  (si.  diff.)—WR  7 
How  a  Widow  Mourned. — Anon. — CS  22 
How  a  Woman  Does  it. — Anon. — DCR 
How  an  Angel  Looks. — Anon. — WR  24 
How  an  Apple  Tree  Grows. — Anon. — AD 
How  an  Engineer  Won  hi»  Bride. — J.^s.  N.  John8v>u. — 

CS32 
How  Arbor  Dav  is  Observed  in  Various  States. — Anon. 

—AD 
"How  are  Thv  Servants  Blest,  O  Tjordl"     (Ode,  An 
— C.)— Jos.  Addison.— FEP 
(Hymn.)— HBP 
"How  are  you.  Sanitary?" — Fs.  Bret  Harte.  —  AWB 
—PAP 


147 


How  Balthazar 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


How  Balthazar  the  King  went  down  into  Egypt. — J: 

H.  Duvar.— TCV 
How  Bat  ease    Came    Home. — W:    H.    Drummond. — 

WR26 
"How  beautiful  is  youthl  how  bright  it  gleams." — H: 

W.  Longfellow-     See  Morituri  Salutamus. 
"How  beautiful  this    night!     The    balmiest   sigh." — 

Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Queen  Mab. 
How  Ben  Fargo's  Claim  was  Jumped.  —  Tom  P.  Mor- 
gan.—BS  18 
("Jumped" — the  Story  of  Ben  Fargo's  Claim.) — 

CS33 
How  Betsey  and   I  Made  up.     {SI.  longer  and  si.  diff. 

fr.  present  vers,  in  Works.) — Will  Carleton — 

CS  5— FTR 
How  Big  was  Alexjinder,  Pa? — Anon. — BS  19 
How  Bones  Caught  a  Duck. — Anon. — DSS 
How  Bones  Cured  a  Smoky  Chimney. — Anon. — DE 
How  Brunhild  was  Received  at  Worms. — Anon.     See 

Nibelungen  Lied. 
How  Buck  was  Brought  to  Time. — Opie  P.  Read. — 

DCR 
How  Burlington  was  Saved. — C.  Mair. — DR 
How  Butter  is  Made. — Anon. — PS 

(Making  Butter.)— TT 
"How  calm,  how  beautiful!" — T:  Moore.      See  Lalla 

Rookh. 
How  Came  the  Holly  Berries  Red?— C:  W.  E.  Chapin, 

Jr.— CG  1 
How  Can  the  Heart  Forget  Her? — Anon. — OB 
How  Christmas    came    to    Crappy    Shute.     (Leslie's 

Weekh/.)—BS  26 
How  Colonel  Ashton  Signed  the  Pledge. — K.  A.  Peters. 

— WR  15 
How  Columbus    Found    America. — H.    C.    Dodge. — 

CS29 
How  Congress  fought  for  Sheridan. — Emma  D.  Banks. 

—BR 
How  Cushing  Destroyed  the  Albemarle. — Anon. — CS  23 
How  Cyrus  Laid  the  Cable.— J:  G.  Saxe.— EDY— PP— 

YFR 
How  Daisy  Went  to  School. — Anon. — HVD 
How  Dennis  took  the  Pledge. — Anon. — BeR — CRR — 

DI— KNE— SDR 
How  Did  it  Happen?— Anon.— COS— PP 

(Baby  Nell— 8e«.)— CPL 
How  Did  she  Know?— Anon.— BS  21— WR  20 
How  Do  I  Look. — Mrs.  Bohne. — FAS 
How  Do  I  Love  Thee?  — Eliz.  B.  Browning.  —  GP — 

TFY 
(Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese — w.  others.) — BNL — 

FEP— HBP— YBF 
(Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese,  XLIII. —  C) — VA 

— WEP  4 
(Ways  of  Love,  The.)— FTA— OH 
How  Do  you  Know? — J.  P.  Hutchinson. — SR  10 
How  Dot   Heard  "The  Messiah." — Hezekiah  Butter- 
worth.— WR  16 
"How  fair  is  the  rose!"     (Sel.  fr.  The  Rose.) — Isaac 

Watts. AD 

How  Father  Carves  the  Duck.— E.  V.  Wright. — PR — 

YA 
(When  Father  Carves  the  Duck.)— SR  9— WR  4 
How  Gavin  Birse  Put  it  to  Maggie  I^ownie.     (A  Win- 
dow in  Thrums,  Ch.  XV.) — J  as.  M.  Barrie. — 

WGS— WR  13 
How  Girls  Fish.- Anon.— SR  10— WR  26 
How  Girls  Study.— Belle  MacDonald.— BS  12— CS  27 

— PR— SR  6 
How  Good   are   the   Poor!     Victor   Hugo.     See   Poor 

Fisher  Folk,  The. 
How  Grandma  Danced. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — SR  9 

(Minuet,  The— C.)— DR  (w.  mMstc)— PS— SR  9— 

TMR 
(SeZ.  )—GMS—SC 
How  Grandpa  Proposed.— Anon. — DCP — WR  7 
How  Hans  Yager  Enjoyed  the  Opera. — Anon. — BDD 
"How  happy  could   I  be  with  either."     (Br.  sel.  jr. 

Beggar's  Opera,  Act    II.,  Sc.   2.) — J:  Gay. — 

OES 
How  Happy  I'll  Be!— Anon.— HR— LLC 
How  Hazel  Kept  House. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
How  he  Does  It. — Anon. — PR 
How  he  Had  him. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
How  he  Lost  her.     (Somerville  Journal) — BS  21 
How  he  Paralyzed  the  Chef. — Anon. — OH 
How  he  Teased  Ned. — S.  Jennie  Smith.— DLD 
How  he  Saved  St.  Michael's.  —  Mary  A.  P.  Stansbury. 

— CS  9— FR  (ahr.)— MYF 
(SI.  afer.)— BAB— FTR— HB—PPSr—S A 
How  he  Whipped  him. — Anon. — CS  15 
How  Hezekiah  St  ole  the  Spoons. — Anon. — BeR — BS  22 
("Hez"  and  the  Landlord.)— CS  9— DFY 


How  his  Garments  got  Turnetl. — Anon. — CH — CS  25 

— DS— YA 
How  I  Edited  an  Agricultural  Paper.     (How  I  Once 
Edited,  etc.— C.)— S:  L.  Clemens.— SO 
(Mark  Twain  Edits  an  Agricultural  Paper — abr.) 

Qg  y 

(My  Editing— cond.)—WR  2 
How  I  Got  Invited  to  Dinner. — Anon. — HR 
How  I  Kissed  her.— G:  M.  Ritchie.— WR  7 
How  I  Love  her.— C.  B.  Newton.— CG  2 
How  I  Love  my  Books.     (Wrinkle.)— CG  3 
How  I  Made  my  Fortune. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KH 
How  I   Once   Edited   an    Agrictiltural    Paper. — S:    L. 

Clemens.     See  How  I  Edited,  etc. 
How  I  Saw  Santa  Claus. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
How  I  Tended  the  Baby.— Anon.— SR  5 

(How  Jimmy  Tended  the  Baby.)— CH— CS  25 
How  I  was  Sold.     (How  the  Author  was  Sold  in  New- 
ark—C.)—Sr  L.  Clemens.— WR  5 
How  I  Won  my  Wife.— W.  A.  Eaton.— CS  31 
How  it  Came.— Sydney  Dayre.— YBT 
How  it  Came  to  Be. — Anon. — SR  11 
How  it  Happened.— J:  Hay.— TFY 
How  it    Happens. — Anon. — BS  21 
How  it  Is. — Anon. — SR  11 
How  it  Once  Was.     (New  Ywk  Sttn.)- PPh 
How  it  Really  Was. — Grace  D.  Litchfield.— SR  9 
How  it  was  to  Be. — Anoti. — SR  11 
How  Jake    Schneider    Went    Blind. — Anon. — BDD — 

BeR— DFY 
How  Jamie  Came  Home.     (Lonaer  than  cirrenl  ed.  in 

Farm    Ballads.)— Will    M.   Carleton.— CS  7— 

SA 
How  Jim  Turner  Broke  up  the  School. — Anon. — CS  22 
How  Jimmy  Tended  the  Baby. — Anon.     See  How    1 

Tended  the  Babv. 
How  Jinny  Eased  her  Mind.— T:  N.  Page.— HBR 
How  Johnnie  Stopped  Crying. — Anon. — ASD 
How  June  Found  Ma-ssa  Linkum. — Eliz.  S.  Phelps. — 

BS25 
How  Kaiser    Wilhelm's    Sister    was    Won. — Anon. — 

MMR 
How  Larrv  Sang  the  "Agnus." — Jeannie  P.  Ewing. — 

CS36 
How  Liab  and  I  Parted. — N.  S.  Emerson. — SR  1 

(Why  Liab  and  I  Parted.)— WR  24 
"How  like  a    winter    hath    my    absence    been." — W: 

Shakespeare.— PGT  1 
(Sonnet.)— HBP— OB  (XTI.) 
(Sonnet  XCVII.— C.)— WEP  1 
How  Lisa    Loved    the    King.     (Cond.) — G:    Eliot. — 

WRll 
"How  little  flattering  is  a  woman's  love." — H:  Tay- 
lor.—GG 
How  Little   Tom   was    Saved.  —  Alex.   Anderson.  — 

DS  (si.  abf.) 
(Nottman.)— CS  26  (si.  a6r.)— WR  13 
How  Long  Before  the  Snow  Comes? — Clara  Denton. — 

LPD 
How  Love   Comes. — H:   W.    Longfellow.     See    Endy- 

mion. 
How  Lucy  Backslid.— Paul  L.  Dunbar.— WR  26 
How  Many  Times. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Torrismond. 
"How  many  times,  as  through  the  rooms  I  hasten." 

Ellen  M.  H.  Gates.— GG 
How  Many  Voices.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  CLIV.)  — 

Walters.  Landor.— FEP 
"How  many   went    from    happy    homes." — Anon. — 

HSSl 
How  Marriage  is  like  a  Devonshire  Lane. — J:  Marriott. 

— CS29 
How  Margrave      Rudeger      was      Slain. — Anon.     See 

Nibelungen  I aed. 
How  Mickey  Got  Kilt  in  the  War. — Anon.— CS  2 
How  Mr.  Blinks  Named  the  Baby. — Mrs.  M.  F.  Howard. 

— SR7 
How  Mr.  CofBn  Spelled  It.     (Detroit  Free  Press.)— SRI 
How  Mr.  Coville  Counted  the  Shingles  on  his  House. 

(Mr.  Coville  Proves  Mathematics — C. — in  They 

All  Do  It.)— Jas.  M.  Bailey.— BS  2— CS  9— 

DDR 
How  Mr.  Rabbit  was  too  Sharp  for  Mr.  Fox. — Joel  C.^ 

Harris.     See  Uncle  Remus,  his  Songs  and  his 

Savings. 
How  Mr.  Simonson  Took  Care  of  the  Baby. — Pauline 

Phelrjs.- WR  20 
How  Mr.  Smiggles  Went  to  a  Public  Dinner. — E.  F. 

Turner.— CS  25 
How  Mrs.   Ga.skell   Did  not   Hire  a  Cook.     (Plan.) — 

Anon.— PR 
How  Mrs.  O'Doolahan  had  Mike  Arrested.  — S.  Jennie 

Smith— CS  34 


148 


TITLE  INDEX 


How  to 


How  Montezuma  Lived. — W:  H.  Prescott.     .See  His- 
tory of  the  Conquest  of  Mexico. 
How  Mose    Counted    the    Eggs.     (Texas    Sittings.) — 

CS29 
(Counting  Eggs.)— GH— PS— SR  6 
"How  Mother  Did  it." — Anon. — MHR 
How  Much  Do  you  Love  me? — Mary  A.  Townsend. — 

FTA 
"How  much  so  ever  in  this  life's  mutations." — Anon. — 

GG 
How  my  Song  of  her  Began. — Philip  B.  Marston.  —  VA 
"How  near  to  good  is  what  is  fair."     (Fr.  Love  Freed 

from  Ignorance  and    Folly.) — Ben    Jonson. — 

BNL— ELP 
(Song.)— EPs 
How  no  Age  is  Content.     (C.) — Henry  Howard,  Earl 

of  Surrey. 
(Age  of  Children  Happiest ,  The  —  sel. )—  CGd  —  LC 
(No  Age  is  Content  with  his  own  Estate.) — FEP 
How  Norman  Won  the  Race. — J.  M.  Whitson. — WR  25 
How  Old  Brown  Took  Harper's  Ferry.    (C.) — Edmund 

C.  Stedman.— PAP 
(John  Brown  of  Osawatomie.) — EPs 
How  Old  Erasmus  Doctored  his  Temperance  Pledge. 

Anon.— DCR 
How  Paderewski  Plavs  the  Piano. — Anon. — CRR 

.  (Piano-music.)— DR—PTS 
How  Pat  Saved  his  Bacon.  —  Anon.     See  How  Terry 

Saved  his  Bacon. 
How  Pat  Sold  a  Dutchman. — .^non. — DE 
How  Pat  Stopped  the  Car. — Anon. — SDR 
How  Pat  Swindled  Hans. — Anon.     See  How  a  Dutch- 
man was  Done. 
How  Pat    Went   Courting.     (Leeds  Mercury.) — CD — 

DES— SDR 
How  Patriots  May  be  Made. — Sir  Rob't  Walpole. — SS 
How  Paul  Won  his  Goat. — Anne  Borden. — BS  1 
How  Persimmons  Took  Cah  ob  der  Baby.     (St.  Nicho- 
las.)—OS  1.3— WR  26 
(Take  Good  Care  of  Baby.)— SR  9 
How  Pussy  was  Left. — Alice  I;.  Richards. — WN 
How  Randa  Went  over  the  River.    (Fr.  Caleb  Krinklo). 

— C:  C.  CoP^n.- CS  23— DS 
How  Robin  Hood  Rescued  the  Widow's  Three  Sous. — 

Anon.— EHT 
(Robin  Hood  Rescuing  the  Widow's  Three  Sons.) — 

BB— WEP  1 
How  Roses  Came  Red. — Rob't  Herrick. — ES 
.How  "Ruby"  Played.— G:  W.  Bagby.— BS  8— CS  16— 

FTR— SA 
(Hoosier    Describes    Rubenstein's    Playing,    A.) — 

SDR 
How  Sad.— Mav  R.  McNabb— PS 
How  Salvator  Won.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— WR  3 
How  Santa  Claus  Came  to    Simpson's    Bar,  Sel.  fr. 

(Jovita;  or,  The  Christmas  Gift.) —  Fs.  Bret 

Harte — DR 
"How  shall  I  know  thee  in  the  sphere." — W:  C.  Bryant. 

See  Future  Life,  The. 
How  she  Cured  him .     (Dinl. )— DS— N PS—  Y A  —  YP 
How  she  Was  Consoled. — Anon. — CRR 
"How  should  I  your  true  love  know."  —  W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Hamlet. 
How  Siegfried    was    Slain. — Anon.     See    Nibelungen 

Lied. 
"How  silentlv,  how  silently." — Phillips  Brooks.     See 

O  Little  Town  of  Bethlehem. 
How  Sleep  the  Brave.     (Ode  Written  in  the  Beg^inning 

of  the  Year  1746— C.)— W:  Collins.— BFV— 

BNL— GN— GP— LC— LLC— OB— OS  3— PC 

PSR— SM 
(Ode.)— EPs— FEP— HBP— SS— WEP  3 
(Ode  Written  in  1746.)— BPB— PGT  1— YBF 
How  Soap  was  First  Made. — Anon. — WR  17 
How  "Sockerv"  Set  a  Hen. — Anon. — BDD 
How  Stands  the  Class  Around? — Anon. — HBP 
How  Strange  it  Will  Be.— Frank  E.  Holliday.— TFY 
"How  sweet  in  winter  time  we  feign  the  spring." — 

Anon.— GG 
"  How  sweet  the  moonlight  sleeps  upon  this  bank!" — 

W :  Shakespeare.  See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
How  Sweet  the  Name  of  Jesus  Sounds.-^J;  Newton. — 

FEP 
How  Tambo  Got  Shot.— Anon.— DSS 
How  Terrv  Saved  his  Bacon. — Anon. — CS  6 
(How  Pat  Saved  his  Bacon.)— BC—DI 
How  the  Author  was  Sold  in  Newark. — S:  L.  Clemens. 

See  How  I  was  Sold. 
How  the  Babies  Grow. — Jennie  Carroll. — TFS 
How  the  Bees  Came  by  their  Sting. — Carlotta  Perrv. 

— CS30 
How  the  Captain  Saved  the  Day. — Walter  Williams. — 

BS26 


How  the    Cats    Went    to    Boarding-school. — Anon. — 

CS15 
How  the  Celebrated  Miltiades  Peterkin  Paul  Got  the 

Better  of  Santa  Claus. — J:Brownjohn. — BS16 
(Miltiades  Gets  the  Best  of  Santa  Claus.)— CS  23— 

PR 
How  the  Church  was  Built  at  Kehoe's  Bar. — J:  Ben- 
nett.—CS  31— NP 
How  the   Derby   Was   Won. — Harrison   Robertson. — 

HBR 
How  the  Dimples  Came. — Anon. — TFS 
How  the  Dutchman  Killed  the  Woodchuck. — Anon — 

BDD— CS  11— DFY 
How  the  Fifty-first  Took  the  Bridge. — Jeff  H.  Nones— 

CS30 
How  the  Flowers  Came. — Anon. — DJS 
How  the  Gates  Came  Ajar.     (Tr.  by)  Helen  L.  Bost- 

wick.— CS  4— OS  1— WCL— WR  15 
How  the  Gentlemen  Do  after  Marriage. — Anon. — CS  9 
How  the    Gentlemen    Do    before   Marriage. — Anon. — 

CS9 
How  the  Gospel  Came  to  Jim  Oaks. — Anon. — BS  12 — 

CR 
How  the    Insurance   Agent    was  Squelched.     (Detroit 

Free  Press.)— SDR 
("Two  ToUar?")— BDD 
How  the  King  Lost   his  Crown. — J :  T.  Trowbridge. — 

CS28 
How  the  La  Rue  Stakes  were  Lost. —  C:  N.  Hood. — 

BS24 
How  the  Lawver[s]  Got  a  Patron  Saint. — J:  G.  Saxe. — 

BC— CS  22 
How  the  Leaves  Came  Down. — Susan  Coolidge. — AD 

NV— PoR 
How  the  Money  Goes. — Anon. — PS 
How  the  Oak  Grew.— Clara  D.  Bates.— YBT 
How  the  Old  Horse  Won  the  Bet. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

CS  17— FTR— HNS— SE  (sel.) 
How  the  Organ  was  Paid  For. — Kate  .\.  Bradley. — 

WR4 
How  the  Parson  Broke  the  Sabbath. — Anon. — CS  22 
How  the  Pilgrims  Gave  Thanks. — Anon. — PEO 
How  the  QuaTPl   Began.     (Dial.) — E.   C.   .and   L.   J 

Rook.— YFE 
How  the  Question  Came  Home. — Anon. — PP — YPS 
How  the  Ransom  Was  Paid. — Anon. — PEO 
How  the  Refugees  Were  Saved. — Ellen  K.  Bradford. — 

CS  36 
How  the  Revival  Came. — Mart?.  J.  Bidwell.— WR  12 
IIow  the  Story  Grew. — Anon — YFD 
How  the  Wind  Blows! — Anon. — NV 
How  the  Yankee  Answered  the  Englishmen. — Anon. — 

PTS 
(Jonathan  and  the   Englishmen — si.   diff.   and  si. 

abr.)—BC 
"How  they  Brought  the  Good  News  from  Ghent  to 

Aix."     (O— Rob't     Browning.— A  VP— BNL 

—  BVC  —  CGd  —  CR  — EPs  — FEP— GN  — 

HB  —  HBF  —  OM  —  OS  2  —  PEB  3—  PHS— 

PSR  —  SAE  (hr.  «eZ.)— SO— SPE— SS— VA  — 

VSG  —  WEP  4 
(Good  News  [from  Ghent])  SE  (scZ. )—WRD 
(Ride  from  Ghent  to  Aix,  The.)— CS  2— MR 
(Ride  to  Aix,  The.)— HSS  2 
(For  parody,  see  Ride  from  Ghent  to  Aix,  The. — 

Irwin  Beaumont.) 
How  thev  Caught  the  Panther. —  Alfred   J.    Hough. — 

WR6 
How  they  Kept  a  Secret. — Clara  Augusta. — SD 
How  they  Pop  the  Question. — Anon. — BO 
IIow  they  Stopped  the  Run.     (Fr.  Sport  Royal.) — An- 
thony Hope.— BS  26 
How  Three  were  Made  one. — E:  H.  Peale. — PR — YA 
How  Tim's  Praver  was  Answered. — Anon. — CS  22 
How  to  Ask  and  Have.— (C.)— S:  Lover.— THP 

(To  Ask  and  to  Have.)— WR  20 
How  to  be  an  Angel. — Anon. — YBT 
How  to  be  Happy. — Anon. — HSS  2 
How  to  be  Noble. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Lady  Clara 

Vere  de  Vere. 
How  to  Break  Bad  News. — Anon. — PS 
How  to  Break  the  Chain.— J:  B.  Gough.— CS  17 
How  to  Choo.ae  a  Wife. — Anon. — CS  25 
How  to  Cure  a  Bad  Memory. — Anon. — DSS 
How  to  Cure  a  Cough.— Anon.— BC — CS  9 
How  to  Curtail  the  T  iquor  TraflFic. — Anon. — TS 
How  to  Deal  with  Common  Natures. — Aaron  Hill. — 

FEP 
How  to  Deal  with  New-laid  Eggs. — Anon. — TFS 
How  to   Draft    Constitution    and    By-laws. — Anon.— 

PS 
How  to  Eat  a  'Possum. — Anon. — WR  7 
How  to  Gain  Friends.— Anon.— TFS 


149 


How  to 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


ilow  to  Get  Rich.— An()n.-T<:S  36 

How  to  Go  to  Sleep.— C:  H.  Clark.— SR  1 

How  to  Have  just  what   we  Like. —  Horace  Smith.  — 

BLP 
How  to  Keep  a  Bee-hivp. — Anon. — DSS 
How  to  Live. — Philip  4-  Bailey.     See  Festus. 
How  to  Live. — Horatius  Bonar.    See  "He  liveth  long 

who  liveth  well." 
How  to  J  Ave. — W:  C.  Bryant.     See  Thanatopsis. 
How  to  Live  Well  on  Nothing  a  Year. — W:  M.  Thack- 
eray.    See  Vanity  Fair. 
How  to  Look  when  Speaking. — Eliz.  Turner. — -BVC 
How  to  Make  a  Boat  Fast. — Anon. — DSS 
How  to  Make  a  Whistle.— Anon— AD— WR  17 
How  to  Make  an  Imitation  of    Browning. — Anon. — 

WR4 
How  to  Make  Hasty  Pudding. — ^Anon. — MCS 
How  to  Make  up  a  Quarrel. — Anon. — KNE 
How  to  Plant  Trees— What  to  Plant.     (Dept.  of  Agri- 

cvUure.)—DF.R 
How  to  Read.— S.  T.  Denison.— SR  10 
How  to  Read  me. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 
How  to  Save  a  Thousand  Pounds. — Anon. — HR 
How  to  Speak  a  Piece. — Ruth  Davenport. — DCP 
How  to  Succeed.— T.  0.  Richmond.— WR  18 
How  to  Woo.— "Bob  O'Link."— DLD 
How  to  Write  a  Letter. — Eliz.  Turner— BVC 
How  Tom  Saved  the  Train.— G:  Birdseye.- WR  4 
How  Tom  Sawyer  Got  his  Fence  Whitewashed. — S:  L. 

Clemens.     See  Tom  Sawyer. 
How  Tom   Sawyer   Whitewashed    his   Fence. — S:   L. 

Clemens.     See  Tom  Sawyer. 
How  Two  Birdies  Kept   House  in  a  Shoe. — Anon. — 

LPS— PP 
How  Two  Men  Spoke  the  Same  Words. — Sargeant. — 

PS 
How  Uncle  Fin  had  the  Laugh  on  the  Boys. — Anon. — 

DCR 
How  Uncle  Podger  Hung  a  Picture. — Jerome  K.  Je- 
rome.    See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat . 
How  we    Beat    the   Captain's   Colt. — Campbell   Rae- 

Brown.— WR  1.3 
How  we  Beat  the  Favorite. — Adam  L.  Gordon. —  CS  36 

— FEP— PEB  4— VA— WR  13 
How  we  Became    a    Nation.  —  Harriet    P.    Spoflord. 

— EDY 
How-we  Burned  the  "Philadelphia." — Barrett  East- 
man.—BAB— EDY 
How  we  Fought  the  Fire. — Will  Carleton. — BS  17 
How  we  Hung  Red  Shed. —  Joaquin  Miller. — WR  7 
How  we  Hunted  a  Mouse. — Joshua  .lenkins. —  BS  5 — 

CS  12— PR— SR  10 
How  we  Kept  the  Day.— Will  Carleton.— BS  23 
How  we  Killed  the  Rooster. — Anon. — CS  34 
How  we  Learn. — Horatius  Bonar. — GP 

(Price  of  Truth,  The— 6r.  seZ. )—WR  17 
How  we  Played  "King  William." — Jeannie  P.  Ewing. 

— CS36 
How  we  Take   it.— Theodore   D.   C.   Miller.  —  BLP 
Howard,  the  Prisoners'  Friend. — H.Humphrey. — FD  1 

(Memory  of  the  Good.) — LLC 
Howard's  Wish. — Anon. — PS 
Howe's  Masquerade.     (Legends  of  the  Province  House, 

I.) — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — APr  (ahr.) 
How'?  my  Boy?— Sydney  Dobell.— BNI.— CGd— CS  6 
— FEP— GN— HBP— LC— MMR— OS    1— VA 
Hoyden,  The.     (Dial.)— Anon.— FBY 
Hovden,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.- BVC 
Hudibras,  Sets.  fr. — S:  Butler. 

Amantium  Irrp.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  TIL,  Can.  I.)— 

WEP2 
Character  of  Hudibras,  The.     (SeZ.  fr.  I.,    I)— ESs 
Argumentative  Theology.     (Br.  sel.) — WEP  2 
Logic  of  Hudibras.     (Br.  sel.) — BNL 

(Hudibras.)- SE 
Muse  of  Doggerel,  The.     (Br.  seZ.)— WEP  2 
New  Light.     (Br.  seZ.)— WEP  2 
Presbyterians,  The.     (SrZ.  )—EHT— WEP  2 
(Religi<m  of  Hudibras,  The.)— BNL— THP 
Honour.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  ITL)— WEP  2 
Hudibras,     Br.  acls.  fr. — BNL 
Hudibras'  Sword  and  Dagger.     (Sel.  fr.   I.,  I.) — 

BNL 
Marriage.     (Br.  gel.  fr.  TIL,  I.)— WEP  2 
Martial  Music.     (Br.  gel.  fr.  I.,  TI.)— WEP  2 
Morning.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  IT.)— WEP  2 
Night.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IT.,  I  )— WEP  2 
Puritans.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  IT.)— EPs 
Spiritual  Trimmers.     (Rr.  gel.  fr.  III.,  T.)— WEP  2 
Hudibras'  Sword  and  Dagger.  —  S:  Butler.      See  Hu- 
dibras. 
Hudson,  The.— G.  S.  Hellman.— AA 
(Sonnet:  to  the  Hudson  )^-CG  3 


Hue  and  Cry  after  Cupid,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Venus'  Runa- 
way.)— Ben  Jonson. — YBF 
Hue  and  Cry  after  Fair  Amoret,  A. — W:  Congreve. — 
OB 
(Amoret— C.)— FEP— WEP  3 
Huggin'  Lampposts. — Anon. — DE 

Hugh  Gordon's  Iron  Mill. — Horace  B.  Durant. — CS  29 
Hugh  of  Lincoln.    (Jew's  Daughter,  The — C. — in  Percy's 
Reliques.) — Anon. — PEB  1 
(SZ.abr.)- BB— OEB 
(Sir  Hugh ;  or,  The  Jew's  Daughter — diff.  vers). — 
BPB 
Hugh  Sutherland's  Pansies. — (Sel.) — Rob't  Buchanan. 

— WR  1 
Hughie  Graham. — Anon.     See  following. 
Hughie  the  Graeme.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. 
— I,H 
(Hughie  Graham — al.  diff.  vers. — abr.) — BB 
Hugo  Grotius. — ICotzebue. — WR  9 
Hugo's  Child  at  Play.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Huldy's  Pumpkin  Pies. — Alfred  Balch.— CS  23 
Hullo.— Sam  W.  Foss.— BS  20 
Human  Bodv — T.«sson  in  Rhyme. — Anna  S.  Badlam. 

—l.PS—FP 
Human  Frailty. — W :  Cowper. — HBP 
Human  Frailty.     (Flowers  of  Sion,   IT.) — W:  Drum- 
mond. — LLC 
("Good  that  never  satisfies  the  mind.  A.") — FEP 
(lUusions.)- CEL 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 
Human  I^ife. — Matthew  Arnold. — WEP  4 
Human  Life.  (C.)— Aubrey  T:  DeVere.— HDL— VA 
(Sad  and  Sweet.)— CEL 
(Sad  is  oui  Youth.)— A VP— FEP 
("Sad  is  oiir  youth,  for  it  is  ever  going.") — BNIj 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 

("Sweet  is  our  youth" — sel.) — HSS  3 
Human  Life,  Sets.  fr. — S:  Rogers. 
Human  Life,  Br.  sel.  /r.— WEP  4 
Marriage.     (Br.  «eZ.)— BIL— BNL— FTA 
(Sensibility— geZ.  )—FP 
Human  I/ife. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Tempest,  The. 
Human  Life. — Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton.— CS  19 
Human  Littleness. — W.  H.  De  Shon. — SR  6 
Human  Plan,  The.— C.  H.  Crandail.— AA 
Human  Seasons,  The. — J:  Keats. — HSS    3— PGT    1— 

WEP  4— WR  1— YBF 
Human  Voice,  The. — Oliver  W.   Holmes.     See  Auto- 
crat of  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Humanity. — W:  Cowper.     See  Ta.sk,  The. 
Humanity. — R:  W.  Dixon. — VA 
Humanity's  Heroes. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Prologue  to  Mr. 

Addison's  Tragedy  oi  Cato. 
Humble  and     Unnoticed     Virtue. — Hannah     More. — 

CS  10 
Humble    Petition   of  Bruar  Water  to  the  Noble  Duke 
of  Athole,  The,  Seh.  /r.— Rob't  Burns. 
"Here  haply,  too,  at  vernal  dawn." — HP 
River's  Supplication,  The.     (Ptly.  like  of  her.) — AD 
Humble  Romance,  A. — Juliet  W.  Tompkins. — CG  2 
Humble-bee,  The.  (C.)— Ralph  W.   Emerson.— AA— 
ASL  —  BFV  —  FEP— GN— HBP— LC(abr.)— 
SN— TAV 
(To  the  Humblebee.)— BNL 
Humblest    of   the    Earth-children,    The. — J:    Ruskin. 

See  Modem  Painters. 
Humbugging  a  Tourist.  (Farce.) — Jas.  K.  (?)  Paulding. 

— BC 
Humility. — Rob't  Herrick.— OS  1 
Humility. — Una  Locke. — HDL 
Humility. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. — EPs 
Humility.— Jas.  Montgomery.— CS  14  (sel.) — HBP 
Humming  of  the  Wires,  The.— E:  A.  Rand.— HP 
Humming  Top,  The.— Anon.— DCR 
Humming  Top,  The. — Eugene  Field. — I-S 
Humming-bird,  The.— Ednah  P.  Clarke.— SN 
Humming-bird,  The. — C:  Mair. — TCV 
Humming-bird,  The.— J.  H.  St.  John.— FMR 
Humming-bird,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— SN 
Humming-bird  Song. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Humorous  Irish  Sketch — Saul  Sertrew. — DSS 
Humpty    Dumpty.       (In    Mother    Goose    for    Grown 
Folks.)— Adeline     D.    T.    Whitney.— OS  21— 
MHR— TAV 
Hunchback,  The —Phoebe  Gary.- BLF 
Hunchback,  The.  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  S.  Knowles. 

Helen  and  Modus.     (Sels.  fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  1,  and  V., 
1.)— NDP 
(Lessons  in  Love.) — VSG 
(Scene  from  "The  Hunchback.")— WR  8 
Scenes  from  "The  Hunchback." — FTR  (sels.  fr.  I., 
2  and  3;  IV.,  2;  V.,  1.)— WR  9  (I..2— ofcr.) 
Hunchbacked  Singer,  'The. — Anon. — CS  30 


150 


TITLE  INDEX 


Hymn 


Hundred  Louis  d'Or,  The. — Sabrina  H.  Dow. — DR 

Hundred  Years  Ago,  A. — Anon. — MYF 

Hundred  Years  from  Now,  A. — Mary  A.  Ford. — CS  14 

— FS 
Hundred  Years  to  Come,  A. — C.  F.  [or  W:  G.]  Brown. 

— CS  12— GP 
Hundred  Years  to  Come,    A. — Hiram    D.    Spencer. — 

FEP— TCV 
Hundreds  !—G :  Cooper.— TFS  / 

(Only  One.)— A  A 
(Our  Mothers.)— YBT 
Hundredth  Anniversary  of  the  Surrender  of  Lord  Corn- 

wallis.  The,  Seta.  fr.—Roh't  C.Winthrop. 
American  Example. — FD  1 
Universal  Education. — FD  1 — SR  5 
Hundred-yard  Dash,  The. — W:  Lindsey. — AA 
Hungary  and  Austria  in  Religious  Contrast,  Sel.  fr. 

(No  Peace  without  Liberty.) — L:  Kossuth. — 

BLP 
(Peace  Inconsistent  with  Oppression.) — SS 
Hungry  Boarder,  The.— Anon.— HSS  3 
Hungry  Traveler,  The. — Anon. — FND 
Hunko! — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 

Hunt,  The. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  Love  Chase,  The. 
Hunt,  The.— Harriet  P.  Spofford.— AA 
Hunt  is  up.  The. — Anon. — ELP. 
Hunted  Squirrel,  The. — W:  Browne. — See  Britannia's 

Hunter  and  the  Child,  The. — Anon. — PS 

Hunter  of  the  Prairies,  The. — W:  C.  Bryant. — AA — 

FEP— HBP 
Hunters,  The. — Matthew  Arnold.    See  Church  of  Brou, 

The. 
Hunter's  Last  Ride,  The. — Anon. — CS  17 
Hunter's  Song,  The.— Bryan  W :  Procter.— ON— HBP 

—OS  2— VA 
Hunter's  Vision,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— HBP 
Hunting.     (Fr.    Time  Vindicated.)  —  Ben  Jonson. — 

BNL 
Hunting  a  Madman.— J:  F.  NichoUs.— CS  32— PR 
Hunting  Eggs.     (Zion's  Herald.)— PHS 
Hunting  of  the  Snark,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Lewis  Carroll. 
Baker's  Tale,  The.     (.Sel.  fr.  Fit  111.)— VA 
Hunting  of  the  Snark.  The.     (Sel.  fr-   Fit   IL, 

The  Bellman's  Speech.)— NA 
Hunting  of  the  Snark,  The.      (SeU.  fr.  Fits  I.,  II., 

III.)— THP 
Hunting  of  the  Cheviot.  The.— Anon.— BB—PEB  1 

(See  also  Chevy-Chase. — R:  Sheale.) 
Hunting  Season,  The.      (Don't  Talk  of  September — 

C.)— T:  H.  Bayly.— THP 
Hunting  Song. — S :  T.  Coleridge.     See  Zapolya.   - 
Hunting  Song,  A. — H:  Fielding.     See  "A-hunting  we 

will  go." 
Hunting  Song. — R:  Hovey. — ASL 
Hunting  Song.     (C.)— Walter  Scott.— AE  («rf.)— BFV 

—  BPB  — BS  21  — CEL  — ON  — LC  — 0S3 

— PGT  1— YBF 
(Waken,  Lords  and  Ladies  Gay.) — BNL 
Hunting  Song. — Raymond  W.  Walker. — CG  3 
Hunting  Tower. — Anon. — WR  8 
Huron  Chief's  Datighter,  The. — Mrs.  R.  E.  M.  Lepro- 

hon.— TCV 
Hurrah  for  the  Flag. — Anon. — NV 

(Our  Flag.)— GMS 
Hurrah  for  the  Fourth  av  July. — M.  L.  Dickinson. — 

SR2 
Hurricane,    The.— W:    C.    Bryant.- BNL— CS    37— 

PEO  (si.  abr.) 
Hurts  of  Time. — Lord  Byron. — See  Siege  of  Corinth, 

The. 
Husband  and  Wife's  Grave,  The.     (C.) — R:  H.  Dana. 

—BNL 
(Immortality.) — AA  (abr.) 

(Sel.)— GP—SFE 
("Oh!  listen,  man!" — br.  set.) — AE 
Husbandman,  The.— J:  Sterling.— HBP 
Husband's  Experience  in  Cooking,  A. — Anon. — CS  3 
Husband's  Petition,  The.— W:  E.  Aytoun.— HPE 
Husband's  Programme.     (Washington  Post.) — PS 
Hush. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — WR  9 
"Hush!  'tis  a  holy  hour!  the  quiet  room." — Bernard 

Barton.— CS  1 
Hushaby,    Sweet    my   Own, — Eugene     Field. — EF — 

WTD 
Huskers,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.- LC 
Huskin',  The.— Will  F.  McSparran.— CS  29— NPS— 

YP 
Husking  Song.— A.  W.  Bellaw.— WR  15 
Hyder  Ali.     (Set.  fr.  The  Nabob  of  Arcot's  Debt.)— 

Edmund  Burke.— SE 
Hyder  Iddle. — Anon. — NA 
Hylas.— Bayard  Taylor.— HBP 


Hylas,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Hylodes,  The.— Lewis  G.  Wilson.— POS 
Hymenaei;  or.  The  Solemnities  of  Masque  and  Barriers 
at   Court,  Sel.   fr.     (Truth.) — Ben  Jonson. — 
WEP2 
Hymen's  Triumph,  Sels.  fr. — S:  Daniel. 
Eyes,  Hide  my  Love. — ES 
Love.— EPs— ES 

(Love  is  a  Sickness.)— BNL— FEP— HBP— OB 
—YBF 
Love's  Birth  and  Beginning. — ELP 
(Early  Love— »eZ.)— FT  A— OH 

(Hymen's  Triumph,  i^'r.)- ES— WEP  1 
Hymn:  "From  the  sunny  morning." — Anon. — YBT 
Hymn:  "He  sendeth  sun,"  etc.-— Sarah  F.  Adams. — 
VA 
(Father,  Thy  Will  be  Done.)— FEP 
Hymn  (Ode,  An — C):  "How  are  thy  servants  blest." 
—Jos.  Addison.— HBP 
("How  are  thy  servants  blest,  O  Lord.") — FEP 
Hymn:    "The  spacious  firmament,"  etc. — Jos.  Addi- 
son.    See  Spectator,  The. 
Hymnr  "When  rising  from  the  bed  of  death." — Jos. 

Addison.     See  Spectator,  The. 
Hymn,  A.— Jos.  Addison.— AE  (br.  sel.)— HBP 

("When  all  thy  mercies,  O,  my  God.") — FEP 
Hymn:     " 'Come,' said  Jesus' sacred  voice."     (VII. — 
C.) — Anna  L.  Barbauld. 
(Come  unto  Me.)— HBP 
Hymn:     "Praise  to  God,  immortal  praise."    (II. — C.) 
— Anna  L.  Barbauld. 
(Praise  to  God.)— EPs— FEP— HBP 
Hymn:    "Sleep,  sleep  to-day,  tormenting  cares."  (XI. 
— C.) — Anna  L.  Barbauld. 
(Sabbath  of  the  Soul,  The.)— BNL— OS  2 
Hymn:  "When  the  angels  all  are  singing." — Nicholas 

Breton.— HBP 
Hymn:  "No  coward  soul,"  etc. — Emily  Bronte. — OS  3 
(Her  Last  Lines.) — VA 
(Last  Lines.)— OB— WEP  4 
Hymn,  A.     "My  Maker!   of  thy  power  the  trace." — 

S:  T.  Coleridge.— FTR 
Hymn:    "Pilgrim,    burdened    with    thy    sins." — G: 

Crabbe.— FEP 
Hymn:  "O  patient  Christ,"  etc.  —  Marg.  W.  Deland. 

— TAS 
Hymn:  "O  li'l  lamb  out  in  de  col'." — Paul  L.  Dunbar. 

— AA 
Hymn:  "God  make   my   life   a  little   light." — Matilda 
B.  Edwards.— YBT 
(Child's  Prayer— aZ>r.  )—PoR 
Hymn,  An  f,  or  A].     (C.)— Phineas  Fletcher.— ELP— 
HBP 
("Drop,  drop,  slow  tears.")- BNL— FEP— YBF 
(Litany,  A.)— OB 
Hymn:   "When    gathering  clouds,"   etc. — Sir   Rob't 
Grant.— HBP 
("When  gathering  clouds  around  I  view.") — FEP 
Hymn,  The:  "For  summer's  bloom,"  etc. — Josiah  G. 

Holland.     See  Bitter-sweet. 
Hymn,  A.— Saxe  Holm.— TAS 

("I  cannot  think  but  God  must  know.") — BIL 
(Waiting  on  God.)— SSS 
Hymn,  A.     "Hear  me,  O  God,"  etc.     (Hymn  to  God, 

the  Father,  A— C.) — Ben  Jonson. — ELP 
Hymn:  "Brother,  thou  art  gone,'   etc. — Henry  H.  Mil- 
man.— HBP 
(Burial  Hymn.)— FEP— VA 
Hymn,  The:  "It   was  the  winter  wild." — J.   Milton. 

See  On  the  Morning  of  Christ^  Nativity. 
Hymn:  "There's    not    a    leaf    within    the    bower." 
—Amelia  Opie.— YBT 
(God's  Mark  on  all  Things— a6r.)— TFS 
Hymn:  "In  darker  days  and  nights  of  storm." — Theo- 
dore Parker.— HBP 
Hymn:  "I'm  but  a  little  child."— M.  H.  S.— YBT 
Hymn:  "O  fly,  my  Soul." — Jas.  Shirley. — OB 
Hymn,  A:     "These  as  they  change." — Jas.  Thomson. 

See  Seasons,  The. 
Hymn:  "Lord,    when    I    quit    this    earthly    stage." 

— Isaac  Watts. — EPs 
Hymn:  "O  Painter  of  the  fruits  and  flowers." — J:  G. 

Whittier. — AD 
Hymn  at  Nightfall.— C:  F.  Richardson.— YB*!" 
Hymn  before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni.    (C.)— 
S:   T.    Coleridge.— BNL  —  BS  25  —  FEP— 
GP— HBP— IR— OS  3— PHS 
(Chamouny. )— OM— SS 
(God  in  Nature — br.  sel.) — SE 
(Hymn  to  Mont   Blanc.)  —  AE  (br.   sel.)  —  CR  — 

FTR— SE 
(Mont     Blanc    before     Sunrise.)  —  BS  7 — EA  — 
SAE  (sel.) 


151 


Hymn 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Hymn  for  America,  A. — Susie  M.  Best. — CS  34 

Hymn  for  Christmas. — Felicia  Hemans. — GN  (o6r.) 
(Christmas  Carol — C.)— OS  1 

Hymn:    For  Easter  Sunday.     (III. — C)  — Anna  L. 
Barbauld. 
(Christ  Risen.)— FEP 

Hyrtin  for  Family  Worship.—  H :  Kirke  White.— FEP 

Hymn  for  First  Sunday  after  Epiphany  (Early  Piety). 
(First   Sunday  after    Epiphany  —  C.) — Regi- 
nald Heber.— FEP 
(By  Cool  Siloam.)— LLC 
(By  Cool  Siloam's  Shady  Rill— seZ.)— PoR 
(Siloam's  Shady  Rill— a6r. )—TFS 

Hymn  for  my  Brother's  Ordmation. — H:  W.  Lopg- 
feUow.— TAS 

Hymn  for  Seriousness,  An.— J:  Wesley.— CEL— WEP  3 

Hymn  for  Thanksgiving. — S.  E.  Adams. — HDL 

Hymn  for  the  Dead. — Walter  Scott.  See  Lay  of  the 
Last  Minstrel,  The. 

Hymn  for  the  Dedication  of  a  Church. — Andrews  Nor- 
ton— A  A 
(Dedication  of  a  Church,  The.)— TAS 

Hymn  for  the  Opening  of  Plymouth  Church,  St.  Paul, 
Minnesota.     (C.)— J:  G.  Whittier. 
(Church  Dedication.) — TAS 

Hymn  for  the  Sixteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity. — H:  H. 
Milman. — VA 
("When  our  heads  are  bowed  with  woe.") — FEP 

Hymn  for  Trinity  Sunday.     (Trinity  Sunday — C) — 
Reginald  Heber.— FEP 
(Holy,  Holy,  Holy!  [Trisagion.] )— LLC 

Hymn  from  "Akbar's  Dream." — Alfred  Tennyson. — 
WEP  4 

Hymn  from  "The  Seasons." — Jas.  Thomson.  See 
Seasons,  The. 

Hymn  in    Honour    of    Beauty. — Edmund    Spenser. — 
ELP 
(Beauty— 8eZ.  )—BNL—EPs 

Hymn  in  Praise  of  Neptune,  A. — T:  Campion. — ELP — 
OB— PGT  1— WEP  1 

Hymn  in  Praise  of  the  Natural  World,  A. — Ellen  Beau- 
champ. — AD 

Hymn  of  a  Child.— C:  Wesley.— WCL 

Hymn  of  Heavenly  Beauty.  (Sel.) — Edmund  Spen- 
ser.- ELP 

Hymn  of  our  Armies. — O.  C.  Auringer. — PAPm 

Hymn  of  our  First  Parents. — J:  MUton. — See  Paradise 
Lost. 

Hymn  of  Pan.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— OB— WEP  4 

Hymn  of  Praise.     (With  music.) — Anon. — AD 

Hymn  of  Praise  by  Adam  and  Eve. — J:  Milton.  See 
Paradise  Lost. 

Hymn  of  the  Alamo. — Reuben  M.  Potter. — BS  26 

Hymn  of  the  Avenger,  The. — T.  S.  Denison. — FAS 

Hymn  of  the  Churchyard.— .1:  Bethune. — HBP 

Hymn  of  the  City.— W:  C.  Bryant.— TAS 

Hymn  of  the  Earth. — W:  E.  Channing. — A  A 

Hymn  of  the  Hebrew  Maid.  —  Walter  Scott.  See 
Ivanhoe 

Hymn  of  the  Last  Supper. — J:  Pierpont. — TAS 

Hymn  of  the  Moravian  Nuns  of  Bethlehem.     (C.) — 
H:  W.  Longfellow. 
(Pulaski's  Banner.) — SR  8 

Hymn  of  the   Nativity,  A.     (,Fr.   Steps  to  the  Tem- 
ple.)— R:   Crashaw. — EP    (2    sta.    more    than 
works.) 
(At  Bethlehem— se?.)—YBF 
(Verses  from  the  Shepherd's  Hymn, — abr.) — OB 

Hymn  of  the  Seasons. — Jas.  Thomson.  See  Seasons, 
The. 

Hymn  of  Trust.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AA— HDL— 
TAS 

Hsmin  of  Winter. — S:  Longfellow.— HDL— TAS 

Hymn  on  the  Fight  at  Concord. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 
See  Hymn  Sung  at  the  Completion  of  the  Con- 
cord Monument. 

Hymn  on  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. — J:  Milton. 
See  On  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. 

Hymn  on  the  Nativity. — J:  Milton.  See  On  the  Morn- 
ing of  Christ's  Nativity. 

Hymn  on  the  Nativity  of  My  Saviour,  A. — Ben  Jon- 
son.— EDY 

Hymn  on  the  Seasons. — Jas.  Thomson.  See  Seasons, 
The. 

Hymn  Sung  at  the  Completion  of  the  Concord  Monu- 
ment.—Ralph    W.    Emerson.— HBP— TAV 
("Bv    the  rude  bridge  that  arched  the  flood" — 

br.  sel.)—SE 
(Concord  Fight.)— BSP—HB—PEO  (abr.) 
(Concord  Hymn- C.)—  A  A  —  ASL  —  EDY  — 
FEP— 6N— GP— PAP— SM— YBF 

! Concord  Monument  Hymn.) — BNL 
Hymn  on  the  Fight  at  Concord.) — GMS 


Hymn  Sung  at   the  Second  Church,   Boston,   at   the 
Ordination  of  Rev.   Chandler  Robbins.     (C.) 
— Ralph  W.  Emerson. 
(House  of  God,  The.)— TAS 
Hymn  to  Adversity.—  T:  Gray.—  FEP  —  PGT  1  — 

WEP  3 
Hymn  to  Aphrodite,  A. — J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De 

Tabley.— AVP 
Hymn  to  Apollo. — J:Lyly.     See  Midas. 
Hymn  to  Christ,  A. — J:  Donne. — EPs 
Hymn  to  Contentment,  A.— T:  Parnell.— FEP  (abr.)— 

WEP  3  (si.  abr.) 
Hynm  to  Cynthia. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Cynthia's  Rev- 
Hymn  to  Darkness.— J :    Norris.  —  PGT  1    (sel. )  —  SN 

— YBF  (sel.) 
Hymn  to  Diana. — Ben   Jonson.     See   Cynthia's   Rev- 
els. 
Hymn  to  God,  my  God,  in  my  Sickness.     (Sel.) — J: 

Donne. — EPs 
Hymn  to  God  the  Father.— J:  Donne.— ELP— FEP— 

OB— YBF 
Hymn  to  God  the  Father,  A.     (C.) — Ben  Jonson. 

(Hymn,  A.)— ELP 
Hymn  to  Intellectual    Beauty. — Percy    B.    Shelley. — 

HBP 
Hymn  to  Light,  The,    Sel.    fr. — Abraham    Cowley. — 

BNL— WEP  2  (8;ior<<T.) 
Hymn  to  Mont  Blanc. — S:   T.    Coleridge.     See   Hymn 

before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. 
Hymn  to  Night.— G:  W.  Bethune.— BNL 
Hymn  to  Pan. — J:  Fletcher. — See  Faithful  Shepherd- 
ess, The. 
Hymn  to  Pan. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Pan's  Anniversary. 
Hymn  to  Pan. — J:  Keats. — See  Endymion. 
Hymn  to  Santa  Rita. — Alvey  A.  Adee. — HP 
Hymn  to  the  Flowers. — Horace    Smith. — AD    (sel.) — 

BNL— CS  6— FEP— HBP— LLC 
Hymn  to  the  Graces. — Rob't  Herrick. — EPs 
Hymn  to  the  Name    and    Honour   of   the    Admirable 

Saint  Teresa,  A. — R:  Crashaw. — OB 
Hymn  to  the  Nativity. — J:  Milton.     See  On  the  Morn- 
ing of  Christ's  Nativity. 
Hymn  to  the  Night.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— AA— BNL 

— CR— PTR— GMS 
Hymn  to  the  North  Star. — W:  C.  Bryant. — SE 
Hymn  to  the  Spirit  of  Nature. — Percy  B.  Shelley.  See 

Prometheus  Unbound. 
Hymn  to  the  Sun.— G:  Darley.— TIP 
Hymn  to  the  Sunrise. — Anon. — NA 
Hymn  to  the  Virgin,  A. — Anon. — OB 
Hymn  Written  for  my  Divinity-school    Graduation. 
(O— J:  W.  Chadwick. 
(Prayer  for  Unitj^,  A.)— TAS 
Hymnes  of  Astraea,  in  Acrosticke  Verse,  Sels.  fr. — Sir 
J:  Davies. 
To  the  Month  of  September.     (Hymn  X.)— WEP  1 
To  the  Nightingale.     (Hymn  VI.)— WEP  1 
To  the  Rose.     (Hymn  VII. I— ELP 
To  the  Spring.     (Hymn  III.)— WEP  1 
Hymns,  Ancient  and  Modem. — R.  L.  Raymond. — CG  2 
Hynd  Horn. — Anon. — BB 

(Hind  Horn— dt;^.  vers.)— PEB  2 
(HjTide  Home — diff.  vers.) — GN 
Hynde  Horn. — Anon.     See  foregoing. 
Hypatia,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Kingsley. 

Boat  Song.  A.     (Fr.  Ch.  III.)— WEP  4 
Hypatia,  Sel.  fr.  (Poem  fr.  Ch.  XXX.)— AVP 
Hyperion,  Sels.  fr. — .1:  Keats. 

Coelus  to  Hyperion.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— WEP  4 
Hyperion:  "As  heaven  and  earth  are  fairer."     (Br. 

sel.  fr.  Bk  II.)— EPs 
Hyperion's  Arrival.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk  II.)— WEP  4 
Oceanus.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk  II.)— WEP  4 
Saturn.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk  I.)— WEP  4 
Saturn.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— EPs 
Thea.     (Br,  sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— EPs 
Hyperion,  Se7«.  fr. — H:  W.  Longfellow. 

Glimpses  into  Cloudland.     (Sel,  fr.  Bk.  II.,  Ch.  VI.) 

— PEO 
Paul    Fleming    Resolves.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.,  Ch. 

VIII.)— LLC 
Poetry  of  City  and  Country  Life,  The.     (Sd.  fr. 

Bk.  L,  Ch.  VIII.)— BS23 
"Setting  of  a  great  hope.  The."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  I., 

Ch.  I.)— GG 
Spring.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.,  Ch.  I.)— AD 
Success.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  VIII.)— SAE 
Hyperion's  Arrival. — J:  Keats.     See  Hyperion. 
Hypochondriac,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FHE 
Hypochondriac,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — SED 
H>-pochondriac,  The.— Dr.  Valentine.— BS  3— CRR— 
CS  2— MHR  (si.  diff.  and  longest)— tiPS—YP 


152 


TITLE  INDEX 


I  know 


Hypochondriacus.    '  (Fragments    of    Burton,    Extract 
III. — A  Conceipt  of  Diabolical  Possession.) — 
Lamb.— HBP 
Hypocrisy.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Hypocrisy.     (Epigram.) — -S:  Butler. — HPE 
Hypocrite,  The. — Rob't  Pollok.     See  Course  of  Time, 
The. 


,  H.  B.— W:  Winter.— AA 

.  M.— R.  T.  Hamilton  Bruce.     (C.)— W:  E.  Henley. 

(Invictus.)— OB— PYO— YBF 
I  Am."— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
am  a  Friar  of  Orders  Gray.     (Fr.  the  opera  of  Robin 

Hood.)— J:  O'Keefe.— BNL— FEP— HBP 
I  am   a  white  falcon,  hurrahl"     (C.) — R:  H:  Stod- 
dard. 
(Falcon,  The.)— AA 
I  am  an  acme  of  things  accomplished." — Walt  Whit- 
man.    See  Song  of  Myself.    . 
am  Dving. — Anon. — CS  6 
I  am  dying,  Egypt."— W:  H.  Lytle.— SR  4 

(Antony  and   Cleopatra.)- .A.E  (sel.) — BNL — CS  9 

—FEP— HP— HR— MR— PYO 
(Antony  to  Cleopatra.) — AA 
am  Lonely. — G:  Eliot. — See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 
am  no  pickpurse  of  another's  wit. — Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
am  not  Old.— Martin  F.  Tupper.— CS  19 

( Song  of  Sevent  y . )— FP 
I  am'  sick  of  opinions.     I  weary  to  hear  them." — J: 

Wesley.— GG 
I  am  struck  with  the  fact  that  Bismarck,  the  great 

statesman  of  Germany." — Jas.  A.  Garfield. — 

GG 
I  am  the  Good  Shepherd." — Dorothy  A.  Thrupp. — 

FEP 
Am!    Yet  what  I  Am.— J:  Clare.— ED Y 
(His  Last  Verses.)— FEP 
(Lasciate  Ogni  Speranza.) — PGT  2 
(Written  in  Northampton  County  Asylum.) — OB 
Arise  from  Dreams  of  Thee. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See 

Indian  Serenade,  The. 
Ask  not  for  thy  Love,  O  Lord. — G:  J.  Romanes. — 

TCV 
I  asked  the  suu."     (The  Galax;/.)— GG 
I  bring  you  these  little  song-blossoms." — Lucy  Lar- 

com.— LCS 
I  call  that  [the  Book  of  Job],  aside  from  all  theories 

about    it." — T:  Carlyle.     See  On  Heroes  and 

Hero-worship. 
I  Can!"— Anon.— PPSr 
I  can  as  well  be  hanged,  as  tell  the  manner  of  it." — 

W:  Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Cresar. 
T  canna  turn  the  key  and  my  baim  outside." — Anon. 

See  "I  cannot  turn,"  etc. 
Cannot   Doubt   that   they   whom  ye  Deplore. — W: 

Wordsworth.     (See  Excursion,' The. 
I  cannot  endure  the  thought  that  Christ's  children 

should  be  less  free." — Beecher. — GG  _ 
I  cannot  tell  the  spel!  that  binds   thine    image." — 

Annie  C.  Ketchum.— FTA 
I  cannot  think  but  God  must  know." — Saxe  Holm, — 

BIL 
(Hymn,  A.)— TAS 
(Waiting  on  God.)— SSS 
I  cannot  turn  the  key  and  my  baim  outside." — Anon. 

CS27 
(I  canna  turn  the  key  and  my  baim  outside.")— SDR 
T  Can't"  and  "I  Can."— W:  A.  Butler.— TFS 
I  Can't  Army,"  The.— Anon.— COS— PP— PS 
Can't.  I  Won't,  and  I  Will.— Anon.— WR  15 
I  care  nothing  for  passing  renown." — T:  (?)  Chalmers. 

— GG 
I  Count  my  Time  bv  Times    that   I  Meet    thee." 

(/n  The  NewDav.)  — R:  W.  Gilder.— AA— 

OH 
Did  but  Look.— T:  Ot way.— YBF 

(Enchantment,  The— C.)— FLS— OB 
Ifid  it— not,  "T  Done  it."— Anon.— LPS— PP 
Didn't  Mean  Anything. — Anon. — FDY 
Die,  Being  Young. — David  Gray. — VA 
do  Confess  thou'rt  Sweet. — Sir  Rob't  Ayton. — GP 
Do  not  Love  thee. — Caroline  E.  S.  Norton. — FLS — 

OB 
Do  not  Love  thee  for  that  Fair.     (Sel.)  —  T:  Carew. 

YBF 

(Compliment,  The — C.) — BNL 
I  do  not  love  thee  less  for  what  is  done." — H:  W. 

Longfellow.     Se-e  Masque  of  Pandora,  The. 


I  do  not  see  why  God  should  e'en  permit  some  things 
to  be." — F.  G.  Browning.     See  Amen. 

I  Don't  See  It !"— Anon.— PS 

Doubt  It. — Anon. — CG  I 

Dream  of  Flo.— Albert  S.  Davis.— CG  2 

I  fain  would  ask  thee  to  forget." — Anon. — GG 

Fear  no  Power  a  Woman  Wields. — Ernest  McGafFey. 
— AA 

Fear  thv  Kisses  f.  Gentle    Maiden].     (To 

I  "fear,  etc.— r.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— BNL— 
FTA— GP— PGT  1— YBF 

I  feel,  when  I  have  sinned,  an  immediate  reluctance 
to  go  to  Christ." — Rob't  M.  McChevne. — GG 

Fill  my  Pipe.— A.  M.  S.— CG  3 

Flunked  T-s-day.  — Albert  P.  Terhune.- CG  2 

Forgot. — Anon. — KNE 

Gave  my  Life  for  Thee. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — Y.^ 

Give  Imratjrtal  Praise.  (Hymn  XXXVIII.) — Isaac 
Watts.— FEP 

Give  my  Heart  to  Thee.— Staiidish  J.  O'Grady. — 
TIP 

Give  Thee  Eternity.  (Ideas,  VI.) — Michael  Drayton. 
—HBP— YBF 

T  go  Fishin'."— Richard  S.  Powell.— BS  25 

I  go  to  prove  my  soul." — Rob't  Browning.  See  Para- 
celsus. 

I  grieved  for  Buonaparte."  (C. — Sonnet  IV.  in 
Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Independence 
and   Liberty.) — W:  Wordsworth. — EPs  (abr.) 

Guess  I'm  the  Man. — Laura  S.  Parsons. — StD 

I  had  a  friend  once  and  she  was  to  me." — Anon. — GG 

I  had  a  little  yellow  bird."     (St.  Nicholas.) — AD 

I  had  no  time  to  hate,  because."     (C.) — Emily  Dick- 
inson. 
(No  Time  to  Hate.)— OH 

I  had  rather  as  a  forgiven  child,  with  all  the  prospects 
of  the  future."— Phillips  Brooks.- GG 

Hae  Naebody  Now. — Jas.  Hogg. — FEP 

Have  and  Obi  Had  I. — Langheim. — OS  1 

I  have  been  always  wonderfully  delighted  with 
fables."— Jos.  Addison.— HSS  3 

Have  Drank  my  Last  Glass. — Anon.— CS  6— FR 

Have  no  Influence? — Anon. — WR  IS 

I  have  not  told  my  garden  yet."     (C.) — Emily  Dick- 
inson. 
(Secret,  The.)— A  A 

I  have  seen  fhe  sea  lashed  into  fury  and  tossed  into 
spray."  (Br.  sel.  fr.  Nomination  of  John  Sher- 
man.)— .las.  A.  Garfield. — GG 

Have  Something  Sweet  to  Tell  you.  —  Frances  S. 
Osgood.— FEP 

I  have  sought  to  counsel  vou  in  your  perplexities." 
— T:  R.  Markham.- GG 

I  have  the  courage  to  be  gay."  —  Jean  Ingelow.  See 
Scholar  and  Camenter. 

Haven't  much  Religion. — J.  L.  Scott. — CS  34 

1  hear  a  dear,  familiar  tone." — Alice  Gary.  See 
Dream  of  Home,  A. 

I  heard  a  great  big  lion  in  the  bush." — Anon. — WR  25 

Heard  an  Angel.  (Sel.  fr.  The  Two  Songs.)— W: 
Blake.— PC 

I  hold  him  great,  who  for  love's  sake."     (Abr.) — Ade- 
laide Procter. — GG 
(Maximus— C. )— SSS 

Hold  Still.— Julius  Sturm  (fr.  by  G:  W.  Doane).— 
,  GP— MMR 
(God's  Anvil.)— BS  14— CS  11 

in  Thee,  and  Thou  in  me. — Christopher  P.  Cranch — 
TAS 

.loumey  through  a  Desert  Drear  and  Wild. — Anon. — 
HBP 

Kin  nod  Trink  To-nighd.— Anon.- DRR 

Kissed  the  Cook. — Anon.— WR  21 

Knew  bv  the  Smoke  that  so  Gracefullv  Curled.  (Bal- 
lad Stanzas— C.)—T:  Moore.— BNL— TFY 
(Home  of  Peace,  The.)— CS  20 

I  know  a  maiden  fair  to  see." — Fs.  W.  Moore. — 
WR13 

I  know  more  than  Apollo." — "Tom  o'  Bedlam." — 
HBP 

Know  Mvself  the  Best  Beloved  of  All. — Alice  W. 
Rollins.— BIL— FTA 

I  know  not  of  the  dark  or  bright." — H:  Alford. — G 
(Contentment.)— BS  4 
(Life's  Answer.) — HDL 
(Trust.)— HSS  3— SPE 

I  know  not  which  I  love  the  most."  (Sel.  fr.  Spring 
Flowers.) — Phcpbe  Cary. — AD 

Know  not  Why. — Morris  Rosenfeld. — AA 

I  know  that    all    beneath    the  moon  decays." — W; 
Dnimmond. — FEP 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 

I  know  that  my  Redeemer  liveth." — Anon. — FHS 


153 


I  lay 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"I  lay  iu  sorrow,  deep  distressed." — C:  Mackay. — FEP 
"I  like  cigars  beneath  the  stars." — Ella  W.  Wilcox. — 

PPh 
"I  live  for  thee." — Alfied  Tennyson.     See  Princess, 

The. 
"T  live  for  those  that^ove  me." — G.  L.  Banks.     See 

My  Aim. 
I  Love  my  Jean.     (C — Of  a'  the  Airts — alao  C.) — 
Rob't  Biiras.— BNL— BPB— GN— MBL 
(Jean . )— BFV— OB— YB  F 

(W.2  add.  doubtJtU  stanzas.)— FEP— FTA—FGT 1 
(My  Jean.)— CEI. 

("Of  a'  the  airts   the  wind  can  blaw.") — EPs — 
WEP3 
I  Love  my  Lovo.— C:  Mackay.— FEP— VS 
I  Love  my  Love. — J.  P.  Sawyer. — CG  2 
I  Love  the  Bird.s.— Lydia  M.  Child.— PS 
(Birds'  Nest.)— TFS 
(If  ever  I  See.) — AD  (w.  mu^.i — NV 
"I  love  the  fair  lilies  and  roses  so  gay." — Dora  R. 

Goodale.— AD 
I  Love  Thee.— M.  A.  Raines.— FI.S 
I  Love  Thee.     (C.)— T:  Hood.— Bir>— FTA 

(Love  Thee— .fW.)— TLR 
I  Love  Thee.~J:  Oxenford.— FLS 
I  Love  Thy  Kinedom,  T/ord. —  (St.  Ambrose,  tr.  by) 
Timothy  Dwight.— FEP 
(Love  to  the  Church — si.  abr.) — A  A 
I  Love  you. — Anon. — WR  4 
"I  Love  you,  Dear." — Anon. — FLS 
I  Love  you,  Dear.— G:  W.  Crofts.— BIL— FTA— TFY 
I  Love  you.  Mother. — .Toy  Allison. — HSS  2 

(Which  Loved  Best.)-DLS— NPS— YBT— YP 
I  Loved  a  Lass. — G:  Wither. — OB 
I  Loved  my  Art.      (In  A  Lover's  Diary.) — H.  Gilbert 

Parker.— TCV 
"I  loved  thee  for  that  dear,  deep  lovingness." — G:  F. 

Armstrong. — BIL 
I  Made  Another  Garden. — Arthur  W.  O'Shaughnessy. 
— VS 
(Song— O— OB— PGT  2— WEP  4 
"I  meant  to  write  a  valentine." — Anon. — WR  2-3 
I  Met  a  Maiden  To-day  (To  My  Mother— C.).—W:  E. 

Henlev.— FTA 
T  Met  at  Eve.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
"I  might!" — Sir   Philip   Sidney.     See   Astrophel   and 

Stella. 
"I  ne'er  could  any  luster  see."     (C.) — R:  B.  Sheridan. 

(Song.)— FTA 
"I  never  cast  a  flower  away." — Caroline  Southey. — GG 
I  never  Knew  it.  Love,  till  Now. — Juan  II.,  King  of 

Castile.— BIL  ' 
"I  pity  the  man  who  has  never,  in  his  best  moods." — 

Phillips  Brooks— GG 
I  Plucked  the  Berry.     (C. )— W :  Motherwell. 

(Sing  on.  Blithe  Bird!)— GN— WCL 
I  Prithee  Send  me  back  my  Heart. — Sir  J:  Suckling. — 
BNL— FEP— OEL— YBF 
(Song— C.)—ES— FTA— WEP  2 
I  Remember,  I  Remember. — R:  H.  Barham. — HSS  2 

(Nursery  Reminiscences — C.) — BC 
I  Remember,  I  Remember.     (C.)— T:  Hood. — BNL— 
BPB— ED  Y  —  FEP  —  FP  — GP— HBP— LC— 
MR— OS  1— PoR  — PSR  — PYO  (abr.)—\S— 
WCL— WCLG  1— YBF 
(House  where  I  Was  Born,  The.) — BLP 
(Old  House  at  Home,  The — abr.)— TFS 
(Past  and  Present.)— PGT  1 
"I  said  to  the  rose,"  etc. — Alfred  Tennyson.  jSf<'Maud. 
I  Saw  a  New  World  (New  World,  The— C.).— W:  B. 

Rands.— VA 
I  Saw,  I  Saw  the  Lovely  Child.— F:  W.  H.  Myers.— VA 
I  Saw  my  Lady  Weep. — Anon. — ELP 
(In  Lacrimas.)— PGT  1 
(My  Lady's  Tears.)— OB 
I  Saw  Thee.— Ray  Palmer.- BNL 
I  Saw  Three  Ships.— Anon.— OS  2— PoR  (s/.  abr.) 
I  Saw  Three  Witches. — Walter  Ramel. — SOC 
I  Saw  Two  Clouds  at  Morning. — J:  G.  C.  Brainard. — 
BNL— GP 
(Epithalamium.)— AA— FEP— HBP 
(To  a  Friend.)— BS  6 
I  See  a  Form,  I  See  a  Face. — Rob't  Bums. 

(This  is  no  my  Ain  Lassie.) — WEP  3 
"I  see  men's  judgments  are.'' — W:  Shakespeare.     <See 

Antony  and  Cleopatra. 
"I  See  the  Point."— J.  P.  McCord.— SR  1 
I  Served  in  a  Great  Cause. — Horace  L.  Traubel. — A  A 
I  Shall  be  Satisfied.- Anon.— GP— HDL 

("Not    here,   not    here!   not    where   the   sparkling 
waters.") — GG 
I  Shall  not  Pass  this  Way  Again.— Eva  R.  York. — 
TCV 


"I  sit  before  my  fire  alone." — Nathaniel  G.  Shepherd 

See  Summer  Reminiscence,  A. 
"I  stood  beside  my  window  one  stormy  winter  day." — 

Caroline  Leslie. — GG 
"I  stood  on  a  tower  in  the  wet." — Alfred  Tennyson. 

New  Year,  The.— OS  2 
"I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill,"  Sels.  fr. — J:  Keats. 
Cynthia's  Bridal  Evening.— WEP  4 
Endymion.     (Br.  sel.)— WEP  4 
Goldfinches.     (Br.  sei.)- GN— POS 
Minnows.— GN—POS 
Morning.— POS  (U^ 

(Sigh  of  Silence,  The— a6r.)— GN 
Nature's  Delights. — GP 
Sweet  Peas.— GN 
"I  stood  upon  the  pebbly  strand." — Anon. — HSS  3 
I  Sue  for  Damages. — Anon. — CS  6 

"I  tell  you.  hopeless  grief  is  passionless." — Eliz.   B. 
Browning.- PGT  2 
(Grief— O— OB— WEP  4— YBF 
"I  think  a  great  many  professors  of  religion  are  just 
like  backgammon-boards." — G:  W.  Bethune. — 
GG 
Think  it's  Wrong,  Don't  you? — Anon. — PS 
I  Think  of  Thee. — Friedrich  von  Matthisson. — FLS 
I  Think  on  thee.— T:  K.  Hervey.— VA 
"I    think  when  I  read    that    sweet  story  of  old." — 
Jemima  T.  Luke.— OS  1 
(Child's  Desire,  The— seZ.)— PC 
("Of  such  is  the  Kingdom  of  Heaven.") — FEP 
"I  thought  once  how  Theocritus  had  sung." — Eliz.  B 
Browning.— PGT  2 
(Sonnets    from  the  Portuguese,  I. — C.) — OB — VA 
—WEP  4 
"I  thought  to  work  for  him.     'Master  I'  I  said." — Anon. 

— GG 
"I  Told  you  So!" — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
"I  Too.'*— Constance  F.  Woolson.— GP 
"I  traveled  among  unknown  men." — W.  Wordsworth. 
— CEL— PGT  1— YBF 
(Lucy.)— OB  (IIL) 
I  Vant  to  Fly.— Anon.— BeR—DFY 
I  Vash  so  Glad  I  Vash  Here.— Anon.— BDD-DFY- 
SR2 
(Puzzled  Dutchman,  The.) — HR 
I  Vimder  Vy?— Anon.— BS  26 
I  Waited  till  the  Twilight.— C:  Swain.— FTA 
"I  wake!     Ah!   would   that    I   could   sleep   again." — 

"  Montebello. "— G  G 
I  Wandered  by  the  Brookside. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord 
Houghton. — NPS    (w.  mus.) — YP  (id.  mus.) 
Brookside,  Tbe.)—BNL— CR— FEP— FTA— GP— 

HBP— OH— PGT  2— TFY— VA— VS— YBF 
(Song.)— CGd— FP 
I  Wandered  Lonely. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  following. 
I  Wandered  Lonely  as  a  Cloud. — W:  Wordsworth. — 
LC— OS3 
(Daffodils  [,The].)—  BNL— BSP— CR— EPs— FEP 
— FP  —  FTR  —  GMS  —  GN  —  GP  —  HBP  — 
HSS  1  —  LLC  —  MBL  —  OB  —  PGT  1  — 
POS— PYO— SN— YBF 
(I  Wandered  Lonely.)— BPB— WEP  4 
I  Want  Mamma.     (Harper's  Weekly.) — LPS— PP 

(Little  Child,  A.)— DJS 
I  Want  to  be  a  Soldier.     (DroZ.)- Anon.— FDY 
I  Want  to  be  a  Soldier.     (Parody.)-!.  W.  Childs.— 

SD 
I  Want  You.— Anon.— FLS 

"I  was  ill  of  an  epidemic  vile  fever."     (Br.  ael.  fr.  A 
Sentimental    Journey,    Ch.    VI.)  —  Laurence 
Sterne.— GG 
"I  was  on  the  Merrimac." — Anon. — WR  26 
I  Was  with  Grant.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— CS  7 

(Aged  Stranger,  The— C. )— AA— BS  9— PTS 
I  Watch  the  Ships.- Arthur  W.  H.  Eaton.— TCV 
"I  went  to  her  who  loveth  me  no  more."     (C.) — Arthur 
W.  O'Shaugnessy. 
(Enchainment.  )^— YBF 
(Song.)— HBP 
I  Will  Abide  in  Thine  House. — Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney 

—HDL 
I  Will  Arise  and  Go  unto  My  Father.— T:  W.  Higgin- 

son.- TAS 
"I  will  go  forth  'mong  men,  not  mailed  in  scorn." — 

Alex.  Smith.— GG 
"I  Will  Help  you." — Wolstan  Dixey.— PEO 
"I  Will  not  Drink."— J:  Wrigglesworth.— WR  18 
I  Will  not  Leave  you  Comfortless. — Anon. — BS  20 
I  Will  not  Let  thee  Go. — Rob't  Bridges — VA 
"I  will  not  spebk  of  war  in  itself."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The 
War  for  the  Union.)— Wendell  Phillips.— HSS  1 
I  Will  not  Tell.— Andrew  Ramsay.— TCV 
I  Wish.     (Dial.)— Anon.— HVD 


154 


TITLE  INDEX 


If  I  can 


I  Wish  I  Was  a  Grown-up.— Mrs.  M.  F.  Butts— KNS— 

PR 
I  Wish  I  Was  by  that  Dim  Lake.     (C.)— T:  Moore. 

(I  Wish  I  Were  by  that  Dim  Lake.)— YBF 
I  Wish  I  Were  a  Bird.     Anon.— PS 
I  Wish  I  Were  by  that  Dim  Lake. — T:  Moore.     -See  I 

Wish  I  Was,  etc. 
I  Wonder.— Anon.— CS  20 
I  Wonder.- Anon.— CS  24 
I  Wonder.— Anon.— WR  17 

I  Wonder  what  Maud  Will  Say?— S:  M.  Peck.— DBS 
I  Wonder  whom  it  is  from?     (Tab.)—E.  C.  and  L.  J. 

Rook.— YFE 
I  Wonder  Why.— Anon.— CS  29 
I  Would  I  Were  a  Note.— Anon.— PC 

(Be  Content.)— YBT 
I  Would  I  Were  an  Excellent  Divine. — Nicholas  Bre- 
ton.—BNL 
(Priest,  The.)— HBP 
"I  would  if  I  could."— Anon.— PR— YA 
"I  would  not  divorce  faith  from  reason." — Anon. — GG 
"I  would  not  for  ten  thousand  worlds  be  that  man." — 

Jos.  Doddridge. — GG 
I  Would  not  Live  Alway. — W:  A.  Muhlenberg. — AA — 

CS21— FEP  («/.  diff.)~GF  (abr.)— LLC  (set.) 
I  Would  Thou  Wert  not  Fair.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Strange 

Fortunes  of  Two  Excellent  Princes.) — Nicholas 

Breton.— ELP 
I  Wouldna  Gie  a  Copper  Plack. —  Mary   A.  Barry. — 

BS12 
"I  Wouldn't— Would   You?"— Anon.— BS  16  {abr.)— 

WRD 
I  Wud  Knot  Dye  in  Winter. — Anon. — HP 
lanthe. — Walter  S.  Landor.— OB 
lanthe.— Walter  S.  Landor.— VS 

(Diif.fr.  foregoing.) 
lanthe's  Question.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  CXXXV.) 

—Walter  S.  Landor.— OB 
lanthe's  Troubles.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  XXIL) — 

Wall  er  S.  Landor.— VA 
Icarus. — Anon. — OB 
Icarus. — Harry  L.  Koopman. — A  A 
Icarus;  or.  The  Peril  of  Borrowed  Plumes.     (SI.  abr.) — 

J:G.  Saxe.— CSS 
Ice  King,  The.— A.  B.  De  Mille.— TCV 
Ice  Palace,  The.— W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Iceberg,  The. — Edgar  Fawcett. — MRS 
Ich  Bin  Dein.— Gideon  W.  Seavey  (?).— WR  14 
Ichabod.— J:    G.    Whittier.— AA— ASL— BNL— EDY 

— EPs— FEP— HBP— TAV 
Icilius  on   Virginia's  Seizure. — T:   B.   Macaulay.     <See 

Virginia. 
I'd  Be— Wouldn't  You?— Anon.— TFS 
"I'd  rather  have  habits  than  clothes."     (Limerick.) — 

Gelett  Burgess. — NA 
Ideal.— Hugh  Cochrane.— TCV 
Ideal,  An.— T.  S.  Denison.— SR  10 
Ideal,  The.     (Hall's  Journal  of  Health.)— BS  9 
Ideal,  The.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— AA 
Ideal. — (Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Independence 

and  Liberty,  Pt.  I.,  XIV.)—  W:  Wordsworth. 

— LH 
(England.)— GP 

(London,  1802— C.)— PGT  1  (II.)— YBF  (II.) 
(Milton.)— LLC— WEP  4 
("Miltonl  thou  shouldst  be  living  at  this  hour.") — 

GG  (abr.) 
(Sonnet:     London,  1802.)— HBP 
(To  Milton.)— BNL— CEL— EPs— FEP 
Ideal  and  the  Real,  The.— T.  E.  Jones.— CS  16 
Ideal  and«the  Real,  The,  Br.  ael.  fr.     (Storm  in  Venice, 

A.)— Joaquin  Miller.— POS 
Ideal  Citizen,  The —J:  Habberton.— BLP 
Ideal  Co-ed,  The.— C:  K.  Field —CG  2 
Ideal  Future,  An.— T.  A.  Harcourt.— HP 
Ideal  Girl,  The.— Anon.— BS  20 
Ideal  Husband  to  His  Wife,  The. — Sam  W.   Foss.— 

THP 
Ideal  India,  The.— Fred.  S.  Ryman.— CS  2.5 
Ideal  is  the  Real,  The. — Ann  Preston. — CS  33 
Ideal  Lawyer,  The.— J:  W.  Griggs.— MRS 
Ideal  Love. — Michael  Angelo. — OH 
Ideal  Memory. — W:  J.  Dawson. — VA 
Ideal  with  a  Roman  Nose,  An. — Anon. — CS  17 
Ideality.       (Sonnet    XXXIII.)— Hartley    Coleridge.— 

VA 
Ideals.— Edmund  H.  Sears.— TAS 
Ideals.— David  A.  Wasson.— TAS 
Ideas  the  Life  of  a  People. — G:  W.  Curiis.- CS  3 

(Element  of  Justice.) — LLC 
Id^s  Napol^oniennes. — W:  Avtoim. — HPE 
Identitv.— T:  B.  Aldirch.— AA— TAV 
Idiot  Boy,  The.— Southey.— CS  7— MMR 


Idiot  Lad,   The.— Rob't   Overton.— CS  32— NPS— YP 
Idiot's  Gallantry,  An.— J:  F.  NichoUs.— CS  28 
Idle  Hands.- (DiaZ.— ad.  fr.)  T.  S.  Arthur.— MPD 
Idle  Love.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Idle  Magnet,  The.— (Tr.  by)  B.  W.  Bellamy  and  M.  W. 

Goodwin.— OS  1 
Idle  Shepherd-boys.  The. — W:  Wordsworth. — PC 
Idle  Words. — Andrew  Peabody. — FMR 
Idleness. — I>ord  Byron.     See  Giaour,  The. 
Idleness. — S.  Weir  Mitchell. — AA 
Idleness  a  Crime.— H:  B.  Carrington.- BLP— PEO 
Idleness  and  Ennui.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.)—' 

BNL 
Idleness  is  the  Mother  of  all  Evil. — Anon. — FDY 
Idler,  The. — Jones  Very. — AA 
Idolize.      (Acting    char.) — E.    C.    and    L.  J.  Rook. — 

YFE 
Idols,  Sels.  /r.— Wendell  Phillips.— CR—NC  (si.  abr.) 
Idyl,  An.— C:  G.  Buck.— THP— WR  7 
Idyl,  An.     (Harvard  Lampoon.) — CG  2 
Idyl  of  the  Period,  An.     (C.)—G:  A.  Baker.— CH— 
HNS— PLD 
(Both  Sides  of  the  Story.)— SR  7 
Idyl  of  th°  Strap,  An.     (Red  and  Blue.)— CG  2 
Idylls  of  the  King,  Sels.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson 

Crowning  of  Arthur,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Coming  of 

Arthur.)— EPs— OS  3 
Dedication.— FEP 

(Albert  the  Good— a6r.)— OS  3 
(Prince  Consort,  The— abr.)- EDY 
(To  the  Memory  of  Prince  Albert.))— EHT 
Elaine.     (Lancelot  and  Elaine — C) — AVP  (sel.) — 

WRl  (cond.) 
Enid.     (Sels.  fr.  The  Marriage  of  Geraint  and  Ger- 

aint  and  Enid.) — WR  1 
Enid's  Song.     (Fr.    The    Marriage    of    Geraint.) — 
BNL— LLC 
(Turn    Fortune   f.   Turn   thy   Wheel].)— OS  2— 
PHS— VS 
Gareth.     (Sel.  fr.  Gareth  and  Lynette.)— TMR 
Gate  of  Camelot,  The.   (Sel.  fr.  Gareth  and  Lynette.) 

—EPs 
Guinevere.     (Cond.) — WR  1 
Guinevere.     (Sel.  fr.  Guinevere.) — CR 
(Arthur's  Farewell— sfi.)— WEP  4 
(Guinevere — br.  sel.) — SAE 

(King    Arthur    and    Queen    Guinevere — abr.) — 
BS  15 
Late,  Late,  so  Late.     (Song  fr.  Guinevere.) — LLC 

(Foolish  Virgins,  The — to.  br.  add.)— BNL 
Passing  of  Arthur,  The.— EHT  (abr.) 

(SeZ.)— LLC— VA  (shorter.) 
Song  of  Elaine.     (Fr.  Lancelot  and  Elaine.) — LLC 
Tristram's  Song.     (Fr.  Guinevere.) — IJ.C 
Vivien,     (Sel.  fr.  Merlin  and  Vivien.) — WR  1 
Vivien's  Song.     (Fr.  Merlin  and  Vivien.) — VS 
(Song:     "In  love,  if  love,"  etc.) — OH 
(Song  of  Vivien.)— LLC 
lena's  Song. — C:  Mair.     See  Tecumseh. 
"If."— Anon.— CPL 
If.— Anon.— CS  13— WR  24 
"If."— Anon.— DLS 
If.— Anon— FTA 
If. — Anon. — NA 

(Nursery  Rhymes,  IV.:     "If  aii  tne  world,"  etc. — 
diff.  vers.) — CGd 
"If."— Clara  J.  Denton.— LL 
If.     W:  D.  Howells.— AA 
If.— J.— CG  3 

If.  (Our  Little  Ones.)— CPL 
If.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
If  a  Brother.— Anon. — DLF 

"If  a  man's  mind  be  thoroughly  alive,  he  cannot  be 

content  with  good  health." — Jos.  Parker. — GG 

"If  all  our  youth  sprung  from  whatever  nationality." — 

Jas.  W.  Patterson.— DFR 
If  all  the  Skies.— H:  Van  Dyke.— HBR 
If  all  the  Voices  of  Men. — Horace  L.  Traubel. — AA 
If  all  the  Worid.— Dollie  Radford.— VA 
If  Doughty  Deeds  [my  Lady  Please]. — Rob't  Cunning- 
hame-Graham.— BNL— OB— PGT  1 
(Tell  me  how  to  Woo  thee.)— FEP 
(To  his  Lady.)— LH 
If  ever  I  See.— Lydia  M.  Child.— AD  (to.  wm«.)— NV 
(Birds'  Nests.)— TFS 
(I  Love  the  Birds.)— PS 
"If  flowers  could   always  bloom   at   eve."  —  Anon.— 

HSSl 
If  he's  Bu'sted?— Howell  L.  Finer.- WR  23 
If  I  but  Knew. — Amy  E.  I>eigh. — AA 
"  If  I  can  stop  one  heart  from  breaking."      (C.)— 
Emily  Dickinson. 
(Not  inVain.)— TAS— YBT 


155 


If  I  Desire 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


If  I   Desire   [with   Pleasant    Songs]. — T:   Burbidge. — 

HHP— TFY— VA 
If  I  had  Thought  thou  Couldst  have  Died.  — C:  Wolfe. 

— FEP 
(Lines  written  to  music.) — TIP 
(To  Mary.)— BPB^OB— PGT  1 
If  I    Knew.     (Where  the  Smiles  are  Kept.) — Anon. — 

YBT 
1  "If  I  leave  all  for  thee,  wilt  thou  exchange." — Eliz.  B. 

Browning.— GG—PGT  2 
(Ful[l]ness  of  Love.)— FT  A— OH 
(Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese.) —  BNL  —  FEP— 

HBP— VA  (XXXV.— C.) 
If  I  Should  Die  To-night.  (Porody.)— Ben  King.— THP 
If  I  Should  Die  To-night.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  27 

— GG— PPSr 
(At.  to  ArabeUa  E.  Smith.)— BNL— BS  3— HP 
If  I  Were  a  Bird. — Anon. — AD 
If   I  Were  a  Boy  Again.— Edgar  W.  Nye.— SR  5— 

WR  15 
"If  I  Were  a  Flower."— Clara  J.  Denton.— DFR—LL 
"If  I  Were  a  Rose."— Anon.— HSS  2 
If  I  Were  a  Sunbeam. — Lucy  Larcom. — GMS — LCS — 

NV 
If  I  Were  a  Voice.— C:  Mackay.— FMR— MYF 

(SI.  afcr.)— BLP— HSS  3— LLC 
"If  I  were  called  to  point  out  the  most  alarming  sins  of 

to-day." — Howard  Crosby. — GG 
"If  I  were  Dead."— Coventry  Patmore. — OB— PG T  2 
If  I  Were  King.— W.  E.  Henley.— PPh 
If  I  Were  You.— Anon.— DLS 
If  I  Were  You.— Anon.— PS— TT 
If!  If!— Anon.— YBT 
If  Ifs  and  Ands. — Anon. — DLF 
"If  it   be  true  that   any   beauteous  thing." — Michael 

Angelo.— BNL 
(Sonnet.)— BIL— HBP 
"If  it  was  not  for  the  Drink." — A.  L.  Westcombe. — 

CS29 
If  it  Were  True.— Anon.— DS 
"If  Jove  would  give  the  leafy  bowers  " — "Clodia." — 

AD 
"If  life  awake  and  will  never  cease." — Josiah  G.  Hol- 
land.—HDL 
If  Men  be  Worlds.— J:  Donne.— EPs 
If  Mine  I  Could  but  Call  Thee.— Anon.— FTA 
"If  no  one  ever  marries  me." — Laurens  Alma-Tadema. 

— BVC 
If  Only  I  Might  Write.— Anon.— FLS 
If  Only  thou  Art  True.— G:  Barlow.— VA 
If  Only  you  Were  Here. — Hester  A.  Benedict. —  FLS — 

FTA 
"If  she  be  Made  of  White  and   Red." — Herbert   P. 

Home. — VA 
If  she   but    Knew. — Arthur   O'Shaughnessy. —  FTA — 

PGT  2— VA 
"If  she  Knew  that  I  am  Cupid."— D.  D.  P.— TL 
"If  Spirits  Walk." — Sophie  Jewett. — AA 
If  Still  Thev  Live  [.whom  Touch    nor-  Sight]. — Edith 

M.  Thomils.     See  Inverted  Torch,  The. 
If  that  Were  True! — Frances  Brown. — HBP 
If  the  Heart  be  True.— G:  MacDonald.— FLS 
"If  the  sinner  persists  in  rejecting  Christ,  the  ruin  of  his 

soul  will  be  his  own  work." — Au.«tin  Phelps. — 

GG 
"If  the  World  Seems  Cold  to  You." — Lucy  Larcom. 

See  Three  Old  Saws. 
"If  there  be  memory  in  the  world  to   come." — Jean 

"  Ingelow.     /See  Star's  Monument,  The. 
"If  there  should  come  a  time,  as  well  there  may."     (All 

the  Year  Round.) — GG 
(Comfort.)— FTA 
"If  Things  Was  only  Sich."— B:  P.  Shillaber.— CS  11 
If  thou  Couldst  Know. — Adelaide  A.  Procter.  —  HDL 
'  if  thoii  couldst  know  thine  own  sweetness." — P's.  T. 

Palgrave. — PoR 
"If  thou  dos..  bid  thv  friend  farewell." — Coventry  Pat- 
more.  — GG 
(P.art  ing. )— BNL— HP 
"If  thou  must  love  me,  let  it  be  for  nought."     (Sonnet 

XIV.— C.)— Eli/,.  B.  Browning.— PGT  2 
(Love  for  Love's  Sake.) — OH 
(Sonnets      from      the       Portuguese.)  —  BNL  — 

FEP— HBP— OB  (IV.)— YBF 
If  thou  Wert  by  my  Side  [,  my  Love].   (Lines  Addressed 

to  Mrs.   Heber—O— Reginald  Heber.— BNL 

—EPs  (si.  <i6r.)— HBP— TFY 
(Lines  Addressed  to  his  Wife.) — FEP 
If  thou  Wert  False.— Art  hur  L.  Salmon. — FLS 
If  thou  Wih  Ease  thine  Heart  (Dirge).  —  T:  L.  Bed- 
does.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
"If  to   embody  in    a   breathing   word."  —  Oliver  W. 

Holmes.    See  Poetry. 


If  'twere  Done  when  'tis  Done. — W :  Shakespeare.     See 

Macbeth. 
If  we  Could.— Anon.— CS  8 
If  we  had  but  Known. — Anon. — CS  6 

(Regrets.)— FLS 
If  we  Knew.— Anon.— CS  37— PR 
If  we  Knew. — Anon. — SSS 
If  we  Knew. — Virginia  M.  Haynard. — CS  33 
If  we  Knew  [;  or  Blessings  of  To-day].     (C.) — May  R. 
Smith.— CS  3— HP— LLC— SM 
(Blessings  of  To-day,  The.)— SSS 
"If  you  have  gentle  words  and   looks,  my  friends." 

(Sunday  Magazine.) — GG 
If  you  Have  Seen.— T:  Moore.— THP 

( Nonsense — C. ) — N  A 
"If  you  mark,  my  lord." — Justin  McCarthy. — GG 
If  you  Want  a  Kiss,  why,  Take  It. — Anon. — HP 

(Concerning  Kisses.) — WR  2 
If  you  Want  to  be  Loved. — Clara  J.  Denton. — SSE 
"If  you  were  coming  in  the  Fall." — Emily  Dickinson. — 

OH 
If  you  Were  Here. — -Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
"If  you   wish  to  win   bright  laurels." — "Lucette." — 

GG 
"If  you  would  make  men  honest  or  pure." — Anon. — 

FHS 
Ignorance  a  Crime,  in  a  Republic. — Horace  Mann.    See 

following. 
Ignorance  in  our  Country  a  Crime.  —  Horace  Mann. — 
KNE— OM 
(Ignorance  a  Crime  in  a  Republic — abr.) — BS  17 — 
SR8 
Ike  after  the  Opera. — Anon. — CS  14 
Ike    Papson's    Courtship. — T.  S.  Denison.     See  Man 

Behind,  The. 
Ike  Walton's  Prayer.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— AA— MRS 
II  Fior  degli  Eroici  Furori. — J:  A.  Symonds. — VA 
U  Penseroso.— J:    Milton.— AE  (br.  seZ.)— BNL— BPB 
— ELP  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  — MBL— OB— 
PGT  1— PHS— SN  (br.  »ei.)— WEP  2 
Iliad,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Homer. 

Camp  at  Night,  The.     (Chapman's  tr.,  sel.  fr.  Bk. 
VIII.)— BNL— WEP  1 
(Iliad,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Pope's  tr.)— WEP  3 
Combat    between    Paris    and    Menel  us.     (Mum- 
ford's  tr.,  sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.)— WR  11 
(Helen  at  the  Sca>an  Gates — plly.  diff. —  Bryant's 

<r.)— NE 
(Helen  on  the  Rampart — shorter  sels. — Chapman's 
<r.)— WEP  1 
Defiance  of  Hector  and  Ajax.     (Pope's  tr. — sel.  fr. 

Bk.  XIII.)— OS  3 
Exploit  of  Hector,  The.     (Cowper's  tr. — sel.  fr.  Bk. 
XII.)— LLC 
(Hector's  Exploit  at  the  Barriers  of  the  Grecian 

Fleet.)— SS 
(Triumph  of  Hector,  The— Mumford's  tr.) — PR 

— WRll 
(Victory     of     Hector,    The — Bryant's     tr. — si. 
longer.)— SO 
Grief  of    Achilles    for    the    Slaying    of    Patroclus, 
Mencetus'  Son.     (Chapman's  tr. —  sel.  fr.  Bk. 
XVIII.)— WEP  1 
Hector   Slain   by   Achilles.    (Cowper's   tr. — sel.    fr. 

Bk.  XXII.)— SS 
Hector's  Farewell  to  Andromache —  Bryant's  tr. — 
sel.cond.  fr.  Bk.  VI.)— WR  14 
(Parting  of     Hector    and    Andromache — shorter 
and  ptly.  diff.) — NE 
Hector's   Rebuke  to  Polydamus.     (Cowper's  tr. — 

sel.  fr.  Bk.  XII.) 
Reply  of  Achilles  to  the  Envoys  of  Agamemnon 
Soliciting   a    Reconciliation.     (Cowper's   tr. — 
sel.  fr.  Bk.  IX.)— PS— SS 
Iliad,  The.— Frances  H.  Newton.— CG  3 
Iliad,  Story  of  the.— Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
I'll  be  a  Man. — Anon. — DLS 

I'll  Never  Love  Thee  More. — Jas.  Graham,  Marquis  of 
Montrose.     <See  My  Dear  and  Only  Love  [,  I 
Pray]. 
I'll  Put  it  Off.— Anon.— DLS— TFS 
I'll  Take    what    Father   Takes.— W.    Hoyle.  — CS9— 

SR  2— TS 
"  I'll  tell  thee  everything  I  can.l'   (C.) — Lewis  Carroll. 

(Ways  and  Means.) — NA 
I'll  Try  and  I  Can't.— Anon.— COS— PP— PS 
Illinois.     (Acting  char.) — Anon. — StD 
Illuminated  Coal,  The.— C:  Sangster. — TCV 
Illusions. — (Flowers  of  Sion,  II.) — W:  Drummond. — 
CEL 
("  Good  that  never  satisfies  the  mind.  A.") — FEP 
(Human  Frailty.) — LLC 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 


156 


TITLE  INDEX 


In  a  Theatre 


Illusions. — Rob't  U.  Johnson. — TAV 

Illustrated  Story,  An.     (Dial.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Illustration,  An. — Philip  Krohn. — SR  2 
Illustration  of  a  Picture. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — FP 
Ilmarinen's  Wedding  Feast. — (Tr.  by)  J:  M.  Crawford. 

See  Kalevala,  The. 
I'm  a  Man. — Anon. — HVD 

I'm  Getting  Too  Big  to  Kiss. — G:  M.  Vickers. — PS 
"I'm  Glad  He  Knows."— Tom  Brown.— WR  12 
I'm  Growing  Old.— J:  G.  Saxe.— FEP— GP 
I'm  Little  but  I'm  Spunky. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KER 
(Speech  for  a  Girl  Five  Years  Old.)— KJ 
I'm  not  a  Single  Man.— T:  Hood.— WR  12 
"I'm  sorry  that  I  spelt  the  word." — J:  G.  Whittier. 

See  In  School-days. 
"I'm  very  happy  where  I  am." — Dion  Boucicault. — 

TIP 
I'm  Very  Young.— Anon.— DJS—TFS 
I'm  with  you  Once  Again. —  G:  P.  Morris. —  CS  13 — 

FTR- HNS 
Imaginary  Conversations,  Sels.  fr. — Walter  S.  Landor. 
Bossuet  and  the  Duchess  of  Fontanges. — ESs 
Washington  and  Franklin. — MRS 
Imaginary  Invalid,    The. — Jerome    K.    Jerome.     See 

Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Imaginary  Sick  Man,   The.     (Le  Malade   Imaginaire, 

Sc.  XIV.)— Jean  B.  P.  Moliere  — PS 
Imagination.     (Frags,  fr.  variou»  authors.) — BNL 
Imagination. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Excursion,  The. 
Imagination  and  Fancy. — C:  C.  Everett. — TMR 
'  Imaginative  Crisis,  The.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Imaginative  Invention,  An. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KJ 
Imaginative  Sympathy    with    Nature. — Lord    Byron. 

See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Imitation. — Anon. — CS  7 — SA 

Imitation  of  Christ,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Thomas  h  Kempis. 
"  Sigh  and  grieve  that  you  are  yet  so  carnal  and 

worldly."     (Bk.  IV.,  Ch.  VII.,  2.)— GG 
"  Think  you  to  escape."     (Bk.  II.,  Ch.  XII.,  6.)— 

FHS 
"Imitation   of   Christ    was   written    by   a   hand   that 

waited,   The."  —  G:   Eliot.      See  Mill  on  the 

Floss,  The. 
Imitation  of  Spenser,  Sel.fr.      (Morning) — J:  Keats. 

— POS(L) 
Imitation    of   Wordsworth,   An. — Catharine   M.   Fan- 

shawe. — NA 
Immensity  of  Creation,  The. — O.  M.  Mitchell. — LLC 

(Infinity  of  the  Universe,  The.)— HSS  2 
Immortal.     (Ahr.) — Lucy  Larcom. — TAS 
"Immortal  amaranth,  a    flower    which    once." — J: 

Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Immortal  Flowers. — Wallace  Rice. — AA 
Immortal  Memories. — G:  A.  Sheridan. — BLP 
Immortal  Mind,  The.  —  (In  Hebrew  Melodies.) —  I^ord 

Byron. — EPs 
("When  coldness  wraps  this  suffering  clay" — C.) 

—FEP 
Immortal  Part,  The. — Jos.  Addison.     SeeCato. 
Immortal  Washington. — Richard  C.   Dillmore. — TMD 
Immortality. — Anon. — LLC 
Immortality. — Anon. — SR  13 
Immortality.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Immortality. — Matthew  Arnold. — YBF 
Immortality. — Richard  H:  Dana.     See  Husband's  and 

Wife's  Grave,  The. 
Immortality. — Arthur  S.  Hardy. — AA 
Immortality.— Jean  B.  Massillon. — CS  8 — SS 
Immortality. — Frd'k  W.  H.  Myers. — VA 
Immort,ality. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 
Immortality. — G.  W.  Rtissell.— VA 
Immortality. — Sarah  F.  Smith. — BLP 
Immortality. — W:    Wordsworth.     See   Ode:     Intima- 
tions of  Immortality,  etc. 
Immortality  of  Love. — Rob't  Southey.     See  Curse  of 

Kehama,  The. 
Immortality   of   True   Patriotism. — Jas.   A.    Garfield. 

See  Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union 

Soldiers. 
Immortals,  The. — Edward    Everett.     See    Eulogy    on 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Immutabilis.     Alice  L.  Bunner.     See  Vingtaine. 
Impeachment  of  Hastings  Finished. — Edmund  Burke. 

See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 
Impeachment  of  Mr.  Hastings,  The. — Edmund  Burke. 

See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 
Impeachment  of    Warren    Hastings,  Sels.  ft. — R:  B. 

Sheridan. 
Impeachment   of    Mr.    Hastings,     The.       (Begum 

Speech— abr. )— MRS 


Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings  (coutinued). 

Nature  of   Justice,    The.     (Peroration   of    Begum 
Speech.)— PS 
(Character  of  Justice — ahr.) — TMD 
Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings,  Speeches  in  the, 
Sels.  fr. — Edmund  Burke. 
Impeachment  of  Hastings  Finished.     (Fr.  Speech 
of  June  16, 1794.)— FTR 
(Close  of  Impeachment  of  Hastings — abr.) — FD  1 
(Peroration  against  Warren  Hastings — si.  abr.) — 

SS 
(To  the  House  of  Lords— seZ.) — OS  2 
Impeachment    of    Mr.    Hastings,    The.     (Sel.    fr. 

Speech  of  Feb.  18,  1788.)— MRS 
Impeachment    of  Warran  Hastings.     (Sel.  arr.  fr. 
Speeches  of  Feb.  16  and  18,  1788.)— CR 
(Despotism  Incompatible  with  Right — abr.) — SS 
Impeachment     of     Warren'    Hastings.     (Sels.     fr. 
Speech  of  Feb.  18,  1788.)— KNE— OS  3— PPS 
— PS— SS— SSD 
Oration  on  the  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings, 
Sel.  fr.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Speech  of  Feb.  18,  1788.) 
— CR 
(Peroration  of  Burke's  Speech  on  the  Impeach- 
ment, etc.) — SE 
Impecunious  Fop,  The. — Jos.  Hall. — ESs 
Imperator  Augustus. — Rennell  Rodd. — VA 
Imperial  Secret,  An. — Alex.  Dumas. — NP 
Imperial   Soul,  The.— Langdon  E.  Mitchell.— TAS 
Imperious  Angler,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley.     See  Session 

with  Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
Imperishability  of  Great  Examples. — Edward  Everett. 

See  Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Impetuous  Resolve,  An. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — RCR 
Impetuous  Samuel. — D.  Streamer. — NA 
"Imph-m."— Anon.— BS  18— CR  (si.  abr.) 
Implora  Pace. — C:  L.  Hildreth. — AA 
Importance  of  the  Agricultural  Interest. — Caleb  Gush- 
ing.—SS 
Imposture,  The,  Song  fr.      (Peace  Restored.)  —  Jas. 

Shirley.— ELP 
Impression. — ;Edmund  Gosse. — VA 
Impressionistic      (Wrinkle.) — CG  3 
Impressions  of  Niagara.     (Sel.  fr.  American  Notes,  Ch. 
XIV.)— C:  Dickens.— CS  20 
(Niagara  FaUs— abr. )—BS  15 
Imprisoned. — Lily  A.  Lefevre. — TCV 
Imprisoned  Soul,  The. — Walt  Whitman. — OB 
Impromptu  Fairy-tale,  An. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Impromptu,  on  Lord  Holland's  Seat  at  Kingsgate. — 

T:  Gray.— WEP3 
Impromptu.     Upon  being  Obliged  to  Leave  a  Pleasant 
Party.     (C.)—T:  Moore 
(On  being  Obliged,  etc.)— HPE 
(Upon  being  Obliged,  etc.)— THP 
Improved  "Enoch  Arden." — Anon. — HP 
Improvise  on  a  Young  Heir's  Coming  of  Age.    (C) — S: 
Johnson. 
(One  and  Twenty.)— OB 
In  a  Child's  Album.— W:  Wordsworth.— GN 

("Small  service  is  true  servdce  J  while  it  lasts]" — si. 

diff.  fr.  Poems.)— CS  1— HSS  2 
(To  a  Cihild,  Wiittpn  in  her  Album— C.)— BNL 
In  a  China-shop. — G :  S.  Hellman. — AA 
In  a  Clear  Starry  Night.— G :  Wither.— HBP 

("Lord,  when  those  gl  ;rious  lights  I  see.") — BNL 
In  a  Copy  of  Omar  Khayyam. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — AA 
In  a  Day,  Sel.  fr.    (The  Deaths  of  Myron  and  Klydone.) 

— Augusta  Webster. — VA 
In  a  Forest. — Rob't  Southey. — AD 
In  a  Garden. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — WR  9 
In  a  Garden. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — PoR 
In  a  Garden  by  Moonlight. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Tor- 

rismond. 
In  a  Garret. — Eliz.  A.  Allen. — AA 
In  a  Gondola. — Rob't  Browning. — VA 

In  a  Gondola.     (Song  fr.  In  a  Gondola.) — OB 
(Moth's  Kiss  First,  The.)— BNL— OH 
(Song.)— TFY 
In   a  Gondola.     (SI.  diff.  vers.  fr.   Poems.) — Joaquin 

MUler.— BIL 
In  a  Graveyard. — Anon. — HP 
In  a  Horse  Car.— Will  H.  Semple.— CS  35 
In  a  Hundred  Years. — Anon. — FMR 
"In  a  Just    Cause."     (Sel.   fr.  Hereditary  Policy  of 

America.) — L:  Kossuth. — SS 
In  a  Lecture-room. — Arthur  H.  Clough. — VA 
In  a  London  Square.— Arthur  H.  Clough.— PGT  2 
"In  a  railroad  train  in  Scotland  was  an  old  lady  with  a 

large  hand-satchel." — Anon. — WR  22 
In  a  September  Night. — F.  W.  Home. — VA 
In  a  Strange  Land.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— GP 
In  a  Theatre. — Abraham  G.  Werner. — SO 


157 


In  a  Year 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


In  a  Year.— Rob't  Browning.— BNL—FEP— HBP 

In  Absence. — Archibald  Lampinan. — TFY 

In  Absence.     (In  Absence,  IV.) — Sidney  Lanier. — TAS 

In  Absence.— J:  B.  Tabb.— ASL— YBF 

In  Action. — Anon. — PAPm 

In  Aesop's  Vein— W»  IT.  Mitchell.- -AWH 

"Id  after  Days."— Austin  Dobson.— AVP— OB — VA 

In  after  Time.     (Poems  and  Enigrams,  CXXXII.)— 

Walter  S.  I.andor. — VA 
"In  all  our  decisions  and  actions,  it  would  be  well  for 

us."     (Br.  Bel.  jr.  Plato;  or.  The  Philosopher, 

in  Representative  Men.) — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 

— GG 
In  Amity  of  Soul.— Mary  K.  Dallas.- WR  3 
In  an  Atelier.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— CR  (d.  diff.  h.  Poems.) 

— HBR— MRS 
In  an  Unknown  Tongue. — J;  W.  Chadwick. — OH 
In  Answer.— Rose  H.  Thorpe.— CRR—CS  22 
In  Answer  to  Mr.  Pope. — Anne  Finch,  Lady  Winchil- 

sea.- WEP  3 
In  Answer  to  One  who  Writ  a  Libel  against  the  Countess 

of  Carlisle,     rc.)— Edmund  Waller. 
(To    One  who   Wrote    against    a    Fair    Lady.) — 

WEP  2 
In  Apia  Bay.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— BAB 
"In  Apprehension,  so  Like  a  God." — Mary  Morgan. — 

TCV 
In  April. — Eliz.  A.  Allen.     See  Spring  at  the  Capital. 
In  April.— Emily  G.  Arnold.— NV—YBT 
In  April.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— POS 
In  April.— Eben  E.  Rexford.— POS 
In  August.— W:  D.  Howells.— ASL— GN— POS 
In  Bachelor's  Hall.— Clarence  W.  Peabody. — CG  1 
In  Bay   Chaleur.  —  Hezekiah    Butterworth.  —  HP  — 

WR  2  (o6r.) 
In  Behalf  of    Starving  Ireland. — S.  S.  Prentiss.     See 

Relief  for  Starving  Ireland. 
In  Blossom  Time. — Ina  D.  Coolbrith.— GMS— TAS 
In  Cap  and  Gown. — Anon. — CG  1 
In  Chartres  Cathedral. — Rennell  Rodd. — HBP 
In  Church — during  the  Litany. — Anon. — BS  15 
In  Clonmel  Parish  Churchyard. — Sarah  M.   B.   Piatt. 

— AA 
In  dat  Great  Gittin'-up  Momin'. — Anon. — AA 
In  Days  Like  These.— T.  H.  Stacy.— PAPm 
In  de  Momin'— Eliz.  Y.  Case.— BS  19 
In  Death. — Mary  E.  Bradley. — AA 
In  Defense  of  Aaron  Burr. — Edmund  Randolph. — EAO 
In  Defence  of  the  British  Soldiers. — Josiah  Quincy,  Jr. 

—EAO 
In  Defence  of  the  Christian  Sunday. — Alex.  P.  Doyle. 

—SO 
In  Defence  of  Universal  Suffrage,  May  20,  1850. — Vic- 
tor Hugo.— PS 
In  der  Schweed  Long  Ago. — "Oofty  Gooft." — DCR — 

DRR 
In  Disgrace. — (Tableau.) — Anon. — TCP 
In  Doubt.— B.  A.— CG  3 
In  Earliest  Spring.     (C.)— W:  D.  Howells.— AA 

(Earliest  Spring.)— OB 
"In  Eastern  lands  they  talk  in  flowers."     (Br.  sel.  fr. 

The  Language  of  Flowers.) — Jas.  G.   Percival. 

—AD 
In  Ethics.— E.  H.  W.— CG  3 
"In  Excelsis  Gloria." — Anon. — OS  2 
In  Exile. — Andrew  Marvell. — LH 

(Bermudas,  The.)— GN— OB— WEP  2 
(Emigrants  in  [the]  Bermudas,  The.) — FEP — HBP 
(Song  of  the  Emigrants  in  Bermuda.) — BNL — BPB 

— EPs— BGT  1 
In  Explanation. — Walter  Learned. — AA 
(Explanation,  An.) — HP 
(What  Else  Could  he  Do?)— BS  21 
In  Extremis. — Alice  Brown. — TAS 
In  Fairy  Land. — Lucy  Larcom. — LC!S 
In  Favor  of  a  State  Law  against  Dueling. — J:  Ran- 
dolph.—PS  (si.  oftr.  )—SS 
In  Favor  of  Tobacco. — S :  Rowlands. — PPh 
In  February. — J:  A.  Symonds. — PoR — POS 
In  Fervent  Praise  of  Picnics. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
In  Forest  Depths. — R:  H.  Home.     See  Orion:  An  Epic 

Poem. 
In  Galilee. — Mary  F.  Butts. — AA 
In  Galilee.— Marg.  E.  Sangster. — TAS 
In  God's  Acre. — Theodore  Tilton. — TAS 
In  Green  Old  Gardens. — Mary  M.  Lamb,  Lady  Currie. 

— VA 
In  Hades. — Anna  C.  Brackett. — AA 
In  Harbor. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — AA 
In  Heaven  I'll  Rock  thee  to  Sleep. — Anon. — CS  11 
In  his  Own  Country.— Chas.  K.  Field.- CG  2 
In  his  Way  a  Hero.     (Fr.  Bettles.) — Edwin  Pugh. — 

WR  19 


In  Honor  of  the  City  of  London. — W:  Dunbar. — OB 
In  Hood  of  Blue.— Anon.— CG  1 

In  Imagine  Pertransit  Homo.     (A  Book  of  Airs,  fourth 
i<ong.)—T:  Campion.— PGT  1 
(Devotion) — OB  (l8t  poem.) 
(Shadow,  The.)— ELP 
In  Immemoriam. — Cuthbert  Bede. — NA 
In  Imminent  Peril.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— MN 
In  Jamaica. — .1.  P.  Denison. — CG  1 
In  June.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— HDL— TAS 
In  June. — Irene  E.  Morton. — TCV 
In  June.— Nora  Perry.— SN—TAV 
In  Junior  Year. — W:  G.  Barney.— CG  1 
In  Lacrimas. — Anon. — PGT  1 

(I  Saw  mv  Lady  Weep.)— ELP 
(My  Lady's  Tears.)— OB 
In  Laleham  Churchyard. — W:  Watson. — AVP 
In  Laudem  Amoris. — Anon. — ELP 
(Devotion.) — OB 
(Omnia  Vincit.)— PGT  1 
In  Leinster.      (Two    Irish    Peasant   Song^,  I. — C.) — 
Louise  T.  Guiney. — AA 
(Song:  in  Leinster.) — ASL 
"In  Lighter  Vein."— Eliz.  K.  Adams.— CG  1 
In  Littles.— W:  C.  Gannett.— TAS 
In  Louisiana. — .1.  W.  De  Forest — AWB 
In  Louisiana. — Albert  B.  Paine. — AA 
In  Love  with  his  Wife.      (Play.) — Clara  S.  Clarke. — 
NDP 
(Merely  Players.)— VSG—WR  13 
In  Love's   Eternity.     (Ahr.) — Arthur  O'Shaughnossy. 

—PGT  2 
In  Love's  Own  Time. — Michael  Angelo. — FTA — OH 
In  Maiden  Meditation. — W.  C.  Nichols. — CG  2 
In  Mamma's  Day. — Curley. — TL 
In  Manila  Bav. — Chas.  Wadsworth,  Jr. — PRR 
In  March. — W:  Wordsworth.— PC 
(After  Rain.)— CEL 

(March.)  -BFS'^— HBP  -OS  1— PHS-PoR 
(Written  iu  March— C.)—AE—CGd—LC 
In  Matahe'e  Land.— S:  M.  Bavlis.-  TCV 
In  May.— F/dwin  M.  Stem.— SR  12— WR  22 
Iu  May.— Rob't  K.  Weeks.— SN 

In  Medio  Tutis.simus  Ibis. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
In  Memoriam.  (C.) — Edwin  Arnold. 
(Lord  Raglan.)— GP 
( Raglan. )— ED  Y—VA 
In  Memoriam. — Craven  L.  Betts. — TCV 
"In  Memoriam." — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
In  Memoriam. — Mary  Lamb. — PGT  1 
(Child.  A.)  -OB 

(Parental  Recollections.)— WEP  4 
In  Memoriam. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. — PGT  2 
In  Memoriam. — G:  D.  Prentice. — CS  9 
In  Memoriam,  Sel8.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 
All  is  Well.     (Sts.  127,  54— seZ*.)— GP 
April.     (115)— YBF 
(Spring.)— SN 

(Stanzas  from  "In  Memoriam.") — PHS 
April  Davs.     (83)— SN 
Arthur  Henry  Hallam.     (107)— EDY 
Autumn.     (11)— SN 

(Landscape — br.  sel.) — EPs 
(Peace  of  Sorrow,  The.)— BNL 
Bells  of  Yule.     (28)— PEO 
(Christmas— abr. )— POS 
Birth  of  Christ,  The.     (28,  30— sris.)— OS  3 
Christmas.     (106)— EPs— HBP 
(Christmas  Bells.)— OS  3 

(New  Year,  The.)— FTR— PHS— POS— WCLG  2 
(New  Year'.s  Eve.)— EDY 
(SI.  a?)r.)— BNL— YBF 
(Old  Year  and  the  New— abr. )—BS   1— CSS— 

PPSr 
(Ring  out.  Wild  Bells.)— CR—CS  3— FP— HSS  2 
— LLC— PSR— SE— SM— SO 
Contemplate  all  this  Work.    (118)— HBP— YBF 
Dead  Friend,  The.     (22,  23,  25,  85,  118,  123— 8eZ«.) 

—BNL 
Dead  in  a  Foreign  Land.     (9) — BNL 
Death  in  Life's  Prime.     (78)— BNL 
Dost  thou  Look  Back?     (64)— OS  3 
Evening.     (84)— HBP 
Grief  Unspeakable.     (5)— BNL 
In  Memoriam.     (Introd.) — LLC 

(Strong  Son  of  God,  Immortal  Love.) — BNL— 
HDL 
In  Memoriam,  Sets.  fr.—AVP  (19,  24,  33,  67,  83, 
101)— FEP  (1,  32,  54,  78,  106)— OB  (9,  10,  11. 
15,  17.  23,  44,  55,  56,  101,  115,  126)— WEP  4 
(19,  35,  54,  109,  123.) 
Mary.     (32)— HBP 
My  Love  has  Talked.     (97)— HBP 


158 


TITLE  INDEX 


In  the  Graveyard 


In  Memoriam  {continued). 

"My  own  dim  life  should  teach  me  this."     (34 — 

eel.)  HDL 
O  Days  and  Hours.     (67)— BIL 
"O  Vwr.  Oh]  vet  we  trust  [that  somehow  good"]. 
(54.)— BNL— GG   (abr.)— HBP— HDL— OS  3 
— PYO— YBF 
Old  Home,  The.     (102)— FP 

"One  writes  that  other  friends  remain."     (6 — sel.) 
—HDL 
(In  Memoriam,  Sd.  /r.)— PYO  {si.  abr.) 
Personal  Resurrection.     (47) — BNL 
Poet's  Tribute,  The.     (77)— BNL 
Separation.     117 — ahr.) — GP 
Spiritual  Communions.     (94) — GP 
Spiritual  Companionship.     (94,  51) — BNL 
Spring.     (83,  115)— BNL— HBP 
Strife,  The.     (55)— HBP— SE— YBF 
"That  which  we  dare  invoke  to  bless."  (124) — HDL 
Time  and  Eternity.     (43)— BNL 
Wedding-day,  The.     {Abr.  (r   aong  fol.  \3\.)— OH 
"With  trembling  fingers  did  we  weave."     (30) — 
HDL 
In  Memoriam  —  A.  Lincoln.  —  Mrs.  Emily  J.   Bugbee. 

—HNS 
In  Memoriam — Alfred,  Lord  Tennyson. — T.  H.  War- 
ren.—AVP 
In  Memoriam— .1.  O.— A.  E.  Watrous.— EDY 
In  Memoriam:  Nelson;  Pitt;  Fox. — Walter  Scott.     See 

Marmion. 
In  Memoriam — Prince  Leopold. — FI.  Halloran. — EDY 
In  Memory  of  Barry    Cornwall. — Algernon    C.    Swin- 
burne.—EDY 
In  Memory  of  Charles    Dickens. — Sue    M.    Remak. — 

CS4 
In  Memory  of  General  Grant. — H:  Abbey  — AA 
In  Memory  of  John  Lothrop  Motley. — W:  C.  Bryant. 

— A  A 
In  Memory  of  Lewis  Carroll.     {Punch.) — EDY 
In  Memory  of  lancoln.— J:  N.  Baldwin. — WR  26 
In  Memorv  of  the  Pilgrims.   —   Grenville     Mellen   — 

WR  10 
In  Memory  of  Walter   Savage    Landor, — Algernon    C. 

Swinburne.— EDY— VA 
In  Mexico. — Evaleen  Stein. — AA 
In  Mid-ocean. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
In  Midsummer. — R:  K.  Munkittrick. — POS 
In  Mother's  Room. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
"In  multitudes  of  cases,  perhaps  the  greater  part  of 

them." — Morgan  Dix. — GG 
In  my  Heart.— J:  Reade.— TCV 
In  Nevada.— C:  G.  Leland.— FEP 
In  Nonsense  Land. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
In  November. — Anon. — WR  4 
In  November. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — AA 
In  November. — Susan  K.  Phillips.^POS 
In  November. — Duncan  C.  Scott. — VA 
In  Obitum  M.  S.  X°.  Maij.  1614.— W:  Browne. — OB 

(Epitaph.)— ELP 
In  Olden  Style.— W.  F.  Barron.— CG  3 
In  our  Boat. — Dinah  M.  M.  Craik. — GP 
In  Pace.— Arthur  R.  Ropes. — HBP — VA 
In  Paradise. — Arlo  Bates. — AA 
In  Paradise. — Harriet  McE.  Kimball. — HDL 
In  Patience. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — HDL 
In  Perpetuum.     (Wrinkle.) — CG  3 
In  Pitti. — Louise  de  la  Ram^. — WR  12 
In  Port. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson.     See  North-west  Pas- 
sage. 
In  Praise  of  Angling. — Sir  H:  Wotton.— BNL 

(Description  of  the  Country's  Recreations,  A.) — 

EP 
(Verses  in  Praise  of  Angling.) — FEP — HBP 
In  Praise  of  Daphne. — J:  Lyly.     See  Midas. 
In  Praise  of  Gilbert    White. — W:   J.    Courthope.     See 

Paradise  of  Birds,  The. 
In  Praise  of  his  Mistress. — {Abr.) — T:  Carew. — ES  — 

WEP2 
In  Praise  of  Lessius,  his   Rule   of  Health.  (C) — R: 
Crashaw. 
(Cheap  Physician,  The.)— BNL 
(Temperance;  or.  The  Cheap  Physician.) — HBP 
In  Praise  of  Trees. — Edmund     Spenser,     ^ee     Faerie 

_  Queene,  The. 
In  Praise  of  Wine. — Anon. — HP 
In  Prison. — Sir  Roger  L'Estrange  — BNL  {sel.) 

(I-oyalty  Confined.)— FEP 
In  Rama. — G.  A.  Townsend. — AA 
"In  regal  quiet  deep."     {Br.  ael.  fr.  Song  for  the  Night 
of    Christ's    Resurrection.) — Jean    Ingelow — 
FHS 
In  Remembrance  of  the  Hon.  Edward  Ernest  Villiers. 
Hr  Taylor.— HBP 


In  Reply  to  Mr.  Grenville. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. 

— SS 
In  Reply  to  those  who  Denied  the  National  Assembly 

the  Legitimate  Powers  of  a  National  Conven- 
tion.— Honors  de  Mirabeau.— SS 
In  Reverie.— Harriet  McE.  Kimball.— FP—TAV 
In  Rotten  Row.— W:  E.  Henley.— PPh 
In  San  Lorenzo. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — CEL 
In  Santa  Claus  Land. — Clara  J.  Denton. — HE 
In  Santa  Claus  Land.— Ada  S.  Shelton.— PP— YPS 
In  Satan's  Council-chamber. — Frances  E.  Willard. — 

WR  18 
In  School-days.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AA— CS  6— FEP— 

FTR— GMS— SR  1— TMD— WCL— WCLI  2 
{Sel. — w.  tabs.)— TCP 
("I'm  sorry  that  I  spelt  the  word" — br.  sel.) —  FTA 
("Within  the  master's   desk  is  seen" — br.  sel.) — 

AE 
In  September.     {Sunday  Afternoon.) — NV 
In  Shadow.— Arlo  Bates.— TAS 
In  Sleep. — R:  Burton. — AA 
In  Snow-time. — Anon. — HP 
In  Solitude.— Clinton  Scollard.— TAV 
In  Song  Time,  Sel.  fr.     (Voice— Pt.  II.)— Harriet  P. 

SpofFord.— AA 
In  Sorrow.— T:  Hastings.- AA— FEP 
"In  spite  of  censorship,  in  spile  of  the  Index." — Victor 

Hugo.— GG 
In  Spring. — {Princeton  Tiger.) — CG  3 
In  State.— Forceythe  Willson.— BNL— EPs—     PG 
In  Sturmes  Not. — Frida  Schanz. — WR  19 
In  Sugar  Time.— Marg.  S.  Burke.— WR  20 
In  Summer-time.— T:  S.  Collier.- POS 
In  Swanage  Bay.     {SI.  abr.  and  si.  diff.  fr.  Poems.) — 

Dinah  M.  Craik.— BS  19— WR  1 
In  Terror  of  Death. — Pedro  de  Alargon. — WR  7 
In  Tesla's  Laboratory. — Rob't  U.  Johnson. — AA 
In  Thanksgiving. — Kathe.  E.  Conway. — TAS 
"In  that  hour,  which  of  all  the  twenty-four."     {Br. 

sel.  fr.  The  Shadow  and  Substance  of  the  Sab- 
bath.)—Frd'k  W.  Robertson.— GG 
In  the  Air. — Lucy  Larcom. — BIL 
In  the  Album  of  Lucy  Barton. — Chas.  Lamb. — LBB 

— MBB 
In  the  Barn.— Anon.— WR  14 

(Grandfather's  Barn.)— PP— PS— YPS 
In  the  Beginning, — Harriet  Monroe. — AA 
In  the  Black  Forest.— Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
In  the  Bottom  Drawer.— Anon.— CS  11— NPS— YP 
In  the  Breaking  of  the  Day. — Francis  L.  Mace. — HS 
In    the    Catacombs. —  Harlan    H.    Ballard. —  CS  23 — 

THP  {abr.) 
In  the  Cathedral  Close.— E:  Dowden.— VSG 
In  the  Children's  Hospital. — Alfred  Tennyson. — BS  15 

— HBR— PGT  2— WR  16 
In  the  Chimney  Corner. — Chas.  B.  Lewis. — CS  20 
In  the  Choir. — Roy  F.  Greene. — TL 
In  the  Churchyard. — C:  Lamb.      See  Rosamund  Gray. 
In  the  Closet.— Laura  E.  Richards. — COS — PP 
In  the  Country. — J:  Keats.- POS 
(Sonnet— C.)— FEP 

("To  one  who  has  been  long  in  city  pent.") — PGT  1 
In  the  Cross  of  Christ  I  Glory. — J:  Bowring.-— SP     E 
In  the  Crucible. — Anon. — HDL 
In  the  Dark.— G:  Arnold.— TAS 
In  the  Dark. — Frances  L.  Bushnell. — AA 
In  the  Dark. — Mary  T.  Higginson. — AA 
In    the    Dime    Museum.       {Arkansaw     Traveller.) — 

CS  30  {si.  ahr.) 
(Boy  in  a  [or  the]  Dime  Museum,  A — si.  abr.) — 

DCR— WR  20 
(Little  Johnny  Visits  the  Dime  Museum.) — SR  7 
(Versions  vary  si.) 
In  the  Down-hill  of  Life. — J:  Collins. — FEP 

(To-morrow.)— PGT  1— YBF 
In  the  Dumps. — Anon. — NA 
In    the    Early    Spring    Time.     {W. music.) — Anon, — 

AD 
In  the  Elevator. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  33 
In  the  Evening. — Hamilton  Aid'd. — FTA 
In  the  Fight. — Alfred  Tennvson.     See  Princess,  The. 
In  the  Firelight.— Eugene  Field.  —  AA  —  EF  —  HP 

— WTD 
In  the  Garden.    {Br.  sel.)  — Rob't  Buchanan. — BIL 
In  the  Garret.     {Knickerbocker.) — BS  8 
"In  the  Garret  are  Our  Boys." — Anon. — C!S  16 
In  the  Gloaming. — Jas.  C.  Bayles. — NA 
In  the  Gloaming.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
In  the  Golden  Birch. — E.  G.  Roberts. — VA 
In  the  Golden  Morning  of  the  World. — T:  West  wood. 

— VA 
In  the  Grass. — Hamlin  Garland. — A  A 
In  the  Graveyard. — Macdonald  Clarke. — PYO 


159 


In  the  Greenwood      AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


In  the  Greenwood.  —  W:    Shakespeare. — See    As    You 

Like  It. 
In  the  Hall.— Anon.— CS  36— WR  14 
In  the  Hammock.     [London  Society.) — HP 
In  the  Harbor.— G:  R.  Sims.- CS  21 
In  the  Haunts  of  Ba88»nd  Bream. — Maurice  Thomp- 
son.—SN 
In  the  Heart.— G:  Cooper.- YBT 
In  the  Highlands.     (Songs  of  Travel  and  Other  Verses, 

XVI.)— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— OB 
In  the  Hospital.— Mary  W.  Howland.— ASL— HDL— 
.     PAPm 
(Requiescam.) — TAS 
(Rest.)— BNI.— GP— OS  2— YBF 
In  the  Hospital. — Algernon  Tassin. — WR  14 
In  the  Hospital  Ward. — Anon. — WR  2 
In  the  Jacquerie. — Simcox. — AVP 
In  the  King's  Garden. — Abbie  F.  Brown. — TMR 
In  the    Land  where  we  Were  Dreaming. — Dinah  B. 

Lucas.— EDY 
In  the  Library. — Anne  C.  L.  Botta. — MBB 

(Thoughts  in  a  Library.)— FEP 
In  the  Library.— Clinton  Scollard.— LBB— MBB 
In  the  Lilac-bush.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
In  the  Looking-glat>s. — Priscilla  Leonard. — CS  36 
"In  the  Mammoth  Cave,"  etc. — J.  B.  Bittinger. — GG 
In  the  Meadow. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL — NV 
In  the  Mile  End  Road. — Amy  Levy. — VA 
In  the  Mining  Town. — Rose  H.  Thorpe. — FS 
In  the  Mist.— Sarah  Woolsey.— BNL— GP 
In  the  Month  when  Sings  the  Cuckoo. — Alfred  Ausi  in. 

— VSG 
In  the  Morning.- Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
In  the  Morning.— C.  L.  Hill.— YBT 
In  the  Morning.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook— YFE 
In  the  Name  of  God,  Amen. — W:  C.  P.  Breckenridge. 

— FD2 
In  the  Name  of  God,  the  Compassionate,  the  Merciful. 

See  Koran,  The. 
In  the  Night. — Anon. — NA 
In  the  Nursery.  (Br.  sel.  fr.  Autobiographic  Sketches, 

Ch.  I.)— T:  De  Quincey.— LLC 
In  the  Nursery. — Jean  Ingelow. — WR  16 
In  the  or  Tobacker  Patch.— S.  Q.  Lapius.— PPh 
In  the  Old  Churchyard  at  Fredericksburg. — F.  W.  Lor- 

ing. — AA 
In  the  Old  Country  Churchyard. — Nathan  H.  Dole. — 

TAS 
In  the  "Old  South."     (C.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— AA 

(In  the  Old  South  Church  )—CS  17 
In  the  Old  South  Church.— J:  G.  Whittier.     See    fore- 
going. 
In  the  Orchard. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
In  the  Other  World.— Harriet  B.  Stowe.— CS  3 

(Other  World,  The— C.)— AA— BNIr— FEP— GP— 
TAS 
In  the  Pit.     (Abr.  and  ad.  fr.  That  Lass  o'  Lowrie's, 

Ch.  XXXV.)— Frances  H.  Burnett.— WR  13 
In  the  Record  Room — Surrogate's  Office. — G :  A.  Baker, 

Jr.— PLD 
In  the  Rock.— Julia  E.  Sargent.- YBT 
In  the  Round  Tower  at  Jhansi. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. 

—EDY 
In  the  Royal  Academy. — Austin  Dobson. — WR  16 
In  the  Same  Line. — Anon. — CS  29. 
In  the  San  Joaquin. — Norman  Hutchinson. — CG  2 
In  the  Sea. — Hiram  Rich. — GP 

In  the  Season.     ("It  is  the  season  now  to  go." — C.) — 
Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — VA 
(Difference.  The.)— OH 
In  the  Signal  Box;  a  Station  Master's  Story. — G:  R. 
Sims.— BS  13— PR  (si.  abr.) 
(Station  Master's  Story,  The.)— CS  24 

"In  the  smoke  of  mv  dear  cigarito."     (" .") — 

Camilla  K.  von  K.— HP 
In  the  Spring.- Eva  W.  McGlasson.— WR  15 
In  the  States. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — VA 
In  the  Still,  Star-lit  Night.— Eliz.  Stoddard.— AA 
In  the  Street  of  By-and-by. — Mrs.  Abdy.-^CS  17 

(Street  of  By-and-bye,  The.)— PPSr 
In  the  Swing. — Eudora  S.  Bumstead. — AD — NV 
In  the  Tenth  Circle.     (Dartmouth  Literary  Monthly.) — 

CG3 
In  the  Time  of  Strife. — Frank  L.  Stanton.— PAPm 
In    the    Train.     (Sunday    at    Hampstead,    X.) — Jas. 

Thomson.— OB 
"In  the  transformation  of  opinion." — Arthur  P.  Stanley. 

•— GG 
In  the  Tree-top. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS— PHS 
In  the  Tunnel.— Anon.— CS  25 
In  the  Tunnel.     (O— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— BAB 

(Flynn  of  Virginia.)— PYO 
In  the  Twilight.— Anon.— BS  26 


In  the  Twilight.— G:  Cotterell.— VA 

In  the  Twilight.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— AA— ASL 

In  the  Valley  of  Cauteretz. — Alfred  Tennyson. — PGT2 

"In  the  whole  realm  of  nature  there  is  never  found  an 

unanswerable  instinct." — Alex.  Clark. — GG 
In  the  Wilderness,  Sel.  fr.  (Mountain  Tragedy,  A— -/r. 
A-Hunting  of  the  Deer.)— C  :D.  Warner.— WR  5 
In  the  Wood. — Herbert  E.  Clarke. — VA 
In  the  Woods.— Anon.— YBT 
In  the  Woods.— J:  M'Pherson.— TCV 
In  the  Year  that's  Come  and  Gone. — W:  E.  Henley. — 

FTA— OH 
"In  thee  I  fondly  hoped  to  clasp."     (Br  ael.  fr.  To 

D— .)— Lord  Byron.— BNL 
In  Three  Days. — Rob't  Browning. — OH 
In  Time  of  Grief. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 
In  Time  of  Peace. — Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
In  Time  of  Pestilence. — T:  Nashe.— FEP — OB 

(Death's  Summons.) — EI^P 
In  Time's  Swing. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
In  Trouble.— Josephine  Pollard.— WR  15 
In  Tuscany. — Eric  Mackay. — VA 
In  Twenty  Years. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
In  Twos.— W:  C.  Gannett.— BIL— OH— TAS 
In  Unison.— G:  McKnight.— TAS 
In  Vain. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — AA 
"In  vain   you   tell  your  parting  lover." — Matthew 

Prior.— FEP 
In  Vanity  Fair. — Florence  Tyles.— CS  27 
In  Venice;  Dipsychus  Speaks. — Arthur  H.  Clough.  See 

Dipsychus. 
In  Want  of  a  Servant. — "Clara  Augusta." — CS  25 — SD 
In  Westminster  Abbey.     (On  the  Tombs  in  Westmins- 
ter— C.) — Francis  Beaumont. — LH 
(Lines   on  the   Tombs   in   Westminster.) — ELP — 

WEP2 
(On  the  Tombs  in  Westminster  Abbey.) — FEP — 
OB— PGT  1— YBF 
In  Wreaths  of  Smoke. — Frank  N.  Holman. — PPh 
In  Youth. — Evaleen  Stein. — AA 
In  Youth  is  Pleasure. — Rob't  Wever. — OB 
"Inasmuch." — Wallace  Bruce. — CD— PFP— WR  24 
Inasmuch.— S.  V.  R.  Ford.— CS  31 
Inaugural  Address. — Anon. — CP 
Inaugural  Address,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  A.  Garfield. 

"Even  from  this  brief  review,"  etc.     (Br.  sel.) — GG 
Inaugural  Address — SSD 
Inaugural  Address. — T:  Jefferson.     See  Inauguration 
Address.  Itl    \— 

Inaugural  Address. — Abraham  Lincoln.     See  First  In- 
augural Address  and  Second  Inaugural  Address. 
Inaugural  Address,  Mar.  4,   1901,   Sel.  fr.    (National 

Progress. )— W :  McKmley .— PEO 
Inauguration  Address,  March  4,  1801.     (C.) — T:JJef- 
ferson. 
(First  Inaugural  Address.) — EAO 
(Inaugural  Address — sel.) — OS  3 
(Party  Spirit  and  Good  Government — sel.) — SSD 
(Republic  the  Strongest  Government,  A — abr.) 
— SS 
Inauguration  of  Franklin  Statue,  Boston. — Rob't  C. 

Winthrop.     See  following. 
Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Franklin,  Sete.  fr. — Rob't 
C.  Winthrop. 
Franklin  as  a  Christian. — FD  2 
Franklin  as  a  Philanthropist  — FD  2 
Franklin  as  a  Philosopher. — FD  2 
Franklin  as  a  Printer. — t  D  2 
Inauguration  of  Franklin  Statue,  Boston. — FD  2 
Inborn  Royalty. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Cymbeline. 
Incantation. — J:  Dryden.     See  GEdipus. 
Incantation. — J:  Milton.     See  Comus. 
Incantation  from  Manfred. — Lord  Byron.     See     Man- 
fred. 
Incarnation.  The.— J:  B.  Tabb. — TAS 
Incentives  to  Duty.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Scholar,  the  Jurist, 
the  Artist,  the  Philanthropist.) — Chas.    Sum- 
ner.—CR 
(Age  of  Progress — sel.) — LLC 
Inchcape  Rock,  The. — Rob't  Southey. — BNL — CGd— 
CS  20  —  FEP— FMR— FP— LLC— MR— PC— 
PHS— VSG 
(SI.  abr.)— GN— HBP— LO-OS  2 
Incident,  An. — Agnes  MacDonell. — WR  24 

(Only  a  Soldier.)— WR  8 
Incident  at  Ratisbon,  An. — Rob't  Browning.     See  In- 
cident of  the  French  Camp,  An. 
Incident     (Characteristic     of    a    Favourite    Dog). — 

W:  Wordsworth.— CGd 
Incident  in  a  Railroad  C!ar,  An. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — LLC 
— TAV 
(God's  Love — br.  sel.)— PS 
("It  may  be  glorious  to  write" — br.  sel.) — GG — HP 


160 


TITLE  INDEX 


Infernal 


Incident  in  the  Life  of  Wendell  Phillips,  An. — Theo- 
dore Weld.— SC 

Incident  of  '64,  An. — Anon. — WR  14 

Incident  of  the  French  Camp.  An. — (C.) — Rob't  Brown- 
ing. —  AVP  —  BNL  —  BS  24  —  CS  15  —  EA 
—  EDY  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HB  —  HBP  —  LC 
— PHS— SC— VA— VSG— WEP  4 
fBoy  of  Ratisbon,  The.) — BLP 
(Incident  at  Ratisbon,  An.) — OS  2 
(Ratisbon.)— MR— TMD 

Incident  of  the  Johastown  Flood,  An. — Monnie  Moore. 
— DR 

Incident  of  the  War,  An. — Harry  W.  Kimball. — NPS 
— YP 

Incident  of  War,  An. — Maurice  Thompson. — BAB 

Incidents  in  the  Life  of  my  Uncle  Arly. — E:  Lear. — NA 

Tncipit  Vita  Nova. — W:  M.  Payne. — AA 

Inclusiveness.  (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  LXIII.) 
— Dante  G.  Rossetti. — VA 

Incognita  of  Raphael. — W:  A.  Butler. — AA 

Incompatibility;  A  Charade. — Ella  H.  Clement. — 
BS  14— TCP 

Incomplete  Revelation,  An. — Richard  A.  Jackson — 
CS  23— PR— YA 

Incompleteness. — Octave  Feuillet. — FLS 

Incompleteness. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — FP 

Inconsistent  Expectations. — Anna  L.  Barbauld. — FAS 

Inconsistent  Sex,  The. — J:  L.  Heaton. — TAV 

Inconsolable  Husband,  The. — Anon. — WR  2 

Inconstancy.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Inconstancy. — Fs.  C:  McDonald. — CG  2 

Inconstancy. — W:  Shakespeare.  See  Much  Ado 
about  Nothing. 

Inconstancy  and  Jealousy.  (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 
—BNL 

Inconstancy  of  Man.  (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 
BNL 

Inconstancy  of  Woman.  (Frags,  fr.  various  auihors.) — 
BNL 

Inconstant. — Anon. — CS  6 

"Increasing  exactions  of  the  church,  The." — Lawrence 
M.  Colfelt.— GG 

Incremation,  The.  (Fr.  Balder  Dead.) — Matthew  Ar- 
nold.—VA 

Indecision. — Anon. — HP — WR  4 

Indemberance. — Carl  Pretzel. — CS  9 

Independence.  (Fr.  Ode  to  Independence.) — Tobias 
G:  Smollett.— GP 

Independence. — Dan'l  Webster.  iSee  Adam."«  and  Jeff- 
erson. 

Independence  Bell.     [July  4th,  1776.] — Anon.— CS  2— 
FR— PR— SA 
(SI.   ofer. )—BS  1— FTR— PRR  — SM  —  TMD  — 
WCLI  2 
(Independence  Bell,  Philadelphia — si.    abr.) — SR  8 

Independence  Bell,  Philadelphia. — Anon.  See  fore- 
going. 

Independence  Day. — Jas.  G.  Blaine. — BLP — DFR 

Independence  Day. — L.  Parmely. — CS  12  —  PRR — 
SR8 

Independence  Day. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — HE 

Independence  Day  Address. — Anon. — CP 

Independence  Day,  1776. — Anon. — PRR 

Independence  Day.  1798.— Royall  Tyler.— HS 

Independence  of  (Sreece. — H:  Clay.  See  On  Recog- 
nizing the  Independence  of  Greece. 

Independent  Character. — Anon. — CP 

Independent  Spirit  of  the  Puritans,  The. — H :  C.  Lodge. 
—MRS 

India. — Florence  F,.  Coates. — AA 

Indian,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Battle  of  Bloody  Brook.)— 
Edward  Everett.— OS  .3 
(Indian  Chief  to  the  White  Settler,  The.)— BS  3— 

CS4 
(Indian  Chieftain,  The— aftr.)— LLC 
(Plea  of  the  Pocomtuc  Chief — nhr.) — BLP 
(Supposed  Speech  of  a  Chief  of  the  Pocomtuc  In- 
dians—afcr.  )— PS— SS 

Indian  at  the  Burial-place  of  hie  Fathers,  An,  Br.  sel. 
fr.  (Indian's  Prophesy,  The.) — W:  C.  Bryant. 
—AD 

Indian  Attack,  The.— J:  Brown  John  — BS  26 

Indian  Brave.  The— Fs.  S.  Smith.-; -PP—YFK 

Indian  Burying-ground,  The. — Philip  Fren^au.-  -A.*. 

Indian  Chief  to  the  White  Settler.  The.  Edward 
Everett.     See  Indian,  The. 

Indian  Chieftain,  The. — Anon.— CS  1.5 

Indian  Chieftain,  The. — Edward  Everett.  See  Indian, 
The. 

Indi.an  Death-song. — Anne  Hunter. — HBP 

Indian  Eloquence. — .\non. — SR  12 

Indian  Emneror.  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Song:  "Ah,  fading 
joy!")     J.  Dryden.— ELP 


Indian  Hunter.  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— WR  iO 
Indian  Huntresses;  Bow  and  Arrow   Drill.— Anon. — 

WDM 
Indian  Love-song. — Robert,  Earl  of  I-ytton. — VA. 
Indian  M«i<!'s.  Lament,  The.— J:  E.  I^gan.— TCV 
(Blood-red    Ring   Hung    Round   the    Moon,  A.) — 

VA 
Indian  Names.— -Lvdin,  H.  Sigourney. — FEP  (si.  abr.) 

— LLC— WR  in 
Indian  Raid,  An.— G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Indian  Revelry. — Bartholemew  Dowling. — FEP 
(Our  Last  Toast.)— HP 
CRevel,  The.)— VA 
(Revelrv  of  the  Dying.)— BNL 
(Song  of  the  Dying.)— CS  5— MR 
Indian  Serenade,    The. — Percy    B.    Shelley.  —  OB  — 

PGT  1- PYO— YBF 
(I  Arise  from  Dreams  of  Thee.) — GP 
(Lines  to   an   Indian  Air.)— BNL— FEP— FT  A— 

HBP 
(Serenade,  The.)— FP 
Indian  Song,  An.— W:  B.  Yeats.— VA 
Indian  Song  of  Songs,  Sel.  fr.     (Song  of  Krishna,  A — fr. 

Sarga  the  First.)- Sir  Edwin  Arnold.— GP 
Indian  Story,  An.     (C.)— W:  C.  Bryant. 

(Retribution.)— VSG 
Indian  Summer. — Anon. — BNL 

Indian  Summer.     (Frags.  Jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Indian  Summer,  The.— J:  H.  Bryant.— POS 
Indian  Summer. — Eudora  S.  Bumstead. — POS 
Indian  Summer. — C.  H.  Collester. — CG  3 
Indian  Summer. — Emily  Dickinson. — ASL 
Indian  Summer.     J.  P.  Irvine. — SN 
Indian  Summer. — Richard  R.  Kirk. — CG  3 
Indian  Summer. — Alex.  McLachlan. — TCV 
Indian  Summer. — J:  B.  Tabb. — AA 
Indian  Summer. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Eve  of  Election, 

The. 
Indian    Warrior's    Last    Song,    The. — J.    H.    Wert. — 

WRIO 
Indianapolis  Speech, Sept.  21,1876. — Rob't  G.  IngersoU 

See  Speech  at  Indianapolis,  etc. 
Indians.^-C:  Sprague.     See  Centennial  Ode. 
Indians,  The.— Jos.      Story.— CS  5— NPS— WR  10— 

YP 
(American  Indians,  The — abr.) — FAS 
Indian's  Prophecy,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  An  Indian  at  tha 

Burial  Place  of  his  Fathers.) — W:  C.  Bryant. — 

AD 
Indian's  Welcome  to  the  Pilgrim  Fathers,  The. — I^ydia 

H.  Sigourney. — AA 
Indifference. — Anon. — NA 
Indifference  (Euphrosyne — C.) — Matthew      Arnold — 

HBP 
Indignant  Polly  Wog. — Marg.  Ey tinge. — WR  2 
Indignant  Scholar.  An.-;-Anon. — DST 
Indignant  Woman's  Raid  on  a  Gambler,  An. — Anon. 

— WR19 
Indignation  of  a  High-minded  Spaniard.     (Sel.) — W: 

Wordsworth.— FTR 
Indirection.     (C.)— Richard    Realf. — AA — BS  18    (si. 

abr.)— CS  18— GP 
("Fair  are  the  flowers  and  the  children,"  etc.) — GG 
Individual  Purity  the  Hope  of  the  State. — C:  Sprague. 

—BLP 
(Stability  of  our  Government,  The.)— KNE— PFP 
Individualism  in  Society. — MUford  H.  Lyons. — SR  9 
Individualitv  of  Conscience  in  the  Voter. — Frances  E. 

Willard.— WR  18 
Inducements  to  Earnestness  in  Religion. — J:  A.  James. 

gg 

Induction,  The.  Sel.  fr.—T:  Sackville.— WEP  1 
Industry. — Anon. — KNE 

Industry  and  Eloquence.— W:  H.  Wirt.— HNS— KNE 
Industry  Necessary  to  the  Attainment  of  Eloquence. 

— H:  Ware.- BS  12 
Indwelling  God,  The.— Frd'k  L.  Hosmer.- TAS 
Inevitable,  The.— Sarah     K.     Bolton.— AA—CS  32— 

HDL 
Inevitable  Trial,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (War  for  the  Union,  The.) 

—Oliver  W.  Holmes,— SSD 
Inexorable.     (Madrigal — C.) — W:  Drummond. — OB 

(Lament,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Inez  de  Castro. — Luis  de  Camoens.     See  Lusiad,  The. 
Infallibility.— T:  S.  Collier.— A  A 
Infamous  Legislation. — Edmund  Burke. — CS  5 
Infant  Jov.     (In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W:  Blake. — 

BFV— BVC— LC— OS  1— PC— PGT  1— PoR— 

YBF 
Infant's  Dream. — Anon. — BS  18 
Infelicissime.     (Nassau  Magazine.) — CS  1 
Infelix  Felix.— T:  D'A.  McGee— TIP 
Infernal  Machine,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— CS  13 


161 


Infida's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Infida's  Song. — Rob't  Greene.     See  Never  Too  Late. 

Infidel  and  Quaker,  The. — Anon. — HR 

Infidelity  not  Friendly  to  Freedom. — Phillips. — SR  8 

Infinity. — Philip  H.  Savage. — AA 

Infinity. — Walt  Whitman.     See  Song  of  Myself. 

Infinity  of  the  Universe,  The. — Ormsby  M.  Mitchell. — 

HSS2  ^ 

(Immensity  of  Creation,  The.) — LLC 
Inflexible  Captive,  The,  Sel.  jr.     (Patriotism  ) — Han- 
nah More.— TMR 
Influence.— Rob't  H.  Schauffler.— CG  3 
Influence  after  Death. — J:  Camming. — BS  21  («eJ.) 

(Voices  of  the  Dead.)— CS  6 
Influence  of  American  Freedom. — Reverdy  Johnson. — 

PR 
Influence  of  Athens,  The. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  On 

Mitford'a  History  of  Greece. 
Influence  of  Life.  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Jane  Austen,  Ch.  II.— 

tnA    Book   of    Sibyls.) — Anne   T.  Ritchie. — 

KNE 
Influence  of  Music. — W:  Shakespeare.    iSe«  King  Henry 

VIII. 
Influence  of    Natural   Objects   in    Calling    Forth    and 

Strengthening  the    Imagination. — W:  Words- 
worth.    See  Prelude,  The. 
Influence  of   Poetry  on  the  Working-classes,  Sel.  fr. 

(Poetry  in  Battle.) — Frd'k  W.  Robertson. — 

FDl 
(Poetry  the  Language  of  Symbolism — longer  and 

pily.  diff.)—NC 
Influence  of  the  GIreat  Teacher,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Influence  of  Time  on  Grief.      (To  Time— C.)— W:  L. 

Bowles.— FEP—WEP  4 
(Time  and  Grief.)- OB 
Informal  Prayer,  An.— Sam  W.  Foss.— WR  22 

(Pra,ver  of  Cyrus  Brown,  The— C.)— AWH— THP 
Information  Party,  An. — Anon. — EuE 
Information  Wanted. — Anon. — DSS 
lng6.  the  Boy-king.     (Abr.) — Hjalmar  H.  Boyesen.— 

BS17 
Ingersoll's  Dream  of  the  War.     (C.) — Rob't  G.  Inger- 

soU. 
(Speech  for  Decoration  Day.) — DFR 
Ingin  Summer. — Eva  W.  McGlasson. — PPh 
Ingomar,  the  Barbarian,  <Sc.  fr.     (Play.) — Frd'k  Halm 

(tr.  by  Maria  Lovell).— FTR 
Ingrateful  Beauty     Threatened.     (C) — T:     Carew. — 

OB 
(Ungrateful  Beauty.) — ES 
Inheritance. — Marv  T.  Higginson. — AA 
Inheritance.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 
Inhospitality. — Anon. — BS  20 
Inhospitality. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Initiated  as  a  Member  of  the  United  Order  of  Half- 
shells.     {DetroU  Free  Press.)- BDD 
(United  Order  of  Half-shells,  The.)— DCR 
Initiated  Tramp,  An. — Anon. — CS  23 
Inkerman. — H:  Lushington. — AVP 
Inkerman.— R;  C.  Trench.— EDY 
Inkermann. — C:  Mackay. — WR  8 
Inkstand,  The.— Sophie  May.  See  Little  Prudy. 
Inmate  of  the  Dungeon,  The. — W.  C.  Morrow. — NP 
Inn  of  Care,  The.— S:  Waddington.— VA 
Inner  Calm,  The. — Horatius  Bonar. — FEP 
Inner  Temple  Masque,  The  (Masque  of  the  Inner  Tem- 
ple, A).  Sels.fr. — W:  Browne. 
Charm,  The.— WEP  2 
Siren's  Song,  The.     ( Fr.  Sc.  I.)— BNL— ELP— ES 

— OB— YBF 
Inner  Vision.    The.     (Sonnet     XLVII.)— W:    Words- 

worth.— PGT  1 
Innocence.     (Toft.)- Anon.— BS  12— TCP 
Innocence. — C:  Mair — TCV 
Innocence  Rewarded. — Oliver   Goldsmith.     iSee   Vicar 

of  Wakefield.  The. 
Innocent  Child  and  Snow-white  Flower.     (C.) — W:  C. 

Bryant. 
(Child  and  the  Lily.  The.)— HSS  1 
Innocent  Drummer,  The. — Fred.  W.  Adams. — WR  3 
Innocents  Abroad,  Sels.  fr. — S:  L.  Clemens. 

Damascus.   {Sel.   fr.   Ch.    XLIV.)— CS    20— SR    7 

(se/.) 
Experience  with  European  Guides.     {Sd.  fr.  Ch. 

XXVII.)— BS  1 
(Mark  Twain's  Description  of  European  Guides.) 

— CS4 
(Our  Guide  in  Genoa  and  Rome.) — CR — MHR 
(Our  Guides.)— FTR 
Getting  under  Way.     {Sel.   fr.  Ch.   III.)— BS  6— 

MHR 
On  the  Sphinx.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  LVIII.)— GG 
Tnnominatus. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lay   of  the   Last 

Minstrel,  The. 


Innovat  ion. — Anon. — DLS 

(Lines  by  an  Old  Fogy.)— HP 
Inquest — Not  Extraordinary.     {Punch.) — HPE 
Inquiring  Friend.  An. — Anon. — ^DS — YA 
Inquiring  Yankee,  An. — Anon. — BeR 
Inquiry,  The.— C:  Mackay.- BS  3— CS  2— CSS— PPSr 

— SA— SE  {br.  sel.) 
{SI.  abr.)- HSS  2— PEO 
("Tell  me,  ye  winged  winds.") — BNL — VA 
Inquisitive  Boy,  The. — Anon. — DCR 
Inquisitve  Customer,  An. — Anon. — CS  22 
Inquisitve  Prince,  The. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
I  nscript  ion.     (  A  nti-Jacohin. ) — H  PE 
Inscription  for  a  Fountain.     (Inscriptions,  I.) — Brj'an 

W.  Procter.— WEP  4 
Inscription  for     a     Monument     at     Vimeiro. — Rob't 

Southey.— EDY 
Inscription  for  a  Statue  of    Chaucer  at  Woodstock. — 

Mark  Akenside.— FEP 
Inscription  for  my  Little  Son's  Silver  Plate. — Eugene 

Field.— LS 
Inscription  for   the   Apartment    in    Chepstow   Castle, 

where  Henrv  Marten  was  Imprisoned. — Rob't 

Southey.— HPE 
Inscription  for  the  Door  of  the  Cell  in  Newgate,  where 

Mrs.  Brownrigg  was  Confined.     {A  nti-Jacobin.) 

—HPE 
Inscription  for    the    Entrance    to    a    Wood. — W:    C. 

Bryant.- AD  {si.  abr. )—VSG 
Inscription  in  a  Hermitage.     (C) — T:  Warton. — HBP 

( Retirement . )— BNL— SN 
Inscription  in  Marble  in  the  Parish  Church  of  Faver- 

sham,  in  Agro  Cantiano. — Anon. — EPs 
Inscription  on  a  Sea  Shell. — Walter  S.  Landor.     See 

Gebir. 
Inscription  on  a  Wall  in  St.  Edmund's  Church,  in  I^om- 

bard  St.,  London. — Anon. — EPs 
Inscription  on  Melrose  Abbey. — Anon. — BNL — EPs 
Inscription  on  the  Statue  Erected  to  Captain  Boyd. — 

W:  Alexander.— TIP 
Inscription  to  the  Mistress  of  Cedarcroft,  Sel.  fr.  (Sun- 
set.)— Bayard  Taylor. — AD 
Inside  of  King's  College  Chapel,  Cambridge.  {C. — Eccle- 
siastical Sonnets,  Pt.  III.,XLIIL)—W:  Words- 
worth. 
i Ecclesiastical  Sonnets,  Sel.  fr.) — BNL  {br.  sel.) 
Within    King's    College    Chapel,    Cambridge.) — 

PGTl 
Inside  Track,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Insight.     {Epigram.) — W:  Watson. — YBF 
Insignificance  of  Earth.  (7n  Astronomical  Discourses.) 

— T:  Chalmers.— LI-C 
Insignificant  Existence.     (Paraphrase  from  Miscella- 
neous Thoughts — C.) — Isaac  Watts. — BNL 
Insomnia. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — TAV 
Insomnia. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — AA 
Inspiration.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  To  William  Simpson.) — Rob't 

Burns.— EPs 
Inspiration. — S:  Johnson. — AA 
Inspiration. — Lily  A.  Lefevre. — TCV 
Inspiration. — Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  andStella. 
Inspiration.     {Se!.)—K:     D.     Thoreau.— AA— ASL— 

EPs— TAS 
Inspiration  of  Sacrifice,  The. — .las.  A.  Garfield.     See 

Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Sol- 
diers. 
Inspiration  of  the  Bible,  The.— E:  Winthrop.— FTR— 

KNE 
Inspiration  of  the  Spirit,  The.— Seth  C.  Beach. — TAS 
Instans  Tyrannus. — Rob't  Browning. — HBR 
Instigators  of  Treason,  The.— W:  Wirt. — SS 
Instinct    of    Immortality,    The. — Newell  D.   Hillis. — 

SR12 
Instinct  of  lyocality  in  Animals  and  Birds. — Anon. — 

KNE 
Institution  of  Arbor  Day,  The. — Anon. — DFR 
Insubstantial  Pageant,     An. — W:     Shakespeare.     See 

Tempest,  The. 
Insurance  Agents,  The   "Fat  Contributor"  on. — ^A.  M. 

Griswold.— CS  9 
Integer  Vitse.     (A  Book  of  Airs.  Pt.  I.,  XVIII.)— T: 

Campion. — OB 
(Man  of  Life  Upright,  The.)— ELP— OEL— PGT  1 
(Upright  Man,  The.)— YBF 
Intellectual  Improvement,   an   Aid  to   Works  of  the 

Imaginat  ion. — Anon. — CP 
Intellectual  Limitations. — .las.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Intelligence  Office.  The.— .\non.— FND 
Intemperance.     (Sel.  fr.     Address  on  Temperance.) — 

W:  E.  Channing.— FAS 
Intemperance  of  Party. — W:  Gaston. — SS 
"Intemperance  wipes  out  God's  image." — J:B.  Gough. 

— GG 


162 


TITLE  INDEX 


Ireland 


Intensely  Utter.     (Albany  Chronicle.) — CRR — SR  4 
(Fashionable  School  Girl,  The.)— CSS 
(Too  Utterly  Utter.)— CS  21 
Intensity. — (Char.) — Anon. — FAD 
Interesting  Traveling  Companion,  An. — C:  B.    Lewis. 

CS  15— S  A 
Interlude,  An. — Catherine  G.  Furley. — FLS 
Interlude. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  V. 
International  Arbitration. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — MRS 
International  Band,  The. — Oliver  Harr>er. — CS  34 
International  Copyright. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — AA 
International  Copyright,  An. — T.  N.  Talfourd. — SS 
International  Episode.  An.     (March  15,  1889.) — Caro- 
line Duer. — AA 
International  Episode,  An. — Eliza  C.  Hall. — BS  8 
International  Good     Will.     (A'^**^     York     Tribune.) — 

TMR 
International  Ode.     (C.)— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— PEO 

,  (God  Bless  our  Father  Land.) — FP 
International  Race,  The. — T.  C.  DeLeon. — SR  13 
Interrupted  Proposal,  An. — Anon. — MAD 
Interrupted  Proposal,  An. — Rob't  C.V.  Meyers. — CS  32 
Interrupted  Recitation,  An. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KJ 
Intervention  in  the  Wars  of  Europe. — Jeremiah  Clem- 
ens.—SS 
Interviewing  Mrs.  Pratt.     (Denver  Tribune.) — BS  12 
Interview  between   Aaron    Burr   and   Mary   Scudder. 
(Abr.  fr.  The  Minister's  Wooing,  Ch.  XXXII.) 
— Harriet  B.  Stowe.— CR 
Interview  between  Amy  and  Lord  Leicester  at  Kenil- 

worth. — Walter  Scott.     See  Kenilworth. 
Interview  between  the  School  Directors  and  the  Jani- 
tor, An.     (Dial.   fr.   The  School-ma'am.) — T. 
S.  Denison.— SR  1 
Intimations  of  Immortality. — H:  M.  Simmons. — BS  21 
Intimations  of    Immortality    [from    Recollections    of 
Early  Childhoodl. — W :  Wordsworth.     See  Ode : 
Intimations  of  Immortality,  etc. 
Into  the  Light. — A.  Matheson. — YBT 
Into  the  Noiseless  Country. — T:  W.  Parsons. — AA 
"Into  the  path  of  pin." — Anon. — GG 
Into  the  Sunset. — Anon. — CS  36 
Into  the  World  and  Out.— Sarah  M.  B.  Pi-att.- GP 
Intoxicating  Cup,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  atUhors.) — 

BNL 
Intra,  Mintra,  Cutra,  Com. —  \non. — CS  13 — LLC 
Intra  Muros. — Mary  C.  Gillington. — PYO 
Introduction,  An. — S:  L.  Clemens. — BeR 

(Mark  Twain  Introduces  Himself.)— DE — PS 
Introduction  to  "Songs  of   Experience."     (Hear  the 

Voice.)— W:  Blake.— OB 
Introduction  [to  "Songs  of  Innocence"]. — FEP — HBP 
— WEP  3 
("And  I  made  a  rural  pen" — br.  sel.) — PoR 
(Child  and  the  Piper,  The.)— CGd— LC 
(Piper,  The.)— BNL— CEL— WCL 
(Piping  down  the  Valleys  Wild.) — PoR 
(Reeds  of  Innocence.) — OB 
Introduction  to  "The  True-bom  Englishman." — Dan'l 

Defoe.— ESs 
Introductory  Address. — Anon. — SD 
Introductorv  to  "House  of  Lifo." — Dante  G.  Rossetti. 

See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Introit. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Intrusion,  An. — D.  C.  Brewer. — CG  ] 
Intry-Mintry.— Eugene  Field.— EF—WTD 
Invalid  in  lodgings.  An.     (In  When  a  Man's  Single.) — 

Jas.  M.  Barrie. — CR  (abr.) 
Invasion,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (C^ad,  Mile  Fdilte,  Elim!)— Ger- 
ald Griffin.— TIP 
Invectice  against  Demosthenes. — Dinarchus. — PS 
Invective  against  Mr.  Corry.     (Invective  against  Corry 
— C— abr.)— H:  Grattan- KNE— SS 
(Reply  to  Mr.  Corry.)— BS  3— CR— CS  3— FTR— 
LLC— SC 
(Si!,  a&r.)— KNE 
Invective  against  Mr.  Flood.     (Sel.  fr.  Philippic  against 
Flood.)— H:  Grattan.— CS  4  (cond.) 
(Reply  to  Flood.)— PPS 

(Reply  to  Mr.  Flood— cond.)— KNE— OM— PS — SS 
Invective  Written  by  Mr.  George  Chapman  against  Mr. 

Ben  Jonson,  An. — G:  Chapman. — ESs 
Inventions.     (Fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S:  But- 
ler.—HPE 
Inventor's  Wife,    The.— Mrs.    E.    T.    Corbett. — CD— 
CS26— SR12— THP 
(SI.  abr.)— CRR— PR 
Inventor's  Wife,  An. — Jeannie  P.  Ewing. — CS  35 
Inverted  Torch,  The,  Sets.  fr. — Edith  M.  Thomas. 

"If  still  they  live,  [whom  touch  or  sight]."  (LIII.) 

^^ TAS 

"Tell  me."     (XI.)— AA 


Inverted  Torch,  The  (continued). 

"When  in  the  first  great  hour."     (III.) — AA 
Will  it  Be  So?     (LXIX.)— AA 

("Oft  have  I  wakened  ere  the  spring  of  day.") — 
TAS 
Invest  igate.     ( Char. ) — T.  S.  Denison. — FAS 
Invictus. — W:  E.  Henley.      See  I.  M. — R.  T.  Hamilton 

Bruce. 
Invincible.     (Fr.  A  Lover's  Diary.) — Gilbert  Parker. — 

VA 
Invincible  Armada,  The. — Friedrich  Schiller. — OS  3 
Invincibles,  The.— Dora  R.  Goodale.— SR  13 
Invisible  Bridge,  The. — Gelett  Burgess. — NA 
Invisible  Heroes,  The.— H:  W.  Beecher.— TMD 

(Honored  Dead,  The.)— BLP  (si.  diff.)—HSS  1  («e/.) 

— SPE 
(Our  Honored  Dead.)— FD  1— LLC— WCLG  1 
(Tribute  to  our  Honored  Dead,  A.) — BS  24 — CS  2— 
DFR— HR 
Invitation,  An.     (Sel.  fr.  Eclogue  I.,  in  The  Shepherd's 

Pipe,) — W:  Browne. 
Invitation,  The. — T:  Dekker.     See  Sun's  Darling,  The. 
Invitation,  The.     (Di'a/.)— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Invitation,  The.     (To  Jane — C.) — Percy  B.  Shelley. — 

FEP— OB 
•       (^6r.)— PGT  1— SN 

Invitation  to  Izaak  Walton. — C:  Cotton. — FEP — GP 
Invitation  to  the  Country,    An.  —  W:    C.    Bryant. — 

AD  (8/.  o6r.)— SN  (abr.) 
Invitation  to  the  Zoological  Gardens,  An.     (Punch.) — 
HPE— THP 
(Longer  vera.)— BS  16— CS  19 
( Pup-pup-poetry. ) — BR  R 
Inviting. — D.  C.  Brewer. — CG  I 

Invocation:  "Awake,  awake,  my  Lyre!"  (Song  fr.  The 
Davideis,  Bk.  III.)— Abraham  Cowley.— BNL 
(Loverto  his  Lyre,  The.)- CEL 
(Suprilication,  A.)— EPs— FEP— PGT  1 
Invocation:  "Phoebus,  arise!"    (Song  XXXVI.,  Pt.  I.) 
— W:  Drummond. — OB 
(Phoebus,  Arise.)— OEL 
(Song.)— ELP—ES— HBP— WEP  2 
(Summons  to  Love — si.  a6r.)— PGT  1 
Invocation:   "We,  children  of  the  free." — Parr  Har- 
low.—AD— DFR 
Invocation:  "Answer  me,  burning  stars  of  night!" — 

Felicia  D.  Hemans. — SS 

Invocation,  An:  "I  never  prayed  for  Dryads,  to  haunt 

the  woods  ^ain." — W :  Johnson-Cory. — PGTi 

Invocation,   An:  "We  are  what  suns  and  winds  and 

waters   make   us."     (Sel.  fr.  Regeneration.) — 

Walter  S.  Landor.— VA 

Invocation:     "Thou,   whose   enduring   hand,"    etc. — 

Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA 
Invocation  from  Paradise  Lost. — J:  Milton.     See  Para- 
dise Lost. 
Invocation  in  a  I/ibrary,  An. — Helen  G.  Cone. — MBB 
Invocation  to  Light. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Invocation  to  Nature. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Alastor. 
Invocation  to  Poesy,  An. — C:  Mackay. — HP 
Invocation  to  Rain.— ^Mrs.  Sarah  A.  Curson. — TCV 
Invocation  to   Rain   in   Summer.      (Summer   Invoca- 
tion—C.)—W:C.  Bennett.— BNL— GN— HBP 
(Rain  in  Summer.) — NV 
Invocation  to  Sleep.     (Song  fr.  The  Woman-hater,  Act 
III.,  Sc.  I.)— J:  Fletcher.— BNL— CEL 
(Sleep.)— OB 
Invocat  ion  to  Sleep. — J :  Fletcher.  See  also  Valent  inian 
Invocation  to  the  Spirit   of  Achilles.     (Fr.   The  De- 
formed   Transformed,    Pt.    I.,    Sc.    I.) — Lord 
Byron.- CEL— WEP  4 
Invocation  to  Tobacco. — IT:  J.  Mellen. — PPh 
Invocation  to  Youth. — Laurence  Binyon. — OB 
lo  Victi?.— W :  W.  .Storj'.     See  He  and  She;  or,  A  Poet'a 

Portfolio. 
Ion,  SeU.  fr.     (PZav.)— Sir  T:  N.  Talfourd. 

Ion,  a  Tragedy.     (.\ot  T.,  Scs.  1  and  2.)— FTR 

(Sympathy— br.  .tel.  fr.  I.,  2.)— BNL 
Ion,  Br.  sel.  fr. — BNL 
lona — A  Memorial  of  St.  Columba. — Arthur  C.  Coxe. — 

AA 
lona  Sonnets. — J:  S.  Blackie.     See  Royal  Saint,  A. 
Iphigeneia  and    Agamemnon. — Walter    S.    Landor. — 
BNI-— CS  14— HBP— WEP  4 
(Sacrifice.)— I-H 
Iphigenia  in  "Tauris,  Sel.  fr.     (Song  of  the  Parcse — fr. 
Act  TV.,  Sc.  5.) — Johann  W.  von  Goethe  (tr.  by 
N.  L.  Frothingham).— EPs 
Tpsissimus. — Eugene  L.  Hamilton. — WR  2 
Ireland.     (Last  Frui*  off  an  Old  Tree,  XIV.)— Walter 

S.  I,andor.— THP 
Ireland. — Denis  F.  MacCarthy. — BNL 
Ireland.— J:  J.  Piatt.— AA 


163 


Ireland 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Ireland. — Dora  Sigerson. — OB 

"Ireland  is  the  Gethsemane  of  Europe." — .Jaa.   Red- 
path.— GG 
Ireland  to  be  Ruled  by  Irishmen.     (Abr.) — W :  E.  Glad- 
stone.— PS  15 
Irene,  Sel.  fr.     (To-mori»w — br.  ad.  fr.  Act.  III.,  So.  2.) 

— S:  Johnson.— BNL 
Iris. — Michael  Field. — VA 

Iris. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Professor  at  the  Break- 
fast-table, The. 

Irish  Agitators,   1834.      (Sel.   fr.  The  Repeal  of    the 
Union.— R:  L.  Shell.— OM 
(Repeal  of  the  Union,  The.)— PS— SS 

Irish  Aliens. — R:  I>.  Shiel.     See  following. 

Irish  Aliens    and    Encrlish    Victories.     (Sel.    fr.    Irish 
Municipal  Bill,  1837.)— R:  L.  SheU.— PS— SS 
— TMD  (si.  abr.) 
(Irish  Aliens.)— CS  4  (si.  abr.)—YB  1 
(Irish  Loyalty  and  Valour — sel.) — OM 
(Irish  Valor  and  Loyalty — sel.) — SSD 

Irish  Astronomy.— C:  G.   Halpine.— AWH— CSS— Dl 

"Irish  Brigade     at     Fontenoy,     The." — Bartholomew 
Bowling. — CS  4 
(Battle  of  Fontenoy.)— FEP 

Irish  Church,  The.— T:    B.    Macaulay.      See    Estab- 
lished Church  of  Ireland,  The. 

Irish  Church,  The. — R:  L.  Shell.     See  England's  Mis- 
rule of  Ireland. 

Irish  Coquetry.— Anon.— CD— CS  21— DI— DS— YA 

Irish  Courtesy.     (Dial.) — Anon.-r-MPD 

Irish  Disturbance  Bill,  The.— Dan'l  O'Connell.— SO 
(On  the   Irish  Disturbance  Bill.)— OM— PPS— PS 
— SS— SSD 

Irish  Drummer,  The. — Anon. — BC — DI 

Irish  Establishment. — R:  L.  Shell.     See   Established 
Church  of  Ireland,  The. 

Irish  Grievances.     (Sel.  fr.  Resolution  on  the  Prosecu- 
tion of  Mr.  O'Connell.)— R:  L.  Sheil.— OM 

Irish  Letter,  An.— Anon.— CS  5— PTS 

(Affectionate  Letter,  An — cond.  and  si.  diff.) — HR 
(Bridget  O'Hooligoin's  Letter.) — DI 

Irish  Letter,  An. — Anon. — DI 

Irish  Loyalty   and   Valour. — R:    L.    Sheil.     See   Irish 
Aliens  and  English  Victories. 

Irish  Lullaby.— A.  P.  Graves.— TIP 

Irish  Melody,  An.— J:  F.  Waller.— HBP 
(Dance  Light.)— BNL 
(Kitty  Neil.)— CS  22— TIP- VA 

Irish  Molly.— W:  Collins.— SR  9 

(Captain  Molly  at  Monmouth.)— PRR—WR  10 
(Molly  Maguirc  at  Monmouth.) — PAP 

Irish  Molly  O.— Anon.— TIP 

Irish  Molly  O.— Fs.  A.  Fahy.— TIP 

Irish  Mother  in  the  Penal  Days.  The. — J:  Banim. — 
TIP 

Irish  Mother's  Lament,  The. — Cecil  F.  Alexander. — TIP 

Irish  Municipal  Bill. — R:  L.  Sheil.     See  Irish  Alien^s 
and  English  Victories. 

Irish  Pariiament,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Union,  1799.)— 
W:  ConjnQgham,  Lord  Plunket. — CR 

Irish  Particular.     (Punch.) — HPE 

Irish  Peasant  Giri,  The.— C:  J.  Kickham.— TIP 

Irish  Peasant  to  his  Mistress,  The. — T:  Moore. — OB — 
TIP 

Irish  Philosopher,  The.— W:  B.(?)  Maccabe.— CRR— 
CS  18— DI— SR  2 

Irish  Picket,  The.— Orpheus  C.  Kerr.— CS  4 

Irish  Rapparees,  The.— Sir  C:  G.  Duffy.— TIP— VA 

Irish  Reaper's  Harvest  Hymn,  The. — .1:  Keegan. — TIP 

Irish  Schoolmaster,  The.— Jas.  A.  Sidey.— BS  1— THP 

Irish  Sleighride,  The.— Anon.— CRR 

Irish  Spinning-wheel.  The. — Alfred  P.  Graves. — HBR 
—TIP 

Irish  Stew.     (Fr.      The      Poetical      Cookery-book.) — 
(Punch.)— HFE 

Irish  Traveler,  The.— Anon.— DI—HR 

Irish  Valor    and    Ix)yalty. — R:    L.    Sheil.     See    Irish 
Aliens  and  English  Victories. 

Irish  Voter,  The.     (Dial.)—Yl.  S.  Kent.— ED 

Irish  Widow  to  Her  Son,  The. — Ellen  Forrester. — CS  35 

Irish  Wife,  The.— T:  D'A.  McGee.— VA 

Irish  Wild-flower.  An. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — AA 

Irish  Witticism. — Anon. — SR  10 

Irish  Wolf,  The.— Jas.  McCarrol!.- TIP 

Irish  Wolf-hound,  The.     (Sel.   fr.   The  Foray  of  Con 
O'Donnell.)— Denis  F.  MacCarthy.— SN— VA 

Irish  Woman's  Lament,  The. — Mary  A.  Denison.     See 
Irishwoman's  I^etter,  The. 

Irishman,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     <See  Stage  Land. 

Irishman,  The. — W:  Maginn.     See  followinn. 

Irishman  and  the  Lady,  The. — W:  Maginn. — THP— 
VA 
(Irishman,  The.)— FEP— HBP— HPE 


Irishman's  Lesson,  The.    (Dial.) — W alley  C.  (7)  Oulton. 

— MPD 
Irishman's  Letter,  An. — Anon. — HR 

(Jimmy  McBride's  Letter.) — DI 
Irishman's  Panorama,  The. — Jas.   Burdette. — BRR — 
CDV— CH  (si.  o6r.)— CRR— DI— SDR 
(Panorama,  The— sZ.  o6r.)— PTS 
Irishman's  Perplexity,  An. — Anon. — CS  26 — DCR 

(Pat's  Perplexity.)- SR  9— WR  3 
Irishwoman's  Letter,      The. — Anon — CS  3 — LLC — S.4. 
(Irish  Woman's  Lament,  The.) — PR 
(Mary  O'Connor,  the  Volunteer's  Wife.) — CD 
(Volunteer's  Wife,  The.)— CR— MMR 
(Versions  vary  si.) 
Iron  Bells,  The.— Edgar  A.  Poe.     See  Bells,  The. 
Iron  Chest,  The,  Scene  from. — G:  Colman. — AE 
Iron  (irown.  An,  Sel.  fr.    (Death  of  Little  Hacket.) — 

T.  S.  Denison.— SR  4 
Iron  Gate,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AA  (sel.) — CS  18 

— MAL 
Iron— Silver— Gold.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
Irreparableness. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — WEP  4 
Irrepressible,  The. — Anon. — CS  18 
Irrepressible  Boy,  The. — Anon. — BS  10 

(fke  Wouldn't  Hush.)— SR  3 
Irrepressible  Boy,  An. — Anon. — WR  25 
Irrepressible  Conflict,  The.— W:  H.  Seward.— OS  3 
Irresolute  Resolution. — Anon. — WR  7 
Iry  and  Billy  and  Jo.     (SI.   abr.) — Jas.   W.   Riley. — 

WR  23 
Is  Fidelity  Eternal?- J.  Q.  Strongfeldt.- SR  6 
Is  Freedom  a  Lie? — J.  M.  Munyon. — CS  33 
I'se  Gwine  to  Jine  de  Masons. — Anon. — DE 
Is  it  Anybody's  Business? — Anon. — CS  5 
Is  it  Come?--Frances  Brownfe].- FEP— HBP 
Is  it  Good-bye?     (Echoes  XLlL— C.)— W:  E.  Henley. 

— FTA 
Is  it  Raining?— Mary  F.  Butts.— HDL 
Is  it  Love? — Anon. — WR  12 
Is  it  Nothing  to  you? — Anon. — CS  13 
Is  it  Nothing  to  you? — May  Probyn. — VA 
Is  it  Well  with  the  Child? — Christina  G.  Rossetti. —  OB 
Is  it  Worth  While?     (C.)— Joaquin  Miller.— BS  19 

("Is  it  worth  while  that  we  jostle  a  brother.") — GG 
"Is  it  worth  while  that  we  jostle  a  brother." — Joaquin 

Miller.     See  foregoing. 
Is  it  you?— Mary  Goodwin.—  COS  —  PP  —  PR— SM— 

YA 
Is  Life  Worth  Living?  (SI.  abr.) — Alfred  Austin.— LH 
Is  Little  Bob  Tucked  in?— Sam  W.  Foss.- SR  13 
Is  Love  BlindJ— (Punch  Bowl.)— CG  3 
"Is  not  he  the  wisest   man   who    rids    his    brow    of 

wrinkles?" — Anon. — HSS  3 
Is  there  a  God?— G:  F.  Cameron.- TCV 
Is  there  for  Honest  Poverty.     (C.) — Rob't  Burns.  — 
PHS 
(Fora'  That  and  a*  That.)— BNL— CR—FP— HSS  3 

— MBL— WCLG  2— YBF  (abr.) 
(Honest  Povertv)— EPs— HBP 
(Man's  a  Man  for  a'  That,  A.)— BS  4— FEP— OS  2 
— SM— SPE— WEP  3 
Is  there  Room  in  Angel  I^and? — Anon. — CS  12 
Is  this  a  Dagger? — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Is  this  All?     (Sel.   fr.    Lincoln's   Election.) —  Wendell 
Phillips.— FD  1 
(Higher  Views  of  the  Union.) — MMR 
"Is  thy  cruse  of  comfort  failing?" — Eliz.  Charles.     See 

Cruse  that  Failed  not ,  The. 
Isaac  Rosenthal  on  the  Chine.xe  Question.     (Scribner's 

Monthly. )— BDD— CDV— DFY 
Isabella;  or.   The   Pot   of   Basil.     (Sel.) — J:   Keats.— 

WRlt 
Isabel's  Grave. — Letitia  E.  Landon. — HR 
Isaiah,  Sels.  fr. — Bible. 

Despoiler  Doomed,  The.     (Ch.   XIII..  2-5,   17-22, 

XIV.,  sels. — Moses  Stuart's  lr.)—BLP 
Ho,  Every  One  that  Thirsteth !     (LV. )— BS  6 
Holy  One,  The.     (XL.,  28-31.)— LLC 
Isaiah  XXXV.— BS  2 

(Selection  from  the  Book  of  Isaiah.) — AE 
Joyful  Messenger,  The.     (LIL,  7-12,  tr.  by  Bishop 

Lowth.)— SS 
Voice  in  the  Wilderness,  The.     (XL.,  3-8.)— LLC 
Woe  follows  Wickedness.     (V. ,  20-24.)— LLC 
Tseult's  Children. — Matthew     Arnold.     See     Tristram 

and  Iseult. 
Island,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Lord  Byron. 

Island,  The.- (Can.  II.,  Sts.  1,  2,  4.)— EPs 
Sea-cave,  The.     (IV.,  6-8,  14— abr.)— EPs 
Sublime  Tobacco.     (II.,  19.) 
(Island,  The— «e«.)— BNL 
Island,  The.     (Fr.  The  Buccaneer. )—R :  H:  Dana.— 
BNL 


164 


TITLE  INDEX 


It's 


Island  Fisherman,  An. — Katha.  T.  Hinkson. — TIP 

Island  of  Home,  The.— Ira  J.  Bailey.— CS  26 

Island  of  Shadows,  The.— R:  Garnett. — VA 

Island  of  Sleep,  The.  {Fr.  The  Wanderings  of  Oisin, 
Bk.  III.)— W:  B.  Yeats.— TIP 

Island  of  the  Scots,  The.  (Cond.)— W:  E.  Aytoun.— 
TMR 

Isle  of  Beauty.  (W.  mvsic — and  w.  add.  at.) — T:  H. 
Bayly.— NPS—YP 

Isle  of  Lone,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 

Isle  of  Long  Ago,  The.     (Isle  of  the  Long  Ago,  The — 
O— B:  F.  Taylor.- BS  1— FTR— HNS— KNE 
— SA 
(Long  Ag#,  The.)— LLC— WCLG  2 
(River  Time,  The.)— TAV 

Isle  of  Lost  Dreams,  The.— W:  Sharp.- VA 

Isle  of  the  Long  Ago,  The. — B:  F.  Taylor.  See  Isle  of 
Long  Ago,  The. 

Isle  of  Yew. — Anon. — LLC 

Isles,  The.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— VA 

Isles  of  Greece,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 

"Isn't  God  upon  the  Ocean,  just  the  same  as  on  the 
Land?"— Jas.  T.  Fields.  See  Ballad  of  the 
Tempest,  The. 

Isolation.     Arthur  H.  Clough.     See  Dipsychus. 

Isolation. — J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 

Israfel.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— AA— ASL— BSP— WR  5 

"It  " — Jas.  W.  Riley.  See  Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A 

It  Came  upon  the  Midnight  Clear. — Edmund  H.  Sears. 
,    —TEP— LLC  (a6r.) 
(Angels'  Song,  The.)— AA 
(Glorious  Song  of  Old.  The.)— OS  2 
(  Peace  on  Eart  h. )— TAS 

It  is  a  Beauteous  Evening,  Calm  and  Free.     (Miscel- 
laneous Sonnets,  Pt.  I.,  30.) — W:  Wordsworth. 
— FEP— MBL 
(By  the  Sea.)— PGT  1— YBF 
(Evening  on  Calais  Beach.) — OB 
(On  the  Beach  at  Calais.)- WEP  4 

"It  is  a  common  saying  th^t  religion  has  nothing  to  do 
with  politics." — Frd'k  W.  Robertson. — GG 

"It  is  a  dear  delight  for  the  soul  to  have  trust  in  the 
fidelity  of  another."     {Harper's.) — GG 

"It  is  a  fitting  opportunity  to  advert  to  the  fact  that 
a  revival  of  religion."  (Southwestern  Presby- 
terian.)— GG 

"It  is  a  sair  thing  to  be  misjudged." — G:  Macdonald. — 
FHS 

It  is  Coming.— M.  F.  Mosher.— PEO— TS 

It  is  Common. -»-Anon. — HP 

It  is  Enough.  (In  A  Lover's  Diary.) — H.  Gilbert  Par- 
ker.—TCV 

It  is  Finished. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — VA 

It  is  Great  for  our  Country  to  Die. — Jas.  G.  Percival. — 
FEP— HBP 
(Elegiac— C.)—AA 

"It  is  hard  to  say  farewell  to  a  hope  that  has  cheered 
us."— W:  H.  H.  Murray.— GG 

It  is  in  Winter  that  we  Dream  of  Spring. — Rob't  B. 
Wilson. — AA 

"It  is  More  Blessed."  —  Rose  T.  Cooke.  —  LI,C  — 
SSS  (ahr.) 

It  is  never  too  Late  to  Mend,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Reade. 

Digging  for  Hidden  Treasure.     (Sel.  fr.  Vol.   II., 

Ch.  II.)— MMR 
Lark  in  the  Gold-fields,  The.     (Vol.  II.,  Chs.  XIII. 
arwf  XIV.)— MMR 
(Lark.  The— se/.)— SC 

"It  is  not  Beaut v  I  Demand." — G:  Darlev. — AVP 
(Loveliness  of  Love,  The.)— BNL— FEP 
(True  Loveliness.)— TIP 

It  is  not  Death  to  Die. — G:  W.  Bethune. — A  A 

"It  is  not  the  best  way  to  teach  the  truth." — Jos.  Cook. 
— GG. 

"It  is  said  that  at  the  battle  of  Shiloh." — G:  C.  Heck- 
man. — GG 

"It  is  said  that  when  General  Grant  first  took  com- 
mand."— Albert  E.  Winship. — DFR 

"It  is  the  miller's  daughter." — Alfred  Tennyson.  See 
Miller's  Daught  er,  The. 

"It  is  the  property  of  the  religious  spirit  to  be  the  most 
refining  of  all  influences."  (Rr.  ael.  fr.  Bos- 
ton.)—Ralph  W.  Emerson. — GG 

"It  is  the  quiet  worker  that  succeeds," — Anon. — GG 

"It  is  the  season  now  to  go."     (C.) — Rob't  L.  Steven- 
son. 
(Difference,  The.)— OH 
(In  the  Season.) — VA 

"It  is  thy  voice  that  floats  above  the  din." — Sarah 
Doudney.— GG 

"It  is  unkind  and  improper  to  exult  over  a  triumph." 
— Anon.— GG 

It  is  well  we  Cannot  See  the  End. — Anon. — CS  .5 


"It  isn't  the  thing  you  do,  dear." — Marg.  E.  Sangster. 

See  Sin  of  Omission,  The. 
It  Kindles  all  my  Soul. — Casimir  of  Poland. — BNL 
It  Made  a  Difference. — Anon. — CRR 
It  May  Be. — Percy  Addleshaw. — VA 
"It  may  be  glorious  to  write." — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See 

Incident  in  a  Railroad  Car,  An. 
It  May  be  Weeds. — Anon. — PPh 
It  May  not  Be. — Anon. — DJS 
"It  Might  Have  Been." — Anon. — GP 
It  Might  Have  Been.— A.  A.  Hopkins.— CS  S 
"It  must  be  so,  Plato,  thou  reasonest  well." — Jos.  Ad- 
dison.    See  Cat  o. 
It  never  Comes  Again. — R:  H.  Stoddard. — BNL — LLC 
—MRS 
(Flight  of  Youth,  The— C.)— AA— ASL— YBF 
(Lost.)— FP 

(Never  Again.)— FEP— TAV 
(There  are  Gains  for  all  our  Losses.) — HBP 
It  never  Pays. — Anon. — KNE 
It  never  Rains,  but  it  Pours. — Anon. — FHE 
"It  Rains."— Lucy  S.  Ruggles.— TFS 
It  Snows.-^Sarah  J.  Hale.— HSS  2 
It  Snows— Hannah  F.  Gould.— YBT 
ft  Snows!  It  Snows.     (Mother  Truth's  Melodies.) — NV 
"It  sometimes  happens  that  two  friends  will  meet." 

(Sunday  Affemoon..) — GG 
"It  suppresses  duration,  it   suppresses   space,  it   sup- 
presses suffering." — Victor  Hugo. — GG 
"It  war  Crackit  Afore."— Gath  Brittle.- WR  21 
It  Was.     (Yale  Record.)— CG  2 
It  was  a  Lass. — Mary  E.  Wilkins. — HS 
It  was  a  Lover  and  his  Lass. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

As  You  Like  It. 
It  was  All  a  Mistake. — Anon. — CS  30 
"It  was  an  eve  of  autumn's  holiest  mood." — Rob't  Pol- 

lok.     See  Course  of  Time,  The. 
"It  was  her  first  sweet  child,  her  heart's  delight." — C: 
Tennyson-Turner.- PGT  2 
(Her  First-bom.)— VA— YBF 
"It  was  no  relief  from  temporal  evils  that  the  Apostle 

promised."— W:  A.  Butler.— FHS 
It  was  not  a  Success. — Anon. — WR  20 
"It  was  not  anything  she  said." — Anon. — FHS 
It  was  not  in  the  Winter. — T:  Hood. — YBF 
(Ballad— C.)—VA 

(^6r.)— HBP— VS 
(Time  of  Roses— abr.)— OB 
"It  was  the  charming  month  [of  May]."     (C. — also 
Charming  Month    of    May,  The — C.)— Rob't 
Bums. 
(Chloe.)— GN— LC 
It  wasn't  Me! — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
"Italia,    lo   Ti   Saluto!"  —  Christina  G.   Rossetti.  — 

PGT  2 
Italian  from  Cork,  The.     (Dtai.)- Daly— SCS 
Italian  Ravine, An. — Percy  B. Shellev.     SeeCenci,The. 
Italian  Song,  An.     ( C. )— S :  Rogers.— FEP 

(My  Native  Vale.)— CEL 
Italian's  Account  of  George  Washington,  An. — Anon. 

— WR21 
Italian's  View  on  the  Labor  Question,  An. — Joe  Kerr. 

— BS  21— WR  21 
Italy  (the  hook),  Sels.  fr. — St  Rogers. 
Don  Garzia.— WRD 
Ginevra.— BNL— FEP 

(SI  abr.)— NPS— TMR— WEP  4— YP 
(SI.  diff.  ■pero.)- CS  3 

(Lost  Bride,  The.)— WR  26 
(For  another  vers,  of  same  story  see  Mistletoe  Bough, 
The.— T:  H.  Bayly) 
Italy  (the  poem).— BNL  (sel.)— WEP  4  (sel.  fr.  Ber- 
gamo, and  Italy,  com.) 
Italy,  Sel.  fr.  (Sel.  fr.  The  Alps.)— BNL 
Jorasse.     (Abr.) — BNL 
"Nature  denied  him  much."     (Sel.  fr.  Farewell.) — 

GG 
Naples.     (SeZ.)- BNL 

Night  and  Day,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Florence.)— AVP 
Rome.     (SeZ.)- BNL 
Venice.     (Cond.)— BNL 
Ite   Domum   Saturae,     Venit    Hesperus. — Art  hur    H. 

Clough.— VA 
Iter  Supremum. — Arthur  S.  Hardy. — AA 
It's  a  Poor  Rule  that  Won't  Work  both  Ways. — Anon. 
— PTS 

"It's  an  111  Wind ."— W.  L.  Kitchel.— CG  1 

It's  Good  to  have  a  Mother. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — TFS 

(Birdies  with  Broken  Wings— C.)—POR 
It's  Hame  and  it's  Hame. — Allan  Cunningham. — FEP 
— GP 
(Hame,  Hame,  Hame!)— HBP— OB— YBF 
(Loyalty— «e/.)—GN—LH 


165 


It's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


It's  Hard  to  be  Good. — Anon. — WR  2 

It's  my  Nature. — Anon. — CS  31 

It's  not  Worth  While  to  Hate. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavan- 

augh. — KJ 
It's  Vera  Weel.— Wallace  Dunbar.— CD 
Itylus. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — CEL — OB 
lykn   Ivknovitch.     (Se' — cond.) — Rob't    Browning. — 

WR  1 
Ivan  the  Czar. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — CS  36 
Ivanhoe,  SeU.  fr.     Walter  Scott. 

Anglo-Norman  Days.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  I.)— WCLG  1 
Archery  Contest,  The.  (5e/.  jr.  Ch.  XIII.)-WCLG  1 
Baron  and  the  Jew,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXII.,  arr. 

08  dto/.)— NDP 
Besieged  Castle.  The.     {Ahr.  and  ad.  fr.  Chs.  XXIX. 
and  XXXI.)— MMR  {longest)— I'K— "^11  11 
(Scene  from  Ivanhoe — ad  jr.  Ch.  XXIX.) — CR 
(Storming  of  the  Castle,  The — aels.  ad.  fr.  Chs. 
XXIX.-XXXI.)— CS  36 
Hymn  of  the  Hebrew  Maid.     {Fr.  Ch.  XXXIX.)— 
HBP 
(Rebecca's  Hymn.)— BNL— FEP 
Trial   of   Rebecca,   The.     {Sd.   fr.   Ch.   XLIII.)— 
WR  19 
I've  Been  Roaming.    {Fr.  Lilian  of  the  Vale.) — G:  Dar- 

ley.— VS 
"I've  thought  of  thee,  I've  thought  of  thee."   XBr.  ael. 
fr.  The  Confessional.) — Nathaniel  P.  Willis. — 
FTA 
Ivery  Inch  a  Gintleman. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
Ivory  Crucifix,  The.— G.  H.  Miles.— WR  6 
Ivory  Gate,  The. — Mortimer  Collins. — VA 
Ivry,  a  Song  of  the  Huguenots.     (C.) — T:  B.  Macaulay 
— BPB  —  EDY  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HB  —  HBP 
— I.C  (abr.)- PPSr— VA 
(Battle  of  Ivry,  The.)— OM  {br.  sel.)— OS  2— SA— 
SE  {ael.— ad.) 
{Abr.)—  BS  6  —  CEL  —  CR  —  CS  5  —  FR  —  GP 
— HSS  1— SO— SS— TMD 
Ivy,  The. — H:  Burton. — AD 
Ivy,  The. — C:  Dickens. — See  following. 
Ivy  Green,  The.— C:  Dickens.— BNL— BS  16  {ahr.)— 
CS  11— FEP— GP— POS— VA— VS 
{SI.  diff.  i>er«.)— AD— HBP— PHS 
(Ivy,  The.)— HSS  1 
Ivy  Orations.     (3)— Anon.— CP 
Ivy  Poem. — Anon. — CP 
Ivy  Song. — Anon.— CP 
Izaak  Walton  to  River  and  Brook. — Eugene  I-ee-Ham- 

ilton.— VA 
Izaak  Walton's  Prayer. — D.  L.  James. — CG  3 


J.  B.— H:  C.  Bunner.— AA— EDY 

Jabberwocky.— C:  L.  Dodgson.— NA— THP— VA 

Jack. — Anon.— CS  36 

Jack.— F.  M.  Stanley.— PR 

Jack  and  Gill. — A  Criticism. — Jos.  Dennie. — BS  3 

Jack  and  I. — Anon. — CS  37 

Jack  and  Jill. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 

Jack  and  Jill. — (Mother  Goose  Sonnets.) — Harriet   S. 

Morgridge. — A  A 
Jack  and  Joan. — T:  Campion. — EP 

(Fortunati  Nimium.V— PGT  1 

(Rustic  Joys.)— YBF 
Jack  and  Joan  (Epitaph,  An — C). — Matthew  Prior. — 

HPE 
Jack  and  Me.— G :  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Jack  at  all  Trades.— F.  Crosby.— PD 
Jack  at  the  Opera.— C:  Dibdin.— THP 
Jack  Chiddy. — Alex.  Anderson. — CS  20 
Jack  Creamer. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — BS  25 
Jack  Frost. — Anon. — DLF 
Jack  Frost. — Anon. — NV 

(Who  is  It?)— PEO  {al.  abr.) 
Jack  Frost.— Hannah  F.  Gould.— PoR—WCL 

(Frost,  The.)— BNI.— NV— TFS— (sZ.  abr.) 
Jack  Frost.     {The  Independent.) — CPL 
Jack  Frost. — Gabriel  Setoun.— BVC 
Jack  Frost.- Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Jack  Frost  and  Tom  Ruddy. — Anon. — PS 
Jack  Grey.— Anon.— COS— PP 

Jack  Hall;  or.  The  School  Days  of  an  American  Boy, 
Sel.  fr. — Rob't  Grant. 

Boat  Race,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  IX.)— MRS— SC  {al. 
abr.) 
(Jack  Hall's  Boat-race — ad.  by  E.  M.  Wilbor.) — 
DR 
Jack  Hopkins'     Story. — C:     Dickens.     See     Pickwick 
Papers,  The. 


Jack  Homer.  {In  Mother  Goose  for  Grown  Folks.) — 
Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— BNL— CS  3  {abr.) 

Jack  in  the  Pulpit.— Clara  Smith. — AD  {al.  abr.) — NV 
— WCL 

Jack  of  all  Trades.    {Ad.  fr.  The  Weathercock.)— J.  T. 
Allingham— DT 
(Weathercock,  The— abr.)— CS  19— SS 

Jack  Kattleton  Goes  to  Springfield  and  Back,  Sel    fr. 
— Waldron  K.  Post. 
Harvard- Yale  Foot -ball  Match.  A.— BS  23 

(Harvard-Yale  Foot-ball  Game,  A — diff.    ad.) — 
PFP 

Jackanapes.  {Abr.  fr.  Jackanapes.  Chs.  IV.,  V.,  VI.) 
—Juliana  H.  Ewing.— WR  25 

Jackdaw,  The.— W:  Cowper.— WEP  3 

Jackdaw  of  Rheims.—R:  H.  Barham.- BC  —  BNL— 

CS  21— VA  ; 

Jack's  Letter  to  Bob. — Davis  S.  Foster. — SR  12 

Jack's  Nap. — Anon. — HVD 

Jackson  at  New  Orleans. — Wallace  Rice. — EDY 

Jacob  Omnium's  Hoss. — W:  M.  Thackeray. — HPE 

Jacobite  in  Exile,  A. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — LII 

Jacobite  on  Tower  Hill,  The.— G:  W.  Thornbury.— 
EHT— VA 

Jacobite  Toast.     (To  the  same  [an  Officer  in  the  Army 
Extempore,  Intended  to  Allay  t  he  Violence  of 
Party  Spirit— C.)— J:  Byrom.— FEP 
(Which  is  mich.)— IIPE 

Jacobite's  Epitaph,  A. — T:  B.  Macaulay. — LH — OB 
(Epitaph  on  a  Jacobite— C.)— A VP—VA— WEP  4 

Jacqueminot. — Bessie  Chandler. — FEP 

Jacqueminot. — F:  L.  Knowles. — CG  2 

Jacqueminot  Rose  Sunday,  A. — Emma  D.  Banks. — 
BS  19 

Jacqueminot  Roses. — Ednah  P.  Clarke. — POS 

Jacques  Cartier. —Matthew  R.  Knight. — TCV 

Jaflfar;  an  Easter  Tradition. — Leigh  Hunt. — BNL — 
CGd  — CS  6  —  HBP  — KNE  — MR  — OS  2  — 
PHS— VSG 

Jaffier  Parting  with  Belvidera.  {Sel  fr.  Venice  Pre- 
served, Act  v.,  Sc.  2.)— T:  Otway.— BNL 

Jail-bird,  A.— Anon.— DSS 

Jail-bird's  Story,  A. — Anon. — WR  2 

Jail-bird's  Story,  A.— Rob't  Overton.— CS  32 

James  and  the  Shoulder  of  Mutton.  —  Ann  and  Jane 
Taylor.— BVC 

James  Fitz-James  and  Ellen. — Walter  Scott.  See  Lady 
of  the  Lake,  The. 

James  Henry  in  School. — Emily  Selinger. — WR  22 

James  McCosh. — Rob't  Bridges. — AA-wEDY 

James  Russell  Lowell.  {Sel.  fr.  To  James  Russell  Low- 
ell.)—Oliver  W.  Holmes.— PEO 

James  Russell  Lowell's  Birthday  Festival.  (At 
a  Birthday  Festival — C.) — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 
—PEO  (abr.) 

James  IV.  at  Flodden. — W:  E.  Aytoun.  See  Edin- 
burgh after  Flodden. 

James  Thomson.     {Frogs,  fr.  varioua  authora.) — BNL 

James  Whitcomb  Rilev. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 

Jamie.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.- BS  10  {si.  abr.)— CS  23 
— DS 
{Proae  vera.  abr.  and  ad.) — FMR 

Jamie  Douglas. — Anon. — CS  15 — FR 

Jamie's  Word  wi'  the  Sea. — Rob't  J.  Cole. — CG  2 

Jane  Austen  {in  A  Book  of  Sibyls).  Sel.  fr.  (Influence 
of  Life.) — Anne  I.  T.  Ritchie.— KNE 

Jane  Conquest. — Anon. — BS  6 — CS  16 

Jane  de  Monfort. — Joanna  Baillie.     See  De  Monfort. 

Jane  Jones.— Ben  King.— CRR— CS  34 

Jane's  Legacy. — Emma  E.  Brewster. — ASD 

Janette's  Hair. — C:  G.  Halpine. — GP 

January.- H.  S.  Comwell.— TAV 

January. — Rosaline  E.  Jones. — PEO 

January. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.  See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal 
The. 

January. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 

January. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 

January. — Edmund  Spenser. — See  Shepheardes  Calen- 
dar, The. 

January  1st,  1828.     (C.)— Nathaniel  P.  Willis. 
(New  Year,  The.)— FP 

January  Wind.     {Abr.) — Rob't  Buchanan. — OS  2 

Janus.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 

Janus  and  January. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — POS 

Japanese  Doll,  The.— Anon.— PS— TT. 

Japanese  Fan  Drill. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 

Japanese  Lullaby.— Eugene  Field.  —  EF— HBR— NV 
— WR  16 
(Little  Blue  Pigeon  J— WTD 

Japanese  Parasol  and  Fan  Drill. — Mary  L  Gaddes. — 
WR6 

Japanese  Wedding,  A.  {Pantomime.) — Sara  S.  Rice. 
— WR3 


166 


TITLE  INDEX 


Jimmy 


Jaqueline. — G:  M.  Vickera. — CS  29 
Jaquerie,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Sidney  Lanier. 
Betrayal. — AA 
Hound,  The.— A  A 
Jar,  The.    ("Day  and  night  my  thoughts  incline" — C.) 

— R:  H.  Stoddard.— AA 
Jarl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve. — Hjalmar  H.  Boyesen. — 

WR8 
(Earl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve — al.  abr.) — BS  23 
Jasmine  Flower,  The. — Saint-Juirs. — WR  7 
Javanese  Dancers. — Arthur  Symons. — VA. 
Jaybird,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Je  suis  Americain. — Anon. — CS  22 
Jealous  Rose,  The. — Anon. — CG  1 
Jealous  Wife,  The.— Fred  E.  Brooks.— CS  28 
Jealousy. — Anon. — FDY 
Jealousy. _    (To/).)- Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Jealousy  in  the  Choir.     {Lowell  New  Moon.) — CH 
Jean.     (Of  a'  the  Airts— C.).— Rob't  Burns.— BFV— 

OB— YBF 
{W.    2    add.    doubtful    stanzas.)- FEP— FTA— 

PGTl 
(I   Love  My  Jean— aZso  C.)— BNL— BPB— GN— 

MBL 
(My  Jean.)— CEL 
("Of   a'  the   airts  the  winds  can  blaw.") — EPs — 

WEP3 
Jean  Anderson,  my  Joy,  Jean. — J.  E.  Rankin. — BS  1 
Jean  Noel:  a  Story  of  Christmas  in  France. — Edith 

ScannelL— WR  24 
Jean  Valjean. — Victor  Hugo.     See  I^es  Mis^rables. 
Jean  Valjean  and  the  Bishop. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Les 

Mis^rables. 
Jean  Valjean's  Sacrifice. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Les  Mis^- 

rables. 
Jeane.—W:  Barnes.— PGT  2 
Jeanie  Deans  and  Queen  Caroline. — Walter  Scott.     See 

Heart  of  Midlothian,  The. 
Jeanie     Morrison. — W:     Motherwell. — BNL  —  CEL  — 

FEP— FTR— HBP— WCL  — WEP  4 
(Abr.)— EPs-  FP 
Jeannie  Marsh. — G:  P.  Morris  — A  A — WR  5 
Jeduthan  and  Jane. — Anon. — MAD 
Jefferson  Davis. — Harry  T.  Peck. — EDY 
"Jefful,  The."     {Sel  fr.  Just  One  Day.)— J:  Habberton. 

— BS  16— DES 
Jehoshaphat's  Deliverance. — G:  L.  Taylor — BS  13 
Jehovah  Tsidkenu.— Rob't  M.  McCheyne.— FEP 
Jellj;  for  the  Minister. — Anon. — MFD 
Jemima.     (2  rers.)— Anon. — BVC 

(There  was  a  Little  Girl — ptly.  like  both  versions — 

o«.  <o  H:  W.  Longfellow.)— NA 
Jemima  Brown. — Anon. — D.IS 
Jem's  Last  Ride. — Mary  A.  Stansbury. — BS  15 
Jena. — Francis  S.  Saltus. — EDY 
Jenkins  Goes  to  a  Picnic. — Anon. — CS  6 — DS — PS 
Jennie.— Fred  E.  Brooks.— WR  2 

Jenny  and  Peggy. — Allan  Ramsay.     See  Gentle  Shep- 
herd, The. 
Jenny  Dunleath. — Alice  Cary. — CS  18 
Jenny  from  Ballinasloe. — Anon. — TIP 
Jenny  Kissed  me.— Leigh  Hunt. — BFV — BNL — CS  20 

—  FTA  —  GP  —  HBP  —  LC  —  OB  — OH— 

OS  2— YBF 
(Rondeau.)— FEP  —WEP  4 
Jenny  Malone. — Anon. — CS  20 
Jenny  Wren  and  Robin  Redbreast. — Anon. — OS  1 

(Nur.sery  Rhvmes,  I.) — CGd 
Jenny's  White  Rose.— Mrs.  H.  E.  M.  Allen.— WR  7 
Jeptha's  Daughter.— W.  W.  Marsh. — WR  7 
Jeptha's  Daughter. — Andrew  Ramsay. — TCV 
Jephthah's  Daughter. — Lord  Byron. — EPs 
Jephthah's  Daughter.     (Abr.) — Nathaniel  P.  Willis. — 

CS  16 
Jephthah's  Rash  Vow. — Miss  Howard. — CS  8 
Jere  Lloyd  on  "Phrenology." — Anon. — CS  11 
Jericho  Bob. — Anna  E.  King. — HS 
Jerry.— Mary  L.  Dickinson.— BS  11— CS  22— SR  4 
Jerry  an'  me. — Anon. — WR  12 
Jerry  an'  me. — H.  Rich. — ASL 
Jerry  the  Bobbin-boy. — Anon. — NP 
Jerusalem  Avenged,     (/n    Hebrew    Melodies.) — Lord 

Byron.— BLP 
(Vision  of  Belshazzar — C.) — EP?^ — GN 
Jerusalem  by  Moonlight.     (Sel.  fr.  Tancred,  Bk.  TIL, 

Ch.   T.) — B:  Disraeli,  Earl  of  Beaconsfield. — 

CS  6— SR  5— TMD 
Jerusalem   Dplivered,  Sela.  fr. — Torquato  Tasso. 

Shepherd's  Song,  The.    (Sel.  fr.  Can.  VII.)— WR  11 
Sophronia    and    Olindo.      (Sel.     fr.    Can.     II.) — 

NE  (Wiffen's  /r.}— WR  11  (diff.  fr.) 
Jerusalem    Delivered,    Story  of. — Kate    M.    Rabb. — 

NE 


Jerusalem  the  Beautiful. — M.  L.  Hoffard. — CS  28 
Jerusalem  the  Golden. — St.   Bernard    (tr.   by  J:  M. 

Neale).— LLC  (abr.) 
(Se^)- HDL— PYO 
(Celestial  Country,  The.)— BNL  (abr.)- FEP 
Jes'  Nail  dat  Mink  to  de  Stable  Do'. — Anon. — DE 
Jessie.— T:  E.  Brown.— OB 
Jessie. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — GN 

Jessie  Brown  at  Lucknow. — G:  Vandenhoff. — FMR 
Jessie  Cameron. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — CS  18 
Jessie,  the  Flower  o'  Dumblane. — Rob't  Tannahill. — 

FEP 
(Flower  o'  Dumblane,  The.)— BNL 
Jessie's  Book. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Jessy.— Rob't  Burns. — FEP 

(Here's  a  Health  to  ane  I  Lo'e  Dear.) — HBP 
"Jest  a-Thinkin'  o'  You." — Ella  Higginson. — WR  21 
Jest  'fore  Christmas.— Eugene  Field.— CS   34— EF   — 

LS 
Jest  of  Fate,  The.     (^Fate's  Frustrated  Joke — C.) — Sam 

W.  Foss.— WR  22 
Jester,  The.— Anon.— WR  12 
Jester,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Jester  Bee. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Jester  Condemned  [to  Death],  The. — Horace  Smith. — 

CS  3  —  KNE  —  NPS  —  OM  —  SCS  —  SS  — 

YP 
Jester's  Sermon,  The.— G:     W.     Thorn  bury.— BNL— 

CS  9— CSS— FEP— WRD 
Jesu,  Lover  of  my  Soul. — C:  Wesley.    See  Jesus,  Lover 

of  my  Soul. 
Jesu,  my  Strength,  my  Hope.     (Abr.) — C:  Wesley. — 

FEP 
Jesuits,  The.     (Fr.  the  second  of  the  Satires  upon  the 

Jesuits.)— J:  Oldham.— WEP  2 
Jesus. — Theodore  Parker. — AA — TAS 
Jesus  Christ.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Jesus,  I  my  Cross  have  taken. — H:  F.  Lyte. — FEP 

("Lo.  we  have  Left  All.")— VA 
Jesus  Knows. — Anon. — DLS 
"Jesus,  Lover  of  my  Soul." — Eugene  J.  Hall. — BS  12 

— CS31 
Jesus,  Lover  of  my  Soul. — C:  Wesley. — LLC  (abr.) 
(SI.  abr.)— HBP— SPE— YBF 
(Christ,  the  Refuge  of  the  Soul.)— WEP  3 
(Jesu,  Lover  of  my  Soul.) — FEP  (abr.) 
Jesus  Loves  Me.— M.    Ella  Cornell.— SSE 
"Jesus,  Master,  whom  I  serve."     (Sel.) — Frances  R. 

Havergal.— FHS 
Jesus  Shall  Reign. — Isaac  Watts. — HBP 

(Psalm  LXXII.)— FEP 
Jesus  the  Carpenter. — Catherine  C.  Liddell. — VA 
Jewels  of  my  Aunt,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  34 
Jewels  she  Lacked,  The. — Anon. — WR  4 
.Tewess  and  her  Son,  The. — J:  Wolcott. — HPE 
Jewish  Disabilities.     (Sel.) — T:  B.  Macaulay.— MRS 
.Tewish  Hymn  in  Babylon.- — H:  H.  Milman. — BNL 
•Jewish  Lullaby.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
.Jew's  Cemetery  on  the  Lido,  The. — J:  A.  Symonds. — 

AVP 
Jew's  Daughter,  The.     (C. — in  Percy's  Reliques.)  — 

Anon. 
(Hugh  of  Lincoln.)— PEB  1 

(SI.  abr.)— BB—OEB 
(Sir  Hugh;  or.  The  Jew's  Daughter  —  diff.  vers.) — 

BPB 

Jew's  Troubles.  A. Hurwood.— BDD — DRR 

Jim.— A.  W.  Bellaw.— CS  33 

"Jim."— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— AA— BNL— CS  4— MHR 

"Jim." — Joe  I/incoln. — CCB 

Jim.— Nora  Perry.— TMR 

Jim.— Jas  W.  Riley.— A WH 

Jim:  a  Hero. — Rob't  Overton. — CS  28 

Jim,  Arizona,  1885. — C:  F.  Lummis. — BS  19 

(Arizona  Jim.) — WR  2 
Jim  Bludso  [of  the  Prairie  Bellel — J:  Hay.— A  A— BAB 

— MR— MRS— PYO— SC— WR  21 
Jim  Bowker.  (Then  Ag'in— C.)— Sam  W.  Foss.— BS  26 
Jim  Lord's  Cat.— E:  B.  Nicholson.— WR  21 
Jim  Onderdonk's  Sunday-school  Oration. — Edgar  W. 

Nye.— DCR 
Jim  Smiley's     Frog. — S:    L.    Clemens.     See   Jumping 

Frog,  The. 
Jim  Wolfe  and  the  Cats.— S:  L.Clemens.— BeR—CS  17 

-DDR 
Jim-Jam   King  of  the  Jou-Jous,  The. — Alaric  B.  Start 

— AWH— CG  2— THP 
Jimmie's  Prayer.     (Boston  Transcript.) — CD — SR  5 
Jimmy  Brown's  Attempt  to  Produce  Freckles. — W:  L. 

Alden.     See  Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown,  The. 
Jimmy  Brown's  Dog. — W:  L.  Alden. — DR 
Jimmy  Brown's  Prompt  Obedience. — W:  L.  Alden.  See 

Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown,  The. 


167 


Jimmy 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Jimmy  Brown's  Sister's  Wedding. — W:  L.  Alden.    iSee 

Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown,  The. 
Jimmy  Brown's  Steam  Chair. — W:  L.  Alden.     (See  Ad- 
ventures of  Jimmy  Brown,  The. 
Jimmy  Butler  and  the  Owl.— Anon.— CS  7— DI— FTR 

— HR— MYF— SA— SR  2 
Jimmy    Hoy.       (Paday   at    Sea. — C.) — S:    Lover. — 

BS  16  (abr.) 
Jimmy  McBride's  Letter. — Anon. — DI 

(Irishman's  Letter,  An.) — HR 
Jimmv's  Wooing. — Will  W.  Harney. — TFY 
Jim's  Future.     (C) — Sam  W.  Foss. 

(Future  in  Front  of  Him,  A.)— SR  9 
Jim's  Kids. — Anon. — CS  22 
Jim's  Story.— H.  S.  Tomer.— WR  21 
Jimtown  Lyceum. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
Jiners,  The.— Anon.— CS  20— CSS— SR  7 
Jingle  Parties.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Jingles.     (Examiner  and  Chronicle.) — MYF 
Jingles  of  the  Street. — Anon. — SR  11 
Jinny.— Eva  W.  McGlasson.— WR  4 
Joam  Docasta.     {Sel.  fr.  Eight  Hundred  Leagues  on  the 

Amazon,  Ch.  XVII.)— Jules  Verne.— NP 
Joan  of  Arc. — Anon. — FMR 
Joan  of  Arc,  Sels.  fr. — T:  De  Quincy. 
Execution  of  Joan  of  Arc. — CS  3 
Joan  of  Arc— CS  3— NPS— YP 

(Shepherd  Girl  of  Domremy.) — LLC 
Martyrdom  of  Joan  of  Arc,  The. — CR 
Joan  of  Arc,  Sel.  fr.     (Crowning  of  the  King,  The — fr. 

Bk.  X.)— Rob't  Southey.— CS  35 
Joan  of  Arc  at  the  Stake.     {Tab.) — Anon. — BS  11 — 

TCP 
Joan  of  Arc  in  Prison. — Mrs.  L.  J.  B.  Case. — WR  4 
Joan  of  Arc's  Farewell  [to  Home].     (Proloijue  to  Maid 
of  Orleans,  Sc.  IV.)— Friedrich  Schiller.— BLP 
— BS  22— FMR— PPSr 
Job,  Sels.  fr.     Bible. 

Job  XXVIII.— BS  10 

(Knowledge   and   Wisdom.) — BS  11 

(True  Wisdom— 12-28— «r.  by  Q.  R.  Noyes.)— 

Omnipotence  of  Job.     (Sels.  fr.  Chs.   XXXVIII., 

XXXIX.— tr.  by  G.  R.  Noyes.)— SS 
Select  Passages  from  Book  of  Job.     (Sels.  fr.  Chs. 

XXXVIII. -XLI.)—AE 
Job. — S :  T.  Coleridge.     See  following. 
Job's  Luck.     (C.)—S:T.  Coleridge. 
(Beelzebub  and  Job.)— HPE 
(Epigram:  "Sly  Beelzebub,"  etc.) — BNL 
(Epigram  on  Job  and  the  Devil.) — FEP 
(Job.)— THP 
Job  Trotter's     Secret. — C:     Dickens. — See     Pickwick 

Papers,  The. 
Jock  Johnstone,    the  Tinkler. —  Jas.    Hogg. — BNL — 

BS22  (afrr.  )—CR 
Jock  o'  the  Side.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — 

PEB  1 
Jock  of  Hazeldean.— Walter    Scott.  —  BFV  —  BPB  — 

FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  LC  —  PEB  3  —  PGT  1 

— PSR— WR  8— YBF 
Joe. — Albert  Laighton. — FP 
Joe.— Alice  Robbins.— CS  5— PS 
Joe  and  Meg. — Howell  L.  Finer. — WR  23 
Joe  Fleming's   Thanksgiving.  —  (Dial.    ad.    by)   C:   S. 

Wayne.— CDs 
Joe  Jones — A  Parody. — Anon. — CS  7 
Joe,  my  Pard,  the  Parson.— S.  B.  M'Beath.— WR  12 
Joe  Sieg.     (Eclectic  Magazine.) — BS  19 
Joe  Striker  and  the  Sheriff.— Anon.— CS  29— WR  20 
Joe.  the  Tramp. — Edgar  M.  Chipman. — CS  20 
Joe's  Search    for    Santa   Claus. — Irving    Bacheller. — 

HS 
Joe's  Way  of  Doing  Chores. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Jog  AlaskarNordue. — Corinne  Sickel. — CG  3 
Jog  on.  Jog  onf,  the  Foot-path  Way]. — W :  Shakespeare. 

.See  Winter's  Tale,  A. 
John  A.  Andrew. — Louise  C.  Moult  on. — EDY 
John  A.  Logan.— G:  R.  Peck.— NC 
John  Alcohol. — Anon. — CS  34 
John  and  Tibbie  Davison's  Dispute.  (SI.  diff.  versions.) 

—Rob't  Leighton.— CDV— CS  14— PS— SDR 
(John  nnd  Tibbie's  Dispute.)— BS  5— S.\ 
(.lohn  Davidson.)— GP 
John  and  Tibbie's  Dispute. — Rob't  Leighton.     See  fore- 
going. 
John  Anderson. — Rob't  Bums.     See  following. 
John  Anderson,  my  Jo.     (C.) — Rob't  Bums. — BNL — 

CR  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  FP  —  FTR  —  GP  —  OB 

— PYO— SO— WEP  3 
(John     Anderson.)    —    CEL— HBP— LC— MBL— 

PGT  1— WCLI  2— YBF 
John  Avar's  Last  Lay. — J:  H.  Duvar. — TCVJ 


John  Barleycorn.— Rob't  Bums.— BVC— PEB  3— PHS 

(SI.  o6r.)— BNI CGd 

(Abr.  and  si.  diff.  vers.) — PC 
John  Bottlejohn. — Laura  E.  Richards. — FS 
John  Boyle  O'Reilly.— Elmer  H.  Capen.— MRS 
John  Bright. — Francis  B.  Gummere. — AA 
John  Brown. — Harry  L.  Koopman. — AA 
John  Brown. — Eugene  F.  Ware. — EDY 
John  Brown  of  Osawatomie. — Anon. — NC 
John  Brown   of  Osawatomie. — Edmund   C.   Stedman. 

—EPs 
(How  Old  Brown  took  Harper's  Ferry — C.) — PAP 
John  Brown's  Body.— J.  D.  Sherman. — BS  24 
John  Brown's  Ten  Little  Injuns;  Tomahawk  Drill. — 

Anon.— WDM 
John  Bull  and  his    Law-suit,  Preface  to. — J:  Arbuth- 

not. — ESs 
John  Bunyan,  Sel.  fr.—T:  B.  Macaulay.— SE— SPE 
John  Burns  of  Gettysburg. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — AWB — 

BAB  —  BS  17  —  CR  —  CS  4  —  FP  —  HNS  — 

MYF— PAP— PAPm 
John  Charles  Fremont.     (To  John  C.  Fremont — C.)— 

J:  G.  Whittier.- BNL 
John  Chinaman's  "Comin'  through  the  Rye."     (Har- 
per's Magazine.) — CDV — SDR 
John  Chinaman's    Protest. — Anon.  —  CDV  —  DCR  — 

SDR 
John  Davidson. — Rob't  Leighton.     See  John  and  Tib- 
bie Davison's  Dispute. 
John  Day.     (C.)—T:  Hood. 

(History  of  John  Day — si.  abr.) — OM 
John  Endicott,  Sel.  fr.     (Captain  Kempthorn — ad.  as 

play.)—H:  W.  Longfellow.— NDP 
John  George  Nicolay.— R:  W.  Gilder.— EDY 
John  Gilpin.— W:  Cowper.— BPB— CGd— CS  7— PC— 

PHS— PSR— WCL 
(Diverting  Historv  of  John  Gilpin,  The— C.)— BNL 

—BVC— FEP— GN— HBP— MBL  —  PEB  3— 

THP 
(Facetious  Story  of  John  Gilpin,  The.)— MHR 
John  Halifax,  Gentleman,  Sd.  fr.  (Little  Muriel — abr. 

fr.  Ch.  XXVIII.)— Dinah  M.  Craik— CS  37 
John  Hancock. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop.     See  Centennial 

Oration. 
John  Harding. — Mary  R.  Jarvis. — WR  13 
John  Hasty  and  Peter  Quiet. — Anon. — CSS 
John  Henry  Newman. — Edmund  Gosse. — EDY 
John  Howard. — Edmund  Burke.     See  Speech  at  Bris- 
tol, Previous  to  the  Election,  1780. 
John  Jankin's    Sermon.     (Harper's    Bazaar.) — CS  8— 

KNE 
(Our  Minister's  Sermon.)— BS  7— FEP— SR  7 
John  Jones. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne — NA 
John  Jones  and  I.— C:  G.  Ames.— CS  23 
John  Jones'  Fortune. — H.  E.  McBride. — SD 
John  Knox's  Indictment  of  the  Queen.     (Sel.  fr.  Both- 
well,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  7.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne — 

VA 
John  Maynard. — Horatio  Alger,  Jr. — CS  5 
(SI.  abr.)- BS  1— FR— PR— PS— SA 
John  Maynard,the  Hero-pilot.— J:  B.  Gough.— FTR 
(Pilot,  The.)— CS  23— CSS— MMR— WRD 
(Story  of  John  Maynard.)— BS  17 
(Poet.  vers,  of  foregoing  story.) 
John  Milton.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Progress    of    Poesy.) — T; 

Gray.— BNL 
John  Mitchell.     (Set.)— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— EDY 
John  Mouldy. — Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
John  of  Launoy. — Sir  H:  Taylor.     See  Philip  Van  Ar- 

tevelde. 
.John  of  Mt.  Sinai.— A.  L.  Frisbie.— BS  18— CS  29 
John  Pelham.— Jas.  R.  Randall.— AA— AWB 

(Dead  Cannoneer,  The.)— EDY 
John  Quincy  Adams,  Sel.  fr.     (American  and  the  Cor- 

sican.  The.)— W:  H.  Seward.— NC 
(Corsican  not  Content,  The — abr.) — WCLG  1 
John  Robb  and  Anna  Cobb. — Anon. — MAD 
John  Smith's  Will.— B:  P.  Shillaber.- CS  18 
John  Spicer  on  Clothes. — Abby  M.  Diaz. — DR 
John  Thomson  and  the  Turk.— Anon.— PEB  2 
John  Valjohn  and  the  Savoyard. — Victor  Hugo.     See 

Les  Mis^rables. 
John  Ward,  Preacher,  SeL  fr.     (Fire,  The— «eZ.  fr.  Ch. 

XI.)— Marg.  Deland.— WR  5 
John  White's      Thanksgiving. — Anon.— GS  33 — PP — 

YPS 
John  Wickliffe.   (Eccles.    Sonnets,  Pt.  II.,  Son.  XVII.) 

— W:  Wordsworth.— BNL  (lei.) 
(Wicliffe- O— EDY 
John  Wycliffe  and  the  Bible.— R:  S.  Storrs.- TMD 
Johneen. — Moira  O'Neill.- TIP 
Johnnie  Armstrong,     (/n  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. 

— BB  (abr.) 


168 


TITLE  INDEX 


Judge's 


Johnnie  Cope. — Adam  Skirving. — WEP  3 
Johnnie  of  Braidislee. — Anon.     See  following. 
Johnnie  of  Breadisiee. — Anon. — -PEB  2 

(Johnnie  of  Braidislee — si.  abr.  and  si.  diff.  arr.) — 
BB 
Johnnie's  Gun. — Clara  J.  Denton. — ASD 
Johnnie's  Poetry. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — DLD 
Johnny  and  the  Teacher.     (New  York  Sun.) — CS  33 

f Mental  Arithmetic.) — DES 

(Trials  of  a  School  Teacher.)— ASD 

(Trials  of  a  Schoolmistress.) — CH 
Johnny  Bartholomew.— T:  D.  English.— BAB— CS  7 — 

FTR— PR 
Johnny  Cox.— A.  P.  Graves.— PEB  4 
"Johnny,  I  Hardly  Knew  Ye." — Anon. — TIP 
Johnny  Judkins. — C:  F.  Adams. — CS  21 
Johnny  Scott. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Johnny  the  Stout.— Anon.— PP—YFR 
Johnny-cake,  The. — Anon. — WCL 
Johnny-cake,  The.     (The  Nursery. )~TiSS  2 
Johnny-jump-up. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Johnny's  Advice. — "Bob  o'Link." — DCP 
Johnny's  Choice. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Johnny's  Confession, — Anon. — WR  17 
Johnny's  Fourth  of  .July. — Anon. — GH 
Johnny's  Lesson. — Anon. — WR  17 
Johnny  s  Opinion  of   Grandmothers. — Anon. — BS  2 — 
SD— WR  17  (sel.) 
(Grandmothers.) — LLC 
Johnny'sPocket.— Anon.— CPL— PP— PR— YFR 
Johnny's  Sisters. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
John's  Pumpkins.— Mrs.  G :  Archibald.— LPS— PP 
Johnson's  Ancestors. — Anon. — DSS 
Johnson's  Bedfellows. — Anon. — DSS 
Johnston  at  Shiloh. — Fleming  James. — BAB 
Joined  the  Blues. — J:  J.  Rooney. — AA — PAPm 
Joke  Versified,  A.— (C.)— T:  Moore.- FEP— HPE 

(On  Taking  a  Wife.)— THP 
Joker's  Mistake,  The. — Lemuel  B.  C.  Josephs. — DR 
Jolly  Brick,  A.— Pauline  Phelps.— WR  21 
Jolly  Good  Ale  and   Old.— J:  StiU.— FEP— GP— OB 

(Good  Ale.)— BNL— HBP 
Jolly  Goshawk,  The.— Anon.— BB 

(Gay    GosFsl-hawk,    The  —  si.    diff.    vers.)- GN— 
PEB  2 
(Scott's  vers. — quite  diff.) — EPs 
Jolly  March.— Lizzie  J.  Rook.— TT 
Jolly  Miller,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Jolly  Old  Crow,  The.— Anon.— CSS— PPSr 

(Cunning  [of]  Old  Crow,  The— dif.  vers.) — AD— 
LLC 
Jolly  Old  Pedagogue,  The.— G:  Arnold.— BNL— CS  6— 

FEP— GP— HSS  3  (a6r.)— LLC 
Jolly  Old  Saint  Nicholas.— Anon.— WR  17 
Jonathan  and  the  Englishmen. — Anon. — BC 

(How  the  Yankee  Answered  the  Englishmen — si. 
diff.  and  si.  longer.) — PTS 
Jonathan  to  John.— Jas.  R.  Lowell. — AWB— PAP— 

PYO  (sel.) 
Jonathan's  Daughters. — H.  E  McBride. — MFD 
Joner  Swallerin'  a  Whale. — L :  Eisenbein. — CS  31 
Jones  at  the  Barber['sl  Shop.— (Punch.) — BNL — HPE 
—THP 

(Barber's  Shop,  The.)— SCS 
Jonson,  Ben.     (Frags.  Jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Jorasse.     (In  Italy.) — S:  Rogers. — BNL  (ahr.) 
Joseph  and  his  Brethren,  Sels.  fr. — C:  J.  Wells. 

Patriarchal  Home,  The. — VA 

Phraxanor  to  Joseph. — VA 

Rachel.— VA 

Triumph  of  Joseph,  The. — VA 
Joseph  Clayton. — Sarah  Parry. — CS  37 
Joseph  Rodman  Drake. — Fitz-Greene  Halleck. — BNL 
— EDY— GP 

(Green  be  the  Turf.)— LLC 

(On  the  Death  of  Joseph  Rodman  Drake — C.) —  AA 
— ASL— FEP— HBP— TAV— WCLG  2 

(To  a  Friend— 8rf.)—GMS 
Joseph  II.  and  the  Grenadier. — Anon. — PTS 
Josh  Billings  on  Artemus  Ward. — H:  W.  Shaw. — SR  4 
Josh  Billings  on  Courting.     (On  Courting — C. — lonqer 
than  rev.  vers,  in  Works.) — H;  W.  Shaw. — CS  1 

(Courting.)— KNE 
Josh  Billings  on  "Gongs."      (Mv   Fust    Gong — C.) — 

H:  W.  Shaw.— CS  3— MHR 
Josh    Billings   on    Laughing.     (Ptly.    fr.    LaflSng   and 

Laughing.)— H:  W.  Shaw.— BC 
Josh  Billings  on  "Manifest  Destiny." — H:  W.  Shaw. — 
CS  2 

(Manifest  Destiny.)— PS 
Josh  Billings  on  the  Mule.      (The  Mule— C.)— H:  W. 

Shaw.— BC 
Joshua  of  1776,  The.— W.  R.  Rose.— SR  4— WR  10  ] 


Josiah  Allen's  wife  as  a  P.  A.  and  P.  I. ;  or,  Samantha  at 

the  Centennial,  Sels.  fr. — Marietta  HoUey. 
Study  in  Dialect,  A.      (Sel.  ad.  jr.  Tirzah  Ann  as  a 

Wife.)— NP 
Widder  Doodle.     (SeZ.)— SR  13 
Josiah  Allen's  Wife  at   a  Fashionable  Restaurant. — 

(Sel.  fr.  Samantha  at  the  World's  Fair,  Ch. 

XIV.)— Marietta  HoUey.— SR  12 
Josiah  Allen's  Wife  at  A.  T.  Stewart's  Store. — Marietta 

Holley.     See  My  Opinions  and  Betsey  Bobbet  's. 
Josiah    and    Family    at    the    Centennial. — Emma    M. 

Johnston. — CS  13 
Josiah    and    the    Mermaid. — Marietta    Holley.     See 

Samantha  at  Saratoga. 
Josiah  at  the  Various  Springs. — Marietta  Holley.     See 

Samantha  at  Saratoga. 
Josiah's  First  Courting. — Anon. — MFD 
Josiah's  Proposal. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
Josiar.— Anon. — BS  20 
Josie's  Fault. — Anon. — HVD 
Journey,  The.— C:  Churchill.— ESs 
Journey,  The. — Mary  B.  (C.)  Hansbrough. — A  A 
Journey  into  Spain,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See 

Outre  Mer. 
.Journey  of  Life,  The. — S.  Jennie  Smith.— CS  29 
Journey  Onwards,  The.— T:  Moore.— HBP— PGT  1— 

YBF 
(As  Slow  our  Ship— C.)— BNL— BPB— TIP 
Journey  South,  The. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Aurora 

Leigh. 
Journey  to  Exeter,  A.     (To  the  Right  Hon.  the  Earl  of 

Burlington— C.)— J:  Gay.— OES  (si.  abr.) 
Journey  to  What's  its  Name,  A. — Anon. — WR  12 
Jove  and  the  Souls. — Jonathan  Swift. — EPs  (abr.) 
(Day  of  Judgment,  The.— O— HPE— WEP  3 
Jovial      Beggar,      The.— Anon.— BVC—CGd— FEP— 

HBP— OS  1 
Jovial  Cobbler  of  Saint  Helen's,  The.— Anon.— BVC 
Jovial  Crew;  or.  The  Merry  Beggars,  Sel.  fr.  (Merry 

Beggars,  The.)— R:  Brome.— ELP 
Jovial  Priest's  (Confession,  The. — (Walter  de  Mapes — 

tr.  by)  Leigh  Hunt.— HPE 
Jovita;  or.  The  Christmas  Gift.     (Sel.  fr.  How  Santa 

Claus    Came    to    Simpson's    Bar.) — Fs.    Bret 

Harte. — DR 
Joy. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — EPa 
Joy.     (In  Give  me  not  Tears.)  —  Rose  H.  Lathrop. — 

AA 
Joy. — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel  in  the  House, 

The. 
Joy  after  Sorrow. — Paul  Gerhardt. — HDL 
Joy  and  Peace  in  Believing.     (C.) — W:  Cowper. — FEP 

—HBP 
("Sometimes  a  light  surprises.") — SAE 
Joy  and  Sorrow. — Jas.  Hedderwick. — FP 
Joy  Enough. — Barrett  Eastman. — AA 
Joy  of  Battle,  The. — J:   Fletcher.      See   Mad  Lover, 

The. 
Joy  of  Incompleteness,  The. — J.   Bessemeres. — HP — 

HSS  3 
.Joy  of  Spring. — Leigh  Hunt. — AD 
Joy  of  the  Hills,  The.— Edwin  Markham.— GMS 
Joy  of  the  Morning. — Edwin  Markham. — AA 
Joy  to  the  Toiler. — Anon.— HSS  3 
Joyful  Messenger,  The.     See  Isaiah. 
Joyful  Surprise,  A. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
.loy-month. — David  A.  Wasson. — SN 
Joys  and  Sorrows  of  Eggs. — H:  W.  Beecher. — MHR 
Joys  of  the  Road,  The. — Bliss  Carman. — BNL — SN 
Juanita. — Joaquin  Miller. — AA 
Juberlo  Tom. — Rob't  Overton. — CS  29 
.Jubilate. — Anon. — HP 
Jubilate.— G:  Arnold.— TAS 
Jubilee  of   the   Flowers,    The. — Sarah   E.    Howard. — 

WR9 
Judas  Maccabaeus.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  II.,  sc.  1.) — H:  W. 

Longfellow. — HDL 
Judas  the  Second.— Fs.  S.  Saltus. — EDY 
Judge  Brown's  Watermelon  Story.     (Arkansaw  Trav 

eller. )— PP— PS— YPS 
Judge  Lynch. — I.  Edgar  Jones. — CS  33 
Judge  not. — Anon. — HP 
Judge  not. — Joaquin  Miller. — FAS 
Judge  not.  (C. — abr.) — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — BNL — 

CS  12  (abr.) 
("Judge  not!  the  workings  of  his  brain" — br.  sel.) — 

GG 
"Judge  not!  the  workings  of  his  brain." — Adelaide  A 

Procter.     See  .Judge  Not. 
Judge  of  Bellinzona,  The.— J.  J.  Reithard.— CS  24 
Judge  Pitman   on  Various   Kinds  of  Weather. — Max 

Adeler.     See  Out  of  the  Hurly  Burlv. 
Judge's  Charge  to  the  Grand  Jury,  The.— C.  E.  B.—  FS 


169 


Judges 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Judges  Should  be  Free. — Jas.  A.  Bayard. — SS— SSD 
Judge's  Temperance    Lecture,   A. — J.    N.    Reading. — 

CS  10— NFS— YP 
Judging  by  Appearances. — Anon. — HR — MHR 
Judgment,  The. — Dora  R.  Goodale. — AA 
Judgment. — Grace  E«C.  Stetson. — AA 
Judgment  Day. — W:  D.  Howells. — A  A 
Judgment  in  Heaven,  A. — Fs.  Thompson.-^ VSG 
Judicial  Tribunals.     (Sel.  fr.  Duties  of  Massachusetts 

at  the  Present  Crisis.) — C:  Sumner. — CS  3 
Judith.     {Br.   sel.   fr.   Judith   and   Holofemes — varies 

8l.)—T:  B.  Aldrich.— HDL 
Judith.— ,W:  Young.— AA 

Judith  and  Holofemes. — T:  B.  Aldrich.     See  Judith. 
Judy  O'Shea  Sees  Hamlet. — Lynn  B.  Porter. — BS  20 
Juggler,  The.— G :  Kyle.— WR  3 
Juggler,  The.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL 
Juggling  Jerry. — G :  Meredith. — VA 
Jugurtha. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — AA 
JugurthineWar,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Sallust. 

Caius  Marius  to  the  Romans  on  the  Objections  to 
Making  him  General.    (LXXV.— conrf.)— SS 
(Merit  before  Birth — diff.  tr.  and  ahr.) — BLP 
Prince  Adherbal  before  the  Roman  Senate.     (XIV. 
— cond.) — BLP 
Julia.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— HPE—SCS 
Julia. — Rob't  Herrick. — GP  {w.  add.  at.) 

(Rock  of  Rubies,  The— C.)— ES— WEP  2 
Juliet.— L:  F.  Austin.— DES 
Juliet  of    Nations. — EHz.     B.     Browning.     See    Casa 

Guidi  ^indows. 
Julius  Csesar. — W:  Shakespeare. — WCLG  2 
SeU.: 
Antony's  Lament  over  Csesar.     {Sel.  fr.  Act  III., 

Sc.  1.)— SO 
Cassius.     {Sel.  fr.  I.,  2.)— EPs 

("And  this  man  is  now  become  a  god" — br.  sel.) 

— SPE 
(Cassius     against     Csesar.)  —  BS    2  —  CS    8  — 

KNE  {si.  o6r.)— SPE 
f Cassius'  Complaint  of  Csesar — sel.) — PPS 
(Cassius  Instigating  Brutus  against  Csesar.) — FR 
(Cassius  to  Brutus.) — OS  2 
(Julius  Csesar — br.  sel.) — BNL 
(Speech  of  Cassius,   Instigating  Brutus  to  Join 
the  Conspiracy  against  Csesar.) — SS 
Crime.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  1.)— EPs 

(Julius  Csesar,  Br.  sel.  fr.) — BNL 
Forum  Scene,  The.     (III.,  2— si.  a6r.)— MRS 

(Antony's  Oration   over  the   Body  of  Casar — 
abr.  )—BLN 
(Antony  on  the  Death  of  Caesar — br.  sel.) — 

PP— YFR 
(Antony  over  the  Dead  Body  of  Csesar — si. 

a&r.)— EPs 
(Antony's   Address   to   the    Romans   [on   the 
Death  of  Csesar]— cond.)— CS  3— FR— PPSr 
(Antony's  Oration  over  Csesar — cond.) — KNE 

—SO 
(Death  of  Julius  Csesar,  The— seZ.) — EDY 
(Julius  Csesar — br.  sel.) — AE 
(Marc  Antony's  Funeral  Oration — sel.) — IR 
(Mark  Antony  to  the  People  on  Caesar's  Death 

—cond.)— OS  2— PS— SS 
(Oration  of  Mark  Antony — cond.) — LLC 
(Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Csesar — sel.) — FR 
(Abr.)—CS  3     EA— LLC— SO 
{Sel.)— FP— YFR 
(Brutus'  Harangue  on  the  Death  of  Caesar — 

a6r.)— KNE 
(Brutus     Justifying     the     Assassination      of 

Csesar — abr.) — OS  2 
(Marcus  Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Csesar — abr.) 
— PS— SS 
(Julius  Caesar — br.  sel.) — SAE 
(Mark  Antony  Scene.)— BS  4— CDD— SR  12 
"I  can  as  well  be  hanged,  as  tell  the  manner  of  it." 

(fir.  sel.  fr.  I.,  2!)— SPE 
Julius  Csesar.  Br.  sels.  fr.—AE  {fr.  III.,  1;  IV.,  3.) 
— BNL(/r.  IL,   1;    IL,  2.)— SAE  {fr.  IT,  1; 
TIL,  1.) 
Julius  Caesar,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  III.     {Sel.)—1R 
(Brutus  to  Cassius — br.  sel.) — SJE 
(Julius  Csesar — br.  sels.)— Bi^L — SE 
(Quarrel  between  Brutus  and  Cassius.) — SO 
(Quarrel  of  Brutus  and  Cassiusf,  The].) — CDD— 

CS  10— KNE  — LLC— PS— SR  12— SS 
("That   you   have   wronged   me   doth  appear  in 
this"— 6r.  set.)— SPE 
Julius  Caesar,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  III.     {Br.  set.)— BNL. 
(Opportunity — si.  abr.) — EPs 
("There   is   a  tide   in   the   affairs  ot   men.") — 
WCLI  1 


Julius  Csesar  {continued). 

Scene  from  Julius  Caesar.     (I.,  1.) — EA 
(Julius  Caesar,  Act  I.,  Sc.  1 — sel.) — PPS 

(Marullus  to    the  Roman   Populace.) — OM — 

PS— SS 
Suspicion.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  2.)— KNE 
July.— J:  Clare.— FEP— HBP— POS  {abr.) 
July. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
July. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
July.— Susan  H.  Swett.— GN— POS— YBT 
Jumblies,  The.     {In  Nonsense  Songs.) — Edward  Lear. 

— NA— THP— VA 
"Jumped" — the  Story  of  Ben  Fargo's  Claim. — T.  P. 

Morgan. — CS  33 
(How  Ben  Fargo's  Claim  was  Jumped.) — BS  18 
Jumping  Frog,  The.     (C.)— S:  L.  Clemens. 

(Mark  Twain's  Account  of  "Jim  Smiley" — ahr.) — 

CSS 
(Celebrated  Jumping  Frog,  The — sel.) — BeR 
(Jim  Smiley's  Frog — sel.) — PS 
(That  Dog  of  Jim  Smiley 's-sei.)— BeR 
Jumping  the  Rope. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Junction,  The. — Constance  Fairbanks. — TCV 
June. — Anon. — PEO 

June.— W:  C.  Bryant.— AA— BNL— FP  (abr.)— GP—SN 
June. — Susan  Grant. — CG  3 
June. — Archibald  Lampman. — TCV 
June. — Jas.  R.   Lowell.       See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal, 

The. 
June. — Caroline  A.  Mason. — CPL 
June. — Mary  N.  Meigs. — HSS  1 
June. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
June. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Jime. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Shepheardes  Calendar, 

The. 
June  Fields.— G:  Cooper.— HSS  1 
June  in  January. — R:  K.  Munkittrick. — TAV 
June  21st.— G:  Birdseye.- AWH 
June  Weather. — Jas.    R.    Lowell.     See    Vision    of  Sir 

Launfal,  The. 
Jungfrau's  Cry,  The. — Stopford  A.  Brooke. — VA 
Junior  Partner  Wanted,  A. — M.  E.  Sanford. — NFS— 

YP 
Junior's  Foxy  Friends,  The. — Raymond  W.  Walker. — 

CG3 
Junipero  Serra. — R:  E.  White. — CS  27 
Jupiter  Amans.     {London  Leader.) — HPE 
Jupiter  and    Ten.— Jas.     T.     Fields.— BS  14 — FEP— 

MMR 
Jupiter  and  the  Bee. — .^Esop. — OS  1 
Juryman's  Story,  A. — Emilia  A.  Blake. — CS  32 
Just  about  these  Days. — A.  T.  Worden. — CS  37 
Just  as  I  Am.— Charlotte  Elliott. — FEP — VA 
Just  as  she  Told  it. — Julia  Witheridge. — WR  24 
Just  Be  Glad.— Jas.  W.  Rilev.— CS  37 

(Kissing  the  Rod— O— HDL 
Just  Commonplace. — Pauline  Phelps. — WR  19 
Just   for   To-day.— S:     Wilberforce.— HDL— VA     {si. 

diff.  and  si.  abr.) 
Just  from  the  City. — H.  E.  McBride. — St.D 
Just  Graduated. — Ruth  Max. — FS 
Just  Like  a  Man. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — CS  36 
(His  Mother's  Cooking.)— BR— CS  28 

Just  Like  God. Viroe.— YBT 

Just  Like  Them.— Pauline  Phelps.— WR  20 

"Just  Me." — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 

Just  One  Day,  Sel.  fr.  ("Jefful,  The.")— J:  Habberton. 

— BS16 
.lust  One  Signal.     {Chicago  Record.) — PAPm 
Just  Over  the  Way.— Anon.— CS  21 
Just  Retribution,  The.     {Dial.  fr.  The  Peasant  Boy.) — 

W:  (?)  Dimond.— CS  23— PS 
(Peasant  Boy's  Vindication,  The — si.  abr.) — NDP 
Just  'Sposin'. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Just  Tribute,  A.— Henrietta  R.  Elliot.— SR  6 
Just  Twenty-one.— Mrs.  R.  K.  Todd.— SR  5 
Just  what  I  Wanted.     {The  Independent.) — CS  34 
Justice. — T:  Carlyle.     See  Past  and  Present. 
Justice.     {Dial.) — Ella  H.  Clement. — CDs 
Justice. — C:  F.  Richardson. — TAS 
Justice. — Jessie  M.  Wood. — TL 
Justice  and  Mercy. — C;  D.  Gardette. — MD 
Justice  for  Dreyfus. — Emile  Zola. — MRS 
Justice  in  a  Quandary. — Anon. — GH 
Justice  in  Leadville,  1878. — Helen  H.  Rich. — CS  23 
Justice,  not  Charity.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— CS  35 
Justice  to  Scotland.     {Punch.) — HPE 
Justice  to  the  Whole  Country. — Dan'l  Webster.     See 

Compromise  Measures,  The. 
Juvenile  Inquisitor,  A. — Zenas  Dane. — DCR 
Juxtaposition. — Arthur   H.   Clough.     See  Amours   de 

Voyage. 


170 


TITLE  INDEX 


Eilmeny 


K 


Kaiser,  The.— W.  Howitt,.— PPSr 

Kaiserblumen,  The. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 

Kaleder  of    Sheperdes,    1528,    Br.  sel.  fr.  (Books.) — 

Anon.— BNL 
Kalendar  Kermesse,  The.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
KalevMla,  The,  Sels.  fr. 

Birth  of  the  Harp,  The.     (Runes  XL.,  XLI. — abr. — 

J:  M.  Crawford's  <r.)—NE 
Ilmarinen's  Wedding  Feast.     (XXI.,  abr. — Craw- 
ford's tr. )—NE 
Kullervo  and  the  Wheat  Cake.    (Sel.  fr.  XXXIII.— 

Crawford's  tr.)— OS  2 
Legend  of  Aino,  The.    (Sets.  fr.  U.  and  IV.— J:  A. 

Porter's  tr. )—WR  11 
Wainamoinen's  Sowing.     (Sal.  fr.  11. — Porter's  <r.) 

— MMR 
Wooing  of  the  Maid  of  Beauty.     {Sela.  fr.  VIII., 

XVIII.,  XIX.,  XX.,  XXI.— Crawford's  tr.)— 

WRll 
Kalevala,  The,  Story  of.— Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
Kane.— Fitz-James  O'Brien.— BNL— CS  1— FEP 
Kangaroo.     (Fr.      Ascutney      Charades.) — Julia      A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Kansas.     (Sel.fr.  Crime  against  Kansas. ) — C:  Sumner. 

-08  3 
Karamanian  Exile,    The. — Jas.    C.    Mangan. — FEP — 

TIP 
Karl  the  Fiddler.— Rossiter  W.  Raymond.— CS  33 
Karl  the  Martyr.     (Abr.)— Anon.— CS  16— FR 
Karma. — W:  Canton.^ — VA 

Karol's  Kiss. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Sad  Shepherd,  The. 
Kate.— Anon.— CS  25— NPS— YP 

(Lines  to  Kate.)— PP— YFR 
Kate.     (United  Irishman,  The.)—BS  21 
Kate  Ketchem.     (Parody   on  Maud   MuUer.) — Phoebe 

Gary  (?).- CS  7— PS— SA 

Kate  Maloney. Dagonet.— CS  18— NPS— YP 

Kate  Shelly.— E'Tgene  J.  Hall.— CS  21— FMR  (abr.)— 

FTR— PR 
(For  another  vers,  of  the  story  see  Brave  Kate  Shelley 

fej/Mrs.  M.  L.  Payne.) 
Kate  Temple's  Song. — Mortimer  Collins. — VA 
Kate's  French  Lesson.     (Dial.) — Anon. — LPS — PP 
Katey's  Letter. — Helen  S.  Sheridan,  Lady    DufiFerin. 

— CH 
(Katy's  Letter — w.  wtwtc.)- NPS— YP 
Kathaleen  Ny-Houlahan. — Jas.  C.  Mangan. — TIP 
Katharine  Janfarie.     (Abr.  and  si.  diff.  fr.  vers,  in  Bor- 
der Minstrelsy.)— Anon.— BB— FEP 
Katharine's  Appeal  to  King  Henry. — W :  Shakespeare. 

See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Kathie  Morris.— Anon.— CS  23— DS 
Kathleen  Ban  Adair. — Fs.  Davis. — CS  10 
Kathleen  Mavourneen. — Louise  (Macartney)  [or  Anne 

(Barry)]     Crawford.— FEP— VA 
Kathleen  O'More.-^G:  N.  Reynolds.— TIP 
Kathrina,  Sels.  fr. — Josiah  G.  Holland. 

"Are  there  not  lofty  moments  when  the  soul."  (Br. 

sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.— Love.)— GO 
Kathrina,  Sel.   fr.     (Br.  sel.  fr.   Pt.  II. — Love.)— 

BIL 
Katie.— H:  Timrod.— ASL 
Katie  an'  me. — Edmund  V.  Cooke. — WR  22 
Katie  Lee  and  Willie  Gray. — Josie  R.  Hunt  [or  J.  H. 

Pixley].—  BS  1  —  CS  8  —  CSS  —  FTR  — 

MYF— NPS— PPSr— SA—YP 
Katie's  Answer. — Anon.— CS  20 — HER — PPSr 
Katie's  Part.- Susan  T.  Perry.— YBT 
Katie's  Questions. — Anon. — CS  36 
Katrina.- Anon.— PP— YPS 
Katrina  Likes  mePoody  Veil. — "Oofty  Gooft."— BDD 

— DFY— HR 
Katrina  Sees  a  Game  of  Foot-ball. — Anon. — CRR 
Katrina's    Visit     to     New     York.  —  Anon. — BDD — 

CS23 
(Abr.)— CDV— SDR 
(Simon's  Wife's  Mother  Lay  Sick  of  a  Fever — abr.) 

—CD 
Katy  Didn't.— Anon.— WR  17 
Katydid.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— BNL  (sel.)— BS  1 
(Sel.)— CSS— TFS 
(To  an  Insect — C.) — SN 
(To  the  Katydid.)— WCLI  2 
Katydid. — Marg.  E.  gangster. — CPL 
Katydids,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Katy's    Letter. — Helen    S.   Sheridan,  Lady    Dufferin. 

See  Katey's  Letter. 
Kavanagh,  Sel.   fr.  (Seasons  in  Sweden,  The — sel.  fr. 

introd.  to  Frithiof's  Saga,  tn  Driftwood.) — H: 

W.  Longfellow.— SE 


Kearny  [wr.   Kearnev]  at  Seven  Pines. — Edmund  C. 

Stedman.— AA— AWB— BAB— MYF— PAP— 

PAPm 
Kearsarge,  The. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — AA — EDY 
Kearsarge  and  Alabama. — Anon. — AWB 
Keats. — Craven  L.  Betts. — EDY 
Keats. — Erasmus  H.  Brodie. — EDY 
Keats. — Stuart  Livingston. — TCV 
Keats.— W:  W.  Lord.     See  Ode  to  England,  An. 
Keats. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 
' ' Keat s  Took  Snuff . "     (The  Globe. )— PPh 
Keenan's  Charge.— G:  P.  Lathrop.— AA— BAB— CS  21 

— PAPm— SR  1 
(Abr. )— A  WB— EDY— PAP— SO— TMD 
"Keep  a    Stiff    Upper    Lip!"— Phoebe    Cary.— BLF— 

KNE 
Keep  it  before  the  People! — A.  J.  H.  Duganne. — PPSr 
Keep  out  of  Debt. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Keep  the  Holidays.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Keep  the  Mill  a-Going.— T:  D.  English.— SR  1 
Keep  the  Record  Clean !— Harriet  W.  Requa.— WR  18 
Keep  those  Banners. — T:  O.  Summers. — SR  8 
Keep  to  the  Line. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  35 
Keep  Trying.- Anon.— HSS  2 

Keep  up  with  the  Times. — Arthur  J.  Burdick. — CS  36 
Keep  Working. — Josephine    Pollard.     See    Over    and 

Over  Again. 
Keeper,  The. — T:  Hughes.     See  Tom  Brown's  School 

Days. 
Keepers  of    the    I^ight,    The. — Letitia   V.  Douglas. — 

CS31 
Keepers  of  the  Pass,  The.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.- VA 
Keeping  a    Heart. — Arthur    O'Shaughnessy. — FTA— 

PGT2 
Keeping  his  Word.— Anon.— CS  4— FR— FTR 
Keeping  House.     (Dial.) — Anon. — YFD 
Keeping  House.     (Dial.) — Sophie  May. — NDP 
Keeping  in  Repair.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MPD 
Keeping  Store. — Anon. — HVD 
Keeping  Store.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Keeping  the  Birthday. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Keepsake  Mill. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Keepsakes. — Anon. — WR  22 

Kehama. — Rob't  Southey.     See  Curse  of  Kehama,  The. 
Keith  of  Ravelst  on.— Sidney  Dobell.— FEP— PEB  3 
(Ballad  of  Keith  of  Ravelston.  The. )— AVP— OB— 

PGT2 
Keller's  American  Hymn. — Matthias  Keller. — BIjP 
Kelpius's  Hymn. — Arthur  Peterson. — AA 
Kemp  Owjme. — Anon.     See  following. 
Kempion.    (In  Border  Minstrelsy.)— Anon. — BB 

(Kemp  Owyne — diff.  vers.) — PEB  2 
Kenilwor+h,  Sels.  fr. — Walter  Scott. 

Amy  Robsart  and  R:  Vamey.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXIT.) 

— CR 
Interview  between  Amv  and  Lord  Leicester  at  Ken- 

ilworth.     (.Se/.  /r.  Ch.  XXXV.)— WR  1 
(Countess  Amy  and  her  Husband — si.  nbr.) — CR 
Raleigh.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XV.)— WCLG  1 
Kenmure's  On  and  Awa. — Rob't  Bums. — HBP 
Keno!— M.  J.  Neville.— DRR 
Kensal  Green.— A.  W.  Drake.— TAV 
Kentucky  Babe. — R  :  H.  Buck. — A.\ 
Kentucky  Belle. — Constance      F.      Woolson. — BS  4 — 

CS  12— MR— SA— SE— SPE 
Kentucky  Philosophy. — Harrison  Robertson. —  BS  2 — 

CS  21— PS— SR  3— THP 
Kept  In.— Ethel  L.  Beers.- OS  1 
Ker  Chew  Duet,  A.— Anon.-  -CS  13 
Kerrected.— Florence  E.  Pratt  [or  Pyatt].— SR  7 
(Courting  in  Kentucky.)— A WH—BS  19— THP 
(School-ma'am's  Courting,  The.)— CRR— DR 
Keynote  of  Abolition,  The.     (Fr.  the  Liberator,  1832.) 

— W:  L.  Garrison.— WR  10 
Keystone.     (Acting   char.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 

YFE 
Khamsin. — Clinton  Scollard. — A  A 
Kickshaw.     (Fr.      Ascutney      Charades.) — Julia      A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Kid  Sixey's  Christmas.— W:  E.  Penney.— BS  19 
Kidnapping  of  Sims,  The. — J:  Pierpont. — EDY 
Kilbrannon.- R.  D.  Joyce.— PEB  4 
"Killed !"— G:  Weatherly.— NPS— YP 
Killed  at  the  Ford.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— HSS  1— MR 
Killed  with  Kindness. — Sophie  May. — SD 
Killiecrankie.     (Fr.  Lays  of  the  Scottish  Cavaliers.) — 

W:  E.  Aytoun.— CEL  (si.  afer.  )—EHT  (ahr.) 
(Burial  March  of  Dundee,  The.)— CR  (si.  abr.)— 

FEP 
(Sei.)— EDY— OM 
Killing  of  Macbeth. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Kilmarnock's  Lament. — Anon. — EDY 
Kilmeny. — Jas.   Hogg.     See  Queen's  Wake,  The. 


171 


Kilvany 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Kilvany.— J:  Hav.— OS  3 

(Law  of  Death,  The — C.)— BS  10  {at.  <o  E.Arnold.) 
Kind  Old  Oak,  The.— Anon.— AD 
Kind  Words. — Anon. — AD  (sel.) 

(Memory  Gems;  "Kind  hearts,"  etc.) — WCLI  1 
(Short  Selections:  ^"Kind  hearts,"  etc.) — SM 
(Short.  Speeches:     Kindness — sel.) — PS 
Kind  Words.— Anon.— CPL 
Kind  Words.     (Prose.)— Anon.— KNE 
"Kind  words  are  the  music  of  the  world."     (Sr.  sel.  Jr. 

Spiritual    Conferences,   Ch.    III.)— Frd'k    W. 

Faber.— FHS 
Kindergarten    Christmas,      A. — Hayden      Carruth. — 

WR26 
Kindly  Words.— Anon.— TFS  (sel.) 

(Speak  Gently.)— FP 
Kindness.— C:  R.  Barrett. — SR  4 
Kindness  and  Cruelty.     (Dial.) — Anon. — PS 
Kindness  to  Animals. — Anon. — BVC 
Kindness  to  Animals. — J.  Ashby  Sterry. — NA 

("Speak  gently  to  the  herring  and  kindly  to  the 

calf"— a6r.)— BVC 
Kindred  Quacks.     (PMnc^i.)- HPE— SCS 
Kinds  of    Trees    to    Plant. — Edmund    Spenser. — See 

Faerie  Queene,  The. 
King,  A. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Pippa  Passes. 
King  Ailill's  Death.— Whitley  Stokes.— TIP 
King    Alcohol's     Soliloquy. — Harriet     A.     Sawyer. — 

WR18 
King  and  People.     (Sel.  fr.  By  Order  of  the  King,  Bk. 

I.,  Pt.  I.,  Ch.  V.)— Victor  Hugo.— OS  2 
King  and  Slave.— Adelaide  A.   Procter.— FTA—TFY 
King  and  the  Child,  The.— Eugene  J.  HaU.— FAS— 

PP— YFR 
King  and  the  Coimtryman,  The. — Anon. — PEB  2 
King  and  the  Locusts,  The.— Anon.— CS  8— MYF 
King  and  the  Nightingales,  The. — C:  Mackay. — WR  1 
King  and  the  Poet,  The. — Andreas  Kerner. — OS  2 
King  and  the  Pope,  The.— C:  H:  Webb.— TAV 
King  and  the  Spelling  Book,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — 

LL 
King  Arthur. — Anon. — NA 

(History.)— BVC 
King  Arthur  and  Queen  Guinevere. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
King  Arthur;  or,  The  British  Worthy,  Sel.  fr.  (Harvest 

Home — song  fr.  Act  Y.,  Sc.   1.) — J:Dryden. — 

ELP 
King  Arthur's  Death.     (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 

—HBP 
King  Arthur's  Waes-hael. — Rob't  S.  Hawker. — OB 
King  Bell.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL 
King  Canute.— W:  M.   Thackeray.— CS  17— EHT  (si. 

abr.) 
(Abr.)—HSS  2— SO 
King  Canute  and  his  Nobles. — J:  Wolcott. — MMR 
King  Charles  II.     (Frags,  fr.  various  anthors.) — BNL 
King  Christian  the  Dane. — Anon. — MYF 
King  Christmas. — A.  Graham. — SR  3 
King  Coal  to  Uncle  Sam.— E.  F.  Burns.— PAPm 
King  Cophetua    and    the   Beggar-maid.     (In  Percy's 

Reliques.) — Anon. — OEB 
King  Cotton. — Rob't  Mackenzie. — WR  10 
King  Death. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — VS 
King  Dollar.     (.46r.)— T:  D.  English.— BS  19 
King  Edward  the  Second. — Christopher  Marlowe.     See 

Edward  the  Second. 
King  Edward  the  Third.     (Act  III.,Sc.  ."j.)— Anon.— 

EHT 
King  Edward   the  Fourth,  Sel.   fr.     (Princes    in    the 

Tower,  The.)— T:  Heywood.- EHT 
King  Edwin's  Feast.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— OS  2 
King  Harold's  Speech  to  his  Army  before  t  he  Battle  of 

Hastings.     (Sel.  fr.  Harold,  Bk.  XIT.,  Ch.  VII.) 

— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— BS  14— OS  2 
King     Henry.      (In     Border    Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — 

PEB  2 
King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I.,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Falstaff  and  Prince  Hal.     (Sel.  fr.  Act  II..  So.  4.) 

— WR  16  m 

(Falstaff 's  Boasting.  )—CS  11 
(Falstaff' s  Instinct — br.  seD—SK  "^ 

(Prince    Henry    and    Falstaff.) — BS    5 — CDD — 
MHR— SE  (ahr.) 
Falstaff's  Honor.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  V.,  1.)— SE 
Hotspur's  Quarrel  with  Henry  IV.     (Sel.  fr.  IV., 

3.)— EPs 
Hotspur's  Soliloquy  on  the  Contents  of  a  Letter. 

(Sel.  fr.  II.,  :<.)- PS 
King  Henry  the  Fourth.     (I.,  1;  sel.  fr.  II.,  4.) — 

EHT 
King  Henry  the  Fourth.        (Sel.  fr.  IV.,  1.)— EHT 
(King  Henry  IV.,  Act  IV..  Sc.  1—br.  «ei.)— BNL 


King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I.,  (continued). 

King  Henry  the  Fourth.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  4.)— EHT 
(Battle  of  Shrewsbury— «eZ.)— ED Y 
(King  Henry  IV.,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  1— 6r.  «eZ.)— BNL 
Scene  from ' '  Henry  the  Fourth."     ( I. ,  3 — abr. ) — CR 
(Fop— sei.)- EPs 

(Hotspur  and  the  Fop.) — LLC 
(Hotspur's  Defence.) — CS  5 — FR 
(Hotspur's  Description  of  a  Fop — si.  abr.) — 
BNL 
(Hotspur — sel.  w.  add.) — EPs 

("But,  sirrah,  henceforth,"  etc. — br.  sel.) — AE 
(Hotspur  to  Worcester — abr.) — PPS 
(King  Henry  IV.— 6r.  seZ.)- BNL 
Scene  from  "Henry  IV."     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  1.)— MPD 
(King  Henry — br.  sels.) — BNL 
(Rhymers— 6r.  sel.)— CS  18 
King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II.,  Sels.  fr.—W:  Shakespeare. 
Henry  the  Fourth's  Soliloquy  on  Sleep.     (Sel.  fr. 
Act  III.,  Sc.  1.)— WRD 
(Sleep.)— AE  (si.  obr.)- BNL— EPs— KNE 
King  Henry  IV.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  1.)— BNL 
King  Henry  the  Fourth.     (Sel.  fr.  IV.,  5.)— EHT 
Oracle:   "There   is  a  history,  etc."     (Br.   sel.   fr. 

IIL,  1.)— EPs 
Sickness.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  IV.,  4  and  5.) — AE 
King  Henry  V.,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

Agincourt.  (Prol.,  si.  abr.;  prol.,  Act  II.,  ahr.; 
prol..  Act  III.;  prol..  Act  IV.,  si.  abr.;  prol.. 
Act  v.,  abr.;  also  Drayton's  The  Battle  of 
Agincourt.) — LH  ' 

(Prologues  from  King  Henry  V. —  prol.  to  play; 
to  Act  II.,  cond.;  to  Act  III.)— MRS 
Black  Prince,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  4.)— 

EPs 
Henry  V.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  1.)— EPs 
Henry  V.  at  Harfleur.     (III.,  1.)— BS  7  (si.  cond.) 
— KNE 
(Henry  V.,  Sel.  fr.—cond.)—SA'E 
(Henry  V.  at  the  Siege  of  Harfleur. )— OS  3 
(Henry  V.  to  his  Soldiers  at  the  Siege  of  Har- 
fleur— al.  cond.) — PS 
(Henry  V.  to  his  Troops. )-7SO 
(Henry's  Speech  before  Agincourt  [Harfleur].) — 

PPS 
(King  Henry  V.,  seZ.  >.)— EHT 
(King  Henry  V.,  Act  III.,  Sc.  1.)— MRS 
(King  Henry  V.  at  Harfleur.)- EDY 
(King  Henry's  Address  to  his  Soldiers.) — WCLG  2 
(King   to    his    Soldiers    before    Harfleur,   The.) 

—BNL 
(Speech  of  Hfenry  V. — cond.) — IR 
Henry  the  Fifth's  Wooing.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  2.)— BS  9 
— CDD— CR  (si.  diff. )—CS  24— MHR— SR  12 
(Wooing  of  the  French  Princess,  The.)— VSG 
King  Henry  V.,  Sels.  fr.     (Act  II.,  Scs.  2  and  3, 

conrf.)— MRS 
King  Henry  V.,  Act  I.,  Sc.  II.     (Conrf.)— MRS 
(CTommon wealth  of  the  Bees,  The — sel.) — GN 

(Bees,  The— abr.)— POS     ' 
(Henry  V.'s  Audience  of  French  Ambassadors — 
sel.)— EFs 
King  Henry  the  Fifth,  Act  IV.,  Sc.   1.     (Sels.)— 

AE  (6r.)— BNL  (6r.)— EHT 
Reduction  of  Harfleur,  The.     (III.,  3.)— EDY 
Scene  from  "Henry  V."     (Sel.  fr.  IV.,  3.)— AE 
(Battle  of  St.  Crispian's  Day — si.  abr.) — EPs 
(Crispian's  Day.)— TMD 
(Henry  V.  to  his  Soldiers.)— PS— SS 
(Henry  V.  Encouraging  his  Soldiers — abr.) — OS  2 
Soliloquy  on  Character.     (5e/.  fr.  III.,  2.) — FAS 
King  Henry   V.    and   the    Hermit    of   Dreux. — Rob't 

Southey.— EHT 
King  Henry  V.  at  Harfl3ur. — W:  Shakespeare.      See 

King  Henry  V. 
King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  I.,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
King  Henry  the  Sixth.     (Act  I.,  Sc.   1 — cond.) — 

EHT 
King  Henry  VI.,  Act  II..  Sc.  4.     (Br.  seZ.)- BNL 
Relief  of  Orleans.     (I.,  6.)— EDY 
King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II.,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Battle  of  St.  Albans.     (Act  V.,  Sc.  3.)— EDY 
Death  of  Cardinal  Beaufort.     (III.,  3.)— EDY 
Death  of  Jack  Cade.     (IV.,  10— sZ.  abr.)- EDY 
Hate  and  Revenge.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III..  2.)— KNE 

(Henry  VI.,  Sel.  fr.—br.  sel.)— SAE 
King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  2.)— BNL 
King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II.     (II.,  2— si.  abr.;  IV.,  2— 
si.  a6r.)— EHT 
King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III.,  Sels.  fr.—W:  Shakespeare. 
Battle  of  Barnet.     (Act  V.,  Sc.  3.)— EDY 
Battle  of  Tewksbury.     (V.,  4— a6r.)— EDY 
Battle  of  Towton.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  6.)— EDY 


172 


TITLE  INDEX 


King 


King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III.,  (continued). 

King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III.     {Sel.  fr.  II.,  5.)— EIIT 
(King  Henry's  Ambition — si.  abr.) — EP 
(Shepherd's  Life,  A—br.  sei.)— BNL 
King  Henry  VIII.,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Anne  BuUen.     (Act  II.,  So.  3— abr.)— MRS 
Buckingham's  Address  on  his  Way  to  Execution. 

(Sel.  fr.  II.,  1.)— SAE 
Cardinal  Wolsey.     (Sel.  fr.  IV.,  2.)— TMD 

(King  Henry  VIII.— 6r.  scZ. )—BNL 
King  Henry  the  Eighth.     (II.,  4— obr.)— EHT 
(Katharine's  Appeal  to  King  Henry — abr.) — SAE 
(Queen  Catherine  to  the  King  and  Court  of  Car- 
dinals— abr. — w.  add.) — FMR 
(Queen  Katharine's  Appeal  to  King  Henry  VIII. 

for  Mercy — abr.) — SO 
(Queen  Katherine — al.  abr.) — MRS 
(Scene  from   "King  Henry  VIII." — al.   abr.) — 

WR  14 
(Trial  of  Queen  Katherine.)— ED Y  (abr.)— SR  12 
(al.  abr.) 
King  Henry  the  Eighth.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  2.)— EHT 
(Be  Just  and  Fear  Not— seZ.) — BLP 
(Cardinal  Wolsey.)— SE  (sel.)— SS  (abr.) 
(Cardinal  Wolsey  on  being  Cast  off  by  Henry 

VIII.— o5r.)— CS  1— OS  2— SM— SO 
(Cardinal  Wolsey's  Soliloquy— 8eZ.)—WCLG  2 
(Fall  of  Wolsey.)— EDY  (aeZ.)— LLC  (abr.) 
("Love  thyself  last;  cherish  thou,"  etc. — br.  sel.) 

— GG 
("This  is  the  state  of  man,"  etc. — ael.) — HSS  3 
(Wolsey's  Advice  to  Cromwell — sel.) — BNL 
(Wolsey's  Fall— seZ. )— BNL— BS  2— KNE 
(Wolsey's  Farewell — abr.) — FR 
(Wolsey's  Farewell  [Address]  to  Cromwell — sel.) 

— PS— WCLG  2 
(Wolsey's  Soliloquy— seZ. )— PS— SAE  (abr.) 
King  Henry  VIII.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  III.,  2,  and  V.,  2.) 

—BNL 
Oracle:    "We  must  not  stint,"  etc.     (Br.   sel.   fr. 

I.,  1.)— EPS 
Scene  from  "King  Henry  Vin."    (III.,  1.)— WR  14 
(Influence     of     Music — song — sometimes     at.     to 
J:  Fletcher.)— FEP— HBP 
(Orpheus.)— OB 

(Orpheus  with  his  Lute.)— BPB— EPs— GN 
(Queen  Catherine— sZ.  o6r.)— NDP— SAE  (br.  sel.) 
King  Henry  the   Eighth.     (Recollections  of  the   Por- 
trait of  King  Henry  VIII.,  Trinity  I,o(lge,  Cam- 
bridge— C. — Poems  of  the  Imagination,  Misc. 
Sonnets,  Pt.  III.,  Son.  IV.)— W:  Wordsworth. 
— EHT 
King  Henry's  Address  to   his   Soldiers. — W:   Shakes- 
peare.    See  Ejng  Henry  V. 
King  Henry's  Ambition. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

.      Henry  VI.,  Pt.IIL 
King  is  Cold,  The.— Rob't  Browning.— BNL 
King  is  Dead,  Long  Live  the  King,  The. — Louise  C. 

Moulton.— WR  8 
King  is  Dying,  The.— Jas.  B.  Kenyon.— FEP 
King  John,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

Constance's  Denunciation  of  King  Philip  of  France 

and  Lymoges  of  Austria.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  1.) — 

SAE 

("Warl  war!  no  peace!  peace  is  to  me  a  war" — 

seZ.  )—AE 

Death  of  Prince  Arthur.  (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  3.) 

—EDY 
Exhortation  to  Courage.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  V.,  1.) — FP 
King   John,  Sels.   fr.     (Sel,  fr.   II.,   1;  br.  sel.   fr. 

III.,  1.)— AE 
King  John,  Sel.  fr.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  4.)— SAE 
("Grief  fills  tne  room  up  of  my  absent  child" — 
abr.)- HDL 

(King  John,  Act  III.,  Sc.  4,  Sel.  fr.)— BNL 
King  John.     Selected  Scenes.     (III.,  3.)— EHT 
(Dialogue  between  King  John  and  Hubert — abr.) 

— AE 
(Tragedy  of  King  John,  The,  Sel.  fr.— abr.)— BS  6 
King  John.     Selected  Scenes.     (IV.,  1.)— EHT 
(Arthur  in  "King  John" — br.  sel.) — SE 
(Tragedy  of  King  John,  The,  Sel.  fr.)—B8  6 
King  John.     Selected  Scenes.     (V.,  7 — si.  abr.) — 
EHT 
(King  John,  Sel.  fr. — br.  seZ.)— AE 
Speech  of  the  Dauphin.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  2.)— EPs 
"Thou  mayst,  thou  shalt;  I  will  not  go  with  thee." 

(5r.  seZ./r.  III.,  l.)—AE 
Threatening.     (Br.  sel.  fr.lY.,  3.)— KNE 
Tragedy  of  King  John,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Sel.  fr.  IV., 
2.)— BS6 
(King  John,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  ?— 3  br.  sels.)— BNL 
King  John  and  Matilda,  Sel.[fr.  (Requiem,  A.) — Rob't 
Davenport. — ELP 


King  John    and    the    Abbot     [of    Canterbury].     (In 
Percy's  Reliques.)— Anon.— BB— BNL— BVC 
— CEL— CGd— EPs— HBP— HPE— PEB  2— 
PHS— WR  1 
(Spelling  varies  si.) 
King  John.  Selected  Scenes. —  W:  Shakespeare.     See 

King  John. 
King  Lear,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

Bluntness.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  2.)— KNE 
Dover  Chff[s].   (Br.  set.  fr.  IV.,6.)— BNL— EPs— SN 
King  Lear.     ( I . ,  1  .—abr. )— WR  9 
King  Lear.     (Br.  Sels.  fr.  II.,  4,  and  III.,  2.)— EPs 
King  Lear.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  2.)— SAE 
King  Lear.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  4.)— BNL 
King  Leir  [or  Lear]  and  his  Three  Daughters.  (In  Percy's 
Reliques.)— Anon.— FMR  (abr.— si.  diff.)— 0KB 
(SI.  abr.)— BY C— CGd 
King  Midas.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
King  Neptune.     (Tob.)- Tony  Denier.— TDT 
King  of  Boyville,  The.     (Ad.  fr.  The  Court  of  Boyville, 

Ch.  III.)— W:  A.  White.— NP 
King  of  Brentford's  Testament,  The.— W:  M.  Thack- 

eVay  — FEP— HPE 

King  of  Day,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

King  of  Denmark's  Ride,  The. — Carohne  E.  S.  Norton 

—Lady  Stirling-Maxwell— BFV— BNL— CS  15 

FEP- GN— HBP— HSS  3— LC— MYF— VA 

King  of  France  and  the  Fair  Lady,  A. — J:  Wolcott. — 

HPE 
King  of  Glory,  The.     Bible.— See  Psalms. 
King  of  Kings,  The.     (Fr.  The  Contention  of  Ajax  and 
Ulysses.) — Jas.  Shirley. — LH 
(Death  the  Leveller.)— BNL— BPB— OB— PGT  1 

— YBF 
(Death's  Final  Conquest.)— EPs  (br.  seZ.)— FEP— 

HBP— OS  2— SS 
(Death's  Triumph.)— CEL 
(Dirge,  A.)— ELP— WEP  2 
King  of  Spain  and  the  Horse,  The.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 
King  of  the  Crocodiles,  The.— Rob't  Southey.— CGd 
King  of  the  Golden  River,  The.     (Ch.  I.)— J:  Ruskin. 

— MBL 
King  of  the  Night,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.- POS 

(Owl,  The— O— BNL— CGd— LC— SN 
King  of  Thule,  The. — Johann   W.   von   Goethe.     See 

Faust. 
King  of  Yvetot,  The. — Pierre  J.  de  B6ranger. — AE 
KiijgO'Toole  and  Saint  Kevin.     (Abr.) — S:  Lover.- — DI 
King  Richard  in  Sherwood  Forest. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  Foresters,  The. 
King  Richard  II.,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

Bolingbroke's  Entrance  into  London.     (Sel.  fr.  Act 

v.,  Sc.  2.)— EPs 
King  Richard  the  Second.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  ].)— EHT 
(King  Richard  II.,  Act  II.,  Sc.  1—2  br.  sels.)— 
BNL 
King  Richard  II.      (Br.  seU.  fr.  I.,  2,  and  II.,  2.)— 

—BNL 
King  Richard  the  Second.     (Sel.  fr.  III..  3.)— EHT 
(King  Richard  II.,  Act  III.,  Sc.  2—br.  sel.)— 
BNL 
King  Richard  the  Second.     (Sels.  fr.  IV.,  1,  and  V., 
6.)— EHT 
King  Richard  III.,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Caution.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  3.)— KNE 
Conscience.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  2.)— KNE 
Earl  of  Richmond  to  his  Army,  The.     (<SeZ.  fr.  V., 
3.)— PS 
(Richmond  to  his  Army.) — SS 
Hatred.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  3.)— KNE 
King  Richard  III.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  3.)— AE 
King  Richard  III.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  I.,  3  and  V.,  3.)— 

BNL 
King  Richard  the  Third.     (Sels.  fr.  IV.,  4,  and  V., 

3;  aZso  v.,  4.)— EHT 
King  Ricard's  Soliloquy.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  1.)— EPs 
(Duke  of  Gloster,  The—br.  seZ.)— BNL 
(King  Richard  III.— fer.  seZ. )— BNL 
(Peace — br.  sel.) — KNE 
Little  Princes,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  III..  1.)— EHT 
Murder  of  the  Princes  in  the  Tower.     (Sel.  fr.  IV., 

3.)— EDY 
Richmond  to  his  Troops.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  3.)— SE 

(Courage — abr.) — KNE 
Scene  from  "Richard  III."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  2.)— AE 

(Richard  III.- o6r.)— SAE 
Scene  from  "Richard  III."     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  4.)— AE 
(Clarence's  Dream — abr.) — AE  (br.  sel.) — BS  4 — 

CS  4— EPs— FR— HNS 
(Dream  of  Clarence,  The— sZ.  o6r. )— EHT— LLC 
(Richard  III.— seZ. )— SAE 
(Terror— br.  seZ.)— KNE 
Soliloquy  of  King  Richard  III.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  3.)— 
CS  6— KNE 


/ 


173 


King 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


King  Richard's      Soliloquy. — W:      Shakespeare.     iSee 

King  Richard  III. 
King  Robert  of  Sicily.     (Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn:  The 
Sicilian's  Tale.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BeR— 
CR— CS  15— HBP— MYF 
("Angel  with  great  joy  received  his  guest,  The — 
br.  sel.)~ AE    * 
King  Roughbeard  and  the  Princess. — Clara  Denton — 

LPD 
King  Sheddad's    Paradise.     (.Sel.) — Edwin    Arnold. — 

WRl 
King  Solomon  and  the  Bees.     (C) — J:  G.  Saxe. 

(Solomon  and  the  Bees.) — GN 
King  Stephen,  Sels.  jr. — J:  Keats.- EHT  (se/s.  /r.  Act 

I.,  Scs.  1  and  2.)— SO  (I.,  1.) 
King,  the  Knave,  and  the  Donkey,  The,  Sd.  fr. — Anon. 

—FAS 
King  to  his  Soldiers  before  Harfleur,  The. — W:   Shake- 
speare.    See  King  Henry  V. 
King  Volmer  and  Elsie.— J:  G.  Whittier.— CS  20 
King  William  Thanks  his  God.— Anon.- CS  4 
King  Winter. — Anon. — DJS 
Kingdom,  "The. — Lizzie  Doten. — MMR 
Kingdom  of  God,    The.  —  R:    C.    Trench.  —  FEP  — 
HDL  {abr.) 
(Our  Father's  Home.)— HBP 
Kingdom  of  Sham,  The.— I.  E.  Jones.— CS  34 
Kingfisher,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— POS 
Kingfisher,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Kingly  Presence,  The.     (SeZ.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— TAS 

(Das  Krist  Kindel— O— HDL 
Kings  and  Courtiers. — J:  Wolcott. — HPE 
Kings  and  Queens. — Marion  Douglas. — FAS 
King's  Bell,  The.— Anon.— WR  6 
King's  Daughter,  The. — Mary  L.   Henderson. — AWH 

BS19 
King's  Daughter,    The. — Algernon    C.     Swinburne. — 

PEB4 
King's  Daughter,  The. — Rebecca  P.  Utter. — CS  35 
King's  Degree,  The. — Dorothy  A.  Shoemaker. — BS  25 
King's  Diarj-,  The.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— OS  3 
King's  Diversion,    The      (Le  Roi  s' Amuse),     Sel.  fr. 
(Father's  Curse,   The— sd.    fr.    Act    I.,    Sc.    4.)— 
Victor  Hugo. — SO 
King's  Enemy,  The.     (.Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
King's  Fool,  The. — Stuart  Livingston. — TCV 
King's  Joy-bells,  The.— Kate  A.  Bradley.— WR  6 
King's  Kisses,  The. — Arthur  L.  Tubbs.— BS  25 
"King's  Missive,  1661,"  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BS  8 
Kings  of  Men.— J:  Reade.— TCV 
King's  Picture,    The. — Helen    B.    Bostwick. — CS  12 — 

CSS— HP— HSS  3— KNE 
King's  Progress,  The.     (/n  Christ  Church  Ms.) — Anon. 
— ELP 
(Preparations.)— OB— YBF 
King's  Quair,  The,  Sel.  fr. — James  the  First  of  Scotland. 

— WEPl 
Ejng's  Repentance,  A. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Ham- 
let. 
King's  Ride,  The.— Lucy  H.  Hooper.— CSS 
King's  Ring,  The.— Theodore  Tilton.— OS  2 

(All  Things  Shall  Pass  Awav.)— BS  20— TMR 
(Even  this  Shall  Pass  Away.) — DR — HBR 
King's  Ships,  The. — Carl  [or  Caroline]  Spencer. — HP — 

TAS 
King's  Son,  The.— T:  Boyd.— TIP 
King's  Temple,  The.— Anon.— CS  11 
King's  Tragedy,    The.     (Diff.    seZs.)— Dante    G.    Ros- 

setti.— EHT— PR— VSG 
King's  Visit,  The. — W:  Morris.     iSce  Earthly  Paradise, 

The. 
King's  Wooing,  The.— E:  Renaud.— WR  8 
Kinmont  Willie    [or  Willy],     (/n    Minstrelsy   of    the 
Scottish  Border. ) — Anon. — BB — BPB — EPs— 
LH— PEB  2— WEP  1 
Kinship.- G:  McKnight.— TAS 
Kinship  of  the  Celt,  The.— J.  I.  C.  Clarke.— EDY 
Kipling's  Religion.-^Anon. — CP 
Kiss,  A.     (Pro»e.)— Anon. — WR  12 
Kiss,  A. — Austin  Dobson.     See  Rose-leaves. 
Kiss,  A.— Alfred  Domett.— VS 
Kjss,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— BNL— YBP 
Kiss,  The. — Ben  Jonson.     See  (Dynthia's  Revels. 
Kiss,  A.— L.— CG  2 
Kiss,  The.— T:  Moore.— HPE 
Kiss  at  the  Door,  A. — Anon. — CS  7 
Kiss,  Dear     Maid,      The.     (On      Parting — C.) — Lord 

Byron.— BNL 
Kiss  Deferred,  The.— Anon.— BS  15— CS  27— SR  5 
Kiss  in  School,  The.— J.  W.  Palmer.— MHR 

(Smack    in    School,     The.)— AWH— BC— BNL— 
BS  1— CRR— CS  1— FEP— FTR— PTS— THP 


Kiss  in  the  Dark,  A.     (Farce.) — Anon. — DT 

Kiss  in  the  Dark,  A. — Milton  Thompson. — CS  28 

Kiss  in  the  Dark,  A.— J:  G.  Watts. — WR  13 

Kiss  in  the  Rain,  A.— S:  M.  Peck.— AWH— FT  A— HP 

— TAV— THP 
Kiss  in  the  Tunnel,  The.— Anon.— CS  33 
"Kiss  me,  Mammaf ;  I  Can't  Sleep]." — Anon. — CS  28 — 

PR— WR  15 
Kiss  me  Softly.    (To  my  Love— C.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— BIL 

— FTA— GP 
Kissed  his  Mother. — Eben   E.  Rexford. — BS  20— PFP 
Kisses.— W:  Strode.— BNL— FEP 
Kisses  All  Round. — Anon. — WR  20 
Kissing  Cup's  Race. — Campbell  Rae-Brown. — CS  32 

(Winning  Cup's  Race.)— WR  14 
Kissing  her  Hair. — Algernon   C:  Swinburne. — BNL — 

OH— YBF 
.  (Rondel.)— VS 
Kissing  Inducements. — Anon. — FLS 
Kissing  the  Rod.     (C.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— HDL 

(Just  be  Glad.)— CS  37 
Kissing  Time. — Eugene  Field. — lyS 
Kissing's  no  Sin. — Anon. — BNL 
Kit   Carson's    Ride.     (Longer    than    present    vers,    in 

Works.)- Joaquin     Miller.— BS  3— CS  8— HR 

— MMR— NPS— YP 
Kit ;  or.  Faithful  unto  Death. — Anon. — CD — SR  4 
Kitchen  Clock,  The.— J :  V.  Cheney.— BS  3— DLS  (abr. ) 

— DR— PPSr 
Kitchen  May-day  Song. — Anon. — EDY 
(Hitchen  May-day  Song,  The.) — CGd 
(May-day  Song.)— OS  2 
Kite  Party,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Kitten,  The. — Joanna  Baillie.— FEP 
Kitten  and  [ivr.  the]  Falling  Leaves,  The. — W:  Words- 

worth.- BPB— FEP 
(SeZ.)- CGd— LC— OS  1— PoR— PTS 
Kitten  and  the  Mouse,  The. — Eliz.  Prentiss. — PTS  (si. 

abr.) 
(Little  Kitty  [or  Kittie].)— LPS— OS  1  (si.  abr.)— 

PP— PS 
Kitten  Gossip.— T.  Westwood.— MYF 
Kitten    of    the    Regiment,    The. — Jas.    Buckham. — 

TMD 
Kitten  that  never  Grew  Old,  The. — Anon. — SR  13 
Kittens,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Kittens  and  Babies. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — BR  (si.  abr.) 

— CS  28— PR— YA 
(Which  One  was  Kept?)— DCP— SR  9 
Kittiwakes,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Kitty.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Kitty.— Anon.— TFS 

Kitty  —Marion  Douglas.— OS  1— WCL— YBT 
Kitiy. — C.  D.  Shanly.     See  Kitty  of  Coleraine. 
Kitty  and  I.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Kitty  Bell.- Alice  I;.  Richards.— SL 
Kitty  Clive.— C:  Churchill.— EDY 
Kitty  Clover.     (AU  si.  diff.) — Carrie  W.  Thompson.— 

WR2 
(Lulu— si.  abr.)— HP 
(Naughty  Kittv  Clover.) — WR  2 
Kitty  Didn't  Mean  to.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Kitty  in  the  Basket.— Eliza  L.  (?)  FoUen.— PC 
Kitty  Knew.— Anon.— DLF-'TT 
Kitty  Malone.— Kate  True. — DI 
Kitty  Neil.— J:  F.  Waller.— CS  22— TIP— VA 
(Dance  Light.)— BNL 
(Irish  Melody,  An.)— HBP 
Kitty  of  Coleraine. — C:   D.   Shanly.     [At.    also  to   E. 

Lysaght.]  — BNL— CR— FEP— HBR— THP— 

TIP 
(Broken  Pitcher,  The.)— CS  14 
(Kitty.)— MHR 
Kittybov's  Christmas. — Amy  E.  Blanchard. — CS  37 
Kitty's  Balh.— Anon.— HVb 
Kitty's  Birds.— Annie  Chase.— DLS— KC 
Kitty's  Christmas  Offering. — Anon. — HS 
Kjtty's  Laugh. — Arlo  Bates. — AA 
Kitty's  "No." — Arlo  Bates. — AA 
Kitty's  Pfaver. — Anon. — CS  25 
Kitty's  Wish.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Knapweed. — Arthur  C.  Benson. — V.\ 
Knee-deep  in  June.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— CR—SAE—SC— 

SR9 
Kneel  and  Pray. — Anon. — YBT 
Kneel  at  no  Human  Shrine. — A.  F.  Kent. — CS  1 
Kneeling  at  the  Threshold.— T:  Guthrie. — HDL 
Knickerbocker.     (For  the  Avery  "Knickerbocker" — 

C.)— Austin  Dobson.— PPb 
Knickerbocker  History  of  New  York,  Sels.  fr. — Wash- 
ington Irving. 
Di8CO^  ery  of  t  he  Hudson  River,  The.     (SeZ.  fr.  Bk. 

II.,  Ch.  I.)— WR  10 


174 


TITLE  INDEX 


Lady 


Knickerbocker  History  of  New  York  {continued). 

Dutch  Governor,  The.     (SeZ.  fr.  Bk.  III.,  Ch.  I.)— 
WCLG  1 
(Renowned   Wouter   Van   Twiller,   The — sel.^ — 

WR5 
(Wouter  Van  Twiller— «e?.)—SE 
Tea  Parties  in  Old  Times.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.,  Ch. 

III.)— WCLG  1 
Uses  of  History.  The.     (.Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VI.,  Ch.  IX.) 

— SR8 
William  the  Testy.     (Set.   fr.   Bk.  IV.,   Ch.  I.)— 
WCLG  1 
Knife  of  Boyhood,  The.— Louise  Unham.— NFS— YP 
Knife-grinder,  The.— G:  Cannmg.— EPs— MHR 

(Friend  of  Humanitv  and  the  Knife-grinder,  The.) 
— BNL  —  ESs  —  FEP  —  H  BP— HPE— TH  P 
Knight,    The. — Geoffrey     Chaucer.     See    Canterbury 

Tales i  The. 
Knight  and  the  Lady,  The.— R:  H.  Barham.— CS  5— 

PR— YA 
Knight  and  the  Lady,  The. — Robertson  Trowbridge. — 

WR3 
Knight  and  the  Page,  The.— Martha  C.  Howe.— BS  17 
Knight    of    Toggenburg,    The. — Friedrich    Schiller. — 

WR7 
Knightes  Tale,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  Canter- 
bury Tales,  The. 
Knighting  of  the  Sirloin  of  Beef  by  Charles  the  Second, 
The.— Anon.— OS  2 
(Knighting  the  Loin  of  Beef.)— MR 
Knighting  the  Loin  of  Beef. — Anon.     See  foregoing. 
Knightly  Welcome,  A.— S.  K.  Cox.— CS  27 
Knight's  False  Vow,  The.— Anon.— WR  24 
Knight's  Leap,  The.— C:  Kingsley.— HBP 
Knights  of  Labor.— T.  V.  P  wderly.— NC— PEO— PFP 
Knights;  or.  Both  Right  and  Both  Wrong,  The. — Anon. 

— BC 
Knight's  Toast,  The.— Anon.— CS  4  —  CSS  —  FR — 
HSS  2— LLC— PFP— PTS  (abr.) 
(My  Mother— a«.  to  Walter  Scott.)— NPS—YPS— 

YP 
(Toast,  The— a<.  toW:  Praed.)— FP 
Knight's  Tomb,  The.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— BNL— FEP 

— GN 
Knight's  Vow,  The.— J.  B.  Lane.— CS  22 
Knittin'  at  th'  Stockin'. — Americus  W.  Bellaw. — AWH 
Knitting.— Anon.— TT 
Knitting.— J.  S.  Cutter.— WR  4 
Knitting.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  12 
Knocked  About.— Dan'l  Connolly.— CS  5— HR— MMR 
Knocking.— Harriet  B.  Stowe. — CS  12 
Knot  of  Blue,  A.— S:  M.  Peck.— BNL 

(Little  Knot  of  Blue,  A.)— FTA 
Know  Thyself. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — FP 
Knowing. — Christopher  P.  Cranch. — hlsC 
(Gnosis.)— TAS 

(St  anzas.)— ASL— FEP— HBP— TAV 
(Thought.)— BNL— GP 

("Thought   is   deeper  than   all   speech" — br.    sel."* 
— CSl 
Knowing.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.— TAV 
Knowing  the  Circumstances.     (Dial.) — Anon. — PP — 

YFR 
Knowing  the  Heart  of  Man. — S:  Daniel.     /See  To  the 

Lady  Margaret,  Countess  of  Cumberland. 
Knowledge.     (SI.  diff.  fr.  Works.)- T:  B.  Aldrich.— 

TAS 
Knowledge.     (Voice  from  Afar,  A — C.) — J:  H:  New- 
man.—AVP 
Knowledge.— F.  G.  Scott.— VA 
Knowledge  after  Death. — H:  C:  Beeching. — VA 
Knowledge  and  Wisdom. — Bible.     See  Job. 
Knowledge  and    Wisdom. — W:    Cowper.     »See    Task, 

The. 
Known  by  his  Works. — Alice  Cary. — TAS 
Known  unto  God. — Constance  F.  E.  R.  Runcie. — WR  2 
Kol  Nidra.     (Fr.     The     Day     of     Atonement.) — Jos. 

Leiser. — AA 
Koran,  The.  Sets.  fr. 

Dhoulkamain.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XVIII.)— WR  11 
In  the  Name  of  God,  the  Compassionate,  the  Mer- 
ciful.    (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXVII.)— WR  11 
Komer's  Battle  Hymn.— Karl  T.  Komer.— HDL 

(Battle  Hymn.)— BS  16— SS 
Kree. — A.  C.  Gordon. — AA 
Krinken.— Eugene  Field.— EF—WTD 
Kris  Kringle's  Surprise. — H:  Davenport. — PR — YA 
Krishna.— G:  W.  Russell.— V A 
Kriss  Kringle.     (C.)— T:  B.  Aldrich. 

("Quite  Like  a  Stocking.")— GMS—PEO 
Kriss  Kringle. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Kriss  Kringle's  Visit.— Anon.— PP—YPS 
Ku  Klux. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 


Kubla  Khan  [or,  a  Vision  in  a  Dream]. — S:   T.    Cole- 
ridge.— BFV  —  BNL  —  BPB—  CEL  —  EPs— 
FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  MBL  —  MRS  —  OB  — 
OS  3— PGT  1— PYO 
(Romance.) — LH 
Kubleh.     (A6r.)— Bayard  Taylor.— WR  5 
KuUervo  and  the  Wheat -cake. — (Tr.  by.)  J:  M.  Craw- 
ford.    See  Kalevala,  The. 
Kulnasatz,  my  Reindeer. — Anon. — HBP 
Kyarlina  Jim.— A.  C.  Gordon.— CD— CS  14 
Kyrie  Eleison.— Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— TAS 


La  Belle  Dame  sans  Merci  [or  Mercy]. — J:  Keats. — 

BFV  —  BPB  —  CGd  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  OB  — 

PEB  3— PGT  1— SO 
La  Derniere  Classe. — Alphonse  Daudet. 

(Last  Lesson,  The.) — BS  19 
La  Grisette. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — AA 
La  Jeime  Malade. — (Dial.  ad.  fr.  Andr^  Ch^nier  by) 

H.  C.  Hunt.— SD 
La  Tour  d'Auvergne. — Maida  Buon. — BS  15 — CS  31 

—PR 
La  Tricoteuse.— G:  W.  Thombury.— EDY— FEP 
La  Vesuviana.— Rebe  S.  Webb.— CG  1 
Labor. — Anon. — HSS  3 

Labor.     (Fraga.  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Labor.— G:  W.  Bungay.— CS  27 
Labor. — T:  Carlyle.     See  Past  and  Present. 
Labor. — Orville  Dewey.     See  Nobility  of  Labor. 
Labor.     (Diff.  seZ. )— Orville  Dewey.— PEO 
I.,abor. — Frances  S.  Osgood. — See  Labor  is  Worship. 
Labor  and  Life. — J.  H.  Morse. — TAS 
Labor  and  Rest. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — FP 

(Now  and  Afterwards.)— BNL— FEP— GP 
Labor  and  Rest. — Jones  Very. — TAS 
Labor  Hours  have  Limits. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  Ten 

Hours'  Bill,  The. 
Labor  is  Worship. — Frances  S.  Osgood. — CS  7 — HSS  3 

— LLC— PPSr—SM—SS— WCLG  2 
(Labor.)— FMR—KNE  (sel.) 
(Lahore  est  Orare.) — BS  5 
(To  Labor  is  to  Pray.)— BNL 
Labor  Question,  The. — Anon. — CH 

(Oration  on  the  "Labor  Question.") — BDD — SDR 
Labor  Song.     (Exercise  for  girls  and  boys.) — Anon. — 

DS— YA 
Labor  Song.     (Fr.      The      Bell-founder.) — Denis      F. 

MacCarthy.— BNL 
Laborare  est  Orare. — Sarah  C.  Woolsey. — TAS 
Laboratory,  The. — Robert  Browning. — PGT  2 — WR  9 
Lahore  est  Orare. — Frances  S.  Osgood.     See  Labor  is 

Worship. 
Laborer,  The.— John  Clare.— BNL — EPs 
Laborer,  The.— W:  D.  Gallagher.— CS  8— LLC— MMR 

— SM— TAV 
(Look  up.  Laborer!) — HSS  3 
Laborers,  The. — Anon. — SM 
Laborer's  Noonday  Hymn,  The. — W:  Wordsworth. — 

HPB 
Laboring  Classes,  The. — Hugh  Legar^. — PS 
Laborious  Writers.     (Fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — 

S:  Butler. —HPE 
Lachin  y  Gair. — I;ord  Byron. — EPs 
Lachrimse ;  or.  Mirth  Turned  to  Mourning. — Rob't  Her- 

rick  —EPs 
Lachrymse  Musarum.— W:  Watson. — VA 
Lachrymatory,  The. — C:      Tennyson-Turner. — FEP — 

VA 
Lachrymose  Writers. — Horace  Smith. — SS 
Lacon  and  Thyrsis.     (Bucolick  betwixt  Two,  A — C.)— 

Rob't  Herrick.— EP 
I,adder  of  St.  Augustine,  The.     (C.)— H:  W.  Longfel- 
low.—FTR—GMS—SE  (br.  sel.) 
(St.  Augustine's  Ladder — si.  al/r.) — SE 
Laddy  Blue  Eyes.— Minna  C.  Smith.— TFS 
Ladies'  Band,  The.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Ladies'  Battle,  Sel.  fr.  (Pursuit,  The — dial.) — Anon. — 

MPD 
Ladies  of  Athens. — Mrs.  M.  A.  Lipscomb. — DR 
Lftdies  of  St.  James's,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — VA — VS 
"Ladies,  though  to  your  conquering  eyes." — Sir  G: 

Etherege.— OB 
Ladies'  Whist  Club,  'The.     (PwcA;.)— CS  37 
Lady,  The. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Sesame  and  Lilies. 
Lady  Alice. — Anon. — CGd 
Lady  Anne  [or  Ann]  Bothwell's  Lament.     (In  Percy's 

Rehques. )— Anon  .—BNL— FEP— HBP 
(Balow — mod.  vers.) — OB 
Lady  at  Sea,  The.— T:  Hood.— HBP 


/ 


175 


Lady 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lady  Barbara. — Alex.  Smith. — BNL 
Lady  Button-Eyes. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Lady  Clara  Vere  de  Vere — Alfred  Tennyson. — BNL — 
CR— CS  15— EPs— FEP— FTR— SPE  {br.  ad.) 
(How  to  be  Noble— 6r.  seZ.)- PS 
Lady  Clare.— Alfred  .  Tennyson.— BFV—CEL—CR— 
CS  4— EPs— tEP— FTR— HNS—  LLC  —  MR 
— PS— SO— WCLG  1 
Lady  Elspat. — Anon. — BB 
Lady  Franklin.— Eliz.  H.  Whittier.— EDY 
Lady  from  the  West ,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  34 
Lady  Gay  Spanker.     {Sel.    fr.    London    Assurance  — 
pZoy.)— Dion  Boucicault.— CS  25  (afrr.)— MRS 
(Scene  from  "  London  Assurance  " — abr.) — SO 
Lady  Geraldine's    Courtship. — Eliz.    B.    Browning. — 

EPs— FEP— HBP— WR  9 
Lady  Golden-rod. — Carrie   W.    Bronson. — AD  («eZ.) — 
TFS 
(Golden-rod— 8e?.)—DCP 
Lady  Heron's  Song. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marmion. 
Lady     Hildegarde,    The. — Anon.     <See    Lady    of    the 

Castle,  The. 
Lady  in  Comus,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Comus. 
Lady  Isabel  and  the  Elf-Knight.— Anon.— PEB  1 
Lady  Jane. — Anon. — CS  31 
Lady  Jane  Gray.     {Dial.  fr.  The  Famous  History  of 

Sir  Thomas  Wyatt.)— J:  Webster.— EHT 
Lady  Judith's  Vision,  The.— Mrs.  E.  V.  Wilson.— BS  14 
Lady  Lost  in  the  Wood,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Comus. 
I>ady  Mabel.— Alfred  Austin.— HS 
I^ady  Macbeth. — Sleep    Walking    Scene. — W:    Shake- 
speare.— See  Macbeth. 
Lady  Mary.— H:  Alford.— AVP— VA 
Lady  Mary  Ann.— Rob't  Burns.— PEB  3 
Lady  Maud's  Oath.— Re.  Henry.— CS  .30 
Lady  Moon. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. — HSS2 — 

OS  1— PHS— PoR— WCL 
Lady  Moon. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — BVC 

("O  Lady  Moon[,  your  horns  point  toward  the  east" 
— C.).)— PoR  . 

Lady  of  Gedo.  The. — (Adapted  from  the  Hungarian  by) 

Mary  J.  Saflford.— WR  2 
Lady  of   La    Garaye,  The. — Caroline 'E.  S.  Norton. — 

AVP 
Ladv  of  Lyons,  Sd.  fr.     E:  Bulwer-Lytton. 

Scene  from  "  The  Lady  of  Lyons."— BS  9— CDD 
(Claude  Melnotte  to  Pauline — si.  abr.) — VSG 
(Claude  Melnotte's  Apology  [and  Defence] — abr.) 
— CS  6— WRD  (si.  diff.) 
Lady  of  Sevilla,  The.— Gratiana  Chanter.— PEB  4 
Lady  of  Shalott,  The.— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.— WR  4 
Lady   of  Shalott, The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— AE  (sel.)— 
BS  19  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBt  —  OB  —  PHS— 
WEP  4 
I,ady  of  the  Castle,  The.— Anon.— TMR 

(Lady  Hildegarde,  The.     (SI.  diff.)—WR  6 
Lady  of  the  Earl,  The.— Anon.— FP 
Ladv  of  the  Lake,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Walter  Scott. 

Alice   Brand.     (Can.   IV.,  Sts.    12-15.)  — BPB — 
EPs((i6r.)— FEP- PEB  3 
(Ballad  of  Alice  Brand,  The— atr.)— SO 
Battle  of  Beal'  an  Duine.     (VI.,  15-18.")— BS  3— 
CR  (o6r.)— CS  21— HSS  2— SR  1— WEP  4 
Beal'  an  Dhuine — si.  abr.) — BNL 
(Flight— 6r.  sel.)— SB 
Blanche  of  Devan.     (Sel.  fr.  Can.  IV.,  arr.  as  play.) 

— SED 
Blanche  of  Devan's  Last  Words.     (IV.,  27 — abr.) 

—WRD 
Chase.  The.     (I.,  1-10.)— LH 

(Highland  Chase,  The— «ei.)— OS  2 
(Slag  Hunt,  The— a?w.)— BNL 
Combat   between   Fitz-James  and   Roderick   Dhu. 
(Sel.  fr.  Cans.  IV.   and  V.,  arr.  as  dial,   by  J. 
Hughes.)— BS  9— CDD 
Contempt.     (V.,  30.)— KNE 
(Lady  of  the  Lake.)— BNL 
Coronach.     (III.,  16.)  —  BNL  —EPs— FEP— HBP 

—LLC— OS  2— PGT  1 
Douglas,  Sel.  fr.  (II.,  34.1— AE 
Douglas  to  the  Populace  of  Stirling.     (V.,  28.) — 

PRR 
Dreams.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  33.)— EPs 
Fitz-James     and     Roderick     Dhu.      (V.,    3-17.) — 
BNL  (ahr.)—  CR  (diff.  abr.) 
(.Srf.)— CS6— FR 
(■Coml")at  of  Fitz-James  and  Roderick — sel.) — PS 
(Death  Struggle,  The— br.  seZ.)— SE 
(Ladv  of  the  Lake — br.  sel.) — AE 
Heath  this  Night  must  be  my  Bed,  The.     (III.,  23.) 
— FEP— YBF 
(Song— C.)— HBP 
(Song  of  the  Young  Highlander.) — BNL 


Lady  of  the  Lake,  The  (continued). 

Highland    Stranger,     The.      (IV.,     29-31— abr.)— 

TMD 
James    Fitz-James    and    Ellen.     (VI.,    25-29 — si. 
abr.)- BNL 
(Lady  of  the  Lake — sd.) — AE 
Lady  of  the  Lake,  The.     (I.,  17-19.)— BNL  (sel.) 

—WCL  I  2 
Lady  of  the  Lake,  The.     (Br.  aeU.  fr.  I,  III,  V.)— 

BNL 
Lay  of  the  Imprisoned  Huntsman,  Sel.  fr.  (VI.,  24 

—abr.)— BNL 
Lodge,  The.     (I.,  26— si.  obr.)— AD 
Morning  Landscape,  A.     (III.,  2). — TMD 

(Summer.)— POS 
"Rose  is  fairest  when  'tis  budding  new,  The.     (IV., 
1— sel.)— AD 
(Lady  of  the  Lake.)— BNL 
Soldier,  Rest!     [Thy  Warfare  O'er.]     (I.,  31,  32— . 
abr.)— BNL— GN  (seZ.)— HSS  1— OS  1 
(Song— O— PHS 

(Song  from  "  The  Lady  of  the  Lake.")  — PPSr 
Song  of  Clan  Alpine.     (II.,  19,  20.)— BNL 
(Boat  Song— sei.)— AD— CR— FEP— LC 
(Clan  Alpine.)— EPs 
Trosachs,  The.     (I.,  11,  12.)— POS 

(Sunset  in  the  Mountains — sel.) — BNL 
Lady  of  the  Lambs,  The. — Alice  Meynell. — OB 

(Shepherdess,  The— C.)— AVP— PYO 
Lady  of  Vain  Delight,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Christ's  Triumph 

on  Earth.)— Giles  Fletcher.— WR  11 
I>ady  Penelope  Clifton.     (Sel.  fr.  An  Elegy  on  t  he  Death 
of  Lady  Penelope  Clifton.) — Fs.  Beaumont. — 
EDY 
Lady  Queen  Anne.     (Dial.) — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KC 
Lady  Rohesia,    The.     (SI.    abr.) — R:    H.    Barham. — 

BS  13 
Lady  Teazle    and    Sir   Peter. — R:   B.    Sheridan.     See 

School  for  Scandal,  The.  I 

Lady  to  her   Inconstant   Servant,  The     T:  Carew. — 

WEP  2 
Lady  Turned    Serving-man,    The.      (In    Percy's  Re- 

liques.) — Anon. — CGd 
Lady  Wentworth.     (Tales   of   a   Wayside    Inn:    The 
Poet's    Tale.)— H:    W.    Longfellow.— NPS — 
YP 
"Lady,   when    I    Behold    the    Roses    Sprouting." — 

Anon.— ELP 
Lady  who   Offers   her  Looking-glass   to  Venus,   The. 
(Taken  from  an  Epigram  of  Plato.) — Matthew 
Prior.— OB 
Lady  with  a  Train,  The. — Anon. — WR  7 
Lady  Yeardley's  Guest. — Anon. — SR  13 
Lady-bird,  Lady-bird. — Caroline    B.    Southey. — NV — 
OS! 
(Little  Lady-Bird,  The.)— WR  12 
(To  the  Ladybird.)— PHS 
Ladybird's  Race. — Campbell  Rae-Brown. — WR  13 
Lady-bug  and  the  Ant,  The.— Anon.— CSS— PPSr 
Ladybug,  Ladybug. — Anon. — NV 
Ladye  Maude. — Cora  Fabbri. — WR  15 
Ladve  of  the  Lab,  The.— C:  K.  Field.— CG  2 
Ladye's  Rock,  The.— E.  J.  Armstrong.— PEB  4 
Lady-killer,  The.     (Dial.) — Mrs.  Russell   Kavanaugh. 

— KH 
Lady's  Chamber,  A. — S:  T.    Coleridge.       See   Chris- 

tabel. 
Lady's  Dream,  The.— T:  Hood.— FEP— MRS 
Lady's  Song,  The.     (Beautiful  Lady  of  the  May,  The 

— O— J:  Dryden.— EP 
Lady's  'Yes,'  The.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— BNL— EPs— 

FEP— VSG 
L'ifayett?. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Sonnet:  "As  when 

far  off,"  etc. 
Lafayette,  the  Faithful  One,  Sel.  fr.     (Marquis  de  La 

Fayette.)— C:  Sumner.— WR  10 
Laffing. — H:  W.  Shaw.     See  Josh  Billings  on  Laugh- 
ing. 
"Laid  on  thine  altar,  O  my  Lord  divine!"     (New  York 

Observer.) 
L'Aiglon,  Sel.  fr.  (Field  of  Wagram,  The— /r.  Act  V.) 
— Edmond  Rostand  (tr.  by  Louis  N.  Parker). 
—EDY 
Laird  o'  Cockpen,  The. — Caroline  Oliphant,  Baroness 
Naime.— BNL— FEP— HBP— PEB  3 
(PEB3  a/8,  last  2  sts.  to  Miss  Ferrier.) 
Laird  o'  Logie,  The.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Laird  of  Schelynlaw,  The.— J:  Veitch.— VA 
Laird  of  Waristoun,  The. — Anon. — PEB  2 
"Lake  and  a  fairy  boat.  A."     (Song  for  Music  —  C.) — 
T:  Hood.— BPB 
(Song.)— BFV— HBP— LC 


176 


TITLE  INDEX 


Land 


Lake  Champlain  and  its  Shores,  Sel.  jr.  (Two  Drowned 
Lovers— sei.  fr.  Pt.  III.)— W:  H.H.  Murray.- 
BS19 
Lake  Coriskin.     See  Lord  of  the  Isles,  The. — Sir  Walter 

Scott. 
Lake   Isle  of  Innesfree,  The.— W:    B.   Yeats.— OB- 
TIP 
Lake  Mahopac — Saturday  Night. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — 

PLD 
Lake  Memory,  A. — W:  W.  Campbell. — VA 
Lake  of  Coolfin,  The.     (Recomposed  by)  P.  W.  Joyce. 

— PEB4 
Lake  of  the  Dismal  Swamp,  The.     (Ballad,  A.     The 

Lake,  etc.— C.)— T:  Moore.— EPs—FEP 
Lake  Saratoga. — J:  G.  Saxe. — CS  23 
Lake  Superior. — S:  G.  Goodrich. — AA 
Laleet.— G:  Martin.— TCV 
Lalla  Rookh,  Sels.  fr. — T:  Moore. 

"Alas,  how  light   a  cause  may  move."     (Sel.   fr. 

The  Light  of  the  Harem.)— BNL 
Araby's  Daughter.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Fire-worshippers. ) 
— EPs  (si.  abr.) 
(W.  mMsic.)— NPS— YP 
("Farewell  to  thee,  Araby's  daughter.") — BNL 
Caliph's    Encampment,    The.     (Br.    sel.    fr.    The 

Veiled  Prophet  of  Korassan.) — EPs 
Curse  on  the  Traitor,  A.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Fire- 
worshippers.  ) — GP  , 
(Denunciation^obr.) — AE 
Fire-worshippers,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Fire-worship- 
pers. )—WEP  4 
"Fly  to  the  desertT,  fly  with  me]."     (Song  of  Nour- 
mahal  in  The  Light  of  the  Harem. ) — BNL  (abr. ) 
—HBP 
Gheber's  Bloody  Glen,  The.     (Sel.   fr.   The  Fire- 
worshippers.) — CS  22 
(Gheber  to  his  Followers,  The.) — AE  (br.  sel.) 
(Linda  to  Hafed — o6r.)— BNL 
"How  calm,  how  beautiful."     (Sel.  fr.  The  Fire- 
worshippers.  ) — AD 
(Calm — sel.,  partly  same.) — KNE 
Lalla  Rookh.     (Sel.  fr.   song:  "There's  a  bower," 
etc.,  in  The  Veiled  Prophet  of   Korassan.) — - 
SAE 
Light  of  the  Harem,  The.     (Sel.)— WEV  4 
(Feast  of  Roses,  The — parthi  same.) — WR  11 
(Vale  of  Cashmir,  The.)— BNL 
Nourmahal.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Light  of  the  Harem.) — 

MR 
Rebellion.     (Br.  sel.  fr.   The  Fire-worshippers.) — 

KNE 
"Spirits  of  fire,  that  brood  not  long."     (Br.  sel.  fr. 

The  Fire- worshippers.) — AD 
Syria.     (Sel.  fr.  Paradise  and  the  PeriJ — BNL 
Tear  of  Repentance,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Paradise  and 
the     Peri.)— BS     14— FR     (si.    a6r.)— MR— 
VSG 
(Paradise  and  the  Peri — partly  same.) — CR 
"There's  a  bliss  beyond  all  that  the  minstrel  has 
told."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Light  of  the  Harem.) 
—BNL 
L' Allegro.— J:  Milton.  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  ELP  —  EPs 
— FEP  —  HBP  —  MBL  —  OB  —  OS  3  (si. 
abr.)— PGT 1— PHS— SN  (seZ.)- VSG— WEP  2 
(Abr.)  -FTR— GN— LLC— WCLG  2 
(Br.  sei.)- SC— SE 
Lamb,  The.     (In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W:  Blake. — 
BFV— BPB— FEP  —  LC  —  OS  1— PoR— P  YO 
— WEP3 
(Little  Lamb.)— PC 
Lamb  that  was  Missed,  The. — Anon. — PPSr  ■ 
Lambs  at  Play. — Rob't  Bloomfield. — BNL 
Lambs  in  the  Meadow.  —  Laurence  Alma-Tadema. — 

PoR 
Lament ,  A.     (Madrigal — C. ) — W :  Drummond. — PGT 1 
— YBF 
(Inexorable. ) — OB 
Lament,  A. — Nathaniel  L.  Frothingham. — TAS 
Lament,  A.     (C.) — C:  Kingsley. 

(Merry  Lark,  The.)— BFV— BNL— YBF 
Lament. — Roden  Noel. — VA 

Lament,  A.     (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— BNL— FEP— 
HBP— WEP  4 
(Threnos.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Lament,  A.     (Remembrance — C.) — Percy  B.  Shelley. 

—HBP 
Lament  for  Absalom. — Nathaniel  P.  Willis. — LLC  (si. 
abr.) 
(Absalom— C.)—CS  1— NPS— YP 
(David's  Lament  for  [or  over]  Absalom — si.  abr.) — 

BS  15— KNE  (hr.  seZ.)- OM— PS— SAE  (sel.) 
(Patriot  King  in  Mourning,  The — abr.) — BLP 
Lament  for  Chaucer. — T:  Hoccleve. — OB 


Lament    for   Culloden. — Rob't    Burns.- EHT— OB — 

PGT  1 
(Lovely  Lass  of  Inverness,  The — C.) — FEP 
Lament  for  Flodden  [Field,  A]. — Jane  Elliott. — CEL — 

EHT— OB— PGT  1 
(Flowers  of  [or  o'j  the  Forest,  The.)— BPB— FEP — 

WEP  3 
Lament  for  Glencairn. — Rob't  Burns.     See  Lament  for 

James,  Earl  of  Glencairn. 
Lament  for  Glencoe. — Mary  M.  Campbell. — FEP 
Lament  for  his  Friend,  A. — W:  Browne.     See  Britan- 
nia's Pastorals. 
Lament   for  James,   Earl   of  Glencairn.     (C. — sel.) — 

Rob't  Burns.— EPs  (sel.) 
(Lament  for  Glencairn.) — LLC 
Lament  for  King  Ivor. — Whitley  Stokes. — TIP 
Lament  for  Meliboeus,  A. — T:  Watson. — EP 
Lament  for  Sir    Philip    Sidney.     (Elegy  on  a  Friend's 

Passion  for  his  Astrophill,  An — C) — Mathew 

Royden.— EDY 
(On  Sir  Philip  Sidney— seZ. )— EPs 
(Sir  PhUip  Sidney.)— BNL 
Lament  for  the  Death  of  Eoghan  Ruadh  O'Neill. — T- 

Davis.— TIP 
Lament  for  the  Makaris  quhen  he  was  Seik,  The. —  W: 

Dunbar.     See  following. 
Lament    for  the   Makers. — W:  Dunbar. — OB 

(Lament  for  the  Makaris  Quhen  he  was  Seik,  The 

— a6r.)— WEP  1 
Lament  for  the  Princess  of  Tir-Owen  and  Tirconnell. — 

Jas.  C.  Mangan.— TIP 
Lament  for  Thomas  Davis. — Sir  Samuel  Ferguson.  — 

TIP 
Lament  in  Spring,  A.     (Sel.  fr.  Scylla's  Metamorpho- 
sis.)—T:  Lodge.— EP 
(Spring  and  Melancholv.)— ES— OEL 
Lament  of  a  Left-over  Doll,  The. — Anon. — TFS 
Lament  of  a  Mocking-bird. — Frances  A.  Kemble. — VA 
Lament  of  Anastasius. — W:  B.  O.  Peabody. — AA 
Lament  of  Anne  Boleyn  on  the  Eve  of    her  Execu- 
tion.—Anne  Boleyn. — EDY 
Lament  of  Jacob  Gray,  The. — H.  E.  McBride. — CS  5 
Lament  of  Maev  Leith-Dherg,  The. — T.  W.  RoUeston. 

—TIP 
Lament  of  Mary  Queen  of  Scots  on  the  Approach  of 

Spring.— Rob't  Burns. — EHT— EPs 
Lament  of  Richard   During   his    Imprisonment. — (Tr. 

by)  W:  E.  Aytoun.— EHT 
Lament  of  the  Border  Widow  [,  The]. — Anon. — BB — 

BNL— FEP— HBP— OEB— PEB  2— YBF 
Lament  of  the  Irish  Emigrant. — Helen  S.  Sheridan, 

Lady  Duff'erin.— BNL— BS  24— CS  1— FEP— 

GP— HBP— OB— TIP— VA— VS— VSG 
Lament  of  the  Irish  Maiden,  The. — Denny  Lane. — TIP 
Lament  of  the  Mangaire  Sugach. — E:  Walsh. — TIP 
Lament  of  the  Widowed  Inebriate,  A. — H.  J.  Duganne. 

— WR  18 
Lamentable  Ballad  of  the  Bloody  Brook,  The. — E:  E 

Hale.— EDY 
Lamentable  Ballad  of  the  Foundling  of  Shoreditch, 

The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.- HPE 
Lamentation  for  Celin,  The. — Anon.  (tr.  by  J:  G.  Lock- 
hart).— FEP— HBP 
Lamentation  of  Don  Roderick,  The. — (Tr.  bv)  J:  G. 

Lockhart.— FEP 
Lamentation  of  Hugh  Reynolds,  The. — Anon. — TIP 
Lamentation  of  the  Old  Pensioner,  The. — W:  B.  Yeats. 

—TIP 
Lamkin.— Anon.— BB— PEB  1  (abr.) 
L' Amour,  1' Amour. — Guy  W.  Carryl. — CG  2 
Lamp,  The. — jEsop. 

(Farthing  Rushlight,  The.)— OS  1 
Lamp,  The. — Sarah  P.  M.  Greene. — AA 
Lamp  in  the  West,  The. — Ella  Higginson. — AA 
Lamplighter,  The. — Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Lamplighter,  The. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — BVC — CGV 

— LC 
Lancashire  Doxology,  A. — Dinah  M.    Craik. — BNL — 

FEP 
Lancelot  and  Elaine. — ^Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls 

of  the  King. 
Land  across  the    Sea,  A. — W:  Morris.     See  Earthly 

Land  beyond  the  Sea.The. — Frd'k  W:  Faber. — HBP 
Land  Dirge,  A.     (Sel.  fr.  The  White  Devil.)— J:  Web- 
ster.—PGT  1— YBF 
(Dirge  [,A].)— ELP— FEP— OB 
Land    o'    the    Leal,    The. — Caroline    Oliphant,    Ladv 
Nairn.- FEP— HBP— OB— WEP  3 
(Sel.)—BNh  —  BPB  —  CEL  —  PGT  1  —  SAE  — 
YBF 
Land  of  Benedictions. — Gulian  C.  Verplanck. — LLC 
(America's  Contributions  to  the  World.) — SS 


177 


Land 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Land    of    Beulah,  The. — J:    Bunyan.     See    Pilgrim's 

Progress. 
Land  of  Counterpane,   The. — Rob't    L.   Stevenson. — 

CGV— DLS— GMS— TFS— VA 
Land  of  Dreams,  The.— H.  F.  Sargent.— POS 
Land  of  Eternal  Summer,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Co- 

mus. 
Land  of  Lands,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  "You 

ask  me  why;  tho'  ill  at  ease. 
Land  of  Liberty,  The.— "Hesperion." — CS  21 

(My  Country.}— POS 
Land  of  Make-believe,  The. — Anon. — DST 
Land  of  my  Birth,  The.— Eliza  Cook.— BLP 
Land  of  Nod,  T*e.— Lucy  M.  Blinn.— WR  15 
Land  of  Nod,  The.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson— CGV— V A 
Land  of  Nod,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BS  22 
(Beautiful  Land  of  Nod,  The— C.)— TAV 
Land  of  Nowhere,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— WR  15 

(NowhereJ— TFS 
Land  of  our  Forefathers,  The.— E:  Everett.     See  First 

Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 
Land  of  Song,  The.— Dwight  M.  Marvin.— CG  3 
Land   of   Story-books,   The. — Rob't    L.   Stevenson. — 

BFV— CGV— DJS— PoR 
Land  of  the  Afternoon. — Anon. — CS  25 
Land  of  Thus-and-so,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BS  17 
Land  Poor.— J.  W.  Donovan.— CS  9 
"Land  which  freemen  till.  The." — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  "You  ask  me  why,  tho'  ill  at  ease." 
Landing  of  the   Pilgrim   Fathers  [,The]. — Felicia   D. 

Hemans.     See  following. 
Landing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers  in  New  England,  The. 

(C.)— Felicia      D.      Hemans.— BNL—EDY— 

FEP— HB— HBP 
("Breaking    waves    dashed    high.    The." — sel.) — 

SAE 
(Landing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers,  [The].)— EPs— 

GN— GP— PHS— PPSr— PSR 
(Landing  of  the  Pilgrims  [,The].)— AD  (seZ.)— GMS 

—LLC— OS  2— SM— WCLG  1 
(Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.)— LH— TMD 
Landing  of  the  Pilgrims  [,The]. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. 

See  foregoing. 
Landlady's     Daughter,    The.  —  Ludwig    Uhland.  — 

BNL     (tr.   by  J.   S.    Dwight)— FS    Ur.   by   E. 

Parsons) 
Landlord  of  "the  Blue  Hen,"  The. — Phoebe  Cary. — 

CS  15 
Landlord's  Last  Moments,  The. — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  19 
Landlord's  Visit,  The.— De  Witt  C.  Lockwood.— BS  13 

— CS  24— NFS— YP 
Landor. — J:  Albee. — A  A 
Landor. — Ale.x.  H.  Japp. — VA 

Landscape,    A. — W:    Browne.     See    Britannia's    Pas- 
torals. 
Landscape. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
L'Ange    qui    Veille     (The    Watching    Angel  —  Dans 

1' Alcove  Sombre). — Victor  Hugo. — WR  25 
Langley  Lane. — Rob't  Buchanan. — CS  33 — EA  (abr.) 

— FEP— FMR— MMR 
Language. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Rhymed  Lesson, 

A. 
Language  of  Flowers,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FDY 
Language  of  Flowers,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  ("  Yet,  no — not 

words,  for  they,"  etc.) — T:  Moore. — AD 
Language  of  Flowers,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  ("In  Eastern 

lands  they  talk  in  flowers.") — Jas.  G.  Percival. 

—AD 
Language  of  Love,  T)ie. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Language  of  Signs,  The;  or.  Two  Sides  to  a  Story. — 

Anon.— MYF 
Language  of  the  Learned.  {Fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) 

—S:  Butler.— HPE 
Lanty  Leary.     (C.) — S:  Lover. 
(Old  Ballad,  An.)— WR  14 
(Won't  you  Follow  me?)— CS  36 
Laodamia. — W:  Wordsworth. — BNL  (6r.  aels.) — EPs 

— HBP— WEP  4 
Lapsus  Calami — To  R.  K. — Jas.  K.  Stephen. — VA 

(Millennium,  The.)— THP 
Larch  and  the  Oak,  The.— T:  Carlyle.— OS  1 
Large  Edition,  A. — Jos.  Lilienthal. — BS  25 

(Full  Edition,  A.)— CG  3 
Large  Room,  A.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Lariat  Jim.     {Cleveland  Plain  Dealer.) — SR  13 
Lark,  The.— Jas.  Hogg.— HBP— SN— TFS  {sel.) 

(Skylark,    The.)— BNI.— BPB— FEP— GN— GP— 

LC— LLC— OS  1— PHS— WCLG  2 
Lark,  The. — C:  Reade.     See  It  is  never  too  Late  to 

Mend. 
Lark  and  her  Young  Ones,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kava- 

naugh.— KER 
Lark  and  the  Rook,  The.— Anon.— OS  1— PoR 


Lark  Ascending,  The. — G:  Meredith. — VA 

Lark,  Flower,  Sun,  and  Shower. — Kate  Greenaway. — 

HSS2 
Lark  in  the  Gold-fields,  The, — C:    Reade.     See  It   is 

never  too  Late  to  Mend. 
Larks. — Katha.  Tynan-Hinkson. — TIP 
Larks  and  Nightingales. — Nathan  H.  Dole. — AWH 

(Our  Native  Birds.)— THP 
Lark's  Song,  The.— Anon.— YBT 

Larrie  O'Dee.— W:  W.  Fink.— AWH— BS  10— CRR— 
CS  26— CSS— DS— SDR— THP 
(Courtship  of  I-arry  O'Dee.)— PPSr 
Larry  M'Hale.— C:  J.  Lever.— TIP 
Larry's  on  the  Force. — Irwin  Russell. — CD— CS  19 
Larva;.— Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— FP—WCL 
Lasca.— Frank  Desprez.— BS  12— MR— PR 

{SI.  abr.)— CS  22— HNS 
I/as  Casas  Dissuading  from  Battle. — R:  B..  Sheridan. 

See  Pizarro. 
Lasciate  Ogni  Speranza. — J:  Clare. — PGT  2 
(His  Last  Verses.)— FEP 
(I  am!  yet  what  I  am.) — EDY 
(Written  in  Northampton  County  Asylum.) — OB 
Lass  Dorothy. — Anon. — WR  6 
Lass  of  Ballochmyle,  The.— Rob't  Burns.- HBP 
Lass  of  Lochroyan,The.     (/n  Border  Minstrelsy — abr.) 
—Anon.— BFV— OB 
(Fair  Annie  of  Lochroyan.) — BB — FEP  {longer.) 
{All  si.  diff.  versions.) 
Lass  of  Richmond  Hill,  The. — Jas.  Upton. — BNL 
Lassie's  Decision,  The.— H.  D.  McAthol.— WR  2 
La.st  Aboriginal,  The.— W:  Sharp.— VA 
Last  and  Best. — Alice  Cary. — TAS 
Last  and  Worst. — Frances  E.  Allison. — HP 
Last  Appeal,!  A. — F:  W.  H.  Myers.- VA 
Last  Appendix  to  "Yankee  Doodle,"  The.     {Punch.) 

—HPE 
Last  Arrival,  The.— G:  W.  Cable.— HP 

(New  Arrival,  The.)— AA 
Last  Banquet,  The. — E:  Renaud. — CS  16 
Last  Battle.  The.— Ellen  Murrav.— CS  33 
Last  Bow-strings,  The.— E.  L.  White. — AA 
Last  Buccaneer,  The. — C:  Kingsley.     See  Last  Bucca- 

nier.  The. 
Last  Buccaneer,  The. — T:  B.  Macaulay. — LH 

Last  Buccanier,  The.     (C.) — C:     Kingsley.— CEL 

WEP  4 
(Last  Buccaneer,  The.)— FEP— VA 
(Pleasant  Isle  of  Aves,  TheJ — LH    ' 
Last  Cffisar,  The.     (SI.  abr.)—T:  B.  Aldrich.— EDY 
Last  Chantey,  The. — Rudyard  Kipling. — VA 
Last  Charge.— The.— G:  B.  Hynson.— CS  25 
Last  Charge  of  Marshal  Ney. — Joel  T.  Headley.     See 

Napoleon  and  his  Marshals. 
Last  Charge  of  Ney,  The. — Joel  T.  Headley.     See  Na- 
poleon and  his  Marshals. 
Last  Chorus  of  "Hellas."     {Chorus  fr.  Hellas.) — Percy 
B.  Shelley.- WEP  4 
(HeUas.)— OB 
Last  Conqueror,  The.     {Ode  fr.   Cupid  and  Death:  A 
masque.)— Jas.  Shirley.- FEP— PGT  1— YBF 
(Might  of  Death,  The.)— WEP  2 
(Victorius  Men  of  Earth.)— HBP 
Last  Cup  of  Canary,  The. — Helen  G.  Cone. — A  A 
Last  Day,  The. — E:  Young.     See  following. 
Last  Day  Book,  the.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Last  Day,  Vol.  II., 

Bk.  I.)— E:  Young.— WEP  3 
Last  Day  in  District  No.  6.— Josephine  M.  Harriman. — 

WR  15 
Last  Day  of  School,  The.     {Dial.) — Clara  Denton. — 

LPD 
Last  Days. — Eliz.  Stoddard. — AA 

Last  Days  of  a  Condemned,  Sel.  fr.  (Secret  Execu- 
tions—/r.  Preface) — Victor  Hugo. — MRS 
Last  Days  of  Herculaneum,     The,     Sel.     fr. — Edwin 
Atherstone.— BS  6— CS  22 
(Roman  Soldier  at  th->  Destruction  of  Herculaneum, 
The— o6r.  and  ad.)— FR 
Last  Days  of  Pompeii,  Sets.  fr. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. 
Destruction  of  Pompeii.      {Sels.  fr.   Bk.  V.,  Chs. 

VII.  and  X.)— SAE— FTR  {abr.) 
Glaucus  and  the  Lion.     {Sd.  fr.  Bk.  V.,  Ch.  IV.)— 
WR  12 
(Destruction  of  Pompeii — ad.) — TMD 
(Last  Days  of  Pompeii — abr.) — MN 
(Vesuvius  and  the  Egyptian — abr.) — NC — PFP 
Happy  Beauty  and  the  Blind  Slave,  The.     {Sel.  fr. 
Bk.  II.,  Ch.  VI.)— WR  9 
(Nvdia  and  lone — ad.) — IR 
Last  Night  of  Pompeii,  The.     {Set.  fr.  Bk.  IV.,  Ch. 

-  XVII.)— TMD 
Nydia's  Sacrifice.     (Bk.  V.,  Ch.  IX.— sel.,  and  Ch 
X.)^PFP 


178 


TITLE  INDEX 


Xa  timers 


Last  Days  of  Pompeii  (continued). 

Witch's  Cavern,  The.     (Sel.  jr.  Bk.  III..  Ch.  IX.)— 
IR  (cond.  and  arr.  as  dial.) — WR  19 
(Wi:ch  of  Vesuvius,  The — arr.  as  dial.) — NDP 
Last    Dream   of  the   Old   Oak   Tree,   The. — Hans   C. 

Andersen. — AD 
Last  Drunkard,  The.— Anon.— WR  18 
Last  Dying  Speech  and  Confession  of  Poor  Puss,  The. 

— Ann  and  Jane  Tavlor. — BVC 
Last  Farewell,  The. — E:  B.  Emerson. — EPs 
Last  Fight,  The.— Lewis  F.  Tooker.— AA— HBR 
Last  Flower  of  the  Year,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Last  Furrow,  The. — Edwin  Markham. — AA 
Last  Good-by,  The. — Louise  C.  Moult  on. — AA 
Last  Hours  of  Little  Paul  Dombey,  The. — C:  Dickens. 

See  Dombey  and  Son. 
Last  Hours  of  Socrates,  The. — .\non. — SS 
Last  Hours  of  Webster.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Death  of  Daniel 

Webster.)— E:  Everett.— CS  3 
Last  Hunt,  The.— W:  R.  Thayer.- AA 
Last  Hymn,     The. — Marianne     Farningham. — BS  5 — 
CS  14— FTR— SR  5 
(Drowning  Singer.  The — w.  mus.) — PR 
(A6r.)— NPS— YP 
Last  Invocation,  The.     (C.)— Walt  Whitman.— TAS 

(Imprisoned  Soul,  The.)— OB 
Last  Journey,     The. — Caroline     B.    Southey. — CS  3 — 

HBP 
Last  Kick  of  Fop's  Alley,  The.     (Punch.)— HFE 
Last  Landlord,  The. — Eliz.  A.  Allen. — AA 
Last  Leaf,    The.— Oliver    W.     Holmes.— AA— ASL— 
BFV  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  OP  —  HBP— 
LC  —  LLC  —  OS  2  —  PYO  (abr.)~  SO  —  TA V 
Last   Lesson,  The. — Alphonse  Daudet.     See  La  Der- 

niere  Classe. 
Last  Letter,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — BIL 
Last  Lines.— Emily  Bronte.— OB— WEP  4 
(Her  Last  Lines.) — VA 
(Hymn.)— OS  3  \ 

Last  Lines. — Sir  Walter  Raleigh. — CEL 
(Conclusion,  The.)— OB 
(Death  of  Sir  Walter  Raleigh.)— EDY 
(Even  such  is  Time.)— EHT— ELP 
(Lines  Found  in  his  Bible.) — BNL 
(Lines  Written  before  his  Execution.)— YBF 
(Verses  Found  in  his  Bible   in  the  Gate-house  at 
Westminster— O— WEP  1 
Last  Look,  A.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  26— NPS— YP 
Last    Man,    The.  —  T:    Campbell.  —  BPB  —  CS  6 — 

WCLG  2(abr.) 
Last  May    a    Braw    Wooer. — Rob't   Burns. — PEB  3 — 

WEP  3 
Last  Mile  stones.  The. — Pearl  Rivers. — CS  6 
Last  Minstrel,  The. — Sir  Walter  Scott. — See  Lay  of  the 

Last  Minstrel,  The. 
Last  Night. — Th^ophile  Marzials. — VA 
Last  Night.— Clement  Scott. — WR  13 
Last  Night,  The.— Virna  Woods.— WR  12 
"Last  night  in  blue  my  little  love  was  dressed." — C: 

H.  Webb.— OH 
Last  Night  of  Misolonghi,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Andronik^.) 

—(Tr.  by)  Edwin  A.  Grosvenor.     NC— PFP 
Last  Night  of  Pompeii.  The. — E:  Bulwer  Lytton.     See 
'  Last  Days  of  Pompeii. 

Last  of  his  Tribe,  The.— H :  Clarence  Kendall.— VA 
Last   of  the  Barons,  The,  Sels.   fr. — E:   Bulwer-Lyt- 
ton. 
Despondent  Inventor,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.   T.,  Ch. 

VII.)— SAE. 
Warwick,  the  King-maker.     (Sels.  fr  Bk.  IV.,  Chs. 
IX.  and  X.)— BS  23 
Last  of   the    Choir,    The.— M.    J.    Kimball.— CS  33— 

DS  (w.  mMS.)— NPS— YP 
Last  of  the  Eurydice,  The. — Sir  Joseph  Noel  Paton. — 

VA 
Last  of  the  Flock,  The. — W:  Wordsworth.— CGd 
Last  of  the  Light  Brigade,  The. — Rudyard  Kipling. — 

WR2 
Last  of  the  Mohicans,  The,     Sels.  fr. — Jas.  F.  Cooper. 
Race  for  Life,  A.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXIII.)— WR  22 
Runnine:  the  Gauntlet.     (Diff.  sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXIII.)— 
WCLI  2 
Last  of  the  New  Year's  Callers,  The. — H:  C.  Bunner. — 

EDY 
Last  of  the  Roman  Tribunes,  The.     (Sel.  fr.   Rienzi, 

Bk.  X.,  la=t  ch.)— E:  Bulwer-Lvtton.— SC 
Last  Orison,  The.— Ezra  H.  Stafford.- TCV 
Last  Parting,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Last  Party,  The.     (Cornell  Widow.)— CG  3 
Last  Pipe,  The.     (London  Spectator.) — PPh 
Last  Prayer,  A. — Helen  (Hunt)  Jackson. — AA 
Last  Prayer  of  Mary,  Queen  of  Scotts. — Willis  G.  Clark. 
— BS  9  (abr. )—C3  9 


I>ast   Prospect,  The. — Edmund   Waller.     See  On  the 

Foregoing  Divine  Poems. 
Last  Redoubt,    The.— Alfred  Austin.^CS  15— NPS— 

VSG— YP 
(Abr.)— BS  20— WR  7 
Last  Remonstrance,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Remonstrance.) — 

Rob't.  Earl  of  Lytton.— FLS 
Last  Reservation,  The. — Walter  Learned. — A  A — TAV 
Last  Resort,  The.— C:  G.  Halpine.— HPE 
Last  Ride  Together,  The. — Rob't  Browning. — OB 
Last  Robin,  The.— H:  S.  Washburn.— POS 
Last  Roll-call,  The.— Anon.— HDL 
Last  Roll-call,  The.— C:  B.  Lewis.- CS  36— WR  7 
Last  Rose,  The. — J:  Davidson. — OB 
Last  Rose  of  Summer,  The.— T:  Moore.— FEP— HBP 

—LLC— WCLG  2 
('Tis  the  Last  Rose  of  Summer— C.)— BNL— PYO 
Last  Sertent,  The.— T.  Crofton  Croker.— MYF 
Last  Soliloquy  of  Faustus,  The. — Christopher  Marlowe. 

See  Doctor  Faustus. 
Last  Sonnet.— J:  Keaf s.— CEL— OB— WEP  4 

("Bright   star!     Would   I  were  steadfast   as  thou 

art.")— PGT  1— YBF 
Last  Speech. — Rob't   Emmet.      See  On  Being  Found 

Guilty  of  High  Treason. 
Last  Spring,  The.— R.  D.— CG  3 

Last  Station,  The.     (Detroit  Free  Press.)— CS  16— PS 
Last  Straw,  The.— Anon.— BS  24 
Last  String,  The. — Gustav  Hartwig. — WR  2 
Last  Summons,  The. — Anon. — SR  13 
Last  Supper,  The. — Joaquin  Miller. — TAS 
Last  Talk,  The.— Anon.— FLS 
Last  Taps. — Theodore  Roberts. — WR  24 
Last  Time  [that- C]  I  Met  Lady  Ruth,  The.— Rob't, 

Earl  of  Lytton.— WR  16 
Last  Translation,  The. — Heinrich  Heine  (fr.  by  Eliz.  B. 

Browning).     See  "Thou  lovest  me  not,"  etc. 
Last  Tree  of  the  Forest, The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — AD 
Last  Tudor,  The. — Annie  M.  L.  Hawes.— CS  34 
Last  Utterances  of  Christ,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.    ("We  are 

ever  taking  leave  of  something  that  will  not 

come    back  again.")— Frd'k  W.  Robertson.— 

GG 
Last  Visitor,  The. — H:  Ames  Blood.— FEP 
Last  Voyage  of  the  Fairies,  The. — W.  H.  Davenport 

Adams. — PoR 
Last  Wish,  The. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — OB 
Last  Wish,  The.— B.  W.  Kirkham.- CS  16 
Last  Word,  The.— Matthew  Arnold. — HBP— YBF 
Last  Word,  The.— Eliz.  Sanderson. — CG  2 
Last  Words. — Anon.— DS 

(Widder  Green's  Last  Words.)— CS  13 
Last  Words. — Anon. — FLS 
Last  Words.     (C.)— Winthrop  M.  Praed. 
(Dying  Girl  to  her  Lover,  'The.)— AVP 
Latakia.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— PPh 
Latches.— C:  N.  Sinnett.— CS  32 
Late. — Anon. — DJS 

Late  at  Breakfast.     (Dial.) — Anon. — PS 
Late  Autumn. — J:  S.  Thomson. — TCV 
Late,  Late,  so  Late! — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of, 

the  King. 
Late  Leaves.     (Poems  and   Epigrams,   CLXI. — C.) — 

Walter  S.  Landor. — OB 
Late  Love. — M.  E.  Martyn. — FLS 
Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont,  The. — J:  Milton. — LH 
(On  the  Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont — C.) — EDY  — 

FEP— HBP— PGT  ]— WEP  2—  YBF 
(Sonnet:  On  the  Late  Massacre,  etc.) — ELP — EPs 
Late  October. — D.  M.  Jordan. — HP 
Late  Spring,  The. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — BNL — GP 
Late  Wisdom. — G:  Crabbe.     See  Reflections. 
"Lately   our  poets   [songsters — C]   loitered   in   green 

lanes."     (Heroic  Idyls,  XV.) — Walter  S.  Lan- 
dor.—WEP  4 
Latent  Principles  of  Religion.     (Br.  sel.) — J:  Caird. — 

AE 
Later  Life.     (Sel.) — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — AA 
Latest   Barbara  Frietchie,  The.     (Parody.) — Anon. — 

DCR— SR  4 
(Barbara  Frietchie.) — DRR 
(Parody  on  "Barbara  Frietchie" — si.  diff.  vera.) — 

BDD— GH 
Latest  Comfort,  The.— F.  W.  L.  Hay.— PPh 
Latest  Decalogue,  The. — Arthur  H.  Clough. — THP 
Latest  Form    of    Literary    Hysterics.     (Chicago    Tri- 
bune.)—GH—FS 
Latest  Sensation  in  Podunk. — F.  Crosbv. — ED 
Latest  Toast,  The.— Raymond  W.  Walker.- CG  3 
Latest  Version,  The.— G:  T.  Lanigan.— AWH 
Latimers,    The,     Sel.    fr.    ("Set' in'    up    with    Elder 

McK'ag's  Peggy.")- H:  C.  McCook.— WH  21 
(Sett  in'  up  with  Peggy  McKeag — si.  abr.) — BS  25 


179 


Latter 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Latter  Day,  The. — T:  Hastings.— AA 

Latter  Rain.  The.— Jones  Very.— BNL—GN— HBP— 

POS 
Lattice  at  Sunrise,  The. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — VA 
Laud.     (Ecclesiastical  Sonnets,  Pt.  IL,  Son.  XLV.) — 

W:  Wordswor^.— EDY 
Laudo  Puellam. — H.  A.  Richmond. — CG  1 
Laugh  and  Grow  Fat. — Winthrop  M.  Praed. — CS  9 
Laugh,  and  the  World  Laughs  with    you. — Ella  W. 

Wilcox.— TMD. 
(Solitude— C.)—TAV 
(World  as  it  is.  The,)— FS 
Laugh  in  Church,  A. — Anon. — WR  24 
Laughin'  in  Meet  in'. — Harriet  B.  Stowe.     See  Laugh- 
ing in  Meeting. 
Laughing.     (C.)— H:  W.  Shaw. 

(Josh  Billings  on  Laughing.) — BG 
Laughing  Chorus,  A. — Anon. — NV — PR 
Laughing  Family,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Laughing    in  Meeting.— Harriet  B.  Stowe.     See  Sam 

Lawson's  Fireside  Stories. 
Laughing  Philosopher,  A. — G:  Cooper. — WR  20 
Laughing  Song.     (,In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W:  Blake. 

— BVC— LC 
Laughter. — Anon. — CS  17 
Laughter. — Mrs.    C.    M.     Peat.     See    Philosophy    of 

Laughter. 
Laughter  and  Death.— Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— VA 
Launch  of  the  Ship,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See 

Building  of  the  Ship,  The. 
Launching  of  Cortez'   Ships.     (Fr.   The  Conquest   of 

Mexico.) — Kinahan  Cornwallis. — EDY 
Ijaunching  of  the  Ship,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow.    S^ee 

Building  of  the  Ship,  The. 
Laura.     (Fr.    Observations    in    the    Art    of    English 

Poetry.)— T:  Campion.— OB 
(Rose-cheek'd  Laura.) — ELP 
(Silent  Music.)— CEL 
Laura,    mv   Darling. — Edmund    C.    Stedman. — OH — 

TFY 
Laura  Sleeping. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — AA 
Laurana's  Song. — R:  Hovey. — AA 
Laura's  Composition  on  the  Cow. — Anon. — WR  12 
Laura's  Song. — Oliver  M.  Brown. — VA 
Laureame:    the  Marble  Dream. — Emma  D.  Banks. — 

BR 
Laurel,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Russian  Fugitive,  Pt.  III.) 

—W:  Wordsworth.— HSS  1 
Laurel  Seed,  The.— R:  H.  Home.— HS 
Laurel  Wreath,   The.     (Dial.) — Lizzie  M.    Hadley. — 

HE 
Laurella,  Sel.  fr.     (Morning  in  the  Bay  of  Naples.) — 

J:  Todhunter.— TIP 
Laurie's  Apology. — Dixie  Wolcott. — WR  20 
Laus  Deo. — Svdney  Dobell. — OB 
Laus  Deo.  — J:  G.  Whittier.  —  BLP  (oftr.)  — BNL  — 

EDY 
Laus  Infantium. — W:  Canton. — VA 
Laus  Veneris. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — AA 
Lavender. — Anon. — HP 
Law.     (.Sel.    fr.    The    Wolf    and    the    Shepherds.     A 

Fable.)— Jas.  Beattie.— CS  15 
(Lawyers  and  the  Law.) — BNL 
Law,  The.     (3  frags,  fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S: 

Butler.- HPE 
Law. — R:  Hooker.     See  Necessity  of  Law. 
Law  agin  It,  A.— Mrs.  G.  Archibald.— CS  27 
Law  and  Faith  and  Freedom. — G :  F.  Hoar. — FD  2 
Law  and  Humanity. — Raymond  N.  Kellogg. — NC 
"Law  is  more  than  a  great  river,  rising  in  the  far  off 

mountains.  The." — C.  C.  Bonney. — GG 
Law  of  Death,  The.     (C.)— J:  Hay.—  BS  10  (ivr.  at.  to 

E.  Arnold.) 
(Kilvany.)— OS  3 
Law  of  Habit,  The.— Frances  E.  Willard.— WR  18 
Law  of  Human  Progress,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Progress  of 

Humanity,  The.)— C:   Sumner.— CS  10— NFS 

— YP 
(Progress  is  Constant — al.  diff.) — BLP 
Law  of  Labor,  The.     (Fr.  Crisis  Thoughts.) — Anon. — 

BLP 
Law  of  Love  as  a  Rule  of  Conduct,  The. — C:  Sumner. 

See  True  Grandeur  of  Nations,  The. 
Law  of  Success,  The. — J:  Sargeant. — SO 
Law  of  the  Jungle,   The.     (Fr.   The  Second  Jungle 

Book.) — Rudyard  Kipling. — VA 
Law  of  Virtue,  The.     (Fra^.)- Cicero.— BLP 
Law-case,  A. — W:  Cowper. — OS  1 
(Nose  and  Eyes. )— BNL— PC 
(Report  of  an  Adjudged  Case — C.) — HPE 
Lawlands  of  [or  o'l  Holland,  The.— Anon.— BB—BPB 
Laws  and  Law. — Sophie  W.  Weitzel. — TAS 
Lawsuit,  A.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FAD 


Lawyer,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Stage  Land. 
Lawyer   and    Free    Institutions,    The. — Chauncey   M. 

Depew. — NC 
Lawyer  and  the  Chimney-sweeper,  The. — Anon. — HR 
Lawyer,  Doctor,  Soldier,  and  Actor,  The.     (Play.) — 

Anon.— SED 
Lawyers  and  Donkeys.     (Dial.) — Anon. — DSS 
Lawyers  and  Laws.     (Sel.  fr.  Verbatim  from  Boileau.) 

—Alex.  Pope.— BNL 
Lawyers  and  the  Cat,  The. — Anon. — CS  9 
Lawyers  and  the  Law.     (Frags   fr.  various  axUhors.)^ 

BNL 
Lawyers  and  the  Law. — Jas.  Beattie.     See  Law. 
Lawyer's  Daughter,  A.— J.  H.  Thacher.— THP— TL 
Lawyer's  Farewell  to  his  Muse,  The. — Sir  W:  Black- 
stone.— FEP 
Lawyer's  Invocation  to  Spring,  The. — H:  H.  Brownell. 
— AWH— BNL— FEP— GP— THP 
(Lawyer's  Poem  to  Spring,  A.) — TFS 
(Ode  on  Spring— sZ.  diff.)—UY¥ 
Lawyer's  Lullaby,  The. — F.  H.  Coggswell. — SAE 
Lawyer's  Poem  to  Spring,  A. — H :  H.  Brownell.     See 

Lawyer's  Invocation  to  Spring,  The. 
Lawyer's  Stratagem,  The. — Anon. — MDD 
"Lay   a   garland    on    my    hearse." — Beaumont    and 

Fletcher.     See  Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Lay  me  Low. — Adam  L.  Gordon. — HP 

( Valedict  ory . ) — VA 
Lay  of  Ancient  Rome,  A. — T:  Ybarra. — CG  3 
Lay  of  Nonse-Irish  Sea^Kings. — G:  Sigerson. — TIP 
Lay  of  Real  Life,  A.— T:  Hood.— CS  9 
Lay  of  St.  Aloys,  The  (in  Ingoldsby  Legends),  Sel.  fr. 

(City  Bells.)— R:  H.  Barham.— BNL 
Lay  of  St.  Gengulphus,  A.     ( In  Ingoldsby  Legends.  ) 

— R:  H.  Barham.- HPE 
Lay  of  the  Brave  Cameron,  The. — J:  S.  Blackie. — EDY 

— VSG 
Lay  of  the  Conscription,  A. — Anon. — WR  13 
Lay  of  the  Famine,  A. — Anon. — TIP 
Lay  of  the  Grateful  Patient.— F.  D. — TL 
Lay-  of   the    Imprisoned    Huntsman. — Walter    Scott. 

See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Lay  of  the  Laborer,  The.— T:  Hood.— HSS  3  (set.)— 

— VA 
Lay  of  the  I^ast  Minstrel,  Sels.  fr. — Walter  Scott. 

Albert    Graeme's  Song.     (Can.   VI.,   St.    11,   12— 

sonff.  )—PEB  3 
"And  said  I  that  my  limbs  were  old."     (III.,  1,  2, 
v.,  13— sei.)- BNL 
(Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel — sel.) — BIL 
Branksome  Hall.     (I.,  1-6.)— OS  2 
Breathes  there  the  Man.     (VI.,  1.)— BNL  — LLC 
— PYO— SR  8— YBF 
("Breathes  there  the  man  with  soul  so  dead.") — 

GG 
(Innominatus.) — OB 

(Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel — sta.  1  and  2  ahr.) — AE 
(Love  of  Country  [,The].)— BLP— GMS— SM— 

SS— WCLG  1 
(My  Native  Land.)— GN— OS  1 
(Patriotism.)— DLS—FTR  (sts.  1  and  2.)— GP— 
KNE— PPSr 
Defiance.     (I.,  18.)— EPs 

Dies  IriE.  (VI.,  following  st.  30 — Scott's  vers.  o/T: 
de  Celano's  poem.) — FEP 
(Hymn  for  the  Dead.)— BPB 
See  also  Mass,  The,  below. 
Fitz-Traver's  Song.     (VI.,  16-20— son^;. )— EPs 
Harold's  Song.     (VI.,  23— son^;. )—PEB  3 

(Rosabelle.)  —  BFV  —  BPB  —  CGd  —EPs— FEP 
— PGTl 
Last  Minstrel,  The.     (/n<rod. )—WEP  4 

(Lav  of  the  Last  Minstrel.  The — hr.  sel.) — SAE 
Mass,  The.  (VI.,  29,  30,  and  Hymn  for  the  Dead.) — 

EPs 
Melrose  Abbey.     (II..  1,  8-11.)— BNL 
(Melrose  bv  Moonlight — sel.) — OS  3 
Poet,  The.     (V.,  1,  2.)— FP 
Scotland.     (VI.,  2.)— BNL 
Lay  of  the  Lover's  Friend,  The. — W:  Aytoun. — HPE 
Lav  of  the  Madman. — Anon. — PPSr 

(A6r.)— CS  9— FR— KNE 
Lays   of   the   Scottish   Cavaliers,    Poems   fr. — W:    E. 
Aytoun.     See: 
Battle  of  the  Boulevard,  The. 
Burial  March  of  Dundee,  The. 
Charles  Edward  at  Versailles. 
Edinburgh  after  Flodden. 
Execution  of  Montrose,  The. 
Heart  of  the  Bruce,  The. 
Widow  of  Glencoe,  The. 
Lazarus. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Lazy  Boy's  Lesson,  A. — Julia  A.  Tirrell. — HSS  2 


180 


TITLE  INDEX 


Legend 


Lazy  Daisy.— Anon.— PP—YFR 

Lazy  Lew. — Anon. — FAS 

Lazy  or  Not. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 

Lazy  Roof,  The. — Gelett  Burgess. — NA 

Liizyland. — Marg.  Vandegrift. — WR  15 

Lo  Depart.— G.  R.  Wallace.— CG  1 

Lc  Dernier  Jour  d'un  Condamnd.     (C.) — G:  A.  Baker, 

Jr.- PLD— TAV 
(Bachelor  Coat,  The.)— CS  37 
Le  Malade  Imaginaire,  Sc^  fr.     (Imaginary  Sick  Man, 

The— Sc.  XIV.)— Jean  B.  P.  Molibre.— PS 
Le  Mauvais  Larron. — Rosamund  M.  Watson. — VA — 

WR  3 
Le  Morte  d'Arthur,  Sel.  jr.    (Sir  Lancelot — ael.  fr.  Bk. 

XXL,  Ch.  XIII.)— Sir  T:  Mal[l]ory.— OS  3 
Le  Rdcit  d'une  Scoeur. — Aubrey  De  Vere. — AVP 
Le   Roi   s' Amuse       (The    King's  Diversion),   Sel.    fr. 

(Father's  Curse,  The — sel.  jr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  4.) — 

Victor  Hugo.— SO 
Lead,  Kindly  Light.— J:  H.  Newman.— BSP— ED Y— 

FEP   —   HDL  —   LLC  —  PYO  —  SAE  — 

WCLG  1— YBF 
("Lead,  kindly  light,  amid  the  encircling  gloom.") 

— GG 
(Lead  Thou  me.)— SSS 
(Pillar  of  the  Cloud,  The— C.)— BNL— GP— SM— 

VA 
"Lead,  kindly  light!  amid  the  encircling  gloom." — J: 

H.  Newman.     See  foregoing. 
Lead,  Kindly  Light,   Pantomime  of. — Lucy  Jenkins. — 

WR  17 
Lead  me,  O  Lord. — Adelaide  Procter. — SSS  (sZ.  abr.) 
(Per  Pacem  ad  Lucem— C.)— CS  7— FEP— HDL— 

VA— YBF 
(Through  Peace  to  Light.)— SSS 
Lead  the  Way. — Lyman  Abbott. — BS  13 
Lead  Thou  me. — J:  H.  Newman.     See  Lead,  Kindly 

Light. 
"Lead  us.  Heavenly  Father,  lead  us." — Jas.  Edmeston. 

—FEP 
(Prayer  to  the  Trinity.)— VA 
Leader  Haughs. — Minstrel  Bum.^BPB 
Leadership   of    Educated    Men,  The.     \Sel.)—G:  W. 

Curtis.— MRS 
Leading  the  Choir.— Edith  M.  Norris.— WR  21 
"Leadville  Jim."— W.  W.  Fink.— CS  27— SR  4 
Leaf  after  Leaf.— Walt eK  S.  Landor.— YBF 
"Leafless    are   the    trees;   their    purple    branches." — 

Ebenezer  Elliott.— AD 
Leaflets,  The.— Kate  L.  Brown. — NV 
Leaflets  and  Lady-bugs. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Leagued  with  Death. — Anon. — MR 
Leah  the  Forsaken.     (Act  IV.,  Sc.  2.) — Augustin  Daly. 

— BS  8— FTR— SAE 
(Scene  from  "Leah  [the  Forsaken].")— CS  27— SR  4 
Leak  in  the  Dike,  The.— Phoebe  Cary.— BS  5— CS  14 

— FR  (si.  abr.) 
Leap  for  Life,  A. — G.  P.  Morris  (at.  also  to  Walter  Col- 
ton).— FTR 
(Main-truck,  The.)— CS  1— LLC— PPSr— TAV 
Leap  of  Curtius,  The.— G:  Aspinall.— CS  12 
Leap  of  Roushan    Beg,    The. — H:    W.    Longfellow. — 

CS  17 
Leap  Year  Farce,  A. — Charlotte  Rogers. — SR  10 
Leap-year  in  the  Village  with  One  Gentleman.    (Play.) 

— Anon.— BS  8— HD 
Leap-year  Mishaps. — Anon. — BS  22 
Leap-year  Wooing,  A. — David  Macrae. — BS  4 — MHR 
Lear.— T:  Hood.— VA 
Learn  a  Little  Every  Day. — Anon. — POS 
Learn  Everything  You  Can. — Anon. — WR  17 
Learn  to  Labor  and  to  Wait.- — T.  S.  Denison. — FAS 
"Learn  to  live,  and  live  to  learn." — Anon. — HSS  2 
I-earn  to  Wait. — Anon. — HP 
Learned    Negro,    The.     (Congregationalist.) — AWH — 

CS  11— THP 
(Darkey  Preacher,  The.)— CDV— SDR 
Learning.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL  ^ 
Learning  to  Prav. — Mary  E.  Dodge. — CS  5 
Learning  to  Pray.— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.— TAS 
Learning  to  Sew. — Anon. — WR  17 
"Leave  God  to  order  all  thv  ways." — G:  Newman. — 

GG— HDL 
Leave  it  with  Him.— Anon.— SSS— YBT  (abr.) 
Leave  me  Not.     (Psalm  XXVII.) — Jas.  Wedderburn. 

— ELP 
Leave  the  Liquor  Alone.— Anon. — TS 
"Leave  the  young  hearts  to  nature  and  to  God."     (.4// 

the  Year  Round.) — GG 
Leaves,  The. — Anon.— AD 

Leaves  and  the  Wind,  The.— G :  Cooper.— TAV 
(Autumn  I.«aves.)— GMS  (abr.)— NV 
(Wind  and  the  Leaves,  The.)— SM  s^ 


Leaves  at  my  Window. — J:  J.  Piatt. — AA 
Leaves  at  Play. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Leaves  from  Fatherland.— T.  W.  Handford.— TFS 
Leaves  of  Grass. — Walt  Whitman.     See  Song  of  My- 
self. 
Leaves   of   Grass,   Sel.    jr.     (Great    are  the   Myths — 

Pt.  II.,  abr.)- Walt  Whitman.— HBP 
Leaving  Jonah. — H.  E.  McBride. — MHD 
Leaving  the  Homestead. — Anon. — CS  18 
Leconte  de  Lisle. — Edmund  Gosse. — EDY 
Lecture,  The.— E.  T.  Corbett.— CS  36  i 

Lecture  by  a  Yankee. — Anon. — MCS 
Lecture  by  the  New  Male  Star. — Helen  H.  Gardener. — 

BS  19 
Lecture  on  Hornet-ology,  A. — Anon. — PTS 
Lecture  on  Patent  Medicines,  A. — "Dr.  Puff  Stuff." — 

CS  1— DS 
Lecture    Recital:     Ella    Wheeler  Wilcox. — Grace   B. 

Faxon.— WR  26 
Lecture  Recital:  Three   Women   Poets  of  New   Eng- 
land.—Grace  B.  Faxon.— WR  26 
Lecture  to  the  Crow,  A. — Anon. — PS^ — TT 
Lecture  upon  the  Shadow,  A.— J:  Donne. — HBP 
Lee  to  the  Rear.— J:  R.  Thompson.— AWB— BAB 
Leedle  Yawcob  [or  Yacob]  Strauss. — C:  F.  Adams. — 

AWH  —  BDD  —  CS  13— CSS  — DFY— FTR— 

HP— THP 
(Yawcob  Strauss.)— PS 
Lefroy  in  the   Forest. — C:   Mair.     See  Tecumseh:   A 

Drama. 
Left.— H.  G.  Chapman.— CG  1 
Left  Alone. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Left  Alone  at  Eighty. — Alice  Robbins. — CS  7 
Left  Behind.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— BNL 

(Loved  you  Better  than  you  Knew.) — FP 
Left  on  the  Battle-field.— Sarah  T.  Bolton.— AWB— 

BNL— WRD 
Left  Undone.— Marg.  E.  Sangster.— SSS 

("It  isn't  the  thing  you  do,  dear." — sel.) — BIL — 

FTA 
(Sin  of  Omission,  The— C.)— SR  9 
Legacy  of  (jlrant.  The. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. — NO 
Legal  Attachment,  A. — Anon. — SR  7 
Legend,  A.     (Boston  Pilot.)— CS  24 
(Monk's  Vision,  The.)— BS  19— PEO 
(True  Artist,  The.)— YBT 
Legend,  A.— Anna  B.  Badlam.— HSS  3 
Legend,  A. — May  Kendall. — VA 
Legend,  A. — Rose  Osborne. — FHS 

(Bell  of  the  Angels,  The.)— CS  29— YBT  (abr.) 
Legend,  The.     (C. — fr.  The  Pilgrim  to  Compostella.) 

— Rob't  Southey. 
(Cock  and  Hen  Story,  A.)— HPE 
Legend,  A.     (Roses   and   Thorns— C. )—R :   H.    Stod- 
dard.—OS  1 
Legend  Beautiful,  The.     (C. — Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn: 

The  Theologian's  Tale.)— H:  W.  Longfellow. 
(Legend  of  the  Beautiful,  The.)— BS  12 
Legend  of  Aino,  The.— (Tr.  by)  J.  E.  Crawford.     See 

Kalevala,  The. 
Legend  of  Arabia,  A. — Anon. — WR  3 
Legend  of  Bregenz,  A. — Adelaide  A.   Procter. — CR — 

CS  16— FTR— HB— MMR— VSG 
(SI.  abr.)— SA— TMR 
(Abr.)- FR— SO 
Legend  of  Brittany,  A,  Sel.  fr.     ("Her  fittest  triumph 

is  to  show  that  good." — br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.) — 

Jas.  R.  Lowell.— FTA 
Legend  of  Christopher  Columbus,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Worth 

of  Fame,  The.)— Joanna  Baillie. — BLP  (abr.) 
gg 

Legend  of  Crystal  Spring.— H:  W.  Austin.— CS  27 
Legend  of  Don  Ditto  and  the  Dutchman.     (Fr.  New 

Sanford  and  Merton.) — Anon. — SR  10 
Legend  of  Easter  Eggs,  The. — Fitz-James  O'Brien. — 

CS  36— DFR 
Legend  of  Good  Women,  The.     (Sels.  fr.  The  Prologue.) 

Geoffrey  Chaucer. 
Daisy,  The.— BNL— GP  (br.  sel.) 
Prologue  to  the  I>egende  of  Goode  Women.     (2  sels 

united.)— WEF  1 
(Queen  Alcestis  and  the  God  of  Love — sel.) — I>C 
Legend  of  Hesse,  A. — Franz  Dingelstedt. — CSS 
Legend  of  Innisfallen,    The. — Minnie    D.    Bateham. — 

CS23 
(For  diff.  vers,  see  Abbott  of  Inisfalen,  The. — W: 

Allingham.) 
Legend  of  Kalooka.  The.— I.  E.  Jones.— CS  27 
Legend  of  King    Nilus,    The. — Edith    Wordsworth. — 

CS  34 
Legend  of  Kingsale,  The. — .^^non. — WR  14 
Legend  of  Montrose,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Orphan  Maid,  The — 

song  fr.  Ch.  IX.)— Walter  Scott.— WR  9 


181 


Legend 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Legend  of  Ogre  Castle,  The.— T:  D.  English.— WR  4 
Legend  of  Paganini,  A. — J.  Harrison. — HSS  2 
Legend  of  Provenge,  A. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — VSG 
Legend  of  Rabbi  Ben  Levi,  The.     (Tales  of  a  Wayside 

Inn:  The  Spanish  Jew's  Tale.) — H:  W.  Long- 

feUow.— BS  17 
Legend  of  Rose  Sunday,  A. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Legend  of  St.  Christopher,  The. — Anon. — LLC 
Legend  of  St.  Christopher,  The.     (2  diff.  versiona  and 

diff.  fr.  foregoing.) — Mary  Fletcher. — CS  26 — 

WR  1 
Legend  of  St.  Freda,  The.— Sarah  D.  Hobart.- CS  29 
Legend  of  St.  Valentine,  A. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Legend  of  Sleepy    Hollow,  The.     {In  Sketch  Book.) — 

Washington  Irving.— WCLI  2 
(Ride  of  Ichabod  Crane,  The— sei.)— WR  16 
Legend  of  the  Aspen. — Anon. — AD 
Legend  of  the  Aspen,  A.  —  Bemhard  S.  Ingemann. — 

HS 
Legend  of  the  Aspen-tree,    A.  —  Eleanore     Darby. — 

HSSl 
Legend  of  the  Beautiful,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow.  <See 

Legend  Beautiful,  The. 
Legend  of  the  Dead  Lambs,  The.    {In  After  Paradise.) 

— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton. — VA 
Legend  of  the  Earth,  The. — Jean  Rameau. — BS  16 
Legend  of  the  Enchanted    Soldier,    The. — Washington 

Irving.     jSee  Alhambra,  The. 
Legend  of  the  Fleur-de-lis,  The.  —  Mabel   Cronise. — 

CS  33 
Legend  of  the  Haunted  Tree,  The,    Sel.    fr.    (Fairy 

Song.) — Winthrop  M.  Praed.— OB 
Legend  of  the  Heather. — Anon. — WR  6 
Legend  of  the  Knot-hole,     The. — Edgar    W.     Nye. — 

WR20 
Legend  of  the  Lily,  The.— Annie  Wall.— WR  6 
Legend  of  the  Missions,  A. — Lee  C.  Harby. — WR  6 
Legend  of  the  Moor's  Legacy. — Washington    Irving. — 

See  Alhambra,  The. 
Legend  of  the  Northland,  A. — Phoebe  Carv. — BLF 

{SI.  a6r.)— CSS— PPSr 
Legend  of  the  Organ-builder,  The. — Julia  C.  B.  Dorr. — 

BS  13— CS  21— FS— MYF— SR  2 
{SI.  a6r.)— FMR— SO 
Legend  of  the  Sacks,  The.     {Juvenile   entertainment.) 

— Anon. — Eu  E 
Legend  of  the  True,  A.— Marietta  F.  Cloud.— WR  7 
Legend  of  the  Willow-pattern  Plate. — Anon. — WR3 
Legends  of  the  Little  Fay,  SeX.  fr.  (Little  Fay,  The.)— 

Rob't  Buchanan. — OS  1 
Legends  of  the   Province    House.  —  Nathaniel  Haw- 
thorne.    See  Howe's  Masquerade. 
Legislative  Union,  The. — Sir  Robert  Peel. — SS 
Legitimate  "Strike,"  A. — Frances  E.  Willard. — WR  18 
Lemon  Party,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Lemonade. — Bessie  Chandler. — SR  2 
Lemuel's  Song.— G:  Wither. — FEP 
Lenna's  Dream. — Anon. — YFD 
Lenora. — Gottfried  A.  Biirger. — WR  7 
Lenore.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— AA— MRS 
Lent.— T.  L.  Clarke.— CG  2 
Lent. — G:  Hyde. — TL 

Lenten  Maid,  The.— S.  R.  Kennedy.— CG  2 
L' Envoi.— Anon. — SCS 
L'Envoi. — Rudyard  Kipling. — OB 
L'Envoi.— E.  B.  Reed.— CG  1 
L'Envoy. — Randolph. — HP 

Leoffricus.     {In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — PEB  1 
Leolin   and   Edith. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Aylmer's 

Field. 
Leona. — Jas.  G.  Clarke. — CS  7 
Leonard  and  Margaret. — Rob't  Southey. — FTR 
Leonard  and  the  V.  C. — Juliana  H.  Ewing.     See  Story 

of  a  Short  Life,  The. 
Leonard  Tarries  Long.     (Sun  upon  the  Lake. — C. — fr. 

The    Doom    of    Devorgoil.) — Walter   Scott. — 

YBF 
(Datur  Hora  Quieti.)— PGT  1 
(Evening.)— BPB 
Leonardo  da  Vinci  Poetizes  to  the  Duke  in  his  Own 

Defence,  Br.  sel.Jr.  (Perseverance.) — Leonardo 

da  Vinci  {tr.  byW:  W.  Story).— BNL 
Leonardo's  "Monna  Lisa.  "—E:  Dowden. — VA 
Leonidas.— G:  Croly.— BLP  (a6r.)— ED  Y—HB— HBP 
Leonidas,  Sets.  fr. — R:  Glover. 
Address  of  Leonidas. — MMR 
Polydorus  and  Maron.     {Fr.  Bk.  IX.)— WEP  3 
Leonidas. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  26 
Leonidas   to    his   Three    Hundred. — Leonidas    {tr.    by 

Pichat).— PS— SS 
Leper,   The.— Nathaniel   P.   WiUis.— TAV— TMD   («Z. 

abr.) 
(il6r.)— BNL  —  BS  7'-  CS  3  —  EA  —  HBR  —  OM 


Les  Burgraves,  Sel.  fr.   (Emperor's  Return,  The — fr. 

Pt.  II,  Sc.  6.)— Victor  Hugo.— SO 
Les  Enfant  s  Perdus.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Les  Mis<^rables,  Sels.  fr.  Victor  Hugo. 

Battle  of  Waterloo,  The.     {Fr.  Cosette,  Bk.  I.) — 

PPS  (Chs.  3-6,  8,  10,  12,  13— c<md.)— PR  (o 

9— cond.)— WCLG2   (8-13)— WR  11  (5-14— 

cond.) 

(Close  of  the  Battle  of  Waterloo — 14,  15— cond.) 

— BS23 
(Napoleon's  Overthrow — 8,  9 — cond.) — CS  25 
(Waterloo— Ch.  16.)— PPS 
Jean  Valjean.      (Fantine,  Bk.  VI.,  Chs.  3-5,  9,  10 

— cond.) — CR 
Gamin,  The.     {Sels.  fr.  Marius,  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  I.,  and 

Jean  Valjean,  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  XV.)— CS  17 
Jean  Valjean  and  the  Bishop.     {Fr.  Fantine,  Bk. 
II.)— HBR  (Chs.   1,  3,  5,  10-14— cond.)— IR 
(3,  5,  10-12— cond.) 
(Bishop's  Silver  Candlesticks,  The — Ch.  12,  arr. 

as  play.) — NDP 
(John  Valjohn  and  the  Savoyard — Ch.  13 — abr.) 
—CSS— MMR 
Jean  Valjean's  Sacrifice.     (Fantine,  Bk.  VII.,  Ch 

3— cond.)— NC 
Little  Gavroche.     (Saint  Denis,  Bk.  VI.,  Ch.  2— 

ggl\ WR  25 

Man  Overboard,  A.     (Fantine,  Bk.  II,  Ch.  VIII.) 
— SAE 
(Billows  and  Shadows — si.  abr.) — BS  21 


t Despair — si.  abr.) — KNE 
Les  Morts  Vont  Vite. — H:  C.  Bunner 


-A  A 


Lesbia.— W:  Congreve.— FEP 

(Silly  Fair.)— BNL 
Lesbia  Hath  a  Beaming  Eye. — T:  Moore. — WEP  4 
Less  than  Cost.— M.  A.  Kidder. — CS  15 
Lesson,  A. — Anon. — DLF 
Lesson,  A. — Anon. — NV 
Lesson,  A. — Anon. — YBT 
Lesson,  The. — Mary  B.  Dodge. — BS  8 
Lesson,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 
Lesson,  A. — W:  Wordsworth. — PGT  1— YBF 
Lesson  for  Mamma,  A. — Sydney  Dayre. — BVC 
Lesson  from  a  Bell,  A. — Walter  S.  Smith. — CS  25 
Lesson  from    "Fruit    of   the    Spirit."      {Arr.    by)  P. 

Garrett.- CS  16 
Lesson  from  the  Sunflowers,,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — 

WLO 
Lesson  in  Etiquette,  A. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 
Lesson  in  Geography,  A. — Frances  Wynne. — TIP 
Lesson  in  Mythology,  A. — Eliza  C.  Hall. — HP 
Lesson  in  Reading,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Autobiography  of 

Leigh  Hunt,  Ch.  III.)— Leigh  Hunt.— MHR 
Lesson  in  Tennis,  A. — C.  F.  Coburn. — CH 
Lesson  in  Weighing,  A.— C:  R.  Talbot.— WR  6 
Lesson  of  Mercy,  A. — Alice  Cary. — BLF 
Lesson  of  Mercy,  A. — G:  Murray. — VA 
Lesson  of  Obedience,  The. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Lesson  of  the  Leaves. — Anon. — AD 
Lesson    of    the    Revolution,    The. — Jared    Sparks. — 

BLP 
(Teachings  of  the  American  Revolution.) — PFP 
Lesson  of  Trust,  The.— Nora  Perry.— YBT 
Lesson  of  Waterloo,  The. — Anon. — CS  18 
Lesson  of    Wisdom    for    all    Manner    of    Children. — 

Svmon  (C:  Simeon?).— BVC 
Lesson  Worth  Enshrining,  A. — Anon. — HSS' 2 — SSS 
Lessons. — Sallie  N.  Roach. — CS  24 
licssons  from  Birds  and  Bees. — Jas.  Hurdis. — YBT 
Lessons  from  Nature  about  Trees. — W.  H.  Benedict. — 

DFR 
Lessons  from  Scripture  Flowers. — M.   B.  C.   Slade. — 

CS  16 
Lessons  from  the  Washington  Centennial. — G:  A.  Gor- 
don.—FD  2 
Lessons  in  Cookery. — Anon. — FAD 
Lessons  in  Love. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  Hunchback, 

The. 
Lessons  of  Nature,  The.     {In  Flowers  of  Sion.) — W: 

Drummond.— FEP— PGT  1— YBF 
Lessons  of  the  Leaves,  The. — Anon. — SSS 
"Let  dead  names  be  eternized  by  dead  stone." — Edith 

M.  Thomas. — AD 
Let  down  the  Bars. — Philip  Mor.^e.      See  Lovejoy  Cow, 

The. 
"Let  each  man  think  himself  an  act  of  God." — Philip 

J.  (?)  Bailey.— CS  1 
Let  Every  One  Sweep  before  his  Own  Door. — Anon. — 

CS  8 
'Let  it  not  be  forgotten  that  patriotism  is  one  of  the 

positive  lessons." — R;  Edwards. — DFR 
Let  it  Pass.- Anon. — SSS 
{SI.  afcr.)— DJS— HSS  2 


182 


TITLE  INDEX 


Liberty 


Let  Little  Hands.— S.  M.  Kniel. — DJS 

(For  Decoration  Day.)— DFR— DLS— LPS— PP 
Let  me  be  with  Thee.— Charlotte  Elliott.— VA 
Let  me  Forget.     (Trinity  Archive.) — CG  3 
'Let  me  not  die  before  I've  done  for  thee.  " — Anon. — 

GG 
"Let  me  not  to  the  marriage  of  true  minds." — W: 

Shakespeare. — OEL 
(Love.)— LLC 
(Sonnet.)  —  BNL  —  EPs   —    FEP   —   HBP    — 

OB  (XVIII.) 
(Sonnet  CXVL— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
(True  Love.)— FT  A— OH— PGT  1— PHS 
Let   not    Woman   e'er   Complain.  —  Rob't    Burns.  — 

BNL 
Let  Santa  Claus  In. — Anon. — WR  26 
Let  the  Angels  Ring  the  Bells. — J.  E.  Rankin. — BS  13 
Let  the  Toast  Pass. — R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  School  for 

Scandal,  The. 
Let  there  be  Light. — Horace  Mann. — BLP — LI^C 
"Let  there  be  no  more  accurse  I  races  on  the  earth." — 

Emilio  (7)  Castelar.— GG 
"Let  those  Laugh  who  Win." — (Musical  sketch — ad. 

by)  Alfred  B.  Sedgwick— DSS 
Let  us  Alone.     (C.)— H:  H.  Brownell.- AWH 
("All  we  Ask  is  to  be  Let  Alone.") — CS  1 
(Old  Cove,  The.)— EPs 
"Let  us  Have  Peace."     (Ahr.) — H:  Watterson. — SC 

(Tribute  to  Grant,  K—diff.  abr.)—CS  31 
I-et  us  Kiss  and  Part. — Michael  Drayton.     See  Love's 

Farewell. 
' '  Let  us  learn  to  be  cont  ent  wit  h  what  we  have,  with  the 

place  we  have  in  life.  "— D:  Swing. — GG 
"Let  us  not  fall  into  the  vulgar  whim  and  dishonor  the 

century  in  which  we  live." — Victor  Hugo. — 

GG 
"  'Let  us  pass  over!'     We  were  far  astray. "    (Friends' 

Review.) — GG 
Let  us  Try  to  be  Happy. — Anon. — DJS 
I^et  us  Wreathe  the  Mighty  Cup. — Michael  Field. — VS 
Letter,  A.— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.— BIL—FTA—TFY 
Letter,  A.     (To   Lady    Margaret    Cavendish    HoUes- 

Harley  when   a  child.)     See  Letter  to  Lady 

Margaret  Cavendish,  A. — Matthew  Pri:  r. 
Letter,  A.— C.  S.— CG  2 
Letter  and  an  Answer,  A.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Letter  from  a  Candidate  for  the  Presidency,  A. — Jas 

R.  Lowell.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 
Letter  from  Italy,  The,  Sel.  jr.     (Blessings  of  Liberty, 

The.)— Jos.  Addison.— WEP  3 
Letter  from  Mr.  Ezekiel  Biglow,  A. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. 

See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 
Letter  from  Mr.  Hosea  Biglow  to  the  Hon.  J.  T.  Buck- 
ingham.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Biglow  Papers, 

The. 
Letter  from  Newport,  A. — F:  W.  H.  Myers. — VA 
Letter  H,  The. — Catherine  Fanshawe. — CS  26 

(Riddle,  A.)— BNL— FEP— GN 
Letter  of  Advice,  A.— Winthrop  M.  Praed.— WEP  4— 

WR  8  (ahr.) 
Letter  of  Blunders,  A. — Anon. — MYF 
Letter  of  Marque,  The. — Caroline  F.  Orne. — CS  17 
Letter  Scene,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Letter  Signed  Hyperion. — Josiah  Quincy,  Jr. — EAO 
Letter  to  Ben  Jonson,   Sel.    fr.     (Ben   Jonson.) — Fs. 

Beaumont. — BNL 
Letter  to  Benjamin  Webb. — B:  Franklin. — MAL 
Letter  to  Bernard  Barton,  Jan.  9th,  1824. —  C:  Lamb. 

(Cold  in  the  Head,  A— abr.)— OS  3 
Letter  to  Col.  Henry  Lee,  A,  Sel.  fr.    (Approach  to  the 

Presidency,  The.) — G:  Washington. — HS 
Letter  to  his  Little  Son. — Martin  Luther. — OS  1 
Letter  to    Lady    Margaret    Cavendish,    A. — Matthew 

Prior.- OB 
(Letter,  A.)— PoR 
Letter  to  Lord  Chesterfield.     (To  the  Right  Honorable 

the  Earl  of  Chesterfield — C.) — S:  Johnson. — 

OS  3 
(Letter  to  the  Earl  of  Chesterfield.)— ESs 
Letter   to    Mr.    Johnson     (Printer). —  W:    Cowper. — 

MRS 
Letter  to  Mother  Nature,  A. — Sydney  Dayre. — WR  24 
Letter    to    Samuel    Mather.     (Ahr.) — B:  Franklin. — 

MAL 
Letter  to  Santa  Claiis.— Emily  H.  Miller. — CPL 
Letter  to  Santa  Claus,  A. — W:  O.  Stoddard. — HS 
Letter  to  the  Earl  of  Chesterfield. — S:  Johnson.     See 

Letter  to  Lord  Chesterfield. 
Letter  to  the  Rev.  Dr.  Lathrop,  Boston.     (To  John 

Lathrop- C.)— B:  Franklin.— MAL 
Letter  to  the  Rev.  John  Newton,  Nov.  30,  1783.     (C.) 

— W:  Cowper. 
(Life  before  the  Flood.)— LLC 


Letter  to  Thomas  Flower  Ellis,  March  30.  1831.     (C.) 

— T:  B.  Macaulay. 
(Passage  of  the  Reform  Bill — si.  ahr.) — CR 
Letters. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — BNL 
Letters,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— CS  1— HBP— OH 
Letters  for  Mr.  Smith.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  36 
Letters  from  Miss  Biddy  Fudge  to  Miss  Dorothy — in 

Ireland. — T:    Moore.     See   Fudge    Family   in 

Paris,  The. 
Letters  of  Peter  Plymley  on  "No  Popery,"  The. — 

Sydney  Smith.— ESs 
Letters  to  Several  Personages:  To  Sir  Henry  Wootton. 

— J:  Donne.      See  Verses  to  Sir  Henry  Woot- 
ton. 
Lettice. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — OH 
Lettice. — Michael  Field. — VA 
"Letting  go  the  unworthy  things  that  meet  us." — 

Anna  R.  Brown.— FHS 
Letting  in  Light. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Autocrat 

of  the  Breakfast -table.  The. 
Letting  the  Old  Cat  Die.— Mary  M.  Dodge.— CS  15— 

FMR— MYF— NV— PPSr 
Letty's  Globe.— C:  Tennyson-Turner.— OB— PGT  2— 

VA— YBF 
Leveling. — Anon. — WR  13 
Levet,  his  Death.     (C.) — S:  Johnson. 
(On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Levett.)— FEP 
(On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Robert  Levet,  etc.,  also  C.) — 

OB 
(Quiet  Life,  The.)— LH 
Lewie  Gordon.— Alex.  Geddes. — WEP  3 
Lex  "Talionis  upon  Benjamin  West,  The. — J:  Wolcott. 

—HPE 
Lexington. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — BS  17 — SR  8 
Lexington. — Prosper  M.  Wetmore. — WR  10 
Liberal   Education,   A. — T:  H:   Huxley.     See   follow- 
ing. 
Liberal  Education  and  whereto  Find  It,  A,  Sels.  fr. — T: 

H:  Huxley. 
Education.     (Br.  sel.} — SE 
Liberal  Education,  A. — OS  3 
Liberalism. — Anon. — CP 
Liberalistic  Temper,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Liberator,  The.  SeZ.  fr.     (O'Connell.)— T:  N.  Burke.— 

FS 
Liberator,  The,  Sci.  fr.     (Keynote  of  Abolition,  The.) 

W:  L.  Garrison.- WR  10 
Libertine,  The.— Aphra  Behn.— OB 
Liberty.— Frank  E.  Brush.— CS  13 
Liberty. — W:  E.  Channing.     See  Spiritual  Freedom. 
Liberty. — Orville  Dewey. — LLC 

("Liberty  is  a  solemn  thing" — hr.  set.,  included  in 

Patriotic  Sentiments.) — DFR 
Liberty.— Walter  Elliott.— TS 
Liberty. — W:  L.  Garrison. — OS  2 
(Free  Mind,  The.)— TAV 
(Freedom  for  the  Mind.) — AA 
(Sonnet  Written  in  Prison.) — BNL 
Liberty.     (Ptly.  same  sel.  fr.  The  American  Republic: 

its  Dangers  and  Responsibilities.) — H:  George. 

— SSD— TMD 
Liberty.— J:  Hay.— AA— TMR 
Liberty. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  Milton. 
Liberty.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— TMR 
Liberty.     (SeZ.)- W:  Wordswort h.— EPs 
Liberty    and    Greatness.  —  Hugh    S.    (?)    Legar^. — 

SR8 
Liberty  and  Intelligence. — J:  C.  Calhoun.     See  Liberty 

the  Meed  of  Intelligence. 
Liberty  and  Knowledge.     (Sel.  fr.   Public  Dinner  at 

New  York.)— Dan'l  Webster.— FD  1 
Liberty    and    Union    [One    and    Inseparable]. — Dan'l 

Webster.     See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The. 
Liberty    Bell.     (Fr.    Ascutney    Charades.) — Julia    A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Liberty  for  All. — W:  L.  Garrison. — A  A 
Liberty  in  Government.     (Sel.  fr.  On  Liberty,  Ch.  V.) 

J:S.  Mill.— OS3 
"Liberty  is  a  solemn  thing." — Orville  Dewey. — See 

Liberty. 
Liberty  is  Strength.— C:  J.  Fox.- PS  (si.  abr.)—SS 
Liberty  of  Man,  Woman,  and  Child,  The,  SeZ.  fr.     (At 

the  Tomb  of  Napoleon.) — Rob't  G.  Ingersoll. — 

CS  30— SC 
Liberty  of  the  Press. — E :  D.  Baker.     See  Free  Press,  A. 
Liberty  of  the  Press,  The.— J:  P.  Curran. — SS 
Liberl  y  of  the  Press. — Sir  Aubrev  De  Vere. — TIP 
Liberty  of  the  Press;  or,  The  Human  Mind,  1850. — 

Victor  Hugo.— PS— SS 
Liberty  or  Death. — Patrick  Henry.     See  Speech  in  the 

Virginia  Convention,  1775. 
Liberty  or  Death.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Declaration  of  Inde- 
pendence.)— Rob't  G.  Ingersoll. — FS 


183 


Liberty 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Liberty  t  he  Meed  of  Intelligence. — J :  C.  Calhoun. — 
KNE— SS 
(Liberty  and  Intelligence.) — SO 
Liberty  Tree.— T:  Paine.— AD  (se/.)— AWB— HS 
Library,  The.— G:  Crabbe.— LBB— MBB 
Library,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— LBB— MBB 
Library,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — AA 
Library,  The.     (Occasional     Pieces,     XVIII.) — Rob't 
Southey.— LBB— MBB 
(Books.)— BNL 
(His  Books.)— OB 
(My  Days  among  the  Dead  [are  Passed].) — FEP — 

HBP— YBF 
(Scholar,  The.)— PGT  1 
(Stanzas  Written  in  his  Library.) — WEP  4 
Library,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— LBB— MBB 
Licensed  to  Sell:  or.  Little  Blossom. — Marg.  J.  Bid- 
well.— BS  3 
Liddel  Bower,  The.— Jas.  Hogg.— PEB  3 
Lides   to   Bary   Jade.     {Scribner's  Monthly.) — BS  3 — 

CS  10 
Lie,  The.     (C.)— Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— FEP— PHS— 
WEP  1 
(Lye,  The— an<.  style.)— HBF 
(Soul's  Errand,  The.)— BNL— CEL— EPs 
Lie  for  a  Life,  A. — G:  H:  Galpin.     See  Threads  from 

the  Woof. 
Life.— Anon.— FP 
Life.— Anon.— FTA 
Life.— Anon— HP 

Life.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Life.— Fs.  Bacon.— FEP 

(World.  The.)— BNL— ELP 
Life.     (C.)— Anna  L.  Barbauld.— GP  —  HBP— OB— 
W  EP  3 
(Sel. )— EPs— FEP— PC— PYO— YBF 
(Life  and  Death— «eZ.) — CEL 
("Life!     I  know  not  what  thou  art.") — BNL 

(Sei.)- HDL— PGT  1 
("Life!  we've  been  long  together" — br.  eel.) — CS  1 
— GG 
(Life's  "Good-morning.")— FP— OS  1 
Life.SeZ.  jr.     (Good  Cheer.)— Charlotte  Bronte.— OS  1 
Life. — Alice  Brown. — AA 
Life.— R:  Coe,  Jr.— CS  25— TAV 
Life.— S:  K.  Cowan.— CS  26— DS 

Life.— (Comp.  hy)  Mrs.  H.  A.  Deming.— FEP— HP— 
SR2 
(Curious  Life  Poem,  A.)— CS  15 
Life.     ("Our    share  of     night  to  bear" — C.) — Emily 

Dickinson. ^ — AA 
Life. — Minnie  Gilmore. — TAS 
Life.     (O— G:  Herbert.- BNL— EPs— FEP 

(Life  and  the  Flowers.)— CEL 
Life.— R:  M.  Milnes.  Lord  Houghton. — HSS  3 

("So  should  we  live,  that  every  hour.") — CS  1 
Life.— H:  King.— FEP 

Life.     {Diff.   poem.) — H:  King    {wr.  at.   to  Fs.  Beau- 
mont).—HBP— YBF 
(Life  of  Man,  The.)— CEL 
(On  the  Life  of  Man— C.)— ELP 
(Sic  Vita.)— BNL— CS  19— FEP 
Life. — Lizzie  M.  Little. — VA 
Life. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Psalm  of  Life,  A. 
Life.— L.  F.  M:— CG  3 
Life.  —  Doii    Jorge  Manrique.     See  Coplas   de   Man- 

rique. 
Life. — Mary  Morgan. — TCV 
Life.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— FEP— HBP— VA 
Life,  A.— Bryan  W.  Procter.- GP 
(History  of  a  Life— C.)— BNL 
Life.— E:  R.  Sill.— GMS—HBR— TAS— TFY 
Life.— C:  Swain.— VA 
Life.— Jones  Very.— TAS 
Life.— H.  B.  Wallace.— LLC 
Life.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BNL 
Life.— R:  H:  Wilde.— BNL 

("My  life  is  like  the  summer  rose.") — ASL — FEP 

—YBF 
(Stanzas.)— AA— HBP 
Life;  a  School  Scene.— E.  H.  Trafton.- SD 
I-ife  and  Death.— Anon.— HBP 
Life  and  Death. — Anon. — HP 
Life  and  Death. — Anna  L.  Barbauld.     See  Life. 
Life  and  Death. — Christopher  P.  Cranch.— TAS 
Life  and  Death  (Of  Life  and  Death — C). — Ben  Jon- 
son.— FP 
Life   and   Death. — Omar   Khayyam.     See   Rubaiyat, 

The. 
Life  and  Death.— Lilla  C.  Perry.- AA 
Life  and  Death.— Duncan  C.  Scjtt.— TCV— VA 
Life  and  Death. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Measure  for 
Measure. 


Life  and  Death  of  Jason,  The,  Sets.  fr. — W:  Morris. 
"Ah!  when  will  aU  be  ended."     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk. 

XVIIJ— GG 
Nymph's  Song  to  Hylas,  The.    {Song  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— 
OB 
(Song  from  Jason.) — EPs 
Summer  Storm.     {Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— POS 
Life  and  Love. — Rob't  C.  Tongue. — CG  1 
Ljfe  and  the  Flowers. — G:  Herbert.     iSee  Life. 
Life  and  Voyages  of  Christopher  Columbus,  Sels.  fr. — 
Washington  Irving. 
Discovery  of  America,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Vol.  I.,  Bk. 
IV.,  Ch.  I. — w.  intYod.  matter.) — WR  10 
(Columbus  Landing  in  the  New  World — ahr.) — 
WR5 
"Life  appears  to  me  too  short  to  be  spent  in  nursing 
animosity  or  registering  wrongs." — Charlotte 
Bronte. — GG 
Life  before  the  Flood.     (Letter  to  the  Rev.  John  New- 
ton, Nov.  30,  1783— C— afcr.)— W:  Cowper.— 
LLC 
Life  beyond  the  Tomb. — Jas.  Beattie.     See  Minstrel, 

The. 
Life  Brigade,  The. — Minnie  Mackav. — CS  17 
Life  Clock,  The.— Anon.— FP 
Life    from    Death.     (Through  Death  to   Life— C.)— 

Horatius  Bonar. — CS  6 
"Lifel  I  know  not  what  thou  art." — Anna  L.  Bar- 
bauld.    See  Life. 
Life  in  a  Love. — Rob't  Browning. — OH 
Life  in  its  Spring-time. — E.  A.  Holbrook. — AD 
Life  in  the  Autumn  Woods. — Philip  P.  Cooke. — BNL 
Life  in  the  Chem.  Lab.— H:  W.  Eliot,  Jr.- CG  3 
Life  is  a  Ladder. — Anon. — YBT 
"Life  is  a  mystic  flame." — J:  S.  Van  Cleve. — GG 
Life  is  but  a  Dream.     (C) — C:  L.  Dodgson. 

(Of  Alice  in  Wonderland.) — VA 
Life  is  Love.— W:  J.  Fox.— VA 
Life  is  what  we  Make  it. — Orville  Dewey. — CS  10 

(Abr.)— NPS— YP 
Life  Lesson,  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— AA—BIL—GMS— 

RCR— TAV 
Life,  Liberty  and  Lager.— Anon.— BDD—DFY 
Life  Mosaic.     (C.) — Frances  R.  Havergal. 

("Master!  to  do  great  work  for  thee,  my  hand.") — 
GG 
Life  of  Cnaeus  Julius  Agricola,  Sel.  fr. — Tacitus. 

Calgacus  [or  Galgacus]  to  the  Caledonians.     {Sel. 
fr.  Calgacus'  Address  to  the  Britons.) — PS — SS 
Life  of  Goethe,  Br.  sel.  /r.— G:  H:  Lewes.— GG 
Life  of  Man,  "The. — H:  King  (at.   to  Fs.   Beaumont). 

See  Life. 
Life  of  Robert,  Second   Duke  of  Normandy,  Sel.  fr. 
(Whilst     Youthful     Sports     are     Lasting.) — T: 
Lodge.— ELP 
Life  on  the  Moon. — Herbert  A.  Howe. — TMR 
Life  on  the  Ocean  Wave,  A. — Epes  Sargent. — A  A — 

BNL— FEP— GN— GP 
Life  or  Death.— E.  B.— HP 
Life  Sculpture.— G :  W.  Doane.— YBT 

(Sculptor,  The.)— OS  1 
"Life!  we've  been  long  together." — Anna  L.  Barbauld. 

See  Life. 
Life  without  I^ove. — Anon. — FLS 

Life  without  Passion,  The.     (Sonnet  XCIV.— C.)— W: 
Shakespeare.— PGT  1 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— OB  (XL) 
Life-boat,  The.— Anon.— HNS 
Lifeboat,  The.— G:  R.  Sims.— BS  14— CS  24— PR 
Life-boat  is  a  Gallant  Bark,  The. — Eliza  Cook.— SR  1 
Life-drama,  A,  Sels.  fr. — Alex.  Smith. 
Forerunners. — VA 
Minor  Poet,  A. — VA 
Sea-marge. — VA 
Life's  Answer. — H :  Alford. — HDL 
(Contentment.)— BS  4 

("I  know  not  of  the  dark  or  bright.") — GG 
(Trust.)— HSS  3— SPE 
Life's  Battle — An  Oration. — Anon. — CS  7 
Life's  Battle  Field. — E:  Brooks.— FAS 
Life's  Common  Things. — Florence  M.  Wright. — YBT 
Life's  Conflict.— W:  Whitehead.— CS  7 
Life's  Day.     {Tab.  rec. )—Marv  L.  Gaddess.— WR  6 
Life's  Forest  Trees.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— AD 
Life's  Game  of  Ball.— Anon.— CD— CS  26 
Life's  Gift  s.— G :  Barlow.— BIL 

Life's  "Good  Morning." — Anna  L.  Barbauld.    /See  Life. 
Life's  Greeting. — Arthur  L.  Green. — CG  1 
Life's  Hebe. — Jas.  Thomson. — VA 
Life's  Incongruities. — Egbert  Phelps. — GP 
Life's  Journey.     (.46r.)— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— CS  25 
Life's  Lessons.— Anon. — SM 
Life's  Loom.— W :  J.  Lee.— BS  1 1 


184 


TITLE  INDEX 


Iiincoln's 


Life's  Love,  A. — Anon. — BNL 

Life's  Maxims.     (.Popular  Educator.) — DLS 

(Wiiat,  to  Do.)— DJS 
Life's  Morning,  Noon,  and  Evening. — L.M.D. — FP 
Life's  Mysteries,  Br.  sel.  jr. — Alice  Gary. — BIL 
Life's  Lessons. — G:  Herbert. — CEL 
(Bosom  Sin.)— LLC 
(Sin— O— EPs— YBF 
Life's  Paths. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Life's  Pity. — Anon. — FLS 
Life's  Purpose. — D:  Lawton. — TS 

Life's  Story.     (Story  of  Life,  The— C.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— 
BS  12 
.  Life's  Sunsets.     {Christian  at  Work.) — BS  19 
Life's  Truth.— T:  S.  Collier.— HP 
Life's  Unexpressed. — Anne  Elders. — FLS 
Life's  Weaving.— Millie  Colcord.— CS  34 
Life-saver,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Lift  up  your  Hearts. — Anon. — CP 
Lifting  the  Veil.     (W.  tabs.)— Anon.— TCP 
Light. — Anon. — KNE 

Light.— Fs.  W.  Bourdillon.— BNL— BSP— DLS— FEP 
—  FLS  —  FT  A  —  HDL  —  HP  —  TFY— YBF 
(Night   has  a  Thousand  Eyes,  The— C.)— AVP— 
GG— PYO— VA— VS 
Light.— Alice  Cary.— TAS 
Light.— Hannah  P.  Kimball.— TAS 
Light. — G:  Macdonald. — VA 
Light. — J:  Milton.     See  Comus. 
Light. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Light.— W.  P.  Palmer.— CS  6 
^ight.— Miss  A.  V.  Turner.— SRI  1 
Light  and  Love.     {The  Academy.) — HP 
Light    and    Shade,   Br.    sel.    fr.     ("Fail — yet   rejoice; 
because  no  less.") — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — CS  1 
•'^ Light  and  the  Sky.     (Frags,  fr.   various  authors.) — 

BNL 
^     Light  at  Evening-time. — R.  H.  Robinson. — HDL 

Light  from  over  the  Range,  The. — Anon. — CD — CS  27 

— SR5 
Light  from  Within,  The. — Jones  Very. — TAS 
Light  in  the  Window,  The.— Patience  Oriel.— CS  32 — 

DS— YA 
Light  of  Asia,  The,  Sets.  fr. — Edwin  Arnold. 

Great    Renunciation,    The.     (Bks.    II.,    III..    IV., 

cond.  )—VSO' 
Nirvana.     (Sel:  fr.  Bk.  VIII.) 
Secret  of  Death,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VJ— HER 

(Tola  of  Mustard  Seed,  The.)-^BS  19 
Song  of  the  Devas  to  Prince  Siddartha.     (Sel.  fr. 
Bk.  Ul.— partly  in  VSG.)— HBP 
(Light  of  Asia,  The,  Sel.  /r.)— AVP 
Sorrow  of  Buddha,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  T.)— CS  37 
Light  of  Love,  The.— J:  Hay.— FTA     ' 
Light' of  Other  Days,  The.— T:  Moore.— BPB— CEL— 
LC— OB— PGT  1— TIP— WCLG  1— YBF 
(Oft,  in  the  Stilly  Night— C.)— BNL— EPs— FEP 
— FTA— HBP— LLC— PYO— SM— WEP  4 
^  Light  of  Stars,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— HBP 

liight  of    the     Harem,    The. — T:    Moore.     See    Lalla 
Rookh. 
^  Light  of  the  World,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Edwin  Arnold. 
At  Bethlehem.     (Sel.  fr.  pro/.)- HS 
Great    Consummation,    The.       (Bk.    VI. — sel.) — 

VSG 
Mary's  Story  of  the  Crucifixion.     (Sel.  /r.  Bk.  VI.) 
— WR  12 
(Mary  at  the  Sepulchre — abr.) — HS 
(Resurrection,  The — si.  diff.  sel'.) — CR 
Pontius  Pilate.     (Sd.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— WR  11 
Light  on  Deadman's  Bar,  The. — Eben  E.  Rexford. — 

TMR 
Light  shall  be  at  Eventide. — Heber  Evans. — HDL 
Light  Shining  out  of  Darkness.     (C.) — W:  Cowper. — 
FEP— HBP 
("God  moves  in  a  mysterious  way.") — LLC — YBF 
(Providence. )— EPs— HDL 
Light  that  is  Felt,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BS  14— 

HDL— PEO— TAS 
Lighthouse,  The. — Anon. — DLF 
Light-house,  The. — Anon. — PEO 
Lighthouse,  The.     (Srf.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— PTS 
I-ight-house,  The.— T:  Moore.— CS  10— HSS  3 
Lighthouse,     The.     (Pharos     Loquitur — C.) — Walter 

Scott.— LC 
Light-house  Mav. — E.  Faxton.-^BS  7 
Light-keeper,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Light  keeper's  Daughter,  The. — Myra  A.   Goodwin. — 

CS  15— NPS— YP 
Lightning  Story.  A. — W.  J.  Lampton. — CS  23 
Lightning-rod  Dispenser.  The.     (SI.  diff.  fr.  Works.) — 

Will  Carleton.— CH 
Light'ood  Fire,  The.— J:  H.  Boner.— AA 


Lights  and  Shades.     (C) — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — CS  10 

(Despair  is  never  Quite  Despair.) — BS  cc 
Lights  o'  London,  The.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  21 
Lights  of  Lawrence,  The. — Ernest  Shurtleff.— TMD 
'Lijah's  Call  to  Preach.— Molly  E.  Seawell.— WR  18 
Like  a  Laverock  in  the  Lift. — Jean  Ingelow. — BNL — 

GP— TFY 
Like  a  Little  Child.     (Father's  Hymn  for  the  Mother 

to  Sing,  The— O— G:  Macdonald.— OH   (si. 

abr.) 
Like  a  Nettle. — Clara  J.  Denton.— WLO 
Like  a  Tree.— Anon.— WR  14 
Like  an  Indian. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LPD 
"Like  as  the  culver  on  the  barf-d  bough." — Edmund 

Spenser.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
"Like  as  the  Lark." — T:  W.  Parsons. — AA 
"Like  Crusoe  walking  by  the  lonely  strand." — T:  B. 

Aldrich.— BFV 
Like  his  Mother  Used  to  Make.     (C.) — Jas.  W.  Riley. 

—HP 
(Coffee  my  Mother  used  to  Make,  The.) — SR  7 
Like  to  a  Coin. — Arlo  Bates. — AA 
Like   to   the    Thundering   Tone  (Nonsen-t^e — C). — R: 

Corbet.— N  A 
Like  Washington. — Anon. — TT 
Like  Washington. — Clara  J.  Denton. — DFR — LL 
Likeness,  The. — Anon. — CS  9 
(Miniature,  The.)— WR  13 
Li'l  Pickaninny  Coon.— P.  H.— CG  3 
Lilac,  The.— Anon.— HSS  1 
Lilac,  The.— Clara  D.  Bates.— AD— NV 
Lilac,  The.     (St.  Nicholas.)— YBT 
Lilac,  The.— Lvdia  H.  Sigoumey.— HSS  1 
Lilacs. — Jas.  Thomson. — -HSS  1 
Lila's  Conclusion. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Lilian. — Alfred  Tennyson. — FEP 
Lilian  [wr.  Lillian]  Adelaide Neilson. — Clement  Scott. — 

EDY— VA 
Lilian  of  the  Vale,  Sel.  fr.     (I've  been  Roaming.) — 

G:  Darley.- VS 
Lilies. — Leigh  Hunt.     iSee  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the 

Flowers. 
Lilies  and  Rosps. — Anon. — YBT 
Lilies  of  the  Field,  The.     (Fr.  The  Christian  Year.)— 

J:  Keble.— CEL 
(Fifteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity:   The  Lilies  [Flow- 
ers—C]  of  the  Field.)— WEP  4 
(Flowers.)— FEP 
Lillian  Adelaide  Neilson. — Clement  Scott.     See  Lilian 

Adelaide  Neilson. 
Lilliput    Lectures.     See    Rands,    W:    B. — Works    in 

Author  Index. 
Lilliput  Levee.     (SI.  abr.)—W:  B.  Rands.— MYF 
Lilliput  Notice. — W:  B.  Rands. — PoR 
Lily,  The.     (C.)— Jas.  G.  Percival.- HSS  1 

(Lily  of  the  Valley,  The— si.  abr.)— NV 
Lily  and  the  Linden,  'The. — Fred  Crosby. — HP 
I>ily  March  and  Song. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — DM 
Lily     of     Nithsdale,     The.  —  Allan     Cunningham.  — 

EPs  (si.  abr.) 
(She's  Gone  to  Dwell  in  Heaven— C.) — FEP    # 
Lily  of  the  Valley,  The.— G:  Croly.— HSS  1 
Lily  of  the  Valley,  The.— Jas.  G.  Pdrcival.     See  Lily, 

The. 
Lily  of  Yorrow,  The. — H:  Van  Dyke. — A  A 
Lily  Servosse's  Ride,  The.     (Arr.  fr.  A  Fool's  Errand, 

Chs.   XXXVI.    and    XXXVII.)— Albion    W. 

Tourg^e.- BS  16 
Lily's  Ball.     (Fun  and  Earnest.)— CSS— 'SV—TC 
"Lily's"     Thanksgiving,     The. — Mrs.      Dawson     M. 

Phelps.— DFR 
Lily's  Word,  A.— Lucy  Larcom.— LCS— YBT 
Limerick  Lasses,  The. — A.  P.  Graves. — TIP 
Limericks.     (By  various  authors.) — NA 
Limitations  of  Genius. — Jas.  W.  Rilev. — CW 
"Limpy  Tim.  "— T.  Harley.- NPS— YP 
Lincoln — Jas.  Russell  Lowell.     See  Ode  Recited  at  the 

Harvard  Commemoration. 
Lincoln. — Harriet  Monroe.     See  Commemoration  Ode. 
Lincoln:     A  Man  Called  of  God.— J:  M.  Thurston.— SC 
Lincoln  as  Cavalier  and  Puritan. — H:  W.  Grady.     See 

New  South,  The. 
Lincoln  at  Gettysburg. — Clark  E.  Carr. — NP 
Lincoln,  the  Great  Commoner  (Lincoln,  the  Man  of  the 

People— C.)— Edwin  Markham.— CMS- GN 
Lincoln  the  Immortal. — Anon. — CP 
Lincoln,  the  Man  of  the  People. — Edwin  Markham. 

See  Lincoln,  the  Great  Commoner. 
Lincoln,  the  Shepherd  of  the  People.    (Sel.  fr.  Abraham 

Lincoln.) — Phillips  Brooks. — SR  8 
(Shepherd  of  the  People,  The.)— CS  5 
Lincoln,  the  Tender-hearted. — H.  W.  Bolton. — LLC. 
Lincoln's  Birthday. — Ida  V.  Woodbury. — PEO 


185 


Lincoln's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lincoln's  Birthday — February  12, 1809. — D:  Swing. — 

Lincoln's  Election,  Sel.  jr.  (Higher  Views  of  the  Union.) 

—Wendell  Phillips.— MMR 
(Is  this  All?)— FD  1 
Lincoln's    Grave,    ael.^  fr.     (Prophecy,    A.) — Maurice 

Thompson. — A  A 
Lincoln's    Last    Dream.  —  Hezekiah    Butterworth.  — 

ES12 
Lincolnshire  Poacher,  The. — Anon. — BVC 
L'Inconnue. — Winthrop  M.  Praed. — OS  3 
Linda  to  Hafed. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Linden.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Line  up.  Brave  Boys. — Hamlin  Garland. — SN 
Linen  Bands. — Vance  Thompson.— AA 
Lines  (C):    "I  murder  hate  by  field  or  flood." — Rob't 

Burns. 
(Poet's  Choice,  The.)— HPE 
Lines:  "Surely  a  voice  hath  called  her  to  the  deep." — 

G:  A.  Greene.— TIP 
Lines:     "When     youthful   faith   hath   fled." — J:   G. 

Lockhart.— AVP 
Lines:  "Love  within  the  lover's  breast." — G:  Mere- 
dith.—YBF 
Lines:  "In  the  merry  hay-time,"  etc. — C.  K.  Paul. — 

AVP 
Lines.     (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— OB— WEP  4 
(Flight  of  Love,  The.)— PGT  1— YBF 
("When  the  lamp  is  shattered.") — BNL 
Lines  Added  to  Goldsmith's  Traveller,  Br.  sel.  fr. — S: 

Johnson. — BNL 
Lines  Addressed  to when  we  Parted  for  the  Last 

Time.     (Punch.)— HFE 
(My  Last  Shirt.)— SCS 
Lines  Addressed  to  a  Seagull,  Seen  off  the  Cliffs  of 

Moher,     in     the     County     of    Clare. — Gerald 

Griffin.— TIP 
Lines  Addressed  to  his  Wife.^ — Reginald  Heber.     <See 

following. 
Lines  Addressed  to  Mrs.  Heber.  (C.) — Reginald  Heber. 
("If  thou  wert  by  my  side[,  my  love].") — BNL — 

EPs  (al.  o6r.)— HBP— TFY 
(Lines  Addressed  to  his  Wife.)— FEP 
Lines  Addressed  to  Monsieur  Alexandre,  the  Celebrated 

Ventriloquist.    (C.) — Walter  Scott. 
(To  Mr.  Alexandre,  the  Ventriloquist.) — HPE 
Lines  by  a  Fond  Lover. — Anon. — NA 
Lines  by  a  Medium. — Anon. — NA 
Lines  by  a  Person    of    Quality. — J.  B.  B.  Nichols. — 

Lines  by  a  Person  of  Quality.     (Song,  by  a  Person  of 
Quality— O— Alex.  Pope.— NA 
(Love  Song,  in  the  Modern  Taste,  A.) — HPE  (at. 
to  Swift.) 
Lines  by  an  Old  Fogy. — Anon. — HP 

(Innovation.) — DLS 
Lines  Composed  a  Few  Miles  above  Tintem  Abbey,  on 
Revisiting  the  Banks  of  the  Wye,  etc.  (C.) — 
.  W:  Wordswort  h.— WEP  4 
tf>ines  Composed  near  Tintern  Abbey.) — FEP 
(^'Nature  never  did  betray — sH.") — AD  (lr.)—-GG 
(On  Revisiting  the  Banks  of  the  Wye.) — HBP 
(Tintern  Abbev.)— BNL 

(Sel. )— EPs— LLC— SN 
(Varying  Impressions  from  Nature — sel.) — GP 
(Love  of  Nature,  The.)— AD 
Lines  Composed  at   Grasmere  on  Tidirgs  of  the  Ap- 
proaching Death  of  Charles  James  Fox.     (C.) 
— W:    Wordsworth.    See     Lines    Written    at 
Grasmere,  etc. 
Lines  for  a  Little  Lassie. — Epes  Sargent.     See  Little 

Cowslip,  The. 
Lines  for  a  Very  Little  Girl  or  Boy. — Clara  J.  Denton. 

— FTT 
Lines  for  an  Exhibition. — Anon. — SD 

(Words  of  Welcome— a6r. )—NPS—SSS—YP 
Lines  for  Music.     (Punch.) — HPE 

Lines.    For  the  Agricultural  and  Horticultural  Exhi- 
bition of  Amesbury  and  Salisbury,   Sept.  28, 
1858. 
(Song  of  Harvest,  A— C.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— AD 
Lines    Found    in    his    Bible. — Walter     Raleigh.     See 
Lines  Written  the  Night  before  his  Execution. 
Lines  Found  in  the  Hand  of  the  Statue  of  Night  at 
Florence  in  the  Sixteenth  Century. — Giovanni 
Strozzi.— OS  2 
Lines,  Imitated  from  Rantzau. — I:  D'lsraeli. — MBB 
Ljnes  in  a  Lady's  Album. — Dan'l  Webster. — EPs 
Lines  Left  upon  a  Seat  in  a  Yew-tree,  which  stands 
near  the  Lake  of  Esthwaite.  etc.,  Sel.  fr.     (True 
Dignity.)— W :  Wordsworth.— EPs 
Lines  on  a  Grasshopper. — Anon. — HP 


Lines  on  a  Late  Hospicious  Ewent. — W:  M.  Thackeray. 

— EDY— HPE 
Lines  on  a  Picture  by  Leonardo  Da  Vinci,  called  "The 
Virgin  of  the  Rocks." — C:  Lamb.     See  Lines 
on  the  Celebrated  Picture,  etc. 
Lines  on  a  Ring. — Loren  M.  Luke. — CG  2  * 

Lines  on  a  Skelton. — Anon. — HBP — PPSr 
(Address  to  a  Skeleton.) — WRD 
(To  a  Skeleton.)— BNL— CS  4— FEP  — PR— PS— 
TMR 
Lines  on  an  X-Ray  Portrait  of  a  Lady. — Lawrence  K. 

Russell.— TL 
Lines  on  Doctor  Johnson. — J:  Wolcott. — THP 

(On  Dr.  Johnson.)— EDY 
Lines  on  Isabella  Markham.     (Sonnet  Made  on  Isa- 
bella Markham — C.) — J:  Haryngton. —  BNI^ — 
FEP 
(Heart  of  Stone,  A.) — ES 
Lines  on  Leaving  Europe.     (C. — sel.) — Nathaniel  P. 
Willis.— EPs 
(Going  Home — shorter  sel.) — OS  1 
(My  Mother.)— GP 
Lines  on  Leigh  Hunt  ("Living  Dog"  and  "The  Dead 

Lion,"  The— r.)—T:  Moore.— ESs 
Lines  on  Naples. — T:  Moore.     See  Lines  on  the  Entry 

of  the  Austrians  into  Naples. 
Lines  on  Re^nsiling  the  Country.    (C.) — W:  C.  Bryant. 

(At  the  Old  Home  Again.)— BLP 
Lines  on  the  Celebrated  Picture  by  Leonardo  da  Vinci, 
Called  the  Virgin  of  the  Rocks.     (Two  poems.) 
C:Lamb.— LPC 
(Lines  on  a  Picture,  etc. — Ist  poem.) — OS  3 
Lines   on   the   Death   of   Gen.   Joseph   Reed. — Philip 

Freneau. — EDY 
Lines  on  the  Death  of  his  Son  Charles.     (C.) — Dan'l 
Webster. 
(On  the  Death  of  my  Son  Charles.) — A  A 
Lines  on  the  Death  of  Napoleon. — Percy  B.   Shelley. — 

EDY 
Lines  on  the  Death  of  Sheridan.     (2  diff.  sels.) 

T:  Moore.— BNL— EDY 
Lines  on  the  Entry  of  the  Austrians  into  Naples.     (C.) 
— T:  Moore. 
(Lines  on  Naples — wording  si.  chgd.) — CSS 
(Occupation  of  Naples  by  the  Austrians.) — EDY 
(To  the  Neapolitans — abr.) — OS  2 
Lines  on  the  Hon.  Edward  Villers,  Sel.  fr.     (Charac- 
terization, A.) — Sir  H:  Taylor. — VA 
Lines    on   the   Mermaid    Tavern.     (C.) — J:    Keats. — 
FEP— WEP  4 
(Mermaid  Tavern,  The.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Lines  on  the  Portrait  of  Shakespeare.  —  Ben  Jonson. — 
FEP 
(On    the    Portrait    of    Shakespeare — C.) — BNL— 
EDY 
Lines  on  the  Prince  of  Wales. — H:  Frederick. — EDY 
Lines  on  the  Same  Picture  [Two  Females  by  Leonardo 
da  Vinci]  being  Removed  to  Make  Place  for  a 
Portraitof  a  Lady  by  Titian. — C:  and  Mary 
Lamb.— LPC 
Lines  on  the  Tombs  in  Westminster.  (OntheTombes  in 
Westminster — C.) — Fs.    Beaumont. — ELP — 
WEP  2 
(In  Westminster  Abbey.) — LH 
(On  the  Tombs   in   Westminster  Abbey.)— FEP- 
OB— PGT  1— YBF 
Lines  Prefixed  to  "  St.  John  of  Damascus."  —  Douglas 

Ainslie.— AVP 
Lines  Printed  under  the  Engraved  Portrait  of  Milton. 
(C.y—J:  Dryden.— WEP  2 
(Lines  Written  under  the  Portrait  of  John  Milton.) 

-BNL 
(Under  Mr.  Milton's  Picture.)- FEP 
(Underthe  Portrait  of  Milton.) — EPs— OS  3 
Lines    Recited    at    the    Berkshire   Jubilee,    Pittsfield, 
Mass.,     Aug.      23,      1844.     (C.)— Oliver     W. 
Holmes. 
(City  Men  in  the  Country.) — SS 
Lines  Relating  to  Curran's  Daughter. — T:    Moore. — 
PS 
(She  is  Far  from  the  Land.— C.)— EDY— FEP— 
HBP 
Lines  Suggested   by   a    Picture  of  Two   Females   by 
Leonardo  da  Vinci. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — 
LPC 
Lines  to  a  Blind  Girl.— T:  B.  Read.— A  A 
Lines  to  a  Friend. — J.  B.  Bensel. — MRS 
Lines  to  a  Monkey. — H:  R.  C'onger. — CG  2 
Lines  to  a  Mule.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.- SYS 
Lines  to  a  Transfer  Check.     (Harvard  Lampoon.) — 

CG3 
Lines  to  a  Younir  I.adv. — E:  Lear. — NA 
(Author  of  the  "Pobble,"  The.)— BVC 


186 


TITLE  INDEX 


Little  Birdie 


Lines  to  Alexander  Pope. — D:  Lewis. — EPs 
Lines  to  an  Indian  Air. — Percy  B.  Shelley. — BNL — 
FEP— FTA— HBP 
(I  Arise  from  Dreams  of  Thee.) — GP 
(Indian  Serenade,  The— C.)— OB— PGT  1— PYO— 

YBF 
(Serenade,  The.)— FP 
Lines  to  Bessy.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Lines  to  Her.— C:  F.  McClure.— CO  2 
Lines  to  Kate. — Anon. — PP 

(Kate.)— CS  25— NPS— YP 
Lines  to  Miss  Florence  Huntington. — Anon. — NA 
Lines    to     Mr.     Hodgson.     (C.) — Lord     Byron.     See 

Lisbon  Packet ,  The. 
Lines  to    Romance,  Br.   sel.    fr.    (Romance.)  —  Lord 

Byron.— HSS  3 
Lines  to  the  Des  Moines  River. — Eugene  Parsons. — 

FS 
Lines  to  the  Memory  of  "Annie." — Harriet  B.  St  owe. 

BNL 
Lines  to  the  Stormy  Petrel. — Anon. — BNL 
Lines    upon     Himself.     (Upon     Himself — C.) — Rob't 

Herrick.— EDY 
Lines  Written  after  a  Battle.     {Punch.) — HPE 
Lines   Written    among   the    Euganean    Hills.     (C.) — 
Percy  B.  Shelley. 
(View  from'  the  Euganean  Hills,  North  Italy — abr.) 

—BNL 
(Written     among     the     Euganean     Hills — ahr.) — 
PGTl 
Lines  Written   at   Grasmere  on    Tidings    of    the  Ap- 
proaching Death  of  Charles  James  Fox  (Lines 
Composed  at  Grasmere,  etc. — C.) — W:  Words- 
worth.— EPs 
Lines  Written  by  One  in  the  Tower,  being  Young  and 
Condemned   to    Die. — Chidiock    Tychborn. — 
BNL— FEP 
(Chediock  Tichebome.)— EDY 
Lines  Written  for  a  School  Declamation. — D:  Everett. 
—BNL 
("You'd  scarce  expect  one  of  my  age" — si.  abr.) — 
SAE 
Lines  Written  in  a  Church-yard. — Herbert   Knowles. 
See  Lines  Written  in  Richmond  Church-yard. 
Lines  Written  in  an  Album. — Willis  Gaylord. — BNL 
Lines  Written  in  August,   1847. — T:  B.  Macaulay. — 

AVP 
Lines  Written  in   Early    Spring.     (C.) — W:    Words- 
worth.—FEP— SN—WEP  4 
(Written  in  Early  Spring.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Lines    Written    in    Imprisonment    at    Windsor. — H: 
Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey.— WEP  1 
(Prisoned  [Prisoner — C]  in  Windsor  he  Recount  eth, 
etc.)— FEP 
Lines    Written    in     Kensington    Gardens. — Matthew 

Arnold.- AVP 
Lines  Written  in  Richmond  Churchyard,  Yorkshire. — 
Herbert  Knowles.— FEP— HBP 
(Lines  Written  ina  Churchyard.) — CS  9 
(Stanzas  Written  in  the  Churchyard  of  Richmond, 
Yorkshire.)— EPs 
Lines  Written  on  a  Blank  Leaf  of  "  The  Pleasures  of 
Memory."     (C) — Lord  Byron. 
(To  Samuel  Rogers,  Esq.)— EDY 
Lines  Written  the  Night  before  his  Execution. —  Sir 
Walter  Raleigh —FEP— YBF 
(Conclusion,  The.)— OB 
(Death  of  Sir  Walter  Raleigh.)— EDY 
(Even  Such  is  Time.)— EHT— ELP 
(Last  Lines.)— CEL 
(Lines  Found  in  his  Bible.) — BNL 
(Verses  Found  in  his  Bible  in  the   Gate-house  at 
Westminster— O— WEP  1 
Lines  Written  to  Music. — C:  Wolfe — TIP 

("If  I   had  thought  thou  couldst  have  died.") — 

FEP 
(To  Mary.)— BPB— OB— PGT  1 
Lines  Written  under  the  Portrait  of  John  Milton. — 
J:  Dryden.     See  Lines  Printed  under  the  En- 
graved Portrait,  etc. 
Linette. — Florence  Folsom. — WR  22 
Lingering  Latimer. — Anon. — MYF 
Linings.— May  R.  Smith.— YBT 
Lion,  The.— Hilaire  Belloc— BVC 
Lion  and  the  Cub,  The.— J:  Gay.— CGd 

(^br.)— GN— OS  1 
Lion  and  the  Giraffe.  The.— T:  Pringle.— HBP 
Lion  and  the  Mouse,  The. — Anon. — PTS 
Lion's  Cub,  The. — Maurice  Thompson. — A  A 
Lion's    Ride.    The. — Ferdinand    Freiligrath. — BNL — 

HBP 
Lion's  Skeleton,  The. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — VA 
Lip  and  the  Heart,  The. — J:  Q.  Adams. — AA 


Lips  that  Touch  Liquor  must  never  Touch  Mine,  The. 

— G:  W.  Young.— CS  16 
Lips  that  Touch  Liquor  shall  never  Touch  Mine.  — 

Harriet  A.  Glazebrook. — TS 
Liquor  or  Liberty?- Wilbur  F.  Crafts.— WR  18 
Liquor  Traffic  Antagonistic  to  American  Liberty. — 

J:B.  Finch.— TS 
Liquor-seller's  Dream,  The. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  33 
Lisbon  Packet,  The.     (Lines  to  Mr.  Hodgson — C.) — 

Lord  Byron.- HPE 
Lise. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — AA 
Lisle's  Dream. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Lisping  Child,  The.— Anon.— WR  20 
Lisping  Lover,  The.— Anon.— BS  11— CRR 
List  of  our  Presidents,  A.     {Youth's  Companion.)  — 

PS 
(Abr.)- PP— YPS 
Listeners  Hear  no  Good  of  Themselves.  (Tab.). — S.  A. 

Frost  (?).— BS  5— PR— TCP 
Listening.— Christ inaG.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
Litany. — J:  S.  Bewley-Monsell. — VA 
Litany,  A. — Phineas  Fletcher. — OB 

("  Drop,  drop,  slow  tears.  ")— BNL— FEP— YBF 
(Hymn,  An  [or  A]— C.)— ELP— HBP 
Litany.— Sir  Robert  Grant.— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Litany,  The. — Rob't  Herrick.     See  Litany  to  the  Holy 

Spirit. 
Litany  to  the  Holy  Spirit  (His  Letanie  to  the  Holy 

Spirit— C.).— Rob't    Herrick.— EPs— FEP— 

HBP— OB  (al>r.) 
(Holy  Spirit ,  The. ^— BNL 
(Litany,  The.)— CEL— ELP— WEP  2 
Literary  Attractions  of  the  Bible. — Dr.  (7)  Hamilton. 

— CS  22 
Literary  Lady,  The.     (Sel.   fr.    epilogue    to    Hannah 

More's   play.    The   Fatal   Falsehood.) — R:  B 

Sheridan.— HPE— THP 
Literary  Lottery. — J.  A.  Macy. — CG  3 
Literary  Nightmare,  A. — S:     L.     Clemens. — BRR — 

BS  23  (abr.)—CS  17 
Literary  Pursuits  and  Active  Business. — A.  H.  Everett. 

— CS6 
Literary  Question  Discussed,  A. — Anon. — MHR 
Literary  Recreations. — Eliz.  Lloyd. — BS  13 
Literary  Vampire,  The.     (Harvard  Lampoon.) — CG  3 
Literature    and    Elocution.  —  Willis    F.    Johnson.  — 

BS25 
Literature     and     Nature. — S:     Waddington. — LBB — 

MBB 
Literature  Perverted. — Anon. — BS  21 
Little  Acorn. — M.  H.  Huntington. — AD 
Little  Acts  of  Kindnes.s. — Anon. — DLS 
Little  Advice,  A. — Annie  L.  Lonergan. — WR  14 
Little  Aglae  [,to  her  Father— C.]. — Walter  S.  Landor 

— VA 
Little  Ah  Sid.- Anon.— SDR 
Little  Alabama  Coon. — Hattie  Starr. — AA 
Little  All-Aloney. — Eugene  Field. — IS 
Little  AUie.— Sarah  P.  Parton.- BS  6— CS  18 
Little  and  Great.- C:  Mackay.— SM— WCLI  2 

(Deed  and  a  Word,  A— «eZ.)— HP— HSS  2— PYO 

— WR  1 
(Small  Beginnings.)— BNL— CS  31— CSS— LLC— 

PPSr— PR— WR  17 
Little  Angel,  The.— Eliz.  Prentiss.— OS  1— PR— YA 
"Little  Angels." — Emma  C.  Hollinger. — SDD 
Little  Army,  The.     (Good  Times.)— BSS  2 
Little  Army,  The.     (Dial.)— Lizzie  J.  Rook.— TT 
Little  Artist,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Little  Assunta. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Little  Bare  Feet. — Anon. — TFS 
Little  Bare  Feet. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Little  Barefoot. — Anon. — CS  20 
Little  Beach-bird,  The.— R:  H.  Dana.— AA— BNL— 

FEP— HBP— HSS  3— SN 
Little  Beggars.  The. — Anon. — HVD 
Little  Bell.  —  T:  Westwood.  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  FMR 

— GN— HBP— LC— OS  1— WCL 
Little  Bennie  for  Benny]. — Annie  C.  Ketchum. — CS  3 

—FMR— MYF 
.   (Benny.)— WCL 
Little  Bessie. — Anon. — CS  22 
Little  Bill.— Anon.— BS  24 
Little  Billee.     (C.)— W:  M.  Thackerav.— BNL— FFP 

— GP— NA— THP 
(Three  Sailors,  The.)— MHR— PEB  3 
Little  Bird,  The.— Anon.— CPL— YBT 
Little  Bird,  The. — Martin  Luther.— OS  1 
Little  Bird  Tells.  A.— Anon.— BS  21— DCP 
Little  Birdie. — Anon. — AD 
Little  Birdie.     (Fr.  Sea  Dreams.) — Alfred  Tennvscn. 

—OS  1— PC— WCL 
(Bird  and  the  Baby,  The.)— PP— PPSr— YFR 


187 


Little  Birdie 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Little  Birdie  {continued). 

(Birdie  and  Baby.)— DCP 

(Cradle  Song.)— LC— PGT  2— PS 

(Morning  Song.) — GMS 

("What   does   little    birdie    say.")— BNL— PHS— 

PoR— TFS        . 
(What  the  Birdie  and  the  Baby  Say.)— HSS  2 
Little  Bird's  Story,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Little  Black  Boy,  The.     (In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — 

W:  Blake.— FEP— HBP— OB— YBF 
Little  Black  Phil.— Hon.  C.  E.  Belknap.— BS  22 
Little  Black  Rose,  The. — Aubrey  De  Vere. — TIP 
Little  Black-eyed  Rebel,  The.— Will  Carleton.— FR— 

PAP— SA 
Little    Blue    Pigeon.     (Japanese    Lullaby.) — Eugene 

Field.— WTD 
"Little  Blue  Ribbons."— H.  Austin  Dobson. — TMR — 

WR  1 
Little  Bluebeard.— Anon.— WR  17 
Little  Bopeep  and  Little  Boy  Blue. — S:  M.  Peck. — 

DES— TAV 
Little  Boy,  A.— Mat  tie  E.  Merriam.- TFS 
Little  Boy  Blue.— Anon.— HBP 
Little  Boy  Blue.— Anon.— WR  12 
Little   Boy   Blue.— Eugene   Field.— AA— ASL— EF— 

FEP  —  GMS  —  HBR  —  LLC  —  PR  —  TAV— 

TMR— WTD 
Little  Boy  Blue.— Abby  S.  Richardson.— BR— HSS  2 
Little  Boy  Lost,  A.     (C.)—W:  Blake. 

(Orthodoxy.)— EPs 
Little  Boy  that   Died,  The.— J.    D.    Robinson.— CS  7 

— MMR 
Little  Boy  who  Ran  Away,  The. — Susan  T.  Perry. — 

LPS— PP— WR  17 
Little  Boy  who  Went  Away,  The. — Sam  W.  Foss. — 

CS32 
Little  Boy's  Argument,  A. — Anon. — WR  17 
Little  Boy's  Debate,  A. — Anon. — MND 
Little    Boy's    First     Recitation,    A. — Anon. — DLS — 

LPS— PP 
Little  Boy's  Lament,  The. — Anon.— DLS— DS — PP — 

YA— YFR 
Little  Boy's  Lament,  The.     {Judge.)— C^  37 
Little  Boy's  Lecture,  A.— Julia  M.  Thayer.— PS— TFS 

— TT 
Little  Boy's  Plea,  A.— Anon.— DST 
Little  Boy's  Reasons,  A. — Anon. — WR  17 
Little  Boy's    Speech,  A.— Anon.— KNS— LPS— PP 
Little  Boy's  Speech,  A. — Anon.— SD 
Little  Boy's  Troubles,  A.— Carlotta  Perry. — DJS— DS 

— PP— YA  (o6r.)— YFR 
Little  Boy's  Vain  Regret,  A.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— AA 
Little  Boy's  Valentine,  A.— Anon.— BS  11— DST 
Little  Boy's  Wants,  A. — Kate  Lawrence. — CPI. 
Little  Boy's  Wonder,  A  [or  The].— Anon.— LPS— PP 

—PS 
Little  Brawl,  A.     {Verses  /r.  Strife    and  Peace:  The 

Last  Strife.) — Frederika  Bremer  {tr.  by  Mary 

Howitt).— OS  1 
Little  Breeches.— J:  Hay.— AA— AWH— BNL— PYO 

— THP 
Little  Britain.     {In  Sketch  Book.) — Washington   Ir- 
ving.— APr 
Little  Brother.— Anon.— WR  17 
Little  Brother,  The.— Alice  Carv.— WCL 

(Among  the  Beautiful  Pictures.) — FP — HBP 
(Pictures   of   Memorv— C.)  — BNL  — CR  — CS  4— 

FTR— GP— HNS— SAE  {hr.  seZ.)- SM— SPE 
(Sweetest  Picture,  The.) — BS  14 
Little  Brother,  The.     {Abr.) — W:  B.  Rands. — PC 
Little  Brother,  Little  Sister. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Little  Brother  of  the  Rich,  A.— E.  S.  Martin.— AA 
Little  Brothers  of'fhe  Ground. — Edwin  Markham. — 

SN 
Little  Brown  Baby.— Paul  L.   Dtmbar.— AWH— HBR 
Little  Brown  Bird,  A. — Anon.— PC 
Little  Brown  Bushy-tail.— Astley  H.  Baldwin. — TFS 
Little  Brown  Cabin,  The.     {Ahr.) — Lucy  Larcom. — 

BIL— TFY 
Little  Brown  Curl.  The.— Anon.— CS  23 
Little  Brown  Hands. — Mary  H.  Krout. — CPL  {sel.) — 

CS  12  —  FS  —  GMS  —  HSS  2  —  OS  1  — TFS — 

WCL 
Little  Brown  Seed,  The.— Harriet  M.  Lothrop.— POS 
Little  Brown  Seed  in  the  Furrow,  The. — Ida  W.  Ben- 
ham.— AD— PEO 
Little  Brown  Wren,  The.— Anon. — DLF 
Little  Bugler's  Alarm.  The.— Ernest  Glanville.— BS  25 
Little  Busv  Bees,  The.     {Detroit  Free  Press.)— BS  20 

— DS 
Little  but  Long. — Anon. — See  Love  me  Little,  Love  me 

Long. 
Little  by  Little.— Anon.— AD— YBT  {abr.) 


Little  by  Little.— Anon.— DJS 

{A  br. )— DS— PP— PS— SM— Y  A— YFR 
Little  by  Little.     (i)taZ.)— Anon.— HVD 
Little  by  Little.— Anon.— SSS— YBT  {sel.) 

{Br.  sW.)- CS  20— SM— WCLI  1 
Little  by  Little.— Luella  Clark.— NV—SM 
Little  by  Little  the  Time  Goes  by. — Anon. — SM 
Little  Carl.— Amelia  H.  Botsford.— CS  27 
Little  Cavalier,  A. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Little  Charlie.— Rob't  Overton.— CS  32— DS 
Little  Charlie's  Big  Story.     {Springfield,   Mass.,  Re- 
publican. ) — SR  5 
Little  Charlie's  Christmas. — Anon. — BS  18 
Little  Chief,  The.— Anon.— DCP 
Little  Child,  A.     {Harper's  Weekly.)— BJS 

(I  Want  Mamma.)— LPS— PP 
Little  Child,  The.— Albert  B.  Paine.— A  A 
Little  Child,  1  Call  Thee.— Douglas  Hyde.— TIP 
Little  Child  shall  I>ead  Them.  A.— Anon.— CS  21 
Little  Child  shall  Lead  Them,  A.— Mrs.  L.  M.  Willis. 

— SSE 
Little  Children.— Anon.— DLS 
"Little  Children."— Anon.— TFS 
Little  Children.— Alice  Cary.— BLF 
Little  Children. — Mary  Howitt.— PoR 
Little  Children,  Love  One  Another. — "Fanny." — YBT 
Little  Child's  Hymn,  A.— Fs.  T.  Palgrave.- VA 
Little  Child's  Prayer,  A. — Anon. — PS 
Little  Child's  Trials,  A.— J:  Neal.— MYF 
Little  Christ  el.— Mary  E.  Bradley.— BS  16— NPS— YP 
Little  Christel.— W:  B.  Rands.— FMR— PoR   {sel.)- 

WCL  {si.  abr.) 
Little  Christmas  Tree,  The. — Susan  Coolidge. — PEO — 

POS 
Little  Church    round    the  Comer,  The. — A.  E.  Lan- 
caster.—CS  5— EDY— HP 
Little  Cloak,  The.— Lillie  E.  Barr.— CPL 
Little  Clock,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Little  Cloud,  The.— J:  H.  Bryant.— BNL 
Little  Cloud  Went  Sailing,  A.— Anon. — HSS  2 
Little  Coat,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Little  Conqueror,  The.— C:  F.  Adams.— HP— PS 
Little    Cookie-hookie. — Howell    L.    Finer. — WR  12— 

WR23 
Little  Cowslip,  The.— Epes  Sargent.— TFS  {sel.) 

(Deeds  of  Kindness.) — BLP 

(Lines  for  a  Little  Lassie — si.  abr.) — YBT 

(Little  Things— 8cZ.)— DLF 

(Suppose.)— GMS— NV—SM— TFS  {sel.) 
Little  (Jrib  Bed,  The.— Alice  I>.  Richards.— SL 
Little  Crosses. — Emma  F.  Wyman. — YBT 
Little  Cup-bearer,  The. — Anon. — CS  18  {si.  abr.) 

(Cup-bearer,  The.)— TS 
Little  Dago  Girl,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  31 
Little  Dandelion.— Helen  B.  Bostwick. —  PC  —  PoR — 

WCL 
"Little  David"  of  Nations,  The.— W:  C.  Duncan.— NC 
Little  Dead  Prince,  A. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — EDY 
Little  Deeds.— Anon.— YBT 
Little  Diamond  and  the  Drunken  Cabman. — G:Mac- 

donald.     See  At  the  Back  of  the  North  Wind. 
Little  Dick  and  the  Clock. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Little    Dora's    Soliloquy.     {St.    Nicholas.) — BS    10 — 
CPL— PR— YA 

(What  is  Babv  Good  for?)— HSS  3 
Little  Dorothy's  Sayings.— G:  P.  Bille.- BS  25 
Little  Dot.— Anon.— DS— NPS— YA—YP 
Little  Doves,  The.— Anon.— NV— PC 
Little  Drama,  A.— Anon. — WR  14 
Little  Dreamer,  The.— Anon.— PC— TFS— WR  17 
Little  Drops.— Anon.— LPS  — PP 
Little    Drops    of   Water. — Julia   A.    F.    Carney.     See 

Little  Things. 
Little  Drummer,  The.— R:  H:  Stoddard.— BAB 
Little  Dutch  Garden,  A. — Hattie  Whitney. — AA 
Little  Edward.     (C.)— Harriet  B.  Stowe. 

(Uncle  Abel  and  Li  tie  Edward.)— WCLI  2 
Little  Efforts.— Anon.— DS—YA 
Little  Efrum's  Ride.— Patience  Oriel. — CS  35 
Little  Elf,  The.— J:  K.  Bangs.— AA— PoR 
Little  Eloise.— Josiah  H.  Fletcher.— FMR 
Little  Eva. — Harriet    B.    Stowe.     jSee    Uncle    Tom's 

Cabin. 
I-ittle     Evangelist,     The. — Harriet     B.     Stowe.     <See 

Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 
Little  Fair  Soul,  The.— Menella  B.  Smedlev.—  VA 
Little  Fay,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Legends  of  the  Little  Fay.) 

— Rob't  Buchanan.— OS  1 
Little  Feet.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— BNL— BS  8 
Little    Feller,    A.     {Michigan    Christian   Advocate.) — 

BS  24— CS  33— DST 
"Little  Feller's  Stockin',  The."— Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Little  Fellow's  Declamation. — Anon. — DLS 


188 


TITLE  INDEX 


Little  Maud 


Little  Field  Preachers.— Ella  Ives. — YBT 
Little  Fireman,  The.— J:  F.  Nicholls.— CS  25 
Little  Fisherman,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Little  Fisherman,  The. — Ann  and  Jane  Taylor. — BVC 
Little  Flag-bearer.  The. — Anon. — PS 

(Our  Flag.)— TT 
Little  Flo's  Letter.— Eben  E.  Rexford.— COS— PP 

(Flo's  Letter.)— DST 

(Oversight  of  Make-up,  An.) — WR  2 
Little  Foes  of  Little  Boys. — Anon. — DJS  ' 

Little  Folks,  The.— Eudora  M.  Stone.— SR  1 
Little  Folks'  Opinions.— H.  E.  McBride.— StD 
Little  Foxes.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.- BS  15 
Little  Foxes. — A.  H.  Morrell.     See  following. 
Little  Foxes  and   Little  Hunters. — A.   H.  Morrell. — 
LPS— PP— SM  (si.  abr.) 

(Little  Foxes— 8^  o6r.)— TFS— YBT 
Ljttle  French  for  a  Little  Girl,  A.— An<  n. — LPS — PP 
Little  French  I^awyer,  The,  Sels.  jr. — Beaumont  and 
Fletcher. 

Bridal  Song.— ES 

Charm,  The.— ELP 

(Song  in  the  Wood.)— ES 
Little  Fritz.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  26 
"Little  Garaine." — Gilbert  Parker. — PoR 
Little  Gardens. — Eniilie  Poulsson. — YBT 
Little  Gavroche. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Les  Mis^rables. 
Little  Gentleman,   The. — Mrs.   Russell   Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Little  GifFen. — Fs.  O.  Ticknor.     See  following. 
Little  Giffen  of  Tennessee.— Fs.  O.  Ticknor.— AWB 

(Little  Giffen.)— A  A— BAB— WR  10 
Little  Gifts.— Anon.— Tl' 
Little  Girl,  A.     (Wanted— a  Little  Girl— C.)— Ella  W. 

Wilcox.— TFS 
Little  Girl  that  Grew  Up,  The.     (Zion's  Herald.)— TMR 
Lit tle-Girl-Two-Li( tie-Girls.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Little  Girl  who  Wouldn't  Eat  Crusts,  The.— Mary  M. 

Dodge.— TFS 
Little  Girl's  Christmas,  A. — Anon. — PS 
Little  Girl's  Declaration,  A.— Anon. — LPS— PP 
Little  Girl's  Fancies,  A.— "A."— HSS  2— WCL 

(All  Things  Love  Me— 6r.  seZ. )— TFS 

(Child's  Fancy,  A— sZ.  a6r.)— PoR 

(Little  Things— 6r.  seZ.)- AD 
Little  Girl's  Hopes,  A.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
Little  Girl's  Lament,  The. — Dora  Greenwell. — PC 
Little  Girl's  Lecture  to  Mothers,  A.^ — Anon. — PS 
Little  Girl's  Letter,  A.     {Wisconsin  Farmer.) — PC 

(Nell's  Letter— sZ.  abr.)—TP 
Little  Girl's  Questions,  A. — Anon. — TFS 
Little  Girl's  Speech,  A. — Anon. — DLS 
Little  Girl's  View  of  Life  in  a  Hotel,  A. — Anon. — CS  17 

(Naughty  Girl's  Life  in  a  Hotel,  A.)— SR  7 

(Naughty  Little  Girl,  The.)— HR 
Little  Girl's  Wish,  A.— Libbie  C.  Baer.— WR  17 
Little  Girl's  Wonder,  A. — Anon. — DLF 
Little  Gleaners,  The.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Little  Golden-hair.— Will  Carleton.— CS  20— FMR 
Little  Goldenhair.— F.  B.  Smith.— BNL—BS  3— CSS 

—HP— HSS  3— LLC— MMR— PPSr 
Little  Goose,  A.— Eli/.a  S.  Turner.— OS  1— PC— WCL 

(Lost— abr.  and  si.  diff.)—'DR—FTS 

(Stray  Child,  A.)— CS  10— NPS— YP 
Little  Gossips. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — DLD 
Little  Gottlieb.     (C.)— Phoebe  Gary.— FMR  (si.  abr.) 

(Little  Gottlieb's  Christmas.) — BS  11 
Little  Gottlieb's  Christmas. — Phoebe  Cary.     See  fore- 
going. 
Little  Grace. — Bessie  Chandler. — DCP 
Little  Gradgrinds,  The. — Barbara  Broome. — MD 
Little  Grand  Lama,  The.     (Fables  for  the  Holy  Alli- 
ance, VI.)— T:  Moore.— HPE—WR  1  (si.  abr. 
and  si.  diff.) 
Little  Grave,  The.     (Wording  si.  diff.)— Anon.— CS  6 

— PEO 
Little  Graves. — Lillie  S.  Curry. — SR  3 
Little  Grenadier,  The.     (Harper's  Young  People.) — FS 
Little  Gretchen.— Anon.— CS  10 
Little     Gretchen. — Hans    C.     Andersen.     See    Little 

Match  Girl,  The. 
Little  Grocer  that  Failed.— Anon.— WR  17 
Little  Guinever. — Annie  Fields. — A  A 
Little  Gustava.— Celia  Thaxter.— PoR — SAP 
Little  Hand,  A.— Frank  L.  St  anton.— BS  21— HDL 
Little  Hatchet  Story,  The.    (With  occasional  questions 
by    a    five-year-old     hearer.) — Rob't    J.    Bur- 
dette.—BS"6—CS  13— DS— KNE 

(New  Hatchet  Story  and  George  Washington,  A.) 
— SR9 
Little     Helpers.     (Concert    rec.)  —  Anon.  —  COS  — 
DST  (diff.  vers. — mon. — abr.)— PP 

(Busy  Children  at  the  Farm— abr.)— HSS  2 


Little  Helpers. — Anon. — YFD 

Little  Helpers.     (DiaZ.)- E.  L.  Brown.— PR 

Little   Hero,   The. — Arthur  (7)  Matthison.     See  Little 

Stowaway,  The. 
Little  Heroine,  A. — Belle  M.  Locke. — CS  35 
Little  Highland  Shepherdess. — Lilla  Vannan. — WR 
Little  Homer's  Slate.— Eugene  Field.— EF — WTD 
Little  Housekeeper,  The.^Aiion. — DLF 
Little  Housekeepers. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — YFE 
Little  Hunchback,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley.     See  Happy 

Little  Cripple,  The. 
"Little  Jack."— Eugene  J.  Hall.— PR— YA 
Little  Jack  Horner.— Anon. ^CDV 
"Little  Jack  Janitor." — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Little  Jack  Two-sticks. — Marion  Manville. — CS  31 
Little  Jean.— Lillie  E.  Barr.- PRR 
Little  Jew,  The.— Dinah  M.  Craik.- FMR 
Little  Jim. — Anon.— CS  2— SA 

(Death  of  Little  Jim,  The.)— HNS 

(Poor  Little  Jim.) — BS  3 
Little  Jim.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  24— WR  15 
Little  Jo. — Mary  McGuire. — CS  29 
Little  Joe.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  35 
Little  Joe's  Flowers.— D:  L.  Proudfit.— SR  7 

(Poor    Little    Joe.)— CS    12— CSS— FTR— HNS— 
HP— PR— PS— SO— TMD 
Little  Johnnie  Visits  the  Dime  Museum.     (Arkansaw 
Traveler.)— SU  7 

(Boy  in  a  [or  the]  Dime  Museum,  A  for  Thel — si 
abr.)— DCR—WR  20 

(In  the  Dime  Museum — si.  abr.) — CS  30 
(Versions  vary  si.) 
Little  Johnnie's  "Piece"  on  Owls. — Ancn. — CS  28 
Little  Joke,  A. — Anthony  Hope. — WR  20 
Little  Kittens,  The.— Anon.— NV 

(Quarrelsome  Kittens,  'The.) — Anon. — NV 
•  (Two  Little  Kittens.)— PS 

Little  Kitty. — Eliz.  Prentiss. — LPS — OS  1  (si   abr  ) 

PP— PS 

(Kitten  and  the  Mouse,  The— sZ.  abr.) — PTS 
Little    Knight   in   Green,   The. — Kaiha.    L.   Bales. 

Little  Knot  of  Blue,  A. — S:  M.  Peck.— FTA 

(Knot  of  Blue,  A.)— BNL 
Little  Lady,  The. — Louise  Reviere. — FTT 
Little  Lady,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Little  Lady  of  Lavender,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Miss  Eva's 
Visit  to  the  Ogre.)— Theodora  C.   Elmslie.— 
BS  24 
Little  Lady-bird,  The. — Caroline  A.  Southev  — WR  12 

(Ladybird,  Ladybird.)— NV— OS  1 

(To  the  Lady-bird.)— PHS 
Little  Lamb. — W:  Blake.     See  Lamb,  The. 
Little  Lambkins,  The. — Anon. — DLF 
Little  Land,  The. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV — PoP 
Little  Lazy  Cloud,  The.— Anon.— NV — SM 
Little  Leaf,  The.— H :  W.  Beecher.     See  Norwood 
Little  Leaf's  Sacrifice. — Hattie  A.  Penney  — BS  18 
Little  Leaves.  The. — G:  Cooper. — NV 
Little  Light ,  The.     (Good  CAeer.)— CPL— DS— PP— 

YA— YFR 
Little  Lights.— Anon.— CPL 
Little  Lizette. — Kathe.  S.  Alcorn. — WR  15 
Little  Lord  Fauntleroy,  Sel.  fr.     (Fauntleroy  and  the 
Earl— conrf.  fr.  Chs.  IV.  and  V..  and  arr.  as 
dial.) — Frances  H.  Burnett. — NDP 
Little  Mabel  at  Long  Branch. — Anon.^WR  21 
Little  Mag's  Victory. — G:  L.  Catlin.— CS  18— NPS— 

Little  Maid  with  Lovers  Twain. — Jennie  E.  T.  Dowe. 

— BS  15 
Little  Maiden  and   the  Little  Bird,   The. — Lvdia  M 

Child.— WCL  • 

Little  Maid's  "Amen,"  A.     (Gospel  Exposilor.) — SSS 
Little  Maid's  Prayer  at  the  Shrine  of  St.  Valentine 

The. — Anon. — PS 
Little  Maid's  Sermon.  The. — Susan  T.  Perry  — BS  18 
Little  Mamma. — C:  H.  Webb. — AWH — OS  1 — TAV 

— THP 
Little  Margery.     (SI.  diff.  t-ers. )— Sarah  Joy.— BS  20 — 

Little  Martyr,  The.— Anon.— CS  9 
Little  Mary  and  the  Birdie. — Anon. — WR  17 
Little  Mary's  Wish. — Mrs.  L.  M.  Blinn. — fS  7 
Little  Match-girl.  The.     (Little  Matoh-f-eller.  The— C 
— prose  vers.— 2  diff.  irons.) — Hans  C.  Ander- 
srn.— BS  17— CS  15 
(Poet.  vers. — sl.  abr.) — BNL 
(Little  Gretchen — poet.  vers. — abr..  «•.  tab.) — TCP 
(New  Year's  Eve — roet.  vers.) — OS  1 
Little    Match-seller,    The.— Hans    C.    Andersen.     See 

foregoing. 
Little  Maud. — Anon. — CS  23 — FMR 


189 


Little  May 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Little  May.— EmUy  H.  Miller.— PC— YBT 
(Music.)— NV 
(Music  of  Nature.)— PTS 
Little  May's  Answer. — Anon. — PPSr 
Little  Messenger  of  Love,  The. — Anon. — PEO 
Little  MidKet.—Anon.*-DST— KER—TFS 
Little  Milliner,  The. — Rob't  Buchanan. — BNL 
Little  Mimics. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — DLD 
Little  M^ftister,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  M.  Barrie. 

Nanny  Saved  from  the  Poorhouse.     {Arr.  fr.  Chs. 

Xn.  and  XIID— WR  26 
(Scene  from  "The  Little  Minister" — al.  diff.  abr.) 

— CR 
Rescue  of  Gavin,  The.     (Ch.  XL.)— WR  19 
Little  Mischief. — Anon.— HVD 
Little  Miss  Blue  Eyes. — Arthur  Weir. — TCV 
Little  Miss  Brag. — Eugene  Field. — EF — LS 
Little  Miss  Limberkin.  (C.) — Mary  M.  Dodge. 

(Miss  Limberkin's  Mouse.) — TT 
Little  Miss  Ray. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Little  Miss  Trot.— Eben  U.  Hexford.- CS  34 
Little    Mission    Band,    The.     (Arthur's   Home   Maga- 
zine.)—CFL 
Little  Mistress  Merciless. — Eugene  Field. — EF 
Little  Mistress  Sans-Merci. — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
Little  Mollie  Whimper.- Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Little  Moments. — Anon. — OS  1 — YBT 
Little  More,  A.— Anon.— WCLG  1 
Little  Mother  Goose. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Little   Mothers,    The.     (Motion   song.) — Anon. —  COS 

— PP 
Little  Mothers,  The.     (Play.)— May  Floyd.— WR  17 
Little  Motto  Bearers,  The.— Sue  S.  Morton.— SSE 
Little  Mud-sparrows,  The.— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.— PEO 
Little  Muriel.       (John      Halifax,       Gentleman  —  Ch. 

XXVIIL,  a6r.)— Dinah  M.  Craik.— CS  37 
Little  Musgrave  and  [the]  Lady  Barnard  [,The].    '(In 

Percy's   Reliques  —  diif.  versions.) — Anon. — 

BB— PEB  1 
Little  Mushrooms,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh.i— 

KJ 
Little  Nan.— Anon.— BS  25— PEO 
Little  Nannie. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS — NV 
Little  Nellie  in  the  Prison. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — CS  20 
Little  Nell's  Funeral. — C:  Dickens.     .See  Old  Curiosity 

Shop,  The. 
Little  Nipper  an'  'is  Ma,  The. — G:  F.  Gouraud. — AA 
Little  Nurse,  The. — Anon. — WCL 
Little  Nurse,  The.— Sabine  C.  A.  V.  Tastu.— OS  1 
Little  Nut  People. — E.  J.  Nicholson. — NV 
Little   Oh-Dear. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Little  Old   Folks.     (Juvenile  Entertainment.) — Anon. 

— EuE 
Little  Old  House  by  the  Shore,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — 

CCB 
Little  One's  Speech,  The.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
Little  Orator,  The.— Thaddeus  M.  Harris.— LPS— PP 

— WR5 
Little  Orphant   Annie.     (C.) — Jas.    W.    Riley. — AA — 

CS  33— OS  1— RCR— TMR 
(Elf-child,  The.)  — AWH  — BR  — BS  16  — SR6— 

THP 
Little  Outcast's  Plea,  The.— Anon.— BS  25— PFP 

(God  after  All,  A.)— WR  14 
Little  Parable,  A.— Anne  R.  Aldrich.- AA— TAS 
Little  Parable,  A.— J:  C.  Minot.— CG  2 
Little  Pat  and  the  Parson.— Anon.— CS  14— MYF 
Little  Patriot.  The.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Little  Paul's  Thanksgiving. — Anon.— DLF— WR  7 
Little  Peach,  The.    (Partial  tr.  of  or  suggested  by  Field's 

poem.) — Anon. — NA 
Little    Peach,    The.— Eugene    Field.  —  DLS  —  HP— 

THP 
Little  Peach  Blossom.— Anon. — TT 
Little  Peddlers,  The.— Millicent  Moor.— TFS 
Little  Penelope's  Sewing. — Anna  M.  Pratt. — CPL 
Little  People  of  the  Snow,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.- AP 
Little  Phil.— Helen  Rich.— CS  21— HP 

(To  Mark  Mother's  Grave — prose  vers.) — CS  21 
Little  Pilgrim,  A.— Anon.— CS  32— WR  6  (si.  abr.) 
Little  Pine  Tree,  The.     (Tr.  by) — Eudora  S.  Bumstead. 

— AD— NV 
Little  Pitcher,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Little  Plant,  The.— Anon.— GMS 
Little  Planter,  A.     (Youth's  Comvanion.) — AD 
Little  Princes,    "The. — ^W:     Shakespeare.     See    King 

Richard  III. 
Little  Prisoner.  The.— Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Little  Prudy,  Sels.  fr. — Sophie  May. 

Inkstand,  The.      (Sel.  ad.   as  dial.  fr.  Ch.  XI.) — 

NDP 
"Playing  Hookey."     (Abr.  and  arr.  as  dial.  fr.  Ch. 

Vlfl.)— NDP 


Little  Prudy's  Sister  Susy,  Sel.  fr.     (Tiny  Quarrel,  A — 

ad.  fr.  Ch.  V.)— Sophie  May.— NDP 
Little  Quaker  Sinner,  The. — Lucy  L.  Montgomery. — 

BS  13— SR  13 
Little  Rain-drops. — Anon. — NV 
Little  Reader,  The.     ("Olive  Leaf. ")— MYF 

("God  is  Nowhere.")— CS  12 
Little  Rebel,  The.— Jos.  Ashby-Sterry.— VA 
Little  Red  Riding  Hood. — Lsetitia  E.  Landon. — HBP 
Little  Red  Riding  Hood;  or,  The  Wicked  Wolf  and  the 
Virtuous     Wood     Cutter. — (Dial. — ad.  fr.)  T: 
Hood  (?).— DS— MPD— NPS— YA— YP 
Little  Regiment,  The. — Anon. — FR 
Little   Rocket's     Christmas.  —  Vandvke     Brown.  — 

BS  10  (a6r. )—CS  15— FTR— NPS— YP 
Little  Rose.     (Blackwood's  Magazine.) — FP 
Little  Saint  Cecilia. — Marg.  Holmes. — CS  32 
Little  School   Marm   [or   Schoolma'am],   A. — Anon. — 

DLF— LPS— PP— PS 
Little  Seamstress,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Little  Seamstress,  The. — Anon. — WR  17 
Little  Seamstress,  A.     (St.  Nicholas.)— LFS — PP 
Little  Seed-cells,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
Little  Seeds,  The.— G:  Cooper.— YBT 
Little  Servants.— J.  K.  Nutting.— YBT 
Little  Ships  in  the  Air.— E:  A.  Rand.— NV— YBT 
Little  Shoe,  A.— Anon.— CS  17 
Little  Shoes  Did  It,  The.— Anon.— CS  21 
Little  Sigrid. — Hjalmar  H.  Bovesen. — WR  8 
Little  Sister  of  Mercy,  The.— Helen  Booth.— CS  29 
Little  Snowfiakes. — Anon. — NV 
Little  Snowfiakes.— M.  M.  — NV 
Little  Song,  A. — Duncan  C.  Scott. — VA 
Little  Song,  A.     (Youth's  Compaiiion.)— COS— FF 
Little  Sophy  by  the  Seaside. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — 

PGT  2 
Little  Sorrow. — Marian  Douglas. — WCL 
Little  Speaker,  The.— Anon.— PPSr 
Little  Speech.  A.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Little  Star.— Anon.— TT 
Little  Steenie. — Anna  L.  Ruth. — CS  11 
Little  Stitches.— Anon.— HP 
Little  Story,  A.— Anne  R.  Aldrich.— TAV 
Little  Stow-away,  The. — Arthur  (?)  Matthison. — CS  14 
—LLC 
(SI.  abr.)— BRR— CSS— EA 
(Little  Hero,  The— poet,  vers.)— CS  13— FR— MYF 
(Stowaway,  The— poet,  vers.)— NPS— YP 
Little  Streams.— Mary  Howitt.— HBP— PTS  (abr.) 
Little  Sunbeam,    The.— Anon.— PR— YA— YBT    (si. 
abr.  and  si.  diff.) 
(Sunbeam,  The— sZ.  dt^.)- NV 
Little  Sunbeam. — Anon.— YBT 
Little  Sunbeam. — I^aura  E.  Richards. — NV 
Little  Sunbeams. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Little  Sunflowers.     (Juvenile  ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Little  Tambourine  Girl,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Little  Teacher,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP— PS 
Little  Teacher,  The.— Sophie  E.  Eastman. — WR  17 
Little  Tee-Hee.— W.  W.  Fink.— CS  26 
Little  Telltale,  The.     (The  .ildine.)—FTR 
(Bobolink,  The. )—BS  11— HNS 

(Abr. )— AD— CSS— PPSr 
(Telltale,  The.)— BNL— PR— TMR— YA 
Little  Theocritus. — Caroline  W.  (F.)  Paradise. — AA 
Little  Things.— Anon.— DJS 
Little  Things.— Anon.— DST 
Little  Things.     (DtaZ.)- Anon.— FDY 
Little  Things.— Anon.— LPS— PP 

(Mite  Song,  A.)— CPL— TFS  (si.  longer.) 
Little  Things.— Anon.— TFS 
Little  Things,  The.— Anon.— TFS 

(Speech  for  a  Little  Boy.)- KER 
Little  Things.— Anon.— WR  17 
Little  Things.     "A."     /See  Little  Girl's  Fancies,  A. 
Little  Things.— Julia  A.   F.  Carney.— FEP  (at.  to  F. 
S.  Osgood)— HSS  2— OS  1— PS 
(Little  Drops  of  Water — sel. — at.  to  Brewer.) — SM 
Little    Things. — Epes    Sargent.     See    Little    Cowslip, 

The. 
Little  Tin  Cup,  The.— T:  Frost.— WR  6 
Little  Tin  Plate,  A.— Garnet  Walch.— WR  13 
Little  Tom.— C.  B.  Lewis.- CS  21 
Little  Tommie's  First  Smoke. — Anon. — PR — YA 
Little  Tommy  Smith.     (SeZ.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— SC 
Little  Tomtit,  The.— Anon.— DST  » 

Little  Travelers,  The.— Anon.— FDY 
Little  Trooper,  The. — Arthur  Weir.— TCV 
Little  Truant,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Little  Turncoats.— Georgia  A.  Peck.— CS  27 
Little  Tyrant.— Anon.— TFS 

(Babv  Sleeps.)— CS  20— DLS 
Little  Vagabond,  The.— W:  Blake.— HBP 


190 


TITLE  INDEX 


Long 


Little  Visitor,  A.— Helen  S.  Perkins. — BS  25 
Little  Voices. — Anon. — WR  17 

Little  Vulgar  Boy,  The.— R:  H.  Barham.— MHR  (abr.) 
(Misadventures    at    Margate — C.) — BNL — HPE — 

THP 
Little  Watcher,  The.— Marg.  J.  Preston. — HDL 
"Little  watchfulness  over  ourselves,  A. " — Epictetus. — 

SC 
Little  Way,  A. — F:  L.  Stanton. — AA 
Little  While,  A.— Horatius  Bonar.— FEP— HBP— VA 
(Beyond  the  Smiling  and  the  Weeping. — C.) — BNL 

— GP 
Little  While,  A.— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— VA— VS 
Little  While  before  the  Fall  was  Done,  A.  —  Fs.  Sher- 
man.—TCV 
Little  While  I  Fain  would  Linger  Yet,  A. — Paul  H. 

Hayne. — AA 
Little  White  Angel  of  Connemaugh,  The. — Miller  Hage- 

man. — WR  19 
Little  White  Beggars,  The.— Helen  W.  Ludlow. — DR 
Little  White  Hearse,  The.— Jas.  W.  Rilev.— CS  25 
Little  White  Lily.— G:  MacDonald.— CCd— OS  1— PC 

PHS— PoR— PTS  (abr.)- WCL 
Little  White  Sun,  The.— Annie  C.  Huestis.— TCV 
Little  Wild  Baby.— Marg.  T.  Janvier.— AA—ASL 
Little  Willie. — Anon.— NA 
Little  Willie.— C:  Grant.— PEB  4 
Little  Willie  Ware.— Anon.— DST 
Little  Woman,  The.— M.  C.  Barnes.- BS  21 
Little  Women,  Sels.  jr. — Louisa  M.  Alcott. 

Family  .Tar,  A.     {Dial.— ad.  fr.  Ch.  XXVITL)— DS 

— MPD— YA 
Little    Women's    Pickwick    Club,    The.     (Ch.    X., 

cond.  and  arr.  as  play.) — MPD 
Reconciliation,  The  (Ch.  XXL,    cond.  and   arr.  as 

piay.)- NDP 
Song  from  the  Suds,  A.     (Song  fr.  Ch.   XVI.) — 

BS  19 
Little  Women's  Pickwick  Club,  The. — Louisa  M.  Al- 
cott.    See  foregoing. 
"Little  word  in  kindness    spoken,    A."     (,Fr.    Little 

Words  of   Kindness— 7)—Dan'l    C.  (7)    Coles- 
worthy. — GG 
Little  Worries.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  30 
"Live  and  love." — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Drama  of 

Exile,  A. 
"Live  in  the  sunshine  and  spend  happy  days. " — Anon. 

— HSS  3 
Live  Oak,  The. — H:  R.  Jackson.— AD 

("With  his  gnarled  old  arms  and  his  iron  form" — 

seZ.)— HSS  1 
Live  While  you  Live.— G:  McKnight.— TAS 
Lives  of  Great  Men. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Psalm  of 

Life,  A. 
Living.     (London  Times.) — HP 
Living  Book,  The.— E:  C.  F.  Bates.— A  A 
"Living  Dog"  and  "The  Dead  Lion,"  The.     (C.)— T: 

Moore, 
(liines  on  Leigh  Hunt.) — ESs 
Living  Memory,  A. — W:  A.  Croflfut. — A  A 
Living  Letters.     (Juvenile  ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Living  Lost,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— FEP 
Living  Stones. — Anon. — CS  33 
Living  Temple,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AA— LLC 

— TAS 
Living  Temnle,  A.— C:  Sangster.— TCV 
Living  to  Thee. — Anne  Steele. — LLC 
Living  Waters. — Caroline  S.  Spencer. — BNL 
Living  Words,  Sel.  fr.     (Triumph  of  Peace,  The.) — 

Edwin  H.  Chapin.— SC 
Lixey.— Anon. — DE 

Lizie  Lindsay. — Anon.     See  Lizzie  Lindsay. 
Lizzie.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  27 
Ijizzie  and  I  are  One. — Anon. — CS  17 
Lizzie  and  the  Baby. — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
Liz[z]ie  Lindsay. — Anon. — BB — PEB  2   (abr.   and    si. 

diff.  vers.) 
Lizy  Ann. — Edgar  F.  Davis. — CG  2 
Llewellyn  and  his  Dog. — W:  R.  Spencer. — PC  (abr. — 

at.  to  Rob't  Southey). 
(Beth  Gelert)— BNL  (abr.)— CS  12— FEP— FR  (si. 

abr.)— HBP— LLC— MR— VSG 
Llyn-y-Dreiddiad-Vrawd ;  or.  The  Pool  of  the  Diving 

Friar.     (Crochet    Castle,    Ch.    XVL)— T:  L. 

Peacock.— PEB  3 
Lo!  He  Comes,  with  Clouds  Descending! — T;  Oliver. — 

FEP 
"Lo,  we  Have  Left  AH."— H:  F.  Lyte.— VA 

(Jesus,  I  my  Cross  have  Taken.) — FEP 
Load  on  his  Mind,  The.     (Burlington  Hawkeye.) — CH 
Lobster  Quadrille,  A.     (Whiting  and  the  Snail,  The — 

C. — fr.    Alice's    Adventures    in    Wonderland, 

Ch.  X.)— Lewis  Carroll.— PoR 


Lobster  Salad,     (i^r.  Poetical  Cookery-book.)  (Punch.) 

—HPE 
Lobsters,  The.     (Punch.)— HFE 
Lochaber   no   More.      (Song — C.) — Allan    Ramsay. — 

BNL— FEP— HBP 
Lochiel's   Warning.     (C.  —  dial.)  —  T:    Campbell.  — 

AE   (br.   seZ.)- BNL— BS   7— CDD— CS    10— 

EPS— FEP— FTR— H  BP— PS— SS— WRD 
(Wizard's  Warning,  The.)— SED 
Lochinvar.     (Prose  vers,  of  following.) — Anon. — PFP 
Lochinvar. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marmion. 
Loehinvar's  Ride. — Walter  Scott.     <See  Marmion. 
Locked  Out.— Anon.— CS  9 
Locksley    Hall.— Alfred    Tennyson.— BNL— EPs— 

FEP— HBP— MR— PGT  2— SAE  (br.  sel.) 
Locomotive,  The. — Anon. — FS  (arr.  as  dial.) 

(Engine,  The.)— SA 
Lodge,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 

The. 
Lodge  Night. — Anon. — CS  13 
Lodgings    for    Single    Gentlemen. —  G:    Colman,    the 

younger.— BC—THF 
Loehrs  and  the  Hammonds,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Lofty  Faith.— Anon.— CS  8 

(Agnes,  I  Love  Thee.)— CH— CRR— SR  5 
Logan,  a  Mingo  Chief,  to  Lord  Dunmore. — Logan. — 

PS— SS 
Logan  at  Peach  Tree  Creek. — Hamlin  Garland. — EDY 
Logan  Braes.— J:  Mayne.— FEP— WEP  3 
Log-cabin,  The.    (Sel.  fr.  Mass  Meeting  at  Saratoga.) — 

Dan'l  Webster.— FD  1 
Logic.      (Harvard  Lampoon.) — CG  2 
Logic  of  Hudibras. — S:  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Logicians.     (In  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S;  Butler. 

—HPE 
Logicians  Refuted,  The. — Oliver  Goldsmith. — ESs 
Logic  o'  Buchan.— G:  Halket.— WEP  3 
Lohengrin. — A.  E.  Watrous. — EDY 
Lohengrin. — W :  M.  Payne. — AA 
"Lollyby,  Lolly,  LoUyby." — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
London. — J:  Davidson. — BNL — VA 
London.  (I.  On  First  Entering  Westminster  Abbey.) 

— Louise  I.  Guiney. — AA 
London,  Sel.  fr.     (Thales'  Reasons  for  Leaving  Lon- 
don.)—S:  Johnson.— WEP  3 
London  Assurance,  Sel.  fr.     (Play.) — Dion  Boucicault. 
Lady  Gay  Spanker.— CS  25  (abr.)— MRS 
(Scene  from  London  Assurance — abr.) — SO 
London  Bee  Story,  A. — "Quiz." — CS  18 
London  Bridge. — F:  E.  Weatherly. — VA 
London  Churches. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. — 

BNL— YBF 
London,  1802.     (Written  in  London,  September,  1802 

—  C.)  —  W:      Wordsworth.  —  PGT  1  (L)  — 

YBF  (L) 
(England,  1802.)— OB 
London,    1802.     (C. — Poems   Dedicated   to   National 

Independence  and  Liberty,  Pt.  I.,  XIV.) — W: 

Wordsworth.— PGT  1  (II.)— YBF  (II.) 
(England.)— GP 
(Ideal.)— LH 
(Milton.)— LLC— WEP  4 
("Milton!  thou  shouldst  be  living  at  this  hour" — 

abr.)— GG 
(Sonnet:  London,  1802.) — HBP 
(To  Milton.)— BNL— CEL— EPs— FEP 
London  Feast. — Ernest  Rhys. — VA 
London  Housetops.     (Cond.  fr.  The  Caxtons,  Pt.  XIV., 

Ch.  II.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— TMR 
London  Lackpenny,  The.     (London  Lyckpenny,  The.) 

— J :  Lydgate. — ESs 
(London  Lickpenny — abr.) — WEP  1 
London  Lickpenny. — J:  Lydgate.     See  foregoing. 
London  Plane-tree,  A. — Amy  Levy. — VA 
London  University,  The. — R  :  H.  Barham. — HPE 
Lone  Star  of  Cuba,  The.— D:  G.  Adee.— TMR 
Loneliness. — W.  H.  Hayne. — TAV 
Lonely  Bird,  The. — Harrison  S.  Morris. — AA — SS 
Lonely  Bugle  Grieves,  The.     (Fr.   Ode  on  the  Cele- 
bration of  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill.) — Gren- 

ville  Mellen. — AA 
Lonely  Pine,  The.— Arthur  J.  Lockhart.— TCV 
Long  Ago.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Long  Ago.— Libbie  C.  Baer.— DCP— WR  6 
Long  Ago. — Mrs.  L.  A.  Bradbury. — HE 
Long  Ago. — T:  S.  Denison. — SR  6 
Long  Ago. — Eugene  Field. — EF — WTD 
Long  Ago,  The.— Marg.  W.  McCutchen. — CG  3 
Long  Ago,  The.— Benj.  F.  Tavlor.- LLC— WCLG  2 
(Isle  of  [the— C]  Long  Ago,  The— C.)— BS   1— 

FTR— HNS— KNE— SA 
(River  Time,  The.)— TAV 
Long  did  I  Toil.— H:  F.  Lyte.— FEP 


191 


Long 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Long  Deserted.— C:  P.  Mulvany.— TIP 

Long  is  the  Way. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 

Long  Life. — Kennedy. — FP 

Long  Night,  The.— Harry  B.  Smith.— AA 

Long  Sermon,  The. — Anon. — TFS 

Long  White  Seam,  The. — Jean  Ingelow. — CEL — GN — 

VA— VS— YBF 
Long  Years  Ago. — Anon. — FLS 

Longest  Life,  The,  Sel.  jr.  (Goal  of  Life,  The.) — Archi- 
bald Lampman. — TCV 
Longfellow.— Craven  L.  Betts.— EDY 
Longfellow. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — AA 

Longfellow   Alphabet,   A.     (Comp.   jr.    H:   W.    Long- 
fellow's Works.)— Anon.— PEO 
Longfellow,    Extract    Concerning. — G:    W.    Curtis. — 

PEO 
Longfellow,  Extract  Concerning. — Octavius  B.  Froth- 

ingham.- PEO 
Longfellow,  Extract  Concerning. — Minot  J.  Savage. — 

PEO 
Longfellow,  Extract  Concerning. — R:  H.  Stoddard. — 

PEO 
Longfellow,   Extract   Concerning. — J:   G.   Whittier. — 

PEO 
Longfellow,    From.     {Frags.) — H:    W.    Longfellow. — 

KNE 
Long-felt  Want,  The.— Anon.— WR  25 
Longing. — Matthew  Arnold. — FTA 
Longing. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold'e  Pilgrim- 
age. 
Longing.     (Abr.)— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BS  7— TMR 
Longing.— G.  H.  Westley.— FLS 
Longing  for  Death.      (Frags,  fr.  varioiis  authors.) — 

BNL 
Longing    for    Home. — Jean    Ingelow.     See    Songs    of 

Seven. 
Longing  for  the  Old   Plantation.- — Addison   H.   Hin- 

man. — CG  3 
Longing  of  a  Blessed  Heart,  The,  Sel.   fr.   (What  is 

Love?)— N:  Breton.— ELP 
Longings. — Anon. — FLS 

Long-lost  Nephew,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  7 
"Look  above  thee — never  eye." — J:  Bowring. — GG 
Look  Aloft. — Jonathan  Lawrence. — CS  2 — OM — TAV 
Look  at  the  Clock.— R:  H.  Barham.— HPE 
"Look  back  on  time  with  kindly  eyes."     (C) — Emily 

Dickinson. 
(Time.)— TAS 
Look  into  the  Gulf,  ^. — Edwin  Markham. — AA 
Look  not    upon    the    Wine. — Nathaniel    P.   Willis. — 

BLP— FAS 
("Look  not  upon  the  wine  when, it  is  red.") — PFSr 
"Look  not  upon  the  wine  when  it  is  red." — Nathaniel 

P.  Willis.     See  foregoing. 
"Look  of  sympathy,  the  gentle  word,  The." — Sarah 

Doudney  (at.  also  to  T:  S.  Collier).— GG 
(Not  Lost.)— CS  8— SSS— TAV 
Look  on  the  Sunny  Side. — Anon. — DLF 
Look  out,    Bright    Eyes.     (Song — C. — fr.    The    False 

One,  Act  I.,  Sc.  2.) — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 

— FEP 
Look  Seaward,  Sentinel,  Sel.  fr.  (Chorus  of  Islanders — 

fr.  Pt.  IV. j— Alfred  Austin.— TMR 
Look  up. — Sarah  K.  Bolton. — YBT 
Look  up,  Laborer!- W.  D.  Gallagher.- HSS  3 

(Lab9rer,  The.)— CS  8— LLC— MMR— SM— TAV 
"Looke  in  thy  heart,  and  write." — Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Lookin'  Back.— Moira  O'Neill.— AVP— TIP 
Looking  Ahead. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — YFE 
Looking  Around  for  a  Wife. — Anon. — MFD 
Looking  for  Bargains.     (St.  Louis  Chronicle.) — BS  19 
Looking    Forward. —  Rob't    L.    Stevenson.  —  CGV  — 

DLS 
liOoking  into  the  Future. — Gerald  Massey. — PR 
Looking  out  for  Me. — Anon. — SSS 
"Looking  over  the  world  on  a  broad  scale." — Harriet 

B.  Stowe.— GG 
Looking  unto  God. — S:  Longfellow. — HDL — TAS 
Looking  unto  Jesus. — Sarah  E.  Miles. — TAS 
"Looking  upward  every  day." — Anon. — FHS 
Looking-glass,   The.     (To  a  Lady,  upon  a  Looking- 
glass  Sent — C.)— Jas.  Shirley.— ES 
Looking-glass   for  London   and    England,  A,   Sd.   fr. 

(Do  me  Right,  and  do  me  Reason.) — T:  Lodge. 

— ES 
Looking-glass  River. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Lookout  Moimtain  [,  1863— Beutelsbach,  1880].— G:  L. 

Catlin.— BDD— BS  9— CS  20— PR— PS 
Loom  of  Life,  The. — Anon. — CS  30 
Loon,  The.— Alfred  B.  Street.— AA 
Loons.  The. — Archibald  Lampman. — TCV — VA 
Lord  Bacon.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 


Lord  Bacon's  Birthday.     (C.) — Ben  Jonson. 

(On  Lord  Bacon's  Birthday.) — EDY 
Lord  Beichan  and  Susie  Pye. — Anon. — GN 

(Young  Beichan  [and  Susie  Pye] — diff.  vers.) — BB 
—HBP— PES  2  (nbr.  and  si.  diff.) 
Lord    Byron. — Rob't    Pollok.     jSee    Course  of    Time, 

The. 
Lord  Byron  to  the  Greeks. — Alphonse  de  Lamartine. 

— PS— ss 
Lord  Careth,  The.     (Sunday  Magazine.) — SSS 
Lord  Chatham. — W :  Cowper.     ^:ee  Table  Talk. 
Lord  Chatham  against  the  American  War.^ — W:  Pitt, 

Lord  Chatham.     See  American  War,  The. 
Lord   Chatham's   Eloquence.     (Sel.   fr.   William   Pitt, 

Earl  of  Chatham.)— T:  B.  Macaulay.— IR 
Lord  Clive.     (Ahr.) — Rob't  Browning. — DR 

(Clive— C.)— BS21 
Lord  Derwentwater. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Lord  Donald. — Anon.     See  Lord  Randal. 
Lord  Dundreary   and   the   French   Widow.— Anon. — 

CS  17 
Lord  Dundreary  at  Bright on[,  and  the  Riddle  he  Made 
There].— Anon.— CS  7— MHR 
(Lord  Dundreary's  Riddle[s].)— BS  17— HR 
Lord  Dundreary  in  the  Country. — Anon. — BS  13  (sel.) 

(Dundreary  in  the  Country.)— CS  13— SE  (sel.) 
Lord   Dundreary   on   Mental   Photographs. — Anon. — 

CS  17 
Lord  Dundreary  on  "Pwoverbs." — Ancn. — CS  2 
Lord    Dundreary   Proposing. — F.   J.    Skill. — CS    11  — 

FTR  (a6r.)— HR— MHR 
Lord  Dundreary's  Riddle[s]. — Anon.     See  Lord  Dun- 
dreary at  Brighton. 
Lord   Helpeth    Man   and    Beast,   The.     (Sel.    fr.  The 
Friend :  The  Second  Landing-place,  Essaj'  IV.) 
— S:  T.  Coleridge.— LLC 
Lord  is  my  Shepherd,  The.— H.  W.  Baker.— HDL 

(My  Shepherd— a6r.)— YBT 
Lord  is  Risen,  The.— C:  Wesley.— FEP 

(Easter  Hymn.)— CEL— FHS  (seZ.)— WEP  3 
Lord,  it  Belongs  rot  to  my  Care. — R:  Baxter. — HDL 

(R  esignation. )— FEP 
Lord  John  Russell. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — AVP 
Lord  Lovel.— Anon.— FEP— HBP— LC 
"Lord,   make   me    quick   to   see." — R.   M.   Offord. — 

FHS 
Lord  Melbourne. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — AVP 
Lord  North's  Ministry  Denounced. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of 

Chatham.— SS 
Lord    of    Burleigh,    The. — Alfred    Tennyson.— CGd — 

CS  26— MR 
Lord  of  Butrago,  The.— (Tr.  hy)3:  G.  Lockhart.— BNL 
— HB— OS  2 
(Garci  Perez  de  Vargas.) — EPs 
Lord  of  Himself.— Sir  H:  Wotton.— LH 

(Character   of   a   Happv   Life,   The— C.)— BNL— 
CEL  —  ELP  —  FEP  —  OB  —  OS  2  —  PGT  1 
— PHS— WEP  2— YBF 
(Happy  Life,  The  [or  A].)— EPs— GP— HBP 
Lord  of  the  Isles.  The,  Sets,  /r.— Walter  Scott. 
Bannockbum.     (VI.,  sels.  fr.  14-30.)— EHT 
Bruce  and  the  Abbot.     (Can.  II. ,  sels.  fr.  Sts.  23-32. ) 
—EPs 
(Abbot's   Blessing    on    the    Bruce,  The — sel.) — 
OS  2 
Lake  Coriskin.     (III.,  13-16.)— WEP  4 
Lord,  Oft  I  Come.— Lizette  W.  Reese.— TAS 
I^ord  Raglan.     (In  Memoriam — C). — Edwin  Arnold. 

— GP 
■     (Raglan.)— EDY— VA 
Lord  Randal.— Anon.— CGd— HBP 
(Lord  Ronald.)— BB—LC 
(Lord  Donald — diff.  and  longer  vers.) — PEB  2 
Lord  Ronald. — .Ainon. — See  Lord  Randal. 
Lord  Ronald's  Bride. — E:  Bulwer-Lvtton. — WR  9 
Lord,  Teach  a  Little  Child.— Anon.— PC 

(Prayer,  A.)— YBT 
Lord  the  Good  Shepherd,  The.      (Psalm  XXIII  —C.) 

— Jas.  Montgomery. — HBP 
Lord  Thomas  and  Fair  Annet.      (In  Percy's  Reliques.) 

— Anon.— BB— PEB  1  (si.  ahr.) 
Lord  Thomas  and  Fair  Annie. — Anon.   See  Fair  Annie. 
Lord  Thomas  and  Fair  Ellinor.     (In  Percy's  Reliques.) 
— Anon.— BB— CGd 
(Ijord  Thomasine  and  Fair  EUinnor — diff.  vers.) — 
WR  8 
Lord  Thomasine  and  Fair  Ellinnor. — Anon.     See  fore- 
going. 
Lord  Thurlow's  Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton. — E: 
Lord  Thurlo*._VSG 
(Reply  to  Grafton  )— LLC 
(Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton.)— KNE— OM— PS 


192 


TITLE  INDEX 


Lotos 


Lord  Ullin's  Daughter.— T:  Campbell.— BFV—BNL— 

BPB  —  CGd  —  CSS  —  FEP  —  GN— HBP  —  LC 

—MR  —  PC  —  PEB  3  —  PGT  1  —  PHS  — 

PPSr— VSG— WR  7 
Lord    Walter's    Wife. — Eliz.    B.    Browning. — BNL — 

WR  9  (sZ.  abr.) 
"Lord,  what  a  change  within  us." — Anon. — GG 
Lord!  When  those  Glorious  Lights  1  See. — G:  Wither. 

—BNL 
(In  a  Clear,  Starry  Night.)— HBP 
"Lord,  with  glowing  heart  I'd  praise  Thee." — Fs.  S. 

Key.— FEP 
Lords  of  Thule,  The.— Anon.— HBP— OS  2 
Lord's  Prayer,  The.— Louisa  J.  Hall.— TAS 
Lord's  Prayer  Illustrated,  The. — Anon. — CS  24 
Lord's  Prayer  in  Verse,  The. — Anon. — BS  18 
Lorelei,  The.     (In  Pictures  of  Travel:     The  Return 

Home,    2.) — Heinrich    Heine    (tr.    by    C.    P. 

Cranch).— HBP 
(Lore-Lei,  The— dt/f.  <r.)— BNL 
Lorna  Doone,  Sels.  jr. — R:  D.  Blackmore. 

Death  of  Carver  Doone.     (.Cond.  jr.  Chs.   LXIV. 

and  LXV.)— BS  24 
Harvest  Song,  A.     (Exmoor  Harvest  Song — C. — 

jr.  Ch.  XXIX.)— HSS  3 
Lorna  Doone.     (Br.  sel.  jr.  Ch.  XXII.)— SAE 
October  Morning,  An.     (Sel.  jr.  Ch.  XXXIII.)— 

TMR 
Snow-storm,    The.     (Cond.    jr.    Chs.    XLI.    and 

XLII.)— WR  1 
Lorraine.     (Ballad:  Lorraine,  Lorraine,  Lorr&e — C.) — 

C:  Kingsley.— CR— CS  20— OS  1— SR  5— VA 
(Lorraine,  Lorraine,  Lorr6e.) — PEB  3 — VSG 
(Lorraine  Lorree.) — MR 
Lorraine,   Lorraine,  Lorree. — C:   Kingsley.     .See  jore- 

going. 
T.,orraine  Loree. — C:  Kingsley.     See  Lorraine. 
Losers  of  Money. — Anon. — WR  2 
Losing  Side,  The.— Arthur  E.  J.  Legge.— AVP 
Loss,  A.     (Judy.)—FPb. 
Loss  and  Gain. — H :  W.  Longfellow. — PEO 
l/oss  and  Gain. — Nora  Perry. — HBP 
Loss  in  Delay.— Rob't  Southwell.— WEP  1 

(Procrastination — br.  sel.) — KNE 
Loss  of  National  Character. — Jonathan  Maxcy. — FD  1 
Loss    of    Property.       (Frags,  jr.  varioics    authors.) — 

BNL 
Loss  of  the  "Arctic,"  The. — H:  W.  Beecher. — CS  4— 

NC— SM  (si.  o6r.)— SPE— WCLG  1 
Loss  of  the  Birkenhead,  The.— Fs.  H.  Doyle.— ED Y— 

HB— PGT  2 
Loss  of  the  College  Pump,  The. — R.   B.  Coolidge. — 

CG3 
Loss  of  the  Emigrants,  The.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— EDY 
Loss  of  the  Eurydice,  The. — F^ldmund  Gosse. — EDY 
Loss  of  the  Hornet,  The.— Anon.— MMR—SA 
Loss  of  the  San  Francisco,  18.53. — Edwin  H.  Chapin. — 

FD  1 
Loss  of  the  Royal  GeorgeF,  The].— W:  Cowper.— CGd 

— LC— PGT  1— PHS— PSR 
(On  the  Loss  of  the  Royal  George — C.)- BNI> — 

EDY— EPs— GN— HBP— MBL— WEP  3 
(Royal  George,  The.)— LH 
Losses.— Fr£tnces  Brown.— BNL— CS  14— FEP— HBP 

—PPSr— SAE 
Lost.— Anon.— FP 
Lost.— L.  M.  Cunard.- BS  17 
"Lost." — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Lost.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— WR  2 
Lost.— R:  H.  Stoddard.- FP 

(Flight  of  Youth,  The— O— AA— ASL— YBF 
(It  never  Comes  Again.)— BNL— LLC— MRS 
(Never  Again. )— FEP— TAV 
(There  are  Gains  for  All  our  Losses.) — HBP 
Lost.— Celia  Thaxter.— GMS— SAP 
Lost. — Eliza  S.  Turner.     See  Little  Goose,  A. 
Lost  and  Found. — Anon. — FLS 
I>ost     and     Found[,  The]. — Hamilton     ATd^. — BeR — 

BS  5  (si.  abr.)— CS  11— LLC— MR— NPS— YP 
Lost  and  Found.— T:  B.  Appleget. — BS  3 
Lost  and  Found. — Emma  E.  Brewster. — SDD 
Lost  and  Found.— C.  A.  Mason.— TAS 
Lost  and  Found.     (Thirteen  Years  Ago — C.) — Bryan 

W.  Procter.— VSG 
Lost  and  Won. — Miss  Chapman. — DDD 
Lost  Arts,  The.— Anon.— KNE 

Lost  Arts,  The.     (Srf.)— Wendell  Phillips.— WCI.G  2 
Lost  Babies,  The.— Anon.— CS  14 — HP 
Lost  Bell,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Lost  Bride,  The. — S:  Rogers.     See  Ginevra. 
Lost  but  Found. — Horatius  Bonar. — VA 
Lost  Child,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Lost  Child,  The.     (Dial.)— Anon.— YFD 


Lost  Child,  The.     (DtaZ. )— Harry  H.  Gushing.- CS  18 

— MD 
Lost  Child,  The.— J:  R.  Robinson.— BS  16 
Lost   Chord,   A   [ur.,   The]. — Adelaide   A.    Procter. — 

AVP  —  BeR  —  BNL  —  CR  —  FS  —  FTR  — 

IR— LLC  (a6r.)— SE  (si.  ofcr.)— SPE— VS 
Lost  Chord  Found,  A.— Willard  Holcomb.— CS  34 
Lost  Church,  The. — Ludwig  Uhland  (tr.  by  Sarah  H. 

Whitman.)— HBP 
(Tr.  by  Rob't  Tilney.)— CS  14 
Lost  Colors,  The.— Mary  A.  Barr.— TMD 
Lost  Colors,  The.— Eliz.  S.  P.  Ward.— AA 
Lost  Day,  A. — Anon. — YBT 
Lost  Days.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  LXXXVI.) 

—Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
Lost  Doll,  The.— Anon.— TFS 

Lost  Doll,  The.— C:  Kingsley.    -Sec  Water  Babies,  The. 
Lost  Found,  The.— Anon.— CS  31 

Lost  Found,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Evange- 
line. 
Lost  Friend,  The.— Norman  Gale.— BVC 
Lost  Genius,  The. — J:  Jas.  Piatt. — A  A 
Lost  Heir,  The.— Anon.— PTS 
Lost  Heir,  The.— T:  Hood.— BNL  — CS  8  — MHR  — 

THP 
(ylbr.)- HSS  3— SE 
Lost  Hours.— R.  T.  W.  Duke.— TAS 
Lost  in  the  City  Streets.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Lost  in  the  Snow. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Lost  Kiss,  The.— .las.  W.  Riley.— SR  9— TAV— WR  25 
Lost   Kitten,   The.— Mrs.    E.   J.   H.   Goodfellow.— PS 

— TT 
Lost  Kitty,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Lost  Knife,  The.— Anon.— YFD 
Lost  Leader,  The.— Rob't  Browning.— AVP— BSP— 

EDY  —  EPs  —  ESs  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  LLC  — 

OS  3— VA— WEP  4— WR  16 
Lost  Legend,  A.— Fs.  W.  Bourdillon.— SO 
Lost  Letter,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Lost  Letter,  A.— Clement  Scott.— HP— WR  13 
Lost  Lotus,  The.— Anon.— PPh 
Lost  Love. — Andrew  Lang. — FI-S 
Lost  Love,  A.— H.  F.  Lyte.— PGT  1 
Lost  Love,  A. — J:  A.  Symonds. — CEL 
Lost  Love,  The. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Lucy. 
Lost  Mav,  The.     (^ftr.)— Bayard  Taylor.— AD 
Lost  Memory,  A.— Philip  C.  Peck.— CG  2 
Lost  Mexican  Citv,  The. — McLellan. — JT 
Lost  Mr.  Blake.— W:  S.  Gilbert.— CS  7 
Lost  Mistress,   The.— Rob't   Browning.— OB— PGT   2 

—YBF 
Lost  on  Schihallion.— J.  C.  Shairp.— PGT  2 
Lost  on  the  Desert. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  30 
Lost  on  the  Prairie. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — WCL 
Lost  on  the  Shore.— Holme  Lee.- CS  26— SR  13 
Lost  Opportunities,  The. — Anon. — FAD 
Lost  Opportunity,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Lost  Opportunity,  The. — Mrs.   E.  J.   H.  Goodfellow. 

— TT 
Lost  Page,  The.— Anon.— CS  34 
Lost    Penny,    The.— Caroline    Evans.— DCP— NPS— 

YP 
Lost  Pleiad,  The.— W:  G.  Simms.— AA 
Lost  Princess,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon.— NDP 
Lost  Pudding,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 
Lost  Puppy,  The.— H:  F.  Wood.— BS  22 
Lost  Sheep,  The.— Eliz.  C.  Clephane.— VA 

(Ninety  and  Nine,  The.)— FEP— LLC  (abr.) 
Lost  Sheep,  The.— Sarah  P.  McL.  Greene.— HP 
(De  Massa  of  de  Sheepfol'.)— SR  6— TAV 
(De  Sheepfol'.)— AA— ASL— YBF 
Lost  Steamer,  The.     (Sel.  jr.  The  Shady  Side  of  Life.) 

—Eugene  J.  Hall.— SR  2 
Lost  Steamship,  The. — Fitz-James  O'Brien. — CS  14 

(Second  Mate,  The.)— A  A 
Lost:   the  Summer. — R:  M.  Alden. — NV 
Lost:   Three  Little  Robins. — Anon. — LLC 
Lost  Tommy. — Julia  M.  Dana. — DS — YA 

(SI.  abr.)— PP—YFR 
Lost  Tribune,  The.— G:  Sigerson.— TIP 
Lost  Type,  A. — Mrs.  M.  L.  Ravne.— SR  12 
Lost  Voice,  A. — Fs.  W.  Bourdillon.— VS 
Lost  War-sloop,  The.— Edna  D.  Proctor.— WR  10 
Lost  Watch,  The.— "Juvenal."— CS  16— DS 
Lot  of  Man,  The.     (Frags,  jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Lot  of  Mankind,  The.     (Frags,  jr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Lot  of  Thousands,  The. — Anne  Hunter. — FEP 
Lot  Skinner's  Elegj'.— Jas.  T:  Fields.— A WH 
Lotos  [tvr.  Lotus]-eaters,  The. — HBP — VA 

Song  of  the  I-otus  [or  Lotos]-eaters,  The.     (Sel. — 

Choric  Song— C.)— OB— SAE  (sel.) 
(Lotos-eaters — sel.) — CR 


193 


Lottie 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lottie  Dougherty.— Dwight  Williams. — CS  22— NFS 

— YP 
Lotty's  Message.  —  Alex.   G.   Murdoch.  —  CS   30  — 

WR  26  (si.  abr.) 
Lotus-eaters,    The.  —  Alfred    Tennyson.     See    Lotos- 
Loud  Call,  The.— Ano«.— KNE 
Lough  Bray.— Standish  J.  OGrady.- TIP 
Louis  Napoleon,  Sel.  fr.     (Death  of  I^ouis  Napoleon.) 

—Christopher  P.  Cranch.— EDY 
Louis  Napoleon. — Oscar  Wilde. — EDY 
Louis    Napoleon's    Address    to    his    Army. — W:    E. 

.\ytoun.— HPE 
Louis  XIV.  and  his  Minister.     (Dial.  ad.  fr.  The  Ref- 
ugees, Ch.  XIX.)— A.  Conan  Doyle.— NDP 
Louis  XV.— J:  Sterling.— FEP—VA 
Louisa  May  Alcott — In  Memoriam. — l/ouise  C.  Moul- 

ton.— AA— EDY 
Louisburg. — R:  Huntington. — TCV 
Love. — Anon. — FLS 
Love. — Sarah  F.  Adams.— VA 
Love.— S:  Butler.- FP- YBF  (abr.) 
Love. — Lord  Byron.     See  Giaour,  The. 
Love.     (Chambers'  Journal.)— FLS— FT  A 
Love.     (O— S:  T.   Coleridge.— BNL—FEP— HBP— 
OB— PG*r  1— WEP  4— WR  8 
(Genevieve.) — EPs 
(Love's  Flame — br.  sel.)— FLS 
Love. — S:  Daniel.     See  Hymen's  Triumph. 
Love. — C:  Dickens.     See  Village  Coquettes,  The. 

(Song.)— BIL— FTA 
Love.    (C.) — C:  L.  Dodgson. 

(Songof  Love,  A.)— GN 
Love. — J:  Donne.     See  Eclogue,  December  26, 1613. 
Love.— G:  Herbert.— ELP— OB— YBF 
Love.     (Diff.  poem.)— G:  Herbert.— WEP  2 
Love.— T:  K.  Hervey.— BNL 
Love. — Jean  Ingelow.     See  Songs  of  Seven. 
Love. — Ben  Jonson. — FTA 
Love.— S:  Longfellow.— TAS 

Love.     (C— abr.)- Jas.   R.   Lowell.— BIL— BNL  (br. 
seZ.  )—TFY 
(Tender  and  True.)— FTA 
Love.— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
Love.— C:  Fs.  Richardson —TAS 
Love. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    Merchant    of    Venice, 

The. 
Love. — W :  Shakespeare. — LLC 

("Let  me  not  to  the  marriage  of  true  minds.") — 

OEL 
(Sonnet.)  —  BNL    —    EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 

OB  (XVIII.) 
(Sonnet  CXVI.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
(True  Love.)— FTA— OH— PGT  1— PHS 
Love.— Alex.  Smith.— OB 
Love.— W:  W.  Story.— FTA— OH 
Love.— C:  Swafc.— "TFY 

("Love?  I  will  tell  thee  what  it  is  to  love!") — 
HBP 
Love. — Katrina  Trask. — AA 
Love.— G.  H.  Westley.— FLS 

Love  against  Love. — D:  A.  Wasson. — BNI^ — EPs — :OH 
Love    among   the    Ruins. — Rob't    Browning. — BIL — 

PGT  2— WEP  4 
Love  and  Absence. — Jas.  A.  Noble. — FTA 
Love  and  Age.— T:  L.  Peacock.— AVP—CS  11— FEP 

—OB 
"Love  and  believe:  for  works  will  follow  spontaneous." 
— H:    W.    Longfellow.     See    Children    of    the 
Lord's  Supper,  The. 
Love  and  Books. — Edmund  Gosse. — LBB 
Love  and  Death. — Anon. — OH 
Love  and  Death. — Marg.  W.  Deland.— AA — TAS 
Love  and  Death. — J:  Ford.     See  Broken  Heart,  The. 
Love  and  Death. — Georgianna  G.  King.— C(5  2 
Love  and  Death. — Rosa  Mulholland. — VA 
Love  and  Death. — Alfred  Tennyson. — BIL 
Love  and  Duty. — Alfred  Tennvson. — AVP 

(What  Sequel 7— br.  sel.)— BIL 
Love  and  Faith. — Agnes  M.  Machar. — TCV 
Love  and  Friendship. — W:  Leggett. — FTA 
Love  and  Glory.— T:  Dibdin.— CGd 
Love  and  Humility. — H :  More. — EPs 
Love  and  Labor. — Anon. — HP 
Love  and  Latin. — Anon. — BS  19 
Love  and  Life. — Julie  M.  Lippmann. — AA 
Love  and  Life. — J:  Wilmot,  Earl  of  Rochester. — ELP 

—OB 
Love  and  Life. — Sarah  Woolsey. — BIL 
Love  and  I^oyalty  of  the  Negro. — H:  W.  Grady.     See 

At  the  Boston  Banquet. 
Love  and  Marriage  of  Ferdmand  and  Miranda,  The. — 
W:  Shakespeare.     See  Tempest,  The. 


Love  and  May. — Anon. — ELP 
Love  and  Murder. — Anon. — MHR 

(Love,  Murder,  and  almost  Matrimony.) — CS  2 
Love  and  Music. — Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
Love  and  Phyllis. — T:  Lodge.     See  Love's  Wanton- 
ness. 
Love  and  Pity. — Anon. — FLS— HP 
Love  and  Poverty. — Elisabeth  J.  (C.)  Pullen. — AA 
Love  and  Prayer. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Rime  of  the 

Ancient  Mariner,  The. 
Love  and  Prudence. — W :  W.  Story. — OH 
Love  and  Reason.     (Abr.) — T:  Moore. — FP 
Love  and  Song. — Burton  W.  Lockhart.— TCV 
Love  and  Stratagem. — G:  C.  Graham. — GS 
Love  and  the  Child.     (In  Lilliput  Lectures.) — W:  B 

Rands.— PoR 
(Happy  Child,  The— w.  dijf.  end.)— OH 
Love  and  the  Sea. — Rob't  E.  Gregg. — CG  1 
Love  and  Theology. — Anon. — WR  4 
Love  and  Time. — Beatrix  D.  Lloyd. — AA 
Love  and  Time. — Denis.  F.  MacCarthy. — BNL 
Love  and  War. — Arthur  P.  Martin. — VA 
Love  and  Youth. — W :  Jas.  Linton. — VA 
Love  at  First  Sight.     (Sel.  fr.  Philaster,  Act  V.,  Sc.  6.) 

— Beaumont  and  Fletcher. — EPs 
Love  at  First  Sight.— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— FTA 
Love  at  Sea. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — VA 
Love  at  the  Seaside. — Anon. — CH 
Love  Banished  Heaven.     (Ideas,  XXVIII.) — Michael 

Drayton.- ES 
"Love!  bles.sed  Love!  if  we  could  hang  our  walls."    (Sel. 

fr.  The  Bridal  Hour.)— Alice  Gary.- BIL 
Love  Came  to  Me.— Fs.  H.  Williams.— TAS 
Love  Cannot  Die. — Anon. — FLS 
Love  Ceremonious. — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel  in 

the  House,  The. 
Love  Chase,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  S.  Knowles. 

Description  of  the  Chase.     (Act  II.,  Sc.  3 — abr.) — 

MPD 
(Hunt,  The— sZ.  conrf.)— MPD 
Scene  from  "The  Love  Chase."     (III.,  2 — abr.) — 

MPD 
Love  Conquers  Revenge.     (Dial.   ad.   fr.  The  Cipher 

Despatch.)— Rob't  Byr.— NDP 
Love,  Death,  and  Reputation. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — 

OS  2 
Love    Dis.sembled. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    As    You 

Like  It. 
Love  Divine,  all  Love  Excelling. — Augustus  Toplady. 

—BNL 
Love  Doth  to  her  Eyes  Repair. — Friedrich  Riickert  (tr. 

by  Jas.  F.  Clarke).- FTA— OH 
Love    Elegies    of   Abel    Shufflebottom,    The. —  Rob't 

Southey. 
Poet  Expatiates  on  the  Beauty  of  Delia's  Hair,  The. 

(III.)— HPE 
Poet  Relates  how  he  Obtained  Delia's  Pocket-hand- 
kerchief, The.     (I.)— HPE 
Poet  Relates  how  he  Stole  a  Lock  of  Delia's  Hair 

etc..  The.     (IV.)— HPE 
Love  Enthroned.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet   I.) — 

Dante  G.  Rossetti.— WEP  4 
Love  Extravaganza,  A. — C:  Mackay. — BIL 
Love  for  Love's  Sake.     (Sonnet  XIV. — C.) — Eliz.  B. 

Browning.  — OH 
("If  thou  must  love  me,  let  it  be  for  nought.") — 

PGT  2 
(Sonnet.)— BNL— FEP— HBP— OB  (IV.)— YBF 
Love  Freed  from  Ignorance  and  Folly,  Sel.  fr.    ("How 

near  to  good  is  what  is  fair.") — BNL — ELP 
(Song.)-rEPs 
Love  from  the  North. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — PEB  3 
Love  Game,  A. — W.  B.  Anderson. — CG  1 
Love  Goes  a-Hawking. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Bride  s 

Tragedy,  The. 
"Love?   I  will  tell  thee  what  it  is  to  love!" — C:  Swain. 

See  Love. 
Love  in  a  Balloon. — Litchfield  Moseley. — BeR — CS  11 

— MYF 
Love  in  a  Cottage. — Anon. — DDM 
Love   in   a   Cottage. — Nathaniel   P.    Willis. — AWH — 

HPE— THP 
Love  in  a  Life. — Rob't  Browning. — OH 
Love  in  Exile,  Sel.  fr. — Mathilde  Blind.— VA 
Love  in  her  Sunny  Eyes.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Change.)  — 

Abraham  dowlev. — ES 
(Fragment,  A.)— FEP 
(Without  and  Within.)— YBF 
Love  in  High  Life.     (Dial.  fr.  Pets  of  Society. )—T.  S. 

Deni-son.- FAS 
Love  in  the  Kitchen.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Love  in  the  Kitchen. — D:  L.  Proudfit. — DI 
Love  in  the  Winds.— R:  Hovey.— AA— ASL— YBF 


194 


TITLE  INDEX 


Loved 


Love  in  the  Valley.— G:  Meredith.— HBP  (abr.)— OB 
Love  in  thy  Youth. — Walter  Porter. — ELP 

("Love  in  thy  youth,  fair  maid,  be  wise.") — PGT  1 
"Love  in  thy  youth,   fair  maid,   be  wise." — Walter 

Porter.     See  foregoing. 
Love    in    Winter,    Br.    ael.    fr.     (Song.) — Rob't    Bu- 
chanan.— VS 
Love  is  a  Hunter  Boy. — T:  Moore. — FTA 
Love  is   a  Sickness. — S:   Daniel.     See  Hymen's  Tri- 
umph. 
Love  is  a  Tree. — Augusta  De  Gruchy. — FLS 
"Love  is  a  woman  with  soulful  eyes." — Anon. — CG  1 
Love  is  Blind. — Anon. — WR  5 
"Love  is  come   with  a  song  and   a  smile." — Alfred 

Tennyson.     See  Harold. 
Love  is  Dead. — Philip  Sidney.     See  Sidera. 
Love  is  Enough,  Song  jr. — W:  Morris. — OB 
Love  is  Enough. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel 

and  Stella. 
Love  is  Enough.     (C.)— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— TFY 

("Love  is  enough,  Let  us  not  .seek  for  gold.") — GG 
"Love  is  enough.  Let  us  not  seek  for  gold." — Ella  W. 

Wilcox.     See  foregoing. 
Love  is  Eternal.— Carlotta  Perry.— BIL— FTA 
Love  is  Forever. — E.  E.  Bradford. — FLS 
Love  is  Like  a  Dizziness.    {Ahr.) — Jas.  Hogg. — GP 
"Love  is  Over  All."— Mrs.  E.  V.  Wilson.— CS  27 
Love  is  Strong. — R:  Burton. — A  A 
Love  Keeping  Watch. — S:  Hinds. — HDL 
Love  Knot,  The. — Nora  Perry.     See  Love-knot,  The. 
Love  Laughs.     (Trinity  Tablet.)— CG  2 
Love  Letter.     See  also  Love-letter. 
Love  Letter,  A. — Anon. — FLS 
Love  Letters.   (Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese,  XXVIII.) 

— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— YBF 
(Lover's  Letters,  A.) — CEL 
(My  Letters.)— BIL— FTA 
(Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese.)  —  BNL — FEP — 

WEP4(XXVIII.— C.) 
Love  Lightens  Labor. — Anon. — BNL — CS  5 — FMR — 

MMR— PR— TFY 
Love  Lights  of  Home.  The.— Frank  L.  Stanton.— TFY 
Love  me  if  I  Live. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — FLS 

(Song— O— HBP 
Love  me  Little,  Love  me  Long. — Anon. — BNL — HBP 

(Little  but  Long.)— CEL 
lyove  me  not. — Anon.      See  "Love  not  me  for  comely 

grace." 
"Love  me  not.  Love,  for    that  I  First  Loved  thee." 

(In  The  New  Day.)— R:  W.  Gilder.— OH 
Love  Much.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BIL 
Love,   Murder,   and   almost  Matrimony. — Anon.     See 

Love  and  Murder. 
Love    not.— Caroline    E.    S.    Norton.—  BNL— FEP— 

FLS— HBP— VA 
Love  not  me. — Anon.     See  following. 
"Love   not   me   for   comely   grace." — Anon. — BNL — 

FEP— FTA— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(Love  me  not.) — FLS 
(Love  not  me.)— HBP 
Love  Notes.     (Echoes  XVIII.:  To  A.  D.— C.)— W:  E. 

Henlev.— BIL— FTA 
(Pleasant  Song,  A.)— OH 
Love  of  Change. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Stones  of  Venice, 

The. 
Love  of  Country,  The.     (Frags,  pr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Love  of  Country.— Newton  Booth.— BS  17— SR  8 
Love  of  Country.— I.  H.  Brown.— BS  21— PFP— PRR 
Love    of    Country. — Rufus    Choate.     See    American 

Nationality. 
Love  of  Country.— Jos.  Holt. — CS  20 

(Agriculture  and  Love  of  Country.) — FD  1 
Love  of  Country. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 

Minstrel,  The. 
Love  of  Country. — Sidney  Smith. — SR  8 
Love  of  Country  and  Home. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See 

Home. 
Love  of  England. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Love  of  Fame  the  Universal  Passion,  Sel.  fr.     (To  the 

Right  Hon.  Mr.  Dodington — Satire  III. — abr.) 

—E:  Young.— ESs 
Love  of  God,  The.— Saxe  Holm.— HDL— TAS 
Love  of  God,   The. — Bernard   Rascas   (tr.   by  W:  C. 

Bryant).— BNL 
Love  of  God,    The.— Eliza    Scudder.— BNL— HDL— 

TAS 
Love  of  God  Supreme,  The. — Gerhard  Tersteegen  (tr. 

by  J:  Wesley).— BNL  (sel.) 
(Divine  Love.)— EPs— HBP  (sel.) 
Love  of  his  Life,  The. — Anon. — CS  24 
Love  of  Home. — Anon. — KNE 


Love  of  Home,   The.  —  H :  W.  Grady.     See  Against 

Centralization. 
Love  of  Jesus. — Jane  Taylor. — YBT 
Love  of  Justice. — Theodore  Parker. — FD  1 
Love  of  Liberty. — W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Love  of  Nature. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Lines  Com- 
posed a  Few  Miles  .■\bove  Tintern  Abbey. 
Love  of  the  Past,  The.     (The  Spectator.)— HF 
Love  of  the  World  Reproved;  or.  Hypocrisy  Detected, 

The.— W:  Cowper.— HPE 
Love  of  Trees,  The. — H:  W.  Beecher.     See  Discourse 

on  Trees,  A. 
Love  on  Deck. — G :  Barlow. — BIL 
Love    on    the    Half-shell.— D:    L.    Proudfit. — BRR— 

CS  14 
Love  on  the  Links. — G.  M.  Winter. — TL 
Love  on  the  Ocean.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Love  One  Another. — Anon. — YBT 
Love  Scene.  A. — Anon. — BS  24 
Love  Scorns  Degrees.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Mountain  of  the 

Lovers.)— Paul  H.  Hayne.— BIL— BNL— GP 
Love  Song,  A. — Anon. — BRR 

Love  Song. — Anon. — FLS  , 

Love  Song.— G :  Darley.— HBP 
(Flower  of  Beauty,  The.)— VA 
(Song.)— OB 
Love  Song  by  a  Lunatic,  A. — Anon. — NA 
Love  Song,  in  the  Modern  Taste,  A.     (Song,  by  a  Per- 
son of  Quality— O— Alex.    Pope. — HPE  (at. 

<o  J.  Swift.) 
(Lines  by  a  Person  of  Quality.) — NA 
Love  Song  of  Henri  Quatre,  A. — Edwin  Arnold. — VS 
Love  Still  Hath  Something  of  the  Sea.— C:  Sedley.— 

FEP 
(Song.)— WEP  2 
"Love  strong  as  death — nay.  stronger." — Anon. — GG 
Love  Stronger  than  Locks. — Anon. — WR  7 
Love  Symphony,  A. — Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. — BIL — 

FTA— PGT  2— TFY— VS 
I.,ove  Tapped  upon  my  Lattice. — A.  M.  L.  Hawes. — TL 
Love  Test,  A. — Carl  Herloszsohn.— FLS 
Love  that  Asketh  Love  again. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — FTA 
I^ove  that  Availeth. — Arthur  L.  Salmon. — FLS 
Love  that  Lives  for  Aye,  The.— S:  M.  Peck.— FTA 
"Love  that  never  cold  can  be." — J:  Erskine. — CG  3 
Love,  the  Best  Monument. — Anon. — CS  25 
Love,  the  Musician. — Francesco  Redi  (tr.   by  E.   W. 

Gosse).— BIL 
Love,  the  Pilgrim. — Hamilton  Ai'd^. — VS 
Love  Thee.— T:  Hood.— FLS  (sel.) 
(I  Love  Thee— O— BIL— FTA 
Love  Thee?— T:  Moore.— FTA 

Love  Thee,  Dearest?     Love  Thee?— T:  Moore.— FTA 
Love  thou  thy  Land. — Alfred  Tennyson. — WEP  4 
Love  Thought,  A. — H.  Ernest  NichoL— FLS 
Love  thy  Mother,  I>ittle  One.— T:  Hood.— TFS  (abr.) 
(Child  and  Mother.)— OS  1— WCL 
(To  a  Child  Embracing  his  Mother— C.)— FEP— 

HBP 
"Love  thyself  last;    cherish  thou    hearts    that    hate 

thee." — W:  Shakespeare.      See  King    Henrv 

VIII. 
Love  to  the  Church.      St.  Ambrose  (tr.  by  Timothy 

Dwight). — AA 
(I  Love  Thy  Kingdom,  Lord.)— FEP 
Love  Took  me  Softly  by  the  Hand. — Walter  R.  Cas- 

sels.— BIL 
Love  Unchangeable.— Rufus  Dawes. — AA 
Love  under  Difficulties. — Anon. — NPS — YP 
Love  under  the  Ledger. — M'Donald  Clarke. — TAV 
Love  Unfeigned,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  Troilus 

and  Criseyde. 
Love  Universal. — Anon. — FLS 
Love  Unretumed.— H.  C.  Beeching. — FLS 
Love  Unsought. — Emma  C.  Embury. — AA 
Love  up  to  Date. — S.  L.  Howard. — CG  2 
Love  will  Find  out    the    Way. —  Anon.     See  Truth's 

Integrity. 
Love  Wins  Love. — Anon. — WR  17 
"Love  without  Thee." — Hamilton  Ai'd^. — FLS 
Love  your  Brother. — Anon. — DLF 
"Love  your  neighbor  as  yourself." — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. 

— BS4 
(Thoughts    on    the    Commandments — C.) — AA — 

PLD 
Loved  and  Lost,  The. — Anon. — CS  3 
Loved,  not  Lost,  The.  —  J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Snow- 
bound. 
Loved  Once,  Br.  sel.  fr.   ("  Say  never,  ye  loved  once.") 

— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— GG 
Loved   One  ever  Near,  The.     (Separation.) — Johann 

W.  von  Goethe  (tr.  by  J.  S.  Dwight).— BIL— 

FTA 


195 


Loved 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Loved  you  Better  than  you   Knew. — Eliz.  A.  Allen. 

See  Left  Behind. 
Lovejoy  Cow,  The.— Philip  Morse.— WR  15 
(Let  Down  the  Bars.)— CS  35 
(Milking-time.)— BS  7— PFP— PR  (si.  abr.) 
Love-knot.  The.— Nor%  Perry.— AA— BNL— CS  22— 

FEP— FTA— PPSr— PR— TAV— TFY 
Love-letter,    A.     (Abr.) — Rob't,    Earl    of    Lytton. — 

FLS 
Love-letter,  The.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XL) — 

Dante  G.  Rossetti.— FTA— OH 
Love-letters  Made  in  Flowers. — Leigh  Hunt. — BNL 
Love-lily. — Dante  G.  Rossetti. — WEP  4 
Loveliness.  —  Maria  Lacey.  —  CPL  —  PP  —  TFS  — 

YBT— YFR 
Loveliness  of  Love,  The.— G:  Darley.— BNL— FEP 
("It  is  hot  beauty  I  demand.") — AVP 
(True  Loveliness.)— TIP 
Lovelocks. — Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Lovely,  Kind,  and  Kindly  Loving. — Nicholas  Breton. 

— ELP 
Lovely  Lass  of  Inverness,  The.     (C.) — Rob't  Bums. — 
FEP 
(Lament  for  Culloden.)— EHT— OB— PGT  1 
Lovely  Mary  Donnelly. — W:  Allingham. — BNL — FEP 
— HBP— VA— VS 
(Mary  Donnelly.)— CRR—EPs 
Lovely  May.     (W.  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Lovely  Scene,  A.— Anon.— CG  1— CR— CS  22 
Love-making. — Rebecca  M.  Reavis. — WR  4 
Love-message,  A. — Lillian  C.  Barnes. — CG  1 
Love-poems. — G:  Wither.     See  Fair  Virtue,  the  Mis- 
tress of  Philarete. 
Lover,  The  (Japan). — R:  H.  Stoddard. — AA 
Lover  and  Birds,  The. — W:  Allingham. — MMR 
Lover  and    Friend  hast    Thou   Put   Far  from  Me. — 

Louise  C.  Moulton.— TAS 
Lover  Beseecheth  his  Mistress  not   to   Forget,   The. 
t  (C.)—T:  Wyatt.— WEP  1 

(Appeal,  An.)— CEL 
(Forget  not  Yet.)— ELP— OB 
(Supplication,  A.)— PGT  1— PHS 
Lover  Complaineth  of  the  Unkindness  of  his  Love, 
The.— T:  Wyatt.— WEP  1 
(Lover  to  his  Lute,  The.)— CEL 
(To  his  Lute.)— OB 
Lover  having  Dreamed   Enjoying  of  his  Love,  The. — 

T:  Wyatt.— WEP  1 
Lover  in  Winter  Plaineth  for  the  Spring,  The. — Anon. 

—OB 
"Lover  Sheweth   how  he  is  Forsaken  of   such   as  he 
Sometime  Enjoyed,   The."     (C.) — T:   Wyatt. 
—ELP 
(Vixi  Puellis  Nuper  Idoneus.) — OB 
Lover  to  his  Lady  that  Gazed  much  up  to  the  Skies, 

The.— G:  Turberville.— ELP 
Lover  to  his  Lady-love,  A. — Mary  W.  Hastings. — CG  3 
Lover  to  his  Lute,  The. — T:  Wyatt.     See  Lover  Com- 
plaineth of  the  Unkindness  of  his  Love,  The. 
Lover  to  his  Lyre,  The.     (Song  fr.  The  Davideis,  Bk. 
III.) — Abraham  Cowley. — CEL 
( Invocation. ) — BNL 
(Supplication,  A.)— EPs— FEP— PGT  1 
Lover  to  his  Mistress,  The.     (C.) — Hamilton  Aid^ 

(Why  I  Love  Thee.)— FLS 
Lover  to  the  Glow-worms,  The. — Andrew  Marvell. — 
HBP 
(Mower  to  the  Glow-worms,  The — C.) — EP 
"Lover  with  his  Loved  One  Sailed  the  Sea,  A. — Edwin 

Arnold.     See  With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Lover  without  Arms,  A. — H :  Davenport. — AWH — PR 
Lovers. — Anon. — OH 

Lovers. — Matthew  Arnold.     See  Consolation. 
Lovers.     (Set.  fr.  At  One  Again.) — Jean  Ingelow. — BIL 
Lovers,  The. — C.  A.  S.   (at.  also  to  Phoebe  Gary).- 
BNL— GP 
(Tragedy  on  Past  Participles,  A.) — BS  15 
Lovers,  and  a  Reflection. — C:  S.  Calverley. — BNL — 

NA— THP 
Lover's  Appeal,  The.— T:  Wyatt.— CEL— PGT  1 
(Appeal,  The.)— OB 

(Earnest  Suit  to  his  Unkind  Mistress  not  to  For- 
sake him,  The.)— BNL— ELP 
Lover's  Complaint.     (Punch  Bowl.) — CG  3 
Lover's  Diary,  A,  Sonnets  fr. — H.  Gilbert  Parker. 
Art.     (2  sons.)— Y A 
Envoy. — VA 

(Reunited.) — OB 
I  Loved  My  Art. — TCTV 
Invincible. — VA 
Love's  Outset. — VA 
Their  Waving  Hands.— TCV 
Woman's  Hand.  A.     (2  sons.) — VA 


Lover's  Lament,  A. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Twelfth 

Night. 
Lover's   Letters,   A. — Eliz.    B.    Browning.     ,See   Love 

Letters. 
Lover's  Lullaby,  A. — G:  Gascoigne.     See  Lullaby  of  a 

Lover,  The. 
Lover's  Lullaby,  A. — J.  Ashby  Sterry. — VS 
Lover's  Melancholy,  The,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Ford. 

Awakening  Song.     (Fr.    Act    V.,    Sc.    1.) — FEP— 
WEP  2 
(Dawn.)— OB 
Lutist  and  the  Nightingale,  The.     (Fr.  I.,  1.)— PS 
(Musical  Duel,  The.)— BNL 
Lover's   Night   Thoughts,   The.     (Sonnet   XXVII.)— 

W:  Shakespeare.— FTA— OH 
Lover's  Quarrel,  A.   (Dial.) — Austin  Dobson. — PYO 

(Tu  Quoque— C.)— MR 
Lover's  Renewal. — C:  Sangster. — TCV 
Lover's  Resolution,   The.  (Fr.  Fidelia.) — G:  Wither. 
—OB 
(Author's  Resolution  in  a  Sonnet,  The.) — CEL — 

ELP— WEP  2 
(Manly  Heart,  The.)— EPs— FTA— OEL— PGT  1 
("Shall  I,  wasting  in  despair[el.")— ES— YBF  (abr.) 
(Shepherd's  Resolution,  The— C.)— BNL— FEP— 
HBP— PYO  (abr.) 
Lover's  Sacrifice,  The. — Anon. — CS  18 
Lover's  Song,  The.— E:  R.  Sill.— AA 
Lover's  Tale,  The,  Br.  sels. Jr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 
Golden  Supper,  The.— WR  1 

"Love's  arms  were  wreathed  about  the  neck  of 
Hope."— GG 
Lover's    Tears,    The. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    Love's 

Labour's  I>ost. 
Love's  a  Riddle.— H :  Carey.— FLS 
"Love's  arms  were  wreathed  about  the  neck  of  Hope." 

— Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Lover's  Tale,  The. 
Love's  Autumn. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — TFY 
Love's  Autumn. — Jr  Payne. — VA 
Love's  Belief.     (Sel.  fr.  Credo.) — Mary  A.  Townsend. 

—HP 
Love's    Birth    and    Becoming. — S:    Daniel.     See    Hy- 
men's Triumph. 
Love's  Blindness. — W:  Jas.  Linton. — VA 
Love's  Blindness.     (Frags.  Jr.  various  authors.)— BNh 
Love's  Calendar. — Anon. — WR  25 
Love's  Calendar.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— FTA— TAV 
Love's  Caramels  Lost. — Castle  Layne. — CS  34 
Love's  Change. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — A  A 
Love's  College.     (Song  fr.  Mother  Bomhie,  Act  III., 

Sc.  3.)— J:  Lyly.— ES 
Love's  Colors.— C.  C.  Frazer-Tytler.— FLS 
Love's  Coming.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BIL— TFY 
Love's  Confession. — C:  Swain. — FTA 
Love's  Course. — Mary  B.  Chapman. — FLS 
Love's  Dangers.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Love's  Day.— W:  B.  Forbush.— CG  1 
Love's  Despair. — G:  Sigerson. — TIP 
Love's  Disguise. — J:  A.  Hamilton. — CG  1 
Love's  Disguises. — Matthew  Prior. — YBF 

("Merchant,  to  secure  his  treasure.  The.") — FEP 

— PGTl 
(Ode,  An— O— WEP  3 
(Song.)— OB 
Love's  Ecstasy. — T:  Heywood. — ES 
Love's  Emblems. — J :  Fletcher.     See  Valentinian. 
Love's  Entrance. — F:  L.  Knowles. — CG  1 
Love's   Eternity. — E:,   Lord   Herbert  of  Cherbury. — 

ELP 
Love's  Farewell.     (Ideas,  LXI. — C.) — Michael  Dray- 
ton.—FTA— PGT  1— YBF 
(Come,  Let  us  Kisse  and  Parte.) — BNL 
(Let  us  Kiss  and  Part.)— HBP 
(Parting,  The  [or  A].)— CEL— GP— OB 
(Since  there's  no  Help.) — OH 
(Sonnet.)— ELP— FEP— WEP  1 
Love's  Final  Powers.— G:  Barlow.— BIL— FTA 
Love's  Flame. — S  :■  T.  Coleridge.     See  Love. 
Love's  Fulfilling.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— BIL — TFY 
Love's  Garden.— Ellen  R.  Field.— YBT 
Love's  Gifts. — Anon. — FLS 

Love's  Grave. — G :  Meredith.     See  Modern  Love. 
Love's  Harvest. — Barry  Straton. — TCV 
Love's   Immortality. — Rob't  Southey.     See  Curse  of 

Kehama,  "The. 
Love's  Insight. — Anon. — POT  1 
Love's  Ju.stification.     (Second  reading.) — Michael  An- 

gelo.— FTA— OH 
Love's  Kiss. — Helen  Hay. — AA 
Love's  Labor  not  Lost.— H.  E.  McBride. — DDD 
Love's  Labour's  Lost,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

Armado    and    Moth.     (Sel.   fr.   Act    I..  Sc.   2.) — 
MPD 


196 


TITLE  INDEX 


liucy 


Love's  Labour's  Lost  (^continued). 

Biron's  Canzonet.     {Sel.  fr   IV.,  2.)— ES 
Blossom,  The.     {Song  fr.  IV.,  3.)— OB 
(Love's  Perjuries.)— PGT  1 
(On  a  Day,  Alack  the  Day.)— FEP 
(SongJ— ES 
Lover's  Tears,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  IV.,  3.)— ES 
Love's  Labour's  Lost.     {Br.  sels.  fr.  I.,  1;  II.,  1; 

IV.,  3.)— BNL 
Perjury  Excused.     {Sel.  fr.  IV.,  3.)— ES 
Rhvme  of  White  and  Red.     {Sd.  fr.  I.,  2.)— ES 
Spring  and  Winter,  II.     (Fr.  V.,  2.)— OB 

("When  icicles  hang  by  the  wall.") — BNL — ELP 

— FEP— GN— POS 
(Winter. )  —  BPB  —  CGd  —  CEL  —  LC  —  OEL— 

PGT  1— PHS— WEP  1 
(Winter  Song,  A.)— BVC 
"When  daisies  pied  and  violets  blu<»."     {Fr.  V.,  2.) 
— EPs  {includes  "When  icicles,"  etc.) 
(Spring.)— EP—ES— OEL 
(Spring  and  Winter,  I.)— OB 
Love's  Language. — Countess  of  Gifford. — FLS 
Love's  Language. — Fs.  T.  Palgrave. — BIL 
Love's  Letter-box.— Helen  J.  Wood. — WR  13 
Love's  Life,  A.     {Chambers'  Journal.) — FLS — HP 
"Love's  light  is  strange  to  you?     Ah,  me!" — Alice 

Gary.- BIL 
Love's  Logic. — Anon. — CG  1 
Love's  Logic.     {Chambers'  Journal.) — HP 
Love's  Lovers.     (The  House  of  Life — Sonnet  VIII. )^ — 

Dante  G.  Rossetti.— WEP  4 
Love's    Meaning.  —  Carlotta    Perry.  —  FTA  —  OH — 

TFY 
Love's  Meinie. — Fs.  W.  Bourdillon. — VS 
Love's    Memory. — W:    Shakespeare.     .See    All's    Well 

that  Ends  Well. 
Love's  Miracle. — Hannah  P.  Kimball. — TAS 
'  Love's  Music. — Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
Love's  Nocturn. — Dante  G.  Rossetti. — WEP  4 
Loves  of  the   Plants.     {Fr.    The  Botanic  Garden.) — 

Erasmus  Darwin. — GP 
Love's      Omnipresence. — Joshua      Sylvester. — FEP — 
FTA— OH— PGT  1— YBF 
(Ubique.)— OB 
(Sonnet.)— WEP  1 

("Were  I  as  base  a.i  is  the  lowly  plain.") — BNL 
Love's  Opportunity. — Sophie  W.  Weitzel.— TAS 
Love's  Outset.     {In  A  Lover's  Diary.)  —  Gilbert  Par- 

ker.— VA 
Love's  Pains.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Love's  Perfections. — Anon. — ELP 

Love's  Perjuries. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Love's  La- 
bour's Lost. 
Love's  Philosophy.     (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— BIL— 
BNL— FEP— GP— HBP— PGT  1— YBF 
("Fountains  mingle  with  the  river,  The.") — HP 
l/ove's  Poor. — R:  Le  Gallienne. — VA 
liove's  Power. — Josephine  Pollard. — FTA 
Love's  Prayer.— J:  Hay.— BIL— FTA 
Love's  Prayer. — F:  L.  Knowles. — CG  2 
Love's  Prayer. — Jas.  W.  Rilev. — AA 
(Prayer  Perfect,  The— C.)— TAS 
Love's  Proving. — F:  E.  Weatherly. — FTA 
liOve's  Punishments. — J.  Ashby-Sterry. — FLS 
Love's  Realities. — Anon. — ELP 
Love's  Reasons. — W:  Browne. — ELP 

(Song.)— OB 
Love's  Reminiscences. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Love's    Request.     ("Shall    I    come,    sweet    Love,    to 

thee" — C.) — T:  Campion. — ES 
Love's  Resurrection  Day. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — AA — 

TAS 
liOve's  Return. — Minot  J.  Savage. — TFY 
Love's  Rosary. — G:  E.  Wood  berry. — A  A 
Love's  Roses. — W.  F.  Gregory. — FLS 
Love's  Sacrifice. — Anon. — TL 
Love's  Seasons. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — CH 
Love's  Secret.- Rob't  P.  Bates.— CG  2 
Love's  Secret.— W:  Blake.— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
Love's  Secret  Name. — J:  A.  Blaikie. — VA 
Loves  she  Like  Me? — S:  Woodworth. — AA 
Love's  Silence. — Philip    Sidney.     See    Astrophel    and 

Stella. 
Love's  Silence. — Augusta  Webster. — TFY 
Love's  Spite. — Aubrey  T:  De  Vere. — VA 
Love's  Stratagem. — Hyder  Ali. — SR  10 
Love's  Strategy.— R.  S.  Sharpe.- CS  32  {si.  abr.) 

(Conjugal  Love.) — MHR 
Love's  "Thread  of  Gold. — Jean  Ingelow. — BIL 
Love's  Token. — Alice  R.  Taggart.- CG  2 
Love's  Transfiguration.     {Chambers'  Journal.) — HP 
Love's  Victory. — D:  A.  Wasson. — OH 
Love's  Waking. — Anon. — FLS 


Love's  Wantonness.— T:  Lodge.— ES— WEP  1 
(Love  and  PhiUis.)— EP 
(Phillis.)— OB  (II.)— OEL 
Love's  Warning. — Ed.  Kenealy. — PEB  4 
Love's  Wisdom. — Marg.  Deland. — AA 
Love's  Young  Dream. — T:  Moore. — BNL 
(Abr.)— EPs— FTA 
{W.  music.)— UPS— YP 
Love's  Young  Dream. — Helen  M.  Waithman. — BS  20 
Love-scrape,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Lovesight.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  IV.) — Dante 

G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2— VA— YBF 
Lovest  thou  Me? — W:  Cowper.- FEP 
Love-triology,  A,  Sel.  /r.— Mathilde  Blind. — VA 
Lovewell's  Fight. — Anon. — AWB 
Loving  and  Giving.- — Anon. — YBT 
Loving  Little  Girl.  The.— E.  C.  Rook.— LPS— PP 
Low  Countries,  The.     {Frags,   fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Low  Countries,   The. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Trav- 
eller, The. 
Low  Tide  on  Grand  Pr^. — Bliss  Carman. — TCV 
Low-backed  Car,  The.     (C.)— S:  Lover.— BNL— BS  17 
— CR— CS  28— FEP— LC  (.si.  abr.) 
{W.  mwstc.)— DR— NPS— YP 
(Low-back  Car,  The.)— PR-^YA 
Lowell  Alphabet,  A.     {Comp.  fr.  Lowell's  Works.) — 

Anon.— PEO 
Lowell,  Extract  Concerning.— D:  W.  Bartlett.— PEO 
Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. — H.  R.  Haweis. — PEO 
Lowell,  Extract  Concerning.     {North  British  Review.) 

—PEO 
Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. — Frances  H.  Underwood. 

—PEO 
Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. — W.  C.  Wilkinson. — PEO 
Lowland  Witch  Ballad,  A.— W:  B.  Scott.— PEB  3 
Lowly  Life,  The.— Gerald  Massey.— YBT 
Loyal  Fisher,  The.— Anon.— AWB 
Loyal  Hearts.— H.  Parker.- SR  12 
Loyal  Legion.  The.— C:  G.  Halpine.— WRD 
Loyal  to  a  Trust.— Anna  W.  Whitney. — SR  13 
Loyal  Woman's  No,  A. — Lucy  Larcom. — EPs 
Loyalty. — Allan    Cunningham.       See    Hame,    Hame, 

Hame! 
Loyalty  Confined.— Sir  Roger  L'Estrange. — FEP 

(In  Prison— seZ. )— BNL 
Loyalty  to  Truth.— Anna  H.  Shaw.— TMR 
Ivucifer  and  Elissa. — Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Festus. 
Lucifer  in  Starlight.— G :  Meredith. — OB— VA 
Lucile,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Bulwer-Lytton. 

Character  of  Lucile.    (Pt.  II.,  Can.  VI.,  sts.  38-40— 
ahr.)—'BS  22 
("No  stream  from  its  source  flows  seaward": — 
seZ.)— FHS 
Dinner  Hour,  The.     (Pt.  I.,  Can.  II.,  18,  19.)— VA 

(Lucile,  Sel.  /r.— II.,  19.)— BNL 
Parting  before  Sebastopol,  The.     (Pt.  II.,  Can.  VJ., 

37— abr.)- AVP 
Under  Canvas.     (Pt.  II.,  Can.  VI..  10-12.)— HSS  1 
Lucinda's  Fan. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — TMR 
Lucius   Junius   Brutus   (rlav),   Sel.    fr.     (Brutus   and 

Titus.)— Nathaniel  Lee.— SS 
Lucius  Junius  BrutusF's  Oration]   over  the  Body  of 

Lucretia. — J :  H.  Payne.     See  Brutus. 
Luck. — Anon. — DJS 
Lucky  Call,  The.— Anon.— CS  11— HR 
Lucky  Horse-shoe,  The.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— CS  22 
Lucky  Jim. — Anon. — WR  15 
Lucky  Jim.— J:  L.  Long.— BS  26 
Lucrece,  Sel.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. — WEP  1 
Lucy.     (C.) — Bryan  W.  Procter. 

(Golden  Girl,  A.)— BNL 
Lucy.     ("Strange  fits  of  passion   I  have   known" — 
Poem?   Founded   on   the  Affections,  VII.— C.) 
— W:  Wordsworth.— OB  (I.)— YBF 
Lucy.     (Poems  Founded  on  the  Affections,  VITI. — C.) 
— W:    Wordsworth.— BFV  (I.)— BNL— FEP 
—  GP  —  HBP  (I.)  —  IR  (L)  —  OB  (II.)  — 
WEP  4  (I.) 
(Lost  Love.  The.)— FTA— PHS 
("She  dwelt  among  the  untrodden  ways.") — MBL 
—PGT  1— PYO— YBF 
Lucy.     (Poems  Founded  on  the  Affections,  IX. — C.) 
—W:  Wordsworth.— OB  (III.) 
("I    travell'd    among    unknown    men.") — CEL — 
PGT  1— YBF 
Lucy.     (Poems     of     the     Imagination,     X. — C.) — W: 
Wordsworth.— BFV  (II.)— GN— HBP  (II.)— 
IR  (ID— OB  (IV.)— PHS— WEP  4  (II.) 
(Se/.)— EPs— OS  3 
(Education  of  Nature,  The.)— PGT  1 
(Three  Years  fheOrew.)- BNL— FEP— GP— MBL 
("Three  years  she  grew  in  sun  and  shower.") — SN 


197 


Lucy 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lucy.     (Poems    of   the    Imagination,    XT. —  C.) — W: 

Wordsworth.— OB  (V.)— WEP  4  (III.) 
(Departed.)— EPs 
("Slumber    did    my    spirit   seal,   A.")— PGT  1— 

YBF 
Lucy  Ashton's  Song.     (/"r.  The  Bride  of  Lammermoor, 

Ch.  111.)- Walfer  Scott.— BPB— OB 
(Beware.)— EPs 
Lucy  Bertram  and  Dominie  Sampson. — Walter  Scott. 

iSee  Guy  Mannering. 
Lucy  Gray;  or,  Solitude. — W:  Wordsworth. — BFV — 

BPB  —  CEL  —  CGd  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  HBP 

—PC— PGT  1— PoR— WCL— WEP  4 
Lucy's  Flittin'.— W:  Laidlaw.— GP 
Lucy's  Song. — C:  Dickens.    jSee  Village  Coquettes,  The. 
Ludgate   Hill. — A   Mystery.     (Drama   for   Every-day 

Life.)     (Punch.)— UPB 
Lugubrious  Whing- Whang,  The. — (C.) — .las.  W.  Riley. 

— NA  (sei.)— RCR 
(Mad,  Mad  Muse,  The— se/.)— HP 
Luke  Havergal. — E.  A.  Robinson. — AA 
Luke  Major. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
LuHaby:     "Rockabv,  baby,  thy  cradle  is  green." — 

Anon.— CS  2.3— TFS  (sel.) 
(Baby's  Cradle  is  Green— 8eZ.)—TFS 
Lullaby:    "Weep  ye  no  more,  sad  fountains." — Anon. 

— ELP 
(Sleep— a<.  to  J:  Dowland.)— BNL— HBP 
(Song  for  Music,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
(Tears.)— OB 
Lullaby:  "The  rook's  nest  do  rock  on  the  tree-top."  — 

W:    Barnes.— PGT  2 
Lullaby:  "Breezes  in  the  tree-tops  high." — Mabel  A. 

Carnenter. — CG  2 
Lullaby:  "Through  Sleepy-land  doth  a  river  flow." — 

E.  Cavazza.— NV 
liUllaby:  "Hush  thee,  sweet  baby."     (Fr.    Danae.) — 

T:  Davidson.— TMR 
Lullaby:      "Golden   slumbers    kiss   your  eyes."  —  T: 

Dekker.    See  Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient  Gris- 

sel,  The. 
Lullaby:     "Beitin^e's  come  fu'  little  boys."  —  Paul  L. 

Dunbsr.— THP 
Lullaby:  "Kivorup  yo'  haid,"  etc.  —  Paul  L.  Dunbar. 

— BS  26 
Lullaby:  "Hush  thee,  hush."— R.  D.  H.— CG  3 
Lullaby:  "I  was  loung'n  amongst  m'  pillows." — Ella 

Higginson.— HSS  2 
Lullaby:       "Over   the    cradle   the   mother   hung." — 

Josiah  G.  Holland.— GMS 
(Where  shall  the  Baby's  Dimple  Be?— C.)— BS  2 
Lullaby:     "Rockaby,  lullaby,  bees  in   the   clover." — 

.Tosiah  G.  Holland.     See  Mistress  of  the  Manse, 

The. 
Lullaby:        "Bye-bye,    drowsiness    o'ertaking,"    etc. 

(Fr.  Erminie,  arr.  by)  O.  E.  McFadon. — DR 
Lullaby:     "Lullabv  and  good-night."     (W.   music — 

arr.  by)  O.  E.  McFadon.— DR 
Lullaby:  "Birds  in  their  nests  are  softly  calling." — 

Grace  Mitchell.— POS 
Lullaby,  A:  "Baloo,  loo,  lammy,  now  baloo,  my  dear." 

— Caroline  Oliphant,  Lady  Nairn. — OS  1 
Lullaby:    "Sleep,  sleep,  lovely  white  soul." — Walter 

Ramal.— SOC 
Lullaby,  A.— R:  Rowlands.— OB— YBF 

("Upon  my  lap  mv  sovereign  sits.") — PGT  1 
Lullaby:  "Slumber,  slumber,  little  one,  now." — Frank 

D.  Sherman.- LFL 
Lullaby,   A:    "Cease,  warring   thoughts,   and  let  his 

brain."     (Sel.  fr.  The  Triumph  of  Beauty.) — 

Jas.  Shirley.— ES— WEP  2 
Lullaby:     "Sweet  and  low." — Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

Princess,  The. 
Lullaby,  A:  "Sleep,  my  darling,  sleep!" — Celia  Thax- 

ter.— SAP 
Lullaby  for  Titania. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Midsum- 
mer Night's  Dream,  A. 
Lullaby  of  a  Lover,   The.  —  G :  Gascoigne.  —  ELP  — 

ES  (a6r.  )—OEL 
(Lover's  Lullaby,  A.) — OB 
Lullaby  of  Iwr.,  on  or  to]  an  Infant  Chief. — Walter 

Scott.— BVC—LC 
(SI.  afer.)— PC— PHS— PoR 
"Lullaby,  oh,  lullaby."     (Domestic  Poems,  IV.) — T: 

Hood.— FEP 
(Serenade,  A.)— CS26— HPE 
Lullaby,  Rest.— Ellen  R.  Manchester.— CG  3 
Lullaby  Song.— W:  P.  M'Kenzie.— TCV 
Lullaby    Song. — (Anon. — tr.    by)  Eliz.    L.    Prentiss. — 

BS  15 
(Cradle  Song— sZ.  afer.)- LC— OS  1 

(^6r.)— FEP 
(Sleep,  Baby,  Sleep!— se?. )— GMS— PC— WCL 


Lullaby    to    an     Infant    Chief. — Walter    Scott.     See 

Lullaby  of  an  Infant  Chief. 
Lullabye,  A.— J:  Skelton.— WEP  I 
"Lulu."— Carrie  W.  Thompson.— HP  (si.  abr.) 
(Kitty  Clover.)— WR  2 
(Naughty  Kitty  Clover.)— BS  20 
Lulu  Takes  Care. — Anon. — DLS 
Lulu's  Complaint. — Anon. — PR — YA 
(Deposed — drff.  vers.) — DLS 
(New  Baby.  The.)— HP 
Lulu's  Picture. — Anon. — HVD 
Lumber  Camp  Romance,  A. — Harriet   F.  Crocker.— 

WR21 
Lunar  Stanzas. — H.  C.  Knight. — NA 
Lurline;    or.    The    Knight's    Visit    to    the    Mermaids. 
— R:  H.  Barham.    See  Sir  Rupert  the  Fearless. 
Lusiad,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Luis  de  Camoens  (tr.  by  Mickle). 
Inez  de  Castro.     (Sel.  fr.  Can.  in.)— NE 
Spirit  of  the  Cape,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Can.  V.l— NE 
Lusiad,  The,  Story  of. — Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
Lusty  May. — Anon. — OB 
Lute  Song  in  "The  Sad  One,"  The. — J:  Suckling. — 

WEP  2 
Luther. — Joaquin  Miller. — BS  12 
"Luther  rebelled   against  the  Pope  in  behalf  of  the 

ministry." — W.  H.  H.  Murray. — GG 
Luther's  Hymn. — Martin  Luther. 

(Paraphrase  of  Luthsr'.s  Hymn,  by  F:  H.  Hedge.) — 
AA 
(Mighty  Fortress  is  our  God,  A — fel.) — BNL 
(Ps  Im  XLVL— <r.  by  T:  Carlvl:.)— HBP 
(S  f?Slr-ngh'!d,  A.)— AE 
Lutist    and    the    Nightingale,    The. — J:    Ford.     See 

Lover's  Melancholy,  The. 
Lux  est  Umbra  Dei. — .1:  A.  Symonds. — VA 
Lux  in  Tenebris. — Katha.  Tynan-Hinkson. — TIP 
Lycidas.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— FP 

Lycidas.— J:  Milton.— BNL  (hr.  srf.)- BPB— EP— EPs 
— FEP  — HBP  — LH— MBL— OB— PGT  1— 
PHS— WEP  2 
(Fame— seZ. )— BNL 
(Flowers— seZ. )— HSS  1 
(Lycidas,  Sel.  /r.)— BNL 
Lydia. — L.  W.  Reese. — .\A 
Lvdia's  Ride.— T:  Frost.— BS  21 
Lye,  The. — Walter  Raleigh.     See  Lie,  The. 
Lying.— T:  Moore.— HPE 
Lying  in  State— Walter  S.  Landor.- HPE 
Lying  in  the  Grass. — Edmund  Gosse. — VA 
Lyke-wake  Dirge,  A.— BB— BPB— EPs  (abr.)— OB— 

WEP  1 
Lyman    Beecher's    First    Home. — Lyman    Beecher. — 

WR5 
Lynmouth.     (A  br. )— Arthur  O  'Shaughnessy.— PGT  2 
Lyon.— H:  Peterson.— AWB—PAPm 

(Death  of  Lvon,  The.)— EDY 
Lyric,  A.— E:  M.  Hulme.— CG  2 
Lyric  of  Action. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — BS  22 

(Upward  and  Onward.) — BS  17 
Lyric  Seer,  The.     (Poet-lore — C.) — Edwin  Markham. 

— SR  13 
Lyrical  Poem,  The. — R:  Garnett. — VA 
Lytell  Geste  of  Robin  Hode.  A. — Anon. — BB 
Lyttel  Boy,  The.— Eugene  Field.— AA—WTD 


M 

M.  A.,  1822-1888.     (C.) — Louise  I.  Guiney. 

(Pa.x  Paganica — w.  add.  at.) — A  A 
M.  P.;  or.  The  Blue  Stockings.     (Sel.  fr.  To  Sigh,  yet 

Feel  no  Pain— sonff.)— T:  Moore.— FEP— FLS 
Mabel.— Anon.— WR  4 
Mabel,  Sel.  fr.     (At  her  Window— C.—Pt.  I.)— Frd'k 

Locker-LampsonJ — OB 
Mabel.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— HDL 
Mabel  Gray. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Mabel  Martin.— J:    G.    Whittier.— AP    (si.    abr.)— SO 

(br.  sel) 
Witch's  Daughter,  The.      (Pts.  1-4,  cond.)—CS  19 

— MMR 
Mabel  on    Midsummer    Day. — Mary    Howitt. — PC — . 

PHS 
Mabel;  or.  The  Face  against  the  Pane. — T:  B.  Aldrich. 

— SA 
(Face     against     the     Pane,     The.)— CS  19 — FR— 

MMR 
Mabel's  May.— R.  M.  Davis.— CG  3 
Macarius  the  Monk.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— KNE 
Macaulav. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 

(To  Macaulav.)— BNL— HBP 
Macaulay. — W:  M.  Punshon. — NC 


198 


TITLE  INDEX 


Magna 


Macaulay's  Prophecy.     (SeZ.  arr.  fr.  Honest  Money.) — 

Jas.  A.  Garfield.— NC 
Macbeth,  Seh.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

"Canst   thou  not  minister  to  a  mind   diseased?" 
(Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  V.,  Sc.  3.)— GG 
(Macbeth — br.  sel.) — BNL 
"If  'twere  done  when  'tis  done,"  etc.     (Sel.fr.  I., 
7.)— OS  3 
f Macbeth— 6r.  sela.) — AE — BNL 
(Macbeth's  Soliloquy — br.  sel.) — SAE 
Killing  of  Macbeth.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  8.)— EDY 
Letter  Scene,  The.     (L,  5.) 
(Macbeth,  Act  1.,  Sc.  5.)— IR 
(Hesitation — sel.) — EPs 
Macbeth.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  I.,  3;  I.,  4;  I.,  5:  II.,  3; 
•     III.,   1;   III.,   2;  III.,  4;  V.,   3;  V.,  4;  V..  5: 
v.,  7.)— BNL 
Macbeth  and  the  Witches.     (IV.,  1.)— BS  10 
(Macbeth — br.  sel.) — AE 
(Oracle:  "The  flighty  purpose  never  is  o'ertook" 

—br.  sel.)— EPs 
(Witches'   Meeting,   The  —  The    Charm — sel.) — 
CGd 
Macbeth  to  the  Ghost.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  4.)— SE 
Morning.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  6.)— EPs 

(Macbeth's  Castle.)— BNL 
Murder  of  King  Duncan.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  1;  II.,  2.) — 
CS  13 
(Dagger  of  the  Mind,  A — sel.) — BNL 
(Dagger  Scene,  The.)— BS  6 
(Dagger  Soliloquy.) — MRS 
(Is  this  a  Dagger?)— OS  3 

(Macbeth  before  the  Murder  of  Duncan.) — FR 
(Macbethf:  Selection  from  the  Dagger  Scene] 
— «eZ.)— HNS— SE 
(Murder,  The— II.,  2.)— BNL 

(Macbeth,  Br.  sels.  /r.)— AE— HNS— SAE 
(Remorse-*-6r.  sel.) — EPs 
Night.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  2.)— EPs 
Sleep-walking  Scene.     (V.,  1.)— MRS 

(Lady  Macbeth — Sleep  Walking  Scene — abr.) — 

SR4 
(Macbeth— scZ. )— SAE 
(Macbeth,  Act  V.,  Sc.  1.)— IR 
"To-morrow,    and    to-morrow,    and    to-morrow." 
(Br.  sel.  fr.  V.,  5.)— PYO— SE  (sel.) 
(Macbeth,  Br.  sel.  fr.)— BNL' 
Witches'  Meeting,  The.     (I.,  1,  and  sel.  fr.  IV.,  1.) 
—CGd 
Macbeth    and    the    Witches. — W:    Shakespeare.     See 

Macbeth. 
Macbeth  before  the  Murder  of   Duncan. —  W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Macbeth. 
Macbeth.      Selection    from    the    Dagger    Scene. — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Macbeth  to  the  Ghost. — W :  Shakespeare.      See  Mac- 
beth. 
Macbeth's  Castle. — W:  Shake.«peare.     See  Macbeth. 
Macbeth's  Soliloquy. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
M'Calla  and  the  Middy.— Anon.— NPS—YP 
Macdonald's  Charge   at   Wagram. — Joel   T.    Headley. 

See  Napoleon  and  his  Marshals. 
Macdonald's  Raid. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — CS  18 
McFingal,  Br.  sels.  fr.  —J :  Trumbull.— BNL 
MacFlecknoe. — J:  Dryden. — ESs 

(Shadwell— seZ.)- WEP  2 
Macgregor's  Defence. — Walter  Scott.     See  Rob  Roy. 
M'llrath  of  Milate. — J:  J.  Rooney. — PRR 
McKinley's  Funeral    Address,    Sel.    fr. — C.    M.    Man- 

chester.- WR  26 
Maclaine's  Child;  a  Legend  of  Lochbuy-Mull. — C:  Mac- 
kay.— CS  9— DDR  (abr.)— FR  (si.  a6r.)— FTR 
— SA 
(Clansman  to  his  Chief,  The— seZ.)- SE 
(Supplication — br.  sel.) — AE 
MacLeod  of  Dare.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  (  h.  XLV.)— W:  Black. 

—SAE 
M'Pherson's  Farewell.     (C.)— Rob't     Burns. — HBP 

(Defiance. ) — LH 
McSwats  Swear  Off,  The.— Anon.— PR— YA 
McSwinger's  Fate. — Anon. — MCS 
Mad.— W:  Littlejohn.— CS  32 
Mad  Actor,  The.— Frd'k  G.  Webb.— WR  2 
Mad  Anthony's  Charge. — Alex.  N.  Easton. — CS  29 
Mad  Cabman's   Song   of   Sixpence,   The.     (Punch.) — 

HPE 
Mad  Engineer,  The.— Anon.— CS  7— MMR 

(Prussian    Railway    Conductor's     Story —  ad.    by 
Walter  K.  Fobes.)— FR 
Mad  Lover,  The.  Sels.  fr.  [Beaumont  and]  F'etcher. 
Joy  of  Battle,  The.     (Song  fr.  Act  V,  Sc.  4.)— LH 
To  Venus.     (SeZ. /r.  IV.,  3.)— EPs 
Mad  Luce. — Anon. — FMR 


Mad,  Mad  Muse,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— HP  (sel.) 

(Lugubrious  Whing-Whaiig,  The— C.)— NA  (sel.)— 

RCR 
Mad  Mag. — Leonard  Wheeler. — CS  16 
Mad  Maid's  Song,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— OB— WEP  2 
Mad  Marie. — Anon. — WR  2 
Mad — Quite  Mad. — Winthrop  M.  Praed. — ESs 
Mad  Song.— W:  Blake.— WEP  3 
Madam  Hickory. — Wilbur  Larremore. — AA 
Madam  How  and  Lady  Why,  SeZ. /r.     (Eyes  and  No 

Eyes— seZ  fr.  Preface.)— C:  Kingsley.- WCLI  2 
Madame  Arachne. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Mme.  Eef.— Anon.— DES 

(French   Account    of   Adam's   Fall — diff.    vers.) — 

CS29 
(Frenchman's  Account  of   the   Fall,  A.) — DFY — 

HR 
Madame  Roland. — Anon. — EDY 
Madcap  April. — Tudor  Jenks. — EDY 
Maddening  Bowl,  The.— Anon.— PPSr 
Made  in  the  Hot  Weather.     (Ballad  Made  in  the  Hot 

Weather— C.)—W:  E.  Henley.— GN 
Made  Perfect  through  Suffering. —  S :  Johnson. — TAS 
Made  to  Fit.— Anon.— DRR 
Madman,  The.     (Punch.)— KNE 
(Fragment,  A.)— HPE 

(His  Eye  was  Stem  and  WUd.)— CS  3— SCS— SR  6 
Madman.  The.— T.  S.  Denison.— FAS 
Madness.     (Punch.)— HPE 
Madonna  dell'  Acqua. — J:  Ruskin. — AVP 
Madonna  of  Fra  Lippo  Lippi,  A. — Richard  W.  Gilder. 

—TAS 
Madonna  of  the  Entry,  A. — Agnes  M.  Machar. — TCV 
Madrigal — In  praise  of  two. — Anon. — WEP  1 
Madrigal:     "Lady,  when  I  behold  the  roses  sprouting." 

— Anon.— ELP 
(Dilemma,  A.)— PGT  1 
Madrigal:     "My  love  in  her  attire  doth  show  her  wt. 

—Anon.— ELP— OB— WEP  1 
(My  Love's  Attire.)— YBF 
(Poetry  of  Dress,  The,  III.)— PGT  1 
Madrigal:     (C.)     "Like     the     Idalian     queen." — W: 

Drummond. — OB 
Madrigal.     (C.)     "My  thoughts  hold  mortal  strife." — 

W:  Drummond. 
( Inexorable. ) — OB 
(Lament,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Madrigal.     (C.)     "Sweet  rose,  whence  is  this  hue?" — 

W:  Drummond.— ELP— ES 
Madrigal:     (C.)     "The  beauty  and  the  life."     (C.)— 

W:  Drummond. 
(Her  Passing.)— OB 
Madrigal:     (C.)     "This  life,"  etc. — W:  Drummond. 
(Bubble,  The.)— ELP 

("Th  s  life,  which  seems  so  fair.") — PGT  1 
Madrigal:     "This  world  a  hunting  is."     (/n  Flowers  of 

Sion.)—W:  Drummond.— WEP  2 
Madrigal.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Madrigal,  A.     (Passionate    Pilgrim,    The,    XII.) — W: 

Shakespeare.— LC— PGT  1— PHS 
(Crabbed  Age  and  Youth.)— FEP— HBP— OB 
(Youth  and  Age.)— EP 
Madrigal:     "Take,    O    take    those    lips    away." — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Measure  for  Measure. 
Madrigal:     "Tell     me   where    is     fancy   bred."  —  W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Madrigal,  A :  "Sweetheart,  the  year  is  young." — Frank 

D.  Sherman.— TFY 
Madrona,  The. — Fred.  M.  Somers. — AD 
Madrono. — Bret  Harte. — AA 
Msecenas  Bids  his  Friend  to  Dine. — Anon. — PPh 
Maestro's  Confession,    The. — Margaret    J.  Preston. — 

CS  9— KNE 
Magazine  Fort,  Phoenix  Park,  Dublin. — W:  Wilkins. — 

TIP 
Magdalen. — Edgar  L.  Wakeman. — SR  3 
Magdalena. — Anon. — CS  3 
Magdalena. — Anon. — HP 
Magdalena:  or.  the  Spanish  Duel. — J.  F.  Waller. — BeR 

— BRR— BS  5— CR— CS  14— FTR— S A 
Maggie  and   Thomas  k  Kempis. —  G :  Eliot.     See  Mill 

on  the  Floss,  The. 
Maggie  Cuts  her  hair. — G:  Eliot.     See  Mill  on  the  Floss, 

The. 
Magic  Buttons. — Emma  C.  Dowd. — BS  12 
Magic  Car  Moved   on.  The. — Percy  B.   Shelley.      See 

Queen  Mab. 
Magic  Wand,  The.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  32— VSG 
Magical  Isle,  The.— Anon.— CS  8 

Magna  est  Veritas.     (C.) — Coventry  Patmore. — PGT  2 
(Truth  is  Great.)— YBF 


199 


Magnanimity 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Magnanimity  ■    in     Politics. — Edmund     Burke.     See 
Speech  on  Moving  his  Resolutions  for  Concilia- 
tion with  America. 
Magnanimous  and  Mean. — C:  Heavysege. — TCV 
Magnificent  Distances. — Anon. — KNE 
Magnolia-Grandiflora.— jChristopher  P.  Cranch. — AD 
Magpie,  The.— Anon.— t:S  32 
Magpie  and  the  Monkey,  The. — Yriarte. — SS 
Magpie's  Nest,    The. — C:    and    Mary    Lamb. — LPC — 

PoR 
Magruder's  Lullaby.     (Puck.)— BS  21 
Maha-Bharata,  Sels._fr. — {Tr.  by)  Edwin  Arnold. 
Great  Journey,  The.     (Sei.)— NE 
Sftvitri';  or.  Love  and  Death.     (Abr.) — NE 
Maha-Bharata,  Storv  of  the. — Kate  M.  Rabb. — NE 
Mahmoud.— Leigh  Hunt.— BNL— CGd— CS  8 
Mahmud  and  Ayaz. — Edwin  Arnold.     See  With  Sa'di 

in  the  Garden. 
Mahmud  and  the  Idol. — Bessie  Chandler. — CS  27 
Mahogany-tree,    The. — W:    M.    Thackeray. — BNL — 

EDY— HBP— PHS— VA— VS 
Mahomet.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— EDY 
Mahsr  John.— Irwin  Russell.— BRR— SDR 
Maid  I  Loved,  The.— Anon.— FLS 

Maid  of  Athens,  ere  we  Part. — Lord   Byron. — BNL — 
HBP— PYO 
(Maid  of  Athens.)— FEP—FTA 
Maid  of  Cloghroe,  The.— Anon.— TIP 
Maid  of  Honor,  The,  Br.  sels.  jr. — Philip  Massinger. — 

BNL 
Maid  of    Neidpath,    The.— Walter    Scott.— PGT 1— 

YBF 
Maid  of  Orleans,  The.— J.  E.  Sagebeer.— CS  24 
Maid  of  Orleans,  The,  Sel.  jr.     (Joan  of  Arc's  Farewell 
[to  Home]— Prol.,  Sc.  IV.)— Friedrich  Schiller. 
— BLP— BS  22— FMR— PPSr 
Maiden  City,  The. — Charlotte    Elizabeth     (Tonna). — 

PEB4 
Maiden  Husking  Com,  The.— J.  H.  Blow.— BS  23 
Maiden  Martyr,      The.— Anon.— BS  5— CS  14—  DS  — 
FR— PFP— SA— SC— SR  6 
(Scotland's  Maiden  Martyr.)— FTR—HB 
Maiden  Missionary,  The. — Paul  Pastnor. — GH 
Maiden  Queen,  The,   Song    fr.     (Hidden    Flame.) — J: 

Dryden. — OB 
Maiden  Song. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — PEB  3 
Maiden  Spring,  The. — (Anon,  arr.) — AD — inchidea: 
Arbutus.— H.  H.— AD— DCP— HSS  1 
Dafifddil. — Anon. — AD 
Daisy. — Anon. — AD 
Lilies. — Leigh  Hunt. — AD  {ahr.) — HSS  1  (in  Songs 

and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers.) 
Pink. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — AD 
May. — Anon. — AD 
Roses. — Leigh  Hunt. — AD  {sel.) — HSS  1  {in  Songs 

and  Chorus,  etc.) 
Violets. — Leigh  Hunt. — AD  {hr.  sel.) 

(Chorus  of  Flowers,  in  Songs  and  Chorus,  etc.) — 
FEP— HBP— HSS  1  (seZ.)— PHS 
Maiden  to  the  Moon,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— BS  23 
Maiden  with   a  Milking-pail,   A.     (Reflections — C) — 

Jean  Ingelow. — BNL 
Maidenhood.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BNL— FEP 
Maiden's  Choice,  The. — H :  Carey.     See  following. 
Maiden's  Ideal  of  a  Husband,  A.     (Fr.  The  Contriv- 
ances.)—H:  Carey.— BNL— TFY 
(Maiden's  Choice,  The.)— FlOP— HBP 
Maidens'  Lake,  The. — Lewis  Morris. — VSG 
Maiden's  Last  Farewell,  The.— J:  Paul.— BS  4 
Maiden's  Mishap,  The. — Anon. — SCS 
Maiden's  Request,  The. — T:  Hood  (tw.  at.  to  Lover.) — 
MHR 
(Come  with  the  Ring.)— CS  21 
(Please  to  Ring  the  Belle.)— BS  24 
Maiden's  Soliloquy,  A. — Alaric  A.  Watts. — FTA 
Maid's  Lament,  The.    (Fr.  The  Examination  of  Shake- 
sneare.)— Walter   S.    Landor.- BNL— FEP— 
FP  — HBP  — OB  — PGT2  — VA  — WEP4  — 
YBF 
Maids  of  Elfin-mere,  The.— W:  Allingham.— PEB  4 
Maids  of  Japan.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Maids  of  Lee,  The.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— FEP  (si.  ahr.) 

(Bird  in  the  Hand,  A.)— VA 
Maid's  Remonstrance,      'The. — Thomas      Campbell. — 

BNL 
Maid's  Tragedy,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Aspatia's  Song.     (Fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  1.)— OB 
(Dirge.)— ELP 

("Lay  a  garland  on  my  hearse.") — FEP 
(Song.)— CEL— WEP  2— YBF 
Bridal  Song.     (Fr.  I.,  2.)— OB 
Wedding  Song.     (Fr.  I.,  2.)— ES 
Main  Hatch,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 


Main  Hazir  Hun. — M.  E.  Winslow. — CS  21 

Maine,  The.— G.  Dichter.— PAPm 

Maine  at  Gettysburg. — Joshua  L.  Chamberlain. — SC 

Maine  Liquor  Law,  The,  Sel.  arr.  fr.    (Enforcement  of 

the   Liquor  Law,  The.) — Wendell   Phillips. — 

MRS 
(Temperance.)— CS  20— TS 
(Temperance  Question,  The.)— BS  8— PS  (ahr.) 
Maine's  Men,  The.  (St.  Louis  Republican.) — PAPm 

(Sinking  of  the  Maine.)— FAS 
Main-truck;  or,  A  Leap  for  Life,  The. — G.  P.  Morris. — 

CS  1— LLC— PPSr— TAV 
(Leap  for  Life,  A.)— FTR 
Maire  my  Girl. — J:  K.  Casey.— TIP 
Maister  an'  the  Bairns,  The. — W:  Thomson. — BS  12 
Maize,  The.— W:  W.  Fosdick.— BNL 
Maize  for    the    Nation's    Emblem. — Celia    Thaxter. — 

POS 
Majestic  in  his  Individuality. — J:  P.  Newman. — LLC 
(Abraham  Lincoln.)— BLP— PFP 
(Abraham  Lincoln's  Place  in  History.) — PEO 
Majesty  in  Misery. — Charl  -s  I.  of  England  (7). — EHT 
Majesty  of  Trifles,  The.— Victor  Hugo.— PR 
Major  Andr^.     (Tab.) — Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Major  Jones'  Fourth  of  July  Oration. — Anon. — DE 
Major  Slott's  Visitor.— C:  H.  Clark.— S A 
Major-General  John  Sedgwick,  ScZs. /r. — G:   W:  Curtis. 
General    Grant,    the    Silent    Captain.     (Arr.    and 

cond.)—¥T>  1 
Spirit  of  Puritanism,  The. — NC 
Make  Relieve. — Alice  Gary. — BLF 
Make  Believe.     (Diff.  poem.) — Alice  Gary. — BNL 
Make  Believe  Land. — Anon. — DJS 
Make  Childhood  Sweet.— Anon.— DS—YA 
Make  Room  in  Heaven. — Horace  B.  Durant. — CS  SO 
Make  the  Best  of  It.— Anon.— TT 
Make  Thy  Way  mine.— G:  Klingle.— HDL 
Make  your  Mark.— David  Barker.— FP—FTT  (ahr.) 
Make  your  WiUs. — Anon. — MDD 
Make  Way  for  Liberty. — Jas.   Montgomery. — BNL — 

FEP 
(Arnold      Winkelried- a6r. )— BS  2— CS  4— OS  2— 

PPSr— SA— TMD 
(Patriot's  Pass-word,  The— C.)— AD  (sei.)- EDY 

— SS  (abr.) 
Makin'  an  Editor  outen  o'  him.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Editor's 

Guests.)— Will  Carleton.— CS  13 
Making  a  Cake. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LI^ 
Making  a  Man  of  the  Boy. — Anon. — SR  13 
"Making  an  Orator." — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Making  an  Orator.  (/nWhilomville Stories.) — Stephen 

Crane.— SR  13 
Making  B'lieve. — Anon. — DST 
Making  Brown-bread  Cakes. — Gail  Hamilton. — FS 
Making  Butter — Anon. — TT 

(How  Butter  is  Made.)— PS 
Making  him  Feel  at  Home. — Belle  M.  Locke. — CS  36 
Making  New  Year's  Calls.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Making  of  Man,  The.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— AA 
Making  of   Man,   The. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne.     See 

Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
Making  Soap. — Anon. — MFD 
Malaria.- Isabel  H.  Reid.— BS  12— PPSr 
Malbrouck.     (Tr.  Vy)  Francis  Mahony.— FEP— HBP 
Malcontents,    The. — J:    Dryden.     See    Absalom    and 

Achitophel. 
Malib  an  and   the   Young   Musician. — Anon. — BS  6 — 

CS12 
Malice. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. 
Malony's  Will.— Anon.— DCR 
Malta,  Sel.  /r.— Carroll  Ryan.— TCV 
Malum  Opus. — Jas.  A.  Morgan. — NA 
Malzah  and  the  Angel  Zelehtha.     C:  Heivysege.     See 

Saul. 
Mama's  Dear  La-^. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Mamie's  Request. — Anon. — TFS 
Mamma's  Boy. — Anon. — TFS 
Mamma's  Flower. — M.  M.  Cass,  Jr. — TFS 
Mamma's  Help. — Anon. — LPS — PP 
Mamma's  Helper.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Mamma's  Kisses.— Anon.— HSS  2— TFS  (si.  abr.) 
Mamma's  Little  Mar.  et   Woman. — Lizzie  J.    Rook — 

PS— TT 
Mammy  Gets  the  Boy  to  Sleep. — Gertrude  M.  Jones. — 

BS24 
Mammy's  Li'l  Boy.— H.  S.  Edwards.— CR—DR 
Mammy's  Story. — Susan  A.  Weiss. — WR  15 
Man.— Florence  E.  Coates.— FEP 
Man.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  introd.  to  Of  the  Soul  of  Man  and  the 

Immortality  Thereof.) — Sir  J:  Davies. — OB — 

YBF 


200 


TITLE  INDEX 


Marble 


Man.— G:  Herbert.— BNL  (br.  sei.)— EPs— HBP 
Man.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  CXLII.—C.)— Walter  S. 

Landor. — VA 
Man. — E:  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Man  after  All. — Anon. — KNE 

Man  and  his  Shoes.     (Old  Shoes.) — Anon. — HSS  3 
Man  and  Nature,  Sel.  fr. — G:  P.  Marsh. — AD 
Man  and  Nature. — Rob't  K.  Weeks. — AA 
Man  and  the  Cause. — H :  C.  Lodge. — FD  2 
Man  and  the  Goose,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Man  and  Woman. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Much  Ado 

about  Nothing. 
Man  Behind,  The,  Sels.  fr.~T.  S.  Denison. 
Ike  Papson's  Courtship. — SR  10 
Sword  of  Damocles,  The. — SR  7 
Man  behind  it  to  the  Theater  Bonnet,  The. — Anon. — 

GH 
Man  by  the  Name  of  Bolus,  A. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — AA 
'Man  cannot  choose  his  own  life.  A." — M.  E.  Braddon. 

— GG 
"Man  does  not  plant  a  tree  for  himself,  A." — Alex. 

Smith.— HSS  1 
Man  for  the  Crisis,  The. — Anon.  (,ad.) — NC 
Man  for  the  Hour,  The.— A.  R.  Robinson.— CS  30 
Man  from   Glengarry,   The,  Sel.  fr.      (Ride   for   Life, 

The— Ch.  IV.)— C:  Gordon.— IR 
"Man  has  interests  other  than  those  that  are  material." 

{Christian  Intelligencer.) — GG 
"Man  in  conscious  virtue  bold,  The."     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IIL, 

Ode  III.)— Horace.- HSS  3 
Man  in  Nature. — W:  R.  Thayer. — AA 
Man  in  the  Dark,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Man  in   the   Fustian   Jacket,   The. — G:   Moggridge. — 

WR2 
Man  in  the  Moon,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BVC—NA 

(Sel.)—BS  18— EA 
Man  in  the  Moon  and  I,  The. — Jacqes  Esprit. — GH 
"Man  is  but  a  reed,  the  weakest  in  nature." — Blaise 

Pascal.     <Sec  Thoughts. 
"Man  is  dear  to  man;  the  poorest  poor."     (Frag.) — W: 

Wordsworth. — GG 
Man  May  be  Happy.— J:  Wolcott.— CS  7— HPE 
Man  o'  Airlie.  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Water-mill,  The.)— Sarah 

Doudney.— HP— SM  (al.  abr.) 
(At.  to  Dan'I  C.  McCallum — si.  diff.  vers.) — BRR 

— CS  14— DS— FMR 
(Water  that  has  Passed,  The.)— GP— SR  1 
Man  Octipartite.— Whitley  Stokes.— TIP 
Man  of  Expedients,  The. — S.  Oilman. — CS  8 
Man  of    Genius,    The. — J:    Ruskin.     <Sce    Stones    of 

Venice. 
Man  of  Life  Upright,  The.     (A  Book  of  Airs,  Pt.  I., 

XVIII.)— T:  Campion.— ELP—OEL— POT  1 
(Integer  Vita;.)— OB 
(Upright  Man,  The.)— YBF 
Man  ot  Nerve,  A. — Anon. — DE 
Man  of  Ross,  The. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Moral  Essays. 
Man  of  the  World,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Utility  <f  B;  oing, 

The.)— C:  Machlin.— CR 
Man    Overboard,    A. — Victor    Hugo.     See   Les   Mis6- 

Man  to  the  Aiigel,  The.— G.  W.  Russell.— VA 

Man  Wants  but  Little  Here  Below. — J:  Q.  Adams. — 

BS5 
(Wants of  Man,  The.)— BNL— CS6— EPs— WCLG  i 
M.in  was  Made  to  Mourn. —  Rob't  Burns. — BNL — FP 

(Melancholy— br.  seL)- KNE 
Man  who  Apologized,  The.       (Detroit  Free  Press.) — 

CH— CS  25 
Man  who  Felt  Sad,  The.      (Detroit  Free  Press.)~CS  12 
Man  who    Frets    at    Worldly    Strife,    The.—  Jos.    R. 

Drake. — AA     * 
Man  who  Hadn't    any  Ob.iection,  The. — Anon. — SR  2 
Man  who  Rode  to   Conemaugh,  The. — J:  E.  Bowen. — 

BAB— HSS  3 
Man  who  Rose  from  Nothing,  The. — Alex.  McLacHan. 

— TCV 
Man  who  Wears  the  Button,  The. —  J.  M.  Thurston. — 

SC 
Man  who  Would  be   King,  The. — Rudyard  Kipling. — 

WGS 
Man  with  a  Cold  in  his  Head,  The. — Anon. — CS  11 
Man  with   the   Hoe,   The. — Edwin   Markham. — AA — 

BNL 
Man  with  the  Hoe — A  Reply,  The. — J:  V.  Cheney. — 

Man  with  the  Musket,  The.— H.  S.  Taylor.— SR  6 

Man  without  a  Country,  The. — H.  F.  H.— CG  2 

Man  without  a  Country,  The,   2   br.    sels.  fr. —  E:E. 

Hale.— SC— TMR 
Man — Woman.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 


Man — Woman. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — BNL 
Management ;  or,  The  Folly  of  Fashion. — Mrs.  L.  E.  V. 

Boyd.— SD 
Manama  Mission,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Sympathy  with  South 
American  Republicanism.) — Dan'I  Webster. — 
PS— SS 
Manassas.— Catherine  M.  Warfield.— AWB— EDY 
M andal ay.— Rudyard  Kipling.— A VP—H  B  R 
Mandolin,  The.— R.C.— CG  3 
Manfred,  Sels.  fr. — Lord  Byron. 

Apparition.  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  4.)— EPs 
Incantation.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  1.) — EPs 
Manfred.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  1)— BNL 
Manfred.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  2.)— EPs 

(Soliloquy  of  Manfred — abr.) — PS 
Manfred's  Soliloquy.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  4.)— FP 
(Coliseum,  The— abr.)— OS  3 
(Coliseum  by  Moonlight,  The — si.  abr.) — BNL — 
MRS 
Manfred's  Soliloquy. — Lord  Byron.     See  foregoing. 
Manhood.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors^ — BNL 
Manhood.— G:  K.  Morris.— BS  15— PEO 
"Manhood  will  come  and  old  age  will  com°,  and  the 
dying-bed  will  come." — T:  (?)  Chalmers. — GG 
Maniac,  The.— C:  G.  Beede.— WR  19 
Maniac,  The. — Matthew      G.      Lewis. — BNL — CS  4 — 
PPSr 
(Progress  of  Madness.  The.) — PS 
Manifest  Destiny.— H  :  W.  Shaw.— PS 

(Josh  Billings  on  Manifest  Destiny.) — CS  2 
Manila  Bay.— H.  E.  W.,  Jr.— EDY— PAPm 
Manita,  Sel.  fr.—Vi:  M'Donnell.— TCV 
Manitou's  Garden. — Lucy  Larconi. — LCS 
Mankind.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Manliest  Man,  The.— G:  W.  Bungay.— HSS  2— SM 
Manly  Boy,  A.     (Dial.)— Anon.—N'DF 
Manly  Heart,  The. — G:  Wither.     See  Shepherd's  Reso- 
lution, The. 
Manly,  Loving  Boy,  A. — Anon. — TFS 
Mannahatta. — Walt  Whitman — AA 
Manners,  2  diff.  br.  sels.  fr.  —  Ralph    W.  Emerson.  — 

AE— WR5 
Manners  and  Customs.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Mannix  the  Coiner. — M.  Hogan. — PEB  4 
Mano;  a  Poetical  History,  Sels.  fr. — Richard  W.  Dixon. 
Of  a  Vision  of  Hell,  which  a  Monk  Had. — VA 
Of  Temperance  in  Fortune. — VA 
Skylark,  The.— VA 
Manor  Lord,  The. — G:  Houghton. — AA 
Man's  a  Man  for  a'  That,  A.^ — Rob't  Bums. — BS  4 — 
FEP— OS  2— SM— SPE— WEP  3 
(For   a'    That    and    a'    That.)— BNL— CR—FP— 

HSS  3— MBL— WCLG  2— YBF  (abr.) 
(Honest  Poverty.)— EPs— HBP 
(Is  there  f'  r  Honest  Poverty— C.)—PHS 
Man's  Capacity  for  Education. — Sumner  Ellis. — FD  2 
Man's  Ingratitude. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    As    You 

Like  It. 
Man's  Life.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Parting  Hour.) — G:  Crabbe. 

— FP 
Man's  Love. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Man's  Material  Triumphs. — Fayet. — SS 
Man's  Mission. — Mrs.  W.  R.  Wilde. — CS  4  »  _ 

Man's  Mortality. — Simon  Wastell.     S'^e  Microbiblion. 
Man's  Name,  A.— Richard  Realf.— BAB— EDY 
Man's  Pillow. — Irving  Browne. — AA 
Man's  Story,  A. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
"Man's  value  and  progress  in  this  life  must  be  meas- 
ured, A."— W.  H.  H.  Murray.— GG 
Mansie  Waugh's  First  and  Last  Play. — D.  M.  Moir. — 

'    CS18 
Mantle  of  St.  John  de  Matha,  The. — J:  G.  Whittier.— 

CS2 
Manual  of  Parliamentary  Rules  and  Practice. — Anon. 

—PS 
Manual  Training     and     Intellectual     Development. — 

Anon.— CP 
Many  things   thou    Hast    Given    me.   Dear   Heart. — 

Alice  W.  Rollins.— AA 
Maple.— T:  D.  English.— AD 
Maple  Leaves.— T:  B.  Aldrich.- GN 
Maple-tree,  The. — Susanna  S.  Moodie.— TCV 
Marathon. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.     /See  Athens:     Its  Rise 

and  Fall. 
Marathon. — Lord    Byron.     See   Childe    Harold's    Pil- 
grimage. 
Marathon  by  Starlight. — Richard  Montgomery. — BLP 
Marble  Faun,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. 
Faun  of  Praxiteles,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  (  h.  1.) — IR 
Frolic  of  the  Carnival,  A.  (Sels.  fr.  Chs.  XLVIII.  and 
XLIX.)— WR  5 


201 


Marble 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Marble  Queen,  The.— Sarah  C.  Woolsey.— TMD 

Marc  Antony. — Anon. — CP 

Ma'rc  Antony's  Funeral  Oration. — W:  Shakespeare. 
See  Julius  Caesar. 

Marc  Antony's  Original  Oration.  (Parody.) — Anon. — 
CS18  , 

March. — Anon. — HP 

March .     (All  the  Year  Round. )— POS 

March.— W:  C.  Bryant.— LLC 
(SI.  a6r.)— GN— PC— POS 

March.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 

March.     (C.) — Mary  M.  Dodge. 
(Nearly  Ready.)— PoR 
(Spring.)— AD 

March.     (Frag.) — Rob't  Loveman. — A  A 

March. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 

March. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 

March.     (C.)— May  R.  Smith. 

(What    March    Does — sl.  diff.  vers.  fr.  Poems.) — 
YBT 

March.— Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 

March.— C:  H.  Webb.— AA 

March. — Constance  F.  Woolson. — FMR 

March.— W:  Wordsworth.— BFV— HBP— OS  1— PHS 
—PoR 
(After  Rain.)— CEL 
(In  March.)— PC 
(Written  in  March— C. )—AE—CGd—LC 

March  for  the  Children.— E.   A.    Holbrook.— AD   (sl. 
ahr.  and  v>.  music. ) 
(Children's  Arbor  Day  March.) — AD 

March  of  Freedom,  The. — Theodore  Parker. — BLP 

March  of  Mind,  The.— J:  Loffland.— CS  12 

March  of  the  Chinese  Lanterns. — Anon. — WDM 

March  of  the  Rebel  Angel?. — J:  Milton.  See  Paradise 
Lost. 

March,  Song,  and  Drill  with  Dolls.  —  E.  C.  and  L.  J. 
Rook— DM 

March  to  Moscow,  The. — Rob't  Southey.— FEP — 
OM  (sl.  abr.) 

Marching  Along.— W:   B.    Bradbury. — AWB  —  PAPm 

Marching  Along.  (In  Cavalier  Tunes.) — Rob't  Brown- 
ing.- EHT— FEP— MRS— VA 

Marching  Song. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 

Marching  Still. — M.  Irving. — PAPm 

Marching  through  Georgia. — H.  C.  Work. — AWB — 
PAPm 

Marco  Bozzaris. — Fitz-Greene  Halleck. — AA — BNL — 
EDY  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  GN  —  HB  —  HBP  — 
HNS— OS  2— PPSr— TAV— WCLG  2 
(Sl.  a6r.)— BS  7— CS  1— OM— SM— TMD 
(Sel.)— SO— SS 
(Br.  seZ.)— AE— LLC 
(Patriot's  Death,  The— 6r.  sel.)—GP 

Marco's  Death.— Beverly  R.  Wood.— CS  27 

Marcus  Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Caesar.  —  W:  Shake- 
speare.    jSee  Julius  Caesar. 

Marcus  of  Rome  (in  Historic  Boys),  Sel.  fr.  (Fes- 
tival of  Mars,  The.)— Elbridge  S.  Brooks.— 
WR22 

Mare  Mediterranean. — J:  Nichol. — VA 

Margaret.- Walter  S.  Landor.— VA— YBF 
(Forsaken.)- VS 
("Mother,  I  cannot  mind  my  wheel.") — OB 

Margaret:    a  Pearl. — Eugene  Field. — EF 

Margaret  Fuller. — Amos  B.  Aloott. — AA 

Margaret  Gray. — C:  Lamb.     See  Rosamund  Grav. 

Margaret  Love  Peacock. — T:  L.  Peacock. — PGT  2 — 
VA 

Margaret's  Broken  Slate. — Anon. — DST 

Margaret's  Guest. — E.  E.  Lay. — CS  28 

Margaret's  Song  in  "Faust." — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. 
See  Faust. 

Margaritae  Sorori. — W:  E.  Henley. — OB 

Margarite  of  America,  A,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Solitary  Shep- 
herd's Song,  The.)— T:  Lodge.— EP 

Margery  Daw.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— CS  21 

Margery  Miller. — Anon. — CS  13 

Margie's  Thanksgiving. — E.  S.  Bumstead. — HS 

Margins.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 

Marguerite.— Evelyn  N.  Schroeder.- BS  22— PFP 

Marguerite. — J:  G.  Whittier. — WR  5 

Marguerite  of  France. — Felicia  D.  Hemans.^CS  22 — 
FMR— VSG 

Mariam,  the  Fair  Queen  of  Jewry,  Sel.  fr.     (Revenge 
of    Injuries — sel.     fr.     Act    IV.) — Lady    Eliz. 
Carew. — BNL 
(True  Greatness.)— YBF 

Marian. — T:  Ashe. — VA 

Marian  Drury. — Bliss  Carman. — VA 

Mariana. — Alfred  Tennyson. — AE  (br.  sel.) — OB 

Mariana  in  the  South. — Alfred  Tennyson. — HBP 


Marian's  Child. — Eliz.      B.      Browning.     See     Aurora 

Leigh. 
Mariar  in  Heaven. — Mather  D.  Kimball. — CS  36 
Maria's  Purse. — Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 
Marie  Antoinette,  Sel.  fr.     (Execution  of  Louis  XVI., 

The— dial. )— Anon.— DES 
Marie  Antoinette. — T:    Carlyle.     See  French   Revolu- 
tion, The. 
Marie    Antoinette    [Queen   of   France].     (Br.    sel.    fr. 
Reflections  on  the  French  Revolution.) — Ed- 
mund Burke.— OS  3  (a6r.)— SS— VSG 
(Apostrophe  to  the  Queen  of  France.) — PS 
(Queen  of  France  and  the  Spirit  of  (jhivalry.  The.) 
—TMD 
Marie  de  Meranie,  Sel.  fr.     (Parting  of  King  Philip  and 

Marie,  The.)— J:  W.  Marston.— VA 
Marigold.- H:  S.  Candee.— C  .  2 
Marigold.- R    Garnett. — BFV 
Marigold  Lane. — M.  E.  W. — TL 
Marigolds. — Susan  Hartley. — NV 
Marigolds. — J:  Keats. — HSS  1 

Marina  and  the  River-god.     W:  Browne.     See  Britan- 
nia's Pastorals. 
Mariner's  Description  of  a  Piano,  A. — Anon. — CS  19 
Mariner's  Dream,  The. — W:  Dimond. — BNL — FEP — 
HBP 
(Sailor-boy's  Dream,  The.)— CS  15— MYF— OM— 
SS 
Mariner's  Hymn. — Caroline  B.  Southey. — FP 
Mariners  of  England,  The.— T:  Campbell.— BFV 
("Ye  Mariners.") — LH 

(Ye  Mariners  of  England— C.)— BNL— BPB— BVC 
—  CEI — CGd— CR  — EHT  — EPs  — FEP  — 
GN— GP— HB  HBP  — LC  — OB  — OSl— 
PGT  1— PHS— PSR— WCLG  2— WEP  4 
Mariner's  Wife,  The. —  Jean  Adam  (at.  also  to  W:  J. 
Mickle).— FEP 
(SaUor's     Wife,     The.)— BFV— BNL— GN— GP— 

LC— PGT  1 
(There's  nae  Luck  about  the  House.) — BS  6 — EPs 
—HBP— WEP  3 
Marino    Faliero,     Doge   of    Venice,   Sela.    fr.  —  Lord 
Byron. 
Doge's    Sentence,    The.     (Fr.   Act    V.,   Sc.    1.)— 

MPD 
Dying  Speech  of  Marino  Faliero.     (Fr.  V.,  3.) — SS 

(Curse  of  Marino  Faliero,  The — br.  sel.) — CR 
Great  Examples,  Procreative  Virtue  of.     (Sel.  fr. 

.IL,2.)— SS 
Marino   Faliero    to    the     FVenetian]    Conspirators. 
(Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  2.)— SS— VSG 
"They  never  fail,"  etc.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  2.) — GG 
Mario.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— EDY 

Marion's  Dinner. — Edward  C.  Jones. — CS  15 — WR  10 
Marion's  Faith,  Sel.  fr.    (Ray's  Ride— seZ.  fr.  Ch.  XIV.) 

— C:King.— SC 
Marion's  Lament. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Mariposa  Lily,  The. — Ina  Coolbrith. — AA 
Mariquita,  the  Bandit's  Daughter. — Ella  S.  Cummins. 

— WR5 
Marit.— T:  Ashe.— VS 
Marit  and  I. — Anon. — BS  13 
Maritae  Suae.- W:  Philpot.— OB 
Marius  amidst  the  Ruins  of  Carthage. — Winthrop  M. 

Praed— OS  2 
Ma-jorie. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 

Marjorie's  Almanac.     (C.)—T:  B.  Aldrich.— NV— PoR 
— SM 
(Our  Almanac.) — AD 
Marjory  May. — Anon. — CS  24 
"Mark." — Ernest  McGaffey. — AA 
Mark  Antony    Scene. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    Julius 

Caesar. 
Mark  Antony  to  the  People  on  Caesar's  Death. — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Mark  of  the  Rose,  1  he. — H.  T.  Kingsbury.- CG  1 
Mark  Twain  and  a  [or  the]  Reporter. — S :  L.  Clemens. 

See  following. 
Mark  Twain  and  the  Interviewer. — S :  L.  Clemens. — 
BS  2— CS  12— KNE— SR  1 
(Encounter  with  an  Interviewer,  An — C.) — CR 
(Mark  Twain  and  a  [or  the]  Reporter — sl.  abr.) — 
PTS— SE 
Mark  Twain  as  a  Farmer. — S :  L.  Clemens. — DS 
Mark  Twain    Edits    an    Agricultural    Paper. — S:    L. 
Clemens.— CS  7  (abr.) 
(How  I   Edited  [H  )W  I  onC3  Edited — C]  an    Agri- 

ucltural  Pape-.) — SO 
(My  Editing— cond. )—WR  2 
Mark  Twain    Introduces   Himself. — S:   L.   Clemens. — 
DE— PS 
(Introduction,  An.) — BeR 


202 


TITLE  INDEX 


Martyr's 


Mark  Twain  on  Juvenile  Pugilists. — S :  L.  Clemens. — 

CS6 
Mark  Twain  on  the  19th  Century- — S:  L.  Clemens. — 

DCR 
Mark  Twain  on  the  Weather.     (Speech  on  the  Weather 
— O— S:  L.  Clemens.— CS  13 
(New  England  Weather.)— SA—WCLG  2  (al.  abr.) 
Mark  Twain  Tells  an  Anecdote  of  A.   Ward. — S:   L. 
Clemens.— CS  8 
(Mark  Twain's  Anecdote  on  A.  Ward.) — CRR 
Mark  Twain  Visits  Niagara.      (Visit  to  Niagara,  A — C). 
S:L.  Clemens.— CS  16 
(Day  at  Niagara,  A.) — BS  6 — SA 
Mark  Twain's  Account  of  "Jim  Smiley." — S:  L.  Clem- 
ens.    See  Jumping  Frog,  The. 
Mark  Twain's  Anecdote  on  A.  Ward. — S:  L.  Clemens. 
See  Mark  Twain  Tells    an    Anecdote  of    A. 
Ward.  ^    ^ 

Mark  Twain's  Description  of  European  Guides. — S:  L. 

Clemens.     <See  Innocents  Abroad. 
Mark  Twain's   First    Interview   with  Artemus   Ward. 
— S:  L.  Clemens.^CS  4— DDR 
(My    First     Interview    with    Artemus    Ward.) — 
MHR 
Mark  Twain's   "Great   Beef -contract."     <See   Facts  in 

the  Case  of  th^  Great  Beef  Contract,  The. 
Mark  Twain's  Mining  Story. — S:  L.  Clemens. — SR  5 
Mark  Twain's  Opinion  of  Chamber-maids.     (Concern- 
ing  (ihamber-maids — C.)  —  S:   L.    Clemens. — 
CS  2 
Mark  Twain's  Story  of  the  Bad   Little  Boy. — S:  L. 

Clemens.— CS  9 
Mark  Twain's  Story  of  the  Good  Little  Boy. — S:  L. 

Clemens.— CS  11 
Mark  Twain's  Watch.— S:  L.  Clemens.— CS  15 
Marlborough  at  Blenheim. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Cam- 
paign, The. 
Marlow  Madrigal,  A. — Jos.  Ashby-Sterry. — VA 
Marmara. — Clara  Barton. — TMR 
Marpessa,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Stephen  Phillips. — AVP 
Marmion,  Sela.  fr. — Walter  Scott. 

Camp,  The.     (Can.  IV.,  23-31.)— WEP  4 
Christmas  in  [the]  Olden  Time.     {Sel.  fr.  introd.  to 
VI.)— BNL— OS  2  (abr.)— FEO  {diff.  abr.) 
(Christmas — sel. )— POS 

(Christmas  Eve  in  the  Olden  Time — abr.)- FTR 
(Christmas  in  England — sel.) — GN 
(Old  English  Christmas,  The— aftr. )—BVC 
Constance  de  Beverly.  (II.,  17— 33— cond.) — WR  1 

(Convent  Scene  from  Marmion — abr.) — MR 
Death  of  Marmion  [The].     (VI.,  28— S3— abr.)— 

SO— SS  (sel.)—VSG  (abr.) 
Flodden     [Field].       (VI.,    22-32  — a&r.)  — BNL  — 
LH  (abr.) 

(Sei.)- EHT— TMD 
(Battle  of  Flodden,  The— 8eZ.)—GP 
In  Memoriam:     Nelson,  Pitt,  Fox.     (Sel.  fr.  introd. 
to  I.)— LH 
(Nelson,  Pitt,  Fox.)— OB 
(Pitt  and  Fox— «eZ.)— EHT 
Lochinvar.     (Lady  Heron's  Song — V.,  12.) — BNL 
_BVC— CEL— CR— CSS— EPs  —  FEP  —  GN 
—  HB  —  HBP  —  HSS  2  —  IR  —  LC  —  LH  — 
MK— MRS  — OS2— PC  — PEB3  — PPSr  — 
SAE  (br.  «ei.)— SS— VSG— WCLI  2 
(Lochinvar's   Ride.)— BS  2— CS  3— OM— SPE— 
(Young    Lochinvar. )— BFV— BPB— CGd— FTR 
HNS— PHS— PSR 
Marmion.     (VI.,  13— 15.)— FP 

(Marmion  and  Douglas — si.  abr.) — BNL — CS  7 — 
LLC— WCLG  1 

(Abr.)— CR  —  EA  —  FTR  —  HB  —  HNS  — 
— KNE— OM— SM— SPE 
(Marmion  Taking  Leave  of  Douglas — abr.) — SS 
(Parting  of  Douglas  and  Marmion.) — OS  2  (abr.) 
— PPSr  (si.  abr.) 
Norham  Castle.     (I.,  1—8.)— BNL 
Where    Shall    the    Lover    Rest?     (III.,  10,  11.)— 
BPB— FEP— PGT  1— PYO 
Marmion  and  Douglas. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marmion. 
Marquis  de  La  Fayette.     (Sel.  fr.  Lafayette,  the  Faith- 
ful One.)— C:  Sumner.— WR  10 
Marquis  of  Lome's  Visit  to  the  North-west,  The. — W: 

Kirby.— TCV 
Marquis  of  Lossie,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Mr.  Graham  and  Lady 
Clementina — Ch.  LX.,  si.  abr.) — G:  Macdonald. 
—FTR 
Marriage. — S :  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Marriage.     (Fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S:  Butler. 

— HPE 
Marriage,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Marriage. — S :  Rogers.     See  Human  Life. 


Marriage  h  La  Mode.     (A  Tetralogy.)— G:  A.  Baker. 

Jr.- PLD  ^^^ 

Marriage  Ceremony,  The. — Anon. — BDD — CRR 
Marriage    Hymn. — Shakespeare    and     Fletcher.     See 

Two  Noble  Kinsmen,  The. 
Marriage  of    Geraint,     The.— Alfred    Tennyson.     See 

Idylls  of  the  King. 
Marriage  of  Santa  Claus,  The.— Anon. — SK.  3 
Marriage  of    the    Dwarfs,    The. — Edmund    Waller.— 

WEP  2 
(Of  the  Marriage  of  the  Dwarfs— C.)— HPE 
Marriage  of  the  Flowers,  The.— S.  H.  M.  Byers.— AD— 

DR 
Marriage  of  Tirzah  and  Ahirad,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — T:  B. 

Macaulay. — SAE 
Marriage  Ring,  A.— G:  Crabbe.— OB 
Marriage  Tour,  A. — S.  J.  Pardessus. — Ch  35 
Married  by  the  New  Justice  of  the  Peace. — Anon. — 

MND  ,^. 

Married  Love-letter,  A.— Anon.— PR— YA 

Married  Lover,  The. — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel 

in  the  House,  The. 
Married  Man  and  the  Bachelor,  The. — Anon.— bli  4 
Married    State,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

Married  to  Josiah  Allen.— Marietta  Holley.     See  My 

Opinions  and  Betsy  Bobbet's. 
Marry  me,  Darlint,  To-night.— W.  W.  Fmk.— AWH— 

BS13 
Marrying  a  Poetess. — Anon. — MAD 
Marrying  for  Money. — H.  E.  McBride. — SD 
Marseillaise,  The.— Rouget  de  I'lsle.— OS  2 
(SI.  abr.)— BNL— BS  24 
(French  Nation.al  Hymn.) — GP 
(Marseilles  Hymn.) — SR  8 
Marseilles  Hymn. — Rouget  de  I'Isle.     See  foregoing. 
Marsh  Song— Sunrise.— Eugene  Field.— -GH 
Marsh  Symphony,  A.— Roy  L.  M'CardelL— WR  20 
Marshal   Ney's    Last    Charge    at    Waterloo. — Joel    T. 

Headley.     See  Napoleon  and  his  Marshals. 
Marshes    of    Glynn,   The. — Sidney    Lanier. — AA — 

TAS  (br.  sel.) 
Marston  Moor. — Winthrop  M.  Praed. — MYF 

(Sir    Nicholas    at    Marston  Moor  —  C.)  —  ED Y — 

PEB3  ^   ^       ^, 

Marsyas. — Lewis  Morris.     See  Epic  of  Hades,  The. 
Marsyas.- C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— VA 
Martha.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.- TAS 
Martha,  Song  fr.     (Gypsy's  Warning,  The.)— Flotow 

and  St.  Georges. — KER 
Martha  or  Mary? — C.  A.  Mason. — TAS 
Marthy  Virginia's    Hand.— G:    P.    Lathrop. — TAV— 

WR4  ^     .  , 

Martial  Friendship. — W:  Shakespeare.    See  Conolanus. 
Martial  Music. — S:  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Martin  Chuzzlewit,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 

Quarrel  of  Sairey  Gamp  and  Betsey  Prig.     (Sel.  fr. 

Ch.  XLIX.— ad.  as  dial.)— MFD 
Ruth  Pinch's  Housekeeping  and  what  Came  of  it. 

(Sel.  fr.  Chs.  XXXIX.  and  LIII.)— BS  23 
St-rm  'M  Sea.    (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XV.)— CS  27 

(Wild  Night  at  Sea,  A.)— BS  17 
Unsuccessful   Attempt   to    liaise   the  Wind,    An. 

(Sel.  fr.  Ch.  IV.— orr.  as  dial.)— MFD 
When     Duty    Begins.      (Sel.    fr.  Ch.    XXXI.)  — 

CSIO 
Martin  Luther.— C.  P.  Krauth.— TMD 
Martin  Luther  at  Potsdam. — Barry  Pain. — NA 
Martin  Luther's  Letter  to   his  Little  Son.      (Arr.) — 

Martin  Luther. — OS  1 
Martin  Relph.— R:  Browning.— WR  19 
Martin  to  his  Man.     (Fr.  Deuteromelia.) — Anon. — NA 
Martin's  Puzzle. — George  Meredith. — HSS  2 
Martin's  Reward. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Martyr  and  the  Conqueror,  The. — H:  W.  Beecher.    See 

Abraham  Lincoln. 
Martyr  Chief,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Ode  Recited 

at  the  Harvard  Commemoration. 
Martyr  of  the  Arena,  The. —  Epes  Sargent. — CS  21 — 

NPS— YP 
Martyr  President,   The — Henry   Ward   Beecher.     See 

Abraham  Lincoln. 
Martyr    to    Science;    or.    Wanted,  a  Confederate,    A. 

(Farce.)— F.  Weston.— BC 
Martyrdom  of  St.  Lucy,  The. — J:  M.  Neale.— EDY 
Martyrdom  of  the  Archbishop  of  Paris,  The. — J:  M. 

Neale— EDY 
Martyrs,  The. — Emily  Dickinson. — TAS 
Martyr's  Hymn,  The. — Martin  Luther  (tr.  by  W:  J: 

Fox).— BNL— HBP 
Martyrs  of  the  Maine,  The. — R.  Hughes. — PAPm 
Martyrs  of  Uganda,  The. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  26 
Martyr's  Memorial. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — AA 


203 


Martyr-spy 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Martyr-spy,  The.     (.Scl.  fr.  Address  at  Unveiling  Hale 

Statue.)— C:  D.  Warner.— TMR 
Marullus  to  the  Roman  Populace. — W:  Shakespeare. 

iSee  Julius  Ca;sar. 
Marvel  of  Marvels. — Christina    Georgina    Rossetti. — 

OB  ♦ 

Mary. — C:  Tennyson-Turner.— PGT  2 
Mary — A  Reminiscence. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — PGT  2 
Mary  Alice  Smith  (Where  is  Mary  Alice  Smith? — C). — 

Jas.  W.  Riley.— BS  19  (abr.) 
Mary  Ambree. — Anon,     (/n  Percy's  Reliques   of   An- 
cient English  Poetry.) — BPB 
Mary  Ames. — Anon. — NA 
Mary  and  Dinah. — Lizzie  J.  Rook. — PS — TT 
Mary  and  her  Pet  Squirrel. — Anon. — AD 
Mary  and  the  Swallow. — Marion  Douglas. — PS 
Mary  Ann's  Child.— W:  Barnes.— CGd 
Mary  Ann's  Escape. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — CS  29 
Mary  Ann's  Wedding. — Anon. — BeR 
Mary  Arden. — Eric  Mackay. — VA 
Mary  at  the  Sepulchre.  —  Edwin  Arnold.     <See   Light 

of  the  World,  The. 
Mary  Booth.— T:  W.  Parsons.— AA 
Mary  Butler's  Ride.— B:  F.  Taylor.— BAB 
Mary  Donnelly. — W:  AUingham.— CR— EPs 

(Lovely  Mary  Do  nelly.)— BNL—FEP— HBP— VA 

— VS 
Mary  Ellen  Attends  a  School  of  Elocution. — Mary  S. 

Hopkins.— WR  26 
Mary  Jane. — Anon. — NA 
Mary  Jane  and  I. — Annie  Rothwell. — DR 
Mary  Macneil. — Erskine  ConoUy. — FEP 
Mary  Magdalene.     At  the  Door  of  Simon  the  Pharisee. 

— Dante  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Mary  Maloney's     Philosophy.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MPD 

— NPS— YP 
Mary    Morison.    (C.)  — Rob't   Burns.— BNL— CEL— 

FEP  — GP— MBL  — OB— PGT  1— WEP  3— 

YBF 
(D^votio  .)— LH 
Mary  O'Connor,  the  Volunteer's  Wife. — Mary  A.  Den- 

ison — CD 
(Irishwoman's  Lament,  The.) — PR 
(Irishwoman's   Letter,   The.)— CS   3— LLC— SA 
(Volunteer's  Wife,  The.)— CR— MMR 
(Versions  vary  al.) 
Mary  of  Castle  Gary. — Hector  Macneil. — AE — FEP 
Mary  of  tbe  Wild  Moor.     (With  music.) — Anon. — NPS 

— YP 
Mary,  Queen  of  Scots.     (SI.  abr.)—7i.   G.  BeU.— NPS 

—PR  (si.  abr.)—YP 
(Abr.  and  pHv.  diff. )—CS  9— DS 
Mary  Queen  of  Scots. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — PGT  2 
Mary  Queen  of  Scots. — W:  Wordsworth. — EDY 
Mary  Stuart.  Sel.fr.  (Execution  of  Queen  Mary — sel. 

fr.  Ch.  XXXIV.) — Alphonse  de  Lamartine. — 

BS  11 
Mary  Stuart,  Sels.  fr. — Friedrich  Schiller  (tr.   by  Jos. 

MeUish). 
Mary  Stuart.     (Act  III.,  Sc.  2.)— BS  6— CDD 

(Mary  Stuart,  Queen  of  Scotland.^ — PS 
Mary  Stuart.     (Act    III.,   Sc.^4.)— FTR— SR   6— 

WR  11        .  ^ 

Mary  Stuart,  Queen  of  Scotland. — Friedrich  Schiller. 

See  forenoing. 
Mary  the  Cook-maid's  Letter  to  Doctor  Sheridan  — 

Jonathan  Swift.— THP 
Mary  the  Maid  of  the  Inn.— R:  Southey.— CGd— CS  11 

— DS 
Mary  the  Mother  of  Jesus. — Nathaniel  P.  Willis. — SR  3 
"Mary,   the   mother    sits  on  the   hill." — Langdon  E. 

Mitchell.— TAS 
Maryland.— J.  R.  Randall.— EPs 

(My  Maryland.)— AA— ASL— AWB— GP 
Maryland  Battalion,  The.— J:  W.  Palmer.— AA— BAB 

—EDY 
Maryland  Yellow-throat,  The.— H:  Van  Dyke.— ASL 

—TMR 
Mary's  Cradle  Song.— W:  C.  Gannett.— TAS— YBT 

(Mary's  Manger  Song.) — FAS 
Mary's  Diminutive  Sheep. — Anon. — CS  10 
Maty's  Dream. — J:  Lowe. — PYO 
Mary's  Lamb. — Sarah  J.  Hale. — PC 
Mary's  Night  Ride. — G:  W.  Cable.     See  Dr.  Sevier. 
Mary's  Singing-lesson. — Anon. — WR  2 
Mary's  Story  of  the  Crucifixion. — Edwin  Arnold.     See 

Light  of  the  World,  The. 
"Ma's  Attic." — Forrest  Crissey. — HBR 
Mascha. — Ivan  TourgenieflF. — WR  8 
Masher,  The.— C:  G.  Leland.— AWH— THP 
Mask  of  Anarchy,  The,     Br.  sel.  fr.  ("Men  of  England. 

heirs  of  glory" — sts.  37,  38.)— Percy  B.  Shelley. 

—YBF 


Mask  of  Death,  The. — Paul  Hamilton  Hayne. — TAS 

Masked  BaU,  The.— Anon.— SED 

Masks.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 

Masks.— R:  Burton.— TAV 

Masonic  Emblems. — Anon. — CS  2 

Masque,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  28 

Masque  and  the  Reality,  The. — W:  Rounseville  Alser. 

— BS  22 
Masque  at  the  Marriage  of  the  Lord  Hayes,    Sel.  fr. 

(Triumph    Now — song    IV.) — T:   Campion. — 

eht 

Masque  of  Alfred,  Sel.  fr.     Jas.  Thomson.     See  Rule 

Britannia. 
Masque  of  Oberon,  Br.  sel.  fr.    (Buz  [or  Buzz],  Quoth 

the  Blue  Fly.)— ELP— NA 
Masque  of  Pandora,  The,  Br.  sels.  fr. — H:  W.  Long- 
fellow. 
"I  do  not  love  thee  less  for  what] is  done."     (Fr. 

Pt.  VIII.)— BIL 
Voices  of  the  Forests,  The.     (Fr.  Pt.  VI.)— AD 
Masque  of  Pleasure  and  Virtue  (Pleasure  Reconciled 

to  Virtue — C.) — Songs  1,2,  3. — Ben   Jonson. 

—EPs 
Masque  of  the  Gentlemen  of  Gray's  Inn  and  the  Inner 

Temple,  A,  Sels.  fr.     (Sons::    "Shake  off  your 

heavy     trance.") — Ben    Jonson. — EDY     (1st 

song) — EPs  (1st  and  2nd  songs  and  sel.  fr.  4th.) 
Masque  of  the   Inner  Temple,  A. — W:  Browne.     Sec 

Inner  Temple  Masque,  The. 
Masque  of  the  Metamorphosed  Gipsies,  A,  Sels.  fr. — 

B  II  Jonson. 
"Fairy  beam  upon  you,  The." — ELP 

(Song  from  Gypsies'  Metamorphoses — 2nd  song.) 

—EPs 
(Wish,  A.)— LC— OS  1 
Song:  "The  owl  is  abroad." — EPs 
Masque  of  the   New  Year,  The. — Elsie  M.  Wilbor. — 

DR 
Masque  of  the  Seasons,  A. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Masquerade,  A. — Anon. — PG — WCL 

(Only  Playing.)— BR  (si.  abr.)— CS  22 
Masquerading.       (Dial.) — E.   C.   and    L.   J.   Rook. — 

YFE 
Masques,  Sel.  fr.     (Sel.  fr.  song  in  Time  Vindicated.) — 

Ben  Jonson. — BNL 
Mass,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel. The. 
Mass'    Crawford,    Isam,    and    the    Deer. — Harry    S. 

Edwards.     See  Two  Runaways,  The. 
Mass  Meeting  at  Saratoga,  Sel.  fr.     (Log-cabin,  The.) 

— Dan'l  Webster.— FD  1 
Massachusetts. — H:  C.  Lodge. — SC 

(Tribute  to  Massachusetts,  A.) — NC 
Massachusetts. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Reply  to  Hayne, 

The. 
Massachu.setts  and    South    Carolina. — Dan'l   Webster. 

<See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The. 
Massachusetts  Lme,  The. — Rob't  Lowell. — AWB 
Massacre  at  Scio,  The. — W:  CuUen  Bryant. — EDY 
Massacre  of  the  Macpherson. — W:  E.  Aytoun. — FEP 

— HBP— VA 
Massacre  of   Zoroaster,  The. — Fs.   Marion   Crawford. 

See  Zoroaster. 
Massa's    in  de   Cold   [or  the    Cold,    Cold]   Ground. — 

Stephen  C.  Foster.— AA— TAV 
Massasauga,  The. — Hamlin  Garland. — AA 
Master. — A.  Conan  Doyle. — WR  26 
Master  and  Man. — Anon. — NA 
Master  Character  of  Victor  Hugo,  The. — J.  C.  Sellers, 

Jr.- SR  11 
Master  Johnny's  Next-door  Neighbor. — Fs.  Bret  Hartc. 

— BS  9— CS  19 
Master  of  the  Situation. — Anon. — MND 
Master  Sky-lark,  Songs  fr. — J :  Bennett. 

Sky-lark's  Song,  The.     (Fr.  Ch.  XXXVI.)— AA 
Song  of  the  Hunt,  The.     (Fr.  Ch.  I.)— AA 
Master  Sleeps,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Master  Spirit,  The.     (Br.   sel.   fr.   The  Conspiracy  of 

Charles,  Duke  of  Byron,  Act  III.,  Sc.  1.)— G: 

Chapman. — EPs 
Master  Squirrel. — Anon. — CPL 
"Master!  to  do  great  work  for  thee,  my  hand."    (Life 

Mosaic — C.) — Frances  R.  Havergal. — GG 
Master-builder,  The.— Isabella  V.  Crawford.— TCV 
Master-chord,  The. — W:  Caldwell  Roscoe. — VA 
Master-knot,  The. — Omar  Khayys'im  (Fitzgerald).    See 

RubAiyiit. 
Masterpiece   of  Brother  Felix,  The.— R:  E:  White.— 

CS27 
Master's  Invitation,  The. — A.  D.  F.  Randolph. — AA 
Masters  of  the  Situation.— Jas.  T.  Fields. — BS  7 — SPE 
Master's  Pen — A  Confession. — Anon. — SR  13 
Master's  Touch,  The.— Anon.— BS  26— CS  36 


204 


TITLE  INDEX 


May 


Master's  Touch,  The.— Horatius  Bonar.— BNL— BS  7 

— GP— HDL— SSS— VA 
(God's  Hand— a6r.)— SSS 
Master's  Work,  The. — W:  Ordway  Partridge. — TAS 
Mat  and  Hal  and  I. — Onlie  Ama  Snow. — CS  14 
Match,   A. — Algernon   C:   Swinburne.— BNL — FEP— 

HBP— PYO— TFY— VA— VS 
Match  and  Shingle  Social. — Anon. — EuE 
Match  of  Love,  The. — Anon. — FLS 
Match-boy,  The.     (Tab.)- Anon.— COS— NPS— PP— 

YP 
Matches  and  Overmatches. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Re- 
ply to  Hayne,  The. 
Match-making  Mamma,  The. — Anon. — WR  7 
Mater  Amabilis. — Emma  La.'^arus. — TMR 
Mater  Dolorosa. — W:   Barnes.     See   Mother's   Dream, 

The. 
Mater  Dolorosa.- C.  C.  Hahn. — HDL 
Mater  Se\  era. — Stephen  L.  Gwynn. — TIP 
Mathematical. — Lehigh  Burr. — CG  2 
Mathematics  and  Physics.     {Sel.  ad.  fr.  Genesis  of  Sci- 
ence.)— Herbert  Spencer. — SE 
Matildy  Goes  to  Meetin'. — L:  Eisenbeis. — CS  33 
Matildy's  Beau. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Matin  Song. — T:  Heywood.     See  Hape  of  Lucrece,  The. 
Matinal  Musings.     (C.)— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 

(Next  Morning.)— CS  20 
Matins.— W:  H.  Burleigh.— TAS 
Matins  (Mattens,  or  Morning  Prayer — C.) — Rob't  Her- 

rick.— EPs 
(Morning  Prayer — abr.) — YBF 
Matins  [at  St.  Mary's]. — Edna  Dean  Proctor. — CS  21 — 

OS  2 
Matrimonial  Adventures   of   Dick   Macnamara.     (Sel. 

ad.  fr.  Hector  O'Halloran.) — W.  H.  Maxwell. — 

DI 
Matrimonial  Advertisement,    The. — Clara   Augusta. — 

CS  9— SD 
Matrimonial  Bugs  and  the  Travelers,  The. — Anon. — 

HR 
Matrimonial  Controversy,  A. — Anon. — WR  16 

(Gimlet  vs.  Corkscrew.)— SR  13 
Matrimonial  Happiness. — J:  Lapraik. — FEP 
Matrimonial  Mix,  A. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  35 

Matrimonial  Tiff,  A. Pickering. — MDD 

Matrimony. — Anon. — CS  19 

M.itrons  and  Maids. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 

Matrons  and  Maids.     (Fr.     Beppo.) — Lord     Byron. — 

THP 
Matt.  F.  Ward's  Trial  for  Murder. — J:  J.  Crittenden. — 

CS  18— NPS— YP 
Mattens. — Rob't  Herrick.     See  Matins. 
Matter  of  Duty,  A. — Anthony  Hope.     See  Dolly  Dia- 
logues, The. 
Matter  of  Opinion,  A.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Matter  of  Words,  A. — Anon. — WR  20 
Matthew  the  Miner. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — WR  26 
Matthew  XXV.— (Bt6/e.)— SPE 
Mattie's  Retort. — Anon. — WR  4 
Mattie's  Wants   and    Wishes. — Grace   Gordon. — DS — 

HP  (si.  o6r.)— NPS— YA— YP 
Matumus'  Address  to  his  Band. —  E:  Spencer. — CS  17 
Maud.— H:  S.  Leigh.— THP 
Maud,  Sels.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

Come  into  the  Garden,  Maud.     (Pt.  I., 22.) — BNL 

— FEP— HBP— IR— VA 
(Garden  Song,  The.)— EPs— PHS 
("I  said  to  the  rose,  etc." — br.  ael.) — AE 
(Maud.)— OB 

(Sel.)— FTA— on 
"For  I  trust,  if  an  enemy's  fleet  came  yonder  round 

by  the  hill."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.,  1.)— LH 
Maud.— EPs  (Pt.  I.,  5.)— WEP  4  (Pt.  L,  18.) 
"O,  let  the  solid  ground."     (Pt.  I.,  11.)     PGT  2 
"O  [lor.  Oh],  that  'twere  possible."     (Pt.  II.,  4.)— 

AVP— HBP— PGT  2 
(Br.  seZ.)- OB— YBF 
P  ayer.  The.     (Pt.  X.,  V.)— EPs 
Shell,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  2.)— GN— OS  1— SN 

— TMD— TMR— VA 
.  Maud  Muller.     (Tab.  on  Whittier's  poem.) — Anon. — 
BS  9— TCP 
Maud  Muller. — Hans  Breitman.     See  Maud  Muller  in 

Dutch. 
Maud  Muller.— J:     G.     Whittier.— AA— AP— BNL— 

BS  3  —  CS  1  —  FEP  —  FP  —  FTR  —  HBP— 

HNS  (si.  o6r.)— MR— SA 
Maud  Muller.     (A  New  Version. ) — Anon. — DLS 
Maud  Muller,  Chinese  Version  of. — Jos.  B.  Smiley. — 

CS30 
Maud  Muller  Drill.— Anon.— WDM 
Maud  Muller  [in  Dutch]. —  Hans  Breitman. — BDD — 

BeR— DFY— DRR 


Maud  Muller's  Moving. — Anon. — SR  3 

Maude  and  the  Cricket. — Anon. — NV 

Maude  Clare.— Christina  Rossetti.— FEP — PEB  3 

Maud's  Birthday.— Anon.— COS— PP— PS  (si.  abr.) 

Maud's  Command;  or,  Yielding  to  Temptation. — H.  E. 

McBride.— MTD 
Maureen. — J:  Todhunter.— OB 

Maurice  de  Gu^rin. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — AA — TAS 
Maurine,  Sel.  fr.     (My  Ships — verses  fr.  Pt.  III.) — Ella 

W.Wilcox.— SRI  1 
Mawgan  of  Melhuach. — Rob't  S.  Hawker. — VA 
Maximilian. — J:  G.  Saxe. — EDY 

Maxims  of  George  Washington.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  Farewell 
Address  and  fr.   First    Inaugural  Address.) — 
DFR 
Maxims  to  Guide  a  Young  Man. — Anon. — KNE 
Maximus.     (Abr.) — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — SSS 

("I  hold  him  great,  who  for  love's  sake.") — GG 
May.— Anon.— AD  (in  Maiden  Spring,  The.)— HSS  1 
May.— Anon.— DST 
May.— Anon.— PEO 
May.— R.  M.  Alden.— NV 

May. Clarke.— AD 

May.— H.  S.  Cornwell.— TAV 

May.— Helen  B.  Curtis.- NV 

May. — Danske  C.  Dandridge. — TAS 

May.— Marg.  Deland.— YBT 

May.— J.  C.  Harrison. — CG  3 

May. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Vision  of  Delight,  The. 

May.— W:  G.  Park.— AD 

May.— Jas.  Gates  Percival.— BNL— HBP 

(Reign  of  May,  The— C.)— FEP 
May. — Eben  E.  Rexford. — AD 
May. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
May.— C.  R.  Saunders.— CG  3 
May.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL—PoR 
May. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
May. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Shepheardes  Calendar, 

The. 
May.— Edward,  Lord  Thurlow.— OB  (abr.) 

(Song  to  May.)— FEP— HBP 
May.— T:  Watson.— FEP 
May  and  Death. — Rob't  Browning. — WEP  4 
May  and  Love. — Stopford  A.  Brooke. — BIL 
May  Bug,  The. — Annette  von  Brandis. — WR  12 
May  Celebration. — Anon.     See    May    Celebration    for 

Young  Children. 
May  Celebration.— Anon.— DFR— KJ  (I.) 
May  Celebration. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
May  Celebration  (II.). — Mrs.   Russell     Kavanaugh. — 

KJ 
May  Celebration  [for  Young  Children]. — Anon. — DFR 

— KNS 
May  Colvin. — Anon. — BB 

May  Court  in  Greenwood. — Laura  U.  Case. — CS  14 
May  Day.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
May  Day. — G :  Darley.     iSee  Sylvia ;  or.  The  May  Queen. 
May  Day. — Emma  A.  Opper. — AD 
May  Day.     iSee  also  May-day. 
May  Day — a  Moving  Drama. — Florence  Howe  Hall. — 

ASD 
May  Days. — Anon. — WR  14 
May,  1840.     (Sonnets  on  the  Seasons,  V.)  —  Hartley 

Coleridge.— WEP  4 
May  Flower,  The. — HopestiU  Goodwin. — AD 
May  in  the  Green-wood. — Anon. — OB 
May  Margaret. — Th(5ophile  Marzials. — VA — YBF 
May  Memories. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
May  Morning,  A. — T:  Hood. — AD 

(Song— O— HBP— VS 
May  Morning.— J:  Milton.— AD— BNL— CEL  —  YBF 

(On  May  Morning.)— CGd—LC 

(Song:  A  May  Morning.) — POS 

(Song  on  May  Morning— CJ—ELP— FEP— GN— 
HBP— OS  2— PYO— SE 
May  Morning. — Eliza  L.  Sproat. — AD 
May  Morning. — Celia  Thaxter. — AA 
May  Morning  Lesson,  A. — Anon. — AD 
May  Queen,  The.     (Dial.)— Anon. — FAD 
May  Queen,  The.     (Diff.  dial.)— Anon,— FDY 
May  Queen,  The.— Alfred    Tennyson.— BNL— CS   2— 
FEP— HBP— PC— SE  (br.  sel.) 
(Cond.)— FP— TCP  (w.  tab.) 
(Sel.)— AD— OS  1— PHS 

May  Queen— Conclusion.     (Concl. — si.  abr.) — BS  2 

New  Year's  Eve.  (Br.  sel.) — SE 
May  Song,  A. — Anon. — AD 

May  Song,  A. — Mary  M.  Lamb,  Lady  Currie. — VA 
May  Song,  A. — Anna  M.  Pratt. — AD 
"May    sun    sheds    an    amber    light.    The." — W:  C. 

Bryant. — AA 
"May  the  glad  dawn." — Anon  — FHS  (abr.) 

(Easter  Greeting.)— TFS 


205 


May 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


May  30.  1893.— J:  K.  Bangs.— AA 

May  to  April. — Philip  Freneau. — AD 

"May  you  never  say  of  a  brother  dear." — Phoebe  Gary. 

See  To  the  Children. 
May-children. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
May-day.— Anon.— DJ*—WR  17  (br.  sel.) 
May-day.  Sd.  fr.     (April  [and  May].) — Ralph  W.  Em- 
erson.—GN—POS 
May-day. — Rob't  Herrick. — CEL 

(Corinna's  Going  a-Maying—C. )— EP— EPs— FEP 

— OB— WEP  2 
(Corinna's  Maying.)— OEL—PGT  1 
(Going  a-Maying.)— GN— LH 
May-day.     See  also  May  Day. 
May-day  Song.     (Old  English.)— A^on— OS  2 
(Hitchen  May-day  Song,  The.)— CGd 
(Kitchen  May-day  Song — abr.) — EDY 
May-day  Sports,     (rob.)- Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Maydes  Metamorphosis,  The,  Sel.  fr.      (Song  of  the 
Fairies— /r.  Act  II..  Sc.  2.)— J:  Lyly.— FEP 
(Urchin's  Dance,  The.)— ELP 
Majrflower,  The.— Erastus  W.  Ellsworth. — AA — WR   0 
Mayflower,  The. —  E:  Everett.    See  First  Settlement  of 

New  England,  The. 
Mayflower,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Mayflower,  The.— J:  M'Pherson.- TCV 
Mayflower.— .1:  B.  O'Reilly.— AA 
Mayflowers.  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— NV 
Maymie's  Story  of  Red  Riding  Hood. — Jas.  W.  Riley. 

— CW 
Mayonette  River,  The.     {Tulane  Collegian.) — CG  3 
Mayor  of  Scuttleton,  The. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — NA 
May-pole,  The.— Anon.— WR  1 
Maypole,  A.     (Riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
May-pole  Dance,  The. — Anon. — DFR 
May-pole  Drill,  No.  I. — A.  E.  Hurst. — ID 
May-pole  Drill,  No.  II. — Marguerite  W.  Morton. — ID 
May's  Apple-tree. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
May's  Five  Dollar  Note. — Anon. — HVD 
May's  Flower.— Anon. — COS — PP 

Mazeppa    (C). — Lord  Byron.     (.Diff.  br.  aels.) — AE — 
BNL— FP— HNS— SE 
(Mazeppa's  Ride — cond.) — MRS 
Mazeppa's  Ride. — Lord  Byron.     See  foregoing. 
Mazurka  of  Chopin's,  A.— C:  F.  Richardson. — WR  2 
Mazzini. — Laura  C.  Redden. — BNL — GP 
Me  and  Bill.— Rob't  Overton.— CS  26 
Me  and  [or  an']  Jim.     {Chicago  TtTnes. )— BS  20— WR  7 
Me  and  Jones.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  26 
Me  and  my  Dog.     {Harper's  Weekly.) — CRR 
Me  and  Thee.— (Tr.  by)  EUice  Hopkins.— FLS 
Meadow  Lands,  The.— Arthur  W.  H.  Eaton.— TCV 
Meadow  Lark,  The. — Hamlin  Garland. — AA 
Meadow  Larks. — Ina  Coolbrith. — GMS 
Meadow  Road,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Meadow  Talk. — Caroline  Leslie. — GMS 
iMeagher's  Defense. — T:  F.  Meagher. — SC 

(On  Being  Found  Guilty  of  Treason.) — CS  3 
Mean  Man,  A. — Anon. — PS 

(Gunner  and  the  Bird.  The.)— COS— PP 
Meaning  of  the   Flag,   The.  —  H :  W.    Beecher.     See 

National  Flag,  The. 
Meaning  of  the  Four  Centuries,  The. — Anon. — WR  10 
Meaning  of  Victory,  The.— C:  Devens.— TMR 
Means  of  Acquiring     Distinction, — Sydney     Smith. — 

PEO 
Means  to  Attain  Happy  Life,  The.      (Martial — tr.  by) 
H:  Howard,   Earl  of  Surrey.— BNL— ELP— 
FEP— HBP— OB— WEP  1 
Measure  for  Measure.  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Each  and  All.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  I..  Sc.  1.)— EPs 

(Measure  for  Measure,  Br.  sel.  fr.) — BNL 
Frustra.     {Songfr.  IV.,  1 — also  contained  in  Beau- 
mont and  Fletcher's  The  Bloody  Brother,  V., 
2.)— PGT  1 
(Madrigal.)— FTA 
(Measure  for  Measure,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  1,  Sel.  fr.) — 

ELP 
(Song  from  "Measure  for  Measure.") — ES 
("Take,  O,  take  those  lips  away.") — EPs — OB — 
YBF 

(W.    add.    St. — form    found    in    The    Bloody 
Brother. )— BNL— GP— HBP 
Life  and  Death.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  1.)— EPs 
Sister  Pleads  for  a  Brother's  Life,  A.     (II.,  2 — 
abr.)— CS  10 
Abuse  of  Authority.     {Br.  sel.) — BNL 

(Merciful  Heaven! — abr.) — EPs 
Prayers.     {Br.  sel.) — EPs 
Measure  for  Measure. — Harriet    P.    Spofford. — BIL — 

FTA 
Measure  of  Beauty.  The.     (Give  Beauty  all  her  Right 
— O— T:  Campion.— ELP 


Measure  of  the  Perfect  Life.  The. — Ben  Jonson.     See 

To  the  Immortal  Memory  and  Friendship  of 

that  Noble  Pair,  Sir  Lucius  Gary  and  Sir  Henry 

Morrison. 

"Measures  not  Men." — G:  Canning. — SS 

Measuring  the  Baby. — Emma  Alice  Brown.  —  CS  12 — 

PR— YA 
Mechanical  Epoch,  The. — J.  P.  Kennedy. — SS 

(Age  of  Work,  The.)— BLP 
Medal,  The.  A  Satire  against  Sedition.    (C.) — J:  Dry- 
den. 
(Epistle  to  the  Whigs.)- ESs 
Meddlesome  Matty. — [Ann  and]  Jane  Taylor.  —  BVC 

—OS  1 
Medical  Man,  A.      {Comedietta.)— W:  S.  Gilbert.— DT 
Medieval  Eventide  Song. — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
Mediocrity  in  Love  Rejected  (Song — C). — T:  Carew. 
(Give  me  more  Love  [or  more  Disdain].) — BNL — 
FLS— FTA— YBF 
Meditation.— S.  G.  Bulfinch.— TAS 
Meditation  for  his  Mistress,  A. — Rob't  Herrick. — OB 
Meditation  in  Winter. — W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Meditation  upon  a  Broomstick,  A. — Jonathan  Swift. — 

ESs 
Meditations  of  a  Hindoo  Prince  and  Skeptic. — Sir  Alf  re<l 

C.  Lyall.     See  following. 
Meditations  of  a  Hindu  Prince. — Sir  Alfred  C.  Lyall. — 
AVP— VA 
(Hindoo's  Search  for  Truth,  A. — abr.) — GP 
(Meditations  of  a  Hindoo  Prince  and  Skeptic.) — 
HBP 
Meditations  on  Immortality. — Adair  Welcker. — BS  19 
Medley:     "Oh  dear!  Oh  dear!  Oh  dear  me,  suz!"  etc. 

— Emma  Dunning  B-nks — BH 
Medley,  A:     "On  Linden,  when  the  sun."  etc. —  Eliz. 

M.  Irving.— CH 
Medley,  A:     "Once  upon  a  midnight  dreary." — Anon. 

— BS  16 
Medley,  A:     "The  boy  stood  on  the  burning  deck." — 

Clara  J.  Denton.— WLO 
Medley:     "To  be,  or  not  to  be — that  is  the  question." 

— H.  M.  Soper.— SR  3 
Medley— Maiy's  Little  Lamb.— Anon.— CS  18— SR  1 
Medusa. — Rob't  K.  Weeks. — AA 
Meerschaum. — "Wrongfellow." — PPh 
Meet  we  no  Angels,  Pansie? — T:  Ashe. — OB 

(At  Altenahr.)— VS 
Meeting. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Meeting  at  Night. 
Meeting. — G:  Crabbe.     See  Tales  of  the  Hall. 
Meeting. — Christina  Rossetti. — YBF 

(Pause,  A— O— PGT  2 
Meeting,  The.— J:  G.  Whitrier.— BNL 
Meeting  after  Long  Absence. — Lilla  C.  Perry. — AA 
Meeting  at  Night. — Rob't  Browning. — AVP— MRS- 
OB- V  A— WR  15 
(Meeting.)— BNL— YBF 
Meeting  of  Evangelineand Gabriel,  The. — H:W. Long- 
fellow.— See  Evangeline. 
Meeting  of  Liquor  Dealers,  A. — H.  E.  McBride. — MTD 
Meeting  of  Orion   and   Artemis. — R:   H.    Home.     See 

Orion:  an  Epic  Poem. 
Meeting  of  Orlando  and   Rosalind,  The. — W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  As  You  Like  It. 
Meeting  of  the  Clabberhuses,  The. —  Sam  W.  Foss. — 

AWH— THP— WR  25 
Meeting  of  the  Dryads,   The.     (Sei.)— Oliver   Wendell 

Holmes. — AD 
Meeting  of  the  Ships,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — BNL 

Qgg 

Meeting  of  the  Waters,  The.     (C.)— T:  Moore.— FEP 

(Vale  of  Avoca,  The.)— BNL 
Meeting-house  is  Split,  The. — L:  Eisenbeis. — CS  34 
Meeting-place,  The.     (C.) — Horatius  Bonar. — CS  2 

(We  shall  Meet  and  Rest— a6r.)— LLC 
Meg  Blane,  Sel.  fr.     ("O  Mither,  dinna  dee!" — sel.  fr. 

Pt.  IV.)— Rob't  Buchanan.— GP 
Meg  May's  Valentine. — Anon. — HS 
Meg  Merrilies. — J:  Keats. — LC — PoR 
Mem     Katrine's     Brudder    Hans. — Emma     Dunning 

Banks.— BR 
Melancholia. — Anon. — NA  « 

Melancholia. — Beaumont   and   Fletcher.     See   Melan- 
choly. 
Melancholy.     {Fr.  The  Nice  Valour,  Act  III.,  Sc.  3.) — 
OB— PGT  1— YBF 
("Hence,  all  ye  [or  you]  vain  delights.") — BNL — 

HBP 
(Melanc[h]olia. )— CEL— FEP 

(Poet's  Mood.)— EPs 
(Song.)— WEP  2 
(Sweetest  Melancholy.) — ELP 
Melancholy.  —  Rob't  Bums.     See  Man  was  Made  to 
Mourn. 


206 


TITLE  INDEX 


Menagerie 


Melancolia. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher.  See  Melan- 
choly. 

Melencolia. — Jas.  Thomson.  See  City  of  Dreadful 
Night,  The. 

Melendy  Prize  Oration,  The. — Stephen  A.  Douglas. — 
SR  12 

Melik  the  Black.— Clinton  ScoUard.— BS  20 

Melincourt,  >Se^  fr.  (Flower  of  Love,  The.) — T:  Love 
Peacock.— WEP  4 

Melismata,  Sel.  fr.  (Bellman's  Song,  The.) — Anon; — 
ELP 

Melrose  Abbey. — Walter  Scott.  See  Lay  of  the  Last 
Minstrel,  The. 

Melrose  by  Moonlight. — Walter  Scott.  jSce  Lay  of  the 
Last  Minstrel,  The. 

Melting  Moments.— Anon.— CS  8— DDR— MHR 

Melting  of  the  Earl's  Plate.— G:  W.  Thombury.— EHT 
— VA 

Melville  and  Coghill. — Andrew  Lang. — VA 

Membranous  Croup  and  the  McWilliamses.  (Experi- 
ence of  the  McWilliamses  with  Membranous 
Croup— C.)—S:  L.  Clemens.— BS  5— SR  10 

Memento  Mori. — G:  Herbert. — LH 

(Virtue  [or  Vertue]- C. )— ELP— EPs— FEP— FP 

— GP— HBP— LC— OB— OS  2— PHS 
(Virtue  Immortal.)— BNL—PYO—YBF 
(Virtuous  Soul,  The.)— CEL 

"Memento  Mori." — H:  Peterson. — CS  18 

Memnon. — Clinton  ScoUard. — AA 

Memoirs  of  Barry  Lyndon,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Princess's 
Tragedy,  A.—ael.  fr.  Ch.  XII.)— W:  M.  Thack- 
eray.- WGS 

Memorabilia. — Rob't  Browning. — VA — YBF 

Memorable  Dessert,  A. — Anon. — HBP 

Memorial  Address  on  Gen.  George  H.  Thomas. — Jas  A. 
Garfield.  See  Gen.  George  H.  Thomas:  His 
Life  and  Character. 

Memorial  Address  on  the  Life  and  Character  of  James 
A.  Garfield.     (C.)— Jas.  G.  Blaine. 
(Eulogy  on  Garfield— abr. )—BS  10 

Death  of  Garfield[,  The].    (SeD—FB  1— NC— 
PPS— SC— SSD  {si.  a6r.)— TMD— WCLG  1 
(Eulogy  on  President  Garfield.) — LLC 
(Oration  on  James  A.  Garfield.) — CS  21 
Garfield's  Early  Life.     {Sel.)— FB  2 

Memorial  Day. — Anon. — DFR 

Memorial  Day.— T:  S.  CoUier.— BS  13 

Memorial  Day. — Edgar  Fawcett. —  HSS  1 

Memorial  Day.— W:  H:  Little.— SR  5 

Memorial  Day. — J:  D.  Long. — MRS 

Memorial  Day.— Z.  F.  Riley.— HS 

Memorial  Day. — Margaret  Sidney — PEO 

Memorial  Day.— S:  F.  Smith.— WR  17 

Memorial  Day. — Cy  Warman. — EDY 

Memorial  Day  Address. — W.  J.  Bryan. — TMR 

Memorial  Day  at  the  Farm. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 

Memorial  Day— 1892.     (C.)— Ella  W.  Wilcox. 
(Decoration  Day.)— WR  4 

Memorial  Day  Exercise. — Anon. — DFR 

Memorial  Day  Poem.— S.  F.  Bennett. — SR  11 

Memorial  Hymn — J.  A.  Garfield. — David  Swing. — GP 

Memorial,  or  Decoration  Day. — Anon. — HSS  1 

Memorial  Services  in  Honor  of  General  Grant  in 
Augusta,  Maine,  Aug.  8,  1885,  Sel  fr.  (Per- 
manence of  Grant's  Fame,  The.)  —  Jas.  G. 
Blaine.— NC— PEO— PFP 

Memorial  Verses.     {SI.  abr.) — Matthew  Arnold. — AVP 
— VA— WEP  4 
(Death  of  Goethe— seZs. )— EDY 
("  When  Goethe's  death  was  told,  we  said  " — sel.) 
— GG 

Memorial  Verses  on  the  Death  of  Th^ophile  Gautier, 
Br.  sel.  fr.  (Th^ophile  Gautier.) —  Algernon 
C.  Swinburne.— EDY 

Memories. — Anon. — HP 

Memories. — Anon. — SR  10 

Memories. — T:  B.  Aldrich. — AA 

Memories. — Alex.  H.  Japp. — VA 

Memories. — G.  D.  Prentice. — AA 

Memories  of  the  Heart. — Anon. — SR  9 

Memories  of  the  War. — Marion  P.  Riche. — CS  30 

Memory.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Memory.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA—ASL— YBF 

Memory. — W:  Browne. — OB 

Memory,  A.— Guy  W.  Carryl.— CG  2 

Memory. — W:  E.  Channing. — EPs 

Memory.— T:  Fuller.— OS  3 

Memory.— Jas.  A.  Garfield.— CS  20— FTR— SR  4 

("  When  the  rough  battle  of  the  day  is  done"  — 
sel.)— GG 
Memory. — Oliver  Goldsmith. — OB 
Memorv. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Memory.     {W.  add.)— Walter  S.  Landor.— HBP— VA 


Memory,  A. — Irville  C.  LeCompte. — CG  2 
Memory. — C:  H.  Luders. — BNL 
Memory,  A. — D.  MacAleese. — TIP 
Memory.     {People's  Maga'-ine.) — HP 
Memory. — Francis,  Earl  of  Rosslyn. — VA 
Memory.— Duncan  C.  Scott.— BS  21— TCV 
Memory. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Memory.- W:  Shakespeare.— PGT  1— YBF 
(Friendship.)— TFY 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (III.) 
(Sonnet  XXX.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
("When  to  the  sessions  of  sweet  silent  thought.") — 

BNL 
Memory.     {Sel.   fr.   Ode   to   Memory,   St.  3.) — Alfred 

Tennyson . — EPs 
Memory.-W:  Wordsworth.— FTR 
Memory:     An  Address   before   the   Order   of   Elks. — 

Anon.— CP 
Memory  and  Hope. — Mrs.  L.  E.  V.  Boyd. — SDD 
Memory  and  the  Muses. — T:  Hobbes. — LLC 
Memory  Gems.- DLS— GMS— WCLI  1 
Memory  in  Absence.     (Frags,   fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Memory  of  Abraham  Lincoln,  The,  Sets.  fr. — Jas.  A. 

Garfield. 
Abraham  Lincoln.— NC— PEO 
On  the  Assassination  of  President  Lincoln.     {Br. 

sel.,  ptly.  incl.  in  NC,  etc.) — GG 
Memory  of  Earth,  The.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 
Memory  of   Joys,  The.     {Frags,  fr.    various   authors.) 

—BNL 
Memory  of  Sorrows,  The.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Memory  of  the  Dead,  The.— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— HDL 
Memory  of  the  Dead,  The.— J:  K.  Ingram.— HBP— 

TIP— VA 
Memory  of  the  Good. — H.  Humphrey. — LLC 

(Howard,  the  Prisoner's  Friend.) — FD  1 
Memory  of  the  Heart,  The. — Dan'l  Webster. — BNL — 

GP— TFY 
Memory     of     Washington,    The. — E:     Everett.     See 

Character  of  Washington,  The. 
Memory-bridges,  The. — Julie  M.  Lippmann. — BS  22 
Memory's  Message. — Anon. — CP 
Memory's  Wildwood. — Anon. — CS  6 
Memory-tricks.     {Dial. ) — Anon. — PTS 
Men,  The.— Anon.— DS—YA 
Men,  The.— Maurice  Bell.— AWB 
Men  always  Fit  for  Freedom. —  T:  B.  Macaulay.     See 

Milton. 
Men  and  Boys.     Theodore  Komer  {tr.  by  C:T.  Brooks.) 

—BNL 
Men  and  Deeds  of  the  Revolution,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  The 

Principle   of   the   American   Constitutions.) — 

E:  Everett.— MRS 
Men  behind   the   Gims,   The. — J:  J.    Rooney. —  A  A — 

EDY— PAPm 
Men  of  England.— T:  Campbell.— FEP 
"Men  of  England,  heirs  of  glorv."     {Br.  sel.  fr.  The 

Mask  of  Anarchy.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— YBF 
Men  of  Gloucester,  The. — Laura  E.  Richards. — BS  21 
Men  of  God.— Alex.  D.  Hill.— SR  2 
Men  of  Gotham,  The. — T:  L.  Peacock.     See  Nightmare 

Abbey. 
Men  of  Mo  u  m  y.  The. — Joe  Cone. — EDY 
Men  of    my   Heart's    Desire. — Theodore    Roberts. — 

TCV 
Men  of  Old,  The.  —  R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. 

—BNL— FEP 
(A6r.)— FP— PGT  2— YBF 
Men  of  the  Alamo,  The. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — BAB 
Men  of    the    "Merrimac,"    The. — Clinton    ScoUard. — 

BAB— EDY 
Men  of  the  North,  The.— W.  T.  Allison.— TCV 
Men  of  the  North. — J:  Neal. — AA 
Men  of  the  North  and  West.— R:  H.  Stoddard.— AWB 

—EDY— PAPm 
Men  of  Ware,  The.— F;  E.  Weatherly.— FEP 
Men  to  Make  a  State,  The.— G:  W.  Doane.— CS  17— 

SM 
"Men  try  to  drown  the  floating  dead  of  their  own  souls 

in  the  wine-cup." — G:  D.  Prentice. — GG 
Men  who  do  not  Lift,  The.— Anon.— CS  30— PR  — 

YA 
Men   who    Never   Die. —  E:  Everett.     See  Eulogy  on 

Adini«  and  Jefferson. 
Men  who  Wore  the  Shield,  The. —  Kate  B.  Sherwood. — 

WR12 
Menagerie,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Menagerie,  The.— J.  Honeywell.— CS  10— CSS— HR— 

MHR 
Menagerie    Song,     A.     {Harpers'     Young    People.) — 

CPL 


207 


Iffenaphon 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Menaphon,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Greene. 

Doron's  Description  of  Samela. — EP 

(Samela.)— CEL— FEP— OB— WEP  1 
Doron's  Eclogue  Joined  with  Cannela's. — EP 
Doron's  Jig. — LC 
Menaphon's  Roundelay. — LC 
Menaphon's  Song.*-ES 
Sephestia's  Lullaby. — OB 

(Sephestia's  Song  to  her  Child.)— ELP—PGT  1 

WEPl 
("  Weep  not,  my  wanton.") — YBF 
Menaphon's  Roundelay. — Rob't    Greene.     See    Mena- 
phon. 
Menaphon's  Song. — Rob't  Greene.     See  Menaphon. 
Mendax. — Gotthold  E.  Lessing. — HPE 
Mended  Vase.  The.— W:  R.  Sims.— CS  32 
Mendicant.     (Charade.) — Anon. — TCP 
Mendicant,  The.— Rob't  M.  Bard.— KNE 
Mendicant,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Mendicants,  The. — Bliss  Carman. — VA 
Mendicants.— M.  E.  H.  Everett.— CG  2 
Mending  the  Clock. — Jas.  M.  Barrie. — SR  12 
"Mene,  Mene,  Tekel,  Upharsin." — Madison  Cawein. — 

PAPm 
Men's  Wicked  Ways. — Anon. — DR 

(Penance.)— FTA 
Mental  Activity.— W:  (?)  Barrow.— KNE 
Mental  Arithmetic. — Anon. — DES  - 
(Johnny  and  the  Teacher.) — CS  33 
(Trials  of  a  School  Teacher  [or  Schoolmistress].) — 
ASD— CH 

Mental  Faculties,  The. Wayland.— KNE 

Mephistopheles,  General  Dealer. — Anon. — CS  10 
Mercantile  Transaction,  A. — Fs.  A.  Humphrey. — BR 

(SI.  o6r.)— PR— YA 
Mercedes.— T:  W.  Parsons.- EDY 
Mercedes. — Eliz.  Stoddard. — AA 
Mercenary    Matches.     (Frags,   fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Merchant  and  the  Book-agent,  The. — Anon. — CS  25 
Merchant  of  Venice,  The,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Casket  Scene,  The.     (Sei.  fr.   Act   TIL,  Sc.   2.)— 
WR9 
(Portia's  Speech  to  Bassanio  on  his  Choice  of  the 
(basket — br.  sel. — ptly.  same.) — SAE 
Fancy.     (Song— C.—/r.  III.,  2.)— ES 
(Love.)— BNL— OB 
(Madrigal.)— LC 
(Merchant  of  Venice,  The,  Act  III.,  Sc.  2,  Sel.  fr.) 

— ELP 
(Song  from  "The  Merchant  of  Venice.") — FEP 
("Tell  me  where  is  fancy  bred.")— EPs — YBF 
(Young  Love.)— PGT  1 
Fourth  Act  of  "The  Merchant  of  Venice."     (IV., 
1.— a6r.)— CS  17 
(Merchant  ot  Venice,  The,  Sel.  /r.)— BNL  (br. 

sel.)—SC  (sel.) 
(Mercy— 6r.  seZ. )—CS  7— KNE— TMD  (longer.) 
(Portia  to  Shylock — sel.) — OS  3 
(Portia's  Plea  for  Mercy — sel.) — SO 
(Portia's     Speech     on     Mercy.)  —  EA     (sel.)  — 

PYO  (br.  sel.) 
(QuaUty  of  Mercy,  The— 6r.  sel.) — PS 
("Quality  of  mercy  is  not  strained.  The" — br.  sel.) 

— GG 
(Trial  Scene  [,  The]— «eZ.)— CDD— LLC— SR  12 
Merchant    of    Venice,    The.     (Play — si.    cond.) — 

WCLG  2 
Merchant  of  Venice,  The.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  I.,  1;  II.,  1; 

v.,  1.)— BNL 
Merchant  of  Venice,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  I.,  1.) 
— AE 
(Pomposity — sel.) — KNE 
Merchant   of   Venice,  Act    III.,  Sc.   1.      (Abr.) — 
HNS 
(Shylock— &r.  aeZ.)- SE 
(Shylock  for  the  Je^s— seJ.)— PPS 
Music.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  1.)— BNL  (si.  cond.)— SO 
(Merchant  of  Venice,  The,  Sel.  /r.)— FP 
(Moonlight— 6r.  sei.)— EPs— SN 
(Music  by  Moonlight — br.  sel.) — OS  2 
(Power  of  Music,  The— 6r.  seZ.)— GN 
Out  and  Inward  Bound.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  6.)— EPs 
Portia's  Picture.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  2.)— BNL 
Scene  from  "The  Merchant  of  Venice."  (I.,  2.) — 
MPD 
(Colloquy  between  Portia  and  Nerissa  regarding 

the  Suitors — abr.) — SAE 
(Portia,  in  "The  Merchant  of  Venice" — br.  sel.) 
— SE 
Shylock  Lends  the  Ducats.     (I.,  3. — si.   cond.) — 
BS22 
(Malice— 6r.  «W.)— KNE 


Merchant  of  Venice,  The  (continued). 

(Merchant  of  Venice,  Br.  sels.  /r.)— BNL— HNS 

—SAE 
(Shylock  to  Antonio.)— CS  3— FR  (ptly.  diff.)— 

SE 
(Shylock's  Soliloquy  and  Address — sel.) — PS 
"Merchant,  to  Secure  nis  Treasure,  The." — Matthew 
Prior.— FEP— PGT  1 
(Love's  Disguises.) — YBF 
(Ode,  An— O— WEP  3 
(Song.)— OB 
Merchants  of  Old  England,  The,  Sel.  fr.—G.  Smythe, 

Viscount  Strangford. — AVP 
Merchants  of    the    Revolution. — Elliot    C.    Cowdin. — 

FD2 
Merciful  Heaven. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Measure  for 

Measure. 
Merciles  Beaute. — Geoffrey  Chaucer. — OB 
Mercury   Vindicated    by   the    Alchemists    at    Court 
(Masques  at  Court),  Sel.  fr.     (Song  of  Nature 
— C.) — Ben  Jonson. 
(Nature.)— EPs 
Mercutio's  Description   of   Queen   Mab. —  W:   Shake- 
speare.    See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Mercy. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Merchant   of  Venice, 

The. 
Mercy  of  God,  The.— Matthew  R.  Knight.— TCV 
Merely  Players.     (Play.)— Clara.    S.     Clarke.— VSG— 
WR13 
(In  Love  with  his  Wife.)— NDP 
Meriky's  Conversion. — Julia  Pickering. — CS  18 
Merit  before  Birth. — Sallust.  See  Jugurthine  War,  The. 
Merits  of  Fulton's  Invention. — Ogden  Hoffman. — SS 
Merlin  (I.). — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — AA 
Merlin  and  Vivien. — Alfred   Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of 

the  King. 
Mermaid,  The.— Anon.— OEB 
Mermaid,  The.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Mermaid,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. — GN 

(Sel.)— LC— OS  1 
Mermaid  of  Padstow,  The.— R:  Garnett.— PEB  4 
Mermaid  Tavern,  The.— J:  Keats.— PGT  1— YBF 

(Lines  on  the  Mermaid  Tavern— C.)— FEP— WEP  4 
Merman,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. — GN — LC  (br.  sel.) 
Merry  Andrew.— ^Matthew  Prior. — HPE 
Merry  Autumn      Days. — C:      Dickens.     See      Village 

Coquettes,  The. 
Merry  Bee.  A. — Jos.  Skipsey. — VS 

Merry  Beggars,  The.     (.SeZ.  fr.  The  Jovial  Crew:  or, 
The  Merry  Beggars.) — Richard  Brome. — ELP 
Merry  Bells  of  Oxford,  The.— Anon.-^ELP 
"Merry,  blue-eyed  laddie  goes  laughing  through  the 

town.  A."— Juliet  W.  Tompkins.— CG  1 
Merry   Christmas. — Anon. — HP — NV 
"Merry  Christmas."     (Acrostic.) — Anon. — WR  26 
Merry  Christmas  and  a  Glad  New  Year,  A. — G :  Cooper. 

— PEO 
Merry  Christmas  Time,  The. — G:  Arnold. — PEO 
Merry  Heart,  A. — Anon. — KNE 
Merry  Journey,  A. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Merry  Lark,  The.     (Lament,  A. — C.) — C:  Kingsley. — 

BFV— BNL— YBF 
Merry  Mike.— Anon.— NPS—YP 

Merry  Month  of    May,  The. — T:  Dekker.— ,See  Shoe- 
maker's Holiday,  The. 
Merry  Pranks  of  Robin  Good-fellow,  The.     (In  Percy's 
Reliques.)— Anon.— FEP— HBP 
(Robin  Good-fellow— sZ.  a6r.)— WR  15 
Merry  Rain. — Anon. — NV 
Merry  Soap-boiler,  The. — Anon. — HR — MMR 
Merry  Spring. — Anon. — AD 

Merry    Summer     Months,    The. — W:    Motherwell. — 
HBP 
(They  Come,  the    Merry  Summer  Months — C.) — 
BNL— POS  (abr.) 
Merry  Sunshine. — Anon. — NV 

(Good-morning,  Merry  Sunshine.) — DST 
Merry  Youth.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Merry-go-round,  The. — Roden  Noel. — VA 
Mesopotamia. — Anon. — KNE 

('Tis  Sweet  to  Roam — sel.) — NA 
Message,  A.— P.  B.— PAPm 
Message,  A. — Sydney  Dayre. — BS  18 

(Telephone  Message,  A.) — DCP 
Message,  A.— H.— CG  1 

Message,  The.     (Fr.  The  Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange.) 
—OB 
(Go,  Pretty  Birds.)— FEP 
(Phillis.)— EP 
(To  Phyllis.)— ES—OEL 
("Ye  little  birds  that  sit  and  sing.") — ELP 
Message  for  the  Children,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Message  from  Bony,  A. — Anon. — CS  29 


208 


TITLE  INDEX 


Might 


Message  from  Mama  in  Heaven,  A.     {Good  Housekeep- 
ing.)~CS  37 
(Telegram,  The.)— NPS— SR  6— YP 
Message  from  the  South,  A. — Booker  T.  Washington. — 

SC 
Message  of  an  yEolian  Harp,  Sel.  fr.     (We  Cannot  Love 

too  Much.) — -Franceji  R.  rlavergal. — BIL 
Message  of  the  Dove,  The.— E.  Nesbit.— BS  16 
Message  of  the  Flowers,  The. — Anon. — DLF 
Message  of  the  New  Year,  The. — Anon. — HDL 
Message  of  the  Rose,  The. — Anon. — HP 
Message  of  the  Seasons,  The. — Anon. — DST 
Message  of  the  Snowdrop,  The. — Anon. — PEO 
Message  of  Victory,  The.     {Fr.  Songs  from  Dramas.) 
— Augusta  Webster. — HP 
(News  to  the  King.) — VA 
Message  the  Roses  Bring,  The. — Jas.  P.  Sawyer. — FTA 

(Prom-roses.)— CG  2 
Message  to  Garcia. — Elbert  Hubbard. — SE  13 
Messenger  Boy,  The.— G :  Ade.— CS  37 
Messenger  Hours,  The. — Amy  Parkinson. — TCV 
Messenger  of  Spring,  The. — J:  Logan. — POS 
(Cuckoo,  The. )—WCL 

(Ode  to  the  Cuckoo — at.  to  Bruce.) — CEL — CGd 
(To  the  Cuckoo— C.)—BNL—FEP— HBP— OB— 
PYO  (abr.  )—SN 
Messiah.— Alex.  Pope.— EP— FEP- HBP 
Metamora.— J:  A.  Stone  (?)— WR  23 

(Metamora  to  his  Warriors — diff.  vers.) — SAE 
(Metamora  to  the  Council — 3rd  vers.) — DDR 
Metamora   to  his  Warriors. — J:  A.  Stone  (7)     See  fore- 
going. 
Metamora  to  the  Council. — J:  A.  Stone  (?).    See  above. 
Metamorphoses,  Sel.  fr.     (Death  of  Ajax,  The.) —  Ovid 

Or.  6.!/ Winthrop  M.  Praed).— OS  2 
Metamorphosis,  A. — W:      Browne.     See      Britannia's 

Pastorals. 
Metamorphosis. — Lloyd  Mifflin. — LLC 
Metamorphosis.  —  (Princeton  Tiger.) — CG  3 
Metaphorical  Papers. — B:  Franklin — CS  14  ■• 

(Paper.— C.)—BNL—WR  5 
Metaphysics. — Oliver  Herford. — NA 
Metempsychosis  of  the  Pine.  •  (C.) — Bayard  Taylor. 

(Spirit  of  the  Pine,  The— abr.)— AD 
Meteors. — Anna  P.  Eichberg. — HP 
Methinks  the  Measure. — P.  A.  Hutchinson. — AA 
Methodist  Camp  Meeting,  A. — W.  H.  Head. — SR  11 
Methodist     Class-meeting,     A.  —  J.     J.     Wray.     See 

Nestleton  Magna. 
Metrical  Feet.     {Abr.)—S:  T.  Coleridge.— BNL 
Miaouletta. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Mice.— Anon.— DS—YA 
Mice,  The.— Anon.— DST— HSS  2 
Mice    at     Play.— Neil    Forrest.- BS  11— EA  (abr.)— 

MYF— SR  10 
Michael. — W:  Wordsworth. — HBR 

(Michael  and  his  Son— seZ.)— FTR 
Michael  and  his  Son.— W:  Wordsworth.     See  foregoing. 
Michael  Angelo.  Sel.  fr.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Monologue  in  Pt. 

II.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BIL 
Michael  Angelo  Buonarotti. — Christopher  P.  Cranch. — 

EDY 
Michael  Dwyer.— T.  I>.  Sullivan. — PEB  4 
Michael  Robartes  Remembers  Forgotten  Beauty. — W: 

B.  Yeats.— TIP 
Michael  Strogoff.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XIV.)— Jules  Verne.— 

PFP 
Michael  the  Archangel  11. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — EDY 
Mick    Tandy's     B-evenge.— (Youth's      Companion.) — 

BS  10 
Mickey  Coaches  his  Father. — Ernest  Jarrold. — PR — 

WR  12— YA 
Mickey  Feeney  and  the  Priest. — Anon. — DCR 
Mickey  Free  and  the  Priest. — C:  Lever. — See  Charles 

O'Malley. 
Mickey  Free's  Letter  to  Mrs.  M'Gra. — C:  Lever.     See 

Charles  O'Malley. 
Microbiblion,  Sel.  fr.     (Man's  Mortality.) — Simon  Was- 
tell  (tr.  by  O'Donovan).— BS  12— CS  14- HBP 
(SeZ.)— BNL— CEL— FEP 
(Of  Man's  Mortality.) — ELP 
(What  is  Man?— seZ. )—TFS 
Microcosm,  The. — Walt  Whitman.    See  Song  of  Myself. 
Mid  the  Breakers. — Ernest  Aye-Williams. — CS  35 
'Mid  the  Roses.— F.  T.  Gerould.— CG  2 
Midas,  Sels.  fr. — .1:  Lyly 

Daphne.     (A  Song  of  Daphne  to  the  Lute — C. — fr. 
Act  IV.,  Sc.  1.)— ES 
(In  Praise  of  Daphne.)— CEL 
Hymn  to  Apollo.     (Song— C.—/r.  V.,  3.)— ELP 

(Song  to  Apollo.) — ES 
Pan's  Song.     (Song— C.—fr.  IV.,  1.)— WEP  1 
(Syrinx.)— ES 


Middle  Aged  Man  and  the  Two  Widows,  The. — Jean 

La  Fontaine. — SCS 
Midges. — Robert,  Lord  Lytton. — HBP 
Midges  Dance  aboon  the  Burn,  The. — Rob't  Tanna- 

hill.— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Midges  in  the  Sunshine. — Anon. — HP 
Midgets'  Greeting,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Midnight. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — POS 
Midnight  and  Moonshine,  Br.  sel.  fr.     ("O  God  !    This 

is  a  holy  hour.") — W:  Motherwell.— AE 
Midnight  Charge,  The. — Clement  Scott. — CS  24 
Midnight  Episode,  A. — Anon. — DDM 
Midnight  Express,  The. — Sherman  D.   Richardson. — 

CS22 
Midnight  Hymn,  A. — Anon. — SSS 
Midnight  Hymn. — T:  Ken. — FEP 
Midnight  in  London.     (Abr.) — Ardennes  Jones-Foster. 

— BS  19— PFP— WR  19 
Midnight  Mass,  The. — Richard  E.  White. — CS  27 
Midnight  Meditation,  A. — W:  Aytoun. — HPE 
Midnight  Tragedy,  A.— Anon.— CRR— CS  30 
Midnight  Train,  The. — Mrs.  C.  Nichols. — FS 
Midnight  Wind,  The. — W:  Motherwell. — HBP 
Midshipman,  The. — L.  D.  Nichols. — ASD 
Midshipmite,  The. — Clement  Scott. — CS  23 
Midsummer. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — SN 
Midsummer. — Abbie  F.  Judd. — AD 
Midsummer. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Midsummer.     (C.) — J:   T.   Trowbridge. — AA — FEP — 

HBP— POS— SC  (sel.)— TAS 
(A6r.)— AD— BS  15 
(Summer.)— GP 
Midsummer  Day,  A. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — HSS  1 

(Reve  du  Midi.) — BNL — FEP — HBP 
Midsummer  Day  Scene,  A. — C:  G.  Eastman. — CS  7 
(Afternoon  Nap,  The.)— WCL 
(Farmer  Sat  in  his  Easv  Chair,  The.) — GP — TAV 
(Picture,  A.)— BNL— FEP 
Midsummer  Invitation. — Myron  B.  Benton. — SN 
Midsummer  Madrigal,  A. — J:  Macfarlane. — TCV 
Midsummer  Night's  Dream,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Approach  of  the  Fairies,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Act  V..  Sc 

1.)— CGd— LC— PHS 
(Oberon  and   Titania  to  the  Fairy  Train — sel.) 

Birds.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  1.)— FEP 

Clown's  First  Rehearsal.  The.     (I.,  2.) — MPD 

Clown's  Second  Rehearsal,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ill     1  ) 

—MPD 
Compliment  to  Queen  Elizabeth.     (Sel.  fr    11     1  ) 

— BNL  (seZ.)- EPS  v         /         .,     .; 

Course  of  True  Love,  The.     (Br.  sel.  /r.  I  .  1  ) — 

BNL  '         <     -J 

("Ah  me!  for  aught  that  I  could  ever  read.") — GG 
Fairies'  Lullaby.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  2.)— BNL 
(Fairyland,  II. — song  fr.  BNL.)— OB 
(Lullaby  for  Titania.)— BFV— CGd— GN—LC 
(Midsummer  Night's  Dream,  Sel.  fr.) — ELP 
Helena  and  Hermia.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  2.) — GN 
Midsummer  Night's  Dream.     (Br.  sels.  fr.  IV     1- 
v.,  1.)— BNL  '     • 

Puck  and  the  Fairy.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  1.) — GN — 

(Midsummer  Night's  Dream,  Br.  sel.  fr.) — BNL 
(Fairy  Land,  I. — aoria  fr.  GN,  etc.) — OB 
(Fairy  Song.)— BFV 
(Fairy  to  Puck.  The.)— OS  1 
(Fairy's  Song,  A.) — PC 

(Midsummer  Night's  Dream,  Sel.  fr.) — ELP 
(Over  Hill  and  over  Dale.) — FEP — YBF 
(Song  of  the  Fairy.)— HBP— LC— PHS 
Woodbine.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  1.)— HSS  1 
(Midsummer  Night's  Dream — sel.) — BNL 
(Violet  Bank,  A  — seZ. )— PoR— POS 
Midsummer  Song,  A. — R:  W.  Gilder. — OS  1 — PoR 
Midsummer's  Noon  in  the  Australian  Forest,  A. — C: 

Harpur. — VA 
Midwinter. — J:  T.  Trowbridge.— AA — GN — POS 
Miggles.     (Cond.) — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — WR  2 
Might  Makes  Right.    (National  Preceptor,  1835.) — BLP 

(Sowing  and  Reaping — si.  abr. ) — LLC 
Might  of  Death,  The.     (Ode  fr.  Cupid  and  Death.) — 
Jas.  Shirley.— WEP  2 
(Last  Conqueror,  The.)— FEP — PGT  1 — YBF 
(Victorious  Men  of  Earth.)— HBP 
Might  of  Love,  The. — Alice  Gary. — CS  12— DS 
Might   of    One   Fair.  Face,  The. — Michael   Angelo. — 
FTA 
("Might  of  one  fair  face  sublimes  my  love.  The.") — 
HBP  ^  ,         .    J 

"Might  of  one  fair  face  sublimes  my  love,  The." 

Michael  Angelo.     See  foregoing. 


209 


Mighty 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Mighty  Fortress  is  our  God,  A. —  Martin  Luther  (tr.  by 
F:  H:  Hedge).— BNL  (sel.) 
(Paraphrase  of  Luther's  Hymn.) — AA 
(Psalm  XLVL— <r.  by  T:  Carlyle.)— HBP 
(Safe  Stronghold,  A.)— AE 
Mighty  Heart,  The.— J»alph  W.  Emerson.     See  Wood- 
notes. 
"Mighty  ocean  rolls    and    raves.    The." — Arthur  H. 

"Clough.     See  Songs  in  Absence. 
Mighty  Word,  "No,"  The.— Theodore  L.  Cuyler.— BLP 
Mignon.— S:  M.  Peck.— FTA 
Mignon  Aspiring  to  Heaven. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. 

See  Wilhelm  Meister'«  Apprenticeship. 
Mignonette. — G.  B.  Bartlett.— v4]Ps 
Mignon's  Song. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe.     See  Wilhelm 

Meister's  Apprenticeship. 
Mike  Gets  a  Job.     (Dial.) — Anon. — NDP 

Mike  Hooter's  Bear  Story. Hall. — BC 

Mike  McGaffaty's  Dog.— Mark  Melville.— CS  22 
Miles  Keogh's  Horse.— J:  H  y.— EDY 
Miles  Standish's  Encounter  with  the  Indians. — H:  W. 
Longfellow.     See  Courtship  of  Miles  Standish, 
The. 
Military  Command. — Anon. — HNS 
Military  Discipline.     (Dial.) — Anon. — YFD 
Military    Insubordination.  —  H :    Clay.     See   Military 

Supremacy  Dangerous  [to  Liberty]. 
Military  Qualifications   Distinct    from    Civil. — J :    Ser- 
geant.—KNE—OM—SS 
Military  Steeple-chase,    The. — Louise    de    la    RamJe. 

See  Under  Two  Flags. 
Military  Supremacy  Dangerous  [to  Liberty].     (Sel.  jr. 
On  the  Seminole  War.)— H:  Clay.— BS  14— 
LLC— OM 
(Military  Insubordination — ptly.  diff.) — SS 
Military  "Training  in  the  Schools. — H:  B.  Carrington. — 

BLP 
Milking.— Celia  Thaxter.- SAP— WCL 
Milking  Maid,  The.     (Farm  Walk,  A— C. )— Christina 

G.  Rossetti.— BNL 
Milking  Time.— Philip    Morse.— BS  7— PFP— PR    (si. 
abr.) 
(Let  Down  the  Bars.) — CS  35 
(Lovejoy  Cow,  The.)— WR  15 
Milking  Time.— Christina    G.   Rossetti.— LC— OS  1— 

PoR 
Milkmaid,  The.— W:  AUingham.— PEB  4 
Milkmaid,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — VS 
Milkmaid,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Milkmaid,  The.— R.  Lloyd.— CGd 
Milkmaid,  The.— T:  Nabbes.— EP 
Milkmaid,  The.— Jeffreys  Taylor.— BNL 
Milk-maid's  Mother's  Answer  [The].     (Reply  to  Mar- 
lowe—C.)— Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— FEP  (w.  add. 
St.)— HBP 
(Her  Reply.)— OB 
(Nymph's  Reply  [to  the  Passionate  Shepherd],  The. ) 

— BNL— GP— PHS 
(Reply  to  Marlowe,  A.)— EP 
(Reply  to  Marlowe's  'The  Passionate  Shepherd  to 

his  Love.  )—WEPl 
(Shepherdess's  Reply,  The — w.  add.  st.) — CEL 
Milkmaid's  Song,  The.— Sydney  Dobell.— BNL 
Milk-maid's  Song,  The.     (Passionate  Shepherd,  The — 
C.) — Christopher  Marlowe. — FEP  (1st  vers.) — 
HBP  (2nd  vers. — si.  shorter.) 
(Passionate  Shepherd  to  his  Love,  The — 1st  vers.) 
—  BFV  —  BPB  —  CEL  —  ES  —  LC  —  OEL 
— PGT  1— YBF 
(2nd      vers.)- BNL  — EP  — FTA  — GP  — OB 
— WEPl 
(Shepherd  to  his  Love,  The— 1st  i;er8.)— CGd— GN 
—PHS 
Milky  Way,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  House  of 

Fame,  The.  » 

Mill  on  the  Floss,  The,  SeU.  fr.—G:  Eliot. 

Aunt  Pullet's  Bonnet.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  IX.)— 

VSG 
Flood  on  the  Floss,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VII.,  Ch. 

V.)— WR  1 
Maggie  and  Thomas  h  Kempis.     (Sel.  ad.  fr.  Bk. 
IV.,Ch.  in.)— FMR 
("  'Imitation  of  Christ'  was  written  by  a  hand 
that  waited.  The" — sel.) — GG 
Maggie  Cuts  her  Hair.     (Sel.  ad.  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  VII.) 

— FMR 
Mill  on  the  Floss,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  I.)— 

LLC 
Ogg,  the  Son  of  Beorl.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  XII.) 

—LLC 
"There  is  something  sustaining  in  the  very  agita- 
tion."    (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.,  Ch.  II.)— 6G 
Mill  River  Ride.— J.  W.  Donovan.— CS  9— DS 


Millais's  "Huguenots."     (SI.  diff.  versions.)     (Lonekm 

Spectator.)— BS  20  (si.  abr.)— EDY 
Millennium,  The.— T:  Moore.— HPE 
Millennium,  The.— Jas.  K.  Stephen.— THP 

(Lapsus  Calami.) — VA 
Miller  and  his  Son,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Miller  and  the  Maid,  The.— F.  M.  Scott.— HP 
Miller  of  Dee,  The.— Eva  L.  Ogden.— CS  20— PPSr— 

SAE 
Miller  of  [the]  Dee,  The.— C:  Mackay.— CSS— PHS 
Miller's  Daughter,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 
"It  is  the  miller's  daughter."     (Song.) — FTA 

(Miller's  Daughter,  The.)— BNL— FEP— HBP— 
OB 
Miller's  Daughter,  The.     (Diff.  sel.)— OH 
Miller's  Maid,  The.—  Fred  E.  Brooks.— CS  28— WR  15 
"Millet  and  Zola." — Rob't  O.  A.  Crewe-Milnes,  Earl  of 

Crewe.— AVP 
Milling-match  between  Entellus  and  Dares,  The. — *": 

Moore.— HPE 
Million  Little  Diamonds,  A.     (C.) — Mary  F.  Butts. — 
AA— GMS— HSS  2 
( Dewdrops. ) — AD 

(Winter  Jewels.)— COS— CPL—DLS—PP 
Millionaire  and  the  Barefoot  Boy,  The. — G.  T.   L. — 

HSS  3 
Milly.— May  R.  Smith.— PP—YPS 
Miltiades  Gets  the  Best  of  Santa  Claus. — J:  Brown  John. 
— CS  23— DS 
(How  the  Celebrated  Miltiades  Peterkin  Paul  Got 
the  Better  of  Santa  Claus.)— BS  16 
Miltiades  Peterkin    Paul. — J:     Brownjohn. — CS  15 — 

NPS— YP 

Milton.— Craven  L.  Betts.— EDY 

Milton. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — AA 

Milton,  Sels.  fr. — T:  B.  Macaulay. 

Charles  the  First.— SO 

Distrust  of  Liberty. — LLC 

(Fruits  of  Liberty,  The.)— MYF 
(Liberty— seZ.)— OS  2 

(Men  Always  Fit  for  Freedom— 8e/.)— OS  2  —  PS 
— SS 
Puritans,  The.— SE  • 

(Sel.)— BS  5— CS  14— PR— TMD  (ptly.  diff.) 
(Puritan,  The— seZ.)- BLP 
Milton.— Lloyd  Mifflin. — AA 
Milton.— Ernest  Myers.— EDY 
Milton.— Alfred  Tennyson.— WEP  4 
Milton.     (Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Independence 
and  Liberty,  Pt.  I..  XIV.)— W:  Wordsworth. 
—LLC— WEP  4 
(England.)— GP 
(Ideals.)— LH 

(London,  1802— C.)— PGT  1  (II.)— YBF  (II.) 
("Milton!  thou  shouldst  be  living  at  this  hour" — 

abr.)— GG 
(Sonnet:    London,  1802.)— HBP 
(To  Milton.)— BNL— CEL— EPs— FEP 
Milton,  John.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
"Milton!  thou  shouldst  be  living  at  this  hour." — W: 

Wordsworth.     See  foregoing. 
Milton's  Prayer  of  Patience. — JEHiz.  L.  Howell — AA^ — 
CS  7— FEP— LLC  (si.  abr.)— T AS 
(Milton's  Soliloquy  in  his  Old  Age.)— HSS  3 
(Old  and  Blind— a/,  to  Milton.)— BS  2 
Milton's  Soliloquy  in  his  OH  Age. —  Eliz.  Lloyd.     See 

Milton's  Prayer  of  Patience. 
Mimic,  The.— Anon.— PPSr 
Mimicking  Others. — Anon. — WR  17 
Mimnermus  in  Church. — -W:  Johnson-Cory. — OB — VA 
Mind,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Mind  of  Man,  The. — Mark  Akenside.     See  Pleasures  of 

Imagination,  The. 
Mind,  the  Glorv  of  Man.— Dan'l  Wise.- CS  11— HSS  3 

— KN£ 
Mind  your  Business. — Wolstan  Dixey. — PEO 
"  Mind  your  own  Business."     (Dial.) — H.  E.  McBride. 

— CS  5— MD 
Mind  your  P's. — Anon. — WR  4 
Minding  the  Hens. — F.  W.  Loring. — SR  5 

(Tildy.)— WR21 
Mind's  Eye,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Mind's  Eye,  The. — W:   Wordsworth.     See  Excursion, 

The. 
Mine.— Dinah  M.  Craik.— OH 
Mine  Host  of  "The  Golden  Apple."  —  T:  Westwood. 

— BVC— GN 
Mine  Katrine.— C:  F.  Adams.— BDD—BS  7— CS  16  — 

DFY 
Mine  Moder-in-law.— C:    F.    Adams.— AWH—DRR— 
GH 
(Mine  Mother-in-law.)— DCR 
(Mother-in-law,  The.)— CS  31 


210 


TITLE  INDEX 


Miss  Jones 


Mine  own  Country. — Kathe.  L.  Bates. — CS  36 
Mine  Schildhood.— C:  F.  Adams.— BS  12— CS  22 

(Tucked  oup  in  Fed.)— GH 
Mine  ShiJdren.— C:  F.  Adams.— BDD—BS  13 
Mine  VamUy.— C:  F.  Adams.— BS  9— CS  21 

(Dutchman's     Family,   The — si.    diff.   wording.) — 
DRR 
Miner's  Death,  The. — J:  Hanover. — SA 
Mines  of  Avondale,  The.— Alice  Cary. — CS  17 
Miniature,  The.— Anon. — WR  13 

(Likeness,  The.)— CS  9 
Ministering. — Anon. — SSS 
Ministering  Angels. — Emily  Judson. — CS  4 
Minister's  Grievances,  The. — Max  Ad  ler. — CH — CS  27 

— CH 
Minister's  Housekeeper,  The. — Harriet  B.  Stowe.    See 

Sam  Lawson's  Fireside  Stories. 
Minister's  Quarter  Pay-day,  A. — Anon. — CS  6 
Minister's  Wife,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Minister's  Wooing,  The,   Sel.  fr.     (Interview  between 
Aaron  Burr  and  Mary  Scudder — dbr.   jr.  (  h. 
XXXII.)— Harriet  B.  Stowe.— CR 
Ministry   of  Angels   [,  The]. — Edmund    Spenser.     See 

Faerie  Queene,  The. 
Ministry  of  Hassan,  The.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— YBT 
Minn(5srngers  Lied,  The.— J:  H.  Duvar.— TCV 
Minnie  and   Winnie. — Alfred  Tennyson. — HSS  2 — NA 
Minnie's  Secret. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Minnows. — J:  Keats.     See  "I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little 

hiU." 
Minor  Poet,  A. — Alex.  Smith.     See  Life-drama,  A. 
Minot's  Ledge. — Fitz-James     O'Brien. — CS  12 — FR — 

SA 
Minstrel,  The. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe.     See  Wilhelm 

Meister's  Apprenticeship. 
Minstrel,  The.     Edna  D.  Proctor.- OS  3 
Minstrel,  The;  or,  The  Progress  of  Genius,  Sels.  fr. — 
.las.  Beattie.  4 

Life  Beyond  the  Tomb.      (Bk.  I.,  Sts.  25-27.)— SS 

Mmstrel,  The,  Br.  sels.  fr.     (I.,  1;  II.,  17— aftr.)— 
BNL 

Minstrel,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (I.,  32-38,  40.)— WEP  3 
(Morning— 38,  39.)— BNL— CEL 
(Summer  Mom,  A— 38-40.)— GP 

Nature.     (I..  9.)— EPs 

Reasons  for  Humility.     (I.,  50.) — CS  1 
Minstrel-boy,    The.— T:    Moore.— BPB— CEL— GN— 

OS  1— SO— YBF 
Minstrels  and  Maids. — W:  Morris.     See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 
Minstrel's  Curse,  The. — Ludwig  Uhland  {tr.  by  Rob't 

Tilney).— AE  (6r.  sel.)— CS  13 
Minstrel's  Marriage  Song. — T:  Chatterton.     See  ^Ella. 
Minstrels  of  the  Marshes,   The.     {Farmer's   Voice.) — 

CS35 
Minstrel's  Roundelay. — T:  Chatterton.     See  JEUa,. 
Minstrel's  Seven  Ages,  The.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Minstrel's  Song. — T:  Chatterton.     See  .^lla. 
Minstrelsy  of  the  Scottish  Border,  Ballads  fr. — (.Edited 
by)  Walter  Scott.     See: 

Annan  Water. 

Armstrong's  Goodnight. 

Barthram's  Dirge. 

Battle  of  Otterbourne,  The. 

Bonny  Hind.  The. 

Broomfield  Hill,  The. 

Brown  Adam. 

Clerk  Saunders. 

Cospatrick. 

Douglas  Tragedy,  The. 

Dowje  Dens  of  Yarrow,  The. 

Eve  of  St.  John,  The. 

Fair  Annie. 

Fair  Helen. 

Flowers  of  the  Forest,  The. 

Fray  o'  Suport,  The. 

Gallant  Grahams,  The. 

Gay  Gos-hawk,  The. 

Graeme  and  Bewick. 

Hughie  the  Graeme. 

Jock  o'  the  Side. 

Johnnie  Armstrong. 

Johnnie  of  Breadislee. 

Katharine  Janfarie. 

Kempion. 

King  Henry. 

Kinmont  Willie. 

Laird  o'  Logie,  The 

Lament  of  the  Border  Widow,  The. 

Lass  of  Lochroyan,  The. 

Lord  Randal. 

Lyke-wake  Dirge,  A. 

Outlaw  Murray,  The 


Minstrelsy  of  the  Scottish  Border  {continued). 
Queen's  Marie,  The. 
Sir  Patrick  Spens. 
Thomas  the  Rhymer. 
Twa  Corbies,  The. 
Wife  of  Usher's  Well,  The. 
Willy's  Lady. 
Young  Redin. 
YoimgTam  Lin. 
Mint  Julip,  The.— C:  F.  Hoffman.— AA 
Minuet,  The.— Mary  M.  Dodge.— BS  17— DR  {w.  mus.) 

— PS— TMR 
(SeZ.)— GMS— SC 
(How  Grandma  Danced.) — SR  9 
Minute  Men  of  Northboro,  The. — Wallace  Rice. — EDY 
Minute  Men  of  '75  [or  '76],  The.  — G:  W:  Curtis.     See 

Centennial  Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 
Minute-gun,  The.— R.  S.  Sharpe.— BNL 
Minutes,  The.— Anon.— TFS 

(Take  Care  of  the  Minutes.) — SM 
(What  the  Minutes  Say— sZ.  abr. )—PP—YFR 
Mirabeau  Dying.— W:  R.  Wallace.— EDY 
Miracle  of    Cana,    The.— Fred    E.    Brooks.— CS  29— 

WR  15 
Miracle  of  the  Egg,  The.     (  Youth's  Comvanion. ) — CS  34 

(Egg  a  Chicken,  An.)— LPS— PP— PS 
Miracle  of  the  Roses,  The.     (Rose,  The — C. — si.  abr.) 

—Rob't  Southey.— HS 
Miracle  Workers,  The.     {Sel.)— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— SN 
Miracles.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— TAS 
Miraculous  Pitcher,     The.     {In   The  Wonder  Book.) 

— Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — WCLI  1 
Mirandy.— Eva  W.  McGlasson.— DES 
Miriam's  Song.— T:  Moore.— BS  16— FEP 

(Sound  the  Loud  Timbrel— C. )— OS  1 
Mis'  Rose.— R.  R.  Kirk— CG  3 
Mis'  Smith.— Albert  B.  Paine.— AWH 
Misadventures  at    Margate.     (C.) — R:    H.  Barham. — 

BNL— HPE— THP 
(Little  Vulgar  Boy,  The— air.)— MHR 
Miscellaneous  Thoughts,  Sels.  fr.—S:  Butler. — HPE 
Mischief.     {Dramatic   char.) — T.  A.  E.  Holcomb. — StD 
Mischief  Makers. — Anon. — CS  6 
Mischievous  Daisy. — Joanna  Matthews. — CD 
Misconceptions. — Rob't  Browning. — HBP — OB — PYO 

— VA 
Miser,  The.— G:    W.    Cutter.— CS  10— NPS— PS— YP 
Miser,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 
Miser,  The.— Rob't  PoUok.     See  Course  of  Time,  The. 
Miser  and  his  Three  Sons,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Essay  III., 

On  Happiness  of  Temper.) — Oliver  Goldsmith. 

— OSl 
Miser  and  Plutus.  The.     (SeZ.)— J:  Gay.— KNE— PS 

— SA 
Miser  and  the  Mouse,  The. — Anon. — PS 
Miser  Fitly    Punished,    The. Osborne. — CS  4 — 

FR— SRll 
Miserere  of  St.    Peter's  Church   at   Rome.     {Fr.   Old 

Rome  and  New  Italy.) — Emilio  Castelar. — FS 
Miseries  of  War,  The.— T:(?)  Chalmers.— BS  14— KNE 
Miser's  Excuse,  The. — Douglas  Jerrold. — WR  13 
Miser's  Fate,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Miser's  Will,    The.— G:    Birdseye.— CS  21— NPS— YP 
Misery.     (SeZ.)—G:  Herbert.- WEP  2 

(See  also  Pulley,  The.) 
Misfit.     (C/iarade.)— Anon. — TCP 

Misfortune.     {Frag.) — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. — KNE 
Misfortune  of  Civil  War.  The. — Mrs.  R.  M.  Swander. — 

PD 
Misfortimes  never  Come  Singly. — Col.  D.  Streamer.— NA 
Misfortunes  of  Elphin,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (War-song  of  Dinas 

Vawr,  The  —  fr.  Ch.  XI.)  —  T:  L.  Peacock.  — 

BPB  —  BVC  —  CEL  —  HBP  —  FEB  3— VA— 

WEP  4 
Misrepresentation. —  J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De  Tabley. 

— AVP 
Miss  Agnes. — Lucy  B.  Ewing. — CS  36 
Miss  Biddy's  Epistle.     {Sel.  fr.    The  Fudge  Family  in 

Paris,  Letter  V.:  From  Miss  Biddy  Fudge  to 

Miss  Dorothy .)— T:  Moore.— THP 

Miss  Edith  Helps  Things  Along. — Fs.   Bret  Harte. — 

BS  6— CRR— CS  16— DS 
Miss  Eva's  Visit  to  the  Ogre. '   {Sel.  fr.  The  Little  Lady 

of   Lavender.) — Theodora  C.  Elmslie. —  BS  24 
Miss  Flora  McFlimiey. — W:  A.  Butler.     See  Nothing 

to  Wear. 
Miss  Fret  and  Miss  Laugh. — Anon.     See  Miss  Laugh 

and  Miss  Fret. 
Miss  Higginson's  Will.     J.  A.  Bellows.— CS  5— MD 
Miss  January  Jones'  Lecture  on  Woman's  Rights. — 

Anon.— PS 
Miss  Jones. — Harry  Romaine. — TL 


211 


Miss  Judith 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Miss  Judith  Macan. — C:  Lever.    See  Charles  O'Malley, 

the  Irish  Dragoon. 
Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her  Precious  Leg,  Sels.  fr. — T: 
Hood. 
Her  Death.— VA  . 
Her  Moral.     (C.)— PYO— VA 
(Gold.)— CS21— TFS 
(Miss  Kilmansegg,  Sel.  fr.) — BNL 
Miss  Laugh  and  Miss  Fret.^Anon. — PR — YA 

(Miss  Fret  and  Miss  Laugh.)— TFS 
Miss  Limberkin's    Mouse.     (Little    Miss    Limberkin — 

O— M  r    M.  Dodge.— Tl' 
Miss  Maloney  (Joes  to  the   Dentist. —  Anon. —  BeR  — 

DDR— WR  21 
Miss  Malony  on  the  Chinese  Question. — Mary  M.  Dodge. 
—  BS  2  —  CDV  —  CS  6  —  DDR  —  DI  —  FTR 
— HR— MHR— NPS— OM— SA— YP 
Miss  Margaret.— (Tr.  by)  Fs.  A.  Shaw.— FTT 
Miss  Milligan's  Party- — Zenas  Dane. — DSS 
Miss  Milly  O'Naire.— Willard  G.  Bleyer.- CG  2 
Miss  Minerva's  Disappointment.— Mrs.  E.  T.  Corbett. 

— CH— CS  19 
Miss  Nancy's  Gown. — Zitella  Cocke. — AA — FEP 
Miss  Nightingale. — Alex.  Smith. — EDY 
Miss  O'Mulligan   Takes   a   Bicycle   Ride. — Loui  e   H. 

Savage.— CS  25 
Miss  Pinkerton's  Academy  for  Young  Ladies. — W:  M. 

Thackeray.     See  Vanity  Fair. 
Miss  Simmons'  New  Bonnet. — Laurie  A.  Raymond. — 

CH 
Miss  Splicer  Tries  the  Toboggan. — "Clara  Augusta." — 
SR6 
(Toboggan  Slide,  The.)— BS  19 
Miss  Willow. — Susie  E.  Kennedy. — NV 
Miss  Witchazel   and   Mr.   Thi.stlepod. — Rob't  J.   Bur- 

dette.— BS  17— WR  21 
Missed  his  Chance.— G:  C.  Graham. — GS 
Misses  at  School,  The. — Anon.— CS  37 
Missing  Ship.  The.— J:  B.  Gough.— CS  14- NPS— YP 
Missing  Ships,  The.— Albert  Laighton.— WR  22 
Mission  of  a  Song,  The. — R.  J.  Hoffner.— BS  26 
Mission  of  America,  The. — J:  Q.  Adams. — SO 
Mission  of  the  Anglo-Saxons,   The. —  F.  J.  Walsh. — 

FS 
Mission   of    the    Press,   The. — Edwin   L.    Shuman. — 

SR7 
Mission  of  the  Public  School,  The.— W:  DeW.  Hyde.— 

SC 
Mission  of  Thomas  Hood,  The. — Anon.     {Ad.) — NC 
Mission  Tea  Party,  The. — Emma  H.  Nason. — TMD 
Missionary,  The.     {Tab.) — Tony  Denier. — TDT 
Missionary  Doll,  The. — Anon. — DCP 
Missionary  Hymn,  The. — Anon. — CS  23 
Missionary  Hymn.     (Before  a  Collection  Made  for  the 
Society  for  the  Propagation  of  the  Gospel — C.) 
—Reginald  Heber.— FEP— LLC 
Missionary  Hymn.— S:  F.  Smith.— FEP 
Missionary  Work  at  Home. — Anon. — MFD 
Mist.     {Verses Jr.  A  Week  on  the  Concord  and  Merri- 
mac  Rivers:  Tuesday.) — H:  D.  Thoreau.  — AA 
— BNL— EPs— SN 
Mist  Opening    in    the    Hills. — W:    Wordsworth.     See 

Excursion,  The. 
Mistake,  A.— Mrs.  J.  T.  Greenleaf.— COS— PP 
Mistakes  Will  Occur. — Anon. — WR  4 
Mr.  Abraham  Cowley's  Death  and  Burial  amongst  the 
Ancient  Poets  (C),  Sels.  fr. — Sir  J:  Denham. 
Elegy  on  Cowley,  The,  Sel.  fr.—WEP  2 
(Abraham  Cowley — br.  sel.) — BNL 
Mr.  and    Mrs.    Bowser's    Family    Jar.     {Detroit    Free 

Press.ySR  7 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Popperman. — Anon. — DCR — WR  3 

(Then  and  Now.)— CS  26 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Santa  Claus. — Anon. — DFR — KNS 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Skinner. — Hardwick. — BC 
Mr.  Artemus  Ward  Crossing  Dixie's  Line.     (Thrilling 
Scenes  in  Dixie — C. —  abr.) — C:  F.  Browne. — 
SCS 
(Artemus  Ward  Crossing  Dixie's  Line.) — CS  2 
Mr.  Barker's  Picture. — Max  Adeler. — WR  25 
Mr.  Barney  Maguire's  Account  of  the  Coronation. — 

R:  H.  Barham.— FEP— THP— VA 
Mr.  Beecher  and  the  Waifs. — Anon. — BS  15 
Mr.  Blif kin's  First  Baby.     {Gleason's  Monthly. ) — CS  9 
Mr.  Bosbyschell's  Confession. — Anon. — CS  17 
Mr.  Bowser  among  the  Dressmakers. — Anon. — DES 
Mr.  Bowser  Takes  Precautions. — Anon. — CS  29 — NPS 

— YP 
Mr.  Brown  has  his  Hair  Cut. —  Anon. —  BS  17  —  SR9 

— WR22 
Mr.  Bumble     and     Mrs.     Cjmey.     C:     Dickens.     See 
Oliver  Twist. 


Mr.  Bunting. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 

Mr.  Caudle  and  his  Second  Wife. —  Douglas  Jerrold  (?) 

— CRR— CS  10— NPS— YP 
Mr.  Caudle  has  been  Made  a  Mason. — Douglas  Jerrold. 
— MDD 
(Caudle  has  been  Made  a  Mason — C. — abr.) — CS  3 

— OM 
Mr.  Caudle   has    Been    to  Greenwich  Fair.  —  Douglas       \ 

Jerrold.— SCS  ^ 

Mr.   Caudle   has   Lent   an   Acquaintance   the   Family 

Umbrella.     (C) — Douglas  Jerrold. 
(Curtain    Lecture    by  Mrs.  Caudle,  A — si.  abr.) — 

SO 
(Mrs.  Caudle's  Umbrella  Lecture.)— CS  1 — DDR 
Mr.  Caudle  Having  (Has — C.)  Lent  Five  Pounds  to  a 

Friend. — l3ouglas  Jerrold. — CS  5 
Mr.  Caudle  Wants  a  "Latch-key."     (Mr.  Caudle,  Hav- 
ing Come  Home  a  little  Late,  Declares  that 

Henceforth   "He   Will   Have   a   Key"— C.)— 

Douglas  Jerrold. — BC 
Mr.  Caudle's  Hat. — Anon. — CS  19 
Mr.  Caudle's  Wedding  Dinner.     (Mr.  Caudle  has  not 

Acted  "Like  a  Husband"  at  the  Wedding  Din- 
ner— C.) — Douglas  Jerrold. — MDD 
Mr.  Clay  and  the  War  of  1812,  Sels.  fr.~H :  Clay. 
For  the  War  of  1813.— SS 
Speech  on  the  War  of  1812— PPS 
Mr.  Copernicus  and   the  Proletariat. — H:C.  Bunner. — 

WR8 
Mr.  Coville    on    Danbury. — Jas.  M.  Bailey.    See    Mr. 

Coville's  Easy  Chair. 
Mr.  Coville    Proves   Mathematics.     (C. — in  They  All 

Do  It.)— Jas.  M.  Bailey.  , 

(How  Mr.  Coville  Counted    the    Shingles    on    his 

House.)— BS  2— CS  9— DDR 
Mr.  Coville's  Easy  Chair.     (Coville  Convalesces — C. — 

in  They  All  Do  It.)— Jas.  M.  Bailey.— CS  9— 

DDR      . 
(Mr.  Coville  on  Danbury.)— BS  2 
Mr.  Cross  and  Servant  John. — Anon. — PS 
Mr.  Cypress's  Song  in  Ridicule  of  Lord  Byron. — T:  L. 

Peacock.     See  Nightmare  Abbey. 
Mr.  ©iffident's  Speech. — Anon. — SR  4 
Mr.  Dooley  Defines  a  Poet. — Finley  P.  Dunne  (?). — 

SR  13  V  >  . 

Mr.  Dooley  in  Peace  and  in  War,  Sel.  fr. — Finley  P. 

Dunne.     See  below. 
Mr.  Dooley  on  a  Populist  Convention.     {Fr.  Mr.  Dooley 

in  Peace  and  in  War.) — Finley  P.  Dunne. — 

CS  37 
Mr.  Eisseldorf  and  the  Water  Pipe. — Anon. — CS  31 — 

PR— SR  10— YA 
Mr.  Finney's  Turnip. — Anon. — NA 
Mr.  Fogg's  Account  of  a  Scientific  Experiment. — Anon. 

— SA 
Mr.  Graham  and  Lady  Clementina.     (The  Marquis  of 

Lossie,  Ch.   LX. — si.   abr.) — G:  Macdonald. — 

FTR 
Mr.  Gregsbury  and  the  Deputation. — C:  Dickens.     See 

Nicholas  Nickleby. 
Mr.  Grey's  Motion  for  a  Reform  in  Parliament,  May  26, 

1797,  Sel.fr.     (Vigor  of  Democratic  Govern- 
ments, The.)— C:  J.  Fox.— SS 
Mr.  Haines's  Able  Argument.     {Arkansaw  Traveller.) — 

TMR 
Mr.    Hammond's  Parable  —  The   Dreamer. — Jas.  W. 

Riley.— CW 
Mr.  Harris's   Comic   Song. — Jerome   K.   Jerome.     See 

Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Mr.  Hoffenstein's  Bugle. — Anon. — SR  4 
Mr.  Hop-toad. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Mr.  Hopwell's  Theory  of  Suppressing  a  Fire  in  a  The- 
atre.    {Detroit  Free  Press.) — SR  4 
Mr.  Hosea  Biglow  to    the    Editor  of    "The  Atlantic 

Monthly." — ./as.     R.     i.!jwell.        See    Biglow 

Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Hunter's  Mistake. — Anon. — DDM 
Mr.  Johnson  on  Lawyers. — Anon. — DSS 
Mr.  Johnson  on  the  Beautiful. — Anon. — DSS 
Mr.  Johnson  on  Wine. — Anon. — DSS 
Mr.  Jonathan  Bangs. — A.  B.  Cole. — CS  25 
Mr.  Kris  Kringle.     {Cond.)— Br.  S.   Weir  Mitchell.— 

BS  22 
Mr.  Meek's  Dinner. — Anon. — CS  36 
Mr.  Merry's  Lament  for  "Long  Tom." — J:  G.  C.  Brain- 

ard. — AA 
Mr.  Middlerib's  Experiment. — Rob't  J.  Burdette.     See 

Movement  Cure  for  Rheumatism,  The. 
Mr.,  Miss,  and  Mrs.,  Sel.fr.     (Everyday  Case,  An.) — 

C:  Bloomingdale,  Jr.— BS  26 
Mr.  Molony's  Account  of  the  Ball. —  W:  M.  Thackeray. 

—  BNL  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  MRS  —  PR— TifP 
— YA 


212 


TITLE  INDEX 


Mrs.  Tubbs 


Mr.  Nobody.— Anon.— BVC—PPSr— PR— YA 

(A6r.)— HSS  2— PP— YFS 
Mr.  O'Hoolahan's  Mistake.— Anon.— CS  15— DI— NPS 

— YP 
Mr.  Perkins  at  the  Dentist's.   (C — inLiie  in  Danbury.) 

— Jas.  M.  Bailey.— CS  15 
Mr.  Perkins  Buys  a  Dog.     (First   Dog,  The  —  C. — in 

Life  in  Danbury.) — .Jas.  M.  Bailey. — CS  8 
Mr.  Perkins  Helps  to  Move  a  Stove.     (C. — in  Life  in 

Danbury.)— Jas.  M.  Bailey.— CS  8 
Mr.  Pickwick  in  a  Dilemma. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pick- 
wick Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Pickwick  in  the  Wrong  Room. — C:  Dickens.     <See 

Pickwick  Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Pickwick's  Dilemma. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pickwi  k 

Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Pickwick's  Proposal  to  Mrs.  Bardell. — C:  Dickens. 

See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Pickwick's  Romantic   Adventure    with    a   Middle- 
aged  Lady  in  Yellow  Curl  Papers. — C:  Dickens. 

See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Piper's  Mittens.— E:  F.  Turner.— CS  24 
Mr.  Potts'  Story.— Max  Adeler.— BS  22 
Mr.  Puff's  Account  of  Himself.     (Sel.  ad.  fr.  The  Critic; 

or,  A  Tragedy  Rehearsed,  Act  I.,  Sc.  2.) — R: 

B.  Sheridan.— SS 
Mr.  Rogers  and   Monsieur  Denise. Matthews. — 

DFY— MDD 
Mr.  Rootle's  Economy. — Anon. — CS  13 
Mr.  Sanscript's  Ride  Down  Hill. — Anon.    See  following. 
•Mr.  Sanscript's  Slide  [or  Ride]  Down  Hill. — Anon. — 

CS  21- NPS— YP 
Mr.  Schmidt's  Mistake.— C:  F.  Adams.— BDD— CD— 

CS  14— DCR— DFY— SDR 
Mr.  Skiff  and  his  Bees. — Anon. — DS 
Mr.  Slocum.— Ella  Rodman  Church.— WR  14 
Mr.  Spoopendyke  Hears  Burglars. — Stanley  Huntley. 

—DCR 
(Spoopendyke's  Burglars.) — CS  19 
Mr.  Sprechelheimer's  Mistake. — W.  W.  Crane. — SR  1 
Mr.  Spring's  Concert. — Anon. — AD  (abr.) 

(Concert  Given  by  Mr.  Spring,  A.)— TFS  {abr.) 
(Concert  in  the  Wood,  The.)— KER— WR  4 
Mr.  Stiver's  Horse.   (C. — in  Life  in  Danbury.) — Jas.  M. 

Bailey.— CS  7 
Mr.  Styx  Rejoices  on  Account  of  a  New  Wellspring. — 

Anon.— MCS 
Mr.  The .  Cibber .    ( Essay  XX  V.— sZ.  abr. )— Oliver  Gold  - 

smith.— BS  19 
Mr.  Tongue.— Anon.— COS— PP— PS 
Mr.  Traver's  First  Hunt.— R:  H.  Davis.— SC 
Mr.   Webster    to    Mrs.    Paige. — Dan'l  Webster.     See 

Morning. 
Mr.  Weller  in  Affliction. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pickwick 

Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Weyler. — Anon. — FS 
Mister  William.— W:  S.  Gilbert.— THP 
Mr.  Winkle  on    Skates. — C:    Dickens.     See    Pickwick 

Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Winkle  Puts  on  Skates. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pick- 
wick Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Winkle's  Adventure. — C:  Dickens.     <See  Pickwick 

Papers,  The. 
Mr.  Worth's  Farm  Hands. — Anon. — MAD 
Mister,  yer  Gittin'  Old. — Lu  B.  Cake. — CS  35 
Misther  Denis's  Return.     (Fr.  Th'  Ould  Master.) — .lane 

Barlow.— TIP 
Mistletoe  Bough,  The.— T:  H.  Bayly.— BNL—FEP— 

OS  3 
(Genevra — dram,  by  Emma  S.  Stillwell.) — CDs 
(For  another  version  of  same  story  see  Ginevra,   by 

S:  Rogers.) 
Mistress,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Abraham  Cowley. 
Spring,  The.— WEP  2 
Wish,  The.— OB— WEP  2 
Mrs.  Bacon,  Lawyer. — Howell  L.  Finer. — WR  23 
Mrs.  Bean's  Courtship. — "Clara  Augusta." — DFY 
Mrs.  Bolivar's  Quilting.— H.  Elliot  McBride.— MHD 
Mrs.  Brady's  Conundrum. — Anon. — GH 
Mrs.  Brindle's  Cowslip  Feast. — Anon. — NV 
Mrs.  Brindle's  Music  Lesson. — Anon. — WR  4 
Mrs.  Britzenhoeffer's  Troubles.— G:  Kyle. — WR  3 
Mrs.  Brown  and  Mrs.  Green. — G.  L.  Banks. — CS  9 
Mrs.  Brown  on  Modern  Houses. — Arthur  Sketchley. — 

BeR 
Mrs.    Brown    on    the   State  of   the   Streets. — Arthur 

Sketchley. — BeR 
Mrs.  Brownlow's  Christmas  Party.     (Every  Other  Sat- 
urday.)~CS  29 
Mrs.  Brown's  Husbands. — Anon. — CS  21 
Mrs.  B.'s  Alarms. — Jas.  Payn. — VSG 
Mrs.  Caudle  has  Taken  Cold. — Douglas  Jerrold. — CS  6 


Mrs.  Caudle  Needs  Spring  Clothing. — Douglas  Jerrold. 

See  following. 
Mrs.  Caudle  Urging  the  Need  of  Spring  Clothing.  (Mrs. 

Caudle  Thinks  it  "High  Time  that  the  Children 

should  have  Summer  Clothing" — C. — si.  abr.) 

—Douglas  Jerrold.- CS  4— MHR 
(Mrs.  Caudle  Needs  Spring  Clothing.) — PS 
Mrs.  Caudle's    Lecture  [on  Shirt   buttons].     (On  Mr. 

Caudle's  Shirt-buttons — C.) — Douglas  Jerrold. 

— BS  21— CS  2 
Mrs.   Caudle's    Umbrella    Lecture. — Douglas    Jerrold. 

See  Mr.  Caudle  has  Lent  an  :*  cquaintance  the 

Family  Umbrella. 
Mrs.  Christopher  Columbus. — Marie  S.  Cowell. — WRIO 
Mrs.  Dove's  Boarding-house. — Jos.  (?)  Barber. — MDD 
Mrs.  Eliz.  Wheeler.— Rob't  Herrick.— HBP 
Mrs.     Fillisy's     Burglar-alarm.  —  Birch     Arnold.f — 

WR  20  (si.  abr.) 
(Burglar  Alarm,  The.)— CH 
Mrs.  Frances  Harris'  Petition. — Jonathan  Swift. — ESs 
Mrs.  Golightly. — Gertrude  Hall. — AA 
Mrs.  Greylock  Tells  about  the  Play. — Anon. — WR  4 
Mrs.  Guptill    Gets    ahead    of    the    Grip.  —  S.     Jennie 

Smith.— CS  34 
Mrs.  Hardcastle's  Journey.  —  (Sel.  ad.  fr.  She  Stoops 

to  Conquer,  Act.  V.)  —  Oliver   Goldsmith.  — 

NDP 
Mrs.  Harwood's  Secret.     (Play  ad.  fr.  The  Story  of  a 

Governess.)— Mrs.  M.  O.  W.  Oliphant.— NDP 
Mrs.  Hemans.— B.  Hallock.— EDY 
Mrs.  Jones'  Lodger. — Edwin  Coller. — CS  24 
Mrs.  Jones'  Pirate.— C:  Heber  Clark.— THP 
Mrs.  Jones's  Pudding. — Anon. — CS  33 
Mrs.  Jones's  Revenge.     (Arr.  by  E.  R.  Ingraham.) — 

BS  20 
Mrs.   June's    Prospectus. — Susan    Coolidge. —  MYF — 

PHS 
(SI.  abr.)— PP—YPS 
Mrs.  Leo  Hunter. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pickwick  Papers, 

The. 
Mrs.  Lofty  and  I.— Anon.— CSS— HSS  3— PPSr— PS 
Mrs.  McDuffy    on    Baseball.     (Detroit   Free   Press.) — 

CS37 
Mrs.  McShane's     Shopping     Expedition.— S.      Jennie 

Smith.— CS  36 
Mrs.  McWilliams  and  the  Lightning. — S:  L.  Clemens. — 

BS  8— CS  19 
Mrs.  Magoogin  on  Spring  Bonnets  and  Spring  Poetry. — 

J:  J.  Jenkins— DES 
Mrs.  Malaprop's  Idea  of  Education. — R:  B.  Sheridan. 

See  Rivals,  The. 
Mrs.  Marigold.— Anon.— BS  20 
Mrs.  Middlerib's  Letter.     (Burlington  Hawkeye.)  —  CH 

— WR26 
Mrs.  Murphv's  Recipelfor  Cake. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — 

CS28 
Mrs.  O'Toole  and  the  Conductor. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — 

CS  31 
Mistress  of  Philarete,  The. — G:  Wither.     See  Fair  Vir- 
tue, the  Mistress  of  Philarete. 
Mistress  of  the  Manse,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Josiah  G.  Hol- 
land. 
Lullaby.     (Fr.  Love's  Consummations,  V.) — AA 

(Rockaby,  Lullaby.)— PoR 
Mistress  of  the  Manse,  Fr.  (Br.  sel.  fr.  Love's  Exper- 
iments, XVII.)— BIL 
Mrs.  Partington's  Reflections  on  New  Year's  Day. — 

B :  P.  Shillaber.— WR  5 
Mrs.  Pickett's  Missionary  Box.     (Abr.) — Alice  M.Eddy 

— BS  15 
Mrs.  Pickles  Wants  to  be  a  Man. — Mary  Kyle  Dallas. — 

WR3 
Mrs.  Piper.— Marian   Douglas.— DES— PP— PS— YPS 
Mrs.    Potts'    Dissipated    Husband. — Anon.^ — CS    18 — 

SRI 
Mrs.  Poyser  "Has  her  Say  out." — (Adam  Bede,  Ch. 

XXXII.)— G:  Eliot.— VSG 
Mrs.  Pussy. — Anon. — NV 
Mrs.  Santa  Claus. — May  R.  McNabb. — PS 
Mistress  Sherwood's  Victory. — Eva  L.  Ogden. — NP 
Mrs.  Slowly  at  the  Hotel.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Mrs.  Smart  Learns  how  to  Skate. — "Clara   Augusta." 

— DFY— PR— YA 
Mrs.  Smith. — Frd'k  I.ocker-Lampson — THP 
Mrs.   Smith  Improves  her  Mind. —  Mary  K.  Dallas. — 

WR3 
Mrs.  Smith's  Boarders. — H.  E.  McBride. — SD 
Mrs.  Thompson's  Nephew. — Anon. — MAD 
Mrs.  Tubbs  and  Political  Economy. — Mary  K.  Dalla?. 

— WR  3 
Mrs.  Tubbs  at  the  Sewing  Circle. — Belle  M.  Locke. — 

CS36 


213 


Mrs.  Walker's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Mrs.  Walker's  Betsey.— H.  B.  Bostwick.— BS  9 

Mrs.  Ward's  Visit  to  the  Prince. — Mary  W.  Janvirn. — 

BSg 
Mrs.  Willis's  Will.— Emile  Souvestre.— DT 
Mrs.  Winkle's  Grandson. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Mrs.  Woffington's  Portrait.     (Sel.  fr.  Peg  Woflington, 

Ch.  XIII.)— C:fteade.— WR  13 
Mrs.  Wright's  Conversation  with  her  Irish  Acquaint- 
ance.    {Dial. ) — Anon. — MPD 
Mite  Song,  A.— Anon.— CPL  (el.  abr.  )—TFS 

(Little  Things—*/.  a6r.)— LPS— PP 
Mitherless  Bairn,  The.— W:  Thom.— BNL— FEP— GP 

— VA 
Mither's  EJiee,  A. — Anon. — BS  14 
Mitten,  The.— A.  W.  Bellaw.— WR  15 
Mixed  Relationship,  A. — Anon. — CS  24 
(Strangely  Related — si.  abr.) — SR  4 
Miyoko  San. — Mary  McN.  FenoUosa. — AA 
Mizpah. — Clement  Scott. — CS  27 
Mo  Craoibhin  Cno.— E:  Walsh.— TIP 
Moan,  Moan,  ye  Dying  Gales. — H:  Neele. — BNL 
Mocking-bird,  The. — Anon. — WR  9 
Mocking-bird,  The. — Jos.  R.  Drake. — POS 

(Mocking-bird's  Song,  The.)— HSS  3— NV 
Mocking-bird,  The.— Ednah  P.  (C.)  Hayes.— AA 
Mocking-bird,  The. — Sidney  Lanier. — AA 
Mocking-bird,  The. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — AA 
Mocking-bird,  The. — H.  J.  Stockard. — AA 
Mocking-bird,  The. — Walt  Whitman,     ^ee  Out  of  the 

Cradle  Endlessly  Rocking. 
Mocking-bird's  Song,  The. — Jos.  R.  Drake.     See  Mock- 
ing-bird, The. 
Model,  A.— Dollie  Radford.- VA 
Model    American     Girl,    The. — Virgil    A.    Pinkley. — 

BS  11 
Model  Church,  The.— J:  H.  Yates.— HP— KNE 

(Old  Man  in  the  Model  Church,  The — bI.  abr.)— BS  2 

— CS  7— SA 
Model  Discourse,  A. — Anon. — BS  7 — SR  2 

(Model  Sermon,  A.)— CS  18 
Model  Farmer,  The. — Anon. — FND 
Model  Husband,  The. — Eleanor  M.  Denny. — SR  10 
Model  Lesson,  The.     (Play.) — Anon.-^PR 
Model  Love-letter,  A. — Anon. — CS  8 — PS 
Model  Sermon,  A. — Anon. — See  Model  Discourse,  A. 
Model  Tea  Party,  A. — M.  H.  F.  Donny. — COS— PP 
Model  Woman,  The.— Anon.— BS  14— SR  6 
Models,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.- BVC 
Moderation.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Modern  Athenian,  A. — Anon. — WR  20 
Modem  and  Mediaeval  Ballad  of  Mary  Jane,  The. — 

Anon. — SR  6 
Modem  Belle,  The.— Anon.— AWH— CS  11  (si.  diff.)— 

THP 
Modem  Book,  The.— M.  R.— CG  2  , 

Modem  Cain,  The.— E.  Evans  Edwards. — BS  1— CS  2 

— SA— SR  2 
Modem  Chivalry.— M.  D.  S.— SD 
Modern  Cymon,  The. —  Bryan  W.  Procter. — CS  10 
Modern  Education. — Anon. — NPS — YP 
Modern  Elijah,  A.— R:  Yorke.— WR  7 
Modern  Facilities  for  Evangelizing  the  World. — H :  W. 

Beecher.— BS  11 
Modern  Flirtation,  A. — Anon. — KNS 
Modern  Girl,  The. — Tom  Masson.— BS  20 

(We  allKnowher.)— CS31— PR— SR  10— YA 
Modern  Hero,  A. — J.  Verey. — VSG 
Modem  Hiawatha,  The. — Anon. — NA 
Modem  High  School  Valedictory. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. 

— SR6 
Modem  House  that  Jack  Built,  The. — Anon. — BNL — 

CS  3 
(Domicile  Erected  by  Jack,  The.)— MHR 
(House  that  Jack  Built,  The.)— PTS  (obr.)— SO 
(Old,  but  Good.)— SR  2 
Modem  Instance,  A.     (Red  and  Blue.) — CG  2 
Modem  Knighthood. — Anon. — CP 
Modem  Love,  Sels.  fr. — G:  Meredith. 
"All  Other  Joys."     (St.  IV.)— VA 
Coin  of  Pity,  The.     (XLIV.)— VA 
Hiding  the  Skeleton.     (XVII.)— VA 
Love's  Grave.     (XLIII.)— OB 
One  TwUight  Hour.     (XLVII.)— VA 
Modem  Loyalty. — Anon. — SR  1 
Modem  Martyrdom,  A. — Sam  W.  Foss. — AWH 
"Modem  newspaper  is  not  merely  a  private  enterprise. 

The."— C.  C.  Bonney.— GG 
Modem  Painters,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Ruskin. 

Beauty  of  the  Clouds.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Sec.  III., 

Ch.  I.)— LLC 
(Open  Sky,  The.)— IR 
(Sky,  The.)— SO 


Modern  Painters  (continued). 

Clouds,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  VII.,  Ch.  I.)— SO  (abr.)~- 
VSG 
(Cloud  Beauty— p%.di^.)—IR 
Death  of  Moses,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  V.,  Ch.  XX.)— 

TMD 
Earth's  First  Mercy.  The.     (Sd.fr.  Pt.  VI.,  Ch.  X.) 
— TMR 
(Humblest  of  the  Earth-children,  The.) — BS  13 
(Mosses,  Earth's  Humblest  Children.)— SR  3 
"On  the  whole  there  are  much  sadder  ages."     (Sel. 

fr.  Pt.  IV.,  Ch.  XVI.)— GG 
Pine  Tree,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  VI.,  Ch.  IX.)— AD 
Sky,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Sec.  II.,  Ch.  II.,  w.  add. 

fr.  Stones  of  Venice.)— BS  10 — OM 
Trae  Contentment.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  IX.    Ch.  XI.)— 

BS5 
Utility  of  the  Beautiful ,  The.     (Sel.  /r.  Pt.  1 1 1 . ,  Sec . 

I.,  Ch.  I.)— SS 
Water.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II. ,  Sec.  V. ,  Ch.  I. )— SE 
Modern  Pirates,  The.— Herbert  Welsh.— BS  25 
Modern  Poet,  The. — Alice  Meynell. — VA 
Modern  Psyche,  A.— Eliza  C.  Hall.— TL 
Modern  Robinson  Crusoe,   The. — Anon. — FND 
Modern  Romans,  The. — C:  F.  Johnson. — AA — HBR 
Modern  Seer,  A.     (Philadelphia  Press.) — BS  26 
Modem  Shakespeare,  The.     (Yonkers  Gazette.) — CS  25 
Modern  Summer    Hotel,    A.      (Traveler's    Record.) — 

SR4 
Modem  Version  of  the  Merchant  of  Venice,  A. — Jos. 

Barber.— DR 
Modem  Wedding  Rites. — Anon. — CH 
Modem  Youth,  A.— Isabel  S.  Goodhue.— CS  37 
Modest  Couple,  The.— W:  S.  Gilbert.— THP 
Modest  Maid,  The.— A.  H.  Morris.— WR  9 
Modest  Poet,  The.— (Yale  Record.)— CG  3 
Modest  Wit,  A.— Selleck  Osbome.— BS  4— CS  1— OM 
—OS  1 

Modulation. Lloyd.— CS  5— HNS— WRD 

("'Tis  not  enough  the  voice  be  loud  and  clear" — br. 
sel.)—SA 
Mogg  Megone,  SeZ. /r.     (Story  of  Ruth  Bonython,  The 
—c(md.)—J:  G.  Whittier.— WR  16 
(Ruth  Bonython— 8«.  diif.)— VSG 
(Spring— 6r.  seZ.)- HSS  1 
Mohammed. — Robert,  Earl  of  Lytton. — WR  1 
Mohammed  and  Seid. — Harrison  S.  Morris. — AA  \ 

Moll.     (Sel.  fr.  To  Samuel  Bindon,  Esq.) — Jonathan 

Swift.— HPE 
Moll  Jarvis  O'Morley.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  25 
Mollie  Pitcher.— Kate  B.  Sherwood.— EDY 
MoUie's  Little  Ram. — Anon. — PS 
Molly.— Anita  M.  Kellogg.— DR 
Molly  Carew.— S:  Lover.— HBP— PPSr—SAE 
Molly  Maguire  at  Monmouth. — W:  Collins. — PAP 
(Captain  MoUv  at  Monmouth.)— PRR—WR  10 
(Irish  Molly.)— SR  9 
Molly  Muldoon. — Anon. — MHR 
Moloch — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Moloch  to  the  Fallen  Angels. —  J:  Milton.     See  Para- 
dise Lost. 
Molony's  Lament. — W:  M.  Thackeray. — HBP 
Momentous  Question,  A. — Schuyler  Colfax. — TS 
Moments. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. — AVP 
"Moments  there  are  in  life — alas,  how  few!" — Rob't 

Southey.— GG 
Monadnoc. — Ralph  Waldo  Emerson. — AP 
Monarch  of  the  Old  Regime,  A.— F.  M.  Michael. — CG  1 
Monarch  of  the  Woods.     (  With  mus.) — Anon. — AD 
Monarchie,  The,  Sel.  fr.— Sir  D:  Lyndesay.- WEP  1 
Monarchy  of  Crsar,  The.     (Sel.   fr.   The  Historv  of 
Rome,  Ch.  XXXVIII.)— Theodore  Mommsen. 
—TMD 
Mona's  Waters.— Anon.— BS  11— CS  7— FTR— HR— 

— MMR— SA— TMR 
Monastery,    The,    Sel.    fr.      (Border   Ballad  — /r.    Ch. 
XXV.)— Walter  Scott.— FEP— GN— HBP  — 
LC— OS  2— PYO 
(Border  Song.)— GP— LLC  (si.  abr.) 
Mon-da-min.     (Br.  sel.) — Bayard  Taylor. — AD 
Monday;  or.  The  Squabble. — J:  Gay.     See  Shepherd's 

Week,  The. 
Mohammed. — T:  Carlyle.     See  On   Heroes  and   Hero 

Worship. 
Money,  Sel.  fr.      (Sudden  Fortune,  A — Act  II.,  Sc.  1, 

abr.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— VSG 
Money  is  King. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Money  Musk.     (Old  Bam,  The— scZ.  fr.  3rd  pt. :  The 
Old  Barn's  Tenantrj';  4th  pt.:   Money  Musk) 
— B:  F.Taylor.— BRR—BS  14— CS  18-CSS— 
SR  1  (4th  pt.  onlv.) 
(W.  mus.— si.  abr.)— BR 


214 


TITLE  INDEX 


Morality 


Moneyless  Man,  The.— H.  T.  Stanton.— CS  5 

Mon-goos,  The. — Oliver  Herford. — AA 

Monk  and    the    Friar,    The. — Geoffrey   Chaucer.     See 

Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Monk  in  his  Cell,  A.     (Tableau.)     {Scribner' a  Monthly.) 

— BS  8— TCP 
Monkey,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— GN— NV  {al.  abr.) 
Monkey's  Glue,  The. — Goldwin  Goldsmith. — NA 
Monkey's  Wedding,  The. — Anon. — NA 
Monk's  Adventures,  The. — Joe  Kerr. — SR  10 
Monks  and  the  Giants,  The,  SeZ.    fr. — J:   Hookham 

Frere.— WEP  4 
Monk's  Magnificat,  The. — E.  Nesbit.     See  Singing  of 

the  Magnificat,  The. 
Monk's  Prayer,  The.— C:  C.  Hahn.— BS  18 
Monk's  Song.     (Fr.  The  Roman.) — Sydney  Dobell. — 

WEP  4 
Monk's  Vision,  The.     (Boston  Pilot.)— BS  19— PEG 
(Legend,  A.)— CS  24 
(True  Artist,  The.)— YBT 
Monna  Innominata.  Seh.  fr. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. 
"Abnegation.     (Sonnet  XII.) — VA 
First  Meeting,  The.     (II.)- FTA— OH 
Sonnet:     "  O  my  heart's  heart,"  etc.  (V.) — BIL 
Sonnet:     "Trust  me,   I    have   not    earned,"  etc. 

(VU— BIL 
Trust.  (XIII.)— VA 
Monochord,  The.    (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  LXXIX.) 

— Dante  G.  hossetti.— WEP  4 
Monody  on  Chatterton. — S :  T.  Coleridge.    See  Monody 

on  the  Death  of  Chatterton. 
Monody  on  the  Death  of  an  Only  Client.     (Punch.) — 

FEP— HPE 
Monody  on   the   Death   of   Chatterton   (C),     Sel.    fr. 

(On  the  Death  of  Chatterton  —  set.  fr.  latest 

vers.)— S:T.  Coleridge.— EDY 
Monody  on  the  Death  of  Sheridan. — Lord  Byron.    See 

following. 
Monody  on  the  Death  of  the  Right  Hon.  R.  B.  Sheri- 
dan. (C.) — Lord  Byron. 
(Monody  on  the   Death  of  Sheridan — br.  sel.)  — 

BNL 
(On  the  Death  of  [Richard  Brinsley]  Sheridan — 

o6r.)— EDY— PS  (longer.) 
Monroe  Doctrine,  The. — ^Lewis  Cass. — MRS 
Monroe  Doctrine,  The. — Jas.  Monroe. — AI 
Monroe  Doctrine,  The. — J:  M.  Thurston— SC 
Monsieur  Camot's  Death. — J:  H.  Ingham. — EDY 
Monsieur  Jacques.     (Dial.) — M.  Bamett. — MPD 
Monsieur  McGint^. — Anon. — NA 

Monsieur  Mocquard  between  Two  Fires. — Anon. — DFY 
Monsieur  Tonson.— J:  Taylor.- CS  4— DFY— FTR— 

MHR 
Monster  Cannon,    The. — Victor    Hugo.     See    Ninety- 
Monster  Diamond,  The.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— CS  19 
Monstrous  Relations  in  Newspapers. — Fisher  Ames. — 

MRS 
Mont    Blanc    before   Sunrise. — S:    T.    Coleridge.     See 

Hymn  before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamoumi. 
Montanus  Sonnet  (I.,  II.— -fr.  Rosalynde;  or,  Euphues' 

Golden  Legacy.)— T:  Lodge.— EP 
Montcalm  and  Wolfe,  Sel.  fr.     (Battle  of  the  Plains  of 

Abraham,  The  —  sel.  fr.   Ch.   XXVII.)  —  Fs. 

Parkman.— WCLG  1 
Montefiore. — Ambrose  Bierce. — AA — EDY 
Monterey.— C :  F.  Hoffman.— AA—AWB— BAB— BNL 

—  EDY  —  FEP  —  HB  —  HBP  —  OS  1  — 

P.^  P— PAPm— PPSr— TAV 
(Storming  of  Monterey,  The.)— BLP 
Montgomery  at  Quebec. — Clinton    Scollard. — BAB — 

EDY 
Month  of  Apple  Blossom.     (W.  mus.) — Anon. — AD 
Month  of  Apple   Blossoms,   The. — H:   W.    Beecher. — 

BS  15 
Month  of  Mars,  The.    (October— C.)—B:  F.  Taylor.— 

BS  2— SA 
Month  of  May.   (Youth's  Companion.)— AD — TT  (abr.) 
Month  of  Maying,  The. — Anon. — ELP 
Months,  The.— Anon.— BVC 
Months,  The.— Lizzie  M.  Hadley.— PP— PS— YPS 

(Months  and  Holidays,  The.)— HE 
Months,  The.— Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Months  and  Holidays,  The. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley.     See 

Months,  The. 
Months  and  Seasons. — Edmund   Spenser.     See   Faerie 

Queene,  The. 
Montravers  O'Brien.— G:  Thatcher.— TH 
Montreal.— W.  D.  Schuyler-Lighthall.— VA 
Montrose's  Love. — Jas.  Graham,  Marquis  of  Montrose. 
-FTA.     See  My  Dear  and  Only  Love  [,  I 


Pray]. 
Monument  of  Trees,  A. 


-J.  P.  McCaskey.— AD 


Monument  of  William  Penn,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  History  of 

William  Penn.)  —  Rob't  J.  Burdette. —  l^R 
(Penn's  Monument.)— BS  17— CS  29— FD  1— NPS 

— SR  8— YP 
Monument  to  Shakespeare,  A.     (William  Shakespeare, 

Third  Pt.,  Conclusion,  Sec.  V.)  —  Victor  Hugo. 

—MRS 
Mood,  A.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— ASL 
Mood,  A. — Winifred  Howells. — ^AA 
Mood,  A. — A.  Troubetzkoy. — AA 
Moods.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Moods  (Sir  J.  S.— C.).— Sir  J:  Suckling.— EPs 

(Constancy.)  —  BNL  —  CEL  —  ELP  —  ES  —  OEL 

—WEP  2— YBF 
(Constant  Lover,  The.)— FEP— OB 
Moon,  The.— Anon.— OS  1 

Moon,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Moon. — H:  Rowe. — OB 
Moon,  The,  I.     (The    Waning    Moon— C.)— Percy    B. 

SheUey.— OB 
Moon,  The,  II.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— OB  (si.  abr.) 
(To  the  Moon— C.)— CEL 

(Si.  abr.)— FEP— PGT  1— YBF 
Moon,  The.— Rob't  L.Stevenson.— CGV 
Moon  amon^  Trees,  The. — W:  Wordsworth.      See  Ex- 
cursion, The. 
Moon  and  Dawn.     (Sunday  Magazine.) — HP 
Moon  and  the  Child,  The.— G:  Jacque.— PP— YFR 
Moon  is  Up,  The. — Anon. — NA 
Moon,  so  Roimd  and  YeUow. — Anon. — CPL 
Moon  was  a-Waning,  The. — Jas.  Hogg. — HBP 
Moone,  The. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and 

Stella. 
Mooni. — H:  Clarence  Kendall. — OB 
Moonlight.— W:  P.  M'Kenzie.— TCV 
Moonlight. — W:  Shakespeare.    See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. 
Moonlight  in  Italy. — Eliz.  C.  Kinney. — AA 
Moonlight  in  Summer. — Rob't  Bloomfield. — BNL 
Moonlight  on  the  Alhambra. — Washington  Irving.  See 

Alhambra,  The. 
Moonlight  on  the  Campus. — Frd'k  E.  Pierce. — CG  3 
Moonlight  on  the  Prairie. — H:     W.     Longfellow.     See 

Evangeline. 
Moonlight  Song  of  the  Mocking-bird. — W:  H.  Hayne. — 

AA 
Moonrise. — Ernest  Jones. — BP 
Moonrise. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — AA 
Moonrise  in  the  Rockies. — Ella  Higginson. — AA 
Moonshine. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Moonshine. — W.  S.  Moody,  Jr. — TL 
Moon-struck,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (That  Light.)  —  Dinah  M. 

Craik.— HDL 
Moor  Calaynos,  The.— J:  G.  Lockhart.— WR  14 
Moorlands  of  the  Not. — Anon. — NA 

Moor's  Revenge,  The. Miciewica. — CS  36 — KNE 

*         gg 

Moose  Hunt,  The.— Anon.— WR  7 

Moral. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Day-dream,  The. 

Moral  and  Physical  Science  Friendly  to  Freedom. — E. 

H.  Chapin.— SS 
Moral  Cosmetics. — Horace  Smith. — BNL — SS 
Moral  Courage. — Anon. — KNE 
Moral  Courage. — F:  W.  Farrar. — NC 
Moral  Courage.— Sydney  Smith.— BS  15— OS  2 
Mo-al  I  risi.s,  A. — C:  W.  Parkhurst — NC 
Moral  Effects    (Jf    Intemperance. — H:   W   Beecher. — 

BS5 
Moral  Essays,  Sels.  fr. — Alex.  Pope. 

Death  of  the  Duke  of  Buckingham,  The.     (Sel.  fr. 

Epistle  IIL)— EDY 
Man  of  Ross,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.)— EDY— EPs 

— WRD 
Moral  Essays,  Br.  sels.  fr.  —BNL  (fr.  II.,  III.,  IV.) 
Moral  Essays,  Epistle  I.     (A6r.)— WEP  1 

(Ruling  Passion,  The.)— BNL  («eZ.)— YBF  (br.  sel.) 
Nature.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IV.)— AD 
Moral  Force   against   Physical. — Dan'l   Webster.     See 

following. 
Moral  Force  of  Public  Opinion.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Revolu- 
tion in  Greece.) — Dan'l  Webster. — MRS 
(Moral  Force  against  Physical — abr.) — SS 
(Public  Opinion.)— TMD 
Moral  in  Sevres,  A. — Mildred  Howells. — AA 
Moral  Law  for  Nations. — J:  Bright. — TMR 
Moral  Power  the   Most    Formidable. — J:   McLean. — 

SS 
Moral  Warfare,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— PEO 
Morality. — Matthew  Arnold. — WEP  4 

("We  cannot  kindle  when  we  will" — sel.) — HDL 
Morality  the  Basis  of  Civilized  Society — Belief  in  God 
the     Basis    of    Morality.  —  Maximilien  M.  I. 
Robespierre.— PS— SS 


215 


Morals 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Morals,  Sel.  Jr.  ("  We  all  complain  of  the  shortness 
of  time" — hr.  sel.  fr.  Ch.  XIX.) — Seneca. — 
WCLIl 

Morals  of    Marcus    Aurelius,  The,  V.— (C.)— R:    H. 
Stoddard. 
(Boast  Not.)— YBT, 

Moravian  Hymn. — J:  Wesley. — EPs 

Moray  and  his  Thirty.— Anon.— NPS—YP 

More  Ancient  Mariner,  A. — Bliss  Carman. — SN — VA 

More  Cruel  than  War.— W.  S.  Hawkins.— CS  12— CS  33 

More  Hullahbaloo!— T:  Hood.— MHR  (abr.) 
(Singing  for  the  Million. )— CS  8  (si.  abr. ) 

"More  in  the  garden  grows  than  what  is  sown." — 
Horatius  Bonar. — FHS 

More  in  the  Man  than  in  the  Land. — Anon. — CS  35 

"More  Love  to  Thee,  O  Christ!"— Eliz.  Prentiss. — SAE 

"More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer." — Alfred  Tenny- 
son.    See  Morte  d'Arthur. 

"More  Truth  than  Poetry."— E.  W.  W.— SR  10 

Morgan. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA 

Moritura. — Marg.  G.  (G.)  Davidson. — AA 

Morituri  Salutamus,  Sels.  fr. — H:  W.  Longfellow. 
Age.— BS  4 

Morituri  Salutamus. — CR— C3?^S 
Morituri  Salutamus. — TMD 

("How  beautiful  is  youth!  how  bright  it  gleams" 
~br.  sel.)— GG 

Mormon  Widower's  Lament,  The. — Anon. — CS  4 

Mom. — Mrs.  J.  L.  Gray.— CS  12 

Morn. — Helen  M.  F.  (Hunt)  Jackson. — AA 

Morn  of  Inkerman,  The. — H:  Lushington. — AVP       * 

Morning.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Morning.    (Sel.  fr.  Awaking.) — W:  Allingham. — EPs 

Morning. — Jas.  Beattie.     .See  Minstrel,  The. 

Morning. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 

Morning. — S:  Butler.     ^See  Hudibras.  * 

Morning. — J:  Cunningham. — BNL 

Morning. — Sir  W:  Davenant. — YBF 
(Aubade.)— OB 
(Dawn-song. ) — CEL 
(Song— O— FEP— WEP  2 

Morning.  (Out  of  the  Morning — C.) — Emily  Dickin- 
son.— A  A 

Morning. —  E:  Everett.  See  Uses  of  Astronomy, 
The. 

Morning. — J:  Fletcher.  See  Faithful  Shepherdess, 
The. 

Morning. — T:  Heywood.     See  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

Morning. — J:  Keats.  See  "I  Stood  Tiptoe  upon  a 
Little  Hill." 

Morning.  (Sel.  fr.  Imitation  of  Spenser.) — J:  Keats. 
— GN— POS  (I.) 

Morning.- .1:  Keble.— FEP 

Morning. — D.  W.  Marvin. — CG  3 

Morning. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Morning. — Lucy  S.  Ruggles. — TFS 

Morning. — Philip  H.  Savage. — AA 

Morning.  ("Hark,  hark!"  etc.) — W:  Shakespeare. 
See  Cymbeline. 

Morning.  ("Look,  love,  what  envious,"  etc.) — W: 
Shakespeare.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 

Morning.  ("This  castle,"  etc.) — W:  Shakespeare. 
See  Macbeth. 

Morning.  (Mr.  Webster  to  Mrs.  Paige,  Richmond, 
April  29,  1847— O— Dan'l  Webster.- FTR 

Morning  after  the  Ball. — W:  Wordsworth.  See  Pre- 
lude, The. 

Morning  among  the  Hills. — Jas.  G.  Percival. — FMR 
— FP 

Morning  and  Afternoon  Chapel. — T:  Hughes.  See 
Tom  Brown's  School  Days. 

Morning  and  Evening. — Philip  P.  Frost. — CG  3 

Morning  and  Night.     (Tab.) — Anon. — TCP 

Morning  and  Night. — R:  W.  Gilder.  See  Celestial 
Passion,  "The. 

"Morning  Argus"  Obituary  Department,  The. — Max 
Adeler.     See  Out  of  the  Hurly  Burly. 

Morning  Bird,  The.— Roswell  M.  Field.— BS  24 

Morning  Call,  The.— Anon.— FDY 

Morning  Calls. — Anon. — FHE 

Morning  Chat,  A. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 

Morning  Fancy. — Mary  McN.  Fenollosa. — AA 

Morning  Glories. — Anon. — SSS 

Morning  Glory.     <See  Morning-glory. 

Morning  Hymn.— Anon.— NV—YBT 

Morning  Hymn.— T:  Ken.— FEP 

Morning  Hymn  [in  Paradise],  A. — J:  Milton.  See  Para- 
dise Lost. 

Morning  Hymn. — Isaac  Watts.     See  Morning  Song,  A. 

Morning  Hymn  for  a  Child. — J:  Pierpont. — TAS 

Morning  in  August. — Jas.  H.  Morse. — POS 

Morning  in  Camp. — Herbert  Bashford. — AA 


Morning  in  London. — Jonathan  Swift. — OES 

(Description  of  the  Morning,  A — C.) — WEP  3  (si. 
abr.) 
Morning  in   London. — W:  Wordsworth. — HBP — OS  3 
(Composed    upon    Westminster    Bridge,    Sept.    3, 

1802— O— WEP  4 
("Earth  has  not  anything  to  show  more  fair.") — 

HBR 
(Sonnet   Composed  upon  Westminster  Bridge.) — 

BNL— FEP— MBL 
(Upon  Westminster  Bridget — OB — PGT  1 — YBF 
(Westminster  Bridge. )—LLC^WR  1 
Morning  in  May. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  Canterbury 

Tales,  The. 
Morning  in   the   Bay  of   Naples.     (Fr.    Laurella) — J: 

Todhunter.— TIP 
Morning  in  the  Mountains. — W:  Wordsworth. — EPs — 

LLC 
Morning  Landscape,  A. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of 

the  Lake,  The. 
Morning  Meditations. — T:  Hood. — BNL 
Morning  Miracle,  A. — C.  M.  Dickinson. — TAS 
Morning  Prayer. — Anon. — TFS 
Morning  Prayer. — Rob't  Herrick.     See  Matins. 
Morning  Psalm,  The. — Marianne  Famingham. — CS  22 
Morning  Ride,  A.     (The  Wheelman.)— FTR 
Morning  Song. — Joanna  Baillie.     See  Beacon,  The. 
Morning  Song. — G:  Darley.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May 

Queen. 
Morning  Song,  A. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Cymbeline. 
Morning  Song.     (Fr.  Sea  Dreams.) — Alfred  Tennyson. 
— GMS 
(Bird  and  the  Baby,  The. )— PP— PPSr— YFR 
(Birdie  and  Baby.)— DCP 
(Cradle  Song.)— LLC— PGT  2— PS 
(Little  Birdie.)— OS  1— PC— WCL 
(What  Does  Little  Birdie  Say?)  —  BNL  —  PHS  — 

PoR— TFS  (sel.) 
(What  the  Birdie  and  the  Baby  Say.)— HSS  2 
Morning  Song,  A.     (C.) — Isaac  Watts. 

(Morning  Hymn.)— TFS 
Morning  Song  [for  Imogen],  A. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

Cymbehne. 
Morning  Songs.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— YBT 
Morning  Sprite,  The. — Clinton  H.  Collester. — CG  3 
Morning  Star,  The.— F:  H:  Hedge.— TAS 
Morning  Street,  The. — J:  J.  Piatt.— FEP 
Morning  Thought,  A.— Edward  R.  SiU.— TAS 
Morning-glories.     See  Morning  Glories. 
Morning-glory. — Anon. — YBT 

Morning-glory. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — AD  (sel.) — OH 
Morning-glory,  The.- — Maria  W.  Lowell. — AA — BNL — 

FEP— HBP— WCL 
Morning's  Mail,  A. — Edmund  V.  Cooke. — CS  37 
Morpheus.- — Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella 
Mors  Benefica. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA 
Mors  et  Vita.— R :  H :  Stoddard.— AA 
Mors  Jabrochii. — Anon. — NA 

Mortal  and  Immortal. — Rob't  C.  Waterston. — TAS 
Mortality.— W:  ICnox.— HBP 

("O  [or  oh],  why  should  the  spirit  of  mortal  be 
proud?")— BNL  (si.  abr.)— CS  1— DDR— FAS 
—FEP  — HSS  3  (br.  eeZ.)- LLC— PS— PYO— 
WCLG  2— WRD 
Morte  d'Arthur.     (Abr.) — Lord      Tennyson. — AVP — 
BNL— HBP— WEP  4  (sel.) 
"More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer."     (Br.  sel.) — 
GG 
(Pray  for  my  Soul.)— HDL 
(Prayer.)— BS  22— CS  16 
Mortgage  on  the  Farm,  The. — Anon. — CS  34 
Mortifying  Mistake,  A. — Anna  M.  Pratt. — AA — DJS — 

WR24 
Mortis  Dignitas.— R :  Burton.— TAV 
Mosaic  Poetry. — Anon.     <See  My  Love. 
Mosaics. — Jotham  Winrow. — CS  13 
Moses  and  the  Angel. — Edwin  Arnold'. — WR  9 
Moses  at  the  Fair. — J.  S.  Coyne. — SS 
Moses  in  Sight  of  the  Promised  Land. — W.  B.  O.  Pea- 
body.— SS 
Moses  on  Pisgah. — Jas.  S.  Wallace. — CS  23 
Moses,  the  Sassy;  or,  the  Disguised  Duke. — Art  emus 

Ward.— BeR 
Moss  Rose,  The. — Friederich  W.  Krummacher. — BNL 

—PHS— POS 
Moss  Supplicateth   for   the  Poet,  The. — R:  H:  Dana. 

— AA 
Moss-covered  Onion,  The. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 
Mosses,  The.— M.  A.  Browne.— HSS  1 
Mosses — Earth's  Humblest  Children.^ — J:  Ruskin.     jSee 

Modern  Painters. 
Mosses  from  an  Old  Manse,  Sel.  fr.     (Drowne's  Wooden 
Image.) — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — APr 


216 


TITLE  INDEX 


Mountains 


Most  Alone    in    Greatest    Company. — Philip    Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Most  Extraordinary  Calamity  that  Befell  Mr.  Winkle, 

A. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 
Most  Fellows  Know.— Tobe  Hodge. — WR  15 

(One  Thing  He  Forgot.)— SR  5 
Motes  and  Mountains. ^ — -Anon. — DLS 
Moth-eaten. — Margaret  E.  Sangster. — CS  17 
Mother. — Anon. — -HP 
Mother.— Anon.— YBT 
Mother. — Elaine  Goodale. — OH 
Mother. — J :  G.  Whittier.     See  Snow-bound. 
Mother  and  Child.— W:  G.  Simms.— BNL 
Mother  and  her  Child,  The.— Anon.— CS  4 
Mother  and   Poet. — Eliz.    B.    Browning. — BNL— CS  3 
— EDY— FEP— FTR  —  HBP  —  HBR  —  SC  — 
VA— WCLG  2 
(46r.)— BS  13— FMR— MMR— SA 
Mother  and    Son.     (Underwoods,    XXV.) — Rob't    L. 

Stevenson. — LH 
Mother  Bird,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Mother  Bomhie,  Sel.  fr.     (Love's  College — song  fr.  Act 

III.,  he.  3.)— J:  Lyly.— ES 
Mother   Country.     {Sel.)  —  Christina  G.    Rossetti. — 

PGT2 
Mother  England. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — AA 
Mother  Goose,  Scene  fr. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LPD 
Mother  Goose,  Tab.  fr. — -Anon. — PR 
Mother  Goose  for  Grown  Folks,  Sels.  fr. — Adeline  D. 
T.  Whitney. 
Humpty  Dumpty— CS  21— MHR— TAV 
Jack  Horner.— BNL— CS  3  (.ahr.) 
Rags  and  Robes. — TAV 
Victuals  and  Drink.— BeR—BS  17— MHR 
Mother  Goose  Lullabies. — Anon. — OS  1 
Mother  Goose  Medley. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — DM 
Mother  Goose   Reception   and  Drill. — E.  C.  and  L.   J. 

Rook.— DM 
Mother  Goose  Sonnets. — Harriet  S.  Morgridge. — AA 
Mother  Goose's  Dinner  Party. — Alice  L.  Richards. — 

SL 
Mother  Goose's  Party. — Anon. — HVD 
Mother,  Home  and  Heaven. — Anon. — CS  11 
Mother,  Home,  Heaven. — W:  G.  Brown. — GP 
Mother  Hubbard.    {Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
Mother  Hubberd's   Tale,   Sel.   fr.      (At    Court.)— Ed- 
mund Spenser. — OS  3 
(Spenser  at  Court.) — EPs 
Mother,  I  Cannot  Mind  my  Wheel. — Walter  S.  Landor. 
—OB 
(Forsaken.)— VS 
(Margaret.)— V  A— YBF 
Mother  Love. — Mary  Clemmer. — HDL 
Mother  Margery.— G:  S.  Burleigh. — HBP 
Mother  of  the  Gracchi,  The.     ( Tat. )— Anon.— BS  10— 

TCP 
Mother  Robin. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Mother,  Watch!— Anon.— OS  1 
Mother  Wept.— Jos.  Skipsey. — VA 
"Mother  who  conceals  her  grief.  The." — T:  B.  Read. — 

See  Wagoner  of  the  AUeghanies,  The. 
Mother  who   Died  too,  The. —  Edith  M.  Thomas.  — 

AA 
Motherhood.— C:  S.  Calverley.— BNL— THP— WR  24 
Mother-in-Law,  The.— C:  F.  Adams.— CS  31 
(Mine  M(»der-in-law. )— A WH— DRR— GH 
(Mine  Mother-in-law.) — DCR 
Mother-in-law,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BS  17 
Motherland,    The.     (Poems    Dedicated    to    National 
Independence  and  Liberty,  Pt.   I.,  XVII.) — 
W:  Wordsworth.— LH 
("When  I  have  borne  in  memory  what  has  tamed.") 
— PGTl 
Motherless. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 
Motherless  T  .rkeys.  The. — Annie  D.  G.  Robinson. — 

MYF— -WCL 
Mother-'love.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Mothers  and  Fathers;  'I'wo  Pictures. — Mary  K.  Dallas. 

— WR3 
Mother's  Angel,  The. — Ludwig  Dyer. — SR  7 
Mother's  Answer,  A.— Lill^e  E.  Barr.— CS  21 
Mother's  Blessing,  The. — Anon. — HP 
Mother's  Blessing. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  All's  Well 

that  Ends  Well. 
Mother's  Children.- Jas.  Otis.— COS— PP 
(Muzzer's  Children — diff.  vers.) — WR  15 
Mother's  Cradle-song,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
Mother's  Daring,    A.— J:    F.    NichoUs.— CS  26— DS— 

WR13 
Mother's  Diary,  A. — Anon. — CS  14 
Mother's  Doughnuts.— C:    F.    Adams.— CD— CS  27— 
DCR— SR  4 


Mother's  Dream,    The.— W:    Barnes.— CR—PGT  2— 

YBF 
(Mater  Dolorosa.) — OB 
Mother's  Easter  Scarf,  The. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Mother's  Excuse,  A. — Sara  J.  Lippincott. — WCL 
"Mother's  Fool."— Anon.— CS  12— HR— PPSr 
Mother's  Girl.— Anon.— HSS  2— TFS 
Mother's  Heart,   The. — Caroline   E.    Norton. — BNL — 

HBP 
Mother's  Hired  Man.— F.  M.  Baker.— WR  17 
Mother's  Hope,     The. — Laman     Blanchard. — BNL — 

HBP 
Mother's  Hymn. — Frederika  Bremer. — WCL 
(Heavenly  Dove,  The.)— OS  1 
(Swedish  Mother's  Hymn.) — YBT 
Mother's  Hymn,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— T AS 
Mother's  Hymns. — Emily  G.  Weatherbee. — WR  6  {abr.) 

(My  Mother's  Hymns.)— CS  33 
Mother's  Jewels,  The.— Richard  C.  Trench.— PPSr 
Mother's  Lament,  A. — W:  Wordsworth. — SAE 

(Affliction  of  Margaret,  The— C.)— PGT  1 
Mother's  Last  Song,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— HBP 
Mother's  Love. — Anon. — YBT 
Mother's  Love.— T:  Burbidge.— HBP— VA 
Mother's  Love,    A.     {Br.    sel.) — Jas.    Montgomery. — 

BNL— KNE 
Mother's  Lullaby.— Mamie  T.  Short.— WR  2 
Mother's  Mending    Basket. — Mrs.    M.    A.    Kidder. — 

BS19 
Mother's  Morning  Prayer,  A. — Anon. — WCL 
Mothers  of  the  Sirens,  The. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.- PLD 
Mother's  Picture,  A. — Edmund  (".  Stedman. — OH 
Mother's  Portrait,  A. — W:  Cowper.     See  On  the  Re- 
ceipt of  my  Mother's  Picture. 
Mother's  Prayer. — Jack  Crawford. — WR  18 
Mother's  Room. — Anon. — CS  37 
Mother's  Sacrifice,  The.— Seba  Smith.— BNL— CS  9 
Mother's  Song. — Anon. — GN 
Mother's  Song. — Anon. — OS  1 
Mother's  Song,  The. — Virginia  W.  CI  >ud. — AA 
M  ther's  Song,  The.— W:  P.  McKenzie.— TCV 
Mother's  Songs. — Alonzo  W.  Smith. — CS  36 
Mother's  Thoughts,  A.— Fs.  D.  Gage.— CS  21 
Mother's  Tinder  Falins,  A.— S.  Jennie  Smith.— CS  30 
Mothers.  Watch  the  Little  Feet. — Anon. — TFS 
Mother's  Way. — Anon. — WR  17 
Mother's  World.— Marg.  H.  Allen.— TCV 
Mother-song. — Alfred  Austin.     See  Prince  Lucifer. 
Moth's  Kiss  First,  The.  —  Rob't  Browning.     See  In  a 

Gondola. 
Moth-song. — EUen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — AA 
Motion:     For      Prayers      in      Convention.     (C) — B.- 
Franklin. 
(God  Governs.)— SS 
Motion  of    the    Leaves,   The. — H:    W.   Beecher.     See 

Walk  among  Trees,  A. 
Motion  Song — Daisy  Fair. — Annie  Chase. — AD 
Motives  of  Action.  —  W :  Murray,  Lord  Mansfield.  — 

MYF 
Motto  for  a  Tobacco  Jar. — Anon. — PPh 
Motto;  or,  Example,  The.— Mrs.  C.  M.  Peat.— SDD 
Mount  of  Laws,  The. — Hall   Caine.      See  Bondsman, 

The. 
Mt.  Pisgah's  Christmas  'Possum. — Paul  L.  Dunbir. — 

WR25 
Mount  Rainier. — Herbert  Bashford. — AA 
Mount  Vernon,  the  Home  of  Washington. — W:  Day. — 

BLP 
Mountain,  The.     {Frag.) — W:  E.  Channing. — EPs 
Mountain  and  the  Squirr  1,  The. —  Ralph  W.  Emerson. 

— AD— BV(  — CGd— CS  29— GMS— OS  1— PC 

— PHS— POS  — PS— PTS— WCL 
( Fable— C. )— AWH— HBP— LC— PoR— THP 
Mountain  Ash,  The. — W:  Wordsworth.   See  Excursion, 

The. 
Mountain  Brook,  A. — C:  O.  Judkins. — CG  2  - 
Mountain  Echo,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.— WEP  4 
Mountain  of  Miseries,  The. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Spec- 
tator, The. 
Mountain   of  the  Lovers,   Br.   sel.   fr.     (Love  Scorns 

Degrees.)— Paul     H.     Hayne.— BIL— BNL— 

GP 
Mountain  Stream,  A.     {Smith  College  Monthly.) — CG  3 
Mountain  to  the  Pine,  The. — Clarence  Hawkes. — AA 
Mountain  Torrent,  The.— C:  Mackay.— YBT 
Mountain  Tragedy,  The.     {Cond.  fr.  No  Thoroughfare, 

Act  III.)— C:  Dickens.— WR  16 
Mountain  Tragedy,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  In  the  Wilderness:   A- 

Hunting  of  the  Deer.) — C:  D.  Warner. — WR  5 
Mountains,  The.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Mountains,  The. — Cyrus  A.  Bartol. — TAS 
Mountains.— E.  M.  Morse.— CS  24— NPS— YP 
Mountains  of  Life,  The.— J.  G.  Clark.— CS  11 


217 


Mountebanks 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Mountebanks,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony   Denier.— TDT 
Mountebanks,  The. — C:  H:  Luders. — AA 

(Passing  Show,  The.)— WR  4 
Mounted  Knight,  The.— Anon.— CS  31 
Mourner,  The. — Anon. — PS 
Mourner  k  la  Mode,  TBIe.— J:  G.  Saxe.— BS  16 
"Mournful  funeral  slow    proceeds    behind.  The." — J: 

Wilson.— HBP 
Mournful  Story,  A. — Anon. — MCS 
Mournful  Tale,  A.— H.  E.  McBride.— CS  33 
Mourning.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Mourning  Garment,  The,  Sels.  jr. — Rob't  Greene. 

Description  of  the  Shepherd  and  his  Wife,  The. — 

Shepherd's  Wife's  Song,  The.     (C.)— EP— ES 
(Shepherd  and  the  King,  The.)— BNL 
Mourning  Hero's  Vision,  The. — Louis  Kossuth. — BLP 
Mourning  Veil,  The.— J.  L.  Harbour.— SR  13 
Mouse,  The.— Harding  Cox.— OS  27 
Mouse,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Mouse,  The.  —  Mrs.  C.  V.  Jamison.      See  'Toinette's 

Philip. 
Mouse  Trap,  The.     (.Farce — dbr.) — W:  D.  Howells. — 

BS  15— HD 
Mouse-hunting. — Gail  Hamilton. — TMR 
Mouse-hunting.— B:  P.  Shillaber.— CS  5— DDR 
Mouse's  Petition,  The.     {SI.  abr.) — Anna  L.  Barbauld. 

— CGd 
Moved  by  a  Crank.— (^rr.  by)  U.  S.  Allen.— WR  20 
Movement  Cure  for  Rheumatism,  The. — Rob't  J.  Bur- 
dette.— CS  24— NPS— YP 
(Mr.  Middlerib's  Experiment.) — SR  3 
(New  Cure  for  Rheumatism,  A.) — BS  13 
Moving.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Moving  Finger  Writes,  The.     Omar  Khayyam  (tr.  by 

E:  Fitzgerald).     See  Rubaiyat,  The. 
Mower  in  Ohio,  The.— J:  J.  Piatt.— AA 
Mower  to  the  Glow-worms,  The.     (C) — Andrew  Mar- 
veU.— EP 
(Lover  to  the  Glow-worms,  The.) — HBP 
Mowers,  The. — Myron  B.  Benton. — BNL 
Mowers,  The.— A.  M.  F.  Robinson.— PEB  4 
Moytura,  Sel.  fr.     (Sword  of  Tethra,  The.)— W:  Lar- 

minie.— TIP 
Mozart  at  the  Fireside. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Mozart's  Requiem. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — EDY 
Mp-tBrta.— Howell  L.  Piner.- WR  23 
Much  Ado  about  Nothing,  Sels.  jr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Benedick's  Soliloquy.     (Sel.  jr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  3.)— 

SAE 
Much  Ado  about  Nothing,  Sel.  arr.  jr.  (Sels.  jr.  I., 

1  and  II.,  3.)— SR  12 
Much  Ado  about  Nothing,  Br.  sels  jr. — BNL  (jr. 

IV.,  1;  v.,  1.)— SAE  (jr.  IIL,  3.) 
Sigh   no   more,  Ladies.     (Song — C. — jr.    II.,   3.) — 
FEP— WEP  1 
(Inconstan  cy . ) — ES 
(Man  and  Woman.)— OEL 

(Much  Ado  about   Nothing,  Act   II.,  Sc.  3,  Sel. 
/r.)— BNL  (sel.)— ELF 
"When  he  shall  hear  she  died  upon   his  word." 
(Br.  sel.  jr.  IV.,  1.)— GG 
Much  Taste  and  Small  Estate.     (Sel.  jr.  The  Progress 

of  Taste.)— W:  Shenstone.— WEP  3 
Mucker's  Love  Song,  The.— E.  L.  Dudley.— CG  3 
Muckle-mou'd  Meg. — Jas.  Ballantine. — VA 
Muckle-mouth  Meg.  —  Rob't   Browning.  —  BS    19  — 
TMR  (si.  a6r.  )—VA—WR  23 
(Another  vers,  oj  joregoing  atoru.) 
Mud  Cakes.— Ethel  E.  Sleeper.— WR  17 
Muddled  Metaphors. — Tom  Hood,  Jr. — NA 
Muffled  Drum's   Sad   Roll,    The.— Theodore    O'Hara. 

<See  Bivouac  of  the  Dead,  The. 
Mufifet.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. — 

TCP 
Muiopotmos;  or.  The  Fate  of  the  Butterfly,  Br.  sel.  jr. 
(Fate     of     the     Butterfly,     The.)— Edmund 
Spenser. — BNL 
Mulberry  Garden,  Sel.  jr. — Sir  C:  Sedley. 
Child  and  Maiden.— PGT  1  (abr.) 

(Song  from  the  Mulberry  Garden.) — WEP  2 
(Song  to  Chloris.)— CEL 
(To  a  Very  Young  Lady.)— BNL— FEP 
(To  Chloris— a6r.)— OB 
Mule,  The.     (C.)— H:  Shaw. 

(Josh  Billings  on  the  Mule.) — BC 
Mule  and  the  Bees,  The. — Luck  Melone. — CS  19 
Mule  Ride  in  Florida,  A. — Anon. — BeR 
Mulford.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AA 
Mulligan's  Gospel. — Annie  Herbert. — CS  12 
Mullins  the  Agnostic. — C.  M.  Snyder  (at.  also  to  A.  T. 
Worden).— CS  35 
(Agnostic,  The— si.  a6r.)— SR  13 


Multitude  of  Littles,  The.— Newman  Hall.— TS 
"Multum  Dilexit." — Hartley  Coleridge. — VA 
Multum  in  Parvo. — Mortimer  Collins. — VS 
Mumford's  Pavement.— Anon.— CS  15— NPS— YP      • 
Mummy,  The. — Horace  Smith. — PPSr  (abr.) 

(Address  to  the  Mummy  at  [or  in]  Belzoni's  Exhi- 
bition.)—BNL— CS  6— FEP— HBP 

(To  a  Mummy.)— OS  3— SO  (abr.) 
Mum's  the  Word.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Munchausen  Outdone.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FHE 
Munster  War-song,  The.— R:  D.  Williams.— TIP 
Murat.     (Sel.  jr.  Ode  from  the  French.) — Lord  Byron. 

— BNL— EPs 
Murder,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The,  Sels.  jr. — Dan'l 

Murder  Will  Out.— WCLG  2 

(Crime  its  own  Detector — ahr.) — CR  (br.  sel.) — 

CS  1— OM  («ei;.)— SR  9 
(Crime  Revealed  by  Conscience — abr.) — BS  24 
(Guilt  its  Own  Betrayer  [or.  Guilt  Cannot  Keep 

its  Own  Secret] — sel.) — SS 
(Murderer's  Secret,  The — sel.) — FD  1 
(Murderer's  Self -betrayal.  The — sel.) — PS 
(Power  of  Conscience,  The — sel.) — LLC 
(Secret  of  Murder,  The— sei.)- MRS 
(Speech  in    the    Knapp  Trial,  Sel.   jr. — abr.) — 
AE 
Murder  of    Damley,    The.     (Fr.    Bothwell.)— W:    E. 

Aytoun.— EDY 
Murder  of     King     Duncan. — W:     Shakespeare.     See 

Macbeth. 
Murder  of  Lovejoy  [at  Alton,  Illinois,  1837],  The,     Sel. 

/r.— Wendell  Phillips.— FD  2— NC  (si.  ahr.) 
Murder  of    Nancy    [Sikes],    The. — C:    Dickens.     See 

Oliver  Twist. 
Murder  of  Riccio,  The.— W:  E.  Aytoun.— EDY 
Murder  of  the  Princes  in  the  Tower. — W :   Shakespeare. 

See  King  Richard  III. 
Murder  of  Thomas  a  Becket,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  Becket. 
Murder  of  Thomas  h  Becket  in  Canterbury  Cathedral, 

The.— Augustin  Thierry.— OS  2 
Murder  Will    Out. — Dan'l    Webster.     See    Murder    of 

Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
Murdered  Traveller,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.- EPs 
Murderer's  Confession,  A.   (Cond.) — Edgar  A.  Poe. — 
PFP 
(Tell  Tale  Heart,  The— C.)— BS  16 
Murderer's  Secret,    The. — Dan'l    Webster.     See   Mur- 
der of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
Murderer's  Self-betrayal,    .The — Dan'l    Webster.     See 

Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
MuriUo's  Trance. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — CS  12 
Murphy's  Mystery  of  the  Pork-barrel. — Anon. — BeR 
Muse,  The.— G:  Wither.— EPs 

Muse  of  Doggerel,  The. — S:  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Muses'  Elysium,  "The,  Sels  /r.— Michael  Drayton. 
Contest,  A.     (6th  Nymphal.)— EP 
Description  of  Elizium.     (Introd.) — EP 
Ferryman,  Venus,  and  Cupid,  The.     (Sel.   jr.  7th 
Nymphal.)— CGd 
'Muses  that  sing  Love's  sensual  empirie.''     (A  Coronet 
for  his  Mistress'  Philosophy,  I.) — G:  Chapman 
—BNL 

Mushroom  Hunt,  The. Halpin.— HPE 

Music— Anon.— PTS 

Music.     (Frags,  jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Music.     (Br.  sel.  jr.  The  Voice  of  Music.) — Felicia  D. 

Hemans. — EPs 
Music— Rob't  Herrick.— CEL— WEP  2 

(To  Music,  to  Becalm  his  Fever— C. )— FEP— OB 
Music. — J:  Keats.     See  Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The. 
Music. — Emily  H.  Miller.     See  Music  of  Nature. 
Music. — W:   Shakespeare.     See  Merchant   of   Venice, 

The. 
Music— W:  Strode.— FEP 

(Praise  of  Music — abr.) — CEL 

(Song:     In  Commendation  of  Music — abr.) — ELP 
Music — G:  M.  Vickers. — PS 
Music  and  Memory. — J :  Albee. — AA 
Music  and    Moonlight,    Song    jr.     (Song    I.) — Arthur 

O'Shaughnessy.— WEP  4 
Music  and  Morals,  Sel.   jr.     C  Remembrance  —  sel.  jr. 

Bk.  I.,  Ch.  VIII.)— H.R.  Haweis.— LLC 
Music  and  Words.     (Pt.  V.)— R:  W.  Gilder.— MRS 
Music  at  Mrs.  Ponto's. — W:  M.  Thackeray.    See  Book 

of  Snobs,  The. 
Music  by  Moonlight. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Merchant 

of  Venice,  The. 
Music  Everywhere. — W:  P.  Mulchinock. — CS  22 
Music  Grinders,  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — AWH  (si. 
abr.)— SO— TAY 


218 


TITLE  INDEX 


My  countrymen 


Music  Hath    Charms.     (Rockland    Courier    Gazette.) — 

SR3 
Music  in     Camp. — J:     R.     Thompson. — AA — AWB — 

BS  15— CS  17— GP— PAP— PAPm— SR  6 
Music  in  the  Night. — HarKet  P.  Spofford. — AA 
Music  in  the  Soul. — Anon. — HP 
Music  in  the  Street. — Anon. — TIP 

Music  Lesson,  The. — W :  Browne.   See  Britannia's  Pas- 
torals. 
Music  Lesson,  A. — Alex.  H.  Japp. — VA 
"Music  of  art  is  but  the  imitation  of  the  music  of 

nature.  The." — W.  H.  Robertson. — GG 
Music  of  Hungary. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — AA 
Music  of  Labor,  The. — Anon. — HSS  3 
Music  of  Nature,  The.— J:  V.  Cheney.— POS 
Music  of  Nature. — Emily  H.  Miller. — NV 
(Little  May.)— PC— YBT 
(Music.)— PTS 
Music  of  Nature,  The. — Mary  F.  Ormsby. — DES 

Music  of  Nature. Pierpont. — FP 

Music  of  the  Night. — J :  Neal. — AA 

Music  of  the  Past,  The. — Anon. — CD 

Music  of  the  Waves,  The. — Anon. — PPSr 

Music,  when  Soft  Voices  Die. — Percy    B.    Shelley. — 

BNL— FEP— OB— PGT  1— PYO— YBF 

(To .— O— WEP  4 

Musical  Bore,  The. — Anon. — DCD 
Musical  Duel,    The. — J:    Ford.     See    Lover's  -Melan- 
choly, The. 
Musical  Frogs,  The.— J:  S.  Blackie.— CS  17 
"Musical!  how  much  lies  in  that. — T:  Carlyle.     /See  On 

Heroes  and  Hero-worShip. 
Musical  Instrument,  The,  Sel.  Jr. — Anon. — AE 
Musical  Instrument,  A. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — AVP — 

BNL— BSP— FEP— LLC— OB— V A— WEP  4 
Musical  Mary  Jane. — Anon. — DSS 
Musical  Threnody,  A. — Anon. — CS  36 
Music-hall,  The. — Theodore  Wratislaw. — VA 
Musician's  Tale,  The.     (The  Ballad  of  Carmilhan — si. 

abr. — in  Tales  of   a  Wayside  Inn.)  —  H;  W. 

LongfeUow.— SR  2 
Musick's  Duel,  Sel.  fr.     (Nightingale's  Song,  The.) — 

Richard  Crashaw — BNL 
Music's  Silver  Sound. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Romeo 

and  Juliet. 
Musidorus'   Song. —  Sir  Philip  Sidney.     <See  Arcadia, 

The. 
Musings.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— PEO 
Musmee,  The. — Edwin  Arnold. — VA 
Musquito,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— HPE 

(To  a  Mosquito— O— BNL  (sZ.  abr.) 
Mustapha,  Sels.  fr. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke. 
Chorus  of  Priests.— WEP  1 
Chorus  of  Tartars.— WEP  1 
Mustard  and  Cress. — Norman  Gale. — BVC 
Muster  of  the  North,  The.— Sir  C:  G.  Duffy.— TIP 
Mustered  Out.— Anon.— CS  27 
Mustered  Out.— W.  E.  Miller.— HSS  1 
(Wounded.)— CSl 

(Abr.  and  w.  2  ate.  fr.  Watson's  The  Wounded 

Soldier.)— FTR— HNS 
Mutabile.     (Wesleyan  Literary  Monthly.) — CG  3 
Mutability.— Percy  B.  SheUey.— HBP 
Mutability. — Edmund    Spenser.     See   Faerie  Queene, 

The. 
Mutability.— W:  Wordsworth.- OB— WEP  4 
Mutilated  Currency  Question,  The.     (Brooklyn  Eagle.) 

— CD— SR  4 
Mutton  Chops.     (Fr.      The     Poetical     Cookery-book. 

Punch.)— UTE  ' 

Mutual  Development  Society;  or.  Capital  vs.  Labor, 

The.— R.  M.  Swander.— PD 
Mutual  Love.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Muzzer's  Children. — Jas.  Otis. — WR  15 

(Mother's  Children— dt^.  vers.)- COS— PP 
My  After-dinner  Cloud.— H:  S.  Leigh.— PPh 
My  Age.— Anon.— TT 
My  Aim.— G.  L.  Banks.— HP 

("I  live  for  those  that  love  me." — 6r.  sels.) — GG — 

SM 
(What  I  Live  For.)— CS  23— HSS  2  (ofer. )—SSS 
My  Ain  Countree  [or  Countrie]. — Allan  Cunningham. — 

HBP— LC 
("Sun  rises  bright   in  France,  The." — abr.) — FEP 

—OB 
My  Ain  Countrie. — Mary  L.  Demarest. — HDL 
My  Ain  Fireside.- Eliz.  Hamiliton.— BNL— FEP 
My  Ain  Wife.— Fs.  Bennoeh.— CDV— SDR 
My  Ain  Wife. — Alex.  Laing. — VA 
My  Ambition.     (Sel.   fr.   Speech  at  the  Barbecue  at 

Lexington  in  Honor  of  Mr.  Clay.) — H:  Clay. 

—SO 
(Ambition  of  a  Statesman.)— FTR— OM—WR  26 


My  Angeline.     (Fr.  The  Wizard  of  the  Nile.) — Harry 

B.  Smith.— THP 
My  Aunt.— Oliver  W.  Hohnes.— AWH— HPE— MDD 

—THP 
My  Aunt  Maria. — Elsie  M.  McCullum. — WR  12 
My  Autumn  Walk.— W:  C.  Br>ant.— AA— BNL 
My  Aviary.- — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — SN 
My  Babes  in  the  Wood. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — AA — 

GP 
My  Baby  Brother.- Sarah  E.  Howard.- TT 
My  Balloon  Ascent. — Anon. — MYF 
My  Bath.— J:  S.  BJackie.— VA 
My  Beacon.— Emily  H.  Miller.— HBR 
My  Beautiful  Child.— W.  A.  H.  Sigoumey.— CS  3 
My  Beautiful  Lady. — T:  Woohier. — VA 
My  Bed  is  a  Boat.  —  Rob't   L.  Stevenson.  —  CGV  — 

DLS— TFS 
My  Bess. — Raymond  W.  Walker. — CG  3 
My  Best  Friend.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
My  Big  Brother.     {New  York  World.)— C&  37 
My  Bird.— Emily  C.  Judson.— AA— FEP 
My  Birds.— Anon.— YBT 
My  Birth. — Minot  J.  Savage. — AA 
My  Birthday.— T:  Moore.— TIP 
My  Birthday.— J:  G.  Whittier.— TAS 
My  Boarding-houses. — G :  Thatcher. — TK 
"My  boat  is  on  the  shore." — Lord  Byron. — PYO 
(Friendship.)— LH 
(To      Thomas  .   Moore— C.)— BNL— GP— HBP— 

YBF 
My  Bonnie  Mary.     (C. — Silver  Tassie,  The — also  C.) — 

Rob't  Bums.— OB 
(Before  Parting.)— LH 
(Bonnie  Mary.) — GP 
(FareweU,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
My  Books. — Fs.  Bennoeh. — MBB 
My  Books.— Austin  Dobson.— LBB— MBB 
My  Books.— W.  F.  Johnson.— LBB— MBB 
My  Books.— H:  W.  LongfeUow.— AA— LBB— MBB 
My  Books.     (,Fr.    An  Autobiographical  Fragment.) — 

Bryan  W.  Procter.- LBB— MBB 
My  Boy.— F.  M.  Gilbert.— CS  33 
My  Boy. — Frances  A.  M.  Johnson. — TFS 
My  Boy  Fritz.- Ellen  Murray.- CS  27 
My  Bread  on  the  Waters.— G:  L.  Catlin.— CS  17 
My  Brigantine.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Water  Witch,  Ch.  XV.) 

Jas.  F.  Cooper.— AA— BNL 
My  Brother  Henry.     (Sel.  fr.  My  Lady  Nicotine,  Ch. 

XIV.)— Jas.  M.  Barrie.- VSG— WR  13 
My  Brother  Jean. — Anon. — KNS 
My  Callie.— P.  A.  P.— CG  3 
My  Captain. — Walt    Whitman.     See   O   Captain,   My 

Captain. 
My  Carlo   Talks.— Mrs.    E.   J.   H.   Goodfellow.— PS— 

TT 
My  Catbird.— W:  H.  Venable.— AA 
My  Charmer. — Edmund  Waller. — EPs 
My  ChUd.— J:     Pierpont.— AA— BNL— CS  9— FEP— 

HBP— HDL— SE  (hr.  sel.)—TAV 
"My  child  and  schollar,  take  good  heed." — BVC 
"My  child   woke   crying   from   her   sleep."     (C.) — G: 

Macdonald. 
(God  Watcheth.)— HDL 
My  Childhood  Home.— B:  P.  ShiUaber.— CS  7 

(Picture,  A.)— FP 
My    Childhood's    Love.  —  C:  Kingsleji/    See   Water 

Babies,  The. 
My  Children. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
My  Chillun's  Pictyah.— Anne  V.  Culbertson.— WR  7 
My  Choice. — W:  Browne.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
My  Christmas  Card.— G.  B.  Fowler.— CG  1 
My  Cid's    Triumph.     (Poem    of    the    Cid.)— (Tr.    by) 

Ormsby.     See  Cid,  The. 
My  Cigar.— Arthur  W.  Gundry.— PPh 
My  Cigarette. — R :  Barnard. — PPh 
My  Cigarette.- Tom  HaU.— PPh 
My  Cigarette.— C:  F.  Liunmis.— HP— PPh  (at.  to  C. 

A.  Snyder.) 
My  Composition  about  Pins. — Anon. — WR  17 
My  Comrade. — Edwin  Markham. — AA 
My  Comrade. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — AA  ' 

My  Comrade  Canoe.— W:  C.  Roberts.— TCV 
My  Country. — Louis  S.  Amonson. — CS  33 
My  Country.     (School  exercise  for  Fourth  of  July.) — 

Mrs.  L.  A.  Bradbury.— EE 
My  Coimtry. — "Hesperion." — POS 
(Land  of  Liberty,  The.)— CS  21 
My  Country. — Jas.  Montgomery.    See  West  Indies,  The. 
My  Country.     {Sels. — ptly.  same.) — G:  E.  Woodberry. 

— AA— WR  10 
My  Country !  'Tis  of  Thee.— S :  F.  Smith.     See  America. 
"My  countrymen!  the  moments  are  quickly  passing." — 

H:  A.  Brown.     See  Centennial  Oration. 


219 


My  covmtrymen         AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"My  countrymen!  this  anniversary  has  gone  by  for- 
ever."— H :  A.  Brown.    See  Centennial  Oration. 
My  Country's  Flag. — Juniata  Stafford. — TT 
My  Creed.— Alice  Gary.— CS  7 

{SI.  a6r.)— FP— TAV 
My  Darlings.— Alice  Csify.— HDL— TAS 
My  Darling's  Shoes.— Anon.— FP—SR  2 
My  Daughter  Jane. — Sarah  L.  Flowers. — CS  17 
My  Daughter  Louise. — Homer  Greene. — BS  20 — CS  21 

-HP 
My  Days  among  the  Dead  [are  Passed].     (Occasional 
Pieces,    XVIII.~C.)— Rob't    Southey-— FEP 
— HBP— YBF 
(Books.)— BNL 
(His  Books.)— OB 
(Library,  The.)— LBB— MBB 
(Scholar,  The.)— PGT  1 
(Stanzas  Written  in  his  Library.) — WEP  4 
My  Dead.— F.  L.  Hosmer.— TAS 

My  Dear  and  Only  Love  [I  Pray]. — Jas.  Graham,  Mar- 
quis of  Montrose.— FEP — HBP 
(Pt.  D— BNL— ELP 
(Heroic  Love — Pt.  I.  ahr.) — LH 
(I'll  Never  Love  Thee  More— Pt.  I.  a6r.)— EPs— 
OH 
{SI.  a6r.)— OB— YBF 
(Montrose's  Love— Pt.  I.  abr. )—FTA 
"My  dear  mistress  has  a  heart."— J:  Wilmot,  Earl  cf 
Rochester.— FEP 
(Song.)— WEP  2 
"My  Dearling." — Eliz.  A.  Allan. — AA 
My  Dejeuner  k  la  Fourchette. — T:  H.  Bayly. — FEP 
My  Delftware  Maid. — Ralph  Alton. 
My  Delight  and  thy  Delight. — Rob't  Bridges.- OB 
My  Dog.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
My  Dog  and  L — Marie  M.  Marsh. — WR  4 
My  Dog  "Sport."- T:  Street.- MYF 
My  Doggie.— Anon.— DST 
My  Dolls.— Bertha  G. 'Davis.— CS  31 
My  Dolly.— Anon.— PS— TT 
My   Double,  and  how    He    Undid    Me.     {Cond.) — E: 

E.  Hale.— BS  22 
My  Dream. — Anon.— NA 
My  Early  Home.— J:  Clare.— PGT  2 
My  Early  Home.— Alex.  Clark.— BS  1 
My  Early  Love. — Anon. — FLS 
My  Editing.— Mark  Twain. — WR  2  {cond.) 

(How  I  [once — C]  Edited  an  Agricultural  Paper.) — 

SO 
(Mark  Twain  Edits  an  Agricultural  Paper — ahr.') 
— CS7 
My  Elm  Tree. — Rebecca  D.  Rickoff. — AD 
My  Enemy. — Alice  W.  Brotherton. — AA 
My  Epitaph. — D:  Gray. — VA 
My  Experience  in  Elocution. — J:  Neal. — MMR 
My  Experience    in     the     Dry    Goods     Business. — G: 

Thatcher.— TK 
My  Eyes!  How  I  Love  You.— J:  G.  Saxe.— BNL— TFY 
My  Faith. — Anon. — MR 

My  Faith  Looks  up  to  Thee.— Ray  Palmer.— FEP— 
SAE— TAV 
(Faith.)— AA— TAS 
My  Familiar.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— AWH— THP 

(Bore,  The.)— KNE 
My  Farm  of  Edgewood,  Sel.  fr.     (Water  in  Landscape 

—ael.  fr.  Ch.  L)— Donald  G.  Mitchell.— LLC 
My  Father.— W:  Drennan.— TIP 
My  Father  was  a  Farmer. — Rob't  Burns. — MBL 
My  Fatherland. — Hoffman  von  Fallersleben. — -BLP 
My  Fatherland. — W:  C.  Lawton. — AA 
My  Father's  Child.— Gertrude  Bloede.— AA— HDL 
My  Father's  Half-bushel. — Anon. — MYF 
My  Feet. — Gelett  Burgess. — NA 
My  Fiancee.— Philip  C.  Reilly.— CS  37 
My  Fiddle.     {Abr.)~3&^.  W.  Riley.— WR  2 
My  Fire. — Loren  Palmer. — CG  3 
My  First   and   Last   Appearance.  —  E :   F.   Turner.  — 

VSG 
My  First  Cigar.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
My  First  Interview  with  Artemus  Ward.     (First  Inter- 
view with  Artemus  Ward — C.) — Mark  Twain. 
— MHR 
(Mark    Twain's    First    Interview    with    Artemus 
Ward.)- CS  4— DDR 
My  First  Kiss.— S:  M.  Peck.— FTA 
My  First  Play.     {SI.  abr.)—C:  Lamb.— MRS 
My  First  Political  Speech. — Max  Adeler.     See  Out  of 

the  Hurly  Burly. 
My  First  Reading.— H:  Irving.— VSG 
My  First  Recital.— W.  A.  Eaton.— CS  33— NPS— YP 
My  First  School.— Anon.— WR  3 
My  First  Singing  Lesson. — C.  S.  Brown,  Jr. — CS  30 
My  First  Speech.— Anon.— TS 


My  Fountain  Pen.— R  b';  J.  Burdette.— BS  23— CS  34 

My  Friendly  Pipe.     {Detroit  Tribune.) — PPH 

My  Friend's  Secret.— B:  P.  Shillaber.— CS  10 

"My  fugitive  years  are  all  hasting  away." — W:  Cowper. 
See  Poplar  Field,  The. 

My  Fust  Gong.     (C.)— H:  W.  Shaw. 

(Josh  Billings  on  Gongs.)- CS  3— MHR 

My  Garden.— T:  E:  Brown.— OB— YBF 

My  Giarden  Acquaintance.  {Fr.  My  Study  Windows.) 
Jas.  R.  Lowell. — APr 

My  Garden  Plot.— Anon.— CS  19 

My  Garden  Wall.— Irene  E.  Morton.— TCV 

My  God,  I  Love  Thee. — St.  Francis  Xavier  {tr.  by  E: 
Caswell).— BNL— HBP 

My  Good-for-Nothing. — Emily    Huntington    Miller. — 
PC— PS— WCL 
(What  are  you  Good  for?)— OS  1 
(What  Boys  are  Good  for— a6r. )—TFS 

My  Grandmother's  Fan.— S:  M.  Peck.— SO— WR  4 

My  Grrandpa. — Anon. — WR  17 

My  Great  Mistake. — Carmen  Golden. — CS  36 

My  Great-aunt's  Portrait. — -Anon. — TMR 

My  Grief  on  the  Sea.— Douglas  Hyde.— OB— TIP 

My  Guest. — Anna  J.  Granniss. — TAS 

My  Guide. — G:  F.  Savage- Armstrong. — VA 

"My  half-day's  work  is  done." — Anon. — GO 

My  Heart  and  I. — Eliz.  Barrett  Browning. — GP — 
SC  {br.  «eZ.)— VA 

My  Heart  is  a  Lute. — Blanche  Elizabeth,  Lady  Lind- 
say.— VA 

"My  heart  is  awed  within  me  when  I  think." — W:  C. 
Bryant.     See  Forest  Hymn,  A. 

My  Heart  is  High  above. — Anon. — OB 

My  Heart  Leaps  up. — W:  Wordsworth.  See  follow- 
ing. 

My  Heart  Leaps  up  when  I  Behold.     (C.) — W:  Words- 
worth.—PGT  1— SN 
(Rainbow,  The. )— BNL— CGd— FEP—  GP—  LC— 
OB— YBF 

"My  heart  was  heavy,  for  its  trust  had  been."  (Forgive- 
ness—C.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— GG 

My  Heart's  in  the  Highlands. — Rob't  Bums. — BNL — 
FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  LC  —  MBL  —  OS  1  — 
PHS— YBF 

My  Heart's  Treasure. — J.  G.  F.  Nicholson. — FTA 

My  Held  is  Like  to  Rend,  Willie. — W:  Motherwell. — 
BNL— HBP 

My  Hero.— J:  P.  True.— PR 

My  Home. — Anon. — NA 

My  Home  in  the  Wildwood. — Anon. — AD 

My  Honey,  My  Love. — Joel  C.  Harris. — AA 

My  Jean  (Of  a'  the  Airts—C.)— Rob't  Bums.— CEL 
(I   Love  my   Jean— also  C.)— BNL— BPB— GN— 

MBL 
(Jean.)— BFV— OB— YBF 

{W.    2    add.    doubtful    stanzas.)— FET— FTA— 
PGTl 
("Of  a'  the   airts  the   wind  can   blaw.") — EPs — 
WEP  3 

My  Jean  (Though  Cruel  Fate— C.)— Rob't  Burns.— 
BIL— FTA 

My  Jessie. — Mrs. Edwards. — PC 

My  John.-.-W:  Hosea  Ballou.— MR 

My  Josiar. — Anon. — HP 

My  Kate.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— BIL— PC 

My  King. — Anon. — FLS 

My  Kingdom.— Louisa  M.  Alcott.— DLS— YBT 

My  Kingdom. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 

My  Laddie's  Hounds. — Marguerite  E.  Easter. — AA 

My  Lady. — Anon. — CG  1 

My  Lady  Goes  to  the  Play. — Arthur  Ketchum. — CG  2 

My  Lady  Nicotine,  Sel.  fr.  (My  Brother  Henry — fr.  Ch. 
XIV.)— Jas.  M.  Barrie.- VSG— WR  13 

My  Lady  of  the  Links. — Anon. — TL 

My  Lady  on  the  Links. — A.  H.  Gilbert.- CG  3 

My  Lady's  Coach. — Anon.— r-WR  19 

My  Lady's  Eyes. — Anon. — FTA 

My  Lady's  Grave. — Emily  Bronte. — OB 
(Song.— O— VA 

My  Lady's  Tears. — Anon. — OB 
("I  saw  my  lady  weep.") — ELP 
(In  Lacrimas.)— PGT  1 

My  Lambs. — Anon. — CS  9 

My  Last  Chance. — Anthony  Hope.  <See  Dolly  Dia- 
logues, The. 

My  Last  Duchess.— Rob't  Browning.— A VP—BS  22— 
BS  25— VA— WR  15 

My  Last  Shirt.— (PMncA.)—SCS 

(Lines  Addressed  to on  the  29th  of  September, 

etc.)— HPE 

"My  last  word  to  you  is,  be  courageous!" — Jean-Paul 
Richter.— GG 

My  Legacy.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— BNL— EPs— GP 


220 


TITLE  INDEX 


My  Psalm 


Mv  Letter. — Grace  D.  Litehfield. — AA 
My  Letters.— R:  H.  Barham— HPE 
My  Letters. — Eliz.  B-  Browning.— BIL — FTA 
(Love  Letters.)— YBF 
(Lover's  Letters,  A.) — CEL 
(Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese.) — BNL  —  FEP  — 

HBP 
(Sonnets   from   the   Portuguese,    XXVIIL — C) — 
WEP4 
"My  life  is  like  the  summer  rose." — R:   H:   Wilde. — 
ASL— FEP— YBF 
(Life.)— BNL 
(Stanzas. )— A  A— HBP 
My  Lighthouse. — Gelia  Thaxter, — HDL 
My  Little  Bo-peep.— Frank  E.  HoUiday  [or  S.  B.  M'Ma- 

nus].— CS  28— WR  4 
My  Little  Boy. — Howell  L.  Finer. — WR  23 
My  Little  Brown  Pipe. — Amelia  E.  Barr. — PPh 
My  Little  Dear.— Dollie  Radford.— VA 
My  Little  Doll.— C:  Kingsley.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
My  Little  Friend.— Sarah  E.  Eastman. — CPL 
My  Little  Girl.— S:  M.  Peck.— AA 
My  Little  Lady.— T.  B.  Westwood.— OS  1 
My  Little  Neighbor. — Mary  A.  Mason. — AA 
My  Little    Newsboy. —  Ada    M.    Melville.  —  SR    9  — 

WR  19  (si.  abr.) 
My  Little  One.— Edgar  Fawcett.— TAS 
My  Little  Saint. — J:  Norris. — ^BNL 
My  Little  Sister. — -Anon.— DJS 
My  Little  Tease. — G:  F.  Lyman. — BS  21 
My  Lord    Tomnoddy.     (Hon.    Mr.    Sucklethumbkin's 
Story.)— R:  H.  Barham.— CS  1 
(Execution,  The— C.)— BS  25— FEP 
My  Lord  Tomnoddy.— Rob't  B.  Brough.— FEP     THP 

— VA 
My  Lost  Baby. — Anoru — HP 
My  Lost  Love.     (All  the  Year  Round.) — HP 
My  Lost  Youth.  —  H:  W.   Longfellow.  —  A  A—  OB— 

PHS 
My  Love. — Anon. — BNL 
(Mosaic  Poetry.)— WRD 
(Poetical  Patch  Quilt,  The.)— SR  1 
My  Love.— Anon.— HBR—WR  3 
My  Love. — Hamilton  Ai'd^.     See  My  Love's  Worth  all 

the  World. 
My  Love.— W.  F.  Fox.— CS  20 
My  Love. — Rob't  Jones. — EP 
My  Love.— J  as.  R.  Lowell.— ASL— FEP— HBP 
My  Love.       (Sonnet    L) — Jas.   G.   Percival.— FTA— 

OH 
My  Love  and  I. — Arthur  D.  Ficke. — CG  3 
My  Love  for  thee. — R:  W.  Gilder.     See  following. 
"My  love  for  thee  doth  march  like  armed  men."     (C.) 
— R:  W.  Gilder.— OH 
(My  Love  for  thee.) — ASL 
My  Love  has  Talked. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Me- 

m  iriam. 
My  Love  is  Dead. — T:  Chatterton.     See  JElla. 
My  Love  of  Long  Ago. — M.  H.  Browne. — -WR  23 
My  Love — Oh!  She   is   My   Love. — Douglas   Hyde. — 

TIP 
My  Lover. — Anon. — WR  13 
My  Lover. — Florence  McCurdy. — CS  28 
My  Lover. — Emma  M.  White. — PR 
My  Love's  Attire. — Anon. — YBF 
(Madrigal.)— ELP— OB— WEP  1 
(Poetry  of  Dress,  The,  III.)— PGT  1 
My   Love's    Worth    all   the  World.     (C.)— Hamilton 
Aid6. 
(My  Love.)— FLS 
My  Ma,  She  Knows. — Anon. — SR  13 
My  Mary. — ^W :  Cowper. — OB 

(To  Mary— O— FEP— WEP  3 
(To  the  Same.)— PGT  1 
My  Maryland. — Jas.  R.  Randall. — AA — ASL — AWB — 
GP 
(Maryland.)— EPs 
My  Matilda  Jane. — Anon. — MCS 
My    Mauria    ni    Milleon.  —  (Tr.    by)    G.    Sigerson. — 

PEB4 
My  Meerschaum  Pipe. — Johnson  M.  Mundy. — PPh 
My  Meerschaums. — Chas.  F.  Lummis. — PPh 
My  Minde  [or  Mind]  to  Me  a  Kingdom  Is. — Sir  E:  Dyer. 
—BNL— FEP 
(A6r.)— ELP— SM— WEP  1 
(At.  to  W:  Byrd.)— BS  7— EPs— HBP— LLC 
(Good  Conscience,  .4 — abr) — FTR 
(Peace  of  Mind.)— PHS 
(Old  style  spelling  in  BNL — FEP— HBP) 
My  Mistake.— E.  P.  G.— CG  2 
My    Mistress's    Boots.  —  Frd'k    Locker-Lampson.  — 

THP 
My  Mother. — Anon. — PS 


My  Mother. — Anon.  (at.   to  Walter  Scott  and  to  Win- 
throp  M.  Praed.)— NPS— YP 

(Knight's  Toast,  The.)— CS  4— CSS— FR— HSS  2— 
PFP— PTS  (o6r.)— LLC 

(Toast,  The.)— FP 
My  Mother.— J:  A.  Currie.— TCV 
My  Mother. — Josephine  Pollard. — SSS 
My  Mother.— W:  Bell  Scott.— VA 

My  Mother. — Nathaniel  P.  Willis.     See  Lines  on  Leav- 
ing Europe. 
My  Mother  at  the  Gate.— Matilda  C.  Edwards.- CS  14 
My  Mother's  Bible.— G:  P.  Morris.— AA— BNL— CS  8 
My  Mother's  Hands.— Ellen  M.  H.  Gates.— HP' 

(Beautiful  nands.) — nf — HsS  3  (aor.) 
My  Mother's  Hymn.^Anon. — -TFS 
My  Mother's  Hymns. — Emily  G.  Wetherbee. — CS  33 

(Mother's  Hymns — abr.) — WR  6 
My  Mother's  Picture. — W:  Cowper. — BNL — EPs  (sel.) 
—LLC 

(Mother's  Portrait,  A — seZ.)— BS  14 

(On  the  Receipt  of  my  Mother's  Picture  [out  of 
Norfolk— C.].)— FEP— HBP— MBL—WCLG  2 
—WEP  2 
My  Mother's  Song. — Emma  M.  Johnston. — CS  23 
My  Mule.— Theodore  Crowl.- BS  1— CS  18 
My  Muse. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
My  Music  (Sonnet  CXXVIIL— C.)— W:  Shakespeare. 
—OH 

(Sonnet.)— EPs 
My  Nanie,  O.— Rob't  Burns.— WEP  3 
My  Nanie's  Awa.     (C.)— Rob't  Burns.— WEP  3 

(My  Nannie's  Awa.) — GN — MBL 
My  Nannie's  Awa. — Rob't  Burns. — See  foregoing. 
My  Native  Land.— W:  D.  LightfaU.— TCV 
My  Native  Land.— J:  Boyle  O'Reilly.— BNL 
My  Native  Land.— Walter  Scott.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 

Minstrel,  The. 
My  Native  Vale.— S:  Rogers.— CEL 

(Italian  Song,  An— C.)— FEP 
My  Neighbor. — Anon. — DJS 
My  Neighbor. — Lizzie  C.  Hardy. — CS  18 
My  Neighbor  Jim. — O.  F.  Pearre.— WR  4 
My  Neighbor  Jim. — Howell  L.  Finer. — WR  23 
My  Neighbor's  Baby. — Washington   Gladden. — CS    13 
ggS 

(Baby  over  the  Way,  The.)— HP 
My  Neighbor's  Call.— Georgia  A.  Peck.— CS  31— PR— 

YA 
"My  New  Pittayatees."— (Z)miZ.  arf. /r.)  T:  Hood(7).— 

BeR— ItfPD 
My  New  World. — Irving  Browne. — AA 
My  Next  Door  Neighbor. — Anon. — DCD 
My  Old  Counselor. — -Gertrude  Hall. — AA 
My  Old  Gray  Nag. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
My  Old  Home.— Ellen  O'Leary.— TIP 
My  Old  Kentucky  Home  [,  Good-night]. — Stephen  C 
Foster.— AA— BNL— FEP— GP—TAV 
(Old  Kentucky  Home,  The.)— ASL 
My  Old  Rag  Doll. — Harriet  F.  Crocker. — WR  25 
My  Only  Jo  and  Dearie,  O. — R :  Gall. — FEP 
My  Opinions  and  Betsey  Bobbet's,  SeZs. /r. —  Marietta 
Holley. 
Fourth  of  July  in  Jonesville.     (Abr.) — CH — SR  10 
Josiah  Allen's  Wife  at  A.  T.  Stewart's  Store.    (Alex- 
ander's Store— C.)—CS  14 
Samantha    Smith    becomes    Josiah  Allen's   Wife 

(Married  to  Josiah  Allen. — C.) — BS  5 
Woman's  Rights.     (Dial.  ad.  fr.  Wimmen's  Speah.) 
— BS  7— HD  ' 

My  Other  Chinee  Cook. — Jas.  B.  Stephens. — THP 
My  Other  Cloe's.— Anon. — WR  14 
My  Other  Me.— Grace  D.  Litchfield.— .\A 
My  Owen. — Ellen  M.  R  Downing. — TIP 
My  Owl.— H.  S.  Comwell.— TAV 

"My  own  dim  life  should  teach  me  this." — Alfred  Ten- 
nyson.    See  In  Memoriam. 
My  Partner.     (Every-day  Characters,  IV.) — Winthron 

M.  Praed.— HPE— THP 
My  Peggy. — Allan  Ramsay.    See  Gentle  Shepherd ,  The. 
My  Phyllis.— W:  C.  Fitch.— CG  1 
My  Pipe.     (German  Smoking  Song.) — Anon. — PPh 
My  Pipe  and  I.— Elton  J.  Buckley.— PPh 
My  Pipe  is  Out. — Herbert  M.  Hopkins. — CG  2 
My  Playmate.— J:  G.  Whittier.— ASL— BFV— EPs— 

FEP— GP— PHS— WCLG  2 
My  Poems. — Ida  W.  Wheeler.— TL 
My  Politics.— G.  W.  Pierce.— CG  2 
My  Pony.— "A."— PoR 
My  Pony. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
My  Portrait. — Walt  Whitman. — BNL 
My  Poultry  Yard.— Anon.— CSS 
My  Present. — Anon. — PS 
My  Psalm.— J:  G.  Whittier.— FEP— HBP— T AS 


221 


My  Purest 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


My  Purest  Longings  Spring. — Arthur  W.  H.  Eaton. — 

TCV 
My  Pussy.— Anon.— DCP—HSS  2 
My  Pussy  Cat. — Anon. — PS 
My  Queen. — Anon. — FLS 
My  Queen. — W :  Winte». — AA 
My  Quest.— W.  T.  O.— CG  2 
My  Question. — Anon. — YBT 
My  Recollectest  Thoughts.— C:  E.  Carryl.- NA 
My  Religion.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XII.)— Count  Leo  Tolstoi. 

—MRS 
My  Ride.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
My  Rights.— Sarah  C.  Woolsey.— TMR 
My  Risen  Lord,  I  Feel  Thy  Strong  Protection. — Anon. 

—HDL 
My  Rival.— Bessie  Chandler.— CH—SR  10 
My  Rival.— Rudyard  Kipling.— HER— SO— WR  4 
My  Robin.— Sarah  K.  Bolton.— YBT 
My  Room-mate.— S.  L.  B.— CG  3 
My  Rose. — Hildegarde  Hawthorne. — AA 
My  Rose  and  Hers.— Thatcher  H.  Guild.— CG  3 
My  Roses  Blossom  the  Whole  Year  Round. — W:  C. 

Bennett.— VS 
My  Secret.     (C.) — Felix  Arvers  (tr.  by.  H:  W.  Long- 
fellow). 
(Secret,  The.)— FLS 
My  Shadow.— Rob't. Louis  Stevenson.— CGV — COS— 

DJS— DST— GMS— HSS  2— LC— PP 
My  Shakespeare.— H:  C.  Bunner.— LBB— MBB 
My  Shepherd.— H:  W:  Baker.— YBT  {abr.) 

(Lord  is  my  Shepherd,  The.)— HDL 
My  Shine.— HoweU  L.  Piner.— WR  23 
My  Ship.— Eliz.  A.  AUen.— BNL— FEP 
My  Ship  and  I.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV 
My  Ships.— W:  M.  Bunn.— CS  34 
My  Ships.— EUa  W.  Wilcox.— SR  11 
My  Silks  and  Fine  Array.— W:  Blake.— FEP 

(Song— O— OB— WEP  3 
My  Sister. — Anon. — MYF 

My  Sister  has  a  Beau. — Roy  F.  Greene. — TMR 
My  Sister's  Husband. — Emma  E.  Brewster. — ^ASD 
My  Slain.— R:  Realf.— GP 
My  Soldier  Boy.— Anon.— PRR 
My  Son  John.— G:  Thatcher.- TK 
My  Song.— OUvia  G.  L.  Wilson.— FTA 
My  Soul  and  I.     (Sei.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— LLC 
My  Speech.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  GoodfeUow.— PS— TT 
My  Spirit  Longeth  for  Thee.    (Desponding  Soul's  Wish, 

The— O— J:  Byrom.— HBP 
My  Springs. — Sidney  Lanier. — TAS 
My  Star. — Rob't  Browning. — OH 
My  Strawberry. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — ASL 
My  Sweet  Sweeting. — Anon.     See  My  Swete  Swetyng. 
My  Sweetheart. — Sydney  Dayre. — TFS 
My  Sweetheart.— R.  W.  K.— CG  3 
My  Sweetheart.— S:  M.  Peck.— BS  26 
My  Sweetheart's  Baby  Brother. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — 

WR3 
My  Sweetheart's  Face.— J:  A.  Wyeth. — BNL 
My  Swete  Swetyng. — Anon. — CEI^ 

(My  Sweet  Sweeting — mod.  apelling — si.  abr.) — BNL 
"My  Three  Little  Texts."— Anon.— DLF 
My  Three  Loves.— H:  S.  Leigh.— PPh 
My  Thrush. — Mortimer  CoUins. — VS 
My  Time  Table.— Anon.— TT 
My  Times  are  in  Thy  Hand. — Christopher  N.    Hall. 

— VA 
My  Times  are  in  Thy  Hands. — A.  L.  Waring. — HDL 
(Supplication — a6r.)— YBF 
(Thy  Will  be  Done.)— FEP 
My  Treasures. — Wilbur  D.  Spencer. — CG  2 
My  Treasures. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
My  Tree.     {YoxUh'a  Companion.) — AD 
My  Triumph,   Br.   sel.   fr.     ("And  present  gratitude," 

etc.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— FHS 
"My  true  love  hath  my  heart  [and  I  have  his]." — Sir 

Philip  Sidney.     See  Arcadia,  The. 
My  Trundle  Bed.— Anon.— BS  5 
My  Twentieth  Birthday.— M.  K.— WR  6 
My  Uninvited  Guest. — May  R.  Smith. — AA 
My  Valentine. — Jennie  L.  Hopkins. — WR  5 
My  Vesper  Song.— Mary  R.  Butler.— BS  22— CS  20— 

HDL 
My  Visit  to  Niagara. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — MAL 
My  Walk  to  Church.— H.  N.  Powers.— TAS 
My  Web  of  Life.— Anon.— FHS 
My  Week.— Anon.— TFS 

My  Welcome  Beyond. — Allie  Wellington. — CS  4 
My  Wife.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
My  Wife  and  ChUd.— H:  R.  Jackson.— BNL— CS  15— 

PYO 
My  Wife  and  I.— Anon.— CS  15 
My  Wife  and  I.— Anon.— HPE 


My  Wife  is  a  Woman  of  Mind. — Anon. — BS  17 

(Woman  of  Mind,  The.)— BC 
My  Wife's  a  Winsome  Wee  Thing.     (C. ) — Rob't  Bums. 

— BNL— HBP— TFY— YBF 
(Winsome  Wee  Thing.  The.)— FEP— LC 
My  Wife's  Husband.— C:  R.  Risley.— CS  34 
My  Wife's  Mother.— Anon.— DCD 
My  Wind.— R.  R.  Kirk.— CG  3 
My  Window  Ivy.     {SI.  abr.)- Mary  M.  Dodge.— POS 

—YBT 
My  Zoological  Flame. — Edna  E.  Linsley. — CG  3 
Mygel  Snyder's  Barty.- Gus  Williams.— BDD — BeR — 

DFY 
Myles  O'Hea.— Chas.  J.  Kickham.— TIP 
Myra. — Fulke  GreviUe,  Lord  Brooke.     See  following. 
Myra's  Fickleness. — Fulke  GreviUe,  Lord  Brooke. — EP 

(Myra— a6r. )— ES— OB 
"Myrtis,"  Sel.  /r.— Walter  S.  Landor.— VA 
Myrtle  and  the  Vine,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Gluggity  Glug.) — 

G:  Colman,  the  younger.— BNL, — GP 
Myrtle's  Letter. — Alice  Lewis  Richards. — SL 
Myself. — Harriet  E.  Arey. — AD 
Myself.— Mrs.  Gusun.— CPL 
Myself. — Walt  Whitman. — See  Song  of  Myself. 
Mysteries,  The.— W:  D.  Howells.— GP 
Mysteries  of  Life,  The. — Francois   R._  A.  de  Chateau- 
briand.    See  Genius  of  Christianity,  The. 
Mysterious  Darkey,  The. — Anon. — DE 

(16,000  Years  Ago.)— SCS 
Mysterious  Duel,  A.  {Harper's  Weekly.) — CS  20 — SR  5 
(Duel  between  Mr.  Shott  and  Mr.  Nott,  The.)— CH 
(Wonderfvil  Duel,  A— si.  abr.)— FS 
Mysterious  Guest,  The. — Fowler  Brannock  [or  Brad- 

nack].— CS  30  (afer.)- KNE— PFP 
Mysterious  Portrait,  a  Story  of  Japan,  The. — G:  Japy. 

— BS22 
Mysterious  Rappings.— B:  P.  Shillaber.— CS  18— SR  6 
Mystery,  A.— Mary  E.  Hoyt.— CG  2 

Mystery,  A. Metcalfe. — TL 

Mystery. — Minot  J.  Savage. — TAS 

Mystery,  The. — G:  F.  Savage-Armstrong. — VA 

Mystery,  A. — J:  A.  Symonds. — OH 

Mystery,  The. — LUian  Whiting. — AA 

Mystery  of  Doom,  The. — Chas.  Heavysege. — TCV 

Mystery  of  God,  The.— F.  L.  Hosmer.— TAS 

Mystery  of  Life. — Alfred  Tennyson. — LLC 

Mystery  of  Life  in  Christ,  The. — Eliz.  Prentiss. — CS  8 

Mystic  Trumpeter,     The.— Walt     Whitman.— HBP— 

TAS  {br.  seL) 
Mystic  Veil,  The.— T:  Whytehead.— CS  12  {alxr.  and  si. 

diff.  vers.) 
(Second  Day  of  Creation,  The.)— AVP 
Mystic  Weaver,  The.— Anon.— CS  6— WCLI  2 
Mystical  Ecstasy,  A.— Francis  Quarles. — PGT  1— YBF 

(Divine  Rapture,  A.) — OB 
Myth,  A.     (Night  Bird,  The— C.)— C:  Kingsley.— GN 

— VA 
Mythology. — Friedrich  Schiller.     See  Wallenstein. 


N 

"N"  for  Nannie  and  "B"  for  Ben. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — 

BS8— WR3 
Naaman,  the   Leper.     (Dial.) — Mrs.   L.   M.   Willis. — 

SSE 
Nabob,  The, — Susanna  Blamire. — FEP 
Nabob  of  Arcot's  Debt,  The.  Sel.  fr.     (Hyder  Ali.)— 

Edmund  Burke. — SE 
Nae  Shoon. — Jeremiah   E.   Rankin   {wr.   at.   to   Hugh 

Miller).— OS  1 
(Babie,  The.)— AA— BNL— FEP— LC  (abr.) 
Nae  Star  was  Glintin. — Eliza  Cook. — CS  25 
Name,  A.— W.  F.  Fox.— CS  8 
Name  in  the  Sand,  A. — Hannah  F.  Gould  (at.  also  to 

G.      D.     Prentice).— AA—CS  12— CSS— FEP 

— PPSr 
Name  of  Old  Glory,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— GN  (abr.)— 

SR13 
Name  of     Washington,     The. — Dan'l     Webster.  *  See 

Character  of  Washington,  The. 
Name  your  Poison. — G :  Sennott. — CS  34 
Nameless  Guest,  The.— Jas.  C.  Harvey. — CS  27 
Nameless  Hero,  A. — E.  M.  Traquair. — SR  5 
Nameless  One,  The.— Jas.  C.  Mangan.—EDY— OB- 
TIP 
Names  of  Good  Omen,  Therapia  on  the  Bosphorus.   (C.) 

— Frd'k  W.  Faber. 
(Therapia.)— AVP 
Naming  Dolly. — Anon. — DJS 
Naming  the  Baby.— Anon.— BS  18— WR  5 
Naming  the  Baby. — Marian  Douglas.— COS— PP — SD 


222 


TITLE  INDEX 


National 


Naming  the  Baby.     (Harper's  Bazar.) — GH 
Naming  the  Chickens. — Mrs.  L.  B.  Bacon. — MYF 

(A6r.)— PR— YA 
Naming  the  Tree.— Mrs.  B.  C.  Rude.— AD 
Nancy  Blynn's  Lovers.     J:  T.  Trowbridge. — MYF 
Nancy  Dawson. — Herbert  P.  Home. — VA 
Nancy  Lee. — F:  E.  Weatherly. — VA 
Nancy  Matilda  Jones. — Anon. — MCS 
Nanny  Saved  from  the  Poorhouse. — Jas.   M.   Barrie. 

>See  Little  Minister,  The. 
Nansen. — Nickolay  Grevstad. — SR  13 
Nantasket.     (Sel.) — Mary  C.  Ames. — SN 
Nantucket  Skipper,  The.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— BNL—CS  5 
— CSS— FEP— GP 

(Alarmed  Skipper,  The— C.)— MHR 
Naomi  and    her    Daughters-in-law.     (Tab.) — Anon. — 

BS  11— TCP 
Naples.     (In  Italy.) — S:  Rogers. — BNL  (sel.) 
Napoleon. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold. 
Napoleon.— Richard  W.  Gilder.— ED Y 
Napoleon.— J:  G.  Lockhart.— FEP 
Napoleon.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— EDY 
Napoleon  and  his  Marshals,  Sels.  jr. — Joel  T.  Headley. 

Burning  of  Moscow,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  IX.)— PPS 

Last   Charge   of   Ney,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXIV.) 
— BS  14— NPS— OM— SR  3— YP 
(Marshal  Ney's  Last  Charge  at  Waterloo — abr.) 

(Waterloo.)— NC—PFP 
(Sels.  vary  si.) 
Macdonald's  Charge  at  Wagram.  (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  VIII.) 
— SR6 
Napoleon  and  the  British  Sailor.     (C.) — T:  Campbell. 
—BNL 
(Napoleon  and  the  Sailor — abr.') — CGd 
(Soldier  and  Sailor.) — LH 
Napoleon  and  the  Sailor.— T:  Campbell.     See  foregoing. 
Napoleon  at  Rest. — J:  Pierpont. — SR  3 

(Exile  at  Rest,  The— o6r.)— AA 
Napoleon  at  St.  Helena.     ( Tab. )— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Napoleon  at  the  Pyramids. — G:  R.  Graff. — BS  21 
Napoleon  Bonaparte. —C ;  PhiUips.— CS  4— HNS— IR 
(SeZ.)— PS— SR  4  (longer.) 
(Analysis  of  the  Character  of  Bonaparte — sel.) — PS 
(Character  of  Napoleon  Bonaparte — sel.) — FAS 
Napoleon  Bonaparte  and  Toussaint  I'Ouverture.    Wen- 
dell Phillips.     See  Toussaint  I'Ouverture. 
Napoleon  the  Little,  iSeZ«.  fr. — Victor  Hugo. 

Napoleon  the  Little.      (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  VII.)— 

MRS 
"This  century  is  the  grandest  of  centuries."     (Br. 

ael.  fr.  Conclusion,  Pt.  II.,  Ch.  II.)— GG 
"This  century  proclaims  the  sovereignty  of  the  cit- 
izen."    (Br.  sel.  fr.  Conclusion,  Pt.  II.,  Ch.  II.) 
— GG 
(Present  Age,  The — cond.  fr.  two  foregoing  aels.) 
— TMD 
Napoleon  II.,  Duke  of  Reichstadt. — Fs.  S.  Saltus. — 

EDY 
Napoleon's  Advice  to  an  Actor. — Anon. — BS  21 
Napoleon's    Ambition     and     Shelley's    Doubt.  —  W: 

De  Shon.— NC 
Napoleon's  Farewell. — (Tr.  by)  Lord  Byron. — EDY 
Napoleon's  Final  Return.  (Sel.  fr.  Crowned  and  Buried.) 

— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— OS  3 
Napoleon's  Midnight  Review. — Jos.  C.  von  Zedlitz  (tr. 

by  Clarence  Mangan). — FEP 
Napoleon's  Overthrow.  —  Victor  Hugo.     See  Les  Mise- 

rables. 
Narayena:  Spirit  of  God.     (Tr.  by)  Sir  W:  Jones. — 

EPs 
Narcissa. — E:  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Narrow  Escape,  A.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MFD 
Narrow  House,  The. — Anon. — HP 
Narrowness  of  Specialties,  The. — E:  Bulwer-Lvtton. — 

TMD 
Naseby.— T:  B.  Macatilay.— AVP— BNL— EDY— FEP 
— HB— HBP 
(Battle  of  Naseby,  The— C.)— BPB— CEL— EHT 
— VA— WEP  4 
(A6r.)— CSS— EA—PSR 
Nashville  Exposition,  The.     (Fr.  a  speech  delivered  at 
the  Nashville  Exposition,  Jime  11,  1897.) — W: 
McKinley.— TMR 
Nat  Rioket  at  Cricket. — Alfred  H.  Miles. — CS  36 
Nathan  Hale. — Joe  Cone. — EDY 

Nathan  Hale.— Fs.  M.  Finch.— A WB— EDY— OS  2— 
P  AP— PAPm— P  YO— TM  R 
(A6r.)— SM— WCLG  1 
(Patriot,  The— abr.)— PRR 
Nathan  Hale.— Eugene  Geary.— DS— NPS— YP 
Nathan  Hale,  the  Martyr  Spy.     I.  H.  Brown. — BS  18 
— CS  31— PFP— PRR 


Nathan  the  Wise,  Sel.  fr.     (Opal  Ring,  The — fr.  Act 
III.,  Sc.  7.)— Gotthold  E.  Lessing.— DR 
(Ring,  The.)— MMR 
Nathaniel  Hawthorne.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Nathan's  Case.     (Sunday  School  Times.) — BS  1 
Nation  Born  in  a  Day,  A. — J:  Q.  Adams.  —  DFR  — 
WRIO 
(Declaration  of  Independence,  The.) — PEO — PS — 
■SS 

National  Anthem  by  Dr.  Oliver  Wendell  H . — Rob't 

H.  Newell.     See  Poems  Received  in  Response 
to  an  Advertised  Call  for  a  National  Anthem. 

National  Anthem  by  Gen.  Geo.  P.  M . — Rob't  H. 

Newell.     jSee  Poems  Received  in  Response  to 
an  Advertised  Call  for  a  National  Anthem. 

National  Anthem  by  N.  P.W .—Rob't  H.  Newell. 

See  Poems  Received  in  Response  to  an  Adver- 
tised Call  for  a  National  Anthem. 

National  Anthem  by  Thomas  Bailey  A . — Rob't  H. 

Newell.     <See  Poems  Received  in  Response  to 
an  Advertised  Call  for  a  National  Anthem. 

National  Anthem  by  William  Cullen  B . — Rob't  H. 

Newell.     See  Poems  Received  in  Response  to 
an  Advertised  Call  for  a  National  Anthem. 
National  Banner,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Battle  of  Lex- 
ington.)—E:  Everett.— CS  6— KNE 
(Flag,  The.)— SO 
(Our  National  Banner.) — LLC 
(Stars  and  Stripes,  The.)— CP 
National  Cemetery  at  Gettysburg,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Gettys- 

burg.)— E:  Everett.— OS  2 
National  Clock,  The.— T:  Starr  King.— SE 
National  Constitution  and  Rum,  The. — A.   Willey. — 

WR18 
National  Decay. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Deserted  Vil- 
lage, 'The. 
National  Distinction   Depends   upon   Virtue.     W:   E. 

Channing.     See  Spiritual  Freedom. 
National  Duties. — Theodore  Roosevelt. — AI 
National  Ensign,  The. — Anon. — BS  9 
National  Ensign,  The. — A.  P.  Putnam. — PTS 

(Our  Flag. )—FD  2 
National  Ensign,  The. — Rob't  C.  Winthrop.     See  Flag 

of  the  Union,  The. 
National  Flag,  The,  Sels.  fr.     (In  Patriotic  Addresses.) 
— H:  W.  Beecher.— TMR 
American  Flag,  The.— PEO 

(Abr.)— CS  10-NPS— PRR— SR  8— WR  10— YP 
Meaning  of  the  Flag,  The.     (Br.  sel.) — DFR 
National  Flag,  The.     (Ptly.  diff.  aeZs.)— NC— TMR 
Our  National  Flag.     (Ptly.  diff.  seZ.  )—SC 
(Our  Flag— seZ. )— PEO— WR  17  (diff.) 
National    Flag,    The.  —  C:  Sumner.     See    Are  we  a 

Nation? 
National  Flower,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — AD — NV 
National  Glory.     (Sel.   fr.    On   the   Direct  Tax.) — H: 

Clay.— LLC 
National  Gratitude. — H :  Grattan.     See  Declaration  of 

Irish  Rights. 
National  Greatness. — J:  Bright. — See  England's  True 

Greatness. 
National  Hatreds. — Rufus  Choate.     See  Barbarity  of 

National  Hatreds. 
National  Hymn.     Fs.  Marion  Crawford.     See  New  Na- 
tional Hymn,  A. 
National  Hymn,  The. — Janet  E.  H.  Richards. — TMR 
National  Hymn.— S:  F.  Smith.— OS  1  (sel.) 
(America. ) — PAPm 

(Sel.)  —  AA— FEP— SM— TAV— WCLI  2 
(My  Country,  'tis  of  Thee— seZ.)— BS  6— LLC— SAE 
— SPE 
National  Injustice. — Theodore  Parker. — BLP — OS  3 
National    Life. — Rufus    Choate.     See    American   Na- 
tionality. 
National  Monument  to  Washington.     (C. — sel.) — Rob't 
C.  Winthrop.- BS  3— CS  2 
(Washington  Monument.) — FD  1 — PEO — TMD 
National  Morality. — H :  W.  Beecher. — SO 
National  Music   of   Ireland,   The,   Sel.   fr.     (Power  of 

Music,  The.)— T:  N.  Burke.— FS 
National  Ode,  Read  at  the  Celebration  in  Independ- 
ence Hall,  Philadelphia,  July  4,  1876,  Sels.  fr. — 
Bayard  Taylor. 
America.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  3.) — AA 

("She  takes  but  to  give  again" — 8eZ.) — GG 
National  Ode,  Sel.  fr.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  1.)— BNL 
National  Paintings,  The:  Colonel  Trumbull's  "The  Dec- 
laration    of     Independence." — Jos.  R.  Drake. 
— AA 
National  Progress.     (Sel.  fr.  Inaugural  Address,  Mar. 

4,  1901.)— W:  McKinley.— PEO 
National  Prohibition.— T:  De  Witt  Talmage.— TS 


223 


National 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


National  Prohibition  Party  our  Only  Deliverer,  A. — J. 

C.  Ray.— TS 
National    Song. — Alfred    Tennyson.       See    Foresters, 

The. 
Nationality. —  Rufus  Choate.      See  American  Nation- 
ality. , 
Nationality.— T:  DaviS.- TIP 
Nationality.— J.  K.  Ingram. — TIP 
Nations  and  Humanity. — G:  W.Curtis.    See  Patriotism. 
Nation's  Birthday,  The. — Mary  E.  Vandyne. — PEO 
Nation's  Day  of  Praise,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Nation's  Dead,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Nation's  Dead,  The.— Anon.— HB—TMR 
Nation's  Dead,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Gray  Honors  the  Blue, 

The.)— H:  Watterson.— BS  7 
Nation's  Defenders,  The. — Hezekiah  Butterworth.    — 

BS23 
Nation's  Duty  to  Slavery,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (North  and  the 

African,  The.)— H:  W.  Beecher.— NC 
Nation's  Honor,  A.— F.  R.  Coudert.— TMD 
Nation's  Hymn,  The. — Anon. — WRD 
Nation's  Strength,  A. — See  Psalms. 
Nation's  Test,  A,  Sel.  fr.      (Daniel  O'Connell — Pt.  VI., 

abr.)—J:  B.  O'Reilly.— EDY 
Nativity,  The. — Alfred  Domett.— AVP 

(Christmas  Chant,  A.)— CS  16— PTS  (abr.) 
(Christmas    Hvmn,    A— C.)— EDY— FEP— GN— 

HBP— OS  2— PGT  2— VA  (old  style.) 
Nativity,  The.— L.  P.  Hopkins.— PEO 
Nativity,  The.— H:  Milman.— AVP 
Nativity,  The.— T:  B.  Read.— PP— SR  3— YPS 
Natural  Comparisons    with    Perfect    Love. — Anon. — 

YBF 
Natural  Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich,  The,  Sets.  fr. 

— Dan'l  Webster. 
Fraudulent  Party  Outcries.— BS  16— FTR 

(Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich — abr.) — SS 
Natural  Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich,  The. — FD  1 
Natural  Theology,  Sel.  fr.     (Happy  World,  The— seZ.  fr 

Ch.  XXVI.)— W:  Paley.— FMR 
Nature.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — HSS  3 
Nature. — Jas.  Beattie.     See  Minstrel,  The. 
Nature. — T:  Carlyle.     See  On  Heroes  and  Hero  Wor- 
ship. 
Nature,  Set.  fr. — Camille  Flammarion. — SAE 
Nature.     (Song    of    Nature— C. — fr.    Mercury   Vindi- 
cated  from   the  Alchemists   at   Court.) — Ben 

Jonson. — EPs 
Nature.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— A  A— ASL—TAS—YI  F 
Nature.— Hugh  Miller.— PP—YFR 
Nature. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Moral  Essays. 
Nature.     (SI.  abr.)—H:  D.  Thoreau.— ASL 
Nature.— Jones  Very.— BNL— HBP— SN—TAS 
Nature. — E:  Yovmg.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Nature  a  Hard  Creditor.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Stump  Orator.) 

— T:  Carlyle.— KNE— SO— SS 
Nature  and  the  Child. — J:  L.  Spalding.     See  God  and 

the  Soul.  ' 

Nature  and  the  Children.— E.  E.  Higbee.— LLC 

(Arbor  Day  and  the  Children — abr.) — AD 
Nature  and  the  Poet.— W:  Wordsworth.— PGT  1 

(Elegiac  Stanzas  Suggested  by  a  Picture  of  Peele 

Castle  in  a  Storm.— C— si.  abr.)— FEP 
(On  a  Picture  of  Peel  Castle  in  a  Storm  — si.  abr.) — 

HBP 
Nature  and  the  Poets,  Sel.  fr. — J:  Keats.     See  "I  stood 

tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill." 
"Nature  denied    him    much."     (Sel.  Jr.   Farewell,  in 

Italy,  the  book.) — S:  Rogers. — GG 
Nature  Designed  for  our  Enjoyment.     (Sel.  fr.  Popular 

Amusements.) — H :  W.  Beecher — SAE 
Nature    in    Spring. — Jas.     Thomson.       See    Seasons, 

The. 
"Nature  never  did   betray." — W:  Wordsworth.     See 

Lines  Composed  a  Few  Miles  above    Tintem 

Abbey. 
Nature  of  Christ,  The.     (In  Plymouth  Pulpit:   New 

Series,  Vol.  I.)— H:  W.  Beecher.— PPS 
Nature    of    Eloquence,    The. — Dan'l    Webster.       See 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Nature  of  Justice,  The. — R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  Im- 
peachment of  Warren  Hastings. 
Nature  of  Man,  The. — Louise  I.  Beecher. — BS  18 
Nature  of  Oratory,  The.— W:  A.  Quayle.— SR  11 
Nature    of    True    Eloquence. —  Dan'l    Webster.     See 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Nature  Prayer,  A. — I.  Edgar  Jones. — CS  25 
Nature  Proclaims  a  Deity. — Frangois  R.  A.  Chftteau- 

briand.     See  Genius  of  Christianity,  The. 
Nature:  The  Artist. — F.  L.  Knowles. — AA 
Nature    vermis    Education.      (Dial.) — S.    A.    Frost. — 

FND 
Nature's  Chain. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Essay  on  Man,  The. 


Nature's  Daughter. — Lord  Byron. — MR 
(For  Music.)— OB 
(Stanzas  for  Music     C.)  —  CEL  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 

WEP  4— YBF 
("There  be  none  of  beauty's  daughters.") — PGT  1 
Nature's   Delights. — J:   Keats.     See   "I   stood   tiptoe 

upon  a  little  hill." 
Nature's  Monotony. — Anon. — CS  36 
Nature's  Party. — Hannah  Coddington. — HSS  2 
Nature's  Poem.— F.  S.  Palmer.— CG  1 
Nature's  Secret. — Josephine  Canning. — YBT 
Nature's  Temple. — David  Vedder. — AD 
Nature's  Thoughtfulness. — M.  F.  Butts. — NV 
Nature's  Tribute  Suggests  Ours.     (With  thus.)  —  Jared 

Barhite. — AD  («e^)  > 

(Arbor  Day  Tribute.)— AD 
"Naught  is  the  same  as  if  love  had  not  been." — Edwin 

Arnold.     See  With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Naughty  Bob.— Anon.— WR  4 
Naughty  Claude.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Naughty  Crow,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards — SL 
Naughty  Doll,  The.— Eugene  Field.— DJS—WTD 
Naughty  Girl,  The.— Anon.— PS 
Naughty  Girl's  Life  in  a  Hotel,  A. — Anon. — SR  7 
(Little  Girl's  View  of  Life  in  a  Hotel,  A.)— CS  17 
(Naughty  Little  Girl,  The. )—HR 
Naughty  Greek  Girl,  The.— Anon.— CH 
Naughty  Hens,  The.— Anon.— TT 
Naughty  Hornet,  A. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Naughty  Kitty  Clover.— Carrie  W.  Thompson.— BS  20 
(Kitty  Clover.)— WR  2 
("Lulu"— sZ.  afer.)— HP 
Naughty  Little  Comet,  A.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— NV— 

WR22 
Naughty  Little  Fred.- Anon.— WR  17 
Naughty  Little  Girl,  The. — Anon.     See  Naughty  Girl's 

Life  in  a  Hotel,  A. 
Naughty  Words.     (Dial.) — Anon.— WR  17 
Naughty  Zell.— Anon.— SR  11 

Nautical  Conversation,  A.     (Dial.) — Anon. — CS  34 
Naval  Service.  (Dial.) — Anon. — DSS 
"Nay,  I'll  stay  with  the  lad."— Lillie  E.  Barr.— BS  10 
"Nay,  sail  I  not." — H:  Taylor.     See  Philip  van  Arte- 

velde. 
Near  the  Dawn. — Anon.^HP 
Near  the  Lake.— G:  P.  Morris.— AA—TAV 
Nearer  Home. — Phcebe  Cary.  —  AA — BNL  (si.  abr. 

and     si.     dijf. )—BS  14— FEP— GP— HDL— 

HSS  3— PYO— TAS— TAV 
(Abr.)— CS  4— FTR— HNS 
Nearer,  my  God,  to  Thee. — Sarah  F.  Adams. — AE — 

BNL— FEP— GP— HBP 
(Nearer  to  Thee.)— VA 
Nearer  to  Thee. — Sarah  F.  Adams.     See  Nearer,    My 

God,  to  Thee. 
"Nearer  to  Thee." — I.  Edgar  Jones. — CS  29 
Nearest  Friend,  The.— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— WCL 
Nearing  Home. — Anon. — CS  29  « 

Nearing  Port.— C.  P.  R.— HP 

"Nearly  one  hundred  years  ago  there  was  a  day  of  re- 
markable  gloom   and   darkness." — Rob't     E. 

Lee.— GG 
Nearly  Ready  (March — C). — Mary  M.  Dodge. — PoR 

(Spring.)— AD 
'Neath  the  Cotton-wood  Trees. — B.  C.  Rude. — AD 
Nebuchadnezzar. — J:  Gower.     See  Confessio  Amantis. 
Nebuchadnezzar  [or  Nebuchadnezzahl. — Irwin  Russell. 

— BNL— BS  8— CRR— FS— SR  5— TMR 
Necessity  of    Independence,    The. — S:    Adams.     See 

American  Independence. 
Necessity  of  Law. — R:  Hooker. — SS 

(Law— 8ciO— OS  3 
Necessity  of  Outside  Agitation,  The. — Wendell  Phil- 
lips.    See  Daniel  O'Connell. 
Necessity  of  Reform  in  Parliament. — Lord  Grey. — SS 
Necessity  of  Religion.— Victor  Hugo.— KNE— PS— SS 
Neckan,  The.— Matthew  Arnold.— FEP— LC 
Necker's  Financial  Plan.     Sept.  26,  1789. — Honor^  de 

Mirabeau.— PS— SS 
Necklace,  The. — Guy  de  Maupassant. — MRS  (cond.) — 

— WGS 
Necks — a  Boy's  Composition. — Laura  M.  Bronson. — 

GH— SR  10 
(Essay  on  Necks — abr.) — DES 
Ned's  Best  Friend.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Need  for  a  Prohibition  Party,  The. — J:  B.  Gough. — 

— WR18 
Need  of  Christ,  The.— Anon.— PS 

Need  of  Heroism  To-day.— A.  McElroy  Wylie.— WR  18 
Needle,  The.— S:  Woodworth.— GN 
Needles  and  Pins.— Anon.— CS  35— PR— YA 
Needless  Fear.     ("Afraid?  of  whom  am  I  afraid?" — C.) 

— Emily  Dickinson. — TAS 


224 


TITLE  INDEX 


New  Englander 


Neglect  of  Little  Things.     (Sel.  fr.  Thrift,  Ch.  IX.)— S : 
Smiles.— VSG 

Neglected    Call,    The.— Hannah   L.  Neale.— CS  22— 
FEP 

Neglected  Pattern,  The.     (Our  Pattern— C.)—Ph(]ebe 
Gary.- PPSr 

Negro  and  the  South,  The. — Anon. — CP 

Negro  Funeral,  The.     (C.)— Will  Carleton. 
(Funeral,  The.)— CD 

Negro  in  American  History,  The. — Frank  F.  Laird. — 
NC 

Negro  Lullaby.     (Lullaby — C.) — Paul  Laurence  Dun- 
bar.—THP 

Negro  Prayer. — Anon. — BS  3 

Negro  Prayer,  A.     {Methodist  Recorder.) — BS  4 

Negro  Problem,  The.— H:  W.  Grady.     See  At  The  Bos- 
ton Banquet. 

Negro  Sermon  on  Memory,  A. — Anon. — WR  9 

Negro  Slavery. — H:,  Lord  Brougham. — SSD 

Negro  Soldier,  The.— B.  M.  Channing.— PRR 

Neighbors. — Anon. — CD — SR  5 

■Neighbors  of  the  Christ  Night. — Nora  A.  Smith. — PoR 

Nekros.- J:  B.  Tabb.— TAS 

Nell.     (Cond.)— Rob't  Buchanan.— CS  15— NPS— YP 

Nell  and  Her  ]3ird. — Ma'-y  Mapes  Dodge. — PC 

Nell  Gwynn. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — EDY 

Nell  Gwynne's  Looking-glass.  —  Laman   Blanchard. — 
VA 

Nellie.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 

Nellie  Walsh.— C-  Barnard.— WR  16 

Nellie's  Decorations. — Winifred  Davis. — WR  17 

Nellie's  Easter  Eggs. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 

Nellie's  Prayer.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  32— PR 

Nell's  Christma.-?  Stocking.     {Play.) — J.  L.  Harbour. — 
NDP 

Nell's  Letter.     {Wisconsin  Farmer.) — See  Little  Girl's 
Letter,  A. 

Nelly  TeUs  how  Baby  Came.— T:  S.  Collier.— HP 

Nelson. — Gerald  Massey. — EHT 

Nelson,  Pitt,  Fox. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marmion. 

Nemesis.— C.  H.  Crandall.— PAPm 

Neophyte.— Eugene  F.  Ware.— THP 

Nepenthe,  Sel.  fr.—G:  Darley.— TIP 

Nephelidia.     {Fr.    The     Heptalogia.)  —  Algernon    C. 
Swinburne. — NA 

Nephon's  Song. — G:  Darley.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May 
Queen. 

Neptune's  Triumph  for  the  Return  of  Albion,  Sel.  fr. 
(Song.) — Ben  Jonson. — EPs 

Nerves. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 

Nervous  Little  Man,  The. — Malcolm  Douglas. — FAS 

Nervous  Woman,  The. — Anon. — DE 

Nessun  Maggior  Dolore. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Hough- 
ton.—PGT  2 
(Shadows.)— OB 

Nest  Eggs. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 

Nest-builders,  The.— Anon.— YBT 

Nestleton  Magna,  Sels.fr. — J.  J.  Wray. 
Methodist  Class  Meeting,  A. — BS  13 
Sister  Agatha's  Ghost.     (Ad.)— BS  14 

Nestlings.— F.  C.  A.— HP 

Nestor  to  Hector. — W:  Shakespeare. — See  Troilus  and 

Nests.     (The  Eagle's  Nest,  I>ec.  VIII.,  Sec.  205,  si. 

abr.)—J:  Ruskin.— OS  1 
Net-braiders,  The.— T:  Wade.— VA 
Netley  Abbey. — R:  Harris  Barham. — HPE 
Nets  and  Cages.— T:  Moore.— HPE 
Nettie  Budd  before  her  Second  Ball. — Mary  K.  Dallas. 

— WR3 
Never  Again.— R:  H.  Stoddard.— FEP— TAV 

(Flight  of  Youth,  The— C.)— AA— ASL— YBF 

(It  Never  Comes  Again.)— BNL— LLC— MRS 

(Lost.)— FP 

(There  are  Gains  for  All  our  Losses.) — HBP 
Never  Break  a  Promise. — Anon. — DJS 
Never  Despair. — S:  Lover. — SS 
Never    Give     Up.  —  Martin    F.     Tupper.  —  CS   8  — 

HSS   2  (abr.)- MYF 
Never  Look  Back. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Never  Mine  de  Why  en  Wharfo'. — {Dial.) — Anon. — 

DCD 
Never  or  Now.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— A WB— EPs 

(Now  or  Never — sel.) — TMR 
Never  out  of  Sight.— Anon.— FAS  (obr.)— YBT 
Never  Play  Truant. — Anon. — TT 
Never  Say  Fail.— Anon.— DS—PP—YA—YFR 
Never  the  Time  and  the  Place. — Rob't    Browning. — 

PGT  2— YBF 
Never  too  Late,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Greene. 

Infida's  Song.— ES 

Palmer's  Ode,  The.— WEP  1 


Never  too  Late  to  Mend. — C:  Reade.     See  It  is  Never 
too  Late  to  Mend. 

Never-ending  Progress. — Spaulding. — LLC 

Nevermore. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Nevermore,  The.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XCVII.) 
— Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti; — -BNL 
(Superscription,  A — C.) — VA 
New  Alcestis,  A.     (C.) — Bryan  W.  Procter. 

(Recalled  to  Life.)- VSG 
New  Americanism,  The.     {Sel.) — H:  Watterson. — SC 

—TMR  {shorter.) 
New  Arrival,  The.— G:  W.  Cable.— AA 

(Last  Arrival,  The.)— HP 
New  Baby,  The.— Anon.— HP 
(Deposed — diff.  vers.) — DLS 
(Lulu's  Complaint.) — PR — YA 
New  Baby,  The.     (Diai. )— Frances  H.  Burnett.— NDP 
New  Baby,  The.— C.  M.  Snyder.— WR  15 
New  Beacon's  Set. — J:  J.  Rooney. — PAPm 
New  Birth,  The.— Herman  Merivale. — CS  19 
New  Book,  A. — Anon. — DLS 
New  Boy,  The.     {Dial.)—G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
New  Boy,  The. — T:  Hughes.     See  Tom  Brown's  School 

Days. 
New  Castalia,  The.— W:  H.  Ward.— AA 
New    Christmas,    The.     {Dial.) — Clara   J.  Denton. — 

FTT 
New  Church  Organ,  The.— Will  M.  Carleton.— AWH— 

BNL— BS  2— CS  6— GP— HR— MR 
New  Country  Occupied,  The. — Cunningham  Geikie. — 

BLP 
New  Cry,  The. — Ben  Jonson. — ESs 
New  Cure  for  Rheumatism,  A. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — 
BS13 
(Mr.  Middlerib's  Experiment.) — SR  3 
(Movement  Cure  for  Rheumatism.) — CS  24 — NPS 
-YP 
New  Day,  The,  Sels.  fr.—R:  W.  Gilder. 
After-song.— AA—BIL— TAV 
Dawn.     (Prelude— O— BNL— GP—SN 
"I  count  my  time  bv  times  that  I  meet  thee." — AA 

—OH 
"Love  me  not,  love,  that  I  first  loved  thee." — OH 
"My  love  for  thee  doth  march  like  armed  men." — 
(C.)— OH 
(My  Love  for  Thee.)— ASL 
"Oh,  love  is  not  a  summer  mood." — BIL — FTA — 

OH— TFY 
"Smile  of  her  I  love.  The."— BIL 
Song.     (O— AA— FTA— OH 

("Not  from  the  whole  wide  world  I  chose  thee.") 
—BIL 
Song:  "Years  have  flown,"  etc.— AA — ASL 
Sower,  The.— TAS 

"There  is  nothing  new  under  the  sun." — TAV 
New  Deacon,  The.— Wade  Whipple.— WR  24 
New  Declaration  of  Independence,  A  lor  Thel.     {Sel 
fr.  Address  Delivered  at  the  Independence  Day 
Celebration,  Woodstock,  Conn.,  1888.) — (Clinton 
B.  Fisk.— CS  28— TS  {si.  diff.  and  abr.) 
New  Doctor,  The.- — Parmenas  Mix. — AWH 
New  Emancipation,  The. — Dwight  Williams. — TS 
New  England. — Anon. — ^FP 
New  England. — Caleb  Cushing.     See  New  England  in 

the  War  of  1812. 
New  England.— Jas.  G.  Percival.— AA— BLP— WR  10 
New  England. — G.  D.  Prentice. — AA 
New  England.     {Sel.  fr.   Address  on  the  Landing  of 
the  Pilgrims.)— S.  S.  Prentiss.- FD  1 
(Glorious  New  England.) — CS  1 
New  England  and  Virginia.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Pilgrim 

Fathers.)— Rob't  C.  Winthrop.— BLP 
New  England  Character.     {Sel.  fr.  Speech  at  the  Din- 
ner of  the  New  England  Society  of  New  York.) 
—Jas.  G.  Blaine.— SC 
New  England  Civilization. — W:  P.  Frye. — SC 
New  England  Climate  in  Summer,  The. — RufusChoate. 

—MRS 
New  England  in  the  War  of  1812. — Caleb  Cushing. — 
SSD 
(New  England.)— CR 

(Sectional  Services  in  the  Last  War  ) — SS 
New  England  in  Winter.— J:  Greenleaf  Whittier.     See 

Snow-bound. 
New  England    Tragedies,    The,    Sel.  fr.     {Br.  sel.   fr. 

Act  I.,  Sc.  3.)— H:  W.  LongfeUow.— HDL 
New  England  Weather.     (Speech   on   the   Weather — 
O— S:  L.  Clemens.— SA—WCLG  2  {si.  abr.) 
(Mark  Twain  on  the  Weather.)- CS  13 
New  Englander  as  a  Citizen.  The.     {A   J'hanksgiving 

Day  address.) — Anon. — CP 
New  Englander  in  History,  The. — H.  L.  Wayland. — N(3 


225 


New  England's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


New    England's   Chevy    Chase.— E:  E.  Hale.— AB- 
BS 10 
New  England's  Dead.— I:  McLellan. — AA — HSS  1 
New  England's  Fairest  Boast.— S.  S.  Prentiss. — FD  1 
New  Ezekiel  The. — Emma  Lazarus. — AA 
New  Fairy  Story,  A.— Edouard    R.    L.    Laboulaye. — 

New  Fem,  A.— "A."— PoR 

New  Girl's    Logic,    The. — Mrs.    Howard    J.    Curtis. — 

WR25 
New  Guides  to  Faith  and  Belief,  The. — Anon.— OS  3 
New  Hail  Columbia.     (Additional  Verses — C.) — Oliver 

W.  Holmes.— LLC 
New  Hatchet  Story  and  George  Washington,  A. — Rob't 

J.  Burdette.— SR  9 
(Little  Hatchet  Story,  The.)— BS  6— CS  13— DS— 

KNE 
New  Heaven,  The.— Eliza  Scudder.— TAS 
New  "Hey  Diddle  Diddle."     (.London  Clarion.) — FAS 
New  Holiday,  A.— G:  W.  Curtis.— AD 

(Arbor  Day.)— HSS  1 
New  House,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Unhappy  Lot  of  Mr. 

Lot.) — Jas.  Russell  Lowell. — AWH 
New  House:  Old  Home.— J:  W.  Chad  wick.— OH 
New  Household,  A. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Hanging 

of  the  Crane,  The. 
New  Inn,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Perfect  Beauty.) — Ben  Jonson. 

— ES— YBF 
(Vision  of  Beauty,  A— C.)— BNL 
New  Jerusalem,  The,  Sel.  fr.     ("  Bathed  in  unfallen 

sunlight.") — Horatius  Bonar. — GG 
New  Jerusalem,  The.     (Song  of  Mary  the  Mother  of 

Christ.)— D:  Dickson  (?).— FEP— HBP 
(Sels.—sl.  dt/f.)— BNL— OB 
(Heavenly  Jerusalem,  The — si.  diff.  sel.) — CEL 
New  Joke,  The.— F.  T.  Easton.— CG  1 
New  Kind  of  DoU,  A.— Anna  L.  Jack.— TT 
New  Liberty  BeU,  The.— H.  B.  C— PEO 
"New  Light. ' ' — S :  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
New  Magdalen,  The.— R.  L.  Gary,  Jr.- HP 
New  Memorial  Day,  The. — A.  B.  Paine. — PAPm 
New  Mittens,  The.— E.  C.  Rook.— LPS— PP 
New  Moon,  The.— Mrs.  FoUen.— DJS— NV— PC— WCL 

— WR  17 
New  Muff  and  Collar,  The.— Kate  E.  Peet.— SDD 
New  Multiplication  Table,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — Lli 
New    National    Hymn,  A. — Fs.    Marion    Crawford. — 

PEO 
(National  Hymn.)— WR  10 
New  Occasional  Address,  A. — Anon. — BC 
New  "Old  Mother  Hubbard." — Anon. — CS  10 
New  Party  Needed,  A.^J:  B.  Finch.— WR  18 
New  Patriotism,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.— TMR 
New  Poet,  A.— W:  Canton.— VA 
New  Preacher,  The.— Philip  J.  BuU.— CS  17 
New  Preacher,  The.     (DmZ.)— "Silonius."— SDD 
New   Prince,  New   Pomp. — Rob't  Southwell. — EPs — 

GN— OS  3 
New  Quarters,  The. — Anon. — HVD 
New  Republic,  The. — Leon  Gambetta. — OS  3 
New  Rosette,  The.     (.W.  nms.) — G:  M.  Vickers. — PS 
New  Sanford  and  Merton,  Sel.  fr.     (Legend  of  Don 

Ditto  and  the  Dutchman.) — Anon. — SR  10 
New  Santa  Claus,  A. — J.  Gertrude  Menaid. — DCP 
New  Series  of  Census  Questions,  A. — Anon. — BS  18 
New  Simile  for  the  Ladies,  A.— T:  Sheridan.— HPE 
New  Sister,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
New  Slate,  The.— Anon.— BS  11 
New  Slavery,  The.— Anon.— WR  18 
New  Song — of  New  Similes,  A. — J:  Gay. — HPE 
New  South.— H:  W.  Grady.- MRS  (obr. )—PPS 

(Sds.)  —  BS  16— NC— OS  2  (6r.)— PR— PS— 

SAE— SC— SO— SR  6— WR  25 
(Confederate  Soldier,  The— 8«Z.)— OS  3 

(Southern  Soldier,  The.)— PEO 
(Lincoln  as  Cavalier  and  Puritan — sd.) — LI/C 
(Old  and  the  new  South,  The— 6r.  «eZ.)— OS  2 
New  South,  The. — H :  W.  Grady.     See  also  South  and 

her  Problem'',  The. 
New  Story,  The. —Ellen  Murrav.— CS  25 
New  Sunday-School  Scholar,  The. — M.  Ella  Cornell. — 

SSE 
New  Tambourine  Drill.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
New  Thanatopsis. — W:  H.  Holcombe. — CS  5 
New  Theory  of  Frost:  or,  the  Story  of  the  Frost-king, 

A.— A.  E.  Brackett.- PPSr 
New  Timon,  The,  Sel  fr.     (St .  .James's  Street  on  a  Sum- 
mer Morning.) — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — AVP 
New  Toreador, The.     (London  Fun.) — PAPm 
New  Toy,  The.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
New  Version  of  a  Certain  Historical  Dialogue,   A. — 

Rob't  J.  Burdette.— WR  3 


New  Version  of  "A   Man's   a  Man  for  a'  That." — C. 

Mackay.— CS  6 
New  Way  to  Pay  Old  Debts,  A,  Br.  sel.  /r.— Philip 

Massinger. — BNL 
"New  Woman,"  The.— E.  Matheson.— TMR 
New  Woman,  The. — Emma  P.  Seabury.— WR  24 
New  Woman  Considered,  The. — ^arah  M.  Graham. — 

WR25 
New  World,  The.     (C.)— W:  B.  Rands. 

(I  Saw  a  New  World.)— VA 
New  World,  The. — Jones  Very. — AA 
New  Year,  A. — Anon. — HP 
New  Year,  The.— A.  H.  Baldwin.— HSS  2 

(On  the  Threshold.)— PEO 
New  Year,  The.— Mary  F.  Butts.— TT 
New  Year,  The. — C.  Innes  Cameron. — SSS 

New  Year,  the. Colton.— HS 

New  Year,  The.— G:  Cooper.— PEO 
New  Year,  The.— Violet  Fuller.— HS 

(Ring,  Joyful  Bells!)— PEO 
New  Year,  A.— Marg.  E.  Sangster.— PEO 
New  Year,  The.     ("I  stood  on  a  tower  in  the  wet.") — 

Alfred  Tennyson.— OS  2 
New  Year,    The. — Alfred      Tennyson.     See     also    In 

Memoriam. 
New  Year,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP      • 
New  Year,  The.     (January  1st,  1828 — C.)— Nathaniel 

P.  Willis.— FP 
New  Year,  The.     (Youth's  Companion.) — CPL 
New  Year  Calls.     (Dial.)—T.  S.  Denison.— FAS 
New  Year  Ledger,  The.— Amelia  E.  Barr.— CS  28 
New  Year,  The ;  or,  Which  Way? — Lyman  Abbott. — 

BS13 
New  Year  Song. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
New  Year's     Address,    A.— E :    Brooks.— BS  2— PEO 
New  Year's  Burden,  A.— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— TFY 
New  Year's  Chime,  A.— Anon.— HS— SE  (sel.)— SB,  1 
New  Year's  Day. — Anon. — PEO 
New  Year's    Day    at    Asolo. — Rob't    Browning.     See 

Pippa  Passes. 
New  Year's  Deed,  A.— Gertrude  Smith.— NPS—YP 
New  Year's  Dream,  A. — Jean-Paul  Richter.     See  Two 

Roads,  The. 
New  Year's  Eve.— Anon.— CS  1— SA— WRD 
New  Year's    Eve. — Hans    C.    Andersen.     See    Little 

Match  Girl,  The. 
New  Year's  Eve.— F.  A.  Bartleson.— PAP 
New  Year's  Eve. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — OS  3 

(Age  and  Song— C.)— FEP 
New  Year's  Eve. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memo- 
riam. 
New  Year's  Eve. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  also  May 

Queen,  The. 
New  Year's  Eve — Midnight. — Frederika  R.  Macdonald. 

— VA 
New  Year's  Exercise.  A. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — SSE 
New  Year's  Gift  to  Brian,  Lord  Bishop  of  Sarum,  A. 

— W:  Cartwright.- WEP  2 
New  Year's  Gifts,   The.     (A   Psalm  for   New   Year's 

Eve— O— Dinah  M.  Craik.— SSS 
(Address  to  the  New  Year — seZs.)- HSS  2 
New  Year's  Guest,  A. — Eliza  F.  Moriarty. — PEO 
New  Year's  Hymn.     (Faithful  Promises — C.)  — Fran- 
ces R.  Havergal.— BS  18 
New  Year's  Resolve.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— PEO— SSS 
New  Year's  Story,  A.— Jas.  Challen.— WR  7 
New  Year's    Talk,   A. — Laura    E.     Richards. — PP — 

YPS 
New  Year's  Vows. — Anon. — DLF 
New  Year's  Wishes. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
New  York  State  Program  for  Arbor  Day,  1889.— A.  S. 

Draper.— DFR 
New   Zealand    Regret,    A. — Eleanor    Montgomery. — 

VA 
New-bom  Babe,  The. — Mrs.  Morris. — CS  2 
Newborn  Death.     I.    (The    House    of    Life,    Sonnet 

XCIX.)— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— WEP  4 
Newborn  Death.     II.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  C.) 

—Dante  G.  Rossetti.— WEP  4 
Newcastle  Apothecary,  The.  (Abr.) — G:  Colman. — CS  1 

Newcomes,  The,  Sel.   fr.     (Description  of  the  Venus 

of  Milo— seZ.  fr.  Ch.  XX.)— W:  M.Thackeray. 

—OS  3 
Newest  Promises  and  Perils  of  Temperance  Reform, 

The,  Sels.  Jr.— Job.  Cook. 
Our  Duty.— WR  18 

Promises  and  Perils,  etc.,  The. — WR  18 
New-fashioned  Singin'.— H:  B.  Smith.— WR  4 
Newly  Wedded,  The.— Winthrop  M.   Praed.— FTA— 

OH— VA 
New-made  Honor. — R:  H.  Barham. — HPE 


226 


TITLE  INDEX 


Night 


Newness.     {Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Newport  Beach. — H :  T.  Tuckerman. — BNL 
News,  The. — C:  Sprague.     See  Curiosity. 
News.— T:  Traheme.- OB 

News  from  Lexington,  The. — G:  Bancroft.     See  His- 
tory of  the  United  States. 
News  from  the  War.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
News  of  a  \pr  the]  Day  [The].     {SI.  diff.  versions.)  — 

Mrs.  S.  T.  Bolton.— DR—HSS  1 
News  to  the  King.        {Fr.   Songs  from  Dramas.)  — 
Augusta  Webster. — VA 
(Message  of  Victory,  The.) — HP 
Newsboy,  The.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Newsboy,  The.— E.  T.  Corbett.— CS  13 
Newsboy  in  Church,  A.— T:  J.  Kelly.— CS  37 
Newsboy's  Debt,    The. — H.    R.    Hudson    {at.    also    to 
Helen  H.  Jackson).— CS  14— VSG 
(.Abr.)- BS  12— SR  1 
Newsboy's  Funeral,  A. — Anon. — CS  34 
Newspaper,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Biglow  Papers, 

The. 
News-telling  Bore,  The. — Anon. — PS 
Next  Morning. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — CS  20 

(Matinal  Musings.) — PLD 
Next  of  Kin.— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
Next  Summer. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Next  Year.— Anon.— YBT 
Next  Year.— Nora  Perry.— PEG 
Niagara. — Anon. — CS  17 
Niagara.— Anon .  — N  PS— YP 
Niagara.— J:  G.  C.  Brainard.— BS  6— FEP 

(Fall  of  Niagara,  The.)— BNL— TAV 
Niagara  Falls. — C:  Dickens.     See  American  Notes. 
Niagara's  Sacrifice. — ^Anon. — SR  6 
Nibelungen  Lied,  Sels.  fr. 

How  Brunhild  was  Received  at  Worms.     {Set.  fr. 

Adventure  X. — Lettsom's  tr.) — NE 
How  Margrave  Riideger  was  Slain.     (Se/.  fr.  Adv 

XXXVII.— Lettsom's  <r.)— NE 
How  Siegfried  was  Slain.     {Sel.  fr.  Adv.  XVI. — 
diff.  <r.)— WR  11 
Nibelungen  Lied,   Story   of   the. — Kate   M.   Rabb. — 

NE 
Nice    Correspondent,    A. — Frd'k    Locke  -Lampson. — 

BIL— FEP— FTA— HBP— OH 
Nice  Distinction,  A. — Kate  Vannah. — BS  21 
"Nice  distinctions  are  troublesome.'" — G:  Eliot. — GG 
Nice  People,  The.     (A6r.)— H:  C.  Bunner.— WR  14 
Nice  Point,  A.     {Emgram.) — Gotthold   E.   Lessing. — 

HPE 
Nice  Valour,  Sel.  fr.     ("Hence,  all  ye  [or  you]  vain 
delights" — fr.  Act  III.,  sc.  3.) — J:  Fletcher. — 
BNL— HBP 
(Melanc[h]olia.)— CEL— FEP 
(Melancholy.)— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(Poet's  Mood,  The.)— EPs 
(Song,  A.)— WEP2 
(Sweetest  Melancholy.) — ELP 
Nicest  One,  The.— Anon. — DJS 
Nicholas  Nickleby,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 

Mr.  Gregsbury  and  the  Deputation.     {Sel.  fr.  t  h. 

XVI.,  arr.  as  dial.)— MPB 
Nicholas  Nickleby  Leaving  the  Yorkshire  School. 
(Chs.  XII.  and  XIII.  cond. )—CS  16 
(Schoolmaster  Beaten,  The — sel.) — BS  10 
Nicholas  Nickleby  Seeking  a  Situation.     {Sel.  fr. 

Ch.  XVT.,  arr.  as  dioZ.)— MPD 
Squeers'  School.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  VIII.)— OS  2 
Nicholas  Niqkleby  Leaving  the  Yorkshire  School. — C: 

Dickens.     See  Nicholas  Nickleby. 
Nicholas  Nickleby  Seeking  a  Situation. — C:  Dickens. 

See  Nicholas  Nickleby. 
Nickerdemus  Quadrille.     {Texas  Sif tings.) — CH 
Nickle  Plated.— I.  E.  Jones.— CS  31 
Nicknames  of  the  States. — H:  U.  Johnson. — CS  30 
Nicodemus  Dodge. — S:  L.  Clemens. — BS  11 
Niger.— Gotthold  E.  Lessing.— HPE  / 

Nigger  Baby. — Bertha  M.  Wilson. — MN 
Night.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Night. — Jas.  Beattie.     See  Hermit,  The. 
Night.     {In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W:  Blake. — OB — 
WEP3 
(SeZ.)— BFV— BPB— LC— YBF 
(Sun  Descending,  The — br.  sel.) — HSS  2 
Night. — S:  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Night.— Mary  F.  Butts.— PoR 

Night. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Night.     (Sonnet  XVIII.)— Hartley  Coleridge.— FEP 
Night. — W:  Habington.     See  Castara. 
Night.— C:  Heavysege.— TCV 
Night. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 


Night.— J.  Mifflin.- ASL 

Night. — Jas.  Montgomery. — BNL — CS  12 — LLC 
Night. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See  also  Alps,  The. 
Night. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
Night.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— BSP—GP— OB 

(To  Night— C.)  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  WEP  4 

—YBF 
(To  the  Night.)— BFV— PGT  1— PHS 
Night. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  also  Queen  Mab. 
Night. — Philip  Sidney.     See  Arcadia,  The. 
Night. — Rob't  Southey.     See  Thalaba. 
Night,  The.— H:  Vaughan.— YBF 
Night. — Jos.  B.  White.     See  Night  and  Death. 
Night.— C.  Whitehead.— PGT  2 
Night. — Edward  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Night  after  Christmas,  The. —  Anon.  —  BC  —  BS  7  — 

CS  16— PPSr 
Night  after  Night. — Gertrude  Bloede. — AA 
Night  and  Day.     (C.)— Mary  M.  Dodge.— PoR 

(God  Sees.)— TFS 
Night  and  Day.— R.  M.  Gibbs.— CG  1 
Night  and  Day. — Sidney  Lanier. — AA 
Night  and  Day,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Florence,  in  Italy.) — 

S:  Rogers.— AVP 
Night  and  Day.     (C.)— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV 
("When  the  golden  day  is  done" — br.  sel.) — PoR 
Night  and  Death.— Jos.  B.  White.— BSP— EPs— GP— 
SN 
(Night.)— BNL— PYO 
(Sonnet  to  Night.)— POS 
(To-night.)— FEP— HBP— OS  3— YBF 
Night  and  Love.     (C — song    fr.  Ernest  Maltravers, 
Bk.  III.,  Ch.  I.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton. 
(Song.)— CR— FLS,(6r.  «eZ.) 

("When  stars  are  in  the  quiet  skies.") — FEP — 
FTA— VA 
Night  and  Morning.     {Dial.) — Mrs.  L.  E.  V.  Boyd. — 

SD 
Night  and  Morning.     {Good  Words.) — HP 
Night  and  Sleep.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Night  and  Tempest. — Lord  Byron,     See  Childe  Har- 
old's Pilgrimage. 
Night  at  Sea. — Letitia  E.  Landon. — HBP 
Night  before  Christmas,  The. — Jean  Agave. — CPL 
Night  before  Christmas,  The. —  Clement  C.   Moore. — 
BS7 
(Christmas  Times.)— PHS 
(St.  Nicholas'  Dashing  Ride.)— SR  3 
(Visit  from  St.  Nicholas,  A.)— AA— BNL— EDY— 
HBP— OS  1— PC— PoR— SM— WCL— WCLI 1 
Night  before  Execution,  The. — Anon.— CS  4 
Night  before    Larry    was    Stretched,    The. — Anon. — 

PEB  4  {abr.  and  si.  diff.)— TIF 
Night  before  the  Wedding,  The;  or.  Ten  Years  After. 

—Alex.  Smith.— BNL 
Night  before      Waterloo,      The. — Lord      Byron.      See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Night  Bird,  The.     (C.)— C:  Kingsley. 

(Myth,  A.)— GN 
Night  Express,  The. — Cosmo  Monkhouse. — AVP 
Night  Has   a   Thousand  Eyes,  The.     (C.) — Fs.  Bour- 
diUon.— AVP— GG— PYO— VA— VS 
(Light.)  —  BNL  —  BSP  —  DLS  —  FEP  —  FLS  — 
FTA— HDL— HP— TFY— YBF 
Night  in  a  Down-town  Street. — C:  G.  D.  Roberts. — 

_  TCV 
Night  in  Camp. — Herbert  Bashford. — AA 
Night  in  Eden. — Mrs.  —  Evans. — CS  23 
Night  in  Italy,  A. — Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton.     See  Wan- 
derer, The. 
Night  in  June,  A. — Alfred  Austin. — VS 
Night  in  Lesbos,  A. — G:  Horton. — AA 
Night  in  the  Desert. — Rob't  Southey.     See  Thalaba. 
Night  in  the  Mediterranean,  A. — Anon. — AVP 
Night  in  the  Red  Sea,  A.— Alfred  Lyall.— AVP 
Night  is  Near  Gone,  The. — Alex.  Montgomerie  [or  ry]. — 
OB 
(Night  is  Nigh  Gone — Allan  Cunningham's  vers. — 
a6r.)— HBP 
Night  is   Nigh  Gone. — Allan  Cunningham.     See  fore- 
going. 
Night  is  Still,  The.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— TAV 
Night  Journey  of  a  River,  The.     (SeZ.)— W:  C.  Bryant. 

— PEO 
Night  Mail  North,  The.— H:  Cholmondely-PenneU.— 

CS35 
Night  Mists.— W:  H.  Hayne.— AA 
Night  of  Horror,  A. — Anon. — KNE 
Night  of  Terror,  A.— Paul  L.  Courier.— CS  9— MYF 
Night  Picture,  A.— S.  P.  Cranch.— SR  1 
Night  Piece,  The. — Rob't  Herrick.     See  Night  Piece: 

To  Julia,  The. 
Night  Piece,A.—W:  Wordsworth.— SN 


227 


Night 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Night    Piece    on    Death,  A.    Sel.  fr.—T:    Pamell.— 

WEP  3 
Night  Piece:     To    Julia,    The.     (C.)— Hob't    Herrick. 
— BNL  (8fZ.)— EPs— FEP— HBP— OB— YBF 
(Night  Piece,  The.)— BFV— ELP— ES— WEP  2 
(To  Julia.)— OEL^ 
Night  Quarters. — H:  H.  Brownell. — GN 
Night  Ride  on  the  Engine,  A. — Emma  Shaw. — CS  29 
Night  Sea,  The.— Harriet  P.  Spofford.— EPs 

(BaUad.)— ASL 
Night  Shade.— Howell  L.  Piner.— WR  23 
Night  Sky,  The.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— VA 
Night  Song. — Matthias  Claudius. — HBP 
Night  that  Baby  Died,  The.— Nicholas  Nile.— CS  17 
Night  Thoughts. — Coventry  Patmore.      iSee  Angel  in 

the  House,  The. 
Night  Thoughts     (Bks.   I.-VIII.:     The    Complaint.), 
Seh.  fr. — E:  Young. 
Aspiration.     {Sel.  fr.  Night  IV.)— WEP  3 
Death.     {Sel.  fr.  Night  IV.)— KNE 
Death   of   Friends,   The.     {Sel.    fr.    Night    III.)— 

WEP  3 
Hope.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Night  VII.)— KNE 
Narcissa.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Night  V.)— BNL 
Nature.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Night  VI.)— FP 
Night.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Night  IX.:  Consolation.)— GP 
Night  Thoughts.     {Sel.  fr.  Night  I . )— PS 
(Man— seZ.)- BNL 
f  Time— seZ. )— BNL— FP 
(Time's  Midnight  Voice — sel.) — SS 
Night  Thoughts.     {Br.  seU.  fr.  Nights  II.,  V.,  VI.) 

—BNL 
On  Procrastination.     {Sel.  fr.  Night  I.)— WRD 

(Procrastination.)- BLP— BNL— LLC 
Penitence.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Night  IX.)— EPs 
Procrastination.     {Sel.  fr.  Night  I.)— WEP  3 
Pursuit    of    Frivolous    Pleasures,    The.     {Sel.     fr. 

Night  I.)— SS 
Sleep.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Night  I.)— EPs 
(Night  Thoughts,  Sel.  fr.)— BNL 
Socrates.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Night  V.)— EPs 
Stream  of  Life,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Night  V.)— WEP  3 
Night  Watch,  The.— Frangois  E.  J.  Coppee.— SR  11 

(Abr.)  BS  14— CS  28~TMR  {shorter.) 
Night  Watch,  The.— W:  Winter.— AA 
Night  Wind.    The.— Eugene    Field.— GMS—LS—POS 

— WR  25 
Night  with   a  Ventriloquist,   A. — {SI.   diff.   abr.) — H: 

Cockton.— CS  6— MHR 
Night  with  a  Wolf,  A.     (Story  for  a  Child,  A— C.)— 

Bayard  Taylor.— GN—PHS—WCL 
Night-blooming  Cereus,  The. — Harriet  Monroe. — AA 
Night-cap  Sociable,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
NightfaU.— J:  Carver.— POS 
Nightfall.— W.  W.  Ellsworth.— CS  20— SA— SPE 
Nightfall.— W:  H.  Furness.— TAS 

(Eternal  Light — si.  diff.  vers.) — HDL 
(Evening  Hymn.) — AA 
NightfaU;  a  Picture.— Alfred  B.  Street.— BNL 
Nightfall  in    Dordrecht. — Eugene    Field. — AA — EF— 

PoR— WTD 
Nightingale,  The.     (Ode  XV.:  To  the  Evening  Star 

— C.)— Mark  Akenside.— OB 
Nightingale,  The. — R:  Barnfield.     See  Cynthia. 
Nightingale,  The. — (Gil  Vicente — tr.  by)  J:    Bowring. 

-.  .  —BNL 
Nightingale,    The. — (Maria    T.    Visscher — tr.    bu)   J: 

Bowring. — BNL 
Nightingale,  The.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— HBP 
Nightingale,  The. — J :  Keats.     See  Ode  to  a  Nigh  ingale. 
Nightingale,  The. — J:  A.  Symonds. — VA 
Nightingale,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Nightingale. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Nightingale,  The.— L:  E.  Van  Norman.— WR  6 
Nightingale,  The.     (Poems  of  the  Imagination,  Sonnet 

IX.— O— W:  Wordsworth.— SN— WEP  4 
Nightingale  and  the  Glowworm,  The. — W:  Cowper. — 
POS 
(Abr.)— BNL— CGd— LC— OS  1— PoR 
"Nightingale,  as  soon  as  April  bringeth.  The." — Philip 

Sidney.     <See  Sidera. 
Nightingale    m    the    Study,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — 

BFV 
Nightingales. — Rob't  Bridges. — OB 
Nightingale's       Death-song,     The.      {Abr.)  —  Felicia 

Hemans. — EPs 
Nightingale  s  Departure,      The. — Charlotte     Smith. — 
HBP 
(On  the  Departure  of  the  Nightingale.) — FEP 
Nightingale's  Song,   The.       (Round  my  own  Pretty 

Rose— O— T:  H.  Bayly.— EPs 
Nightingale's  Song,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Musick's  Duel.) — 
R:  Crashaw.— BNL 


Nightmare  Abbey,  Sels.  fr. — T:  L.  Peacock. 

Men  of  Gotham,  The.     {Son^  fr.  (  h.  XL)— VA— 
WEP  4— YBF 
(Three  Men  of  Gotham.)— OB 
Mr.   Cypress's  Song   in   Ridicule   of  Lord   Byron. 
{Song  fr.  Ch.  XI.)— WEP  4 
Nightmare  of  a  Freshman  Sign  Swiper. — W.  D.  Flags 

— CG2 
Nightmare  of  India,  A. — G:  C.  Graham. — GS 
Nights,  The.— Adelaide  Procter.- SO 
Night's  Adventure,  A. — Anon. — SCS 

(Fragment,  A — si.  diff.  vers.) — KNE 
Nights  and  Days.— Sybil  L.  Fox.— CG  3 
Nights  of  Music— T:  Moore.— FTA 
Nights  of  Venice,  The.— G:  Sand.— OS  2 
Nights  with  Uncle  Remus,  Sel.  fr.     (Brer  Rabbit  and 
the  Little  Girl— Ch.  III.,  aft/-.)- Joel  C.  Harris 
— WR7 
Night-swans,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Night-wind. — Beatrix  D.  Lloyd. — AA 
Nihil  Humani  Alienum. — Titus  M.  Coan. — AA 
Nikolina.— Celia  Thaxter.— GMS—GN  (afer.)— SAP 
Nikolson's  Nek.— C:  E.  Russell.— ED Y 
Nile,  The.— Leigh  Hunt.— CEL— FEP— YBF 
Nile  Notes  of  a  Howadji,  Sel.  fr.   (Under  the  Palms — 

Ch.  XXII.— cond.)—G:  W:  Curtis.— AD 
Nilsson. — Sidney  Lanier. — EDY 
Nimmers,  The.— J:  Byrom.— SCS— WEP  3  {abr.') 
Nine    Cent-girls,    The.     {Cond.)  —  H:    C.  Bunner. — 

WR9 
Nine  Days'  Wonder,  A,  Sel.  fr.     (Oh  [O— C],  Let  me 

Dream.) — Hamilton  Ai'de. — VS 
Nine  Graves  in  Edinbro. — Irwin  Russell. — WR  9 
Nine  Little  Goblins.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Nine  Muses,  The. — Blanche  W.  Bellamy  and  Maud  W. 

Goodwin.— OS  1 
Nine  Parts  of  Speech,  The.— Anon.— TFS 

( Grammar  in  Rhyme. )— PPr— PS 
Nine  Suitors,  The.— Anon.— CS  35— WR  20 
Nineteenth  Century      Ends     Slavery,      The. — Lucius 

Q.  C.  Lamar.- BLP 
Nineteenth  Century  Teacher,  The. — Anon. — SR  3 

(School  Statistics.)— BS  10 
Nineteenth  of  April,  1775,  The.— G:  F.  Hoar.- FD  2 
Nineteenth  of    April,    1861,    The. — Lucy    Larcom. — 

WR  10 
Ninetieth  Psalm.     {Paraphrase.) — Anon. — DST 
Nmetyand   Nine,   The.— Eliz.   C.   Clephane.— FEP— 
LLC  {abr.) 
(Lost  Sheep,  The.)— VA 

Ninety-eight. — Dr. Campion. — CS  24 

Ninety-eight  in  the  Shade. — Joe  Lincoln — CCB 
Ninety-nine  in  the  Shade. — Rossiter  Johnson. — HP — 

OS  2 
Ninety-three,  Sels.  fr. — Victor  Hugo. 

Carronade,  The.     (Pt.  I.,  Bk.  II.,  Chs.  IV.,  V.,  VI.— 
si.  cond.)— WCLG  2 
(Monster    Cannon,    The— abr.)— BS  3— CS  11— 
TMD  {shorter.) 
Children  of  the  Bonnet  Rouge,  The.     {Sels.   arr. 
and  cond.  fr.  Pt.  I.,  Bk.  I.,  and  Pt.  III.,  Bks. 
II.  and  V.)— DES 
Ninkum  Land,  The.     {Portland  Oregonian.) — CS  31 
Niobe,  Sel.  fr. — Frd'k  Tennyson. — VA 
Nirvana. — Edwin  Arnold.     See  Light  of  Asia,  The. 
Nisus  and  Euryalus. — Virgil. — See  A"'.neid. 
Nix,  The.— R:  Garnett.— CGd 
Nix's  Mate. — Hezekiah  Butterworth. — BS  1 
No. — Anon. — SM 
"No!"— Anon.— WR  6 
"No!"— Eliza  Cook.— TFS 

(Bravest  Thing,  The— seZ.  )—DLS 
No! — T:  Hood.     5ee  November. 
"No."— Eben  E.  Rexford.— YBT 

No  Age  Content  with  his  Own  Estate.     (How  no  Age 
is  Content — C.) — H:  Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey. 
—FEP 
(Age  of  Children  Happiest,  The— seZ. )— CGd— LC 
No  and  Yes.— T:  Ashe.— VS 

No  Baby  in  the  House.— Clara  G.  DoUiver.— BNL 
No  Boy  Knows.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
"No  candid  observer  will  deny  that  whatever  of  good 
there  may  be."     {Springfield  Republican.) — GG 
No  Chance  for  an  Alibi. — Anon. — SR  10 
No  Conflict  Now.— C:  Devens.— BLP 
No  Death.— Philip  B.  Marston.— VA 
No  Excellence    without    Labor. — W:    Wirt.— BLP  — 
PEO 
(Culture  the  Result  of  Labor.)— CS  11— DS 
"No  Fellow." — Anon. — GH 
No  Flowers. — Anon. — PEO 

"No  free    government    was    ever    founded." — Josiah 
Quincy,  Jr.— HSS  1 


228 


TITLE  INDEX 


Nerval 


No  God.— N.  K.  Richardson.— BS  4  («?.  abr. )~CS  1— 

SA 
"No  Hint  of  Stain." — W:  V.  Moody.     See  Ode  in  Time 

of  Hesitation,  An. 
No  Hope  for  English  Literature.     (C.) — Sam  W.  Foss. 

(No  Hope  for  Literature.) — GH 
No  Hope   for   Literature. — Sam   W.    Foss.     See   fore- 
going. 
No  Jewell'd  Beauty. — Gerald  Massey. — FTA 
No  Kiss.— Madge      Elliot.  — BS  11— CRR— CS  25— 

SR  11 
No  Man     Knoweth     his    Sepulchre.     (Sel.) — W:     C. 

Bryant.— BLP 
No  More. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
No  More.     (Song    of    Autumn,    A — C.) — Arthur    H. 

Clough.- HBP 
No  More.— B.  F.  Willson.— ASL 
No  More  Sea. — Anon. — GP 
No  More  Words. — F.  Lushington. — PAPm 
No  Mortgage  on  the  Farm. — J:  H.  Yates. — CS  8 
No,  not  More  Welcome. — T:  Moore. — TIP 
No  One  Else  is  you.— Anon. — FLS 
No  Peace  without  Liberty.      (Sel.  fr.   Hungary    and 

Austria  in  Religious  Contrast.) — L:  Kossuth. — 

BLP 
(Peace  Inconsistent  with  Oppression — longer  and  si. 

diff. )—SS 
No  Room  for  Mother.     (Lockport  Express.) — PJ'P 
No  Royal  Road  to  Victory. — Irving  Glen. — WR  12 
"No  Saloons    up    There."     (Baltimore    Methodist.) — 

CS  34— PR  — TS 
No  Science  for  him. — Lurana  W.  Sheldon. — WR  21 

(Too  Progressive  for  him.)— CS  32— PR— YA 
No  Sects  [or  Sect]  in  Heaven. — Eliz.  H.  J.  Cleaveland. 

— CS  2— FTR— HNS— HP— HR— PS 
No  Slave  beneath  that  Starry  Flag. —  G:  L.  Taylor. 

See  following. 
No  Slave  beneath  the  Flag.— G:  L.  Taylor.— PEG 

(No  Slave  beneath  that  Starry  Flag.)— BLP 
No  Smoking  Allowed.— J.  H.  Bailey.— CS  22 
No  Stockings  to  Wear. — Anon. — PR — YA 
"No  stream  from  its  source." — Rob't,  Lord  Lytton. 

See  Lucile. 
No  Surrender!     No  Compromise. — J.O.  Peck. — TS 
No  Telephone  in  Heaven. — Anon. — WR  21 
No  Thoroughfare,  Sel.  fr.     (Mountain  Tragedy,  The — 

cond.  fr.  Act  III.)— C:  Dickens.— WR  16 
No  Time  Like  the  Old  Time.— Anon.— GP 
No  Time  Like  the  Present. — Phoebe  Cary. — HSS  2 — 

KNS 
(Arr.  fr.  Now  and  Obedience,  w.  adds.) 
No  Time  to  Hate.     ("I  had  no  time  to  hate,  because" 

—O— Emily  Dickinson.— OH 
No  Trust  in  Time.     (Fr.  Flowers  of  Sion.) — W:  Drum- 

mond.— FEP 
(Sonnet  from  "Flowers  of  Sion.") — WEP  2 
(Sonnet— Posting  Time.)— ELP 
No  Wonder.— Frank  T.  Easton.— AWH— CG  1 
No  Work   the   Hardest   Work. — Caroline  F.    Orne. — 

WRD 
(Toilers,  The.)— HSS  3 
Nobility.— Alice  Cary.— LLC— SM  (abr.) 
(True  Worth— 6)-.  scZ.)— PS 
("True  worth  is  in  being,  not  seeming" — br.  sel.) — 

GG— WCLI  1 
Nobility  of      Labor.- Orville      Dewev.—AE— EAS- 
ED 1— LLC— PP— PS— SS— YFR 
(Ashamed  to  Toil?— abr.)— HSS  3 
(Labor— abr.)— BS  17— PEO— SE 
Noble  Answer,  A.     (Dial.) — Anon. — WR  17 
Noble  Balm,    The.     (Ode,    An— C.)— Ben    Jonson.— 

OB 
(True  Balm.)— LH 
Noble  Lay  of  Aillinn,  The. — Stopford  A.  Brooke. — 

TIP 
Noble  Living.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Noble  Nature,  The. — Ben  Jonson.     See  To  the  Immor- 
tal Memory  and  Friendship  of  that  Noble  Pair, 

Nobl-^  Old  Elm,  The.— Jas.  W.  Ril?v.— BJC 
Noble  Revenge,  The.— Anon.— CS  6— PS 

(After  Twenty  Years.)- NPS— YP 
Noble  Revenge.— T:  De  Quincey.— CS  7 
Noble  Stranger,  The.— Anon.— CS  26— PR— YA 
Noble  Tuck-man,  The. — Jean  Ingelow. — NA 
Nobleman  and  the  Pensioner,  The. — Gottlieb  K.  PfefFel 

(tr.  by  C:T.  Brooks).- BNL 
Nobleman's  Wedding,   The.— W:   Allingham.— PEB  4 
Nobler  Exercise,    A. — Philip    Sidney.     See    Astrophel 

and  Stella. 
Noblest  Hero,  The.     (Dial.)— Alice  Gray.— SDD 
Noblest  Men,  The.— G:  S.  Bungay.— HSS  3 
(Earth's  Noblemen — si.  diff.  vers.) — CS  20 


Noblest  Public   Virtue,  The.— H:  Clay.     See  On    the 

Nobly  Bom,  The.— E.  S.  H.— EPs— OS  3  (abr.) 

Nobody  Cares.— Anon.— BS  21 

Nobody  Knows  but  Mother. — Anon. — PS 

Nobody  There.— Anon.— CS  9 

Nobody's  Child.— Phila   H.   Case   [or  Chase]— BS  1— 

CS  2— PS— SA 
Nobody's  Dog.— Anon.— TFS 
Nobody's  Mule. — Anon. — SR  10 
Nocturnal  Reverie,   .A.. — Anne   Finch,   Lady   Winchil- 

sea.— FEP— WEP  3 
Nocturnal  Sketch  [A].— T:  Hood.— BNL— CS  17— OS  2 

— SR7 
(Blank  Verse  in  Rhyme.)— HBR—HR 
Nocturnal  upon  St.  Lucie's  [or  Lucy's]  Day,  A.     (Sel.) 

J:  Donne.— ED Y 
Nocturne.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— HBP— PYO 
Nocturne.     (An    Echo    of    Chopin.)     (All    the    Year 

Round.)— UP 
Nocturne.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.- PLD 
Nocturne. — Gerald  Griffin. — VA 
Nocturne  of  Consecration,  A. — C:   G.   D.    Roberts. — 

TCV 
Nocturne  of  Spiritual  Love,  A. — C:  G.  D.  Roberts. — 

TCV 
Noel.— R:  W.  Gilder.— AA 
Noey  Bixler. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Noey's  Night-piece. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Nola  Kozmo.— W:  (?)  Baine.— CS  22— NPS— YP 
Noll's  Journey.     (Abr.     and    arr.) — Drexa    Henry. — 

BS20 
Nominating  General  Grant. — Roscoe  Conkling. — NP 
Nominating  James  G.  Blaine  for  President.    (C.)  — 

Rob't  G.  Ingersoll. 
(Plumed  Knight,  The— cond.)— SC 
Nomination  of  John  Sherman,  Br.  sel.  fr.     ("I  have 

seen  the  sea,"  etc.) — Jas.  A.  Garfield.-— GG 
Non  Nobis. — Anon. — OB 
"Non  Omnis    Moriar."     (Third    book    of    Odes,  song 

XXX. )— Horace.— TMD 
None  of  Self  and  all  of  Thee. —  Theodore  Monod. — 

HDL 
Nones  and  Ides. — Anon. — AE 
Nongtongpaw.— C:  Dibdin.— CGd— CS  3— FEP— THP 

— WR20 
Nonsense. — Anon . — NA 
Nonsense.     (C.) — R:  Corbet. 

(Li,^e  to  the  Thundering  Tone.) — NA 
Nonsense.     (C.) — T:  Moore. — NA 

(If  you  Have  Seen.)— THP 
Nonsense  Alphabet.     (No.  6.) — E:  Lear. — GPL 
Nonsense  Verses. — C:  Lamb. — NA 
Nook  and  a  Book,  A.— W:  Freeland.— MBB 
Noon  of  Life,  The.— Clement  Scott.— FLS 
Noontide. — J:  Leyden. — BNL 
Noozell  and  the  Organ-grinder. — "Ah-Mie." — CS  15— 

DFY 
Nora  M'Guire's  Lovers. — W:  Whitehead. — CS  20 
Nora  Mulligan's    Thanksgiving     Party. —  Louise     H. 

Savage.— CS  31 
Nora's  Charm. — Phupbe  Cary. — BLF 
Nora's  Vow.— Walter  Scott.— AE   (seZ.)— BFV— BPB 
Norham  Castle. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marmion. 
Norine. — Anon. — SR  6 
Norman  Ba  tie-song. — Anon. — OS  1 
Normans,  The.— F.  P.  Tracy.— SE 
Norns  Watering  Yggdrasill,  The.— W:  B.  Scott.— VA 
Norse  LuUaby.— Eugene  Field.— EF—NV—WTD 
North. — Anon.— CP 
North  American    Indians. — C:   Sprague. — BS  2 — LLC 

— WR  10 
(American  Indian,  The— abr.)— CS  4— PS 
North  and  South.     (Youth's  Companion.^ — TT 
North  and  the  African,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Nation's 

Duty  to  Slavery.)- H :  W.  Beecher.— NC 
North  Wind.— Dinah  M.  M.  Craik.— HBP 
Northern  Cobbler,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson. — GP 

(Yorkshire  Cobbler,  The.)— BS  9 
Northern  Farmer.     (New  Style.) — Alfred  Tennyson. — 

PGT  2— THP 
Northern  Farmer.     (Old  Style.) — Alfred  Tennyson. — 

PGT  2— V A— WEP  4 
Northern  I^aborers. — C.  Naylor. — OM  (abr.) 

(American  Laborers.) — SS 
Northern  Lights,  The.— B:  F.  Taylor.— BNL 
Northern  Seas,  The.— W:  [or  Mary]  Howitt. — GN — PC 

— PHS 
Northern  Star,   The:     A   Tynemouth   Ship. — Anon. — 

BFV 
North-west  Passage. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 

(Good-night— Pt.  I.)— DLS 
Norval. — J:  Home.     See  Douglas. 


229 


UTorvem 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Norvem  People. — Irwin  Russell. — WR  14 

Norwegian  Wedding-march  of  Grieg,  in  Verse,  The. — 

C:  W.  Johnson.— B LP 
Nor'-west  Courier,  The. — J :  E.  Logan. — VA 
Norwood,  Sels.  fr. — H:  W.  Beecher. 

Anxious  Leaf,  The.'  {C.—seU.  fr.  Ch.  XVI.)— AD 
(Little  Leaf,  The.)— HSS  1 
(What  a  Little  Leaf  Said— aZ.  a6r. )—TFS 
Biah  Cathcart's  Proposal.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  III.)— CS  7 

— MMR 
Coming  and  Going.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XVI.)— BS  1 
Tommy  Taf t.    {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXIX. )— BS  4— CS  20 
Nosce  Teipsum,  Sels.  fr. — Sir  J:  Davies. 
Soul  Compared  to  a  River,  The.— WEP  1 
Soul  Compared  to  a  Virgin  Wooed  in  Marriage,  The. 
— WEPl 
Nose  and  the  Eyes.  The.— W:  Cowper.— BNL 
(Law-case,  A.) — OS  1 
(Report  of  an  Adjudged  Case — C.) — HPE 
Nose  out  of  Joint. — (5:  F.  Adams. — DLS 

(Charley's  Opinion  of  the  Baby. — Anon. — Varia- 
tion on  this.) — PR — PS 
(Welcome,  Little  Stranger.) — HP 
Nose   out  of  Joint,  A. — Mrs.  E.  J.    H.  GoodfeUow. — 

TT 
Nosegay,  A. — J:  Reynolds. — OB 
Noses.— H:  F.  Wood.— BS  18 
Nostradamus's  Prophecy.     {SI.    abr.) — Andrew    Mar- 

vell.— ESs 
Not  a  Bom  Orator. — Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Not  a  Child.     (1st  poem.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — 

OSl 
Not  a  Sous  Had  he  Got.     (SI.  abr. — in  a  note  to  The 

Cynotaph.)— R:  H.  Barham.- HPE 
Not  all  Imagination. — Anon. — WR  7 
"Not  all  who  seem  to  fail  have  failed  indeed."     (Fr. 

Politics  for  the  People. )— Anon. — GG 
Not  as   I   Will.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— HDL— HSS  3— 

TAS 
Not  Ashamed  of  his  Occupation.     (Dial.) — Morton. — 

SS 
Not  Ashamed  of  Ridicule. — Anon. — BS  22 
Not  Blmd.— H.  M.  H.— CG  1 

"Not,  Celia,  that  I  juster  am." — C:  Sedley. —  FEP — 
FTA— PGT  1 
(Constancy.)— YBF 
(To  Celia.)— ELP— OB    ' 
Not  Changed  but  Glorified. — Anon. — HDL 
Not  Every  Day  Fit  for  Verse. — Rob't  Herrick. — EPs 
"  Not   from   the    whole   wide    world    I    chose    thee." 
(Song  fr.   The  New  Day.)— R:  W.   Gilder.- 
BIL 
(Song. )— AA— FTA— OH 
Not  George  Washington. — Anon. — DST  (abr.) 

(He  Never  Told  a  Lie.)— CS  15 
Not  Guilty. — Harry   S.   Edwards.     See  Trial  of  Ben 

Thomas,  The. 
Not  Guilty?— J.  W.  Hatton.— CS  22— NPS— YP 
"Not  here,  not  here,  not  where  the  sparkling  waters." 
— Anon.— GG 
(I  Shall  be  Satisfied.)— GP— HDL 
Not  I. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — NA 
Not  in  the  Programme. — Edwin  Coller. — BS  20  (ael.) 

— CS  26  (si.  diff.  vers.) 
Not  in  Vain.     ("If  I  can  stop  one  heart  from  breaking" 

—O— Emily  Dickinson.— TAS— YBT 
Not  Knowing.     (C.) — Mary  G.  Brainard. — AA — HDL 
— SSS— TAV 
(God  Knoweth — v)r.  at.  to  Bridgman.) — LLC 
Not  Lost. — Sarah  Doudney  (at.  also  to  T:  S.  CoUier). — 
CS  8— SSS— TAV 
("Look  of  sympathy,  the  gentle  word,  The.) — GG 
Not  Mine.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.— SSS 
Not  Now. — Mrs.  C.  Pennefather. — HDL 
Not  on   the   Battle-field.— J:   Pierpont.— BNL  (sel.)— 

CS  3— PPSr 
Not  One  to  Spare.— Ethel  L.  Beers.— BNL— GP 
(Which?)— OH 

(Which  Shall  it  be?)— CS  3— FEP— LLC— OS  1— 
PPSr 
Not  Opposed  to  Matrimony. — Anon. — DE 
Not  ours  the  Vows. — Bernard  Barton. — BNL — FEP 

— FTA— HBP— TFY 
Not  Quite.     (Dial.  ad.  fr.  Paul  Pry.)— J :  Poole.— NDP 
Not  Quite  a  Bargain.     (Dial.) — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Not  so  Easy. — Eliza  Doolittle. — SD 
Not  so  Well  Acquainted. — Georgene  Traver. — CS  24 
"Not  to  be  served,  O  Lord,  but  to  serve  man." — Walter 

C.  Smith.— FHS 
'Not  to  Myself  Alone."— J.  R.  Webb  [or  S:  W:  Par- 

tridgel.- BLP— HSS  3 
Not  Understood. — T:  Bracken. — CS  35 
Not  Very  Far. — Horatius  Bonar. — CS  7 


Not  Victims  of  Money  Microbes. — Anon. — WR  20 

"Not  Wanted."— Anon.— CS  35 

Not  what  he  Wanted.     (Dial.)— -J.  D.  Vinton. — StD 

Not  Willin'.— Anon.— CS  29— WR  15 

Not  Worth  Knowing.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MD 

Not  Yet,  Br.  sel.  fr.      (Our  Country.) — W:  C.  Bryant. 

— SE 
Not  Yet.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.     See  "Not  yet,  O  friend  I 

not  yet." 
Not  Yet.— Caroline  A.  Mason.— TAS 
"Not  yet,   O  friend  1  not   yet."     (Not  Yet — C. — Bong 

fr.  Cadet  Grey,  Can.  II.,    St.   13.)— Fs.    Bret 

Harte.— GG 
Note  for  a  Nosegay,  A. — Jas.  P.  '^Vebber. — CG  3 
Note  to  Santa  Claus,  A. — Anon. — DLF 
"Noted  Traveler,  A."— Jas.  W.  Riley.— CW 
Noten    Like  a    Patience. — (Reported    by)  Mrs.  T.   S. 

Oughton.— BS  19 
Notes  from  a  Battle-field.— S.  C.  Stone.— PP—YFR 
Notes  of  a  Honeymoon. — Austin  Dobson. — WR  9 
Nothin'  to  Say.     (Set.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— SR  6 
Nothing.     (Harper's  Bazar.) — SR  1 
Nothing  and    Something. — D.    S.    T.    Butterbaugh. — 

WR2 
Nothing  at  aU  in  the  Paper  To-day. — Anon. — CS  6 — 

HP 
Nothing  but  Flags. — Anon. — PRR 
Nothing  but    Leaves.— Lucy    E.    Akerman. — BNL — 

CS  8— FEP— PPSr— SSS 
Nothing  but  Leaves.— M.  H.  G.— MRS 
Nothing  for  Use.— Elmer  R.  Coates. — CS  27 
Nothing  in  it. — C :  Mathews. — SS 
Nothing  is  Lost. — Anon. — CS  20 
Nothing  Lost  in  Nature. — Gail  Hamilton. — LLC 
Nothing  to  Do.— Anon.— SSS 
Nothing  to  Wear— W:  A.  Butler.— BNL— CS  4  (cond.) 

—FEP 
(Sel.)— FS—SR  9 
(Cast-off  Garments — sel.) — BC 
(Miss  Flora  McFlimsey— afcr. )— AWH— THP 
Nothing  to  Wear.- M.  G.  Crocker.— CPL 
Nothing  Under  the  Sun  is  New. — Marc  E.  Cook. — HBP 
Noth'n'  't  AIL— Howell  L.  Finer.- WR  23 
Notoriety.     (Dial.) — Anon. — DSS 
Notorious  Glutton,    The. — Ann    and    Jane    Taylor. — 

BVC 
Nottman. — Alex.  Anderson. — CS  26  (si.  abr.) — WR  13 

(How  Little  Tom  was  Saved — si.  abr.) — DS 
'Nough  for  Me. — Jas.  Foley,  Jr. — SR  13 
Nourmahal. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Novel  Christmas-tree,  A. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh.— 

KC 
Novel  Poem,  A. — Anon. — BS  22 
Novel  Readers,  The.— Anon.— FND 
Novel  Reading. — Anon. — FDY 
Novel  Reading. — Anon. — SDD 
November.— W:  C.  Bryant.- BS  25— FP 
November.— Airce  Gary.— BLF—NV— YBT 
November. — C.  L.  Cleaveland. — SN 
November.     (Sonnets  on  the  Seasons,  XII.) — Hartley 

Coleridge.— FEP— HBP— LC—PEO— YBT 
November.— A.  J.  F.— CG  3 
November. — Mrs.  S.  Frances  Harrison. — TCV 
November.     (C.)— T:  Hood.— GN— OS  2— POS 
(No !)— BNL— HPE— THP 
(November  in  England.) — SN 
November. — S :  Longfellow.     See  November  and  April. 
November. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
November. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
November. — Eliz.  Stoddard.— AA 
November  and  April.     (C.) — S:  Longfellow. 
(April— sei.)—SN 
(November — sel.) — SN 
November  Child,  A.— R:  W.  Gilder.— OS  1 
November,  1813.     (C.) — W:  Wordsworth. 

(George  III.)— EHT 
November  Good-night,  A. — Ethel  L.  Beers.— POS 
November  in  England. — T:  Hood.     See  November. 
November,  1793.— W:  L.  Bowles.— WEP  4 
November's  Cadence. — Jas.  Carnegie,  Earl  of  Southesk. 

— VA 
November's  Come. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Now.— Anon.— HSS  3 
Now.— Anon.— TFS 
Now.— Phoebe  Gary.— BLF 

(No   Time   Like   the    Present — arr.    fr.    Now   and 

Obedience,  w.  adds.)— HSS  2— KNS 
Now. — Mary  B.  Dodge. — AA 

"Now!"     (Si.  abr.) — -Frances  R.  Havergal. — CS  14 
Now.— C:  Mackay.— LLC 
Now.     (O— Adelaide  A.  Procter.- CS  7— HDL 

("Rise!   for  the   day  is  passing" — br.  sel.) — GG — 

HSS  3 


230 


TITLE  INDEX 


O,  Inexpressible 


Now  and  Afterwards.     (C) — Dinah    M.    M.  Craik. — 

BNL— FEP— GP 
(Labor  and  Rest.)— FP 
'Now,  believe   me,    God   hides   some   ideal   in   every 

human  soul." — Rob't  Collyer. — FHS 
Now,  Grandpapa.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
"Now  I  Lay  me  Down  to  Sleep." — Anon. — CS  5 — HP 
{Ptly.  same — CS  5  includes  Unfinished  Prayer,  The 

— Anon. — znHP.) 
Now  I  Lay  me  Down  to  Sleep. — Anon. — CS  26 
Now  I  Lay  me  Down  to  Sleep. — Eugene  H.  Pullen. — 

AA 
Now  I  Lay  me  Down  to  Sleep.     (Wichita  Eagle.) — 

BS  23— LLC  (si.  abr-.)— PR 
Now  is  the  Cherry  in  Blossom. — Mary  E.   (Wilkins) 

Freeman. — AA 
Now  is  the  Time. — Jones  Very. — AD 

("Bud  will  soon  become  a  flower.  The" — sel.) — 

HSS3 
Now  or   Never. — Oliver   W.    Holmes.     See   Never   or 

Now. 
Now  or  Never. — Ellen  Pickering. — DDD 
"Now,  soul,   be  very  still  and  go  apart." — Mary  A. 

Barr.- GG 
"Now  thank  we  all  our  God." — Martin  Rink  rt. — LLC 
Now  the    Day    is    Over. — Sabine    Baring-Gould.     See 

Child's  Evening  Hymn. 
Now  the  Noisy  Winds  are  Still. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — 

PoR 
Now  the  Sun  is  Sinking. — Anon. — NV 
Now,  Wouldn't  you  Like  to  Know. —  Dyer  Smith. — 

CG3 
Nowhere.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— TFS 

(Land  of  Nowhere,  The.)— WR  15 
Nox  Nocti   Indicat   Scientiam. — W:   Habington.     See 

Nubian,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Talisman,  The. 
No.  5  Collect  Street.— S.  J.  Pardessus.— CS  34 
Number  999.— E:  F.  Turner.— CS  28 
Number  Ninety-one. — Anon. — CS  10 
Number  One.— C:  R.  Talbot.— YBT 
Number  Twenty-five. — Anon. — CS  27 
Numbers,  Sels.  fr.     Bible. 

Balaam's    Parables.     (Sels.    fr.   Chs.   XXIII.   and 

XXIV.)— BS  15 
(Balaam's    Prophecy   in  Behalf   of   Israel  —  ptly. 
same. ) — SS 
Numbers  Altered.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Nun,  The.— Leigh  Hunt.— FEP— HBP 
Nun  at  her  Devotions,  A.    (Tab.)  (Scrihner's  Monthly.) 

— BS  8— TCP 
Nun  Danket  Alle  Gott. — Martin  Rinkart. — LLC 
Nunc  Amet  qui   nunquam   Amavit.  —  Coventry  Pat- 
more.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 
Nun's  Lament    for    Philip    Sparrow,    The.     (Sel.    fr. 

Phyllyp  Sparowe.)— J:  Skelton.— CGd 
Nun's  Priest's  Tale. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     iSee  Canter- 
bury Tales. 
Nuptial  Eve,  A.— Sydney  Dobell.— VA 
Nuptial  Song.  —  J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De  Tabley. — 

AVP 
Nuremberg. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — BNL 
Nurse  Winnie  Goes  Shopping. — Hannah  M.  Johnson. 

— BS  17 
Nursery  Fable,.  A.— Will  H.  Wall.— PS— TT 
Nursery  Reminiscences.     (C.) — R:  H.  Barham. — BC 

(I  Remember,  I  Remember.) — HSS  2 
Nursery  Rhymes. — Anon. — CGd 
I.:  "Jenny  Wren  fell  sick." 

(Jenny  Wren  and  Robin  Redbreast.) — OS  1 
TL:  "There  were  three  jovial  Welshmen." 

(Three  Jovial  Huntsmen — si.  diff.  vers.) — NA 
III.:  "There  was  an  old  woman,  as  I've  heard  tell." 

(Old  Market-woman,  The.)— OS  1 
IV. :  "If  all  the  world  was  apple-pie." 

('■W—diff.  vers.)- NA 
v.:  "There  was  a  little  boy  and  a  little  girl." 
Nursery  Rhymes  Drill. — Mary  L.  Gaddess. — WR  17 
Nursery  Song. — Mrs.  Carter    [or  Mrs.    J.  Morrison]. — 
NV— PC— PHS 
(Recitation  for  Three  Little  Girls.)— LPS— PP 
(What  the  Mother  Heard.)— PPSr 
Nursery  Stove,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Nurses  Song.     (In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W:  Blake. 

— BPB— BVC— LC— YBF 
Nursing. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Nut  Hard  to  Crack,  A.— Alice  Gary.- BLF 
Nut-brown    Maid,     The.      (In    Percy's    Reliques.) — 

Anon.— FEP— OB— OEB— PEB  1 
Nutting. — Anon. — NV 
Nutting.— Lucv  M.  Blinn.— CS  18 
Nutting.     (SI.  'abr. )— W :  Wordsworth.— POS 
Nutting  Expedition,  A. — Anon. — CS  26 


Nuts  to  Crack,  No.  I.    (Acting  char. — for  boys.) — Clara 

J.  Denton.— WLO 
Nuts  to  Crack,  No.   11.     (Acting  char. — for  girls.) — 

Clara  J.  Denton.— WLO 
Nydia  and  lone. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.     See  Last  Days 

of  Pompeii,  The. 
Nydia's  Sacrifice. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.   <See  Last  Days 

of  Pompeii,  The. 
Nymph  Complaining  for  the  Death  of  her  Fawn,  The. 
(O— Andrew  Marvell.— FEP— HBP 
(Death  of  the  White  Fawn.)— BNL 
(Girl    Describes    her    Fawn,      The — sel.) — BPB — 

PGT  1— YBF 
(Nymph  Mourning  her  Fawn,  The — sel.) — EPs 
Nymph  Mourning  her  Fawn,  The. — Andrew  Marvell. 

See  foregoing. 
Nymph  of  the  Severn,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Comus. 
Nymphydia:     The  Court  of  Fairy,  Sels.  fr. — Michael 
Drayton. 
Arming  of  Pigwiggen,  The.— GN— WEP  1 
Queen  Mab's  Visit  to  Pigwiggen. — LC 
Nymph's  Passion,  A. — Ben  Jonson. — EP 
Nymph's  Reply  [to  the  Passionate  Shepherd],  The. — 
Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— BNL— GP— PHS 
(Her  Reply.)— OB 
(Milk-maid's  Mother's  Answer.) — FEP  (w.  add.  st.) 

—HBP 
(Reply  to  Marlowe,  A.)— EP 
(Reply  to  Marlowe's  The  Passionate  Shepherd  to 

his  Love. )— WEP  1 
(Shepherdess'  Reply,  The — w.  add.  st.) — CEL 
Nymph's  Song  to  Hylas,  The.     (Song  fr.  The  Life  and 
Death  of  Jason,  Bk.  IV.)— W:  Morris.— OB 
(Song  from  Jason.)— EPs 
Nyum-Nyum,  The. — Anon. — NA 


"O  babie,  dainty  Babie  Bell."— T:  B.  Aldrich.     See 

Baby  BeU. 
O,  Boys,  Carry  me  'Long.     Stephen  C.  Foster. — TAV 
O,   Breathe   not   his    Name!     (Rob't    Emmett). — T: 

Moore.     See  Oh!  Breathe  not  his  Name. 
O    Captain!     My    Captain!     Walt    Whitman. — AA — 

EDY  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBR—  LLC  —  OB  — 

PAP  —  PAPm  —  PYO  —  SO  —  SO  —  SR  8  — 

TAV— TMR— YBF 
(My  Captain.)— OS  3 
O  Christ,  Our  King.— Anon.— HS 
"O  come,  let  us  sing   unto   the  Lord."     Bible.     See 

Psalms. 
O  Come  Quickly!     (Divine  and  Moral  Songs,  XL — C.) 

— T:  Campion.— OB— YBF 
O  Crudelis  Amor.     (Book  of  Airs,  XX.— C.)— T:  Cam- 
pion.—PGT  1 
(Vobiscum  est  lope.) — OB 
(When  thou  Must  Home.)— ELP 
O  Days  and  Hoiu-s. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See   In    Me- 

moriam. 
O  Dear  Me!— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
O,  Do  not  Wanton  with  those  Eyes. — Ben  Jonson. — 
.      BNL 
(Song— O— ES       " 
O  Earth!     Art  thou  not  Weary? — Julia  C.  R.  Dorr. — 

AA 
"O  earth!     Thou  hast  not  any  wind  that  blows." — R: 

Realf.     See  Symbolisms. 
O  Fain  Would  I.— Anon.— YBF 
O  Fairest  of  the  Rural  Maids. — W:  C.  Bryant. — AA — 

ASL— BNL 
O  Filia  Pulchra.— W :  W.  Story.     See  He  and  She ;  or,  A 

Poet's  Portfolio. 
"O  Fons  Bandusise." — Austin  Dobson. — VA 
"O  glorious   Easter  morning!" — Sarah   K.   Bolton. — 

FHS 
O  God,our  Help  in  Ages  Past.— I:  Watts.— YBF 
O  God,  that  Madest  Earth  and  Sky. — Reginald  Heber. 

—HDL 
"O  God!     This  is  a  holy  hour."     (Br.  se^ /r.  Midnight 

and  Moonshine.) — W:  Motherwell. — AE 
O  Happy  Soul  that  Lives  on  High.— I:  Watts.— FEP 
"  O  happy  Thames,  that    didst    my  Stella  bear." — 

Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
"O  how  feeble  is  man's  power."     (Sel.  fr.  Song.) — 

J:  Donne.— EPs 
O,  how  the  Thought  of  God  Attracts!     (SI.  abr.)— 

Frd'k  W.  Faber.— BNL 
O,  Inexpressible  as  Sweet.     (C. — in   Wild    Eden.) — 

G:  E.  Woodberry.— AA 
(Silence  of  Love,  The. )— ASL— FTA 


231 


O  Lady  Moon 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"OLadyMoon[,  your  horns  point  toward  the  east" — C.]. 

— Christina  G.  Rossetti. — PoR 
(Lady  Moon.)— BVC 
O  Lark  of  the  Summer  Morning. — Anon. — NV 
O,  Lay  thy  Hand  in  mine,  Dear! — Gerald  Massey. — 

BNL— GP— TFY 
O  [tvr.  Oh],  Let  me  Dream.     (Sel.  fr.  A  Nine  Days' 

Wonder.)— Hamilton  Ai'd^.— VS 
"O,   let   the   solid   groimd." — Alfred   Tennyson.     See 

Maud. 
"O  life,  O  death,  O  world,  O  time."— R:  C.  Trench.— 

PGT2 
(Suffering.)— HDL 
"O  life,  O  silent  shore."  (Sel.  fr.  Sitting  on  the  Shore.) 

—Dinah  M.  Craik.— HSS  3 
O  Little  Town  of  Bethlehem.    (A6r.)— Phillips  Brooks. 

— AA— FEP— GN 
(Child  of  Bethlehem,  The.)— TAS 
("How  silently,  how  silently" — br.  sel.) — FHS 
O  Lord,  Thy  Wing  Outspread.- W :  J.  Blew.— VA 
"O  love  an^  death!"     (Br.  sel.  fr.   Edith.)— Felicia  D. 

Hemans. — BIL 
O  Love,  if  Life  Should  be. — Anon. — FLS 
O.  M.  B.— Ford  M.  Brown.— VA 
O,    Mally's    Meek,    Mally's    Sweet. — Rob't    Bums. — 

GN 
O  Martyrs  Numberless. — Anon. — PEO 
"O  Mary,  go  and  call  the  cattle  home." — C:  Kingsley. 

See  Sands  of  Dee,  The. 
"O  [or  Oh]  mistress  mine,  [where  are  you  roaming?]" — 

W:  Shakespeare.— O EL 
"O  Mither,  dinna  dee!"     (Sel.  fr.  Meg  Blane,  Pt.  IV.)— 

Rob't  Buchanan. — GP 

O,  Mither,  Sing  a  S  ng  to  the  Bairns.— Alex.  Anderson. 
rjg  oj 

"O  Modern  Girl."— Eliz.  K.  Adams.— CG  1 

O  Mores  I— Albert  E.  Thomas.— CG  2 

"O  Mother  of  a  Mighty  Race."— W:  C.Bryant.     See 

"Oh,  Mother,  etc." 
"O  mothers  whose  children  are  sleeping."     (Christian 

Union.)— GG 
O  [or  Oh],  my  Luve's  Like  a  Red,  Red  Rose. — Rob't 

Burns.— BNL— EPs—GP—PGT  1 
(Red,  Red  Rose,  A.)  —  BIL  —  BPB  —  FEP  — FTA 

—  HBP  2-  LC  —  MBL  —  OB  —  WEP  2  — 

YBF 
O  Nanny,  Wilt  thou  Gang  wi'  Me    [or  Go   with  Me]? 

(In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — BNL — FEP 
"O  Navis." — Austin  Dobson. — VA 
O  Near  Ones,  Dear  Ones. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — BIL 
O,  not  by  Graves.- W.  R.  Wallace.— FP. 
"O  piety!     O  heavenly  piety!" — Anon. — GG 
"O  pious  mother!  kind,  good,  brave  and  truthful." — 

T:Carlyle.— FHS 
O,   Saw  ye   Bonnie  Lesley? — Rob't    Burns. — BNL — 

GP 
(Bonnie  Lesley  [or  Leslie].)—  FEP  —  HBP  —  OB— 

PGTl 
O,  Saw  ye  the  Lass?- R:  Ryan.— BNL— GP 
O  Say,  thou  Best  and  Brightest. — T:  Moore. — FTA 
O  Sleep,  my  Babc-^Sara  Coleridge. — OB 
O,  Snatched  away  in  Beauty's  Bloom! — Lord  Byron. 

See  "Oh,  snatch'd  away,"  etc. 
O,    Stay,    Sweet    Warbling    Wood-lark.     (C.)— Rob't 

Burns. 
(Address  to  the  Woodlark — also  C.) — WEP  3 
O,  Struck  beneath  the  Laurel.     (In  Wild  Eden.) — G: 

E:  Woodberry. — A  A 
O  Swallow,  [Swallow,]  [Flying  South]. — Alfred  Tenny- 
son.    See  Princess,  The. 
O,  Sweet  Content! — T:  Dekker.     See  Pleasant  Comedy 

of  Patient  Grissell,  The. 
O  that  'twere  Possible. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Maud. 
O,  the  Pleasant  Days  of  Old! — Frances  Brown.     See 

Oh!  the  Pleasant,  etc. 
O,  the  Sight  Entrancing. — T:  Moore.    See  Oh,  the  Sight 

Entrancing. 
O  Thou,  from  Whom  all  Goodness  Flows. — T:  Haweis. 

—FEP 
"OThou  great  Friend  to  all  the  sons  of  men!" — Theo- 
dore Parker. — GG 
(Way,  the  Truth,  and  the  Life,  The.)— BNL— GP 
O  Thou  of  Little  Faith.— G:  Macdonald.— HDL 
O    Thou,    the    Contrite    Sinners'    Friend. — Charlotte 

Elliott.— FEP 
"O,  Thou  who  dry'st  the  mourner's  tear." — T:  Moore. 

See  "Oh,  Thou,"  etc. 
"O  Victor  Emmanuel   the  king."     (Br.   sel.   fr.   The 

Sword  of  Castruccio.) — ^BNL 
"O  were  I  a  cross  on  thy  snowy  breast."     (Eton  Maga- 

zine.) — AVP 
O  Were   my  Love  yon    Lilac    Fair. — Rob't    Burns. — 

OB 


O  [tw.   Oh],  Wert  Thou  in  the  Cauld   Blast.^Rob't 
Burns.— BPB— MBL— WEP  3— YBF 
(Address  to  a  Lady.)— HBP 
O  What  Can  Little  Hands  Do?— Anon.— YBT 
O  [or  Oh],  Why  Should  the  Spirit  of  Mortal  be  Proud?— 
W:  Knox.—  BNL  (si.  a6r.)  —  CS  1  —  DDR  — 
FAS  —  FEP  —  HSS  3  (br.  sel.)  —  LLC  —  PS 
-  PYO— WCLG  2— WRD 
(Mortality.)— HBP 
O  Wind  of  the  Mountain!— T:  Westwood.— VA 
"O  winds!  ye  are  too  rough,  too  rough!" — Alice  Gary. — 

BIL 
"O!  winter  twilight,  while  the  moon." — Fs.  W:  Bour- 

dillon.— GG 
O  Winter!     Wilt  thou  never  Go?— D:  Gray.— BNL 
"O  Word  of  God  Irtbarnate."- W:  W.  How.— FEP 
O  World,  be  Nobler. — Laurence  Binyon. — -OB 
O  ye  Sweet  Heavens! — T:  W.  Parsons. — A  A 
O  ye  Tears!— C:  Mackay.—VS 
"O  Years,  you  Have  Vanished." — Anon. — CP 
O  Yet  we  Trust  [that  Somehow  Good]. — Alfred  Tenny- 
son.    See  In  Memoriam. 
O  Youth  whose  Hope  is  High. — Rob't  Bridges. — VA 
Oak,  The.     (In  The  Plea  of  the  Trees. )— Anon.— AD 
Oak,  The.— Anon.— AD— HSS  1 
Oak,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
(Bits  of  Things.)— AD 
(Growing.)— CPL 
Oak,  The.     (In  Choosing  a  "State  Tree.") — Jos.  Bro^ 

Oak,  The.— i:  Dryden.— HSS  1 

Oak,  The.     (Fr.   Fall  of   the   Oak.)— G:   Hill— AD— 
HSSl 

Oak,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— AD— HSS  1  (sel.) 

Oak,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — AD 

Oak,  The.— Mrs.  E.  O.  Smith.— AD 

Oak,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— OS  2 

Oak  and    the    Briere,    The. — Edmund    Spenser.     See 
Shepheardes  Ca'endar,  The. 

Oak  and  the  Mistletoe  Seed,  The.^Anon. — AD 

Oak  in  a  Storm,  An.     (Mon.  and  pant.  fr.  Romance  ) 
— Abraham  Dreyfus. — WR  13 

Oak  of  our  Fathers,  The.— Rob't  Southey.— AD 

Oak  Tree,  The.— Anon.— AD 

Oak    Tree,    The.       (SI.  o6r.)— Mary    Howitt.— AD— 
LLC 

Oaks,  The.— J.  C.  Johnson.— AD 

Oak's  Farewell,  The.— G:  H.  Stover.- CG  3 

Oaks  of  Monte  Luca,  The.     (Sel.)— B.:W.  Longfellow. 
—AD 

Oasis.— E:  Dowden.— TIP 

Oasis  of  Sidi  Khaled,  The.     (In  Love  Sonnets  of  Pro- 
teus.)—Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— HBP 

Oath,  The.— T:  B.  Read.— CS  1 

Oath  of  Freedom,  The.— Jas.  B.  Hope.— AWB 

Obedience.     (C.)— Phoebe  Gary.— BLF— SM— WR  17 
(Do  your  Best— seZ. )— TT 

(No  Time    Like    the    Present — arr.   fr.   Now  and 
Obedience,  w.  addsA—US,S  2— KNS 

Obedient  Servants,  The. — (jlara  J.  Denton. — WLO 

Obermann    Once    More.     (Sel.) — Matthew    Arnold. — 
OS  3 

Oberon  and  Titania  to  the  Fairy  Train. — W:    Shake- 
speare.    See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 

Oberon's  Feast. — Rob't  Herrick. — WEP  2 

Obeying  Orders. — Anon. — DS — YA 

Obeying  Pleasantly. — Anon.— WR  17 

Obituary. — T:  W.  Parsons. — AA 

Object  of  Missions,  The.— Fs.  Wayland.— CS  11 

Oblation,  The. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — LH 

Obligations  of  Wealth,  The. — Anon.— CP 

Obliging  Druggist,  The. — Anon. — -PS 
(Encouraging  Self-murder.)— GH 

Obliging  his  Landlady.— C:  D.  Hickman. — WR  24 

Oblivion's  Gate. — Frank  M.  Larned. — CG  1. 

O'Branigan's  DriU.— W.  W.  Fink.— CS  24— DCR 

Obrig  Grange,  Sel.  /r.- Walter  C.  Smith.— VA 

Obsequies  of  David  the  Painter. — Pierre  J.  B^ranger 
(tr.  by  Fs.  Mahoney). — GP 

Obsequies  of  Stuart. — J:  R.  Thornpson. — EDY 

Observation  Party,  An. — Anon. — EuE 

Observations  by   Rev.   Gabe  Tucker. — J.   A.   Macon. 
See  Rev.  Gabe  Tucker's  Remarks. 

Observations  on  the  Art  of  English  Poesy,  Sel.  fr. — 
(Laura.) — T:  Campion. — OB 
(Rose-cheek'd  Laura.) — ELP 
(Silent  Music.)— CEL 

Obstacle,  An. — Charlotte  P.  Stetson  Oilman. — SR  9 

Obstinate  Music-box,  The.— S.  V.  R.  Ford.— CS  28 

Obstinate  Old  Man,  An.— G:  Horton.— WR  4 

Obstructive  Hat  in  the  Pit,  The. — F.  Anstey. — BS  20 
— CS  33— WR  9 

Obtaining  a  Promise. — H.  E.  McBride. — MTD 


232 


TITLE  INDEX 


Ode 


Obtaining    Help    in   the   Countrv.     (Dial.) — Anon. — 

MPD 
Occasional  Prologue,  An. — Anon. — BC 
Occupation  of  Naples  by  the  Austrians.     (Lines  on  the 
Entry  of  the  Austrians  into  Naples — C.) — T: 
Moore.— EDY 
(Lines  on  Naples — wordivg  si.  chgd.) — CSS 
(To  the  Neapolitans — ahr.) — OS  2 
Ocean,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 
Ocean.  The.— R:  H.  Dana.— POS 
Ocean,  The.     {SI.  ahr.) — -Jas.  Montgomery. — BNL 
Ocean. — Rob't  Pollok.     .See  Course  of  Time,  The. 
Ocean,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— HSS  3 

(Address  to  the  Ocean— si.  abr.)— BNL— FP 
Ocean. — C:  Sprague. — EPs 

Ocean,  The.— C:  Tennyson-Turner.- BNL— POS 
Ocean  Burial,  The.— W:  H.  Saunders.— FTR 
Ocean  of  Life,  The. — Laura  Rose. — SSE 
"Ocean  stood  like  crystal.  The."— R.  C.  W.— GG 
Ocean  Wanderer,  The. — Anon. — NA 
Ocean's  Dead,  The.— S.  V.  R.  Ford.— CS  29 
Oceanus. — J:  Keats.     See  Hyperion. 
O'Connell. — E :  Bulwer-Lytton.— AVP 
O'Connell.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Liberator.)— T:  N.  Burke.— FS 
O'Connell's  Heart.- A.  H.  Dorsey.- CS  9 
October. — Anon. — HP 
October.- W:  C.  Bryant.- PEO 
October.— (O— Dinah  M.  Craik.— EDY— POS 

(Autumn's  Processional — hr.  sel.) — GN 
October.— D.  M.  Jordan.— HP 
October.— R:  K.  Munkittrick.— AWH 
October.— DoUie  Radford. — VA 
October. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
October. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
October.     (C.)— B:  F.  Taylor. 

(Month  of  Mars,  The.)— BS  2— SA 
October. — Jones  Very. — POS 
October.— W:  H.  Withrow.— TCV 
October  here  Again. — Anon. — HSS  2 
October  in  Tennessee. — Walter  Malone. — AA 
October  Love  Song. — (Campus.) — CG  3 
October  Morning,  An. — R :  D.  Blackmore.     See  Lorna 

Doone. 
October  Trees. — Edith  B.  Abercrombie. — CG  3 
October's  Bright  Blue  Weather. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — 

GN— NV 
October's  Party.- G :  Cooper.—  COS  —  DST  —  NV  — 

PP— WR  15 
Odd  I  See,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Odd  Number,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Necklace,  The.)— Guy  de 

Maupassant. — -MRS 
Odd  Sea-saws.— Anon. — BS  24 
Odd  to  a  Krokis. — Anon. — NA 

Ode,  An.     (C.) — "How  are  thy  servants  blest,"  etc. — 
Jos.  Addison. 
("How  are  thy  servants  blest,  O  Lord.") — FEP 
(Hvmn.)— HBP 
Ode,  An:  "The  spacious  firmament,"  etc. — Jos.  Addi- 
son.    See  Spectator,  The. 
Ode:     "Behold,  out  walking  in  these  valleys." — Bar- 

nabe  Barnes. — ELP 
Ode,  An:     "As  it  fell  upon  a  day." — R:Barnfield.     See 

Cynthia. 
Ode:     "How  sleep  the  brave." — W:  Collins.     See  Ode 

Written  in  1746. 
Ode,  An:     "Now  each  creature  joys  the  other." — S: 

Daniel.— EP 
Ode:     "I  am  the  spirit  of  the  morning  sea." — R:  W. 

Gilder.— AA 
Ode:  "What  constitutes  a  state." — Sir  W:  Jones.     See 

Ode  in  Imitation  of  Alcaeus,  An. 
Ode,  An:     "High-spirited  friend." — Ben  Jonson. 
(Noble  Balm,  The.)— OB 
(True  Balm.)— LH 
Ode    (C):     "Bards    of    passion    and    of    mirth." — J: 
Keats.— HBP— WEP  4 
(Bards  of  Passion  and  of  Mirth.) — OB 
(Ode  on  the  Poets.)— PGT  1— PHS 
(To  the  Poets.)— FEP 
Ode:     "We   are   the   music  makers."     (Sel.) — Arthur 

O'  Shaughnessy.— OB— PGT  2— YBF 
Ode,  An  (C):     "The  merchant,"  etc. — Matthew  Prior. 
—FEP— WEP  3 
(Love's  Disguises.) — YBF 

("Merchant,  to  secure  his  treasure,  The.") — PGT  1 
(Song.)— OB 
Ode:     Autumn.     (C.)— T:  Hood.— VA 
(Autumn.)— BNL— HBP— OB 
(Ode  to  Autumn.)— CEL 
Ode:     Composed  on  May  Morning.     (C.) — W:  Words- 
worth. 
(First  of  May— sZ.  a6r.)— EPs 


Ode  for  a  Master  Mariner  Ashore. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — 

AA 
Ode  for  a  Social  Meeting. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — BNL 

— THP 
Ode  for  Ben   Jonson,   An. — Rob't   Herrick. — ELP — 

WEP  2 
(Ode  to  Ben  Jonson.)— BNL— EPs 
(To  Ben  Jonson.)— EDY 
Ode  for  Decoration  Day. — H:  Peterson. — AA  (sel.) — 

CS  9— HSS  1— PEO 
Ode  for  Decoration  Day. — S.  D.  Phelps.-^BLP 
Ode   (for  Music)   on   St.   Cecilia's   Day.     (C.) — Alex. 

Pope.     See  Ode  on  St.  Cecilia's  Day. 
Ode  for  St.  Cecilia's  Day. — J:  Dryden.     See  Song  for 

St.  Cecilia's  Day,  A. 
Ode  for  the   Canadian  Confederacy,   An. — C:  G:   D. 

Roberts.- TCV 
Ode  for  Washington's  Birthday. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — 

DFR 
Ode  from  the  French,  Sel.  fr.  (Murat.) — Lord   Byron. — 

BNL— EPs  *^ 

Ode  in  Imitation  of  Alcaeus,  An. — Sir  W:    Jones.— 

FEP 
(Ode:     "What  constitutes  a  state.") — HBP 
(Our  Country's  Needs — Finch — contains  this,  abr.) — 

sss 

(What    Constitutes    a    State.)— BNL— GG—GP— 
SE  (sel.) 
(^6r.)— LLC— PPSr— SM— WCLG  2 
Ode  in  May. — W:  Watson.— OB 
Ode  in  Memory  of  Dr.  Hoffmann,  Sel.  fr.     (The  Svec- 

iator.  )—BVC 
Ode  in  Time  of  Hesitation,  An, Se/s.  fr.     W:  V.  Moody. 
"No  Hint  of  Stain." — AA 
Robert  Gould  Shaw. — AA 
Ode:     Intimations  of  Immortalitv  in  Early  Childhood. 
(C.)—W:  Wordsworth.— FEP— OB— WEP  9 
(Immortality.) — EPs 
(Intimations  of  Immortality.) — AE  (sel.) — HBP — 

LLC  (cond.)— OS  3 
(Ode  on  Immortality.)— GP— PHS— WCLG  2 
(Ode    on    Intimations    of    Immortality    [in    Early 

Childhood].)— PGT  1 
("Thanks  to  the  human  heart  by  which  we  live" — 

hr.  seZ.)- HSS  1 
("There  was  a  time,"  etc.) — BNL 
("We  will  grieve  not" — br.  sel.) — GG 
Ode:     Laura  Sleeping. — C:  Cotton. — ELP 
Ode  of  Thanks  for  Certain  Cigars,  An. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. 

— PPh 
Ode :     Of  Wit.— Abraham  Cowley.— WEP  2 
Ode  on  a  Distant  Prospect  of  Clapham  Academy. — T: 

Hood.— HPE 
Ode  on  a  Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College. — T:  Gray. 
—POT  1— PHS— WEP  3 
(Eton  College.)— EPs 

(On  a  Distant   Prospect  of    Eton  College — C.) — 
BNL  (br.  seis.)- FEP— HBP— MBL 
Ode  on  a  Fair  Spring  Morning. — Lewis  Morris. — PGT  2 
Ode  on  a  Grecian  Urn.  (C.)—3:  Keats.— BNL— BSP— 
CEL  — HBP  — HBR  — MRS  — OB  — OS  3  — 
PGT  1— PYO  (seZ.)- WEP  4 
(On  a  Grecian  Urn.)— FEP 
Ode  on  a  Jar  of  Pickles. — Bayard  Taylor.     See  Echo 

Club,  The. 
Ode.    On  a  Sermon  against  Glory.    (C— Ode  XVII.)— 
Mark  Akenside. 
(On  a  Sermon  against  Glory.) — HBP 
Ode  on  Art.— C:  Sprague.— FP  (abr.) 

(ArtO— SS 
Ode  on  Christmas.— J.  E.  Clinton.— PEO 
Ode  on  Conflicting  Claims.— R:  W.  Dixon. — VA 
Ode:     On  Decorating  the  Graves  of  [the]  Confederate 
Dead    [or    Soldiers]. — H:    Timrod.     See    Ode 
Sung  on  the  Occasion  of  Decorating,  etc. 
Ode    on    Immortality. — W:    Wordsworth.     See    Ode: 

Imimations  of  Immortality,  etc. 
Ode  on  Intimations  of  Immortality  [from  Recollections 
of   Early  Childhood]. — W:  Wordsworth.     See 
Ode:     Intimations  of  Immortality,  etc. 
Ode  on  Melancholy. — J:  Keats. — OB 
Ode  on  St.  Cecilia's  Day  (Ode  for  Music  on  St.  Cecilia's 
Day  — C.)— FEP 
(Descend,  ye  Nine— se/.) — GN 
Ode  on  St.  Cecilia's  Day. — J:  Dryden.     See  Song  for 

St.  Cecilia's  Day,  A. 
Ode  on  Science. — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
Ode:  On  Solitude. — Abraham  Cowley.  See  Of  Solitude. 
Ode  on  Sohtude.     (C.)— Alex.  Pope.— FEP— HBP— 
LC— PYO— SN 
(Ode  to  Solitude.)— BNL 
(Quiet  Life,  The.)— CEL 
(Solitude.)— PGT  1— YBF 


233 


Ode 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Ode  on  the  Assassination  of  President  Garfield. — ^Anon. 

— GG 
Ode  on  the  Birth  of  oxir  Savioiir,  An.      (,Abr.) — Rob't 

Herrick.— GN 
Ode  on  the  Celebration  of  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill, 
Sel.  fr.  (LoneljjBugle  Grieves,  The.) — Grenville 
Mellen. — AA 
Ode  on  the  Death  of  Mr.  Thomson. — W:  Collins.     See 

Ode  on  the  Death  of  Thomson. 
Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington.     (C.) — 
Alfred  Tennyson.—  EHT  (sel.)—  FEP  —  VA 
— WEP4 
(Burial  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington — se^)— EDY 
(On   the  Death  of    the   Duke   of  Wellington  — 
seZ.)— BNL 
(Path  of  Duty,  The— 6r.  sel.)—KNE 
Ode  on  the  Death  of  Thomson.     (C.)— W:  Collins.— 
BNL(6r.«ei.)— EDY     • 
(Ode    on   the    Death    of   Mr.  Thomson.)— FEP— 
WEP  3 
Ode  on  the  Morning  <Sf  Christ's  Nativity. — J:  Milton. 

See  On  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. 
Ode  on  the  Passions. — W :    Collins.     See    Ode    to    the 

Passions. 
Ode  on  the    Pleasure    Arising    from    Vicissitude. — T: 
Gray.— BNL  (6r.  seZs.)— PGT  1  (sel.) 
(Spring,  sel.) — LC 
Ode  on  the  Poets. — J:    Keats.     See    Ode:     "Bards    of 

paesion,"  etc. 
Ode:    On    the    Spring.     (C.)—T:    Gray.— PGT    1  — 
WEP  3 
(On  the  Spring.)— FEP 
(Spring.)— BNL 
Ode  on  the  Unveiling  of  the  Shaw  Memorial  on  Boston 

Common,  An. — T:  B.  Aldrich. — AA 
Ode  on  Venice,  Sel.  fr.     (Race  with  Death,  The— Pt. 

I.j— Lord  Byron.— LH 
Ode  I. — Horace.     See  Death  of  Cleopatra,  The. 
Ode  Read  at  the  (Dne  Hundredth  Anniversary  of  the 
Fight  at  Concord  Bridge,  Br.  sel.  fr.    (Ode  to 
Freedom.) — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — BNL 
Ode  Recited  at  the  Harvard  Commemoration,  July  21. 
1865.     (O— Jaa.  R.  Lowell.— AA 
Abraham    Lincoln.  —  (Sts.    5,    6 — abr.) —  BNL — 
PAP  (obr. )—TMD 
(Commemoration  Ode — sel.  fr.  Sts.  3,  5,6,  8,  11, 

12— abr.)- EPs- HB  (abr.)— OS  3  (sel.) 
(Lincoln.)— BS  16— PEO 
(Martyr  (jhief ,  The.)— LLC 
(Our  Country  Saved — sel.) — MMR 
Unreturning  Brave,  The — st.  8,  abr.) — GP 
Ode,  Sung  at  the  Opening  of  the  International  Exhibi- 
tion, Br.  sel.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. — BNL 
Ode  Sung  in  the  Town  Hall,  Concord,  July  4,  1857.— 

Ralph  W.  Emerson.— AA—GN 
Ode  Simg  on  the  Occasion  of  Decorating  the  Graves  of 
the  Confederate  Dead. — H:  Timrod. — EPs 
(At  Magnolia  Cemetery.) — AA 
(Decoration  Day  at  Charleston.) — GP 
(Ode  on  Decorating  the  Graves  of  [the]  Confederate 

Dead  [or  Soldiers].)— HSS  1— OS  3 
("Sleep  sweetlv  in  your  humble  graven.") — BNL 
Ode  XXXVII.— Horace.      See    Death    of    Cleopatra, 

The. 
Ode  to  a  Butterfly. — T:  W.  Higginson. — AA 
Ode  to  a  Nightingale.    (C.)— J: Keats.— BNL— HBP— 
PGT  1— SN— WEP  4 
(SI.  abr.)— GF— OB 
(Nightingale,  The— 6r.  sel.)— EPs 
(To  a  Nightingale.)— FEP 
Ode  to  a  Rhinoceros. — Hilaire  Belloc. — BVC 
Ode  to  a  Skylark.— Percy  B.  SheUey.— WR  7 
(Sky-lark,  The— a&r.)— HSS  3— WCLG  2 
(To  a  Skylark— C.)  —  BFV  —  BPB  —  FEP  — GMS 
— GN  — GP  — LLC  — OB  —  OSS  — PGT    1 
— PHS  "VSG— WEP  4 
(A&r.)- CR— IR 
(SeZ.)— EPs— SE 
(To  the  Skylark.)- BNL— HBP 
Ode  to  an   Indian   fCrold]   Coin. — J:   Leyden. — FEP — 

HBP— LL(3 
Ode  to  an  Infant  Son. — T:  Hood.     See  Parental  Ode  to 

my  Son,  etc.,  A. 
Ode  to  Apollo.— J:  Keats.— FTR 
Ode  to  Autumn. — T:  Hood.     See  Ode:     Autumn. 
Ode  to  Autumn.— J:  Keats.- PGT  1— SN 
(Autumn.)— POS 

(To  Autumn.— C.V-CEL  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  OB  — 
WEP  4— YBF 
Ode  to  Beauty.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— HBP 
Ode  tq  Ben  Jonson. — Rob't  Herrick.     See  Ode  for  Ben 

Jonson,  An. 
Ode  to  Bums. — Anon. — SR  9 


Ode  to  Duty.     (C. )— W :  Wordsworth.  —  FEP  —  HBP 
—OB— PGT  1— PHS— WEP  4 
(SeZ«.)— BNL— EPs— TMD 
(Duty— «eZ.)— HDL 
(To  Duty.)— LH 
Ode  to  Endymion  Porter.— Rob't  Herrick.— WEP  2 
Ode  to  England,  An,  Sels.  fr.—W:  W.  Lord. 
Keats. — AA 
Wordsworth. — AA 
Ode  to  Evening.     (C.)—W:  Collins.—  EPs  —  FEP  — 
HBP— OB— PGT  1— WEP  3 
(Evening.)— CEL 
(To  Evening.)— BPB 
Ode  to  Fortune. — HaUeck  and  Drake. — AA 
Ode  to  France.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— EDY 
Ode  to  Freedom. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Ode  Read  at 
the  One  Hundredth  Anniversary  of  the  Fight 
at  Concord  Bridge. 
Ode  to  Himselff,  An]. — Ben  Jonson. —  EPs  (si.  abr.) — 
OEL— WEP2 
(To  Himself.)— FEP 
Ode  to  Independence,  Sel.  fr.  (Independence.) — Tobias 

G.  Smollett.— GP 
Ode  to  Independence  Hall,  An. — J.  S.  Mitchell. —  BS  4 

CS12— PRR— SR8 
Ode  to  Leven  Water.— Tobias  Smollett.— FEP 

(To  Leven  Water— sZ.  a6r.)— OB 
Ode  to  Liberty.— W:  Collins.— WEP  3 
Ode  to  Master  Anthony  Stafford.— T:  Randolph.— OB 

—WEP  2 
Ode  to  Memory,  Sel.  fr.    (Memory.) — Alfred  Tennyson. 

—EPs 
Ode  to  Miss  Carteret,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Ambrose  Philips. — 

WEP  3 
Ode  to  Mr.    C.    Cotton,    Sel.    fr.     R:    Lovelace.     See 

Grasshopper,  The. 
Ode  to  Mother    (jarey's    Chicken. — Theodore    Watts- 

Dunton. — VA 
Ode  to  my  Little  Son. — T:  Hood.     See  Parental  Ode  to 

my  Son,  etc.,  A. 
Ode  to  my  Pipe. — Andrew  Wynter. — PPh 
Ode  to  Napoleon  Bonaparte,  Br.   sel.  fr.      (Washing- 
ton.)—Lord  Byron.- EDY 
Ode  to  Niagara. — Anon. — BS  26 
Ode  to  Peace.— W:  Tennant.— BNL 
Ode  to  Perry.— T:  Hood.— HPE 
Ode  to  Psyche. — J:  Keats. — OB 
Ode  to  Rae  Wilson,  Esquire.— T:  Hood.— HPE 
Ode  to  Rum,  An.— W:  G.  Brown.— CS  9 
Ode  to  Simplicity.— W:  Collins.— OB— PGT  1 
Ode  to  Sir  William  Sidney  on  his  Birthday,  Sel.  fr.   (To 
William  Sidney  on  his  Birthday.) — Ben  Jon- 
son.— EPs 
Ode  to  Solitude. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Ode  on  Solitude. 
Ode  to  Spring.— Anna  L.  Barbauld.— WEP  3 
Ode  to  Spring.— H:  H.  Brownell.— MYF  (si.  diff.) 
(Lawyer's  Invocation  to  Spring,  A.)  —  AWH — 

BNL— FEP— GP— THP 
(Lawyer's  Poem  to  Spring,  A.) — TFS 
Ode  to  the  American   Flag. — Jos.   R.  Drake. — PEO — 
SR  8  (si.  abr.) 
(American  Flag,  The.)  —  AA  —  BNL  —  BS  3  -^ 
CS  1  —  DFR  —  EDY  —  FEP  —  FTR  — 
GMS  —  GN  (sel.)—  GP  —  HBP  —  LLC  —  OM 
—  PAP  —  PPSr—  SE  —  SM  —  SS  —  WCLG  1 
— WRD 
(Br.  seU.)— OS  1— SAE 
(Flag  of  the  Free— br.  seZ.)- PRR 
Ode  to  the  Assertors  of  Liberty,  An.     (Ode  Written 
1819,  before  the  Spaniards  had  Recovered  '  heir 
Liberty,  An— C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— MRS 
Ode  to  the  Cuckoo. —  J:   Logan  (at.    also   to   Michael 
Bruce).— CEL— CGd 
(Cuckoo,  The.  )—WCL 
(Messenger  of  Spring,  The.) — POS 
(To  the  Cuckoo.— C.)  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 
OB— PYO  (a6r.)— SN 
Ode  to  the  Deity. — Gabriel   R.    Derzhavin  (tr.   by   J: 
Bowring). — BS  4 
(God.)  —  AE  (br.  sel.)  —  CS  4  —  FTR  —  GP  — 
HBP— HNS  (abr.) 
Ode  to  the  Devil.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 
Ode:   To  the  Evening  Star.     (Ode  XV.— C.)  — Mark 
Akenside. 
(Nightingale,  The— a&r.)— OB 
Ode  to  the  Gowdspink.— Rob't  Ferguson.— WEP  3 
Ode  to  the  Great  Sea-serpent  on  nis  Wonderful  Re- 
appearance.    (Punch.) — HPE 
Ode  to  the  Human  Heart. — Laman  Blanchard. — NA 
Ode  to  the  Immortal  Memory  of  Sir  Lucius  Cary  and 
Sir   Henry    Morrison. — Ben   Jonson.     See   To 
the  Immortal  Memory  and  Friendship  of  that 
Noble  Pair,  etc. 


'2M 


TITLE  INDEX 


Of  Three 


Ode  to  the  Legislature. — J:  G.  Saxe. — BS  4 
Ode  to  the  Northeast  Wind.     (O— C:  Kingsley.— GN 
— PHS— VSG 
(Welcome,  A.)— LH 
Ode  to  the   Passions. — W:   CoUins. —  AE   {br.   sel.) — 
FTR  (8l.  afer.)— TMD  (sel.) 
(Ode  on  the  Passions— sZ.  abr.)  —  BS  3  —  KNE  — 

SS 
(Passions.   The— C.)  —  BNL  —  CS  23  —  EPs  (al. 
abr.)— FEP— HBP— PGT  1— PHS— WEP  3 
Ode  to  the  Pious  Memory  of  the  Accomplished  Young 
Lady,  Mrs.  Anne  Killigrew. — J:  Dryden. —  OB 
(To  the  Pious  Memory,  etc.— C.)— WEP  2 
Ode  to  the  Popular  Superstitions  of  the  Highlands  of 
Scotland,  An.     (.SI.  abr. )— W :  CoUins.— WEP  3 
Ode  to  the  Roc. — W:  J.  Courthope.     See  Paradise  of 

Birds,  The. 
Ode  to  the  Royal  Society    (To  the  Royal  Society —  C), 

Sel.  /r.— Abraham  Cowley  —  WEP  2 
Ode  to  the  Spleen,   An,    Sel.  fr. — Anne    Finch,  Lady 

Winchilsea.— WEP  3 
Ode  to  the  Trees. — Maggie  M.  Welsh. — AD 
Ode  to  the  West  Wind.  —  Percy   B.  SheUey.  —  CEL 
—  FEP  —  GP  {ad.)  —  HBP  —  OB  —  PGT  1 
—WEP  4 

Ode  to  Tobacco.     (C.)— C:     S.    Calverley. PPh— 

THP 
(To  Tobacco.)— BNL 
Ode  to  Tobacco.    {Fr.  letter  to  Mr.  Bingham,  Sept.  22, 

1801.)— Dan'l  Webster.— PPh 
Ode  to  Tranquillity.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— FTR 
Ode  to  Winter.— T:  CampbeU.— PGT  1 
Ode  upon   a  Question   Moved    whether   Love   should 
Continue  for  Ever,  An. — E:  Lord  Herbert  of 
Cherbury.— WEP  2 
Ode,  Written   during   the   Negociations   with  Buona- 
parte,  in   January,    1814. — Rob't   Southey. — 
WEP  4 
Ode,  Written    1819,    before    the    Spaniards    had    Re- 
covered their  Liberty,  An. — Percy  B.  Shelley. 
See  Ode  to  the  Assertors  of  Liberty,  An. 
Ode  Written  for  the  Consecration  of  Sleepy  Hollow 

Cemetery. — Frank  B.  Sanborn. — EPs 
Ode  Written  in  1746.     (Ode  Written  in  the  Beginning 
of  the  Year  1746— C.)— W:  CoUins.— BPB— 
PGT  1— YBF 
(How  Sleep  the  Brave.)— BFV— BNL— GN— GP— 

LC— LLC— OB— OS  3— PC— PSR— SM 
(Ode.)— EPs— FEP— HBP— SS— WEP  3 
Odes  of  Anacreon,  Sel.  fr.     See  Ode  XLIV. 
Odor,  The.— G:  Herbert.— HBP 
Odysseus  Reveals    Himself    to    his   Father. — Homer. 

See  Odyssey,  The. 
Odysseus'  Speech  to  Nausicaa. — Homer.   See  Odyssey, 

The. 
Odyssey,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Homer. 

Bending  of  the  Bow,  The.     {Sela.  fr.  Bks.  XXI., 

XXII. ,  Bryant's  <r.)— NE 
Hermes    in    Caljrpso's    Island.     {Sel.    fr.    Bk.    V., 

Chapman's  <r.)— WEP  1 
Odysseus    Reveals  Himself  to   his  Father.     {Sel. 

fr.  Bk.  XXIV.,  Chapman's  «r.)— WEP  1 
Odysseus'  Speech  to  Nausicaa.     {Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VI., 

Chapman's  <r.)— WEP  1 
Palace    of    Alcinoiis,    The.     {Sel.    fr.    Bk.    VII., 

Bryant's  tr.) — NE 
Song  the  Sirens  Sung,  The.     {Br.  ael.  fr.  Bk.  XII., 
Chapman's  <r.)— WEP  1 
Odyssey,  The. — Andrew  Lang. — OB — VA 
Odyssey,  The  Story  of.— Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
CEdipus,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Dryden. 

Incantation.     {Sel.  fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  1.)— ELP 
CEdipus,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  1,  Br.  ael.  fr.—BtfL 
CEnone;  or,  the  Choice  of  Paris.     (Sel.) — Alfred  Tenny- 
son.— EPs 
Of  a  Certaine  Man. — Sir  J:  Harrington. — BNL 
Of  a  Precise  Tailor.— Sir  J :  Harrington.— FEP 
Of  a  Rose,  a  Lovely  Rose,  of  a  Rose  is  al  myn  Song. — 

Anon. — OB 
Of  a'  the  Airts. — Rob't  Burns.     See  following. 
"Of  a'  the  airts  the  wind  can  blow."     (Of  a'  the  airts 
—O— Rob't  Burns.— EPs— WEP  3 
(I  Love  my  Jean— aiso  C.)— BNL— BPB— GN— 

MBL 
(Jean. )— BFV— OB— YBF 

{W.  2  add.  doubtful  ate.)— FEP— FT  A— PGT  1 
(My  Jean.)— CEL 
Of  a  Vision  of  Hell,  which  a  Monk  Had. — R:  W.  Dixon. 

See  Mano :  a  Poetical  History. 
Of  Alice  in  Wonderland.     (Life  is  but  a  Dream — C.) — 

C:  L.  Dodgson.— VA 
"Of  all  the  reproaches  which  arise  against  a  man  in  his 
chamber  of  study." — C.  J.  Vaughan. — GG 


"Of  aU  the  solemnities  of  which  the  mind  can  conceive, 

death  is  the  greatest." — David  Swing. — GG 
Of  Baiting  the  Lion. — Owen  Seaman. — NA 
Of  Blue  China. — Andrew  Lang. — VA 

(BaUade  of  Blue  China— C.)— OS  2 
Of  Circumspection. — G:  Chapman. — ELP 
Of  Clementina.     (Poems     and     Epigrams    LXXI.) — 

Walter  S.  Landor.— OB 
(Sixteen.)— FEP— VS 
Of  Corinna's  Singing.     (A  Book  of  Airs,  No.  VI., — C) 

— T:  Campion.— WEP  1 
Of  Course. — Juliet  W.  Tompkins. — CG  1 
Of  Course  they  Met.— Anon.— WR  8 
Of  Cruelty  to  Animals.     {Fr.  Proverbial  Philosophy.) 

— Martin  F.  Tupper. — BNL 
Of  Goodness,  and  Goodness  of  Nature. — Fs.   Bacon. 

See  Goodness  and  Greatness. 
Of    Great    Place. — Fs.  .Bacon.     See     Goodness     and 

Of  Heaven.     (C.)— Jeremy  Taylor.— HBP 
(Heaven.)— BNL 

Of  Henry  George  [who  Died  Fighting  against  Political 
Corruption— C.l.—R:  W.  GUder.— EDY 

Of  his  Choice  of  a  Sepulchre. — Andrew  Lang. — VA 

Of  his  Dear  Son,  Gervase. — Sir  J:  Beaumont.  See 
On  my  Dear  Son,  (5ervase  Beaumont. 

Of  his  Love's  Beauty. — Ben  Jonson.  See  Celebra- 
tion of  Charis,  A. 

Of  Idle  Words.     Bible.     See  St.  Matthew. 

Of  Joan's  Youth. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — AA 

Of  Liberty  and  Charity,  Sel.  fr.  (Holy  Nation,  A.) — 
R:  Realf.— PYO 

Of  Life. — Andrew  Lang. — VA 

Of  Life  and  Death.     (C.) — Ben  Jonson. 
(Life  and  Death.)— FP 

Of  Man's  Mortality. — Simon  Wastell.  See  Microbiblion. 

Of  Masques  and  Triumphs.  (Essay  XXXVII.)  — 
Fs.  Bacon. — MBL 

Of  my  Dear  Son,  Gervase  Beaumont. — Sir  J:  Beau- 
mont. See  On  my  Dear  Son,  Gervase  Beau- 
mont. 

Of  Myself.     (C.)— Abraham  Cowley.— BNL— FEP 
(Wish,  A.)— CEL— WEP  2 

Of  Negotiating.     (Essay  XLVII.)— Fs.  Bacon.— MBL 

Of  Old  Sat  Freedom  on  the  Heights. — Alfred  Tenny- 
son.—BNL  (seZ.)— GP— WEP  4 

Of  One  who  neither  Sees  nor  Hears. —  R:  W.  GUder. — 
AA 

Of  One  who  Seemed  to  have  Failed. — S.  Weir  Mitchell. 
\j^ 

Of  Solitude.     (C.)— Abraham  Cowley.— FEP 

("Hail,  old  patrician  trees  so  great  and  good" — 

seZ.)- AD 
(Ode:  On  Solitude.)— ELP 
(On  Solitude.)— HBP— WEP  2 
Of  Studies.     (C— Essay    L.)— Fs.    Bacon.— LLC    {al. 
abr.)- MBL 
(Books— «Z.  air.)— CR 
(Studies- sZ.  abr.)— OS  3 
Of  Such  as  I  Have.— Sarah  C.  Woolsey.— TFY 
"Of  such  is  the  kingdom  of  Heaven." — Jemima  T. 
Luke.— FEP 
(Child's  Desire,  The— seZ. )— PC 
("I  think  when  I  read  that  sweet  story  of  old" — 
al.  abr.)— OS  1 
Of  Suspicion.     (Essay  XXXI.)— Fs.  Bacon.— MBL 
Of  Temperance     in     Fortune. — R:     W.     Dixon.     See 

Mano:  a  Poetical  History. 
Of  the  Book-hunter. — Andrew  Lang. — VA 

(Ballade  of  the  Book-hunter— C.)—LBB—MBB 
Of  the  Child  with  the  Bird  at  the  Bush. — J:  Bunyan. — 

WR7 
Of  the  Club. — Joseph  Addison.    See  Spectator,  The. 
Of  the  Clourtier's  Life,  written  to  John  Poins  (C),  Sel. 
/r.— Sir  T:  Wyatt. 
(Second  Satire,  Sel.  /r.)— WEP  1 
Of  the  Danger  his  Majesty  (being  Prince)  Escaped  in 
the  Road  at  Saint  Andero,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (His 
Majesty's  Escape  at  St.  Andrew's.) — Edmund 
WaUer.— WEP  2 
Of  the  Lost  Ship. — Eugene  R.  White, — AA 
Of  the     Marriage     of     the     Dwarfs.     {€.) — Edmund 
WaUer.— HPE 
(Marriage  of  the  Dwarfs,  The.)— WEP  2 
Of  the  Passing  away  of  Brynhild. — W:  Morris.     See 

Story  of  Sigurd  the  Volsung,  The. 
Of  the  Progress  of  the  Soul,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Ele^  on 

Mistress  Elizabeth  Drury.) — J:  Donne. — EPs 
Of  the  Soul  of  Man,  and  the  Immortality  thereof,  Br. 

ael.  /r..(Man.)— Sir  J:  Davies.— YBF 
Of  the   Warres   in   Ireland.     {Fr.  Epigrams,  Bk  IV. , 

Ep.  6.)— Sir  J:  Harrington.— BNL 
Of  Three  Girls  and  their  Talk. — Boccaccio. — OH 


235 


Of  Travel 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Of  Travel.     (Essay  XVIII.)— Fs.  Bacon.— MBL 

Of  Truth  (Essay  I.),  Sel.  fr.      (Truth.)— Fs.  Bacon.— 

OS  2 
Off  for  Slumber-land. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Off  Havana.— J:  H.  Ingham.— EDY 
Off  Riviere  du  Loup.-tDuncan  C.  Scott.— TCV 
Off  to  London.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Off  to  School  We  Go. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Off  to  the  War.     ( Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Offering  for  Cuba,  An.— Ida  T.  BeU.— BS  25 
Offertory,  An. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — PoR 
Officer  Brady.— Rob't  W:  Chambers.— THP 
Office-seeker's  Platform,  The.— Anon.— CS  9— KNE 
O'Flaherty  and  John  Stubbs.— Sam  W.  Foss.— CS  34 
"Oft  have  I  wakened  ere  the  spring  of  day." — Edith 

M.  Thomas.     See  Inverted  Torch,  The. 
Oft  in    the    StiUy    Night.     (C.)— T:    Moore.— BNL— 

EPs  —  FEP  —  FTA  —  HBP  —  LLC  —  PYO 

— SM— WEP  4 
(Light  of  Other  Days,  The.)— BPB— CEL— LC— 

OB— PGT  1— TIP— WCLG  1— YBF 
("When  I  remember" — nel.) — HSS  3 
"Often  I  linger  where  the  roses  pour." — Julia  C.  R. 

Dorr. — AD 
Ogg,  the  Son   of  Beorl.— G:   Eliot.     See  Mill  on  the 

Floss,  The. 
O'Grady's  Goat.— Will  S.  Hays.— BS  18 
Ogre,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Oh !— Anon.— PS— TT 
Oh!  Arranmore,  Loved  Arranmore.     (C.) — T:  Moore. 

(Arranmore.) — HBP 
Oh,  Ask  not  Thou.— J.  E.  Saxby.— HDL 
"Oh,  be  at  least  able  to  say  in  that  day." — C:  Kings- 
ley.— FHS 
Oh,  Bless  us!— Anon.— TFS 
Oh   [tvr.  O]  Breathe  not  his  Name  (Robert  Emmett). 

-T:  Moore.-BNL-CS  17-ED  i-FEP— HBP 
Oh,  Call  it  by  Some  Better  Name.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
"Oh  courage!     there     he     comes."     (Frag.) — Joshua 

Sylvester.— HBP 
Oh,  Dear!— Anon.— HVD 

Oh,  Dear  Me.     (Dial.) — Marion  Douglas. — ASD 
"Oh,  dear!  what  can  the  matter  be?" — H:  Fielding  (?). 

— OES 
Oh!  Doubt  me  not.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
Oh,  Fear  not  thou  to  Die. — Anon. — HBP 
Oh,  Fear  to  Call  it  Loving. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See 

Woman's  Shortcomings,  A. 
"Oh,  first   of  human  blessings,  and  supreme!" — Jas. 

Thomson.     See  Britannia. 
Oh,  for  a  Man!— M.  C.  Hungerford.- CS  32— SR  11 
Oh,  Golden-rod.— W.  L.  Jaquith.— PEO 
"Oh,  happy  trees  which  we  plant  to-day." — Anon.  — 

HSSl 
(Happy  Trees.)— DCP 
"Oh  heart  of  God  that  pities  all!  " — Alfred  Tennyson. 

— GG 
"Oh  how  kindly  hast  Thou  led  me." — T:  Grinfield. — 

FEP 
"Oh,  if  every  one  could  put  his  arms  round  one  other 

one."— J:  B.  Gough.— GG 
Oh,  if  thou  Be'st  True  Lover. — Edwin  Arnold. — BIL 
"Oh,  if  thou  lovest  and  art  a  woman." — Letitia  E. 

Landon. — GG 
"Oh,  keep    their    memory   green    who    led." — W.    H. 

Venable.— GG 
Oh,  Lady  Mine.— Ethel  M.  KeUey.— CG  3 
Oh  [O— C],  Let  me  Dream.     (Sel.  fr.  A  Nine  Days' 

Wonder.)— Hamilton  Aide.— VS 
"Oh,  let  me  know."     (Sel.) — Frances  R.  Havergal. — 

—FHS 
"Oh,  let  us  carry  hence  each  one." — Anon. — GG 
"Oh,  listen,    man!" — -R:    H:    Dana.      See  Husband's 

and  Wife's  Grave,  The. 
Oh,  Little  Child.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Oh,  Look  at  the  Moon!— Mrs.  FoUen.— HSS  2 
Oh,  Love  is  not  a  Summer  Mood.     (In  The  New  Day.) 

— R:  W.  Gilder.— BIL— FTA— OH— TFY 
"Oh,  man,  boast  not  thy  'lion  heart.'  " — S.  F.  Streeter. 

— CSl 
"Oh,  may  I  join  the  choir  invisible." — G:  Eliot. — BNL 

—  EDY  —  FEP  —  GG  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HBR 

— VA 
(Choir  Invisible,  The.)— HDL  (a6r.)— LLC— OS  3 
Oh  [or  O],  Mistress  Mine.— W:  Shakespeare.— TFY 
"Oh  [wr.  O],  Mother  of  a  Mighty  Race."     (C.)— W:  C. 

Bryant.— HBP 
(America.) — ;AA — BNL 
("What  cordial  welcome  greets  the  guest" — br.  sel.) 

— GG 
Oh,  my  Geraldine. — F.  C.  Bumand. — NA 
Oh,  my  Luve's  like  a  Red,  Red  Rose. — Rob't  Bums. 

See  O,  my  Luve's  Like  a  Red,  Red  Rose. 


"Oh I  never  wear  a  brow  of  care." — Anon. — HBP 

Oh,  no — not  e'en  [e'vn — C]  when  First  we  Loved.  — 

T:  Moore.— FTA 
Oh,  No— of  Course  not.— J.  B.  Smiley.— CS  30 
"Oh!  Promise  me. "— H:  F.  Wood.— G» 
"Oh  [Ah — C],  sad  are  they  who  know  not  love."  (Two 

Songs    from    the    Persian,     II.— C.)— T:    B. 

Aldrich.— FTA  (abr.) 
(Sad  are  they  who  Know  not  Love — abr.) — TFY 
(Who  Know  not  Love.)— OH 
Ohl  Say  not  Woman's  Heart  is  Bought. — T:  L.  Pea- 
cock.—FTA 
(She  Loves  and  Loves  Forever.) — FLS 
(Song.)— TFY 
Oh,  Sir!— (Tr.  and  ad.  by)  Alfred  Ayres. — DR 
"Oh  [xor.  O]!  snatch'd  away  in  beauty's  bloom."    (C) 

(In  Hebrew  Melodies.)— Lord  Byron. — BNL — 

FEP— HBP— WEP  4— YBF 
(Elegy.)— PGT  1 
"Oh,  surely   who    will   guide." — Julia   A.    Wolcott. — 

HDL 
"Oh,  sweet  is  the  sound  of  the  shuttle  and  the  loom." 

Read.— AE 

"  Oh,  talk  not  to  me  of  a  name  great  in  story." — 

Lord  Byron.  See  Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road 

between  Florence  and  Pisa. 
Oh,  that     'twere     Possible. — Alfred     Tennyson.     See 

Maud. 
Oh,  that   we   Two  were   Maying. — C:  Kingsley.     See 

Saint's  Tragedy,  The. 
Oh!  the     Golden,     Glowing     Morning.     (New      York 

Herald.)— BS  19 
"Oh,  the  long,  long  years  are  flown." — Anon. — FHS 
Oh  [or  O]!  the  Pleasant  Days  of  Old! — Frances  Brown. 

—BNL  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  HSS  3  (br.  sel.)— 

OS  2 
("Oh,  those  blessed  days  of  old" — br.  sel.) — HSS  3 
(Pleasant  Days  of  Old,  The.)— FMR 
Oh  [wr.  O],  the  Sight  Entrancing,  Sels.  fr. —  T:  Moore. 

—BNL 
Oh,  the  Sports  of  Childhood;  or.  Swinging  'neath  the 

Old  Apple  Tree.— O.   R.   Barrows.— AD     (w. 

mus.) 
(Swinging  'neath  the  Old  Apple  Tree.) — LLC 
"Oh,  those  blessed  times  of  old." — Frances  Brown. 

See  Oh,  the  Pleasant  Days  of  Old. 
"Oh,  thou  to-morrow!  mystery!     (Songs  of  the  Soul 

—O— Joaquin  Miller— GG 
"Oh  \ivr.   O]  thou  who  dry'st  the  mourner's  tear." 

(C.)—T:  Moore. 
(God  the  True  Source  of  Consolation.) — HNS 
(Resignation.)— KNE  (ahr.)— THP 
"Oh  to  be  ready  when  death  shall  come." — Anon. — 

GG 
Oh!  to  See  him  Once  Again. — Arthur  G.   Butler. — 

FTA 
Oh!  Weary  Mother. — Barry  Pain. — NA 
Oh,  Wert   thou   in   the   Cauld   Blast. —  Rob't   Burns. 

See  O,  Wert  thou,  etc. 
"Oh!  what  a  lot  of  folks  to-night." — "Bob  o'Link." — 

DCP 
Oh,  What  a  Sell!— Clara  J.  Denton.— ASD 
"Ohl    What    is    man,    great     maker    of     mankind!" 

(Dignity  of  Man,  The — C.) — Sir  JiDavies. — 

HBP 
Oh!  Where    do    Fairies    Hide    their    Heads?— T:    H. 

Bayly.— HBP— VA 
Oh!  Why  Should  the  Spirit  of  Mortal  be  Proud?- W: 

Knox.     See  O,  Why  Should  the  Spirit,  etc. 
"Oh!  Wilt  thou  Sew  my  Buttons  On?"     (Punch.)— 

HPE 
"Oh,  with  what  pride  I  used." — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See 

William  Tell. 
"Oh,   would   I  were  a  boy  again." — Mark  Lemon. — 

HSS  3 
"Oh  yet    we    trust    [that    someh9w    good]." — Alfred 

Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
OhnAwa. — J:  Hunter-Duvar.     See  De  Roberval. 
O'Hussey's  Ode  to  the  Maguire. — Jas.  C.  Mangan. — 

TIP 
Oil  on  the  Brain. — S.  A.  McKeever. — SD 
Oil  Yourself  a  Little.— Anon.— KNE 
O'Kavanagh,  The.— J.  A.  Shea.— PEB  4— SS 
O'Kelley    Cabin,  The. — Dion  Boucicault.     See  Shau- 

graun.  The. 
or  Pickett's   NeU.— Mather  D.  Kimball.  —  AWH — 

DR 
Ol'  Tunes,  The.— Paul  L.  Dunbar.— CS  35 
Old,  The.— Anon.— PTS 

Old.— Ralph  Hoyt.— AA— BNL  (seZ.)- TAV  (si.  abr.) 
Old,  The.— Roden  B.  Noel.— OB 

(Dying.)— VA 
Old  Ace.— Fred  E.  Brooks.— CS  32— WR  4 


236 


TITLE  INDEX 


Old  Folks 


Old  Actor's  Story,  The.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  23— PFP— 
WR  26  (al.  abr.) 
(Actor's  Story,  The.)— PR 
Old  Adrairal,  The.     (Admiral  Stewart,  U.  S.  Navy.)— 

Edmund  C.  Stedman.— BNL— EDY— MRS 
Old  Age.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Old  Age. — Edmund  Waller. — See  following. 
Old  Age   and   Death.     (Fr.   Verses  upon   his    Divine 
Poesy.)— Edmund  Waller.— BNL— YBF 
(Old  Age.)— OB 
(Last  Prospect,  The.)— ELP 
Old  Age   of   Temperance.— W :   Shakespeare.     See  As 

You  Like  It. 
Old  Amontillado.— M.  E.  W.  G.— CG  1 
Old  and   Blind.— Eliz.    L.    Howell.— BS  2   (u>r.   at.   to 
Milton.) 
(Milton's  Prayer  of  Patience.)— AA—CS  7— FEP— 

LLC  (si.  abr.)- TAS 
(Milton's  Soliloquy  in  his  Old  Age.)— HSS  3 
Old  and  New,  The.— Anon.— CP 
Old  and  New  Year,  The.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— 

HE 
Old  and  New  Year  Ditties,  III.     (C.)— Christina  G. 
Rossetti. 
(Passing  Away.) — OB 
Old  and  the  New,  The.— Anon.— BS  24 
Old  and  the  New,  The.— Mary  McGuire.— CS  24 
Old  and  the  New,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Old  and  the  New  South,  The.— H:  W.   Grady.— See 

New  South,  The. 
Old  and  the  New  Year,  The.— Anon.— FP 
Old  and  the  New  Year,  The.     (Includes  A  Dead  Past — 
si.    abr.,    and     The     Present.) — Adelaide    A. 
Procter.— HS 
(Present,  The— also  in)  FP— OS  2 
Old  and  Young.— Fs.  W.  Bourdillon.— VA 
Old  and  Young  Courtier,  The.     (C. — in  Percy's   Re- 
liques.)— Anon.— FEP— HBP 
(Old  Courtier,  The— sei.)- BVC— CGd 
Old  Apple-tree,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Old  Apple-woman,  The. — Anon. — MMR 
Old  Apple-woman,  The. —  H.  K.  McBride. — MD 
Old  Arithmetic,  The.— Anon.— WR  20 
Old  Arm-chair,      The.— Eliza      Cook.— BNL — FKi'— 
TAV— TFS  (sel.) 
(SI.  a6r.)— CS  25— PC 
Old  Artillerist,  The.— Meredith  Nicholson. — PAPm 
Old  Aunt,  The.— Anon.— MAD 
Old  Aunt  Mary's.     (C.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 

("Out  to  Old  Aunt  Mary's.")- BS  13— SAE  (br.  set  ) 
Old  Bachelor,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Old  Ballad,  An.     (DiaZ.)- Anon.— KJ 
Old  Ballad,    An.     (Lanty    Leary — C.) — S:    Lover. — 
WR14 
(Won't  vou  Follow  me?)— CS  36 
Old  Barn,  the.— B:  F.  Taylor.     See  Money  Musk. 
Old  Baron,  The.— T:  Miller.— VA 
Old  Battle-field,  An.— Frank  L.  Stanton.— BNL 
Old  Beau,  The.— Edgar  Fawcett.— TAV 
Old  Benedict  Arnold.— Pauline  Phelps.— WR  19 
Old  Bill  Stevens.— Anon.— DCR 
"Old  Bob  White."— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Old  Books.— Anon.— MBB 

Old  Books  are  Best. — Beverly  Chew.— LBB— MBB 
Old  Books,  Fresh  Flowers. — Jos.  Boulmier. — LBB 
Old  Braddock.— J:  V.  Cheney.— BAB 
Old  Bridge  at  Florence,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — 

OS  3 
Old,  but  Good.— Anon.— SR  2 

(Domicile  Erected  by  John,  The.)— MHR 
(House  that  Jack  Built,  The.)— PTS  (abr.)— SO 
(Modem   House  that   Jack   Built,   The.)— BNL— 
CS  3 
Old  Canoe,  The.— Albert  Pike.— CS  8 
Old  Canteen,  The.— Harry  S.  Edwards.— BS  21 
Old  Canteen,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  35 
Old  Canteen,  The.— G.  M.  White.— CS  23— PS 
Old  Carryall,  The.— Joe  Lincoln.— CCB 
Old  Cavalier,  The.— Sir  Fs.  H.  Doyle.— EHT— FEP— 

VA 
Old  China.     (In  Essays  of  Elia.)— C:  Lamb.— MBL 
Old  Christmas. — Anon.— PEO 
Old  Christmas.     (SI.  abr.)— Mary  Howitt.— PC 

(Abr.)— GN— OS  1 
Old  Christmas  Forty  Years  Ago!— Mrs.  C.  F.  Candy. — 

KJ 
Old  Christmas  Returned. — Anon. — GN 
Old  Chums.— Alice    Gary.- CR— CS  7— CSS— MMR— 

WCLG  1 
Old  Church,  The.— H.  H.  Johnson.— DR 
Old  Church  at  Lismore,  The. — Ellen  M.  Downing. — 

AVP— TIP 
Old  Church  Bell,  The.— Anon.— CS  17 


Old  Church  Bells.— Anon.— CS  18 

Old  Churchyard  of   Bonchurch,   The. — Philip  B.  Mar- 

ston. — VA 
Old  Church-yard  Tree,  The.— Anon.— CS  20 
Old  City  Church,  The.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— WR  7 
Old  Clay  Pipe,  The.— A.  B.  Van  Fleet.— PPh 
Old  Cloak,    The. — Anon.     (In    Percy's    Reliques). — 

OB 
(Take  thy  Old  Cloak  about  Thee— C.)— FEP— HBP 

— HPE 
Old  Clock,  The.— Guy  Carleton.— CS  22 
Old  Clock,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Old  Clock 

on  the  Stairs,  The. 
Old  Clock    against    the   Wall,    The.— Anon.— CS  11— 

NFS— YP 
(Old  Cottage  Clock,  The— sei.)- PS 
Old   Clock  in  the    Corner,   The.— Eugene  J.   Hall.— 

SR2 
Old  Clock   on  the   Stairs,   The.     (C.)— H:   W.   Long- 
fellow.—BS  2— CR— CS  3— FEP— FP  (si.  abr.) 

— PPSr— PS— SO— TAV— WCLG  2 
(Old  Clock,  The.)— FMR 
Old  Constitution,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Old 

Ironsides. 
Old  Continentals,   The.— Guy  H.  McMaster.— BS  13— 

PAP— PAPm— SE 
(Carmen      Bellicosum.)— AA— AWB— BNL— FEP 

GN— GP— HB— HBP— LC— OS  2 
(Song  of  the  War.)— KNE 
Old  Coquette,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Satire  V.,  On  Women. ) 

— E:  Young.— WEP3 
Old  Cottage     Clock,     The. — Anon.     See     Old     Clock 

against  the  Wall,  The. 
Old  Courtier,     The. — Anon.     See     Old     and     Young 

Courtier,  The. 
Old  Cove,  The.— H:  H.  Brownell.— EPs 
("All  we  Ask  is  to  be  Let  Alone.")— CS  1 
(Let  us  Alone— C.)—AWH 
Old  Cradle,  The.— E.  M.  Griffith.— WR  4 
Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The.     (£n<.)— Anon.— EuE 
Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 

Burial  of  Little  Nell.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  LXXII.)— DDR 

— WRD 
(Little  Nell's  Funeral.)— CS  3 
(Old  Curiosity  Shop — br.  sel.) — SAE 
Death  of  Little  Nell.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  LXXI.)— BS  1 

—  CSS  — DS  — NPS— OSl    (br.   sel.)  — SM 

—WCLG  1— YP 
(Old  Curiosity  Shop— br.  srf.)— SAE 
Dick  Swiveller  and  the  Marchioness.     (Sels.  fr.  C'hs. 

LVII.  and  LVIII.)— CR— HBR 
Old  Daddy    Turner.     (Detroit    Free    Press.)— CS  20 — 

SAE 
Old  Daguerreotypes,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Old  Darky's  Defense,  The.— Anon.— WR  21 
Old  Days.     (Harvard  Advocate.)— CG  2 
Old  Deacon's  Lament,  The.— E.  T.  Corbett.— CS  13— 

HP 
Old  Dobbin.— Eliza  Cook.— WCL 
Old  Dobbin.— Will  L.  Keese.— WR  24 
Old    Doll    to    the    New    One,  The. — Felix   Leigh. — 

WR17 
Old  England.— Ebenezer  Elliot.— BLP  (si.  abr.) 

(England.)— SS 
Old  English     Christmas,     The.— Walter     Scott.     See 

Marmion. 
Old  Erasmus'  Temperance  Pledge. — Anon. — DCR 
Old  Faiths  in  New  Light.— S.  P.  N.  Smyth.— TMD 
Old  Familiar    Faces,    The.     (SI.    abr.)— C:    Lamb.— 

BNL— FEP— GP— HBP— LLC— OB— PGT  1 

— PYO— WEP  4— YBF 
Old  Farmer  Gray  gets  Photographed. — Anon. — CS  9 — 

SR9  (abrA 
Old  Farm-house,  The. — Anon. — CS  19 
Old  Fiddling  Josey. — Irwin  Russell. — HP 
Old  Fire-dog,  The.— T:  Frost.— WR  7 
Old  Fireplace,  The.— Anon.— BS  16 
Old  Fisherman,  The.— Anon.— CS  32— PR— YA 
Old  Fisherman,    The. — Jean    Ingelow.     See    Brothers 

and  a  Sermon. 
Old  Fisherman's    Prayer,    The. — Jean    Ingelow.     See 

Brothers  and  a  Sermon. 
Old  Flag,  The.     (C.)— H:  C.  Bunner.- TAV 

(Salute  the  Flag— abr.)— PAPm 
Old  Flag  Forever.     (Diff.  fr.  vers,  in  Wflrks.) — Frank 

L.  Stanton.— PAPm 
Old  Flemish  Lace. — Amelia  W.  Carpenter. — AA 
Old  Flower-beds,   The. — Hezekiah       Butterworth.  — 

BS23 
Old  Folks.— Anon.— BS  8 
Old  Folks.     (Prose.)- Anon.— FAS 
Old  Folks.     (Dial.)— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
(Playing  Old  Folks.)— PS 


237 


Old 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Old  Folks  at  Home.— Stephen  C.  Foster.— AA—FEP 

— GP— TAV 
Old  Folks'  Room,  The.— Anon.— FP 
Old  Folks'  Thanksgiving.— Anon. — WR  14 
Old  Forsaken  School-bouse,  The.— J:  H.  Yates.— BS  3 

— CSS— SA    ' 
Old  Fortunatus,  Sel.  Jr.     (Praise  of  Fortune,  The.) — 

T:  Dekker.— WEP  2 
Old  Friends.— Anon.— HP 
Old  Friends.— B.  J.  M'Dermott.— CS  30 
Old  Gaelic  Cradle-song,  An. — Anon.     See  following. 
Old  Gaelic  Lullaby.— Anon.— PoR—WCL 

(Old  Gaelic  Cradle-song,  An.)— OS  1 
Old  Gentleman  who  Married  a  Young  Wife,  The. —  R : 

B.  Sheridan.     See  School  for  Scandal,  The. 
Old  Glory.— Anon.— CP 

"Old  Glory"  at  Pekin.— Clara  B.  Brown.— SR  13 
Old  Grenadier's    Story,    The.— G:    W.    Thombury.— 

BS  21— FR— HSS  1— VA 
Old  Grimes.— Albert  G.  Greene.— A WH—BNL—BS  7 

— BVC— FEP— TAV— THP 
Old  Grimes'  Hen.— J.  M.  Barron. — SRI 
Old  Grudge   against    England,    The. — Rufus   Choate. 

See  Enmity  toward  Great  Britain. 
Old  Hat,  The.— Anon.— PPSr 
Old  Hay-mow,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Old  Heads  on  Young  Shoulders. — Mrs.  L.  E.  V.  Boyd. 

— StD 
Old  Hemlock,  An. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Autocrat 

of  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Old  Hen,  An.— M.  M.  D.— TFS 

Old  Home,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.    See  In  Memoriam. 
Old  Home  and  the  New,  The.— Rob't  Bleakie.— BLP 
Old  Home  Folks,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— CW 
Old  Homestead,  The.— Wallace  Bruce.— BS  14 
Old  Homestead,  The. — H:  Davenport. — PR 
Old  House  at  Home,  The.— T:  Hood.— TFS  (^ahr.) 
(House  Where  I  was  Bom,  The.)— BLP 
(I  Remember,  I  Remember— C.)—BNL— BPB— 

EDY— FEP— FP— GP;—  HBP  —  LC  —  MR  — 

OS  1  —  PoR  —  PSR  —  PYO  (a6r.)— VS— 

WCL— WCLG  1— YBF 
(Past  and  Present.)— PGT  1 
Old  House  in  the  Meadow,  The. — Anon. — CS  10 
Old  House  on  the  HiUside,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— 

CS  28 
Old  Huldah.— E.  N.  Gunnison.— CS  14 

(Women  of  Marblehead,  The— abr. )—FR 
"Old  Ironsides."     (C.)— Oliver     W.     Holmes.— AA— 

AE  (br.  eel.)  —  ASL  —  AWB  —  BFV  —  BNL 

—  BS  5  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  GN  —  LC  —  LLC  — 

PAP  —  PAPm  —  PC  —  SM  —  SO  —  SS  — 

TAV— WCLG  2— YBF 
(Old  Constitution,  The.)— OS  2 
( lattered  Ensign,  The — br.  sel.) — PRR 
"Old  Ironsides."- H:C.  Lodge.— NC 
Old  Jack  in  the  WeU.— Anon.— CS  22 
Old  Jack  Watt's  Christmas.— Anon.— CS  32— PR 
Old  Jane.— T:  Ashe.— PGT  2 

Old  Kentucky  Home,  The. — Stephen  C.  Foster. — ASL 
(My   Old   Kentucky  Home  LGood-night].)— AA— 

BNL— FEP— GP— TAV 
Old  King  Cole.— M.  C.  Hungerford.— CS  23— DS 
Old  Knight's  Treasure,  The.— H:  Morford. — CS  22 
Old  Letters.— Anon.— BS  12 
Old  Letters.- W:  J.  Benners,  Jr.— CS  30 
Old  Letters.— W.  L.  Kitchel.— CG  1 
Old     Letters.     (SI.    diff.     vers.     jr.     Poems.) — Frd'k 

Locker-Lampson. — FEP 
Old  Log  Schoolhouse,  The.— Anon.— SR  9 
Old  Love,  The.— C:  Kingsley.    See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Old  Love  Song. — Anon. — CEL 
Old  Love  Song,  The.— W:  C.  Gannett.— OH 
Old  Lover,  An. — Rob't  Jones.— OH 
Old  Maid,  The.— G:  Barlow.— VA 
Old  Maid,  The.— H.  M.  Garrett.— CS  23— ED 
Old  Maid,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Old  Maid,  The.— Amelia  B.  Welby.— BNL 
Old  Maid's  Prayer,  The.— Anon.— WR  20 

{For  another  vers,  of   same  story,  see  Anv  [One 

Will  Do.) 
Old  Maid's  Warning,  An. — Mattie  M.  Caslin. — WR  20 
Old  Man,  The.— Eugene  Field.— HBR 
Old  Man  and  Death,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

KkR 

Old  Man  and  Jim,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— AA—BS  16 

— SAE  (««/.)- SR  7 
Old  Man  by  the  Brook,  The.— W:  Wordsworth. — FP 
Old  Man  Dreams,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes. — BNL — 

FEP— OH 
Old  Man  Goes  to  School,  The.— J:  H.  Yates.— CS  18 
Old  Man    Goes    to    Town,    The. — J.  G.  Swinerton. — 

BS13 


Old  Man   in   the  Model   Church,  The.— J:  H.  Yates. 

See  Model  Church,  The. 
Old  Man  in  the  Palace  Car,  The.— J:  H.  Yates.— CS  20 

— PR— SR  1 
Old  Man  in  the  Stvlish  Church,  The.— J:  H.  Yates.— 

CS  6— KNE 
Old  Man  in  the  Wood,  The.— Anon.— CS  10— PHS 
(To  Inconsistent  Husbands — si.  diff.  vers.) — KJ 
Old  Man      Whiskery-Whee-Kum- Wheeze. —  Jas.      W. 

Rilev.— BJC 
Old  Man's  Address  to  Young  Wives,   An. — Anon. — 

MCS 
Old  Man's  Carousal,  The. — Jas.  K.  Paulding. — AA 
Old  Man's  Comforts,  The. — Rob't  Southey.     See  fol- 
lowing. 
Old  Man's  Comforts,  and  how  he  Gained  Them,  The. 

(O— Rob't  Southey.— CGd 
(Father  William.)— PC— PPSr 
(Old  Man's  Comforts,  The.)— BNL— FP 
Old  Man's  Counsel,  The.     (SeZ.)— W:  C.  Bryant.— AD 
Old  Man's  Darling,  An.     CTob.)- Anon.— TCP 
Old  Man's  Funeral,  The.     (SeZ.)- W:  C.  Bryant.— EPs 
Old  Man's  Idyl,  An.— R:  Realf.— AA— CS  28— GP 
Old  Man's  Laughing  Song.     (W.  mtis. — in  A  Gay  Old 

Man  Am  I.)— Alfred  B.  Sedgwick.— DSS 
Old  Man's  Prayer,  The. — Jean  Ingelow.     See  Brothers 

and  a  Sermon. 
Old  Man's  Ship  Comes  Home,  The. — H.  H.  Brown. — 

WR24 
Old  Man's  Song,  An. — R:  Le  Gallienne. — VA 
Old  Man's  Story,  An.— Milton  Thompson. — CS  29 
Old  Man's  Vigil,  The.— Theron  Brown.     See  Old  Wife, 

The. 
Old  Market-woman,  The. — Anon. — OS  1 

(Nursery  Rhymes,  III.)— CGd 
Old  Maxims:     "Hoe    your    own     row."     (C.) — Alice 

Cary.— BLF 
("Hoe  your  own  Row.")— CPL— TFS  {.br.  sel.) 
Old  May  Day.— Anon.— BVC 
Old  Methodist's  Testimony,  The.— Anon.— CS  24 
Old  Mill,  The.— T:  D.  English.— AA 
Old  Minstrel,  The.— Anon.— CS  34 
Old  Mirror,  The.— Sarah  H.  Whitman.— HBP 
Old  Mortality,    Sel.    fr.       (Answer  —  motto    fr.    Ch. 

XXXIV.)— Walter  Hcott.— OB 
(Sound,  Sound  the  Clarion.)— YBF 
Old  Mountain  Tree,  The.     {W.  mus.) — Anon. — AD 
Old  Navy.  The.— Frd'k  Marryat.— LH 

(Captain  Stood  on  the  Carronade,  The.) — BVC 
Old  Oaken    Bucket,    The.— S:    Woodworth.— BLP— 

BNL— CS  25— FEP— GP— LLC— OS  1— PPSr 

PYO— SM— TAV— WCLG  1 
(Bucket,  The.)— A  A— ASL— HBP 
Old  Oaken  Bucket,  The.— Parody. — Anon. — CRR 

(Parody— The  Old  Oaken  Bucket.)— CS  2 
"Old,  Old    Song,"    The.  — C:    Kingsley.     See    Water 

Babies,  The. 
Old,  Old,  Story,  The.— Anon.— WR  15 
Old,  Old  Story,  The.— Emma  D.  Banks.— BR 
Old,  Old  Story,  The.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— CS  22— WR  3 
Old  Organ,  The.— Helen  Booth.— CS  29 
Old  Pedhar  Carthy  from  Clonmore. — Patrick  J.  Mc- 

Call.— TIP 
Old  Photograghs.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Old  Pincher.    {SI.  o6r.)— Eliza  Cook.— BVC 
Old  Pine   Box,   The.     (C.)— Frank   L.    Stanton.     See 

»  Ole  Pine  Box,  The. 

Old  Pipe  of  Mine.— J:  J.  Gormley.— PPh 
Old  Poet  to  Sleep,  An.— Walter  S.  Landor. — HBP 
Old  Politician,  The. — Rob't  Buchanan. — HBP 
(Freedom's  Ahead.) — SAE 
(Tom  Dunstan;  or.  The  Politician— C.)— FEP 
Old  Professor,  The.— Anon.— CS  12 
Old  Quarrel,  An. — Frances  C.  Baylor. — WR  5 
Old  Quizzle. — Anon. — HR 
Old  Rat's  Tale,  An.— Anon.— WR  17 
Old  Reading-class  [,  The— C.].— Will  Carleton.— CS  23 
Old  Rhyme,  An.— Rob't  Herrick.— HP 

(To  Electra— C.)— ELP— FTA— OB 
Old  Road,  The.— Jones  Very.— A  A 
Old  Robin.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.— BS  7 
Old  Robin  of  Portingale.     {In  Percy's  Reliques.)  — 

Anon.— PEB  1 
Old  Rome  and  New  Italy,  Sel.  fr.    (Miserere  of  St.  Peter's 

Church  at  Rome.) — Emilio  Castelar. — FS 
Old  Roundsman's  Story,  An. — Marg.  Eytinge. — BS  16 

—HSS  2 
Old  Rye  Makes  a  Speech. — Anon. — See  following. 
Old  Rye's  Speech. — Anon. — DLS 
(Old  Rye  Makes  a  Speech.  )--SD 
(Song  of  the  Corn,  The.)— LPS— PP 


(Song  of  the  Rye— sZ.  abr.)— PS 
Old  St.  David's  at  Radnor.— H:  W.  Longfellow.- 


-FEP 


238 


TITLE  INDEX 


Omnia 


Old  Sampler,  The.— Marg.  E.  Sangster.— CS  13  (.si.  abr.) 

("Elizabeth,  Aged  Nine"— C.)— OS  1 
Old  Santa  has  Struck.- Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Old  Saw,  An.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Old  School  Clock,  The.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— PR— WR  2 
Old  School   Exhibitions,   The. — Frank   L.   Stanton. — 

CS  33  I 

Old  School-house,  The.— Anon.— CS  5— HSS  3 
Old  School-house,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— CS  25 
Old  Schoolmaster,  The.— G:  W.  Bungay.— SR  1 
Old  Scottish  Cavalier,  The.— W:  E.  Aytoun.— GN— LC 
Old  Sedan    Chair,  The. —Austin  Dobson.  —  FEP  — 

WR  1  (si.  abr.) 
Old  Sergeant,  The.  —  Forceythe  Willson.  —  AA   — 

AWB  (si.  abr.)  —  BS6  —  CS15  —  GP  —  HB  — 

MMR— PAP 
Old  Sermon,  The.— Anon.— CS  36 
Old  Sexton,  The.— Park  Benjamin.— AA—GP 

(Sexton,  The.)— CS  8 
Old  Shoes. — Anon.     See  Man  and  his  Shoes,  A. 
Old  Shrines  and  Ivy,  Sel.  fr.     (Field  of  CuUoden,  The.) 

— W:  Winter.— TMR 
Old  Sir  Walter.— G.  W.  Thornbury.— PEB  3 
Old  Slave's  Lament,  The.— Anon. — WR  1 
Old  Soldier  Tramp,  The.— Joaquin  Miller.— CS  23 
Old  Soldier's  Story,  The.— E.  A.  Duncan.— CS  13 
Old  Song.— Anon.— FLS 
Old  Song,  An.— Anon.— HP 
Old  Song.— E:  Fitzgerald.— GN  (sel.)— OB 
Old  Song  Resung,  An.     (Down  by  the  Salley  Gardens 

Q  \ ■^.  g   Yeats. VA 

Old  Song  Reversed,  An. — R:  H.  Stoddard. — AA 

Old  Souls.— T:  G.  Hake.— VA 

Old  South  Meeting-house,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Plea  for  the 

Old  South  Church,  Boston.)— Wendell  Phillips. 

— FD  1— PPS 
"Old  Speckle."— Anon.— LPS— PP 
Old  Speckled  Hen.— Lucy  S.  Ruggles.— TFS 
Old  Squire,  The.— Wilfred  S.  Blunt.— VA 
Old  State  House,  Boston  (Rededicated,  1882),  The.— 

S:A.  Green.— FD2 
Old  State   House,    Boston    (Restored,    1882),    The.— 

W:  H.  Whitmore.— FD  2 
Old  Stoic,  The.— EmUy  Bronte.- VA— WEP  4 
Old  Stone  Basin,  The. — Susan  Coolidge. — PEO 
Old  Story,  The.— Anon.— BS  21 
Old  Story,  An.— Anon.— KNS 
Old  Story,  An.— Anon.— WR  20 
Old  Story,  The.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— GP 
Old  Story,  The.— Alice  Gary.— CS  16 
Old  Story,  Thfe.— J:  O'Hagan.— AVP— HBP— PEB  4 

—TIP 
Old  Story  Over  Again,  The.— Jas.  Henry.— TFY 
Old  Story,  The.     (Scientific  Version.)— Anon.— BS  16 
Old  Street,  An. — Virginia  W.  Cloud. — AA 
Old  Sugar's  Courtship.—  — Robb.— BC 
Old  Surgeon's   Story,    The. — Eleanor   C.    Donnelly. — 

CS17 
Old  Sweet  Song,  The.— Anon.— CS  14 
Old  Sweetheart  of  Mine,  An. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — PPh— 

WR4 
(  SI.  abr.)— BS  16— SR  7 
Old  Sword  on  the  Wall,  The,— Joe  Lincoln.— CCB 
Old  Tennant  Church.— George  W.  Bungay.— CS  29 
Old  Thanksgiving  Days,  The.— Ernest  W.  Shurtleff.— 

PEO 
Old  Thirteen,  The.— C:  T.  Brooks.— CS  17 
Old  Thought,  An.— C.  H.  Luders.- AA 
Old  Time  and  I.— Mark  Lemon.— HP 
Old  Time  Bells,  The.— Ar  on.— HS 
Old  Time  Lovers.     (Tab.)- E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— 

YFE 
Old  Time  Plays.     (Motion  sonn.) — E.   C.   and   L.   J. 

Rook.— YFE 
Old  Times.— Anon.— GP 

Old  Times  and  New.— A.  C.  Spooner.- CS  4— SA 
Old  Tramp,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Old  Tree,  The.— Anon.— AD 
Old  Tubal  Cain.— C:  Mackay.— LLC— PPSr 
(Tubal  Cain.)— BLP  (abr.)- BNL— CS  2 
Old  Tyme  Tayle.— Jack  Bennet.     See  Ye  Old  Tyme 

Tayle,  etc. 
Old  Valentine,  An. — G:  Birdseye. — PR 
Old  Village  Choir,  The.     (C.)— B:  F.  Taylor.— SR  2 

(Old-fashioned  Choir,  The.)— TAV 
Old  Violin,  The.— Maurice  F.  Egan.— AA 
Old  Violin  The.— Mary  Stewart.— CS  36 
Old  Vote  for  "Young  Master,"  An. — Eva  M.  De  Jar- 

nette.— BS  21 
Old  Ways  and  the  New,  The.— J :  H.  Yates.— CS  10— 

HSS  2 
Old  Wife,  The.— Theron  Brown.— BS  22— CS  35— PR 
(Old  Man's  Vigil,  The.)— NPS— YP 


Old  Wife's  Kiss,  The.— Anon.— CS  9 

Old  Wine  in  New  Bottles.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.- SYS 

Old  Winter.— T:  Noel.— BVC— GN 

Old  Winter,  Esquire.— Alfred  M.  Lynes.— PP— YPS 

Old  Wives'  Tale,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Harvesters'  Song,  The.) 

— G:  Peele.— EP 
(Harvestmen  a-Singing.) — ELP 
Old  Woman's  Complaint,  An. — R.  L.  Roys. — CS  24 
Old  Woman's  Love  Story.— Anon. — CD 
Old  Woman's  Railway  Signal,  The. — Elihu  Burritt. — 

CS  12— DS 
Old  Wood,  The.— Hugh  Kelso.— AD 
Old  World  and  the  New,  The.— G :  Berkeley.     See  On 

the  Prospect  of  Planting  Arts  and  Learning  in 

America. 
Old  Yankee  Farmer,  The.— Anon.— BS  1— CS  5 
Old  Year,  The.— Violet  Fuller.— HS 
Old  Year,  The.     (Little  Corpora?. )—SSS 
Old  Year  and   the   New,  Tne. — Josephine   Pollard. — 

BSll 
Old  Year  and  the  New,  The.— Eben  E.  Rexford.— BS  10 
Old  Year  and  the  New,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

In  Memoriam. 
Old  Year  out  and  the  New  Year  in,  The.    (W.  mus.) — 

Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Olden  Love-making. — Nicholas  Breton. — EP 
Olden  Times,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Oldest  Story,  The.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— OH 
Oldest  Woman  on  Record,  The. — Anon. — DSS 
Old-fashioned    Choir,   The.— B:   F.   Taylor.     See   Old 

Village  Choir,  The. 
Old-fashioned  District  School,  The.     (Ent.) — Anon. — 

EuE 
Old-fashioned  Flowers. — Ethel  Lynn. — AD 
Old-fashioned  Fourth,  An.     (Play.) — Anon. — EuE 
Old-fashioned  Garden,  Sel.  fr. — J:  R.  Hayes. — AA 
Old-fashioned  Garden,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Old-fashioned  Lesson,  An.^ — Anon. — YBT 
Old-fashioned  Mother,  The.— Anon.— SR  2 
Old-fashioned  Roses. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — WR  2 
Old-fashioned    Sea-fight,    An. — Walt    Whitman.     See 

Song  of  Myself. 
Old-school  Punishment.— Anon. — BNL— CS  19 
Old-time  Breakdown,    An. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

—KER 
Old-time  Negro,  An.— C:  H:  Smith.— Bill  Arp.— WR  15 
Old-time  Sleigh-ride,  The.— Anon.— CS  20 
Ole  Bull's  Christmas. — Wallace  Bruce. — WR  22 
"Ole  Marster's"   Christmas,  The. — Sam   W.   Small. — 

CD— CRR 
Ole  Mistis.     (Abr.)— J:  T.  Moore.— BS  26 
Ole  [Old— C]  Pine  Box,  The.     (Abr.)— Frank  L.  Stan- 
ton.—WR  21 
Ole  Settlers'  Meetun. — R:  L.  Dawson.— DCR 
O'Lincohi  Family,  The.— Wilson  Flagg.— MYF 

(SI.  obr.)— BNL— SN 
Olive  Tree,  The. — Sabine  Baring-Gould.— GN 
Olive  Tree,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — AD 
Olive  Trees  of  Palestine. — (Hours  at  Home.) — AD 
Oliver  Cromwell. — J:  Dryden.     See   Poem    upon    the 

Death  of  his  Late  Highness,  etc. 
Oliver   P.  Morton,  Br.  sel.  fr.     ("Strong   men  have 

strong  convictions.")— Jas.  A.  Garfield — GG 
Oliver  Twist,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 

Courtship  of  Mr.  Bumble  and  Mrs.  Corney,  The. 

(Ad.    fr.    Chs.    XXIII.,    XXIV.,    XXVII.)— 

WR25 
(Mr.  Bumble  and  Mrs.  Corney — abr.) — MPD 
Death  of  Bill  Sykes  ^ikes— C],  The.     (Ch.  L.— 

cond.  )—CS  28— NP 
Murder    of    Nancy    Sikes,    The.       (Ch.    XLVIL— 

cond.  )—BS  24 
(Murder  of  Nancy,  The— seZ.)- VSG 
Oliver  Wendell  Holmes.— W :  H.  Hayne.— EDY 
Oliver's  Advice,  Sel.  fr. — Valentine  Blacker. — BNL 
Olive's  Advice. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Olivia.— E:  PoUock.— AA 

Olivia. — W:  Shakespeare.   •  See  Twelfth  Night. 
Olivia.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Talking  Oak.)— Alfred  Tennyson. 

— GN 
Olrig Grange,  Sel.fr.    (Daughters  of  Philistia.) — Walter 

C.  Smith.— VA 
Olympic  Crown,  The. — E :  Bulwer-Lytton.  See  Athens; 

its  Rise  and  Fall. 
Om.— G:  W.  RusseU.— VA 
Omar  and  the  Persian. ^Sarah  Williams. — VA 
Omar  Khayyam,  Sel.  fr.—E:  Fitzgerald.     See  Rubai- 

yat.     Omar  Khayytlm. 
Omen,  The.     ( Wrinkle.)— CG  3 

Omnes  eodem  Cogimur. — Rob't  Blair.     See  Grave,  The. 
Omnia  Vincit. — Anon. — PGT  1 
(Devotion.) — OB 
(In  Laudem  Amoris.) — ELP 


239 


Omnipotence 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Omnipotence  of  Jehovah.     Bible.     See  Job. 
Omnipotent,    The. — Walter    Scott.     See    Antiquary, 

The. 
Omnipresence.     (Under    Laurels    and    Maples — C.) — 

E:E.  Hale.— HDL 

On .— T:  Moore.— HPE 

On  a  Bad  Singer.     (C.) — S :  T.  Coleridge. 
(Epigram  on  a  Bad  Singer.) — FEP 
(Epigrams. ) — BNL 
On  a  Bank  as  1  Sat  a-Fishing.     (C — in  Walton's  Com- 

pleat  Angler.)— H :  Wotton.— EP 
(Spring  Idyll.  A.)— CEL 
On  a  Beautiful  Day. — J :  Sterling. — BNL 
On  a  Birthday.     (Lord  Aberdare's.) — Sir  Lewis  Morris. 

— AVP 
On   a   Blank   Leaf   of   Dugdale's  "Monasticon." — T: 

Warton.- FEP 
(Sonnet — Written  in  a  Blank   Leaf  of  Dugdale's 

"Monasticon"— C.)—WEP  3 
On  a  Boy's  First  Reading  of  King  Henry  V. — S.  Weir 

Mitchell. — AA 
On  a  Bust  of  Dante. — T:  W.  Parsons.  —  AA  —  ASL  — 

BNL— FEP— HBP— PYO  (a6r. )—TAV 
(Bust  of  Dante.)— FP 
On  a  Candle.     {Riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  a  Cannon.     (Riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  a  Caricature. — T:  Sheridan. — HPE 
On  a  Carrier  who  died  of  Drunkenness.     (Epitaph  on 

John  Adams,  of  Southwell,  a  Carrier,  etc. — C.) 

—Lord  Byron.— HPE 
On  a  Cast  from  an  Antique. — G:  Pellew. — AA 
On  a  Cat  Killed  while  Attempting  to  Rob  a  Dove-cote. 

—Anon.— OS  2 
On  a  Celebrated   Ruling   Elder.     (Epitaph   on  a  Cele- 
brated   Ruling    Elder.— C.) — Rob't    Burns. — 

HPE 
On  a  Certain  Lady  at  Court. — Alex.  Pope.— OB 
On  a  Circle.     (Riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  a  Clock. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — BIL 
On  a  Club  of  Sots.     (Epigram  on  a  Club  of  Sots — C.) 

—S:  Butler.— HPE 
On  a  Contented  Mind. — Thomas,  Lord  Vaux. — FEP 
On  a  Corkscrew.     (Riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  a  Cyclamen,  Plucked  at  Cana  of  Galilee,  and  Pre- 
sented to  a  Bride. — Edwin  Arnold. — BIL 
On  a  Day,    alack    the    Day. — W:    Shakespeare.     See 

Love's  Labour's  Lost 
On  a  Dead  Child.— Rob't  Bridges.— OB 
On  a  Dead  Poet. — Frances  S.  Osgood. — AA 
On  a   Distant  Prospect  of   Eton  College.     (C.)  —  T: 

Gray.— BNL  (br.  «ete.)— MBL 
(EtonCoUege.)— EPs 
(Ode  on  a  Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College.) — 

PGT  1— PHS— WEP  3 
On  a  Fan.     (C. — riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. 

(Fan,  A.)— HPE 
On  a  Fan  that  Belonged  to  Marquise  de  Pompadour. 

(O— Austin  Dobson.— BNL — VA 
(Pompadour's  Fan,  The.)— PYO 
"On  a  far  shore  my  land  swam  far  from  my  sight." — 

Anon.— GG 
On  a  Favourite  Cat,  Drowned  in  a  Tub  of  Gold  Fishes. 

— -T :  Gray.     See  On  the  Death  of  a  Favourite 

Cat,  Drowned,  etc. 
On  a  Ferry  Boat. — Richard  Burton. — AA 
On  a  Fly  Drinking  out  of  his  Cup. — W:  Oldys. — OB 
("Busy,  curious,  thirsty  fly.") — FEP 
(Fly,  The.)— CEL— HBP 
(To  a  Fly.)— LC 
On  a  Fly-leaf  of  a  Book  of  Old  Plays. — Walter  Learned. 

— TAV 
(On  the  Fly-leaf,  etc.)— LBB— MBB 
On  a  Forgotten  By-way. — A.  E.  Watrous. — TAV 
On  a  Full-length  Portrait  of  Beau  Marsh. — Philip  D. 

Stanhope,  Earl  of  Chesterfield.— HPE 
On  a  Girdle.     (C.)— Edmund  Waller.—  BNL  —  ELP 

—  EPS  (abr.)  —  ES  —  FEP  —  FTA  —  OB  — 

OEL— PGT  1— PYO  —WEP  2— YBF 
(Girdle,  A.)— GP 
On  a  Grave  at  Grindelwald. — F:  W.  H.  Myers. — VA 
On  a  Giave  in  Christ-Church,  Hants. — Oscar  F.  Adams. 

^A. 

On  a  Great  Man  whose  Mind  is  Clouding. —  Edmund  C. 

Stedman. — AA 
On  a  Grecian  Urn. — J :  Keats.     See  Ode  on  a  Grecian 

Urn. 
On  a  Greek  Vase. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — AA 
On  a  Hundred  Years  Hence. — W:  M.  Thackeray. — 

ESs 
On  a  Lady  Singing.— T:  W.  Parsons.— HBP 
On  a  Lap-dog.— J:  Gay.— HPE 
On  a  Lute  Found  in  a  Sarcophagus. — Edmund  Gosse. 

— VA 


On  a  Magazine  Sonnet. — Russell  H.  Loines. — AA 

On  a  Miniature. — H:  A.  Beers. — AA 

On  a  Motion  to  Censure  the  Ministry.  (Set.  fr.  Parlia- 
mentary Speech  of  Feb.  21,  1783,  on  American 
Peace. )— W :  Pitt.— SS 

On  a  Noted  Coxcomb. — Rob't  Burns.  See  On  a  Scotch 
Coxcomb. 

On  a  Painted  Lady  with  111  Te^th.  (Epigram  on  a 
Painted  Lady  with  .  Ill  Teeth,  An— C.)— Ed- 
mund Waller.— HPE 

On  a  Pair  of  Dice.     (Riddle.)— Jon&th&n  Swift. — HPE 

On  a  Pale  Lady  with  a  Red-nosed  Husband. — Anon. — 
HPE 

On  a  Pen.     (fttrfdie. )— Jonathan  Swift.— HPE 

On  a  Pet  Cat.— G:  A.  Persell.— CG  3 

On  a  Photograph.— R.  Wilton.— PGT  2 

On  a  Picture. — Anne  C.  Lynch  Botta. — BNL 

On  a  Picture  of  Leander. — J:  Keats. — WEP  4 

On  a  Picture  of  Peel  Castle  in  a  Storm. — W:  Words- 
worth.— HBP  (si.  abr.) 
(Elegiac  Stanzas.  Suggested  W  a  Picture  of  Peele 

Castle  in  a  Storm.— C.)— FEP  (si.  abr.) 
(Nature  and  the  Poet.)— PGT  1 

On  a  Piece  of  Tapestry. — G :  Santayana. — A  A 

On  a  Portrait  of  Columbus.— G:  E.  Woodberry.— AA 

On  a  Portrait  of  Servetus.— R:  W.  Gilder.— ED Y 

On  a  Portrait  of  Wordsworth  by  B.  R.  Haydon. — Eliz. 
B.  Browning. — BNL 

On  a  Prayer-book  Sent  to  Mrs.  M.  R. — R:  Crashaw. — 
FEP— HBP  ,    .  , 

On  a  Reader  of  his  Own  Verse.- (C.)— S:  T.  Coleridge. 
(Epigram:     "Hoarse   Mtevius   reads   his   hobbling 
verse.") — BNL 

On  a  Recent  Classic  Controversy.  (Two  Poems.) — J: 
G.  Saxe.— HPE 

On  a  Rejected  Nosegay.     (Punch.) — HPE 

On  a  Scotch  Coxcomb.  (On  a  Noted  Coxcomb — C.) — 
Rob't  Burns.— HPE  ,      .      ^ 

On  a  Sermon  against  Glory.  (Ode  XVII.— On  a  Ser- 
mon, etc. — C.) — Mark  Akenside. — HBP 

On  a  Shadow  in  a  Glass,  (fltddie— abr.)- Jonathan 
Swift.— HPE  ,^  ^.  ^       „, 

On  a  Spaniel  CaUed  "Beau"  Killing  a  Young  Bird.— W : 
Cowper.— BPB— LC— PoR 

On  a  Sprig  of  Heath.— Anne  Gr  nt.— FEP 

OnaSquintingPoetess.—T:  Moore.— HPE 

On  a  Stone  Thrown  at  a  Very  Great  Man. — J:  Wolcott. 
—HPE 

On  a  Suicide.— Rob't  Bums.— HPE 

On  a  Summer's  Eve. — G. — CG  1 

On  a  Tear.     ( C. )— S :  Rogers.— FP 

(Tear,  A.)— BNL  .„.,,. 

On  a  Tear  which  Angelina  Observed  Trickling  down 
my  Nose  at  Dinner  Time.  (Stanzas  for  the 
Sentimental,  I.)     (Punch.)— HFE  . 

On  a  Thrush  Singing  in  Autumn. — Sir  Lewis  Morris. — 
VA 

On  a  Tobacco  Jar. — Bernard  Barker. — PPh 

On  a  Traveling  Speculator. — Philip  Freneau. — AA 

On  a  Tuft-hunter.  (Epitaph  on  a  Tuft-hunter. — C.) — 
T:  Moore.— HPE 

On  a  Usurer.  (Epitaph  on  Demar  the  Usurer. — C.) — 
Jonathan  Swift.— HPE  •    ,    o    j 

On  a  Virtuous  Yoimg  Gentlewoman  that  Died  Sud- 
denly.—W:  Cartwright.— OB  (abr.)— WEV  2 

On  a  Wag  in  Mauchline.  (Epitaph  on  a  Wag  in 
Mauchline.—C.)— Rob't  Burns.— HPE 

On  a  Young  Poetess's  Grave. — Rob't  Buchanan. — 
VA 

On  Afric's  Golden  Sands.  (University  Herald.) — 
CG2 

On  Altering  the  Virginia  Constitution. — J:  Randolph. 
— SS 

On  American  Industry.     (SeJ.)- H:  Clay.— EAO 

On  American  Taxation. — Edmund  Burke.  See  Speech 
on  American  Taxation. 

On  an  Artist.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 

(Actor,  An.)— THP  .  ,„  ,   ,     „ 

On  an  Attempt  to  Coerce  him  to  Resign.  (Set.  fr.  Par- 
liamentary Speech,  Feb.  20th,  1784.)— W:  Pitt. 
— SS 

On  an  Ill-read  Lawyer. — J:  G.  Saxe. — HPE 

On  an  Infant  Dying  as  Soon  as  Bom. — C:  Lamb. — FEP 
—OB— PGT  1— WEP  4 

On  an  Inscription. — Arthur  J.  Munby. — LBB — MBB 

On  an  Intaglio   Head  of  Minerva. — T:  B.   Aldrich. — 
ASL— BNL  (abr.  and  si.  diff. )—FEF 

On  an  Old  Muff. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson. —  BNL  (si. 
diff.  uiordrnff.)- THP— VA 

OnanOldSong.— W:H.  Lecky.— AVP 

On  an  Ugly  Person  Sitting  for  a  Daguerreotype. — J:  G. 
Saxe.— HPE 


240 


TITLE  INDEX 


On  Lord  Bacon's 


On  an  Urn.— R:  Garnett. — VA 

On  Anacreon.     (Antipater,  the   Sidonian,  to  Anacreon 

— C.)— Antipater  of  3idon  (paraphrase  of  T: 

Moore).— HBP 
On  Andrew  Turner. — Rob't  Burns.— HPE 
On  Another's  Sorrow. — (In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W: 

Blake.— FEP— HBP— PC 

On Asleep.     (C) — S:  Rogers. 

(Sleeping  Beauty,  A  [or  The].)  —  BNL  —  FTA — 

PGT  1— YBF 
On  Babies.     (Abr.) — Jerome  K.  Jerome. — HBR 

(Babies.)— BS  21 
On  Banks   [Banck — C]   the    Usurer. — Ben   Jonson. — 

HPE 
On  Barclay's  Apology  for  the  Quakers.     (Abr.) — Mat- 
thew Green.— WEP  3 
On  Behalf  of  the  People  of  Boston,  in  Support  of  the 

Memorial  of  December  18,  1765. — J:  Adams. — 

EAO 
On  being    Found    Guilty    of    High    Treason. —  Rob't 

Emmet.— PS— SS 
Extract  from  the  Last  Speech  of  Robert  Emmet. 

(Sel.)—B8  1 
Last  Speech.     (Sel.)—FD1 
Speech  in  his  own  Defence.     (Sel.) — OS  2 
Speech  of  Vindication.     (Sel.)—CS  8— FTR  (abr.) 

— OM 
(All  sels.  ptly.  alike). 
On  being  Found  Guilty  of  Treason. — T:  F.  Meagher. — 

CSS 
(Meagher's  Defence.) — SC 
On  being  Obliged  to  Leave  a  Pleasant  Party.      (Im- 
promptu:     Upon  being  Obliged,  etc. — C.) — T: 

Moore.- HPE 
(Upon  being  Obliged,  etc.)— THP 
On  being  Suspected  of   Receiving  Overtures  from  the 

Court,  May  22,   1790.  — Honors  de  Mirabeau. 

— SS— SSD 
On  Bishop    Atterburv.     (Epigram    on    Bishop    Atter- 

bury—C.)— Matthew  Prior.— HPE 
On  Board  the  Cumberland,  March  7,  1862.     (C.)— G: 

H.  Boker.- AWB— CS  1— WR  10 
(Attack  of  the  "Cumberland.") — SA 
On  Board  the  Victory.— Ednah  Robinson. — WR  22 
On  Burning  a  Dull  Poem. — .Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  Butler'sMonument.—S:  Wesley.— HPE 
On  Calais  Sands.— Andrew  Lang. — VA 
On  Captain  Barney's  Victory  over  the  Ship  General 

Monk.— PhUip  Freneau.— EDY 
On  Captain  Grose's  [On  the  Late  Captain  Grose's — C] 

Peregrinations  through  Scotland,  Br.  sel.  fr.— 

Burns.— BNL 
On  Captain  Matthew  Henderson.     (C.) — Rob't  Burns. 
(Elegy    on     Captain      Matthew      Henderson.)  — 

BNL  (a6r.)— FEP— HBP  (si.  abr.) 
(He's  Ga,ne— sel.)— EFs 
On  Catullus.— Walter  S.  Landor.— OB 
On  Certain  Books. — C:     Tennyson-Turner.  —  LBB  — 

MBB 
On  Charges  against  Roman  Catholics. — (Sel.   fr.  The 

Catholics  of  Ireland.)- R:  L.  Shell.— SS 
On  Chev'ril  the  Lawyer. — Ben  Jonson. — HPE 
On  Chloris  Walking  in    the   Snow. — Anon.    (at.  to  T : 

Carew  and  to  Rob't  Herrick). — ES 
(Chloris  in  the  Snow.)— OB— OEL 
On  Conquering  America. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. 

See  American  War,  The. 
On  Courting.     (C. )— H :  W.  Shaw. 

(Josh  Billings  on    Courting — longer    than    present 

vers.)— CS  1 
On  Court-worm. — Ben  Jonson. — WEP  2 
On  Crutches.— W:  R.  Rose.— WR  24 
On  Dean  Swift's  Proposed  Hospital  for  Lunatics. — T. 

Sheridan.— HPE 
On  Dogs  and  Cats. — Alex.  Dumas. — MRS 
On  Dr.  Hill's  Farce.— D :  Garrick.-FEF 
On  Dr.  Johnson.— J:  Wolcott.— EDY 

(Lines  on  Dr.  Johnson.) — THP 
On  Don  Surly. — Ben  Jonson. — ESs 
On  Dorilis.- Gotthold  E.  Lessing.— HPE 
On  Durer's  "Melencolia." — W:  Watson. — VA         '■; 
On  Elizabeth  L.  H. — Ben  Jonson. — OB 
(Epitaph.)— EPs 
(Epitaph  on  Elizabeth  L.  H.—C.)  —  BNL  —  FEP 

—HBP— WEP  2 
On  Eloquence. — W:  C.  Preston.      See  Eloquence  and 

Logic. 
On  Factotum  Ned.     (Fragment  of  a  Character — C.) — 

T:  Moore.— HPE 
On  Fame.— J:  Keats.— YBF 
On  Fell.— Gotthold  E.  Lessing.— HPE 
On  First  Entering  Westminster  Abbey.     (London,  I.) 

— Louise  I.  Guiney. — AA 


On  First  Looking  into  Chapman's  Homer.     (C.) — J: 
Keats.-  BFV  —  BNL  (br.  sel.)  —  BPB  — 
BSP  —  CEL  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  — 
LLC— OB— PGT  1— WEP  4— YBF 
(Sonnet:     On  First  Looking,. etc.) — OS  3 
(To  the  Adventurous.) — LH 
On  Frequent  Executions. — Sir  W.  Meredith. — SS 
On  Friendship. — W :  Cowper.     See  Friendship. 
On  General  Wolfe.— Anon.— EDY 
On  George  the  Third's  Patronage  of  Benjamin  West. 

(Two  epigrams.) — P:  Pindar. — HPE 
On  Government. — Alex.  Hamilton.     See  General  Gov- 
ernment and  the  States,  The. 
On  Government   Extravagance. — J :  J.  Crittenden  — 

SS 
On  Grandpapa's  Kne«.— T.  W.  Handford. — TFS 
On  Great  Sugarloaf.- G.  A.  Greene.- TIP 
On    Grizzel     Grim    FGrimme — CI. — Rob't     Burns.  — 

HPE 
On  Happiness  of  Temper,  Sel.  fr.     (Miser  and  his  Three 

Sons,  The.)— Oliver  Goldsmith.— OS  1 
On  Heights  of  Power. — Frances  E.  Willard. — WR  18 
On  her  Dancing. — Jas.  Shirley. — ES 
On  Heroes  and  Hero  Worship,  Sels.  fr. — T:  Carlyle. 
"Heroes  have  gone  out,  quacks   have  come  in." 

(Sel.  fr.  The  Hero  as  Man  of  Letters.)— GG 
"I  call  that  [the  Book  of  Job]  aside  from  all  theories 
about  it,"  etc.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Hero  as  Prophet.) 
— GG 
Mohammed.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Hero  as  Prophet.) — 

FS 
"Musical!  how  much  lies  in  that."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The 

Hero  as  Poet.  )—GG 
Nature.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Hero  as  Divinity.) — FS 
On  Himself.— Rob't  Herrick.— YBF 
On  Himself.      (In  The  Last  Fruit  off  an  Old  Tree.)— 
Walter  S.  Landor.— V A— WEP  4— YBF 
(Finis.)— OB 

(On  his  Seventy-fifth  Birthday.)— A VP 
On  Himself. — Jas.  R.  LoweU.     See  Fable  for  Critics,  A. 
On  his  being  Arrived  at  [or  to]  the  Age  of  Twenty-three. 
(O— J:  Milton.— EDY— EPs— FEP— HBP— 
WEP  2— YBF 
On  his  Blindness.     (C.)— J:  Milton.— BNL  — CEL  — 
ED  Y— FEP—  GN— HBP—  HDL  — LH—  LLC 
—OB— OS  3— PGT  1— PHS— WEP  2— WR  1 
—YBF 
(Blindness.)— GP 

(Sonnet:  On  his  Blindness.) — ELP — EPs 
On  his  Deceased  Wife. — J:  Milton. — OB— YBF 
On  his  Divine  Poems. — Edmund  Waller.    See  On  the 

Foregoing  Divine  Poems. 
On  his  Friends. — Meskin  Aldaramy. — OS  3 
On  his  Majesty's  Recovery  from  the  Small-pox. —  W : 

Cartwright.— WEP  2 
On  his  Marriage  to  Mary  Godwin.     (Sel.  fr.  To  Mary 
Wollstonecraft  Godwin.) — Percy  B.  Shellev.— 
EDY 
On  his   Mistress,   the   Queen   of   Bohemia.     (C.) — H: 
Wotton.— ELP— WEP  2 
(Elizabeth  of  Bohemia.)  —  BPB  —  EPs  —  OB  — 

PGT  1— YBF 
(To  his  Mistress,  Elizabeth.  Queen  of  Bohemia.) — 

BNL 
(To  his  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohemia.) — FEP 
(You  Meaner  Beauties.) — HBP 
On  his  Own  Blindness. — J:  Milton. — BNL — YBF 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 
(To  Cyriack  Skinner— C.)— FEP 
("These  eyes,  though  clear — sel.) — HDL 
On  his  Return  from  Spain.— T:  Wyatt. — WEP  1 
On  his    Seventy-fifth    Birthday. — Walter    S.    Landor. 

See  On  Himself. 
On  his  "Sonnets  of  the  Wingless  Hours." — Eugene  Lee- 
Hamilton. — VA 
On  Holy  Willie.     (C. )— Rob't  Burns. 

(Epitaph  on  Holy  Willie— aZso  C.)— ESs— HPE 
On  Homeward  Wing. — -Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
On  Ink.     (i2irfdZe.)—Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  John  Dove.— Rob't  Bums. — HPE 
On  Kingston  Bridge. — Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — AA 
On  Laurence  Sterne. — Anon. — EDY 
On  Lebanon. — D :  Gray. — AA 
On  Lending  a  Punch  Bowl. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — AA 

— FP— TAV 
On  Liberty,  Sel.  fr.     (Liberty  in  Government. — Sel.  fr. 

Ch.  V.)— J:  S.  MiU.— OS  3 
On  Limiting   the  Hours  of  Labor,  1846. — T:  B.  Ma- 

caulay.     See  Ten  Hours  Bill,  The. 
On     Living     Too     Long.      (Poems     and     Epigrams, 

CXCVIII.)— Walters.  Landor.— VA 
On  Lord  Bacon's  Birthday.     (Lord  Bacon's  Birthday 
— C.)— Ben  Jonson.— EDY 


241 


On  Lord  Dudley         AN  INDEX.  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


On  Lord  Dudley  and  Ward.— S:  Rogers.— HPE 

On  Love. — Sir  Rob't  Ayton.— BNL 

On  Lucretia  Borgia's  Hair. — Walter  S.  Landor.     See 

On  Seeing  a  Hair  of  Lucretia  Borgia. 
On  Lucy,  Countess  of  Bedford. — Ben  Jonson. — EPs — 

FEP— WEP« 
On  May  Morning — J:  Milton. — CGd — LC 

(May  Morning.)  —  AD  —  BNL  —  GEL  —  YBF 
(Song:     A  May  Morning.) — POS 
(Song  on  May  Morning  — C.)  —  ELP  —  FEP  —  GN 
—HBP— OS  2— PYO— SE 
On  Melancholy. — Rob't  Burton. — CEL 
On    Milton's     Paradise     Lost.  —  Andrew     Marvell. — 

WEP2 
On  Mr.    Caudle's    SJyjt-buttons.     (C.) — Douglas    Jer- 
rold. 
(Mrs.  Caudle's  Lecture  [on  Shirt  Buttons].) — BS  1 — 
CS2 
On  Mr.  Clay's  Resolutions. — Dan'l  Webster.    See  Con- 
stitution and  the  Union,  The. 
On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution  in  the  United  States  Senate, 
Jan.  21,  1830,  Sels.  /r.— Rob't  Y.  Hayne. 
On  Mr.  Webster's  Defence  of  New  England. — SS 

(Reply  to  Mr.  Webster.)— PS 
South  Carolina  and  the  Union. — TMD 

(South  Carolina  [in  the  Revolution] — al.  abr.) — 

CR— SSD 
(South  during  [or  in]  the  Revolution  [The] — si. 
n6r.)— KNE— OM— SO— SS— WR  10 
South  during  the  War  of  1812,  The.— PS— SS 
On  Mr.    Tiemey's   Motion,    December    11,    1798. — G: 

Canning. — PS — SS 
On  Mr.  Webster's  Defence  of  New  England.— Rob't  Y. 

Hayne.     See  On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution,  etc. 
On  Mrs.  Tofts  \.a.  Famous  Opera  Singer — C.]. — Alex. 

Pope.— HPE 
OnMitford's  History  of  Greece,  Sels.  fr. — T:  B.  Ma- 
caulay. 
Courtesies  of  War. — HSS  1 
Influence  of  Athens,  The.— OS  3 
On  Music. — Walter  S.  Landor.— VA 
On  Music— T:  Moore.— TIP 

(Pleasures  of  Memory — sel.) — FP 
On  my  Birthday,  July  21. — Matthew  Prior. — OB 
On  my  Dear  Son  [Deare  Sonne — C],  Gervase  Beau- 
mont.— Fs.  Beaumont. — FEP 
(Of  his  Dear  Son,  Gervase — br.  sel.) — OB 
(Of  my  Dear  Son,  Gervase  Beaumont.) — YBF 
On  my  Finding  Angelina  Stop  Suddenly  in  a  Rapid 
After-supper  Polka. — (Stanzas  for  the  Senti- 
mental, in.)— (Punc/i.)- HPE 
On  my  Joyful  Departure  from  the  same  City  [Cologne].) 
—S:  T.Coleridge. 
(Expectoration,  An.) — HPE 
On  my  Refusing  Angelina  a  Kiss  imder  the  Mistletoe. 
(Stanzas  for  the  Sentimental,  II.)     {Punch.) — 
HPE 
On  my  Thirty-seventh  Birthday. — Lord   Byron.     See 
On  this  Day  I  Complete  my  Thirty-sixth  Year. 
On  National  Character.     (Sel.  fr.  The  First  Battles  of 
the  Revolutionary  War.) — E:  Everett.— SSD 
(Our  National  Character.) — FD  1 
On  Observing  a  Vulgar   Name   on  the   Plinth  of  an 

Ancient  Statue. — Walter  S.  Landor. — HPE 
On,  On,  Forever. — Harriet  Martineau.— VA 

("Beneath  this  starry  arch" — br.  sel.) — GG 
On  one    Delacourt's    Complimenting    Carthy    on    his 
Poetry.     (In     Epigrams     against     Carthy.) — 
Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  One  who  Died  Discovering  her  Kindness. —  J:  Shef- 
field.—OB 
On  One  who  Died  in  May. — Clarence  C.  Cook. — AA 
On  Overtures  of  Peace  from  Napoleon. — C:  J.  Fox. — 
SSD 
(Partition  of  Poland,  The,  1800.)— OM— PS— SS 
On  Parliamentary  Innovations. — H:  (?)  Beaufoy. — SS 
On  Parliamentary  Reform. — Lord  J:  Russell. — SS 
On  Parting.     (C.) — Lord  Byron. 

(Kiss,  Dear  Maid,  The.)— BNL 
On  Parting  with  his  Books. — W:  Roscoe. — FEP 

(To  my  Books  on  Parting  with  them.) — LBB — 
MBB 
On  Phillis'  Sickness.— T:  Lodge.— EP 

(Phillis'  Sickness.)— WEP  1 
On  Precedents  in  Government. — Lewis  Cass. — SS 
On  Procrastination.— E:  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

On  Reading .— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 

On  Reading  a  Poet's  First  Book. — H:  C.  Bimner. — AA 
On  Receipt  of  a  Rare  Pipe.— W.  H.  B.— PPh 
On  Receiving  a  White  Pink. — "Viola." — FLS 
On  Receiving  the  Master's  Degree  from  Harvard.  — 
Booker  T.  Washington. — SC 
(Address  at  the  Harvard  Alumni  Dinner.") — MRS 


On  Recognizing  the  Independence  of  Greece. — H :  Clay. 

See  On  the  Greek  Revolution. 
On  Reducing  the  Army. — W:  Pulteney. — SS 
On    Returnmg   a    Copy    of    Halleck's    Poems. — Eliz. 

M.  Chandler —^EP 
On  Revisiting  the  Banks  of  the  Wye. — W :  Wordsworth. 

—HBP 
(Lines  Composed  a  Few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey, 

on  Revisiting,  etc.— O— WEP  4 
(Lines  Composed  near  Tintern  Abbey.) — FEP 
(Tintern  Abbey.)— BNL 

(Sel. )— EPs— LLC— SN 
(Varying  Impressions  of  Nature — sel.) — GP 
On  Revisiting  the  River  Loddon. — T:  Warton. — FEP 

(To  the  River  Lodon— C.)— WEP  3 
On  Rising  with  the   Lark. — C:Lamb.     See  That   wa 

should  Rise  with  the  Lark. 
On  Salathiel  Pavy. — Ben  Jonson. — OB 

(Epitaph  on  Salathiel  Pavy,  a  Child  of  Queen  Eliza- 
beth's Chapel,  An  —C.)  —  FEP  —  WEP  2  — 

YBF 
On  Samuel  Rogers. — Lord  Byron. — HPE 
On  Scotland.— J:  Cleveland.— HPE 
On  Seeing  a  Hair  of  Lucretia  Borgia.     (C.) — Walter  S. 

Landor. 
(On  Lucretia  Borgia's  Hair.)— VA 
On  Seeing   a    Wounded    Hare    Limp    by   Me. — Rob't 

Bums— SN 
On  Seeing  an  Execution.     (Punch.) — HPE 
On  Seeing  the  Busts  of  Newton,  Locke,  and  Others. — 

Jonathan  Swift.— HPE 
On  Seeing  Verses  Written  upon  Windows  at  Inns. — 

Jonathan  Swift.— HPE 
On  Simony. — Jos.  Hall. — ESs 
On  Sir  John  Vanbrugh — Poet  and  Architect. — Dr. 

Evans.— EDY 
On  Sir  Kenelm  Digby.— Anon.— EDY 
On  Sir  Philip  Sidney. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke. — 

EPs 
(Elegy  on  Sir  Philip  Sidney,  An— obr.)— WEP  1 
On  Sir  Philip  Sidney.    (Fr.  An  Elegy  on  a  Friend's 

Passion  for  his  Astrophill.) — -Matthew  Royden. 

See  Sir  Philip  Sidney. 
On  Sivori's  Violin. — Frances  S.  Osgood. — AA 
On  Sleep. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.    See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
On  Snow.     (Riddle.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  Snow-flakes  Melting  on  his  Lady's  Breast. — W:  M. 

Johnson,  — A  A 
On  Solitude. — Abraham  Cowley.     See  Of  Solitude. 
On  Solitude.     (In  Flowers  of  Sion.) — W:  Drummond. 

—ELP 
On  Some  Buttercups. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — AA 
On  Some  Lines  of  Lopez  de  Vega.     (Burlesque  of  the 

Following  Lines  of  Lopez  de  Vega — C.) — S: 

Johnson.— HPE 
On  Some  Roses  Sent  Anonymously. — Anon. — CG  1 
On  Southey's  Death. — Walter  S.  Landor.— WEP  4 
On    Sudden    Political    Conversions.— Dan'l    Webster. 

See  Remarks  on  the  Political  Course  of  Mr. 

Calhoun  in  1838. 
On  Taking  a  Wife.— T:  Moore.— THP 

(Joke  Verified,  A— C.)— FEP— HPE 
On  the  American  Revolution. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chat- 
ham.    See  American  War,  The. 
On  the  American  War. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. 

See  American  War,  The. 
On  the  Art-unions.— T:  Hood. — HPE 
On  the  Assa.ssination  of  Lincoln. — Tom  Taylor.     See 

Abraham  Lincoln. 
On  the  Assassination  of  President  Lincoln. — Jas.   A. 

Garfield.     See  Memory  of  Abraham  Lincoln, 

The. 
On  the  Atchafalaya. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Evan- 
geline. 
On  the  Bank  Veto,  Sel.  fr.  (Public  Virtue.)— H :  Clay.— 

CS  5— KNE 
(Noblest  Public  Virtue,  The— sL  a6r.)— PS— SS— 

TMD 
(Patriotism  Inculcates  Public  Virtue — si.    abr.) — 

SR  8 
(True  Patriotism— seZ.) — SO 
On  the  Beach. — Anon. — WR  3 
On  the  Beach.— W:  Whitehead.— CS  25 
On  the  Beach  at  Calais.     (Miscellaneous  Sonnets.  Pt.  I., 

30.)— W :  Wordsworth.— WEP  4 
(By  the  Sea.)— POT  1— YBF 
(Evening  on  Calais  Beach.) — OB 
(It  is  a  Beauteous  Evening,  Calm  and  Free.) — FEP 

— MBL 
On  the  Birthday  of  Catherine  of  Braganza. — Helen  C.(  ?) 

Knight.- EDY 
On  the  Bluff.— J:  Hay.— BS  18 


242 


TITLE  INDEX 


On  the  Foregoing 


On  the  Borders  of  Cannock  Chase. — Jean  Ingelow. — 

WRl 
On  the  Bridge. — Arthur  R.  Ropes. — VA 
On  the  Brink.— C:  S.  Calverley.— VA— WR  8 
On  the  Calendar. — Anon. — WR  22 
On  the  Campagna. — Eliz.  Stoddard. — A  A 
On  the  Captivity  of  the  Countess  of  Anglesey.     (The 

Countess  of  Anglesey,   Lead  Captive  by  the 

Rebells,  at  the  Disf  orresting  of  Pfewsam —  Song 

— O— Sir  W:  Davenant.— WEP  2 
On  the  Castle  of  Chillon. — Lord  Byron.     See  Prisoner 

of  Chillon,  The. 
On  the  Channel  Boat. — Anon. — CS  19 
On  the  Church's  Danger. — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  the  Civil  War  in  America. — J:  Bright. — OS  3 
On  the  Cliffs,  <Se/.  fr.      (Sappho.) — Algernon  C.  Swin- 
burne.— VA 
On  the  Coast  of  Man. — Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
On  the  Conclusion  of  his  Odes. — J :  Wolcott. — HPE 
On  the  (Coronation  of  Queen  Victoria. — Jedediah  Hunt- 
ington.—EDY 
On  the  Countess    Dowager    of    Pembroke.     {In  Lans- 

downe  MS.) — W:  Browne  {or  Ben  Jonson]. — 

OB 
(Epitaph  on  the  Countess  of  Pembroke — C.) — BFV 

—  BNL  {w.  add.  st.)  —  EDY  —  ELP  —  FEP 

—WEP  2— YBF 
On  the  Death  of . — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Hough- 
ton.—AVP 
On  the    Death    of    a    Favourite  Canary.  —  Matthew 

Arnold.     See  Poor  Matthias. 
On  the  Death  of  a  Favourite  Cat  [, Drowned  in  a  Tub   , 

of  Goldfishes— C.].)—T:    Gray.— HPE— THP 
(On   a   Favourite  Cat,   Drowned,   etc.)  —  BFV  — 

CGd  (si.  abr.)— GN— OB— PGT  1 
On  the  Death  of  a  Friend's  Child,  Br.  sel.  fr.     ("  'Tis 

sorrow  builds  the  shining  ladder  up.") — Jas. 

R.  Lowell.— HDL 
On  the  Death  of  a  Metaphysician. — G:  Santayana. — 

AA 
On  the  Death  of  a  Particular  Friend.     (Sel.  fr.  On  the 

Death  of  Mr.  Aikman.) — Jas.  Thomson. — ^OB 
On  the  Death  of  an  Infant.  —  Dirk  Smits  (<r.  by  H . 

S.  Van  Dyk).— HBP 
(Death  of  an  Infant.) — WCL 
On  the  Death  of  Benjamin  Franklin. — Philip  Freneau. 

—EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Burbage.- T:  Middleton.— EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Burns.— W :  Roscoe.— ED Y— HBP 
On  the  Death  of  Canon  Kingsley. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — 

EDY 
On  the  Death    of    Captain    Nicholas    Biddle. — Philip 

Freneau.— EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Chatterton.     (Sel.  fr.  Monody  on  the 

Death  of  Chatterton — latest  vers.) — S:  T.  Cole- 
ridge.—EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Coleridge.     (C. ) — C :  Lamb. 

(Death  of  Coleridge,  The.)— LLC 
On  the  Death  of  Decatur. — W :  Crafts.— EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Johnson. — W:  Cowper. — EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Levett.— S :  Johnson.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Mr.  Robert  Levet,  etc. 
On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Swift,  Sel.  fr.     (Verses  on  the 

Death  of    Dr.    Swift.) — Jonathan    Swift. — 

WEP  3 
On  the  Death  of  General  Taylor.— Rob't  T.  Conrad.— SS 
On  the  Death  of  General  Worth.— G:  W.  Cutter.— EDY 
On  the  Death    of    George    the    Third.     (C) — Horace 

Smith.     See  Contrast,  The. 
On  the  Death    of    James    Hogg. — W:    Wordsworth. — 

EDY 
(Extempore   Effusion   upon   the   Death   of   James 

Hogg— C.)— MBL 
(Passing  of  the  Elder  Bards,  The— sei.)- VA 
On  the  Death  of  Joseph  Rodman  Drake.     (C) — Fitz- 

Greene  Halleck.—  AA  —  ASL  —  FEP  —  HBP 

— TAV— WCLG  2 
(Green  be  the  Turf.)— LLC 
(Joseph  Rodman  Drake.)— BNL— EDY— GP 
(To  a  Friend— 8eZ.)—GMS 
On  the  Death    of    Little    Mahala'  Ashcraft. — Jas.    W. 

Riley.— AA 
On  the  Death  of  Lord  Hastings. — (Abr.) — J:  Drvden. — 

EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Addison.— T:  Tickell.— FEP 

(To  the  Earl  of  Warwick   on  the  Death  of  [Mr.] 

Addison.)— BNLr-WEP  3  (abr.) 
On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Aikman. — (C.) — Jas.  Thomson. 

See  On  the  Death  of  a  Particular  Friend. 
On  the  Death  of  Mr.   Crashaw. — Abraham  Cowley. — 

WEP  2 
On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Fox. — Lord  Byron.— EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Hone,  R.  A.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 


On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Perceval.— T:  Moore. — EDY 

On  the  Death   of   Mr.    Robert   Levet,   a   Practiser   in 

Physic.     (C.)  (Levet,  his  Death — alsoC.) — S: 

Johnson. — OB 
(On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Levett.) — FEP 
On  the  Death  of  Mr.  William  Hervey. — Abraham  Cow- 
ley.—WEP  2 
(Afcr.)— OB— PGTl 
On  the  Death  of  Mrs.   Browning. — Sydney   Dobell. — 

EDY— VA 
On  the  Death  of  Mrs.  Holland. — Mrs.  Earl. — AVP 
On  the  Death  of  Mrs.  Throckmorton's  Bullfinch.-^ W : 

Cowper.— WEP  3 
On  the  Death  of  M.  d'Ossoli  and  his  Wife,  Margaret 

Fuller.— Walter  S.  Landor.- EDY— VA 
On  the  Death  of  my  Son  Charles.    (Lines  on  the  Death 

of  his  Son  Charles — C.) — Dan'l  Webster.— A  A 
On  the  Death  of  Oliver  Cromwell.     (Br.  sel.  jr.  Poem 

upon  the  Death  of  his  late  Highness,  Oliver, 

Lord    Protector    of    England,   Scotland,  and 

Ireland,  A.)— J:  Dryden.— EDY 
(Oliver  Cromwell — br.  sel.) — BNL 
On  the  Death  of  [Richard  Brinsley]  Sheridan. — Lord 

Byron.     See   Monody    on    the    Death    of    the 

Right  Hon.  R.  B.  Sheridan. 
On  the  Death  of  Richard  Burton,  Br.  sel.  Jr.    (Burton.) 

— Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — EDY 
On  the  Death  of  Sir  Philip  Sidney. — H:  Constable. — 

OB 
(Sonnet  Prefixed  to  Sidney's  Apology  for  Poetry. 

1595.)— WEP  1 
On  the  Death  of  Sir  Thomas  Wyatt. — H:  Howard,  Earl 

of  Surrey.— WEP  1 
On  the  Death    of    Southey.     (Poems    and    Epigrams, 

LXXXV.)— Walter  S.  Landor.— EDY 
On  the  Death    of    the    Duke    of    Wellington. — Alfred 

Tennyson.     See  Ode  on  the  Death,  etc. 
On  the  Death  of  the  Rev.  George  Whitefield. — Phillis 

Wheatley.— EDY 
On  the  Death  of  the  Right  Hon. .     (C.) — Oliver 

Goldsmith. 
(GreatMan,  A.)— NA 
On  the  Death  of  Waller. — Aphra  Behn. — WEP  2 
On  the  Death   of    Washington. — Theodore    Dwight. — 

EDY 
On  the  Deaths  of  Thomas  Carlyle  and  George  Eliot. — 

Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — VA 
On  the  Declaration  of  Independence. — R:  S.  Storrs. — 

WRIO 
On  the  Defeat   of   a   Great   Man. — W:  W.  Lord.     See 

following. 
On  the  Defeat  of  Henry  Clay.— W:  W.  Lord.— FEP 

(On  the  Defeat  of  a  Great  Man.) — AA 
On  the  Departure  of  Sir  Walter  Scott  from  Abbotsford 

for  Naples. — W:  Wordsworth. — BPB — WEP  4 
On  the  Departure      of      the      Nightingale. — Charlotte 

Smith.— FEP 
(Nightingale's  Departure,  The.) — HBP 
On  the  Devon  Coast. — Arthur  Chamberlain. — SR  12 
On  the  Direct  Tax,    Sel.    fr.     (National    Glory.)— H: 

Clay— LLC 
On  the  Disappointment  of  the  Whig  Associates  of  the 

Prince  Regent  at  not  Obtaining  Office.     (Epi- 
gram Written  in  the  Last  Reign  —  C.) — C: 

Lamb.— HPE 
On  the  Doorstep. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — FEP 

(Doorstep,  The.— C.)  —  AWH  —  CS  9  —  FP  — 

FTA— OH— TAV 
On  the  Elevation  of  the  Labouring    Classes,  Sel.   fr. 

(Great  Ideas.)— W:  E.  Channing.— SS 
On  the  Eve  of  War. — Danske  Dandridge. — PAPm 
On  the  Expunging  Resolution,  1837.     (C. —  abr.) — H: 

Clay.— PS 
(Expunging  Resolution,  The.) — OM — SS 
On  the  Extinction  of  the  Venetian  Republic.     (C.) — 

W:  Wordsworth.- FEP— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(Venice.)— LH 
On  the  Federal   Constitution. — Alex.    Hamilton.     See 

Speech  on  the  Compromises  of  the  Constitution. 
On  the  Fiftieth  Birthday  of  Agassiz. — H:  W.  Long- 
fellow.—EPs 
(Fiftieth  Birthday  of  Agassiz,  The.— C.)— BNL— 

GMS— PHS 
On  the   Five  Senses.     (Riddle  —  si.    abr.) — Jonathan 

Swift.— HPE 
On  the  Fly-leaf    of    a    Book    of    Old    Plays.— Walter 

Learned.     See  On  a  Fly-leaf,  etc. 
On  the  Fly-leai  of  Manon  Lescaut. — Walter  Learned. — 

AA 
On  the  Foregoing  Divine  Poems.  (  C. ) — Edmund  Wal  ler. 
(Last  Prospect,  The— abr.)— ELP 
(Old  Age  [and  Death]— abr.)— BNL— OB— YBF 
(On  his  Divine  Poems.)— FEP' 


2i'A 


On  the  Freeing 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


On  the  Freeing  of  the  Serfs.     ( Verses  /r.   A   Russian 
Journey:     The    Czar.) — Edna    D.    Proctor. — 
EDY 
On  the  Frontier.— I.  E.  Jones.— CS  23 — DS 
On  the  Funeral  of  Charles  [the]  First,  at  Night,  in  St. 
George's  ChaBBl,  Windsor. — W:  L.  Bowles. — 
EDY— FEP— HBP— OS  3 
On  the  Grasshopper. —  Anacreon  {tr.  by  W:  Cowper). 
—HBP 
(Grasshopper,  The — tr.  by    Abraham    Cowley,    in 
Anacreontiques.)—  BNL—  CGd— HBP— LC— 
PHS 
On  the  Grasshopper  and   Cricket.     (C.) — J:   Keats. — 
FEP— GN— HBP— LC— OS  2— WEP  4 
(Grasshopper  and  Cricket  f,  The].)— BNL— LLC 
(Poetry  of  Earth,  The.)— WR  1 
On  the  Greek  Question. — J :  Randolph. — SS 
On  the  Greek  Revolution,  Sels.  jr. — H:  Clay. 
America's  Duty  to  Greece. — PPS 

(Duty  of  America  to  Greece. — Sel.) — OM 

(On  Recognizing  the  Independence  of  Greece.) 
— PS— SS 
(Sympathy  with  the  Greeks — sd.) — EA — SO 
GreeK  Revolution.     (Ptly.  same.) — SC 
On  the  Heights.— E:  Dowden.— TIP 
On  the  Heights. — Lucius  H.  Foote. — AA 
On  the  HUlside.— A.I.  M.— YBT 

(Trust.)- HP 
On  the  Ice.— Anon.— BS  17— SA 

On  the  Irish  Disturbance  Bill. — Dan'l  O'Connell. — OM 
— PPS— PS— SS— SSD 
(Irish  Disturbance  BiU,  The.)— SO 
On  the  Judiciary  Act,  1802.    (.Sel.  jr.  Second  Speech  on 
the    Judiciary  Establishment.)  —  Gouverneur 
Morris.— OM—SS 
On  the  Lady  Manchester.     (C.) — Jos.  Addison. 

(Countess  of  Manchester,  The.) — HPE 
On  the  Late  Captain  Grose's  Peregrinations  through 
Scotland.     (C.)— Rob't  Burns.     See  On  Cap- 
tain Grose's,  etc. 
On  the  Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont.     (C.) — J:  Milton. 
—EDY  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  PGT  1  —  WEP  2  — 
YBF 
(Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont,  The.) — LH 
(Sonnet:     On  the  Late  Massacre,  etc.) — ELP — EPs 
On  the  Late  S.  T.  Coleridge. — Washington  Allston. — 

AA 
On  the  Life  of  Man.     (C.)  —  H:  King  (tfr.  at.  to  Fa. 
Beaumont). — ELP 
(Life.)— HBP— YBF 
(Life  of  Man,  The.)— CEL 
(Sic  Vita.)— BNL— CS  19— FEP 
On  the  Life-mask  of  Abraham  Lincoln. — R:  W.  Gilder. 

— AA— ASL— BNL— YBF 
On  the  Lord  General  Fairfax. — J :  Milton. — EDY 
On  the  Lord's  Prayer. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
On  the  Loss  of  the  Royal  George.     (C.) — W:  Cowper. 
—  BNL  —  EDY  —  EPs  —  GN  —  HBP  — 
MBL— WEP  3 
(Loss  of  the  Royal  George  [,  The].)—  CGd  —  LC  — 

PGT  1— PHS— PSR 
(Royal  George.The.)—LH 
On  the  Monument    Erected    to   Mazzini    at    Genoa.— 

Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — EDY — VA 
On  the  Moon.     {Rid'^le.) — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
On  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity      (C) — J:  Milton. 
— BPB— FEP- HBP 
(Ode  on  the  Morning  of  Chr  st's  Nativity.) — BFV — 
PGTl 
Hymn,  The.     (C.)— PGT  1 
(Christmas — br.  sel.) — SE 
(Christmas  Hymn.) — EPs 
(Hymn  on  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity.) 

—OB— PHS 
(Hymn  on  [or  to]  the  Nativity.) — BS  25  {sel.) 

—ELP— OS  3 
("  Ring  out,  ye  crystal  spheres" — hr.  sel.) — HP 
On  the  Moimt. — F.  L.  Hosmer. — TA8 
On  the  Nat-vity  of  Christ.— W:  Dunbar.- OB 
On  the  Ocean. — ^Jas.  T.Fields.     See  Tempest,  The. 
On  the  Origin  of  Evil.— J:  Byrom.— WEP  3 
On  the  Other  Train;  a  Clock's  Story.  —  Anon.  —  BS  22 

— CS  19— FMR— NPS— SCf— SO— SR  6— YP 
On  the  Ottawa.— E:  H.  Dewart.- TCV 
On  the  Oxford  Carrier.     (On  the  University  Carrier — 

O— J:  Milton.— N  A 
On  the  Picture  of  an  Infant  f, Playing  near  a  Precipice]. 
(From  a  Greek  Epigram  —  C.)  —  Leonidas  of 
Alexandria  (tr.  by  S:  Rogers).— BNL— HBP 
On  the  Picture  of  the  Last  Supper,  at  Milan.  (Br.  sel. 
fr.  Padre  Bandelli  Proses  to  the  Duke  Ludovico 
Sforza  about  Leonardo  da  Vinci.) — W:  W. 
Story.— OS  3 


On  the  Plains. — Fs.  Brooks. — AA 

On  the  Portrait  of  Shakespeare.     (C) — Ben  Jonson. — 

BNL— EDY 
(Lines  on  the  Portrait  of  Shakespeare.) — FEP 
On  the  Prairie.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  28 
On  the  Proposal  to  Erect  a  Monument  in  England  to 

Lord  Byron. — Emma  Lazarus. — AA 
On  the  Prospect    of    Planting   Arts    and    Learnine  in 

America.— G:    Berkeley.—    BNL    —    FEP— 

HBP— YBF 
(America.) — SS 
(American  Destiny.) — BLP 
(Old  World  and  the  New,  The.)— FP 
(Verse:     Westward  the  Star  of  Empire — br.  sel.) — 

EPs 
(Westward  the  Course  of  Empire — ahr.) — GP 
On  the  Prospect  of  War  [with  Great  Britain,  1811]. — J: 

C.  Calhoun.— PS— SS 
On  the  Punishment  of  Louis  XVI.  —  Maximilien  M.  I. 

Robespierre. — PS 
On  the  Queen's  Return  from  the  Low  Countries. — W : 

Cartwright.- OB 
"On  the  ramparts  bare,  stood  the  lady  fair." — Anon. — 

MYF 
On  the  Rappahannock.  —  C.  C.  Somerville  (at.  also  to 

C:H.  Tiffany.)— PR 
(Home,  Sweet  Home.)— CS  22 
On  the  Rappahannock.     (Diff.  poem.) — C:  H.  Tiffany. 

— CS32 
On  the  Receipt  of  my  Mother's  Picture  [out  of  Norfolk 

—CJ.—W:  Cowper.—  FEP  —  HBP  —  MBL— 

WCLG  2— WEP  3 
(Mother's  Portrait,  A— sei.)- BS  14 
(My  Mother's  Picture.)—  BNL  —  EPs  (sel.)—  LLC 
On  the  Refusal  of  the  Chambers  of  Vacations  of  Rennes 

to  Obey  the  Decrees  of  the  National  Assembly. 

— Victor  Riquetti,  Marquis  de  Mirabeau. — SS 
On  the  Resolution  to  put  the  Commonwealth  into  a 

State  of  Defence — before  Virginia  Convention. 

— Patrick  Henry.     See  Speech  in  the  Virginia 

Convention. 
On  the  Rhine.— W:  L.  Bowles.- BNL 
On  the  River.— Howard  W.  Long. — CS  25 
On  the  Road. — Paul  L.  Dunbar. — AA 
On  the  Road. — Tudor  Jenks. — NA 
On  the  Road  to  Chorrera. — ^Arlo  Bates — AA 
On    the'  Road    to    Dreamtown. — Eben  E.  Rexford — 

CS33 
On  the  Ruins  of  a  Country  Inn. — Philip  Freneau — AA 
On  the  Sea.     (SI.  diff.  fr.  present  vers.) — Bayard  Tay- 
lor.—FP 
On  the  Seminole  War,  Sels.  fr. — H :  Clay. 
Military  Insubordination. — SS 
Military    Supremacy    Dangerous    [to    Liberty]. — 

(Ptly.  same  as  SS.)— BS  14— LLC— OM 
On  the  Shore. — Sidney  Lanier. — TAV 

(Evening  Song— C.)— ASL— BIL—GP—PYO 
On  the  Shores  of  Tennessee. — Ethel  L.  Beers. — CS  1 — 

FEP— HNS 
On  the  Slain  at  Chickamauga. — Herman  Melville. — AA 

—EDY 
On  the  Soul  of  Man  and  the  Immortality  Thereof,  Br. 

sel.  fr.     (Man.)— Sir  J:  Davies.— OB— YBF 
On  the  Sphinx.    —  S:     L.     Clemens.     See    Innocents 

Abroad. 
On  the  Spring. — T:  Gray.     See  Ode:    On   the  Spring. 
On  the  Stair.— R:  Burton.— CG  1 
On  the  Stair.— C.  F.  Lester.- CS  37 
On  the  Stairs. — Anon. — CG  1 
On  the  Stairs.     (Fr.  Tales  of  Mean  Streets.) — Arthur 

Morrison. — WGS 
On  the  Stairway. — Anon. — BS  13 
On  the  Stairway. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
On  the  Stamp  Act. — Jas.  Otis. — EAO 
On  the  Statue  of  King  Charles  I.  at  Charing  Cross  in 

the  Year  1674.— Edmund  Waller.— FEP 
On  the  Sunny  Side.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
On  the  Sunset  Line. — Beaumont  Claxton. — CS  36 
On  the  Taking  of  Namur  by  the  King  of  Great  Britain. 

(Sel.  fr.  An  English  Ballad  on  the  Taking  of 

Namur,  etc.) — Matthew  Prior. — EDY 
On  the  Terrace.— E.  Nesbit.— WR  24 
On  the  Threshold.— A.  H.  Baldwin.— PEO 

(New  Year,  The.)— HSS  2 
On  the  Tomb  of  Guidarello  Guidarelli  at  Ravenna. — 

Walter  W.  Greg.— AVP 
On  the  Tombs  in  Westminster  Abbey.     (On  the  Tombs 

in  Westminster — C.) — Fs.  Beaumont. —  FEP 

—OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(In  Westminster  Abbey.) — LH 
(Lines   on   the   Tombs   in   Westminster.) — ELP — 

WEP  2 
On  the  Train.     (Tah.)—E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 


244 


TITLE  INDEX 


One-legged 


On  the  Union. — Ben  Jonson. — EDY 

On  the  University  Carrier.     (C.) — J:  Milton.     See  On 

the  Oxford  Carrier. 
On  the  Verge. — W :  Winter. — AA 
On  the  Vowels.     (C.)— Jonathan  Swift.— HPE 

(Riddle,  A.)— GN 
On  the  Weather. — Ferris  Greenslet. — CG  2 
"On  the  whole,  there  are  much  sadder  ages  than  the 

early  ones." — J :  Ruskin.    See  Modern  Painters. 
On  the  Windows  of  King's  College  Remaining  Boarded. 

— R:  H.  Barham.— HPE 
On  the  Winter  Solstice.— Mark  Akenside. — ^WEP  3 
On  the  Writs  of  Assistance. — Jas.  Otis. — EAO 
On  this  Day  I  Complete  my  Thirty-sixth  Year.     (C) — 

Lord  Byron.— FEP—WEP  4 
(Byron's  Last  Poem.) — CEL 
(Hail  and  Farewell.)— LH 
(On  my  Thirty-seventh  Birthday.) — EDY 
On  Time.— J :  Milton.— OB 
On  Time.     (BiddZe.)— Jonathan  Swift.— HPE 
On  Tiptoe.— G:  F.  Cameron.— TCV 

(Standing  on  Tiptoe.)— VA 
On  to  Freedom. — A.  J.  H.  Duganne. — CS  4 
"On  to  the  sacred  hill." — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
On  Two    Beautiful    One-eyed    Sisters. — Gotthold    E. 

Lessing.— HPE 
On  Two  Gentlemen. — Anon. — HPE 
On  Two  Lean  Millers.     (C) — J:Byrom. 

(Epigram   on   Two    Monopolists — si.  diff.   vera.) — 

FEP 
On  Tying  Daphne's  Shoe.— J.  S.  Bryan.— CG  2 
On  Various  Subjects.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
On  Waking  from  a  Dreamless  Sleep. — Annie  Fields. — 

AA 
On  War    with    France   or    America,    1778.     (Sel.    fr. 

Amendment   to   the   Address   on    the    King's 

Speech  at  the  Opening  of  the  Session,  Nov.  26, 

1778.)— C:  J.  Fox.— PS 
On  Washington's  Farewell  Address. — St.  John  Honey- 
wood.— EDY 
On  Which  Side  are  You?— Frances  E.  Willard.— WR  18 
On  William     Graham     of     Mossknowe.     (C.) — Rob't 

Burns. 

(Epitaph  on  W ^.)— HPE 

On    William    Hogarth  —  in   Chiswick    Churchyard. — 

Anon.— EDY 
On  Woman. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Vicar  of  Wake- 
field, The. 
On  Women   (Satire  V.),  Br.   sel.    fr.     (Old  Coquette, 

The.)— E:  Young.— WEP  3 
Once.     {Child  World.)— AYP 
Once.— W.  L.  Lampton.— WR  15 

(Unexpected,  The.)— BS  21 
"Once  as  our  Saviour  walked  with  men  below." — Anon. 

—AD 
Once  at  Battle  Eve. — Mary  H.  Krout. — BLP 
"Once  at   midnight,  just   as   Arktos." — Anacreon. — 

AE 
Once  Before. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — AA 
"Once  from  the  town  a  starling  flew."     (St.  Nicholas.) 

— BVC 
Once  More. — Jas.  C.  Hodgins. — TCV 
Once  More.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— CS  9— SE  (br.  sel.) 
Once  on  a  Time.— Emilv  H.  Miller.— PP—YPS 
Once  to  Every  Man  and  Nation. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See 

Present  Crisis,  The. 
Once  upon  a  Time. — Louisa  Bushnell. — BS  5 
Once  upon   a   Time. — Caroline  B.  Southey.  —  FEP  — 

HSS3 
Onconvanience,  An.     (Tab.) — Tony  Denier. — TDT 
One.— Arlo  Bates.— TFY 
One  Advantage  of  Volapuk. — McG.  J. — CG  1 
One  and  One. — Anon. — CPL 
One  and    Twenty.     (Improviso    on    a    Young    Heir's 

Coming  of  Age — C.) — S:  Johnson. — OB 
One  at  a  Time.— Ernest  Whitney.— YBT 
One  Bachelor  of  Many.     (Harper's  Magazine.) — SR  6 
One  beneath  Old  Glory. — Anon. — PAPm 
One  by  One. — Anon. — HP 
One  by  One. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. —  DLF  —  FEP  — 

GN— OS  1— SM  (si.  abr. )—TFS  (br.  sel.) 
One  Cent  and  Costs.     (Boston  Globe.) — SR  3 
One  Country. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — A  A 
One  Country— One  Sacrifice.— R:  W.  Gilder.— EDY 
One  Day.— Jas.  B.  Bensel.— POS 
One  Day  Solitary.     (SI.    abr.)— J:    T.    Trowbridge.— 

CS  18— NPS— YP 
One  Dear  Smile.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
One  Easter  Day. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
One  Face.— Sarah  K.  Bolton.— BIL— FTA 
One  Face  Alone. — S :  T.  Coleridge.     See  Phantasmion. 
One  Flower  for  Nelly.— Rose  H.  Thorpe. — BS  11 
One  for  Everybody. — Anon. — DSS 


One  Forgotten,  The. — Dora  Sigerson. — TIP 

One  Glass  More. — Anon. — CS  6 — SR  2 

One  Glass  Too  Much.— Anon.— TS 

One  Good  Turn  Deserves  Another.     (Punch.) — HPE 

One  Good    Turn    Deserves    Another.     (Dial.) — J:    T. 

Trowbridge.— ASD 
One  Gray  Hair,  The.— Walter  S.  Landor.-  BNL  — 

FEP— HBP 
(One  White  Hair,  The.)— VA 
One  Heart's  Enough  for  Me. — Levi  Chey.ney. — FP 
One  Hope,  The.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  CI.) — 

Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
One  Hundred  Years  from  Now. — C:  Rowland. — CS  17 
One  in  Blue,  and  One  in  Gray. — Anon. — CS  12 

(Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.)— HP 
One  in  the  Infinite. — G:  F.  Savage-Armstrong. — VA 
One  isn't  Loved  Every  Day. — Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton. 

See  Aux  Italiens. 
One  Little  Hatchet.— Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
One  Little  Star. — Susan  Coolidge. — YBT 
One  Lovely  Name. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VS 
One  More  Year. — A.  Norton. — PEO 
One  Niche  the  Highest.— Elihu  Burritt.— CS  7— PFP 
(SI.  abr.)— BS  17— PR 
(Ambitious  Youth,  The— sZ.  difl.  vers.) — WRD 
(Scene  at  the  Natural  Bridge.)— CR 
One  Night  with  Gin. — Anon. — CS  5 
One  of  Christ's  Little  Ones. — Anon. — WR  24 
One  of  God's  Little  Heroes. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — CS  37 

— TMR 
One  of  his  Animal  Stories. — Jas.  W.  Riley.     See  Session 

with  Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
One  of  his  Names.— Josephine  Pollard.— SR  13— TFS 

(His  Names— a6r.)—CS  32 
One  of  Many. — Minnie  D.  Bateham. — CS  36 
One  of  the  Common  People. — J.  W.  Hamilton. — FD  2 
One  of  the  Dewsenburys.— Anon. — MC 
One  of  the  Heroes. — Eben  E.  Rexford. — PR 
One  of  the  Six  Hundred. — Anon. — CS  18 
One  Saturday. — Annie  D.  Robinson. — AA 
One  Step  at  a  Time. — Anon. — DJS 
One  Story's  Good  till  Another  ia  Told. — C:  Swain. — 

SS 
One  Summer.— J.  M.  L.— CPL 

One  Thanksgiving  Day. — Preserved  Wheeler. — SR  10 
One  Thanksgiving  Day  out  West. — Emma  D.  Banks. — 

BR 
"One  there  is  who  has  silently  advanced  through  time 

from  the  beginning." — Frederika  Bremer. — GG 
One  Thing  at  a  Time.— M.  A.  Stoddart.— LPS— PP 

(Work  and  Play.)— TFS 
One  Thing  He  Forgot.— Tobe  Hodge.— SR  5 

(Most  Fellows  Kjiow.)— WR  15 
"One  thing  is  sure,  the  day  of   the  Lord  is  hastening 

on."— W.  X.  Ninde.— GG 
One  Touch  of  Nature.— Rob't  J.  Burdette. — NPS — 

YP 
One  Touch- of  Nature. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Troilua 

and  Cressida. 
One  Twilight  Hour. — G:  Meredith.     See  Modem  Love. 
"One,  Two,  Three!"— H:  C.  Bunner.— HBR— PoR— 

TAV— TMR 
One,  Two,  Three. — Marg.  Johnson. — GMS 
One  Volume    More.     (Bannatyne    Club,    The — C.) — 

Walter  Scott.— LBB 
One  Way  of  Love.— Rob't  Browning.—  HBP  —  VA  — 

WR  8— YBF 
One  Way  of  Trusting. — Hannah  P.  Kimball. — AA 
One  White  Hair,  The.— Walter  S.  Landor.     See  One 

Gray  Hair,  The. 
One  who  Stays  at   Home,  The. — -Burneston  Lane. — 

BS  20 
"One  with  yawning  made  reply,  The." Brooks. 

—SO 
One  Word.— Wallace  Bruce.— BS  20— WR  8 
"One  word  is  too  often  profaned." — Percy  B.  Shelley. 

—FEP— FTA— OH— PGT  1— YBF 

(To .—C.)— HBP— OB— WEP  4 

One  Word  More. — Rob't  Browning.     See  following. 
One  Word  More.     To  E.  B.  B.— Rob't  Browning. — 

VA 
(To  E.  B.  B.— sel.)— OB. 
One  Writes  that  Other  Friends  Remain. — Alfred  Ten- 
nyson.    See  In  Memoriam. 
One-hoss  Shay,  The;  or,  The  Deacon's  Masterpiece. — 

Oliver  W.  Holmes.—  BNL  —  CR  —  MHR  — 

SE(8eZ.) 
(Deacon's  Masterpiece,  The;  or.  The  Wonderful,  etc. 

— C.)— AWH— EPs— FEP— THP 
(Wonderful  "One-hoss  Shay,"  The.)— AD  (sd.)— 

CS2 
One-legged    Duck,   The. — F.    Hopkinson   Smith.     See 

One-legged  Goose,  The. 


245 


One-legged 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


One-legged  Goose,  The.— J.  R.  Planche.— CS  24 
One-legged   Goose,   The.     (Sel.fr.   Colonel   Carter  of 

Cartersville,  Ch.  III.) — F.  Hopkinson  Smith. — 

BS  24— CS  31— HBR— WR  4 
(One-legged  Duck,  The — arr.  by  W:  H.  Head.) — 

SRll 
Oneyda's    Death    Song,    The.     (Sel.    fr.    Gertrude    of 

Wyoming,  Pt.  III.)— T:  CampbeU.— WEP  4 
OrAy.— {The  Argosy. )—ViP 
Only.— Jessie  Gordon.— CS  26— FHS  {sel.) 
Only.— Charlotte  Murray.— SSS 
Only.— Carlotta  Perry.— BS  9— YBT 
Only.— J :  W.  Storrs.— BS  13 
Only.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Only  a  Baby.— Anon.— HP— TFS 
Only  a  Baby. — Addie     Layton.     See    Only     a     Baby 

SmaU. 
Only  a  Baby  Small.— Matthias  Barr. —  FTT  —  GP  — 

PC  (se«.)— PP— PS— YFR 
(Only  a  Baby — at.  to  Addie  Layton.) — BS  5 
Only  a  Beggar  Boy.— Hattie  T.  Volk.— SR  6 
"Only   a   Bit   of   Childhood   Thrown   Away." — Maud 

Moore.- HP 
Only  a  Boy.— Anon.— BS  2— CS  9 

(OurJim.)— TFS(se«.) 
Only  a  Chicken.     {Part  rec.)— Eugenie  J.  Hall.— LPS 

— PP 
Only  a  Curl.- Eliz.  B.  Browning.—  CS  9  —  FP  —  NPS 

— YP 
Only  a  Drunkard. — Anon. — CS  34 
Only  a  Drunkard. — C.  J.  Clingan. — CS  23 
Only  a  Glass  of  Cider.— Mrs.  E.  J.  Richmond.— SR  2 
Only  a  Glove. — Anon. — CS  20 
Only  a  Jew. — Anon. — CS  16 
Only  a  Little.— Dora  Goodale.— PEO 
Only  a  Little  Child.— Anon.— YBT 
Only  a  Little  Chinese  Talk. — Anon. — SR  13 
Only  a  Little  Thing.— Mrs.  M.  P.  Handy.— PEO 
Only  a  Pin.— I.  H.  Brown.— CRR 
Only  a  Shaving.— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton.— MYF  {sel.) 

— VSG 
Only  a  Smile. — Florence  McCurdy. — CS  29 
Only  a  Soldier. — Agnes  MacDonell. — WR  8 

(Incident,  An.)— WR  24 
Only  a  Song.— Anon.— CS  28— SSS 
Only  a  Sparrow. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Only  a  Tramp.— T.  G.  La  Moille.— FS 
Only  a  Woman. — Dinah  M.  M.  Craik. — BNL 
Only  a  Woman.— Hester  A.  Benedict.— CS  11— DS— 

HP 
Only  a  Woman. — Tom  Masson. — CS  32 
Only  a  Woman's  Hair.— J.  A.  Noble.— EDY 
"Only  a  Year."— Harriet  Beecher  Stowe.— BNL — FP 

— GP 
Only  an  Insect.— Grant  Allen.— TCV 
Only  Another  Footprint. — Anon. — MND 
"Only  Cooning." — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Only  Faithful.— Sarah  Williams.— FTA 
Only  Five.— Anon.— KER— TFS 
Only  Five  Minutes  to  Live.     {Arkansaw  Traveler.) — 

SR4 
Only  for  This. — Louisa  Jackson. — FLS 
Only  in  Dreams. — Josiah  G.  Holland.     See  Gradatim. 
Only  Joe.— Jas.  R.  Reed.— CS  32— HP— WR  4 
Only  Once. — Anon. — WR  4 
Only  One. — G :  Cooper. — AA 
(Hundreds.)- TFS 
(Our  Mothers.)— YBT 
Only  One!— Frd'k  Locker-Lampson.— TFS  {sel.) 

(Rhyme  of  One,  A.)— OH 
Only  One  Kind  Word  —Ella  Dare.— WR  15 
Only  One  Life.— Anon.— FP 
Only  One  Mother.— B.  C.  Dodge.— DCP 
Only  Playing.— Anon.— BR  {si.  obr.)— CS  22 

(Masquerade,  A.)— PC— WCL 
Only  Seven.— H:  S.  Leigh.— BNL— THP 
Only  Sixteen. — Anon. — CS  9 

Only  the  Brakesman.— Constance  F.  Woolson. — CS  22 
Only  the  Clothes  she  Wore. — N.  G.  Shepherd. — BNL 
Only  True  Life,  The.— Horace  B.  Durant.— CS  28 
Only  Waiting.— Frances  L.  Mace.— BNL— CS  4— GP 
"Only  way  to  clear  the  track  of   life  is   to  leave  no 

enemy    behind.    The." — Rev.    Dr.    

Twitchell.— GG 
Onnalinda,  Sel.  fr.     (Burning  Ship,  The.)— J.  H.  Mc- 

Naughton.— DES 
"Oolaghaun,"  The. — Dion  Boucicault.    See  Shaugraun, 

The. 
Oor  Wee  Laddie.— W:  Lyle.— WR  21 
Opal  Ring,  The.     {Sel.  arr.  fr.  Nathan  the  Wise,  Act 

III.,  Sc.  7.)— Gotthold  Lessing.— DR 
(Ring,  The.)— MMR 
Open  Door.  The.— Anon.— CS  22 


Open  Door,  An. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 

Open  or  Shut?     {Dial.  ad.  fr.  "A  Door  must  be  either 

Open  or  Shut.") — Alfred  de  Musset.— NDP 
Open  Question,  An.     (C.)— T:  Hood. 

(Sunday  Question,  The.)— HPE 
Open  Secret,  An. — Anon. — DJS 
Open  Secret,  An. — C.  A.  Mason. — AA 
Open  Secret,  An. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Open  Sky,  The. — J :  Ruskin.     See  Modern  Painters. 
Open  Steeplechase,  The. — Anon. — CS  32 
Open  the  Gates  as  High  as  the  Sky.     {Dial.) — Mrs. 

Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Open  Window,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— HBP 
Open  your  Mouth.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Open  your   Mouth   and    Shut    your    Eyes.     {Tab.) — 

Anon.— TCP 
Opening  Address.— Anon. — COS — PP 
Opening  Address. — Mrs.  M.  E.  Cornell. — HE 
Opening  Address. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Opening  Address,  The.     {Dial.) — L.  J.  and  E.  C.  Rook. 

—CDs 
Opening  Dialogue. — Anon. — DLD 
Opening  of  the  Mississippi  in  1862,  The. — W:  E.  Lewis. 

— NC— PFP 
Opening   of  the   Original   Prologue   to   the   Confessio 

Amantis. — J:  Gower.     See  Confessio  Amantis. 
Opening  of   the    Piano,    The.     {Atlantic   Monthly.) — 

FP 
Opening  of  the  Thirteenth  of  Cinkante  Balades. — ^J: 

Gower.— WEP  1 
Opening   Recitation.     {For   twelve   little    girls.) — Mrs. 

Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Opening  Scene  at  the  Trial  of-  Warren  Hastings,  The. 

— T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  Warren  Hastings. 
Opening  Song.     {Tab.  w.  song.) — Anon. — KJ 

(Song  of  the  States.)— PP—YFR 
Opening  Speech,  The.     {Dial.) — -Anon. — MND 

(Salutatorian's  Difficulties,  A.) — PS 
Opening  Speech  for  a  Boy. — Anon. — KNS 
Opening  Speech  (for  a  Small  Boy). — Anon. — DLF 
Opening  the  Campaign. — Anon. — CS  21 
"Opera  is  an  experiment,  bold  even  to  the  verge  of 

absurdity.  The." — Jonathan  Edwards. — GG 
Opera  Mad.     {Extravaganza.) — Anon. — SED 
Opera  Music  for  the  Piano. — Anon. — MHR 
Ophelia.     {Tab.    based    on   Shakespeare's    Hamlet.) — 

Anon.— BS  8— TCP 
Opinion.— S:  Butler.— HPE 
Opinion.     {Sel.  ad.  fr.  Familiar  Letters,  Bk.  III.,  Letter 

5.)— Jas.  Howell.— KNE 
Opinionative,  The.— S:  Butler.— HPE 
Opinions  Stronger  than  Armies.     {SI.  diff.) — Luther  A. 

Ostrander.— PFP- SR  8 
Opportunities   of   the   Scholar. — H:    W.    Grady.     See 

Against  Centralization. 
Opportunity. — Anon. — CS  18 
Opportunity. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 
Opportunity.- J:  J.  Ingalls.— AA— PYO— SR  13 
Opportunity. — Arthur  Ketchum. — CG  2 
Opportunity. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Opportunity.— E:  R.  Sill.—  BS  21— GMS  —  GN  — 

HBR— TAS— TAV— TMD 
Opportunity  for  Effort. — -G:  R.  Russell.     See  following. 
Opportunity  for  Work.— G:  R.  Russell.— CS  1— DS 

(Opportunity  for  Effort.) — SR  3 
Opportunity    to    Labor.— T:    B.    Reed.— PEO— SC — 

TMR 
Opposite      Examples.  —  Horace      Mann.  —  CS  1  — 

KNE  (a6r.)— LLC 
Opposition  to  Misgovemment. — Dan'l  Webster. — SS 
Optimism.     {Blackwood's  Magazine.) — CS  33 
O'Quirk's  Sinecure.     {Dial.) — Harry  and  J:  Kurnell. — 

DE 
Or  Ever  the  Earth  Was.     {Fr.  Book  of  Day-dreams.) — 

C:  L.  Moore. — AA 
"Or,  suppose,  on  the  other  hand,  he  had  told  you  the 

plea  was  granted." — ^Alex.  B.  Jack. — GG 
Oracle,  The.     (Ta6.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Oracle:     "Mine  honesty  and  I,"  etc.— W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 
Oracle:     "The     flighty     purpose,"    etc. — W:    Shake- 
speare.    See  Macbeth. 
Oracle:      "There  is  a  history,"  etc.— W:  Shakespeare. 

See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II. 
Oracle:     "There  is  a  mystery,"  etc. — -W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
Oracle:     "We  must  not  stint,"  etc. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Orange  and  Green. — Anon. — PR 
Orange  Tree,  The.     (DioZ.)- Anon.— HVD 
Orara.— H.  C.  Kendall.— PGT  2 
Oration  against  Catiline. — Cicero.     See  First    Oration 

against  Catiline. 


246 


TITLE  INDEX 


'Ostler 


Oration  at  the  Laying  of  the  Corner-stone  of  the  Bunker 

Hill  Monument. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Bunker 

Hill  Monument,  The. 
Oration  for  a  Boy,  An. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Oration  for  a  Six  Year  Old  Boy,  An. — Anon. — DLS 
Oration  in  New  York  City,  18S2,  Sel.  fr.     (Decoration 

Day.)— Rob't  IngersolL— PS— SR  3 
Oration    of    Mark    Antony. — W:    Shakespeare.     See 

Julius  Csesar. 
Oration  on  Hamilton. — Gouvemeur  Morris. — EAO 
(Funeral  Oration  by  the  Dead  Body  of  Hamilton — 

C.—abr.)— MRS 
Oration  on  Idols. — Wendell  Phillips.     See  Idols. 
Oration  on  Lafayette. — E:  Everett.     .See  Eulogy  on 

Lafayette. 
Oration  on  the  Crisis. — Anon. — MHR 
Oration  on  the  Crown,  The,  Sela-.  fr.  Demosthenes. 
Athenian  Patriotism. — SR  8 

(Public  Spirit  of  [the]  Athenians.)— SS—SSB 
Exordium.     (Lord  Brougham's  tr.) — SS 
Fortune  of  ^schines. — FTR 
Oration  on  the  Crown. — OS  3 

(Close  of  the  Oration  on  the  Crown — abr.,  diff. 

tr.)— SO 
Reply  to  .iEschines,  Pts.  I.  and  II.     (Lord  Brough- 
am's tr.) — PS 
(Demosthenes  not  Vanquished  by  Philip — abr.  fr. 

Pt.  1.)— SS 
Oration  on  the  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. — 

Edmund  Burke.     See  Impeachment  of  Warren 

Hastings. 
Oration  on  the  "Labor"   Question. — Anon. — BDD — 

SDR 
(Labor  Question,  The.)— CH 
Oration  on  Washington. — Fisher  Ames. — EAO 
Oration  on  Washington. — E:  Everett.     See  Character 

of  Washington,  The. 
Orations  on  Philip. — Dehiosthenes.     See  Philippics. 
Orator,  The. — Otto  von  Bismarck. — OS  2 
Orator,  The.— E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — AVP 
Orator  Described,  The.— R:  B.  Sheridan.— BLP 

(Perfect  Orator,  The.)— HSS  2 
Orator  Puff.     {Fr.  The  M.  P.;  or.  The  Blue  Stocking.) 

— T:  Moore.—  BNL  —  BS  1  —  CS  9  —  MHR 

— SA 
Orator's  Cause,  The.— J:  D.  Wright.— NC 
Orator's   Epitaph,   The. — H: ,  Lord  Brougham. — HPE 
Orator's  First  Speech  in  Parliament,  An. — Alex.  Bell. 

—MHR 
Oratory.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Oratory.— H:  W.  Beecher.— BS  6 
Oratory. — (?)  Maary. — KNE 
.  Oratory  among  the  Arts. — Anna  L.  Shafer. — SR  1 2 
Oratory  and  the  Press. — Dan'l  Dougherty. — BS  2 — 

CS  8— HSS  2 
Oratory  of  Wendell  Phillips,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Wendell 

Phillips.)— T:  W.  Higginson.— FD  2 
Orbits. — R:  Le  Gallienne. — VA 
Orchard,  The.— Hugh  Kelso.— AD 
Orchard  Blossoms. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — AD — LLC 
Orchard-lands  of  Long  Ago,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — 

HP 
Orchestra;  or,  A  Poeme  of  Dauncing,  Sel.  fr.   (Antinous 

Praises   Dancing   before    Queen   Penelope.) — 

SirJ:Davies.— WEPl 
(Dancing  of  the  Air,  The— seZ.)- BNL 
Ordeal  by  Fire,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — 

HDL 
Ordeal  of  Richard  Feverel,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Ferdmand 

and  Miranda — sel.  fr.  Chs.  XIV.  and  XV.) — 

G:  Meredith.— MRS 
Order.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
Order  for  a  Picture,  An.— Alice  Gary.-  BS  8  —  CR  — 

CS  8  —  FTR  —  HNS  —  LLC  —  MMR  —  SA  — 

WCLG2 
(A6r.)— PPSr— TMR 
Order  of   Nature,   The. — Alex.   Pope.     See  Essay   on 

Man,  An. 
Orders  not  to  Go.     {Dial.) — Anon. — WR  17 
O'Reilly's  Billy  Goat.— Joe  Lincoln.— CCB 
Organ,   The. — Washington   Irving.     See   Westminster 

Abbey. 
Organ  Creations.— H.  W.  Warren.— BS  6 
Organist,  The.— Matthias  Barr.— PR— WR  12 
Organist,  The. — Archibald  Lampman. — BS  26 
Organ-tempest   of   Lucerne,   The. — Hezekiah   Butter- 

worth.- BS  24 
Orient,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Bride  of  Abydos,  The. 
Orient  Yourself. — Horace  Mann. — SO 
Origin  of  Didactic  Poetry,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — EPs 
Origin  of  Ireland,  The.     (National  Teachers'  Monthly.) 

— HBP— THP 
(Birth  of  Ireland,  The.)— BRR— CSS— PPSr 


Origin  of  Scandal,  The.     {The  Argona%il.)—'B,S  14— FS 

— SR6 
Origin  of  Shoes,  The. — Edmund  J.  Burk.— CS  36 
Origin  of  the  Banjo,  The. — Irwin  Russell.     See  Christ- 
mas Night  in  the  Quarters. 
Origin  of  the  Harp,  The.— T:  Moore.— BNL 
Origin  of  the  Opal. — Anon. — BNL 
Origin  of  the  Peacock,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KER 
Origin  of  the  Red  Moss  Rose. — Anon. — DLF 
Origin  of  the  White,  the  Red,  and  the  Black  Men.     (A 

Seminole   Tradition  —  C.  —  sel.  fr.  The   Semi- 

noles — Origin  of  the  White,  the  Red  and  the 

Black  Men:     The  Conspiracy  of  Neamathla.) — 

Washington  Irving. — WCLG  1 
Origin  of  Violets. — Anon. — POS 
Original  Draft  of  the  Declaration  of  Independence,  The. 

— T:  Jefferson.     See  Declaration  of  Independ- 
ence, The. 
Original  Liquor  League,  The. — T.  De  Witt  Talmage. — 

TS 
Original  Love  Story,  An. — Anon. — CS  27 — DCR 
Original  Maxims  of  George  Washington. — G:  WashJng- 

ton.— PEO 
Original  Parody,   An.     (On  Cato's  Soliloquy  on  the 

Immortality  of  the  Soul,  hy  Addison.) — Anon. 

— BC 
Origins.— C :  G.  D.  Roberts.— TCV 
Orioles,  The. — Anon. — WCL 
Orion. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — VA 
Orion:     An  Epic  Poem,  Sels.  fr. — R:  H.  Home. 
Akinetos. — VA 
Distraught  for  Merop^. — VA 
Eos.— VA 

In  Forest  Depths. — VA 
Meeting  of  Orion  and  Artemis. — VA 
Orlando  Furioso,  Sel.  fr.     (Death  of  Zerbino,  The — sels. 

/r.  Can.   XXIV.,  Sts.   49-91.)  — Ariosto  (<r.  6y 

W:S.  Rose).— NE 
Orlando  Furioso,  Story  of. — Kate  M.  Rabb. — NE 
Orlando's    Wooing. — W:    Shakespeare.     See   As    You 

Like  It. 
Ormolu's    Tenement    House. — Fitz-James    O'Brien. — 

CS19 
Orphan,  The,  Sels.  fr. — T:  Otway.     {Br.  sels.  fr.  Act 

II.,  Sc.  1  and  III..  1.)— BNL 
Orphan  Billy.— Arthur  J.  Burdick. — SR  12 
Orphan  Born. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Orphan  Boy,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Amelia  Opie. 
Orphan  Boy.     {Br.  sel.)—AB 
Orphan  Boy's  Tale,  The.— FEP 
Orphan  Boy's  Tale,  The. — Amelia  Opie.      See  Orphan 

Boy,  The. 
Orphan  Maid,  The.     (Song"  fr.  The  Legend  of  Montrose, 

Ch.  IX.)— Walter  Scott.— WR  9 
Orphan's  Dream  of  Christmas,  The. — Anon. — WR  6 
Orphan's  Prayer,  The. — Anon. — CS  19 
Orphan's  Trust,  The.     (DtoZ.)- H.  C.  Hunt.— SDD 
Orpharion,    The,    Sel.    fr.     (Orpheus'    Song.) — Rob't 

Greene.— WEP  1 
Orpheus. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Orpheus  and  Eurydice. — N.  M.  Baskett. — CS  24 
Orpheus  and  Eurydice.     {Abr.)— J:  G.  Saxe. — SPE — 

SR7 
Orpheus  and  the  Mariners  Make  Answer. — Frank  T. 

Marzials.     See  Two  Sonnet-songs. 
Orpheus'  Song. — Rob't  Greene.      See  Orpharion,  The. 
Orpheus  to  Beasts. — R:  Lovelace. — HBP 
Orpheus  with  his  Lute. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

Henry  VIII. 
Orra,    Sel.    fr.      (Chough    and    [the]    Crow,    The.) — 

Joanna  BaiUie.— CEL— WEP  4 
(Outliiw's  Song,  The.)— OB 
Orsames'  Song  [in  "Aglaura"].     {Fr.  Aglaura.) — Sir  J: 

Suckling.— ELP—ES— WEP  2 
(Encouragements  to  a  Lover.) — PGT  1 
(Song— O— HBP 
(ToaLover.)— YBF 
(Why  so  Pale  [and  Wan,  Fond  Lover]?)- BNL— 

FEP— GP— OB— OEL— PYO 
Orthod-Ox    Team,    The.— Fred    E.    Brooks.— CDV— 

WR21 
Orthodoxy.     (Little  Boy  Lost,  A— C.)— W:  Blake.— 

EPs 
Orthography. — G:  Stevens. — CS  29 
Osme's  Song. — G:  Darley.     See  Sylvia;  or,  The  May 

Queen. 
Osmunda  Regalis,  The. — W:  Wordsworth. — EPs 
Ossian's  Address  to  the  Sun.     {Sel.  fr.  Carthon.) — Jas. 

MacPherson.— HSS  2— PT  S 
(Address  to  the  Sun.)— CS  22 
"  'OstlerJoe."— G :  R.Sims.— BS  25  (a6r.)— MR 


247 


Othello 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice,  SeU.  fr. — W :  Shakespeare. 
Othello,  Br.  sela.  [r.—AE  (fr-  Act  II.,  Sc.  1.)— BNL 

(/r.II.,1;   III.,  4;   IV.,  2;  V.,  II.) 
Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice,  Act  III.,  Sc.  3.— SR  12 
(Good  Name— seZ.)— OS  1 

("Good    name*  in    man   or  woman,  dear  my 

lord.")— GG 
(Othello,  Br.  sel.  /r.)— BNL 
(Othello— 8eZ.)—SE 
Othello's  Address  to  the  Duke  of  Venice  and  the 
Senators.     (Se?. /r.  I.,  3.)— MRS 
(Course  of  Love,  The — sel.) — OH 
(Othello— «ei.)— A  E 

(Othello's  Apology.)— BS  1— CS  9— KNE— SPE 
(Othello's  Courtship.)— WCLG  2 
(Othello's  Defence.)— BNL— EPs— SO 
("She  thanked  me,  and  bade  me,"  etc. — br.  ad.) 
SPE 

Othello's  Farewell.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  III.,  3.)— PS 

(Othello,  Br.  sel.  /r.)— AE— BNL 
Othello's  Last  Words.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  V.,  2.)— EPs 
Othello's  Remorse.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  V.,  2.)— BNL 
Regrets  of  Drunkenness.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  3.) — SS 
(Cassio's  Lost  Reputation — abr.) — WR  18 
Othello's  Address  to  the  Duke  of  Venice  and  the  Sena- 
tors.— W :  Shakespeare.    See  Othello,  the  Moor 

of  Venice. 
Othello's  Apology. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Othello,  the 

Moor  of  Venice. 
Othello's  Courtship.  —  W:  Shakespeare.     See  Othello, 

the  Moor  of  Venice. 
Othello's  Defence. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Othello,  the 

Moor  of  Venice. 
Othello's  Farewell. — W:  Shakespeare.    See  Othello,  the 

Moor  of  Venice. 
Othello's  Last  Words. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Othello, 

the  Moor  of  Venice. 
Othello's  Remorse. — W:  Shakespeare.    See  Othello,  the 

Moor  of  Venice. 
Other  Children.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— HSS  2 

(Foreign  Children— C.)—CGV 
Other  FeUow,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Evolution  of  Dodd. 

Ch.  XIIL)— W:  H.  Smith.— SC 
Other  One,  The.— Harry  T.  Peck.— AA 
Other  One  was  Booth,  The.— Edmund  V.  Cooke. — CS  33 
Other  People's  ChHdren.     (Dial.)— Mrs.  E.  R.  A.— StD 
Other  Side,  The.     (Cornell  Widow.)— CG  3 
Other  Side  of  the  Moon,  The. — Edgar  Fawcett. — MRS 
Other  World,   The.     (C.)— Harriet   B.   Stowe.— AA— 

BNL— FEP— GP— TAS 
(In  the  Other  World.)— CS  3 
Ottawa.— Duncan  C.  Scott.— TCV—VA 
O-U-G-H-.— C :  B .  Loomis.— EuE— S AE 
Ouglou's  Onslaught,  Br.  sel.  fr.    ("Tchasson  Ouglou  is 

onl") — W:  Motherwell.— AE 
Ould  Doctor  [or  Docther]  Mack. — Alfred  P.  Graves. — 

CS  30— THP  . 
Ould  Master,  Th',  Sel.  fr.     (Misther  Denis's  Return.) 

—Jane  Barlow.— TIP 
Ould  Plaid  Shawl,  The.— Fs.  A.  Fahy.— TIP 
Our  Acts  our  Angels  Are. — J :  Fletcher.     See  Upon  an 

Honest  Man's  Fortune. 
Our  All  Around. — Anon. — MAD 
Our  Almanac. — T:B.  Aldrich. — AD 

(Marjorie's  Almanac — C.) — NV — PoR — SM 
Our  Anniversary. — Mrs.  M.  E.  Cornell. — SSE 
Our  Arbor  Day  in  May. — Anon. — AD 
Our  Army  and  Navy. — W :  T.  Sherman. — FD  2 
Our  Aunt  Lucy. — Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
Our  Autocrat.     (Sel. ) — J :  G.  Whittier. — PEO 
Our  Baby.— Anon.— WR  17 
Our  Banner.— W.  P.  TUden.— PRR 
Our  Banner  Unrent;  its  Stars  Unobscured. — Lawrence 

S.  Ross.— BLP 
Our  Beloved  Dead.     (Troy  Times.) — BS  18 
Our  Biggest  Fish. — Eugene  Field. — EF 
Our  Boat  to  the  Waves. — W :  E.  Channing. — BNL  (si. 

abr.) 
(Sea  Song.)— EPs 
Our  Book-shelves.- T:  G.  Hake.— LBB— MBB 
Our  Boys  are  Marching  On. — J.  H.  Jewett. — PAPm 
Our  Casuarina  Tree. — Torn  Dutt. — VA 
Our  Cause. — W:  J.  Linton. — VA 
Our  Centennial      Celebration.— Orestes      Cleveland. — 

CS  12— PRR 
Our  Cherished  Flag. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See  Our  Flag. 
Our  Childhood's  Home.— R.  S.— HP 
Our  Children.— W:  C.  Bryant.— TAS 
Our  Choir.— Anon.— BS  15 
Our  Christ. — Lucy  Larcom. — TAS 

Our  Christian  Heritage,  Sel.  fr.     (Great  American  Re- 
public a  Christian-State,  The.) — Jas.,  Cardinal 

Gibbons.— BLP— PFP 


Our  Christmas. — Julia  Wolcott  [or  Walcottl. — CS  34 — 

PR— SRll— WR12 
Our  Church  Sociable. — Louis  Eisenbeis. — CS  31 
Our  C'lumbus.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  27 

Our  Colors  at  Fort  Sumter. Aldrich. — FP 

Our  Comrades.— Anon. — PEO 

Our  Constitution. — H.  W.  Bolton. — SR  8 

Our  Constitution. — Chaimcey  M.  Depew. — FD  2 

Our  Country.     (Dial.)— Anna.  F.  Bayley. — DLD 

Our  Coimtry.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Not  Yet. )— W :  C.  Bryant.— 

SE 
Our  Country. —  T:  S.  Grimk^.     See  Duty  of  Literary 

Men  to  America. 
Our  Country.     (Fr.   Speech   Del'd   Apr.    30,   1889.)— 

B:  Harrison.- SSD— TMD 
Our  Country.     (Fr.  Speech  Del'd  Nov.  1,  1894.)— B: 

Harrison.— TMR 
Our  Country.— W:  J.  Pabodie.— BLP— CS  20— PRR 
Our  Country.— Edna  D.  Proctor.— SR  10 
Our  Country.— Epes  Sargent.— BLP— PEO 
Our  Country.     (SeZ.)— J :  G.  Whittier.— TMR 
Our  Country  Saved. — Jas.   R.   Lowell.     See  Ode  Re- 
cited at  the  Harvard  Commemoration. 
Our  Countrymen  in  Chains.     (Expostulation — C.) — J: 

G.  Whittier.— TMD  (si.  abr.) 
Our  Country's  CaU.— R:  Barry.— PRR 
Our  Country's  Call.— W:  C.  Bryant.— AWB—CS  2— 

PRR— WRD 
Our  Country's  Flag. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — DLD 
Our  Country's  Greatness. — G :  F.  Hoar.— PRR 
Our  Coimtry's  Needs.— J:  B.  Finch.— SSS 

(Includes  What  Constitutes  a  State — abr. — by  Sir 
W:  Jones.) 
Our  Country's  Wealth.     (Dial.)—E.  C.  Rook.— CDs 

Our  Cousins. White.— MDD 

Our  Daily  Reckoning.     (Mail  and  Express.) — HSS  2 

(At  Set  of  Sun.)— CS  14 
Our  Daisy.— Anon.— TFS 
Our  Darling. — Anon. — HP 
Our  Daughter.     (Z)iai.)— Anon.— NDP 
Our  Dead.— G:  D.  CampbeU,  Duke  of  Argyle.— PGT  2 
Our  Dead  Heroes.— W.  J.  C.  Train.— DFR 
Our  Dead  Soldiers.- Fs.  A.  Walker.— FD  2 
Our  Debating  Club.— E.  F.  Turner.— CS  26— DCR 
Our  Defenders.     (Defenders,  The— C.)— T:  B.  Read.— 

CS  1 
Our  Delight.— E.  Murray.- LPS— PP 
Our  Dim  Eyes  Seek  a  Beacon. — Anon. — HDL 
Our  Dog. — H:  Davenport. — PR 
Our  Dogs.     (Abr.)- Dr.  J:Brown.— MBL 
Our  Drummer  Boy.— Fred  Hildreth.— WR  7 
Our  Duties    to    our    Country. — Dan'l     Webster.     See 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Our  Duties  to  the  Republic— Jos.  Story.- FTR- KNE 
— SS 

(Destiny  of  our  Country.) — OS  3  . 

(Our  Duty  to  the  Republic.) — LLC 

(Our  Future.)— BLP 

(Responsibilities  of  our  Republic.) — HNS 

(Responsibility  of  American  Citizens.) — WRD 

(Shall  America  Betray  Herself?)— FD  1— SR  6 
(Sels.  vary  somewhat.) 
Our   Duty. — Jos.   Cook.      See  Newest   Promises    and 

Perils  of  the  Temperance  Reform. 
Our  Duty  Here. — Sir  J:  Bowring. — AD 

("Grateful  to  Drink  Life's  Cup"— se?.)- HSS  3 
Our  Duty    to    the    Philippines. — W:    McKinley.     See 

Future  of  the  Philippines. 
Our  Expanding  Republic,  Sets.  fr. — H:  Watterson. 

Columbian  Oration.     (Cond.) — SO 
(Retrospect,  A — ptly.  same.) — TMR 

Dedication  of  Columbian  Exposition. — BLP 

Schools  Take  Part,  The.— BLP 
Our  Fallen  Heroes. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. — SAE 
Our  Fallen  Heroes.— G:  B.  Griffith.- HBP 
Our  Fathers. — C:  Sprague.     See  Centennial  Ode. 
Our  Father's  Home.— R:  C.  Trench.— HBP 

(Kingdom  of  God,  The.)— FEP— HDL  (abr.) 
Our  Favourite  Hymn.     (Tenn.  University  Mag.)— CG  3 

Our  Federal  Constitution-. Fuller.- FD  2 

Our  First  Commander.— W:  F.  (?)  Vilas.— SR  1 

Our  First   Experience   with   a   Watchdog. — Frank   R. 

Stockton.     See  Rudder  Grange. 
Our  First  Fire-crackers. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Our  First  ThanksgivingDay.     (Youth's  Companion.) — 

PP— YPS 
Our  First  Young  Love. — Anon. — FTA 
Our  Flag.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Our  Flag.— Anon.— DJS 

Our  Flag.     (DiaZ.)— Anon.— DLD— LPS— PP 
Our  Flag.— Anon.— DST 
Our  Flag.— Anon.— GMS 

(Hurrah  for  the  Flag.)— NV 


248 


TITLE  INDEX 


Out 


Our  Flag.— Anon.— NV 
Our  Flag.— Anon.— TT 

(Little  Flag-bearer,  The.)— PS 
Our  Flag.— Anon.— WR  17 
Our  Flag.— C:  F.  Alsop.- PRR 

Our  Flag.— H :  W.  Beecher.     See  National  Flag,  The. 
Our  Flag.— Jas.  Montgomery.— DCP—DFR 

(Our  Cherished  Flag.)— PEO 
Our  Flag.— A.  P.  Putnam.— FD  2 

(National  Ensign,  The.)— PTS 
Our  Flag.     {Concert  rec. )— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Our  Flag.— A.  L.  Stone.— BS  17 

("Rally  Round  the  Flag.")— PEO 
Our  Flag  at  Apia.— Annie  B.  King.— TMD 
Our  Flag  is  There.— Anon.—  BLP  —  CP  —  WR  17  {d. 

Our  Folks.— Ethel  L.  Beers.—  BS  1  —  CR  —  CS  5— 

FTR— HNS— MMR— SA— WRD 
Our  Future.— J:  Ireland.— BLP 

Our  Future. — Jos.  Story.     See  Our  Duties  to  the  Re- 
public. 
Our  Future  Work.— Anon.— DST 
Our  Garden.— Juliana  H.  Ewing.— NV— WR  17 
Our  Gardener's  Burial. Johnstone. — BLP 

(Gardener's  Burial,  The.)— AVP— LLC 
Our  Glorious  Language. — Anon. — WR  26 

(English  Language,  The.)— SR  13 
Our  Goddess.     ( Wrinkle.)— CG  3 
Our  Guide  in  Genoa  and  Rome. — S:  L.  Clemens.     See 

Innocents  Abroad. 
Our  Guides. — S:  L.  Clemens.     See  Innocents  Abroad. 
Our  Gunner's  Shot.— Anon.— CS  23— DS 
Our  Happy  Warrior.— H.  P.  Collier.- FD  2 
Our  Heritage. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Heritage,  The. 
Our  Hero. — Harry  Romaine. — TL 

Our  Heroes.— J:  A.Andrew. —  BLP   {d.  a?<r.)— WRD 
Our  Heroes.— Phoebe  Gary  (?).— BS  26— PP— YPS 
Our  Heroes.— O.  F.  Pearre.— WR  7 
Our  Heroes  and  Martyrs. — Edwin  H.  Chapin. — FD  1 
Our  Heroes'  Graves. — Anon. — PEO 
Our  Hired  Girl.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Our  Hired    Girl. — Frank    R.    Stockton.     See    Rudder 

Grange. 
Our  History. — Julian  C.  Verplanck. — BLP  {abr.) 

(American  History.) — SR  8 
Our  Holidays.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Our  Holidays.— Eliz.  Lloyd.— HE 
Our  Homemaker. — Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney. — TMR 
Our  Homestead. — Phcebe  Gary.— WCL 
Our  Honored  Dead. — Anon. — CP 

Our  Honored  Dead.— H:  W.  Beecher.—  FD  1  —  LLC— 
WCLGl 

(Honored  Dead,  The.)— BLP  {si.  dt#.)— HSS  1  {sel.) 
— SPE 

(Invisible  Heroes,  The.)— TMD 

(Tribute  to  our  Honored  Dead,  A.)  —  BS  24  — CS  2 
— DFR— HR 
Our  Honored  Heroes.— S.  F.  Smith.— PEO 

(Decoration  Day.)- HSS  1 
Our  Jim.— Anon.— TFS  (ael.) 

(Only  a  Boy.)— BS  2— CS  9 
Our  Laclye  of  the  Snow.— T:  D'A.  M'Gee.— TCV 

Our  Land. King.— HS 

Our  Last  Toast. — Bartholomew  Dowling. — HP 
,  (Indian  Revelry. )—FEP 

(Revel,  The.)— VA 

(Revelry  of  the  Dying.)— BNL 

(Song  of  the  Dying.)— CS  5— MR 
"Our  Left."— Fs.  O.  Ticknor.— EDY 
Our  Limitations. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — TAS 
Our  Little  Queen. — Emily  Warren. — WCL 

(Daisy.)— TMR 
Our  Lives. — Anon. — CS  27 
Our  Lost. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — SSS 
Our  Love  shall  Live.—  Edmund  Spenser.     See  Amo- 

retti  and  Epithalamion. 
Our  Martyred  Dead. — Mark  Trafton. — BLP 
Our  Mary    and    the    Child    Mummy. —  C:    Tennyson- 
Turner.— PGT  2 
Our  Master.— J :  G.  Whittier.— TAS 
Our  Minister's  Sermon.     (Harper's  Bazar.)  —  BS  7 — 
FEP— SR  7 

(John  Jankin's  Sermon.) — CS  8 — KNE 
Our  Mother  Tongue. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. 
— GN 

(Envoy  to  an  American  Lady.) — VA 
Our  Mothers.— G:  Cooper.— YBT 

(Hundreds!)— TFS 

(Only  One.)— A  A 
Our  Mother's  Sampler. — ^Anon. — HSS  2 
Our  Nation   and   Flag. —  C:   Sumner.     See  Are  we   a 
Nation  ? 


Our  National  Anniversary. — A.  H.  Rice. — PEO 
Our  National  Banner.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Battle  of  Lex- 
ington.)—E:  Everett. — LLC 
(Flag,  The.)— SO 

(National  Banner,  The.)— CS  6— KNE 
(Stars  and  Stripes,  The.)— CP 
Our  National  Character.     (Sel.  fr.  The  First  Battles  of 

the  Revolutionary  War.)— E:  Everett.— FD  1 
(On  National  Character.) — SSD 
Our  National  Curse.- T.  DeW.  Talmage.— SSS 
Our  National   Flag. — H:   W.    Beecher.     See   National 

Flag.  The. 
Our  Nationality.— T:  S.  King.— BLP 
Our  Native  Birds.- Nathan  H.  Dole.— THP 

(Larks  and  Nightingales.) — AWH 
Our  Navy.- Anon.— AWB— PAPm 
Our  New  Relations. — W:   McKinley.     See   Future   of 

the  Philippines. 
Our  New  Servant. — Jas.  M.  Barrie. — WR  25 
Our  New  Walk. — W:  L.  Alden.       See  Adventures  of 

Jimmy  Brown,  The. 
Our  Old  Doctor.- Anon.— CS  21 
Our  Orders. — Julia  W.  Howe. — AA 
Our  Oriole  Neighbors. — Beverly  Moore. — MYF 
Our  Own.     (C.)— Marg.  E.  Sangster.— BIL—BS  4  (<U. 

to  S.  H.  T.)— CS  13— FT  A— HP— LLC— TAV 
(Unkind  Words.)- OH 
Our  Own  Dear  Land. — J.  R.  Thomas. — HS 
Our  Pattern.     (C.)— Phoebe  Gary. 

(Neglected  Pattern,  The.)— PPSr 
Our  Platform.— Theodore  L.  Cuyler.- TS 
Our  Pledge  to  Puerto  Rico.— C.  E.  Littlefield.— SO 
Our  Presidents. — Laura  E.  Richards. — LPS — PP 
Our  Railroads. — Anon. — CS  21 

Our  Ranks  are  Getting  Thin. — Louis  Eisenbeis. — CS  35 
Our  Recent  Diplomacy. — J:  Hay. — AI 
Our  Regiments  of  Reform. — T.  DeWitt  Talmage. — TS 
Our  Relations    to    {or    with]    England. —  E:    Everett. 

See  First  Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 
Our  Relations    with    Europe. — G:    Washington.     See 

Farewell  Address. 
Our  Republic.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Circumstances  Favorable 

to  the  Progress  of  Literature  in  America.) — 

E:  Everett.— SO 
(American  Experiment  of  Self-government,  The.) — 

SS— SSD— TMD 
Our  Responsibility  as  a  Nation. — H:  A.  Boardman. — 

SSD 
Our  Rich  Heritage.— J:  M.  Thurston. — SC 
Our  Scarlet  King.— Harold  M.  Bowman. — CG  2 
"Our  share  of  night  to  bear."     (C) — Emily  Dickinson. 

(Life.)— A  A 
Our  Shepherd.— Frances  R.  Havergal.— YBT 
Our  Ships  at  Sea.— G:  W.  Bungay. — CS  13 
Our  Sir  Robin. — Anon. — NV 
Our  Sister. — (Household  Words.) — MMR 
Our  Sister. — Horatio  N.  Powers. — GP 
Our  Skater  Belle.— Anon.— BNL 
Our  State.— J:  G.  Whittier.— HB— HBP 
Our  Sweet  Unexpressed  !—W.  F.  Fox.— CS  12 
Our  Temperance  Banner. — Anon. — DLS 
Our  Thanksgiving  Accept. — W:  D.  Howells. — PEO 

(Thanksgiving  [ ,  A]— C.)— HDL— TAS 
Our  Throne's  Decay.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 
Our  Traveled    Parson.— Will    Carleton.— BS  7— CS  18 

—FTR 
Our  Traveller.— H.  C.  Pennell.— THP 
Our  Two  Opinions.    (C.)— Eugene  Field.— AA—EF— OH 

(Two  Opinions.)— BS  21— WR  15 
Our  Verse. — Anon. — HVD 
Our  Very  Best.— Anon.— TT 

Our  Visitor  and  what  he  Came  for. — Anon. — CS  14 
Our  Warfare  and  our  Duty. — Theodore  L.  Cuyler. — TS 
Our  Washington.— Eliza  W.  Durbin.— PEO 
Our  Watch  Words. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Our  Weddin'-day.— Belle  C.  Greene.— CS  32 
Our  Wee  White  Rose.— Gerald  Massey. — BNL 
Our  Whippings. — Eugene  Field. — WTD 
Our  Whole  Country.— Anon.— CS  8— PRR 
Our  WiUie.— Anon.— FTR 
Our  Willows.     (Hours  at  Home.) — AD 
Our  Work.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Our  Worst     Foes. — G:    W:    Curtis.     See    Centennial 

Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 
Our  Wrongs.— C.  F.  H.— CG  2 
Ourselves  Alone. — J:  O'Hagan. — TIP 
Out.— T :  H.  Bayly.     See  Out ,  John ! 
Out  and  Into. — Anon.— CS  24 
Out  and  Inward  Bound. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Mer- 

Out  at  Sea.— J.  S.  Fletcher.- CS  30— DES— PR 

Out  in  the  Cold.— Anon.— KNE 

Out  in  the  Cold. — Jennie  Harrison.-^YBT 


249 


Out 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Out  in  the  Dark.— Stephen  L.  Gwynn.— TIP 
Out  in  the  Fields. — Anon. — HDL 
Out  in  the  Meadow.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Out  in  the  Sobbing  Rain. — Dora  Shaw. — CS  8 
Out  in  the  Streets.— Tt  D.  English.— CS  3 
Out,  John!     (O— T:  H.  Bayly.— HSS  3 

(Out.)- CS  10 
Out  of  Adversity. — J :  Milton.     See  Samson  Agonistes. 
Out  of  Doors.— Jas.  R.  (7)  Lowell.— LLC 
Out  of  her  Reckoning. — Anon. — WR  24 
Out  of  Italian.     A  Song.     (C.) — R.  Crashaw. 

(Song,  A:  To  Thy  Lover.)— HBP 
Out  of  Muhlqueen's  Alley. — Agnes  L.  Provost. — BS  26 
Out  of  Shadow.— Mary  D.  Chellis.— HDL 
Out  of  the  Bottle.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Out  of  the  Cradle  Endlessly  Rocking. — Walt  Whitman. 
— AA 

(Mockmg-bird,  The— sei.)— BNL 
Out  of  the  Deeps  of  Heaven. — R:  H:  Stoddard. — TAS 
Out  of  the  Depths.— H.  E.  McBride.— MTD 
Out  of  the  East. — Stockton  Bates. — CS  35 
Out  of  the  Heart.    {Dedication.)— 3 :  W.  Chad  wick. — OH 
Out  of  the  Hurly  Burly,  Sels.  fr.—C:  H.  Clark. 

Avalanche  of  Drugs,  An.     (Ch.  XIX.)— BS  26 

Catching  the  Morning  Train.    (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  IV.)— 
CS  10 

(Reaching  the  Early  Train — si.  difl. )—BS  3 

Judge  Pitman  on  Various  Kinds  of  Weather.     (Sel. 
fr.  Ch.  XVII.)— BS  4 

"Morning     Argus"    Obituary    Department,    The. 
(Sel.  fr-  Ch.  VIII.)— BRR— CS  10 

My  First  Political  Speech.     (Set.  fr.  Ch.  XXIII.)— 
-CSll 

Story  of  Bishop  Potts,  The.     (Set.  fr.  Ch.  XV.)— 
CS  17 
Out  of  the  Morning.     (C.) — Emily  Dickinson. 

(Morning. ) — AA 
Out  of  the  Old  House,  Nancy.— Will  M.  Carleton.— AA 

CS  8— DDR— PS  (sel.) 
Out  of  the  Way.— Emma  C.  Dowd.— BS  18 
Out  of  the  Window.— S.  A.  Brock.— CS  35 
Out  Sleighing  with  Sophia.— G:  V.  Hobart.— WR  26 
"Out  to  Old  Aunt  Mary's."- Jas.  W.  Riley.     See  Old 

Aunt  Mary's. 
Out  West.- Anon.— HP 
Outcast,  The.— Anon.— BS  19 
Outcast,  The.— Anon.— WR  24 
Outcast,  The.— Mary  L.  Ritter.— HP 
Outcast's  Dream,  The.— Olive  Bell.— HP 
Outgrown.— Julia    C.    R.    Dorr.— BNL— EPs— GP— 

WR  14  (abr.) 
OutUlon  Saidi.     (IF.  mus.) — Anon. — HE 
Outlandish  Knight,  The. — Anon. — CGd 
Outlaw,  The.— M.  Henderson.— CS  27 
Outlaw,  The.     (DtaZ.)— Jennie  Joy.— MD 
Outlaw,  The.— Walter  Scott.— See  Rokeby. 
Outlaw  Murray,  The.   (The  Song  of  the  Outlaw  Murray 

— in  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon.— r-BB  (ahr.) 
Outlaw  of  Loch  Lene,  TSie. — Jeremiah  J.  Callanan. — 

OB— TIP 
Outlaws,  The.— E.  J.  M'Phelim.— SR  6 
Outlaw's  Song,  The.     (Song  fr.  Orra,  Act  III.,  Sc.  1.) 
— Joanna  Baillie. — OB 

(Chough  and  [the]  Crow,  The.)— CEL— WEP  4 
Outline.     (*SeZ.  fr.  The  Recluse,  Bk.  I.,  conclusion.) — 

W:  Wordsworth.— EPs 
Outlook. — Archibald  Lampman. — TCV 
Out-of-door  Arithmetic. — Anon. — NV 
Outrageous  Fortune. — Anon. — WR  14 
Outre  Mer,  Sels.  fr. — H :  W.  Longfellow. 

Journey  into  Spain,  The. — APr 

Valley  of  the  Loire,  The.— APr 
Outside. — Anon. — CS  25 
Outside  the  Fold.— E:  WUlett.— DLS 
Outward  Bound.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 
Outward  Bound. — W :  Allingham. — MMR 
Outward  Bound. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Outward  Shows,  The.     (Harvard  Lampoon.) — CG  2 
Outwards    or    Homewards.     (Patience — C) — Fs.    W. 

Bourdillon.— HP 
Oven-bird,  The.— Frank  BoUes.— SN 
Over  and  Over  Again. — Josephine  Pollard. — BS  22 — 
HSS  2— OS  1— SM— YBT 

(Keep  Working— 8eZ.)—PS 
Over  behind  der  Moon. — Joe  Kerr. — GH 
Over  Hill ,    over   Dale. —  W :    Shakespeare.     See    Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream,  A. 
Over  in  the  Meadow. — Oliver  A.  Wadsworth. — PHS — 

WCL 
Over  the  Bare  Hills.— Anon.— DST 
Over  the    Crossin'.     (Svringjield    Republican.) — CD — 


NPS— TMR— YP 


Over  the  Divide. — Marion  Manville. — CS  31 
Over  the  Fence. — Anon. — PS 

(Boy  and  his  Conscience,  The — abr. — si.  diff.) — YBT 
Over  the  Green  Downs. — Jean  Ingelow. — LLC 
Over  the  Hill.— E.  H.  Hastings.— WR  22 
Over  the  Hill.     (TeU  Me— C.)— G :  Macdonald.— HSS  3 

(SI.  a6r.  )—BS  1— CEL— LLC 
Over  the  Hill  from  the  Poor-house. — Will  Carleton. — 

BS  8— CS  19 
Over  the   HiU   to   the   Poor-house. — Will   Carleton. — 

BNL— BS  2— CS  4— PS 
Over  the  Hills  and  Far  Away. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — BS  5 
Over  the  Hills  and  Far  Away. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Over  the  Hills  from  the  Poor-house. — May  Mignonette. 

— CS  5— PS 
Over  the  Orchard  Fence. — Harry  J.  Shellman. — BS  12 

— PFP 
"Over  the  lattice  there  clambered  a  vine." — Anon. — 

WR21 
Over  the  Range. — Anon. — CS  36 
Over  the  Range.— J.  H.  Mills.— HBP 
Over  the  River.— Nancy  P.   Wakefield.— BNL— BS  1 

— CS  2  (al.  to  Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton)— FEP— FMR 

—  FP  —  FTR  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HNS  —  LLC 

— SA— SAE  (br.  sel.}— SU—WChG  9. 
Over  the  River  of  Drooping  Eyes. — Anon. — BS  25 
Over  the    Threshold   of    my»  Library. — (  Tr.    by)  H: 

Drury.— LBB— MBB 
Over  their  Graves. — H :  J.  Stockard. — AA 
Overboard!— Edith  Elmer.— BS  21 
Overcoat  he  Got,  The.— Anon.— BDD 
Overcome  by    Love. — Philip    Sidney.     See    Astrophel 

and  Stella. 
Overcometh'— Marg.  E.  Sangster.— CS  23— SSS 
Overdone  Economy. — J:  Wolcott. — CS  34  (abr.) 

''Economy.)- HPE— SCS  (si.  abr.) 
Overdrawn  Accounts. — Nettie  H.  Pelham. — SR  9 
Overflow  of  Great   River,  The. — Georgia  A.   Peck. — 

CS26 
Overheard  at  the  Zoo. — C:  M.  Snyder. — GH 
Overheard  in  a  Garden,  Epilogue  to.      (Gold.) —  Oliver 

Herford.- THP 
Overland  Mail,  The.— Rudyard  Kipling.- CS  32 
Oversight  of  Make-up,  An. — Eben  E.  Rexford. — WR  2 
(Flo's  Letter.)— DST 
(Little  Flo's  Letter.)— COS— PP 
Overture.     Omar  Khayyam.     See  Rubiiiyiit. 
Overture  from  "Thrasymedes  and  Eunoc." — Walter  S. 

Landor.  See  Thrasymedes  and  Eunoo. 
Overtures  from  Richmond. — F.  J.  Child. — AWB 
Overwork.  (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Ovid's  Banquet  of  Sense — Narratio,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Thames, 

The.)— G:  Chapman.— WEP  1 
Owd  Pinder. — Edwin  Waugh. — VA 
Owd  Roii.     (^6r.)— Alfred  Tennyson.— WR  1 
Owed  to  Halifax. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SR  7 
"Owed"  to  my  Pocket-book. — Anon. — HP 
Owed  to  the  Steem  Fire  Engine. — A.  Skwirt. — CS  1 
Owen  Moore. — Anon. — BS  23 
Owen's  Oath.— Frd'k  M.  Holmes.— CS  31 
Owl,  The.— Anon.— HBP 
Owl,  The.— Bryan    W.     Procter.— BNL— CGd— LC— 

SN 
(King  of  the  Night,  The.)— POS 
Owl,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Song:     The  Owl. 
Owl  and  Nightingale,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KC 
Owl  and  the  Bell,  The.— G:  Macdonald.— EA 
Owl  and  the  Pussy-cat,  The.— E:  Lear.— CSS— DST— 

GMS— NA— OS  1— PoR— PPSr— WCL 
Owl  Critic,  The.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— AWH—BVC—BS  7 

— CS  18— EA— NPS— SR  10— THP— YP 
Owl  in  Church.— Rosa  V.  Jeffrey.— DES 
Owl's  Court,  The. — Jean  Agave. — CPL 
Owyhee  Joe's  Story. — Rounseville  Wildman. — BS  23 
Oxen,  The.— Anon.— NV 

"Oxen  that  Rattle  the  Yoke  and  Chain." — Walt  Whit- 
man.    See  Song  of  Myself. 
Oxford  and  her  Chancellor. — W :  Alexander. — AVP 
Oxford  Boat-race. — Arthur  C.  Coxe. — DS 
Oxford  County.— J:  D.  Long.— SC 
Oxford  in  1845.— W:  Alexander.- AVP 
Oxfordshire  Children's  May  Song. — BVC 
Oxfordshire  Guy  Fawkes'  Song. — Anon. — BVC 
Oxus. — Matthew  Arnold.     See  Sohrab  and  Rustum. 
Oyster  Yarn,  An. — Anon.— WR  24 
Oysterman,  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.— SR  10 

(Ballad  of  the  Ovsterman,  The— C.)— CR— CSS— 

—PPSr— THP 
Ozymandias. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  following. 
Ozymandias  of  Egypt.     (Sonnet. — Ozymandias — C.) — 

Percy  B.  Shelley.— BNL— OS  3— PGT  1— YBF 
(Ozymandias.)— FEP— LLC 


250 


TITLE  INDEX 


Papa's 


**Pa  Never  Does." — Anon. — WR  25 

Pacific  Shore,  The.— Anon. — BLP 

"Pack  clouds  away  [,  and  welcome  day]." — T:  Hey- 

wood.     iSee  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 
Package.     {Acting  char.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.   Rook. — 

YFE 
Packet  of  Letters,  A.— Oliver  Herford.— BS  18 
Packing  the  [Knowledge]  Box. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Good- 
fellow.— PS— TT 
Paddle  your  Own  Canoe. — Mrs.    Sarah    T.  Bolton. — 

KNE— PPSr 
Paddy  and  his  Musket. — Anon. — SCS 

(Pat  and  his  Musket.) — DI 
Paddy  at  Sea.    (C ) — S:  Lover. 
(Jimmy  Hoy — abr.) — BS  16 
Paddy  Blake's  Echo.— S:  Lover.— CS  17— DI— OS  2 
Paddy  Dunbar.     (Parody  on  Walter    Scott's  Lochin- 

var.)— "Sir  We-alter  Scott.  "—WR  13 
Paddy  Pagan's  Pedigree. — Anon. — DI 
Paddy  McGrath's  Introduction  to  Mr.  Bruin. — Anon. — 

CS  15— DI 
Paddy  Moore.— Fred  E.  Brooks.— WR  16 
Paddy  O'Rafther.— S:  Lover.— DI— SCS— THP 
Paddy  the  Piper.— S :  Lover.— BeR—DI 
Paddy  the  Sport,  Sel.  fr.     (Pat   and  the  Fox.)— S: 

Lover. — DI 
Paddy's  Courting.— W.  A.  Eaton.— CS  26— DS 
Paddy's  Dream. — Anon. — BeR — DI 
Paddy's  Excelsior.     {Harper' a  Magazine.) — CS  6 

(Pat's  Excelsior.)— BS  1 
Paddy's  Lament. — Anon. — CS  23 — DS 
Paddy's  Reflections  on  Cleopatra's  [or  Cleopathera's] 

Needle.— Cormac  O'Leary.— GH— PS 
(Reflections   on   Cleopathera's    Needle.)  — AWH — 

THP 
Padre  Bandelli  Proses  to  the  Duke  Ludovico  Sforza 

about  Leonardo  da  Vinci,  Br.  sel.  jr.     (On  the 

Picture  of  the  Last  Supper  at  Milan.) — W:  W. 

Story.— OSS 
Paganini. — Anon. — BS  20 

Page  and  the  Maid  of  Honor,  The  (Effect  at  a  Dis- 
tance).— JohannW.  von  Goethe.- — WR  8 
Page  of  Lancelot,  The. — May  Kendall. — VA 
Paid  Bill,  The.     (PMncA.)— HPE 
Pain  and  Weariness.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Pain  in  a  Pleasure  Boat. — 1 :  Hood. — TMD 
Pain  in  the  Side,  A.— H.  E.  McBride.— MOD 
Pain  of  Love. — H :  Constable. — GP 

(Sonnet.     "To  live  in  hell,"  etc.)— FEP 
Pain  of   Love,   The. — Abraham  Cowley.     See  Change, 

The. 
Painful  Plough,  The.— Anon.— BVC 
Painted  Fan,  A. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — AA 
Painter  of  Seville,  The.— Susan  Wilson.— BS  3— CS  2 

— FTR— HNS— SA 
Painter  who  Pleased  Nobody  and  Everybody,  The.  — 

J:  Gay.— BNL  (br.  sels.)— FEP  (sel.) 
Painter's  Studio,  The.— Anon.— SED 

(Art  and  Artifice.)— CS  1 
Pair  of  Fools,  A. — Jas.  K.  Stephen.— HBR 
Pair  of  Gloves,  A. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  25 
Pair  of  Lions,  A. — Harry  M.  Cushing. — StD 
Pairing    Time    Anticipated.       (Sel.) — W:    Cowper. — 

Palabras  Carifiosas.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA— FTA— OH 
Palabras  Grandiosas. — Bayard  Taylor.   See  Echo  Club, 

The. 
Palace,  The.— T.  S.  Denison.— SR  3 
Palace    Beautiful,    The. — J:    Bunyan. — See    Pilgrim's 

Progress. 
Palace  o'  the  King,  The.— W:  Mitchell.— BS  9— CS  16 
Palace  of  Alcinous,  The. — Homer  (W:  C.  Bryant). — 

See  Odyssey,  The. 
Palace  of  the  Days,  The. — Rossiter  W.  Raymond  - 

CS35 
Palace  of  the  Gnomes. — Maria  G.  Brooks. — See  Zophiel. 
Palamon    and    Arcite. — Geoffrey    Chaucer    (tr.    by   J: 

Dryden).     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Palaver.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Palermo.  (Sel.  fr.  The  Disciples.) — Harriet  E.  H.  King. 

— VA 
Palestine.- Fred  E.  Brooks.- WR  4 
Palestine.     (Sel.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— PTS 
Palice  of  Honour,  The,     Sels.  fr. — Gawain  Douglas. 
Ballade    in    (Commendation  of  Honour.     (Sel.   fr. 

Pt.  III.)— WEP  1 
Desert  Terrible,  A.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— WEP  1 
Fete  Champetre,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  11.)— WEP  1 


Palingenesis. — Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton.     See  Wanderer, 

The. 
Palinode,  A.— Edmund  Bolton.— WEP  1 
Palinode — Autumn. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — AA — FEP 
Palladium.— Matthew  Arnold.— TMD— WEP  4 
PaUas.- Guy  W.  Carryl.— CG  2 

Pallas  in  Olympus. — C:  Kingsley. — See  Andromeda. 
Palm  and  Pine. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton.     See 

Palm-tree  and  the  Pine,  The. 
Palm  and  the  Pine,  The.— Bayard  Taylor. — AD 
Palmer,  The.— D:  L.  Proudfit.— BS  19 
Palmer,  The.     (SI.  abr.)- Walter  Scott.— CGd 
Palmer's  Ode. — Rob't  Greene.     See  "Never  too  Late." 
Palmer's    Vision,    The. — Josiah    G.    Holland. — EA — 

WR  6  (sel.) 
Palmerston  and  Lincoln. — G:  Bancroft. — BS  1 
Palmetto  and  the  Pine,  The. — Virginia  L.  French. — 

BS  6— CS  13 
Palmetto  and  the  Pine,  The.— Manley  H.  Pike.— TMD 
Palm-tree,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AD— BNL— PC 
Palm-tree  and  the  Pine,  The. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord 

Houghton.— CEL 
(Palm  and  Pine.)— EPs 
Pamela  in  Town.— Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — AA 
Pan  in  Love.     (SI.  abr.)—W:  W.  Story.- BNL 
Pan   in   Wall  Street. — Edmund   C.   Stedman. — AA — 

ASL— FEP— WCLI  2 
Panacea,  A.— R.  O.  Ryder.— CG  2 
Panacea. — Annie  N.  Scribner. — CG  2 
Pandora  (Paradise  of  Children,  The — C). — Nathaniel 

Hawthorne.— WCLI  1 
Pandosto,    Sel.    fr. — Rob't    Greene.     See    Praise    of 

Fawnia,  The. 
Panegyric  on  America. — C:  Phillips. — FD  1  (sel.) 
(America.)— CS  6— PRR 
(American  Republic,  The.) — LLC 
(Destiny  of  America.)— BS  14— OM  (abr.) 
Panegyric  on  Julius  Csesar.     (Sel.  fr.  Speech  in  Behalf 

of  Marcus  Claudius  MarceUus.)— Cicero. — FTR 
Panegyrics  on  Washington.     (By  various  authors.) — 

DFR 
Panglory's  Wooing  Song.     (Fr.  The  Sorceress  of  Vain 

Delight.)— Giles  Fletcher.— FEP— HBP 
(Wooing  Song.)— OB 
Panic.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Panorama,  The. — Jas.  Burdette. — PTS  (si.  abr.) 

(Irishman's    Panorama,    The.)— BRR— CDV— CH 

(si.  a6r.)— CRR— DI— SDR 
Pan's  Anniversary;  or.  The  Shepherd's  Holyday,  Sels. 

fr. — Ben  Jonson. 
Hymn  to  Pan.— ELP 
Shepherd's   Holiday   [or    Holyday],    The.  —  EP — 

OEL— WEP  2 
Pan's  Holiday.     (The  School  of  Compliments,  Act.  V., 

Sc.  3.)— Jas.  Shirley.— EP 
(Holiday  in  Arcadia.) — CEL 
Pan's  Song. — J:  Ijyly.     See  Midas. 
Pansies. — Sarah  Doudnev. — HP 
Pansies.— Tom  Hood.— HSS  1 
Pansies,  The.— Ruth  Wilson.— HSS  1 
Pansies  from  Penshurst  and  Wilton,  Sel.fr.  (Heart  and 

Soul— Verses— C.  )—PhUip  Sidney.— OEL 
Pansy. — Mary  E.  Bradley.     See  Heart's  Ease. 
Pansy  Party,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Pansy  Song. — Anon. — NV 
Pantaloon  Fight,  A.— H.  E.  McBride.— MHD 
Pantheism  and  Theism. — T:  W.  Higginson. — TAS 
Pantheist's  Song  of  Immortality,  The. — Constance  C. 

W.  Naden.— VA 
Pantheon,   The. — Lord    Byron.     See  Childe   Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Panther,  The. — Anon. — NA 

Panther's  Choice,  The.     (Chicago  Times.) — CS  36 
Pantomime,  A. — Anon. — BS  12 
Pantomime    of   Campbell's    "Pleasures   of    Hope." — 

Howell  L.  Piner.-;-WR  23 
Pantomime  of  "Lead,  Kindly  Light." — Lucv  Jenkins, 

— WR  17 
Pantomime    of    "Where    are    you    going,    mv    pretty 

maid?" — Agnes  Crawford.— WR  20 
Paolo  and  Francesca,  Sel.  fr.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  II.) — 

Stephen  PhiUips.— AVP 
Papa  and  the  Boy.— J.  L.  Harbour. — GH— WR  7 

(Papa's  Little  Boy.)— SR  9  , 

Papa  Can't  Find  me.— Anon. — CS  13— TFS  " 

"Papa  Says  so.  Too." — Jennie  T.  H.  Lewis. — BS  1 
Papa  to  his  Heir.     (Punch.)— HPE 
Papa  was  Stumped. — Anon. — BS  21 
Papa's  Best  Gjrl. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Papa's  Birthday.     (Tab.) — Tony  Denier.- TDT 
Papa's  Coming.— Carlos.— FTT 

Papa's  Letter.— Anon.— CS  14  —  FTR  —  MR  —  PS  — 
SR2 


251 


Papa's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Papa's  Little  Boy. — J.  L.   Harbour.     See  Papa  and 

the  Boy. 
Papa's  Little  Girl.— Anon.— FAS 
Papa's  Watch. — Anon. — DLS 
Paper.    (C.)— B:  Franklin.— BNL—WR  5 

(Metaphorical  Papers.) — CS  14 
"Paper  Don't  Say,"  The.— Anon.— DCR— FAD  (arr. 

as  died.) 
Parable,  A. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — AD 
Parable  against  Persecution,  A. — B:  Franklin. — OS  2 
Parable  from  Liebig,  A. — C:  Kingsley. — FEP 
Parable  of  Nature,  A. — Anon. — ^VSG 
Parable  of  the  Spirit,  A.— J:  A.  Goodchild.— VA 
Parable  of  the   Wrecks,  The.  —  W:  O.   Stoddard.— 

BS23 
Paracelsus,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Browning. 

"I  go  to  prove  my  soul."      (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.) — 

HDL 
Song  from  "Paracelsus."     (Fr.  Pt.  IV.) — VA 

(Wanderers,  The.)— OB 
Thus  the  Mayne  Glideth.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  V.)— OB 
Paradise.— G:  Birdseye.— AWH— BS  7 
(Hindoo  Died,  A.)— MR 
(Hindoo's  Death,  The.)— HP 
(Hindoo's  Paradise,  The.)— CS  22 
Paradise.— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— VA 

Paradise  and  the  Peri. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Paradise  Enow. — Omar  Khayyam  (E:  Fitzgerald"). — 

See  Rubaivat 
Paradise  Lost,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Milton. 

Adam  Describing  Eve.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VIII.)— BNL 
(Adam  Describing  the  Creation  of  Eve — abr.) — 
FTR 
Adam  to  Eve.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IX.)— BNL 
Adam's  Account  of  his  Creation.    (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VIII. ) 

—FTR 
Adam's  Morning  Hymn  in  Paradise.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk. 
V.)— BNL 
(Hymn  of  our  First  Parents — si.  abr.) — SS 
(Hymn  of  Praise  by  Adam  and  Eve — sel.) — POS 
(Morning  Hymn  [in  Paradise].) — AE  (br.  sel.) — 

LLC— SE  (si.  abr.) 
(Song  of  Praise— 8ei. )— POS 
Apostrophe  to  Light.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.)— NE 
(Hail,  Holy  Light — sel.  w.  add.) — GP 
(Invocation  to  Light.)— BNL— SE  (sel.) 
(Light.)— OB 
Battle  of  the  Angels.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VI.)— BNL 

(Paradise  Lost — sel.) — SE 
Belial's  Address,  Opposing  War.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.) 
gg 

Concord.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.)— IR 

("Immortal  amaranth,  a  flower  which  once" — 
hr.  sel.)— AT) 
Departure  from  Paradise,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk. 

XII.)— BNL 
Discord.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— IR 
Eve  to  Adam.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  XL  )— BNL 
Evening.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— FP— POS 
(Evening  in  Paradise.)— BNL— GN— OS  2 
(Paradise  Lost,  Sel.  fr. — abr.) — SAE 
Eve's  Lament.     (Br.  sel:  fr.  Bk.  XI.)— BNL 

(Eve's  Lamentation.) — AD 
Eve's  Mirror.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— WR  11 
Faithful  Angel,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  V.)— BNL 
Moloch  to  the  Fallen  Angels.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— SS 
Morning.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— POS 
(Paradise  Lost,  Sel.  fr. — abr.) — BNL 
(World  Beautiful,  The.)— GN 
"On  to  the  sacred  hill."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  VI.)— 

AE 
Paradise  Lost.     (Br.  seU.  fr.  Bks.  II.,  IV.,  V.,  IX.) 

—BNL 
Paradise  Lost,  Bk.  I.— WEP  2 

Invocation  from  Paradise  Lost.     (Sel.) — SO 
March  of  the  Rebel  Angels.     (Sel.)— FF 
Paradise  Lost.     (Br.  sefe.)- BNL— SE 
■Satan.     (SeZ.)— NE 
(Moloch— 6r.)—SE 

(Satan's  Speech  to  his  Legions.) — PS 
Paradise  Lost,  Bk.  IV.,  Sel.  /r.— WEP  2 
Adam  and  Eve.     (Sei.)— BNL 

(Scene  in  Paradise,  A- — br.) — GN 
Eternal  Spring.     (Br.  sel.) — GN 
Paradise  Lost,  Bk.  X  ,  Sel.  fr.— WEP  2 
Raphael's  Account  of  the  Creation.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk. 

VII.)— FP— TMD  (abr.) 
Satan.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— OS  3 

(Paradise  Lost — br.  sel.) — BNL 
■Satan's  Encoimter  with  Death.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.) — 
SS 
("Whence  and  what  art  thou,  execrable  shape" 
— sel.)— AE 


Paradise  Lost  (continued). 

To  be  no  More.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.)— EPs 

(Paradise  Lost,  Sel.  /r.)— BNL 
Wisdom  and  Goodness  of  God,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr. 
Bk.  V.)— KNE 
Paradise  Lost,  The  Story  of. — Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
Paradise  of  Birds,  The,  Sels.  fr. — W:  J.  Ciourthope 
Birdcatcher's  Song. — VA 
In  Praise  of  Gilbert  White. — VA 
Ode — to  the  Roc. — VA 
Paradise  of    Children,    The.     (C.) — Nathaniel    Haw- 
thorne. 
(Pandora.)— WCLI  1 
Paradise  Regained,  Sels.  fr.—J:  Milton. 

Paradise  Regained.     (Bk.  III.— a6r.)— WEP  2 
(Paradise  Regained — br.  sel.) — BNL 
(Saviour's  Reply  to  the  Tempter,  The — sel.) — SS 
(Temptation  of  the  Vision  of  the  Kingdoms  of  the 

Earth,  The— sel.,  w.  add.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— NE 
(True  Glory— 8eZ.)—BLP 
Paradise  Regained. — BNL  (br.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.) — 
WEP2(aeZ.Jr.  Bk.  I.) 
Paradise  Regained,  The  Story  of. — Kate  M.  Rabb. — NE 
Paradisi  Gloria.— T:  W.  Parsons.- AA— ASL— TAS— 

YBF 
Paradox,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Paradox,  The. — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel  in  the 

House,  The. 
Paradox  of  Time,  The.— Austin  Dobson.— CS  24— PYO 
"Paradoxical  as  it  may  appear,  war,  the  demon- 
scourge  of  humanity." — Anon. — GG 
Paradyse  of  Dainty  Devises,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Aman- 
tium  Ir®.)- R.  Edwards.— OB— WEP  1  (sel.) 
Parallel  between  Pope  and  Dryden.     (Sel.  fr.  Pope.) — 

S:  Johnson.— AE— KNE 
Paranaeticall,  or  Advisive  Verse,   to   his   Friend,   Mr. 
John  Wicks,  A.     (C.)— Rob't  Herrick. 
(Easy  Life,  The.)— CEL 
Paraphrase  from  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.    (C) — Isaac 
Watts. 
(Insignificant  Existence.) — BNL 
Paraphrase  of  Luther's  Hymn. — Martin  Luther.     (F: 
H.  Hedge.)— AA 
(Mighty  Fortress  is  our  God,  A — sel.) — BNL 
(Psalm  XLVI.— <r.  by  T:  Carlyle.)— HBP 
(Safe  Stronghold,  A.)— AE 
Paraphrase  of  Psalm  XXIII. — Jos.  Addison. — FEP 
(Translation  of  the  Twenty-third  Psalm.) — CEL 
Paraphrase  upon    Luke    1st,    Sel.    fr. — G:    Sandys.— 

WEP  2 
Parasol  Drill,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.-^WLO 
Parasol  Drill.- E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
Parcae,  The.— Anon.— KNS 
"Pardnership." — Eleanor  Kirk. — WR  21 
Pardon,  The. — Jennie  Joy. — MD 
Pardon  Complete.— Clara   G.   DoUiver.— CS  21— PP— 

PS— YPS 
Pards.- Effie  W.  Merriman.— WR  25 
Parent.     (Pantomime  charade.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Parent  Reprimanded,  A. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Parent  with  the  Hoof,  The. — -Anon. — CH 
Parental  Discipline. — Anon. — BS  20 
Parental  Ode  to  my  Son,  Aged  Three  Years  and  Five 
Months,   A.     (C. — Domestic   Poems,   II.) — T- 
Hood.— HPE—THP— WEP  4 
(Ode  to  an  Infant  Son.)— WRD 
(Ode  to  my  Little  Son.)— CS  1— FEP 
(To  my  Infant  Son.)— BNL 
Parental  Recollections.     C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — WEP  4 
(Child,  A.)— OB 
(In  Memoriara.)— PGT  1 
Pariah,  The. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. — WR  9 
Paris  and  Helen. — W :  Aytoun.     See  Puffs  Poetical. 
Parisina,  Sels.  fr. — Lord  Byron. 

Execution,  The.     (Sts.  XV.,  XVI.,  XVII.—  abr.)— 

EPs 
Parisina,  Sel.  fr.  (St.  I.)— WEP  4 
(Twilight.)— CEL 
Parlement  of  Foules,  The,  Sels.  fr.  —  Geoffrey  Chaucer. 
Parlement  of  Foules,  The.     (SeU.)— WEP  1 
Irees,  Flowers,  and  Birds.     (Br.  sel.) — GP 
Parliament  of  Man,  The.— J :  H :  Brown.— TCV 
Parliamentary  Law. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Parliamentary  Reform. — H:,  Lord  Brougham. — OM — 

— SS 
Parliamentary  Reform,  Sels.  fr. — T:  B.  Macaulay. 
Government  should  Grow  with  the  People. — SS 
Public  Opinion  and  the  Sword,  October  10,  1831. — 
OM— PS  (sei.)— SS— SSD 
Parliamentary  Speech  of  Feb.  20,  1784,  on  the  Motion 
by  Mr.  Powys,   etc.,  Sel.  fr.     (On  an  Attempt 
to  Coerce  him  to  Resign.) — W:  Pitt. — SS 


252 


TITLE  INDEX 


Passionate 


Parliamentary  Speech  of  Feb.  21,  1783,  on  American 
Peace,  Sel.  fr.     (On  a  Motion  to  Censure  the 
Ministrv.)— W:  Pitt.— SS 
Parlor  Base  Ball. — Anon. — EuE 
Parlor  Entertainment,  A. — Anon. — FAD 
Parlor  Lamp,  The. — Maurice    E.  M'Loughlin. — WR  4 
Pamell. — Lionel  Johnson. — EDY 
Parody,  A. — Anon. — BS  7 

Parody  for  a  Reformed  Parliament.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Parody  on    "Barbara    Frietchie." —  Anon. —  BDD  — 
GH 
(Barbara  Frietchie — si.  diff.  vers.) — DRR 

(Latest  Barbara  Frietchie,  The.)— DCR— SR  4 
Parody  on  Pope. — Sydney  Smith. — FEP 
Parody  on  the  Declaration  of  Independence. — Anon. — 

DDR— MDD 
Parody— The  Old  Oaken  Bucket.— Anon.— CS  2 

(Old  Oaken  Bucket,  The.— Parody.)— CRR 
Parrhasius.     (C.)— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— AA 

(«c«.)— BNL— KNE— SC  (6r.  «eZ.)— WRD 
(Parrhasius  and  the  Captive.)— CS  2— PFP  {abr.) 
(Sel.)—BS  3— FTR— LLC— SR  2 
Parrhasius  and  the  Captive. — Nathaniel  P.  Willis.    See 

joregoing. 
Parrot,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Parrot,  The.— T:  Campbell.— A VP 

{SI.  afcr.)- CGd— LC— OS  1 
Parrot  and  the  Cuckoo,  The. — Anon. — WR  1 
Parrot  in  a  Deacon's  Meeting,  A. — Anon. — CS  30 
Parrots,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  35 
Parsifal  at  Baireuth. — Irving  Browne. — EDY 

Parson    and  the    Corkscrew,  The. Moncrieff. — BC 

Parson  and  the  Spaniel,  The. — Anon. — RH 
Parson  and  the  Widow,  The. — Anon. — MDD 
Parson  Gray. — Oliver  Goldsmith. — NA 
Parson  Jinglejaw's   Surprise. — Wade   Whipple. — DCR 
Parson  Kelly. — Marion  Douglas. — SR  6 
Parson  Lee. — Anon. — KNE 
Parson  Policy.— Mrs.  Alex.  McV.  Miller. — CS  30 
Parson's  Comforter,  The. — Frd'k  Langbridge. — HP 
Parson's  Conversion,  The. — W:  H.  H.  Mxirray. — HBR 
Parson's  Cradle,  The.— Anna  R.  Diehl.— DES 
Parson's  Daughter,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Parson's  Fee;  or.  The  Bag  of  Beans,  The.     {Tab.) — 
Anon.— BS  11— TCP 
(Includes  The  Wedding  Fee,  by  R.  M.  Streeter,  aho 
in  CS  12.) 
Parson's  Horse   Race,  The. — Harriet   B.  Stowe.     See 

Sam  Lawson's  Fireside  Stories. 
Parson's  Sociable,  The. — Anon. — CS  17 

(Donation  Party,  The.)— FAS 
Parson's  Vacation,  The. — Louis  Eisenbeis. — CS  28 
Part  of  an  Ode  to  the  Immortal  Memory,  etc. — Ben 
Jonson.     iSee  To  the  Immortal  Memory,  etc. 

Parted. — Madame  Desbordes-Valmore. — OH 

Parted  Friends.     (Friends — C.) — Jas.  Montgomery. — 
BNL— GP 
(Friend  after  Friend  Departs.)— FEP 
Parted  Love.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XLVI.)— 

Dante  G.  Rossetti.— WEP  4 
Parterre,  The.— E.  H.  Palmer.— NA 
Parthenia.     (Dioi.)— Anon.— BS  5— CDD 
Partial  Critic,  A. — Anon. — WR  25 
Parties.— Frances  E.  Willard.— WR  18 
Parting. — Anon. — ELP 
Parting. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA — ASL 
Parting,  The     [or     A].     (Ideas     LXI.—C.)— Michael 
Drayton.— CEL—GP— OB 
(Come,  Let  us  Kisse  and  Parte.) — BNL 
(Let  us  Kiss  and  Part.) — HBP 
(Love's  Farewell.)— FTA—PGT  1— YBF 
(Since  there's  no  Help.) — OH 
(Sonnet.)— ELP— FEP— WEP  1 
Parting,  The.— W:  H.  Head.— SR  11 
Parting.— Gerald  Massey.—FLS— FTA—PGT  2 
Parting,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — J.  Norris.- BNL 
Parting.- — Coventry  Patmore. — BNL — HP 

("If  thou  dost  bid  thy  friend  farewell.") — GG 
Parting  and  Meeting  Again. — W :  B.  Scott.— VS 
Parting  at  Morning. — ^Rob't  Browning. — AVP — MRS 
— OB— VA 
(With  Meeting  at  Night.)— WR  15 
Parting    before    Sebaatopol,    The. — Robert,     Earl    of 

Lytton.     See  Lucile. 
Parting  Glass,  The. — Philip  Freneau. — AA 
Parting  Hour,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Man's  Life.)— G:  Crabbe. 

— FP 
Parting  Hour,  The. — Olive  Custance. — VA 
Parting  Hour,  The.— E:  Pollock.— CS  ;j 
Parting  Hymn. — Anon. — BS  3 
Parting  in  Dreamland,  A. — J:  A.  Symonds. — CEL 
Parting  Lovers,  The. — (Anon. —  Ir.  by)  W:  R.  Alger.  — 
BNL 


Parting  Lovers. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — BNL 

Parting  Lovers,  The.— Mary  E.  Day.— BS  1— CS  21— 

KNS 
Parting  of  Douglas  and  Marmion. — Walter  Scott.     See 

Marmion. 
Parting  of    Hector    and    Andromache,  The. — Homer. 

See  Iliad,  The. 
Parting  of  King  Philip  and  Marie,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Marie 

de  Meranie.) — J:  W.  Marston. — VA 
Parting  of  the  Ways,  The.— Jos.  B.  Gilder. — AA 
Parting  Song.— T:  T.  Swinburne.— CG  1 
Parting  Words. — Anon. — FLS 
Parting  Words. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — HNS 
Partmg  Words.— Esther  Kent.— CS  13 
Parting  Words. — Philip  B.  Marston. — BIL 
Partition  of  Poland,   The,    1800.— C:   J.    Fox.— OM— 

PS— SS 
(On  Overtures  of  Peace  from  Napoleon.) — SSD 
Partnership.- Anon.— COS— PP— PS 
Partridges.- Alonzo  T.  Worden.— POS 
Party,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Party  at  Mr.  Wigglesworth's,  A.     (Rockland  Courier.) 

— SR7 
Party  Caucus,  The.. — Horace  B.  Durant. — CS  31 
Party  Spirit    and  'Good    Government.     T:    Jefferson. 

See  Inauguration  Address. 
Pa's  Mem'ry. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Pa's  Soft  Spot.— D.  A.  Ellsworth.— CS  37 
Pa's  Ways. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Paschal  Moon,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— TAS 
Pass.— Eugene  F.  Ware.— THP 
Pass  in  the   Indian   HiUs,  The.     (SeZs.)  —  Frd'k  W. 

Robertson.— OS  2 
Pass  of   Kirkstone,   The.     (Sel.) — W:  Wordsworth. — 

EPs 
Passage,  The. — Ludwig  Uhland  (tr.  by  Sarah  Austin). 

—BNL— HBP— LLC— OS  2— SS 
Passage  in  the  Life  of  St,  Augustine,  A.  —  Anon. — 

BNL  , 

Passage  of  the  Reform  Bill  (Letter  to   Thomas  Flower 

Ellis,  March  30.  1831— C.).— T:  B.  Macaulay. 

— CR  (si.  abr.) 
Passage  to  India,  Sel.  fr.     (Sea  of  Faith,  The — sel.  fr. 

Sec.  IX.)— Walt  Whitman.— TAS 
Passed  off  the  Stage. — Jas.  Buckham. — WR  7 
Passer-by,  A. — Rob't  Bridges.— OB — VA 
Passing  and  Glassing. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Passing  Away. — J:      Pierpont. — BS  3 — CR —  CS  10  — 

FEP— SA— SE  (br.  sel.)— SR  1 
Passing  Away.     (Old  and  New  Year  Ditties,  III. — C.) 

— Christina  G.  Rossetti. — OB 
Passing  Bell  at  Stratford,  The.— W:  Winter.— AA 
Passing  By. — Dinah  M.  Craik.— CS  11 
Passing  of  Arthur,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls 

of  the  King. 
Passing  of  March,  The. — Rob't  B.  Wilson. — SN 
Passing  of  Olaf,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Thelma,  Ch.  XXXII.) 

—Marie  Corelli.— WR  19 
(Crimson  Shroud  of  Olaf  Guldmar,  The — lonner  and 

si.  diff. )~FFP 
Passing  of  Summer,  The.— W:  E.  Hunt.— TCV 
Passing  of  the  Elder  Bards,  The. — W:  Wordsworth. 

See  Extempore  Effusion  upon  the  Death  of 

James  Hogg. 
Passing  of  the  Horse. — Anon. — CRR 
Passing  of  the  Rubicon,  The. — Jas.  S.  Knowles. — KNE 

— PS— S  E  (si.  diff.  vers. ) 
(Csesar  Passing  the  Rubicon.) — CS  4 — OM 
(Csesar's  Passage  of  the  Rubicon.) — SS 
(Crossing  [of]  the  Rubicon  [,The].)— LLC— OS  2 
Passing  Show,  The.— C:  H:  Luders.— WR  4 

(Mountebanks,  The.) — A  A 
Passing  Song,  A. — Guy  W.  Carryl. — CG  2 
Passing  under  the  Rod. — Mary  S.  B.  Dana. — CS  13 

(Under  the  Rod.)— SAE 
Passing  Understanding. — Frd'k  L.  Hosmer. — TAS 
Passing  Year,  The. — Anon. — PEO 
Passion  and  Patience. — Ellen  T.  Fowler. — FLS 
Passion  Flower,  The. — E.  C.  Howarth.— TAS 
Passion  in  the  Desert,  A. — Honors  de  Balzac. — WGS 
"Passion  of  my  Lord  of  Essex,  A." — Rob't  Devereux, 

Earl  of  Essex.— ELP 
(Wish,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Passion  Sunday. — Venantius  Fortunatu  . — HBP 
Passionate  Pilgrim,  The,  Sel.  fr. — ^W:  Shakespeare. 
Crabbed  Age  and  Youth.— FEP— HBP— OB 
(Madrigal,  A.)— LC— PGT  1— PHS 
(Youth  and  Age.)— EP 
Passionate  Reader  to  his  Poet,  The. — R:  Le  GaUienne. 

— VA 
Passionate  Shepherd,  The,  Sels.  fr. —  Nicholas  Breton. 
Second  Pastor's  Song. — EP 
Third  Pastor's  Song.— EP 


253 


Passionate 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Passionate  Shepherd  to  his  Love,  The.  (Passionate 
Shepherd,  The — C.) — Christopher  Marlowe. — 
1st  vers.— BFV— BPB— CEL— ES— LC— OEL 
— PGT  1— YBF 
(2nd  vera.  — si.  8fcor<er.)— BNL— EP— FTA— GP 
— OB— WEP  V 
(MUkmaid's     Song,    The.)  —  FEP    (1st     vers.) — 

HBP  (2nd  vers.) 
(Shepherd  to  his  Love,  The— 1st  vers.) — CGd— GN 
— PHS 
Passion-flower. — Sir  Aubrey  de  Vere. — AD 
Passions,  The.     An  Ode  for  Music.     (C.)— W:  Collins. 
—  BNL  —  CS  23  —  EPs  (si.  abr.)  —  FEP  — 
HBP— PGT  1— PHS— WEP  3 
(Ode  on  the  Passions— sZ.  abr.)— BS  3— KNE— SS 
(Ode  to  the  Passions.)- AE  (6r.   sel.)—FTR  (si. 

abr.)— TUB  (sel.) 
(Revenge — br.  sel.) — SE 
Passions  IL,  XL.,  LXV.     (Fr.  The  Hecatompathia.)— 

T:  Watson.— WEP  1 
Past,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Past.  The.— W:  Cf.  Brvant.— AA— LLC 

(To  the  Past.)— ASL 
Past. — Winifred  Howells. — AA 
Past  and  Future  of  Poetry,  The. — W:  Cowper.     See 

Table  Talk. 
Past  and  Present,  SeU.  fr. — T:  Carlyle. 

Aristocracy.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.,  Ch.  VIII.)— OS  3 
Await  the  Issue.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  II.)— FMR— 
SO 
(Justice — abr. ) — SS 
Heard  are  the  Voices.     (Verses  tr.  fr.  Goethe — in 

Bk.  IL.Ch.  XVn.)— GP 
Honor  of  Labor,  The.      (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.,  Ch.  11.)  — 
BS26 
(Labor— 8eZ.)—BS  17— TMR 

(Work.)— PEO— PP— YFR 
(Honor  to  the  Laborer — abr.) — HSS  3 
Work.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.,  Chs.  XI.  and  XII.— p%. 
like  BS  17,  etc.)— LLC 
(Sacredneas  of  Work— seZ.)— HSS  3— TMD 
(Work.)— OS  2 
Past  and  Present.— T:  Hood.— PGT  1 
(House  where  I  was  Bom,  The.) — BLP 
(I   Remember,   I   Remember— C.)— BNL— BPB— 
EDY— FEP— FP—GP— HBP— LC— MR- 
OS  1  —  PoR  —  PSR  —  PYO  (abr.)— VS— 
WCL— WCLG  1— YBF 
(Old  House  at  Home,  The— o6r.  )—TFS 
Past  Friends.— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 
Past  Meridian  (Ballad  of  the  Past  Meridian — C). — G: 

Meredith.— WRD 
Past  Perils  and  the  Perils  of  To-day,  Sel.  fr.     (Sup- 
pressed Repudiation.) — H:  W.  Beecher. — NC 
Past  Years  of   Home.     (Poems  of  the   Imagination, 
Miscellaneous      Sonnets,      XLII.  —  C.) — W- 
Wordsworth.— WEP  4 
(View  from  Fox  How.) — AVP 
Pastel.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— AA 

Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Stephen  Hawes. 
Amoure  Laments  the  Absence  of  La  Belle  Pucel. 

(Sel.  fr.  Can.  XXX.)— WEP  1 
Character  of  a  True  Knight.  The.    (Sel.  fr.  XXVIII. ) 
— WEPl 
(True  Knight,  The— 8eZ.)— OB 
Description  of  La  Belle  Pucel.     (Sel.  fr.  XXX.) — 

WEPl 
Dialogue  between  Graunde  Amoure  and  La  Belle 
Pucel.     (Sels.  fr.  XVIII.  and  XIX.)— WEP  1 
Pastor  MoKnock's  Address. — Anon. — BC 
Pastor  Wanted,  A. — Anon. — CS  7 
Pastoral,  A. — Nicholas  Breton. — FEP 

(Phillis  the  Fair— abr.)— BNL 
Pastoral,  A.— J:  Byrom.— BNL — FEP 
Pastoral,  A.— S:  Daniel.— EP 
Pastoral,  A. — Th^ophile  Marzials. — VA 
Pastoral,  A.— J.  B.  B.  Nichols.— VA 
Pastoral. — W:  Shenstone.     See  following. 
Pastoral      Ballad     [,A].  —  W:     Shenstone.  —  FEP — 
WEP  3  (Pt.  I.  abr.) 
Pastoral.     (Pt.  II.)— CEL 
(Hope.)— EP 

(Shepherd's   Home.   The— «eZ.)— CGd— GN— LC 
—PHS 
Pastoral  Catch,  A. — .1:  Dickenson. — ELP 
Pastoral  Courtship.  A.  Sel.  fr.—T:  Randolph.— WEP  2 
Pastoral  Dialogue,  A.— T:  Carew.— EP— WEP  2 
Pastoral  Pictures.     (C.) — Rob't  Buchanan. 

(Summer  Pool.  The.)— VA 
Pastoral  Song  between  Phillis  and  Amarillis.  A. — H: 

Constable.— WEP  1 
Pastoral  upon  the  Birth  of  Prince  Charles.  A. — Rob't 
Herrick.— EP 


Pastorals,  Sel.     fr.     (Daffodils— /r.     Eclogue     IX.)— 

Michael  Drayton. — EP 
Pastor's  Reverie,   The. — Washington   Gladden. — FEP 

—HP 
Pasture,  A.— F:  L.  Knowles.— AA— CG  2 
Pat  and  his  Musket. — Anon. — DI 
(Paddy  and  his  Musket.)— SCS 
Pat  and  the  Fox. — S :  Lover.     See  Paddy  the  Sport. 
Pat  and  the  Gridiron.— S:  Lover.— DI— SCS 
Pat  and  the  Oysters. — Anon. — DI — SR  4 
Pat  and  the  Pig.— Anon.— BeR—CDV—CS  23— KNE 

— PTS  (seZ.)— SDR 
Pat  and  the  Yankee. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Pat  Answers  the  Advertisement.     (Dial.) — DS — YA 
Pat  Flanigan's  Logic. — Anon. — CS  24 
Pat  Magee. — Anon. — WR  14 
Pat  O'Flanigan's  Colt. — Anon. — DI 
Patchwork  Philosophy. — Anon. — CS  21 
Patent  Medicine. — -F.  Crosby. — PD  ' 

Patent  Right  Agent,  The.— Anon.— FAD 
Patents  Applied  for. — G :  Thatcher. — TK 
Pater  Filio.— Rob't  Bridges.— OB 
"Pater  Vester  Pascit  TUa." — Rob't  S.  Hawker. — VA 
Path,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— SM 
Path  of  Duty,  The.— G:  F.  Hoar.— SC 
Path  of  Duty,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Ode  on 

the  Death  of  Wellington. 
Path  of  Independence,  The. — Anon. — FP 
Path  of  Sorrow,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  To  an  Afflicted  Protest- 
ant Lady  in  France.) — W:  Cowper. — HDL 
Path  of  the  Cyclone,  The.— Meta  E.  B.  Thome.— DES 
Pathetic  Incident  of  the  Rebellion,  A. — Anon. — PFP 

(Confederate  Sergeant,  The — si.  diff.  vers.) — NC 
Pathos  of  Applause,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— (;W 
Pathos  of  Ihackeray  and   Dickens,   The. — Julien   M. 

Elliott.— NC 
Pathways  in  Palestine. — Anon. — SSS 
Patie  and  Peggy. — Allan  Ramsay.     See  Gentle  Shep- 
herd, The. 
Patie  and  Roger. — Allan  Ramsay.     See  Gefitle  Shep- 
herd, The. 
Patience. — Anon. — WR  22 
Patience.     (C.)— Fs.  W.  Bourdillon. 
(Outwards  or  Homewards.) — HP 
Patience. — Emma  Lazarus. — TAS 
Patience. — W:  J.  Linton. — VA 

(Be  Patient— a<.  to  R:  C.  Trench.)- HBP— MYF— 
POS 
Patience  with  Love. — G:  Klingle. — CS  20 
Patient. — Anon. — HP 
Patient  Griselda.     (Fr.  the    Decameron.) — Boccaccio. 

— WGS 
Patient  Griselda. — Geoffrey      Chaucer.     See      Canter- 
bury Tales,  The. 
Patient  Grissell. — T:  Dekker.     See  Pleasant  Comedy 

of  Patient  Grissell,  The. 
Patient  Joe. — Anon. — HR — MMR 
Patient  Mercy  Jones.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— CS  20— PPSr 
Patriarchal  Home,  The. — C:  J.  Wells.     See  Joseph  and 

his  Brethren. 
Patrick  Dolin's  Love  Letter. — O.  F.  Starkey. — BS  1 

(Pat's  Love  Letter — cond.) — PR — YA 
Patrick  O'Rouke  and  the  Frogs. — G:  W.  Bungay. — 

CS  8— DI 
Patriot  and  Traitor,  The. — G:  Lippard.     See  Benedict 

Arnold. 
Patriot  Dead,  The.— S:  F.  Smith.— BLP 
(Breathe  Balmy  Airs.)— HSS  1 
(Precious  Lives.) — WR  17 
Patriot  King  in  Mourning,  The. — Nathaniel  P.Willis. — 
BLP  (abr.) 
(Absalom— C.)—CS  1— NPS— YP 
(David's  Lament  for  [or  over]  Absalom — si.  abr.) — 
BS  15— OM— PS 
(SeZ.)— KNE  (br.  )—SAE 
(Lament  for  Absalom — si.  abr.) — LLC 
Patriot  Mother,  The.— Anon.— PEB  4 
Patriot  President,  The. — Tom  Taylor.     See  Abraham 

Lincoln. 
Patriot  Sons  of  Patriot  Sires.— S:  F.  Smith.— BLP— 

TMR 
Patriot  Spy,  The.— F.  N.  Finch— PRR  (abr.) 

(Nathan  Hale.)—  AWB  —  EDY  —  OS  2  —  PAP  — 
PAPm— PYO— TMR 
(^br.)— SM— WCLG  1 
Patriotic  Boy,  A.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— PS— 

TT 
Patriotic  Prince,  The. — H:  B.  Carrington. — BLP 
Patriotic  Recitations. — Anon. — PRR 
Patriotic  Sentiments.     (Fr.  diff.  authors.) — DFR 
Patriotic  Smoker's    Lament,    The.     (The    St.    James 

Gazette.)—FFh 
Patriotic  Song.- J.G.  Kinkel.— BLP 


254 


TITLE  INDEX 


Pebbles 


Patriotic  Tourist,  The.— R:  K.  Munkittrick.— AWH 
Patriotic  Words  for  the  Young.— E:  E.  Hale.— BLP 
Patriotism,  Sels.  fr. — G:  W:  Curtis. 

Nations  and  Humanity.— BS  8— CS  11— OM— OS  3 

— SE  (seZ.)— SR8— TMD 
(  Patriotism — ael. ) — -SO 
("Through  all  history,  from  the  beginning" — br. 

sei.)- HSS  1 
(True  Patriotism  is  Unselfish— sZ.  di#.)— PEO 
Patriotism. — J:  Ireland. — CS  37 
Patriotism.— T:  F.  Meagher.— BLP— SR  5 

(5eZ.)— CS  6— FD  1— SE 
Patriotism.     (Sel.  fr.  The   Inflexible   Captive.) — Han- 
nah More.— TMR 
(Duty  to  One's  Country.)— SS 
Patriotism. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel, The. 
Patriotism  and  Freedom. — Joanna  Baillie. — LLC 
Patriotism  at  Squawville.     (Denver  Post.) — PAPm 
Patriotism   Inculcates   Public  Virtue. — H:  Clay.     See 

On  the  Bank  Veto. 
Patriotism  of  American  Women. — T:  B.  Read.     See 

Wagoner  of  the  AUeghanies,  The. 
Patriots  and  Martyrs. — W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Patriot's  Bride,  The.— Sir  C:  G.  Duffy.— GP 
Patriot's  Cry,  The. — H:  B.  Carrington. — BLP 
Patriot's  Death,  The. — Fitz-Greene  Halleck.  jSee  Marco 

Bozzaris. 
"Patriots  have  toiled,  and  in  their  country's  cause." — 

W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Patriot's     Pass- word.     The.  —  Jas.     Montgomery.  — 

AD  («e/.)— EDY— SS  (.abr.) 
(Arnold    Winkelried  —  abr. )— BS  2— CS  4— OS  2— 

PPSr— SA— TMD 
(Make  Way  for  Liberty.)— BNL—FEP 
Pat's  Bondsman. — Lillian  A.  Moulton. — CRR — SR  2 
Pat's  Correspondence.— W.  M.  Griffin.— CS  12— DCR 
Pat's  Criticism.— C:  F.  Adams. — DI 
Pat's  Dilemma. — Anon.— DCD 
Pat's  Excelsior.     {Harper's   Magazine.)     See   Paddy's 

Excelsior. 
Pat's  Excuse. — Anon. — PS 
Pat's  Letter. — Anon. — CII 

Pat's  Letter.— "Queerquill."— CD— DI— HP— SR  1 
Pat's  Love.— "Joe  Jot,  Jr."— NFS— YP 
Pat's  Love     Letter. — O.     F.     Starkey.     See     Patrick 

Dolin's  Love  Letter. 
Pat's  Mistake. — Anon. — CS  26 
Pat's  Perplexity.— Anon.— SR  9— WR  3 

(Irishman's  Perolexity,  An.)— CS  26— DCR 
Pat's  Purchase. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Pat's  Reason.     (Brooklyn  Eagle.) — CH— -SR  5 
Pat's  Secret.— Anon.— CS  30 

Pat's  Wisdom.— Anon.— CS  29— DS— NFS— YA— YP 
Patsy's  and  Tom's  Thanksgiving. — Alice  L.  Richards. 

— WN 
Pattin'  Juba.— Frances  E.  Wadleigh.— CS  30 
Paudeen  O'Rafferty's      Say      Voyage. — Anon. — DI — 

MDD 
Paul  at  Athens.     Bible.     See  Acts  of  the  Apostles. 
Paul  before  King  Agrippa. — Bible.     See  Acts  of    the 

Apostles. 
Paul  Faber,  Surgeon,  Sel.   fr.     (That  Holy  Thing— 

verses  fr.  Ch.  XLIX.)— G:  Macdonald.— OB— 

YBF 
Paul  Fleming     Resolves. — H:     W.     Longfellow.     See 

Hyperion. 
Paul  Jones'  Victory. — Anon. — AWB — EDY 
Paul  Pry,  Sels.  fr.—J:  Poole. 

Not  Quite.     (Dial,  ad.)— NDP 
Paul  Pry  at  Doubledot's.     (Dial. )— MPD 
Paul  Pry  at  Doubledot's. — J:  Poole.     See  foregoing. 
Paul  Revere's  Ride. — G:  W:  Curtis.     See  Centennial 

Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 
Paul  Revere's  Ride.     (Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn:     The 

Landlord's  Tale. )—H:  W.  Longfellow.— AWB 

—BAB  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  FTR  — HB  —  MR  — 

PAP— SE  (br.  8eZ.)— TMR  (abr.) 
(81.  abr.)— CS  2— GMS— HR— SR  8 
Paul  Venarez.— Eben  E.  Rexford. — FMR 

(Ride  of  Paul  Venarez,  The.)— CS  1— PR 
Paiil's  Defense   before  Agrippa.     Bible.     See  Acts   of 

the  Apostles. 
Paul's  Defense  before  Festus  and  Agrippa.     Bible.  See 

Acts  of  the  Apostles. 
Paulus  the  Lawyer. — Lindsay. — HPE 
Pauper  Girl,  The.— Georgene  Traver.— CS  24— NFS— 

YP 
Pauper's  Child,  The. — Augusta  Moore. — CS  32 
Pauper's  Death-bed,    The.— -Caroline    B.    Southey. — 

BNL— CS  1— FEP— FTR— HBP— PPSr— SS 
Pauper's  Drive,  The.— T:  Noel.— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Pauper's  Revenge,  A.— J:  F.  NichoUs. — CS  26 


Pause,  A.     (C.)— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
(Meeting.)— YBF 

Paving  the  Streets.— Mrs.  L.  C.  McVean.— WR  18 

Pawnbroker's  Shop,  The.— Anon.— CS  19— WRD 

Pawns,  The. — W:  Young.     See  Wishmakers'  Town. 

Pax  Paganica.     (M.    A.,    1822-1888 — C.)— Louise    I. 
Guiney. — A  A  (w.  add.  at.) 

Pax  Vobiscum!— G:  L.  Taylor.— BS  1 

Payin'  Honest  Debts. — Howell  L.  Finer. — WR  23 

Paying  her  Fare. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 

Peace.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Peace.— W.  T.  Adams.— DLF 

("Peace  to  the  brave  who  nobly  fell.") — HSS  1 

Peace. ^Mary  C.  Ames. — GP 

Peace.— Phoebe  Gary.- BNL— EDY 

Peace.— C:  De  Kay.— SN 

Peace.— JuUa  C.  R.  Dorr.— HS 

Peace.— G:  Herbert.— EPs—FP 

Peace.— C:  F.  Richardson.— T AS 

Peace. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Richard  III. 

Peace. — C:  Sumner.     See  True  Grandeur  of  Nations, 
The. 

Peace. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Britannia. 

Peace.— H :  Vaughan.— CEL— ELP— GN— HBP— OB 

Peace  and  War. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Queen  Mab. 

Peace  at-any-price  Man,  A.     (Baltimore  Life.) — PAPm 

Peace!  Be  Still.— Anon.— HDL 

Peace  Congress  of  the  Union,  The. — E:  Everett.     See 
Battle  of  Bunker  Hill,  The. 

Peace  Hath  her  Victories.     (Diff.  fr.  rev.  vera.) — Wal- 
lace Rice. — BAB 

Peace  in  God.     (Hours  of  the  Night — Third  hour — C.) 
—Harriet  B.  Stowe.— BS  8 

Peace   Inconsistent  with  Oppression.     (Sel.   fr.  Hun- 

farjr  and    Austria  in   Religious  Contrast.) — 
;ouis  Kossuth. — SS 
(No  Peace  without  Liberty.) — BLP 
Peace  Men,  The.— T:  S.  King.— SSD 
Peace  of  Christmas-time,  The. — Eugene  Field. ^TAS — 

WTD 
Peace  of  Death,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Peace  of  Mind.— Sir  E:  Dyer.— PHS 
(Good  Conscience,  A — abr.) — FTR 
(My  Minde  {or  Mind]  to  me  a  Kingdom  Is.) — BNL— 
FEP 
(A6r.)— ELP— SM— WEP  1 
(At.  to  W:  Byrd.)— BS  7— EPs— HBP— LLC 
(Old  style  spelling  in  BNL— FEP— HBP.) 
Peace  of    Sorrow,    The. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See    In 

Memoriam. 
Peace  on  Earth. — Jas  R.  Lowell. — LLC  (si.  abr.) 

(Christmas  Carol,  A.—C.—sl.  diff.)— TAS 
Peace  on  Earth. — Edmund  H.  Sears. — TAS 
(Angels'  Song,  The.)— AA 
(Glorious  Song  of  Old,  The.)— OS  2 
(It  Came    upon    the    Midnight    Clear.)  —  FEP  — 
LLC  (a6r.) 
Peace   on   the  Sea.       (Frags,  fr.  var^ious  authors.) — 

BNL 
Peace  Restored.     (Song — C. —  fr.   The   Imposture.) — 

Jas.  Shirley.— ELP 
"Peace  to  the  brave  who  nobly  fell." — W.  T.  Adams. 

See  Peace. 
Peace  to  the  Slumberers. — T:  Moore. — HBP 
Peace!     What  do  Tears  Avail? — Bryan  W.  Procter.^ 

HBP— VA— VS 
Peaceable  Secession. — Dan'l    Webster.     See   Constitu- 
tion and  theUnion,  The. 
"Peaceful  western  wind,  The." — Rob't  Campion. — OEL 
Peacemaker,  The. — Anon. — YFD 
Peacemaker,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Peach,  The.— C:  and  Marv  Lamb.— LPC 
Peach  Blossoms. — Hannah  F.  Gould. — AD 
Peacock,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Peacock  on  the  Wall,  The.— Anon.— WR  1 
Peak  Sisters,  The.     (Ent.)—Anoa.—E\iE 
Peaks,  The. — Stephen  Crane. — AA 
Pearl;  a  Girl,  A. — Rob't  Browning. — OH 
Pearls.— R:  H:  Stoddard.— GP 

Peasant  Boy,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Just  Retribution,  The.) — 
W.  (?)  Dimond.— CS  23— PS 
(Peasant  Boy's  Vindication,  The — si.  abr.) — NDP 
Peasant  Boy's      Vindication,      The. — W.  (?)  Dimond. 

See  foregoing. 
Peasant  Heroine,  A. — Christian  Burke. — WR  13 
Peasants,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Stage  Land. 
Peasants'  Chorus,  The. — G:  Darley.     See  Sylvia;  or, 

The  May  Queen. 
Peasant's  Return,  The. — W:  Barnes. — EPs 
Pebble  and  the   Acorn,    The. — Hannah    F.    Gould. — 

AD 
Pebbles.— Frank  D.  Sherman.- LFL— NV 


255 


Peculiar 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Peculiar  Neighbor,     The. — Harriet    M.     Spauldini;. — 
CS  24— NPS— YP 
(A5r.)— DS— YA 
Pedant,  The.— Matthew  Prior.- HPE 
Peddler,  The.     (.Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Peddler's  Caravan,  The.— W:  B.  Rands.     See  Pedlar's 

Caravan,  The.     * 
Pedlar,  A.— Anon.— OB 
Pedlar,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Pedlar's  Caravan,  The.— W:  B.  Rands.— BVC—PoR 

(Peddler's  Caravan,  The.)— KER 
Pedler  and  his  Trumpet,  The.    (Sel.)—T:  Hood.— WR  1 

(Tale  of  a  Trumpet,  The~ptly.  diff.  «eZ.)— SE 
Peepsy. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Peepy  Is  not  Dead.— Rob't  K.  Kernighan. — TCV 
Peevish  Boy,  A. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Peg  WoflBngton,  Sel.  fr.     (Mrs.  Woffington's  Portrait^ 

8d.  fr.  Ch.  XIII.)— C:  Reade.— WR  13 
Pegasus  in  Pound. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — LC 
Pegging  Away. — Anon. — HSS  3 

Peggy. — Allan  Ramsay.     See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 
Peggy's  Garden,     and    what    Grew    Therein. — Celia 

Thaxter.— SAP 
Peleg  and  Patience. — Anon. — MAD 
Pelican,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See  following. 
Pelican  Island,  Sels.  fr. — Jas  Montgomery. 
Birds.     {Sel.  fr.  Can.  III.)— BNL 
Coral  Reef.     {Sel.  fr.  II.)— BNL 
Pelican,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  IV.)— BNL 
Sea  Life.     {Sel.  fr.  I.)— BNL 
Pelters  of  Pyramids. — R:  H.  Home. — VA 
Pemberton,  Sel.   fr.     (Execution  of  Andr^,  The — Pt. 

III.,  Ch.  XIII.)— H:  Peterson.— BS  23— PFP 
Pen,  The. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.     See  Pen  Mightier  than 

the  Sword,  The. 
Pen  and  the  Album,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— VA 
Pen  Mightier  than  the  Sword,  The,     (C.)— E:  Bulwer- 
Lytton. 
(Pen,  The.)— OS  2 
Pen  Photographs  of  Dickens'  Readings,  Sel.  fr. — Kate 

Field.— MRS 
Penalty  of  Genius,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Penance. — Anon. — FTA 

(Men's  Wicked  Ways.)— DR 
Penance.  (Taft.)— Anon.— TCP 
"Penalties;  quarrel  not  with  the  old  phraseology,  good 

readers."— T:  Carlyle.— GG 
Pendennis,  Sel.  fr.     (At  the  Church  Gate.)— W:  M. 

Thackeray.—  AVP  —  BNL  — FEP  —  FTA  — 

HBP  —  OH  —  PGT  2  —  PYO  {al.  abr.)—  VA 

— VS— YBF 
Penitent,  A.— Marg.  Eytinge.— CS  37— SR  1 
Penitent,  The. — J:  Keats.     See  Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The. 
Penning  a  Pig. — Jas.  M.  Bailey. — CS  24 
Penn's  Monument.     {Sel.  fr.  History  of  William  Penn.) 

—Rob't  J.  Burdette.— BS  17- CS  29— FD  1— 

NPS— SR  8— YP 
(Monument  of  William  Penn,  The.)— TMR 
Pennsylvania's  Lament,  The.     {Omaha  World.) — BS  16 
Penny  Showman,  The.— H.  C.  Newton. — CS  38 
"Penny  ye  Meant  to  Gi'e,  The." — Anon. — CS  14 
Pensive  and  Faltering. — Walt  Whitman. — TAS 
Pensiveness. — Philip      Sidney.     See     Astrophel      and 

Stella. 
Penthea's  Dying  Song. — J:  Ford.     See  Broken  Heart, 

The. 
People,  The.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
People  always  Conquer,  The. —  E:   Everett. — FD  2 — 

OS  2  (seZ.)— PS 
(People  Triumphant,  The.)— BLP 
People  and  King. — R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  Popular  and 

Kingly  Examples. 
People  and  their  Palace,  The.     {Punch.) — HPE 
People  Delivered,  A. — Clunningham  Geikie. — BLP 
People  of  the  United  States,  The.     (2  diff.  sels.)—S. 

Grover  Cleveland.— FD  2— TMD 
People  Triumphant,    The. — E:    Everett.     See    People 

always  Conquer,  The. 
People  Will  Talk.— Emma  M.  Buckingham.— MD 
People's  Holidays,     The. — Marianne      Farningham. — 

PEO 
People's  Petition,  The.— Wathen  M.  W.  Call.— EHT— 

VA 
People's  Song  of  Peace,  The.     {Fr.  Song  of  the  Cen- 
tennial.)—Joaquin  Miller.— BNL— BS  15— SM 
Pepita,  the  Gipsy  Girl  of  Andalusia. — Anon.— CS  12 
Per  Aspera  ad  Astra. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Per  gl'  Occh'  alineno  non  v'6  Claiisura. — E.  C.  Pember. 

—AVP 
Per  Pacem  ad  Lucem.     (C.) — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — 

CS  7— FEP— HDL— VA— YBF 
(Lead  Me,  O  Lord— si.  o6r. )—SSS 
(Through  Peace  to  Light.)— SSS 


"Perche  Pensa?     Pensando  s'nivecchia." — Arthur  H. 

Clough.— WEP  4 
Per-contra;  or,  Matrimonial  Balance,  The. — Gotthold 

E.  Les.sing.— HPE 
Perdita.^Florence  E.  Coates. — AA 
Perdita.      {Harvard  Advocate.) — CG  2 
Perdita.— Mrs.  W.  R.  Jones.— DR 
Perduret  atque  Valeat.     {Valedictory.) — Anon. — CP 
Perfect  Beauty.     {Song  fr.  The  New  Inn,  Act  IV.,  Sc. 

3.)— Ben  Jonson.— ES— YBF 
(Vision  ot  Beauty,  A.)— BNL 
Perfect  Day,  A.     {Monologue.) — Clyde  Fitch.— WR  24 
Perfect  Day,  The.— Edna  D.  Proctor.— TAS 
Perfect  Faith,  A. — Seumas  B.  McManus. — CS  29 
Perfect  Feast,  A.— Clara  Denton.— LPD 
Perfect  Greyhound,  The.— Anon.— BVC 
Perfect  Life,  The. — Ben  Jonson.     See  To  the  Immortal 

Memory  and   Friendship  of  that  Noble  Pair, 

etc. 
Perfect  Love. — Archibald  Lampman. — TFY 
Perfect  Man,  The.— Anon.— CS  25 
Perfect  Orator,  The.— R:  B.  Sheridan.— HSS  2 

(Orator  Described,  The.)— BLP 
Perfect  Sailor,  The.— C:  Dibdin.— LH 

(Tom    Bowling.)  — BNL— BPB— FEP— HBP— PC 

—YBF 
Perfect  Wife,  The.— Anon.— BS  20 
Perfect  Woman.     (Poems  of  the   Imagination,   VIII. 

— C.)— W:  Wordsworth.— OB 
(Portrait,  A.)— LLC 
(Seen,  Loved,  Wedded.)— FTR 
("She  was  a  phantom  [of  delight].")— BNL— BSP 

—  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  —  MBL  —  PGT  1 

—WEP  4— YBF 
Perfectibility.— W:  R.  Thayer.— TAS 
Perfectly  Awfully  Lovely  Story,  A. — Anon. — BS  15 
Perfume. — Edmund  W.  Gosse. — BNL 
"Perhaps  it  may  have  been  little  thought  of." — T:  (?) 

Chalmers. — GG 
"Perhaps  it  will  all  come  right  at  last."     {Br.  sel.  fr. 

Wishing   and    Having.) — R:    H.    Stoddard. — 

BIL 
"Perhaps  'twas  boyish  love." — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — 

BNL 
Pericles. — G:  Croly.     See  following. 
Pericles  and  Aspasia.     (C.) — G:  (Droly. — HBP 

(Pericles.)— AVP 
Pericles  and  Aspasia,  Sels.  fr. — Walter  S.  Landor. 
Cleone  to  Aspasia. — WEP  4 
Corinna,     from     Athens,     to     Tanagra.      (Corinna 

to  Tanagra,  from  Athens— C.)—CEL— WEP  4 
Peril  of  the  Mines,  The.— Anon.— CS  21 
Peril  of  the  Passenger  Train,  The. — Mrs.  A.  D.  Gillett. 

— CS28 
Perils  of   Invisibility,   The.— W:  S.  Gilbert.— CS  16— 

THP 
Perils  of  Parliamentary  Reform. — J:  W.  Croker. — SS 
"Perish  policy  and  cunning." — Norman  Macleod.-^JG 
Perished.— Mary  L.  Ritter.— BNL 
Periton's  Ride. — Miller  Hageman. — WR  15 
Perjury     Excused. — W:      Shakespeare.     See      Love's 

Labour's  Lost. 
Perkin  Warbeck.     {Sels.    fr.    Act   V.,   Scs.    2.  3.)— J: 

Ford.— EHT 
Permanence  of  Grant's  Fame,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Memorial 

Services  in  Honor  of  General  Grant.)— Jas.  G. 

Blaine.— NC— PEO— PFP 
Permanency  of  Empire,  The. — Wendell  Phillips. — SSD 

—TMD 
Pernicious  Weed! — W:  Cowper.     See  Conversation. 
Peronella.— Anon.— CS  31 
Peroration  against  Warren  Hastings. — Edmund  Burke. 

See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 
Peroration  of  Burke's  Speech  on  the  Impeachment  of 

Warren  Hastings. — Edmund  Burke.     See  Im- 
peachment of  Warren  Hastings. 
Peroration  of     Buzfuz: — Bardell     vs.     Pickwick. —  C: 

Dickens.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 
Peroration  of  Webster's    Plymouth    Rock    Oration. — 

Dan'l  Webster.     See  First  Settlement  of  New- 
England,  The. 
Peroration  of  Webster's  Reply  to  Hayne. — ^Dan'l  Web- 
ster.    See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The. 
Perpetual  Youth. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — TAS 
Perpetuity.— Clinton  Scollard.—TAV 
Perplexeci  Housekeeper,  The. — Anon. — MHR 
Perplexing  Question. — Anon. — DLF 
Perry's  Celebrated   Victory   on   Lake    Erie. — Anon. — 

PRR 
Perry's  Victory. — Anon. — EDY 
Perry's  Victory. — Jas.  G.  Percival.     See  following. 
Perry's  Victory  [on  Lake  Erie — C.]. — Jas.  G.  Percival. 

AWB— PAP 


256 


TITLE  INDEX 


Philippic 


Persephone. — Jean  Ingelow. — WR  9 
Perseverance. — Anon. — HSS  2 

Per.severance. —  R.  8.  S.  Andros. —  BNL — LLC  (abr.) 
— POS 
(Swallow,  The.)— HSS  2 
Perseverance.    (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Useful  Life.) — Horatius 

Bonar.— HDL 
Perseverance. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — KNE 
Perseverance. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Perseverance.    (Br.  sel.  fr.  Leonardo  da  Vinci  Poetizes 

to  the  Duke  in  his  own  Defence.) — Leonardo 

da  Vinci  (tr.  by  W:W.  Story).— BNL 
Persevere. — Anon.— DCP 
Persevere. — Anon. — DLF 

(Drive  the  Nail  Aright.)— SM 
Persevere. — J:  Brougham. — CS  7 
Persevere. — Jane  E.  Gormley. — DCP 
Persian  Love  Song. — Blanche  Lindsay. — FLS 
Persicos  Odi. — C:  E.  Merrill,  Jr. — AA 
Persistence.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  XL — C.) — Wal- 
ter S.  Landor. — VA 
Personal.     (Chicago  Tribune.) — -CH 
Personal  Characteristics — ^Men.      (Frags,    fr.    various 

authors.) — BNL 
Personal  Characteristics — Women.    (Frags,  fr.  various 

authors. ) — BNL 
Personal  Charms.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Personal  Influence.; — J.  O.  Branch. — BS  21 
Personal  Resurrection. — Alfred      Tennyson.     See      In 

Memoriam. 
Personality  and  Uses  of  a  Laugh,  The. — Anon. — KNE 
Personating  Olders. — Anon. — MAD 
Personified  Sentimental,  The.     (Songs  without  Sense, 

I.)— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— NA 
Persuasions  to  Joy:   a  Song.     (Song,   Persuasions  to 

Enjoy— C.)—T:  Carew.— OB 
Perverse.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Perverse  Hen,  The.— Anon.— CS  6— DS 
Per\'ersion  of  the  Bible.— Rob't  PoUok.— CS  5 
Peschiera. — Arthur  H.  Clough. — VA 
Pessimism.     (Blackwood.) — HP 
Pessimist,  The.     (C- — also  The  Sum    of    Life.) — Ben 

King.— NA 
(Too  Bad.)— PR— YA 
Pessimistic  Philosopher,  The. — Anon. — CS  26 
Pet  and  Bijou. — Helen  M.  Bean. — DR 
Pet  and  her  Cat.     (Harper's   Young  People.) — DLS — 

HS 
Pet  Coon,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Pet  Lamb,     The.— W:     Wordsworth.— FEP— HBP— 

MBL— OS  1— PC  (a6r.)— PHS  (si.  abr.)—FoR 
(SeD—nSS  2— PPSr 
Pet  Name,  The.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— BNL— PGT  2 
Pet  of  the  School,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KH 
Petah.— Anon.— SR  4 
Pete  Ivory's  Ordeal. — Anon. — SR  13 
Peter  Adair. — Rob't  Overton. — CS  30 
Peter  Cooper. — Joaquin  Miller. — AA — EDY 
Peter  Grey.- Alice  Gary.— BLF 
Peter  Klaus. — Anon,— CS  28 
Peter  Longpocket. — Anon. — CS  17 
Peter  Mulrooney  and  the  Black  Filly. — Anon — CS32  — 

DI— SR  11 
(Feeding  the  Slack  Fillies.)— BeR 
Peter  Peabody's  Stump  Speech. — Anon. — MCS 
Peter  Sorghum  in  Love.— Alf.  Burnett.— CRR—DFY 

— HR 
(Yankee  in  Love,  A.)— CS  2— NPS— YP 
Peter-bird,  The.— H:  T.  Stanton.— NV 
Peter's  Ride  to  the  Wedding.— Anon.— CS  5— CSS— 

MYF— PPSr 
Petit  Jean. — Mary  A.  Barr. — CS  21 
Petit  Maitre,  and  the  Man  on  the  Wheel,  The.— J:  Wol- 

cott.— HPE 
Petition,  A.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 
Petition.     (C.) — Jane  Taylor. 

("Ah,  dear  papa,  did  you  but  know" — abr.) — BVC 
Petition  to  Time,  A.  (C.)— Bryan  W.  Procter.— BLP— 

CEL— CR— FEP— HBP— VA— VS— WEP  4— 

YBF 
(Time— 6r.  sel.)—SE 
Petra.- J.  W.  Burgon.— AVP 
Petrarch's  Tomb. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Petrified  Fern,  The.— Mary  L.  B.  Branch.— AA — AD— 

BNL  —  CS  37  —  HSS  3  —  LLC  —  MYF  — 

POS  —  PPSr  —  PTS  —  SO  —  TAV  —  TMD 
Pets  of  Society,  Sel.  fr.     (Love  in  High  Life — dial.) — 

T.  S.  Denison.— FAS 

Petticoat  Government. — Miss Chapman. — DDD 

Pewee,  The.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.— SN 


Phsedria  and  the  Idle  Lake. — Edmund  Spenser.     See 

Faerie  Queene,  The. 
Phaethon;  or,  the  Amateur  Coachman. — J:  G.  Saxe. — 

HPE 
Phaidrig  Crohoore. — Anon.— CS  20  (si.  abr.)—Dl 
Phantasmion,  Sels.  fr. — Sara  Coleridge. 
He  came  Unlooke  '  for. — VA 
One  Face  Alone. — VA 
Phantastes      A  Faerie  Romance  for  Men  and  Women, 
Sel.fr.    (Song:     " 'O   lady,   thy  lover  is  dead,' 
they  cried"— /r.  Ch.  XX.) — G:  Macdonald. — 
HBP 
Phantasy,  A.     (Campus.) — CG  3 
Phantasy,  Sel.  /r.— Alex.  R.  Garvie.— TCV 
Phantasy.     (  Yale  Record. )— CG  2 

Phantom,  The,  SeZ. /r.     (Song:  "They  who  may  tell 
love's  wistful  tale" — fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  4.) — Joanna 
Baillie.— WEP  4 
Phantom,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Phantom.     (Pantomime  char.) —  E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Phantom,  The.— Bayard  Taylor.— HBP 
Phantom  Ball,  The.— Rosa  V.  Jeffrey.- DES 
Phantom  Caravan,  The. — Omar  KhayyAm  (Fitzgerald). 

See  Rubaiyiit. 
Phantom  Isles,  The.— J:  Monsell.— CS  5 
Phantom  Light  of  the  Bale  des  Chaleurs,  The. — Arthur 

W.  H.  Eaton.— TCV 
Phantom  of  the  Rose,  The. — Jerome  A.  Hart. — HP 
Phantom  Party,  A. — Anon.- — EuE 
Phantom  Ship,  The. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Rime  of 

the  Ancient  Mariner,  The. 
Phantom  Ship,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BFV 
Phantom  Ship,  Ihe  .     (Cruise  of  the  Mystery,  The. — 

O— Celia  Thaxter.- BS  10 
Phantoms.— T:  Ashe.— VA 
Phantoms,  The.     (Baltimore  News.) — PAPm 
Phantoms  All. — Harriet  P.  SpofFord. — AA 
Phantoms  of  St.  Sepulchre,  The.— C:  Mackay.— CS  12 
Phaon,  the    Ferryman. — J:    Lyly.     See    Sapho    and 

Phaos. 
Pharisee  and  Sadducee. — Anon. — CH — SR  5 
Pharos  Loquitur.     (C.) — Walter  Scott. 

(Lighthouse,  The.)— LC 
Pheidippides. — Rob't  Browning. — OS  3 — SC  (cond.) — - 

WR  1  (si.  abr.) , 
Phenomenal  Baby,  A. — Anon. — WR  7 
Phenomenal  Memory,  A. — Anon. — WR  26 
Phil  Blood's  Leap.— Rob't  Buchanan.— CS  15— PEB  4 

— VSG 
Philanthropic    Love    of     Power. — Dan'l    Webster. — 

FDl 
Philaster,  Sel.  fr.     (Love  at  First  Sight — sel  fr.   Act 

v.,  Sc.  5.) — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. — EPs 
Philip,  my   King.— Dinah    M.    Craik.— BNL— EDY— 

FEP— HBP— OS  1— VA— WCL 
Philip  of     Macedon. — Demosthenes.     See     Philippics, 

The. 
Philip  of  Pokanoket  (in  Sketch  Book),  Sel.  fr.     (Death 
of  King  Philip.) — Washington  Irving. — WR  10 
Philip  to  Adam. — Arthur  H.  Clough.     See  Bothie  of 

Tober-na-Vuolich,  The. 
Philip  van  Artevelde,  Sels.  fr. — H :  Taylor. 
Artevelde.     (Br.  sel.)—BlL 
("Nay,  said  I  not.")— GG 
Artevelde's  Vision. — VSG 
Elena's  Song.— OB 

(Song.)— VA 
Heart  Rest.     (Br.  «eZ.)— BNL 
John  of  Launoy.    .  (Br.  sel.) — VA 
Philip  van  Artevelde.     (Br.  seZ.)- EDY— VA 
Philip  van  Artevelde,     Br.  sels.  fr. — BNL 
Philip  van  Artevelde  to  the  Men  of  Ghent. — PS 

(Van  Artevelde  to  the  Men  of  Ghent.) — SS 
Revolutions. — VA 

(Van  Artevelde's  Defence  of  his  Rebellion — vtlu. 
diff.)—SS 
Song:         "Down  lay  in  a  nook  my  lady's  brach." — 

HBP— VA 
Van  den  Bosch  and  Artevelde. — SS 

(Philip  van  Artevelde — br.  sel.) — BNL 
Wife,  A.     (Br.  seZ.)— BNL 
Philip  van  Artevelde  to  the  Men  of  Ghent. — H :  Taylor. 

See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Philip  van  Artevelde's  Defence  of  his  Rebellion. — H : 

Taylor.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Philippians,  Sel.   fr.     (Golden   Whatsoevers— IV. ,   8.) 

Bible.— LLC 
Philippic    against  Flood,  Oct.   28,    1783.     (C.)  — H: 
Grattan. 
(Invective  against  Mr.  Flood — cond.) — CS  4 
(Keply  to  Flood.)— PPS 
(Reply  to  Mr.  Flood— con-Z. )— KNE— OM— PS— SS 


257 


Philippics 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Philippics     (Orations    against    Philip),  Sela.  fr. — De- 
mosthenes. 
Against  Bribery.     {Sel.  fr.  3rd.  Ph.)— PS 
Against  Philip.     {Sel.  fr.  1st.)— PS— SS 

(Philip  of  Macedon— di/f.  <r.)— SSD 
Degeneracy  of  Atljens,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  3rd.  (?)  )— 

BLP— PS— SS 
Democracy  Hateful  to  Philip,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  8th. 

(?)  )— PS— SS 
Venality  the  Ruin  of  Greece.     (Sel.  fr.  9th.  (?)  )— 
PS— SS 
Philippine  Islands,  The.— J:  D.  Long.— PFP 
Phillida  and  Coridon  [or  Corydon].  —  Nicholas  Breton. 
— BNL— FEP— HBP— OEB— YBF 
(SI.  a6r.)— EP— ES— OB— WEP  1 
Phillida  Flouts  Me.— Anon.— EP 

(.4?>r.)— CEL— OB 
Phillida's  Love-call  [to  her  Corydon,  and  his  Replying]. 
— Anon.— EP— WEP  1 
(Phyllida's  Love-call.)— OB 
Phillips  Brooks.— Bliss  Carman.— TCV 
Phillips  Brooks.— J:  H.  Ingham.— EDY 
Phillips  Brooks.— Harriet  P.  Spofiford.— EDY 
Phillis.— Anon.— EP 
Phillis. — W:  Drummond.     See  Phyllis. 
Phillis.     (Fr.  The  Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange.)— T: 

Heywood. — EP 
■      (Go,  Pretty  Birds.)— FEP 
(Message,  The.)— OB 
(To  Phyllis.)— ES—OEL 
("Ye  little  birds  that  sit  and  sing.")^ELP 
Phillis.— T:  Lodge.— EP— OB  (l.—abr.) 

(To  PhiUis  the  Fair  Shepherdess — at.  to  Dyer.) — 
ES— WEP  1 
Phillis.— T:  Lodge.— OB  (II.)— OEL 
(Love  and  Phillis.)— EP 
(Love's  Wantonness.)— ES— WEP  1 
Phillis. — Sir  C:  Sedley.     See  following. 
Phillis  is  my  Only  Joy.— Sir  C!:  Sedley.— BNL 
(Phillis.)— CEL—EP 
(Song.)— WEP  2 
PhUlis'  Sickness.— T:  Lodge.— WEP  1 

(On  Phillis'  Sickness.)— EP 
Phillis  the  Fair. — Nicholas  Breton. — BNL  (abr.) 

(Pastoral,  A.)— FEP 
Phillis  the  Fair.     (C.)— Rob't  Burns.     See  Phyllis  the 

Fair. 
Phillis  the  Fair  Shepherdess.- Sir  E:  Dyer.— WEP  1 
Phillis's  Age. — Matthew  Prior.- HPE 
Philomel. — R:  Bamefield.     See  Cynthia. 
Philomel  to  Corydon. — W:  Young. — AA 
Philomela.— Matthew    Arnold.— BNL— FEP— HBP— 

OB— PGT  2— SN— VA 
Philomela. — Philip  Sidney.     See  Sidera. 
Philomela,  the  Lady  Fitzwater's  Nightingale,  Sels.  fr. 
— Rob't  Greene. 
Philomela's  Ode  [that  She  Sung  in  her  Arbour — 

— C.].— ELP— HBP— WEP  1 
Philomela's  Second  Ode. — EP 
Philomela's  Ode. — Rob't  Greene.     See  Philomela,  the 

Lady  Fitzwater's  Nightingale. 
Philomela's  Second   Ode. — Rob't  Greene. — See  Philo- 
mela, the  Lady  Fitzwater's  Nightingale. 
Philosopher,  A.— Sam  W.  Foss.— AWH 
Philosopher  and  the  Ferryman,  The. — Anon. — WR  17 
Philosopher  and  the  Lover,  The;  to  a  Mistress  Dying. 
(C.)— SirW:  Davenant. 
(To  a  Mistress  Dying.) — OB 
Philosopher  in  the  Apple  Orchard,  The.     (In  Comedies 

of  Courtship.) — Anthony  Hope. — WR  20 
Philosopher  Toad,  The.— Rebecca  S.  Nichols.— BNL 
Philosopher's  Devotion,  The.— H:  More.— ELP— HBP 
Philosopher's  Escape,  The. — Eva  Lovett. — TMD 
Philosopher's  Scales,  The. — Jane  Taylor. — BLP  (abr.) 

—BNL  (si.  a6r.)— CS  14 
Philosophia  Amoris. — G.  L.  R. — CG  1 
Philosophy.     (Frags,  jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Philosophy.— C.  W.  Crannell.— CG  2 
Philosophy.     (Fr.  A  Scholar  and  his  Dog.) — J.  Mars- 
ton.— BNL 

Philosophv. Thomson.— KNE 

"Philosophy  has  sometimes  forgotten  God,  as  a  great 

people  never  did." — G:  (7)  Bancroft. — GG 
Philosophy  of  Laughter.- Mrs.  C.  M.  Peat.— BS  8 

(Laughter— sei.l—HSS  3 
Philosophy  of  Progress.— E.  W.  Dunlavy. — SR  13 
Philosophy  of  Sport,  The.— C:  Mackay.— PPSr 
Phil's  Complaint.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Phoebe-bird,  The.— G:  P.  Lathrop.— TAV 
Phoebe's  Exploit.— Fs.  Lynde.— BS  23 
"Phoebus,  Arise."     (Song      XXXVL,      Pt.      1.)— W: 
Drummond. — OEL 
C  Invocation. ) — OB 


"Phoebus,  Arise"  (continued). 

(Song.)— ELP— ES— HBP— WEP  2 
(Summons  to  Love — si.  abr.) — PGT  1 
Phoebus  with  Admetus. — G:  Meredith. — OB 
Phoenix,  The.— Arthur  C.  Benson.— OB 
Phoenix  and  the  Turtle,  The.     (C.)— W:  Shakespeare. 

—OB 
(Phoenix  and  Turtle-dove.) — EPs 
Phoeni.x     and     Turtle-dove. — W:     Shakespeare.     See 

foregoing. 
"Phosphor,  Bring  the  Day." — Fs.  Quarles. — ELP 
Photograph  Album,  The.— Ella  Bevier.— CRR 
Photograph  Gallery,  The.— G:  C.  Graham.— GS 
Photograph  in  a  Shop  Window,  A. — Bernard  McEvoy. 

—TCV 
Photographic  Album.— H:  D.  (7)  Ryder.- AVP 
Photographs,  The. — Anon. — CH 
Phraxanor  to  Joseph. — C:  J.  Wells.     See  Joseph  and 

his  Brethren. 
Phrenologist  to  his  Mistress,  The.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Phrenology. — D.  L.  Demorest. — SD 
Phuss  and  Phret. — -Anon. — WR  15 
Phyllida's  Love-call. — Anon.     See  Phillida's  Love-call. 
Phyllis.     (Phillis— C.)—W:  Drummond.— GN—LC 
Phyllis  and  Corydon. — Arthur  W.  Cotton. — CG  1 
Phyllis  and  Damon. — Nora  Hopper.— TIP 
Phyllis  the  Fair.     (Phillis  the  Fair— C.)— Rob't  Bums. 

— LC 
Phyllis's  Slippers. — H.  A.  Richmond. — CG  2 
Phyllyp  Sparowe,    Sd.    fr.     (The    Nun's    Lament   for 

Philip  Sparrow.)- J:  Skelton.— CGd 
Physical  Education. — Anon. — KNE 
Physician  in  Spite  of  Himself,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Dorcaa 

and  Gregory — Act  I.,  Scs.   1-4.) — Jean  B.  P. 

de  Moliere.- WR  11 

Physician's  Story,  A.— Dr. Munro.— CS  13 

Physics.— W:  Whewell.— BNL 

Piano  Mania,  The. — Jennie  June. — MMR 

Piano-music. — Anon. — DR — PTS 

(How  Paderewski  Plays  the  Piano.) — CRR 
Piazza,  The. — Eugene  Field.     See  following. 
Piazza  Tragedy,  A.— Eugene  Field.— THP 

(Piazza,  The.)— AWH 
Pibroch. — Walter  Scott.     See  following. 
Pibroch  of  Donald  Dhu.     (C.)— Walter  Scott.— BNL 

—  BS  25  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  LC  —  OS  2 

—  PHS 

(Gathering  Song  of  Donald  Dhu  [or  the  Black].) — 

BPB— PGT  1 
(Gathering  Song  of  Dondl  Dhu.)— CEL— GN 
(Highland  War-song.)— PS 
(Pibroch.)— LH 
(Summons,  The — br.  sel.) — SE 
Picaninny's  Cyclone,  The.— Howell  L.  Finer. — WR  23 
Piccaninny  Lullaby. — Anon. — DST 
Picciola.— Rob't  H.  Newell.— AA—WR  10 
Piccola.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 

Piccolomini,  The.— Friedrich  Schiller.    See  Wallenstein. 
Pickaninny,  The. — Anon. — WR  7 
Picket  before  Bull  Run,  The.— J:  W.  Day.— FP 
Picket  Guard,  The.— Ethel  L.  Beers.— AWB— BNL— 
CR— CS  2  (at.  to    L.  Fontaine).— HSS  1— MR 
— PAP— PAPm— WRD 
(All  Quiet  along  the  Potomac.)— AA— FEP 
Pickett's  Charge  at  Gettysburg.     (Chicago  Ledger.) — 

SR6 
Pickpocket,  The.— Anon.— WR  24 
Pickwick  in  the  Wrong  Bedroom. — C:  Dickens.     See 

Pickwick  Papers.     The. 
Pickwick  Papers,  The,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 

Bardell  and  Pickwick.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXIII.)— 
BS3 
(Address  of  Sarjeant  Buzfuz — abr.) — MDD 
(Buzfuz  versus  Pickwick — abr.) — OM 
(Peroration  of  Buzfuz — abr.) — SE 
(Pickwick  Trial,  The — longer  and  ad.  as  dial.)— 

MPD 
(Speech  of  Sergeant  Buzfuz  in  the  Case  of  Bar- 
dell against  Pickwick — abr.) — FAS — SS 
Elder  Mr.  Welter's  Sentiments  on  Literary  Com- 
position, The     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXII.)— BS  5 
(Sam  Weller  and  his  Father— abr.)— NDP 
(Sam  Welter's  Valentine— a6r.)—FND— MDD— 
MPD 

(Abr.)— CS  3— FTR— NPS— YP 
(Tab.)~TCF 
Goblins,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXVIII.)— HS 
Ivy  Green,  The.     (Verses  jr.    Ch.   VI.)— BNL  — 
BS  16  (a6r.  )—CS  11— FEP— GP— POS  —  VA 
— VS 
(SI.  diff.  cera.)- AD— HBP— PHS 
(Ivy,  The.)— HSS  1 


258 


TITLE  INDEX 


Pilgrim's 


Pickwick  Papers,  The  (continued). 

Jack  Hopkins'  Story.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXI.)— CS  24 

— NPS— YP 
Job  Trotter's  Secret.    {Sel.  ad.  fr.  Ch.  XVI.)— MDD 
Mr.  Pickwick  in  a  Dilemma.    (Ch.  XII.— a6r.)— CS  2 
(Mr.  Pickwick's  Dilemma.) — MHR 
(Mr.  Pickwick's  Proposal  to  Mrs.  Bardell — sel.) 
— FTR— HNS 
Mr.  Pickwick's  Romantic  Adventure  with  a  Middle- 
aged  Lady  in  Yellow  Curl-papers.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch. 
XXII.)— MHR 
(Getting  in  the  Wrong  Room — abr.) — CS  1 
(Mr.  Pickwick  in  the  Wrong  Room — abr.) — PS 
(Pickwick  in  the  Wrong  Bedroom — abr.) — CR 
Mr.  Weller  in  Affliction.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  V.)— SDR 
Mr.  Winkle's  Adventure.     (Sel.  fr.  Chs.  XXIV.  and 

XXV.)— WR  16 
Mrs.  Leo  Hunter.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XV.)— WR  1 
Most    Extraordinary    Calamity     that    Befell    Mr. 

Winkle,  A.     (Ch.  XXXV.— cond.)— MHR 
Pickwickians  on  Ice,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXIX.)— 
PR— YA 
(Mr.  Winkle  [Puts]  on  Skates— abr.)— BS  14— SO 
Pickwickians  Taken  for  Informers,  but  Rescued  by 
the  Stranger,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  II.)— WR  9 
Pickwick    Trial,    The. — C:    Dickens.     iSee    Pickwick 

Papers,  The. 
Pickwickians  on  Ice,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pickwick 

Papers,  The. 
Pickwickians  taken  for  Informers,  but  Rescued  by  the 
Stranger,    The. — C:    Dickens.     See    Pickwick 
Papers,  The. 
Picnic  at  Selina,  The.     (Abr.) — Frank  L.  Stanton. — 

CS34 
Picnic  Party,  The.— G:  C.  Graham.- GS 
Picnic-time. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Picture,  A. — Anon. — CG  1 
Picture,  The.— Anon.— CS  8 
Picture,  A.— Anon.— CS  19 
Picture,  A.— Anon.— PGT  1 
Picture,  A.— Anon.— YBT 
Picture,  A.— C:G.  Eastman.— BNL—FEP 
(Afternoon  Nap,  The.)— WCL 

(Farmer  Sat  in   his  Easy  Chair,  The.)— GP— TAV 
*       (Midsummer  Day  Scene,  A.) — CS  7 
Picture,  A.     (.S'e/.)— Josiah  G.  Holland.— POS 
Picture,  The.— W:  B.  Rands.     See  Doll  Poems. 
Picture,  A.— E:  B.  Reed.— CG  2 
Picture.    (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. — 

TCP 
Picture,  A.— B:  P.  Shillaber.— FP 

(My  Childhood  Home.)— CS  7 
Picture  of  Death,  A. — Lord  Byron.     See  Giaour,  The. 
Picture  of  Little  T.  C.  in  a  Prospect  of  Flowers,  The. 
(O— A.  Marvell.— OB— PGT  1 
(Picture  of  T.  C,  The.)— FEP 
Picture  of  Riot.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Bowge  of  Courte.) — J: 

Skelton.— WEP  1 
Picture  of  T.  C,  The. — Andrew  Marvell.     See  Picture 

of  Little  T.  C.,etc. 
Picture  of  the  Last    Supper. — Louise    E.    V.    Boyd. — 

CS35 
Picture  on  the  Wall,  The.— A.  W.  Hawks.- CS  33 
Picture-books  in  Winter. — Robt.  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 

— LBB— MBB 
Pictures  from  Appledore,  sels.  fr. — J:  Russell  Lowell. 
Appledore — IR 
Appledore  in  a  Storm. — MMR 
Pictures  of  Memory.     (C.) — Alice  Gary. — BNL — CR — 
CS  4  —  FTR  —  GP  —  HNS  —  SAE  (br.  sel.)  — 
SM  —  SPE 
(Among  the  Beautiful  Pictures.) — FP — HBP 
(Little  Brother,  The.)— WCL 
(Sweetest  Picture,  The.) — BS  14 
Pictures  of  Memory. — J:  Reade. — TCV 
Pictures  of  Travel,  Sels.  fr. — Heinrich  Heine. 
Du  Bist  wie  eine  Blume.     ( Tr. )— FTA 
Fisher's  Cottage,  The.     (Tr.  by  C:  G:  Leland.)— 

BNL— HBP 
Lore-lei,  The.— BNL 

(Lorelei,  Th^—tr.  by  C.  P.  Cranoh.)— HBP 
Thine  Eyes.  (Tr.  by  J.  F.  Ballantyne.)— FTA— HP 
Water  Fay,  The.     (Tr.  by  C:  G.  Leland.)— HBP 
Piece  of  Advice,  A. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Piece  of  Bunting,  A.— F.  W.  Palmer.— BS  1 
Piece  of  News;  or.  Aunt  Ray's  Cat,  A. — Marg.  Sydney. 

— ASD 
Piece  of  Red  Calico,  A. — Andrew  Scroggin. — CS  20 — 

CSS— SR  9 
Piece  of  String,  The. — Guy  de  Maupassant. 

(String,  The.)— WGS 
Piecing  the  Preacher's  Quilt. — Idora  M.   Plowman. — 
WR15 


Pied  Piper  of  Hamelin,  The. — Rob't  Browning.— BVC 

—  CGd  —  CS   13  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  — 

MHR   (si.  abr.)  —  OS  1   —  PHS  —  PSR  — 

WCL— WCLI  1 
(A6r.)— BNL— LLC 
Pierian  Spring,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Piero  da  Castiglione.  Song  fr. — Stuart  Sterne. — BIL 
Pierre  La  Forge's  Dream. — Eva  Mink. — SR  3 
Pierrot's  Valentine. — Minnie  B.  Goodman. — ^HS 
Piers  Ploughman. —  G:    Gascoigne.      See  Steel  Glass, 

The. 
Piety.     (Fr.   Miscellaneous   Thoughts.) — S:   Butler. — 

HPE 
Piety  and  Civic  Virtue.— C.  H.  Parkhurst.— NC— SC 
Pig,  The.— Rob't  Southey.— HPE— SCS 
Pig  and  the  Hen,  The.— Alice  Gary.- BLF 
Pig  and  the  Magpie,  The. — Peter  Pindar.- HPE 
Pigeon  House,  The.     (Blades  and  Flowers.) — NV 
Piggy  and  the  Crows. — Anon. — WR  17  » 

Pike  County  Wedding,  A.— Anon.— CS  22 
Pilgrim,  The. — J:  Bunyan.     See  Pilgrim's  Progress. 
Pilgrim,  The.— Sarah  H.  Palfrey.— AA 
Pilgrim,  The.     (Sir  Walter  Raleigh's  Pilgrimage — C.) 

Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— OS  3  (abr.) 
(His  Pilgrimage.)— OB  (a6r.)— WEP  1 
(Pilgrimage  [,The].)— BNL— EP>  (afer.)— FEP 
Pilgrim,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Pilgrim,  The.— Friedrich  Schiller.— WCLG  2 
Pilgrim  Ancestors,  The. — David  C.   Robinson. — TMD 
Pilgrim  Charter   and    Covenant,    The. — T:    Russell. — 

FD2 
Pilgrim  Commemoration,  The. — J:  D.  Long. — FD  2 
Pilgrim  Fathers,  The. — Rufus  Choate.     See  Age  of  the 

Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History,  The. 
Pilgrim  Fathers,    The. — Felicia    D.    Hemans. — LH — 

TMD 
("Breaking  waves  dashed  high.  The"; — sel.) — SAE 
(Landing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers  [or  Pilgrims],  The.) 

—AD  (sel.)  —  EPs  —  GMS  — GN— GP— LLC— 

OS  2— PHS— PPSr— PSR— SM— WCLG  1 
(Landing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers  in  New  England, 

The— C.)— BNL— EDY— FEP— HB— HBP 
Pilgrim  Fathers,  The. — Isaac  McLellan,  Jr.     See  Pil- 
grim Fathers,  The. — J:  Pierpont. 
Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.— J:  B.  0':&eilly.— MAL 
Pilgrim  Fathers,     The.— J:     Pierpont.— AA— HBP— 

PSR— YBT 
(W.  add.  by  I.  McLellan,  Jr.)— WR  10 
Pilgrim  Fathers,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (New  England  and 

Virginia.)— Rob't  C.  Winthrop.— BLP 
Pilgrim  Fathers,    The.     (Ecclesiastical    Sonnets,    Pt. 

III.,  Son.  XIII.:     Aspects  of  Christianity  in 

America,  I.)— W:  Wordsworth.— EDY— EHT 
Pilgrim  Monument,  The.— J.  Q.  A.  Brackett.— FD  2 
Pilgrim  to  Compostella,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (The  Legend — 

O— Rob't  Southey. 
(Cock  and  Hen  Story,  A.)— HPE 
Pilgrim  to  Pilgrim  (As  you  Came  to  the  Holy  Land — 

C.).— Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— ELP 
Pilgrimage,  The. — Sir  Walter   Raleigh.     See  Pilgrim, 

The. 
Pilgrimage    in    Search    of    Do- Well. — W:   Langland. 

See  Vision  of  Piers  [the]  Plowman. 
Pilgrimage  to    Kevlar   [Kevlaar — C],   The. — Heinrich 

Heine.— WR  8  (Pts.  1  and  2.) 
Pilgrims,  The,     SeL  ■  fr.     (Knight,     The.)— Geoffrey 

Chaucer. — OS  3 
Pilgrims,  The.— Chauncey  M.  Depew.— BS  18— PS 
Pilgrims,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (What  we  owe  the  Pilgrims.) — 

Wendell  Phillips.— NC 
Pilgrims,  The. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — HDL 
Pilgrims,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Pilgrims  of  Ply- 
mouth,  The. 
Pilgrims  and  the  Peas,  The.— J:  Wolcott.— CS  11 

(Abr.)- BNL— HPE— THP 
Pilgrims  as  Conquerors,  The. — H:  C.  Lodge. — FD  2 
Pilgrims'  Idea  of  Home,  The.— J.  M.  W.  Hall.— FD  2 
Pilgrims  of  New  England,  The. — Rufus  Choate.     See 

Age  of  the  Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our 

History,  The. 
Pilgrims  ot  Plymouth.  The.     (C.)— J:  G.  Whittier. 

(Pilgrims.  The— si.  abr-.)- MMR 
Pilgrims  of  the  Night,  The.     (C.—sl.  abr.)- Frd'k  W. 

Faber.— HDL 
(Angelic  Songs  are  Swelling.  )-^LIjC 
Pilgrim's  Progress,  Sels.  fr. — J:  ffunyan. 

Land  of  Beulah,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— OS  2 
Palace  Beautiful,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— WCLI  1 
Pilgrim,  The.     (Verses  fr.   Pt.   II.)— BPB— GN— 

HBP 
Shepherd  Boy  Sings  in  the  Valley  of  Humiliation, 

The.     ( Verses  fr.  Pt.  11.)— GN— OB 
(Song.)— PYO 


259 


Pilgrim's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Pilgrim's  Vision,  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.— WR  10 
Pillar  of  the  Cloud,  The.     (C.)— J:  H.  Newman.— BNL 
— GP— SM— VA 
(Lead,  Kindly  Light.)— BSP—EDY—FEP— HDL 

— LLC— PYO— WCLG  1— SAE— YBF 
("Lead,  kindly  lighU  amid  the  encircling  gloom.") — 

GG 
(Lead  Thou  Me.)— SSS 

{Pantomime   of   "Lead,    Kindly   Light,"    hy   Lucy 
Jenkins.)— WR  17 
Pillar  of  Trajan,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.— AVP 
Pilot,  The.— T:  H.  Bayly.— FEP—SS 
Pilot,  The,  Sels.  fr.—J&a.  F.  Cooper. 

Capture  of  the  Whale,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XVIL)— 

WCLI2 
Pilot,  The.     (.Sel.  fr.  Ch.  V.)— WCLI  2 
Pilot  [.A  Thrilling  Incident],The.— J:  B.  Gough.— CS23 

— CSS— MMR— WRD 
«    (John  Maynard,  the  Hero-pilot.) — FTR 

(Story  of  John  Maynard.)- BS  17 
Pilot's  Bride,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  29 
Pilot's  Daughter,  The.— W:  AUingham.— EPs 
Pilot's  Story,    The.— W:    D.    Howells  — CS  19— SC— 
SR7 
(A6r.)— FR— PFP 
Pimpkin  versus  Bodkin. — Anon. — CS  14 
Pin.  A.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BS  16— DES— SR  6 
Pindarique  Odes,  Sels.  fr. — Abraham  Cowley. 
Brutus.— WEP  2 
To  Mr.  Hobbes.— WEP  2 
Pine  Needle. — W:  H.  Hayne.     See  Pine-needles. 
Pine  Town  Darkey  Debating  Society,  The.     (Harper's 

Magazine. )— CD— CDV— SDR 
Pine  Tree,  The.— Anon.— PEO 

Pine  Tree,  The. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Modem  Painters. 
Pine  Tree  Academy,  The.— V.  E.  Scharfif.- AD 
Pine  Tree  Shillings,  The. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne.     See 

Grandfather's  Chair, 
Pine  Tree's  Choice,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— WLO 
Pine  Valley  Boys,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— MAD 
Pine  Woods,  The. — John,  Lord  Hanmer. — VA 
Pine-needles. — W:  H.  Hayne. — AD 

(Pine  Needle.)— NV 
Pines,  The. — Anon.— WR  14 
Pines,  The.- — -Julie  M.  Lippmann. — AA 
Pines,  The.— Harriet  P.  SpofTord.— AA 
Pines  and  the  Sea,  The.— -Christopher  P.  Cranch. — AA 
Pine-tree  Buoy,  The. — Harrison  S.  Morris. — AA 
Pink,  The.— Johann  W.  von  Goethe.— HSS  1 

{In  The  Maiden  Spring.) — AD 
Pink  Perfumed  Note,  A.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  30 
Pins.— Anon.— DCP 
Pio  Nono.— Julia  W.  Howe.— EDY 
Pioneers. — Hamlin  Garland. — AA 
Pious.     (Acting  Charade.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 

YF-, 
Pious  Editor's  Creed,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Big- 
low  Papers,  The. 
Pipe,  The.     {Philadelphia  Times.)— FS 
Pipe  and  Can.— G :  Wither.— OB  {si.  abr.) 

(Tobacco.)— PPh 
Pipe  and  Tobacco.— Anon. — PPh 
Pipe  Critic,  The.— Walter  Littlefield.— PPh 
Pipe,  Merry  Annot.— Nicholas  Udall  (?).— ELP 
Pipe  of  Pan,  The.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— SN 
Pipe  of  Tobacco,  A.     {Song  fr.  The  Grub-street  Opera, 

Act  III.,  Sc.  1.)— H:  Fielding.— PPh 
Pipe  of  Tobacco,  A.— J:  Usher.— PPh 
Pipe  you  Make  Yourself,  The.— H:  E.  Brown.— PPh 
Pipe-plaver,  The. — Edmund  Gosse. — VA 
Piper,  The.     {In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W:  Blake. — 
BNL— CEL— WCL 
("And  1  made  a  rural  pen" — br.  sel.) — PoR 
(Child  and  the  Piper,  The.)— CGd— LC 
(Introduction    [to    Songs  of  Innocence].) — FEP — 

HBP— WEP  3 
(Piping  down  the  Valleys  Wild.)— PoR 
(Reeds  of  Innocence.) — OB 
Pipes  and  Beer.— Edgar  Fawcett.— MRS— PPh 
Pipes  at  Lucknow,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— FMR— GN 

— TMD 
Piping  down  the  Valleys  Wild. — W :  Blake.     See  Piper, 

The. 
Pippa  Passes,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Browning. 

Good  Morning.     {Sonrj  fr.  Morning.) — OS  1 — PoR 
(Pippa's  Song.)-iBVC— OB— WEP  4— YBT 
(Song  from  "Pippa  Passes.")— GMS—LC—VA 
(Year's  at  the  Spring,  The.)— PYO— YBF 
King,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  sono  in  Evening.) — EPs 
New  Year's  Day  at  Asolo.     {Sel.  fr.  Introduction.) 
— IR 
(Pippa  Passes — br.  sel.) — SN 
You'll  Love  me  Yet.     {Song  in  Evening.) — OB 


Pippa's  Song. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Pippa  Passes. 
Pip's  Fight.     {Sel.  fr.  Great  Expectations,  Ch.  XL) — 

C:  Dickens.— CS  13 
Pirate  Story.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV—VA 
Pirate,  The,  Sei.  fr.     (Farewell — song.) — Walter  Scott. 

— LH 
Piscator  and  Piscatrix. — W:  M.  Thackeray.— ESs 
Piscatory    Eclogues. — Phineas    Fletcher.     See    Prize, 

The. 
Pitcher  of  Mignonette,  A. — H :  C.  Bunner. — AA 
Pitcher  or  Jug.— M.  P.  Chick.— LPS— NPS—PP—YP 
Pitt.— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— AVP 
Pitt  and  Fox. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marmion. 
Pitt's  Reply  to  Walpole.— W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. — 

(Answer  of  Pitt  to  Walpole,  The.)— OS  3 

(Reply  of  Mr.  Pitt  [to  Sir  Robert  Walpole].)— KNE 

—TMD  {com)/) 
(Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole.)— CS  4 
(Reply  to  Sir  Robert  Walpole,  1741.)— PS— SS 
(Reply  to  Walpole.)— LLC 
"Pitty  Power,"  The.— Augusta  Moore.— CS  34 
Pittypat  and  Tippytoe.— Eugene  Field.— EF — GMS— 

WTD 
Pity  for  Poor  Africans.     (C) — W :  Cowper. 

(Preaching  vs.  Practice — abr.) — PS 
Pity  of  it ,  The .     ( C. )— G :  Macdonald . 

(Sweet  Peril.)— CEL 
Pity  of  the  Leaves,  The. — E.  A.  Robinson. — AA 
Pity  of  the  Park  Fountain,  The.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis. 

— FP 
Pity  the  Poor  Blind!— Anon. — DDM 
Pity  the  Sorrows  of  a  Poor  Old  Man. — Anon.     (Incl. 

in  A  Gay  Old  Man  Am  I — mus.  mon.) — DSS 
Pity  'tis,  'tis  True.— Herbert  Welch.— CG  2 
Pixy  People,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Pizarro  {tr.  fr.  Katzebue's  Spaniards  in  Peru),  Sels.  fr. 
—R:  B.Sheridan. 
Las  Casas  Dissuading  from  Battle.     (Act  I.,  Sc.  1.) 

—LLC 
Pizarro  and  Rolla.     (IV.,  2.)— NDP 
Speech  of  Rolla  to  the  Peruvian  Army.     {Sel.  fr. 
II.,  2.)— PS 
(Rolla  to  the  Peruvians.) — LLC 
(Rolla's    Address    to    the    Peruvians.) — CS  8 — 
KNE  {at.  to  Knowles)— OM— SS 
Pizarro  and  Rolla. — R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  Pizarro. 
Place  de  la  Revolution.     (C.)— H :  H.  Brownell. 

(Death  of  Robespierre.) — EDY 
Place  for  Everything,  and  Everything  in  its  Place,  A. 

{Dial. )— Anon.— FD  Y 
Place  in  thy  Memory,  A. — Gerald  Griffin. — VA 

(Song.)— FTA 
Place  of  Athletics  in  College  Life,  The. — Chauncey  M. 

Depew. — NC 
Place  of  Love,  The.— S.  C.  Brackett.— CG  1 
Place  of  Rest,  The.— Heloise  Durant. — DS 
Place  of  the  Damned,  The. — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
Place  of  the  Imagination  in  the  Art  of  Expression,  The. 

—A.  J.  F.  Behrends.— BS  16 
Place  of  the  Individual  in  American  Society,  The,  Sel. 
fr.     (Tendencies  of  Self-government,  The.) — 
Lyman  Abbott —TMR 
Place  to  Die,  The. — Michael  J.  Barry.     See  following. 
Place  where  Man  Should  Die,  The. — Michael  J.  Barry. 
— GP— HB  (afer.)— HBP 
(Place  to  Die,  The.)— FEP 
(Where  Man  Should  Die.)— C!S  6 
Plaidie,  The.— C:  Sibley.— BNL— GP—THP 

(Adoon  the  Lane.) — BS  3 
Plain  and  Pleasant  Talk  about  Fruits,  Flowers,  and 
Farming,  SeZ. /r.     (Family  Government. )--H: 
W.  Beecher.— SR  4 
Plain  Direction,  A. — Anon. — WR  1 
Plain  Language  from  Truthful  James.     (C.) — Fs.  Bret 
Harte.— AWH  —  BNL—  EPs— FEP— HBP— 
THP 
,      (Heathen  Chinee,  The.)— CS  3— HR— SE 
Plain  Man's  Dream,  A. — Frd'k  Keppel. — AA 
Plain  People,  The.— Anon.— CP 
Plain  Tale  of  1893,  A.— Anon.— EA  ' 
Plain-spoken  Philosophy. — Howard  Y. Newell. — WR  24 
Plaint.— Ebenezer  Elliott.— OB— WEP  4 
Plaint  of  Jonah,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
"Plan  not,  nor  scheme,  but  calmly  wait." — J:  R.  (?) 

Macduff.— GG 
Planet  of  my  Light. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella. 
Plant  a  Tree. — Lucy  Larcom. — AD — DCP  {br.  sel.) — 
LLC— PEO 
("He  who  plants  a  tree" — br.  sel.) — HSS  1 
(Who  Plants  a  Tree— o6r.)— TMR 
Plant  Song.— Nellie  M.  Brown.— NV 


260 


TITLE  INDEX 


Ploughman 


Plant  the  Oak.— Addie  V.  McMullen.— AD 
"Plant  the  trees,  children." — Anon. — AD — DFR 
"Plant  trees  and  care   for  them." Larrabee. — 

HSSl 
Plant  Worship.     (.Gentleman's  Magazine.) — AD 
Plantation  Ditty,  A. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — AA 
Plantation  Pictures. — Andrews  Wilkinson. — WR  4 
Planted. — Anon. — AD 

Planted  Himself  to  Grow. — Anon.     See  Planting  Him- 
self to  Grow. 
Planting  for  the  Future. — Harriet  B.  Wright. — AD 
Planting  Himself  to  Grow.— Anon.— PP—TFS—YFR 

(Planted  Himself  to  Grow.)— NV 
Planting  of  the  Apple-tree  [.The].— W:  C.  Bryant.— AA 

—  AD  —  BNL  —  GN  —  HSS  1  —  LLC  —  SN 

— WCLG  1— WR  4 
Planting  the  Oak. — Hezekiah  Butterworth. — HS 
Planting  the  Tree.— H:  Abbey.— YBT 

(Dedicatory  Exercises  include  this.)— 'DFK 

(Have  you  Planted  a  Tree?)— WR  17 

(What  do  we  Plant— C.  [when  we  Plant  the  Tree]?) 

— AD— PEO 
Planting  the  Tree.— E.  P.  Waterbury.— AD— DFR 
"Planting"  Wheat. — May  M.  Anderson. — PR — YA 
Platform  of  the  Constitution,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Remarks 

on  the  Political  Course  of  Mr.  Calhoun  in  1838.) 

— Dan'l  Webster.— SS 
(Against  Secession — ptly.  jr.  this  and  ptly.  fr.  The 

Constitution  and  the  Union.) — SSD 
Plato  and  Diogenes. — Jas.  F.  Gore. — CS  34 
Plato;  or.  The  Philosopher  {in  Representative  Men), 

Br.  sel.  fr.     ("In  all  our  decisions  and  actions 

it  would  be  well  for  us.") — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 

— GG 
Plato  to  Theon. — Philip  Freneau. — AA 
Platonic— Anon.— FTA 
Platonic.— W:   B.   Terrett.— BNL— CS  6— MR— PPSr 

— SR  13  {si.  abr.) 
Platonic  Friendship,  A. — Jas.  M.  Barrie. — WR  22 
Platypus,  The. — Oliver  Herford. — NA 
Play  of  Fancy,  A.     {Japanese  drill.) — Mary  S.  Far- 
rand.— WR  24 
Play  of  "King  Lear,"  The.— W:  Watson.— VA 
Play  Softly,  Boys.— Teresa  B.  O'Hare.— BS  26 
Playful.     (CAar.)— Anon.— BS  13— TCP 
Play-house  Musings. — Jas.  Smith. — HPE 
Playing  Barber.- Anon.— TFS 
Playing  Bo-Peep,  with  a  Star. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Playing  Carpenter. — Anon. — LPS — PP 
Playing  Church. — Anon. — PS 

Playing  Doctor.     {Tab.)—E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Playing  Drunkard.— Fs.  S.  Smith.— PP— PS— YPS 
Playing  Entertainment. — Anna  Hopper.— WR  21 
Playing  for  Keeps.— Nettie  H.  Pelham.— WR  2 
Playing  Fourth  of  July. — M.  F.  Burlingame. — SD 
Playing  Grandma.     {Tab.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 

YFE 
Playing  Grown-up.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Playing  "Grown-up." — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Playing  "Hookey."     {Abr.  and  arr.  as  dial.  fr.  Little 

Prudy,  (5h.  VIII.)— Sophie  May.— NDP 
Playing  Old  Folks.     (DiaZ.)— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfel- 

low.— PS 
(Old  Folks.)— TT 
Playing  School.     (DtoZ.)— Anon.— MND 
Playing  School.     (DioZ.)- Anon.— WR  17 
Playing  School.     (Diai.)- Anon.— YFD 
Playing  School.— Lida  P.  Caskin.— BS  13— DR 
Playing  School.     {Dial.)—&.  J.  Smith.— DLD 
Playing  Store.     {Dial.)—E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Playing  with  Fire. — Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 
Playmate  Hours,  The. — Mrs.  T:  W.  Higginson. — OH 
Playmates,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— TAS 
Plays.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  CXCVII.)— Walter  S. 

Landor. — VA 
Playthings. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Plea  for  "Castles  in  the   Air,"   A. — Jacob  Gough. — 

HP    ^ 
Plea  for  Chanty.— Alice  Cary.— TAS 
Plea  for   Cuba,   A. — J:  M.  Thurston.     See  Afifairs  in 

Cuba. 
Plea  for  Enthusiasm,  A. — Anon. — NC 
Plea  for  Spring  Poetry,  A.— R.  K.  K.— CG  3 
Plea  for  the  Animals. — Jas.   Thomson.     <See  Seasons, 

The. 
Plea  for  the  Old  South  Church,  Boston.     {Sel.  fr.  The 

Old  South  Meeting-house.)— Wendell  Phillips. 

— FD  1— PPS 
Plea  for  the  Sailor,  A.— W:  Mountford.— PS  {abr.)— 

Plea  for  the  Union.— W :  H.  Seward.— SSD 
Plea  for  William  Freeman,  A.      {Sel.    fr.    Defence    of 
William  Freeman.)— W:  H.  Seward.— NC 


"Plea  of  emotional  insanity  or  transitory  mania,  The." 

— Murray  Hoffman. — GG 
Plea  of  the  Pocomtuc  Chief.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Battle  of 
Bloody  Brook.)    E:  Everett.— BLP  {abr.) 
(Indian,  The.)— OS  3 
(Indian  Chief  to  the  White  Settler,  The.)— BS  3— 

CS4 
(Indian  Chieftain,  The.)— LLC  {abr.) 
(Supposed  Speech  of  a  Chief  of  the  Pocomtuc  In- 
dians—o6r.  )— PS— SS 
Plea  of  the  Trees,  The.— (Arr.  by)  W.  H.  Benedict.— 

AD— DFR 
Pleading  Extraordinary. — Anon. — CS  3 
Pleasant  Acquaintance,     A.     {Tab.) — Anon.  —  BS  14 

—TCP 
Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient  Grissell  [or  Grissil  or  Gris- 
sill].  The,  Sels.  fr.—T:  Dekker. 
Beauty,  Arise! — ES 

Content.    {Fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  1.)— CEL— ELP— WEP  2 
(Happy  Heart,  The.)— BNL— PGT  1— YBF 
(O,  Sweet  Content.)— EP  / 

(Sweet  Content.)— FEP— OB 
Lullaby:     "Golden  slumbers,"  etc.— ELP— FEP— 
LC— WEP  2— YBF 
Pleasant  Days  of  Old,  The. — Frances  Brown. — FMR 
(Oh  [or  Oj,  the  Pleasant  Days  of  Old!)— BNL— FEP 
—HBP— HSS  3  {br.  sel.)— OS  2 
Pleasant  Isle  of  Aves,  The. — C:  Kingsley. — LH 
(Last  Buccaneer,  The.)— FEP— VA 
(Last  Buccanier,  The— C.)— CEL— WEP  4 
Pleasant  Song,  A.     (Echoes  XVIII.:  To  A.  D.— C.)— 
W:  E.  Henley.— OH 
(Love  Notes.)— BIL— FTA 
Pleasant  Weather. — Anon. — PPSr 
Pleasant  Words. — Anon. — FAS 
Pleasant  Words.— Anon.— YBT 
Please  Do  not  Speak  so. — Anon. — WR  17 
"Please,  preacher-man,    can    I    go    home?" — Anon. — 

CS  30— DST 
"Please  to  Ring  the  Belle."     (C.)— T:  Hood.— BS  24 
(Come  with  the  Ring.)— CS  21 
(Maiden's  Request,  The — at.  toS:  Lover.) — MHR 
Pleasure  at  Home. — Anon.- — PS 

Pleasure  Reconciled  to  Virtue    {C.),Sels.  fr.    (Masque 
of  Pleasure  and  Virtue—Songs  I.,  II.,  III.) — 
Ben  Jonson. — EPs 
Pleasure-boat,  The.— R:  H.  Dana.— BNL— FTR 
Pleasures  of  Heaven,  The.     {Sel.  fr.   Eupheme,   IX. : 

Elegy  on  my  Muse.) — Ben  Jonson. — FP 
Pleasures  of  Hope,  The,  Sels.  fr. — T:  Campbell. 

Downfall    of    Poland,   The.      {Sel.    fr.    Pt.   I.)— 
GP  {sel.)—SR8 
(Battle  of  Maciejowice — sel.) — EDY 
(Fall  of  Warsaw,   1794— air.)— OM— PPSr— SS 
(Poland— 8eZ.)— BNL 
Hope.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.)— BNL 

(Hope  of  an  Hereafter,  The — ptly.  same.) — FP 
("With  thee,  sweet  Hope,  resides  the  heavenly 
light"— 6r.  8eZ.)— AE 
Pleasures  of  Hope,  The.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— FP 

(Hope— a6r.)— EPs 
Pleasures  of   Hope,  Pantomime  of.     {By  Howell  L. 
Piner.)— WR23 
Pleasures  of  Imagination,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Mark  Aken- 
side. 
Compensations  of  the  Imagination.     {Sel.  fr.  Bk. 

III.)— SS 
Pleasures  of  Imagination,  The.     {Sels.  fr.  Bk.  I.) — 
EPs— WEP  3  {abr.) 
(Delights  of  Fancy— seZ. )— BNL 
(Mind  of  Man,  The— obr. )—SS 
Pleasures  of  Memory. — T:  Moore. — FP  («eZ.) 

(On  Music— O— TIP 
Pleasures  of    Memory,    The.     (Sel.    fr.    Pt.    II.)— S: 

Rogers.— WEP  4 
Pleasures  of  Picnic-ing. — Anon. — CS  12 
Pleasures  of  the  Telephone. — Anon. — DCR 
Pleasures  of  War.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Pledge,  The.— Anon.— PS 

Pledge  at  Spunky  Point,  The.— J:  Hav.— AWH 
Pledge  with  Wine.— Anon.— CS  2— FMR  (abr.)— PS 
(Bridal  Feast — poet.  vers. — F.  C.  Long.) — CS  4  {abr.) 

— SA 
(Bridal  Wme-cup,  The.)— WRD 

{Dram,  by  A.  F.  Bradley.)— CS  14— ED 
{Dram,  by  Sidney  Herbert.)- BS  4— CDD 
Plighted.— A.  D.  1887.— Alice  W.  Brotherton.- DES 
Plorata  Veris  Lachrymis. — W.  Barnes. — PGT  2 
Plough,  The.— R:  H.  Home.— OB— VA 
Plough  Hand's  Song,  The.     (Uncle    Remus    and    his 
Friends — his  Songs  and   Ballads,  I.) — Joel  C. 

Ploughman,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— BNL— MAL 


261 


Pluck 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Pluck. — Marcus  M.  Pomeroy. — FAS 
Plum  Cake,  The.— Ann  and  Jane  Taylor.— BVC 
Plumber's  Revenge,  The. — Anon. — WR  2 
Plumed  Knight,  The.     (Nominating  James  G.  Blaine 
for  President — C. — cond.) — Rob't  G.  IngersoU. 
— SC  ♦ 

Plunkettville  Literary  Society,  The. — Anon. — MC 
Plymouth  Rock.     {Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A. 

Sabine.— TCP 
PljTnouth  Rock. — Dan'l   Webster.     See   First   Settle- 
ment of  New  England,  The. 
Po'  Little  Jude.— R.  Hackley.— WR  16 
Pebble  Who  Has  no  Toes,  The.  — E:  Lear.- BVC  — 

NA 
Pocahontas.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Pocahontas. — Mary  Hartwell.— SDD 
Pocahontas.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— GN— OS  2 
Pockets.     {Ad.) — Julian  Hawthorne. — BS  14 
Poem  for  a  Silver  Wedding,  A. — Anon. — CP 
Poem  for  the  Dedication  of  the  Fountain  at  Stratford- 
on-Avon,  presented    by  George  W.  Childs  of 
Philadelphia.     (C.)— Oliver  W.  Holmes. 
(Stratford  Fountain.)— BS  16 
Poem  of  the  Cid.— J:  Ormsby.     See  Cid,  The. 
Poem  of  the  Cid,  Story  of  the.— Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
Poem  of  the  Universe,  The. — C:  Weldon. — VA 
Poem  Read  at  the  Dinner  Given  to  the  Author  by  the 
Medical  Profession  of  the  City  of  New  York- 
April  12,  1883,  Sel.  fr.     (Strong  Heroic   Line, 
The.)— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AA 
Poem  Read  at  the  Foimding  of  [the]  Gettysburg  Monu- 
ment.—C:  G.  Halpine.— CS  1— WRD 
Poem  upon  the  Death  of  his  Late  Highness,  Oliver, 
Lord  Protector  of  England,  Scotland  and  Ire- 
land, A,  Br.ael.fr.     (On  the  Death  of  OUver 
Cromwell  )— J:  Dryden.— EDY 
(Oliver  Cromwell — br.  sel.) — BNL 
Poems.     (XVI.) — Emily  Dickinson. — BNL  (ls<  poem.) 
Poems.     (XVII.)— Emily      Dickinson.— BNL      (2nd 
poem.) 
(Certainty.)— T  AS 
(Chartless. )— A  A— GN 
Poenas  by  a  Seamstress,  Sel.  fr.     (Dreamer,  The.) — 

Anon.— BNL 
Poems  Composed  in  the  Summer  of  1833,  Sel.  fr. 
(Poems,  Composed  or  Suggested  during  a  Tour, 
in  the  Summer  of  1833:  Sonnet  XXXVII.— 
O— W:  Wordsworth.- BNL  (6r.  seZ;) 
Poems  Received  in  Response  to  an  Advertised  Call  for 
a  National  Anthem. — Rob't  H.  Newell. 

National  Anthem  by  Dr.  Oliver   Wendell   H . 

—BNL 
(Rejected  "National  Hymns,"  The,  III.)— THP 

National  Anthem  by  Gen.  George  P.  M . — BNL 

National  Anthem  by  N.  P.  W .—BNL 

(Rejected  "National  Hymns,"  The,  VI.)— THP 

National  Anthem  by  Thomas  Bailey  A . — BNL 

(Rejected  "National  Hymns,"  The,  VII.)— THP 

National  Anthem  by  William  Cullen  B . — BNL 

(Rejected  "National  Hymns,"  The,  V.)— THP 

Rejected  "National  Hymns,"  The,  I.     By  H y 

W.  L  -  ngf w.— THP 

Rejected  "National  Hymns,"  The,  II.     By  J  -  hn 

Gr  -  -  nl  -  -  f  Wh  -  -  t  -  -  r.— THP 
Rejected  "National  Hymns,"  The,  IV.     By  R  -Iph 
W  -  Ido  Em  -  r  -  -  n.— THP 
Poe's  Cottage  at  Fordham. — J:  H.  Boner. — AA 
Poesie.— Rob't  Reid.— TCV 
Poesy. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Poetry. 
Poet,  The.— Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Festus. 
Poet,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— AA— BNL 
Poet,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  House  of  Fame, 

The. 
Poet,  The.     Sara  J.  D.  Cotes.— TCV 
Poet,  The. — Cornelius  Mathews. — AA 
Poet,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel, The. 
Poet,  The.— C.  S.  T.— EPs 
Poet  and  Lark. — Mary  A.  De  Vere. — AA 
Poet  ana  Painter. — H.  R.  Hudson. — SR  3 
Poet  and  the  Alchemist,  The. — Horace  Smith. — SS 
Poet  and  the  Child,  The.— Winifred  Ho  wells.— A  A 
Poet  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Oliver  W. 
Holmes. 
Fashionable  Piano  Music.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  III.)— KNE 
Gambrel-roofed     House    and    its    Outlook,    The. 

(Story  fr.  Ch.  l.—sl.  abr. )—APr 
("Where  we  love  is  home" — br.  sel.  fr.  Homesick  in 
Heaven,  in  Ch.  I.) — BIL 
Poet  Dreamt  of  Heaven,  The. — Anon. — FP 
Poet  Expatiates  on  the  Beauty  of  Delia's  Hair,  The. 
(The  Love  Elegies  of  Abel  ShufHebottom,  III.) 
—Rob't  Southey.— HPE 


Poet  Expressed  his  Feelings  Respecting  a  Portrait  in 
Delia's  Parlor,  The.  (The  Amatory  Sonnets 
of  Abel  ShufHebottom,  IV.) — Robert  Southey. 
—HPE 

Poet  Foiled,  The.     (Punch.)— HFE 

Poet  in  the  City,  The.— Catherine  C.     Liddell.— VA 

Poet  in  the  Woods,  The. — W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 

Poet  of  Earth.— Stephen  H.  Thayer.— AA 

Poet  of  Fashion,  The. — Jas.  Smith. — EiSs 

Poet  of  Nature,  The. — Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Festus. 

Poet  of  To-day,  The. — Sarah  J.  Lippincott. — BNL 

Poet  Proves  the  Existence  of  a  Soul  from  his  Love  for 
Delia,  The.  (The  Amatory  Sonnets  of  Abel 
ShufHebottom,    HI.)— Rob^t    Southey.— HPE 

Poet  Relates  how  he  Obtained  Delia's  Pocket-hand- 
kerchief, The.  (The  Love  Elegies  of  Abel 
Shufflebottom,  I.)— Rob't  Southey.— HPE 

Poet  Relates  how  he  Stole  a  Lock  of  Delia's  Hair,  and 
her  Anger,  The.  (The  Love  Elegies  of  Abel 
Shufflebottom,  IV.)— Rob't  Southey.— HPE 

Poeta  Nascitur. — T:  Ashe. — VA 

Poetaster,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Banquet  of  Sense,  The — 
song  fr.  Sc.  fi.)  — Ben  Jonson. — ES 

Poetic  Inspiration. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 

Poetic  Mystery,  The. — Anon. — HP 

Poetic  Principle,  The. — Edgar  A.  Poe.     See  Poetry. 

Poetical  Cookery-book,  The.     (Punch.)— HFE 
(Roasted  Sucking-pig — br.  sel.) — BNL 

Poetical  Courtship.- L.  P.  Hills.— CS  28 

Poetical  Patch  Quilt,  The.— Anon.— SR  1 
(Mosaic  Poetrv.)— WRD 
(My  Love.)— BNL 

Poet-lore.     (C.) — Edwin  Markham. 
(Lyric  Seer,  The.)— SR  13 

Poetry. — L.  H.  Foote. — AA 

Poetry,  Sels.  fr. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

"If  to  embody  in  a  breathing  word."     (Sel.  fr.  Pre- 
lude and  Pt.  V.)— HP 
Poesy.     (Sel.  fr.  Prelude.)— FP 

Poetry. — Edwin  Markham. — AA 

Poetry.     (SI.  a6r.)— Jas.  G.  Percival.— SA 

Poetry.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Poetic  Principle. )— Edgar  A.  Poe. 

Poetry.  (Br.  sel.  fr.  Preface  to  Lyrical  Ballads.) — W: 
Wordsworth. — LLC 

"Poetry,  and  its  twin-sister,  Music,  are  the  most  sub- 
lime and  spiritual  of  arts." — Philip  (?)  Schaff. 
— GG 

Poetry  and  the  Poor.— W.  W.  Stowe.— HP 

Poetry  in  Battle.   (Seh.  fr.  two  lectures  on  The  Influence 
of  Poetry  on  the  Working-classes.) — Frd'k  W. 
Robertson.— FD  1 
(Poetrv  the  Language  of   Symbolism — longer  and 
ptly.  diff.) — NC 

Poetry  of  City  and  Country  Life,  The. — H:  W.  Long- 
fellow.    See  Hyperion. 

Poetry  of  Dress,  The.— Anon.— PGT  1  (III.) 
(Madrigal.)— ELP— OB— WEP  1 
(My  Love's  Attire.)— YBF 

Poetry    of    Dress,    The.  —  Rob't    Herrick.  —  EPs  — 
PGT  1  (I.)— YBF 
(Delight  in  Disorder— C.)— BNL— ELP— ES—FEP 
— HBP— OB— OEL— PYO— WEP  2 

Poetry  of  Dress,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— PGT  1  (II.) 
(Upon     Julia's     Clothes— C.)— ELP— OB— OH— 

WEP  2 
(Whenas  in  Silks.)— YBF 
(Whenas  in  Silks  my  Julia  Goes.) — BNL 

Poetry  of  Earth,  The.— J:  Keats.— WR  1 

(Grasshopper  and  Cricket  [,The].)— BNL— LLC 
(On  the  Grasshopper  and  Cricket— C.)—FEP—GN 
— HBP— LC— OS  2— WEP  4 

Poetry  of  Science,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Hunt. 
Poetry  of  Science. — KNE 
Wonders  of  an  Atom,  The. — KNE 

Poetry  of  Science,  The.  (Sel.  fr.  Education:  What 
Knowledge  is  of  Most  Worth?) — Herbert 
Spencer.— CS  26 

Poetry  on  an  Improved  Principle.     (Punch.) — HPE 

Poetry,  Prose  and  Fact.  (Dial.) — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 
anaugh. — KJ 

Poetry  the  Language  of  Symbolism. — Frd'k  W.  Rob- 
ertson.    See  Poetrv  in  Battle. 

Poets,  The.  (Sonnet  XXIII.— C.)—T:  B.  Aldrich.— 
TAS 

Poets,  The. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Poets.  (Fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S:  Butler.— 
HPE 

Poet's  Admiration,  The.  (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 
—BNL 

Poet's  Ambition,  The. — W:  Browne.  See  Britannia's 
Pastorals. 

Poets  and  Poetry.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Poets  at  Tea,  The.— Barry  Pain.— THP  (obr. )—VSG 


262 


TITLE  INDEX 


Popanilla 


Poet's  Bridal-day    Song,     The. — Allan    Cunningham. 
— BNL— FEP— HBP 

Poet's  Choice,      The.     (Lines — C.) — Rob't      Bums. — 
HPE 

Poet's  Complaint  of  his  Muse,  The,  Sel.  fr. — T:  Otway. 
— WEP2 

Poet's  Dream,  The. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Prome- 
theus Unbound. 

Poet's  Epitaph,  A.— Ebenezer  Elliott,— EDY— FEP— 
HBP— VA— WEP  4  (si.  abr.) 
(Burns.)- BNL 

Poet's  Epitaph. — Joel  E.  Spingam. — CS  3 

Poet's  Epitaph,  A.— W:  Wordsworth. — WEP  4 

Poet's  Friend,  The. — Alex.  Pope. — See  Essay  on  Man, 
An. 

Poet's  Funeral,  The.— Fs.  N.  Zabriskie.— CS  23 
(Tribute  to  Longfellow,  A.)— BS  13— SR  4 

Poet's  Good  Wishes  for  the  most  Hopef ull  and  Hand- 
some Prince,  the  Duke  of  Yorke,  The.     (C.) — 
Rob't  Herrirk. 
(To  the  Duke  of  York.)  -WEP  2 

Poet's  Hope,    A,    Sel.    fr.—W:    E.    Channing.— AA— 
EPs  (si.  abr.) 
(Br.  seZ.)- ASL— YBF 

Poet's  Impulse,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Har- 
old's Pilgrimage. 

Poet's  Journal,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Bayard  Taylor. 
Praise.  (Hymn  fr.  Third  Evening.) — TAS 
Prayer.     (Hymn  fr.  First  Evening.) — TAS 

Poet's  Mind,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (To   the  Critic.) — Altred 
Tennyson. — EPs 

Poet's  Mood,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Nice  Valour,  Act  IIL, 
So.  3.)— J:  Fletcher.— EPs 
("Hence,  all  ye  [or  you]  vain  delights.") — BNL — 

HBP 
(Melanc[h]olia. )— CEL— FEP 
(Melancholy.)— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(Song,  A.)— WEP  2 
(Sweetest  Melancholy.) — ELP 

Poet's  Mom,  The.— Walter  S.  Bigelow.— GH 

Poet's  Pipe,  A.— R:  H.  Shepherd,— PPh 

Poet's  Retirement,  The. — Andrew  Marvell.     See  Gar- 
den, The. 

Poet's  Secret,  The.— Eliz.  Stoddard.— AA 

Poet's  Simple  Faith,  The.— Victor  M.  Hugo.— HDL 

Poet's  Song,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— OS  3 

Poet's  Song  to  his  Wife,  The. — Bryan   W.   Procter. — 
BNL— FEP- HBP— TFY— VA— VS— YBF 

Poet's  Thought,  A.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— HBP— VA 

Poet's  Tribute,      The. — Alfred      Tennyson.     See      In 
Memoriam. 

Poet's  Vow,    The. — T:    Lodge.     See    Rosalynde;    or, 
Euphues'  Golden  Legacy. 

Poet's  World,   The.— Percy   B.'  Shelley.     See   Prome- 
theus Unbound. 

Poet-tree.— H.  C.  Dodge.— CH 

Poganuc  People,  Sel.  fr.    (Zeph  Higgins' Confession  — 
abr.  fr.  Ch.  XXX.)— Harriet  B.  Stowe.— CS  17 

Point  Sublime,    Colorado    Cafion. — J.    E.    Nesmith. — 
BS24 

Pointer's  Dyspeptic  Goat. Von  Boyle. — CH 

Points  of  the  Compass,  "The. — Anon. — NV 

Poisoned. — Vincent  Amcott. — DT 

Poisoned  Darkys,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— MTD 

Poisonous  Fruit. — Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 

Poker.— Anon.— H  P 

Poland. — T:  Campbell.     See  Pleasures  of  Hope,  The. 

Polar  Quest,  The. — R:  Burton. — AA 

Policeman's  Story,  The. — G:  Birdseye. — CS  21 

Polish.— S:  Butler.— HPE 

Polish  Boy.  The.— Ann  S.  Stephens.- AE  (hr.  sel.)— 
FTR— HNS— PS 
(SI.  a6r.  )—BS  2— CS  3— FR— SA 

Polish  May  Song.     (With  music.) — Anon. — AD 

Politeness. — Anon. — OS  1 

Politeness.— Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 

Political  Corruption.— G:  McDuffie.— CS  7 

Political  Duties  and  Responsibilities  of  University  Men. 
— S.  Grover  Cleveland.— SSD 
(College  and  the  Nation.  The— sel.) — TMR 

Political  Equality  the  Soul  of  the  Republic— S:  W. 
McCall.— FD  2 

Political  Infidelity,  Sel.  fr.    (Rub-a-dub  Agitation,  A.) 
— G:  W:  Curtis.— NC 

Political  Stump  Speech,  A.— Fred  A.  Parker. — CS  37 

Politicians,     (/n  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S:  Butler. 
—HPE 

Politics. — Marion  Douglas. — MYF 

Politics  and  Journalism. — C:  E.  Smith. — SSD 

Politics  for  the  People,  Sel.  fr. — Anon.— GG 

Polka  Lyric.    A. — Barclay    Philips    [or    Gilbert    A.    k 
Becket— ].— HPE 
(Holiday  Task,  A.)— NA 


Polliwog,  The. — Anon. — NA 

Polly.— W:  B.  Rands.— OS  1  (si.  abr.— at.  to  G:  Mao- 

donald)— PoR— VA— WCL 
Polly.— C:  W.  Shope.— CG  2 
Polly's  Dilemma. — Anon. — DLF 
Polly's  Lecture  to  Dolly. — Anon. — DJS 
Polly's  Thanksgiving.— A.  C.  Stoddard.—HS 
Polonius'  Advice  to  Laertes. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

Hamlet. 
Polonius  to  Laertes.  — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Polonius  to  Laertes — "Renewed." — Anon.^-CH 
Polydorus  and  Maron. — R:  Glover.     See  Leonidas. 
Polyolbion,  Sel.  /r.- Michael  Drayton.— WEP  1 
Pomona  Describes  her  Bridal  Trip. — Frank  R.  Stock- 
ton.    See  Rudder  Grange. 
Pompadour,  The.— G :  W.  Thornbury.— FEP 
Pompadour's  Fan,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — PYO 

(On  a  Fan  that  Belonged  to  the  Marquise  de  Pom- 
padour—C.  )— BNL— VA 
Pompeian  Preacher,  A,  Br.  sel.  fr.  —  May  R.  Smith.  — 

HDL 
Pompeii.— Anon.— CS  24— FD  1   (si.  abr.)— NPS—YP 
Pompey's  Ghost.— T:  Ho.mI.— MRS 
Pomposity. — W:      Shake."  |  eare.     See     Merchant      of 

Venice,  The. 
Pomp's  Story.     (Ad.   fr.   Cudjo's  Cave,   Ch.   XIV.)— 

J:  T.  Trowbridge.- NP 
Pond,  The.     (Abr.)— J:  Byrom.- TMD 
Pontius  Pilate. — Edwin    Arnold.     See    Light    of    the 

World,  The. 
Pool  of    the    Diving  Friar,  The.     (Llyn-y-Dreiddiad- 

Vrawd.)— T:  L.  Peacock.— PEB  3 
Poor  and  Little  Greece. — Harvey  N.  Shepard. — FD  2 
Poor  and  the  Rich,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BS  17 
(Heritage,    The— C.)— CS  8— FEP— GMS— LLC— 

PYO— WCLG  2 
Poor  Brother. — Anon. — NA 
Poor  Child's  Hymn,  The.     (C.) — Mary  Howitt. 

(Child's  Hymn,  The.)— PC 
Poor  Dear  Grandpapa. — D'Arcy  W.  Thompson. — NA 
Poor  Dog  Tray.     (Harper,  The— C.)— T:  Campbell.— 

CGd— LC 
Poor  Fisher  Folk,  The.     (SI.  o6r.)— Victor  Hugo  (tr. 

by  H.  W.  Alexander).— MMR 
(How  Good  Are  the  Poor— abr.)- CR— OS  3 
Poor  French  Sailor's  Scottish  Sweetheart,  A. — W:  J. 

Cory.— VA 
Poor  Indian,  The. — Anon. — PS 
Poor  Irish  Boy,  The.— Eliza  Cook.— WR  9 
Poor  Jack.— S:  K.  Cowan.— WR  2 
Poor  Jack.— C:  Dibdin.— BNL— FEP 
Poor  Little  Boy's  Hymn,  The.— J:  B.  Gough.— CS  19 

(Dying  Boy,  The.)— DS— NPS— YP 
Poor  Little  Children. — Victor  Hugo. — OS  1 
Poor  Little  Jim. — Anon. — BS  3 

(Death  of  Little  Jim,  The.)— HNS 
(Little  Jim.)— CS  2— SA 
Poor  Little  Joe.— David  L.   Proudfit.— CS  12— CSS— 

FTR— HNS— HP— PR— PS— SO— TMD 
(Little  Joe's  Flowers.)— SR  7 
Poor  Little  Mother,  A.— Mary  L.  B.  Branch.— CPL— 

LPS— PP 
Poor  Man  and  the  Fiend.  The. — Rev. Maclellan. 

— WRD 
Poor  Matthias. — Matthew  Arnold. — SN 

(On  the  Death  of  a  Favorite  Canary— seZ.)— PGT  2 
Poor  Men  vs.  Rich  Men. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KJ 
Poor  Old  Horse.— Anon.— BVC 
Poor  Old  Maids. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Poor  Player  at  the  Gate,  The.— G:  Vandenhoff.— CS  3 
Poor  Relation,  The. — Anon.— MDD 
Poor  Richard's  Almanac. —  B :  Franklin.     See  Way  to 

Wealth,  The. 
Poor  Robin.— Anon.— YBT 
Poor  Rule,  A.— Anon.— BS  20— WR  14 
"Poor,    sad    Humanity."  —  H:    W.   Longfellow.     See 

Christus:  A  Mystery. 
Poor  Sick  Lucy. — Anon. — HVD. 
Poor  Susan. — W:  Wordsworth. — PC 

(Reverie   of   Poor  Susan,   The— C.)— BPB— LC— 

MBL— PGT  1— WEP  4— YBF 
Poor  Tartar.     A  Hungarian  Legend.    (C) — J:  G.  Saxe. 

(Tartar,  The.)— KNE 
Poor  Voter  on  Election  Day,  The. — J:  G.  Whittier. — 

CSS 
Poor  Withered  Rose. — Rob't  Bridges. — VA 
Poor  Work  Don't  Pay.     (DmZ.)— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Poor-house  Nan.—  Lucy  H.  Blinn.— BS  12— TMR  (si. 

abr.) 
Popanilla  on  Man.     (The  Voyage  of  Captain  Popanilla, 

Ch.  IV.)— B:  Disraeli.— ESs 


263 


Pope 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Pope.— Craven  L.  Betts.— TCV 

Pope,  Set.  fr.  (Parallel  between  Pope  and  Dryden.) — 

S :  Johnson.— AE—KNE 
Pope  and  the  Net,  The.— Rob't  Browning.— THP 
Pope  at  Twickenham. — C:  Kent. — VA 
Pope's  Charade,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Poplar,  The.— R:  Harris  Barham.-vHPE 
Poplar  Field,  The.— W:  Cowper.— BPB— FEP— PGT  1 

— WEP  3 
("My  fugitive  years  are  all  hasting  away" — br.  ael.) 

—AD 
Poplar-tree,  The.— Anon.— HSS  1 
Poppies. — Leigh  Hunt.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the 

Flowers. 
Poppies  in  the  Wheat. — Helen  M.  F.  (Hunt)  Jackson. — 

Popping  Com.— Anon.— CS  12— DS— GP 

Popping  the    Question.     {Tableau.) — Tony    Denier. — 

TDT 
Popping  the  Question. — Messrs.  Fezandi^. — MN 
Popping  the  Question. — Rob't  Grant.  —  CRR  —  CS  14 

—MRS 
Popping  the  Question. — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  18 
Poppoea.— C:  P.  Mulvaney.— TCV 
Poppy. — Mary  A.  Barr. — AD    , 
Poppy,  The.     (C.)— T:  H.  Bayly.— FEP 

(Reading  a  Tragedy.)— BC 
Poppy,  The.— Jane  Taylor.— NV— PC 
Poppy,  The.— Fs.  Thompson.— OB 
Poppy  Seed,  A.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Poppyland  Limited  Express,  The. — Edgar  W.  Abbott. 

— SRll 
(Rapid  Transit. )—BS  21 
Popular  Americans. — Anon. — BS  20 
Popular  Amusements,  Sel.  fr.     (Nature  Designed  for 

our  Enjoyment.) — H:  W.  Beecher. — SAE 
Popular  and  Kingly  Examples. —  R:  B.  Sheridan.  — SS 
Popular  Elections. — G :  McDuflSe.    See  Popular  Interest 

in  Elections. 
Popular  Error,  A.— J:  Starkie.— CS  21 
Popular   Fallacies. — C:  Lamb.     See  That   we  should 

Rise  with  the  Lark. 
Popular  Interest  in  Elections. — G:  McDuffie. — SS 

(Popular  Elections— o6r. )—NPS—YP 
Popular  Poplar  Tree,  The. — Blanche  W.  Howard. — AD 
Popular  Recollections   of   Bonaparte.     (Souvenirs   du 

Peuple.)  —  Pierre  J.  B^ranger  (tr.  by  Fs.  Ma- 

hony).— BNL— EDY 
Popular  Science  Catechism. — Anon. — BS  12 
Popular  Song,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Porphyria's  Lover. — Rob't  Browning. — OB 
Port  of  Ships,  The. — Joaquin  Miller.     See  Columbus. 
Portent.— Celia  Thaxter. — SR  2 
Portents  and  Fears.     (.Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Portia,  in  the  Merchant  of  Venice. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Portia  to  Shylock. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Merchant 

of  Venice,  The. 
Portia's  Picture. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Merchant  of 

Venice,  The. 
Portia's  Plea  for  Mercy. — W:  Shakespeare. — See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  The. 
Portia's  Speech  on  Mercy. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  Thfe. 
Portia's  Speech  to  Bassanio. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Portiere.      (Fr.    Ascutney    Charades.) — Julia  A.   Sa- 

bme.— TCP 
Portrait,  A. — Jos.  Ashby-Sterry. — VA 
Portrait,  The.     (DtaZ.)- Isabel  B.  Bowman. — PR 
Portrait,  A. — Eliz.  Barrett  Browning. — BNL — GN 
Portrait,  A. — Caroline  Duer. — AA 
Portrait,  The. — J:  [or  T:]  Heywood.     See  Praise  of  his 

Lady,  etc.,  A. 
Portrait,  The.— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton.— BNL— BS  16 

— CS  11— FEP— MR 
Portrait,  The.— Clement  Marot.— FTA 
Portrait,  The.— Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti.— VA— WEP  4 
Portrait,  The.     {Southern  Collegian.) — CG  2 
Portrait,  A.     {Tnnity  Tablet.)— CG  2 
Portrait,  A. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Perfect  Woman. 
Portrait  and  the  Critics,  The.— Anon. — CS  26 
Portrait  Gallery,  Sels.  fr. — H :  W-  Beecher. 

Cynic,  The.     (Coru/.)- BS  3— CS  19— LLC—  SM  — 

WCLG2 
Demagogue,  The.— BS  2— KNE 

(Dishonest  Politician,  The — ptly.-same.) — CS  8 
Portrait  of  a  Lady. — Anon. — WR  14 
Portrait  of  a  Warrior,  The.— Walter  Ramal. — SOC 
Portrait  of  Addison.  —  Alex.  Pope.     See  Epistle  to  Dr. 

Arbuthnot. 
Portrait.".,  The.— Anon.— MYF 


Portraits.     (roA.)- Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Portraits  from  the  Canterbury  Tales. — Geoffrey  Chau- 
cer.    See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Positively  the  Last  Performance!     (Punch.) — DCR — 

TMR 
Positivists,  The.— Mortimer  Collins.— THP 
Possession.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Possession. — Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton. — BNL 
Possession.— Bayard  Taylor.— BNL— TFY 
Possibilities.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Possible  Consequences  of  a  Comet  Striking  the  Earth 
in  the  Pre-Glacial  Period.     (Set.  fr.  Ragnarok.) 
Ignatius  Donnelly. — BS  1 1 
'Possum  Run  Debating  Society,  The. — Anon. — DE— SP 
Post,  The.     Fireside  in  Winter,  The. — W:  Cowper.    See 

Task  The 
Post  Mortem'.— Fanny  Pamell.— TIP 

(After  Death.)— VA 
Post  Mortem.- W:  Shakespeare.— PGT  1— YBF 

(Sonnet  XXXII.— C.)— WEP  1 
Post  Nummos  Virtus. — Martin  J.  Spalding. — CS  7 
Post  that  Fitted,  The.— Rudyard  Kipling.— WR  4 
Postage.     (Fr.    Ascutney   Charades.)  —  Julia   A.    Sa- 
bine.—TCP 
Poster-girl,  The.— Carolyn  Wells.— AWH— THP 
Posthumous. — Henry  A.  Beers. — AA 
Postilion  of  Nagold,  The.— G:  L.  Catlin.— CS  35 
Postmaster,  The  — Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Post-meridian. — W.  P.  Garrison. — AA 
Post-nuptial  Reverie,  A. — Roy  F.  Greene — TL 
Pot,  and  a  Pipe  of  Tobacco,  A. — Anon. — PPh 
Potato,  The.— T:  Moore.— CS  19 
Potato  Bug,  A.     Anon.— CRR 

Potatoes.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sa- 
bine.—TCP 
Potency  of  English  Words.— J:  S.  Macintosh.— BS  9— 

FTR 
Potion  Scene,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Romeo  and 

Juliet. 
Potter's  Field,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  24 
Potter's  Wheel,    The.— Rob't    Browning.     See   Rabbi 

Ben  Ezra. 
Pound,  Sir!  A.— Anon.— FAS 
"Pour  out  thy  love  like  the  rush  of  a  river." — Rose 

T.  Cooke.— BIL 
Poveri!     Poveris! — Joaquin  Miller. — OS  2 
Poverty.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Poverty  Party,  A.     (Ent.) — Anon.— EuE 
Power.— T:  S.  Collier.— AA 
Power. — J:  Ruskin. — OS  3 

(True  Kings  of  the  Earth,  The.)— OM 
Power  of  Conscience,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Mur- 
der of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
Power  of  Free  Ideas,  The.— G:  W.  Curtis.— SAE 
Power  of  Habit,  The.— J:  B.  Gough.— SC 

(A6r.)— BS  3— CS  5— CSS— FR— LLC— PS— SO 
Power  of  Justice,  The.     Mrs.    Russell    Kavanaugh.-. 

KER 
Power  of  Love,  The. — Anon. — SR  9 
Power  of  Love,  The.     Beaumont   and    Fletcher.      See 

Valentinian. 
Power   of    Love    and    Beauty.      (Frags,    fr.    various 

authors.) — BNL 
Power  of  Music,  The.     (Fr.  The  National  Music  of  Ire- 
land.)—T:  N.  Burke.— FS 
Power  of  Music,  The. — W:     Shakespeare.     See     Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  The. 
Power  of  Music,  The.— T.  DeWitt  Talmage.— SAE 
Power  of  Music.     (C.) — W:  Wordsworth. 

(Blind  Fiddler,  The.)— FTR— LLC 
Power  of  Prayer;  or.  The  First  Steamboat  up  the  Ala- 
bama,   The. — Sidney    and    Clifford    Lanier. — 
BRR— GP— HBR 
Power  of  Public  Opinion,  The.— Dan'l  Webster.— SS 
Power  of  Temper,  The. — Mrs.   Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KJ 
Power  of  the    Tongue,    The.      (St.    James,    Ch.    III.) 
Bible.— BS  12 
(Tongue,  The— v.  2-8.)— LLC 
Power  of  Words,  The.     (Sel.   fr.   Words. )— Edwin  P. 

Whipple.— LLC 
"Power  to  converse  well  is  a  very  great  charm,  The."^ 

J:  Ruskin.— GG 
Practical  Charity. — G :  Crabbe.     See  Borough,  The. 
Practical  Jokes. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  1 
Practical  Regeneration,  A. — Anon. — BS  2.5 
Practical  Religious  Instruction.     (Sel.) — Victor  Hugo. 

— SS 
Practical  Way  for  Christians  to  Reform  the  Theatre, 

The.     (Baltimore  American.) — GG 
Practical  Young  Woman,  A. — Irwin  Russell. — BS  8 
Praeterita  ex  Instantibus. — W.  D.  Schuyler-Lighthall. 
— VA 


264 


TITLE  INDEX 


Prelude 


Prairie. — Herbert  Bates. — AA 
Prairie,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  F.  Cooper. 

Prairie  on    Fire,  The.       (Sel.   fr.  Ch.    XXIII.)  — 

WCLI  2 
Stampede,  The.    (Sels:  fr.  Chs.  XVIII.  and  XIX.)— 
WCLI  2 
Prairie  Fire,  The.— C.  W.  Hall.— TMR 
Prairie  Greyhounds. — E.  Pauline  Johnson. — TCV 
Prairie  Mirage,  The.     (Detroit  Free  Press.)— CS  31— PR 
Prairie  on  Fire,  The.— Phcsbe  Gary.- BLF 
Prairie  on  Fire,  The. — Jas.  F.  Cooper.   jSee  Prairie,  The. 
Prairie  Path,  The.— Anon.— HP 
Prairie  Princesses,  The.     (Play.) — Anon. — NDP 
Prairie  States,  The.— Walt  Whitman.— BNI. 
Praise.     (Frags,  fr.  variovs  authors.) — BNL 
Praise.— G:  Herbert.— BNL 
Praise.— E:  Osier.— FEP 

Praise. — Bayard  Taylor.     See  Poet's  Journal,  The. 
Praise  and  Prayer. — Sir  W :  Davenant.     See  Gondibert. 
Praise  for  the  Fountain  Opened.    (Zechariah,  XIII..  1.) 

— W:  Cowper.— FEP 
Praise  of  Ceres.  (Sel.  fr.  Silver  Age.)— T:  Heywood.— LC 
Praise  of  Fawnia,     The.    (C. — fr.     Pnndo.sto.) — Kob't 
Greene. 
(Fawnia.)— ELP— OB— WEP  1— YBF 
Praise  of  Fortune,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Old  Fortunatus.) — 

T:  Dekker.— WEP  2 
Praise  of  his  Ladv,  A. — J:  for  T:]  Heywood. — OB 

(Portrait,  The— abr. )— BNL— EPs 
Praise  of  his  Love,  wherein   he  Reproveth  Them  that 
Compare  their  Ladies  with  his,  A. — H :  Howard. 
Earl  of  Surrey.— FEP— WEP  1 
(Give  Place,  ye  lovers.) — BNL 
Praise  of  Homer,  The. — G:  Chapman. — EPs 
Praise  of  Little  Women. — Juan  Ruiz   de    Hita   (tr.  by 

H:  W.  Longfellow).— MHR—SR  3 
Praise  of  Music— W:  Strode.— CEL  (abr.) 
(Music.)— EPs— FEP— HBP 
(Song:  In  Commendation  of  Music — abr.) — ELP 
Praise  of  Princess  Mary,  A.^ — J:  Heywood. — EHT 
Praise  of  Spenser,  The. — W :  Browne.     See  Britannia's 

Pastorals. 
Praise  of  Sydney,  The. — W :  Browne.     See  Britannia's 

Praise  of  the  Cat. — Anon.— COS— PP 

Praise  of  the  Thames. — Sir  J:  Denham.     See  Cooper's 

Hill. 
Praise  of  Woman,  Br.  sel.  fr. — C:  Mackay. — BNL 
Praise  of  Women. — Rob't  Mannyng. — OB 
Praise  to  God.     (Hymn  II. — C.) — Anna  L.   Barbauld. 

—EPs— FEP— HBP 
Praise-God  Barebones. — Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — A  A 
Praxiteles  and  Phryne.— W:  W.  Story.— AA— FEP 
Pray  for    my    Soul. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See     Morte 

d'Arthur. 
Pray  for  the  Dead.— A.  W.  H.  Eaton.— AA 
Pray,  Love,  Work  and  Sing. — Anon. — YBT 
Prayer,  A :     "O  Jesus,  dear  Jesus."' — Anon. — YBT 
Prayer,  A.— Anon.— YBT 

("Lord,  teach  a  little  child.")— PC 
Prayer.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Prayer,  A.— Anne  R.  Aldrich.— TAV 
Prayer,  A. — Anne  Bronte. — VA 
Prayer.  The.      (Earthquake-prayer,  The  — C.)— Will 

Carleton.— CD 
Prayer.— Hartley  Coleridge.— VA— YBF 
Prayer,  A.— Ina  D.  Coolbrith.— TAS 
Prayer.     ("At  least  to  pray  is  left,  is  left" — C.) — Emily 

Dickinson.— TAS 
Prayer,  A.— Brooke  Herford.— YBT 
Prayer.— Eliza  M.  Hickok.— SR  6 
Prayer,  A. — Selwyn  Image. — VA 
Prayer. — Mary,  Queen  of  Hungary. — BNL 
Prayer. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See  "Prayer  i<  thefoul's 

sincere  desire." 
Prayer,  A. — Nora  Perry. — TAS  ^ 

Prayer. — C:  F.  Richardson. — AA 
Prayer,  A.— E:  R.  Sill.— AA 
Prayer,  A.— Rob't  Southey.— YBF 
Prayer,  A.^Bayard  Taylor.     See  Poet's  Journal,  The. 
Prayer. — Jeremy  laylor.— OS  3 
Prayer. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Morte  d'Arthur 
Prayer,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Princess,  The. 
Prayer,  The.— Jones  Very.— TAS 
Prayer  and  Potatoes.— J.  T.  Pettee  [or  Peltree].— CS  5 

— KNE— MYF 
Prayer  for  Indifference. — Fanny  Greville. — OB 
Prayer  for  Life,  A.— G:  S.  Burleigh.— BNL 
Prayer  for  Saturday  Evening. — Anon. — TFS 
Prayer  for  the  Nation.     (Boston  Transcript.) — PAPm 
Prayer  for  Unity,  A.     (Hymn  Written  for  My  Divinity- 
school  Graduation — C.) — J:  W.  Chadwick. — 

TAS 


Prayer  in  Battle.  The.— J:  H.  Hewitt.— CS  27 
Prayer  in  Prospect  of  Death,  A. — Rob't  Burns. — FP 
Prayer  in  Sorrow,  A.— Louise  C.  Moulton. — HDL 
"Prayer  is  the  application  of  want  to  Him  who  only 

can  relieve  it." — Hannah  More. — GG 
"Prayer  is    the    soul's    sincere    desire." — Jas.    Mont- 
gomery.— SAE  (abr.) 
(Prayer — sel.) — LLC 
(What  is  Prayer?- O— FEP— HBP 
Prayer  Living  and  Dying,  A. — Augustus  M.  Toplady. 

—HBP 
(Rock  of  Ages  [,cleft  for  me].)— FEP— SAE— YBF 
Prayer  of    Agassiz,    The.— J:    G.    Whittier.— BNL— 

TMD  (si.  abr.) 
Prayer  of  Columbus,  The.     (Br.  sel.)— Wa.lt  Whitman. 

—TAS 
Prayer  of  Cyrus  Brown,  The.     (C.) — Sam  W.  Foss. — 

AWH— THP 
(Informal  Prayer,  An.)— WR  22 
Prayer  of  Nature,  The. — Lord  Byron. — FP 
Prayer  of  Old  Age,  The.— G:  Wither.     See  Hallelujah. 
Prayer  of  the  Satirist. — O.  L. — CG  3 
Prayer  of  Theocritus  for  Syracuse,  The. — Theocritus 

(tr.  by  Sir  E:  Dyer).     See  Sixe  Idillia. 
Prayer  Perfect,  The.     (C.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— TAS 

(Love's  Prayer.) — AA 
Prayer  to  Apollo.  —  Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  House  of 

Fame,  The. 
Prayer  to  Ben  Jonson. — Rob't  Herrick. — EPs 

(His  Prayer  to  Ben  Jonson— C.)— ELP— WEP  2 
Prayer  to  Fate,  A.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  CLXVII.) 

—Walter  S.  Landor.— YBF 
Prayer  to  the  Trinity. — Jas.  Edmeston. — VA 

("Lead  us.  Heavenly  Father,  lead  us.") — FEP 
Prayer  to  the  Wind,  A.— T:  Carew.— ES— WEP  2 
Prayers.- H :  C.  Beeching.— LH— OB— VA 
Prayers. — Walter  S.  Landor.     See  Gebir. 
Prayers. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Measure  for  Measure. 
Prayers  for  the  Dead.— Edna  D.  Proctor. — TAS 
Prayers  of  Children. — Anon. — CS  6 
Prayer-seeker,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BeR 
Praying  and  Loving. — S :  T.  Coleridge.     See  Rime  of 

the  Ancient  Mariner,  The. 
Praying  for  Papa. — Anon. — CS  25 — SR  5 
Praying  for  Rain.— J:  Wolcott.— CS  3— HPE— SCS 
Praying  for  Shoes.— Paul  H.  Hayne.— BS  16— CS  26 
Preaching  and  Missions.   (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL  .        ,     T.       u 

"Preaching  may  be  compared  to  lightning.'  — Enoch 

Pond.— GG 
Preaching  versus    Practice.  —  W :   Cowper.     See  Pity 

for  Poor  Africans. 
Precarious  Predicament,  A. — E.  H.  Trafton. — MD 
Precedents. — Lewis  Cass.     See  On  Precedents  m  Gov- 
ernment. 
Precepts.- T:  Randolph.— CS  16 

(He  Lives  Long  who  Lives  Well — sel.) — FP 
Precious  Lives.— S:  F.  Smith.— WR  17 
(Breathe  Balmy  Airs.)— HSS  1 
(Patriot  Dead,  The.)— BLP 
Predestination. — Anon. — SR  13 
Predictions  Concerning  the  Fourth  of  July. — J:  Adams. 

— WRIO 
Predictions  of  Disunion. — W:  Pinkney. — SS 
Pre-existence. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — BNL — GP 
Preface  [to  Poems].— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 
Preface  to  Lyrical  Ballads,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Poetry.)— W: 

Wordsworth. — LLC 
Preface  to    "The    Finding    of    the    Book    and    Other 

Poems." — W:  Alexander. — AVP 
Pregnant  Comment,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — OH 
Prehistoric  Smith.— David  L.  Proudfit.— AWH— THP 
"Prejudice  is  prejudgment.     It  is  formiM  an  opinion 

without  examining." — Anon. — GG 
Prelude: — "Words,  words." — J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 
Prelude,  A:     "O     covering     grasses!     O     unchanging 

trees!"     (Sel.)— Fs.  Sherman.— TCV 
Pi-elude:     "England!     Since  Shakespeare  died,"  etc. — 

Edmund  C.  Stedman. — VA 
Prelude,  A.     (C.) — Maurice  Thompson. 

(Fertility.)— ASL 
Prelude.  The,  Sels.  fr.—W:  Wordsworth 

Apparition  on  the 'Lake.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— WEP  4 
Ascent  of  Snowdon.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  XIV.)— WEP  4 
Defile  of  Gondo.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VI.)— WEP  4 
Influence  of  Natural  Objects  m  Calling   Forth  and 
Strengthening  the  Imagination.     (Sel.  Jr.  Bk. 
I. — first  printed  as  sep.  poem.) — BNL — HBP — 
WEP  4 
(Skating— afer. )— EPs— GN— POS 
Morning  after  the  Ball.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— WEP  4 
Prelude  to    an    Evening's    Recitations,    A. — Anon. — 
MDD 


265 


Premature 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Premature  Proposal,  The. — (Dram,  by)  A.F.Bradley. 

— CS  13— PD 
Preparation. — Mary  F.  Butts.— YBT 
Preparation  and  Battle,     {trags.  fr.  various  authors.) 

— BNL 
Preparing  a  Flunk. — Aiion. — CG  1 
Preparing  for  a  Picnic. — Anon. — YFD 
Preparations. — Anon . — OB — Y  B  F 
(King's  Progress,  The.)— ELP 
Presage.— Celia  Thaxter.— BIL— FTA 
Presbyterians,  The. — S:  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Prescience.— T:  B.  Aldrich.- AA— ASL 
Presence.  The. — Jones  Very. — TAS 
Presence  in  Absence.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Present,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Present,  The.— Adelaide  A.  Procter.- FP— OS  2 

(Included  in  Old  and  the  New  Year,  The.) —    S 
Present  Age,  The,  Sel  fr.~W:  E.  Channing.— SSD 

(A6r.)— PFP— SR  8  (si.  longer.) 
Present  Age,  The. — Victor    Hugo.     See    Napoleon  the 

Little. 
"Present  age,  exultant  over  the  many  recent  wonder- 
ful triumphs.  The."— H:  C.  Minton.— GG 
Present  and      Future     Faiths,     The.     (SeZ.)- Phillips 

Brooks.— OS  3 
Present  Crisis,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— FP— HDL  (br. 

sel.)— TAS 
(Cond.)— TS— WR  10 
(Once  to  Every  Man  ano  Nation — sel.) — LLC 
Present  in  Absence.— J:  Donne  (?).— PGT  1  (abr.) 
(Absence— a6r.)—YBF 

("Absence,  hear  thou  my  protestation.")— ^ELP 
(That  Time  and  Absence  Proves  rather  Helps  than 

Hurts  to  Loves.) — OB 
Present  Time  Best  Pleaseth,  The.    (C.)  — Rob't  Her- 

rick. 
(This  Age  Best.)— ELP 
Presentation  Address  to  a  Foreman  by  a  Workman,  A. 

— Anon.— CP 
Presentation  of  a  Flag  to  a  Regiment  Departing  for 

War.— Anon.— CP 
Presentation  of  the  Keys  of  a  New  School  Building  by 

the  Architect. — Anon. — CP 
"Presentation  of  the  Trumpet,  Tne." — Anon. — -SR  10 
Presentation  Oration. — Anon. — CP 
Presentation  Speech. — Anon. — DS — YA 
Presentation  Speech.— Anon. — PS 
Presentiment. — Ambrose  Bierce. — AA 
Presentiments. — T.  S.  Denison. — SR  2 
Presenting  to  a  1/ady  a  White  Rose  and  a  Red  on  the 

Tenth  of  June,  Sel.  fr. — W:  Somerville.     See 

White  Rose,  A. — Somerville  and  Congreve. 
President  Garfield,  Br.  sel.  fr.     ("Ah,  me!  how  dark 

the  discipline  of  pain.") — H:  W.  Longfellow. — 

HDL 
President  Lincoln's     Second      Inaugural     Address. — 

Abraham  Lincoln. — CS  3 
(Second   Inaugural   Address.) — AI — LLC — MRS — 

OS  3— PPS— SO  (si.  abr.) 
President  McKinley's  Last  Address  [or  Speech]. — W: 

McKinley.— AI— NP  (abr.) 
President  Washington's   Receptions. — W:   Sullivan. — 

HS 
Presidential  Protest,  The,  Sets,  fr.' — Dan'l  Webster. 
Executive  Power  to  be  Dreaded. — FD  1 
Representative,  The.— FD  1 
Resistance  to  Oppression  in  its  Rudiments. — SS 
President's  Address,  A. — Anon. — CP 
Presiding  Officer's  Address  at  a  Public  Debate,  The. 

— Anon.— CP 
Press,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Press,  The.— W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Press,  The.     (^d.)— Ebenezer  Elliott.— SS 
Press  Evangel,  The.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— DES 
Press  On.— Park   Benjamin.— BLP   (si.   abr.)— CS  5— 

FP  (abr.) 
Press  the    Protection     of    the    People,    The. — Dan'l 

O'Connell.— PS 
Presto  Change. — Jos.  B.  Smiley. — CS  30 
Presto  Furioso. — Owen  Seaman. — THP 
Pretext  of    Rebellion,    The. — Stephen    A.    Douglas. — 

CS  2 
"Prettiest  Girl,  The."— Mary  D.  Brine.— DS—YA 
PretU-  Cow.— Jane  Taylor.— PC 

CThank  you.  Pretty  Cow.)— PoR 
Pretty  Girl  of  Loch  Dan,  The.— >S:  Ferguson.— BNL 
Pretty  is  that  Pretty  Does.— Alice  Cary  (?)— DLS— 

GMS 
Pretty  Little  Blue  Bird.     (W.  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Pretty  Maid  of  Kissimmee,  The. — Joel  Benton. — CS  31 
Pretty  Pictures,  The.— Anon.— PPSr 
Pretty  Rose-tree,  The.— T:  Moore.— AD 


Pretzel's  Speech   before   the   Illinois  Assembly. — Carl 
Pretzel.— BDD—DRR 

Preventive  "No,"  A. — Bible.     See  Proverbs  of    Solo- 
mon, The. 

Price,  The.— Tom  Masson.— WR  22 

Price,  The.— Walter  H.  Pollock.— FLS 

Price  of  a  Drink,  The. — ^Josephine  Pollard. — BS  15 — 
CS  22— SR  6 

Price  of    High    License,    The. — A.    J.    Waterhouse. — 
WRIS 

Price  of  Truth,  The. — Horatio  Bonar. — See  How  We 
Learn. 

Pride.— Robt.  Blair.     See  Grave,  The. 

Pride.— Earl  of  Sterlene.— KNE 

Pride  against  Pride.      (Dial.  ad.  fr.  Donna  Diana.) — 
Westland  Marston. — NDP 

Pride  and  Vanity.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Pnide  of  Ancestry.— G :  Croly.—SS 

Pride  of  Battery  B,  The.— Frank  H.  Gassaway.— BR— 
CS  13— FR— MR— TMD 

Pride  of  Youth,  The.— Walter  Scott.     See  Heart   of 
Midlothian,  The. 

Pride  Rebuked. — Anon. — PS 

Priest,  The.— Nicholas  Breton.— HBP 

("I  would  I  were  an  excellent  divine.") — BNL 

Priest,  A. — Norman  Gale. — VA 

Priest  and  his  Mare,  The. — Anon. — PPSr 

Priest  and  the  Mulberry-tree,  The. — T:  L.  Peacock. — 
CGd— GN— LC 

Priest's  Evening  Song,  The. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Faith- 
ful Shepherdess,  The. 

Priest's  Morning  Song,  The. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Faith- 
ful Shepherdess,  The. 

Priest's  Prayer,  A. — Martha  G.  Dickinson. — AA 

Primary  Class,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 

Prime  of  Life,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— CS  27 

Primeval  Forest,      The. — H:      W.      Longfellow.     See 
Evangeline. 

Primrose,  The. — T:     Carew.     See     Primrose,     The. — 
Rob't  Herrick. 

Primrose  [,  The— C.J.     (Sel.)— J :  Clare.— AD 

Primrose,  The.— Rob't     Herrick.— EPs—FEP— OB— 
YBF 
(At.  to  T:  Carew— aZ.  diff.  vers.)— ELF — ES 

Primrose  Dame,  A. — Gleeson  White. — VA 

Primrose  of  the  Rock,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.— FP — 
FTR 

Prince.— Harriet  L.  Childe-Pemberton.— BS  20— PFP 
— VSG 

Prince  Adeb.— G:  H.  Boker.— BNL 

Prince  Adherbal  before  the  Roman  Senate.. — Sallust. 
See  .Jugurthine  War,  The. 

Prince  Amadis,  Sel.  fr.     (Flight  of  the  Wild  Swans, 
The— Sts.  33-37.)— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 

Prince  and  his  Mistress. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 

Prince  Consort,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of 
the  King. 

Prince  Eric's  Christ-maid. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 

Prince  Eugene.— (Tr.  6j/)  J:  Hughes.— ED Y— HBP 

Prince  Hal. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 

Prince  Henry    and    Falstaff. — W:    Shakespeare.     See 
KingHenry  IV.,Pt.  I. 

Prince  Lucifer,  Son'js  fr. — Alfred  Austin. 
Grave-digger's  Song. — VA 
Mother-song. — VA 

Prince  of  Peace,  The. — Anon. — HP 

Prince  Otto,     Sel.     fr. — Rob't     L.     Stevenson.     See 
Princess  and  the  Countess,  The. 

Prince    Riquet's    Song.  —  Stopford    A.   Brooke.     See 
Riquet  of  the  Tuft. 

Princes.     (Sels.  fr.  The  Crown  of  Wild  Olive,  Lecture 
III.  War.)— J:  Ruskin.— OS  3 

Prince's  Bow  and  Arrows,  The. — Sam  W.  Foss. — DCP 

Prince's  Feather.— Mary  E.  Bradley.— CS  23 

Prince's  Hunting,  The.— H:  W.  Austin.— CS  28 

Princes  in    the   Tower,   The.     (Fr.  King  Edward  the 
Fourth.)- T:  Heywood.— EHT 

Prince's  Progress,  The,  Sei.  fr.     (Bride  Song.) — Chris- 
tina G.  Rossetti. — OB 
(Too  Late.)— AVP 

Princess,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

As  thro'  the  Land.     (Sons'  foL.  Pt.  I.)— VA— YBF 
("As  thro'  the  land  at  eve  we  went.") — FEP 
(Reconciliation,  The.)— HBP 
(We  Kiss'd  Again  with  Tears.)- BIL— TFY 
Ask  me  no  More.     (Song  fr.  Pt.  VI.V— FEP— GP— 
HBP— OH— PGT  2— V A— YBF 
(Songs  from  "The  Princess,"  III.)— CEL 
Bugle  Song.     (Fr.  Pt.  III.)— BS  1— BSP— BVC— 
CR— CS  2  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  GMS  — 
GN  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HNS  —  HSS  2  —  LC  — 
LLC  —  OM  —  OS  2  —  PPSr  —  PSR  —  PYO 
— SA— SM— SO— VA— VS— WCLG  1 


266 


TITLE  INDEX 


Professor's 


Princess,  The  {continued). 

(Blow,  Bugle  [,Blow].)— OB— PHS 

(Bugle,  The.)— BNL— YBF 

(Princess,  The,  Sel.  /r.)— SAE  {sel.) 

(Songs     from     "The     Princess.")— CEL  (II.)— 

MRS  (III.) 
(Splendour  Falls  on  Castle  Walls,  The.)— WEP  4 
"  Come  do  wn ,  O  maid . ' '     {Song  /r .  Pt .  V 1 1 . )— OB 
Days  that  Are  no  More,  The.      {Song  fr.  Pt.  IV.)— 
FEP— HBP 
(Princess,  The,  Sel.  /r.)— FP 
(Retrospection.) — BNL 
(Song  of  the  Maiden.) — LLC 
(Songs  from  "The  Princess,"  II.) — MRS 
(Tears,  Idle   Tears.)— BSP—FTR—GP— OS  3— 
PYO— VA— VS— WEP  4  —YBF 
Home  they  Brought  her  Warrior  [Dead].     {Song  fr. 
Pt.  V.)— BNL— FEP— HSS  1— PHS— YBF 
(Home — early  vers.) — OS  1 
(I  Live  for  Thee.)— CS  19— LLC 
(Songs  from  "The  Princess,"  IV.)— CEL 
(Widow  and  Child,  The.)— HBP 
In  the  Fight.     {Song  fr.  Pt.  V.,  Interlude.)— EPs 
Thv  Voice  is  Heard  [thro'   Rolling  Drums].) — 
FEP— VA— YBF 
Lullaby.     {Fr.  Pt.  II.)— BFV— BNL— BS  1— HBP 
—HSS  2— LC— OS  1— WCLI  2— YBF 
(Princess,  The,  Sel.  fr. )—SC 

(Songs      from      "The      Princess.")— CEL  (I.)— 
MRS  (IV.) 
-r  (Sweet     and    Low.)— EA— FEP— QMS— LLC— 
N  V— PH  S— Po  R— SO— V  A— VS 
O  Swallow,  Flying  South.     {Song  fr.  Pt.  IV.)— GP 
— TFY 
(O  Swallow,  Swallow  [,Flying  South].)— BNL— 

YBF 
(Songs  from  "The  Princess,"  I.) — MRS 
Princess,  The.     {Br.  sels.  fr.  Pts.  II.  and  VI.)— SAE 
Summer  Night.     {Song  fr.  Pt.  VII.)  — OB 
Tribute  to  Motherhood,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  VII.)— SAE 
Woman's  Cause.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  VII.)— OH 
(Woman— abr. )—BS  .3 
Princess  and  the  Countess,  The.     {Dial.  ad.  fr.  Prince 
Otto,  Ch.  XIII.)— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— NDP 
Princess  and  the  Rabbi,  The.— W.  L.  Gardner.— CS  23 
Princess'  Finger-nail,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BS  19 
Princess  Fuzz. — Anon. — DLS 
Princess  Imra  and  the  Goatherd. — Emma  D.  Banks. — 

BR 

Princess's  Tragedy,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Memoirs  of  Barry 

Lyndon,  Ch.  XII.)— W:  M.  Thackeray.— WGS 

Principle  of  the  American  Constitutions,  The,  Sel.  fr. 

(Men  and  Deeds  of  the  Revolution,  The.) — E: 

Everett.— MRS 

Principles  of  the  Revolution,  The. — Josiah  Quincy. — 

BLP— PEO 
Printing  Press,  The.— Edwin  H.  Chapin.— FD  1 
Prior  to  Miss  Belle's  Appearance. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — 

AWH— THP— WR  14 
Priscilla.— Ellen  M.  H.  Cortis'oz.— FTA— OH 
Priscilla.— S:  M.  Peck.— TL 
Priscilla.     {Yale  Record.)— CG  2 
Priscilla  Prim's  Views  on  Woman's  Rights. — Anon — 

CS27 
Prisoned  [Prisoner — C]  in  Windsor  he  Recounteth  his 
Pleasure  there  Passed. — H:  Howard,  Earl  of 
Surrey.- FEP 
(Lines   Written   in    Imprisonment   at  Windsor.) — 
WEPl 
Prisoner,  The.     {Sel.) — Emily  Bronti'. — OB 
Prisoner  for  Debt,  The.— J :  G.  Whittier.— CS  10 
Prisoner  in  Windsor  he  Recounteth  his  Pleasure  there 
Passed. — H:    Howard,    Earl    of    Surrey.     See 
Prisoned  in  Windsor,  etc. 
Prisoner  of  Chillon,  The. — Lord  Byron. — BNL — FEP 
— HBP— MBL— SA  («ei.)— WCLG  2  {tl.  abr.) 
{Abr.)—BS  5— EDY 
{Br.  seZ.)- EPs— SE 
Sonnet  on  Chillon  (C. — introd.  to  poem). — WEP  4 
(Chillon.)— OS  3 
("Eternal  spirit  of  the  chainless  mind" — sel.) — 

GP 
(On  the  Castle  of  Chillon.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Prisoner  of  the  Bastile,  The. — Mrs.  J.   O.  Warner. — 

CS33 
Prisoner  to  a  Robin  who  Came  to  his  Window,  The. 
(Verses   to   a   Robin    Red-breast,   etc. — C.) — 
Jas.  Montgomery. — PC 
Prisoners  of  Naples,  The,  Sel.  fr. — J:  G.  Whittier.— 

HDL 
Prisoner's  Plea,  The.     (Ad.)— Anon. — NP 
Priuli  and  Jaffier.     {Sel.  fr.  Venice  Preserved,  Act  I., 
Sc.  1.)— T:  Otway.— SS 


Private  Devotion. — Phoebe  H.  Brown. — AA — TAV 
Private  Judgment. — J:    Dryden.     See  Hind   and   the 

Panther,  The. 
Private  of  the  Buffs  [  -.or,  the  British  Soldier  in  China, 

The].     (O— Sir  Fs.  H.  Doyle.— BNL— HB— 

HBP— LH— VA 
(British  Soldier  in  China,  The.)— PGT  2 
Private  Rehearsal,  A. — Anon.— WR  14 
Private  Rehearsal,  A. — Belle  M.  Locke. — CS  35 
Private's  Glory,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Prize,  The    (Piscatory  Eclogues,  VII.),  SeZ. /r.     (Stella 

and     Mira  — Sts.    XXII. -XXVII.) -Phineas 

Fletcher.— EP 
Prize  Contest    on    Domestic    Accomplishments,    A. — 

Anon. — EuE 
Pro  Mortuis.— H:  A.  Blood.— TAS 
Pro  Mortuis. — Fs.  T.  Palgrave. — VA 
Pro  Patria  et  Gloria.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Pro  Patria  Mori.— T:  Moore.— PGT  1 

("When  he,  who  adores  thee"— C.)— EDY— FTA— 

TIP— WEP  4 
Pro  Tern.     {Play.)—B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— SPC 

Problem,  A. — Bessie  Chandler^ — CPL 
Problem,  A.— G.  P.  Day.— CG  2 
Problem,  The.— Ralph     W.     Emerson.— AA— BNL— 

FEP— HBP 
(Responses — sel.) — GP 
(Problem,  The.)— TAS 
Problem  of  Life,  The.— Theodore  Tilton.— SR  3 
Problem  of     Self-government,     The. — Chauncey     M. 

Depew.— FD  2 
Problem  of  the   Universe,   The. — O.     M.    Mitchell. — 

SSD 
Procession  of  the  Flowers,  The. — Sydney  Dobell. — GN 

(Chanted  Calendar,  A.)— OB 
Procession  of  Time,  The. — G:  Chapman.     See  Tears  of 

Peace,  The. 
Processional. — Alice  A.  (S.)  James. — AA 
Proclamation,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— EDY 
Proclamation  of  Emancipation  (1863). — Abraham  Lin- 
coln.— AI 
Proclamation   of   the   Columbian    Exposition,   A. — B: 

Harrison. — BLP 
Proclamation  to  the  Army  of  Italy. — Napoleon  Bona- 
parte.—OS  3  {abr.)% 
(Bonaparte  to  his  Army  in  Italy — diff.  tr.) — BLP 
(To     the    Army     of     Italy- sZ.    same.)— PS— SS— 

SSD 
Proclivior.     (Variation    on     Longfellow's    Excelsior.) 

{Punch.)  — HPE 
Procrastination. — Anon. — CS  30 

Procrastination. — Rob't  Southwell.     See  Loss  in  Delay. 
Procrastination. — E:  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Procreative  Virtue  of  Great  Examples. — Lord  Byron. 

See  Marino  Faliero. 
Procrustes'  Bed. — Carlotta  Perry. — CS  25 
Proctor  Knott  on  Duluth. — Proctor  Knott. — CS  34 
Prodigal  Son,  The.     (St.  Luke,  Ch.  XY.—abr.)     Bible. 

— AE— BS  1— EA 
Prodigal's  Return,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Proem: — "There  is  no  rhyme  that  is  half  so  sweet." — 

Madison  Cawein. — AA 
Proem: — "If  this  little  world  to-night." — Oliver  Her- 

ford.— AA 
(Earth.)— THP 
Proem,  A : — "When  in  my  walks  I  meet  some  ruddy 

lad."— S:  Ward.— AA 
Proem: — "I  love  the  old  melodious  lays." — J:  G.  Whit- 
tier.— AA 
Proem  in  A'terwhiles. — SAE 
"Profaneness  i"  a  low,  grovelling  vice." — Edwin  C.  (7) 

Chapin.— WCLI  1 
Profession  of  Faith,  Sel.  fr. — Blaise  Pascal. — GG 
Professional  Education,  Sel.  fr.     (Study  of  Latin  and 

Greek.)— Sydney  Smith.— LLC 
Professional  Pride.     (Taft.)- Anon.— TCP 
Professor,  The.— F.  Crosby.- ED 
Professor  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Oliver 

W.  Holmes! 
Faithful  Little  Wife,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XII.)— SR  I 
Iris.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  III.)— WR  5 
Professor  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The.     {Br.  sel.  fr. 

Ch.  II.)— AE 
Robinson  of  Leyden      (Ferses /r.  Ch.  VII.)— EDY 
Professor  Dinkelspeigelmann  on  the  Origin  of  Life. — 

Anon.— DRR 
Professor  Gunter  on  Marriage. — G:  Kyle. — WR  3 
Professor  in  Shafts,  The.— Elijah  Kellogg.— SR  1 
Professor  Puzzled,     The.     {Dial.)—F.     B.     Wilson.— 

BS  6— HD— WRD 
Professor's  Ball    Game,  The.— Will    H.     Irwin.— WR 

25 
Professor's  Present,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 


267 


Prof.'s 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Prof.'s  Little  Girl,  The.— C:  K.  Field.— CG  2 

Program — At  the  Tree. — Anon. — DFR 

Programmes. — Anon. — PS 

Progress. — Anon. — CS  17 

Progress.— N.  Michel!.— CS  10 

Progress  is   Constant  .-"-C:   Sumner.     See   Progress   of 

Humanity,  The. 
Progress  of  Curiosity,  The;  or,  A  Royal  Visit  to  Whit- 
bread's  Brewery,  Sel.  fr.   (Birth-day  Ode.) — J: 

Wolcott.— HPE 
Progress  of    Humanity,    The.     (Sel.   fr.    The  Law  of 

Human  Progress.)— C:  Sumner. — CS  10 — NPS 

— YP 
(Progress  is  Constant — si.  diff.) — BLP 
Progress  of  Madness,  The. — Matthew  G.  Lewis. — PS 

(Maniac,  The.)— BNL— CS  4— PPSr 
Progress  of  Poesy,  The.— T:  Gray.— BNL  (6r.  seU.)— 

FEP— OB— PGT  1— WEP  3 
(John  Milton — br.  sel.) — BNL 
Progress  of  Poetry,  The. — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
Progress  of  Sir  Jack  Brag,  The. — Anon. — AWB 
Progress  of  Taste,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Much  Taste  and  Small 

Estate.)— W:  Shenstone.— WEP  3 
Progressive  Peanut  Party,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Prohibition  a  Blessing  to  the   Poor. — H:  W.  Grady. 

iSee  following. 
Prohibition  in  Mlanta.— H:  W.  Grady.- NC 

(Business  Side  of  Prohibition — ptly.  same.) — TS 
(Prohibition  a  Blessing  to  the  Poor —  ptly.  same  as 

NO— TS 
Prohibition  in  Kansas. — J:  J.  Ingalls. — WR  18 
Prohibition  Party  a  Necessity,  A. — A.  B.  Leonard.  — 

WR18 
Prohibition    Song    of    Good    Fellowship.  —  Lydia    H. 

Sigoumey. — WR  18 
Prohibition  the   Only   Safeguard   for   Youth. — G:   L. 

Taylor.- TS 
Prohibition  the    True    Anti-poverty    Party. — W.     J. 

Demorest .  — -TS 
Prohibition  the  Ultimatum. — A.  A.  Phelps.— TS 
Prohibition's  Bugle    Call. — Mrs.    Lide    Meriwether  — 

WR18 
Prohibition's  Might.— R.  L.  Bruce. — WR  18 
"Project  of  connecting  the  planting  of  trees.  The." — 

B.  Pickman  Mann.-r-AD 
Prologue: — "Dear  friends,  we  thank  you  for  your  con- 
descension . ' ' — Anon. — BC 
Prologue:     "I  am  the  herald  of  a  band  of  brothers." — 

Anon.— DLF 
Prologue: — "Ladies  and   Gentlemen: — You  need   not 

shudder  in  anticipation." — Anon. — DLS 
Prologue:     "Kind  friends,  you  see  us  mustered  here." 

(DM.)— "Boh  O'Link."— DCP 
Prologue: — "Ladies   and    gentlemen,   let    me  ask." — 

"Bob  O'Lmk."— DCP 
Prologue,  The. — Geoffrey    Chaucer.     See    Canterbury 

Tales,  The. 
Prologue: — "A  prologue?     Well,  of  course,  the  ladies 

know."— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— SCS 
Prologue  and  Epilogue  to  "Amboyna;  or,  The  Cruelties 

of  the  Dutch  to  the  English  Merchants."     (C.) 

— J:  Dryden. 
(Satire  on  the  Dutch.)— ESs 
Prologue  for  a  Boy. — Anon. — DST 
Prologue  for  a  Boy  and  a  Girl. — Anon — DJS 
Prologue  for  a  Child.   (2) — Anon. — DJS 
Prologue  for  a  Child. — Anon. — DLS 
Prologue  for  a  Small  Child. — Anon. — DCP 
Prologue  for  a  Tuiy  Tot.— Anon.— DST 
Prologue   from  "King  Henry  V." — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  King  Henry  V. 
Prologue  Spoken  at  the  Opening  of  the  Drury  Lane 

Theatre. — S :  Johnson.     See  folloioing. 
Prologue  Spoken  by  Garrick  at  the  Opening  of  the 

Theatre  Royal,  Drury  Lane.     (C.) — S:  John- 

son.- FEP 
(Prologue  Spoken  at  the  Opening  of  the  Drury  Lane 

Theatre.)— WEP  3 
(Shakespeare — sel.) — BNL 
Prologue  to  "A  Word  to  the  Wise." — S:   Johnson. — 

WEP  3 
Prologue  to  Aureng-Zebe,  or    the    Great    Mogul. — J: 

Dryden.     See  Aureng-Zebe. 
Prologue  to  Mr.   Addison's  Tragedy  of  Cato. — Alex. 

Pope.— FEP 
(Humanity's  Heroes — sel.) — BNL 
Prologue  to  '  The  Apprentice." — Anon. — MDD 
Prologue  to  the  Canterbury  Tales. — Geoffrey  Chaucer. 

See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Prologue  to  "The  Dreme",  iSeZ.  /r.— Sir  David  Lyndesay. 

— WEPl 
Prologue  to  the  Legende  of  Goode  Women. — Geoffrey 

Chaucer.     See  Legend  of  Good  Women,  The. 


Prologue  to  the  Satires  (Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot). — 
Alex.  Pope.— WEP  3 
Addison.     (SeZ.)- BNL 
Scandal.     (SeZ.)— BNL 
Sporus — Lord  Hervey.     (Sel.) — BNL 
Prologues  to  the  ^neid,  Sels.  fr. — Gawain  Douglas. 
Scottish  Winter  Landscape,  A.     (Sel.  fr.  Prol.  to 

Bk.  VIL)— WEP  1 
Spring.     (Sel.  fr.  Prol.  to  Bk.  V.)— WEP  1 
Promenading  Ontology. — E.  T.  D. — CG  3 
Promenading  Psychology. — F.  K.  Curtis. — CG  1 
Prometheus. — lord  Byron. — WEP  4 
Prometheus  Unbound,  Sels.  fr. — Percy  B.  Shelley. 
Hymn  to  the  Spirit  of  Nature.     (Fr.  Act.  II. ,  so. 
5.)— HBP— YBF 
(Voice  in  the  Air,  Singing.)— WEP  4 
Poet's  Dream,  The.     (Song  fr.  Act  I. — si.  abr.) — 
PGT  1 
(Poet's  World,  The.)— YBF 
Semichorus  I.  of  Spirits.     (Fr.  II.,  2.) — WEP  4 
Semichorus  II.     (Fr.  II.,  2.)— WEP  4 
Sunrise.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  1.)— POS 
Promise. — Anon. — HP 
Promise,  The. — H:  N.   Cobb.     See  Gracious  Answer, 

The. 
Promise,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— TAS 
Promise  of  Spring,  The.— Helen  M.  Merrill. — TCV 
Promised  Land  To-morrow,   The. — Gerald   Massey. — 
CS23 
(To-daAT   and    To-morrow. — si.    diff.   vers.) — PR — 
LLC 
Promises  and  the  Perils  of  Temperance  Reform,  The. — 
Jos.  Cook.    See  Newest  Promises  and  Perils,  etc. 
Promoted.— Mary  S.  Bacon.— TAV 
Prompt  Messenger,  A.     (Dial.) — G:C.  (7)  Colman,  the 

younger. — MPD 
Prompt  Obedience. — W:   L.   Alden.     See   Adventures 

of  Jimmy  Brown. 
Prom-roses. — Jas.  P.  Sawyer. — CG  2 

(Message  the  Roses  Bring,  The.)— FTA 
Proof,  The.— Lucy  Larcom.— TAS 
Proof  Positive.— Anon.— BS  15— PR— YA 
Proper  Distinction.     (The  Jest  Book.) — MRS 
Proper  Man,  A. — Ben  Jonson. — CEL 
Proper  Sonnet,  A.     (Fr.  A  Handefull  of  Pleasant  De- 

lites.)— Anon.— WEP  1 
Proper  Woman,  A. — T:  Carew. — CEL  (abr.) 
(Disdain  Returned- C.)— FEP— HBP 
(SI.  ohr.)- ELP— ES— WEP2 
(Abr.)- EPs- OEL 
("He  that  loves  a  rosy  cheek" — abr.) — BNL 
(True  Beauty  [.The}— abr.)— BFV— FTA— PGT  1— 

YBF 
(Unfading  Beauty,  The— abr.)- OB 
Prophecies.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Prophecies. Cobbe.— NA 

Prophecy.— Florence  M.  Alt.— WR  22 
Prophecy,  A.     (Poems  and   Epigrams,   LVII.) — Wal- 
ter S.  Landor.— VA— YBF 
(Proud  Word  you  Never  Spoke.) — OB 
Prophecy,  A.    (Fr.  Lincoln's  Grave.) — Maurice  Thomp- 
son.— A  A 
Prophecy  of  Capys,  The.— T:  B.  Macaulay.— WCLG  2 
Prophecy     of     Enterprise,     A.     (Frags,     fr.    various 

authors.) — BNL 
Prophecy  of  Famine,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.   (Description  of  his 

Muse.)— C:  Churchill.— WEP  3 
Prophecy  of  Samuel  Sewall,  The. — J:  G.  Whittier. — 

AP 
Prophet,  The.— G.  M.  Perkins.— CG  3 
Prophetess. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Snow-bound. 
Prophetic  Mirror,  A.— Carlisle  Smith. — WR  7 
Prophets  of  the  Hive,  The,— Anon.— BVC 
Proposal,  A.     (Puck.)— CH 

Proposal.- Bayard     Taylor.— BIL—FP— FTA— TAV 
Proposal,  The. — Marg.  Vandegrift. — DR 
"Proposed  religious  amendment  to  the  Constitution, 

The."— F.  A.  Noble.— GG 
Prosopopoia;  or.   Mother  Hubberd's  Tale,  Sel.  fr.  (At 
Court.) — Edmund  Spenser. — OS  3 
(Spenser  at  Court.) — EPs 
Prospective  Visit,  A. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Prospects  of  California,  The. — Nathaniel  Bennett. — SS 
Prospects  of  the  Republic,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Circum- 
stances Favorable  to  the  Progress  of  Litera- 
ture in  America,  The.) — E:  Everett. — BS  11 — 
SR4 
(American  Experiment  of  Self-government,  The — 

abr.  )—SS—SSD—TMD 
(Our  Republic— a6r.)—S0 
Prosperity.-^W.     R.    Smith.      See    Hazards    of    our 

National  Prosperity. 
Prosperous  Couple,  A. — Anon. — CS  35 


268 


TITLE  INDEX 


Public 


Prospice.— Rob't     Browning.— BSP  —  HER— HDL— 

PGT  2  —  SAE  — VA— WEP  4— YBF 
Protect  us  through  theComing  Night.      (PF.  music.)  — 

Anon. — AD 
Protection  of    Americans    in    Armenia,    The. — W.    P. 

Frye.— SC 
Protest,  A. — Arthur  H.  Clough.— VA 
Protest,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— OH 
Protestant  Ascendency. — J  ;  O'Hagan. — TIP 
Protestants'  Joy,  The. — Anon. — EDY 
Protestation,  The.— T:  Carew.— ES— WEP  2 
Protestation.    The. — Selwyn  Image. — VA 
Protestations. — C:  Mackay. — BIL 
Prothalamion.  —  Edmund     Spenser.  —  ELP  —  OB  — 

PGT  1— PHS 
Prototype,  A. — Anon. — CS  31 

Proud  Maisie. — Walter   Scott.     .See   Heart   of   Midlo- 
thian, The. 
"Proud  Maisie  is  in  the  Wood." — Walter  Scott.     <See 

Heart  of  Midlothian,  The. 
Proud  Miss   MacBride,    The.     (.Abr.) — J:  G.   Saxe.— 

BNL 
Proud  Winter  Cometh.— Ernest  W.  Shurtleff.— POS 
Proud  Word  you  Never  Spoke. —  Walter  S.  Landor. 

See  Prophecy,  A. 
Proverb— All  that  Glitters  Is  not  Gold,  A.     {Play.)— 

S.  A.  Frost.— BS  5 
Proverbeel  Feelossofy. — "Ag^ikler." — CS  13 
Proverbial  Philosophy,  Sel.  fr. — Martin  F.  Tupper. — 

BNL 
Proverbs.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Proverbs  of  Solomon,  The,  Sets.  fr.     Bible. 

Preventive"  No,"  A.     (Ch.  IV.,  14,  15.)— BLP 
Solomon,  the  Wise   King.     (SeU.  fr.  Chs.  IV.  and 

XXII.)— BLP 
Proverbs,  or  Rhymes  and  Reasons. — E.  C.  and  I^.  J. 

Rook.— SSE 
Providence. — W :  Cowper. — EPs — HDL 

("God  moves  in  a  mysterious  way.") — LLC — YBF 

(Light  Shining  out  of  Darkness— C.)—FEP— HBP 

Providence.     (Fifteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity — C.)  — 

Reginald  Heber. — GN 
(God  Provideth  for  the  Morrow — abr.) — AD 
Providence.     (Sei.)—G:  Herbert.— EPs 
Provider,  The. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — WR  25 
Province  of  History,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  ("World's  history 

is  a  divine  poem.  The.") — Jas.   A.   Garfield. — 

GG 
Province  of  History,  The.     (.Sel.    fr.    History    of    the 

World,  Ch.  CLXXII.)— J:C.  Ridpath.— PFP 
Province  of  Woman,  The. — Hannah  More. — FP 
Proving  the  Question. — Anon. — WR  17 
Provisional  ForKiveness.-7-Anon. — KNE 
Prudence.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Prudent  Words.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Pruning  Trees.— H.  R.  Sanford.— AD 
Prussian  Armistice,   The.     (Sel.) — Leon   Gambetta. — 

OS  2 
Prussian  National  Anthem. — Anon. — GP 
Prussian    Railway    Conductor's    Story,    The. — Anon. 

(ad.  by)  Walter  K.  Fobes.— FR 
(Mad  Engineer,  The— dt^.  vers.)— CS  7— MMR 
Psalm  XIII.     (Paraphrase.)— Fa.  Davison.- HBP 
Psalm  XVIII.     (Paraphraae.)—T:  Stemhold.—  EPs 

(br.  «eZ.)— HBP 
Psalm XIX.     (Pamp;ira«e— Pt.II.)— I:  Watts.- HBP 
Psalm  XXIII.     (Paraphrase.)— Fa.  Davison.— HBP 
Psalm  XXIII.     (Paraphra8e.)—Jba.  Merrick.— HBP 
Psalm  XXIII.     (C. — paraphrase.) — Jas.  Montgomery. 

(Lord  the  Good  Shepherd,  The.)— HBP 
Psalm  XXIII.   A  Pastoral  Hymn.  (C.) — Jos.  Addison. 

(Translation  of  the  Twenty-third  Psalm. ) — CEL 
Psalm  XXVII. — Jas.  Wedderburn.     See  Leave  me  not. 
Psalm  XLVL— Martin  Luther.— HBP  (T:  Carlyle's  tr.) 
(Mighty  Fortress  Is  our  God,  A — F:  H.  Hedge's  tr. 

— seZ. )— BNL 
(Paraphrase  of  Luther's  Hymn — Hedge.) — AA 
(Safe  Stronghold,  A— Carlyle.)— AE 
Psalm  XLVL    (Paraphrase— Pt.l.)— I:  Watts.- HBP 
Psalm    LXV.      (Farap^irose— Pt.  II.)  —  I:    Watts.- 

HBP 
Psalm  LXXII.     (Paraphrase.) — Jas.    Montgomery. — 

FEP 
(Reign  of  Christ  on  Earth,  The.)— HBP 
Psalm  LXXII.     (Paraphrase— Ft.  II.)  —  I:  Watts.— 

FEP 
(Jesus  shall  Reign.)— HBP 
Psalm  LXXXIV.     (Paraphrase.)— H:  F.  Lyte.— FEP 
Psalm  LXXXVII.     (Paraphrase.)— J :  Newton.— FEP 
Psalm  XC.     (Paraphrase.) — Anon. 

(Ninetieth  Psalm.)- DST 
Psalm  XC,  Sel.  fr.  (Time  Past,  Time  Passing,  Time  to 

Come.) — Jas.  Montgomery. — HBP 


Psalm  XC.     (Paraphrase — Pt.  II.,  sZ.  abr.) — I:   Watts. 

—FEP 
Psalm  XCIII.     (Paraphrase.) — Sir   Philip    Sidney  [or 

Countess  of  Pembroke]. — EPs 
Psalm  XCVI.     (Sing  unto  the  Lord.)— Sir  Philip  Sid- 
ney [or  Countess  of  Pembroke]. — EPs 
Psalm    XCVIII.     (Paraphrase— Ft.  II.)  —  I:    Watts. 

—FEP 
Psalm  C.     (Paraphrase.)— W :  Kethe.— FEP 
Psalm  C.     (Paraphrase.)— Tate  and  Brady.  —  FEP  — 

HBP  ' 

Psalm  C.     (Paraphrase — Pt.  II.,  abr.  and  diff.  vers.)  — 

I:  Watts.— FEP 
Psalm    CXVII.    (Paraphrase— Ft.    II.)— I:    Watts.— 

HBP 
Psalm  CXXI.     (Paraphrase— Ft.  XVIII.)— I:   Watts' 

—FEP 
Psalm  CXXXIX.    (Paraphrase.) — Sir  Philip  Sidney  [or 

Countess  of  Pembroke]. — EPs 
Psalm  CXLVIII.     (Paraphrase.) — G:  Wither.— FEP 
Psalm  for  New  Year's  Eve,  A.     (C.) — Dinah  M.  Craik. 
(Address  to  the  New  Year — sels.) — HSS  2 
(New  Year's  Gifts,  The.)— SSS 
Psalm  of  Hope,  A.— W.  F.  Fox.— CS  11 
Psalm  of  Life,  A.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— AA— BNL  — 
CS  2  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  GMS  —  HBP—  KNE 
—LLC  —  PHS  —  SE  —  SO  —  TAV— WCLI  2 
(Life — ptly.  same  sels.) — EPs — GN 
(Lives  of  Great  Men — br.  sel.) — PS 
Psalm  of  Marriage. — Phcebe    Gary. — CRR — CS  2    — 

PPSr 
Psalm  of  the  Union,  A.— W:  R.  Wallace.— WRD 

(United    States    National   Anthem — abr. — si.    diff. 
vers.)— CS  2 
Psalm  of  the  West,  Sel.  fr.     (Battle  of  Lexington,  The.) 

—Sidney  Lanier.— GP— PAP 
Psalm  of  Trust,  A.— Frd'k  L.  Hosmer.— TAS 
Psalm-book  in  the  Garret,  The.     (Abr.)—B:  F.  Taylor 

BS12 
Psalms  of  David,  Sels.  fr.     Bible. 
Psalm  I.— LLC 
Psalm  VIII.— LLC 
Psalm  XIX.— PYO— SAE 

Psalm  XXIII.  —  BS  1  —  GMS  —  LLC  —  NV  — 
SAE  (v.  1-4.)    . 
(Recitations  from  the  Bible.)— FTT 
(Twenty-third  Psalm,  The.)— EA— PS  (arr.) 
Psalm  XXIV.— BS  1— IR— PYO 
(King  of  Glory,  The.  1-8.)— NV 
Psalm  XXXIII. 

(Nation's  Strength,  A.)— BLP  (8-22)— SS  (12-22 
— diff.  tr.) 
Psalm  XXXVII.— LLC  (1-11.) 
Psalm  XLVL— PYO 
Psalm  XLVIIL— PYO 
Psalm  LXXXIV.— PYO 
Psalm  LXXXV.— LLC 
Psalm  XC— BS  8— LLC 
Psalm  XCL— SPE 
Psalm  XCV.— BS  14 

(Psalms,  The.)— AE  (1-7.) 
Psalm  XCVI. 

(Song  of  Praise,  A.)— SSS 
Psalm  C— LLC 

Psalm  cm.— LLC  (8-22)— SC  (1-5,  19-21.) 
Psalm  CIV. 

(Psalms,  The.)—  AE  (1-3,  5.) 
( Reverence.  )—-SE 
Psalm  CXXI.— GMS— PYO 
Psalm  CXLVL— LLC 
Psalm  CXLVIII. 

(Exhortation  to  Praise  God.) — SS 
Psyche.— H:  A.  Beers.— TAS 
Psycholophon. — Gelett  Burgess. — NA 
Public  Dinner  at  New  York,  <SeZ«.  fr. — Dan'l  Webster. 
Benefits  of  the  Constitution. — BS  23 

(Glorious  Constitution,  The.)— TMR 
Liberty   and  Knowledge. — FD  1 
Public  Dishonesty.     (Sel.  fr.   Twelve  Causes  of  Dis- 
honesty.)—H:  Ward  Beecher.— BS  2— PS 
PublicOpinion.— F:  W.  Farrar.— CS  21- FD  1— TS 
Public  Opinion.     (SeZ.)— Wendell     Phillips.— NC     — 

TMR 
Public  Opinion.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Revolution  in  Greece.) — 
Dan'l  Webster.— TMD 
(Moral  Force  against  Physical — abr.) — SS 
(Moral  Force  of  Public  Opinion.) — MRS 
Public  Opinion  and  the  Sword. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See 

Parliamentary  Reform. 
"Public  opinion  employs  no  officers." — W:  H.  H.  Mur- 
ray.—GG 
"Public  opinion  is  the  collective  judgment  of  men." — 
W.  H.  H.  Murray.— GG 


269 


Public 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Public  Opinion  the  Reliance  of  our  Government.     (Sel. 

fr.  Revolution  in  Congress.) — Jas.  A.  Garfield. 

— FD2 
Public  School  Teacher  in  the  Republic,  The. — G:  T. 

Balch.— BLP 
Public  Speech.— H.  W.  Bellows.— BS  13 
Public  Spirit  of  [the]  Athenians. — Demosthenes.     See 

Oration  on  the  Crown,  The. 
Public  Virtue.    {Sel.  fr.  On  the  Bank  Veto.)— H :  Clay. 

— CS  5— KNE 
(True  Patriotism — sel.) — SO 
Public  Worrier,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.- CS  27 
Publius  Scipio  to  the  Roman  Army  before  the  Battle 

of  Ticin. — Livy.     See  History  of  Rome. 
Puck  and  the  Fairy. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Midsum- 
mer Night's  Dream,  A. 
Pudd'nhead  Wilson,  Sel.  fr.     (Tom  and  Roxy — sel.  fr. 

Chs.   VIII.    and    IX.,    ad.     as    diaDS:    L. 

Clemens.— NDP 
Puer  ex  Jersey. — Anon. — NA 
Puffing.     (Fr.  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S:  Butler. — 

HPE 
Puffs  Poetical. — W:  Aytoun. 
Paris  and  Helen.— HPE 
Tarquin  and  the  Augur. — HPE 
Pugilists,  The.— Anon.— BC 
Pulaski's  Banner.     (Hymn  of  the  Moravian  Nuns  of 

Bethlehem— C.)—H:  W.  Longfellow.— SR  8 
Pull-back,  A.— Anon.— HP 

Pulley,  The.   (C.)— G:  Herbert.— CEL  (w.  3  sts.  fr.  Mis- 
ery.)—EPs—FEP— OB— WEP  2— YBF 
(Gifts  of  God,  The.)— BNL— FP— OS  2— PGT  1 
Pulmonic  Passion. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Pulpit  and  Politics,  The.— C:  H.  Parkhurst.— NC 
Pulpit  Oratory.— Dan'l   Dougherty.— BS  3— CS  10   — 

LLC 
"Pulpit  plagiarist  ruins  his  style,  The." — J.  M.  Buck- 
ley.—GG 
Pumpkin,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BNL— DFR— LLC 

— MMR  (abr.) 
Pumpkin-pie. — Anon. — DJS 
Pungent.     (Charade.) — Anon. — TCP 
"Pupil  of  the  eye  is  the  portal." — Dan'l  (?)  March. — 

— GG 
Pup-pup-poetry.     (Punch.) — BRR 

(Invitation  to  the  Zoological  Gardens,  An.) — HPE 

— THP 
(Longer  vers.)— BS  16— CS  19 
Pure  and  Holy  Motive. — D.  W.  Thomp.-on. — LLC 
Pure  and  True  and  tender.— H.—FTA 
Pure  Hypothesis,  A. — May  Kendall. — VA 
Purest  Pearl,  The.— Anon.— CS  5— KNE 
Purgatory,  The. — Dante.     See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 
Puritan,  The. — G:  W:  Curtis.    See  Puritan  Spirit,  The. 
Puritan,  The. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  Milton. 
Puritan  and  the  Dutchman,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Puritan  and  the  Pilgrim,   The.— G:   F.    Hoar.  —  TMD 
Puritan  of  Essex  County,  The. — H:  C.  Lodge. — NC 
Puritan  Sabbath,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Address  at  the  Annual 

Banquet  of  the  New  England  Society  in  New 

York  City,  Dec.  23,  1895.)— H:  Van  Dyke.— 

SC 
Puritan  Spirit,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Puritan,  The.)  —  G :  W : 

Curtis.— BS  14 
Puritan  Spirit,  The  — R.  S.  Storrs. — SC 
Puritanism.— G:  F.  Hoar.— FD  2 
Puritans. — ^:  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Puritans,  The. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See  Milton. 
Puritans,  The.— Heman  L.  Wayland.— TMR 
Puritan's  Dilemma,  The.     (Dial.)—F.  Crosby.— CS  21 

— PD 
Puritans  on   the   Way  to   Church.     (Tai>.) — Anon. — 

TCP 
Purple  Asters.— Arthur  W.  H.  Eaton.— TCV 
Purple  Beech,  The.     (Garden  and  Forest.) — AD 
Purple  Blossoms. — Anon. — CG  1 
Purple  Cow,  The.— Gelett  Burgess.— NA 
Purple  Island,  The,   Sel.  fr.     (Shepherd's  Life,  The— 

fr.  Can.  XII.)— Phineas  Fletcher.— EP 
Purpose. — Anon. — CS  27 
Purpose.— C:  R.  Barrett.— SR  5 
Purpose.     (Fr.  To  a  Writer  of  the  Day.) —  Langdon  E. 

Mitchell.— AA 
Purpose,  A.— H:  C.  Pearson.— CS  21 
Purpose. — J:  J.  Piatt. — AA 
Purse  and  the  Sword,  The.— J:  C.  Calhoun.— SS 
Pursuit,  The.   (Dial.  fr.  Ladies'  Battle.) — Anon. — MPD 
Pursuit  of  Character  and  Service. — Phillips  Brooks. — 

FD2 
Pursuit  of  Frivolous  Pleasures,  The. — E:  Young.     See 

Night  Thoughts. 
Pursuit  of  Knowledge     under      Difficulties. — Anon. — 

FND 


Pursuit  of  Legal  Advice    under    Difficulties,  The. — A 

Family  Scene. — Theodore  Hook. — MHR 
Pussy  and  the  Poppies.     (Youth's  Companion.) — AD 
Pussy  Clover. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Pussy  Wants  a  Comer.— W.  A.  Stout.— CS  30 
Pussy  Willow.— Anon.— HSS  1 
Pussy  Willow,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Pussy  Willow. — Marian  Douglas. — AD — NV 
Pussy  Willows. — Anon. — DJS 
Pussy-cat.— "Aunt  Effie."— BVC— PC 
Pussy's  Better  Nature. ^Annie  Hughes. — WR  13 
Pussy's  Class.— M.  M.  D.— PHS— SR  13 
Pussy's  Picture. — Lizzie  J.  Rook. — TT 
Put  Flowers  in  ■  our  Window. — Anon. — AD 
Put  Out  that  Fire.— W:  M.  Taylor.— TS 
Put  Yourself  in  her  Place. — C:  Barnard. — CS  24 
Putting  Down  the  Window. — Anon. — CS  16 
Putting  his  Armor  On. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Putting  on  Airs. — Anon. — FHE 
Putting  the  Children  to  Bed.     (Tab.)— Anon. — COS — 

DS— NPS— PP— YA— YP 
Putting  up  o'  the  Stove. — Anon. — CS  1 — PS 
Putting  up  Stoves. — Anon. — CS  5 — KNE 
Putty  Man,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Puzzle,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Puzzle,  A.— Marg.  Eytinge.— BS  21 
Puzzled.— Annie  T.  Slosson.— CS  26 
Puzzled    Census  Taker,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— CRR  — 

CS  14— CSS— MYF 
Puzzled  Dutchman,  The.^ — Anon. — HR 

(I  Vash  so  Glad  I  Vash  Here.)— BDD— DF  Y— SR  2 
Puzzled  Dutchman,  The.— C:  F.  Adams.— BS  2— CS  5 

— PR— PS— YA 
Puzzles  in  Figures. — Anon. — EuE 
Puzzling  Example,  A. — Anon. — DJS 
Puzzling  Question,  A. — Anon. — DLF 
Pwize  Spwing  Poem.     (San  Francisco   News    Letter.) 

— BS9 
Pygmalion.— W:  B.  Scott.— VA 
Pygmalion  and  Galatea. — W :  S.  Gilbert. — MN 
(Actl.)— VA  (sei.)— VSG  (abr.) 
(Shorter  sel.j—'BS  21— PS 
Pyramids  not  all  Egyptian. — G.  O.  Barnes. — CS  13 
Pyramus  and    Thisbe.— J:    G.    Saxe.— CS  18— FTR— 

HNS— MHR— SA 
Pyrotechnic  Polyglot.- G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 

(Dialect  Medley.)— SDR 
Python,  The.— Hilaire  Belloc— NA 
Pyxidanthera.  The.— A.  C.  Bristol. — AA 


Q 

Qua  Cursum     Ventus. — Arthur    H.    Clough. — AVP — 

BNL  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  PGT  2  — VA— 

WEP  4— YBF 
Quack,  The.— Anon.— FAD 
Quack  Doctor,  The. — Anon. — DCD 
Quack  Medicines. — G:  Crabbe.     See  Borough,  The. 
Quackery.— J.  W.  Bonfield.— SD 
Quaker  and     the      Robber,     The. — S:     Lover.     See 

Quaker's  Meeting,  'The. 
Quaker  Boy,  The. — Brummell  Jones. — WR  12 
Quaker  Graveyard,  The. — S.  Weir  Mitchell. — AA 
Quaker  Ladies. — Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — AA 
Quaker  Meeting  and  Social. — Anon. — EuE 
Quaker  Widow,   The.— Bayard   Taylor.— AA—CS  2— 

FEP 
Quakerdom.     (The  Formal  Call.) — C:  G.   Halpine. — 

BNL— PTS  (si.  abr.) 
Quakeress  Bride,  The. — Eliz.  C.  Kinney. — AA 
Quaker's  Meeting,  The.     (C.)— S:  Lover.— THP 

(Quaker  and  the  Robber,  The.)— CS  8 
Quality  of  Mercy  [Is  not  Strained],  The. — W:  Shakes- 
peare.    See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Quarrel,  A.     (Little  Folks.)— T>CP 
Quarrel,  The. — C:  Mackay. — CS  26 
Quarrel  between     Brutus     and     Cassius,     The. — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Csesar. 
Quarrel  between  Sir  Peter  and  Lady  Teazle. — R:  B. 

Sheridan.     See  School  for  Scandal,  The. 
Quarrel  of    Brutus    and    Cassius. — W:    Shakespeare. 

See  Julius  Caesar. 
Quarrel  of  Friends,  The.— S:  T.  Coleridge.     See.Chris- 

tabel. 
Quarrel  of  Sairey  Gamp  and  Betsey  Prig. — C :  Dickens. 

See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 
Quarrel  of  Squire  Bull  and  his  Son  Jonathan  [,  The]. — 

Jas.  K.  Paulding.— BS  4— WR  10 
Quarrel  of  the  Flowers,  The. — Anon. — WR  17 
Quarrel  of  the  Wheels,  The.— T:  D.  English.— CS  26 


270 


TITLE  INDEX 


Quietness 


Quarrel  Scene    from    "School    for    Scandal." — R:    B. 

Sheridan.     See  School  for  Scandal,  The. 
Quarreling.     {Frags.fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Quarrels  of  Friends.   {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Quarrelsome  Boy,  The.— W.  T.— KNS 
Quarrelsome  Kittens,  The. — Anon. — DST 
(Little  Kittens,  The.)— NV 
(Two  Little  Kittens.)— PS 
Quart  of  Milk,  A.— Emma  D.  Banks.— BR — CH 
Quatorzain. — H:  Timrod. — AA 

Quatrain: — "Oh!  to  be  wafted  away." — Anon. — -NA 
Quatrain: — "My  song  is  silenced,  yet  the  echo  stays." 

—Kendall  Banning. — CG  3 
Quatrain: — "The    red     rose    petals    droop    and  fall." 

{Morningside.) — CG  3 
Quatrain,   A:     "Hark  at  the  lips,"  etc.  —  Frank   D. 

Sherman. — A  A 
Quatuor  Novissima. — W:  Shakespeare. — CEL 
(Sonnet  VIIL)— OB 

(Sonnet  LXXIII.— C.)— ELP— FEP— WEP  1 
(That  Time  of  Year.)— YBF 
("That  time  of  vear  thou  may'st  in  me  behold.") — 

OEL— PGT  1 
Queen,  The. — Coventry    Patmore.     See   Angel   in    the 

House,  The. 
Queen  Alcestis     and     the     God     of     Love. — Geoffrey 

Chaucer.     See  Legend  of  Good  Women,  The. 
"Queen  Anne's  Lace." — Georgia  Benedict. — CG  3 
Queen  Arjamand's      Dagger.  —  Edwin      Arnold.     See 

With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Queen  Catharine. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry 

VIIL 
Queen  Catharine  to  the  King  and  Court  of  Cardinals. 

— W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  VIIL 
Queen  Elizabeth. — Anon. — HR 
Queen  Elizabeth.— Sarah  Williams.— EHT 
Queen  Henrietta  Maria. — Oscar  Wilde.— EDY 
Queen  Hynde,  Sel.  fr.     (Boat-race,  The.) — Jas.  Hogg. 

— SAE 
Queen  in  her  Carriage  Riding  by.  The. — Anon. — TFS 
Queen  Isabella's  Resolve. — Epes  Sargent. — WR  10 
Queen  Katharine's  Appeal  to  Henry  VIIL — W:  Shakes- 
peare.    See  King  Henry  VIIL 
Queen  Katherine. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry 

VIIL 
Queen  Mab.  —  T:  Hood.  —  BVC  —  OS  1  —  WR  26  (w. 

mus.) 
Queen  Mab. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Queen  Mab,  Sels.  fr. — Percy  B.  Shellev. 

Drones  of  the  Community,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  III.) 

gg 

Magic  Car  Moved  on.  The.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— 

GN 
Night.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  IV.)— BNL 
{Br.  seZ.)— HNS— POS 
("How  beautiful  this  night!     The  balmiest  sigh" 
—br.seD—AE 
(Peace  and  War.)— HSS  1— SS 
Sunset.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.)— BNL— BS  26 
To  lanthe.  Sleeping.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— BNL 
War.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  IV.)— BNL 
Queen  Mab's  Visit  to  Pigwiggen. — Michael   Drayton. 

See  Nymphidia:  "The  Court  of  Fairy. 
Queen  Margaret  to  William  de  la  Pool,  Duke  of  Suf- 
folk.    (SeZ.)— Michael  Drayton.— WEP  1 
Queen  Mary,  Sela.  fr. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

Queen  Mary.     (Act  V.,  sc.  5— a6r.  )—BS  9 — CDD 

(Happiest  Hotu-,  The — hr.  sel.) — BIL 
Queen  Mary.     {Sels.  fr.  Acts  III.,  IV.,  V.)— EHT 

(Song  of  the  Milkmaid— /r.  III.,  5.)— BNL 
Wyatt's  Harangue  to  the  London  Crowd.     {Sel.  fr. 
II.,  1.)— MYF 
Queen  of  a  Night,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KC 
Queen  of  Beauty,  The. — Anon. — CS  4 
Queen  of  Corinth,  The,  Sel.   fr.     {Song  fr.   Act   III., 
Sc.  2.)— J:  Fletcher.— WEP  2 
(Weep  no  More.)- ELP— FEP— OB 
Queen  of  France  and  the  Spirit  of  Chivalry,  The.     {Br. 
sel.  fr.  Reflections  on  the  French  Revolution.) 
Edmund  Burke.— TMD 
(Apostrophe  to  the  Queen  of  France.) — PS 
(Marie  Antoinette  [,  Queen  of  France].) — OS  3  {abr.) 
— SS— VSG 
Queen  of  Flowers,  The.     {Tab.) — Tony  Denier. — TDT 
Queen  of  Prussia's  Ride,  The. — A.  L.  A.  Smith. — CS  21 

— NPS— YP 
Queen  of  the  School. — Anon. — DFR 
"Queen  of  the  silver  bow,  by  thy  pale  beam." — Char- 
lotte Smith.— AE 
Queen  Oriana's  Dream. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb.— LPC 
Queen  Vashti.— T.  DeWitt  Talmage.— CS  28 
Queen  Vashti's  Lament. — J:  Reade. — BS  11 — SR  4 


Queen's  Ball,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Mrs.  Archer  Clive.— AVP 
Queen's  Last  Ride,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— WR  26 
Queen's  Letter,  The.     {Cond.  fr.  Rupert  of  Hentzau, 
Chs.  XVII.  and  XVIII.)— Anthony  Hope.— 
NP 
Queen's  Marie,  The.     {In  Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. 

—OB 
Queen's  Song. — Stopford  A.   Brooke.     See  Riquet   of 

the  Tuft. 
Queen's  Vespers,  The. — Aubrey  T.  DeVere. — VA 
Queen's  Wake,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  Hogg. 

Abbot  M'Kinnon,  The.     (Night    III.— The  ScAen- 

teenth  Bard's  Song.) — FEP 
Fate  of  Macgregor,  The.    (Night  II.— The  Eleventh 

Bard's  Song.)— CS  23— MMR 
Kilmeny.      (Night    II.— The    Thirteenth    Bard's 
Song.)— BNL— EPs  (seZ.)— FEP— HBP  —  OB 
Witch  of  Fife,  The.     (Night  L— The  Eighth  Bard's 
Song.)— EPs 
Queen's  Year,  The.— I.  N.  F.— TMR 
Queer  Boy,  The.— W .  H.  Salter.— BS  19— WR  15 
Queer  Doll,  A.— Anon.— CPL 

Queer  Fish  they  Caught,  The.— Mary  D.  Brine.— CPL 
Queer  Fit,  A.     (PZojy.)— Anon.— CS  5— MD 
Queer  Hole,  A. — Anon. — DLF 
Queer  Little   House,   The.— Anon.— COS— DJS— NPS 

— PP— YP 
Queer  Scholars,  The.— Anon— COS— PP 

(Frogs  at  School— a6r. )—WR  17 
Queer  Table,  A.— Anon.— PS— TT 
Queer  Word,  A. — Anon.— WR  25 
Quelling  of  the  Blatant  Beast,  The. — Edmund  Spenser. 

See  Faerie  Queen,  The. 
Quentin  Durward,  Sel.  fr.     (County  Guy — song  fr.  Ch. 
IV.)— Sir    Walter   Scott.— BFV— BNL— BPB 
—EPs— FEP— LC— WEP  4 
(Serenade,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Query,  A.     {Good  Words.)— HV 
Quest,  The.— Eliza  Scudder.- TAS 
Quest.     {Fr.  Corda  Concordia.) — Edmund  0.  Stedman. 

— AA 
Quest  of  three  Kings,  The. — E.  Murray. — HE 
Question,  A.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Question,  A.— Anon.— CS  13— DS— YA 
Question,  A. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — TAS 
Question,  A. — Karl  von  Halm  {tr.  by  H.  I.  D.  Ryder). 

— BIL— FTA 
Question,  A.— W:  H.  Head.— SR  11 
?— F.  A.  Le  H.— HP 
Question. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
Question,  The.     (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— FEP— HBP 
—OB 
(Dream  of  the  Unknown,  A.)— PGT  1 
Question  of  Nations,  The. — B.  W.  Richardson. — TS 
Question,  The.     To  Lisetta. — Matthew  Prior. — OB 
Question  Whither,  The.— G:  Meredith.— HSS  3 
Questionings. — F.  H.  Hedge. — EPs 
Questions. — H:  S.  Kent.— CS  16 
Questions.— J.  M.  L.— CPL 
Questions. — Kate  Lawrence. — YBT 
Questions.— G.  V.  S.— YBT 
Questions.     Sir    Philip    Sidney.     See    Astrophel    and 

Stella. 
Questions  about  Women. — Anon. — PS 
Questions  and  Answers.     {SI.  abr.) — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

—LLC 
Questions  Easily  Answered. — Anon. — DE 
Questions  of  the  Hour. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — FP 
Qui  Laborat,  Orat.— Arthur  H.  Clough.— WEP  4 
Quia  Amore  Langueo. — Anon. — OB 
Quicksand,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  31 
Quidnunckis  [Quidnunkis- — C],  The. — J:  Gay. — ESs 
Quiet  Evening  at  Cards,  A. — Anon. — WR  7 
Quiet  Eve,  The.— Eliza  Cook.— VA 
Quiet  Life.  The.— W:  Byrd.— ELP 

(Song.)— HBP 
Quiet  Life,  The.     (Levet,    his    Death — C.) — S:   John- 
son.— LH 
(On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Levett.)— FEP 
(On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Robert  Levetretc. — also  C.) — 
OB 
Quiet  Life,  The.— Alex.  Pope.— CEL 

(Ode  on  Solitude— C.)— FEP— HBP— LC—PYO— 

SN 
(Ode  to  Solitude.)— BNL 
(Solitude.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Quiet  Mr.  Smith,  The.— Sarah  P.  W.  Parton.— MHR 
Quiet  Pilgrim,  The.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— AA— TAS 
Quiet  Smoke,  A.— W.  H.  Neall.— CS  31 
Quiet  Soul,  A.— J:  Oldham.— OB 
Quiet  Street,  The.— Anon.— SA 
Quiet  Summer  Resort,  A. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 
Quietness.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.— TAS 


271 


Quilting 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Quilting,  The. — Anna  Bache. — CS  6 

Quince.   (Every-day  Characters,    II.) — Winthrop    M. 
Praed.— FEP 

Quip,  The.— G:  Herbert.— EPs—WEP  2 

Quite  a  History. — Arlo  Bates. — BVC 

Quite  Like    a   Stocking.     (Kris    Kringle— C.)— T:    B. 
Aldrich.— G^— PEO 

Quite  Possible. — Anon. — CG  1 

Quits.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 

Quiz  Sociable,  The. — Anon. — EuE 

Quo  Vadis,  Sel.  jr. — Henry  K.  Sienkiewicz. 

Contest  in  the  Arena,  The.     (Ch.  LXV. — abr.) — 
TMD 
(Fight  with  the  Aurochs,  The.)— BS  25— PEP 
(Rescue  of  Lygia,  The — abr.) — SC 
(Ursus  and  the  Aurochs — abr.) — WR  19 

Quotations.     For  a  Class  Exercise. — Anon. — AD 

"Quoth  a  young  Sadducee."     (Ben  Karshook's  Wis- 
dom, II.) — Rob't  Browning. — SO 

Quousque  Tandem,  O  Catilina? — A.  L.  Frisbie. — SR  3 


Rab  and  his  Friends. — Dr.  J:  Brown. — MBL 

Rab  the    Ranter's    Bag-pipe    Playing.     {Fr.    Anster 

Fair.)— W:  Tennant.— WEP  4 
Rabbi  and  the  Prince,  The.— Jas.  C.  Harvey.— WR  6 
Rabbi  Ben  Ezra.— Rob't  Browning.— PGT  2— WEP  4 

(Potter's  Wheel,  The— sei.)- HDL 
Rabbinical  Origin  of  Women,  The.— T:  Moore.— HPE 

— THP 
Rabbi's  Present,  The.     (Comhill  Magazine.) — HP 
Rabbi's  Vision,  The. — Frances  Brown. — CS  20 
Rabble;    or,   Who    Pays,   The.       (Fr.     Miscellaneous 

Thoughts.)— S:  Butler.— HPE 
Rabboni. — Marg.  J.  Preston.— CS  8 
Rabia.— (Tr.  by)  Jas.  F.  Clarke.— EPs 
Rabiah's  Defense. — T:  W.  Higginson. — SO 
Raccoon,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Race,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Anna  Karenina,  Chs.  XXIV.  and 

XXV.)— Lyof  Tolstoi.— PR— WR  11 
Race,  The. — Lew  Wallace.     See  Ben-Hur. 
Race,  The.— X.  Y.  Z.— CPL 

Race  at  Devil's  Elbow,  The. — Jas.  Buckham. — WR  24 
Race  for  a  Wife,  A.— Jas.  M.  Barrie. — WR  13 
Race  for  Dear  Life,  A. — Anon. — PRR 
Race  for  Life,  A. — Anon. — KNS 
Race  for  Life,  A. — Anon. — WR  14 
Race  for  Life,  A. — Jas.  F.  Cooper.     See  Last  of  the 

Mohicans,  The. 
Race  for  Life,  A.— W.  W.  Marsh.— PR 
Race  for  Life,  A.— J.  L.  Molloy.— CS  32— DS— NPS— 

PR— YP 
Race  of  the  Boomers,  The. — R:  Burton. — PR 
Race  of  the  Flowers  [,  The].— W:  B.  Rands.— AD— PC 
Race  of  the  "Oregon,"  The.— J:  J.  Meehan. — EDY— 

PAPm 
Race  Prejudice.— Anon. — WR  15 
Race  with  Death,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ode  on  Venice,  Pt. 

1.)— Lord  Byron.— LH 
Race  with  the   Flames,   The.     (Who  was  he?     Pt.  I., 

abr.;  sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.)— W.  H."H.  Murray.— HBR 
Rachel.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  III.)— Matthew  Arnold.— EDY 
Rachel. — C:  J.  Wells.     <See  Joseph  and  his  Brethren. 
Racy  Stump  Speech,  A. — Anon. — CS  1 
Rag  Babies. — Anon. — WR  17 
Ragged  Robin. — L.  A.  Twamley. — NV 
Ragged  Sailors. — Anon. — PEO 
Raggedy  Man,    The.— Jas.    W.    Riley.— BVC    (sel.)— 

RCR 
Raggles.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  36 
Raglan.     (In   Memoriam — C.) — Sir   Edwin  Arnold. — 

EDY— VA 
(Lord  Raglan.)— GP 
Ragnarok,  Set.  fr.     (Possible  Consequences  of  a  Comet 

Striking  the  Earth  in  the  Pre-Glacial  Period.) — 

Ignatius  Donnelly. — BS  11 
Rags  and  Robes.     (In  Mother  Goose  for  Grown  Folks.) 

—Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— TAV 
Rabat,  The. — J.  J.  Rooney. — AA 
Raillery.— B:  S.  (?)  Stillingfleet.— KNE 
Railroad  Car  Scene,  A. — Anon. — CS  5 — SR  4 

(Compensation — poet,  vers.) — CS  5 
Railroad  Clocks. — Anon. — CS  2 
Railroad  Crossing,   The. — Hezekiah   Strong. — CS  24 — 

NPS— SR  9— YP 
Railroad  Nursery  Rhyme.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Railroad  Rhyme.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— BNL 

(Rhyme  of  the  Rail— fcr.  aeZs.)- SAE— SE 
Railroad  Train,  The.— Minna  C.  Smith.— ASD 
Railway  Chase,  The.— David  Macrae.— CS  26 


Railway  Gilpin,  The.     (PwncA.)— HPE 

Railway  Matinee,    A. — Rob't    J.    Burdette. — BS  10 — 

CS21 
(Abr.  and  arr.  as  dial,  by  M.  \V.  Morton.) — CDs 
Railway  of  Life,  The.     (PwncA.)— HPE 
Railway  Station,  The. — Archibald  Lampman. — TCV 
Railway  Station  in  the  North  of  England,  A. — W:  An- 
derson.—CS  14 
Railway  Traveler's    Farewell    to     his    Family,    The. 

(Punch.)— HPE 
Raimond  Released.   (The  Vespers  of  Palermo,  Act  V., 

Sc.  3— a6r.)— Felicia  D.  Hemans.— NDP 
Rain. — Anon. — HP 
Rain,  The.— Anon.— HSS  2 
Rain,  The.— Anon.— HSS  3 
Rain,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Rain. — Marg.  Deland. — NV 
Rain. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Rain  and  Storm.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Rain  and  Sunshine. — Phoebe  Cary. — BLF 
Rain  Coach,  The. — -Anon.     See  Raindrops'  Ride,  The. 
Rain  Fairy,  The.— Anon.— HVD 
Rain  in  September. — Mortimer  Collins. — POS 
Rain  in  Summer.     (Summer  Invocation — C.) — W:  C. 

Bennett.— NV 
(Invocation   to   Rain   in   Summer.) — BNL — GN — 

HBP 
Rain  in  Summer.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BNL— GMS— 

SN— WCLG  2 
(SI.  o6r.)— CGd— FP— GN 
Rain  in  the  Garret.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Dream  Life:  Dreams 

of  Boyhood,  I.)— Donald  G.  Mitchell.— OS  2 
Rain  in  the  Heart. — Anon. — HP 
Rain  on    the    Roof. — Coates    Kinney. — BNL — CS  2 — 

GP— HBP— HP— HSS  3— PPSr— SA 
Rain  upon  the  Roof,  The. — Mrs.  F.  B.  Gage.— HP 
Rainbow,  The.— Anon.— CS  7— LLC— SA 
Rainbow,  The. — Anon. — CS  15 
Rainbow,  The.— Anon.— HSS  2 
Rainbow,  The. — Anon.      (Incl.   in  An  April   Day.)  — 

WR9 
Rainbow,  The.— Anon.— YFD 
Rainbow,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Rainbow,  The.— T:  Campbell.— POS  (abr.) 
(To  the  Rainbow— O— FEP— SS 
(SI.  abr.)— EPs— SN 
Rainbow,  The.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Rainbow,  The.     (Anticipation  and  Retrospection — C. 

—abr.)— J:  Keble.— CGd— FP— OS  1 
Rainbow,  The. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Rainbow.     (Pantomime  Charade.) — E.   C.  and  L.  J. 

Rook.— YFE 
Rainbow,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Rainbow,  The. — Jas.  Thomson.     iSee  Seasons,  Th^. 
Rainbow,  The  [or  A].— W:  Wordsworth.- BNL— CGd 

— FEP— GP— LC— OB— YBF 
("My  heart  leaps  up  when  I  behold" — C.) — PGT  1 — 

SN 
Rainbow  and  its  Emblems,  The. — Anon. — DLD 
Rainbow  Drill. — Marguerite  W.  Morton. — ID 
Rainbow  Drill.— C.  H.  Sherman.— WR  17 
Rainbow  Festival,  The. — Anon. — EuE 
Rain-crow,  The. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 
Raindrops,  "The. — Anon. — DST 
Rain-drops. — Anon.     See  Raindrops'  Ride,  The. 
Rain-drops,  The.— Delia  L.  Colton.— CS  24 
Raindrops'  Ride,  The.— Anon.— DS— NPS— YP 
( Rain  Coach ,  The. )— TT 
(Rain-drops — si.  abr.) — SM 
Rain-harp,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Rain-lesson,  The. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — PTS 
Rainy  Day,  A. — Anon. — HP 
Rainy  Day,  A. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Rainy  Day,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BNL— BS  1— 

CR— CS  14— FEP— HDL— NV— SA— SR  6— 

TAV 
Rainy  Day,  The.      (Motion  song.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J. 

Rook.— YFE 
Raise  the  Gates.     (Tab.)— Anon.— COS— NPS— PP— 

YP 
Raising  a  Beard.     (Texas  Siftings.) — CS  32 
Raising  the  Devil.— R:  H.  Barham.— HPE 
Raising  the  Flag  at  Sumter.     (<Se/.  fr.  Address  at   the 

Raising  of  the  Union  Flag  over  Fort  Sumter.) — 

H:W.  Beecher.— SR2 
Raising  the  Wind.— W.  H.  Neall.— CS  33 
Raja  of  India  Sends  a  Chessboard  to  Nushirvan,  The. — 

Firdausi.     See  Shah-Nameh,  The. 
Rajput  Nurse,    A.— Edwin    Arnold.— BS  20— CS  28— 

PFP 
Rale  Convanience,  A.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Raleigh.     Sir  Walter  Scott.     See  Kenilworth. 
Raleigh's  Cell  in  the  Tower.— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— EHT 


272 


TITLE  INDEX 


Recipe 


"Rally  Round  the  Flag."— A.  L.  Stone.— PEO 
Ralph  Coleman's  Reformation. — -H.      E.      McBride. — 

MTD 
Ralph  Waldo  Emerson*  Br.  sel.  Jr.    (Extract  concern- 
ing Emerson.) — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — PEO 
Ralph  Waldo  Emerson. — Mrs.  E.  C.  Kinney. — PEO 
Ramayana,  The,  Sels.  fr. — (Tr.  by)  H.  H.  Milman. 
Death  of  Yajnadatta,  The.— NE 
Descent  of  the  Ganges,  The. — NE 
Ramayana,  The  Story  of  the. — Kate  M.  Rabb. — NE 
Rambling  Rhyme  of  Dorothy,  A. — Arthur  C.  Train. — 

CG2 
Rambo-tree,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Ramon.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— BNL— CRR 
Randall  McDonald.— T.  D.  McGee.— PEB  4 
Randolph  of  Roanoke. — J:  G.  Whittier.— FEP 
Ranger. — Anon. — PC 

Ranger,  The,  Sel.  fr.—J:  G.  Whittier.— SC—SE 
Ranger's  Grave. — Caroline  B.  Southey. — PC 
Rape  of  Lucrece,  The,  Sels.  fr. — T:  Heywood. 

Good-morrow  [Song].     {Fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  6.)— FEP 
— OEL 
(Greeting,  A.)— CEL 
(Greetings  to  my  Love — sel.) — ES 
(Matin  Song.)— OB 
(Pack     Clouds     Away.)— BNL  — ELP  — SN — 

YBF 
("Pack  clouds  away,  and  welcome  day" — sel.) — 

AE— PGT  1 
(Song. )— HBP— LC— TFY 
Song  of  the  Bell.     (Fr.  IV.,  6.)— ELP 
Rape  of  the  Bell,  The.— Augusta  Moore.— CS  33 
Rape  of  the  Lock,  The.— Alex.  Pope.— FEP  (i.an  .  I., 
II.,     IV.,     V.)— HBP— WEP3    (IL,     HI.)— 
WRll  (I.) 
Age  of  Queen  Anne,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Can.   III.) — 

EHT 
Belinda.     (Sel.  fr.  Can.  II.)— BNL 
Toilet,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Can.  II.)— BNL 
Raphael.     (Sel.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— LLC 

("We  shape  ourselves  the  joy  or  fear" — ptly^  same 
sel.)— GG 
Raphael's  Account  of  the  Creation. — J:  Milton.     See 

Paradise  Lost. 
Rapid  Transit.— Edgar  W.  Abbot.— BS  21 

(Poppyland  Limited  Express,  The.J — SR  1 1 
Rapture,  The,  Sel.  fr.—T:  Carew.— WEP  2 
Rare  Moments. — C:  H,  Phelps. — AA 
Rare  Willy  Drowned  in  Yarrow. — Anon. — HBP 
"Rarely,    rarely  comest    thou." — Percy  B.  Shelley. — 
FEP 
(Song.)— HBP 

(Spirit  of  Delight,  The.)— CEL 
Rarest  Pearl,  The.— S.  F.  Fiester.— CS  28 
Raschi  in  Prague.    (Sel.) — Emma  Lazarus. — WR  5 
Rationalistic  Chicken,  The.— Anon.— BS  4— CR 

(First  Problem,  The.)— SR  10 
Ratisbon. — Rob't  Browning. — MR— TMD 
(Boy  of  Ratisbon,  The.)— BLP 
(Incident  of  Ratisbon,  An.) — OS  2 
(Inciffent  of  the  French  Camp,  An — C.)— AVP— 
BNL  —  BS  24  —  CS  15  —  EA  —  EDY  —FEP 
—  GN  —  HB  —  HBP  —  LC  —  PHS  —  SC  — 
VA— VSG— WEP  4 
Rats. — Jane  Loudon. — FTR 
Rats.— J:  Mcintosh. — BeR 
Raven,  The.     (Parody.) — Anon. — DCR 
Raven,  The.     (C.)— S:  T.  Coleridge. 
(Raven  and  the  Oak,  The.)— CGd 
Raven,  The.— Edgar      A.      Poe.— AA— ASL— BNL— 
BS  4  —  CGd  —  CR  —  CS  1  —  FEP  —  FP — 
GN  —  HBP  —  HNS  —  HSS  2—  M  YF  —  PPSr 
— PS— PSR— SE  («eZ8.)— VSG— WRD 
Raven  and  the  Oak,  The.-^ :  T.  Coleridge.   See  Raven, 

The. 
Ravenna  Pine  Forest,  Sel.  fr. — Leigh  Hunt. — AD 
Raven's  Tomb,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Ravenswood  and   Lucy  Ashton. — Walter  Scott.     See 

Bride  of  Lammermoor,  The. 
Ray's  Ride.     (Sel.  fr.  Marion's  Faith,  Ch.  XIV.)— C: 

King.— SC 
Razor  Seller,  The.— J:  Wolcott.— BNL— BS  24— CS  3 

— HPE 
Reaching  the  Early  Train. — Max  Adeler.     See  Out  of 

the  Hurly  Burly. 
Reaction  against  the  Classics,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Read  this.  Boys.— Anon. — SSS 
Read  to  Sleep. — Marg.  J.  Preston.- — CS  2 
Readen  ov  a  Head-stwone.— W :  Barnes. — PGT  2 
Reading. — -Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 
Reading  a  Letter. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — DLD 
Reading  a  Tragedy.— T:  H.  Bayly.— BC 
(Poppy,  The— O— FEP 


Reading  for   the   Thought.     J:   Ruskin.     See   Sesame 

and  Lilies. 
Reading  the  List. — Anon. — AWB 
Reading  the  Will.     (^06.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Reading  the  Will.     (Play.) — Epes  Sargent  [or  W.  B. 
Fowle].— PS 
(Will,  The.)— MPD 
Reading  Works  of  Fiction — A  Debate. — F.  Crosbv. — 

PD 
Ready.— Phoebe  Gary.- AWB— BAB— PAP 
Ready,  Ay,  Ready. — Herman  C.  Merivale. — VA 
Ready  for  a  Kiss.     (Christian  Weekly,  The.) — BS  5 — 

DLS  (abr.) 
Ready  for  Duty. — Anna  B.  Warner. — AD — PHS 
(Brave  Little  Flower,  The.)— PPSr 
(Daffy-down-dilly.)— PoR 
Real  Elocution.     (Diai.)— Anon.— PP— YFR 
Real  Gentleman,  'The. — Anon. — KNE 
Real  Power.— Anon.— PEO 

Real  Santa  Claus,  A. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Realism. — Arthur  C.  Benson. — VA 
Realism  of  Dickens,  The. — W:  A.  Lathrop. — NC 
Reality. — Martha  G.  Dickinson. — AA 
Reality  of  Literary  Property. — T:  N.  Talfourd.— SS 
Realization. — -Rob't  J.  Burdette. — -SYS 
Realm  of  Fancy,  The.— J :  Keats.— PGT  1 
(Fancy— C.)— BNL— FEP— HBP— OB 
Realm  of  Love,  The.— G.  T.  Bispham,  Jr.— CG  3 
Reaper,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.— PGT  1 — PHS— YBF 
(TSolitarv  Reaper,  The— C.)— BFV— BPB— FEP— 

GN— HBP— HSS  3— OB— WEP  4 
Reaper  and  the  Flowers,  The. — H:  W.  LongfelKjw. — 

BNL— LC— LLC— PC— SSS— TAS— WCLI  2 
Reaper  of  Life's  Harvest. — Anon. — GP 

(Ho,  Reapers  of  Life's  Harvest!) — HSS  3 
Rear  Guard,  The.— Irene  F.  Brown.— EDY 
Reason,  The.— Anon.— WR  20 
Reason  and    Instinct. — Alex.    Pope.     See    Essay    on 

Man,  An. 
Reason  off  Duty. — E.  S.  Loomis.— WR  18 
Reason  Why,  The.— Anon.— CS  20 
Reason  Why,  The.— Anon.— CS  26 
Reason  Why,  The.— Anon.— EDY 
Reason  Why,  The. — Anon. — FTA-^ 
Reason  Why,  The.— Anon.— KNS 
Reason  Why,  The.— Anon.— NPS—YP 
Reason  Why,  The. — Mary  E.   Bradley.^DS — NPS — 

WR  15— YA— YP 
Reason  Why,  The.— G:  Cooper.— YBT 
Reason  Why,  The.— J.  P.  Prickett.— WR  10 
Reason  Why,  The.— Katharine  H.  Terry.— CS  29 
Reasonable  Doubt,  A. — E:  Bushnell. — BS  26 
Reasonable  Man,  A. —  (Tr.  by)  Lucy  H.  Macqueen. — 

WR26 
Reasons  for  Drinking. — H:  Aldrich. — THP 

(Why  Drink  Wine? — diff.  vers.) — HP 
Reasons  for    Humility. — Jas.    Beattie.     See   Minstrel, 

The. 
Reasons  Why.— T.  Sheppard.— PS 
Reawakening. — Carl  Spencer. — -WR  10 
Rebecca's  After-thought. — Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 
Rebecca's  Hymn. — -Walter  Scott.     See  Ivanhoe. 
Rebecca's  Revenge.— Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Rebekah.— M.  E.  H.  Everett.— CG  3 
Rebellion,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Rebellion. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Rebels  of  Boston  Before  the  Revolution,  The,  Sel.  fr. 

(Supposed  Speech  of  James  Otis.) — -Lydia  M 

Child.— OS  2— SC— SS 
(Freedom  must  Triumph.) — SR  8 
(Speech  against  the  Stamp  Act — abr.) — BS  15 
Rebuff,  A.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Recalled.— Marg.  J.  Preston. — BS  21 
Recalled  to  Life.     (New  Alcestis,  A — C.) — Bryan  W. 

Procter.— VSG 
Receipt  for  a  Racket,  A.— M.  E.  B.— PR— WR  12— 

YA 
Receipt  for  Hash. — H:  W.  Shaw.— BS  22 
Receipt  for  Salad,  A.— Sydney  Smith.     See  Recipe  for 

Salad,  A. 
Receiving  and  Giving.— Anon. — YBT 
Receiving  Calls. — Almedia  Brown. — BS  12 
Reception,  The. — Ellen  Pickering. — DDD 
Recess  Speeches. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
Recessional. — Rudyard     Kipling. — BS  25 — CR — EDY 

—  FEP  —  GMS  —  GN  —  HBR  —  HDL— OB— 

YBF 
Recessional.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts. — TCV 
Recipe  for  a  Modern  Bonnet. — Anon. — HPE 
Recipe  for  a  Modern  Novel. — Anon. — CS  17 
Recipe  for  a  Poem.     (New  York  Evening  Post.) — HP 
Recipe  for  a  Salad,  A. — Sydney  Smith.     See  Recipe 

for  Salad,  A. 


273 


Recipe 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Recipe  for  an  Appetite. — Alice  Gary. — ^BLF 

Recipe  for  Potato  Pudding.  —  Frances  M.  Whitcher. 

See  Widow  Bedott  Papers,  The. 
Recipe  for  Salad,  A. — Sydney  Smith. — BNL 
(Receipt  for  Salad,  A.)— HBP 
(Recipe  for  a  Salad,  A.)— FEP 
(Salad.)— HPE    * 
Reciprocity. — Anon. — WR  2 
Recitation,  Sel.  /r.— W:  E.  (?)Channing.— AE 
Recitation:     "I  love  my  papa,  that  I  do." — Mrs.  Rus- 
sell Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Recitation:     "It's  verj'  hard,  kind  friends,  for  me." — 

Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Recitation:     "Much  has  been  said  by  poets  wise." — 

Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Receitation  for  a  Boy. — Mrs.    Russell   Kavanaugh. — 

KG 
Recitation  for  a  Boy  Three  Years  Old. —  Mrs.   Russell 

Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Recitation  for    a    Dozen    Little    Girls. — Mrs.    Russell 

Kavanaugh. — KG 
Recitation  for  a   Little  Ghild. — Mrs.   Russell   Kavan- 
augh.—KG 
Recitation  for  a  Small  Boy. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KJ 
Recitation  for  a  Very  Little  Girl. — Annie  Ghase. —  KG 

(Spring.}— TT 
Recitation  for  a  Very  Small  Girl. — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 
anaugh.— KJ 
Recitation  for  any  Number  of  Small  Ghildren. — Mrs. 

Russell  Kavanaugh.- — KG 
Recitation  for  Six  Very  Little  Girls. — Annie  Ghase. — 

DLD 
Recitation  for  Three  Little   Girls. — Mrs.   J.   Morrison 
[or  Garter].— LPS— PP 
(Nursery  Song.)— NV— PC— PHS 
(What  the  Mother  Heard.)— PPSr 
Recitations  from  the  Bible.    (Psalm  XXIIl.)    Bible. — 
FTT 
(Twenty-third  Psalm,  The.)— EA— PS 
Recitations  in  Goncert. — Anon. — PS 
Reckermemper  der  Poor. — Anon. — DRR 
Reckoning  with  the   Old   Year. — Mrs.  Mary   E.   Fox- 
well.— BS  8 
Reclaimed;  or,  Sunshine  Comes  at  Last. — H.  E.  Mc- 

Bride.— CS  31 
Reclaimed  Brother;  or,    the   Chain    of   Roses,   The. — 

H.  E.  McBride.— SDD 
Reclaimed  Father,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— MHD 
Recluse,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Outline— seZ.  fr.  1st  Bk.,  con- 
clusion.)— W:  Wordsworth. — EPs 
Recluse  Hermit,  The. — J:  Donne.     aScc  Ecologue,  Dec. 
26,    1613.       Allophanes   finding   Idios    in    the 
Country,  etc. 
Recognition,  A  .    (Fr.  Sonnets  to  George  Sand.) — Eliz. 

B.  Browning. — BNL 
Recognition. — J:  W.  Chadwick. — A  A 
Recognition,  The.— W:  Sawyer.— THP 
Recollection. — Anne  R.  Aldrich.^AA 
Recollection. — Amelia  W.  Carpenter. — AA 
Recollection,  A.— H.  M.  Nickerson. — TCV 
Recollection,  The.  (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— BPB  (si. 
abr.)—FGT  1— POS  (se?.)- SN 
(To  Jane — the  Recollection— «Z.  abr.) — WEP  4 
Recollection,  the  Strongest  Influence.— Anon. — GP 
Recollections  of  a  Gifted  Woman,  Br.  sel.  Jr. — Nathan- 
iel Hawthorne. — AE 
Recollections  of  Childhood. — G:      Lamb.     <See     Rosa- 
mund Gray. 
Recollections  of  iny  Christmas  Tree.     (Christmas  Tree, 
A — C. — in  Reprinted  Pieces.) — C:  Dickens. — 
GS  8— LLC— SAE 
Recollections  of  the    Portrait    of    King   Henry   VIII., 
Trinity  Lodge,  Cambridge.     (C.)— W:  Words- 
worth. 
(King  Henry  the  Eighth.)— EHT 
Recompense,  The. — Anon. — FLS 
Recompense,  The. — C.  H.  Dorrie. — PAPm 
Reconcilement,  The. — J:  Sheffield. — OB 
Reconciliation,  The. — Louisa   M.  Alcott.     See    Little 

Women. 
Reconciliation. — W:  Pitt,  Lord  Chatham.     See    First 

Step  to  Reconciliation  with  America,  The. 
Reconciliation. — C.  A.  Mason. — AA 
Reconciliation,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Princess, 

The. 
Reconsidered  Verdict,  The.     Gilbert  Venables. — HBR 
Reconstructed  Man,  A. — Anon. — MAD 
Record  of  a  Life,  The.— H:  D.  Gray.— CG  2 
Record  of  the  Hours,  The. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Recrimination. — Ella  W.  Wilcox. — AA 
Recruit,    The.— Rob't    W.    Chambers.— AA— THP— 
WR26 


Re-cured  Lover  Exulteth  in  his  Freedom,  The. — Sir  T: 

Wyatt.— FEP 
Red  and  the  Blue,  The,— H.  A,  Roby.— PAPm 
Red  and  White  Roses.— T:  CaFew.— ES 
Red  Bird,  The.— W:  H.  Hayne.— DES 
Red  Cross  Knight  and  Una,  The. — Edmund  Spenser. 

See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
Red  Fisherman ;  or.  The  Devil's  Decoy,  The. — Winthrop 

M.  Praed.— BPB— ESs 
Red   Harlaw,    The. — Walter    Scott.      See    Antiquary, 

The. 
Red    Herrings.      (Fr.   The    Poetical     Cookery-book.) 

(Punch.)— HFE 
Red  Jacket,  The.— G:  M.  Baker.— BS  2— GS  11— DS— 

FR  (si.  abr.)- NPS— YP 
(Fireman,  The.)— SA 
Red  Jacket.     (C.) — Fitz-Greene  Halleck. — AA 

(To  a  Portrait  of  Red  Jacket— cond. )—WR  10 
Red  King,  The.— G:  Kingsley.— EHT 
Red  King's  Warning,  The. — Anon. — PS 
Red  Poppies  in  the  Sabine  Valleys  near  Rome.  —  W : 

Sharp.     See  Sospiri  di  Roma. 
Red,  Rea  Rose,  A.— Rob't  Burns.— BIL— BPB— FEP 

— FTA— HBP— LC  —  MBL  —  OB  —  WEP  3— 

YBF 
("O,  my  luve's  like  a  red,  red  rose.") — BNL — EPs — 

— GP— PGT  1 
Red  Riding  Hood.— J:  G.  Whittier.— GMS 
Red  Riding  Hood  Drill.— Anon.— WDM 
Red  River  Voyageur,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— FEP— 

PHS 
Red  Sandwort. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Red,  the  White,  the  Blue,  The.— Kate  B.  Sherwood.— 

PEO 
Red  Thread  of  Honour,  The.— Sir  Fs.  H.  Doyle.— LH 

(SI.  abr.)- PGT  2— PSR 
Red  Thread  of  Honour,  The.— J.  A.  Noble.— PEB  4 

(Same  subject  as  foregoing.) 
Red,  White  and  Blue,  The.— Anon.— TT 
Red,  White  and  Blue,  The.— D:   T.    Shaw  (also  at.  to 

Timothy  Dwight).— WCI>I  2 
(Columbia,  the  Gem  of  the  Ocean.) — GP  (si.  abr.) — 

LLC— PAPm  (si.  diff.  vers.) 
(Columbia,  the  Lana  of  the  Brave.) — BLP 
Redbreast  Chasing  the  Butterfly,  The. — W:  Words- 

worth.— GGd— LC 
Red-top  and  Timothy. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Reductio  ad  Absurdum. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Reductio  ad  Absurdum. — A.  B.  Simonds. — CG  1 
Reduction    of    Harfleur,  The. — W:   Shakespeare.     See 

King  Henry  V. 
Redwing's  Song. — S.  J.  Douglass. — TFS 
Reed,  The.— H:  B.  Carpenter.— AA 
Reed-player,  The.- — Duncan  C.  Scott. — VA 
Reeds  of  Innocence.     (In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W: 

Blake.— OB 
("  And  I  made  a  rural  pen  " — br.  sel.) — PoR 
(Child  and  the  Piper,  The.)— GGd- LC 
(Introduction  [to  Songs  of  Innocence] — C.) — FEP 

—HBP— WEP  3 
(Piper,  The.)— BNL— GEL— WCL 
(Piping  down  the  Valleys  Wild.) — PoR 
"Reflected  in  the  lake  I  love." Townshend. — 

GG 
Reflections.— G:  Grabbe. — FP 
(Late  Wis  'om — sel.) — OB 
Reflections  in  the  Pillory. — C:  Lamb.— FTR 
Reflections  in  [ivr.  on]  Westminster  Abbey. — Jos.  Addi- 
son. ■  See  Spectator,  The. 
Reflections  Looking  over  a  Gate  at  a  Pool  in  a  Field. 

(C.) — Jean  Ingelow. 
(Maiden  with  a  Milking-pail,  A.) — BNL 
Reflections  of  a  Proud  Pedestrian.— Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

—HPE 
Reflections  of  Sir  Walter  Scott.     (Fr.  Diary  for  Dec. 

18,  1825.)— Walter  Scott.— LLC 
Reflections  on  Cleopathera's  Needle. — Cormac  O'Leary. 

— AWH— THP 
(Paddy's  Reflections  on  Cleopathera's  [or  Cleopat- 
ra's] Needle.)— GH— PS 
Reflections  on  the  French  Revolution,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Apos- 
trophe  to   the   Queen    of   France.) — Edmund 

Burke.— PS 
(Marie    Antoinette    [,  Queen     of    France].) — OS  3 

(abr.)- SS— VSG  ^^    ^ 

(Queen  ot  France  and  the  Spirit  of  Chivalry,  The.) 

— TMD 
Reflections  on  Westminster  Abbey. — Jos.  Addison.  See 

Spectator,  The. 
Reflections  on  Westminster  Abbey. —  Washmgton  Ir- 
ving.    See  Westminister  Abbey. 
Reflective  Retrospect,  A.— J:  G.  Saxe.— FEP 


274 


TITLE  INDEX 


Beliques 


Reform  Bill,  The.     (Sel.  jr.  A  Speech  Delivered  in  the 

House  of  Commons  on  the  2nd  of  March,  1831.) 

— T:  B.  Macaulay.— CR 
(Reform  that  you  may  Preserve — sel.) — SS 
Reform  Bill  a  Second  Bill  of  Rights,  The.     {Sel.  jr.  A 

Speech  Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on 

the  5th  of  July,  1831.)— T:  B.  Macaulay.— SS 
Reform  in  Parliament. — Lord  Grey.     See  Necessity  of 

Reform  in  Parliament. 
Reform  Irresistible.     {Sel.  fr.  A  Speech  Delivered  in 

the  House  of  Commons  on  the  16th  of  Decem- 

per,  1831.)— T:  B.  Macaulay.— SS 
Reform  that  you  may  Preserve.— T:  B.  Macaulay.  See 

Reform  Bill,  The. 
Reform  will  Go  on.  The.— Anon.— CS  9 
Reformation.— H.  B.  Niles.— SDD 
Reformation  of  the  Knave  of  Hearts.     {Fr.  Nos.  11 

and  12  of  the  Microcosm.) — G:  Canning. — ESs 
Reformed  Man's  Lament,  A. — Anna  Linden. — CS  17 
Reformed  Mormon  Tippler,  The. — H.  E.  McBride. — 

DDD 
Reformer,  A.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Reformer,  The.— Horace  Greeley.— LLC— TMR  {al.  abr.) 
Reformer,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BNL 
Refuge  of  the  Ideal,  The.— Hannah  P.  Kimball.— TAS 
Refugees,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Louis  XIV.  and  his  Minister— 

Ch.  XIX.,  cond.  and  arr.  as  dial.) — A.  Conan 

Doyle.— NDP 
Regard  for  the  Negro  Race. — H :  W.  Grady.    <See  At  the 

Boston  Banquet. 
Regency  Resolutions,  Dec.  31,  1810,  Sel.  fr.     (Defence 

of  Pitt.)— G:  Canning.— SS 
Regeneration,  Sel.   fr.     (Invocation,  An.) — Walter  S. 

Landor. — VA 
Regiment  Song. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — PAPm 
Regiment's  Return,  The.— E.  J.  Cutler.— CS  18— MMR 
Regina  Coeli. — Coventry  Patmore. — VA 
"Reg'lar  Army  Man,  The." — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Regret.— Jean  Ingelow.— BS  5— CS  14— HDL  {sel.) 
Regret. — R:  Le  Gallienne. — VA 
Regrets. — Anon. — FLS 

(If  We  had  but  Known.)— CS  6 
Regrets. — J.  Ashby-Sterry. — VS 
Regrets      of      Drunkenness.- — W:     Shake.speare.     See 

Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. 
Regulus.— Emily  A.  Braddock.— WR  9 
Regulus.— T.  Dale.— CS  11— DS 
Regulus   before   the   Roman   Senate. — Epes   Sargent. 

<Sce  Regulus  to  the  Roman  Senate. 
Regulus  to  the  Carthaginians. -^Elijah  Kellogg. — CS  11 

— DS— CM- PPS 
{Abr. — but  speech  comp.) — BS  13 — PS 
(Curse  of  Regulus,  The~diff.  ■yer«.)— CS  2— KNE 

(Supposed  Speech  of  Regulus.)— NPS—YP 
(Return  of  Regulus,  The — abr.  fr.  CS  11 — speech 

abr.)— TUB 
Regulus  to  the  Roman  Senate.^Epes  Sargent. — CS  3 

— LLC— PS— SS 
(Regulus  before  the  Roman  Senate — abr.) — BLP 
Rehearsal,  The.     {Dial.)— Anoa.—FNB 
Rehearsal,  The.— {Dial.)     Ella  H.  Clement.— YFD 
Rehearsal,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— SD 
Reign  of  Christ  on  Earth,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — 

HBP 
(Psalm  LXXII.)— FEP 
Reign  of  May,  The.     (C.)— Jas.  G.  Percival.— FEP 

(May.)— BNL— HBP 
Reign  of  Napoleon,  The.     (The  History  of  the  Restora- 
tion of  Monarchy  in   France,  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  I. — 

abr.) — Alphonse  de  Lamartine. — TMD 
Reign  of  Peace,  The. — Eliza  Thornton.- BLP 
Reincarnation. — D:  B.  Sickels.— AA 
Reinforcement.' — Anon.- — TS 
Rejected.     {Dial.) — Anon.- — MAD 
Rejected. — Anon. — TL 
Rejected  National  Hymns,  The.     (Poems  Received  in 

Response  to  an  Advertised  Call  for  a  National 

Anthem.) — Rob't  H.  Newell. 

I.  ByH yW.  L-ngf w.— THP 

II.  By  J-hnGr--nl--f  Wh--t--r.— THP 

III.  By  Dr.  Ol-v-r  W  -  nd  —  1  H  -  Imes.— THP 
(National  Anthem  by  Dr.  Oliver  Wendell  H — • — .) 

—BNL 

IV.  By  R-lph  W-ldo  Em-r-  -n.— THP 

V.  by  W-ll--m  C-U-n  B-y-nt.— THP 
(National  Anthem  by  William  Cullen  B .) — 

BNL 
•       VI.     By  N.  P.  W-ll-s.— THP 

(National  Anthem  by  N.  P.  W .)— BNL 

VII.     By  Th-m-s  B-il-y  Aid-  -ch.— THP 

(National  Anthem  by  Thomas  Bailey  A .) — 

BNL 
National  Anthem  by  Gen.  George  P.  M . — BNL 


Rejection   of   the   Reform   Bill.     {Sel.   fr.   Speech   at 
Taunton  in  1831  on  the  Reform  Bill  not  Being 
Passed.)— Sydney  Smith.— SS 
Rejoicing  [Rejoicings — C]  upon  the  New  Year's  Com- 
ing of  Age.     (Cond.)— C:  Lamb.— HS—WR  26 
Relapse.— C:  Kellogg  Field.— CG  2 
Relapse,  The.— T:  Stanley.— OB 
Relations  of  Booksellers  and  Authors,  The.     (A  Tale  of 

a  Tub,  Sec.  X.) — Jonathan  Swift. — ESs 
Released  [—  January,   1878— C.]— J:   B.   O'Reilly.— 

EDY 
Released.— Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— TAS 
Relenting   Mob,  A.  —  Victor   Hugo     {tr.  by  Lucv  H. 
Hooper).— BS  18— PFP 
(Civil  War  [an  Episode  of  the  Commune].) — CS  32 
— DR  {si.  abr.) 
Relentless  Time. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Coplas   de 

Manrique. 
Relentless  Tyrant,  A. — Anon. — KNS 
Reliance  on  God.     {Casket.) — FP 
Relics.— Annie  D.  Ware.— CS  16 
Relics.— W:  Winter.— FTA 

Relief  for  Starving  Ireland,  1847. — S.  S.  Prentiss. — 
PS 
(Appeal  in  Behalf  of   Ireland — si.  longer  and  vtlv 
dt^.)- FTR— HNS 
(In  Behalf  of  Starving  Ireland — sel.) — OM 
(Sending  Relief  to  Ireland.) — SS 
Relief  of  Lucknow,  The — Anon.     {Ad.) — NC 
Relief  of  Lucknow,  The.— Rob't  T.  S.  Lowell.— BNL— 
BS  1  —  CS  11  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HB  —  HBP— 
LLC  —  MMR  —  OM  —  OS  2  —  SA  —  SO  — 
TMR 
Relief  of  Orleans. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry 

VI.,  Pt.  I. 
Religio    Laici,     Sel.    fr.    (Tradition.) — J:    Dryden. — 

WEP2 
Religion  and  Doctrine.     (C.) — J:  Hay. — CS  13 

(Blind  Man's  Testimony,  The.)— BS  18 
Religion  Independent  of  Government.     {Sel.   fr.   The 
Catholic  Question ,  May  31, 1811.  >— H :  Grattan . 
— SS 
Religion  of  Hudibras,  The. — S:  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Religion  of  Revolutionary  Men. — Alphonse  de  Lamar- 
tine.— SS 
Religious  Character  of  President  Lincoln,  The.     {Fr. 
the  funeral  address,  April  19th,  1866.) — Rev. 
P.  D.  Gurley.— PEO— WRD 
Religious  Meditation.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Religious  Persecution. — Anon.     See  Folly  of  Religious 

Persecution. 
Reliques  of  Ancient  English  Poetry,  Sels.  fr. — {Edited 
by)  T:  Percy.     See: 
Adam  Bel,  Clym  of  the  Clough,  and   William  of 

Cloudesle. 
As  ye  Came  from  the  Holy  Land. 
Babes  in  the  Wood,  The. 
Baffled  Knight,  The;  or.  Lady's  Policy. 
Bailiff's  Daughter  of  Islington,  The. 
Ballad  of  Chevy-Chase,  The. 
Barbara  Allen's  Cruelty. 
Battle  of  Otterburn,  The. 

Blind  Beggar's  Daughter  of  Bednall-Greene,  The. 
Bonny  Earl  of  Murray,  The. 
Brave  Lord  Willoughby. 
Child  of  Elle,  The. 
Child  Waters. 
Edom  o'  Gordon. 
Edward,  Edward. 
Fair  Margaret  and  Sweet  William. 
Fairy  Queen,  The. 
Fiodden  Field. 
Friar  of  Orders  Gray. 
Frolicksome    Duke,    The;    or,  The  Tinker's   Good 

Fortune. 
Gil  Morrice. 
Glasgerion. 
Heir  of  Linne,  The. 
Jew's  Daughter,  The. 
King  Arthur's  Death. 
King  Cophetua  and  the  Beggar  maid. 
King  Jotn  and  the  Abbot  of  Canterbury. 
King  Leir  and  his  Three  Daughters. 
Lady  Anne  Bothwell's  Lament. 
Lady  Turned  Serving-man,  The. 
Leoffricus. 

Ivittle  Musgrave  and  Lady  Barnard. 
Lord  Thomas  and  Fair  Annet. 
Lord  Thomas  and  Fair  Ellinor. 
Mary  Ambree. 
Nut-brown  Maid,  The. 
O  Nanny,  Wilt  thou  Gang  wi'  Me? 


275 


Beliques 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Reliques  of  Ancient  English  Poetry  (continued). 
Old  and  Young  Courtier,  The. 
Old  Robin  of  Portingale. 
Robin  Good-fellow. 
Robin  Hood  and  Guy  of  Gisborne. 
Sir  Andrew  Barto*. 
Sir  I^ncelot  du  Lake. 
Sir  Patrick  Spens. 
Spanish  Lady's  Love,  The. 
Sweet  William's  Ghost. 
Take  thy  Old  Cloak  about  Thee. 
Truth's  Integrity  (Love  will  Find  out  the  Way). 
Waly.  Waly,  Love  be  Bonny. 
Wandering  Jew,  The. 
Winifreda. 
Young  Waters. 
Relish  of  Fair  Prospect. — W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Remain!      (Poems     and    Epigrams,     L  "> — Walter    S 
Landor. — OB 
(Appeal,  The.)— VA 
Remarkable  Case,  A. — -Anon. — WR  12 
Remarkable  Experience.  A. — Anon. — GH 
Remarkable  Honeymoon    Trip,   A. — Laurence   Lee. — 

WR26 
Remarkable  Instance  of  Presence  of  Mind. — Anon. — 

CS9 
Remarkable  Longevity. — Anon. — DS — -YA 
Remarks  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Cemetery 
at     Gettysburg,     Nov.     19,     186.3. — Abraham 
Lincoln.     See  Address  at  the  Dedication  of  the 
Cemetery  at  Gettysburg. 
Remarks  on  the  Character  and  Writings  of  John  Milton, 
Sel.  fr.  (Defense  of  Poetry.) — W:  E.  Channing. 
— SE 
Remarks  on  the  Political  Course  of  Mr.  Calhoun  in 
1838,  SeU.  /r.— Dan'I  Webster. 
On  Sudden  Political  Conversions.     (Br.  sel.) — SS 
Platform  of  the  Constitution ,  The. — SS 

(Against    Secession  —ntly.  fr.  The    Constitution 
and  the  Union . )— SSD 
Remedy  as  Bad  as  the  Disease,  The. — Anon. — HR 
Remedy  Worse  than  the  Disease,  The. — Matthew  Prior. 

— THP 
Remember. — Anon. — TFS 
Remember. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — OB — VA 
Remember,  Boys  Make  Men. — Mary  E.  Tucker. — NPS 

— SSS— YP 
Remember  now  thy  Creator.     (Ecclssiastes,  Ch.  XII.) 

Bible.~BB  4— LLC  (1-7.) 
Remember  or  Forget. — Hamilton  Ai'd^. — VA — VS  — 

YBF 
Remember  the  Maine. —  Rob't  B.  Wilson. — CS  37  — 

PAPm 
Remembered. — J.  L.  Gordon. — PAPm 
Remembrance. — J:  H.  Boner. — AA 
Remembrace.— Emily  Bronte.  —  AVP  —  HBP  —  OB 

— PYO  (s/.  obr. )—WEP  4 
Remembrance,  A. — Willis  G.  Clarke. — AA 
Remembrance.     {Sel.  fr.  Music  and  Morals,  Bk.  I.,  Ch. 

VIU.)— H.  R.  Haweis.— LLC 
Remembrance. — G.  P.  Lathrop. — AA 
Remembrance. — Jas.  G.  Percival.     See  Retrospection. 
Remembrance,  A. — J.  C.  Shairp. — AVP 
Remembrance.     (C.) — Percy  B.  Shelley. 

(Lament,  A.)— HBP 
Remembrance. — Rob't  Southey. — FP 
Remembrance  of  God. — W:  H.  Furness. — TAS 
Reminding  the  Hen. — Bessie  Chandler.— DLS—HSS  2 

— WR15 
Reminiscence,  A. — Anon. — FAS 
Reminiscence. — Anon. — FLS 
Renainiscence. — T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 
Reminiscence,  A. — J:  F.  Clarke. — OH 
Reminiscence  of   Exhibition   Day,   A. — Rob't  J.  Bur- 

dette.— BS  10 
Reminiscence  of   Lexington,   A.— Theodore  Parker. — 

OM— PPS 
Reminiscences  of  a  Sentimentalist. — T:  Hood. — HPE 
(Epicurean  Reminiscences  of  a  Sentimentalist — C.) 
— FEP 
Remonstrance,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Last  Remonstrance — 

wording  chad.) — Rob't,  Lord  Lytton. — FLS 
Remonstrance  with  the  Snails. — Anon. — BNL 
Remorse.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Remorse,  Sel.  fr.     (Song:  "Hear,  sweet  spirit" — fr.  Act 

III.,  Sc.  I.)— S:  T.  Coleridge.— HBP 
Remorse. — W:  Shakespeare.  See  Macbeth. 
Remorse  (Stanza,  April,  184-. — C). — Percy  B.  Shelley. 

—OB 
Remorse  and  Retribution.    {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Remorse   of    King   Claudius. — W:   Shakespeare.     See 
Hamlet. 


Remorseful  Cakes,  The. — Eugene  Field. — TFS 

Removal,  The.  (I'erse  vers,  of  follovina.) — Anon. — 
CS21— SCS 

Removal,  The.     {Dial.) — Sydney  Hamilton. — MD 

Renouncement. — Alice  Meynell. — FLS —  OB  —  VA  — 
YBF 

Renowned  Wouter  Van  Twiller,  The. — Washington 
Irving.  See  Knickerbocker  History  ot  New 
York,  The. 

Rent-day,  The.— (Tab.)- Tony  Denier.— TDT 

Renunciants. — E:  Dowden.— VA 

Renunciation,  A.  (A  Book  of  Airs,  XII., — C.) — T: 
Campion.— PGT  1 

Renunciation,  A.     (Surrender,  The — C.) — H:  King. — 
OB  {si.  abr.) 
(Surrender— seZ. )— YBF 

Renunciation,  A. — E:  Vere,  Earl  of  Oxford. — BNL — 
FEP 

Renyi.— Helen  Booth.— CS  27 

Reopening  of  the  Drury  Lane  Theatre  (Address  Spoken 
at  the  Opening  of  Drury  Lane  Theatre — C.) — 
Lord  Byron.— ED Y 

Reparation. — Anon. — WR  24 

Repartee.— Ben  W.  Davis.— CS  24 

Repartee. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 

Repartee.-^.  A.  York.— CG  1 

Repeal  Claimed  by  Americans  as  a  Right.  {Fr.  a  speech 
of  Jan.  20,  1775,)— W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. 
— PS— SS 

Repeal  of.  the  Stamp  Act,  The. — Jonathan  Mayhew. — 
MRS 

Repeal  of  the  Union.  —  Dan'I  O'Connell.  —  CR  — 
PPS  {cond.) 

Repeal  of  the  Union,  The,  Sel.  fr.—R:  L.  Shiel.— PS— SS 
(Irish  Agitators  1834.)— OM 

Repentance. — Anon. — WR  4 

Repentance. — Anon. — WR  15 

Repentir  de  Noel. — Sarah  Bernhardt. — WR  7 
(Christmas  Repentance,  A — tr. ) — WR  7 

Reply,  Sel.  fr.  (Early  Death.) — Hartley  Coleridge. — 
OB 

Reply,  The.— J:  Norris.— HBP 

Reply  of  Achilles  to  the  Envoys  of  Agamemnon,  Soli- 
citing a  Reconciliation. — Homer.  See  Iliad. 
The. 

Reply  of  Mr.  Pitt  [to  Sir  Robert  Walpole].— W:  Pitt. 
Earl  of  Chatham.  See  Reply  of  Pitt  to  Wal- 
pole. 

Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole.— W:  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. 
— CS4 
(Answer  of  Pitt  to  Walpole,  The.)— OS  3 
(Pitt's  Reply  to  Walpole.)— FTR— HNS 
(Reply  of  Mr.  Pitt.)— KNE 

(Reply  of  Mr.  Pitt  to  Sir  Robert  Walpole— cond. ) 
— TMD 

(Reply  to  Sir  Robert    Walpole,    1741.)— PS— 
— SS 
(Reply  to  Walpole.)— LLC 

Reply  to  "A  Woman's  Question." — Nettie  H.  (7)  Pel- 
ham.— CS  13 

Reply  to  Address  Presenting  Colors  of  France  to  the 
United  States,  sel.  fr.  (France  and  the  United 
States.)— G:  Washington.— SS 

Reply  to  iEschines.  —  Demosthenes.  See  Oration  on 
the  Crown,  The. 

Reply  to  Essays  and  Reviews,  Sel.  fr. — Anon. — GG 

Reply  to  Flood.     (Philippic  against  Flood — C.) — H: 
Grattan.— PPS 
(Reply  to  Mr.  Flood— con'i.)— KNE— OM— PS— SS 
(Invective  against  Mr.  Flood — cond.) — CS  4 

Reply  to  Grafton. — Edward,  Lord  Thurlow.  See  Re- 
ply to  the  Duke  of  Grafton. 

Reply  to  Hayne,  The  (Second  Speech  on  Foot's  Reso- 
lution), Sels.  fr. — Dan'I  Webster. 
Liberty  and  Union  [,  One  and  Inseparable]. — BS  2 

—  CS  1  —  FD  1  —  FTR  —  KNE  —  LLC 

—  OS  3  —  PPS  —  PS  —  SC  —  SM  —  SO  — 
SPE    {ptly.  dt#.)—SR  8  —SS  —  TMR  (oftr.) 

—  WCLG  1  (vtly.  diff.) 

(Peroration  of  Webster's  Reply  to  Hayne — abr.) 
— SE 
Massachusetts  and  South  Carolina. — FTR — SPE 
(Massachusetts^abr.) — OS  2 
(South     Carolina     and     Massachusetts.) — CR — 
FD  1— MRS— OM— PS—  SO  —  SS  —  TMD  — 
WCLG  1 
(Tribute  to  Massachusetts — abr.) — SE 
Reply  to  Hayne.— BS  8  (se/.)- PPS 

(Alatches  and  Overmatches— 8e/.)—FD  1— FTR 
— SS 
Reply  to  Hayne. — IR 

(Liberty  and  Union.) — SO 
Reply  to  John  Randolph.     {W .  add.)—H:  Clay.— PS 


276 


TITLE  INDEX 


Rest 


Reply  to  "Lines  Found  in  the  Hand  of  the  Statue  of 
Night    at    Florence"    by    Giovanni    Strozzi. — 
Michael  Angelo. — OS2 
R?ply  to  Lord  North,  1774.— Isaac  Barr^.— OM— SS 
R^ply  to   Macaulay's    "Reform    Irresistible." — J:    W. 

Croker.— SS 
Reply  to  Marlowe  (C),  A.— Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— EP 
(Her  Reply.)— OB 
(Milk-maid's  Mother's  Answer.) — FEP  (w.  add.  st.) 

—HBP 
(Nymph's  Reply  [to  the  Passionate  Shepherd],  The.) 

— BNL— C5P— PHS 
(Reply  to  Marlowe's  The  Passionate  Shepherd  to 

his  Love.)— WEP  1 
(Shepherdess's  Reply,  The.)— CEL  (w.  add.  st.) 
Reply  to  Marlowe's    The    Passionate  Shepherd  to  his 

Love. — Sir  Walter  Raleigh.     See  foregoing. 
Reply  to  Mr.  Corry.     (Invective  against  Corry — abr.) — 
H:  Grattan.— BS3  — CR— CSS— FTR— LLC 

gQ 

{SI.  a6r.)— OM— SE 
(Invective  against  Mr.  Corry.) — KNE — SS 
Reply  to  Mr.  Flood. — H :  Grattan.     See  Reply  to  Flood. 
Reply  to  Mr.  Webster,   Jan.,  1830.— Rob't  Y.  Hayne. 

See  On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution. 
Reply  to  Mr.  Wickham  in  Burr's  Trial.— W:  Wirt- SS 
Reply  to  Sir  Robert  Walpole.      1741.— W:  Pitt,  Earl  of 

Chatham.     See  Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole. 
Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton. — E:,  Lord  Thurlow. — 

— KNE— OM— PS— SS 
(Lord  Thurlow's  Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton.) — 

VSG 
(Reply  to  Grafton.)— ULC 
Reply  to  "The  Welcome."— W.  F.  Fox.— CS  10 
Reply  to  Threats  of  Violence.     (Sel.  fr.  Stamp  Officers' 

Salaries.    1790.)— J:  P.  Curran.— PS— SS 
Reply  to  Walpole.— W:   Pitt,   Earl  of  Chatham.     See 

Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole. 
Reply  to   Webster. — Rob't   Y.  Hayne.      See  On  Mr. 

Webster's  Defence  of  New  England. 
Report,  The.— Ellen  Pickering.— DDD 
Report  Amer.  Home  Miss.  Society,  Sel.  jr. — Anon. — GG 
Report  of   an   Adjudged   Case.     (C.) — W:   Cowper.^ 

HPE 
(Law-case,  A.) — OS  1 
(Nose  and  Eyes.)— BNL— PC 
Reporter's  Prayer,  A. — J.  A.  Fraser,  Jr. — WR  12 
Repose,  A.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— WEP  4 
Representative,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Presiden- 
tial Protest,  The. 
Representative    Government    Trustworthy.     {Arr.    fr. 

speech    of   .Emilius,    in    Life    of    jEmilius.) — 

Plutarch.— B  LP 
Representative  Men,  Sel.  fr.       ("In  all  our  decisions 

and  actions  it  would  be  well  for  us" — br.  sel.  fr. 

Plato;  or.  The  Philosopher.) — Ralph  W.  Emer- 
son.—GG 
Reproach,  A. — Flavel  S.  Mines.— WR  4 
Reprove  Gently. — Anon. — CS  15 
Republic,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Building  of 

the  Ship,  The. 
Republic  Defined,  A. — Alphonse  de^Lamartine. — BLP 

(Establishment  of  the  Republic.) — SS 
Republic  of  New  England,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Common 

Citizen-soldier.)- J:  B.  O'Reilly.— FD  2 
Republic  or  a  Monarchy,  A? — Victor  Hugo. — SS — SSD 
Republic  the  Strongest  (iiovernment,  A. — T:  Jefferson. 

See  Inauguration  Address. 
Republican  Press,  The.     {Fr.  a  speech  delivered  before 

the  Republican  Press  Association  of  Ohio,  Sept. 

8,1896.)— W:  McKinley.— SSD 
Republic's  Duty,  The.     {Fr.  a  speech  delivered  at  the 

Atlanta   Peace  Jubilee,   Dec.    16,   1898.)— W: 

McKinley.— TMD 
Reputation.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Requiem,    A.     {Sel.    fr.    King   John    and    Matilda.) — 

Rob't  Davenport. — ELP 
Requiem,  A.— H:  King.— YBF 
Requiem:     "Breathe,  trumpets,  breathe." — G:  Lunt. 

See  Requiem  for  One  Slain  in  Battle. 
Requiem. — Sir  Jos.  N.  Patton. — VA 
Requiem.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— AVP—BFV— OB— 

PYO— VA 
Requiem  [for  One  Slain  in  Battle].  —  G:  Lunt.  —  A  A 

— EPs 
Requiescam. — Mary  W.  Howland. — TAS 
(In  the  Hospital.)— ASL— HDL— PAPm 
(Rest.)— BNL— GP— OS  2— YBF 
Requiescat.— Matthew  Arnold.— A VP— OB— PYO  — 

WEP  4 
Requiescat. — Oscar  Wilde. — GP 
Requital,  The. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — VA 
Rescue,  The.— Marion  P.  Riche.— CS  31 


Rescue,  The.— B:  F.  Taylor.— NC 

Rescue  of  Albret,  The.— T:  D.  English.— CS  32 

Rescue  of  Chicago,  The.— H:  M.  Look.— CS  5 

Rescue  of  Gavin,   The. — Jas.  M.   Barrie.     See  Little 

Minister,  The. 
Rescue  of  Lygia,  The. — Henryk  Sienkiewicz.     See  Quo 

Rescue  of  Mr.'Figg,  The.— Anon.— CS  32— DS— YA   . 

Rescued. — Anon. — WR  6 

Rescued.— Celia  Thaxter— SAP 

"Resembles  life  that  once  was  held  of  light"  (What  is 

Life?— C.).— S:  T.  Coleridge.— HP 
Resentment.— G:  H.  Clarke.— TCV 
Reserve. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 
Reserve. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — AA 
Resignation.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Resignation,  Sel.  fr. — Matthew  Arnold. — WEP  4 
Resignation. — R:  Baxter. — P^EP 

("Lord,  it  belongs  not  to  my  care.") — HDL 
Resignation[,  The— C]  — T:  Chatterton.- FEP— HBP 

(Faith.)— PU) 
Resignation    (Wednesday    before    Easter — C).  —  J: 

Keble.— CEL 
Resignation.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  C.—C.) — Walter 

S.  Landor.— OB 
("Why,  why  repine,  my  pensive  friend.") — HP— 

WEP  4 
Resignation.— H:      W.      Longfellow.— BNL— CS  12— 

FEP  —  HDL  —  LLC  —  PS  —  SO  {abr.)  — 

TAS— TAV— WCLI  2 
Resignation  ("Oh  thou  who  dry'st  the  mourner's  tear" 

— C.).— T:  Moore.— KNE  {abr.)— THP 
(God  the   True  Source  of  (  onsolation.) — HNS 
Resignation. — W  ■  Shakespeare.    See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Resignation    and    Despair.     (Holy    Sonnets,  IX.) — J: 

Donne.— CEL 
Resigning.— Dinah  M.  M.  Craik. — HDL 
Resistance   ofi  Mal-administration. — S.  Grover  Cleve- 
land.-i-FD  2 
Resistance  to  British  Aggression. — Patrick  Henry.  See 

Speech  in  the  Virginia  Convention,  1775. 
Resistance  to  Oppression     in     its     Rudiments. — Dan'l 

Webster.     See  Presidential  Protest,  The. 
Resisting  a  Mother's  Love. — Anon. — CS  14 — SR  1 
Resolution.     {Harper's  Magazine.) — PTS 
(Doing  and  Giving— 8ei.)—HSS  2 
(Gentle  Hints— »/.  abr.)— DLS 
Resolution    and    Independence. — W:    Wordsworth.— 

HBP— MBL 
Resolution  on  the  Prosecution  of  Mr.  O'Connell,  Sel. 

fr.     (Irish  Grievances.) — R:  L.  Shell.— OM 
Resolve,  The. — ^Alex.  Brome. — OB 
Resolve  of  Regulus,  The. — Epes  Sargent. — PS 
Resolved?— G.  A.  P.— CG  3 
Respect  the  Aged. — Alcide  Richenbach. — FAS 
Respect  the  Burden. — Dinah  M.  Craik.— CS  14 
Respectability.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Respectability. — Rob't  Browning. — VA 
Respice  Finem. — Fs.  Quarles. — OB 
Respite,  The. — Maria  G.  Brooks.     See  Zophiel:  or.  The 

Bride  of  Seven. 
Response  of  a  College  Professor  to  a  Complimentary 

Resolution. — Anon. — CP 
Response  to  Beautiful  Snow,  A. — Sallie  J.  Hancock.— 

SR2 
Responses. — Ralph  W.  Emerson.     See  Problem,  The. 
Responsibilities  of     a     Recommendation     of     War. — 

Horace  Binney. — SS 
Responsibilities  of    our    Republic. — Jos.    Story.     See 

Responsibility  of  American  Citizens. 
Responsibilities  of    Young    Men,    The. — Bishop 

Clark.— SSD 
Responsibility  of    American    Citizens. — Jos.    Story. — 

WRD 
(Destiny  of  our  Country.) — OS  3 
(Our  Duties  [or  Duty]  to  the  Republic.)— FTR— 

KNE— LLC— SS 
(Our  Future.)— BLP 

(Responsibilities  of  our  Republic.) — HNS 
(Shall  America  Betray  Herself?)- FD  1— SR  5 
{Sets,  vary  somewhat.) 
Responsibility  of  our  Country,  The. — Jas.  Madison. — 

SR8 
Rest.— Anon.— CS  22 
Rest. — Anon. — -H  P 
Rest. — Amy  E.  Blanchard. — CS  35 
Rest.     {Chambers'  Journal.) — HP 
Rest.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— TAS 
Rest. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe  {tr.  by  J:  S.  Dwight). 

— PHS  {sel.) 
(Sweet  is  the  Pleasure.) — HBP 
(True  Rest.)— BNL— YBF  {abr.) 


277 


Rest 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Rest. — Mary  W.  Howland.     See  Requiescam. 

Rest. — J:  A.  Jennings. — CS  25 

Rest.— G:  MacDonald.— BS  8 

Rest.  (Waiting  for  the  Morning — C) — J:  H.  New- 
man.—AVP 

Rest.— Percy  S.  Payn*.— TIP 

Rest. — ChiistinaG.  Rossetti.— OB 

Rest. — Abram  J.  Ryan. — BS  4 

Rest. — Marg.  L.  Woods. — VA 

Rest  at  Eventide.— T:  D'A.  McGee.— HP 

Rest  for  the  Weary.— Emma  F.  Swingle. — CS  29 

Rest  in  the  Grave.     {Temple  Bar.) — HP 

Rest  is  not  Here. — Caroline,  Laay  Naime. — HBP 

Restitution. — Anon. — GP 

Restitution.— J:  W.  Bengough.— TCV 

Restless  Youth,  The.     (DtaZ.)- Anon.— NDP 

Restoration  of  the  Union,  The. — Alex.  H.  Stephens. — 
SSD 

Restraining  Jotham. — Anon. — MND 

Result  of  Cruelty,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.- BVC 

Results  of  the  American  War.  (Sel.  fr.  Amendment 
to  the  Address  of  Thanks  on  the  King's  Speech 
at  the  Opening  of  the  Session,  Nov.  27,  1781.) 
— C:  J.  Fox.— SS 

Resurgam. — Seymour  S.  Short. — AD 

Resurrected  Hearts,  The. — ^Josie  F.  Cappleman. — WR  7 

Resurrection,  The. — Edwin  Arnold.  .See  Light  of  the 
World,  The. 

Resurrection,  A. — Helen  G.  Cone. — TAS 

Resurrection,  The. — Rob't  Blair.     See  Grave,  The. 

Resurrection. — J:  B.  Tabb.— TAS 

Resurrection. — W.  J.  C.  Train. — DFR 

Resurrection  Morn. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  31 

Resurrection  of  Abdullah. — Sir  Edwin  Arnold. — LLC 
(After  Death.)— BS  8— OS  3 

(After  Death  in  Arabia— C.)—CS  31— FEP— VA 
(He  who  Died  at  Azan.)— HBP— HDL 

Resurrection  of  Christ.— H:  Ware,  Jr.— TAS 

Resurrexit. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — HE 

Resuscitation  of  Fancy. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — PGT  2 

Retaliation    [,The — tw.]. — Oliver    Goldsmith. — ESs  — 
WEP  3  (sel.) 
(Edmund  Burke— 6r.  seZ.)— EHT— LLC 

Retired  Cat,  The.— W:  Cowper.— HPE 

Retired  Statesman,  The. — W:  Cowper.  See  Retire- 
ment. 

Retirement,  The.— C:  Cotton.— BNL— FEP— HBP— 
SN 

Retirement,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Cowper. 

Dejection   and   Retirement.     The   Retired   States- 
man.—WEP  3 
What  to  Read.— WEP  3 

Retirement.  (Olney  Hymns,  XL VII.) — W:  Cowper.- 
FEP  (^diff.  poem.) 

Retirement.— T:  Warton.— BNL— SN 

(Inscription  in  a  Hermitage — C.) — HBP 

Retirement.— H:  Kirke  White.— CEL 

Retort,    The.— Anon.— CSS— PPSr— PS 

Retort. — Paul  L.  Dimbar. — AA 

R«tort,  The.— G:  P.  Morris.— AWH— BNL— CS  9— 
DS— HPE— MHR— THP— YA 

Retreat,  The.— H:  Vaughan.— CEL— ELP— EPs— OB 
—PGT  1— WEP  2— YBF 

Retreat  from  Moscow,  The. — Anon. — FP 

Retreat  from  Moscow,  The. — Walter  Thornbury. — 
EDY 

Retribution.— Anon.— CS  29— NPS— YP 

Retribution. — Anon. — WR  14 

Retribution.  (Indian  Story,  An — C.) — W:  C.  Bryant. 
— VSG 

Retribution. — Anthony  Hope.  See  Dolly  Dialogues, 
The. 

Retribution. — Abraham  Lincoln.  See  Second  Inau- 
gural Address. 

Retribution.— David  L.  Proudfit.— HP 

R«tribution. — Friedrich  von  Logau  (<r.  by  H:  W. 
Longfellow).— BNL 

Retributive  Justice. — T:  Corwin.— SSD 

"Retro  me,  Sathana!"  (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet 
XC.)— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 

Retrospect,  A.— R:  D.  Hubbard.— TMD 

Retrospect,  A. — Victor  Hugo. — MRS 

Retrospect,  A.  (Poems  and  Epigrams,  LXV.) — Walter 
S.  Landor.— YBF 

Retrospect,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Burton  W.  Lockhart.— TCV 

Retrospect,  A. — H:  Watterson.  See  Our  Expanding 
Republic. 

Retrospection . — Anon. — HP 

Retrospection. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 

Retrospection. — Garnet  B.  Freeman. — HP 

Retrospection. — Sir  Alfred  Lyall. — VSG 

Retrospection,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Remembrance.) — Jas.  G. 
Percival.— FP 


Retrospection. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Princess,  The. 
Retrospections.     (C.) — Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton. 

(Wanderer,  The,  Sel.  fr.)— AVP 
Retrospective,  A. — Anon. — SR  4 
Return!— Sydney  Dobell.— OB 
Return,  The. — Annie  Fields. — AA 
Return,  The.— G.  A.  Greene.— TIP 
Return,  The.— L.  F.  Tooker.— ASL 
Return. — J:  Wilmot.— OB 

(Song.)— WEP  2 
Return  from  Battle,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — PP — 

YFR 
(Ancient  Greek  Chant  of  Victory — C.) — SAE 
(Greeks'  Return  from  Battle,  The.) — SS 
Return  of  British  Fugitives. — Patrick  Henry. — SS 
Return  of   Columbus,   The.     (Sel.    fr.    History    of   the 

Reign  of  Ferdinand  and   Isabella,  Pt.   I.,  Ch. 

XVIII.)— W:  H.  Prescott.— WR  10 
Return  of  Columbus,  The. — Epes  Sargent. — WR  10 
Return  of  May,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — AD 
Return  of  Napoleon  from  St.  Helena,  The. — Lydia  H. 

Sigourney. — A  A — EDY 
Return  of  Reguliis,  The. — Elijah  Kellogg.     See  Regu- 

lus  to  the  Carthaginians. 
Return  of  Spring. — Pierre  Ronsard. — BNL — HBP 
Return  of  Spring,  The.     (Abr.) — Bayard  Taylor. — AD 
Return  of  the  Birds,  The.     (SeZ.)— W:  C.  Bryant.— AD 
Return  of  the  Dead,  The.     (Abr.)— Edna,  D.  Procter. 

— DDR— FMR  (si.  diff.  abr.) 
Return  of  the  Hillside  Legion. — Ethel  L.  Beers. — BRR 

— CS  14 
Return  of  the  Hoe,  The.     (Drake's  Magazine.) — HBR 
Return  of  the  Swallows,  The.— Edmund  W.  Gosse. — 

FMR 
Return  of  Youth,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— FP 
Return  to  Nature.— J.  C.  Shairp.— PGT  2 
Returned  Brother,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— StD 
Returning  from    the    War.     (Tab.) — Tony    Denier.— 

TDT 
Returning  Home.— R:  C.  Trench.— PGT  2 
Reuben  James. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — BS  19 — CS  33 
Reimion  of  Peter  and  Jane. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
Reunited.  (Fr.  A  Lover's  Diary.) — Gilbert  Parker. — OB 

(Envoy.)— V  A 
Reunited. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — PAPm 
Reunited    Country,    A.     (Response   to    Toast    "Our 

Country"    at    Atlanta    Peace    Jubilee,    Dec, 

1898.)— W:  McKinley.— TMD 
Reunited  Love. — R:  D.  Blackmore. — HP 
Reve  du  Midi.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— BNL— FEP— HB 

(Midsummer  Day,  A.)— HSS  1 
Revealed. — Harry  L.  Koopman.— AA 
R^veill^,  The.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— AWB— EDY— GN— 

LH— PAPm 
(What  the  Drums  Say.)— BS  25 
R^veill^.— Michael     O'Connor.— AA— AWB— BS  25— 

FEP 
Revel,  The. — Bartholomew  Dowling. — VA 
(Indian  Revelry.)— FEP 
(Our  Last  Toast.)— HP 
(Revelry  of  the  Dying.)— BNL 
(Song  of  the  Dying.)— CS  5— MR 
Revelation.     (Ch.  XXII.,  1-14.)     Bible.— BS 'i 
Revelation. — Edmund  Gosse. — OB 
Revelations  of  a  Pocket. — Anon. — DDM 
Reveler's  Dream,  The.— C:  Mackay.— WR  18 
(Dream  of  the  Reveler,  The.)— SR  2— TS 
Revellers,  The.— Anon.— CS  19 
Revellers,  The.— Felicia  D.  Hemans.— FP 
Revelry  of   the   Dying. — Bartholomew   Dowling.     See 

Revel,  The. 
Revels. — Anon. — ELP 
Revels  of   the  Csesars,   The. — Amelia   B.    Edwards.^ 

WRl 
Revenge.     (Frags,  fr.  varioxis  authors.) — BNL 
Revenge. — Annie  R.  Blount. — WR  9 

Revenge,  The. — Messrs. Fezandi^. — MN 

Revenge,  A.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.- CS  32 
"Revenge,"  The:  A  Ballad  of  the  Fleet.     (C.)— Alfred 

Tennyson.— BS  21— CR— EDY— EHT— GP— 

HB— MRS— OS  3— PGT  2— PSR— WEP  4 
(Ballad  of  the  Fleet,  A.)— LH 
Revenge,  Br.  sels.  fr.—B:  Young.— AE—KNE  (fr.  Act 

v.,  Sc.  2.) 
Revenge  of  Hamish,  The. — Sidney  Lanier. — HBR 
Revenge  of  Injuries.    (Sel.  fr.  Mariam,  Act  IV.) — Lady 

Eliz.  Carew.- BNL 
(True  Greatness.)— YBF 
Reverence. — Bible.     See  Psalms  of  David. 
Reverence  Due  from  the  Old  to  the  Young,  The. — C: 

R.  Lowell.— CP 
Reverence  for  Law. — Jos.  Hopkinson. — BLP 
Reverence  for  the  Flag. — Horace  Porter. — SC 


278 


TITLE  INDEX 


Bide 


Rev.  Gabe  Tucker's  Remarks. — J.  A.  Macon. — AWH 

— BS  10— THP 
(Observations  by  Rev.  Gabe  Tucker — abr.) — PR — 

YA 
Rev.  John  Smith  of  Arkland  Prepares  his  Sermon,  The. 

— S.  R.  Crockett.— CS  35 
Rev.  Oleus  Bacon.  D.D.,  in  Memoriam.^ — Anon. — CS  12 
Rev.  Uncle  Jim's  Sermon,  The. — Anon. — DE 
Reverie.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Reverie,  A.— Frd'k  G:  Scott.— TCV 
Reverie  in  Church.— G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.- BS  3— CS  10— 

NPS— YP 
(Easter  Morning— C.)—PLD 
Reverie  of  Poor  Susan,  The.     (C.) — W:  Wordsworth. 

— BPB— LC— MBL— PGT  1— WEP4— YBF 
(Poor  Susan.)— PC 
Reveries  of      a      Bachelor.     (Tab.) — Anon. — BS  10 — 

TCP 
Reveries  of   a   Bachelor,   Sel.    fr.     (The   Sea — Fourth 

Revery,    I. — cond.) — Donald    G.    Mitchell. — 

SR  12 
Reveries  of  a  Bachelor. — W.  C.  Nichols. — CG  1 
Reverse;  or,  Mrs.  Cludd,  The. — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
Reverses. — J:  H.  Newman. — VA 
Review  of  the  Dead,  The.— H:  J.  Stockard.— BLP 
Review  of    the   Grand   Army,  The. — Anon.     {Ad.) — 

NC 
Revised  Proofs. — Bernard  M'Evoy. — TCV 
Revival,  The.— Horace  Smith.— HPE 
Revival,  The. — Alfred     Tennyson.     See     Day-dream, 

The. 
Revival  Hymn.— Joel  C.   Harris.     See  Uncle  Remus: 

His  Songs  and  his  Sayings. 
Revival  of  Romance. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — TAV 
Revocation,  A. — Sir  T:  Wyatt. — OB 
Revolt  of  Islam,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Child  of  Twelve,  A— 

sel.  fr.  Can.  II.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— GN 
Revolt  of  "Mother,"  The.     (A6r.)— Mary  E.  Wilkins. 

— HBR 
(Arr.  by  Eva  Coscarden.) — DR 
Revolution  in  Congress,  <Se/.  fr.     (Public  Opinion  the 

Reliance  of  our  Government.) — Jas.   A.   Gar- 
field.—FD  2 
Revolution  in  Greece,  The,  Sela.  fr.     (Moral  Force  of 

Public  Opinion.)— Dan'l  Webster.— MRS 
(Moral  Force  against  Physical — ahr.) — SS 
(Public  Opinion.)— TMD 
Revolutionary  Alarm,   The. — G:   Bancroft.     See   His- 
tory of  the  United  States. 
Revolutionary  Desperadoes. — Sir    Jas.    Mackintosh. — 

FTR 
Revolutionary  Hero,  A. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Biglow 

Papers,  The. 
Revolutionary  Men. — Alphonse    de    Lamartine.     See 

Religion  of  Revolutionary  Men. 
Revolutionary      Rising,      The. — T:      B.     Read.     See 

Wagoner  of  the  Alleghanies,  The. 
Revolutionary  Sermon,  A. — -Hugh  H:  Breckenridge. — 

CS4— PS  {si.  ahr.) 
Revolutions.— W:   Shakespeare.— EPs— PGT  1— YBF 

(Sonnet)— ELP  (LX.— C.)— FEP 
Revolutions. — Sir  H:  Taylor.      See    Philip   van  Arte- 

velde. 
Revulsion,  The. — Coventry    Patmore.     See    Angel    in 

the  House,  The. 
Reward  of  Earnest  Effort,  The.— Mrs.  M.  E.  Cornell.— 

SSE 
Reward  of  Innocent  Love,  The. — W:  Habington.     See 

Reward  of  Merit,  A.     {Trinity  Tablet.) — CG  2 
Reward  of  the  Cheerful  Candle,  The. — Mary  V.  Wor- 

stell.— HS 
Rhapsody,  A.— T.  H.  Gould.— CG  3 
Rhine,  The.— Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 
Rhode  Island  to  the  South.— F.  W.  Lander. — AWE 
Rhododaphne,  Sels.  fr. — T:  L.  Peacock. 
Spell  of  the  Laurel-rose,  The.— WEP  4 
Vengeance  of  Bacchus,  The. — WEP  4 
Rhodora,  The.— Ralph      W.      Emerson.— AA— AD— 
ASL— BNL— FEP— GN— HBP— IR— LC— 
PEO  (seZ.)- TAS— YBF 
Rhoecus.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL  {br.  seZ.)— HBP 

(A6r.)— AA— LLC  {si.)  ' 

Rhotruda. — F:  G.  Tuckerman.— EPs 
Rhyme  for  Priscilla,  A. — -Frank  D.  Sherman. — AWH 

—THP 
Rhyme  of  Death's  Inn,  A. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — TAS 
Rhyme  of  Jennie  Eaglehart,  The. — Anon. — WR  16 
Rhyme  of  Life,  A.— C:  W.  Stoddard.— GP 
Rhyme  of  One,  A. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson. — OH 

(Only  One!— seZ.)— TFS 
Rhyme  of  Robin  Puck,  A.— Helen  G.  Cone.— WR  15 


Rhyme  of  the  Duchess  May  (C),  The.— EPs— FEP 
Duchess  May.     (The  Rhyme.)— WR  1  {cond.) 
(End  of  the  Siege,  The— «e^)— CEL 
(Rhyme  of  the  Duchess  May — diff.  cond.) — CR 
Rhyme  of  the  Rail.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— SAE  {br.  sel.) 
— SE  {br.  sel.) 
(Railroad  Rhyme.)— BNL 
Rhyme  of  the  Time,  A.— Anon.— PTS  v. 

Rhyme  of  the  Year,  A.— Anon.— PP— YPS 
Rhyme  of   White   and    Red,   The. — W:   Shakespeare. 

See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Rhyme      Six     Hundred      Years     Old.     A. — Anon. — 

YBT 
Rhymed  Lesson,    A     (Urania),   Sela.    fr. —  Oliver    W.. 
Holmes. 
Language. — AE 

(Words  on  Language.) — SPE 
(Urania,  A  Rhymed  Lesson — -sel.) — SO 
Rhymed  Lesson,  A,  Br.  sel.  fr. — SO 
Rhymed     Will     of     Hunnis,      The. — W:     Hunnis. — 

EDY 
Rhymelet,  A.— Anon.— BS  13 
Rhymers. — W:   Shakespeare.     See    King   Henry    IV., 

Pt.  I. 
Rhymes    for     Hard     Times.  —  Norman     McLeod.  — 
PR  {si.  abr.) 
(Trust  in  God.)— CSS— PPSr 
"Rhymes  of   Ironquill,"   Three. — Eugene  F.   Ware. — 

THP 
Rhymes  on    the    Road,    IX.     (Eternal   London.) — T: 

Moore.— HPE 
Rhymes  on  tne  Wing,  Sel.  fr. — Rob't  J.  Burdette.    See 

"There  was  a  young  man  of  Cohoes." 
Rib,  The.— Ernest  McGaffey.- HBR 
Ribbon  Drill. — Marg  erite  W.  Morton. — ID 
Rich  in  the  Lord.— Frances  F.  Cobbe. — HDL 
Rich  Little  Dolly,  The.     ( Wide  Aivake.)—CP'L 
Rich  Man  and  the  Poor,  The. — Ivan  I.  Khemnitzer. — 

KNE— SS  ' 

Richard     Brinsley     Sheridan.       {Frags,     fr.     various 

authors.) — BNL 
Richard  Hakluyt's  Men. — Wallace  Rice. — EDY 
Richard  Somers. — Barrett  Eastman.— AA 
Richard  III.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— EDY 
Richard  III.  —  W:  Shakespeare.     See  King   Richard 

III. 
Richard  to  the  Princes  of  the  Crusade. — Walter  Scott. 

See  Talisman,  The. 
Richard's  Reformation. — Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 
Richelieu  and  France. — E :  Bulwer-Lytton.     See  Riche- 
lieu; or.  The  Conspiracy. 
Richelieu;  or.  The  Conspiracy,  Sels.  fr. — E:  Bulwer- 
Lytton. 
Cardinal's  Soliloquy  [,The].     {Sel.  fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  I.) 

— TMR  (abr.)— VA 
Richelieu.     (IV.,  2.)— HBR 
(A6r.)— FTR— SR6 
(Scene  from  Richelieu — si.  cond.) — CS  26 
Richelieu.— CR     {Sels.  fr.  IV.,  1.  2.)— SE  {br.  sel. 

fr.  IIL,  1.)— WR  11  (II.,  1.) 
Richelieu    and    France.     (IV.,     1.)— KNE— SS— 
TMD 
(Richelieu — br.  sel.) — AE 
(Richelieu's  Vindication.) — SO 
Richelieu's  Vindication.  —  E.      Bulwer-Lytton.      See 

Richelieu;  or.  The  Conspiracy. 
Riches.     {Fraqs.  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Riches  Have  Wings!— H.  E.  McBride.— MHD 
Richest  Prince,  The. — Andreas  J.  Korner.— BLP 
Richie  Story.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Richmond  to  his  Army.— W :  Shakespeare.     See  King 

Richard  III. 
Richmond  to  his  Troops. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  King 

Richard  III. 
"Rid  of  the  world's  injustice  and  his  pain." — Oscar 

Wilde.— GG 
Riddle,  A. — Anon. — NA 
Riddle.     (C.) — Anna  L.  Barbauld. 

(Words.)— LLC 
Riddle,  A.     (A  Book.)— Hannah  More.— GN 
Riddle,  A.     (The  Letter  "H.") — Catharine  Fanshawe. 
—BNL— FEP— GN 
(Letter  i/.  The. )—CS  26 
Riddle,  A.     (The  Vowels.)— Jonathan  Swift.— GN 
Ridaler,  The.— C:  G.  Leland.— CSS— PPSr 
Riddles,  Two.— Matthew  Prior. — HPE 

Ride.— President Bate.— BS  19 

Ride  by  Night,  The.— E:  W.  Thomson.— BS  26 

Ride  for  Life,  The.  (The  Man  from  Glengarry,  Ch.  IV.) 

— C:  Gordon.— IR 
Ride  from    Ghent    to    Aix,    The.     {Parody.) — Irwin 
Beaumont. — TL 


279 


Bide 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Ride  from  Ghent  to  Aix,  The.— Rob't  Browning. — CS  2 

—MR 
(Good  News  ffrom  Ghent].)— SE  (seZ.)— WRD 
("How  thev  Brought  the  Good  News  from  Ghent 

to  Aix"— O  —  AVP  — BNL  — BVC  — CGd  — 

CR  —  EPS  — *FEP  —  GN  —  HB  —  HBP  — 

OM  —  OS  2  —  PEB  3  —  PHS  —  PSR  — 

SAE  (br.  sel.)  —  SO  —  SPE  —  SS  —  VA  — 

VSG  —  WEP  4 
(Ride  to  Aix,  The.)— HSS  2 
Ride  of  Collins  Graves,  The.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— AE— 

BAB— BS  17— CS  13— SA 
Ride  of  Death,  The.— Eugene    J.    Hall.  — CS  32— DS 

— WR  19  («;.  abr.) 
Ride  of    Ichabod    Crane,    The. — Washington    Irving. 

See  Legend  of  Sleepy  Hollow,  The. 
Ride  of  Paul  Venarez,  The.— Eben  E.  Rexford.— CS  21 

—PR 
(Paul  Venarez.)— FMR 
Ride  of  Jennie  McNeal,  The.— Will  Carleton.— BAB— 

— BS  6— CS  17— FR— FTR— HNS 
Ride  on  in  Majesty. — H:  H.  Milman. — VA  (,sl.  abr.) 

(Christ  Crucified.)- FEP 
Ride  on  the  Black  Valley  Railroad  [,A]. — I.  N.  Tarbox. 

— CS  11— SR7 
Ride  to  Aix,  The. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Ride  from 

Ghent  to  Aix,  The. 
Ride  to  Bumpville,  The. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Ride    to    Cherokee,    The.- — Amelia   W.   Carpenter. — 

AA 
Ride  to  the  Lady,  The. — Helen  G.  Cone. — AA 
Rider  of   the  Black    Horse,   The. — G:  Lippard.     See 

Benedict  Arnold. 
Rider  of  the  Knee,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Riderless  Steeds,  The.— Anon.— SR  9 
Riding  Down.— Nora  Perry.— AA—CR—CS  20— HBP 

—OH 
Riding  in  the  Cars.     {For  a  boy.) — Mr§.  Russell  Kav- 

anaugh. — KJ 
Riding  in  the  Cars.     (For  a  girl.) — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 

anaugh. — K.T 
Riding  on  a  Rail.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— BS  20 
Riding  to  the  Hunt.— W.  A.  Leahy.— CG  1 
Riding  to  the  Tournament,  The. — W.  G.  Thornbury. 

— BS  17 
Riding  Together.— W:  Morris.— AVP— BNL 
Rienzi,  Sela.  fr. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. 

Appeal  to  the  Romans.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  II.,  Ch.  III.) 

— SR6 
Last  of  the  Roman  Tribunes,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk. 

X.,  last  ch.)— SC 
Rienzi. — Mary  R.  Mitford.     See  Rienzi's  Address  to 

the  Romans. 
Rienzi  to  the  Roman  Conspirators  in  1347. — T:  Moore. 

—PS 
Rienzi  to  the  Romans. — Mary  R.  Mitford.    See  Rienzi's 

Address  to  the  Romans. 
Rienzi's  Address  [to  the   Romans].     (Sel.   fr.   Rienzi, 

Act  II.,  Sc.  2.)— Mary  R.  Mitford.— BS  4— CS  1 

— EDY— FR— FTR— HNS— LLC— OM— OS  2 

PPSr— SR  8— WCLG  2 
(Rienzi     to    the     Romans.)— BNL— CR— KNE— 

PS— SO— SS— TMD 
Rienzi's  Last  Appeal  to  the  Romans. — Cola  di  Rienzi. 

—KNE 
Rift  of  the  Rock,  The.— Annie  Herbert.— CS  14 
Rifts  in  the  Cloud,  Br.  sel.  fr.     ("Way  at  times  may 

dark  and  dreary  seem.  The.")— Will  Carleton. 

— FHS 
"Right  about  Face."— Mary  D.  Brine.— HSS  2 
Right  and  Wrong. — Anon. — HP 
Right  Building.— W:  J.  Duncan.— CS  35 
Right  Living.— Anon.— CS  30 
Right  Makes  Might.— Anon.— TS 
Right  Man  for  the  Place,  The.— Sam  W.  Fo.ss.— SR  9 
Right  Must  Win,  The.— Frd'k  W:  Faber.— FEP 
(&7.  a6r.)— BNL— HDL— VA 
(Songs  of  Devotion,  Sel.  fr.- — sel.) — GG 
Right  of   Free   Discussion. — Dan'l   Webster. — KNE — 

OS  2  (abr) 
Right  Standard,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Shadows  of  the  Stage, 

2nd  Series,  Pt.  I.)— W:  Winter.— MRS 
Right  to  Tax  America,  The. — Edmund  Burke. — OM 
Righteous  Never  Forsaken,  The. — Anon. — CS  9 
Righteous  War,  A.— W.  S.  Witham.— TMD 
Rights  and  Duties.— Frd'k  W.  Robertson. — NC 

(True    Liberty — shorter    and    ptly.    diff.) — BLP — 

PEO 
Rime  of  the  Ancient  Mariner,  The. — S:  T.  Coleridge. — 

BFV  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  MBL 

—OB— PEB  3— WCLG  2— WEP  4 
Ancient  Mariner,  The.— CGd  (cond. )—SE  (br.  sel. 

fr.  Pt.  IV.) 


Rime  of  the  Ancient  Mariner,  The  (continued). 

Love  and  Prayer.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  VII.)— FTR 
(He  Prayeth  Best— ofcr. )—GMS 
(He  Prayeth  Well  who  Loveth  Well.)— PC 

(A6r.)— GG— HSS  2— WCLI  1 
(Praying  and  Loving— a6r.) — OS  1 
Phantom  Ship,  The.     (Pt.  III.— sZ.  a6r.)— SO 
Rime  of  the  Ancient  Mariner,  The.     (Pt.  II. — si. 

abr.)—lR 
(Dead  Calm  at  Sea — br.  sel.) — LLC 
Rime  of    the    Ancient    Miller.     (Parody.) — Rob't    J. 

Burdette.— SYS 
Rinaldo. — H:  Peterson. — AA 
Ring,  The.     (Sel.  arr.  fr.  Nathan  the  Wise,  Act  III., 

Sc.    7.)— Gotthold    E.    Lessing  (tr.   by  Ellen 

Frothingham). — MMR 
(Opal  Ring,  The.)— DR 
Ring  and     the    Book,     The,    Dedication    to. — Rob't 

Browning.— WEP  4 
Ring  Down  the  Drop — I  Cannot  Play. — ^J.  W.  Watson. 

— CS  11 
Ring  Drill.— A.  E.  Hurst.— ID 
Ring  from  the  Rim  of  the  Glass,  Boys. — J:  C.  Anthony. 

— CG2 
Ring,  Happy  Bells.— Lucy  Larcom.— DFR— DST 
Ring,  Joyful  Bells !— Violet  Fuller.- PEO 

(New  Year,  The.)— HS 
Ring  Out  the  Old.— Anon.— SM 
Ring  Out,  Wild  Bells.— M.  M.  Hughes.— SR  3 
Ring  Out,    Wild    Bells!— Alfred    Tennyson.     See    In 

Memoriam. 
"Ring  out,  ye  crystal  spheres." — J:  Milton.     See  On 

the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. 
Ring  Posy,  A.— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— OH 
"Ring!     Ring!  of  liberty  and  peace!" — H:  B.  Carring- 

ton.— BLP 
Ring  the  Bell  Softly.— Dexter  Smith.— CS  3 
Ringan  Gilhaize,   Sel.   fr.     (Covenanters   and   Charles 

Stuart,  The.)— J:  Gait.— FD  1 
Ringer  of  the  Chimes,  The. — Jeannie  P.  Ewing. — CS  34 
Ringer's  Veangence,  'The.  (SI.  abr. ) — H :  Abbey. — WR  9 
Ringleted  Youth  of  my  Love. — Douglas  Hyde. — TIP 
Rings,  The. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — ASL 
Rings  and  Seals.— T:  Moore.— HPE—SCS 
Ring's  Motto,  The.— Anon.— CS  23— DS— HP 
Riot's  Climbing  of  a  Hill. — W:  Browne.     See  Britan- 
nia's Pastorals. 
Rip    Van    Winkle.  — ■  Washington     Irving.  —  APr  — 

CS  8  (seZ.)— MAL— MRS   (cond.)— WCLI  1— 

WGS 
Rip  van   Winkle.     (Sels.   arr.   fr.   Acts    I.    and   II.)- — 

Washington  Irving  (dram,  by  Jos.  Jefferson). — 

BRR— GH— HBR 
Ripe  Grain. — Dora  R.  Goodale. — GP 
Ripened  Fruit.— T:  O'Hagan.— TCV 
Riquet  of  the  Tuft,  Songs  fr. — Stopford  A.  Brooke. 
Prince  Riquet's  Song. — VA 
Queen's  Song. — VA 
"Rise,"  A.^ — Ernest  McGaffey. — AA 
Rise  and    Fall    of    Wolsey,    The.     S:    Johnson.     See 

Vanity  of  Human  Wishes,  The. 
"Rise!  for  the  day  is  passing." — Adelaide  A.  Procter. 

See  Now. 
Rise,  my  Soul,  and  Stretch  thy  Wings. — Rob't  Sea- 
grave.— FEP 
Rise  of  Man,  The.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— AA 
Rise  of  the   Dutch   Republic,  The.   Sel.   fr.     (Fall  of 

Antwerp,  The— seZ.  fr.  Bk.  II.,  Ch.  V.)— J:  L. 

Motley. — IR 
"  'Rise,'  .said  the  Mafter,  'come  unto  the    feast.' " — 

H:  Alford.— BNL 
(Bride,  The.)— OB 
Risen  with  Christ. — Anon. — SSS 
Rising,  The.— T:  B.   Read.     See  Wagoner  of  the  Alle- 

ghanies.  The. 
Rising   in   1776,  The.— T:  B.  Read.     See  Wagoner  of 

the  AUeghanies,  The. 
Rising  of  1776,  The.— T:  B.  Read.     See  Wagoner  of  the 

AUeghanies,  The. 
Rising  of  the  Moon,  The.— J.  K.  Casey.- TIP 
Rising  of  the  People,  The.— Elbriage  J.  Cutler.— WR  10 

(Drum-call  in  1861,  The— cond.)— MMR 
Rising,  Watching  Moon,  The. — Anon. — TFS 
llitter  Hugo.— C:  G.  Leland.— BNL 
(Ballad— C.)— HBP 
(Ballad  of  the  Mermaid.)— AWH—THP 

Rival  Broom  Makers,  The. ^Wolcot. — MDD 

Rival  Darkies,  The. — Anon.— DJ^ 

Rival  Drummers,  "The. — Anon.— CRR 

Rival  Lodgers,     The.— T:  (7)Morton.     See    Box     and 

Cox. 
Rival  Orators,  The. — Anon.     See  Rival  Speakers,  The. 
Rival  Singer,  The.— Anon.— CS  27 


280 


TITLE  INDEX 


Robinson 


Rival  Speakers,  The.     (Dta/.)— Anon.— BS  4— HD— 
PS 
(Rival  Orators,  The.)— MPD— NPS— YP 
Rival  Sweetheart,  The.— Jerome  C.  Bull.— SR  10 
Rivals,  The.     (Sel.)—J:  Clare.— EP 
Rivals,  The.— Bessie  Chandler.- BS  20 
Rivalry  in  Love.— W:  Walsh.— BNL 

(Rivals.)— OB 
Rivals,  The,  Sels.  fr.—B. :  B.  Sheridan. 

Challenge,  The.     Ubr.  fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  4,  IV.,  1,  and 

v.,  3.)— NDP 
Cool  Reason.     {Sel.  fr.  II.,  1.)— BS  6— CDD 
(Rivals,  The— 8i.  o6r.)— IR 
(Scenes  from  "The  Rivals" — 2nd  sel.) — SO 
Duel,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  V.,  3.)— PS 

(Duel  Scene  from  "The  Rivals,"  The.)— CS  29 
(Scene  from  "The  Rivals" — al.  diff.) — EA 
Rivals,  The.     (III.,  1.)— BS  8— CDD 
Scene  from  "The  Rivals."     {Sel.  fr.  II.,  1,  and  III., 
J  \ pg  2 

Sceneis]  from  "The  Rivals."     (I.,  2,)— MRS  {ahr.)~ 

SO  {sel.) 
(Mrs.  Malaprop's  Idea  of  Education — sel.) — OS  3 
Rivals,  The.— H.  G.  Smith.— WR  12 
Rivals. — W:  Walsh.     See  Rivalry  in  Love. 
River,  The.— Anon.— CS  5 
River,  The.— S:  G.  Goodrich.— NV—POS 
River,  The.— E:  H.  Plumptre.— FEP 
River,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Evening  Scene,  An — si.  diff. 

rers.)— Coventry  Patmore.- PGT  2 
River,  The.— Caroline  B.  Southey— BS  9— OS  1— POS 
River,  The.— Hiram  L.  Spencer.— TCV 
River  Fight,  The.     H:  H.  Brownelll.— AWB— PAP 

(Se/.)— AA— BAB 
River  God  to  Amoret,  The. — -J:  Fletcher.     See  Faith- 
ful Shepherdess,  The. 
River  of  Commerce,  The.— O.  L.— CG  3 
River  of  Life,  The.     (Thought  Suggested  by  the  New 

Year,  A— C.)— T:  Campbell.— BNL— PGT  1— 

YBF 
River  Path,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.- FP— TAV 
River  Song.— F.  B.  Sanborn.— EPs 
River  Thames,   The. — Sir  J:   Denham.     See   Cooper's 

Hill. 
River  Time,  The.— B:  F.  Taylor.— TAV 

(Isle  of  [the— C.l  Long  Ago,  The.)— BS  1— FTR— 

HNS— KNE— SA 
(Long  Ago,  The.)— LLC— WCLG  2 
Rivermouth  Rocks. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Wreck  of 

Rivermouth,  The. 
River's  End,  The.— Matthew  Arnold.     See  Sohrab  and 

Rustum. 
Rivers  of   England,   The^      (Ideas,   XXXII.:     To  the 

River  Ankor.) — Michael  Drayton. — FEP 
River's  Supplication,  The. — Rob't  Burns.     See  Hum- 
ble Petition  of  Bruar  Water  to  the  Noble  Duke 

of  Athole,  The. 
Riviera,  The.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— POS 
Rivulet,  The.     {Br.  sel.)—W:  C.  Bryant.— EPs 
Rivulet,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS — PoR 
Rizpah.— Mrs.  Lucy  Blinn.— BS  10— SR  3 
Rizpah. — J:  Reade. — TCV 
Rizpah.— Alfred  Tennyson.— BS  25— MRS— PGT  2— 

— VA 
Rizpah.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  36— PS 
Road  to  Fairy-land,  The. — Anon. — TT 
Road  to    Happiness    Open,    The. — Alex.    Pope. — See 

Essay  on  Man,  An. 
Road  to   Heaven,   The.— G:   R.    Sims.— CS  26— DS— 

WR  2  {abr.) 
Road  to  Ruin,  The,  Scenes  fr.     {Play.)—T:   Holcroft. 

—MRS 
Road  to  the  Trenches,  The. — H:  Lushington. — AVP 
Road  to    Wrinkletown,    The. — Irving   C.    Lambert. — 

SR13 
Road  to  Yesterday,  The. — Anon. — PR 
Roadside  Lesson,  A.— Nellie  F.  Wells.— YBT 
Roadside  Path,  The.— D.  H.  Killian.— SR  12 
Roadside  Preacher,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Roaming.     {W.  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Roast  Beef  of  Old  England,  The.— H:  Fielding  and  R: 

Leveridge.— BNL— BVC 
Roast  Pig. — C:  Lamb.     See  Dissertation  upon  Roast 

Pig. 
Roasted  Sucking-pig.     {Punch.)     See  Poetical  Cook- 
ery-book. 
Rob  Rov,  SeU.  /r.— Walter  Scott. 

Death  of  Morris.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXI.)— CS  4 
Macgregor's  Defence.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXV.)— FD  1 
Rob  Roy's  Grave. — W:  Wordsworth. — EPs 
Robber,  The.— Anon.— CS  16— MMR 

{Same  in  prose.) — FMR 
Robber  under  the  Bed,  A.     {Dial.) — Anon. — MFD 


Robbie  Rockaway.— C.  H.  Colle.ster.— CG  3 
Robbie  Tamson's  Smiddie. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Robe  of  Innocence,  The. — Anon. — FTT 
Robert.- Julia  T.  Bishop.— WR  19 
Robert  Browning. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 

(To  Robert  Browning.— C.)— ED Y 
Robert  Browning.     {Philadelphia  Press.) — BS  18 
Robert  Browning     Personalia,     Sel.     fr.     (Browning's 

First  Manuscript.) — Edmund  Gosse. — MRS 
Robert  Bruce    and    the    Spider.— Bernard    Barton. — 

CS24 
(Bruce  and  the  Spider — abr.) — BNL 
Robert  Bruce  and  the  Spider  (Try  again — C). — Eliza 

Cook.— YBT  {abr.) 
Robert  Burns,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Greatness  of  the  Poet,  The.) 

— G:  W.  Curtis.— SSD—TMD 
Robert  Emmet. — T:  Moore.     See  "Oh,  breathe  not  his 

name." 
Robert  Gould    Shaw.— W:    V.    Moody.     See    Ode    in 

Time  of  Hesitation,  An. 
Robert  of    Lincoln.— W  :    C.    Bryant.— BFV— BNL— 

BS  6— CS  16— FMR— FTR— HNS— HSS  2  — 

LC  {abr.)  —  MYF  —  NV  —  PHS  —  PoR  — 

PPSr  (se/.)- WCL— WCLG  1 
Robert  Southey. — Lord    Byron.     See    English    Bards 

and  Scotch  Reviewers. 
Robespierre's  Last  Speech. — Maximilien  M.  I.  Robes- 
pierre.—PS— SS—SSD 
Robin,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  To  the  Robin.)— Eliza  Cook.— 

AD  {w.  mus.) 
Robin,  The.— Katherine  Van  D.  Harkee.— CG  2 
Robin,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.- NV 
Robin,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AD 
Robin    Adair.  —  Lady    Caroline     Keppel.  • —  BNL  — 

FEP 
Robin  and  Makyne.    {SI.  diff.  versions.) — Rob't  Henry- 
son.— EP— OB 
Robin  and  [the]  Chicken  [,The].— Anon.— AD— TFS 

(Self-esteem.)— LLC 
Robin  Burns. — Cierald  Massey. — EDY 
Robin  Good-fellow.     {In  Percy's  Reliques.) — -Anon. — 

WR  15  {si.  abr.) 
(Merry    Pranks    of    Robin    Good-fellow.) — FEP — 

HBP 
Robin  Hood.— J:  Keats.— MRS— OS  2 

(A6r.)— LC— LLC 
Robin  Hood,  Sel.   fr.     (I  am  a  Friar  of  Orders  Gray.) 

—J:  O'Keefe.— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Robin  Hood,  Songs  fr. — Leonard  MacNally. — MRS 
Robin  Hood  and  Allin  [or  Allen,  or  Allan]  a  Dale. — 

Anon.—  BNL  —  CGd  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  OEB 

—PHS 
Robin    Hood    and    Guy    of    Gisbome.     {In    Percy's 

Reliques.)— Anon.— OEB  {si.  abr.)— PEB  1 
Robin  Hood   and   the   Bishop   of  Hereford. — Anon. — 

CGd— OS  2— PHS 
Robin  Hood  and  the  Monk. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Robin  Hood    Rescuing    the    Widow's    Three    Sons. — 

Anon.— BB— WEP  1 
(How   Robin   Hood   Rescued   the   Widow's  Three 

Sons.)— EHT 
Robin     Hood's     Death     and     Burial.       {In     Percy's 

Reliques.)- Anon.— BB— CEL— OEB— PC— 

PEB  1— WEP  1 
Robin  or  I? — Sarah  E.  Sprague.— GMS 
Robin  Redbreast.— W:      Allingham.— BFV— CGd— 

FEP  —  HBP  —  HSS  2  —  LC  —  OS  1  —  PHS 

— PoR— YB  F— YBT 
Robin  Redbreast,    The.— "Aunt    Effiie."— PC— PR— 

YA 
Robin  Redbreast. — G :  W.  Doane. — A  A 
Robin  Redbreast. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Robin  Redbreast. — E.  A.  Mathers. — AD 
Robin  Redbrea.st's  Secret. — {Youth's  Penny  Gazette.) — 

AD— DST  {sel.)— KER  {si.  abr.) 
Robin's  Apology. — Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL 
Robin's  Come.— W:  W.  Caldwell.— AD  (abr.)- HP— 

SN 
Robin's  Farewell. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Robin's  Flight,  The.— Fanny  B.  Bates.— YBT 
Robin's  Message. — Fannie  L.  Hall. — YBT 
Robin's  Nest,  The.— Phrebe  Gary.- BLF 
Robin's  New  Year. — Anon. — DST 
Robin's  Rain-song. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Robin's  Return.^ — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Robin's  Secret. — Katharine  L.  Bates. — AA 
Robin's  Song,  The. — Anon. — LLC 
Robinson  Crusoe.— C:   E.  Carryl.— AA— AWH— TAV 

— THP 
Robinson  Crusoe,  Sels.  fr. — Dan'l  Defoe. 

Crusoe's    Fight    with    the    Wolves.     {Sel.    fr.    Sec. 

XXIX.)— FTR 


281 


Robinson 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Robinson  Crusoe  (continued). 

Friday's  Frolic  with  a  Bear.     {Sel.  fr.  Sec.  XXIX.) 

— FTR 
Getting  Supplies  from  the  Wreck.     (,Sel.  fr.  Sec. 
V.)— WCLI  1 
Robinson  Crusoe  in  Verse. — J.  A.  Brown. — BS  2 
Robinson  of  Leyden.-i^Oliver  W.   Holmes.     See  Pro- 
fessor at  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Rob's  Mittens.     (Youth's  Companion.) — PS — TT 
Rob's  Temptation. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Rock  and  the  Sea,  The.— C:  P.  Stetson.— BS  26 
Rock  me  to  Sleep,  Mot  her. — Eliz.  A.  Allen. — AA — BNL 
— BS  11— CS  11— FEP— HSS  3— LLC— MMR 

—  PYO 

Rock  of  Ages.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 

"Rock  of  Ages." — Ella  M.  Moore  (at.  also  to  E:  H.  Rice). 

—  BeR  —  BNL  —  BS  3  —  CR  —  CS  7  —  CSS 
—FTR  —  HDL  —  HP  —  LLC  — -PEO- PPSr 
— SA 

"Rock  of  Ages." — Frank  L.  Stanton.— FMR  (si.  diff.) 
— WR7 
(How  a  Song  Saved  a  Soul.) — SR  4 
Rock  of  Ages.— Augustus  M.  Toplady.— FEP— YBF 

(Prayer  Living  and  Dying,  A.) — HBP 
"Rock  of  Ages,  Cleft  for  Me!" — Augustus  M.  Toplady. 

See  foregoing. 
Rock  of  Cashel,  The.— Sir  Aubrey  De  Vers.- TIP 
Rock  of    Rubies,  The.     (C.)— Rob't    Herrick.— ES— 
WEP2 
(Julia — w.  add.  st.) — GP 
Rof  kaby . — Anon . — TFS 

Rock-a-bye,  Baby,  on  the  Tree  Top. — Anon. — AD 
Rock-a-by  Lady,  The.— Eugene  Field.— BS  24— EF— 

LS— POS 
Rockaby,  Lullaby. — Josiah  G.  Holland.     See  Mistress 

of  the  Manse,  The. 
Rocked  in  the  Cradle  of  the  Deep. — Emma  H.  Willard. 

—AA— HBP— PYO  (abr.) 
Rocking  Hymn,  A.     (Sweet  Baby,  Sleep.) — G:  Wither. 

— lEP 
Rocking  the  Baby.— Madge  Morris. — HP 
Rocks  of  Mt.  Desert,  The.— E.  M.  T.— CG  1 
Rocks  of  my  Country.     (Cliffs  of  Dover,  The — C.) — 

Felicia  D.  Hemans.— BLP— SS 
Roderick  [,the  Last  of  the  Goths — C],  Sel.  fr.     (Fr. 
Can.     XXV.:     Roderick     in     Battle.)— Rob't 
Southey.— WEP  4 
Rodney's  Ride.— Elbridge  S.  Brooks.— CS  29— NPS— 
PRR— WR  6— YP 
(Csesar  Rodney's  Ride.)— TMD 
Roger  and  Dolly.     (Blackwood.) — HPE 
Rogers'  Groups.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Roger's  Wish. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Rogue,  A.— Anon.— DS— YA 
(Basting  Thread,  A.)— BR 
(Harry's  Mistake.)— LPS— PP 
Roguery  Taught  by  Confession. — J:  Wolcott. — HR 
Rokeby,  Sels.  /r.— Walter  Scott. 

Allen-a-Dale.     (Song— C— Can.     III.,    st.     30.)— 

BFV— BPB— EPs— FEP— LC— PC— PSR 
Brignall  Banks.    (Song— C— III.,  16-18.)— EPs— OB 
(Edmund's  Song.)— WEP  4 

(Outlaw,      The.)— BPB  — FEP  — HBP— LH— 
PGTl 
Buccaneer,  The.     (I.,  5-10.)— WEP  4 
Cavalier,  The.     (V.,  20.)— BPB 
Death  of  Bertram,  The.     (VI.,  32,  33.)— SS 
Friar    of    Orders    Gray.     (Ballad— C.—V.,    27.)— 

EPs 
Rover,    The.     (Song— C— M    III.,    28.)— BFV— 
PGTl 
(Rover's  Adieu,  The.)— OB 
(Song.)— HBP 

("Weary  lot  is  thine  [,fair  maid].  A.") — BPB — 
EPs— YBF 
Youth.     Sel.  fr.  IV.,  11  J— FP 
Roland's  Death. — (Tr.  by)  Leonce  Rabillon.     See  Song 

of  Roland,  The. 
Roll,  Jordan,  Roll. — Anon. — AA 
Roll  On.— Anon.— CS  19 
"Roll  on,  thou  deep  and  dark  blue  ocean — roll!" — Lord 

Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Roll  Out,  O  Song.— Frank  Sewall.— AA 
RoUa  to  the  Peruvians. — R:  B.  Sheridan.     See  Pizarro. 
RoUa's  Address  to  the  Peruvians. — R:  B.   Sheridan. 

See  Pizarro. 
Roll-call  [.The].- Nathaniel  G.  Shepherd.— AA—AWB 
— CS  4— CSS— HB— HBP— HP— KNE— LLC 
—PAPm— PPSr— PRR 
(Calling  the  Roll.)— HSS  1 
Rollicking  Mastodon,  The. — Arthur  Macy. — NA 
Roman,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Monk's  Song.) — Sydney  Dobell. 
—WEP  4 


Roman  Father,  The. — J:  H.  Payne.     See  Brutus:  or. 

The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Roman  Father's  Sacrifice,  The. — T:  B.  Macaulay.     See 

Virginia. 
Roman  Legend,  A. — Jas  C.  Harvey. — CS  31 
Roman  Legions,  The. — J:  Mitforci. — VA 
Roman  Mirror,  A. — Rennell  Road. — VA 
Roman  Senate  and  the  American  Congress,  The.     (Sel. 

fr.  Address  before  the  Congress  of  the  United 

States  in  1851.) — Louis  Kossuth.— BLP 
Roman  Sentinel,  The.— Ward  M.  Florence.— CS  21— 

DS— NPS— YP 
Roman  Soldier  at   the   Destruction   of  Herculaneum, 

"The. — Edwin  Atherstone. — FR  (abr.  and  ad.) 
(Last  Days  of  Herculaneum,  The,  Sel.  fr.) — BS  6 — 

CS22 
Roman  Valentine,  A. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Romance.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  To  Romance.) — Lord  Byron. — 

HSS  3 
Romance. — S :  T.  Coleridge.     See  Kubla  Khan. 
Romance,  Sel.  fr.     (Oak  in  a  Storm,  An- — mon.   and 

pantomime.) — Abraham  Dreyfus. — WR  13 
Romance,  A. — Eugene  Field. — HP 
Romance. — Mildred  Howells. — AA 
Romance. — Andrew  Lang. — VA 
Romance. — Gabriel  Setoun. — PoR 
Romance.     (Songs   of   Travel,   etc.,   VII.) — Rob't   L. 

Stevenson. — OB 
Romance  at  Home. — Sarah  P.  Parton. — MYF — SR  2 
Romance  in  the  Rough,  A. — A.  P.  Martin. — WR  13 
Romance  in  Verse,  A. — Anon. — CS  11 
Romance  in  Words   Frequently  Mispronounced,   A. — 

Anon.— BS  22 
Romance  of   a  Carpet.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.     See  Ro- 
mance of  the  Carpet,  The. 
Romance  of  a  Hammock. — Anon. — BS  11 
Romance  of  a  Hat. — Anon.  (tr.  by  Eliz.  W.  Latimer). — 

SR4 
Romance  of  a  Rose. — Maurice  E.  McLaughlin. — WR  23 
Romance  of  a  Rose,  The. — Nora  Perry. — CR — MRS 
Romance  of  a  Year,  The.— M.  E.  W.  Sherwood.— DR 
Romance  of  Britomarte,  The. — A.  L.  Gordon. — VSG 
Romance  of  Nick  Van  Stann,  The. — J:  G.  Saxe. — BS  2 

— CS  3— HR 
Romance  of  the  Carpet,  The. —  Rob't  J.  Burdette.  — 

AWH— CS  14— SR  9— THP 
Romance  of  the  Ganges,  A.     (Abr.) — Eliz.  B.  Brown- 
ing.—SR  11 
Romance    of    the    Matterhorn,    A. — Esme    Stuart. — 

WR  19 
Romance  of  the  Revolution,  A. — Anon. — PR 
Romance  of  the   Rood-loft,  A.— H.  S.  Clarke.— BS  14 
Romance  of  the  Saw-dust,  A. — G:  A  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Romance  of  the  Swan's  Nest,  The. — Eliz.  B.  Brown- 
ing.—AE  (br.  sel.)  —  BNL  —  BS  14  — CEL  — 

CGd  (abr.)  —  CR  —  GN  —  I<C  —  MR  —  PEB  3 

— WCL 
Romance  of  the  War,    A.     (Dial. — ad.    fr.    "Spirit    of 

'76.")— Anon.— MPD 
Romance  of  "To-day,  A.^ — Anon. — TL 
Romany  Song. — C:  G.  Leland. — OH 
Romanzo  to  Sylvia. — G:  Darley.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The 

May  Queen. 
Romaimt  of  the  Page,  The.  —  Eliz.  B.  Browning.  — 

DR  (se?.)— PEB  3 
Romaunt  of  the  Rose,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Geoffrev  Chaucer. 

— WEPl 
Romaunt  of  the  Rose,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — BNL 
Rome.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Rome. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Rome.     (In  Italy.)— S:  Rogers.— BNL  (sel.) 
Rome  and  Carthage.— Victor  Hugo.— BS  17— CS  6  — 

DS— FD  1— KNE— PPS— PS— SE— SS 
Rome  in  Midsummer,  Sel.  fr.  (Coliseum,  The.) — H:  W. 

Lonefellow.— OS  3 
Rome  Wasn't   Built   in  a  Day.     (For  a   boy.) — Alice 

Gary.— DS— YA 
Romeo  and  Juliet,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Dawn.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  5.)— EPs 

(Morning — sel.) — GP 
Music's  Silver  Sound.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IV.,  5.)— GN 
Potion  Scene,  The.     (IV.,  3— ofcr.)— MRS 
Queen  Mab.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  4.)— BNL— EPs 

(Abr.)— CGd— LC 
(Mercutio's  Description  of  Queen  Mab — si.  abr.) 

—HNS 
Resignation.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IV.,  5.)— HDL 
Romeo  and  Juliet,  Br.  sels.  fr. — AE  (fr.  II.,  2)  — 

BNL  (fr.  III.,  2;  V.,  1)— SE  (fr.  II.,  2.) 
Romeo  and  Juliet,  Sel.  fr.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  II.,  6.) —  AE 

—HNS 
Romeo  and  Juliet,  Act  II.,  Sc.  5.  (SZ.cond.)- WR  9 
(Romeo  and  Juliet — br.  sel.) — AE 


282 


TITLE  INDEX 


Rose-bush 


Romeo  and  Juliet  (continued). 

Romeo  and  Juliet:  Balcony  Scene.     (II.,  2.)  — CDD 

— CR  (sel.)—CS  3— PR— SR  12 
(Soliloquy  of  Romeo  in  the  Garden — ael.) — PS 
Romeo's  Presage.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  V.,  1.) — EPs 
Romeo  and  Juliet.     (Altered.) — Anon. — CS  18 
Romeo  and  Juliet.     (The  Latest  Correct  Version  of  the 

Balcony  Scene.)     Dial. — Anon. — BDD 
Romeo  and  Juliet.     The  Way  it  Should  be  Read   in 

1880.     (Dial.) — Burlinoton  Hawkeye. — DE 
Romeo's  Presage.- — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Romeo  and 

Juliet. 
Romne.y  and  Aurora. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Aurora 

Leigh. 
Romola,  Sels.  fr.—G :  Eliot. 

Romola  and  Savonarola.     (Ch.  XL. — abr.) — CR 
(Romola's   Flight — arr.    by   Mrs.    S.    Saxton.) — 

WR24 
Tito's  Armor.     (Ad.   fr.  Chs.   XXVII.,  XXVIII.. 

XXXIV.)— NDP 
Romola  and  Savonarola. — G:  Eliot.     <See  Romola. 
Romola's  Flight.^ — -G :  Eliot.     See  Romola. . 
Rondeau.     "A  ruined  rose, — I  hold  it  so.  — Anon. — 

CGI 
Rondeau. — Theodora  Bates. — CG  3 
Rondeau.— Leigh  Hunt.— FEP— WEP  4 

(Jenny  Kissed  Me.)— BFV— BNL— CS  20— FTA— 

GP— HBP— LC— OB— OH— OS  2— YBF 
Rondeau  for  St.  Valentine's  Day,  A. — W:  Clyde  Fitch. 

— CG  1 
Rondeau  to  Ethel,  A. — Austin  Dobson. — VA 
Rondel: — "I'd   draw  the   knot   as  tight   as  man  can 

draw."— J.  J.  Mack,  Jr. — CG  2 
Rondel:     "Kissing  her  hair,  etc." —  Algernon  C.  Swin- 
burne.— VS 
(Kissing  her  Hair.)— BNL— OH— YBF 
Rondel:     "Out  of  the  past  remembered  eyes." — M.  G. 

Tuttiett.— BIL 
Rondel  of  Love,  A. — Alex.  Scott. — OB 
Rook  and  the  Sparrows,  The. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — 

LPC 
Rookery,  The. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — VA 
Room  at  the  Top.— G:  Branson. — PTS 
Room  Enough  for  All. — Anon. — CS  26 
Room  for  Children. — Anon. — CPL 
Room  for  You.— G:  R.  Howarth.— CS  18 
Room's  Width,  The.— Eliz.  S.  P.  Ward.— AA 
Rory  of  the  Hills.— C:  J.  Kickham.— TIP 
Rory  O'Moore;  or.  Good   Omens.     (C.) — S:   Lover. — 

BNL  —  CS  20  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HBR 

— LC— MRS— THP— TIP— VA 
Rory  O'More's  Present  to  the  Priest. — S:  Lover. — DI 

— HH 
Rosa  Dartle's  Revenge. — C:  Dickens.     See  David  Cop- 

perfield. 
Rosa  Rosarum. — Mrs.  Darmesteter. — VA 
Rosabella's  Lovers. — Anon.— MND 
Rosabelle. — Walter  Scott.    See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 
Rosader's  Description   of  Rosalynd. — T:   Lodge.     See 

Rosalynde;  or,  Euphues'  Golden  Legacy. 
Rosader's   Sonetto.- — T:   Lodge.     See   Rosalynde;   or, 

Euphues'  Golden  Legacy. 
Rosalie. — Washington  Allston. — A  A — BNL 
Rosalie.— W :  C.  Richards.— GP 
Rosalie. — Juliet  W.  Tompkins. — CG  1 
Rosalind's  Complaint. — T:  Lodge.     See  Rosalynde;  or, 

Euphues'  Golden  Legacy. 
Rosalind's  Description.- — T:    Lodge.     See    Rosalynde; 

or,  Euphues'  Golden  Legacy. 
Rosalind's  Madrigal. — T:  Lodge.     See  Rosalynde;  or, 

Euphues'  Golden  Legacy. 
Rosalind's  Scroll.      (Sel.  fr.  The  Words  of  Rosalind's 

Scroll.)- Eliz.  B.  Browning.- OB 
Rosaline. — T:   Lodge.     See   Rosalynde;   or,   Euphues' 

Golden  Legacy. 
Rosalynde;  or,  Euphues'  Golden  Legacy,  SeZ«.  fr. — T: 

Lodge. 
Montanus'  Sonnet.     (I.) — EP 
Montanus'  Sonnet.      (II.)- — EP 
Poet's  Vow,  A.— EP 
Rosader's  Description  of  Rosalynd.     (Rosalynde's 

Description— C.)—ELP— WEP  1 
(Rosalind's  Description.) — ES 
(Rosaline.)   —  BNL  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  OB  — 

PGT  1— YBF 
Rosader's  Sonetto  (Rosader's  Second  Sonetto — C). 

—FEP 
Rosalind's  Complaint. — BNL 

(Rosalind's  Madrigal.)— ES— FEP— OB 
(Rosalynd's   Madrigal— C.)  —  OEL  —  PGT  1  — 

WEPl 
Rosalynd's  Madrigal. — T:  Lodge.     See  Rosalynde;  or, 

Euphues'  Golden  Legacy. 


Rosamund,  Sel.  fr. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne.     See  fol- 
lowing. 

Rosamund  at  Woodstock.     (Fr.  Rosamund.) — Alger- 
non C.  Swinburne. — VA 

Rosamund  Gray,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Lamb. 

In  the  Churchyard.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XI.)— LLC 
Margaret  Gray.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  I.)— FTR 
Recollections  of  Childhood.   (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XI.)— LLC 

Rosary,  A.— C:  W.  E.  Chapin,  Jr.— CG  1 

Rosary,  The.— Rob't   C.   Rogers.— AA—ASL—FLS— 
YBF 

Rosary  of  my  Tears,  The. — Abram  J.  Ryan. — BNL — 
CS  17— SSS 

Rosciad,   The,    Sel.    fr.    (Characters    of    Actors.) — C: 
Churchill.- WEP  3 

Rose. — Anon. — AD 

Rose,  The.— Anon.— HSS  1 

Rose,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ode  XLIV.)— Anacreon  (tr.  by  T: 
Moore). — AD 

Rose,  The.— W:  Browne.— OB 

(Vision  of  the  Rose,  The.)— ELP 

Rose,  The.— W:  Cowper.- BNL 

Rose,  A. — Sir  R:  Fanshawe. — OB 

Rose,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— EPs 
(Go,  Happy  Rose!)— CEL 

(To  the  Rose  [ :  A  Song— C]  —  ELP  —  ES— OEL— 
WEP  2— YBF 

Rose,  The.    (^6r.)—R:  Lovelace.— ELP— ES— WEP  2 

Rose,  The.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— CS  21 

Rose,  The.— Pierre  Ronsard.- PYO 

Rose,  The.     (C.)— Rob't   Southey. 
(Rose,  The— sZ.  abr.)- HS 

Rose,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Temptation  of  Hassan  Ben 
Khaled.)— Bayard  Taylor.— BNL 

Rose,  The.— Edmund  Waller.— HBP  i 

(Go,  Lovely  Rose!)— BFV— BNL  (w.  add.  st.  by  K. 
White)  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  OB  —  OEL— PGT  1 
—PYO— YBF 
(Rose's  Message,  The.) — CEL 
(Song— O— ELP— ES— WEP  2 

Rose,  The,  Sel.  fr.  ("How  fair  is  the  rose!") — I:  Watts. 
—AD 

Rose  Adair. — Malachy  Ryan. — TIP 

Rose  and  a  Thorn,  A. — Mrs.  Louise  E.  V.  Boyd. — MD 

Rose  and  Root. — J:  J.  Piatt. — A  A 

Rose  and  the  Fair  Lily,  The.— W:  Motherwell.— PEB  3 

Rose  and  the  Gardener,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — OS  2 
(Fancy  from  Fontenelle,  A— C.)— AVP— BNL 

Rose  and  the  Gauntlet,  The. — J:  Wilson  [or  J:  Ster- 
ling].—BNL— HBP 

Rose  and  the  Ring,    The. — Frd'k    Locker-Lampson. — 
AVP 

Rose  and  the  Sunflower,  The. — Anon. — DLF 

Rose  and  the  Wind,  The.— Philip  B.  Marston.— VA 

Rose  and  Thorn,  The. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — AA 

Rose  at  it  Again.— Mitchell  D.  Follansbee. — CG  1 

Rose  Aylmer.— Walter  S.    Landor.—  BFV  —  BPB  — 
FEP— OB— V  A— VS— YBF 
("Ah!  what  avails  the  sceptred  race!") — WEP  4 

Rose  Aylmer's  Hair,  Given  by  her  Sister. — Walter  S. 
Landor. — VA 

Rose  by  the  Wayside,  The. — D.  A.  Drown.— FP 

Rose  in  October,  The. — Mary  Townley. — SN 

"Rose  is  fairest  when  'tis  budding  new.  The." — Walter 
Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

"Rose  kissed  me  to-day." — Austin  Dobson.     See  Rose- 
leaves. 

Rose  of  Avondale,  The.— Helen  Booth.— CS  28 

Rose    of    Kenmare,      The. — Alfred       P.      Graves. — 
HBR 

Rose  of  Rome,  A. — G:  H.  Galpin.     See  Threads  from 
the  Woof. 

Rose  of  Stars,  The.     (In  Wild  Eden.)— G:  E.  Wood- 
berry. — AA 

Rose  of  the  World,  The.  —  Coventry   Patmore.     See 
Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Rose  of  the  World,  The.— W:  B.  Yeats.— TIP— VA 

Rose  Song. — W:  Sawyer. — FLS 

"Rose    that    all    are    praising.    The."     (Sel.) — T:  H. 
Bayly.— BNL 

Rose  thou  Gav'st,  The. — C:  Swain. — VA 

Rose  upon  my  Balcony,  The. —  W:  M.  Thackeray.     See 
Vanity  Fair. 

Rose  will  Fade,  A. — Dora  Sigerson. — TIP 

Rosebud,  The.     (Sel.)—W:  Broome.— OB 

Rosebud  in  Lent,  A. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 

Rosebud  or  Thorn?— Anon.— COS— PP 

Rosebuds.     (Bowdoin  Orient.) — CG  2 

Rosebud's  First  Ball.— (A^cto  YorfcStor.)- HP— WR  17 

Rose-bush,  The.- — Anon. — HP 

Rose-bush,  The.     (Z)ta«.)— Anon.— HVD 

Rose-bush,  The.     (Anon.— <r.  by)  W:  W.  Caldwell.— 
BNL— CS  37 


283 


Rose-cheeked 


AX  IXDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Rose-cheeked  Laura.     (Fr.  Observations  on  the  Art 
of  English  Poesy.)— T:  Campion.— ELP 

(Laura.)— OB 

(Silent  Music.)— CEL 
Rose-colored  Note,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — DDM 
Rose-leaves.  Seh.  fr. — Austin  Dobson. 

"Rose  kissed  me  tfl^<lay"  (Kiss,  A— C). — FTA 

"Urceus  Exit."— OB 
Rosemary  and  Rue. — Floyd  W.  Jefferson. — CG  3 
Roses. — Anon. — FLS 
Roses.— Anon.— PEO 
Roses. — Edgar  Fawcett. — AD 
Roses. — Leigh  Hunt.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the 

Flowers. 
Roses  and  Thorns.     (C.)— R:  H.  Stoddard. 

(Legend,  A.)— OS  r 
Rose's  Cup,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — AA — LFL 
Rose's  Message,  The.— Mary  W.  Abbott. — CG  1 
Rose's  Message,  The. — Edmund  Waller.     See  Rose,  The. 
Rose's  Mite,  The.— Abby  M.  Hall.— CG  1 
Roses  of  Memory. — A.  C.  Gordon. — AA 
Rose's  Plaint,  The.— FBH— CG  1 
Rosicrucian,  The.— Dinah  M.  Craik.— WR  9 
Roslin  and  Hawthornden. — H:  Van  Dyke. — AA 
Rossini.— J:  Todhunter.— EDY 

Rosy  Musk-mallow,  The. — Alice  E.  Gillington. — VA 
Rosy  North,  The.— Anon.— WR  24 
Rough  and  Smooth. — Josephine  Pollard. — PPSr 
Rough  Diamond,  The.— J:  B.  Buckstone.— CS  15 

(Country  Cousin,  The.)— SED 
Rough  Rhyme  on  a  Rough  Matter,  A.   (Bad  Squire, 
The— /r.  Yeast,  Ch.  IX.)— C:  Kingsley.— BNL 
Roughing  It,  iSeis.  ^. — S:  L.Clemens.  ^ 

Buck  Fanshaw's  Funeral.     (Ch.  VI.,  abr.)- BS  2 
— CS9 
(.Abr. )— DDR— DS— H  R 

Coyote,  The.     (Ch.  V.,  afcr. )—TMD 
Round.-M]!:  Dickens.     See  Village  Coquettes,  The. 
Round  my  own  Pretty  Rose.     (C) — T:  H.  Bavly. 

(Nightingale's  Song,  Tne.)—EPs 
Round   of    Life,    The.  —  Alex.    Lament.  —  CS  22  — 

HSS  3  (abr.) 
Roufid  Table,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of 

the  King,  The. 
Round  the  Year.— G:  Cooper.- WR  25— YBT 
Roundel,  The. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — VA 
Round-up,  A.— H:  C.  Bunner.— WR  14 
Rover,  The,  Sei!.  fr.     (Song  by  Rogero  [the  Captive].) — 
G:  Canning.— ESs—FEP 

(Song  of  One  Eleven  Years  in  Prison.)— HBP— THP 


liU'-ei  <Song.     Sung  by  Rogero,  etc.)— HPE 

f3,W>*-^-r^     C  r (University  of  Gottingen,  The.)— MHR— OS 


Rover.— S.  D!— CPL 

Rover,  The.— Walter  Scott. — See  Rokeby. 

Rover  in   Church.— Jas.  Buckham.— BS  17— CS  34— 

DES— NV 
Rover's  Adieu,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Rokeby. 
Rover's  Petition.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— BS  9 
Roving  Journey-man,  The. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Row  in  the  Kitchen,  A.— H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
Rowfant  Books,  The. — Andrew  Lang. — MBB 
Rowfant  Library,  Toe. — Andrew  Lang. — MBB 
Rowland  for  an  (Oliver,  A.     (The  Jest  Book.) — MRS 
Royal  Adventurer,  The. — Philip  Freneau. — AWB 
Royal  Birthday,  A.— W.  J.  C.  Train.— DFR 
Royal    Bumper      Degree,      The.       (Peck's     Sun.)  — 

CRR  (abr.)- GH 
Royal  George,  The. — W:  Cowper. — LH 

(Loss  of  the   Royal  George[,   The].)— CGd— LC— 

PGT  1— PHS— PSR 
(On  the  Loss  of  the  Royal  George — C.)— BNL — 

EDY  —  EPs  —  GN  —  HBP  —  MBL  —  WEP  3 
Royal  Guest,  The.— Julia  W.  Howe.— BNL 
Royal  Mummy  to  Bohemia.  The. — C:  W.Stoddard. — AA 
Royal  Princess,  A.  —  Christina  G.  Rossetti. — BS  7 — 

CS  17— VSG 
Royal  Race.  A.— Jas.  M'Carroll.— TCV 
Royal  Saint,  The.     (lona  Sonnets,  II.) — J:  S.  Blackie. 

—VSG 
Royal  Tarts,  The.— Clara  Denton.— LPD 
Royal  Victory  over  the  Dutch,  The. — Anon. — EDY 
Royalty.— F:  L.  Knowles.— CG  1 
Royalty. — D.  A.  Wasson.- — EPs 
Royalty  of  Virtue,  The.— H:  C.  Potter.— TMD 
Rub-a-dub  Agitation,  A.     (Sel.  fr.  Political  Infidelity.) 

—G:W:  Curtis.— NC 
*Rubaiyat  of  Omar  Khayyam,  Sets.  fr. — (Tr.  by)  E: 

Fitzgerald. 
And  yet— and  yet!     (Sts.  XCVI.-CI.)— VA 
Life  and  Death.    (XVIL,  XVIII.,  XXIV.,  XXVII., 

XLVI..  LXIX.,  LXX.)— OS  3 


Rubaiyiit  of  Omar  KhAyyfim  (continued). 

Master-knot.  The.     (XXXI.-XXXIX.)— VA 
Moving  Finger  Writes,  The.    (LXVI.-LXXII.)— VA 
Omar  Khayyam,  From. — OB 
I.     (X:il.-XV.) 
II.     (XVII.-XXIV.) 
III.     (XCL,  C,  CI.) 
Overture.     (I.-III.)— VA 
Paradise  Enow.     (XI.-XXIV.)— VA 
Phantom  Caravan,  The.     (XLIl.-XLVIII.)— VA 
Rubaiyat  of  Omar  Khayyam.     (XVIII.-XXVIII. 
— AVP 
Rubber.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.)  —  Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Rubies.     (Poems  and    Epigrams,  CVIII.)— Walter  S. 

Landor.— FTA— VS 
Rubric— J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 

Ruby's  Stratagem. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh.- — KC 
Rudder  Grange,  Sels.  fr. — Frank  R.  Stockton. 

Our  First  Experience  with  a  Watchdog.     (Abr.  fr. 

Chs.  VII.  and  VIII.)— BS  15 
Our  Hired  Girl.     (Ch.  III.— cowd.)— WR  15 
Pomona  Describes  her  Bridal  Trip.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch. 

XVI.)— PR— Y  A 
That  Other  Baby  at  Rudder  Grange.     (Sels.  fr.  Chs. 
XIX.  and  XX.)— HBH 
Rudeness. — Eliz.  Turner. — BVC 
Rudolph    the    Headsman. — Oliver    W.   Holmes.     See 

Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Rue.— Anon.— FLS 
Rugby  Chapel.— Matthew  Arnold.— EDY  (br.  sel.)— 

WEP  4 
Ruggles  &  Co.     (Dial.)—C:  S.  Wayne.— CDs 
Ruined  Chapel,  The.— W:  AUingham.— TIP 
Ruined  Cottage,  The.— Clara  V.  (?)Maclean.— CS  15 
Ruined   Library,  A.— Walter  H.  Pollock.— LBB-  MBB 
Ruined  Merchant,  The.— Cora  M.  Eager. — CS  3 
Ruined  Nest,  The.— G  :  Sigerson.— TIP 
Ruining  the  Minister's  Parrot. — Anon. — SR  2 
Ruinous    Con.sequences   of    the    American    War. — W: 

Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham— SS 
Ruins  of  Babylon,  The.— Frd'k  C:   (?)  Husenbeth.— 

CS  10 
Ruins  of  Rome,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Har- 
old's Pilgrimage. 
Rule,  Britannia.     (Fr.  Masque  of  Alfred.) — Jas.  Thom- 
son. —  BNL— BS  23  —  FEP— FP— PGT  1— 
YBF 
Rule  for  Birds'  Nesters,  A. — Anon. — BVC 
Rule  Golden,  The.— Anon.— YFD 

Rules  and  Lessons.— H:  Vaughan.— HBP— YBF  (sel.) 
Rules  of  School.— Anon.— DCP    • 

Ruling  Passion,  The. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Moral  Essays. 
Ruling  Passion,  The.— W:  H.  Switer.— PR— YA 
Rum  Everywhere.     (Irish  World.)     See  following. 
Rum  Evil,  The.     (Irish  World.)— T^ 

(Rum  Everywhere.) — WR  18 
Rum  Fiend,   The.— W:   H.   Burleigh.     See  Rum   Ma- 
niac, The. 
Rum  Fiend's  Portrait.  The.— T:  De  Witt  Talmage.— 
CSIO 

Rum  Maniac,  The. Allison.— CS  2 

Rum  Maniac,  The.— (Ret),   and  ad.   fr.   T:  W.   Nott's 
Rum's  Maniac  and  W:  H.  H.  Burleigh's  The 
Rum  Fienfl,  61/)  Frank  H.  Fenno. — SA 
Rum  the  Worst   Enemy  of  the  Working-classes. — T: 

De  Witt  Talmage.— TS 
Rumpus,  A.— H.  E.  McBride.— MKD 
Rumpus  in  a  Shoemaker  Shop,  A.  —  H.  E.  McBride. — 

MCD 
Rum's  Devastation  and  Destiny. — W:  Sullivan. — CS  22 
Rum's  Maniac— T.  W.  Nott.— BS  2— CS  3 

(See  also  Rum  Maniac,  The.) 
Rum's  Ruin.— E.  C.  Dunn.— SR  1 
Rum-seller's  Invitation,  The. — Anon. — SSS 
Rumseller's  Song,  The.— C.  W.  Denison.— CS  22 
Runaway,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley.     See  followinq. 
Runaway  Boy.  The.     (C.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 

(Runaway,  The.)— WR  4 
Runaway  Boy,  The.     (Prose.)— Jas.  W.  Riley.— CS  3() 
Runaway  Match,  A. — Anon. — DDM 
Runaway  Ride,  A. — Frances  Millard. — WR  14 
Runaways,  The. — Anon. — FAD 
Running  a  Race.— C.  W.  F.— PR— WR  12 

(Tear  and  the  Smile,  The.)— DCP 
Running  Away. — Anon.— TFS 
Running  for  (Congress. — F.  Crosby. — ED 
Running  for  Office.— H.  E.  McBride.— DDD 
Running  the  Batteries. — Herman  Melville. — AWB 
Running  the  Cuban  Blockade,  Sel.  fr.  (Death  of  Garcia, 
The.)— W:  O.  Stoddard.— SR  13 


■•■In  accordance  with  Houghton,  Mifflin  &  Co.'s  edition. 
284 


TITLE  INDEX 


Sailor's 


Running  the  Gauntlet. — Jas.  F.  Cooper.     See  Last  of 

the  Mohicans,  The. 
Running  the  Weekly.— llob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Rupert  of  Hentzau,  Sel.  fr.  (Queen's  Letter,  The — cond. 

fr.  Chs.  XVIL  and  XVIIL)— Anthony  Hope.— 

NP 
Rural  Fehcity. — Anon.— FHE 
Rural  Funerals  (in  Sketch  Book),  Se/. /r.     (Sorrow  for 

the  Dead.) — Washington  Irving. —  CS  5 — LLC 
(Grave,  The— abr.)— KNE  -SAE 
Rural  Hours,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Susan  F.  Cooper. — AD 
Rural  Infelicity.- C:  B.  Lewis.— BS  22 
(Goin'  Somewhere.)— CS  13— DCR 
Rural  Lesson  in  Rhetoric,  A. — Anon. — MHR 
Rural  Life.     {Fraqs.  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Rural  Life  in  England,  Sel.  fr.     (Charms  of  Rural  Life, 

The.) — Washington  Irving. — IR 
(English  Scenery — sel.) — SE 
Rural  Remonstrance,  A.     {Boston  Courier.) — GH 
Rus  in  Urbe. — Clement  Scott. — VA 
Ruskin's  "Ethics  of  the  Dust." — Anon. — CP 
Russia. — Nathan  H.  Dole. — AA' 

Russia  the  Antagonist  of  the  United  States. — L:  Kos- 
suth.—MRS 
Russia  the  Enigma  of  Europe. — Gilbert  H.  Grosvenor. 

— NC 
Rus.sian  and  Turk. — Anon.^NA 
Russian  Christmas,  A. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Russian  Fantasy,  A. — Nathan  H.  Dole. — AA 
Russian  Courtship,  A.— Anon.— CS  34— PR— YA 
Russian  Fugitive,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Laurel,  The — sel.  fr.  Pt. 

III.)— W:  Wordsworth.— HSS  1 
Russian  .lourney.  A,  Sel.  fr.   (On  the  Freeing  of  the 

Serfs- /r.    The   Czar.)  — Edna   D.    Proctor.- 

EDY 
Ru.ssian  Nihilism.— Wendell  Phillips.— FD  2 
Rustic  Bridal;  or.  The  Blind  Girl  of  Castle  Cuille  (Blind 

Girl  of  Castel  Cuille,  The— C.).— H:  W.  Long- 
fellow.—BS  17 
Rustic  Courtship. — Anon. — CS  16 
Rustic  Joys. — T:  Campion.— YBF 
(Fortunati  Nimium.)— PGT  1 
(.lack  and  Joan.) — EP 
Rustic  Lad's  Lament  in  the  Town,  The. — D:  M.  Moir. 

—BNL 
Rustic  Song. — T:  Dekker.     See  Sun's  Darling,  The. 
Rustle  of  a  Wing,  The.— Consider  B.  Carter. — SR  5 
Rusty  Sword,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  34— PS 
Ruth.— T:  Hood.  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  —HBP 

—OB— OH— OS  3— V A— YBF 
Ruth  and  Naomi.— W.  B.  O.  Peabody.— BLP 
Ruth  Bonython    (Mogg    Megone — C. — cond.). — J:    G. 

Whittier.— VSG 
(Spring— 6r.  «ei.)— HSS  1 
(Story  of  Ruth  Bonython,  The— si.  di^.)— WR  16 
Ruth;  or,  the  Influences  of  Nature. — W:  Wordsworth. 

—PGT  1 
Ruth  Pinch's  Housekeeping  —  and  what  Came  of  it. — 

C:  Dickens.     See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 
Ruthie's  Faith  in  Prayer. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Ruthless  Time. — W :    Shakespeare.     See    Troilus    and 

Cressida. 


S.  P.  C.  A.,  The.— Anon.— YFD 

"S"  Supper  and  Sociable. — -Anon. — EuE 

Sibbath,  The.— Anon.— TFS 

Sabbath,  The.— T.  Frelinghuysen.- BS  21 

Sabbath,  The. — Jas.  Grahame.— BNL 

Sabbath  Bells,  The.— Anon.— HP 

Sabbath  Day,  The.— S.  G.  Bulfinch.- TAS 

Sabbath  Evening.— G:  D.  Prentice.— FEP 

Sabbath   Morning,   The.— J:   Leyden.— BNL— FEP— 

HBP 
Sabbath  Morning  in  the  Country. — Philip  J.  Bailey. 

See  Festus. 
Sabbath  of  the  Soul,  The.     (Hymn  XL— C.)— Anna 

L.  Barbauld.— BNL— OS  2 
Sabbatia,  The.— Jones  Very.— TAS 
Sable  Sermon.— I.  E.  Jones.— CS  29 
Sable  Theology.— I.  E.  Jones.— CD 
Sabrina  Fair. — ,1:  Milton.     See  Comus. 
Sacheverel.— W :  Wordsworth.— EDY 
Sack  of  Baltimore,  The.— T:  O.  Davis.— BNL— EDY— 

FEP— PEB  4— TIP— VA 
Sacred  Cypress  Tree,  The.     {Sel.)— 3:  G.  Whittier.— 

AD 
Sacred  Influences. — Jos.  Cook. — LLC 
Sacredness  of  the  Union. — H :  Clay. — OS  2 
Sacredness  of  Work,  The. — T:  Carlyle.     See  Past  and 

Present. 


Sacrifice. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — HB 
Sacrifice. — Walter  S.  Landor. — LH 

(Iphigenia     and     Agamemnon.) — BNL  —  CS  14 — 
HBP— WEP  4 
Sacrifice.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 
Sacrifice  of  Genius,  The.— R.  S.  Hichens.— WR  13 
Sacrilege.— T:  S.  Collier.— BS  20— PR 
Sacrilegious  Gamesters,  The.     {SI.  abr.) — Eliza  Cook. 

— CS25 
Sacristan's  Household,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Sentry  on  the 

Tower,  The.)— Anon.— MMR 
Sad  Accident,  A. — Anon. — DJS 
Sad  and  Sweet.— Aubrey  T:  De  Vere.- CEL 
(Human  Life.)— HDL— VA 
("Sad  is  our  youthf,  for  it  is  ever  going].") — AVP 

—BNL— FEP  " 
(Sonnet.)— HBP 

("Sweet  is  our  youth" — sel.) — HSS  3 
Sad  are  they   who    Know  not   Love. — T:  B.  Aldrich. 

See  'Two  Songs  from  the  Persian. 
Sad  Case,  A.— Clara  D.  Bates.— LPS— PP 
Sad  Day,  The.— T:  Flatman.— OB 

Sad  Fate  of  a  Policeman,  The.— Anon.— DCR— WR  3 
"Sad  is  our  youth[,  for  it  is  ever  going]." — Aubrey  T: 

de  V^ere.     See  Sad  and  Sweet. 
Sad  Memories.— C :  S.  Calverley.- PEB  4 
Sad  Mi.stake,  A. — Josephine  E.  P.  Scribner. — CS  32 
Sad  Mother,  The.— Kathe.  T.  Hinkson.— VA 
Sad  One,  The,  Sel.fr.     (Lute  Song.)— -J:  Suckling.— 

WEP  2 
Sad  Shepherd,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Ben  Jonson. 

^glamour's  Lament.     (Act  I.,  Sc.  1.) — GP 
(Earine.)— EP 

(Shepherd's  Love,  The.)— GP 
^glamour's  Lament.     {Sel.  fr.  I.,  2.) — EP 
Karol's  Kiss.     {Sel.  fr.  I.,  2.)— EP 
Sad  Story,  A.— Anon.— MCS 

Sad  Story  of  a  Little  Boy  that  Cried,  The.     {St.  Nicho- 
las.)—B\C 
Sad   Story  of  Blobbs  and  his  Pullet,   The. — Anon. — 

CS  18 
Sad    Ventures.     {Boston    Cultivator.)     See    Sea    Ven- 
tures. 
Saddened  Tramp,  A. — Anon. — HP 
Saddest  Fate,  The.— Anon.— HDL  (a6r.)— HP 
"Saddest  thing  that  can  befall  a  soul,  The." — Alex. 

Smith.— GG 
Saddle  to  Rags.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Safe  Attachment,  A. — S.  St.  G.  Lawrence. — TL 
Safe  Stronghold,  A.— Martin  Luther.— AE  {tr.  by  T: 
Carlyle.) 
(Mighty  Fortress  is  our  God,  A — tr.  by  F:  H.  Hedge 

— seZ. )— BNL 
(Paraphrase  of  Luther's  Hymn — Hedge.) — A  A 
(Psalm  Forty-six— Carlyle.)— HBP 
Safest  Plan,  The.      {Scribner's  Monthlv.)—SDK 
Safety  in  the  Rock.— J.  D.  Gillilan.— CS  37 
Saga  of  King  Olaf,  The  (Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn:  The 
Musician's  Tale),  Sel.  fr.     (Crew  of  the  Long 
Serpent,  The.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BVC 
Sagamore,  The.— B:  P.  Shillaber.— FP 
Sage  Counsel.- Arthur  T.  Quiller-Couch.— BVC— NA 
Said  I  not  So?— G:  Herbert.— BNL 
Said  Tulip,  "That  is  so."— Madge  Elliot.— NV 
Sail  on  the  Clouds,  A.— Mary  L.  Wyatt.— POS 
Sailing.— Ralph  D.  Paine.— CG  1 
Sailing  beyond  Seas. — Jean  Ingelow. — VA 
Sailing  of   King  Olaf,   The. — Alice   W.   Brotherton. — - 
BS9 
(A6r.)— FR— SPE 
Sailing   of  the   Fleet,   The.     {New    York    Tribune.) — 

PAPm 
Sailing  the  Mississippi  at  Midnight. — Walt  Whitman. 

—SO 
Sailor,  The.— W:  AUingham.— CGd— EPs— VA 
Sailor,  The. — -Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Stage  Land. 
Sailor  Boy,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— WEP  4 
Sailor  Boy  at  Prayers,  The.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 
Sailor  Girl,  The.— A.  P.  Graves.— PEB  4 
Sailor  Santa  Claus,  A. — Patience  Stapleton. — SR  6 
Sailor-boy's     Dream,     The.— W:     Dimond.— CS  15— 
MYF— OM— SS 
(Mariner's  Dream,  The.)— BNL— FEP— HBP 
Sailor's  Apology  for  Bow-legs,  A.— T:  Hood.— THP 
Sailor's  Consolation,  The. — C:  Dibdin  {at.  also  to  W: 

Pitt).— BNL— BVC— FEP— GP— MYF 
Sailor's  Farewell,  The.     (C) — Ruthven  Jenkyns. 
(Good-bye— a<.  to  Moore.)— TFY 
(Sweetheart,  Good-by!)— FLS 

("Sweetheart,  good-bye!  that  flut'ring  sail.") — GG 
(Though  Lost  to  Sight,  to  Memory  Dear.) — CS  13 — 
FTA— HP— PYO  {at  to  Moore.) 
Sailor's  Funeral,  The. — Lydia  H.  Sigourney. — CS  3 


285 


Sailor's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Sailor's    Mother,    The.— W:    Wordsworth.— CGd    (si. 

abr.)— PC 
Sailor's  Return,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.- TDT 
Sailors'  Song. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Sailor's  Story,  A.— C.  H.  N.  Thomas.— CS  15 
Sailor's  Story,  The.— <5:  M.  Vickers.— PS 
Sailor's  Wife,   The. — Jean   Adam,  [at.   also  to   W:   J. 

Mickle].—  BFV  —  BNL  —  GN  —  GP  —  LC  — 

PGTl 
(Mariner's  Wife,  The.)— FEP 
(There's  Nae  Luck  About  the  House.)— BS  6 — EPs 

— HBP— WEP  3 
Sailor's  Wife,  The.— C:  Mackay.— FEP 
Sailor's  Yarn,  A.— F.  T.  Davis.— WR  13 
Sailor's  Yarn,  A. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — NA 
St.  Agnes'      Eve.     (C.)— Alfred      Tennyson.— EDY— 

FEP— OB— OS  3— PGT  2— WEP  4— WR  25 

— YBF 
(Eve  of  St.  Agnes.)— AVP 
Saint  and  Sinner. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Saint  Anthony. — Eliz.  W.  Latimer. — WR  6 
St.  Anthony's  Sermon  to  the  Fishes. — Anon. — EDY — 

FEP— HBP 
St.  Augustine's  Ladder. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — SE  (si. 

abr.) 
(Ladder  of  St.  Augustine,  The— C.)— FTR— GMS 

— SE  (br.  sel.) 
Saint  Brandan. — Matthew  Arnold. — OS  3 
Saint  Brigid. — Rosa  MulhoUand,  Lady  Gilbert. — TIP 
Saint  Cecilia.     (SI.  abr.) — Lewis  Morris. — WR  2 
St.  Cecilia.— Cornelius  O'Brien.— TCV 
St.  Cecilia's  Day.— J:  Dryden.     See   Song   for   St.  Ce- 
cilia's Day,  A. 
Saint  Christopher. — W:  D.  Howells. — SR  3 
St.  Clement's  Day  Rhyme.— Anon. — BVC 
Saint  Columba. — Lionel  Johnson. — EDY 
St.    Distaff's    Day.        (SI.     abr.) — Rob't     Herrick. — 

EDY 
Saint  Elizabeth. — C:  Kingsley.     See  Saint's  Tragedy, 

The. 
St.  Francis  and  the  Wolf. — Katha.  Tynan-Hinkson. — 

TIP 
St.  George  and  the  Dragon. — Eliz.  W.  Latimer. — BS  9 
St.  George's,   Hanover  Square. — Frd'k  Locker-Lamp- 

son.— OH 
St.  James,  Sels.  fr. — Bible. 

Power  of  the  Tongue,^The.     (Ch.  III.)— BS  12 
(Tongue,  The— t).  2-8.)— LLC 
St.  James's  Street  on  a  Summer  Morning.     (Fr.  New 

Timon.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— AVP 
Saint  John  Baptist. — W:  Drummond.     See    St.    John 

the  Baptist. 
St.  John  Baptist. — Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. — PGT  2 
"St.  John  of  Damascus,"  Lines  Prefixed  to. — Douglas 

Ainslie.— AVP 
St.  John  the  Aged.— Anon.— BS  6— CS  21 
Saint  John  [the]  Baptist.     (Fr.  Flowers  of  Sion.) — W: 

Drummond.— EDY— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(For  the  Baptist.)— FEP— WEP  2 
(Sonnet:  Repent,  Repent  1) — ELP 
St.  John's  Eve.— C:  J.  Kickham.— TIP 
Saint  Jonathan. — J:  G.  Saxe. — SCS 
St.  Kevin. — S:  Lover.— DI 
St.  Luke,  Sels.  fr.     Bible. 

Good  Tidings.     (Ch.  II.,  8-15.)— OS  1 

Prodigal  Son,  The.     (Ch.  XV.,  o6r.)— AE— BS  1— 

EA 
St.  Luke  the  Painter.     (The  House  of   Life,  Sonnet 

LXXIV.)— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— EDY 
St.  Margaret's  Eve. — W :  AUingham. — PEB  4 
St.  Martin    and    the    Beggar. — Marg.    E.    Sangster. — 

BS  18— TMD 
St.  Martin's  Day.— Browne  Willis.— EDY 
St.  Matthew,  Sels.  fr.     Bible. 

Beatitudes,  The.     (Ch.  V.,  3-12.)— LLC 
Of  Idle  Words.     (XIV.,  34-37.)— LLC 
Trust  in  God.     (VI.,  26-34.)— BS  3 
Saint  Matthew. — J:  Keble. — AVP 
(Happiness— 6r.  sei.)- FP— OS  1 

("There    are   in    this  loud   stunning    tide.") — 

HDL 
St.  Michan's  Churchyard. — Rose  Kavanagh. — TIP 
St.  Nicholas.— M.  J.  H.— MD 
St.  Nicholas'  Dashing  Ride. — Cleroent  C.  Moore.     See 

Night  before  Christmas,  The. 
Saint  Nick.     (Boston  Budget.)— PV—^K  3— YPS 
Saint  Pancras  Bell. — Shirley  Brooks. — OS  2 
Saint  Patrick  and  the  Impostor. — Aubrey  de  Vere. — 

WR6 
St.  Patrick  of  Ireland,  my  Dearl — W:  Maginn. — HBP 

— THP  J 

St.  Patrick  was  a  Gentleman. — H:  Bennett. — BNL — 

EDY— FEP— HBP 


St.  Patrick's  Day.     (SI.  ofer. )— Ben  King.— BS  21 

St.  Patrick's  Martyrs. — Anon. — CS  17 

Saint  Paul.     (Br.  «eZ«.)— Frd'k    W.  H.   Myers.— AVP 

— VA 
St.  Paul  at  Melita.— J.  H.  Newman.— EDY 
Saint  Peray.— T:  W.  Parsons.- HBP 
St.  Peter's    [Church]    at    Rome. — Lord    Byron.     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
St.  Peter's    Complaint,    Sel.    fr. — Rob't    Southwell. — 

WEP  1 
St.  Peter's  Day.— J:  Keble.— EDY— HBP 
St.  Peter's  Politeness. — Anon. — CS  31 
St.  Philip  Neri  and  the  Youth.     (Dial.) — J:  Byrom. — 

MPD— WRD 
St.  Pierre  to    Ferrardo.     (TheWife,  Act  IV.,  Sc.  3.)— 

Jas.  S.  Knowles.— CS  4— FR— SS 
St.  Romauld. — Rob't  Southey. — CGd 
St.  Simeon  Stylites. — Enrico  Nencione. — EDY 
St.  Stephen's,  Sel.  fr.     (Consequences  of  the  Reforma- 
tion.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — AVP 
St.  Swithin.     (In  Two  Promises.) — Anon. — BVC 
St.  Swithin's  Chair.— Walter  Scott.— BPB 
Saint  Symphorien.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— OS  3— TAV 
Saint  ifrsula.     (The  Story  of  St.  Ursula  —  si.  abr.  —  in 
Fors  Clavigera,  Letter  LXXI.) — J:  Ruskin. — 
WR6 
St.  Valentine's  and  St.  Patrick's  Day.     (W.  music.) — 

Emma  D.  Banks.— BR 
St.  Valentine's  Day.     (In  Love  Sonnets  of  Proteus.) — 

Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— OB 
St.  Valentine's  Day.— Helen  W.  Clark.— PR— WR  12 
St.  Valentine's  Day. — E:  Valentine. — HS 
St.  Valentine's  Day  among  the  Birds. — Anon. — FAS 
St.  Valentine's  Day  in  a  Country  Village.     (Tab.) — 

Anon.— TCfP 
St.  Valentine's  Eve.— E.  W.  Burlingame.— CG  2 
Saint  Valentine's  Eve. — Ernest  McGaffey. — EDY 
St.  Valentine's  Magic  Wand.— W:  Waterfield.— HS 
St.  Valentine's  Revenge. — Clara  J.  Denton. — HE 
Saint's  Tragedy,  The,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Kingsley. 

Crusader  Chorus.     (Act  II.,  Sc.  X. — abr.) — VA 
"Oh,  that  we  two  were  maying."     (Song  fr.  II.,  9.) 
— BIL 
(Song— O— VA 
Saint  Elizabeth.     (Acts  I.-III. — cond. )—WR  1 
Saints'  Messenger,  The. — Anna  J.  Granniss. — TAS 
Sairy  Jackson's  Baby. — Anon. — NPS — YP 
Sal  Parker's  Ghost.— Edwin  Coller.— CS  24— NPS— 

YP 
Salad.— Mortimer  Collins.— THP 
Salad.— Sydney  Smith.— HPE 
(Receipt  for  Salad,  A.)— HBP 
(Recipe  for  a  Salad,  A.)— FEP 
Saladin,  Malek  Adhel,  Attendant.    (Harper's  Monthly.) 

See  Saracen  Brothers[,  The]. 
Salammbo's  Appeal.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Salammbo,  Ch.  III.) 

— Gustave  Flaubert.— WR  13 
Salathiel,  the  Wandering  Jew. — G:  Croly.     See  Tarry 

thou  till  I  Come. 
Sale  of  the  Pig,  The.— Jessie  F.  O'Donnell.— DES 
Salem,  A.  D.  1692.— Edmund  C.  Stedman.— AA 
Sallie's  Visit  to  the  City. — Anon. — FHE 
Sally.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.- CS  2 
Sally  Ann's  Experience— Eliza  C.  Hall.— WR  22 
Sally  from  Coventry,  The.— G.  W.  Thornbury.- EPs 
Sally  In  our  Alley.— H:  Carey.— BNL— CEL— FEP— 

OB— PGT  1— PYO  (abr.) 
Sally  Simpkin's  Lament.— T:  Hood.— THP 
Salome. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Saloon  and  the  Home,  The.— E.  K.  Young.— TS 
Saloon  in  Politics,  The.— Clinton  B.  Fisk.— WR  18 
Saloon  in  Relation  to  Morals,  The. — G.  E.  Pentecost. — 

WR18 
Saloons  Must  Go!    (W.  music.) — Frances  E.  Willard. — 

WR18 
Salopia  Inhospitalis.— Douglas  B.  W.  Sladen. — VA 
Salt-water  Adventures. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 
Salu-Ta-Tat-U.-A.  Ry.— Anon.— MCS 
Salutation  to  the  Kelts. — T:  D'A.  McGee.— TIP 
Salutatorian's  Difficulties,  The. — Anon. — PS 

(Opening  Speech,  The.) — MND 
Salutatory:     "Ladies  and  gentlemen,  I  come." — Anon. 

See  Salutatory  Speech  for  a  Boy  of  Ten. 
Salutatory:     "Our  exhibition   has  begun." — Anon. — 

DLF 
Salutatory:     "Our  program  we  have  put  in  print." — 

Anon.— DJS 
Salutatory,  A:     "Parents  and  friends,  you  have  come." 

—Anon.— MCS 
Salutatory:     "A  welcome,  friends  assembled  here." — 

L.  Crosby.- DLS 
Salutatory.     (1):    "I  have  often  heard  it  said." — Clara 
J.  Denton. — LL 


286 


TITLE  INDEX 


Sated 


Salutatory.     (2):     "Small    oaks    from   mighty   acorns 

grow." — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Salutatory   Address:     "I   am   requested   to   open." — 

Anon.— PS 
Salutatory  Delivered  at  Princeton  University. — Anon. 

— CP 
Salutatory  for  a  Small  Boy. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. 

— KJ 
Salutatory:     For  very  Small    Pupils,  either  Girls  or 

Boys. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Salutatory  Speech  for  a  Boy  of  Ten. — Anon. — KJ 

(Salutatory.)— DLF 
Salute  the  Flag.— H :  C.  Runner.— PAPm  (abr.) 

(Old  Flag,  The— C.)— TAV 
Salve!- T:  E.  Brown.- OB 
Salvel— Hezekiah  Butterworth. — BS  26 
Sam.— Albert  Hardy.— PR 

Sam    Lawson's    Fireside  Stories,  Sela.  fr. — Harriet  B. 
Stowe. 
Laughing  [or  Laughin']  in  Meeting  [or  Meetin']. — 

BS  3— CDV— CS  11— CSS— SA— SDR 
Minister's  Housekeeper,  The.     (Cond.)— DR 
Parson's  Horse  Race,  The.— (Sei.)— SR  10 
Sam  Weller  and   his   Father.^C:  Dickens.     See  Pick- 
wick Papers,  The. 
Sam  Weller's  Valentine. — C:  Dickens.     See  Pickwick 

Papers,  The. 
Sam  Weller's  Valentine.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Samantha  at  Saratoga,  Sels.  fr. — Marietta  Holley. 
Josiah  and  the  Mermaid.     (,Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XI.)— DS 
Josiah  at  the  Various  Springs.     (Set.  fr.  Ch.  XV.) — 
WR9 
Samantha  at  the  Centennial. — Marietta  Holley.     See 

Josiah  Allen's  Wife  as  a  P.  A.  and  P.  I. 
Samantha  at  the  World's  Fair,  Sel.  fr.     (Josiah  Allen's 
Wife  at  a  Fashionable  Restaurant, — sel  fr.  Ch. 
XIV.)— Marietta  Holley.— SR  12 
Samantha  Smith  Becomes  Josiah  Allen's  Wife. — Mar- 
ietta  Holley.     See  My   Opinions  and   Betsey 
Bobbet's. 
Samantha's  Talk. — Samantha  Jones. — SR  10 
Sambo's  Lullaby. — Anon. — DCP 
Sambo's  New  Year  Sermon. — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  36 
Sambo's  Right  to  the  Kilt. — C.  G.  Halpine. — AA 
Same.  The.— G.  D.— CG  1 

"Same  old  baffling  questions!  O  my  friend.  The." — J: 
G.  Whittier.- GG 
(Trust.— O— HDL 
Samela. — Rob't  Greene.     See  Menaphon. 
Sammie— Sallie.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Sample  Rooms. — Anon. — CS  21 — TS 
Sam's  Letter.     (Fr.  Our  [or  The]  American  Cousin.) — 

Anon.— BS  9— CS  20— CSS— SR  4 
Samson.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Samson.— F.  G.  Scott.— VA 
Samson  Agonistes,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Milton. 

Samson  Agonistes.     (Much  cond.) — EPs 
(Death  of  Samson,  The— sel.) — MRS 

(Destruction  of  the  Philistines.) — SS 
(Eyeless  at  Gaza — sel.) — LH 
(Out  of  Adversity — br.  sel.) — LH  - 
(Samson  Agonistes — 1st  sel.) — OB 
Samson  Agonistes — 2nd  sel.     (Br.  sel.) — OB 
Samson  Agonistes.     (Sel.) — -WEP  2 
Samson  Agonistes.     (Br.  sels.) — BNL 
Samson  on  his  Blindness. — (Br.  sel.) — BNL 
Samson  on  his  Blindness. — J:    Milton.     See   Samson 

Agonistes. 
Samuel  Adams  and  the  New  England  Town  Meeting. 
— G:  W.  Curtis.     See  Centennial  Celebration 
of  Concord  Fight. 
Samuel  Hoar. — Franklin  B.  Sanborn. — AA 
Samuel  Short's  Success. — Anon.     See  Simon  Short's 

Son  Samuel. 
San  Miniato. — J:  Sterling. — OS  3 
San  Terenzo. — Andrew  Lang. — VA 
Sanctity  of  State  Obligations.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Speech  in 

Wall  Street,  1840.)— Dan'l  Webster.— SS 
Sanctity  of  Treaties,  1796.— Fisher  Ames.- PS— SS 
Sinctuaiy. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — -AA 
Sanctuary,  The. — Horace  Smith.     See  following. 
Sanctuary  within  the  Breast,  The. — Horace  Smith. — 
BLP 
(Sanctuary,  The— 8eZ.)—SS         , 
Sand.— Anon.— CS  33 

Sandalphon.     (C.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— AE  —  CR — 
FTR— HNS— SE— SPE 
(Sandalphon,  the  Angel  of  Prayer.)— FMR—MMR 
Sandalphon,  the  Angel  of  Prayer. — H:  W.  Longfellow. 

See  foregoing. 
Sand-man,  The. — Elmer  R.  Coates. — CS  27 
Sand-man,  The. — G:  Cooper. — CS  29 


Sandman,  The. — Marg.  Vandegrift. — PoR 

Sandman's  Daughter,  The. — Anon. — DLF 

Sandpiper,  The.     (C.)— Celia  Thaxter.—  AA  —  BNL 
—  GN  — HBP  — OS  1— POS  — SAP  — SN— 
TAS— TAV— TMR— WCL— YBT 
(Sandpiper  and  I,  The.)— GMS 

Sandpiper  and  I,  The. — Celia  Thaxter.     See  foregoing. 

Sandpiper's  Nest,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 

Sands  o'  Dee,  The. — C:  Kingsley.— -BNL.  See  follow- 
ing. 

Sands  of  Dee,  The.     (C. — in  Alton  Locke.) — C:  Kings- 
ley.—  AVP  —  CEL  —  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  — 
HSS  2  —  LC  —  OB  —  PC  —  PEB  3  —  PGT  2 
— VA— VS— WEP  4— YBF 
("O  Mary,  go  and  call  the  cattle  home.") — HBP 
(Sands  o'  Dee,  The.)— BNL— CGd— FP 

Sandy  Hook. — G:  Houghton. — AA 

Sandy  Macdonald's  Signal. — Leo  Ross. — CS  22 

(Foxes'  Tails,  The.)— BS  11— CDV— SDR  (ptly.  arr. 
as  dial.) 

Sandy's  Ghost;  or,  A  Proper  New  Ballad  of  the  New 
Ovid's  Metamorphoses,  as  it  was  Intended 
to  be  Translated  by  Persons  of  Quality. — Alex. 
Pope.— ESs 

Sandy's  Romance. — H :  Davenport. — PR 

Sang  of  the  Outlaw  Murray,  The. — Anon.  See  Outlaw 
Murray,  The. 

Santa  and  his  Reindeer. — M.  H.  Steen. — PS 

Santa  Barbara. — Fs.  F.  Browne. — AA 

Santa  Claus.— Anon.— BVC— PoR 

Santa  Claus.— Anon.— PS— TT 

Santa  Claus.— Anon.— TFS 

Santa  Claus. — Anon. — WR  6 

Santa  Claus. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 

Santa  Claus'  Agent. — -Hannah  M.  Kohaus. — HS 

Santa  Claus  and  the  Motherless  Children. — Sophia  P. 
Snow.— MYF 
(Annie  and  Willie's  Prayer.)—  BS  1  —  CS  5  —  CSS 
— FTR— HR— PPSr— SA 

Santa  Claus  and  the  Mou.se. — Anon. — WR  12 

Santa  Claus  Frolic- G:  M.  Baker.— DFR 

Santa  Claus  in  Spite  of  Himself. — Rossiter  W.  Ray- 
mond.—CS  34 

Santa  Claus  in  the  Mines. — Anon. — BS  12 

Santa  Claus  Outwitted. — Clara  J.  Denton. — HE 

Santa  Claus'  Speech.— T:  W.  Butts.— KNS 

Santa  Claus's  Reception. — Jean  Halifax. — WR  17 

Santa  Filomena.     (C.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— EPs— SE 
("Whene'er  [wr.  where'er]  a  noble  deed  is  wrought  " 
— 6r.  se/.)— FHS— GG 

Santa's  Queer  Joke. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 

Santa's  Secret. — Anon. — -PR — YA 

Santiago. — T:  A.  Janvier. — EDY 

Sanyassi,  The. — Philip  G.  Hamerton. — VA 

Sapho  and  Phao  (C),  Sels.  fr. — J:  Lyly. 

Arrows   for   Love.    (The   Song,  in   making   of  the 

Arrowes— C— /r.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  4.)— ES 
Phaon,  the  Ferryman.- (SeZ.  fr.  I.,  1.)— OS  2 
Sappho's  Song.     (Song— C.—/r.  III.,  3.)  — WEP  1 

Sapphics  of  the  Cab-stand.     (Punch.) — HPE 

Sappho.  (Sel.  fr.  On  the  Cliffs.) — Algernon  C.  Swin- 
burne.— VA 

Sappho  and  Phao. — J:  Lyly.     See  Sapho  and  Phao. 

Sappho's  Song. — J:  Lyly.     See  Sapho  and  Phao. 

Sara.— G:  D.  Sutton.— WR  12 

Saracen  Brothers!,  The].     (Harper's  Monthly.) — BS  5 
— ODD- CS  10— SA 
(Saladin,  Malek  Adhel,  Attendant.)— SS 

Sarah  Ann  Miranda. — Anon. — CS  36 

Sarah's  Proposal.— C:  Barnard. — CS  31 

Sara's  Conversion. — Anon. — DDM 

Saratoga  Waiter,  The.     (DiaZ.)- White.— SCS 

Sargent's  Portrait  of  Edwin  Booth  at  "The  Players." 
— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 

Sarmon  to  Skillettvillers. — Anon. — MCS 

Sartor  Resartus,  Sel.  fr.  (Everlasting  No,  The — Ch. 
VIII.— a6r.)— T:  Carlyle.— BS  19 

"Sary  Emma's  Photygraphs." — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 

Sary  "Fixes  up"  Things. — Albert  B.  Paine. — AWH — 
THP 

Sash,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 

Sassafras. — S:  M.  Peck. — AA 

Sasso  di  Dante,  The.— S:  Rogers.— AVP 

Satan.  (Sel.  fr.  Sospetto  d'Herode,  Bk.  I.) — R:  Cra- 
shaw. — EPs 

Satan. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Satan  and  the  Grog-seller.— W.  H.  Burleigh. — BS  6— 
CS18 

Satan's  Encounter  with  Death. — J:  Milton.  See  Para- 
dise Lost. 

Satan's  Speech  to  his  Legions. — J:  Milton.  See  Para- 
dise Lost. 

Sated  One,  The.     (Punch.)— B.FE 


287 


Satire 


AN  IXDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Satire  Addressed  to  Friend  that  is  about  to  leave  the 
University,  etc.,  A,  Sel.  fr.  (Domestic  Chap- 
lain, The.)— J :  Oldham.— WEP  2 

Satire  V. — On  Women,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Old  Coquette, 
The.)— E:  Young.— WEP  3 

Satire  on  a  Conceited  Playwright.  (To  Mr.  Edward 
Howard,  on  hi# Plays — C.) — C:  Sackville,  Earl 
of  Dorset. — ESs 

Satire  on  the  Dutch.  (Prologue  and  Epilogue  to 
"Amboyna;  or.  The  Cruelties  of  the  Dutch  to 
the  English  Merchants.") — -J:  Dryden. — ESs 

Satire  on  the  Pension  System,  1786. — J:  P.  Curran. — 
PS— ss 

Satire  on  the  Syde  Taillis — Ane  Supplicatioun  Directit 
to  the  Kingis  Grace. — Sir  D:  Lyndsay. — ESs 

Satire  on  the  Whig  Poets.  (<S/.  afrr.) — Alex.  Pope. — ESs 

Satire  upon  Plagiaries,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Apology  for  Pla- 
giaries, An.)— S:  Butler.— WEP  2 

Satire  upon  the  Weakness  and  Misery  of  Man,  Sel.  fr. 
(Upon  the  Weakness  and  Misery  of  Man.) — S: 
Butler.— WEP  2 

Satires  upon  the  Jesuits,  Sel.  fr.  (Jesuits,  The  —  fr. 
2nd  Satire.)— J:  Oldham.— WEP  2 

Satirist,  The. — Harry  L.  Koopman. — AA 

Satisfied.— Hester  A.  Benedict. — HP 

Satisfied.— CharlotteT.  B.  Rog(!.— TAS 

Satisfied  all  Round. — Anon. — DCD 

Saturday  Afternoon. — Nathaniel  P.  Willis. — FEP  — 
HBP— HSS  3  (abr. )—WCL 

Saturday  Night.— Anon.— PPSr 

Saturn. — J:  Keats.     See  Hyperion. 

Saturninus. — Kathe.  E.  Conway. — AA 

Satyr,  The. — J:  Fletcher.  See  Faithful  Shepherdess, 
The. 

Satyre  of  the  Threie  Estaitis,  Ane,  Sels.  fr. — Sir  D: 
Lyndesay. 
Pardoner.— WEP  1 
Pauper.— WEP  1 
Veritie.— WEP  1 

Satyrs'  Dance,  The.- — Anon. — ELP 

Satyr's  Service,  The. — J:  Fletcher.  See  Faithful  Shep- 
herdess, The. 

Saul,  Sels. Jr. — Rob't  Browning. 

David  Playing  before  Saul.     (Sts.  5-7.)— CEL 
David  Singing  before  Saul  (8-10).— WEP  4 
Saul,  Sel.  fr.     (18— a6r.)— HDL 

Saul,  Scenes  fr. — C:  Heavysege. 

David  Exorcising  MaUah,  the  Evil  Spirit  from  the 

Lord.— VA 
Flight  of  Malzah,  The— VA 
Malzah  and  the  Angel  Zelehtha. — VA 

Saul  and  Jonathan.  (Second  Samuel,  I.,  19-27.) 
Bible.— BhP 

Saul  before  his  Last  Battle.      (Fr.    Hebrew  Melodies.) 

N,  — Lord  Byron. — PS 

(Song  of  Saul  before  his  Last  Battle — C.) — EPs 

Saunders  McGlashan's  Courtship. — D:  Kennedy.— 
BS  23— CR  {si.  diff.  vers.)- HBR 

Sausage.     {Pantomimic  char.) — Anon. — TCP 

Sausage-maker's  Ghost,  The.— T:  Hood.— CS  17 

Savage,  A.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— AA 

Savannah. — A.  S.  Burroughs. — EDY 

Save  the  Other  Man. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — CS  11 — 
NPS— YP 

Saved.     {Dial,  and  tab.)— Anon.— CS  8— StD 

Saved.     (DiaZ.)— Anon.— MAD 

Saved. — Stockton  Bates. — CS  28 

Saved. — Jenny  Joy. — CS  5 

Saved.— Mrs.  L.  M.  Sloper.— CS  37 

Saved  by  a  Boy.     (^6r.)— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.- BS  23 

Saved  by  a  Ghost.— Eben  E.  Rexford.— CS  21— NPS 
— YP 

Saved  by  a  Hymn.     {New  York  Evangelist.) — CS  34 

Saved  by  a  Rattlesnake. — Anon. — CS  25 

Saved  from  Suicide. — Anon. — KNS 

Saved  from  the  Poor  House. — Anon. — MFD 

Saving  Mission  on  Infancy,  The. — Harriet  W.  Hodson. 
— BS7 

Saving  Mother. — Anon. — PPSr 

Saving  the  Cider.- Anon.— CS  23— DS 

"Savior,  again  to  Thy  dear  name  we  raise." — J.  Eller- 
ton. — LLC 

"Savior!  I  follow  on." — Horace  L.  (?)  Hastings. — 
SAE 

Saviour,  Who  thy  Flock  art  Feeding. — W:  A.  Muhlen- 
berg.—FEP 

Saviour's  Message,  The.    {€.) — Philip  Doddridge. 
(Hark,  the  Glad  Sound— w.  3  add.  «<«.)- FEP 

Saviour's  Reply  to  the  Tempter,  The. — J:  Milton.  See 
Paradise  Regained. 

Savitri;  or.  Love  and  Death. — {Tr.  by)  Edwin  Arnold 
See  Maha-Bharata,  The. 

Savonarola. — W:  M.  Punshon. — NC 


Savonarola    and     Lorenzo.     {Ad.    fr.    Savonarola.) — 

Alfred  Austin.— NDP 
Saw  ye  Bonnie  Lesley.—  Rob't   Burns.     See  Bonnie 

Saxon  Grft^.— Rob't   Collyer.—  CS  20  —  EDY  —  OF  — 

HB  («/.  abr.)  , 

Say!— L.  L  Melroy.— PS 
"Say  never,  ye  loved  once."     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Loved  Once.) 

Eliz.  B.  Browning. — GG 
Say  not  the  Struggle  Naught  Availeth.     (C) — Arthur 

H.  Clough.  — AVP  —  GP  —  HDL  —  OB  — 

PGT  2— SO— WEP  4— YBF 
(Courage.)— OS  3 
(Despondency  Rebuked.) — HBP 
"Say  ye,  that  years  roll  on  and  ne'er  return?"     (To  the 

Comtesse  de  Molande  about  to  marry  the  Due 

de    Luxembourg — C.)— Walter    S.    Landor. — 

WEP  4 
Saying,  not  Meaning.— W:  B.  Wake.— HPE— SCS 
Sayings  and  Doings. — W:  \y.  Story.     See  He  and  She; 

or,  A  Poet's  Portfolio. 
Scale  of  Minds.' — W:  Wordsworth.     {Verses,  fr.  Post- 
script of  1835.)— EPs 
Scaling  of  Perc6  Rock,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Battle  of  the 

Strong,  Bk.  V.,  Ch.  XL.)— Gilbert  Parker.— 

PFP 
"Scallywag."— Caroline  B.  Le  Row.— BS  22— WR  21 
Scalp,  The.— C.  F.  Savage-Armstrong.— TIP 
Scandal.— Mary  E.  C.  Johnson.— CS  26 
Scandal. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot. 
Scandal  and  Slander.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Scandal  Monger,  The.     (DiaZ.)— Ellen  (?)  Pickering.— 

MDD 
Scandal  Mongers. — Silas  Dinsmore. — HP 
Scandal  on  the  Brain. — Blanche  B.  Beebe.— SD 
Scandinavia.     (Charade.) — Anon. — FAD 
Scaped. — Stephen  Crane. — AA 
"Scarcely   Hope    had    shaped    for    me."     (Br.   sel.  fr. 

Andrew  Rykman's  Prayer.) — HDL 
Scarecrow,  The.— Wallace  E.  Mather.— WR  2 
Scarecrow,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Scarf  Drill.— A.  E.  Hurst.- ID 
Scarlet  Letter,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Elf-child  and  the  Minister, 

The.) — Nathaniel     Hawthorne. — CR    (sel.     fr. 

Chs.  VII.  and  VIII.)— WR  2  (arr.  fr.  Ch.  VIII.) 
Scarlet  Tanager,  The. — Joel  Benton. — A  A 
Scarlet  Tanager,  The. — Mary  A.  Mason. — AA 
"Scatter  in  Spring-time  a  handful  of  seeds." — Anon. — 

YBT 
Scatter  the  Germs  of  the  Beautiful. — Anon. — CS  13 
Scene  at  Doctor  Blimber's. — C:  Dickens.    See  Dombey 

and  Son. 
Scene  at  Niagara  Falls. — C:  Tarson. — CS  14 
Scene  at  the  Natural  Bridge. — Elihu  Burritt. — CR 
(Ambitious  Youth,  The— sZ.  diff.  vers.)— WRD 
(One  Niche  the  Highest.)— CS  7— PFP— SC 
(  SI.  a6r.)— BS  17— PR 
Scene  between  Hamlet  and    the    Queen. — W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Hamlet. 
Scene  from  Cyrano  de  Bergerac. — Edmund   Rostand. 

See  Cyrano  de  Bergerac. 
Scene  from  "Douglas."  A. — J:  Home.     See  Douglas. 
Scene  from  "Hamlet." — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Scene  from  "Henry  IV." — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Scene  from  "Henry  V." — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King 

Henry  V. 
Scene  from  "King  Henry  VIII." — W :  Shakespeare.  See 

King  Henry  VIII. 
Scene  from  "Julius  Csesar." — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

Julius  Cajsar. 
Scene  from  "Leah." — Augustin  Daly.     See    Leah    the 

Forsaken. 
Scene  from  "London  Assurance."  —  Dion  Boucicault. 

See  London  Assurance. 
Scene  from  "Richard   III."  —  W:   Shakespeare.     See 

King  Richard  III. 
Scene  from     "Richelieu."  —  E:     Bulwer-Lytton.     See 

Richelieu. 
Scene  from  "The  Hunchback." — Jas.  S.  Knowjes.    See 

Hunchback,  The. 
Scene  from  "The  Iron  Chest." — G  :  Colman.— AE 
Scene  from  "The  Lady  of  Lyons." — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. 

See  Lady  of  Lyons,  The. 
Scene  from  the  Life  of  Robin  Hood,  A. — Mrs.  Russell 

Kavanaugh. — KER 
Scene  from  "The  Little  Minister." — Jas.  M.   Barrie. 

See  Little  Minister,  The. 
Scene  from  "The  Love  Chase." — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See 

Love  Chase,  The. 
Scene  from  "The  Merchant  of  Venice." — W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 


288 


TITLE  INDEX 


Schools 


Scene  from  "The  Rivals." — R:  B.  Sheridan.  See  Rivals, 

The. 
Scene  from  "The    Spanish    Gypsy." — -G.     Eliot.     See 

Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 
Scene  in  a  Backwoods  School. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
Scene  in  a  Photograph  Gallery. — Anon. — MC 
Scene  in  a  Railway  Station. — H.   E.   McBride. — MHD 
Scene  in  a  Street  Car. — Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Scene  in  an  Irish  School. — Gerald  Griffin. — MMR 
Scene  in  Court,  A. — Anon. — CS  23 
Scene  in  Court,  A. — Anon. — PD 

Scene  in  Paradise,  A. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Scene  in  the  Bobtown  School,  A. — H.  E.  McBride. — 

MHD 
Scene  on  the  Austrian  Frontier,  A.     {Punch.) — HPE 
Scene  on  the  Battlefield,  A.— H:  W.  Grady.   See  South 

and  her  Problems,  The. 
Scenes  at  the  Police  Court. — Anon. — DE. 
Scenes  from  "The  Hunchback." — Jas.  S.  Knowles.    See 

Hunchback,  The. 
Scenes  from  the  Life  of  an  Ofiice-boy.     {Tab.) — Anon. 

—TCP 
Scenes  from    "The    Rivals." — R:    B.    Sheridan.     See 

Rivals,  The. 
Scenes  from  "The  School  for  Scandal." — R:  B.  Sheridan. 

See  School  for  Scandal,  The. 
Scent  of  a  Good  Cigar,  The. — Kate  A.  Carrington. — 

PPh 
Scented   Grove,  The. — -W:    Browne.     See    Britannia's 

Schake  und  Agers.— I.  H.  Brown.— CRR—CS  28  (si. 

abr.) 
Schemer,  A. — Edgar  L.  Warren. — PEO 
Schill.     (Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Independence 
and  Liberty,   Pt.  II.,  Sonnet   XIX.— (.'.)— W: 
Wordsworth.^EPs 
Schiller's  Dying  Vision. — Agnes  M.  Macharr. — TCV 
Schlausenheimer's    Alarming-glock. — A.  Von  Boyle. — 

BDD 
Schlausheimer    Don't    Gonciliate. — A.    Von    Boyle. — 

BDD— CS  12— DRR— DS 
Schlosser's     Ride.     (Parody    on    Sheridan's    Ride.) — 

Anon.— BDD— DFY 
Schneider  Sees   Leah. — -"Uncle   Schneider."     See  fol- 
lowing. 
Schneider's  Description  of  the  Play  of  Leah. — "Uncle 
Schneider."— BRR— CSS 
(Schneider  Sees  Leah.)—  BDD  —  BeR  —  BS  2— 
DFY— SDR 
Schneider's  Ride.     (Parody  on  Sheridan's  Ride.) — Gus 
Phillips  [or  "Oofty  Gooft"].— CS  9— DRR 
(SI.  diff.  vers.)- BDD— DFY 
Schneider's  Tomatoes.— C:  F.  Adams.- BDD— CD— 

CDV— CS  24— DFY— SDR 
Schnitzerrjl's  Philosopede.  —  C:  G.  Leland.  —  BDD  — 
DFY  (abr.)- DRR 
(Schnitze[r]rs  Velocipede — si.  diff.    vers.) — CDV — 
CRR 
Schnitzerl's   Velocipede. — C:   G.   Leland.     See   forego- 
ing. 
Scholar,    The.     (Occasional     Pieces,  XVIII.— C.)  — 
Rob't  Southey.— PGT  1 
(Books.)— BNL 
(His  Books.)— OB 
(Library,  The.)— LBB— MBB 
(My  Days  among  the  Dead  [are  Passed].) — FEP  — 

HBP— YBF 
(Stanzas  Written  in  his  Library.) — WEP  4 
Scholar,  The. — H:  Taylor.     See  Edwin  the  Fair. 
Scholar  and  Carpenter,  Br.  sels.  fr. — Jean  Ingelow. 
God's  Time.— SR  1 
I  Have  the  Courage  to  be  Gay. — BIL 
Scholar  and   his   Dog,  A,  Sel.   Jr.     (Philosophy.) — J. 

Marston. — BNL 
Scholar  and  the  State,  The'.— Frank  S.  Black.— TMD 
Scholar  in  a  Republic,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Wendell  Phillips. 
Distrust  of  the  People.— FD  2 

(Scholar's  Distrust,  The — ptly.  same.) — NC 
Educate  the  Masses. — FD  2 
Scholar  in  Public  Life,  The.    (Ptly.  diff.  sels.) — Chaun- 

cey  M.  Depew.— NC— SSD 
Scholar  of  Thebet  Ben  Khorat.    .(Sei. )— Nathaniel  P. 

Willis.— PFP 
Scholar,  t  e  Jurist,  the  Artist,  the  Philanthropist,  The, 
Sel.  fr.     (Incentives  to  Duty.) — C:  Sumner. — 
CR 
(Age  of  Progress — sel.) — IXC 
Scholar-Gypsy,  The.— Matthew  Arnold. — AVP— OB— 
PGT  2 
(Flee  fro'  the  Press — sel.) — LH 
Scholar's  Convention,  The. — Julia  H.  May. — FS 
Scholar's  Distrust,  The.— Wendell  Phillips.     See  Schol- 
ar  in  a  Republic,  The. 


Scholar's  Mission,  The.— G:  Putman.— WRD 
Schone  Rothraut. — J:  A.  Goodchild. — VA 
School. — Anon. — DJS 

(Six  Years  Old.)— TFS 
(Six-year-old,  A.)— PS— TT 
(Speech  for  a  Six-year-old.) — KER 
School,  The.— Fitz-Hugh  Ludlow.— HSS  2— WCL 
School  Affairs  in  Riverhead  District. — C.  W.  Deans. — 

SDD 
School  and  School-fellows.— W:     M.     Praed.— FEP— 

HPE  («;.  abr.) 
School,  Before  and  After. — Anon. — LLC 
(Before  and  After  School.)— WR  7 
(School  Children.)— HSS  2 
School  Begins  To-day.— J:  H.  Yates.— BS  9 
School  "Called."— B:  F.  Taylor.— BS  6 
School  Cantata. — Louisa  P.  Hopkins. — CS  25 
School  Children. — Anon.    See  School,  Before  and  After. 
School  Committee,  The.   (Dtal.)—W.  B.  Fowle.— MPD 
School  Committee  Man,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
School  Episode,  A. — Anon. — WR  7 
School  Episode.  A. — Emma  Shaw. — CS  30 
School  Fencibles. — W :  Cory. — LH 
School  for  Scandal,  The,  Sels.  fr.—R:  B.  Sheridan. 
Let  the  Toast  Pass.    (Songfr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  3.)— BNL 
Quarrel  between  Sir  Peter  and   Lady  Teazle.    (II., 
1;  I.,2— 6r.  sel.;  III.,  1— se/.)— BS  10— HD 
(Lady  Teazle  and  Sir  Peter — abr.) — CR 
(Old  Gentleman  who  Married  a  Young  Wife,  The 

— sel.)— BC 
(Quarrel  Scene  from   "School  for  Scandal.") — 

CS  17 
(Scenes  from  "The  School  for  Scandal" — abr.) — 

FTR 
(School  for  Scandal — br.  sel.) — SE 
(Sir  Peter  and  his  Lady  Quarrel — abr.) — VSG 
School  in  an  Uproar.     (Tab.) — Tony  Denier. — TDT 
School  is  Out. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
School  of  Compliments,   The,   Sel  fr.   (Holiday  in  Ar- 
cadia— song  fr.  Act  V.,  Sc.  3.) — Jas.  Shirley.— 
CEL 
(Pan's  Holiday.)— EP 
School  or  Work. — Anon. — FHE 
School  Statistics. — Anon. — BS  10 

(Nineteenth  Century  Teacher,  The.)— SR  3 
School  "Takes  Up."— Rob't  J.  Burdette.- SYS 
School-bell,  The.— Clara  J.  Denton.— WLO 
School-boy,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— AP 
School-boy,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
School-boy  on  Corns,  A.— Anon.— BS  14— CS  26— DS 
School-boy's  Apples,  The.— Anon.— CS  23— DS 
Schoolboys'  Strike,  The. — Rob't  J.  Burdette.- BS  24— 

WR26 
Schoolday.     (Dramatic  Charade.) — Mrs.  Sara  K.  Hunt. 

— MD 
School-day,  A.— Will  F.  McSparran.— CH— CRR 
School-days.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
School-girl,  The.— W:  H.  Venable.— AA 
School-girl's  Troubles,  A. — Annette  Marsh. — PR 
School-house,     The. — Jas.     R.     Lowell.     See    Biglow 

Papers,  The. 
Schooling  a  Husband. — Anon. — CS  10 
School-ma'am,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
School-ma'am,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Interview  between  the 
School  Directors  and  the  Janitor,  An.) — T.  S. 
Denison.— SR  1 
School-ma'am's  Courting.  The. — Florence  E.  Pratt  [or 
Pyatt].— CRR— DR 
(Courting  in  Kentucky.)— A WH—BS  19— THP 
(Kerrected.)— SR  7 
Schoolmaster,  The.— (Dial.)— W.  T.  Adams.— NDP 
Schoolmaster,  The. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Deserted 

Vidage,  The. 
Schoolmaster  Abroad,  The. — Anon. — FDY 
Schoolmaster  Abroad  with  his  Son,  The. — C:  S.  Calver- 

ley.— THP 
Schoolmaster  Beaten,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  Nicholas 

Nickleby. 
Schoolmaster's  Conquest,  The. — Anon.— CS  19 
School-master's  Guests,  The.     (SI.  abr.) — Will  Carle- 
ton.— BS  5— CS  14 
Schoolmaster's  Sleep,  The.— Ben  W.  Davis.— CS  9 
School-mistress,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — PTS 
Schoolmistress,  The.— W:  Shenstone.— FEP— HBP 
(Suffering  and  Sympathy — br.  sel.) — WEP  3 
(Village  Schoolmistress,  The — sel.) — BNL 
Schoolroom  I  Love  the  Best,  The. — Kathe.  L.  Bates. — 
WR17 
(Vacation  Song.)— POS 
Schoolroom  Idyl,  A.— C:  B.  Going.— PR 
Schools  and   Colleges  of    our  Country,  The. — C:  W. 
Eliot.     See  Washington  and  our  Schools  arid 
Colleges. 


289 


Schools 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Schools  and  Teachers. — Anon. — SE 

Schools  Take  Part,  The.— H:  Watterson.  See  Our 
Expanding  Republic. 

School-teacner,  The. — H:,  Lord  Brougham. — BLP 

School-time. — Anon. — WR  17 

Science  Friendly  to  Freedom. — E.  H.  Chapin.  See 
Moral  and  Phrsical  Science  Friendly  to  Free- 
dom. 

"Science,  if  true  to  itself,  must  come  back  to  a  personal 
God."— Noah  Porter.— GG 

Science  Religious. — E:  Hitthcock.  <See  True  'Science 
and  Religion  (True  Science  ought  to  be  Re- 
ligious). 

Scientific  Genesis,  The. — Anon. — BS  17 

Scientific  Method  Applied  to  History,  Br.  sel.  jr.  (His- 
tory.)—Jas.  A.  Froude.- FTR 

Scientific  Party,  A.— I.  H.  Brown.— CRR 

Scintillate.     (.Charade.) — Anon. — FAD 

"Scipio."— Walter  S.  Keplinger.— CS  29— NPS— YP 

Scipio  Declines  Hannibal's  Overtures  for  Peace. — Livy.  ^ 
See  History  of  Rome. 

Scipio  to  his  Army. — Livy.     See  History  of  Rome. 

Scipio  to  the  Senate. — D.  A.  Wasson. — MYF 

Scorching  versus  Diamonds.— Pauline  Phelps. — WR  20 

Scorn  not  the  Sonnet.     (Misc.  Sonnets,  Pt.  II.,  No.  1.) 
—W:  Wordsworth.— FEP 
(Sonnet,  The.)— BNL— OB  (II.)— YBF 

Scorn  to  be  Slaves. — Jos.  Warren.  See  Constitutional 
Liberty  and  Arbitrary  Power. 

Scot  to  Jeanne  d'Arc,  A.  (SeZ.)— Andrew  Lang. — 
EDY— VA 

Scotch  Heather. — Marion  Manville. — BIL 

Scotch  Hymn. — Anon. — HDL 

Scotch  Jeanie's  Story. — Anon.- — BS  19 

Scotch  Philosophy  of  Kissing.  (Harper's  Magazine.) — 
CDV— SDR 

Scotch  Witness,  A.— Anon.— WR  22 

Scotch  Words.— Rob't  Leighton.— MHR 

Scotland.— Rob't  Burns.  See  To  the  Guid  Wife  of 
Wauchope  House. 

Scotland.— Edmund  Flagg.— FD  1— TMD  («i.  abr.) 

Scotland. — Walter  Scott.  See  Lay  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel The. 

Scotland's  Maiden  Martyr.— Anon.— FTR — HB 

(Maiden  Martyr,  The.)  —  BS  5  —  CS  14  —  DS  — 
FR— PFP— SA— SC— SR  6 

Scots  Apostasie,  The. — J:  Cleiveland. — ESs 

Scots,  Wha  Hae.—(C.)— Rob't  Burns.— PYO 

(Bannockburn.)—  BS  5  —  EDY  —  EPs  —  FEP  — 
GN  —  HB  —  HBP  —  LC  —  OS  1  —  PHS  — 
WEP  3— YBF 
(La<ert>ers.)— BPB 

(W.  two  add.  s<8.)— BLP— BNL— GP— HSS  1 
(Battle  of  Bannockburn — later  vers.) —  CEL  —  EHT 
(Bruce's  Address  [to  his  Army].) — LC 
(Later  vers.)— CSS— PPSr 

Scott  and  the  Veteran. — Bayard  Taylor.— CS  1 — NPS 
— PAP— WRD— YP 

Scottish  Ballad,  A.— W:  Lyle.— WR  4 

Scottish  Winter  Landscape,  A. — Gawain  Douglas.  See 
Prologues  to  the  .(Eneid. 

Scourge  of  War,  The.— W :  H.  Burleigh.— BLP— LLC 

Scream  from  the  American  Eagle  in  Dakota,  A. — Anon. 
—CRR 

Scripture  Etchings  for  Arbor  Day.  (Scattered  verses.) 
— Bible.— WR  11 

Scripture  Questions. — Anon.— DCR 

Scripture  Scenes.     (2  tabs.) — Anon. — TCP 

Scripture  Tableaux. — Anon. — TCP 

Scrooge  and  Marley. — ^C:  Dickens.  See  Christmas 
Carol,  A. 

Scrooge  Fulfils  his  Vow. — C:  Dickens.  See  Christmas 
Carol,  A. 

Scrooge's  Reformation. — C:  Dickens.  See  Christmas 
Carol,  A. 

Sculpin. — Anon. — BeR 

Sculptor,  The.— G:  W.  Doane.— OS  1 
(Life  Sculpture.)— YBT 

Sculpture.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Scurrilous  Scribe,  The. — Philip  Freneau. — AA 

Scylla's  Metamorphosis,     Sel.  fr.   (Lament  in  Spring, 
A.)— T:  Lodge.— EP 
(Spring  and  Melancholy.)— ES—OEL 

Scythe  Song.  — Andrew  Lang.  —  GN  —  SN  —  VA — 
YBT 

Sea,  The.— Anon.— NA 

Sea,  The. — Bernard  Barton. — BNL 

Sea,  The. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 

Sea,  The. — Lord  Byron.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrim- 
age. 

Sea. — Lord  Byron.     See  Corsair,  The. 

Sea,  The. — Ralph  W.  Emerson.     See  Sea-shore,  The. 

Sea,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— POS 


Sea,  The. — (Sel.  fr.  Reveries  of  a  Bachelor. — Fourth 

Reverie,    I. — Cond.) — Donald    G.    Mitchell. — 

SR12 
Sea,  The.— Eva  L.  Ogden.— CS  37 
Sea,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.- AE  (br.  sel.)  —  BNL  — 

CEL  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  HSS  2  —  LC  — 

OS  2— POS— SN— VA— VS— WEP  4 
(Song  of  the  Sea,  A.)— LH 
Sea,  The.— R:  H :  Stoddard.     See  Sea,  The  [Storm]. 
Sea,  The. — Alfred      Tennyson.     See     Break,      Break, 

Break. 
Sea  and  Land  Victories. — Anon. — AWB 
Sea  and  Shore. — Harry  L.  Koopman. — AA 
Sea  Ballad. — Sydney  Dobell.     See  Balder. 
Sea  Captain's  Story,  The.— Lord  Lytton  (?).- WRD 
Sea  Child,  A.— Bliss  Carman. — VA 
Sea  Child. — See  also  Sea-child. 

Sea  Dirge,  A. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Tempest,  The. 
Sea  Dreams,  Sel.   fr. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  "What 

does  little  birdie  say?" 
Sea  Fight,  The.— Anon.— BNL 
Sea  Fight,  The. — C:  Kingsley.     See  Westward  Ho! 
Sea  Fight.     See  also  Sea-fight. 
Sea  Fowler,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— LC—VA 
Sea  Gull.     See  Sea-gull. 
Sea  Gulls.— R.  W.  Page.— CG  3 
Sea  Irony. — J.  L.  Heaton. — AA 

Sea  Life. — Jas.  Montgomery.     See  Pelican  Island,  The. 
Sea  Longings.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— SN 
Sea  of  Faith,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Passage  to  India,  Sec.  IX.) 

—Walt  Whitman.— TAS 
Sea  of  Fire,  The.    (Br.  sel.  fr.  St.  32.)— Joaquin  Miller. 

—BIL 
Sea  of  Troubles,  A.     (Dial.)— G:M.  Baker.— MPD 
Sea  Shell,  The.— W :  Wordsworth.     See  Excursion,  The. 
Sea  Shell.     See  also  Sea-shell. 
Sea  Side  Song.s.     (C.)— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton. 

(Serenade.)— CEL 
Sea  Slumber-song. — Roden  Noel. — VA 
Sea  Song. — W:  E.  Channing. — EPs 

(Our  Boat  to  the  Waves— «/.  abr.) — BNL 
Sea  Song,  A.— Allan  Cunningham.— GN—LH— PYO 
(A6r.)— EPs— LLC 
(At  Sea.)— BFV— PSR 
("Wet  sheet  and  a  flowing  sea.  A.")— BNL— BVC— 

FEP  —  HBP  —  LC  —  OS  2  —  PC  —  PGT  1  — 

YBF 
Sea  Song,  A.     (Williams  Literary  Monthly.) — CG  3 
Sea  Song.     See  also  Sea-song. 

Sea,  The  [Storm— C.].—R:  H.  Stoddard.— AA— HBP 
Sea  Story,  A.— Emily  H.  Hickey.— PEB  4— VA 
Sea  Ventures.     (Boston  CuU.)—SSS 
(Heart  Ventures.)— CS  22 
(Sad  Ventures.)— HP 
Sea-birds. — Eliz.  A.  Allan. — AA 
Sea-bird's  Cry,  The.— Edith  F.  Parsons.— CG  3 
Sea-cave,  The. — I^ord  Byron.     See  Island,  The. 
Sea-child,  The.— Eliza  Cook.— VA 
Sea-child.     See  also  Sea  Child. 
Sea-fight,  The.— Anon.— HBP 

Sea-fight,  A. — Walt  Whitman.     See  Song  of  Myself. 
Sea-fight.     See  also  Sea  Fight. 
Sea-gull,  The.— A.  D.  MacNeill.— TCV 
Sea-gulls.     See  Sea  Gulls. 
Sea-king,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— VS 
"Sea-maids'  Music,  The." — Ernest  Myers. — VA 
Seal  Lullaby.     (Verses  preceding  The  White  Seal,  in 

The  Jungle  Book.) — Rudyard  Kipling. — PoR 
Sealed  Orders. — Anon. — CS  27 
Sea-limits,  The. — Dante  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Seaman's  Happy  Return,  The. — Anon. — HBP 
Sea-marge.— Alex.  Smith.     See  Life-drama,  A. 
Sea-mews  in  Winter  Time. — Jean  Ingelow. — CS  37 — 

PQS  (a5r.) 
Search,  The. — Ernest  Crosby. — A  A 
Search  after  God.— T:  Heywood.— HBP 
Search  after  Happiness-  or.  The  Quest  of  Sultaun  Soli- 
maun,  The.— Walter  Scott. — HPE 
Search  for  Happiness,  The.     (Play.) — Mary  L.   Gad- 

dess.— WR  4 
Search  for  Harold's  Body,  The. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. 

See  Harold.   , 
Search  for  the  Fairies,  A.     (Play.) — Clara  Denton. — 

LPD 
Search  Questions.     (S.  S.  exercise.) — Anon. — PS 
Searching  for  Happiness.     ( Tab. ) — Anon. — TCP 
Searching  for  the  Slain.— Anon.— CS  3— FTR— NPS— 

PS— YP 
(After  the  Battle.)— HSS  1 
Sea's  Influence,  The.— W:  E.  Hunt.— TCV 
Sea's  Love,  The.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— HP 
Sea's  Spell,  The. — Susan  M.  Spalding. — AA 
Sea-serpent,  The. — Planch^. — NA 


290 


TITLE  INDEX 


Sects 


Sea-shell,  The.— H.  W.— HSS  2 

Sea-shell,  The.— G:  Macdonald.— BIL— TFY 

Sea-shell.     See  also  Sea  Shell. 

Sea-shell  Murmurs.— Eugene  Lee-Hamilton. — VA 

Sea-shore,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.)' — BNL 

Sea-shore,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Sea, The.)— Ralph  W.  Emerson. 

—BNL 
Sea-shore,    The. — W:    Wordsworth.     See    Excursion, 

The. 
Sea-side  Flirtation,  A.— S:  M.  Peck.— DES 
Seaside  Incident,  A.— Marc  Cook.— HP— TAV— WR  2 
Seaside  Well,  The.— Anon.— BNL 
Sea-sleep. — -T:  L.  Harris. — AA 
Seasonable  Sweets. — C— PPh 
Sea-song.— W:  D.  Baker.— CG  1 
Sea-song.     See  also  Sea  Song. 

Sea-song  from  the  Shore,  A. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — PoR 
Seasons,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — 'DJS 
Seasons,  The.     (Dial.) — -Anon. — MD 
Seasons,  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Seasons,  The. — ^Jas.  (?)  Grahame. — FP 
Seasons,  The. — M.  E.  N.  Hathaway.     See  Signs  of  the 

seasons. 
Seasons,  The. — Hattie  Home. — SDD 
Seasons,  The.      (Literary  recreations.) — Eliz.  Lloyd. — 

BS13 
Seasons.  The. — Helen  A.  Ricker. — NV 
Seasons,  The. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene, 

The. 
Seasons,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  Thomson. 
Autumn,  Sels.  fr. 

"Oh,  bear  me  then."     (Br.  sel.  in  Thoughts  on 

the  Forest.)— AD 
Stag  Hunt,  The.— BNL 
Storm  in  Harvest.— WEP  3 
Hymn,  A.  (C.) 

(Hymn  of  the  Seasons.)— FEP 
(Hymn  on  the  Seasons.) — BNL 
(Seasons,  The— seZ.)- FP 
(Universal  Hymn  of  Nature,  The — abr.) — SS 
Sea.sons,  The,  Br.  sels.  /r.— BNL 
Spring,  Sels.  fr. 
Angling — BNL 

Coming  of  the  Rain,  The.— WEP  3 
Connubial  Life. — BNL 

(Soul  Culture— br.  seZ.)— BLP 
Domestic  Birds.     (Br.  sel.) — BNL 
Early  Spring. — AD 

Nightingale,  The.     (Br.  scZ.)— EPs— LC 
Nature  in  Spring. — GP 

("Who  can  paint  like  nature,"  etc. — br.  sel.) 
— BS8 
Plea  for  Animals,  A. — BNL 
Rainbow,  The.— GP 
Songsters.  The.— BNL— POS 
Spring,  The.     (Br.  seZ.)— AD 
Summer,  Sels.  fr. 
Bathing.— BNL 

"Hence,  let  me  haste."     (Br.  sel.)- — AD 
Sheep  Washing.— WEP  3 
Thunder-storm,  The.— GP 
"Welcome,  ye  shades."     (Br.  sel.) — AD 
Winter,  Sels.  fr. 

Death  Typified  by  Winter.— SS 
Lost  in  the  Snow. — -EPs 
Snow  Scene,  A.— WEP  3 
(Snow  Storm,  The.)— GP 
(Winter  Scenes.)— BNL 
Seasons.— Kate  D.  Walster. — AD — DLD  (arr.  as  dial.) 
Seasons  in    Sweden,    The.     (Sel.    fr.     Kavanagh — fr. 
introd.  to  Frithiof's  Saga,  in  Driftwood.) — H: 
W.  Longfellow.— SE 
Seasons  of  Life.  The.— Rob't  Southey.— HSS  3 
Sea-swallows,  The. — A.  C.  Swinburne. — PEB  4  , 

Seat  for  Three,  A.— Walter  Crane.— VA 
Seaward. — Jeanette  B.  Gillespy. — CG  3 
Seaward. — Celia  Thaxter. — AA. 
Seaward.     (In    Wild    Eden.)  — G:    E.   Woodberry. — 

AA  (sel.) 
Sea-way. — Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — AA 
Sea-weed. — Will  A.  Dromgoole. — BS  21 
Seaweed.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BNL— HBP— SE  (hr. 
sel.)— SO 
(Drifting— br.  seZ.)— SE 
Sea-weed,  The.— Elisabeth  J.  (C.)  Pullen.— AA 
Second  Brother,   Sel.   fr.     (Song:   "Strew  not  earth," 

etc.)— T:  L.  Beddoes.— VS 
Second  Bunker  Hill  Monument  Oration. — Dan'l  Web- 
ster.    See  Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Mon- 
ument, The. 
Second  Crucifixion,  The. — R:  Le  Gallienne. — OB 
Second  Day  of  Creation,  The. — T:  Whytehead.— AVP 
(Mystic  Veil,  The — abr.  and  si.  diff.  vers.) —  CS  12 


Second  Dirge. — T:   L.    Beddoes.     See     Death's      Jest 

Book. 
Second  Hymn  for  Advent,  The.     (C.) — Jeremy  Taylor. 
(Christ's  Coming  to  Jerusalem  in  Triumph.) — CEL 
Second  Madrigal,  The.— Lord  De  Tabley.— VS 
Second  Mate,  The. — Fitz-James  O'Brien. — AA 

(Lost  Steamship,  The.)— CS  14 
Second  Inaugural    Address. — Abraham    Lincoln. — AI 

—  LLC  —  MRS  —  OS  3  —  PPS  —  SO(«Z.  abr.) 
(President  Lincoln's  Second  Inaugural  Address.) — 
^   CS3 

( Retribution — sel.  )^PS 
(With  Malice  towards  none,  with  Charity  for  all — 

br.  seZ.)— HSS  1 
Second  Oration  against  Catiline.     (Catiline  Expelled.) 

—Marcus  Tullius  Cicero.— CS  5— OS  3— PS— 

SS 
Second  Pastor's  Song,  The. — N :  Breton.     See  Passion- 
ate Shepherd,  The. 
Second  Prize,  The.     (Dial.)—R.  E.  McBride.— StD 
Second  Quest,  The. — Jos.  R.  Drake.     See  Culprit  Fay, 

The. 
Second  Review  of  the  Grand  Army. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — 

EDY 
Second  Samuel,  Sel.  fr.     (Saul  and  Jonathan — Ch.  I., 

19-27.  )—/it6Ze.—BLP 
Second  Satire,  The  (Of  the  Courtier's   Life,   written 

to  John  Poins— C),   Sel.  /r.— Sir  T:  Wyatt.— 

WEPl 
Second  Song — To  the  Same. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

Song:  The  Owl. 
Second  Speech  on  Foot's  Resolution. — Dan'l  Webster. 

See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The. 
Second  Speech  on  the  Judiciary  Establishment,  Sel.  fr. 

(On  the  Judiciary  Act.) — Gouverneur  Morris. 

— OM— SS 
Second   Sunday  after   Easter. — J:  Keble.  —  AVP  — 

WEP  4 
Second  Sunday  after  Trinity. — J :  Keble. — AVP 
Second  Trial,  A.— Sarah  W.  Kellogg.— BS  14— HBR 

(Commencement.) — PFP 
Second  Volume,  The.— Rob't  M.  Bell.— AA 
Secret,  The.— Anon.— AD— DLF 
Secret,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP 

(Birdie's  Secret.)— DJS 
Secret,  A.— Anon.— YBT 
Secret,  The  (My  Secret — C). — Felix  Arvers  (tr.  by  H: 

W.  Longfellow).— FLS 
Secret,  The.     (Dial.) — "Cousin  Fannie." — SD 
Secret,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Secret,  The.     ("I  have  not  told  my  garden  yet" — C.) 

— Emily  Dickinson. — AA 
Secret,  A.— Mrs.  G.  M.  Howard.— PEO 
Secret,  The. — Cosmo  Monkhouse. — VA 
Secret,  A. — Helen  I.  Moorhouse. — POS 
Secret,  The. — Harriet  B.  Stowe. — TAS 
Secret,  The.     (In  Wild  Eden.)— G:  E.  Woodberry.— 

AA— ASL— FTA— YBF 
Secret  Combination,  The. — Ellis  P.  Butler. — TL 
Secret  Dispatches,  The.     (Ad.) — Anon. — NP 
Secret  Executions.     (Sel.  fr.  preface  to  Last  Days  of  a 

Condemned.) — Victor  Hugo. — MRS 
Secret  of  a  Happy  Day,  The.    (C.) — Frances  R.  Haver- 
gal.— HDL 
(Hour  of  Comfort,  The— seL)— SSS 
Secret  of  Death,  The. — Edwin  Arnold.     See  Light  of 

Asia,  The. 
Secret  of  Death,  The. — Edwin  Arnold.     See  also  She 

and  He. 
Secret  of  Life,  The.— Sabine  Baring-Gould.— VSG 
Secret  of  Lincoln's    Power,    The.     (Sel.    fr.    Abraham 

Lincoln.) — H:  Watterson. — SC 
(Abraham  Lincoln — ptly.  same  sel.) — SR  11 
Secret  of  Murder,  The.— Dan'l  Webster.     See  Murder 

of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 
Secret  of  the  Nightingale,  The. — Roden  Noel. — VA 
Secret  of  the  Sea,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— PHS 
Secret  of  the  Sunflower,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Secret  Place,  The.— H:  F.  Lyte.— VA 
Secret  Place  of  the  Most  High,  The.— W:  C.  Gannett. 

—TAS 
Secret  Sorrow,  The.     (Punch.)— YIVE 
Secretary,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FAD 
Secretary,  The. — Matthew  Prior.— WEP  3 
Secrets  of  Masonry,  The. — Anon. — CS  17 
Secrets  of  the  Heart,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — WR  12 
Sectarian  Tyranny,  1812.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Catholic  Ques- 
tion, April  23,  1812.)— H:  Grattaft.- PS— SS 
Sectional  Services  in  the  Ijast  War. — Caleb  Gushing. — 

SS 
(New  England  [in  the  War  of  1812].)— CR— SSD 
Sects,  The.     Private  Judgment.— J:  Dryden— WEP  2 

See  Hind  and  the  Panther,  The. 


291 


See 


A\  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


See  what  it  is  to  Love. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     jSee  As- 

trophel  and  Stella. 
Seed,  The.— Anon.— AD 
Seed,  The.— Anon.— NV 
Seed,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
Seed  Sower,  The.     (Tafc.)— Anon.— TCP 
Seed  Time.     See  also  Sad-time. 
Seed  Time  Hymn.— J :  Keble.— VA 
Seed  Word. — Anon. — AD 
Seeds. — Anon. — CS  4 

Seedsman,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Seed-time.     (Spring  exercises.) — Mrs.  L.  A.  Bradbury. 

— SSE 
Seed-time. — Patrick  J.  Coleman. — TIP 
Seed-time.     See  also  Seed  Time. 
Seed-time  and  Harvest. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke. 

See  Caelica. 
Seed-time  and  Harvest.— J:  G.  Whittier.— HBP 
Seein'  Things.— Eugene  Field.— BS  24— EF— LS 
Seeing  a  Ghost.     (Dial.)^Ju\isi  A.  Crouch.— SDD 
Seeing  and  not  Seeing.— ( Tran*.  by)  C.  T.  Brooks. — 

CSl 
Seeing  Santa  Claus.     (Dial.) — Mrs.  L.  A.  Bradbury.— 

HE 
Seeing  Through.-^Anon.—CS  10 
Seek    not    to    Understand    her. — C:   F.    Hoffman. — 

FTA 
Seeker  in  the  Marshes,  The. — Dau'l  L.  Dawson. — AA 
Seeking  a  Country. — H:  B.  Carrington. — BLP 
Seeking  Rest.— Anon.— CS  18— DS 
Seeking  the  May-flower. — Edmuno  C.  Stedman. — SN 
Seen  and  Unseen. — D:  A.  Masson. — TAS 
Seen,  Loved,  Wedded. — W:  Wordsworth.     See   "She 

was  a  phantom  of  delight." 
Seer  and  the  Dreamers,  The.     (Dial.) — Ellen  Murray. 

— CS29 
Segovia  and  Madrid. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — AA 
Seizure,   The;   or,   A   Sentimental   Maiden's   Mistake. 

(Dial.)— Esther  W.  Brown.— CDs 
Self-conceit.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Self-conceit. — Millie  C.  Pomeroy. — SR  7 
Self-culture.- Anon.— BS  14 
Self-denial.     (Dta?.)— Anon.— FDY 
Self-dependence. — Matthew  Arnold.—  BS  25  —  HBR 

— PYO— TMR 
Self-discipline.— G:  W.  Russell.— VA 
"Self-ease  is  pain;  they  only  rest."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The 

Voices. )— J :  G.  Whittier.— GG 
Self-esteem. — Anon. — LLC 

(Robin  and  [the]  Chicken[,  The].)— AD— TFS 
Seif-exiled,  The.— Walter  C.  Smith.— VA 
Selfish  and  Lend-a-hand. — Mary  F.  Butts. — ^YBT 
Selfish  Prayer. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
Selfishness  of  Society. — T.  S.  Denison. — FAS 
Self-life.— J:  Pulsford.—BS  16 

Self-made  Man  in  American  Life,  The. — Grover  Cleve- 
land.— AI 
Self-murder. — Rob't  Blair.     See  Grave,  The. 
Self-respect.- Cato.— BLP 
Self-sacrificing  Ambition. — Horace  Greeley. — BLP 

(Ambition.)— OS  2 
Selkirk  Grace,  The.     (C.)— Rob't  Bums. 

(Child's  Grace,  A.)— PoR 
Sella.— W:  C.  Bryant.— AP 
Selling  a  Coat;  or.  How  a  Jew  Trained  a  Clerk. — Anon. 

— CS  10— PS. 
Selling  off  at  the  Opera  House.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Selling  the  Baby.— Ada  Carleton.— CS  29.— WR  14 
Selling  the  Farm. — Anon. — BS  7 
Selling  the  Farm.— Beth  Day.— BS  9 
Selling  the  Image. — Mrs.  C.  V.  Jamison.    See  'Toinette's 

Philip. 
Semichorus  of  Spirits. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Prome- 
theus Unbound. 
Seminoles,   The,   Sel.   fr.     (Origin  of  the  White,   the 

Red  and  the  Black  Men.) — Washington  Irving. 

— WCLG  1 
Seminole's   Defiance,    The.— G.    W.    Patten.— HNS— 

LLC— OM— OS  1 
(Seminole's  Reply.  The.)— CS  1 
(^6r.)— FTR— PPSr— SA 
Seminole's  Reply,  The. — G.  W.  Patten.     See  foregoing. 
Semper  Idem.— H.  D.  Hale.— CG  1 
Sempronius's    Speech    for    War. — Jos.    Addison.     See 

Cato. 
Senator  Entangled,  A.     (Fr.  The  Dodge  Club.)— Jas. 

de  Mille.— BRR— MHR 
(^6r.)-tCR— FTR 
(Senator's  Dilemma,  The.)— BS  3— CD V— SDR 
Senator  Ingnlls'  Great  Speech  on  Death  of  Burnes,  of 

Missouri.     (Eulogy  on  the  Death  of  Congress- 
man James  N.   Burnes,  of  Missouri. — C) — J: 

J.  Ingalls.— SR  7  (abr.) 


Senator's  Dilemma,  The. — Jas.  De  Mille.     See  Senator 

Entangled,  A. 
Senator's  Grandmother,  The. — Patience  Stapleton. — 

DES 
Sending  Relief  to  Ireland. — S.  S.  Prentiss.     See  Relief 

for  Starving  Ireland. 
Seneca  Lake. — Jas.  G.  Percival. — BNL 

(To  Seneca  Lake— C.)—FEP—GP— HBP— SN 
Senex  Jubilans.— W:  Reed.— BS  20 
Senior  and  the  Rose,  The. — Eva  L.  Soule. — CG  2 
Senior  Schedule,  A. — Mary  H.  McLean. — C(J  2 
Senior's  Plea,  A. — J:  C.  Underwood. — CG  2 
Sennacherib. — Lord  Byron. — LH 

(Destruction  of  Sennacherib,  The — C.)  —  AE  — 

BFV  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  CEL  —  CGd  —  CS  14 

—  EPs  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HB  —  HBP  —  LLC 

—  MBL  —  MR  —  OS  2  —  PHS  —  PPSr  — 
PSR— PYO— SS— YBF 

"Sensation  novel  has  had  its  day.  The." — Justin  Mc- 
Carthy.—GG 
Sense  and  Spirit.— G.  F.  W.— TCV 
Sen.se  of  Public  Duty,  The.— A.  E.  Pillsbury.— FD  2 
Senses,  The.— Anon.— COS— PP— PS 
Senses,  The.— Anon.— PTS 
Sensibility. —  S :  Rogers.     See  Human  Life. 
Sensible. — Anon. — FAS 
Sensible  Serenade,  A. — L.  M.  L. — CG  2 
Sensitive  Plant,  The.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— HBP  (w.  1 

add.  St.)—  POS  (sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.)— WR  25  (abr.) 
Sensual  Delights  Lowest. — Anon. — LLC 
Sent  Back  by  the  Angels. — Frd'k  Langbridge. — CS  29 

(SI.  o6r. )—BS  17— WR  21 
Sent  by  Express.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Sent  to  Heaven.— Adelaide  A.  Procter.- CS  37— VS 
Sent  with  a  Rose  to  a  Young  Lady. — Marg.  Deland — .  AA 
Sentence,  The.     (Tab.)~Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Sentence  of  Death  on  the  High  Seas. — Arthur  Matthi- 

son.— CS  16— NPS— YP 
Sentences. — Coventry    Patmore.     See    Angel    in    the 

House,  The. 
Sentimental.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— HPE 
Sentimental  Journey,  A,    Sel.    fr.     ("  I  was  ill  of  an 

epidemic  vile  fever" — br.  sel.   fr.   Ch.  VI.) — - 

Laurence  Sterne. — GG 
Sentiments  and  Life-thoughts. — Anon. — CS  6 
Sentinel  of  Metz,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  26 
Sentinel  Songs,  Sels.  fr. — Abram  J.  Ryan. 
Cause  of  the  South,  The.— BNL 
Sentinel  Songs. — BN'L 
Sentry    on    the    Tower,    The.     (Fr.    The    Sacristan's 

Household.)— Anon. — MMR 
Separate    as    Billows,    but    One    as    the    Sea. — Alex. 

Stephens.— BLP 
Separation. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — FLS 
Separation. — Alice  L.  Bunner.     See  Vingtaine. 
Separation. — Martha  G.  Dickinson.— AA 
Separation. —  Johann  W.  von  Goethe.     See  Loved  One 

Ever  Near,  The. 
Separation. — Fs.  Kazinezi. — FTA 
Separation. — W alter  S.  Landor. — OB 
Separation. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Separation  from  Traitors. — Cicero.     See  First  Oration 

against  Catiline. 
Sephestia's  Lullaby. — Rob't  Greene.     See  Menaphon. 
Sephestia's  Song  to  her  Child. — Rob't    Greene.     See 

Menaphon. 
September.     (SI.  abr.)  —  G:  Arnold.  —  BNL  — GP — 

POS  (abr.)— YBT  (sel.) 
September.— Adelaide  V.  Finch.— WR  17 
September. — S.  Frances  Harrison. — TCV — VA 
September.     (SI.  abr.) — Helen  H.  Jackson. —  NV  — 

PoR— WR  17 
(Abr.)— BST— OS  1 
September. — Archibald  Lampman. — TCV 
September. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
September. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
September  Days. — G:  Arnold. — POS 
(Sweet  September — br.  sel.) — GN 
September,  1802,  near  Dover.     (C.) — W:  Wordsworth. 

(English  Channel,  The.)— EPs 
September,  1815.— W:  Wordsworth.— PEO 
September,  1819.     (Sel.)—W:  Wordsworth.— EPs 
September  Gale,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— CSS— SO 
September  in  Australia. — H:  C.  Kendall. — VA 
"September  Mornin's." — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
September  Robin,  A. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — POS 
September  Violet,  A. — Anon. — PEO 
September  Violet,  A. — Rob't  U.  Johnson. — BNL 
Sepulcher  in  the  Garden,  The.— H:  W.  Beecher.— MRS 
Serapis,   Sel.   fr.     (Chariot   Race   in   Alexandria— Ch. 

XXV.— a&r.  )—Georg  Ebers.— PFP 
(Hippodrome  Race,  The  — arr.  by  Elsie  M.  Wilbor 

— a6r.)— WR  4 


292 


TITLE  INDEX 


Shadow 


Serenade,  The:     "A  youth  went  out." — Anon. — BS  12 
(Hopele.ss  Serenade,  A.) — SR  6 

(Youth  who  Played  before  he  Looked,  The.)  —  FS 
Serenade,  The:     "Black  cuffy  had  come." — Anon. — 

SR  10 
Serenade:     "Oh,  hearing  .sleep,  and  sleeping  hear." — 

W:  AUingham.— VS 
Serenade:     "Lute!      breathe      thy      lowest." — Edwin 

Arnold.— VS 
Serenade:     "Dearest,  do  not  you  delay  me."     (Song — 
C— /r.  The  Spanish   Curate,  Act   n.,Sc.  5.)— 
Beaumont  and  Fletcher. — ES 
(Speak,  Love!)— HBP 
Serenade:  "Sleep  sweet,  beloved   one,"  etc.  —  Rob't 

Buchanan. — VS 
Serenade:     "Awake  thee,  my  lady-love!" — G:  Darley. 

See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 
Serenade:    "  Softly,  O  midnight  hours." —  Aubrey  De 
Vere.— OB 
(Song.)— VS 
Serenade:     "Ah,  sweet!  thou  little  knowest  how." — T: 

Hood.— FTA— HBP— YBF 
Serenade,    A:     "Lullaby,    oh,    lullaby."      (Domestic 
Poems,  IV.)— T:  Hood.— CS  26— HPE 
("  Lullaby,  oh,  lullaby."— FEP 
Serenade:     "Stars    of    the    summer    night!" — -H:    W. 

Longfellow.     See  Spanish  Student,  The. 
Serenade:     "The  day  is  down  into  his  bower." — Rob't, 

Lord  Lytton.     See  Sea  Side  Songs. 
Serenadef,  A]:  "  I^ook  out  upon  the  stars, my  love." — 
E:  C.  Pinkney.— AA  — ASL  — FTA— HBP— 
YBF 
Serenade,  A:     "Smile,  lady,  smile."     (Punch.) — HPE 
Serenade,  A.     (Som  fr.  Quentin  Durward,  Ch.  IV.) — 
Walter  Scott.— PGT  1— YBF 
(Count V  Guv— C.)  —  BFV—  BNL— BPB— EP.s— 
FEP— LC— WEP4 
Serenade,  The.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— FP 
("I  ari.«e  from  dreams  of  thee.") — GP 
(Indian  Serenade,  The— C.)—  OB  —  PGT  1— PYO 

—YBF 
(Lines  to  an  Indian  Air.)—  BNL  —  FEP  —  FTA  — 
HBP 
Serenade:     "The    western    wind    is    blowing    fair." — 

Oscar  Wilde.— GP 
Serenade,  A.    Set  to  music  bv  the  Chevalier  Neukomm. 

—Bryan  W.  Procter.- VS 
Serf's  Secret,  The.— W:  V.  Moody.— CG  1 
Sergeant  of  the  Fiftieth,  The.— Anon.— HSS  1 
Sergeant  Prentiss'  First  Plea. — N.  L.  F.  Bachman. — 

PFP 
Sergeant's  Story,  The. — Anon. — PFP 
Serious  Mishap,  A. — S.  Jennie  Smith. — CS  33 
Sermon,  The.— Anon.— CS  22 
Sermon,  The.— Louisa  M.  Alcott.— PFP 
Sermon  for  the  Sisters,  A. — Irwin  Russell. — -AWH — 

DCR 
Sermon  for  Young  Folks,  A. — Alice  Cary. — BLF 
Sermon  from  a  Thorn-apple  Tree,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  Thorn- 
apple.)— Emily  H.  Miller.— AD 
Sermon  in  a  Stocking,  The. — Ellen  A.  Jewett. — HP 

(Grandmother's  Sermon.)— CS  22 
Sermon  in  Flowers,  A. — Addie  F.  Davis. — CS  35 
Sermon    in    Rhvme,  A.  — Anon.  —  BS  19  — CS  24  — 

DST  inbr.) 
Sermon  in  Ver.se,  A. — Anon. — KNE 

("Tired!  well,  and  what  of  that?")— GG 
(What  of  that?)- HP 
{SI.  afor.  )—BS  15— PEO 
Sermon  of  Life,  A.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— CS  30 
Sermon  on  Keards,  Hosses,  Fiddlers,  and  Foolin'  with 

the  Gals,  A.— Anon.— DE 
Sermon  on  the  Death  of  Abraham  Lincoln. — H:  W. 

Beecher.     See  Abraham  Lincoln. 
Sermon  Time.— Joe  I-incoln. — CCB 
Sermons. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Stones  of  Venice,  The. 
Sermons  in  Stones. — Alice  Carv. — TAS 
Serpent  of  the  Still,  The.— J:  Lofland.— BLP 
Served  him  Right.— Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Service. — ^Anon. — CP 
Serving.— G:  Cooper.— YBT 
Sesame  and  Lilies,  Sels.  fr. — J:  Ruskin. 

Ladv.  The.    {Sel.  fr.  I>ecture  II.:  Lilies — Of  Queens' 

Gardens.)— OS  3 
Reading  for  the   Thought.     {Sel.   fr.    I^ecture    I.; 
Sesame — Of  King's  Treasures.) — EA 
Sesostris.     (Sonnet  V.)— Lloyd  MifHin.—AA— ASL— 

YBF 
Session  with  Uncle  Sidney.  A. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
One  of  his  Animal  Stones. 
Uncle  Brightens  Up. 
Sings  a  "Winky-tooden"  Song. 
And  Makes  Nursery  Rhymes. 


Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A  {continued). 
Diners  in  the  Kitchen,  The. 
Imperious  Angler,  The. 
Gathering  of  the  Clans,  The. 
"It." 

Daring  Prince,  The. 
Set  Fair.— Anon.— DSS 
Seth   Peter's   Report   of   Daniel  Webster's   Speech. — 

Sam  W.  Foss.— CS  32 
Settin'  the  Flags.— Jas.  C.  Purdy.— CS  37 
"Settin'   up  with  Elder  McK'ag's  Peggy."     {Sel.   fr. 
The  Latimers,  Ch.  XIV.)— H:  C.  McCook.— 
WR21 
(Settin'  up  with  Peggy  McKeag — si.  abr.) — BS  25 
Settin'  up  with  Peggy  McKeag. — H:  C.  McCook.     See 

foregoing. 
Setting  a  Hen.— Anon.— BS  8— CSS 

("Sockery"  Setting  a  Hen.)— CS  18— FTR— SR  1 
Setting  Sail.— Emily  Dickinson. — TAS 
Setting  Sun,  The.— Anon. — NV 
Settler,  The.— Alfred  B.  Street.— AA— BNL 
Settling  under  Difficulties. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SR  10 
Seven  Ages,  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Seven  Ages,  The. — W :  Shakespeare.  See  As  You  Like  It. 
Seven  Ages  of  Man,  The.  —  W :  Shakespeare.     See  As 

You  Like  It. 
Seven  Ages  of  Man,  Shakespeare's.     {Tab.) — Anon. — ■ 

TCP  ' 

Seven  Days  in  a  Week.     {Concert  piece.) — Cora  W.  Fos- 
ter.—KC— PS— TT 
Seven  Days'  Wonder.     {For  a  Church  fair.) — Anon. — - 

EuE 
Seven  Fiddlers,  The.— Seba,stian  Evans.— PEB  3 
Seven  Invincibles,  The.     {New  England  Magazine.) — 

SR8 
Seven   Poor  Travellers,   The.     (Abr.) — C:  Dickens. — 

MBL 
Seven  Sisters,  The;  or,  The  Solitude  of  Binnorie,  The. 

— W:  Wordsworth.— CGd— PEB  3 
Seven  Sleepers  of  Ephesus,  The.     {SI.  abr.) — Johann 

W.  Von  Goethe.— WR  8 
Seven  Stages,  The.— Anon.— SR  2— WR  15 
Seven  Times  One! — Exultation]. — Jean   Ingelow.     See 

Songs  of  Seven. 
Seven  Times  Two[ — Romance]. — Jean    Ingelow.     See 

Songs  of  Seven. 
Seven      Times      Three — Love. — Jean      Ingelow.     See 

Songs  of  Seven. 
Seven  Times  Four[ — Maternity]. — -Jean   Ingelow.     See 

Songs  of  Seven. 
Seven  Times  Six — Giving  in  Marriage. — Jean  Ingelow. 

See  Songs  of  Seven. 
Seven  Times  Seven — Longing  for  Home. — Jean  Inge- 
low.    See  Songs  of  Seven. 
Seven  Virgins,  The. — Anon. — OB 
Seven  Whistlers,  The.— Alice  E.  GiUington.— VA 
Seven  Wonders  of  the  World,  The. — Blanche  W.  Bel- 
lamy and  Maud  W.  Goodwin. — OS  1 
Seventh  Plague  of  Egypt,  The.— G:  Croly.— CS  4— FR 

— SS 
Seventh  Song. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and 

Stella. 
Seventy-six.     (C.)— W:  C.  Bryant.— BLP  {abr.) 

(Story  of  Seventy-six,  The.)— PPR 
Several  Cats.     {Golden  Days.) — BS  17 
Sewing  Circle,  The.     (Dta/.)- Anon.— FND 
Sewing  on  a  Button.     (Button  off ,  A — C. — in  Life  in 
Danbury.)— Jas.  M.  Bailey.— CS  14— PS 
(How  a  Married  Man  Sews  on  a  Button.) — BS  4 — 
CRR 
Sextain.— W:  Drummond.— WEP  2 
Sexton,  The.— Park  Benjamin.— CS  8 

(Old  Sexton,  The.)— AA— GP 
Shacob's  Lament. — Anon. — CS  25 — PR— YA 
("Bevare  of  the  Vidders.")— CD 
(Widow,  The.)— CDV 
Shade  of  the  Trees,  The.     (C.)— Marg.  J.  Preston. 

(Under  the  Shade  of  the  Trees.)— AWB— EDY— 
LLC  {si.  abr.  and  sl.  diff.) 
Shaded  Water,  T  e.— W:  G.  Simms.— BNL 
Shadow,  The.    (A  Book  of  Airs,  4th  Song.)— T:  Cam- 
pion.— ELP. 
(Devotion — 1st  poem.) — OB 
(In  Imagine  Pertransit  Homo.) — PGT  1 
Shadow,  The.— Arthur  H.  Clough.— WEP  4 
Shadow,    The    (Song    That    Women    are    but    Men's 
Shadows — C.) — Ben  Jonson. — OB 
(Song:  "Follow  a  shadow,  etc.) — FEP 
Shadow,  A. — Adelaide  A.  Proctor. — BIL 
Shadow,  The.— R.  H.  Stoddard.— AA 
Shadow  and  the  Substance  of  the  Sabbath,  The,  Br. 
sel.  fr.      ("In    that     hour,    which    of    all    the 
twenty-four." — Fred'k  W.  Robertson. — GG 


293 


Shadow 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


V* 


Shadow  Boat,  A.— Arlo Bates.— TAV 
Shadow  Children. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Shadow  Dance,  The. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — AA 
Shadow    from    an    Insane    Asylum,    A. — Horace    B. 

Durant.— CS  32 
Shadow    March. — Rob't    L.    Stevenson.     See    North- 
west Passage,    j. 
Shadow  of  a  Flower,  The. — Felicia    D.    Hemans. — 

CS37 
Shadow  of  a  Song,  The. — Campbell  Rae-Brown. — DR 
Shadow  of  Doom,  The  (All's  Well— C.).— Celia  Thax- 

ter.— BS  11 
Shadow  of  the  Cross,  The.     (Abr.) — Edwin  Arnold. — 

SAE 
Shadow  of  the  End,  The.— Ethel  W.  Hawkins.— CG  3 
Shadow  of  the  Night,  A.— T:  B.  Aldric^.— AA 
Shadow  of  the  Rock,  The.— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 
Shadow  on  the  Blind,  The.— Anon.— CS  8 

(A6r.)— MYF— OM 
Shadow  on  the  Wall,  The.— Anon.— CS  9 
Shadow  Pantomimes. — Anon. — EuE 
Shadow  Pictures. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Shadow  River. — E.  Pauline  Johnson. — TCV 
Shadow  Rose,  The. — Rob't  C.  Rogers. — AA 
Shadow  Ships.— Newton  M.  Hall.— CG  1 
Shadow-evidence. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — AA 
Shadows.— Anon.— CS  7— MR 
Shadows.— Anon.- — H*P 
Shadows. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. — OB 

(Nessun  Maggior  Dolore.) — PGT  2 
Shadows.— W:  S.  Kennedy.— SN 
Shadows.     (The  Lantern.)— CS  16  (abr. )—HPE 
Shadows,  The.     (TF.  add.  St.,  and  si.  diff.)^G:  Mac- 

donald.— WCL 
Shadows.— C.  E.  Meetkerke.— FLS 
Shadows.     {Richmond  Christian  Advocate.) — SSS 
Shadows.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Shadows,  The.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— AA— LFL 
Shadows  Lengthen,  The. — Anon. — HDL 
Shadows  of  the  Stage,  Sel.  Jr.     (Right  Standard,  The 

—fr.  Second  series,  Pt.  I.)— W:  Winter.— MRS 
Shadows  on  the  Curtain.— E:  H.  Dewart. — TCV 
Shadows  on  the  Snow. — I.  Edgar  Jones. — CS  31 
Shadow-town  Ferry. — Lilian  D.  Rice. — OS  1  (abr.) 

(Ferry  for  Shadowtown,  The.)— CS  37— GMS 
Shadwell. — J:  Dryden.     See  MacFlecknoe. 
Shady  Side  of  Life,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Lost  Steamer,  The.) 

—Eugene  J.  Hall.— SR  2 
Shag,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 

Shah-Nameh,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Firdausi  (tr.  by  S:  Robin- 
son). 
Raja  of  India  Sends  a  Chessboard  to  Nushirvan, 

The.— NE 
Zal  and  Rudabeh.— NE 
Shah-Nameh,  The  Story  of  the.— Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
Shakes.— Anon.— DSS 

"Shake's  Telephone."— C:  B.  Lewis.— BDD 
Shakespeare. — Matthew  Arnold.— OB— WEP  4 
Shakespeare. — H:  A.  Blood. — A  A 
Shakespeare. — G:  S.  Bryan.- CS  18 
Shakespeare.     (Sonnet  XXVIII.) — Hartley   Coleridge. 

— BNL 
(To  Shakespeare — C.) — VA 
Shakespeare. — S:  Johnson.      See  Prologue  Spoken    by 

Mr.   Garrick  at    the   Opening  of  the   Theatre 

Royal,  Drury  Lane. 
Shakespeare.— J:  Sterling.— HBP— OS  3— VA 
Shakespeare  and  Milton. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 
Shakespeare  Improved. — Anon.— DE 
Shakespeare's  Dream. — Anon. — WR  1 
Shakespeare's  England,  Br.  sel.  fr.—W:  Winter. — SAE 
Shakespeare's  Mark  Antony. — Walter  B.  Winchell. — 

NC 
Shakespeare's  Seven  Ages  of  Man.     (Tab.) — Anon. — 

TCP 
Shakesperian  Perversion,  A. — Anon. — WR  6 
Shall  America  be  Ruled  Forever  by  the  Liquor  Power? 

—Jos.  Ireland.— TS 
Shall  America  Betray  Herself?— Jos.  Story. — FD  1 — 

SR5 
(Destiny  of  our  Country. )^ — OS  3 
(Our  Duties  [or  Duty]  to  the  Republic.)— FTR— 

KNE— LLC— SS 
(Our  Future.)— BLP 

(Responsibilities  of  our  Republic.) — HNS 
(Responsibility  of  American  Citizens.) — WRD 
(Sels.  vary  somewhat.) 
Shall  Jefferson  Davis  be  Restored  to  Full  Citizenship? 

Sel.  fr.     CAmnestv  of  Jefferson  Davis,  The.) — 

Jas.  G.  Blaine.— NC 
"Shall  an  American  citizen  be  scourged?" — Rob't  F. 

Stockton.     See  -Against  Floggmg  in  the  Navy. 
Shall  Bess  Come  Hame?— Fred  E.  Brooks. — CS  28 


"Shall  I  come,  sweet  Love,  to  thee."     (C) — T:  Cam- 
pion. 
(Love's  Request.) — ES 
"Shall   I   compare   thee   to   a   summer's   day?" — W: 
Shakespeare.— OEL—YBF 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (I.) 
(Sonnet  XVIII.— C.)— WEP  1 
(To  his  Love.)— PGT  1— PHS 
Shall  I  Look  Back. — Anon. — HDL 
Shall  I  Tell  you  [whom  I  Love]? — W:  Browne.      <Se« 

Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Shall  I,  Wasting  in  Despair. — G:  Wither.     iSee  Shep- 
herd's Resolution,  The. 
Shall  the  Baby  Stay?— Anon.— CS  7 
Shall  we  Give  up  the  Union? — Dan'l   S.  Dickinson. — 

Qg  2 SSD 

(Give  up  the  Union?— se/.)— OS  2 
Shall  we  Know   Each   Other  There?— Anon.— CS  6 — 

NPS— YP  * 

Shall  we  Meet  Again?— G:  D.  Prentice.— CS  26— FS 
Shameful  Death.— W:  Morris.— BFV—VA 
Shamrock,  The. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — AA 
Shamus  0'Brien[,  the  Bold  Boy  of  Glingall].— J.  S. 
Le  Fanu  (at.  also  to  S:  Lover.)— CR—CS  1— 
DDR— HR— MMR— SA— SDR 
(Shemus  O'Brien.)— HB— TIP 
(Versions  vary  somewhat.) 
Shan  Van  Vocht[,  The].— Anon.— EDY  (si.  abr.)— HB 

(Abr.)- HBP— TIP 
Shandon  Bells,  The.— Fs.  S.  Mahony.— AVP— VA— 
VSG 
(Bells  of  Shandon,  The.)— BNL— BS  2— CR—CS  3 

—  EA  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  —  HR  —  HSS  3 

—  LLC  —  MMR  —  OB  —  OS  2  —  PSR  —  PYO 
— SA— SR  2— TIP— VS 

Shane's  Head.— J:  Savage.— TIP 
Shannon,  The.— Sir  Aubrey  De  Vere.— TIP 
"Shannon"    and    the    "Chesapeake,"    The. — T:    T. 

Bouv6.— BAB— EDY 
"Shape  alone  let  others  prize,  The.^ — Mark  Akenside. — 

BNL 
Shapes  and  Signs. — Jas.  C.  Mangan. — TIP 
Shaugraun,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Dion  Boucicault. — BRR 
Conn's   Description   of   the   Fox    Hunt.     (Act    I., 

Sc.  3.)— BRR 
O'Kelley  Cabin,  The.     (III.,  1.)— BRR 
"Oolaghaun,"  The.     (III.,  2.)— BRR 
Tailor's  Thimble,  The.     (II.,  4.)— BRR 
She  Always  Made  Home  Happy. — Anon. — CS  15 
She  and  He.     (C.)— Edwin  Arnold.— GP 

(He  and  She.)— BIL— MR— SR  11  (si.  abr.) 
(Secret  of  Death,  The.)— BNL 
She  Came  and  Went. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — AA — ASL — 

HBP— YBF 
She  Cut  his  Hair.     (Abused  Boy,  An— C— w  They  All 

Do  It.)— Jas.  M.  Bailey.— BS  12 
She  Didn't  Want  to  Meddle.— Anon.— SR  12 
She  "Displains"  It.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— WR  14 
She    Dwelt    among    the    Untrodden   Ways.      (Poems 
Founded    on    the    Affections,  VIII. — C.) — W: 
Wordsworth.- MBL— PGT  1— PYO— YBF 
(Lost  Love.  The.)— FTA— PHS 
(Lucy.)  — BFV  — BNL  — FEP  — GP— HBP  (L) 
— IR  (I.)— OB  (II.)— WEP  4  (I.) 
She  Earned  her  Half.— N.  P.  Babcock.— WR  24 
She  had  Business  with  the  Boss  Mason. — Anon. — CS  22 
She  is  a  Maid  of  Artless  Grace. — Gil  Vicente  (tr.  by 

H.  W.  Longfellow).— HBP 
She  is  Far  from  the  Land.     (C.)— T:  Moore.— EDY— 
FEP— HBP 
(Lines  Relating  to  Curran's  Daughter.) — PS 
"She  is  not  fair  to  outward  view." — Hartley  Coleridge. 
—BNL— FEP— FTA— PGT  1— YBF 
(Song— C.)— HBP— OB— V A— WEP  4 
She  is  so  Pretty. — Pierre  J.  de  B^ranger  (tr.  by  Ethel 

Grey).— FLS 
She  just  Keeps  House  for  me. — Jean  Blewett. — TCV 
She  Liked  him  Rale  Weel. — Andrew  Wauless. —  BS  18 
She  Loves  and  Loves  Forever.     (C.) — T:  L.  Peacock. 
—FLS 
("Oh,  say  not  woman's  heart  is  bought.") — FTA 
(Song.)— TFY 
She  Meant  Business.     (Detroit  Free  Press.) — CS  15 — 

NPS— SR  10— YP 
She  never  was  a  Boy. — S.  E.  Kiser. — WR  26 
She  Referred  him  to  her  Pa.      (Somerville  Journal.)  — 

CH— SR  5 
"She  rose  from  her  untroubled  sleep."     (Br.  sel.  fr. 
Chamber  Scene.)— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— BNL 
She  Sayeth  "No."— Bertrand  A.  Smalley.— CG  2 
She  Shook  her  Head.— J.  P.  Sawyer.— CG  2 
She  Showed  him  Stars. — Anon. — WR  15 
She  Still  Wins.     (The  Tech.)— CG  2 


294 


TITLE  INDEX 


Shiner 


She  Stoops  to  Conquer,  Sel.  jr.     (Mrs.   Hardcastle's 
Journey — sel.    ad.   fr.   Act   V.) — Oliver   Gold- 
smith.—NDP 
"She  takes  but  to  give  again." — Bayard  Taylor.     See 

National  Ode. 
"She  thanked  me,  and  bade  me,"  etc. —  W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. 
She  walks  in  beauty.     {Fr.  The  Hebrew  Melodies.) — 
Lord  Byron.  —  BNL  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP— 
MBL— OB— WEP  4— YBF 
("She  walks  in  beauty,  like  the  night.") — PGT  1 
— PYO 
She  Wanted  an  Epitaph. — Anon. — CS  12 
She  Wanted  to  Hear  it  Again. — Anon.- — BS  15 
She  Wanted  to  Learn  Elocution. — Anon. — CS22 — SR7 
She  was  a  Beauty. — H :  C.  Bunner. — AA 
'She  was  a  phantom  [of  delight].     (Poems  of  the  Imagi- 
nation—VIII.— C.)  —  W:  Wordsworth.— BNL 
—  BSP  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP— MBL— PGT  1 
—WEP  4— YBF 
(Perfect  Woman.)— OB 
(Portrait,  A.)— LLC 
(Seen,  Loved,  Wedded.)— FTR 
"She  was  Mine." — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel  in 

the  House,  The. 
She  was  not  Fair  nor  Full  of  Grace. — Bryan  W.  Proc- 
ter.—VS 
"She  was  sent  forth." — Letitia  E.  Landon.- — BIL 
She  was  Travelling  all  Alone.^ — Frank  Marion. — WR  15 
She  Washed  for  Him.— Howard  Fielding.— BS  18 
She  Waved.— Anon.— SO 
She  Wore  a  Wreath  of  Roses.— T:  H.  Bayly.— HBP 

— VA 
She  Would  be  a  Mason. — Jas.  C.  Naughton. — CS  11 — 

SR  6  {si.  abr.) 
She  Wouldn't  Listen.— Anon.— WR  7 
Sheep    and    Lambs. — Katha.    T.    Hinkson.  —  OB  — 

PoR  (abr.)— VA 
Sheep   Washing,  The. — Jas.   Thomson.     See  Seasons, 

The. 
Sheep-shearing,    A. — W:   Shakespeare.     iSec   Winter's 

Tale,  The. 
Shell,  The.— Walter  S.  Landor.     See  Gebir. 
Shell,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Maud. 
Shelley.— Craven  L.  Betts.— EDY 
Shelley.— Alex.  H.  Japp.— VA 
Shelley.^G:  Martin.— TCV 

Shelling  Peas.— Christopher  P.  Cranch.— CS  12— MYF 
Shells  of  Ocean.— J.  W.  Cherry  [or  Merry].— LLC 

{W.  mws.)- NPS— YP 
Shelter.— C:  S.  Calverley.— AVP 
Shelter.— W:  J.  Lee.— CS  11 
Sheltered.— Sarah  O.  Jewett.— VSG 
Shemuel. — E:  Bowen.— AVP 
Shemus    O'Brien. — Jos.    S.    Le    Fanu.     See    Shamus 

O'Brien. 
Shepheardes  Calendar,  The,  Sets.  fr. — Edmund  Spenser. 
April  {abr.):     Colin's  Lay  of  Elisa. — EP 

(Ditty,  in  Praise  of  Eliza,  Queen  of  the  Shep- 
herds, A— abr.)- OB 
Chase  after  Love,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  March.)— WEP  1 
December. — EP 

(Complaint  of  Age,  The— abr.)- WEP  1 
Description  of  Maying.     {Sel.  fr.  Maye.) — WEP  1 

(May.)— EP 
Fable  of  the  Oak  and  the  Briar.     {Sel.  fr.   Feb- 
ruarie.)— WEP  1 
(Oak  and  the  Briere,  The— seZ.)- WR  11 
January  (Januarie — C). — EP 
June.— EP 
Shepherd,  The.     {In  Songs  of  Innocence.) — W:  Blake. 

— BVC— LC 
Shepherd    and   the   King,    The. — Rob't   Greene.     See 

Mourning  Garment,  The. 
Shepherd  Boy,  The.— Letitia  E.  Landon.— HBP 
Shepherd  Boy  Sings  In  the  Valley  of  Humiliation,  The 

— J:  Bunyan.     See  Pilgrim's  Progress. 
Shepherd  Boy's  Carol,  The.— Anon.— HS 
Shepherd  Dog  of  the  Pyrenees,  The. — Ellen  Murray. 

— CS25 
Shepherd    Girl    of    Domremy. — T:    De  Quincey.     See 

Joan  of  Arc. 
Shepherd  Maiden,  A. — E:  C.  Lefroy. — VA 
Shepherd  of  King  Admetus,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.' — 

BFV— LLC— WCLI  2 
Shepherd  of  the  People,  The.      {Sel.  fr.  Akraham  Lin- 
coln.)—Phillips  Brooks.— CS  5 
(Lincoln,  the  Shepherd  of  the  People.) — SR  8 
Shepherd  to   his   Love,   The.—  Christopher  Marlowe. 

See  Passionate  Shepherd  to  his  Love,  The. 
Shepherd  to  the  Flowers,  The. — Anon. — ELP 
Shepherdess,  The.— Alice  Meynell.— AVP— PYO 
(Lady  of  the  Lambs,  The.)— OB 


Shepherdesses'    Garlands,     The.  —  W:    Browne.      See 

Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Shepherdess's  Reply,  The.     (Reply  to  Marlowe — C.) 
-Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— CEL  {w.  add.  st.) 
(Her  Reply.)— OB 
(Milk-maid's  Mother's  Answer.) — FEP  {w.  add.  st.) 

—HBP 
(Nymph's  Reply  [to  the  Passionate  Shepherd],  The.) 

— BNL— GP— PHS 
(Reply  to  Marlowe,  A.)— EP 

(Reply  to  Marlowe's  The  Passionate  Shepherd  to 
his  Love.)— WEP  1 
Shepherds,  The.     {In  Flowers  of  Sion.) — W:  Drum- 

mond. — EPs 
Shepherd's  Calendar,  The. — Edmund    Spenser.        See 

Shepheardes  Calendar,  The. 
Shepherd's    Description    of    Love,    The. — Sir    Walter 

Raleigh.— EP 
Shepherds'  Holiday  [or  Holyday],  The. — Ben  Jonson. 

See  Pan's  Anniversary. 
Shepherd's  Home,  The. — W:  Shenstone.     See  Pastoral 

Ballad. 
Shepherd's  Hunting,  The.     {Set.    fr.  4th    Eclogue.) — 
G:  Wither.— HBP 
Eclogue.     (SeZ.)- EP 
Eclogue  IV.     {Sel.)— WEP  2 
Shepherd's  Hymn,  The. — R:  Crashaw.     See  Hymn  of 

the  Nativity,  A. 
Shepherd's   Life,   'The.     {Sel.   fr.   The   Purple   Island, 

Can.  XII.)— Phineas  Fletcher.— EP 
Shepherd's    Life,     A. — W:     Shakespeare.     See    King 

Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III. 
Shepherd's  Love,  The. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Sad  Shep- 
herd, The. 
Shepherd's  Pipe,  The,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Browne. 
Death  of  Philarete,  The.     (Eclogue  IV.)— EP 
Invitation,  An.     (Sei.  fr.  Ec.  I.)— EP 
Shepherd's  Praise  of  his  Sacred  Diana,  The. — Anon. — 

ELP 
Shepherd's    Resolution,    The    {C.—fr.    Fidelia.)— G: 
Wither.— BNL— FEP— HBP— PYO  {abr.) 
(Author's  Resolution  in  a  Sonnet,  The.) — CEL — 

ELP— WEP  2 
(Lover's  Resolution,  The.) — OB 
(Manly  Heart,  The.)— EPs— FT  A— O  EL— PGT  1 
(Shall  I,  Wasting  in  Despair[e].)—ES— YBF  (abr.) 
Shepherd's  Sirena,  Sel.  fr.     (Sirena.) — Michael  Dray- 
ton.—EP— OB 
Shepherd's  Song,   The. — Torquato   Tasso.     See  Jeru- 
salem Delivered. 
Shepherd's  Song  of  Venus  and  Adonis. — H :  Constable. 

—WEP  1 
Shepherd's  Story,  The.— D:  J.  Burrell.— CS  30 
Shepherd's  Swain,  A.- — G:  Wither.     See  Fair-Virtue, 

the  MLstress  of  Philarete. 
Shepherd's  Trophy,  The.— Alfred  OUivant.     See  Bob, 

Son  of  Battle. 
Shepherd's  Week,  The,  Sels.  fr.—3:  Gay. 

Monday;  or.  The  Squabble.     (Pastoral  I.)— EP 
Shepherd's  Week,  Sel.  fr.     (Past.  II.:  Tuesday;  or. 

The  Ditty— cond.)— WEP  3 
Thursday;  or.  The  Spell.     (Past.  IV.)— EP 
Shepherd's    Wife's    Song,    The. — Rob't    Greene.     See 

Mourning  Garment,  The. 
Sheridan.— R:  W.  Gilder.— EDY 

Sheridan,   Richard   Brinsley.     {Frags,   fr.  various  au- 
thors.)—B'Sh 
Sheridan's  Ride.— T:  B.   Read.— AWB— BAB— BNL 

—  BRR  —  CS  1  —  DDR  —  FEP  —  FR  —  GN 

—  HB  —  HNS  —  HSS  1  —  OS  2  —  PAP  — 
PAPm— PPSr— PSR— SM— TAV— WRD 

Sheriff  of  Cerro-Gordo,  The.     (^br.)— Fred  E.  Brooks. 
— WR  21. 

Sheriff  of  Saumur,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— BS  24 

Sheriff  Thome.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.— BS  7 

Sheriff's  Honor,  The.— Anon.— NP 

Sherman.— R:  W.  Gilder.— AA— EDY 

Sherman  on  the  Veterans. — W:  T.  Sherman. — DFR 
(Veterans,  The.)— PS 

Sherman  Tornado,  The.— Howell  L.  Piner.— WR  23 

Sherman's  March. — Anon. — AWB 

Sherman's  March.— Fred  E.  Brooks.— CS  30— WR  19 

Sherman's  March  to  the  Sea. — S:  H.  M.  Byers. — AWB 
—PAP 

She's  All  my  Fancy  Painted  him. —  Lewis  Carroll.— NA 

"She's  cursed,  said  the  skipper,"  etc. — J:  G.  Whittier. 
See  Wreck  of  Ri vermouth,  The. 

She's  Gane  to  Dwall  in   Heaven.      (C.) — Allan  Cun- 
ningham.— FEP 
(Lily  of  Nithsdale,  The— si.  abr.)— EPs 

Shibboleth!— E.  H.  J.  Cleveland.— CS  3 

Shield,  The.— S.  G.  W.— EPs 

"Shiner"  and  the  Waifs,  The.— Anon. — SR  11 


295 


Shining 


AX  IXDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIOXS 


Shining  Little  House,  The.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— YBT 

Shining  Web,  The.— Anon.— NV 

Ship,  The.— Lloyd  Mifflin.— AA 

Ship.  The.     (Sonnets  XVII.,  XVIII.,  XIX.)— Rob't 

Southey.— FP 
Ship  in  the  Desert,  The,  Br.  eel.  fr.     (Dreamers.) — Joa- 
quin Miller. — GP 
("Ah,  there  be  souls  none  understand"  —  abr.)  — 

GG 
Ship  o'  the  Fiend,  The.— Anon.— BB  (si.  abr.) 

(Demon     Lover,     The  —  diff.   vers.)  —  BPB  — 

WR21  (si.  abr.) 
(Damon  Lover,  The— si.  afcr.)— CGd— PEB  2 
Ship    of    Faith,    The.— Anon.— BRR—BS  7— CDV— 

CS  17— CSS— HBR— SDR 
Ship  of  State,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Build- 
ing of  the  Ship,  The: 
Ship  of  State,  The.— W:  P.  Lunt.— BS  14— LLC— SS 
Ship  on  Fire,  The.— H:  Bateman.—MMR—PPSr  (a6r.) 
Ship  on  Fire,  The.— C:  Mackay.— HSS  2— PS  (si.  abr.) 
Ship-boy's  Letter,  The.— Anon.— CS  36 
Ship-builders,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.- MAL 
Ships.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Ships  at  Sea.— Rob't  B.  Coffin.— BNL— EPs— FEP— 

HBP— LLC— MMR— MRS 
Ships  at  Sea.— Allie  W.  Rollins.— CS  21 
Ships  that  Pass  in  the  Night,  Sel.  fr.      (Traveler  and 

the  Temple  of  Knowledge,  The— Ch.   VI.)— 

Beatrice  Harraden. — BS  22 
Shipwreck,  The. — ^Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Shipwreck.  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Can.  III.,  5.)— W:  Falco     -. 

—BNL  (8f?.)— WEP  3 
Shipwreck,  The.— E.  H.  Palmer.— N A 
Shipwrecked. — Frangois  Copp^e. — CS  19 
Shirley  Chase. — Mortimer  Collins. — AVP 
Shock  of  Bereavement,  The.     (Poems  of  the  Imagi- 
nation—Misc.    Sonnets,      XXVIL— C.)  —  W: 

Wordsworth.— WEP  4 
(Desideria.)— OB— PGT  1 
Shockheaded  Cicely  and  the  Two  Bears.     (C.) — W:  B. 

Rands. 
(Cicely  and  the  Bears.)— MYF 

Shocking  Mistake,  A. Pickering. — MDD 

Shoemaker's  Cabinet,  The. — Anon. — PTS 
Shoemaker's  Daughter,  The.— T:  D.  English.— CS  22 
Shoemaker's  Holiday,  The,  Sels.  fr.—T:  Dekker. 

Merry  Month  of  May,  The.     (Song  fr.  Act  III.,  Sc. 

5.)— ELP 
Troll  the  Bowl!     (The  Second  Three  Men's  Song— 

v.,  4.)— ELP 
Shoemaker's  Troubles,  A. — Anon. — MND 
Shonny,  Don'd  you  Hear  me? — "Oofty  Gooft." — BDD 
Shonny   Schwartz.— C:    F.    Adams.— BDD— CS   23— 

DRR— FS 
Shoo  Flies. — Anon. — BeR 

(A6r.)— BDD— DFY 
Shooting.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Shooting  Song,  A.— W:  B.  Rands.— BVC 
Shopping.— Anon. — SR  13 
"Shore  is  lined  with  anchored  ships.  The." — Helen  H. 

Jackson. — BNL 
Shore  of  Eternity,  The.     (SI.  abr.)— Frd'k  W:  Faber. 

— BS  16 
Short  Christmas  Performance,  A. — Anon. — DFR — KC 
Short  Conversation,  A. — Anon. — CDV 
Short  Hymn  upon  the  Birth  of  Prince  Charles,  A. — H: 

Wotton.— EDY 
Short  Missionary  Service,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — SSE 
Short  Selections.     (Fr.  various  authors.) — SM 
Short  Selections. — W:  Shakespeare. — WCLG  2 
Short  Sen.sational  Story. — Anon.- — CS  16 
Short  Sermon,  A. — Alice  Cary. — BLF 
Short  Speech,  A. — Anon. — DLS 
Short  Speeches  for  Little  Philosophers.     (Fr.  various 

authors.) — PS 
Short  Temperance  Speech,  A. — Anon. — DLS 
Shorten  Sail. — G:  B.  Dodington,  Lord  Melcombe. — OB 
Shortness  of  Life,  The.— Fs.  Quarles.— FEP 
"Shot  throiTgh  the  Heart."— Ina  M.  Porter.— EDY 
"Should  I  not  Love  my  Flowers?" — Dora  Greenweli. 

—HSS  1 
Shout  the  Glad  Tidings.— W:  A.  Muhlenberg.- FEP 
"Shoutin'." — Frank  L.  Stanton.^CS  29 
Shouting  Jane.— S.  V.  R.  Ford.— CS  28 
Shower,  The.     (In  An  April  Day.) — Helen  E.  Brown. 

— WR9 
Showing  off  an  Elocutionist. — A.  M.  Griswold. —  CS  33 
Showman  on  the  Woodchuck,  A. — Anon. — HR 
Shriving  of  Guinevere,  The.— S.  Weir  Mitchell.— BS  10 
Shrouding  of  the  Duchess  of  Malfi,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr. 

The   Duchess   of   Malfi,   Act   IV.,   Sc.   2.)— J: 

Webster.— OB 
("Hark,  now  everything  is  still.") — ELP 


Shrubbery,  The.— W :  Cowper.— PGT  1 

Shuffle-Shoon    and    Amber-Locks. — Eugene    Field. — 

EF— LS 
Shule  Agra.— Anon.— PEB  4 
Shule  Aroon.— Anon.— TIP 
Shun  the  Bowl.— Eliza  H.  Barker.— CS  15 
Shut  the  Door.- Anon.— PTS 
Shut  your  Cattle  In.— Mrs.  B.  C.  Rude.— AD 
Shut-eye  Train,  The.— Eugene  Field.— EF—LS 
Shy  Gallant,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Shylock. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. 
Shylock   for  the  Jews. — W :   Shakespeare.     See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  The. 
Shylock    Lends   the    Ducats. — W:   Shakespeare.     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Shylock  to  Antonio. — W :  Shakespeare.     iSee  Merchant 

of  Venice,  The. 
Shylock's  Soliloquy  and   Address. — W:   Shakespeare. 

<See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Shyness  of  Love.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Si,  Do,  Re.— Mrs.  B.  C.  Rude.— TFY 
Si  Jeunesse  Savait! — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA 
Siberia. — Jas.  C.  Mangan. — TIP 
Sibyl,  The.— T:  G.  Hake.— VA 
Sibyl.— J:  Payne.— VA 
Sibylla  Palmifera. — Dante     G.     Rossetti.  See     Soul's 

Beauty. 
Sic  Itur.— Arthur  H.  Clough.— PGT  2 
Sic  Passim.— Alice  M.  Ardagh.- TCV 
Sic  Semper.— Will  L.  Graves.— CG  2 
Sic  Transit.— W.  B.  Anderson.— CG  1— PPh 
Sic  Transit.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Sic  Transit.— T:  Campion.— PGT  1 

(Day  and  Night.)— ELP 
Sic  Vita.— H:  King.— BNL— CS  19— FEP 
(Life.)— HBP— YBF 
(Life  of  Man,  The.)— CEL 
(On  the  Life  of  Man— C.)— ELP 
Sicilian  Captive,    The.     (Br.    sel.,    w.    mus.) — Felicia 

Hemans. — WR  6 
Sicilian  Night,  A.— E:  C.  Lefroy.— VA 
Sicilian's  Tale,   The. — H:   W.    Longfellow.     See   King 

Robert  of  Sicily  . 
Sick  Boy's  Plan,  The.     (DtoZ.)- Anon.— NDP 
Sick  Child,  The.     (Punch.)— UPE 
Sick  Doll,  The.     (Dm;.)- Anon.— HVD 
Sick  Doll,  The.     (DiaZ.)- Anon.— YFD 
Sick  Kitty,  The.— Anon.— WR  17 
Sick  Little  Girl,  The.— Anon.— DLF 
Sick  Rooster,  The.— Helen  A.  Goodwin.— WR  20 
Sick  Stock-rider,  The.— Adam  L.  Gordon.— AVP  (br. 

sel.)—YA 
Sickness.  —  W:   Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry   IV., 

Pt.  II. 
Siddons  and  her  Maid. — Walter  S.  Landor. — HPE 
Sidera,  Sels.  fr. — Philip  Sidney. 

Dirge,    A.     (XIII.    Love    is    Dead— C.)— OEL— 

WEPl 
"Nightingale,    as    soon    as    April   bringeth.    The." 

(XII.  Song:     The  Nightingale— C.)— PGT  1 
(Philomela.)— OB— WEP  1  (sel.) 
(Sonnet :     Philomela— se/. )— ELP 
Sidney  Godolphin.— Clinton  Scollard.- AA— EDY 
Sidney  Lanier.— W:  H.  Hayue. — EDY 
Sidney,  Sir  Philip.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Siege  and    Conquest    of    Alhama. — Lord    Byron.     See 

Very  Mournful  Ballad  on  the  Siege,  etc. 
Siege  of  Belgrade.— Anon.— BNL— FEP 
Siege  of  Calais,  The.— Will  V.  McGuire.— CS  33 
Siege  of  Corinth,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Lord  Byron. 

Alp's  Decision.  (Sts.  XVIII.— XXL— cond. )—TMD 

(Hurts  of  Time— XVIII.— «i.  abr.)— EPs 
Heroes  of  Greece.     (Sel.  fr.  XV.)— CS  7 

(Dead  Heroes — abr.)- — SE 
Siege  of  Corinth,  The.     (Cond.)— WR  11 
Siege  of  Corinth,  The.     (XXII.)— EPs 
Storming  of  Corinth,  The.     (XXII.,  XXIV.,  XXV., 

XXX  -XXXIII  ) 
Siege  of  Cuautla,  The:     The  Bunker  Hill  of  Mexico.— 

Walter  S.  Logan.— WR  22 
Siege  of  Derry,  The.— Cecil  F.  Alexander.— EDY— TIP 
Siege  of     Havana,    The.     (Rivington's    Gazette.)     See 

Siege  of  Savannah,  "rhe. 
Siege  of    Lucknow,    The.— H.    Savile    Clark.— VSG— 

WR,13 
Siege  of  Savannah    [iir.   Havana],    The.     (Rivington's 

Gazette.)— EDY 
Siege  of  the  Alamo.— Eliz.  L.  Saxon.— BS  19— PFP 
Siege  of  Valencia,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. 
Ballad  of  Roncesvalles,  A.— WEP  4 
Dirge:     "Calm   on   the  .spirit   [bosom — C]  of    thy 

God."— FEP— OB— WEP  4 


296 


TITLE  INDEX 


Since 


Siege  of  Zamora,  The.— (Tr.  by)   Rob't  Southey.     See 

Cid,  The. 
Siena,  Sel.    jr.     (Sodoma's   Christ   Scourged.) — G:    E. 

Woodberry. — TAS 
Sierras  [from  the  Sea — C],  The. — Joaquin  Miller. — GP 
Sigh,  A.— Harriet  P.  Spofford.— AA— ASL— FTA 
"Sigh  and    grieve    that    you    are    yet    so    carnal    and 

worldly." — -T:   h.  Kempis.     See  Imitation   of 

Christ.  The. 
Sigh  for  Knockmany,  A. — W:  Carleton. — TIP 
Sigh  no  more.  Ladies.— W:  Shakespeare.     See   Much 

Ado  about  Nothing. 
Sigh  not  for  Love. — Helen  Hay. — AA 
Sigh  of  Silence,  The.— J:  Keats.     See  "I  stood  tiptoe 

upon  a  little  hill." 
Sighs,  Tears,  and  Smiles.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) 

— BNL 
Sight  in  Camp  in  the  Daybreak  gray  and  Dim,  A. — 

Walt  Whitman.— AA— HBP 
Sign  of  Distress,  The. — Anon.— CS  8 
Sign  of  the  Cross,  The. — J:  H.  Newman. — VA 
Signal  Man,  The.     (Cond.  and  ad.) — C:  Dickens. — NC 
Signalman's  Story,  The.— Jessie  H.  Wheeler.— WR  19 
Signals  of  Distress. — -Rob't  Crompton. — TS 
Sign-board,   The.— Ella   W.    Wilcox.— CS  14— SR  6— 

WR15 
Significance  of  the  Spanish  War,  The. — J:  D.  Long. — 

SC 
Signing  of  Magna  Charta,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome. 

See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Signing  of   the  Declaration,   The. — G:   Lippard.     See 

Fourth  of  July,  1776,  The. 
Signing  of  the  Pledge.     (Dial.) — Anon. — CS  16 
Signing  the  Pledge. — Anon.— SR  2 
Signing  the  Pledge.     (ra6.)— Anon.— TCP 
Signing  the  Pledge.     (Dial.)— EUa.  C.  Clement.— CDs 
Signor  Billsmethi's   Dancing   Academy. — C:    Dickens. 

See  Sketches  by  Boz. 
Signs  and     Omens.  —  Anon.  —  BS  3  —  CDV— CS  1 0— 

MHR— SDR 
(Hans  Sourcrout  on  Signs  and  Omens. )-^BDD 
Signs  of  an  Early  Spring. — Anon. — DSS 
Signs  of  Foul  Weather. — E :  Jenner.     See  following. 
Signs  of  Rain.— E:  Jenner.- BNL— CGd— PoR 
(Signs  of  Foul  Weather — si.  diff.  vers.) — BVC 
Signs  of  the  Seasons,  The.— M.  E.  N.  Hatheway.— YBT 

(Seasons,  The— a6r.)— YBT 
Signs  of  the  Times.— H.  C.  Dodge.— AWH 
Signs  of  the  Zodiac. — Anon. — OS  1 
Sigurd  the  Volsung.     See  Story  of  Sigurd  the  Volsung, 

The. 
Silas  Marner,  Sels  fr. — G:  Eliot. 

Discussion  at  the  Rainbow,  The.     (Ch.  VI.)— VSG 
Silas  Marner.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  I.)— WCLG  1 
Silence. — Anon. — FTA 
Silence. — Anon. — KNE 
Silence.— T:  Hood.— OB— WR  1— YBF 

Silence. Lynch.— HP 

Silence. — J.  H.  Morse. — AA 

Silence.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— TAS 

Silence. — J:  L.  Spalding.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Silence  is  Golden.     (Fr.  The  World  to  Come.)     (Chau- 

tauquan.) — AD 
Silence  of  Love,  The. — Hamilton  Drummond. — FTA — 

HP  (si.  abr.) 
Silence  of  Love,  The.     (In  Wild  Eden.)— G:  E.  Wood- 
berry.— ASL— FTA 
("O,  inexpressible  as  sweet" — C)— AA 
Silence  of  the  Hills,  The.— W:  P.  Foster.— BNL 
Silence  Party,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Silenced  Singer,  The.— W:  J.  Linton.— VA 
Silences.— Arthur  O'Shaughnessy.—PGT  2— VA 
Silent  Army  of  Memorial  Day,  The. — Julia  C.  Jones. — 

DR 
Silent  Baby.— Ellen  B.  Currier.— BNL 
Silent  Grand  Army,  The.— E.  M.  H.  C— PEO 
Silent  Harp,  The.— Anon.— CS  13 
Silent  Influence. — Anon. — KNE 
Silent  Land,  The.— Kate  S.  McLean.— GP 
Silent   Lover,  The.  —  Sir  Walter  Raleigh.  —  FEP  — 

OB  (br.  sel.) 
Silent  Multitude,  The.— Felicia  D.  Hemans.— FP 
Silent  Music.     (Fr.  Observatio  s  in  the  Art  of  English 

Poesy.)— T:  Campion.— CEL 
(Laura.)- OB 

(Rose-cheek'd  Laura.) — ELP 
Silent  Noon.     (The   House   of   Life,   Sonnet   XIX.)— 

Dante  G.  Rossetti.— OH— PGT  2— YBT 
Silent  Partner,  The.     (Mon.) — Fannie  A.  Matthews. — 

MN 
Silent  Tower  of  Bottreaufx],  The.— Rob't  S.  Hawker.— 

CS  18— MMR— SR  1— VA 
Silent  Voices,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— PGT  2— VA 


Silent  Warriors,  The.— Anon.— PPSr 
Silent  Watch,  The.— Alice  Brown.— TAS 
Silent  Woman,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Sim- 
plex Munditiis. 
Silhouettes.— Annie  K.  Pillsbury.- CG  2 
Silkweed. — -Philip  H.  Savage. — AA 
Siller  Croun,  The.— Susanna  Blamire.— BNL— FEP 
Silly  Billy.     (SI.  abr.)— Fred  E.  Brooks.— WR  25 
Silly  Fair.- W:  Congreve.— BNL 

(Lesbia.)— FEP 
Silly  Song,  A.— Dinah  M.  M.  Craik.— VS 
Siloam's  Shady  Rill.     (First  Sunday  after  Epiphany — 
O— Reginald  Heber.- TFS  (aOr.) 

(By  Cool  Siloam.)— LLC 

(By  Cool  Siloam's  Shady  Rill— se/.)— PoR 

(Hymn  for  First  Sunday  after  Epiphany.) — FEP 
Silver  Age,  Sel.  fr.     (Praise  of  Ceres.)- — T:  Hey  wood. — 

LC 
Silver  Bells,  The.— Edgar  A.  Poe.     See  Bells,  The. 
Silver  Bird's  Nest,  The.— Anon.— PEO 
Silver  Boat,  The.— Anon.— GMS 
Silver  Cup,  The.— Anon.— CS  26— DS 
Silver  Dollar,  The.     (Dial.)—H.  E.  McBride.— SD 
Silver  Lining,  The.     (Dial.)— Anon.— MNB 
Silver  Penny,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Silver  Plate,  The.— Marg.  J.  Preston.— BS  17 
Silver  Question,  The. — Oliver  Herford. — NA 
Silver  Tassie,  The.     (C.)— Rob't  Burns. 

(Before  Parting.)— LH 

(Bonnie  Mary.) — GP 

(Farewell,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 

(My  Bonnie  Mary — also  C.) — OB 
Silver  Thaw,  The.— Charles  G.  D.  Roberts.— TCV 
Silver  Wedding,  The.— Mrs.  C.  M.  Stowe.— CS  6— SR  7 
Silvia.- — W:    Shakespeare.     See    Two    Gentlemen    of 

Verona,  The. 
Silvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. — G:  Darley.     See  Sylvia; 

or.  The  May  Queen. 
Similar  Case,    A.     (Acta    Columbiana.) — CG  1 — CH — 

CR— PR— YA 
Similar  Cases.— Charlotte  P.  S.  Oilman.— AWH   "^ 
Simile,  A. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 
Simile,  A.— Matthew  Prior.— HPE—WEP  3 
Similia  Similibus  Curantur.- R.  H.  Newell.— CS  20 
Simon.— John  F.  Herbin.— TCV 
Simon  de  Montfort,  Earl  of  Leicester. — Jas.  Lincoln. — 

EHT 
Simon  Grub's  Dream.— Anon.— CS  33— NPS— YP 
Simon  Lee,  the   Old  Huntsman. — W:  Wordsworth. — 

PGT  1 
Simon  Short's  Courtship. — Anon.     See  following. 
Simon  Short's  Son  Samuel. — Anon. — CS  8 

(Samuel  Short's  Success.) — SA 

(Simon  Short's  Courtship.)— SR  10 
Simon  Solitary's  Ideal  Wife.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Simon's  Burden. — Rose  T.  Cooke. — S8S 
Simon's  Wife's  Mother  Lay  Sick  of  a  Fever. — Anon. — 
CD  (abr.) 

(Katrina's  Visit  to  New  York.)— BDD— CS  23 
(^br.)— CDV— SDR 
Simple  Church,  The.— Anon.— CS  28 
Simple  Maid,  A.  —  J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De  Tabley. 

— VA 
Simple  March,  A.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Simple  Nature.— G:  J.  Romanes. — PGT  2 
Simple  Ploughboy,  The.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Simple  Sign,  A.— Anon.— CS  29— WR  15 
Simple  Simon.     (Mother  Goose  Sonnets.) — Harriet  S. 

Morgridge. — A  A 
Simplex  Munditiis.     (Song  fr.  [Epiccene;  or,]  The  Silent 
Woman,  Act  I.,  Sc.  1.) — Ben  Jonson. — OB 

(Freedom  in  Dress.)— BNL— EPs— YBF 

(Song.)— FEP— HBP— WEP  2 

(Sweet  Neglect,  The.)— ES— OEL 
Simplicity.— M.  Woolsey  Stryker.— YBT 
Sim's  Little  Girl.— Mary  Hartwell.— CS  14 
Sin.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Sin.— R:  (7)  Baxter.— PP—YFR 
Sin.     (O— G:  Herbert.- EPs— YBF 

(Bosom  Sin.)— LLC 

(Life's  Lessons.) — CEL 
Sin  of  Omission,  The.     (C.)— Marg.  E.  Sangster.- SR  9 

("It  isn't  the  thing  vou  do,dear"— seZ.) — BIL — FTA 

(Left  Undone.)— SSS 
Sin  of  Sir  Pertab    Singh,  The.— Sir   Frd'k    Pollock.— 

AVP 
Sin  of  the  Bishop  of  Modenstein,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The 
Heart    of    Prince.ss    Osra,    Ch.    V.) — Anthony 
Hope.— NP 
"Sin  runs  to  passion;  passion  to  tumult  in  character." 

—Austin  Phelps.— GG 
"Since  Cleopatra  Died." — T:  W.  Higginson. — AA 
Since  First  I  Saw  your  Face.- — Anon. — OB 


297 


Since 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Since  she  Went  Home.— Rob't  J.  Burdette. — CS  28— 
WR23 

Since   there's   no   Help.     (Ideas   LXI. — C.) — Michael 
Drayton.— OH 
(Come,  Let  us  Kisse  and  Parte.) — BNL 
(Let  us  Kiss  and  Part.)— HBP 
(Love's  Farewell.>-FTA— PGT  1— YBF 
(Parting,  The  [or  A1.)—CEL—GP— OB 
(Sonnet.)— ELP—FEP—WEP  1 

Since  we  Parted. — Rob't,  Lord  Lytton. — FLS 

Sincerity   the   Soul   of   Eloquence. —  Johann   W.    von 
Goethe.— CS  9— SS 

Sinfonia  Eroica. — Alice  A.  (S.)  James. — A  A 

Sing.— Mary  E.  Carter.- YBT 

Sing  a  Song  a  Sixpence. — Anon. — BS  14 

Sing  a  Song  of  Christmas. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

Sing  a  Song  to  me. — Anon. — AD — LLC 

Sing  Again. — Marie  Van  Vorst. — AA 

"Sing,   children,   sing!" — Celia  Thaxter.     See  Song  of 

Easter,  A. 
Sing  for  the  Garish  Eye.— W:  S.  Gilbert.— N A 
Sing  on,  Blithe  Bird!     (I  Plucked  the  Berry— C.)—W: 

Motherwell.— GN—WCL 
Sing,  Pretty  Birds.— Anon.— YBT 
Sing  unto  the  Lord.     (Paraphrase  of  Psalm  XCVL) — 

Philip  Sidney.— EPs 
Sing-away   Bird,   The.     (SI.    diff.   fr.    Poems.) — Lucy 

Larcom. — FS 
Singer,  The.— Wade  Robinson.— HDL 
Singer,  The.— Edmund  C.  Stedman.— PoR 
Singer,   The.     (SI.   a6r.)— J:   G.   Whittier.— BIL   (6r. 

seZ.)- CS  4 
Singer  and  the  Child,  The.— Adeline  E.  Gross.— CS  25 
Singer  of  One  Song,  The. — H :  A.  Beers. — AA 
Singers,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— LLC 
Singer's  Alms,  The.     (C.—W.2  add.sts.) — H :  Abbey.— 

CS14 
(Stranger's  Alms,  The— «/.  abr. )—TMD 
(For  another  vers,  of  the  same  story  see  Song  of  the 

Market  Place,  The,  by  3 as .  Buckham.) 
Singer's  Climax,  The.— Anon.— CS  21— DS— NPS— YP 
Singer's  Prelude,  The.^ — W:  Morris.     See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 
Singing. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV — LC 
Singing  across  the  Water. — Wesley  Stretch. — CS  21 
Singing  Baby,  The.— Grace  Winthrop.— WR  19 
Singing  for  the  Million.     (A6r.)— T:  Hood.— CS  8 

(More  HuUahbaloo — C. — more  abr.) — MHR 
Singing  Heart,  The.— Danske  C.  Dandridge.— TAS 
Singing  in  God's  Acre,  The. — Eugene  Field. — EF 
Singing  Joseph. — Annie  A.  Preston. — PP — YPS 
Singing  Leaves,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — GN 
Singing  Lesson,   A. — Jean   Ingelow. — HSS   3 — LLC — 

OS  2— PHS 
Singing  of  the  Magnificat,  The.— E.  Nesbit.— VSG 
(Monk's  Magnificat,  The— abr.)- BS  17— WR  6 
Singing  of  You. — Anon. — FLS 
Singing  Stars. — Kathe.  T.  Hinkson. — VA 
Singing  Temperance  Songs.     (Dial.) — J.  D.  Vinton. — 

MD 
Single    Head   of  Wheat,   A.  —  Mrs.  L.  C.   Eldred.  — 

BS  17  (si.  obr. )—CS  20— FMR 
Sings  a  "Winky-tooden"  Song. — Jas.  W.  Riley.     See 

Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
Singular  Sangfroid  of  Baby  Bunting,  The. — Guy  W. 

Carryl. — NA 
Sinking  of  the  Maine.     (St.  Louis  Republican.) — FAS 

(Maine's  Men,  The.)— PAPm 
Sinking  of  the  Merrimac,  The.— Arthur  D.  Hall.— MRS 
Sinking  of  the  Merrimac,  The.— R:  P.  Hobson.— PRR 
Sinking  of  the  Ships,  The.— W.  B.  Collison.— PRR 
Sinking  the  Merrimac. — Joe  Cone.- — EDY 
Sinless  Child,  The,  Sel.  fr.—Eliz.  O.  Smith.— AA 
Sioux   Chief's   Daughter,   The.     (SI.   diff.    fr.    Poems, 

rev.    ed.)  —  Joaquin    Miller.  —  BS  8  —  CS   19 

—HSS  2  (o6r.)— NPS— PFP—YP 
"Sir,  an  attempt  has  been  made  to  alarm  the  com- 
mittee."—H,:  Clay.— SO 
Sir  Andrew    Barton.     (In  Percy's   Reliques — si.  diff. 

versions.) — EPs — PEB  1 
Sir  Arthur  and  Charming  Mollee. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Sir  Arthur  and  Lady  Ann.— Hew  Ainslie. — PEB  3 
Sir  Cupid.— F:  E.  Weatherly.— TMR 
Sir  Dandelion.— Mrs.. E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Sir  Dilberry  Diddle.— Anon.— OES 
Sir  Eldric— A.  M.  F.  Robinson.— PEB  4 
Sir  Francis  Drake.  —  C:  Kingsley.     See  Westward  Ho! 
Sir  Galahad.— Alfred  Tennyson.— OS  2— PHS— VA 
Sir  Hugh;  or.  The  Jew's  Daughter.      (Jew's  Daughter, 

The — C.—in  Percy's  Reliques. > — Anon. — BPB 
(Hugh  of  Lincoln — diff.  vers.) — PEB  1 
(Si.  a6r.)— BB— OEB 


Sir 
Sir 
Sir 


Sir 


Sir 


Hugo's  Choice. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — BS  21 

Humphrey  Gilbert.— H:  W.  Longfellow. — ASL 

J.  S.     (O— Sir  J:  Suckling. 

(Constancy.)-  BNL  —  CEL  —  ELP  —  ES  —  FEP 
— OEL— WEP  2— YBF 

(Constant  Lover,  The.) — OB 

(Moods.)— EPs 

John  A.  MacDonald.— J:  W.  Bengough.— TCV 

John  Franklin.— G:  H.  Boker.— CS  1 

(Ballad  of  Sir  John  Franklin,  A.)— AA— EDY 

John  Franklin. — Alfred  Tennyson. — EDY 

John  Suckling's  Campaign. — Sir  J:  Mennis  (7) — 
CGd 

Lancelot.  (Sel.  fr.  Le  Morte  d'Arthur,  Bk.  XXL, 
Ch.  XIIL)— Sir  T:  Mal[l]ory.— OS  3 

Lancelot  du  Lake.  (In  Percy's  Reliques — ad.  fr. 
Malory's  Le  Morte  d'  Arthur.) — Anon. — (JGd 

Lark  and  King  Sun :  A  Parable.  ( Verses  fr.  Adela 
Cathcart,  Ch.  XVI.)— G:  MacDonald.— GN 

Launcelot  and  Queen  Guinevere. — Alfred  Tennyson. 
— VA 

Launfal  and  the  Leper. — Jas.  R  Lowell.  See  Vision 
of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 

Marmaduke. — G:  CJolman  (the  Younger). —  BFV  — 
BNL— FEP— HBP 

Marmaduke's  Musings. — Theodore  Tilton. — AA 

Nicholas  at  Marston  Moor.  (C)  —  Winthrop  M. 
Praed.— EDY— PEB  3 

(Marston  Moor.) — MYF 

Patrick  Spence. — Anon.     See  following. 

Patrick  Spens.     (In  Border  Minstrelsy  and  Percy's 
Reliques.)— Anon.  — BFV  —  BPB  —  EPs  — 
FEP— GN— HBP  — LH  (al.  abr.)  —  OEB  — 
WEPl 
(Abr.)— BB— OB 

(Sir  Patrick  Spence.)— PEB  1  (sei.)- PHS  (abr.) 
(Br.  sel.  used  as  text  to  Dejection:     An  Ode,  by  S: 
T.  Coleridge.) 

Pavon  and  St.  Pavon. — Sara  H.  Palfrey. — EPs 

Peter  and  his  Lady  Quarrel. — R:  B.Sheridan.  See 
School  for  Scandal,  The. 

Philip  Sidney. — W:  Browne.  See  Britannia's  Pas- 
torals. 

Philip  Sidney.  (Fr.  An  Elegy  on  a  Friend's  Passion 
for  his  Astrophill.) — Matthew  Royden. — BNL 

(Lament  for  Sir  Philip  Sidney.)— EDY 

(On  Sir  Philip  Sidney— seZ. )— EPs 

Robert  Walpole.— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— AVP 

Robert  Walpole  against  Mr.  Pitt. — KNE 

(Against  Mr.  Pitt,  1741.)— PS— SS 

(Against  William  Pitt.)— SSD 

(Walpole's  Attack  on  Pitt.)— BS  17— FTR 

Robin. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 

Roger  at  his  Country  House. — Jos.  Addison.     See 
''    Spectator,  The. 

Roger  de  Coverley  Papers. — Jos.  Addison.  See 
Spectator,  The. 

Roger  de  Coyerley's  Sunday. — Jos.  Addison.  See 
Spectator,  The. 

Rupert  the  Fearless. — R:  H.  Barham. — HPE 

(Lurline;  or,  The  Knight's  Visit  to  the  Mermaids — 
cond.  )—WR  1 

Rupert's  Wife.— G:  R.  Sims.— NPS— YP 

Sidney  Smith.— T:  Dibdin.—  CGd  (si.  abr.)  —  EDY 
—HBP  (at.  to  C:  Dibdin.) 

Thomas  Wyatt.— Sir  Antonio  Sentleger.— EDY 

Turlough ;  or.  The  Churchyard  Bride. — W :  Carleton. 
—PEB  4— TIP 

Walter  Raleigh  and  Queen  Elizabeth. — F.  M. 
Allen.— BS  20 

Walter  Raleigh  to  a  Caged  Linnet. — Eugene  Lee- 
Hamilton.— EDY— VA 

Walter  Raleigh's  Pilgrimage.  (C.) — Sir  Walter 
Raleigh. 

(His  Pilgrimage.)— OB  (obr.)— WEP  1 

(Pilgrim,  The — ibr.)— OS  3 

(Pilgrimage[,  The].)— BNL— EPs  (abr.)— FEP 

Walter  Raleigh's  Verses  Found  in  his  Bible  in  the 
Gate-house  at  Westminster. — Sir  Walter  Ral- 
eigh.    See  Verses  Found  in  his  Bible,  etc. 

Walter  Scott. — Lord  Byron.  See  English  Bards 
and  Scotch  Reviewers. 

Walter  Scott.— R:  W.  Gilder.— EDY 

Walter  Scott,  iSr.  seZ. /r.  ("Triumphs  of  the  war- 
rior are  bounded  by  the  narrow  theatre  of  his 
own  age,  The.")— W:  H.  Prescott.  —HSS  1 

Walter  Scott  and  his  Dogs.  (Sel.  fr.  Abbotsford.) 
— Washington  Irving. — FTR 

Walter  Scott  in  Westminster. — J:  Hay. — NC 

Walter's  Honor.     (SeZ.)— Marg.  J.  Preston.— TMD 

William  Napier  and  Little  Joan. — Celia  Thaxter. — 
SAP 

William  Pepperell's  Well.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 


298 


TITLE  INDEX 


Sleep 


Sirena.  {Fr.  The  Shepherd's  Sirena.) — Michael  Dray- 
ton.—EP— OB 

Sirens,  The,  Br.  sel.  /r.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL 

Sirens  Sing,  The. — Frank  T.  Marzials.  See  Two  Sonnet 
Songs. 

Sirens'  Song,  The. — W:  Browne.     iSee  Inner  Temple 

Siren's  Wedding-ring',  The.— G.  H.  Jessop.— CS  23 
Sirloin,     (f  r.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine — 

TCP 
Sis's  Beau.' — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Sistah  Lize.— W:  W.  Cook.— CS  37 
Sister. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Snow-bound. 
Sister  Agatha's  Ghost. — J.  J.   Wray.     See  Nestleton 

Magna. 
Sister  and  Bluebirds. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Sister  and  L— Anon.— BS  7— CS  18— NPS— YP 
Sister,  Awake.— Anon.— OB— YBF 
Sister  Ernestine's  Beau.- — Belle  M.  Locke. — CS  36 
Sister  Helen.— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PEB  3— VSG 
Sister  Madeleine. — Clare  Everest. — HP 
Sister  Mary  of  the  Love  of  God. — Rosa  MulhoUand. — 

VA 
Sister  Months,  The. — Lucy  Larcom. — POS 
Sister  of  Charity,  The.— Gerald  Griffin.— CS  12 
Sister  of  Mercy,  The.     (Tab.)- Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Sister  Pleads  for  a  Brother's  Life,  A. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Measure  for  Measure. 
Sister  Simmons. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Sisterly  Confidences. — Rhoda  Broughton. — WR  20 
Sisterly  Scheme,  A.— H :  C.  Bunner.— BS  21— DR  (,abr.) 
Sisters,  The.— H.  C.  Hunt.— SD 
Sisters,  The.— J :  B.  Tabb.— AA 
Sisters,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BFV—CS  10 
"Sister's  Best  Feller." — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Sister's  Cake.— Eugene  Field.— NPS— YP 
Sister's  Expostulation  on  the  Brother's  Learning  Latin, 

The.— C:  and  Mary  Lamb.— LPC 
Sisyphus.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Sisyphus,  Sel.  /r.— C:  Mackay.— AVP 
Sit  Down,  Sad  Soul.     (C.)— Bryan  W.  Procter.— BNL 

— HBP— VA— VS 
("Sit    down,   sad    soul,    and    count" — si.    abr.) — 

HSS3 
Sitting  on  the  Shore,  Sel.  jr.     ("O  Life,  O  silent  shore.") 

—Dinah  M.  Craik.— HSS  3 
Situation  of  a  University,  The. — Elmer  H.  Capen. — 

MRS 
Six  Carpenters'  Case,  The.— Sir  Frd'k  Pollock.— VA 
Six  Kinds  of  Manners.— Abby  M.  Diaz.— HSS  2 
Six  Little  Maids  from  School. — Anon. — ASD 
Six  Little  Words.— Anon.— TFS 
Six  Love  Letters.— Anon.— CS  25— WR  20 
Six  o'clock  P.  M.— Anon.— PP— YFR 
Six  Years  Old. — Anon. — See  School. 
Six  Years  Old.— Esther  Fleming.— KC 

(From  One  to  Six.)— PS— TT 
Sixe  Idillia,   SeU.  fr. —  Theocritus  (tr.  by  Sir  E:  Dyer). 
Helen's  Epithalamion. — WEP  1 
Prayer  of  Theocritus  for  Syracuse,  The. — WEP  1 
Sixteen.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  LXXL) — Walter  S. 

Landor.- FEP— VS 
(Of  Clementina.)— OB 
Sixteen  and  Sixty. — Anon. — CS  23 
16,000  Years  Ago.— Anon.— SCS 
(De  Mysterious  Darkv.) — DE 
Sixty  and  Six[;  or,  A  Fountain  of  Youth — C.].— T:  W. 

Higginson. — OS  1 
Sixty  Years  Ago.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Sixty  Years  Ago.     (Harper's  Young  People.) — HSS  3 
Sixty-four  and  Sixty-five. — Anon. — BS  2 
Sixty-second    Birthday    of    Swinburne,    The. — C:    E. 

Russell.— EDY 
Six-year-old,  A. — Anon.     See  School. 
Skater  and  Wolves.— G:  H.  Clarke.- TCV 
Skaters,  The.— Grace  W.  Leach.— CG  2 
Skater's  Song. — Anon. — FP  , 
Skating.      (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Skating. — ^W:  Wordsworth.  ,  See  Prelude,  The. 
Skating  Hath  Charms.— H.  H.— CG  2 
Skating  Song,  A.     (Abr.) — Ephraim  Peabody. — BVC 
Skating  Song.— Cora  L  Warburton. — CG  2 
Skee-race,  The.     (Gunnar,  Ch.  IX.,  abr.) — Hjalmar  H. 

Boyesen.— TMR 
Skein  of  Zephyr,  A. — Anon.— CG  1 
Skeleton  at  the  Feast,  The. — Jas.  J.  Roche. — AA 
Skeleton  in  Armor,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — A  A — 

AE  (br.    sei.)- BFV— FEP— MRS  —  TAV  — 

WCLG  2 
(Abr.)— FP— SO 
Skeleton  in  the  Cupboard,  The. — Frd'k  Locker-Lamp- 

son. — VA 
Skeleton's  Story,  The.— Anon.— BS  12 


Skeptic,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Borderers,  Act  IV.,  Sc. 

2.)— W:  Wordsworth.— EPs 
Sketch  of  a  Young  Lady  Five  Months  Old. — Winthrop 

M.  Praed.— OH 
Sketch  of  his  Own  Character.— T:  Gray.— WEP  3 
Sketch  of  Moses,  A. — Horace  L.  Hastings. — BLP 
Sketch  of  the  "Old  Coaching  Days,"  A. — J:  Poole. — 

CS6 
Sketch-book,  The. — Washington  Irving.     See: 
Legend  of  Sleepy  Hollow,  The. 
Little  Britain. 
Philip  of  Pokanoket. 
Rip  van  Winkle. 
Rural  Funerals. 
Rural  Life  in  England. 
Voyage,  A. 
Westminster  Abbey. 
Widow  and  her  Son,  The. 
Sketches. -^J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Among  the  Hills. 
Sketches  by  Boz,  Sel.  fr.     (Drunkard's  Death,  The — 

C.—8el.)—C:  Dickens.— BS  24— CS  6 
(A6r.)— FR— KNE  (more  abr.) 
(Convict's  Death,  The — si.  diff.  abr.) — NO 
Skilful  Listener,  The.— J:  V.  Cheney.— AA 
Skimpsey.— Alfred  Stoddart.— BS  20 
Skipper  Ben. — Anon. — BS  15 
Skipper  Ireson's  Ride. — J:  G.  Whittier. — AA — ASL — 

CS  8— EPs— FEP 
Skipper's  Love;  or,  the  Tide  Will  Turn,  The. — Mary  A. 

Barr.- BS  16 
Skipping.— Anon.— TFS 
Skull,  The  [or  A].— Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Sky,  The. — J:  Ruskin.  See  Modern  Painters  ond  Stones 

of  Venice,  The. 
Sky,  The.— R:  H.  Stoddard.     See  following. 
Sky  is  a  Drinking-cup,  The.     (C.)— R:  H.  Stoddard.— 

WR17 
(Sky,  The.)— A  A— HSS  2 
Skylark,  The.    (Fr.  Mano :  a  IJoetical  History. )— R :  W. 

Dixon. — VA 
Skylark,  The.— Miller  Hageman.— WR  2 
Skylark,  The.— Jas.  Hogg.  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  FEP  — 

GN— GP— LC— LLC— OS  1— PHS— WCLG  2 
(Lark,  The.)— HBP— SN— TFS  («e/.) 
Skylark,  The.— Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  To  a  Skylark. 
Skylark,  The.— Frd'k  Tennyson.— GN  (br.  sel.)— 

PGT  2— SN 
Sky-lark's  Song,  The. — J:  Bennett.     See  Master  Sky- 
lark. 
Skylight.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Sky-making. — Mortimer  Collins. — THP 
Slandec— Anon.— BS  8— CS  9— HP 
Slander. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Cymbeline. 
Slang.     (Diai.)— Anon.— FDY 
Slang  versus  Dictionary.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FND 
Slaughter  House,  The  —Alfred  Young.— CS  32 
Slave,  The.— R:  H.  Home.— VA 
Slave  of  Boston,  The  —Theodore  Parker.— NC 
Slave  Singing  at  Midnight,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow. — 

HBP 
Slavery. — W:  Cowper. — See  Task,  The. 
Slavery.     (Sel.  fr.  The  American  Tract  Society.) — Jas. 

R.  Lowell.— OS  3 
Slave's  Auction,  A.— W.  E.  Eaton.— WR  24 
Slaying  of  the  Niblungs,  The. — W :  Morris.     See  Story 

of  Sigurd  the  Volsung,  The. 
Sleep. — Anon.     (At.  to  J:  Dowland.) — BNL— HBP 
(Lullaby.)— ELP 

(Song  for  Music,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
(Tears.)— OB 
Sleep.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA— TAS— TAV 
Sleep. — Alice  Brown. — AA 
Sleep[,     The  —  C.].—  Eliz.    B=.   Browning.  —  AVP  — 

BNL  (si.  abr.)— FEP— HBP— V A 
(He  Giveth  his  Beloved  Sleep.)— BS  5— LLC— OS3 
Sleep.— T:  Sackville,  Lord  Buckhurst.— WEP  1 
Sleep. — S:  Daniel.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 
Sleep.     (Song  fr.  The  Woman-hater,  Act  III.,  Sc.  1.) — 

J:  Fletcher.— OB 
(Invocation  to  Sleep.)— BNL— CEL 
Sleep. — Johann  W.  von  Goethe.    See  Wanderer's  Night- 
song,  The. 
Sleep.— Ada  L.  Martin.— HBP 

Sleep. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II. 
Sleep. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Sleep. — Lewis  F.  Tooker. — AA 
Sleep. — ^Virgil  (tr.  by  Gawain  Douglas).     See  iEneid, 

The. 
Sleep.— J:  Wolcott.— BNL 
Sleep.— E:  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
"Sleep  and  his  Brother  Death."— W:  H.  Hayne. — AA 


299 


Sleep 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Sleep,  angry  beauty  [,  sleep  and  fear  not  me!]." — T: 

Campion.— PGT  1— YBF 
Sleep  at  Sea.— Christina  G.  Kossetti. — PGT  2 
Sleep,  Baby,  Sleep.  —  Anon.  {tr.  by  Eliz.  L.  Prentiss). 

See  Lullaby  Song. 
Sleep,  Baby,  Sleep.— I.  L.  Jones.— TFS 
Sleep,  Comrades,  Sleep>»— H:  W.  Longfellow. — PEO 

(Decoration  Day— C.)— BLP— BS  H 
Sleep,  my  Treasure. — E.  Nesbit.— PoR 
Sleep,  Silence'  Child.— W:  Drummond.— YBF 
Sleep,  Soldier,  Sleep! — Anon. — DJS 
"Sleep  sweetly  in  your  humble  graves." — HiTimrod. 
— BNL 
(At  Magnolia  Cemetery.) — AA 
(Decoration  Day  at  (Charleston. )^GP 
(Ode  on  Decorating  the  Graves  of  [the]  Confederate 
Dead  [or  Soldiers].)— HSS  1— OS  3 
Sleep  Time  in  Darktown.     {Baltimore    American.)    — 

CS37 
Sleep,  Weary  Child.— Carl  Plough.— CS  17 
Sleepe. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Sleeper,  The.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— AA— ASL— BPB 
Sleeping  and  Dreaming. — Josiah  G.  Holland. — GP 
Sleeping  Babe,  The.— S:  Hinds.— FEP 

(Baby  Sleeps.)— BNL 
Sleeping  Beauty. — Q:  A.  Baker,  Jr.- — PLD 
Sleeping  Beauty,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 

Sleeping  Beauty,  A  [or  The.].    (On Asleep- — C.) — 

S:  Rogers.— BNL— FT  A— PGT  1— YBF 
Sleeping  Beauty,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See    Day- 
dream, The. 
Sleeping  Boy,  The.     (Tab.)—E:  H.  Trafton.— MD 
Sleeping  Child,  A.— Arthur  H.  Clough.— PoR— WCL 
Sleeping  May.— Rebekah  Willis.— TT 
Sleeping  Princess  of  Aphrodite,  A. — Rob't  C.  Rogers. 

— AA 
Sleeping  Sentinel,  The.— Fs.  De  H.  Janvier. — CS  1— 

SA 
Sleeplessness.     (Poems  of  the  Imagination,  Pt.  L,  Misc. 
Sonnets,  XIV.)— W:  Wordsworth.- BNL 
(To  Sleep.)  — FEP  — HBR—MBL— PGT  1— PYO 
—YBF 
Sleep-walking    Scene,     The. — W:    Shakespeare.      See 

Macbeth. 
Sleepy. — Anon. — CS  28 
Sleepy  Hollow. — W:  E.  Channing.— EPs 
Sleepy  Man.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— TCV 
Sleigh  Song.— G.  W.  Pettee.— BNL 
Sleighing  Song. — J:  Shaw. — AA 
Sleigh-ride,  The.— Anon.— WR  17 
Slight  Miscalculation,  A.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— SPC 
Slight  Mistake,  A.     (DmZ.)— Anon.— FHE 
Slight  Mistake,  A.— Anon. — WR  20 
Slight  Mistake,  A. — Anthony   Hope.     jSee  Dolly   Dia- 
logues, The. 
Slight  Misunderstanding,  The. — Anon. — CS  5 

(Frenchman's  Mistake,  The.) — DFY 
Slight  Misunderstanding,  A.     {Comedietta.) — Anon.  — 

DDM 
Slight  Misunderstanding,  A.     {Dial.) — Mrs.  G.  S.  Hall. 

— NPS— YP 
Slim  Teacher  of  the  Cranberry  Gulch,  The. — Anon. — 

CS28 
Sloth,  The.— Ruth  Kimball-Gardiner.— TL 
Slow  and  Sure. — Su.san  Coolidge.- — POS 
"Slowly  and  sadly  we  laid  him  down." — C:  Wolfe.    See 

Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore.  The. 
Slowlys  at  the  Photographer's,  The. — Mary  K.  Dallas. 

— WR3 
Slowlys  at  the  Theatre,  The.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
"Slumber  did  my  spirit  seal.  A."   (Poems  of  the  Imagi- 
nation,    XI.)— W:     Wordsworth.— PGT  1— 
YBF 
(Departed.)— EPs 
(Lucy.)— OB  (V.)-^WEP4  (III.) 
Slumber  Song,  A.     A.  H.  Aiken.— WR  4 
Slumber  Song. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Valentinian. 
Slumber  Song.— Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Sly  Little  Maid,  A.     {Trinity  Tablet.)— CG  2 
Sly  Old  Rat,  A.— ParmenasMix.— FS 
Sly  Thoughts. — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel  in  the 

House,  The. 
Smack  in  School,  The.— W:  P.  Palmer.— AWH—BC— 
BNL  —  BS  1  —  CRR  —  CS  1  —  FEP  —  FTR 
— PTS— THP 
(Kiss  in  School,  The.)— MHR 
Smack  "Out"  of  School,  The.— Anon.— CS  25 
Small  and  Early. — Tudor  Jenks.— AA 
Small    Beginnings.— C:    Mackav.— BNL— CS  31— CSS 
— LLC— PPSr— PR— WR  17 
(Deed  and  a  Word,  A— aei.)- HP— HSS  2— PYO— 

WRl 
(Little  and  Great.)— SM—WCLI  2 


Small  Beginnings  of  Great  Historical  Movements. — G. 

S.  HiUard.— OM 
Small  Boy,  The.— Anon.— KNS 
Small  Boy's  Loquitur,  The. — Anon. — GH 
Small  Boy's  Questions,  A. — Emma  H.  Nasoh. — SR  13 
Small  Dressmaking.     {Youth's  Companion.)  —  LPS — 

PP 
Small  Pitchers  Have  I^arge  Ears.     Mrs.  Itusseh  Kava- 

naugh. — KJ 
"Small  service  is  true  service[  while  it  lasts]." — W: 

Wordsworth.     See  To  a  Child,  Written  in  her 

Album. 
Small  Things.— Anon.— WR  17 
Small  Things.— F.  Bennoch.— PPSr 
Small  Things. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton.— CS  19 
Smallest  Grade,    The. — Mrs.     Russell    Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
Smallest  of  the  Drums,  The. — J:  Buckham. — BAB — 

PAPm 
Smart  Boy,  A. — Anon. — MND 
Smart  Girl,  A. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Smatterers.     {Fr.     Misc.     Thoughts.) — S:     Butler. — 

HPE 
Smile  and  a  Frown,  A. — Emma  C.  Dowd. — BS  25 
Smile  and  Never  Heed  me. — C:  Swain. — BNL 
Smile  and  the  Sigh,  The.— G.  T.  Johnson.— BS  14 
"Smile  of  her  I  Love,  The."     {In  The  New  Day.)— R: 

W.  Gilder.— BIL 
Smile  Whenever  you  Can. — Anon. — DJS 
Smiles  and  Tears. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Smiling  Demon  of  Notre  Dame,  A. — Sophie  Jewett. — 

AA 
Smiling  Listener,  The. — Anon. — SE 
Smith  and  the  King,  The.— E:  Carpenter.— WR  22 
Smith  Family,  The.     {Entertainment.) — Anon. — EuE 
Smith  Family,  The.— Anon.— WR  20 
Smith's  Bargain  Day. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers. — CS  34 
Smiting  the  Rock.— Anon.— CS  21— FMR 
Smoke,  The.     (C.)— G:  Macdonald. 

(Smoke  of  Sacrifice,  The.)— BS  13 
•Smoke. — H:  D.  Thoreau.     See  Walden. 
Smoke  and  Chess.— S:  W.  Duffield.— PPh 
Smoke  is  the  Food  of  Lovers. — Jacob  Cats. — PPh 
Smoke  of  Sacrifice,  The. — G:  Macdonald.      See  Smoke, 

The. 
Smoke  Traveller,  The. — Irving  Browne. — PPh 
Smoked-American  Theology. — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  24 
Smoker,  The.— Anon.— HPE 
Smoker's  Calendar,  The. — Anon. — PPh 
Smoker's  Reverie,  The. — Anon. — PPh 
Smoking  Away. — Fs.  M.  Finch. — PPh 
Smoking  Song. — Anon. — PPh 
Smoking  Spiritualized. — Anon.— HBP — PPh 
Smooth  Day,  A.— "Joe  Jot,  Jr."— CS  21— NPS— YP 
Smooth  Divine,  The. — Timothy  Dwiglit. — AA 
Smooth  Path,  A. — Millie  C.  Pomeroy. — SR  3 
Snackin'-Turple  Man,  The. — Anon. — DE 
Snail,  The.— V.  Bourne.— CGd 

Snake  and  the  Baby,  The.— Sir  Edwin  Arnold.— VSG 
Snare  and  a  Delusion,  A.     ( Yale  Record.) — CG  2 
Snarls  and  Scowls. — (Illara  J.  Denton.— LL 
Snarl's  Children. — Anon. — MAD 
Sneezing.— Leigh  Hunt.— BNL— CS  12 
Sneezing  Man,  The.— Ward  M.  Florence. — CS  8 
Sniggles  Family,  The.— {Ent.)— Anon.— EE 
Sniveler,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Croakers  of  SocietA^  and  Liter- 

ature.)— Edwin  P.  Whipple.— KNE 
Snobbery.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Snobs.— W :  M.  Thackeray.     See  Book  of  Snobs,  The. 
Snorkey's  Version  of  the  Flood  and  the  Ark. — Anon. 

— GH 
Snow,  The.     (DiaZ.)- Anon.— HVD 
Snow.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— SN 
Snow.— A.  E.  C— NV 
Snow. — W:Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Snow,  The.— W:  Whitehead.— CS  25 
Snow. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  French  Army  in  Russia, 

The. 
Snow.— A  Winter  Sketch.— Ralph  Hoyt.— BNL 
Snow  and  Sun. — Mortimer  Collins. — TFY 

(To  F.  C,  20th  February,  1875.)— VS 
Snow  Brigade,  The.     (Motion  Song.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J. 

Rook.— YFE      ' 
Snow  Flake,  A.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— TAV 
Snow  in  Town. — Richman  Mark. — BVC 
Snow  of  Age,  The.— Anon.— CS  6 
Snow  Party,  A. — Anon. — EuE 

Snow  Scene,  A. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Snow  Song. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Snow  Song. — Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL 
Snow  Sorcery.— C:  L.  Hildreth.— POS 
Snow  Storm,  The. — Ethelwyn  Wetherald. — VA 
Snow  Twins,  The.— P.  B.  Power.— HS 


300 


TITLE  INDEX 


Soldier 


Snow-bird,  The.— Anon.— NV 

Snowbird,  The.— Hezekiah  Butterworth.— PoR — POS 

Snow-bird,  The.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL 

Snow-birds.     (Tab.)— Anon.— BS  10— TCP 

Snow-birds,  The.— Anon.— YET 

Snowbirds. — Archibald  Lampman. — POS 

Snow-bird's  Song,  The.— Fs.  C.  Woodworth.— NV 

(Chick-a-de-dee. )— PS 
Snow-bound:     A  Winter  Idyl.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AP— 

MAL 
Mother.     {Sel.)—AA 
Prophetess.     (Sel.) — A  A 
Sister.     {Sel.)— AA 

New  England  in  Winter,      (^e^)— BNL 
(Firelight — sel.  w.  add.) — AA 

(Loved,  not  Lost,  The— sei.)- SR  7 
(Snow-bound— 8f/.)—BlL—FTA 
(Snow-bound.)— SAE  (6r.  «eZ.)— SN 

(A67-.)— GN— SPE 
(Snowstorm,  The— se^s.)— POS 
(World  Transformed,  The— »eZ.)— AA 
Snow-bound,  Br.  sels.  /r.— BNL— HDL 
Snowdrop,  The.— Anon.— POS 
Snowdrop,  The.     (Songs  for  the  Little  Ones  at  Home.) 

— NV 
Snowdrop,  A. — Harriet  P.  Spofford.— GN 
Snowdrops. -J^aurence  Alma-Tadema. — PoR 
Snowdrop's  (Jail,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards.- — SL 
Snowed  Under.     (Se^)— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— TFS 
Snow-filled  Nest,  The.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— SN 
Snowflakes. — Anon. — YBT 
Snow-flakes.— C:  L.  Benjamin.— YBT 
Snowflakes.— J:  V.  Cheney.— POS 
Snowflakes.— Mary  M.  Dodge.— A  A— DCP— PoR 
Snow-flakes.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BNL— YBF 
Snowflakes. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — lyFL 
Snow-flakes  and  Snow-drifts. — Martha  T.Gale.- — DR 
Snow-image,  The. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — APr 
Snowing  of  the  Pines,  The. — T:  W.  Higginson. — A  A — 

GN 
Snow-man,  The. — Anon.— TT 
Snows,  The.— C:  Sangster.— BNL 
Snowshoe  Song,  A. — Arthur  Weir.     See  following. 
Snowshoeing  Song. — Arthur  Weir. — VA 

(Snowshoe  Song,  A.)— TCV 
Snow-shower,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— BNL— NV 
Snow-shower,  The. — Mary  L.  Duncan. — NV 
Snow-song,  A.— H:  Van  Dyke.— HBR 
Snow-storm,  The.— Anon. — NV 
Snow-storm,    The. — R:    D.    Blackmore.     See    Lorna 

Doone. 
Snow-storm,   A   [or  The]. — C:   G.   Eastman. — BNL — 

CS  8— HBP 
Snow-storm,  The. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. —  AA  —  BNL 

— FP— GN— HBP— POS— WR  5 
Snowstorm,  The. — J.  Hazard  Hartzell. — POS 
Snow-storm,  The. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Snowstorm,  The. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Snow-bound. 
Snow-weaver,  The. — Frank  D.  Sherman.— -LFL 
Snuff.— Rob't  Southey.— HPE 
Snuff-boxes,  The.— Anon.— BVC 
Snug  Little  Island,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.      (Tight    Little 

Island,  The.)— T:  Dibdin.— BNL 
Snyder's  Nose.— A.  M.  Gri.swold.—  BDD  —  BRR  — 

CS  10— DFY— MYF 
"So,  as  I  sat  upon  Appledore,"  etc. — J:  G.  Whittier. 

See  Wreck  of  Rivermouth,  The. 
"So  every  little  child  I  see."     (Br.  sel.  fr.  A  Glimpse 

of  Youth.)— Josiah  G.  Holland.— HP 
So  Glad. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
So  I  Got  to  Thinkin'  of  her.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— WR  2 
So  Little.— Anon.— WR  17 
"So  live,  that  when  thy  summons  comes  to  join." — W: 

C.  Bryant.     See  Thanatopsis. 
So  Much  May  be  Done.     (Hebrew  Journal.)— SSS 
"So  nigh  is  grandeur  to  our  dust."     (Sel.  fr.  Volun- 
taries, III.)— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— HSS  3 
(Duty.)— GN— OS  1 
So  she  Refused  him.     (Boston  Transcript.) — BS  21 
"So  should  we  live  that  every  hour." — R:  M.  Milnes, 

Lord  Houghton.— CS  1 
(Life.)— HSS  3 
So  Slow  to  Die.     (In  Wild  Eden.)— G:  E.  Woodberry. 

So,  So,  Rock^-by  So!— Eugene  Field.— EF—LS 

So  Sweet.-^Anon.— CG  1 

So  Sweet   is   She. — Ben   Jonson.     See   Celebration   of 

Charis,  A. 
So  Sweet  Love  Seemed. — Rob't  Bridges. — VA 
So  the  Snow  Comes  Down. — Mary  F.  Butts. — POS 
"So  these  lives  that   had   run  thus  far  in   separate 

channels." — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Courtship 

of  Miles  Standish,  The. 


So  Tired.— M.  E.  Townsend.— HDL 

So  Wags  the  World. — Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — AA 

So  was  I.— Jos.  B.  Smiley.— CS  31 

So,  we'll  Go  no  More  a-Roving.     (C.) — Lord  Byron. — 

BPB— WEP  4 
(We'll  Go  no  More  a-Roving.) — OB 
Soap  Bubbles. — Anon. — CG  2 
Soap  Bubbles.     (Ent.) — Anon. — EuE 
Soap-bubble,  A. — F:  L.  Knowles. — CG  1 
Soarin'  o'  the  Eagle,  The.— M.  F.  Ham.— PAPm 
Sobbing. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Dora. 
Sober  Second  Thought,  A. — Anon. — MFD 
Social  Glass,  A.— Anon.— WR  22 
Social  Heredity.— J:  K.  Ingram.— TIP 
Social  Pleasures.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Social  Scale,  The.— S.  L.  T.— DS 
Society  Boy,  The. — Anon.— WR  14 
Society  Flirtation. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Society  for  Doing  Good,  A.— H.  Elliot  McBride.—DDD 
Society  for  the  Suppression  of  Gossip,  The. — Anon. — 

FAD 
Society  Martyr,  A. — J:  C.  Anthony. — CG  2 
Society  of   the   Army   of   the    Potomac,   The,  Sel.  fr. 

(Great  Question  Settled,  The.)— G:  W.  Curtis. 

— BLP 
Society  upon  the  Stanislaus  [ur.  Stanislaw],  The.     (C.) 

— Fs.  Bret  Harte.—  AA  —  BNL  —  FEP  —  GP 

— PYO— THP 
(Throes  of  Science,  The.)— MHR 
Sockery  Kadahcut's  Kat.— Anon.— BDD— SDR 
"Sockery"    SettingaHen.— Anon.-CS  18— FTR-SRl 
(How  "Sockery  "  Set  a  Hen.)— BDD 
(Setting  a  Hen.)— BS  8— CSS 
Socks  for  John  Randall.— Mrs.  P.  H.  Phelps.— CS  7 
Socrates  Snooks.— Anon.—  BS  2  —  CS  2  —PR  —  PS 

— WRD 
Sod  House  in  Heaven,  The.— Harry  E.  Mills.— WR  21 
Sodoma's  Christ  Scourged.     (Sel.   fr.   Siena.) — G:  E: 

Woodberry. — TAS 
Sofa,  The.— W:Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Soft  and  Sweet  the  Zephyrs  Sigh.     (W.  music.) — Anon. 

—AD 
Soft  Black  Overcoat  with  a  Velvet  Collar,  A. — Rob't 

C.  V.  Meyers.- CS  15 
Soft  Guitar,  The.— P.  H.  Bowne.— PR— YA 
"Soft  is  Thy  Rest."— W:  D.  Baker.- CG  1 
Soft-hearted  Bill.— W.  Sapte,  Jr.— CS  27 
"Softly  now  the  light  of  day."— G:  W.  Doane. — LLC — 

SAE 
( Evening. ) — A  A 

(Evening  Contemplation.)^ — FEP 
Softly  the  Evening  Shadows. — Dan'l  C.  Brewer. — BIL 

— FTA 
Softly  Woo  away  her  Breath. ^Bryan  W.  Procter. — 

BNL— CS  4— HBP 
Soggarth  Aroon.— J:  Banim.— TIP — VA 
Sohrab   and   Rustum. — Matthew  Arnold. —   HBP  — 

WR  16  (cond.) 
(Death  of  Sohrab,  The— sel.)— IM 
(Combat,  The— se/.)- VA 
(Oxus— 6r.  ««?.)- VA 

(River's  End,  The.)— POS 
(Sohrab  and  Rustum,  Sel.  fr.—abr.)—'WEF  4 
Sojourners. — Anon. — SR  6 
Solace  in  Winter.— G:  Sigerson. — TIP 
Soldier,   The.     (Fr.    The   King,   the   Knave   and   the 

Donkey. ) — Anon.- — FAS 
Soldier,  A.— Joanna  Baillie. — KNE 
Soldier  and  Sailor.— T:  Campbell.— LH 

(Napoleon  and  the  British  Sailor — C.) — BNL 
(Napoleon  and  the  Sailor — abr.) — CGd 
Soldier  and  the  Pard,  The.     (Abr.) — Bayard  Taylor.— 

WR2 
Soldier  and  the  Virgin  Mary,  The.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 
Soldier  Bird,  The.— Anon.— MYF 
Soldier  Boy,  The.— J:  D.  Long.— SC 
Soldier  Boy,  The.— W :  Maginn.— VA 
Soldier  Boy  for  me.  The.— S:  E.  Kiser.— PAPm 
Soldier  from  Bingen,  The. — Caroline  E.  S.  Norton.— SS 
(Bingen  on  the  Rhine.)  —BNL  —  CS  1  — DDR— 

FEP  —  FP  —  LLC  —  MR  —  OS  2  —  PPSr 

—WRD 
Soldier  Going  to  the  Field,  The.   (Song:  The  Souldier 

Going  to  the  Field— C.)— Sir  W:  Davenant. — 

CEL— YBF 
Soldier  of  the  Empire,  The.     (Sel.)—T:  N.  Page.— SC 
Soldier  Poet,  A. — Rossiter  John.son. — AA 
Soldier,  Rest.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Soldier,  Rest!    TThy    Warfare    O'er].— Walter    Scott. 

See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Soldier,  Soldier. — Rudyard  Kipling.— PEB  4 
Soldier  Tramp,  The.— "Don  Santiago  Carlino."— CS  27 

— SR5 


3C1 


Soldier's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Soldier's  Burial,  The.— Caroline  Norton.— HSS  1— PEO 
Soldier's  Cradle-hymn,    The.— Mary   McGuire.— CS  23 

— PR  (w.  mus.) 
Soldier's  Departure,  The.     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Soldier's  Dream,  The.— T:  Campbell.— BNL—BPB— 

CEL  —  CGd  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  HSS  1 

—LLC  —  OS  1«-  PC  —  PGT  1  —  PHS—  PPSr 

— PSR— SS— YBF 
Soldier's  Dream,  The.     (Tab.)- Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Soldier's  Faith,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— SC 
Soldier's  Grave,  A.- — J:  Albee. — AA 
Soldier's  Heart,  A.     {Baltimore  News.) — PAPm 
Soldier's  Home,    Washington,    The. — Joaquin   Miller. 

— BS  14 
Soldiers  in  Camp.     (Tob.)- Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Soldier's  Joy,  The.     (.With  music.) — Emma  D.  Banks. 

—BR 
Soldier's  Monument,  The.— J:  L.  Swift.— FD  1 
Soldier's  Mother,  The.— Anon.— SR  2 
Soldiers  of  Freedom.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Soldiers  of  the  Sun.^ — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Soldier's  Offering,  A.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  27 
Soldier's  Pardon,  The.— Jas.  Smith.— CS  9— NPS— PS 

— YP 
Soldier's  Reprieve,  The.— R.  D.  C.  Robbins.— BRR— 

BS  2— CS  3— CSS— LLC 
Soldier's  Reprieve,  The.— Rose  H.  Thorpe.- FR 
Soldier's  Retrospect,  A. — Kate  B.  Sherwood. — WR  5 
Soldier's  Return,  The.     (Tob.)— Anon.— TCP 
Soldier's  Return,  The.— Rob't  Bloomfield.— BNL 
Soldier's  Return,  The.     {Dial.)—B.   C.    L.    Griffith.— 

MN 
Soldier's  Return,  The.— Hudson  Tuttle.— DES 

Soldier's  Return,  The.     {Dial.) White.— BC 

Soldier's  Re-union. — S.  F.  Bennett.^ — SR  3 
Soldier's  Tent,  The. — Helene  Vacaresco. — HS 
Soldier's  Widow,  The.     (SI.  abr.)— Nathaniel  P.  Willis. 

— BLP 
Solemn  Book-agent,  The.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) — DCR 

— DRR 
Soliloquies    from    "Hamlet." — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

Hamlet. 
Soliloquy,  A. — Rixby  Forbes. — SR  9 
Soliloquy,  A.— Walter  Harte.— BNL— HBP 
Soliloquy  at  the  Oak  Grove  (8:55  A.  M.).  —  H:  W. 

Palmer.— CG  3 
Soliloquy  by  a  Girl  of  the  Period. — Anon. — SR  3 
Soliloquy    from    "Hamlet." — W:     Shakespeare.     See 

Hamlet. 
Soliloquy  of  Arnold.- E:  C.  Jones.— CS  1— WR  10 
Soliloquy   of    Douglas  —  Solemnity.  —  J :  Home.     »See 

Douglas. 
Soliloquy  of  King  Richard  III. — W :  Shakespeare.    See 

King  Richard  III. 
Soliloquy  of  Manfred. — Lord  Byron.     See  Manfred. 
Soliloquy  of  Romeo  in  the  Garden. — W :  Shakespeare. 

See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Soliloquy  of  the  Dying  Alchemist. — Nathaniel  P,  Wil- 
lis.—WRD  {si.  abr.) 
{ Dying  Alchemist ,  The— C. )— CS  6~FP 
Ubr.)— FR— PS 
Soliloquy  on  Character. — W:  Shakespeare.      See  King 

Henry  V. 
Soliloquy  on  Death. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Soliloquy:  on  Immortality. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Cato. 
Solitary  Reaper,  The.     (C.)— W:  Wordsworth.— BFV 

— BPB— FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  HSS  3  —OB  — 

WEP4 
(Reaper,  The.)— PGT  1— PHS— YBF 
Solitary  Shepherd's  Song,  The.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  A  Margarite 

of  America.) — T:  Lodge. — EP. 
Solitary-hearted,  The. — Hartley  Coleridge. — OB 

(Stanzas— C.)—WEP  4 
Solitude.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Solitude. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrim- 
age. 
Solitude.— E.  R.  G.— CG  3 
Solitude. — Frd'k  Peterson. — AA 
Solitude.— Alex.  Pope— PGT  1— YBF 

(Ode  on  Solitude— O— FEP— HBP— LC—PYO- 

SN 
(Ode  to  Solitude.)— BNL 
(Quiet  Life,  The.)— CEL 
Solitude. — Philip  H.  Savage. — AA 
Solitude.— H:  Kirke  White.— HBP 
Solitude.     (O— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— TAV 

(Laugh  and  the  World  Laughs  with  you.) — TMD 
(World  as  it  is.  The.)— FS 
Solitude  and  the  Lily. — R:  H.  Home. — VA 
Solitude   of   Alexander   Selkirk,  The. — W:   Cowper. — 

BPB 
(Se^.)- PGT  1— PSR 


Solitude  of  Alexander  Selkirk,  The  {continued). 
(Alexander  Selkirk.)— OS  2 
(Verses  Supposed  to  be  Written  by  Alexander  Sel- 

kirk.)- BNL  —  CGd  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  MBL 

— WCLG  2 
Solium  Fac',  A.— Anon.— PP— YFR 

(De  Old  Plantation  Mule — si.  abr.) — CRR 
Solomon  and  his  Sages. — Anon. — CS  16 
Solomon  and  Mamma.- — Anon. — OS  1 
Solomon  and  the  Bees.  (King  Solomon  and  the  Bees — 

O— J:  G.  Saxe.— GN 
Solomon  and  the  Sparrow. — Caroline  C.  Joachimsen. — 

WR2 
Solomon  Grub. — Jonas  Cook. — CS  33 
Solomon,  the  Wise  King.     {Bible.)     See  Proverbs. 
Solomon's  Wise  Choice.— I.  N.  Tarbox.— YBT 
Solstice.     (O— Edith  Thomas. 

Summer  Solstice,  The.     {Sel.)—ET>Y 
Winter  Solstice,  The.     (Sei.)- EDY 
Solution,  The.— J:  W.  Ryan.— CS  20 
Solution  of  the  Southern  Problem,  The. — Booker  T. 

Washington. — SC 
Solway  Sands. — Eliz.  Craigmyle. — VA 
Some  "Arabian     Nights"     People. — Clara    Denton. — 

LPD 
Some  Children  of  the  Bible. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 

SSE 
Some  Day  of  Days.— Nora  Perry.— FTA—GP— OH 
("Some   day,    some    day   of   days,   threading   the 

street" — at.  to  E.  S.  Phelps.) — GG 
Some  Day  or  Other. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
"Some  day,  some  day  of  days,  threading  the  street." 

— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.     See  Some  Day  of  Days. 
Some  Delusions  of  High  License. — Herrick  Johnson. — 

WR  18 
Some  Famous  Trees. — Anon. — HSS  1 
Some  Future  Day. — Arthur  H.  Clough.     See  Songs  in 

Absence. 
Some  Geese. — Oliver  Herford. — NA 
Some   Hallucinations.  —  Lewis  Carroll.     See    Strange 

Wild  Song,  A. 
"Some   hearts   go   hungering  through   the   world." — 

Anon.— GG 
Some  high  or  humble  enterprise  of  good." — Anon. — 

HSS  3 
Some  Lover's  Dear  Thought. — Sarah  Woolsey. — BIL 
Some  Mother's  Child.— Fs.  L.  Keeler.— CS  10 
"Some    murmur    when   their    sky    is    clear." — R:    C. 

Trench.- GG 
Some  Noted  Characters. — Clara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Some  of  the  Children.— Isabel  F.  Bellows.— TFS 
Some  Old  School-books. — Anon. — PEO 
Some  One  Loves  us  Best. — M.  E.  Vandyne. — HSS  2 
Some  Opinions. — Anon. — CPL 
Some  Polite  Dogs.— Celia  Thaxter.- SAP 
Some  Rules. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
"Some  say  that  kissin's  a  sin." — Anon.— WR  22 
Some  Stylish  "Cumpny." — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Some  Suppositions. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Some  Sweet  Day. — Lewis  J.  Bates. — HP 
"Some  Tangled  Hair." — Anon. — CG  1 
Some  Time.— Eugene  Field.— EF— OH— WTD 
Some  Verses  to  Snaix. — Anon. — NA 
Some  Very  Famous  People. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Some  were  Empty,  Sel.  fr.     (Christmas  Eve.) — Anon. 

— GMS 
Some  Years  in  Washington's  Life. — M.  L.  Stanley. — 

DFR 
Somebody.— Anon.— BNL— TFY 
"Somebody."— Anon. — CG  1 
Somebody.     (2)     Anon. — DJS 
"Somebody's."— Rae  McRay.— CS  29 
Somebody's  Boy. — Anon. — WR  6 
Somebody's  Darling.- — Maria  La  Conte. — AWB — BNL 

— CS  2— HSS  1— PAPm— SA 
Somebody's  Knocking. — Anon. — AD 
Somebody's  Mother.    {Macmillan's  Magazine.) — PP — 

YBT— YFR 
{SI.  afcr.)— CS  17— FR— FTR— PR— SM 
Somehow. — Anon. — CS  24 

Somehow  or  Other.^Anon. — HP — KNE  {sl.  abr.) 
Something  Better. — Clara  J.  Denton.— DFR — LL 
Something  Beyond. — Mary  Clemmer. — HDL 
Something  Cheap. — C:  Swain. — FP 
Something  Each  Day. — Anon. — YBT 
Something  Great.— Florence  Tyler.  —  BS  18— NPS— 

WR  6— YP 
Something  Split.— Anon. — CS  16 
Something  to  be  Done. — Mary  D.  Chellis. — TS 
Something  to  be  Thankful  for.     {Dial.) — Clara  J.Den- 
ton.—DFR— LL—WLO 
Something  to  Do.— Anon.— YBT 
Something  to  Do.    {Abr.) — Frances  R.  Havergal.— YBT 


302 


TITLE  INDEX 


Song 


Something  to  Hate. — Anon. — TS 

Something  to  our  Advantage. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
Something  to  Remember. — Anon. — DLF 
Sometime. — Anon. — CS  15 
Sometime. — Hosea  Q.  Blaisdell. — CS  18 
Sometime.— May  R.  Smith.— HDL— HP— TAS 
(God  Knoweth  Best— 6r.  sei.)— SSS 
("Sometime,  when    all    life's    lessons    have    been 

learned.")— CS  15  (a6r.)— GG  (sel.) 
Sometime.— F.  A.  F.  W.  W.— BS  9 
Sometime — Somewhere.  —  Ophelia   G.    Browning    (iw. 

at.  to  Rob't  Browning).— SSS 
"Sometime,  when  all  life's  lessons  have  been  learned." 

— May  R.  Smith.     See  Sometime. 
Sometimes. — Louisa  F.  Story. — HP 
"Sometimes  a  light  surprises." — W:  Cowper. — SAE 
(Joy  and  Peace  in  Believing.— C.)—FEP— HBP 
Somewhere. — Julia  C.  R.  Dorr. — TAS 
Somewhere. — Alfred  C.  Shaw. — LLC 
Somewhere     or    Other.  —  Christina    G.     Rossetti.  — 

FLS  (ad.)— FT  A— PGT  2— YBF 
Somnambulist,  The. — Anon. — MND 
Son  of  Abdallah,  A. — Albion  W.  Tourgee.     See  Son  of 

Old  Harry,  A. 
"Son  of  God  goes  forth  to  war.  The." — ^H.  S.  Cutler. — 

LLC 
Son  of  Old  Harry,  A,  Sel.  fr.     (Son  of  Abdallah,  A.)— 

Albion  W.  Tourgee.— NP 
Son-Dayes.— H :  Vaughan.— FEP 
Sonet:  "Fra  bank  to  bank,  fra  wood  to  wood  I  rin." — 

Maa-k  A.  Boyd.— OB 
Song:  "The  chestnuts  shine  through  the  cloven  rind." 

— T:  B.  Aldrich.— FP 
Song:  "O  spirit  of  the  summertime." — W:Allingham. 

— VS 
Song:  "Joy  came  in  youth  as  a  humming  bird." — 

Sophie  M.  Almon-Hensley.— TCV 
Song:  "Oh,  welcome  bat  and   owlet  gray." — Joanna 

Baillie.     See  Song   Written    for  a  Welsh  Air 

Called  "The  Pursuit  of  Love." 
Song:  "The  bride  she  is  winsome  and  bonny." — Joanna 

Baillie.     See  Song,  Woo'd  and  Married  and  A'. 
Song:  "They  who  may  tell  love's  wistful  tale."     (Ft. 

The  Phantom,  Act  I.,  Sc.  4.) — Joanna  Baillie. 

— WEP  4 
Song,  A: — "I  shouldn't  like  to  say,  I'm  sure." — G:A. 

Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Song,  A:  "Spring-time  is  coming  again,  my  dear." — 

G:  A.  Baker,  Jr.— PLD 
Song:  "Come  here,  fond  youth,  whoe'er  thou  be."     (I. 

— C) — Anna  L.  iJarbauld. 
(What  it  is  to  Love— s/.  afcr.)— FLS 
Song:  "Fain  would  I  wake  you,"  etc. — Beaumont  and 

Fletcher.     See  Wit  at  Several  Weapons. 
Song:  "Hence,  all  ye  [or  you]  vain  delights." — Fs.  Beau- 
mont.    See  Nice  Valour,  The. 
Song:  "Shake    off    your    heavy    trance."     (Songs    jr. 

Masque    of     the    Gentlemen    of    Gray's    Inn, 

and  the  Inner  Temple,  A.) — Fs.  Beaumont. — 

EDY  (1st  song) — EPs  (1st  and  2nd  songs,  and 

sel.  jr.  4th.) 
Song:  "Do  not   fear  to  put,"  etc.- — Beaumont  and 

_  Fletcher.     See  Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
Song:  "Lay  a  garland  on  my  hearse." — Beaumont  and 

Fletcher.     See  Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Song:  "How  many  times,  etc." — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See 

Torrismond. 
Song:"My  goblet's  golden  lips  are  dry." — T:  L.  Bed- 
does.— VS 
Song:    "Strew    not    earth,"    etc.      {Fr.    The    Second 

■     Brother.)— T:  L.  Beddoes.— VS 
Song:  "Who  is  the  baby,  that  doth  lie."— T:  L.  Bed- 
does.     See  Bride's  Tragedy,  The. 
Song:  "Love  in  fantastic  triumph  sate."     {Fr.  Abde- 

lazar.) — Aphra  Behn. — OB 
(Song  from  Abdelazar.) — WEP  2 
Song:  "In    thy   white   bosom    Love   is   laid."— J:    A. 

Blaikie.— VA 
Song:  "How  sweet  I  roamed  from  field  to  field." — W: 

Blake.— FEP— WEP  3 
Song:  "Memory,  hither  come." — W:  Blake. — WEP  .3 
Song:  (C.)     "My  silks  and  fine  array. "^ — W:  Blake  — 

OB— WEP  3 
(My  silks  and  fine  array.)— .FEP 
Song:  "O  fly  not  pleasure,"  etc. — Wilfrid  S.  Blunt. — 

OB 
Song:     "  True  as  the  needle  to  the  pole,"  Br.  sel.  fr. — 

B.  Booth.— BNL 
Song:     "See,  O  see!     How  every  tree."     (Fr.  Elvira.) 

— G:  Digby,  Earl  of  Bristol  (?).— ELP 
Song  (C):     "The  linnet  in  the  rocky  dells."— Emily 

Bronte. — VA 
(My  Lady's  Grave.) — OB 


Song:     "Day,    in    melting    purple,"    etc.— Maria    G. 

Brooks.     See  Song  of  Egla. 
Song:     "For  her  gait  if  she  be  walking." — W:  Browne. 
—OB 
(Love's  Reasons.) — ELP 
Song:     "Welcome,  welcome  do  I  sing." — W:  Browne. 
— CEL— ES— WEP  2 
(WeIcome[,  The].)— ELP— FEP— OB 
(Welcome,  welcome.)— HBP— YBF 
("  Welcome,  welcome,  do  I  sing.") — BNL 
Song:     "Nay  but  you,  who  do  not  love  her." — Rob't 

Browning. — OB 
Song:     "The    moth's    kiss,    first." — Rob't    Browning. 

See  In  a  Gondola. 
Song:     "O    love    is    like    the    roses."     {Fr.    Love    in 

Winter.)— Rob't  Buchanan. — VS 

Song:     "When  stars  are  in  the  quiet  skies."     (Night 

and  Love — C. — fr.  Ernest  Maltravers,  Bk.  III., 

Ch.I.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— CR— FLS  {br.  sd.) 

(When  Stars  are  in  the  Quiet  Skies.)  —  FEP—  FTA 

— VA 

Song:     "He   that    is    down,"    etc. — J:    Bunyan.     See 

Pilgrim's  Progress. 
Song:     "What    pleasure    have    great    princes." — W: 
Byrd.— HBP 
(Quiet  Life,  The.)— ELP 
Song  (C):     "Earl  March  look'd  on  his  dying  child." 
—T:  Campbell. 
("Earl  March  look'd  on  his  dying  child.") — PGT  1 
—YBF 
Song  (C):    "How  delicious  is  the  winning." — T:  Camp- 
bell.—HBP  {si.  afer.)— YBF 
(First  Kiss,  The.)— BNL— FTA 
Song:     "Withdraw  not  yet  thos3  lips  and  fingers." — 

T:  Campbell.— FTA 
Song  (C):     "Ask  me  no  more  where  Jove  bestows." — 
T:  Carew.—  ELP  —  ES— HBP—  OB— WEP  2 
—YBF 
("Ask  me  no  more  where  Jove  bestows.") — FEP — 
OEL 
Song:     "Would   you  know  what's  soft?"  —  {At.  to) 

T:  Carew.— ES— WEP  2 
Song:     "Love,  by  that  loosened  hair." — Bliss  Carman. 

— VA 
Song:     "Heaven!    'Tis    delight    to    see   how    fair." — 
Charles,  Duke  of  Orleans  (<r.  bj/Costello). — FTA 
Song:     "Wilt    thou    be     mine?" — Charles,    Duke    of 

Orleans  {tr.  by  Costello). — FTA 
Song:     "For  me  the  jasmine  buds  unfold." — Florence 
E.  Coates.- FEP 
(World  is  Mine,  The.)— A  A 
Song:     "Bud  into  blossom,  flower  into  fruit." — Rob't 

J.  Cole.— CG  3 
Song  (C):     "Sheisnot  fair  to  outward  view." — Hartley 
'      Coleridge.— HBP— OB— V A— WEP  4 
("She  is  not  fair  to  outward  view.") — BNL— FEP 
—FTA— PGT  1— YBF 
Song(C.):     "'Tis  sweet  to  hear  the  merry  lark." — 

Hartley  Coleridge.     See  Song:  The  Lark. 
Song:     "Hear,    sweet    spirit,    hear    the    spell."     {Fr. 
Remorse,  Act  III,  Sc.  1.) — S:  T.  Coleridge.— 
HBP 
Song  (C):    "False  though  she  be,"  etc. — W:  Congreve. 
—WEP  3 
("False  though  she  be  [to  me  and  love].") — FTA — 
OB 
Song,  A:     "To  thy  lover."     (Out  of  Italian— C.)—R: 

Crashaw.— HBP 
Song:     "Only   tell  her  that  I  love." — J:  L.  Cutts. — 

OB 
Song:     "Are  they  Shadows  that  we  see?"— S:  Daniel. 

ELP 

( Eidola. )— ES— O  EL 
Song:     "Sweet  in  her  green  dell,"  etc. — G:  Darley. — 
OB 
(Flower  of  Beauty,  The.)— VA 
(Love  Song.)— HBP 
Song  (C):     "The  lark  now  leaves  his  watery  nest." 
— Sir  W:  Davenant.— FEP— WEP  2 
(Aubade.)— OB 
( Dawn-song. ) — CEL 
(Morning.)- YBF 
Song:     "The  boat  is  chafing  at  our  long  delay."^J: 

Davidson. — OB 
Song:     "Seek  not  the  tree  of  silkiest  bark." — Aubrey 

T:  De  Vere.— VA— VS— YBF 
Song:     "Singthe  old  song,  amid  the  sounds  dispersing." 

— Aubrey  de  Vere. — HBP 
Song:     "Softly,  O  midnight  hours!" — Aubrey  De  Vere. 
— VS 
(Serenade.)— OB 
Song:     "When    I    was  young,  I  said  to  sorrow." — 
Aubrey  De  Vere.— TIP— VS 


303 


Song 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Song: 


Song: 
Song: 


Song: 
Song: 


Song: 


"Love  is  not   a  feeling    to    pass    away." — C: 
Dickens.     See  Village  Coquettes,  The. 

"Go  and  catch  a  falling  star." — J:  Donne. — 

OB— WEP  1 

"Sweetest  love,  I  do  not  go." — J:  Donne. — 

ELP— WEP  1 
("O  how  feeble  i%man's  power" — gel.) — EPs 
Song:     "Dorinda's  sparkling  wit  and  eyes."  —  C:Sack- 

ville,  Earl  of  Dorset.— WEP  2 
("  Dorinda's  s  arkling  wit  and  eyes.") — FEP 
Song:     "Phillis,  for  shame,  let  us  improve." — C:  Sack- 

ville,  Earl  of  Dorset.— WEP  2 
Song:     "Phoebus,  arise!"    (Song  XXXVI.,  Pt.  I.)— W: 

Drummond.— ELP— ES— HBP— WEP  2 
( Invocation. ) — OB 
("Phoebus,  arise!")- OEL 
(Summons  to  Love — d.  abr.) — PGT  1 
Song:     "Ah,    fading    joy!"     (Fr.    The    Indian    Em- 
peror.)— J:  Dryden. — ELP 
Song:     "  When  another's  voice  thou  hearest." — Helen 

S.  Sheridan,  Ladv  DufTerin.— VS 
Song:     "Child,  is  thy  father  dead?" — Ebenezer  Elliott. 

—WEP  4 
Song,  The. — J:  Erskine. — A  A 
Song,  A:     "First  the  fine,  faint  dreamy  motion." — 

Norman  Gale. — VS 
Song:     "This  peach  is  pink,  with  such  a  pink." — Nor- 
man Gale. — VA 

"  Wait  but  a  'little  while." — Norman  Gale. — 

VA— VS 

"O  ruddier  than  the  cherry!"     (Fr.  Acis  and 

Galatea,  Pt.  II.)— J:  Gay.— OB 
Song:     "The  silent  bird  is  hid  m  the  boughs." — Rosa 

Mulholland,  Lady  Gilbert.— TIP 

"Not  from  the  whole  wide  world,"  etc. — R:  W. 

Gilder.— AA—FTA— OH 
("Not  from  the  whole  wide  world  I  chose  thee.") — 

BIL 
Song:     "Years  have  flown  since  I  knew  thee  first." — 

R:  W.  Gilder.— AA—ASL 
Song   (C):     "Sweet   are  the  thoughts  that   savor  of 

content."     (Fr.  Farewell  to  Follie  [or  Folly].) — 

Rob't  Greene.— HBP— WEP  1 
(Content.)— BNL—EP— FEP 
( Cont  entment . )— YBF 
(Sweet  Content.)— OEL 
Song:     "A  place  in  thy  memory,  dearest." — Gerald 

Griffin.— FTA 
(Place  in  thy  memory.  A.) — VA 
Song:     "  There  are  days  when  the  sun  shines  warm  and 

bright. "^ — Emelyn  B.  Hartridge. — CG  1 

"Sing  me  a  sweet,  low  song  of  night." — Hilde- 

garde  Hawthorne. 
Song:     "Pack  clouds  away,"  etc.— T:  Heywood.     See 

Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

"A  lake  and  a  fairy  boat."     (Song  for  Music  — 

O— T:  Hood.— BFV— HBP— LC 
("Lake  and  a  fairy  boat.  A.") — BPB 
Song  (C):     "O  lady,  leave  thy  silken  thread." — T: 

Hood.— HBP— VS 
(May  Morning,  A.) — AD 
Song:     "The  stars  are  with  the  voyager." — T:  Hood. 

— VS 
Song: — "I  wander'd  by  the  brookside." — R:  M.  Milnes, 

Lord  Houghton.— CGd—FP 
(Brookside,  The.)— BNL  — CR—  FEP  —  FTA— 

GP— HBP— OH— PGT    2— TFY— VA— VS— 

YBF 
("I  wandered  by  the  brookside"  —  wr  music.') — 

NPS— YP 
Song:     "Thy  face  I  have  seen  as  one  seeth." — Sophie 

Jewett. — AA 
Song:    "Follow  a  shadow,"  etc.     (Song. — That  Women 

are  but  Men's  Shadows — C.) — Ben  Jonson. — 

FEP 
(Shadow,  The.)— OB 
Song:     "How  near  to  good  is  what  is  fair."     [Fr.  Love 

Freed  from  Ignorance  and  Folly.) — Ben  Jon- 
son — EPs 
("How  near  to  good  is  what  is    fair.") — BNL — 

ELP 
Song  (C):     "Oh,  do  not  wanton  with  those  eyes." — 

Ben  Jonson. — ES 
("O  do  not  wanton  with  those  eyes.") — BNL 
Song:     "See  the  chariot  at  hand." — Ben  Jonson.     See 

Celebration  of  Charis,  A. 

"Spring  all  the  graces  of  the  age."     (Chorus  fr. 

Nentune's  Triumph  for  the  Return  of  Albion.) 

— Ben  Jonson. — EPs 

"Still   to   be   neat,"    etc. — Ben    Jonson.     See 

Simplex  Munditiis. 

"The     owl    is     abroad." — Ben     Jonson.     <See 

Gipsies  Metamorphosed,  The. 


Song: 


Song: 


Song: 


Song: 
Song: 


Song  (C):     "I  had  a  dove  and  the  sweet  dove  died." 
—J:  Keats.— CGd—LC—PoR 
(Dove,  The.)— OS  1 
Song:     "Oh!  that  we  two  were  maying."  —  C:  Kings- 
ley.     jSee  Saint's  Tragedy,  The. 
Song:     "She's  .somewhere  in  the  sunlight  strong."  — 

R:LeGallienne.— OB 
Song,  A:     "She  sat  alone  by  the  gray  stone  wall." — 

Addie  I.  Locke.— CG  1 
Song:     "Thy  braes  are  bonny." — J:  Logan.     SeeSong: 

The  Braes  of  Yarrow. 
Song  (C):     "Stay,  stay  at  home." — H:  W.  Longfellow. 

(Home  Song.)— BS  6— GN— OH 
Song(C.):     "Violet!  sweet  violet !  " — Jas.  R.  Lowell. 

(Violet.  The— si.  abr.)— AD 
Song:     O  bird,  thou  dartest  to  the  sun. — Maria  W. 

Lowell. — AA 
Song:     "Pan's  Syrinx  was  a  girl  indeed." — J:  Lyly. 

See  Midas. 
Song:     "What  bird  so  sings,  yet  does  so  wail?" — J: 

Lyly.     <See  Alexander  and  Campaspe. 
Song:     "We  must  love  and  unlove,  and  it  may  be."  — 
Rob't.   Earl   of  Lytton.     See  Wanderer,  The. 
Song,  A:     "This  I  learned  from  the  birds." — Fs.  C: 

McDonald.— CG  2 
Song:     "I    dreamed    that    I    woke    from    a   dream." 
(Song  fr.  Wilfrid  Cumbermede,  Ch.  LVI.)— G: 
Macdonald. — VA 
Song:     "  'O   lady,   thy  lover  is   dead,'   they    cried." 
(Song  fr.   Phantastes.     A  Faerie  Romance  for 
Men  and  Women,  Ch.  XX.)— G:  MacDonald. 
—HBP 
Song:     "All  glorious  as  the  rainbow's  birth." — Gerald 

Massey. — VS 
Song:     "My  fair,  no  beauty  of  thine  will  last." — Alice 

Meynell. — VA 
Song:     "Nymphs  and  shepherds,  dance  no  more." — J: 

Milton.     See  Arcades. 
Song:     "O'er  the  smooth  enamelled  green." — J:  Mil- 
ton.    See  Arcades. 
Song:     "Sweet  Echo,  sweetest  nymph,"  etc. — J:Milton. 

See  Comus. 
Song:     "Who  calls  me  bold  because  I  won  my  love." 

— Cosmo  Monkhouse. — VA 
Song: — "Love    took    my    life     and    thrill'd    it." — Sir 

Lewis  Morris.- — VA 
Song:     "Where    the    soft    shadows    fall.'.' — Irene    E. 

Morton.— TCV 
Song:     "The  pouring  music,  soft  and  strong." — F:  H. 

W.  Myers. — VA 
Song:     "Your  heart  is  a  music-box,  dearest."- — Frances 

S.  Osgood.— AA 
Song:     "Has  summer  come  without  the  rose."     (In 
Lays   of   France.) — Arthur   O'Shaughnessy. — 
FTA— PGT  2— WEP  4— YBF 
("Has  summer  come  without  the  rose?") — VA 
Song  (C):    "I  made  another  garden,  yea." — Arthur  W. 
O'Shaughnessy.— OB— PGT  2— WEP  4 
(I  Made  Another  Garden.) — VS 
Song:     "I  went  to  her,"  etc.     ("I  went  to  her  who 
loveth     me     no     more"  —  C.)  —  Arthur     W^. 
O  'Shaughnessy .  — H  B  P 
( Enchainment. )— YBF 
Song,   A:     "Oh,   the   hopper  grass   is   clattering  and 

flying  all  the  day."— S.  P.— CG  2 
Song:     "  When  thy  beauty  appears." — T:  Parnell. — 
OB 
(When  your  Beauty  Appears.) — BNL 
Song:     "For  the  tender  beech  and  the  sapling  oak." 

— T:  L.  Peacock.— BFV— LC—PoR 
Song:     "Oh!  say  not  a  woman's  heart,"  etc. — T:  L. 
Peacock.— TFY 
("Oh!  say  not  woman's  heart  is  bought.") — FTA 
(She  Loves  and  Loves  Forever — C.) — FLS 
Song:     "We  break  the  glass,  whose  sacred  wine." — E: 

C.  Pinkney.— AA—ASL 
Song:     "The    merchant,    to    secure    his    treasure." — 
Matthew  Prior.- OB 
(Love's  Disguises.) — YBF 
("Merchant,  to  secure  his  treasure.  The.")  —  FEP 

— PGTl 
(Ode,  An— O— WEP  3 
Song  (C):     "Love  me  if  I  live." — Bryan  W.  Procter. — 
HBP 
("Love  me  if  I  live.") — FLS 
Song:     "Gray  is  the  sky,  but  naught  care  I." — W.  T.  R. 

— CG3 
Song:     "O  for  a  moon  to  light  me  home!"  —  Walter 

Ramal.— SOC 
Song:     "At    setting    day    and    rising    morn." — Allan 

Ramsay.     See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 
Song(C.):     "Farewell  to  Lochabpr." — Allan  Ramsay. 
(Lochaber  no  More.)— BNL— FEP— HBP 


304 


TITLE  INDEX 


Song  for 


Song,  A:     "Knowest  thou  but  joy." — H.  R.  Remsen. — 

CG2 
Song,  A  (C):     "There  is  ever  a  song  somewhere,  my 

dear."— Jas.  W.  Riley.— GMS 
(Ever  a  Song  Somewhere.) — YBT 
Song:     "Absent  from  thee  1  languish  still." — J:  Wil- 

mot,  Earl  of  Rochester. — WEP  2 
(Return.)— OB 
Song:     "Dear,  from  thine  arms  then  let  me  fly." — J: 

Wilmot,  Earl  of  Rochester.— ELP 
Song:     "My  dear  mistress,"  etc. — J:  Wilmot,  Earl  of 

Rochester.— WEP  2 
("My  dear  mistress  has  a  heart.") — FEP 
Song:     "When  on  those  lovely  looks  I  gaze." — J:  Wil- 
mot, Earl  of  Rochester.— WEP  2 
Song:     "O  roses  for  the  flush  of  youth." — Christina  G. 

Rossetti.— VS 
Song:'  "Two   doves   upon    the    selfsame   branch."  — 

Christina  G.  Rossetti.— VS 
Song:     "When  I  am  dead,  my  dearest." — Christina  G. 

Rossetti.— OB— PGT  2-tVS— YBF 
Song:     "A  weary  lot  is  thine?     etc.— Walter  Scott. 

See  Rokeby. 
Song;     "Allen-a-Dale    has    no    fagot,"    etc. — Walter 

Scott.     See  Rokeby. 
Song:     "O  Brignall  banks,"  etc. — Walter  Scott.     See 

Rokeby. 
Song:     "Soldier,    rest!    thy    warfare    o'er."  —  Walter 

Scott.     <See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Song:     "The  heath  this  night  must  be  my  bed." — 

Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Song:     "Where  shall  the  lover  rest." — Walter  Scott. 

See  Marmion. 
Song  (C):    "Love  still  has  something  of  the  sea." — Sir 

C:Sedley.— WEP2 
("Love  still  hath  something  of  the  sea.") — FEP 
Song:     "Phillisismyonlyjoy."-SirC:Sedley.— WEP2 
(PhiUis.)— CEL— EP 
("Phillis  is  my  only  joy.") — BNL 
Song:     "Fear  no   more   the  heat  o'  the  sun."  —  W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Cymbehne. 
Song:     "Hark,  hark!  the  lark,"  etc. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Cymbeline. 
Song:     "How  should  I  your  true  love  know." — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
Song:     "On  a  day  (alack  the  day)." — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Song:     "Orpheus  with  his  lute."  —  W:  Shakespeare. 

See  King  Henry  VIIL 
Song:     "Tell  me  where  is  fancy  bred." — W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Song:     "Under    the    greenwood    tree." — W:    Shake- 
speare.    See  As  You  Like  It. 
Song:     "Love  in  my  heart;  Oh  heart  of  me,  heart  of 

me!" — W:  Sharp. — VA 
Song:     "Who  has  robbed  the  ocean  cave." — J:  Shaw. 

— AA— ASL— FTA 
Song:     "Rarely,  rarely  comest  thou." — Percy  B.  Shel- 
ley.—HBP 
("Rarely,  rarely  come.st  thou.") — FEP 
(Spirit  of  Delight,  The.)— CEL 
Song:     "Had  I  a  heart  for  falsehood  framed."     {Air 

fr.    The    Duenna,    Act    IIL,   So.    1.)— R:    B. 

Sheridan.— TIP 
Song:     "I  ne'er  could  any  luster  see."     (Sel.) — R:  B. 

Sheridan.— FTA 
Song  (CJ:     "Ye  virgins,  that  did  late  despair."     (Fr. 

The  Imposture.) — .las.  Shirley. 
(Peace  Restored.)— ELP 
Song:     "Who  hath  his  fancy  pleasi'd."  —  Sir  Philip 

Sidney.— OB 
Song:     "Wake    now,    my    love,    awake."  —  Edmund 

Spenser.     See  Epithalamion. 
Song:     "I  prithee  send  me  back  my  heart."- — Sir  J: 

Suckling.— ES— FTA— WEP  2 
("I  prithee  send  me  back  my  heart.") — BNL — FEP 

— OEL— YBF 
Song:     "Love,  Reason,  Hate,  did  once  bespeak." — Sir 

J :  Suckling. 
(Dance,  The.)— WEP  2 
Song(C.):     "No,  no,  fair  heretic!  it  needs  must  be." 

— Sir  J:  Suckling. 
(True  Love.  )—ES 
Song(C.):     "When,  dearest,  I  but  think  of  thee." — 

Sir  J:  Suckling. 
("When,  dearest,  I  but  think,"  etc.) — OB 
Song  (C):     "Why  so  pale?"     (Fr.  Aglaura.)— Sir  J: 

Suckling.— HBP 
(Encouragements  to  a  Lover.) — PGT  1 
(Orsames'Song[in"Aglaura"].)— ELP— ES— WEP2 
(To  a  Lover.)— YBF 
("Why  so  pale  [and  wan,  fond  lover]?") — BNL — 

FEP— GP— OB— OEL— PYO 


Song:     "O   lips  that   mine   have    grown   into."     (Fr. 

Felise.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — VS 
Song :     "  Daughter  of  Egypt ,  veil  thine  eyes. ' ' — Bayard 

Taylor.— AA 
Song:     "Down  lay  in  a  nook  my  lady's  brach." — Sir 

H :  Taylor.  -  See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Song:     "Quoth  tongue  of  neither  maid  nor  wife,"     Sir 

H:  Taylor.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Song:     "In  love,  if  love  be  love." — Alfred  Tenny.son. 

See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Song  (C):     "The  winds,  as  at  their  hour  of  birth." — 
Alfred  Tennyson. 
(We  are  Free.)     SAE 
Song:   "We  sail  toward  evening's  lonely  star." — Celia 

Thaxter.— AA— GP 
Song:  "  'Tis  said  that  absence  conquers  love." — Fr'd'k 
W.  Thomas.— AA 
("  'Tis  said  that  absence  conquers  love.") — FTA 
Song(C.):     "Tell  me,  thou  soul  of  her  I  love." — Jas. 
Thomson. 
(To  her  I  Love.)— WEP  .3 
Song:  "Bring  from  the  craggy  haunts  of  birch  and 

pine."— J:  Todhunter. — TIP 
Song:  "Go,  lovely  rose!" — Edmund   Waller. — ELP — 
ES— WEP  2 
("Go,   lovely  rose!")— BFV— BNL— EPs— FEP— 

OB— OEL— PGT  1— PYO— YBF 
(Rose,  The.)— HBP 
(Rose's  Message,  The.) — CEL 
Song(C.):     "Whilst  I  listen,"  etc. —  Edmund  Waller. 

(To  Chloris.)— ES 
Song: — "I  never  knew  how  dear  thou  wert." — Catharine 

Warfield.— FTA 
Song:  "April,  April,  laugh  thy  girlish  laughter." — W: 
Watson.- OB 
(Song  to  April.)— GN 
Song:     "The  poets  sing  that  love  is  blind."     (Wellesley 

Magazine.) — CG  3 
Song:  "I  bade  thee  stay.     Too  well  I  know." — Sarah 

H.  Whitman.— HBP 
Song:  "A  bird  in  my  bower." — Fs.  H.  Williams. — AA 
Song,  A:  "I  do  not  ask — dear  love — not  I." — Rob't  B 

Wilson.— TFY 
Song:     "O  [or  Oh],  say  not  that  my  heart  is  cold  " — 

C:Wolfe.— HBP— WEP4 
Song:  A  May  Morning. — J:  Milton.     See  Song  on  May 

Morning. 
Song  about  Singing,  A. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — AA 
Song  and   Science   ("The  Twilight  of  the  Poets"). — 

Milicent  W.  Shinn. — AA 
Song  at  the  Feast  of  Brougham  Castle  upon  the  Res- 
toration of  Lord  Clifford,  the  Shepherd,  to  the 
Estates   and    Honors    of   his   Ancestors. — W: 
Wordsworth.- FEP 
(Two  Victories — 8el.) — LH 
Song  before  Grief,  A. — Rose  H.  Lathrop. — A  A 
Song  before  the  Entry  of  the  Masquers.    (Chorus — C. — 
fr.   The   Fortunate   Isles   and  their  Union.) — 
Ben  Jonson.— WEP  2 
Song  by  a  Person  of  Quality.     (C.) — Alex.  Pope. 
(Lines  by  a  person  of  Quality.) — NA 
(Love  Song,  in  the  Modem  Taste,  A — at.  to  Swift.) 
— HPE 
Song,  by  Glycine. — S:  T.  Coleridge.     See  Zapolya. 
Song  by  Rogero  [the  Captive].     (Fr.   The   Rover.) — 
G:  Canning.— ESs— FEP 
(Song  of  One  Eleven  Years  in  Prison.) — HBP — 

THP 
(Song  Sung  by  Rogero,  etc.) — HPE 
(University  of  Gottingen,  The.) — MHR — OS  2 
Song,  by  Two  Voices. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Bride's 

Tragedy,  The. 
Song  for  a  Catarrh,  A.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Song  for  July  12th,  1843.— J:  De  J.  Frazer.- TIP 
Song  for  Lexington,  A. — Rob't  K.  Weeks. — AA 
Song  for  May,  A. — Eben  E.  Rexford. — AD 
Song  for  Music,  A. — Anon. — PGT  1 — YBF 
(Lullaby.)— ELP 

(Sleep— a<.  to  Dowland.) — BNL — HBP 
(Tears.)— OB 
Song  for  Music. — Edmund  Gosse. — VA 
Song  for  Music.     (C.)—T:  Hood. 

("Lake  and  a  fairy  boat.  A.") — BPB 
(Song.)— BFV— HBP— LC 
Song  for  Punch  Drinkers.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Song  for  St.    Cecilia's    Day,    A.     (C.) — J:    Dryden  — 
BNL  —  ELP  —  FEP  —  OB  —  P(5T  1   — 
WEP2— WRll 
(Fife  and  Drum— 6r.  se?.)- GN— OS  1 
(Ode  for  St.  Cecilia's  Day — si.  abr.) — SO 
(Ode  on  St.  Cecilia's  Day.) — FP  (sel.) — IR 
(St.  Cecilia's  Day.)— EPs— WCLG  2 
(Trumpet's  Loud  Clangor,  The — sel.) — LC 


305 


Song 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Song  for  September,    A.— T:     W.     Parsons.— HBP — 

TAV 
Song  for  the  Asking,  A. — Fs.  O.  Ticknor! — AA 
Song  for  the  Conquered,  A.  —  W:  W.  Story.     See  He 

and  She;  or,  A  Poet's  PortfoHo. 
Song  for  the  Fleet,  A.— Clinton  Scollard. — PAPm 
Song  for  the   Girl  t  Love,  A. — Frd'k  Langbridge. — 

HP 
Song  for  the  Hot  Winds,  A. — Harriet  M.  Davidson. — 

HP 
Song  for  the  Hour,  A.— W.  F.  Dunbar.— PAPm 
Song  for  the  Lute. — Edmund  Gosse.-^VS 
Song  for  the  New  Year. — Eliza  Cook. — HS 
Song  for  the  Night  of  Christ's  Resurrection,  Br.  sel.  fr. 

("In    regal    quiet    deep.")  —  Jean    Ingelow. — 

FHS 
Song  for  the     Sailor-men,     A.     (Baltimore     News.) — 

Anon. — PAPm 
Song  for  the  Seasons,  A.- — Bryan  W.  Procter. — HBP 
Song  for  Tree-planting. — Sara  J.   Underwood. — AD — 

DFR 
Song  for  Winter. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Song  from  a  Drama  (Stanzas  for  Music — C. — fr.  an  un- 
finished   drama). — Edmund     C.    Stedman. — 

— AA 
Song  from  a  Drama. — Edmund  C.   Stedman. — BIL — 

TFY 
Song  from  Abdelazar. — Mrs.  Aphra  Behn. — WEP  2 

(Song:  "Love  in  fantastic,"  etc.) — OB 
Song  from  ^lla,  A. — T:  Chatterton.     See  ^lla. 
Song  from  Ben-Hur. — Lew  Wallace.     See  Ben-Hur. 
Song  from  "Epiccene;  or.  The  Silent  Woman." — Ben 

Jonson.     iSee  Simplex  Munditiis. 
Song  from  Gypsies'  Metamorphoses.— Ben  Jonson.  See 

Gipsies  Metamorphosed,  The. 
Song  from  Jason.     (Fr.  Life  and  Death  of  Jason,  Bk. 

IV.)— W:  Morris.— EPs 
(Nymph's  Song  to  Hylas,  The.)— OB 
Song  from   "King  Arthur." — JrDryden.     See  Harvest 

Home. 
Song  from    "Lays    of    France." — Arthur    O'Shaugh- 

nessy.— WEP  4 
Song  from    "Love    in    Winter." — Rob't  Buchanan. — 

VS 
Song  from  "  Measure  for  Measure." —  W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Measure  for  Measure. 
Song  from  "Midas." — J:  Lyly.     See  Midas. 
Song  from  Neptune's  Triumph. — Ben  Jonson. — EPs 
Song  from  "Paracelsus." — Rob't  Browning.     See  Para- 
celsus. 
Song  from    "Pippa    Passes." — Rob't    Browning.     See 

Pippa  Passes. 
Song  from  the  Arcadia,  A. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See 

Arcadia,  The. 
Song  from  "The  Lady  of  the  Lake." — Walter  Scott. 

See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Song  from  "The  Merchant  of  Venice." — W:  Shakes- 
peare.    See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Song  from  "The  Mulberry  Garden." — Sir  C:  Sedley. — 

WEP  2 
(Child  and  Maiden— abr.  )—PGT  1 
(Song  to  Chloris.)- CEL 
(To  a  Very  Young  Lady.)— BNL— FEP 
(To  Chlorjs- abr.)— OB 
Song  from    "The    Nice    Valour." — J:    Fletcher.     See 

Sweetest  Melancholy. 
Song  from  "The  Second  Brother." — T:  L.  Beddoes. — 

VS 
Song  from   the   Ship. — T:   L.    Beddoes.     See   Death's 

Jest  Book. 
Song  from  "The  Sophy."— Sir  J:  Denham.— WEP  2 
Song  from  the  Suds,  A. — Louisa  M.  Alcott.     See  Little 

Women. 
Song  from  "The  Two  Noble  Kinsmen." — Shakespeare 

and  Fletcher.     See  Two  Noble  Kinsmen,  The. 
Song  from  "The  Wild  Wagoner  of  the  Alleghanies." — 

T:  B.'  Read.     See  Wagoner  of  the  Alleghanies, 

The. 
Song  from  "Torrismond." — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Tor- 

rismond. 
Song  from   "Valentinian." — Beaumont   and   Fletcher. 

See  Valentinian. 
Song  in  Autumn,  A. — Arthur  J.  Stringer. — TCV 
Song  in  Color,  A.— Anon.— YBT 
Song:     In    Commendation    of   Music. — W:    Strode. — 

ELP  (a6r.) 
(Music.)— EPs— FEP— HBP 
(Praise  of  Music — abr.) — CEL 
Song — in   Imitation  of  Sir  John  Eaton,  A.     (C) — J: 

Wilmot,  Earl  of  Rochester. 
("Too  late,  alas!  I  mu.st  confess.")— BNL— FEP 
Song  in  Imitation  of  the  Elizabethans. — W:  Watson. — 

VA 


Song:     In  Leinster.     (Two  Irish  Peasant  Songs,  I.) — 

Louise  I.  Guiney. — ASL 
(In  Leinster — C.)— AA 
Song,  in  Making  of  the  Arrowes,  The.  —  J:  Lyly.     See 

Sapho  and  Phao. 
Song  in  March.— W:  G.  Sims.— AA— POS 
Song  in  Praise  of  Spring. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — HSS  1 
Song  in  the  Dell,  The.— C:  E.  Carryl.— AA 
Song  in     "The     Foresters." — Alfred     Tennyson.     See 

Foresters,  The. 
Song  in  the  Night,  The. — J  as.  Buckham. — NV 
Song  in  the  Storm,  The. — Jas.  Buckham.- — NV 
Song  in    the    Wood. — Beaumont    and    Fletcher.     See 

Little  French  Lawyer,  The. 
Song  in  the  Wood,  The. — W :  Browne.     See  Inner  Tem- 
ple Masque. 
Song — Mediocrity  in  Love  Rejected.     (C.) — T:  Carew. 
(Give  me  more  Love  [or  more  Disdain].) — BNL — 

FLS— FTA— YBF 
Song  my  Mother  Sings,  The.— T:  O'Hagan.— TCV 
Song  my  Paddle  Sings,  The. — E.  Pauline  Johnson. — 

HBR— TCV— VA 
Song  of  a  Heathen,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.     See  Celestial 

Passion,  The. 
Song  of  a  Summer  Stream,  The.     (Sel.) — Frances  R. 

Havergal.— POS 
Song  of  an  Angel. — Frd'k  Tennyson.— PGT  2 
Song  of  an  Old  Dollar  Bill.— D.  W.  Curtis.— CS  25 
Song  of  Angiola  in  Heaven.- — Austin  Dobson.- — GP 
Song  of  Arbor  Day. — Sarah  J.  Pettinos.^AD  (w.  mus.) 

—HSS  1— PEO 
Song  of  Ariel. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Tempest,  The. 
Song  of  Arno,  A. — Grace  E.  C.  Stetson.^ — AA 
Song  of   Autolvcus. — W:   Shakespeare.     See  Winter's 

Tale,  "The. 
Song  of  Autumn,  A.     (C.) — Arthur  H.  Clough. 

(No  More.)- HBP 
Song  of  Autumn,  A.- — Rennell  Rodd. — HBP 
Song  of  Birds. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Birds  of  Kil- 

lingworth.  The. 
Song  of  Braddock's  Men,  The.— Anon.— AWB—EDY 
Song  of  Callicles  [in   Sicily,   The].— Matthew   Arnold. 

See  Empedocles  on  Etna. 
Song  of  Canada,  A. — Rob't  Reid. — TCV 
Song  of  Celadyne,  The.- — W:  Browne.     See  Britannia's 

Pastorals. 
Song  of    Chanson     de    Roland,     The.- — (Tr.    by)    J: 

O'Hagan.     See  Song  of  Roland,  The. 
Song  of  Clan-Alpine. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The. 
Song  of  Clover,  A.— "Saxe  Holm."— GN— NV 
Song  of  Daphne  to  her  Lute,  A.- — J:  Lyly.     See  Midas. 
Song  of  Consecration.^ — E.  A.  Holbrook. — AD 
Song  of  Content,  A.— J:  J.  Piatt.— TAS 
Song  of  David, The. — C.  Smart.    See  Song  to  David,  A. 
Song  of  Dedication. — Ellen  Beauchamp. — AD 
Song  of  Degrees,  A. — Marg.  Vandegrift.- — AWH 
Song  of  Dewey's  Guns,  The. — Sam  W.  Foss. — PAPm 
Song  of  Doubt,  A.— Josiah  G.  Holland.— TAS 
Song  of  Early  Autumn,  A.— R:  W.  Gilder.— SN 
Song  of     Easter,    A.     (C.)— Celia    Thaxter.— GMS — 

SAP— TAS 
("Sing,  children,  sing!" — sel.) — FHS 
Song  of  Echo. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
Song  of  Egla. — Maria  G.  Brooks.— A  A 

("Day,  in  melting  purple  dying.") — BNL — FEP 
(Song.)— HBP 
Song  of  1876,  The.— Bayard  Taylor.— CS  12 
Song  of  Elaine. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the 

King. 
Song  of     Empedocles,    The. — Matthew    Arnold.     See 

Empedocles  on  Etna. 
Song  of  Enchantment,  The. — Edmund  Spenser.     See 

Faerie  Queen,  The. 
Song  of  Eros.     (Fr.   Agathon.) — G:  E:Woodberry. — 

AA 
Song  of  Fairies.     (Fr.   Amyntas:   or.   The   Impossible 

Dowry.) — T:  Randolph  (tr.  by  Leigh  Hunt). — 

FEP— HBP 
(Fairies'  Soni^.)— BNL 

(Song  of  Fairies  Robbing  an  Orchard — C.) — BVC 
Song  of  Faith.— W :  Croswell.— TAS 
Song  of  Faith,  A.— Josiah  G.  Holland.— TAS 
Song  of  Faith  Forsworn,  A. — J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De 

Tabley.— VA 
Song  of  Farewell,  A. — Dora  Green  well. — VA 
Song  of  Fionnuala,  The.— T:  Moore.— EPs — TIP 
Song  of  Giuki,  The. — W:  Morris.     See  Story  of  Sigurd 

the  Volsung,  The. 
Song  of  Growth,  A.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.- TCV 
Song  of  Harvest.  A.     (C.)— J:  G.  Whittier. 

(Lines — for  the  Agricultural  and  Horticultural  Ex- 
hibition, etc.)  AD — 


306 


TITLE  INDEX 


Song 


Song  of  Hiawatha,  The,  Sels.  fr. — H:  W.  Longfellow. 
Famine,  The.     (Pt.  XX.)— FP— FTR— MR 
(SI.  abr.)—BS  3— CS  1— SA 
(Death  of  Minnehaha — sel.) — A  A 
(Hiawatha— 6r.  sels.)— SAE—SE 
Ghosts,  The.     (Pt.  XIX.)— BS  2 
(Hiawatha — br.  sel.) — SAE 
(Disasters — ahr.) — FP 
Hiawatha's  Childhood.     (Pt.  XXII.— a6r.)— BVC 
(Seis.)- LC— WCL 
(Hiawatha's  Brothers — br.  sel.) — PoR 
(Hiawatha's  Chickens — br.  sel.) — PoR 
Hiawatha's  Sailing.— (Pt.  VII.)— BVC 
Hiawatha's  Wedding  Feast.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Pt.  XI.) 

— PEO 
Hiawatha's  Wooing.     (Pt.  X.)— CS  1 
South  Wind,  The.    (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  The  Four  Winds. ) 

— BS7 
Story  of  "Hiawatha,"  The.    (Introd. — cond.;  sel.  fr. 
Pt.  I. :  The  Peace  Pipe,  sel.  fr.  Pt.  II. :  The  Four 
Winds.)— AD 
Tableaux  from  Hiawatha. 

Death  of  Minnehaha,  The.     (Fr.  Pt.  XX.)— BS  9 

—TCP 
Tableaux  from  Hiawatha,  with  Readings. — BS  13 
—TCP 

I.  Infancy  and  Childhood.     (Fr.  Pt.  XXII.) 

II.  The  Wooing.     (Fr.  Pt.  X.) 

III.  The  Famine.     (Fr.  Pt.  XX.) 

'  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The.  An  English  Criticism.  (Punch.) 
— HPE 
Song  of    Impossibilities,   A. — Winthrop  M.   Praed. — 

NA 
Song  of  Israel.     Bible.     See  Exodus. 
Song  of  Joy,  The.— Carl  Spencer.— YBT 
Song  of   Krishna,   A.     (<S'e^    fr.   The    Indian  Song  of 
Songs,  Sarga  the  first.) — Sir  Edwin  Arnold. — 
GP 
Song  of    Love,    A.     (Love — C.) — C:    L.    Dodgson. — 

GN 
Song  of  Love  Despairing  and  about  to  Die.    (C)     (Fr. 
The  Captain.)- J:  Fletcher. 
(Away,  Delights!)— OB 
Song  of  Luddy-Dud,  The.— Eugene  Field.— LS 
Song  of  Madame  Do-as-you-Would-be-Done-by,  The. 

C:Kingsley.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Song  of  Maelduin.— T.  W.  Rolleston.— TIP 
Song  of  Marion's  Men.— W:  C.  Bryant.— A WB— BAB 
— BFV  — BNL  — CS  15— FEP— HB— HBP— 
HSS  1— LC— OS  1— PAP— PAPm—  PS  (abr.) 
— PSR— SM— WCLG  1 
Song  of  Mary  the  Mother  of  Christ. — Anon.     <See  New 

Jerusalem,  The. 
Song  of  Mila,  The.— S.  Sterne.— PAPm 
Song  of  Mina's  Soldiers  [lyr.  The]. —  Felicia  D.  Hemans. 

—PS 
Song  of  Moses.     Bible.     See  Exodus. 
Song  of  Motto  and  Perkin.     (Song  fr.  Pastorals,  Ninth 

Eclogue.) — Michael  Drayton. — OEL 
Song  of  Myself  (formerly  called  Walt  Whitman),  Sels. 
/r.— Walt  Whitman. 
Bare-bosomed  Night.     (St.  21,  a6r.)— SN 
Heroes.     (Sel.  fr.  33,  35.)— AA 

(Dying  Fireman,  The— seZ.  fr.  33.)— LH 
(Old-fashioned  Sea-fight,  An— 35,  36.)— HBP 
(Sea-fight,  A— 35.)— LH 
Infinity.     (44,  45 — abr.) — A  A 

("I  am  an  acme  of  things  accomplished" — 44 

o6r.  )—SN 
(Song  of  Myself— sei.  fr.  44.)— YBF 
Leaves  of  Grass.     (6,  sel.  fr.  20.) — AA 
Microcosm,  The.     (31.) — SN 
Myself.     (1.)— AA 

"Oxen  that  rattle  the  yoke  and  chain."     (13.) — SN 
You  Sea!     (Sel.  fr.  22.)— SN 
Song  of  Nature. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — SN 
Song  of  Nature.     (C.  —  fr.  Mercury  Vindicated  from 
the  Alchemists  at   Court — Masques  at  Court.) 
— Ben  Jonson. 
(Nature.)— EPs 
Song  of  Nourmahal  in  "The  Light  flf  the  Harem." — 

T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Song  of  One  Eleven  Years  in   Prison. — G:  Canning. 

See  Song  by  Rogero  the  Captive. 
Song  of  Palms.     (Abr.) — Arthur    O'Shaughnessy. — 

PGT2 
Song  of  Paris  and  CEnone. — G:  Peele.     See  Arraign- 
ment of  Paris,  The. 
Song  of  Praise,  A.     Bible.     See  Psalms. 
Song  of  Praise. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Song  of  Rebecca,  the  Jewess. — Anon. — WR  5 
Song  of  Riches,  A. — Katha.  L.  Bates. — AA 


Song  of  Roland,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Anon. 

Horn,  The.     (Tr.  by  Leonce  Rabillon.)— NE 

Death  of  Roland,  The.    (Tr.  62/ J:0'Hagan.)— BS  10 
(Roland's  Death— <r.  by  Rabillon.)— NE 
Song  of  Roland,  Story  of  the.— Kate  M.  Rabb.— NE 
Song  of  St.  Francis,  A.— H:  N.  Maugham.— BVC 
Song  of  Saratoga.— J:  G.  Saxe.— CS  7— MHR— MR 
Song    of    Saul    before    his    Last    Battle.     (C.) — Lord 
Byron.— EPs 

(Saul  before  his  Last  Battle.) — PS 
Song  of  Seasons,  A. — Eliz.  R.  Macdonald. — TCV 
Song  of  Seventy,  The.— Martin  F.  Tupper.— FP 

(I  am  not  Old.)— CS  19 
Song  of  Sherman's  Army,  The. — C.  G.  Halpine. — CS  1 

—PAP 
Song  of  Singing,  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Song  of  Solomon,  Sel.  fr.     (Spring  is  Coming — Ch.  II., 

11,  12.)     Bible.— AB 
Song  of  Spring,  A. — Helen  C.  Bacon. — NV 
Song  of  Spring.— E:  YouL— HBP— TFS  (sel.) 

(Flowers,  The.)— HSS  1 
Song  of  Steam,  The.— G:  W.  Cutter.— BNL— BS  8— 
MYF  (abr.) 

(SI.  abr.—diff.)—CS  7— HSS  3 
Song  of  Summer,  A.— Anon. — NV 
Song  of  Summer,  A. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — HDL 
Song  of  Tavy,  The. — W:    Browne.     See    Britannia's 

Song  of  the  All-wool  Shirt.— Anon.— DS—NPS—YA 

— YP 
Song  of  the  American  Eagle. — Anon. — BS  13 — CS  23 
Song  of  the  Ancient  People,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Edna  D. 

Proctor. — AA 
Song    of    the    Battle    of     Morgarten.     (C.) — Felicia 
Hemans.— EDY 
(Battle  of  Morgarten.)— BS  14— NFS— YP 
Song  of  the  Battle  Ships.— C.  F.  Harper. — PAPm 
Song  of  the  Battle-flag. — Anon.— CS  21 
Song  of  the  Bee,  The. — Marion  Douglass. — NV 
Song  of  the   Bell. — T:   Hey  wood.     See  Rape  of   Lu- 

crece   The. 
Song  of  the  Bicycle,  The. — Anon.— CS  36 
Song   of  the   Brook.     (Fr.   The   Brook:   An    Idyl.)— 
Alfred  Tennyson.  —  BNL  —  CR  —  FEP  — 
FTR— HBP— LLC— SAE  (br.  sels.) 
(Brook,  The.)  — AE  (sel.)  —  BFV  —  BS  5  —  CGd— 
CS  12— GMS  —  LC  —  OS  1—  PGT  2  —  PHS— 
POS  (a6r.)— PSR— SM—SN—WCL—WCLI  1 
— WEP4 
(SI.  a6r.  )—GN—SC 
Song  of  the  Bullet.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— PAPm 
Song  of  the  Camp,  The.     (C.)— Bayard  Taylor.— AA 
— ASL  —  BIL  —  BNL  —  BS  9  —  FEP  —  GN 
— GP  —  HB  —  LLC  —  OM  —  OS  2  —  PYO— 
TAV  — TMR— WCLG  1 
(Crimean  Incident,  A.) — HSS  1 
Song  of  the  Cannon,  The. — Sam  W.  Foss. — PAPm 
Song   of   the   Centennial,   Sel.   fr.     (People's   Song   of 
Peace,  The.) — Joaquin  Miller.— BNL  — BS  15 
— SN 
Song  of  the  Chattahoochee. — Sidney   Lanier. — AA — 

ASL— HBR 
Song  of  the  Chimney. — Anon. — SR  1 
Song  of  the  Corn,  The.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
(Old  Rye  Makes  a  Speech.)— SD 
(Old  Rye's  Speech.)— DLS 
(Song  of  the  Rye — si.  abr.)— PS 
Song  of  the  Corn  Popper,  The.— Laura  E.  Richards. — 

TFS 
Song  of  the   Cornish  Men. — Rob't   S.    Hawker.     See 

Song  of  the  Western  Men,  The. 
Song  of  the  Cossack  to   his   Hor.se,   The. — Pierre   J. 

de  Beranger  (tr.  by  Francis  Mahony). — MMR 
Song  of  the  Crickets,  The.— Emily  H.  Miller.— BS  6 
Song  of  the  Daisy.— E.  C.  Glover.— HSS  1 
Song  of  the  Decanter. — Anon.: — CS  1 — PS 
Song  of  the  Devas  to  Prince  Siddartha,  The. — Edwin 

Arnold.     See  Light  of  Asia,  The. 
Song  of  the  Drunkard. — W.  Hargreaves. — CS  4 
Song  of  the  Dying. — Bartholomew  Dowling.— CS  5— MR 
(Indian  Revelry.)— FEP 
(Our  Last  Toast.)— HP 
(Revel,  The.)— VA 
(Revelry  of  the  Dying.)— BNL 
Song  of  the  Elfin  Miller. — Allan  Cunningham. — OS  1 — 

WCL 
Song  of  the  Elfin  Steersman. — G:  Hill. — AA 
Song  of  the  Emigrants  in  Bermuda.— Andrew  Marvell. 
— BNL— BPB— EPs— PGT  1 
(Bermudas[,  The].)— GN— OB— WEP  2 
(Emigrants  in  [the]  Bermudas,  The.)— FEP— HBP 
(In  Exile.)— LH 


307 


Song  of 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECTTATIOXS 


Song  of  the  English,  A,  Sel.  fr.     (Coast-wise  Lights, 

The.)— Rudyard  Kipling.— BNL 
Song  of  the  Exmoor  Hunt,  A.— A.  P.  Graves.— FEB  4 
Song  of  the  Fairies.     (Fr.  The  Maydes  Metamorphosis, 
Act  II.,  Sc.  2J— J:  Lyly.— FEP 
(Urchins'  Dance,Jfhe.)— ELF 
Song  of  the  Fairy. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  Midsummer 

Night's  Dream. 
Song  of  the  Fleet,  A. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — PAPm 
Song  of  the  Forge[,  The].— Anon.— CS  24— GF— HBP 
Song  of  the  Ghost,  The.— A.  P.  Graves.— FEB  4 
Song  of  the  Grass,  The. — Sarah  Roberts.      See    Voice 

of  the  Grass,  The. 
Song  of  the  Grass  Blades. — Anon. — AD 
Song  of  the  Greek  Bard. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Song  of  the  Greek  Poet. — Lord  Byron.     See  Don  Juan. 
Song  of  the  Greeks.     (1822.)— T:  Campbell.— FHS— 

SA— SS 
Song  of  the  Harvest.— H:  S.  Washburn.- PCS 
Song  of  the  Headlight,  The.— Hardy  Jackson.— NFS 

— YP 
Song  of  the  Holly. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    As    You 

Like  It. 
Song  of  the  Humbugged  Husband,  The.     (Punch.) — 

HFE 
Song  of  the  Hundred  and  Forty  and  Four  Thousand, 
The.     (C) — Jas.  Montgomery. 
(What  are  these  in  Bright  Array.) — FEP 
Song   of   the    Hunt,   The. — J:   Bennett.     See   Master 

Sky-lark. 
Song  of  the  Indian  Maid. — J :  Keats.     See  Endymion. 
Song  of  the  Kings  of  Gold. — Ebenezer  Jones. — VA 
Song  of  the  Leaves,  The.— Mrs.  H.  E.  Kimball.— KC 
Song  of  the  Lightning.— G :  W.  Cutter.— BNL 
Song  of  the  Locomotive,  The. — Anon. — WR  6 
Song    of    the    Lotus-eaters. — Alfred    Tennyson.     <See 

Lotus-eaters,  The. 
Song  of  the  "Lower  Classes." — Ernest  Jones. — WR  22 
Song  of  the  Mad  Poet.— M.  P.  — CG  3 
Song  of  the  Maiden. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Princess, 

The. 
Song  of  the  Maple. — R.  M.  Streeter. — AD  (w.  mtia.) — 

HSS  1— PEO 
Song   of   the    Market-place,    The. — Jas.    Buckham. — 
BS  20— PFP— WR  8 
(For  another  vers,  of  same  story  see  Singer's  Alms, 
The.) 
Song  of  the  Milkmaid. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Queen 

Mary. 
Song  of  the  Mountain  Shepherd  Boy. — Ludwig  Uh- 

land.     jSee  following. 
Song  of  the  Mountain-boy. — Ludwig  Uhland. — PPSr 
(Song  of  the  Mountain  Shepherd  Boy — -diff.  tr.) — 
CSS 
Song  of  the  Mountaineers. — T:  B.  Read.     See  Wagoner 

of  the  Alleghanies,  The. 
Song  of  the  Mystic. — Abram  J.  Ryan. — BS  11 — CS  20 

FTR— PYO  (sel.)— SAE  (br.  sel.) 
Song  of  the  Negro  Boatman. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  At 

Port  Royal. 
Song  of  the  Night  at  Daybreak. — Alice  Meynell. — VA 
Song  of  the  North,  A.— Eliz.  Doten.— FEP 

(Fate  of  Sir  John  Franklin,  The.)— BS  22 
Song  of  the  North  Wind. — Anon. — POS 
Song  of  the  Old  Love.     (Song  fr.  Supper  at  the  Mill.) 
—Jean  Ingelow.— PGT  2 
("We  shall  walk  no  more  through  the  sodden  plain" 

—sel.)— BNL 
(When  Sparrows  Build — si.  abr.)     WR  16 
Song  of  the  Old  Mother,  The.— W:  B.  Yeats.— VA 
Song  of  the  Oyster,  A. — Anon. — CS  29 
Song  of  the  Pagan  Princess. —  Irene  E.  Morton. — TCV 
Song  of  the  Palm. — Tracy  Robinson. — AA 
Song  of  the  Parcae.     (Fr.  Iphigenia  in  Tauris,  Act  IV., 
Sc.  5.) — Johann  W.  von  Goethe  (tr.  by  N.  L. 
Frothingham). — EPs 
Song  of  the  Pine,  The.— Jas.  Buckham.— PEO 
Song  of  the  Printing  Press,  The. — H:  Davenport. — 

PR— YA 
Song    of    the    Railroad,    The. — R:    M.    Milnes,    Lord 

Houghton.— EDY 
Song  of  the  Railroad.— C.  T.  Wolfe.— HSS  3 
Song  of  the  Rain,  The.     (Spectator,  The.)— FOS 
Song  of  the  Rapid-fires,      A.     (Baltimore      News.) — 

PAPm 
Song  of  the  River. — C:  Kingsley.     See  Water  Babies, 

The. 
Song  of  the  River. — Abram  J.  Ryan. — HSS  3 
Song  of  the  Road,  A.— R.  R.  Walker.— CG  3 
Song   of   the    Rose.     (Fr.    Achilles    Tatius.) — (At.    to 

Sappho — tr.  by)  Eliz.  B.  Browning. — AD 
Song  of  the  Rose,  A.    (Abr.) — Felicia  Hemans. — HSS  1 


Song  of  the  Rover. — Lord  Byron.     See  Corsair,  The. 
Song  of  the  Rye. — Anon.     See  Song  of  the  Corn. 
Song  of  the  Screw. — Anon. — NA 
Song  of  the  Sea. — Anon. — BS  3 
Song  of  the  Sea,  A.— W:  H.  Fuller.— TCV 
Song  of  the  Sea,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Song  of  the  Sea,  A. — Bryan  W.  Procter.    See  Sea,  The. 
Song  of  the  Sea  Wind,  The. — Anon.— CS  36 
Song   of   the   Shirt,   The.— T:    Hood.— BNL— CS  2— 
FEP  —  HBP  —  HSS  2  —  PYO  (sel.)  —  VA 
— WCLG  1 
(Br.  8e/8.)— AE— BNL— SE 
(  Sel.  w.  lab.)— TCF 
Song  of  the  Silent  Land. — Johann"G.  von  Salis  (tr.  by 
H:  W.  Longfellow).— HBP— HSS  1— FHS  (at. 
to  Uhland.) 
Song  of  the  Smithy.— L.  W.— CG  3 
Song  of  the  Smoke-wreaths. — L.  T.  A. — PPh 
Song  of  the  Soldiers. — C:  G.  Halpine. — PAP 
Song  of  the  Sons  of  Esau,  The. — Bertha  B.  Runkle. — 

AA 
Song  of  the  Sparrow,  The. — Anon.— TFS  (si.  abr.)— 

YBT 
Song  of  the  Spinning-wheel,  The. — Anon. — PR — WR  4 
Song  of  the  Squatter. — Rob't  Lowe,  Viscount  Sher- 

brooke. — VA 
Song  of  the  Stars[,  The— C.].— W :  C.  Bryant.— EPs— 
FP 
(Stars,  The.)— PPSr 
Song  of  the  Stars,  The.     Louise  C.  Moulton. — TAS 
Song  of  the  States,   A.     (Tab.   with  song.) — Anon. — 
PP— YFR 
(Opening  Song.) — KJ 
Song  of  the  Steamer  Engine. — C.  B.  LeRow. — PEO 
Song    of    the    Stygian    Naiades. — T:    L.    Beddoes. — 

WEP4 
Song  of  the  Summer  Winds. — G:  Darley. — BNL — POS 

(Summer  Winds.) — VA 
Song  of  the  Sword. — Carl  T.  Korner.    See  Sword  Song, 

The. 
Song  of  the  Thaw,  The.— Rob't  K.  Kernigham.— TCV 
Song  of  the  Tonga-Islanders. — Anon. — EPs 
Song  of  the  Trip-hammer. — C.  H.  CoUester. — CG  3 
Song  of  the  Turnkey,  The. — Harry  B.  Smith. — AA 
Song  of  the  Turtle  and  Flamingo  (Turtle  and  Flamingo, 

The— C.).— Jas.  T.  Fields.- GN  (abr.) 
Song  of  the  Type.— Anon.— CS  16 
Song  of  the  Union. — Jeremiah  W.  Cummings. — BLP 
(American  Freedom — sel.) — DCP 
(Banner  of  Freedom,  The.)— DFR 
Song  of  the  Vane,  The. — Walter  Learned. — TAV 
Song  of  the  War.— Anon.— KNE 
Song  of  the  Waters.— Anon.— LPS— PP—PTS  (abr.) 
Song  of  the  Wave,  A.— G:  C.  Lodge.— A  A 
Song  of  the  Western  Men,  The. — Rob't  Hawker. — BVC 
— EHT— LH— PYO— VA 
(Song  of  the  Cornish  Men.)— FEP— HB— HBP 
Song  of  the  Wild  Storm-waves,  The. — Percy  F.  Sinnett. 

— VA 
Song  of  the  Wind.— Anon.— POS 

(SI.  abr.  — diff.)— WR  6— WR  17 
Song  of  the  Winds,  The.—  L.  R.  Allen.— DLS 
Song  of  the  Winter  Winds.— W:  M.  Clark.— BS  1 
Song  of  the  Wulfshaw  Larches. — Ernest  Rhys. — VA 
Song  of  the  Young  Highlander. — Walter  Scott.     See 

Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Song  of  the  Zincali. — G:  Eliot.     See   Spanish   Gypsy, 

The. 
Song  of  Then  and  Now,  The. — J.  Barnes. — PAPm 
Song  of  Thyrsis.     (Fr.  Female  Frailty.) — Philip  Fre- 

neau. — AA 
Song  of  Two  Angels,  A. — Laura  E.  Richards. — AA 
Song  of  Vivien.- — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the 

King. 
Song  of  Waking,  A.— Katha.  L.  Bates.— PEO 
Song  of  Winter,  A.— Emily  Pfeiffer.— VA 
Song  of  Winter  Days.     (Songs  of  the  Winter  Days, 
IV. — si.   diff.  wording.)  —  G:  Macdonald. — 
HSS  2 
Song  of  Wood-nymphs. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — BNL 
Song  of  Yesteryear,  A. — Harry  J.  Smith. — CG  3 
Song  on  King  William  III.,  A. — Anon. — NA 

(For  (mother  vers,  see  All   the  Same  in  the  End — 
Isaac  Ross.) 
Song  on  May  Morning.     (C.)—3:  Milton.— ELP—FEP 
— GN— HBP— OS  2— PYO— SE 
(May  Morning.)— AD— BNL— CEL—YBF 
(On  May  Morning.)— CGd—LC 
(Song:     A  May  Morning.) — POS 
Song:     Persuasions  to  Enjoy.     (C.) — T:  Carew. 

(Persuasions  to  Joy;  a  Song.) — OB — YBF 
Song  Revels.— Mrs.  M.  E.  Allen.— BS  1 


308 


TITLE  INDEX 


Songs 


Song,  Sung  by  Rogero  in  "The  Rover." — G:  Canning. 

See  Song  by  Rogero,  the  Captive. 
Song  that  Silus  Sung,  The.— Sam  W.  Foss.— WR  15 
Song. — That  Women  are  but  Men's  Shadows.     (C) — 
Ben  Jonson. 
(Shadow,  The.)— OB 
(Song.)— FEP 
Song:     The  Braes  of  Yarrow.     (C) — .J :  Logan. 

(Braes    of    Yarrow,  The.)  — EPs  (abr.)  — FEP  — 

PGTl 
(Song:     "Thy  braes  are  bonny.") — HBP  {si.  abr.) 
(Thy  Braes  are  Bonny — si.  abr.) — BNL 
Song,  The    Dove. — J:   Keats.     See   Song:     "I   had    a 

dove,"  etc. 
Song:     The  Greenwood.  —  W:  Shakespeare.     See  As 

You  Like  It. 
Song:     The  Lark.     (Song — C.)  —  Hartley  Coleridge. — 
HBP 
("  'Tis  sweet  to  hear  the  merry  lark.") — FEP 
Song:     The  Light  of  Spring. — Alice  D.  Miller. — AA 
Song:     The     Nightingale. — Sir     Philip     Sidney.     See 

Sidera. 
Song  the  Oriole  Sings,  The.— W:  D.  Howells.— SN 
Song:     The    Owl.     Second    Song — To    the    Same. — 
Alfred  Tennyson.— HBP— LC 
(Owl,  The~lst  song.)~OS  1— PoR 
Song  the  Sirens  Sung,  The. — Homer  (tr.  by  G:  Chap- 
man).    See  Odyssey,  The. 
Song:     The  Souldier  Going  to  the  Field.     (C.)— SirW: 
Davenant. 
(Soldier  Going  to  the  Field,  The.)— CEL— YBF 
Song  to  a  Fair  Young  Lady,  going  out  of  the  Town  in 

the  Spring.     J:  Dryden.— OB 
Song. — To  Amarantha,  that  she  would  Dishevel  her 
Haire,  Set.  fr. 
(To  Amarantha.) — R:  Lovelace. — OB 
(Her  Golden  Hair— a6r.)— CEL 
Song  to  Apollo. — J:Lyly.     See  Midas. 
Song  to  Aoril.- W:  Watson.— GN 

(Song.)— OB 
Song  to  Bacchus. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Valentinian. 
Song.— To  Celia.     (C— The  Forest,  IX.)— Philostratus 
(tr.  by  Ben  Jonson).— ELP—WEP  2 
("Drink  to  me  only  with  thine  eyes.") — BNL  ' 
(To  Celia.)  —  EPs  —  ES  —  FEP— FT  A— HBP— OB 

— OEI PGT  1— PYO— YBF 

Song  to  Ceres. — Leigh  Hunt.- — EPs 

Song  to  Chloris. — Sir  C:  Sedley.     See  Song  from  "The 

Mulberry  Garden." 
Song  to  David  [,  A].  —  Christopher    Smart.  —  OB  — 
WEP  3  (ptly.  same  but  longer.) 
(Song  of  David,  The— 6r.  ae?.)— PGT  1 
Song  to  Her,  A.     (Wrinkle.)— CG  2 
Song  to  her  Beauty,  A. — G:  Wither.     See  Fair  Virtue, 

the  Mistress  of  Philarete. 
Song:     To  Lucasta  Going  to  the  Warres. — R:  Lovelace. 

See  To  Lucasta  [,  on  Going  to  the  Wars]. 
Song  to  May. — Erasmus  Darwin.- — FEP 
Song  to  May.— E:,  Lord  Thurlow.— FEP— HBP 

(May— abr.)- OB 
Song  to  Mother  Earth,  A. — Jas.  H.  Kellog. — AD 
Song:     To  my  Inconstant  Mistress.     (C.) — T:Carew. 

(To  his  Inconstant  Mistress.) — OB 
Song:     To   Psyche. — W:  Morris.     See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 
Song  to  the  Evening  Star.— T:  Campbell.— PGT  1— 
YBF 
(Evening  Star,  The.)— BNL 
(To  the  Evening  Star.)— FEP— HBP 
"Song,  to    the    Gods,    is    sweetest    sacrifice." — Annie 

Fields.— AA 
Song  to  the  Maple  Tree. — E.  A.  Holbrook. — AD 
Song  to  the  Oak.— H.  F.  Chorley.— HSS  1  (sel.) 
(Brave  Old  Oak,  The.)— AD  (w.  mtw.)- BNL 
Song  to  the  Queen,  The. — Anon. — EuE 
Song  to  the  Trees.- — Jos.  W.  Miller. — AD 
Song-we  Sing,  The.— Mrs.  R.  N.  Turner.- CPL 
^ong  with  a  Discord,  A. — Arthur  Colton. — AA 
Song  without  a  Name,  A.^W.  Lloyd. — PPh 
Song  without  a  Sound. — Sir  Edwin  Arnold.     See  With 

Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Song  without  Music. — A.  W.  Bellaw. — BS  20 
Song  without  Words.  A.— M.  E.  B.— YBT 
Song:     Woo'd  and   Married   and  A'.     (C) — Joanna 
Baillie. 
(Song:  "The  bride  she  is  winsome  and  bonny.") — 
WEP  4 
Song  Written  at  Sea[,  in  the  First  Dutch  War],  etc. — 

C:  Sackville,  Earl  of  Dorset.— OB— WEP  2 
Song,  Written  for  a  Welsh  Air  Called  "The  Pursuit  of 
Love."     (C) — Joanna  Baillie. 
(Song:    "Oh,  welcome  bat  and  owlet  gray.") — FEP 
Song,  Youth  and  Sorrow. — W :  C.  Lawton. — AA 


Song-bird  of  the  Princess,  The. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— r 

CS36 
Songs.— R:  H:  Stoddard. — AA 
Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. — -Leigh  Hunt. 

Chorus  of  rthe]  Flowers.    (SeZ.)— HBP— HSS  1  (sel.) 

phs 

(Flowers— «eZ.)— PC 
(Songs  of  the  Flowers.)— FEP 
Lilies.— HSS  1 
Poppies.— HSS  1 
Roses.— HSS  1 
Sweet-brier.— HSS  1 
Violets.- HSS  1 
Songs'  End. — J:  Payne. — VA 
Songs  from  "Astrophel  and  Stella." — Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Songs  from  Dramas. — Augusta  Webster. 
Day  is  Dead. — VA 
Message  of  Victory,  The. — HP 

(News  to  the  King.)— VA 
Tell  me  not  of  Morrows,  Sweet. — VA 
'Tween  Earth  and  Sky.— VA 
Songs  from     "Master     Sky-lark." — J:     Bennett.     See 

Master  Sky-lark. 
Songs  from    ^'Prince    Lucifer." — Alfred    Austin.     See 

Prince  Lucifer. 
Songs  from  "Riquet  of  the  Tuft." — Stopford  A.  Brooke. 

See  Riquet  of  the  Tuft. 
Songs  from  "Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen." — G:  Darley. 

See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 
Songs  from   "The   Princess." — Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

Princess,  The. 
Songs  from    "The    Spanish    Gypsy." — G:    Eliot.     See 

Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 
Songs  in  Absence,  Sels.  fr. — Arthur  H.  Clough. 
Come  Back.— WEP  4 

"Mighty  ocean  rolls  and  raves.  The." — PGT  2 
Some  Future  Day  [when  what  is  now  is  not — C]. — 

AVP 
Where  Lies  the  Land?— AVP— FEP— GN— GP— 
HBP— LC— VA— WEP  4— YBF 
Songs  in  Sleep.— W:  C.  Richards.- HP 
Songs  in  the  Night.     {Burlington  Hawkeye.) — BS  6 
Songs  my  Mother  Sung,  The. — Edgar  L.  Wakeman. — 

WR7 
Songs  of  Birds,   The. — J:   Lyly.     See  Alexander  and 

Campaspe. 
Songs  of  Devotion,  Sel.  fr.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Right  Must 

Win.)— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— GG 
Songs  of  Experience. — W :  Blake.     See: 
Ah,  Sunflower. 
Angel,  The. 

Introduction  to  "Songs  of  Experience." 
Tiger,  The. 
Songs  of  Innocence.— W :  Blake.     See: 
Chimney-sweeper,  The. 
Cradle  Song,  A. 
Echoing  Green,  The. 
Holy  Thursday. 
Infant  Joy. 

Introduction  to  "Songs  of  Innocence." 
Lamb,  The. 
Laughing  Song. 
Little  Black  Boy,  The. 
Night. 

Nurse's  Song. 
On  Another's  Sorrow. 
Shepherd,  The. 
Songs  of  Seven. — Jean  Ingelow. — CDD  {w.tabs.) — FEP 
Seven    Times    One[.     Exultation —  C.]. —  BNL — 
GMS  (si.  abr.)—  HSS  2  —  N V—  OS  1  —  PoR  — 
SM  —  WCL  —  WCLI  2  —  YBF 
(Songs  of  Seven.     Seven  Times  One,  etc.) — PHS 
Seven  Times  Two[.    Romance— C.].— BNL— GN— 

OS  2— PHS 
Seven  Times  Three.     Love.     (C.)— BNL 

(Love.)— BIL— FP— VS 
Seven  Times  Four[.     Maternity— C.].— BNL— NV 

(Heigh-ho!    Daisies  and  Buttercups.) — LLC 
Seven  'Times  Six.     Giving  in  Marriage.  (C) — BiJL. 

(Giving  in  Marriage.) — -FP 
Seven  Times  Seven.     Longing  for  Home.     (C.) 
(Longing  for  Home.)— CR—GP— HDL 
Songs  of  the  Flowers. — Leigh  Hunt.     See  Songs  and 

Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 
Songs  of  the  Night. — C :  S.  Spurgeon.— HSS  3 
Songs  of  the  Night  Watches,  Sel.  fr.     (Apprenticed — 

introd.) — Jean  Ingelow. — CEL 
Songs  of  the  Seasons. — Meta  E.  B.  Thome.— PEO 
Songs  of  the  Soul.     (C.) — Joaquin  Miller. 

("Oh,  thou  to-morrow!     Mystery!") — GG 
Songs  of  the   Voices   of   Birds,   Sel.   fr.     (Eagles — fr^ 
Introd.) — Jean  Ingelow. — BVC 


309 


Songs 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Songs  of  the  Winter  Days. — G:  Macdonald.     See  Song 

of  Winter  Days. 
Songs    without   Sense,   Sels.   fr. — Fs.    Bret    Harte. — 
NA 
Personified  Sentimental,  The.   (I.) — NA 
Swiss  Air.     (III.)— NA 
Songs  without  Words.-j-Rob't  J.  Burdette. — SYS 
Song's  Worth,  A. — Susan  M.  Spalding. — AA 
Song-sparrow,  The. — G:  P.  Lathrop. — SN 
Song-sparrow,  The. — Edward  W.  Thomson. — TCV 
Song-sparrow,  The. — H:  van  Dyke. — SN 
Songsters,  The. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Songstress,  The. — Jos.  Skipsey. — VS 
Sonnet:   "I   saw  her  once,  oijce  only,   long  ago." — 

Anon.— FLS 
Sonnet:     "In  the  desert  of  the  Holy  Land  I  strayed." 

—Anon.— HBP 
Sonnet  (C):  "When  this  young  land."     (XXIII.) — 
T:  B.  Aldrich. 
(Poets,  The.)— TAS 
Sonnet:    "Ah,    sweet    Content." — Barnabe    Barnes. — 

ELP 
Sonnet:  "The  honey-bee  that  wanders  all  day  long." 
—Anne  C.  L.  Botta.— CS  1 
(Hidden  Sweets.)— POS 
Sonnet:  "Fra  bank  to  bank,"  etc. — Mark  A.   Boyd. 

See  Sonet:  "Fra,"  etc. 
Sonnet:    "Sion    lies    waste,    and    Thy    Jerusalem." — 

Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke.     See  Cselica. 
Sonnet:  "Fairest,  when  bv  the  rules  of  palmistry." — 

W:  Browne.— WEP  2 
Sonnet,  The.— E:  B.  Brownlow.— TCV 
Sonnet:  "Long  time  a  child,  and  still  a  child,  when 
years."     (Sonnet   IX.) — Hartley   Coleridge. — 
WEP  4 
Sonnet:   "As   when   far   off  the   warbled   strains   are 
heard."    (Sonnets  on  Eminent  Characters,  IV. : 
Lafayette— C.)—S:  T.  Coleridge.- WEP  4 
Sonnet:  "A  low  full  sweep  of  instrumental  string." 

(Cornell  Widow.)— CG  3 
Sonnet:  "Happy  are  they  who  kiss  thee."     (C.) — Au- 
brey De  Vere. 
(Happy  are  they  who  Kiss  Thee.) — BIL 
Sonnet:  "Sad  is  our  youth,"  etc. — Aubrey  T:  De  Vere. 
—HBP 
(Human  Life.)— HDL— VA 
(Sad  and  Sweet.)— CEL 
(Sad  is  our  Youth.)— AVP— FEP 
("Sad  is  our  youth,  for  it  is  ever  going.") — BNL 
("Sweet  is  our  youth" — sel.) — HSS  3 
Sonnet:  "Death,  be  not  proud,"  etc.     (Holy  Sonnets, 
X.)— J:  Donne.— ELP 
(Death.)— OB— YBF 
Sonnet:  "Since  there's  no  help,"  etc. — Michael  Dray- 
ton.    See  Since  there's  no  Help. 
Sonnet:  "A  good  that  never  satisfies,"  etc.     (Flowers 
of  Sion,  II.)— W:  Drummond.— HBP 
("Good  that  never  satisfies  the  mind,  A.") — FEP 
(Human  Frailty.) — LLC 
(Illusions.)— CEL 
Sonnet:  "Alexis,  here  she  stay'd,"  etc. — W:  Drum- 
mond.—WEP  2 
("Alexis,  hpre  she  stay'd.") — FEP 
(Spring  Bereaved,  III.)— OB 
Sonnet  (C):   "  Dear  chorister,"  etc.  —  W:  Drummond. 

See  Sonnet : — To  the  Nightingale. 
Sonnet:  "I  know  that  all  beneath  the  moon  decays." 
—W:  Drummond.— HBP 
("  I  know  that  all  beneath  the  moon  decays.") — - 
FEP 
Sonnet:  "If  crost  with  all  mishaps,"  etc. — W:  Drum- 
mond.—WEP  2 
Sonnet:  "In  my  first  years,"  etc.— W:  Drummond. — 

WEP  2 
Sonnet:  "Of  mortal  glory,  O  soon  darkened  ray!" — 

W:  Drummond.- HBP 
fionnet:  "Then  is  she  gone,"  etc. — W:  Drummond. — 

WEP  2 
Sonnet:  "Thou  window,  once  which  served,"  etc. — W: 

Drummond.— WEP  2 
Sonnet:  "Triumphing  chariots,"  etc.     (Urania,  I. — C.) 
— W:  Drummond.- HBP 
(Change.)— LLC 
Sonnet,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.- AA— TAV 
Sonnet:  "Die  down,"  etc. — D:  Gray. — ^HBP 

(Die  Down,  O  Dismal  Day.)— BNL 
Sonnet  (C):   "Cupid   abroad  was  'lated,"  etc. — Rob't 
Greene. 
("Cupid  abroad  was  'lated  in  the  night.") — OEL 
(Cupid's  Ingratitude.) — ES 
Sonnet,  The.— J:  F.  Herbin.- TCV 
Sonnet:  "Were  its  name,"  etc. — Leigh  Hunt. — MBB 
(His  Poets.)— LBB 


Sonnet:  "After  dark  vapours,"  etc. — J:  Keats. 

(Sonnet  Written  in  January,  1817.)— WEP  4 
Sonnet:  "When  I  have  fears  that  I  may  cease  to  be." 

(O— J:  Keats. 
(Fear  of  Death,  The.)— YBF 
(Sonnet  Written  in  January,  1818.)— WEP  4 
(Terror  of  Death,  The.)— PGT  1 
("When  I  have  fears  that  I  may  cease  to  be.") — 

OB 
Sonnet:     "  Give  me  that  growth,"  etc.     (Son.  VII. — 

abr.)- Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL 
Sonnet:  "I  cannot  think  that  thou,  "  etc.     (Son.  X.) 

—Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL 
Sonnet:  "I    thought    our   love    at    full,"    etc.     (Sou. 

XXVII.)— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL 
Sonnet:  "My  love,  I  have  no  fear,"  etc.     (Son.  IX.) 

—Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL 
("  With  my  [thy — C]  love  this  knowledge  too  was 

given  " — br.  sel.)  -  FTA 
Sonnet:  "Our  love  is  not  a  fading,"  etc.     (Son.  XXV.) 

—Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL 
Sonnet:  "As    when,    O    lady    mine,"    etc.     {Sel.) — 

Michelangelo  {tr.  by  Mrs".  H:  Ro.scoe). — BNL 
Sonnet:  "If   it   be   true,"   etc. — Michelangelo   {tr.    by 

3.  E.  Taylor).— BIL— HBP 
("If  it  be  true  that  any  beauteous  thing.") — BNL 
Sonnet:  "The  prayers  I  make  will  then  be  sweet  in- 
deed."— Michelangelo  {tr.  by  S:  Wordsworth). 

—HBP 
Sonnet:  "Yes,  hope  may  with  my  strong  desire  keep 

pace." — Michelangelo  {tr.  by  W:  Wordsworth). 

HBP 
Sonnet,  A:  "Dear,  if  you  love  me,  hold  me  most  your 

friend." — Alice  D.  MilleV. — AA 
Sonnet:  "If  in  the  field,"  etc.     (Sonnet,  imitated  from 

the  Italian   of    Gaetana    Passerini — C) — Jas. 

Montgomery. — AD 
Sonnet:  "How     orient     is     thy     beauty,"     etc. — Fs. 

Quarles.— HBP 
Sonnet:  "Nor  myrrh,  nor  cassia,"  etc. — Fs.  Quarles. 

—HBP 
Sonnet:  "Who    ever    smelt    the    breath,"    etc. — Fs. 

Quarles.— HBP 
Sonnet:  "O  my  heart's  heart." — Chrisfina  G.  Rossetti. 

See  Monna  Innominata. 
Sonnet:  "Trust  me,  I  have  not  earned." — Christina  G. 

Rossetti.     See  Monna  Innominata. 
Sonnet.     {Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.)— Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Sonnet:  "Because  I  oft  in  Dark  Abstracted  Guise." — 

Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Sonnet:  "Come,     Sleepe,"    etc. — Sir    Philip     Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Sonnet:  "In  martial  sports  I  had  my  cunning  tried." 

— Sir     Philip     Sidney.     See     Astrophel     and 

Stella. 
Sonnet:  "O  happie  Thames,"  etc. — Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Sonnet:  "With  how  sad  steps,"  etc. — Sir  Philip  Sid- 
ney.    See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Sonnet:  "Fayre  is  rny  love,"  etc. — Edmund  Spenser. 

See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "Fresh  Spring,  the  herald  of  love's  mighty 

king."^ — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Amoretti  and 

Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "Joy   of    my   life,"    etc. — Edmund    Spenser. 

See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "Lackyng  my  love,"  etc. — Edmund  Spenser. 

See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "Like  {or  Lyke]  as  a  ship,"   etc.^ — Edmund 

Spenser.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "Men  call  you  fair,"  etc. —  Edmund  Spenser. 

See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "More  than  most  fair,"  etc. — Edmund  Spen- 
ser.    See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "Most  glorious  Lord  of  life,"  etc. — Edmund 

Spenser.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "Sweet  smile,  the  daughter,"  etc. —  Edmund 

Spenser.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:     "The  doubt  which  ye  misdeem,"  etc. — Ed- 
mund    Spenser.     See    Amoretti   and   Epitha- 
lamion. 
Sonnet:  "Thrise  happie  she,"  etc. — Edmund  Spenser. 

See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet:  "What  guyle  is  this,"  etc. — Edmund  Spenser. 

See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sonnet,  A:  "Two  voices  are  there;  one  is  of  the  deep." 

—Jas.  K.  Stephen.— VA 
Sonnet  (C):  "Of    thee,  kind    boy,  I   ask  no   red   and 

white."- — Sir  J:  Suckling. 
(Truth  in  Love.)— WEP  2 
Sonnet :  "There  shines  the  morning  star!" — W.  Stevens. 

— CG3 


310 


TITLE  INDEX 


Sonnet 


Sonnet:  "Were    I    as    base,"    etc. — J.    Sylvester. — 
WEP  1 
(Love's  Omnipre.sence.)  —  FEP  —  FTA  —  OH  — 

PGT 1  —  YBF 
(Ubique.)— OB 

("Were  I  as  base  as  is  the  lowly  plain.")  -  BNL 
Sonnet,  The. — J:  A.  Symonds. — VA 
Sonnet:  "The     crimson     moon     uprising,"     etc. — E: 

Hovel,  Lord  Thurlow.— HBP 
Sonnet:  "The  nightingale  is  mute,"  etc. — E:  Hovel, 

Lord  Thurlow.— HBP 
Sonnet:  "'Tis     much     immortal     beauty,"     etc. — E: 
Hovel,  Lord  Thurlow.— HBP 
( Beauty .  )—BN  L— YBF 
Sonnet:  ''Who   best   can  paint   th'  enamelled  robe  of 

spring."— E:  Hovel,  Lord  Thurlow.— HBP 
Sonnet:  "All  beautiful  things  bring  sadness." — R:  C. 

Trench.- VA 
Sonnet,  A:  "Take  all  of  me, — I  am  thine  own,  heart, 

soul." — Amelie  Troubetzkoy; — AA 
Sonnet:  "What  has  this  bugbear  death  that's  worth 

our  care?" — W:  Walsh.     See  Sonnet:  Death. 
Sonnet:     "Mysterious    night!    when   our  first    parent 
■  knew." — J.  Blanco  White'     {Incl.  in  Day  Con- 
ceals, hyS.  P.  Nichol.)— SS 
Sonnet:  "If  thy  sad  heart,  pining  for  human  love." — 

Sarah  H.  Whitman. — A  A 
Sonnet:  "Oft  since  thine  earthly  eyes  have  closed  on 

mine." — Sarah  H.  Whitman. — AA 
Sonnet:  "On   our  lone   pathway  bloomed   no  earthly 

hopes." — Sarah  H.  Whitman. — AA 
Sonnet:  "When  first  I  looked  into  thy  glorious  eyes." 
{Fr.  Sonnets  on  Edgar  Allan  Poe.) — Sarah  H. 
Whitman. — AA 
(To  Edgar  A.  Poe.)— ED Y 
Sonnet:  "Alas,   what  boots  the  long,"  etc.     (Poems 
Dedicated     to     National     Independence    and 
Liberty,  Pt.  II.,  12.)— W:  Wco-dsworth.- EPs 
(What  Boots  the  Quest?)— LLC 
Sonnet:  "It  is  not  to  be  thought  of,"  etc.     (Poems 
Dedicated     to     National     Independence     and 
Liberty,  Pt.  I.,  16.)— W:  Wordsworth.— EPs 
(Destiny.)— LH 

(Faith  and  Freedom — hr.  sel.) — GN 
Sonnet,  The:  "Nuns  fret  not,"  etc.     (Misc.  Sonnets, 
Pt.  I.,  1.)— W:  Wordsworth.— OB  (I.) 
(Gains  of  Restraint,  The.)— WEP  4 
Sonnet,   The:  "Scorn   not   the   sonnet,"   etc.      (Misc. 
Sonnets,  Pt.  II.,  1.)  — W:  Wordsworth.— BNL 
—OB  (II.)— YBF 
(Scorn  not  the  Sonnet.)— FEP 
Sonnet:  "The  world  is  too  much  with  us,"  etc.  (Poems 
of  the  Imagination,  Misc.  Sonnets,  Pt.  I.,  33.) 
— W:  Word.sworth.— FEP 
(We're  out  of  Tune.)— LLC 
(World,  The.)— OB 
(World  is  too  much  with  us,  The.)— BNL— GP— 

HBP— HBR     PYO— SN— YBF 
("World  is  too  much  with  us:  late  and  soon.  The.") 

— BSP— PGT  1 
(World's  Ravages,  The.)— WEP  4 
Sonnet:     Complaint  of  a  Lover  Rebuked. — H:  Howard, 

Earl  of  Surrey.— ELP 
Sonnet.     Composed  on  a  Journey  Homeward. — S:  T. 

Coleridge.— WEP  4 
Sonnet  Composed    upon    Westminster    Bridge[,  Lon- 
don, 1802].— W:  Wordsworth.— BNL— FEP— 
MBL 
(Composed    upon    Westminster    Bridge,    Sept.    3, 

1802— O— WEP  4 
("Earth  has  not  anything  to  show  more  fair.") — 

HBR 
(Morning  in  London.)— HBP— OS  3 
(Upon  Westminster  Bridge[,  Sept.  3,  1802]).— OB 

—PGT  1— YBF 
(Westminster  Bridge.)— LLC— WR  1 
Sonnet  Composed  while  the  Author  was  Engaged  in 
Writing  a  Tract,  Occasioned  by  the  Conven- 
tion of  Cintra.     (C.)— W:  Wordsworth. 
(Convention  of  Cintra.) — EDY 
Sonnet:  Czar  Alexander  the  Second.     (C) — Dante  G. 
Rossetti. 
(Alexander  II.)— EDY 
Sonnet:     Death.     (C.)—W:  Walsh. 

(Sonnet:  "What  has  this  bugbear.")— WEP  3 
Sonnet:     Description  of  Spring. — H:  Howard.  Earl  of 
Surrey.— ELP 
(Description  of  Spring.)— FEP— HBP— LC— OB— 
PHS— WEP  1 
Sonnet:     Eternal  Love. — Philip  Sidney.       See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella. 
Sonnet    Found    by    Mrs.    Alexander    Ireland. — Leigh 
Hunt.— MBB 


Sonnet  Found  in  a  Deserted  Mad  House. — Anon. — NA 
Sonnet  from  "Cynthia." — R:  Barnfield.  See  Cynthia. 
Sonnet  from  Flowers  of  Sion. — W:  Drummond.     See 

Sonnet :  Posting  Time. 
Sonnet  from  Petrarch. — T:  W.  Higginson. — OH 
Sonnet:     Geraldine. — H:  Howard,  Earl  of  Surrey. — 
ELP 
(Description  and  Praise  of  his  Love,  Geraldine.) — 
CEL 
Sonnet:     Heart-exchange. — Philip    Sidney.     See    Ar- 
cadia, The. 
Sonnet,   Imitated  from  the   Italian  of  Gaetana  Pas- 
serini.     (C.)- — Jas.  Montgomery.     See  Sonnet: 
"If  in  the  field,"  etc. 
Sonnet  in  a  Garden. — J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 
Sonnet  in  Dialogue,  A. — Austin  Dobson. — HBR 
Sonnet:     Inspiration. — Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel 

and  Stella. 
Sonnet:  London,  1802.— W:  Wordsworth.— HBP 
(England.)— GP 
(Ideal.)— LH 

(London,  1802— C.)— PGT  1  (II.)— YBF  (II.) 
(Milton.)— LLC— WEP  4 
("Milton!  thou  shouldst  be  living  at  this  hour" — 

abr.  )—GG 
(To  Milton.)— BNL— CEL— EPs— FEP 
Sonnet:     Love  is  Enough. — Philip  Sidney.     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 
Sonnet    Made    on    Isabella   Markham,    when    I    First 
Thought  her  Fair,  etc.     (C.) — Sir  J:  Haryng- 
ton. 
(Heart  of  Stone,  A.)— ES 
(Lines  on  Isabella  Markham.) — BNL — FEP 
Sonnet:  Majuba  Hill.— J:  K.  Ingram.— TIP 
Sonnet    on    Chillon. — Lord    Byron.     See    Prisoner   of 

Chillon,  The. 
Sonnet ;  On  First  Looking  into  Chapman's  Homer. — 
J:  Keats.— OS  3 
(On  First  Looking  into  Chapman's  Homer — C.) — 
BFV  —  BNL  (br.  sel.)  —  BPB  —  BSP  —  CEL 
—  EPs—  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  LLC  —  OB— 
PGT  1— WEP  4— YBF 
(To  the  Adventurous.) — LH 
Sonnet:     On  his  Blindness.— J:  Milton.— ELP— EPs 
(Blindness.)— GP 

(On  hi?  Blindness— C.)— BNL— CEL— EDY— FEP 
—GN— HBP— HDL— LH— LLC— OB— OS    3 
—PGT  1— PHS— WEP  2— WR  1— YBF 
Sonnet  on  the  Death  of  Mr.  Richard  West. — T:  Gray. 

—WEP  3 
Sonnet:     On    the    Late    Massacre    in   Piedmont. —  J: 
Milton.— ELP— EPs 
(Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont,  The.) — LH 
(On  the  Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont — C.) — EDY — 
FEP— HBP— PGT  1— WEP  2— YBF 
Sonnet — One  Day,  SeZ.   fr.     ("There  is  no  sorrow.") — 

Marg.  J.  Preston. — GG 
Sonnet. — Ozymandias.     (C) — Percy  B.  Shelley. 

(Ozymandias    fof    Egypt].)— BNL— FEP— LLC— 
OS  3— PGT  1— YBF 
Sonnet:  Philomela. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Sidera. 
Sonnet:  Posting  Time. — W:  Drummond. — ELP 
(No  Trust  in  Time.)— FEP 
(Sonnet  from  "  Flowers  of  Sion.")— WEP  2 
Sonnet  Prefixed  to  Sidney's  Apology  for  Poetry,  1595. 
— H :  Constable.— WEP  1 
(On  the  Death  of  Sir  Philip  Sidney.)— OB 
Sonnet:  Repent,  Repent! — W:  Drummond.     See  Saint 

John  the  Baptist. 
Sonnet    Sequence,    A.     (Pts.    I.    and    II.) — G:    Mac- 

donald.— HDL 
Sonnet:  Spring.- — W:    Drummond.     See    Spring    Be- 
reaved, II. 
Sonnet :     Suggested  by  Mr.  Watts'  Picture  of  Love  and 
Death. — Blanche  E.  Fitzroy,  Lady  Lindsay. — 
VA 
Sonnet:  Sweet     Bird.     (In     Flowers    of    Sion.) — W: 
Drummond. — ELP 
(To  a  [or  the]  Nightingale.)— BNL— FEP— WEP  2 
(To  the  Redbreast.)— HBP 
Sonnet:  The  Crucifixion.     (C.) — Jas.  Montgomery. 

(Crucifixion,  The.)— PS 
Sonnet:  To    a    Bird    that    Haunted    the    Waters    of 
Laaken  in  the  Winter. — E:  Hovel,  Lord  Thur- 
low.—HBP 
(To  a  Bird  that  Haunted,  etc.)— BNL— FEP 
Sonnet  to  a  Clam  (To  a  Clam — C). — J:   G.  Saxe. — 

HPE 
Sonnet  to  a  Monkey. — Marjorie  Fleming. — BVC 
Sonnet:  to  Cyriac  Skinner. — J:  Milton. — HBP 
(On  his  own  Blindness.)  -  BNL— YBF 
(To  Cyriack  Skinner— C.)  -  FEP 
Sonnet  to  Delia. — S:  Daniel.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 


311 


Sonnet 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Sonnet  to  Duty.     (C.)— T:  W.  Higginson. 

(To  Duty.)— AA 
Sonnet  to  his   Friend  Maister  R.  L. — R:  Barnfield. — 

WEP  1 
Sonnet  to  my  Mother.     (C.)— H :  Kirke  White. 

(To  my  Mother.)— PC 
Sonnet  to  Night.— Jo*  B.  White.— POS 
(Night.)— BNL—PYO 

(Night  and  Morning.)— BSP—EPs-GP-SN 
(To  Night.)— FEP— HBP— OS  3— YBF 
Sonnet:     To  Sir  Henry  Vane.     (To  Sir  Henry  Vane, 

the  Younger— O— J:  Milton.— EPs 
Sonnet  to  Sir  W.  Alexander.— W:  Drummond.— WEP  2 
Sonnet  to  Sir  W.  Alexander.    (To  Sir  William  Alexander, 
with  the  Author's  Epitaph — C. — appended  to 
The  Cypresse  Grove.) — W:  Drummond. — ELP 
—WEP  2 
Sonnet  to  Solitude.     (C) — J:  Keats. 

(Solitude.)— LLC 
Sonnet:  To  the  Hudson. — G:  S.  Hellman. — CG  3 

(Hudson,  The.)— AA 
Sonnet:  To  the    Lady    L.   S.     (Ideas,   IV.)— Michael 

Drayton.— ELP 
Sonnet:  To  the  Lord  General  Cromwell.— J:  Milton. — 
HBP 
(To  the  Lord  General.)— LH 

(To  the  Lord  General  Cromwell[,  on  the  Proposals 
of  Certain  Ministers,  etc.— C.].)— BNL — EHT 
—FEP— OS  3— WEP  2— YBF 
Sonnet  to  the  Moon,  A.— C:  Best. — WEP  1 
Sonnet:     To  the  Moon. — Philip  Sidney.  See  Astrophel 

and  Stella. 
Sonnet:       To  the  Nightingale.     (Sonnet  —  C.)— W: 
Drummond. — ELP 
(To  the  Nightingale.)     FEP 
Sonnet  to  the  Nightmgale.     (C.)  -  J:  Milton.— ELP 
(To  the  Nightingale.)— BNL  (6r.«eZ.)— FEP— HBP 
YBF 
Sennet :  To  the  Redbreast.     J :  Bampfylde.  -  FEP 
Sonnet:  To  the  River  Ankor.     (Ideas,  LIII. — Another 
to  the  River  Ankor — C. ) — Michael  Drayton. — 
ELP 
Sonnet.     To     Toussaint      L'Ouverture. — W:    Words- 
worth.—HBP 
(To  Toussaint  L'Ouverture— C.)— BNL— ED Y 
(Toussaint  L'Ouverture.)- SO— WR  1 
Sonnet — Written    after    Seeing    Windsor    Castle. — T: 

Warton.— FEP 
Sonnet  Written  during  his  Residence  in  College. — C: 

Wolfe.— TIP 
Sonnet  Written  in  a  Blank  Leaf  of  Dugdale's  "Monas- 
ticon."— T:  Warton.— WEP  3 
(On  a  Blank  Leaf  of  Dugdale's  "Monasticon.") — 
FEP 
Sonnet    Written    in    January,    1817. — J:    Keats.     See 

Sonnet:  "After  dark  vapours,"  etc. 
Sonnet    Written    in    January,    1818. — J:    Keats.     See 

Sonnet:  "When  I  have  fears,"  etc. 
Sonnet  Written  in  Prison. — W:  L.  Garrison. — BNL 
(Free  Mind,  The.)— TAV 
(Freedom  for  the  Mind.) — AA 
(Liberty.)— OS  2 
Sonnets,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 

II.:  "When  forty  winters,"  etc. — WEP  1 
XII.:  "When  I  do  count  the  clock,"  etc. — EPs — 
FEP— HBP— WEP  1 
(Approach  of  Age.) — BNL 
XVIII. :  —FEP— HBP— OB  (I.)— WEP  1 

("Shall  I  compare  thee  to  a  summer's  day?") — 

OEL— YBF 
(To  his  Love.)— PGT  1— PHS 
XXL:  "So  is  it  not  with  me,"  etc. — HBP 
XXIII. :  "As  an  imperfect  actor,"  etc. — WEP  1 
XXV.:   "Let    those    who    are    in    favor,"    etc. — 

BNL  (seZ.)— HBP 
XXVII. :  "Weary  with  toil,"  etc. 

(Lover's  Night  Thoughts,  The.)— FTA— OH 
XXIX.:  "When,  in  disgrace  with  fortune,"  etc. — 
ELP— FEP— HBP— OB  (II.)— WEP  1 
(Amor  Omnia  Vincit.)— FTA— OH 
(Consolation,  A.)— PGT  1— PHS 
(When  in  Disgrace.)— BS  25— PYO— WR  23 
XXX.— ELP— FEP— HBP— OB  (III.)— WEP  1 
(Friendship.)— TFY 
(Memory.)— PGT  1— YBF 

("When  to  the  sessions  of  sweet  silent  thought.") 
—BNL 
XXXI.:  "Thy  bosom  is  endeared,"  etc. — HBP — 

OB  (IV.) 
XXXII.:  "If  thou  survive,"  etc. — WEP  1 

(Post  Mortem.)— PGT  1— YBF 
XXXIII. :  "Full  many  a  glorious  morning,"  etc. — 
ELP— EPs— FEP— HBP— SN— WEP  1 


Sonnets— Shakespeare  {continued). 

XXXIV.:  "Why  didst  thou  promise,"  etc.— HBP 
LIL:  "So  am  I  as  the  rich,"  etc. — EPs— WEP  1 
LIII.:  "What   is   your   substance,"    etc. — HBP — 

OB  (V.) 
LIV.:  "O  [or  Oh],  how  much  more  doth  beauty," 

etc.— EPs— FEP— HBP— OB  (VI.)— WEP  1 
LV.:  "Not  marble  nor  the  gilded  monuments." — 

FEP— HBP 
LVIL:  "Being  your  slave,"  etc.— OB  (VII.) 

(Absence.)— PGT  1 
LIX. :  "If  there  be  nothing  new,"  etc. 
(Spoils  of  Time,  The— 3d  son.)- FP 
LX.:  "Like  as  the  waves,  etc."— ELP— FEP 
(Revolutions.)— EPs— PGT  1— YBF 
(Spoils  of  Time,  The— 1,1  h  son.)— FP 
LXIV. :  "When  I  have  seen,"  etc. 
(Spoils  of  Time,  The— 5th  son.)- FP 
(Time    and    Love,    I.)  — PGT   1    (I.)--PHS— 
YBF  (I.) 
LXV.:  "Since  brass,  nor  stone,"  etc. 
(Spoils  of  Time,  The— 67^.  son.)- FP 
(Time  and  Love,  II.)— PGT  1— YBF 
LXVL:  "Tired  with  all  these,"  etc.— ELP— FEP 
—WEP  1 
(World's  Way,  The.)— PGT  1 
LXX.:  "That    thou    art    blamed,"    etc.— HBP — 

WEP  1 
LXXL:  "No  longer  mourn  for  me,"  etc. — ELP — 
FEP 
(Triumph  of  Death,  The.)— PGT  1 
LXXIIL— ELP— FEP— OB  (VIII.)— WEP  1 
(Quatuor  Novissima.) — CEL 
(That  Time  of  Year.)— YBF 
("That  time  of  year  thou  may'st  in  me  behold.") 
—OEL— PGT  1 
LXXV. :  "So  are  you  to  my  thoughts,"  etc. — HBP 
LXXXVIL— HBP— OB  (IX.) 

(Farewell!  Thou  art  too  Dear.)— BNL 
("Farewell!  Thou  art    too  dear  for  my    posses- 
sing.")—PGT  1 
XC. :    "Then   hate   me   when   thou   wilt,"   etc. — 

BNL  (seZ.)— OB  (X.)— WEP  V. 
XCIV. :  "They  that  have  power  to  hurt,"  etc. — 
FEP— OB  (XI.) 
(Life  without  Passion,  The.)— PGT  1 
XCVL:  "Some  say  thy  fault  is  youth,"  etc. — HBP 
XCVII.— HBP— OB  (XII.)— W^P  1 

("How  like  a  winter  hath  my  absence  been.") — 
PGT  1 
XCVII  I.:  "From  you  have  I  been  absent,"  etc. — 
EPs— HBP— OB  (XIII.)— WEP  1 
(Absence.)— GP 
(Garden  of  Love,  The.)— OH 
XCIX.:  "The  forward  violet,"  etc.— BNL— HBP 
C. :  "Where  art  thou,  muse,"  etc. 

(Spoils  of  Time,  The—lat  son.)— FP 
CIL:  "My  love  is  strengthen'd,"  etc.— OB  (XIV.) 

—WEP  1 
CIV.— ELP— FEP— OB  (XV.)— WEP  1 
(To  me,  Fair  Friena.)  -  EPs 

("To  me,  fair  friend,  you  never  can  be  old.") — 
PGT  1 
CVI.— ELP— FEP— HBP— OB  (XVI.)— WEP  1 
(To  his  Love.)— PGT  1  (II.)— YBF 
("When   in   the   chronicle   of  wasted  time.") — 
BNL— OEL 
CVIL:  "Not  mine  own  fears,"  etc.— ELP— HBP 
—WEP  1 
(Good  Omens.)— EPs 
CVIIL:  "What's  in  the  brain,"  etc. 

(Spoils  of  Time,  The— 2rf  son.)— FP 
CIX. :  "O  never  say  that  I  was  false,"  etc. — ELP 
—HBP— OB  (XVII.) 
(Unchangeable,  The.)— FTA— PGT  1 
ex.:  "Alas,  'tis  true  I  have  gone  here  and  there." 

—WEP  1 
CXI.:  "O,    for    my    sake    do    you    with    Fortune 

chide."— EPs— WEP  1 
CXVI.  —  BNL  —  ELP  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 
OB  (XVIII.)— WEP  1 
("Let  me  not  to  the  marriage  of  true  minds.") — 

OEL 
(Love.)— LLC 

(True  Love.)  — BIL  — FTA  — GP— OH— PGT  1 
—PHS 
CXIX. :  "What    potions    have    I    drunk,"    etc. — 

WEP  1 
CXXVIIL:  "How    oft,   when   thou,    my    music," 
etc.— EPs 
(My  Music.)— OH 
CXXIX.:  "The  expense  of  spirit,"  etc. — ELP — 
OB  (XIX.) 


312 


TITLE  INDEX 


Soul's 


Sonnets — Shakespeare  {continued). 
CXXX. :  "My  mistress'  eyes,"  etc. 

(Common  Sense.) — EPs 
CXLVL:  "Poor    soul,    the    centre    of    my    sinful 
earth."— ELP—FEP— OB  (XX.) 
(Soul  and  Body.)— PGT  1— YBF 
CXLVIII.:  "O  me,  what  eyes  hath  Love,"  etc. 
(Blind  Love.)— PGT  1 
Sonnets  from  Astrophel  and  Stella. — Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
, Sonnets  from  the  Poems.— -W:  Drummond. — WEP  2 
Sonnets    from    the     Portuguese,     Sels.    jr. — Eliz.     B. 
Browning. 
L— OB— VA— WEP  4 

("I  thought  once  how  Theocritus,"  etc. — PGT  2 
III.:  "Unlike  are  we,"  etc.— OB  (II.) 
IV.:  "Thou  hast  my  calling,"  etc.— VA— WEP  4 
v.:  "I  lift  my  heavy  heart,"  etc. — VA 
VI.— BNL— FTA— OB  (III.)— V A— WEP  4— YBF 
(Far  and  yet  Near.) — OH 

("Go  from  me.     Yet  I  feel  that  I  shall  stand.") 
—PGT  2 
IX.:  "Can  it  be  right  to  give,"  etc. — VA 
XII.:  "Indeed  this  very  love  which  is  my  boast." 

—BNL 
XIV. :— BNL— FEP— HBP— OB  (IV.)— YBF 
("If  thou  must  love  me  let  it  be  for  naught.") — 

PGT  2 
(Love  for  Love's  Sake.) — OH 
XVIII.:  "I   never   gave  a  lock   of   hair  away." — 

BNL— FEP— HBP— V  A— YBF 
XX.:  "Beloved,  my  Beloved,  when  I  think." — ;VA 
XVI.:  "Say  over  again,  and  yet  once  over  again." 

—BNL— FEP— HBP 
XXII.:  "When  our  two   souls  stand   up,"  etc. — 

OB  (V.)— VA 
XXIII.:  "Is  it  indeed  so?"  etc.— VA 
XXVI.:  "I  lived  with  visions,"  etc. — VA 
XXVII. :  "My  own  Beloved,  who  hast  lifted  me." 

—WEP  4 
XXVIII.:  "My    letters!    all    dead    paper,"    etc. — 
BNL— FEP— WEP  4 
(Love  Letters.)— YBF 
(Lover's  Letters,  A.)— CEL 

(Mv  Letters.)— BII FTA 

XXXII.:  "The  first  time  that  the  sun,"  etc.— BNL 
XXXV. :— FEP— HBP— VA 

(Ful[l]ness  of  Love.)— FTA— OH 
("If  I  leave  all  for  thee,  wilt  thou  exchange.") — 
GG— PGT  2 
XXXVIII.:  "First  time  he  kissed  me,"  etc.— BNL 
—FEP— HBP— VA 
(First,  Second,  Third.)— OH 
(Three  Kisses.)— BIL— FTA— GP 
XXXIX.:  "Because  thou  hast  the  power,"  etc. — 

VA 
XLL:  "I  thank  all  who  have  loved  me,"  etc. — VA 
XLIIL:  "How  do  I  love  thee?"  etc.— BNL— FEP 
— HBP— V A— WEP  4— YBF 
(How  do  I  Love  Thee?)— GP— TFY 
(Ways  of  Love,  The.)— FTA— OH 
Sonnets  in  Shadow. — Arlo  Bates. — BNL 
Sonnets  on  Edgar  Allan  ^oe,  Sel.  jr. — Sarah  H.  Whit- 
man.    See  Sonnet:  "When  first  I  looked,"  etc. 
Sonnets    on    Eminent    Characters. — S:    T.    Coleridge. 

See  Sonnet:  "As  when  far  off,"  etc. 
Sonnets  on  the  Seasons. — Hartley  Coleridge.    See: 
May,  1840. 
November. 
Sonnets  to  Delia,  Sels.  jr. — S:  Daniel. 

Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  I.     (Sonnet  VI.)— OB 
Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  II.     (XII.)— OB 
Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  III.     (XXXII.)— OB 
Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  IV.     (XXXVIII.)— OB 
Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  V.     (XLVII.)— OB 
("Beauty,  sweet  love,  is  like  the  morning  dew.") 

— OEL 
(Sonnet  to  Delia.)— ELP 
Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  VI.     (XLVIII.)— OB 
Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  VII.     (LII.)— OB 
Care-charmer  Sleep.     (LI.)— ELP— YBF 

("Care-charmer  sleep,  son  of  the  sable  night.") 

—OEL— PGT  1  ' 

(Sleep.)— FEP 
(Sonnet  to  Delia.)— WEP  1 
(To  Delia.)— BNL 
Sonnets  to  George  Sand. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. 
Desire,  A.— BNL 
Recognition,  A. — BNL 
Sonnet's  Voice,  The. — Theodore  W.  Dunton. — VA 
Sons  of  the  Nation. — Anon. — HSS  1 
Sons  of  the  Widow,  The.     (Widow  at  Windsor,  The — 
C.)— Rudyard  Kipling.— WR  21 


Sons  of  Turann,  The.— J:  Todhunter.— TIP 

Son's  Wish,  The.— Anon.— HR 

Soothsay.— Dante  G.  Rossetti. — WEP  4 

Sophomore,  The. — Anon. — CG  1 

Sophomore's  Soliloquy,     The.     {Michigan     University 

Maff.  )—WRD 
Sophronia  and  Olindo. — Torquato  Tasso.     See  Jerusa- 
lem Delivered. 
Sophy,  The,   Sonff/r.— Sir  J:  Denham.— WEP  2 
Sorceress  of  Vain  Delight,  The,  Sel.  jr.     (Panglory's 

Wooing  Song.)— Giles  Fletcher.— FEP— HBP 
(Wooing.)— OB 
Sore   Disappointment. — -Th.   Koehner   (tr.  by  E.  F.  L. 

Gauss).— SR  6 
Sorra  the  Day. — Eva  Best.— SR  7 
Sorrow.     {Sel.  jr.  The  Complaint  of  Rosamond.) — S: 

Daniel.— KNE 
Sorrow.— Aubrey  T.  De  Vere.— HDL— OB— TIP— VA 
Sorrow.— Celia  Thaxter.— HDL 
Sorrow. — Katrina  Trask. — AA 
Sorrow.— Chr.  Wilster.— WR  2 
Sorrow  and  Joy. — R:  H :  Stoddard. — TAV 
Sorrow  for  Sin.— Ann  Taylor.— YBT 
Sorrow  for  the  Dead. — Washington  Irving.     See  Rural 

Funerals. 
Sorrow  of    Buddha,    The.— Sir    Edwin    Arnold.     See 

Light  of  Asia,  The. 
Sorrow  of  Rohab,  The.— Arlo  Bates.— HBR 
Sorrow  of  the  Sea,  The.— Anon.— PEO 
Sorrowful  Lamentation  of  Callaghan,  Greally  and  Mul- 
len.—Anon.— TIP 
Sorrowful  Sea-gull,  The.— Anon.— WCL 
Sorrowful  Tale  of  a  Hired  [or  Servant]  Girl. — J:  Quill. — 

BeR— CS  11 
Sorrows  Humanize  Our  Race. — Jean  Ingelow. — HDI., 
Sorrows  of  Werther[,  The].— W:  M.  Thackeray.— BNL 

— FEP— GP— HPE— NA— THP— VA 
Sorrow-song. — Sam  Rowley. — CEL 
Sorting  the  Mail.     (Tot.)— Anon.— TCP 
Sospetto  d'Herode,  Sel.  jr.     (Satan — sel.  jr.  Bk.  I.) — 

R:  Crashaw.— EPs 
Sospiri  di  Roma,  SeZt.  jr. — W:  Sharp. 

Red  Poppies  in  the  Sabine  Valleys  near  Rome. — VA 
Susurro. — VA 
White  Peacock,  The.— VA 
Sotto  Voce.— Harold  M.  Bowman. — CG  2 
Soubrette's  Revenge,  The.— H.  S.  Hewitt.— SR  6 
Soul,  The.-^-'Jos.  Addison.     See  Cato. 
Soul,  The.-^Madison  Cawein. — A  A 
Soul,  The.— R:  H:  Dana.— BNL 
Soul  and  Body.— W:  Shakespeare.— PGT  1— YBF 

(Sonnet.)— ELP  (CXLVL— C.)— FEP— OB  (XX.) 
Soul  and    Body. — Algernon    C:    Swinburne.     See   At- 

alanta  in  Calydon. 
Soul  and  Body. — S:  Waddington. — VA 
Soul  and  Country. — Jas.  C.  Mangan. — -VA 
Soul  and  Sense. — Hannah  P.  Kimball. — AA 
Soul  Compared  to  a  River,  The. — Sir  J :  Davies.     See 

Nosce  Teipsum. 
Soul  Compared  to  a  Virgin  Wooed  in  Marriage,  The. — 

Sir  J:  Davies.     See  Nosce  Teipsum. 
Soul  Culture. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Soul  in  Grass  and  Flowers,  A. —  Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See 

Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 
Soul  in  the  Body,  The.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— AA 
Soul   of  Adventure,   The.     (Frags,  jr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Soul  of  Lilith,  The,  Sel.  jr.    (Story  of  the  Priest  Phile- 
mon, The.)— Marie  Corelli.— VSG 
Soul  of  Man,  The. — Dora  R.  Goodale.— AA 
Soul  of  the  Violin,  The.— Marg.  M.  Merrill.— BS  22— 

HBR— PFP 
Soul  of  the  World,  The.— Ernest  Crosby.— AA 
Soul  Sculpture. — Anon. — LLC 

(Discipline.)— CS  2,3 
Soul  Shadow.— F:  L.  Knowles.— CG  1 
Soul  Stithy,  The.— Jas.  C.  Woods.— VA 
Soul  that  Passed  in  the  Night,  A. — Howell  L.  Piner. — 

WR23 
Soul  unto  Soul  Glooms  Darkling.     (Fr.  The  Book  of 

Day-dreams.) — C:  L.  Moore. — AA 
Soul,  Wherefore  Fret  Thee? — Gertrude  Bloede. — AA 
Soul-building,  Br.  .'els.  jr. — H:  W.  Beecher. 

"  Work  proceeds  without  intermission,  The."  -     GG 
"  You  think  that  one  hour  buries  another." — GG 
Soul's  Answer,  The.     (Abjde  in  me,  and  I  in  you:   The 

Soul's  Answer — C.) — Harriet  B.  Stowe.  — TAS 
Soul's  Beauty.     (C. — The     House     of     Life,     Sonnet 

LXXVII.)— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
(Sibylla  Palmifera.)— WEP  4 
Soul's  Cry,  The.— Ray  Palmer.— BNL 
"Soul's  dark  cottage,  battered  and  decayed,  The." — 

Edmund  Waller.— GG 


313 


Soul's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Soul's  Defiance,  The.— Lavinia  Stoddard.— AA—FEP 

—HBP 
Soul's  Errand,    The.— Sir    Walter    Raleigh.— BNL— 

CEL— EPs 
(Lie,  The— C.)— FEP— PHS— WEP  1 
Soul's  Home,  The.— W :  A.  Muhlenberg.— T AS 
Soul's  Kiss,  The.— Mi^ud  Thompson.— CG  2 
Souls,  not  Stations. — Anon. — BLP 
(As  Pebbles  in  the  Sea.)— HP 
(How  a  Man  Should  be  Judged.)— CS  2 
Souls  of    Books,    The.— E:    Bulwer-Lytton.— LBB— 

MBB 
Souls  of  Men  why  Will  Ye  Scatter.     (SI.  o6r. )—Frd'k 

W.  Faber.— HDL 
Sound  Advice. — Anon. — FAS 
Sound  Money. — Alice  Washburn. — SR  13 
Sound  the  Reveill(5.— L  E.  Jones.— CS  27 
Sound,  Sound  the  Clarion.     (Motto  ft.  Old  Mortality, 

Ch.  XXXIV.)— Walter  Scott.— YBF 
(Answer. ) — OB 
Sound  the  Loud  Timbrel.     (C.)— T:  Moore.— OS  1 

(Miriam's  Song.)— BS  16— FEP 
Sounds. — H :  D.  Thoreau.     See  Walden. 
Sounds  of  Nature.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Sounds  of  the  Sabbath  Bells,  The.— Anon. — FR 
Sour  Grapes.— Anon.— KJ—PP—YFR 
Source  of  my  Life. — Anna  L.  Waring. — HDL 
South.— Anon.— CP 
South  and  her  Problems,  The.     (Sel.)—Yi.:  W.  Grady. 

— NC— SC  (ptly.  diff.) 
(Future  of  the  South,  The— ptly.  like  SC.) — SSD 
(New  South,  The— p%.  like  NC,  etc.)— TMR 
(Scene  on  the  Battlefield,  A.)— PFP 
South  Carolina. — Rob't  Y.  Hayne.     See  On  Mr.  Foot's 

Resolution,  etc. 
South  Carolina  and  Massachusetts,  1830.- — Dan'l  Web- 
ster.    See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The. 
South  Carolina  and  the  Union. — Rob't  Y.  Hayne.     iSe« 

On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution,  etc. 
South  Carolina  Bourbon,  A. — Yates  Snowden. — TAV 
South  Carolina  in  the  Revolution. — Rob't  Y.  Hayne. 

See  On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution,  etc. 
South  during  the  Revolution,  The. — Rob't  Y.  Hayne. 

See  On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution,  etc. 
South  During  the  War  of  1812,  The. — Rob't  Hayne. 

See  On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution. 
South  Fork.— Stockton  Bates.— CS  30 
South  in  the  Revolution. — Rob't  Y.  Hayne.     See  On 

Mr.  Foot's  Resolution. 
South  Wind.— G:  P.  Lathrop.— AA 
South  Wind,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Song  of 

Hiawatha,  The. 
South  Wind    and    the  Sun,  The.  —  Jas.  W.   Riley.  — 

CR(si.  a6r.)— RCR 
Southern  Girl,  A.— S:  M.  Peck.— AA 
Southern  Negro,    The.— H:    W.    Grady.     See   At    the 

Boston    Banquet. 
Southern  Scene,  A. — Anon. — MR 
Southern  Snow-bird,  The. — W:  H.  Hayne. — AA 
Southern  Soldier,     The.— H :    W.     Grady.     See    New 

South,  The. 
Southland.— Lizzie  Y.  Case. — BS  5 
Souvenir,  A. — Anon. — CS  37 

Souvenirs  du  Peuple  (Popular  Recollections  of  Bona- 
parte).— Pierre    J.    de    B^ranger    (tr.    by    Fs. 

Mahony).— BNL— EDY 
Sovereign  Moments. — Matthew  R.  Knight. — TCV 
Sovereigns,  The. — Lloyd  Mifflin. — AA 
Sovereignty  of  the  People,  The.— E:  J:  Phelps.- TMD 
Sovereignty  of  the  United  States,  The.- — Anon.^ — CP 
"Sow,  and      look      onward,       upward."      (Household 

Words.)— HSS  3 
Sower,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
Sower,  The.     (Fr.  The  New  Day.)— R:  W.  Gilder.— 

TAS 
Sower,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — FHS  (si.  abr.) 

(Field  of  the  World,  The— C.)— HBP 
Sower,  The. — Antoinette  V.  H.  Wakeman. — SR  9 
Sower  and  his  Seed,  The.— W.  E.  H.  Lecky.— TIP 
Sowers,  The.— Anon.— CS  37 
Sower's  Song,  The.— T:  Carlyle.- VA 
Sowing. — Adelaide  A.  Procter.     See  Sowing  and  Reap- 
ing. 
Sowing  and    Harvesting. — Emily   S.  Oakey. — CS  7  (si. 

afer.  )—SM 
Sowing  and    Reaping.     (Nat'l  Preceptor.)  —  LLC    (si. 

abr.) 
(Might  Makes  Right.)— BLP 
Sowing  and     Reaping. — Adelaide     Procter. — HSS  3 — 

sss 

(Sowing.)— LLC 
"  'Spacially  Jim." — Bessie    Morgan. — AWH — BS  18 — 
CRR  — HBR  — HP  — SDR  — TAV  — WR  15 


Spacious   Firmament   on    High,   The. — Jos.   Addison. 

See  Spectator,  The. 
Spaewife,  The. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — VA 
Spain's  Hour  of  Doom. — Albert  R.   Haven. — EDY — 

PAPm 
Spain's  Last  Armada. — Wallace  Rice. — BAB — EDY — 

HBR 
Spaniard  Answered,  The. — R.  C.  Rogers. — PAPm 
Spaniards  in  Peru,  The. — Kotzebue  (tr.  by  li:B.  Sheri- 
dan).    See  Pizarro. 
Spanish  American  War,  The. — J:  P.  Chidwick.— MR^ 
Spanish    Armada,   The. — T:    B.   Macaulay. — BS    2 — 
CGd 
(Armada,    The— C.)— AVP— BPB— CEL— EDY- 
EHT- GN— HB— WR  1  (si.  abr.) 
Spanish  Curate,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Serenade — fr.   ActlL, 
So.  V.)— J:  Fletcher.— ES 
(Speak,  Love!)— HBP 
Spanish  Gypsy,  The,  Sels.  fr.—G:  Eliot. 
Dark,  The.     (Sona  fr.  Bk.  I.)— VA 
Day  is  Dying.     (Song  fr.  Bk.  I.)— BNL— GP 
Hermit,  The.     (Song  fr.  Bk.  II.)— OS  2 
I  am  Lonely.     (Son:;  fr.  Bk.  II.)— GN 
Scene  from  "The  Spanish  Gypsy."     (Dial.  fr.  Bk. 

I.)— MPD 
Song  of  the  Zincali.     (Sona  fr.  Bk.  III.)— VA 
Spanish  Gypsy,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  I.)— DR 
Spring  Song.     (Sonn  fr.  Bk.  I. — a6r.)— PoR 
Spanish  Lady's  Love,  The.     (In  Percy's  R«liques.) — 

Anon.— CGd— HBP 
Spanish  Mother,    The.— Sir    Fs.    H.    Doyle.— NPS  — 

PFP  (si.  abr.)— PR— VSG— YP 
Spanish  Point.— Sir  Aubrey  De  Yere.- TIP 
Spanish  Student,  The,  Sels.  fr. — H:  W.  Longfellow. 
Serenade.     (Fr.  Act  I.,  So.  3.)— AA— ASL— LC— 

PYO 
Spanish  Student,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Sel.  fr.   I.,  3.)— 
BIL 
Spanish  Valet  and  the  Waiting  Maid,  The.     (Duologue 

fr.  "The  Wonder.")— Anon.— BC 
Spare  the  Trees. — Madame  — — Michelet. — AD 
Spare  the  Youth.— Letitia  W.  Brosius.— WR  18 
Sparkling  and  Bright.— C:  F.  Hoffm;tn. — AA— ASL — 

HBP— TAV 
Sparkling  Bowl,  The.— J:  Pierpont.- PP— YFR 
Sparrow  Must  Go,  The.— J:  P.  St.  John.— TS 
Sparrows,  The. — Anon. — POS 
Sparrows,  The,  Sel.  fr.—Vf:  Kirby.— TCV 
Sparrows,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Sparrows.- Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— PEO 
Sparrow's  Nest,  The. — Mary  Howitt. — NV 
Spartacus  and  Jovius. — Rob't  M.  (?)  Bird. — PS 
Spartacus  to  the  Gladiators  [at  Capua]. — Elijah  Kel- 
logg.—BS  1— FTR  —  LLC  —  OM  ^  OS  3  — 
PPS— PS— SC— SE  (br.  sei.)- SO— SS— WRD 
(SI.  abr.)— CS  1— KNE— WCLG  2 
Spartacus  to  the  Roman   Envoys  [in  Etruria]. — Epes 

Sargent.— CS  2— LLC— OM— PS— SC— SS 
Spartan  Boy,  The. — Mary  Lamb. — PC 
Spartans  and  the  Pilgrims,  The. — Rufus  Choate.     See 
Age  of  the  Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our 
History,  The. 
Spartans'  March,    The. — Fislicia    D.    Hemans. — SS — 

TMR 
Speak!     (Misc.    Sonnets,   Pt.    III.,   25.)— W:   Words- 
worth.—OB 
(To  a  Distant  Friend.)— PGT  1 
Speak  Gently. — Anon. — FP 

(Kindly  Words— 8eZ.)—TFS 
Speak  Gently.  —  David      Bates.  —  CS    29  —  TAV  — 
TFS  (sel— at.  to  Hangford.) 
(A6r.)— LLC   (at.   to   Wallace)— OS  1— YBT   (diff. 
abr.) 
Speak  Gently  to  the  Erring. — Mary  E.  (?)Lee. — SM 
"Speak  gently  to  the  herring,  and  kindly  to  the  calf." 
—J.  Ashby-Sterry.— BVC  (abr.) 
(Kindness  to  Animals.) — NA 
Speak,  Love! — J:  Fletcher.     See  Spanish  Curate,  The. 
Speak  Nae  111.— Anon.— CD 
Speak  the  Truth.— Anon.— HSS  2 

(Abr.)— PP— YFR 
"Speak  to  the  children,  little  book". — Mary  I.  Love- 
joy. — NV 
Spears  of  Kan-Mar,  The. — Theodore  Roberts. — TCV 
Specialist,  A.— F.  T.  Easton.— CG  1 
Specimen    of    the    Laconic. — Gotthold    E.  Lessing. — 

HPE 
Speckled  Hen,   The.— E.   W.    Denison.— PPSr— PR— 

YA 
Spectacles,  or  Helps  to  Read.     (Sel.  fr.  Verses  Spoken 
on  the  same  Occasion  with  the  Preceding  fat 
the  Breaking  up  of  the  Free  Gramma  ■  School 
in  Manchester].) — J :  Byrom. — SCS 


314 


TITLE  INDEX 


Speech 


Spectator,  The,  Sels.  fr.— Jos.  Addison. 

Fan  Drill,  The.    (Exercise  of  the  Fan — C.—sel.  fr. 

No.  102.)— OS  2 
Hymn:  "When  rising  from  the  bed  of  death."    (Fr. 

No.  513.)     HBP 
Mountain  of  Miseries,  The.     (Nos.  558,  559 — En- 
deavors of  Mankind  to  Get  Rid  of  Their  Bur- 
dens—C.)—WCLG  1 
Psalm    XXIII.      A    Pastoral    Hymn.       (C.  —  fr. 
No.  441.) 
(Paraphrase  of  Psalm  XXIII.)— FEP 
(Translation  of  the  Twenty-third  Psalm.) — CEL 
Reflections  in  [wr.  on]  Westminster  Abbey.     (No. 

26.)— AE  (a6r.)— MRS 
Sir  Roger  de  Coverley  Papers,  Sels.  fr. 

Club,  The.     (The  Spectator,  No.  2— Of  The  Club, 

etc.)— MBL 
Coverley    Household,    The.     (No.     107— by    R.- 
Steele.)—MBL 
Death  of  Sir  Roger  de  Coverley.     (No.  517.) — 

MBL 
Sir  Roger  at  his   Country   House.     (No.    106 — 
Coverley  Hall,  or,  A  Visit  to  Sir  Roger  de  Cover- 
ley's  Country  Seat.) — MBL 
Sir  Roger  de  Coverley's   Sunday. — (No.    112 — 
Sunday  with  Sir  Roger,  or,  A  Sunday  in  the 
Country.)— ESs 
Spectator's  Account  of  Himself,  The.     (No.  1 — 

The  Spectator.)- MBL 
Will  Wimble.    (No.  108— Character  of  Will  Wim- 
ble.)—MBL 
Spacious  Firmanent  [on  High],  The.     (Fr.  No.  465.) 
— BNL— EPS  —  GN  —  LLC  —  OS  1  — POS— 
PYO  —  SM— WCLG  2— YBF 
(Hymn.)— OB 
(Ode,  An.)— FEP— HBP 
Vision  of  Mirza,  The.     (No.  159.)— WCLG  1 
(SI.  abr.)—C8  16— SA 
Spectator  ab  Extra. — Arthur  H.  Clough.     See  Dipsy- 

chus. 
Spectator's  Account  of  Himself.   The. — Jos.  Addison. 

See  Spectator,  The. 
Spectre  of  the-.Past,  The. — Arthur  O'Shaughnessy. — 

PGT2 
Spectre  of  the  Rose,  The. — Theophile  Gautier. — WR  8 
Spectrum,  The. — Cosmo  Monkhouse. — VA 
Speculation,  A.— T:  Moore.— FEP— HPE 
Speculative. — Rob't  Browning. — OH 
Speculators,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— HPE 
Speech:     "My  pa  and  ma  will  be  surprised." — Mrs. 

Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Speech:     "My  pappy  asked  me  if  I'd  say." — Mrs.  Rus- 
sell Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Speech:     "None  but  a  school-boy  knows  how  hard." — 

Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Speech  against  the  Stamp  Act. — Lydia   M.  Child  (at. 
to  Jas.   Otis).     See  Supposed   Speech  of  Jas. 
Otis. 
Speech  at  Birmingham  Nov.  12,  1851,  Sel.  fr.     (Hero- 
ism  of  the  Hungarian   People.) — Louis  Kos- 
suth.- SR  8— SS— SSD 
Speech  at  Bristol,  Previous  to  the  Election,  1780,  Sels. 
fr.- — Edmund  Burke. 
John  Howard. — SE 
To  the  Electors  of  Bristol. — PS — SS 
Wisdom  Dearly  Purchased.— BS  16— FTR 
Speech    at    Hamburg,  July  4. — Ulysses    S.   Grant. — 
FDl 
(What  Saved  the  Union.)— PS 
Speech  at  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Sept.  21,  1876,  Sel.  fr. 
(Col.   Ingersoll's  Remarkable  Vision.) — Rob't 
G.  IngersoU. — FS 
(Vision  of  War,  The.)— SC 
Speech  at  Manchester,  Nov.  11,  1851,  Sel.  fr.     (Con- 
tentment of  Europe,  The.)- — Louis  Kossuth. — 
SS 
Speech  at  Taunton  in   1831   on  the  Reform  Bill  not 
being  Passed,  Sel.  fr.     (Rejection  of  the  Re- 
form Bill.)— Sydney  Smith.— SS 
Speech  at  the  Barbecue  at  Lexington  in  Honor  of  Mr. 
Clay,  Sel.  fr.     (Ambition  of  a  Statesman.) — 
H:  Clay.— FTR— OM—WR  26 
(My  Ambition.)— SO 
Speech  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Cemetery  at 
Gettysburg. — Abraham  Lincoln.     See  Address 
at  the  Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at  Gettys- 
burg. 
Speech  at  the  Dinner  of  the  New  England  Society  of 
New  York,  Dec.  23,  1878,  Sel.  fr.     (New  Eng- 
land Character.) — Jas.  G.  Blaine. — SC 
Speech  at  Union  Square,  N.  Y.,  April  20th,  1861,  Sel. 
fr.—E:  D.  Baker.— CS  1 
(To  Young  Men  of  New  York  in  1861.)— SC 


Speech  at  Union  Square,  N.  Y.,  April  20th,  1861,  Sel. 
/r.— Dan'l  S.  Dickenson.— CS  1 

Speech  before  the  Republican  State  Convention  of 
Massachusetts,  Mar.  27,  1896,  Sel.  fr.  (What 
the  Flag  Means. )— H :  C.  Lodge.— SC 

Speech  before  the  Virginia  Convention. — Patrick 
Henry.    See  Speech  in  the  Virginia  Convention. 

Speech  by  Billy  Higgins  on  the  Destruction  of  his 
Rambo  Apple  Tree. — Anon. — MCS 

Speech  by  Obadiah  Partington  Swipes. — Anon. — CS  7 

Speech  Delivered  at  a  Dinner  of  the  New  England  So- 
ciety of  New  York,  Dec.  22,  1884,  Sel.  fr. 
(True  Americanism.) — H:  C.  Lodge. — SC 

Speech  Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on  the 
5th  of  July,  1831,  Sel.  fr.  (Reform  Bill  a  Sec- 
ond Bill  of  Rights.)— T:  B.  Macaulay.— SS 

Speech  Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on  the 
2nd  of  March,    1831,    Sel.  fr.     (Reform    Bill. 
The.)— T:  B.  Mac&ulay.— CR 
(Reform  that  you  may  Preserve — sel.) — SS 

Speech  Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on  the 
16th  of  December,  1831,  Sel.  fr.  (Reform 
Irresistible.)- T:  B.  Macaulay.— SS 

Speech  for  a  Boy.  (2)— Anon.    KNS 

Speech  for  a  Boy  Four  or  Five  Years  Old. — Mrs.  Rus- 
sell Kavanaugh. — KJ 

Speech  for  a  Boy  of  Eight  or  Nine. — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 
anaugh.— KJ 

Speech  for  a  Boy  of  Four  or  Five. — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 
anaugh.— KJ 

Speech  for  a  Girl  Five  Years  Old. — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 
anaugh.— KJ 
(I'm  Little  but  I'm  Spunky.) — KER 

Speech,  for  a  Little  Boy. — Anon. — DJS 

Speech  for  a  Little  Boy.^ — Anon. — KER 
(Little  Things,  The.)— TFS 

Speech  for  a  Little  Boy. — Sylvia  Manning. — DLS 

Speech  for  a  School  Exhibition. — Anon. — KNS 

Speech  for  a  Six-year-old. — Anon.     See  School. 

Speech  for  a  Small  Boy.     Anon. — DLS 

(Opening  Speech  for  a  Small  Boy.) — DLF 

Speeeh  for  a  Small  Boy.  (3) — Anon.^KNS 

Speech  for  a  Small  Boy. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 
KJ 

Speech  for  a  Small  Girl. — Anon. — KJ 
(First  Speech,  A.)— TT 

Speech  for  a  Ten-year-old  Boy. — Anon. — DLF 

Speech  for  a  Tiny  Little  Girl. — Anon. — KNS 

Speech  for  a  Very  Little  Boy.  (2)— Anon.— KNS 

Speech  for  a  Very  Little  Boy.— Anon.— LPS— PP 

Speech  for  a  Very  Little  Girl. — Anon. — KNS 

Speech  for  a  Very  Small  Child. — Anon. — DLS 

Speech  for  a  Very  Small  Child.— Anon.— KNS 

Speech  for  a  Very  Small  Girl. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavan- 
augh.— KJ 

Speech  for  a  Young  Girl. — Anon. — DLS 

Speech  for  Decoration  Day.  (Ingersoll's  Dream  of  the 
War— O— Rob't  G.  IngersoU.— DFR 

Speech  in  Behalf  of  Marcus  Claudius  Marcellus,  Sel.  fr. 
(Panegyric  on  Julius  Cffisar.) — Cicero. 

Speech  in  his  Own  Defence.— Rob't  Emmet.  See 
On  being  Found  Guilty  of  High  Treason. 

Speech  in  the  Convention  at  the  Conclusion  of  its  De- 
liberations, 1787.     (C.)— B:  Franklin. 
(Federal  Constitution,  The — abr.)—SS 

Speech  in    the   Virginia   Convention,    1775. — Patrick 
Henry.— FTR 
(Appeal  to  Arms,  An — sel.) — SO 
(Call  to  Arms,  The.)— PPS 
(Freedom  or  Slavery.)— SSD— TMD 
(Liberty  or  Death.)— SO  (sel.)— WCLG  1 
(On  the  Resolution  to  Put  the  Commonwealth  into 

a  State  of  Defence.) — EAO 
(Resistance  to  British  Aggression — seZ.)— OM — PS 

— SS 
(Speech  before  the  Virginia  Convention.) — KNE 
(Speech  of  Patrick  Henry.)— CS  25— SR  5 
(War  Inevitable,  The.)— LLC 

(Sel.)  — OM  — OS  2  — PP  — PS  — PTS  — SE  — 
SS— YFR 

Speech  in  Wall  Street,  1840,  Sel.  fr.  (Sanctity  of  State 
Obligations.)— Dan'l  Webster. — SS 

Speech  is  Silver;  Silence,  Golden. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Good- 
fellow.— TT 

Speech  of  Black  Hawk.— Black  Hawk.— SR  12 

(Address  of  Black  Hawk  to  Gen.  Street — cond.) — 
PS— SS 

Speech  of  Caius  Gracchus.  —  Jas.  S.  Knowles.  iSee 
Caius  Gracchus  Cited  before  the  Censors, 
Appeals  to  the  People. 

Speech  of  Cassius,  Instigating  Brutus  to  Join  the  Con- 
spiracy against  Cffisar. — W:  Shakespeare.  See 
Julius  Caesar. 


315 


Speech 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Speech  of  Emer,  The. — W:  Larminie.     See  Fand. 

Speech  of  Galgacus. — Tacitus.  See  Galgacus  to  the 
Caledonians. 

Sr>eech  of  Henry  V. — W:  Shakespeare.  S«e  King 
Henry  V. 

Speech  of  Leonidas. — Leonidas  {tr.  by  Pichat).  See 
Leonidas  to  l^s  Three  Hundred. 

Speech    of    M.    Hector    De    Longuebeau.  —  Litchfield 
Mosely. — OM 
(After-dinner   Speech   by   a    Frenchman  —  ael.)  — 

BS  13— HSS  3— SE 
(Charity  Dinner,  The.)— BeR— CS  16 
(Frenchman  Proposes  the  Ladies,  A — longer  sel.) — 
VSG 

Speech  of  Patrick  Henry. — Patrick  Henry.  See  Speech 
in  the  Virginia  Convention. 

Speech  of  Pericles. — Thucydides.  See  History  of  the 
Peloponnesian  War. 

Speech  of  Prospero. — -W:  Shakespeare.  See  Tempest, 
The. 

Speech  of  Red  Jacket.  Red  Jacket'(Sa-go-ye-wat-ha). 
— NPS— WR  10— YP 

Speech  of  Regulus. —  Epes  Sargent.  See  Regulus  to 
the  Roman  Senate. 

Speech  of  Rolla  to  the  Peruvian  Army,  The. — Kotze- 
bue  (tr.  by  H:  B.  Sheridan).     See  Pizarro. 

Speech  of  Sempronius  [for  War]. — Jos.  Addison.  See 
Cato. 

Speech  of  Sergeant  Buzfuz  in  the  Case  of  Bardell 
against  Pickwick. — C:  Dickens.  See  Pickwick 
Papers,  The. 

Speech  of  the  Dauphin. — W:  Shakespeare.  See  King 
John. 

Speech  of  the  Erdgeist  in  "Faust." — T:  Carlyle.  See 
Faust. 

Speech  of  the  Grand  Rabbi,  Moses-Ben-Habib,  to  Fer- 
dinand and  Isabella.  (Sel.  fr.  Torquemada, 
Pt.  II.,  Act  II.,  Sc.  3.)— Victor  Hugo.— MRS 

Speech  of  the  Hon.  Perverse  Peabody  on  the  Acquisi- 
tion of  Cuba. — Anon. — SR  7 

Speech  of  Titus  Quintius. — Livy.  See  History  of 
Rome  (Titus  Quintius  against  Quarrels  be- 
tween the  Senate  and  the  People). 

Speech  of  Vindication. — Rob't  Emmet.  See  On  being 
Found  Guilty  of  High  Treason. 

Speech  on  a  Motion  for  an  Address  to  the  Throne. — W: 
Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham.— PPS 

Speech  on  American  Taxation.  Sel.  fr.  (American  Tax- 
ation.)—Edmund  Burke.— PPS 
(On  American  Taxation — sel.) — SS 

Speech  on  Boils. — Anon. — DE 

Speech  on  Conciliation  with  America. — Edmund  Burke. 
See  Speech  on  Moving  his  Resolutions,  etc. 

Speech  on  Happiness.  -  Anon. — DE 

Speech  on  Moving    his    Resolutions    for    Conciliation 
with  America,  Sels.  fr. — Edmund  Burke. 
England  and  her  (Colonies. — TMR 
Enterprise  of  American  Colonists. — PS — SS 
Magnanimity  in  Politics. — OS  3 — SS 

Speech  on  Temperance,  A,  Sel.  fr. — Schuyler  Colfax. — 
CS  5— TS 

Speech  on  the  American  War. — W:  Pitt,  Earl  of 
Chatham.     See  American  War,  The. 

Speech  on  the  Babies.     (C.) — S:  L.  Clemens. 
(Babies,  The— si.  abr. )—CS  18— SR  1 

Speech  on  the  Compromi.ses  of  the  Constitution,  Sel.  fr. 
(On  the  Federal  Constitution.) —  Alex.  Hamil- 
ton.—EAO 
(American  Constitution,  The— seZ.)- BLP— PEO 

(Constitution  of  the  United  States — si.  diff.) — SS 
(General  Government  and  the  States,  The  —  sel.) — 
PS— SS 

Speech  on  the  Death  of  President  Lincoln,  Se.  frl. — 
Park  Godwin.— CS  1 
(Death  of  Lincoln,  The.)— PRR 

Speech  on  the  Internal  Improvement  Bill. — J:  C.  Cal- 
houn.—EAO 

Speech  on  the  Senate   of   the    United   States,   Sel.  fr. 
(American  Constitution,  The.) — Alex.   Hamil- 
ton.—BLP—PEO 
(Constitution  of  the  United  States — si.  diff.) — SS 

Speech  on  the  War  of  1812.     (Sel.  fr.  Mr.  Clay  and  the 
War  of  1812.)— Henry  Clay.— PPS 
(In  Favor  of  Prosecuting  the  Wskr—ptly.  same.)— SS 

Speech  on  the  Weather.     (C.) — S:  L.  (Jlemens. 
(Mark  Twain  on  the  Weather.)— CS  13 
(New  England  Weather.)— S A— WCLG  2  (si.  abr.) 

Speech  on  Woman's  Rights. — Anon. — DE  (si.  abr.) 
(Woman's  Rights,  by  Mistress  Tabitha  Primrose.) 
— BS  1  (si.  abr.)— CS  9 

;Spe©ch  to  Robt.  E.  Lee  Camp  Confederate  Veterans, 
Sel.  fr.  (Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.)— H:  C. 
Lodge.— NC—SC  (abr.) 


Speech  to  the  Army  at  Tilbury. — Queen  Elizabeth.  — 

OS  3 
Speeches  at  Prince  Henry's  Barriers,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Chiv- 
alry.)— Ben  Jonson. — EPs 
Speeches  for  Tots. — Anon. 

Speech  for  a  Very  Little  Child.— DLS 
Speech  for  a  Very  Small  Child.— DLS 
Speeches  in  the  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. — 

Edmund  Burke.     See  Impeachment  of  Warren 

Hastings. 
Speeches  of  Zenobia  and   her  Council  in  Reference  to 

the  Anticipated  War  with  Rome. — W:  Ware. 

See  Zenobia. 
Speech-making. — Anon. — MHR 
Speed.     (Trinity  Tablet.)— CG  2 
Speed  Away. — -I.  B.  Woodberry. — LLC 
"Speed,  Ringbolt,  to  your  leader,  speed!" — T:  B.  (?) 

Read.— AE 
Spell  of  Ashtaroth,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Fall  of  Jericho,  The.) 

— Duffield  Osborne.— CS  28 
Spell  of  Rhyme,  A.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Spell  of  the  Laurel-rose,    The. — T:    L.  Peacock.     See 

Rhododaphne. 
Spellin'  School,  A.— D:  K.  Buchanan.— CS  .36 
Spelling  Bee  at  Angels,  The.— Fs.  Bret  Harte. — BS  24 

— CS16 
Spelling  Class,  The.— D.  R.  Brubaker.- SDD 
Spelling  Class,  The.    (Hard  Words  to  Spell.)  —  E.  P. 

Dyer.— CS  16 
Spelling  Down.— Will  Gifford.— CS  13 
Spelling  in  the  Nursery.— Earl  Marble.— CPI-— DLS— 

WR24 
Spelling  "Kitten."— Anon.— DCP 
Spelling  Lesson,  The. — Anon. — WR  4 
Spelling-match  at  Grande  Pointe,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Bona- 

venture,   Chs.    X.   and  XL)— G:  W.  Cable.— 

WR25 
Spendthrift  Doll,  The.— Sarah  O.  Sweet.— KJ 
Spenser. — Craven  L.  Betts. — EDY 
Spenser  at  Court.     (Sel.  fr.  Prosopopoia;  or.  Mother 

Hubberd's  Tale.) — -Edmund  Spenser. — EPs 
(At  Court.)— OSS 
Sphinx,  The.— H :  H.  Brownell.— AA    , 
Sphinx,    The,    Br.    sel.    fr.     (Fate   of   the   Man-chiid, 

The.)— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— HBP 

Sphinx. Lowell. — -LLC 

Sphinx  of  the  Tuileries.  The.— J:  Hay.— EDY 
Sphinx  Speaks,  The.— Fs.  S.  Saltus.— AA 
Sphynx,  The.    (Fr.  Eothen,  Ch.  XX.)— Alfred  W.  King- 
lake.— VSG 
Spice-tree,  The.— J:  Sterling.— AD  (se?.)- BNL— HBP 
Spider,  The.— Lucy  S.  Ruggles.— TFS 
Spider  and  Fly. — Alice  Cary. — BLF 
Spider  and  the  Bee,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Spider  and  the  Flv,  The.— Anon.— WR  18 
Spider  and  the  Fly,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— BVC  (si. 

abr.)—  FEP  —  LLC  —  NV  —  OS  1  —  PPSr 

— WCL 
Spider's  Parlor,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Spike  that  Gun.— Anon.— CS  14 
Spinner,  The. — Mary  A.  De  Vere. — AA 
Spinning.     (C.)— Helen  H.  Jackson.—  FP  —  HBP  — 

HDL— TAS 
(Blind  Spinner,  The.)— HSS  3 
Spinning  Song,  A.— J:  F.  O'Donnell.— TIP 
Spinning  Top. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Spinning  Wheel,  The. — Felix  Carmen. — TL 
Spinning-wheel,  The. — J:  F.  Waller.     See  following. 
Spinning-wheel  Song,   A  [or  The]. —  J:   F.   Waller. — 

AE  —  BNL  —  BR  (w.  music)— CS  20  —  HBP 

— VA 
(Spinning-wheel,  The.)— TIP 
Spinster  Thurber's  Carpet. — Pauline  Phelps. — WR  20 
Spinster's  Stint,  A. — Alice  Cary. — BNL 
Spirit,  The.— Jones  Very.— TAS 
"Spirit    in    our   hearts.    The." — H:  U.   Onderdonk. — 

FEP 
Spirit  Land,  The.— Jones  Very.— BNL— HBP 
Spirit  of  Conquest,  The. — T:  Corwin.— NC 
(Danger  of  the  Spirit  of  Conquest.) — -OM 
(Unjust    National    Acquisition — si.    diff.) — CS  1 — 

WRD 
Spirit  of  Delight,  The.  —  Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Song: 

"  Rarely,  rarely,"  etc. 
"Spirit  of  free  thought  may  be  seen  in  every  depart- 
ment of  active  life,  The." — H:  C.  Minton. — GG 
Spirit  of    Homer,    The. — G:  Chapman.     See  Tears  of 

Peace,  The. 
Spirit  of  Human  Liberty. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Char- 
acter of  Washington,  The. 
Spirit  of    Liberty,    The.     (Dial.)— Mrs.    S.    L.    Ober- 

holtzer.— CDs 
Spirit  of  Poetry,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— AD 


316 


TITLE  INDEX 


Spring 


Spirit  of  Puritanism,  The. — G:  W.  Curtis.     See  Major- 

General  John  Sedgwick. 
Spirit  of  '76.     (ro6.)— Anon.— BS  4— TCP 
^        Spirit  of  '76,  Sel.  fr.     (Romance  of  the  War,  A  —  ad. 

as  dial.) — Anon. — MPD 
Spirit  of  Shakespeare,  The. — G:  Meredith. — VA 
Spirit  ot  Summer,  The. — S.  C.  Kenyon. — CG  3 
Spirit  of  the  Age  Adverse  to  War,  The. — G.  C.  Beck- 

with.— SS 
Spirit  of    the    Cape,    The. — Luis    de    Camoens.     iSee 

Lusiad,  The. 
Spirit  of  the  Fall,  The. — Danske  Dandridge. — AA 
Spirit    of   the    House,  The. — Archibald  Lampman. — 

TFY 
Spirit  of  the  Maine,  The.— Tudor  Jenks. — AA — EDY — 

PAPm 
Spirit  of  the  Pine,  The.     (Metempsychosis  of  the  Pine. 

—O— Bayard  Taylor.— AD  (abr.) 
Spirit  of  the  Sunset,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Spirit  of  the  Wheat,  The.— E.  A.  U.  Valentine.— AA 
Spirit  that  Should  Animate,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Spirited  Object  Lesson,  A. — Anon. — CS  28 
Spirit.p.      (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.)— JiJ^h 
Spirits. — Rob't  Bridges.- OB 
Spirit's  Birth,  The.— Anon.— CS  18 
Spirit's  Call,  The.— Anon.— SSS 
Spirits  of  Fire,  The.     (Fr.  A  Bachelor's  Wedding  Trip.) 

— C:  P.  Sherman.— BS  18 
"Spirits  of  Fire,  that  brood,"  etc. — T:  Moore.     iSee 

Lalla  Rookh. 
Spirit's  Song  to  Sabrina. — J:  Milton.     See  Comus. 
Spirit-shepherd,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Comus. 
Spiritual  Body,  The.— Milan  C.  Ayres.— SR  5 
Spiritual    Communions. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See    In 

Memoriam. 
Spiritual  Companionship. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In 

Memoriam. 
Spiritual  (Conferences,  Sel.  fr.     ("Kind  words  are  the 

music   of  the  world"  —  br.  sel.  fr.  Ch.   III.) — 

Frd'k  W.  Faber.- FHS 
Spiritual  Freedom,  Sels.  fr. — W:  E.  Channing. 
Great  Distinction  of  a  Nation,  The. — SS 
(Liberty— -(r.  sel.)— SE 
(National  Distinction  Depends  upon  Virtue.) — 

SR8 
Spiritual  Freedom.- HSS  2 
Spiritual  Temple,  The.— Anon.— CS  8 
Spiritual  Trimmers. — S :  Butler.     See  Hudibras. 
Spiritus  Intactus.— Rob't  G.  Cole. — CG  3 
Spirk  Troll— Derisive.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— NA 
Spleen,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Matthew  Green.— WEP  3 

(Voyage  of  Life,  The— seZ.)- BNL 
Splendid  Beau,  A. — Anon. — DCD 
Splendid  Shilling,  The.— J:  Philips.— BNL 
Splendid  Spur,  The.— A.  T.  Quiller-Couch.— VA 
Splendidis  Longum  Valedico  Nugis. — Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Splendor  of  Lilies,  The.     (C.) — Marg.  E.  Sangster. 

(Eastertide.)— SR  13 
"Splendour  falls  on  castle  walls.  The." — Alfred   Tenny- 
son.    See  Princess,  The. 
Spoiled  Child,  The.— Anon— FDY 
Spoiled  Child,  A.— R:  H.  Home.— WR  20 
Spoiled  Face,  The.— W.  O.  C— SD 
Spoils  of  Time,  The.     (Sonnets  C,  CVIII.,  LIX.,  LX., 

LXIV.,  LXV.)— W:  Shakespeare.- FP 
Spool  of  Thread,  A. — Sophie   E.   Eastman. — PRR — 

WR  10 
Spoopendyke    Stops    Smoking.     (Brooklyn    Eagle.) — 

CH 
(Swearing  off  Smoking.)— WR  20 
Spoopendykes,  The.— Anon.— DS—NPS—YP 
Spoopendyke's  Burglars. — Stanley  Huntley.- — CS  19 

(Mr.  Spoopendyke  Hears  Burglars.) — DCR 
Spoopendyke's  Private  Theatricals. — Anon. — WR  20 
Sport. — Duncan  Anderson. — TCV 
Sport.     (Sel.   fr.   Boy   Life  on  the  Prairie.) — Hamlin 

Garland.— SO 
Sport.— H.  C.  Southwick.— CG  1 
Sport  Royal,  Sel.  fr.  (How    they  Stopped  the  Run.) — 

Anthony  Hope. — BS  26 
Sporus, — Lord   Hervey. — Alex.   Pope.     See  Epistle  to 

Dr.  Arbuthnot. 
S'posen  a  Case. — Anon. — CS  27 
S'posin.— Anon. — CS  23 
Spotty.— Anon.— TT 

Spray  of  Honeysuckle,  A. — Mary  E.  Bradley. — AA 
Snray  Sprite,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Spread  Eagle  Oratory. — Anon. — DSS 
Spring.     (W.  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Spring.     (Ode  XLVI.) — Anacreon  «r.  6j/T:  Moore). — 

BNL— HBP 
Spring. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher.     See  Valentinian. 


Spring.- W:  C.  Bryant.— HNS  (abr.) 

(Gladness  of  Nature,  The— C.)— AD  —  POS  —  SM 

— SN— WCL— WCLG  1 
(Summer — br.  sel., — SE 
Spring.— T:  Carew.— GN— LC 
Spring. — Charles  of  Orleans. — BNL 
Spring. — Annie  Chase. — TT 

(Recitation  for  a  Very  Little  Girl.) — KC 
Spring.— Willis  G.  Clark.— HSS  1 
Spring,  The. — Abraham  Cowley.     See  Mistress,  The. 
Spring. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — AD 

(Nearly  Ready.)— PoR 
Spring. — Gawain  Douglas.    See  Prologues  to  the  ^neid. 
Spring. — Ebenezer  Elliott. — BNL 
Spring.— T:  Gray.- BNL 

(Ode:     On    the   Spring  —  C.)  —  FEP  —  PGT  1 — 

WEP  3 
Spring. — T:   Gray.     See    also    Ode   on   the   Pleasure 

arising  from  Vicissitude. 
Spring,  Sel.  fr.     (April,  ever   Frail  and  Fair.) — Oliver 

W.  Holmes.— POS 
Spring[,  The].  —  Mary  Howitt.     See  "Spring,  she  is  a 

blessed  thing.  The." 
Spring. — Andrew  Lang. — POS 
Spring. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  Hyperion. 
Spring. — Rob't  Loveman. — AA 
Spring. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Biglow  Papers. 
Spring,  The. — J:  Lyly.     See  Alexander  and  Campaspe. 
Spring.     (Fr.  Summer's  Last  Will  and  Testament.) — 

T:  Nashe.  —  BPB  —  CEL  —  CGd  —  FEP  — 

LC  —  OB  —  OEL  —  PGT  1  —  YBF 
(Birds  in  Spring.) — PoR 

(Spring,  the  Sweet  Spring.)— BNL— ELP—EP 
Spring.— W.  O.  B.  Peabody.— HSS  1 
Spring.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— SR  1 

(When  the  Green  Gits  Back  in  the  Trees —C. )— AD 
Spring. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Spring. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Spring.— Celia  Thaxter.—  AD  —  CSS  —  PHS  —  PoR 

SAP— YBT 
Spring. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Spring. — H :  D.  Thoreau.     See  Walden. 
Spring.— Ludwig  Tieck.— POS 

Spring. — H :  Timrod.     See  Spring  in  South  Carolina. 
Spring. — Marg.  Veley. — HS 
Spring. — J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Mogg  Megone. 
Spring:     A  New  Version. — T:  Hood. — HPE 
Spring,  a  Skeleton  Essay. — S.  A.  Frost. — DFR 
Spring  and  Autumn. — W:  J.  Linton. — VA 
Spring  and  Melancholy. — T:  Lodge.    See  Scylla's  Meta- 
morphosis. 
Spring  and  Summer. — Anon. — AD  (si.  abr.) — OS  1 — 

PoR 
(Spring  is  Growing  up — br.  sel.) — TT 
Spring    and    Winter. — W:    Shakespeare.     See  Love's 

Labour's  Lost. 
Spring  at  the  Capital. — Eliz.  A.  Allen. — PAPm 

(In  April— cei.)— PoR— POS 
Spring  Beauties,  The. — Helen  G.  Cone. — AA 
Spring  Bereaved,  I.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Song.) — W:  Drum- 

mond. — OB 
Spring  Bereaved,  II. — W:  Drummond. — OB 
(Sonnet:     Spring.)— ELP 
(To  Spring— is<  son.)— FEP 
Spring  Bereaved,  III. — W:  Drummond. — OB 

(Sonnet:  "Alexis,  here  she  stay'd,"   etc.) — FEP — 

WEP  2 
Spring  Comes. — Anon.— COS— PP 
Spring  Flowers. — Anon. — AD 
Spring  Flowers. — Anon. — YBT 
Spring  Flowers,  Sel.  fr.     ("J  know  not  which  I  love  the 

most.") — Phoebe  Gary. — AD 
Spring  Flowers  from  Ireland.— Denis  F.  McCarthy.— TIP 
Spring  Garlands ;  Drill  of  ye  Olden  Tyme. — Anon. — 

WDM 
Spring  Harbingers. — Anon. — NV 

Spring  has  Come,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— WR   17 
Spring  Holiday,  A. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Spring  House-cleaning. — Anon. — CS  23 — DS 
Spring  Idyll,  A.— Sir  H:  Wotton.— CEL 

("On  a  bank  as  I  sat  a-fishing"— '^. ) — EP 
Spring  in  Carolina. — H :  Timrod. — BNL — GP 

(Spring.)— AD— FEP 
Spring  in  New  England,  Br.  sel.  fr.    (Bluebird,  The.) — 

T:  B.  Aldrich.— SN 
Spring  is  Coming. — Anon. — AD 
Spring  is  Coming. — Anon. — WR  17 
Spring  is  Coming.     (Song  of  Solomon,  Ch.  II.,  11,  12.) 

—Bible.— AD 
Spring  is  Coming. — Mary  Howitt. — HSS  1 
Spring  is  Growing  Up. — Anon.     See  Spring  and  Sum- 
mer. 
Spring  Journey,  The.— Reginald  Heber.— CEL— HSS  3 


317 


Spring 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Spring  Lament,  A. — Louis  J.  Magee. — CG  2 

Spring  Lilt,  A.— Anon.— BFV 

Spring  Maiden,  A.— E.  L.  Liddell.— BS  24 

Spring  Meeting,  A.     {Harper's  Young  People.) — NV 

Spring  Morning,  A. — Lady  Flora  Hastings. — PTS 

Spring  Morning. — David  M.  (?)  Moir. — AD 

Spring  of  the  Year,  Ttfe. — Allan  Cunningham. — OB 

Spring  on  the  Heights.— M.  H.  C— CG  .3 

Spring  Planting-time. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 

Spring  Poet,  The.— Anon.— BS  13 

Spring  Poet,  The.— Hal  Berte.— DES 

Spring  Pointing  to  God. — Michael  Bruce.     See  Elegy 

— Written  in  Spring. 
Spring  Rondeau,  A.— R.  R.  K(irk).— CG  3 
"Spring,  she  is  a  blessed  thing.  The."     (C.) — Mary 
Howitt. 
(Springf.The].)- AE  («eZ.)— LLC— PEG    {el.    abr.) 
Spring  Song,  A.     (With  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Spring  Song. — Anon. — NV 
Spring  Song. — Bliss  Carman. — VA 
Spring  Song,  A.     (Children's  Friend    and    Kindergar- 
ten.)—HV 
Spring  Song,  A.— Jas.  F.  Clarke.— PCS 
Spring  Song. — G :  Eliot. — See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 
Spring  Song. — Kate  Hawthorn. — AD 
Spring  Song. — Jessie  Norton. — AD 
Spring  Song  in  the  City. — Rob't    Buchanan. — SN — 

VA 
Spring  Song  of  the  Birds. — King  James  I.  of  Scotland. 

—OB 
Spring,  the  Sweet  Spring. — T:  Nashe.     <See  Spring. 
Spring  Twilight.— E:  R.  Sill.— HBR 
Spring  Voices. — Anon. — PS 
Spring  Whistles. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Spring's  Coming.— Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Spring's  Immortality. — Mackenzie  Bell. — VA 
Spring's  Welcome. — J:  Lyly.     <See  Alexander  and  Cam- 

paspe. 
Spring-tide. — Anon. — OB 
Spring-time.     {With  music.) — Anon. — AD 
Spring-time. — Anon. — HSS  1 
Spring-time. — R.  P.  Graham. — AD 

('Tis  Spring-time.)— LPS— PP 
Springtime.- B.  F.  Griffin.— CG  3 
Spring-time,  The.     {Class  rec.) — Lily  Rutherford.  — 

AD 
Spring-time  and  Love. — J :  Fletcher.     <See  Valentinian. 
Spring-time  Flowers. — Lina  Dutcher. — DCP 
Spring-time  is  Coming. — Anon. — AD 
Spurgeon's  Advice. — ^C:  H.  Spurgeon. — -KNE 
Squarest  un  among  'Em,  The.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) — 

BS18 
Squeers'  School. — C:  Dickens.     See  Nicholas  Nickleby. 
Squeeze  in  the  Dark,  A. — Emma  D.  Banks. — BR 
Squire  Billings'  Pickerel. — Anon. — DFY 
Squire  Thornhill's  Argument. — Anon.- — PTS 
Squire's  Bargain,  The. — E.  M.  Traquair. — BS  15 
Squire's  Pew,  The.--Jane  Taylor.— FEP 
Squire's  Pledge,  The.— Anon.— CS  15 
Squire's  Rooster,  The.— W.  H.  Neall.— CS  33 
Squirrel.  The.— Mary  Howitt.— POS 
Squirrel's  Arithmetic,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Squirrel's  Lesson,  The.— Anon.— DS—PP—YA—YFR 

(Time  Enough.)— NV 
Squirtgun  Uncle  Maked  Me,  The. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — 

RCR 
Stab,  The.— Will  W.  Harney.— AA—CS  7 
Stabat   Mater  Dolorosa. — Fra  Jacopone.     {Orig.   and 

tr.  by  Abraham  Coles.) — BNL 
Stability  of  our    Government,     The. — C.     Sprague. — 
KNE— PFP 
(Individual  Puritv  the  Hope  of  the  State.) — BLP 
Stability  of  Virtue,  The.— T.  Marshall.— FTR 

(Sturdy  Rock,  for  all  his  Strength,  The.)— HBP 
"Stack  Arms." — Jos.  B.  Alston. — EDY 
Staff  and  Scrip,  The.     {Abr.) — Dante  G.  Rossetti. — 

WR8 
Stag  Hunt,  The.— Walter  Scott.     See    Lady    of   the 

Lake,  The. 
Stag  Hunt,  The. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Stage,  The.     (Frags. Jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Stage  Adventures,     'The. — Jerome     K.     Jerome.     See 

Stage  Land. 
Stage  Detective  and   Peasants,  The. — Jerome  K.  Je- 
rome.    See  Stage  Land. 
Stage   Hero,  The. — Jerome    K.    Jerome.     See    Stage 

Land. 
Stage  Heroine,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Stage 

Land. 
Stage  Land,  Sels.  fr. — Jerome  K.  Jerome. 
Child,  The.     (Cond.)— VSG 
Comic  Lovers,  The.     (Conrf.)— VSG 
Comic  Man,  The.     (Cond.)— VSG 


Stage  Land  (continued). 

Good  Old  Man,  The.     (Cond. )—VSG 
Hero,  The.     (C— cond.)— VSG 

(Stage  Hero,  The— di^.  cond. )—WR  9 
Irishman,  The.     (Cond.)— VSG 
Lawyer,  The.     (Cond.)— VSG 
Sailor,  The.     (Cond.)— VSG 
Stage  Adventures,  The.     (Adventures,  The — C.) — 

WR  8  (cond.) 
Stage  Detective    and    Peasants,    The.     (Cond.) — 
WR8 
(Detective,  The— C— dt/f.  cond.)— VSG 
(Peasants,  The— C.—di^.  cond.)— VSG 
Stage  Heroine,  The.    (Heroine,  The — C. — si.  cond.) 

— WR8 
Villain,  The.     (Cond.)— VSG 
Stage  of  Destiny,  The. — Beaumont  Claxton. — CS  36 
Stage-driver's  Story,  The.— Anon.— CS  21— DS— NPS 

— PR— WR  19— YP 
Stage-struck.     (Play.) — Anon. — BS  8 — HD 
Stage-struck    Blacksmith,    The.  —  H.    E.    McBride. — 

MCD 
Stage-struck  Clerk. — Anon. — SED 
Stage-struck  Darkey,  The.     (Farce.)  —  Anon. — DE 
(Widow's  Victim,  The.)— BC 

Stage-struck  Darkey.  The.     (Dial.) White.— BC 

Stage-struck  Hero,  The. — Anon. — BC 
Stage-struck  Hero,  The. — Anon. — BS  24— CS  35 
Stagnant,  The.     (St.  Nicholas.)— hP8~PF 
Stained  by  the  Blood  of  Heroes. — Anon. — PRR 
Stammering  Wife,  The.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— THP 

(Stuttering  Lass,  The.)— AWH— HR— MR 
Stamp  Act,  The.— W:  Grimshaw.— WR  10 
Stamp  Officers'  Salaries,  Sel.  fr.     (Reply  to  Threats  of 

Violence.)— J:  P.  Curran.— PS— SS 
Stampede,  The.— Jas.  F.  Cooper.     See  Prairie,  The. 
Stand  by  the  Flag. — Jos.  Holt.— CS  2 
Standby  the  Flag!— J:   N.    Wilder.— GN   (si.    abr.)— 

LC— OS  2— PRR  (br.  sel.  w.  anon,  add.) 
Stand  for  Liberty,  A. — Anon. — DSS 
Stand!  the  Ground's  your  Own. — J:  Pierpont. — WR  5 
See  Warren's  Address  at  the  Battle  of  Bunker 
Hill. 
Standard  of  the  Constitution,  The. — Dan'l  Webster. — 

SS 
Standing  on  Tiptoe. — G.  F.  Cameron. — VA 

(On  Tiptoe.)— TCV 
Stanza  for  Thomson's  Castle  of  Indolence. — G :,  Lord 

Lyttelton.— BNL 
Stanza  from  an  Early  Poem. — Christopher  P.  Cranch. 

— AA 
Stanza  on  Freedom,  A. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Stanzas 

on  Freedom. 
Btanzas:  "Often   rebuked,   yet   always   back,"   etc. — 

Emily  Bronte.— V A— WEP  4 
Stanzas:  "And  thou  art  dead,"  etc. — Lord  Byron. — 
FEP 
("And  thou  art  dead,  as  young  and   fair" — C.) — 

WEP  4 
(Elegy  on  Thyrza.)— PGT  1 
Stanzas:   "Could    love    forever."     (C. — sel.)  —  Lord 
Byron.— WEP  4 
("Could  love  forever  run  like  a  river.") — BPB 
Stanzas:  "Oh,  talk  not  to  me,"  etc. — Lord  Byron.     See 
Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road  between  Flor- 
ence and  Pisa. 
Stanzas:  "Though  the  day  of  my  destiny's  over." — 

Lord  Byron.     See  Stanzas  to  Augusta. 
Stanzas  (C):  "She  was  a  queen  of  noble  Nature's  crown- 
ing."— Hartley  Coleridge. — WEP  4 
(Solitary-hearted,  The.)— OB 
Stanzas.— Christopher  P.  Cranch.— ASL— FEP— HBP 
— TAV 
(Gnosis.)— TAS 
(  Knowing. ) — LLC 
(Thought.)— BNL— GP 

("Thought  is  deeper  than  all  speech" —  br.  sel.) — 
CS  1 
Stanzas  (C).    "Farewell,  Life,"  etc.— T:  Hood.— FEP 
— VA 
(Farewell.  Life.)— BNL 
Stanzas: — "In  a  drear-nighted  December." — J:  Keats. 
OB 
(December.) — GN 

(Happy  Insensibility.)— OH— PGT  1 
(Winter.)— BPB 
Stanzas  (C):  "My  life," etc.— R:H.  WUde.— AA— HBP 
(Life.)— BNL 

("My  life  is  like  the  summer  rose.") — ASL — FEP 
— YBF 
Stanzas— April,    1814.      (C.)— Percy     B.     Shelley.— 
WEP  4 
(Remorse.) — OB 


318 


TITLE  INDEX 


Steam-threshing 


Stanzas  for  Music.     (C.)— Lord  Byron.— CEL—FEP 
— HBP— WEP  4— YBF 
(For  Music.)— OB 
(Nature's  Daughter.) — MR 

("There  be  none  of  Beauty's  daughters.") — PGT  1 
Stanzas  for  Music:  "There's  not  a  joy,"  etc. — Lord 
Byron.— WEP  4 
("There's  not  a  joy  the  world  can  give.") — FEP 
(Youth  and  Age.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Stanzas  for  Music  :"They  say  that  Hope,"  etc. — Lord 

Byron.— WEP  4 
Stanzas  for  Music.    (C — fr.  an   unfinished  drama.) — 

Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AA 
Stanzas  for  the  Sentimental.     {Punch.) 

I.  On  a  Tear  which  Angelina  Observed  Trickling 

down  my  Nose  at  Dinner  Time. — HPE 

II.  On  my  Refusing  Angelina  a  Kiss  under  the 
Mistletoe.— HPE 

III.  On  my  Finding  Angelina  Stop  Suddenly  in  a 
Rapid  After-supper  Polka  at  Mrs.  Tompkins's 
Ball.— HPE 

Stanzas  from  the  Grande  Chartreuse. — Matthew  Ar- 
nold—AVP 
Stanzus   from  "Wine  of    Cyprus."    (<SeZ.)  —  Eliz.  B. 

Browning. — GEL 
Stanzas  in  Memory  of  the  Author  of  "Obermann." — 

Matthew  Arnold.- AVP 
Stanzas  on  Freedom. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — GN  {sel.) 
(Freedom.)— BLP  {si.  abr. )—PEO  {abr.) 
(Stanza  on  Freedom,  A — hr.  sel.) — -AA 

("They  are  slaves  who  fear  to  speak.") — FHS 
Stanzas  on  Seeing  the  Speaker   Asleep.     (C.) — Win- 
throp  M.  Praed. 
(Verses  on  Seeing  the  Speaker  Asleep  in  his  Chair.) — 
AVP 
Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  a  Friend.     (At  the  Funeral — 
O— Reginald  Heber.— FEP 
("Thou  art  gone  to  the  grave.") — HBP 
Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  Thomas  Gray. — Anon. — EDY 
Stanzas  on  Woman. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Vicar  of 

Wakefield,  The. 
Stanzas  to  an  Egg.     {Punch.)     HPE 
Stanzas    to    Augusta.      (C.) — Lord     Byron. — HBP — 
WEP  4 
(Stanzas:     "Though  the  day,"  etc.) — EPs  . 
Stanzas  to  Eternity. — Elsie  M.  Wilbor. — DR 
Stanzas  to  my  Nose. — Anon. — WR  9 
Stanzas  to  Pale  Ale.     {Punch.) — HPE 
Stanzas  to  the  Memory  of  Thomas  Hood. — Bartholo- 
mew Simmons. — EDY — VA 
(To  the  Memory  of  Thomas  Hood.)— BNL  {sel.)— 
HBP 
Stanzas  Written   in    Dejection    near    Naples.     (C.) — 
Percy  B.  Shelley.— WEP  4 
("Sun  is  warm,  the  sky  is  clear,  The" — si.  abr.) — 
BNL 
Stanzas  Written  in  his  Library.     (Occasional  Pieces, 
XVIII.)— Rob't  Southey.— WEP  4 
(Books.)— BNL 
(His  Books.)— OB 
(Library,  The.)— LBB— MBB 
("My  days  among  the  dead  [are  passed].") — FEP 

—HBP— YBF 
(Scholar,  The.)— PGT  1 
Stanzas  Written  in  the  Churchyard  of  Richmond,  York- 
shire.— Herbert  Knowles. — EPs 
(Lines  Written  in  a  Churchyard.) — CS  9 
(Lmes  Written  in    Richmond    Churchyard,  York- 
shire.)— FEP— HBP 
Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road  between  Florence  and 
Pisa.     (O— Lord  Byron.— BPB— WEP  4 
(All  for  Love.)— PGT  1— YBF 
("Oh,  talk  not  to  me  of  a  name  great  in  story.") 

—FEP 
(Stanzas.)— HBP 
Star,  The.— Jane  Taylor.— BVC  {si.  abr.) 
(Twinkle,  Twinkle— a6r. )—TFS 
(Twinkle,  twinkle,  little  star.)— SM 
(Abr.)— NV— PC 
Star  at  Dawn,  The.— Sophie  W.  Weitzel.— TAS 
Star  Exercise. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — SSE 
Star  in  the  West,  The.— Hezekiah  Butterworth. — PEO 
Star  in  the  West,  A.— Eliza  Cook.— BLP 
Star  of  Bethlehem,  The.     {SI.  abr.)—W:  C.  Bryant.— 

TAS 
Star  of  Bethlehem,  The.— H:  Kirke  White.— FEP 
Star  of  Calvary,  The. — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — AA 
Star  of  Democracy,  The.     (Speech  on  the  occasion  of 
the  nomination  of  Gen.  S.  B.  Buokner  as  Gov- 
ernor of  Kentucky.) — H:  Watterson. — DES 
"Star  of  love  now  shines  above.  The." — G:  Morris. — 

BNL 
Star-gazing. — Anon.— CS  30 


Starless  Crown,  The.— Anon.— BS  17— CS  30 

Starlight.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— AA— OH 

Starlight. — Lucy  Larcom. — -LCS 

Starling,  The.— Rob't  Buchanan.— HR—MMR 

Starry  Flag,  The.— Stockton  Bates.— CS  29— PRR 

Starry  Host,  The. — J:  L.  Spalding.     See  God  and  the 

Soul. 
Stars. — Anon. — OS  1 

Stars,  The.      {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Stars,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.     See  Song  of  the  Stars, 

The. 
Stars. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Stars,  The. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — AA 
Stars.— Frances  R.  Havergal. — YBT 
Stars,  The.— E.  Murray.— KC 
Stars.     {Abr.}— Bryan  W.  Procter.— CGd^OS  1 
Stars  and  Stripes,  The. — Anon. — PEO 
Stars  and  Stripes,  The.     {Br.   sel.   fr.   The  Battle  of 
Lexington.) — E:  Everett. — CP 

(Flag,  The.)— SO 

(National  Banner,  The.)— CS  6— KNE 

(Our  National  Banner.) — LLC 
Stars  and  Stripes,  The.— Jas.  T.  Fields.— AWB 
Stars  and  Stripes,  The. — Lucretia  G.  Noble. — HS 
Stars  and    the    Flowers,  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow.— 
GMS 

(Flowers— C.)— AD— BS  22— HBP— HSS  1— SE 
Stars  are  Coming,  The. — Anon.— NV 
Stars'  Ball,  The.     {Ladies  Home  Journal.) — NV 
Stars  Begin  to  Fall. — Anon. — AA 
Stars  in  my  Country's  Sky. — LHS— WRD 
Star's  Monument,  The,  Br.  sels.  fr. — Jean  Ingelow. 

Gone.— HDL 

"If  there  be  memory  in  the  world  to  come." — GG 
Star-song,  Thef:  A  CaroU  to  the  King,  Sung  at  White- 
hall—(7.].    {Abr.)— Roh't   Herrick.- EPs— GN 
Star-spangled  Banner,  The.— Fs.  S.  Key.—  AA  —AWB 

—  BNL  —  CP  —  CS  4  —  EA  —  EDY  —  FEP 

—  GP  —  HBP  —  LLC  —  OS  1  —  PAP  — 
PAPm— PYO— TAV— WCLG  1 

{SI.  atr.)- BLP— SM 

Star-spangled  Banner,  The.  {Rec.  including  song.) — 
Jessie  F.  O'Donnell.— DR 

Start  True.— Mrs.  H.  C.  Blakeslee.— HSS  2 

Starting  in  Life. — Anon. — FDY 

Startling  Revelations.     {Boston  Globe.) — SR  5 
(Freckle-faced  Girl,  The.)— BS  11— CRR 
(What  the  Little  Girl  Said.)  —  CS  24  —  DS  —  NPS 

—  YP 

State  of  Maine,  The.— W:  P.  Frye.— SC 
State-craft.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Stately  Minuet,  The. — Hezekiah  Butterworth. — DR 
States,  The.— Fitzhugh  Lee.— FD  2 
Station-agent's  Story,  The. — Rose  H.  Thorpe. — CS  18 
Station-master's  Story,  The. — G:  R.  Sims.— CS  24 

(In  the  Signal  Box.)— BS  13— PR  {si.  abr.) 
Statuary.     {Tab.) — Anon.— BS  13 
Statuary  Vivants. — Anon. — TCP 
Statue,  The.— Anon.— LLC 
Statue  and  the  Bust,  The.     {Abr.) — Rob't  Browning. 

— WR8 
Statue  Bride,  The.     {Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Statue  in  Clay,  The.— Anon.— BR— BS  8— CS  12 
Statue  of  Liberty  Unveiled.— G:  W.  Bungay.— CS  27 
Statue  of  Lorenzo  De'  Medici,  The. — Jas.  E.  Nesmith. 

j^ji^ 

Statue  of  Victor  Hugo,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Victor  Hugo.)— 
Aleernon  C.  Swinburne. — EDY 

Statue  of  Webster,  The.— Mellen  Chamberlain. — FD  2 

Statue's  Story,  The.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 

Stavoren. — Helen  S.  Conant.— TMD 

"Stay,  Phoebus[,  stay]!"  — Edmund  Waller.— ES  — 
OEL 

"Stay-at-Home's"  Paean,  The. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — 
PLD 

"Stay-at-Home's"  Plaint,  The. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — 
PLD 

Steadfast  Shepherd,  The.— G:  Wither.— FEP 

Steak,  The.  (The  Poetical  Cookery-book. — Punch.) — 
HPE 

Stealing  Apples. — J.  D.  Vinton.— SD 

Stealing  Roses. — Mrs.  Mary  L.  Gaddess. — WR  12 

Steam  Chair,  A. — W:  L.  Alden.  See  Adventures  of 
Jimmy  Brown,  The. 

Steamboat,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— HBP 

Steamboat  Race,  The. — S:  L.  Clemens.  See  Gilded 
Age,  The. 

Steamboats,  Viaducts  and  Railways.  (Poems  Com- 
posed or  Suggested  during  a  Tour  in  the 
Summer  of  1833,  Sonnet  XLII.)— W:  Words- 
worth.— EPs 

Steam-threshing  Machine,  The. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. 
—PGT  2 


319 


steel 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Steel  Glass,  The,  Sels.  fr. — G:  Gascoigne. 
Epilogues.— WEP  1 
Piers  Ploughman.— WEP  1 

Steering  Home.— Timothy  D.  Sullivan. — TIP 

SteUa.— C:  H.  Crandall.- AA 

Stella  and  Mira.  (Piscatory  Eclogues,  VII. :    The  Prize, 
sts.  22-27.) — Phineas  Fletcher. — EP 

Stella  Lookt  on. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel 
and  Stella. 

"Stella,   the   only    planet   of    my   light." — Sir   Philip 
Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

"Step   to  the  Captain's  Office  and  Settle." — G.     B. 
Cheever.— FAS 

Stepping  in  Father's  Tracks. — Louise  S.  Upham. — TS 

Stepping  Westward. — W:  Wordsworth. — MBL 

Stevenson's  Birthday. — Kathe.  Miller. — A  A — EDY 

Stewart  Holland.— Walter  K.  Fobes.— FR 

Stewed  Duck  and  Peas.     (Fr.  The  Poetical  Cookery- 
book.— Pwnc/i.  )— H  PE 

Stewed    Steak.      (Fr.    The    Poetical    Cookery-book.) 
{Punch.)— B.VE 

Stick  to  Your  Bush.— J.  W.  Watson.— NPS—YP 

Stickit  Minister,  The.— S.  R.  Crockett.— WR  21 

Sticky.     (Punch.  — HPE 

Stigma,  The.— F.  De  H.  Janvier.— CS  12 

Still  Day  in  Autumn,  A. — Sarah  H.  Whitman.— HBP 
(A6r.)— BNL— POS 

"Still  in  Thy  love  I  trust."— A.  A.  Fields.— ASL— HDL 

Still  Small  Voice,  The.— Alex.  Smart.— PoR 

Still  Small  Voice,  A.— R.  Walter  Wright.— TCV 

Still,  Still,  Kiss.— Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and 
Stella. 

Still.  Still,  with  Thee.— Harriet  B.  Stowe.— LLC  (ael.) 
(When  I  awake  I  am  still  with  Thee— C.)— TAS 
(si.  abr.) 

Still  though  the  One  I  sing.— Walt  Whitman. — AA 

Still  True.     (St.  James  Gazette.)— GU 

Still  Waters.— W.  C.  Richards.- CS  23 

Still  Waters  Run  Deep,  Scene  from.  (Dial.) Tay- 
lor.—MPD 

Stingy  Friend,  The.— Martial.— LBB 

Stirring  up  of  Billy  Williams,  The. — Harry  S.  Edwards. 
— NP 

Stirrup-cup,  The. — J:  Hay. — AA 

Stirrup-cup,  The. — Sidney  Lanier. — AA — OS  .3 

Stitch  in  Time  Saves  Nine,  A. — Anon. — ^HVD 

Stockade.     (Charade.) — Anon. — FAD 

Stock-broker,  The.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 

Stoddards,  The.— Eugene  Field.— EF 

Stolen    Bird's    Nest,    The.     (Taft.)— Anon.— BS    14— 
TCP 

Stolen  Child,  The.— W:  B.  Yeats.— AVP 


DS 


PP 


YA 


-HP 


Stolen  Custard,  The. — Anon. 
YFR 

Stolen  Kiss,  A.— G:  Wither.— FEP 
(Upon  a  Stolen  Kiss.)— BNL 

Stolen  Pets,  The.— Anon.— HVD 

Stone  the  Woman,  Let  the  Man  Go  Free. — Anon.- 

Stone  Walls. — Julie  M.  Lippmann. — AA 

Stone-cutter,  The.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— DES 

Stone-cutter,  The.— Bayard  Taylor.— MYF 

Stones  of  Venice,  The,  Sels.  fr. — -J:  Ruskin. 

Education.     (Sel.  fr.  Vol.  III.,  Appendix,  Div.  7 — 

Modern  Education.)— TMR 
Love    of   Change.     (Sel.    fr.    Vol.    II.,  Second,    or 
Gothic,     Period,    Ch.     VI.— The     Nature     of 
Gothic.)— AE 
Man  of  Genius,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Vol.  TIL,  Third,  or 
Renaissance,  Period,  Ch.  II. — Roman  Renais- 
sance.)— AE 
Sermons.     (Sel.   fr.   Vol.   II.,  First,   or  Byzantine, 

Period,  Ch.  II.— Torcello.)— BS  19 
Sky,  The.     (Set.  fr.  Vol.  I.,  Ch.  XXL,  w.  add.  fr. 

Modern  Painters.)— BS  10— OM 
Tyre,  Venice,  and  England.     (Sel.  fr.  Vol.  I.,  Ch.  I.) 
— TMD 

Stonewall  Jackson. — Harry  L.  Fla.sh. — AA 

(Death  of  Stonewall  Jackson,  The.)— A WB— EDY 

Stonewall  Jackson. — Herman  Melville. — AWB — EDY' 

Stonewall  Jackson's  Death. — Paul  M.  Russell. — WR  10 

Stonewall  Jackson's  Way. — J :  W.  Palmer. — AA — AWB 
— EDY— FEP— GP— HB 

Stop,  Stop,  Pretty  Water.— Mrs.  Follen.— NV— TFS— 
WCL 

Stop  yer  Kickin'! — Anon. — BS  25 

Stork,  The.— Eugene  Field.— LS 

Storm,  The.     (/JtaZ.)— Anon.— MFD 

Storm,  The.     (To6.)— Anon.— TCP 

Storm,  The.— Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Storm,  The.— Adelaide  A.  Procter.— FEP 

Storm,  The.— G:  A.  Stevens.— BNL 

Storm  at  Sea. — C:  Dickens.     See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 


Storm  in  Harvest. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Storm  in  the  Distance,  A. — Paul  H.  Hayne.     AA 
Storm  in  the  Forest,  The. — Hannah  F.  Gould. — AD 
Storm  in  Venice,  A.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Ideal  and  the 

Real.)— Joaquin  Miller.— POS 
Storm  of  Delphi,  The. — Felicia  D.   Hemans. — BS   23 
Storm  on  the  East  Coast,  A. — G:  Crabbe.     See  Bor- 
ough, The. 
Storm  Song. — Bayard  Taylor.— HBP 
Storm  the  King.— Fs.  M.  Finch.— WR  5 
Stormi.ig  of  Corinth,  The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Siege  of 

Corinth,  The. 
Storming  of  Mission  Ridge,  The.     (Sel.) — B :  F.  Taylor. 

— NC— PFP— SC 
(Battle  of  Mission  Ridge,  The — 7:tly.  same  sel.) — SR  4 
Storming  of  Monterey,  The.— C:  F.  Hoffman.— BLP 
(Monterey.)—  AA  —  AWB  —  BAB  —  BNL  — 

EDY  —  FEP  —  HB  —  HBP  —  OS  1  —  PAP 

— PAPm— PPSr— TAV 
Storming    of    the    Castle,    The. — Walter    Scott.     See 

I  van  hoe. 
Storms  and  Shipwreck.      (Frags,   fr.  various  authors.) 

—BNL 
Stormy  Petrel,  The.— Anon.— POS 

(Lines  to  the  Stormy  Petrel.) — BNL 
Stormy  Petrel,  The.— Park  Benjamin.— POS 
Stormy  Petrel,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— BNL— FEP 

— HBP— PHS— SN— VA 
Story,  A.— Anon.— CPL 
Story,  The.     (Dial.)— Anon— HYD 
Story  by  the  Fire,  A.— Dora  Greenwell.— PC— WCL 
Story  for  a  Child,  A.     (C.)— Bayard  Taylor. 

(Night  with  a  Wolf,  A.)— GN— PHS— WCL 
Story  Katie  Told,  The.— A.  C.  H.  S.— BS  14 
Story  of  a  Bedstead,  The.— Anon.— CS  27 
Story  of  a  Blackbird. — Alice  Cary. — BLF 
Story  of  a  Cent,  The. — Kate  Lawrence. — CPL 
Story  of  a  Governess,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Mrs.  Harwood's 

Secret— ad.)— M.  O.  W.    Oliphant.— NDP 
Story  of  a  Great  Artist,  The.— Eliz.  P.  Allen.— CS  36 
Story  of  a  Leaf,  The. — Rebecca  D.  Rickoff. — AD 
Story  of  a  Little  Red  Hen,  The.— S.  E.  Eastman. — 

WR  24  '• 

Story  of  a  New  Hat. — Anon.— CS  18 
Story  of  a  Picture. — Anon.— YBT 
Story  of  a  Picture,  The.     ("Breaking  Home  Ties.") — 

Frances  Forrester.— BS  22 
Story  of  a  Short  Life,  The,  Sel-.  fr. — Juliana  H.  Ewing. 
Leonard  and  the  V.  C.     (Chs.  VI.  and  VII. — abr.) 

— WR  14 
Story  of  a  Short  Life,  The.     (Ch.  XL— si.  cond.)— 

WR9 
Story  of  a  Stowaway,  The. — Clement  Scott. — CS  35 — 

DS  (abr.)— FR  (si.  cond.) 
(Stowaway,  The.)— VSG 
Story  of  a  Summer  Day,  The. — Alex.  Hume. — BNL — 

CEL 
(Summer  Day,  A — si.  abr.) — OB 
Story  of  an  Ambuscade,  The. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — WR  5 
Story  of  an  Apple,  A. — Sydney  Dyer.- — BS  15 
Story  of  Bishop  Potts,  The. — Max   Adeler.     See  Out 

of  the  Hurly  Burly. 
Story  of  Chinese  Love,  A.     (Los  Angeles  Express.) — 

BS  12— CS  19— DS— SDR— YA 
Story  of  Constance,   The. — J:   Gower.     See  Confessio 

Amantis,  The. 
Story  of  Cruel  Psamtek,  The. — Anon. — NA 
Story  of  Deacon  Brown,  The. — Anon. — CS  16 
Story  of  Dick,  The.— Frank  L.  Stanton.— WR  19 
Story  of  Echo,  The.— Anon.— WR  5 
Story  of  Faith,  The.     (Gospel  Expositor.)— CS  29 

(Little  Maid's  "Amen,"A.)— SSS 
Story  of  Fifty-two  Prayer-meetings. — Anon. — WR  9 
Story  of  George    Lee.     (SI.    abr.) — Hamilton    Aid^. — 

DS. 
(George  Lee— C.)— CS  26 
Story  of  Good  Little  Vincent. — Jos.  B.  Smiley. — CS  33 
Story  of  Guggle.— T:  Speed.— DR 
Story  of  Hard  Times,  A.— Pauline  Phelps. — WR  21 
Story  of  "Hiawatha,"  The. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See 

Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 
Story  of  his  Life. — Eugene  Field. — EF 
Story  of  John  Maynard.— J:  B.  Gough.— BS  17 
(John  Maynard,  the  Hero-pilot.)— FTR 
(Pilot,  The.)— CS  23— CSS— MMR— WRD 
Story  of  Life,  A.— Jean  Ingelow.— CS  21 

(Sweet  is  Childhood.)— VS 
Story  of  Life,  The.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe. 

(Life's  Story.)— BS  21 
Story  of  Little  Moses,  The.— Eugene  J.  Hall.— CS  28 
Story  of  Little  Suck-a-Thumb,  The.  —  Heinrich  Hoff- 
mann.—BVC 
Story  of  Omar,  The.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL 


320 


TITLE  INDEX 


Stripes 


Stor>'  of  Prince  Agib,  The.— W:  S.  Gilbert.— N A 
Story  of  Pyramid  Thothmes,  The. — Anon. — NA 
Story  of  Rebekah,  The.— T:  M.  Armstrong.— CS  28 
Story  of  Rimini,   The,  Sel.   jr.    (Garden   and    Summer 

House,  A.)— Leigh  Hunt.— WEP  4 
Story  of   Rosina,    The.      (,Abr.)  —  Austin    Dobson. — 

WR9 
Story  of  Ruth  Bonython,  The.— J:   G.    Whittier.     See 

Mogg  Megone. 
Story   of    St.    Ursula,  The.  —  J :  Ruskin.     See   Saint 

Ursula. 
Story  of  Santa  Claus,  A. — Harriet  A.  Glazebrook. — TS 
Story  of  Seven  Devils,  A.     (C.     Dusky  Philosophy — 

First  Exposition.) — Frank  R.  Stockton. 
(Uncle  Peter's  Masterly  Argument.) — WR  15 
Story  of  Seventy-six,  The.     (Seventy-six — C.)— W:  C. 

Bryant.— PRR 
Story  of  Sigurd  the  Volsung,  The,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Morris. 
Of  the  Passing  Away  of  Brynhild.    (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  III.) 

— VA 
Slaying  of  the  Niblungs,  The.    (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  IV.)— LH 
Story  of  Some  Bells,  The.— Anon.— CS  24 
Story  of  Thank.sgiving,  The. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — HE 
Story  of  the  Bad  Little  Boy.     (C.)— S:  L.  Clemens. 

(Mark  Twain's  Story  of  the  Bad  Little  Boy.) — CS  9 
Story  of  the  Barefoot   Boy,   A. — J:  T.   Trowbridge. — 

TMD 
Story  of  the  Days,  The.     (PZo?/.)- Anon.— EuE 
Story  of  the  Divine  Comedy,  The. — Kate  M.  Rabb. — 

NE 
Story  of  the  Faithful  Soul,  The. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. 

— BeR— CS  18— FMR— MR— SO— VSG 
Story  of  the  Gate. — Harrison  Robertson. — HP 
Story  of  the  Gentians,  The. — Anon. — PPSr 
Story  of  the  Good  Little  Bov.     (C.)— S:  L.  Clemens. 
(Mark  Twain's  Story  of  the  "Good  Little  Boy.") — 

CSll 
Story  of  the  Kinkankee,    The. — Mrs.    Russell    Kavan- 

augh.— KC 
Story  of  the  Little  Rid  Hinf,  The].— Mrs.  L.  D.  Whit- 
ney.—CS  12— DS 
(  Verse  vers.  at.  to  Riverside  Mag.) — MYF 
Story  of  the  Man  who  Didn't  Know  Much,  The,  Sel.  fr. 

(Honor  of  the  Woods,  The— Ch.  Vll.—cond.) 

— W:  H.  H.  Murray.— NP 
Story  of  the  Monk  Felix,   The.— H :  W.   Longfellow. 

See  Christus:  a  Mystery. 
Story  of  the  Morning-glory  Seed,  The. — Marg.  Eytinge. 

—AD 
Story  of  the  Nibelungen  Lied,  The. — Kate  M.  Rabb. — 

NE 
Story  of  the  Old  Arm-chair.  The.— G:  Thatcher. — TK 
Story  of  the  Priest  Philemon,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Soul 

of  Lilith.)— Marie  Corelli.— VSG 
Story  of  the  "Star  Spangled  Banner." — Anon. — DFR 
Story  of  the  Swords,    The. — Adelaide    C.    Waldron. — 

WR  10 
Story  of  the  Wild  Huntsman,  The.  —  Heinrich  Hoff- 
mann.— NA 
Story  of  the  Yorkshire  Coast,  A. — Anon. — WR  21 

(Tale  of  the  Yorkshire  Coast,  A— si.  abr. )—BS  8 
Story  of  Two  Little  Shoes,  The. — Jeannie  P.  Ewing. — 

CS34 
Story  the  Doctor  Told,  The. — Harrydele  Hallmark. — 

BS26 
Story  which  the  Ledger  Told,  The.— Luella  D.  Smith. 

— CS25 
Story-book  Boy,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Story-teller,  The.— Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Stowaway,  The.— Arthur  (?)  Matthison.— NPS— YP 
(Little  Hero,  The.)— CS  13— FR— MYF 
(Little  Stowaway,  The— /rose  vers.)— CS  14— LLC 
(SI.  o6r.)— BRR— CSS— EA 
Stowaway,  The. — Clement     Scott.     See    Story    of    a 

Stowaway,  The. 
Strafford,  Sel.  fr.     (Sels.  fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  1,  anri  V.,  2.)— 

Rob't  Browning.— EHT 
Strafford's  Defence  against  the  Charge  of  High  Treason, 

Sel.  fr.—T:  Wentworth,   Earl   of   Strafford.— 

OSS 
(Earl  of  Strafford's  Defence — ptly.  same.) — SS 
Straight  Road,  The.— Anon.— CS  19 
Stranded  Bugle,  The.— L.  E.  Mosher.— BS  21 
Strange  Case  of  Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr.  Hyde,  The,  Sel.  fr. 

(Dr.  Lanyon's     Narrative — C. — cond.) — Rob't 

L.  Stevenson. — BS  25 
(Dr.  Lanyon's  Story — si.  diff.  cond.) — WR  16 
Strange  Child's  Christmas,  The. — Anon. — PC 
Strange  Experience,  A. — Josephine  Pollard. — BS  15  — 

PEO 
Strange  Fortunes  of  Two  Excellent  Princes,  The,  Sel. 

fr.     (I   Would  thou  Wert  not  Fair.) — Nicho- 
las Breton.— ELP 


Strange  Harvest,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  25 
Strange  Land,  The.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  5 
Strange  Lands. — Laurence  Alma-Tadema. — PoR 
Strange  Little  Boy,  Thc.^Anon. — PC 
Strange  Passion  of  a  Lover,  A. — G :  Gascoigne. — ES — 

WEP  1 
Strange  Request,  The. — Annie  R.  Johnson. — CS  28 
Strange  Sea  Story,  A,  Sel.  fr.     (Billy's  First  and  Last 

Drink  of  Lager.)— Anon.— CS  16— PTS 
Strange  Vessel,  The.— Ezra  H.  Stafford.— TCV 
Strange  Wild  Song,  A.     (The  Gardener's   Song — C. — 

in  Sylvie  and  Bruno.) — Lewis  Carroll. — BVC 
(Some  Hallucinations — sel.) — THP 
Strangely  Related. — Anon. — SR  4  (si.  abr.) 

(Mixed  Relationship,  A.)— CS  24 
Stranger,  A.— J.  M.  L.— CPL 
Stranger,  The.— Philander  Johnson.— COS— PP 
Stranger  and  his  Friend,    The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — 

CS  36— FEP— HBP— PPSr 
Stranger  in  the  Pew,  A. — Mary  E.  Dodge. — CS  12 
Stranger  on  the  Sill,  The.— T:  B.  Read.— FEP— HSS  3 
Stranger  on  the  Stand,  The.— E.  A.  Blount,  Jr.— CS  31 
Strangers,  The. — Jones  Very. — EPs 
Stranger's  Alms,  The. — H:  Abbey.     See  Singer's  Alms, 

The. 
Strangers  Yet.  —  R:    M.    Milnes,    Lord    Houghton. — 

FLS  (abr.)- PGT2 
Strategy.— C:  K.  Field.— CG  2 
Strategy.— G :  C.  Graham.— GS 
Strategy  of  Dave,  The.— Julia  T.  Bishop.— SR  13 
Stratford  Fountain.     (Poem  for  the  Dedication  of  the 

Fountain    at    Stratford-on-Avon,    etc. — C.) — 

Oliver  W.  Holmes.— BS  16 
Strauss'  Boedry.— C:  F.  Adams.— CS  29 
Strawberry  Woman,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Stray  Child,  A.— Eliza  S.  Turner.— CS  10— NPS— YP 
(Little  Goose,  A.)— OS  1— PC— WCL 
(host— abr.and  si.  diff.)— BR— PTS 

Stray  Parrot,  A. Paul.— SCS 

Stray  Sunbeam,  A.— Frank  M.  Gilbert. — CS  27 
Strayed  Reveller,  The.— Matthew  Arnold.- WEP  4 
Stream  of  Life,  The.  —  Arthur   H.    Clough.  —  CEL  — 

FEP— WEP  4 
Stream  of  Life,  The. — Reginald  Heber. — LLC 
Stream  of  Life,  The.— E:  Young.    See  Night  Thoughts. 
Street  Cries.- E:  Eggleston.— CS  20— GH  —  SR  10— 

WR3 
Street  Crowd,  A. — Anon.— CS  22 
Street  Gamin's  Story  of  the  Play,  A. — Anon.- — CD — 

CS23 
Street  Incident,  A. — Anon. — DJS 
Street  Musicians,  The.— G:  L.  Catlin.— CS  16— PPSr 

Street  of  By-and-bye,  The.— Mrs. Abdy.— PPSr 

(In  the  Street  of  By-and-by.)— CS  17 
Street  Tumblers,  The.— G:  R.  Sims.— CS  28 
Street-car  Romance,  A. — W:  Ames. — CG  2 
Streets  of   London,  The. —  Rob't,  Earl   of   Lytton. — 

WR  1 
"Strength  for  the  day:  at  early  dawn  I  stand."     (Scrib- 

ners'  Magazine.) — GG 
Strength    of    the    American    Government,    The. — J: 

Bright.— SSD 
(American  Government,  The — abr.) — LLC 
Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers,  Sels. 

fr. — Jas.  A.  Garfield. 
Arlington.- TMR 
Decoration  Day  Address.     (Ptly.  like  TUB..)— SST> 

(Arlington  Heights  Oration— seZ.) — GG 
Decoration  Day  Address  at  Arlington.     (Ptly.  like 

Graves,  etc.)— TMD 
Graves  of  Union  Soldiers  at  Arlington,  The.- — NC 
Immortality  of  True  Patriotism.    (Ptly.  like  TMR.) 

— NC 
Inspiration  of  Sacrifice,  The.    (Ptly.  like  TMR.) — • 

TMD 
Strife,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Strife  and  Peace,  Sel.    fr.      (Little    Brawl,    A — sel.    fr. 

The  Last  Strife.)— Frederika  Bremer.— OS  1 
Strike  among   the    Flowers,   A. — Mrs.    Russell   Kava- 

naugh. — KJ 
Strike  at  Colchester,  The.— T.  B.  Exeter.— BS  24 
Strike  for  Prohibition. — Anon. — TS 
Strike  the  Blow.— F.  McK.— PAPm 
Strikes.— Anon.— CPL— HSS  3 
Striking  Expression. — Anon. — DSS 
Striking  Oil.— H.  E.  McBride.- CS  26 
Striking  the  Blow.— H.  E.  McBride.— MHD 
String,  The.     (Piece  of  String,  The.) — Guy  de  Mau- 
passant.— WGS 
Strip  of     Blue,     A.  —  Lucy     Larcom.  —  AA  —  FP  — 

GP  (a6r. )  —  SN  —  TAV 
Stripes  and  the  Stars.  The.— Edna  D.  Proctor.— AWB 

—PAPm 


321 


strive 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Strive  to  live  well;  tread  in  the   upright  ways." — 

Anon.— HSS  3      ■ 
Strive,  Wait  and  Pray. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — FP — 

LLC 
StrollingPlayers. — G:  Crabbe.     See  Borough,  The. 
Strong,  The.— J:  V.  Cheney.— AA 
"Strong  are  the  mount#ins,  Lord,  but  stronger  Thou!" 

— Anon.— GG 
Strong  as  Death. — H :  C.  Bunner. — ASL 
Strong  Drink.- J.  A.  Seiss.— CS  8 
Strong  Heart,  The.— E.  H.  Chapin.— HSS  3 

(Good  Strong  Heart,  A.)— LLC 
Strong,  Heroic  Line,  The.     (Sel.  jr.  Poem  Read  at  the 

Dinner  Given  to  the  Author  by  the  Medical 

Profession,  etc.) — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — AA 
"Strong  men  have  strong  convictions."     {Br.  sel.  fr. 

Oliver  P.  Morton.)— Jas.  A.  Garfield.— GG 
Strong  Son  of  God,  Immortal  Love. — Alfred  Tennyson 

See  In  Memoriam. 
Strong  Temptation,  A. — Anon. — CS  16 
Strongest  Government,  The. — T:  Jefferson.     <See  In- 
auguration  Address,  March  4,  1801.  (Republic 

the  Strongest  Government,  A). 
Struggle,  The.— D.  C.  Dandridge.— TAS 
Struggle  on  the  Pass,  The.— Anon.— CS  20 
Struggle  with  a  Stove-pipe,  A.     (C — in  Life  in  Dan- 
bury.)— Jas.  M.  Bailey.— CS  7 
Stubborn  Boot,  The.     {Hearth  and  Home.)—UYF 

(Boy  and  the  Boot,  The— sZ.  a6r.)— TFS 
"Stuck."     (Tob.)- Anon.— TCP 

Student,  The.— Anon.—  CS  1  —  LLC  (al.  abr.)  —  PPSr 
Student    and    his    Neighbors,    The.     {Play.) — N.    A. 

Woodward. — CS  4 
Student-heroes   of   our    War,   The. — C:   W.    Eliot. — 

WR22 
Student's  Frolic,  The.— T.  S.  Robinson.— DT 
Studies. — Fs.  Bacon.— OS  3  {si.  abr.) 
(Books— si.  o6r. )—CR 
(Of  Studies— C.)— LLC  {si.  abr.)— MBL 
Studious  Girl,  A.— Minnie  W.  Gates.— WR  24 
Study  in    Dialect,   A. — Marietta   Holley.     See   Josiah 

Allen's  Wife  as  a  P.  A.  and  P.  I. 
Study  in  Nerves,  A. — Anon. — CR 
Study  of  Astronomy,  The.— O.  M.  Mitchell.— BS  23 
Study  of  Elocution,  The. — Matthew  Simpson. — CS  19 
Study  of  Eloquence,  The.     (De  Oratore,  Bk.  I.,  Sec. 

VIII.— si.  abr.)— Cicero.— CS  21 
Study  of  Latin  and  Greek.     {Sel.  fr.  Professional  Edu- 
cation. ) — Sydney  Smith. — LLC 
Study  of  Trees  and  Flowers,  The. — Rob't  Chambers. — 

HSSl 
Studying  for  the  Contest. — Anon. — SR  12 
Stump  Orator,  The,  Sel.  fr.    (Nature  a  Hard  Creditor.) 

— T:  Carlyle.— KNE— SO— SS 
Stump  Speech,  A. — Anon. — MCS 
Stump  Speech. — Anon. — SCS 
Stupid  Grown  Ups,  The. — Susan  Grant. — CG  3 
Stupid  Lover,  The.     (Z)mi.)— Anon.— NDP 
Sturdy  Rock,  for  All  his  Strength,  The.— T:  Marshall. 

See  Stability  of  Virtue,  The. 
Stuttering  Lass,  The. — J:  G.  Saxe.     See  Stammering 

Wife,  The. 
Subject  for  Dissection,  A. — Anon. — HR 
Sublime  Tobacco. — Lord  Byron.     See  Island,  The. 
Sublimity  of  the  Bible.— L.  J.  Halsey.— CS  11 
Submission. — Lyman  W.  Allen. — HDL 
Sub-mistletoe.     {Lehigh  Burr.) — CG  2 
Subscribing  to  Missionary  Fund. — Anon. — MFD 
Subscription  List,  The. — S:  Lover. — CR  {abr.) 
(Father  Blake's  Collection.) — HR 
(Father  Phil's  Collection.)— BS  6— CS  10— MHR 
{SI.  abr.)— BRR—DI 
(Abr.)— CDV— SDR 
Substitute,  The.— M.  N.  Baskett.— CS' 23 
Substitution. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — HDL 
Subtlety.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Success. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Hyperion. 
Success.— B:  F.  Taylor.— CS  13  . 

Success. Thomson. — KNE 

Success  and  Failure. — Anon. — LLC 

Success  in  Life. — Anon. — CP 

Success  in  Life.— G :  W.  Childs. — BLP 

Success  in  Life.— Jas.  A.  Garfield.—  NPS  —  PP  —  PS 

— YFR— YP 
Successful  Politician,  The. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — AVP 
Succession,  The. — Frances  L.  Mace. — AA 
Succession  of  the  Four  [Foure — C]  Sweet  Months,  The. 

— Rob't  Herrick. — LC 
Succory,  The. — Marg.  Deland. — OS  1 
Such  a  Duck. — Anon. — HP 
"Such  a  starved  bank  of  moss." — Rob't  Browning. 

See  Two  Poets  of  Croisic,  The. 
Such  is  Life.— C:  T.  Brooks.— TAS 


"Such  is  my  name,  and  such  my  tale." — Lord  Byron. 

See  Giaour,  The. 
Such  is  the  Death  the  Soldier  Dies. — Rob't  B.  Wilson. 

— AA 
"Such  Stuff  as  Dreams  are  Made  of." — T:  W.  Higgin- 

son. — AA 
Sudbury  Fight,  The.— Wallace  Rice.— ED Y 
Sudden  Arrival,  A.— Frd'k  Hay.— DT 
Sudden  Blow,  A.— Anon.— MFD 
Sudden  Change  of  Mind,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Sudden  Fortune,  A.     (Money,   Act    II.  —  abr.)  —  E: 

Bulwer-Lytton.— VSG 
Sudden  Light.— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2— VA— VS 
Sudden  Revulsion. — Anon. — KNS 
Sudden  Shower,  A.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— PoR—RCR 
Sudden  Transformation  from  Winter  to  Summer.     {Sel. 

fr.  Tent  Life  in  Siberia,  Ch.  XXXI.)— VSG 
Sue  an'  Me. — D:  Belasco. — DR 
Sue    Waters's    Housekeeping. — Theodore    Whiting. — 

WR26 
Suffering.— R:  C.  Trench.— HDL 

("O  life,  O  death,  O  world,  O  time.")— PGT  2 
Suffering  and  Sympathy. — W :  Shenstone.     See  School- 
mistress,  The. 
Suffering  of  Nehushta,  The.  —  Fs.  Marion  Crawford. 

See  Zoroaster. 
Sufferings  and  Destiny  of  the  Pilgrims.  — E:  Everett. 

See  First  Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 
Sufferings  of    the    Pilgrims. — E:    Everett.    See  First 

Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 
Sufficiency. — Gleeson  White.— VA 
Suffolk  Miracle,  The.— Anon.— CGd 
Suffrage  Question,  The. — Anon. — PD 
Sugar-plum  Tree,  The.     (C.)— Eugene  Field.— DLF— 

EF— WTD 
(That  Sugar-plum  Tree.)— BS  21 
Suggested  by  Plato's  Bust  in  the  Logic  Room. — Mary 

A.  Molloy.— CG  3 
Suggested  Subjects  for  Debate. — Anon. — PS 
Suggestion.     ( The  Jest  Book.)— MRS 
Suggestion  for  a  Happy  New  Year,  A. — Mary  M.  Dodge. 

— YBT 
Suicidal  Cat,  The.— Anon.— CS  9— DS— HR 
Suicide.     {Frag.'',  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Suicide;   or,   the   Sin    of   Self-destruction. — T.    DeW. 

Talmage.— BS  23 
Suing  for  Damages. — Anon. — DSS 
Suit    that    Does   not    Prosper,    A.     {Tab.) — Anon. — 

TCP 
Sully  the  Rooster. — Anon. — SR  9 

Sultan  and  the  Potter,  The.— Sir  Edwin  Arnold.— WR  1 
Sultan  of  my  Books,  The. — Edmund  Gosse. — LBB — 

MBB 
Sum  of  Life,  The.— W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Sum  of  Life,  The. — Ben  King.     See  Pessimist,  The. 
Summer. — Anon. — ELP 
Summer,     {Sel.  fr.  The  Gladness  of  Nature.)  —  W:  C. 

Bryant.— SE 
Summer. — Marietta  Holley. — BIL 
Summer. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal, 

The. 
Summer  (The  Fields  of  Dawn,  XV.)— Lloyd  Mifflin.— 

SN 
Summer,  The.— T:  B.  Read.— CGd 
Summer.  —  Christina  G.  Rossetti.     See  Summer  Days. 
Summer. — Walter  Scott.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Summer. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
Summer. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Summer.— E :  Hovel,  Lord  Thurlow.— FEP 
Summer.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.- GP 

(Midsummer  — C.)—  AA  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  POS 

— SC  («eZ.)— TAS 
(Abr.)— AD— BS  15 
Summer  and  Winter.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Summer  and  Winter. — Percy  B.  Shelley. — POS 
Summer  Boarder,  The. — Anon. — SR  9 
Summer  Campaign,  A. — J.  H.  Scranton. — CG  2 
Summer  Changes. — Philip  B.  Marston. — OS  1 
Summer  Dawn. — W:  Morris. — OB 
Summer  Day,  A.— Anon.— HSS  1  {si.  obr.)— NV 
Summer  Day,  A. — Anon. — PEO 
Summer  Day,  A. — H:  C.  Beeching. — VA 
Summer  Day,  A. — Alex.  Hume.     See  Story  of  a  Sumi- 

mer  Day,  The. 
Summer  Days.— Wathen  M.  W.  Call.— BNL— HBP— 

VA 
Summer  Days  (Summer — C). — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — 

PoR 
Summer  Deceit,  A. — Anon. — DS — YA 
Summer  Drought. — J.  P.  Irvine. — SN 
Summer  Eve.— W:  Whitehead.— CS  19 
Summer  Evening,  The.— J:  Clare.— PHS 
Summer  Evening,  A. — I:  Watts. — BNL 


322 


TITLE  INDEX 


Sunset 


Summer    Evening,   A.     (Description    of   a   Summer's 

Eve— O— H:  Kirke  White.— BVC  (sL  abr.) 
Summer  Evening's  Meditation,  A. — Anna  L.  Barbauld 

— BNL 
Summer  Friends.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Summer  Friends. — J:  Brougham. — BS  5 
Summer  Games.— G:  Cooper.— COS— PP 
Summer  Girl,  The.— Anon.— CG  1 
Summer  Girl,  The  —Edwin  O.  Grover.— CG  2 
Summer  Girl,  The.     {Yale  Record.)— CG  2 
Summer  Idyl,  The.— Philip  Morse.- SR  13 
Summer  Idyl,  A.— F.  M.  Waithman.— WR  13 
Summer  Invocation.     (C.) — W:  C.  Bennett. 

(Invocation  to  Rain  in  Summer.)  —  BNL — GN — 

HBP 
(Rain  in  Summer.) — NV 
Summer  is  Coming.— Anon. — PS 
Summer  is  Coming. — -Alfred  Tennyson. — OH 

(Throstle,  The— C.)— OH 
Summer    is    Ended,    The. — Christina    G.    Rossetti. — 

PGT2 
Summer  Longing,  A. — G:  Arnold. — AD — POS 
Summer    Longings. — Denis    F.    MacCarthy. — BNL — 

FEP— HBP 
Summer  Lullaby,  A. — E.  S.  Bumstead. — NV 
Summer  Moods. — J:  Clare. — BNL 
Summer  Moon. — Rob't  Buchanan. — OS  2 
Summer  Morn,  A. — Jas.  Beattie.     See  Minstrel,  The. 
Summer  Morning. — G:  H.  Boker. — TAS 
Summer  Night,  A.— Matthew  Arnold.— A VP—PGT  2 
Summer  Night,  A.— E:  J.  Chapman.— TCV 
Summer  Night,  A. — Eliz.  Stoddard. — AA 
Summer  Night. — -Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Princess,  The. 
Summer  Nights  at  Grandpa's. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Summer  Noon,  A. — W:  Howitt. — BNL 
Summer  Picture,  A. — Anon. — -HP 
Summer    Pool,   The  (Pastoral    Pictures — C). — Rob't 

Buchanan. — VA 
Summer  Rain.— H :  W.  Beecher.— WCLG  2 
Summer  Rain. — Hartley  Coleridge. — WEP  4 
Summer  Rain. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Summer  Storm. 
Summer  Rain,  The.     (Verses  fr.  A  Week  on  the  Con- 
cord   and   Merrimac   Rivers:   Thursday.) — H: 

D.  Thoreau.— ASL 
Summer  Reminiscence,    A. — Nathaniel    G.  Shepherd. 

—HBP 
("I  sit  before  my  fire  alone" — br.  sel.) — HSS  3 
Summer  Sanctuary,  A. — J:  H.  Ingham. — AA 
Summer  Shower,  A. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Summer  Shower. — Emily  Dickinson. — NV 
Summer    Shower,    The.— T:    B.    Read.— CGd— FP— 

TAV 
Summer  Solstice,  The. — Edith  Thomas.     See  Solstice. 
Summer  Song. — Anon. — DST 
Summer  Storm.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL— PEO  (sel.) 

(Summer  Rain — sel.) — SE 
Summer  Storm. — W:  Morris.     See  Life  and  Death  of 

Jason,  The. 
Summer  Story,  A ,  Sel.  fr.     (Angler,  The — br.  sel.  fr.  Pt. 

I.)— T:  B.  Read.— BNL 
Summer  Sun. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV—YBT 
Summer  Time. — Anon. — NV 
Summer  Vacation. — Mrs.  H.  E.  Kimball. — KNS 
Summer  Winds. — G :  Darley.     See  Song  of  the  Summer 

Winds. 
Summer  Woods. — Mary  Howitt. — LC — NV  (sel.) 
Summer's  Day,  A. — R.  Pier. — CG  3 
Summer's  Day,  A. — Abba  G.  Woolson. — POS 
Summer's    Last    Will    and    Testament,    Sel.    fr. — T: 

Nashe.     See  Spring. 
Summerset  Folks,  The. — Willis  B.  Hawkins.— BS  19 
Summer-sweet. — Katha.  Tynan-Hinkson. — TIP 
Summons,  The.— Walter     Scott.     See     Pibroch     of 

Donuil  Dhu. 
Summons    to    Love. — W:      Drummond.     See     Song: 

"Phoebus,  arise." 
Summum  Bonum. — Rob't  Browning. — OH — YBF 
Summum  Bonum. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — TAS 
Sumner's    Tribute    to    William    Penn.  —  C :    Sumner. 

See  True  Grandeur  of  Nations,  The. 
Sumter.     (C.) — Edmund  C.  Stedman.— EDY 

(Twelfth  of  April,  The.)— AWB 
Sun,  The.— J.  Davis.— N A 
Sun.— H:  Rowe.— OB 

Sun  and  his  Satellites,  The.     (raft.)- Anon.— KNS 
Sun  and   Rain. — Anon. — OH 

Sun  and  the  Violet,  The. — Amelie  V.  Petit. — WR  17 
Sun  Cup,  The. — Archibald  Lampman.— TCV 
Sun  Descending,  The. — W :  Blake.     See  Night. 
Sun  God,  The.— Aubrey  De  Vere.— TIP 
Sun  is  Warm,  the  Sky  is  Clear,  The. — Percy  B.  Shelley. 

See  Stanzas  Written  in  Dejection  near  Naples. 
Sun  of  Liberty,  The.— Victor  Hugo.— NC 


Sun  of  my  Soul. — J:  Keble.     See  Evening. 

Sun  Rises  Bright  in  France,  The. — Allan  Cunningham. 

See  My  Ain  Countree. 
Sun  upon  the  Lake,  The.     (C. — fr.  The  Doom  of  De- 

vorgoil.) — Walter  Scott. 
(Datur  Hora  Quieti.)— PGT  1 
(Evening.)— BPB 
(Leonard  Tarries  Long.) — YBF 
Sun  upon  the  Weirdlaw  Hill,  The.  —  Walter  Scott.  — 

BPB 
Sunbeam,  The. — Anon. — NA 

Sunbeam,  The. — Anon.     See  Little  Sunbeam,  The. 
Sunbeam,  The. — Anon.     (Incl.    in  April  Day,  An.) — 

WR9 
Sunbeam,  The.     (Abr.) — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — AD 
Sunbeam,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— TAS 
Sunbeam  and  Dewdrop. — Frances  R.  Havergal. — YBT 
Sunbeam  Fairies. — Anon. — DLF 
Sunbeams.— Anon.— NV—TFS 

Sunbeams,  The.— Emilie  Poulsson.— DCP  (a6r.)— NV 
Sunbeam's  Mission,  The. — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  31 
Sunday.     (C.)—G:  Herbert.— FEP  (abr.) 
(Sei.)- CEL— PHS— YBF  (longer) 
("Sundays  the  pillars  are" — br.  sel.) — GG 
Sunday  Afternoons. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Sunday  at  Hampstead,  Sel.  fr.     (X.  In  the  Train.) — 

Jas.  Thomson.- — OB 
Sunday  Fishin'. — Harrison  Robertson. — CS  23 — DS 

(Abr.)— BS  11— CDV— SDR 
Sunday  Hymn,  A.— Oliver  W.  Holmes. — TAS 
Sunday  in  the  Country,  A. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Spec- 
tator, The. 
Sunday  Morning. — Johann  P.  Hebel. — WCL 
Sunday  Newspaper,  The. — Herrick  Johnson. — NC 
Sunday  Question,   The.     (Open   Question,   An — C.) — 

T:  Hood.— HPE 
Sunday  Question  of  To-ddy,  The. — Edwin  K.  Hart. — 

CS34 
Sunday  Talk  in  the  Horse  Sheds. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. 

— PR— WR  12— Y  A 
Sunday  up  the  River,  Sels.  fr. — Jas.  Thomson. 
Gifts.     (XV.)— OB 
Sunday  up  the  River.     (XII.)— OB 
"Sundays  the  pillars  are." — G:  Herbert.     See  Sunday. 
Sunday-school  Acrostic. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — SSE 
Sunday-school  Picnic,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Sundered. — Sidney  H.  Morse.— -EPs 
Sun-dial,  The.— Austin  Dobson.— BNL— WR  12 
Sun-dial.      (Dial,    The  —  C.)  —  Jas.    Montgomery.  — 

EPs  (abr.) 
Sunflower,  The.     (In     Songs     of      Experience.) — W: 

Blake.— EPs 
(Ah,  Sunflower— O— WEP  3 
Sunflower,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — POS 
Sunflower  to  the  Sun,  The. — Mary  E.  (Hewitt)  Steb- 

bins. — AA 
Sun-gold.— Helen  M.  Merrill.— TCV 
Sunken  City,  The. — Wilhelm  Mueller  (tr.   by  Jas.   C. 

Mangan).— BNL— HBP 
Sunken  Gold. — Eugene  Lee-Hamilton. — VA 
Sunken  Treasure,,  The. — Nathaniel    Hawthorne.     See 

Grandfather's  Chair. 
Sunlight  and  Starlight.— Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.- TAS 
Sunnit  to  the  Big  Ox,  A.— Anon.— CS  7— HPE 
Sunny  Shaft  did  I  Behold,  A.  —  S:  T.  Coleridge.     See 

Zapolya, 
Sunny  Side,  Sel.  fr.     (Voices  of  the  Flowers.) — Anon. 

— DFR 
Sunny-day  Sermons. — Anon. — YBT 
Sunrise. — E :  Everett.     See  Uses  of  Astronomy,  The. 
Sunrise.     (Hymns  of  the  Marshes,  I.) — Sidney  Lanier. 

— AA 
Sunrise. — Percy  B.  Shelley.    See  Prometheus  Unbound. 
Sunrise. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
Sunrise,  The. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Excursion,  The. 
Sunrise  among  the  Hills. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — CS  26 
Sunrise  Comes  To-morrow. — Anon. — HBP 
Sunrise  in  the  Hills  of  Satsuma. — Mary  McN.  Fenol- 

losa. — AA 
ftSunrise  never  Failed   us  Yet.  The. — Celia  Thaxter. — 
T  HBP— HDL— PEO— TAS 

Sunrise  of  the  Poor,  The.— Rob't  B.  Wilson.— AA 
Sunrise  on  the  Hills. — H :  W.  Longfellow. — AD 
Sunrise  on  the  Tusket. — R:  Huntington. — TCV 
Sun's  Darling.  The,  Sels.  fr.—T:  Dekker. 
Country  Glee. — EP 

(Rustic  Song.)— LC— WEP  2 
Invitation,  The.— ES— OEL 
Sun's  Shame,  The.    (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XCII.) 

—Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
Sun's    Travels,    The.— Rob't    L.    Stevenson.— CGV— 

DLS 
Sunset.— L.  F.  B.— CG  3 


323 


Sunset 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Sunset. — Herbert  Bashford. — AA 
Sunset.  A.— J:  H:  Brown.— TCV 

Sunset. — Lord  Byron.    See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Sunset.— Phoebe  Gary.— TAS 
Sunset,  A. — Rob't  Loveman.— AA 
Sunset. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Queen  Mab. 
Sunset.     (Sel.  fr.  Inscription  to  the  Mistress  of  Cedar- 
croft.) — Bayard  Taylor. — AD 
Sunset.— Dwight  Williams.— CS  25 
Sunset,  The. — W:  Wordsworth.     .See  Excursion,  The. 
Sunset  City,  The.— H :  S.  Cornwell.— BNL 
Sunset  in  the  Mountains. — Walter  Scott.     <See  Lady 

of  the  Lake,  The. 
Suneet  in  the  Orchard. — Kate  P.  Osgood. — DS 
Sunset  Land. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Sunset  on  Lake  Leman. — H:  S.  Washburn. — POS 
Sunset  on    the   Cunimbla   Valley,  Blue   Mountains. — 

Douglas  B.  W.  Sladen.— VA 
Sunset  Wings.— D.  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
Sunset  with  its  Rosy  Feet. — Anon. — POS 
Sunshine. — Anon. — AD 
Sunshine. — Jean  F.  C.  Delavigne. — OS  1 
Sunshine.— Svdney  Dayre.— NV— YET 
Sunshine  in  the  House.— Clara  L.  Burnham. — YBT 
Sunshine  Johnson. — Anon. — WR  22 
Sunshine  Land.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— POS 
Sunshine  of  the  Gods,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Bayard  Taylor. — 

AA 
Sunshine  of  thine  Eyes,  The. — G  :  P.  Lathrop. — AA 
Sunshine  or      Shower.     (Tab.) — Anon. — COS  —  DS — 

NPS— PP— YA— YP 
Sunshine  Song. — Anon. — YBT 
Sunshine's  Caress,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Sunthin'  in  a  Pastoral  Line.- — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Big- 
low  Papers,  The. 
Superfluous  Man,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— SR  1 
Superior  Boys,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 
Superior  Nonsense  Verses. — Anon. — NA 
Superiority  of  Machinery,  The. — T:  Hood. — HPE 
Superiority  of  Washington. — Chauncey  M.   Depew. — 
FD2 
(Tribute  to  Washington.)— SSD 
"Supernatural  in  this  Jesus  is  the    best  hope  of  the 

world.  The."— D:  Swing.— GG 
"Supers."- H.  C.  Newton.— CS  27 
Super's  Story,  The.— Edwin  Drew.— CS  5 
Superscription,   A.   (C — The   House   of   Life,   Sonnet 
XCVII.)— Dante  G.  Rossetti.— VA 
(Nevermore,  The.)— BNL 
Superstition.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Supper,  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 
Supper  at  the  Mill,  Sel.  fr.     (Song  of  the  Old  Love.) — 
Jean  Ingelow.— PGT  2 
("We  shall  walk  no  more  through  the  sodden  grass" 

— ce/.)— BNL 
(When  Sparrows  Build — si.  nbr.) — WR  16 
Supplication,  A.     (Song  fr.  The  Davideis,  Bk.  IIL) — 
Abraham  Cowley.— EPs—FEP— PGT  1 
( Invocation. ) — BNL 
(Lover  to  his  Lyre,  The.) — CEL 
Supplication. — C :  Mackay.     See  MacJaine's  Child. 
Supplication. — Anna  L.  Waring. — YBF  (abr.) 

(Thy  Will  be  Done.  — FEP 
Supplication,  A.— T:  Wyatt.— PGT  1— PHS 
(Appeal,  An."»— CEL 
(Forget  not  Yet.)— ELP— OB 

(Lover  Beseecheth  his  Mistress  not  to  Forget,  The 
— O— WEP  1 
Supporting  the  Guns.     (Detroit  Free  Press.) — CS  25 — 
EA  (abr.) 
(Battery  in  Hot  Action,  A.)— PFP— PR 
Suppose.— Alice  Gary.- BLF— HSS  2— NV 
Suppose.     (O— Phoebe       Gary.— BLF— PHS— PR— 
YA 
(Abr. )— PP— TFS— YFR 
("Suppose,    my    little     lady"  —  abr.)  —  GM  — 

HSS  2  (sel.)— SM 
("  Suppose  your  task,  my  little  man" —  sel. — HSS  2 
(Wisest  Plan,  The.)— PS 
Suppose.     (Our  Little  Men  and  Women.) — GPL 
Suppose.— T.  H.  Robertson.— WR  .3 
Suppose.  —  Epes    Sargent.  —  GMS  —  NV  —  SM  — 
TFS  (sel.) 
(Deeds  of  Kindness.) — BLP 
(liines  for  a  Little  Lassie — si.  abr.) — YBT 
(Little  Cowslip,  The— sei.)— TFS 
(,1-ittle  Things— 8eZ.)—DLF 
"Suppose,  my  little  lady." — Phoebe  Gary.    See  Suppose. 
"Suppo.se  your  task,  my  little  man."  —  PhoRbe  Gary. 

Se"  Suppose. 
Supposed  Speech    against    the    Declaration    of    Inde- 
pendence.— IDan'l   Web.ster.     See  Adams  and 
Jefferson. 


Supposed  Speech  of  a  Chief  of  the  Pocomtuc  Indians. 

— E:  Everett.     See  Indian,  The. 
Supposed  Speech  of  James  Otis.     (Fr.  The  Rebels  of 
Boston    before    the    Revolution.) — Lydia    M. 
Child.— OS  2— SC— SS 
(Freedom  Must  Triumph.)— SR  8 
(Speech  against  the  Stamp  Act — abr.) — BS  15 
Supposed  Speech  of  John  Adams  [for  or  in  favor  of  or] 
on  the   Declaration   of   Independence. — Dan'l 
Webster.     See  .\dams  and  Jefferson. 
Supposed  Speech  of  John  Adams  [in  Support  of  Ameri- 
can     Independence]. — Dan'l      Webster.     See 
Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Supposed  Speech    of    Regulus. — Elijah    Kellogg.     See 

Regulus  to  the  Carthaginians. 
Supposin'. — Eva  W.  McGlasson. — WR  7 
Supposing. — Mary  N.  Prescott. — HSS  2 
Suppressed  Repudiation.     (Sel.  fr.  Past  Perils  and  the 

Perils  of  To-day.)— H :  W.  Beecher.— NG 
Supremacy  of  Conscience,  The. — R:  S.  Storrs. — BLP 
Supreme  Court  and  the  Constitution,  The. — H:  Hitch- 
cock.—TMD 
Supreme  Court   of  the   United   States,   The. — Horace 

Binney.— SS 
Surl'Eau,  Sel.  fr.     (Government  by  Epigrams. )^Guy 

de  Maupassant. — OS  2 
Sure  Witness,  The.— Alice  Gary.— TAS 
Surf.— Edmund  G.  Stedman.— POS 
Surf  Along  the  Shore,  The. — Joe  Lincoln.— CCB 
Surgeon's  Child,  The.— F :  E.  Weatherly.— VSG— WR16 
Surgeon's  Tale,  The.— Barry  Cornwall.— CS  13— DS 

(Doctor's  Story,  The.)— VSG 
Surly  Tim's  Trouble.     (Abr.) — Frances  H.  Burnett. — 
BS7 
(SeZ.)- BRR— CS  19 
Surprise,  The.— W:  Barnes.— PGT  2 
Surprise,  The.     (Dial.)— ld&  Fay.— WR  17 
Surprise,  The.— T:  Moore.— HPE 
Surprise  at    [or   of]   Ticonderoga,    The. — Mary   A.    P. 

Stansbury.— BAB— EDY 
Surprise  Party,  A. — Anon. — MFD 
Surprise  Party,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Surrender,  The.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.— TDT 
Surrender,  The.— Mrs.  S.  M.  I.  Henry.— TS 
Surrender,  The.     (C.)— H:  King. 
(Renunciation,  A — si.  abr.)- — OB 
(Surrender— se?.)— YBF 
Surrender  of  Spain,  The.— J :  Hay. — AA 
Sursum  Corda. — Eliz.  B.  Browning.     See   Casa  Guidi 

Windows. 
Survival. — Florence  E.  Coates. — AA 
Survival  of    the    Fittest,    The. — (A    Medley,  arr.    by) 

Daisy  N.  Ives.— BS  20 
Survival  of  the  Fittest  in  Literature,  The. — Anon. — CP 
Susan. — Anon. — NA 
Susan:     a  Poem  of  Degrees,  Sel.  fr.     (Sweet  Nature's 

Voice.) — Arthur  J.  Munby. — VA 
Susan  Van  Doozen. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Susan's  Escort.     (Cond.)— E:  E.  Hale.— WR  5 
Susceptible  Parson,  The. — Anon. — CS  33— DS 
Susette.— Walter  K.  Fobes.— FMR 
Susie's  Lesson.— S.  Jennie  Smith. — DLD 
Suspension  of  the  Habeas  Corpus  Act. — J:  Bright. — 

PPS 
Suspicion. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Susurro. — W:  Sharp.     See  Sospiri  di  Roma. 
Sut  Lovingood's  Shirt.     (Fr.  Sut  Lovingood's  Yarns.) 

— Anon.— DFY 
Svend  Vonved. — (Tr.  bn)  G:  Borrow. — EPs 
Swackhamer's  Ball. — Anon. — DRR 
Swallow,  The.— Anon.— HSS  2 
Swallow,  The.— T:  Aird.— VA 
Swallow,  The.     (Fr.   Anacreontiques.) — Anacreon   (tr. 

by  Abraham  Cowley).- OB  (sel.)— WEP  2 
Swallow,  The.— Charlotte  Smith.— BNL 

(First  Swallow,  The.)— CGd— LLC  (si.  abr.) 
Swallowed  Frog,  The.— Anon.— CS  28 
Swallowing  a  Fly.— T.  De  Witt  Talmage.— BS  5 
Swallows,  The.— Edwin  Arnold.— PoR 
Swallows,  The.     (Epigram.).—R:  B.  Sheridan.— HPE 
Swallow's  Nest,  The. — Edwin  Arnold  — PoR 
Swamp  Fox,  The.— W:  G.  Simms.— AA 
Swan  Song,  The.— Katha.  R.  Brooks.— BS- 16 
Swan  Song  of  Parson  Avery,  The. — J:  G.  Whittier. — 

AA 
Swearing  off  Smoking.     (Brooklyn  Eagle.)    See  Spoop- 

endyke  Stops  Smoking. 
Swedish  Battle-song. — Michael  Altenburg. — OS  2 

(Battle  Hymn— a<.  to  Gustavus  Adolphus.)— HDL 
(Battle  Song  of  Gustavus  -Adolphus.) — BNL 
Swedish  Mother's  Hymn. — Frederika  Bremer. — YBT 
(Heavenly  Dove,  The.)— OS  1 
(Mother's  Hymn.)— WCL 


824 


TITLE  INDEX 


Sword 


Swedish  Poem,  A. — Anon. — PEO 
(What  Does  It  Matter?)— CS  5 
Sweeping  the  Floor. — Anon. — PPSr 
Sweeping  Women  of  Munich.     (Tab.) — Anon. — TCP 
Sweet  Afton.     (C.) — Rob't  Burns. . 

(Afton  Water.)— BNL—GP—SN—YBF 

(Flow  Gentlv,  Sweet  Afton.)— FEP—IR— LLC— 

MBL— SO— WCLG  1 
Sweet  and   Bitter. — Edmund   Spenser.     iSee  Amoretti 

and  Epithalamion. 
Sweet    and    Low. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See    Princess, 

The. 
Sweet  and    Twenty. — W:    Shakespeare.     See   Twelfth 

Night. 
Sweet  Answer,  A. — Anon. — WR  17 
Sweet  are  the   Banks. — Rob't   Burns.     See  Banks  o' 

Doon,  The. 
Sweet  are  the  Charms. — Barton  Booth. — FEP 
"Sweet  are  the  uses  of  adversity." — W:  Shakespeare. 

iSee  As  You  Like  It. 
Sweet  Baby,  Sleep  (Rocking  Hymn,  A). — G:  Wither. — 

FEP 
Sweet,  Be  Not  Proud.— Rob't  Herrick.— BNL 

(To     Dianemes— C. )— BFV— ELP— FEP— FTA— 

OB— PGT  1— TFY— YBF 
Sweet  Cicely,  Sel.  fr.     (Buying  a  Feller  —  sel.fr. Ch. 

XIII.)— Marietta  Holley.— WR  15 
(For  a'  that;  or.  Selling  a  Feller— a6r. )—BS  20 
Sweet  Content. — T:  Dekker.     See  Pleasant  Comedy  of 

Patient  Grissell,  The. 
Sweet  Content. — Rob't  Greene. — See  Farewell  to  Fol- 

lie. 
"Sweet  hand  that  held  in  mine."     (Frazier's  Maga- 
zine.)— GG 
Sweet  Home. — J:  HJ'ayne.     iSee  Home,  Sweet  Home. 
Sweet  Innisfallen. — T-:  Moore.- — FEP 
Sweet  is    Childhood.— Jean    Ingelow.     See    Story    of 

Life,  A. 
"Sweet  is  our  youth." — Aubrey  De  Vere.     See  Sonnet: 

"  Sad  is  our  youth,"  etc. 
"Sweet  is  the  lore  which  nature  brings." — W:  Words- 
worth.    See  Tables  Turned,  The. 
Sweet  is  the  Pleasure.- — Johann  W.  von  Goethe  (tr.  by 

J:S.  Dwight).— HBP 
(Rest— seZ.)- PHS 
(True  Rest.)— BNL— YBF  (abr.) 
"Sweet  is  the  rose  [,but  grows  upon  a  brere]." — Edmund 

Spenser.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
Sweet  Lamenting. — Anon. — ELP 
"Sweet  letters  of  the  angel  tongue."  —  M.  M.  Ballou. 

—AD 
Sweet  Lullaby,     A.— Nicholas    Breton  (?).     (Fr.    The 

Arbor  of  Amourous  Devises.) — ELP — PGT  1 — 

WEP  1 
(Cradle  Song,  A.)— OB 
Sweet  Meeting   of   Desires. — Coventry   Patmore.     See 

Angel  in  the  House,  The. 
Sweet  Nature's  Voice.     (Fr.   Susan:  A   Poem  of  De- 
grees.)— Arthur  J.  Munby. — VA 
Sweet  Neglect,  The. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Simplex  Mun- 

ditiis. 
Sweet  Pastoral,  A.— Nicholas  Breton.— EP— HBP  (al. 

abr. ) 
Sweet  Peace  is  Born.— C:  C.  Hahn.— BS  19 
Sweet  Peas. — Anon. — PEO 
Sweet  Peas. — J:  Keats.     See  "I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a 

little  hill." 
Sweet  Peas.— Lilian  PaySon.— PP— YFR 
Sweet  Peril  (Pity  of  It,  The— C.).— G:  Macdonald.— 

CEL 
Sweet  Red  Rose,  The. — Joel  Stacy. — AD 
Sweet  Remembrances. — T:  Moore.     See  "Farewell! — 

but  whenever  you  welcome  the  hour." 
Sweet  Sabbath  Bells.— Anon.— YBT 
Sweet  September. — G:  Arnold.     S^ee  September   Days. 
Sweet  Sixteen.— H.  W.  Banks.— CG  1 
Sweet  Smoking  Pipe. — Anon. — PPh 
Sweet  Song  of  Songs,  A. — Gerald  Massev. — YBT 
Sweet  Star,  The.— W:  D.  Lighthall.— TCV 
Sweet  Stream,  that  Winds. — W:  Cowper. — BNL 

(Comparison,  A.     Addressed  to  a  Young  Lady  — 

O— WEP  3 
(To  a  Young  Lady.)— PGT  1 
Sweet  Suffolk  Owl.— T:  Vautor  (?).— ELP— LC 
Sweet  William's  Farewell  to  Black-eyed  Susan.     (C. ) — 

J:Gay.— FEP— HBP 
(Black-eyed  Susan.)— BNL— PGT  I— WEP  3 
(SI.  abr.)— CEL— PC 
Sweet  William's  Ghost.     (C. — tn  Percy's  Reliques.) — 

Anon.— BB— CGd 
(William  and  Marjorie.)— PEB  1 
(3   diff.  versions.) 
Sweetbrier,  The.— J:  G.  C.  Brainard.— POS 


Sweetbrier. — Leigh  Hunt.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of 

the  Flowers. 
Sweete  Cruell  Shot. — Sir   Philip   Sidney.     See   Astro- 

phel  and  Stella. 
Sweetest  Flower  that  Blows,  The. — Frd'k  Peterson. — 

BIL— FTA 
Sweetest  Melancholy.     (Song  fr.  The  Nice  Valour,  Act 

III.,  Sc.  3.)— ELP 
"Hence,  all  ye  [or  you]  vain  delights.") — BNL — 

HBP 
(MelancMolia.)— CEL— FEP 
(Melancholy.)— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(Poet's  Mood.)— EPs 
(Song.)— WEP  2 
Sweetest  Picture,  The.— Alice  Gary. — BS  14 
(Among  the  Beautiful  Pictures.)— FP— HBP 
(Little  Brother,  The.)— WCL 
(Pictures     of     Memory— C.)— BNL— CR—CS  4— 

FTR  —  GP  —  HNS  —  SAE  (br.  sel.)  —  SM  — 

SPE 
Sweetest  Place,  The.— Mrs.  M.  F.  Butts.— COS— PP 
Sweetheart. — Hamilton  Aid^. — FLS 
Sweetheart. — A:  Greville. — FLS 
Sweetheart  Gate,  Th'.— Edwin  Waugh.— VA 
Sweetheart,  Good-by! — Ruthven  Jenkyns  (also  at.  to 

T:  Moore).     See  Sailor's  Farewell,  The. 
"Sweetheart,  good-bye!  that  flut'ring  sail." — Ruthven 

Jenkyns.     See  Sailor's  Farewell,  The. 
Sweetly  Breathing,  Vernal  Air.     (Sel  fr.  Upon  Master 

W.  Montague,  his  Return  from  Travel.) — T: 

Carew.— BNL 
(Airs  of  Spring,  The.)— FEP— HBP 
Sweetness  and  Light,  Sel.  fr.     (Duties  of  the  Scholar.) 

—Matthew  Arnold.— OS  3 
Sweets  of  Liberty,  The. — Anon. — MYF 
Sweets  of  Love,  The.     (Frags,   fr.   various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Sweets  that  Die. — Langdon  E.  Mitchell. — AA 
Swell  [in  a  Horse-car],  The.— G:   W.   Kyle.— BRR— 

CS  29— FTR 
(Delancey  Stuyvesant  and  the  Horse-car.)  —  WR  3 
"Swell's"  Homage  to  Mrs.  Stowe,  A.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Swell's  Soliloquy  [on  the  War],  A  [or  The]. — Anon. — 

BNL— BS  5— CS  4 
Swift.— Hartley  Coleridge.— EDY 
Swiftness  of  Time,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — G:  Gascoigne. 
Swimming.     (Frags,  fr.  various  atdhors.) — BNL 
Swimming.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Two  Foscari,  Act  I.,  Sc. 

1.)— Lord  Byron.— BNL— EPs— GN 
Swimming.     (Br.   sel.   fr.    Tri.stram    of    Lyonesse,    Pt. 

VIII.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne.^GN 
Swing,  The.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV—HSS  2 
Swing  Away. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Swing  High  and  Swing  Low. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Swing  Low,  Sweet  Chariot. — Anon. — AA 
Swing  Song  and  Drill. — Marguerite  W.  Morton. — ID 
Swinging  'neath  the  Old  Apple-tree. — O.  R.  Barrows. — 

LLC 
("Oh!  the  sports  of  childhood" — w.  mus.) — AD 
Swinging  on  a  Birch-tree. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
Swinging  on  the  Gate. — Anon. — MC 
Swipe's  Dinner. — Anon. — CS  32 

Swipesy's  Christmas     Dinner. — Anon. — BS  19 — SR  12 
Swiss  Air.     (Songs     without     Sense,    III.) — Fs.    Bret 

Harte.— NA 
Swiss  Mercenaries,  The. — Victor  Hugo. 

(Hireling  Swiss  Regiment,  The.) — MMR 
Swjtchman's  Story,  The. — B.  A.  R.  Ottolengui. — CS  25 
Switzerland.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Switzerland. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  William  Tell. 
Sword,  The.— Michael  J.  Barry.— TIP 
Sword,  The.     (Play.) — Armand  Berquin. — NDP 
Sword,  The.— Helen  Booth.— CS  30 
Sword,  The.— Isabella  V.  Crawford.- TCV 
Sword,  The.— T.  S.  Grimke.- FD  1— SS  (si.  longer.) 
"Sword!  a  name  of  dread.  The." — J:  Pierpont. — GG 
Sword  and  a  Nation's  Rights,  The. — T.  F.  Meagher. — 

FD  1 
Sword  Drill,  The.— Anna  B.  Webb.— DR 
Sword  Drill  and  March. — Marguerite  W.  Morton. — ID 
Sword  Exercise,  The.     (Far  from  the  Madding  Crowd, 

Ch.  XXVIII.)— T:  Hardy.— WR  13 
Sword  of  Bunker  Hill,  The.— W:  R.  Wallace.— SR  8 
Sword  of  Castruccio  Castracani,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.     ("O 

Victor  Emmanuel  the  King.") — Eliz.  B.  Brown- 
ing.—BNL 
Sword  of  Damocles,  The. — T.  S.   Denison.     See  Man 

Behind,  The. 
Sword  of   Damocles,   The,   Sel.    fr.     (Defence   of   the 

Bride,  The.)— Anna  K.   G.   Rohlfs.— BS  18— 

WR4 
Sword  of  Tethra,  The.     (Fr.  Moytura.) — W:  Larminie. 

—TIP 


325 


Sword 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Sword   Song[,  The].— Carl  T.    Korner    «r.    by   C:   T. 
Brooks).— BNL— MRS 
(Song  of  the  Sword— dt/f.  <r.)— HB 
Sword-bearer,  The.— G:  H.  Boker.— AWB 
"Swore  Off."— J:  N.  Fort  [or  Foot].— CS  30— PFP 
Sycophantic  Fox  and  the  Gullible  Raven,  The. — Guy 

W.  Carryl.— 4A 
Sydney  Carton's    Death. — C:    Dickens.     See    Tale    of 

Two  Cities,  A. 
Syke's  Predicament.     (Farce.) — Anon. — DDM 
Sylvia. — G:  Darley.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 
Sylvia. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    Two    Gentlemen    of 

Verona,  The. 
Sylvia;  or,  The  May  Queen,  Sels.  fr. — G:  Darley. 
Call,  The.     {Fr.  Act  IV.,  So.  1.)— FEP 
(Morning  Song.) — VA 
(Serenade.)— VS 
Chorus  of  Spirits. — VA 
May  Day.     (Fr.  III.,  2.)— VS 

(Peasants'  Chorus,  The.)— EP 
Nephon's  Song. — VA 
Osm^'s  Song.— EP 
Rom,anzo  to  Sylvia. — VA 

(Sylvia.)— HBP 
Sylvia's  Song.  (?)— VS 
Sylvia's  Song. — G:  Darley.     iSee  Sylvia;  or,  The  May 

Queen. 
Sylvie  and  Bruno.     C:L.  Dodgson. — NA 
Symbol,  A.     (C.) — Johann  W.  von  Goethe. 

("Future  hides  in  it.  The.")— GG 
Symbolism.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 
Symbolisms.     (C.)— R:  Realf. 

("O  earth!  thou  hast  not  any  wind  that  blows" — 
a6r.  )—HSS  3 
(Word,  The— seZ.)- AA 
Symbols. — Vance  Thompson. — AA 
Symbols  of  the  Republic. — Edwin  H.  Chapin. — FD  1 
Symon's  Lesson  of  Wisdom  for  all  Manner  of  Children. 

— Symon  (C:  Simeon?).— BVC 
Sympathy.— Fanny  B.  Bates.— YBT 
Sympathy.— Althea  Gyles.— TIP 
Sympathy. — Anna  E.  Hamilton. — HDL 
Sympathy.— Reginald  Heber.— BS  10— CS  25— FEP— 

PS— THP 
Sympathy.     Sir  T:  N.  Talfourd.     See  Ion. 
Sympathy.— C.  W.  Thomson.— CS  19 
Sympathy.     (Verses  fr.  A  Week  on  the  Concord  and 
Merrimack      Rivers:      Wednesday.) — H:      D. 
Thoreau.— EPs 
Sympathy  and  Scorn.     (Frags,   fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Sympathy  with  South  American  Republicanism.     (Sel. 
fr.  The  Manama  Mission.  — Dan'l    Webster. — 
PS— SS 
Sympathy  with  the   Greeks. — H:  Clay.     .See  On  the 

Greek  Revolution. 
Symphony  in  Smoke,  A.     (Harper's  Bazar.) — PPh 
Syr  Cauline. — Anon. — HBP 
Syria. — T:  Moore.     .See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Syrinx. — J:  Lyly.     See  Midas. 
System. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 


T.  A.  H.     Ambrose  Bierce. — AA 
Ta!  Ta!— Anon.— KNS 
Tabby's  Tea-fight.— Anon.— WR  14 
Table  Rules  for  Little  Folks.— Anon. — OS  1 
Table  Talk,  Sels.  fr.—W:  Cowper. 
Lord  Chatham .     (Br.  8el.)—ET>Y 
Past  and  Future  of  Poetry,  The.— WEP  3 
Table  Talk,  Sel.  fr.     (Genius  and  Common  Sense.) — 

W:  Hazlitt.— MRS 
Tableaux  from   Hiawatha. — H:   W.    Longfellow.     See 

Song  of  Hiawatha. 
Tableaux  of  "The  Ten  Virgins."— Anon.— WR  23 
Tableaux  Vivants.— J:  Ford.— WR  17 
Tables  Turned,  The.— Anon.— KNS 
Tables  Turned,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.— HBP— LLC 
WEP  4— YBF 
("Sweet  is  the  lore  which  nature  brings" — br.  sel.) — 

HSS3 
("Up!  up!  my  friend,  and  quit  your  books.") — SN 
Tacita. — Jas.  B.  Kenyon. — AA 
Tacking  Ship  off  Shore.— Walter  F.  Mitchell.— AA— 

BNL— EPs— FEP— GN— HBP 
Tact  and  Talent.     (London  Atlas.)— FPS  (si.  abr.)— 
SE  (br.  sei.)- SPE— WCLG  2 
(Contrast  of  Tact  and  Talent.)— SE 
Tahawus. — Georgiana  Mendum. — SO 


Taill  of  the  Lyoun  and  the  Mous,  The. — Rob't  Henry- 
son.— WEP  1 
Tailor  of  Tipperary,  The.— Anon.— SED 
Tailor's    Thimble,  The. — Dion  Boucicault.     See  Shau- 

graun,  The. 
Take  Back  your  Words.- Lloyd  Mifflin.— FTA 
Take  Care.— Alice  Cary.— BLF— GMS— TFS  (si.  abr.) 
Take  Care  of  the  Minutes. — Anon. — PS 
Take  (TJare  of  the  Minutes. — Anon. — SM 
(Minutes,  The.)— TFS 

(What  the  Minutes  Say—al.  a6r. )—PP—YFR 
Take  Courage. — Anon. — WR  17 
Take  er  Tatah  en  Wait.— Anon.— CS  37 
"Take  Good  Care  of  Baby."— (S<.  Nicholas.)— SR  9 
(How  Persimmons  Took  Cah  ob  der  Baby.) — CS  13 

— WR26 
Take  Heart.— Edna  D.  Procter.— GP 
Take  it  Like  a  Man. — C.  F.  Lester. — BS  26 
Take  me.  Mother  Earth. — Anna  Jameson. — VA 
Take,  oh!  take  those  lips  Away. — W:  Shakespeare  and 

John  Fletcher.     See  Bloody  Brother,  The,  and 

Measure  for  Measure. 
Take  the  World  as  It  Is.— C:  Swain.— VA 
Take  thy    Old    Cloak    about    Thee.     (C.—in   Percy's 

Reliques. )— Anon.— FEP— HBP— HPE 
(Old  Cloak,  The.)— OB 
Take  up  the  Collection.— Anon.— PR— SSS—YA 
Taken  on  Trial. — Fanny  Barlow. — GH 

(Wedding-march  on  Trial,  A.)— MYF 
"Takin'  Boarders." — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Taking  Aim. — Anon. — CPL 
Taking  Care  of  Him  Nights. — Anon. — DLF 
Taking  Dolly's  Picture. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow. — 

PS— TT 
Taking  of  Sebastopol,  The.— T.  W.  Parsons,— EDY 
Taking  the  Census.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FAD 
Taking  the  Census.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MFD 
Taking  the     Census.     (Dial.)  —  Dr. Valentine. — 

CPL— MPD 
Taking  the  Cream.     (Tab.)- Anon.— TCP 
Taking  the  Veil.— Tom  Masson.— WR  7 
Taking  the  Veil.— (Pwric/i  Bowl.)— CG  3 
Taking  Toll.— Anon.— FS 
Taking  up  Carpets. — Anon. — CS  14 
Tale,  A. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Two  Poets  of  Croisic, 

The. 
Tale  of  a  Cigarette,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Tale  of  a  Dog,  The.— Albert  B.  Paine.— GH 

(Five  Chapter  of  Real  Life.)— PS 
Tale  of  a  Dog  and  a  Bee.— Anon.— TFS 
Tale  of  a  Leg,  A.— T:  Miller.— BeR 
Tale  of  a  Nose,  A.— C:  F.  Adams.— AWH— CS  18 
Tale  of  a  Pony.— Anon.— TT 
Tale  of  a  Tadpole,  The.— Anon.— CS  25 
Tale  of  a  Temptation. — Alice  Horton. — CS  15 
Tale  of  a  Tramp,  The.— Anon.— CS  18 
Tale  of  a  Trumpet,  Sel.  fr.     T:  Hood.— SE 

(Peddler  and  his  Trumpet,  The—ptlj/  di^.)— WR  1 
Tale  of  a  Tub,   A,   sel.   fr.     (Relations  of   Booksellers 

and  Authors.The — Sec.  X.) — Jonathan  Swift. — 

ESs 
Tale  of  Christmas  Eve, .A.     (Designer.) — WR  26 
Tale  of  Drury  Lane,  A.— Horace  Smith.— BNL  (abr.) 

—FEP— HPE 
Tale  of  Hard  Times,  A.— Anon.— BS  24 
Tale  of  Providence,  A.- — I:  W.  Pennypacker. — FMR 
Tale  of  Sweethearts,  A.— G:  R.  Sims.— BS  20— PFP 
Tale  of  the  Atlantic  Coast,  A.— G:  Zeagles.— CS  15  — 

NPS— YP 
Tale  of  the  Big  Snow,  A.— "Bizarre."— CS  17 
Tale  of  the  Crimean  War,  A.— Frd'k  G.  Webb.— WR  2 
Tale  of  the  East  (Side),  A.— J:  Albro.— GH 
Tale  of  the  Fishwife  and  its  Sad  Fate. — S :  L.  Clemens. 

See  Tramp  Abroad,  A. 
Tale  of  the  Kennebec    Mariner. — Holman    F.    Day. — 

THP 
Tale  of  the  Man  of  Lawe,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.    See 

Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Tale  of  the  Terrible  Fire.— Anon.— WR  6 
Tale  of  the  Yorkshire  Coast,  A. — Anon. — BS8(8Z.  abr.) 

(Stor>-  of  the  Yorkshire  Coast,  A.)— WR  21 
Tale  of  Two  Cities,  A,  Sels.  fr.—C:  Dickens. 

Death  of  Madame  Defarge,  The.     (Bk.   III.,  Ch. 

XIV.,  abr.)— MRS 
Execution  of  Sydney  Carton,  The.     (Bk.  III.,  Chs. 

XIII.  anrf  XV.— cond. )—BS  23  (si.)— MRS  (fr. 

XV.)— WR  8 
(Sydney  Carton's  Death — si.  diff.    cond.  fr.  Ch. 

XV.)— NC 
Guillotine,  The.     (Sel.    fr.    Bk.   III.,    Ch.    IV.)— 

OS  3 
Tale  the  Titles  Told,  The.— Kate  A.  Davis.— CS  36 
Talented  Man,  The.— Winthrop  M.  Praed.— WR  9 


326 


TITLE  INDEX 


Teachings 


Tales  of  a  Wayside  Inn. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See; 

Ballad  of  Carmilhan,  The. 

Bell  of  Atri,  The. 

Birds  of  Killingworth,  The. 

Emma  and  Eginhard. 

King  Robert  of  Sicily. 

Lady  Wentworth. 

Legend  Beautiful,  The. 

Legend  of  Rabbi  Ben  Levi,  The. 

Paul  Revere's  Ride. 

Saga  of  King  Olaf ,  The. 
Tales  of  the  Hall,  ^  els.  /r.— G :  Crabbe. 

Approach  of  Age,  The.     (Sel.  jr.  Bk.  X.)— BNL 

Entanglement,  An.     {Sel.  fr.  Bk.  XIII.)— WEP  3 

Meeting.     {Sona  fr.  Bk.  VII.)— OB 
Taliesin:  A  Masque,  <Srf.  fr. — R:  Hovey. — AA 
Talisman,  A. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — TAS 
Talisman,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Walter  Scott. 

Nubian,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XX.)— WCLG  1 

Richard  to  the  Princes  of  the  Crusade.     (Sel.  fr. 
Ch.  XIX.)— SS 
Talk  to  an  Art  Union.— Walt  Whitman. — SO 
Talking  in   their  Sleep.— Edith    M.   Thomas.— AD— 
PEO— YBT 

Talking  Latin. Haliburton.— DDR— SCS 

Talking  Oak,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Olivia.)— Alfred  Tennyson. 

— GN 
Talking  to  Dolly.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Talking  Tots.— Anon.— DLD 

(Midgets'  Greeting,  The.)— KER 
Talks  on  Trees. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Autocrat  of 

the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Tam  Glen.— Rob't  Burns.— WEP  3 
Tam  O'Shanter.— Rob't  Burns.- BNL— EPs— FEP— 

HBP— THP— WEP  3— WR  18 
Tamar    and    the    Nymph. — Walter    S.    Landor.     See 

Gebir. 
Tamberlaine  the  Great,  Sel.  fr.     (Ambition — br.  sel.  jr. 
Pt.  I.,  Act  II.,  Sc.  7.) — Christopher  Marlowe. — 
KNE 
Tambo  a  Ladies'  Man. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  and  his  Mother-in-Law. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  on  Babies. — Anon.— DSS 
Tambo  on  Chess. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  on  Ciphering. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  on  Entomology. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  on  Kisses. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  on  Matrimony. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  on  Natural  History. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  on  Preaching. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo  on  the  English  Language.— Anon. — DSS 
Tambo's  Bet  with  Mr.  Johnson. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambo's  Dog.— Anon.— DSS 
Tambo's  Hat.— Anon.— DSS 
Tambo's  Postage  Stamp  Gag. — Anon. — DSS 
Tambourine  Drill.— A.  E.  Hurst.— ID 
Tambourine  Drills.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Tame  Hares.— W:  Cowper.— FTR 
Taming  a  Wife. — J:  Tobin.     See  Honeymoon,  The. 
Taming  an  Alligator. — Anon. — WR  2 
Taming  of  the  Shrew,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  1.) 

— W:  Shakespeare.— BNL 
Tamlane.     (Sel.  fr.  Tne  Young    Tamlane — in    Border 
Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — BB 

(Young  Tam   Lin,   The — diff.   and  longer    vers.) — 
PEB  1 
Tammy's  Prize.— Anon.— BS  10— CS  20 
Tampa  Romance,  A. — Dollie  L.  Rogers. — CS  37 
Tancred,  Sel.   fr.      (Jerusalem  by  Moonlight — sel.   fr. 
Bk.  III.,  Ch.  I.)— B:  Disraeli,  Earl  of  Beacons- 
field.— CS  6— SR  5— TMD 
Tangled  Skein,  A. — Josephine  Pollard. — SSS 
Tannhauser. — W:  M.  Payne. — A  A 
Tantalizing.— H:  M.  Stone.— CG  2 
Tantalus:  Texas. — Joaquin  Miller. — CS  20 
Taper  March  and    Drill. — Marguerite    W.   Morton. — 

ID 
Tapestry  Weavers,  The. — Anson  G.  Che-ster. — HDL 
Tar  for  all  Weathers,  The.— C:  Dibdin.— CGd 
Tardy  George. — Anon. — AWB 
Tardy  Spring.— G:  Meredith.— OB 
Tariff  Reform.— W:  L.  Willson.— TMR 
Tarpeia. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — WR  22 
Tarquin  and  the  Augur. — W :  Aytoun.     See  Puffs  Poet- 
ical. 
Tarry  thou  Till  I  Come;  or,  Salathiel,  the  Wandering 
Jew,  Sel.  fr.     (Constantius  and  the  Lion- — sel. 
fr.  Bk.  I.,  Ch.  XXI.)— G:  Croly.- BS  24— PFP 

(Thrilling  Sketch.)— CS  8 
Tarrytown  Romance,  A.     (Good  Cheer.) — BS  12 
Tartar,  The  (Poor  Tartar:  A  Hungarian  Legend — C). 

—J:  G.  Saxe.— KNE 
Tartary.- Walter  Ramal.— SOC 


Task,  The,  Sels.  fr.—W:  Cowper. 
Bk.  I.     The  Sofa,  SeZs.  fr. 

Crazy  Kate,  The  Gipsies.— WEP  3 
Relish  of  Fair  Prospect.— WEP  3 
Task,  The,  Bk.  I.,  Br.  sel.  fr.— BNL, 
Bk.  II.     The  Time-piece,  Sels.  fr. 
Affectation  in  the  Pulpit. — CS  5 — SS 
England.— BNL  (abr.)—WEP  3 

("England,  with  all    thy   faults   I   love   thee 
still.")— EHT 
Slavery.— BNL 

(Love  of  Liberty — si.  abr.) — GP 
Bk.  III.     The  Garden,  i-els.  fr. 
Autobiographical.- — WEP  3 

(Sum  of  Life,  The.)— BNL 
Truth.     (Br.  sel.)— CS  11 
Bk.  IV.     The  Winter  Evening,  Sels.  fr. 

Early   Love   of   the   Country   and   of   Poetry. — 

WEP  3 
Post,  The.     The  Fireside  in  Winter.— WEP  3 
(Winter— «cZ.)—GP 

(Winter   Evening  at  Home,  A- — br.  sel.,  ptly. 
difl.)—GP 

(Task,  The— ptly.  same.)— BNL 
Snow.— WEP  3 
Bk.  V.     The  Winter  Morning  Walk,  Sels.  fr. 
Freeman,  The. — BNL 
Ice  Palace,  The.— EPs 
Patriots  and  Martyrs. — BLP 

("Patriots  have  toiled  and  in  their  country's 
cause" — br.  sel.) — HBP 
Winter  Morning. — BNL 
Bk.  VI.     The  Winter  Walk  at  Noon,  Sels.  fr. 
Happiness  of  Animals. — FTR 

(Poet  in  the  Woods,  The— seZ.)— WEP  3 
(Woodland  in  Spring — si.  abr.) — AD 
Happy  Man,  The.— BNL 
Humanity.— BNL— CS  15 
Meditation  in  Winter. — WEP  3 
(Winter  Noon — abr.) — BNL 
(Knowledge  and  Wisdom  —  sel.) — FP  (6r.) — 
FTR 
Tasso.— Craven  L.  Betts.— EDY 

Tasso. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Taste.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BS  18— CRR 
Taste,  an  Epistle  to  a  Young  Critic,  SeZ.  fr. — J:  Arm- 

strong.— WEP  3 
Taste  and  Genius.     (Sel.  fr.  Difference  between  Taste 

and  Genius.) — Hugh  Blair. — AE 
Taste  it  not.-— Anon.— CS  26 
Tastes  of  Yesterday,  The.— R.  K.  K.— CG  3 
Tatler,  The.     (Commonwealth  of  Lunatics,  The — No. 

125.)— R:  Steele.— ESs 
Tattered  Ensign,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.     Sfe  Old 

Ironsides. 
Tauler.— J:  G.  Whittier.- LLC 
Taxation  of  America. — P:  St.  John. — AWB 
Taxes[,   the    Price    of   Glory].     (Sel.    fr.    America.) — 

Sydney  Smith.— SS—SSD 
Tax-gatherer,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— GN 
"Tchasson  Ouglou  is  on!"     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Ouglou's  On- 
slaught.)— W:  Motherwell. — AE 
Te  Martyrum  Candidatus. — Lionel  Johnson. — TIP 
Tea  Parties  in  Old  Times. — Washington  Irving.     See 

Knickerbocker  History  of  New  York. 
Tea  Party,  The.— Anon.— FAD 

"Teach  me  to  live!  'Tis  easier  far  to  die." — Anon. — GG 
Teach  us  to  Die.— Arthur  P.  Stanley.— VA 
Teach  us  to  Wait.     (C.)-  Phoebe  Cary. 

("  Why  are  we  so  impatient  of  delay.") — GG 
Teacher  the  Hope  of  America,  The. — S:  Eells. — KNE 

—PFP 
"Teacher  Wanted."— Frank  Crosby.— CS  10— ED 
Teacher's  Diadem,  The.— Anon.— BS  22 
Teacher's  Dream,  The.— W.  H.  Venable.— CS  12— FEP 

— FS— LLC— PPSr 
Teachers  of  Mankind,  The.^H:,  Lord  Brougham. — 

LLC 
Teaching  a  Lesson.— Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Teaching  a  Sunday-school  Class. — J.  P.  Lyons. — BS  22 
Teaching  Dolly.     (Youth's  Companion.) — PS 

(Dolly's  Lesson.)— TT 
Teaching  Dolly  to  Walk. — Anon. — WR  17 
Teaching  Him  the  Business.— Anon.— BDD—CS  23 

(Vay  Rube  Hoffestein  Sells,  The.)— DRR 
Teaching  of  the  Colleges,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Address  de- 
livered before  the  New  England  Society  in  New 
York  City,  Dec.  22.  1892.)— Seth  Low.— TMR 
Teaching  Public  School. — Anon. — CS  5 
Teachings  of  Nature.— Sarah  J.  (7)  Hale. — KNE 
Teachings  of  the  American  Revolution. — Jared  Sparks. 
—PFP 
(Lesson  of  the  Revolution.) — BLP 


327 


Teacups 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Teacups.     (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Tea-gown,  The.— Eugene  Field.— TAV 
Tea-kettle  and  the  Cricket,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Cricket 
on  the  Hearth,  Chirp  the  First.) — C:  Dickens. — 
PR 
"Teamster  Jim." — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — CD 
Tear,  A.— S:  Rogers.*-BNL 

(On  a  Tear— O— FP 
Tear  and  the  Smile,  The.— C.  W.  F.— DCP 

(Running  a  Race.)— PR— WR  12 
Tear  of     Repentance,     The. — T:     Moore.     See    Lalla 

Rookh. 
Teares  of  the  Muses,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Complaint  of  Thalia.) 

—Edmund  Spenser.- WEP  1 
Tears. — Anon. — OB 
(Lullaby.)— ELP 

(Sleep— at.  to  J:  Dowland.)— BNL— HBP 
(Song  for  Music,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Tears.— J:  V.  Cheney.— T AS 
Tears.— Clarence  N.  Ousley.— BS  21— HBR 
Tears. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 

Tears  at  the  Grave  of  Sir  Albertus  Morton  Wept  by 
Sir  H.  Wotton.     (C.)— Sir  H:  Wotton. 
(Tears  Wept  at  the  Grave,  etc.)— FEP 
Tears,  Idle  Tears. — Alfred   Tennyson.     See   Princess, 

The. 
Tears  in  Spring — (Lament  for  Thoreau). — W:  E.  Chan- 

ning. — AA 
Tears  of  Peace,  The,  Sels.  fr. — G:  Chapman. 

Procession  of  Time,  The.      {Sel.  fr.  Conclusion.)  — 

WEP  1 
Spirit   of   Homer,   The.     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Inductio.) — 
WEP  1 
Tears  of  Scotland,  The.— Tobias  Smollett.— FEP 
Tears  of  the  Poplars,  The.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— AA 
Tears  of  Tullia,  The.— Edgar  Fawcett.— WR  16 
Tears  Wept  at  the  Grave,  etc. — Sir  H:  Wotton.     See 

Tears  at  the  Grave,  etc. 
Technique. — Langdon  E.  Mitchell. — <See  To  a  Writer 

of  the  Day. 
Tecumseh:  a  Drama,  Sels  fr. — C:  Mair. 
Buffalo  Herds,  The.— VA 
lena's  Song. — VA 
Lefroy  in  the  Forest. — VA 
Teddy  McGuire    and    Paddy    O'Flynn. — Amanda    T. 

Jones.— BS  12 
Teddy  O'Rourke.— Malcolm  Douglas.— WR  4 
Teddy  O'Toole's  Six  Bulls.— Anon.— DI 
Teeny- Weeny. —Eugene  Field.— WTD 
Teetotaler's  Story,  A.— Delia  A.  Haywood.— CS  30 
Telegram,  The.     (Good  Housekeeping.) — NPS — SR  5 — 
YP 
(Message  for  Mamma  in  Heaven,  A.) — CS  37 
Telegraph  Clerk,  The.— Anon.— HP 
Telegraphic  Signal,  The.— C:  Barnard.— CS  21 
Telemachus.     G.  M.  Sheldon.— WR  6 
Telemachus  to  the  Allied  Chiefs.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Adven- 
tures of  Telemachus,  Bk.  XV.) — Francois  de 
S.  de  La  M.  F^nelon.— SS 
Telepathy.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— FTA— OH 
Telephone  at  Home,  The.^Anon. — WR  7 
Telephone  Conversation,  A. — Helen  A.  Gregg. — WR  12 
Telephone  Message,  A. — Anon. — PEO 
Telephone  Message,  A. — Sydney  Dayre. — DCP 

(Message,  A.)— BS  18 
Telephonic  C^onversation,  A. — S:  L.  Clemens. — BS  11 
Telesilla.— Anon.— FMR 
Tell  Her  So.— Anon.— WR  2 
Tell  Me.     (C.)— G:  Macdonald. 
(Over  the  Hill.)— HSS  3 

(SI.  afer.  )—BS  1— CEL— LLC 
Tell  Me.— Edith  M.  Thomas.     See  Inverted  Torch,  The. 
Tell  Me  how  to  Woo  Thee. — Rob't  Graham  of  Gartmore. 
—FEP 
(If  Doughty  Deeds  [my  Lady  Please].)— BNL— OB 

— PGTl 
(To  his  Lady.)— LH 
Tell  me,  my  Heart[,  if  this  be  Love].      (Song — C.) — 

G:,  Lord  Lyttleton.— BNL— HBP— OB 
Tell  Me   not    of    Morrows,    Sweet.     (In     Songs   from 

Dramas.) — Augusta  Webster. — VA 
Tell  Me  where  is  Fancy  Bred. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Tell  Me,  ye  Wing6d  Winds.— C:  Mackay.— BNL— VA 
(Inquiry,  The.)— BS  3— CS  2— CSS  — PPSr— S A— 
SE  (br.  sel.) 
(Si:  a6r.1— HSS  2— PEO 
Tell  on  His  Native  Hills.— Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  Wil- 
liam Tell. 
Tell  on  Switzerland. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  William 

Tell. 
Telling  Fortunes. — Alice  Cary. — BLF 


Telling  Fortunes. — G:  H.  Jessop. — WR  4 

Telling  Tales.— Ana  Barnard.— WR  21 

Telling    the    Bees.     (Parap/iroae.)-^ Andrew    Lang. — 

VA 
Telling  the  Bees. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 
Telling    the    Bees.— J:    G.    Whittier.— BFV— EPs— 

PHS 
Tell's  Address  to  the  Alps. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.     See  Wil- 
liam Tell. 
Tell's  Address  to  the  Mountains. — Jas.  S.  Knowles.    See 

William  Tell. 
Telltale,  The.     (AWme.)— BNL— PR— TMR—YA 
(Bobolink,  The.)— BS  11— HNS 

(Abr. )— AD— CSS— PPSr 
(Little  Telltale,  The.)— FTR 
Tell-tale  Flowers.— J:  Clare.— PGT  2 
Tell-tale  Heart,  The.     (C.—cond.)— Edgar    A.   Poe.— 
BS  16 
(Murderer's  Confession,  A.) — PFP 
Tellus.— W:  R.  Huntington.— AA 

Temper  and  Aim  of  the  Scholar,  The.— W:  E.  Glad- 
stone.—TMD 
Temperance. — Anon. — TS 

Temperance.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Temperance,  Sel.  fr.     (Vice  of  Intemperance,  The.) — 

E:  Everett.     WR  18 
Temperance.— J :  Ireland.— BS  12— FS 
Temperance.     (Sel.  arr.  fr.  The  Maine  Liquor  Law.) — 
Wendell  Phillips.— CS  20— TS 
(Enforcement  of  the  Liquor  Law,  The.) — MRS 
(Temperance  Question,  The.)— BS  8— PS  (abr.) 
Temperance  Address. — Anon . — DLS — KNS 
(What  I  Think.)— LPS— PP 
(What  to  Drink.)— DST— PS— SS—TT 
Temperance  Alphabet. — Anon. — WR  17 
Temperance  Alphabet. — Anon. — WR  18 
Temperance  Alphabet,  A. — -Eliz.  Lloyd. — SSE 
Temperance  Boy,  The.     (S.  S.  Advocate.)— COS— FP 
Temperance  Dialogue. — E.  Murray. — CS  11 
Temperance  Echo,  The.— E:  Carswell.— CS  22 
Temperance  Enlightening  the  World. — G:  L.  Taylor. — 

WR  18 
Temperance  Meeting,  A. — H.  E.  McBride.- — MTD 
Temperance;  or.  The  Cheap  Physician.     (In  Praise  of 
Lessius,  his  Rule  of  Health — C.)— R:  Crashaw. 
—HBP 
(Cheap  Physician,  The.)— BNL 
Temperance  Pearls    from    Many    Authors. — Anon. — 

CS  13 
Temperance    Pledge,     The.  —  T:     F.      Marshall.  — 

CS  17  (ptly.  dt"^.)— PEO— WR  18 
Temperance  Question,  The. — Josiah  G.  Holland. 

(Tramp,  Tramp,  Tramp— sZ.  obr. )—BS  5— CS  14 
Temperance  Question,    The. — Wendell    Phillips.     See 

Temperance. 
Temperance  Rhyme-ation. — Anon.— CS  12 
Temperance,  1776-1876.— G:  W.  Bungay.— CS  9 
Temperance  Ship,  The.     (Banner,  The.)— CS  36 
Temperance  Song.     (Punch.) — HPE 
Temperance  Song  Recital.    (Dial.) — Mrs.  P.  D.  Brown. 

— SR4 
Temperance  Speech.  (2) — Anon.— DLS 
Temperance  Speech. — Gus  Williams. — BDD 

(Burlesque  Temperance  Speech — si.  abr.) — DSS 
Temperance  Star,  The. — Anon. — TS 
Tempered.— Sarah  C.  Woolsey.— TMR 
Tempest,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  David  Copperfield. 
Tempest,    The.— Jas.    T.    Fields.^BNL— FP— GP— 
TAV— WCLG  1 
(Ballad  of  the  Tempest— C.)—CS  19— FEP— HBP 

— LC 
(Captain's  Daughter,  The.)— CSS— DJS  (si.  abr.) — 

PPSr— WCL 
("Isn't  God  upon  the  ocean,"  etc. — abr.) — TFS 
(On  the  Ocean— a6r. )—YBT 
Tempest,  The.— Epes  Sargent.— KNE 
Tempest,  The.  Sels.  fr. — W  :  Shakespeare. 

Ariel's  Song[sJ.     (Song  fr.  Act  V.,  Sc.  1.)     BFV  (I.) 
—  EPs  — GN(II.)       HBP  (III.)— LC(I.)  — 
OEL  (I.)— OS  1— PHS  (III.)— WEP  1 
(Fairy  Land,  IV.)— OB 
(Fairy  Life,  The.  I.)— PGT  1 
(Fairy  Songs  1.)— YBF 
(Tempest,  The,  Sel.  /r.)- BNL— ELP 
("  Where  the  bee  sucks,  th^re  suck  I.")—  BPB — 
FEP 
Insubstantial  Pageant,  An.     (Sel.  fr.  IV.,  1.)  —  EP 
Love  and  Marriage  of  Ferdinand  and  Miranda,  The. 
(Sel.  fr.  I.,  2;  III.,  I;  sels.  fr.lY.,  1,  and  V..  1.) 
— VSG 
Airy   Nothings.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IV.,  1.)— BNL  — 
CS  14 
(Human  Life.)— EPs 


328 


TITLE  INDEX 


Thankfulness 


Tempest,  The  (continued). 

Ariel's    Songs.     (Song    fr.   I.,   2.)— BFV  (II.)— 
GN  (I.)— HBP  (I.)  —  LC  (II.)— OEL  (II.)— 
PHSd.) 
("  Come  unto  these  yellow  sands.") — FEP 
(Pairy  Land,  III.)— OB 
(Fairy  Life,  The,  II.)— PGT  1 
(Fairy  Songs,  II.)— YBF 
(Song  of  Ariel.)— CGd 
(Tempest,  The,  Sel.  fr.)  -  BNL 
Ariel's  Songs.     (Soni  fr.   I.,  2.)  —  GN  (HI.)  — 
HBP   (II.)  -    LC    (III.)  —  OEL  (III.)  — 
PHSdI.) 
(FairyLand,  V.)— OB 

("Full  fathom  five  thy  father  lies.")— EPs— 
FEP 
(Sea  Dirge.  A.)  —  BFV  —  BPB— CGd— PGT  1 
— WEP  1— YBF 

(Tempest,  The,  Sel.  /r.)— BNL— ELP 
Speech  of  Prospero,  A.     (Sel.  fr.  V.,  1.)— MRS 
Tempest,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Fr.  II.,  1.)— BNL 
Tempest  Stilled,  The.— J.  G.  Lyons.— SS 
Temple  of  Clitumnus. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Har- 
old's Pilgrimage. 
Temple  of  Fame,  The.    (Entertainment.) — Anon. — EuE 
Temple  of  Human  Liberty,  The.— J.  S.  Holmes.— FD  1 
Temple  of  Living  Masons,  The. — Lawrence  M.  Green- 
leaf.— CS  30 
Temple  to  Friendship,  A.^T:  Moore. — BNL 
Tempora  Acta.     (Sel.  fr.  Babylonia.) — Rob't,  Earl  of 

Lytton. — VA 
Temptation.     (Pt.  IV.)— R:  W.  Gilder.- TAS 
Temptation.      (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Temptation  of  Hassan  Ben  Khaled,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Rose, 

The.)— Bayard  Taylor.- BNL 
Temptation  of  the    Vision    of   the    Kingdoms    of    the 
Earth,    The. — J:    Milton.     See    Paradise    Re- 
gained. 
Temptation  Resisted.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FAD 
Temptation  Resisted.     (Dial.) — ^Anon. — FDY 
Temptations  of  St.  Anthony.     (Bentley'a  Miscellany.) 

— CS  11 
Tempted,  The.     (ro6.)— Anon.— TCP 
Tempted.— E:  R.  Sill.— A  A 

Ten  Commandments,  The.     (Arr.) — Anon. — FTT 
Ten  Commandments,  The.     Bible.     See  Exodus. 
Ten  Commandments,  The.     (Dial.) — Lizzie    M.    Had- 

ley.— SSE 
Ten  Famous  Women.     (Dial.) — Eliz.  Lloyd. — CDs 
Ten  Hour  Bill,  The,  Seh.  fr.—T:  B.  Macaulay. 
Labor  Hours  Have  Limits. — BLP 

(On  Limiting  the  Hours  of  Labor.) — PS— SS 
Ten  Hour  Bill,  The.— WR  22 
Ten  Little  Fingers.     (Dial.) — Anon. — ASD 
Ten  Little  Songsters,  The.— Anon. — WR  7 
Ten  Little  Toes.— Anon.— TFS 

Ten  Nights  in  a  Barroom,  Sel.  fr.     (Drunkard's    Re- 
pentance, A — fr.  Night  the  Third.) — Timothy 
S.  Arthur  (arr.  byWiW.  Pratt).— WR  18 
Ten  Pound  Ten.— G:  W.  Bungay.— CS  26 
Ten  Robber  Toes.— Lillie  E.  Barr.— DR 
Ten  Thousand  a  Year.  —  Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KC 
Ten  Thousand  a  Year,  Sel.  fr.  (Tittlebat  Titmouse's 
Experiment  —  seZ.  fr.  Chs.    V.    and  VI.) — S: 
Warren.— WR  8 
Ten  True  Friends.- Anon.— COS— PP 

(^6r.)— HSS  2— TFS 
Ten  Virgins,  The,  Tabs,  o/.— Anon.— WR  23 
Ten  Years  Ago. — Alaric  A.  Watts. — FP 
Tendencies   of   Self-government,   The.     (Sel.    fr.    The 
Place  of  the  Individual  in  American  Society.) 
— Lyman  Abbott. — TMR 
Tender  Affection.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.)  — BNL 
Tender  and  True.     (Abr.)—Jas.  R.  Lowell.— FTA 

(Love— C.)—BIL— BNL  (br.  seZ.)- TFY 
Tender  Heart,  The.— Helen  G.  Cone.— BS  14 
Tender  Husband,  The.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 
Tender  Mercies. — Anna  L.  Waring. — FHS 
Tender  Shepherd,  The.— Mary  L.  Duncan.— TFS 

(Child's  Evening  Prayer[,  A].— COS— DLS— PP— 
ggS 

(Evening  Hymn.)— YBT 
Tender-heartedness.      (SI.     diff.     fr.     Works.) — D. 

Streamer. — NA 
Tenement    House    Guest,    A. — Gertrude    Garrison. — 

CS37 
Tennessee. — Fs.  Brooks.— AA 
Tennis  Drill.— A.  E.  Hurst.— ID 
Tennis  Drill.— Mary  D.  Wilson.— WR  6 
Tennyson.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 
Tennyson. — Florence  E.  Coates. — AA 
Tennyson.— T:  H.  Huxley.— EDY—VA 


Tennyson. — H :  Van  Dyke. — AA 
Tenor,  The.— H:  C.  Bunner.— WR  8 
Tent  Life  in  Siberia,  Sel.  fr.  (Sudden  Transformation 
from  Winter  to  Summer — sel.  jr.  Ch.  XXXI.) 
— G:  Kennan.— VSG 
Tent  on  the  Beach,  The,  Sels.  fr.—J:  G.  Whittier.   See; 
Abraham  Davenport. 
Brother  of  Mercy,  The. 
To  her  Absent  Sailor. 
Worship  of  Nature,  The. 
Wreck  of  Rivermouth,  The. 
Tenth  of  January,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Fall  of  [the]  Pember- 
ton  Mill,  The.)  —  Eliz.   S.   Phelps.— BRR  — 
BS  12  (abr.)—CS  15 
Tenth  Song,  Absence. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella. 
Ter'ble  Sperience,  A.— Plato  Johnson.— BS  12 
Terence's  Farewell. — Lady  Dufferin. — TIP 
Term  of  Death,  The.— Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt.— AA 
Terminus. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — AA 
Ternarie  of  Littles,  upon  a  Pipkin  of  Jellie  Sent  to  a 

Lady,  A.— Rob't  Herrick.— BVC 
Terpsichore  in  the  Flat  Creek  Quarters. — J:  A.  Macon. 
— BS9 
(Dancing  in  the  Flat  Creek  Quarters.) — WR  7 
Terrible  Example,  A. — Layton  Brewer. — TL 
Terrible  Infant,  A.    (C.) — Frd'k  Locker- Lampson. 

(Earliest  Recollection.)— DCP 
Terrible  Race,  A.— Campbell  Rae-Brown.— WR  13 
Terrible  Secret,  A.— J.  S.  Coyne.— DT 
Terrible  Threat,  A.     (Dial.)— Clara.  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Terrible  Time,  A.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Terror. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Terror  of  Death,  The.   (Sonnet :  "  When  I  have  fears," 
etc.— C.)— J:  Keats.— PGT  1 
(Fear  of  Death,  The.)— YBF 
(Sonnet  Written  in  January,  1818.)— WEP  4 
("When  I  have  fears  that  I  may  cease  to  be.") — OB 
Test,  The.— Anon.— ELP 
Test,  The.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.- AA 
Test,  The.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  LIV.)— Walter  S. 

Landor. — VA 
Test,  The.     (Dial.)—Ii.  E.  McBride.— SD 
Test  of  Patience. — Anon. — KNE 
Test  of  Sight,  The.— Christopher  P.  Cranch.— MYF 
Test;   or,    Maud    May's    Lovers,    The.     (Dial.) — Mrs. 

Russell  Kavanaugh. — KH 
Testament  and  Complayntof  the  Papingo,  The,  Sel.  fr. 

—Sir  D:  Lyndesay.— WEP  1 
Testimony  of  Experience,  The.- — Anon. — TS 
Testing  the  Suitors.     (Dial.) — Anon. — NDP 
Tete-a-tote.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— HP— OH 
Tete-a-tete  with  Phyllis.— G.  C.  Smith.— CG  1 
Texas  Centennial  Oration. — R.  B.  Hubbard. — CS  17 
Texas  Cow,  The.     (Texas  Sif tings. )-—'PS 
Texas  Story,  A.— J.  W.  Donovan.— CS  17 
Text  without  a  Sermon,  A.     (Harper's  Magazine.) — 

CD— SDR 
Thackeray's  Birthday.— Rob't  C.  Rogers.- EDY 
Thaddeus  Stevens.— Phoebe  Gary.- EDY 
Thae  Auld  Laird's  Secret.- Findley  Braden.  —  WR  21 
Thaisa's  Dirge. — Herman  C.  Merivale. — VA 
Thalaba  the  Destroyer,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Southey. 

Night  [in  the  Desert].— (Bk.  I.,  St.  1.)— CEL— FP 
— GN 
(Thalaba,  Sel.  /r.)— BNL 
Thalaba,  Sel.    fr.    (Bk.   VIII.,   Sts.    23.   26-29.)— 
WEP  4 
Thalatta!  [Thalatta!]  [or  Thalassa!  Thalassa]. — Jos.  B. 

Brown.— AA—ASL—PYO— TAS— YBF 
Thales'  Reasons  for  Leaving  London.     (Sel.  fr.  Lon- 
don.)—S:  Johnson.— WEP  3 
Thalia.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 
Thames,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Ovid's  Banquet   of  Sense 

— Narratio.)— G:  Chapman.— WEP  1 
Thanatopsis.— W:  C.  Bryant.— AA— BNL— BS  6— CR 
— CS  1  —  FEP  —  FTR  —  GMS  —  HBP  —  LLC 

—  MAL  —  OM  —  OS  3  —  PYO  —  SE  —  SM 

—  TAS  —  TAV  —  VSG  —  WCLG  2  —  WRD 
(^6r.)— EPs— SO— TMR 

(Br.  seis.)- AD— HDL 
(How  to  Live — br.  sel.) — FP 

("So    live   that   when   thy  summons    comes  to 
join.")— AE— GG 
Thank  God,  there's  Still  a  Vanguard.  —  Mrs.  H.  E.  G. 

Arey.— HSS  3 
Thank  You,  Pretty  Cow. — Jane  Taylor. — PoR 

(Pretty  Cow.)— PC 
Thankful  Children.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
Thankful  Hearts. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Thankful  Parson,  A.— Anon.— CS  30 
Thankful  Soul,  A.— Frank  L.  Stanton.— BS  24— WR  21 
Thankfulness.— G:  Cooper.— YBT 


329 


Thanks 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Thanks  to  the  human  heart  by  which  we  live." — 
W:    Wordsworth.     See   Ode:     Intimations   of 
Immortality. 
Thanksgivin'  Pumpkin    Pies. — Marg.    E.    Sangster. — 

DR 
Thanksgiving. — Anon. — PEO 
Thanksgiving.— Amelia  E.  Barr.— YBT 
Thanksgiving,  A.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— TAS 
Thanksgiving.     {SI.    abr.) — Frances    R.    Havergal. — 

HS 
Thanksgiving!,  A].    (C.)— W:     D.    Howells.— HDL— 
TAS 
(Our  Thanksgiving  Accept.) — PEO 
Thanksgiving.— T.  G.  La  Moille.— FS 
Thanksgiving,  A. — Lucy  Larcom. — BS  6 — CS  9 
Thanksgiving.— H.  E.  McBride.— SD 
Thanksgiving,  A. — J.  H.  Newman. — CEL 
Thanksgiving.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— SSE 
Thanksgiving  among  the  Greeks. — Anon. — PEO 
Thanksgiving  among  the  Jews. — Anon. — PEO 
Thanksgiving  at  Grandma's. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Thanksgiving  Day. — Anon. — DFR 
Thanksgiving  Day. — Anon. — PEO 
Thanksgiving  Day.  —  H :  Alford.      See  Thanksgiving 

Hymn. 
Thanksgiving  Day.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Family  as  an  Ameri- 
can Institution.) — H:  W.  Beecher. — OS  3 
(Day  of  Thanksgiving,  The— sei.)— PEO 
Thanksgiving  Day.- Lydia    M.    Child.— NV— OS  1— 

PoR— WCL 
Thanksgiving  Day.— Rose  H.  Thorpe.— BS  22 
Thanksgiving  Dinner,   A.— I^esbia   Bryant. — PR — YA 
Thanksgiving  Dinner,  A. — Ann  S.  Stephens. — MMR 
Thanksgiving  Dream,  A. — Clara  .1.  Denton. — I^L 
Thanksgiving  Dream,  A. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Thanksgiving  Elopement,  A. — N.  S.  Emerson. — DR 
Thanksgiving  Eve. — Anon. — WR  6 
Thanksgiving  Exercise. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — DFR 
Thanksgiving  Fable,  A. — Oliver  Herford. — PoR 
Thanksgiving    for    His    Hou.se. — Rob't   Herrick.     See 

Thanksgiving  to  God  for  His  House.  A. 
Thanksgiving  Guest,     The.— Mary     H.     Grosvenor. — 

BS26 
Thanksgiving  Hymn. — Anon. — PEO 
Thanksgiving  Hymn.     {Sel.   fr.   Harvest  Home.) — H: 
Alford.— FEP 
(Thanksgiving  Day — ptly.  same.) — OS  1 
Thanksgiving  in  Boston  Harbor,  The. — Hezekiah  But- 
terworth.- AA— BS  16 
(First  Boston  Thanksgiving,  The— afer. )— PEO 
Thanksgiving  Ode,  A. — Josiah  G.  Holland.   See  Bitter- 
sweet. 
Thanksgiving  Ode.     (Autumn    Festival,    An — C.) — J: 
G.  Whittier.— PEO  {abr.) 
(Harvest  Hymn— sei. )— PEO 
Thanksgiving  of  Old.— E.  A.  Smuller.— PEO 
Thanksgiving  Prayer,  A. — Anon. — PEO 
Thanksgiving  Prayer,  A. — May  R.  Smith. — HDL 
Thanksgiving  Sermon,  A. — Anon. — CS  4 
Thanksgiving  Song. — Anon. — CP 
Thanksgiving  Speech,  A. — Anon. — CP 
Thanksgiving  Story,  A.— Anon.— PP— YPS 
Thanksgiving  to    God,    A. — Rob't    Herrick.     See   fol- 
lowing. 
Thanksgiving  to  God  for  His  House,  A.     (C.)-Rob't 
Herrick.— FEP 
(Thanksgiving  for  His  House — ahr.) — PEO 
(Thanksgiving  to  God,  A.)— OS  3— WEP  2 
Thanksgiving  Turkey. — Jean  Havez. — SR  12 
Thank.sgiving  Turkey.- Z.  F.  Riley.— TT 
Thar  was  Jim. — J.  Crawford. — BS  21 
"That  a  man  stand  and  speak  of  spiritual  things  to 

men!"— T:  Carlyle.— GG 
That  Amateur  Flute.     {Parody  on  Poe's  The  Bells.) — 
Anon. — HP 
Amateur  Flute-player,  The.)— CH 
That  Autograph  Sale.— Elmer  R.  Coates.— CS  29 
That  Awful  Girl!— Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh.— KH 
That  Baby  in  Tuscaloo.— Bartley  T.  Campbell.— CS  11 
That  Boy.— Anon.— HP 
That  Boy  Jim.— Frank  L.  Stanton. — WR  7 
That  Boy  John!— Fannie  M.  P.  Deas.— WR  24 
That  Calf.— Phoebe  Cary.— DS— PP— WR  15— YFR 
That  Day  You  Came.— Lizette  W.  Reese.— ASL 
That  Dog  of  Jim  Smiley's. — S:  L.  Clemens. — See  Jump- 
ing Frog,  The. 
That  Each  Thing  is  Hurt  of    Itself.— Anon.— EPs— 

PHS 
That  Echo.     (DtaZ.)- Anon.— HVD 
That  "Fellow"  who  Came  on  Sundays. — H.  C.  Dodge. 

— BS  26 
That  Fire    at    the    Nolan's.     (Lt/e.)— CS  28— DCR— 
— WR  21 


That  Freckle-faced  Girl.— Anon.— DCR 

That  Gentle  Man  from  Boston  Town. — Joaquin  Miller. 

— THP 
That  Giggle.— Alice  L.  Richards.- SL 
That  Hired  Girl.     {Detroit  Free  Press.)- BS  7— CRR 

— CS  13— CSS 
That  Holy  Thing.     {Verses  fr.   Paul  Faber,    Surgeon, 

Ch.  XLIX.)— G:  Macdonald.— OB— YBF 
That  Kiss  of  Marthy's.— Eben  E.  Rexford.— WR  15 
That  Lass  o'  Lowries,  Sel.  fr.     (In  the  Pit — abr.  and 

ad.  fr.  Ch.  XXXV.)— Frances  H.  Burnett.— 

WR  14 
"That  law  and  system,  self  caused  and  self  directed." — 

Anon.— GG 
That  Light.     {Br.    sel.    fr.    Moon-struck.) — Dinah   M. 

Craik.— HDL 
That  Line  Fence. — Anon. — CS  8 
That  Little.— W.  M.  L.  Jay.— YBT 
"That  Little  Dog."— Jas.  W.  Riley.— CW 
That  Little  Girl  of  Mine.— W:  H.  Head.— SR  11 
That     Little     Wretch. — Anthony    Hope.     See    Dolly 

Dialogues,  The. 
That  Littul  Orfun  Brat.— Joe  Kerr.- GH 
"That  motionless  shaft  will  be  the  most  powerful  of 

speakers." — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Bunker  Hill 

Monument,  The. 
That  Old  Book.— Anon.— BS  12 

That  Other  Baby  at  Rudder  Grange. — Frank  R.  Stock- 
ton.    See  Rudder  Grange. 
"That  Other  Fourth."— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
That  Starry  Flag  of  Ours.— Anon.— PRR 
That  Such  Have  Died. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA 
That  Sugar-plum  Tree.— Eugene  Field.— BS  21 

(Sugar-plum  Tree,  The— C.)— DLF— EF— WTD 
That  Sweet    Girl    Graduate.     {Harvard    Lampoon.) — 

CG2 
That  Telephone. — Jerome  K.  Jerome. — VSG 
That  Ten  Dollars.— Anon.— MYF 
"That  They  All  May  be  One."— Roden  Noel.— VA 
That  Things  are  no  Worse,  Sire. — Helen  H.  Jackson. — 

PEO 
That  Time   and   Absence    Proves    rather   Helps  than 

Hurts  to  Loves. — J:  Donne. — OB 
(Absence— a6r.)— YBF 

("Absence,  hear  thou  my  protestation.") — ELP 
(Present  in  Absence — abr.) — PGT  1 
That  Time  of  Year. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  following. 
"That  time  of  year  thou  may'st  in  me  behold." — W: 

Shakespeare.- OEL^PGT  1 
(Quatuor  Novissima.) — CEL 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— OB  (VIII.) 
(Sonnet  LXXIIL— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
(That  Time  of  Year.)— YBF 
That  Waltz  of  Von  Weber.— Nora  Perry- BS  16 
That  we  Should  Rise  with  the  Lark  (Popular  Falla- 
cies, No.  14),  Sels.  fr. — C:  Lamb. 
On  Ri.sing  with  the  Lark. — LLC 
We  Chfirish  Dreams.— LLC 
That  West-side  Dog,  or,  William  Nye  in  Chicago. — 

B.  F.  Wilkie.— BeR 
That  which  we  Dare  Invoke  to  Bless.     Alfred  Tenny- 
son.    See  In  Memoriam. 
That  Whistle    Saved    my    Life. — Ralph    Bingham. — 

CS36 
"That  you  have  wronged  me  doth  appear  in  this." — 

W :  Shakespeare.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
That's  Baby.— Anon.— CS  36— PR— PS— TT 
"That's  Not  the  Way  at  Sea." — Frances  R.  Havergal. 

—LLC 
That's  What  I  Thought.— Anon.— DSS 
"That's  You."     (Taft.)- Anon.— TCP 
Thea. — J:  Keats.     See  Hyperion. 
Theater,  The.— Jas.  Smith.— FEP— HPE 
'Theatre  is  neither  moral  nor  immoral.  The." — E.G. 

Sweetzer. — GG 
Theatrical  Curiosity,    A.     {Cruikshank's    Omnibus.) — 

HPE 
Thebes.— W:  Whitehead.— CS  11 
Thefts  of  the  Morning.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— AA 
Their  First  Spat.— (London  7'td-Bt78.)—BS  20 

(They  never  Quarreled.)— WR  20 
Their  First  Unpleasantness. — Anon. — SR  9 
Their  Mother. — Anon.— DR 
Their  Turn.— K.  H.  A.— TL 
Their  Waving    Hands.     {In    A    Lover's    Diary.) — H. 

Gilbert  Parker.- TCV 
Thekla's  Song. — Friedrich  Schiller.     See  Wallenstein. 
Thelma,  Sel.  fr.     (Crimson  Shroud  of  Olaf  Guldmar, 

The— sci.  fr.  Ch.  XXXII.)  — Marie  Corelli.— 

PFP 
(Passing  of  Olaf,  The— shorter  and  si.  rft^.)- WR  19 
Them  Dear   Old    Garret   Things. — Eliz.    Carpenter. — 
C  S36 


330 


TITLE  INDEX 


There'll 


Them  Oxen.— Anon.— BS  22 

Them  Yankee  Blankits.— S:  W.  Small.— DFR— PS 

Then.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— HBP 

Then  Ag'in.     (C.)— Sam  W.  Foss. 

(Jim  Bowker.)— BS  26 
Then  and  Now.— Anon.— CS  26 

(Mr.  and  Mrs.  Popperman.)— DCR— WR  3 
Then  and  Now. — Anon.— DCP 
Then  and  Now. — Anon. — WR  7 
Then  and  Now.— Guy  W.  Carryl.- CG  2 
Then  and  Now.— F.  W.  Fish.— CS  12— PRR  (seZ.) 
Then  and  Now. — C:  F.  Johnson. — AA 
Then  and  Now.— Mary  M'Guire. — CS  29 
Then  and  Now.— Rennell  Rodd.— VA 
Then  and  Now.— Viola  Valentine. — BS  9 
(Time  Turns  the  Tables.)— CH—SR  2 
Then,  Fare  Thee  Well.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
"Then  gently  scan  your  brother  man." — Rob't  Burns. 

See  Address  to  the  Unco'  Guid. 
"Then  hush!  oh,  hush!  for  the  Father  knows  what  thou 

knowest     not."     {Sel.    fr.     Compensation.) — 

Frances  R.  Havergal. — FHS 
"Then  let  the  holly  red  be  hung." — Frank  D.  Sherman. 

— PoR 
Then  Shall  We  See.     (In  Book  of  Day-dreams.)— C: 

L.  Moore. — AA 
"Then,  too,  I  love  thee." — M.  Lomin. — GG 
Theocritus. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — TAV 
Theocritus. — Annie  Fields. — AA 
Theocritus.— Edmund  Gosse. — VA 
Theocritus. — C:  H.  Langhorne. — VA 
Theology.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Theology.     (Fr.  The  New  England  Primer.) — Anon. — 

BNL 
Theology  in  Extremis.- Alfred  Lyall.— AVP— LH 
Theology  in   the    Quarters. — J:    A.    Macon.— A WH — 

BS  10— CH 
Th^ophile  Gautier.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Memorial  Verses  on 

the  Death  of  Th(5ophile  Gautier.) — Algernon 

C.  Swinburne.— EDY 
Theophilus  Thistles    Thrusted    Thumb.— Chester     E. 

Pond.— BS  20 
Theosophic  Marriage,  A. — H:  J.  W.  Dam. — SR  6 
Therania.— W:  AUingham.— TIP 
Therapia.     (Names  of  Good  Omen,  Therapia  on  the 

Bosphorus— C.)— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 
"There  are  books  which  take  rank  in  our  life  with 

parents  and  lovers." — -Ralph  W.  Emerson.  See 

Books. 
There  are  Gains  for  all  our  Losses. — R:  H:  Stoddard. 

—HBP 
(Flight  of  Youth,  The— O— AA— ASL— YBF 
(It  Never  Comes  again.)— BNL— LLC— MRS 
(Lost.)— FP 

(Never  Again.)— FEP— TAV 
There  are  in  this  Loud  Stunning  Tide. — J:  Keble.     See 

St.  Matthew. 
^'There  are  many  phases  thorugh  which  the  soul  must 

pass." — Anon. — GG 
There  are  no  Dead. — J.  L.  McCreery.     See  There  is  no 

Death. 
There  are  None.— I.  E.  Jones.— CS  23 
"There  are  parts  of  our  life  we  do  not  like  to  think 

about." — Jos.  Parker. — GG 
"There    are    recollections    as  pleasant    as    they    are 

sacred  and  eternal."— H:  A.  Walker.— GG 
There  are  several  sovereignties  in  this  country. — Jas. 

A.  Garfield.— GG 
"There  are  some  great  troubles  that  only  time  can 

heal." — Anon.— GG 
"There  are  two  angels  that  attend  unseen." — H:  W. 

Longfellow.     SeeChristus:     A  Mystery. 
"There  are  who  say  we  are  but  dust." — Walter  S.  Lan- 

dor.- WEP  4  ' 

"There  be  none  of  Beauty's  daughters." — Lord  Byron. 

— PGT  1 
(For  Music.)— OB 
(Nature's  Daughter.) — MR 
(Stanzas      for     Music— C.)—CEL— FEP— HBP— 

WEP  4— YBF 
There  be  Those.— Bernard  Barton.— FEP— HBP 
"There  can  be  no  prosperity  nor  virtue  nor  glory  in  the 

aggregate." — Edwin  H.  (?)  Chapin. — (3G 
There  Come  the  Boys. — Anon. — CS  11 
There  Falls  with  Every  Wedding  Chime.     (Last  fruit 

off    an  Old  Tree— II.)— Waiter  S.  Landor.— 

VA 
(Feathers.)- YBF 
There  is  a  Garden  in  her  Face.     (Fourth  Book  of  Airs, 

VII.) — T:  Campion  (wr.  at.  to  R:  Alison).-^ 

BNL— FEP— TFY 
(Cherrv    Ripe.)  — BPB  — ES  — GP  —OB  — OEL— 

PGT  1— PYO— YBF 


"There  is  a  glory  in  tree  and  blossom." — B:  S.  Parker. 

—FTA 
"There  is  a  grandeur  in  the  soul  that  dares." — Sara  J. 

Clarke.— GG 
There  is  a  Green  Hill[,far  away]. — Cecil  F.  Alexander. 

—FEP— LLC— VA 
(Green  Hill  Far  Away,  The.)— TFS 
There  is  a  Happy  Land. — Andrew  Young. — FEP 
There  is  a  Lady  [Sweet  and   Kind]. — Anon. — ELP — 

OB  (sei.) 
There  is  a  Land  of  Pure  Delight.     (Hymn   LXVI.)— 

Isaac  Watts.— FEP 
(Heavenly  Canaan,  The.)— HBP 
"There  is  a  river  in  the  ocean." — M.  F.  Maury. — GG 
"There  is  a  tide  in  the  affairs  of  men." — W:  [Shake- 
speare.    See  Julius  Caesar. 
There  is  a  Time.— J.  C.  B.— CG  1 

"There  is  a  time,  we  know  not  when.  ' — Addison  Alex- 
ander (?).— GG 
"There  is    an   apostolical  succession." — H:  A.  Board- 
man. — GG 
""'There  is   an   evening  twilight   of   the   heart." — Fitz- 

Greene  Halleck.     See  Twilight. 
"There  is,  between  the  whole  animal  kingdom  on  the 

one  side." — Max  Miiller. — GG 
There  is  no  Death. — J.  L.  McCreery  (wr.  at.  to  E:  Bul- 

wer-Lytton).— CS  5— GP— LLC— PYO  {longer 

and  diff.  vers.) — SSS 
(There  is  no  Death— si.  a6r.)— HSS  1 
("There  is  no  death!  the  stars  go  down.") — GG 
There  is  no  God. — Sophie  M.  Almon-Hensley. — TCV 
"There  is  no  morrow."     (Sel.  fr.  Sonnet:     One  Day.) 

— Marg.  J.  Preston.— GG 
"There  is  no  roof  in  all  the  world,  of  palace  or  of  cot." — 

Anon.— GG 
"There  is  no   sadness  so  unutterable." — Stopford  A. 

Brooke.— GG 
"There  is  one  spojt  for  which  my  soul  will   yearn." — 

Myron  B.  Benton. — SN 
There  is  None,  O,  None  but  You.     (Light  Conceits  of 

Lovers,  XIII.)— T:  Campion.— ELP 
There  is  Nothing  New  under  the  Sun.     (In  The  New 

Day.)— R:  W.  Gilder.— TAS 
"There  is  something  sustaining  in  the  very  agitation." 

— G :  Eliot.     See  Mill  on  the  Floss,  The. 
"There  is  one  thing  in  the  wide  universe  which  is  really 

valuable."— J:  Todd.— GG 
There  once  was  a  Toper.— Anon.— CS  2— DS— NPS— 

YP 
"There  once  was  a  writer  named  Wright."     (Limerick.) 

—Carolyn  Wells.— SO 
"There  once  was  an  old  man  of  Lyme."     (Limerick.) — 

Cosmo  Monkhouse. — NA 
There  Sat    the  Women  Weeping    for  Thammuz. — W. 

T.  Allison.— TCV 
There  Shall  be  no  Night  There.— W.  M.  L.  Jay.— HDL 
"There,  speak  in  whispers,  fold  me  to  thy  heart." — 

Anon. — GG 
There  was    a     Boy.     (C.) — W:    Wordsworth.- SN — 

WEP  4 
(Boy-poet,  The— abr. )—EPs 
There  was  a  Child  Went  Forth.— Walt  Whitman.— SN 
"There  was  a  Crooked  Man."— W:  E.  Penney.— CS  31 

— PR— YA 
"There  was  a  gay  damsel  of  Lynn."     (Limerick.) — 

Anon. — -NA 
There  was  a  Frog. — Anon. — NA 
There  was  a  Jolly  Miller. — I:  (?)  Bickerstaffe.- PC 
There  was  a  Little  Boy. — Anon. — WR  17 
There  was  a  I^ittle  Girl. — Anon.  (at.  to  H:  W.  Longfel- 
low).—NA 
(Jemima — 2  versions — ptly.  same  and  ptly.  like  NA.) 

— BVC 
There  was  a  Maid  Came  out  of  Kent. — Anon. — PEB  1 
There  was  a  Monkey. — Anon. — NA 
"There  was  a  time." —  W:  Wordsworth.      See  Ode: 

Intimations  of  Immortality. 
"There  was  a  young  lady  of  Niger."     (Limerick.) — 

Anon. — NA 
"There  was  a  young  maid  who  said,  'Why.'  "     (Lim- 
erick.)— Anon. — NA 
"There  was  a  young  man  of  Cohoes."     (Limerick 

in  Rhymes  on  the  Wing.) —  Rob't  J.  Burdette. 

— NA 
"There  was  a  young  man  who  was  bitten."     (Lim- 
erick.)— Walter  Parke.— N A 
"There  Were  Ninety  and  Nine." — R:  H.  Davis. — HBR 
"There  will  I  ask  of  Christ  the  Lord." — Dante  G.  Ros- 

setti. — BIL 
"There  Yet." — Clara  J.  Denton.— LL 
There'll  be  Room  in  Heaven. — Anon. — CS  26 
There'll  Never  be  Peace  'Till  Jamie  Comes  Hame. — 

Rob't  Burns.— BPB 


331 


There's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


There's  a  Boy  in  the  House. — Anon. — WR  17 
There's  a  Silver  Lining  to  Every  Cloud. — Eliza  Cook. — 

CS9 
There's  a  Tree  That  Blossoms. — Anon. — CPL 
There's  a  Wedding  in  the  Orchard.     (C.) — Mary  M. 

Dodge.— WCLI  2 
(Blossom    Time— %/.  diff.,    si.    abr. — w.    music.) — 

AD 
"There's  a  wideness  in   God's  mercy."     (Br.   sel.   jr. 

Come  to  Jesus.) — Frd'k  W.  Faber.— GG 
There's  a  Woman  Like  a  Dewdrop. — Rob't  Browning. 

See  Blot  in  the  'Scutcheon,  A. 
There's  Business  for  AIL— P.  S.  Pennell.— CS  13 
"There's  always    a    river    to    cross." — Anon. — SM — 

WCLI  1 
There's  but  One  Pair  of  Stockings  to  Mend  To-night. — 

Anon.— CS  2— WRD 
There's  Danger  in  the  Town. — J:  M.  Yates. — FS 
There's  Life  in  the  Old  Land  Yet.— Jas.  R.  Randall.— 

AWB 
"There's  many  a  life  chained  down  by  circumstances. "- 

— Anon.— GG 
There's  nae  Luck  about  the   House.^  Jean    Adam. — 

BS  6— EPs  {at.  also  <o  W:  J.  Mickle)—  HBP— 

WEP,3 
(Mariner's  Wife,  The.)— FEP 
(Sailor's     Wife,     The.)— BFV— BNL— GN— GP— 

LC— PGT  1 
There's  Never    any    Harm    in    Good    Company. — C. 

Shirley  Brooks.— VSG 
There's  No  Rose    without  a  Thorn.     {Tab.)     {Scrib- 

ner's  Monthly.)— BS  8— TCP 
There's  no  Such  Word  as  Fail.— Alice  B.  Neal.— SSS 
"There's  not  a  flower  that  decks  the  vale." — Gerald 

Griffin.- HSS  3 
(God's  Love.)— AD— YBT 
There's  not  a  Joy  the  World  Can  Give. — Lord  Byron. — 

FEP 
(Stanzas  for  Music— C.)—WEP  4 
(Youth  and  Age.)— PGT  1— YBF 
"There's  nothing  bright  above,  below." — T:  Moore. 

See  Turf  Shall  be  my  Fragrant  Shrine,  The. 
There's  Nothing  Like  the  Rose. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. 

— PoR 
There's  Tan  in  the  Street.— A.  W.  Thaxter.— CS  10 
There's  Work  Enough  to  Do.— Anon.— CS  15 
"These  are  they  who,  with  the  Bible  in  their  hands." — 

Anon.— GG 
These  Dreadful  "Hard  Times:"— Anon.— CS  33— DS 
"These  eyes,     though     clear." — J:     Milton.     See    To 

Cyriack  Skinner. 
"These  loving   eyes   niay   never  more   behold    thee." 

(Blackwood's) — GG 
"These  Three."— Isabella  V.  Crawford.— TCV 
Theseus  and  Ariadne. — Lloyd  Mifflin. — AA 
Thesmophoriazusae,  The,  Sel.  jr.     (Chorus  of  Women.) 

— Aristophanes. — WR  20 
Thet  Boy  ov  Ourn.— Jere  De  Brown.- CD— SR  5 
They  are  All  Gone.     (C.)— H :  Vaughan.— BNL— FEP 

HBP 
(Beyond  the  Veil.)— ELP— WEP  2 
(Friends  Departed.)— OB 

(Friends  in  Paradise— abr.)— HDL— PGT  2— YBF 
They  are  Always  at  the  Gate.— Anon. — CS  17 
"They  are  Dear  Fish  to  Me." — Anon.     See  "They're 

Dear  Fish  to  Me." 
"They  are  slaves  who  fear  to  speak." — Jas.  R.  Lowell. 

See  Stanzas  on  Freedom. 
They  Ask  Me  why  I  am  so  Bad. — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 

anaugh. — KER 
They  Come  Not  Back.— Anon.— LLC 
They   Come!  the  Merry  Summer   Months.     (C.) — W: 

Motherwell.— BNL— POS  (ahr.) 
(Merry  Summer  Months,  The.)— HBP 
They    Didn't      Think.  —  Phoebe      Gary.  —  BLF  — 

HSS  2  (si.  a6r.)— NV 
(Didn't  Think— seZ. )— CPL 
They  Don't  Agree.— Anon.— DES 
They  Know  not  My  Heart.— T:  Moore.- FTA 
They  Love  indeed  who  Quake  to  Say  they  Love. — Sir 

Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
"They  may  rail  at  this  life."     (Br.  sel.) — T:  Moore. — 

HSS  3 
They  Met  but  Once.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
They  Met  in  Death.     (Detroit  Free  Press.)- CS  36 
They  Never  Quarreled.     (London  Tid-bits.)     Sec  Their 

First  Spat. 
They  Parted.— Jas.  R.  Planche.— BIL— FTA 
They  Sang  for  It.— Anon.— WR  15 
"They  Say."— Anon.— KJ— PR— YA 
They  Say.     (DiaZ.)— Anon.— PS 
"They  sin  who  tell  us  love  can  die." — Rob't  Southey. 

See  Curse  of  Kehama,  The. 


"They  turned  to  the  earth,  but  she  frowns  on  her  child." 

—Bayard  Taylor.— BNL 
They  Went  A-fishin'. — Anon.     See  Two  Fishers. 
They  Went  Fishing. — Anon.     See  Two  Fishers. 
"They  were  living  to  themselves;  self,  with  its  hopes 

and  promises  and  dreams." — Anon. — GG 
"They  who     may     blame     my     tenderness." — Claire 

D'Anduze.— FTA 
"They  who  the  sweetest  rest." — M.  E.  Townsend. — 

FHS 
They  Will  Never  Do  so  Again. — Marg.  Vandegrift. — 

CS  36— WR  14 
(Culprit,  A.)— BS  14— SR  15 
"They're  Dear  Fish  to  Me." — Anon. — FEP 

("They  are  Dear  Fish  to  Me.")— BNL 
They've  Cut  the  Wood  Away. — Anon. — AD 
Thief,  The.     ( A 6r.)— Abraham  Cowley.— ES 
Thief  on  the  Cross,  The.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  24— PS 
Thief's  Apology,  A.— Rob't  P.  St.  John.— CG  2 
Thikhed's  New  Year's  Call.— Anon.— DCR—WR  3 
Thine  Eyes.     (In  Travel  Pictures  No.  63.) — Heinrich 

Heine  (tr.  by  J.  F.  Ballantyne).— FTA— HP 
Thing  of  Beauty  is  a  Joy  Forever,  A. — J:  Keats. — See 

Endymion. 
Things  a  Girl  Doesn't  Know.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Things  Delightful.— G:  Sigerson.— TIP 
Things  I  Miss,  The.— T:  W.  Higginson.— TAS 

("Easy  thing,  O  power  divine,  An" — sel.) — HDL 
Things  not  Always  What  They  Seem. — Anon. — WR  14 
Things  that  I  Do  not  Like  to  See.— L.  J.  Rook.— LPS 

— PP— PS 
Things  that  Never  Die.— C:  Dickens. — CS  37— HBR 
Things  that  Never  Die.— E.  O.  Jewell.— CS  23 
Things  to  Remember. — Anon. — PEO 
Think  before  you  Drink. — Anon. — TS 
Think  before  You  Speak.— W:  Penn.— PS 
Think  it  Over.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Think  of  Me,  Dearest.— C:  F.  Hoffman.— FTA 
Think  of  Me  Then.— Anon.— CS  7 
"Think  on    thy    wants,    on    thy     faults." — Frederika 

Bremer. — GG 
Think,  Speak  and  Live  Truly.— Anon.— PS 
"Think  you  to  escape." — T:  k  Kempis.     See  Imitatioo 

of  Christ,  The. 
Third  of   November   [1861— C],   The.     (Sel.)—W:  C. 

Bryant.— PEO 
Third  Pastor's  Song,  The. — N:  Breton.     See   Passion- 
ate Shepherd,  The. 
Third  Sunday  in  Advent.     (Abr.)—.1:  Keble.— AVP 
Third  Sunday  in  Lent.     (In  The  Christian  Year.) — Jr 

Keble.— WEP  4 
Thirsis'  Praise  of  his  Mistress.— W:  Browne.— EP 
Thirsty  Earth  Soaks  up  the  Rain,  The.     (Anacreon- 

tiques,  II.) — Anacreon  (tr.  by  Abraham  Cow- 
ley).—LC  (si.  abr.) 
(Drinking— O— FEP— HBP— OB— WEP  2 
Thirteen  Years  Ago.     (C.) — Bryan  W.  Procter. 

(Lost  and  Found.)— VSG 
Thirteenth  Chapter  of  First  Corinthians.     Bible.     See 

First  Corinthians. 
Thirty  Years  Ago.     (C.) — Bryan  W.  Procter. 

(Lost  and  Found.)— VSG 
Thirty  Years  with  a  Shrew.     (Brooklyn  Eagle.) — GH — 

PS 
Thirty-first  of  May. — Frd'k  Tennyson. — VA 
"39."— T.  G.  La  Moille.— FS 
Thirty-nine  Lovers,  The.     (London  Graphic.) — TMR 

(Girl  with  Thirty-nine  Lovers,  The.)— WR  18 
"This,  after  all,  we  believe,  is  the  tone  of  true  wisdom 

and  true  virtue." — Fs.,  Lord  Jeffrey. — GG 
This  Age  Best.     (Present  Time  Best  Pleaseth,  The.)— 

Rob't  Herrick.— ELP 
This  Army  Led  by  a  Delicate  and  Tender  Prince. — W : 

Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
This  Canada  of  Ours.- Jas.  D.  Edgar.— TCV 
"This  century  is  the  grandest  of  centuries." — Victor 

Hugo.     See  Napoleon  the  Little. 
"This  century  proclaims  the  sovereignty  of  the  citizen." 

— Victor  Hugo.     See  Napoleon  the  Little. 
This  Compost.— Walt  Whitman.— SN 
"This  dav,  two  hundred  years  ago." — J:   G.  Whittier. 

-^AD 
This  is  All.— Rose  Churchill.— FLS 
This  is  East,  and  this  is  West. — Anon. — TFS 
This  is  no  my  Ain  Lassie  (I  see  a  Form,  I  see  a  Face). — 

Rob't  Burns.— WEP  3 
"This  is  the  state  of  man." — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

King  Henry  VIII. 
This  Life  is  What  We  Make  It.— Anon.— TFS 
"This  life,  which  seems  so  fair." — W:  Drummond. — 

PGTl 
(Bubble,  The.)— YBF 
(Madrigal.)— ELP 


332 


TITLE  INDEX 


Threatened 


This  Means  You,  Girls.     {Peck's  Swn.)— CRR 

This  Old  Country.— Frank  L.  Stanton.— WR  25 

This  Old  World  of  Ours.— G:  W.  Bungay.— CS  25 

This  One  is  Wig-ged.     (/JiaZ.)— Anon.— DSS 

This  Side  and  That.— G:  Macdonakl.— BS  11 

"This  system  and  order  everywhere  forms  the  basis  of 

all  science." — H:  C.  Minton. — GG 
This,  too,  Will  Pass  Away.— J:  G.  Saxe.— KNE 
This  Way.— Anon.— LPS— PP 
This  World  is  All  a  Fleeting  Show.— T:  Moore.— BNL 

— GP 
This  World's  Joy.— Anon.— OB 
This  Would  I  Do. — Constance  F.  Runcie.— MR 
This  Year.— Ethel  M.  Kelley.— CG  3 
This  Year — Next  Year. — Anon. — HP 
Thisbe.— Helen  G.  Cone.— AA 
Thistle,  The.— G:  Murray.- TCV 
Thistle  and  the  Rose,  The,  Sels.fr. — W:  Dunbar. 

Dame  Nature  Crowns  the  Scottish  Lion  King  of 

Beasts. — LC    . 
Thri-ssill  and  the  Rois,  The.— WEP  1 
Thistledown. — Clara  D.  Bates. — -AA 
Tho'  Worlds  'quite  me,  shall  I  myself  Forgive? — Sir 

Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Thomas  k  Kempis. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — -AA 
Thomas  k    Kempisf ;  De  Imitatione    Christi]. — R:    R. 

Bowker.— AA— EDY— FEP— HDL 
Thomas  at  Chickamauga. — Kate  B.  Sherwood. — BAB 
Thomas  Buchanan  Read.     Fs.  De  H.  Janvier. — AE 
Thomas  Carlyle.     (London  Punch.) — -EDY 
Thomas  Chatterton. — Anon. — CP 
Thomas  Jefferson  and  John  Adams. — Rob't  C.  Win- 

throp.     See  Centennial  Oration. 
Thomas  Moore.— R:  H.  Stoddard.- EDY 
Thomas  the  Pretender. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — BJC 
Thomas  the  Rhymer.     (Pt.  l.^in  Border  Minstrelsy.) 

— Anon.— BB— HBP— OB— PEB  2    (abr.  and 

sl.diff.) 
Thora.     (SI.  a6r.)— Hjalmar  H.  Boyesen. — BS  11 
Thoralf  and  Synnov. — Hjalmar  H.  Boyesen. — AA 
Thoreau. — Amos  B.  Alcott. — AA 
Thoreau's  Flute. — Louisa  M.  Alcott. — AA — EDY 
Thorgerda. — ^J :  Payne. — VA 
Thorn,  A.— Anon.— FLS 
Thorn  that  Guards,  The.— T.  G.  P.— CG  2 
Thorn-apple,   Sel.   fr.     (Sermon   from   a   Thorn-apple 

Tree,  A.)— Emily  H.  Miller.— AD 
Thornless  Roses. — Julia  C.  R.  Dorr. — BIL 
Those  Ashes.— R.  K.  Munkittrick.— PPh 
,  Those  Evening      Bells.— T:      Moore.— BNL— CS  15—- 

FEP— HBP— SO— WCLG  1 
Those  Far-off  Fields.— Constance  Fairbanks.— TCV 
Those  Glorious    Stars     (Conjunction    of    Jupiter    and 

Venus,  The— C.).— W:  C.  Bryant.— LLC 
Those  I  Love.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Those  Other  Letters.— Anon.— WR  20 
Those  Rebel  Flags.— J.  H.  Jewett.— PAPm 
Those  Thompsons. — Anon. — MND 
Those  Violets  Blue.— H.  W.  Banks.  — CG  1 
Thou  art  Gone  to  the  Grave.     (At  a  Funeral — C.) — 

Reginald  Heber.— HBP 
(Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  a  Friend.) — FEP 
Thou  Art,  O  God!     (C.)—T:  Moore.— FEP 

(Glory  of  God  in  Creation,  The.)— POS 
Thou  Canst     not     Forget.— Anon.— CS  21— FLS     (si. 

abr.) 
"Thou  canst  not  frown,  O  Death." — S.  H.  Thayer. — 

GG 
Thou  Didst  Delight  My  Eyes.— Rob't  Bridges.— VA 
Thou,  God,  Seest  Me. — Jas.  Montgomery. — HBP 
Thou  God  Unsearchable.— C:  Wesley.— HBP 
Thou    Hast  Sworn  by  Thy  God,  My  Jeanie. — Allan 

Cunningham.— BNL— EPs— FEP     - 
(Thou  HastVowedby  thy  Faith,  my  Jeanie.) — HBP 
Thou  Ha.st  Vowed  by  thy  Faith,  my  .leanie. — Allan 

Cunningham.     See  foregoing. 
Thou  Knowest  Best. — Marianne  Farningham. — CS  26 
Thou  Lingering  Star. — Rob't  Burns.     See  To  Mary  in 

Heaven. 
Thou  Livest,  O  Soul!     (In  Book  of  Day-dreams.) — C: 

L.  Moore. — AA 
"Thou  lovest   me  not,   thou  lovest   me   not."     (Last 

Translation,  IV. — C. — ir.  fr.  Lyrical  Interlude 

12.) — Heinrich  Heine  (tr.  by  Eliz.  B.  Browning). 
"Thou  mayst,  thou  shalt,  I  will  not  go  with  thee." — 

W :  Shakespeare.     See  King  John. 
Thou  Wert   Lovely  on  thy  Bier.— W:    S.   Walker.— 

HBP 
(Death's  Alchemy.) — VA 
Thou  Wilt  Never  Grow  Old.— E.  C.  Howarth.— LLC 
Though  Cruel  Fate. — Rob't  Burns. 

(My  Jean.)— BIL— FTA 
"Though  He  Slay!"— Albion  W.  Tourg^e.— TMR 


Though  Lost    to    Sight,    to    Memory    Dear.     (Sailor's 
Farewell,  The — C.) — Ruthven  Jenkyns  (wr.  at. 
<o  T:  Moore).— CS  13— FTA— HP— PYO 
(Good  Bye.)— TFY 
(Sweetheart,  Good-by!)— FLS 

("Sweetheart,  good-bye!  that  flut'ring  sail.") — GG 
Though  Oft  Deceived.— Anon.— FLS 
"Though  scoffers  ask,  where  is  your  gain?" — T:  Knox. 

— GG 
"Though  you  are  young,  and  I  am  old." — T:  Campion. 

— OEL 
Thought.— Christopher  P.  Cranoh.— BNL— GP 
(Gnosis.)— T  AS 
(Knowing.)— LLC 

(Stanzas.)— ASL— FEP— HBP— TAV 
("Thought  is  deeper  than  all  speech" — br.  sel.) — 
CS  1 
Thought,  A.— J:  H.  Ingham.— EDY 
Thought.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— ASL— EPs 
Thought,  A.     (Last  Fruit  off  an  Old  Tree,  X.)— Wal- 
ter S.  Landor. — VA 
Thought,  The.— W:  B.  Rands.— OB 
Thought,  A,     Sel.     fr.     ("Follow     me.") — Abram     J. 

Ryan.— GP 
Thought,  A.— Jas.  K.  Stephen.— VA 
Thought,  A.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV 
Thought  and  Language. — Anon. — KNE 
"Thought  is  deeper  than  all  speech." — Christopher  P. 

Cranch.     See  Thought. 
Thought  of  a  Briton  on  the  Subjugation  of  Switzerland. 
(O— W:  Worasworth.— EPs— WEP  4 
(England  and  Switzerland,   1802.)— PGT  1— SC— 
YBF 
Thought  Suggested  by  the   New   Year,  A.     (C.)—T: 
Campbell. 
(RiverofLife.The.)- BNL— PGT  1— YBF 
"Thoughtless  world    to     majesty    may    bow,     The." 
(Lines  rejected  fr.  Elegy  Written  in  a  Country 
Churchyard.)— T:  Gray.— HP 
Thoughts.— Philip  J.  (?)  Bailey.— FP 
Thoughts,  Sels.  fr. — Blaise  Pascal. 

"Man    is   but    a    reed,  the    weakest  in    nature." 
(Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Greatness  and   Littleness   of 
Man.)— GG 
Thoughts.— Rose  H.  Thorpe.— CS  37 

Thoughts.— Mrs.  Whiton.— YBT 

Thoughts  at  a  Party.— Maty  K.  Dallas.— WR  3 
Thoughts  tor  a  New  Year. — Theodore  Parker. — BS  9 
Thoughts  for  the  New    Year.     (Youth's   Companion.) 

— BS  14 
Thoughts  for  Young  Men. — Horace  Mann. — BS  23  , 
Thoughts  from   Goethe. — Johann   W.    von   Goethe. — 

KNE 
Thoughts  in    a   Garden. — (Tr.    by)   Andrew   Marvell. 

See  Garden ,  The. 
Thoughts  ir  a  Library. — Anne  C.  L.  Botta. — FEP 

(In  the  Library.) — MBB 
Thoughts  of  "Enoch  Arden." — Anon. — CS  5 
Thoughts  of  Home. — Anon. — SSS 

Thoughts  of  Marcus  Aurelius,  Seis. /r. — Marcus  Aurelius 
Antoninus. 
Even  in  a  Palace.    (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  V.,  Par.  16.)— OS  2 
Fortitude.     (Sel.  fr.  IV..  49.)— OS  2 
Goodness.     (Sel.  fr.  VII.,  15.)— OS  1 
Thoughts  on  Immortality. — Philip  Schaff. — CS  23 
Thoughts  on  the  Commandments. — G :  A.  Baker,  Jr. — 
AA— PLD 
("Love  your  neighbor  as  yourself.") — BS  4 
Thoughts  on  the  Forest. — Alice  B.  Neal.     See  Trees  in 

the  City. 
Thoughts  on  the  Forest. — J:  Neal. — AD 
Thoughts  on  the  Forest. — W:  J.  Pabodie. — AD 

(Forest,  The.)— HSS  1 
Thoughts  on  the  Forest. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons, 

The. 
Thoughts  on  the  Forest.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  A  Farewell  to  the 
Vanities  of  the  World.) — Sir  H:  Wotton.  (?)- 
AD 
Thoughts  Suggested  the  Day  Following,  on  the  Banks 
of    Nith,    Near    the    Poet's    Residence.  —  W: 
Wordsworth.- WEP  4 
Thousand  a  Year,  A.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MPD 
Thrasymedes  and  Eunoe. — Walter  S.  Landor. — BS  20 
(Overture  from  "Thrasymedes  and  Eun<)e" — br.  sel.) 
— VA 
Thread  and  Song.— J:  W.  Palmer.— BNL 
Thread  of  Life,   The.     (C.)— Christina  G.   Rossetti. — 
VA 
(Aloof.)— OB 
Threads  from  the  Woof,  Sels.  fr.—G:  H.  Galpin. 
Lie  for  a  Life,  A.— WR  24 
Rose  of  Rome,  A.— WR  22 
Threatened  Visit,  The.— Anon.— FND 


333 


Threatening 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Threatening. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  King  John. 

Three  Acres  of  Land. — Anon. — NA 

Three  Beggars.  The.— Walter  Ramal.— SOC 

Three  Bells,  The.— J:  G.   Whittier.- BeR— CR— CS  8 

CSS NPS PC SA YP 

Three  Best  Doctors,  The.— S.  W.  Duffield.     See  Three 

Good  Doctars. 
Three  Black  Crows,  The.     (Abr.)—J:  Byrom.— SCS 
Three  Brave  Men. — Anon. — DDM 
Three  Bright  Stars.     (With  music.) — Anon. — KNS 
Three  Bugs.     (C.)— Alice  Cary.— BLF 

("Three  little  bugs  in  a  basket.")— GMS 
Three  Chairs,  The. — Anon. — See  Three  Little  Chairs, 

The. 
Three  Cheers  for  the  Olden  Time. — Fanny  Crosby. — 

HSS  1 
Three  Cherry-stones,  The.— Anon.— CS  26 
Three  Children. — Anon. — NA 

Three  Companions.     (Abr.) — Dinah  M.  Craik. — GMS 
Three  Counsellors,  The.— G:  W.  Russell.— TIP 
Three  Cunning  Crabs,  The.— Dorothy  Wood.— POS 
Three  Days.— Jaa.  R.  Gilmore.— BNL 
Three  Days  in  the  Life  of  Columbus. — Jean  F.  C.  Dela- 

vigne.— OM  (si.  a6r.)— SS— TMR  (^abr.) 
Three  Enigmas. — Anon. — KNS 
Three  Fiends,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SR  3 
Three  Fishers,  The.      (Tab.  based  on  Kingsley's    The 

Three  Fishers.)— Anon.— TCP 
Three  Fishers,  The.     (C.)— C:  Kingsley.— BNL— BS  3 

—  BSP  —  CGd  —  CS  10  —  FEP  —  GP  — 

HSS  3  —  LC  — LLC  — OS2  — PYO  — VA  — 

WCLI  2— WR  26 
(Fishermen.The.)— CSS— HBP— PPSr— YBF 
(Three  Fishers  Went  Sailing.)— VS 
Three  Fishers  Went  Sailing. — C:  Kingsley.     See  fore- 
going. 
Three  Flowers,  The.— S:  F.  Smith.— POS 
Three  Friends,  The.— C:  Lamb.^LPC— PC  (br.  sel.) 
Three  Gates. — Anon.     See  Good  Rule,  A. 
Three  Good  Doctors.- S.  W.  Duffield.— PP—YFR 

(Three  Best  Doctors,  The.)— TFS 
Three  Graces,  The.     (Tab.)- Anon.— BS  13— TCP 
Three  Horsemen,  The.— Anon.— CS  15— PTS 
Three  Hundred    Thousand    More.  —  Anon.  —  AWB  — 

EDY— PAPm 
Three  Jovial  Huntsmen. — Anon. — NA 

(Nursery  Rhymes,  11.) — CGd 
Three  Kings,  The. — Eugene  Field.     See  Three  Kings 

of  Cologne,  The. 
Three  Kings,    The.— H:    W.    Longfellow.— BS  15    (si. 

abr. )— GN— PP— YPS 
Three  Kings  of  Cologne,  The.     (C.)  —  Eugene  Field. — 

TAS 
(Three  Kings,  The.)— GN 
Three  Kisses.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— BIL—FTA—GP 
(First,  Second,  Third.)— OH 
(Sonnets    from    the    Portuguese.) — BNL — FEP — 

HBP— VA  (XXXVIIL— C.) 
Three  Kisses  of  Farewell. — Agnes  E.  Glase. — FLS 
Three  Leaves  from  a  Boy's   Diary. — Sue  Gregory. — 

BS  14 
Three  Liberties,  The.— J:  Pym.— OS  3 
Three  Little  Bugs  in  a  Basket. — Alice  Cary.     See  Three 

Bugs. 
Three  Little  Chairs,  The.— Anon.— CS  13 

(Three  Chairs,  The— sZ.  abr.)— SR  7 
Three  Little  Graves. — Anon. — CS  16 
Three  Little  Kittens.— Anon.— WR  6 
Three  Little  Kittens. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Three  Little  Lads.— Ellen  T.  Sullivan.— DLD 
Three  Little  Mothers. — Clara  Denton.— LPD 
Three  Little  Mushrooms.— Anon.— PP—YFR 
Three  Little  Nest-birds.— Anon.-MYF 
Three  Little  Pigs,  The.— A.  S.  Scott-Gatty.— BVC 
Three  Lovers,  The. — Anon. — CH 
Three  Loves.— Lucy  H.  Hooper.— BNL— FEP 
Three  Marys  at  Castle  Howard,  in  1812  and  1837,  The. 

— E.  Elliott.— WEP  4 
Three  Meetings.— Dinah  M.  Craik.— BIL—BS  15 
Three  Men  in  a  Boat,  Sels.  fr. — Jerome  K.  Jerome. 

Dark  Forest  -of  Sorrow,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  X.)— 

CS  30 
(Night— «eZ.)—BS  25 
Hanging  a  Picture.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  III.)— WR  9 
(How  Uncle  Podger  Hung  a  Picture — si.  abr.) — 

BS  19 
(Uncle  Podger  Hangs  a  Picture.)— CS  30 
Herr  Slossenn  Boschen's  Song.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  VIII.) 

— WR9 
Mr.  Harris's  Comic  Song.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  VIII.)— 

— WR9 
Signing  of  the  Magna  Charta,  The.    (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XL ) 

— CS30 


Three  Men  in  a  Boat  (continued). 

Trials  of  the  Musical  Amateur.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XIV.) 

— WR15 
Unexpected  Denouement,  An.    (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XVIII.) 

— WR  24 
Victim  to  One  Hundred  and  Seven  Fatal  Maladies, 

A.     (SeZ. /r.  Ch.  I.)— WR  15 
(Imaginary  Invalid,  The— abr.) — HBR 
Three  Men  of  Gotham. — T:  L.  Peacock.     See  Night- 
mare Abbey. 
Three  Men's  Song,  The.— T:  Dekker.     See   Troll    the 

Bowl. 
Three  Missions,  The. — Loula  K.  Rogers. — WR  6 
Three  Musketeers,  'The,  Sel.  fr.  (Execution  of  Lady  De 

Winter,   The— Vol.   II.,  Ch.  XXXVI.)— Alex. 

Dumas.— BS  24 
Three  Nazarites,  The. — Ellen  Murray. — CS  25 
Three  o'Clock    in  the    Morning.  —  R.    S.    Palfrey.  — 

LLC  (abr.)— NV 
Three  Old  Carols.- Anon.— BVC 
Three  Old  Saws.     (C.) — Lucy  Larcom. 

(Do  Something.)— HP  (abr.)— PP—YFR 
("If  the  world  seems  cold  to  you" — sel.) — HSS  2 
Three  Pairs   and    One.    —  Friedrich   Riickert  (tr.    by 

Clement  L.  Smith).— OS  1 
Three  Parsons,  The.— A  Sailor  Deacon's  Story. — Rob't 

Overton.— CS  25— SSS 
Three  Portraits  of  Prince  Charles. — Andrew  Lang. — 

EDY— EHT— VA 
Three  Preachers,  The.— C:  Mackay.— CS  32 
Three  Ravens,  The.— Anon.— OB— PEB  1 
Three  "Rhymes   of    Ironquill." — Eugene    F.    Ware. — 

THP 
Three  Roses.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— GP 

(Destiny— C.)—ASL 
Three  Sailor-boys. — Anon. — CG  1 

Three  Sailors,  The.— W :  M.  Thackeray.— MHR— PEB  3 
(Little  Billee— O— BNL— FEP— GP— NA— THP 
Three  Scars,  The.— G:  W.  Thombury.- VA 
Three  Seasons.— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2— VS 
Three  Shadows. — Dante  G.  Rossetti. — VS 
Three  Smart  Girls.— Anon.— MFD 
Three  Sons,    The.— J:    Moultrie.— BNL— CS  15— FEP 

—HBP— PPSr  (abr.) 
Three  Spectres,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Three  Stages.— Anon.— CS  37 
Three  Sunbeams. — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  28 
Three  Sundays  in  a  Week.     (Cond.) — Edgar  A.  Poe. — 

WR5 
Three  Topers.— Hyde  Parker.— WR  18 
Three  Trees.— C:  H.  Crandall.— HS— NV— PEO 
Three  Trees,  The.— Ellen  Murray.— CS  28 
Three  Triolets.- J:  A.  Hamilton.- CG  1 
Three  Troopers,    The.— G:    W.    Thornbury.— EHT— 

FEP— VA— VS 
Three  Visitors. — Lucy  H.  Hooper. — WR  5 
Three  Voices,  The.— C:  C.  Hahn.— BS  19 
Three  Warnings,    The.— Hester    T.     Piozzi.— BNL— 

CS  12— FEP— MYF 
Three  Wishes,  The.— Anon.— CS  16 
Three  Wishes,  The.     (Dial.)—F,:  T.  Horn.— StD 
Three  Wishes.— M.  N.  Simon.— CG  3 
Three  Women.- — Anon. — WR  15 
Three  Women  Poets  of  New  England.     (Lecture  recital 

— irith  recitations.) — Grace  B.  Faxon. — WR  26 
Three  Words  of  Strength.— Friedrich  Schiller.— HDL 
(Hope,  Faith,  [and]  Love.)— GP— OS  2 
(Words  of  Strength.)— BS  9— KNE 
Three  W's,— Work,  Watch,   Wait,   The.— H:   B.   Car- 

rington . — BLP 
Three  Years  She  Grew.     (Poems  of  the  Imagination. — 

X.)— W:  Wordsworth.  — BNL— FEP  — GP  — 

MBL 
(Education  of  Nature,  The.)— PGT  1 
(Lucy.)  —  BFV  — GN  — HBP  (II.)  — IR  (II.)  — 

OB  (IV.)— PHS— WEP  4  (II.) 
(Sei.)— EPs— OS  3 
(""Three  years  she  grew  in  sun  and  shower.") — SN 
"Three  years  she  grew  in  sun  and  shower." — W:  Words- 
worth.    See  foregoing. 
"Three's  a  Crowd."     (Vassar  Miscellany.) — CG  2 
Threnody.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— AA— HBP 

(Abr.)— EDY— TAS  (longer.) 
Threnody,  A.— G:  T.  Lanigan.— AA— EDY— NA 

(Ahkoond  of  Swat,  The.)— AWH— THP 
Threnody  in  Memory  of  Albert  Darasz,  A,  SeZ.  fr. — W: 

J.  Linton. — VA 
Threnody  of  the  Pines.— W:  H.  Hayne.— EDY 
Threnos.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— PGT  1— YBF 

(Lament,  A— C.)— BNL— FEP— HBP— WEP  4 
Threshold  of  the  New  Year.— Anon.— POS 
Thrift,SeZ. /r.  (Neglect  of  Little  Things— seZ./r.  Ch.  IX.) 
—S:  Smiles.— VSG 


334 


TITLE  INDEX 


Time 


Thrilling  Appeal,  A. — Anon. — TS 

(Woman's  Plea,  A — diff.  vers.)— FMR 
Thrilling  Incident,  A.— Anon.— KNE 
Thrilling  Scenes  in  Dixie.     (C.) — C:  F.  Browne. 
(Artemus  Ward  Crossing  Dixie's  Line.) — CS  2 
(Mr.  Artemus  Ward  Crossing  Dixie's  Line.) — SCS 
Thrilling  Sketch.     {Sel.  fr.  Tarry  thou  till  I  Come;  or, 

Salathiei,    the    Wandering   Jew,    Bk.    I.,    Ch. 

XXI.)— G:  Croly.— CS  8 
(Constantius  and  the  Lion.)— BS  24— PFP 
Thrissill  and  the  Rois. — W:  Dunbar.     See  Thistle    and 

the  Rose,  The. 
Throes  of  Science,  The.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— MHR 

(Society  upon  the  Stanilaus  [urr.  law] — C.) — A  A — 

BNL— FEP— GP— PYO— TH  P 
Throne  of  Death,  The.     (Poems  of  the  Imagination, 

Miscellaneous  Sonnets,  Pt.   I.,   XXVIII.)— W: 

Wordsworth.- WEP  4 
Throstle,  The.     (C.)— Alfred  Tennyson.— SN 

(Summer  is  Coming.) — OH 
"Through  all  history,  from  the  beginning."  —  G:  W. 

Curtis.     See  Patriotism. 
Through  Baltimore.- Bayard  Taylor— EDY 
Through  Children's  Eyes. — Anon. — YFD 
"Through  court,  and  through  mart,  and  through  col- 
lege."—R.  R.  McNulty.— GG 
Through  l5eath  to  Life.     (C.) — Horatius  Bonar. 

(Life  from  Death.)— CS  6 
Through   Death  to   Life.  —  H :    Harbaugh.  —  CS  3  — 

PPSr(a6r.) 
Through  Life.     (Chambers'  Journal.)- — HP 
Through  Peace  to  Light. — Adelaide  Procter. — SSS 
(Lead  me,  O  Lord — si.  abr.) — SSS 
(PerPacem  ad  Lucem— C.)— CS  7— FEP  — HDL 

— VA— YBF 
Through  the  Dark  Forest.     (Sel.  fr.  Speech  in  London, 

May  18,  1890.)— H:  M.  Stanley.— BS  18 
Through  the  Darkness.— W:  Winter. — FP 
Through  the  Flood. — J:  Watson.     See  Beside  the  Bon- 
nie Brier  Brush. 
Through  the  Fog. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Through  the  Looking-glass,  Sel.  fr.     (The  Walrus  and 

the  Carpenter — verses.) — Lewis  Carroll. —  BVC 

— CS  26— GN— NA— THP 
Through  the  Loopholes. — A.  H.  Harryman. — SR  3 
Through  the  Lovely  Vale.     {With  music.) — H.  S.  Per- 
kins.— AD 
Through  the  Solitudes. — G.    F.    Savage-Armstrong. — 

TIP 
"Through  the  tense  clear  sky  above  us." — W:  W.  Story. 

See  Un  Bacio  Dato  non  (^  Mai  Perduto. 
Through  the  Wood,  Laddie.    (In  Tea-table  Miscellany.) 

—Allan  Ramsay.— WEP  3 
Through  Toil.— A.  L.  Hinds.— HP 

Through  Trials. Rosegarten. — CS  7 

"Throughout  the  entire  word  of  God  we  are  taught  the 

sacred    duty    of    being'  happy." — Arthur    P. 

Stanley.— GG 
Throw  away  'Trouble. — Anon.     See   Trouble   Borrow- 

Throwing  Kisses.— Anon.— DJS—TFS 

Throwing  Kisses. — Anon. — PS 

Thrown     Away.  —  Rudyard       Kipling.  —  HBR  — 

WR  19  (cond  ) 
Thrush's  Nest,  The.— J:  Clare.— CGd— FEP— LC 
Thrush's  Song,  The.— W.  Macgillivray.- TMR 
Thunder  Storm,  A.— A.  P.  Miller.— SR  3 
Thunder  Storm,  The.— G:  D.  Prentice.- WCLG  1 
Thunder-storm,  The. — Jas.     Thomson.     See    Seasons, 

The. 
Thunder-storm   in   the    Alps,    A. — Lord    Byron.     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Thursday;   or.  The   Spell. — J:   Gay.      See   Shepherd's 

Week   The 
Thursday  Sab'bath'Day,  The.     (C.)— Will  Carleton. 

(Grand  Old  Day,  The — earlier  vers.) — BS  18 
Thus  the  Mayne  Glideth. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Par- 

"Thust  Only  aDweam."— J:  Bennett.— SR  10 
Thy  Braes  were  Bonny.     (Song — The  Braes  of  Yar- 
row— C.) — J:  Logan. — BNL  (si.  abr.) 
(Braes  of  Yarrow,  The.)— EPs(a6r. )— FEP— PGT  1 
(Song— sZ.  afcr.)— HBP 
"Thy  glory  Thou   didst   manifest"  (Water  into  Wine, 
The).— E.  E.  Hi^bee.- LLC 
•  Thy  Heart.— Anon.— NA 
Thy  Joy  in  Sorrow. — Chauncey  H.  Townshend. — VA 
"Thy  Kingdom  Come." — Lady  H:  Somerset. — WR  18 
Thy  Name.— C:  F.  Hoffman.— FTA 
"Thy  sacred  leaves,  fair  freedom's  flower." — Oliver  W. 

Holmes. — See  Flower  of  liberty,  The. 
Thy  Smiles.— C:  F.  Hoffman.— FTA 
Thy  Song.— Frances  L.  Mace.— TFY 


Thy  Voice   is   Heard   [thro'    Rolling   Drums]. — Alfred 

Tennyson.     See  Princess,  The. 
Thy  Way,  not  Mine.— Horatius  Bonar.  —  FEP— HDL 

— VA 
Thy  Will  be  Done.— Charlotte  Elliott.— FEP 
Thy  Will  be  Done.— Anna  L.  Waring.— FEP 
(My  Times  are  in  Thy  Hands.)— HDL 
(Supplication — abr.) — YBF 
Thy  Will  be  Done.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BNL 
Thy  Witching  Look.— Anon.— FLS 
Thyme  and  Rue.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Thyrsis.- Matthew  Arnold.  —  EPs  —  HDL  (br.  sel.) — 

PGT  2— WEP  4 
(Departure  of  the  Cuckoo — br.  sel.) — SN 
Thyself.— J:  A.  Symonds.— VA 

Tiamondts  on  der  Prain.— Anon.— BDD— BeR— DFY 
Tibbie  Dunbar.— Rob't  Burns.— LC 
Tickled  all  Oafer.— Anon.— CRR— DCR— DRR 
Ticket  o'  Leave.— G:  R.  Sims.— BS  11— CS  22 
Ticket  of  Leave,  The.     (Punch.)— HFE 
Tickle  his  Hand  with  a  Ten  Dollar  Bill.— Anon.— KNS 
Ticonderoga. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — PEB  4 
Ticonderoga.— V.  B.  Wilson.— PAP 
Tide  at  the  Flood,  The.   (SeZ. )— Dinah  M.  Craik.— FMR 
Tide  Rises,  the  Tide  Falls,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— 

AA— ASL— YBF 
Tide  River,  The. — C:  Kingsley.     See  Water  Babies. 
Tides,  The.— Anon.— PR 
Tides,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— TAS 
Tides  are  Rising,  The.— Anon.— CS  23 
Tiger,  The.     (C. — in  Songs  of  Experience.) — W:  Blake. 

— BFV— BNL—  BVC  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  GN  — 

HBP  —  HSS  2  —  OB  — PYO— SN— WEP  3— 

YBF 
(SI.  o6r.)— CEL— PSR 
(Afer.)— CGd— OS  1 
(Beauty  of  Terror,  The.)— LH 
Tiger  Bay. — Rob't  Buchanan.     See  following. 
Tiger  Bay:   A   Stormy   Night's   Dream.     (C.)— Rob't 

Buchanan.— VSG 
(Tiger  Bay.)— CS  34 
Tiger-lilies.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— GN— POS 
Tight   Little   Island.  The.    (Br.  sel.  fr.  The  Snug  Little 

Island.)— T:  Dibdin.— BNL 
Tight  Times.— Anon.— KNS 
Tildy.— Frd'k  W.  Loring.— WR  21 

(Minding  the  Hens.) — SR  5 
Tildv  in  the  Choir.— F:  L.  Knowles.— CG  2 
Tilghman's   Ride[  from    Yorktown   to    Philadelphia]. 

(Abr.)— Howard  Pyle.— BS  10— CS  21  (longer.) 
Till  Christmas.— Anon.— WR  17 

Till  Death  us  Join. — Arthur  P.  Stanley.     See  following. 
"  'Till  death  us  part.'  "—Arthur  P.  Stanley.— GG 

(Till  Death  us  Join.)— BS  10 
Tilly  Bones.— Eliz.  W.  Bellamy.— WR  15 
Tim  Murphy  Makes  a  Few  Remarks. — Anon.     See  fol- 
lowing. 
Tim  Murphy's  [Irish]  Stew.— Anon.— CD— CDV—DE 

—PS— SDR 
(Tim  Murphy  Makes  a  Few  Remarks.) — CRR 
Tim  Murphy's  Stew. — Anon.     See  foregoing. 
Tim  Titus.— J.  Fox  Abrahams.— CS  33 
Tim  Tuff.— E:  Capern.— CS  3— HR 
Tim  Turpin.— T:  Hood.— THP 
Tim  Twinkleton's  Twins.— C:  A.  Bell.— CS  7 
Timber,  The.     (SeZ.)— H:  Vaughan.— OB 
Timber  Line.— Surville  J.  DeLan.— CS  27 
Tim's  Downfall.— S.  Jennie  Smith.— CS  32 
Tim's  Madonna. — Eliz.  D.  Renninger. — WR  25 
Time.— Anon.— PC 

Time.      (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Time.— Sir  J:  Beaumont.— KNE 
Time.— Alice  Gary.— TAS 
Time.— T:  S.  Collier.— AA 
Time. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Time     ("Look  back  on  time  with  kindly  eyes." — C). 

—Emily  Dickinson.— TAS 
Time.— B:  Franklin.     See  Way  to  Wealth,  The. 
Time. — Jasper  Mayne. — OB 

("Time  is   a  feathered  thing.") — HBP 
Time. — Bryan  W.  Procter.     See  Petition  to  Time,  A. 
Time.— F.  G.  Scott.— VA 
Time. — Walter  Scott. — See  Antiquary,  The. 
Time.— E:  Young.     See  Night  Thoughts. 
Time  and  Death.— W:  H.  Whitworth.— VA 
Time  and  Eternity.— C:  H.  Ludors.— TAS 
Time  and  Eternity. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  In  Memo- 

riam. 
Time  and  Grief. — W:  L.  Bowles.       See   To  Time. 
Time  and  its  Changes. — Philip  James  Bailey.  See  Festus. 
Time  and  Love,  I.     (Sonnet  LXIV.) — W:  Shakespeare. 

—PGT  1— PHS— YBF 
(Spoils  of  Time,  The— 5<^  sow.)— FP 


335 


Time 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Time  and   Love,   II.     (Sonnet  LXV.)  — W:     Shake- 
speare.—PGT  1— YBF 
(Spoils  of  Time,  The— 6th  son.)— FF 
Time  and  the  Seasons. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Time  Doeth  All  Things  Well.— Jerome  Harte.— WR  26 
Time  Enough. — Anon. — NV 

(Squirrel's  Lesson,  The.)— DS— PP— YA— YFR 
Time  Flies.— Mrs.  ET J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Time  for  Prayer,  The.— Anon.— CS  10 
Time,  Hope  and  Memory. — T:  Hood. — FP 
Time  in  Absence.      {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
"Time  is  a  feathered  thing." — Jasper  Mayne.    See  Time. 
Time  I've  Lost  in  Wooing,  The.— T:  Moore.— FTA— 

WEP4 
Time  Mav  Steal  the  Dewy  Bloom.  —  C:  G.  Blanden. — 

tFY 
Time  not  to  be  Recalled. — Anon.— CS  1 
Time  of  Clearer  Twitterings.- Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Time  of  Roses.— T:  Hood.— OB  (abr.) 
(Ballad- C.)— YBF  (abr.) 
("It  was  not  in  the  Winter.") — VA 
(A6r.)— HBP— VS 
Time  of  the  Barmecides,  The. — -Jas.  C.  Mangan. — TIP 
Time  of  the  Singing  of  Birds,  The.     (With  music.) — 

Anon. — AD 
Time  Only  for  Love.— M.  A.  L.— YBT 
Time  Past,  Time   Passing,  Time  to  Come.     {Sel.   fr. 

Psalm  XC.) — Jas.  Montgomery. — HBP 
Time,  Real  and  Imaginary.- — S:  T.  Coleridge. — OB — 

WEP4 
Time  Spent  in  Dress.— C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Time  to  be.  The,  Sel.  /r.— Alice  Cary.— AD 
Time  to  be  Wise.— Walter  S.  Landor.— VA— YBF 
Time  to  Go. — Susan  Coolidge. — GN 

(Flowers  Know  their  Time  to  Go.)— YBT 
"Time  to  Me." — Anon. — HP 
Time  to  Rise. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Time  Turns  the  Tables. — Viola  Valentine.     See  Then 

and  Now. 
Time  Vindicated,  5cZ.  fr.     (Masques — sd.  fr.  song.) — 

Ben  Jonson. — BNL 
"Time  wasteth  years,  and  months,  and  hours." — T.- 
Watson.—FEP 
Timely  Hint,  A.— Anon.— CS  29 
Time-piece,  The.— W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Time's  Cure.— Anon.— HBP 
Times  go  by  Turns.— Rob't  Southwell.— FEP— OB— 

PHS— WEP  1 
Time's    Midnight     Voice.      E:     Young.      See     Night 

Thoughts. 
Time's  Revenge. — Anon. — -CH 
Time's  Silent  Lesson. — Emeline  S.  Smith. — CS  25 
Time's  Soliloquy.— Anon.— CS  23 
Timid  Hortense. — P:  Newell. — NA 
Timon  of  Archimedes. — C.  B.  Loomis. — NA 
Timon  of  Athens,  Br.  sel.  fr.      {Fr.  Act   IV.,  Sc.  3.)— 

W:  Shakespeare. — BNL 
Timothy.— W:  Wordsworth.— CGd 

(Childless  Father,  The— C.)— YBF 
Timothy  Doolan's  Will.— Anon.— CH 
Timothy  Grey.— Alfred  H.  Miles.— CS  27 
Timothy  Horn.— W.  W.  Fink.— BS  18 
Timothy  Titcomb's  Letters,  Sel.  fr.  (Getting  the  Right 

Start— Letter  I.,  a6r.)— BLP— BS  24— PEO 
Timothy's  Quest,  Sel.  fr.  (Aunt  Hitty  Taxbox — sel.  fr. 

Sc.  X.)— Kate  D.  Wiggin.— MRS 
Tin  Peddler,  The.— Joe  Lincoln.— CCB 
Tinker  and  Miller's  Daughter,  The. — J:  (7)  Wolcott. — 

BC 
Tinker  and  the  Glazier,  The. — Harrison. — BC 
Tintamarre,  The.— Julia  M.  Ryan.— WR  6 
Tintern  Abbey.— W:  Wordsworth. — BNL 
(Sei.)- EPs— LI>C— SN 
(Lines  Composed  a  Few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey, 

etc.— C.)— WEP  4 
(Lines  Composed  near  Tintern  Abbey.) — FEP 
(On  Revisiting  the  Banks  of  the  Wye.)— HBP 
(Varying  Impressions  of  Nature — sel.) — GP 
Tiny  Boy's  Speech,  A.— Anon.— DST 
Tiny  Little  Snowflakes. — Anon. — DLF 
Tiny  Quarrel,  A.     {Dial. — ad.  fr.  Little  Prudy's  Sister 

Susy,  Ch.  V.)— Sophie  May.— NDP 
Tiny  Shoe,  A.— Anon.— DCP 
Tipperary.- Mary  E.  Kelly.— TIP— VA 
Tirade — Explained,  A.     {Cornell  Widow.) — CG  3 
Tired.— Anon.— HP 
Tired  Mothers.     (C.)— May  R.  Smith.— BS  7— CS  8— 

GP— HP— LLC— OS  2 
(To  a  Tired  Mother.)— WR  15 
Tired  of  Church.     (Dtoi.)- Anon.— NDP 
Tired  of  Play.- Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— OS  1 

(Child  Tired  of  Play.)— WCLI  2 
Tired  Old  Woman,  The.— Anon.— WR  21 


Tired  Out.     (Tab.)- Anon.— COS  —  DS  —  NPS  —  PP 

— YA— YP 
Tired  Out.— Anon.— HP 
Tired  Out.     {All  the  Year  Round.)— BS  19 
"Tired!  well,  and  what  of  that?" — Anon. — GG 
(Sermon  in  Verse,  A.) — KNE 
(What  of  That?)— HP 
{SI.  a6r.)— BS  15— PEO 
Tiresome  Caller,  A. — Anon. — DS — YA 
Tiresome  Insects.     (New  York  Times.) — HSS  3 
'Tis  a  Little  Thing.— T:  N.  (?)  Talfourd.— FP 
"  'Tis  a  time  for  memory  and  for  tears."— G:D.  Pren- 
tice.— AE 
'Tie  but  a  Little  Faded  Flower. — Ellen  C.  Howarth.— 

AA— FTA— TAV 
'Tis  Ever  Thus.— R.  K.  Munkittrick.— AWH 
'Tis  Five-and-twenty  Years. — Anon. — CS  13 
'Tis  I,  be  Not  Afraid.— Eliz.  Charles.— HDL 
'Tis  Midnight; — Anon. — NA 
"  'Tis  not  enough  the  voice  be  sound  and  clear." 

— Lloyd.     See  Modulation. 
'Tis  not  Fine  Feathers  that  Make  Fine  Birds. — Anon. 

— SS 
'Tis  Said    that    Absence    Conquers    Love. — Frd'k    W. 

Thomas.— FTA 
(Song:     "  'Tis  said,"  etc.) — AA 
'Tis  Sair  to  Dream.— Rob't  Gilfillan.— VA 
"  'Tis  sorrow  builds  the  shining  ladder  up."     {Br.  sel. 

fr.  On  the  Death  of  a  Friend's  Child.) — Jas.  R. 

Lowell.— HDL 
'Tis  Spring-time.— R.  P.  Graham.— LPS— PP 

(Spring-time.) — AD 
'Tis  Summer  Still.— C:  Sangster.— TCV 
"  'Tis  sweet  in  the  green  spring."    (From  the  Spanish 

of  Villejas — C. — si.  abr.) — (Villejas — tr.  by)  W: 

C.  Bryant.— AD 
"  'Tis  sweet  to  hear  the   merry  lark."     (Song — C) — 

Hartley  Coleridge.— FEP 
(Song:  The  Lark.)— HBP 
'Tis  Sweet  to  Roam. — Anon. — NA  {sel.) 

(Mesopotamia.) — KNE 
'Tis  the  Last   Rose  of  Summer.     (C.) — T:  Moore. — 

BNL— PYO 
(Last  Rose  of  Summer,  The.)— FEP— HBP— LLC 

— WCLG  2 
'Tis  the  White  Anemone. —  Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton. — 

POS 
(White  Anemone,  The — abr.) — GN 
"  'Tis  weary  watching  wave  by  wave." — Gerald  (?) 

Massey. — SM 
Tit  for  Tat.— Anon.— BR— PR— YA 
Tit  for  Tat.— Anon.— CG  1 
Tit  for  Tat.— Anon.— MYF 
Tit  for  Tat.— Anon.— WR  14 
"Tit  for  Tat."— Clara  J.  Denton.— LL 
Tit  for  Tat.— H.  R.  Hudson.— TT 
Tit  for  Tat.— W:  Lyle.— CS  37 

Titcomb's    Letters. — Josiah   G.    Holland.     iSee  Timo- 
thy Titcomb's  Letters. 
Tithes. — R:  L.  Sheil.     See  England's  Misrule  of  Ire- 
land. 
Tithonus.— Alfred   Tennyson.  —  EPs  —  FEP— HBP— 

WEP  4 
Titmarsh's   Carmen   Lilliense. — W:   M.   Thackeray. — 

HPE 
Titmouse,  The.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— AP—PoR  {br. 

sel.) 
Tito's  Armor. — G:  Eliot.     See  Romola. 
Tittlebat  Titmouse's  Experiment. — S:   Warren.      See 

Ten  Thousand  a  Year. 
Titus  Quintius  against  Quarrels  between  the  Senate 

and  the  People. — Livy.     See  History  of  Rome. 

To :  "Tell  me  your  joy,  etc." — Anon. — FLS 

To :  "I    love    you — not    because,"    etc. — G:    C. 

Baker.— CG  1 
To :  "What  boots  it,"  etc. — W:    H.    L.  Bulwer, 

Lord  Dalling  and  Bulwer. — FLS 
To :  "'Twas  at  a  ball,"  etc. — Denison  Eldridge. — 

TL 
To :  "When     summer     dwells,"     etc. — Heinrich 

Heine.— FLS 
To :  "In  years  to  come,"  etc.  —  Owen  Innsly. — 

FLS 
To :  "With  woman's  form  and  woman's  tricks." — 

T:  Moore.- HPE 

To .     (O— Percy  B.  Shelley. 

(I  Fear  thy  Kisses.)— FTA— GP 

("I  fear  thy  kisses,  gentle  maiden.") — BNL — PGT  1 

—YBF 
To .     (O— Percy     B.     Shelley.— HBP— OB     — 

WEP  4 
("One  word  is  too  often  profaned.") — FEP— FTA 

—OH— PGT  1— YBF 


336 


TITLE  INDEX 


To  a  Nightingale 


To .     (O— Percy  B.  Shelley.— WEP  4 

("Music,   when   soft  voices  die.") — BNL — FEP — 

OB— PGT  1— PYO— YBF 

To :  "The  broken  moon,"  etc. — Alex.  Smith. — VA 

To (C):   "As  when  with  downcast  eye,"  etc. — 

Alfred  Tennyson. 
(Friendship.)— WR  1 
To :  "Her  voice   is   one   of   command." — W:   B. 

Wheelwright.— CG  3 
To ,  in  her  Seventieth  Year.     (C. — Misc.  Sonnets, 

Pt.  III.,  XVII.)— W:  Wordsworth. 
(To  Lady  Fitzgerald  in  her  Seventieth  Year.) — 

WEP  4 
To [Miss  Blackett],  on  her  First  Ascent  to  the 

Summit    of    Helvellyn. — W:    Wordsworth. — 

WEP  4 

To on  her  Sister's  Death.— J:  Keble.— PGT  2 

To  a  Bird  that  Haunted  the  Waters  of  Laaken  in  the 

Winter.— E:   Hovel,   Lord   Thurlow.— BNL— 

FEP 
(Sonnet.    To  a  Bird  that,  etc.)— HBP 
To  a  Blockhead.— Alex.  Pope.— HPE 
To  a  Butterfly.— G:  H.  Clarke.— TCV 
To  a  Butterfly.— W:  Wordsworth.  —  CGd—LC— PC— 

SN 
To  a  Capricious  Friend. — Jos.  Addison. — HPE 
To  a  Caty-did. — Philip  Freneau.— AA — SN 
To  a  Cherokee  Rose.-^W:  H.  Hayne. — AA 
To  a  Child  Embracmg  his  Mother.     (C.) — T:  Hood. — 

FEP— HBP 
(Child  and  Mother.)— OS  1— WCL 
(Love  thy  Mother,  Little  One — abr.) — TFS 
To  a  Child.— G.  E.  Montgomery.— AA 
To  a  Child.— Fs.  T.  Palgrave.— OH 
To  a  Child.— J:  Sterling.— HBP— VA 
To  a  Child.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.     See  To  Laura  W— , 

To  a  Child.— "Yankee."— SS 

(Truth — Freedom— Virtue.) — CS  19 
To  a  Child  During  Sickness.— Leigh  Hunt.     See  To  T. 

L.  H.,  Six  Years  Old,  during  a  Sickness. 
To  a  Child  of    Quality[,    Five    Years    Old].— Matthew 

Prior.- BFV— FEP— GN— OB— WEP  3 
To  a  Child.    Written  in  her  Album.    (C.) — W:  Words- 
worth.— BNL 

(In  a  Child's  Album.)— GN 

("Small  service  is  true  service  [while  it  lasts]" — si. 
di^.)— CS  1— HSS  2 
To  a  Christmas  Pudding. — Anon. — BS  1 
To  a  Chrysanthemum. — J:  A.  Thompson. — CG  2 
To  a  Clam.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe. 

(Sonnet  to  a  Clam.)— HPE 
To  a  Cloud.— W:  C.  Bryant.— POS 
To  a  Collection  of  Pastorals. — F.  B.  Wiley. — CG  1 
To  a  Conservatory  Flower. — A.  G.  Newcomer. — CG   1 
To  a  Cricket.— W:  C.  Bennett.— GN— HBP 
To  a  Cricket  —Eli  Shepherd.— POS 
To  a  Crow.- Rob't  B.  Wilson.— AA 
To  a  Cyclamen. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 
To  A.  D.  (O— W:  E.  Henley. 

(Love  Notes.)— BIL— FTA 

(Pleasant  Song,  A.)— OH 
To  a  Daisy. — J:  Hartley.— VA 
To  a  Daughter  on  her  Marriage. — VictorHugo  (tr.  by  S: 

Longfellow).— OH 
To  a  Dead  Bird.— Rob't  J.  Kellogg.— CG  1 
To  a  Dead  Woman.— H:  C.  Bunner.— ASL— FEP 
To  a  Deaf  and  Dumb  Little  Girl. — Hartley  Coleridge. 

—WEP  4 
To  a  Desolate  Friend. — W:  J.  Dawson. — VA 
To  a  Distant  Friend.     (Misc.  Sonnets,  Pt.  III.,  XXV.) 
— W:  Wordsworth.— PGT  1 

(Speak)— OB 
To  a  Dublin  Publisher.— T :  Sheridan.— HPE 
To  a  Fair  Maiden.— Walter  S.  Landor.— YBF 
To  a  Field  Mouse.— Rob't  Burns.— PHS 
To  a  Firefly.— W:  C.  Bryant.— YBT 
To  a  Fish.— J:  Wolcott.— GP 
To  a  Fly.— W:  Oldys.— LC 

("Busy,  curious,  thirsty  fly.") — FEP 

(Fly,  The.)— CEL— HBP 

(On  a  Fly  Drinking  out  of  his  Cup,) — OB 
To  a  Fly  taken  out  of  a  Bowl  of  Punch. — P:  Pindar. — 

HPE 
To  a  Football.— F:  L.  Knowles.— CG  1 
To  a  Friend.— Matthew  Arnold.— PGT  2— WEP  4 
To  a  Friend.— J:  G.  C.  Brainard.- BS  6 

(Epithalamium.)— AA— FEP— HBP 

(I  Saw  Two  Clouds  at  Morning.)— BNL— GP 
To  a  Friend.— Dan'l  A.  Brown.— FP 
To  a  Friend.     (C. — Sonnet  I.) — Hartley  Coleridge. 

(Friendship.)— OB 
To  a  Friend.— J:  Gowdy.— CG  2 


To  a  Friend.— Fitz-Greene  Halleck.— GMS  (ael.) 
(Green  be  the  Turf.)— LLC 
(Joseph  Rodman  Drake.)— BNL — EDY— GP 
(On  the  Death  of  Joseph  Rodman  Drake — C.) — 

AA— ASL— FEP— HBP— TAV— WCLG  2 
To   a    Friend    Studying    German. — C:   G.   Leland. — 

BDD 
To  a  Girl.— Anon.— FTA— OH 
To  a  Glove. — -B :  Jonson.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
To  a  Greek  Girl. — Austin  Dobson. — VA 
To  a  Highland  Girl  (at   Inversneyde  upon  Loch  Lo- 
mond).    (O— W:  Wordsworth.— BNL— FEP 

—WEP  4 
(To  the  Highland  Girl  of  Inversneyde.)— PGT  1 
To  a  Honey-bee. — Alice  Gary. — BLF 
To  a  Honey-bee. — Philip  Freneau. — AA 
To  a  Humming-bird.— J:  V.  Cheney.— POS 
To  a  Humming-bird  in  a  Garden. — G:  Murray. — SN — 

VA 
To  a  Hurt  Child.— Grace  D.  Litchfield.— AA 
To  a  June  Breeze. — H :  C.  Bunner. — AA 
To  a  Lady.— T:  W.  Parsons.— AA 
To  a  Lady.— J:  J.  Piatt.— AA 
To  a  Lady.— W:  Dunbar.— OB 
To  a  Lady. — Jonathan  Swift.     See  To  Mrs.  Houghton, 

etc. 
To  a  Lady  Admiring  Herself  in  a  Looking-glass. — T: 

Randolph.— BNL 
To  a  Lady  Asking  how  Long  He  Would  Love  Her. — 

SirG:Etherege.— OB 
To  a  Lady  before  Marriage. — T:  Tickell. — BNL 
To  a  Lady  in  Retirement. — Edmund  Waller.— ELP 
To  a  Lady  Offended  by  a  Sportive  Observation  that 

Women   have   no   Souls. — S:   T.    Coleridge. — 

HPE 
To  a  Ladv:  She  Refusing  to  Continue  a  Dispute. — 

Matthew  Prior.— WEP  3 
To  a   Lady,  upon   a  Looking-glass  Sent.     (C) — Jas. 

Shirley. 
(Looking-glass,  The.)— ES 
To  a  Lady,  with  a  Guitar. — Percy  B.  Shelley. — CEL — 

PGTl 
(With  a  Guitar:  to  Jane— C.)— FEP 
To  a  Lady,  with  Some  Painted  Flowers. — Anna  L.  Bar- 

bauld.— BNL 
To  a    Lake    Party.      (SI.   abr.)— Frd'k   W.   Faber.— 

AVP 
To  a  Laugh.— Paul  Terry.— CG  3 
To  a  Liar.— Gotthold  E.  Lessing.— HPE 
To  a  Lily. — J.  M.  Legar^. — AA 
To  a  Little  Brook.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
To  a  Little  Maid.— Anon.— YBT 
To  a  Living  Author. — Anon. — HPE 
To  a  Lofty  Beauty,  from  Her  Poor  Kinsman. — Hartley 

Coleridge.     (Sonnet  XXXIV.)— WEP  4 
To  a  Louse. — Rob't  Burns. — BNL 

(We  all  Have  Faults— 6r.  seZ.)— PS 
To  a  Lover.     (Song— C.)— Sir  J:  Suckling.— YBF 
To  A.  M.  Olar.     (An  Old  Man's  Memories.) — Mary  K. 

Dallas.— WR  3 
To  a  Magnolia  Flower  in  the  Garden  of  the  Armenian 

Convent  at  Venice.— S.  Weir  Mitchell. — AA 
To  a  Maple  Seed.— Lloyd  Mifflin.- AA 
To  a  Missal  of  the  Thirteenth  Century. — Austin  Dob- 
son.— LBB—MBB 
To  a  Mistress   Dying.     (Philosopher  and  the   Lover, 

The;  to  a  Mistress  Dying — C.) — Sir  W:  Daven- 

ant.— OB 
To  a  Modern  Girl. — Archibald  Douglas. — TL 
To  a  Mosquito.     (C.)— W:  C.  Bryant.— BNL  (si.  abr.) 

(Musquito,  The.)— HPE 
To  a  Moth.— C:  E.  Thomas. — A  A 
To  a  Moth  that  Drinketh  of  the  Ripe  October. — Emily 

Pfeiffer. — VA 
To  a  Mountain. — H:  C.  Kendall. — VA 
To  a  Mountain   Daisy. — Rob't   Burns. — AD — BNL — 

EPs— FEP— HBP— MBL— SN 
(SI.  a6r.)— HSS  1— PHS— POS— WCLG  1— 
(A&r.)— BVF— GN 
To  a  Mouse[,  on  Turning  up  Her  Nest  with  the  Plough]. 

(O  — Rob't  Burns.— BNL— EPs  — FEP  — 

HSS  3— MBL  — PGT  1— SN— WCLG  1  — 

WEP  3 
(To  a  Field  Mouse.)— PHS 
To  a  Mummy. — Horace  Smith.— OS  3 — SO  (abr.) 

(Address  to  the  Mummy  at  [or  in]  Belzoni's  Exhi- 
bition.)—BNL— CS  6— FEP— HBP 
(Mummy,  The— a6r. )—PPSr 
To  a  Nightingale.     (In  Flowers  of  Sion.) — W:  Drum- 

mond.— BNL— FEP 
(Sonnet:     Sweet  Bird.)- ELP 
(To  the  Nightingale.)— WEP  2 
(To  the  Redbreast.)— HBP 


337 


#^ 


To  a  Nightingale       AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


To  a  Nightingale. — J:  Keats. — FEP 

(Nightingale,  The— br.  «eJ.)— EPs 

(Ode  to  a  Nightingale— C.)—BNL— HBP— PGT  1 
— SN— WEP  4 
(SI.  o6r.)— GP— OB 
To  a  Picture. — Anon. — CG  1 
To  a  Picture.— Herbw-t  E.  Millholen. — CG  1 
To  a  Pine-tree.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— AD  («Z.  ofcr.)- POS 
To  a  Pij>e  of  Tobacco.     (Gentleman's  Magazine.) — PPh 
To  a  Poem.— Frank  B.  Wade.— CG  3 
To  a  Poet  Breaking  Silence. — Fs.  Thompson. — VA 
To  a  Poet  who  Died  of  Want. — Ludwig  Uhland  (<r.  by 

L.  Filmore).— FP 
To  a  Portrait. — Arthur  Symons, — VA 
To  a  Portrait  of  Red  Jacket. —  Fitz-Greene  Halleck. — 
WR  10  (cond.) 

(Red  Jacket— C.)—AA 
To  a  Redbreast.     {Abr.) — J:  L.  Langhorne. — PC 
To  a  Rich  Young  Widow.     (Punch.)— HFE 
To  a  River  in  which  a  Child  was  Drowned. — C:  and 

Mary  Lamb.— LPC 
To  a  Robin. — -Anon. — LLC 
To  a  Rogue. — Jos.  Addison. — HPE 
To  a  Rose.— W.  C.  B.— CG  3 
To  a  Rose. — Seymour  H.  Ransom. — CG  1 
To  a  Rose. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — AA 
To  a  Sea-bird. — Fs.  Bret  Harte.— SN 
To  a  Seabird.— W:  Watson.— VA 
To  a  Sister  of  Charity. — Edwin  G.  Alexander. — CG  1 
To  a  Skeleton.— Anon.— BNL—CS  4— FEP— PR— PS 
— TMR 

(Address  to  a  Skeleton.)— WRD 

(Lines  on  a  Skeleton.)— HBP— PPSr 
To  a  Skull.— Anon.— BS  5 
To  a  Skull.— T:  C.  Irwin.— TIP 
To  a  Skylark.     (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— BFV—BPB 

—  FEP  —  (3MS  —  GN  —  GP  —  LLC  —  OB  — 
OS  3— PGT  1— PHS— VSG— WEP  4 

(Abr.)—CR~-IR 
(SeZ.)- EPs— SE 
(Ode  to  a  Skylark.)— WR  7 
(Sky-lark,  The— a6r.)— HSS  3— WCLG  2 
(To  the  Skylark.)— BNL— HBP 
To  a  Skylark     (C):     "Ethereal   minstrel,"  etc. — W.- 
Wordsworth.—FEP— LLC— MBL  (si.   abr.) 
(To  the  Skylark.)— BNL— EPs— PGT  1— YBF 
To  a  Skylark:     "Up  with  me!"  etc. — W:  Wordsworth. 

— FEP— LC— SN 
To  a  Slow  Walker  and  Quick  Eater. — Gotthold  E.  Les- 

sing.— HPE 
To  a  Spider.— T:  Whytehead.— AVP 
To  a  Spider-web.— (i.  H.  Ferris.— CG  1 
To  a  Swallow  Building  under  our  Eaves  ^  under  the 
Eaves  at  Craigenputtock]. — Jane  W.  Carlyle. — 
OS  3— VA 
To  a  Thrush  Singing  in  January.    ( Winter  Thrush,  The 

—C.—al)r.)—J:  Keble.— POS 
To  a    Tired    Mother. — May     R.     Smith.     See    Tired 

Mothers. 
To  a  Town  Poet. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 
To  a  Troublesome  Fly.— T:  MacKellar. — SN 
To  a  Usurper.— Eugene  Field.— EF—WTD 
To  a  Very  Young  Lady. — Sir  C:  Sedley. — BNL — FEP 
(Child  and  Maiden— a6r.)—PGT  1 
(Song  from  "The  Mulberry  Garden.") — WEP  2 
(Song  to  Chloris.) — CEL 
(To  Chloris— o6r.)— OB 
To  a  Waterfowl.— W:  C.  Bryant.— AA— ASL— BFV— 
BNL  —  BPB  —  BS  18  —  BSP  —  CEL  —  CGd 

—  EPs  —  FEP  —  GMS  —  GN  —  HBP  — 
HSS  3  —  LLC  —  MAL  —  PHS  —  PYO  (si. 
abr.)  —  SN  —  SO  —  TAS  —  TAV  —  VSG  — 
WCLG  2— YBF— YBT 

(S'ls.^—GG—SE 
To  a  Wild  Rose  Found  in  October.— Ednah  P.  (C.) 

Hayes. — AA 
To  a  Wind-flower. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 
To  a  Withered  Rose. — J:  K.  Bangs. — AA 
To  a  Would-be  New  Woman. — Jas.  S.  Metcalfe. — TL 
To  a  Writer  of  the  Day,  Sels.  fr. — Langdon  E.  Mitchell. 

Purpose. — AA 

Technique. — AA 
To  a  Young  Child.— Eliza  Scudder.— AA 
To  a  Young  Girl  Dying.— T:  W.  Parsons.— A  A— ASL 

—TAS 
To  a  Young  Lady.— W:  Cowper.— PGT  1 

(Comparison,  A.     Addressed  to  a  Young  Lady — 
O— WEP  3 

(Sweet  Stream,  that  Winds.)— BNL 
To  Abraham  Lincoln. — J:  J.  Piatt. — AA 
To  Absent  Friends. — Anon. — OS  36 
To  Admiral  George  Dewey. — V.  Vaughan. — PAPm 
To  Age.— Walter  S.  Landor.— VA 


To  Alexander  H.  Stephens.— Paul  H.  Hayne.— EDY 
To  Alfred  Tennyson.— Rob't  S.  Hawker.— VA 
To  Alfred  Tennyson.- H:  W.  Longfellow.— GG 

(  Wapentake— C  J— AA 
To  All  in  Haven.— Philip  B.  Marston. — BNL 
To  Allie.— Edgar  A.  Brown.— CG  1 
To  Althea. — R:  Lovelace.     See  following. 
To  Althea  from  Prison.     (C.) — R:  Lovelace. — BNL — 
BPB  —  CEL  —  EHT  —  ELP  —  ES  —  FEP  — 
GP  — HBP  — OB  — OEL  — PGT  1  — PHS  — 
PYO  —  WEP  2— YBF 
(From  Prison.)— LH 
(To  Althea.)— EPs 
To  Amarantha,  that  She  would    Dishevel    her  Hair, 
(Sel.)—K:  Lovelace.— OB 
(Her  Golden  Hair— a/wrter.)— CEL 
To  America. — Alfred  Austin. — GN 
(Britannia  to  Columbia.) — PAPm 
(Voice,  A.)— WCLG  1 
To  America.— G:  H.  Boker.— ASL— YBF 
To  America. — R:  Garnett. — VA 
To  America  in  1876.— Martin  F.  Tupper.— CS  13 
To  an  Absent  Wife.— G:  D.  Prentice.— FEP 
To  an  Afilicted   Protestant   Lady  in   France,  Sel.   fr. 

(Path  of  Sorrow,  The.)— W:  Cowper.— HDL 
To  an  Alaskan  Glacier. — C:  Keeler. — SN 
To  an  Athlete  Dying  Young. — A.  E.  Housman. — YBF 
To  an  Autumn  Leaf. — Albert  Mathews. — AA 
To  an  Early  Primrose.     (C.)— H:  Kirke  White.— FEP 

(Early  Primrose,  The.)— BNL 
To  an  Elm.— H:  T.  Tuckerman.— POS 
To  an  Ill-favored  Lady. — Jos.  Addison. — HPE 
To  an  Imaginary  One.— H :  B.  Eddy.— CG  2 
To  an  Imperilled  Traveller.- — Nathan  H.  Dole. — AA 
To  an  Inconstant  One.-^Sir  Rob't  Ayton. — OB 

(Woman's  Inconstancy.)— BNL — FEP— YBF 
To  an  Insect.     (C.) — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — SN 
(Katydid.)— BNL  (seJ.)- BS  1 

(SeZ.)- CSS— TFS 
(To  the  Katydid.)— WCLI  2 
To  an  "Instructor." — Harry  S.  Furbur,  Jr. — CG  2 
To  an  Obscure  Poet  who  Lives  on  my  Hearth. —  C.  L. 

Hildreth.— AA 
To  an  Officer  in  the  Army ;  Intended  to  Allay  the  Vio- 
lence of  Party  Spirit.     (C.) — JrByrom. 
(Jacobite  Toast.)— FEP 
(Which  is  Which.)— HPE 
To  an  Old  Pipe.— De  Witt  Sterry.— PPh 
To  an  Old   Portrait  of  a  I^ittle  Girl.     (William  and 

Mary  College  Monthly.) — -CG  3 
To  an  Old  Venetian  Wine-glass. — Lloyd  Mifflin. — AA 
To  an  Oriole.— Edgar  Fawcett.— BNL— SN 
To  Andrew  Jackson.— G:  H.  Boker.- EDY 
To  Angelina.     (Fr.  The  Elder  Brother.)- J:  Fletcher. 
— ES 
(Beauty  Clear  and  Fair.)— ELP— HBP— OB— OEL 
To  Anne. — Clement  Marot. — FTA 
To  Anthea:     "Bid  me  to  live,"  etc. — Rob't  Herrick. 

See  To  Anthea,  who  may,  etc. 
To  Anthea:     "Now  is  the  time,"  etc. —  Rob't  Herrick. 

—WEP  2 
To  Anthea,  who  may  Command  Him  Anything.     (C.) 
—Rob't     Herrick.— FEP— LH— OB— OEL— 
PGTl 
(To  Anthea.)— ELP— FTA— WEP  2 
To  Any  Desponding  Genius,  Sel.  fr.     (To  the  Despond- 
ing.)—Alice  Cary.— BS  14 
To  Any  Reader. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
To  Ask  and  to  Have.— S:  Lover.— WR  20 

(How  to  Ask  and  Have— C.)— THP 
To  Augusta.     (C.) — Lord  Byron.- BNL 

(Epistle  to  Augusta.)— WEP  4 
To  Auntie.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
To  Aurora.— W:  Alexander,  Earl  of  Stirling.— FEP  — 

PGTl 
To  Austin  Dobson.— R:  W.  Gilder.- EDY 
To  Austin  Dobson. — Arthur  Ketchum. — CG  2 
To  Autumn.     (C.)— J:    Keats.— CEL— FEP— HBP— 
OB— WEP  4— YBF 
(Autumn.)— POS 
(Ode  to  Autumn.)— PGT  1— SN 
To    Barbary     Land.— Agnes     E.    Mitchell.— BS  17 — 

WR14 
To  Bayard  Taylor  beyond  Us.— Paul  H.  Hayne. — EDY 
To  be  Kings  among  Men. — Anon. — CP 
To  be  no  More. — J:  Milton  .     See  Paradise  Lost. 
To  Be  or  not  to  Be. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Hamlet. 
To  Beguile    the   Time. — W:    Shakespeare.     See   Mac- 
beth. 
To  Ben  Jonson. — Rob't  Herrick. — EDY 

(Ode  for  Ben  Jonson,  An— C.)— ELP— WEP  .2 
(Ode  to  Ben  Jonson.)— BNL— EPs 
To  Ben  Jonson.— T:  Randolph.— WEP  2 


338 


TITLE  INDEX 


To  his  Conscience 


To  Blossoms.— Rob't    Herrick.— BNL— BPB— CEL— 
ELP  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  FP  —  HBP  —  OB  — 
PGT  1— PHS  — SN  (si.  a6r.  )—WEP  2— YBF 
To  Brainhardy. — Ben  Jonson. — HPE 
To  Bryant  on  His  Birthday. — G:  H.  Boker. — EDY 
To  C.  F.  Bradford.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— PPh 
To  Campbell.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Verses  to  the  Poet  Crabbe's 

Inkstand.)— T:  Moore.- BNL— EPs 
To  Carmen  Sylva. — Emma  Lazarus. — EDY 
To  Castara  in  a  Trance. — W:  Habington.     See  Cas- 

ToCastara. "  Of  True   Delight.— W:  Habington.   See 

Castara. 
To  Castara:     The    Reward    of    Innocent    Love. — W: 

Habington. 
To  Castara,  upon  the  Death  of  a  Lady. — W:  Habing- 
ton.    See  Castara. 
To  Celia.     (The   Forest,   IX.)— (Philostratus  — tr.  61/) 

Ben  Jonson.  —  EPs  —  ES  —  FEP  —  FTA  — 

HBP— OB— OEL— PGT  1— PYO— YBF 
("Drink  to  me  only  with  thine  eyes.") — BNL 
(Song— To  Celia— O— ELP— WEP  2 
To  Celia.— Sir  C:  Sedley.— ELP— OB 
(Constancy.)— YBF 
("Not,  Celia,  that   I  juster  am.")— FEP— FTA— 

PGTl 
To  Celia  Singing.— T:  Carew.- OEL 
(CeliaSinging— 0— ES— WEP  2 
To  Celia  Thaxter.- Annie  Field.— EDY 
To  Charles  Dickens.— J:  Forster.— EDY 
To  Charles  Dickens.— T:  Hood.— EDY 
To  Charles  Lamb. — R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Houghton. — 

EDY 
To  Charlotte    Pulteney. — Ambrose    Phillips.     See   To 

Miss  Charlotte  Pulteney,  etc. 
To  Children  of  Girard,  Pa.— J:  G.  Whittier.— PEO 
To  Chloe.     (Sel.)—W:  Cartwright.— OB 
To  Chloe.— J:  Wolcott.— BNL— HPE 
To  Chloris.— W:  Drummond.— ES— WEP  2 
To  Chloris.     Sir  C:  Sedley.     See  To   a   Very   Young 

Lady. 
To  Chloris.     (Song— C.)— Edmund  Waller.— ES 
To  Chloris,  Singing  a  Song  of  his  Own  Composition. — 

Edmund  Waller.— OEL 
To  Christina  of  Sweden. — J:  Milton  {tr.  by  W:  Cowper). 

—EDY 
To  Christina  Rossetti. — Dora  Greenwell. — VA 
To  Ccelia.— C:  Cotton.— OB 

To  Colin  Clout.— Anthony  Munday.— EP— WEP  1 
(Beauty  Bathing.)— OB 
(Colin.)— PGT  1 
To  Constantia — Singing. — Percy  B.  Shelley.— HBP 
To  Corinne.       (Br.  gel.  fr.   Corinne   at  the  Capitol.) — 

Felicia  D.  Hemans. — EPs 
To  Critics. — Walter  Learned. — AA 
To  Cupid,   upon   a   Dimple   in   Castara's  Cheek. — W: 

Habington.     See  Castara. 
To  Cynthia. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
To  Cyriac  rCyriack- C]  Skinner.  (1656.)  — J:  Milton. 

—OB— PGT  1 
To  Cyriack  Skinner.     (C.)     (1655.)— J:  Milton.— FEP 

—HBP 
(On  his  Own  Blindness.)— BNL— YBF 
(■'These  eyes,  though  clear" — sel.) — HDL 
To  D ,  Sel.  fr.     ("In  thee  I  fondly  hoped  to  clasp.") 

— Lord  Byron. — BNL 
To  D.  H.     (O— W:  E.  Henley. 

(Home.)— GN 
To  Daffodils.     (C.)— Rob't    Herrick.— BPB  — CEL  — 

CGd  —  ELP  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  FP  —  GN  — 

HBP  — LC  —  OB—  OEL  —  PGT  1  —  PHS  — 

POS— WEP  2— YBF 
(Daffodils.)— BNL— PEO  (sel.) 
To  Daisies. — Rob't  Herrick.     See  following. 
To  Daisies,  not  to  Shut  so  Soon.     (C) — Rob't  Her- 
rick.—OB— YBF 
(To  Daisies.)— OEL 
To  Daphne.— Sir  Walter  Besant. — VA 
To  Death.— Johann  C.  von  Gluck. — BNL 
To  Death.— Rob't  Herrick.- YBF 
To  Death. — Caroline  Southey. — OB 
To  Delia. — S :  Daniel.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 
To  Demeter. — Maybury  Fleming. — AA 
To  Detraction.— J:  Marston.- WEP  1 
To  Diana.— T:  Heywood.— CEL 
To  Diane. — Helen  Hay. — AA 
To  Dianeme.     (C.)— Rob't      Herrick.— BFV— ELP— 

FEP— FTA— OB— PGT  1— TFY— YBF 
(Sweet,  be  not  Proud.)— BNL 
To  Doctor  Empiric. — Ben  Jonson. — HPE 
To    Dr.     John    Brown. — Algernon    C.    Swinburne.  — 

EDY 
To  Duffy  in  Prison.— T:  D'A.  McGee.— TIP 


To  Duty.     (Sonnet  to  Duty— C.)— T:  W.  Higginson.— 

To  Duty.— W:  Wordsworth.— LH 
(Duty— seZ. )— HDL 

(Ode   to   Duty— O— FEP— HBP— OB  — PGTl 
—PHS— WEP  4 
(Sel. )— BNL— EPs— TMD 
To   E.  B.  B. — Rob't  Browning.     See  One  Word  More. 

To  E.  B.  B. 
To  E.  B.  B.— Jas.  Thomson.— EDY 

(E.  B.  B.— O— AVP 
To  E.  N.  L.— Stuart  Livingston.— TCV 
To  Echo. — J:  Milton.     SeeComus. 
To  Edgar  A.  Poe.     (Fr.  Sonnets  on  Edgar  Allan  Poe.) 
—Sarah  Whitman.— EDY 
(Sonnet . ) — AA 
To  Electra.     (C.)— Rob't  Herrick.— ELP— FTA— OB 

(Old  Rhyme,  An.)— HP 
To  Elizabeth.— W.  T.  Mclntyre.— CG  3 
To  England.— G:  H.  Boker.— AA  (seZ.)— ASL 
To  England.— C:  L.  Moore.- AA 
To  Eva.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— FEP 
To  Evening.— W:  Collins.— BPB 
( Evening.^ — CEL 

(Ode  to  Evening— O— EPs— FEP— HBP— OB— 
PGT  1— WEP  3 
To  Everlasting  Oblivion.— J:  Marston'. — WEP  1 
To  F.  C,  20th  February,  1875.- Mortimer  Collins.— VS 

(Snow  and  Sun.)— TFY 
To  F.  S.  O.,  Sel.  /r.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— BNL 
To  Fanny.     (SI.  afcr.)— T:  Moore.- HPE 
To  Faustine. — Arthur  Colton. — AA 
To  February.- Agnes  E.  Wetherald.— TCV— VA  (sel.) 
To  Fine  Grand.— Ben  Jonson.— HPE 
To  Flavia.— Edmund  Waller.— ES— OEL 
To  Florence.     (To  the  Jersey  Lily — C.) — Joaquin  Mil- 
ler.—TFY  (longer  than  Works.) 
To  Flush,  My  Dog. — Eliz.  B.  Browning. — BPB 
To  Fool  or  Knave. — Ben  Jonson.— WEP  2 
To  Fortune.     (C) — Jas.  Thomson. 

"Forever,  Fortune,  wilt  thou  prove" — abr.) — PGT  1 
To  George  Edward  Woodberry. — J :  Erskine.-— CG  3 

To  George  M .— T:  Miller.— HBP 

To  George  Peabody. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — EP 

To  Giulia  Grisi.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— AA 

To  God  and  Ireland  True.— Ellen  O'Leary.— TIP— VA 

To  Grandpapa,  on  His  Seventieth  Birthday. — Anon. — 

YBT 
To  Grown-up  Land.— Anon.— CS  37 — TFS 
To  H.  C.     (O— W:  Wordsworth. 
(To  Hartley  Coleridge.)- HBP 
To  H.  W.  L.     (C.)— Jas.  R.  Lowell. 

(To  Henry  Wadsworth   Longfellow — on  his  Birth- 
dayj— BNL 
To  Hafiz.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— AA 

To  Harriett.  (Dedication  to  Harriett — C. — in  Mis- 
cellaneous Poems  and  Ballads.) — Rob't  Buch- 
anan.— BIL 
To  Hartley  Coleridge. — W :  Wordsworth.  See  To  H.  C. 
To  Heaven.  (The  Forest,  XV.)— Ben  Jonson.— WEP  2 
To  Heaven  Approached  a  Sufi  Saint. — Dschellaleddin 

Rumi  (tr.  by  W:R.  Alger).— BNL 
To  Helen.— Edgar    A.    Poe.— AA— ASL— BPB— CEL 

— OB— TAV— YBF 
To  Helen  in  a  Huff.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— HPE 
To  Helena.     (C.)— T:  H.  Bayly. 

(To  my  Wife.)— FEP 
To  Helene,  on  a  Gift-ring  Carelessly  Lost. — G :  Darlev. 

—OB 
To  Henrietta,  on  her  Departure  to  Calais.     (SI.  abr.) — 

T:  Hood.— BVC 
To  Henry   Wadsworth   Longfellow. — Jas.    R.    Lowell. 

See  To  H.  W.  L. 
To  her  Absent  Sailor.      (Song  in  The   Tent   on   the 

Beach.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— BNL 
To  her  Eyes. — Fulke  Greville,  Lord  Brooke. — ES 
To  her  I  Love  (Song — C.).— Jas.  Thomson.— WEP  3 
To  her  Sea-faring  Lover. — Anon. — OB 
To  Himself.— Ben  Jonson.— FEP 

(Ode  to  Himself,  [An].)— EPs  (si.   a6r.)— OEL— 
WEP  2 
To   Himself   and    the    Harp,  Sel.  fr.     (Harp,  The.) — 

Michael  Drayton. — EPs 
To  his  Book.     (Two  poems.) — Rob't  Herrick. —  LBB 

— MBB 
To  his  Book.— W:  Walsh.- WEP  3 
To  his  Book.     Of  his  Lady. — Edmund  Spenser.     See 

Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 
To  his  Books.     (Epistles,  Bk.   I.,  Epis.  20.) — Horace 
(T-nrnphrased    by    Austin     Dobson). — LBB — 
MBB 
To  his  Books.— H:  Vaughan.— LBB— MBB 
To  his  Conscience. — Rob't  Herrick. — YBF 


339 


To  his  Countrymen    AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


To  his  Countrymen. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Fable  for 

Critics,  A. 
To  his  Coy  Love. — Michael  Drayton. — ES — OB 
To  his  Coy  Mistress. — Andrew  Marvell. — OB 
To  his  Fair  Idea. — Michael  Drayton. — FEP 
To  his  Forsaken  MisUess. — Sir  Rob't  Ayton. — FEP — 

OB 
To  his   Inconstant  Mistress.     (Song.     To  my   Incon- 
stant Mistress — C.) — T:  Carew. — OB 
To  his  Lady. — Rob't  C.  Graham. — LH 
To  his  Love.— W:  Shakespeare.— PGT  1  (I.)— PHS 
("Shall  I  compare  thee  to  a  summer's  day?") — 

OEL— YBF 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (I.) 
(Sonnet  XVIII.— C.)—WEP  1 
To  his  Love.— W:  Shakespeare.— PGT  1  (II.)— YBF 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (XVI.) 
rSonnet  CVL— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
("When  in  the  chronicle  of  wasted  time.") — BNL — 
OEL 
To  his   Lute.— W:   Drummond.— CEL— FEP— PGT  1 
To  his  Lute.— Sir  T:  Wyatt.— OB 

(Lover  Complaineth  of  the  Unkindness  of  his  Love, 

The— C.)— WEP  1 
(Lover  to  his  Lute,  The.)— CEL 
To  his  Mistress.  —  J:  Wilmot,   Earl  of  Rochester. — 

ELP  (seZ.)- OB 
To  his  Mistress     (Elizabeth,   Queen   of  Bohemia).  — 

Sir  H :  Wotton.     See  following. 
To  his  Mistress,  Objecting  to  him,  neither  Toying  or 

Talking.— Rob't  Herrick.— YBF 
To  his  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohemia. — Sir  H :  Wotton 
—FEP 
(Elizabeth  of  Bohemia.)— BPB—EPs— OB— PGT  1 

—YBF 
(On  his  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohemia — C.) — ELP 

—WEP  2 
(To  his  Mistress,  Elizabeth,  Queen  of  Bohemia.) — 

BNL 
(You  Meaner  Beauties.) — HBP 
To  His  Mother.— J :  B.  Tabb.     See  Child,  The. 
To  his  Saviour,  a  Child;  a  Present  by  a  Child. — Rob't 

Herrick. — PoR 
To  his  Sleeping  Mistress. — J:   Fletcher.     See  To  my 

Mistress'  Eyes. 
To  his  Supposed   Mistress,  Sel.   fr.     (Wishes  for  the 

Supposed  Mistress.) — R:  Crashaw. — ELP 
To  his  Winding-sheet. — Rob't  Herrick. — EPs  iabr.) 

(His  Winding-sheet— O— OB 
To  Hope,   Br.  sel.  fr.     ("And  as  in  sparkling  majesty 

a  star.") — J:  Keats. — HP 
To  Hope.— Helen  M.  Williams.— FEP 
To  lanthe.     (Poems  and  Epigrams  LVII. — C.) — Wal- 
ter S.  Landor. — VA 
("You  smiled,  you  spoke,  and  I  believed.") — WEP  4 
To  lanthe.  Sleeping. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Queen 

Mab. 
To  Imagination. — Edith  M.  Thomas. — AA 
"To  Imogen. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Cymbeline. 
To  Imperia. — Thomas  Burbidge. — VA 
To  Inconsistent  Husbands. — Anon. — KJ 

(Old  Man  in  the  Wood,  The— sZ.  diff.  tiers.)— CS  10 
—PHS 
To  J.  H.— Leigh  Hunt.— HBP 
To  James  Russell  Lowell,  Sel.  fr.     (James  R.  Lowell.) 

—Oliver  W.  Holmes.— PEO 
To  Jane — The  Recollection.     (C) — Percy  B.  Shelley. 
—WEP  4  (si.  abr.) 
(Recollection,    The.)— BPB     (si.     abr.)— PGT  1— 
POS  (seZ.)- SN 
To  Jenny  Lind. — Edmund  Gosse. — EDY 
To  Jessie's  Dancing  Feet. — W :  DeL.  Ellwanger. — AA 
To  Joanna.    (C. — Poems  on  the  Naming  of  Places,  Pt. 

II.— aZ>r.)— W:  Wordsworth.— EPs 
To  John  Bovle  O'Reilly.— J.  B.  Bensell.— EDY 
To  John  C.  Fremont.     (C.)— J:  G.  Whittier. 

(John  Charles  Fremont.)— BNL 
To  John  Greenleaf  Whittier. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — PEO 
To  John  Greenleaf  Whittier,  on  the  Death  of  Lowell. — 

W:  H.  Ward.— A  A 
To  John  Lathrop.     (C.) — B:  Franklin. 

(Letter  to  the  Rev.  Dr.  Lathrop,  Boston.) — MAL 
To  Julia.— Rob't  Herrick. — OEL 

(Night  Piece,  The.)— BFV— ELP— ES— WEP  2 
KNight  Piece,  The:     To  Julia— C.)— BNL  (sel.)— 
EPs— FEP— HBP— OB— YBF 
To  Julia  in  Shooting  Togs. — Owen  Seamen. — ^THP 
To  Julia  under  Lock  and  Key. — Owen  Seaman. — THP 
To  June.— Leigh  Hunt.— POS 

To  Keep  a  True  Lent.     (C.)— Rob't  Herrick.— FEP— 
HBP— OS  3  (at.  to  G:  Herbert.) 
(TrueLent,  A.l— BNL     YBF 
To  Kentucky.— Anon.— WR  20 


To  King   Charles   and   Queen    Henrietta.     (The    Tri- 
umph of  Peace,  Song  VI.)— Jas.  Shirley.— EHT 
To  King  Charles  and  Queen  Mary,  for  the  Loss  of  Their 
First-born.     An    Epigram    Consolatory. — Ben 
Jonson.— EDY 
To  Kriss.- Anon.— COS— PP 

To  L.  E.  L.,  on  the  Death  of  Felicia  Hemans.     (Felicia 
Hemans.   To  L.  E.  L. — C.) — Eliz.  B.  Browning. 
— AVP 
To  La  Sanscoeur. — W:  C.  Roscoe. — VA 
To  Labor  is  to  Pray. — Frances  S.  Osgood. — BNL 
(Labor.)— FMR—KNE  (sd.) 
(Labor    is    Worship.)— CS  7— HSS  3— LLC— PPSr 

— SM— SS— WCLG  2 
(Lahore  est  Orare.) — BS  5 
To  Lady  Anne  Hamilton. — W:  R.  Spencer. — FEP — 
HBP 
(Too  Late  I  Stayed.)— BNL— YBF 
To  Lady  Fitzgerald,  in  her  Seventieth  Year.     (Misc. 

Sonnets,    Pt.    III.,    XVII.     To   ,   in    her 

Seventieth      Year — C.) — W:      Wordsworth. — 
WEP  4 
To  Lady  Margaret.     (C.) — S:  Daniel. 
(Knowing  the  Heart  of  Man.) — EPs 

To  Laura  W ,  Two  Years  of  Age,   Sel.  fr.     (To  a 

ChildJ— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— EPs 
To  Lesbia. — T:  Campion.— ELP — ES 
To  Leuconoe — I.     (In  Echoes  from  the  Sabine  Farm.) 

— Roswell  M.  Field.— AA 
To  Leuconoe — II.     (In     Echoes    from     the    Sabine 

Farm.) — Eugene  Field. — A  A 
To  Leven  Water.— Tobias  G.  Smollett.— OB  (si.  abr.) 

(Ode  to  Leven  Water.)— FEP 
To  Life's  Pilgrim. — Geoffrey  Chaucer. — CEL  (abr.) 
(Good  Counsail.)— FP 

(Good  Counseil  of  Chaucer— C.)— FEP— WEP  1 
"To  live  in  Hell,  and  Heaven  to  behold."  —  H:  Con- 
stable.—FEP 
(Pain  of  Love.)— GP 
To  Live  Merrily,  and  to  Trust  to  Good  Verses.     (C.) — 
Rob't  Herrick.— ELP— EPs 
(His  Poets.)— LBB 
To  Lord  De  Tabley. — Austin  Dobson. — AVP 
To  Louis  Frechette.— J:  Reade. — TCV 
To  Louis  Kossuth. — Anon. — EDY 
To  Louis  Napoleon. — G:  H.  Boker. — EDY 
To  Love.— H:  Kirke  White.— TFY 
"To  love    satisfies    one-half   of    our   nature." — A.    A. 

Hodge.— GG 
To  Love  There  is  No  End. — Anon. — FLS 
To  Lucy. — Fred.  Henderson.- FTA 
To  LucastaF,  Going  beyond  the  Seas].    (C.) — R:  Love- 
lace.— BNL  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  OB  —  OEL  — 
PGT  1— YBF 
To  Lucasta,  going  to  the  Wars. — R:  Lovelace.     See 

To  Lucasta,  on  Going,  etc. 
To  Lucasta  [, her  Reserved  Looks —C]. — -R:  Lovelace. 

—WEP  2 
To  Luca8ta[,  on  Going  to  the  Wars].     (Song:     To  Lu- 
casta Going  to  the  Warres — C.) — R:  Lovelace. 
—  BFV  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  CEL  —  EPs  — 
FEP  —  FTA  —  HBP  —  OEL  —  OH  —  OS  3 
—PGT  1— PHS— PYO— YBF 
(Going  to  the  Wars.)- ELP— ES— LH— WEP  2 
(To  Lucasta  Going  to  the  Wars.) — OB 
To  Lydia  Maria  Child,  Sel.  fr.—J:G.  Whittier.— BIL 
To  M.  T.— Bayard  Taylor.— AA 
To  Mabel.     (Ad.)— R:  Jago.— FLS 

(Absence.) — OB 
To  Macaulay.— Walter  S.  Landor.— BNL— HBP 

(  M  acaulay . ) — V  A 
To  Madame  de  S^vign(5.     (Playing  Blind-Man's  Buff.) 

— Montreuil.- BNL 
To  Make  Mischief. — Anon. — KNE 
To  Manon  —  Comparing  Her  to  a  Falcon.     (In  Love 

Sonnets  of  Proteus.)- Wilfrid   S.  Blunt.— VA 
To  Manon  on  Her  Lightheartedness.     (In  Love  Son- 
nets of  Proteus.) — Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— VA 
To  Manon  —on  His  Fortune  in  Loving  her.     (In  Love 

Sonnetsof  Proteus.)- Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— OB 
To    Marguerite. — Matthew     Arnold. — OB — WEP  4 — 

YBF 
To  Marie. — Anon. — NA 
To  Mark  Mother's  Grave. — Anon. — CS  21 

(Little  Phil — poet.  vers,  by  Helen    Rich.) — CS  21 — 
HP 
To  Mary.— S:  Bishop.— FEP 
To  Mary.     (C.)— W:  Cowper.— FEP— WEP  3 
(My  Mary.)- OB 
(To  the  Same. )— PGT  1 
To  Mary.— C:  Wolfe.— BPB— OB— PGT  1 

("If  I  had  thought  thou  couldst  have  died.")— FEP 
(Lines  Written  to  Music.) — TIP 


340 


TITLE  INDEX 


To  Perilla 


To  Mary  in  Heaven.     (Thou  Lingering  Star.) — Rob't 

Burns.— AE  (seZ.)— BNL— CEL— FEP— HBP 

— HSS  .3— MBL— VSG— WEP  3 
To  Mary  Unwin. — W:  Cowper.     See  To  Mrs.  Unwin. 
To  Mary    WoUstonecraft    Godwin,    Sel.    fr.     (On    his 

Marriage  to  Mary  Godwin.) — Percy  B.  Shelley. 

— EDY 
To  Master  Robbie  Miller.— R.  H.  Moulton.— CG  3 
To  Maude's  Guitar.— L.  C.  Stone.— CG  2 
To  Maystress  Margaret  Hussey. — J:  Skelton.     See  Gar- 

lande  of  Laurell,  The. 
"To  me,   fair   friend[,  you   never   can   be   old]." — W: 

Shakespeare.- EPs— PGT  1 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— OB  (XV.) 
(Sonnet  CIV.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
To  Meadows.     (To  Meddowes — C.) — Rob't  Herrick. — 

ELP— ES  —  HBP  —  OB  —  OEL  —  WEP  2 
To  Miguel  de  Cervantes  Saavadra. — R:  K.  Munkittrick. 

^\ 

To  Millicent  Abroad.— T.  P.  Sanborn.— CG  1 
To  Milton.     (Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Indepen- 
dence and  Liberty,  Pt.  I.  XIV.)— W:  Words- 
worth.—BNL—CEL— EPs— FEP 
(England.)— GP 
(Ideal.)— LH 

(London,  1802— CJ— PGT  1  (II.)— YBF  (II.) 
(Milton.)— LLC— WEP  4 
("Milton!  thou  shouldst  be  living  at  this  hour" — 

o6r.)— GG 
(Sonnet:  London,  1802.)— HBP 
To  Minnie.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
To  Minnie:     A  Picture-frame  for  you  to  Fill.     (C) — 
Rob't.  L.  Stevenson. 
(With  a  Hand-glass.)— OH 

To  Miss  .— T:  Moore.— HPE 

To  Miss  Charlotte  Pulteney[,  in  Her  Mother's  Arms]. 
—Ambrose  Philips.— FEP— WEP  3 
(To  Charlotte  Pulteney.)— PGT  1 
To  Miss  Mitford,  Authoress  of  "Our  Village."     (C) — 
C:  Kingsley. 
(To  the  Authoress  of  "Our  Village.")— EDY 
To    Mr.    Alexandre,    the    Ventriloquist.     (Lines    Ad- 
dressed to  Monsieur  Alexandre,  the  Celebrated 
Ventriloquist— C.)— Walter  Scott.— HPE 
To  Mr.  Congreve.— Eliz.  Toilet.— EDY 
To   Mr.    Edward    Howard,    on    his    Plays.     (C.) — C: 
Sackville,  Earl  of  Dorset. 
(Satire  on  a  Conceited  Playwright.) — ESs 
To  Mr.    Hobbes.     {Fr.    Pindarique   Odes.) — Abraham 

Cowley.— WEP  2 
To  Mr.  Lawrence.- J:  Milton.— OB— PGT  1 
To  Mr.  Pye.     (C.)— S:  T.  Coleridge. 

(Eternal  Poem,  An.)— HPE 
To  Mrs.    Biddy   Floyd;  or.   The   Receipt   to   Form   a 

Beauty. — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
To  Mrs.  Houghton  of  BourmQnt,  on  Praising  her  Hus- 
band to  Dr.  Swift.     (C.)— Jonathan  Swift. 
(To  a  Lady.)— HPE 
To  Mistress    Isabel    Pennell. — J:   Skelton.     See  Gar- 

lande  of  Laurell,  The. 
To  Mistress  Margaret  Hussey. — J:  Skelton.     See  Gar- 

lande  of  Laurell,  The. 
To  Mistress    Margery    Wentworth. — J:    Skelton.     iSee 

Garlande  of  Laurell,  The. 
To  Mrs.  Unwin.     (C.)— W:  Cowper.- FEP 
(To  Mary  Unwin.)— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
To  Mollidusta. — Jas.  Robinson. — Planch^. — NA 
To  Mother  Fairie.— Alice  Gary. — BLF 
To  Music,  to  Becalm  his  Fever.     (C.) — Rob't  Herrick. 
FEP— OB 
(Music.)— CEL— WEP  2 
To  my  Big  Sweetheart. — Frd'k  S.  Cozzens. — AWH 
To  my  Books.       (Sonnet  VIII.) — Caroline  Norton. — 

MBB 
To  my  Books  on  Parting  with  Them. — W:  Roscoe. — 
LBB— MBB 
(On  Parting  with  his  Books.) — FEP 
To   my  Bookseller.    (Epigrams,  III.) — Ben  Jonson. — 

LBB— MBB 
To  my  Brothers. — Norman  Gale. — VA 
To  my  Canary  Bird.— G:  Martin.— TCV 
To  my  Cat. — Rosamund  M.  Watson. — VA 
To  my  Cigar. — Friedrich  Marc. — PPh 
To  my  Cigar.— C:  Sprague.— PPh 
To  my  Companions. — W :  E.  Channing. — HBP 
To  my  Daughter!,  on  her  Birthday— C.].—T:  Hood.— 

HBP 
To  my  Dear  Friend  Aim^e.— G.  H.  Westley.— FLS 
To  my   Dear  Friend,   Mr.   Congreve,   on  his  Comedy 
Called  "The  Double  Dealer."     (C.)— J:  Dry- 
den. 
(To  my  Friend,  Mr.  Congreve.) — WEP 
To  my  Dear  Son. — Lady  Dufferin. — AVP 


To  my    Empty    Purse. — Geoffrey    Chaucer. — HPE — 

OSS 
(Compleynte  of  Chaucer  to  his  Purse — C.) — BNL 
To  my  Friend,  Mr.  Congreve.— J:  Dryden.     See  To  my 

Dear  Friend,  etc. 
To  my  Friend  on  the  Death  of  her  Sister,  Br.  sel.  fr. 

(Angels     of   Grief,   The.)— J:   G.    Whittier.— 

HDL 
To  my  Grandmother. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson. — AVP 

— CEL— VA 
To  my  Honoured   Kinsman,  John  Dryden  [Driden — 

C.].— J:  Dryden.— WEP  2 
To  my  Horse. — Anon. — FEP 
To    my    Infant    Son.     (Domestic    Poems,     III.) — T: 

Hood.— BNL 
(Ode  to  an  Infant  Son.)— WRD 
(Ode  to  my  Little  Son.)— CS  1— FEP 
(Parental  Ode  to  my  Son,  Aged  Three  Years  and 

Five  Months,  A.)— HPE— THP— WEP  4 
To  my  Lady.— G:  H.  Boker.— AA 
To  my  Love.— W.  A.  Eaton.— CS  25 
To  my  Love.     (C.)— J:  G.  Saxe. 

(Kiss  me  Softly.)— BIL—FTA—GP 
To  my  Meerschaum.— P.  D.  R.— CG  1— PPh 
To  my  Mere  English  Censurer.     (Epigrams,  XVIII.) — 

Ben  Jonson.— WEP  2 
To  my  Mistress. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson. — VA 
To  my  Mistress.^ — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
To  my  Mistress's   Eyes.     (Song  fr.   Women   Pleased, 

Act  III.,  Sc.  4.)— J:  Fletcher.— ES 
(To  his  Sleeping  Mistress.)— ELP 
To  my  Mother.     (C.)— W:  E.  Henley. 

(I  Met  a  Maiden  To-day.)— FTA 
To  my    Mother.     (Sonnet    to    my    Mother — C.) — H: 

Kirke  White.— PC 
To  my  Mother.— Howell  L.  Finer.— WR  23 
To  my  Mother. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
To  my  Name-child. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV 
To  my  Nose.— Alfred  A.  Forrester.— BNL— HPE 
To  my  Picture.— T:  Randolph.— FEP 
To  my  Poland  Rooster. — F.  S.  Cozzens. — AWH 
To  my  Promised  Wife.— J:  Walsh.— TIP 
To  my  Readers,  Sel.  fr.     ("Deal  gently  with  us,  ye  who 

read.")— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— GG 
To  my  Shadow.— T:  W.  Higginson.— TAS 
To  my  Sister.— J:  G.  Whittier.— HBP 
To  my  Sister. — W:  Wordsworth.— SN 
To  my  Soul.— Paul  Fleming.— OS  1 
To  my  Soul.— Albert  Laighton.— TAS 
To  my   Tortoise    Chronos. — Eugene    Lee-Hamilton. — 

VA 
To  my  Totem. — H:  C.  Beeching.— VA 
To  my  Wife.— T:  H.  Bayly.     See  To  Helena. 
To  my  Wife,  Mildred.— R :  Le  Gallienne.— AVP 
To  N.  V.  de  G.  S.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— VA 
To  Narcissa.— E.  P.  Train.— TL 
To  Night. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — AA 
To  Night.     (C.)— Percy    B.    Shelley.— BNL— FEP— 

HBP— WEP  4— YBF 
(Night . )— BSP— GP— OB 
(To  the  Nignt.)— BFV— PGT  1— PHS 
To  Night.— Jos.  B.  White.— FEP— HBP— OS  3— YBF 
( Night. )— BNL— PYO 

(Night  and  Neath.)— BSP— EPs— GP—SN 
(Sonnet  to  Night.)— POS 
To  O.  S.  C— Annie  E.  Trumbull.— AA 
To  O.  W.  Holmes.— Paul  H.  Hayne.— EDY 
To  CEnone.— Rob't  Herrick.— OB 
To  One  Being  Old.— Langdon  E.  Mitchell.— AA 
To  One   Excusing  his   Poverty.     (In  Love  Sonnets  of 

Proteus.)— Wilfrid  S.   Blunt.— HBP 
To  One    in    Paradise. — Edgar    A.    Poe. — AA — ASL — 

BPB— YBF 
To   One    Persuading    a   Lady    to     Marriage. — Kathe. 

Philips.— OB 
To  One  Saying  She  was  Old. — Jas.  Shirley.     See  follow- 
ing. 
To  One  that  Said  his  Mistress  was  Old.     (C.)  —  Jas. 

Shirley. 
(To  One  Saying  she  was  Old.)— ES— OEL 
"To  one  who  has  been  long  in  city  pent." — J:  Keats. 

—FEP— PGT  1 
(In  the  Country.)— POS 
To  One  who  Would    Make  a  Confession,      (/n    Love 

Sonnets    of    Proteus.)  —  Wilfrid    S.    Blunt. — 

HBP 
To  One  who  Wrote  against  a  Fair  Lady.     (In  Answer 

to  One  who  Writ  a  Libel  against  the  Countess 

of  Carlisle— C.)— Edmund  Waller.- WEP  2 
To  Our  Baby.— Anon.— TFS 

To  Pan. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
To  Peggy.— C:  G.  Loring,  Jr.— CG  3 
To  Perilla.— Rob't   Herrick.— HBP— WEP  2— YBF 


341 


To  Philip 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


To  Philip  Massinger,  "a  Stranger." — C:  E.  Russell. — 

EDY 
To  Phillis.— Rob't  Herrick.     See  To  Phillis,  to  Love 

and  Live  With  Him. 
To  Phillis,  the  Fair  Shepherdess. — T:  Lodge  (at.  also 
to  Sir  E:  Dyer).— ES— WEP  1 
(Phillis.)— EP—0»  (1  —a&r.) 
To  PhUlis,  to  Love  and  Live  with  Him.     (C.) — Rob't 
Herrick. 
(To  Phillis.)— WEP  2 
(To  Phyllis.)— EP 
To  Phoebe.— W:  S.  Gilbert.— THP 
To  Phyllis.— Rob't  Herrick.     See  To  Phillis,  to  Love 

and  Live  with  Him. 
To  Phyllis.     (Fr.  The  Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange.)— 
T:  Heywood.— ES— OEL 
(Go,  Pretty  Birds.)— FEP 
(Message,  The.)— OB 
(Phillis.)— EP 

("Ye  little  birds  that  sit  and  sing.") — ELP 
To  Phyllis.— Albert  P.  Terhune.— CG  2 
To  Phyllis  Rettirned  to  Town. — MacGregor  Jenkins. — 

TL 
To  Primroses  Filled  [Fill'd — C]  with  Morning  Dew. — 
Rob't   Herrick.— FEP— HBP— WEP  2— YBF 
To  Prince  Henry.— Jas.  I.  of  England.— FEP 
To  Professor  Airey.— Sidney  Smith.— HPE 
To  Pnie.— A.  B.  Houghton.— CG  1 
To  Q.  H.  F.— Austin  Dobson.— FEP 
To  Robert  Browning.     (C.)— Walter  S.  Landor.— EDY 

(Robert  Browning.) — VA 
To  Robert  Louis  Stevenson. — Herman  K.  Vieli^. — EDY 
To  Robin  Red  Breast.— Rob't  Herrick.— WEP  2 
To  Romance,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Romance.) — Lord  Byron. — 

HSS3 
To  Roses  in  the  Bosom  of  Castara. — W:  Habington. — 

See  Castara. 
To  Rosina  Pico.— W:  W.  Lord.— AA 
To  Ruby  Lips. — H.  A.  Richmond. — CG  2 
To  Russia. — Joaquin  Miller. — AA 
To  S.  R.  Crockett.     (C.)— Rob't  L.  Stevenson. 

(Whaups,  The.)— VA 
To  St.  Mary  Magdalen.— B:  D.  Hill.— A  A 
To  St.  Valentine. — Madeleine  Reese. — TL 
To  Sally.— J:  Q.  Adams.— A  A 
To  Samuel  Bindon,   Esq.,  Sel.  fr.     (Moll.) — Jonathan 

Swift.— HPE 
To  Samuel  Rogers,  Esq.     (Lines  Written  on  a  Blank 
Leaf  of  "The   Pleasures  of  Memory" — C.) — 
Lord  B5Ton.— EDY 
To  Sea!  [To  Sea!]— T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Death's  Jest 

Book. 
To  See  her  Pipe  Awry.— C.  F.— PPh 
To  Seneca  Lake.     (C.)— Jas.  G.  Percival.— FEP— GP— 
HBP— SN 
(Seneca  Lake.) — BNL 
To  Shakespeare.     (C— Sonnet     XXVIII.)  —  Hartley 
Coleridge. — VA 
(Shakespeare. ) — BNL 
To  Shakespeare. — R:  E.  Day. — AA 
To  Shelley.— J:  B.  Tabb.— AA 
To  Sigh,  yet  Feel  No  Pain.     (Song  fr.  M.  P. ;  or.  The 

Blue  Stocking.)— T:  Moore.— FEP— FLS 
To  Silvia.— Rob't  Herrick.— EPs    * 
To  Sir  Annual  Filter  [Tilter— C.].— Ben  Jonson.— HPE 
To  Sir  Henry  Goodyere. — Ben   Jonson. — LBB — MBB 
To  Sir  Henry  Vane  (the  Younger) — C. — J:  Milton. 

(Sonnet:  To  Sir  Henry  Vane.)— EPs 
To  Sir  Hudson  Lowe.— T:  Moore.— HPE 
To  Sleep. — Maybury  Fleming. — AA 
To  Sleep.— J:  Keats.— OB 

To  Sleep.     (^Poems  and  Epigrams,  CLXXXII.)— Wal- 
ter S.  Landor. — VA 
To  Sleep. — Frances  S.  Osgood. — AA 
To  Sleep. — Sir    Philip    Sidney.     See    Astrophel    and 

Stella. 
To  Sleep.     (Poems  of  the  Imagination,  Pt.   I.,  Misc. 
Sonnets,  XIV.)— W:  Wordsworth.  —  FEP  — 
HBR— MBL— PGT  1— PYO— YBF 
(Sleeplessness. ) — BNL 
To  Song-birds  on  a  Sunday.     (Punch.) — HPE  ' 
ToSpaih— a  Last  Word.— Edith  M.   Thomas.— EDY 

— PAPm 
To  Spring.— W:  Blake.— OB 
To  Spring.     (2  «<m«.)— W :  Drummond.— FEP 
(Sonnet:  Spring— 1st  son.  of  FEP.)— ELP 
(Spring  Bereaved,  II.)— OB 
To  Stella.— Sir  Philip  Sidney.— Y^F 
To  Sylvia. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Two  Gentlemen  of 

Verona,  The. 
To  T.  L.  H.,  Six  Years  Old,  during  a  Sickness.     (C.) 
—Leigh  Hunt.— FEP 
(To  a  Child  during  Sickness.)— BNL— HBP 


To  Tacsea.     (Poems  and  Epigrams,  LXXIII.)— Wal- 
ter S.  Landor.— WEP  4 
To  the  Adventurous. — J:  Keats. — LH 

(On   First  Looking  into    Chapman's    Homer — C.) 
—  BFV  —  BNL  (br.  sel.)  —  BPB  —  BSP  — 
CEL  —  EPs  ^FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  LLC  — 
OB— PGT  1— WEP  4— YBF 
(Sonnet:  on  First  Looking,  etc.) — OS  3 
To  the  American  Poet. — F:  L.  Knowles. — PAPm 
To  the  American  Troops  before  the  Battle  of  Long 
Island,  1774.— G:  Washington.— SS—SSD 
(Address  to  his  Troops.) — OS  2 
(Washington  to  his  Soldiers.) — PS 
(Washington's  Address  to  his  Troops.) — BS  24 
To  the  Army  before  Quebec,  1759.— Jas.  Wolfe.— PS— 
S8 
(Address  of  General  Wolfe  before  Quebec.) — BLP 
To  the  Army  of  Italy,  May  15,  1796. — Napoleon  Bona- 
parte.—PS— SS—SSD 
(Proclamation  to  the  Army  of  Italy — el.  same.) — 
OS  3 
(Bonaparte  to  his  Army  in  Italy — diff.  tr.) — BLP 
To  the  Author   of   a   Sonnet    Beginning   "Sad    is   my 
verse,  you  say,    'and   yet   no    tear.'  "-^Lord 
Byron.— HPE 
To  the  Authoress  of  "Our  Village." — C:  Kingsley.    See 

_To  Miss  Mitford,  Authoress,  etc. 
To  the  Blest  Evanthe.     (Song  fr.  A  Wife  for  a  Month, 

Act  I.,  Sc.  2.)— J:  Fletcher.— ES 
To  the  Boy  who  goes  Daily  Past  my  Windows  Sing- 
ing.— Eliz.  C.  Kinney. — AA 
To  the  Boys.— H:  Downton.— FAS 
(Advice  to  Boys.)— KNS 
(Brave  and  True.)— DS— PP— YA— YFR 
To  the  Butterfly.— S :  Rogers.— FEP 
To  the  Cambro-Britons  and  their  Harp:  His  Ballad  of 
Agincourt.— Michael  Drayton.— ELF— WEP  1 
(Agincourt.) — -HB — LH  {w.  Shakespeare) — OB 
(Ballad  of  Agincourt[,  The].)— BNL— BPB— EDY 

— FEP— HB— HBP— HSS  1— PSR 
(Battle     of    Agincourt,   The— C.)  — BFV— CEL— 
EHT— GN— OS  3 
To  the  Cat-bird.— Anon.— SN 
To  the  Child  Julia.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
To  the  Children.— Phoebe  Gary.- BLF— YBT  (abr.) 
("May  you  never  say  of  a  brother  dear" — hr.  sel.) 
— FHS 
To  the  Christ.— J:  B.  Tabb.— TAS 
To  the  Chrysanthemum.— W:  C.  Bennett.— POS 
To  the  Cigarette  Girl.— H.  F.  H.— CG  2 
To  the  College  Idol.— Addison  H.  Hinman.— CG  3 
To  the  Comtesse  de  Molande  about  to  Marry  the  Due 
de  Luxembourg.     (C.) — Walter  S.  Landor. 
("Say  ye,  that  years  roll  on  and  ne'er  return?") — 
WEP  4 
To  the  Countess  of  Cumberlarkd. — S:  Daniel.     See  To 

the  Lady  Margaret,  Countess,  etc. 
To  the  Countess  of  Rutland  (Sel.  fr.  The  Forest,  XII. 
— Epistle  To  Elizabeth,  Countess  of  Rutland.) 
— Ben  Jonson. — EPs 
To  the  Critic.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Poet's  Mind . )— Alfred  Ten- 
nyson.— EPs 
To  the  Cuckoo.     (C.)— J:  Logan.— BNL— FEP— HBP 
—OB— PYO  (afer.  )—SN 
(Cuckoo,  The.)— WCL 
(Messenger  of  Spring,  The.)- — ^POS 
(Ode  to  the  Cuckoo — at.  to  Michael  Bruce.) — CEL 
— CGd 
To  the  Cuckoo.— W:  Wordsworth.-  BNL  —  BPB  — 
CEL  —  FEP  —  GP  —  HBP  —  LC  —  MBL  — 
PGT  1— SN— WEP  4— YBF 
To  the  Daisy.— W:  Wordsworth.— FEP 
To    the    Daisy.      (Diff.    voem.) — W:    Wordsworth. — 

BNL  (hr.  8e/.)— CEL— FEP— MBL— PGT  1 
To   the    Dandelion.— Jas.     R.     Lowell.— AD— ASL — 
HBP— PYO  (air.)— SN—TAV 
(Longer  vers,  than  in  Works.) — LLC — PEO 
(Br.  aei.)— BNL— GN 
To  the  Dead.— W:  B.  Scott.— VA 
To  the  Departed.— Anon.— SSS 

To  the  Desponding. — Alice  Gary.     See    To    any    De- 
sponding Genius. 
To  the  Devil. — Rob't  Bums.     See  Address  to  the  Deil. 
To  the  Discouraged.— G:  W.  Crofts.— HDL 
To  the  Duke    de    Noalles    (Epigram    Written    to    the 
Duke  de  Noalles,  An — C.). — Matthew  Prior. — 
HPE 
To  the  Duke  of  York.     (Poet's  Good  Wishes   for  the 
Most  Hopeful  and  Handsome  Prince,  the  Duke 
of  Yorke,  The— C.)— Rob't  Herrick.— WEP  2 
To  the  Dykes.— T.  De  Witt  Talmage.— CS  32— DS 
To  the  Earl  of  Warwick,  on  the  Death  ot  Addison. — 
T:  Tickell.     See  follmving. 


342 


TITLE  INDEX 


To  the  Palace 


To  the  Earl  of  Warwick,  on  the  Death  of  Mr.  Addi- 
son.    (C. )— T :  TickelL— WEP  3  (a6r. ) 
(On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Addison.) — FEP 
(To  the  Earl  of  Warwick,  on  the  Death  of  Addi- 
son.)—BNL 
To  the  Electors     of     Bristol. — Edmund     Burke.     See 
Speech  at  Bristol,  Previous  to  the  Election, 
1780. 
To  the  End.     (SeZ.)— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
To  the  Evening  Star.— W:  Blake.— WEP  3 
To  the  Evening  Star.— T:  Campbell.— FEP— HBP 
(Evening  Star,  The.)— BNL 

(Song:  to  the  Evening  Star— C.)— PGT  1— YBF 
To  the  Evening  Star.     (Caroline,  Pt.   II.) — T:  Camp- 
bell.—PGT  1 
To  the  Evening  Star. — J:  Leyden. — FEP 
To  the  Evening  Star.— G.  M.  Perkins. — CG  3 
To  the  Evening  Wind.— W:  C.  Bryant.— PHS 
(Evening  Wind,  The— C.)— LLC 

(W.  add.  8<.)— AA— BNL— GP— HBP 
To  the  Faculty.— H.  K.  Webster.— CG  2 
To  the  First  Robin.— H:  S.  Washburn.— POS 
To  the  Fir-tree.     (Tr.   by)   Blanche  W.   Bellamy  and 

Maud  W.  Goodwin.— OS  1 
To  the  Flying  Squadron. — Anon. — PAPm 
To  the  Forgotten  Dead. — ^Margaret  L.  Woods. — VA 
To  the  Fountain  of  Bandusia.     (Fr.  Echoes  from  the 

Sabine  Farm.) — Eugene  Field. — AA 
To  the  French  People,  1792. — Pierre  V.  Vergniaud. — 
pg gg 

To  the  Fringed  Gentian. — W :  C.  Bryant. — AA — ASL 
—  BNL  —  EPs  —  FEP  —  GN  —  HBP  —  LC 
—LLC— OS  2— POS— YBF 
To  the  Glowworm. — J:  Clare. — FEP 
To  the  Gossamer-light. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — VA 
To  the  Grand  Army  of  the  Republic. — T:  B.  Reed. — 

SC 
To  the  Grasshopper  and  [the]  Cricket. — Leigh  Hunt. — 
BNL  -  FEP     GN— POS— WEP  4 
(Grasshopper   and   [the]    Cricket,    The.) — CEL  — 
HBP— LC— OS  2 
To  the  Guardian   Angel,   Sabine. — C.   A.   V.  Tastu. — 

OS  1 
To  the  Guidwife  of  Wauchope  House,  Sel.  fr.     (Epistle 
to  Mrs.  Scott  of  Wauchope.) — Rob't  Burns. — 
WEP  3 
(Scotland — br.  sel.)— EPs 
To  the  Harvest  Moon.— H:  Kirke  White. — BNL  (abr.) 

—HBP 
To  the  Herald  Honeysuckle. — Emily  Pfeifler.- — VA 
To  the  Herb  Rosemary.— H :  Kirke  White.— EPs 
To  the  Highland    Girl    of    Inversneyde. — W:    Words- 
worth.    See  To  a  Highland  Girl. 
To  the  Hon.  Charles  Montague.     (,Abr.  fr.  Variations 
from  a  Copy  Printed  1692.) — Matthew  Prior. — 
BNL 
To  the  Housatonic  at  Stockbridge. — Rob't  U.   John- 
son.—SN 
To   the   House  of  Lords. — Edmund  Burke.     See  Im- 
peachment of  Warren  Hastings. 
To  the  Humblebee.     (C.)— Ralph  W.  Emerson. — BNL 
(Humble-bee,  The.— C)  —  AA  —  ASL  —  BFV  — 
FEP— GN— HBP— LC— SN— TAV 
To  the  Humming-bird. — Jones  Very. — LC 
To  the  Immortal  Memory  and  Friendship  of  that  Noble 
Pair,  Sir  Lucius  Cary  and  Sir  Henry  Morrison, 
Sel.  fr.    (Part  of  an  Ode  to  the  Immortal  Mem- 
'    ory,  etc.) — Ben  Jonson. — OB 
(Good  Life,  Long  Life— 6r.  seZ.)— BNL— FEP 
(Honor  in  Bud— abr.) — LH 
(Measure  of  the  Perfect  Life,  The.)— ELP 
(Noble  Nat.ure.The.)— CGd— CS  15— FP— GN— 

LC— OS  1— PGT  1— YBF 
(Perfect  Life,  The.)— CEL 
To  the  Jersey  Lily.     (C.) — Joaquin  Miller. 

(To  Florence — lovqer  vers.) — TFY 
To  the  Katydid.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  To  an  In- 
sect. 
To  the  King. — "Junius."     See  To  the  Printer,  etc. 
To  the  King  on  his  Birthday[,  Nov.  19,  1632— C.].— 

'  Ben  Jonson. — EDY 
To  the  Lady  in  the  Chemisette  with  Black  Buttons. — 

Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— HPE 
To  the  Lady  Margaret,  Countess  of  Cumberland. — S: 
Daniel.— FEP— HBP— WEP  1  (.abr.) 
(Knowing  the  Heart  of  Man — br.  sel.) — EPs 
(To  the  Countess  of  Cumberland— 6r.  sel.) — BNL 
To  the  Lady  Margaret  Ley.— J:  Milton.— FEP— HBP 

—OB— PGT  1 
To  the  Lady-bird.— Caroline  B.  Southey. — PHS 
(Ladybird,  Ladybird.)— NV— OS  1 
(Little  Lady  Bird,  The.)— WR  12 
To  the  Lakes.— W.  W.  Campbell.— VA 


To  the  Lapland  Longspur. — J:  Burroughs. — SN 

To  the  Lark.- Rob't  Herrick.— CEL— WEP  2 

To  the  Leading  Periodical.     (Punch.) — HPE 

To  the  LeanAn  Sidhe.— T:  Boyd.— TIP 

To  the  Lion  of  St.  Mark.  (Sel.  fr.  Venice.) — Joaquin 
Miller.— OS  3 

To  the  Little  Readers. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 

To  the  Lord  General. — J:  Milton.     See  following. 

To  the  Lord  General  [Cromwell]. — J:  Milton. — BNL — 
EHT— FEP— LH— OS  3— WEP  2— YBF 
(Sonnet.  To  the  Lord  General  Cromwell,  etc.— C'.) 
—HBP 

To  the  Lord  of  Potsdam. — Owen  Seaman. — THP 

To  the  Man-of-war-bird. — Walt  Whitman. — A  A 

To  the  Memory  of  Ben  Jonson. — J:  Cleveland. — BNL 

To  the  Memory  of  Channing. — Anne  C.  Lynch. — EDY 

To  the  Memory  of  Fletcher  Harper  (Honest  Man,  An 
—C.).— Dinah  M.  Craik.— BNL 

To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved  Master,  William  Shake- 
speare^, and  what  he  Hath  Left  Us].  See  fol- 
lowing. 

To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved  Mr.  William  Shakes- 
peare, and  what  he  hath  Left  us.  (C.) — Ben 
Jonson. 
(To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved  Master,  William 
Shakespeare,  and  what  he  hath  Left  us.) — 
WEP  2 
(To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved,  the  Author,  ^r. 

William  Shakespeare,  etc.) — FEP 
(To  the  Memory  of  Shakespeare.) — BNL 

To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved,  the  Author,  Mr.  Wil- 
liam Shakespeare,  and  What  he  hath  Left  us. 
— Ben  Jonson.     See  foregoing. 

To  the  Memory  of  Pietro  d'Alessandro.  —  H:  Lush- 
ington. — AVP 

To  the  Memory  of  Prince  Albert. — Alfred  Tennyson. 
See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

To  the  Memory  of  Shakespeare.  —  Ben  Jonson.  See 
To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved  Mr.  William 
Shakespeare,  etc. 

To  the  Memory  of  Sydney  Dobeli. — J:  S.  Blackie. — 
EDY 

To  the  Memory  of  the  Americans  Who  Fell  at  Eutaw. 
—Philip  Freneau.— PAP 
(Eutaw  Springs.)- AA—AWB— EDY 

To  the  Memory  of  the  Late  Brigham  Young. — Anon. — 
SRI 

To  the  Memorj'  of  Thomas  Hood. — Bartholomew  Sim- 
mons.—BNL  (seZ.)— HBP 
(Stanzas  to  the  Memory  of  Thomas  Hood.) — EDY 
— VA 

To  the  Milkweed. — Lloyd  Mifflin. — AA 

To  the  Mocking-bird. — Albert  Pike. — AA 

To  the  Mocking-bird.- R:  H.  Wilde.— AA— FEP— 
SN 

To  the  Moment  Last  Past. — W:  Habington.  See  Cas- 
tara. 

To  the  Month  of  September.  (Hymns  of  Astrea, 
Hymn  X.)— Sir  J :  Davies.— WEP  1 

To  the  Moon.     (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— CEL 
(SI.  abr.)— FEF—FCT  1— YBF 
(Moon,  The,  II.— sZ.  a6r.)— OB 

To  the  Moon. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.  See  Astrophel  and 
Stella. 

To  the  Moon.— E:  Hovel,  Lord  Thurlow.— FEP 

To  the  Moonflower. — Craven  L.  Betts. — AA 

To  the  Muses.— W:  Blake.  —  CEL  —  FEP  —  OB  — 
PGT  1— WEP  3 

To  the  Nautilus. — Hartley  Coleridge. — VA 

To  the  Neapolitans.     (Lines     on     the    entry    of    the 
Austrians   into   Naples  —  C)  —  T:   Moore. — 
OS  2  (abr.) 
(Lines  on  Naples.) — CSS 
(Occupation  of  Naples  by  the  Austrians  — EDY 

To  the  Night.— Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  To  Night. 

To  the  Nightingale. — R:  Barnfield.     See  Cynthia. 

To  the  Nightingale.  (Hymns  of  Astrea,  Vl.) — Sir  J: 
Davies.— WEP  1 

To  the  Nightingale. — W:  Drummond. — FEP 
(Sonnet:  To  the  Nightingale.)— ELP 

To  the  Nightingale. — W:  Drummond.  See  also  To  a 
Nightingale. 

To  the  Nightingale.— J:  Milton.— BNL  (br.  sel.)— FEP 
—HBP— YBF 
(Sonnet:  To  the  Nightingale— C.)— ELP 

To  the  Nightingale. — Anne  Finch,  Lady  Winchelsea. — 
WEP  3 

To  the  Ocean. — Lord  Byron.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

To  the  Ocean  now  I  Fly. — J:  Milton.     See  Comus. 

To  the  Old  and  the  New  Year. — Laura  F.  Armitage. — 
YBT 

To  the  Palace  of  the  King.— S.  J.  Smith.— CS  33 


343 


To  the  Past 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


To  the  Past.     (C.)— W:  C.  Bryant.— ASL 

(Past,  The.)— A  A— LLC 
To  the  Pious    Memory    of    the    Accomplished    Young 
Lady,  Mrs.  Anne  Killigrew.     (C) — J:  Dryden. 
— WEP2 
(Ode  to  the  Pious  Memory,  etc. — si.  abr.) — OB 
To  the  Pliocene  SkuU.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— AWH— BNL 

— THP 
To  the  Poets.—.!:  Keats.— FEP 

(Bards  of  Passion  and  of  Mirth.) — OB 
(Ode:  "Bards  of  passion,"  etc.)— HBP— WEP  4 
(Ode  on  the  Poets.)— PGT  1— PHS 
To  the  Portrait  of  "A  Gentleman." — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

— HPE 
To  the  Portrait  of  One  "Gone  Before." — Mrs.  A.  M. 

Butterfield.— FP 
To  the  Princess  Alice.     (Dedicatory  Poem  to  the  Prin- 
cess Alice — C.) — Alfred  Tennyson. — EDY 
To  the  Printer  of  the  Public  Advertiser.     (C. — Letter 
XXXV.) — "Junius." 
(To  the  King.)— ESs 
"To  the  pure  mind  alone  hath  solitude  its  charms." — 

Anon. — GG 
To  the  Queen.— Alfred  Tennyson.— EDY— EHT 
To  the  Rainbow.     (C. )— T :  Campbell.— FEP— SS 
(SI.  a6r.)— EPs— SN 
(Rainbow,  The— o6r. )— POS 
To  *he  Redbreast.— G:  Cornish.— AVP 
To  the  Redbreast. — W:  Drummond.     See  To  a  Night- 
ingale. 
To  the  Rescue. — Anon. — CS  14 
To  the  Rev.  Dr.  Wordsworth.     (C.) — W:  Wordsworth. 

(Christmas  Carol,  The— o6r.)— EPs— OS  3 
To  the  Rev.  F.  D.  Maurice.- Alfred  Tennyson.— GP 
To  the  Rev.  Mr.  Newton. — W :  Cowper.     See  To  the 

Rev.  Mr.  Newton,  Rector,  etc. 
To  the  Rev.  Mr.  Newton,  on  His  Return  from  Rams- 
gate.— W:  Cowper.— WEP  3 
To  the  Rev.  Mr.  Newton,  Rector  of  St.  Mary,  Wool- 
worth.     (C.)—W:  Cowper. 
(To  the  Rev.  Mr.  Newton.)— PPh 
To  the  Revolutionary  Veterans. — Dan'l  Webster.    See 

Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 
To  the  Right  Hon.  Mr.   Dodington.     (Love  of  Fame 
the  Universal  Passion,  Satire  III. — abr.) — E: 
Young. — ESs 
To  the  Right  Hon.  the  Earl  of  Burlington.     (C.)— J: 
Gay. 
(Journey  to  Exeter,  A — si.  abr.) — OES 
To  the  Right   Hon.  the   Earl  of  Chesterfield.     (C.)— 
S:  Johnson. 
(Letter  to  Lord  Chesterfield.)— OS  3 
(Letter  to  the  Earl  of  Chesterfield.)— ESs 
To  the  River  Ankor.     (C— Ideas  XXXII.)— Michael 
Drayton. 
(Rivers  of  England,  The.)— FEP 
To  the  River  Charles.     (C.)— H :  W.  Longfellow. 

(To  the  Silent  River.)— LLC 
To  the  River  Lodon.     (C.)— T:  Warton.— WEP  3 

(On  Revisiting  the  River  Lodon.) — FEP 
To  the  Robin,  Sel.  fr.     (Robiti,  The — w.  mus.) — Eliza 

Cook.— AD 
To  the  Rose.     (Hymns  of  Astrea,  VII.) — Sir  J:  Davies. 

— ELP 
To  the  Rose[:   a   Song— C.].— Rob't  Herrick.- ELP— 
ES— OEL— WEP  2— YBF 
(Go,  Happy  Rose!)— CEL 
(Ro.se,  The.)— EPs 
To  the  Royal  Society,  Sel.fr.     (Ode  to  the  Royal  So- 
ciety.)— Abraham  (;owley. — WEP  2 
To  the  Sacred  Poets  of  America.— R:  Wilton. — TAS 
"To  the  school  and  the  college  attaches  vast  respon- 
sibility."—Merrill  E.  Gates.— DFR 
To  the  Secretary  of  War,    1824. — Pushmataha. — PS — 

SS 
To  the  "Sextant."— Arabella    M.     Willson.  — BNL  — 
MHR 
(Appeal  to  the  "Sextant"  for  Air,  An.) — BS  4  (at. 

to  "A.  Gasper.")— CS  4 
(To  the  Sexton.)— PTS 
To  the  Sexton. — Arabella  M.  Willson.     See  foregoing. 
To  the  Silent  One.— Emanuel  Geibel.— FTA 
To  the  Silent  River. — H :  W.  Longfellow.     See  To  the 

River  Charles. 
To  the  Sister  of  "Elia."— Walter  S.  Landor.— EDY— 

FEP 
To  the  Skylark.— Percy   B.   Shelley.     See  To   a  Sky- 
lark. 
To  the  Skylark. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  To  a  Skylark. 
To  the  Small  Celandine.— W :  Wordsworth.- HBP  — 

PHS— POS  (seZ.)— SN 
To  the  Spirit  of  Abraham  Lincoln. — R:  W.  Gilder. — 
EDY 


To  the  Spirit  of  Poetry.— Philip  B.  Marston. — VA 
To    the    Spring.     (Hymns    of    Astrea,    III.) — Sir    J: 

Davies.— WEP  1 
To  the  Stars   and    the   Stripes   from   Abroad. — Adair 

Welcker.— SR  9 
To  the  Supreme  Being.     (Includes  also  At   Florence.) 

Michelangelo  (tr.  by  W:  Wordsworth). — FTR 
To  the  Survivors  of  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill. — Dan'l 

Webster.     See  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 
To  the  Terrestrial  Globe.— W:S.  Gilbert.— BNL— CS  8 

—MHR— OS  2— SO 
To  the  Tobacco  Pipe.     (The  Meteors.)— FFh 
To  the  Unco  Guid[;  or.  The  Rigidly  Righteous]. — Rob't 

Burns.— BNL— EPs 
(Address  to  the  Unco  Guid,  or  the  Rigidly  Right- 
eous—C.)— ESs 
To  the  Virginian  Voyage. — Michael  Drayton. — OB 
To  the  Virgins!,  to  make  much  of  Time].     (C.) — Rob't 

Herrick.  —  BNL  —  CEL  —  ELP  —  ES  —  FTA 

—OB— OEL— OH— WEP  2 
(Counsel  to  Girls.)— PGT  1— YBF 
(Counsel  to  Virgins.)— PYO 
("Gather  ye  rosebuds  as  ye  may.") — HBP 
(To  Virgins,  to  make  much  of  Time.) — FEP 
To  the  Western  Wind. — Rob't  Herrick. — OB 
To  the  Willow-tree.— Rob't  Herrick.— OB 
To  the  World.     (C— The  Forest,  IV.)— Ben  Jonson. 

(Farewell  to  the  World,  A.)— OB 
To  Thee,  O  Country !— Anna  P.  Eichberg.— BLP 
To  Theocritus,  in  Winter.     (Ballade  to  Theocritus  in 

Winter — C.) — Andrew  Lang. — VA 
To  Thine  Own  Self  be  True.— Pakenham  Beatty. — HP 

—PYO 
To  Thomas  Moore.     (C.)— Lord  Byron.— BNL— GP— 

HBP— YBF 
(Friendship.)— LH 
("My  boat  is  on  the  shore.") — PYO 
To  Those  about  to  Marry. — Anon. — CS  6 
To  Those  who  Fail.— Nellie  Barlow.— NPS—YP 
"To  Thy  temple  I  repair."     (Day  in  the  Lord's  Courts, 

A — C.) — Jas.  Montgomery. — FEP 
To  Time.     (C.)— W :  L.  Bowles. 

(Influence  of  Time  on  Grief.)- FEP— WEP  4 
(Time  and  Grief.)— OB 
To  Tobacco.— C:  S.  Calverley— BNL 

(Ode  to  Tobacco— O— PPh— THP 
To  "Toussaint  L'Ouverture.     (C)— W:  Wordsworth. — 

BNL— EDY 
(Sonnet  to  Toussaint  L'Ouverture.) — HBP 
(Toussaint  L'Ouverture.)- SO— WR  1 
To  Two  Bereaved.— T:  Ashe.— OB 
To  Venus. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher.     See  Mad  Lover, 

The. 
To  Vernon  Lee. — Amy  Levy. — VA 
To  Victor  Hugo. — Alfred  Tennyson.— BNL — GP 
To  Vincent  Corbet,  my  Son.— R:  R.  Corbet.— FEP 

(Father's  Blessing,  A.)— YBF 
To  Violets.     (O— Rob't    Herrick.    —   ELP— HBP— 

LC— OB— OS  1 
(Violets.)— BNL— GP 
To  Virgil.— Alfred  Tennyson.— EDY— WEP  4 
To  Virgins,  to  make  much  of  Time. — Rob't  Herrick. 

See  To  the  Virgins,  etc. 
To  Vittoria  Colonna.     (Misc.  Sons.,  XXIV.)— Michel- 
angelo (tr.  by  W:  Wordsworth). 
To  W.  L.  Garrison.     (C.)— Jas.  R.  Lowell. 

(William  Lloyd  Garrison.)— BNL 
To  Waltz  with  Thee.— G:  B.  Zug.— CG  2 
To  Whom  Honor  Be  Due.— Anon. 
To  Whom  Shall  We  Give  Thanks?— Mrs.  Levi  Wade. 

— BS  1— FTR— MYF— PPSr— YBT 
To   William  Cullen  Bryant. —  Fitz-Greene  Halleck. — 

PEO 
To  William  H.  Seward.— J:  G.  Wliittier.— EDY 
To  William  Sidney  on  his  Birthday.     (Sel.  fr.  Ode  to 

Sir  William   Sidney  on  his  Birthday.)  —  Ben 

Jonson. — EPs 
To  William  Simpson,  Br.  sel.  fr.    (Inspiration.) — Rob't 

Burns.— EPs 
To  Willie  and  Henrietta.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV 
To  Wordsworth. — O.  F.  Emerson. — AD 
To  Wordsworth,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Wordsworth.) — Felicia 

D.  Hemans.— BNL 
To  Young  Men  of  New  York  in  1861.— E:  D.  Baker. 

See  Speech  at  Union  Square,  N.  Y.,  April  20th, 

1861. 
To  Youth.— Walter  S.  Landor.— VA 
To  Zepheria. — Anon. — ELP 
Toad,  A.— Edgar  Fawcett.— SN— TAV 
Toad,  The.— Lucv  S.  Ruggles.— TFS 
Toad's  Journal,  The. — Jane  Tavlor. — BNL 
Toadstool,  The.— Oliver  W.  Hdlmes.- POS 
Toast,  The.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— CS  16— TS— WR  18 


344 


TITLE  INDEX 


Too 


Toast,  A.— A.  K.  Lane.— CG  2 

Toast,  The.— C:  C.  Marsh.— CG  1 

Toast,  The.— Winthrop  M.  Praed.— FP 

Toast,  A.— H:  M.  Stone.— CG  2 

Toast,  A — "Peace  and  Plenty." — -Anon. — CS  15 

Toast  to  Omar  Khayyam. — Theodore  Watts-Dunton. — 

VA 
Toast— To  the  Ladies,  A.— J:  L.  Oswald. — SR  13 
Toast  to  the  Lovers  and  Husbands  of  the  Shakespeare 

Club.— Howell  L.  Piner.— WR  23 
Toast-master,  The. — Anon. — WR  18 
Toasts  and  Sentiments. — Anon. — KNE 
Tobacco.— T:  Jones.— PPh 
Tobacco.— G:  Wither.— PPh 

(Pipe  and  Can — si.  abr.) — OB 
Tobacco  is  an  Indian  Weed. — Anon. — PPh 
Tobacco  Pledge,  The.    (DtaZ.)— Eliz.  E.  Ralston.— SDD 
Tobe's  Monument.— Eliz.  Kilham.— BS  18— WR  26 
Tobias  Turnitop    in    General    Court.     (Dial.) — -Anon. 

(  Sinj'-ct  fr.  Haliburton.)— MPD 
Toboggan  Slide,  The.— "Clara  Augusta."— BS  19 
(Miss  Splicer  on  the  Toboggan  Slide.) — SR  6 
Toby  Tosspot.     (Sei. /r.  The  Elder  Brother.)— G:  Col- 
man,  the  younger. — BNL — CS  15 — SCS 
Toccata  of  Galuppi's,  A. — Rob't  Browning. — PGT  2 
Toccoa,  the  Beautiful. — Loula  K.  Rogers. — WR  4 
To-day.— T:  Carlyle.— AVP— GN— OS  1— PYO 
"To-day."— J:  Ruskin.— HDL— HSS  2 
To-day  and  To-morrow. — Gerald  Massey. — LLC — PR 
(Promised  Land  To-morrow,  The — al.  diff.  vers.) — 
CS23 
"To-day   the    great    question    that    is   stirring   men's 

hearts." — Jos.  Parker. — GG 
Together.— G:  Barlow.— BIL 
Toil.— Anon.— PEO 

Toil  of  the  Trail,  The.— Hamlin  Garland.— SN 
Toilers,  The.— Caroline  F.  Orne.— HSS  3 
Toilers  of  the  Sea,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Combat  with  the 
Octopus,  The— Bk.  IV.,  Chs.    I.-III.    cond.)— 
Victor  Hugo.— WCLG  2 
Toilet,  The. — Alex.  Pope.     See  Rape  of  the  Lock,  The. 
Toinette's  Philip,  Sels.  jr. — Mrs.  C.  V.  Jamison. 

Mouse,  The.     {Dial.  ad.  fr.  Chs.  XXI.  and  XXII.) 

— NDP 
Selling  the  Image.     (Dial.  ad.  fr.  Chs.  III.  and  IV.) 
—NDP 
Token,  The.     (A6r.)— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— LLC 
Tola  of  Mustard  Seed,  The. — Sir  Edwin  Arnold.     See 

Light  of  Asia,  The. 
Told  at  "The  Falcon."— Edwin  Coller.— CS  33 
Told  at  the  Tavern.— Theo.  F.  Havens.— HP 
Told  by  the  Hospital  Nurse.— S.  B.  McBeath.— WR  4 
told  by  "The  Noted  Traveler."     (C.)— Jas.  W.  Riley. 
— CW 
(Traveler's  Story,  The.)— SC 
Told  in  the  Stalls.— J.  H.  Tucker.— WR  13 
Told  in  the  Twilight.— J.  G.  F.  Nicholson.— FTA 
Tom.— Constance   F.    Woolson.— BS  6— CS  13— FR— 
KNE— NV 
(Tom,  the  Hero.)— DS 
Tom  and  Roxy.     (Sels.  fr.  "Pudd'nhead  Wilson."  Chs. 
VIII.  and  IX.,  ad.  as  dial.) — S:  L.  Clemens. — 
NDP 
Tom  and  Sally.     (DiaZ.)- Anon.— MND 
Tom  Bowling.— C:     Dibdin.—     BNL— BPB— FEP— 
HBP— PC— YBF 
(Perfect  Sailor,  The.)— LH 
Tom  Brown  at  Oxford,  Sel.     (Boat  Race,  The — sel.  fr. 

Ch.  XIII.)— T:  Hughes.— NC—PFP 
Tom  Brown  at  Rugby. — T :  Hughes.     See  Tom  Brown's 

School  Days  at  Rugby. 
Tom  Brown  Starting    for    Rugby. — T:    Hughes.     See 

Tom  Brown's  School  Days  at  Rugby. 
Tom  Brown's   School   Days   at    Rugby,  Sels.   fr. — T: 
Hughes. 
At  Rugby.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.,  Ch.  V.,)— WCLI  2 
Egg  Hunting.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  IV.)— WCLI  2 
Fighting.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  V.)— OS  1 
Hare  and  Hounds.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.,  VII.)— WCLI  2 
Keeper,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  IX.)— WCLI  2 
Morning  and  Afternoon  Chapel.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.   I., 
VII.)— MRS 
("We  listened  as  all  boys  in  their  better  moods" 
—seD—FHS 
New  Boy,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  I.)— WCLI  2 

(Tom  Brown  at  Rugby— sei. )— OS  2 
Tom  Brown  Starting  for  Rugby.     (Sels.  fr.  Pt.  I., 
Chs.  III.  and  IV.)— LLC 
(Away  to  School— /r.  IV.)— WCLI  2 
Tom  Dunstan;   or,    the    Politician.     (C) — Rob't    Bu- 
chanan.— FEP 
(Freedom's  Ahead.) — SAE 
(Old  Politician,  The.)— HBP 


Tom  Moody.— Anon.— BVC 

Tom  O'Connor's  Cat.— Anon. — DDR 

Tom  Sawyer,  Sels.  fr. — S :  L.  Clemens. 

How  Tom  Sawyer  Whitewashed  his  Fence.     (Sel, 

fr.  Ch.  II.)— BS  7 
(How  Tom  Sawyer  Got  his  Fence  Whitewashed— 

si.  a6r.)— CS  15— MYF 
Tom  Sawyer  Treated  for  Lovesickness.    (Sel.  fr.  Ch. 

XII.)— CH 
Tom  Sawyer's  Love  Affair.     (Sels.  fr.  Chs.  VI.  and 

VII.)— BS  3 
Tom  Sawyer  Treated  for  Lovesickness. — S:  L.  Clemens. 

See  Tom  Sawyer. 
Tom  Sawyer's  Love  Affair. — S:  L.  Clemens.     See  Tom 

Sawyer. 
Tom,  the  Drummer-boy. — Anon. — CS  15 
Tom,  the  Hero. — Constance  F.  Woolson.     See  Tom. 
Tom  Tom.    (Fr.  Ascutney  Charades.) — Julia  A.  Sabine. 

—TCP 
Tom  Twist.— Anon.— WR  20 
Tomb,  The.— T:  Stanley.— HBP— WEP  2 
Tomb  in  Ghent,   A.     (Abr.) — Adelaide   A.    Procter. — 

DR 
Tomb  in  the  Church  of  Brou,  The. — Matthew  Arnold. 

See  Church  of  Brou,  The. 
Tomb  of  Charlemagne,  The.— Bayard  Taylor.— WR  2 
Tomb  of  Washington,  The.— J.  W.  Savage.— CS  5 
Tombola,  The.-    (£n<.)— Anon.— EuE 
Tommie's  Composition  on  "Authors." — Anon. — CPL 
Tommy  and  the  Crocodile. — Rob't    C.   V.    Meyers. — 

CS.35 
Tommy   Brown.     (Common    School     Education.) — TS 
Tommy  Brown.- L.  C.  Hardy.— WR  21 
Tommy  Linn. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Tommy  Taft. — H:  W.  Beecher.     See  Norwood. 
Tommy's  Army.- F:  E.  Weatherly.— COS— PP 
Tommy's  Dead.  —  Sidney  Dobell.  —  BS  23  —  FEP  — 

HBP— VA 
Tommy's  Death-bed.— Anon.— NPS—YP 
Tommy's  Essay  on  Breath.- — -Anon. — WR  17 
Tommy's  First  Love.     (Gemini  and  Virgo — C.) — C:  S. 

Calverly.— CS  24 
Tommy's  Prayer.— J:  F.  Nicholls.— CS  25 
Tommy's  Twials. — Anon. — CD 
To-morrow. — Anon. — CS  28 
To-morrow. — Anon. — HP 
To-morrow. — Anon.— HR — LLC 

(What  is  To-morrow?)— WR  6 
To-morrow. — Florence  E.  Coates. — AA 
To-morrow.- J:  Collins.— PGT  1— YBF 

(In  the  Downhill  of  Life.)— FEP 
To-morrow.— Nathaniel  Cotton.— BLP—SS 
To-morrow.— W.  F.  Fox.— CS  15 
To-morrow.     (Br.  sel  fr.  Irene,  Act  III.,  So.  2.)— S: 

Johnson. — BNL 
To-morrow. — Wilbur  D.  Spencer. — CG  2 
To-morrow.     (Abr.) — Alfred  Tennyson.— WR  16 
"To-morrow,  and    to-morrow,   and    to-morrow." — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Macbeth. 
To-morrow  at  Ten. — Nora  Perry. — SR  9 
To-morrow  is  Another  Day. — I:  B.  Choate. — CG  3 
To-morrow's  News.— G :  Klingle.— HDL— TAV 
Tom's  Come  Home.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.— MYF 
Tom's  Eyes  and  Mine.     (Popular  Educator.) — DLS 
Tom's  Little  Star.— Fanny  Foster.  —  BS  7— CS  18— 

CSS— FTR— SR  5 
Tom's  Philosophy.     (Harvard  Lampoon.) — CG  2 
Tom's  Practical  Joke.     (Dial.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Tom's  Proposal.     (Dial.) — Anon. — DDM 
Tom's  Thanksgiving.— G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  35— PS 
Tone  of  the  Voice,  The.— Anon.— CS  32  (sel.) 

(Words  and  Tones.)— HSS  2 
Tongue,  The. — Bible.     See  St.  James. 
Tongue,  The.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Euphues:  of  the  Education 

of  Youth — paraphrased  fr.  Plutarch.) — J:  Lyly. 

—OS  1 
Tongue,  The.— Philip  B.  Strong.— YBT 
Tongues  in  Trees. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  As  You  Like 

It. 
Tonis  ad  Resto  Mare. — Anon.  (at.  to  Jonathan  Swift). 

— BNL— HPE       , 
Too  Bad  (also  called  The  Sum  of  Life). — Ben  King. — 

PR— YA 
(Pessimist,  The— C.)— NA 
Too  Bad  to  Mend.     (Toft.)— Anon.— TCP 
Too  Big  to  be  Rocked.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— WR  17 
Too  Clever  by  Half.— Anon.— DDM 
Too  Dear  for  the  Whistle.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Whistle.)— 

B:  Franklin.— LLC 
(Don't  Give  too  much  for  the  Whistle — si.  abr.) — 

BLP 
(Whistle,  The.)— WCLI  2 


345 


Too 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Too  Fine  and  Too  Plain.— Anon.— FND 

Too  Good  to  Attend  Common  School. — Eliza  Doolit- 

tle.— SDD 
Too  Great    a    Sacrifice.- Anon.— AWH— HP— PPh— 

THP 
"Too  hard  to  bear!     Why  did  they  take  me  thence?" — 

Alfred  Tennytpn.     See  Enoch  Arden. 
Too  Hot.     (.Tab.)—E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
Too  Late. — <3ustave  Becquer. — -FLS 
Too  Late.   (C.)— Dinah  M.  Craik.— FEP— FTA— HBP 

— VA— VS— YBF 
(Douglas;  [Douglas,]  Tender  and  True.)— BNLr— FP 

— LLC— PYO 
Too  Late. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA 
Too  Late! — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Too  Late.— W:  J.  Linton.— VA 

Too  Late.— Fitz-Hugh    Ludlow.— BNL—CS  13— OS  3 
Too  Late.     (.Song  jr.  The  Prince's  Progress.) — Chris- 
tina G.  Rossetti. — AVP 
(Bride  Song.)— OB 
"Too  late,  alas!     I  must  confess."     (Song — in  Imita- 
tion of  Sir  John  Eaton,  A — C.) — J:  Wilmot, 

Earl  of  Rochester.— BNL— FEP 
Too  Late  for  the  Train.— Anon.— CS  14— DS— FTR— 

PS 
Too  Late  I  Stayed.— W:  R.  Spencer.     See  To  Lady 

Anne  Hamilton. 
Too  Late  We  Met.— G.  H.  Westley.— FLS 
Too  Many  Books. — Rob't  Leighton. — MBB 
"Too  Many  Chillun,  Pa?"— Anon.— WR  16 
Too  Many  Daughters. — Anon. — DSS 
"Too  Many  of  We."— Anon.— CS  27 
Too  Much  Nose.— Anon.— CS  19 
Too  Much  of  a  Good  Thing.— Anon.— PS— TT 
Too  Much  of  It.— G:  Birdseye.— AWH 
Too  Old  for  Father's  Kisses.— C:  D.  Bingham.— WR  25 
Too   Progressive    for    Him. — Lurana    W.    Sheldon. — 

CS  32— PR— YA 
(No  Science  for  Him.)— WR  21 
"Too  solemn  for  day,  too  sweet  for  night." — W:  S. 

Walker.- OB 
Too  Utterly  JJUer.— (Albany  Chronicle.)— CS  21 
(Fashionable  School  Girl,  The.)— CSS 
(Intensely  tJtter.)— CRR— SR  4 
Too  Zealous  by  Half.— Anon.— CS  23 
Took  Johnny  to  the  Show.— Will  Carleton.— CS  37 
"Took  Nodice."— Anon.— BS  17— SDR 
Toot  Makes  a  Match. — Bessie  G.  Hart. — WR  20 
Tootle,  Tootle,  Too.^Alfred  B.  Sedgwick.— DSS 
Too-too  Serenade,  A. — Anon.— WR  2 
Top  Landing,  The.     (Dial.)— Roh't  C.  V.   Meyers.— 

CS  18 
Topic  Social,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Topsey  and  Eva.     (Tab.)— Tony  Denier.- TDT 
Topsy. — Harriet  B.  Stowe.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 
Topsy's  First  Lesson. — Harriet  B.  Stowe.     <See  Uncle 

Tom's  Cabin. 
Topsy-turvy  World.— W:  B.  Rands.— VA 

(A6r.)— OS  1— WCL 
Torch  Bearers,  The,  Set.  fr.     (America.) — Arlo  Bates. 

j^/^ 

Torch  of  Liberty,  The.— T:  Moore.— BLP—SS 
Torch  Race,  The.— Helen  G.  Cone.— TAS 
Torch  Light  in  Autumn. — J:  J.  Piatt. — A  A 
"Torment  of  hell  is  bred  of  these  two  things,  The." — 

W.  H.  H.  Murray.— GG 
Torn  Hat,  The.     (C.)— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— AA 

(Boy,  A.)— CS  11— LLC 
Torpedo-boat,  The. — J.  Barnes. — PAPm 
Torquemada,  Sel.  fr.     (Speech  of  the  Grand  Rabbi, 

Moses-Ben-Habib  to   Ferdinand  and   Isabella 

—sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Act  II.,  Sc.  3.)— Victor  Hugo. 

—MRS 
Torrismond,  Sels.  fr. — T:  L.  Beddoes. 

How  Many  Times.     (Song  fr.  Sc.  3.)— FEP— FTA 

— GP— OH— TFY 
(Song. )— OB— VA— YBF 
(Song  from  Torrismond.)— VS—WEP  4 
In  a  Garden  by  Moonlight.    (Br.  sel.  fr.  Sc.  3.) — 

VA 
Total  Annihilation.— Mary    D.    Brine.— BR— BS  12— 

CRR— CS  21— TFS 
Tottie's  Tree-talk.- Maria  B.  Butler.— DCP 
Tot's  Correspondence. — Anon. — DCP 
"Touch,  a  tender  word,  no  more.  A." — Anon. — FHS 
Touch  it  Never.- Anon.— HSS  2  (sel.)— LPS— PP 
Touch  it  not.— W.  A.  Eaton.— TS 
Touch  of  Nature.  A.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— SN 
Touch  of  Nature,  A.— W:  H.  Bushnell.— CS  34 
Touch  Snuff  Story,  The.— Howard  Paul.— MHR 
Touching  Appeal,   A. — Nathan   Blinkerhaiisen. — HDD 

-DE 
Touching  Incident,  A. — Anon. — KNS 


Touching  Relic  of  Pompeii,  A. — Anon. — KNE 
Touchstone,   The.     (SI.  o6r.)— W:  AUingham.— FEP 

—LLC 
(SI.  di^.)— BNL— EPs 
Toujours  Amour. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — ASL — FEP 

— FTA— OH— TAV— YBF 
Toussaint  L'()uverture,  Sels.  fr. — Wendell  Phillips. 
Napoleon  Bonaparte  and  Toussaint  L'Ouverture. — 

BS  25— NC 
Toussaint   L'Ouverture. — BS  16 — CR  (2 — abr.  and 

sel.)— CS  18— FTR— HNS— IR— PS— SC— SO 

— WCLG  2 

(SI.  diff.)—FD  1— TMD 
(Toussaint    L'Ouverture's    Place    among    Great 

Men — ptly.  diff.)—NC 
Toussaint  L'Ouverture. — W:     Wordsworth.     See     To 

Toussaint  L'Ouverture. 
Toussaint  L'Ouverture's    Place    among  Great  Men. — 

Wendell  Phillips.     See  Toussaint  L'Ouverture. 
Toward  Emmaus.— S.  T.  Clark.— HDL 
Tower  of  Flame,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.— EDY 
Tower  of  St.  Maur,  The.— A.  M.  F.  Robinson.— FEB  4 
Town  and  Country. — Anon. — TFS 
Town  and  Country.— W:  F.  Collins.— CG  1 
Town  Meeting,  The. — Anon. — PD 
Town  of   Concord,    Mass.,   The. — G:   D.    Robinson. — 

FD2 
Town  of  Hay,  The.— S:  W.  Foss.— AA 
Town  Pump,  The.— G:  W.  Bungay.— CS  26 
Toy  Cross,  The.— Roden  Noel.— VA 
Toy  of  the  Giant's  Child,   The.— Adelbert  von  Cha- 

misso. — WCL 
Toys,  The.     (In  The  Unknown  Eros.)— Coventry  Pat- 
more.— HDL— OB— OH— PGT  2— V  A— YBF 
Traced. — Layton  Brewer. — TL 
Trades  Display,  The.     (Ent.)— Anon.— EuB 
Tradition.     (Sel.    fr.    Religio    Laid.) — J:    Dryden. — 

WEP2 
Tradition  of  Conquest. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — AA 
Traditions  of  Massachusetts,  The. — H:  C.  Lodge. — NC 

— SC 
Trafalgar  Day.— E.  Nesbit.— EDY 
Trafalgar  Square. — Laurence  Binyon. — AVP 
Traffic  in  Ardent  Spirits. — Lyman  Beecher. — CS  19 — 

SR  2— TS 
Tragedy,  The.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— BS  10 
Tragedy,  A.— J.  A.   Knox.— GH 

Tragedy,  A.— T.  De  Witt  Talmage.— BS  1— PS— SR  2 
Tragedy. — Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Tragedy  at   Dodd's   Place,   The. — Mary   K.   Dallas. — 

WR3 
Tragedy  in  the  Sunshine,  A.     (Detroit  Free  Press.) — 

BS  19— CS  32 
Tragedy  of  Blind  Margaret,  The. — Bertha  M.  Wilson. 

— MN 
Tragedy  of  Darious,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Sir  W:  Alexander. — 

WEP2 
Tragedy  of  King  John,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

King  John. 
Tragedy  of  Sedan,  A.— Anna  K.  G.  Rnhlfs.— DR 
Tragedy  of  the  North  Sea,  A.— Jos.  C.  Powell.— TMR 
Tragedy  of  the  Ten  Little  Boys,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. 

— DS— YA 
Tragedy  on  Past  Participles,  A- — C.  A.  S.  (at.  also  to 

Phoebe  Cary).— BS  15 
(Lovers,  The.)— BNL— GP 
Tragic  Parting,  A.— (Detroit  Tribune.) — CS  37 
Trail  of  Gold,  The.— Frank  L.  Pollock.— TCV 
Trailed  Banner,  The.— Abram  J.  Ryan.— HSS  1 

(Conquered    Banner,    The  — C.)  —  AA  —  AWB — 

EDY— FEP— WRD 
Trailing  Arbutus.— H:  Abbey.— HP— SN 
Trailing  Arbutus,  The.— Rose  T.   Cooke.— AD— HBP 

—OS  2 
Trailing  Arbutus,  The.— Sarah  H.  Whitman.— POS 
Trailing  Arbutus,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AD— PEO 
Train  among  the  Hills,  The.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.— TCV 
Train  to  Mauro,  The.     (Dial.)—S.  A.  Frost.- FHE— 

HD— NPS— YP 
Traitor,  A.— F.  Fertiault.— LBB 
Traitor  Sea,  The.— C.  J.  Corrie.— CS  27 
Traitor's  Deathbed,  The. — G:  Lippard.     See  Benedict 

Arnold. 
Tramp,  The.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Tramp,  The.— Donald  McCaig.— TCV 
Tramp  Abroad,  A,  Sels.  fr. — S:  L.  Clemens. 

American  Specimen,  An.     (Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Ch.  IX.) 

— BS8 
Critical  Situation,  A.     (Sd.  fr.  Ft.  I.,  Ch.  II.)— CR 
(Guessing  Nationalities.) — BS  15— SR  9 
(Trying  Situation,  A.)— WR  15 
French  Duel,  The.     (Pt.  I..  Ch.  VIII.,  abr.  and  arr. 

as  play.) — NDP 


346 


TITLE  INDEX 


Tribute 


Tramp  Abroad,  A  (continued). 

Tale  of  the  Fishwife  and  its  Sad  Fate.     {Story  jr. 

Appendix  D:     The  Awful  German  Language.) 

— SRIO 
Tramp  Abroad,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.,  Ch.  II.)— EA 
Tramp  and  a  Vagabond,  A. — Anon. — CS  19 
Tramp,  Tramp,     Tramp. — Josiah     G.     Holland.     See 

Temperance  Question,  The. 
Tramp,  Tramp,  Tramp.— G:  F.  Root.— AWB— PAPm 
Tramp's  Philosophy,  A.     {Merchant  Traveler.) — CD 
Tramp's  Story,  The.— C.  E.  Richmond.— CS  22 
Trance  of  Time,  The.    {Abr.)—3 :  H :  Newman.— PGT  2 
Transcendentalism.     ( Times  of  India. ) — N  A 
Transferred  Ghost,   The.     (Cond.)— Frank   R:   Stock- 
ton.—WR  5 
Transfiguration. — Louisa  M.  Alcott. — TAS 
Transfiguration.— J:  J.  Piatt.— TAS 
Transfigured. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt. — AA 
Transformation. — G:  A.  Dennison. — FTA 
Transient  Beauty. — Lord  Byron.     See  Giaour,  The. 
Translation  from  Heine.     (Lyrical  Interludes,  XII.) — 

Merle  St.  C.  Wright.— FTA 
Translation  from  Propertius.     (Bk.  V.,  Elegy  XI.) — 

Sir  Edmund  Head.— AVP 
Translation  of  the  Twenty-third  Psalm. — Jos.  Addison. 

See  Spectator,  The. 
Transposed. — Anon. — KNS 
Transpositions.— W.  F.  Fox.— SR  7 
Trapped.     {Diai.)—C:  S.  Wayne.— CDs 
Trapper's  Last  Trail,  The. — Madge  Morris. — CD 
Trapper's  Story,  A.— C:  F.  Adams.— CS  13 
Trapping  a  Witness. — Anon. — KNE 
Travel.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV 
Travel  in  England.— Anon. — SR  1.3 
Traveller,  The.     (DiaZ.)- Anon— FAD— FDY 
Traveller  and  the  Temple  of  Knowledge,  The.    (Ships 

that  Pass  in  the  Night,  Ch.  VI.) — Beatrice  Har- 

raden.— BS  22 
Traveller  at    the    Source  of    the    Nile,    The. — Felicia 

Hemans.— EDY 
Traveller,  The;    or,    A    Prospect    of    Society. — Oliver 

Goldsmith.— FEP— HBP 
Better  Countrv,  The.     {Br.  sel.)—GV 

(First,  Best  Country,  The— si.  diff.)—G'H 

(Home.)— BNL 
Traveller,  The.     {Br.  «eZ«.)— BNL 
Travellers. — Percy  Addleshaw. — VA 
Travellers,  The. — Mark  A.  DeW.  Howe. — AA 
Traveller's  Return,  The.— Rob't  Southey.— PC 
Traveller's  Story,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.     See  Told  by 

"The  Noted  Traveler." 
Travelling  Magician.     {Tab.)— knon. — TCP 
Travelling  under  the  Care  of  a  Gentleman. — Gail  Ham- 
ilton.—MHR 
Travels  of  Baron  Munchausen,  Sels.  fr. — Rudolph  E. 

Raspe. 
Adventure  of  Baron  Munchausen  in  a  Fight  with 

the  Turks.- OS  2 
Adventure  of  Baron  Munchausen  with  his  Horse. — 

OS  2 
Trav. — Rob't  Browning. — BS  19 
Tray's  Epitaph.— J:  Wolcott.— HPE 
Treadwater  Jim.— S:  W.  Small.— CS  21— NPS— YP 
Treason.     (The  -Test  BooA:.)— MRS 
Treason  of  Benedict  Arnold. — Anon. — CP 
Treason's    Last    Device.  —  Edmund    C.    Stedman. — 

AWB 
Treasure  of  the  Wise  Man,  The. — Jas.   W.   Riley. — 

BJC 
Treasures. — Katie  H.  Kavanagh.— WR  7 
Treasures  of  the  Deep,  The.— -Felicia  Hemans. — BNL 

—FEP 
Treatment  of  his  Hares,  The. — W:  Cowper. — MBL 
Tree,  The. — Bjomstjerne      Bjornsen. — AD — HSS  1 — 

NV— PC— PoR— WCL 
Tree,  The.— Jones  Very.— AD— GN— HS— NV 
Tree,  The. — Anne  Finch,  Lady"  Winchelsea. — WEP  3 

(Fair  Tree!— seZ.)- AD 
Tree  Assembly,  The. —  {Arr.  by)  Clara  J.  Denton. — 

SSD 
Tree  Burial.     {Sel.)—W:  C.  Bryant.— AD 
Tree  of  Liberty,  The.     (C.)— Rob't  Bums. 
(Heard  Ye  o'  the  Tree  of  Liberty?) — HS 
Tree  of  Life,  The.     (Genesis,  Ch.  II.,  8-25,  Ch.  III.) 

Bible.— WR  11 
Tiee  of  Spiritual  Blessings,  The. — Mrs.  M.  E.  Cornell. — 

SSE 
Tree  of  State,  The.— Mrs.  B.  C.  Rude.— AD 
Tree  Planting.— M.  F.  Butts.— AD— CP— LLC 
Tree  Planting.— Joel  T.  Headley.— AD— DFR  {abr.) 
Tree  Planting.— S :  F.  Smith.— POS 

(Trees— sZ.  obr.)— YBT 
Tree  that  Tried  to  Grow,  The.— Fs.  Lee.- AD 


Trees.     {Class  exercise.) — Anon. — AD 

Trees.     (Frags,  fr.  various  a I'thors.) — BNL 

Trees.— S:  F.  Smith.     See  Tree  Planting. 

Trees. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Trees.— T:  W.  (?)  Wilson.— AD 

Trees,  a  Skeleton  Essay.— S.  A.  Frost. — DFR 

Trees  and  the  Master,  The.     (Ballad  of  Trees  and  the 

Master,  A — C). — Sidney  Lanier. — LLC 
(Ballade  of  Trees  and  the  Master,  A.) — AA — TAS — 

TAV 
Trees'  Choice,  The. — Grace  R.  Carter.— PEO 
Trees,  Flowers,    and    Birds. — Geoffrey    Chaucer.     See 

Parlement  of  Foules,  The. 
Trees  in  the  City.— Alice  B.  Neal.— AD 

(Thoughts  on  the  Forest — sel.) — AD 
Trees  of  Com.     (Good  Cheer. )— AD 
Trees  of  History  and  Mythology. — F.  L.  Sheldon. — 

AD 
Trees  of  the  Bible.— W.  H.  Groser.— AD 
Trees  of  the  Bible,  The.— M.  B.  C.  Slade.— CS  11 
Tree's  Record  of  its  Life,  A.     {Vick's  Magazine.) — AD 
Trees  They  are  so  High,  The.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Tree-tise  on  Nature,  A. — L:  H.  Levin. — WR  6 
Tree-toad  on  the  Limb,  The. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Trenton's  Cheer  to  the  Caliope,  The. — Anon. — TMD 
Trial  at  Elocution,  A.— W:  H.  Head.— SR  11 
Trial  of  Ben  Thomas,  The.     (De  Valley  an'  de  Shadder, 

Ch.  IV.)— Harry  S.  Edwards.— CR 
(General's  Client,  The — abr.  and  ad.) — NC 
(Not  Guilty— ad.)— PFP—SC 
Trial  of    Fing   Wing.     (Z>iaZ.)— Gertie    F.    Bunnell.— 

BS  11— HD 
Trial  of    Queen     Katherine. — W:    Shakespeare.     See 

King  Henry  VIII. 
Trial  of  Rebecca,  The. — Walter  Scott.     See  Ivanhoe. 
Trial  of    Warren    Hastings[,  The].     {Sel.  Jr.    Warren 

Hastings.) — T:  B.   Macaulay. — HSS  2   {cond.) 

— WCLG  2 
(Opening  Scene  at  the  Trial  of  Warren  Hastings — 

sel.)—\SG 
Trial  Scene,  The. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  Merchant  of 

Venice,  The. 
Trial  Scene  of  Queen  Catherine. — W :  Shakespeare.  See 

King  Henry  VIII. 
Trials.— Bessie  B.  McClure.— TT 
Trials  of  a  Columbian  Guard. — W:  H.  Head. — SR  11 
Trials  of  a  School  Teacher.     {New   York  Sun.)     See 

following. 
Trials  oi   a  Schoolmaster,  The.     {New   York  Sun.) — 

CH 
(Johnny  and  the  Teacher.)— CS  33 
(Mental   Arithmetic.) — DES 
(Trials  of  a  School  Teacher.)— ASD 
Trials  of  a  Twin. — H:  S.  Leigh.     See  Twins,  The. 
Trials  of  the  Musical  Amateur. — Jerome  K.  Jerome. 

See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Trials  that  Jar.— L.  E.  O.— CG  3 
Triangular  Tragedy,  A. — Anon. — SR  7 
Tribes  of    the    Dead,    The. — Gawain    Douglas.     See 

^neid.  The. 
Tribulations  of  Biddy  Malone,  The. — G:  M.  Vickers. — 

CD— CS  24 
Tribute,  A.     (Sei.)- Josiah  G.  Holland.— BIL 
Tribute,  The. — Coventry  Patmore.     See  Angel  in  the 

House.  The. 
Tribute  of  Goldwin  Smith  [to  .Abraham  Lincoln].  — 

Goldwin  Smith. — LLC 
Tribute  of  Grasses,  A. — Hamlin  Garland, — AA 
Tribute  to  an  Old  Shoe,  A.— Anon.— TFS 
Tribute  to  Columbus,  A. — Joaquin  Miller. — PR 

(Columbus— C.)—AA—CR— EDY— GN—WR  10 
(Columbus— West  ward . )— GMS 
(Port  of  Ships,  The— si.  abr.)— ASL—YBF 
Tribute  to  East  Tennessee,  A. — Landon  C.  Haynes. — 

BS6 
Tribute  to  Gen.  Sherman,  A. — Horace  Porter. — SC 
Tribute  to  Grant,  A. — H.  D.  Jenkins.— SR  4 
Tribute  to  Grant,  A.     ("Let  us  have  Peace" — C.) — H: 

Watterson.— CS  31  (abr.) 
("Let  us  have  Peace" — diff.  abr.) — SC 
Tribute  to  Lincoln. — Emilio  Castelar. — FD  1 — SO 

(Abraham  Lincoln.)— MRS— TMD 
Tribute  to  Logan. — E.  B.  Sherman. — SR  6 
Tribute  to  Longfellow,  A. — F.  N.  Zabriskie. — BS  13 — 

SR4 
(Poet's  Funeral,  The.)— CS  23 
Tribute  to  Massachusetts,  A. — H:  C.  Lodge. — NC 

(Massachusetts.) — SC 
Tribute  to  Massachusetts. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Re- 
ply to  Hayne,  The. 
Tribute  to    Motherhood,    A. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See 

Princess,  The. 
Tribute  to  Nature. — Mary  A.  Heermans. — DA 


347 


Tribute 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Tribute  to  our  Honored  Dead,  A. — H:  W.   Beecher. — 
BS  24— CS  2— DFR— HR 
(Honored  Dead,    The.)-BLP(«Z.  dt#.)-HSS  1  (ael.) 

— SPE 
(Invisible  Heroes,  The.)— TMD 
(Our  Honored  Dead.)— FD  1— LLC— WCLG  1 
Tribute    to     Sir     Walter    Scott,     A.— C:     Swain.  — 
BS  11  (sel.) 
(Dryburgh  Abbey.)— FEP 
Tribute  to  the  Men  of  the  Maine,  A. — Rob't  G.  Cousins. 
— SC 
(Heroes  of  the  "Maine  Disaster.") — CP 
Tribute  to  the  Supreme  Court. — Reverdy  Johnson — 

SSD 
Tribute  to  Washington. — Eliza  Cook. — BS  4  (abr.) 
(Washington.)— SR  10— TMR 
(SI.  a6r.)— HS— MYF 
Tribute  to  Washington. — Chauncey  M.  Depew. — SSD 

(Superiority  of  Washington.) — FD  2 
Tribute  to  Washington. — ^W.  H.  Harrison. — LLC 
Tribute  to  Washington.— J.  A.  Price.— BS  9 
Tribute  to  Water,  A. — J:  B.  Gough  (at.  also  to  A.  W. 
Arrington  and  to  Paul  Denton).— PP — YFR 

! Apostrophe  to  Cold  Water.) — SA 
Apostrophe  to  Water.) — LLC — SSD 
(Glass  of  Cold  Water,  A.).— CS  2— HSS  3— SR  2— 

WRD 
(SI.  diff.  versions.) 
Tribute    to  William    Penn. —  C:    Sumner.     See  True 

Grandeur  of  Nations,  The. 
Tribute  to     Woman,     A. — Eliz.     B.     Browning.     See 

Drama  of  Exile,  A. 
Trick  vs.  Trick.— J.  S.  Wood.— SR  12 
Tricksey's  Ring. — Alice  Cary. — WR  16 
Tri-colors,  The.— Emma  Fields.— SDD 
Tried.- Lulah  Ragsdale.— WR  3 
Tried  to  Tell  his  Wife.— Anon.— CS  32 
Trifle.     (Fr.  The  Poetical  Cookery-Book.)     (Punch.)— 

HPE 
Trifles.    (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Trifles.— J.  Colesworthy.— NV 
Trifles.— May  R.  Smith.— SSS 
Trilby. — Alice  Brown.— AA 
Trinity  Sunday.     (C.) — Reginald  Heber. 
("Holy,  holy,  holy!"  [Trisagion].)— LLC 
(Hymn  for  Trinity.)— FEP 
Triolet. — Anne  V.  Culbertson. — BS  25 
Triolet.— F.  W.  C.  Hersey.— CG  3 

Triolet:     "He  kissed  me  'neath  the  mistletoe." — Ger- 
trude Craven. — CG  2 
Triolet  to  her  Husband.— F.  Fertiault.— MBB 
Triolets:     To  her  whom  I  call  Rose. — Elliot  Gray. — 

CG  1 
Trip  to  Blankville,  A.— Anon.— DDM 
Trip  to  the  Stars,  A. — Horace  B.  Durant.- CS  33 
Triple  Flag  Drill.— Alice  C.  Fuller.— ID 
Triple  Tie,  The.— H:  G.  Perry.— CS  18 
Tripping  Down  the  Field-path. — C :  Swain. — VA 
Trisagion. — Reginald  Heber.     See  Trinity  Sunday. 
Tristram  and      Iseult.     (Abr.) — Matthew      Arnold. — 

AVP 
(Iseult's  Children— srf.  fr.  Pt.  I.) 
Tristram  of  Lyonesse,  Sel.  fr.     (Swimming — br.  sel.  fr. 

Pt.  VIII.)— Algernon  C.  Swinburne.- GN 
Tristram's  Song.— Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the 

King. 
Triumph. — H:  C.  Bunner.— ASL 
Triumph.— Helen  H.  Jackson.— KNE 
Triumph,  The. — Ben     Jonson.     »See     Celebration     of 

Charis,  A. 
Triumph,  A.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Triumph  Now.     (Masque  at  the  Marriage  of  the  Lord 

Hayes,  Song  IV.)— T:  Campion.— EHT 
Triumph  of  Beauty,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Lullaby,  A.) — Jas. 

Shirley.— ES—WEP  2 
"Triumph  of  Charis. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Celebration  of 

Charis,  A. 
Triumph  of  Cupid,  The. — Geraldine  Meyrick. — TL 
■Triumph  of  Death,  The.— W:  Shakespeare.- PGT  1 

(Sonnet.)— ELP  (LXXL— C.)— FEP 
Triumph  of  Faith.— J.  S.  Buckminster.— CS  4 
Triumph  of  Hector,  The. — Homer.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Triumph  of  Isis,  The,  Sel.  fr.—T:  Warton.— WEP  3 
Triumph  of  Joseph,  The.     C:  J.  Wells.     See  Joseph  and 

his  Brethren. 
Triumph  of  Order,  A.— J:  Hay.— CS  7 
Triumph  of  Peace,  The.— E.  H.  Chapin.— SC 
Triumph  of  Peace.  The,  Sel.  /r.— Jas.  Shirley.     See  To 

King  Charles  and  Queen  Henrietta. 
Triumph  of    the    Ricci,    The. — Edith    Wordsworth. — 

CS33 
Triumph  of  Time,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Disappointed  Lover, 

The.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — BNL 


Triumph  of  Truth,  The.— Jas.  De  Mille.— SSS 

Triumph  of  Truth.— C:  Mackay.— PS 

Triumph  through  Faith. — Fanny  E.  Newberry. — CS  37 

Triumphs  of  the  English  Language. — J.  G.  Lyons. — 
CS  10— SS 

"Triumphs  of  the  warrior  are  bounded  by  the  narrow 
theatre  of  his  own  age,  The."  (Br.  sel.  fr.  Sir 
Walter  Scott.)— W:  H.  Prescott.— HSS  1 

Trodden  Flowers. — Anon. — FLS 

Troilus  and  Cressida,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Foresight.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  3.)— EPs 
Good  Deeds  Past.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  3.)— LLC 
(One  Touch  of  Nature— «e/.)—PYO 
(Ruthless  Time— seZ.)— PYO 
(Troilus  and  Cressida — br.  sel.) — BNL 
(Ulysses  and  Achilles.) — EPs 
Nestor  to  Hector.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IV.,  5.)— EPs 
Oracle:   "There  is  a  mystery  in  the  soul  of   state." 
(Br.sel.fr.  III.,  3.)— EPs 

Troilus  and  Criseyde,  Sels.  fr. — Geoffrey  Chaucer. 

Troylus  and  Criseyde.    (Sels.  fr.  Bks.  I.-V.)— WEP  1 
(Love  Unfeigned,  The— ?>r.  sel.  fr.  Bk.  V.)— OB 

Troll  the  Bowl!  (Shoemaker's  Holiday,  The;  or,  Three 
Men's  Song,  The— C.)— T:  Dekker.— ELP 

Trolley  La  La!— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 

Trolley  on  the  Nile,  The.— Anon.— CS  37 

Troll-man,  The.— Caroline  M.  Hewins.— CS  28 

Trooper  to  his  Mare,  The.— C:  G.  Halpine.- FEP 

Trooper's  Death,  The.— (Tr.  by)  R.  W.  Raymond. — 
BNL 

Trooper's  Dirge,  The.— Anon.— HSS  1 

Troop-ship  Sails,  The.— Rob't  W.  Chambers.- PAPm 

Tropical  Morning  at  Sea,  A.— E:  R.  Sill.— ASL 

Tropical  Scene. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Enoch  Arden. 

Tropics,  The.— Douglas  B.  W.  Sladen.— VA 

Trosachs,  The. — Walter  Scott.  See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 
The. 

Trosachs,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.— OB— PGT  1 

Trot's  Wedding  Journey. — Eliz.  S.  Phelps.  See 
Trotty's  Wedding  Tour. 

Trotty's  Wedding  Tour  [wr.  Trot's  Wedding  Journey], 
Sel.  fr.  (Day  of  Judgment,  The— Ch.  XIII., 
cond.)— Eliz.  S.  Phelps.— BS  16 

Troubadour  to  the  Captive  Richard,  Coeur  de  Lion, 
The.— J:  Breakenridge.- TCV 

Troubadour's  Song. — Marguerite  Fellows. — CG  3 

Trouble  about  Miss  Prettyman.  (Caudle  Lectures, 
XVIII.— Caudle  whilst  Walking  with  his  Wife, 
has  been  Bowed  to,  etc. — arr.  as  dial.) — Doug- 
las Jerrold.- MPD 

Trouble  Borrowers.— Anon.— CS  24— NPS— YP 
(Throw  away  Trouble — sel.) — SM 

Trouble  in  a  Mormon  Family.  (Dial.) — H.  E.  Mc- 
Bride.— MCD 

Trouble  in  the  "Amen  Corner." — T.  C.  Harbaugh. — 
CS  22 

Trouble  in  the  Choir.— A.  T.  Worden.— CS  14— SR  6 

Trouble  with  the  Steward,  The.— Anon.— CS  24— SR  10 

Trouble  your  Head  with  your  Own  Affairs.— Eliza 
Cook.— CS  10 

Troubles  of  a  Wife.— Kitty  Lincoln.— CS  11— DS 

Troublesome  Caller,  A. — Anon. — WR  17 

Troublesome  Investment,  The. — A.   F.  Bradley. — PD 

Troublesome  Tooth,  The.  (ra6.)— Tony  Denier.— 
TDT 

Troublesome  Visitor,  A. — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 

Troublesome  Wife,  The.— Anon.— CS  .36 

Trout-brook,  The.— Carl  Waring.- HP 

Trouting. — J :  T.  Trowbridge. — SN 

Troylus  and  Criseyde. —  Geoffrey  Chaucer.  See  Troi- 
lus and  Criseyde. 

Truant.— S.  A.  Hudson.— NV 

Truant  Boys,  The.— Ann  and  Jane  Taylor.— BVC 

True  Americanism.  (Sel.  fr.  speech  delivered  at  a 
dinner  of  the  New  England  society  in  New 
York  City,  1884.)— H:  C.  Lodge.— SC 

True  Americanism,  Sel.  fr.  (Americanism.)  —  Theo- 
dore Roosevelt. — TMR 

True  and  False  Glory.- D.  C.  Eddy.— CS  10 

True  Aristocrat,  The. Stewart.— FP 

True  Artist,  The.     (Boston  Pilot.)— YBT 
(Legend,  A.)— CS  24 
(Monk's  Vision,  The.)— BS  19— PEO 

True  Aspiration  of  Youth,  The. — Jas.  Montgomery. — 
BLP 

True  Balm.     (Ode,  An — C.) — Ben  Jonson. — LH 
(Noble  Balm,  The.)— OB 

True  Beautie  Vertue  Is. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.  See  As- 
trophel  and  Stella. 

True  Beauty[,  The]. — T:Carew.    See  Disdain  Returned. 

True  Beauty.— J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Beautiful,  The. 

True  Bostonian  [at  Heaven's  Gate],  A.  (Somerville 
Journal.)— BS  19— CS  32— WR  9 


348 


TITLE  INDEX 


Trust 


True  Bravery. — Anon. — PS 

True  Charity.     (.Dial.)— Anon.— YFB 

True  Charity.     {Dial.) — Stephanie     F.    D.    de   Saint- 

Aubin,  Comtesse  de  Genlis.— FDY 
True  Contentment.— H:  S.  Kent.— CS  34 
True  Contentment. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Modern  Painters. 
True  Courage. — Anon. — PFP 
True  Courage  in  Life. — W:  E.  Channing. — BS  21  («Z. 

abr.) 
(Courage.)— WR  5 
True  Dignity.     {Sel.  fr.  Lines  Left  upon  a  Seat  in  a 

Yew-tree,  etc.) — W:  Wordsworth. — EPs 
True  Eloquence. — Dan'l    Webster.     See    Adams    and 

True  Faith,  The.— W:  H.  Burleigh.— SSS 
True  Faith.— B:  P.  Shillaber.— CS  11— KNE 
True  Gentleman,  The. — J:  H.  Newman. — FS 
True  Glory. — J :  Milton.     See  Paradise  Regained. 
True  Grandeur  of  Nations,  The,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Sumner. 
Law  of  Love  as  a  Rule  of  Conduct,  The. — HSS  1 
(Sumner's  Tribute  to  William  Penn.) — CS  12 
Peace.— TMR 

(True  Grandeur  of  Nations,  The — ptly.  same.) — 

BLP 
(Victories  of  Peace,  The — ptly.  same.) — TMD 
"True  honor  of  a  nation  is  to  be  found  only  in  deeds 
of  justice.  The."     (Br.  sel.)— HSS  1 
True  Greatness.     (Sel.  fr.  Mariam,  the  Fair  Queen  of 
Jewry,  Act  IV.)— Lady  Eliz.  Carew.— YBF 
(Revenge  of  Injuries.) — BNL 
True  Greatness.— T:  S.  King.— SE 
True  Greatness  of  our  Country,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (America's 
True  Greatness.)— W:  H.  Seward.— SR  8 
(Home  and  School  the  Bulwark  of  our  Country.) — 
FD2 
True  Happiness. — Anon. — KNS 
True  Heart,  A.     (Youth's  Companion.) — SSS 
True  Hero,  A.— Russell  H.  Conwell.— FR  (si.  abr.) 

(Fireman's  Prayer,  The.)— CS  19— PS 
True   Heroism. — J.   Hamilton  Charters  (?) — CS  10  — 

KNE— NPS— PEG— SSS— YP 
True  Honor  of  a  Nation,  The.— W.  R.  Prince.— SR  8 
"True  honor  of  a  nation  is  to  be  found  only  in  deeds 
of  justice,  The." — C:  Sumner.     See  True  Gran- 
deur of  Nations,  The. 
True  Immortality,  The. — Emily  H.  Miller.— BS  24 
Trae  Incident  of  the  War,  A. — Emily  D.  Irwin. — SR  9 
True  King,  The.— Seneca.- OS  2— SS 
True  Kings  of  the  Earth,  The. — J:  Ruskin.— CM 

(Power.)— OS  3 
True  Knight,  The.— Stephen  Hawes.     iSee  Pastime  of 

True  Lent,  A.— Rob't  Herrick.— BNL— YBF 

(To  Keep  a  True    Lent  —  C.)  —  FEP— HBP — 
OS  3  (at.  to  G:  Herbert.) 
True  Leucothoe,  The. — Anon. — PPh 
True  Liberty.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Characters:  Of  Judgments.) 

— Jean  de  la  Bruyere. — BLP 
True  Liberty.— Frd'k  W.  Robertson.— BLP— PEO 
(Rights  and  Duties — longer  and  ptly.  diff.) — NC 
True  Life.— Mrs.  G.  H.  Gildersleeve.— SR  1 
True  Love.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
True  Love.— Phoebe  Gary.— BIL— FTA— TFY 
True  Love,  A.— N:  Grunald.— OB 

True  Love.— W:  Shakespeare.   —  BIL— FTA— GP— 
OH— PGT  1— PHS 
("Let  me  not  to  the  marriage  of  true  minds.") — 

OEL 
(Love.)— LLC 
(Sonnet.)    —    BNL  —   EPs  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 

OB  (XVIII.) 
(Sonnet  CXVI.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
True  Love. — W :  Shakespeare.     See  also  All's  Well  that 

End's  Well. 
True  Love  (Song— C.)— Sir  J:  Suckling.— ES 
True  Loveliness.— G:  Darley.— TIP 

("It  is  not  beauty  I  demand.") — AVP 
(Loveliness  of  Love,  The.)— BNL— FEP 
True  Love's  Dirge.— W:  Motherwell.— WEP  4 
True  Manhood  the  Nation's  Only  Safety. — H.  M.  Soper. 

— SR8 
True  Manliness. — Anon.— WR  17 
True  Manliness.— D.  C.  Eddy.— HSS  3— LLC 
True  Manliness.     (Dial.)—M.  L.  R.— SDD 
True  Measure  of  Life,  The. ^Philip      J.      Bailey.     See 

Fcstus 
True  Men.  (Wanted— C.)— J.  G.  Holland.— SR  7 

(Give  us  Men.)— CS  26 
True  Nobility.— Anon.— CP 
True  Nobility.— Anon.— CS  13 
True  Nobility.— C:  Swain.— BLP 

True  Nobility.     (Epigram.) — Gotthold    E.    Lessing. — 
HPE 


True  Nobleman,  A.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Forest  Trees  in  Brace- 
bridge  Hall.) — Washington  Irving. — HSS  1 

(Forest  Irees — ptly.  same.) — AD 
True  Objects  of  Desire,  The. — S:  Johnson.     See  Van- 
ity of  Human  Wishes,  The. 
True  Patriotism. — Fisher  Ames. — PR 

(What  is  Patriotism?) — SR  8 
True  Patriotism. — H:  Clay.     See  On  the  Bank  Veto. 
True  Patriotism  is  Unselfish. — G:  W.  Curtis.     See  Pat- 
riotism. 
True  Politeness. — Anon. — KNE 

True  Power  of  a  Nation,  The.— E.  H.  Chapin.— SC 
True  Prayer.— Anon.— YBT 
True  Repentance. — Fs.  Quarles. — KNE 
True    Rest.  —  Johann    W.   von    Goethe  (tr.  by  J :  S. 
Dwight).— BNL— YBF  (abr.) 

(Rest— sel.)— PHS 

(Sweet  is  the  Pleasure.) — HBP 
True  Science  and  Religion. — E:  Hitchcock. — LLC 

(True  Science  Ought  to  be  Religious.) — SS 
True  Science   Ought  to  be  Religious. — E:  Hitchcock. 

See  foregoing. 
True  Socialism,  The.— Fred  E.  Morgan. — SR  11 
True  Soldier,  The.      (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
True  Source  of  Contentment. — Anon. — CS  9 

(Be  Content.)— CSS  (afer.)— PPSr 

(Carriage  and  Couple,  The.)— MYF 
True  Source  of  Reform,  The.— E.  H.  Chapin.— CS  8— 

SS 
True  Story,  A.— Abbie  Kinne.— BS  24 

(Child's  Mirror.  The.)— CS  32 
True  Story  of  a  Brie  Cheese,  The.— W.  E.  P.  French. 

— CS30 
True  Story  of  Abraham  Lincoln. — Anon. — WR  10 
True  Story  of  Littie  Boy  Blue.    The. — Carlotta  Perry. 

— BS  10— DS— PR— YA 
True  Story  of  Young  Lochinvar  in  Blank  Verse,  The. 

(Parody  on  Lochinvar.) — J.  J.  Fay. — WR  13 
True  Teaching.— Horatius  Bonar. — CS  19 

(Be  True.)— CSS— GN— SSS 
True  Temple,  The.— Anon.— CS  13 
True  to  Life. — Anna  F.  Burnham. — WR  5 
True  to  Poll.— Frank  C.  Burnand.— THP 
"True  to  the  promise  of  thy  far-off  youth."     (All  the 

Year  Round.) — GG 
True  To-day,  The.— H.  Withington.— SS 
True  Until  Death.     ("It  was  a'  for  our  rightfu'  King" 
—O— Rob't  Burns.— LH 

(Farewell,  The.)— BFV— BPB— OB 
True  Use  of  Music,  The.— C:  Wesley.— HBP 
True  Victory.  — M.  A.  Maitland.— TS 

(Fought  and  Won.)— WR  18 
True  War  Spirit,  The.     (Fr.  a  speech  in  the  U.  S.  Sen- 
ate, April  14,  1898.)— G:  F.  Hoar.— SC 
True  Wisdom.     Bible.     See  Job. 
True  Worth.— Anon.— CS  34 
True  Worth. — Alice  Gary.     See  Nobility. 
"True  worth  is  in  being,  not  seeming." — Alice  Gary. 

See  Nobility. 
True-born  Englishman,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Introduction.) 

—Dan'l  Defoe.— ESs 
True-hearted  Ben. — Anon. — HBP 
Truest  Wisdom. — Anon. — PPSr 
Trumpet,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans.— FP 
Trumpet  Sermon,  A. — Anon. — MCS 
Trumpeter's    Betrothed,    The. — Lucy    H.    Hooper. — 

DR 
Trumpet's  Loud  Clangor,  The. — J:  Dryden.     See  Song 

for  St.  Cecilia's  Day,  A. 
Trumpets  of  Doolkarnein,  The. — Leigh  Hunt. — BNL 
Trundle-bed  Theology.— L.  G.  Brown.— WR  15 
Trundle-bed  Treasures.— Mrs.  Hattie  F.  Bell.— CS  24 
Trust.— Anon.— HDL 
Trust.— H:  Alford.— HSS  3— SPE 

(Contentment.) — BS  4 

("I  know  not  of  the  dark  or  bright.") — GG 

(Life's  Answer.) — HDL 
Trust.— W:  H.  Burleigh.— TAS 
Trust.— Mary  F.  Butts.— HDL— TAS 
Trust.— Frances  A.  Kemble.— CS  19 
Trust.— A.  I.  M.— HP 

(On  the  Hillside.)— YBT 
Trust. — Lizette  W.  Reese. — AA 

Trust. — Christina  Rossetti.     See  Monna  Innominata. 
Trust.     (C.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— HDL 

("Same  old  baffling  questions,  The.") — GG 
Trust. — W :  Wordsworth. — EPs 
Trust  in  God.     (St.  Matthew,  Ch.  VI.,  26-34.)— 5t6ie. 

— BS3 
Trust  in  God.— Norman  Macleod.— CSS— PPSr 

(Rhymes  for  Hard  Times — si.  abr.) — PR 
Trust  in  God.— I:  Williams.— YBT 
Trust  in  Providence. — Helen  M.  Williams. — HBP 


349 


Trust 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Trust  in  Women. — Anon. — NA 

"Trust  not,  sweet  soul!  those  curled  waves  of  gold." — 
W:  Drummond.— OEL 
(Beauty  Fades.)— FEP 
Trust  not  to  Appearances. — Anon. — PS 
Trust  Thou  Thy  Love.— J :  Ruskin.- OB— VA 
Trusting.— Harriet  MoE.  Kimball.— YBT 

(Flight  of  the  BirdX^The.)- HDL— POS 
Trusting  too  far;  or,  Learning  by  Experience. — H.  M. 

Garrett.— PD 
Trusty  and  True.     (Dial.) — Mrs.  Clara  A.  Sylvester. — 

CS  5— StD 
Truth.— Anon.— DLS 
Truth.— Anon.— FAS 

Truth.     (Frags,  fr.  various  avihors.) — BNL 
Truth.     {Sel.  fr.  Of  Truth— Essay  I.)— Fs.  Bacon.— 

OS  2 
Truth.— W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Truth.     {Sel.   fr.    Hymenal;   or.   The   Solemnities   of 
Masque  and  Barriers  at  the  Marriage  of  the 
Earl  of  Essex,  1606.)— Ben  Jonson.—WEP  2 
Truth.- J:  MUton.— OS  3  ' 

Truth.— Eliza  Scudder.— TAS 
Truth.— Martin  F.  Tupper.— MYF 
Truth  about  Horace,  The.— Eugene    Field.— AWH— 

THP 
Truth  and    Falsehood. — Mrs.   Russell   Kavanaugh. — 

KJ 
Truth  and  Falsehood.— Matthew  Prior.— HPE 
Truth  and  Integrity.     (Advantages  of  Truth  and  Sin- 

cerity- O— J:  Tillotson.— KNE  (in  2  pts.) 
Truth  and  Victory.— D.  C.  Scoville.— PFP 
"Truth,  as  humanity  knows  it,  is  not  what  the  school- 
men call  it."     {Br.  sel.  fr.  Caxtoniana,  Essay 
XXII.,  Motive  Power.) — E:  Bulwer-Lytton. — 
GG 
Truth  at  Last.— E:  R.  Sill.— HBR 
Truth  —  Freedom — Virtue.  —  "Yankee."     See   To   a 

Child. 
Truth  in  Love.     (Sonnet  —  C.)  —  Sir  J:  Suckling. — 

WEP2 
Truth    in    Parentheses    [or    Parenthesis].     (Domestic 
Asides;    or.    Truth    in    Parentheses— C)^T: 
Hood.— CS  4— HSS  3— MHR— OM 
Truth  in  the  Ship's  Log. — Anon. — CS  31 
Truth  is  Great. — Coventry  Patmore. — YBF 

(Magna  est  Veritas— C.  )—PGT  2 
Truth  of  the  Gospel,  The.— Alex.  McKenzie.— MRS 
Truth  of  Truths,  The.— J:  Ruskin.— BS  9 
Truth  the  Object  of  All  Studies. — Frayssinous. — KNE 

— SS 
"Truths  half  drawn  from  Nature's  breast." — Anon. — 

HSS  3 
Truth's  Integrity.— Anon.— HBP 

fGreat  Adventurer,  The— seZ.)- ELP— PGT  1 
(Love  will  Find  out  the  Way — sd. — C. — in  Percy's 
Reliques.)— FEP— GN  (6r.)— OB  {longest.) 
Truths  of  the  Bible.— Anon.— LLC 
Truth-seekers,  The.— Fs.  C.  McDonald.— CG  2 
Truth-speaker,  The.     (DiaZ.)— Anon.     (Ad.)— MPD 
Truxton's  Victory. — Anon. — AWB 
Try.— Anon.— TFS 
Try  Again.     (C.) — Eliza  Cook. 

(Robert  Bruce  and  the  Spider.)— YBT 
"Try"  Boys,  The.— Anon.— DJS 
Try,  Try  Again. — Anon. — SM 
Trying  Hard. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Trying  Situation,    A. — S:    L.    Clemens.     See    Tramp 

Trjring  the  "Rose  Act." — Marietta  Holley. — WR  22 
Trying  to  be  Literary.     {Play.) — Anon. — BS  12 
Trying  to  Keep  up  the  Appearance  of  a  Gentleman. — 

H.  M.  Garrett.— ED 
Tryst  of  the  Night,  The.— Mary  C.  G.  Byron.— VA 
Trysting.- F.  W.  Hart.— CG  1 
Trysting-place,  The.— M.  E.  H.  Everette.— CG  1 
Tsar  Oleg.— J.  J.  Kenealy.— CS  29— NPS— YP 
Tsigane's  Canzonet,  The. — E:  King. — AA 
Tu  Quoque.     (C. — dial.) — Austin  Dobson. — MR 

(Lover's  Quarrel,  A.) — PYO 
Tubal  Cain.— C:  Mackay.— BLP  (air.)— BNL — CS  2 

(Old  Tubal  Cain.)— LLC— PPSr 
Tuberose. — L:  J.  Block. — AA 
Tucked  oup  in  Ped.— C:  F.  Adams— GH 

(Mine  Schildhood— C.)— BS  12— CS  22 
Tuesday-    or    the    Ditty. — J:    Gay.     Sec    Shepherd's 

Week  The. 
Tulip  Tree,  Tte.— Bayard  Taylor.— AD 
Tulkinghorn,  the  Lawyer,  and  Mademoiselle  Hortense. 

— C:  Dickens.     See  Bleak  House. 
Tullochgorum.— J:  Skinner.— WEP  3 
Tumbler  of  Claret,  A.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— CS  36 
Tunkuntel,  The.— Anon.— WR  5 


Turf    Shall    be    my    Fragrant    Shrine,    The,  Sel.    fr. 
("There's  nothing  bright  above,  below.") — T: 
Moore.— HDL 
"Turk"-ey  Drill.— Anon.— WDM 
Turkish  Legend,  A.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— GN— OS  1 
Turkish  Refrain. — A.  G.  Newcomer. — CG  1 
Turkish  Tradition,  A. — Anon. — PEO 
Turn  about's  Fair  Play. — Hattie  Herbert. — StD 
Turn,  Fortune[,  Turn  Thy  Wheel]! — Alfred  Tennyson, 

See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Turn  of  the  Tide,  The.— Rose  Kavanaugh. — WR  6 
Turn  the  Carpet;  or.  The  Two  Weavers.     (C.)— Han- 
nah More. 
(Two  Weavers,  The.)— CS  24— MYF 
Turned  out  for  Rent.— M.  L.  S.  Burke.— HP 
Turner.— J.  J.  G.  Wilkinson.— EPs 
Turning. — Carrie  E.  Bronson. — CS  35 
Turning  Around.     {Dial.) — Anon. — MND 
Turning  Over  the  New  Leaf. — Anon. — HP 
Turning  the  Grindstone. — B:  Franklin. — OS  2 
Turning  the  Points* — Rob't  Overton. — CS  27 
Turinng  the  Tables.     (Dial.) — Anon. — FND 
Turning  the  Tables.     (Dial.)—G:  C.  Graham. — GS 
Turning  the  Tables.    (Dial.) — S.  Jennie  Smith. — CS  36 
Turtle  and  Flamingo,  The.     (C.)— Jas.  T.  Fields. 
(Song  of  the  Turtle  and  Flamingo — abr.) — GN 
Turtle  Dove's  Nest,  The.— "Aunt  Effie."— PC 
Turtles,  The.     (Abr.)~T:  Hood.— WR  1 
Turvey  Top. — Anon. — NA 
"Tuscan   Cypress,"   Sel.  fr. —  A.  Mary  F.  R.  Darmes- 

teter. VA 

Tutelage,  The.— Rob't  M.  Bell.— AA 
Tuxedo  Romance,  A.^-Albert  Hardy. — PR — YA 
Twa  Brothers,  The.— Anon.— CEL — HBP— PEB  2  (sel. 
— diff.  vers.) 
(See  also  Edward,  Edward.) 
Twa  Corbies,  The.     (In  Bonier  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — 
BB— BPB— CEL— LH— OB— OEB— -PEB  2— 
PGT  1— WEP  1— YBF 
(SI.  diff.  rer«.)— FEP— HBP 
Twa  Courtins,  The.— D:  Kennedy.— HBR 
Twa  Magicians,  The.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Twa  Sisters,  The.— Anon.— CEL— PEB  1 
(Binnorie — sl.  abr.) — OB 
(Cruel  Sister,  The.)— FEP— HBP 
(Twa  Sisters  o'  Binnorie,  The— sel.) — BB — WR  9 
Twa  Sisters  o'  Binnorie,  The. — Anon.     See  foregoikg. 
T'ward  Arcadie. — Egan  New. — DR 
'Twas  at  Manhattan  Beach. — Anon. — DCR 

(At  the  Restaurant.)— WR  7 
" 'Twas  ever    thus! — Each  hour  that  came." — W:  G. 

Simms.— BNL 
'Twas  just  before  the  Hay  was  Mown. — C:  Swain. — VA 
'Twas  off  the  Blue  Canaries. — Jos.  W.  'Fabens. — PPh 
'Twas  when  the  Seas  were  Roaring.     (Ballad  fr.  "The 
What  d'ye  CaU  it,"  Act  II.,  Sc.  8.)— J:  Gay.— 
FEP 
(Ballad  from  "The  What  d'ye  Call  it,"  A.)— WEP  3 
Tweedle-dum  and  Tweedle-dee. — Anon. — NA 
'Tween  Earth  and  Sky.     (In  Songs  from  Dramas.) — 

Augusta  Webster. — VA 
Twelfth  Day;  or.  The  Epiphany.— G:  Wither.—   HBP 
Twelfth  Night;  or.  What  you  Will,  Sela.  fr.—W :  Shake- 
speare. 
Carpe  Diem.     (Song  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  3.)— PGT  1 
(O  [or  Oh]  Mistress  Mine.)— BNL— ES—TFY- 

("O  mistress  mine,  where  are  you  roaming.") — 

OEL 
(Sweet  and  Twenty.)— FEP— OB— OS  3 
(Twelfth  Night,  Sel.  /r.)— ELP 
"Come  away,  come  away.  Death."    (Song  fr.  II.,  4.) 
—EPs— FEP— OEL 
(Come  away.  Death.) — HBP 
(Dirge.)— (5B 
(Dirge  of  Love.)— PGT  1 
(Lover's  Lament,  A.) — WEP  1 
(Twelfth  Night,  Sel.  /r.)— ELP 
,     Olivia.     (Br.  «eZ. /r.  I.,5.)— BNL 

Twelfth  Night.       (Br.  sela.  fr.  I.,  1 ;  II.,  4;  V.,  1.)— 

BNL 
Viola  Disguised,  and  the  Duke.     (Sel.  fr.  11.,  4.) — 
EPs 
(Unrequited  Love — sel.) — BNL 
Twelfth  of  April,  The.— Edmund  C.  Stedman.— .\WB 

(Sumter— C.)—EDY 
Twelfth  of  December,  The.— R:  W.  Gilder.— ED Y 
Twelve  Articles. — Jonathan  Swift. — HPE 
Twelve  Causes  of  Dishonesty,  SeZ. /r.     (Public  Dishon- 

estv.)— H:  W.  Beecher.— PS 
Twelve  Golden  Rules  for  Boys. — Anon. — TFS 
Twelve  Little  Brothers,  The.— N.  G.  Cone.— FS 
Twelve  Months,  The.     (Dial.)—H :  H.  Johnson.— SDD 


350 


TITLE  INDEX 


Two 


Twelve  Months'  Carnival,  A. — Anon. — EuE 
Twentieth  Century,  The.— Merrill  E.  Gates.— BLP 
Twentieth  Sunday  after  Trinity. — J:  Keble.— AVP 
Twenty  Frogs  at  School. — Anon. — TFS 

(Frogs  at  School.)— CSS— FAS— PPSr 
Twenty     Years     Ago.  —   Anon.  —  CS   3  —  FEP  — 

HSS  3  (.si.  a6r.)— LLC 
(Forty  Years  Ago.)— BS  1— FTR— KNT]  (si.  abr.) 
Twenty  Years  Hence. — Walter  S.  Landor.     See  follow- 
ing. 
"Twenty  years  hence  my  eyes  may  grow.'' — Walter  S. 

Landor.— WEP  4 
(Twenty  Years  Hence.) — OB 
Twenty-eight  and  Twenty-nine.     (<SiZ.  diif.  fr.  Works.) 

— Winthrop  M.  Praed.— EDY— HBP 
Twenty-first  Sunday  after  Trinity.— J:  Keble.— AVP 
Twenty-five  Years  of  Peace. — E:  Everett. — PS 
Twenty-old  and  Seven-wild. — Annie  C.  Huestis. — TCV 
Twenty-one.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.— FEP— SSS 
Twenty-one  To-day.— Elmer  R.  Coates.— CS  28 
Twenty-second  of  December,  The. — W:  0.  Bryant. — 

GN 
Twenty-second  of  December,  1620,  The.— Sir  H:  Bul- 

wer. — SS 
Twenty-second  of  February,  The. — W:  C.  Bryant. — 

BS  14— EDY— PEG 
Twenty-second  of  February,   The. — Dan'l   Webster. — 

PS 
(Washington's  Birthday.) — SE 
Twenty-second  Sunday  after  Trinity.     (C.) — Reginald 

Heber. 
(Forgive.)— SS 
Twenty-six  of  Them. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
Twenty-third  Psalm,  The.— H:  W.  Beecher.— BS  2 
Twenty-third  Psalm.     (Bible.)     See  Psalms  of  David. 
Twice. — Christina  G.  Rossetti.^ — OB 
Twice  Told  Tales,  Sel.   fr.     (Gray  Champion,  The— 

sel.  fr.  Ch.  I.) — Nathaniel  Hawthorne. — BS  15 
Twickenham  Ferry. — ThtSophile  Marzials. — VA 

(W.  wr«.)— DS— NPS— YP 
Twig  that  Became  a  Tree,  The. — Anon. — AD 
Twilight. — Grace  Blackburn. — WR  25 
Twilight.     (Parisina,  St.  IJ— Lord  Byron.— CEL 

(Parisina,  Sel.  /r.)— WEP4 
Twilight. — Lord  Byron.     See  also  Don  Juan. 
Twilight. — Olive  Custance. — VA 
Twilight.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Twilight. — C:  Heavysege. — VA 
Twilight.— H :  W.  Longfellow.— BFV— HBP— LC 
Twilight  at  Nazareth. — Joaquin  Miller. — BS  19 
Twilight  at  Sea.— Amelia    B.    Welby.— AA— BNL   — 

FEP— POS 
Twilight    at    the    Heights    [Hights  —  C].  —  Joaquin 

Miller. — AA 
Twilight  Dreams.     (Chambers'  Journal.) — HP 
Twilight  Fancy,  A. — Dora  R.  Goodale. — BNL 
Twilight  Idvll,  A.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— CS  17 
Twilight  of  Thanksgiving,  The.— W:  D.  Kelly.— HS 
"Twilight  of  the  Poets,  The»"     (Fr.  Song  and  Science.) 

— Milicent  W.  Shinn. — AA 
Twilight  on  Sumter.— R:  H.   Stoddard.— EDY— PAP 
Twilight  Pastoral,  A.— Anon.— WR  3 
Twilight  Reverie,  A. — Anon. — HP 
Twilight  Song. — J:  Hunter-Duvar.     See  De  Roberval. 
Twilight's  Hour.— W.  F.  E.  L— HP 
'Twill  Not  be  Long.— Anon.— CS  11 
Twin  Ballots,  The.— Anon. — CS  36 
Twin  Jewelu. — Anon. — CG  1 

Twin  Peaks  of  the  Valley. — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Ex- 
cursion, The. 
Twin  Stars    Aloft.     (Hope,    A — C.)— C:    Kingsley.— 

FTA 
Twinkle,    Twinkle.  ^  Jane     Taylor.       See     Twinkle, 

Twinkle,  Little  Star. 
"Twinkle,  Twinkle,  Little  Star." — Anon. — WR  4 
Twinkle.  Twinkle,  Little  Star.- Jane  Taylor.— SM 
(A6r.)— NV— PC 
(Star,  The— si.  a&r.)— BVC 
(Twinkle,  Twinkle— a6r.)—TFS 
Twinkles,   Sel.    fr.     (Washington.) — J:   P.    Bocock. — 

TMR 
Twins.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Twins,  The.— H:    S.    Leigh.— FEP— MHR— PPSr   — 

THP 
(Trials  of  a  Twin.)— CRR— CS  9— DS 
Twins,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Twins  in  the  Turret,  The.— J.  P.  Bocock.— PAPm 
Twist  Me  a  Crown. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — LC — VA 
Twist  ye.  Twine  ye. — Walter  Scott. — See  Guy  Manner- 

ing. 
Two.— Anon.— CS  23— FMR 
Two.— Anon.— HP 
Two.     (Abr.  and  arr.) — Caroline  L.  Field. — BS  20 


Two.— Mary  A.  Townsend.— WR  24 
Two  Absent-minded  Men,  The. — Anon. — CS  20 
Two  Anchors,  The.— R:  H.  Stoddard.— BIL—CS  10 
Two  and  One.— Friedrich  Riickert.  —  NV— YBT  (diff. 

tr.) 
Two    Angels,    The.— H:   W.    Longfellow.  —  EDY — 

HDL  (sel.) 
Two  Angels,  The.— J:  Macfarlane.— TCV 
Two  Angels,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AA 
Two  Answers,  The.— G:  P.  Wheeler.— CG  1 
Two  April  Mornings,  The. — W :  Wordsworth. — BPB — 

PGT  1— WEP  4 
Two  Argosies. — Wallace  Bruce. — AA 
Two  Armies,  The.— E.  A.  Hughes.— WR  18 
Two  Banners  of  America,   The. — Herrick  Johnson. — 

SR  8— SSS— WR  10 
Two  Beggars,  The. — Anon. — CS  20 
Two  Bells.— J.  W.  Sanborn.— DES 
Two  Bills,  The.— Anon.— PP— PS— YPS 
Two  Blacksmiths,  The. — Anon. — PPSr 
Two  Blind  Beggars,     (rab.)- Anon.— BS  10— TCP 
Two  Boot-blacks.— Anon.— CS  14— HNS— SR  10 
Two  Brothers,  The.— Talmud.— DS—WR  6— YA 
Two  Captains,  The.— W:  Cory.— LH 

(Ballad  for  a  Boy,  A.)— PEB  3 
Two  Champions,  The. — Anon.— CS  25 
Two  Chimneys,  The.— Philip  B.  Strong.— CS  30— WR  6 
Two  Christmas  Eves. — N.  S.  Emerson. — SR  1 
Two  Christmas  Eves.— E.  Nesbit.— BS  18— WR  15  (abr.) 
Two  Church-builders,  The.— J:  G.  Saxe.— BS  19— CSS 

— MYF 
Two  Cities.— Anon. — CS  26 

Two  Colors.     (Springfield  Revvblican.) — TMR         ' 
(Blue  and  Gray.)— CPL 
(United  at  Last.) — CS  20 
Two  Commands,  The.— Anon.— PP— PS— YFR 
Two  Deserts,     The. — Coventry     Patmore. — PGT  2— 

VA 
Two  Dolls,  The.— Louise  E.  V.  Boyd.— StD 
Two  Drowned  Lovers.     (Sel.  fr.  Lake  Champlain  and 

its  Shores,  Pt.  III.)— W:  H.  H.  Murray.— BS  19 
Two  Dutiful    Daughters.     (Dial.) — Grace    D.    Litch- 
field.—BS  15— HD 
Two  Enigmas. — Matthew  Prior. — HPE 
Two  Epitaphs. — Anon. — PEO 
Two  Epochs.— Paul  H.  Hayne  — BIL 
Two  Families  in  One  Room.     (Play.) — Anon. — SED 
Two  Faults. — Alice  A.  Coale. — SD 
Two  Fishers.— Anon.— AWH— THP 
(Fishing.)- FAS— PTS 
(They  Went  a-Fishin'.)— CS  23 
(They  Went  Fishing.)— HBR 
Two  Foscari,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Swimming — br.  sel.  fr.  Act 

I.,  Sc.  1.)— Lord  Byron.— BNL— EPs—GN 
Two  Friends,  The.     (Dial.)     America  Atkeson. — SD 
Two  Friends,  The.— C:  G.  Leland.— AA 
Two  Friends,  The.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
Two  Frogs,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Two  Gardens.— Mollie  W.  Anderson. — YBT 
Two  Gardens,  The. — Ann  and  Jane  Taylor. — BVC 
Two  Gates,  The.— S.  S.  Conant.— HSS  2 
Two  Gentlemen   of   Kentucky,   The.     (Sel.) — Jas.    L. 

Allen.— BS  21 
Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. 
Love  Complaining.    (Br.  sel.  jr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  4.) — AE 
Silvia  [or  Sylvia].     (Song  fr.  IV.,  2.)— OB— OEL— 

WEPl 
(To  Sylvia.)— ES 

(Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona,  Sel.  fr.) — ELP 
(Who    is  Silvia  Tor  Sylvia]?)— EP— FEP— GN— 

HBP— LC— YBF 
("Who  is  Silvia?     What  is  she?")— BPB 
Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona,  fir.  sels.  fr.     (Fr.  II.,  4 

and  II.,  7.)— BNL 
Two  Girls  of  1812.— Anon.— WR  7 
Two  Glasses,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— BS  3— CS  15— 

PEO  (at.  to  C.  B.  A.)— WR  18 
Two  Goslings. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Two  Gray  Wolves. — Mary  A.  Fanton. — WR  22 
Two  Heavens.     (Sel.   fr.    A   Heaven   upon   Earth.) — 

Leigh  Hunt.— GN 
("For  there  are  two  heavens,  sweet.") — BIL 
Two  Heloers. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Two  Highwaymen,  The.     (In  Love  Songs  of  Proteus.) 

—Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— OB 
Two  Homes,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — SS 
Two  Hundred  Years. — J:  Pierpont. — FP 
Two  in  One. — Anon. — ELP 
Two  in  the  Campagna. — Rob't  Browning. — PGT  2  — 

WEP  4 
Two  Infinities. — E:  Dowden. — VA 
Two  Interpreters    of    Dreams,    The.     (Dial.) — Hattie 

Herbert.— SDD 


351 


Two 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Two  Irish  Peasant  Songs.     (C.) — Louise  I.  Guiney. 
(In  Leinster — 1st  song.) — AA 
(Song.     In  Leinster.) — ASL 
Two  Kinds  of  Fun.     (Dial.) — Clara  J.  Denton. — LPD 
Two  Kings. — Andrew  Marvell. — LH 

(Cromwell  and  King  Charles— ^seZ.) — EPs 
(Death  of  Charlte  First— «eZ.)—EHT 
(Execution  of  Charles  First — sel.) — EDY 
(Horatian  Ode  upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ire- 
land, A— O— FEP— HBP— OB— PGT  1   — 
WEP2 
Two  Kings.— J:  J.  Piatt.— TFS 
Two  Kisses.— R:  S.  Powell.— TL 
Two  Kittens.— Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow.— TT 
Two  Left.— Anon.— DE 

Two  Lessons,  The.— T:  W.  Higginson.— TAV 
Two  Letters  and  Two  Telegrams. — Clyde  Fitch. — SR  12 
Two  Little  Bears.     (Our  Little  Ones.)- LPS— PP 
Two  Little  Boys. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Two  Little  Eyes.— Anon.— YBT 
Two  Little  Feet.— Anon.— TFS 

Two  Little  Girls    I    Know.     (Youth's    Companion.) — 
DJS— HSS  2 
(At  Bedtime.)— WR  17 
Two  Little  Hands. — Anon. — GMS 
Two  Little  Kittens.— Anon. — PS 
(Little  Kittens,  The.)— NV 
(Quarrelsome  Kittens,  The.)— DST 
Two  Little  Magpies  Sat  on  a  Wall. — Anon. — TFS 
Two  Little  Old  Dames.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Two  Little  Rogues.— Abby  M.  Diaz.— CS  16 

(W.  WM«.)— DS— NPS— YP 
Two  Little  Roses.— Julia  P.  Ballard. — AD 
Two  Little  Stockings,  The.— Sara  K.  Hunt.— CS  36— 

LPS— PP 
Two  Lives,  The.— Anon.— BS  24 
Two  Lives.     (Dial.)—G:  M.  Vickers.— CS  8 
Two  Locks  of  Hair,  The. — Gustav  P.  Fizer  (tr.  by  H: 

W.  Longfellow).— BIL 
Two  Lovers.— G:  Eliot.— BIL— OH— PYO 
Two  Loves,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BIL 
Two  Loves  and  a  Life.— W:  Sawyer.— CS  10— NPS— 

YP 
Two  Maidens. — Gertrude  M.  Cannon. — YBT 
Two  Marys,  The.— Jean  Blewett.— TCV 
Two  Masks,  The.— G:  Meredith.— VA 
Two  Men.— C:  N.  Gregory.— CS  33 
Two  Men  I  Know. — Anon. — HP 
Two  Minute  Charade. — Anon. — EuE 
Two  Monks  and  the  Pilgrim,  The. — Anon. — DLS 
Two  Mysteries,  The. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — A  A — BNL — 

BS  19— GP— HDL— OS  2— TAS 
Two  Mystics. — Anon.— CG  1 
Two  Napoleons,  The.— Victor  Hugo.— PS— SS 
Two  Noble  Kinsmen,  The,  Sels.  fr.  —  Shakespeare  and 
Fletcher. 
Bridal  Song[,  A].     (Fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  1.)— CEL^ES 
— FEP— OB— YBF 
(Marriage  Hymn.) — ELP 

(Song  from  "The  Two  Noble  Kinsmen.")— WEP  2 
Dirge  of  the  Three  Queens.     (Fr.  I.,  5.)— OB 
Two  Oceans,  The.— J:  Sterling.— HBP 
Two  of  a  Kind.— Anon.— WR  24 
Two  of  a  Kind.— Walter  T.  Arndt.— CG  2 
Two  of  a  Kind.— H.  W.  Banks.— CG  1 
Two  of  a  Trade.— S.  W.  Duffield.— AA— NV 
Two  of  Dickens'  Villains. — Julien  M.  Elliott. — NC 
Two  of  Them.— Anon.— CS  19 
Two  Old  Crows.— Anon.— SR  10 

Two  Old  Kings,  The.— J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De  Tab- 
ley.— VA 
Two  Old  Soldiers,  The.— J.  C.  Macy.— WR  12 
Two  Opinions.— Eugene  Field.— BS  21— WR  15 

(Our  Two  Opinions— C.)— A  A— EF— OH 
Two  Opinions  of  One  House.— Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
Two  Orphans,    The.     (Didn't     We,    Jim?— C.)— Ben 

King.— WR  14 
Two  Other  Hearts.     (London  Tobacco.) — PPh 
Two  Paths.— J.  C.  R.  Dorr.— AA 
Two  Paths  on  Art,  Sel.   fr.     (Great  Art — br.  sel.  fr. 

Lecture  I.) — J:  Ruskin. — SO 
Two  Pennies,  The.— Anon.— CS  32 
Two  Pictures,  The.— Anon.— BS  16 
Two  Pictures. — Anon. — HP 
Two  Pictures. — Annie  D.  Green. — BNL — WR  5 
Two  Pictures.— G :  W.  Hoss.— BS  26 
Two  Pictures  from  Life.- — Anon. — SSS 
Two  Pilgrims.— Anon.— PP—YPS 
Two  Poets  of  Croisic,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Rob't  Browning. 
Bard  and  the  Cricket,  The.— WR  8 

(Tale,  A.)— HBR 
Such  a  Starv-ed  Bank  of  Moss.     (Br.  sel.) — YBF 
Two  Points  of  View.— Hannah  P.  Kimball.— TAS 

352 


Two  Professions. — G.  E.  Throop.— WR  12 
Two  Promises. — Anon. 
Candlemas.— BVC 
St.  Swithin.— BVC 
Two  Queens. — Franklin  Addington. — NC 
Two  Queens  in  Westminster. — H :  Morford. — BS  16 
Two  Rabbis  [Rabbins— C.l,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AP 
Two  Rag  Men.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
Two  Revolutions.     (Sel.  fr.  Address  before  the  Spring- 
field    Washingtonian     Temperance     Society, 
1842.)— Abraham  Lincoln.— TS 
Two  Riddles.— Matthew  Prior.— HPE 
Two  Rivers. — Anon.— OB 
Two  Roads,  The.— Anon.— PP—YFR 
Two  Roads,  The.— Jean-Paul  Richter.  —  CS  1— CSS— 
DS— SPE— SR  1— WCLG  2— WRD 
(New  Year's  Dream,  A — diff.  tr.  and  cond.) — OS  3 
Two  Robbers.— Fs.  W.  Bourdillon.— HP 
Two  Robin  Redbreasts. — Anon. — DLF 
Two  Runaways,  The.     (Sel.fr.  Ch.  V.)— Harry  S.  Ed- 
wards.—BS  15— CR 
(Mass'  Crawford,  Isam,  and  the  Deer — abr.  and  arr. 
by  Kate  W.  Dallas.)— WR  21 
Two  Runaways,   The.     (Dial.)  —  Mary    Edwards. — 

WR17 
Two  Schools  of  Eloquence. — Rufus  Choate. — FD  2 
Two  Seasons. — Clarence  B.  Burleigh. — CG  1      ( 
Two  Ships,  The.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— TAS 
Two  Sinners.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— MR 
Two  Simple  Little  Ostriches. — Juliet  W.  Tompkins, — 

CG  2— WR  22 
Two  Songs,  The,  Sel.   fr.     (I   Heard  an  Angel.)— W: 

Blake.— PC 
Two  Songs. — J:  Milton.     See  Arcades. 
Two_ Songs  from  the  Persian,  II.     (C.)—T:  B.  Aldrich. 
("Oh  [Ah — C],  sad  are  they  who  know  not  love" 

— a6r.)— FTA 
(Sad  are  they  who  Know  not  Love — abr.) — TFY 
(Who  Know  not  Love.) — OH 
Two  Sonnet-songs. — Frank  T.  Marzials. — VA 
I.     The  Sirens  Sing. 
II.     Orpheus  and  the  Mariners  Make  Answer. 
Two  Sons. — Rob't  Buchanan. — VA 
Two  Spies,  Andr^  and  Hale,  The. — Chauncey  M.  De- 
pew.— SR  12— TMD 
(Andr^  and  Hale.)— CS  36— NC  (si.  abr.)— PR 
(Captain  Hale  and  Major  Andi^.) — FD  2 
Two  Spirits,  The.— J.  B.  Kenyon.— AA 
Two  Squirrels,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Two  Stammerers,   The. — Anon. — BS    13     (si.   abr.) — 

CS  16 
Two  Streams,  The.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— OS  3— PEO 
Two  Streams  of   History,   The. — C:   L.   Thompson. — 

TMD 
Two  Teachers,  The.     (DiaZ.)- Hattie  Herbert.—  SDD 
Two  Temples,  The.— C.  T.  Corlis.— CS  13 
Two  Thanksgiving  Dances.     (W.    music.) — Emma  D. 

Banks.— BR 
"Two  Tollar?"     (Detroit  Free  Press.)— BDD 

(How  the  Insurance  Agent  was  Squelched.) — SDR 
Two  Trees,  The.— W:  B.  Yeats.— TIP 
Two  Truths.- Helen  H.  Jackson.— BIL— FLS— OH— 

TAV— TFY 
Two  Valentines. — May  R.  Smith. — DES 
Two  Verses.— R:  S.  Powell.— TL 
Two  Veterans.     (Dirge  for  Two  Veterans — C.) — Walt 

Whitman.— GN—LH 
Two  Victories. — W:  Wordsworth.     See    Song    at    the 

Feast  of  Brougham  Castle. 
Two  Views  of  Christmas. — C :  Dickens.     See  Christmas 

Carol,  A. 
Two  Views  of  War. — H:  R.  Palmer.— TAV 
Two  Villages,  The.— Rose  T.  Cooke.— CS  7— HBR 
Two  Visits.— N.  E.  M.  Hathaway.— NPS— YP 
Two  Voices.— D:  J.  Brewer. — TMR 
Two  Voices,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Dragon-fly,  The.)— Alfred 

Tennyson. — SN 
Two  Voyagers,  The.     (Voyages,     The  — C.)— T:     W. 

Higginson. — TAS 
Two  Waitings,  The.— J:  W.  Chad  wick.— BNL 
Two  Ways  of  Doing  Good. — Mrs.  J.  E.  McConaughy. 

— MD 
Two  Ways  of  Life.— H.  C.  H.— SDD 
Two  Ways  of  Looking  at  It.^ — Leonine  Waterman. — FS 
Two  Ways  of  Spending  "The  Fourth."     (Dial.)— Clara. 

Denton.— LPD 
Two  Ways  of  Telling  the  Same  Thing.     (Diai.)- Mrs. 

E.  B.  Duffey.— StD 
Two  Weavers,    The. — Hannah    More.     See   Turn    the 

Carpet,  etc. 
Two  Went  up  into  the  Temple  to  pray. — R :  Crashaw. 

—BNL— ELP— EPs 
Two  Wise  Owls.— Anon.— NV 


TITLE  INDEX 


ITncle 


Two  Wives,  The. — W:  D.  Howells. — AA 

Two  Worlds. — Mortimer  Collins.— GP 

Tying  her  Bonnet  under  her  Chin. — Nora  Perry. — BIL 

Typewriter  Tune,  The. — Anon. — WR  15 

Typical  Dutchman,  The.— H.  J.  Van  Dyke.— TMD 

Tyrannic  Love,  Sel.  fr.     (Ah,  how  Sweet  it  is  to  Love 

—fr.   Act   IV.,  So.    1.)— J:   Dryden.— BNL — 

OB 
Tyrant's  Plea,  The.      {Frags,   fr.  various  authors.)  — 

BNL 
Tyre,  Venice,  and  England. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Stones 

of  Venice,  The. 


u 


U.  S.  Spells  "Us."— May  N.  Bradford.— WR  24 
Ubique.     {Hamilton  Literary  Monthly.) — CG  2 
Ubique. — Joshua  Sylvester. — OB 

(Love's    Omnipresence.)  —  FEP  —  FTA  —  OH  — 

PGT  1— YBF 
(Sonnet.)— WEP  1 

("Were  I  as  base  as  is  the  lowly  plain.") — BNL 
Uffia.— Harriet  R.  White.— NA 
Ugliest  of  Seven,  The. — {Ad.  fr.  the  German  by)  M.  G. 

Townsend.— CS  2 
Ugo  Bassi's  Sermon  in  a  Hospital,  Sel.  fr. — H.  E.  H. 

King.— HDL 
Uhland.— W:  A.  Butler.— HBP 
Ulalume.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— AA— BPB 
Ulf  in  Ireland.— C -De  Kay.— AA— MR 
Ulric  Dahlgren.— Kate  B.  Sherwood.— BAB— EDY 
Ultima  Veritas.— Washington  Gladden.— TAS— TMD 
Ulysses.— Alfred     Tennyson.— A  VP— BS  14— EPs — 

FEP— HBP— LLC— OS  3— V A— WEP  4 
Ulysses  and  Achilles. — W:  Shakespeare. —     See  Troi- 

lus  and  Cressida. 
Ulysses  and  the  Siren. — S:  Daniel. — OB 
Ulysses  S.  Grant.— T:  W.  Higginson.— MRS 
Ulysses  S.  Grant.— G:  D.  Robinson.— FD  1 
Umbrella  March.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
Umbrella  on  the  Beach,  The.     {Harper's  Bazar.) — CH 
Umbrellas  to  Mend.— W:  M.  Gill.— WR  20 
Umpires. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — OH 
Un  Bacio  Dato  non  6  Mai  Perduto. — W:  W.  Story. — 

OH 
('"Through  the  tense,  clear  sky  above  us." — abr.) — 

FTA 
Un  Potpourri  d'Elocution. — {Arr.  by)  Claudius  Rosaire. 

— SR6 
"Una."— Anon. — CP 
Una  and    the    Lion. — Edmund    Spenser.     See    Faerie 

Queene,  The. 
Una  and  the  Red  Crosse  Knight.     See  Faerie  Queene, 

The. 
Unaccountable  Mystery,  An. — Paul  Denton. — CS  22 
Unanswered. — Martha  G.  Dickinson. — AA 
Unappreciated  Genius.— Millie  M.  Olcott. — StD 
Una's  Marriage. — Edmund  Spenser.  See  Faerie  Queen, 

The. 
Unattainable,  The. — Anon. — FAS 
Unawares. — Joe  Kerr. — GH 
Unbelief.— Phoebe  Gary.- TAS 
Unbeliever,  The.— T:  Chalmers.  —  CS  4— HR— LLC— 

PS 
Unbidden  Guest,  The.— Carlotta  Perry.— HSS  2 
Unbidden  Guest,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.- SAP 
Unbolted  Door,  The.— E:  Garrett.— CS  10— PS 
Unborn,  The.— Julia  N.  Finch.— AA 
Unburied  Woman,  The.     {Dial.)— Anon.— 'SBF 
Uncertain  Pledge,  An.     {Yale  Record.) — BS  21 

(His  Oath.)— WR  7 
Unchangeable,  The.— W:  Shakespeare.— FTA— PGT  1 

(Sonnet.)— ELP  (CIX.— f .)— HBP— OB  (XVII.) 
Uncle,  The.— H.  G.  Bell.— BS  16— CS  9— SR  7 
Uncle  Abel  and  Little  Edward.     (Little  Edward— C.) 

—Harriet  B.  Stowe.— WCLI  2 
"Uncle  Ben." — Mary  Bradley.— BS  13 
Uncle  Billv's  Disaster. — Anon. — DCR 
Uncle  Bob's  Story  of  Daniel. — Anon. — WR  12 
Uncle  Brightens  up. — -Jas.  W.  Riley.     See  Session  with 

Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
Uncle  Cephas'  Yarn.  {Century  Magazine.) — CH — CRR 
Uncle  Daniel's  Apparition  and  Prayer. — S :  L.  Clemens 

and  C:  D.  Warner.     See  Gilded  Age,  The. 
Uncle  Daniel's  Introduction  to  a  Mississippi  Steamer. 

— S:    L.    Clemens    and    C:    D.    Warner.     See 

Gilded  Age,  The. 
Uncle  Dan'l's  Apparition  [and  Prayer]. — S :  L.  Clemens 

and  C:  D.  Warner.     See  Gilded  Age,  The. 


Uncle  Dan'l's  Prayer.— S:  L.  Clemens  and  C:  D.  War- 
ner.    See  Gilded  Age,  The. 
Uncle  Deal's  Lecture. — Alice  A.  Coale. — StD 
Uncle  Dick's  Version. — Anon.— WR  2 
Uncle  Eben's  Opinion. — Anon. — SR  12 
Uncle  Edom  and  the  Flurridy  Nigger. — E.  F.  Andrews. 

— CS31 
•Uncle  Edom  and  the  Yankee  Book-agent, — E.  F.  An- 
drews.—CS  30 
Uncle  Eph's  Heaven.— Fred  E.  Brooks. — WR  16 
Uncle  Esek's  Wisdom.     {Century  Magazine.) — DSS 
Uncle  Ethan  Ripley.     (C) — Hamlin  Garland. 

(Uncle  Ethan  Ripley's  Speculation — cond.) — WRJ22 
Uncle  Ethan  Ripley's  Speculation. — Hamlin  Garland. 

See  foregoing. 
Uncle  Gabe  at  the  Corn-shucking. — J.  A.  Macon. — CD 
Uncle  Gabe  on  Church  Matters.— J.  A.  Macon. — CD    t 
Uncle  Gabe's  White  Folks.— T:  N.  Page.— AA— HBR 
Uncle  George  was  There. — Anon. — DSS 
Uncle  Ike's  Roosters. — Aaron  W.  Fredericks. — CS  23 
Uncle  Isrul's  Call.— Caroline  F.  Stanley.— WR  21 
Uncle  Jacob's  Money.— H.  E.  McBride. — CS  24 
Uncle  Jo. — Anon. — CS  6 

Uncle  Joel  on  Peddlers.     {Albany  Argus.) — CRR 
Uncle  John. — Anon. — MC 

"Uncle  John"    Writes  to  his  City  Cousin. — D:  K.  Bu- 
chanan.— CS  32 
Uncle  Jotham's  Boarder. — Annie  T.  Slosson. — CS  35 
Uncle  Mart's  Poem. — Jas.  W.  Riley. — CW 
Uncle  Mellick  Dines  with  his  Master. — J.  R.  Eggleston. 

—DCR 
Uncle  Morton's  Gift.     (DioZ.)— Lilian  F.  Wells.— CDs 
Uncle  Nate's  Funeral. — Anon. — SR  13 
Uncle  Nathan's  Creed. — Anon. — DSS 
Uncle  Nathan's  Indian. — A.  H.  Widney. — MD 
Uncle  Ned's  Banjo  Song. — Anon. — CD 
Uncle  Newton — a  Pinchtown  Pauper. — Armistead  C. 

Gordon.— WR  14 
Uncle  Noah's  Ghost.— Sylvan  us  Cobb,  Jr. — BS  20 
Uncle;    or,    "Comparisons   are    Odious,"    The. — Ellen 

Pickering.— DDD 
Uncle  Pete.— Anon.— DE— PS 
Uncle  Pete  and  Marse  George. — Anon. — CD — CDV — 

SDR 
Uncle  Peter  and  the  Trolley  Car.— W.  H.  Neall.— CS  34 
Uncle  Peter  at  the  "Big  House."— W.  H.  Neall.— CS  35 
Uncle  Peter's  Masterly  Argument.     (Dusky   Philoso- 
phy, I.     A  Story  of  Seven  Devils — C.) — Frank 
R.  Stockton.— WR  15  {cond.) 
Uncle  Pete's   Counsel   to   the   Newly   Married. — "Ed- 
mund Kirke."— BS  1 
(Darky's  Counsel  to  the  Newly  Married,  A.) — CS  5 
Uncle  Pete's  Plea.— Jos.  AUgood. — CS  32 
Uncle  Pete's  Sermon. — Irwin  Russell. — DE — PS 
(Half-way  Doin's— C.)— CDV— CS  19— SDR 
Uncle  Podger  Hangs  a  Picture. — Jerome  K.  Jerome. 

See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Uncle  Remus  and  his  Friends — His  Songs  and  Ballads, 
I.     (Plough-hands'  Song,  The.)— Joel  C.  Har- 
ris.— AA 
Uncle  Remus,  his  Songs  and  his  Sayings,  Sels.  fr. — 
Joel  C.  Harris. 
Revival  Hymn.— AWH— THP 

(Uncle  Remus's  Revival  Hymn.) — CS  14 
Wonderful  Tar  Baby  Story,  The.— WR  26 
(Uncle  Remus'  Tar-baby.) — DCR 
(Wonderful   Tar-baby,    The — si.  abr.    and   incl. 
How  Mr.  Rabbit  was  too  Sharp  for  Mr.  Fox, 
abr.)- NP 
Uncle  Remus'  Tar-baby. — Joel  C.  Harris.     See  Uncle 

Remus,  his  Songs  and  his  Sayings. 
Uncle  Remus's  Revival  Hymn. — .Joel  C.  Harris.     See 

Uncle  Remus,  his  Songs  and  his  Savings. 
Uncle  Reuben's  Baptism. — Anon. — CS  12 — DCR 
Uncle  Reuben's  Tale.     {Atlantic  Monthly.) — SCS 
Uncle  Sammy. — Will  Carleton. — AWH 
Uncle  Sam's  a  Hundred.    {New  York  Evening  Post.) — 

CS  12 
Uncle  Sam's  Birthday. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Uncle  Sam's  Great  Bullfight. — Eliot  White.— SO 
Uncle  Sam's  Spring  Cleaning. — S.  W.  Foss. — PAPm 
Uncle  Sam's  Wars.— H.  E.  McBride.— MHD 
"Uncle   Schneider"   Visits  the   Side-shows. — Anon. — 

DRR 
Uncle  Simon  and  Uncle  Jim. — Artemus  Ward. — NA 
Uncle  Tascus    and    the    Deed. — Holman   F.   Day. — 

THP  Sfl 

"Uncle  Todd."— Isabel  A.  Mallon.— TMR 
Uncle  Tom.     {Tab. — based  on  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin.) — 

Tony  Denier. — TDT 
Uncle  Tom  and  the  Hornets.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) — 

CH— CS  20 
Uncle  Tommy's  Philosophy. — G:  B.  Hynson. — BS  24 


353 


Uncle 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Uncle  Tom's  Cabin,  Seln.  fr. — Harriet  B.  Stowe. 
Gassy.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXIII.)— WR  10 
Cruelty  of  Legree,  The.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXIII.)— 

NP 
Death  of  Uncle  Tom,  The.     {Sela.  fr.  Chs.  XL.  and 

XLI.)— WR  16 
Escape,  The.     {SeK  fr.  Ch.  VII.)— NP 
Eva's  Death.     {Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXVI.)— BS  2— CS  9 
Freeman's  Defence,    The.     (Ch.    XVII. — cond.) — 

WRIO 
Little  Eva.     (Sel.  Jr.  Ch.  XIV.)— LLC 
Little  Evangelist,  The.     (Ch.  XXV.)— CS  10 
Topsy  and  Eva.     {Tab. — arr.  by  Tony  Denier.) — 

TDT 
Topsy 's  First    Lesson.     (Sels.    fr.    Chs.    XX.    and 
XXV.)— BS  16— MHR  (.abr.) 
(Topsy— p%.  diff.  sel.  fr.  Ch.  XX.) 
Uncle  Tom's  Testament.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XIV.)— LLC 
Uncle    Tom's     Testament. — Harriet    B.    Stowe.     See 

Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 
Uncle  Turner's  Last  Words.     (Detroit  Free  Press.) — 

CDV— SDR 
Uncle  Zeke's  Opinion.— W.  H.  Sabean.— SDD 
Uncle's  Reception,  The.     (Dial.) — Anon. — MAD 
Uncomfortable  Call,  An.     (Dial.)— Anon. — CS  36 
Uncomfortable  Predicament,  An.     (Dial.) — Anon.  — 

MND 
Unconscious  Greatness  of  Stonewall  Jackson,  The. — 

Moses  D.  Hoge>— NC— PEO 
Uncover  to  the  Flag. — E:  C.  Cheverton. — PAPm 
Uncut  Diamond,  An. — Anon. — CS  33 
Undaunted  Mary. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Under  an  Umbrella.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  17 
Under  Canvas. — Rob't,  Lord  Lytton.     See  Lucile. 
Under  False  Colours.— R.  A.  L.— CG  3 
Under  Laurels  and  Maples.     (C.) — E:  E.  Hale. 

(Omnipresence.) — HDL 
Under  Mr.  Milton's  Picture. — J:  Dryden.     See  Under 

the  Portrait  of  Milton. 
Under  my  Window.— T:  Westwood.  —  BNL— HBP— 

LC— OS  1— WCL 
Under  the  Apple-tree. — ^Eliz.  A.  Allen. — AD 
Under  the  Blue. — Fs.  F.  Browne. — AA 
Under  the  Cloud.— C:  G.  Ames.— T AS 
Under  the  Cross.— W:  C.  Richards.— HDL 
Under  the  Daisies. — Hattie  T.  Griswold. — GP    , 
Under  the  Greenwood   Tree.  —  W :  Shakespeare.     See 

As  You  Like  It. 
Under  the  Holly  Bough.— C:    Mackay.— OS  2— PP— 

PTS  (arr.  as  dial.)— YPS 
Under  the  Lamplight. — Aiinie  R.  Blount. — CS  3 
Under  the  Leaves. — Anon. — POS 
Under  the  Leaves. — Albert  Laighton. — SN 
Under  the  Light-house. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 
Under  the  Lindens.— Walter  S.  Landor.— VS— YBF 
Under  the  Old   Ehn.— Jas.   R.   Lowell.— AD   (seU.  fr. 
Pts.  I.  and  III.)— AP 
(Washington.)— BNL  (sels.  fr.  Pts.  III.,  V.,    and 
VI.)— GN  (Pt.  v.,  St.  3.) 
Under  the  Old  Oak  Tree — a  Garland. — Harriet  E.  Dur- 

fee.— CS  35 
Under  the  Palms.    (Nile  Notes  of  a  Howadji,  Ch.XXII., 

cond.)—G:  W.  Curtis.— AD 
Under  the  Pine.— Paul  H.  Hayne.— EDY 
Under  the  Portrait  of  Milton.     [Prefixed  to  "Paradise 
Lost."]— J:  Dryden.— EPs— OS  3 
(Lines   Printed   under  the    Engraved   Portrait   of 

Milton.— C.)—WEP  2 
(Lines  Written  under  the  Portrait  of  John  Milton.) 

—BNL 
(Under  Mr.  Milton's  Picture.)— FEP 
Under  the  Purple  and  Motley. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — 

CS34 
Under  the  Red  Cross. — C.  Hijkox. — AA 
"Under  the  reign  of  the  Moorish  caliphs." — Anon. — AD 
Under  the  Rod.— Mary  B.  Dana.— SAE 

(Passing  under  the  Rod.)— CS  13 
Under  the  Rose. — Catherine  Y.  Glen. — CG  2 
Under  the  Rose.— R:  H.  Stoddard.— BIL—FTA 
Under  the  Shade  of  the  Trees  (Shade  of  the  Trees,  The 
— C.).— Marg.     J.     Preston.— AWB— EDY— 
LLC  (si.  abr.  and  si.  diff.) 
Under  the  Snow.     (Christmas  in  the  Snow.) — Anon. — 

MMR 
Under  the  Snow.— Rob't  Collyer.—  AA  —  CS  36  — 

HS  (abr.  )—PPSr 
Under  the  Snow. — Fay  Hempstead. — POS 
Under  the  Snows. — Kathe.  L.  Bates.— TAS 
Under  the  Stars.— Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz.— TAS 
Under  the  Stars. — Wallace  Rice. — AA 
Under  the    Stars    and    Stripes. — Madison    Cawein. — 

PAPm 
Under  the  Violets. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — AA — ASL 


Under  the  Violets. — E:  Young. — AA 

Under  the  Wagon. — Anon. — MYF 

Under  the  Washington  Elm,  Cambridge. — Oliver  W. 

Holmes.— AD— PEO 
Under  the  Wheels.    (SI.  abr.)— Will  Carleton.— CS  32 
Under  the  Willows.— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— AD  (a6r.)— AP 
Under  Two  Flags,     Sels.  fr. — Louise  de  la  Ram^. 
Battle  of  Zaraila,  The.     (Ch.  XXVI. ,  cond. )— BS  24 

— PFP 
Forest  King's  Race.     (Sel.fr.  Ch.  III.)— WR  19 
(Military  Steeple-chase,  The— abr. )--CS  33 
Under  Two  Flags.— Juliet  W.  Tompkins.— CG  2 
Under-current,  The.— S.  F.  Fiester.— BS  26 
Underground  Jottings. — E:  F.  Turner. — VSG 
Under-prefect,  The.— Anon.— WR  25 
Undersong,   The. — Ralph   W.    Emerson.     See   Wood- 
notes. 
Undertaking,  The.— J:  Donne.— ELP— EPs 
Under-tow,  The. — Anon. — GH 
Undertow,  The.— Carrie  B.  Morgan.— CS  33 
Undeveloped  Lives,  The.— W:  E.  H.  Lecky.— TIP 
Undine.     (Tab.)     (Scribner's   Monthly.)— BS  8— TCP 
Undiscovered  Country,  The.     (Sonnet  XXIV.)— T:  B. 

Aldrich. — AA 
Undiscovered  Country,  The. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — 

KNE— TAS 
Undowered. — Harriet  McE.  Kimball. — HP 
Undressing  Little  Ned. — Anon. — TS 
Une  Robe  Angelique. — Willis  Merritt. — SR  5 
Unequal  Game,  An. — Anon. — FLS 
Unequal  Partnership,  An. — Louise  S.  Upham. — CS  34 
Unexpected,  The.— Will  J.  Lampton.— BS  21 

(Once.)— WR  15 
Unexpected  Company. — Anon. — DDM 
Unexpected    Denouement,    An. — Jerome   K.    Jerome. 

See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Unexpected  Greeting,  An. — Anon. — WR  20 
Unexpected  Son,  The. — Anon. — CSS 
Unfading  Beauty.  The.— T:  Carew.— OB  (abr.) 
(Disdain  Returned— C.)— FEP— HBP 
(SI.  o6r.)— ELP— ES—WEP  2 
Uftr.)- EPs— OEL 
("He  that  loves  a  rosy  cheek" — abr.) — BNL 
(Proper  Woman,  A — abr.) — CEL 
(True  Beauty[,  The]— aftr.)- BFV— FTA— PGT  1 
—YBF 
Unfading  Evergreen,  The. — Anon. — AD 
Unfailing  Cruise,  The.— Eliz.  Charles.— HDL 
(Cruse  that  Faileth  not.  The.)— SSS 
("Is  thy  cruse  of  comfort  failing?" — sel/) — GG 
Unfaithful  Shepherdess,  The.— Anon.— PGT  1 

(Faithless  Shepherdess,  The.)— OB 
Unfaithfulness.— H.  E.  McBride.— CS  26 ' 
Unfaltering  Trust.— Ray  Palmer.— TAS 
Unfinished  Manuscript,  The.— Anon. — CS  25— SR  12 
Unfinished  Prayer,  The. — Anon. — HP 
(Abr.)- MYF— SR7 
(Included,  also,  in  Now  I  Lay  Me  in  CS  5) 
Unfinished  Prophecy,  An.— C:  E.  Jakeway.— TCV 
Unfinished  Still.— Anon.— CS  12— HP— SR  1 
Unfolding    the    Flocks.— J:    Fletcher.     See    Faithful 

Shepherdess,  The. 
Unfortunate  Likeness,  An. — W:  S.  Gilbert. — CS  7 
Unfortunate  Phrase,  An.— F.  S.— CG  2 
Unfortunate  Scholar,  The. — Anon. — FDY 
Unfulfilment.— F.  L.  Bushnell.— AA 
Ungrateful  Beauty. — T:  Carew.     See  following. 
Ungrateful  Beauty. — T:  Carew.— ES 

(Ingrateful  Beauty  Threatened — C.) — OB 
Ungrateful  Cupid,  The.     (Ode    III.) — Anacreon    (Ir. 
6?/J:Hughes).— CGd 
(Cheat  of  Cupid,  The — tr.  by  Rob't    Herrick.)  — 
HBP 
Unguarded  Gates. — T:  B.  Aldrich. — A  A 
Unhappy  Lot  of  Mr.  Knott,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  New  House, 

'The.)- Jas.  R.  Lowell.— A WH 
"Unillumined  Verge,  The." — Rob't  Bridges. — AA 
Uninscribed  Monument  on  One  of  the  Battle-fields  of 
the  Wilderness,  An. — Herman  Melville. — AA — 
EDY 
Union,  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Brother  Jona- 
than's Lament  for  Sister  Caroline. 
Union,  The.— Fs.  DeH.  Janvier.— BS  4 
Union,  A. — Kathe.  E.  Junkermann. — WR  25 
Union,  The,  Sel.   fr.    1799.  (Irish  Parliament,  The.)— 

W:  Conyngham,  Lord  Plunket. — CR 
Union  and  its  (jovernment.  The. — W:  G.  Simms. — SS 
Union  and  Liberty.— Oliver  W.  Holmes.—  CS  2  —  SO 

— WCLG  2 
Union  Forever,  The.     (Tab.) — Anon.— BS  13— TCP 
Union  Linked  with  Liberty. — Andrew  Jackson. — CS  7 

— SS 
Union  of  Blue  and  Gray. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — PRR 


354 


TITLE  INDEX 


Upon 


Union  of  Church  and    State,    The. — Gabriel    Honors 

de  Mirabeau. — PS 
Union  of  North  and  South,  The. — Frances  E.  Willard. 

— WR  18 
Union  of  the  States,  The. — Edmund  Randolph. — SR  8 
(Extent  of  Country  no  Bar  to  Union — ptly.  same.) 

— SS 
Union  of  the  States,  The. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Char- 
acter of  Washington,  The. 
Union  with     Great     Britain.     {Sel,     fr.     Anti-Union 

Speeches.) — H:  Grattan. — OM 
Unit,  A.— Eliz.  Stoddard.— BS  19 
United.— Helen  F.  O'Neill.— AD 
United  at  Last. — H.  E.  McBride. — MCD 
United  at  Last.     {Springfield  Republican.) — CS  20 
(Blue  and  Gray.)— CPL 
(Two  Colors.)— TMR 
United  Country,  A.— G:  F.  Hoar.— TMD 
United  in  Death. — Anon. — SO 

(Foes  United  in  Death.)— CS  3— KNE— SR  12 
United  Order  of  Half-shells,  The.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) 

— DCR 
(Initiated  as  a  Member  of  the  United  Order,  etc.) — 

BDD 
United  States.     (In    Lyra    Apostolica.) — J:    Keble. — 

WEP4 
"United  States,"  and  "Macedonian,"  The.    (I.) — Anon. 

— AWB 
"United    States"    and  "Macedonian,"    The.     (II.) — 

Anon.— AWB— EDY 
United  States  National  Anthem. — W:  R.  Wallace. — 

CS2 
(Psalm  of  the   Union,  A — longer  and  si.  diff.  vers.) 

— WRD 
United  States  of  Europe,  The.   (Fr.  Addresses  at  the 
-"■Ij  Peace  Congress,  1849.) — Victor    Hugo. — SS — 

SSD 
United  Workmen,  The. — Anon. — YFD 
Unity  of  the  Catholic  Church,  The. — J:  Dryden.     iSee 

Hind  and  the  Panther,  The. 
Universal  Education.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Hundredth  Anni- 

versarv  of  the  Surrender  of  Lord  Cornwallis.) 

— Rob't  C.  Winthrop.— FD  1— SR  5 
Universal  Hymn  of  Nature,  The. — Jas.  Thomson.     See 

Seasons,  The. 
Universal  Prayer,  The. — Alex.  Pope. —  BNL  —  CS  33 

— FEP— HBP— LLC— OS  3 
Universal  Religious  Liberty. — Dan'l  O'Connell. — SS 
Universal  Suffrage,  May  20th,  1850. — Victor  Hugo. — 

SS 
Universal  Worship. — J:  Pierpont. — TAS 
University  and  True  Patriotism,  The. — Anon. — CP 
University  of  Gottingen,  The.— ^:  Canning. — MHR — 

OS  2  ■     .,     ■         ■-•:->  •     -■ 

(Song  by  Rogero[,  the  Captive].)— ESs— FEP 
(Song  of  One  Eleven  Years  in  Prison.) — HBP — 

THP 
(Song  Sung  by  Rogero,  etc.) — HPE 
University  the  Training  Camp  of  the  Future,  The. — 

H:  W.  Grady.     See  Against  Centralization. 
Unjust  National  Acquisition.     (SI.  diff.) — T:   Corwin. 
— CS  1— WRD 
(Danger  of  the  Spirit  of  Conquest.) — OM 
(Spirit  of  Conquest,  The.)— NC 
Unjust  Suspicion.     (Dial.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. — 

YFE 
Unkind  Words. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — OH 

(Our  Own— C-l  —  BIL  —  BS  4  (at.  to  S.  H.  T.)— 
CS  13— FTA— HP— LLC— TAV 
Unkinde  Guest,  The. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella. 
Unknown.— W:  H.  Gardner.— SSS 
Unknown  Country,  The. — Dinah  M.  Craik. — HSS  3 
Unknown  Eros,  The,  Sels.  fr. — Coventry  Patmore.  See: 
Farewell,  A. 
Magna  est  Veritas. 
Toys,  The. 
Two  Deserts,  The. 
Unknown  Hero,  An. — E.  L.  Bogart. — TMR 
Unknown  Hero,  An. — W:  G.  McCabe. — BAB 
Unknown   Poets. — W:   Wordsworth.     See   Excursion. 

The. 
Unknown  Rider,  The  [or  An]. — G:  Lippard.     See  Bene- 
dict Arnold. 
Unknown    Speaker,  The.  —  G:  Lippard.     See  Fourth 

of  July,  1776,  The. 
Unless.     Eliz.    B.    Browning.     See    Woman's    Short- 
comings, A. 
Unless.— Ella  D.  Glynes.— AA 
Unlocked.— W:  C.  Fitch.— CG  1 
Unmanifest  Destiny. — R :  Hovey. — AA 
Unnoticed  and  Unhonored  Heroes. — W:  E.  Channins. 
'       — BS  9 


Unnoticed  Bound,  The. — Anon. — CS  14 

Unofficial.— E.  Nesbit.— WR  13 

Unpaid  Seamstress,  The. — A  Note  of  Warning. — Anon. 

— CS  14— DS 
Unpardonable  Sin,  The. — Anon. — CS  29 
Unp raised  Picture,  An.— R:  Burton. — AA 
Unquiet  Grave,  The. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Unregistered  Record,  An. — W.  C.  Cherry. — BS  21 
Unrequited     Love. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    Twelfth 

Night. 
Unrest.— H :  S.  CornweU.- TAV 
Unrest  in  Paradise. — Anon. — WR  16 
Unreturning. — Eliz.  Stoddard. — AA 
Unreturning  Brave,   The. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Unreturning  Brave,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Ode 

Recited  at  the  Harvard  Commemoration. 
Unsatisfactory.— Frd'k  W.  H.  Myers.— BNL— FLS 
Unseen.— C :  G.  Ames.— TAS 
Unseen  Angel,  An. — Nancy  P.  McLean. — CS  31 
Unseen  Battle-field,  The.— Anon.— SSS 
Unseen  Depths,  The.— W.  C.  Langdon,  Jr. — CG  1 
Unseen,  not  Unknown. — Ray  Palmer. — "TAS 
Unseen  Playmate,  The. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Unseen    Spirits.— Nathaniel    P.  Willis.— AA— BNL— 

FP 
Unseen  World — at  Home,  The. — Christina  G.  Roesetti. 
-—FEP 
(At  Home.— O— VA 
Unseen  yet  Unseen. — Anon. — WR  6 
Unselfishness  of  Washington,  The. — Rob't  T.  Paine. — 

BLP— PEO 
Unsophisticated. — Emile  Pickhardt. — CS  34 
Unspoken. — Anon. — CS  26 
Unspoken. — A.  St.  John  Adcock. — FLS 
Unspoken  Question,  The. — Anon. — FLS 
Unspoken  Words. — Anon. — HP 
Unsuccessful  Advance,  An. — Anon. — MND 
Unsuccessful  Attempt   to   Raise   the   Wind,   An. — C: 

Dickens.     See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 
Unsuccessful  Plan,  The. — Anon.— WR  15 

(Country  Squire,  The — shorter   and  diff.  vers.)  — 

MHR 
Unsuspected  Fact,  An. — E:  Cannon. — BVC — NA 
Untamed.— C:  Mair.—TCV 
Unter  den  Linden. — Emma  H.  Nason. — SC 
Unter  den  Linden. — Harry  T.  Peck. — EDY 
Until  Death.— Anon.— FLS 
Untimely  Call,  An.     (N.  Y.  Swn. )—SR  4 
Untimely  Thought,  An.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— PYO 
Untimely  Trumpet,  The.     (^Harper's  Monthly.) — SDR 
Unto  the  Least  of  These  Little  Ones. — Am^lie  Rives. 

—TAS 
Unto  the  Perfect  Day.— Willis  B.  Allen.— TAS 
Unto  Thee. — Horatius  Bonar. — SSS 
Unwelcome  Guest,  The. — H.  E.  McBride. — StD 
Unwelcome  Intrusion,  An. — Anon. — DCD 
Unwilling  Muse,  The.— Guy  W.  Carry].- CG  2 
Unwilling  Witness,  The. — Anon.— FHE 
Unwise  (5hoice,  The. — Alice  Cary. — BIL 
Unwritten  Music,  Sel.  fr. — Nathaniel  P.  Willis. — AE 
Unwritten  Poems.— Anon.— CS  24— SR  5 
Unwritten  Poems. — W:  Winter. — AA 
Up  Above   and    Down   Below. — W:   A.    Alexander. — 

PPSr 
Up  and  Doing. — Lucy  S.  Ruggles. — TFS 
Up  at  a  Villa — Down  in  the  City. — Rob't  Browning. — 

WEP  4— WR  14  (si.  abr.) 
Up  Higher.— Jos.  B.  Smiley.— CS  31 
Up  in  a  Wild.— Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— POS 
Up  in  the  Loft.— Will  Carleton.— CS  37 
Up  in  the  Morning  Early. — Rob't  Bums. — LC 
Up  in  the  Tree. — G :  Macdonald.     See  At  the  Back  of 

the  North  Wind. 
"Up,  quit  thy  bower." — Joanna  Baillie.     See  Beacon, 

The. 
Up  Thar  Behind  the  Sky  I— J.  M.  Muayon.— CS  29 
Up  the  Nile,  Sel.  fr. — Joaquin  Miller.     See  Ship  in  the 

Desert,  The  (Dreamers). 
"Up!   Up!   My   friend,   and    quit   your   books." — W: 

Wordsworth. — -SN 
("Sweet  is  the  lore  which  nature  brings  " — br.  sel.) 

—HSS  3 
(Tables    Turned,    The— C.)— HBP— LLC— WEP  4 

— YBF 
Upas-tree,  The. — Lydia  H.  Sigoumey. — WR  18 
Uphill.— Christina  G.  Rossetti.— AVP— BNL— CEL— 

CS  17— FEP— GP— OB— PGT  2— PYO  —  VA 

—YBF 
Upon  a  Child.     (C.) — Rob't  Herrick. — ELP 

(Epitaph  upon  a  Child  that  Died.)— OB— YBF' 
Upon  a  Child  that  Died.     (C.)— Rob't  Herrick.— ELP 
(Epitaph  upon  a  Child  that  Died.) — OB 


355 


Upon 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Upon  a  Stolen  Kiss.— G:  Wither.— BNL 

(Stolen  Kiss,  A.)— FEP 
Upon  an  Honest  Man's  Fortune.     (C.) — J:  Fletcher. 
(Honest  Man's  Fortune,  An.) — EPs 
(Our  Acts  our  Angels  Are — br.  sel.) — OS  2 
Upon  being  Obliged ^o  Leave  a  Pleasant  Party  (Im- 
promptu: Upon  being  Obliged,  etc. — C). — THP 
(On  being  Obliged,  etc.)— HPE 
Upon  Combing  her  Hair. — E:  Herbert,  Lord  Herbert 

of  Cherbury.— WEP  2 
Upon  her  Feet. — Rob't  Herrick. — BNL 
Upon  her  Lips.     (Yale  Record.) — CG  3 
Upon  Himself.     (C.) — Rob't  Herrick. 

(Lines  upon  Himself.) — EDY 
Upon  Julia's  Clothes.     (C.)— Rob't  Herrick.— ELP— 
OB— OH— WEP  2 
(Poetry  of  Dress,  The,  XL)- PGT  1 
(Whenas  in  Silks.)— YBF 
("Whenas  in  silks  my  Julia  goes.") — BNL 
Upon  Master  W.  Montague,  his  Return  from  Travel, 
Sel.  fr.  (Airs  of  Spring,  The.)— T:  Carew.- FEP 
—HBP 
(Sweetly  Breathing,  Vernal  Air.) — BNL 
"Upon  my  lap  my  sovereign  sits." — R:    Rowlands. — 
PGTl 
(LuUaby[,  A].)— OB— YBF 
Upon  Pope's  Translation  of  Homer. — Anon. — HPE 
Upon  Sappho  [Sapho]  Sweetly  Playing  and   Sweetly 

Singing.— Rob't  Herrick. — ES 
Upon  the  Beach.— H :  D.  Thoreau.— GP 

(Fisher's  Boy,  The.)— AA 
Upon  the  Book  and  Picture  of  the  Seraphical  Saint 
Teresa. — R:  Crashaw. — OB  (si.  cdrr.) 
(Flaming  Heart,  The.)— ELP— WEP  2  (si.  abr.) 
Upon  the  Death  of  King  Charles  I. — Jas.,  Marquis  of 

Montrose.— EDY 
Upon  the  Death  of  Sir  Albert[us]  Morton's  Wife. —  Sir 

H:  Wotton.— FEP— OB— WEP  2 
Upon  the  Hill  before  Centreville. — G :  H.  Boker. — AWB 
Upon  the  Loss  of  his  Mistresses. — Rob't  Herrick. — ELP 
Upon  the  Shore. — Rob't  Bridges. — VA 
Upon  the  Sudden  Restraint  of  the  Earl  of  Somerset, 
then  Falling  from  Favor. — Sir  H:  Wotton. — 
FEP 
Upon  the  Threshold.— G.  E.— HP 

Upon  the  Weakness  and  Misery  of  Man.     {Set.  fr.  Sa- 
tire upon  the  Weakness  and  Misery  of  Man.) — 
S:  Butler.- WEP  2 
Upon  Westminster  BridgeF.  Sept.  3, 1802]. — W:  Words- 
worth.—OB— PGT  1— YBF 
(Composed  upon  Westminster  Bridge,  Sept.  3,  1802 

— O— WEP4 
("Earth  has  not  anything  to  show  more  fair.") — 

HBR 
(Morning  in  London.)— HBP— OS  3 
(Sonnet  Composed  upon  Westmister  Bridge,  1802.) 

— BNL— FEP— MBL 
(Westminster  Bridge.)— LLC— WR  1 
Upper  Chamber,  An. — Frances  Bannerman. — OB 
Upright  Man,  The.     (A  Book  of  Airs,  Pt.  I.,  XVIII.) 
— T:  Campion.— YBF 
(Integer  Vitse.)— OB 

(Man  of  Life  Upright,  The.)— ELP— OEL— PGT  1 
Uprising  See  the  Fitful  Lark. — Anon. — NA 
Upside  Down.— G:  Cooper.— HSS  2— TFS 
Upward  and  Onward. — Paul  H.  Hayne. — BS  17 

(Lyric  of  Action.)— BS  22 
Urania.     (C.) — Matthew  Arnold. 

(Excuse.)— HBP— OH 
Urania,  I.     (C.) — W:  Drummond. 
(Change.)— LLC 

(Sonnet:  "Triumphing  chariots,"  etc.) — HBP 
Urania. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See  Rhymed  Lesson,  A. 
Urceus  Exit. — Austin  Dobson.     See  Rose-leaves. 
Urchins'  Dance,  The.     (Song  fr.  The  Maydes  Meta- 
morphosis, Act  II.,  Sc.  2.)— J:  Lyly. — ELP 
(Song  of  the  Fairies.)— FEP 
Uriel.— Ralph  W.  Emerson.— OB 
Ursus  and   the   Aurochs. — Henryk  Sienkiewicz.     See 

Quo  Vadis. 
Urvasi. — Helen  B.  Bostwick. — BIL 
Us  Boys. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Us  Two.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
Use  and  Abuse  of   Property,  The. — Theodore   Roose- 
velt.—MRS— SR  13 
Use  and    Worth    of    Knowledge. — Fs.     Bacon.     See 

Worth  of  Knowledge,  The. 
Use  for  Boys,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Use  of  Arbor  Day,  The.     (Garden  and  Forest.) — AD 
Use  of  Flowers,  The.— Mary  Howitt.  —  AD— FEP— 
HSS  1— LLC— NV— PC— PHS— YBT  (si.  abr.) 
(A6r.)— BNL— PPSr 
(Uses  of  the  Flowers,  The— «eZ.)— TFS 


Use  Plain  Language. — Anon. — KNE 

Use  Precepts  for  Girls. — Anon. — CS  24 

Used-to-be,  The.— Jas.  W.  RUey.— BS  23 

Useful  Life,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Perseverance.) — Horatius 
Bonar.— HDL 

Useful  Little  Words.— Anon.— TFS 

Useful  Plough,  The.— Anon.—  BNL— BV(>-CGd— LC 

Useful  Possession,  A. — Anon. — DLF 

Uses  of  Adversitj',  The.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — 
BNL 

Uses  of  Astronomy,  The,  Sels.  fr. — E:  Everett. 

Eternal  Clockwork  of  the  Skies.     (Br.  se^.)— SPE 
Galileo  Galilei.— FD  1— OM  (si.  cond.) 

(Discoveries  of  Galileo— a6r.)—CS  1— DS— PTS 

— SM— WCLG  2 
(Galileo.)— OS  2  (sel.)— SO 
Sunrise. — SAE 

(Morning— seZ.)—BS  5— CS  16— CSS— SA 
(Wonders  of  the  Dawn,   The— si.   abr.)— PFS — 
TMD 

Uses  of  History,  The. — Washington  Irving.    See  Knick- 
erbocker History  of  New  York. 

Uses  of  Life,  The.— Anon.— SSS 

Uses  of  Poetry  and  Art.— J:  S.  Mill.— LLC 

Uses  of  the  Flowers. — Mary  Howitt.     See  Use  of  Flow- 
ers, The. 

Usual  Way,  The.— F:  E.   Weatherly.- BS  17  — HBR 
— THP— WR  15 

Usurper,  A. — Anon. — TL 

Ute  Lover,  The. — Hamlin  Garland. — AA 

Utility  of  Booing,  The.     (Fr.  The  Man  of  the  World.) 
— C:Macklin.— CR 

Utility  of  History. — Louis  Philippe,  Comte  de  Segur. — 
SS 

Utility  of  the  Beautiful,  The. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Mod- 
ern Painters. 

Utilizing  our  Failures. — Lyman  Abbott. — SAE 

Utmost,  The.— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton. — VA 

Utopia.— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 
(What  Will  We  Do?)— AWH 

Utterance. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA 


V 

Vacant  Cage,  The. — C:  Tennyson-Turner. — VA 
Vacant  Chair,  The.— Anon.— CS  22 
Vacant  Places.     (Friends'  Intelligencer.) — SSS 
Vacation. — (jlara  J.  Denton. — FTT 
Vacation. — Lizzie  M.  Hadley. — KC 
Vacation.— Z.  F.  Riley.— BS  20 
Vacation  Days. — Marg.  Sidney. — YBT 
Vacation  Fragment,  A. — Susan  Hall. — CS  29 
Vacation  Hymn,  A. — Anon. — CS  11 
Vacation  Song. — Katha.  L.  Bates. — POS 

(Schoolroom  I  Love  Best,  The.)— WR  17 
Vacation  Song. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Vacation  Time. — Anon. — DJS 
Vagabond  Song,  A. — Bliss  Carman. — GN 
Vagabonds,  The. — E.  P.  Johnson. — VA 
Vagabonds,  The.— J:  A.  Macy.— CG  3 
Vagabonds,  The.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.  —  AA— AE  (sel.) 

—  BNL  —  BS  3  —  CR  —  CS  1  —  FEP— FTR 

— HNS— MMR— SA— SC— WRD 
Vagabonds.     (Wesleyan  Literary  Monthly.) — CG  3 
Vagrant,  A. — Josephine  Pollard. — HP 
Vagrant  Pansies. — Ellen  M.  H.  Cortissoz. — PHS 
Vain  Desire,  A. — Theodore  Wratislaw. — VA 
Vain  Wish,  A.— Philip  B.  Marston.— VA 
Vale!— Anon.— FLS 
Vale.     (Written  on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide — C.) — R: 

Realf.— GP 
("When  for  me  the  end  has  come,"  etc. — br.  sel.) — 

GG 
Vale  of  Avoca,  The.— T:  Moore.- BNL 

(Meeting  of  the  Waters,  The— C.)— FEP 
Vale  of  Cashmere,  The. — T:  Moore.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Vale  of  Estabelle.— J:  S.  Thomson.— TCV 
Valediction    Forbidding   Mourning,    A. — J:    Donne. — 

BNL  («ei.)— ELP— FEP— WEP  1 
Valedictory. — Anon. — DLF 
Valedictory. — Anon. — ^MCS 
Valedictory,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Valedictory. — Adam  L.  Gordon. — VA 

(Lay  me  Low.) — HP 
Valedictory.  (2) — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
Valedictory. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KJ 
Valedictoryr,  A].— A.    F.    Shoals.- DLS— LPS— NPS 

— PP— YP 
Valedictory.— G:  Thatcher.— TK 
Valedictory  Address  to  the  Senate.     (Sel.) — H:  Clay. 

—MRS 


356 


TITLE  INDEX 


Verdict 


Valedictory  for  a  Small  Boy. — Anon. — DST — KJ 
Valedictory  Sonnet  to  the  River  Duddon. — W :  Words- 
worth.— OB 
(After-thought— C.)—WEP  4 
Valentine,  A. — -Anon. — CG  1 
Valentine,  The.     (Z>ioZ.)— Anon.— FHE 
Valentine,  A. — Anon. — PPh 
Valentine,  The.— Mary  D.  Brine.— CS  4 
Valentine,  A. — Eugene  Field. — LS 
Valentine,  A. — Jeannette  B.  Gillespy. — AA — CG  3 
Valentine,  A.— R.  M.  Green.— CG  3 
Valentine,  A.— Ethel  Hobart.— CG  3 
Valentine,  A.— H.  W.  Holmes.— CG  3 
Valentine,  A.— S.  J.  McM.— CG  3 
Valentine,  A.— Mary  T.  Reiley.— FLS 
Valentine,  A. — Laura  E.  Richards. — AA 
Valentine,  A. — Frank  D.  Sherman.— EDY 
Valentine,  A.— G:  R.  Sims.— BR  (si.  abr.)—CS  26 
Valentine  to  a  Flirt. — Felix  Carmen. — TL 
Valentine  to  a  Man  of  Worth. — E:  A.  Church. — HS 
Valentine  Verses.     (Verses  fr.  Billington's  Valentine.) 

—T:  N.Page.— EDY 
Valentine's  Day.— C:  Lamb. — HS 
Valentinian,  Sels.  fr. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 

Care-charming  Sleep.     (Song  fr.  Act  V.,  Sc.  2.) — 

YBF 
(Invocation  to  Sleep.)— ELP—OEL—WEP  2 
(Slumber-song.) — CEL 
(Song  from  "Valentinian.") — FEP 
God  LyiBus.     (Song  fr.  V.,  8.)— OB 

(Song  to  Bacchus.)— ELP—WEP  2 
Spring-time   and   Love.     (Song  and  2nd    song  fr. 

II.,5.)— ES 
Love's  Emblems.     (1st  song.) — ELP — OB 

(Spring. )— HBP— YBF 
Hear,  ye  Ladies.     (2nd  Song.)— OB~YBF 

(Power  of  Love.)— FEP 

(Song  from  "Valentinian.")— WEP  2 
Valentinian  (ad.  of  Fletcher's),  Sel.   fr.     (Song:  "In- 
jurious charmer,"   etc.) — J:  Wilmot,   Earl  of 

Rochester.— WEP  2 
Valley  Brook,  The.— J:  H.  Bryant.— BNL 
Valley  Forge. — H:  A.  Brown.     See  Centennial  Address 

Delivered  at  Valley  Forge,  June  19,  1878. 
Valley  of  Shanganagh,  The.— J:  Martley.- TIP 
Valley  of  the  Loire,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— APr 
Valley  of  Unrest,  The.— Edgar  A.  Poe.— ASL— BPB— 

YBF 
Valse  Jeune. — Louise  I.  Guiney. — AA 
Value  of  Amusements.— Anon. — KNE 
Value  of  Character.— D:  W.  Wood.— FAS 
Value  of  Education,  The.     (Boston  Transcript.) — CS  35 
Value  of  Literature,  The. — Hamilton  W.  Mabie. — BS|24 
Value  of  Literature  to  the  Union. — Rufus  Choate. — 

FDl 
Value  of  Little  Things,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Value  of   Reputation.— C:   Phillips.— BS   23— CS   5— 

FTR— KNE 
Value  of    Science.     (Sel.    fr.    Address,    1S79.) — Peter 

Cooper.— FS 
Value  of  the  Union,  1847,  The.— S.  S.  Prentiss.— PS 
Van  Artevelde  to  the  Men  of  Ghent. — SirH:  Taylor. 

See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Van   Artevelde's   Defence  of   his    Rebellion. — Sir   H: 

Taylor.     <See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Van  Bibber's  Rock. — Emma  D.  "Banks. — -BR 
Van  den  Bosch  and  Artevelde. — H:  Taylor.    See  Philip 

van  Artevelde. 
Vane  on  the  Spire,  The.— B:  F.  Taylor.— BS  17 
Van  Elsen.— Frd'k  G.  Scott.— TCV—VA 
Vanessa.— Howell  L.  Finer. — WR  23 
Vanished. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA — TAS 
Vanished  Village,  A.— R:  Wilton.— PGT  2 
Vanishers,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— AA 
Vanishings.— W:  T.  Allison.— TCV 
Vanitas  Vanitatum. — W:  M.  Thackeray. — HBP 
Vanitas  Vanitatum.     (Fr.  The  Devil's  Law-case.) — J: 

Webster.— ELP— OB— YBF 
Vanity.— Alice  Cary.— BNL  (at.  to  H.  P.  Spofford)  — 

BS15 
Vanity  Fair. — Anon. — TL 
Vanity  Fair,  Sels.  fr. — W:  M.  Thackeray. 

How  to  Live  Well  upon  Nothing  a  Year.     (Sel.  fr. 

Ch.  XXXVII.)— VSG 
Miss  Pinkerton's  Academy  for  Young  Ladies.  (Sel. 

fr.  Ch.  I.)— WR  1 
Rose  upon  my  Balcony,  The.     (Verses  fr.  Ch.  LI.) 

— LC— OS  1 
Vanity  of  Human  Wishes,  The. — S:  Johnson. — ESs — 

FEP— HBP 
Charles  XII.     (Sel.)— B^h 

(Charles  XII.  of  Sweden.)— EDY— GP 
(Fate  of  Charles  the  Twelfth.)— SS 


Vanity  of  Human  Wishes,  The  (continued). 

Rise  and  Fall  of  Wolsey,  The.     (Sel.)— WEP  3 
True  Objects  of  Desire,  The.     (Sel.)— WEF  3 
(Wise  Man's  Prayer,  The— sL  abr.) — SS 
Vanity  of  the  Beautiful,  The. — G :  Gascoigne. — BNL 
Vanity  of  the  World,  The.— Fs.  Quarles.— BNL— FEP 
"Vanity  of  Vanities." — I.  E.  Jones. — CS  33 
Vanity  Vanquished.     (Dramatic.) — H.  E.  McBride. — 

CS6 
Vanquished.— Fs.  F.  Browne.— AA— EDY— HP 
Vaquero. — Joaquin  Miller. — AA 
Varied  Misery.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Varium  et  Mutabile. — J.  P.  Sawyer. — CG  2 
"Varuna,"  The.— G:  H.  Boker.— AWB— EDY 
Varying  Impressions  from  Nature. — W:  Wordsworth. 

See  Lines  Composed  a  few  Miles  above  Tintern 

Abbey. 
Vas  Bender  Henspecked. — Acland  Von  Boyle. — BDD 

— CRR— CS  14— DFY— FAS 
"Vas  Marriage  a  Failure?" — C:  F.  Adams. — AWH — 

CS  29— DSS 
V-A-S-E,  The.— Jas.  J.  Roche.— BNL— BS  13— HBR 

— SR  4— THP 
Vashti.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.— BS  8— CS  20 
Vastness. — Alfred  Tennyson. — VA 
Vat  Have  I  Got  to  Pay?- W.  H.  Freeman.— CS  6 
Vat   You  Please.— Jas.   R.   Planch^.— DDR— DFY— 

MDD— THP 
(Cond.  and    si.  diff.  vers. — at.  to  W:  B.  Fowle.) — 

CS  2— SR  3 
Vaudois  Missionary,  The.— J :  G.  Whittier.  See  following. 
Vaudois  Teacher,  The.     (C.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— CS  14 

— YBT 
(Vaudois  Missionary,  The.) — BS  5  v 

Vay  Rube  Hoffenstein  Sells,  The.— Anon.— DRR  f 

(Teaching  him  the  Business.)— BDD— CS  23 
Veery,  The.— H:  Van  Dyke.— AA— ASL 
Veery-thrush,  The.— Jos.  R.  Taylor. — AA 
Vegetable  Convention,  A. — G:  W.  Bungay. — CS  12 
Veiled  Picture,  The.— Anon.— CS  12— CSS— MMR 
Veiled  Presence,  The.— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
Veiled  Priestess,  The.     (DioZ.)— Laura  U.  Case.— CS  8 
Veiled  Statue  at  Sais,  The. — Friedrich  Schiller  (tr.  by 

Theodore  Martin).— BS  19 
Velvet  Coat  of  the  Last  Century,  A. — -Anon. — CS  31 
Venality    the    Ruin    of    Greece. — Demosthenes.     See 

Philippics. 
Venetian  Pastoral,  A.     (For  a  Venetian  Pastoral — C.) 

— Dante  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Venetian  Serenade,  The.— R:  M.  Milnes,  Lord  Hough- 
ton.—VS 
Venetian  Song.     (Song  fr.  Volpone;  or,  The  Fox,  Act 

III.,  Sc.  5.)— Ben  Jonson.— ES— WEP  2  ' 
Venezuela  Question,  The. — H:  C.  Lodge. — NC 
Vengeance    of    Bacchus,    The. — T:    L.    Peacock.     See 

Rhododaphne. 
Vengeance  of  the  Flag,  The. — H :  D.  Esterbrooke. — NC 
Veni  Creator  [Spiritus]. — (In  Latin,  also  paraphrased 

by)    J:    Dryden.—  BNL  —  FEP  —  HBP  — 

WEP  2 
(Shorter  f.araphrase — Anon.) — FEP 

(Original  Latin  vers.  at.  to  St.  Ambrose,  to  St. 

Gregory,  and  io  Charlemagne.) 
Veni  Sancte  Spiritus. — Rob't  II.  of  France. — (In Latin, 

also  tr.  by)  Catharine  Winkworth. — -BNL 
Venice. — Lord  Byron.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Venice.     (Sel.  fr.  To  the  Lion  of  St.  Mark.) — Joaquin 

Miller.— OS  3 
Venice.     (In  Italy.)— S:  Rogers. — BNL  (cond.) 
Venice.— Alan  Sullivan.— TCV 
Venice. — J:  A.  Syrnonds. — VA 
Venice. — W:  Wordsworth. ^LH 

(On  the  Extinction  of  the  Venetian  Republic  — C.) 

—FEP— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
Venice   of   the   Aztecs,    The. — W:    H.    Prescott.     See 

History  of  the  Conquest  of  Mexico. 
Venice  Preserved,  Sels.  fr. — T:  Otway. 

Jaffier  Parting  with  Belvidera.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act  V., 

Sc.  2.)— BNL 
Priuli  and  Jaffier.     (Sel.  fr.  L,  1.)— SS 
Venice  Preserved,  Br.  sel.  fr.     (Fr.  I.,  1.)- — BNL 
Ventriloquist   on   a   Stage-coach,   A. — H:   Cockton. — 

CS  12— MHR 
Venturesome  Buds,  The.— A.  C— NV 
Venus  and  Adonis,  Sel.  fr. — W:  Shakespeare. — WEP  1 
Venus  of  the  Louvre. — Emma  Lazarus. — AA 
Venus  of  the  Needle.— W:  AUingham.— HPE 
Venus'  Runaway.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Hue  and  Cry  after 

Cupid.)— Ben  Jonson.— YBF 
Veny  Raynor's  Bear  Story. — W:  P.  (?)  Hawes. — MDD 
Vera  Victoria. — H.  M.  Soper.— SR  2 
Verbatim  from  Boileau,  Sel.  fr. — Alex.  Pope. — BNL 
Verdict,  The.— Mrs.  J.  P.  Ballard.— WR  18 


357 


Verlaine 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Verlaine. — Bliss  Carman. — EDY 

Vermont,     Sel.   fr.    (Hills   were  Made   for   Freedom, 

The.)— W:  G.  Brown.— GP 
Vernal  Solace.— W:  H.  Hayne.— FHS 
Vernal  Tree,  A.     (Ent.)— Anon. — EuE 
Veronica.— Dinah  M.  Craik.- WR  1 
Verres    Denounced.     XSels.    fr.    First  Oration  against 

Verres,  Sec.   T.,  and  fr.  Sixth  Oration  against 

Verres,  Sees.  LXI.-LIII.)— Cicero.— CS  4  — 

KNE— PS— SS 
(Against  Caius  Verres — longer.) — SR  8 
(Cicero  against  Verres — ptly.  same  sel.  fr.  LVIH., 
LXI.-LXIII.)— OM 
Vers  Nonsensiques.    {In  French.) — G :  du  Maurier. — NA 
Versailles. — Stopf  ord  A.  Brooke. — VA 
Verse:  "Westward  the  star  of  empire." — G:  Berkeley. 

See  Westward  the  Course  of  Empire. 
Verse:     "He  swore  he  loved  her."     {Cornell  Widow.) — 

CG3 
Verse:     "A  Melancholy  Prussian,"  etc. — O.  L. — CG  3 
Verse:     "Happy,  O  so  Happy."     {Mount  Holyoke.) — 

CG3 
Verse:     "Past  ruin'd  Ilion  Helen  lives." — Walter  S. 

Landor. — OB 
Verses:     "Heart  hunger  is  for,"  etc. — Edwin  F.  Pifer. 

— CG3 
Verses:     "O  fairl  O  sweet!  when  I  do  look."     (C. — fr. 

Pansies    from     Penshurst  and     Wilton.) — Sir 

Philip  Sidney. 
(Heart  and  Soul.)— OEL 
Verses:     "What   must   be,   must   be,"   etc. — Forsyth 

Wickes.— CG  2 
Verses  Found  in  his  Bible  in  the  Gate-house  at  West- 
minster.    (C.)— Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— WEP  1 
Conclusion,  The.— OB 
Death  of  Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— EDY 
Even  Such  is  Time.— EHT— ELP 
Last  Lines. — CEL 
Lines  Found  in  his  Bible. — BNL 
Lines  Written  the  Night  before  his  Execution. — 

FEP— YBF 
Verses  from  the  Shepherd's  Hymn. — R:  Crashaw.    See 

Hymn  of  the  Nativity,  A. 
Verses  in  Praise  of  Angling.— Sir  H:  Wotton. — FEP — 

HBP 
(Description  of  the  Country's  Recreations,  A.) — EP 
(In  Praise  of  Angling.) — BNL 
Verses  on   Seeing  the   Speaker  Asleep   in   his  Chair. 

(Stanzas  on  Seeing  the  Speaker  Asleep. — C.) — 

Winthrop  M.  Praed.— AVP 
Verses  on  the   Death  of   Dr.  Swift  (On  the   Death  of 

Dr.   Swift — C),  Sel.    fr. — Jonathan    Swift.— 
■    WEP  3 
Verses  Spoken  on  the  same  Occasion  with  the  Preced- 
ing [at  the  Breaking  up  of  the  Free  Grammar 

School  in  Manchester^  Sel  fr.   (Spectacles;  or. 

Helps  to  Read.)— J:  Byrom.— SCS 
Verses,  Supposed  to  be  Written  by  Alexander  Selkirk. 

(O— W:  Cowper.—  BNL  —  CGd  —  FEP  — 

HBP— MBL— WCLG  2 
(Alexander  Selkirk.)- OS  2 
(Solitude  of  Alexander  Selkirk,  The.)— BPB  {sel.)— 

PGT  1— PSR 
Verses  to  a  Robin  Red-breast  who  Visits  the  Window 

of  my  Prison  every  Day,  Sel.  fr.  (Prisoner   to 

a  Robin  who  Came  to  his  Window,  The.) — Jas. 

Montgomery. — PC  {w.  add.  st.) 
Verses  to  Her  Royal  Highness  the  Duchess. — J :  Dryden. 

—WEP  2 
Verses  to  Sir  Henry  Wootton,  Sel.  fr.     {Fr.  Letters  to 

Several  Personages:     To  Sir  Henry  Wootton.) 

—J:  Donne.— WEP  1 
Verses  to  the  Poet  Crabbe's   Inkstand,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (To 

Campbell.)— T:  Moore.— BNL— EPs 
Verses  upon  his  Divine  Poesy. — Edmund  Waller.     See 

On  the  Foregoing  Divine  Poems. 
Verses  Why  Burnt. — Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 
Verses  Written  in  an  Album.     (Written  in  the  Blank 

Leaf  of  a  Lady's  Commonplace  Book. — C.) — 

T:  Moore.— BNL 
Vertue. — G:  Herbert.     See  Virtue. 
Very  Bad  Case,  A.— F.  H.  Stauffer.— DES 
Very  Bashful.     {Dial.)— Anon.— FHE 
Very  Dark. — Anon. — CS  3 
Very  Far  Away. — W:  Alexander. — TIP 
Very  Humane. — Malcolm  Douglas. — FAS 
Very  Little  Boy,  A.— Anon.— WR  17 
Very  Little  Ones  are  We. — Anon. — SD 
Very  Moiu-nful  Ballad  on  the  Siege  and  Conquest  of 

Alhama.    A.     {C.)—{Tr.  by)    Lord    Byron.- 

FEP— HBP 
(Alhama.) — LH 
(Siege  and  Conquest  of  Alhama — Sel.) — EPs 


Very  Much  Astonished.     {Dial.) — Anon. — DSS 

Very  Provoking. — Marg.  Eytinge. — SR  7 

Vesper  Bell,  The.— Eugene  Davis.- WR  6 

Vesper  Hymn. — S :  Longfellow. — TAS 

Vesper  Hymn. — Eliza  Scudder. — TAS 

Vesper  Sparrow,  The.— Edith  M.  Thomas. — SN 

Vespers.— Charlotte  M.  Packard.— TAS 

Vespers  of  Palermo,  The,     Sel.  fr.  (Raimond  Released 

— Act  v.,  Sc.  3,  abr.) — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — 

NDP 
Vesta.— J:  G.  Whittier.— OB 
Vestal  Virgins;  Drill. — Anon. — WDM 
Vestis  Angelica. — T:  W.  Higginson. — TAS 
Vesuvius  and  the  Egyptian. — E:  Bulwer-Lytton.    <Se« 

Last  Days  of  Pompeii,  The. 
Veteran,  A. — Minna  Irving. — WR  24 
Veteran,  A.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  34 
Veteran  and  Recruit. — E:  W.  Hazewell. — HBP 
Veterans,  The.— W:  T.  Sherman.— PS 
(Sherman  on  the  Veterans.) — DFR 
Via  Amoris. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and 

Stella. 
Vicar,  The.     (Every-day  Characters,  I.) — Winthrop  M. 

Praed.  —  FEP— HBP— HPE— THP— VA  — 

WEP  4 
Vicar  of  Bray,  The.— Anon.  —  BNL— FEP— HBP— 

OS  3 
Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The,  Sels.  /r.— Oliver  Goldsmith. 
Elegy  on  the  Death  of  a  Mad  Dog.     ( Verses  fr.  Ch. 

XVII.)  —  BNL  —  BPB  —  BVC  —  CGd  — 

CSS  —  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  —  HBP  —  NA  — 

OM— OS  1— PEB  3— PHS— PPSr- THP 
(Death  of  a  Mad  Dog.)— FTR 
Hermit,  The[;  or,  Edwin  and  Angelina].  (Ballad,  A 

—C.—fr.  Ch.  VII.— w.  add.  «<.)— BNL— FEP 

—HBP— PEB  3 
(Edwin  and  Angelina.)— FTR 
Innocence  Rewarded.    {Dial.  arr.  fr.  Chs.  XXVIII., 

XXX    XXXI  ) NDP 

On  Woman.     {Sorig  fr.  Ch.  XXIV.)— BNL— YBF 
(Stanzas  on  Woman.)— FEP— WEP  3 
("When  lovely  woman  stoops  to  folly.") — PGT  1 
(Woman.)— OB 
Vicar's  Sermon,  The. — C:  Mackay. — SM  {abr.) 
(Be  as  Thorough  as  You  Can.)— BS  10 
(Bit  of  a  Sermon,  A— abr.)- YBT 
Vice  of  Intemperance,  The.  {Sel.  fr.  Temperance.) — E: 

Everett. — WR  18 
Vice  Versa.      {Play.) — Mrs.    E.    J.    H.   Goodfellow. — 

EE 
Vicksburg.— Paul  H.  Hayne.— AA—WR  10 
Victim,  The.— Anon. — LLC 

Victim,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— CS  12— OS  2— SO 
Victim  of  Charity,  A. — Anon. — CH 
Victim  of  Reform,  The.     {Blackwood's  Mag.) — SS 
Victim  to  One  Hundred  and  Seven  Fatal  Maladies,  A. 

— Jerbme  K.  Jerome.     See  Three    Men    in  a 

Boat. 
Victims  and  Victimizers.     {Sel.) — Dinah  M.  Craik. — 

FMR 
Victor,  The.— Anon.— DLF 

Victor  and  Vanquished.— Harry  T.  Peck.— CS  36 
Victor  Hugo.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Statue  of  Victor  Hugo.) — 

Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — EDY 
Victor  of   Marengo,   The.— Anon.— BS  14— CR— SC— 

SR6 
(Abr.)— NC—TMD 
Victoria. — Alfred  Austin. — TMR 
Victoria  Grey. — Eugene  J.  Hall. — WR  16 
Victories  of  Peace,  The. — C:  Sumner.     See  True  Gran- 
deur of  Nations,  The. 
Victorious  Men  of  Earth.     {Ode  fr.  Cupid  and  Death.) 

—Jas.  Shirley.— HBP 
(Last  Conqueror,  The.)— FEP— PGT  1— YBF 
(Might  of  Death,  The.)— WEP  2 
Victory  Deferred.     {Dial.)— J.  W.  Scott.— MD 
Victory  for  the  Dentist. — Anon. — WR  20 
Victory  of  Hector,  The. — Homer.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Victory  of  Perry,  The.— Alice  Cary.— CS  19 
Victory  of  the  "Bonhomme  Richard"  over  the  "Sera- 
pis." — Philip  Freneau. — EDY 
Victuals  and  Drink. — Anon. — MCS 
Victuals  and  Drink.     {In    Mother    Goose    for    Grown 

Folks.)— Mrs.  A.  D.  T.  Whitney.— BeR—BS  17 

— MHR 
View  across  the  Roman  Campagna,  A. — Eliz.  B.  Brown- 
ing.—BNL 
View  from  Fox  How,  The.     (Poems  of  the  Imagma- 

tion,  Misc.  Sons.,  XLII.)— W:  Wordsworth.— 

AVP 
(Past  Years  of  Home.)— WEP  4 
View  from  Lookout  Mountian,  The. — E:  L.  Pierce. — 

FD2 


358 


TITLE  INDEX 


Vision 


View  from  the  Euganean  Hills,  North  Italy.     (Lines 

Written    among    the    Euganean    Hills — C.) — 

Percy  B.  Shelley.— BNL  (abr.) 
(Written  among  the  Euganean  Hills — abr.) — PGT  1 
View  of  London  from  Cooper's  Hill. — Sir  J:  Denham. 

See  Cooper's  Hill. 
Views  of  Farmer  Brown.— Kathe.  H.  Terry. — CS  30 
Vigil,  The.     (London  Pu7ich.)—EDY 
Vigil  Strange  I  Kept  on  the  Field  [one  Night — C.]. — 

Walt  Whitman.— HBP 
Vigilants,  The.— L  E.  Jones.— CS  26 
Vigor  of  Democratic  Governments.   (Sel.  fr.  Mr.  Grey''s 

Motion  for  a  Reform  in  Parliament.) — C:  J. 

Fox.— SS 
Village,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Village  as  it  is.  The  —  sel.  fr. 

Bk.  I.)— G:  Crabbe.— WEP  3 
Village  as  it  is.  The. — G :  Crabbe.     See  foregoing. 
Village  Bell,  The.— Anon.— CS  17 
Village  Blacksmith,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow. — AA — 

BFV— BNL— BPB— BS  7  — FEP— QMS— LC 

— PPSr— WCLI  2 
(SI.  abr.)- AS L— HBP 
Village  Choir,  The.     (Tab.)— Anon.— BS  10 
Village  Coquettes,  The,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Dickens. 
Merry  Autumn  Days. — WR  17 

(Round— O—'fMR 
Song  (Lucy's  Song— C.).— BIL— FTA 
(Love— seZ.)- FLS 
Village  Dance,  The.     (Cornell  Widow.)— CG  3 
Village  Meddler,  The.— Anon.— MFD 
Village  Oracle,  The.— Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Village  Patriarch,    The.    Sel.    fr.     (Excursion    to    the 

Mountains,  An.) — Ebenezer  Elliott. — WEP  4 
Village   Post-office,    The.     (^06.)- Anon.  — BS  15  — 

TCP 
Village  Preacher,    The. — Oliver    Goldsmith.     See    De- 
serted Village,  The. 
Village  Scare,  The.— S.  Jennie  Smith.— CS  28 
Village  Schoolmaster,    The. — -Oliver    Goldsmith.     See 

Deserted  Village,  The. 
Village     Schoolmistress,     The. — W:     Shenstone.     See 

Schoolmistress,  The.   . 
Village  Sewing-society,  The. — Anon. — CS  13 
Villain,  The. — Jerome  K.  Jerome.     See  Stage  Land. 
Villanelle.— Philip  S.  Allen.— CG  1 
Villanelle.— Mrs.  S.  F.  Harrison.— TCV 
Villon.     (Cornell  Widow.)— CG  3 
Villon  to  His  Mistress.- F.  B.  W.— CG  1 
Villon's  Straight  Tip  to  all  Cross  Coves. — W:  E.  Henley. 

— NA 
Vindication. — Arthur  M.  Smith. — CG  2 
Vindication  of  Mr.  Pitt. — G:  Canning.     See  Defence  of 

Pitt. 
Vindication  of  Virginius. — Elijah  Kellogg. — BLP 
Vine,  The. — Jas.  Thomson. — OB 
Vine  and  the  Oak,  The. — Anon. — AD 
Vines  of  Memory. — Grace  D.  Boylan. — SR  12 
Vingtaine,  Sels.  fr. — Alice  L.  Butler. 
Immutabilis. — AA 
Separation. — AA 
Viola  Disguised  and  the  Duke. — W:  Shakespeare.    See 

Twelfth  Night.— EPs 
Viola's  Answer. — H.  E.  McBride. — HD 
Violation   of    English    Promises. — Dan'l   O'Connell. — 

PS 
Violet,  The.      Jas.   Beatty.     See  Violet,    The. — Jane 

Taylor. 
Violet,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.     See  Yellow  Violet,  The. 
Violet,  The,   Br.  seZ. /r.  ("Violets!  deep-blue  violets!") 

— Letitia  E.  Landon. — AD 
Violet,   The.     (Song— C.)— Jas.    R.   Lowell.— AD   (si. 

abr.) 
Violet,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— NV 
Violet,  The.— Walter  Scott.— WEP  4 
Violet,  The.— W:  W.  Story.— BNL— FEP— GP— HBP 
Violet,  The.— Jane  Taylor.  —  NV— PC— PoR— PTS— 

TFS— WCL— YBT 
(Ptly.  diff. — w.  mus. — at.  to  James  Beatty.) — AD 
Violet,  The.— Adeline  D.  T.  Whitney.— BIL 
Violet  and  the  Rose,  The. — Jos.  Skipsey. — VS 
Violet  Bank,  A. — W:    Shakespeare.     See    Midsummer 

Night's  Dream,  A. 
Violet  in  Her  Hair,  A. — C:  Swain. — BNL 
Violets.— Dinah    M.     Craik.— HSS  1— HSS  2— PoR— 

YBT 
Violets,  The. — Stephen  Crane. — AA 
Violets.— Rob 't  Herrick.— BNL— GP 

(To  Violets— C.)—ELP— HBP— LC— OB— OS  1 
Violets. — Leigh  Himt.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the 

Flowers. 
Violets.— J:  Moultrie.— CGd—LC— OS  1 

(Dear  Little  Violets.)— PoR 
Violets  at  Home. — Mortimer  Collins. — VS 


"Violets!  deep-blue  violets!" — Letitia  E.  Landon.     See 

Violet,  Tne. 

Violet's  Grave,  The. Vicortari. — HP 

Violet's  Prayer,  The.— E.  J.  Richmond.— YBT 

Violet's  Victory. — Dixie  Wolcott.— WR  17 

Violin  Fantasy,  A.— G.  C.  Fletcher.— WR  12 

Violinist,  A.— Fs.  W.  Bourdillon.— VA 

Violiniste.— Wilder  D.  Quint.— CG  1 

Violin's  Complaint,  The. — W:  R.  Thaver. — AA 

Virgil's  Tomb. — Rob't  C.  Rogers. — AA 

Virgin  Mary's  Bank,  The.— J.  J.  Callanan. — PEB  4 

Virgin  Most  Pure,  A. — Anon. — BVC 

Virgin  with  the  Bells,  The.     (SI.  abr.) — Austin  Dobson. 

— WR6 
Virginia. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     See  Canterbury  Tales, 

The. 
Virginia  [:  a  Lay  of  Ancient  Rome]. — T:  B.  Macaulay. 

— CR  (abr.)—HB(8l.  abr.) 
(Sel.)— FTR—YSG 
(Fate  of  Virginia,  The— seZ.)— LLC 

(SI.  abr.)— CS  3— SS 
(Icilius  on  Virginia's  Seizure— sei.) — SS 
(Roman  Father's  Sacrifice,  The — sel.) — BNL 
(Virginius — sel. ) — FR 
Virginia  Mummy,  The. — C.  White. — DE 
Virginia  Tobacco.- — (At.  to)  J:  S.  Gregson. — PPh 
Virginia's  Hand, Sel.  'fr.    (Hidden  Rose-tree,  A.) — Mar- 
guerite A.  Power. — TIP 
Virginia's  Kingly  Plant. — Anon. — PPh 
Virginians  of  the  Valley,  The. — Fs.  O.  Ticknor. — AA 
Virginius,   Sel.  /r.— Jas.   S.   Knowles.— FTR   (Act    I., 

Sc.  2;  II.,  2— abr.;  IV.,  2— a6r.)  — MPD  (Act 

lU.,Sc.5—abr.) 
Virginius,  as  Tribtine,  Refuses  the  Appeal  of  Appius 

Claudius. — Livy.     See  History  of  Rome. 
Virtue.     (Ftags.  fr.  various  avthors.) — BNL 
Virtue.     (O— G:    Herbert.  —  ELP  —  EPs  —  HBP— 

LC— LLC— 5b— OS  2— PHS 
(  Vertue. )— FEP— FP— GP 
(Virtue  Immortal.)— BNL— PYO—YBF 
(Virtuous  Soul,  The.)— CEL 
Virtue  Immortal. — G:  Herbert.     See  foregoing. 
Virtue  Uncorrupted  by  Fortune. — Quintus  Curtius. — 

BLP 
Virtuosa. — Mary  A.  Townsend. — AA 
Virtuoso,  The.     (Sel.) — Mark  Akenside. — BNL 
Virtuoso,  A. — Austin  Dobson. — FEP 
Virtuous  Soul,  The. — G:  Herbert.     See  Virtue. 
Vision,  A. — Anon. — CP 
Vision,  The.     (As  I  Stood  by    yon  Roofless  Tower — 

C.)— Rob't  Burns.— EPs  (si.  abr.) 
Vision,  The.— Rob't  Burns.— HBP 
Vision,  A. — Jessie  T.  Craig. — CS  33 
Vision,  A.  — A.  M.  E. — FP 
Vision,  A.— Mrs.  E.  M.  H.  Gates.— GS  22 
Vision.— W:  D.  Howells.— AA 
Vision,  A. — H:  Vaughan.     See  World,  The. 
Vision  of  Battle,  A.— Svdney  Dobell.— MMR 
Vision  of  Beauty,  A.     (Song  fr.  The  New  Inn,  Act  IV., 

Sc.  3.) — Ben  Jonson. — BNL 
(Perfect  Beauty.)— ES—YBF 
Vision  of  Belshazzar.     (C. — in    Hebrew    Melodies.)^ — 

Lord  Byron.— EPs— GN 
(Jerusalem  Avenged.) — BLP 
Vision  of  Children,  A.— T:  Ashe.— VA 
Vision  of  Connaught  in  the  Thirteenth  Century,  A. — 

Jas.  C.  Mangan.— TIP 
Vision  of  Delight,    The,    Sels.    fr. — Ben   Jonson. 
Fantasy.     (Son?.)— BNL— EPs 
May.— EPs 
Vision  of  Future  Bliss,  A. — R:  Baxter. — CS  4 
Vision  of  Handel,  The.— P.  L.  Blatchford.— WR  6 
Vision  of  Immortality,  The. — E.  P.  Weston. — AE  (sel.) 

—CSS 
Vision  of  Judgment,  The.     (Sel.) — Lord  Byron. — ESs 
Vision  of  Liberty,  The.— H:  Ware,  Jr.— WR  10 
Vision  of  Mist-splendours,  A. — W:  Wordsworth.     See 

Excursion,  The. 
Vision  of  Mirza,  TThe. — Jos.  Addison.     See  Spectator, 

The. 
Vision  of  Monk  Gabriel,  The. — Eleanor  C.  Donnelly. — 

CS6 
Vision  of  Piers  [the]  Plowman,  The,  SeZs.  fr. — W:  Lang- 
land. 
Pilgrimage  in  Search  of  Do-well.     (8th  Passus  of 

Piers,  etc.,  and  1st  of  Do-wel!.) — ESs 
Vision  of  Piers  the    Plowman.      (Passus  XXI.)  — 

WEP  1 
Vision  of  Poets,  A,  Sels.  fr.  —  Eliz.  B.  Browning. — 

AVP  (6r.)— WR  1 
(Children  (jathering  Palms — sel.  fr.  Conclusion.) — 

LC 
Vision  of  Repentance,  A. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 


359 


Vision 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Vision  of  St.  Dominic,  The. — Anon.^-WR  6 
Vision    of     Sir     Launfal,     The.  —  Jas.     R.     Lowell. 
AE  (Preludes  I.  and  ll.— obr.)— AP— MAL— 
WR  5  (Preludes  omitted.) 
June.     (Prel.,  Pt.  I.,  o6r.)— BNL— GP— PYO  (6r. 
sel.)— SO  (selX 
(.46r.)— ASL-i-BS  14— FMR 
("At  ihe  devil's  booth  all  things  are  sold" — Ir. 

8e/,>— WCLI 1 
(June  Weather — abr^ — GN 
i  'WSoul  in  Grass  and  Flowers,  A — abr.) — AD 
*^    *(Summer— ()r.  »el.)—SE 

(Vision  of  Sir  Launfal — abr.) — AA — LLC 
Sir  Launfal  and  the  Leper.     {Sel.  fr.  Pt.  I.) — GN 

(Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The — br.  sel.) — AE 
Winter  Morning,  A.     (Br.  ael.  fr.  Pt.  II.)— GN 

(January.)— POS 
Winter  Pictures.     (Prel.,  Pt.  II.  and  br.  sel.  fr.  Pt. 
II.)— BNL 
(Brook  in  Winter,  The— abr.)— GN 
Vision  of  the  Fawn,  The.— Petrarch.— WR  1 
Vision  of  the  Rose. — W :  Browne. — ELP 

(Rose,  The.)— OB 
Vision  of  the  Snow,  The. — Marg.  J.  Preston. — AA 
Vision  of  War,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Speech  at  Indianapolis, 
Sept.  21,  1876.)— Rob't  G.  Ingersoll.— SC 
(Col.  Ingersoil's  Remarkable  Vision.) — SC 
Vision  upon  the  Faerie  Queene,  A. — Sir  Walter  Ral- 
eigh.    See  following. 
Vision  upon    this    Conceit    of    the    Faerie    \or    Fairy] 
Queen,  A.— Sir  Walter  Raleigh.— FEP—WEPl 
(Vision  upon  the  Faerie  Queene,  A.) — CEL 
Visions.— D.  L.  Maulsby.— CG  1 

Visit  from  St.  Nicholas,  A. — Clement  C.  Moore. — AA — 
BNL  —  EDY  —  HBP  —  OS  1  —  PC  —  PoR 
— SM— WCL— WCLI 1 
(Christmas  Times.)— PHS 
(Night  before  Christmas,  The.)  —  BS  7  —  CS  16 

— FEP— PPSr 
(St.  Nicholas'  Dashing  Ride.)— SR  3 
Visit  from  the  Sea,  A. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — GN — 

OSl 
Visit  from  the  Smiths,  A. — Anon. — MAD 
Visit  of  Santa  Claus.     (Dial. )— Anon. — H VD 
Visit  of  the  Prince  of  Wales  to  Laura  Secord. — Sarah 

A.  Curzon.— TCV 
Visit  to  Belle  Yard,  A. — C :  Dickens.     See  Bleak  House. 
Visit  to  Hades,  A.— Stockton  Bates.— CS  28 
Visit  to  Niagara,  A.     (C.) — S:  L.  Clemens. 
(Day  at  Niagara,  A.)— BS  6— SA 
(Mark  Twain  Visits  Niagara.) — CS  16 
Visit  to  Sir  Roger  de  Coverley's  Country  Seat,  A. — 

Jos.  Addison.     See  Spectator,  The. 
Visit  to  the  Oil  Regions,  A. — Anon. — MND 
Visit  to  the  Sea,  A.— J:  Troland.— CS  36 
Visit  to  Thompkinsville  University,  A. — Anon. — CS  7 
Visitation.— H:  W.  Palmer.— CG  3 
Visiting  Laura  Belle.— S:  E.  Kiser.- WR  24 
Visitors  from  Story  Land.     (Dial.) — E.  C.  and  L.  J. 

Rook.— YFE 
Visitors  from  the  City. — Anon. — MFD 
Vita  Benefica. — Alice  W.  Rollins. — A  A 
Vita  Nuova,  Sels.  fr. — Dante. 
Her  Helpfulness. — OH 

His  Lady's  Praise.     (XXI. — D.  G.  Rossetti's  tr.) — 
OH 
Vita   Nuova. — E:   H.    Plumptre.     <See   Dedication   to 

Dante's  Divine  Comedy. 
Viva  I'America. — Anon. — DFR 
Viv^rols. — D:  S.  Jordan.— AA 

Vivid    Description   of  a  Midnight   Murder. — Anon. — 
SRIO 
(Bombastic  Description  of  a  Midnight  Murder.) — 
CSl 
Vivien. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Vivien's  Song. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Idylls  of  the 

King. 
Vixi  Puellis  Nuper  Idoneus.— Sir  T:  Wyatt.— OB 
(Lover  Showeth  how  he  is  Forsaken,  The. — C.) — 
ELP 
Vobiscum  est  lope.     (A  Book  of  Airs,  XX.) — T:  Cam- 
pion.— OB 
(O  Crudelis  Amor.)— ELP 
(When  thou  must  Home.) — ELP 
Voice,  The.— Anon.— WR  17 
Voice,  A.— Alfred  Austin.— WCLG  1 
(Britannia  to  Columbia.) — PAPm 
(To  America.)— GN 
Voice.     (In  Song  Time,  Pt.  II.) — Harriet  P.  Spofford. 
j^j^ 

Voice,  The.— Forceythe  Willson.— MMR 
Voice,  and  Nothing  Else,  A.     (PMncA.)— BNL— HPE 
(Epigram:     Vox  et  prajterea  Nihil.) — FEP 


Voice  from  Afar,  A.     (C.) — J:  H.  Newman. 

(Knowledge.)— A  VP 
Voice  from  Galilee,  The.     (C) — Horatius  Bonar. — VA 

("Come  unto  Me.")— FEP 
Voice  from  the  Old  Boys  Left  Behind. — J.  H.  Jewett. 

—PAPm 
Voice  in  the  Air,  Singing,  A. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See 

Prometheus  Unbound. 
Voice  in  the  Twilight,  The. — Mrs.  Herrick  Johnson. — 

BS  7— CS  20— SPE 
Voice  in  the  Wild  Oak,  The.— H:  C.  Kendall.— VA 
V»ice  in  the  Wilderness,  The. — Bible.     See  Isaiah. 
Voice  of  a  Leaf,  The.— I.  M.  Chambers.— YBT 
Voice  of  an  Alumnus,  The.— S.  N.  Whitney.— CG  3 
Voice  of  Calm,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Brewing  of  Soma.) 

— J:G.  Whittier.— TAS 
Voice  of  D.  G.  R.,  The.— Edmund  Gosse.— VA 
Voice  of  Despair,  The. — J.  J.  Talbot. — TS 
Voice  of  Music,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (To  Music.)  —  Felicia 

D.  Hemans. — EPs 
Voice    of     Spring,    The.  —  Felicia    D.    Hemans.  — 

HNS  (abr.) 
(Sel.)  —  AD  —  HSS  1  —  LLC  —  PEO  —  POS  — 

SM 
(Br.  aeZ.)- SAE— SE 
Voice  of  Spring,  The. — Mary  Howitt. — PoR 
Voice  of  the  Dove,  The. — Joaquin  Miller.-^AA 
Voice  of  the  Flag,  The.— Anon.— CP 
Voice  of  the  Grass,  The. — Sarah  R.  Boyle.— AA— AD 

— BNL— HBP— SN— WR  17  (br.  ael.) 
(SI.  a6r.)— HSS  1— NV— PoR 
(Song  of  the  Grass,  The— si.  abr.)— YBT 
Voice  of  the  Oregon,  The.— H.  J.  D.  Browne.— EDY— 

PAPm 
Voice  of  the  People,  The.— Jas.  G.  Clark.— DES 
Voice  of  the  Pine,  The.     (The  Celestial  Passion,  Pt. 

III.,  No.  4.)— R:  W.  Gilder.— SN 
Voice  of  the  Pines,  The.— C:  Mair.— TCV 
Voice  of    the    Poor,    The. — Jane    F.    Speranza,    Lady 

Wilde.— GP—VA 
Voice  of  the  Reader,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Demon  of  the 

Study.)— J:  G.  Whittier.— LLC 
Voice  of  the  Sea,  The.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— BFV— LC 
Voice  of  the  Void,  The.— G:  P.  Lathrop.— AA 
Voice  of  the  West  Wind,  The.— Rob't  P.  Utter.— CG  2 
Voice  of  the  Wind,  The.— Rosaline  E.  Jones.— BS  21 
Voice  of  the  Wind. — H:  Taylor.     See  Edwin  the  Fair. 
Voice  of  Webster,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Rob't  U.  Johnson. — AA 
Voice  Within,  The.— Fannie  Fagan.— YBT 
Voiceless,    The.— Oliver    W.     Holmes.— AA— FEP— 

HBP 
Voiceless  Chimes,  The. — Annie  Fox.— CS  28 
Voic'es,  The,  Br.    sel.    fr.  ("Self-ease  is  pain;  thy  only 

rest.")— J:  G.  Whittier.— GG 
Voices  at    the    Throne,    The. — T:    West  wood. — CR — 

CS  7— FMR— HR— MMR 
Voices  at  the  Window. — Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella. 
Voices  of  the  Dead. — J:  Cumming. — CS  6 

(Influence  after  Death — sel.) — -BS  21 
Voices  of  the  Dead,  The.— Orville  Dewey.— HSS  1— SE 
Voices  of  the  Flowers.     (Fr.  Sunny  Side.) — Anon. — 

DFR 
Voices  of  the  Forest. — H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Masque 

of  Pandora,  The. 
Voices  of  the  Night. — Joe  Kerr. — GH 
Voices  of  the  Night.     (SeZ.)— H:  W.  Longfellow.— AD 
Voices  of  the  Trees. —  (Arr.  by)  W.  H.  Benedict.  — 

DFR 
Voices  of  the  Wildwood. — Ella  S.  Cummins. — DR 
Void  Between,  The. — J:  L.  Spalding.     See  God  and  the 

Soul. 
Volpone;    or.  The  Fox,    Sel.  fr.  (Venetian    Song — fr. 

Act  III.,  Sc.  5.)— Ben  Jonson.— ES— WEP  2 
Voltaire  and  Wilberforce. — W:  B.  Sprague. — CS  19 
Voluntaries,  III.,    Sel.  fr.  (Duty.)— Ralph  W.  Emer- 

son.— GN— OS  1 
("So  nigh  is  grandeur  to  our  dust.") — HSS  3 
Volunteer,  The.  —  Elbridge   J.   Cutler.- AA  —  HS — 

PAPm 
Volunteer,  The.— Frank  L.  Stanton.— PAPm 
Volunteer  Organist,   The. — Sam  W.   Foss. — BS   18 — 

CS  30— DR— PFP— SR  11 
Volunteer  Soldiers  of  the  Union,  The. — Anon. — SR  2 
Volunteers  of  '85,  The. — Stuart  Livingston. — TCV 
Volunteer's    Wife,   The. — Mary   A.    Dennison. — CR — 

MMR 
(Irish  Woman's  Lament,  The.) — PR 
(Irishwoman's  Letter,  The.)— CS  3— LLC — SA 
(Mary    O'Connor,  the    Volunteer's    Wife.)  —  CD 

( Versions  vary  si. ) 
Vote  the  Traffic  Down.— J:  P.  St.  John.— WR  18 
Voter's  Responsibility,  The.— W.  J.  Demorest.— WR  18 


360 


TITLE  INDEX 


Waly 


Votive  Song. — E:  C.  Pinkney. — A  A 

Vow,  The.^ — ^Meleager  (tr.  by  J:  H.  Merivale). — BNL 

Vow  of  Washington,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— BS  17— 

SR8 
Vox  Ultima  Crucis. — J :  Lydgate. — OB 
Voyage,  A,    Br.  sel.  fr.    ("From  that  time  until  the 

period  of  arrival.")— Washington  Irving. — SO 
Voyage  and  a  Haven,  A.— Fs.  C.  Hoey.— NFS- YP 
Voyage  in  the  Arm-chair,  A. — -Anon. — DLF 
Voyage  of  Arabella,  The.— Ellen  D.  Deland.— DCP 
Voyage  of  Captain  Popanilla,  The,    Sel.  fr.  (Popanilla 

on  Man,  Ch.  IV.)— B:  Disraeli.— ESs 
Voyage  of  Life,  The. — Matthew  Green.     See  Spleen, 

The. 
Voyage  of  Life,  The,  Sets.  fr.—F.  De  H.  Janvier.— AE 
Voyage  of  Life,  The.— Fs.  Quarles.— CEL 
Voyage  of  Maeldune,  The.     (^br.) — Alfred  Tennyson. 

— WR  12 
Voyage  of  Sleep,  The.— Arthur  W.  H.  Eaton.— BNL 
Voyage  of  the  "Fram,"  The.— Arthur  P.  Hunt.— NC 
Voyage  with  the  Nautilus,  The.— Mary  Howitt.— FEB  3 
Voyages,  The.     (C.)— T:  W.  Higginson. 

(Two  Voyagers.)— T AS 
Voyageur  Song. — ^Arthur  Weir. — TCV 
Vulgar  Little  Lady,  The. — Ann  and  Jane  Taylor. — 

BVC 
Vulture  of  the  Alps,  The.— Anon.— CS  10— NFS— YP 


w 

Waban  Ripple,  A.— Anon.— AWH— CG  1 
Wabash  Violets.— Earl  Marble.— HP 
Wae's  Me  for  Prince  Charlie.— W:  Glen.— FEP— HBP 
Wages.— Alfred  Tennyson.— LLC— FGT  2 
Wagoner  of  the  AUeghanies,  The,  Sels.  jr. — T:  B.  Read. 
Brave  at  Home,  The.—  BLP  —  BNL  —  BS  5  — 

CS  2— LLC— PAP— PAPm— TAV— YBF 
("Mother  who  conceals  her  grief.  The — -br.  sel.)  — 

BNL 
(Patriotism  of  American  Women.) — PRR 
Revolutionary  Rising,  The.      (Rising,  The — C.) — 

BS  1  —  CR  —  CS  2  —  SA— SC— SO  {si.  abr.)— 

SPE— SR  1 
(Rising  in  [or  of]  1776,  The.)— FR— FTR— HNS 

— TMR  (abr.) 
Song  of  the  Mountaineers.     (Ft.  I.) — BS  16 

(Song  from   "The   Wild   Wagoner  of  the  AUe- 
ghanies.")— AE 
Wagoner  of  the  AUeghanies,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr. — AE 
Waif.     (Crimson  Throne,  The — C.) — G:  Macdonald. — 

BSl 
Waif,  The.— A.  C.  Smith.— VA 
Wail  of  a  Disappointed  Candidate. — Anon. — CS  14 
Wail  of  Jugurtha,  The.— C:  Wolfe.— BLP 
Wail  of  the  Cornish  Mother,  The. — R.  S.  Hawker. — 

FGT  2 
Wainamoinen's    Sowing.  —  (Tr.  6j/)  J:  A.  Porter.     See 

Kalevala,  The. 
Wait.— Dora  R.  Goodale.— YBT 
Wait!— Ward  Steele.— CFL 
Wait.— Bayard  Taylor  (?).— TAS 
Wait  On.— C:  C.  Hahn.— BS  20 
Wait  upon  the  Lord. — S.  E.  Adams. — HDL 
Waiter,  The.     (Punch.)— B.FE 
Waiter  Drill.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— DM 
Waiter  Girl. — Anon. — MR 
Waiter's  Trials,  A.     (Z)«iZ.)— Anon.— DCR 
Waitin'  fer  the  Cat  to  Die.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR— 

WR2 
Waiting. — Anon. — DLF 
Waiting. — Anon. — HP 
Waiting. — Anon. — TFS 
Waiting.     (In  The  Light  of  Day.) — J:  Burroughs.— GP 

(SI.  abr.)— AA— TAS 
Waiting.— Eli  G.  Coe.— HDL 
Waiting.— C:  H.  Crandall.— HDL— TAS 
Waiting.— L.  D.  S.— HDL 
Waiting.— Katha.  Tynan-Hinkson.— TIP 
Waiting,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— PYO 
Waiting — at    the    Church    Door. — Mrs.    Alex.    McV. 

Miller.- CS  30 
Waiting  by  the  Gate.— W:  C.  Bryant.— CS  10— FMR— 

HBP— WCLG  1 
Waiting  Chords,  The.— S.  H.  Thayer.— AA 
Waiting  for  an  Interview.     (Dial.) — Colman. — MFD 
Waiting  for  Easter.— Edna  D.  Proctor.- SSS 
Waiting  for  Something  to  Turn  Up.     (C.) — Alice  Gary. 
— BLF 

("World  owes  me  a  living,  The" — sel.) — HSS  3 


Waiting  for  the  Armada. — C:   Kingsley.     See  West- 
ward Ho! 
Waiting  for  the  Bugle. — Anon. — SR  5 
Waiting  for  the  Children. — Anon.- — BS  3 — SA 
Waiting  for  the  Galleon.— R:  E.  White.— CS  28 
Waiting  for  the  Grapes. — W:  Maginn. — BNL 
Waiting  for  the  May. — Anon. — AD — LLC 
Waiting  for  the  Morning.     (C) — J:  H.  Newman. 

(Rest.)— AVP 
Waiting  for  the  Stage.     (Dial.)—F.  Crosby.— PD 
Waiting  Juliet,  The. — Arthur  Quiller-Couch. — WR   12 
Waiting  on  God. — Saxe  Holm. — SSS 
(Hymn,  A.)— TAS 

("I  cannot  think  but  God  must  know.") — BIL 
Waiting  on  the  Lord. — Oliver  Crane. — CS  22 
Waiting  to  Grow.  —  Frank  French.  —  AD  —  LLC — 

NV  (o6r.)— YBT 
Waiting  to  See  Him  Off.— Anon.— SDD 
Wake,  The.— Rob't  Herrick.— WEF  2 
Wake,    Gently    Wake. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher.     See 

Wit  at  Several  Weapons. 
Wake  Now,  my  Love.— Edmund  Spenser.  See  Epitha- 

lamion. 
Wake  of  the  Absent,  The.— Gerald  Griffin.— TIP 
Wake  of  Tim  O'Hara,  The. — Rob't  Buchanan.  —  CD 

— DI— VA 
Wake  of  William  Orr,  The.— W:  Drennan.— TIP 
Wake  Robin,    Sel.    fr.     (Bluebird.) — J:    Burroughs. — 

AD  (sel.) 
Wake  up.  Little  Daisy. — Anon. — NV 
Wakeful  Birds,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Waken,    Lords    and    Ladies  Gay. — Walter    Scdtt.  — 
BNL 
(Hunting    Song— C.)— AE      (seZ.)— BFV— BPB— 
'    BS  21— CEL— GN— LC— OS  2— FGT  1— YBF 
Wakening,  The. — Anon. — OB 
Wakin'  the  Young  Uns.— J:  Boss.— BS  18— CS  32— 

PR— YA 
Waking. — Caroline  Mason. — MYF 
Waking  of  Spring,  The. — Olive  Custance. — VA 
Waking  of  the  Lark,  The. — Eric  Mackay. — VA 
Waking  Year,  The. — Emily  Dickinson. — AA 
Waldeinsamkeit. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — SN 
Walden,  Sels.  fr.—H:  D.  Thoreau. 

Smoke.     (Verses  fr. Ch.  XIII.)— AA— BNL  — EPs 

— SN 
Sounds.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  VI.)— APr 
Spring.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XVII.)— HS 
Walk  among  Trees,  A.     (C.)— H  :  W.  Beecher. 
(Discourse  on  Trees,  A.) — AD 

("First  in  our  regard,"  etc. — sel.) — HSS  1 
(Love  of  Trees— «eZ.)— HSS  1 
(Motion  of  the  Leaves,  The— seZ.)- HSS  1 
Walk  in  Spring,  A.     (Sel.) — Jas.  Montgomery. — AD 
Walk  in  Spring,  A.— M.  A.  Stoddart.— NV— YBT 
Walker   of   the  Snow,   The.— C:   D.  Shanly.— TCV— 

VA 
Walking  Encyclopedia.  The. — Anon — FND 
Walking  with  God.— W:  Cowper.— FEP- HBP  (abr.) 
Wallenstein,  Sels.  /r.— Friedrich  Schiller  (tr.  by  S:  T. 
Coleridge). 
Death  of  Wallenstein,  The,  Sels.  fr. 

Dirge:  "He  is  gone — is  dust!"     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Act 
.    v.,  Sc.  1.)— EPs 

(Grief  of  Bereavement,  The.)— SS 
Wallenstein's  Soliloquy.     (I.,  4 — abr.) — SS 
Piccolomini,  The,  Sels.  fr. 

Astrological  Tower,  The.  (Sel.  fr.  III.,  5.)— FTR*" 
Belief  in  Astrology,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  4.)— SS 

(Mythology.)— EPs— LLC 
Heroism.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  IV.,  7.)— EPs 
Thekla's  Song.     (Sel.  fr.  III.,  7.)— EPs 
Wallenstein's  Death.— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton.— EDY 
Wallenstein's  Soliloquy. — Friedrich  Schiller.     See  Wal  - 

lenstein. 
Walloping  Window-blind,  The.— C:  E.  Carryl.— NA 
Walpole's  Attack  on  Pitt.— Rob't  Walpole: — BS  17 — 
FTR 
(Against  Mr.  Pitt.)- FS— SS 
(Against  William  Pitt.)— SSD 
(Sir  Robert  Walpole  against  Mr.  Pitt.)— KNE 
Walrus  and   the   Carpenter,   The.     (In  Through   the 
Looking-glass.)— Lewis  Carroll.— BVC — CS  26 
— GN— NA— THF 
Walt  Whitman. — Harrison  S.  Morris. — AA 
Walt  Whitman. — Walt  Whitman.     See  Song  of  Myself. 
Walt  Whitman.— Fs.  H.  Williams.— AA 
Walter's  First  Speech. — Eliza  Doolittle. — SD 
Walton's  Book  of  Lives.     (Ecclesiastical  Sonnets,  Pt. 

III.,  Son.  V.)— W:  Wordsworth.— BNL 
Waltz,  The.— Lord  Byron.— ESs 
Waltz-quadrille,  A.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— WR  26 
Waly,  Waly. — Anon.     See  folloiving. 


361 


Waly 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Waly,  Waly,  [but]    Love  be  Bonny.     (C — in   Percy's 
Reliques.)  —  Anon.  —  BNL  —  EPs  — FEP  — 
GP  (sei.)— HBP— OEB— PEB  1 
(Forsaken.)— PGT  1 

(Waly,  Waly.)— BB— ELP— OB— WEP  1 
Wanderer,  The.— Austin  Dobson.— FTA— HBP— YBF 
Wanderer,  The.— Eug^e  Field.— EDY— EF— HP 
Wanderer,  The.     (Littell's  Living  Age.) — HP 
Wanderer,  The,    Sel.    /r.  (Retrospections — -C.) — Rob't, 

Earl  of  Lj^ton.— AVP 
Wanderer,  The,  SeU.  fr. — Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton. 
Night  in  Italy,  A.     (Prologue,  Ft.  I.,  a6r.)— OB 
Palingenesis.     {Sds.  fr.  Bk.  VI.)— WR  23 
Song:  "We  must  love  and  unlove,  and,  it  may  be." 
{Sel.  ad.  fr.  Song  in  Bk.  II.)— FLS 
Wanderer,  The,  Sel.  /r.— Alex.  C:  Stewart.-— TCV 
Wanderers,  The. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Paracelsus. 
Wanderers.- Charles  Stuart  Calverley.— THP 
Wanderer's  Bell,  The.— Marg.  J.  Preaton.^R  3 
Wanderer's  Night-song,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Johann  W.  von 
Goethe  {in  German,  also  tr.  by  T.  C.  Porter). — 
TMR 
{Sleep— diff.  <r.)— HDL 
Wandering  Jew,  The. — Anon. — CS  35 
Wandering  Jew,  The.     {In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 

—FEP 
Wandering  Knight's  Song,  The. — {Tr.  by)  J:  G.  Lock- 
hart.— BFV 
Wandering  Willie. — Rob't  Burns.— MBL 
Wandering  Wind,  The. — Felicia  D.  Hemans. — HBP 
Wanderings  of  Cain,  The,  Sel.   fr.   Prefatory  Note  to. 
•    (Child  in  the  Wilderness,  The.)— S:  T.  Cole- 
ridge.— LC 
Wanderings  of  Oisin.  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Island  of  Sleep,  The — 

Pt.  III.)— W:  B.  Yeats.— TIP 
Wanderings  of  the  Birds,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Wander-lovers,  The. — R :  Hovey. — AA 
Waning  Moon,  The.     (C.)— Percy  B.  Shelley. 

(Moon,  The.  I.)— OB 
Waning  Moon,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Waning  Spirit. — Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Festus. 
Want.— Rob't,  Earl  of  Lytton.— FLS 
Wanted. — Anson  G.  Chester. — CS  13 
Wanted.    "(C.)—Josiah  G.  Holland. 
(Give  us  Men.)— CS  26 
(True  Men.)— SR  7 
Wanted.— Walter  A.  Ratcliffe.— TCV 
Wanted — a  Governess. — Anon. — MDD 
Wanted— a  Little  Girl.     (C.)— Ella  W.  Wilcox. 

(Little  Girl,  A.)— TFS 
Wanted — a  Man. — Edmund  C.  Stedman. — AWB 
Wanted,  a  Minister's  Wife. — Anon. — CRR 
Wanted — a  Nurse. — Guslav  Kobb^. — DDD 
Wanted — a  Pastor. — Anon. — CS  8 
Wanted— a  Valet.— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— SPC 
"Wanted,  a  Young  Lady." — W.  E.  Suter. — DT 
Wanted — Saint  Patrick. — Fitz-James  O'Brien. — EDY 
Wanted  to  See  his  Old   Home.     (New  York  Sun.) — 

BS  18 
Wanting  is — What? — Rob't  Browning. — YBF 
Wants  of  Man,  The.— J:  Q.  Adams.— BNL— CS  6— 
EPs— WCLG  1 
("Man  wants  but  little  here  below.") — BS  5 
Wapentake.     (C.)— To     Alfred     Tennyson.— H:     W. 
Longfellow. — AA 
(To  Alfred  Tennyson.)— GG 
War. — Binney.     See  Responsibilities  of  a  Recommen- 
dation of  War. 
War. — Sam  W.  Foss. — PAPm 
War. — Percy  B.  Shelley.     See  Queen  Mab. 
War. — Grace  E.  C.  Stetson. — AA 

War. — C:  Sumner.     See  War  System  of  the  Common- 
wealth of  Nations. 
War   and  Peace,   Sels.  fr.  —  Frd'k  W.  Robertson.  — 

NC  (seZ.)— OS  2 
War  and  Washington. — Jonathan   M.    Seward. — AWB 
War  Deprecated. — Stephen  A.  Douglas. — SSD 
War  for  the  sake  of  Peace. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Brit- 
annia. 
War  for  the  Union,  The.     (Sel.   fr.   Inevitable  Trial, 

The.)— Oliver  W.  Holmes.— SSD 
War  for  the  Union,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  ("I  will  not  speak  of 

war  in  itself.")— Wendell  Phillips.— HSS  1 
War  Hymn. — B.  R.  Stevens. — PAPm 
War  Inevitable,  The.     March,    1775.— Patrick   Henry. 

{Sel.)     OM— OS     2— PP— PS— PTS— SE— SS— 
YFR 
(Appeal  to  Arms,  An — eel.) — SO 
(Freedom  or  Slavery.) — SSD— TMD 
(Liberty  or  Death.)— SO  (se/.)— WCLG  1 
(Resistance  to  British  Aggression — sel.) — OM — PS 
— SS 


War  Inevitable,  The  {continued). 

(Speech  before  the  Virginia  Convention.) — KNE 
(Speech  in  the  Virginia  Convention,  1775.) — FTR 
(Speech  of  Patrick  Henry.) — CS  25— SR  5 

"War  is  dread  when  battle  shock  and  fierce  affray." — 
Frank  Birch.— GG 

"War  must  go  on,  The." — Dan'l  Webster.     See  Adams 
and  Jefferson. 

War  of  the  Months,  The.— "Bob  o'Link."— DLD 

War  or  Peace? — -Abraham  Lincoln.  See  First  Inau- 
gural Address. 

War  Poem.— R:  Le  Gallienne. — PAPm 

War  Prayer.— M.  J.  H".— PAPm 

War  System  of  the  Commonwealth  of  Nations,  Sel.  fr. 
(War.)— C:  Sumner.— MRS— SR  8 
(Horrors  of  War— seL)- HSS  1 

"War!  War!  No  peace!  Peace  is  to  me  a  war." — W: 
Shakespeare.     See  King  John. 

War  with  Alcohol,  The.— W.  E.  Williams.— SR  2 

War  with  America,  The. — W:  Pitt,  Lord  Chatham. 
See  American  War,  The, 

War  with  France. — G :  Canning.  See  Fruits  of  the  War 
with  France. 

War  with  Spain,  The.  Sel.  fr.  (Fight  off  Santiago,  The — 
sel.  fr.  Ch.  VII.)— H :  C.  Lodge.— SC 

Warble  for  Lilac-time. — Walt  Whitman. — PYO 

Warble  thy  Lays  to  me.— Pamelia  V.  Yule.— TCV 

Warden,  Keep  a  Place  for  Me.— D:  L.  Proudfit.— CS  16 

Warden  of  the  Cinque  Ports,  The. — H :  W.  Longfellow. 
—AA— EDY— EPs— HBP— OS  2 

Warfare.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

War-horn  of  the  Elkings,  The.  (Sel.  fr.  The  House  of 
the  Wolfings,  Ch.  II.)— W:  Morris.— BS  19 

Warning,  A. — Anon. — DJS 

Warning,  A. — Anon. — KNS 

Warning,  A.— J:  Gay.— BVC 

Warning,  A. — C:  Lamb.  See  Warning  to  the  Intem- 
perate. 

Warning,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— VSG 

Warning,  A. — Arthur  Lovell. — PPh 

Warning. — Celia  Thaxter. — SAP 

Warning  against  Wine,  A. — Dwight  L.  Moody. ^-TS 

Warning  and  Reply. — Emily  Bronte. — VA 

Warning  to  the  Intemperate.     {Sel.  fr.  Confessions  of  a 
Drunkard.)— C:  Lamb.— CS  11 
(Cry  from  the  Depths,  A.)— TS 
(Warning,  A.)— CPL 

Warning  to  Woman. — Anon. — DCR 

Warnings.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Warrantee  Deed,  The. — Anon. — SCS 

Warren  Hastings,  Sel.  fr. — T:  B.  Macaulay. 

Trial  of  Warren  Hastings  [,  The!.— HSS  2  {cond.) 
—WCLG  2 
(Opening  Scene  at  the  Trial  of  Warren  Hastings, 
The— 8pZ.)— VSG 

Warren's   Address.- J:    Pierpont. — AWB — BNL — CR 

— CS  8  —  CSS  —  EDY  —  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  — 

OS  1  — PAP  — PAPm  — PS  — SM  — TMD  — 

WCLG  2 

(General  Joseph  Warren's  Address.) — SR  8 

(General  Warren  to  his  Troops  at  the  Battle  of 

Bunker  Hili.)— HSS  1 
(Stand!    The  Ground's  your  Own.)— WR  5 
(Warren's   Address   at   [or   before]   the    Battle   of 

Bunker['s]  Hill.)— PPSr— PSR 
(Warren's  Address  to  the  American  Soldiers.) — AA 
(Warren's  Supposed   Address  at   Bunker   Hill.) — 
BLP 

Warren's  Address  at  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill. — J: 
Pierpont.     See  Warren's  Address. 

Warren's  Aodress  before  the  Battle  of  Bunker's  Hill. 
— J:  Pierpont.     See  Warren's  Address. 

Warren's  Address  to  the  American  Soldiers. — J:  Pier- 
pont.    See  Warren's  Address. 

Warren's  Supposed  Address  at  Bunker  Hill. — J:  Pier- 
pont.    See  Warren's  Address. 

Warrior's  Wreath,  The.  {National  Preceptor,  1835.) — 
BLP 

War's  End.— A.  M.  Bell.— MMR 

War's  Sacrifice.— V.  S.  Mosby.— WR  3 
(After  the  Battle.)— CS  29— NPS— YP 

War-ship  Dixie,  The.— Frank  L.  Stanton. — PAPm 

War-ship  of  1812,  The.  (Philadelphia  Record.) — 
PAPm 

War-song  of  Dinas  Vawr,  The.  (Song  fr.  The  Misfor- 
tunes of  Elphin,  Ch.  XI.)— T:  L.  Peacock.— 
BPB  —  BVC  —  CEL  —  HBP  —  PEB  .S— VA 
—WEP  4 

Warwick,  the  King-maker.— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.  See 
Last  of  the  Barons,  The. 

Wary  Trout,  The.— Anon.— PC 

Was  I  to  Blame.— Dudlev  L.  Bonde.— BS  18 

Was  it  Right.     (Texas  Sifiings.) — PS 


362 


TITLE  INDEX 


Water 


"Was    James    A.    Garfield    great?     Ask    those    early 

years." — D:  Swing. — GG 
Was  there  another  Spring? — Helen  Hay. — AA 
Wash  Day.— Anon.— PS— TT 
Wash  Day  at  Zofflecoffer's. — Anon. — MC 
"Wash  Dolly  up  Like  that."  —  Eleanor  K.  Ames. — 

PEO— PR— YA 
Washers  of  the  Shroud,  The. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — EPs — 

PAP 
Washerwoman's  Friend,  The. — Eugene  F.  Ware.     See 

following. 
Washerwoman's  Song,  The.     (C.) — Eugene  F.  Ware. 
(Constant  Friend,  The— 6r.  sel.)— HP 
(Washerwoman's  Friend,  The.)— CS  26 
Washing. — Anon.     See  following. 
Washing  Dishes.— Carrie  E.  Ellis.- TFS 
Washing  Dolly's  Clothes. — Anon. — PS 

(Washing.)— TT 
Washing-day.     (Hearth  and  Home.) — HP 
Washington.     (Tab.)— Anon.— B8  6— TCP 
Washington. — Anon. — DLF 

Washington.     (Fr.  Twinkles.)— J:  P.  Bocock.— TMR 
Washington. — Hezekiah  Butterworth. — CS  35  (abr.) 

(Crown  our  Washington.) — BLP — PEO 
Washington.     (Br.    sel.    fr.   Ode   to   Napoleon    Bona- 
parte.)— Lord  Byron. — EDY 
Washington.— W.  W.  Caldwell.— WR  17 
Washington.     (C.)— Eliza  Cook.— SR  10— TMR 
(SI.  a6r.)— HS— MYF 
(Tribute  to  Washington — abr.) — BS  4 
Washington. — Jas.    R.    Lowell.     JSee   Under   the    Old 

Elm. 
Washington. — Harriet  Monroe.     See  Commemoration 

Ode. 
Washington.— C:  Phillips.— PS 
(A6r.)— LLC— PR 
(Character  of  Washington — abr.) — OM — SE 
Washington. — W.  H.  Spence. — NP 
Washington. — Dan'l   Webster.     <See   Addition   to   the 

Capitol,  The. 
Washington. — Dan'l  Webster.     See  also  Character  of 

Washington,  The. 
Washington  a  Model  for  Youth. — Timothy  Dwight. — 

BLP— PEO 
Washington  Acrostic. — Anon. — WR  26 
Washington  and  Franklin. — W.  S.  Landor.     See  Imag- 
inary Conversations. 
Washington  and   Our  Schools  and  Colleges. — C:  W. 

Eliot.— FD  2 
(Schools  and  Colleges  of  our  Country,  The — si.  abr.) 

— SC— TMD 
Washington  and  the  Constitution. — J:  M.  Harlan. — 

FD2 
Washington  and  the  Nation. — J:  W.  Daniel. — TMD 
Washington  and  the  Nation.     (Address  delivered    at 

the  dedication  of  the  Washington  Monument 

at  Philadelphia,  May  15, 1897.)— W:  McKinley. 

—TMR 
Washington    and-  the    Union. — Dan'l    Webster.     iSee 

Character  of  Washington,  The. 
Washington  Arch  in  New  York,  The. — G:  W.  Curtis. 

See  Washington  Memorial  Arch,  The. 
Washington  as  a  Civilian. — Fisher  Ames. — BS  2 
Washington  as  a  Leader. — J:  Pierpont. — BLP 
Washington  as  a  Soldier. — H:  B.  Carrington. — BLP 
Washington  at    Vallev    Forge. — Theodore    Parker. — 

WR  10 
Washington   Hawkins   Dines   with   Colonel   Sellers. — 

Clemens  and  Warner.     See  Gilded  Age,  The. 
Washington  Memorial  Arch,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Washing- 
ton Arch  in  New  York,  The.) — G:  W.  Curtis. 

— FD  2 
Washington  Monument.     (Sel.  fr.  National  Monument 

to  Washington.)— Rob't  C.  Winthrop.— FD  1 

—PEO— TMD 
(National    Monument    to    Washington.) — BS    3 — 

CS2 
Washington    Monument    Completed,    The. — Rob't    C. 

Winthrop.     See  Completion    of    the  National 

Monument  to  Washington. 
Washington  Needle,  The. — Rob't   C.   Winthrop.     See 

Completion    of    the   National    Monument    to 

Washington. 
Washington    Sequoia,    The,    Sel.    fr.       (Yosemite.) — 

Milicent  W.  Shinn. — AA 
Washington  to  His  Soldiers. — G:  Washington. — PS 
f  Address  to  his  Troops.)— BS  24— OS  2 
(To   the   American   Troops   before   the   Battle   of 

Long  Island.)— SS—SSD 
Washington's  Address  to  His  Troops. — G:  Washing- 
ton.    See  Washington  to  his  Soldiers. 
Washington's  Birthday. — Anon. — CP 
Washington's  Birthday. — Anon. — DST 


Washington's    Birthday.  —  Rufus    Choate.  —  DFR  — 

PS  (sel.) 
(Birthday  of  Washington,  The.)— CS   1— FD  2— 

HS— PEO— PS— SE— SR  8— SS 
Washington's  Birthday. — H:   Lee.      See  Funeral  Ora- 
tion on  the  Death  of  General  Washington. 
Washington's  Birthday. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — PEO — 

TMR 
Washington's  Birthday. — Dan'l  Webster. — SE 

(Twenty-second  of  February,  The.) — PS 
Washington's  Birthday  Address. — Anon. — CP 
Washington's  Birthday  Oration. — Anon. — CP 
Washington's  Characterization. — Sam'l  Eliot. — FD  2 
Washington's  Fame. — Asher  Robbins.^ — PEO 
Washington's  Farewell  to  his  Army. — Anon. — WR  10 
Washington's  Foreign  Policy.- — W :  McKinley. — SO 
Washington's  Inaugural   Address.  —  G:    Washington. 

See  Washington's   Inaugurals,  April  .30,    1789. 
Washington's  Inaugurals,  Apr.  30,  1789.-— G:  Washing- 
ton.— AI 
(First  Inaugural  Address.) — EAO 
TMaxims  of  George  Washington — incl.  br.  sel.  fr. 

thi8.)—DVR 
(Washington's  Inaugural  Address — sel.) — OS  3 
Washington's  Inaugurals,  Dec.  3,  1793. — G:  Washing- 
ton.— AI 
Washington's     Inauguration.     (Abr.) — Chauncey     M. 

Depew. — MRS 
(Centennial  Speech — diff.  abr.) — SR  8 
Washington's  Kiss. — Annie  S.  Downs. — HS — WR  25 
Washington's  Life.     (Concert  rec.) — M.  A.  Bryant. — 

DFR 
(George  Washington.)— DLS—PP— PS— YPS 
Washington's  Name. — Jas.  G.  Percival. — PRR 
Washington's  Proclamation. — Anon. — PEO 
Washington's  Statue. — H:  T.  Tuckerman. — AA 
Washington's    Sword    and    Franklin's    Staff. — J:    Q. 

Adams.— CS  2— FD  1— PS— SR  8— SS 
Washington's  Training.— C:  W.  Upham.— BLP— PEO 
Washington's  Vision.     (Tab.) — Amanda  P.  Selkrig. — 

StD 
Wasp  and  the  Bee,  The.— Anon.— DCP 
Wasp's  Frolic,  The.— Anon.— AWB— EDY 
Wassail  Chorus  at   the  Mermaid  Tavern. — Theodore 

Watts-Dunton. — OB 
Waste  Not,  Want  Not. — Anon. — CS  18 

(Hans'  Midnight  Excuses.) — BDD 
Wasted.— J.  F.  Norton.— BS  16 
Wasted  Energy. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Wasted  Sympathy,  A. — Winifred  Howells. — AA 
Wat  Tyler,  Sels.  /r.— Rob't  Southey. 

Wat  Tyler.     (Sels.  fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  2;  II.,  1  and  2; 

III.,  2.)— EHT 
Wat  Tyler's  Address  to  the  King.     (Sel.  fr.  II.,  3.) 

— PS— SS 
Wat  Tyler's  Address  to  the  King. — Rob't  Southey. 

See  Wat  IVler. 
Watch.— Anon.— SSS 
Watch  and  Pray. — Anon. — DJS 
Watch  by  Night,  The.— J:  Keble.— HDL 
Watch  Night. — Horatius  Bonar. — BS  15 
Watch  of  a  Swan,  The. — Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt.— AA 
Watch  on  the  Rhine,  The. — Max  Schneckenburger. — 

OS  2 
(Abr.)  — LLC     (wr.    at.    to     Carl     Wilhelm.)  — 

WCLG  1 
(Guard  on  the  Rhine,  The — tr.  by  G.  F.  Dunning  ) 

— HSS  1— SM 
Watch  Your  Words. — Anon. — HSS  2 
Watcher,  The. — Sarah  J.  Hale. — AA 
Watchers,  The. — Arlo  Bates. — AA 
Watchers,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Watching.— Anon.— KNS 

Watching.— Emily  C.  Judson.— AA— BNL— HBP 
Watching    Angel,    The    (Dans    I'Alcove     Sombre). — 

Victor  Hugo. 
(L'Ange  qui  Veille.)— WR  25 
Watching  for  Crumbs. — Anon. — LPS — PP 
Watching  for  Papa. — Anon. — HP 
Watching  for  Santa  Claus. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL — 

LPD 
Watching  for  Santa  Claus.     (Dial.) — Clara  Denton. — 

LPD 
Watchman,  Tell  us  of  the  Night. — J:  Bowring.     See 

Watchman's  Report,  The. 
Watchman's  Report,  The. — J:  Bowring. — HBP 
(Watchman,  Tell  us  of  the  Night.)— FEP 
(What  of  the  Night?)— VA 
Watchman's  Story,  The.— J:  F.  Nicholls.— CS  27 
Water.— Anon.— PEO 

Water.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Water.— Eliza  Cook.— CS  35 
Water. — Paul  Denton.     See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 


363 


Water 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Water. — J:  Ruskin.     See  Modern  Painters. 

Water  and  Rum.— J:  B.  Gough.— BS  16— CS  32— PS 

— SAE  (6r.  sel.) 
Water  and  the  Flower,  The. — Anon. — YBT 
Water  Babies,  The,  Sels,  fr. — C:  Kingsley. 

Clear  and  Cool.    CTide  River,  The— C— /r.  Ch.  I.) 

— GN  ^ 

(Song  of  the  River.)- BNL— MMR— SN 
Lost  Doll.  The.      (My  Little  Doll— C.—/r.  Ch.  V.) 

—OS  1— PoR 
(My  Childhood's  Love.)— WR  22 
(Old  Love,  The.)— GMS 
(Song  of  Madame  Do-as-you-would-be-done-by, 

The.)— WEP  4 
"Old,  Old  Song,  The."     (Young  and  Old— C.—fr. 

Ch.  II.)— BFV— LC— PGT  2— WEP  4— YBF 
("When  all  the  world  is  young[,  lad].") — BS  25 

—LLC 
("Wild  Oats.")— GP— WR  2 
(Youth  and  Age.)— CEL 
Water  Color,  A.— Anon.— WR  26 
Water  Fay,  The.     (/n  Pictures  of  Travel:  The  Return 

Home,  XIV.)— Heinrich  Heine  {tr.  by  C:  G. 

Leland).— HBP 
Water  for  Me. — E:  Johnson.     See  Water-drinker,  The. 
Water  in   Landscape.     (Sd.   fr.   My   Farm   of   Edge- 
wood,  Ch.  I.)— Donald  G.  Mitchell.— LLC 
Water  into  Wine,  The.     ("Thy  glory  Thou  didst  man- 
ifest.")—E.  E.  Higbee.— LLC 
Water  Lady,  The.— T:  Hood.— HBP— VA 
Water  Lily,  The.— Mary  F.  Butts.— BS  16— HP 
Water  Lily,  The,  Sel.  fr.—Fs.  L.  D.  Waters.— TCV 
Water  Lily.     See  also  Water-lily. 
"Water!  look  at  it,  ye  thirsty  ones." — A.  W.  Arring- 

ton.     See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 
Water  that  has  Passed,  The. — Sarah  Doudney.     See 

Water-mill,  The. 
Water!     The  Water,  The.— W:  Motherwell.— HBP— 

PoR  (sel.) 
Water  Witch,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (My  Brigantine — song  fr. 

Ch.  XV.)— Jas.  F.  Cooper.— AA— BNL 
Water-bloom,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Water-cure,  The. — Austin  Dobson. — VSG 
Water-drinker,  The. — E:  Johnson. — SS 
(46r.)— BNL— WR  18 
(Water  for  me — sel.) — PS 
Waterfall,  The,  Sel.  fr.—J:  Keble.— CEL— WEP  4 
Waterfall,  The.— Frank  D.  Sherman.— LFL— PoR 
Watering  the  Horses.     (Tab.) — Anon.— TCP 
Water-lily,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— AA— SN 
Water-lily.     See  also  Water  Lily. 

Waterloo. — Lord  Byron.     <See  Chllde  Harold's  Pilgrim- 
age. 
Waterloo. — -Joel  T.   Headley.     See   Napoleon  and  his 

Marshals. 
Waterloo. — Victor  Hugo.     See  Les  Mis^rables. 
Waterloo. — Douglas  Sladen. — WR  7 
Waterloo  Ballad,  A.— T:  Hood.— HSS  3 
Watermelon  Pickles.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) — FAS 
Watermelon  Season,  The.— E.  N.  Baldwin.— WR  21 
Watermelon  Talk.— Anon— DSS 
Water-mill,    The.— "Aunt    EfRe."— BVC— WCL    (si. 

abr.) 
Water-mill,   The.     (Fr.    The   Man   o'   Airlie.) — Sarah 

Doudney.— HP— SM  (si.  abr.) 
(At.  to  Dan'l  C.  McCallum  —  si.  diff.    vers.)  — 

BRR— CS   14— DS— FMR 
(Water  that  has  Passed,  The.)— GP— SR  1 
Watermillion,  The.— Anon.— CS  31— PR— TFS— YA 
Water-nymph   and   the   Boy,   The. — Roden   B.  Noel. 

—OB 
Waters  of  Carr,  The.— Arthur  J.  Lockhart.— TCV 
Wave,  The.— Christoph  A.  Tiedge.— BS  12 
Waverley,  Sels.  fr. — Walter  Scott. 

Davie  Gellatley's  Song.     (Fr.  Ch.  IX.)— PEB  3 
Hie  Away.     (Sonn  fr.  Ch.  XII.)— OS  1— PoR 
Waves.     (Sels.  Jr.  Fragments  on  Nature  and  Life.) — 

Ralph  W.  Emerson. — AA 
Wax  Figures,  The.     (Dial.)— Anon.— YFD 
Wax  Work.— Anon.— BS  3— CS  10— MHR 
Way,  The.— W:  S.  Shurtleff.— WR  6 
"Way  at  times  may  dark  and  dreary  seem,  The."     (Br. 

sel.  fr.  Rifts  in  the  Cloud.)— Will  Carleton. — 

FHS 
'Way  Down  in  Ole  Virginy.— W:  H.  Head.— SR  11 
'Way  Down  Souf  in  Georgy.  —  Howell   L.    Piner.  — 

WR23 
Way  for  Billy  and  Me,  The.— Jas.  Hogg.— OS  1 

(Boy's    SongT,   A].)— BFV— BPB— BVC      (abr.)— 

CEL— LC— NV— OB— PoR— WEP  4 
Way  it  is  Said,  The.— Anon.— FS 
Way  of  It,  The.— J:  V.  Cheney,— TAV 
Way  of  It,  The.     (  Yale  Record.)— CG  2 


Way  of  the  Cross,  The.— Ellen  C.  Howarth.— HDL 
Way  of  the  World,  The.— Anon.— CS  26 
Way  of  the  World,  The. — Aristine  Anderson. — WR  20 
Way  the  Baby  Slept,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— AA 
Way  the  Baby  Woke,  The.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— AA 
Way,  the  Truth,  and  the  Life,  The. — Theodore  Parker. 

— BNL— GP 
("O  Thou  great  Friend  to  all  the  sons  of  men!")— 

GG 
Way  They  Pop  in  Boston,  The.— Anon.— WR  14 
Way  to  Arcady,  The.— H:  C.  Bunner.— AA— ASL 
Way  to  be  Brave,  The.— Anon.— SSS 
Way  to  be  Happy,  The.— Anon.— FTT— HSS  2 

(^i>r.)— PPSr— PS 
Way  to  be  Happy. — Jane  Taylor. — PC 
Way  to  Conquer,  The. — Bryan  W.  Procter. — WR  24 
Way  to  Do  It,  The.     (C.)— Mary  M.  Dodge.— PP— 

YFR 
(Way  to  Speak  a  Piece,  The— si.  abr.)— WR  17 
Way  to  Freedom,  The.   (Dial. )— S .  Jennie  Smith.— CS  34 
Way  to   Heaven,   The. — Josiah   G.  Holland. — LL(3 — 

OS  2— SM 
(Gradatim— O— BS  6— CS  6— GMS— GP— SO  (si. 

abr.) 
(Gradation — si.  abr.) — KNE 
Way  to  Heaven,  The. — C.  G.  Whiting.— AA 
Way  to  Make  Money  Plenty  in  Every  Man's  Pocket, 

The,   Br.  sel.   fr.   (Honesty  and   Economy.) — 

B:  Franklin.— HSS  3 
Way  to  Sing,  The.— Anon.— HSS  2 
Way  to  Speak  a  Piece,  The. — Mary     M.     Dodge.     See 

Way  to  Do  It,  The.- 
Way  to  Spend  Christmas,  The.     (Dial.) — Annie  Chase. 

— DLD 
Way  to  Wealth,  The[:  being  a  Summary  of  the  Maxims 

and  Proverbs  in  Poor  Richard's  Almanac — C.]. 

— B:  Franklin.— WCLI  2  (abr.) 
(Poor  Richard's  Almanac.) — MAL 
(Time— sei.)- OS  1 
Wayback  Temperance  Lecture. — C :  R.  Risley. — CS  35 
Wayfarer,  The.— Stephen  Crane. — AA 
Wayfarers.— E.  S.  H.— EPs 
Waylaid.     (Pantomime  char.)  —  E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook. 

— YFE 
Ways  and  Means  (' '  I'll  tell  thee  everything  I  can  " — C). 

— Lewis  Carroll. — NA 
Ways  of  Love,  The.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— FTA— OH 
(How  do  I  Love  thee?)— GP— TFY 
(Sonnets    from    the    Portuguese.) — BNL — FEP — 

HBP— YBF 
(Sonnets  from  the    Portuguese,   XLIII. — C.) — VA 

—WEP  4 
Ways  of  Some  Girls  at  the  Play,  The. — Anon. — DCR 
Ways  of  War. — Lionel  Johnson. — TIP 
Wayside,  The. — J:  H.  Morse. — AA 
Wayside  Calvary,  A. — Anne  R.  Aldrich. — TAS 
Wayside  Inn,  The.— Adelaide  A.  Procter.- BS  10 
Wayside  Inn — an      Apple-tree,      The. — Anon. — AD — 

HSS  1 
Wayside  Virgin,  The:  France. — Langdon  E.  Mitchell. — 

AA 
Wayside  Well,  The.— Walter  Learned.— TAV 
"We  all  complain  of  the  shortness  of  time."     (Br.  sel. 

fr.  Morals,  Ch.  XIX.)     Seneca.— WCLI  1 
We  all  have  Faults. — Rob't  Burns.     See  To  a  Louse. 
We  all  know  Her.— Tom  Masson.— CS  31— PR— SR  10 

— YA 
"We  all  like  Sheep."— Anon.— CS  29.-TFS 
"We  All  Wishes  You  was  up  Here." — Howell  L.  Piner. 

— WR  23 
"We  Americans  make  a  God  of  our  common-school 

system."     (Scribner's  Monthly.) — GG 
We  are  Brethren  A'.— Rob't  NicoU.— BNL— FEP 
"We  are  Builders,  and  each  one." — Anon. — GG 
We  are  but  Little  Folks,  you  See. — Marie  E.  Kunkler. — 

KC 
(But  Little  Folks— sei.)—TT 
We  are  Children.     (Cornisken  Sonnets,   III.) — Rob't 

Buchanan. — VA 
"We  are  ever  taking  leave  of  something  that  will  not 

come   back    again."     (Br.    sel.    fr.    The    Last 

Utterances  of  Christ.) — Frd'k  W.  Robertson. — 

GG 
We  are  Four.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
We  are  Free  (Song — C). — Alfred  Tennyson. — SAE 
We  are  Seven.— W:  Wordsworth.— BNL— FEP— FMR 

— GMS— GN— GP— HBP— MBL— MR— PC— 

PHS— VSG— WCL 
(SI.  ofcr.)- CSS— OS  1— PPSr 
"We  are  what  the  past  has  made  us." — Frd'k  W.  Robert- 
son.— GG 
We  Can  Do  So  Little.— G:  Du  Maurier.- WR  17 
"We  cannot  despair  of  success." — R.  W.  Dale. — GG 


364 


TITLE  INDEX 


Weight 


We  Cannot  Kindle  when  We  Will. — Matthew  Arnold. 

See  Morality. 
We  Cannot  Love  too  Much.     (Sel.  jr.  Message  of  an 

^oljan  Harp.) — Frances  R.  Havergal. — BIL 
"We  cannot  say  to  any  young  man:  'Do  not  play  bil- 
liards.'"—J:  Tulloch.— GG 
We  Cherish  Dreams — C:  Lamb.     See  That  we  should 

Rise  with  the  Lark. 
We  Conquer  God. — Maurice  F.  Egan. — TAS 
"We  do  not  get  our  best  vision  of  heaven." — R.  S. 

Storrs.— GG 
We  do  not  Stop  to  Think. — Anon. — SR  2 
We  Greet  Thee,  Merry  Spring  Time.     (With  micsic.) — 

Anon. — AD 
"We  grow  wrong;  we  allow  ourselves  to  crystallize  in 

habits." — Jos.  Cook. — GG 
We   Have    Been    Friends   Together. — Caroline    E.    S. 

Norton.— BNL—GP— HBP— VA 
We  Have  Seen  Thee,  O  Love. — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. 

See  Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
We  Kissed  again  with  Tears. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See 

Princess,  The. 
' '  We  know  what  would  be  the  effect  of  abating  faith." — 

Anon.— GG 
We  Lay  us  down  to  Sleep. — Louise  C.  Moulton. — AA — 

HDL 
"We  Lead  Two  Lives,  the  outward  seeming  fair." — 

Anon.— GG 
We  Lift  our  Tuneful  Voices.     {With  music.) — Anon. — 

AD 
"We  listened,  as  all  boys  in  their  better  moods  will 

listen." — T:  Hughes.     See  Tom  Brown's  School 

Days. 
We  Little  Boys.     (Concert   piece.)— COS— DJS—DLS 

— PP— TT 
"We  live  in  the  world's  crisis." — Anon. — GG 
We  Love  but  Few.— Anon.— BIL— FLS— FTA— HP 
"We  may  hope  that  the  growing  influence  of  enlight- 
ened sentiments." — Dan'l  Webster. — HSS  1 
"We  may  not  stand  content;  it  is  our  part." — J:  J. 

Piatt.— GG 
We  Meet  upon  the  Level  and  We  Part  upon  the  Square. 

— Rob't  Morris.— CS  2 
We  Met.— T:  H.  Bayly.— FP 
We  Must  All  Scratch.— Anon.— PP—YFR 
(Chickens,  The.)— DS— NPS— TFS— YA 
(Five  Little  Chickens.)— DES 
"We  must  fight  this  temperance  battle  out." — J:  B. 

Gough.— GG 
We  Parted  in  Sadness.— C:  F.  Hoffman.— FTA 
We  Parted  in  Silence. — Julia  Crawford. — BNL — GP — 

HBP 
We  Plough  the  Fields.— Matthias  Claudius.— YBT 
We  Saw,  and  Woo'd  Each  Other's  Eyes.— W:  Habing- 

ton.     See  Castara. 
We  Shall  be  Satisfied.— S.  K.  Phillips.— HP 
We  Shall  Know.— Annie  Herbert.— CS  9— TFS  (sel.) 

(When  the  Mists  have  Rolled  away — abr.) — LI>C 
We  Shall  Meet  and  Rest.— Horatius  Bonar. — LLC  {abr.) 

(Meeting-place,  The— C.)—CS  2 
"We  shall  walk  no  more  through  the  sodden  plain." — 

Jean  Ingelow.     Sec  When  Sparrows  Build. 
"We  shape  ourselves  the  joy  or  fear." — J:  G.  Whittier. 

See  Raphael. 
We  Thank  Thee.— Mary  M.  Dodge.— YBT 
We  Thank  Thee.— Ralph  W.  Emerson(7).— NV 

(Sel.)  AD— NV— YBT 
We  Twain. — Amanda  T.  Jones. — GP 
We  Two.     (Harper's  Bazar.)— C8  15 
We  Two.— Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt.— TAS 
We  Two.— Marg.  J.  Preston.— BIL 
"We  walk  alone  through  all  life's  various  ways." — 

Eleanor  Gray. — GG 
We    Walked    among   the    Whispering    Pines. — J.    H. 

Boner. — AA 
We  Were  Boys  Together. — G:  P.  Morris. — AA — BLP 
"We  will  grieve  not." — W:  Wordsworth.     See  Ode: 

Intimations  of  Immortality,  etc. 
Weakness.     (Fr.     Abuses     Stript     and     Whipt.) — G: 

Wither.- WEP  2 
Wealth. — Anna  H.  Branch. — CG  2 
Wealth. — (/n  Conduct  of  Life.) — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — 

SE  (sel.) 
Wealth  and  Progress. — Anon. — CP 
Wealth  and  Work.— Anon.— NPS— YP 
Wealth  is  not  happiness. — Caroline  E.  S.  Norton. — FP 
"Weapon  that  comes  down  as  still.  A." — J:  Pierpoiit. 

See  Word  from  a  Petitioner,  A. 
Wearin'  o'  the  Green,  The.— Anon.— TIP 
Weary  Coble  o'Cargill,  The.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Weary  in  Well-doing. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — FEP 
"  'Weary  lot  isthine[,fairmaid],  A.'  "—Walter  Scott. — 

See  Rokeby. 


Weary  Soul,  The.— Anon.— CS  11 

Wearyin'  for  You. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — BS  21 

Weather,  The.— Anon.— CPL 

( Weather-song. )— SSS 
Weather  Bureau,  The. — Anon. — WR  25 
Weather  in  Verse,  The. — Vandyke  Brown. — CS  26 
Weather  Receipt,  A. — Anon. — YBT 
Weather  Rule,  A.— Anon.— BVC 
Weathercock.    The.      (C.)  —    J.    T.    Allingham.  — 

CS  19  (abr.ySS  (abr.) 
(Jack  of  all  Trades— ad.)— DT 
Weather-cock's  Complaint,  The. — Anon. — NV 
Weather-song. — Anon.     See  Weather,  The. 
Weaver,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
Weaver,  The.— W :  H.  Burleigh.— CS  7 
Weaving  the  Web.— Julia  C.  R.  Dorr.- SR  1 
Web  of  Life,  The.— Clara  J.  Moore.- FEP 
Webster  — Epes  Sargent. — EDY 
Webster:    An  Ode,  Sel.  fr.     (At  Marshfield.)— W.  C. 

Wilkinson. — AA 
Webster  as  an  Orator  and  Statesman. — S:  C.  Bartlett. 

— FD  2 
Webster  Statue  at  Concord,  N.  H.,  The.— G:  D.  Rob- 
inson.—FD  2 
Webster  the  Successor  of  Washington. — J:  A.  Bing- 
ham.—FD  2 
We'd  All  Like  to  Stop  There.— Anon.— SR  13 
Wedded.— Anon.— HP 
Wedded.— Jas.  V.  Blake.— BIL— TFY       ♦ 
Wedded   Bliss.— Charlotte  P.   (S.)   Gihnan.— AWH— 

THP 
Weddmg,  The.— Rob't  Southey.— BS  20 
Wedding  Bells. — Charlotte  M.  Griffiths.— PR 
Wedding  Bells,  The.— Edgar  A.  Poe.     See  Bells,  The. 
Wedding  Day.     See  also  Wedding-day. 
Wedding  Day,  The;  or,  "Better  Late  than  Never." 

(Z>iaZ.)— Ellen  Pickering.— DDD 
Wedding  Fee,  The.— R.  M.  Streeter.— CS  12 

(Also  included  in  Parson's  Fee,  The — tab.) — BS  11 

—TCP 
Wedding  Gift,  The.— (Tr.  by)  Leonard  C.  Foster.— 

CS37 
Wedding  Gifts.— Martin  F.  (?)  Tupper.— FP 
Wedding  Hymn. — Sidney  Lanier. — TAS 
Wedding    of    Pale    Bronwen,    The. — Ernest    Rhys. — 

PEB  4 
Wedding     of     Shon     Maclean,     The.     (SeZ.)— Rob't 

Buchanan. — BS  11 
Wedding  of  the  Clans,  The. — Aubrey  De  Vere. — TIP 
Wedding  of  the  Moon,  The. — G:  P.  Lathrop.— BS  19 
Wedding  Song. — Beaiunont  and  Fletcher.     See  Maid's 

Tragedy,  The. 
Wedding  Song,  A.— J:  W.  Chadwick.— AA— OH 
Wedding  Song,  A. — J:  Savary. — OH 
Wedding  VeU,  The.— Eliz.  Whittier.— BIL 
Wedding-day,  The.— Anon.— WR  13 
Wedding-day,  The.— Edmund  C.  Stedman.— TAV 
Wedding-day,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.    See  In  Memo- 

riam. 
Wedding-day.     See  also  Wedding  Day. 
Wedding-gown,  The. — Etta  W.  Pierce. — DR 
Wedding-march  on  Trial,  A. — Fanny  Barlow. — MYF 

(Taken  on  Trial.)— GH 
Wedlock  Hymn,  A. — W:  Shakespeare.     See  As   You 

Like  It. 
Wednesday  before  Easter.     (C.) — J:  Keble. 

(Resignation.) — CEL 
Wee,  Wee  Bairnie,  The. — Anon. — CD — SR  4 
Wee,  Wee  Man,  The. — Anon. — HBP — PEB  1  (si.  diif.) 
Wee  Willie  Winkie.     (Sei.)-T-Rudy»rd  Kipling.— WR  9 
Weed  and  the  Boy,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
Weed's  Mission,  The. — Marg.  Eytinge. — YBT 
Weehawken    and   the   New   York   Bay. — Fitz-Greene 

Halleck.     See  Fanny. 
Week  of  Work,  A. — Anon. — DLF 
Week    on    the    Concord    and    Merrimack    Rivers,    A, 

Verses  fr. — H:  D.  Thoreau. 
Haze.     (Fr.  Tuesday.)— EPs 
Mist.     (Fr.  Tuesday.)— A  A— BNL— EPs— SN 
Summer  Rain,  The.     (Fr.  Thursday.)— ASL 
Sympathy.     (Fr.  Wednesday.) — EPs 
Week's  Work,  The.— Anon. — PEB  2 
Weep  no  More. — J:  Fletcher.     See  Queen  of  Corinth, 

The. 
Weep  not.— Johann  Hofel. — HDL 
Weep  not,  my  Wanton. — Rob't  Greene.      See  Mena- 

phon. 
Weep  not!    Sigh  not! — W:  J.  Linton. — VA 
Weeper,  The. — R:  Crashaw. — OB 
Weeping  Mary. — J:  Newton. — HBP  * 

Wee-waw  Land,  The.— H.  T.  Hollands.— WR  17 
Weighing  Social,  A. — Aimn. — EuE 
Weight  of  a  Word,  The.— Anon. — PR 


365 


Weird 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Weird  Lady,  The.— C:  Kingsley.— FEB  3 

Weird  Warble,  A.— H.  C.  Newton.— CS  35 

Welcome. — Anon. — DCP 

Welcome.— Anon.— DST 

Welcome.     {Concert  piece.) — Anon. — PS — TT 

Welcome[,  A   or   The].— W:    Browne.— ELP— FEE- 

OB  • 

(Song.)— CEL— ES— WEP  2 
(Welcome,  welcome.)— HBP— YBF 
("Welcome,  welcome,  do  I  sing" — abr.') — BNL 
Welcome,    The.— T:    Davis.- BNL— CS    10— FEP— 

FLS  (fcr.  seZ.)- HBP— VA 
Welcome,  A. — C:  Kingslev. — LH 

(Ode  to  the  North-east  Wind— C.)— GN— PHS— 
.  VSG 
Welcome,  Bonny  Brid! — S:  Laycock. — VA 
Welcome  for  School  Entertainment. — Ida  M.  Hedrich. 

— DS— YA 
Welcome  Home. — Annie  R.  Christie. — TCV 
Welcome,  Little  Stranger. — C:  F.  Adams. — HP 

(Charley's  Opinion  of  the  Baby. — Anon. — variation 

onHP.)— PR— PS 
(Nose  out  of  Joint.) — DLS 
Welcome  Spring,   The.     {W.  music.) — E.  R.  Latta. — 

AD 
Welcome  to  Alexandra  (OF,  (Princess  of  Wales)]  A. — 

Alfred  Tennyson.— EDY — SO 
(Alexandra — sel. ) — SE 
Welcome  t<5  "Boz,"  A.     (On  His  First  Visit  to  the 

West.)— W.  H.  Venable.— BNL 
Welcome  to  Gen.  La  Fayette. — E:  Everett. — SR  8 
Welcome  to  Her  Royal  Highness,  Marie  Alexandrovna, 

Duchess    of    Edinburgh.     (C.) — Alfred    Ten- 
nyson. 
(Welcome  to  the  Duke  and  Duchess  of  Edinburgh, 

A.)— EDY 
Welcome  to  Louis  Kossuth.     (Sel.) — W:  H.  Seward. 

— NC 
Welcome  to  May. — Anon. — AD 
Welcome  to  Summer,  A. — Anon. — BS  3 
Welcome  to  the  Duke  and  Duchess  of  Edinburgh,  A. — 

Alfred     Tennyson.     See     Welcome     to     Her 

Royal  Highness,  etc.,  A. 
Welcome  to  the  Forest.     (W.  mtisic.) — ^Anon. — AD 
Welcome  to  the  Nations. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. — CS  19 
Welcome  to  the  Nations. — Levi  P.  Morton. — BLP 
Welcome,  Welcome. — W :  Browne.     See  Welcome. 
Welcome,   Welcome,   Do   I   Sing. — W:   Browne.     See 

Welcome. 
We'll  a'  Go'  Pu'  the  Heather.— Rob't  NicolL— VA 
"Well,  Dinah  Might."— S.  G.  Tenney.— CG  1 
We'll  Go  no  More  a-Roving. — Lord  BjTon. — OB 

("So,    we'll    go  no  more    a-roving" — C.) — BPB — 

WEP  4 
"Well  I  know  thy  trouble."— J:  M.  Neale.— HDL 
Well  of  Death,  The.— Anon.— SED 
Well   of   St.    Keyne,   The.— Rob't   Southey.— BNL— 

CS  4— FEP— PEB  3— WR  25 
Well  Spent.— G:  Eliot.— YBT 

"Well,  Then,  I'm  Yourn."— Jos.  B.  Smiley.— CS  33 
Wellesley  in  Autimrn. — M.  B.  Wood. — CG  3 
Wellington. — B:  Disraeli,  Lord  Beaconsfield. — EDY — 

VA 
Wellington's  Nose. — Anon. — HPE 
"Well-nerved    and    stout    be   the    arm    that    smiteth 

wrong." — W.  H.  H.  Murray. — GG 
Well-spent  Simday,  The. — Matthew  Hale. — DLS 
Welsh  Classic,  A. — Harlan  H.  Ballard. — CS  23 — SPE 

— SR  11 
W'en  Bill  Smith  Gi*s  His  'Cordeen  Out.— Anon.— CS  34 
W'en   de  Darky  am  a-Whistlin'  in  de  Co'n. — S.   Q. 

Lapius. — BS  23 
Wendell  Phillips.— Amos  B.  Alcott.— AA 
Wendell  Phillips.— H:  W.  Beecher.— NC 
WendeU  Phillips.— G:  W:  Curtis.     See  Wendell  Phil- 
lips.    A  Eulogy,  etc. 
Wendell  Phillips,  Sel.  fr.     (Oratory  of  Wendell  Phil- 
lips, The.)— T:  W.  Higginson.— FD  2 
Wendell  Phillips.     (Sonnet  XXIII.)— Jas.  R.  Lowell. 

— PEO    ■ 
Wendell  Phillips.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— AA  («eZ.)— BS  12 
Wendell    Phillips.     A    Eulogy    Delivered    before    the 

Municipal  Authorities  of  Boston,  Mass.,  April 

18,  1884,  SeU.  fr.—G:  W.  Curtis. 
Eulogy  of  Wendell  Phillips.— FD  2 
Eulogy  on  Wendell  Phillips.     {Ptly.  like  others.) — 

Wendell  Phillips.— FS 

Wendell  Phillips  as  an  Orator. — FD  2 

^Eulogy  on  Wendell  Phillips — ahr.) — AE 
Wendell  Phillips  at  Faneuil  Hall.— FD  2 
Wendell  Phillips  as  an  Orator. — G:  W.  Curtis.     See 
Wendell  Phillips.     A  Eulogy,  etc. 


Wendell  Phillips  at  Faneuil  Hall.— G:  W.  Curtis.    -See 

Wendell  Phillips.     A  Eulogy,  etc. 
Wer  wenig  Sucht,  der  Findet  Viel. — Friedrich  Riickert 

Qr.  by  Lilian  Clarke).— OH 
"We're  Building  Two  a  Dayl" — Alfred  J.  Hough. — 

CS  25 
Were  but  My  Spirit  Loosed  upon  the  Air. — Louise  C. 

Moulton. — AA — ASL 
"Were  half  the  power  that  fills  the  world  with  terror." 
— H:  W.  Longfellow.     See  Arsenal  at  Spring- 
field, The. 
Were  I  as  Base  as  is  the  Lowly  Plain. — Joshua  Sylves- 
ter.—BNL 
(Love's  Omnipresence. )— FEP— FTA— OH— PGT 1 

—YBF 
(Sonnet.)— WEP  1 
(Ubique.)— OB 
Were  I  but  his  Own  Wife. — Ellen  M.   P.  Downing. — 

HBP— VA 
"Were  I  so  tall  to  reach  the  pole." — Anon. — HSS  2 
Were  I  the  Sun.— Anon.— DLF 
Were  I  Thy  Bride.-- Anon. —FLS 
Were  I  You,  Little  Lad.— Belle  K.  Towne.— HSS  2 
Were  it  Only  Now.— A.  W.  Bell.— CG  2 
We're  Only  Little  Children. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
"Were  there  no  night,  we  could  not  read  the  stars." — 

H:  Burton.— GG 
Werena  my  Heart's  Licht  I  wad  dee. — Lady  Grisel 

Baillie.— OB 
Were-wolf. — Julian  Hawthorne. — AA 
Were-wolves,  The.— W.  W.  Campbell.— VA 
West.— Anon.— CP 

West    Indies,    Sel.    fr.     (Home— /r.    Pt.    III.)— Jas. 
Montgomery. — WRD 
(SeZ.)— FP— WCLG  2 
(Love  of  Country  and  Home.) — PPSr  (br.  sel.) — 

SS  (abr.) 
(My  Country— a6r.)— BNL— SM 
West  Point.— L.  C.  Strong.— FEP— HBP 
West  Wind,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.- POS 
West  Wind.— Carmen  Sylva.— HS 
Western  Artist's  Accomplishments,  A. — Anon. — CS  26 

— DCR 
Western  Lawyer's  Plea  against  the  Fact,  A. — Anon. 

— BC 
Westminster  Abbey,  Sets.  Jr.     (In  The  Sketch  Book.) 
— Washington  Irving. 
Organ,  The.— SE 

(Sketch-book,  The,  Sel.  /r.)— AE 
(Westminster  Abbey.  )^-SAE 
Reflections  on  Westminster  Abbey. — BS  7 
Westminster  Abbey. — TMD 
Westminster  Bridge.— W :  Wordsworth.-LLC — WR  1 
(Composed    upon    Westminster    Bridge,    Sept.    3, 

1802— C.)— WEP  4 
("Earth  has  not  anything  to  show  more  fair.") — 

HBR 
(Morning  in  London.)— HBP— OS  3 
(Sonnet     Composed     upon     Westminster    Bridge, 

1802. )— BNL— FEP— MBL 
(Upon  Westminster  Bridge.)— OB— PGT  1— YBF 
Westward. — Douglass  B.  Douglass. — CG  3 
Westward  Ho!,  Sels.  fr. — C:  Kingsley. 

Sea  Fight,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXXI.)— VSG 
Waiting  for  the  Armada.     (Sel.  fr.  Ch.  XXX.) — 
WCLG  1 
(Sir  Francis  Drake — sel.) — OS  2 
Westward  Ho! — Joaquin  Miller. — AA 
Westward    the    Course    of    Empire. — G:    Berkeley. — 
GP  (abr.) 
(America. ) — SS 
(American  Destiny.) — BLP 
(Old  World  and  the  New,  The.)— FP 
(On  the  Prospect  of  Planting  Arts  and  Learning 

in  America.)— BNL— FEP— HBP— YBF 
(Verse:  Westward  the  Star  of  Empire  —  br.  sel.)  — 
EPs 
Wet  and  Dry.- Clark  Jillson.— CS  13— DS— YA 
Wet  Sheet  and  a  Flowing  Sea,  A. — Allan  Cunningham. 
—BNL  —  BVC  —  FEP  —  HBP  —  LC  —  OS  2 
—PC— PGT  1— YBF 
Wet  Weather  Talk.     (SI.  abr.)— J&a.  W.  Riley.— CD 
We've  always  been  Provided  for. — Anon. — CS  21 
Wexford  Massacre,  The. — M.  J.  Barry. — EDY 
Wha'll  be  King  but  Charlie? — Caroline  Oliphant,  Lady 

Nairn.— EDY— EHT  (a6r.)— WEP  3 
Whango  Tree,  The. — Anon. — NA 
"Whar's  de  Kerridge?"     (Virginia  City  Chronicle.) — 

CDV— CRR— SDR 
What?— Kate  P.  Osgood.— WCL 
What  a  Bird  Taught. — Alice  Carv.— BLF 
What  a  Boy  Can  Do.— Anon.— WR  15 
What  a  Christmas  Carol  Did. — T.  A.  Harcourt.— CS  21 


366 


TITLE  INDEX 


"What 


What  a  Common  Man  May  Say;  or,  What  I  Have  to 

be  Thankful  for.— Anon.— PS 
"  'What  a  fool  you  are,  Paley,'  said  a  young  man  in  a 

British  university." — Albert  Barnes. — GG 
What  a  Little  Boy  is  Worth. — Anon.— FAS 
What  a  Little  Boy  Thinks  about  Things. — J:  Paul. — 

CS  19 
What  a  Little  Girl  Can  Do. — Anon.— WR  17 
What  a  Little     Leaf     Said. — H:     W.     Beecher.     See 

Norwood. 
"What  a  noble  gift  to  man  are  the  forests!" — Susan 

F.  Cooper.— AD 
What  a  Small  Boy  Can  Do. — Anon. — FAS 
What  a  Thirty-ton  Hammer  Can  Do. — Anon. — CS  25 
What    Adam    Missed.— Anon.— CS    21— DS— NPS— 

YA— YP 
What  Ailed  the  Pudding.— Josephine  Pollard. — DR 
What  Ailed  "Ugly  Sam."— Anon.— CS  12 
What  Ails  This  Heart  o'  Mine7^Susanna  Blamire. — 

BNL— FEP 
What  Arbor  Day  Has  Already  Done. — Warren  Higley. 

— DFR 
(Arbor  Day.)— AD 
What   are   Little   Boys   Good   for.     (Dial.) — Anon. — 

HVD 
"What  are  the  Flowers  of  Scotland." — Jas.  Hogg. — 

AD 
What  are  the  Wild  Waves  Saying?     (Tab.) — Anon.— 

TCP 
What  are  these  in  Bright  Array  (Song  of  the  Hundred 

and   Forty  and   Four  Thousand,  The — C). — 

Jas.  Montgomery. — FEP 
What  are  You  Good  for?— Emily  H.  Miller.— OS  1 
(My  Good-for-Nothing.)— PC— PS— WCL 
(Wliat  Boys  are  Good  for— a6r.  )—TFS 
What  Became  of  a  Lie. — Mrs.  M.  A.  Kidder. — PP — 

YPS 
What  Became  of  the  Kitten. — Anon. — SR  11 
What  Bessie  Saw. — Carrie  W.  Bronson. — CPL — PP — 

YPS 
What  Biddy  Said  in  the  Police  Court.— E.  T.  Corbett. 

— CS  18 
What  Boots  the  Quest?     (C — Poems    Dedicated    to 

National    Independence   and   Liberty,   Pt.  I., 

XIL)— W:  Wordsworth.- LLC 
(Sonnet.)— EPs 
What  Boys  are  Good  for. — Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  Goodfellow. 

— PS— TT 
What    Boys    are    Good    for. — Emily    H.    Miller.     See 

What  are  you  Good  for? 
"What  can  an  old  man  do  but  die?" — T:     Hood. — 

BNL 
(Ballad— C.)—VA 
What  Came  from  a  Ride. — Anon. — WR  19 
What   Constitutes  a  State. — Sir  W:   Jones. — BNL — 

GG— GP— SE  (sel.) 
(A6r.)— LLC— SM— WCLG  2 
(Ode:  "What  constitutes,"  etc.) — HBP 
(Ode  in  Imitation  of  Alcseus,  An.) — FEP 
(Our  Country's  Needs — Finch — includes  this.) — S8S 
What       Constitutes       Successful       Management. — G: 

Thatcher.— TK 
"What   cordial  welcome   greets   the   guest." — W:   C. 

Bryant.     See     "Oh,     Mother     of     a    Mighty 

What  Do  They  Say?— Anon.— YBT 
What  do  we  Plant — C.  [when  we  Plant  the  Tree]  ? 
— H:  Abbey.— AD— PEO 

(Dedicatory  Exercises  include  this.) — DFR 

(Have  you  Planted  a  Tree?)— WR  17 

(Planting  the  Tree.)— YBT 
What  Does  It  Matter. — Anon. — CS  5 

(Swedish  Poem,  A.)— PEO 
What  does  Little  Birdie  Say?     (Fr.  Sea  Dreams.) — 
Alfred  Tennyson.  —  BNL  —  PHS  —  PoR  — 
TFS  (sel.) 

(Bird  and  the  Baby,  The.)— PP— PPSr— YFR 

(Birdie  and  Babv.)— DCP 

(Cradle  Song.)— LC— PGT  2— PS 

(Little  Birdie.)— OS  1— PC— WCL 

(Morning  Song.) — GMS 

(What  the  Birdie  and  the  Baby  Say.)— HSS  2 
What  Dooley  Says. — Finley  P.  Dunne.— WR  21 
What  Drove  me  into  a  Lunatic  Asylum. — Eli  Perkins. 
Qg  29 

What  d'  ve  Call  It,  The,  Sel.  jr.     (Ballad,  A— /r.  Act 
II.,  Sc.  8.)— J:  Gay.— WEP  3 

(" 'Twas  when  the  seas  were  roaring.") — FEP 
What  Echo  Said.— Anon.— WR  6 
What  Else?— Kate  P.  Osgood.— FT  A— OH 
What  Else  Could  He  Do?— Anon.— BS  21 

(Explanation,  An.) — HP 

(In  Explanation.) — HP 


What  Farmer  Green  Said.— J.  W.  Watson.— SR  3 
What  Girls  Love  to  Do.     (Z>iaZ.)— Anon.— PS— TT 
What  Good  is  a  Brother? — Alice  L.  Richards.— SL 
What   Good   will  the  Monument   Do?     (Sel.   fr.   The 

Bunker  Hill  Monument.) — E:  Everett. — SS 
What  Grandma  Foretold. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
What  Grandma  Says. — G :  Cooper. — WR  15 
What  Grandma  Thinks. — Mrs.   Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KER 
What  Grandmother  Says. — Anon. — YBT 
"What  Happened." — Rudyard  Kipling. — AVP 
What    has    been    Done    may    be    Done    again. — Mrs. 

Russell  Kavanaugh. — KER 
What  Hast  Thou  Done  To-day. — Katie  B.  Wichmann. 

— CS37 
What  Have  I  Done?— Lillian  B.  Fearing.— HP 
What  He  Called  It.     (Somerville  Jowmai. )—GH 

(Educational  Courtship.)— CS  25 — DS 
What  He  Has. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
What  He  Would  Give  Up.— Anon.— DLF— WR  3 
What  House  to  Like. — Anon.- — HP 
What  I  Can  Do. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
What  I  Don't  Like.— Anon.— PS 
What  I  Know.— Anon.— DST 
What  I  Like.— Eliza  Doolittle.— SD 
What  I  Like.— H.  L.— PPh 
What     I     Live     for.  —  G.     L.     Banks.— CS     23  — 

HSS  2  (a6r.)— SSS 
("I  live  for  those  that  love  me" — br.  sels.) — GG 

— SM 
(My  Aim.)— HP 
What  I  Said.— Ellen  Murray.— CS  28 
What  I  Saw.— J.  M.  Akers.— CS  13 
What  I  Saw  in  Washington. — G:  Thatcher. — TK 
What  I  Think.— Anon.     See  What  to  Drink. 
What  I  was  Made  for.— Anon.— YBT 
What  I  would  Be.— D.  A.  Heywood.— WR  17 
"What  if  God  should  place  in  yoiu"  hand  a  diamond." 

— E:  (?)  Payson.- GG 
What  Intemperance  Does. — Anon. — CS  18 — SM 
What    Intemperance    Does.  —  H.     M.     Scudder.  — 

WR  18  (si.  diff.) 
(Destroyer,  The.)— CS  17— TS 
What  is  a  Baby  Good  for?     (St.  Nicholas.)— KSS  3 

(Little  Dora's  Soliloquy.)— BS  10— CPL— PR— YA 
What  is  a  Boy? — Mary  A.  Denison. — FS 
What  is  a  Gentleman.— Anon.— NPS— YP 
What  is  a  Gentleman?     (Dial.) — Clara    J.    Denton. — 

FTT 
What  is  a  Hedgehog? — Anon. — WR  14 
What   is  a  Minority?— J:   B.   Gough.— FD    1— PR— 

WCLG  1 
(SI.  a6r.)— BS  17— CS  13— PS— SR  6— TMR 
What  is  Ambition?     (Sel.  fr.  Extracts  from  a  Poem 

Delivered  at  Brown    University    in    1830.) — 

Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— BLP—SR  3  (longer) 
What  is  Christmas? — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
"What  is  commonly  called  musial  criticism  is  a  mis- 
nomer."— Jonathan  Edwards. — GG 
What  is  Fame?— J.  H.  Stedman.— WR  4 
What  is  Flirtation?— Anon.— BS  21 
What  is  Good?     (C.)— J:  B.  O'Reilly.-  DLF 
(Good,  The.)— BS  18— CS  30 
("What  is  the  real  good?")— YBT 
What  is  Heaven? — Anon. — CS  24 
"What   is   hell   but   an   expression   of   God's   infinite 

abhorrence  of  sin." — Lyman  Beecher. — GG 
What  is  his  Creed? — Anon.     See  What  was  his  Creed? 
What  is  Home? — Anon. — CS  28 
What  is  it  to  Die.— Anon. — CS  21 
What  is  It  to  Me?— B:  P.  Shillaber.— SR  1 
What  is  Life?— Anon. — SR  1 
What  is  Life?     (Blackwood's  Magazine.)— HFE 
What  is  Life?     (C.)—S:  T.  Coleridge. 

("Resembles  life  that  once  was  held  of  light.") — 

HP 
What   is   Love?     (Sel.  fr.  The   lionging  of  a  Blessed 

Heart.)- N:  Breton.— ELP 
What  is  Love?— A.  J.  T.— CG  3 
What  is  Man? — Simon  Wastell.     See  Microbiblion. 
"What  is  ministerial  success?"     (Br.  sel.  fr.  Elijah.) 

— Frd'k  W.  Robertson.— GG 
What  is  my  Work  To-day?— Anon.— SSS 
What  is  Patriotism? — Fisher  Ames. — SR  8 

(True  Patriotism.)— PR 
What  is  Prayer? — Jas.  Montgomery. — FEP — HBP 
What  is  Temperance. — L.  B.  Coles.— WR  18 
What  is  That,  Mother?— G:  W.  Doane.— WRD 

(Eagle,  The— se?.)- TFS 
What  is  that  to  Thee?— T:  D.  James.— CS  9— NPS 

— YP 
What  is  the  Real  Good?— J:  B.  O'Reilly.     See  What 

is  Good? 


367 


What 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


What    is   the   Song   the   Swallows   Sing? — Harry   B. 

Smith.— AD 
What  is  the  Use?,  Sel.  fr.—E.  W.  Ellsworth.— AA 
What  is  the  Use  of  Latin. — Anon. — PTS 
What  is  Time?— W:  Marsden.- BNL— VSG  {si.  diff.) 

— WRD 
What  is  To-morrow? — Anon. — WR  6 

(To-morrow. )— HR— LLC 
What  is  Worth  While.— Mrs.  S:  Lindsay.— TMR 
What    is    your    Culture    to    me?,    Sel.     fr.      (Young 

Scholar,  The.)— C:  D.  Warner.— BS  2— CS  22 

— DS— LLC 
What   It   is  to   Love.     (Song  I. — si.  abr.) — Anna  L. 

Barbauld.— FLS 
What  Janie  Thinks. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
What  Lack  We  Yet?     (C.)— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— SYS 

(When  Washington  was  President.) — WR  6 
What  License  Legalizes. — Anon. — TS 
What  Life  Hath.— Sarah  Doudney. — HP 
What  Little  Dick  Would  Do. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
What  Little  Folds  Can  Do. — Lucy  Moore. — KG 
What  Lottie  Saw.— E.  L.  Brown.— WR  6 
What  Love  is  Like.— T:  Middleton.— FEP 
What  Ma  Kin  Do.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
What  Makes  a  Hero.— H:  Taylor.— PS— SS 

(Hero,  The.)— VA 
What  Makes  the  Sky  Blue?— Anon.— CP 
What  Makes  the  Summer?- Marietta  Holley. — YBT 
What  Man  is  There  of  You?— G:  Macdonald.— HDL 
What  March   Does.    (March— C.)— May  R.  Smith.— 

YBT  (si.  diff.  vers.  fr.  Poems.) 
What  Matters  It?— G:  F.  Cameron.— TCV—VA 
What  May  Happen  to  a  Thimble. — "B." — PoR 
What  Men   Have  not   Fought   for.  —  Rob't    J.   Bur- 
dette.—BS  17— CS  27 
What  Might  Be  Done.— C:  Mackay.— BLP— HBP— 

SM— VA 
What  Might  Happen.— Eva  L.  Carson.— CS  31— PR 
What  Might  Have  Been?— Anon. — CS  8 
What  Miss  Edith  Saw  from  Her  Window. — Fs.  Bret 

Harte.— BS  23 
What   Mr.    Robinson   Thinks. — Jas.    R.   Lowell.     See 

Biglow  Papers,  The. 
What  Mother  Says.— Anon.— HSS  2 
What  Mother  Says.— Anon.— TFS 
What  My  Lover  Said. — Homer  Greene. — AA — CS  20 

— HBR— HP 
What  not  to  Do. — Anon. — KNS 
"What  note  of  sorrow  wounds  the  joyous  May?" — 

Sarah  D.  Hobart.— HSS  1 
"What  now,    Sir    Foole!" — Sir    Philip    Sidney.      See 

Astrophel  and  Stella. 
What  o'clock. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 
What  of  That?— Anon.— HP 
(SI.  a6r.  )—BS  15— PEG 
(Sermon  in  Verse,  A.) — KNE 
("Tired!  well,  and  what  of  that?")— GG 
What  of  the  Night? — Sir  J :  Bowring.     See  Watchman's 

Report,  The. 
What  Old  Mrs.  Ember  Said.— Mary  K.  Dallas.— WR  2 
What  One  Boy  Thinks.— Harriet  P.  Spofiford. — CS  29 
What  Robin  Said. — ^Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
What  Robin  Told. — G:  Cooper.— AD 
What  Sambo  Says. — Anon.— CRR 
What  Saved  the  Union. — Ulysses  S.  Grant. — PS 

(Speech  at  Hamburg.) — FD  1 
What  Sequel? — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Love  and  Duty. 
What  Shall  I  Do  for  My  Love? — Lewis  Morris. — BIL — 

FTA— TFY 
"'What  shall  I  do'?  My  boy,  don't  stand   asking." — 

Frances  D.  B.  (?)  Gage.— GG 
What  Shall  It  Profit?— W:  D.  Howells.— AA— TAS 
What  Shall  We  Wrap  the  Baby  in? — -Lucy  Larcom. — 

YBT 
What  She  Said.— Sarah    De    W.    GamwelL— BS  IO- 
CS 32— DST 
What  Should  a  Young  Maid  Do? — Byron  W.  King. — 

WR2 
What  Some  One  Said.— Anon.— FLS 
What  the  April  Breeze  Said  to  the  Trees. — Keith  St. 

John.— YBT 
What  the  Bells  Said. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
What  the  Birdie  and  the  Baby  Say. — Alfred  Tennyson. 

See  What  Does  Little  Birdie  Say? 
What  the  Birds  Said.— J:  G.  Whittier.— EPs 
What  the  Bullet  Sang.— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— AA—LH— 

OB 
What  the  Burdock  was  Good  For.- Anon.— NV— YBT 
What  the  Chimney  Sang.     (C.) — Fs.  Bret  Harte. 

(Chimnev's  Melody,  The.)— BS  10 
What  the  Choir  Sang  about  the  New  Bonnet. — M.  T. 

Morrison. — CH 
(Foolish  Little  Maiden,  A.)— CS  26 


What  the  Clock  Says.— Anon.— WR  17 
What  the  Coal  Says.— Anon.— NV 
What  the  Crickets  Said.— Mary  K.  Dallas. — WR  3 
What  the  Daisy  Said. — Anon. — See  Daisy  and  Snow- 
drop. 
What  the  Diver  Saw. — Horace  B.  Durant. — CS  28 
What  the  Drums  Say. — Fs.  Bret  Harte. — BS  25 

(Reveille,  The— C.)  —  AWB  —  EDY— GN— LH— 

PAPm 
What  the  Flag  Means.     (Fr.  a  speech  before  the  Repub- 
lican    State     Convention     of    Massachusetts. 

March  27,  1896.)— H:  C.  Lodge.— SC 
What  the  Frogs  Sing.— Phoebe  Cary.— BLF 
What  the  Lambs  Say.— Edith   M.   Thomas.— COS— 

PP 
What  the  Little  Girl  Said.     (Boston  Globe.)— CS  24— 

DS— NPS— YP 
(Freckled-faced  Girl,  The.)— BS  11— CRR 
(Startling  Revelations.) — SR  5 
What  the  Little  Maiden  Saw. — Anon. — HSS  2 
What  the  Little  Shoes  Said.— Anon.— PS— TT 
What  the  Little   Things  Said. — Fanny  J.   Crosby. — 

AD  (w.mus.)— YBT  ' 
What  the  Lord    Had    Done   for    Him. — Mrs.    Findley 

Braden.— WR  7 
What  the  Lord  High  Chamberlain  Said. — Virginia  W. 

Cloud.— WR  20 
What  the  Minutes  Say. — Anon.     See  Take  Care  of  the 

Minutes. 
What  the  Mother  Heard. — Mrs.     Carter    [or    Mrs.     J. 

Morrison]. — PPSr 
(Nursery  Song.)— NV— PC— PHS 
(Recitation  for  Three  Little  Girls. )  —  LPS  —  PP  — 
What  the  Old  Man  Said.— Alice  Robbins.— BS  4— CS  5 

— FR— KNE 
What  the  Prince    of    I    Dreamt. — H.    Cholmondeley- 

Pennell.— NA 
What  the  Quail  Says.— Clara  D.  Bates.— YBT 
What  the  Robin  Can  Tell.— Anon.— SR  4 
What  the  Rose  Saw. — Philip  B.  Marston. — BIL 
What  the  Snow-birds  Said. — Anon. — NV 
What  the  Snow-drop  Said.— Anon.— TFS 
What  the  Sonnet  is. — Eugene  Lee-Hamilton. — VA 
What  the  Temperance  Cause  has  Done  for  John  and  Me. 

—J:  F.  Coles.— CS  14 
What  the  Train  Ran  Over. — Lucy  Larcom. — LCS 
What  the  Trumpeter  Said. — Sebastian  Evans. — VA 
What  the  Wild  Waves  Said.     (University  Herald.) — 

CG2 
What  the  Winds  Bring.     (C.)— Edmund  C.  Stedman.— 

BNL  —  FAS  —  HSS  2  —  KC  —  NV  —  PC  — 

PoR— PP— SN— TFS— YFR 
(Wind,  The.)— PTS 
What  the  Wolf  Really  Said  to  Little  Red  Riding-Hood. 

— Fs.  Bret  Harte.— TFY 
What  They  Dreamed  and  Said.— M.  E.— HP 
What  They  Knew.— S.  J.  Smith.— DLD 
What  They  Said.— E.  C.  and  L.  J.  Rook.— YFE 
What  They  Say  about  Cupid. — Anon. — PPSr 
What  They  Wanted.— Anon.— CS  37 
What  They  Will  Do.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
What  though  the  Green  Leaf  Grow? — Maybury  Flem- 
ing.— AA 
What  Three  Women  Said.— Anon.— CS  35 
What  Time  is  It?— Anon.— CS  20— KNE 
What  to  Do.     (Popular  Educator.) — DJS 

(Life's  Maxims.) — DLS 
What  to  Drink.- Anon.— DST— PS— TT 
(Temperance  Address.)— DLS— KNS 
(What  I  Think.)— LPS— PP 
What  to  Drink.— G:  S.  Burleigh.— TS 
What  to  Read. — W:  Cowper.     See  Retirement. 
What  Tommy  Dislikes. — Anon. — WR  17 
What  Tommy  Found.— Anon.— HVD 
What  Vacation  is.— H.  C.  Dodge.— WR  24 
What  Waked  the  World.— Albion  W.  Tourg^e.— WR  10 
What  Was  his  Creed?— Anon.— SR  2 

(What  is  his  Creed?)- HP 
What  was  It  7— Sidney  Dayre.— DJS— DR 
What  Was  My  Dream? — Jos.  O'Connor. — AA 
What  We  Did  with  the  Cow.— N.  P.  Ufford.— BS  14 
What  We  Learn  at  School.— -Anon. — FAS 
What  We  Love.— Eliza  H.  Morton.— DLD 
What  We  Owe  the  Pilgrims.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Pilgrims.)— 

Wendell  Phillips.— NC 
What  Whiskey  Did  for  Me.— E :  Carswell.— CS  17 
What  Will  Become  of  the  Children? — Jennie  June. — 

MMR 
What  Will  We  Do?— Rob't  J.  Burdette.— AWH     . 

(Utopia— C— si.  diff.)— SYS 
What  Will  You  Do,  Love?— rS :  Lover.— VS 
What  Wondrous  Life  is  This  I  Lead? — Andrew  Marvell. 

See  Garden,  The. 


368 


TITLE  INDEX 


When 


What  Would  You  See?— G:  Macdonald.     See  At  the 

Back  of  the  North  Wind. 
What  Would  You  Think?— Anon.— FAS 
"Whatever  I  have  tried  to  do  in  my  life,  I  have  tried 

with  all  my  heart   to  do   well."— C:   Dickens. 

See  David  Copperfield. 
What's   a'    the   Steer,    Kimmer.     (Jacobite   Song.) — 

Anon.— OS  3 
What's  Hallowed  Ground?— T:  Campbell.     -See  Hal- 
lowed Ground. 
What's  in  a  Name? — Anon. — SR  13 
What's  in  a  Name? — EUerton  Gay.— WR  26 
What's  in  a  Name?— R:  K.  Munkittrick.— AWH 
What's  My  Thought  Like?— T:  Moore.— HPE 
What's  the  Difference?- O.  F.  Pearre.— BS  25— HBR 

— WR7 
What's  the  Good.— Harry  C.  Webber.— WR  24 
"What's  the  Lesson  for  To-day?"— Anon. — PEO 
What's  the  Matter?- H.  K.  P.— PP— YFR 
"What's  the  News,  Grandpa?"     (Tab.)— Anon. — TCP 
Whaups,  The.— To  S.  R.  C.     (To  S.  R.  Crockett— C.)— 

Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — VA 
Wheel  and  I,  The.— Anon.— CS  35 
When.— C.  C.  Bingham.— DCP 
"When?"— E.  A.  Blount,  Jr.— CG  2 
When? — Alfred  Tennyson. — LC 
When.— Sarah  Woolsey.— BNL— CS  6— GP 
When  a  Feller's  a  Boy. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
When  all  the  World,  is  Youngt,  Lad]. — C:  Kingsley. 

See  Water  Babies,  The. 
When  all  Thy  Mercies,  O  my  God. — Jos.  Addison. — 

FEP 
(Hymn,  A.)— AE  (6r.  sei.)- HBP 
When  Almonds  Bloom. — Milicent  W.  Shinn. — AA 
When  Angry,  Count  a  Hundred. — E.  Cavazza. — HBR 

—MRS 
When  Banners  are  Waving. — Anon. — GN — HBP 
When  Bess  Goes  Out.— W.  T.  Mclntyre.— CG  3 
When  Brother  was  a  Sister. — Alice  L.  Richards.— SL 
"When  builders    start  a  house  to  build." — Anon. — 

DJS 
When    Coldness    Wraps    this    Suffering    Clay.     (In 

Hebrew  Melodies.) — Lord  Byron. — FEP 
( Immortal  Mind ,  The. )— EPs 
"Wnen   daisies  pied  and  violets  blue."  —  W:  Shake- 
speare.    See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
When  Daylight  Dies.— Bertha  C.  Lovell.— CG  3 
When  de  Co'n  Pone's  Hot.— Paul  L.  Dunbar.— BS  26— 

TMD 
When,  Dearest,  I  but  Think  of  thee  (Song — C.). — Sir  J: 

Suckling.— OB 
When  Death  to  Either  shall  come. — Rob't  Bridges. — 

OB 
When  Dolly  was  Sick. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
"When  dooined  to  feel  that  youth  is  o'er." — Anon. — 

GG 
When  Dora  Died.— Amos  H.  Chandler.— TCV 
When  Duty  Begins. — C:  Dickens. — See  Martin  Chuz- 

When  Even  Cometh  On. — Lucy  E.  Tilley. — A  A 
When  Father  Carves  the  Duck.— E.  V.  Wright.— SR  9 

— WR4 
(How  Father  Carves  the  Duck.)— PR— YA 
When  First    I    Saw    Her.     (In    Wild    Eden.)— G:    E. 

Woodberry. — AA 
When  Flora  had  O'erfret  the  Firth. — Anon. — OB 
"When  for  me  the  end  has  come  and  I  am  dead." — 

R:  Realf.     See  Written  on  the  Night  of  his 

Suicide. 
When  Gathering  Clouds  Around  I  View. — Sir  Rob't 

Grant.— FEP 
(Hymn.)— HBP 
When  George  was  King. — Theodosia  Pickering. — WR 

22 
When  Girls  Wore  Calico.— Hattie  Whitney.— CRR 
When  Gladys  Plays. — Ferris  Greenslet. — CG  2 
"When  Goethe's  death  was  told,  we  said." — Matthew 

Arnold.     See  Memorial  Verses. 
When    Grandfather    Went    to    Town.— Rob't    C.    V. 

Meyers.— CS  32 
When  Grandpa  was  a  Boy. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
When  Grandpa  Was  a  Little  Boy. — Malcolm  Douglas. 

—PEO 
When  Grandpa  was  Little. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
When  Greek  Meets  Greek. — Anon. — AWH 
When  Greek  Meets  Greek. — Anon.     See  also  following. 
When  Greek  Met  Greek. — Anon. — CS  26 

(When  Greek  Meets  Greek.) — CD 
"When  he  shall  hear  she  died  upon  his  word." — W: 

Shakespeare.     See  Much  Ado  about  Nothing. 
When  he.  who  Adores  thee.     (C.)— T:  Moore. — EDY — 

FTA— TIP— WEP  4 
(Pro  Patria  Mori.)— PGT  1 


When  He  would  have  His  Verses  Read. — Rob't  Her- 

rick.— WEP  2 
"When  Helen  first  saw  wrinkles  in  her  face." — Walter 

S.  Landor.     See  Wrinkles. 
When  I  am  a  Man.— Anon.— COS— PP 
When  I  am  a  Man. — Nelly  R.  Cramer. — WR  17 
When  I  am  a  Man. — Emily  H.  Miller. — SD — WR  17 
When  I  am  a  Woman. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
"When  I  am  Big."— Anon.— TFS 
When  I  am  Dead. — Anon. — CS  32 
When  I  am  Dead  — Emma  A.  Browne. — FP 
"When  I  am  Dead."— Rennell  Rodd.— VA 
'  'When  I  am  dead  and  buried."     (Scribner'a.) — GG 
When  I  am  Married. — Anon. — WR  2 
When  I  am  Old.— Caroline  A.  Briggs.— FMR— FP 
When  I  am  Weak  then  I  am  Strong. — Mary  Sherman. 

— BS  19 
When  I  Awake  I  am  Still  with  Thee.     (C.)— Harriet  B. 

Stowe.—TAS  (sZ.abr.) 
(Still,  Still  with  thee— sei. )— LLC 
When  I  beneath  the  Cold,  Red  Earth  am  Sleeping. — W: 

Motherwell.— EDY— HBP 
When  I  Dit  Drowed.— Anon.— DLF 
"When  I  have  borne  in  memory  what  has  tamed." 

(Poems  Dedicated  to  National  Independence 

and  Liberty,  Pt.  I.,  XVII.)— W:  Wordsworth. 

—PGT  1 
(Motherland,  The.)— LH 
When  I  Have  Fears  that  I  May  Cease  to  Be.     (Sonnet: 

"When  I  have  fears,"  etc. — C.) — J:  Keats. — 

OB 
(Fear  of  Death,  The.)— YBF 
(Sonnet  Written  in  January,  1818.)— WEP  4 
(Terror  of  Death,  The.)— PGT  1 
When  I  Have  Time.— Anon.— YBT 
' '  When  I  look  around  me  and  see  how  few  of  the  com- 
panions  of   earlier   years." — Johann   W.    von 

Goethe.— GG 
When  I  Mean  to  Marry.— J:  G.  Saxe.— BS  17 
"When  I  remember." — T:    Moore.     See    Oft    in    the 

Stilly  Night. 
"When  I  think  on  the  happy  days." — Anon.  (at.  to 

Rob't  Burns).— BNL 
(Absence.)— FTA— GP— PGT  1— YBF 
When  I  was  a  Baby. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
When  I  was  a  Baker.— G :  Thatcher.— TK 
When  I  was  a  Boy.— Eugene  Field.— BS  23— LS 
When  I  was  a  Girl. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
' '  When  I  was  little." — Anon.— FAS 
When  I  was  One   and   Twenty. — A.  E.  Housman. — 

YBF 
When  I  Was  Ten  and  she  was  Fifteen. — Anon. — CRR 
When  I  was  Young. — Anon. — BS  17 
When  Icicles  Hang  by  the  Wall. — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
When  I'm  a  Big  Girl. — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
When  I'm  a  Man.— Anon.— DST 
When  I'm  Growed  up  Big. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
When  in  Disgrace. — W:  Shakespeare. — BS  25 — PYO — 

WR23 
(Amor  Omnia  Vincit.)— FTA— OH 
(Consolation,  A.)— PGT  1— PHS 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (II.) 
(Sonnet  XXIX.— C.)—ELP— WEP  1 
When  in  the  Chronicle  of  Wasted  Time. — W:    Shake- 
speare.—BNL— OEL 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (XVI.) 
(Sonnet  CVL— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
When  in  the  First  Great  Hour. — Edith  M.  Thomas. 

See  Inverted  Torch,  The. 
When  in  the  Night  We  Wake  and  Hear  the  Rain. — 

Rob't  B.  Wilson.— SN 
When  It  Rains. — Anon.— YBT 
When  Jimmy  Comes  from  School. — Jas.  N.  Matthews. 

— WR17 
"When  loss  of  property  and  loss  of  repute  are  come."-^ 

R.  S.  Storrs.— GG 
When  Love  Comes  Knocking. — W:  H.  Gardner. — AA 
When  Love  Most  Secret  Is. — Rob't  Jones. — FTA — OH 
When  Love  Shall  Come. — Anon. — FLS 
"When  lovely  woman  stoops  to  folly." — Oliver  Gold 

smith.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 
When  Ma  begins  to  Clean. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
When  Ma  was  Near. — Anon. — DJS 
When  Mabel  Smiles.— S :  Minturn  Peck.— TL 
When  Maggy  Gangs  Away. — Jas.  Hogg. — FEP 
When  Malindy  Sings. — Paul  L.  Dunbar. — HBR 
When  Mamma  was  a  Little  Girl. — Grace  F.  Cooliage. — 

DS— TFS— WR  17— YA 
When  Mandy  Brings  the  Kids.— A.  T.  Worden. — CS  33 
When  Margaret  Laughs. — G:  B.  Kilbourne. — <)G  2 
When  Mary    was    a    Lassie. — Anon.— CS  10  ■ —  CSS — 

MMR— PPSr 


369 


When 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"When  midnight  o'er  the  moonless  skies." — W:  R. 

Spencer.— FEP 
When  'midst  the  Gay  I  Meet.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
When  Moonlike  are  the  Hazure  Seas. — W:  M.  Thack- 
eray.— NA 
When  Morning  Breaks. — E:  A.  Raleigh. — CG  2 
When  My  Cousin  Com^s  to  Town. — W.  P.  Bourke. — TL 
When  My  Dolly  Went  to  School. — Alice  L.  Richards. — 

SL 
When  My  Kitty  was  a  Kitten. — Alice  L.  Richards. — 

SL 
When  my  Mother  Tucked  Me  In. — Bettie  Garland. — 

SR13 
When  my  Ship  Comes  In. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. — HP 
When  Nathan  Led  the  Choir. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
When  Nature  hath  Betrayed  the  Heart  that  Loved  her. 

— Sophie  Jewett. — AA 
When  Nelly  Hangs  her  Stocking  Up. — Earle  H.  Eaton. 

— TL 
When  not  to  Keep  Books. — -Anon. — SR  13 
When  Old  Jack  Died.  -Jas.  W.  Riley.— WR  6 
"When  other  friends  are  round  thee." — G:  P.  Morris. — 

FTA 
"When  our  eyes  are  weary — weary." — Anon. — HSS  1 
When  our  Heads  are  Bowed  with  Woe'. — H:  H.  Milman. 

—FEP 
(Hymn  for  the  Sixteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity.) — 

VA 
When  Pa  Begins  to  Shave. — Harry  D.  Robins. — BS  26 
When  Pa  Takes  Care  of  Me.— Fs.  C.  Williams.— WR  26 
When  Papa  Puts  His  Great  Coat  on. — May  R.  McNabb. 

—PS 
When  Papa's  Sick. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
When  Samwel  led  the  Singin'.     (Boston  Globe.)— CS  32 

— PR— YA 
When  Santa  Claus  Comes. — Anon. — DLS 
'When  Saw  We  Thee?'— Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt.— TAS 
When  Shall  We  All  Meet  Again?— Anon.  iSee  When  Shall 

We  Three  Meet  Again? 
When  Shall  We  Meet  Again. — Anon. — LLC 
"When  Shall  We  Meet  Again?"— Jas.  F.  Clarke.— FTA 
When  Shall  We  Three  Meet  Again?— Anon.— CS  15— 

HBP  (ahr.) 
(When  Shall  We  All  Meet  Again— a6r.)—SM 
When  she  Comes.— G.  H.  Westley.— FLS 
When  she  Comes  Home.     (C.) — Jas.  W.  Riley. — A  A — 

FTA— OH— TAV— TFY 
(When  she  Comes  Home  again.) — FEP 
When  she  Comes  Home  Again. — Jas.    W.    Riley.     <See 

foregoing. 
When  Should  a  Girl  Marry?— J.  R.  Parke.— BS  21 
When  Sparrows  Build.  (Song  fr.  Supper  at  the  Mill.) — 

Jean  Ingelow. — ^WR  16  (si.  abr.) 
(Song  of  the  Old  Love.)— PGT  2 
("We  shall  walk  no  more  through  the  sodden  plain" 

— seZ.)— BNL 
When  Stars  are  in  the  Quiet  Skies.     (Night  and  Love 

— C. — song  fr.  Ernest  Maltravers,  Bk.  III.,  Ch. 

I.)— E:  Bulwer-Lytton.— FEP— FTA— VA 
(Song.)— CR— FLS(6r.  sel.) 
When  Summer  Says  Good-bye. — Frank  L.  Stanton. — 

BS  24 
"When  Sylvia  Sings."— S:  P.  Duffield.— CG  1 
"When  that  Seint  George  hadde  sleyne  ye  draggon." 

(Limerick.) — Anon. — NA 
When  the  Apple  Blossoms  Stir.— Anon. — AD 
When  the  Assault  was  Intended  to  the  City.     (C.) — 

J:     Milton.     —     EDY— EPs— FEP— HBP— 

PGTl 
(Arms  and  the  Muse.) — LH 
When  the  Baby  Died.— Helen  H.  Jackson. — TAV 
When  the  Bloom  is  on  the  Heather. — P:  Grant. — TMR 
When  the  Cat's  away  the  Mice  Will  Play. — Anon. — 

FHE 
When  the  Circuit    Rider    Came. — Jas.    B.    Adams. — 

SR13 
When  the  Cork  Goes  Down.— Rob't  Mclntyre. — SR  13 
When  the  Cows  Come  Home.— Agnes  E.   Mitchell. — 

CS  16  —  PPSr  —  SA    (sel.)  —  SE    (br.    set.)— 

TMR  (abr.) 
(SI.  a6r.)— HP— IR 
When  the  Fairies  Lived  Here.- Anon.— PS— TT 
When  the  Frost  is  on  the  Punkin.     (Abr.) — Jas.  W. 

Riley.— FAS— HP— PP—YFR 
"When  the  Golden  day  is  done." — Rob't  L.  Steven- 
son.    See  Night  and  Day. 
When  the  GrassShallGrowAgain.— Anon.— GP— HBP 
When  the  Great  Grey  Ships  Come  In. — Guy  W.  Car- 

ryl.— AA— EDY 
When  the  Green  Gits  Back  in   the   Trees.    (C.) — Jas. 

W.  Riley.— AD 
(Spring.)— SR  1 
When  the  Hammock  Swings. — E:  A.  Oldham. — WR  4 


When  the  Hounds    of    Spring. — Algernon    C.    Swin- 
burne.    .See  Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
"When  the  hours  of  day  are  numbered." — H:  W.  Long- 
fellow.    See  Footsteps  of  Angels. 
When  the  House  is  Alone  by  Itself. — Mary  K.  Dallas. 

— CS24 
When  the  Kye  Come[s]  Hame.— Jas.  Hogg.— BNL— CR 

—FEP 
When  the  Lamp   is   Shattered. — Percy   B.    Shelley. — 

BNL 
(Flight  of  Love,  The.)— PGT  1— YBT 
(Lines— O— OB— WEP  4 
When  the  Light  Goes  Out.— Harry  S.  Chester.— BS  23 

— CS34 
When  the  Little  Boy  Ran  Away. — Anon. — TAV 
When  the  Minister  Comes  to  Tea. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
When  the  Mists  Have  Rolled  Away. — Annie  Herbert. 

—LLC  (abr.) 
(We  Shall  Know.)— CS  9— TFS  (sel.) 
When  the  Most  is  Said.- — Mary  A.  De  Vere. — AA 
When  the  Grass  Shall  Cover  Me. — Ina  Coolbrith. — AA 

—GP— HBP— TAV 
"When  the  pale  wreath  is  laid  upon  the  tomb."  — 

Anon.— GG 
"When  the  rough  battle  of  the  day  is  done." — Jas.  A. 

Garfield.     See  Memory. 
When  the  Ship  Comes  in.— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
"When  the  Sleeper  Wakes."     (Yale  Record.)— CG  3 
When  the  Stone  was  Rolled  Away. — Clara  J.  Denton. 

— LL 
When  the  Sultan  Goes  to  Ispahan. — T:  B.  Aldrich. — 

AA— ASL 
When  the  Summer  Boarders  Come. — Nixon  Waterman. 

— BS26 
When  the  Swallows. — J:  H.  Gordon. — LLC 
When  the  Teacher  Gets  Cross.— Anon.— CS  37— WR  21 
When  the  Tide  Goes  Out.— Anon.— CS  10  " 
When  the  Tide  Goes  Out.— Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
When  the  Train  Comes  In. — Nixon  Waterman. — BS  26 
When  the  Wind  Goes  thro'  the  Maples. — Ella  M.  Trues- 

dell.— WR  26 
When  the  World  is  Burning. — Ebenezer  Jones. — OB 
When  this  Cruel  War  is  Over. — C.  C.  Sawyer. — AWB 

— PAPm 
When  Thou  Art  Near.— F.  B.  Doveton.— FLS 
When  Thou  Art  Near  Me.— Lady  J:  Scott.— FTA— 

HBP 
When  Thou  Art  Nigh.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
When  Thou  Must   Home.     (A   Book  of  Airs,   Pt.    I., 

XX.)— T:  Campion.— ELP 
(O  Crudelis  Amor.)— PGT  1 
(Vobiscum  est  lope.) — OB 
When  Time  Hath  Bereft  Thee.— Anon.— FLS 
When  to  Make  Haste.— Anon.— YBT 
"When  to  the  sessions  of  sweet,  silent  thought." — W: 

Shakespeare. — -BNL 
(Friendship.)— TFY 
(Memory.)— PGT  1— YBF 
(Sonnet.)— FEP— HBP— OB  (III.) 
(Sonnet  XXX.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 
When  to  Worship. — Anon. — CS  15 
When  Twilight  Dews.— T:  Moore.— FTA 
"When  vanished  in  this  vapor  we  call  life." — A.  T.  L. 

— GG 
When  Washington  was  President. — Rob't  J.  Burdette. 

See  What  Lack  we  Yet? 
When  we  are  All  Asleep.     (Cornisken  Sonnets,  IV.) — 

Rob't  Buchanan. — VA 
When  we  are  Parted.— Hamilton  Aidi. — FLS — VA 
When  we  are  upon  the  Seas. — G:  Wither.     See  Halle- 
luiah. 
When  we  First  Played  "Show."— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
When  We  Go  Home.— J.  L.  Scott.— HDL 
When  We  Grow  Big.    (Concert  piece.) — Lizzie  J.  Rook. 

— TT 
"When  we  in  our  viciousness  grow  hard." — W:  Shakes- 
peare.    See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 
When  we  Plant  a  Tree.     (Sel.  fr.  a  letter.) — Oliver  W. 

Holmes. — LLC 
When  We  Two  Parted.— Lord  Byron.— BNL  (br.  ael.) 

—FEP— HBP— OB— PGT  1— WEP  4— YBF 
When  Will  Love  Come?— Pakenham  Beatty.—  FLS— 

HP 
When  will  You  Come  Home  Again? — Anon. — CS  19 

(At  Christmas-time.) — HS 
When  Witherspoon  was  President. — D:  Potter. — CG  2 
When  Women  have  their  Rights. — Anon. — MND 
When  Work  and  Me  Fell  Out. — Alice  L.  Richards. — 

WN 
"When  you  are  Old." — W:  Henley. — OH 
When  you  are  Old.— W:  B.  Yeats.— OB— TIP 
When  Your  Beauty  Appears. — T:  Parnell. — BNL 
(Song:  "When  thy  beauty  appears.") — OB 


370 


TITLE  INDEX 


Whistle 


"Whenas  in  Silks."     (Brunonian.) — CG  3 
Whenas  in  Silks. — Rob't  Herrick.     See  following. 
Whenas  in  Silks  My  Julia  Goes. — Rob't  Herrick. — BNL 
(Poetry  of  Dress,  The,  II.)— PGT  1 
(Upon  Julia's    Clothes— C.)— ELF  — OB  — OH  — 

WEP  2 
(Whenas  in  Silks.)— YBF 
"  'Whence  all  these  verses?'  you  ask  me." — Anon. — 

CG2 
"Whence  and  what  art  thou,  execrable  shape." — J: 

Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
"When'er  a  noble  deed  is  wrought." — H:  W.   Long- 
fellow.    See  Santa  Filomena. 
W^henever  a  Little  Child  is  Born. — Agnes  C.  Mason. — 

AA— GMS 
Where  are  Sighs?— Walter  S.  Landor.— YBF 
Where  are  the  Dead? — Anon. — PS 
Where  are  the  Men? — -Talhaiarn  (Ir.  by  T:  Oliphant). 

—BNL 
Where  are  Wicked  Folks  Buried?     (Truth  Seeker.) — 

CS  21— SR  4 
Where  are  You  GoingT,  My  Pretty  Maid]? — Anon. — 

BNL— FEP— TCP  (w.  tab.) 
(Pantomime  based   on  poem — by  Agnes  Crawford.) 

— WR  20 
Where  are  You  Sleeping,  Lady  Fair? — R.  R.  Kirk. — 

CG3 
Where  are  Your   Treasures? — Horace    B.    Durant. — 

CS32 
Where  Avalanches  Wail. — Anon. — NA 
Where  Columbia  Stands.— A.  H.  Hall.— PAPm 
Where  Cupid  Dwells.— Rob't  L.  Munger.— CG  2 
Where  Did  It  Go?— W:  C.  Gannett.— TAS 
Where  Did  They  Go?     (Our  Little  Ones.)— KNS 
Where  did  You  Come  from[,  Baby]?- — G:  Macdonald. 

See  At  the  Back  of  the  North  Wind. 
Where  Do  Babies  Go? — Alice  L.  Richards. — SL 
Where  Do  You  Live?— Anon.— WR  14 

(Grumble  Corner  and  Thanksgiving  Street.) — CS  30 

— DST 
Where  Does  the  Water  Spring?^Anon. — HSS  3 
Where  Go  the  Boats?— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— CGV   — 

PoR 
Where  He  Struck  It.— Anon.— DSS 
Where  Heaven  Is. — Anon. — PS 
Where  Helen  Comes. — J.  J.  Rooney. — AA 
Where  Helen  Sits. — Laura  E.  Richards. — AA 
Where  Honeysuckles  Grow. — May  R.  McNabb. — PS 
Where  Hudson's  Wave. — G:  P.  Morris. — -AA 
Where  Ignorance  is  Bliss.- — ^Anon. — HP 
Where  is  He?- H:  Neele.— SS 
Where  is  Mary  Alice  Smith?     (C.)— Jas.  W.  Riley. 

(Mary  Alice  Smith— o6r.)—BS  19 
Where  is  Mother? — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Where  is  my  Hat? — A.  F.  Owens. — SR  7 
Where  is  Papa  To-night?— Cora  M.  Eager.— BS  5 
Where  Lies  the  Land? — -Arthur  H.  Clough.     See  Songs 

in  Absence. 
Where  Love  is,  there  God  is  also.     (C.) — Leo  Tolstoi. 
(Heavenly  Guest,  The — mftrical  vers. — tr.  by  Celia 

Thaxter.)— BS  17 
Where  Man  should  Die.- — Michael  J.  Barry. — CS  6 
Where  my  Books  Go.— W:  B.  Yeats.— OB 
Where  Runs  the  River. — Fs.  Bourdillon. — AVP 
Where  Shall  the  Baby's   Dimple  Be?  (C.)— Josiah  G. 

Holland.— BS  2 
(Lullaby.)— GMS 
"Where  shall  the  lover  rest?" — Walter    Scott.     See 

Marmion. 
Where  Shall  We  Find  God?— Edith  W.  Linn.— SSE 
"Where  she  her  sacred  bower  adorns."     (Light  con- 
ceits of  Lovers,  V.) — T:  Campion. — OEL 
"Where  the  bee  sucks,  there  suck  I." — W:  Shakespeare. 

See  Tempest,  The. 
"Where  the  Lilies  Bloom." — Howell L.  Finer. — WR  23 
Where  the  Lion     Roareth,     and     the     Wang-Doodle 

Mourneth. — Anon. — DE 
(Hard-shell  Sermon,  A.)— PS 
Where  the  Mince  Pie  Grows. — Anon. — PR 
Where  the  Smiles  are  Kept. — Anon.     See  If  I  Knew. 
W^here  there's  a  Will  there's  a  Way.    (Dial.) — Anon. — 

MPD 
Where  there's  a  Will  there's   a  Way. — Eliza  Cook. — 

KNE 
Where  there's  a  Will  there's  a  Way. — Mrs.  Russell  Kav- 

anaugh. — KER 
Where  there's  a  Will  There's  a  Way.     (Dial.) — Sophie 

May.— StD 
Where  there's  a  Will  there's  a  Way,  Sel.  fr.     (Will  and 

the  Way,  The.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— HSS  3 
Where  They  Grow.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Where  Thev  Never  Feel  the  Cold.— Anon.— PP— PS— 

YPS 


Where  Thou   Goest   I   Will  Go.— Howell  L.   Finer.— 

WR23 
Where  was  17— B.  L.  C.  Griffith.— MN 
"Where  we  love  is  home." — Oliver  W.  Holmes.     See 

Poet  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 
Where  Winds  Abound. — Michael  Field. — VS 
"Where'er  a  noble  deed  is  wrought." — H:  W.  Long- 
fellow.    See  Santa  Filomena. 
Where's  Annette?— Aden.— BS  11 
Where's  My  Baby?— Anon.— OS  1 
"Where's  My  Hat?"— Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Where's  My  Hat?— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  4 
"Wherever,  O  man,  God's  sun  first  beamed  upon  thee." 

— M.  E.  Arndt.— AE 
"Wherever  party  spirit  shall  strain  the  ancient  guar- 
antees of  freedom." — G:  W.  Curtis.     See  Cen- 
tennial Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 
Which?— Anon.— BS  24 

Which?— Ethel  L.  Beers.     See  Which  Shall  it  Be? 
Which?— W.  C.  Nichols.— CG  2 
Which  Could  I  Spare? — Frances  B.  M.  Brotherson. — 

CS4 
Which  General?— Kate  W.  Hamilton.— WR  25 
Which  is  Best?     (Dial.)— Anon.— DST 
Which  is  Best?      (DiaZ.)— Annie  L.   Hannah.— PS— 

TT 
Which  is  Best?— Laura  C.  Redden. — BIL 
Which  is  the  Best?     (Dial.)— Anon.— HYB 
Which  is  Which  (To  an  Officer  in   the  Army,  etc. — 

C.).—J:  Byrom.— HPE 
(Jacobite  Toast.)— FEP 
Which  Loved  Best?— Joy  Allison.— DLS—NPS—YBT 

— YP 
(I  Love  you,  Mother.) — HSS  2 
Which  One?— I:  H.  Brown.— BS  25 
Which  One  was  Kept?— Lizzie    M.    Hadley. — DCP — 

SR  9 
(Kittens  and  Babies.)— BR  (al.  abr.)—CS  28— PR 

— YA 
Which  Path?— E.  J.  Goodfellow.— SSE 
Which  Road?— Anon.— CS  30 
Which  Shall  It  Be?— Ethel  L.  Beers.— CS  3— FEP— 

LLC— OS  1— PPSr 
(Not  One  to  Spare.)— BNL— GP 
(Which?)— OH 
Which  Shall  It  Be?— "Bob  o'Link."— DLD 
Which  Side  are  you  On?     (Our  Youth.)— SSS 
Which  was  the  Hero?— G:  C.  Graham.- GS 
Which  Would  You  Rather?  ■  (Z>toZ.)— Anon.— DSS 
Which  Would  You  Rather  Be?  (Dial.) — Anon.— KNS 
While  Shepherds  Watched. — Clara  J.  Denton. — SSE 
While  Shepherds  Watched. — Nahum  Tate.     See  While 

Shepherds  Watched  their  Flocks  by  Night. 
"While  Shepherds  Watched  their  Flocks  by  Night." — 

Marg.  Deland.— GN— YBT 
While  Shepherds  Watched  [their  Flocks  by  Night]. — 

Nahum  Tate.— GN— LLC— OS  1 
(Christmas.)— FEP 
While  the  Joy  Goes  On. — Clara  J.  Denton. — WLO 
While  We  May.— Susan  Coolidge.— BS  16— HP 
While  We  Shed  a  Tear.- Jos.  Addison.— HSS  1 
Whilst  as  Fickle     Fortune    Smiled. — R:    Barnfield.— 

FEP 
Whilst  it  is  Prime. — Edmund  Spenser.     See  Amoretti 

and  Epithalamion. 
Whilst  Thee  I  Seek.— Helen  M.  Williams.— FEP 
Whilst  Youthful  Sports  are  Lasting.     (Sel.  fr.  Life  of 

Robert,    Second    Duke    of    Normandy.) — T: 

Lodge.— ELP 
Whims.— A.  V.  Bower. — CS  24 
Whip-poor- Will. — Clarence  Bennett. — WR  4 
Whip-poor-will,  The.— E:  B.  Brownlow.— TCV 
Whip-poor-will. — Mary  M.  Dodge. — POS 
Whip-poor-will.— Lucy  S.  Ruggles. — TFS 
Whip-poor-will,  The.— H:  Van  Dyke.— ASL 
Whirling  Wheel,  The.— Tudor  Jenks.— BS  23 
Whirlwind  Road,  The. — Edwin  Markham. — AA 
Whiskers,  The.— S:  Woodworth.— CS  5— FEP 
Whisper! — Frances  Wynne. — FEP 
Whisperin'   Bill. — Irving  Bacheller. — CS  30 — PR — 

WR  2  (»/.  abr.) 
Whispering  Gallery,  The.— Jas.  T.  McKay.— OH 
Whispers  of  Heavenly  Death. — Walt  Whitman. — TAS 
Whistle,  The.— Rob't  Burns.— FEB  3 
Whistle,  The  (a  letter  written  to  Madame  Brillon,  Nov 

10.  1779).  Sel.  fr.     (Too  Dear  for  the  Whistle.) 

— B:  Franklin.— LLC 
(Don't  Give  too  much  for  the  Whistle — si.  abr.) — 

BLP 
(Whistle,  The.)— WCLI  2 
Whistle,  The.— Rob't  Story.— BNL— MHR— MR— PP 
—YPS 
(Whistler,  The.)— CS  9 


371 


Whistle 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Whistle,  and  I'll  Come  to  [Ye  or]  You,  My  Lad. — Rob't 

Burns.— BNL—WEP  3 
Whistler,  The.— Rob't  Story.     See  Whistler,  The. 
Whistling:  a  Yankee  Portrait. — J:  Pierpont. — HSS  3 
Whistling  in  Heaven.     (Harper's  Magazine.) — CS  14 
Whistling  Marmot,  The. — Hamlin  Garland. — SN 
Whistling  Regiment, *he.—Jas.  C.  Harvey. — BS  18— 

CS  30— PFP 
White  Alder,  The.     (^Trinity  Tablet.)— CG  3 
White  Anemone,  The.  —  Rob't,    Earl    of    Lytton. — 

GN  (abr.) 
('Tis  the  White  Anemone.) — POS 
White  Azaleas. — Harriet  McE.  Kimball. — AA 
White  Birds,  The.— W:  B.  Yeats.— VA 
White  Blossom,  The.— Anon.— YBT 
White  Blossom's  off  the  Bog,  The. — Alfred  P.  Graves. 

— VA 
White  Butterflies.     (Envoi — C.—abr. — in   A   Century 

of  Roundels.) — Algernon  C.  Swinburne. — LC-— 

PoR 
White  Camellia,  A.— Edgar  Fawcett. — SN 
White  Canoe,  The.— Alan  Sullivan.— TCV 
White  Chip  Hat,   The.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— HPE 
White  Devil,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Dirge,  A.)— J:  Webster.— 

ELP— FEP— OB 
(Land  Dirge,  A.)— PGT  1— YBF 
White  Gull,  The.— Bliss  Carman.— TCV 
White  Hearse,  The.— Anon.— WR  6 
White  Horse  of  the  Peppers,  The,  Sel.  fr.     (Disgusted 

Dutchman,    The — Act    II.,    Sc.    3 — abr.) — S: 

Lover.— SCS 
White  Island[;  or.   Place  of  the   Blest],  The.— Rob't 

Herrick.— EPs— HBP— WEP  2— YBF 
White  Jessamine,  The.— J:  B.  Tabb.— ASL 
White  Kitten,  The. — Marian  Douglas. — WR  17 
White  Lies.— Anon.— FDY 
White  Lily,  A.— Mary  L.  Wright.— CS  35— PR 
White    Man's    Burden,     The.  —  Rudyard    Kipling. — 

WR26 
"White  Morning,  A." — Grace  W.  Leach. — CG  2 
White  Moth,  The.— Arthur  T.  Quiller-Couch.— VA 
White  Opal,  The.— R.  K.  K.— CG  3 
White  Pacha,  The. — ^Andrew  Lang. — LH 
White  Paternoster,  The. — Anon. — BVC 
White  Peacock,     The. — W:     Sharp.     See    Sospiri    di 

Roma. 
White  Pilgrim,  The,  Sel.  fr. — Herman  Merivale. — AVP 
White  Ribbon,  The.— Hattie  F.  Crocker.— WR  18 
White  Rose,  The.— Jos.  O'Connor.— AWB 
White  Rose,  A.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— AA— OB 
White  Rose,  The.     (Istst.  fr.  Somerville's  Presenting 

to  a  Lady  a  White  Rose  and  a  Red,  etc.) — W: 

Somerville  and  W:  Congreve. — BNL— FEP— 

HBP— OS  2— YBF 
White  Rose  and  the  Poppy,  The. — Annie  L.  Hannah. 

— CS  32— DS— YA 
White  Rose  over  the  Water,  The. — G:  W.  Thornbury. 

— VA 
White  Roses. — Cora  Fabbri. — AA 
White  Roses. — Ernest  Rhys. — VA 
White  Seal,  The,   Verse  preceding.     (Seal  Lullaby.) — 

Rudyard  Kipling. — PoR 
White  Ship,   The.  —  Dante    G.     Rossetti.  —  EHT — 

WR  1  (cond.) 
WhiteSquall,  The.— Bryan  W.  Procter.— BNL 
White  Squall,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— BS  9— CR— 

CS  19— HBP— MR— SAE  (seZ.)- THP 
(After  the  Storm— seZ.) — LC — PoR 
Whitethroat,  The.— Theodore  H.  Rand.— TCV 
White-throated  Sparrow,  The. — A.  West. — SN 
Whither. — J:  V.  Cheney. — AA 

Whither?  (Sonnet  VIII.)— Hartley  Coleridge.— VA 
Whither.— Philip  B.  Goetz.— AA 

Whiting  and  the  Snail,  The.     (C. — song  fr.  Alice's  Ad- 
ventures in  Wonderland,  Ch.  X.)  —  Lewis  Car- 
roll. 
(Lobster  Quadrille,  A.)— PoR 
Whittier. — Marg.  E.  Sangster. — AA 
Whittier  Alphabet,  A.     {Comp.  fr.)  J:  G.  Whittier. — 

PEO 
Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. — John  Bright. — PEO 
Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. — Horace  E.  Scudder. — 

PEO 
Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. — R:  H.  Stoddard. — PEO 
Whittier,  Extract   Concerning.  —  Frances  H.  Under- 
wood.—PEO 
Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. — David  A.  Wasson. — 

PEO 
Whittling.— J:  Pierpont.— BNL— GN—PPSr—SM  — 
WCLI  2 
(Whittling— a  Yankee  Portrait.)— HSS  3— SS 
(Whittling  Typical  of  Young  America.) — BLP 
(Yankee  Boy,  The.)— CS  35 


Whittling  —  a  Yankee   Portrait. —  J:    Pierpont.     See 

foregoing. 
Whittling  'Typical  of  Young  America. — J:  Pierpont. 

See  Whittling. 
Who  am  de  Mudder. — Anon. — DSS 
Who  and  What  are  Great  Men?-  Rob't  C.  Winthrop. 

See  Centennial  Oration. 
Who  are  Really  Honored. — Edwin  H.  Chapin. — FD  2 
Who  are  Responsible? — W:  L.  Garrison. — SSD 
Who  are  the  Free?— J:  G.  Prince.— CS  15 
"Who  art  thou,  shadowy  passer-by?" — Victor  Hugo. — 

GG 
Who  Bides  His  Time.— Anon.— DST 
Who  but  Thee.— Eliza  Scudder.— TAS 
"Who    comes    dancing   over   the    snow." — Dinah   M. 

Mulock.— PoR 
Who  Did  It?     (Boston  Post.)— ^R  \\ 
Who  Did  It?— Kate  Lawrence.— YBT 
"Who   ever   sees   a   hawthorne   or   a   sweet-brier." — 

Anon.— HSS  1 
Who  Gather  Gold.— Andrew  B.  Saxton. — HP 
"Who  has  not  looked  upon  her  brow." — Pierre  Rogers 

«r.  by  Costello).— FTA 
Who  is  It?— Anon.— PEO  (si.  atr.) 

(Jack  Frost.)— NV 
Who  is  It?— Anon.— TFS 
Who  Is  It?— Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Who  is  my  Neighbor? — Anon. — SSS 
Who  is  She?— Marian  Douglas.— CSS 

(Cheerfulness— o6r. )— YBT 
Who  is  She?— Julie  M.  Lippmann.— TT 
"Who  is  Silvia  [or  Sylvia]  ?  [What    is    She?]"  — W: 
Shakespeare.     See  Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona, 
The. 
Who  is  the  Poet?— Kate  Woodland.— StD 
Who  is  This  Wonderful  Prophet?- Anon.— CS  19 
Who  is  to  Blame?— Anon.— CS  14 

Who  Know  not  Love.     (Two  Songs  from  the  Persian, 
II.— O— T:  B.  Aldrich.— OH 
("Oh  [Ah— C],  sad  are  they  who  know  not  love.") 

—FTA 
(Sad  are  they  who  Know  not  Love — ahr.) — TFY 
Who  Knows?— Jessie  V.  Kerr.— CG  2 
Who  Knows. — Jas.  H.  Morse. — TAV 
Who  Knows? — Nora  Perry. — AA 

Who  Knows  the  Most?— Nellie  G.  Bronson.— PS— TT 
Who  Likes  the  Rain?— Clara  D.  Bates.— NV—TT  (abr.) 
"Who  liveth  so  merry." — T:  Ravenscroft. — OES 
Who  Made  the  Speech.— Anon.— PS— WR  17— YFE 
Who  Made  Them?— Anon.— TFS 

Who  ne'er  his  Bread  in  Sorrow  Ate. — Johann  W.  von 
Goethe.     See  Wilhelm    Meister's    Apprentice- 
ship. 
Who  Plants  a  Tree. — Lucy  Larcom. — TMR  (abr.) 
("He  who  plants  a  tree"— 6r.  sel.) — HSS  1 
(Plant  a  Tree.)— AD— DCP  (br.  seZ.)- LLC— PEO 
Who  Rules  the  Household?— Anon.— CS  26 

(Eggs  and  the  Horses.) — BNL 
Who  Runs  may   Read.     (Septuagesima  Sunday — C.) 
—J:  Keble.— VA 
(Elder  Scripture,  The— seZ.)— HBP 
Who  Santy-Claus  Wuz.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— GH—RCR 
Who  Shall   be   Queen   of  May? — Marion   Wayland. — 

SR9 
Who  Should  Wipe  the  Dishes?- Mary  Kelly.— WR  24 
Who  Stole  the  Bird's  Nest?— Lydia  M.  Child.— GMS— 
— NV 
(W.  re/rain.)— LLC— PoR— PPSr—WCL 
"Who  struggles  with  his  baser  part." — Anon. — HSS  1 
Who  Was  he  ?  Sel.  fr.     (Race  with  the  Flames,  The— 
Pt.  I.,  abr.;  sel.  fr.  Pt.  II.)— W:  H.  H.  Murray. 
— HBH 
Who  Was  She?- Anon.— COS— HSS  2    (seZ.)— NV— 

PP 
Who  was  the  Minute-man? — G:  W.  Curtis.     See  Cen- 
tennial Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 
Who  Wears  the  Breeches?- H.  E.  McBride.— DDD 
Who  Will  Take  Care  of  Me? — Frances  R.  Havergal. — 

—YBT 
Who  Works  the  Hardest?— Anon.— DFY 
Who  Would  be  a  Boy  Again?— Anon.— CS  7 
"Whoe'er  she  be." — R:  Crashaw. — OEL  (abr.) 

(Wishes  for  the  Supposed  Mistress.) — FEP  (si.  abr.) 

—PGT  1  (abr.) 
(Wishes  to  his  Supposed  Mistress — C) — BNL  (abr.) 
—OB  (si.  abr.) 
(SeZs.)- ELP— WEP  2 
Whole  Duty  of  Children.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— BVC 
— CGV— DLS 
(Good  Manners.)— HSS  2 
Who'll  be  the  Drunkards  Then?— T:   R.  Thompson.— 

TS 
Who'll  Buy  my  Love-knots?— T:  Moore.— WR  11 


372 


TITLE  INDEX 


Wife 


Who'll  Tend  Baby?— E.  E.— HP 

"Whom  the  Gods  Love." — Mark  A.  D.  Howe. — AA 

Whom  Wilt  Thou  Live  for.— Anon.— CS  15 

Who's  Afraid  in  the  Dark. — Anon. — DJS 

Whose  Girl?— Anon.— DS—YA 

Why.— Anon.— WR  4 

Why?— S.  P.  B.— SR  2 

Why.— Bliss  Carman.— OB 

Why? — Stephen  Crane. — AA 

Why?     {Good  Words  for  the  Fownff. )—KER 

Why?— Maud  Moore.— HP 

Why?— C.  H.  Patterson.— CG  1 

Why?— Alice  L.  Richards.— SL 

Why?— Mary  L.  Ritter.— BNL— TFY 

Why  ?— ' '  Viola.  "—FLS 

Why,  and  Because.— Anon.— LPS— PP 

"Why  are   we   so  impatient   of  delay"   (Teach   us  to 

Wait— C.).— PhcEbe  Gary.- GG 
Why  Ben    Schneider    Decides    for    Prohibition. — Vira 

Hopkins.— CD— CS  26 
Why  Biddv  and  Pat  Married.— R:  H.  Stoddard.— BS  5 

— CS  14— DS 
Why  Destroy  this  Government? — T:  A.  R.  Nelson. — 

SSD 
Why  do  Bells  of  Christmas  Ring? — Eugene  Field. — 

PoR 
Why  Do  they  Ever  Begin? — Anon.— WR  17 
Why  Don't  You  Tell  Me  Yes?— Mrs.  G:  Archibald.— 

WR2 
Why  Drink  Wine.— H:  Aldrich.— HP 

(Reasons  for  Drinking — diff.  vers.) — THP 
Why  he   Waited   to   Laugh.     {Detroit   Free  Press.) — 

CH— SR  10 
Why  he  Wouldn't  Sell  the  Farm.— A.  A.  Dayton.— BS  1 
Why    I   Love   Thee.     (Lover  to  his  Mistress,  The — C.) 

— Hamilton  Aide. — FLS 
Why  I  Object  to  High  License.— J.  R.  Turner.— WR  18 
Why  I  Sing.— Anon.— SSS 
Why  is  It?— Clara  J.  Denton.— LL 
Why  is  It  So?— Anon.— HP 
Why  it  was  Cold  in  May. — ^Henrietta  R.  Eliot. — AA — 

SR6 
Why  Jim  Forsook  the  Ministry. — Clarence  H.  Pierson. 

— GH 
Whv  Liab  and  I  Parted.— N.  S.  Emerson.— WR  24 

(How  Liab  and  I  Parted.)— SR  1 
Why,    Lovely   Charmer?     {Fr.  The   Hive.) — Anon. — 

BNL 
Why  Mother  is  Proud.— G:  Klingle.— TAV 
Why  my  Father  Left  the  Army. — C:  Lever  {arr.  by  J: 

A.  McCabe).— DR 
Why  no  Scotchmen  Go  to  Heaven. — Anon. — SDR 
Why  not,  if  he  Paid  the  Shot?— Anon.— DRR 
Why  One  Excelled  the  Other. — Anon. — FAS 
Why  Sammy  Left  the  Farm. — Albert  B.  Paine.— AWH 
Why  Should  I  Sign  the  Pledge?— Mrs.  S.  M.  I.  Henry.— 

WR  18 
"Why  shouldst  thou  fill  to-day  with  sorrow." — Paul 

Fleming.— GG 
Why  so  Pale? — Sir  J :  Suckling.     See  following. 
Why  so  Pale  and  Wan?     {Fr.  Aglaura.)— Sir  J:  Suck- 
ling.—BNL— OB— PYO 
(Encouragements  to  a  Lover.) — PGT  1 
(Orsames'     Song     [in     "Aglaura"].) — ELP — ES — 

WEP2 
(Song— C.)— HBP 
(ToaLover.)— YBF 
(Why  so  Pale?)— FEP 

("Why  so  pale  and  wan,  fond  lover?") — GP — OEL 
"Why  so  pale  and  wan,  fond  lover?" — Sir  J:  Suckling. 

See  foregoing. 
Why  the  Cows  Came  Late. — J :  Hoynton. — WR  4 
Why  the   Robin's   Breast   is   [or   was]   Red. — Jas.    R. 

Randall.— AA—WR  6 
Why  They  Didn't  Bow.— Anon.— WR  7 
Why  thev  Twinkle.     (Album  Verses — C) — Oliver  W. 

Holmes.— DCP—SAE 
Why  Thus  Longing?— Harriet  W.  Sewall. — AA — BNL 

—FEP— HBP 
Why  Truth  Goes  Naked.— Anon.— HP 
Why  Uncle  Ben  Back-slid.— Ralph  Bingham.— CS  .34 
"Why,  why  repine,  my  pensive  friend."     (Poems  and 

Epigrams,  C.—C.)— Walter  S.  Landor.— HP— 

WEP4 
( Resignation . ) — OB 
Why  Will  Ye  Call  It  Death's  Dark  Night?— C.  M.  Noel. 

—HDL 
Why  Woman  Wants  the  Ballot. — Marie  C.  Brehm. — 

WR  18 
Why  ye  Blossome    Cometh  before  Ye  Leafe. — Oliver 

Herford. — AA 
Wicklow. — G:  F.  Savage- Armstrong. — TIP 
W^icklow  Scene,  A. — G:  F.  Savage-Armstrong. — TIP 


Wicliffe.     (C— Ecclesiastical  Sonnets,  Pt.  II.,  XVII.) 
— W:  Wordsworth.— ED Y 
(John  Wickliffe— sei.)— BNL 
Widder  Budd.— Anon.— CS  21— NPS— YP 
"  Widder  Clark,  The."— Joe  Lincoln.— CCB 
Widder  Doodle. — Marietta  Holley.     See  Josiah  Allen's 

Wife  as  a  P.  A.  and  P.  I. 
Widder  Green's  Last  Words. — Anon. — CS  13 

(Last  Words.)— DS 
Widdicombe  Fair. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Widdowes  Teares ;  or,  Dirge  of  Dorcas,  The. — Rob't 
Herrick. 
(Dirge  for  Dorcas — ohrA — EPs 
Widening  Horizon,  The.— Frances  E.  Willard.— WR  18 
Widow,  The.— Anon.— CDV 

("Bevare  of  the  Vidders.")- CD 
(Shacob's  Lament.)— CS  25— PR— YA 
Widow,   The.— C.    F.  Gellert   {tr.  by  C.  T.  Brooks).  — 

CS  17— MHR 
Widow,  The.— W :  B.  Wheelwright.— CG  3 
Widow  and  Child,  The. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Prin- 
cess, The. 
Widow  and  Her  Son,  The.     {In  Sketch  Book — abr.) — 

Washington  Irving.— BS  9— FTR 
Widow  at  Wind.sor,  The.     (C.)— Rudyard  Kipling. 

(Sons  of  the  Widow,  The.)— WR  21 
Widow    Bedott    Papers,    The,    Sels.  fr. — Frances    M. 
Whitcher. 
Hezekiah  Bedott.     (Ch.  I.)— BS  2— CS  .3— MHR— 

scs 

Recipe   for    Potato    Pudding.     {Dial.    ad.    fr.    Ch. 

XXIX.)— MPD— NPS— YP 
Widow  Bedott's  Letter  to  Elder  Sniffles,  The.     (Ch. 

XIII.,a6r.)— BeR 
(Widow  Bedott  to  Elder  Sniffles,  The — verses  fr. 

Ch.    XIII.,    si.    a6r.)— AWH— BNL— THP— 

WRD 
Widow  Bedott's  Poetry,   The.     (Ch.    II.)— CS   4— 

MHR 
Widow's  Mistake,  The.     (Chs.  VII.  and  VIII.,  abr. 

and  ad.  as  dial. ) — SCS 
Widow  Bedott  to  Elder  Sniffles. — Frances  M.  Whitcher. 

See  Widow  Bedott  Papers,  The. 
Widow  Bedott's  Letter  to  Elder  Sniffles,  The. — Frances 

M.  Whitcher.     See  Widow  Bedott  Papers,  The. 
Widow  Bedott's  Poetry,  The. — Frances  M.  Whitcher. 

See  Widow  Bedott  Papers,  The. 
Widow  Bird,  A  [or  The].     {Song  fr.  Charles  the  First, 

Sc.  v.— a6r.)— Percy  B.  Shelley.— CGd—LC— 

YBF 
Widow  Brown's  Christmas. — J :  T.  Trowbridge. — BS  7 

— WR  2  {sel.) 
Widow  Cummiskey,  The.— Anon.— BS  14— DI 
Widow  Machree.— S:  Lover.— BNL— HBP— TIP— VA 
Widow  MacShane.— Rob't  H.  Newell.— THP 
Widow  Malone.— C:  Lever.— BNL— CR—CS  19— PYO 

— SAE  {br.  seZ.)— SDR— THP— TIP 
Widow  Muggins — Her  Opinions  of  Cooks,  Suitors  and 

Husbands,  The.— J.  W.  Bonfield.— SD 
Widow  Mysie,  The.     (Cond.)— Rob't    Buchanan.— BS 

25 
Widow  O'Brien's  Toast. — Anon. — DE 
Widow  of  Glencoe,   The.     {In   Lays   of   the    Scottish 

Cavaliers.)— W:  E.  Aytoun.— EDY  {sel.) 
Widow  of  Main,  The.     (^6r.)— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— 

SO 
Widow  O'Shane's  Rint,  The.— Anon.— CD— NPS— YP 
Widowed  Heart,  The. — Albert  Pike. — AA 
Widower's  Speech,  The.^ — Anon. — DE 

(Bereaved  Editor's  Speech,  The.)— PS 
Widow's  Hymn,  A.— G:  Wither.— OB  {sel.) 

(For  a  Widower  or  Widow.) — HBP 
Widow's  Light,  The.— Augusta  Moore.— CS    18— NPS 

— YP 
Widow's  Mistake,  The. — Frances    M.    Whitcher.     See 

Widow  Bedott  Papers,  The. 
Widow's  Mite,  The.     {Columhiu  Spectator.)— CG  2 
Widow's  Mite,  The. — Frd'k  Locker-Lampson. — BNL — 

VA— YBF 
Widow's  Son  Restored  to  Life,  The. — Wesley  Stretch. 

— CS  23— DS 
Widow's  Victim,  The.     {Farce.) — Anon. — BC 

(Stage  Struck  Darkey,  The.)— DE 
Wife,  The.     {Frags,  fr.  rario^'s  authors.) — BNL 
Wife,  A.— W:  Allingham.— FEP 
Wife,  The.— Phoebe  Gary.— THP 
Wife,  The. — Anna  P.  Dinnies. — AA 
Wife,  The,  !^el.  fr.  (St.  Pierre  to  Ferrardo- Act  IV.,  Sc. 

3.)— Jas.  S.  Knowles.— CS  4— FR— SS 
Wife,  A. — {Imrrromptu  in  Ana.)  R:  B.  Sheridan. — THP 
Wife,  A.— Sir  H:  Tavlor.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Wife,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Among  the  Hills. 
Wife  a-lost.  The.— W:  Barnes.— OB 


373 


Wife 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Wife  and  a  Home,  A.     (DtaZ.)— Anon.— NDP 

Wife,   Children     and     Friends. — W:    R.     Spencer. — 

BNL— CS  11  (si.  abr. )—TFY 
Wife  for  a  Month,  A,  Sel.  fr.  (To  the  Blest  Evanthe— 

song  fr.  Act  I.,  Sc.  2.)--J:  Fletcher.— ES 
Wife  of  Loki.  The.— Lady  Charlotte  Elliot.— VA 
Wife  of  Usher's  Well.ffhe.     (/n  Border  Minstrelsy.) — 

Anon.— BB— OB  {si.  abr.) 
(A6r.)— BPB— CEL— PEB  2— WEP  1 
Wife  to  her  Husband,  The.— Anon.— BNL— TFY 
Wife  to  Husband.     (In   The    Unseen  World.) — Chris- 
tina G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Wife-hunting  Deacon,  The.— L.D.  A.  Stuttle  [or  Suttle]. 

— NPS— YP 
(Deacon's  Courtship,  The.)— CS  22 
Wife's  Appeal,  The.— W.  C.  Bennett.— CS  11 
Wife's  Appeal,  The.— Sarah  J.  Lippincott.— CS  24 
Wife's  Confession,  A. — Violet  Fane. — WR  7 
Wife's  Lament,  A.— Will  H.  Cadmus.— DR 
Wife's  Prayer,  The.— Annie  De  G.  Van  Sickle.— CS  36 
Wife's  Tale,  The. — Geoffrey  Chaucer.     iSee  Canterbury 

Tales  The. 
Wild  Apples.-^H :  D.  Thoreau.— M AL 
Wild  Flowers. — Sarah  Doudney. — HS 
Wild  Flowers.— P:  Newell.— N A 
Wild  Geese,  The.— J.  H.  Morse.- AA 
Wild  Geese.— Celia  Thaxter.— PoR— SAP— SN 
Wild  Grapes.— Anon.— CS  22 

Wild  Honeysuckle,  The. — Philip  Freneau. — AA — ASL 
Wild  Huntsman,  The.     (C.)— G.    A.    Burger    (<r.    by 

Walter  Scott).— CGd  (o6r.)— EPs 
(Chase,  The.)— BS  13 
Wild  Huntsmen,  The.— Philip  G.  Hamerton.— VA 
Wild  Night  at  Sea,  A. — C :  Dickens.     See  Martin  Chuz- 

zlewit. 
Wild  Oats.— C :  Kingsley .     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Wild  Prairie  Fire,  A.     (Detroit  Free  Press.)— CS  30 
Wild  Rabbits,  The.— Anon.— NV 

"Wild  raged  the  tempest." — Annie  L.  Matthews. — GG 
Wild  Ride,  The.— Louise  I.  Guiney.— AA  (a6r.)— BNL 
Wild  Rose.     (Abr.)~W:  Allingham.— GN 
Wild  Rose,  A.— Alfred  Austin.— FTA 
Wild  Rose  in  September,  A. — -Helen  H.  Jackson. — POS 
Wild  Roses.     (In  Flower  Songs.) — Mary  G.  Crocker. — 

CPL 
Wild  Roses.— Edgar  Fawcett.— POS— TAV 
Wild  Thorn  Blossoms.— Julian  S.  Cutler.— AD— HSS  1 
Wild  Violet,  The.— Hannah  F.  Gould.— AD— HSS  1— 

PEO 
Wild  Winds.— Mary  F.  Butts.— PoR 
Wilderness   Transformed,   The. — Philip   Doddridge.- — 

HBP 
("Amazing,  beauteous  change!") — BNL 
Wilford's  Piece. — Alice  L.  Richards. — WN 
Wilfred    Denver's  Dream.     (Fr.  The  Silver  King.) — 

Anon.— WR  13 
Wilfrid  Cumbermede,  Sel.  fr.     (Song:  "I  dreamed  that 

I  woke  from    a  dream" — fr.  Ch.  LVI.) — G: 

Maodonald. — VA 
Wilful  Little  Mouse,  The.— Anon.— WR  17 
Wilhelm  I.,  Emperor  of  Germany. — H:  C.  Bunner. — 

EDY 
Wilhelm  Meister's  Apprenticeship,  Sels.  fr. — Johann  W. 

von  Goethe. 
Mignon  Aspiring  to  Heaven.     (Sel.  fr.  Bk.  VIII., 

Ch.  I.)— FP 
Mignon's  Song  [from  "Wilhelm  Meister."J    (Fr.  Bk. 

III.,  Ch.  I.)— BNL  (tr.  by  Hemans)— PYO  (diff. 

tr.) 
Minstrel,  The.     (Verses  fr.  Bk.  II,  Ch.  Xl.~tr.  by. 

J.C.  Mangan.)— HBP 
"Who  ne'er  his  bread  in  sorrow  ate."     (Sel.  fr.  song 

in  Bk.  II.,  Ch.  XIII.)— GG— GP 
Wilkins  Family,  The.— J:  Quill.— MDD 
Will,  The.— Anon.— CP 

Will,  The.— J:  Donne.— BNL— HBP— WEP  1 
Will,  The.     (Dial  )— W.  B.  Fowle.— MPD 

(Reading  the  Will — at.  to  Epes  Sargent.) — PS 
Will,  The.— Ellen  Pickering.— DDD 
Will.     (Abr.)- Ella  W.  Wilcox.— WR  17 
Will  and  the  Way.  The.     (Sel.  fr.  Where  there's  a  Will 

there's  a  Way.)— J:  G.  Saxe.— HSS  3 
"Will  Frank  Buchanan   Write?" — Clement    Scott. — 

WR13 
Will  it  be  so?— Edith  M.  Thomas.     See  Inverted  Torch, 

The. 
Will  it  Pay?— Mrs.  Mary  T.  Lathrap.— WR  18 
"Will  My  Soul  Pass  through  Ireland?" — Dennis  O'Sul- 

livan.— WR  6 
Will   of   God,   The.  —  Frd'k   W.    Faber.  —  FEP  — 

HDL  («eZ.)— VA 
Will  the  New  Year  Come  To-night[,  Mamma]? — Cora 

M.  Eager  [or  Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton].— BS  1— CS  2 


Will  Wimble.  —  Jos.    Addison.     See    Spectator,    The : 

Sir  Roger  de  Coverley  Papers. 
Will  You  Advertise?— Anon.— FHE 
Will  You  Love  Me  when  I'm  Bald? — H:  Firth  Wood. — 

GH 
William  and  Margaret.— D:  Mallet.— FEP 
William  and  Marjorie.     (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. 

— PEBl 
(Sweet  William's  Ghost— C.)—BB— CGd 
(3  diff.  versions.) 
William  Blake.— Edmund  Gosse.— EDY 
William  Brown  of  Oregon.     (SI.  abr.) — Joaquin  Miller. 

Qg  22 

William  Did.— Anon.— WR  14 

(Billet-doux,  A  [or  The].)— CS  26— DCD 
William  E.  Gladstone.     (London  Punch.) — EDY 
William  Ewart  Gladstone. — Agnes  M.  Machar. — TCV 
William  Goetz.— H:  Reeves.— BS  9 
William  Lloyd  Garrison  (To  William  Lloyd  Garrison — 

C.).— Jas.  R.  Lowell.— BNL 
William  Lloyd  Garrison.     (Sel.) — Wendell    Phillips. — 

NC 
William  of  Cloudesy. — Anon. — EPs 
William  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham,  Sel.fr.  (Lord  Chatham's 

Eloquence.) — T:  B.  Macaulay. — IR 
William  Shakespeare.     (Frags,    fr.  various  authors.) — 

BNL 
William   Shakespeare,  Sel.  fr.   (Monument  to  Shake- 
speare, A — Third    Pt.,  Conclusion,  Sec.  V.) 
—Victor  Hugo.— MRS 
William  Tell.— W:  Baine.— BS  1— CS  7— FR 
William  Tell,  Sels.  fr.— Jas.  S.  Knowles. 

William  'Tell  among  the  Moutains.     (Sels.  fr.  Act 
I.,Sc.  2and  ActlL.Sc.  1.)— CR 
(William  Tell's  Address  to  his  Native  Hills.)— FR 
William  Tell  among  the  Mountains.     (Fr.  I.,  2.) — 
OM— SO— SS 
(Tell  on  his  Native  Hills— a6r.)—SAE 
(Tell's  Address  to  the  Alps— o6r.)— HNS 
(Tell's  Address  to  the  Mountains — abr.) — PS 
("Ye  crags  and  peaks,  I'm  with  you  once  again" 
—br.sel.)~C8  1 
William  Tell  on  Switzerland.     (Fr.  II.,  1.)— OM— 
SS 
(Switzerland — sel. ) — B  N  L 
("Oh,  with  what  pride  I  used,"  etc. — si.  abr.)— 

SPE 
(Tell  on  his  Native  Hills— si.  abr.)— BS  3— LLC 

— SA— SR8 
(Tell  on  Switzerland.)— CS  1 
William  Tell,  SeZs. /r.—Friedrich  Schiller  (tr.' by  S:  T. 
Coleridge'). 
Address  to  the  Swiss.     (Sel.  fr.  Act  II.,  Sc.  2.)— SS 
Alpine  Minstrelsy.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  1.)— FTR 
Das  Licht  des  Auges.     (Sel.  fr.  I.,  4.)— TMD 

William  Tell  Describes  his  Escape.     (Sel.  fr.  IV.,  1.) 

gg 

William  Tell  in  Wait  for  Gessler.     (Sel.  fr.  I V. ,  3.  )— 

SS 
William  Tell  among  the  Mountains. — -Jas.  S.  Knowles. 

See  William  Tell. 
William  Tell  and  His  Son.— Martha  J.  Nott.— WR  6 
William  Tell  Describes  His  Escape. — Friedrich  Schiller. 

See  William  Tell. 
William  Tell  in  Wait  for  Gessler. — Friedrich  Schiller. 

See  William  Tell. 
William  Tell  on  Switzerland.- — Jas.    S.    Knowles.     See 

William  Tell. 
William  Tell's  Address  to  his  Native  Hills. — Jas.  S. 

Knowles.     See  William  Tell. 
William  the  Conqueror. — E:  A.  Freeman. — WR  9 
William  the  Conqueror. — C! :  Mackay. — CS  4 
William  the  Testy. — Washington  Irving.  See  Knicker- 
bocker History  of  New  York. 
William  the  Third.     (Ecclesiastical  Sonnets,  Pt.  III., 

Son.  IX.)— W:  Wordsworth.— EDY 
William  Wordsworth.— Fs.  T.  Palgrave. — VA 
Willie  and  Helen. — Hew  Ainslie.     See  Willy  and  Helen. 
Willie  and  his  Esmeralda.— G :  Thatcher.— TK 
Willie  and  May  Margaret;  or,  The  Water  of  Clyde. — 

Anon.— BB 
(Qrowned  Lovers,  The — 2  diff.  versions.) — EPs  (si. 

o6r.)— PEB2(a6r.) 
Willie  Clark.— T:  E.  Garrett.— CS  26 
Willie      Drowned      in      Yarrow. — Anon.     See     Willy 

Drowned  in  Yarrow. 
Willie  Winkie.— W:    Miller.— BNL— FEP— GP— HBP 

—OS  1— PHS— WCL— YBF 
(SI.  abr.)— LC—\ A 
Willie's  Breeches.  —  Etta     G.     Salsbury.  —  PP  — 

WR    17(«eZ.)— YFR 
Willie's  Signal  for  Jesus.- Anon.— CS  23 
Willie's  Speech.— Anon.— LPS— PP— PS 


374 


TITLE  INDEX 


Winter 


Willie's  Speech.— Elia  Doolittle.— SD 

Willie's  Tears.— Anon.— DLS 

Willie's  Visit  to  Melville  Castle. — Anon.— HBP 

Willis,  The.— D:  L.  Proudfit.— AA 

Willow,  The.— Eliz.  A.  Allen.— HSS  1  (6r.  seZ.)- OS  3 

Willow  Song[,  The— C.].— Felicia  D.  Hemans.— HBP 

Willow-tree,  The.     {Br.  sel. )— Eliza  Cook.— AD 

Willow-tree,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.— WR  4 

Willowwood.     (I.— The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  XLIX.) 

—Dante  G.  Rossetti.— PGT  2 
Will's  Desire.— Mary  P.  Thomas.— WR  17 
Will's  Dollar  Bill.— Alice  L.  Richards.— WN 
Willy  and  Helen.— Hew  Ainslie.— PEB  3 

(Willie  and  Helen— o6r.)— OB 
Willy  Drowned  in  Yarrow. — Anon. — PGT  1 

(Willie  Drowned  in  Yarrow — si.  abr.) — BPB 
Willy  Reilly.— Anon.— TIP 
Willy's  Grave.— Edwin  Waugh.— CS  10 
Willy's  Lady,     (/n  Border   Minstrelsy.) — Anon.— BB 

—PEB  2  (si.  diff.  vers.) 
Willy's  Walk.— Anon.— HVD 
Wilt  Thou  be  Long?— E.  Matheson.— FLS 
Wiltshire  Wedding,  The.— Anon.— PEB  2 
Wily  Bee,  The.— Ed.  H.  Cahill.— DCR 
Wimmen's  Speah. — Marietta  Holley.     See  My  Opin- 
ions and  Betsey  Bobbet's. 
Wind,  The.— Letitia  E.  Landon.— PoR— POS 
Wind,  The.     {Mother  Truth's  Melodies.)— HV 
Wind,  The.— Adelaide  A.  Procter.- POS 
Wind,  The.— Edmund    C.    Stedman.     See    What    the 

Winds  Bring. 
Wind,  The.— Rob't   L.   Stevenson.— CGV—GMS—GN 

—HSS  2— TFS 
Wind  and  Sea. — Bayard  Taylor.     See  Wind  and   the 

Sea,  The. 
Wind  and  the  Leaves,  The. — G:  Cooper. — SM 
(Autumn  Leaves.)— GMS  (abr.)— NV 
(Leaves  and  ths  Wind,  The.)— TA  V 
Wind  and  the  Moon,  The. —  G:  Macdonald. —  BeR — 

BS  22— CS  22— EA— PHS— VSG  (abr.) 
Wind  and  the  Sea,  The  (Wind  and  Sea— C.).— Bayard 

Taylor.— POS 
Wind  and  the  Sun,  The.— ^sop.— OS  1 
Wind  and  Wave.— C:  W.  Stoddard.— AA 
"Wind,  be  still,  'tis  Spring!" — Anon.— HSS  1 
Wind  in  a  Frolic,  The.— W:  Howitt.— BVC 
(Abr.)— FMR— PC— PHS— PoR— POS 
Wind  in  the  Pines,  The. — Madison  Cawein. — AA 
Wind  in  the  Pines,  The. — Sir  H:  Taylor.     See  Edwin 

the  Fair 
Wind  of  Death,  The.— Ethelwyn  Wetherald.— VA 
Wind  of  Summer. — Michael  Field. — VA 
Wind  of  the  Sea.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— BJC 
Wind  of  the  Southland. — Douglass  B.  Douglass. — CG  3 
Wind  on  the  Hills,  The.— Dora  Sigerson.— TIP 
Windflower,  A. — Bliss  Carman. — VA 
Winding  Banks  of  Erne:  or,  The  Emigrant's  Adieu  to 

Ballyshannon,  The.— W:  Allingham.— TIP 
Winding  my  Watch. — Anon. — LLC 
Windlass  Song. — W :  Allingham. — GN 
Windmill,  The.— Anon.— DLF 
Windmill,  The.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— BVC 
Window,  The.     (C.)— Alfred  Tennyson. 

(Winter.)— LC 
Window  in  'Thrums,  A,  Sel.  fr.  (How  Gavin  Birse  Put  it 

to  Mag  Lownie — Ch.  XV.) — Jas.  M.  Barrie. — 

WGS— WR  13 
Window  Song,  A.— T:  C.  Irwin.— TIP 
Winds,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— HSS  3— SE 
Winds,  The.     {Cornell  Widow.)— CG  3 
Winds,  The,  Sel.  fr.—Il.  F.  Gould.— AE 
Winds   and    Waves.      {Frags,    fr.   various  authors.) — 

BNL 
Winds  of  the  Prairie,  The.— Caroline  F.  Candy.— KNS 
Winds  of  the  Winter,  The.— Paul  H.  Hayne.— POS 
Wind's  Song,  The.— Joe  Lincoln.— CCB 
Winds  To-day  are  Large  and  Free. — Michael  Field. — 

VS 
Wind's  Voices,  The. — Susan  Warner. — MR 
Windsor  Forest,  Br.  sel.  fr.  (Angling.) — Alex.  Pope. — 

BNL 
Windsor  Poetics. — Lord  Byron. — HPE  . 

Wind-swept  Wheat,  The. — Mary  A.  De  Vere. — AA 
Windy  Night,  The.— T:  B.  Read.— GN— HBP 
Windy  Nights.— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— BVC— CGV— 

PoR 
Wine.— J :  Gay.— HPE 
Wine  and  Dew.      ("You  may  drink  to  your  leman  in 

gold"— C.)—R:  H:  Stoddard.— AA 
Wine  and  Water. — Nettie  Mackey. — KC 
Wine  Cup,  The.— Anon.— CS  13— KNE 
Wine  of  Cyprus,  Sel.  fr.  (Stanzas.) — -Eliz.  B.  Browning. 

— CEL 


Wing  Tee  Wee.— J.  P.  Denison.— CG  1 

Winged  Seeds.— Helen  G.  Cone.— NV 

Winged  Worshippers,  The. — C:  Sprague. — AA — BNL 

— FEP— SN— TAS— YBT 
Wings. — Danske  C.  Dandridge. — TAS 
Wings.— Mary  L.  Ritter.— BNL 
Winifred  Waters. — Anon. — WR  17 
Winifreda.     {In  Percy's  Reliques.)  —  Anon. —  FEP — 

FTR— GP— HBP     • 
Wink.— Mrs.  E.  D.  Kendall.— HSS  2— MYF 
Winners  by  their  Own  Lengths.     {Sel.  ad.  fr.  Black 

Rock,  Ch.  II.)— Ralph  Connor.— NP 
Winnie's  Welcome.— Will  Emmett.— BS  21 

{SI.  abr.)- CD— SR  5 
Winnifred,  Walter  and  the  W's. — Anon. — DES 
Winning  a  Wager. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Winning  and  Losing.     {Verses  heading  Christian's  Mis- 
take, Ch.  XIII.)— Dinah  M.  Craik  (?).— OS  1 
Winning  Company,  A. — Anon. — CRR 
Winning  Cup's  Race. — Campbell  Rae-Brown. — WR  14 

(Kissing  Cup's  Race.)— CS  32 
Winning  the  Prize.— Anon. — FDY 
Winsome  Wee  Thing,  The.— Rob't  Burns.— FEP— LC 
(My  Wife's  a  Winsome  Wee  Thing— C.)— BNL— 

HBP— TFY— YBF 
Winstanley.     {Without  the   Apology.)— Jean  Ingelow. 

— EPs— LLC  (abr.)— PC  {si.  abr.) 
Winter.- Anon.— HP 
Winter.— Anon.— POS— SM—WCL 
Winter.— Anon.— COS— PP 
Winter.— J:  H.  Bryant.— BNL 
Winter. — W :  C.  Bryant.     See  Winter  Piece,  A. 
Winter. — Rob't  Burns.     See  Winter :  a  Dirge. 
Winter.     {Chambers'  Journal.)— tiF 
Winter.— W :  Cowper.     See  Task ,  The. 
Winter.- Dora  R.  Goodale.— POS 
Winter.— J:  Keats.— BPB 
(December.) — GN 

(Happy  Insensibility.)— OH— PGT  1 
(Stanzas— O— OB 
Winter.     {In   The   Unknown    Eros.) — Coventry   Pat- 
more.— PGT  2  {abr.) 
Winter. — W :  Shakespeare.     <See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Winter.     (Sonnet  XV.)— Rob't  Southey.— PEO 
Winter. — -Edmund  Spenser.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
Winter. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Window,  The.. 
Winter. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 
Winter[:  a  Dirge— C.].— Rob't  Burns.— EPs— POS 
Winter  and  Summer. — Anon. — GMS 
Winter  Apples. — Hattie  Whitney. — NV 
Winter   Being   Over,    The. — Ann[e]    Collins. — BNL — 

HBP 
Winter  Birds.— G:  Cooper.— POS 
Winter  Dawn.— M.  A.  P.— CG  3 
Winter  Days.— H:  Abbey.— A  A— SN 
Winter  Evening. — W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Winter  Evening. — Katha.  Tynan-Hinkson. — TIP 
Winter  Evening  at  Home,  A.— W:  Cowper.     See  Task, 

The. 
Winter  Evening  Hymn  to  My  Fire,  A. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. 

— BNL— PPh  {sel.) 
Winter  Fancies.— Jas.  W.  Riley.— RCR 
Winter  Flowers. — Blanche  Bishop. — TCV 
Winter  Gloaming. — Faith  Lincoln. — SSS 
Winter  Hymn,  A. — Am^lie  Rives. — TAS 
Winter  in  the  Lap  of  Spring.     {Tab.) — Anon. — BS  11 

—TCP 
Winter  Jewels.— Mary  F.  Butts.— COS— CPL— DLS— 

PP 
(Dewdrops.) — AD 
(Million    Little    Diamonds,    A — C.)— AA — GMS — 

HSS  2 
Winter  Leaves. — Anon. — CP 
Winter  Morning. — W :  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Winter  Morning,  A. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Vision  of  Sir 

Launfal,  The. 
Winter  Morning  Walk,  The. — W:  Cowper.     See  Task, 

The. 
Winter  Night,  A.     {SI.  abr.)  —  Rob't  Burns.—  EPs  — 

POS 
Winter  Night.— Mary  F.  Butts.— PoR 
Winter  Night,  A.— Melville  H.  Cane.— CG  3 
Winter  Nightfall.— Rob't  Bridges.— OB 
Winter  Nights.     (Third  Book  of  Airs,  XII.)— T:  Cam- 
pion.—ELP— OB 
Winter  Nights  at  Home,  The. — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 
Winter  Noon. — W:  Cowper.     See  Task,  The. 
Winter  Pictures. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     See  Vision  of  Sir 

Launfal,  The. 
Winter  Piece,  A,  Sel.  fr.  (Winter.)— W:  C.  Bryant.— 

POS 
Winter  Rain. — Christina  Rossetti. — HSS  2 
Winter  Scenes. — Jas.  Thomson.     See  Seasons,  The. 


375 


Winter 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Winter  Sketch,  A.— J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De  Tabley. 

— VS 
Winter  Sleep.— Edith  M.  Thomas.— AA 
Winter  Solstice,  The. — Edith  Thomas.     See  Solstice. 
Winter  Song,  A.— W:  C.  Bennett— POS 
Winter  Song,  A. — Susan  Hartley.- FS— PEO 
Winter  Song.— Lud wig  Holty  {tr.  by  C:  T.  Brooks).— 

BNL 
(Winter's  Snows.)— TFS 
Winter  Song,  A. — W :  Shakespeare.  <Sec  Love's  Labour's 

Lost. 
Winter  Song  for  Pan. — J:  Erskine. — CG  3 
Winter  Starlight. — Frank  D.  Sherman.— TAV 
Winter  Sunshine. — Anon. — FTA 
Winter  Thrush,  The.     (C.)— J :  Keble. 

(To  a  Thrush  Singing  in  January — nbr.) — POS 
Winter  Twilight,  A^Arlo  Bates. — AA 
Winter  Twilight.— G :  T.  Elliot.— AA 
Winter  Walk  at  Noon,  The.— W:  Cowper.     See  Task, 

The. 
Winter  Wish,  A.— Rob't  H.  Messinger.- AA— HBP 

(Give  me  the  Old.)— BNL— EPs— FEP— TAV 
Winter's  Acrobats. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — -LFL 
Winter's  Snows. — Ludwig  Holty.     See  Winter  Song. 
Winter's  Tale,  The,  Sels.  jr. — W  :  Shakespeare. 

Art  and  Nature.     {Br.  sel.Jr.  Act  IV.,  Sc.  4.)—  EPs 
Couit  Scene  from  "The  Winter's  Tale."     {Sel.  fr. 

III.,  2.)— WR  14 
Sheep-shearing,  A.     {Sel.  fr.  IV.,  4.)— EP 
(Flowers— 6r.  se?.)- EPs— SN 

(Winter's  Tale— si.  abr.)— BNL 
Song    of    Autolycus.     (Song   fr.  IV.,   3.)— OEL— 

WEPl 
(Jog  on.  Jog  on — sel.  w.  2  add.  sts.) — GN 
("Jog    on,  jog    on   the   footpath   way" — sel.) — 

HP 
Winter's  Tale,  The,  Br.  sel.  fr.  {Fr.  II.,  3.)— BNL 
Winter's  Work. — Anon. — DJS 
Winter-time. — Rob't  L.  Stevenson. — CGV 
Wiped  Out.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) — CS  23 — DS 
Wisdom. — Coventry     Patmore.     See    Angel     in     the 

House,  The. 
Wisdom.— C:  F.  Richardson.— TAS. 
Wisdom  and  Goodness  of  God,  The — J:  Milton.      See 

Paradise  Lost. 
Wisdom  and  Wealth. — Ivan  I.  Khnemnitzer. — BLP 
W^isdom  Dearly     Purchased. — Edmund      Burke.     See 

Speech  at  Bristol,  Previous  to  th)  Election,  etc. 
Wisdom  of  Krishna.     {Notes  and  Queries. — CS  36 
W^isdom  of  the  Ages. — Anon. — LLC 
Wisdom's  Treasures. — Mrs.  E.  J.  Goodfellow. — SSE 
Wise  Child,  The.— Gotthold  E.  Lessing.— HPE 
Wise  Fairy,  The.— Alice  Cary.— BLF 
"Wise  man  always  shows  himself  on  the  side  of  his 

assailants.   The." — Ralph   W.    Emerson.     See 

Compensation. 
Wise  Man's  Prayer,  The. — S:  Johnson.     See  Vanity  of 

Human  Wishes,  The. 
Wise  Men  of  Gotham,  The. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Wise  Resolution,  A.— E.  C.  A.  Allen.— TS 
Wise  Selection,  A. — Anon. — MC 
Wise  Women  of  Inverness,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Adam  O'Fin- 

try.)— W:  Black.— VSG 
Wisest  Fool,  The.— Eva  Lovett.— TMR 
Wisest  Plan,  The.— Phoebe  Cary.— PS 

(Suppose— C. )— BLF— PHS— PR— YA 

(^6r.)— PP— TFS— YFR 
("Suppose,  my  little  lady"— afer.)— GMS— HSS  2 

{sel.)—SM 
Wish,  A.— A.— CG  2 
Wish,  A.— Matthew  Arnold.— HBP 
Wish,  A.— Rose  Terry  Cooke.— WCL 

(Give  me  a  Wish.)— PC 
Wish,  A.— Abraham  Cowley.— CEL—WEP  2 

(Of  Myself— O— BNL— FEP 
Wish,  The. — Abraham  Cowley.     See  Mistress,  The. 
Wish,  A. — Henrietta  R.  Eliot. — SR  6 
Wish,  A.— Rob't  Devereux,  Earl  of  Essex.— PGT  1— 

YBF 
(Passion  of  my  Lord  of  Essex,  A.) — ELP 
Wish,  A. — Hamlin  Garland. — AA 

Wish,  A. — Ben  Jonson.     See  Masque  of  the  Metamor- 
phosed Gipsies,  A. 
Wish,  A.— S:    Rogers.— BNL— CEL— FEP— HBP— 

PGT  1— YBF 
Wish  Dearer  than  the  Crown,  The. — Nettie  V.  Braiden. 

— CS34 
Wish-bone,  The.— Leon  Mead.— DR 
Wishes,  The.— Anon.— YFD 
Wishes.— H.  W.  Banks.— CG  1 
Wishes.— H:  Halloran.- FLS 
Wishes  for  the  Supposed  Mistress. — R:  Crashaw.     See 

following. 


Wishes:  to  His    Supposed    Mistress.     (C.) — R:    Cra- 
shaw.—BNL  (abr.)— OB  {si.  abr.) 
{Sel.)  ELP— WEP  2 
(Whoe'er  She  be— ofer. )— OEL 
(Wishes  for  the  Supposed  Mistress.) — FEP  {si.  abr.) 

—PGT  1  {abr.) 
Wishing.— W:   Allingham.— NV— OS    1— PC— PHS— 

PoR— WCL 
Wishing  and  Having,  Br.  sel.  fr.  ("Perhaps  it  will  all 

come  right  at  last.") — R:  H:  Stoddard. — BIL 
Wishmakers'  Town,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Young. 
Bells,  The.— AA 
Bridal  Pair,  The.— AA 
Conscience-keeper,  The. — A  A 
Flower-seller,  The. — AA 
Pawns,  The.— AA 
Wissahikon,  The,  Sel.  fr.    {In  Washington  and  his  Gen- 
erals.)— G:  Lippard. 
Hero  Woman,  The.     (Ch.  VI.— o6r.)— CS  25 
Wistful  .—Anon  .—FLS 

Wistful  Days,  The.— Rob't  U.  Johnson.— AA—SN 
Wit  at  Several  Weapons,  Sel.  fr.  (Song — C. — fr.  Act 

III.,  Sc.  1.) — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
(Wake,  Gently  Wake.)— ES 
Witch,  A.— W:  Barnes.— CGd 
Witch,  The.— Virginia  W.  Cloud.— WR  22 
Witch  in  the  Glass,  The.— Sarah  M.  B.  Piatt.— AA— 

BNL— TAV 
Witch  of  Fife,  The. — Jas.   Hogg.     See  Queen's  Wake, 

The. 
Witch  of  Vesuvius,  The. — E :  Bulwer-Lytton.     See  Last 

Days  of  Pompeii,  The. 
Witch-bride,  The.— W :  Allingham.— PEB  4 
Witches.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Witches'  Frolic,  The.     {Abr.)—R:  H.  Barham.— WR  1 
Witches'  March. — Anon. — WDM 

Witches'  Meeting,  The. — W :    Shakespeare.     See   Mac- 
beth. 
Witches'  Town.     (Bowdoin  Quill. ) — CG  3 
Witch-mother,  The.— Algernon  C.  Swinburne.' — PEB  4 
Witch's  Ballad,  The.— W :  B.  Scott.— OB 
Witch's  Cavern,  The. — E:    Bulwer-Lytton.     See    Lagt 

Days  of  Pompeii,  The. 
Witch's  Daughter,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.     See  Mabel 

Martin. 
Witch's  Whelp,  The.— R:  H:  Stoddard.- AA 
With  a  Copy  of  Herrick. — Edmund  Gosse. — VA 
With  a  Copy  of  Keats.— F:  L.  Knowles.— CG  2 
With  a  Golfer's  Apologies  to  Tennyson.     {Punch  Bowl.) 

— CG3 
With  a  Guitar,  to  Jane.     (C.)— Percy     B.     Shelley.— 

FEP 
(To  a  Lady,  with  a  Guitar.)— CEL— PGT  1 
With  a  Hand-glass   (To  Minnie:  A   Picture-frame   for 

you  to  Fill— C.).— Rob't  L.  Stevenson.— OH 
"With  a  hey!   and  a  hi!   and  a  hey-ho  rhyme!" — Jas. 

W.  Riley.— BJC 
With  a  Nantucket  Shell.— C:  H.  Webb.— A  A 
With  a  Prayer-book.— Oscar  F.  Adams. — TAS 
With  a  Rose  from  Conway  Castle. — Julia  C.  R.  Dorr. — 

AA 
With  a  Spray  of  Apple  Blossoms. — Walter  Learned. — 

AA 
"With  broken   heart   and   contrite   sigh." — Cornelius 

Elven.— FEP 
With  Clearer  Vision.— Carlotta  Perry.— WR  7 
With  Esther.— Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— OB 
With  Flowers.     (Life,  XXV.)— Emily  Dickinson.— AA 
"With  gentle  looks  and  hearts  made  calm  by  sorrow." 

—J.  N.  Tarbox.— GG 
With  Gleaming  Sail.— Evelj-n  G.  Gardiner.— CG  3 
"With  his  gnarled  old  arms  and  his  iron  form." — H: 

R.  Jackson.     See  Live  Oak,  The. 
"With  how  sad  steps,  O  Moon,  thou  climb'st  the  skies." 

— Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
With  Lilacs.— C.  H.  Crandall.— AA 
With  Malice  towards  none,   with  Charity   for  all. — 

Abraham     Lincoln.     See     Second     Inaugural 

With  my  Cigar.— J:  C.  Anthony.— CG  2 

"With  my  love  this  knowledge  too  was  given."— Jas. 

R.  Lowell.     See  Sonnet:  "My  love,  I  have  no 

fear,"  etc. 
With  No  One  to  Love  Us.— E:  Ball.— FLS 
With  Pipe  and  Book.— R:  Le  Gallienne. — PPh 
"With  Pipe  and  Flute." — Austin  Dobson. — VA 
With  Roses. — Beatrix  D.  Lloyd. — AA 
With  Roses.— Sheffield  Phelps.— CG  1 
With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden ;  or.  The  Book  of  Love,  Sels.  fr. 

■ — Edwin  Arnold. 
Book  of  Love.     (Br.  «eZ.)— BIL 
Lover  with  his  Loved  One  Sailed  the  Sea,  A.    (Song.) 

—BIL 


376 


TITLE  INDEX 


Woman's 


With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden;  or.  The  Book  of  Love  (,con- 

tinued). 
Mahmud  and  Ayaz. — VA 
"Naught  is  the  same  'as  if  love  had  not  been.'" 

(Br.  seZ.)— BIL 
Queen  Arjamand's  Dagger. — SAE 
Song  without  a  Sound. — -VA 
With  Strawberries. — W:  E.  Henley. — OH 
"With  the  results  of  Christianity  before  him  and  in 

him."— Josiah  G.(?)  Holland.— GG 
With  the  Tide.— Anon.— HP 
With  Thee.— Mary  C.  Clarke.— FLS 
"With  thee,  sweet  Hope,  resides  the  heavenly  light." — 

T:  Campbell.     See  Pleasures  of  Hope,  The. 
With  Trembling    Fingers    Did    We    Weave. — Alfred 

Tennyson.     See  In  Memoriam. 
With  Trumpet  and  Drum.— Eugene  Field.— WTD 
With  Walker  in  Nicaragua,  Sel.  fr.     (At  the  Grave  of 

Walker.)— AA—EDY 
"With  white  wings  spread  she  bounded  o'er  the  deep." 

— Mary  A.  Livermore. — GG 
With  whom   is   no   Variableness[,   neither   Shadow   of 

Turning].— Arthur  H.  Clough.— HDL— WEP  4 
(Changeless,  The.)— YBF 
With  Wordsworth  at  Rydal.— Jas.  T.  Fields. — AA 
'With  you  Alway.'— Willis  B.  Allen.— TAS 
"Within  a  few  years  past  it  has  become  the  fashion." 

—(The  Nation. )—GG 
Within  King's  College  Chapel,  Cambridge.     (Ecclesias- 
tical Sonnets,  Pt.  II.,XLin. — Inside  of  King's 

College  Chapel,  Cambridge— C.  )—W :  Words- 

worth.- PGT  1 
(Ecclesiastical  Sonnets,  Sel.  fr.) — BNL  (br.  sel.) 
Within  the  Fold.— Anon.— CS  .35 
Within  the  Gates.— Clay  Clement.— WR  2 
"Within  the  master's  desk  is  seen." — J:  G.  Whittier. 

See  In  School  Days. 
Without  and  Within.     {Sel.  fr.  The  Change.) — Abra- 
ham Cowlev.— YBF 
(Fragment,  A.)— FEP 
(Love  in  her  Sunny  Eyes.) — ES 
Without  and  Within.     {SI.    abr.) — Jas.    R.    Lowell. — 

FEP— HBP— THP 
Without  and  Within. — Pierre  A.  D.  B.  Metastosio. — 

BNL 
Without  and  Within.— R:  H.  Stoddard.— FEP 
Without  Her.     (The  House  of  Life,  Sonnet  LIU.) — 

Dante  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Without  Him.— Edith  Rutter.— FEP 
Without  the  Children. — Anon. — BeR 
Witness,  The. — Anon. — PR 

(Guileless  Witness,  The.)— KNE 
(Hard  Witness,  The.)— DCR 
Witnesses.— Harriet  P.  Spofford.- TAS 
Wit's  Epitaph,  A.— Anon.— HSS  3 
Witticisms  and  Funny  Sayings. — Anon. — CS  6 
Witty  Retort,  A.— Anon.— DLF— KJ 
Wives  in  a  Social  Game. — Anon. — MRS 
Wives  of    Brixham,    The.— Anon.  —  CS  8  —  MYF — 

PC  (abr.) 
Wives  of  Great  Men. — Anon. — PS 
Wizard  Frost. — Frank  D.  Sherman. — LFL 
Wizard  of  the  Nile,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (My  Angeline.) — Harry 

B.  Smith.— THP 
Wizard  of  Valley  Forge,  The.— H.  S.  Kent.— ED 
Wizard's  Spell,  The.— L.  V.  Douglas.— CS  30 
Wizard's  Warning,  The.     {Dial.)—T:  Campbell.— SED 
(Lochiel's    Warning— C.)—AE    {br.    sel.)— BNL— 

BS  7  —  CDD  — CS  10— EPs  —  FEP  —  FTR  — 

HBP— PS— SS— WRD 
Wo-begone  Lover,  A. — Anon.— CS  19 
Woe  follows  Wickedness.     Bible.     See  Isaiah. 
Wofle  New  Ballad  of  Jane  Roney  and  Mary  Brown,  The. 

— W:  M.  Thackeray.— HPE 
Woful  Tale   of  Jotham   Brown,   The.— Jennie   E.   T. 

Dowe.— FS 
Wolf  and  Shepherds,  The,  Br.    sel.  fr.    (Law.) — Jas. 

Beattie. — CS  15 
(Lawyers  and  the  Laws.) — BNL 
Wolf  and  the  Bear,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — 

KER  Ik 

Wolf  and  the  Kid,  The.— Anon.— PPSr 
Wolfe  at  Quebec— Frank  D.  Budlong.— NC— PFP 
Wolfram's  Dirge. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Death's  Jest 

Book. 
Wolfram's  Song. — T:  L.  Beddoes.     See  Death's  Jest 

Book. 
Wolsey's  Advice  to  Cromwell. — W:  Shakespeare.     See 

King  Henry  VIII. 
Wolsey's  Fall. — ^W:    Shakespeare.     See    King    Henry 

VIII. 
Wolsey's  Farewell  [Address]  to  Cromwell. — W :  Shakes- 
peare.    See  King  Henry  VIII. 


Wolsey's   Soliloquy.— W :    Shakespeare.  See   King 

Henry  VIII. 
Wolves,  The.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.— MMR 
Woman. — -Anon. — BNL 
Woman. — Anon. — CP 

Woman.     {Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Woman. — Eaton  S.  Barrett. — GP 
Woman. — Calidasa  {tr.  by  Horace  H.  Wilson). — BNL — 

EPs 
Woman. — Oliver  Goldsmith.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield, 

The. 
Woman. — -Joaquin  Miller. — FAS 
Woman. — Osborne. — M  DD 

Woman. — Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Princess,  The. 
Woman.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— CS  31 
Woman  and  the  Weed.— Andrew  Lang. — VSG 
Woman  as  Friend. — J :  Lord. — TMR 
Woman  Contemplating  a  Household  God,  A.     (C.) — G: 

Croly. 
(Domestic  Love.) — FP 
Woman  Healed,  The. — Jessie     F.     Houser. — CS     31 — 

sss 

Woman  in  Politics.— J.  Ellen  Foster.— TMR 
Woman  in  Temperance. — Frances  E.  Willard. — WR  18 
Woman  Next  Door,  The.— Anon.— NPS—YP 
Woman  of  Mind,  The. — Anon. — BC 

(My  Wife  is  a  Woman  of  Mind.)— BS  17 
Woman  of  no  Importance,  A,  Sel.  fr.  (Gerald  and  his 

Mother.)— Oscar  Wilde.— VSG 
Woman  of  the  War,  A. — Rossiter  Johnson. — AWB 
Woman  of  Three  Cows,  The. — Jas.  C.  Mangan.— TIP 
Woman  who  Lingers,  The. — -Anon.— CS  20 
Woman-hater,  The,  Sel.  fr.  (Song — C. — fr.  Act  III., 

Sc.  1.)— J:  Fletcher. 
(Invocation  to  Sleep.)— BNL — CEL 
(Sleep.)— OB 
Womanhood. — Lizzie  J.  Rook. — TT 
Woman's  Answer,  A. — -Adelaide  A.  Procter. — BNL — 

FEP— FTA  (afcr. )— OH 
Woman's  Answer,  A. — Lydia  M.  Wood. — FLS 
Woman's  Answer  on  Being  Accused  of  being  a  Maniac 

on  the  Subject  of  Temperance,  A. — Anon. — 

PPSr 
(Go,  Feel  what  I  have  Felt.)— BNL— PS— SM 
(Hate  of  the  Bowl.)— CS  2— HNS 
Woman's  Career. — {Life.)— BS  21 

Woman's  Cau.se,  The. — Alfred    Tennyson.     See    Prin- 
cess, The. 
Woman's  Complaint,  A.     (Advance.) — FLS  (si.  abr.) — 

HP 
(Famished  Heart,  A.)— BS  18 
Woman's  Conclusions,  A. — Phoebe  Gary. — HDL 
Woman's  Curiosity.— Anon.— PP—YPS- 
Woman's  Day. — -Anon. — TFS 
Woman's    Death-wound,    A. — Helen    H.    Jackson. — 

BIL 
Woman's  Description  of  a  Play,  A. — Zenas  Dane. — 

DCR 
Woman's  Execution,  A. — E:  King. — A  A 
Woman's  Face,  A.— -Jas.  K.  Stephen. — HBR 
Woman's  Four  Seasons. — Philip  J.  (?)  Bailey. — FP 
Woman's  Gifts,  A.— Mary  A.  De  Vere.— TFY 
Woman's  Half-profits,  The.    (Cond.) — R:  Le  Gallienne. 

— WR  19 
Woman's  Hand,  A.     (In   A   Lover's   Diary.) — Gilbert 

Parker. — VA 
Woman's  Hate,  A. — Anon. — WR  7 
Woman's    Inconstancy.— Sir     Rob't    Ayton. — BNL — 

FEP— YBF 
(To  an  Inconstant  One.) — OB 
Woman's  Love.— Anon. — C!S  37 

(Conflict  of  Trains,  A.)— CS  15 
Woman's  Love. — Anon. — FP 
Woman's  Love. — -Anon. — WR  14 
Woman's  Love,  A.— J :  Hay.— BNL— GP 
Woman's  "No,"  A. — Arthur  Graham. -^CH 
Woman's  Part,  The.— Annie  R.  Christie.— TCV 
Woman's  Plea,  A. — Anon. — FMR 

(Thrilling  Appeal,  A—diff.  vers.)— TS 
Woman's   Pocket,  A.     (In  Danbury    News.)  — Jas.  M. 

Bailey.— CS  22— NPS—YP 
Woman's  Power. — Marietta  F.  Cloud. — BS  14 
Woman's  Praise,  A. — -Anon. — DCP 
Woman's  Pride,  A. — Helen  Hay. — AA 
Woman's  Question,  A. — Lena  Lathrop  {wr.  at.  to  Eliz. 

B.  Browning).— CS  13— MR— WCLG  2 
(Her  Reply.)— SR  7 
Woman's  Question,  A. — Adelaide  A.  Procter. — BNL — 

CS  6— FEP— FLS— GP— VA 
Woman's  Rights. — Anon. — MAD 
Woman's  Rights.     (Tafc.)— Anon.— TCP 
Woman's  Rights. — G:  W:  Curtis.     See  Fair  Play  for 

Women. 


377 


Woman's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Woman's  Rights. — Marietta  Holley.     See  My  Opinions 

and  Betsey  Bobbet's. 
Woman's  Rights  [by  Miss  Tabitha  Primrose]. — Anon. — 
BS  1  (sZ.  abr. )—CS  9 
(Speech  on  Woman's  Rights — si.  abr.) — DE 
Woman's  Shortcomings,  A. — -Eliz.  B.  Browning. — BIL 
(Oh,  Fear  to  Call  iffl^oving— se/.)— FTA 
(Unless.)— FLS 
Woman's  Song,  A. — Clement  Scott. — CS  28 
Woman'sThought,  A.— R:  W.   Gilder.— ASL— BIL— 

FTA 
Woman's  Trust,  Br.  sel.  fr.      ("Angel  face — its  sunny 
wealth  of  hair.  An.") — Frances  S.  Osgood. — 

BNL 
Woman's  Voice. — Edwin    Arnold. — BNL    (6r.    ael.) — 

HBP 
Woman's  War  Mission. — Anon. — AWB 
Woman's  Watch,  A.— Anon.— PR— YA 
Woman's  Way. — Anon. — WR  2 
Woman's  Way,  A. — Anon. — WR  4 
Woman's  Wiles. — H:  S.  Chapman. — CG  1 
Woman's  Will  {An  Epigram.) — J:  G.  Saxe. — BNL — 

HPE— THP 
Woman's  Wish,  A.— Mary  A.  Townsend. — HP 
Women,     (/n  Miscellaneous  Thoughts.) — S:  Butler. — 

HPE 
Women  and  Temperqjice  Work. — Frances  E.   Willard. 

— TS 
Women  and  their  Ways. — Anon. — SR  4 
Women  Fo'k,  The.— Jas.  Hogg.— BNL 
Women    of    Marblehead,    The. — E.    N.    Gunnison. — 

FR  {abr.) 
(Old  Huldah.)— CS  14 
A'^omen   of   Mumbles   Head,   The. — Clement  Scott. — 

CS  25— FMR— VSG 
tVomen  of  Sego,  The. — Mungo  Park. — FMR 
iVomen  of  the  Revolution.- — Mary  E.  Blake. — WR  10 
A''omen  of  the  War. — Annie  Thomas. — DES 
A'^omen  Pleased,  Sel.  jr.  (To  his  Sleeping  Mistress — song 

fr.  Act  III.,  Sc.  4.)— J:  Fletcher.— ELP 
(To  my  Mistress's  Eyes.) — ES 
Women's  Dispositions. — T.  De  Witt  Talmage. — BS  18 
Women's  Rights. — Anon. — WR  12 
Women's  Rights.— Emma  Zeliff.— SDD 
Won  by  Strategy.     {Farce.) — Anon.- — DCD 
Won  the  Pot.— J.  R.— CG  1 
Wonder,  The,  Sel.  jr.  (Spanish  Valet  and  the  Waiting 

Maid,  The — duoloque.) — Anon. — BC 
"Wonder  of  all-ruling  Providence,  The."— J:  Keats. — 

BNL 
Wonder  Story,  A.— Helen  C.  Bacon.— TT 
Wonder-child ,  The.— R :  Le  Gallienne.— VA 
Wonderfu'  Wean,  The.— W:  Miller.— FEP 
Wonderful.— Julian  S.  Cutler.— POS 
Wonderful  Country,  The.— J:  B.  O'Reilly.— BS  16 
Wonderful  Dog  Story.  A.— E.  J.  Wheeler.— WR  25 
Wonderful  Dream.     (DwiZ.)- Christy.- BC 
Wonderful  Duel,  A.     {Harper's  Weekly.) — FS  {si.  abr.) 
(Duel  between  Mr.  Shott  and  Mr.  Nott,  The.)— CH 
(Mysterious  Duel,  A.)— CS  20— SR  5 
Wonderful  Lamp,  The.— Anon. — DDM 
Wonderful  Mosquitoes. — Anon. — KNE 

(Clerical  Wit.)— CS  4— SCS 
Wonderful  Old  Man,  The.— Anon.— NA 
Wonderful  "One-hoss  Shay,"  The. — Oliver  W.  Holmes. 

—AD  {sel.)— CS  2 
(Deacon's  Masterpiece,  The;  or,  etc. — C) — AWH — 

EPs— FEP— THP 
(One-hoss  Shay,  The;  or,  etc.)— BNL— CR— MHR 

— SE  {sel.) 
Wonderful  Sack,  The.— J:  T.  Trowbridge.— MYF 
Wonderful  Scholar,  The.     (Z>taZ.)— Anon.— FDY 
Wonderful  Tar-baby    [Story],    The.— Joel    C.    Harris. 

<Se«  Uncle  Remus,  his  Songs  and  his  Sayings. 
Wonderful  Tree,  The.— Anon.— AD 
Wonderful  Weaver,  The. Cooper. — DLS— PP— 

TMR— YPS 
Wonderful  Whalers,  The. — Anon.— MDD 
Wonderful  World,  The.    (Great,  Wide,  Beautiful,  Won- 
derful World— C.)—W:  B.  Rands  {wr.  at.  to 

M.  Browne).— GMS—PoR 
(Child's  World,  The.)— POS  {si.  dijf.  vers.)—SM— 

WCL— YBT 
(World,  The.)— OS  1 
Wonderland. — Harry  T.  Peck. — AA 
Wonders,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 
Wonders  of  an  Atom,  The. — Rob't  Hunt.     <See  Poetry 

of  Science. 
Wonders  of  Genealogy,  The.     (  Yale  Record.)— BS  1 1 
Wonders  of  the  Dawn,  The. — E:  Everett.     See  Uses  of 

Astronomy,  The. 
Wonders  of  the  Victorian  Age.     {Punch.) — HPE 
Won't  and  Will.— Anon.— LPS— PP 


Won't  You?— T:  H.  Bayly.— BIL— FTA— TFY 
Won't  you  Follow  Me  (Lanty  Leary — C). — S:  Lover. — 

CS36 
(Old  Ballad,  An.)— WR  14 
Woo'd  and  Married  and  A'. — Joanna  Baillie.   See  Song: 

Woo'd  and  Married  and  A'. 
Wood  of  Chancellorsville,  The. — Delia  R.  German. — 

CS  1— WR  10 
Wood  Orchid,  The.     {College  Folio.)— CG  2 
Woodbine. — W:  Shakespeare.   <See  Midsummer  Night's 

Dream. 
Woodbines  in  October. — Charlotte  F.  Bates. — AA 
Woodchucks. — Anon. — CS  19 
Wooden  Doll  and  the  Wax  Doll,  The. — Jane  Taylor. 

—OS  1 
Wooden  Leg,  The.— Max  Adeler. — WR  2 
Wooden  Legs. — Anon. — OS  1 
Wood-fire,  The.— E.  S.  H.— EPs 

Woodland  Grave,  A. — J:  B.  L.  Warren,  Lord  De  Tab- 
ley.— VA 
Woodland  Hymn,  A. — Phebe  A.  Holder. — AD 
Woodland   in  Spring,  The. — W:  Cowper.     See  Task, 

The. 
Woodland  Lesson,  The. — Eliz.  Bouton. — CS  18 
Woodland  Tragedy,  A.— Arlo  Bates.— TAV 
Woodland  Walks.     (Poems  of  the  Imagination,  Misc. 

Sonnets,  Pt.  II.,  2.)— W:  Wordsworth.— WR  1 
"Woodman,  Spare  that  Tree."     {History  oj  the  poem.) 

— Anon. — AD 
Woodman,   Spare   that    Tree. — G:   P.   Morris.- — A  A — 

AD  {w.  mus.)  —  BLP  —  BNL  —  FEP  — GP— 

HSS  1  —  LLC  —  POS  —  PS  —  SM  —  TAV  — 

WCLGl 
Wood-notes,  Sels.  jr. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 

Heart  of  all  the  Scene,  The.     (Pt.  I.,  4.)— AA 
Wood-notes.     (Pt.  II.)— HBP 
(Mighty  Heart,  The— seZ.)- AA 
(Undersong,  The — sel.) — AA 
Wood-nymphs.     {Frags,  jr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Woodpecker  and  the  Dove,  The. — {Tr.  by)  Blanche  W. 

Bellamy  and  Maud  W.  Goodwin.— OS  1 
Woodruffe,  The.— Isa  C.  Knox.— VA 
Woods  in  Winter.— H:  W.  Longfellow.— HBP 
"Woods  that  Bring  the  Sunset  Near,  The." — R:  W. 

Gilder.— A»L— TAV 
Wood-song. — J.  P.  Peabody. — AA 
Woodspurge,  The. — Dante  G.  Rossetti. — VA 
Wooing.— J:  B.  L.  Soule.— GP 
Wooing  of  Amoret. — Edmund     Spenser.     See     Faerie 

'  Queene,  The. 
Wooing  of  the  French  Princess. — W :  Shakespeare.  See 

King  Henry  V. 
Wooing  of  the  Lady  Amabel. — F.  Anstey. — CS  29 
Wooing  of  the  Maid    of    Beauty. — Anon.     See    Kale- 

vala.  The. 
Wooing  Song.     {Fr.  The  Sorceress  of  Vain  Delight.) — 

Giles  Fletcher.— OB 
(Panglory's  Wooing  Song.)— FEP— HBP 
Woolen  Doll,  The.— G:  W.  Hows.— BeR 
Woone  Smile  Mwore. — W:  Barnes. — VA 
Wopsenonic. — Louise  E.  V.  Boyd. — CS  35 
Word,  The.— R:  Realf.     See  Symbolisms. 
Word  for  Cranks,  A. — {Burlington  Hawkeye.) — CS  26 
Word  for  each  Month,  A. — Clark  Jilson.— CS  13 
Word  from  a  Petitioner,  A,  Br.  sel.  jr.  {r,  lines.) — J: 

Pierpont.— BNL 
(Ballot,  The— 4  lines.)— KK 
("Weapon  that  comes  down  as  still,  A" — 6  lines.) 

— GG 
Word  of  God   to   Leyden    Came,   The. — Jeremiah    E. 

Rankin. — AA 
Word  of  Warning,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Word  to  the  Wise,  A. — Caroline  Duer. — AA 
Word  to  the  Wise,  A,   Sel.   jr.     (Prologue.) — S:  John- 

son.- WEP  3 
Word  to  Young  Men,  A.— J:  B.  Gough.— TS 
Word  with  a  Skylark,  A.— Sarah  Piatt.— SN 
Words. — Anon . — YBT 

Words.     (Riddle— O— Anna  L.  Barbauld.— LLC 
Words.     (Abr.)- Josiah  G.  Holland.— YBT 

Words. Howell.— KNE 

Words  and  Their  Uses.— Frank  Olive.— CS  17— SR  1 
Words  and  Tones.— Anon. — HSS  2 

(Tone  of  the  Voice,  The— seZ.)- CS  32 
Words  for  Parting. — Mary  Clemmer. — BIL— FTA 
Words  from  the  Tree.     (Sel.  jr.  letter.) — Moncure  D. 

Conway. — AD 
Words  of  Cheer.— T:  H.  Barker.— PEO 
Words  of  Rosalind's  Scroll,  The,  Sel.  jr.     (Rosalind's 

Scroll.)— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— OB 
Words  of  Strength.— Friedrich  Schiller.— BS  9— KNE 
(Hope,  Faith,  [and]  Love.)— GP— OS  2 
(Three  Words  of  Strength.)— HDL 


378 


TITLE  INDEX 


Wreck 


Words  of  Welcome.- — Anon.     See  Lines  for   an   Exhi- 
bition. 
Words  on  Language. — Oliver  W.  Holmes.  See  Rhymed 

Lesson,  A. 
Wordsworth.— Craven  L.  Betts. — EDY 
Wordsworth. — Lord  Byron.     See   English    Bards    and 

Scotch  Reviewers. 
Wordsworth.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  To  Wordsworth.) — Felicia 

D.  Hemans.— BNL 
Wordsworth. — W:  W.  Lord.     See  Ode  to  England,  An. 
Wordsworth.— J:  G.  Whittier.— LLC 
W'^rdsworth  on  Poetry.     See  Poetry.     Wordsworth. 
"Wordsworth's  Grave,"  Sei'. /r.     W:  Watson.     (IL) — 

BNL 
Work. — Anon. — AD 
Work.— (A«  the  Year  Round.)— UF 
Work.— L:  J.  Block.— AA 
Work. — T:  Carlyle.     See  Past  and  Present. 
Work.— Alice  Cary.— HSS  3— NV 
Work.— Sidney   Dyer.     See   Work,   for  the   Night   is 

Coming. 
Work.— C:  Lamb.— WEP4     . 
Work.— Martha  P.  Lowe.— TAS 
Work.— Mary  N.  Prescott.— YBT 
Work  and  Play.— Anon.— COS— PP 

(Bee  and  the  Butterfly,  The.)— TFS 
Work  and  Play.— Anon.— WR  17 
Work  and  Play.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Work  and  Play.— M.  A.  Stoddart.- TFS 

(One  Thing  at  a  Time.)— LPS— PP 
Work  and  Song.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Work  and  Wait.— Annie  R.  White.— CPL 
Work  Away.— Anon.— HSS  3 
Work,  for  the  Night  is  Coming. — Sidney  Dyer. — LLC 

(Work— seZ. )— TFS 
Work  on  Earth.— J :  Wilson.— HDL 
Work  or  Play.     (Dial.)— Anon.— HVT) 
"Work  proceeds  without  intermission.  The." — H:  W. 

Beecher.     See  Soul-building. 
Work  that   is   Best,   The.— Carlotta   Perry.— CS  36— 

WR6 
Work  without  Hope.— S:  T.  Coleridge.— OB— YBF 
Work,  Work  Away.— Virgil  A.  Pinkley.— BS  22 
Work,  Work,  My  Boy.— Anon.— HSS  3 
Working  Man's  Song,  The. — J:  S.  Blackie. — VA 
Works  and  Days,  Br.  sel.  fr. — Ralph  W.  Emerson. — 

PEO 
Works  of  God,  The.— Jane  Taylor.— NV 

(God  Made  All  Things.)— TFS 
Work-shop  and  the  Camp,  The. — Anon. — SS 
World,  The.— Fs.  Bacon.— BNL— ELP 

(Life.)— FEP 
World,  The.— G:  Herbert.— WEP  2 
World,  The.— W:  B.  Rands.     See  Wonderful  World, 

The. 
World,  The.     (Parables  and  Riddles,  IV.)— Friedrich 

Schiller.— OS  1 
World,  The.     (C.)— H:    Vaughan.— ELP    (br.    sel.)— 

WEP  2 
(Vision,  A—br.  sel.)—FGT  1— YBF 
World,  The.— Jones  Very.— HBP 
World,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— CS  29 
World,  The. — W:    Wordsworth.     See    World    is    too 

much  with  us,  The. 
World  and  I,  The.— Nelly  M.  Hutchinson.— HP 
World  and  Soul.— G:  Macdonald.— VA 
World  and  the  Quietist,  The. — Matthew  Arnold. — VA 
World  as  it  Is,  The.— Ella  W.  Wilcox.— FS 

(Laugh  and  the  World  Laughs  with  you.) — TMD 
(Solitude— C.)—TAV 
World  Beautiful,  The. — J:  Milton.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
World  Beyond,  A. — Nathaniel  I.  Bowditch. — AA 
World  for  Sale,  The.— Ralph  Hoyt.— CS  10— WCLG  2 
World  I  am  Passing  Through,  The. — Lydia  M.  Child. 

— AA 
World  is  Mine,  The. — Florence  E.  Coates. — AA 
World  is  too  Much  with    us.  The.      (Poems  of    the 

Imagination,  Misc.  Sonnets,  Pt.  I.,  XXXIII.) 

— W :  Wordsworth.— BNL— GP— HBP—  HBR 

— LLC— PYO— SN— YBF 
(Sonnet.)— FEP 
(World,  The.)— OB 
("World  is  too  much  with  us,  late  and  soon,  The.") 

— BSP— PGT  1 
(World's  Ravages,  The.)— WEP  4 
"World  is  too  much  with  us,  late  and  soon.  The." — W: 

Wordsworth. — See  foregoing. 
World  Music— F.  L.  Bushnell.— AA 
"World  Owes  Me  a  Living,  The." — Anon. — PS 
"World  Owes  Me  a  Living,  The." — Alice  Cary.     See 

Waiting  for  Something  to  Turn  Up. 
World  to  Come,    The,    Sel.    fr.     (Silence    is    Golden.) 

— ( Chautauquan. ) — AD 


World  Transformed,  The. — J :  G.  Whittier.  See  Snow- 
bound. 

World  We  Live  In,  The.— T.  De  Witt  Talmage.— BS  15 
— CS  18— PS 

World  Well  Lost,  The.— Edmund  C.  Stedman.— 
AA 

World  Without  and  Within,  The.— T:  N.  Talfourd.— 
SS 

World  Would  be  Better  for  It,  The.— M.  H.  Cobb.— 
BLP— HSS  3  (abr.) 

Worldly  Place.     (C.)— Matthew  Arnold. 
(Even  in  a  Palace.)— OS  2 

Worldly  Treasures.- Philip  J.  (?)  Bailey.— FP 

World's  Death-night,  The.— Jas.  C.  Woods.— VA 

"World's  history  is  a  divine  poem,  The."  (Br.  sel.  fr. 
The  Province  of  History.) — Jas.  A.  Gar- 
field.—GG 

World's  Music,  The.— Gabriel  Setoun.— BVC  (abr.)  — 
PoR 

World's  Problem,  The.  —  Mrs.  Mary  C.  Leavitt. — 
WR  18 

World's  Ravages,  The.— W:  Wordsworth.  See  World 
is  too  much  with  us.  The. 

World's  Verdict,  The.— Flavel  S.  Mines.— BS  21 

World's  Wanderers,  The.— Percy  B.  Shelley.— CEL— 
FP— POS 

World's  Way,  The.— W:  Shakespeare.— PGT  1 
(Sonnet.)— FEP 
(Sonnet  LXVI.— C.)— ELP— WEP  1 

World-weariness.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 

Worm,  The.— Eliz.  Turner.— BVC 

Worn  Wedding-ring,  The.— W:  C.  Bennett.— BNL — 
TFY 

Worn-out  Parties,  The. — Frances  E.  Willard. — WR  18 

Worried  about  Catherine.  (Dial.) — Will  Carleton. — 
SR  10 

Worse  than  Marriage.     (Boston  Courier.) — BS  21 

Worship,  Sel.  fr.  (All  Great  Ages  have  been  Ages  of 
Belief.) — Ralph  W.  Emerson. 

Worship,  Sel.  fr.—W:  W.  Lord.— AA 

Worship.     (Br.  sel.)—J:  G.  Whittier.— YBT 

Worship  in  the  Wild-wood.— E.  YouL— HSS  1 

Worship  of  Nature,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.  See  Tent 
on  the  Beach,  The. 

Worsted  Stocking,  The.— Anon.— MYF 
(Building  the  Chimney.)— CS  11 

Worth  before  Show. — Pauline  Butler. — MD 

Worth  of  Eloquence,  The. — Anon. — CS  5 

Worth  of  Eloquence,  The. — Anon. — KNE 

Worth  of  Fame,  The.  (Sel.  fr.  The  Legend  of  Chris- 
topher Columbus.)  —  Joanna  Baillie.- — 
BLP  (abr.)— SS 

Worth  of  Knowledge.  (Sel.  fr.  The  Advancement  of 
Learning,  Bk.  I.) — Fs.  Bacon. — LLC 

Worth  of  Present  Popularity. — W:  Murray,  Lord  Mans- 
field.—SS 

Would  You  be  Young  Again? — Carolina,  Lady  Nairne. 
— AVP— HBP 

Wouldn't  You?— Anon.— WR  24 

Wounded. — Anon. — DS 

Wounded.— W:  E.  Miller.- CS  1 

(Abr.  and  with  2  sts.  fr.  Watson's  The  Wounded 
Soldier.)— FTR— HNS 
(Mustered  Out.)— HSS  1 

Wounded. — J:  W.  Watson.  See  Wounded  Soldier, 
The. 

Wounded  Cupid,  The— Rob't  Herrick.— WR  14 

Wounded  Curlew,  The.— Celia  Thaxter.- SAP 

Wounded  Daisy,  The.— Anon.— OS  1 

Wounded  in  the  Corners. — Anon.- — DE 

Wounded  Soldier,  The.— J:  W.  Watson.— BS  7— CS  5 
— FR— PFP— SAE  (br.  sel.) 
(Wounded.)— MMR—SR  2— TMD 
(Wounded  to  Death.)— BNL 

Wounded  to  Death. — J:  W.  Watson.     See  foregoing. 

Wouter  Van  Twiller.^ — ^Washington  Irving.  See  Knick- 
erbocker History  of  New  York. 

Wrangling  Pair,  The.—  - — -  Valentine.— SCS 

Wrath  of  Cupid,  The.— Anon.— TL 

Wreath  of  Flowers,  A. — Clara  Denton. — LPD 

Wreathe  the  Bowl.— T:  Moore.— HBP 

Wreck,  The. — C:  Dickens.     See  David  Copperfield. 

Wreck,  The.— Felicia  D.  Hemans.— FP 

Wreck,  The.— J:  Ruskin.— VA 

Wreck,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— PGT  2 

Wreck  of  an  Ocean  Steamship,  The. — H:  Davenport. 
—PR 

Wreck  of  Rivermouth,  The,  Sel.  fr.—J:  G.  Whittier.— 
AE 

Wreck  of  the  Aideen,  The. — Alfred  P.  Graves. — 
AVP 

Wreck  of  "The  Grace  of  Sunderland." — Jean  Ingelow. 
See  Brothers  and  a  Sermon. 


379 


Wreck 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Wreck  of  the  Hesperus,    The. — H:    W.    Longfellow. — 

ASL  —  BFV  —  BPB  —  CGd  —  CR  —  FEP  — 

FP  —  FTR  —  GN  —  HBP  —  LLC  —  MR  — 

MYF  (afer. )—OM—PHS—SA—TAV—WRD 
Wreck  of  the  Huron.— T.  De  Witt  Talmage.— CS  15— 

CSS— SA 
Wreck  of  the  "Julie  Wante,"  The. — W:  H.Drummond. 

— NA 
Wreck  of  the  "Mary  Wiley,"  The. — E.  S.  Jackson. — 

CS30 
Wreck  of  the  "Northern     Belle,"    The.     (SI.     abr.)— 

Edwin  Arnold.— BS  23 
Wreck  of  the  Scotch    Express,    The. — C.    C.    Mott. — 

WR13 
Wreck  of  the  Solent,  The.— F:  Lyster.— WR  6 
Wreck  of  the  Steamship  "Puffin,"  The. — F.  Anstey. — 

BVC 
Wrecker  of  Priest's  Cove,  The. — Graham  R.  Tomson. — 

SO 
Wreck  off  Mizen-Head,  The. — G :  F.  Savage- Armstrong. 

— PEB4 
Wrecker's  Bell,  The.— W:  Winter.— MRS 
Wrecker's  Oath    on    Barnegat,    The. — H:    Morford. — 

CS17 
Wren's  Nest,  The.— Lucy  R.  Fleming.— YBT 
Wren's  Nest,  A. — W:  Wordsworth. — CGd 
Wrestler,  The.— C:  G.  D.  Roberts.- TCV 
Wrestling  Jacob.— C:  Wesley.— FEP— WEP  3 

{SI.  o6r.)— BNL— HBP 
Wretch,  Condemned  with  Life  to  Part,  The. — Oliver 

Goldsmith.     See  Captivity,  The. 
Wrinkles.     (Poems     and     Epigrams,     LXXXVII.) — 

Walter  S.  Landor. — VA 
("When  Helen  first  saw  wrinkles  in  her  face.") — 

WEP  4 
"Write  a  Poem  for  the  'Lit.'  "— C.  W.  Yeomans.— CG  1 
Write  It.— Anon.— SR  13 

Write  Them  a  Letter  To-night.— Anon.— BS  23 
Writing  a  Book.— (DtaZ.)— Clara  J.  Denton.— FTT 
Writing  a  Letter.     (Dial.)— Anon. — FDY 
Writing  a  Tragedy. — (Dial.) — Anon. — FHE 
Written  on  the  Image,  The. — W:  Morris.     See  Earthly 

Paradise,  The. 
Writing  to  Grandma.— Anon.— COS— PP— PS 
Writing  Verses. — Rob't  Burns.     See  Epistle  to  James 

Smith.  , 

Written  after   Swimming   from   Sestos   to   Abydos. — 

Lord  Byron.— HPE 
Written  among  the  Euganean  Hills.     (Lines  Written 

among   the    Euganean    Hills — C.) — Percy    B. 

Shelley.— PGT  1  (abr.) 
(View  from  the  Euganean  Hills — abr.) — BNL 
Written  at  an  Inn  at  Henley. — W:  Shenstone. — HBP 
Written  at  Florence.     (In  Love  Sonnets  of  Proteus.) — 

Wilfrid  S.  Blunt.— OB 
Written  at  Killarney.— Mary  Tighe. — FEP 
Written  at  Ostend.— W:  L.  Bowles.— WEP  4 
Written  at  the  End  of  a  Book.— Langdon  E.  Mitchell. 

— AA 
Written  beneath  a  Crucifix. — -Anne  R.  Aldrich. — TAS 
Written  immediately  after  Reading  the  Speech  of  Rob- 
ert Emmet.     (C.) — Rob't  Southey. 
(Emmet's  Epitaph.) — BNL 
Written  in  a  Nunnery  Chapel. — Jas.  C.  Mangan. — TIP 
Written  in  a  Young  Lady's  Commonplace  Book. — T: 

Moore.— HPE 
Written  in  Conway  Castle.— Frd'k  W.  Faber.— AVP 
Written  in  Early  Spring.— W:  Wordsworth.- PGT  1 — 

YBF 
(Lines  Written  in  Early  Spring— C.)— FEP— SN— 

WEP  4 
Written  in  Edinburgh. — Arthur  H.  Hallam. — VA 
Written  in  Emerson's  Essays. — Matthew  Arnold. — VA 
Written    in   London,     September,     1802.      (C.)— W: 

Wordsworth. 
(England,  1802.)— OB 
(London,  1802— I.)— PGT  1— YBF 
Written  in  March.     (C.)—W:    Wordsworth.- AE    — 

CGd— LC 
(After  Rain.)— CEL 
(In  March.)- PC 

(March.)— BFV— HBP— OS  1— PHS— PoR 
Written  in  Northampton  County  Asylum. — J:  Clare. — 

OB 
(His  Last  Ver.ses.)— FEP 
(I  am!  Yet  what  I  Am.)— EDY 
(Lasciate  Ogni  Speranza.) — PGT  2 
Written  in  the  Blank  I^eaf  of  a  Lady's  Commonplace 

Book.     (O— T:  Moore. 
(Verses  Written  in  an  Album.) — BNL 
Written  in  the  Churchyard  of  Richmond,  Yorkshire. — 

Herbert  Knowlss.     See  Lines  Written  in  Rich- 
mond Churchyard,  Yorkshire. 


Written  in  the  First  Leaf  of  a  Child's  Memorandum 

Book. — C:  and  Mary  Lamb. — LPC 
Written  in  the  Visitors'  Book  at  the  Birthplace  of  Rob- 
ert Burns.— G :  W.  Cable.— AA 
Written  Lesson,  A. — S.  W.  Chamberlain. — CG  2 
Written  on  a  Fly-leaf  of  Theocritus. — Maurice  Thomp- 
son.— A  A 
Written  on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide.     (C.)— R:  Realf. 
("He  was  a-weary,  but  he  fought  his  fight" — br. 

8el.)—GG 
(Vale.)— GP 

("When  for  me  the  end  has  come,"  etc. — br.  sel.) 
— GG 
Written  Under  Difficulties.— G :  Thatcher.— TK 
Wrong  Man,  The.— Anon.— CS  19 
Wrong  Man,  The.     (Z>Mii.)— Anon.— DDM 
Wrong  Road,  The.— H.  W.  Adams.— CS  24 
Wrong  Train,   The.— C:  B.  Lewis.— PR— YA 
Wrongs  of   Ireland. — H:Grattan.     See  Declaration  cf 

Irish  Rights. 
Wyatt's  Harangue  to  the  London  Crowd. — Alfred  Ten- 
nyson.    See  Queen  Mary. 
Wynken,  Blynken  and  Nod.     (C.) — Eugene  Field. — 
AA  —  EF  —  GMS  —  HBR  —  PoR  —  WTD  — 
(Dutch  Lullaby.)— ASL— BNL— BVC— DCP  — DR 
— NV 


Xerxes  at  the  Hellespont. 
NPS— YP 


-R:  C.  Trench.— CS  15- 


Yaba  Dam. — Anon. — CS  9 

Yacht  Race,  The,     (New  York  Herald.)— FFP 

Yacob's  Losing  Deal.^ — Anon. — BDD 

(Dutchman  in  the  Police  Court,  The.) — DRR 
Yak,  The.— Hilaire  Belloc— NA 
Yale,  A.  D.  2,000.     (Yale  Record.)— CG  2 
Yale  and  Princeton. — Anon. — CP 
Yaller  Dog,  The.— Anon.— DCR 
"Yaller"  Dog's  Love  for  a  Nigger,  A. — G:    Thatcher. 

— TK 
Yankee  and  the  Butter,  The.— Anon.— WR  2 
Yankee  and  the  Dutchman's    Dog,    The. — Anon.    — 

BDD— CS  9— DFY 
Yankee  Aunt,  The.     (Dial.)— Anon.— FND 
Yankee  Boy,  The.— J:  Pierpont.— CS  35 

(Whittling.)— BNL— GN—PPSr-SM-WCLI  2 
(Whittling— a  Yankee  Portrait.)— SS 
(Whittling  Typical  of  Young  America.) — BLP 
Yankee  Fireside,  The.— Yankee  Hill.— CDV   —   DFY 

— HR 
Yankee  Gypsies,  The.— J:  G.  Whittier.— APr 
Yankee  in  Love,  A.— Alf  Burnett.— CS  2— NPS— YP 

(Peter  Sorghum  in  Love.)— CRR— DFY— HR 
Yankee  Landlord,  The.     (Atlantic  Monthly.)  —  DFY 

SQS 

Yankee  Man-of-war,  The.— Anon.— AA—AWB— BAB 

— WR5 
Yankee  Tar's  Return,  The.     (Dia/.)— Anon.— SED 
Yankee  Thunders. — Anon.-^AWB — PAPm 
Yankee  Volunteers,  The.— W:  M.  Thackeray.  —  HPE 
Yankees  in  Battle,  The.— R.  D.  Evrrs.— PRR 
Yankee's   Stratagem,   The;   or.   Here   she   Goes — and 

There  she  Goes.— (Play— ad.  by)  G.  W.  Dale. 

— BS  4— HD 
"Yap."^ — Joe  Lincoln. — CCB 

Yard  in  December,  The.— Arthur  D.  Ficke.— CG  3 
Yarn,  A.— Mary  E.  Hewitt.— CS  11 
Yarn  of  the  "Nancy  Bell,"  The.— W:S.  Gilbert.— BeR 

— BNL— Bfe  2— CS  7— FEP— SO— TCP     (w. 

pant.)— THF—\SG 
Yarrow  Revisited.— W:  Wordsworth.— FEP— HBP 
Yarrow  Unvisited.—W:  Wordsworth.  —  BPB— FEP 

— HBP— MBL— PGT  1— WEP  4 
Yarrow  Visited.— W:  Wordsworth.   —  BPB— FEP— 

HBP— PGT  1 
Yawcob  Strauss. — C:  F.  Adams. — PS 

(Leedle  Yawcob  [or  YacobJStrauss.)— AWH— BDD 

— CS  13— CSS— DFY— FTR— HP— THP 
Yawcob's     Dribulations     (or   Tribulations).  —  C:     F. 

Adams.— BS  19— CS  32 
Ye  Baggage  Smasher. — Anon. — BS  4 
Ye  Ballad  of  Christmas.— Anon.— TFS 
Ye  Banks  and  Braes  o'  Bonnie  Doon.     See  Banks  o' 

Doon,  The. 
Ye  Children,  be  Gay.— Lucy  S.  Ruggles.— TFS 
"Ye  crags  and  peaks,  I'm  with  you  once  again." — Jas. 

S.  Knowles.     See  William  Tell. 


380 


TITLE  INDEX 


Young 


Ye  Editor's  Perplexities. — Anon. — CS  8 

Ye  Flowery    Banks. — Rob't    Burns.     See    Banks    o' 

Doon,  The. 
Ye    Gentlemen    of    England.  —  Martyn    Parker.  — 

FEP  («eZ.)— HBP 
Ye  Golden  Lamps  of  Heaven,  Farewell.    (C — in  Dod- 
dridge's Character.) — Philip  Doddridge. — FEP 
(God  the  Everlasting  Light  of  the  Saints  above.) 
—HBP 
Ye  Golden-headed  Cane.— F:  L.  Knowles.— CG  2 
Ye  Laye  of  ye  Woodpeckore. — H:  A.  Beers. — NA 
Ye  Little  Birds  that  Sit  and  Sing.     {Fr.  The  Fair  Maid 
of  the  Exchange.)— T:  Hey  wood. — ELP 
(Go,  Pretty  Birds.)— FEP 
(Message,  The.)— OB 
(Phillis.)— EP 
(To  Phyllis.)— ES—OEL 
"Ye  Mariners." — T:  Campbell.     See  following. 
Ye  Mariners  of  England.- T:  Campbell.— BNL—BPB 

—  BVC  —  CEL  —  CGd  —  CR  —  EHT  —  EPs 

—  FEP  —  GN  —  GP  —  HB  —  HBP  —  LC  — 

—  OB  —  OS  1  —  PGT  1  —  PHS  —  PSR  — 
WCLG  2— WEP  4 

(Mariners  of  England,  The.)— BFV 
("Ye  Mariners.") — LH 
Ye  may  Drink,  if  ye  List. — Calvin  (?)  Pease. — PPSr 
Ye  Olde  Tyme  Tayle  of  Ye  Knighte,  Ye  Yeomanne, 

and   Ye   Faire  Damosel. — Jack  Bennett. — PR 

— YA 
Y'^e  Parliament  of  England. — Anon. — AWB 
"  'Ye  shall  find  the  Babe.'  "—A.  R.  G.— FHS 
Ye  Sleighride  Partie. — Jack  Stevens. — TL 
Year,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh. — KC 
Year  Ago,  A. — Percy  C.  S.  Smythe,  Viscount  Strang- 

ford  (<r.  fr.  Luis  de  Camoens?). — FLS 
Year  in  Paradise,  A. — Jos.  (?)  Cross. — CS  25 
Year  of  Jubilee,  The.— Anon.— AWB 
Year  of  Sorrow;  Ireland,  1849,  The.-^Aubrey  De  Vere. 

—TIP 
Year  that  is  to  Come,  The. — Frances  D.  Gage. — CS  9 
Yearly  Miracle  of  Spring,  The.— G:  H.  Boker.— TAS 
Yearning.     (All  the  Year  Round.) — HP 
Years.— Walter  S.  Landor. — OB 
Year's  at  the  Spring,  The. — Rob't  Browning.  See  Pippa 

Passes. 
"Years  back  of  us  are  full  of  voices,  The." — W:  H.  H. 

Murray. — GG 
Year's  Twelve  Children,  The.— Anon.— CS  24— WR  12 
Year's  Windfalls,  A. — Christina  G.  Rossetti. — PoR 
Year's  Wooing,  A. — Anon. — CS  24 
Yeast,  Sel.  fr.     (Rough  Rhyme  on  a  Rough  Matter, 

A — or  Bad  Sqiiire,  The — verses  fr.  Ch.  XI.) — C: 

Kingslev.— BNL 
Yellow  and  White.— Ernest  McGaffey.— SR  11 
Yellow  Jessamine. — Constance  F.  Woolson.— AA 
Yellow  Pansy,  A.— Helen  G.  Cone.— BNL 
Yellow  Pocket,  The.— Anon.— TFS 
Yellow  Roses. — J.  H.  Hamersley. — WR  15 
Yellow  Violet,  The.— W:  C.  Bryant.— POS—YBT 

(Violet,  The— 6r.  sel.)— FEO 
Yellow-bird.— Celia  Thaxter.— SAP 
Yellow-hammer's  Nest,  The.— J:  W.  Chadwick. — HP 

(Golden  Robin's  Nest,  The— C.)— AA 
Yerl  o'  Watervdeck,  The.— G:  Macdonald.— PEB  3 
(Earl    o'    Quarterdeck,    The  — C.)— BNL— EPs— 

HBP— HSS  2 
"Yes!"— R:  D.  Blackmore.— FTA— HP 
Yes?— H:  C.  Bunner.— HP 
Yes!— G:  H.  Jessop.— HP 
"Yes,  I  shall  sleep!    Some    sunny   day." — W.  A.  Ur- 

quhart. — GG 
"Yes,  I  will  sew  thy  buttons  on!"     (Punch.) — HPE 
Yes,  I'm  Guilty.— J.  M.  Munyon.— CS  27— SR  6 
Yes  or  No.— Hal  Louther.— HBR 
"Yes,  sing  the  song  of  the  orange  tree." — J.  K.  Hoyt. — 

AD 
Yesterday.— Frd'k  L.  Knowles.— CG  2 
Yesterday.- Edith  M.  Percy.— WR  15 
Yesterday. — David  Swing. — FS 

"Yesterday  I  dragged  wearily  along." — O.  F. — FHS 
"Yet  nerve  thy  spirit  to  the  proof." — W:  C.  Bryant. 

See  Battle-field.  The. 
"Yet,  no — not  words,  for  they,"  etc.     (Br.  sel.  fr.  The 

Language  of  Flowers.) — T:  Moore. — AD 
"Yet  with  hands  by  evil  stained." — J:  G.  Whittier. 

See  Andrew  Rykman's  Prayer. 
Yew,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Burial  Place.)— W:  C.  Bryant. 

—AD 
Yew-trees. — W:  Wordsworth.— EPs— WEP  4 
"Yield,  madman,  yield!  Thy  horse  is  down." — G:   H. 

Boker.— AE 
Ylen's  Song.     (Fr.  The  Birth  of  Galahad.)— R :  Hovey. 

— AA 


Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo,  The.— E:  Lear.— NA 

Yoppy's   Varder   unt    hees   Drubbles. — • Sidell. — 

BDD— DFY— DRR 
Yorkshire  Angling. — Anon. — CS  1 
Yorkshire  Cobbler,  The.— Alfred  Tennyson.— BS  9 

(Northern  Cobbler,  The.)— GP 
Yorkshire  Horse-dealer,  The. — Anon. — PEP  2 
Yorktown  Centennial  Lyric— Paul  H.  Hayne. — EDY 
Yosemjte,  The.— Wallace  Bruce.— BS  13 
Yosemite. — Jos.  Cook. — BS  12 
Yosemite.     (Fr.  The  Washington  Sequoia.) — Milicent 

W.  Shinn.— AA 
You.— Anon.— FLS 
You  and  I.— H:  Alford.- FLS 
You  and  I.— C:  Mackay.— WCLI  2 
You  and  I.— Timothy  D.  Sullivan.— TIP 
You  Ask  Me  for  a  Pledge,  Love. — Alaric  A.  Watts. — 

FTA 
You  Ask  Me,  Why,  Tho'  111  at  Ease. ^ — Alfred  Tennyson. 

—WEP  4 
(Land  of  Lands,  The— «eZ.)— BNL 
("Land  which  freemen  till.  The" — ptly.  sameael.) — 

— GG 
You  Can't  Find  Me.     (Tob.)- Anon.— NPS— PP— YP 
"You  Get  [or  Git]  up!"— Joe  Kerr.— GH— WR  3 
You  Kissed  Me. — Josephine  Hunt. — FLS 
You  Know  if  it  was  You.— Nathaniel  P.  Willis.— HPE 
"You  may  drink  to  your  leman  in  gold."     (C.)— R:  H : 

Stoddard. 
(Wine  and  Dew.) — AA 
"You  may  get  through  the  world,  but  'twill  be  very 

slow."     (Washington  Capitol.) — GG 
You  Meaner  Beauties. — Sir  H :  Wotton. — HBP 

(Elizabeth  of  Bohemia.)— BPB— EPs— OB— PGT  1 

— YBF 
(On  his  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohemia — C.) — ELP 

—WEP  2 
(To  his  Mistress,  Elizabeth,  Queen    of   Bohemia.) 

—BNL 
(To  his  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohemia.) — FEP 
You  Must  be  Dreaming. — Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  27 
"You,  O  man,  who  with  your  honey  words  and  your 

tender  looks." — Dinah  M.  Craik. — GG 
You  Put  no  Flowers  on  My   Papa's  Grave. — C.  E.  L. 

Holmes.— BS  1— CS  5— FTR— PS 
"You  say,  preach  away,  tell  us  something  more  of  this 

fruitless  fig  tree." — Alex.  B.  Jack.- — GG 
You  Sea! — Walt  Whitman.  See  Song  of  Myself. 
"You  smiled,  you  spoke  and  I  believed."     (Poems  and 

Epigrams,  LVII.)— Walter  S.  Landor.- WEP  4 
(To  lanthe.)— VA 
"You  think  that  one  hour  buries  another." — H:  W. 

Beecher.     See  Soul-building. 
"You  who  to  the  rounded  prime." — Jas.  W.  Riley. — 

BJC 
"You'd  scarce  expect  one  of  my  age." — D:  Everett. — 

SAE  (si.  abr.) 
(Lines  Written  for  a  School  Declamation.)  —  BNL 
You'll  Love  me   Yet. — Rob't  Browning.     See  Pippa 

Young  Airly.— Anon.— FEP— HBP 

Young  Akin.— Anon. — PEB  2 

Young  America. — Anon. — CS  27 — WR  21 

Young  America.     (Dial.)— Mrs.  T.  Starr  King. — NPS 

— YP 
Young  American,  The. — Alex.  H.  Everett. — BLP 
Young  and  01d.--C:  Kingsley.    See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Young  Artist,    The.     (Tab.)— Anon.    —    COS— DS— 

NPS— PP— YA— YP 
Young  Beichan. — Anon.     See  following. 
Young  Beichan  [and  Susie  Pye]. — Anon. — BB — HBP — 

PEB  2  (abr.  and  si.  diff.) 
(Lord  Beichan  and  Susie  Pye — diff.  vers.) — GN 
Young  Boot-black,  The.— W.  P.  Burroughs.- CS  31 
Young  Critic,  The. — Mrs.  Russell  Kavanaugh.^ — KJ 
Young  Dandelion. — Dinah  M.  Mulock. — PoR 

(Sei.)- AD— HSS  1 
Young  Debaters,  The.— H.  E.  McBride.— StD 
Young  Desperado,  The.— T:  B.  Aldrich.— MMR 
Young  Donald.— G:  Roy.— WR  2 
Young  Fir-wood,  A. — Dante  G.  Rossetti. — GN 
Young  Gazelle,  The.— Walter  Parke.— THP 
Young  Grav  Head,  The.— Caroline  B.  Southey.— BNL 

— CS  3  (se?.)- MMR  (si.  abr.) 
Young  Hunting. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Young  Jessica. — T:  Moore. — HPE 
Young  John  and  His  True  Sweetheart. — Anon. — BB 
(Pause  Lover,  The — -si.  longer  and  si.  diff.  vers.) — 

OEB— PEB  2 
Young  Johnstone. — Anon. — PEB  1 
Young  Lochinvar. — Walter  Scott.     See  Marmion. 
Young  Lochinvar.     (Pantomimic  farce.) — Emma  E. 

West.— WR  22 


381 


Young 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Young  Love. — Andrew  Marvell. — WEP  2 

Young  Love. — W:     Shakespeare.     See     Merchant     of 

Venice. 
Young  Lovers,  The. — F.  R.  Torrence.     See  House  of  a 

Hundred  Lights,  The. 
Young  Man  Waited,  The.— J.  E.  V.  Cooke.— CS  37 
Young  Man's  Slave,  Af     (Tab.)— Anon.— TCP 
Young  May  Moon,  The.— T:  Moore.— BFV—BNL—(6r. 

86^)— CEL— OB— WEP  4 
"Young  men,  let  the  nobleness  of  your  mind  impel  you 

to  its  improvement." — W.  D.  Howard. — GG 
"Young  men,  you  are  the  architects  of  your  own  for- 
tunes."— ^Noah  Porter. — GG  (si.  abr.) 
(Advice  to  Young  Men.) — PS 
Young  Monopolist,  A.     (To6.)— Anon.— TCP 
Young  Mother's  Perplexity,  A. — Clara  J.  Denton. — LL 
Young  Musician,  The.— Sam  W.  Fosa.— CS  37 
Young  Night  Thought.— Rob' t  L.  Stevenson.— CGV— 

DLS 
Young  Patriot,  Abraham  Lincoln,  The.— lAnon. — PRR 
Young  Queen,  The.— Eliz.  B.  Browning.— EDY 
Young  Redin.    (Earl  Richard — in  Border  Minstrelsy — 

si.  diff.  vers.) — Anon. — BB 
Young  Roger  of  the  Valley. — Anon. — PEB  2 
Young  Scholar,  The.     (Sel.  fr.  What  is  your  Culture  to 

me?)— C:  D.   Warner.— BS  2— CS    22— DS— 

LLC 
Young  Schoolma'am's  Solioquy,  The. — Anon. — WR  14 
Young  Statesman,  The.     (Dial.)— "Beno." — SDD 
Young  Tam  Lin.     (,Sel.  fr.  The  Young  Tamlane. — in 

Border  Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — PEB  1 
(Tamlane — diff.  vers. — si.  ahr. ) — BB 
Young  Timothy     and     the     Forget-me-nots. — Estelle 

Thomson. — AD 
Young  Tramp,  The.— C:  F.  Adams.— CS  19 
Young  Van  Dyck,  The. — Marg.  J.  Preston.— OS  2 
Young  Waters.     (In  Percy's  Reliques.) — Anon. — BB 

(SI.  o6r.)— OEB— PEB  1 
Young  Wife's  Lament,  The. — Anon. — WR  14 
Young  Windebank. — Marg.  L.  Woods. — VA 
Your  Faces.— Anon.— YBT 

Your  Mission.— Anon.— BS  1— CS  2— HSS  3— SPE 
Yours.— W.—CG  2 
Yours,  Truly.— Anon.— CD 
Yours  Truly. — Anon.     See  also  following. 
"Yours  Truly,  Sir."— Anon.— TFS 

(Yours  Truly:)— KER 
Yourself. — Jones  Very. — AA 
Youth.     (Frags,  fr.  various  authors.) — BNL 
Youth.— Virginia  W.  Cloud.— AA 
Youth.— C:  G.  Lodge.— AA 
Youth.— Walter  Scott.      See  Rokeby. 
Youth  and  Age. — Anon.— <!S  6 
Youth  and  Age.— Lord  Byron.- PGT  1— YBF 
(Stanzas  for  Music— C.)— WEP  4 
(There's  not  a  Joy  the  World  can  Give.) — FEP 
Youth  and  Age.— S :  T.   Coleridge.— CEL—FEP— OB 

— PGTl 
Youth  and  Age. — C:    Kingsley.     See    Water    Babies, 

The. 
Youth  and  Age.— W:  B.  Scott.— VA 
Youth  and  Age.     (Sel.  fr.  The  Passionate  Pilgrim.) — 

W:  Shakespeare. — EP 
(Crabbed  Age  and  Youth.)— FEP— HBP— OB 
(Madrigal,  A.)— LC— PGT  1— PHS 
Youth  and  Age. — F.  R.    Torrence.     See    House    of    a 

Himdred  Lights,  The. 
Youth  and  Art. — Rob't  Browning. — VA— WR  16 
Youth  and  Calm. — Matthew  Arnold. — HBP 
Youth,  Love,  and  Death. — Philip  J.  Bailey.     See  Fes- 

tus. 


Youth,  that  Pursuest. — R:  M.  Milne,  Lord  Houghton. 

— FP 
Youth  who    Never   Saw    a    Woman,    The.     (Dial.) — 

Anon.— SED 
Youth  who  Played  before  He  Looked,  The. —  Anon. — 
FS 

(Hopeless  Serenade,  A.) — SR  6 

(Serenade,  The.)— BS  12 
Youthful  Dissipation.     (Dial.) — Anon. — YFD 
Youthful  Experiences. — Anon. — CS  18 
Youthful  Piety.— Philip  Doddridge.— TFS 
Youthful  Valor.— Tyrtajus.—TMD 
Yuki. — Mary  McN.  Fenollosa. — AA 
Yule  Log,  The.— W:  H.  Hayne.— AA 
Yuma.— C:  H.  Phelps.— AA 
Yussouf. — Jas.  R.  Lowell. — BNL 


Zachariah  Popps'   Courtship  and  Marriage. — Anon. — 

MCS 
Zaire.— (Act  IL,  Scs.  3  and  4.)— Voltaire.— WR  8 
Zal  and  Rudabeh. — Firdausi.     See  Shah-Nameh. 
Zamora. — J:  Tobin.     See  Honeymoon,  The. 
Zapolya,  Sels  fr.—S:  T.  Coleridge. 

Choral  Song  of  Illyrian  Peasants.     (Fr.  Act  IV.,  Sc. 
2.)— CGd— PHS 
(Hunting  Song.)— LC— PoR 
Glycine's  Song.    (Song  by  Glycine — C. — fr.  IL,  1.) 
—OB 
("Sunny  shaft  did  I  behold.  A.")— LC 
Zarafi.— Lamartine. — BS  13 — PR 
Zara's  Ear-rings. — (Tr.  by)  J:  G.  Lockhart. — BNL — 

CS  20— FEP— HBP— HSS  2 
Ze  Daylight  Veel  Coam.— Anon.— DDM 
Ze  Moderne  English.— Rob't  C.  V.  Meyers.— CS  31 
Zekle. — Jas.  R.  Lowell.     jSce  Biglow  Papers,  The. 
Zenobia.— Mrs.  W.  R.  Jones.— WR  12 
Zenobia,  Sels.  fr. — W:  Ware. 

Aurelian  and  Zenobia.     (Sel.  ad.  as  play.) — NDP 
Speeches  of  Zenobia  and  her  Council  in  Reference 
to  the  Anticipated  War  with  Rome. — BS  11 — 
CDD 
Zenobia's  Defence.— CS  26— HSS  2  (si.  abr.)- TMR 
(Zenobia  to  her  People.) — SO 
(Zenobia's  AmbitionJ — FMR 
Zenobia  to  Her  People.— W:  Ware.     See  Zenobia. 
Zenobia's  Ambition. — W :  Ware.     See  Zenobia. 
Zenobia's  Defence. — W:  Ware.     See  Zenobia. 
Zeph  Higgins'  Confession.    (Poganuc  People,  Ch.  XXX. 

— abr.)- Harriet  B.  Stowe.— CS  17 
Zimri. — J:  Dryden.     See  Absalom  and  Achitophel. 
Zip  Johnson's  Return. — Anon. — DSS 
Zoological  Romance,  A. — C:  F.  Adams. — CS  17 
Zoology. — Anon. — HP 

Zophiel;  or,  the  Bride  of  Seven,  Sels.  fr. — Maria  G. 
Brooks. 
Disappointment. — BNL 
Palace  of  the  Gnomes. — AA 
Respite,  The. — AA 
Zoroaster,  Sels.  fr. — Fs.  Marion  Crawford. 

Massacre  of  Zoroaster,  The.     (Arr.  fr.  Ch.  XIX.  by 

Elsie  Wilbor.)— DR 
Suffering  of    Nehushta,  The.      (Play  ad.  fr.  Chs. 
XVI.,  XVII.,  XX.)— NDP 
Zuleika.— Arthur  O'Shaughnessy.— PGT  2 
Zummer  an'  Winter. — W :  Barnes.— PGT  2 
Zwei  Konige  auf  Orkadal. — G:  A.  Baker,  Jr. — PLD 
Zwei  Lager.— C:  F.  Adams.— BDD—D FY— PTS 
Zwischen  Trinken. — W.  S.  Ayars. — CG  3 


382 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


AUTHOK  INDEX 


A. — Spring  and  Summer. 

Wish,  A. 
"A." — All  Things  Love  Me.     See  Little  Girl's  Fancies, 
A. 

Child  and  the  Fairies,  The. 

Child's  Fancy,  A.     See  Little  Girl's  Fancies,  A. 

Deaf  and  Dumb. 

Little  Girl's  Fancies,  A. 

Little  Things.     See  Little  Girl's  Fancies,  A. 

My  Pony. 

New  Fern,  A. 
A.,  B.— In  Doubt. 
A.,  C.  B.— Two   Glasses,   The.     {Wr.   at.)     See  Wil- 

.  cox,  Mrs.  Ella  [Wheeler]. 
A.,  Mrs.  E.  R.— Other  People's  Children. 
A.,  F. — Acrostic,  An. 
A.,  F.  C. — Nestlings. 
A.,  K.  H.— Their  Turn. 
A.,  L.  T. — Song  of  the  Smoke- wreaths. 
A.,  W.  B.— Fall  of  Corydon,  The. 
Abbey,  H: — Donald. 

Draw-bridge  Keeper,  The. 

Faith's  Vista. 

Galley  Slave,  The. 

Have  You  Planted  a  Tree? 

In  Memory  of  General  Grant. 

Planting  tne  Tree.    See  Have  You  Planted  a  Tree? 

Ringer's  Vengeance,  The.  

Singer's  Alms,  The. 

Stranger's  Alms,  The.     See  Singer's  Alms,  The. 

Trailing  Arbutus. 

What  Do  We  Plant  When  We  Plant  the  Tree? 
See  Have  You  Planted  a  Tree? 

Winter  Days. 
Abbott,  Edgar  W^de. — Her  Majesty. 

Poppyland  Limited  Express,  The. 

Rapid  Transit.     See  Poppyland  Limited  Express, 
The. 
Abbott,   Lyman. — He   Worried   about   It.     {Wr.   at.) 
See  Foss,  Sam  W. 

Lead  the  Way. 

New  Year,  The;  or,  Which  Way? 

Place  of  the  Individual  in  American  Society.  The. 

Tendencies  of  Self-government,  The.     See  Place  of 
the  Individu.al  in  American  Society,  The. 

Utilizing  Our  Failures. 
Abbott,  Mary  Winchester.— Rose's  Message,  The. 
Abbott,  S. — Auf  Wiedersehen. 

Abdy,  Mrs. — In  the  Street  of  By  and  Bye.    See  Street 
of  By-and-bye,  The. 

Street  of  By-and-bye,  The. 
Abercrombie,  Edith  Brainerd. — October  Trees. 
Abrahams,  J.  Fox. — Tim  Titus. 
Academy,  The. — Light  and  Love. 
Acta  Columbiana. — Similar  Case,  A. 
Adam,  Jean. — Mariner's  Wife.  The.     (At.  also  to  W.  J. 
Mickle.) 

Sailor's  Wife,  The.     See  Mariner's  Wife,  The. 

There's  Nae  Luck  about  the  House.     See  Mariner's 
Wife,  The. 
Adams,  C:  FoUen  ("Yawcob  Strauss"). — "Ah-Goo!" 

Charley's  Opinion  of  the  Baby.     See  Nose  Out  of 
Joint, 

"Cut,  Cut  Behind." 

Der  Coming  Man. 

Der  Deutscner's  Maxim. 

Der  Drummer. 

Der  Oak  und  der  Vine. 

Der  Shpider  und  der  Fly. 

Der  Vater-mill. 

"Don't  [or  Don'd]  Feel  too  Big!" 

Dot  Baby  off  Mine. 

Dot  Funny  Leetle  Baby. 

Dot  Lambs  vot  [or  what]  Mary  Haf  Got. 

"Dot  Leedle  Loweeza." 

Dot  Long-handled  Dipper. 

Dutchman's  Family,  The. 

Fred  Englehart's  Baby.     See  Dot  Funny  Leetle 
Baby. 

Fritz  und  [or  and]  I. 


Adams,  C:  FoUen  (continued). 

Gets  Dhere. 

Hans  and  Fritz. 

He  Gets  There.     See  Gets  Dhere. 

Leedle. Yawcob  [or  Yacob]  Strauss. 

Little  Conqueror,  The. 

Mine  Katrine. 

Mine  Moder-in-law  [or  Mother-in-law]. 

Mine  Schildhood. 

Mine  Shildren. 

Mine  Vamily.     See  Dutchman's  Family,  The. 

Mr.  Schmidt's  Mistake. 

Mother-in-law,  The.     See  Mine  Moder-in-law. 

Mother's  Doughnuts. 

Nose  Out  of  Joint. 

Pat's  Criticism. 

Puzzled  Dutchman,  The. 

Schneider's  Tomatoes. 

Shonny  Schwartz.  v 

Strauss'  Boedry. 

Tale  of  a  Nose,  A. 

Trapper's  Story,  A. 

Tucked  oup  in  Ped.     See  Mine  Schildhood. 

Vas  Marriage  a  Failure? 

Welcome,  Little  Stranger.    See  Nose  out  of  Joint. 

Yawcob  Strauss.     See  I^eedle  Yawcob  Strauss. 

Yawcob's  Dribulations  [or  Tribulations]. 

Young  Tramp,  The. 

Zoological  Romance,  A. 

Zwei  Lager. 
Adams,  C:  Fs. — Example  of  Washington,  The. 

Greatest  Fruit  of  the  Declaration. 
Adams,  Eliz.  Kemper.— "In  Lighter  Vein." 

"O  Modern  Girl." 
Adams,  Fred  W. — Innocent  Drummer,  The. 
Adams,  F.  W.  L. — Dance  Song. 
Adam."!,  G : — For  Arbor  Day. 
Adams,  H.  W.— Wrong  Road,  The. 
Adams,  Jas.  Barton. — -When  the  Circuit  Rider  Came. 
Adams,  Jean.     See  Adam,  Jean. 
Adams,  J: — American  Constitution  Tested.  The. 

On  Behalf  of  the  People  of  Boston,  in  Support  of 
the  Memorial  of  December  18,  1765. 

Predictions  Concerning  the  Fourth  of  July. 
Adams,  J:  Quincy. — Declaration  of  Independence,  The. 

Lip  and  the  Heart.  The. 

Man  Wants  but  Little  Here  Below.    See  Wants  of 
Man,  The. 

Mission  of  America,  The. 

Nation  Born  in  a  Day,  A.     See  Declaration  of 
Independence,  The. 

To  Sally. 

Wants  of  Man,  The. 

Washington's  Sword  and  Franklin's  Staff. 
Adams,  Josiah  R. — Heart  never  Grows  Old,  The. 
Adams,  Mary  Mathews. — Dead  Love. 
Adams.  Oscar  Fa^. — At  Lincoln. 

On  a  Grave  m  Christ-Church,  Hants. 

With  a  Prayer-book. 
Adams.  S.  E. — Hymn  for  Thanksgiving. 

Wait  upon  the  Lord. 
Adams,  S.  H. — At  Eastertide. 
Adams,  S: — American  Independence. 

American  Liberty. 

Necessity  of  Independence,  The.     See  American 
Independence. 
Adams,  Sarah   Flower. — Father,  Thy  Will  be  Done. 
See    Hymn:    "He    sendeth    sun,    He    sendeth 
shower." 

Hope. 

Hymn: — "He  sendeth  sun.  He  sendeth  shower." 

Love, 

Nearer,  My  God,  to  Thee. 

Nearer  to  Thee.     See  Nearer,  My  God,  to  Thee. 
Adams,  T:  C- — Columbus. 

Adams,  Valentine. — Chief  Bread-baker  to  the  King,  The. 
Adams,    W.    H.    Davenport.— Last    Voyage    of    the 

Fairies,  The. 
Adams,  W:  Taylor  ("Oliver  Optic"). — Demons  of  the 
Glass,  The. 

Peace. 

"Peace  to  the  brave  who  nobly  fell."     See  Peace. 

Schoolmaster,  The. 


385 


V 


Adcock 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Adcock,  A.  St.  John. — Unspoken. 
Addington,  Franklin. — Two  Queens. 
Addison.  Jos. — Blessings  of  Liberty,  The.     See  Letter 
from  Italy,  The. 

Caesar's  Message  to  Cato.     See  Cato. 

Campaign,  The. 

Cato.  - 

Cato  on  Immortality.     See  Cato. 

Cato  on  the  Immortality  of  the  Soul.     See  Cato. 

Cato  over  the  Dead  Body  of  His  Son.     See   Cato. 

Cato's  Soliloquy.     See  Cato. 

Cato's  Soliloquy  on  Immortality.     See  Cato. 

Cato's  Soliloquy  on  the  Immortality  of  the  Soul. 
See  Cato. 

Character  of  Will  Wimble.     See  Spectator,  The. 

Club,  The.     See  Spectator,  The. 

Countess  of  Manchester,  The.     See  On  the  Lady 
Manchester. 

Coverley  Hall.     See  Spectator,  The. 

Death  of  Cato.     See  Cato. 

Death  of  Sir  Roger  de  Coverley.     See  Spectator, 
The. 

Endeavours  of  Mankind  to  Get  Rid  of  their  Mis- 
eries.    See  Spectator,  The. 

Exercise  of  the  Fan.     See  Spectator,  The. 

Fan-drill,  The.     See  Spectator,  The. 

"How  are  thy  servants  blest,  O  Lord!"     See  Ode: 
"How  are,"  etc. 

Hymn:  "How  are  thy  servants  blest."     See  Ode: 
"How  are,"  etc. 

Hymn:  "The  spacious  firmament  on  high."     See 
Spectator,  The. 

Hymn,  A:  "When  all  thy  mercies,"  etc. 

Hymn:   "When  rising  from  the  bed  of  death." 
See  Spectator,  The. 

"I  have  been  always  wonderfully  delighted  with 
fables." 

Immortal  Part,  The.     See  Cato. 

"It   must   be    so,    Plato,    thou    reasonest    well." 
See  Cato. 

Letter  from  Italy,  The. 

Marlborough  at  Blenheim.     See  Campaign,  The. 

Mountain  of  Miseries,  The.     See  Spectator,  The, 

Ode:  "How  are  thy  servants  blest,  O  Lord." 

Ode:   "The   spacious   firmament   on   high."     See 
Spectator,  The. 

On  the  Lady  Manchester. 

Paraphrase  of  Psalm  XXIII.     See  Spectator,  The. 

Psahn  XXIII.     See  Spectator,  The. 

Reflections  in  [or  on]  Westminster  Abbey.     See 
Spectator,  The. 

Sempronius's  Speech  for  War.     See  Cato. 

Sir  Roger  at  His  Country  House.     See  Spectator, 
The. 

Sir  Roger  de  Coverley  Papers,  The.     See  Spec- 
tator, The. 

Sir  Roger  de  Coverley's  Sunday.     See  Spectator, 
The. 

Soliloquy:  on  Immortality.     S«e  Cato. 

Soul,  The.     See  Cato. 

Spacious   Firmament  [on  High],  The.     See  Spec- 
tator, The. 

Spectator's  Account  of  Himself,  The.     See  Spec- 
tator, The. 

Speech  of  Sempronius.     See  Cato. 

Speech  of  Sempronius  for  War.     See  Cato. 

Sunday  in  the  Country  [or  with  Sir  Roger],  A. 
See  Spectator,  The. 

To  a  Capricious  Friend. 

To  a  Rogue. 

To  an  Ill-favored  Lady. 

Translation    of    the    Twenty-Third  Psalm.     See 
Spectator,  The. 

Vision  of  Mirza,  The.     See  Spectator,  The. 

Visit  to  Sir  Roger's  Country  Seat,  A.     See  Spec- 
tator, The. 

When  All  Thy  Mercies,  O  My  God.    See  Hymn,  A: 
"When  all,"  etc. 

While  We  Shed  a  Tear. 

Will  Wimble.     See  Spectator,  The. 
Addleshaw,  Percy. — Happy  Wanderer,  The. 

It  May  Be. 

Travellers. 
"Addums,  Mozis."     See  Bagbt,  Dr.  G:  W: 
Ade,  G: — Messenger  Boy,  The. 
Adee,  Alvey  A.— -Hymn  to  Santa  Rita. 
Adee,  D:  Graham. — Lone  Star  of  Cuba,  The. 
"Adeler,  Max."     See  Clark,  C:  Heber. 

Aden, . — Where's  Annette? 

Advance,    T/ie.— Famished   Heart,   A.     See   Woman's 
Comnlaint,  A. 

Woman's  Complaint,  A. 
iEschines. — Demosthenes  Denounced, 
.^schylus. — Battle  of  Salamis,  The. 


iEsop. —  Country  Maid  and  her  Milk  Can,  The.     See 
Fables. 

Fables. 

Farthing  Rushlight,  The.     See  Fables. 

Goose  with  the  Golden  Eggs,  The.     See  Fables. 

Jupiter  and  the  Bee.     See  Fables. 

Wind  and  the  Sun,  The.     See  Fables. 
Agave,  Jean. — Night  before  Christmas,  The. 

Owl's  Court,  The. 
' '  Agrikler. ' ' — Proverbeel  Feelossof y . 
Aguilar,    Grace. —  Battle  of  Bannockburn,  The.     See 
Days  of  Bruce,  The. 

Days  of  Bruce,  The. 
"Ah-Mie." — Nozell  and  the  Organ-grinder. 
Aid^,  Hamilton. — Christmas  Eve. 

Christmas-eve    Redemption,    A.     See    Christmas 
Eve. 

Danube  River,  The. 

Forsaken,  The. 

George  Lee. 

In  the  Evening. 

Lost  and  Found. 

Love,  the  Pilgrim. 

"Love,  without  Thee." 

Lover  to  His  Mistress,  The. 

My  Love.     See  "My  Love's  Worth  all  the  World." 

"My  Love's  Worth  all  the  World." 

Nine  Days'  Wonder,  A. 

Oh,  Let  Me  Dream.     See  Nine  Days'  Wonder,  A. 

Remember  or  Forget. 

Story  of  George  Lee.     See  George  Lee. 

Sweetheart. 

When  We  are  Parted. 

Why  I  Love  Thee.     See  Lover  to  His  Mistress, 
The. 
Aiken,  A.  Holcombe. — Slumber  Song,  A. 
Aiken,  J: — Hill  of  Science,  The. 
Ainslie,    Douglas. — "St.    John    of    Damascus,"    Lines 

Prefixed  to. 
Ainslie,  Hew. — Sir  Arthur  and  Lady  Ann. 

Willie  [or  Willyjand  Helen. 
Aird,  T:— Swallow,  The. 
Akenside,  Mark. — Amoret. 

Compensations   of   the    Imagination.     See  Pleas- 
ures of  Imagination,  The. 

Complaint,  The. 

Delights  of  Fancy.     See  Pleasures  of  Imagination, 
The. 

For  a  Grotto. 

Inscription  for  a  Statue  of  Chaucer  at  Woodstock. 

Mind  of  Man,  The.     See  Pleasures  of  Imagination, 
The. 

Nightingale,  The.     See  Ode :  To  the  Evening  Star. 

Ode :  On  a  Sermon  against  Glory. 

Ode:  To  the  Evening  Star. 

On  a  Sermon  against  Glory.     See  Ode:  On  a  Ser- 
mon against  Glory. 

On  the  Winter  Solstice. 

Pleasures  of  Imagination,  The. 

"Shape  alone  let  others  prize,  The." 

Virtuoso,  The. 
Akerman,  Lucy  Evelina. — Nothing  but  Leaves. 
Akers,  Eliz.     See  Allen,  Mrs.  Eliz.  [Akers]. 
Akers,  J.  Milton. — What  I  Saw. 
Alarcon,  Pedro  de. — In  Terror  of  Death. 
Albany  Argus. — Uncle  Joel  on  Peddlers. 
Albany  Chronicle. — Fashionable  School  Girl,  The.    See 
Intensely  Utter. 

Intensely  Utter. 

Too  Utterly  Utter.     See  Intensely  Utter. 
Albee,  J:— Bos'n  Hill. 

Dandelions. 

Landor. 

Music  and  Memory. 

Soldier's  Grave,  A. 
Albertson,  Hon.  C:  C. — Centennial  Speech. 
Albro,  J:— Tale  of  the  East  (Side),  A. 
Alcorn,  Kathe.  S. — Little  Lizette. 
Alcott,  Amos  Bronson.— Bad  Prayers. 

Bartol. 

Channing. 

Emerson. 

Garrison. 

Hawthorne. 

Margaret  FuUer. 

Thoreau. 

Wendell  Phillips. 
Alcott,  Louisa  May. — Address  to  a  Robin. 

Beautiful  Old  Story,  The. 

Children's  Offering,  The. 

Enlisting  as  Army  Nurse. 

Little  Women. 

Little  Women's  Pickwick  Club,  The.     See  Little 
Women. 


386 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Alford 


Alcott,  Louisa  May  (continued). 

My  Kingdom. 

Reconciliation,  The.     See  Little  Women. 

Sermon,  The. 

Song  from  the  Suds,  A.     See  Little  Women. 

Thoreau's  Flute. 

Transfiguration. 
Aldaramy,  Meskin. — On  His  Friends. 
Alden,  Mrs.  Marg.  H. — Mother's  World. 
Alden,  R:  M. — -Lost:  the  Summer. 

May. 
Alden,  W:  Livingston. — Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown. 

Freckles.     See  Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown. 

Ghost   Scene,    The.     See   Adventures   of   Jimmy 
Brown. 

Jimmy   Brown's   Attenipt   to    Produce    Freckles. 
See  Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown. 

Jimmy  Brown's  Dog. 

Jimmy  Brown's  Prompt  Obedience.     See  Adven- 
tures of  Jiinmy  Brown. 

Jimmy   Brown's  Sister's   Wedding.     See  Adven- 
tures of  Jimmy  Brown. 

Jimmy  Brown's  Steam  Chair.     See  Adventures  of 
Jimmy  Brown. 

Our  New  Walk.  See  Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown. 

Prompt    Obedience.     See   Adventures   of   Jimmy 
Brown. 

Steam    Chair,    A.     See    Adventures    of    Jimmy 
Brown. 

Sue's     Wedding.     See     Adventures     of     Jimmy 
Brown. 
Aldine,  T^ie.— Bobolink,  The. 

Little  Telltale,  The.     See  Bobohnk,  The. 

Telltale,  The.     See  Bobolink,  The. 

Aldrich,  . — Our  Colors  at  Fort  Sumter. 

Aldrich,  Anne  Reeve. — April — and  Dying. 

Crowned  Poet,  A. 

Death  at  Daybreak. 

Eternal  Justice,  The. 

Fraternity. 

In  November. 

Insomnia. 

Little  Parable,  A. 

Little  Story,  A. 

Love's  Change. 

Music  of  Hungary. 

Prayer,  A. 

Recollection. 

Separation. 

Song  about  Singing,  A. 

Wayside  Calvary,  A. 

Written  beneath  a  Crucifix. 
Aldrich,  Dr.  H: — Reasons  for  Drinking. 

Why  Drink  Wine?     See  Reasons  for  Drinking. 
Aldrich,  Jas. — Death-bed,  A. 
Aldrich,  T:  Bailey. — After  the  Rain. 

"Ah,   sad   are   they  who   know   not   love."     See 
Two  Songs  from  the  Persian. 

Alec  Yeaton's  Son. 

Andromeda. 

Appreciation. 

Arab  Welcome,  An. 

Babie  Bell.     See  Baby  Bell. 

Baby  Bell. 

Ballad  of  Babie  Bell,  The.     See  Baby  Bell. 

Before  the  Rain. 

Bells  at  Midnight,  The. 

Bluebells  of  New  England,  The. 

Bluebird,  The.     See  Spring  in  New  England. 

Circumstance. 

Comedy. 

Crescent  and  the  Cross,  The. 

Destiny. 

"Enamoured  architect  of  airy  rhyme." 

Elective  Course,  An. 

Face  against  the  Pane,  The. 

Fredericksburg. 

Guilielmus  Rex. 

Heredity. 

Identity. 

In  an  Atelier. 

Judith. 

Judith  and  Holofernes.     See  Judith. 

Knowledge. 

Kriss  Kringle. 

Last  Caesar,  "The. 

Latakia. 

"Like  Crusoe,  walking  by  the  lonely  strand." 

Love's  Calendar. 

Lycidas. 

Mabel ;  or.  The  Face  against  the  Pane.     See  Face 
against  the  Pane,  The. 

Maple  Leaves. 

Marjorie's  Almanac. 


Aldrich,  T:  Bailey  {continued). 

Masks. 

Memories. 

Memory. 

Miracles. 

Mood,  A. 

Nocturne. 

"O  babie,  dainty  Babie  Bell."     See  Baby  Bell. 

Ode  on  the  Unveiling  of  the  Shaw  Memorial  on 
Boston  Common,  An. 

"Oh,  sad  are  they  who  know  not  love."     See  Two 

Songs  from  the  Persian. 
^On  an  Intaglio  Head  of  Minerva. 
*On  Reading  — — •. 

Our  Almanac.     See  Marjorie's  Almanac. 

Outward  Bound. 

Palabras  Carinosas. 

Petition,  A. 

Poets,  The.    See  Sonnet:  "When  this  young  land. 

Prescience. 

Quite  Like  a  Stocking.     See  Kriss  Kringle. 

Quits. 

Reminiscence. 

Sad   are  They  Who  Know  Not  Love.     See  Two 
Songs  from  the  Persian. 

Sargent's  Portrait  of  Edwin  Booth  at  "The  Play- 
ers." 

Sea  Longings. 

Shadow  of  the  Night,  A. 

Sleep. 

Snow  Flake,  A. 

Song:  "The  chestnuts  shine  through  the  cloven 
rind." 

Sonnet:  "When  this  young  land." 

Spring  in  New  England. 

Tennyson. 

Thalia. 

Three  Roses.     See  Destiny. 

Tiger-lilies. 

To  Hafiz. 

Touch  of  Nature,  A. 

Tragedy,  The. 

Turkish  Legend,  A. 

Two  Songs  from  the  Persian.     II. 

Undiscovered  Country,  The. 

Unguarded  Gates. 

Untimely  Thought.  An. 

Voice  of  the  Sea,  The. 

When  the  Sultan  Goes  to  Ispahan. 

Who  Know  not  Love.     See  Two  Songs  from  the 
Persian. 

Young  Desperado,  The. 
Alexander,    Addison  (?). — "There  is  a  time,  we  know 

not  when." 
Alexander.  Mrs.  Cecil  Frances   [Humphrey]. — Adora- 
tion of  the  Wise  Men,  The. 

All  Things.     See  All  Things  Bright  and  Beautiful. 

All  Things  Beautiful.     See  All  Things  Bright  and 
Beautiful. 

All  Things  Bright  and  Beautiful. 

Burial  of  Moses,  The. 

Burial    of    the    Deliverer,    The.     See    Burial    of 
Moses,  The. 

Dreams. 

Forgiving. 

Green  Hill  Far  Away,  The.     See  There  is  a  Green 
Hill. 

Irish  Mother's  Lament,  The. 

Siege  of  Derry,  The. 

There  is  a  Green  Hill. 

There  is  a  Green  Hill  Far  Away.     See  There  is  a 
Green  Hill. 
Alexander,  Edwin  G: — To  a  Sister  of  Charity. 
Alexander,  H.  W.— Poor  Fisher  Folk.  The.     (Tr.) 
Alexander,  W:,  Bishop  of  Derry  and  Raphoe  and  Pri- 
mate of  Ireland. — Among  the  Sand-hills. 

Epitaph  in  Fahan  Churchyard. 

Epitaph  in  the  Cathedral  of  Derry. 

Inscription  on  the  Statue  Erected  to  Captain  Boyd, 

Oxford  and  her  Chancellor. 

Oxford  in  1845. 

Preface  to  "The  Finding  of  the  Book  and  Other 
Poems." 

Up  Above  and  Down  Below. 

Very  Far  Away. 
Alexander,  W:     See  Stirling,  Earl  of. 
Alford,  H: — Baptismal  Hymn. 

Be  Just,  and  Fear  not. 

Be  True.     (At.  to  Rob't  CoUyer.)     See  Be  Just, 
and  Fear  not. 

Bride,  The.     See  "  'Rise,'  said  the  Master,  'come 
unto  the  feast.' " 

Colonos. 

Contentment.     See  Trust. 


387 


Alford 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Alford,  H:  (continued). 

Filiolffi  Dulcissimse. 

Harvest  Home.     iSee  Thanksgiving  Hymn. 

"I  know  not  if  or  dark  or  bright."     .See  Trust. 

Lady  Mary. 

Life  s  Answer.     See  Trust. 

"'Rise,'  said  the  ]|(Iaster,  'come  unto  the  feast.'" 

Thanksgiving  Day.     See  Thanksgiving  Hymn. 

Thanksgiving  Hymn. 

Trust. 

You  and  I. 

Alger, . — "At  the  top  of  his  mind,  the  devout 

man  has  a  holy  of  holies." 
Alger,  Horatio,  Jr. — Carving  a  Name. 

John  Maynard. 
Alger,  Rev.  W:  Rounseville. — Abou  El  Mahr  and  His 
Horse.     (Tr.) 

Butterfly's  Revenge,  The. 

Masque  and  the  Reality,  The. 

To  Heaven  Approached  a  Sufi  Saint.     (Tr.) 
Alison,  R: — Cherry  Ripe.     See  Campion,  T: 

There  is  a  Garden  in  her  Face.     See  Campion,  T: 
All  the  Year  Round. — Before  Sailing. 

Comfort. 

Couldn't  Keep  a  Secret. 

Flotsam  and  Jetsam. 

Hawthorn. 

"If  there  should  come  a  time,  as  well  there  may." 
See  Comfort. 

"Leave  the  young  hearts  to  nature  and  to  God." 

March. 

My  Lost  Love. 

Nocturne. 

Tired  Out. 

"True  to  the  promise  of  thy  far-off  youth." 

Work. 

Yearning. 
Allen,   Mrs.    Eliz.   Ann  [Cha.se]  [Akers].      ("Florence 
Percy.") — Bird's  Nest,  A. 

"Blush,  happy  maiden,  when  you  feel." 

Briar-bloom. 

Bringing  our  Sheaves. 

Bringing   our   Sheaves   with    Us.      See    Bringing 
our  Sheaves. 

Brother  Antonio. 

Endurance. 

Four  Words. 

God  is  Love. 

In  a  Garret. 

In  April.     See  Spring  at  the  Capital. 

Last  Landlord,  The. 

Left  Behind. 

Little  Feet. 

Loved    you    Better  than    you    Knew.     See  Left 
Behind. 

Ministry. of  Hassan,  The. 

Miracle  Workers,  The. 

"My  Dearling." 

My  Ship. 

Old  Story,  The. 

Pipe  of  Pan,  The. 

Rock  me  to  Sleep. 

Sea-birds. 

Snow. 

Spring  at  the  Capital. 

Stone  Cutter,  The. 

Under  the  Apple-tree. 

Willow,  The. 

Wise  Resolution,  A. 
Allen,  Eliz.  P. — Conundrum,  A. 

Story  of  a  Great  Artist,  The. 
Allen,  Ethan.— Capture  of  Ticonderoga,  The. 
Allen,  F.   M. — Sir  Walt«r  Raleigh  and  Queen   Eliza- 
beth. 
Allen,  Grant. — Only  an  Insect. 
Allen,  Mrs.  H.  E.  M. — Jenny's  Whit«  Rose. 
Allen,  .las.  Lane.— Two  Gentlemen  of  Kentucky,  The. 
Allen,  Jos.  Antisdell.— Daydreams,  Sel.  fr. 
Allen,  L.  R.— Song  of  the  Winds,  The. 
Allen,  Lyman  Whitney. — Coming  of  His  Feet,  The. 

Submission. 
Allen,  Mrs.  M.  E. — Song  Revels. 
Allen,  Philip  S.— Villanelle. 
Allen,  U.  S.  (Arr.  by). — Moved  by  a  Crank. 
Allen.  Willis  Boyd.— Unto  the  Perfect  Day. 

'With  You  Alway.' 
Allerton,  Ellen  P.— Beautiful  Things. 
Allgood,  Jos. — Uncle  Pete's  Plea. 

AUingham,  J.  Till. — Jack  of  All  Trades.     See  Weather- 
cock, The. 

Weathercock,  The. 
AUingham,  W: — Abbot  of  Inisfalen,  The. 

,Eolian  Harp. 

Across  the  Sea. 


AUingham,  W:  (continued). 

Awaking. 

Ban-shee,  The. 

Bird,  The. 

Blowing  Bubbles.     See  Bubble,  The. 

Boy,  The. 

Bubble,  The. 

Day  and  Night  Songs. 

Dirty  Old  Man,  The. 

Dream,  A. 

Fairies,  The. 

Fairy  Folk,  The.     See  Fairies,  The. 

Faithless  Knight,  The. 

Fields  in  May,  The. 

Gravestone,  A. — 

Half-waking. 

liOvely  Mary  Donnelly. 

Lover  and  Birds,  The. 

Maids  of  Elfin-mere,  The. 

Mary  Donnellv.     See  Lovely  Mary  Donnelly. 

Milkmaid,  Th4. 

Morning.     See  Awaking. 

Nobleman's  Wedding,  The. 

Outward  Bound. 

Pilot's  Daughter,  The. 

Robin  Redbreast. 

Ruined  Chapel,  The. 

Sailor,  The. 

St.  Margaret's  Eve. 

Serenade:  —  "Oh,    hearing    sleep,     and    sleeping 
hear." 

Song: — "O  spirit  of  the  suipmertime." 

Therania. 

Touchstone,  The. 

Venus  of  the  Needle. 

Wife,  A. 

Wild  Rose. 

Winding  Banks  of  Erne,  The;  or,  The  Emigrant's 
Adieu  to  Ballyshannon. 

Windla.ss  Song. 

Wishing. 

Witch-bride.  The. 
Allison,  Frances  Ekin. — Last  and  Worst. 
"Allison,  Joy."     See  Cbagin,  Maby  A. 
Allison,  R:     See  Alison,  R: 
Allison,  W:  Talbot.— Men  of  the  North,  The. 

Rum  Maniac,  The. 

"There  sat  the  Women  weeping  for  Thammuz." 

Vanishings. 
AUston,  Washington. — America  to  Great  Britain. 

Boyhood. 

On  the  late  S.  T.  Coleridge. 

Rosalie. 
AUyn,  Kate. — Best  of  the  Dollies. 

Doll's  Wedding,  The. 
Alma-Tadema,   Laurens  [or  Laurence]. — Blessing  for 
the  Blessed,  A. 

"If  no  one  ever  marries  me." 
•    Lambs  in  the  Meadow. 

Snowdrops. 

Strange  Lands. 
Almon-Hensley,  Mrs.  Sophie  M. — Content. 

Song:  "Joy  came  in  youth  as  a  humming-bird." 

There  is  no  God. 
Alsop,  C:  F.— Our  Flag. 
Alston,  .los.  B.^"Stack  Arms." 
Alt,  Florence  May. — Court  of  the  King,  The. 

Francesco's  Angel. 

Prophecy. 
Altenburg,  Michael. — Battle  Hymn.     See  Battle  Song 
of  Gustavus  Adolphus,  The. 

Battle  Song  of  Gustavus  Adolphus,  The. 

Swedish   Battle-song.     See  Battle  Song  of  Gus- 
tavus Adolphus,  The. 
Alton,  Ralph. — My  Delftware  Maid. 
Alwaharwany,  Ibu  Alalof. — On  a  Cat  Killed  while  At- 
tempting to  Rob  a  Dove-cote. 
Ambrose,  Jas.  Clement. — Deacon's  Sunday-school  Ser- 
mon, The. 
Ambrose,  St. — See  St.  Ambrose. 
Amcott,  Vincent. — Poisoned. 
American  Messenger. — "Good-night,  Papa." 
American  Queen,  The. — Give  Thanks  for  What? 
Ames,  C:  Gordon. — Athanasia. 

Hidden  Life. 

John  Jones  and  I. 

Under  the  Cloud. 

XJnsccii. 
Ames,  Edith  Theodora. — From  My  Window. 
Ames,  Mrs.  Eleanor  Maria  [Easterbrook].     ("Eleanor 
Kirk.")— "Bob  White." 

"Pardnership." 

"Wash  Dolly  Up  Like  That." 


388 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Arnold 


See  Cheat  of  Cupid,  The. 
-Last  Dream  of  the  Old 


Ames,  Fisher. — British  Treaty,  The. 

Monstrous  Relations  in  Newspapers. 

Oration  of  Washington. 

Sanctity  of  Treaties. 

True  Patriotism.     See  What  is  Patriotism? 

Washington  as  a  Civilian. 

What  is  Patriotism? 
Ames,  Mrs.  Mary  [Clemmer].  Sec  Hudson,  Mrs.  Mary 

[Clemmer]  [Ames]. 
Ames,  W. — Street-car  Romance,  A. 
Amiel,  Henri-Fr^d^ric. — Dew-drop,  The. 
Amonson,  Louis  S. — My  Country. 
Anacreon. — Cheat  of  Cupid,  The. 

Drinking. 

Epicure,  The. 

Gold. 

Grasshopper,  The. 

On  the  Gras.shopper.     See  Grasshopper,  The. 

"Once  at  midnight,  just  as  Arktos." 

Rose,  The. 

Spring. 

Swallow,  The 

"Thirsty    earth    soaks    up    the  rain.  The."     See 
Drinking. 

Ungrateful  Cupid,  The. 
Andersen,   Hans  Christian. - 
Oak  Tree,  The. 

Little  Gretchen.     See  Little  Match  Girl,  The. 

Little  Match  Girl,  The. 

Little  Match-seller,  The.     See  Little  Match  Girl, 
The. 

New  Year's  Eve.     See  Little  Match  Girl,  The. 
Anderson,  Alex. — "Bairnies,  Cuddle  Doon." 

Cuddle  Doon.     See  "Bairnies,  Cuddle  Doon." 

How  Little  Tom  was  Saved. 

Jack  Chiddy. 

Nottman.     See  How  Little  Tom  was  Saved. 

O.  Mither,  Sing  a  gong  to  the  Bairns. 
Anderson,  Ari.«tine. — Way  of  the  World,  The. 
Anderson,  Duncan. — Death  of  Wolfe,  The. 

Sport 
Anderson,  E:  D. — Baby  in  the  Library,  The. 
Anderson.  Mrs.  May  M^ — Brother  Robin. 

Child  Martyr,  The. 

Flower  Dances. 

"Planting"  Wheat. 
Anderson,  MoUie  W. — Two  Gardens. 
Anderson,  W.  B. — liOve  Game,  A. 

Sic  Transit. 
Anderson,  Waldron  W. — As  the  Sun  Went  Down. 
Anderson,   W:  —  Railway    Station   in   the    North   of 

England,  A. 
Andrew,  .T:  Albion. — Our  Heroes. 
Andrews,  E.  F.^=Bebatin'  S'ciety,  The. 

Uncle  Edom  and  the  Flurridy  Nigger. 

TTncle  Edom  and  the  Yankee  Book  agent. 
Andrews,  Maude. — J?ad  Obsolete,  The. 
Andros,  R.  S.  S. — Perseverance. 

Swallow,  The.     See  Perseverance. 
Angelo,  Michael.     See  Buonarotti,  Michelangelo. 
Annable,  G:  G. — Agfainst  Licen.se. 
Anster,  .!:— Fairy  Child,  The. 
"Anstey,  F."     See  Guthrie.  Fs.  Anstev. 
Anthony,  J:  Clinton. — Ring  from  the  Rim  of  the  Glass, 
Boys. 

Society  Martyr,  A. 

With  My  Cigar. 
Anti-Jacobin.     In.scription    for    the  Door   of    the  Cell 
in  Newgate,  where  Mrs.  Brownrigg  was  Con- 
fined. 
Antipater  of  Sidon. — Erinna. 

Antoninu.s,  Marcus  Aurelius. — Even  in  a  Palace.    See 
Thoughts  of  Marcus  Aurelius. 

Fortitude.     See  Thoughts  of  Marcus  Aurelius. 

Goodness.     See  Thoughts  of  Marcus  Aurelius. 

Thoughts  of  Marcus  Aurelius. 
Antrobus,  .J:— Cowboy,  The. 
Appleget,  T:  B. — Lost  and  Found. 
"Arbory,  J:"     See  Macfarlane,  J: 
Arbuthnot,  J: — Epitaph  upon  Colonel  Chartres. 

John  Bull  and  His  Law-suit. 
Archer.  T:     See  Brough,  J.  C,  and  Archer,  T: 
Archibald,  Mrs.  G:— Army  Overcoat,  The. 

•John's  Pumpkin. 

Law  agin  It,  A. 

Why  Don't  You  Tell  Me  Yes? 
Ardagh,  Alice  M.— Sic  Passim. 
Arey.  Mrs.  Harriet  Ellen  [Grannis]. — Myself. 

Thank  God,  there's  Still  a  Vanguard. 
Argonaut,  The. — Origin  of  Scandal,  The. 
Argosy,  The. — Only. 

Argyll,  G:  Douglas  Campbell.  Duke  of. — Our  Dead. 
Ariosto. — Death  of  Zerbino,  The.    See  Orlando  Furioso. 

Orlando  Furioso. 


Aristophanes. — Birds,  The. 

Chorus  of  Women.     SeeThesmophoriazus®,  The. 
ThesmophoriazussB,  The. 
Arkansaw  Traveller. — Arkansas  Traveller,  The. 
Boy  in  a  ]or  the]  Dime  Mu.seum,  A. 
In  the  Dime  Museum.     See  Boy  in  a  Dime  Mu- 
seum, A. 
Judge  Brown's  Watermelon  Story. 
Little    Johnnie    Visits    the    Dime    Museum.     See 

Boy  in  a  Dime  Museum,  A. 
Mr.  Haines's  Able  Argument. 
Only  Five  Minutes  to  Live. 
"Arkwright,  Peleg^^"     See  Proudfit,  D:  Law. 
Armitage,  Laura  F. — Bluebird's  Message,  The. 
First  Pussy  Willows,  The. 
To  the  Old  and  the  New  Year. 
Armstrong,  Edmund  J. — Adieu. 
BUnd  Student,  The. 
Fionnuala. 
Lady's  Rock,  The. 
Armstrong,  G:  Fs.  Savage.     See  Savage- Armstrong, 

G:  Fs. 
Armstrong,  J: — Art  of  Preserving  Health,  The. 

Building  a  Home.     See  Art  of  Preserving  Health, 

The. 
Taste:  an  Epistle  to  a  Young  Critic. 
Armstrong,  T:  M. — Story  of  Rebekah,  The. 
Arndt,  Ernst  Moritz. — Fatherland. 
Arndt,    M.    E. — "Wherever,    Oman,    God's    sun    first 

beamed  upon  thee." 
Arndt.  Walter  Tallmadge. — Two  of  a  Kind. 

Arnold, . — Death  of  Nelson,  The. 

Arnold,  Alice. — Another  Day. 
Arnold,  Birch.- — Burglar  Alarm,  The. 

Mrs.  Fillisy's  Burglar-alarm.   See  Burglar  Alarm. 

The. 
Arnold,  Sir  Edwin. — A  ma  Future. 
Adelaide  Anne  Procter. 
Adulteress,  The. 

After  Death.     See  After  Death  in  Arabia. 
After  Death  in  Arabia. 
Almond  Blossom.     See  April. 
April. 

Armageddon. 

At  Bethlehem.     See  Light  of  the  World,  The. 
Bazaar  Girl,  The. 

Book  of  Love.  The.    See  With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Caliph's  Draught.  The. 
Clemency  of  Salah-ud-Deen,  The.     See  Adulteress, 

The. 
Dancing-girl.  The. 
Destiny. 

Egyptian  Slippers. 
Good  Deeds. 
Great    Consummation,    The.     See   Light    of   the 

World,  The. 
Great  Journey.  The.     (Tr.)     See  Maha-Bharata, 

The. 
Great    Renunciation,  The.     See    Light  of    Asia, 

The. 
"He  and  She."     See  She  and  He. 
He    Who    Died    at    Azan.     See   After    Death    in 

Arabia. 
In  Memoriam. 
Indian  Song  of  Songs,  The. 
King  Sheddad's  Paradise. 
Light  of  Asia,  The. 
Light  of  the  World,  The. 
Lord  Raglan.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Love  Song  of  Henri  Quatre,  A. 
Lover  with  His  Loved   One  Sailed  the   Sea,   A. 

See  With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Maha-Bharata.     (Tr.) 

Mahmud  and  Ayaz.     See  With  Sa'di  in  the  Gar- 
den. 
Mary  at  the  Sepulchre.     See  Light  of  the  World, 

The. 
Mary's  Story  of  the  Crucifixion.     See  Light  of  the 

World,  The. 
Moses  and  the  Angel. 
Musmee,  The. 
"Naught  is  the  same  'as  if  Love  had  not  been.'" 

See  With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Oh,  if  Thou  be'st  True  Lover. 
Nirvana.     See  Light  of  Asia,  The. 
On  a  Cvclamen. 

Pontius  Pilate.     See  Light  of  the  World,  The. 
Queen  Arjamand's  Dagger.     See  With  Sa'di  in  the 

Garden. 
Raglan.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Rajput  Nurse,  A. 

Resurrection,  The,     See  Light  of  the  World,  The. 
Resurrection   of   Abdullah.     See   After   Death   in 

Arabia. 


389 


Arnold 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Arnold,  Sir  Edwin  (continued). 

Savitri;  or,  Love  and  Death.     (Tr.)     See  Maha- 

Bharata,  The. 
.     Secret  of  Death,  The.     See  Light  of  Asia,  The. 
Secret  of  Death,  The.     See  aho  She  and  He. 
Serenade:  "Lute!  breathe  thy  lowest." 
Shadow  of  the  Cross,  The. 
She  and  He.  * 

Snake  and  the  Baby.  The. 
Song  of  Krishna,  A.     See  Indian  Song  of  Songs, 

The. 
Song  of  the  Devas  to  Prince  Siddartha,  The.     See 

Light  of  Asia,  The. 
Song  without  a  Sound.     See  With  Sa'di  in  the 

Garden. 
Sorrow  of  Buddha,  The.     See  Light  of  Asia,  The. 
Sultan  and  the  Potter,  The. 
Swallows,  The. 
Swallow's  Nest,  The. 
Tola  of  Mustard  Seed,  The.     See  Light  of  Asia, 

The. 
With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden. 
Woman's  Voice. 

Wreck  of  the  "Northern  Belle,"  The. 
Arnold,  Emily  Gail. — In  April. 
Arnold,  G: — Alone  by  the  Hearth. 
Among  the  Heather. 
Beer. 

Cigars  and  Beer.     See  Beer. 
Big  Oyster,  The. 
Farewell,  A. 
Farewell  to  Summer. 
Golden  Fish,  The. 
In  the  Dark. 

Jolly  Old  Pedagogue,  The, 
Jubilate. 

Merry  Christmas  Time,  The. 
September. 
September  Days. 
Summer  Longing,  A. 
Sweet  September.     See  September  Days. 
Arnold,  Matthew. — Absence. 

"Ah,  Love!  let  us  be  true."     See  Dover  Beach. 

Apollo.     See  Empedocles  on  Etna. 

Austerity  of  Poetry. 

Bacchanalia;  or,  Tne  New  Age. 

Balder  Dead. 

Berlin — the  Sixteenth  of  March. 

Better  Part,  The. 

Buried  Life,  The. 

Cadmus  and  Harmonia.     iSee  Empedocles  on  Etna. 

Calais  Sands. 

Callicles  beneath  Etna.     <See  Empedocles  on  Etna. 

Callicles'  Song.     See  Empedocles  on  Etna. 

Callicles'  Song  of    Apollo.     <Sec    Empedocles    on 

Etna. 
Church  of  Brou,  The. 
Combat,  The.     See  Sohrab  and  Rustum. 
Consolation. 

Death  of  Goethe.     See  Memorial  Verses. 
Death  of  Sohrab,  The.     See  Sohrab  and  Rustum. 
Departure  of  the  Cuckoo,  The.     See  Thyrsis. 
Desire. 

Dover  Beach. 

Duties  of  the  Scholar.     See  Sweetness  and  Light. 
Empedocles  on  Etna. 
Euphrosyne. 

Even  in  a  Palace.     See  Worldly  Place. 
Evening.     See  Bacchanalia;  or,  The  New  Age. 
Excuse.     See  Urania. 

Flee  fro'  the  Press.     See  Scholar-Gypsy,  The  . 
Forsaken  Merman,  The. 
Future,  The. 
Geist's  Grave. 
Growing  Old. 
Hawortn  Churchyard. 
Heine's  Grave. 
Human  Life. 

Hunters,  The.     See  Church  of  Brou,  The. 
Hymn  of  Empedocles. 
Immortality. 

Incremation,  The.     See  Balder  Dead. 
Indifference.     See  Euphrosyne. 
Iseult's  Children.     See  Tristram  and  Iseult. 
Last  Word,  The. 

Lines  Written  in  Kensington  Gardens. 
Longing. 

Lovers.     See  Consolation. 
Memorial  Verses. 
Morality. 
Neckan,  The. 
Obermann  once  More. 
On  the  Death  of  a  Favourite  Canary.     See  Poor 

Matthias. 


Arnold,  Matthew  (continued). 

Oxus.     See  Sohrab  and  Rustum. 

Palladium. 

Philomela. 

Poor  Matthias. 

Rachel. 

Requiescat. 

Resignation. 

River's  End,  The.     See  Sohrab  and  Rustum. 

Rugby  Chapel. 

Saint  Brandan. 

Scholar-Gypsy,  The. 

Self-dependence. 

Shakespeare. 

Sohrab  and  Rustum. 

Song  of  Callicles.     See  Empedocles  on  Etna. 

Song  of  Callicles  in  Sicily.     See  Empedocles  on 

Etna. 
Song  of  Empedocles,   The.     See  Empedocles  on 

Etna. 
Stanzas  from  the  Grande  Chartreuse. 
Stanzas  in  Memory  of  the  Author  of  "Obermann." 
Strayed  Reveller,  The. 
Summer  Night,  A. 
Sweetness  and  Light. 
Thyrsis. 
To  a  Friend. 
To  Marguerite. 
Tomb  in  the  Church  of  Brou,  The.     See  Church 

of  Brou,  The. 
Tristram  and  Iseult. 
Urania. 

We  Cannot  Kindle  when  We  Will.     See  Morality. 
"When  Gpethe's  death  was  told,  we  said."     See 

Memorial  Verses. 
Wish,  A. 

World  and  the  Quietist,  The. 
Worldly  Place. 

Written  in  Emerson's  Essays. 
"Arp,  Bill."— See  Smith,  C:  H. 

Arrington,  Alfred  W. — ^ Apostrophe  to  Cold  Water.   See 
Apostrophe  to  Water. 
Apostrophe  to  Water.     (At.  also  to  Paul  Denton 

and  to  J :  B.  Gough.) 
Glass    of    Cold    Water,    A.     See    Apostrophe    to 

Water. 
Tribute  to  Water,  A.     See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 
Water.     See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 
"Water!  look  at  it,  ye  thirsty  ones!"     See  Apos- 
trophe to  Water. 
Arthur,  Timothy  Shay. — Idle  Hands. 
Arthur's    Home    Magazine. — Little    Mission     Band, 

The. 
Ars'ers,  Felix. — My  Secret. 

Secret,  The.     See  My  Secret. 
Ascher,  Isidore  G. — By  the  Firelight. 
Ashbury,  W: — Father  in  Heaven. 
Ashby-Sterry.  Jos. — Cigarette  Rings. 
Daisy's  Dimples. 
Kindness  to  Animals. 
Little  Rebel,  The. 
Lover's  Lullaby,  A. 
Love's  Punishments. 
Marlow  Madrigal,  A. 
Portrait,  A. 
Regrets. 

"Speak  gently  to  the  herring,  and  kindly  to  the 
calf."     See  Kindness  to  Animals. 
Ashe,  T:— At  Altenahr. 
By  the  Salp^triere. 
Marian. 
Marit. 

Meet  we  no  Angels,  Pansie?     See  At  Altenahr. 
No  and  Yes. 
Old  Jane. 
Phantoms. 
Poeta  Nascitur. 
To  Two  Bereaved. 
Vision  of  Children,  A. 
Askewfe],  Annfe].— Fight  of  Faith,  The. 
Aspinall,  G: — Leap  of  Curtius,  The. 
Atheneum,  The. — Ferryman,  The. 

Atherstone  [wr.  Atherton],  Edwin. — Last  Days  of  Her- 
culaneum.  The. 
Roman    Soldier    at    the    Destruction    of    Hercu- 
laneum.     The.     See    Last     Days    of     Hercu- 
laneum,  The. 
Atkeson,  America. — Two  Friends,  The. 
Atlanta  Constitution. — Baby's  Visitor. 
Atlantic  Monthly. — Opening  of  the  Piano,  The. 
Uncle  Reuben's  Tale. 
Yankee  Landlord,  The. 
Auber,  Harriet. — Holy  Spirit,  The. 
"Aunt  Clara." — Frog's  Good-bye,  The. 


390 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Bailey 


"Aunt  Effie."— Clocking  Hen.  The. 

Dame  Duck's  First  Lecture  on  Education. 

Freddie  and  the  Cherry-tree. 

Pussy-cat. 

Robin  Redbreast,  The. 

Turtle  Dove's  Nest,  The. 

Water-mill,  The. 
Auringer,  Obadiah  Cyrus. — April. 

Ballad  of  Oriskany,  The. 

Flight  of  the  War-eagle,  The. 

God's  Country. 

Hymn  of  Our  Armies. 
Austen,  Sarah. — Pa.ssage,  The.     (jTr.) 
Austin,  Adam. — For  Lack  of  Gold. 
Austin,  Alfred. — Agatha. 

As  Dies  the  Year. 

At  His  Grave. 

Ave  Maria. 

Britannia  to  Columbia. 

Chorus  of  Islanders.     See  Look  Seaward,  Sentinel. 

Death  of  Huss,  The. 

Grave-digger's  Song.     See  Prince  Lucifer. 

Haymaker's  Song,  'The. 

In  the  Month  when  Sings  the  Cuckoo. 

Is  Life  Worth  Living? 

Ijady  Mabel. 

Last  Redoubt,  The. 

Look  Seaward,   Sentinel. 

Mother-song.     See  Prince  Lucifer. 

Night  in  June,  A. 

Prince  Lucifer. 

Savonarola  and  Lorenzo. 

To  America.     See  Britannia  to  Columbia. 

Voice,  A.     See  Britannia  to  Columbia. 

Wild  Rose,  A. 
Austin,  Arthur  W:— Double  Sacrifice,  The. 
Austin,  H:  W. ^Legend  of  Cry.stal  Spring. 

Prince's  Hunting,  The. 
Au.stin,  J: — Blest  be  thy  Love,  Dear  Lord. 
Austin,  L:  F. — .luliet. 

Averill,  Anna  Boynton. — Birch  Stream,  The. 
Avery,  Adeline  B. — Contesting  for  a  Prize. 
Ayars.  W.  S. — Zwischen  Trinken. 
Aye- Williams,  Ernest. — Mid  the  Brsakers. 
Ayres,  Alfred. — Oh,  Sir! 
Ayres,  Rev.  Milan  C. — Spiritual  Body,  The. 
Ayton,   Sir   Rob't. — "Forsaken   of   all   comforts  but 
these  two." 

I  do  Confess  Thou'rt  Sweet. 

On  Love. 

To  an  Inconstant  One. 

To  His  Forsaken  MLstress. 

Woman's    Inconstancy.     See    To    an    Inconstant 
One. 
Aytoun,  W:  Edmondstoune. — Battle  of  the  Boulevard. 
The. 

Biter  Bit,  The. 

Bothwell. 

Burial  March  of  Dundee,  The.  ' 

Charles  Edward  at  Versailles. 

Comfort  in  Affliction. 

Dame  Fredegonde. 

Dirge  of  the  Drinker,  The. 

Edinburgh  after  Flodden. 

Empty  Bottle,  The. 

Execution  of  Montrose,  The. 

Francesca  da  Rimini. 

Heart  of  the  Bruce,  The. 

Husband's  Petition,  The. 

Idoes  Napoldonlennes. 

Island  of  the  Scots,  The. 

James    IV.    at    Flodden.     See    Edin'ourgh    after 
Flodden. 

Killiecrankie.     See  Burial  March  of  Dundee,  The. 

Lament  of  Richard  durmg  His  Imprisonment.  (Tr.) 

Lay  of  the  Lover's  Friend,  The. 

Louis  Napoleon's  Address  to  His  Army. 

Mas.sacre  of  the  Macpherson. 

Midnight  Meditation,  A. 

Murder  of  Darnley.  The.     See  Bothwell. 

Murder  of  Riccio,  The. 

Old  Scottish  Cavalier,  The. 

Paris  and  Helen.     See  Puffs  Poetical. 

Puffs  Poetical. 

Tarquin  and  the  Augur.     See  Puffs  Poetical. 

Widow  of  Glencoe,  The. 

B 

"B." — What  May  Happen  to  a  Thimble. 
B.,  A.  H.  —Don't  You  Wish  You  Knew! 
B.,  E. — Life  or  Death. 
B.,  E.  G. — Barcarole. 


B.,  F.  R.  D.— After  the  Soiree. 

B.,  F.  W. — Autumn  Voices. 

B.,  H.  C. — Autumn  Song  of  a  Little  Girl. 

B.,  H.  H.— Elm,  The. 

B.,   J. — Epilogue:  Suitable   for  the   conclusion   of  an 

Entertainment. 
B.,  J.  C— There  is  a  Time. 
B.,  L.— Biologic  Face,  The. 
B.,  L.  F.— Sunset. 
B.,  M. — Contentment. 
B.,  M.  E. — Receipt  for  a  Racket,  A. 

Song  without  Words,  A. 
B.,  M.  F. — Changelings. 

Fidelity. 
B.,  M.  K.  [or  B.,  M.  R.].— Four  Sunbeams,  The. 
B.,  P. — Message,  A. 
B.,  R.  F.— Golf  Fiend,  The. 
B.,  S.  L. — My  Room-mate. 
B.,  S.  P.— Why? 
B.,  W.  C— To  a  Rose. 
B.,  W.  H. — On  Receipt  of  a  Rare  Pipe. 
Babb,  E.  C. — "Best  thoughts  of  the  day  ought  to  be 

in  the  daily  papers.  The." 
Babcock,  N.  P.— She  Earned  Her  Half. 
Bache,  Anna.— Quilting,  The. 
Bachelder,    May   I. — Choosing   a  "State  Tree." — The 

Hemlock. 
Bacheller,    Irving. — Joe's   Search   for   Santa   Claus. 

Whisperin'  Bill.  ' 
"Bachelor  Ben."- — Her  Lovers. 

Bachman,   N.   L.    F.— Sergeant   Prentiss'    First   Plea. 
Bacon,    Fs.,    Baron   Verulam    and     Viscount    St.    Al- 
bans. 

Advancement  of  Learning,  The. 

Books.     See  Of  Studies. 

Goodness  and  Greatness. 

Life.     See  World,  The. 

Of  Masques  and  Triumphs. 

Of  Negotiating. 

Of  Studies. 

Of  Suspicion. 

Of  Travel. 

Of  Truth. 

Studies.     See  Of  Studies. 

Truth.     See  Of  Truth. 

World,  The. 

Worth     of     Knowledge.     See    Advancement     of 
Learning,  The. 
Bacon,  Helen  C. — -Song  of  Spring,  A. 

Wonder  Story,  A. 
Bacon,  H: — Flowers,  The. 
Bacon,  Mrs.  L.  B. — Naming  the  Chickens. 
Bacon,  Mary  S. — Promoted. 
Badlam,  Anna  E. — Human  Body  Lesson  in  Rhyme. 

Legend,  A. 
Baer,  Libbie  C. — Little  Girl's  Wish,  A. 

Long  Ago. 
Bagby,    Dr.     G:     W:  ("Mozis     Addums").— Hoosier 
Describes  Rubenstein's  Playing,  A.     See  How 
"Ruby"    Played. 

How  "Ruby"  Played. 
Bailey,  Rev.  Ira  J. — Lsland  of  Home,  The. 
Bailey,  J.  H. — -No  Smoking  Allowed. 
Bailey,    Jas.    Montgomery  ("Danbury    News  Man"). 

Abused  Boy,  An. 

Anger  and  Enumeration. 

Awaking  a  Boy. 

Baby's  First  'Tooth,  The.     See  Harbison's  Baby, 
the. 

Button  Off,  A. 

Calling  a  Boy  in  the  Morning.     See  Awaking  a 
Boy. 

Coville  Convalesces. 

Curtain  Fixture,  The. 

Domestic  Economy. 

First  Dog,  The. 

Harbison's  Baby,  The. 

How   a   Married   Man   Sews   on    a   Button.     See 
Button   Off.   A. 

How   Mr.    Coville   Counted   the   Shingles   on    his 
House.     See  Mr.  Coville  Proves  Mathematics. 

Mr.  Coville  on  Danbury.     See  Coville  Convalesces. 

Mr.  Coville  Proves  Mathematics. 

Mr.  Coville's  Easy  Chair.     See  Coville  Convalesces. 

Mr.  Perkins  at  the  Dentist's. 

Mr.  Perkins  Buys  a  Dog. 

Mr.  Perkins  Helps  to  Move  a  Stove. 

Mr.   Stiver's  Horse. 

Penning  a  Pig. 

Sewing  on  a  Button.     See  Button  Off,  A. 

She  Cut  His  Hair.     See  Abused  Boy,  An. 

Struggle  with  a  Stove-pipe,  A. 
Bailey,  Lansing  C. — Eight  Volunteers. 


391 


Bailey 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Bailey,   Philip  Jas. — Aim  of  Life,  The.     See  Festus. 

Country  and  Patriotism.     See  Fesstus. 

Festus. 

Forecast.     See  Festus. 

Helen's  Song.     See  Festus. 

How  to  Live.     See  Festus. 

"Let  each  man^think  himself  an   act  of  God." 

Lucifer  and  Elissa.     See  Festus. 

Poet,  The.     See  Festus. 

Poet  of  Nature,  The.     See  Festus. 

Sabbath  Morning  in   the   Country.     See   Festus. 

Thoughts.     See  Festus. 

Time  and  its  Changes.     See  Festus. 

True  Measure  of  Life,  The.     See  Festus. 

Waning  Spirits.     See  Festus. 

Woman's   Four  Seasons.     See  Festus. 

Worldly  Treasures.     See  Festus. 

Youth,  Love  and  Death.     See  Festus. 
Baillie,    Lady    Grisel. — Werena   my    Heart's   Licht    1 

wad  Dee. 
Baillie,  Joanna. — Beacon,  The. 

Black  Cock,   The. 

Brave  Man,  The. 

Chough  and  [the]  Crow,  The.     See  Orra. 

Deceit.     See   DeMonfort. 

DeMonfort. 

Fisherman's  Song.     See  Beacon,   The. 

Heath-cock,  The.     See  Black  Cock,   The. 

Jane   deMonfort.     See  DeMonfort. 

Kitten,  The. 

Legend  of  Christopher  Columbus,  The. 

Morning  Songs.     See  Beacon,  The. 

Orra. 

Outlaw's  Song,  The.     See  Orra. 

Patriotism  and  Freedom. 

Phantom,  The. 

Song:  "Oh  welcome,  bat  and  owlet  gray."  See 
Song  Written  for  a  Welsh  Air  Called  the  "Pur- 
suit of  Love." 

Song: — "The  bride  she  is  winsome  and  bonny." 
See  Song:  Woo'd  and  Married,  and  A'. 

Song: — "They  who  may  tell  love's  wistful  tale." 
See  Phantom,  The. 

Song:  Woo'd  and  Married  and  A'. 

Song:  Written  for  a  Welsh  Air  Called  "The  Pur- 
suit of  Love." 

"Up,  quit  thy  bower."     See  Beacon,  The. 

Worth  of  Fame,  The.     See  Legend  of  Christopher 
Columbus,    The. 
Bajllie,  Mary. — De  Tired   Pickaninny's  Star  Song. 
Bain,  G:  W. — -American  Home,  The. 
Baine,  W: — Nola  Kozmo. 

William  Tell. 
Baines,  M.  A. — I  Love  Thee. 
Baker,  Col.  E:  Dickinson. — Free  Press,  A. 

Freedom. 

Liberty  of  the  Press.     See  Free  Press,  A. 

Speech  at  Union  Square,  New  York,  April  20th, 
1861. 

To  Young  Men  of  New  York  in  1861.     See  Speech 
at  Union  Square,  New  York. 
Baker,   G:   A:,  Jr. — After  the   German. 

Afterthought,   An. 

Auto-da-fe. 

Bachelor  Coat,  The.  See  Le  Dernier  Jour  d'un 
Condamn^. 

Both  Sides  of  the  Story.  See  Idyl  of  the  Period, 
An. 

Chinese  Lanterns. 

Chivalrie. 

Christmas   Greens. 

De  Lunatico. 

Dialect  Medley.     See   Pyrotechnic   Polyglot. 

Easter   Morning. 

Eight  Hours. 

Fishing. 

Frost-bitten. 

Idyl  of  the  Period,  An. 

In  the  Record  Room, — Surrogate's  Office. 

Jack  and  Me. 

Lake  Mahopac — Saturday  Night. 

Language  of  liOve,  The. 

Le  IDernier  Jour  d'un  Condamn^. 

Legend  of  St.  Valentine,  A. 

Les   Enfants   Perdus. 

"Love  Your  Neighbor  as  Yourself."  See  Thoughts 
on  the  Commandments. 

Making  New  Year's  Calls. 

Marriage  iV  la  Mode. 

Matinal  Musings. 

Mothers  of  the  Sirens,  The. 

Next  Morning.     See  Matinal  Musings. 

Nocturne. 

Old   Photographs. 


Baker,  G:  A:,  Jr.  {continued). 
Per  Aspera  ad  Astra. 
Piece  of  Advice,  A. 
Pro  Patria  et  Gloria. 
Pyrotechnic   Polyglot. 
Reductio  ad  Absurdum. 

Reformer,   A. 

Retrospection. 

Reverie  in  Church.     See  Easter  Morning. 

Romance  of  the  Saw-dust,  A. 

Rosebud  in  Lent,  A. 
Sleeping  Beauty. 

Song,  A: — "I  shouldn't  like  to  say,  I'm  sure." 

Song,    A: — "Spring-time    is    coming    again,    my 
dear." 

"Stay-at-Home's"  Psean,  The. 

"Stay-at-Home's"  Plaint,  The. 

Thoughts  on  the  Commandments. 

Zwei    Konige  auf  Orkadal. 
Baker,  G:  Comstock. — To :    "I  love  you — not  be- 
cause." etc. 
Baker,  G:  M. — Cruise  of  the  "Monitor,"  The. 

Fireman,  The.     See  Red  Jacket,  The. 

Mother's  Hired  Man. 

Red  .lacket,  The. 

Santa  Claus  Frolic. 

Sea  of  Troubles,  A. 
Baker,  H:  W: — "Be  near  when  I  am  dying." 

Lord  is  My  Shepherd,  The. 

My  Shepherd.     See  Lord  is  My  Shepherd,  The. 
Baker,  W:  Drummond. — Sea-song. 

"Soft  is  Thy  Rest." 
Bakewell,  J: — Hail,  Thou  Once-desnised  Jesus. 
Balch,  Alfred. — Huldy's  Pumnkin  Pics. 
Balch,  G:  T. — Public  School  Teacher  in  the  Republic, 

The. 
Baldwin,  Astley  H. — Little  Brown  Bushy-tail. 

New  Year,  The.     See  On  the  Threshold. 

On  the  Threshold. 
Baldwin,  E.  N. — Watermelon  Season,  The. 
Baldwin,  H : — At  the  Rug  Auction. 
Baldwin,  Judge  J:  M. — In  Memory  of  Lincoln. 
Baldwin,  Jos. — Culture  of  the  Moral  Virtues. 
Ball,  Alice  M. — Doctor's  Choice,  The. 
Ball,  E:— With  No  One  to  Love  Us. 
Ballam,  Anna  A.     God  is  Everywhere. 
Ballantyne  [wr.  Ballantine],  Jas. — Castles  in  the  Air. 

Muckle-mou'd  Meg. 
Ballantyne,  J:  F.— Thine  Eyes.     (Tr.) 
Ballard,  Harlan  Hoge. — In  the  Catacombs. 

Welsh  Classic,  A. 
Ballard,  Mrs.  Julia  [Perkins]. — Two  Little  Roses. 

Verdict,  The. 
Ballou,  A.  L. — Dead  in  His  Bed. 
Ballou,  Maturin  Murray. — "Sweet  letters  of  the  angel 

tongue." 
Ballou,  W:  Hosea. — My  John. 

Baltimore  American. — "Practical  way    for    Christians 
to  reform  the  theatre.  The." 

Sleep  Time  in  Darktown. 
Baltimore  Elocutionist. — -Fashionable  Singing. 
Baltimore  Life. — Peace-at-any-price  Man,  A. 
Baltimore  Methodist. — "No  Saloons  up  There." 
Baltimore  News. — Chickamauga — ^1898. 

Phantoms,  The. 

Soldier's  Heart,  A. 

Song  for  the  Sailor-men,  A. 

Song  of  the  Rapid-fires,  A. 
Balzac,  Honors  de. — Passion  in  the  Desert,  A. 
Bampfylde,  J: — Sonnet:  To  the  Redbreast. 
Bancroft,  G: — Acadian  Exiles,  The.     See  History  of 
the  United  States. 

Character   of   the    Declaration   of   Independence. 
See  History  of  the  United  States. 

Discovery  of  the  Mississippi,  The.     See  History  of 
the  United  States. 

God  in  History. 

Government  of  the  People,  The. 

Great    Britain    and    Her  English  Colonies.      See 
History  of  the  United  States. 

Growth  of  the  American  Republic. 

History  of  the  United  States. 

News  from  Lexington,  The.     See  History  of  the 
United  States. 

Palmerston  and  Lincoln. 

"Philosophy  has  sometimes  forgotten  God,   as  a 
great  people  never  did." 

Revolutionary  Alarm,  The.     See  History  of  the 
United  States. 
Bangs,  J:  Kendrick. — Afternoon  in  a  Hotel  Room,  An. 

Before  the  Toy  Shop  Window. 

Little  Elf.  The. 

May  30.  1893. 

To  a  Withered  Rose. 


392 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Barnes 


Banim,  J: — Damon  and  Pythias. 

Damon    to    the    Syracusans.     See    Damon    and 
Pythias. 

He  said  that  He  was  not  Our  Brother. 

Irish  Mother  in  the  Penal  Days,  The. 

Scene  from  Damon  and  Pythias.     See  Damon  and 
Pythias. 

Soggarth  Aroon. 
Banks,  Emma  Dunning. — -Aline's  Love  Song. 

Aunt  Rhody's  Dream. 

Battle  Cry. 

Bridget's  Mission  Jug. 

Diamond  Cut  Diamond. 

Dot's  Christmas;  or,  the  Sober  Hat. 

Flossie  Lane's  Marriage. 

Flying  .Tim's  Last  Leap. 

Gipsy  Bride,  The. 

Grandma  Robbins's  Temperance  Mission. 

How  Congress  fought  for  Sheridan. 

Jacqueminot  Rose  Sunday,  A. 

Laureame:  the  Marble  Dream. 

Legend  of  Rose  Sunday,  A. 

Lesson  of  Obedience,  The. 

Man's  Story,  A. 

Medley. 

Mein  Katrine's  Brudder  Hans. 

Memorial  Day  at  the  Farm. 

Mother's  Easter  Scarf,  The. 

Off  for  Slumber-land. 

Old,  Old  Story,  The. 

One  Thanksgiving  Day  out  West. 

Pat  and  the  Yankee. 

Prince  Eric's  Christ-maid.  • 

Princess  Imra  and  the  Goatherd. 

Quart  of  Milk,  A. 

Roman  Valentine,  A. 

Russian  Christmas,  A. 

Ruthie's  Faith  in  Prayer. 

St.  Valentine's  and  St.  Patrick's  Day. 

Society  Flirtation. 

Soldier's  Joy,  The. 

Squeeze  in  the  Dark,  A. 

Two  Thanksgiving  Dances. 

Van  Bibber's  Rock. 
Banks,  G.  Linnaeus. — "I  live  for  those  that  love  me." 
See  My  Aim. 

Mrs.  Brown  and  Mrs.  Green. 

Mv  Aim. 

What  I  Live  For.     See  My  Aim. 
Banks,  H.  W. — Sweet  Sixteen. 

Those  Violets  Blue. 

Two  of  a  Kind. 

Wishes. 
Banks,  Martha  Burr. — Flag  Day. 
Banner,  The. — Temperance  Shio,  The. 
Bannerman,  Frances. — Upper  Chamber,  An. 
Banning,  Kendall. — Quatrain. 
Banta,  Mrs.  M.  E. — Aftermath. 

Barbauld,  Anna  Lsetitia. — Christ  Risen.      See  Hymn: 
For  Easter  Sunday. 

Come  Unto  Me. 

Death  of  the  Virtuous,  The. 

Hymn:   "Come,   said   Jesus'   sacred   voice."     See 
Come  unto  Me. 

Hymn:  "Praise  to  God,  immortal  praise."      See 
Praise  to  God. 

Hymn: — "Sleep,  sleep  to-day,  tormenting  cares." 
See  Sabbath  of  the  Soul,  The. 

Hymn:  For  Easter  Sunday. 

Inconsistent  Expectations. 

Life. 

Life  and  Death.     See  Life. 

I^ife:  I  Know  not  what  Thou  Art.     See  Life. 

"Life!  we've  been  long  together."     See  Life. 

Life's  "Good-morning."     See  Life. 

Mouse's  Petition,  The . 

Ode  to  Spring. 

Praise  to  God. 

Riddle. 

Sabbath  of  the  Soul,  The. 

Song: — "Come  here,  fondyouth,  whoe'er  thou  be." 

Summer  Evening's  Meditation,  A. 

To  a  Lady,  with  Some  Painted  Flowers. 

What  it  is  to  Love.     See  Song: — "Come  here,  fond 
youth,  whoe'er  thou  be." 

Words.     See  Riddle. 
Barber,  Jos.- — Bell  and  the  Gong,  The. 

Mrs.  Dove's  Boarding-house. 

Modern  Version  of  the  Merchant  of  Venice,  A. 
Barbour,  J:— Bruce^The. 

Freedom.     See  Bruce,  The. 
Barbour.  Martha  E. — Attitudes  Illustrated  in  Verse. 

(Arr.) 
Bard,  Rob't  M. — Mendicant,  The. 


Barham,    R:    Harris  ("Thomas    Ingoldsby"). — As    I 
lay  a-Thynkynge. 

Bagman's  Dog,  The. 

City  Bells.     See  Lay  of  St.  Aloy's,  The. 

Confession,  The. 

Eheu  Fugaces. 

Execution,  The. 

Fatally  Poetry. 

Ghost,  The. 

Hon.  Mr.  Sucklethumbkin's   Story.     See   Execu- 
tion, The. 

I  Remember,  I  Remember.     See  Nursery  Remi- 
niscences. 

Jackdaw  of  Rheims,  The. 

Knight  and  the  Lady,  The. 

Lady  Rohesia,  The. 

Lay  of  St.  Aloy's,  The. 

Lay  of  St.  Gengulphus,  A. 

Little   Vulgar  Boy,   The.     See  Misadventures  at 
Margate. 

London   University,    The;   or,   Stinkomalee    Tri- 
umphans. 

Look  at  the  Clock. 

Lurline;  or,  'The  Knight's  Visit  to  the  Mermaids. 
See  Sir  Rupert  the  P^earless. 

Misadventures  at  Margate. 

Mr.  Barney  Maguire's  Account  of  the  Coronation. 

My  Letters. 

My  Lord  Tomnoddy.     See  Execution,  The. 

Netley  Abbey. 

New-made  Honor. 

Not  a  Sous  Had  He  Got. 

Nursery  Reminiscences. 

On   the   Windows   of   King's  College   Remaining 
Boarded. 

Poplar,  The. 

Raising  the  Devil. 

Sir  Rupert  the  Fearless. 

Witches'  Frolic,  The. 
Barhite,  Jared. — Arbor  Day  Tribute. 

Nature's  Tribute  Suggests  Ours.     See  Arbor  Day 
Tribute. 
Baring-Gould,  Sabine. — Bishop  Benno  and  the  Frogs. 

Building  of  S.  Sophia,  The. 

Child's  Ev^ening  Hymn. 

Day  is  Over.     See  Child's  Evening  Hymn. 

Now    the    Day    is    Over.     See    Child's    Evening 
Hymn. 

Olive" Tree,  The. 

Secret  of  Life,  The. 
Barker,  Bernard. — On  a  Tobacco  Jar. 
Barker,  D: — Make  Your  Mark. 
Barker,  E:  D. — Go  Sleep,  ma  Honey. 
Barker,  Eliza  H. — Shun  the  Bowl. 
Barker,  J.  W. — Dead  Volunteer,  The. 
Barker,  J:— As  Toll. 

Barker,  Johnson. — House  Full  of  Wine,  The. 
Barker,  T:  H.— Words  of  Cheer. 
Barlow,  Fanny. — -Taken  on  Trial. 

Wedding-march  on  Trial,  A.     See  Taken  on  Trial. 
Barlow,  G:— Dead  Child,  The. 

If  only  Thou  art  True. 

Life's  Gifts. 

Love  on  Deck. 

Love's  Final  Powers. 

Old  Maid,  The. 

Together. 
Barlow,  Jane. — Curlew's  Call,  A. 

End  of  Elfintown,  The. 

Flitting  of  the  Fairies,  The.    See  End  of  Elfintown, 
The. 

Misther  Denis's  Return.     See  Ould  Master,  Th'. 

Ould    Master,  Th'. 
Barlow,  Joel. — Columbia. 

Hasty  Pudding,  The. 
Barlow,  iJellie. — To  Those  who  Fail. 
Barnaby,  Goodman. — Give  Me  the  Hand. 

Hand  for  Me,  The.     See  Give  Me  the  Hand. 
Barnard,  Anna. — Telling  Tales. 

Barnard,  Lady  Anne  [Lind.say]. — Auld  Robin  Gray. 
Barnard,  C: — French  by  Lightning. 

He  was  never  Known  to  Smile. 

Nellie  Walsh. 

Put  Yourself  in  Her  Place. 

Sarah's  Proposal. 

Telegraphic  Signal,  The. 
Barnard,  R: — My  Cigarette. 
Barnefield.  R: — See  Barnfield,  R: 
Barnes,  Albert. — "  'What  a  fool  you  are,  Paley,'  said 

a  young  man  in  a  British  univer.'sity." 
Barnes,  Barnabe. — Ode: — "Behold,    out    Walking     in 
these  Valleys. 

Sonnet:   "Ah,    sweet  content;  where  is  thy  mild 
abode?" 


393 


Barnes 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Barnes,  G.  H. — Bricklayers,  The. 

Barnes,  G.  O. — Pyramids  not  all  E(?yptian. 

Barnes,  .las. — Song  of  Then  and  Now,  ,The. 

Torpedo-boat,  The. 
Barnes,  Lillian  Corbett. — Love-message,  A. 
Barnes,  M.  C— Little  Woman,  The. 
Barnes,  W: — Blackmwore  Maidens. 

Broken  Heart,  Tne. 

Castle  Ruins,  The. 

Ellen  Brine  of  Allenbum. 

False  Friends-like. 

Girt  Woak  Tree  that's  in  the  Dell,  The. 

Girt  Wold  House  o'  Mossy  Stwone,  The. 

Heare,  The. 

Jeane. 

Lullaby. 

Mary-Ann's  Child. 

Mater  Dolorosa.     See  Mother's  Dream,  The. 

Mother's  Dream,  The. 

Peasant's  Return,  The. 

Plorata  Veris  Lachrymis. 

Readen  ov'a  Head-stwone. 

Surprise,  The. 

Wife  a-Lost,  The. 

Witch,  A. 

Woone  Smile  Mwore. 

Zummer  an'  Winter. 
Barnett,  Morris. — Monsieur  Jacques. 
Barney,  W:  Grant. — In  Junior  Year. 
Barnfield  [or  Barnefield],  R: — Address'to  the  Nightin- 
gale.    See  Cynthia. 

Cynthia. 

Nightingale,  The.     See  Cynthia. 

Ode,  An:  "As  it  fell  upon  a  day."     See  Cynthia. 

Philomel.     See  Cynthia. 

Sonnet  from  Cynthia.     <See  Cynthia. 

Sonnet  to  His  Friend  Maister  R.  L. 

Whilst  as  Fickle  Fortune  Smiled. 
Barnum,  Mrs./ Frances  Courtenay  [Baylor]. — Old  Quar- 
rel, An. 
Barr,    Mrs.    Amelia    Edith    [Huddleston]. — Christmas 
Camp  on  the  San  Gabr'el,  A. 

My  Little  Brown  Pipe. 

New-year  Ledger,  The. 

Thanksgiving. 
Barr,  Lillie  E.— Little  Cloak,  The. 

Little  Jean. 

Mother's  Answer,  A. 

"Nay,  I'll  Stay  with  the  Lad." 

Ten  Robber  Toes. 
Barr,  Mary  A. — Bottom  Drawer,  The. 

Burial  of  the  Old  Flag,  The. 

Deserter,  A. 

Lost  Colors,  The. 

"Now,  soul,  be  very  still  and  go  apart." 

Petit  Jean. 
.  Poppy. 

Skipper's  Love,  The;  or.  The  Tide  Will  Turn. 
Barr,  Matthias. — Dying  Street  Arab,  The. 

Only  a  Baby  [Small].     (At.  also  to  Addie  Layton.) 

Organist,  The. 
Barr,  Rob't. — Archbishop's  Christmas  Gift,  The. 

"Gentlemen!  The  King!" 
Barr^,  Col.  I: — America's  Obligations  to  England. 

Reply  to  Lord  North. 
Barrett,  C:  R. — Kindness. 

Purpose. 
Barrett,  Eaton  Stannard. — Woman. 
Barrett,  Eliz.  Barrett.     See  Browning,  Mrs.  Eliz.  Bar- 
rett [Barrett]. 
Barrie,  Jas.  Matthew. — Auld  Licht  Idylls. 

Courting   of   T'nowhead's    Bell,    The.     See   Auld 
Licht  Idylls. 

How   Gavin   Birse   put   it    to  Mag  Lownie.     See 
Window  in  Thrums,  A. 

Invalid  in  Lodgings,  An. 

Little  Minister.  The. 

Mending  the  Clock. 

My  Brother  Henry.     See  My  Lady  Nicotine. 

My  Ladv  Nicotine. 

Nanny   Saved   from   the    Poorhouse.     See   Little 
Minister,  "rhe. 

Our  New  Servant. 

Platonic  Friendship,  A. 

Race  for  a  Wife,  A. 

Rescue     of    Gavin,    The.     See    Little    Minister, 
The. 

Window  in  Thrums,  A. 
Barritt,  Mrs.  Frances  Fuller. — Destiny  of  the  Empress 

Josephine,  The. 
Barron,  J.  M. — Old  Grimes'  Hen. 
Barron,  W.  F.— In  Olden  Style. 
Barrow,  W:  (?) — Mental  Activity. 
Barrows,  Rev.  Dr.  J:  H: — Centennial  Speech. 


Barrows,  O.    R. — Oh,    the  Sports  of  Childhood.     See 
Swinging  'neath  the  Old  Apple-tree. 

Swinging  'neath  the  Old  Apple-tree. 
Barry,  Anne.     See  Crawford,  Mrs.  Anne  [Barry]. 
Barry,  H:  H. — He  Leadeth  Me. 
Barry,  K.  E. — Caught. 
Barry,  Mary  A. — Elswitha. 

I  Wouldna  Gie  a  Copper  Plack. 
Barry,  Michael  Jos. — Place  to  Die,  The.     See  Place 
where  Man  should  Die,  The. 

Place  where  Man  should  Die,  The. 

Sword,  The. 

Wexford  Massacre,  The. 

Where  Man  shotdd  Die.      See  Place  where  Man 
should  Die,  The. 
Barry,  R: — Our  Country's  Call. 
Bartleson,  F.  A. — New  Year's  Eve. 
Bartlett,  D:  W. — Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. 
Bartlett,  G:  B. — Mignonette. 
Bartlett,  Mary  C— Baby's  Skies. 

Bartlett,  S:  C. — Webster  as   an  Orator  and   States- 
man. 
Bartol,  Rev.  Cyrus  A. — Mountains,  The. 

Emerson,  Extract  Concerning. 
Barton,  Bernard  ("Quaker  Poet"). — At  Home.     See 
Home. 

British  Oak,  The. 

Bruce  and  the  Spider.     See  Robert  Bruce  and  the 
Spider. 

Caractacus. 

Cast  Thy  Bread  upon  the  Waters. 

Colloquy  with  Myself,  A. 

Evening  Prayer,  An. 

Home. 

"Hush!  'tis  a  holy  hour!  the  quiet  room." 

Not  Ours  the  Vows. 

Robert  Bruce  and  the  Spider. 

Sea,  The. 

There  be  Those. 
Barton,  Clara. — Marmara. 
Bashford,  Herbert. — Along  Shore. 

Arid  Lands,  The. 

By  the  Pacific. 

Cuba— 1897. 

Morning  in  Camp. 

Mount  Rainier. 

Night  in  Camp. 

Sunset. 
Baskett,  Newton  M. — Orpheus  and  Eurydice. 

Substitute,  The. 
Basse,  W: — Angler's  Song,  The. 

Clorus'  Song. 
Batchelder,  F.  R. — Ballade  of  College  Girls,  A. 
Batchelder,  S.  F.— Critic,  The. 

Diva,  The. 
Bate,  Pres.  C:  Spence. — Ride. 
Bateham,  Minnie  D. — Legend  of  Innisfallen,  The. 

One  of  Many. 
Bateman,  H: — Snip  on  Fire,  The. 

Bateman,  Newton. — Address  to  the  Graduating Cla.'^s  of 
Knox  College,  1877. 

Heroism  and  History. 
Bates,  Arlo. — America.     See  Torch  Bearers,  The. 

Cyclamen,  The. 

In  Paradise. 

In  Shadow. 

Kitty's  Laugh. 

Kitty's  "No." 

Like  to  a  Coin. 

On  the  Road  to  Chorrera. 

One. 

Quite  a  History. 

Shadow  Boat,* A. 

Sonnets  in  Shadow. 

Sorrow  of  Rohab,  The. 

Torch  Bearers,  The. 

Watchers,  The. 

Winter  Twilight,  A. 

Woodland  Tragedy,  A. 
Bates,  Charlotte  Fiske. — See  Roge,  Mrs.  Charlotte 

FisKE  [Bates]. 
Bates,  Mrs.  Clara  [Doty]. — Acorn  Lesson,  An. 

Cat  and  Canary. 

How  the  Oak  Grew. 

Lilac.  The. 

Sad  (iase,  A. 

Thistle-down. 

What  the  Quail  Says. 

Who  Likes  the  Rain? 
Bates,  D.— Speak  Gently.     (At.  to  G.  W.  Hangford  and 

to  W.  V.  Wallace.) 
Bates,  Fanny  Beulah. — "Blackbird  Snow,  A." 

Robin's  Flight,  The. 

Sympathy. 


394 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Beaumont 


Bates,  Herbert. — Heavens  are  our  Riddle,  The. 

Prairie. 
Bates,  Katha.  Lee. — Little  Knight  in  Green,  The. 

Mine  Own  Countree. 

Robin's  Secret. 

Schoolroom  I  Love  the  Best,  The.     See  Vacation 
Song. 

Song  of  Riches,  A. 

Song  of  Waking,  A. 

Under  the  Snows. 

Vacation  Song. 
Bates,  Lewis  J. — Some  Sweet  Day. 
Bates,  Rob't  Peck. — Love's  Secret. 
Bates,  S:  Penniman. — Fruits  of  Labor,  The. 
Bates,  Stockton. — Asleep. 

Eureka. 

Fathoming  Brains. 

Friend  Death. 

Out  of  the  East. 

Saved. 

South  Fork. 

Starry  Flag,  The. 

Visit  to  Hades,  A. 
Bates,  Theodora. — After. 

Hall  of  Sleep,  The. 

Rondeau. 
Baxter,  R: — Lord,  it  Belongs  not  to  My  Care.     See 
Resignation. 

Resignation. 

Sin.     (?) 

Vision  of  Future  Bliss,  A. 
Bayard,  .las.  A. — Judges  Should  be  Free. 
Bayard,  T:  F. — -Character  of  Webster. 
Bayles,  Jas.  C. — In  the  Gloaming. 
Bayley,  Anna  F. — Our  Country. 
Bayley,  L.  M.  Laning. — Grave  by  the  Sorrowful  Sea, 

The. 
Baylis,  S:  Mathewson. — Coureur-de-Bois,  The. 

In  Matabele  Land. 
Bayly,  T:  Haynes. — Don't  Talk  of  September. 

Hunting  Season,  The.     See  Don't  Talk  of  Septem- 
ber. 

Isle  of  Beauty. 

Mistletoe  Bough,  The. 

My  DfSjeuner  h  la  Fourchette. 

Nightingale's   Song,   The.     See   Round   my   own 
Pretty  Rose. 

Oh!  Where  do  Fairies  Hide  Their  Heads? 

Out.     See  Out,  John! 

Out,  John! 

Pilot,  The. 

Poppy,  The. 

Reading  a  Tragedy.     See  Poppy,  The. 

"Rose  that  all  are  praising.  The." 

Round  my  own  Pretty  Rose. 

She  Wore  a  Wreath  of  Roses. 

To  Helena. 

To  My  Wife.     See  To  Helena. 

We  Met. 

Won't  You? 
Baylor,    Frances    Courtenay.       See     Babnum,     Mrs. 

Frances  Courtenay  [Baylor]. 
Beach,    H.    Prescott. — Hither,   Meadow    Gossip,   Tell 

Me! 
Beach,  Seth  Curtis. — Inspiration  of  the  Spirit,  The. 
Beaconsfield,  B:  Disraeli,  Earl  of. — Coningsby. 

Hebrew  Race,  The.     See  Coningsby. 

.lerusalem  by  Moonlight.     See  Tancred. 

Popanilla  on  Man.     See  Voyage  of  Captain  Popa- 
nilla.  The. 

Tancred. 

Voyage  of  Captain  Popanilla,  The. 

Wellington.  • 

Beal,  W:  Jas. — Convention  of  Michigan  Trees,  A. 
Bean,  Helen  Mar. — Pet  and  Bijou. 
Beard,  G:  P.— Farmer's  Life,  The. 
Beattie,  Jas. — Benevolence.    (?) 

Epitaoh,    An.     See  Epitaph  Intended   for  Him- 
self. 

Epitaph  Intended  for  Himself. 

Hermit,  The. 

I^aw.     See  Wolf  and  Shepherds,  The. 

Lawyers  and  the  Laws.     See  Wolf  and  Shepherds, 
The. 

Life  beyond  the  Tomb.     See  Minstrel,  The. 

Minstrel,  The;  or,  The  Progress  of  Genius. 

Morning.     See  Minstrel,  The. 

Nature.     See  Minstrel,  The. 

Night.     See  Hermit,  The. 

Reasons  for  Humility.     See  Minstrel,  The. 

Summer  Morn,  A.     See  Minstrel,  The. 

Wolf  and  Shepherds,  The. 


Beattie,  W: — Evening  Hymn  of  the  Alpine  Shepherds. 
Beatty,  Jamie.— Violet,  The.     (Wr.   at.)     See  Taylor, 

Jane. 
Beatty,  Pakenham  T: — Charles  Lamb. 
Death  of  Hampden,  The. 
To  Thine  Own  Self  be  True. 
When  Will  Love  Come? 
Beauchamp,  Ellen. — Arbor  Day  March. 

Hymn  in  Praise  of  the  Natural  World,  A. 
Song  of  Dedication. 
Beaufoy,  H:   (?) — On  Parliamentary  Innovations. 
"•"Beaumont.  Fs..  and  Fletcher,  J: — Aspatia's  Song.   (F.) 

See  Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Away,  Delights!     See  Captain,  The. 
Beauty  Clear  and  Fair.     (F.)     See  Elder  Brother, 

The. 
Ben  Jonson.     (B.)     See  Letter  to  Ben  Jonson. 
Bloody  Brother,  The.     (F.) 
Bonduca. 

Bridal  Song.     See  Little  French  Lawyer.  The. 
Bridal  Song.     See  also  Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Bridal  Song,  A.     (F.)     See  also  Two  Noble  Kins- 
men, The. 
Captain,  The. 

Care-charming  Sleep.  (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Charm,  The.    (F.)    See  Little  French  Lawyer.  The. 
Country  Scenes  in  Old  Days.     (F.)     See  Faithful 

Shepherdess,  The. 
Daybreak.     (F.)     See  Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
Dirge:  "Lay  a  garland  on  my  hearse."     (F.)     See 

Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Dirge  of  the  Three  Queens.     (F.)     See  Two  Noble 

Kinsmen,  The. 
Drink  To-day.     (F.)     Sec  Bloody  Brother,  The. 
Elder  Brother.  The. 

Elegy  on  the  Death  of  Lady  Penelope  Clifton,  An. 
Evening.     (F.)     See  Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
Evening  Song.     (F.)     See   Faithful  Shepherdess, 

The. 
Faithful  Shepherdess,  The.     (F.) 
False  One,  The. 
Folding  of  the  Flocks.     See  Faithful  Shepherdess, 

The. 
Folding   the   Flocks.     See   Faithful   Shepherdess, 

The. 
God  Lyaeus.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Hear,  ye  Ladies.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Hence,    All    Ye    Vain    Delights.     (F.)     See  Nice 

Valour,  The. 
Honest  Man's  Fortune,  An.     (F.)     See  Upon  an 

Honest  Man's  Fortune. 
Hymn  to  Pan.     (F.)     See  Faithful  Shepherdess, 

The. 
In  Westminster  Abbey.     (B.)     See  On  the  Tombs 

in  Westminster. 
Invocation  to  Sleep.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Invocation    to    Sleep.     (F.)     See    also     Woman- 
hater  The. 
.loy  of  Battle,  The.     (F.)     See  Mad  Lover,  The. 
Lady  Penelope  Clifton.     See  Elegy  on  the  Death 

of  Lady  Penelope  Clifton,  An. 
"Lav  a  garland  on  my  hearse."     (F.)     See  Maid's 

Tragedy,  The. 
Letter  to  Ben  Jonson. 
Life  of  Man,  The.     (B. — wr.  at.)     See  On  the  Life 

of  Man. 
Lines  on  the  Tombs  in  Westminster.     See  On  the 

Tombs  in  Westminster. 
Little  French  Lawyer,  The. 
Look  Out,  Bright  JEyes.     See  False  One,  The. 
Love  at  First  Sight.     See  Philaster. 
Love's  Emblems.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Mad  Lover,  The. 
Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Marriage  Hymn.     (F.)     See  Two  Noble  Kinsmen, 

The. 
Masque  of  the  Gentlemen  of  Grey's  Inn  and  the 

Inner  Temple,  A. 
Melancfhlolia.     (F.)     See  Nice  Valour,  The. 
Melancholy.     (F.)     See  Nice  Valour,  The. 
Misfortune. 

Morning.     (F.)     See  Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
Nice  Valour,  The.     (F.) 
On  the  Life  of  Man.     (B. — lor.  at.) 
On  the  Tombs  in  Westminster.     (B.) 
On  the  Tombs  in  Westminster  Abbey.     (B.)     See 

On  the  Tombs  in  Westminster. 
Orpheus.     (Sometimes  at.)     See  King  Henry  VIII. 

W:  Shakespeare. 
Our  Acts  Our  Angels  Are.     (F.)     See  Upon  an 

Honest  Man's  Fortune. 
Philaster. 


""Selections  generally  attributed  to  Beaumont  and  Fletcher  separately  are  marked  respectively  (B.)  or  (F.). 

395 


Beauraont 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Beaumont,  Fs.,  and  Fletcher,  J.  (corUinued). 
Poet's  Mood,  The.     See  Nice  Valour,  The. 
Power  of  Love,  The.     (F.) 
Priest's  Evening  Song,  The.     (F.)     See  Faithful 

Shepherdess,  The. 
Priest's  Morning  Song,  The.     (F.)     See   Faithful 

Shepherdess  The. 
Queen  of  Corinth,  The.     (F.) 
River  God  to  Amoret,  The.     (F.)     See  Faithful 

Shepherdess,  The. 
Satyr,  The.     (F.)     See  Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
Satyr's  Service,   The.     (F.)     See  Faithful  Shep- 

nerdess.  The. 
Serenade:  "Dearest,  do  not  delay  me."     (F.)     See 

Spanish  Curate,  The. 
Sleep.     (F.)     See  Woman-hater,  The. 
Slumber-song.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Song:  "Do  not  fear  to  put  thy  feet."     (F.)     See 

Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
Song: — "Fain  would  I  wake  you,  sweet,  but  fear." 

See  Wit  at  Several  Weapons. 
Song:  "Hence  all  you  Vain  Delights."     See  Nice 

Valour,  The. 
Song:  "Lay  a  garland  on  my  hearse."    (F.)     See 

Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Song:  "Shake  off  your  heavy  trance."     See  Masque 

of  the  Gentlemen  of  Grey's  Inn  and  the  Inner 

Temple,  A. 
Song  from  "Valentinian."     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Song  in  the  Wood.     See  Little  French  Lawyer, 

The. 
Song  of  Love  Despairing  and  Prepared  to  Die. 

See  Captain,  The. 
Song  to  Bacchus.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Spanish  Curate,  The. 

Speak,  Love!     (F.)     See  Spanish  Curate,  The. 
Spring.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Spring-time  and  Love.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Sweetest  Melancholy.     (F.)    See  Nice  Valour,  The. 
Take,    O    Take    Those    Lips    Away.     (F.)     See 

Bloody  Brother,  The. 
To  Angelina.     See  Elder  Brother,  The. 
To  His  Sleeping  Mistress.     See  Women  Pleased. 
To  My  Mistress's  Eyesr    See  Women  Pleased. 
To  Pan.     (F.)     See  Faithful  Shepherdess,  The. 
To    the    Blest    Evan  the.     (F.)     See   Wife    for    a 

Month,  A. 
To  Venus.     See  Mad  Lover,  The. 
Two  Noble  Kinsmen,  The.     (Shakespeare  and  F.) 
Unfolding  the  Flocks.     (F.)     See  Valentinian. 
Upon  an  Honest  Man's  Fortune.      (F.) 
Valentinian. 

Wake,  Gently  Wake.   See  Wit  at  Several  Weapons. 
Wedding  Song.     See  Maid's  Tragedy,  The. 
Weep  no  More.     See  Queen  of  Corinth,  The. 
Wife  for  a  Month,  A. 
Wit  at  Several  Weapons. 
W^oman-hater,  The. 
Women  Pleased.     (?) 
Beaumont,  Irwin. — Ride    from    Ghent    to    Aix,    The. 

(Parody.) 
Beaumont,  Sir  J: — Of  his  Dear  Son,  Gervase.     See  On 

My  Dear  Son,  Gers'ase  Beaumont. 
On  [or  of]  My  Dear  Son,  Gervase  Beaumont. 
Time. 
Becker,  Charlotte. — Charlotte  Bronte. 
Becket,  Gilbert  Abbott  k.— Holiday  Task,  A.     (Also 

at.  to  Barclay  Philips.) 
Polka  Lyric.     See  Holiday  Task,  A. 
Becquer,  Gustave. — Too  Late. 
Beckwith,  Rev.  G.  C. — Spirit  of  the  Age  Adverse  to 

War,  The. 
Beddoes,     T:     Lovell. — Amala's     Bridal     Song.     See 

Death's  .Test  Book. 
Athulf's  Death  Song.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Athulf's  Song.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Ballad  of  Human  Life. 

Bridal  Song  and  Dirge.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Bride's  Tragedy,  The. 
Death's  Jest  Book. 
Dirge:  "If  thou  wilt  ease  thine  heart."    See  Death's 

Jest  Book. 
Dirge  for  Wolfram.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Dream-pedlary. 

Hesperus  Sings.     See  Bride's  Tragedy,  The. 
Hesperus'  Song.     See  Bride's  Tragedy,  The. 
How  Many  Times.     See  Torri.smond. 
If  Thou  Wilt  Ease  Thine  Heart.     See  Death's  .lest 

Book. 
In  a  Garden  by  Moonlight.     See  Torrismond. 
Love  Goes  a-H^wking.     See  Bride's  Tragedy,  The. 
Sailor's  Song.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Sea.  The.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Second  Brother,  The. 


Beddoes,  T:  Lovell  (continued). 

Second  Dirge.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 

Song:  "How  many  times  do  I  love  thee,  dear?" 
See  Torrismond. 

Song:  "My  goblet's  golden  lips  are  dry." 

Song:  "Strew  not  earth,"  etc.    SeeSecond  Brother, 
The. 

Song:   "Who  is  the  baby,   that  doth   lie."     See 
Bride's  Tragedy,  The. 

Song,  by  Two  Voices.     See  Bride's  Tragedy,  The. 

Song  from  the  Ship.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 

Song  of  the  Stygian  Naiades. 

Song  from  "Torrismond."     See  Torrismond. 

To  Sea!     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 

To  Sea,  to  Sea!     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 

Torrismond. 

Wolfram's  Dirge.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 

Wolfram's  Song.     See  Death's  Jest  Book. 
Bede,  Cuthbert. — In  Immemoriam. 
Bedinger,  H. — Eagle's  Flight,  An. 
Beebe,  Blanche  B. — Scandal  on  the  Brain. 
Beecher,  H:  Ward. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Abraham    Lincoln,    the    Martyr.     See   Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Address  at  the  Raising  of  the  UnionFlag  over  Fort 
Sumter. 

Against  a  Compromise  of  Principle. 

American  Flag,  The.     See  National  Flag,  The. 

"And  while,  some  books,  like  steps,  are  left  be- 
hind us." 

Beecher  on  Eggs. 

'Biah  Cathcart's  Proposal.     See  Norwood. 

Blindness. 

"Book  is  good  company.  A." 

Books. 

Coming  and  Going.     See  Norwood. 

Compromise  of  Principle.  See  Against  a  Compro- 
mise of  Principle. 

"Could  I  obtain  a  hearing  of  the  young  men  and 
young  women  who  thus  seek  the  city." 

Cynic,  The.     See  Portrait  Gallery. 

Day  of  Thanksgiving,  The.  See  Family  as  an 
American  Institution,  The. 

Death  of  Lincoln,  The.     See  Abraham  Lincoln. 

Death  of  Our  Almanac,  The. 

Demagogue,  The.     See  Portrait  Gallery. 

Discourse  on  Trees,  A.     See  Walk  among  Trees,  A. 

Dishonest  Politician,  The.     See  Portrait  Gallery. 

Easter  Morning. 

England  against  War. 

Eulogy  on  General  Grant. 

Family  as  an  American  Institution,  The. 

Family  Government.  See  Plain  and  Pleasant 
Talks  about  Fruits,  Flowers,  and  Farming. 

"First  in  our  regard,  as  it  is  fir.st  in  the  whole  no- 
bility of  trees."     See  Walk  among  Trees,  A. 

Funeral  Oration  on  Abraham  Lincoln.  See  Abra- 
ham Lincoln. 

"Go  to  Work!  Nothing  is  more  salutary  to  the 
human  soul." 

God  the  Father. 

God's  Love  to  Man. 

"Health  is  nerve  and  nerve  is  man." 

"Hearts  more  or  less,  I  suppose  we  have." 

Honored  Dead,  The.  See  Tribute  to  our  Hon- 
ored Dead,  A. 

Horace  Greeley. 

"I  cannot  endure  the  thought  that  Christ's  chil- 
dren .should  be  less  free." 

Invisible  Heroes,  The.  See  Tribute  to  our  Hon- 
ored Dead,  A. 

Joys  and  Sorrows  of  Eggs. 

Little  Leaf,  The.     See  Norwood. 

Loss  of  the  Arctic. 

Love  of  Trees,  The.     See  Walk  among  Trees,  A. 

Martyr  and  the  Conqueror,  The.  See  Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Martyr  President,  The.     See  Abraham  Lincoln. 

Meaning  of  the  Flag,  The.      See  National  Flag.  The. 

Modern  Facilities  for  Evangelizing  the  World. 

Month  of  Apple  Blossoms,  The. 

Moral  Effects  of  Intemperance. 

Motion  of  the  Leaves,  The.      See  Walk    among 

National  Flag,  The. 

National  Morality. 

Nation's  Duty  to  Slavery,  The. 

Nature  Designed  for  Our  Enjoyment.  See  Popu- 
lar Amusements. 

Nature  of  Christ,  The. 

North  and  the  African,  The.  See  Nation's  Duty 
to  Slavery,  The. 

Norwood. 

Oratory. 


396 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Bennett 


Beecher,  H:  Ward  (continued). 

Our  Flag.     See  National  Flag,  The. 

Our  Honored  Dead.     See  Tribute  to  our  Honored 

Dead,  A. 
Our  National  Flag.     See  National  Flag,  The. 
Past  Perils  and  the  Perils  of  To-day. 
Plain  and  Pleasant  Talks  about  Fruits,  Flowers, 

and  Farming. 
Popular  Amusements. 
Portrait  Gallery. 

Public   Dishonesty.     See  Twelve   Causes  of  Dis- 
honesty. 
Raising  the  Flag  at  Sumpter.     See  Address  at  the 
Raising  of  the  Union  Flag  over  Fort  Sumter. 
Sepulcher  in  the  Garden.  The. 
Sermon  on  the  Death  of  Abraham  Lincoln.      See 

Abraham  Lincoln. 
Soul-building. 
Summer  Rain. 
Suppressed  Repudiation.     See  Past  Perils  and  the 

Perils  of  To-day. 
Thanksgiving  Day.     See  Family  as  an  American 

Institution,  The. 
Tommy  Taft.     See  Norwood. 
Tribute  to  our  Honored  Dead,  A. 
Twelve  Causes  of  Dishonesty. 
Twenty-third  Psalm,  The. 
Walk  among  Trees,  A. 
Wendell  Phillips. 

What  a  Little  Leaf  Said.     See  Norwood. 
"Work  proceeds  without  intermission.  The."     See 

Soul-building. 
"You  think  that  one  hour  buries  another."     See 
Soul-building. 
Beecher,  Louise  I. — -Nature  of  Man,  The. 
Beecher,  Lyman. — Appeal  to  Young  Men. 
East  and  the  West  One,  The. 
Lyman  Beecher's  First  Home. 
Traffic  in  Ardent  Spirits. 

"What  is  hell  but  an  expression  of  God's  infinite 
abhorrence  of  sin." 
Beecher,  T:  K. — ^Brother  Anderson.     See  Brother  An- 
derson's Sermon. 
Brother  Anderson's  Sermon. 
Beeching,  H:  C: — Bicycling  Song. 
Boy's  Prayer,  A.     See  Prayers. 
Gomg  Down   Hill  on   a  Bicycle.     See  Bicycling 

Song. 
Knowledge  after  Death. 
Love  Unreturned. 
Prayers. 

Summer  Day,  A. 
To  My  Totem. 
Beed,  Eve  J.— Golden  Rod,  The. 
Beede,  C:  Gould. — Maniac,  The. 

Beers,  Mrs.   Ethelinda  [Eliot]    ("Ethel  Lynn").— All 
Quiet  along  the  Potomac.     See  Picket  Guard, 
The. 
Boys,  The. 
Conflicting  Claims. 
Doorway  of  Sleep,  The. 
Kept  In. 

Not  One  to  Spare.     See  Which  Shall  it  Be? 
November  Good-night,  A. 
Old  Fashioned  Flowers. 
On  the  Shores  of  Tennessee. 
Our  Folks. 

Picket  Guard,  The.     (Wr.  at.  to  Lamar  Fontaine^) 
Return  of  the  Hillside  Legion. 
Which.     See  Which  Shall  it  Be? 
Which  Shall  it  Be? 
Beers,  H:  Augustin. — Biftek  aux  Champignons. 
Carcamon. 
Ecce  in  Deserto. 
On  a  Miniature. 
Posthumous. 
Psyche. 

Singer  of  One  Song,  The. 
Ye  Laye  of  ye  Woodpeckore. 
Begbie,  Harold. — Grounds  of  the  Terrible. 
Behn,  Mrs.  Aphra. — Abdelazer;  or.  The  Moor's  Re- 
venge. 
Dream,  The. 
Libertine,  The. 
On  the  Death  of  Waller. 

Song:   "Love   in   Fantastic  Triumph   sate."     See 
Abdelazer;  or.  The  Moor's  Revenge. 
Behrends,  Rev.  Adolphus  Julius  Frd'k. — Place  of    the 

Imagination  in  the  Art  of  Expression,  The. 
Belasco,  David. — Sue  an'  Me. 
Belaw,  Americus  Wellington.     See  Bellaw,  Americus 

Wellington. 
Belford, .—Dread  of  Death,  The. 


Belgravia. — Episode  in  the  Life  of  Miss  Tebitha  Tre- 

noodle. 
Belknap,  Hon.  C.  E.— Little  Black  Phil. 
Bell,  A.  W.— Were  it  Only  Now. 
"Bell,  Acton." — See  Bronte,  Anne. 
Bell,  Alex.  Melville. — Ask  Mamma. 
Dutchman  in  England,  A. 
Helpmate,  A. 

Orator's  First  Speech  in  Parliament,  An. 
War's  End. 
Bell,  C:  A.— Tim  Twinkleton's  Twins. 
"Bell,  Currer."     See  Bronte,  Charlotte. 
"Bell,  Ellis."     See  Bronte,  Emily. 
Bell,  Mrs.  Hattie  F.— Trundle-bed  Treasures. 
Bell,  H:  Glasford. — Mary  Queen  of  Scots. 

Uncle,  The. 
Bell,  Ida  Trafford.- Offering  for  Cuba,  An. 
Bell,  Mackenzie. — -At  Stratford-on-Avon. 

At  the  Grave  of  Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti. 
Spring's  Immortality. 
Bell,  Maurice. — Alabama,  The. 

Men,  The. 
Bell,  Olive. — Outcast's  Dream,  The. 
Bell,  Rob't  Mowry.— F(ir  Cuba. 
Second  Volume,  The. 
Tutelage,  The. 
Bellamy,  Mrs.  Blanche  [Wilder],  and  Goodwin,  Mrs. 
Maud  [Wilder]. — Ear  of  Corn,  The.     (Tr.) 
Idle  Magnet,  The.     (Tr.) 
Nine  Muses,  The. 

Seven  Wonders  of  the  World,  The. 
To   the   Fir-tree.     (Tr.) 
Woodpecker  and  the  Dove,  The.    (Tr.) 
Bellamy,  Eliz.  W. — Baby  Logic. 

Baby's  Logic.     See  Baby  Logic. 
Tilly  Bones. 
Bellaw  [wr.  Belaw],  Americus  Wellington. — Christmas 
Eve. 
Christmas-tide.     See  Christmas  Eve. 
Conjugal  Conjugations. 
Husking  Song. 
Jim. 

Knittin'  at  th'  Stockin'. 
Mitten.  The. 
Song  without  Music. 
Belloc,  Hilaire. — "Bad  Child's  Book  of  Beasts,  The," 
Introduction  to. 
Bison,   The. 
Elephant,  The. 
Frog,  The. 
Lion,  The. 

Ode  to  a  Rhinoceros. 
Python,  The. 
Yak,  The. 
Bellows,  H:  Whitney. — Public  Speech. 

Bryant,  Extract  Concerning. 
Bellows,   Isabel  Frances. — Some  of  the  Children. 
Bellows,  J.  A. — Miss  Higginson's  Will. 
Bellows,  J.  D. — ;Aunt  Jemima's  Money. 
Benedict,  Georgia. — "Queen  Anne's  Lace." 
Benedict,  Hester  A. — Good-night. 
If  Only  You  Were  Here. 
Only  a  Woman. 
Satisfied. 
Benedict,  Prof.  W.  H.    (Arr.) — Bouquet  of  Flowers,  A. 
Choosing  a  Treef 
Dedicatory  Exercises. 
Greenwood  Greetings. 
Grove  of  Curious  Trees,  A. 
Lessons  from  Nature  about  Trees. 
Plea  of  the  Trees,  The. 
Voices  of  the  Trees. 
Bengough,  J:  Wilson. — <3onstitution. 

Sir  John  A.  MacDonald. 
Benham,  Ida  W. — Little  Brown  Seed  in  the   Furrow, 

The. 
Benjamin,  C:  L. — Snow-flakes. 
Benjamin,  C:  L.,  and  Sutton,  G:  D. — Flag  that  Has 

never  Known  Defeat,  The. 
Benjamin,   Park. — Alexander  Taming  Bucephalus. 
Old  Sexton,  The. 
Press  On. 

Sexton,  The.     See  Old  Sexton,  The. 
Stormv   Petrel,   The. 
Benners,  W:  J.,  Jr. — Gloria  Bell. 

Old    Letters. 
Bennett,  Clarence. — Whip-poor- Will. 
Bennett,  H: — St.  Patrick  was  a  Gentleman. 
Bennett,  H:  Holcomb. — Flag  Goes  By,  The. 
Bennett,  J:  [or  Jack]. — Dead  Pussy-cat,  The. 
God  Bless  You,  Dear,  To-day! 
Her  Answer. 
How  the  Church  was  Built  at  Kehoe's  Bar. 


397 


Bennett 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Bennett  J:  [or  Jack]  (^continued). 

Master   Sky-lark. 

Sky-lark's  Song,  The.     See  Master  Sky-lark. 

Song  of  the  Hunt,  The.     <See  Master  Sky-lark. 

"Thust  Only  a  Dweam." 

Ye  Olde  Tyme  Tavle  of  Ye  Knighte,  Ye  Yeomanne, 
and  Ye  Faim  Damosel. 
Bennett,  Julia  M. — <^\ip  of  Water,  A. 
Bennett,    Nathaniel.— Prospects    of    California,    The. 
Bennett,  Dr.  S.  F. — Memorial  Day  Poem. 

Soldier's   Re-union. 
Bennett,  W:  Cox.— Baby  May. 

Baby's  Shoes. 

Be  Mine,  and  I  will  Give  Thy  Name. 

Cradle  Songs.     (2) 

From  India. 

Invocation  to  Rain  in  Summer.  See  Summer 
Invocation.  , 

My  Roses  Blossom  the  Whole  Year  Round. 

Rain    in    Summer.     See   Summer    Invocation. 

Summer  Invocation. 

To  a  Cricket. 

To  the  Chrysanthemum. 

Wite's  Appeal,  The. 

Winter  Song,  A. 

Worn  Wedding-ring,  The. 
Bennoch,  Fs. — My  Ain  Wife. 

My  Books. 

Small  Things. 
Beno. — Young   Statesman,   The. 
Bensel,  Jas.  Berry. — Ahmed. 

At  the  Last. 

February. 

Lines  to  a  Friend. 

One  Day. 

To  John  Boyle  O'Reilly. 
Benson,  Arthur  Christopher. — After  Construing. 

English  Shell,  An. 

Knapweed. 

Phoenix,  The. 

Realism. 
Benson,  L.  L. — "Come  unto  Me." 
Bentley's   Miscellany. — Death   of   Dr.   Morrison,   The 

Temptations  of  St.  Anthony. 
Benton,  J.  B.— First  Snow.  The. 
Benton,  Joel. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

At  Chappaqua. 

December. 

Scarlet  Tanager,  The. 
Benton,  Myron  B. — Midsummer  Invitation. 

Mowers,  The. 

"There  is  One  Spot  for  which  My  Soul  will  Yearn." 
Bdranger,  Pierre  Jean  de. — King  of  Yvetot,  The. 

Obsequies  of  David  the  Painter. 

Popular  Recollections  of  Bonaparte. 

She  is  So  Pretty. 

Song  of  the  Cossack  to  his  Horse, The. 
Bergen,  Helen  Corinne. — Even  in  Death. 
Bergengren,    Ralph   Wilhelm. — Conversion,    The. 
Berkeley,  Rt.   Rev.   G:— America.     See  On  the  Pros- 
pect of  Planting  Arts  and  Learning  in  America. 

American  Destiny.  See  On  the  Prospect  of 
Planting   Arts   and    Learning   in    America. 

Old  World  and  the  New,  The.  See  On  the  Pros- 
pect of  Planting  Arts  and  Learning  in  Amer- 
ica. 

On  the  Prospect  of  Planting  Arts  and  Learn- 
ing in  America. 

Verse:  "Westward  the  star~of  empire."  See  On 
the  Prospect  of  Planting  Arts  and  Learn- 
ing in  America. 

Westward   the   Course   of  Empire.     See   On   the 
Prospect   of   Planting  Arts   and   Learning   in 
America. 
Berlyn,  Alfred. — Avenged! 

Bernard  of  Cluny,  or  of  Morlaix. — Celestial  Country, 
The.     See  De  Contemptu  Mundi. 

De  Contemptu  Mundi. 

Jerusalem  the  Golden.     See  De  Contemptu  Mundi. 
Bernhardt,  Sarah.— Christmas  Repentance,  A.     (Re- 

pentir  de  Noel.) 
Berquin,  Amaud. — Sword,  The. 
Berry,  Eliz. — Forever. 
Berte,  Hal.— Spring  Poet,  The. 
Besant,  Sir  Walter. — To  Daphne. 
Bessemeres,  J. — Joy  of  Incompleteness,  The. 
Best,  C: — Sonnet  of  the  Moon,  A. 
Best,  Eva. — Dog  and  the  Tramp,  The,  » 

Don't  Tell. 

Sorra   the    Day. 
Best.  Susie  M. — Decoration  Day. 

Herein  is  Love. 

His  Idea  of  it. 

Hymn  for  America,  A. 


Bethune,  G:  Washington. — Blessed  Name,  The. 

Fourth  of  July. 

Future  Empire  of  Our  Language. 

Future  of  Our  Language,  'Tne.     See  Future  Em- 
pire of  Our  Language. 

Hymn  to  Nig.'it. 

"I  think  a  great  many  professors  of  religion  are 
just  like  backgammon  boards." 

It  is  not  Death  to  Die. 
Bethune,   J: — Hymn   of  the   Churchyard. 

Bettersworth, . — Bill  the  Engineer. 

Betts,  Craven  Langstroth. — Bayard  Taylor. 

Byron. 

Chaucer. 

Don  Quixote. 

Dryden. 

Emerson. 

Hollyhocks,  The. 

In  Alemorian. 

Keats. 

Longfellow. 

Milton. 

Pope. 

Shelley. 

Spenser. 

Tasso. 

To  the  Moonflower. 

Wordsworth. 
Beveridge,  Alfred  J. — America's  Mis.«!ion. 
Bevier,   Ella. — Photograph  Album,  The. 
Beza,  Theodore. — Bookworm,  The. 
Bible. — Acts  of  the  Apostles. 

Balaam's  Parables.     See  Numbers. 

Balaam's    Prophecy    in    Behalf    of    Isarel.     See 
Numbers. 

Be  not  Deceived.     See  Galatians. 

Beatitudes,  The.     See  St.  Matthew. 

"Bless  the   Lord,   O  my  soul."     See    Psalms  of 
David. 

Charity.     See  First  Corinthians. 

David  and  Goliath.     See  First  Samuel. 

Despoiler  Doomed,  The.     See  Isaiah. 

Deuteronomy. 

Ecclesiastes. 

Elijah    and    the    Prophets    of    Baal.     See    First 
Kings. 

Exhortation  to  Praise  God.     See  Psalms  of  David. 

Exodus. 

First  Civil  Code.   The,     See  Deuteronomy. 

First  Constitution,  The.     See  Exodus. 

First  Corinthians. 

First  Kings. 

First  Samuel. 

First  Timothy. 

Galatians. 

Genesis. 

Godliness    with    Contentment.     See    First    Tim- 
othy. 

Golden    Whatsoevers.     See  Philippians. 

Good  Tidings.     See  Saint  Luke. 

Great  Commandments,  The.     See  Deuteronomy. 

Ho,  Every  One  that  Thirsteth.      See  Isaiah. 

Holy   One,   The.     See   Isaiah. 

Isaiah. 

Job. 

Jojrful  Messenger,  The.     See  Isaiah. 

King   of   Glory,   The.     See   Psalms   of   David. 

Knowledge  and  Wisdom.     See  Job. 

Nation's  Strength,  A.     See  Psalms  of  David. 

Numbers. 

"O  come,  let  us  sing  imto  the  Lord."     See  Psalms 
of  David. 

Of  Idle  Words.     See  Saint  Matthew. 

Omnipotence  of  Jehovah.     See  Job. 

Paul  at  Athens.     See  Acts  of  the  Apostles. 

Paul  before  King  Agrippa.     See  Acts  of  the  Apos- 
tles. 

Paul's    Defence    before    Agrippa.     See    Acts    of 
the  Apostles. 

Paul's  Defence  before  Festus  and  Agrippa.     See 
Acts  of  the  Apostles. 

Philippians. 

Power  of  the  Tongue,  The.     See  Saint  James. 

Preventive   "No",   A.     See  Proverbs. 

Prodigal  Son,  The.     See  Saint  Luke. 

Proverbs. 

Psalms  of  David. 

Recitations    from    the    Bible.     See     Psalms    of 
David. 

Remember  now  Thy  Creator.     See  Ecclesiastes. 

Revelation,  XXII. 

Reverence.     See  Psalms  of  David. 

Saint    James. 

Saint  Luke. 


398 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Blake 


Bible  (continued). 
Saint  Matthew. 

Saul  and  Jonathan.     See  Second  Samuel. 
Scripture  Etchings  for  Arbor  Day. 
Second  Samuel. 

Solomon,  the  Wise  King.     See  Proverbs. 
Song  of  Israel.     See  Exodus. 
Song,  of  Moses.     See   Exodus. 
Song  of  Praise,  A.     See  Psalms  of  David. 
Song  of  Solomon. 

Spring  is  Coming.  See  Song  of  Solomon. 
Ten  Commandments,  The.  See  Exodus. 
Thirteenth   Chapter  of   First   Corinthians.        See 

First  Corinthians. 
Tongue,  The.     See  Saint  James. 
Tree    of  Life,  The.     See  Genesis. 
True  Wisdom.     See  Job. 
Trust  in  God.     See  Saint  Matthew. 
Twenty-third  Psalm,  The.     See  Psalms  of  David. 
Voice  "in  the  Wilderness,  The.     See  Isaiah. 
Woe  Follows  Wickedness.     See   Isaiah. 
Bible,  G:  P. — Little  Dorothy's  Sayings. 
Bice,  H.  H. — Heart's  Pictures,  The. 
Bickerstaffe,  I: — There  was  a  Jolly  Miller. 
Biddies,  Adelaide.— Flight  of  the  Gods,  The. 
Bidwell,  Marg.  J. — How  the  Revival  Came. 

Licensed  to  Sell;  or.  Little  Blossom. 
Bierce,    Ambrose. — Another   Way. 
Bride,  The. 
Creation. 

Death  of  Grant,  The. 
Montefiore. 
Presentiment. 
T.  A.  H. 
Bigelow,  J: — Bryant,   Extract  Concerning. 
Bigelow,  Walter  Storrs. — Poet's  Morn,  The. 
Bigg,  Louisa.— Child  is  Father  to  the  Man,  The. 
Biggart,    Mabelle    B.— ErI-Konig,    The.    (Arr.)     See 

Goethe,  Johann  W.  von. 
"Billings,  Josh."     See  Shaw,  H: 
Bingham,  C.  Clifton. — When. 
Bingham,  C:  D. — Building  of  the  Barn,  The. 

Too  Old  for  Father's  Kisses. 
Bingham,    Mrs.    H.    B. — Good-morning. 
Bingham,  J:  A. — Webster  the  Successor  of  Washing- 
ton. 
Bingham,  Ralph. — That  Whistle  Saved  My  Life. 

Why   Uncle   Ben   Back-slid. 
Binney,  Horace. — Responsibilities  of  a  Recommenda- 
tion of  War. 
Supreme  Court  of  the  United  States,  The. 
Binyon,   Laurence.— Invocation  to  Youth. 
O  World,  be  Nobler. 
Trafalgar  Square. 
Birch,  Frank. — "War  is  dread  when  battle  shock  and 

fierce    affray." 
Birckhead,  W:  Hunter. — Aspiration. 
Bird,  Rob't  Montgomery. — Fairy  Folk,  The. 

Spartacus  and  Jovius.  (?) 
Birdseye,  G: — Fair  Exchange.  A. 

Hmdoo    Died,    A.     See    Hindoo's    Death,     The. 

Hindoo's  Death,  The. 

Hindoo's    Paradise,    The.     See   Hindoo's    Death, 

The. 
How  Tom  Saved   the  Train. 
June    21st. 
Miser's  will,  The.     • 
Old  Valentine,  An. 
Paradise.     See  Hindoo's   Death,  The. 
Policeman's  Story,  The. 
Too  Much  of  It. 
Bisbee,   Susan   A. — Aristarchus   Studies   Elocution. 
Bishop,  Blanche. — Bride  o'   the  Sun,  The. 
Christmas  Mom. 
Winter   Flowers. 
Bishop,   Julia  Truitt. — Robert. 

Strategy  of  Dave,  The. 
Bishop,  S:— To  Mary. 

Bismarck,  Prince  Otto  von. — Orator,  The. 
Bispham,  G.  F.,  Jr. — Realm  of  Love,  The. 
Bittinger,   J.  B. — "  'Froebelism,'  or  the  Kindergarten 
system    of   education." 
"In  the  Mammoth  Cave,"  etc. 
"Bizarre." — Tale  of  the  Big  Snow,  A. 
Bjornson,    Bjornstjerne. — Tree,    The. 
Black,  Frank  Swett. — Scholar  and  the  State,  The. 
Black,   W: — Adam    O'Fintry.     See   Wise   Women   of 
Inverness,    The. 
MacLeod  of  Dare,  Sel.  fr. 
Wise  Women  of  Inverness,  The. 
Blackadder,    E : — Annapolis   Royal. 
Blackburn,  Grace. — Twilight. 
Blackburn,  T: — Easter  Hymn,  An. 
Blacker,  Lt.-Col.  Valentine  (?). — Oliver's  Advice. 


Black  Hawk. — Speech  of  Black  Hawk. 
Blackie,  J:  Stuart.— Beautiful  World. 
Emigrant  Lassie,  The. 
Lay  of  the  Brave  Cameron,  The. 
Musical  Frogs,  The. 
My  Bath. 
Royal  Saint,  The. 
To  the  Memory  of  Sydney  Dobell. 
Workingman's  Song,  The. 
Blackmore,  R:  Doddridge. — Death  of  Carver  Doone. 
See  Lorna  Doone. 
Harvest  Song,  A.     See  Lorna  Doone. 
Lorna  Doone. 

October  Morning,  An.     See  Lorna  Doone. 
Reunited    Love. 

Snow-storm,  The.       See  Lorna  Doone. 
"Yes." 
Blackstone,  Sir  W: — Lawyer's  Farewell  to  His  Muse, 

The. 
Blackwood's  Magazine. — Autumn. 
Dramatic  Styles. 
Fragments. 

"Great,  indeed  is  the  task  assigned  to  woman." 
Little  Rose. 
Optimism. 
Pessimism. 
Roger  and   Dolly. 
"These    loving    eyes    may    never    more    behold 

thee." 
Victim   of  Reform,  The. 
What  Is  Life? 
Blades  and  Flowers. — Pigeon  House,  The. 
Blaikie,  J:  Arthur. — Absence. 
Love's  Secret  Name. 
Soldier,   A. 

Song:  "In  thy  white  bosom  love  is  laid." 
Blaine,   Jas.    Gillespie. — American   Shipbuilding.     See 
Encouragement  to  American  Ship-building  and 
the   Revival   of  American   Commerce   on   the 
Ocean. 
Amnesty    of    Jefferson    Davis,    The.     See    Shall 
Jefferson    Davis  be   Restored  to  Full  Citizen- 
ship? 
Can   the   Country    Sustain   the   Expense   of   the 
War  and  Pay  the  Debt  which  it  will  Involve? 
Chinese  Immigration  [to  the  Pacific  Slope]. 
Death  of  Garfield.     See  Memorial  Address  on  the 

Life  and  Character  of  James  A.  Garfield. 
Elements  of  National  Wealth,  The.     See  Can  the 
Country  Sustain  the  Expense  of  the  War  and 
Pay  the  Debt  which  it  will  Involve? 
Encouragement   to   American   Ship-building   and 
the   Revival   of  American  Commerce   on   the 
Ocean. 
Eulogy  on  Garfield.     See  Memorial  Address  on  the 

Life  and  Character  of  James  A.  Garfield. 
Eulogy    on    President    Garfield.     See    Memorial 
Address  on  the  Life  and  Character  of  James  A. 
Garfield. 
Garfield's  Early  Life.     See  Memorial  Address  on 
the  Life  and  Character  of  James  A.  Garfield. 
Independence  Day. 
Memorial  Address  on  the  Life  and  Character  of 

James  A.  Garfield. 
Memorial   Services   in   Honor   of   General    Grant 

in  Augusta,  Maine,  Aug.  8.  1885. 
New    England    Character.     See    Speech    at    the 
Dinner  of  the  New  England  Society  of  New 
York. 
Oration    on    James    A.    Garfield.     See   Memorial 
Address  on  the  Life  and  Character  of  James  A. 
Garfield. 
Permanence  of  Grant's  Fame,  The.     See  Memo- 
rial Services  in  Honor  of  General  Grant. 
Shall  Jefferson  Davis  be  Restored  to  Full  Citizen- 
ship? 
Speech  at  the  Dinner  of  the  New  England  So- 
ciety of  New  York. 
Blair,    Dr.    Hugh. — Difference    between    Taste    and 
Genius. 
Taste  and  Genius.     See  Difference  between  Taste 
and  Genius. 
Blair,    Rob't. — Grave,    The. 

Omnes   Eodem    Cogimur.     See   Grave,    The. 
Pride.     See   Grave,    The. 
Resurrection,  The.     See  Grave,  The. 
Self-murder.     See  Grave,  The. 
Blaisdell,  Hosea  Q. — Sometime. 
Blake,  Emilia  Aylmer. — Alice  Ayres. 
Glacier-bed,  The. 
Juryman's  Story,  A. 
Blake,  H.  G.  —  Friar's  Christmas,  The. 
Blake,  J.  K.— Flight  of  Time,  The. 
Blake,  Jas.  Vila.— Wedded. 


399 


Blake 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Blake,  Mary  Eliz. — Dawning  o'   the  Year,  The. 

Equinoctial,  The. 

Women   of   the   Revolution. 
Blake,   Nelson. — Centennial  Speech. 
Blake,  W:— Ah,  Sunflower. 

"And   I   made   a   rural   pen."     See   Introduction 
to  "Songs  9f  Innocence." 

Angel,  The. 

Beauty  of  Terror,  The.      See  Tiger,  The. 

Charity  Children  at  St.  Paul's.     See  Holy  Thurs- 
day. 

Child  and  the  Piper,  The.     iSee  Introduction  to 
"Songs  of  Innocence." 

Chimney-sweeper,  The. 

Cradle  Song. 

Echoing  Green,  The. 

Fair  Eleanor. 

Garden  of  Love,  The. 

Hear  the  Voice.     See  Introduction  to  "Songs  of 
Experience." 

Holy    Thursday. 

I  Heard  an  Angel.     See  Two  Songs,  The. 

Infant  Joy. 

Introduction  to  "Songs  of  Experience." 

Introduction  to  "Songs  of  Innocence." 

Lamb,   The. 

Laughing  Song[,  AT. 

Little  Black  Boy,  The. 

Little  Boy  Lost,  A. 

Little  Lamb.     See  Lamb,  The. 

Little  Vagabond,  The. 

Love's  Secret. 

Mad  Song. 

My  Silks  and  Fine  Array.     See  Song:  "My  silks," 
etc. 

Night. 

Nurse's  Song. 

On   Another's   Sorrow. 

Orthodoxy.     See  Little  Boy  Lost,  A. 

Piper,.  The. 

Piping  down  the  Valleys  Wild.      See  Introduc- 
tion to  "Songs  of  Innocence." 

Reeds  of  Innocence.     See  Introduction  to  "Songs 
of   Innocence." 

Shepherd,  The. 

Song:  "How  sweet  I  roamed  from  field  to  field." 

Song:  "Memory,  hither  come." 

Song:  "My  silks  and  fine  array." 

Sun  Descending,  The.     See  Night. 

Sunflower,  The.     See  Ah,  Sunflower. 

Tiger,  The. 

To   Spring. 

To  the  Evening  Star. 

To  the  Muses. 

Two  Songs,  The. 
Blakeslee,  Mrs.  H.  C. — Start  True. 
Blamire,   Susanna. — Nabob,   The. 

Siller  Croun,  The. 

What  Ails  this  Heart  o'  Mine? 
Blanchard,    Amy    Ella. — Kittyboy's    Christmas. 

Rest. 
Blanchard,     Laman. — Art     of     Book-keeping, 
(Another  vers.  at.  to  T:  Hood.) 

False  Love  and  True  Logic. 

Hidden  Joys. 

Mother's   Hope,   The. 

Nell   Gwynne's   Looking-glass. 

Ode  to  the  Human  Heart. 
Blanchard,   Mary   E. — Glance    Backward,   A. 
Bland,  Mrs.  Edith  [Nesbit]  (Mrs.  Hubert  Bland- 
Nesbit"). — Absolution. 

Baby  Seed  Song. 

Ballad  of  a  Bridal. 

Ballad   of  Splendid   Silence,   The. 

Child's   Song   in    Spring 

Message   of   the   Dove,   The. 

Monk's  Magnificat,  The. 

See  Singing  of  the  Magnificat,  The. 

On  the  Terrace. 

Singing  of  the  Magnificat,  The. 

SleeD,  My  Treasure. 

Trafalgar   Day. 

Two   Christmas   Eves. 

Unofficial. 
Bland,  Rob't.  (Tr.) — Home.     See  Leonidas. 
Blanden,  C:  Granger. — Afterglow. 

Time  May  Steal  the  Dewy  Bloom. 
Blatchford,  P.  L.— Vision  of  Handel,  The. 
Bleakie,  Rob't. — Old  Home  and  the  New,  The. 
Blew,  W:  J: — O  Lord,  Thy  Wing  Outspread. 
Blewett,    Mrs.   Jean. — At   Quebec. 

Boy  of  the  House,  The. 

She  just  Keens  House  for  Me. 

Two  Marys,  The. 


The. 


'E. 


Bleyer,  J.  Mount.— Death  of  Poe's  Wife,  The. 
Bleyer,  Willard  Grosvenor. — Banjo  Fiend,  The. 

Miss  Milly  O'Naire. 
Blind,    Mathilde.— Dead,    The. 

Love  in   Exile, 

Love    Trilogy,    A. 
Blinkerhausen,  Nathan. — Touching  Appeal,   A. 
Blinn,  Mrs.  Lucy  Marion. — Dream  Peddler,  The. 

Land  of  Nod,  The. 

Little  Mary's  Wish. 

Nutting. 

Poorhouse    Nan. 

Rizpah. 
Block,  L:  Jas. — Fate. 

Garden  where  there  is  no  Winter,  The. 

Tuberose. 

Work. 
Blodgett,  Harriet  F. — Days  and  the  Year,  The. 
Bloede,  Gertrude  ("Stuart  Sterne"). — Angelo. 

My  Father's  Child. 

Night  after  Night. 

Piero  De  Castiglione,  Song  from. 

Song  of  Manila,  The. 

Soul,   Wherefore   Fret   Thee? 
Blood,  H:  Ames. — Comrades. 

Fighting  Parson,  The. 

Last  Visitor,  The. 

Pro   Mortuis. 

Shakespeare. 
Bloomfield,  Rob't. — Abner  and  the  Widow  Jones, 

Fakenham  Ghost,  The. 

Farmer's  Boy,  The. 

Lambs  at  Play. 

Moonlight  in  Summer. 

Soldier's   Return,   The. 
Bloomingdale,  C:,  Jr. — -Every-day  Case,  An.     See  Mr., 
Miss,  and  Mrs. 

Mr.,  Miss,  and  Mrs. 
Blount,  Annie  R. — Revenge. 

Under  the  Lamplight. 
Blount,  E:  A:,  Jr.- — Crew  Poem,  A. 

Stranger  on  the  Stand,  The. 

"When?" 
Blow,  J.  H. — Maiden  Husking  Corn,  The. 
Blunt,  Wilfrid  Scawen.— Desolate  City,  The. 

Gibraltar. 

Laughter   and   Death. 

Oasis  of  Sidi   Khaled,  The. 

Old   Squire,   The. 

St.   Valentine's  Day. 

Song: — "O    fly    not.    Pleasure,    pleasant-hearted 
Pleasure." 

To  Manon,  Comparing  her  to  a  Falcon. 

To  Manon,  on  his  Fortune  in  Loving  her. 

To  Manon  on  Her  Lightheartedness. 

To    One    Excusing   his   Poverty. 

To  One  who  woiild  Make  a  Confession. 

Two  Highwaymen,  The. 

With    Esther. 

Written   at   Florence. 
Boar,   Arthur. — Breeding  Lark. 

Boardman,  Rev.  H:  A: — Our  Responsibility  as  a  Na- 
tion. 

"There  is  an  apostolical  succession." 
"Bob  O'Link." — -Almost  a  Tragedy. 

Brag. 

Caught  in  Their  Own  Ti-ap. 

Close  Shave,  A. 

Epilogues.    (.3) 

Give  and  Take. 

Golden  Rule,  The. 

How   to   Woo. 

Johnny's    Advice. 

Prologues.    (.3) 

War  of  the  Months,  The. 

Which  Shall  it   Be. 
Boccaccio,     Giovanni,      di      Certaldo.  —  Decameron, 
The. 

Description   of   the   Golden  Age.      See   Falls   of 
Princes. 

Falls  of  Princes. 

Patient  Griselda.     See  Decameron,  The. 

Of   Three   Girls   and    their   Talk. 
Bocock,   J;   Paul. — Twinkles. 

Twins    in    the    Turret,    The. 

Washington.     See    Twinkles. 
Bogart,    Eliz.  ("Estelle").— Chosen    Tree,    The. 

He  Came   too  Late. 

Unknown    Hero,    An. 

Bohne,   Mrs. . — How  Do  I  Look? 

Boker,  G:  H: — Attack  of  the  Cumberland.     See  On 
Board    the    "Cumberland." 

Ballad  of  Sir  John   Franklin,  A. 

Battle  of  Lookout  Mountain,  The. 


400 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Bourdillon 


Boker,  G:  H:  (continued). 

Before    Vicksburg. 

Black  Regiment,  The. 

Count  Candespina's  Standard. 

Countess   Laura. 

Dirge  for  a  [wr.  the]  Soldier. 

Elisha  Kent  Kane. 

Ferry,   The. 

Francesca  da   Rimini. 

Hooker's  Across. 

On   Board   the   "Cumberland." 

Prince   Adeb. 

Sir  John  Franklin.    See  Ballad  of  Sir  John  Franklin. 

Summer  Morning. 

Sword-bearer,  The. 

To   America. 

To  Andrew  Jackson. 

To  Bryant  on  His  Birthday. 

To  England. 

To  Louis  Napoleon. 

To    My    Lady. 

Upon  the  hill  before  Centreville. 

"Varuna,"  The. 

Yearly  Miracle   of  Spring,   The. 

"Yield,    madman,    yield!    Thy    horse    is    down." 
Boleyn,  Anne. — Lament  of  Anne  Boleyn  on  the  Eve 

of   Her   Execution. 
BoUes,  Frank. — Oven-bird,  The. 
Bolton,  C:   Knowles. — Charybdis. 
Bolton,  Edmund. — Palinode,  A. 
Bolton,    Rev.    H.    W. — Lincoln,    the   Tender-hearted. 

Our   Constitution.      ,« 
Bolton,   Mrs.   Sarah  [Krfowles]. — Early   Work. 

Her  Creed. 

Inevitable,  The. 

Look    Up. 

My    Robin. 

"O  glorious  Easter  morning!" 

One    Face. 
Bolton,    Mrs.    Sarah    Tittle    [Barritt]. — Left    on    the 
Battle-field. 

News  of  a  [or  the]  Day[,  The]. 

Paddle  Your  Own  Canoe. 
Bonaparte,  Napoleon.     See  Napoleon  I. 
Bonar,  Horatius. — Abide  with  Us. 

All's  [wr.  AU]  Well. 

"Bathed  in  unfallen  sunlight."       See  New    Jeru- 
salem, The. 

Be  True. 

Beyond  the  Smiling  and  the  Weeping.     See  Little 
While,  A. 

"Come  unto  Me."     See  Voice  from  Galilee,  The. 

Everlasting  Memorial,   The. 

Gain  of  Loss,  The. 

God's   Hand.     See  Master's  Touch,   The. 

Good  Life,  A.     See  He  Liveth  Long  who  Liveth 
Well. 

He  Liveth  Long  who  Liveth  Well. 

Hold  Thou  Me. 

How  to  Live.     See  He  Liveth  Long  who  Liveth 
Well. 

How  we   Learn. 

Inner  Calm,  The. 

Life  from   Death.     See  Through  Death  to  Life. 

Little  While,  A. 

Lost  but  Found. 

Master's   Touch,   The. 

Meeting-place,   The. 

"More  in  the  garden  grows  than  what  is  sown." 

New  Jerusalem,  The. 

Not  Very  Far. 

Perseverance.     See  Useful  Life,  The. 

Price  of  Truth,  The.     See  How  we  Learn. 

Through  Death  to  Life. 

Thy  Way,  Not  Mine. 

True   Teaching.     See  Be  True. 

Unto  Thee. 

Useful  Life,  The. 

Voice  from  Galilee,  The. 

Watch  Night. 

We   Shall   Meet   and   Rest.       See  Meeting-place, 
The. 
Bonde,  Dudley  L:— Was  I  To  Blame? 
Boner,  J:  H: — Light'ood  Fire,  The. 

Poe's  Cottage  at  Fordham. 

Remembrance. 

We  Walked  among  the  Whispering  Pines. 
Bonfield,  J.  W. — ^(^uackery. 

Widow  Muggins — Her  Opinions  of  Cooks,  Suitors 
and  Husbands,  The. 
Bonney,  C:  Carroll. — "And  the  newspaper  is  also  the 
great    agency    of    progress    in    all    reforms." 

"Chief  agency  in  the  progress  and   development 
of  the  law.  The." 


Bonney,  C:  CarroU  (continued). 

"Law  is  more  than  a  great  river,  rising  in  the 
far  off  mountains.  The." 

"Modern  newspaper  is  not  merely  a  private  enter- 
prise, The." 
Booth,  Barton. — Song:  "True  as  the  needle  to  the  pole." 

Sweet  are  the  Charms. 
Booth,  Helen. — After  Twenty  Years. 

At  the  "Red  Lion." 

Electric  Episode,  An. 

Fifty-dollar  Milliner's  Bill,  A. 

Hostage,  The. 

Little   Sister  of  Mercy,  The. 

Old  Organ,  The. 

Renyi. 

Rose  of  Avondale,  The. 

Sword,  The. 
Booth,  Newton.   — Love  of  Country. 
Borden,  Anne. — How  Paul  Won  His  Goat. 
Borrow,  G:  (Tr.) — Svend  Vonved. 
Boss,  J: — Wakin'  the  Young  Uns. 
Bossuet,  Jaques  Benigne. — Eulogium  upon  St.  Paul. 
Boston  Budget. — Saint  Nick. 
Boston  Courier. — Climax,  The. 

Delsartean  Plea,  A. 

Rural    Remonstrance,    A. 

Worse   than   Marriage. 
Boston  Cultivator. — Heart  Ventures.     See  Sad  Ventures. 

Sad  Ventures. 

Sea  Ventures.     See  Sad  Ventures. 
Boston  Gazette — "Agar,"  The. 
Boston  Globe. — Freckled-faced  Girl,  The. 

One   Cent   and   Costs. 

Startling  Revelations.     See   Freckled-faced    Girl, 
The. 

What    the    Little  Girl  Said.     See  Freckled-faced 
Girl,   The. 

When  Sam'wel  led  the  Singin'. 
Boston  Herald. — Bachelor's  Pipe,  A. 
Boston  Journal. — American  to  His  Mother,  An. 
Boston  Pilot. — Legend,  A.     See  Monk's  Vision,  The. 

Monk's  Vision,  The. 

True  Artist,  The.     See  Monk's  Vision,  The. 
Boston  Post. — Expecting  to  Gtet  Even. 

Who  Did  It? 
Boston  Transcript. — Bachelor  Coat,  The. 

Garfield  at  Chattanooga. 

Grandpa  and  Baby. 

Jimmie's  Prayer. 

Prayer  for  the  Nation. 

So  She  Refused  Him. 

Value  of  Education,  The. 
Bostwick,  Mrs.  Helen  Louise  [Barron]. — Drafted. 

How  the  Gates  Came  Ajar.     (Tr.) 

King's  Picture,  The. 

Little  Dandelion. 

Mrs.  Walker's  Betsey. 

Urvasi. 
Botsford,  Amelia  H. — Little  Carl. 
Botta,  Mrs.  Anne  Charlotte  [Ljrnch]. — Faith. 

Go  forth  in  Life  not  Seeking  Love. 

Hidden  Sweets. 

In  the  Library.     See  Thoughts  in  a  Library. 

On  a  Picture. 

Sonnet:   "The   honey-bee    that   wanders   all   day 
long."     See  Hidden  Sweets. 

Thoughts  in  a  Library. 

To  the  Memory  of  Channing. 
Boucicault,    Dion. — Conn's    Description    of    the    Fox 
Hunt.     See  Shaugraun,  The. 

"I'm  very  happy  where  I  am." 

LadylGay  Spanker.     See  London  Assurance. 

London  Assurance. 

O'Kelly  Cabin,  The.     See  Shaugraun.  The. 

"Oolaghaun,"  The.     See  Shaugraun,  The. 

Shaugraun,  The. 

Tailor's  Thimble,  The.     See  Shaugraun,  The. 
Boulmier,  Jos. — Old  Books,  Fresh  Flowers. 
Bourchier,    M. — Bridget    O'Flannagap    on    Christian 

Science  and  Cockroaches. 
Bourdillon,  Fs.  W:— At  Sea. 

Eurydice. 

Light.     See  Night  Has  a  Thousand  Eyes,  The. 

Lost  Legend,  A. 

Lost  Voice,  A. 

Love's  Meinie. 

Night  Has  a  Thousand  Eyes,  The. 

"O!  winter  twilight,  while  the  moon." 

Old  and  Young. 

Outwards  or  Homewards.     See  Patience. 

Patience. 

Two  Robbers. 

Violinist,  A. 

Where  Runs  the  River. 


401 


Bourke 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Bourke,  W.  P. — When  My  Cousin  Comes  to  Town. 
Bourne,  Vincent. — Cricket,  The.     (Tr.  by  W:  Cowper.) 
Housekeeper,  The. 
Snail,  The. 
Bourne,  W.  O.— Heart's  Fine  Gold,  The. 
Boutelle,  Mary  Keeley. — Grandmother  Gray. 
Bouton,  Eliz. — Woo^and  Lesson,  The. 
Bouv^,  T:  Tracy. — 'Shannon"  and  the  "Chesapeake," 

The. 
Bowditch,  Nathaniel  Ingersoll. — World  Beyond,  A 
Bowdoin  Orient. — Rosebuds. 
Bowdoin  Quill. — -Witches'  Town. 
Bo  wen,  C:,  Lord. — Good-night,  Good-moming. 
Bowen,  E: — Forty  Years  Ago. 

Shemuel. 
Bowen,  J:  Eliot. — Man  who  Rode  to  Conemaugh,  The. 
Bower,  A.  V. — Whims. 
Bowker,  R:  Rogers. — Thomas  h  Kempis  [:  De  Imita- 

tione  Christi]. 
Bowles,    Caroline.       <See    Southet,    Mrs.    Caroline 

[Bowles]. 
Bowles,  W:  Lisle. — Bereavement. 

Come  to  These  Scenes  of  Peace. 

Greenwood,  The. 

Influence  of  Time  on  Grief.     See  To  Time. 

November,  1793. 

On  the  Funeral  of  Charles  the  First[,  at  Night,  in 
St.  George's  Chapel,  Windsor]. 

On  the  Rhine. 

Time  and  Grief.     See  To  Time. 

To  Time. 

Written  at  Ostend. 
Bowman,  Harold  Martin. — Our  Scarlet  King. 

Sotto  Voce. 
Bowman,  Isabel  B. — Portrait,  The. 
Bowne,  P.  H.— Soft  Guitar,  The. 

Bowring,    Sir   J: — From    the    Recesses   [of    a    Lowly 
Spirit]. 

God.     (TV.) 

God  is  Love. 

"Grateful  to  Drink  Life's  Cup.     See  Our   Duty 
Here. 

In  the  Cross  of  Christ  I  Glory. 

"Look  above  thee — never  eye." 

Nightingale.  The.     (Tr.) 

Ode  to  the  Deity.     See  God. 

Our  Duty  Here. 

Watchman,  Tell  us  of  the  Night.     See  Watchman's 
Report,  The. 

Watchman's  Report,  The. 

What  of  the  Night?     See  Watchman's  Report,  The. 
Boyd,  Mrs.  Louise  E.  V. — Columbus  at  the  Court  of 
Spain. 

Fairy  Queen's  Decision,  The. 

Four  Seasons,  The. 

Management;  or.  The  Folly  of  Fashion. 

Memory  and  Hope. 

Night  and  Morning. 

Old  Heads  on  Young  Shoulders. 

Picture  of  the  Last  Supper. 

Rose  and  a  Thorn,  A. 

Two  Dolls,  The. 

Wopsenonic. 
Boyd,  Mark  Alex. — Sonnet:  "Fra  bank  to  bank,  fra 

wood  to  wood  I  rin." 
Boyd,  T:— King's  Son.  The. 

To  the  Lean&n  Sidhe. 
Boyesen,  Hjalmar  Hjorth.     Brier-rose. 

Calpurnia. 

Earl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve.     See  Jarl  Sigurd's 
Christmas  Eve. 

Gunnar. 

Hilda's  Little  Hood. 

Ing^,  the  Boy-king. 

Jarl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve. 

Little  Sigrid. 

Skee-race,  The.     See  Gunnar. 

Thora. 

Thoralf  and  Synnov. 
Boylan,    .     Don    Carlos.     (Tr.)     See    Schiller, 

JOHANN  FrIEDRICH  VON. 

Boylan,  Mrs.  Grace  [DuflSe]. — By  and  By. 

Vines  of  Memory. 
Boyle,  Mrs.  Sarah  [Roberts]. — Voice  of  the  Grass,  The. 

Song  of  the  Grass,  The.    See  Voice  of  the  Grass,  The. 
Boyne,  H.  A. — Antonina. 
Boynton,  J.  H. — Eleanor. 

Boy's  Oton  Paper,  The. — Golden  Rules  for  the  Young. 
Bracken,  T: — Not  Understood. 
Brackett,  A.  E. — New  Theory  of  Frost;  or,  The  Story 

of  the  Frost-king. 
Brackett,  Anna  Callender. — Benedicite. 

In  Hades. 
Brackett,  J.  Q.  A. — Pilgrim  Monument,  The. 


Brackett,  S.  C— Place  of  Love,  The. 
Bradbury,  B.  W.— Chide  Mildly  the  Erring. 
Bradbury,  Mrs.  L.  A. — Christmas  Pastime,  A;  or.  The 
Crying  Family. 

Long  Ago. 

My  Country. 

Seed-time. 

Seeing  Santa  Claus. 
Bradbury,  W:  B. — Marching  Along. 
BraiddocK,  Emily  A. — -Burghers  of  Calais,  The. 

Choosing  a  Building  Spot. 

Regulus. 
Braddon,  Mary  E. — After  the  Battle. 

"Man  cannot  choose  his  own  life.  A." 
Braden,  Mrs.  Findley. — Convention  of  Realistic  Read- 
ers. 

Fence  o'  Scripture  Faith,  The. 

Thae  Auld  Laird's  Secret. 

What  the  Lord  Had  Done  for  Him. 
Bradford,  E.  E. — Love  is  Forever. 
Bradford,  Ellen    Knight. — How    the    Refugees    were 

Saved. 
Bradford,  May  N.— U.  S.  Spells  "Us." 
Bradley,  A.— Cruel  Maid,  The. 
Bradley,  A.  F. — Arcadian  Club,  The;  or.  Theory  versus 

Bridal  Wine  Cup,  The.     (Dram.)     See  Long,  F.C. 

Changing  the  Hundred  Dollar  Note ;  or.  False  Pre- 
tensions Rebuked. 

Premature  Proposal,  The.     (Dram.) 

Troublesome  Investment,  The. 
Bradley,  Alice.     ("Cousin  Alice.")     See  Haven,  Mrs. 

Alice  [Bradley]  [Neal]. 
Bradley,  Kate  A.- — How  the  Organ  was  Paid  For. 

King's  Joy-bells,  The. 
Bradley,  Mrs.  Mary  Emily  [Neeley]. ^Beyond  Recall. 

Boy  and  Girl. 

Chrysalis,  A. 

Frost  Work. 

Hearts'-ease. 

In  Death. 

Little  Christel. 

Pansy.     See  Hearts'-ease. 

Prince's  Feather. 

Reason  Why,  The. 

Spray  of  Honeysuckle,  A. 

"Uncle  Ben."  .    . 

Bradley,  S.  F.  Kent.— Hands  Drop  Off,— the  Work  Goes 

On,  The. 
Bradley,  W.  A.— "Beauty  of  St.  Giles,  A." 
Bradnack,  Fowler.     See  Brannock,  Fowler. 
Bradner,  Clara  H. — Air  Castles. 
Bradstreet,  Mrs.  Anne  [Dudley]. — Contemplations. 

Four  Ages  of  Man,  The. 
Bradt,  Edith  Virginia.— As  Ye  Would. 
Brady,  N: — See  Tate,  Nahum. 

Braidon,  Nettie  V. — Wish  Dearer  than  the  Crown,  The. 
Brainard,  J:  Gardiner  Calkins. — Captain,  "The. 

Deep,  The. 

Epithalamium. 

Fall  of  Niagara,  The.     See  Niagara. 

I   Saw  Two   Clouds   at    Morning.      See    Epitha- 
lamium. 

Mr.  Merry's  Lament  for  "Long  Tom." 

Niagara. 

Sweetbrier,  The. 

To  a  Friend.     See  Epithalamium. 
Brainard,  Mary  Gardiner. — God  Knoweth.     (Wr.  at.  to 
Mary  A.  Bridgman.)     See  Not  Knowing. 

Not  Knowing. 
Brainerd,  Mary  Beale. — Her  Laddie's  Picture. 
Branch,  Anna  Hempstead. — Foreign  Tongue,  A. 

Wealth. 
Branch,  J.  O. — Personal  Influence. 
Branch,  Afr«.  Mary  Lydia  [BoUes].— Petrified  Fern,  The. 
Brandon  Banner. — Coming  from  the  Picnic. 
Brannock,  Fowler. — Mysterious  Guest,  The. 
Branson,  G: — Room  at  the  Top. 
Breckenridge,  Hugh  H :— Revolutionary  Sermon,  A. 
Breckenridge,  J: — Troubadour,  to  the  Captive  Richard 

Cceur  de  Lion,  The. 
Breckenridge,  W:  C.  P. — In  the  Name  of  God.  Amen. 
Brehm,  Marie  C. — Why  Woman  Wants  the  Ballot. 
"Breitmann,  Hans." — See  Leland,  C:  Godfrey. 
Bremer,  Frederika. — Heavenly  Dove,  The. 

Little  Brawl,  A. — See  Strife  and  Peace. 

Mother's  Hymn.     See  Heavenly  Dove,  The. 

"One  there  is  who  has  silently  advanced  through 
time  from  the  beginning." 

Strife  and  Peace. 

Swedish  Mother's  Hymn.   See  Heavenly  Dove,  The. 

"Think  on  thy  wants,  on  thy  faults." 
Brennan  for  Brenan],  Jos. — Come  to  Me,  Dearest. 

Exile  to  His  Wife,  The.     See  Come  to  Me,  Dearest. 


402 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Brooks 


Breton,  N: — Cradle  Song,  A. 

Hymn: — "When  the  angels  all  are  singing." 

I  Would  I  were  an  Excellent  Divine.  % 

I  Would  Thou  Wert  not  Fair.     See  Strange  For- 
tunes of  Two  Excellent  Princes,  The. 

Longing  of  a  Blessed  Heart,  The. 

Lovely  Kind,  and  Kindly  Loving. 

Olden  Love-making. 

Passionate  Shepherd,  The. 

Pastoral,  A. 

Phillida  and  Corydon  \or  Coridon]. 

Phillis  the  Fair.     See  Pastoral,  A. 

Priest,  The.     See  "I  would  I  were  an  excellent 
divine." 

Second  Pastor's  Song,  The.     See  Passionate  Shep- 
herd, The. 

Strange  Fortunes  of  Two  Excellent  Princes,   The. 

Sweet  Lullaby,  A.     See  Cradle  Song,  A. 

Sweet  Pastoral,  A. 

Third  Pastor's  Song,  The.     See  Passionate  Shep- 
herd, The. 

What  is  Love?     See  Longing  of  a  Blessed  Heart, 
The. 
Brewer,  — — . — Little  Drops  of  Water. '    (,Wr.  at.)    See 

Carney,  Julia  A.  T. 
Brewer,  Dan'l  Chauncey. — Discouraging. 

Dreams:  On  the  Hunting-ground. 

Intrusion,  An. 

Inviting. 

Softly  the  Evening  Shadows. 
Brewer,  D:  Josiah. — Two  Voices. 
Brewer,  Harriet. — Carol,  A:  Standard  of  the  Cross. 

Counting. 
Brewer,  Layton. — Terrible  Example,  A. 

Traced. 
Brewster,  Emma  E. ^Jane's  Legacy. 

Lost  and  Found. 

My  Sister's  Husband. 
"Bridges,  Madeline."     See  De  Vere,  Mary  Ainge. 
Bridges,  Rob't  ("Droch"). — At  the  Farragut  Statue. 

Diana's  Valentine. 

James  McCosh. 

"Unillumined  Verge,  The." 
Bridges,  Rob't  Seymour. — Absence. 

Asian  Birds. 

Awake,  My  Heart! 

Elegy. 

I  Will  not  Let  Thee  Go. 

My  Delight  and  Thy  Delight. 

Nightingales. 

O  Youth  whose  Hope  is  High. 

On  a  Dead  Child. 

Passer-by,  A. 

Pater  Filio. 

Poor  Withered  Rose. 

So  Sweet  Love  Seemed. 

Soirits. 

Thou  Didst  Delight  My  Eyes. 

Upon  the  Shore. 

When  Death  to  Either  shall  come. 

Winter  Nightfall. 
Bridgman,  Mary  A.— God  Knoweth.     (Wr.  at.)     See 

Brainard,  Mary  G. 
Briggs,  Caroline  A.     See  Mason,  Mrs.  Caroline  Ath- 

ERTON. 

Bright,  J: — American  Government,  The.     See  Strength 
of  the  American  Government,  The. 

Appeal  to  the  People,  An. 

Civil  War  in  America,  The. 

England's  True  Greatness.     See  Foreign  Policy. 

Foreign  Policy. 

Greatness  Based  on  Morality.     See  Foreign  Policy. 

Moral  Law  for  Nations. 

National  Greatness.     See  Foreign  Policy. 

On  the  Civil  War  in  America. 

Strength  of  the  American  Government,  The. 

Suspension  of  the  Habeas  Corpus  Act. 

Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. 
Bright,  Canon  W: — Crowned  and  Discrowned. 
Brine,  Mary  D[ow]  [Northam]. — Christmas  Bells. 

Home  Concert,  The. 

"Prettiest  Girl,  The." 

Queer  Fish  They  Caught,  The. 

"Right  about  Face." 

Total  Annihilation. 

Valentine,  The. 
Bristol,  Mrs.    Augusta  [Cooper]. — Pyxidanthera,  The. 
Bristol,  Frank  Milton. — His  Choice  and  His  Destiny. 
Bristol,  T:  Digby,  Earl  o/.— Elvira. 

Song:  "See,  O  see!  how  every  tree."     See  Elvira. 
Brittle,  Gath. — "It  war  Crackit  Afore." 
Brobeck,  Jos. — Choosing  a  "State  Tree^" — The  Oak. 

Oak,  The.     See  Choosing  a  "State  Tree." 
Brock,  Sallie  A.     See  Putnam.  Mrs.  Sarah  A.  [Brock]. 


Brodhead,  Mrs.  Eva  Wilder  [McGlasson]. — Content- 
ment. 

Daguerreotype,  The. 

In  the  Spring. 

Ingin  Summer.' 

Jinny. 

Mirandy. 

Supposm'. 
Brodie,  Erasmus  H. — Keats. 
Brome,  Alex. — Resolve,  The. 
Brome,  R: — Jovial  Crew,  A. 

Merry  Beggars,  The.     See  Jovial  Crew,  A. 
Bromley,  I:  H. — -Big  Trees  and  the  Yosemite,  The. 

Fallen   Monarch,   The.     See   Big   Trees   and    the 
Yosemite,  The. 
Bronson,  Carrie  E. — Turning. 

Bronson,  Carrie  W. — Golden-rod.     See  Lady   Golden- 
rod. 

Lady  Golden-rod. 

What  Bessie  Saw. 
Bronson,  Laura  M. — Essay  on  Necks.     See  Necks — a 
Boy's  Composition. 

Necks — a  Boy's  Composition. 
Bronson,  Nellie  G. — Who  Knows  the  Most? 
Bronte,  Anne  ("Acton  Bell"). — Prayer,  A. 
Bronte,  Charlotte  ("Currer  Bell"). — Good  Cheer.    See 
Life. 

Life. 

"Life  appears  to  me   too  short  to  be  spent    in 
nursing  animosity  or  registering  wrongs." 
Brontt',  Emily  ("Ellis  Bell"). — T)eath-scene,  A. 

Her  Last  Lines. 

Hymn:  "No  Coward  Soul  is  Mine."     See  Her  Last 
Lines. 

Last  Lines.     See  Her  Last  Lines. 

My  Lady's  Grave.     See  Song:  "The  linnet  in  the 
rocky  dells." 

Old  Stoic,  The. 

Prisoner,  The. 

Remembrance. 

Song:  "The  linnet  in  the  rocky  dells." 

Stanzas:  "Often  rebuked,  yet  always  back  return- 
ing." 

Warning  and  Reply. 
Brooke,  Caris. — Cradle  Song. 

Cycle,  A. 
Brooke,  Fulke  Greville,  Lord. — Alaham. 

Cselica. 

Cselica  and  Philocell.     See  Cselica. 

Chorus  of  Good  and  Evil  Spirits.     See  Alaham. 

Chorus  of  Priests.     See  Mustapha. 

Chorus  of  Tartars.     See  Mustapha. 

Elegy  on  Sir  Philip  Sidney,  An.     See  On  Sir  Philip 
Sidney. 

Elizabetha  Regina.     See  Cselica. 

Mustapha. 

Myra. 

Myra's  Fickleness.     See  Myra. 

On  Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

Seed-time  and  Harvest.     See  Cselica. 

Sonnet:  "Sion  lies  waste,  and  Thy  Jerusalem." 
See  Cselica. 

To  Her  Eyes. 
Brooke,  Percy. — God's  Work. 
Brooke,  Stopford  A: — At  Last. 

Earth  and  Man,  The. 

Jungfrau's  Cry,  The. 

May  and  Love. 

Noble  Lay  of  Aillinn,  The. 

Prince  Riquet's  Song.     See  Riauet  of  the  Tuft. 

Queen's  Song.     See  Riquet  of  tae  Tuft. 

Riguet  of  the  Tuft. 

"There  is  no  sadness  so  unutterable." 

Versailles. 
Brooklyn  Eagle. — Mutilated  Currency  Question,  The. 

Pat's  Reason. 

Spoopendyke  Stops  Smoking. 

Swearing  off  Smoking.     See  Spoopendyke  Stops 
Smoking. 

Thirty  Years  with  a  Shrew. 

Brooks, . — "One  with  yawning  made  reply,  The." 

Brooks,  Alice. — Herod. 
Brooks,  B.  S. — Curly-head. 

Brooks,  C:  Shirley. — Home  They  Brought  Her  Lap- 
dog  Dead. 

There's  Never  any  Harm  in  Good  Company. 
Brooks,  C:  Timothy. — Alpine  Heights.     (Tr.) 

Fisher,  The.     (Tr.) 

Fisherman's  Hut,  The. 

God  Save  the  State. 

Good-night.     (Tr.) 

Great  Voices,  The. 

Men  and  Boys.     (Tr.) 

Nobleman    and    the   Pensioner,  The.     (Tr.) 


403 


Brooks 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Brooks,  C:  Timothy  («m/tnM«d). 

Old  Thirteen,  The. 

Seeing  and  not  Seeing.     (.Tr.) 

Song  of  the  Sword.     (Tr.)     See  Sword  Song. 

Such  is  Life. 

Sword  Song.     (Tr.) 

Widow,  The.     CPr.) 

Winter  Song.     (Tr.) 

Winter's  Snows.     (Tr.)     See  Winter  Song. 
Brooks,  E: — Be  a  Woman. 

Commit  to  Memory. 

Life's  Battle  Field. 

New  Year's  Address,  A. 
Brooks,  Elbridge  Streeter. — Battle  of  Shrewsbury,  The. 
See  Harry  of  Monmouth. 

Cfflsar  Rodney's  Ride. 

Festival  of  Mars,  The.     See  Marcus  of  Rome. 

Harry  of  Monmouth. 

Marcus  of  Rome. 

Rodney's  Ride.     See  C»sar  Rodney's  Ride. 
Brooks,  Fs. — Down  the  Little  Big  Horn. 

On  the  Plains. 

Tennessee. 
Brooks,  Fred  Emerson. — Barnyard  Melodies. 

California  Flea.  The. 

Don't  You  Think  So,  Bill? 

Foreign  Views  of  the  Statue. 

Foreigners  at  the  Fair. 

Fimeral  of  the  Mountains,  The.  > 

Ghost  of  an  Old  Continental,  The. 

Jealous  Wife,  The. 

Jennie. 

Miller's  Maid,  The. 

Miracle  of  Cana,  The. 

Old  Ace. 

Orthod-ox  Team,  The. 

Paddy  Moore. 

Palestine. 

Shall  Bess  Come  Hame? 

Sherman's  March. 

Sheriff  of  Cerro-Gordo,  The. 

Silly  Billy. 

Uncle  Eph's  Heaven. 
Brooks,  Katha.  R.— Swan-song,  The. 
Brooks,  Maria  Gowen  ("Maria  del  Occidente"). — ^Day, 
in  Melting  Purple  Dying. 

Disappointment.     See  Zophiol;  or,  The  Bride  of 
Sieven. 

Farewell  to  Cuba. 

Palace    of    the    Gnomes.     See    Zophiel;    or,    The 
Bride  of  Seven. 

Respite,    The.     See    Zophiel;    or.  The   Bride    of 
Seven. 

Song:  "Day,  in  melting  purple  dying."     See  Day, 
in  Meltmg  Purple  Dying. 

Song    of    Egla.       See    Day,    in    Melting   Purple 
Dying. 

Zophiel;  or,  The  Bride  of  Seven. 
Brooks,  Rt.  Rev.  Phillips. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Autobiography,  An. 

Beautiful  Island  of  Ceylon,  The. 

Character  and  Service. 

Child  of  Bethlehem,  The.     See  O  Little  Town  of 
Bethlehem. 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Easter  Angels. 

Graduation. 

Heroic  Courage. 

"How  silently,  how  silently."     See  O  Little  Town 
of  Bethlehem. 

"I  had    rather  as  a  forgiven    child,  with  all  the 
prospects  of  the  future." 

"I  pity  the  man  who  has  never,  in  his  best  moods." 

Lincoln,  the  Shepherd  of  the  People.     See  Abra- 
ham Lincoln. 

O  Little  Town  of  Bethlehem. 

Present  and  Future  Faiths. 

Pursuit  of  Character  and  Service. 

Shepherd    of    the    People,    The.     See    Abraham 
Lincoln. 
Brooks,  Shirley. — Saint  Pancras  Bell. 
Broome,  Barbara.— Choose  Your  Words. 

Little  Gradgrinds,  The. 
Broome,  W: — Belinda's  Recovery  from  Sickness. 

Rosebud,  The. 
Brosius,  Letitia  W. — Spare  the  Youth. 
Brosnan,  C.  M. — Dying  Patriot's  Request,  The. 
Brotherson,  Frances  B.  M. — Which  Could  I  Spare? 
Brotherton,    Mrs.    Alice    [Williams]. — Blazing    Heart, 
The. 

Christmas  Day. 

Mv  Enemy. 

Plighted,  A.  D.  1887. 

Sailing  of  King  Olaf,  The. 


Brough,  Rob't  Barnabas. — My  Lord  Tomnoddy. 
Brough,  J:  Cargill,    and    Archer,    T: — Eligible    Situ- 
ation, An. 
Brougham,  H:,  Lord. — Fate  of  the  Reformer,  The. 

Glory  of  Washington,  The. 

Negro  Slavery. 

Orator's  Epitaph,  The. 

Parliamentary  Reform. 

School-teacher,  The. 

"Teachers  of  Mankind,  The. 
Brougham,  J: — Persevere. 

Summer  Friends. 
Broughton,  Rhoda. — Sisterly  Confidences. 
Brown,  Abbie  Farwell. — Books  I  Ought  to  Read,  The. 

In  the  King's  Garden. 
Brown,  Alice.— Candlemas. 

Cloistered. 

Hora  Christi. 

In  Extremis. 

Life. 

Silent  Watch.  The. 

Sleep. 

Trilby. 
Brown,  Almedia. — Receiving  Calls. 
Brown,  Anna  Robertson. — Common  Duties. 

"Letting  go  the  unworthy  things  that  meet  us." 
Brown,  C.  S.,  Jr. — My  First  Singing  Lesson. 
Brown,  Clara  Bell. — "Old  Glory"  at  Pekin. 
Brown,  Dan'l  A. — To  a  Friend. 
Brown,  E.  L. — Little  Helpers. 

What  Lottie  Saw. 
Brown,  Edgar  Allan. — To  AUie. 
Brown  [or  Browne],  Emma  Alice. — Baby  is  Dead,  The. 

Measuring  the  Baby. 

When  I  am  Dead. 
Brown,  Mrs.  Esther  Wilson. — Adventures  in  the  Wrong 
House. 

Seizure,  The;  or,  A  Sentimental  Maiden's  Mistake. 
Brown,  Ford  Madox. — For  the  Picture,  "The  Last  of 
England." 

O.  M.  B. 
Brown,  Frances  ("The  Blind  Poetess  of   Donegal"). — 
If  that  were  True! 

Is  it  Come? 

Losses. 

Oh  [or'O],  the  Pleasant  Days  of  Old. 

"On,  those  blessed  times  of  old."     See  Oh,  the 
Pleasant  Days  of  Old. 

Pleasant  Days  of  Old,  The.     See  Oh,  the  Pleasant 
Days  of  Old. 

Rabbi's  Vision,  The. 
Brown,  Helen  E. — April  Day,  An. 

Shower,  The. 
Brown,  H:  Armitt. — Ontennial  Address  delivered  at 
Valley  Forge.  June  19,  1878. 

Centennial  Oration.  \ 

"My  countrjrmen!  the  moments  are  quickly  pass- 
ing."    See  Clentennial  Oration. 

"My  countrymen!   this  anniversary  has  gone  by 
forever."     See  Centennial  Oration. 

Valley  Forge.     See  Centennial  Address  delivered 
at  Valley  Forge,  June  19,  1878. 
Brown,  H:  E. — Pipe  you  Make  Yourself,  The. 
Brown,  H.  H. — Old  Man's  Ship  Comes  Home,  The. 
Brown,  Irene  Fowler. — Rear  Guard,  The. 
Brown,  I:  Hinton. — American  Exile,  An. 

Hans  Bleimer's  Mool. 

Love  of  Country. 

Nathan  Hale,  the  Martyr  Spy. 

Only  a  Pin. 

Schake  und  Agers. 

Scientific  Party,  A. 

Which  One? 
Brown,  J.  A. — Robinson  Crusoe  in  Verse. 
Brown,  Jessie  H. — Finding  of  the  Cross,  The. 
Brown,  Dr.  J: — Our  Dogs. 

Rab  and  His  Friends. 
Brown,  J:  H. — Parliament  of  Man,  The. 

Sunset,  A. 
Brown,  J:  T: — Dutchman's  Dog  Story,  A. 
Brown,  Jos.  Brownlee. — Thalassa!  Thalassa!  See"Tha- 
latta." 

"Thalatta." 

Thalatta!  Thalatta!     See  "Thalatta." 
Brown,  Kate  L. — Cherry  Ripe. 
•  Dandelion. 

Gentian. 

Leaflets,  The. 
Brown,  L.  G. — Trundle-bed  Theology. 
Brown,  Nellie  M. — Plant  Song. 
Brown,  Oliver  Madox. — Before  and  After. 

Laura's  Song. 
Brown,  Mrs.  P.  D. — Temperance  Song  Recital. 
Brown,  Mrs.  Phoebe  [Hinsdale]. — Private  Devotion. 


404 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Browning 


Brown,  Theron. — Battle  above  the  Clouds,  The. 
Critical  Moment,  The. 
His  Majesty. 

Old  Man's  VigU.  The.     See  Old  Wife,  The. 
Old  Wife.  The. 
Brown,  T:  E: — Dora. 
Jessie. 
My  Garden. 
Salve  1 
Brown,  Tom. — "I'm  Glad  he  Knows." 
"Brown,  Vandyke."     See  Cook,  Marc  Eugene. 
Brown,  W:  Goldsmith. — Hills  were  Made  for  Freedom, 
The.    See  Vermont. 
Hundred  Years  to  Come,  A.     (Also  at.  to  C:  F. 

Browne.) 
Mother,  Home,  Heaven. 
Ode  to  Rum.  An. 
Vermont. 
Browne,     C:     Farrar  ("Artemus     Ward"). — Artemus 
Ward  at  the  Tomb  of  Shakespeare. 
Artemus  Ward  Crossing  Dixie's  Line.     See  Thrill- 
ing Scenes  in  Dixie. 
Artemus  Ward  on  Woman's  Rights. 
Artemus  Ward  Visits  the  Shakers. 
Artemus  Ward's  Advice  to  Husband.s. 
Artemus  Ward's  Fourth  of  July  Oration. 
Artemus  Ward's  London    Lecture.     See   Artemus 

Ward's  Mormon  Lecture. 
Artemus  Ward's  Mormon  Lecture. 
Artemus  Ward's  Panorama — "Among    the    Mor- 
mons." 
Artemus  Ward's  Trip  to  Richmond. 
Fourth   of   July   Oration.     See   Artemus   Ward's 

Fourth  of  Juhf  Oration. 
Gloverson  the  IVformon.     See  Mormon    Romance 

— Reginald  Gloverson. 
Hundred   Years  to    Come,   A.     (Also   at.   to   W: 

Goldsmith  Brown.) 
Mr.  Artemus  Ward_  Crossing    Dixie's  Line.     See 

Thrilling  Scenes  in  Dixie. 
Mormon  Romance — Reginald  Gloverson. 
Moses,  the  Sassy ;  or,  The  Disguised  Duke. 
Thrilling  Scenes  in  Dixie. 
Uncle  Simon  and  Uncle  Jim. 
Browne,  Charlotte  Eliz.     See  Tonna,  Mrs.  Charlotte 

Eliz.  [Browne]. 
Browne,  Emma  Alice.    See  Brown.  Emma  Alice. 
Browne.  Frances.     See  Brown.  Frances. 
Browne.  Fs.  Fisher.    Carcassonne.    (.Tr.) 
Santa  Barbara. 
Under  the  Blue. 
Vanquished. 
Browne.  H.  J.  D. — Voice  of  the  Oregon.  The. 
Browne.  Irving. — At  Shakespeare's  Grave.      (Ignatius 
Donnelly  Loq.) 
Man's  Pillow. 
My  New  World. 
Parsifal — at  Baireuth. 
Smoke  Traveller,  The. 
Browne.  M.  Hedderwick. — My  Love  of  Long  Ago. 
Browne.  Mary  Anne. — Mosses,  The. 
Browne,  Matthew.— Child's    World,    The.     (Wr.  at.) 

See  Rands,  W:  B. 
Browne,  Sir  T: — Before  Sleep.     See  Evening  Hymn. 

Evening  Hyrrin. 
Browne,  W:— Brittannia's  Pastorals. 

Carpe  Diem.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Charm,  The.     See  Inner  Temple  Masque,  The. 
Colour  Passage,  A.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Comparison,  A.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Complaint    of    Pan,    The.     See   Britannia's    Pas- 
torals. 
Country  Danger,  A.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Death  of  Philarete,  The.     See  Shepherd's  Pipe, 

The. 
Description  of  a  Musical  Consort  of  Birds.     See 
Britannia's  Pastorals. 
•   Description  of  Walla,  The.     See  Britannia's  Pas- 
torals. 
Dirge,    A: — "Glide    soft,  ye    silver    floods."     See 

Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Edmund  Spenser.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
Epitaph: — "May!  be  thou  never  graced  with  birds 
that  sing."     See  In  Obitum  M.  S.  X°.  Maij, 
1614. 
Epitaph  on  the  Countess  of  Pembroke.     (Also  at. 

to  Ben  Jonson.) 
Hunted  Squirrel,  The.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 
In  Obitum  M.  S.  X°,  Maij,  1614. 
Inner  Temple  Masque,  The. 
Invitation,  An.     See  Shepherd's  Pipe,  The. 
Lament  for  His  Friend,  A.     See  Britannia's  Pas- 
torals. 
Landscape,  A.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 


Browne,  W:  (continued). 

Love's  Reasons. 

Marina  and  the  River-god.     See  Britannia's  Pas- 
torals. 

Masque  of  the  Inner  Temple.  A.  See  Inner  Temple 
Masque.  The. 

Memory. 

Metamorphosis,  A.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

Music    Lesson,    The.     See   Britannia's   Pastorals. 

My  Choice.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

On  the  Countess  Dowager  of  Pembroke.     See  Epi- 
taph on  the  Countess  of  Pembroke. 

Poet's  Ambition,  The.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

Praise  of  Spenser,  The.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

Praise  of  Sydney,  The.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

Riot's  Climbing  of  a  Hill.     See  Britannia's  Pas- 
torals. 

Rose,  The.     See  Vision  of  the  Rose. 

Scented  Grove,  The.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

Shall  I  Tell?     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

Shall  I  Tell  You  Whom  I  Love?     See  Britannia's 
Pastorals. 

Shepherd's  Pipe,  The. 

Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

Shepherdesses'    Garlands.    The.     See    Britannia's 
Pastorals. 

Sirens'   Song,   The.     See   Inner  Temple   Masque, 
The. 

Song:   "For  her  gait,   if   she   be   walking."     See 
Love's  Reasons. 

Song:  "Welcome,  welcome  do  I  sing." 

Song    in    the    Wood,    The.     See    Inner    Temple 
Masque,  The. 

Song  of  Celadyne,  The.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

Song  of  Tavy,  The.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals. 

S9nnet:  "Fairest,  when  by  the  rules  of  palmistry." 

Vision  of  the  Rose. 

Welcome  [A,  or  The].     See  Song:  "Welcome,  wel- 
come, do  I  sing." 

Welcome.    Welcome.     See  Song:  "Welcome,  wel- 
come, do  I  sing." 

Welcome,  Welcome,  Do  I  Sing.     See  Song:  "Wel- 
come, welcome,  do  I  sing." 
Brownell,  H :  Howard. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

"All  We  Ask  is  to  be  Let  Alone."     See  Let  us 
Alone. 

Bay  Fight,  The. 

Burial  of  the  Dane,  The. 

Death  of  Robespierre.  The.     See  Place  de  la  R^ 
volution. 

Eagle  of  Corinth.  The. 

Lawyer's  Invocation  to  Spring.  The. 

Lawyer's  Poem  to  Spring,  A.     See  Lawyer's  Invo- 
cation to  Spring,  The. 

Let  us  Alone. 

Night  Quarters. 

Ode    to    Spring.     See    Lawyer's    Invocation    to 
Spring,  The. 

Old  Cove,  The.     See  Let  us  Alone. 

Place  de  la  Revolution. 

River  Fight,  The. 

Sphinx,  The. 
Browning,    Mrs.    Eliz.    Barrett   [Barrett].  —  Achilles 
Tatius.     (Tr.) 

Aurora  Leigh. 

Aurora's  Home.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Beauty  of  England,  The.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Bertha  in  the  Lane. 

Best  Thing  in  the  World,  The. 

Books.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

"But  then  the  thrushes  sang."     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

"By  Solitary  Fires."     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Casa  Guidi  Windows. 

Cheerfulness.     See  Cheerfulness  Taught  by  Rea- 
son. 

Cheerfulness  Taught  by  Reason. 

Child  and  the  Watcher,  The. 

Children  Gathering  Palms.     See  Vision  of  Poets.  A. 

Child's  Thought  of  God.  A. 

Comfort,. 

Consolation. 

Court  Lady.  A. 

Cowper's  Grave. 

Crowned  and  Buried. 

Crowned  and  Wedded. 

Cry  of  the  Children.  The. 

Curse  for  a  Nation.  A. 

De  Profundis, 

Dead  Rose,  A. 

Death  of  Savonarola.     See  Casa  Guidi  Windows^ 

Deserted  Garden,  The. 

Desire.  A.     See  Sonnets  to  George  Sand. 

Drama  of  Exile.  A. 

Dream.  The. 


405 


Browning 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Browning,  Mra.  Eliz.  [Barrett]  {continued). 

Duchess  May.     See  Rhyme  of  the  Duchess  May. 
Elizabethan  Poets. 

End  of  the  Siege,  The.     See  Rhyme  of  the  Duchess 
May. 

England.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

False  Step,  A.     * 
I       Far,  and  Yet  Near.     See  Sonnets  from  the  Portu- 
guese. 

Felicia  Hemans.     To  L.  E.  L. 

Ferment  of  New  Wine,  The.     See  Aurora  I^eigh. 

First  News  from  Villafranca. 

First,  Second,  Third.     See  Sonnets  from  the  Portu- 
guese. 

Forced  Recruit,  The. 

Forced  Recruit  at  Solferino,  A.     See  Forced  Re- 
cruit, The. 

"From  my  lips  in  their  defilement."     {Tr.) 

Ful[l]ness  of  Love.     <See  Sonnets  from  the  Portu- 
guese. 

Futurity. 

"Get  leave  to  work."     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

"Go  from  me.     Yet  I  feel  that  I   shall  stand." 
See  Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese. 

Grief. 

He  Giveth  His  Beloved  Sleep.     See  Sleep,  The. 

House  of  Clouds,  The. 

How  Do   I   Love  Thee?     See  Sonnets  from  the 
Portuguese. 

"I   tell   you   hopeless   grief  is  passionless."     See 
Grief. 

"I  thought  once  how  Theocritus  had  sung."     See 
Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese. 

"If  I  leave  all  for  thee,  wilt  thou  exchange."     See 
Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese. 

"If  thou  must  love  Me,  let  it  be  for  nought."     See 
Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese. 

Irreparableness. 

Journey  South.  The.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Juliet  of  Nations.     See  Casa  Guidi  Windows. 

Lady  Geraldine's  Courtship. 

Lady's  "Yes,"  The. 

Last  Translation,  The.     {Tr.)     See  "Thou  lovest 
me  not,  thou  lovest  me  not." 

"Live  and  Love."     See  Drama  of  Exile,  A. 

Lord  Walter's  Wife. 

Love   fop   Love's   Sake.     See   Sonnets   from    the 
Portuguese. 

Love  Letters.      See  Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese. 

Loved  Once. 

Lover's  Letters,  A.     See  Sonnets  from  the  Portu- 
guese. 

Marian's  Child.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Mother  and  Poet. 

Motherless.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Musical  Instrument,  A. 

My  Heart  and  I. 

My  Kate. 

My  Letters.     See  Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese. 

Napoleon's    Final     Return.     See    Crowned    and 
Buried. 

"O  Victor  Emmanuel  the  King."     See  Sword  of 
Castruccio  Castracani,  The. 

Oh,  Fear  to  Call  it  Loving.     See  Woman's  Short- 
comings, A. 

On  a  Portrait  of  Wordsworth. 

Only  a  Curl. 

Parting  Lovers. 

Pet  Name,  The. 

Poets,  The.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Portrait,  A. 

Reading.     See  Aurora  I^igh. 

Recognition,  A.     See  Sonnets  to  George  Sand. 

Rhyme  of  the  Duchess  May. 

Romance  of  the  Ganges,  A. 

Romance  of  the  Swan's  Nest. 

Romaunt  of  the  Page,  The. 

Romney  and  Aurora.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Rosalind's  Scroll.     See  Words  of  Rosalind's  Scroll, 
The. 

"Say  never,  ye  loved  once."     See  Loved  Once. 

Simile,  A.     See  Aurora  Leigh. 

Sleep[,  The]. 

Song  of  the  Rose.     {Tr.)     See  Achilles  Tatius. 

Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese. 

Sonnets  to  George  Sand. 

Stanzas  from  "Wine  of  Cyprus."     See  Wine  of 
CjTJrus. 

Substitution. 

Sursum  Corda.     See  Casa  Guidi  Windows. 

Sword  of  Castruccio  Castracani,  The. 

"Thou  lovest  me  not,  thou  lovest  me  not."     {Tr.) 

Three    Kisses.      See   Sonnets    from    the    Portu- 
guese. 


Browning,  Mra.  Eliz.  [Barrett]  {continued). 
To  Flush,  My  Dog. 
To  L.  E.  L.,  on  the  Death  of  Felicia  Hemans.     See 

Felicia  Hemans.     To  L.  E.  L. 
Tribute  to  Woman,  A.     See  Drama  of  Exile,  A. 
Unless.     See  Woman's  Shortcomings,  A. 
View  across  the  Roman  Campagna,  A. 
Vision  of  Poets,  A. 

Ways  of  Love,  The.     See  Sonnets  from  the  Portu- 
guese. 
Wine  of  Cyprus. 
Woman's  Question,  A.     {Wr.  at.)     See  Lathrop, 

Lena. 
Woman's  Shortcomings,  A. 
Words  of  Rosalind's  Scroll,  The. 
"You  who  keep  account." 
Young  Queen,  The. 
Browning,  Frd'k  G. — Amen. 

"I  do  not  see  why  God  should  e'en  permit  some 

things  to  be."     See  Amen. 
Browning,  Ophelia   G. — See  Bureoughs,  Ophelia  G. 

[Browning]. 
Browning,  Rob't. — Abt  Vogler. 

Amphibian.     See,  Fifine  at  the  Fair. 

April    in    England.     See    Home    Thoughts    from 

Abroad. 
Asolando. 
Bard  and  the  Cricket,  The.     See  Two  Poets  of 

Croisic,  The. 
Ben  Karshook's  Wisdom. 
Bishop    Orders     His    Tomb   [at    Saint     Praxed's 

Church],  The. 
Blot  in  the  'Scutcheon,  A. 
'-^^oot  and  Saddle.     See  Cavalier  Tunes, 
^oy  and  the  Angel,  The. 
Boy  of  Ratisbon,  The.     See  Incident  of  the  French 

Camp,  An.  > 

By  the  Fireside. 
Cavalier  Tunes. 

"Childe  Roland  to  the  Dark  Tower  Came." 
Clive. 

Confessions. 
Count  Gismond. 
Cristina. 

David  Playing  before  Saul.    See  Saul. 
David  Singing  before  Saul.     See  Saul. 
"De  Gustibus." 
Death  of  Mildred,  The.     See  Blot  in  the  'Scutcheon, 

A. 
Donald. 

Donald  and  the  Stag.     See  Donald. 
Earl  Mertoun's  Song.     See  Blot  in  the  'Scutcheon  , 

A. 
Epilogue  [to  Asolando].     See  Asolando. 
Epitaph  on  [tvr.  for]  Levi  Lincoln  Thaxter. 
Evelyn  Hope. 
Face,  A. 

Fifine  at  the  Fair. 
Flight  of  the  Duchess,  The. 
Flower's  Name,  The.     See  Garden  Fancies. 
Garden  Fancies. 

Give  a  Rouse.     See  Cavalier  Tunes. 
Glove,  The. 

Good  Morning.     See  Pippa  Passes. 
Good  News.     See  "How  they  Brought  the  Good 

News   from  Ghent  to  Aix." 
Good  News  from  Ghent.     See  "How  they  Brought 

the  Good  News  from  Ghent  to  Aix." 
Grammarian's  Funeral,  A. 
Guardian-angel,  The. 
Halbret  and  Hob. 
"Hark,    where    my   blossomed    pear   tree    in    the 

hedge."     See  Home  Thoughts  from  Abroad. 
Her  Perfect  Praise.     See  Blot  in  the  'Scutcheon,  A. 
"I  go  to  prove  my  soul."     See  Paracelsus. 
Herv^  Riel. 
Holy  Cross  Day. 
Home  Thoughts  from  Abroad. 
Home  Thoughts  from  the  Sea. 
Householder.  The.     See  Fifine  at  the  Fair. 
"How  they  Brought  the  Good  News  from  Ghent  to 

Aix." 
In  a  Gondola. 
In  a  Year. 
In  Three  Days. 
Incident  at  Ratisbon,  An.     See  Incident  of  the 

French  Camp,  An. 
Incident  of  the  French  Camp[,  An]. 
Instans  Tyrannus. 
Ivkn  Ivknovitch. 
King,  A.     See  Pippa  Passes. 
King  is  Cold,  The. 
Laboratory,  The. 
Last  Ride  Together,  The. 


406 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Bryant 


Browning,  Rob't  (continued) . 
Life  in  a  Love. 
Lord  Clive.     See  Clive. 
Lost  Leader,  The. 
Lost  Mistress,  The. 
Love  among  the  Ruins. 
Love  in  a  Life. 
—Marching  Along.     See  Cavalier  Tunes. 
Martin  Relph. 
May  and  Death. 

Meeting.     See  Meeting  at  Night. 
Meeting  at  Night. 
Meeting    at    Night — Parting    at    Morning.     See 

Meeting  at  Night. 
Memorabilia. 
Misconceotions. 

Moth's  Kiss  First,  The.     See  In  a  Gondola. 
Muckle-mouth  Meg. 
My  Last  Duchess. 
My  Star. 

Never  the  Time  and  the  Place. 
New  Year's  Day  at  Asolo.     See  Pippa  Passes. 
One  Way  of  Love. 
One  Word  More[.  To  E.  B.  B.]. 
Paracelsus. 
Parting  at  Morning. 
Pearl — a  Girl,  A. 
Pheidinpides. 

Pied  Piper  of  Hamelin,  The. 
Pippa  Passes. 
Pippa's  Song. 
Pope  and  the  Net,  The. 
Porphvria's  Lover. 

Potter's  Wheel,  The.     See  Rabbi  Ben  Ezra. 
Prospice. 
"Quoth  a  young  Sadducee."     See  Ben  Karshook's 

Wisdom. 
Rabbi  Ben  Ezra. 

Ratisbon.     See  Incident  of  the  French  Camp,  An. 
Re.'^pectability. 
Ride  from  Ghent  to  Aix,  The.     See  "How  they 

Brought  the  Good  News  from  Ghent  to  Aix.  ' 
Ride  to  Aix,  The.     See  "How  they  Brought  the 

Good  News  from  Ghent  to  Aix." 
Ring  and  the  Book,  The. 
Saul. 

Sometime — Somewhere.      (TTr.     at.)      See    Bur- 
roughs, Mrs.  Ophelia  G.  [Browning]. 
Song:  "Nay  but  you,  who  do  not  love  her." 
Song:  "'The  moth's  kiss  first."     See  In  a  Gondola. 
Song  from  "Paracelsus."     See  Paracelsus. 
Song  from  "Pippa  Passes."     See  Pippa  Passes. 
Speculative. 

Statue  and  the  Bust,  The. 
Strafford. 
Such  a  Starved  Bank  of  Moss.     See  Two  Poets  of 

Croisic,  The. 
Summum  Bonum. 

Tale,  A.     See  Two  Poets  of  Croisic,  The. 
There's  a  Woman  Like  a  Dewdrop.     See  Blot  in 

the  'Scutcheon, A. 
Thus  the  Mayne  Glideth.     See  Paracelsus. 
To  E.  B.  B.     See  One  Word  More.  To  E.  B.  B. 
Toccata  of  Galuppi's,  A. 
Tray. 

Two  in  the  Campagna. 
Two  Poets  of  Croisic,  The. 
Ud  at  a  Villa — Down  in  the  City. 
Wanderers,  The.     See  Paracelsus. 
Wanting  is— What? 

Year's  at  the  Spring,  The.     See  Pinpa  Passes. 
You'll  Love  me  Yet.     See  Pippa  Passes. 
Youth  and  Art. 
Brownjohn,  J: — Fish  Story,  A. 

How  the  Celebrated  Miltiades  Peterkin  Paul  Got 

the  Better  of  Santa  Claus. 
Indian  Attack,  The. 
Miltiades  gets  the  Be.st  of  Santa  Claus.     See  How 

the  Celebrated  Miltiades  Peterkin  Paul  got  the 

Better  of  Santa  Claus. 
Miltiades  Peterkin  Paul. 
Brownlow,  E:  Burough. — Sonnet,  The. 

Whip-poor-will,  The. 
Brubaker,  D.  R.— Spelling  Class,  The. 
Bruce,  L.   H. — Comoosition   Day. 
Bruce,    Michael.— Elegy — Written    in    Spring. 
Ode   to  the  Cuckoo.     (At.)     See  Logan,   J: 
Spring  Pointing  to  God.     See  Elegy — Written  in 

Spring. 
Bruce,  R.  L. — Prohibition's  Might. 
Bruce,   Wallace. — Decoration   Day. 
"Inasmuch." 
Old  Homestead,  The. 
Ole    Bull's   Christmas.  -  >' 


Bruce,  Wallace  (contimied). 

One   Word. 

Two  Argosies. 
'       Yosemite,  The. 

Brueys,  D:  Augustin. — Fractious  Man,  The. 
Brunonian. — Conditioned. 

"Whenas  in  Silks." 
Brush,  Frank  E. — Liberty.  ^ 

BruySre,  Jean  de  la.     See  La  Bruyere,  Jean  de. 
Bryan,  G:  S. — Shakespeare. 
Bryan,  J.  Stuart. — On  Tying  Daphne's  Shoe. 
Bryan,  Mrs.   Mary  Edwards. — Dumb  Savior,  The. 
Bryan,  W:  Jennings. — Fredericksburg. 

Free  Silver  Coinage. 

Memorial  Day  Address. 
Bryant,  J:  Howard. — Close  to  Ninety. 

Indian   Summer,   The. 

Little    Cloud,    The. 

Valley  Brook,  The. 

Winter. 
Bryant,   Lesbia. — Thanksgiving  Dinner,  A. 
Bryant,  M.   Alice.;; — George  Washington.     See  Wash- 
ington's Life. 

Washington's  Life. 
Bryant,  W:  CuUen. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Ages,  The. 

America.     See  Ages,  The. 

America.     See    also    "Oh    Mother    of    a    Mighty 
Race." 

Among  the  Trees. 

Antiquity  of  Freedom,  The. 

At  the  Old  Home  Again.     See  Lines  on  Revisit- 
ing  the   Country. 

Battle  of  Bennington,  The. 

Battle   of   Life,    The.     See   Battle-field,   The. 

Battle-field,  The. 

Be   Truthful.     See   Battle-field,   The, 

Bending  of  the  Bow,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Odyssey, 
The. 

"Blessed  are  They  that  Mourn." 

Bryant  Alphabet,  A. 

Burial  of  Love,  The. 

Burial   Place,   The.        \ 

Cervantes. 

Child    and   the   Lily,   The.     See    Innocent   Child 
and  Snow-white  Flower. 

Conjunction  of  Jupiter  and  Venus,  The. 

Conqueror's  Grave,  The. 

Crowded  Street,  The. 

Damsel  of  Peru,  The. 

Death  of  Schiller,  The. 

Death  of  Slavery,  The. 

Death  of  the  Flowers,  The. 

Evening   Reverie,   An. 

Evening  Wind,  The. 

Fatima  and  Raduan.     (Tr.) 

Flood  of  Years,  The. 

Forest    Hymn,    A. 

Fountain,  The. 

Freedom.     See  Antiquity   of   Freedom,   The. 

From    the   Spanish   of   Villejas. 

Future   Life,   The. 

Gladness  of  Nature,  The. 

God's   First   Temples.     See   Forest   Hymn,   A. 

Green    River. 

Groves,  The.       See  Foreet  Hymn,  A. 

Hector's    Farewell    to    Andromache.     (Tr.)     See 
Iliad,  The. 

Helen  at  the  Scsean  Gates.     (Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 

"How  shall  I  know  thee  in  the  sphere."     See  Fu- 
ture Life,  The. 

How  to  Live.       See  Thanatopsis. 

Hunter  of  the  Prairies,  The. 

Hunter's    Vi-sion,    The. 

Hurricane,  The. 

Hymn    of   the   City. 

Hymn  to  the  North  Star. 

Iliad,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Homer. 

In  Memory  of  John  Lothrop  Motley. 

Indian  at  the  Burial-place  of    his    Fathers,  An. 

Indian's  Prophecy,  The.     See  Indian  at  the  Bur- 
ial-place of  his  Fathers,  An. 

Innocent  Child  and  Snow-white  Flower. 

Inscription  for  the  Entrance  to  a  Wood. 

Invitation  to  the  Country,  An. 

June. 

Lines  on  Revisiting  the  Country. 

Little  People  of  the  Snow,  The. 

Living  Lost,  The. 

Love  of  God,  The.     (Tr.) 

March. 

Massacre  at  Scio,  The. 

May  Sun  Sheds  an  Amber  Light,  The. 

Mother's  Hymn,  The. 


407 


Bryant 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Bryant,  W:  CuUen  (.continued). 
Murdered  Traveller,  The. 
Musquito,  The.  See  To  a  Mosquito. 

My  Autumn  Walk. 
"My   heart  is  awed   within  me   when   I  think." 

See  Forest  Hvmn,  A. 
Night  Journey  of  a  River,  The. 
No  Man   Knoweth   His  Sepulchre. 
Not   Yet. 
November. 

O  Fairest  of  the  Rural  Maids. 
O  Mother  of  a  Mighty  Race.     See  "Oh  Mother 

of  a  Mighty  Race. 

Odyssey,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Homer. 

"On  Mother  of  a  Mighty  Race." 

Old   Man's  Counsel,   The. 

Old   Man's   Funeral,   The. 

Our  Children. 

Our  Country.      See  Not  Yet. 

Our  Country's  Call. 

Palace  of  Alcinous,  The.    (Tr.)    See  Odyssey,  The. 

Parting  of  Hector  and  Andromache,  The.     (Tr.) 

See  Iliad,  The. 
Past,  The.     See  To  the  Past. 
Path,  The. 

Planting  of  the  Apple-tree,  The. 
Poet,  The. 
Retribution. 

Return  of  the  Birds,  The. 
Return  of  Youth,  The. 
Rivulet,    The. 
Robert  of  Lincoln. 
Sella. 

Seventy-six. 
Snow-snower,   The. 
"So  live,  that  when  thy  summons  comes  to  join." 

See  Thanatopsis. 
Song  of  Marion's  Men. 
Song  of  the  Stars[,  The — C.]. 
Spring.     See  Gladness  of  Nature,  The. 
Star   of   Bethlehem,   The. 
Stars,  The.     See  Song  of  the  Stars,  The. 
Story    of    Seventy-six,    The.     See   Seventy-six. 
»       Summer.     See  Gladness  of   Nature,   The. 
Thanatopsis. 

Third  of  November,  The. 
Those  Glorious  Stars.     See  Conjunction  of  Jupiter 

and  Venus,  The. 
Tides,    The. 
"'Tis  sweet  in  the  green  spring."     See  From  the 

Spanish  of  Villejas. 
To    a   Cloud. 
To   a  Firefly. 
To   a   Mosquito. 
To  a  Water  Fowl. 

To  the  Evening  Wind.     See  Evening  Wind,  The. 
To   the   Fringed   Gentian. 
To   the   Past. 
Tree  Burial. 

Twenty-second   of  December,  The. 
Twenty-second    of   February,    The. 
Victory  of  Hector,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 
Violet,   The.        See  Yellow   Violet,   The. 
Waiting  by  the  Gate. 
West    Wind.    The. 
"What  cordial  welcomes  greet  the  guest."     See 

"Oh,  Mother  of  a  Mighty  Race." 
Winds,   The. 

Winter.     See  Winter  Piece,  A. 
Winter  Piece,  A. 
Yellow   Violet,   The. 

"Yet  nerve  thy  spirit  to  the  proof."     See  Battle- 
field, The. 
Yew,  The.     See  Burial  Place,  The. 
Brydges,  Sir  S:  Egerton. — Echo  and  Silence. 
Buchanan,   D:   K. — Spellin'   School,   A. 

"Uncle  John"  Writes  to  His  City  Cousin. 
Buchanan,   Rob't. — At  the  Grindstone;  or,  a  Home 

View   of   the   Battle-field. 
Ballad  of  Judas  Iscariot,  The. 
Ballad  of  the  Wayfarer,  The. 
Book    of    Orm,    The. 
Churchyard,     The. 
Death  of  Roland,  The. 
Dedication  to  Harriett,  in  Miscellaneous  Poems 

and   Ballads. 
Dream  of  the  World  without  Death,  The.     See 

Book   of  Orm.   The. 
Faery    Foster-mother,    The. 
Fra  Giacamo. 
Freedom's  Ahead.     See  Tom   Dunstan;  or,  The 

Politician. 
Green  Gnome,  The. 


Buchanan,  Rob't  (continued). 

Hans  Vogel. 

Hermione. 

Hugh  Sutherland's  Pansies. 

In   the  Garden. 

January  Wind. 

Langley  Lane. 

Legends  of  the   Little   Fay. 

Little  Fay,  The.     See  Legends  of  the  Little  Fay. 

Little  Milliner,  The. 

Love  in  Winter. 

Meg   Blane. 

Nefl. 

"O  Mither,  Dinna  Dee!"     See  Meg  Blane. 

On  a  Young  Poetess's  Grave. 

Old  Politician,  The.     See  Tom  Dunstan;  or.  The 
Politician. 

Pastoral   Pictures. 

Phil    Blood's    Leap. 

Serenade:  "Sleep  sweet,  beloved  one,  sleep  sweet!" 

Song:  "O   love   is  like   the   roses."     See  Love  in 
Winter. 

Spring  Song  in  the  City. 

Starling,  The. 

Summer  Moon. 

Summer   Pool,   The.     See ,  Pastoral   Pictures. 

Tiger  Bay[:  A  Stormy  Night's  Dream]. 

To  Harriett.     See  Dedication  to  Harriett. 

Tom    Dunstan;   or.   The   Politician. 

Two   Sons. 

Wake  of  Tim  O'Hara,  The. 

We    are    Children. 

When  We   are  All  Asleep. 

Wedding  of  Shon  Maclean,  The. 

Widow    Mysie,    The. 
Buck,  C:  Gurdon. — Idyl,  An. 
Buck,   R:   H: — Kentucky   Babe. 
Buckhani,  Jas. — Child  of  To-day,  A. 

David    Shaw,    Hero. 

Kitten    of    the    Regiment,    The. 

Passed   off   the   Stage. 

Race    at    Devil's    Elbow,    The. 

Rover   in   Church. 

Smallest  of  the  Drums,  The. 

Song   in   the    Night,   The. 

Song    in    the    Storm,    The. 

Song  of  the   Market-place,   The. 

Song  of   the   Pine,   The. 
Buckhurst,  T:  Sackville,  Lord.     See  Dorset,  Earl  of. 
Buckingham,  Emma  M. — People  Will  Talk. 
Buckingham,   G:  Villiers,  Duke  of. — Epitaph   on   Sir 

Thomas    Fairfax. 
Buckley,  Elton  J. — My  Pipe  and  I. 
Buckley,  Rev.    Jas.  Monroe. — "Pulpit   plagiarist  ruins 

his    style.    The." 
Buckminster,   Jos.   Stevens. — Triumph   of  Faith. 
Buckstone,    J:    Baldwin. — Country   Cousin,    The;    or, 
The   Rough  Diamond, 

Rough  Diamond,  The.     See  Country  Cousin,  The; 
or.    The    Rough    Diamond. 
Budlong,  Frank  D. — -Destruction  of '  Jerusalem,  The. 

Wolfe   at   Quebec. 
Buell,    Sarah    Josepha.       See  Hale,   Mrs.  Sarah  J. 

[Buell]. 
Bugbee,  Mrs.  Emily  J. — Growth. 

In  Memoriam — A.  Lincoln. 
Bulfinch,  Maria  H. — Easter-tide  Deliverance,  An. 
Bulfinch,  Stephen  Greenleaf. — Communion  of  Saints, 

The. 
Bulfinch.T:— Echo  and  Narcissus. 

Meditation. 

Sabbath   Day,   The. 
Bull,    Jerome    C. — Rival    Sweetheart,    The. 
Bull,   Norris. — Good  Cigar,   A. 
Bull,   Philip  J. — New  Preacher,  The. 
Bulwer,  Str  H:      See  Dalling  and  Bulwer,  W:  H: 

Lytton  Earle  Bulwer,    Baron. 
Bulwer-Lytton,    E:    G:    Earle,     Lord    Lytton. —  Ab- 
sent,  yet   Present. 

Address  of  Caradoc  the  Bard. 

Appeal  to  the  Romans.     See  Rienzi. 

Athens;  its   Rise    and    Fall. 

Bard's  Summons  to  War,  The. 

Battle,  The.     (Tr.) 

Be  in  Earnest. 

Caradoc,  the  Bard  of  the  Cymrians.     See  Address 
of  Caradoc  the  Bard. 

Cardinal's    Soliloquy,    The.     See    Richelieu;    or, 
The  Conspiracy. 

Caxtoniana. 

Caxtons,  The. 

Chariot  Race,  The.     (Tr.) 

Claude  Melnotte  to  Patiline.    See  Lady  of  Lyons, 

'      The. 


408 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Burbidge 


Bulwer-Lytton,  E:  G:  Earle,  Lord  Lytton  {continued). 
Claude  Melnotte's  Apology.     See  Lady  of  Lyons, 

The. 
Claude    Melnotte's    Apology    and    Defence.     See 

Lady  of  Lyons,  The. 
Consequences     of     the     Reformation.       See     St. 

Stephen's. 
Cromwell  on  the  Death  of  Charles  the  First. 
Despondent    Inventor,    The.      See    Last    of    the 

Barons,   The. 
Destruction     of    Pompeii.     See    Last     Days    of 

Pompeii. 
Ernest  Maltravers. 
Fox. 

Glaucus  and  the  Lion.     See  Last  Days  of  Pom- 
peii. 
Glove,  The.     (Tr.) 
Happy  Beauty  and  the  Blind  Slave,  The.     See 

Last  Days  of  Pompeii. 
Harold. 
King  Harold's  Speech  to  His  Army  before   the 

Battle  of  Hastings.     <See  Harold. 
Lady  of  Lyons,  The. 
Last  Days  of  Pompeii. 
Last    Night    of    Pompeii,    The.     See    Last    Days 

of   Pompeii. 
Last   of   the    Barons,   The. 
Last  of  the  Roman  Tribunes,  The.     See  Rienzi; 

or.  The  Last  of  the  Roman  Tribunes. 
Last  Wish,  The. 

London   House-tops.     See  Caxtons,  The. 
Lord    John    Russell. 
Lord   Melbourne. 
Lord    Ronald's   Bride. 
Love    at    First   Sight. 

Marathon.     See   Athens;   its    Rise   and    Fall. 
Money. 

Narrowness  of  Soecialties,  The. 
New    Timon,    The. 

Night   and   Love.     See   Ernest   Maltravers. 
Nydia    and    lone.     See    Last    Days    of    Pompeii. 
Nydia's   Sacrifice.     See    Last    Days   of    Pompeii. 
O  Near  Ones,  Dear  Ones. 
O'Connell. 
Olympic  Crown,  The.     See  Athens;  its  Rise  and 

Fall. 
Orator,  The. 
Pen,   The.     See   Pen   Mightier   than   the   Sword, 

The. 
Pen   Mightier  than   the  Sword,  The. 
Pitt. 
Richelieu    and    France.     See   Richelieu;   or,   The 

Conspiracy. 
Richelieu;    or,    The    Conspiracy. 
Richelieu's  Vindication.     See  Richelieu;  or.  The 

Conspiracy. 
Rienzi,   the   Last   of   the   Roman   Tribunes. 
St.  James's  Street  on  a  Summer  Morning.     See 

New  Timon,   The. 
St.    Stephen's. 
Scene  from  "Richelieu."     See  Richelieu;  or,  The 

Conspiracy. 
Scene  from  "The  Lady  of  Lyons."     See  Lady  of 

Lyons,    The. 
Sea  Captain's  Story,  The. 

Search  for  Harold's  Body,  The.     See  Harold. 
Sir   Robert  Walpole. 
Song:     "When  stars  are  in  the  quiet  skies."      See 

Ernest  Maltravers. 
Souls   of   Books,   The. 
Successful  Politician,  The. 
Sudden   Fortune,  A.     See  Money. 
There  is  no  Death.     {Wr.   at.)     See  McCreert, 

J.    L. 
"Truth,  as  humanity  knows  it,  is  not  what  the 

schoolmen   call   it."     See   Caxtoniana. 
Vesuvius  and  the  Egyptian.     See  Last  Days  of 

Pompeii. 
Warwick — the    King-maker.      See    Last    of    the 

Barons,  The. 
When  Stars  are  in  the  Quiet  Skies.     See  Ernest 

Maltravers. 
Witch   of  Vesuvius,   The.  See  Last   Days   of 

Pompeii. 
Witch's  Cavern,  The.     See  Last  Days  of  Pompeii. 
Bumstead,    Eudora   S. — In   the   Swing. 
Indian    Summer. 
Little  Pine-tree,  The.     (Tr.) 
Margie's  Thanksgiving. 
Summer  Lullaby,  A. 
Bungay,  G:  Washington. — Battle  of  Inkerman,  The. 
Battle   of  Lexington,   The. 
Buying  Gape-seed.       (At.   also  to  J:  B.   Gough.) 

See  Gape-seed. 


Bungay,  G:  Washington  (continued). 
Creeds  of  the  Bells,  The. 
Earth's  Noblemen. 
For  You. 
Gape-seed. 

Heads,  Hearts,  and  Hands. 
Labor. 

Manliest  Man,  The. 

Noblest  Men,  The.     See  Earth's  Noblemen. 
Old  Schoolmaster,  The. 
Old  Tennant  Church. 
Our   Ships   at   Sea. 
Patrick  O'Rouke  and  the  Frogs. 
Statue  of  Liberty  Unveiled. 
Temperance,   1776-1876. 
Ten   Pound   Ten. 
This  Old  World  of  Ours. 
Town  Pump,  The. 
Vegetable  Convention,   A. 
Bunn,    W:    M. — My   Ships. 

Bunnell,  Gertie  F. — Trial  of  Fing  Wing.     (Ad.) 
Bunner,  Alice  Learned. — Immutabilis.     See  Vingtaine 
Separation.     See   Vingtaine. 
Vingtaine. 
Bunner,  H:  Cuyler. — Appeal  to  Harold,  The. 
Behold   the    Deeds! 
Candor. 

Chaperon,   The. 
Deaf. 

Farewell  to  Salvini. 
Feminine. 
For  an  Old  Poet. 

Grandfather  Watts's  Private   Fourth. 
Holiday  Home. 
J.  B. 

Last  of  the  New  Year's  Callers,  The. 
Les  Morts  Vont  Vite. 
Mr.   Copernicus  and   the  Proletariat. 
My  Shakspere. 
Nice  People,  The. 
Nine-cent  Girls,  The. 
Old    Flag,    The, 

On   Reading  a  Poet's  First   Book. 
"One,  Two,  Three." 
Pitcher  of  Mignonette,  A. 
Round-up,    A. 

Salute  the  Flag.     See  Old  Flag,  The. 
She  was  a  Beauty. 
Sisterly  Scheme,  A. 
Strong  as  Death. 
Tenor,   The. 
To  a   Dead   Woman. 
To   a  June   Breeze. 
Triumph. 

Wav   to   Arcady,   The. 
Wiltielm    I.,    Emperor   of    Germany. 
Yes? 
Bunyan,  J: — "Heart  when  broken,  is  like  sweet  gums 

and   spices  when  beaten.   The." 
Land    of   Beulah,   The.     See   Pilgrim's   Progress. 
Of  the  Child  with  the  Bird  at  the  Bush. 
Palace  Beautiful,  The.     See    Pilgrim's    Progress. 
Pilgrim,  The.     See  Pilgrim's  Progress. 
Pilgrim's    Progress. 
Shepherd  Boy  Sings  in  the  Valley  of  Humiliation, 

The.     See  Pilgrim's  Progress. 
Song:  "He  that  is  down  need  fear  no  fall."     See 

Pilgrim's    Progress. 
Buon,    Maida. — La    Tour   d'Auvergne. 
Buonarrotti,  Michelangelo. — At  Florence.     See  To  the 

Supreme  Being. 
Ideal  Love. 
"If  it  be  true  that  any  beauteous  thing."     See 

Sonnet:  "If  it  be  true,"  etc. 
In  Love's  Own  Time. 
Love's  Justification. 
Might  of  One  Fair  Face,  The. 
"Might  of  one  fair  face  sublimes  mv  love,  The." 

See  Might   of   One    Fair   Face,  The. 
Reply  to  "Lines  Found  in  the  Qand  of  the  Statue 

of  Night  at  Florence." 
Sonnet:  "As  when,  O  lady  mine,"  etc. 
Sonnet:  "If  it  be  true,"  etc. 
Sonnet:  "Yes,   hope  may  with  my  strong  desire 

keep  pace." 
Sonnet:  "The  prayers  I  make  will  then  be  sweet 

indeed." 
To  the  Supreme  Being." 

To  VittoriaColonna.  See  Sonnet:  "Yes,  hope,"  etc. 
Burbidge,   T: — Eventide. 
If  I  Desire. 

If  I  Desire  with  Pleasant  Songs.     See  If  I  Desire. 
Mother's  Love. 
To  Imperia. 


409 


Burdette 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Burdette,  Jas.  S.— Betsey  und  I  Hafe  Bust  Ub. 

Burdette,  Rob't  Jones  (continued). 

Der  Mule.     See  Der  Mule  Shtood  on  der  St«am- 

Sic  Transit. 

boad  Deck. 

Since  She  Went  Home. 

Der  Mule  Shtood  on  der  Steamboad  Deck. 

Sisyphus. 

Irishman's.  Panorama,   The. 

Soldiers,  Rest. 

Panorama,  The.     See  Irishman's  Panorama,  The. 

Songs  without  Words. 
Spell  of  Rhyme,  A. 

Burdette,  Rob't  Joilfcs. — Advice  to  a  Young  Man. 

After   the   Battle. 

Sunday  Talk  in  the  Horse  Sheds. 

All  Things  to  All  Men. 

"Teamster  Jim." 

Aquarius. 

"There  was  a  young  man  of  Cohoes." 

Archaological   Congress,   An. 

Three    Fiends,    The. 

Baby  Mine. 

Tramp,   The. 

Brakeman  at  Church,  The. 

Trolley  La  La! 
Two   Rag  Men. 

Brakeman  Goes  to  Church,  The.     See  Brakeman 

at  Church,  The. 

Twilight  Idyll,  A. 

Under  the  Purple  and  Motley. 

Brakeman's   Sweetheart, The. 

Bravest   of   the   Brave, 

Utopia. 

Cataracket,  A. 

What  Lack  we  Yet? 

Comet,  The. 

What  Men  have  not  Fought  for. 
What  Will  We  Do?     See  Utopia. 

Consequences. 

Countermarch,  The. 

When  My  Ship   Comes   In. 

When    Washington    was    President.     See    What 

Cricket,  The. 

Day  in  the  Woods,  A. 

Lack    we    Yet? 

Day  We  Do  not  Celebrate,  The. 

Burdick,  Arthur  J. — Keep  up  with  the  Times. 

Dogmatic  Philosophy. 

Orphan    Billy. 

Don't   Be   Mean,   Boys. 

Biirger,     Gottfried  August.— Chase,    The.     Sfie   Wild 

Don't  Fret. 

Huntsman,  The. 

Emancipation  of  Man,  The. 

Lenora. 

Engineers  Making  Love. 

Wild  Himtsman,  The. 

Evening. 

Burgess,  [Frank]  Gelett. — Abstemia. 

Festina   Lente. 

Abstrosophy. 

Finis. 

Bohemians  of  Boston,  The. 

Froward  Duster,  The. 

"I'd  rather  have  habits  than  clothes." 

Funny  Old  Clown,  The. 

Invisible    Bridge,    The. 

Get   Acquainted    with    Yourself. 

Lazy   Roof,  The. 

Getting   Even. 

My  Feet. 

Glory  m  the  Northwest. 

Psycholophon. 

Gray  Day,  The. 

Purple  Cow,  The. 

History  of  William  Penn. 

Burgon,  J:  W:— Petra. 

Hod-fellow,    The. 

Burk.  Edmund  J. — Busy. 

In  Medio  Tutissimus  Ibis. 

Honkl  Honk! 

In  Time  of  Peace. 

Origin   of  Shoes,   The. 
Burke,  Christian. — Peasant  Heroine,  A. 

Inside   Track,    The. 

James  Whitcomb  Riley. 

Burke,    Edmund. — American    Taxation.     See   Speech 

Lines  to  a  Mule. 

on  American  Taxation. 

Little  Foxes. 

Apostrophe  to  the  Queen  of  France.      See    Re- 
flections on  the  French  Revolution. 

Little  Hatchet  Story,  The. 

Main  Hatch,  The. 

Arraignment  of  Ministers. 

March. 

Close    of    Impeachment    of    Hastings.     See    Im- 

Margins. 

peachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 

Master  Sleeps,  The. 

Despotism  Incompatible  with  Right. 

May   Day. 

England  and  Her  Colonies.     See  Speech  on  Con- 

Mendicant, The. 

ciliation  with  America. 

Miss  Witchazel   and  Mr.   Thistlepod. 

Enterprise    of    American    Coloni.«!ts,     1775.     See 

Mr.  Middlerib's  Experiment. 

Speech  on  Conciliation  with  America. 

Modern    High   School   Valedictory. 

Hyder  Ali.     See  Nabob  of  Arcot's  Debt,  The. 

Monument  of  William  Penn,  The.     See  History 

Infamous  Legislation. 

of   William   Penn.   The. 

Impeachment    of    Hastings    Finished.      See    Im- 

Morning. 

peachment    of   Warren    Hastings. 

Movement  Cure  for  Rheumatism,  The.     See  Mr. 

Impeachment    of    Mr.    Hastings,    The.     See   Im- 

Middlerib's   Experiment. 

peachment   of    Warren    Hastings. 

My  First  Cigar. 

Impeachment   of  Warren   Hastings. 

My  Fountain  Pen. 

John  Howard.     See  Speech  at  Bristol,  Previous 

New  Cure  for  Rheumatism,  A.     See  Mr.  Middle- 

to the  Election,   1780. 

rib's  Experiment. 

Magnanimity  in  Politics.     See  Speech  on  Concilia- 
tion with  America. 

New  Hatchet  Story  and  George  Washington,  A. 
See  Little  Hatchet  Storv,  The. 

Marie     Antoinette.       See     Reflections     on    the 

New  Version  of  a  Certain  Historical  Dialogue,  A. 

French  Revolution. 

Odd    I    See,    The. 

Marie  Antoinette,  Queen  of  France.     See  Reflec- 

Old   Wine    in    New    Bottles. 

tions  on  the  French  Revelution. 

On  the  Coast  of  Man. 

Nabob  of  Arcot's  Debt,  The. 

One  Touch  of  Nature. 

On  American  Taxation.     See  Speech  on  American 

Orphan  Bom. 

Taxation. 

Owed   to  Halifax. 

Peroration    against   Warren    Hastings.     See    Im- 

Penn's Monument.     See  History  of  William  Penn. 

peachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 

Pierian  Spring,  The. 

Peroration  of  Burke's  Speech  on   the   Impeach- 

Plaint   of   Jonah,    The. 

ment    of    Warren    Hastings.     See    Impeach- 

Postmaster, The. 

ment  of  Warren  Hastings. 

Private's  Glory,  The. 

Queen  of  France  and  the  Spirit  of  Chivalry,  'The. 

Pulmonic   Fusion. 
Putting  His  Armor  On. 

See    Reflections    on    the    French    Revolution. 

Reflections  on  the  French  Revolution. 

Putty    Man,    The. 

Right  to  Tax  America,   The. 

Railway  Matinee,  A. 

Speech  at  Bristol,  Previous  to  the  Election,  1780. 

Realization. 

Speech  on  American  Taxation. 

Reminiscence  of  Exhibition  Day,  A. 

Speech  on  Conciliation  with  America. 

Rime   of  the  Ancient   Miller. 

Speeches  in  the   Impeachment  of  Warren  Hast- 

Romance of  the  Carpet,  The. 

ings.     See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 

Running   the    Weekly. 
School    Ma'am,    The. 

To  the  Electors  of  Bristol.     See  Speech  at  Bristol, 

Previous  to  the  Election,   1780. 

School    "Takes    Up." 

To   the   House   of   Lords.     See   Impeachment   of 

Schoolboy's  Strike,  The. 

Warren  Hastings. 

Seedsman.  The. 

Wisdom  Dearly  Purchased.     See  Sneech  at  Bris- 

Sermon  of  I^ife,  A. 

tol,  Previous  to  the  Election,   1780. 

Settling  under  Difficulties. 

Burke,  M.  L.  S.— Turned  Out  for  Rent. 

410 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Burns 


Burke,    Marg.    Sullivan. — In    Sugar    Time. 
Burke,  Rev.T:  N :— Liberator,  The. 

National  Music  of  Ireland,  The. 

O'Connell.     See  Liberator,  The. 

Power    of    Music,    The.     <See  National   Music  of 
Ireland,   The. 
Burleigh,  Clarence  B. — Two  Seasons. 
Burleigh,    G:   Shepard. — Conqueror   Conquered,   The. 

Mother    Margery. 

Prayer  for  Life,  A. 

What    to    Drink. 
Burleigh,  W:  H: — Blessed  are  They  that  Mourn. 

Deborah  I^ee. 

Gifted    for    Giving. 

Matins. 

Rum  Fiend,  The.  See  Rum  Maniac,  The. — 
Frank  H.  Fenno. 

Satan   and   the   Grog-seller. 

Scourge  of  War,  The. 

True  Faith,  The. 

Trust. 

Weaver,  The. 
Burlingame,    Anson. — Charles    Sumner    Attacked    in 

the  Senate. 
Burlingame,  E.  W. — St.  Valentine's  Eve. 
Burlingame,  M.  F. — Playing  Four^th  of  July. 
Burlington    Hawkeye. — Champion    Snorer,    The. 

Condensed  Telegram,  The. 

Driving  the   Cow. 

Happy    Love. 

Load  on  His  Mind,  The. 

Mrs.    Middlerib's    Letter. 

Romeo  and  Juliet.  The  Way  it  Should  be  Read 
in    1880. 

Songs  in   the   Night. 

Word  for  Cranks,  A. 
"Burn,  Minstrel." — Leader  Haughs. 
Burnand,  Sir  Fs.  Cowley. — Oh,  My  Geraldine. 

True   to  Poll. 
Burnett,  Alf. — Drunken  Soliloquy  in  a  Coal  Cellar,  A. 

Egyptian  Debate. 

Peter  Sorghum  in  Love. 

Yankee  in  Love  A.     See  Peter  Sorghum  in  Love. 
Burnett,   Mrs.  Frances   Eliza  [Hodgson]. — Fauntleroy 
and  the  Earl.     See  Little  Lord  Fauntleroy. 

In   the   Pit.     See  That   Lass  O'Lowrie's. 

Little    Lord    Fauntleroy. 

New   Baby,    The. 

Surly   Tim. 

Surly  Tim's  Trouble.     See  Surly  Tim. 

That  Lass  o'   Lowrie's. 
Burnett.  Mary  E. — Did  not  Pass. 
Burnham,  Anna  F. — Baby's  Offering. 

First  Tangle,  The. 

Her  Name. 

True   to  Life. 
Burnham,  Mrs.  Clara  Louise  [Root]. — All  at  Sea.     (IF. 
others.) 

Sunshine   in   the   House. 
Burnham,    Raymond. — Her    Answer    to    His    Verses. 
Bums.  E:  F. — Hobson  and  His  Men. 

King  Coal  to  Uncle  Sam. 
Bums,  .L   D.— Child   Samuel,  The. 
Burns,  Rob't. — Absence.     {At.) 

Address  to  a  I.,ady.  See  O,  wert  thou  in  the  Cauld 
Blast. 

Address  to  the  Deil. 

Address  to  the  Toothache. 

Address  to  the  Unco  Guid,  or,  the  Rigidly  Right- 
eous. 

Address  to  the  Woodlark. 

Ae  Fond  Kiss. 

Ae.  Fond  Kiss  before  We  Part.      See  Ae  Fond  Kiss. 

Afton  Water.     See  Sweet  Afton. 

"Again  rejoicing  nature  sees."  See  Composed 
in  Spring. 

Answer  to  Verses  Addressed  to  the  Poet  by  the 
Guidwife  of  Wauchope  House.  See  1*0  the 
Guidwife  of  Wauchope  House. 

As  I  Stood  by  yon  Roofless  Tower. 

Anld  Lang  Syne. 

Banks  o'  [or  of]  Doon,  The. 

BaVinockburn. 

Battle  of  Bannockburn,  The.      See  Bannockburn. 

Bafd's  Epitanh,  A. 

Beauties  of  Nature,  The. 

Before  Parting.     See  My  Bonny  Mary. 

Birks  of  Aberfeldy,  The. 

Blissful  Day,  The.     See  Day  Retums.  The. 

Bonnie  Doon.     See  Banks  o'  Doon,  The. 

Bonnie  Lesley  [or  Leslie]. 

Bonnie  Mary.     See  My  Bonnie  Mary. 

Bonnie  Wee  Thing. 

Bookworms,  The. 


Burns,  Rob't  {continued). 

Bruce  -to  His  Men  at  Bannockburn.  See  Ban- 
nockburn. 

Bruce's  Address.     See  Bannockburn. 

Bruce's  Address  to  His  Army.     See  Bannockburn. 

Ca,'  the  Yowes  to  the  Knowes.  (One  vers.  at.  to 
Isabel  Pagan.) 

Captain's  Lady,  Tne. 

Cha,rlie  He's  My  Darling.  {Another  vers,  by  Jas. 
Hogg.) 

Charming  Month  of  May.  See  It  was  the  Charm- 
ing Month. 

Child's  Grace,  A.     See  Selkirk  Grace.  The. 

Chloe.     See  It  was  the  Charming  Month. 

Cock  up  your  Beaver 

Comin'  through  the  Rye. 

Composed  in  Spring. 

Cotter's  Saturday  Night,  The. 

Day  Returns,  The. 

Day  Returns,  My  Bosom  Burns,  The.  See  Day 
Returns,  The. 

Death  and  Dying  Words  of  Poor  Mailie,  The. 

Defiance.     See  McPherson's  Farewell. 

Dinner  at  the  House  of  Dugal  Stewart,  A. 

Duncan  Gray. 

Duncan  Gray  Cam'  Here  to  Woo.   See  Duncan  Gray. 

Dusty  Miller,  The. 

Elegy  on  (Captain  Matthew  Henderson.  See  On 
Captain  Matthew  Henderson. 

Epistle  to  a  Young  Friend. 

Epistle  to  Davie. 

Epistle  to  James  Smith. 

Epistle  to  John  Lapraik,  An. 

Epistle  to  Mrs.  Scott  of  Wauchope,  The.  See  To 
the  Guidwife  of  Wauchope  House. 

Epitaph  on  a  Celebrated  Ruling  Elder. 

Epitaph  on  a  Wag  in  Mauchline. 

Epitaph  on  Holy  Willie. 

Epitaph  on  W .     See    On    Wm.    Graham    of 

Mossknowe. 

Farewell,  A.     See  My  Bonnie  Mary. 

Farewell,  The.     See  It  was  a'  for  our  Rightfu'  King. 

Farewell  to  Nancy.     See  Ae  Fond  Kiss. 

Flow  Gently,  Sweet  Afton.     See  Sweet  Afton. 

For  a'  That  and  a'  That.  See  Is  there,  for  Honest 
Poverty. 

Goal  of  Life,  The.     See  Auld  Lang  Syne. 

Good  Heart.     See  Epistle  to  Davie. 

Green  Grow  the  Rashes  [O]! 

Halloween. 

Happy  Trio,  The. 

Hark!  the  Mavis.  See  Ca'  the  Yowes  to  the 
Knowes. 

Heard  ye  o'  the  Tree  of  Liberty?  See  Tree  of 
Liberty,  The. 

"Here  haply  too,  at  vernal  dawn."  See  Humble 
Petition  of  Bruar  Water  to  the  Noble  Duke  of 
Athole.  The. 

Here's  a  Health  to  Ane  I  Lo'e  dear.     See  Jessy. 

Here's  a  Health  to  Them  that's  Awa. 

He's  Gane.  See  Elegy  on  Captain  Matthew  Hen- 
derson. 

Hey,  the  Dusty  Miller.     See  Dusty  Miller,  The. 

Highland  Mary. 

Holy  Fair,  The. 

Holy  Willie's  Prayer. 

Honest  Poverty.    See  Is  there,  for  Honest  Poverty. 

Humble  Petition  of  Bruar  Water  to  the  Noble 
Duke  of  Athole,  The. 

I  Love  my  Jean. 

I  See  a  Form,  I  See  a  Face. 
In.spiration.     See  To  William  Simpson. 
Is  there,  for  Honest  Poverty. 

It  was  a'  for  our  Rightfu'  King. 

II  was  the  Charming  Month. 

It  was  the  Charming  Month  of  May.  See  Itlwas 
the  Charming  Month.  ~ 

Jean.     See  I  Love  My  Jean. 

Jessy. 

John  Anderson.     See  John  Anderson,  My  Jo. 

Jbdn  Anderson,  My  Jo. 

John  Barleycorn. 

Kenmore's  on  and  Awa. 

Lady  Mary  Ann. 

L'ament  for  Culloden.  See  Lovely  Lass  of  Inver- 
(  ness.  The. 

Lament  for  Glencairn.  See  Lament  for  James, 
Earl  of  Glencairn. 

Lament  for  James,  Earl  of  Glencairn. 

Lament  of  Mary  Queen  of  Scots  on  the  Approach 
of  Spring. 

Lass  of  Balloehmyle,  The. 

Last  Mav  a  Braw  Wooer. 

Let  not  Woman  e'er  Complain. 


411 


Burns 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Burns,  Rob't  (continued). 

Lines: — "I  murder  hate  by  field  or  flood." 

Lovely  Lass  of  Inverness,  The. 

McPherson's  Farewell. 

Man  was  Made  to  Mourn. 

Man's  a  Man  ^r  a'  That,  A.  See  Is  there,  for 
Honest  Poverty. 

Mary  Morison. 

Melancholy.     See  Man  was  Made  to  Mourn. 

My  Bonnie  Mary. 

My  Father  was  a  Farmer. 

My  Heart's  in  the  Highlands. 

My  Jean.     See  Though  Cruel  Fate. 

My  Jean.     See  also  I  Love  my  Jean. 

My  Nanie,  O. 

My  Nanie's  Awa. 

My  Nannie's  Awa.     See  My  Nanie's  Awa. 

My  Wife's  a  Winsome  Wee  Thing. 

O  Mally's  Meek.  Mally's  Sweet. 

O,  My  Luve's  Like  a  Red,  Red  Rose.  See  Red, 
Red  Rose,  A. 

O,  Saw  Ye  Bonnie  Lesley?     See  Bonnie  Lesley. 

O  Stay,  Sweet  Warbling  Wood-lark.  See  Address 
to  the  Woodlark. 

O  this  is  No  my  Own  Lassie.  See  I  See  a  Form, 
I  See  a  Face. 

O  were  nay  Love  yon  Lilac  Fair. 

O,  Wert  Thou  in  the  Cauld  Blast. 

Of  a'  the  Airts.     iSee  I  Love  my  Jean. 

Of  a'  the  Airts  the  Wind  can  Blaw.  See  I  Love 
rny  Jean. 

Oh,  Wert  Thou  in  the  Cauld  Blast.  See  O,  Wert 
Thou  in  the  Cauld  Blast. 

On  a  Celebrated  Ruling  Elder.  iSee  Epitaph  on 
a  Celebrated  Ruling  Elder. 

On  a  Noted  Coxcomb. 

On  a  Scotch  Coxcomb.     See  On  a  Noted  Coxcomb. 

On  a  Suicide. 

On  a  Wag  in  Mauchline.  See  Epitaph  on  a  Wag 
in  Mauchline. 

On  Andrew  Turner. 

On  Caotain  Grose's  Peregrinations  through  Scot- 
land. See  On  the  Late  Captain  Grose's  Pere- 
grinations thro'  Scotland. 

On  Caotain  Matthew  Henderson. 

On  Grizzel  Grim  [Grimme— C]. 

On  Holy  Willie.     See  Epitaph  on  Holy  Willie. 

On  John  Dove. 

On  Seeing  a  Wounded  Hare  Limp  by  Me; 

On  the  Late  Captain  Grose's  Peregrinations  thro' 
Scotland. 

On  Wm.  Graham  of  Mossknowe. 

Phyllis  [or  Phillis]  the  Fair. 

Poet's  Choice,  The.  See  Lines:  "I  murder  hate 
by  field  or  flood." 

Prayer  in  the  Prospect  of  Death,  A. 

Red,  Red  Rose,  A. 

River's  Suonlication,  The.  See  Humble  Petition  of 
Bruar  Water  to  the  Noble  Duke  of  Athole,  The. 

Scotland.  See  To  the  Guidwife  of  Wauchope 
House. 

Scots  Wha  Hae.     See  Bannockburn. 

Selkirk  Grace,  The. 

Silver  Tassie,  The.     See  My  Bonnie  Mary. 

Sweet   Afton. 

Sweet  are  the  Banks.     See  Banks  o'  Doon,  The. 

Tam  Glen. 

Tam  O'Shanter. 

"Then  gently  scan  your  brother  man."  See  Ad- 
dress to  Unco  Guid,  or,  the  Rigidly  Righteous. 

There'll  never  be  Peace  till  Jamie  Comes  Hame. 

This  is  no  my  ain  Lassie.  See  I  See  a  Form,  I 
See  a  Face. 

Thou  Lingering  Star.     See  To  Mary  in  Heaven. 

Though  Cruel  Fate. 

Tibbie  Dunbar. 

To  a  Field  House.  See  To  a  Mouse,  on  Turning 
up  her  Nest  with  a  Plough. 

To  a  Louse. 

To  a  Mountain  Daisy. 

To  a  Mouse.  See  To  a  Mouse,  on  Turning  up 
her  Nest  with  the  Plough. 

To  a  Mouse,  on  Turning  up  her  Nest  with  the 
Plough. 

To  Mary  in  Heaven. 

To    the    Devil.     See   Address   to   the   Deil. 

To  the  Guidwife  of  Wauchope  House. 

To  the  Unco  Guid[,  or  the  Rigidly  Righteous]. 
See  Address  to  the  Unco  Guid,  or  the  Rigid- 
ly Righteous. 

To  William  Simpson. 

Tree  of  Liberty,  The. 

True  Until  Death.  See  It  was  a'  for  our  Rightfu' 
King. 


Burns,  Rob't  (continued). 

Up  in  the  Morning  Early. 

Vision,  The. 

Vision,  The.       See  also  As  I  Stood  by  yon  Roof- 
less Tower. 

Wandering  Willie. 

We  All  Have  Faults.     See  To  a  Louse. 

"When  I  think  on  the  happy  days."     (At.)     See 
Ab.sence. 

Whistle,  The. 

Whistle,  and  I'll  Come  to  You  [or  Ye],  My  Lad. 

Winsome    Wee    Thing,    The.     See   My    Wife's    a 
Winsome  Wee  Thing. 

Winter. 

Winter  Night,  A. 

Writing  Verses.     See  Epistle  to  James  Smith. 

"Ye    banks    and    braes    o'    bonnie    Doon."     See 
Banks  o'  Doon,  The. 

Ye   Flowery   Banks.     See  Banks  o'    Doon,   The. 
Burr,  Amelia. — Battle  of  Manila,  The. 
Burr,  Celia  M. — Agnes  and  the  Years. 
Burrell,  D:  Jas. — Shepherd's  Story,  The. 

Burrington,  . — Beautiful,  The. 

Burritt,  Elihu  ("  The  Learned  Blacksmith"). — Ambi- 
tious Youth,  The.     See  One  Niche  the  Highest. 

Drunkard's  Wife,  The. 

Old  Woman's  Railroad  Signal,  The. 

One  Niche  the  Highest. 

Scene   at   the    Natural   Bridge.     See   One    Niche 
the  Highest. 
Burroughs,  Althea  S. — Savannah. 
Burroughs,  Ellen.     See  Jewett,  Sophie. 
Burroughs,  J: — Blue-bird.  The.     See  Wake  Robin. 

Golden  Crown  Sparrow  of  Alaska. 

To  the  Lapland  Longspur. 

Waiting. 

Wake  Robin. 
Burroughs,  Mrs.  Ophelia  G.  [Browning]. — Sometime — 

Somewhere. 
Burroughs,  W.  F. — Young  Boot-black,  The. 
Burton,  H:— Gold  of  Hope,  The. 

Ivv,  The. 

"Were  there  no  night,  we  could  not  read  the  stars." 
Burton,  J: — Holy  Bible,  Book  Divine. 
Burton,   R:  Eugene. — Across  the  Fields  to  Anne. 

Black  Sheep. 

City,  The. 

"Extras!" 

First  Song,  The. 

Forefather,  The. 

God's  Garden. 

In  Sleep. 

Love  is  Strong. 

Ma.sks. 

Mortis  Dignitas. 

On  a  Ferry  Boat. 

On  the  Stair. 

Polar  Quest,  The. 

Race  of  the  Boomers,  The. 

Unpraised  Picture,  An. 
Burton,    Rob't. — On    Melancholy. 
Busbee,  C;  Manly. — Benefits  of  the  Civil  War. 
Bushnell,  E: — Reasonable  Doubt,  A. 
Bushnell,  Frances  Louisa. — In  the  Dark. 

Once  Upon  a  Time. 

Unfulfilment. 

World  Music. 
Bushnell,  W:  H. — Touch  of  Nature,  A. 
Butler,  Rev.  Dr. — Death  of  Henry  Clay. 
Butler,  Arthur  Grey. — Oh!  to  See  Him  Once  Again. 
Butler,  B:  Franklin.  Jr. — Fauntleroy. 
Butler,   Ellis  Parker. — Secret  Combination,  The. 
Butler,  Mrs.  Frances  Anne  [Kemble].-»-Absence. 

Art  Thou  Already  Weary. 

"Better  trust  all  and  be  deceived."     See  Faith. 

Black  Wall-flower,  The. 

Description  of  Holland. 

Evening. 

Faith. 

Lament  of  a  Mocking-bird. 

Trust.     See  Faith. 
Butler.  Marie  Barrett. — Tottie's  Tree-talk. 
Butler,  Mary  R. — My  Vesper  Song. 
Butler.  Pauline. — Worth  before  Snow. 
Butler,  S: — Amantium  Irae.     See  Hudibras. 

Apology    for    Plagiaries,    An.      See    Satire    upon 
Plagiaries. 

.\rgumentative  Theology.     See  Hudibras. 

Authority. 

Bad  Writers. 

Character  of  a  Small  Poet,  The. 

Character  of   Hudibras,  The.     See  Hudibras. 

Confession. 

Courtiers. 


412 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Byron 


Butler,  S:  {continued). 

Critics. 

Description   of   Holland. 

Distichs  and  Saws. 

Epigram  on  a  Club  of  Sots. 

Fear. 

Godly,  The. 

Good  Writing. 

Holland.     See  Description  of  Holland. 

Honour.     See  Hudibras. 

Hudibras. 

Hudibras'  Sword  and  Dagger.     See  Hudibras. 

Hypocrisy. 

Inventions. 

Laborious  Writers. 

Language   of  the  Learned. 

Law,  The.  (3). 

Logic  of  Hudibras.     See  Hudibras. 

Logicians. 

Love. 

Marriage. 

Marriage.     See  aUo  Hudibras. 

Martial  Music.     See  Hudibras. 

Miscellaneous  Thoughts. 

Morning.     See   Hudibras. 

Muse  of  Doggerel,  The.     See  Hudibras. 

'New   Light.'     See  Hudibras. 

Night.     See  Hudibras. 

On  a  Club  of  Sots.    See  Epigram  on  a  Club  of  Sots. 

Opinion. 

Opinionative,  The. 

Piety. 

Poets. 

Polish. 

Politicians. 

Presbyterians,   The.     See   Hudibras. 

Puffing. 

Puritans.     See  Hudibras. 

Rabble,  The;  or.  Who  Pays. 

Religion   of  Hudibras,   The.     See  Hudibras. 

Satire   upon   Plagiaries. 

Satire  upon  the  Weakness  and  Misery  of  Man. 

Smatterers. 

Spiritual  Trimmers.     See  Hudibras. 

Upon   the   Weakness   and   Misery   of   Man.     See 
Satire  upon  the  Weakness  and  Misery  of  Man. 

Women. 
Butler,  Sarah.     See  Wister,  Mrs.  Sakah  [Butlek]. 
Butler,  W:  Allen.— All's  Well! 

Cast-off  Garments.     See  Nothing  to  Wear. 

"I  Can't  "  and  "I  Can." 

Incognita  of  Raphael. 

Miss  Flora  M'Flimsey.     See  Nothing  to  Wear. 

Nothing  to  Wear. 

Uhland. 
Butler,  W :  Archer. — "It  was  no  relief  from  temporal 

evils  that  the  Apostle  promised." 
Butt,  Geraldine. — After  All! 

Biitterbaugh,  D.  S.  T. — Nothing  and  Something. 
Butterfield,  Mrs.  A.  M. — To  the  Portrait  of  one  "Gone 

Before." 
Butterworth,  Hezekiah. — Banner  that   Welcomes  the 
World,  The. 

Crown  Our  Washington. 

Decoration  Day. 

Discovery  Day. 

Festal   Day   Has  Come,  The. 

First    Boston    Thanksgiving,    The.— July,    1630. 
See  Thanksgiving  in  Boston  Harbor,  The. 

First  Christmas  in   New  England,  The. 

First  Thanksgiving,   The. 

For  Christmas  Day. 

How  Dot  Heard  "The  Messiah." 

In  Bay  Chaleur. 

Lincoln's  Last  Dream. 

Nation's  Defenders,  The. 

Nix's  Mate. 

Old  Flower-beds,  The. 

Organ-temoest  of  Lucerne,  The. 

Planting  the  Oak. 

Salve. 

Snowbird,  The. 

Star  in  the  West,  The. 

Stately  Minuet,  The. 

Thanksgiving  in  Boston  Harber,  The. 

Washington.     See  Crown  Our  Washington. 
Butts,  Mrs.  Mary  Frances  [Barber]. — Brook's  Song,  The. 

Christmas  Trees,   The. 

DewdroDs.     See  Million  Little  Diamonds,  A. 

"Here  We  Are!" 

I  Wish  I  was  a  Grown-up! 

In  Galilee. 

Is  it  Raining? 

Million  liittle  Diamonds,  A. 


Butts,  Mrs.  Mary  Frances  [Barber]  {continued).  , 

Nature's  Thoughtfulness. 

New  Year,  The. 

Night. 

Preparation. 

Selfish  and  Lend-a-Hand. 

So  the  Snow  Comes  Down. 

Sweetest  Place,  The. 

Tree  Planting. 

Trust. 

Water-lily,  The. 

Wild  Winds. 

Winter  Jewels.     See  Million  Little'Diamonds,  A. 

Winter  Night. 
Butts,  T:  W.— Santa  Claus'  Speech. 
Buxton,  Ida  M. — Faded  Flowers. 

Byers,     S:     Hawkins     Marshall. — Marriage     of     the 
Flowers,  The. 

Sherman's  March  to  the  Sea. 
Byr,  Rob't. — Cipher  Despatch,  The. 

Love  Conquers  Revenge.  See  Cipher  Despatch,  The. 
Byrd,   W: — My   Mind    to   Me   a   Kingdom   is.     {At.) 
See  Dyer,  Sir  E: 

Quiet  Life,  The. 

Song:  "What  pleasure  have  great  princes."     See 
Quiet  Life,  The. 
Byrom,  Dr.  J: — Careless  Content. 

Christmas  Carol. 

Country  Fellows  and  the  Ass,  The. 

Countrymen  and  the  Ass,  The.  See  Coimtry  Fel- 
lows and  the  Ass,  The. 

Desponding  Soul's  Wish,  The. 

Epigram  on  Two  Monopolists.  See  On  T*o  Lean 
Millers. 

Jacobite  Toast.  See  To  the  Same  [  an  Officer  in 
the  Army],  etc. 

My  Spirit  Longeth  for  Thee.  See  Desponding 
Soul's  Wish,  The. 

Nimmers,  The. 

On  the  Origin  of  Evil. 

On  Two  Lean  Millers. 

Pastoral,   A. 

Pond,  The. 

Saint  Philip  Neri  and  the  Youth. 

Spectacles;  or.  Helps  to  Read.  See  Verses 
Spoken  on  the  same  Occasion  with  the  Pre- 
ceding Fat  the  Breaking  up  of  the  Free  Gram- 
mar School,  in  Manchester]. 

Three  Black  Crows,  The. 

To  the  Same  [an  Officer  in  the  Army],  Extem- 
pore; Intended  to  Allay  the  Violence  of  Party 
Spirit. 

Verses  Spoken  on  the  same  Occasion  with  the 
Preceding  [at  the  Breaking  up  of  the  Free 
Grammar   School,   in   Manchester]. 

Which  is  Which.     See  To  the  same  [an  Officer 
in  the  Army],  etc. 
Byron,  G:   Noel  Gordon,   Lord. — Address  Spoken  at 
the  Opening  of  Drury  Lane  Theatre,  Satur- 
day, Oct.   10,   1812. 

Address  to  the  Ocean.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Adieu!  Adieu!  My  Native  Shore.  See  Childe's 
Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Alhama.  See  Very  Mournful  Ballad  on  the  Siege 
and  Conquest  of  Alhama,  A. 

All  for  Love.  See  Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road 
between  Florence  and  Pisa. 

All  is  Vanity,  saith  the  Preacher. 

Alp's  Decision.     See  Siege  of  Corinth,  The. 

Ambition.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

And  Thou  art  Dead,  as  Young  and  Fair. 

Apostrophe  to  the  Ocean.  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 

Apparition,  The.     See  Manfred. 

Aspect  of  Death.     See  Giaour,  The. 

At  St.  Peter's  at  Rome.  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 

Ball  at  Brussels,  the  Night  before  the  Battle  of 
Waterloo,  The.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Battle  of  Albuera.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Battle  of  Waterloo,  The.  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 

Beppo. 

Bride  of  Abydos,  The. 

Bull  Fight,  The.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Byron's  Last  Poem.  See  On  this  Day  I  Complete 
my  Thirty-sixth  Year. 

Calm  and  Storm  on  Lake  Leman.  See  Childe 
Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Childe  Harold's  Farewell  to  England.  See  Childe 
Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Childe   Harold's  Pilgrimage. 


413 


Byron 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Byron,  G:  Noel  Gordon,  Lord  (continued). 

Chillon.     See   Prisoner  of  Chillon,   The. 

Churchill's  Grave. 

Coliseum,  The.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Coliseum,  The.     jSee  aha  Manfred. 

Coliseum  by  Mo*ilight.     See  Manfred. 

Cornelian,  'The. 

Corsair,  "rhe. 

"Could  love  forever."  See  Stanzas:  "Could  love 
forever." 

Curse  of  Marino  Faliero,  The.  See  Marino  Fali- 
ero.  Doge  of  Venice. 

Daniel  Boone.     See  Don  Juan. 

Darkness. 

Dead  Heroes.     See  Siege  of  Corinth,  The. 

Death  of  General  Marceau.  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 

Death  of  the  Princess  Charlotte.  See  Childe  Har- 
old's Pilgrimage. 

Death  Penalty  for  New  Offences,  The. 

"Dedication"  in  Don  Juan,  The.     See  Don  Juan. 

Defeat  of  Napoleon.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Deformed  Transformed,  The. 

Degeneracy  of  Greece.     See  Don  Juan. 

Destruction  of  Sennacherib,  The. 

Doge's  Sentence,  The.  See  Marino  Faliero,  Doge 
of  Venice. 

Don  Juan. 

Donna  Julia's  Letter.     See  Don  Juan. 

Dream,    The. 

Dream  of  Darkness.     See  Darkness. 

Dying  Gladiator,  The.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Dying  Speech  of  Marino  Faliero.  See  Marino 
Faliero,  Doge  of  Venice. 

Elegy.  See    Oh,  Snatched  away  in  Beauty' s  Bloom. 

Elegy  on  Thyrza.  See  And  thou  art  Dead,  as 
Young  and  Fair. 

English  Bards  and  Scotch  Reviewers. 

Epistle   to  Augusta. 

Epitaph  for  William  Pitt. 

Epitaph  on  John  Adams  of  Southwell,  a  Carrier, 
who  Died  of  Drunkenness. 

Eternal  Spirit  of  the  Chainless  Mind.  See  Pris- 
oner of  Chillon,  The. 

Eve  of  Quatre  Bras.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Eve  of  Waterloo,  The.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Evening.     See  Don  Juan. 

Execution,  The.     See  Parisina. 

Exhortation  to  the  Greeks. 

Fair  Greece!  Sad  Relic  of  Departed  Worth.  See 
Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Fall  of  Greece.  The.     See  Giaour,  The. 

Fall  of  Terni,  The.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Fare  Thee  Well. 

Farewell,  if  ever  Fondest  Prayer. 

FareweU  to  His  Wife.     See  Fare  Thee  Well. 

Father-land  and  Mother-tongue.     (At.) 

Field  of  Waterloo,  The.  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 

Filial  Love.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

First  Love.     See  Don  Juan. 

For  Music.     See  Stanzas  for  Music. 

Friendshin.     See  To  Thomas  Moore. 

Giaour,  The. 

Girl  of  Cadiz,  The. 

Gladiator,  The.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Glory  That  was  Greece,  The.     See  Don  Juan. 

Greece.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Greece.     See  also  Giaour,  The. 

Haidee  and  Juan.     See  Don  Juan. 

Hail  and  Farewell.  See  On  this  Day  I  Complete 
my  Thirty-sixth  Year. 

"Hark,  heard  ye  not  those  hoofs  of  dreadful  note?" 
See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Harold  the  Wanderor.  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 

Heroes   of   Greece.     See   Siege   of   Corinth,   The. 

Hurts  of  Time.     See  Siege  of  Corinth,  The. 

"I  do  believe  though  I  have  found  them  not." 
See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Imaginative  Sympathy  witn  Nature.  See  Childe 
Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Idleness.      See  Giaour,  The. 

Immortal  Mind,  The.  See  When  Coldness  Wraps 
this  Suffering  Clay. 

"In  thee  I  fondly  hoped  to  clasp."     See  To  D — . 

Incantation  from  Manfred.     See  Manfred. 

Invocation  to  the  Spirit  of  Achilles.  See  De- 
formed Transformed,  The. 

Island,  The. 


Byron,  G:  Noel  Gordon,  Lord  (continued). 

Isles  of  Greece,  The.     See  Don  Juan. 

Jephthah's  Daughter. 

Jerusalem   Avenged.     See   Vision    of   Belshazzar. 

Kiss,  Dear  Maid,  The.     See  On  Parting. 

Lachin  y  Gair. 

Lines  to  Mr.  Hodgson. 

Lines  Written  on  a  Blank  Leaf  of  "The  Pleasures 
of  Memory." 

Lisbon  Packet,  The.     See  Lines  to  Mr.  Hodgson. 

Longing.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Love.     See  Giaour,  The. 

Love  of  England.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Maid  of  Athens.     See  Maid  of  Athens,  ere  We  Part. 

Maid  of  Athens,  ere  We  Part. 

Manfred. 

Manfred's  Soliloquy.     See  Manfred. 

Man's   Love.     See   Don   Juan. 

Marathon.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Marino  Faliero,  Doge  of  Venice. 

Marino  Faliero  to  the  Conspirators.  See  Marino 
Faliero,  Doge  of  Venice. 

Marino  Faliero  to  the  Venetian  Conspirators.  See 
Marino  Faliero,  Doge  of  Venice. 

Matrons  and  Maids.     See  Don  Juan. 

Matrons   and   Maids.     See   also   Beppo. 

Mazeppa. 

Monody  on  the  Death  of  [the  Right  Hon.  R.  B.] 
Sheridan. 

Murat.     See  Ode  from  the  French. 

My  Boat  is  on  the  Shore.     See  To  Thomas  Moore. 

Napoleon.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Napoleon's   Farewell. 

Nature's  Daughter.     See  Stanzas  for  Music. 

Night.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Night  and  Tempest.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Night  before  Waterloo,  The.  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 

Nevermore.     See  Don  Juan. 

No  More.       See  Don  Juan. 

O,  Snatched  away  in  Beauty's  Bloom!  See 
Oh,  Snatched  away  in  Beauty's  Bloom. 

Ocean.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Ode  from  the  French. 

Ode  on  Venice. 

Ode  to  Napoleon  Buonaparte. 

Oh!  Snatched  away  in  Beauty's  Bloom. 

Oh,  Talk  not  to  Ate  of  a  Name  Great  in  Story. 
See  Stanzas  Writtten  on  the  Road  between 
Florence  and   Pisa. 

On  a  Carrier  who  Died  of  Drunkenness.  See 
Epitaph  on  John  Adams  of  Southwell,  a 
Carrier,  who  Died  of  Drunkenness. 

On  My  Thirty-seventh  Birthday.  See  On  this 
Day  I  Complete  my  Thirty-sixth  Year. 

On  Parting. 

On  Samuel  Rogers.    . 

On  the  Castle  of  Chillon.  See  Prisoner  of  Chillon, 
The. 

On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Fox. 

On  the  Death  of  [Richard  Brinsley]  Sheridan.  See 
Monody  on  the  Death  of  the  Right  Hon.  R.  B. 
Sheridan. 

On  this  Day  I  Complete  my  Thirty-sixth  year. 

Orient,  The.     See  Bride  of  Abydos,  The. 

Outward  Bound.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Pantheon,  The.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Parisina. 

Petrarch's  Tomb.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Picture  of  Death,   A.     See  Giaour,  The. 

Poet's  Impulse,  The.  See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 

Prayer  of  Nature,  The. 

Prisoner  of  Chillon,  The.    < 

Procreative  Virtue  of  Great  Examples.  See 
Marino  Faliero,  Doge  of  Venice. 

Prometheus. 

Race  with  Death,  The.     See  Ode  on  Venice. 

Rainbow,   The.     See   Don   Juan. 

Reopening  of  the  Drury  I>ane  Theatre.  See  Ad- 
dress Spoken  at  the  Opening  of  Drury  Lane 
Theatre. 

Rhine,  The.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Robert  Southey.  See  English  Bards  and  Scotch 
Reviewers. 

"Roll  on.  thou  deep  and  dark  blue  ocean — roll!" 
See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Romance.     See  To  Romance. 

Rome.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 

Ruins  of  Rome,  The.  See  Childe  Harold's"  Pil- 
grimage. 

St.  Peter's  Church  at  Rome.  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 


414 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Cameron 


Byron,  G:  Noel  Gordon,  Lord  (continued). 

Saul  before  His  Last  Battle.      See  Song  of   Saul 

before  his  Last  Battle. 
Sea,  The.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Sea.     See  also  Corsair,  The. 
Sea-cave,  The.     See  Island,  The. 
Sennacherib.    See  Destruction  of  Sennacherib,  The. 
"She  walks  in  beauty,  like  the  night."     See  She 

Walks  in  Beauty. 
She  Walks  in  Beauty. 
Shipwreck.     See  Don   Juan. 

Siege  and  Conquest  of  Alhama.  See  Very  Mourn- 
ful Ballad  on  the  Siege  ond  Conquest  of  Al- 
hama, A. 
Siege  of  Corinth,  The. 
Sir  Walter  Scott.     See  English  Bards  and  Scotch 

Reviewers. 
Skull,  Thefor  A].     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
So,  we'll  Go  no  more  a-Roving. 
Soliloquy  of  Manfred.      See  Manfred. 
Solitude.     See   Childe    Harold's    Pilgrimage. 
Song  of  Saul  before  his  Last  Battle. 
Song  of  the  Greek  Bard      See  Don  Juan. 
Song  of  the  Greek  Poet.     See  Don  Juan. 
Song  of  the  Rover.     See  Corsair,  The. 
Sonnet     on    Chillon.      See   Prisoner   of    Chillon, 

The. 
Stanzas: — "Could  love  forever." 
Stanzas: — "Oh,  talk  not  to  me  of  a  name  great  in 
story."     See  Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road  be- 
tween Florence  and  Pisa. 
Stanzas:  "Though  the  day  of  my  destiny's  over." 

See  Stanzas  to  Augusta. 
Stanzas  for  Music:  "There  be  none,"  etc. 
Stanzas  for  Music:  "There's  not  a  joy,"  etc. 
Stanzas  for  Music:  "They  say  that  Hope,"  etc. 
Stanzas  to  Augusta. 
Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road  between  Florence  and 

Pisa. 
Stars.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Storm,  The.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Storming  of  Corinth,  The.     See  Siege  of  Corinth, 

'  The. 
Sublime  Tobacco.     See  Island,  The. 
"Such  is    my  name    and    such    my    tale."      See 

Giaour,  The. 
Sunset.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Swimming.     See  Two  Foscari,  The. 
Tasso.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Temple  of  Clitumnus.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage. 
"There    be    none    of    Beauty's    daughters."     See 

Stanzas  for  Music. 
There's  not  a  Joy  the  World  can  Give.     See  Stan- 
zas for  Music. 
"They  never  fail  who  die."     See  Marino  Faliero, 

Doge  of  Venice. 
Thunder-storm  in  the  Alps,  A.     See  Childe  Har- 
old's Pilgrimage. 
To  Augusta.         See  Epistle  to  Augusta. 

To  D . 

To  Romance. 

To  Samuel  Rogers,  Esq.     See  Lines  Written  on  a 

Blank  Leaf  of  "The  Pleasures  of  Memory." 

To  the  Author  of  a  Sonnet  Beginning  "Sad  is  my 

Verse,  you  say,    'and  yet  no  Tear.'  " 
To  the  Ocean.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
To  Thomas  Moore. 

Transient  Beauty.     See  Giaour,  The. 
Twilight.     See  J  Don  Juan. 
Twilight.     See  also  Parisina. 
Two  Foscari,  The. 
Unreturning    Brave,    The.     See   Childe    Harold's 

Pilgrimage. 
Venice.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
Very  Mournful  Ballad  on  the  Siege  and  Conquest 

of  Alhama,  A. 
Vision  of  Belshazzar. 
Vision  of  Judgment,  The. 
Waltz,  The. 

Washington.     See  Ode  to  Napoleon  Buonaparte. 
Waterloo.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage. 
We'll  Go  no  More  A-roving.     See  So,  we'll  Go  no 

more  a-Roving. 
When  Coldness  Wraps  this  Suffering  Clay. 
When  we  Two  Parted. 
Windsor  Poetics. 
Wordsworth.     See    English    Bards    and    Scotch 

Reviewers. 
Written  after  Swimming  from  Sestos  to  Abydos. 
Youth  and  Age.     See  Stanzas  for  Music. 
Byron,  Mrs.  Mary  C.  [Gillington]. — Fairy  Thrall,  The. 
Intra  Muros. 
Tryst  of  the  Night,  The. 


C. — Seasonable  Sweets. 

C,  A. — Venturesome  Buds,  The. 

C,  A.  E.— Snow. 

C,  A.  G.— Be  Thou  a  Bird,  My  Soul. 

C,  E.  M.  H.— Silent  Grand  Army,  The. 

C,  J. — Beauty  and  Time. 

C.,  K. — Buttercup,  A. 

C.,  L.  A.  B. — Annie's  Party. 

C,  M.  E. — Autumn  Song.  - 

C.,  M.  H. — Spring  on  the  Heights. 

C,  R.— Mandolin,  The. 

C.  T.  H. — Hopes  and  Fears. 

C,  W.  C— Fly,  Little  Letter. 

C,  W.  O.— Spoiled  Face,  The. 

Cable,  G:  Washington. — Bonaventure. 

Dr.  Sevier. 

Fall  In!  1860.     See  Dr.  Sevier. 
Last  Arrival,  The. 

Mary's  Night  Ride.     See  Dr.  Sevier. 

New  Arrival,  The.     See  Last  Arrival,  The. 

Spelling-match  at  Grande  Pointe,  The.     See  Bona- 
venture. 

Written  in  the  Visitors'  Book  at  the  Pirthplace  of 
Robert  Burns. 
Cadmus,  Will  H. — Wife's  Lament,  A. 
Cahill,  Ed.  H.— Bric-a-brac. 

Wily  Bee,  The. 
Caine,  Hall. — Bondman,  The. 

Cut  off  from  the  People.     See  Deemster,  The. 

Deemster,  The. 

Father  and  Son.     See  Deemster,  The. 

Homeless  Old  Man,  The.     See  Bondman,  The. 

Mount  of  Laws,  The.     See  Bondman,  The. 
Caird,  J. — Latent  Principles  of  Religion. 
Cake,  Lu  B.— Mister,  Yer  Gittin'  Old. 
Caldwell,  A.  F.— All  Ending  in  "O". 

Grandmother's  Stitches. 
Caldwell,  W:  Warner. — Robin's  Come. 

Rose-bush,  The.     (Tr.) 

Washington. 
Calhoun,  J:  Caldwell. — Against  the  Force  BiU. 

Force  BiU,  The.     See  Against  the  Force  Bill. 

Liberty  and  Intelligence.     See  Liberty  the  Meed 
of  Intelligence. 

Liberty  the  Meed  of  Intelligence.  » 

On  the  Prospect  of  War.     See  On  the  Prospect  of 
War  with  Great  Britain. 

On  the  Prospect  of  War  with  Great  Britain. 

Purse  and  the  Sword,  The. 

Speech  on  the  Internal  Improvement  Bill. 
Calidasa. — Babe,  The. 

Baby,  The.     See  Babe,  The. 

Woman. 
Call,  Wathen  Marks  Wilks. — People's  Petition,  The. 

Summer  Days. 
Callanan,  Jeremiah  Jos. — Convict  of  Clonmel,  The. 

Dirge  of  O'SuUivan  Bear. 

Gougaune  Barra. 

Outlaw  of  Loch  Lene,  The. 

Virgin  Mary's  Bank,  The. 
Callistratus. — Harmodius  and  Aristogeiton. 
Calthrop,  S:  R. — Where  Baby  Joy  Comes  From. 
Calverley,  C:  Stuart. — Arab,  The. 

Auld  Wife,  The.     See  Ballad:  "The  auld  wife  sat 
at  her  ivied  door." 

Ballad:  "The  auld  wife  sat  at  her  ivied  door." 

Cock  and  the  Bull,  The. 

Companions. 

Disaster. 

First  Love. 

Gemini  and  Virgo. 

"Hie  Vir,  Hie  Est." 

Lovers,  and  a  Reflection. 

Motherhood. 

Ode  to  Tobacco. 

On  the  Brink. 

Sad  Memories. 

Schoolmaster  Abroad  with  his  Son,  The. 

Shelter. 

"Tommy's  First  Love.     See  Gemini  and  Virgo. 

Wanderers. 
Calvert,  G:  H:— Bunker  Hill. 
Campbell,  G:  Douglas.     See  Argyll,  Duke  of. 
Cameron,  C.  Innes. — New  Year,  The. 
Cameron,  G:  Frd'k.— Golden  Text,  The. 

Is  There  a  God? 

On  Tiptoe. 

Standing  on  Tiptoe.     See  On  Tiptoe. 

What  Matters  it? 


415 


Camoens 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Camoens,  Luis  de. — Blighted  Love. 
Inea  de  Castro.     See  Lusiad,  The. 

Lusiad,  The. 

Spirit  of  the  Cape,  The.     See  Lusiad,  The. 
Camp,  Frd'k  Stanley. — Anita. 

Flirtation.  , 

Camp,  Pauline  Frances. — Cradle  Song. 
Campbell,  Hartley  T. — That  Baby  in  Tuftcaloo. 
Campbell,  Jane.— Chestnut-tree,  The. 

Decoration  Day. 
Campbell,  Mary  Maxwell. — Lament  for  Glencoe. 
Campbell,  T :— Adelgitha. 

Battle  of  Hohenlinden.     See  Hohenlinden. 

Battle  of  Linden,  The.     See  Hohenlinden. 

Battle  of  Maciejowice,  The.     See  Pleasures  of  Hope. 

Battle  of  the  Baltic. 

Beech  Tree's  Petition,  The. 

Caroline. 

Downfall  of  Poland[,  The].     See  Pleasures  of  Hope. 

Earl    March    Look'd    on    His   Dying   Child.     See 
Song:  "Earl  March,"  etc. 

Evening  Star.  The.     See  Song  to  the  Evening  Star. 

Exile  of  ErinF,  The]. 

Fall  of  War.saw.     1794.     See  Pleasures  of  Hope. 

First  Kiss,  The.     See  Song:  "How  delicious  is  the 
winning." 

Gertrude  of  Wyoming. 

Glenara. 

Hallowed  Ground. 

Harper,  The. 

Hohenlinden. 

Hope.     See  Pleasures  of  Hone. 

Hope    of    an    Hereafter,     The.    See    Pleasures  of 
Hope. 

Last  Man,  The. 

Lochiel's  Warning. 

Lord  UUin's  Daughter. 

Maid's  Remonstrance,  The.       , 

Mariners  of  England,  The.     See  Ye  Mariners  of 
England. 

Men  of  England. 

Napoleon  and  the  [British]  Sailor. 

Ode  to  Winter. 

Oneyda's    Death    Song,    The.     See    Gertrude    of 
Wyoming. 

Parrot,  The.— A  True  Story. 

Pleasures  of  Hope. 

Poland.     See  Pleasures  of  Hope. 

Poor  Dog  Tray.     See  Harper,  The. 

Rainbow,  The.     See  To  the  Rainbow. 

River  of  Life,  The.     See  Thought  Suggested  by 
the  New  Year,  A. 

Soldier  and  Sailor.     See  Napoleon  and  the  British 
Sailor. 

Soldier's  Dream,  The. 

Song:  "Earl  March  look'd  on  his  dying  child." 

Song:  "How  delicious  is  the  winning.' 

Song:  "Withdraw  not  yet  those  lips  and  fingers." 

Song  of  the  Greeks. 

Song  to  the  Evening  Star. 

Thought  Suggested  by  the  New  Year,  A. 

To  the  Evening  Star.     See  Caroline. 

To  the  Evening  Star.     See  also  Song  to  the  Eve- 
ning Star. 

To  the  Rainbow. 

What's  Hallowed  Ground?     See  Hallowed  Ground. 

"With   thee,    sweet   Hope,   resides   the   heavenly 
light."     See_  Pleasures  of  Hope. 

Wizard's  Warning,  The.     See  Lochiel's  Warning. 

"Ye  Mariners."     See  Ye  Mariners  of  England. 

Ye  Mariners  of  England. 
Campbell,  W:  Wilfred.— Canadian  Folk-song,  A. 

Lake  Memory,  A. 

To  the  Lakes. 

Were-wolves.  The. 

Campion,  Dr.  . — Ninety-eight. 

Campion,  Rob't. — "Peaceful  western  wind.  The." 
Campion,  T: — Advice  to  a  Girl. 

Amaryllis  [or  Amarillis]. 

Basia. 

Charm.  The. 

Cherry  Ripe.     {At.  also  to  R:  Alison.) 

Come  Awav! 

Day  and  Night. 

Devotion.     (2  poems.) 

Follow  Your  Saint!     See  Devotion  (Id  poem). 

Fortunati  Nimium. 

Give  Beauty  all  her  Right. 

Hymn  in  Praise  of  Neptune.  A. 

In  Imagine  Pertransit  Homo.     See  Devotion  (,1st 
poem). 

Integer  Vitae. 

Jack  and  Joan.     See  Fortunati  Nimium. 


Campion,  T:  {continued). 

Laura.  See  Observations  on  the  Art  of  English 
Poesy. 

Love's  Request.  See  "Shall  I  come,  .sweet  love, 
to  thee?" 

Man  of  Life  Upright,  The.     See  Integer  Vitse. 

Masque  at  the  Marriage  of  the  Lord  Hayes. 

Measure  of  Beauty,  The.  See  Give  Beauty  all  her 
Right. 

O  Come  Quickly! 

O  Crudelis  Amor.     See  When  Thou  must  Home. 

Observations  on  the  Art  of  English  Poesy. 

Of  Corinna's  Singing. 

Renunciation.  A. 

Rose-cheeked  Laura.  See  Observations  on  the 
Art  of  English  Poesy. 

Rustic  Joys.     See  Fortunati  Nimium. 

Shadow,  The.     See  Devotion  (1st  poem). 

"Shall  I  come,  sweet  love,  to  thee?" 

Sic  Transit.     See  Day  and  Night. 

Silent  Music.  See  Observations  on  the  Art  of 
English  Poesy, 

"Sleep,  angry  beautyf,  sleep  and  fear  not  me]." 

There  is  a  Garden  in  her  Face.     See  Cherry  Ripe. 

There  is  None,  O,  None  but  You. 

"Though  you  are  young,  and  1  am  old." 

To  Lesbia. 

Triumph  Now.  See  Masque  at  the  Marriage  of 
the  Lord  Hayes. 

Upright  Man,  The.     See  Integer  Vitae. 

Vobiscum  est  lope.     See  When  Thou  must  Home. 

When  Thou  must  Home. 

"Where  she  her  sacred  bower  adorns." 

Winter  Nights. 
Campus. — October  Love  Song. 

Phantasy,  A. 
Candee,  Harry  Safford. — Auf  Wiedersehen. 

Marigold. 
Candy,  Mrs.  Caroline  F. — Old  Christmas  Forty  Years 
Ago! 

Winds  of  the  Prairie,  The. 
Cane,  Melville  H. — Winter  Night,  A. 
Canfield,  Hattie  G. — Changing  Color. 
Canning,  G: — Against  Lord  John  Russell's  Motion. 

Balance  of  Power,  The. 

Bank-notes  and  Coin. 

Collision  of  Vices[,  A]. 

Defence  of  Pitt.     See  Regency  Resolutions. 

Elderly  Gentleman,  The. 

Epitaph  for  the  Tombstone  Erected  over  the 
Marquis  of  Anglesea's  Leg,  Lost  at  the  Battle 
of  Waterloo. 

Epitaph  on  the  Tombstone  Erected  over  the  Mar- 
quis of  Anglesea's  Leg.     See  ' '  Epitaph  for,"  etc. 

Friend  of  Humanity  and  the  Knife-grinder,  The. 

Fruits  of  the  War  with  France. 

"Measures  not  Men." 

Knife-grinder,  The.  See  Friend  of  Humanity  and 
the  Knife-grinder,  The. 

On  Mr.  Tiemey's  Motion,  December  11,  1798. 

Reformation  of  the  Knave  of  Hearts. 

Regency  Resolutions. 

Rover,  The. 

Song  by  Rogero  the  Captive.     See  Rover,  The. 

Song  of  One  Eleven  Years  in  Prison.  See  Rover, 
The. 

Song.  Sung  by  Rogero  in  the  Burlesque  Play  of 
"The  Rover."     See  Rover,  The. 

University  of  Gottingen,  The.     See  Rover,  The. 
Canning,  Josephine. — Nature's  Secret. 
Cannon,  Rev.  E: — Unsuspected  Fact,  An. 
Cannon,  Gertrude  M. — Two  Maidens. 
Cam  ton,  W: — -Karma. 

Laus  Infantium. 

New  Poet,  A. 
Capen,  Elmer  Hewitt. — John  Boyle  O'Reilly. 

Situation  of  a  University,  The. 
Capern,  E:— Tim  Tuff. 
Caopleman,  Josie  Frazee. — Resurrected  Hearts,  The. 

Cardwill, .—Hero,  The. 

Carew,  Lady  Eliz. — Mariam,  the  Fair  Queen  of  Jewry. 

Revenge  of  Injuries.  See  Mariam,  the  Fair 
Queen  of  Jewry. 

True  Greatness.     See  Mariam,  the  Fair  Queen  of 
Jewry. 
Carew,  T: — Airs  of  Spring,  The.     See  Upon  Master  W. 
Montague,  his  Return  from  Travel. 

"Ask  me  no  more  where  Jove  bestows."  See 
Song:     "Ask,"  etc. 

Celia  Singing. 

Chloris  in  the  Snow.  (At.)  See  On  Chloris  Walk- 
ing in  the  Snow. 

Compliment,  The. 


416 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Carman 


Carew,  T:  (continued). 
Cruel  Mistress,  The. 
Deposition  from  Love,  A. 
Disdain  Returned. 
Epitaph  on  Lady  Mary  Villers.     See  Epitaph  on 

the  Lady  Mary  Villiers. 
Epitaph  on  the  Lady  Mary  Villiers.     (2  poems.) 
Give  Me  More  Love.     See  Song:     Mediocrity  in 

Love  Rejected. 
Give  Me  More  Love  or  More  Disdain.     See  Song: 

Mediocrity  in  Love  Rejected. 
"He    that    loves    a    rosy    cheek."     See    Disdain 

Returned. 
I  Do  not  Love  Thee  for  that  Fair.     See  Compli- 
ment, The._ 
In  Praise  of  His  Mistress. 
Ingrateful  Beauty  threatened. 
Lady  to  her  Inconstant  Servant,  The. 
On  Chloris  Walking  in  the  Snow.     (.At.) 
Pastoral  Dialogue,  A. 

Persuasions  to  Joy:  a  Song.     See   Song:     Persua- 
sions to  Enjoy. 
Prayer  to  the  Wind,  A. 
Primrose,  The.     (At.) 

Proper  Woman,  A.     See  Disdain  Returned. 
Protestation,  The. 
Rapture,  The. 
Red  and  White  Roses. 

Song:     "Ask  me  no  more  where  Jove  bestows." 
Song:     "Would  you  know  what's  soft."     (At.) 
Song:     Mediocrity  in  Love  Rejected. 
Song:     Persuasions  to  Enjoy. 
Song:     To  my  Inconstant  Mistress. 
Spring. 
Sweetly  Breathing,  Vernal  Air.     See  Upon  Master 

W.  Montague,  his  Return  "from  Travel. 
To  Celia  Singing.     See  Celia  Singing. 
To  His  Inconstant  Mistress.     See  Song:     To  my 

Inconstant  Mistress. 
True  Beauty,  The.     See  Disdain  Returned. 
Unfading  Beauty,  The.     See  Disdain  Returned. 
Ungrateful      Beauty.     See      Ingrateful      Beauty 

Threatened. 
Upon    Master    W.    Montague,    his    Return    from 
Travel. 
Carey,  Ellen  W. — Down  the  Stream. 
Carey,  H: — Contrivances,  The. 
Drinking  Song,  A. 
Genius  for  the  Stage,  A. 
God  Save  the  King. 
Love's  a  Riddle. 

Maiden's  Choice,  The.     See  Contrivances,  The. 
Maiden's  Ideal  of  a  Husband,  A.     See  Contriv- 
ances, The. 
Sally  in  our  Alley. 
Carleton,  Ada. — Selling  the  Baby. 
Carleton,  Guy.— Old  Clock,  The. 
Carleton,  Will  M. — Ancient  Miner's  Story,  The. 
Baron  Grimalkim's  Death. 
Betsj?  and  I  are  Out. 
Burning  of  Chicago,  The. 
Caliber  Fifty-four. 
Christmas  Baby,  The. 
Cover  Them  Over. 
Dead  Student,  The. 
Death-bridge  of  the  Tay,  The. 
Difficult  Love-making. 
Earthquake-prayer,  The. 
Editor's  Guests,  The. 
Elder  Lamb's  Donation. 

Farmer  and  Wheel;  or,  The  New  Lochinvar. 
Farmer  Stebbins  at  Football. 
Farmer  Stebbins  at  Ocean  Grove. 
Farmer  Stebbins'  First  and  Last  Anpearance  on 

Rollers.     See  Farmer  Stebbins  on  Rollers. 
Farmer  Stebbins  on  Rollers. 
First  Settler's  Story,  The. 
Flash — the  Fireman's  Storv. 
Funeral,  The.     See  Negro  Funeral,  The. 
Goin'  Home  To-day. 
Gone  with  a  Handsomer  Man. 
Grand  Old  Day,  The.     See  Thursday  Sabbath  Day, 

The. 
How  Betsy  and  I  Made  Up. 
How  Jamie  Came  Home. 
How  We  Fought  the  Fire. 
How  We  Kept  the  Day. 
Lightning-rod  Dispenser,  The. 
Little  Black-eyed  Rebel,  The. 
Little  Golden-hair. 

Makin'    an    Editor   outen    o'    him.     See   Editor's 
Guests,  The. 


Carleton,  Will  M.  (continued). 
Negro  Funeral,  The. 
New  Church  Organ,  The. 
Old  Reading-class,  The. 
Our  Traveled  Parson. 
Out  of  the  Old  House,  Nancy. 
Over  the  Hill  from  the  Poor-house. 
Over  the  Hill  to  the  Poor-house. 
Prayer,  The._    See  Earthquake-Grayer,  The. 
Ride  of  Jennie  McNeal,  The. 
Rifts  in  the  Cloud. 
School-master's  Guests,  The. 
Thursday  Sabbath  Day,  The. 
Took  Johnny  to  the  Show. 
Uncle  Sammy. 
Under  the  Wheels. 
Up  in  the  Loft. 
"Way  at  times  may  dark  and  dreary  seem."     See 

Rifts  in  the  Cloud. 
Worried  about  Catherine. 
Carleton,  W: — Sigh  for  Knockmann,  A. 

Sir  'Turlough;  or,  The  Churchyard  Bride. 
"Carlino,  Don  Santiago." — Soldier  Tramp,  'The. 
"Carlos." — Papa's  Coming. 

Carlyle,  Jane  Welsh. — Answer  to  "Cui  Bono,"  An. 
Heroi.sm  in  Housekeeping. 
To  a  Swallow  Building  under  our  Eaves. 
To  a  Swallow  Building  under  the  Eaves  at  Craig- 
enputtock.     See  To  a  Swallow  Building  under 
our  Eaves. 
Carlyle.  T:— Adieu. 

Aristocracy.     See  Past  and  Present. 

Await  the  Issue.     See  Past  and  Present. 

Charlotte  Corday.     See  French  Revolution,  The. 

"Cui  Bono?" 

Everlasting  No,  The.     See  Sartor  Resartus. 

Execution  of  Marie  Antoinette,  The.     See  French 

Revolution,  The. 
Faust.     (Tr.)     See  Goethe,  Joh ANN  W.  von. 
French  Revolution,  The. 

"Give  us,  O  give  us,  the  man  who  sings  at  his  work." 
Heard  are  the  Voices.     See  Past  and  Present. 
"Heroes  have  gone  out;  quacks  have  come  in." 

See  On  Heroes  and  Hero  Worship. 
Honor  of  Labor,  The.     See  Past  and  Present. 
Honor  to  the  Laborer.     See  Past  and  Present 
"I   call   that,   the   Book   of  Job,   aside   from    all 
theories  about  it."     See  On  Heroes  and  Hero 
Worship. 
Justice.     See  Past  and  Present. 

Labor.     See  Past  and  Present. 

Larch  and  the  Oak,  The. 

Marie  Antoinette.     See  French  Revolution,  The. 

Mohammed.     See  On  Heroes  and  Hero  Worship. 

"Musical!  how  much  lies  in  that."     See  On  Heroes 
and  Hero  Worship. 

Nature.     See  On  Heroes  and  Hero  Worship. 

Nature  a  Hard  Creditor.     See  Stump  Orator,  The. 

"O  pious  mother!  kind,  good,  brave,  and  truthful." 

On  Heroes  and  Hero  Worship. 

Past  and  Present. 

"Penalties!  quarrel  not  with  the  old  phraseology, 
good  readers." 

Psalm  Forty-six.     (Tr.) 

Sacredness  of  Work,  The.     See  Past  and  Present. 

Safe  Stronghold,  A.     (Tr.)     See  Psalm  Forty-six. 

Sartor  Resartus. 

Sower's  Song,  The. 

Speech  of  the  Erdgeist  in  "Faust."     See  Faust. 

Stump  Orator,  The. 

"That  a  man  stand  and  speak  of  spiritual  things  to 
men!" 

To-day. 

Work.     See  Past  and  Present. 
Carman,  (W:)  Bliss. — Crimson  House,  The. 

Eavesdropper,  The. 

Envoy. 

Golden  Rowan. 

Gravedigger,  The. 

Hack  and  Hew. 

Henry  George. 

Joys  of  the  Road,  The. 

Low  Tide  on  Grand  Pr^. 

Marian  Drury. 

Mendicants,  The. 

More  Ancient  Mariner,  A. 

Phillips  Brooks. 
■  Sea  Child.  A. 

Song:     "Love,  by  that  loosened  hair." 

Spring  Song. 

Vagabond  Song,  A. 

Verlaine. 


417 


Carman 


AN  IXDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Carman,  (W:)  BWss  (continued). 

White  GuU.  The. 

Why. 

Windflower,  A. 
Carmen,  Felix.— -Spinning  Wheel,  The. 

Valentine  to  a  Flirt. 
"Carmen  Sylva."     S*  Eliz.  Pauline  Attilia,  Queen 

of  Roumania. 
Carnegie,  James.     See  Southesk,  Earl  of. 
Carney,  Julia  A.  T. — Little  Drops  of  Water.     See  Little 
Things. 

Little  Things.     {Also  at.  to  Frances  Sargent  Os- 
good and  to Brewer.) 

Carpenter,  Mr».  Amelia  Walstein  [Jolls].— Old  Flemish 
Lace. 

Recollection. 

Ride  to  Cherokee,  The. 
Carpenter,  E: — Smith  and  the  King,  The. 
Carpenter,  Eliz. — Them  Dear  Old  Garret  Things. 
Carpenter,  H:  Bernard. — Reed,  The. 
Carpenter,  Jos.  E: — Gottingen  Barber,  The. 
Carpenter,  Mabel  A. — Lullaby. 
Carpenter,  Millie  W. — Christmas  Carol. 
Carr,  Col.  Clark  E.— lAncoln  at  Gettysburg. 
Carrington,   H:   Beebe.— As  Thy  Day  Thy  Strength 
Shall  Be. 

Exiles  in  Egypt,  The. 

Idleness  a  Crime. 

Military  Training  in  the  Schools. 

New  Liberty  Bell.  The. 

Patriotic  Prince,  The. 

Patriot's  Cry,  The. 

"Ring!  Ring!  of  liberty  and  peace!" 

Seeking  a  Country. 

Three  W's— Work,  Watch,  Wait,  The. 

Washington  as  a  Soldier. 
Carrington,  Kate  A. — Scent  of  a  Good  Cigar,  The. 
Carroll,  .Jennie. — How  the  Babies  Grow. 
Carroll,  Lewis.     See  Dodgson,  C:  Lutwidge. 
Carruth,  Hayden. — Kindergarten  Christmas,  A. 
Carryl,  C:  E:— My  Recollectest  Thoughts. 

Robinson  Crusoe. 

Song  in  the  Dell,  The. 

Walloping  Window-blind,  The. 
Carryl,  Guy  Wetmore. — Ballade  of  Justification,  A. 

Captive,  The. 

Convert,  The. 

Fickle  Heart,  A. 

Friends. 

L'Amour,  1' Amour. 

Memory,  A. 

Pallas. 

Passing  Song,  A. 

Singular  Sangfroid  of  Baby  Bunting,  The. 

Sycophantic  Fox  and  the  Gullible  Raven,  The. 

Then  and  Now. 

When  the  Great  Grey  Ships  Come  Tn. 
Carson,  Eva  Lovett. — What  Might  Happen. 
Carson,  Paul. — Arabella  and  Sally  Ann. 
Carswell,  E:— Caw!     Caw!     Caw! 

Temperance  Echo,  The. 

What  Whiskey  Did  for  Me. 

Carter,  Mrs.  — ; . — Nursery  Song,     {At.  also  to  Mrs. 

J.  Morrison.) 

Recitation  for  Three  Little  Girls.  See  Nursery  Song. 

What  the  Mother  Heard.     See  Nursery  Song. 
Carter.    Agnes  L.      ,See  Mason,  Mrs.  Agnes  Louisa 

[Carter]. 
Carter,  Alice  P. — Baby's  Correspondence. 

Day  before  Christmas,  The. 
Carter,  Consider  B. — Rustle  of  the  Wing,  The. 
Carter,  Grace  R. — Trees'  Choice,  The. 
Carter,  Mary  E. — Sing. 
Cartwright,  W: — Falsehood. 

New  Year's  Gift  to  Brian  Lord  Bishop  of  Sarum,  A. 

On   a  Virtuous   Young   Gentlewoman   that  died 
suddenly. 

On  His  Majesty's  Recovery  from  the  Small-pox. 

On  the  Queen's  Return  from  the  Low  Countries. 

To  Chloe. 
Carver,  J  :^Nightfall. 
Carvie,  Alex.  Rae. — Phantasy. 

Cary,    Alice.*— Among    the    Beautiful    Pictures.     See 
Pictures  of  Memory. 

At  the  Tavern. 

Autumn. 

Balder's  Wife. 

Barbara  Blue. 

Bridal  Hour,  The. 

Buried  Gold. 

Burning  Prairie,  The. 

Child's  Wisdom.  A. 

Chopper's  Child,  The. 


Cary,  Alice  {continued). 

Christmas  Story,  A. 

Dan  and  Dimple,  and  how  They  Quarreled. 

Dream  of  Home,  A. 

Dreams. 

Dying  Hymn. 

Faded  Leaves. 

Fairy  of  the  Dell,  The. 

Fairy-folk. 

Faith  and  Works. 

Ferry  of  Galloway,  The. 

Field  Sweet-brier,  The. 

Fisherman's  Wife,  The. 

Flower-spider,  The. 

Good  Rule,  A. 

Grateful  Swan,  The. 

Gray  Swan,  The. 

Her  Last  Verses.     See  Dying  Hymn. 

Here  and  There. 

Hide  and  Seek. 

Hoe  your  own  row.     <See  Old  Maxims. 

I  Hear  a  Dear,   Familiar  Tone.     See  Dream  of 
Home,  A. 

Jenny  Dunleath. 

Known  by  His  Works. 

Last  and  Best. 

Lesson  of  Mercy,  A. 

Life's  Mysteries. 

Light. 

Little  Brother,  The.     iSee  Pictures  of  Memory. 

Little  Children. 

"Love!  blessed  Love!  if  we  could  hang  our  walls." 
See  Bridal  Hour,  The. 

"Love's  light  is  strange  to  you?     Ah,  me!" 

Make  Believe. 

Might  of  Love,  The. 

Mines  of  Avondale,  The. 

My  Creed. 

My  Darlings. 

Nobility. 

November. 

Nut  Hard  to  Crack,  A. 

"O  winds!  ye  are  too  rough,  too  rough!" 

Old  Chums. 

Old  Maxims. 

Old  Story,  The. 

Order  for  a  Picture,  An. 

Peter  Grey. 

Pictures  of  Memory. 

Pig  and  the  Hen,  The. 

Plea  for  Charity. 

Pretty  is  that  Pretty  Does. 

Recipe  for  an  Appetite. 

Rome  Wasn't  Built  in  a  Day. 

Sermon  for  Young  Folks,  A. 

Sermons  in  Stones. 

Short  Sermon,  A. 

Spider  and  Fly. 

Spinster's  Stint,  A. 

Story  of  a  Blackbird. 

Suppose. 

Sure  Witness,  The. 

Sweetest  Picture,  The.     See  Pictures  of  Memory. 

Take  Care. 

Telling  Fortunes. 

Three  Bugs. 

Three  Little  Bugs  in  a  Basket.     See  Three  Bugs. 

Time. 

Time  to  be.  The. 

To  a  Honey-bee. 

To  Any  Desponding  Genius. 

To  Mother  Fairie. 

To  the  Desponding.  See  To  Any  Desponding  Genius. 

Tricksey's  Ring. 

True  Worth.     See  Nobility. 

"True  Worth  is  in  being,  not  seeming."  See  Nobility. 

Unwise  Choice,  The. 

Vanity. 

Victory  of  Perry,  The. 

Waiting  for  Something  to  Turn  Up. 

What  a  Bird  Taught. 

Wi.se  Fairy,  The. 

Work. 

"World  Owes  Me  a  Living,  The."     See  Waiting 
for  Something  to  Turn  Up. 
Cary,  H:  Fs.— Fairest  Thing  in  Mortal  Eyes,  The.  {Tr.) 
Cary,  Lucius.     See  Falkland,  Lord. 
Cary,  Phoebe. — Ajax. 

Answered. 

Baby's  Ring. 

Black  Ranald. 

Chicken's  Mistake,  The. 

Christmas  Sheaf,  T?he. 


418 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Chamberlain 


Gary,  Phoebe  (continued). 

Cassels,  Walter  R:— Love  Took  Me  Softly  by  the  Hand. 

Coming  Round. 

Cassius,  Caius  Longinus. — Caesar's  Death  Justified. 

Compensation. 

Castelar,  Emilio. — Abraham  Lincoln.     See  Tribute  to 

Crow's  Children.  The. 

Lincoln. 

Dappledun. 

Catacombs,  The. 

Didn't  Think.     See  They  Didn't  Think. 

Freedom  of  Thought. 

Do  your  Best.     See  Obedience. 

Gladiators,  The. 

Don't  Give  Up. 

"Let  there  be  no  more  accursed  races  on  the  earth." 

Dreams  and  Realities. 

Miserere  of  St.  Peter's  Church  at  Rome.     See  Old 

Easy  Lessons. 

Rome  and  New  Italy. 

Effie's  Reasons. 

Old  Rome  and  New  Italy. 

Envious  Wren,  The. 

Tribute  to  Lincoln. 

Feathers. 

Castilla,  Ethel. — Australian  Girl,  An. 

.  Field  Preaching. 

Ca.stle,  Miss  H.  D. — Courting  of  Mother  Goose,  The. 

Fire  by  the  Sea,  The. 
Good  Little  Si«ter,  The. 

Castles,  Frank. — By  Special  Request. 
Caswall,  E:— My  God,  I  Love  Thee.     (Tr.) 
Catlin,  G:  L,— Cripple  Ben. 

Griselda  Goose. 

Happy  Little  Wife,  The. 

Fire-bell's  Story,  The. 

Hives  and  Homes. 

Little  Mag's  Victory. 

Hunchback,  The. 

Lookout  Mountainf,  1863— Beutelsbach,  1880].  . 
My  Bread  on  the  Waters. 

"I  know  not  which  I  love  the  most."     See  Spring 

Flowers. 

Postilion  of  Nagold,  The. 

Kate  Ketchem. 

Street  Musicians,  The. 

"Keep  a  Stiff  Upper  Lip!" 
Landlord  of  the  "Blue  Hen,"  The. 

Cato,  Marcus  Fortius. — Self-respect. 

Cats,  Jacob. — Smoke  is  the  Food  of  Lovers. 

Leak  in  the  Dike,  The. 

Catullus,  Caius  Valerius. — Catullus  to  His  Book. 

Legend  of  the  Northland,  A. 

Cavazza,  E.     See  Pollen,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Jones. 

Little  Gottlieb. 

Gawein,  Madison  Julius. — Gomradery. 

Little  Gottlieb's  Christmas.     See  Little  Gottlieb. 

Creek-road,  The. 

Lovers,  The.     (At.)     See  Tragedy  on  Past  Parti- 

Death. 

ciples.— 0.  A.  S. 

Dirge:     "What  shall  her  silence  keep." 

"May  you  never  say  of  a  brother  dear."     See  To 
the  Children. 

Flight. 

Ku  Klux. 

Nearer  Home. 

"Mene,  Mene,  Tekel,  Upharsin." 

Neglected  Pattern,  The.     See  Our  Pattern. 

Opportunity. 

No  Time  Like  the  Present.     See  Obedience. 

Proem. 

Nora's  Charm. 

Rain-crow,  The. 

Now. 

Soul,  The. 

Obedience. 

To  a  Wind-flower. 

Our  Heroes.  (7) 

Under  the  Stars  and  Stripes. 

Our  Homestead. 

Wind  in  the  Pines,  The. 

Our  Pattern. 

Celano,  Thomas  ^[or  de]. — Dies  Irae. 

Cennick,  John.- — Children  of  the  Heavenly  King. 

Peace. 

Prairie  on  Fire,  The. 

Century  Magazine. — Uncle  Cephas'  Yarn. 

Psalm  of  Marriage. 

Uncle  Esek's  Wisdom. 

Rain  and  Sunshine. 

"Ceria."— Effects  of  War. 

Ready. 

Cervantes  Saavedra,  Miguel  de. — Don  Quixote. 

Robin's  Nest,  The. 

Don  Quixote  and  the  Huntress.     See  Don  Quixote. 

Spring  Flowers. 

Don  Quixote  and  the  Windmills.     See  Don  Quixote. 

Sunset. 

Sleep.     See  Don  Quixote. 

Suppose. 

Chadwick,  J:  White. — Auld  Lang  Syne. 

Suppose,  my  Little  Lady.     See  Suppose. 
"Suppose  your  task,  my  little  man."     See  Suppose. 

Fate. 

Golden  Robin's  Nest,  The. 

Teach  us  to  Wait. 

His  Mother's  Joy. 

Thaddeus  Stevens. 

Hymn  Written  for  my  Divinity-school  Graduation. 

That  Calf. 

In  an  Unknown  Tongue. 

They  Didn't  Think. 

In  June. 

To  the  Children. 

King  Edwin's  Feast. 

True  Love. 

King's  Diary,  The. 
Making  of  Man,  The. 

Unbelief. 

What  the  Frogs  Sing. 

New  House :     Old  Home. 

"Why  are  we  so  impatient  of  delay."     See  Teach 

Oldest  Story,  The. 

Out  of  the  Heart.     (Dedication.) 

us  to  Wait. 

Wife,  The. 

Prayer  for  Unity,  A.     See  Hymn  Written  for  my 
Divinity-school  Graduation. 

Wisest  Plan,  The.     See  Suppose. 

Woman's  Conclusions,  A. 

Recognition. 

Gary,  R:  L.,  .Jr.— Fight  of  Lookout,  The. 

Ri.se  of  Man,  The. 

New  Magdalen,  The. 

Starlight. 

Case.  Laura  U.— Fatal  Glass,  The. 

Tete-il-Tete. 

May  Court  in  Greenwood. 

Two  Waitings,  The. 

Veiled  Priestess,  The. 

Wedding  Song,  A. 

Case,  Lizzie  York. — Empty  Nest,  The. 

Yellow-hammer's  Nest,  The.     See  Golden  Robin's 

Fairy-land. 
Faith  and  Reason. 

Nest,  The. 

Chaffee,  Helen.— Early  Start,  An. 
Chahoon,  Mary. — At  Boarding-school. 

In  de  Mornin'. 

Southland. 

Chalkhill,  J:— Angler,  The. 

Case,  Mrs.  Luella  J.  B. — Joan  of  Arc  in  Prison. 

Coridon's  Song. 

Case,  Phila  H. — "Boarding  'Round." 

Ghallen,  Jas. — New  Year's  Story,  A. 

Holiday. 

Challiss,  Jas.  Courtney. — Christmas  Letter,  A. 

Nobody's  Child. 

Chalmers,  Rev.  T: — False  Coloring  Lent  to  War. 

Case,  Rev.  W. — -Defeat  of  Burgoyne,  The. 

Good  Deeds. 

Casey,  J:  Keegan. — Maire  my  Girl. 
Rising  of  the  Moon,  The. 

"I  care  nothing  for  passing  renown." 

Insignificance  of  Earth. 

Casimir  the  Great,  King  of  Poland. — It  Kindles  All 

"Manhood  will  come,  and  old  age  will  come,  and 

My  Soul. 

the  dying  bed  will  come." 

Casket. — Reliance  on  God. 

Miseries  of  War,  The. 

Caskin,  Lida  P. — -Playing  School. 

Caslin,  Mattie  M. — Old  Maid's  Warning,  An. 

"Perhaps  it  may  have  been  little  thought  of." 

Unbeliever,  The. 

Cass,  Lewis. — Eloquence. 

Chamberlain,  Arthur. — On  the  Devon  Coast. 

Monroe  Doctrine,  The. 

Chamberlain,  H.  S.,  Jr.— Back-work  Club,  The. 

On  Precedents  in  Government. 

Chamberlain,  General  Joshua  L. — Dead  on  the  Field 

Gassel,  Paul. — "Had  the  great  truths  waited  until  the 

of  Honor. 

majority  voted  in  their  favor." 

Maine  at  Gettysburg. 

419 


Chamberlain 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Chamberlain,  Mellen. — Statue  of  Webster,  The. 
Chamberlain,  S.  W. — Fashion's  Folly. 

Written  Lesson,  A. 
Chamberlayne,  W:— -Chastity. 
Chamberlin,  H.  H.,  Jr. — Drifting. 
Chambers,  I.  Mench. — Voice  of  a  Leaf,  The. 
Chambers'  Journal.— Evening. 

E.tiles.  The. 

Love. 

Love's  Life.  A. 

Love's  Transfiguration. 

Rest. 

Through  Life. 

Twilight  Dreams. 

Winter. 
Chambers,  Dr.  Rob't. — Bobby. 

Chambers,  Rob't — Study  of  Trees  and  Flowers,  The. 
Chambers,  Rob't  W: — Officer  Brady. 

Recruit,  The. 

Troop-ship  Sails,  The. 
Chambers,  Annie.     See  Ketchxtm,  Mrs.  Annie  [Cham- 
bers]. 
Chamisso,  L:  C:  Adelaide  de.     (German — Adelbert  von 

Chamisso.)— Toy  of  the  Giant's  Child,  The. 
Champney,  E.  Frere. — Canoe  Sang. 
Champney,  Mrs.  Eliz.  [Williams]. — Daddy  Worthless. 
Chandler,  Amos  H: — When  Dora  Died. 
Chandler,  Alfred  T.— Bess. 
Chandler,  Bessie. — At  School. 

Jacqueminot. 

Lemonade. 

Little  Grace. 

Mahmud  and  the  Idol. 

My  Rival. 

Problem,  A. 

Reminding  the  Hen. 

Rivals,  The. 
Chandler,  Eliz.   Margaret. — On  Returning  a  Copy  of 

Halleck's  Poems. 
Chanler,    Mrs.    Am^lie    [Rives].      See    Troubetskoy, 

Princess. 
Channing,  B.  M. — Negro  Soldier,  The. 
Channing,  W:  EUery. — Address  on  Temperance. 

Barren  Moors,  The. 

Courage. 

Defense  of  Poetry.     See  Remarks  on  the  Character 
and  Writings  of  John  Milton. 

Earth  Spirit.  The. 

Edith. 

Flight  of  the  Wild  Geese. 

Great  Distinction  of  a  Nation,  The.     See  Spiritual 
Freedom. 

Great  Ideas.     See  On  the  Elevation  of  the  Labour- 


Hillside  Cot,  The. 

Hymn  of  the  Earth. 

Intemperance.     See  Address  on  Temperance. 

Liberty.     See  Spiritual  Freedom. 

Memory. 

Mountain,  The. 

National  Distinction  Depends  upon  Virtue.     See 
Spiritual  Freedom. 

On  the  Elevation  of  the  Labouring  Classes. 

Our  Boat  to  the  Waves.     See  Sea  Song. 

Poet's  Hope,  A. 

Present  Age,  The. 

Recitation. 

Remarks  on  the  Character  and  Writings  of  John 
Milton. 

Sea  Song. 

Spiritual  Freedom. 

Sleepy  Hollow. 

Tears  in  Spring.     (Lament  for  Thoreau.) 

To  my  Companions. 

True  Courage  in  Life.     See  Courage. 

Unnoticed  and  Unhonored  Heroes. 
Channing-Stetson,  Mrs.  Grace  EUery. — England. 

Judgment. 

Song  of  Amo,  A. 

War. 
Chanter,  Gratiana. — Lady  of  Sevilla,  The. 
Chapin,  C:  W.  E.,  Jr. — Dead  Astronomer,  The. 

How  Came  the  Holly  Berries  Red? 

Rosary,  A. 
Chapin,     Rev.     Edwin     Hubbell.— Ballot,     The.     See 
Ballot-boK,  The. 

Ballot-box,  The. 

"Come,  Howard,  from  the  gloom  of  the  prison, 
and  the  taint  of  the  lazar-house." 

Dead  on  the  Field  of  Honor. 

District  School,  The. 

Good  Strong  Heart,  A.     See  Strong  Heart,  The. 

Heroes  and  Martyrs. 

Loss  of  the  San  Francisco,  18.53. 


Chapin,  Rev.  Edwin  Hubbell  (continued). 

Moral  and  Physical  Science  Friendly  to  Freedom. 

Our  Heroes  and  Martyrs. 

Printing  Press,  The. 

"Profaneness  is  a  low,  grovelling  vice." 

Strong  Heart,  The. 

Symbols  of  the  Republic. 

"There  can  be  no  prosperity  nor  virtue  nor  glory 

in  the  aggregate." 
Triumph  of  Peace,  The. 
True  Power  of  a  Nation,  The. 
True  Source  of  Reform,  The. 
Who  are  Really  Honored. 
Chapman,  Miss. — Lost  and  Won. 

Petticoat  Government. 
Chapman,  E.  W. — Flower.^  for  the  Brave. 

Flowers  for  the  Fallen  Hero.     See  Flowers  for  the 
Brave. 
Chapman,  E:  J. — Columbia. 

Summer  Night,  A. 
Chapman,  G: — Bridal  Song.     See  Hero  and  Leander. 
Camp  at  Night,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 
Conspiracy  of  Charles  Duke  of  Byron,  The. 
Coronet  for  his  Mistress'  Philosophy,  A. 
England's  Parnassus. — Descriptions  of  Beauty  and 

Personage. 
Grief  of  Achilles  for  the  Slaying  of  Patroclus,  The. 

(Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 
Helen  on  the  Rampart.     (Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 
Her  Coming.     See  England's  Parnassus,  etc. 
Hermes  in  Calypso's  Island.  (Tr.)  See  Odyssey, The. 
Hero  and  Leander. 
Iliad,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Homeh. 
Invective  Written  by  Mr.  George  Chapman  against 

Mr.  Ben  Jonson,  An. 
Master  Spirit,   The.     See  Conspiracy   of  Charles 

Duke  of  Byron,  The. 
Odysseus  Reveals  himself  to  his  Father.     (Tr.) 

See  Odyssey,  The. 
Odysseus'  Speech  to  Nausicaa.    (Tr.)    See  Odyssey , 

The. 
Odyssey,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Homer. 
Of  Circumspection. 
Ovid's  Banquet  of  Sense. 
Praise  of  Homer,  The. 

Procession  of  Time,  The.     See  Tears  of  Peace. 
Song  the  Sirens  Sung,  The.  (Tr.)  See  Odyssey,  The. 
Sonnet:    "Muses    that    sing  Love's   .sensual   em- 
piric."  See  Coronet  for  his  Mistress'  Philosophy. 
Spirit  of  Homer,  The.     See  Tears  of  Peace,  The. 
Tears  of  Peace,  The. 

Thames,  The.     See  Ovid's  Banquet  of  Sense. 
Chapman,  H.  G. — Left. 
Chapman,  H:  S. — Woman's  Wiles. 
Chapman,  Mary  Berri.     See  Hansbrodgh,  Mrs.  Mary 

[Bebei]. 
Charlemagne,  King  of  France. — Veni  Creator.     (At.) 
Charles,  Duke  of   Orleans. — Fairest  Thing  in  Mortal 
Eyes,  The. 
Song:     "Heavenl  'Tis  delight'to  see  how  fair." 
Song:     "Wilt  thou  be  mine?" 
Spring. 
Charles,    Mrs.    Eliz.    Rundell. — Child   in   [or   on]    the 
Judgment  Seat,  The. 
Child-judge,    The.     See   Child    in    the   Judgment 

Seat,  The. 
Cruse  that  Failethnot.The.  See  Unfailing  Cruse.The 
"Is  thy  cruse  of  comfort  failing?"     See  Unfailing 

Cruse,  The. 
'Tis  I,  be  Not  Afraid. 
Unfailing  Cruse,  The. 
Charles  I.  of  England. — Majesty  in  Misery. 
"Charlotte  Elizabeth."     See  Tonna,  Mrs.  Charlotte 

Elizabeth. 
Charters,  Dr.  J.  Hamilton. — True  Heroism.  (?) 
Chase,  Annie. — Flock  of  Birds,  A. 
Kitty's  Birds.  • 

Motion  Song — Daisy  Fair. 
Recitation.     For  a  Very  Little  Girl.     (2.) 
Recitation.     For  Six  Very  Little  Girls. 
Spring.  See  Recitation.  ForaVery  LittleGirl.  (II.). 
Way  to  Spend  Christmas,  The. 
Chase,  Mrs.  M.W. — Growing  Old. 

Chateaubriand,  Francois  Ren^  Augu.ste,  Vicomte  de. — 
Comparison  of  Washington  and  Napoleon. 
Genius  of  Christianity,  The. 
Mysteries  of  Life,  The.     See  Genius  of  Christianity. 

The. 
Nature  Proclaims  a  Deity.     See  Genius  of  Chris- 
tianity, The. 
Chatfield,  Sara  M.— Are  These  God's  Children? 
Children's  Voices.     An  Easter  Ode. 
Children's  Wi.shes,  The. 
Cross  Betsy. 


420 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Child 


Chatham,    W:    Pitt,    Earl    of. — Against    Employing 

Indians  in  War      See  American  War,  The. 
Against  Search-warrants  for  Seamen. 
,  Against  the  Stamp  Act. 
America  Unconquerable.    See  American  War,  The. 
American  War,  The. 
Answer  of  Pitt  to  Walpole,  The.     See  Reply  of 

Pitt  to  Walpole. 
Conciliation  Preferable  to  War. 
Conciliation  the  Best  Policy. 

Consequences  of  the  American  War.     See  Amer- 
ican War,  The. 
Employment  of   Indians  in  the   American   War. 

See  American  War,  The. 
First  Step  to  Reconciliation  with  America,  The. 
Horrors  of  Savage  Warfare.     See  American  War, 

The. 
In  Reply  to  Mr.  Grenville.     (1766.) 
Lord  Chatham  against  the  American  War.     See 

American  War,  The. 
Lord  North's  Ministry  Denounced. 
On  Conquering  America.     See  American  War,  The. 
On  the  American  Revolution.     See  American  War, 

The. 
On  the  American  War.     See  American  War,  The. 
Pitt's  Reply  to  Walpole.     See  Reply  of  Pitt     to 

Walpole. 
Repeal  Claimed  by  Americans  as  a  Right. 
Reply  of  Mr.  Pitt.     See  Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole. 
Reply  of  Mr.   Pitt  to  Sir  Robert  Walpole.     See 

Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole. 
Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole. 
Reply  to  Sir  Robert  Walpole.     See  Reply  of  Pitt 

to  Walpole. 
Reply  to  Walpole.     See  Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole. 
Ruinous  Consequences  of  the  American  War. 
Speech  on  a  Motion  for  an  Address  to  the  Throne. 
Speech  on  the  American  War.     See  American  War, 

The. 
War  with  America,  The.     See  American  War,  The. 
Ohatterton,  T: — Accounts  of  W.  Canynge's  Feast,  The. 
^lla. 

Bristowe  Tragedy. 
Eclogue  the  First. 
Eclogue  the  Third. 
Excellent  Ballad  of  Charity,  An. 
Faith.     See  Resignation. 
Minstrel's  Marriage  Song.     See  iElla. 
Minstrel's  Roundelay.     See  .(Ella. 
Minstrel's  Song.     See  ^lla. 
Minstrel's  Song  in  Ella.     See  .lElla. 
My  Love  is  Dead.     See  JEUsl. 
Resignationf,  The]. 
Song  from  /Ella.     See  .^lla. 
Chaucer,    Geoffrey. — Ariadne.     See   Legend    of   Good 

Women,  The. 
Balade:     "Hyd.  Absolon,  thy  gilte  tresses  clere." 

See  Ballad  Sung  to  Alceste. 
Ballad  Sung  to  Alceste. 
Boke  of  the  Duchesse,  The. 
Canterbury  Pilgrims,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales, 

The. 
Canterbury  Tales,  The. 

Clerkes  Tale,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Compleynte  of  Chaucer  to  His  Purse,  The. 
Court  of  Love,  The. 
Cuckoo  and  the  Nightingale,  The.     See  Cuckow 

and  the  Nightingale,  etc. 
Cuckow  and  [the]  Nightingale;  or,  The  Boke  of 

Cupide,  God  of  Love. 
Daisy,  The.     See  Legend  of  Good  Women,  The. 
Destmy.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The  . 
Dethe  of  Blaunche,  The. 

Duchesse  Blanche.     See  Dethe  of  Blaunche,  The 
Emperor's  Daughter  Stands  Alone,  An.     See  Can- 
terbury Tales,  The. 
Flower  and  the  Leaf,  The. 
Forecast.     See  House  of  Fame,  The. 
Fox  and  Cock.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Frankeleynes  Tale,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales, 

The. 
Gtentility.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Good  Counsail.     See  Good  Counseil  of  Chaucer. 
Good  Counseil  of  Chaucer. 
Griselda.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
HousFe]  of  Fame,  The. 

Knight,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Knightes  Tale,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Legend  of  Good  Women,  The. 

Love  Unfeigned,  The.     See  Troilus  and  Criseyde. 
Merciles  Beaute. 

Milky  Way,  The.     See  House  of  Fame,  The. 
Monk  and  the  Friar,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales, 

The. 


Chaucer,  Geoffrey  (continued). 

Morning  in  May.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 

Nunnes  Preestes  Tale,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales, 
The. 

Palamon    and    Arcite.      See    Canterbury    Tales, 
The. 

Parlement  of  Foules,  The. 

Phisiciens  Tale,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 

Poet,  The.     See  House  of  Fame,  The. 

Portraits  from  the  Canterbury  Tales.     See  Canter- 
bury Tales,  The. 

Prayer  to  Apollo.     See  House  of  Fame,-  The. 

Prologue,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 

Prologue  to  "The    Legende  of    Goode  Women." 
See  Legend  of  Good  Women,  The. 

Queen  Alcestis  and  the  God  of  Love.     See  Legend 
of  Good  Women,  The. 

Romaunt  of  the  Rose,  The.     (At.) 

Tale  of  the  Man  of  Lawe,  The.     See  Canterbury 
Tales,  The. 

To  Life's  Pilgrim.     See  Good  Counseil  of  Chaucer. 

To  My  Empty  Purse.     See  Compleynte  of  Chaucer 
to  his  Purse,  The. 

Trees,    Flowers,    and    Birds.     See    Parlement    of 
Foules,  The. 

Troilus  and  Criseyde. 

Troylus  and  Criseyde.     See  Troilus  and  Criseyde. 

Virginia.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 

Wife's  Tale,  The.     See  Canterbury  Tales,  The. 
Chautauquan. — Historic  Tree  of  Chicago,  The. 

Silence  is  Golden.     See  World  to  Come,  The. 

World  to  Come,  The. 
Cheever,   G:   B. — Avalanches   of   Jungfrau   Alp.     See 
Avalanches  of  the  Jungfrau. 

Avalanches  of  the  Jungfrau. 

Deacon  Giles's  Distillery. 

"Step  to  the  Captain's  Office  and  Settle." 
Chellis,  Mary  Dwinell. — rOut  of  Shadow. 

Something  to  be  Done. 
Chemnitzer,    Ivan     Ivanovitch.       See    Khemnitzer, 

Ivan  Ivanovitch. 
Cheney,  J:  Vance. — After  the  Cows. 

At  the  Hearthside. 

Evening  Songs. 

Every  One  to  His  Own  Way. 

Faith. 

Fallen,  The. 

Happiest  Heart,  The. 

Kitchen  Clock,  The. 

Man  with  the  Hoe — A  Reply,  The. 

Music  of  Nature,  The. 

Old  Braddock. 

Skillful  Listener,  The. 

Snowflakes. 

Strong,  The. 

Tears. 

To  a  Humming»bird. 

Way  of  It,  The. 

Whither. 
Cherry,  Andrew. — Bay  of  Biscav,  The. 
Cherrjf,  or  Merry],  J.  W. — Shells  of  Ocean. 
Cherry,  W.  C. — Unregistered  Record,  An. 
Chester,  Anson  G.— Tapestry  Weavers,  The. 

Wanted. 
Chester,  Harry  S. — When  the  Light  Goes  Out. 
Chester, Vale. — Conjugating  German,  The. 
Chesterfield,  Philip  Dormer  Stanhope,  Earl  of. — Aim  at 
Perfection. 

On  a  Full-length  Portrait  of  Beau  Marsh. 
Cheverton,  E.  C. — Uncover  to  the  Flag. 
Cheverton,  Rev.  E.  G. — Decoration  Day  Oration. 
Chew,  Beverly. — Old  Books  are  Best. 
Cheyney,  Levi. — One  Heart's  enough  for  Me. 
Chicago  Herald. — Cold,  Hard  Cash. 
Chicago  Inter-Ocean. — -Congress  of  Nations,  The: 
Chicago  Ledger. — Pickett's  Charge  at  Gettysburg. 
Chicago  Post. — Boys  Wanted. 
Chicago  Rambler. — Decorative  Mania,  The. 
Chicago  Record. — Just  One  Signal. 
Chicago  Times. — Me  and  [or  an']  Jim. 

Panther's  Choice,  The. 
Chicago  Tribune. — Latest  Form  of  Literary  Hysterics. 

Chick,  M.  P.-^Pitcher  or  Jug. 

Chidwick,  J:  P. — Spanish-American  War,  The. 

Child,  Edith. — Ballade  of  the  Alumna. 

Child,  Fs.  Jas. — Overtures  from  Richmond. 

Child,  Mrs.  Lydia  Maria  [Francis]. — Birds'  Nests. 

Cloister,  The. 

Freedom  Must  Triumph.     See  Rebels  of  Boston 
before  the  Revolution,  The. 

I  Love  the  Birds.     See  Birds'  Nests. 

If  Ever  I  See.     See  Birds'  Nests. 

Little  Maiden  and  the  Little  Bird,  The. 


421 


Child 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Child,  Mr».  Lydia  Maria  [Francis]  (continued). 

Rebels  of  Boston  before  the  Revolution,  The. 
Speech  against  the  Stamp  Act.      See  Rebels  of 

Boston  before  the  Revolution,  The. 
Supposed  Speech  of  James  Otis.     See  Rebels  of 

Boston  before  the  Revolution,  The. 
Thanksgiving  Dav. 
Who  Stole  the  Bitd's  Nest? 
World  I  am  Passing  Through,  The. 
Child  Garden. — Bird's  Lawn  Party,  The. 
Child  World.— Once. 

Sorrowful  Sea-gull,  The. 
Spring  Song,  A. 
Childe-Pemberton,  Harriet  L. — Deed  of  Grace,  A. 

"Prince." 
Childs,  G:  W. — Success  in  Life. 
Childs,  J.  Ward.— I  Want  to  be  a  Soldier. 
Chinn,  G: — Annihilation. 
Chipman,  Edgar  M. — Jo,  the  Tramp. 
"Chiquita."     5ee  Harte,  Fs.  Bret. 
Chisholm,  W:  B.— "Flag  the  Train." 
Choate,  I:  Bassett. — To-morrow  is  Another  Day. 
Choate,   Jos.    H. — Address   at    the   Unveiling   of   the 

Statue  of  Rufus  Choate. 
Choate,  Rufus. — Address  Delivered  in  South  Danvers, 
at  the  Dedication  of  the  Peabody  Institute, 
Sept.  29,  1854. 
Age  of  the  Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  His- 
tory, The. 
American  Nationality. 
Barbarity    of    National    Hatreds.     See    Enmity 

toward  Great  Britain. 
Birthday  of  Washington,  The. 
Consolations    of    Literature,   The.     See    Address 

Delivered  in  South  Danvers,  etc. 
Daniel  Webster's  Eloquence. 

Discourse  Commemorative  of  Daniel  Webster,  A. 
Eloquence  of  Revolutionary  Periods,  The. 
Enmity  toward  Great  Britain. 
Eulogy  on  Webster.     See  Discourse  Commemora- 
tive of  Daniel  Webster,  A. 
Heroic  Age,  The.     See  Age  of  the  Pilgrims  the 

Heroic  Period  of  our  History,  The. 
Heroism  of  the  Pilgrims,  The.     .See  Age  of  the 
Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History,  The. 
Love  of  Country.     .See  American  Nationality. 
National  Life.     See  American  Nationality. 
Nationality.     See  American  Nationality. 
New  England  Climate  in  Summer,  The. 
Old  Grudge  against  England,  The.     See  Enmity 

toward  Great  Britain. 
Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.     iSee  Age  of  the  Pilgrims 

the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History,  The. 
Pilgrims  of  New  England,  The.     iSee  Age  of  the 
Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History,  The. 
Spartans  and  the  Pilgrims,  The.     See  Age  of  the 
Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History,  The. 
Two  Schools  of  Eloquence. 
Value  of  Literature  to  the  Union. 
Washington's  Birthday.     See  Birthday  of  Wash- 
ington, The. 
Cholmondely-Pennell,  H: — Bloated  Biggaboon,  The. 
Night  Mail  North,  The. 
Our  Traveller. 

What  the  Prince  of  I  Dreamt. 
Chorley,  H:  Fothergill.— Brave  Old  Oak,  The. 

Song  to  the  Oak.     See  Brave  Old  Oak,  The. 
Christian  at  Work. — Life's  Sunsets. 
Christian  Intelligencer. — "Man  has  interests  other  than 

those  that  are  material." 
Christian  Observer. — Baby  Faith. 
Christian    Union. — Coming  Woman,  The. 

"O  mothers  whose  children  are  sleeping." 
Christian  Weekly,  The. — Ready  for  a  Kiss. 
Christie,  Mrs.  Annie  Rothwell. — After  the  Battle. 
Mary  Jane  and  I. 
Welcome  Home. 
Woman's  Part,  The. 

Christy,  . — Wonderful  Dream. 

Chrysostom,  Saint    John.      See  Saint  John  Chrysos- 

TOM. 

Church,  E:  A. — Valentine  to  a  Man  of  Worth. 
Church,  Mrs.  Ella  Rodman  [Macllvaine]. — Mr.  Slocum. 
Churchill,  C: — Characters  of  Actors.     See  Rosoiad,  The. 

Charles  the  First.     See  Gotham. 

Description  of  Johnson.     See  Ghost,  The. 

Description  of  His  Muse.     See  Prophecy  of  Fam- 
ine, The. 

Ghost,  The. 

Gotham. 

Journey,  The. 

Kitty  Clive. 

Prophecy  of  Famine,  The. 

Rosciad,  The. 


Churchill,  Rose. — This  is  All. 
Cibber,  CoUey.— Blind  Boy,  The. 

Contented    Blind    Boy,    The.     See    Blind    Boy, 

The. 
Cicero,   Marcus  Tullius. — Against  Caius  Verres.     See 

Verres  Denounced. 
Against  Catiline.     See  First  Oration  against  Cati- 
line. 
Catiline   Denounced.     See  First   Oration   against 

Catiline. 
Catiline    Expelled.     See  Second   Oration   against 

Catiline. 
Cicero  against  Verres.     See  Verres  Denounced. 
De  Oratore. 

First  Oration  against  Catiline. 
Law  of  Virtue,  The. 
Oration     against     Catiline.     See     First     Oration 

against  Catiline. 
Panegyric  on  Julius  Caesar.     See  Speech  in  Behalf 

of  Marcus  Claudius  Marcellus. 
Second  Oration  against  Catiline. 
Separation    from    Traitors.     See    First    Oration 

against  Catiline. 
Speech  in  Behalf  of  Marcus  Claudius  Marcellus. 
Study  of  Eloquence,  The.     See  De  Oratore. 
Verres  Denounced. 
Cigar  and   Tobacco    World. — Bachelor's  Soliloquy,  A. 

Discovery  of  Tobacco,  The. 
Clapp,  F.  M. — Helen  in  Argos. 
"Clara  Augusta." — How  they  Kept  a  Secret. 
In  Want  of  a  Servant. 
Matrimonial  Advertisement,  The. 
Miss  Splicer  Tries  the  Toboggan. 
Mrs.  Bean's  Courtship. 
Mrs.  Smart  Learns  how  to  Skate. 
Toboggan  Slide,  The.     See  Miss  Splicer  Tries  the 

Toboggan. 
Clare,  J: — His  Last  Verses.   See  Lasciate  ogni  Speranza. 
I  Am!     Yet  What  I  am.     See  Lasciate  ogni  Spe- 
ranza. 
July. 

Laborer,  The. 
I-asciate  ogni  Speranza. 
My  Early  Home. 
Primrose[,  The— C.l 
Rivals,  a  Pastoral,  The. 
Summer  Evening,  The. 
Summer  Moods. 
Tell-tale  Flowers. 
Thrush's  Nest,  The. 
To  the  Glowworm 
Written   in    Northampton   County   Asylum.     See 

Lasciate  ogni  Speranza. 
Clar^tie,  Jules. — Boum-boum. 
Clark,  Alexander. — "In    the    whole    realm    of    nature 

there  is  never  found  an  unanswerable  instinct." 
My  Early  Home. 
Clark,  C:  Heber  ("Max  Adeler"). — Avalanche  of  Drugs, 

An.     See  Out  of  the  Hurly  Burly. 
Bill. 

Bill  Smith. 
Book  Canvasser,  The. 
Bridget  as  a  School-teacher. 
Case  of  Young  Bangs,  The. 
Catching    the    Morning   Train.     See   Out    of    the 

Hurly  Burly. 
High  Art — Music. 
How  to  Go  to  Sleep. 
Judge  Pitman  on  Various  Kinds  of  Weather.     See 

Out  of  the  Hurly  Burly. 
Major  Slott's  Visitor. 
Minister's  Grievances,  The. 
Mr.  Barker's  Picture. 
Mr.  Pott's  Story. 
Mrs.  Jones's  Pirate. 
Morning    "Argus"    Obituary    Department,    The. 

See  Out  of  the  Hurly  Burly. 
My  First  Political  Speech.     See  Out  of  the  Hurly 

Burly. 
Out  of  the  Hurly  Burly. 
Reaching  the  Early  Train.     See  Out  of  the  Hurly 

Burly. 
Story    of    Bishop    Potts,    The.     See    Out    of    the 

Hurly  Burly. 
Wooden  Leg,  The. 
Clark,  Clara  Savile.     See  Clarke,  Clara  Savile. 
Clark,  Mrs.  Fanny  [Foster]. — Charlie. 
Derby  Dav. 
Tom's  Little  Star. 
Clark,  H.  Savile.     See  Clarke,  H.  Savile. 
Clark,  Helen  Whitney. — Grandpa's  Courtship. 

St.  Valentine's  Day. 
Clark.  J.  H. — Game  of  Choice. 


422 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Clemens 


Clark,  Jas.  G. — Art  Thou  Living  Yet? 

Dawn  of  Redemption,  The. 

Leona. 

Mountains  of  Life,  The. 

Voice  of  the  People,  The. 
Clark,  L.  C— Flamingo,  The. 
Clark,  Luella. — Fir-tree,  The. 

Little  by  Little. 
Clark,  Mary  Bayard. — Cleopatra's  Soliloquy. 
Clark,  Mattie  A.  W.— At  Sunset. 
Clark,  S.  T.— Toward  Emmaus. 
Clark,  Bt.  Rev.  T:  March. — Responsibilities  of  Young 

Men,  The. 
Clark,  W:  M.— Song  of  the  Winter  Winds. 
Clark,  Willis  Gaylord. — Last  Prayer  of  Mary,  Queen 
of  Scots. 

Remembrance,  A, 

Spring. 

Clarke, . — May. 

Clarke,  Clara  Savile. — In   Love  with  his  Wife.     See 
Merely  Players. 

Merely  Players. 
Clarke,  Ednah  Proctor.    See  Hayes,  Mrs.  Ednah  Proc- 
tor [Clarke]. 
Clarke,  F.  C. — German  Favors. 
Clarke,  G:  Herbert. — Child's  Evening  Hymn,  A. 

Ecclesiastes. 

Resentment. 

Skater  and  Wolves. 

To  a  Butterfly. 
Clarke,  H.  Savile. — Francesca. 

Romance  of  the  Rood-loft,  A. 

.Siege  of  Lucknow,  The. 
Clarke,  Herbert  Edwin. — Age,  The. 

Cry.A. 

In  the  Wood. 
Clarke,  Jas.  Freeman. — Almighty  Love,  The. 

Caliph  and  Satan,  The.     {Tr.) 

Cana. 

Difficulty,  The.     (Tr.) 

Grass  and  Roses. 

Here  am  I. 

"Love  doth  to  her  eyes  repair."     (Tr.) 

Rabia.     {Tr.) 

Reminiscence,  A. 

Spring  Song,  A.      {Tr.) 

"When  Shall. We  Meet  Again?" 
Clarke,  Jas.  G.     See  Clark,  Jas.  G. 
Clarke,  Jos.  Ignatius  Constantine. — After  the  Lecture 
on  Spion  Kop. 

Fighting  Race,  The. 

Kinship  of  the  Celt,  The. 
Clarke,  Lilian. — Wer  Wenig  Sucht,   der  Findet   Viel. 

{Tr.) 
Clarke,  Macdonald. — In  the  Graveyard. 

Love  under  the  Ledger. 
Clarke,    Mr8.  Mary    Cowden. — See  Cowden-Clarke, 

Mrs.  Mary. 
Clarke,  Medora. — Defiled. 
Clarke,  Rebecca  Sophia  ("Sophie  May"). 

Inkstand,  The.     See  Little  Prudy. 

Keeping  House. 

Killed  with  Kindness. 

Little  Prudy. 

Little  Prudy's  Sister  Susy. 

Playing  "Hookey."     See  Little  Prudy. 

Tiny  Quarrel,  A.     See  Little  Prudy's  Sister  Susy. 

Where  there's  a  Will  there's  a  Way. 
Clarke,  Sara  Jane.     See  Lippincott,  Mrs.  Sara  Jane 

[Clarke]. 
Clarke,  T.  L.— Lent. 
Claudius,  Matthias. — Hen,  The. 

Night  Song. 

We  Plough  the  Fields. 
Claxton,  Beaumont. — On  the  Sunset  Line. 

Stage  of  Destiny,  The. 
Clay,  Cassius  Marcellus. — America  the  Child  of  Destiny. 

Aspirations  for  America. 
Clay,  F. — Constant  Heart,  A. 
Clay,  H :— Address  to  Lafayette. 

Ambition    of   a  Statesman.     See   Speech   at   the 
Barbecue  at  I^exington  in  Honor  of  Mr.  Clay. 

America's   Duty  to   Greece.     See   On   the   Greek 
Revolution. 

Defence  of  Jefferson. 

Dissolution  of  the  LTnion. 

Duty  of  America  to  Greece.     See  On  the  Greek 
Revolution. 

Expunging    Resolution,    The.     See    On    the    Ex- 
punging Resolution. 

Greek  Revolution.     See  On  the  Greek  Revolution. 

In  Favor  of  Pro.secuting  the  War.     See  Mr.  Clay 
and  the  War  of  1812. 


Clay,  H:  {continued). 

Military  Insubordination.     See  On  the  Seminole 

War. 
Military    Supremacy    Dangerous.     See    On    the 

Seminole  War. 
Military  Supremacy  Dangerous  to  Liberty.     See 

On  the  Seminole  War. 
Mr.  Clay  and  the  War  of  1812. 
My  Ambition.     See  Speech  at  the   Barbecue   at 

Lexington  in  Honor  of  Mr.  Clay. 
National  Glory.     See  On  the  Direct  Tax. 
Noblest  Public  Virtue,  The.     See  On  the  Bank 

Veto. 
On  American  Industry. 
On  Recognizing  the  Independence  of  Greece,  1824. 

See  On  the  Greek  Revolution. 
On  the  Bank  Veto. 
On  the  Direct  Tax. 
On  the  Expunging  Resolution,  1837. 
On  the  Greek  Revolution. 
On  the  Seminole  War. 
Patriotism  Inculcates  Public  Virtue.     See  On  the 

Bank  Veto. 
Public  Virtue.     See  On  the  Bank  Veto. 
Reply  to  John  Randolph. 
Sacredness  of  the  Union. 
"Sir,   an   attempt  has  been   made   to   alarm   the 

committee." 
Speech  at  the  Barbecue  at  I^^exington  in  Honor 

of  Mr.  Clay. 
Speech  on  the  War  of  1812.     See  Mr.  Clay  and 

the  War  of  1812. 
Sympathy  with  the  Greeks.     See  On  the  Greek 

Revolution. 
True  Patriotism.     See  On  the  Bank  Veto. 
Valedictory  Address  to  the  Senate. 
Cleaveland,  C.  L. — November. 
Cleaveland,  Mrs.  Eliz :  H.  [Joceljm]. — Hidden  Path,  The ; 

or.  The  Atlantic  Cable. 
No  Sects  in  Heaven.     At.  also  to  Mrs.  Cecilia  J. 

Cleveland. 
Shibboleth. 
Cleland,  W: — Hallo,  my  Fancy. 
Clemens,    Jeremiah. — Intervention    in    the    Wars    of 

Europe. 
Clemens,  S:   Langhorne  ("Mark  Twain"). — American 

Specimen,  An.     See  Tramp  Abroad,  A. 
Aurelia's  Unfortunate  Young  Man. 
Babies,  The.     See  Speech  on  the  Babies. 
Buck  Fanshaw's  Funeral.     See  Roughing  It. 
Capt.  Hurricane  Jones  on  the  Miracles. 
Celebrated    Jumping    Frog,    The.     See    Jumping 

Frog,  The. 
Concerning  Chambermaids. 
Coyote,  The.     See  Roughing  It. 
Critical  Situation,  The.     See  Tramp  Abroad,  A. 
Damascus.     See  Innocents  Abroad. 
Day  at  Niagara,  A.     See  Visit  to  Niagara,  A. 
Encounter  with  an  Interviewer,  An. 
Experience  of  the  McWilliamses  with  Membranous 

Croup. 
Experience    with    European    Guides.     See    Inno- 
cents Abroad. 
Facts  in  the  Case  of  the  Great  Beef  Contract. 
First  Interview  with  Artemus  Ward. 
French  Duel,  The.     See  Tramp  Abroad,  A. 
General  Grant's  English. 

Getting  under  Way.     See  Innocents  Abroad. 
"Great   Beef  Contract."   The.     See  Facts  in  the 

Case  of  the  Great  Beef  Contract. 
Ghost  Story,  A.     See  Golden  Arm,  The. 
Golden  Arm,  The. 

Guessing  Nationalities.     See  Tramp  Abroad,  A. 
How  I  [once — C]  Edited  an  Agricultural  Paper. 
How  I  was  Sold.     See  How  the  Author  was  Sold 

in  Newark. 
How  the  Author  was  Sold  in  Newark. 
How  Tom  Sawyer  got  His  Fence  Whitewashed. 

See  Tom  Sawyer. 
How  Tom  Sawyer  Whitewashed  His  Fence.     See 

Tom  Sawyer. 
Innocents  Abroad. 
Introduction,   An.     See  Mark   Twain   Introduces 

Himself. 
Jim  Smiley's  Frog.     See  Jumping  Frog,  The. 
Jim  Wolfe  and  the  Cats. 
Jumping  Frog,  The. 
Literary  Nightmare,  A. 

Mark  Twain  and  a  \or  the]  Reporter.     See  Encoun- 
ter with  an  Interviewer,  An. 
Mark  Twain  and  the  Interviewer.     See  Encounter 

with  an  Interviewer,  An. 
Mark  Twain  as  a  Farmer. 


423 


Clemens 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Clemens,  S:  Langhorne  ("Mark Twain")  (continued). 
Mark  Twain   Eklits  an   Agricultural   Paper.     See 

How  I  once  Edited  an  Agricultural  Paper. 
Mark  Twain  Introduces  Himself. 
Mark  Twain  on  Juvenile  Pugilists. 
Mark  Twain  on  the  Weather.     See  Speech  on  the 

Weather,     (fl.) 
Mark  Twain  Tells  an  Anecdote  of  A.  Ward. 
Mark  Twain  Visits  Niagara.     See  Visit  to  Niagara, 

A. 
Mark    Twain's   Account   of   "Jim   Smiley."     See 

Jumping  Frog,  The. 
Mark  Twain's  Anecdote  on  A.  Ward.     See  Mark 

Twain  Tells  an  Anecdote  of  A.  Ward. 
Mark  Twain's  Description  of   European  Guides. 

See  Innocents  Abroad. 
Mark  Twain's  First  Interview  with  Artemus  Ward. 

See  First  Interview  with  Art«mus  Ward. 
Mark  Twain's  Great  "Beef  Contract."     See  Facts 

in  the  Case  of  the  Great  Beef  Contract,  The. 
Mark  Twain's  Mining  Story. 
Mark    Twain's    Opinion    of   Chambermaids.     See 

Concerning  Chambermaids. 
Mark  Twain's  Story  of  the  "Bad  Little  Boy."     See 

Story  of  the  Bad  Little  Boy. 
Mark  Twain's  Story  of  the  "Good  Little  Boy." 

See  Story  of  the  Good  Little  Boy. 
Mark  Twain's  Watch. 
Membranous  Croup  and  the  McWilliamses.     See 

Experience   of  the   McWilliamses  with  Mem- 
branous Croup. 
Mrs.  McWilliams  and  the  Lightning. 
My  Editing.     See  How  I  once  Edited  an  Agricul- 
tural Paper. 
My    Fir.st    Interview   with   Artemus    Ward.     See 

First  Interview  with  Artemus  Ward. 
New    England    Weather.     See    Speech    on    the 

Weather. 
Nicodemus  Dodge. 

On  the  Sphinx.     See  Innocents  Abroad. 
Our  Guide  in  Genoa  and  Rome.     See  Innocents 

Abroad. 
Our  Guides.     See  Innocents  Abroad. 
Pudd'nhead  Wilson. 
Roughing  It. 
Speech  on  the  Babies. 
Speech  on  the  Weather. 
Story  of  the  Bad  Little  Boy. 
Story  of  the  Good  Little  Boy. 
Tale  of  the  Fishwife  and  its  Sad  Fate.     See  Tramp 

Abroad,  A. 
Telephonic  Conversation,  A. 
That  Dog  of  Jim  Smiley's.     See  Jumping  Frog, 

The. 
Tom  and  Roxy.     See  Pudd'nhead  Wilson. 
Tom  Sawyer. 
Tom  Sawyer  Treated  for  Lovesickness.     See  Tom 

Sawyer. 
Tom  Sawyer's  Love  Affair.     See  Tom  Sawyer. 
Tramp  Abroad,  A. 

Trymg  Situation,  A.     See  Tramp  Abroad,  A. 
Visit  to  Niagara,  A. 
Clemens,   S:   Langhorne,   and   Warner,   C:   Dudley. — 

Gilded  Age,  The. 
Uncle    Daniel's    Introduction    to    a    Mississippi 

Steamer.     See  Gilded  Age,  The. 
Uncle  Dan'l's  [or  Daniel's]  Apparition  [and  Prayer]. 

See  Gilded  Age,  The. 
Uncle  Dan'l's  Prayer.     See  Gilded  Age,  The. 
Steamboat  Race,  the.     See  Gilded  Age,  The. 
Washington  Hawkins  Dines  with  Colonel  Sellers. 

See  Gilded  Age,  The. 
Clement,  Clay. — Within  the  Gates. 
Clement,  Ella  H. — Christmas  Eve  Adventure,  A. 
Incompatibility:     A  Charade. 
Justice. 

Rehearsal.  The. 
Signing  the  Pledge. 
Clement,  Lewis  R. — "  'Ceptin'  Jim." 
Clemmer,  Mary. — By  the  Sea. 

"For  they  alone  have  need  of  sorrow." 
Good-by,  Sweetheart. 
Mother  Love. 
Nantasket. 
Something  Beyond. 
Words  for  Parting. 
Clemons,  W.  Harry. — Camp-fire,  The. 
Clephane,  Eliz.  Cecilia. — Lost  Sheep,  The.     See  Ninety 

and  Nine,  The. 
Ninety  and  Nine,  The. 

Cleveland,  . — Charade  for  Little  Folks. 

Cleveland,  Mrs.  Cecilia  J. — No  Sect  in  Heaven.     See 

Ci.EAVELAND,  Mr8.  ElIZ.  E.  J. 


Cleveland,  G rover.  See  Cleveland,  (Stephen)  Grover. 
Cleveland,  J: — On  Scotland. 

Scots  Apostasie,  The. 

To  the  Memory  of  Ben  Jonson. 
Cleveland,  Kate  H. — As  the  Twig  is  Bent. 
Cleveland,  Orestes. — Our  Centennial  Celebration. 
Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. — Beneath  the  Flag. 

Beyond. 
Cleveland,  (Stephen)   Grover. — Advent   of  the  Ballot 
Reform,  The. 

Ballot  Reform.     See  Advent  of  the  Ballot  Reform, 
The. 

College  and  the  Nation,  The.     See  Political  Duties 
and  Responsibilities  of  University  Men. 

Columbian  Exposition  Opened,  The. 

Empire  State,  The. 

Garfield  Statue,  The. 

People  of  the  United  States,  The. 

Political  Duties  and  Responsibilities  of  University 
Men. 

Resistance  of  Mal-administration. 

Self-made  Man  in  American  Life,  The. 
Clingan,  C.  J. — Only  a  Drunkard. 
Clinton,  De  W^itt. — Against  Foreign  Conquest. 
Clinton,  J.  E. — Ode  on  Christmas. 
Clipper. — Bones  at  a  Raffle. 
Clive,  Mrs.  Archer. — Queen's  Ball,  The. 
"Clodia." — "If  Jove  would  give  the  leafy  bowers." 
Clothier,  Clarkson. — At  Last. 
Cloud,  Marietta  F. — -Legend  of  the  True,  A. 

Woman's  Power. 
Cloud,    Virginia    Woodward. — Ballad    of    Sweet    P, 
The. 

Care. 

Mother's  Song,  The. 

Old  Street,  An. 

What  the  Lord  High  Chamberlain  Said. 

Witch.  The. 

Youth. 
Clough,  Arthur  Hugh. — Ah!     Yet  Consider  It  Again. 

Amours  de  Voyage. 

Athei.sm.     See  Dipsychus. 

Bathers,  The.     See  Bothie  of  Tober-na-Vuolich, 
The. 

Bathing.     See  Bothie  of  Tober-na-Vuolich,  The. 

Bothie  of  Tober-na-Vuolich,  The. 

Changeless,  The.     See  "With  whom  is  no  variable- 
ness,'' etc. 

Claude  to  Eustace.     See  Amours  de  Voyage.    . 

Columbus. 

Columbus  Crossing  the  Atlantic.     See  Columbus. 

Come  Back.     See  Songs  in  Absence. 

Come  Poet,  Come! 

Courage.     See  Sav  Not  the  Struggle  Nought  Avail- 
eth. 

Despondency   Rebuked.     See  Say  not  the  Strug- 
gle Nought  Availeth. 

Dipsychus. 

Easter  Day. 

Elspie    and    Philip.     See    Bothie    of    Tober-na- 
Vuolich,  The. 

Epilogue.     See  Amours  de  Voyage. 

Green  Fields  of  England. 

Hidden  Love,  The. 

Highland  Stream,  The.     See  Bothie  of  Tober-na- 
Vuolich,  The. 

In  a  Lecture-room. 

In  a  Londop  Square, 

In  Venice ;  Dipsychus  Speaks.     See  Dipsychus. 

Isolation.     See  Dipsychus. 

Ite  Domum  Saturtp,  Venit  Hesperus. 

.luxtaposition.     See  Amours  de  Voyage. 

Latest  Decalogue,  The. 

"Mighty  ocean  rolls  and  raves.  The."     See  Songs 
in  Absence. 

No  More.     See  Song  of  Autumn,  A. 

Perche  Pensa?     Pensando  s'Inveccbia. 

Peschiera. 

Philip  to  Adam.     See  Bothie  of  Tober-na-Vuolich, 
The. 

Protest,  A. 

Qua  Cursum  Ventus. 

Qui  Laborat,  Orat. 

Say  not  the  Struggle  Naught  Availeth. 

Shadow,  The. 

Sic  Itur. 

Sleeping  Child.  A. 

Some  Future  Day.     See  Songs  in  Absence. 

Song  of  Autumn,  A. 

Songs  in  Absence. 

Spectator  ab  Extra.     See  Dipsychus. 

Stream  of  Life,  The. 

Where  Lies  the  Land?     See  Songs  in  Absence. 


424 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Coleridge 


Clough,  Arthur  Hugh  (continued). 

With  Whom  is  no  Variableness.     See  "With  whom 
is  no  variableness,  neither  shadow  of  turning." 

"With  whom  is  no  variableness,  neither  shadow  of 
turning." 
Coale,  Alice  A. — Daddy  Drum. 

"Honest  and  Honorable." 

Two  Faults. 

Uncle  Deal's  Lecture. 
Coan,  Rev.  Leander  S. — Better  in  the  Morning. 
Coan,  Titus  Munson. — Crystal,  The. 

Dream  of  Flowers,  A. 

Nihil  Humani  Alienum. 
Coates,  Elmer  Ruan. — Balance  Wheel,  The. 

Billy  K.  Simes. 

Bridget  and  the  Matinee. 

Falling  in  and  Falling  Out. 

False  Faces. 

Genius. 

Giles  and  Abraham. 

Nothing  for  Use. 

Sand-man,  The. 

That  Autograph  Sale. 

Twenty-one  To-day. 
Coates,  Mrs.  Florence  Van  Leer  [Earle]  [Nicholson]. — 
India. 

Man. 

Perdita. 

Song:  "For   me   the  jasmine  buds  unfold."     See 
World  is  Mine,  The. 

Survival.  • 

Tennyson. 

To-morrow. 

World  is  Mine,  The. 
Coates,  Reynell. — Christian  Charity. 

Gambler's  Wife,  The. 
Cobb,  H:  N. — "Father,  Take  my  Hand."     See  Gracious 
Answer,  The. 

Gracious  Answer,  The. 

Promise,  The.     See  Gracious  Answer,  The. 
Cobb,  Mark  Huntington. — World  Would  Be  Better  for 

It,  The. 
Cobb,  Sylvanus,  Jr. — Uncle  Noah's  Ghost. 

Cobbe, . — Cobbe's  Prophecies. 

Cobbe,  Frances  Power. — Rich  in  the  Lord. 
Cobden,  R: — American  Merchant  Vessels. 
Coburn,  C.  F. — Lesson  in  Tennis,  A. 
Cochran,  W.  Burke. — Decoration  Day. 
Cochran,  W.  Eugene. — Colored  Philosophy. 
Cochrane,  Hugh. — Ideal. 
Cocke,  Zitella. — Greek  Mother's  Lullaby. 

Miss  Nancy's  Gown. 
Cocker,  Prof.  William  John.son(?). — "All  the  rich  treas- 
ures  of   the   past  are  appropriated  by  Chris- 
tianity." 
Cockin,  Hereward  K. — Death  of  Burnaby,  The. 
Cockton,  H:— Night  with  a  Ventriloquist,  A. 

Ventriloquist  on  a  Stage-coach,  A. 
Coddington,  Hannah. — Nature's  Party. 
Coe,  Eli  G.— Waiting. 
Coe,  R:,  Jr. — Emblems. 

Life. 
Coffey,  Clare  Beatrice.— Christmas  Angel's  Message, The. 
Coffin,  C:  Carleton.— Caleb  Krinkle. 

How    Randa   went   over   the    River.     See   Caleb 
Krinkle. 
Coffin,  Rob't  Barry  ("Barry  Gray"). — Ships  at  Sea. 
Coffin,  Rob't  Stevenson.     (Wr.)     See  foregoing. 
Coggins,  Paschal  H. — Affection  of  the  Heart,  An. 
Coggswell,  C.  N. — "Estrangement." 
Coggswell,  F.  H. — Lawyer's  Lullaby,  The. 
Cohen,  D.  S.— As  "Old  Giles"  Saw  it. 
Colcord,  Millie. — Life's  Weaving. 
Cole,  A.  B. — Mr.  Jonathan  Bangs. 
Cole,  Rob't  Jermain. — Jamie's  Word  wi'  the  Sea. 

Song:  "Bud  into  blossom,  flower  into  fruit  " 

Spiritus  Intactus. 
Coleman,  C:  Washington. — Bit  of  Human  Nature,  A. 
Coleman,  Mary. — His  Name. 
Coleman,  Patrick  Jas. — Seed-time. 
Coleridge,  Hartley. — Address  to  Certain  Gold-fishes. 

Birth  of  Speech,  The. 

Donne. 

Early  Death.     See  Reply. 

First  Man,  The.     See  Birth  of  Speech,  The. 

Friendship.     See  To  a  Friend. 

Ideality. 

May,  1840. 

"Multum  Dilexit." 

Night. 

November. 

Prayer. 

Reply. 


Coleridge,  Hartley  (continued). 

Shakespeare.     See  To  Shakespeare. 

She  is  not  Fair  to  Outward  View.  See  Song:  "She 
is  not  fair  to  outward  view." 

Solitary-hearted,  The.  See  Stanzas:  "She  was  a 
queen  of  noble  Nature's  crowning." 

Song:  "She  is  not  fair  to  outward  view." 

Song:  The  Lark. 

Sonnet:  "Long  time  a  child,  and  still  a  child,  when 
years." 

Stanzas:  "She  was  a  queen  of  noble  Nature's 
crowning." 

Summer  Rain. 

Swift. 

"  'Tis  sweet  to  hear  the  merry  lark."  See  Song: 
The  Lark. 

To  a  Deaf  and  Dumb  Little  Girl. 

To  a  Friend. 

To  a  Lofty  Beauty,  from  Her  Poor  Kinsman. 

To  Shakespeare. 

To  the  Nautilus. 

Whither. 
Coleridge,  S:  Taylor. — Alice  du  Cloa. 

Ancient  Mariner,  The.  See  Rime  of  the  Ancient 
Mariner,  The. 

Answer  to  a  Child's  Question. 

Astrological  Tower,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Wallenstein. 

Avaro.  (Tr.)  See  Epigram:  "There  comes  from  old 
Avaro's  grave." 

Bad  Poets. 

Beelzebub  and  Job. — See  Job's  Luck. 

Belief  in  Astrology,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Wallenstein. 

Chamouny.  See  Hymn  before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale 
of  Chamouni. 

Character.     See  Good,  Great  Man,  The. 

Child  in  the  Wilderness,  The. 

Choral  Song  of  Illyrian  Peasants.     See    Zapolya. 

Christabel. 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Cologne. 

Dead  Calm  at  Sea.  See  Rime  of  the  Ancient 
Mariner,  The. 

Dejection.     An  Ode. 

Devil's  Thoughts,  The.  See  Devil's  Walk,  The. 
Coleridge  and  Southey. 

Dirge:  He  is  gone — is  dust.  (Tr.)  See  Wallen- 
stein. 

Eolian  Harp,  The. 

Epigram :  "Hoarse  Msevius,"  etc.  See  On  a  Reader 
of  his  Own  Verse. 

Epigram:  "Sly  Beelzebub,"  etc.     See  Job's  Luck. 

Epigram:  "Swans  sing  before  they  die,"  etc.  See 
On  a  Bad  Singer. 

Epigram:  "There  comes  from  old  Avaro's  grave." 
(Tr.) 

Epigram:  Cologne.     Sec  Cologne. 

Epigram  on  a  Bad  Singer.     See  On  a  Bad  Singer. 

Epigram  on  Job  and  the  Devil.     See  Job's  Luck. 

Epitaph:  "Stop,  Christian  passerby,"  etc. 

Epitaph  on  an  Infant. 

Epitaph  on  Himself.  See  Epitaph:  "Stop,  Chris- 
tian passer-by,"  etc. 

Eternal  Poem,  An.     See  To  Mr.  Pye. 

Exchange,  The. 

Expectoration,  An.  See  On  my  Joyful  Depart- 
ure from  the  same  City  [Cologne]. 

Expectoration  the  Second.     See  Cologne. 

Fancy  in  Nubibus;  or.  The  Poet  in  the  Clouds. 

Fears  in  Solitude. 

France:  An  Ode. 

Friend,  The. 

Frost  at  Midnight. 

Genevieve. 

Genevieve.     See  also  Love. 

Glycine's  Song.     See  Zapolya. 

God  in  Nature.  See  Hymn  before  Sunrise  in  the 
Vale  of  Chamouni. 

Good  Great  Man,  The. 

"Hast  thou  a  charm  to  stay  the  morning  star." 
See  Hymn  before  Sunrise,  in  the  Vale  of  Cha- 
mouni. 

He  Prayeth  Best.  See  Rime  of  the  Ancient 
Mariner,  The. 

"He  prayeth  well,  who  loveth  well."  See  Rime  of 
Ancient  Mariner,  The. 

Heroism.     (Tr.)     See  Wallenstein. 

Hunting  Song.     See  Zapolya. 

Hymn,  A:  "My  Maker!  of  thy  power  the  trace." 

Hymn  before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. 

Hymn  to  Mont  Blanc.  See  Hymn  before  Sunrise 
in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. 

Job.     See  Job's  Luck. 

Job's  Luck. 


425 


Coleridge 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


C!oleridge,  S:  Taylor  (continued). 

Julia. 

KniRht's  Tomb,  The 

Kubla  Khan. 

Lady's  Chamber,  A.     See  Christabel. 

Lafayette.     Seefionnet:  "As  when  far  off,"  etc. 

Lord  Helpeth  Man  and  Beast,  The.     See  Friend, 
The. 

Love. 

Love    and    Prayer.     See    Rime    of    the    Ancient 
Mariner,  The. 

Love's  Flame.     See  Love. 

Mahomet. 

Metrical  Feet. 

Monody  on  the  Death  of  Chatterton. 

Mont    Blanc   before    Sunrise.     See  Hymn  before 
Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. 

Mythology.     (Tr.)     See  Wallen stein. 

Nightingale,  The. 

Ode  to  Tranquillity. 

On  a  Bad  Singer. 

On  a  Reader  of  his  Own  Verse. 

On   my   Joyful   Departure   from   the   same   City 
[Cologne]. 

On  the  Death  of  Chatterton.     See  Monody  on  the 
Death  of  Chatterton. 

Phantom  Ship,  The      See  Rime  of  the  Ancient 
Mariner,  The, 

Praying  and  Loving.     See  Rime  of  the  Ancient 
Mariner,  The. 

Quarrel  of  Friends,  The.     <Sec  Christabel. 

Raven,  The. 

Raven  and  the  Oak,  The.     See  Raven,  The. 

Remorse. 

"Resembles  life  that  once  was  held  of  'ight."     See 
What  is  Life? 

Rime  of  the  Ancient  Mariner,  The. 

Romance.     See  Kuhla  Khan. 

Sentimental. 

Song:  "Hear,  sweet  spirit,  hear  the  spell."     See 
Remorse. 

Song,  by  Glycine.     See  Zapolya. 

Sonnet:  "As  when  far  off  the  warbled  strains  are 
heard." 

Sonnet.    Composed  on  a  Journey  Homeward. 

Sonnelffi  on  Eminent  Characters.     See  Sonnet:  "As 
when  far  off,"  etc. 

Sunny  Shaft  did  I  Behold,  A.     See  Zapolya. 

Time,  Real  and  Imaginary. 

To  a  Ijady  Offended  by  a  Sportive    Observation 
that  Women  have  no  Souls. 

To  Mr.  Pye. 

WaUenstein.  (Tr.)  See  Schiller,  Johann  W.  von. 

Wanderings  of  Cain.     See  Child  in  the  Wilderness, 
The. 

What  is  Life? 

Work  without  Hope. 

Youth  and  Age. 

Zapolya. 
Coleridge.    S:  Taylor,    and   Southey,    Rob't. — Devil's 

Walk,  The. 
Coleridge,  Sara.— Child,  The 

He  Came  Unlook'd  for.     See  Phantasmion. 

O  Sleep,  my  Babe. 

One  Face  Alone.     See  Phantasmion. 

Phantasmion. 
Coles.  Abraham. — Dies  Irae.     (Tr.) 

Stabat  Mater  Dolorosa.     (Tr.) 
Coles,  .1 :  F. — What  the  Temperance  Cause  ha.s  Done 

for  John  and  Me. 
Coles,  L.  B. — What  is  Temperance? 
Colesworthy,  Dan'l  Clement. — Don't  Kill  the  Birds.  (?) 

"Little  word  in  kindness  spoken,  A." 

Trifles. 
Coley,  L:  B. — Good  Name  More  Desirable  than  Riches, 

A. 
Colfax,  Schuyler. — Education. 

Momentous  Question,  A. 

Speech  on  Temperance,  A. 
Colfelt,  Rev.  Lawrence  M. — "Increasing  exactions  of 

the  church.  The." 
College  Folio. — Wood  Orchid,  The. 
CoUer,  Edwin.— Blind  Poet's  Wife,  The. 

Mrs.  Jones's  Lodger. 

Not  in  the  Programme. 

Sal  Parker's  Ghost. 

Told  at  "The  Falcon." 
Collester,  Clinton  H. — Ephraim's  Storm  Lullaby. 

Indian  Summer. 

Morning  Sprite,  The. 

Robbie  Rockaway. 

Song  of  the  Trip-hammer. 
Collier,  H.  Price. — Our  Happy  Warrior. 


Collier,  T:  Stephens. — Compensation. 
Disappointment. 
Forgotten  Books,  The. 
In  Summer  Time. 
Infallibility. 
Life's  Truth. 
"Look  of  sympathy,  the  gentle  word.  The."      See 

Not  Lost. 
Memorial  Day. 
Nelly  Tells  how  Baby  Came. 
Not  Lost.     At.  also  to  Sarah  Doudney. 
Power. 
Sacrilege. 
Time. 
Collins,  Annfe]. — Winter  Being  Over,  The. 
Collins,  J:  C. — In  the  Down-hill  of  Life. 

Tomorrow.     See  In  the  Down-hill  of  Life. 
Collins,  Mortimer. — Comfort. 
Conceit,  A. 
Darwin. 

First  of  April,  The. 
Game  of  Chess,  A. 
Greek  Idyl,  A. 
Ivory  Gate,  The. 
Kate  Temple's  Song. 
Multum  in  Parvo. 
My  Thrush. 
Positivists,  The. 
Rain  in  September. 
Salad. 

Shirley  Chase. 
Sky-making. 
Snow  and  Sun. 

To  F.  C. ,  20th  February,  1875.     See  Snow  and  Sun. 
Two  Worlds. 
Violets  at  Home. 
Collins,  V.  Lansing.— Curfew  Chimes,  The. 
Collins,  W: — Captain  Molly  at  Monmouth. 
Dirge  in  Cymbeline. 
Evening.     See  Ode  to  Evening. 
Fidele.     See  Dirge  in  Cymbeline. 
How  Sleep  the  Brave.     See  Ode  Written  in  the 

Beginning  of  the  Year  1746. 
Irish  Molly.     See  Captain  Molly  at  Monmouth. 
Molly  Maguire  at  Monmouth.     See  Captain  Molly 

at  Monmouth. 
Ode:  "How   sleep   the  brave  who   sink  to  rest." 

See  Ode  Written  in  the  Beginning  of  the  Year 

1746. 
Ode  on  the  Death  of  Mr.  Thomson.     See  Ode  on 

the  Death  of  Thomson. 
Ode  on  the  Death  of  Thom.son. 
Ode  on  the  Passions.     See  Passions,  The.     An  Ode 

for  Music. 
Ode  to  Evening. 
Ode  to  Liberty. 
Ode  to  Simplicity. 
Ode  to  the  Passions.     See  Passions,  The.     An  Ode 

for  Music. 
Ode  to  the  Popular  Superstitions  of  the  Highlands 

of  Scotland,  An. 
Ode  Written  in   1746.     See  Ode  Written  in  the 

Beginning  of  the  Year  1746. 
Ode  Written  in  the  Beginning  of  the  Year  1746. 
Passions,  The.     An  Ode  for  Music. 
Revenge.     See  Passions,  The.     An  Ode  for  Music. 
To  Evening.     See  Ode  to  Evening. 
Collins.  W:  French. — Conditionally. 

Town  and  Country. 
Collison,  W.  B.— Sinking  of  the  Ships,  The. 
Collyer,   Rob't.— Be  True.     (At.)     See  Be  Just,  and 

Fear  not. — Alford. 
"Now,  believe  me,  God  hides  some  ideal  in  every 

human  soul." 
Saxon  Grit. 
.    Under  the  Snow. 
Colman,  G:,  the  younger. — Elder  Brother,  The. 
Footman  Wanted,  A. 

Gluggity  Glug.     See  Myrtle  and  the  Vine,  The. 
Iron  Chest,  The. 
Lodgings  for  Single  Gentlemen. 
Myrtle  and  the  Vine,  The. 
Newcastle  Apothecary,  The. 
Prompt  Messenger,  A. 
Sir  Marmaduke. 

Toby  Tosspot.     See  Elder  Brother,  The. 
Waiting  for  an  Interview. 
Colson,  Ethel  M. — Babies  All  are  Grown,  The. 
Colton,  Arthur  Willis. — Concerning  Tabitha's  Dancing 

the  Minuet. 
Song  with  a  Discord,  A. 
To  Faust ine. 
Colton,  Delia  Louise. — Rain-drops,  The. 


426 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Cooley 


Colton,  Walter. — Grandeur  of  the  Ocean. 

Leap  for  Life,  A.     (At.  also  to  G.  P.  Morris.) 
Main  Truck,  The;  or,  A  Leap  for  Life.      See  Leap 

for  Life,  A. 
New  Year,  The. 

Columbia  Literary  Monthly. — Cloudland. 

Columbia  Spectator. — After  the  Game. 

Widow's  Mite,  The. 
Columbus  Sunday  Morning  News. — Big  Enough  Family, 

A. 
Commercial  Weekly  Times. — Ensign  Bearer,  The. 
Common  School  Education. — Tommy  Brown. 
Conant,  Helen  Stevens. — Stavoren. 
Conant,  S:  Stillman. — Two  Gates,  The. 
Concordiensis. — Fin  de  Sifecle  Girl,  A. 
Cone,  Helen  Gray. — Arraignment. 

Ballad  of  Calnan's  Christmas,  The. 

Contrast,  The. 

Dandelions  [,  The]. 

Fair  England. 

Greencastle  Jenny. 

Invocation  in  a  Library,  An. 

Last  Cup  of  Canary,  The. 

Resurrection,  A. 

Rhvme  of  Robin  Puck,  A. 

Ride  to  the  Lady.  The. 

Spring  Beauties.  The. 

Tender  Heart,  The. 

Thisbe. 

Torch  Race,  The. 

Winged  Seeds. 

Yellow  Pansy,  A. 
Cone,  Joe. — Men  of  Monomoy,  The. 

Nathan  Hale. 

Sinking  the  Merrimac. 
Cone,  N.  G.— Twelve  Little  Brothers,  The. 
Conger,  H :  Rutgers. — Lines  to  a  Monkey. 
Congregationalist. — Facilis  Descensus. 
Congreve,  W: — Amoret. 

Cathedral. 

"False   though   she  be  [to   me   and   love]."     See 
Song:  "False  though  she  be,"  etc. 

Hue  and  Cry  after  Fair  Amoret,  A.     See  Amoret. 

Lesbia. 

Silly  Fair.     See  Lesbia. 

Song:  "False  though  she  be  to  me  and  love." 
Congreve,  W:,  and  Somerville,  W: — White  Ro.se,  The. 
Conington,  J: — ^Eneid,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Virgil. 

Nisus  and  Euryalus.     (Tr.)     See  ^neid.  The. 
Conkling,  Roscoe. — Nominating  General  Grant. 
Connolly,    C:    M.-^Charge    of    "De    [or    the]    Dutch 

Brigade,"  The. 
Connolly,  Dan'l. — Knocked  About. 
Connolly,  Erskine. — Mary  Macneil. 
"Connor,  Ralph."     See  Gordon,  Rev.  C:  W. 
ConoUy,  Luke  Aylmer. — Enchanted  Island,  The. 
Conrad,  Rob't  Taylor. — Fireman,  The. 

On  the  Death  of  General  Taylor. 
Constable,  H: — Damelus'  Song  to  his  Diaphenia. 

Damelus'  Song  to  his  Flock. 

Diaphenia.     See  Damelus'  Song  to  his  Diaphenia. 

On  the  Death  of  Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

Pain  of  Love. 

Pastoral  Song  between  Phillis  and  Amarillis,  A. 

Shepherd's  Song  of  Venus  and  Adonis,  The. 

Sonnet   Prefixed  to  Sidney's  Apology  for  Poetry. 
See  On  the  Death  of  Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

"To  live  in   Hell  and   Heaven   to  behold."     See 
Pain  of  Love. 
Converse,  C.  C. — Forever  and  Forever. 
Conway,  Kathe.  Eleanor. — Christ  and  the  Mourners. 

Heaviest  Cross  of  All,  The. 

In  Thanksgiving. 

Saturninus. 
Conway,  Moncure  D. — Words  from  the  Tree. 
Conwell,  Russell  Herrman. — Fireman's  Prayer,  The. 

True  Hero,  A.     See  Fireman's  Prayer,  The. 
Cook,  Clarence  Chatham. — Abram  and  Zimri. 

On  One  Who  Died  in  May. 
Cook,  Eliza.— Bay,  The. 

Bravest  Thing,  The.     See  "No!" 

Building  upon  the  Sand. 

Christmas  Holly,  The. 

Christmas  Tide. 

Death  of  Master  Tommy  Rook,  The. 

Fern  and  the  Moss,  The. 

Forest  Trees,  The. 

Germs  of  Greatness. 

God  in  Everything. 

Heart's  Charity,  The. 

Holly,  The.     See  Christmas  Holly,  The. 

Land  of  My  Birth,  The. 


Cook,  Eliza  (continued). 

Life-boat  is  a  Gallant  Bark,  The. 

Nae  Star  was  Glintin'. 

"No!" 

Old  Arm  Chair,  The. 

Old  Dobbin. 

Old  Pincher. 

Poor  Irish  Boy,  The. 

Quiet  Eye,  The. 

Robert  Bruce  and  the  Spider.     See  Try  Again. 

Robin,  The.     See  To  the  Robin. 

Sacrilegious  Gamesters,  The. 

Sea-child,  The. 

Song  for  the  New  Year. 

Star  in  the  West,  A. 

There's  a  Silver  Lining  to  Every  Cloud. 

To  the  Robin. 

Tribute  to  Washington.     See  Washington. 

Trouble  your  Head  with  your  own  Affairs. 

Try  Again. 

Washington.  , 

Water. 

Where  There's  a  Will  There's  a  Way. 

WUlow  Tree,  The. 
Cook,  E.  Elbert. — Euterpe's  Visit. 
Cook,  Jonas. — Solomon  Grub. 

Cook,  Jos. — "It  is  not  the  best  way  in  which  to  teach 
the  truth." 

Newest  Promises  and  Perils  of  the  Temperance 
Reform. 

Our  Duty.  See  Newest  Promises  and  Perils  of  the 
Temperance  Reform. 

Promises  and  the  Perils  of  Temperance  Reform, 
The.  See  Newest  Promises  and  Perils  of  the 
Temperance  Reform. 

Sacred  Influences. 

"We  grow  wrong;  we  allow  ourselves  to  crystal- 
lize." 

Yosemite. 
Cook,  Marc  Eugene  ("Vandyke    Brown"). — Clown's 
Story,  The.  , 

Curious  Want,  A. 

Little  Rocket's  Christmas. 

Nothing  under  the  Sun  is  New. 

Seaside  Incident,  A. 

Weather  in  Verse,  The. 
Cook,  W:  Wallace. — Sistah  'Lize. 
Cooke,  G:  Willis. — Emerson,  Extract  Concerning. 
Cooke,  Helen  M.— Flag  at  Half-mast,  The. 
Cooke,  J.  Edmund  Vance. — Courtin'  Call,  A. 

Dat  Gawgy  Watahmillon. 

Katie  an'  Me. 

Morning's  Mail,  A. 

Other  One  was  Booth,  The. 

Young  Man  Waited,  The. 
Cooke,  J:  Esten. — Band  in  the  Pines,  The. 
Cooke,  Philip  Pendleton. — Florence  Vane. 

Life  in  the  Autumn  Woods. 
Cooke,  Mrs.  Rose  [Terry]. — Arachne. 

Best. 

Beyond. 

Bluebeard's  Closet. 

Deacon's  Week,  The. 

Done  For. 

Fishing  Song{,  The]. 

Give  me  a  Wish.     See  Wish,  A. 

In  Vain. 

"It  is  More  Blessed." 

Lise. 

Lost  on  the  Prairie.  . 

Midsummer  Day,  A.     See  Reve  du  Midi. 

"Pour  out  thy  love  like  the  rush  of  a  river." 

Rest. 

R6ve  du  Midi. 

Saint  Symphorien. 

Segovia  and  Madrid. 

Simon's  Burden. 

Snow-filled  Nest,  The. 

Thanksgiving,  A. 

Then. 

Trailing  Arbutus[,  The]. 

Two  Villages,  The. 

Wish,  A. 
Cooke,  W.  C. — Jock  o'  the  Side. 
Coolbrith,  Ina  Donna. — Frederick  III. 

Fruitionless. 

Helen  Hunt  Jackson. 

In  Blossom  Time. 

Mariposa  Lily,  The. 

Meadow-larks. 

Prayer   A. 

"When  the  grass  shall  cover  me." 
Cooley,  Hattie  A. — Grandmother's  Bible. 


427 


Coolidge 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Coolidge,  Grace  F. — When  Mamma  was  a  Little  Girl. 
Coolidge.  R.  B  — Loss  of  the  College  Pump,  The. 
Coolidge,  Susan. — Flowers  Know  their  Time  to  Go. 

Time  to  Go.     See  Flowers  Know  their  Time  to  Go. 

While  We  May. 

Coop)er, . — Wonderful  Weaver,  The. 

Cooper,  F.  T. — Caprii5ousness. 

Coincidence,  A. 

Cro  Sis-purposes. 
Cooper.  G:— All  the  Good  We  Can. 

Autumn  Leaves. 

Baby-land. 

"Bob  White." 

Boy  that  Laughs,  The. 

Boy's  Promise,  A 

CaUing  Them  Up. 

Doll-baby  Show,  The. 

Farmer's  Pipe,  The. 

Flowers  and  Weeds. 

For  the  Giver. 

Hundreds! 

In  the  Heart. 

June  Fields. 

Laughing  Philosopher,  A. 

Leaves  and  the  Wind,  The.     See  Autumn  Leaves. 

Little  I.eaves,  The. 

Little  Seeds,  The. 

Merry  Christmas  and  a  Glad  New  Year,  A. 

New  Year,  The. 

October's  Party. 

Only  One.     See  Hundreds! 

Our  Mothers.     See  Hundreds! 

Reason  Why,  The. 

Round  the  Year. 

Sand-man,  The. 

Ser\'ing. 

Summer  Games. 

'Thankfulness. 

Upside  Down. 

What  Grandma  Says. 

What  Robin  Told. 

Wind  and  the  Leaves.     See  Autumn  Leaves. 

Winter  Birds. 
Cooper,  .Tas.  Fenimore.     Capture  of  the  Whale.     See 
Pilot,  The. 

Death  of  the  Savage,  The.     See  Deerslayer,  The. 

Deerslayer,  The. 

Last  of  the  Mohicans,  The. 

Mv  Brigantme.     See  Water  Witch,  The. 

Pilot,  The. 

Prairie,  The. 

Prairie  on  Fire,  The.     See  Prairie,  The. 

Race  for  Life,  A.      See  Last  of  the  Mohicans,  The 

Running  the  Gauntlet.     See  Last  of  the  Mohicans, 
The. 

Stampede,  The.     See  Prairie,  The. 

Water  Witch,  The. 
Cooper,  M.  Truesdell. — Arithmetic  in  Life. 
Cooper,  May. — Be  Brave. 

Gossip. 
Cooper,  P: — Value  of  Science. 
Cooper,  Ruth. — Drunkard's  Wife,  The. 
Cooper,  Susan  Fenimore. — Birds  Choose  the  Maple,  The. 

"Of  the  infinite  variety  of  fruits,"  etc. 

"What  a  noble  gift  to  man  are  the  forests!" 
Cooper,  T: — Chartist  Song. 
Copeland,  Rob't. — Foot-ball  Game,  The. 
Cope's  Tobacco  Plant. — Another  Match. 
Copp^e,  Fran(;ois  Edouard  Joachim. — Benediction,  The. 

Night-watch,  The. 

Shipwrecked. 
Corbet,  Rt.  Rev.  R: — Fairies'  Farewell,  The. 

Farewell  to  the  Fairies.     See  Fairies'  Farewell,  The. 

Father's  Blessing,  A.     See  To  Vincent  Corbet,  my 
Son. 

Like  to  the  Thundering  Tone.     See  Nonsence. 

Nonsence. 

To  Vincent  Corbet,  my  Son. 
Corbett,  Mrs.  E.  T. — Christening,  The. 

Foreclosure  of  the  Mortgage,  The. 

Inventor's  Wife,  The. 

Lecture,  The. 

Miss  Minerva's  Disappointment. 

Newsboy,  The. 

Old  Deacon's  Lament,  The. 

What  Biddy  Said  in  the  Police  Court. 
Corelli,  Marie. — Crimson  Shroud  of  Olaf  Guldmar,  The. 
See  Thelma. 

Passing  of  Olaf.  The.     See  Thelma. 

Soul  of  Lilith,  The. 

Story  of  the  Priest  Philemon,  The.     See  Soul  of 
Lilith,  The. 

Thelma. 


Corlis,  C.  T.— Two  Temples,  The. 
Cornell,  Mrs.  M.  Ella. — Closing  Address. 

Jesus  Loves  Me. 

New  Sunday-school  Scholar,  The. 

Opening  Address. 

Our  Anniversary. 

Reward  of  Earnest  Effort,  The. 

Tree  of  Spiritual  Blessings,  The. 
Cornell  Widow. — Autumn  Cry,  The. 

Box  of  Cigarettes,  A. 

Cigarette  and  Pipe,  A. 

Complication,  A. 

Conquest. 

Eskimelodrama;  or,  the  Eskapade  of  an  Eskamaid. 

Last  Party,  The. 

Other  Side,  The. 

Sonnet:  "A  low  full  sweep  of  instrumental  string." 

Tirade — Explained,  A. 

Verse. 

Village  Dance,  The. 

Villon. 

Winds,  The. 
Comhill  Magazine. — Beyond  the  Haze. 

Rabbi's  Present,  'The. 
Cornish,  Rev.  G: — To  the  Redbreast. 
Cornwall,  Barry.     See  Procter,  Bryan  Waller. 
Comwallis,  Kinahan. — Battle  of  Fredericksburg,  The. 

Battle  of  Lookout  Mountain,  The. 

Battle  of  Murfreesboro,  The. 

Conquest  of  Mexico,  The. 

Laimching    of    Cortez'    Ships.     See   Conquest    of 
Mexico,  The. 
Corn  well,  H:  Sylvester. — Angel  Ferry,  The. 

December. 

February. 

January. 

May. 

My  Owl. 

Sunset  City,  The. 

Unrest. 
Corrie,  C.  J.— Traitor  Sea,  The. 

Cortissoz,  Mrs.  Ellen  Mackay  [Hutchinson]. — All  the 
Year  Round. 

April  Fantasie. 

Bride's  Toilette,  The. 

Cry  from  the  Shore,  A. 

Harvest. 

Her  Picture. 

Moth-song. 

On  Kingston  Bridge. 

Pamela  in  Town. 

Praise-God  Barebones. 

Prisoilla. 

Quaker  Ladies. 

Sea-way. 

So  Wags  the  World. 

Under  the  Stars. 

Vagrant  Pansies. 

World  and  I,  The. 
Corwin,  T:— Cumberland  Road,  The. 

Danger  of  the  Spirit  of  Conquest.     See  Spirit  of 
Conquest,  The. 

Retributive  Justice.  ^^ 

Spirit  of  Conquest,  The. 

Unjust  National  Acquisitions.     See  Spirit  of  Con- 
quest, The. 
Cory,  W:  (formerly  W:  Johnson). — Amaturus. 

Ballad  for  a  Boy,  A. 

Callimachus. 

Dirge,  A. 

Heracl[elitus.     See  Callimachus. 

Invocation,  An. 

Mimnermus  in  Church. 

Poor  French  Sailor's  Scottish  Sweetheart,  A. 

School  Fencibles. 

Two  Captains,  The.     See  Ballad  for  a  Boy,  A. 
Costello,  Louisa  Stuart  (?) — Song:  "Heaven!   'Tis  de- 
light to  see  how  fair."     (Tr.) 

Song:  "Wilt  thou  be  mine?"     (Tr.) 

"Who  has  not  looked  upon  her  brow."     (Tr.) 
Cotes,  Mrs.  Sara  Jeanette  [Duncan]. — Poet,  The. 
Cotterell,  G: — Autumn  Flitting,  An. 

In  the  Twilight. 
Cotton,  Arthur  W. — Phyllis  and  Corydon. 
Cotton,  C: — Contentation. 

Invitation  to  Izaak  Walton. 

Ode:     Laura  Sleeping. 

Retirement,  The. 

To  Coelia. 
Cotton,  Nathaniel. — Fireside,  The. 

To-morrow. 
Couch,  Arthur  T.  Quiller.     See  Quiller-Couch,   Ar- 

THtJR  T. 


428 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Cowper 


Couch,  Mabel  Quiller.     See  Quillee-Couch,  Mabel. 
Coudert,  F:  Ren^.— City  of  New  York,  The. 
Faith  of  Washington,  The. 
Nation's  Honor,  A. 
Courier,  Paul  L: — Night  of  Terror,  A. 
Courtenay,  W:  Ashmead. — Boston,  Mass.,  and  Charles- 
ton, S.  C. 
Courthope,  W:  J: — Birdcatcher's  Song.      See  Paradise 
of  Birds.  The. 
Chancellor's  Garden,  The. 
In  Praise  of  Gilbert  White.     See  Paradise  of  Birds, 

The. 
Ode — to  the  Roc.     See  Paradise  of  Birds,  The. 
Paradise  of  Birds,  The. 
"Cousin  Alice."      See  Haven,  Mrs.  Alice  [Bradley] 

[Neal]. 
"Cousin  Fannie." — Secret,  The. 

Cousins,   Rob't   G. — Heroes  of  the  "Maine  Disaster." 
See  Tribute  to  the  Men  of  the  Maine,  A. 
Tribute  to  the  Men  of  the  Maine,  A. 
Covert,  Hon.  Jas.   W. — "Every  Year."     {At.   also  to 

Albert  Pike.) 
Cowan,  S:  K. — Becalmed. 

Becalmed  at  Sea.     See  Becalmed. 
Life. 

Cowden-Clarke*  Mrs.  Mary  [Novello]. — With  Thee. 
Cowdin,  Elliot  C. — Merchants  of  the  Revolution. 
Cowell,  Marie  S. — Mrs.  Christopher  Columbus. 
Cowley,  Abraham. — Anacreontics.     (Tr.) 

Brutus.     (Tr.)     See  Pindarique  Odes. 

Change,  The. 

Chronicle,  The.     A  Ballad. 

Davideis,  The. 

Discourses  by  Way  of  Essays,  The.  , 

Drinking.     (Tr.)     See  Anacreontics. 

Epicure,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Anacreontics. 

Epigram  on  Francis  Drake. 

Fragment,  A.     See  Change,  The. 

Garden,  The. 

Gold.     See  Chancre,  The. 

Grasshopper,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Anacreontics. 

"Hail,  old  patrician  trees,  so  great  and  good!" 
See  Of  Solitude. 

Hymn  toLight,  The. 

Invocation.     See  Davideis,  The. 

Love  in  Her  Sunny  Eyes.     See  Change,  The. 

Lover  to  His  Lyre,  The.     See  Davideis,  The. 

Mistress,  The. 

Ode:  On  Solitude.     See  Of  Solitude. 

Ode:     Of  Wit. 

Ode  to  the  Royal  Society,  The.      See  To  the  Royal 
Society. 

Of  Myself. 

Of  Solitude. 

On  Solitude.     See  Of  Solitude. 

On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Crashaw. 

On  the  Death  of  Mr.  William  Hervey. 

Pain  of  Love,  The.     See  Change,  The. 

Pindarique  Odes.     (Tr.) 

Spring,  The.     See  Mistress,  The. 

Supplication,  A.     See  Davideis,  The. 

Swallow,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Anacreontics. 
"*       Thief,  The. 

Thirsty  Earth  Soaks  up  the  Rain,  The.    (Tr.)     See 
Anacreontics. 

To  Mr.  Hobbs.     (Tr.)     See  Pindarique  Odes. 

To  the  Royal  Society. 

Wish,  A.     See  Of  Myself. 

Wish,  The.     See  Mistress,  The. 

Without  and  Within.     See  Change,  The. 
Cowper,  J.  F. — Encounter  with  a  Panther,  An. 
Cowper,  W:— -Acquiescence  of  Pure  Love,  The. 

Affectation  in  the  Pulpit.     See  Task,  The. 

Afternoon  Call,  An.     See  Conversation. 

Alexander  Selkirk.     See  Verses   Supposed   to   be 
Written  by  Alexander  Selkirk. 

Autobiographical.     See  Task,  The. 

Beau's  Reply. 

Boadicea.     An  Ode. 

Castaway,  The. 

Characters  and  Sketches.     See  Conversation. 

Colubriad,  The. 

Comparison,  A.     Addressed  to  a  Young  Lady. 

Contentment.     (Tr.) 

Contradiction.     See  Conversation. 

Conversation. 

Crazy  Kate.     The  Gipsies.     See  Task,  The. 

Cricket,  The.     (Tr.) 

Dejection  and  Retirement.     The  Retired  States- 
man.    See  Retirement. 

Dependence. 

Diverting  History  of  John  Gilpin,  The. 


Cowper,  W:  (continued). 

Dog  and  the  Water-lily,  The. 

Dog  (Beau)  and  the  Water-lily,  The.     See  Dog 

and  the  Water-lily,  The. 
Duelling.     See  Conversation. 
Early  Love  of  the  Country  and  of  Poetry.     See 

Task  The. 
England'.     See  Task,  The. 
England,  with  all  Thy  Faults,  I  Love  Thee  Still. 

See  Task,  The. 
Epistle  to  Joseph  Hill[,  Esq.],  An. 
Epitaph  on  a  Hare. 
Excessive  Modesty.     See  Conversation. 
Exploit  of  Hector,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 
Facetious  Story  of  John  Gilpin,  The.     See  Divert- 
ing History  of  John  Gilpin,  The. 
Faithful  Bird,  The. 
Freeman,  The.     See  Task,  The. 
Friendship. 

Future  Peace  and  Glory  of  the  Church,  The. 
Garden,  The.     See  Task,  The. 
God    Moves   in    a   Mysterious    Way.     See    Light 

Shining  out  of  Darkness. 
Grace  and  the  World.     See  Hope. 
Happiness  of  Animals.     See  Task,  The. 
Happy  Man,  The.     See  Task,  The. 
Hector  Slain  by  Achilles.     (Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 
Hector's  Exploit  at   the  Barriers  of  the  Grecian 

Fleet.     (Tr.)     See  IHad,  The. 
Hector's  Rebuke  to  Polydamus.     (Tr.)     See  Iliad, 

The. 
Hope. 

Human  Frailty. 
Humanity.     See  Task,  The. 
Ice  Palace,  The.     See  Task,  The. 
Iliad,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Homer. 
Jackdaw,  The. 
John  Gilpin.    See  Diverting  History  of  John  Gilpin , 

The. 
Joy  and  Peace  in  Believing. 
Knowledge  and  Wisdom.     See  Task,  The. 
Law-case,  A.     See  Report  of  an  Adjudged  Case. 
Letter  to  Mr.  Johnson  (Printer). 
Letter  to  the  Rev.  John  Newton,  Nov.  30,  1783. 
Life  before  the  Flood.     See  Letter  to  the  Rev. 

John  Newton. 
Light  Shining  out  of  Darkness. 
Lord  Chatham.     See  Table  Talk. 
Love  of  Liberty.     See  Task,  The. 
Love  of  the  World  Reproved,  The;  or.  Hypocrisy 

Detected. 
Lovest  Thou  Me? 

Meditation  in  Winter.     See  Task,  The. 
Mother's  Portrait,  A.     See  On  the  Receipt  of  my 

Mother's  Picture. 
"My  fugitive  years  are  all  hasting  away."     See 

Poplar  Field,  The. 
My  Mary.     See  To  Mary. 
My  Mother's  Picture.     See  On  the  Receipt  of  my 

Mother's  Picture. 
Nightingale  and  the  Glowworm,  The. 
Nose  and  [the]  Eyes  [,  The].     See  Report  of  an 

Adjudged  Case. 
On  a  Spaniel,  called  Beau,  Killing  a  Young  Bird. 
On  Friendship.     See  Friendship. 
On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Johnson. 
On  the  Death  of  Mrs.    Throckmorton's   Bullfinch. 
On  the  Grasshopper.     (Tr.) 
On  the  Loss  of  the  Royal  George. 
On  the  Receipt  of  My  Mother's  Picture  [out  of 

Norfolk— C.]. 
Pairing  Time  Anticipated. 

Past  and  Future  of  Poetry,  The.     See  Table  Talk. 
Path  of  Sorrow,  The.     See  To  an  Afflicted  Protes- 
tant Lady  in  France. 
Patriots  and  Martyrs.     See  Task,  The. 
"Patriots    have    toiled,    and    in    their    country's 

cause."     See  Task,  The. 
Pernicious  Weed!     See  Conversation. 
Pity  for  Poor  Africans. 
Poet  in  the  Woods,  The.     See  Task,  The. 
Poplar  Field,  The. 

Post,  The.   The  Fireside  in  Winter.    See  Task,  The. 
Praise  for  the  Fountain  Opened. 
Preaching   versus    Practice.     See   Pity   for   Poor 

Africans. 
Providence.     See  Light  Shining  out  of  Darkness. 
Relish  of  Fair  Prospect.     See  Task,  The. 
Reply  of  Achilles  to  the  Envoys  of    Agamemnon 

Soliciting  a  Reconciliation.     (Tr.)     See  Iliad, 

The. 
Report  of  an  Adjudged  Case. 
Retired  Cat,  The. 


429 


Cowper 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Cowper,  W:  (continued). 

Retirement. 

Rose,  The. 

Royal  Greorge,  The.     See  On  the  Loss  of  the  Royal 
George. 

Shrubbery,  The. 

Slavery.     See  Task,  The, 

Snow.     See  Task,  The. 

Sofa.  The.     See  Task,  The. 

Solitude  of  Alexander  Selkirk,  The.     See  Verses 
Supposed  to  be  Written  by  Alexander  Selkirk. 

"Sometimes  a  light  siuprises.       See  Joy  and  Peace 
in  Believing. 

Sum  of  Life,  The.     See  Task,  The. 

Sweet  Stream,  that  Winds.     See   Comparison,  A. 
Addressed  to  a  Young  Lady. 

Table  Talk. 

Tame  Hares. 

Task,  The. 

Timepiece,  The.     See  Task,  The. 

To   a   Young   Lady.     See   Comparison,   A.     Ad- 
dressed to  a  Young  Lady. 

To  an  Afflicted  Protestant  Lady  in  France. 

To  Christina  of  Sweden.     (  Tr.) 

To  Mary. 

To  Mary  Unwin.     See  To  Mrs.  Unwin. 

To  Mrs.  Unwin. 

To   the  Rev.  Mr.  Newton.     See  To  the  Rev.  Mr. 
Newton,  Rector,  etc. 

To  the  Rev.  Mr.  Newton,    on    His  Return    from 
Ramsgate. 

To  the  Rev.  Mr.  Newton,    Rector    of    St.    Mary, 
Woolworth. 

Treatment  of  His  Hares,  The. 

Truth.     See  Task,  The. 

Verses  Supposed  to  be  Written  by  Alexander  Sel- 
kirk. 

Walking  with  God. 

What  to  Read.     See  Retirement. 

Winter.     See  Task,  The. 

Winter  Evening.     See  Task,  The. 

Winter  Evening  at  Home,  A.     See  Task,  The. 

Winter  Morning.     See  Task,  The. 

Winter  Morning  Walk,  The.     See  Task,  The. 

Winter  Noon.     See  Task,  The. 

Winter  Walk  at  Noon.     See  Task,  The. 

Woodland  in  Spring,  The.     See  Task,  The. 
Cox,  Eugene  A. — Broken  Chains. 
Cox,  Harding. — Mouse,  The. 
Cox,  Jacob  D. — Garfield  Memorial  at  Cleveland,  Ohio, 

The. 
Cox,  R:— Dying  Soldier,  The. 
Cox,  Rev.  S.  K. — Knightly  Welcome,  A. 
Cox,  S:  Sullivan  ["Sunset"]. — America. 
Coxe,  Rt.  Rev.  Arthur  Cleveland. — Chimes  of  Old  Eng- 
land, The. 

Christmas  Carol. 
■  Desire  of  all  Nations,  The. 

lona — A  Memorial  of  St.  Columba. 

Heart's  Song,  The. 

Oxford  Boat-race. 
Coyne,  J.  Sterling. — Moses  at  the  Fair. 

Terrible  Secret,  A. 
Cozzens,  Frd'k  Swartout.— Battle  of  Bunker['s]  Hill[, 
The]. 

Dumb-waiter,  The. 

Experience  and  a  Moral,  An.  ^ 

To  My  Big  Sweetheart. 

To  My  Poland  Rooster. 
Crabbe,  G: — Approach  of  Age,  The.     See  Tales  of  The 
HaU. 

Borough,  The. 

Convict's  Dream,  The.     See  Borough,  The. 

Entanglement,  An.     See  Tales  of  the  HaU. 

Evening  Sail,  The.     See  Borough,  The. 

Founder  of  the  Almshouse,  The.      See  Borough, 
The. 

Hymn:  "Pilgrim,  burdened  with  thy  sin." 

Late  Wisdom.     See  Reflections. 

Library,  The. 

Man's  Life._    See  Parting  Hour,  The. 

Marriage  Ring,  A. 

Meeting.     See  Tales  of  the  Hall. 

Parting  Hour,  The. 

Practical  Charity.     See  Borough,  The. 

Quack  Medicines.     See  Borough,  The. 

Reflections. 

Storm  on  the  East  Coast,  A.     See  Borough,  The. 

Strolling  Players.     See  Borough,  The. 

Tales  of  the  HaU. 

Village,  The. 

VUlage  as  it  is.  The.     See  ViUage,  The. 
Crafts,  Rev.  Wilbur  F. — Liquor  or  Liberty? 


Crafts,  W: — On  the  Death  of  Decatur. 
Cragin,  Mary  A.     ("Joy  Allison"). — February  Twenty- 
second. 

I  Love  You,  Mother.     See  Which  Loved  Best? 

Which  Loved  Best? 
Craig,  Jessie  T. — Vision,  A. 
Craigmyle,  Eliz. — Solway  Sands. 

Craik,  Mrs.  Dinah  Maria  [Mulock]. — Address  to  the  New 
Year.     See  Psalm  for  New  Year's  Eve,  A. 

Angel  Faces. 

Autumn's  Processional.     See  October. 

Boat  of  My  Lover,  The. 

Buried  To-day. 

By  the  Alma  River. 

Christian's  Mistake. 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Count  Ludwig  and  the  Wood-spirit. 

Dead  Czar,  The. 

Dead  Czar  Nicholas,  The.     See  Dead  Czar,  The. 

Don't  be  Afraid. 

Douglas[,  Douglas],  Tender  and  True.     See  Too 
Late. 

Four  Years. 

God  Rest  Ye,  Merry  Gentlemen.     See  Christmas 
Carol,  A. 

Good  of  It,  The. 

Grandpapa. 

Green  Things  Growing! 

Guns  of  Peace. 

Her  Likeness. 

Highland  Cattle. 

Honest  Man,  An. 

In  Our  Boat. 

In  Swanage  Bay. 

John  Halifax,  Gentleman. 
*      Labor  and  Rest.     See  Now  and  Afterwards. 

Lancashire  Doxology,  A. 

Lettice. 

Little  Dead  Prince,  A. 

Little  Jew,  The. 

Little  Muriel.     See  John  Halifax,  Gentleman. 

Love  that  Asketh  Love  Ag^n. 

Michael  the  Archangel. 

Mine. 

Moon-struck. 

New  Year's  Gifts,  The.     See  Psalm  for  New  Year's 
Eve,  A. 

Now  and  Afterwards. 

North  Wind. 

"O  life,  O  sUent  shore."     See  Sitting  on  the  Shore. 

October. 

Only  a  Woman. 

Over  the  Hills  and  Far  Away. 

Passing  By. 

Philip,  My  King. 

Psalm  for  New  Year's  Eve,  A. 

Resigning. 

Respect  the  Burden. 

Rosicrucian,  The. 

September  Robin,  A. 

Silly  Song,  A. 

Sitting  on  the  Shore. 

Sunrise  among  the  HiUs. 

"That  Light.     See  Moon-struck. 

Three  Companions. 

Three  Meetings. 

Tide  at  the  Flood,  The. 

To  the  Memory  of  Fletcher^Harper.     See  Honest 
Man,  An. 

Too  Late. 

Unknown  Country,  The. 

Veronica. 

Victims  and  Victimizers. 

Violets. 

"Who  comes  dancing  over  the  snow?" 

Winning  and  Losing.     See  Christian's  Mistake. 

"You,  O  man!  who  with  your  honey  words  and 
your  tender  looks." 

Young  Dandelion[,  The]. 
Cramer,  Nelly  R. — When  I  am  a  Man. 
Cranch,  Christopher  Pearse. — Bobolinks,  The. 

By  the  Shore  of  the  River. 

Chinese  Story,  A. 

Compensation. 

Death  of  Louis  Napoleon.     See]Louis  Napoleon. 

Gnosis.     See  Thought. 

I  in  Thee,  and  Thou  in  Me. 

Knowing.     See  Thought. 

Life  and  Death. 

Lore-lei,  The.     (Tr.) 

Louis  Napoleon. 

Magnolia-Grandiflora. 

Michael  Angelo  Buonarrotti. 


430 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Crosby 


Cranch,  Christopher  Pearse  {continued). 

Pines  and  the  Sea,  The. 

Shelling  Peas. 

Stanza  from  an  Early  Poem. 

Stanzas:   "Thought   is  deeper  than   all   speech." 
See  Thought. 

Test  of  Sight,  The. 

Thought. 

"Thought  is  deeper  than  all  speech."   See  Thought. 
Cranch,  S.  P.— Night  Picture,  A. 
Crandall,  C:  H:— Fair  Copy-holder,  The. 

Human  Plan,  The. 

Nemesis. 

Stella. 

Three  Trees. 

Waiting. 

With  Lilacs. 
Crane,  Eliz.  Green. — Gentian. 
Crane,  Oliver. — Waiting  on  the  Lord. 
Crane,  Stephen. — Ancestry. 

Black  Riders,  The. 

Content. 

Escaped. 

I  Explain. 

Making  an  Orator. 

Peaks,  The. 

Violets,  The. 

Wayfarer,  The. 

Why? 
Crane,  W.  W.  — Mr.  Sprechelheimer's  Mistake. 
Crane,  Walter. — Across  the  Fields. 

Seat  for  Three,  A. 
Crannell,  C.  W. — Philosophy. 
Crapsey,  E: — "Entombed  within  a  nation's  reverent 

love." 
Crashaw,  R: — At  Bethlehem.     See  Hymn  of  the  Na- 
tivity, A. 

Christ  Crucified. 

Description  of  a  Religious  House  [and  Condition 
of  Life— C.]. 

Epitaph  iipon  Husband  and  Wife[,  An]. 

Flaming  Heart,  The.     See  TJpon  the  Book    and 
Picture  of  the  Seraphical  Saint  Teresa. 

Hymn  of  the  Nativity,  A. 

Hymn  to  the  Name  and  Honour  of  the  Admirable 
Saint  Teresa,  A. 

In  Praise  of  Lessius,  His  Rule  of  Health. 

Music's  Duel. 

Nightingale's  Song,  The.     See  Music's  Duel. 

On  a  Prayer-book  [Sent  to  Mrs.  M.  R.]. 

Out  of  Italian.     A  Song. 

Satan.     See  Sospetto  d'Herode. 

Shepherd's  Hymn,  The.     See  Hymn  of  the  Na- 
tivity, A. 

Song,  A:  "To   thy   lover."     See  Out   of  Italian. 
A  Song. 

Sospetto  d'Herode. 

Temperance,    or   the    Cheap    Physician.     See    In 
Praise  of  Lessius,  His  Rule  of  Health. 

Two  Went  up  into  the  Temple  to  Pray. 

Upon   the   Book  and   Picture   of   the   Seraphical 
Saint  Teresa. 

Weeper,  The. 

"Whoe'er  she  be."     See  Wishes  to  his  Supposed 
Mistress. 

Wishes  for  the  Supposed  Mistress.     See  Wishes  to 
His  Supposed  Mistress. 

Wishes  to  His  Supposed  Mistress. 
Craven,  Mme.  A: — Fleurange. 
Craven,  Gertrude. — Triolet:  "He  kissed  me,  'neath  the 

mistletoe." 
Crawford,   Agnes. — Pantomime   of   "Where   are   You 

Going,  My  Pretty  Maid?" 
Crawford,  Mrs.  Anne  [Barry]. — Kathleen  Mavourneen. 

See  Crawford,  Mrs.  Louise  [Macartney]. 
Crawford,  Fs.  Marion. — Extracting  a  Secret. 

Massacre  of  Zoroaster,  The.     See  Zoroaster. 

National  Hymn.     See  New  National  Hymn,  A. 

New  National  Hymn,  A. 

Suffering  of  Nehushta,  The.    See  Zoroaster. 

Zoroaster. 
Crawford,  Isabella  Valancey. — Axe,  The. 

Axe  of  the  Pioneer,  The.     See  Axe,  The. 

Canoe,  The. 

Helot,  The. 

Master-builder,  The. 

Sword,  The. 

"These  Three." 
Crawford,  J. — Thar  was  .Jim. 

Crawford,  Captain  Jack.     SeeCBAWFORD,  J:  Wallace. 
Crawford,  J:  Martin.     (Tr.)— Birth  of  the  Harp,  The. 
See  Kalevala,  The. 

Ilmarinen's  Wedding  Feast.     See  Kalevala,  The. 


Crawford,  J:  Martin  (continued). 

Kalevala,  The. 

Kullervo  and  the  Cheat-cake.     See  Kalevala,  The. 

Wooing  of  the  Maid  of  Beauty.     See  Kalevala, 
The. 
Crawford,    J:    Wallace    ("Captain    Jack    Crawford"). 

Mother's  Prayer. 
Crawford,  Julia. — We  Parted  in  Silence. 
Crawford,  Mrs.  Louise  [Macartney]. — Kathleen  Mavour- 
neen.  {At.  also  to  Mrs.  Anne  [Barry]  Crawford.) 
Creasy,  E:  Shepherd. — Demosthenes. 
Crewe,  Rob't  Offley  Ashburton  Crewe-Milnes,  Earl  of. 

Millet  and  Zola. 
Crewe-Milnes,  Rob't   OflBey  Ashburton.     See  Ckewe. 

Earl  of. 
Crissey,  Forrest. — "Ma's  Attic." 
Crittenden,  J:  J. — Matt.  F.  Ward's  Trial  for  Murder. 

On  Government  Extravagance. 
"Croakers,  'The."      See  Halleck,  Fitz-Greene,  and 

Drake,  Joseph  Rodman. 
Crocker,  Harriet   Francene. — Hepsy  at  the  State  Con- 
vention. 

Lumber  Camp  Romance,  A. 

My  Old  Rag  Doll. 

Wliite  Ribbon,  The. 
Crocker,  Mary  G. — Blue-bells.     See  Flower  Songs. 

Buttercups.     See  Flower  Songs. 

Daisies.     See  Flower  Songs. 

Dialogue  for  Bands  of  Hope. 

Flower  Songs. 

Nothing  to  Wear. 

Wild  Roses.     See  Flower  Songs. 
Crockett,  S:  Rutherford. — -Rev.  John  Smith  of  Arkland 
Prepares  his  Sermon,  The. 

Stickit  Minister,  The. 
Croffut,  W:  Andrews. — Clam-soup. 
Croffut,  W:  A: — Dirge  Concerning  the  Late  Lamented 
King  of  the  Cannibal  Islands,  A. 

Living  Memory,  A. 
Croffut,  W.  F.— Give  Thanks  for  What? 
Crofton,  Fs.  Blake.— Battle-call  of  Anti-Christ,  The. 
Crofts,  Rev.  G:  W. — Easter  Lilies. 

I  Love  You,  Dear. 

To  the  Discouraged. 
Croker,  J :  Wilson. — Perils  of  Parliamentary  Reform. 

Reply  to  Macaulay's  "Reform  Irresistible." 
Croker,  T.  Crofton. — Last  Serpent,  The. 
Croly,  G: — Belshazzar. 

Bitter  Disappointment.     See  Catiline. 

Catiline. 

Catiline  to  the  Gallic  Conspirators.     See  Catiline. 

Catiline,  on  Hearing  His  Sentence  of  Banishment. 
See  Catiline. 

Catiline  to  His  Friends,  after  Failing  in  His  Elec- 
tion to  the  Consulship.     See  Catiline. 

Catiline  to  the  Roman  Army.     See  Catiline. 

Catiline's  Defiance.     See  Catiline. 

Catiline's  Last  Harangue  to  His  Army.     See  Cati- 
line. 

Constantius  and  the  Lion.     See  Tarry  Thou  Till  I 
Come,  etc. 

Crucifixion,  The. 

Death  of  Leonidas,  The. 

Dirge,  A:  "Earth  to  earth  and  dust  to  dust." 

Domestic   Love.     See   Woman    Contemplating   a 
Household  God,  A. 

Dust  to  Dust.     See  Dirge:  "Earth   to  earth  and 
dust  to  dust." 

Effect  of  Oratory  on  a  Multitude. 

Evening. 

Expulsion  of  Catiline.     See  Catiline. 

Genius  of  Death,  The. 

Greek  and  Turkman,  The. 

Leonidas. 

Lily  of  the  Valley,  The. 

Pericles.     See  Pericles  and  Aspasia. 

Pericles  and  Aspasia. 

Pride  of  Ancestry. 

Seventh  Plague  of  Egypt,  The. 

Tarry  Thou  Till  I  Come;  or,  Salathiel,  the  Wander- 
ing Jew. 

Thrilling  Sketch.     See  Tarry  Thou  Till  I  Come,  etc. 

Woman  Contemplating  a  Household  God,  A. 
Croly,    Mrs.   Jane  [Cunningham]  ("Jennie    June"). — 
Piano  Mania,  The.  . 

What  Will  Become  of  the  Children? 
Crompton,  Rob't. — Signals  of  Distress. 
Cronise,  Mabel. — Legend  of  the  Fleur-de-lis,  The. 
Crosby,  Ernest. — Choir  Practice. 

Search,  The. 

Soul  of  the  World. 
Crosby,  Fanny  J.    See  Van  Alstyne,   Mrs.  Frances 
Jane. 


431 


Crosby 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Crosby,  Frank. — "All  the  Comforts  of  a  Home." 

Hiring  Help. 

Hour  in  Scnool,  An. 

Jack  at  All  Trades. 

Latest  Sensation  in  Podunk. 

Patent  Medicine. 

Professor,  The^ 

Puritan's  Dilemma,  The. 

Reading  Works  of  Fiction — A  Debate. 

Running  for  Congress. 

"Teacher  Wanted." 

Waiting  for  the  Stage. 
Crosby,  Dr.  Fred. — Lily  and  the  Linden,  The. 
Crosby,  Howard. — "If  I  were  called  to  point  out  the 

most  alarming  sins  of  to-day." 
Crosby,  L. — Salutatory. 
Crosby,  Nora  E. — Farmer  Nick's  Scarecrow. 
Cross,  Rev.  Dr.  Jos.  C.  (?) — Year  in  Paradise,  A. 
Cross,  Adeline  E.— Singer  and  the  Child.  The. 
Cross,  Mrs.    Marian    [or  Mary  Ann]    [Evans]  [Ijewes] 
("  George  Eliot"). — Adam  Bede. 

Armgart. 

Aunt  Pullet's  Bonnet.     See  Mill  on  the  Floss,  The. 

Brother  and  Sister. 

Choir    Invisible,    The.     See  O,  May  I  Join  the 
Choir  Invisible  I 

Dark,  The.     See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 

Day  is  Dying.     See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 

Death  of  Moses,  The. 

Discussion    at    "The    Rainbow,"    A.     See    Silas 
Mamer. 

Flood  on  the  Floss,  The.     See  Mill  on  the  Floss, 
The. 

Hermit,  The.     See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 

How  liisa  Loved  the  King. 

I  am  Lonely.     See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 

"Imitation  of  Christ  was  written  by  a  hand  that 
waited,  The."     See  Mill  on  the  Floss,  The. 

Maggie  and  Thomas  ^  Kempis.     See  Mill  on  the 
Floss.  The. 

Maggie  Cuts  Her  Hair.     See  MiU  on  the  Floss,  The. 

Mill  on  the  Floss,  The. 

Mrs.    Poyser   "Has   Her   Say   Out."     See  Adam 
Bede. 

"Nice  distinctions  are  troublesome." 

O,  May  I  Join  the  Choir  Invisible! 

Ogg,  the  Son  of  Beorl.     See  Mill  on  the  Floss,  The. 

Romola. 

Romola  and  Savonarola.     See  Romola. 

Romola's  Flight.     See  Romola. 

SUas  Marner. 

Song  of  the  Zincali.     See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 

Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 

Spring  Song.     See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 

"There  is  something  sustaining  m  the  very  agita- 
tion."    See  MiU  on  the  Floss,  The. 

Tito's  Armor.     See  Romola. 

Two  Lovers. 

WeU  Spent. 
CrosweU,  W:— Clouds,  The. 

Song  of  Faith. 
Crouch,  Julia  A. — Seeing  a  Ghost. 
Crowl,  Theodore. — My  Mule. 

"CrowquiU,  Alfred."     See  Forrester,  Alfred  A. 
Cruikshank'a  Omnibus. — Catalectic  Monody,  A. 

Theatrical  Curiosity,  A. 
Culbertson,  Anne  Virginia.— Gyda  of  Varsland. 

He  Understood. 

My  Chillim's  Pictyah. 

Triolet. 
Culbertson,  Carey. — At  the  Junior  Promenade. 
Cumming,  J: — Influence  after  Death.     See  Voices  of 
the  Dead. 

Voices  of  the  Dead. 
Cummings,    Jeremiah    W. — American    Freedom.     See 
Song  of  the  Union. 

Banner  of  Freedom,  The.     See  Song  of  the  Union. 

Song  of  the  Union. 
Cummins,  Ella  Sterling. — Fan  Brigade,  The. 

Mariquita,  the  Bandit's  Daughter. 

Voices  of  the  Wildwood. 
Cunard,  L.  M. — Lost. 
Cunningham,  Allan. — At  Sea. 

Gane  were  but  the  Winter  Cauld. 

Hame,  Hame,  Hame! 

It's  Hame,  and  it's  Hame.  See  Hame,  Hame, 
Hamel 

Lily  of  Nithsdale,  The.     See  She's  Gane  to  Dwall 
in  Heaven. 

Loyalty.     See  Hame,  Hame,  Hame! 

My  Ain  Countree. 

Night  is   Nigh  Gone.     See  Night  is  Near  Gone, 
The — Montgomerie. 


Cunningham,  Allan  (continued). 

Poet's  Bridal-day  Song,  The. 

Sea  Song.     See  At  Sea. 

She's  Gane  to  Dwall  in  Heaven. 

Song  of  the  Elfin  Miller. 

Spring  of  the  Year,  The. 

Sun  Rises  Bright  in  France,  The.     See  My  Ain 
Countree. 

Thou  hast  Sworn  by  thy  God,  my  Jeanie. 

Thou  hast  Vowed  by  thy  Faith,  my  Jeanie.     See 
Thou  hast  Sworn  by  thy  God,  my  Jeanie. 

Wet  Sheet  and  a  Flowing  Sea,  A. 
Cunningham,  F. — Fox  and  the  Cat,  The. 
Cunningham,  J: — Content.     A  Pastoral. 

Corydon,  a  Pastoral. 

Morning. 
Cunninghame-Graham,  Rob't.     See  Graham,  Robert, 
of  Gartmore. 

Curley . — In  Mamma's  Days. 

Curr,  Allan. —  Battle  of  Bothwell  Bridge,  The;  a  Lay 

of  the  Covenanters. 
Curran,  J:  Philpot. — -Against  Religious  Distinctions. 

Appeal  to  Lord  Avonmore. 

Defense  of  Mr.  Rowan,  1794. 

Description  of  Mr.   Rowan.    See  Defense  of  Mr. 
Rowan. 

Deserter,  The.     See  Deserter's  Meditation,  The. 

Deserter's  Meditation,  The. 

Habeas  Corpus  Act,  The. 

Liberty  of  the  Press,  The. 

Reply  to  Threats  of  Violence.     See  Stamp  OflScers' 
Salaries. 

Satire  on  the  Pension  System,  1786. 

Stamp  Officers'  Salaries. 
Currie,  Lady  ("Violet  Fane"). — Afterward[s]. 

Foreboding,  A. 

In  Green  Old  Gardens. 

May  Song,  A. 

Wire's  Confession,  A. 
Currie,  J:  AUister. — My  Mother. 
Currie,  Mrs.  Marg.  Gill. — By  the  St.  John. 
Currier,  Ellen  Bartlett. — Silent  Baby. 
Curry,  Lillie  S. — Little  Graves. 
Curtis,  D.  W.— Song  of  an  Old  Dollar  Bill. 
Curtis,  Emma  Ghent. — Cowboy's  Sermon,  The. 
Curtis,  F.  K. — Between  the  Galop  and  the  Lanciers. 

Promenading  Psychology. 
Curtis,  G:  W:— Arbor  Day. 

Bryant,  Extract  Concerning. 

Burgoyne's  Surrender. 

Cause  of  Bunker  Hill,  The.     See  Good  Fight,  The. 

Centennial  Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 

Changes  of  a  Hundred    Years.     See    Centennial 
Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 

Charles  Sumner. 

Duty  of  the  American  Scholar. 

Ebb  and  Flow. 

Egyptian  Serenade. 

Element  of  Justice,  The. 

Eulogy  on  [or  of]  Wendell  Phillips.     See  Wendell 
Phillips.    A  Eulogy,  etc. 

Fair  Play  for  Women. 

Father  of  the  Revolution,  The.     See  Centennial 
Celebration  of  Concord  Fight. 

General  Grant,  the  Silent  Captain.     See  Major- 
General  John  Sedgwick. 

Good  Fight,  The. 

Great  Question  Settled,  The.     See  Society  of  the 
Army  of  the  Potomac,  The. 

Greatness  of  the  Poet,  The.     See  Robert  Bums. 

Heroes  of  '76,  The.     See  Centennial  Celebration  of 
Concord  Fight. 

Holmes,  Extract  Concerning. 

Ideas  the  Life  of  a  People.    See  Element  of  Justice, 
The. 

Leadership  of  Educated  Men,  The. 

Longfellow,  Extract  Concerning. 

Major-General  John  Sedgwick. 

Minute  Men  of  '75,  The.     See  Centennial  Celebra- 
tion of  Concord  Fight. 

Minute  Men  of  '76.     See  Centennial  Celebration  of 
Concord  Fight. 

Nations  and  Humanity.     See  Patriotism. 

New  Holiday,  A.     See  Arbor  Day. 

Nile  Notes  of  a  Howadji. 

Our  Worst   Foes.     See  Centennial  Celebration  of 
Concord  Fight. 

Patriotism. 

Paul  Revere's  Ride.     See  Centennial  Celebration 
of  Concord  Fight. 

Political  Infidelity. 

Power  of  Free  Ideas,  The. 

Puritan,  The.     See  Puritan  Spirit,  The. 


432 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Dana 


CurtisfO:  W:  (continued). 
Puritan  Spirit,  The. 
Robert  Burns. 

Rub-a-dub  Agitation,  A.     See  Political  Infidelity. 
Samuel  Adams  and  the  New  England  Town  Meet- 
ing.    See  Centennial  Celebration   of  Concord 
Fight. 
Society  of  the  Army  of  the  Potomac,  The. 
Spirit  of  Puritanism,  The.    See  Major-General  John 

Sedgwick. 
"Through  all  history,   from  the  beginning."    See 

Patriotism. 
True  Patriotism  is  Unselfish.     See  Patriotism. 
Under  the  Palms.     See  Nile  Notes  of  a  Howadji. 
Washington  Arch  in  New  York,  The.     See  Wash- 
ington Memorial  Arch,  The. 
Washington  Memorial  Arch,  The. 
Wendell  PhiUips.    SeeWendeUPhiUips.    A  Eulogy, 

etc. 
Wendell  Phillips.     A  Eulogy  Delivered  before  the 
Municipal  Authorities  of  Boston,  Mass.,  April 
18,  1884. 
Wendell  Phillips  as  an  Orator.     See  Wendell  Phil- 
lips.    A  Eulogy,  etc. 
Wendell  Phillips  at  Faneuil  Hall.     See  Wendell 

Phillips.     A  Eulogy,  etc. 
"Wherever  party  spirit  shall  strain  the  ancient 
guarantees  of  freedotn."     See  Centennial  Cele- 
bration of  Concord  Fight. 
Who  was  the  Minute-man?     See  Centennial  Cele- 
bration of  Concord  Fight. 
Woman's  Rights.     See  Fair  Play  for  Women. 
Curtis,  Helen  B. — May. 

Curtis,  Mrs.  Howard  J. — New  Girl's  Logic,  The. 
Curtiss,  F.  R. — Engaged. 

Curtius,  Quintus. — Alexander  the  Great  to  His  Men. 
Darius  to  His  Army. 
Virtue  Uncorrupted  by  Fortune. 
Curzon,  Mrs.  Sarah  Anne. — Invocation  to  Rain. 
Visit  of  the  Prince  of  Wales  to  Laura  Secord. 
Gushing,  Caleb. — Importance  of  the  Agricultural  Inter- 
est. 
New  England.     See  New  England  in  the  War  of 

1812. 
New  England  in  the  War  of  1812. 
Sectional   Services   in   the   Last   War.     See   New 
England  in  the  War  of  1812. 
Gushing,  Harry  H.— Lost  Child,  The. 

Pair  of  Lions,  A. 
Custance,  Olive. — Parting  Hour,  The. 
Twilight. 

Waking  of  Spring,  The. 
Cutler,  Elbridge  Jefferson. — Drum-call  in  1861,  The. 
Regiment's  Return,  The. 
Rising  of  the  People,  The.     See  Drum-call  in  1861, 

The. 
Volunteer,  The. 
Cutler,  H.  S.— Church  Militant,  The. 
Cutler,  Julian  S. — Angel  of  Dawn,  The. 
Eclipse,  The. 
Knitting. 

Wild  Thorn  Blossoms. 
Wonderful. 
Cutter,  Eliz.  Reeve. — Bread  and  Wine. 

Gift,  A. 
Cutter,  G:  W.— E  Pluribus  Unum. 
Miser,  The. 

On  the  Death  of  General  Worth 
Song  of  Steam,  The. 
Song  of  the  Lightning. 
Cutts,  J:,  Lard. — Song:  "Only  tell  h«r  that  I  love." 
Cuyler,  Rev.  Theodore  L. — Boys — and  the  Bottle. 
Mighty  Word,  "No,"  The. 
Our  Platform. 
Our  Warfare  and  Our  Duty. 


D.,  E.  T. — Promenading  Ontology. 

D.,  F. — Lay  of  the  Grateful  Patient. 

D.,  G.— Same,  The. 

D.,  G.  H. — "And   perched  the  glittering,   icy  boughs 

among." 
D.,  L.  M. — Life's  Morning,  Noon,  and  Evening. 
D.,  M.  C— Charade. 
D.,  M.  M.— Old  Hen,  An. 

Pussy's  Class. 
D.,  R.— Last  Spring,  The. 
D.,  S.— Rover.— 
"Dagonet." — Kate  Maloney. 
Daily  Graphic. — Astronomical. 


"Dakota  Bell." — Following  the  Advice  of  a  Physician. 
Dale,  G.  W. —  Yankee's  Stratagem,  The:  or  Here  She 

Goes — and  there  She  Goes. 
Dale,  Rev.  Rob't  W: — "We  cannot  despair  of  success." 
Dale,  T.— Regulus. 
Dallas,  Mary  Kyle. — Annie  O'Brien. 

At  the  Altar. 

Aunt  Betsey  on  Marriage. 

Aunt  Peggy  and  High  Art. 

Aunty  Doleful's  Visit. 

Aurelia's  Valentine. 

Bessie's  Dilemma. 

Brave  Love. 

Bridget's  Soliloquy. 

Broken  Dreams. 

Charity  Grinder  and  the  Postmaster  General. 

Corianna's  Wedding. 

Dream,  A. 

Dutifuls,  The. 

Fashionable  Hospitality. 

Fashionable  Vacation,  A. 

Father  Paul. 

Frightened  Woman,  A. 

Great  Man,  A. 

He'd  Nothing  but  His  Violin.     See  Brave  Love. 

Her  First  Steam-engine. 

Her  Heart  was  False,  and  Mine  was  Broken. 

In  Amity  of  Soul. 

Knitting. 

Love's  Reminiscences. 

Miaouletta. 

Mrs.  Pickles  Wants  to  be  a  Man. 

Mrs.  Slowly  at  the  Hotel. 

Mrs.  Smith  Improves  Her  Mind. 

Mrs.  Tubbs  and  Political  Economy. 

Mrs. Winkle's  Grandson. 

Mothers  and  Fathers:  Two  Pictures. 

My  Sweetheart's  Baby  Brother. 

"N"  for  Nannie  and  "B"  for  Ben. 

Nettie  Budd  before  Her  Second  Ball. 

Old,  Old  Story,  The. 

Out  of  the  Bottle. 

Paying  Her  Fare. 

Rebecca's  Revenge. 

Riding  on  a  Rail. 

Scene  in  a  Street  Car. 

Simon  Solitary's  Ideal  Wife. 

Slowlys  at  the  Photographer's,  The. 

Slowlys  at  the  Theatre,  The. 

Statue's  Story,  The. 

"Thoughts  at  a  Party. 

To  A.  M.  Olar.     (An  Old  Man's  Memories.) 

Toast,  The. 

Tragedy  at  Dodd's  Place,  The. 

Two  Opinions  of  One  House. 

What  Old  Mrs.  Ember  Said. 

What  the  Crickets  Said. 

When  the  House  is  Alone  by  Itself. 
Dalling   and   Bulwer,   W:   H:   Lytton   Earle   Bnlwer, 
Baron. — After-dinner  Speech. 

To .     "What  boots  it  that  thine  eye  is  bright." 

Twenty-second  of  December,  1620,  'The. 
Dalrymple,  Sir  D: — Edward,  Edward. 

Edward    of    the    Bloody    Brand.     See    Edward, 
Edward. 

Dalton, . — Barmecide's  Feast,  The. 

Daly,  Augustin. — Leah,  the  Forsaken. 

Scene  from  "Leah."     See  Leah,  the  Forsaken. 
Daly,  Eugene  Howell. — Alpheus  and  Arethusa. 
Dam,  H:  J.  W. — Theosophic  Marriage,  A. 
Dana,  C:  A. — Democracy. 
Dana,  Jas.  Dwight. — Geology. 
Dana,  Mrs.  Julia  M. — Alphabet  of  Summer,  The. 

First  Snowdrop,  The. 

Lost  Tommy. 
Dana,  Mrs.  Mary  S.  B. — Flee  as  a  Bird. 

Passing  under  the  Rod. 

Under  the  Rod.     See  Passing  under  the  Rod. 
Dana,  Olive  E. — Columbus. 
Dana,  P. — Cenotaph,  A. 
Dana,  R:  H: — Buccaneer,  The. 

Chanting  Cherubs— a  Group  by  Greenough,  The. 

Good  Son,  The. 

Husband  and  Wife's  Grave,  The. 

Immortality.  See  Husband  and  Wife's  Grave,  The. 

Island,  The.     See  Buccaneer,  The. 

Little  Beach  Bird,  The. 

Moss  Supplicateth  for  the  Poet,  The. 

Ocean,  The. 

"Oh!    listen,    man!"     See    Husband    and    Wife's 

Grave,  The. 
Pleasure-boat,  The. 

Soul,  The. 


433 


Danbury 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Danbury  News  Man."     See  Bailey,  Jas.   Montgom- 
ery. 
Dandridge,  Mrs.  Danske  [Bedinger]. — Are  You  Glad? 
Dead  Moon,  The. 

May. 

On  the  Eve  of  War. 

Singing  Heart,  The. 

Spirit  of  the  Fair  The. 

Struggle,  The. 

Wings. 
D'Anduze,  Claire. — "They  who  may  blame  my  tender- 
ness." 
"Dane,  Barry."     See  Logan,  J:  E. 
Dane,  Zenas. — Big  Bob  Simpson. 

Juvenile  Inquisitor,  A. 

Miss  Milligan's  Party. 

Woman's  Description  of  a  Play,  A. 
Daniel,  J:  Warwick.— Washington  and  the  Nation. 
Daniel,  S: — "Beauty,  sweet  love!  is  like  the  morning 
dew."     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 

Beauty,  Time  and  Love.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 

Care-cnarmer  Sleep.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 

"Care-charmer  Sleep,   son    of   the   sable  Night." 
See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 

Complaint  of  Rosamond,  The. 

Concerning  the  Honofu]r  of  Books. 

Death  of  Talbot,  The.     See  History  of  the  Civil 
War. 

Early  Love.     See  Hymen's  Triumph. 

Eidola. 

Eyes,  Hide  My  Love.     See  Hymen's  Triumph. 

History  of  the  Civil  War. 

Hymen's  Triumph. 

Knowing  the  Heart  of  Man.     See   To  the  Lady 
Margaret,  Counteiss  of  Cumberland. 

Love.     See  Hymen's  Triumph. 

Love  is  a  Sickness.     See  Hymen's  Triumph. 

Love's  Birth  and  Becoming.     See  Hymen's  Tri- 
umph. 

Ode,  An:  "Now  each  creature  joys  the  other." 

Pastoral,  A. 

Sleep.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 

Song:   "Are   they   shadows   that   we    see?"     See 
Eidola. 

Sonnet  to  Delia.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 

Sonnets  to  Delia. 

Sorrow.     See  Complaint  of  Rosamond,  The. 

To  Delia.     See  Sonnets  to  Delia. 

To  the  Countess  of  Cumberland.     See  To  the  Lady 
Margaret,  Countess  of  Cumberland. 

To  the  Lady  Margaret,  Countess  of  Cumberland. 

Ulysses  and  the  Siren. 
Dante  Alighieri. — -Beatrice.     See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 

Beatrice   Descending  from   Heaven.     See  Divine 
Comedy,  The. 

Buonconte  di  Montefeltro.  See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 

Count  Ugolino.     See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 

Divine  Comedy,  The. 

Exquisite  Beauty  of  Beatrice.     See  Divine  Com- 
edy, The. 

Her  Helpfulness.     See  Vita  Nuova. 

His  Lady's  Praise.     See  Vita  Nuova. 

Vita  Nuova. 
Darby,  Eleanore. — Legend  of  the  Aspen-tree,  A. 
D'Arcy,  H.  Antoine. — Face  on  the  Floor,  The. 
Dare,  Ella.— Only  One  Kind  Word. 
Darley,  G:— Call,  The.     See  Sylvia;  or,  The  May  Queen. 

Chorus  of  Spirits.     See  Sylvia;  or,  the  May  Queen. 

"Down   the  dimpled  greensward  dancing."     See 
Gambols  of  Children,  The. 

Fallen  Star,  The. 

Fight  of  the  Forlorn,  The. 

Flower  of  Beauty,  The.     See  Song:  "Sweet  in  her 
green  dell,"  etc. 

Gambols  of  Children,  The. 

Hymn  to  the  Sun. 

"It  is  not  beauty  I  demand." 

I've  been  Roaming.     See  Lilian  of  the  Vale. 

Lilian  of  the  Vale. 

Love  Song.   See  Song:  "Sweet  in  her  green  dell,"  etc. 

Loveliness  of  Love,  The.     See  "It  is  not  beauty 
I  demand." 

May  Day.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 

Morning  Song.     See  Sylvia;  or,  The  May  Queen. 

Nepenthe. 

Nephon's  Song.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 

Osm^'s  Song.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 

Peasants'  Chorus,  The.     See  Sylvia;  or,  The  May 
Queen. 

Romanzo   to  Sylvia.     See  Sylvia;  or,   The   May 
Queen. 

Serenade:    "Awake    thee,    my    lady-love."     See 
Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 


Darley,  G:  (continued).  ' 

Song:  "Sweet  in  her  green  dell  the  flower  of  beauty 

slumbers." 
Song  of  the  Summer  Winds. 

Summer  Winds.     See  Song  of  the  Summer  Winds. 
Sylvia.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 
Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 

Sylvia's  Song.     See  Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen. 
To  Helene,  on  a  Gift-ring  Carelessly  Lost. 
True  Loveliness.     See"It  is  not  beauty  I  demand." 
Darmesteter,  Mrs.  Agnes  Mary  Frances  [Robinson].    See 

DucLATJX,  Mme. 
Dartmouth  Literary  Monthly. — In  the  Tenth  Circle. 
Darwin,  Erasmus. — -Botanic  Garden,  The. 

Loves  of  the  Plants.     See  Botanic  Garden,  The. 
Song  to  May. 
Daryl,  Sidney. — His  First  Brief. 
Daudet,  Alphonse. — French  Ensign,  The. 

Last  Lesson,  The  (La  Dernif^re  Classe). 
Davenant,  Sir  W: — Aubade.     See  Song:  "The  lark," 
etc. 
Countess  of  Anglesey  led  Captive  by  the  Rebells, 

at  the  Disforresting  of  Pewsam. — Song. 
Dawn-song.     See  Song:  "The  lark,"  etc. 
Gondibert. 

Morning.     See  Song:  "The  lark,"  etc. 
On  the  Captivity  of  the  Countess  of  Anglesey.     See 

Countess  of  Anglesey  led  Captive,  etc. 
Philosopher  and  the  Lover;  to  a  Mistress  Dying, 

The.     Song. 
Praise  and  Prayer.     See  Gondibert. 
Soldier  Going  to  the  Field,  The.     See  Song:  The 

Soldier  Going  to  the  Field. 
Song:  "The  lark  now  leaves  his  watery  nest." 
Song:  The  Soldier  Going,  etc. 

To  a  Mistress  Dying.      See  Philosopher  and  the 
Lover,  The. 
Davenport,  H: — Asking  Mother. 

Boy's  Poem  on  Washington,  A. 
Grave,  The. 

Kris  Kringle's  Surprise. 
Lover  without  Arms,  A. 
Old  Homestead,  The. 
Our  Dog. 

Sandy's  Romance. 
Song  of  the  Printing  Press,  The. 
Wreck  of  an  Ocean  Steamship,  The. 
Davenport,  Rob't. — King  John  and  Matilda. 

Requiem,  A.     See  King  John  and  Matilda. 
Davenport,  Ruth.- — How  to  Speak  a  Piece. 
Davidson,  Harriet  Miller. — Song  for  the  Hot  Winds,  A. 
Davidson,  J: — Ballad  of  Heaven,  A. 
BaUad  of  Hell,  A. 
Harvest-home  Song. 
Last  Rose,  The. 
London. 

Song:  "The  boat  is  chafing  at  our  long  delay." 
Davidson,  Lucretia  M. — -Auction  Extraordinary,  The. 
See  Bachelor  Sale,  The. 
"Auctioneer,  then  in  his  labor  began.  The."     See 

Bachelor  Sale,  The. 
Bachelor  Sale,  The. 
Charnel  Ship,  The. 
Davidson,  Mrs.  Marg.  Oilman  [George]. — Moritura. 
Davidson,  T: — Danae. 

LuUaby.     See  Danae. 
Davies,  Acton. — Dimple  and  Dumpling. 
Davies,   Sir  J :  ■ —  Antinous    Praises    Dancing    before 
Queen  Penelope.     See  Orchestra;  or,  A  Poeme 
of  Dauncing. 
Dancing  of  the  Air,  The.     See  Orchestra;  or,  A 

Poeme  of  Dauncing. 
Dignity  of  Man,  The. 
Hymnes  of  Astrsea,  in  Acrosticke  Verse. 
Man.     See  Of  the  Soul  of  Man,  and  the  Immor- 
tality thereof. 
Nosce  Teipsum. 

Of  the  Soul  of  Man,  and  the  Immortality  thereof. 
"Oh!   what   is  man,   great   Maker  of  mankind!" 

See  Dignity  of  Man,  The. 
Orchestra;  or,  A  Poeme  of  Dauncing. 
Soul    Compared    to    a    River,    The.     See    Nosce 

Teipsum. 
Soul  Compared  to  a  Virgin  Wooed  in  Marriage, 

The.     See  Nosce  Teipsum. 
To   the   Month   of   September.     See   Hymnes   of 

Astrea  in  Acrosticke  Verse. 
To  the  Nightingale.     See  Hymnes  of  Astrsea  in 

Acrosticke  Verse. 
To  the  Rose.     See  Hymnes  of  Astrsea  in  Acrosticke 

Verse. 
To  the  Spring.     Sec  Hymnes  of  Astrsea  in  Acros- 
ticke Verse. 


434 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Demosthenes 


Davin,  N:  Flood. — Eos. 

Da  Vinci,  Leonardo.     See  Vinci,  Leonardo  da. 
Davis,  Addie  F. — Sermon  in  Flowers,  A. 
Davis,  Albert  Sargent. — I  Dream  of  Flo. 
Davis,  Ben  Wood. — After  the  Opera. 

After  the  Waltz. 

Barcarolle.  , 

Childless. 

Columbus. 

Decoration  Ode. 

Repartee. 

Schoolmaster's  Sleep,  The. 
Davis,  Bertha  Gerneaux. — My  Dolls. 
Davis,  Edgar  F. — Lizy  Ann. 
Davis,  Eugene. — Vesper  Bell,  The. 
Davis,  F.  T. — Sailor's  Yarn,  A. 
Davis,  Fs. — Fisherman's  Song,  The. 

Kathleen  Ban  Adair. 
Davis,  J.— Sun,  The. 

Davis,  Kate  A.— Tale  the  Titles  Told,  The. 
Davis,  Mrs.  Mary  Evelyn  [Moore]. — Blind  Beggar,  The. 

Counsel. 

Going  Out  and  Coming  In. 
Davis,  Paul  B. — Ah  Yet's  Christmas. 
Davis,  R.  M. — Mabel's  May. 
Davis,  R:  Harding. — Boy  Orator  of  Zepata  City,  The. 

Cuba  in  War  Time. 

Death  of  Rodriguez,  The.     See  Cuba  in  War  Time. 

Her  First  Appearance. 

Mr.  Traver's  First  Hunt. 

"There  Were  Ninety  and  Nine." 
Davis,  T:  Osborne. — Battle  of  Fontenoy  [The]. 

Battle-eve  of  the  Brigade. 

Boatman  of  Kinsale,  The. 

Celts  and  Saxons. 

Fontenoy.     See  Battle  of  Fontenoy,  The. 

Girl  of  Dunbwy,  The. 

Lament  for  the  Death  of  Eoghan  Ruadh  O'Neill. 

Nationality. 

Sack  of  Baltimore,  The. 

Welcome,  The. 
Davis,  Winifred. — Nellie's  Decorations. 
Davison,  Fs. — Psalm  Thirteen. 

Psalm  Twenty-three. 
Dawes,  Rufus. — Love  Unchangeable. 
Dawson,  Dan'l  Lewis. — Seeker  in  the  Marshes,  The. 
Dawson,  Jas. — After  the  Battle.     iSee  By  the  Alma. 

By  the  Alma. 
Dawson,  M.  Phelps. — After  the  Fourth  of  July. 
Dawson,  R:  Lew. — Ole  Settlers'  Meetun. 
Dawson,  W:  Jas. — Angel  at  the  Ford,  The. 

Bird's  Song  at  Morning. 

Child's  Portrait,  A. 

Ideal  Memory. 

To  a  Desolate  Friend. 
Day,  Beth.— Blind  Weaver,  The. 

Selling  the  Farm. 
Day,  G.  P.— Problem,  A. 
Day,  Holman  F. — Aunt  Shaw's  Pet  Jug. 

Cure  for  Homesickness. 

Grampy  Sings  a  Song. 

Tale  of  the  Kennebec  Mariner. 

Uncle  Tascus  and  the  Deed. 
Day,  J:  W:— Picket  before  Bull  Run,  The. 
Day,  Mary  E. — Parting  Lovers,  The. 
Day,  R:  Edwin. — England. 

To  Shakespeare. 
Day,  T:  Fleming.— Coasters,  The. 

Day,  Rev.  W: — Mount  Vernon,  the  Home  of  Washing- 
ton. 
Dayre,  Sydney. — Cherry  Time. 

Chickadee,  The. 

Dorry  Learns  to  Sew. 

Frowns  or  Smiles. 

Getting  Acquainted. 

Good-night. 

Grandma's  Angel. 

How  it  Came. 

Lesson  for  Mamma,  A. 

Letter  to  Mother  Nature,  A. 

Message,  A. 

My  Sweetheart. 

Sunshine. 

Telephone  Message,  A.     <See  Message,  A. 

What  was  It? 
Dayton,   A.   Alphonse. — ^Why   He   Wouldn't  Sell   the 

Farm. 
Dayton,  Fred  C. — His  Sweetheart's  Song. 
Dazey,  C:  Turner. — February  Rain. 
Deane,  Antony  C. — Here  is  the  Tale. 
Deans,  C.  W. — School   Affairs  in    Riverhead   District. 
Deas,  Fannie  M.  P. — That  Boy  John. 
De  Brown,  Jere.— Thet  Boy  ov  Ourn. 


Defoe,  Dan'l. — Crusoe's  Fight  with  Wolves.     See  Rob- 
inson Crusoe. 

Friday's  Frolic  with  a  Bear.    See  Robinson  Crusoe. 

Getting  Supplies  from  the  Wreck.     See  Robinson 
Crusoe. 

Robinson  Crusoe. 

True-born  Englishman,  The. 
DeForest,  J.  W. — In  Louisiana. 
De  Kay,  C:  — Arcana  Sylvarum. 

Peace. 

Ulf  in  Ireland. 
Dekker,  T: — Beauty.  Arise!     See  Pleasant  Comedy  of 
Patient  Grissell,  The. 

Content.     See  Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient  Gris- 
sell, The. 

Country  Glee.     See  Sun's  Darling,  The. 

Gifts  of  Fortune  and  Cupid,  The. 

Happy  Heart,    The.     See    Pleasant    Comedy    of 
Patient  Grissell,  The. 

Honest  Whore,  The. 

Invitation,  The.     See  Sun's  Darling,  The. 

Lullaby.   See  Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient  Grissell, 
The. 

Merry  Month  of  May,  The.     See  Shoemaker's  Hol- 
iday, The. 

O,  Sweet  Content!     See  Pleasant  Comedy  of  Pa- 
tient Grissell,  The. 

Old  Fortunatus. 

Patient  Grissell.     See  Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient 
Grissell,  The. 

Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient  Grissell   [or   Grissil], 
The. 

Praise  of  Fortune,  The.     See  Old  Fortunatus. 

Rustic  Song.     See  Sun's  Darling,  The. 

Shoemaker's  Holiday,  The. 

Sweet  Content.     See  Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient 
Grissell,  The. 

Sun's  Darling,  The. 

Trowl  the  Bowl!     See  Shoemaker's  Holiday,  The. 
DeLan,  Surville  J. — Timber  Line. 
Deland,  Ellen  Douglas. — Voyage  of  Arabella,  The. 
Deland,  Afrs.Marg.  WadelCampbell]. — Affaire  d'Amour. 

Christmas  Silence,  The. 

Clover,  The. 

Doubt. 

Easter  Music. 

Fairies'  Shopping,  The. 

Fire,  The.     See  John  Ward,  Preacher. 

Hymn:  "O  patient  Christ!" 

John  Ward,  Preacher. 

Ijove  and  Death. 

Love's  Wisdom. 

May. 

Ram. 

Sent  with  a  Rose  to  a  Young  Lady. 

Succory,  The. 

"While     Shepherds    Watched    Their    Flocks    by 
Night.'" 
Delano,  E:  C. — Historic  Trees. 
Delano,  H.  A. — Greatness  of  His  Simplicity. 
Delano,  Myra  S. — -Easter  with  Parepa,  An. 
Delavigne,  Jean  Francois  Casimir. — Sunshine. 

Three  Days  in  the  Life  of  Columbus. 
De  Leon,  T:  Cooper. — International  Race,  The. 
Delisle,  Rouget.     See  Rouget  de  Lisle,  Claude  Jos. 
Delke,  Jas.  A. — Carolina  and  Mecklenburg. 
Delone,  T. — Fair  Rosamund. 
DeLong,  Heber. — Cuba's  Banner. 
DeLorez,  Stella. — Coaching  the  Rising  Star. 
De  Leuville,  Marquis.     See  Leuville,  Marquis  de. 
DeLys,  J:  W. — Alas  the  Songs! 
Demarest,  Mary  \j. — My  Ain  Countrie. 
DeMille,  A.  B. — Ballad:  "Good  Christmas  bells,  I  pray 
you." 

Ice  King,  The. 
DeMille,  Jas. — Behind  the  Veil. 

Dodge  Club,  The.     See  Senator  Entangled,  A. 

Senator  Entangled,  A. 

Senator's  Dilemma,  The.  See  Senator  Entangled ,  A. 

Triumph  of  Truth,  The. 
Deming,  Mrs.  H.  A.  (compiler). — Curious  Life  Poem,  .\. 

Life.     See  Curious  Life  Poem,  A. 
De  Montreuil,  Mathieu.     See  Montreuil,  Mathied  de. 
Demorest,  D.  L. — Phrenology. 

Demorest,   W.  Jennings. — Prohibition  the   True  Anti- 
poverty  Party. 

Voter's  Responsibility,  The. 
Demosthenes. — Against   Bribery.     See  Philippics. 

Against  Philip.     See  Philippics. 

Athenian  Patriotism.     See  Oration  on  the  Crown, 
The. 

Close  of  the  Oration  on  the  Crown,  The. 

Degeneracy  of  Athens.     See  Philippics. 


435 


Demosthenes 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Demosthenes  {continued). 

Democracy  Hateful  to  Philip,  A  [or  The].     -See 

Denier,  Tony  {continued). 

Surprise  Party,  The. 

Philippics. 

Surrender,  The. 

Demosthenes    not    Vanquished    by    Philip.     See 

Topsey  and  Eva. 
Troublesome  Tooth,  The. 

Oration  on  the  Crown,  The. 

Exordium.     See  Oration  on  the  Crown,  The. 

Uncle  Tom. 

Fortune  of  ./EscSines.     See  Oration  on  the  Crown, 

Den^son,  C:  W. — Drunkard's  Dream,  The. 

The. 

Rumseller's  Song,  The. 

Oration  on  the  Crown,  The. 

Denison,  E.  W. — Speckled  Hen.  The. 

Philip  of  Macedon.     See  Philippics. 

Denison,  J.  P.— Fancy-dress  Ball,  The. 

Philippics. 

In  j^amaica. 

Public  Spirit  of  [the]  Athenians.     See  Oration  on 
the  Crown,  The. 

Wing  Tee  Wee. 

Denison,  Mary  A. — Christmas  Ballad,  A. 
Grandfather's  Rose. 

Reply  to  .(Eschines.     See  Oration  on  the  Crown, 

Irish  Woman's  Lament,  The.     See  Mary  O'Connor, 

Venality  the  Ruin  of  Greece.     See  Philippics. 

the  Volunteer's  Wife. 

Denham,  Sir  J: — Abraham  Cowley.     See  Mr.  Abraham 
Cowley's  Death.and  Burial  amongst  the  Ancient 

Irishwoman's  Letter,  The.     See  Mary  O'Connor, 

the  Volunteer's  Wife. 

Poets. 

Mary  O'Connor,  the  Volunteer's  Wife. 

Against  Love. 

Volunteer's  Wife,  The.     See  Mary  O'Connor,  the 

Cooper's  Hill. 

Volunteer's  Wife. 

Elegy   on   Cowley.     See   Mr.   Abraham   Cowley's 
Death,  and  Burial  amongst  the  Ancient  Poets. 

What  is  a  Boy? 

Denison,  T.  S. — Birth  of  the  Rainbow,  The. 

Mr.  Abraham  Cowley's  Death,  and  Burial  amongst 

Blessed  are  de  Peacemakers. 

the  Ancient  Poets. 

Death  of  Little  Hacket.     See  Iron  Crown,  An. 

Praise  of  the  Thames.     See  Cooper's  Hill. 

Dem  Shickens. 

River  Thames,  The.     See  Cooper's  Hill. 

Hasty  Opinions. 

Song  from  "The  Sophy."     See  Sophy,  The. 

How  to  Read. 

Sophy,  The. 

Hymn  of  the  Avenger,  The. 

View  of  London  from  Cooper's  Hill.     See  Cooper's 

Ideal,  An. 

Hill. 

Ike  Papson's  Courtship.     See  Man  Behind,  The. 

Denier,  Tony. — Angel,  The. 
Artist,  The. 

Interview  between  the  School  Directors  and  the 

Janitor,  An.     See  School-ma'am,  The. 

Bottle— Beggary,  The. 

Investigate. 

Bottle — Brutality,  The. 

Iron  Crown,  An. 

Bottle— in  Debt,  The. 

Learn  to  Labor  and  to  Wait. 

Bottle— its  Effects,  The. 

Long  Ago.                                       ,  „     . 

Bottle— Madness,  The. 

Love  in  High  Life.     See  Pets  of  Society. 

Bottle — Murder,  The. 

Madman,  The. 

Bottle— Poverty,  The. 

Man  Behind,  The. 

Bottle— the  First  Glass,  The. 

New  Year  Calls. 

Bouquet,  The. 

Palace,  The. 

Brigands,  The. 

Pets  of  Society. 

Brigand's  Death,  The. 

Presentiments. 

Christening,  The. 

School-ma'am,  The. 

Condemned  King,  The. 

Selfishness  of  Society. 

Contentment. 

Sword  of  Damocles,  The.     See  Man  Behind,  The. 

Country  Cousins. 

Denman,  Lord  — Harmodius  and  Aristogeiton.     {Tr.) 

Country  Post-office,  The. 

Dennen,  Grace  Atherton. — Gold-of-Ophir  Roses. 

David  and  Saul. 

Dennie,  Jos. — Jack  and  Gill — A  Criticism. 

Drunkard's  Home,  The. 

Dennison,  G:  A. — Transformation. 

Faith,  Hope  and  Charity. 

Denny,  Eleanor  M. — Model  Husband,  The. 

Fine  Arts,  The. 

Denton,  Clara  J. — About  Dish- washing 

Fortune  Teller,  The. 

About  Fire-crackers 

Fratricide,  The. 

About  Freddie. 

General  Warren's  Death. 

After  the  Circus. 

Ghost  Story,  The. 

Almost  a  Runaway. 

Goddess  of  Liberty,  The. 

Appointment,  The 

Hagar  and  Isimiael. 

At  Christmas  Time. 

Jealousy. 

At  Dame  Nature's  Feet. 

King  Neptune. 

Backward  Glance,  A. 

Love  in  the  Kitchen.- 

Balky  Horse,  The. 

Major  Andr^. 

Begun  at  Last. 

Marriage,  The. 

Being  Thankful. 

May-day  Sports. 

Best  of  All,  The. 

Missionary,  The. 

Beware! 

Mountebanks,  The. 

Birthday  Doll,  The. 

Napoleon  at  St.  Helena. 

Birthday  Wish,  A. 

News  from  the  War. 

Blue  Eyes  and  Brown  Eyes. 

Now,  Grandpapa. 

Bob  and  His  Sister. 

Off  to  the  War. 

Brave  Little  Mary. 

Onconvanience,  An. 

Breaking  the  Colt. 

Oracle,  The. 

Brother  Jonathan's  Birthday. 

Papa's  Birthday. 

But  Once  a  Year. 

Peddler,  The. 

"Children's  Day"  Service,  A. 
Christmas  Good-night,  A. 

Pocahontas. 

Popping  the  Question. 

Christmas  Joy. 

Portraits. 

Climbing. 

Prodigal's  Return,  The. 

Columbia  and  Mr.  "They  Say." 

Queen  of  Flowers,  The. 

Columbia  and  the  Boys. 

Rale  Convanience,  A. 

Coming  of  Santa  Claus,  The. 

Reading  the  Will. 

Crowning  the  May  Queen. 

Rent-day,  The. 

Difficulties. 

Returning  from  the  War. 

Doom  of  King  Alcohol,  The. 

Sailor's  Return,  The. 

Easter  Flowers. 

School  in  an  Uproar. 

Easter  Joy. 

Sentence,  The. 

Easter  Service,  An. 

Seven  Ages,  The. 

Easter  Wrenth,  The. 

Sister  of  Mercy,  The. 

Finger  Exercise,  A. 

Soldier's  Dream,  The. 

First  Christmas  Night,  The. 
First  Day  of  School,  The. 

Soldiers  in  Camp. 

Statue  Bride,  The. 

First  Week  of  School,  The. 

Summer  and  Winter. 

Five  Little  Tadpoles. 

436 


AUTHOR  INDEX                                                    Denver 

Denton,  Clara  J .  (continued). 

Denton,  Clara  J.  {continued). 

Flower  Service,  A. 

Parliamentary  Law. 

Foolish  Maid,  A. 

Parasol  Drill,  The 

For  a  Birthday  Celebration. 

Peacemaker,  A. 

For  a  Wedding  Anniversary. 

Perfect  Feast,  A. 

For  Another's  Sake. 

Pine  Tree's  Choice,  The 

Four  Celebrated  Characters. 

Playing  "Grown  Up."  • 

Four  Judges,  The. 

Primary  Class,  The. 

Four  Photographs,  The. 
Four  Winds,  The. 

Prince  and  His  Mistress. 

Professor's  Present,  The. 

From  Captivity  to  Power. 
Funny  Old  Man,  A. 

Puzzle,  A. 

Rebellion,  The. 

Funny  Old  Woman,  A. 
Gay  Christmas  Ball,  A. 

Rebuff,  A. 

Record  of  the  Hours,  The. 

Ghost  in  the  Closet,  The. 

Royal  Tarts,  The. 

Gifts  for  All. 

St.  Valentine's  Revenge 

Going  to  the  Corner. 

Salutatory.    (2) 

Gold  Spinner,  The. 

Santa  Claus  Outwitted. 

Good  Country,  A. 

School  is  Out. 

Good  in  All. 

School-bell,  The. 

Good-bye,  A. 

Search  for  the  Fairies,  A. 

Grandma  Doll,  A. 

Secret,  A. 

Great  Treasure,  A. 

Served  Him  Right. 

Handkerchief  Drill,  The. 

Short  Missionary  Service,  A. 

Hat  DriU,  The. 

Snarls  and  Scowls. 

Help  for  My  Sisters. 

So  Glad. 

Helping  Rule,  A. 

Some  "Arabian  Nights"  People. 

Honor  Thy  Father  and  Thy  Mother. 

Some  Noted  Characters. 

How  I  Saw  Santa  Claus. 

Some  Rules. 

How  Long  before  the  Snow  Comes? 

Some  Suppositions. 

Hunko! 

Some  Very  Famous  People. 

"If." 

Something  Better. 

"If  I  Were  a  Flower." 

Something  to  be  Thankful  For. 

If  You  Want  to  be  Loved. 

Strawberry  Woman,  The. 

"In  Memoriam." 

Sudden  Change  of  Mind,  A. 

In  Nonsense  Land. 

Tale  of  a  Cigarette  The. 

In  Santa-Claus-Land. 

Terrible  Threat.  A. 

In  the  Morning. 

Terrible  Time,  A. 

Inquisitive  Prince,  The. 

Thankful  Hearts. 

Invitation,  The. 

Thanksgiving  Dream,  A. 

Jack  and  Jill. 

"That  Other  Fourth." 

Joe's  Way  of  Doing  Chores. 

"There  Yet." 

Johnnie's  Gun. 

Thing.s  a  Girl  Doesn't  Know. 

Jumping  the  Rope. 

Three  Little  Mothers. 

"Just  Me." 

Time. 

Just  'Sposin*. 

Time  and  the  Seasons. 

Keep  the  Holidays. 

"Tit  for  Tat." 

Keeping  the  Birthday. 

Tree  Assembly,  The. 
Twenty-six  of  Them. 
Two  Helpers. 

King  and  the  Spelling  Book,  The. 

King  Roughbeard  and  the  Princess. 

Last  Dav  of  School.  The. 

Two  Kinds  of  Fun 

Last  Parting.  The. 

Two  Ways  of  Spending  "The  Fourth." 

Laughing  Family,  The. 

Uncle  Sam's  Birthday. 

Lazy  or  Not. 

Use  for  Boys,  A. 

Leaflets  and  Lady-bugs. 

Vacation. 

Left  Alone. 

Valedictory,  A 

Lesson  from  the  Sunflowers,  A. 

Watching  for  Santa  Claus. 

Like  a  Nettle. 

Weed  and  the  Boy,  The. 

Like  an  Indian. 

What  Grandma  Foretold. 

Like  Washington. 

What  He  Has. 

Lines  for  a  Very  Little  Girl  or  Boy. 

What  I  Can  Do. 

Little  Bird's  Story,  A. 

What  is  a  Gentleman? 

Little  Fisherman,  The. 

What  is  Christmas? 

Little  Mollie  Whimper. 

What  Little  Dick  Would  Do. 

Little  Mother  Goose. 

What  o'clock. 

Little  Pitcher,  A. 

What  They  will  Do. 

Little  Prisoner,  The. 

When  Grandpa  was  a  Boy. 

"Lost." 

When  I  am  a  Woman 

Lost  Letter,  The. 

When  the  Ship  Comes  in. 

Lost  Opportunity,  The. 

When  the  Stone  was  Rolled  Away. 

Making  a  Cake. 

Where  is  Mother? 

"Making  an  Orator." 

"Where's  My  Hat?" 

Medley,  A. 

While  Shepherds  Watched. 

Message  for  the  Children,  A. 

While  the  Joy  Goes  On. 

Mr.  Bunting. 

Who  Is  It? 

Morning  Chat,  A. 

Why  is  It? 

Mother  Goose. 

Wise  Men  of  Gotham,  The. 

Mouse,  A. 

Word  of  Warning,  A. 

My  Pony. 

Wreath  of  Flowers,  A. 

Nation's  Day  of  Praise,  The. 

Writing  a  Book 

Nerves. 

Young  Mother's  Perplexity,  A 

New  Christmas,  The. 

Denton,  Paul. — Apostrophe  to  Cold  Water.     See  Apos- 

New Multiplication  Table,  A 

trophe  to  Water. 

Not  a  Bom  Orator. 

Apostrophe  to  Water.     (At.  also  to  A.  W.  Arrington 

Not  Quite  a  Bargain. 

and  to  J:  B.  Gough.) 

Nursery  Stove,  The. 

Glass  of  Cold  Water,  A.    See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 

[         Nuts  to  Crack. 

Harvest  of  Rimni,  The. 

Obedient  Servants,  The. 

Tribute  to  Water,  A.     See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 

Oh,  What  a  SeU! 

Unaccountable  Mystery,  An. 

Old  Santa  Has  Struck. 

Water.     See  Apostrophe  to  Water 

One  Little  Hatchet. 

"Water!  look  at  it,  ye  thirsty  ones."     See  Apos- 

"Only Cooning." 
Our  Watchwords. 

trophe  to  Water. 

Denver  Post. — Patriotism  at  Squawville. 

437 


Denver 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Denver  Tribune. — Interviewing  Mrs.  Pratt. 
Depew,  Chauncey  Mitchell. — Andnl>  and  Hale. 
Army  of  the  Potomac,  The. 

Captain  HaJe  and  Major  Andr^.     See  Andr^  and 
Hale. 

Capture  of  Andr^,  The.     See  Capture  of  Major 
Andr6,  The.  « 

Capture  of  Major  Andr^,  The. 

Centennial  Speech.     See  Washington's  Inaugura- 
tion. 

Columbian  Oration. 

Columbus.     See  Columbian  Oration. 

Columbus  the   Discoverer  of  America.     <See  Co- 
lumbian Oration. 

Constitutional  Convention  of  1787,  The. 

Convention  of  1787,  The. 

Dedication  Exercises.     See  Columbian  Oration. 

England  and  the  United  States. 

General  Grant. 

Higher  Education  for  Women. 

Home  Rule  for  Ireland. 

Lawyer  and  Free  Institutions,  The. 

Legacy  of  Grant,  The. 

Our  Constitution. 

Our  Fallen  Heroes. 

Pilgrims,  The 

Place  of  Athletics  in  College  Life,  The. 

Problem  of  Self-government,  The. 

Scholar  in  Public  Life,  The 

Superiority  of  Washington. 

Tribute  to  Washington.     See  Superiority  of  Wash- 
ington. 

Two  Spies,  Andr^  and  Hale,  The.     See  Andr^  and 
Hale. 

Washington's  Inauguration. 
De  Quincey,  T: — Autobiographic  Sketches. 

Execution  of  Joan  of  Arc.     See  Joan  of  Arc. 

In  the  Nursery.     See  Autobiographic  Sketches. 

Joan  of  Arc. 

Martyrdom  of  Joan  of  Arc,  The      See  Joan  of  Arc. 

Noble  Revenge. 

Shepherd  Girl  of  Domremy      See  Joan  of  Arc. 
Derzhavin,  Gabriel  Romano  witch. — God. 

Ode  to  the  Deity.     See  God 
Desbordes-Valmore,  Madame. — Parted 
DeShon,  W:  H. — Human  Littleness. 

Napoleon's  Ambition  and  Shelley's  Doubt. 
Designer. — Tale  of  Christmas  Eve,  A. 
Desprez,  Frank. — Lasca. 
De  Tabley,  Lord. — At  the  Council. 

Circe. 

Fortune's  Wheel. 

Hymn  to  Aphrodite,  A. 

Misrepresentation. 

Nuptial  Song. 

Second  Madrigal,  The. 

Simple  Maid,  A 

Song  of  Faith  Forsworn,  A. 

Two  Old  Kings,  The 

Winter  Sketch,  A. 

Woodland  Grave,  A. 
Detroit  Free  Press. — Aired  Her  Knowledge. 

"Am  Life  Wuf  de  Libin'." 

Average  Boy,  The 

Battery  in  Hot  Action,  A.     See    Supporting    the 
Guns. 

Beating  a  Conductor. 

Brother  Gardner  on  de  Human  Race. 

"Come  and  Be  Shone." 

Cry  in  the  Darkness — the  Sentinel's  Alarm. 

Daddy  Benson  and  the  Fairies. 

Dutchman's  Telephone,  The. 

Election  of  the  Future,  The. 

Fantasy.  A. 

Fourth  of  July,  The. 

"He  Wasn't  in  It." 

How  Mr.  Coffin  Spelled  It. 

How  the   Insurance  Agent   was  Squelched.     See 
"Two  Tollar?" 

Initiated   as  a  Member  of  the   United  Order  of 
Half-shells. 

Last  Station,  The. 

Little  Busy  Bees,  The. 

Man  Who  Apologized,  The. 

Man  Who  Felt  Sad,  The. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Bowser's  Family  Jar. 

Mrs.  McDuffy  on  Baseball. 

Old  Daddy  Turner. 

Prairie  Mirage,  The. 

She  Meant  Business. 

Solemn  Book-agent,  The. 

Square.st  un  Among  'Em,  The. 

Supporting  the  Guns. 


Detroit  Free  Press  (continued). 

That  Hired  Girl. 

They  Met  in  Death. 

Tragedy  in  the  Sunshine,  A. 

"Two  Tollar?" 

Uncle  Tom  and  the  Hornets. 

Uncle  Turner's  Last  Words. 

United  Order  of  Half  Shells,  The.     See   Initiated 
as  a  Member  of,  etc. 

Watermelon  Pickles. 

Why  He  Waited  to  Laugh. 

Wild  Prairie  Fire,  A. 

Wiped  Out. 
Detroit  Tribune. — My  Friendly  Pipe. 

Tragic  Parting,  A. 
Devens,  C: — Meaning  of  Victory.  The. 

No  Conflict  Now. 
De  Vere,  Sir  Aubrey. — Children  Band,  The. 

Gougane  Barra. 

Liberty  of  the  Press. 

Passion-flower. 

Rock  of  Cashel,  The. 

Shannon,  The. 

Spanish  Point. 
De  Vere,  Aubrey  T: — Ballad  of  Athlone,  A;  or,  How 
They  Broke  down  the  Bridge. 

Ballad  of  "Bonny  Portmore,"  The;  or.  The  Wicked 
Revenge. 

Ballad  of  Sarsfield,  A;  or.  The  Bursting  of  the  Guns. 

Ballad  of  the  Bier  that  Conquered,  The. 

Bard  Ethell,  The. 

Cardinal  Manning. 

Columbus. 

Dirge  of  Rory  O'Moore. 

Early  Friendship. 

Epicurean's  Epitaph,  An. 

Evening  Melody. 

Flowers  I  Would  Bring. 

Grattan. 

Happy  are  They  Who  Kiss  Thee.     See  Sonnet: 
"Happy,"  etc. 

Human  Life. 

Le  R^cit  d'une  Scoeur. 

Little  Black  Rose.  The. 

Love's  Spite. 

Queen's  Vespers,  The. 

Sad  and  Sweet.     See  Human  Life. 

Sad  is   Our  Youth[,   for  it  is  Ever  Going],      See 
Human  Life. 

Saint  Patrick  and  the  Impostor. 

Serenade. 

Song:  "Seek  not  the  tree  of  silkiest  bark." 

Song:  "Sing  the  old  song,  amid  the  sounds  dispers- 
ing." 

Song:  "Softly,  O  midnight  hours!"     See  Serenade. 

Song:  "When  I  was  young,  I  said  to  Sorrow." 

Sonnet:  "Happy  are  tney  who  kiss  thee." 

Sonnet:  "Sad  is  our  youth,  for  it  is  ever  going." 
See  Human  Life. 

Sorrow. 

Sun  God,  The. 

"Sweet  is  our  youth,  although  it  hath  bereft  us." 
See  Human  Life. 

Wedding  of  the  Clans,  The. 

Year  of  Sorrow;  Ireland,  1849,  The. 
De  Vere,  Mary  Ainge  ("Madeline  Bridges"). — Breath, 
A. 

Faith  Trembling. 

Farewell,  A. 

First  Snow,  The. 

God  Keep  You. 

Friend  and  Lover. 

Her  Perfect  Lover. 

Poet  and  Lark. 

Spinner,  The. 

When  the  Most  is  Said. 

Wind-swept  Wheat,  The. 

Woman's  Gifts,  A. 
De  Vere,  Sir  Stephen  E.— Death  of  Cleopatra,  The. 

(Tr.) 
Devere,  W: — 'Ceptin'  Ike. 
Devereux,  G.  H. — Ass  and  his  Master,  The.     {Tr.) 

Eggs,  The.     (Tr.) 
Devereux,  Rob't.     See  Essex,  Earl  of. 
Dewart,  E:  Hartley  — On  the  Ottawa. 

Shadows  on  the  Curtain. 
Dewey,  E.  H.  Graham. — Her  Wish. 
Dewey,  G:  W. — Blind  Louise. 

Dewey,  Orville. — Ashamed  to  Toil?     See    Nobility    of 
Labor. 

Freedom  and  Patriotism. 

Labor.     See  Nobility  of  Labor. 

Liberty.     (2) 


438 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Dickens 


Dewey,  Orville  (continued). 

"Liberty  is  a  solemn  thing."     See  Liberty. 

Life  is  What  We  Make  It. 

Nobility  of  Labor. 

Voices  of  the  Dead,  The. 
Diaz,  Mrs.  Abby  [Morton]. — Bird  Dialogue,  The. 

John  Spicer  on  Clothes. 

Six  Kinds  of  Manners. 

Two  Little  Rogues. 
Dibdin,  C: — Anchorsmiths,  The. 

Anne  Hathway.     (At  ) 

Constancy. 

Heaving  of  the  Lead,  The. 

High-mettled  Racer,  The. 

Jack  at  the  Opera. 

Nongtongpaw. 

Perfect  Sailor,  The. 

Poor  Jack. 

Sailor's  Consolation,  The      (At.  also  to  W:  Pitt.) 

Sir  Sidney  Smith.     See  Dibdin,  Thomas. 

Tar  for  all  Weathers,  The. 

Tom  Bowling.     See  Perfect  Sailor,  The. 
Dibdin,  T:— All's  Well.     See  British  Fleet,  The. 

British  Fleet,  The. 

Love  and  Glory. 

Sir  Sidney  Smith.     (At.  also  to  C:  Dibdin.) 

Snug  Little  Island,  The. 

Tight  Little  Island,  The.     See  Snug  Little  Island, 
The. 
Dichter,  Griswald. — Maine,  The. 

Dickens,  C: — Address  of  Sergeant  Buzfuz.     See  Pick- 
wick Papers,  The. 

"Alas!  how  few  of  nature's  faces  are  left  to  glad- 
den us  with  their  beauty." 

American  Notes. 

Aunt  Betsey  and  Little  Davy.     See  David  Cop- 
perfield. 

Bardell  and  Pickwick.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Barnaby  Rudge. 

Birth  of  Dombey,  The.     See  Dombey  and  Son. 

Birth  of  Little  Paul,  The.     See  Dombey  and  Son. 

Births.     Mrs.  Meek,  of  a  Son. 

Black  Veil,  The. 

Bleak  House. 

Bob  Cratchit's  Dinner.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Burial  of  Little  Nell.     See  Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The. 

Buzfuz  versus  Pickwick.     See  Pickwick  Papers, 
The. 

Cheap  Jack,  The.     See  Doctor  Marigold. 

Cheerful  Locksmith,  The.     See  Barnaby  Rudge. 

Children,  The.    (Wr.  at.)  See  Dickinson,  C:  Mon- 
roe. 

Child's  Dream  of  a  Star,  A. 

Child's  Hi-story  of  England. 

Child-wife,  The.     See  David  Copperfield. 

Christmas  at  Bob  Cratchit's,  A.     See  Christmas 
Carol,  A. 

Christmas  at  Fezziwig's  Warehouse.     See  Christ- 
mas Carol,  A. 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Christmas  Goose,  The.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Christmas  Goose  at  the  Cratchit's,  The.   See  Christ- 
mas Carol,  A. 

Christmas  Invitation,  A.      See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Christmas  Party  at  Scrooge's  Nephew's,  The      See 
Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Chri.stmas  Tree,  A. 

Convict's  Death,  The.     See  Sketches  by  Boz. 

Courtship  of  Mr.  Bumble  and  Mrs.  Corney,  The. 
See  Oliver  Twist. 

Cricket  on  the  Hearth. 

David  Copperfield. 

David     Copperfield     and     His     Child-wife.      See 
David  Copperfield. 

Death  of  Bill  Sikes,  The.     See  Oliver  Twist. 

Death  of  Dora.     See  David  Copperfield. 

Death  of  Harold.     See  Child's  History  of  England. 

Death  of  Little  Jo.     See  Bleak  House. 

Death  of  Little  Nell.     See  Old  Curiosity  Shop. 

Death  of  Little  Paul  [Dombey].     See  Dombey  and 
Son. 

Death  of  Mme.   Defarge.  The.     See  Tale  of  Two 
Cities,  A. 

Death  of  Paul  Dombey.     See  Dombey  and  Son. 

Death  of  Poor  Jo.     See  Bleak  House. 

Death  of  Steerforth,  The.     See  David  Copperfield. 

Dick    Swiveller   and    the    Marchioness.     See   Old 
Curiosity  Shop, 

Disastrous   Announcement,   A.     See   David   Cop- 
perfield. 

Doctor  Marigold. 

Doctor  Marigold  and  His  Dumb  Girl.     See  Doctor 
Marigold. 


Dickens,  C:  (continued). 

Dombey  and  Son. 

Drunkard's  Death,  The.     See  Sketches  by  Boz. 

Elder  Mr.  Weller's  Sentiments  on  Literary  Compo- 
sition, The.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Execution  of  Sydney  Carton,  The.  See  Tale  of 
Two  Cities,  A. 

Getting  in  the  Wrong  Room.  See  Pickwick 
Papers,  The. 

Goblins,  The.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Gradgrind's  Idea  of  Education.     See  Hard  Times. 

Great  Expectations. 

Guillotine,  The.     See  Tale  of  Two  Cities,  A. 

Hard  Times. 

Housekeeping.     See  David  Copperfield. 

Impressions  of  Niagara.       See  American  Notes. 

Ivy,  The.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Ivy  Green,  The.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Jack  Hopkins'  Story.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Job  Trotter's  Secret.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Last  Hours  of  Little  Paul  Dombey,  The.  See 
Dombey  and  Son. 

Little  Nell's  Funeral.    See  Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The. 

Love.     See  Village  Coquettes,  The. 

Lucy's  Song.     See  Village  Coquettes,  The. 

Martin  Chuzzlewit. 

Merry  Autumn  Days.     See  Village  Coquettes,  The. 

Miser,  The.     See  Chri.stmas  Carol,  A. 

Mr.  Bumble  and  Mrs.  Corney.      See  Oliver  Twist. 

Mr.  Gregsbury  and  the  Deputation.  See  Nicholas 
Nickleb.y. 

Mr.  Pickwick  in  a  Dilemma.  See  Pickwick  Papers, 
The. 

Mr.  Pickwick  in  the  Wrong  Room.  See  Pickwick 
Papers,  The. 

Mr.  Pickwick's  Adventure  with  a  Middle-aged 
Lady  in  Yellow  Curl-papers.  See  Pickwick 
Papers,  The 

Mr.  Pickwick's  Dilemma.  See  Pickwick  Papers, 
The. 

Mr.  Pickwick's  Proposal  to  Mrs.  Bardell.  See 
Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Mr.  Weller  in  Affliction.    See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Mr.  Winkle  [Puts]  on  Skates.  See  Pickwick 
Papers,  The. 

Mr.  Winkle's  Adventure.  See  Pickwick  Papers, 
The. 

Mrs.  Leo  Hunter.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Most  Extraordinary  Calamity  that  Befell  Mr. 
Winkle.  A.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Mountain  Tragedy,  The.     See  No  Thoroughfare. 

Murder  of  Nancy  [Sikes],  The.  See  Oliver  Twist. 
'  Niagara  Falls.     See  American  Notes. 

Nicholas  Nickleby. 

Nicholas  Nickleby  Leaving  the  Yorksaire  School. 
See  Nicholas  Nickleby. 

Nicholas  Nickleby  Seeking  a  Situation.  See  Nich- 
olas Nickleby. 

No  Thoroughfare. 

Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The 

Old  Fezziwig's  Ball.     »Siee  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Oliver  Twist. 

Peroration  of  Buzfuz.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Pickwick  in  the  Wrong  Bedroom.  See  Pickwick 
Papers,  The, 

Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Pickwick  Trial,  The.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Pickwickians  on  Ice,  The.  See  Pickwick  Papers, 
The. 

Pickwickians  taken  for  Informers,  but  Rescued  by 
the  Stranger,  The.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The, 

Pip's  Fight.     See  Great  Expectations. 

Quarrel  of  Sairey  Gamp  and  Betsey  Prig.  See 
Martin  Chuzzlewit. 

Recollections  of  My  Christmas  Tree.  See  Christ- 
mas Tree,  A. 

Rosa  Dartle's  Revenge.     See  David  Copperfield. 

Round.     See  Village  Coquettes,  The. 

Ruth  Pinch's  Hoasekeeping — and  what  Came  of 
It.     See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 

Sam  Weller  and  His  Father.  See  Pickwick  Papers, 
The. 

Sam  Weller's  Valentine.    See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Scene  at  Doctor  Blimber's.     See  Dombey  and  Son. 

Schoolmaster  Beaten,  The.  See  Nicholas  Nick- 
leby. 

Scrooge  and  Marley.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Scrooge  Fulfils  His  Vow.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Scrooge's  Reformation.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Seven  Poor  Travellers,  The. 

Signal  Man,  The. 

S'lgnor  Billsmethi's  Dancing  Academy  See 
Sketches  by  Boz. 


439 


Dickens 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dickena,  C:  (contwMed). 

Sketches  by  Boz. 

Song:  "Love  is  not  a  feeling  to  pass  away."  See 
Village  Coquettes,  The. 

Speech  of  Sergeant  Buzfuz  in  the  Case  of  Bardell 
against   Pickwick.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The. 

Squeers's  School*    See  Nicholas  Nickleby. 

Storm  at  Sea.     See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 

Sydney  Carton's  Death.  See  Tale  of  Two  Cities, 
A. 

Tale  of  Two  Cities,  A. 

Tea-kettle  and  the  Cricket,  The.  jSee  Cricket  on 
the  Hearth,  The. 

Tempest,  The.     See  David  Copperfield. 

Things  that  Never  Die. 

Tulkinghorn  and  Mademoiselle  Hortense.  See 
Bleak  House. 

Two  Views  of  Christmas.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Unsuccessful  Attempt  to  Raise  the  Wind,  An. 
See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 

Village  Coquettes,  The. 

Visit  to  Belle  Yard,  A.     See  Bleak  House. 

"Whatever  I  have  tried  to  do  in  my  life,  I  have 
tried  with  all  my  heart  to  do  well."  See  David 
Copperfield. 

When  Duty  Begins.     See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 

Wild  Night  at  Sea,  A.     See  Martin  Chuzzlewit. 

Wreck,  The.     See  David  Copperfield. 
Dickenson,  J: — Pastoral  Catch,  A. 
Dickie,  S: — Citizen  and  the  Saloon  System,  The. 
Dickinson,  Anna  Eliz. — Assault  on  Fort  Wagner,  The 
See  Fort  Wagner. 

Fort  Wagner. 
Dickinson,  C:  Monroe. — Children,  The. 

Morning  Miracle,  A. 
Dickinson,  Dan'l  Stevens. — Evils  of  War,  The. 

Give  up  the  Union?  See  Shall  We  Give  up  the 
Union? 

Shall  We  Give  up  the  Union? 

Speech  at  Union  Square,  N.  Y.,  April  20th,  1861. 
Dickinson,    Emily. — "Afraid?  of  whom  am  I  afraid?" 

"At  least  to  pray  is  left,  is  left." 

Autumn. 

Battle-field,  The. 

Beclouded. 

Bee,  The. 

Book,  A. 

Called  Back. 

Certainty.     See  Chartless. 

Chariot,  The. 

Chartless. 

Choice. 

Constant. 

Daisy  Follows  Soft  the  Sun,  The. 

Day,  A. 

Dialogue,  A. 

Eternity. 

First  Lesson,  The. 

Fold,  The. 

Fringed  Gentian. 

Grass,  The. 

"Have  You  Got  a  Brook  in  Your  Little  Heart?" 

Heart,  We  Will  Forget  Him. 

"I  had  no  time  to  hate,  because." 

"I  have  not  told  my  garden,  yet." 

"If  I  can  stop  one  heart  from  breaking." 

"If  You  were  Coming  in  the  Fall." 

Indian  Summer. 

Life.     See  "Our  share  of  night  to  bear." 

"Look  back  on  time  with  kindly  eyes." 

Martyrs,  The. 

Morning.     See  Out  of  the  Morning. 

Needless  Fear.  See  "Afraid?  of  whom  am  I 
afraid?" 

No  Time  to  Hate.  See  "I  had  no  time  to  hate, 
because." 

Not  in  Vain.  See  "If  I  can  stop  one  heart  from 
breaking." 

"Our  share  of  night  to  bear." 

Out  of  the  Morning. 

Parting. 

Poems.     XVII.     See  Chartless. 

Prayer.     See  "At  least  to  pray  is  left,  is  left." 

Secret,  The.     See  "I  have  not  told  my  garden  yet." 

Setting  Sail. 

Summer  Shower. 

That  Such  Have  Died. 

Time.     See  "Look  back  on  time  with  kindly  eyes." 

Too  Late. 

Utterance. 

Vanished. 

Waking  Year,  The. 

With  Flowers. 


Dickinson,  Martha  Gilbert. — Forgiveness  Lane. 

Heaven. 

Her  Music. 

Priest's  Prayer,  A. 

Reality. 

Separation. 

Unanswered. 
Dickinson,  Mrs.  Mary   [Lowe]. — "Easter  praise  may 
falter.  The." 

Edelweiss. 

Hurrah  for  the  Foorth  av  July. 

Jerry. 
Dickson,  D:  (?) — Heavenly  Jerusalem,  The.     See  New 
Jerusalem,  The. 

New  Jerusalem,  The. 
Diehl,  Anna  Randall. — Fritz. 

Parson's  Cradle,  The. 
Diekenga,  I.  E. — Building. 

Heavenward. 
Dietz,  Ella.— First  Snow,  The 
Digby,  G:     See  Bristol,  Earl  of. 
Dike,  Norman  Staunton. — From  June  to  June. 
DiUmore,  R:  Casper. — Cupid  Peeped  in  Through  the 
Blinds. 

Immortal  Washington. 
Dillon,  Wentworth.     See  Roscommon,  Earl  of. 

Dimond, . — Just   Retribution,  The.     See  Peasant 

Boy,  The. 

Peasant  Boy,  The. 

Peasant  Boy's  Vindication.  The.    See  Peasant  Boy, 
The 
Dimond,  W: — Mariner's  Dream,  The.     See  Sailor-boy's 
Dream,  The. 

Sailor-boy's  Dream,  The. 
Dinarchus. — Invective  against  Demosthenes. 
Dingelstedt,  Franz. — Legend  of  Hesse,  A. 
Dinkelspiel,  Grace. — As  in  a  Looking-glass. 
Dinnies,  Anna  Peyre. — Wife,  The. 
Dinsmore,  Silas. — Churning  Song,  The. 

ScandaJ-mongers. 
Disraeli,  B: — See  Beaconsfield,  Earl  of. 
D'Israeli,  I: — Lines  Imitated  from  Rantzau. 
Dix,  J:  Adams. — Christianity  as  a  Political  Force. 

Dies  Irae.     (Tr.)     See  Celano,  T:  de. 
Dix,  W:  Chatterton. — Epiphany. 
Dixey,  Wolstan. — Concert  Rehearsal,  The. 

I  Will  Help  You. 

Mind  Your  Business. 
Dixon,  Fred'k  A: — Feather's  Message,  A. 

Hinc  lUse  Lachrymse. 
Dixon,  R:  Watson. — Humanity. 

Mano:  a  Poetical  History. 

Ode  on  Conflicfmg  Claims. 

Of  a  Vision  of    Hell,  which  a   Monk  had.     See 
Mano:  a  Poetical  History. 

Of  Temperance  in  Fortune.     See  Mano:  a  Poetical 
History. 

Skylark,  The.     See  Mano:  a  Poetical  History. 
Doane,  Rt.  Rev.  G:  Washington. — Banner  of  the  Cross, 
The. 

Eagle,  The.     See  What  is  that,  Mother? 

Evening.     See  Softly  now  the  Light  of  Day. 

Evening  Contemplation.    See  Softly  now  the  Light 
of  Day. 

Gentleman,  The. 

God's  Anvil.     (Tr.) 

I  Hold  Still.     See  Life  Sculpture. 

Life  Sculpture. 

Men  to  Make  a  State,  The. 

Robin  Redbreast. 

Sculptor,  The.     See  Life  Sculpture. 

Softly  now  the  Light  of  Day. 

What  is  that.  Mother? 
Doane,  Rt.  Rev.  W:  Croswell. — Ancient  of  Days 

December. 
Dobell,  Sydney — America. 

Balder 

Ballad  of  Keith  of  Ravelston,  The. 

Basking.     See  Home,  Wounded. 

Chamouni. 

Chanted  Calendar,  A. 

Common  Grave,  The. 

Daft  Jean. 

Dante,  Shakespeare.  Milton.     See  Balder. 

England      See  Balder. 

Epigram  on  the  Death  of  Edward  Forbes. 

Fragment  of  a  Sleep-song. 

Home  in  War-time. 


Home,  Wounded. 
How's  My  Boy? 
Keith  of  Ravelston. 

elston,  The. 
Laus  Deo. 


See  Ballad  of  Keith  of  Rav- 


440 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Dodgson 


Dobell,  Sydney  (continued). 

Doddridge,  Philip  (continued). 

Milkmaid's  Song,  The. 

Christian  Race,  The. 

Monk's  Song.     See  Roman,  The. 

Christ's  Love. 

Nuptial  Eve,  A 

Confirmation  Hymn.     See  Entering  into  Covenant. 

On  the  Death  of  Mrs.  Browning. 

Entering  into  Covenant. 

Procession    of   the    Flowers,    The.     See   Chanted 

Epigram :  Dum  Vivimus  Vivamus.     See  Christian 
Life,  The. 

Calendar,  A. 

Return ! 

Epigram    on    His    Family   Arms.     See    Christian 
Life,  The. 

Roman,  The. 

Sea  Ballad.     See  Balder. 

For  New- Year's  Day. 

Tommy's  Dead. 

God  the  Everlasting   Light  of  the  Saints  above. 

Vision  of  Battle,  A. 

See  Ye  Golden  Lamps  of  Heaven,  Farewell. 

Dobson,  Austin.     See  Dobson,  Henrt  Austin. 

Hark,  the  Glad  Sound.     See  Savior's  Message.  The. 

Dobson,  (H:)  Austin.— Angelas  Song.    See  "Good-night, 

"I  would  not  for  ten  thousand    worlds  be  that 

Babette. " 

man. ' ' 

April  Pastoral,  An. 

Savior's  Message,  The. 

Ars  Victrix. 

Wilderness     Transformed,     The.     See    Amazing, 

"Au  Revoir. " 

Beauteous  Change! 

Ballad  of  "Beau  Brocade,"  The. 

Ye  Golden  Lamps  of  Heaven,  Farewell. 

Ballad  of  Heroes,  A. 

Youthful  Piety. 

Ballad  of  the  Armada,  A.     See   Ballad   to   Queen 

Dodge,  B.  C— Only  One  Mother. 

Elizabeth,  etc. 

Dodge,  H.  C. — Bait  of  the  Average  Fisherman. 

Ballad  of  the  Spanish  Armada        See    Ballad  to 

Graduating  Essay. 

How  Columbus  Found  America. 

Queen  Elizabeth,  etc. 

Ballad  of  the  Thrush,  The. 

Poet-tree 

Ballad  to  Queen  Elizabeth  [of  the  Spanish  Arma^  • 

Signs  of  the  Times. 

da],  A. 

That  "Fellow"  who  came  on  Sundays. 

Before  Sedan. 

What  Vacation  Is. 

Book-plate's  Petition,  The.                                  ' 

Dodge,  Mary  Abby  ("Gail  Hamilton"). — Archie  Dean. 
Battle  Song  tor  for  of]  Freedom,  A. 

Child  Musician,  The. 

Child  Violinist,  The.     See  Child  Musician,  The. 

Both  Sides. 

Cradle,  The. 

Chickens. 

Cupid's  Alley. 

Fading  Leaf,  The. 

Cure's  Progress,  The. 

Making  Brownbread  Cakes. 

Dead  Letter,  A. 

Mouse-hunting. 

Dialogue  from  Plato,  A. 

Nothing  Lost  in  Nature. 

Dora  versus  Rose. 

Travelling  under  the  Care  of  a  Gentleman. 

Familiar  Epistle,  A. 

Dodge,  Mrs.  Mary  Barker  [Carter]. — Chimney  Nest,  The. 

Fancy  from  Fontenelle,  A. 

Lesson,  The. 

Final  Word,  A. 

Now. 

For  a  Copy  of  Theocritus. 

Dodge,  Mary  E. — Chrysanthemums. 
Learning  to  Pray. 
Stranger  in  the  Pew,  A. 

For  the  Avery  "Knickerbocker." 

Forgotten  Grave,  The. 

Gage  d'Amour,  A. 

Dodge,  Mrs.  Mary  Elizabeth   [Mapes]. — Birdies   with 
Broken  Wings. 

Garden  Song,  A. 

"Good-night,  Babette!" 

Blossom   Time.     See   There's   a   Wedding  in  the 

Growing  Gray. 

Orchard. 

"In  After  Days." 

Christmas. 

In  the  Royal  Academy. 

Christmas  Morning.     See  Christmas. 

Kiss,  A.     See  Rose-leaves. 

Emerson. 

Knickerbocker.     See    For    the    Avery    "Knicker- 

God Sees.     See  Night  and  Day. 

bocker.  ' ' 

How  Grandma  Danced.     See  Minuet,  The. 

I^adies  of  Saint  .lames's,  The. 

It's  Good  to  Have  a  Mother.     See  Birdies  with 

Little  Blue  Ribbons. 

Broken  Wings. 

Lover's  Quarrel,  A.     See  Tu  Quoque. 

Letting  the  Old  Cat  Die. 

Milkmaid,  The. 

Little  Girl  who  Wouldn't  eat  Crusts,  The. 

My  Books. 

Little  Miss  Limberkin. 

Notes  of  a  Honeymoon. 

March. 

"O  Fons  Bandusiae. " 

Mayor  of  Scuttleton,  The. 

"O  Navis." 

Minuet,  The. 

Old  Sedan  Chair,  The. 

Miss  Limberkin's  Mouse.     See  Little  Misa   Lim- 

On a  Fan  that  Belonged  to  the  Marquise  de  Pom- 

berkin. 

padour. 

Miss  Malony  on  the  Chinese  Question. 

Paradox  of  Time. 

My  Window  Ivy. 

Pompadour's  Fan,  The.     See  On  a  Fan,  etc. 

Nearly  Ready.     See  March. 

Romaunt  of  the  Rose,  The. 

NeU  and  Her  Bird. 

Rondeau  to  Ethel,  A. 

Night  and  Day. 

Rose  and  the  Gardener,  The.     See  Fancy  from 

Now  the  Noisy  Winds  are  Still. 

Fontenelle,  A. 

Offertory,  An. 

"Rose  kissed  me  to-day."     See  Rose-leaves. 

Once  Before. 

Rose-leaves. 

Shadow- evidence. 

Secrets  of  the  Heart,  The. 

Snow-flakes. 

Song  of  Angiola  in  Heaven. 

Spring.     See  March. 

Sonnet  in  Dialogue,  A. 

Stars,  The. 

Story  of  Rosina,  The. 

Suggestion  for  a  Happy  New  Year,  A. 

Sundial,  The. 

There's  a  Wedding  in  the  Orchard. 

To  a  Greek  Girl. 

Two  Mysteries,  The. 

To  a  Missal  of  the  Thirteenth  Century. 

Umpires. 

To  his  Books.     (Tr.) 

Way  to  Do  It,  The. 

To  Lord  De  Tabley. 

Way  to  Speak  a  Piece,  The.     See  Way  to  Do  It, 
The. 

To  Q.  H.  F. 

Tu  Quoque. 

We  Thank  Thee. 

Urceus  Exit.     See  Rose-leaves. 

Whippoorwill. 

Virgin  with  the  Bells.  The. 

Dodge,  Nathaniel  Shatswell. — Convention  of  Michigan 

Virtuoso,  A. 

Trees. 

Wanderer,  The. 

Elm,  The.     See  Convention  of  Michigan  Trees. 

Water-cure,  The. 

Dodington,  George  Bubb.     See  Melcombe,  Lord. 

"With  Pipe  and  Flute." 

Dodgson,   C:   Lutwidge   ("Lewis  CarroU").  —  Alice's 

"Dr.  Puff  Stuff.  "—Lecture  on  Patent  Medicine,  A. 

Adventures  in  Wonderland. 

Doddridge,  Philip. — Amazing,  Beauteous  Change! 

Baker's  Tale.  The.     See  Hunting  of  the  Snark, 

"Awake,  my    soul,    stretch    every    nerve."     See 

The. 

Christian  Race,  The. 

Father  William. 

Christian  Life,  The. 

Gardener's  Song,  The. 

441 


Dodgson 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dodgson,  C:  Lutwidge  (continued). 

Hunting  of  the  Snark,  The. 

I'll  tell  Thee  Everything  I  can. 

Jabberwocky. 

Life  is  but  a  Dream. 

Lobster  Quadrille,  A.     See  Alice's  Adventures  in 
Wonderland.^ 

Love. 

Of  Alice  in  Wonderland.     See  Life  is  but  a  Dream. 

She's  all  My  Fancy  Painted  Him. 

Some  Hallucinations.     See  Gardener's  Song,  The. 

Song  of  Love,  A.     See  Love. 

Strange  Wild  Song,  A.     See  Gardener's  Song,  The. 

Sylvie  and  Bruno. 

Tnrough  the  Looking-glass. 

Walrus  and  the  Carpenter,  The.     See  Through  the 
Looking-glass. 

Ways  and  Means.     See  I'll  tell  Thee  Everything 
I  can. 

Whiting  and  the  Snail,  The.     See  Alice's  Adven- 
tures in  Wonderland. 
Doggett,  H.  L. — Bacchic  Lyric,  A. 
Doheny,  Michael  — Cushla  Gal  mo  Chree,  A. 
Dole,  Nathan  Haskell. — Amateur  Photography. 

Close  of  a  Rainy  Day,  The. 

In  the  Old  Country  Church. 

Larks  and  Nightingales.  .  See  Our  Native  Birds. 

Our  Native  Birds. 

Russia. 

Russian  Fantasy,  A. 

To  an  Imperilled  Traveller. 
Dolliver,  Clara  G. — No  Baby  in  the  House. 

Pardon  Complete. 
Domett   [or   Dommet   or   DommettJ,   Alfred. — Christ- 
mas Chant,  A.     See  Christmas  Hymn,  A. 

Christmas  Hymn,  A. 

Glee  for  Winter,  A. 

Kiss,  A. 

Nativity,  The.     See  Christmas  Hymn,  A. 
Dominick,  Bayard — Falling  Stars. 
Donne,  John. — Absence.     See  That  Time  and  Absence, 
etc. 

"Absence,    hear    thou    my  prostestation. "     See 
That  Time  and  Absence,  etc. 

Bait,  The. 

Blosssom,  The. 

Break  of  Day. 

Character  of  the  Bore,  The. 

Daybreak.     See  Break  of  Day. 

Death. 

Dream,  The. 

Eclogue,  December  26,  1613.     Allophanes  Find- 
ing Idios  in  the  Country,  etc. 

Ecstasy,  The. 

Elegy  on  Mistress  Elizabeth  Drury.     See  Of  the 
Progress  of  the  Soul. 

Funeral,  The. 

Hymn  to  Christ,  A. 

Hymn  to  God,  my  God,  in  my  Sickness. 

Hymn  to  God  the  Father. 

If  Men  be  Worlds. 

Lecture  upon  the  Shadow,  A. 

Love.    See  Eclogue,  Dec  26,  1613,  etc. 

Nocturnal  upon  St.  Lucie's  Day,  A. 

"O,   how    feeble  is  man's    Power."     See    Song: 
"Sweetest  love,"  etc. 

Of  the  Progress  of  the  Soul, 

Present  in  Absence.     See  That  Time  and  Absence, 
etc. 

Recluse  Hermit,  The.     See  Eclogue,  Dec.  26,  1613. 

Resignation  and  Despair. 

Song:    "Go  and  catch  a  falling  star." 

Song:  "Sweetest  love,  I  do  not  go." 

Sonnet:  "Death,  be  not  Proud." 

That  Time  and  Absence  proves  Rather  Helps  than 
Hurts  to  Loves. 

To  Sir  Henry  Wootton. 

Undertaking,  The. 

Valediction  Forbidding  Mourning,  A. 

Verses  to  Sir  Henry  Wootton.     See  To  Sir  Henry 
Wootton. 

Will,  The. 
Donnelly,  Eleanor  Cecilia. — Contrast,  A. 

Fate  of  Charlotte  Russe,  The. 

Gualberto's  Victory. 

Old  Surgeon's  Story,  The. 

Vision  of  Monk  Gabriel,  The. 
Donnelly,     Ignatius  —  Possible    Consequences    of    a 
Comet  Striking  the  Earth  in  the  Pre-Glacial 
Period.     See  Ragnarok. 

Ragnarok. 
Donovan.  Dr. — Man's  Mortality.      (Tr.) 


Donovan,  J.  W. — Granger's  Wife,  The. 

Land  Poor. 

Mill  River  Ride. 

Texas  Story,  A. 
Donny,  M.  H.  F.— Model  Tea  Party,  A. 
"Dooley,  Mr."     See  Dunne,  Finley  P: 
Doolittle,  Eliza. — Alice's  Party. 

Charlie's  Speech, 

Examination  Day. 

Exhibition  Day. 

Four  Year  Old. 

Fred's  First  Speech. 

Not  so  Easy. 

Too  Good  to  Attend  Common  School. 

Walter's  First  Speech. 

What  I  Like. 

Willie's  Speech. 
Dorgan,  J:  Aylmer. — Beautiful,  The. 

Dead  Solomon,  The. 
Dorman,  S. — Dream  of  the  Spanish  Admiral,  The. 
Dorr,  Mrs.  Julia  Caroline  [Ripley]. — Armorer's  Errand, 
The. 

Blind's  Bird's  Nest,  The. 

Doves  at  Mendon,  The. 

Elsie's  Child. 

Fallow  Field,  The. 

Foreshadowings. 

Knowing. 

Legend  of  the  Organ-builder,  The. 

Martha. 

Not  Mine. 

O  Earth!  Art  Thou  not  Weary? 

"Often  I  linger  where  the  roses  pour." 

Outgrown. 

Peace. 

Quietness. 

Somewhere. 

Thornless  Roses. 

Twenty-one. 

Two  Paths. 

Vashti. 

Weaving  the  Web. 

With  a  Rose  from  Conway  Castle. 
Dorrie,  C.  H. — Recompense,  The. 

Dorset,   C:    Sackville,  Earl  o/ ^-"Dorinda's  sparkling 
wit  and  eyes."     See  Song:  "Dorinda's,"  etc. 

Fire  of  Love,  The. 

Satire  on  a  Conceited  Plajrwright.     See  To  Mr. 
Edward  Howard,  on  His  Plays. 

Song:  "Dorinda's  sparkling  wit  and  eyes." 

Song:  "Phillis,  for  shame,  let  us  improve." 

Song  Written  at  Seaf,  in  the  first  Dutch  War,  1665, 
the  Night  before  an  Engagement]." 

To  Mr.  Edward  Howard,  on  His  Plays. 
Dorset,  T:  Sackville,  Lord  Buckhurst,  Earl  of. — Com- 
plaint of  the  Duke  of  Buckingham. 

Induction,  The. 

Sleep. 
Dorsey,  Mrs.  Anna  Hanson. — O'ConneU's  Heart. 
Doten   Eliz. — Embarkation,  The. 

Fate  of  Sir  John  Franklin.  See  Song  of  the  North,  A. 

Kingdom,  The. 

Song  of  the  North,  A. 
Doudney,  Sarah. — Cleopatra  to  Antony. 

"Children's  world  is  full  of  sweet  surprises.  The." 

Farewell  to  the  Old  Year. 

Hardest  Time  of' All,  The. 

"It  is  thy  voice  that  floats  above  the  din." 

"Look  of  sympathy,  the  gentle  word.  The"     See 
Not  Lost. 

Man  o'  Airlie,  The. 

Not  Lost. 

Pansies. 

Water  that  Has  Passed,  The.      See  Man  o'  Airlie, 
The. 

Water-mill,  The.     (At.  also  to  Dan'l  C.  McCallum.) 
See  Man  o'  Airlie,  The. 

What  Life  Hath. 

Wild  Flowers. 
Dougherty,    Dan'l.  — "Burn  and  destroy  the  idols  of 
party  you  have  worshiped. ' ' 

Oratory  and  the  Press. 

Pulpit  Oratory. 
Douglas,  Archibald. — To  a  Modern  Girl. 
Douglas,  Gawain. — ^neid.  The. 

Ballade    in    Commendation    of   Honour,    A.     See 
Palice  of  Honour,  The. 

Desert  Terrible,  A.     See  Palice  of  Honour,  The. 

Destiny  of  Rome,  The.     See  .lEneid,  The. 

Dido's  Hunting.     See  ./Eneid,  The. 

Ffite  Champetre,  The.     See  Palice  of  Honour,  The. 

Ghost  of  Creusa,  The. 

Palice  of  Honour,  The. 


442 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Drummond 


Douglas,  Gawain  {continued). 

Prologues  to  the  .Eneid. 

Scottish  Winter  Landscape,  The.     See  Prologues 
to  the  ^neid. 

Sleep.     See  JEnexA,   The. 

Spring.     See  Prologues  to  the  ^Eneid. 

Tribes  of  the  Dead,  The.     See  .5^.neid,  The 
Douglas,     Letitia    Virginia — Keepers    of    the    Light, 
The. 

Wizard's  Spell.  The. 
Douglas,  Malcolm. — Family  Drum  Corps,  A. 

Nervous  Little  Man,  The. 

Teddy  O'Rourke. 

Very  Humane 

When  Grandpa  Was  a  Little  Boy. 
Douglas,   Marian.     See  Robinson,  Mrs.  Annie  Doug- 
las [Green]. 
Douglas,  Stephen  A. — Melendy  Prize  Oration,  The. 

Pretext  of  Rebellion,  The. 

War  Deprecated. 
Douglas,  Wayne. — Going  Home  in  the  Morning. 
Douglas,  W:,  of  Fingland. — Annie  Laurie. 
Douglass,  Douglass  Burns. — Westward. 

Wind  of  the  Southland. 
Dougla.ss,  S.  J. — Redwing's  Song. 
Doveton,   Fred'k  Bazett. — -When  Thou  Art  Near. 
Dow,  Neal. — Alcoholic  and  Tobacco  Habit,  The. 
Dow,  Mrs.  Sabrina  H. — Hundred  Louis  d'Or,  The. 
Dowd,  Emma  C. — -Cicely  Croak. 

Magic  Buttons. 

Out  of  the  Way. 

Smile  and  a  Frown,  A. 
Dowden,   E: — Aboard   the  "Sea-Swallow." 

In  the  Cathedral  Clo.se. 

Leonardo's  "Monna  Lisa." 

Oasis. 

On  the  Heights. 

Renunciants. 

Two    Infinities. 
Dowie,  Jennie  E.  T. —  Little  Maid  with  Lovers  Twain. 

Woeful  Tale  of  Jotham  Brown,  The. 
Dowling,  Bartholemew. — Battle  of  Fontenoy. 

Indian  Revelry.     See  Revel,  The. 

Irish   Brigade   "at   Fontenoy,"   The.     See  Battle 
of  Fontenoy. 

Our  Last  Toast.     See  Revel,  The. 

Revel.  The. 

Revelry  of  the  Dying.     See  Revel,  The. 

Song  of  the  Dying.  The.     See  Revel,  The. 
Downer,  W.  B. — Children's  Praise  Song. 
Downey,  Gertrude.  M  — Doubting. 
Downing,  Andrew. — Belles  of  Brookline,  The. 
Downing,   Mrs.   Ellen   Mary  [Patrick]  ("Mary   of   the 
Nation"). — My  Owen. 

Old  Church  at  Lismore,  The. 

Were  I  but  His  Own  Wife. 
"Downing,  .lack. ' '     See  Smith,  Seba. 
Downs.  Annie  S. — Washington's  Kiss 
Downton,  H: — Advice  to  Boys.     See  Brave  and  True. 

Brave  and  True. 

To  the  Boys.     See  Brave  and  True. 
Doyle,   Rev.    Alex.    P. — In   Defence   of   the   Christian 

Sunday. 
Doyle,  Sir  Arthur  Conan. — Blind  Archer,  The. 

Corporal  Dick's  Promotion. 

Louis  XIV.  and  His  Minister.     See  Refugees,  The. 

Master. 

Refugees,  The. 
Doyle,  Sir  Fs.  Hastings. — Briti.sh  Soldier  in  China  The. 
See  Private  of  the  Buffs,  The. 

Doncaster  St.  Leger,  The. 

Loss  of  the  "Birkenhead,"  The. 

Old  Cavalier,  The. 

Private  of  the  Buffs  r;or,  the  British  Soldier  in 
China],  The. 

Red  Thread  of  Honour,  The. 

Spanish  Mother.  The. 
Drake,  Alex.  W. — Kensal  Green. 
Drake,  Gustav  V. — Astral  Romance,  An. 
Drake,  Jos.  Rodman  — American  Flag,  The. 

Culprit  Fay,  The. 

Elfin  Song.     See  Cjlprit  Fay,  The. 

Evening. 

Fairy  in  Armour,  A.    See  Culprit  Fay,  The^ 

Fay's  Sentence,  The.     See  Culprit  Fay,  The. 

First  Quest,  The.     See  Culprit  Fay,  The. 

Flag  of  the  Free.     See  American  Flag,  The. 

Gathering  of  the  Fairies,  The.     See  Culprit  Fav, 
The. 

Man  who  Frets  at  Worldly  Strife,  The. 

Mocking-bird,  The 

Mocking-bird's     Song,     The.     See    Mocking-bird, 
The. 


Drake,  Jos.  Rodman  (continued). 

National  Paintings,  The:  Colonel  Trumbull's  "The 
Declaration  of  Independence. ' ' 

Ode  to  the  American  Flag.  See  American  Flag, 
The. 

Second  Quest,  The.     See  Culprit  Fay    The. 
Drake's  Magazine. — Return  of  the  Hoe,  The. 
Draper,  Andrew  Sloan. —  New  York  State  Program  for 

Arbor  Day,   1889. 
Drayton,  H:  S.     Grace  Vernon  Bussell. 
Drayton,   Michatil. — -Agincourt.     See  To  the  Cambro- 
Britons  and  their    Harps:  His  Ballad  of  Agin- 
court . 

Arming  of  Pigwiggen,  The.  See  Nymphidia-  The 
Court  of  Fairy. 

Ballad  of  Agincourt,  The.  See  To  the  Cambro- 
Britons  and  their  Harps:  His  Ballad  of  Agin- 
court. 

Battle  of  Agincourt,  The.  See  To  the  Cambro- 
Britons  and  their  Harps:  His  Ballad  of  Agin- 
court. 

Cas.samen  and  Dowsabel. 

Come,  Let  Us  Ki.sse  and  Parte.  See  Love's  Fare- 
well. 

Contest,  A.     See  Muses'  Elysium,  The. 

Daffodil.     See  Pastorals. 

Defiance  to  Love. 

Description  of  Elizium,  The.  See  Muses'  Elysium, 
The. 

Ferryman,  Venus,  and  Cupid.  The.  See  Muses' 
Elysium,  The. 

Fine  Day.  A 

Harp,  The.     See  To  Himself  and  the  Harp. 

I  Give  thee  Eternity. 

Let  us  Kiss  and  Part.     See  Love's  Farewell. 

Love  Banished  Heaven. 

Love's  Farewell. 

Muses'  Elysium,  The. 

Nymphidia:  the  Court  of  Fairy. 

Parting,  A    [or  The].     See  Love's  Farewell. 

Pastorals. 

Polyolbion,  The. 

Queen  Mab's  Visit  to  Pigwiggen.  See  Nymphidia: 
the  Court  of  Fairy. 

Queen  Margaret  to  William  de  !a  Pool,  Duke  of 
Suffolk. 

Rivers  of  England,  The.     See  To  the  River  Ankor. 

Shepherd's  Sirena,  The. 

Since  there's  no  Help.     See  Love's  Farewell. 

Sirena.     See  Shepherd's  Sirena,   The. 

Song  of  Motto  and  Perkin. 

Sonnet:  "Since  there's  no  help,"  etc.  See  Love's 
Farewell. 

Sonnet:  To  the  Lady  L.  S. 

Sonnet:  To  the  River  Ankor. 

"To  Himself  and  the  Harp. 

To  His  Coy  Ijove. 

To  his  Fair  Idea. 

To  the  Cambro-Britons  and  their  Harp:  Hi.s 
Ballad  of  Agincourt 

To  the  River  Ankor. 

To  the  Virginian  Voyage. 
Drennan,  W: — Erin. 

My  Father. 

Wake  of  William  Orr,  The. 
Drew,  Edwin. — Super's  Story.  The. 
Dreyfus,   Abraham. — Oak   in  a  Storm,  An.     See  Ro- 
mance. 

Romance. 
Drinker,  Mrs.  Anna  ("Edith  May"). — Forest  Scene,  A. 
Drobisch,  Theodor. — Der  Letzte  Gast. 
Dromgoole,  Will  Allen. — Engineer  Connor's  Son. 

Heart  of  Old  Hickory,  The. 

Sea- weed. 
"Droch. "     See  Bridges,  Rob't. 
Drown,    Dan'l  A. — Rose  by  the  Wayside,  The. 

To  a  Friend. 
Drummond,  Hamilton. — Silence  of  Love,  The. 
Drummond,  W:,    of  Hawthornden. — "Alexis,  here    she 
stay'd,   among  these  pines."     See  Spring  Be- 
reaved,  III. 

Angels,  The. 

Beauty  Fades.  See  "Trust  not,  sweet  soul!  those 
curled  waves  of  gold. ' ' 

Bubble,  The.     See  Madrigal:  "This  life,"  etc. 

Change.     See  Urania. 

Change  should  Breed  Change. 

Damon's  Lament. 

"Doth  then  the  world  go  thus,  doth  all  thus 
move?" 

For  the  Baptist.     See  Saint  John  Baptist. 

"Good  that  never  satisfies  the  mind,"  A.  See 
Human  Frailty. 


443 


Drummond 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dnimmond,  W:,  of  Haivihomden  (continued). 

Her  Passing.  See  Madrigal:  "The  beauty  and 
the  life." 

Htunan  Frailty 

"I  know  that  all  beneath  the  moon  decays." 

Illusions.     See  Human  Frailty. 

Inexorable.     iSee*Madrigal:  "My  thoughts,"  etc. 

Invocation.     See  "Phoebus,  arise!" 

Lament,  A.     See  Madrigal,  "My  thoughts,"  etc. 

Lessons  of  Nature,  The. 

Madrigal:  "Like  the  Idalian  Queen." 

Madrigal:  "My   thoughts   hold   mortal   strife." 

Madrigal:  "Sweet  rose,  whence  is  this  hue?" 

Madrigal:  "The  beauty  and  the- life.  " 

Madrigal:  "This  life  which  seems  so  fair." 

Madrigal:  "This  world  a  hunting  is." 

No  Trust  in  Time. 

On  Solitude. 

PhiUis. 

"Phoebus,  arise!" 

Saint  John  Baptist. 

Saint  John  the  Baptist.     See  Saint  John  Baptist. 

Sextain. 

Shepherds,  The. 

Sleep,  Silence,  Child. 

Song:  "Phoebus,  arise!"     See  "Phoebus,  arise!" 

Sonnet:  "A  good  that  never  satisfies  the  mind." 
See  Human  Frailty. 

Sonnet-  "Alexis,  here  she  stay'd  among  these 
pines."     See  Sirring   Bereaved,    III. 

Sonnet :  "Dear  chorister, ' '  etc.  See  To  the  Night- 
ingale. 

Sonnet:  "I  know  that  all  beneath  the  moon  de- 
cays."    See  "I  know  that  all,"  etc. 

Sonnet:  "If  crost  with  all  mishaps,"  etc. 

Sonnet:  "In  my  first  years,"  etc. 

Sonnet:  "Of  mortal  glory,  O  soon  darkened  ray." 

Sonnet:  "Then  is  she  gone,"  etc. 

Sonnet:  "Thou  window,  once  which  served,"  etc. 

Sonnet  from  Flowers  of  Sion.  See  No  Trust  in 
Time. 

Sonnet:  Posting  Time.     See  No  Trust  in  Time. 

Sonnet:  Repent,  Repent!     See  Saint  John  Baptist. 

Sonnet :  Spring.     See  Spring  Bereaved,  II. 

Sonnet:     Sweet  Bird. 

Sonnet  to  Sir  W.  Alexander. 

Sonnet  to  Sir  W.  Alexanderf.  (Appended  to  the 
Cypresse  Grove.)].  See  to  Sir  William  Alex- 
ander, with  the  Author's  Epitaph. 

Sonnet : — To  the  Nightingale.  See  To  the  Nightin- 
gale. 

Spring  Bereaved      (I.,  II.,  III.) 

Summons  to  Love.     See  "Phoebus,  arise!" 

"This  life,  which  seems  so  fair."  See  Madrigal: 
"This  life,"  etc. 

To  a  Nightingale.     See  Sonnet:  Sweet  Bird. 

To  Chloris. 

To  His  Lute. 

To  Sir  William  Alexander,  with  the  Author's  Epi- 
taph. 

To  Spring.     See  Spring  Bereaved,  II. 

To  the  Nightingale. 

To  the  Nightingale.     See  also  Sonnet:  Sweet  Bird. 

To  the  Redbreast.     See  Sonnet:  Sweet  Bird. 

"Trust  not,  sweet  soul !  those  curled  waves  of  gold." 

Urania,  I. 
Drummond,  W:  H: — De  Nice  licetle  Canadienne. 

Habitant,  The. 

Habitant's  Jubilee  Ode,  The. 

How  Bateese  Came  Home. 

Wreck  of  the  "Julie  Plante,"  The. 
Drury,  H: — Over  the  Threshold  of  my  Library.    (Tr.) 
Dryden,  J: — Absalom  and  Achitophel. 

Achitophel.     See  Absalom  and  Achitophel. 

Ah,  How  Sweet.     See  Tyrannic  Love. 

"Ah,  how  sweet  it  is  to  love."  See  Tyrannic 
Love. 

Alexander's  Feast[;  or,  the  Power  of  Music]. 

Ambojma-  or.  The  Cruelties  of  the  Dutch  to  the 
English  Merchants. 

Annus  Mirabilis,  the  Year  of  Wonders. 

Attempt  at  Berghen,  The.  See  Annus  Mirabilis, 
the  Year  of  Wonders. 

Aureng-Zebe;  or.  The  Great  Mogul. 

Beautiful  Lady  of  the  May,  The. 

Buzzard,  The.     See  Hind  and  the  Panther,  The. 

Character  of  the  Duke  of  Monmouth.  See  Absa- 
lom and  Achitophel. 

Character  of  the  Earl  of  Shaftesbury.     See  Absa- 
lom and  Achitophel. 
I         Character  of  Zimri.     See  Absalom  and  Achitophel. 

Cymon  and  Iphigenia. 

Doeg  and  Og.     See  Absolom  and  Achitophel. 


Dryden,  J:  (continued). 

Epistle  to  the  Whigs.     See  Medal,  The. 

Fife  and  Drum.     See  Song  for  St.  Cecilia's  Day,  A. 

Fire  of  London,  The.     See  Annus  Mirabilis,  the 

Year  of  Wonders. 
Grief. 
Harvest  Home.     See  King  Arthur;  or.  The  British 

Wort  Ivy. 
Hidden  Flame.     See  Maiden  Queen,  The. 
Hind  and  the  Panther,  The. 
Incantation.     See  CEdipus. 
Indian  Emperor,  The. 
King  Arthur;  or,  The  British  Worthy. 
Lady's  Song,   The.     See   Beautiful    Lady   of   the 

May,  The. 
Lines   Printed   under   the   Engraved   Portrait   of 

Milton 
MacFlecknoe. 
Maiden  Queen,  The. 
Malcontents,    The.     Zimri.      See    Absalom     and 

Achitophel. 
Medal,  The. 
Oak,  The. 

Ode  for  St.  Cecilia's  Day.     See  Song  for  St.  Ce- 
cilia's Day,  A. 
Ode  on  Cecilia's  Day.     See  Song  for  St.  Cecilia's 

Day,  A. 
Ode  to  the  Pious  Memory  of  the  Accomplished 

Young  Lady,  Mrs.  Anne  Killigrew.     See  To  the 

Pious  Memory  of  Mrs.  Anne  Killigrew. 
CEdipus. 
Oliver  Cromwell.     See  Poem  upon  the  Death  of 

his  Late  Highness,  etc. 
On  the  Death  of  Lord  Hastings. 
On   the    Death   of   Oliver   Cromwell.     See   Poem 

upon  the  Death  of  his  Late  Highness,  etc. 
Palamon     and     Arcite.     (Tr.)     See     Canterbury 

Tales. — Geoffrey  Chaucer. 
Poem  upon  the  Death  of  his  Late  Highness,  Oliver, 

Lord   Protector  of  England,  Scotland,  and  Ire- 
land, A. 
Prologue  to  Aureng-Zebe,  or,  the  Great  Mogul. 

See  Aureng-Zebe,  etc. 
Religio  Laici. 
St.  Cecilia's  Day.     See  Song  for  St.  Cecilia's  Day, 

A. 
Satire  on  the  Dutch.     See  Amboyna,  etc. 
Sects,   The.     Private  Judgment.     See  Hind   and 

the  Panther,  The. 
Shadwell.     See  MacFlecknoe. 
Song:   "Ah,   fading  joy!"     See  Indian   Emperor, 

The.  . 
Song  for  St.  Cecilia's  Day,  A. 
Soujg  from  King  Arthur.     See  King  Arthur;  or, 

The  British  Worthy. 
Song  to  a  Fair  Young  Lady,  Going  out  of  the  Town 

in  the  Spring. 
To  my  Dear  Friend,  Mr.  Congreve,  on  his  Comedy 

Called  "The  Double  Dealer." 
To  My  Friend,  Mr.  Congreve.     See  To  my  Dear 

Friend,  Mr.  Congreve,  etc. 
To  My  Honoured  Kinsman,  John  Dryden. 
To  the  Pious  Memory  of  Mrs.  Anne  Killigrew. 
Tradition.     See  Religio  Laici 
Trumpet's  Loud  Clangor,  The.     See  Song  for  St. 

Cecilia's  Day,  A. 
TVrannic  Love. 
Under  Mr.  Milton's  Picture.     See  Lines  Printed 

under  the  Engraved  Portrait  of  Milton. 
Under  the  Portrait  of  Milton.     See  Lines  Printed 

imder  the  Engraved  Portrait  of  Milton. 
Unity  of  the  Catholic  Church,  The.     See  Hind  and 

the  Panther,  The. 
Veni  Creator  [Spiritusl.     (Tr.) 
Verses  to  Her  Royal  Highness  the  Duchess. 
Zimri.     See  Absalom  and  Achitophel. 
Dschellaleddin  Rumi. — To  Heaven  Approached  a  Sufi 

Saint. 
Du  Bois,  F  R. —  Ballad  of  the  Overconfident  PolUwog, 

The. 
Duclaux,  Mme.  Agnes  Mary  Frances  [Robinson]  [Dar- 

mesteter]. — Ballad  of  Orleans,  A. 
Captain  Gold  and  French  Janet. 
Celia's  Home-coming 
Cockyne  Country. 
Dawn-angels. 
Darwinism. 
Fireflies. 
Mowers,  The. 
Rosa  Rosarum. 
Sir  Eldric. 

Tower  of  St.  Maur,  The 
"Tuscan  Cypress." 


iU 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Eames 


Dudevant.  Mme.  Amantine  Lucille  Aurore  ("George 

Sand"). — Nights  of  Venice,  The. 
Dudley.  E.  L. — Mucker's  Love  Song,  The. 
Duer,  Caroline  T. — International  Episode,  An  (March 
15,  1889). 
Portrait,  A. 
Word  to  the  Wise,  A. 
Dufferin,   Frd'k    Temple    Blackwood,    Baron. — Black 

Death  of  Bergen.  The. 
Dufferin,    Helen    Selina  [Sheridan],    Lady.     Kat[ejy's 
Letter. 
Lament  of  the  Irish  Emigrant. 
Terence's  Farewell. 
To  My  Dear  Son. 

Song: — "When  another's  voice  thou  hearest." 
Duffev,  Mrs.  Eliza  Bisbee. — After  a  Fashion. 

Two  Ways  of  Telling  the  Same  Thing. 
Duffield,  S:  Pitts. — "For  Sale." 

"When  Sylvia  Sings." 
Duffield,  S:  Willoughby. — Smoke  and  Chess. 

Three  Best  Doctors,  The.    See  Three  Good  Doctors. 
Three  Good  Doctors. 
Two  of  a  Trade. 
Duffy,  Sir  C :  Gavan. — Irish  Rapparees,  The. 
Muster  of  the  North,  The 
Patriot's  Bride,  The. 
Duganne,  Augustine  Jos.  Hickey. — Bethel. 
Caractacus. 

Keep  it  before  the  People! 
Lament  of  the  Widowed  Inebriate. 
On  to  Freedom. 
Duke,  R.  T.  W. — Last  Hours. 
Dumas,  Alexandre  — Bonivard. 

Execution  of  Lady  De  Winter,  The.     See  Three 

Musketeers,  The. 
Imperial  Secret,  An. 
On  Dogs  and  Cats. 
Three  Musketeers,  The. 
Du  Maurier,  G: — Vers  Nonsensiques. 

We  Can  Do  So  Little. 
Dunbar,  Paul  Laurence. — Conscience  and  Remorse. 
Corn-song,  A. 
Death  Song,  A. 
Discovered. 

Harriet  Beecher  Stpwe. 
How  Lucy  Backslid. 
Hymn:  "O  li'l  lamb  out  in  de  col'." 
Little  Brown  Baby. 

Lullaby:  "Bedtime's  come  fu'  little  boys." 
Lullaby:  "Kiver  up  yo'  haid. " 
Mt.  Pisgah's  Christmas  'Possum. 
Negro  Lullaby.    Sec  Lullsiby:  "Bedtime's  come  fu' 

little  boys. ' ' 
or  Tunes,  The. 
On  the  Road. 
Retort. 

When  de  Co'n  Pone's  Hot. 
When  Malindy  Sings. 
Dunbar,  Wallace. — It's  Vera  Weel.  ^^ 
Dunbar,  W : — All  Earthly  Joy  returns  in  Pain. 

Dame  Nature  Crowns  the  Scottish   Lion   King  of 

Beas5ts.     See  Thistle  and  the  Rose,  The. 
Dance  of  the  Seven  Deadly  Sins  [or  Sevin  Deidly 

Synnis],  The. 
Goldvn  Targe,  The. 
In  Honor  of  the  City  of  London. 
Lament  for  the  Makaris  quhen  He  was  Seik,  The. 

See  Lament  for  the  Makers. 
Lament  for  the  Makers. 
On  the  Nativity  of  Christ. 
Thistle  and  the  Rose,  The. 
Thrissill  and  the  Rois,  The.     See  Thistle  and  the 

Rose,  The. 
To  a  Lady. 
Dunbar,  W:  F. — Song  for  the  Hour,  A. 
Duncan,  E.  A.— Old  Soldier's  Story,  The. 
Duncan,  H.  A. — Child-philosophy. 
Duncan,  Lindsay. — Christmas  Guests  [,The]. 
Duncan,  Mary  Lundie. — Child's  Evening  Prayer,  A. 
Evening  Hymn.     See  Child's  Evening  Prayer,  A. 
Snow-shower,  The. 

Tender    Shepherd,    The.     See    Child's    Evening 
Prayer,  A. 
Duncan,    Sara    Jeannette.      See    Cotes,    Mrs.    Saka 

Jeannette  [Duncan]. 
Duncan,  W:  Cecil.  — "Little  David"  of  Nations,  The. 
Duncan,  W:  J. — Right  Building. 
Dunham,  H.  G. — At  the  Ball. 
Duniway,  Mrs.  Abigail  Scott. — Men,  The. 
Dunlavy,  E.  W. — Philosophy  of  Progress. 
Dunlop,  J: — Dinna  Ask  Me. 
Dunn,  Dr.  E.  C. — Rum's  Ruin. 
Dunn,  Frank  Edwin. — Frances  Edwena. 


Dunn,  Julia  M. — Carmelita. 

Dunne,  Finley  P:  ("Mr.  Dooley").— Mr.  Dooley  Defines 
a  Poet. 
Mr.  Dooley  in  Peace  and  in  War.     See  Mr.  Dooley 

on  a  Populist  Convention. 
Mr.  Dooley  on  a  Populist  Convention. 
What  Dooley  Says. 
Dunton,  Theodore  Watts.     See  Watts-Dunton,  Theo- 

DOHE. 

Durant,  Heloise. — Place  of  Rest,  The. 
Durant,  Horace  B. — Christ  Calming  the  Tempest. 
"Dead!     Name  Unknown." 
Hugh  Gordon's  Iron  Mill. 
Make  Room  in  Heaven. 
Only  True  Life,  The. 
Party  Caucus,  The. 
Shadow  from  an  Insane  Asylum,  A. 
Trip  to  the  Stars,  A. 
What  the  Diver  Saw. 
Where  are  Your  Treasures? 
Durbin,  Eliza  W.— Our  Washington. 
Durfee,  Harriet  E. — Four  Pictures. 

Under  the  Old  Oak  Tree — a  Garland. 
D'Urfey,  T:— Chloe  Divine. 

(^ome.  Sweet  Lass. 
Durivage,  Fs.  Alex. — All. 
Cavalry  Charge,  The. 
Chez  Bryant. 

Christian  Maiden  and  the  Lion,  The. 
Durke,  G.  L. — Boy's  Idea  of  Girls,  A. 
Dustin,  May  E. — Could  I  Have  Borne  It? 
Dutcher,  Lina. — Spring-time  Flowers. 
Dutt,  'Tom. — Awake. 

Our  Casuarina  Tree. 
Dutton,  Maude  Barrows. — Genius  to  Her  Poet. 
Duvar,  J:  Hunter.     See  Hdnter-Duvar,  J: 
Dwight,  J:  Sullivan. — Landlady's  Daughter,  The.(7'r.) 
Rest.     (Tr.) 

Sweet  is  the  Pleasure.     {Tr.)     See  Rest. 
True  Rest.     (Tr.)     See  Rest. 
Dwight,  Theodore. — On  the  Death  of  Washington. 
Dwight,  Timothy. — America  (God   Bless  our   Native 
Land). 
Beautiful  in  Creation,  The. 
Columbia. 
Columbia,    the    Gem    of    the    Ocean.     See    Red, 

White,  and  Blue,  The. 
Glory  of  Nature,  The. 
I  Love  Thy  Kingdom,  Lord.     (Tr.) 
Love  to  the  Church.     See  I  Love  Thy  Kingdom, 

Lord. 
Red,  White,  and  Blue,  The.     (Also  at.  to  D.  T. 

Shaw.  ) 
Smooth  Divine,  The. 
Washington  a  Model  for  Youth. 
Dyer,  E.  P. — Hard  Words  to  Spell.     See  Spelling  Class, 
The. 
Spelling  aass.  The. 
Dyer,  Sir  E: — Cynthia. 

(ilood  Conscience,  A.     See  My  Minde  to  me  a  King- 
dom is. 
Helen's  Epithalamion.     See  Sixe  Idillia. 
My  Minde  [or  Mind]  to  me  a  Kingdom   is.     (At. 

also  to  W:  Byrd.) 
Peace  of  Mind.     See  My  Minde  to  me  a  Kingdom^  is. 
Praver  of  Theocritus  for  Syracuse,  The.     See  Sixe 

idiUia. 
Phillis.     (Tr.)     (At.  also  to  T:  Lodge.) 
Sixe  Idillia.     (Tr.) 

To  Phillis  the  Fair  Shepherdess.    (Tr.)   See  Phillis. 
Dyer,  J: — Fleece,  The. 

Grongar  Hill. 
Dyer,  Rev.  Ludwig. — Mother's  Angel,  The. 
Dyer,  Sydney. — Story  of  an  Apple,  A. 

Work.     See  Work,  for  the  Night  is  Coming. 
Work,  for  the  Night  is  Coming. 


E. — After  Reading  Austin  Dodson. 

"E.,  A."     See  Rdssell,  G:  W: 

E.,  A.  M. — Vision,  A. 

E.,  E.— Who'll  Tend  Baby? 

E.,  G. — Upon  the  Threshold. 

E. ,  M. — What  They  Dreamed  and  Said. 

Eager,  Cora  M. — Be  Strong. 

Ruined  Merchant,  The. 

Where  is  Papa  To-night? 

Will  the  New  Year  come  To-night[,  Mamma]?   (At. 
also  to  Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton.) 
Eames,  Eliz.  J. — Addison. 


445 


Earl 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Earl,  Mrs. — On  the  Death  of  Mrs.  Holland. 
Easter,  Marguerite  Eliz. — My  Laddie's  Hounds. 
Eastman,  Barrett. — How  We  Burned  the  "Philadel- 
phia. ' ' 

Joy  Enough. 

Richard  Somers.  ^ 
Eastman,    C:    Gama^. — Afternoon    Nap,    The.     See 
Picture,  A. 

Dirge. 

Farmer  Sat  in  his  Easy  Chair,  The.     iSee  Picture, 
A. 

Midsummer  Day  Scene,  A.     See  Picture,  A. 

Picture,  A. 

Snow-storm,  A. 
Eastman,  Mrs.  Elaine  [Goodale]. — Arbutus. 

Ashes  of  Roses. 

Baby. 

Countryman  of  Mine,  A. 

Golden-rod. 

Mother. 
Easton,  Alex.  N. — Mad  Anthony's  Charge. 
Easton,  Frank  Turtellet. — Echo  from  the  17th,  An. 

New  Joke,  The. 

No  Wonder. 

Specialist,  A. 
Eastman,  Julia  A. — Bluebell,  The. 
Eastman,  S.  E.— Story  of  a  Little  Red  Hen,  The. 
Eastman,  Sarah  E. — My  Little  Friend. 
Eastman,  Sophie  E. — Little  Teacher,  The. 

Spool  of  Thread,  A. 
Eaton,  Arthur  Wentworth  Hamilton. —  Deepening  the 
Channel. 

Egyptian  Lotus,  The. 

I  Watch  the  Ships. 

Meadow  Lands,  The. 

My  Purest  Longings  Spring. 

Phantom  Light  of  the  Bale  des  Chaleurs,  The. 

Pray  for  the  Dead. 

Purple  Asters. 

Voyage  of  Sleep,  The. 
Eaton,  Earle  H. — When  Nelly  Hangs  her  Stocking  Up. 
Eaton,  R.  L. — "April  sun  shines  bright  above.  The." 
Eaton,  W.  A. — Bridge  Keeper's  Story,  The. 

Death  of  the  Reveller,  The. 

Fire!    Fire! 

Fireman's  Wedding,  The. 

Haunted  Smithy,  'The. 

How  I  Won  My  Wife. 

My  First  Recital. 

Paddy's  Courting. 

Slave's  Auction,  A. 

To  My  Love. 

Touch  it  Not. 
Eberhart,  Gilbert  F.— Fife,  The. 

Ebers,    Georg.  —  Chariot    Race    in    Alexandria.     See 
Serapis. 

Hippodrome  Race,  The.     See  Serapis. 

Serapis. 
Eclectic  Magazine. — Joe  Sieg. 
Ecob,  Jas.  H. — Dreamer  and  Reaper,  The. 
Eddy,  Alice  M.— All  Together. 

Mrs.  Pickett's  Missionary  Box. 
Eddy,  D.  C— True  and  False  Glory. 

True  Manliness. 
Eddy,  H:  B. — To  an  Imaginary  One. 
Eddy,  W:  Holden. — Fairy  Barcarolle,  A. 
Edgar,  Sir  Jas.  D: — This  Canada  of  Ours. 
Edgarton,  S.  C— Beauty  of  Piety,  The. 
Edlin,  H: — Birthday  Greeting,  A. 

Edmeston,  Jas. — "Lead  us.  Heavenly  Father,  lead  us." 
See  Prayer  to  the  Trinity. 

Prayer  to  the  Trinity. 
Edmond.son,  Miriam  R. — Dream-ship,  The. 
Edmundston,  Jas. — Forgiveness. 

Edwards,  Mrs. . — My  Jessie. 

Edwards,  Amelia  Blandford. — Adventure,  An. 

Give  Me  Three  Grains  of  Corn,  Mother. 

Revels  of  the  Caesars,  The. 
Edwards,  E.  Evans. — Modern  Cain,  The. 
Edwards,  Harry  Stillwell. — Born  Inventor,  A. 

Charlie  and  the  Possum. 

De  Valley  an'  de  Shadder. 

General's  Client,  The.     See  De  Valley  an'  de  Shad- 
der. 

Mammy's  Li'l  Boy. 

Mass'  Crawford,  Isam,  and  the  Deer.     See  Two 
Runaways,  'The. 

Not  Guilty.     See  De  Valley  an'  de  Shadder. 

Old  Canteen,  The. 

Stirring  up  of  Billy  Williams,  The. 

Trial  of  Ben  Thomas,  The.     See  De  Valley  an'  de 
Shadder. 

Two  Runaways,  The. 


Edwards,  Rev.  Jonathan. — "Opera  is  an  experiment, 
bold  even  to  the  verge  of  absurdity.  The." 

"What  is  commonly  called  musical  criticism  is  a 
misnomer. ' ' 
Edwards,  Mary. — Two  Runaways,  The. 
Edwards,  Matilda  Betham. — Child's  Prayer,  A. 

Hymn:  "God  make  my  life  a  little  light."     See 
Child's  Prayer,  A. 
Edwards,  Matilda  C. — My  Mother  at  the  Gate. 
Edwards,  R : — Amantium  Irae.    See  Paradyse  of  Dainty 
Devises,  The. 

Paradyse  of  Dainty  Devises,  The. 
Edwards,  R: — "Let  it  not  be  forgotten  that  patriotism 

is  one  of  the  positive  lessons. ' ' 
Edwards,  W:  H.— Ben  Bolt.     See  English,  T:  D. 
Eells,  S: — -Teacher  the  Hope  of  America,  The. 
Egan,  Maurice  Fs. — Chrysalis    of    a    Bookworm,  The. 

Columbus,  the  World-giver. 

Fra  Angelico. 

He  Made  Us  Free. 

Maurice  de  Gu^rin. 

Old  Violin,  The. 

Perpetual  Youth. 

Question,  A. 

Shamrock,  The. 

Theocritus. 

We  Conquer  God. 
Egbert,  Alice  E.— Charm,  The. 

Eggleston,  E: — Discourse    by    the    Rev.    Mr.  Bosan. 
See  Hoosier  School-master,  The. 

Hoosier  School-master,  The. 

Street  Cries. 
Eggleston,    J.    R. — Uncle     Mellick     Dines    with    his 

Master. 
Eichberg,  Anna  Philipine.     See  King,  Mrs.  Anna.  P. 

[Eichberg]. 
Eisenbeis,  L: — Are  You  Ready? 

Christmas  a  Hundred  Years  to  Come. 

Church  Fair,  The. 

Church  in  Lucre  Hollow,  The. 

Church  Kitchen,  The. 

Deacon,  Me  and  Him,  The. 

Joner  Swallerin'  a  Whale. 

Matildy  Goes  to  Meetin'. 

Meetin'-house  is  Split,  The. 

Our  Church  Sociable. 

Our  Ranks  are  Getting  Thin. 

Parson's  Vacation,  The. 
Elders,  Anne. — Life's    Unexpressed. 
Eldred,  Mrs.  L.  C— Single  Head  of  Wheat,  A. 

Eldridge,   Denison. — To  :  "'Twas  at  a  ball. 

In  vain  I  tried." 
Elgee,  Jane  Francesca.     See  Wilde,  Lady. 
Eliot,  C:  W: — Holmes,  Extract  Concerning. 

Schools  and  Colleges  of  Our  Country,  The.     See 
Washington  and  our  Schools  and  Colleges. 

Student-heroes  of  Our  War,  The. 

Washington  and  Our  Schools  and  Colleges. 
Eliot,  Ebenezer.     See  Elliott,  Ebenezer. 
Eliot,  G: — See  Cross,  Mrs.  Marian  [Evans]  [Lewes]. 
Eliot,  Mrs.  Henrietta  Robins  [Mack]. — Hint,  A. 

Just  Tribute,  A. 

Why  It  was  Cold  in  May. 

Wish,  A. 
Eliot,  H:  W.,  Jr.— His  Sentence. 

Life  in  the  Chem.  Lab. 
Eliot,  S: — Washington's  Characterization. 
Elizabeth.  Queen. — "Golden  Speech,  The,"  of  Queen 
Elizabeth. 

Speech  to  the  Army  at  Tilbury. 
Elizabeth  Pauline   Attilia,  Queen  of  Roumania  ("Car- 
men Sylva"). 

Contented. 

West  Wind. 
EUerton,  J. — -Grant  Us  Thy  Peace.     See  Savior,  again 
to  Thy  Dear  Name. 

Savior,  again  to  Thy  Dear  Name. 
Elliot,  Lady  Charlotte.— Wife  of  Loki,  The. 
Elliot,  Ebenezer.     See  Elliott,  Ebenezer. 
Elliot,  G:  Tracy.— Winter  Twilight. 
Elliot,  Sir  Gilbert. — Amynta. 
Elliot,  Mrs.  Henrietta  R.    See  Eliot,  Mrs.  Henrietta 

R. 
Elliot,  Madge. — Cartwheels. 

Go  Slow. 

No  Kiss. 

Said  Tulip,  "That  Is  So." 
Elliot,  Roberta  Kerr. — Chrysanthemums. 
Elliot,  S.  R.— Burden  of  Night,  The. 
Elliott,  Charlotte. — Just  as  I  Am.  I 

Let  Me  be  with  Thee. 

O  Thou,  the  Contrite  Sinners'  Friend. 

Thy  Will  be  Done.  \ 


iiG 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


English 


Elliott,    Ebenezer. — "And    shall    the    mortal    sons   of 
God. ' ' 

Battle  Song. 

Bramble.     See  Bramble  Flower,  The. 

Bramble  Flower,  The. 

Builders,  The. 

Burns.     See  Poet's  Epitaph,  A. 

Corn-law  Hymn. 

Elegy  on  William  Cobbett. 

England. 

Excursions  to  the  Mountains,  An.     See  Villiage 
Patriarch,  The. 

"Leafless  are  the  trees;  their  purple  branches." 

Old  England.     See  England. 

Plaint. 

Poet's  Epitaph,  A. 

Press,  The. 

Song:     "Child,  is  thy  father  dead?" 

Spring. 

Three  Marys  at  Castle  Howard,  in  1812  and  1837, 
The. 

Village  Patriarch,  The. 
Elliott,  Jane. — Flowers  o'  {or  of]  the  Forest,  The. 

Lament  for  Flodden  [Field],  A.     See  Flowers  of 
the  Forest,  The. 
Elliott,  .Julian  M.- — Pathos  of  Thackeray  and  Dickens, 
The. 

Two  of  Dickens'  Villains. 
Elliott,  Rev.  Father  Walter. — Liberty. 

Ellis,  Mrs. .—Art  of  Reading  Well,  The. 

Ellis,  Carrie  E. — Washing  Dishes. 

Ellis,  Sumner. — Man's  Capacity  for  Education. 

Elliston,  Alfred.— Bicycle  Girl,  The. 

Ellsworth,  D.  A.— Pa's  Soft  Spot. 

Ellsworth,  Erastus  Wolcott.— Mayflower,  The. 

What  is  the  Use? 
Ellsworth,  W.  W.— Nightfall. 

Ellwanger,  W:  De  Lancey. — To  Jessie's  Dancing  Feet. 
Elmer,  Edith. — Overboard! 
Elmslie,  Theodora  C. — Little  Lady  of  Lavender,  The. 

Miss  Eva's  Visit  to  the  Ogre.     See  Little  Lady  of 
Lavender,  The. 
Elton,  E.— Child's  Time  Table. 
Elvan,  Cornelius. — "With  broken  heart  and  contrite 

sigh." 
Ely,  H:  S. — Decoramenta. 
Embury,  Emma  Catharine. — T/Ove  Unsought. 
Emerson,  E:  Bliss. — Last  Farewell,  The. 
Emerson,  G.  R.— Baby's  Kiss,  The. 
Emerson,  N.  S. —  Deacon  Munroe's  Story;  or,  Church 
Discipline. 

Deacon's  Confession,  The.     See  Deacon  Munroe's 
Story. 

Deacon's    Story,     The.     See     Deacon     Munroe's 
Story. 

How  Liab  and  I  Parted. 

Thanksgiving  Elopement,  A. 

Two  Christmas  Eves. 

Why  Liab  and  I  Parted.     See  How  Liab  and  I 
Parted. 
Emerson,  O.  F. — To  Wordsworth. 
Emerson,  Ralph  Waldo. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Adirondacs,  The. 

"All  great  ages  have  been  ages  of  belief."     See 
Worship. 

American  Scholar,  The. 

Amulet,  Tne. 

April.     See  May-day. 

April  and  May.     iSee  May-day. 

Art. 

Bacchus. 

Beauty. 

Behavior. 

Books. 

Boston. 

Boston  Hymn. 

Brahma. 

Celestial  Love,  The. 

Character. 

Compensation. 

Concord  Fight.     See  Concord  Hymn. 

Concord  Hymn. 

Concord  Monument  Hymn.     See  Concord  Hymn. 

Days. 

Death  of  Lincoln.     See  Abraham  Lincoln. 

Dirge:  "Knows  he  who  tills  this  lonely  field." 

Duty.     See  Voluntaries. 

Each  and  All. 

Earth,  The. 

Emerson  Alphabet,  An. 

Eros. 

Fable. 

"Fate  of  the  man-child,  The. "     See  Sphinx,  The. 


Emerson,  Ralph  Waldo  {continued). 
Forbearance. 
Forerunners. 

Fragments  on  Nature  and  Life. 
Friendship. 
Give  All  to  Love. 
Good-bye. 
"Great   man   is   always  willing   to  be  little.  A." 

See  Compensation. 
Guy. 

Heart  of  all  the  Scene,  The.     See  Woodnotes. 
House,  The. 
House  of  God,  The.     See  Hymn,  Sung  at  the 

Second  Church,  Boston,  etc. 
Humble-bee,  The. 
Hymn   on   the   Fight   at  Concord.     See  Concord 

Hymn. 
Hymn.     (Sung  at  the  Completion  of  the  Concord 

Monument.)     See  Concord  Hymn. 
Hymn,  Sung  at  the  Second  Church,  Boston,  at  the 

Ordination  of  Rev.  Chandler  Robbins. 
"In  all  our  decisions  and  actions,  it  would  be  well 

for  us."     See  Representative  Men:  Plato;  or, 

The  Philosopher. 
"It  is  the  property  of  the  religious  spirit  to  be  the 

most  refining  of  all  influences."     See  Boston. 
Letters. 
Manners. 
May-day. 
Merlin. 

Mighty  Heart,  The.     See  Woodnotes. 
Monadnoc. 

Mountain  and  the  Squirrel,  The.     See  Fable. 
Ode  Sung  in  the  Town  Hall,  Concord,  July  4,  1857. 
Ode  to  Beauty. 
Problem,  The. 

Representative  Men:  Plato;  or.  The  Philosopher. 
Responses.     See  Problem,  The. 
Rhodora,  The. 
Sacrifice. 

Sea,  The.     See  Sea-shore,  The. 
Sea-shore,  The. 
Snow-storm,  The. 

"So  nigh  is  grandeur  to  our  dust."     See  Volun- 
taries. 
Song  of  Nature. 
Sphinx,  The. 
Terminus. 
Test,  The. 
"There  are  books  which  take  rank  in  our  life  with 

parents  and  lovers. ' '     See  Books. 
Threnody. 
Titmouse,  The. 
To  Eva. 

To  the  Humblebee.     See  Humble-bee,  The. 
Undersong,  The.     See  Woodnotes. 
Uriel. 

Voluntaries,  III. 
Waldeinsamkeit. 

Waves.     See  Fragments  on  Nature  and  Life. 
We  Thank  Thee. 
Wealth. 
"Wise  man  always  shows  himself  on  the  S'de  of 

his  assailants.  The."     See  Compensation. 
Works  and  Days. 
Worship. 
Emery,  G:  D.— Heroic  Deed,  The. 
Emmet,    Rob't. —  Extract   from    the    Last   Speech  of 

Robert  Emmet.     See  On  being  Found  Guilty 

of  High  Treason. 
Last  Speech.     See  On  being  Found  Guilty  of  High 

Treason. 
On  being  Found  Guilty  of  High  Treason. 
Speech  in  His  Own  Defence.     See  On  being  Found 

Guilty  of  High  Treason. 
Speech  of  Vindication.     See  On  being  Found  Guil- 
ty of  High  Treason. 
On  being  Found  Guilty  of  High  Treason. 
Emmett,  Will. — Winnie's  Welcome. 
England,  Rt.  Rev.  J: — Duelist's  Honor,  The. 
English,  Ivy. — Angelic  Song,  The. 
English,  T:  Dunn. — Arnold  at  Stillwater. 
Ballad  of  the  Colors,  The. 
Bankrupt's  Visitor,  The. 
Battle  of  New  Orleans,  The. 
Battle  of  the  Cowpens,  The. 
Ben  Bolt. 
Betty  Zane. 
Browns,  The. 
Charge  by  the  Ford,  The. 
Come  Back. 

Fight,  The.     See  Fight  at  Lexington,  The. 
Fight  at  Lexington,  The. 


447 


English 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


English,  T:  Dunn  {contintied). 

Flag  of  the  Rainbow. 

Game  Knut  Played,  The. 

Johnny  Bartholomew. 

Keep  the  Mill  a-Going. 

King  Dollar. 

Legend  of  Ogre  Qistle.  The. 

Maple. 

Old  Mill.  The. 

Out  in  the  Streets. 

Quarrel  of  the  Wheels,  The. 

Rescue  of  Albret,  The. 

Shoemaker's  Daughter,  The. 
Eno,  Arthur  Llewellyn. — Decision,  A. 
Epictetus. — "Little  watchfulness  over  ourselves.  A." 
Erskine,  Fs.  St.  Clair.     See  Rossltn,  Earl  of. 
Erskine,  J: — De  Gustibus. 

"Love  that  Never  Cold  Can  Be." 

Song,  The. 

To  George  Edward  Woodberry. 

Winter-song  for  Pan. 
Erskine,  T:,  Lord.^Freedom  of  the  Press,  The. 

French  and  English. 

Great  Minds  in  Their  Relations  to  Christianity. 
Esprit,  Jacques. — Man  in  the  Moon  and  I,  The. 
Essex,    Rob't    Devereux,    Earl    of. — Passion     of    my 
Lord  of  Essex,  A. 

Wish,  A. — See  Passion  of  my  Lord  of  Essex,  A. 
"Estelle. "     See  BoGART,  Eliz. 
Esterbrooke,  H:  D. — ^Vengence  of  the  Flag,  The. 
Eton  Magazine. —  "O,  were  I   a   cross  on   thy   snowy 

"Ettrick  Shepherd,  The. ' '     See  H9GG,  Jas. 
"Eureka." — Contentious  Community,  A. 

Evans,  Mrs. . — Night  in  Eden. 

Evans,  Caroline. — Lost  Penny,  The. 

Evans,  Dr.  Heber. — Light  Shall  be  at  Eventide. 

On  Sir  John  Vanburgh — Poet  and  Architect. 
Evans,  Mary  Ann  ("George  Eliot").    See  Cross,  Mrs. 

Marian  [Evans]  [Lewes]. 
Evans,  Captain  Robley  Dunglison. — Yankees  in  Battle, 

The. 
Evans,  Sebastian. — Dirge  for  Summer,  A. 

Seven  Fiddlers,  The. 

What  the  Trumpeter  Said. 
Evarts,  W:  Maxwell. — Centennial  of  1876,  The. 

Dignity  of  Our  Nation's  Founders. 
Eve,  Maria  L. — <3onquered  at  Last. 
Evenus. — Epigram:  "Pest  of  the  Muses,"  etc. 
Evered,  Mary. — Death  of  Hope. 
Everest,  Clare. — Sister  Madeleine. 
Everett,  Alex.  Hill. — Arts  and  Letters. 

Literary  Pursuit  and  Active  Business. 

Young  American,  The. 
Everett,  C:  CarroU. — Imagination  and  Fancy. 
Everett,  D: — Lines  Written  for  a  School  Declamation. 

"You'd  scarce  expect  one  of  my  age."     See  Lines 
Written  for  a  School  Declamation. 
Everett,    E: — Adams  and  Jefferson.     See  Eulogy  on 
Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Advantages  of  Adversity  to  the  Pilgrim  Fathers. 
See  First  Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 

Agriculture  as  Affected  by  the  War. 

American  Experiment  01  Self-government,  The. 
See  Circumstances  Favorable  to  the  Progress 
of  Literature  in  America,  The. 

Battle  of  Bloody  Brook,  The. 

Battle  of  Bunker  Hill. 

Battle  of  Lexington,  The. 

Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

Character  of  Washington,  The. 

Circumstances  Favorable  to  the  Progress  of  Liter- 
ature in  America,  The. 

Civilization  of  Africa. 

Commerce. 

Death  of  Copernicus  [.The]. 

Death  of  Daniel  Webster,  The. 

Dirge  of  Alaric  the  Visigoth. 

Discoveries  of  Galileo.  See  Uses  of  Astronomy, 
The. 

Dizzy  Activities  of  the  Times,  The.  See  Battle  of 
Bunker  Hill. 

Eternal  Clockwork  of  the  Skies.  See  Uses  of 
Astronomy,  The. 

Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Eulogy  on  Lafayette. 

Fathers  of  the  Republic,  The.  See  Eulogy  on 
Adams  and  Jefferson. 

First  Battles  of  the  Revolutionary  War,  The. 

First  Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 

Flag,  The.     See  Battle  of  Lexington,  The. 

Galileo.     See  Uses  of  Astronomy,  The. 

Galileo  Galilei.     See  Uses  of  Astronomy,  The. 


Everett,  E:  (continued). 

Gettysburg.  See  National  Cemetery  at  Gettys- 
burg. 

Great  Issue,  The. 

Great  Lives  Imperishable.  See  Eulogy  on  Adams 
and  Jefferson. 

Immortals,  The.  See  Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jef- 
ferson. 

Imperishability  of  Great  Examples.  See  Eulogy 
on  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Indian,  The.     See  Battle  of  Bloody  Brook,  The. 

Indian  Chief  to  the  White  Settler,  The.  See  Bat- 
tle of  Bloody  Brook,  The. 

Indian  Chieftain,  The.  See  Battle  of  Bloody 
Brook,  The. 

Land  of  Our  Forefathers,  The.  See  First  Settle- 
ment of  New  England,  The. 

Last  Hours  of  Webster.  See  Death  of  Daniel 
Webster,  The. 

Mayflower,  The.  See  First  Settlement  of  New 
England,  The. 

Memory  of  Washington,  The.  See  Character  of 
Washington,  The. 

Meo  and  Deeds  of  the  Revolution,  The.  See 
Principle  of  the  American  Constitutions.  The. 

Men  Who  never  Die.  See  Eulogy  on  Adams  and 
Jefferson. 

Morning.     See  Uses  of  Astronomy,  The. 

National  Banner,  The.  See  Battle  of  Lexington, 
The. 

National  Cemetery  at  Gettysburg. 

Nature.     See  Agriculture  as  Affected  by  the  War. 

On  National  Character.  See  First  Battles  of  the 
Revolutionary  War,  The. 

Oration  on  Lafayette.     See  Eulogy  on  Lafayette. 

Our  National  Banner.  See  Battle  of  Lexington, 
The. 

Our  National  Character.  See  First  Battles  of  the 
Revolutionary  War,  The. 

Our  Relations  to  [or  with]  England.  See  First  Set- 
tlement of  New  England,  The. 

Our  Republic.  See  Circumstances  Favorable  to 
the  Progress  of  Literature  in  America,  The. 

Peace  Congress  of  the  Union,  The.  See  Battle  of 
Bunker  Hill. 

People  Always  Conquer,  The. 

People  Triumphant,  The.  See  People  Always 
Conquer,  The. 

Plea  of  the  Pocomtuc  Chief.  See  Battle  of  Bloody 
Brook,  The. 

Principle  of  the  American  Constitutions,  The. 

Prospects  of  the  Republic,  The.  See  Circum- 
stances Favorable  to  the  Progress  of  Litera- 
ture in  America,  The. 

Stars  and  Stripes,  The.  See  Battle  of  Lexington, 
The. 

Sufferings  and  Destiny  of  the  Pilgrims.  See  First 
Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 

Sufferings  of  the  Pilgrims.  See  First  Settlement 
of  New  England,  The. 

Sunrise.     See  Uses  of  Astronomy,  The. 

Supposed  Speech  of  a  Chief  of  the  Pocumtuc  In- 
dians.    See  Battle  of  Bloody  Brook,  The. 

Temperance. 

Twenty-five  Years  of  Peace. 

Uses  of  Astronomy,  The. 

Vice  of  Intemperance,  The.     See  Temperance. 

Welcome  to  General  La  Fayette. 

What  Good  will  the  Monument  Do?  See  Bunker 
Hill  Monument,  The. 

Wonders  of  the  Dawn,  The.     See  Uses  of  Astron- 
omy, The, 
Everette,  M.  E.  H.— Good-night. 

Mendicants. 

Rebekah. 

Trysting-place,  The. 
Every    Other   Saturday. — Mrs.    Brownlow's   Christmas 

Party. 
Ewen,  J:— Boatie  Rows,  The. 

Ewing,    Jeannie    Pendleton. — How    Larry    Sang    the 
"Agnus."  J 

How  we  Played  "Kmg  William." 

Inventor's  Wife,  An. 

Ringer  of  the  Chimes,  The. 

Story  of  Two  Little  Shoes,  The. 
Ewing,  Mrs.  Juliana  Horatia. — Burial  of  the  Linnet, 
The. 

Gifts. 

Jackanapes. 

Leonard  and  the  V.  C.  See  Story  of  a  Short  Life, 
The. 

Our  Garden. 

Story  of  a  Short  Life,  The. 


448 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Feuillet 


Ewing,  Lucy  Barbour. — Bresca. 

Miss  Agnes. 
Examiner  and  Chronicle. — Jingles. 
Exeter,  T.  B. — Strike  at  Colchester,  The. 
Eyster,  Mrs.  Nellie. — Brave  Aunt  Katy. 
Eytinge,  Marg. — Baby  Louise. 

Countersign  was  Mary,  The. 

Dog's  Cold  Nose,  The. 

Indignant  Polly  Wog. 

Old  Roundsman's  Story,  An. 

Penitent,  A. 

Puzzle,  A. 

Story  of  the  Morning-glory  Seed,  The. 

Weed's  Mission,  The. 


F. — Her  Present. 

F.,  A.  J. — November. 

F.,  C— To  See  Her  Pipe  Awry. 

F.,  C.  W. — Running  a  Race. 

Tear  and  the  Smile,  The.     See  Running  a  Race. 
F.,  E.  S.— Blood-root. 
F.,  I.  N. — Queen's  Year,  The. 
F.,  M.  E.— Birthday  Greeting,  A. 
F.,  O. — "Yesterday  I  dragged  wearily  along." 
Fabbri,  Cora  Randall. — Ladye  Maude. 

White  Roses. 
Fabens,  Jos.  Warren. — 'Twas  off  the  Blue  Canaries. 
Faber,  Frd'k  W:— Aged  Cities. 

Angelic  Songs  are  Swelling.     See  Pilgrims  of  the 

Night,  The. 
Bamberg. 
Come  to  Jesus. 
Evening  Hymn. 
Flight    of    the    Wild    Swans,    The.     See    Prince 

AmadJs. 
Genoa. 

God  of  My  Childhood,  The. 
Heaven. 
"Kind  words  are  the  music  of  the  world."     See 

Spiritual  Conferences. 
Land  beyond  the  Sea,  The. 
Memory  of  the  Dead,  The. 
Names  of  Good   Omen,   Therapia    on    the    Bos- 

phorus. 
Nearest  Friend,  The. 
O,  How  the  Thought  of  God  Attracts! 
Paradise. 
Past  Friends. 

Pilgrims  of  the  Night,  The. 
Preface. 
Prince  Amadis. 
Right  Must  Win,  The. 
Shadow  of  the  Rock,  The. 
Shore  of  Eternity,  The. 

Songs  of  Devotion.     See  Right  Must  Win,  The. 
Souls  of  Men  why  Will  Ye  Scatter. 
Spiritual  Conferences. 
"Therapia.     See  Names  of  Good  Omen,  Therapia  on 

the  Bosphorus. 
"There's  a  wideness  in  God's  mercy."     See  Come 

to  Jesus. 
To  a  Lake  Party. 
WiU  of  God,  The. 
Written  in  Conway  Castle. 
Pagan,  Fannie. — Voice  Within,  The. 
Fahy,  Fs.  A. — Donovans,  The. 
"Irish  Molly  O. 
Ould  Plaid  Shawl,  The. 
Fairbanks,  Constance. — Halifax. 
Junction,  The. 
Those  Far-off  Fields. 
Fairthorne,  Dart. — Early  Autumn. 
Falconer,  Edmund. — Anne  Hathaway. 
Falconer,  W: — Shipwreck,  The. 

Falkland,    Lucius   Gary,    Lord.  —  Ben   Jonson's    Com- 
monplace Book. 
Fane,  Violet.     See  Currie,  Lady. 
"Fanny." — Little  Children  Love  One  Another. 
Fanshawe,  Catherine  M. ^Imitation  of  Wordsworth, An. 
Letter  H.  The. 

Riddle,  A.     See  Letter  H,  The. 
Fanshawe,  Sir  R: — Rose,  A. 
Fanton,  Mary  A. — Annunciata. 

Two  Gray  Wolves. 
Farmer,  Mrs.  Lydia  [Hoyt]. — Fashions  at  the  Court  of 

Queen  Flora. 
Farningham,  Marianne. — Boy's  Hymn,  A. 
Consider  the  Jyilies. 
Daily  Task,  The. 


Farningham,  Marianne  (.continued). 
Drowning  Singer,  The. 

Last  Hymn,  The.     See  Drowning  Singer,  The. 
Morning  Psalm,  The. 
People's  Holidays,  The. 
'Thou  Knowest  Best. 
Farquhar,  — . — Courage. 
Farrah,  M.  J. — Dickens  Gallery,  The. 
Farrand,  Mary  Steevens. — Play  of  Fancy,  A. 
Farrar,  Dean  F:  W. — Greatness  of  Obedience,  The. 
Moral  Courage. 
Public  Opinion. 
Faulds,  Lena  E. — American  Flag,  The. 
Fawcett,  Edgar. — B.  B.  Romance,  The. 
Baby's  Dreams. 
Bird  of  Passage. 
Chorus  of  Anglomaniacs. 
Dead  Friend,  A. 
Dying  Actor,  The. 
Grass. 

House  on  the  HiU,  The. 
Iceberg,  The. 
Memorial  Day. 
My  Little  One. 
Old  Beau,  The. 
Other  Side  of  the  Moon,  The. 
Pipes  and  Beer. 
Roses. 

Tears  of  Tullia,  The. 
To  an  Oriole. 
Toad,  A. 

White  Camellia,  A. 
Wild  Roses. 
Fawcett,  J: — Blest  be  the  Tie. 

Faxon,  Grace  B. — Lecture  Recital:  EUaWheelerWilcox. 
Lecture    Recital:   Three    Women    Poets   of    New 
England. 
Faxton,  E. — Light-house  May. 
"Fay,  Gerda."     See  Gemmer,  Caroline. 
Fay,  Ida. — Surprise,  The. 
Fay,  J.  J. — True  Story  of  Young  Lochinvar  in  Blank 

Verse,  The. 
Fay,  Theodore  Sedgwick. — German  Fire-eater,  A. 
"Faj^et." — Man's  Material  Triumphs. 
Fearing,  Lillian  B. — What  Have  I  Done? 
Felkin,  Mrs.  Ellen  Thorneycroft  [Fowler]. — "For  Bet- 
ter, for  Worse." 
Passion  and  Patience. 
Fellows.  Marguerite  D. — Troubadour's  Song. 
F^nelon,    Francois   de    Salignac    de    la   Motte    (or   la 
Mothe)  de,  (Archbishop  of  Cambray). — Adven- 
tures of  Telemachus. 
Cicero  and  Demosthenes  Compared. 
Telemachus   to   the   Allied    Chiefs.     See    Adven- 
tures of  Telemachus. 
Fenner,  Cornelius  G: — Gulf-weed. 
Fenno,  Frank  H. — Rum  Maniac,  The. 
Fenollosa,   Ernest  Francisco. — Golden  Age,  The. 
Fenollosa,  Mrs.  Mary  [McNeil]  (Mary  McNeil  Scott). 
— Drifting  Petal,  A. 
Flying  Fish. 
Miyoko  San. 
Morning  Fancy. 

Sunrise  in  the  Hills  of  Satsuma. 
Yuki. 
Ferdusi.     See  Firdausi. 
Ferguson,  Jas. — Auld  Daddy  Darkness. 
Ferguson,  J:— Gout's  Errant,  and  what  Cam'  o't,  A. 
Ferguson,  Sir  S: — Aideen's  Grave. 
Burial  of  King  Cormac,  The. 
Cashel  of  Munster. 
Cean  Dubb  Deelish. 
Congal. 

Fair  Hills  of  Ireland,  The. 
Fairy   Thorn,   The. 
Forging  of  the  Anchor,  The. 
Lament  for  Thomas  Davis. 
Pretty  Girl  of  Loch  Dan,  The. 
Ferguson,  Rob't. — Braid  Claith. 
Caller  Water. 
Daft  Days,  The.    . 
Ode  to  the  Gowdspink. 
"Fern,  Fanny."     See  Parton,  Mrs.  Sarah  Fatson. 
Ferrabasco,  Alfonso. — Fain  I  Would. 
Ferriar,  J: — Bibliomania,  The. 
Ferris,  G.  F. — Chickamauga. 
Ferris,  G.  H. — To  a  Spider-web. 
Fertiault,  Frangois. — Domestic  Event,  A. 
'Traitor,  A. 

Triolet  to  Her  Hu.sband. 
Festellis,  Kate  Neely. — Christmas  Time. 
Feuillet,  Octave.— Incompleteness. 


449 


Fezandie 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Fezandi^,  Hector  and  — .  — Canaibal  and  the  Skeleton, 

Field,  Eugene  {continued). 

The. 

Lizzie  and  the  Baby. 

Popping  the  Question. 

"Lollyby,  Lolly,  LoUyby." 

Revenge,   The. 

Long  Ago. 
Lyttel  Boy,  The. 
Nfarsh  Song — Sunrise. 

Ficke,  Arthur  D. — My  Love  and  I. 

Yard  in  December,  The. 

Field,  Mrs.  Caroline  l^slie  [Whitney]. — Two. 
Field,  C:  Kellogg. — Evening  on  the  Campus. 

Naughty  Doll,  The. 

Nellie. 

Four  Valentines. 

Night  Wind,  The. 

God's  Acre. 

Nightfall  in  Dordrecht. 

Hero,  A. 

Norse   Lullaby. 
Margaret:  a  Pearl. 

Ideal  Co-ed,  The. 

In  His  Own  Country. 
Ladye  of  the  Lab,  The. 
Frof.'s  Little  Girl,  The. 

Medieval  Eventide  Song. 

Oh,  Little  Child. 

Old  Man,  The. 

Relapse. 

Our  Biggest  Fish. 

Strategy. 

Our  Two  Opinions. 

Field,  Ellen  R. — Love's  Garden. 

Our  Whippings. 

Field,  Eugene. — Armenian  Lullaby. 

Over  the  Hills  and  Far  Away. 
Peace  of  Christmas-time,  The. 

Armenian  Mother,  The. 

At  Play. 

Piazza,  The.     See  Piazza  Tragedy,  A. 

At  the  Door. 

Piazza  Tragedy,  A. 

Balow,  My  Bonnie. 

Picnic-time. 

Bambino. 

Pittypat   and   Tippytoe. 

Beard  and  Baby. 

Remorseful  Cakes,  The. 

Bell-flower  Tree,  The. 

Ride  to  Bumpville,  The. 

Bench-legged  Fyce,  The. 

Rock-a-by  Lady,  The. 

Bethlehem-town. 

Romance,  A. 

Bibliomaniac's  Prayer,  The. 

Seein'  Things. 

"Booh!" 

Shuffle-shoon  and  Amber-locks. 

Bottle  Tree,  The. 

Shut-eye  Train,   The. 

Boy,   The. 

Singing  in  God's  Acre,  The. 

Brook,   The. 

Sister's  Cake. 

Brook  Song,  A. 

So,  so,  Rock-a-by  So! 

Buttercup,  Poppy,  Forget-me-not. 

Some  "Time. 

Child  and  Mother. 

Song  of  Luddy-dud,  The. 

Christmas  Eve. 

Stoddards,  The. 

Christmas  Treasures. 

Stork,  The. 

Cobbler  and  [the]  Stork  [,The]. 

Story  of  his  Life. 

Contentment. 

Sugar-plum  Tree,  The. 

Croodlin'    Doo. 

Swing  High  and  Swing  Low. 

Cunnin'  Little  Thing,  The. 

Tea-gown,  The. 

Cyclopeedy,  The. 

Teeny-weeny. 

Dead   Babe,  The. 

That    Sugar-plum    Tree.     See   Sugar-plum    Tree, 

Delectable  Ballad  of  the  Waller  Lot,  The. 

The. 

Dibdin's  Gho.st. 

Three  Kings,  The.     See  Three  Kings  of  Cologne, 

Dinkey-bird,  The. 

The. 

Doll's  Wooing,  The. 

Three  Kings  of  Cologne,  The. 

Dream-ship,  The. 

To  a  liittle  Brook. 

Drum,  The. 

To  a  Usurper. 

Duel,  The. 

To  Leuconoe — II. 

Dutch  Lullaby. 

To  the  Fountain  of  Bandusia. 

Eugene  Field  to  His  Children. 

Truth  about  Horace,  The. 

Fairy  and  Child. 

Two  Opinions.     See  Our  Two  Opinions. 

Father's  Letter. 

Valentine,   A. 

Father's  Way. 

Wanderer,  The. 

Fiddle-dee-dee. 

When  I  was  a  Boy. 

Fire-hangbird's   Nest. 

Why  do  Bells  of  Christmas  Ring? 

Fisherman  Jim's  Kids. 

With  "Trumpet  and  Drum. 

Fly-away  Horse,  The. 

Wooing  of  Miss  Woppit,  The. 

Ganderfeather's   Gift. 

Wynken,  Blynken,  and  Nod.  See  Dutch  Lullaby. 

Garden  and  Cradle. 

Field,  Kate. — Charles  Dickens  the  Reader.     See  Pen 

Gold  and  Love  for  Dearie. 

Photographs   of    Dickens'    Readings. 

Good-children   Street. 

Forty  to   Twenty.     See  Heads,   not   Hearts   are 

Googly-goo. 
Grandma's   Prayer. 

Trumps. 
Heads,  not  Hearts  are  Trumps. 

Grandsire,  The. 

Pen  Photographs  of  Dickens'   Readings. 

Happy  Household,  The. 
Hawthorne  Children,  The. 

Field,  Mary  H. — Ezra  and  Me  and  the  Boards. 

Grandfather's  Story. 

Heigho,  My  Dearie. 

Field,  Michael. — ^olian  Harp,  An. 

Hi-spi  [or  spy]. 

Burial  of  Robert  Browning,  The. 

Hugo's  "Child  at  Play." 

Canute  the  Dane.     See  Canute  the  Great. 

Humming  Top,  The. 

Canute  the  Great. 

Hunting  Song,  A. 

Dancers,  The. 

Hushaby,  Sweet  My  Own. 
In  the  Fire  Light. 

Earth  to  Earth. 

Iris. 

Inscription  for  My  Little  Son's  Silver  Plate, 

I^et  us  Wreathe  the  Mighty  Cup. 

Intry-mintry. 

Lettice. 

Japanese  Lullaby. 

Where  Winds  Abound. 

Jest  'fore  Christmas. 

Wind  of  Summer. 

Jewish  Lullaby. 

Winds  To-day  are  Large  and  Free. 

Kissing  Time. 

Field.  Roswell  Martin. — Morning  Bird,  The. 

Krinken. 

To  Leuconoe — I. 

Lady  Button-eyes. 
Little  AU-aloney. 

Fielding,    H:— A-Hunting    We    Will     Go.      See    Don 
Quixote  in  England. 

Little   Boy  Blue. 

Author  and  the  Statesman,  The. 

Little  Blue  Pigeon.     See  Japanese  Lullaby. 

Don  Quixote  in  England. 

Little  Homer's  Slate. 

Grub-street  Opera,  The. 

Little  Miss  Brag. 
Little  Mistress  Merciless. 

Hunting  Song,  A.     See  Don  Quixote  in  England. 

"Oh!  dear!  what  can  the  matter  be?" 

Little  Mistress  Sans-merci. 

Pipe  of  Tobacco,  A.     See  Grub-street  Opera,  The. 

Little  Oh-dear. 

Fielding,  H:.  and  Loveridge,  R: — Roast  Beef  of  Old 

Little  Peach,  The. 

England,  The. 

450 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


FoUansbee 


Fielding,  Howard. — She  Washed  for  Him. 
Fields,  Mrs.  Annie  [Adams]. — <!;edar  Mountain. 

Little  Guinever. 

On  Waking  from  a  dreamless  Sleep. 

Return,  The. 

"Song,  to  the  Gods,  is  Sweetest  Sacrifice." 

"Still  in  Thy  Love  I  Trust." 

Theocritus. 

To  Celia  Thaxter. 
Fields,  Emma.— Tri-colors,  The. 
Fields,  Jas.  T: — Agassiz. 

Alarmed  Skipper,  The. 

Atlantic  Cable,  The. 

Ballad  of  the  Tempest. 

Ballad  of  the  Wicked  Nephew. 

Captain's  Daughter,  The.     See  Ballad  of  the  Tem- 
pest. 

Common  Sense. 

Dirge  for  a  Young  Girl. 

In  a  Strange  Land. 

"Isn't  God  upon  the  ocean   just  the  same  as  on 
the  land?"     See  Ballad  of  the  Tempest. 

Jupiter  and  Ten. 

Lot  Skinner's  Elegy. 

Lucky  Horse-shoe,  The. 

Masters  of  the  Situation. 

Nantucket  Skipper,  The.     See  Alarmed  Skipper, 
The. 

On  the  Ocean.     See  Ballad  of  the  Tempest. 

Owl-critic.  The. 

Patient  Mercy  Jones. 

Rover's  Petition. 

Song  of  the  Turtle  and  Flamingo.     See  Turtle  and 
Flamingo,  The. 

Stars  and  Stripes,  The. 

Tempest,  The.     See  Ballad  of  the  Tempest. 

Turtle  and  Flamingo,  The. 

With  Wordsworth  at  Rydal. 
Fiester,  S.  F.— Rarest  Pearl,  The. 

Under-current,  The. 
Filmore,  L.  (Tr.) — To  a  Poet  who  died  of  Want. 
Finch,  Adelaide  V. — September. 
Finch,  Anne.     See  Winchelsea,  Countess  of. 
Finch,  Fs.  Miles. — Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. 

Decoration  Day.     See  Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. 

Patriot  Spy,  The.     See  Nathan  Hale. 
Smoking  Away. 
Storm — the  King. 
Finch,  J:  Bird. — Con.stitutional  Prohibition  [the  Great 
Remedy]. 
Liquor  Traffic  Antagonistic  to  American  Liberty. 
New  Party  Needed,  A. 
Our  Country's  Needs. 
Finch,  Julia  Nealy. — Unborn,  The. 
Fink,  W.  W. — Courtship  of  Larry  O'Dee.     See  Larrie 
O'Dee. 
Hoosier  and  His  Hanner,  The. 
Larrie  [or  Larry]  O'Dee. 
"Leadville  Jim." 
Little  Tee-hee. 
Marry  Me,  Darlint,  To-night. 
O'Branigan's  Drill. 
Timothy  Horn. 
Finley,  J: — Bachelor's  Hall. 
Finnegan,  Frank  X. — -Guardsman,  The. 
Fish,  F.  W.— Then  and  Now. 

Fisk,  Gen.  Clinton  B. — Address  Delivered  at  the  In- 
dependence    Day     Celebration,     Woodstock, 
Conn.,  July  4,  1888. 
New  Declaration  of  Independence,  A.     See  Ad- 
dress Delivered  at  the  Independence  Day  Cele- 
bration, Woodstock,  Conn.,  July  4,  1888. 
Saloon  in  Politics,  The. 
Fiske,  H.  G.,  Vandenhoff,  G:,  and  Burnham,  C.  L. — 

All  at  Sea. 
Fiake,  J: — Bounding  the  United  States. 
Fitch,  Arden  S.— Bill  and  Bell. 

Fitch,    [W :]  Clyde.  — Captain  Jinks  of   the  Horse  Ma- 
rines. 
Determination. 
Di's  Mitten.     See    Captain    Jinks   of    the   Horse 

Marines. 
My  Phyllis. 
Perfect  Day,  A. 

Rondeau  for  St.  Valentine's  Day. 
Two  Letters  and  Two  Telegrams.         ' 
Unlocked. 
Firdausi  [or  Ferdusi],  Abool-Kasim-Man.soor. — Raja  of 
India  Sends  a  Chessboard  to  Nushirvan,  The. 
See  Shah-Nameh,  The. 
Shah-Nameh,  The. 
Zal  and  JRudabeh.     See  Shah-Nameh,  The. 


Fitzgerald,  Mrs.  E. — Song  of  the  Maple. 
Fitzgerald,  E: — And  Yet — and  Yet!     See  RubaiyAt  of 
Omar  Khflyy^m. 
Ballad  of  Jenny,  the  Mare,  The.     See  Euphranor. 
Because. 
Euphranor. 
Life  and  Death.     See  Rubaiy&t  of  Omar  KhAy- 

y'lm. 
Master-knot,  The.     See  RubaiyAt  of  Omar  KhAy- 

yiim. 
Moving    Finger   Writes,    The.     See   RubaiyAt    of 

Omar  KhAyyAm. 
Old  Song. 
Omar  KhAyyAm.     See  RubaiyAt  of   Omar  KhAy- 

yAm. 
Overture:  "Wake!  For  the  sun,"  etc.     See  Rubai- 
yAt of  Omar  KhAyyAm. 
Paradise  Enow.     See  RubaiyAt  of    Omar  KhAy- 
yAm. 
Phantom  Caravan,  The.     See  RubaiyAt  of  Omar 

KhAyyAm. 
RubaiyAt  of  Omar  KhAyyAm.  (Tr.) 
Flaccus,  Quintius  Horatius.     See  Horace. 
Flagg,  Edmund. — Scotland. 
Flagg,  Ellen  H.— Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. 

Death  the  Peacemaker.     See  Blue  and  the  Gray, 
The. 
Flagg,  W.  D. — Nightmare  of  a  Freshman  Sign  Swiper. 
Flagg,  Wilson. — O'Lincoln  Family,  The. 
Flammarion,  Camille. — Nature. 
Flash.  H :  Lynden. — Death  of  Stonewall  Jackson. 
Flag,  The. 

Stonewall  Jackson.     See  Death  of  Stonewall  Jack- 
son. 
Flatman,  T:— Sad  Day,  The. 
Flaubert,  Gustave.— SalAmmbo's  Appeal. 
Fleming,  Esther. — From  One  to  Six. 

Six  Years  Old.     See  From  One  to  Six. 
Fleming,  Lucy  Randolph. — Wren's  Nest,  The. 
Fleming,  Marjorie. — -Ephibol  on    My  Dear   Love    Isa- 
bella. 
Sonnet  to  a  Monkey. 
Fleming,  Maybury. — To  Demeter. 
To  Sleep. 

What  though  the  Green  I^eaf  Grow? 
Fleming,  Paul.— To  My  Soul. 

"Why  shouldst  thou  fill  to-day  with  sorrow." 
Fletcher,  G.  C— Violin  Fantasy,  A. 
Fletcher,  Giles. — Christ's  Triumph  on  Earth. 
Christ's  Victory  in  Heaven. 
Lady  of  Vain  Delight,  The.     See  Christ's  Triumph 

on  Earth. 
Panglory's  Wooing  Song.     See  Sorceress  of  Vain 

Delight,  The. 
Sorceress  of  Vain  Delight,  The. 
Wooing   Song.      See   Sorceress  of   Vain    Delight, 
The. 
Fletcher,  J.  S.— Out  at  Sea. 
Fletcher,   J:     See    Beaumont    and    Fletcher,    also 

Shakespeare  and  Fletcher. 
Fletcher,  Josiah  H. — Little  Eloise. 
Fletcher,  Mary. — Legend  of  St.  Christopher,  The. 
Fletcher,    Phmeas. — Drop,    Drop,    Slow    Tears.     See 
Hymn,  An: — "Drop,  drop,  slow  tears." 
Hymn,  An: — "Drop,  drop,  slow  tears." 
Litany,   A.      See    Hymn,    An:  Drop,    drop,    slow 

tears. ' ' 
Prize,  The. 
Purple  Island,  The. 

Shepherd's  Life,  The.     See  Purple  Island,  The. 
Stella  and  Mira.     See  Prize,  The. 
Florence,  Ward  M. — Roman  Sentinel,  The. 

Sneezing  Man,  The. 
Florian,  Jean  Pierre  Claris  de. — Flying-fish,  The. 
Flotow,  Friedrich  von,  and  St.  Georges,  Jules  Henri. — 
Gipsy's  Warning,  The.     See  Martha. 
Martha. 
Flowerdew,     Alice.  —  Fountain     of    Mercy!    God     of 

Love! 
Flowers,  Sarah  L. — My  Daughter  Jane. 
Flowers,  Sydney. — Fire. 
Floyd,  May.— Little  Mothers,  The. 
Fobes,  Walter  K. — Agnes  Hotot. 

Daughter's  Love  and  Heroism,  A. 

Hans,  the  Useless. 

Mad  Engineer,  The. 

Prussian  Railway  Conductor's  Story.  {Ad.)     See 

Mad  Engineer,  The. 
Stewart  Holland. 
Susette. 
Foley,  Jas.,  Jr.  — 'Nough  for  Me. 
FoUansbee,  Mitchell  D.— Her  Thanks. 
Rose  at  it  Again. 


451 


Folien 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


FoUen,  Mrs.  Eliza  Lee  [Cabot]. — God  is  Good. 

Kitty  in  the  Basket. 

New  Moon,  The. 

Oh,  Look  at  the  Moon! 

Stop,  Stop,  Pretty  Water. 
Folsom.  Florence. — Linette. 
Fonblanque,  Ethel  d«» — Deserted. 
Fontaine,  Lamar. — Picket  Guard.  The.  (Wr.  at.)     See 

Beers,  Mrs.  Ethelinda  [Eliot]. 
Foot,  J.  N.     See  Fort,  J.  N. 
Foote,  Lucius  Harwood. — Derelict,  The. 

Don  Juan. 

EU  Vaquero. 

On  the  Heights. 

Poetry. 
Foran,  Jos.  Kearney. — Aurora  Borealis,  The. 
Forbes,  Kate  E. — Going  to  be  an  Orator. 
Forbes,  Rixby. — Soliloquy,  A. 
Forbush,  W:  B. — Love's  Day. 
Ford,  Anna  M. — Fox  and  Geese. 
Ford,  Horatio. — Fringed  Gentian. 

Ford,  J: — Awakening  Song.     See  Lover's  Melancholy, 
The. 

Broken  Heart,  The. 

Calantha's  Dirge.     See  Broken  Heart,  The. 

Dawn.     See  Lover's  Melancholy,  The. 

Fancies. 

Love  and  Death.     See  Broken  Heart,  The. 

Lover's  Melancholy,  The. 

Lutist    and   the    Nightingale,   The.     See   Lover's 
Melancholy,  The. 

Musical    Duel,    The.       See    Lover's    Melancholy, 
The. 

Penthea's  Dying  Song.     iSee  Broken  Heart,  The. 

Perkin  Warbeck. 
Ford,  J: — Tableaux  Vivants. 

Ford,  Mrs.  Mary  A. — Hundred  Years  from  Now,  A. 
Ford,  Rob't. — Bonniest  Bairn   in  a'  the   Warl',   The. 
Ford,  S.  V.  R. — Inasmuch. 

Obstinate  Music-box,  The. 

Ocean's  Dead,  The. 

Shouting  Jane. 
Forest  [or  Forrest],  Neil. — Mice  at  Play. 
Forrester,   Alfred   A.   ("Alfred   Crowquill"). — To   My 

Nose. 
Forrester,  Ellen. — Irish  Widow  to  Her  Son,  The. 
Forrester,  Fleta. — Daisy  Time. 

Forrester,  Frances.— Story  of  a  Picture,  The  ("Break- 
ing Home  Ties"), 
forster,  J: — To  Charles  Dickens. 
Forsyth,  Mary  Isabella. — English  Sparrow,  The. 
Fort  [or  Foot],  J:  N.— "Swore  Off." 
Fortunatus,  Venantius. — Passion  Sunday. 
Fosdick,  Harry  E. — Autumn  Leaf,  An. 
Fosdick,  W:  W.— Maize,  The. 
Foss,  Sam  Walter. — Abraham  and  Ephraim. 

Agricultural  Editor's  Poem,  The. 

Art-critic,  An. 

Auctioneer's  Gift,  The. 

Awakening  of  Uncle  Sam,  The. 

Bangs  Family  TeU  a  Story,  The. 

Buster,  The. 

City  Man's  Dream  of   the  Country.     See  Agricul- 
tural Editor's  Poem,  The. 

Cosmopolitan  Woman,  A. 

Country  Summer  Pastoral,  A.     See  Agricultural 
Editor's  Poem,  The. 

1898— and  1.562. 

Fancy  Work  Maiden,  The.     , 

Fate's  Frustrated  Joke. 

Future  in  Front  of  Him,  A.     See  Jim's  Future. 

He  Didn't  Amount  to  Shucks. 

He  Wanted  to  Know. 

He  Worried  about  It.  (TTr.  at.  to  Lyman  Abbott.) 

He'd  Had  no  Show. 

Hullo. 

Ideal  Husband  to  His  Wife,  The. 

Informal  Prayer,  An.     See  Prayer  of  Cyrus  Brown, 
The. 

Is  Little  Bob  Tucked  in? 

Jest  of  Fate,  The.     See  Fate's  Frustrated  Joke. 

Jim  Bowker.     See  Then  Ag'in. 

Jim's  Future. 

Little  Boy  Who  Went  Away.  The. 

Meeting  of  the  Clabberhuses,  The. 

Modern  Martydom,  A. 

No  Hope  for  [English — C]  I.,iterature. 

O'Flaherty  and  John  Stubbs. 

Philosopher,  A. 

Prayer  of  Cyrus  Brown,  The. 

Prince's  Bow  and  Arrows,  The. 

Right  Man  for  the  Place,  The. 

Seth  Peter's  Report  of  Daniel  Webster's  Speech. 


Foss,  Sam  Walter  (continued). 
Song  of  Dewey's  Guns,  The. 
Song  of  the  Cannon,  The. 
Song  that  Silus  Sung,  The. 
Then  Ag'in. 
Town  of  Hay.  The. 
Uncle  Sam's  Spring  Cleaning. 
Volunteer  Organist,  The. 
War. 

Young  Musician,  The. 
Fossett,  P.  C. — Abner's  Second  Wife. 
Foster,    Ardennes    Jones-.     See    Jones-Foster,   Ar- 
dennes. 
Foster,  Cora  Woodward. — Seven  Days  in  a  Week. 
Foster,  Davis  Skatts. — Jack's  Letter  to  Bob. 
Foster,  Fanny.     See  Clark,  Fanny  Foster. 
Foster,  G:  T.— Church  Steps,  The. 
Foster,  Miss  H.  A. — Christmas  Dream,  A. 

Christmas  Eve.     See  Christmas  Dream,  A. 
Foster,  H:  R:— At  the  Window. 
Foster,  Mrs.  Judith  Ellen. — -Woman  in  Politics. 
Foster,  Leonard  C— Wedding  Gift,  The. 
Foster,    Rt.    Rev.    Randolph   Sinks. — Arraignment    of 
Rum,  The. 
Arraignment  of  the  Rum  Traffic,  An. 
Foster,  Stephen  Collins. — Massa's  in  de  [wr.  the]  Cold 
[,Cold]  Ground. 
My  Old  Kentucky  Home  [, Good-night]. 
O,  Boys,  Carry  Me  'Long. 
Old  Folks  at  Home. 

Old  Kentucky  Home,  The.     See  My  Old  Kentucky 
Home. 
Foster,  W:  Prescott. — April. 
Silence  of  the  Hills,  The. 
Fowle,  W:  B.— School  Committee,  The.    , 

Vat  you  Please.  {At.)     See  Planche,  Jas.  R. 
Reading  the  WUl.     {At.  also  to  Epes  Sargent.)    See 

Will,  The. 
WiU,  The. 
Fowler,  C:  H. — Abraham  Lincoln. 
Fowler,  Ellen  Thomeycroft. — See  Felkin,  Mrs.  Ellen 

T.  [Fowler]. 
Fowler,  G.  B.  — My  Christmas  Card. 
Fox,  Annie.  — Voiceless  Chimes,  The. 
Fox,  C:  .las. — Amendment  to  the  Address  of  Thanks 
on  the  King's  Speech  at  the  Opening  of  the 
Session,  Nov.  27,  1781. 
Amendment  to  the  Address  on  the  King's  Speech 

at  the  Opening  of  the  Session,  Nov.  26,  1778. 
Foreign  Policy  of  Washington,  The. 
Liberty  is  Strength. 
Mr.  Grey's  Motion  for  a  Reform. 
On  Overtures  of  Peace  from  Napoleon.     See  Par- 
tition of  Poland,  The. 
On    War    with    France    or    America,    1778.     See 
Amendment   to    the   Address    on    the    King's 
Speech  at  the  Opening  of  the  Session,  Nov.  26, 
1778. 
Partition  of  Poland,  The. 

Results  of  the  American  War.     See  Amendment 
to    the    Address    of    Thanks    on    the    King's 
Speech  at  the  Opening  of  the  Session,  Nov.  27, 
1781. 
Vigor    of    Democratic    Governments       See     Mr. 
Grey's  Motion  for  a  Reform. 
Fox,  G:— County  of  Mayo,  The. 
Fox,  ^bil  L. — Nights  and  Days. 
Fox,  W.  F. — Beneath  the  Surface. 
Fourth  of  July,  1876. 
My  Love. 
Name,  A. 

Our  Sweet  Unexpressed. 
Psalm  of  Hope,  A. 
Reply  to  "The  Welcome." 
To-morrow. 
Transpositions. 
Fox,  W:  Johnson. — Barons  Bold,  The. 
Life  is  Love. 

Martyr's  Hymn,  The.  {Tr.) 
Foxwell,  Mrs.  Mary  E. — -Ilieckoning  with  the  Old  Year. 
Francis.  Lydia  Maria.     See  Child,  Mrs,  Lydia  Maria 

[Francis]. 
Francke,  H. — Blest  Spring  Time. 
Frankenstein,  Gustavus. — Forest  Flowers. 
Frankfort  Yeoman. — Court  of  Berlin,  The. 
Franklin,  B: — ^Don't  Give  Too  Much  for  the  Whistle. 
See  Whistle,  The. 
Federal  Constitution,  The.     See  Speech  in  the  Con- 
vention. 
Franklin  and  the  Gout. 

God  Governs.   See  Motion:  For  Prayers  in  Conven- 
tion. 
Good  and  Bad  Spelling. 


452 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Oale 


Franklin,  B:  (continued). 

Honesty  and  Economy.     See  Way  to  Make  Money 
Plenty  in  Every  Man's  Pocket,  The. 

Letter  to  Benjamin  Webb. 

Letter  to  Samuel  Mather. 

Letter  to  the  Rev.  Dr.  I^athrop,  Boston.     See  To 
John  Lathrop. 

Metaphorical  Papers.     See  Paper. 

Motion :  For  Prayers  in  Convention. 

Paper. 

Parable  against  Persecution,  A. 

Poor  Richard's  Almanac.     See  Way  to  Wealth, 
The. 

Speech  in  the  Convention  at  the  Conclusion  of  its 
Deliberations,  1787. 

Time.     See  Way  to  Wealth,  The. 

To  John  Lathrop. 

Too  Dear  for  the  Whi.stle.     See  Whistle,  The. 

Turning  the  Grindstone. 

Way   to   Make    Money    Plenty   in    Every    Man's 
Pocket,  The. 

Way  to  Wealth,  The. 

Whistle,  The. 
Franklin,  Nora  C— Fiddle  Told,  The. 
Fraser,  J.  A.,  Jr. — Reporter's  Prayer,  A. 
Fraser-Tytler,     Catherine    C.      See     Liddell,     Mrs. 

Catherine  C. 
Frayssinous,    Denis    Luc. — Truth    the    Object  of   All 

Studies. 
Frazer,  J:  D.  J.— Song  for  July  12th,  1843. 
Frazer,  W.  M. — Come,  Sign  the  Pledge. 
Frazier,  A.  O. — Breaking  Home  Ties. 
Frazier'a  Magazine. — ^" Sweet  hand  that  held  in  mine." 
Frederick,  H: — Lines  on  the  Prince  of  Wales. 
Fredericks,  Aaron  W. — Uncle  Ike's  Roosters. 
Freeland,  W: — Nook  and  a  Book,  A. 
Freeman,  Albert  M. — Boating-song. 
Freeman,  E:  A. — William  the  Conqueror. 
Freeman,  Garnet  B. — Four  Lives. 

Retrospection. 
Freeman,  Mrs.  Mary  Eleanor  [Wilkins]. — April  Showers. 

Gift  that  None  Could  See,  The. 

Her  Bonnet. 

It  Was  a  Lass. 

Now  is  the  Cherry  in  Blossom. 

Revolt  of  "Mother,"  The. 
Preeman,  W.  H.— Death's  Head,  The. 

Vat  Have  I  got  to  Pay? 
Freiligrath,  Ferdinand. — Lion's  Ride,  The. 
Frelinghuysen,  Theodore. — Sabbath,  The. 
French,    Frank. — Waiting    to    Grow. 
French,  Mrs.  L.  Virginia  TSmith]. — Palmetto  and  the 

Pine,  The. 
French,  W.  E.  P. — True  Story  of  a  Brie  Cheese,  The. 
Freneau,   Philip. — -Ancient   Prophecy,   An. 

Battle  of  Lake  Champlain,  The. 

Capture   of   the   Guerriere   by   the   Constitution, 
The. 

Death's  Epitaph.     See  House  of  Night,  The. 

Emancipation  from  British  Dependence. 

Epitaph.     See  Fading  Rose,  The. 

Eutaw    Springs. 

Fading   Rose,   The. 

Female  Frailty. 

House  of  Night,  The. 

Indian  Burying-ground.  The. 

Lines  on  the  Death  of  Gen.  Joseph  Reed. 

May  to  April. 

On  a  Travelling  Speculator. 

On  Captain  Barney's  Victory  over  the  Ship  Gen- 
eral   Monk. 

On  the  Death  of  Benjamin  Franklin. 

On  the  Death  of  Captain  Nicholas  Biddle. 

On  the  Ruins  of  a  Country  Inn. 

Parting  Glass,  The. 

Plato  to  Theon. 

Royal  Adventurer,  The. 

Scurrilous  Scribe,  The. 

Song  of  Thyrsis.     See  Female  Frailty. 

To  a  Caty-did. 

To  a  Honey  Bee. 

To  the  Memory  of  the   Americans  who  Fell  at 
Eutaw.     See   Eutaw   Springs. 

Victory  of  the  "Bonhomme  Richard"  over  the 
"Serapis. " 

Wild  Honeysuckle,  The. 
Frere,  J:  Hookham. — Monks  and  the  Giants,  The. 
Friends'   Intelligencer. — Vacant   Places. 
Friends'  Review.  — "  'Let  us  pass  over!'  we  were  far 

astray. " 
Frisbie,  Rev.  A.  L. — Deacon  Kent  in  Politics. 

John  of  Mt.  Sinai. 

Quousque  Tandem,  O  Catilina? 


Frost,  Philip  P.^ — Morning  and  Evening. 

Frost,  S.  A. —  Listeners  Hear  no  Good  of  Themselves. 

Nature   versus   Education. 

Spring,  a  Skeleton   Essay. 

Train  to  Mauro,  The. 

Trees,  a  Skeleton  Essay. 
Frost,  T: — "Attempted  Suicide." 

Frank,  the  Fireman. 

Going  Away. 

Little  Tin  Cup.  The. 

Lydia's  Ride. 

Old  Fire-dog,  The. 
Frothingham,  Ellen. — Opal  Ring,  The.    (Tr.) 

Ring,  The.    (Tr.)     See  Opal  Ring.  The. 
Frothingham,  Nathaniel  Langdon. — Church,  The. 

Communion   Hymn. 

Crossed  Swords,  The. 

Lament,   A. 

Song  of  the  Parcae.    (.Tr.) 
Frothingham,  Rev.  Octavius  B. — Longfellow,  Extract 

Concerning. 
Froude,  Jas:  Anthony. — Coronation  of  Anne  Boleyn, 
The.     See  History  of  England. 

Coronation  Pageant  of  Anne  Boleyn,  The.     See 
History  of  England. 

Death  of  Mary  Stuart.     See  History  of  England. 

Execution  of  Sir  Thomas  More,  The.     See  His- 
tory of  England. 

History.     See  Scientific  Method  Applied  to  His- 
tory. 

History  of  England. 

Scientific  Method  Applied  to  History. 
Frye,  W:  Pierce. — Cuba. 

New  England  Civilization. 

Protection   of  Americans  in   Armenia,   The. 

State  of  Maine,  The. 

Fudy, . — Loss,  A. 

Fuller, . — Our   Federal   Constitution. 

Fuller,  Alice  C— Easter  Drill. 

Fancy  Costume  Drill. 

Triple  Flag  Drill. 
Fuller,   C:   H.— Green   Things  Growing.     {Arr.)     See 

Craik,  Mrs.  Dinah  M.  M. 
Fuller,  Hon.   Frank.— Garfield. 
Fuller,  Marg. — Dryad  Song. 
Fuller,  Melville  W.— Grant. 
Fuller,  T: — Memory. 
Fuller,  Violet. — Christmas  Eve. 

New  Year,  The. 

Old  Year,  The. 

Ring.  Joyful  Bells!     See  New  Year,  The. 
Fuller,  W:  H:— Song  of  the  Sea,  A. 
Fun  and  Earnest. — Lily's  Ball. 
Funk,  Rev.  Dr.  I:  K. — Conscience  in  Politics. 

Go  Forward  to  Victory. 
Furbur,  Harry  S.,  Jr. — To  an  "Instructor." 
Furley,  Catherine  G. — Interlude,  An. 
Furlong,   Alice. — Dreamer,  The. 
Fumess,  W:  H: — Eternal  Light.     See  Nightfall. 

Evening  Hymn.     See  Nightfall. 

Nightfall. 

Remembrance  of  God. 


G. — On  a  Summer's  Eve. 

G.,  A.  R.— "  'Ye  shall  find  the  Babe.'  " 

G.,  E.  P.— My  Mistake. 

G.,  E.  R.— Solitude. 

G.,  M.  E.  W.— Old  Amontillado 

G.,  M.  H. — Nothing  but  Leaves. 

G.,  S.  E.— "Bide  a  Wee,  and  Dinna  Fret." 

Gaiddess,  Mrs.  Mary  L. — Bundle  of  Loves,  A. 

Fortune-teller  and  Maiden. 

Japanese  Parasol  and  Fan  Drill. 

Life's  Day. 

Nursery  Rhymes  Drill. 

Search  for  Happiness,  The. 

Stealing  Roses. 
Gage,  Mrs.  Frances  Dana  [Barker]. — Ben  Fisher. 

Earnest  Cry,  An. 

Home  Picture,  A. 

Housekeeper's  Soliloquy,  The. 

Mother's  Thoughts,  A. 

Rain  upon  the  Roof,  The. 

"  'What  shall  I  do?'     My  boy,  don't  stand  ask- 
ing." 

Year  that  is  to  Come,  The. 
Galaxy,  The. — "I  asked  the  sun." 
Gale,  Martha  Tyler. — Snow-flakes  and  Snow-drifts. 


453 


Oale 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Gale.  Norman. — Born  Dumb. 
Content. 

Country  Faith.  The. 
Dawn   and   Dark. 
Dead  Friend.  A. 
Father  Christmas. 
First  Kiss,  The. 
Lo.st  Friend.  Th« 
Mustard  and  Cress. 
Priest,  A. 

Song,  A:     "First  the  fine,  faint  dreamy  motion." 
Song:     "This  peach  is  pink,  with  such  a  pink." 
Song:     "Wait  but  a  little  while." 
To   My   Brothers. 
Gall,  R:— Mv  Only  Jo  and  Dearie,  O. 
Gallagher,   W:  Davis.— August. 

Autumn,  The.     See  Autumn  in  the  West. 
Autumn  in  the  West. 
Beautiful    are    the    Mountains. 
Cardinal  Bird,  The. 
I..aborer,  The. 

Look  up.  Laborer!     See  Laborer,  The. 
Galpin,  G:  H:— Lie  for  a  Life,  A.     See  Threads  from 
the  Woof. 
Rose  of  Rome,  A.     See  Threads  from  the  Woof. 
Threads  from  the  Woof. 
Gait,  J: — Covenanters  and  Charles  Stuart,  The.     See 
Ringan  Gilhaize. 
Ringan   Gilhaize. 
Galvin,   E'    I. — American   Citizenship,   its    Privileges, 

Rights  and  Duties. 
Gambetta.  Leon. — New  Republic,  The. 

Prussian  Armistice,  The. 
Gamwell.  Sarah  De  Wolf.— What  She  Said. 
Gannett,  W:  Channing. — Aunt  Phillis's  Guest. 
Consider  the  Lilies,  how  They  Grow. 
Highway,  The. 
In   Littles. 
In  Twos. 

Mary's  Cradle  Song. 

Mary's  Manger-song.     See  Mary's  Cradle  Song. 
Old  Love  Song,  The. 
Secret  Place  of  the  Most  High,  The. 
Where  Did  It  Go? 
Garabrant,  Nellie  M. — Dandelion. 
Garden  and  Forest. — Purple  Beech,  The. 

Use  of  Arbor  Day,  The. 
Gardener,  Helen  H. — Lecture  by  the  New  Male  Star. 
Gardette,  C:  D.— Fire-fiend,  The. 

Justice  and  Mercv. 
Gardiner,  Celia  E. — "But  oh!  'twas  hard  to  have  him 

go." 
Gardiner,  Evelyn  Gail. — With  Gleaming  Sail. 
Gardiner,  Ruth  Kimball.— Sloth,  The. 
Gardner,  J. — Cuba. 

Gardner,  W.  L. — Princess  and  the  Rabbi,  The. 
Gardner,  W:  H: — Unknown. 

When  Love  Comes  Knocking. 
Garfield,  Jas.  Abram. — Abraham  Lincoln.    See  Memory 
of  Abraham  Lincoln,  The. 
Appeal  to  Young  Men,  An.     See  Democratic  Party 

and  Public  Opinion,  The. 
Arlington.     See  Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of 

,    Union  Soldiers. 
Arlington  Heights  Oration.     See  Strewing  Flowers 

on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers. 
Decoration  Day  Address.     See  Strewing  Flowers 

on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers. 
Decoration  Day  Address  at  Arlington.     See  Strew- 
ing Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers. 
Democratic  Party  and  Public  Opinion,  The. 
"Even  from  this  brief  review  it  is  manifest  that 
the  nation  is  resolutely  facing  to  the  front. ' ' 
See  Inaugural  Address. 
General  George  H.  Thomas:  His  Life  and  Char- 
acter. 
General  Thomas  at  Chickamauga.      See    General 

George  H.  Thomas:  His  Life  and  Character. 
Golden  Grains. 

Graves  of  Union  Soldiers  at  Arlington,  The.     See 
Strewing    Flowers    on    the    Graves    of    Union 
Soldiers. 
Honest  Money. 
"I  am  struck  with  the  fact  that  Bismarck,  the 

great  statesman  of  Germany. ' ' 
"I  have  seen  the  sea  lashed  into  fury  and  tossed 
into  spray."     See  Nomination  of  John  Sher- 
man. 
Immortality    of  True    Patriotism.     See  Strewing 

Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers. 
Inaugural  Address. 

Inspiration  of  Sacrifice.  The.     See  Strewing  Flow- 
ers on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers. 


Garfield,  Jas.  Abram  (continued). 

Macaulay's  Prophecy.     See  Honest  Money. 

Memorial  Address  on  Gen.  George  H.  Thomas. 
See  General  George  H.  Thomas:  His  Life  and 
Character. 

Memory. 

Memory  of  Abraham  Lincoln,  The. 

Nomination  of  John  Sherman. 

Oliver  P.  Morton. 

On  the  Assas.sination  of  President  Lincoln.  See 
Memory  of  Abraham  Lincoln,  The. 

Province  of  History,  The. 

Public  Opinion  the  Reliance  of  Our  Government. 
See  Revolution  in  Congress. 

Revolution  in  Congress. 

Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers. 

"Strong  men  have  strong  convictions."  See 
Oliver  P.  Morton. 

Success  in  Life. 

"There  are  several  sovereignties  in  this  country." 

"When  the  rough  battle  of  the  day  is  done."  See 
Memory. 

"World's  history  is  a  divine  poem,  The."     See 
Province  of  Histoiy,  The. 
Garland,  Betti^. — When  My  Mother  Tucked  Me  In. 
Garland,  Hamlin. — Bov  Life  on  the  Prairie. 

Do  you  Fear  the  Wind? 

Gift  of  Water,  The. 

Gold-seekers,  The. 

Greeting  of  the  Roses,  The. 

Herald  Crane,  The. 

In  the  Grass. 

Line  up.  Brave  Boys. 

Logan  at  Peach  Tree  Creek. 

Massasauga,  The. 

Meadow  Lark,  The. 

Pioneers. 

Sport.     See  Boy  Life  on  the  Prairie. 

Toil  of  the  Trail,  The. 

Tribute  of  Grasses,  A. 

Uncle  Ethan  Ripley. 

Uncle  Ethan  Ripley's  Speculation.  See  Uncle 
Ethan  Ripley. 

Ute  Lover,  The. 

Whistling  Marmot,  The. 

Wish,  A. 
Garnet,  Jasper. — Give  me  Back  My  Boy. 
Garnett,  Dr.  R: — Age. 

Ballad  of  the  Boat,  The. 

Didactic  Poem,  The. 

Fair  Circassian,  The. 

Highwayman's  Ghost,  The. 

Island  of  Shadows,  The. 

Lyrical  Poem,  The. 

Marigold. 

Mermaid  of  Padstow,  The. 

Nix,  The. 

On  an  Urn. 

To  America. 
Garrett,  E:— Unbolted  Door,  The. 
Garrett,  H.  M. — Country  Cousins,  The. 

Old  Maid,  The. 

Trusting  too  Far;  or.  Learning  by  Experience. 

Trying  to  Keep  up  the   Appearance  of  a  Gentle- 
man. 
Garrett,  P. — Lesson  from  "Fruit  of  the  Spirit,"  A. 
Garrett,  T:  E.— Willie  Clark. 
Garrick,  D:— On  Dr.  Hill's  Farce. 
Garrison,  Gertrude. — Depot  Incident,  A. 

Tenement  House  Guest,  A. 
Garrison,  Theodosia. — God  Save  the  King! 
Garrison,  Wendell  Phillips. — Post-meridian. 
Garrison,  W:  Lloyd. — Abolitionism. 

"Church  of  the  living  God!  in  vain  thy  foes." 

Free  Mind,  The. 

Freedom  for  the  Mind.     See  Free  Mind,  The. 

Keynote  of  Abolition.  The. 

Liberty.     See  Free  Mind,  The. 

Liberty  for  All. 

Sonnet  Written  in  Prison.  See  Free  Mind, 
The. 

Who  are  Responsible? 
Garth,  Sir  S: — Dispen.sary,  The. 
Gascoigne,  G: — Arraignment  of  a  Lover,  The. 

Epilogus.     See  Steel  Glass,  The. 

Lover's  Lullaby,  A,  See  Lullaby  of  a  Lover 
[,  The]. 

Lullaby  of  a  Lover  [,The]. 

Piers  Ploughman.     See  Steel  Gla.ss,  The. 

Steel  Glass,  The. 

Strange  Passion  of  a  Lover,  A. 

Swiftness  of  Time,  The. 

Vanity  of  the  Beautiful,  The. 


454 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Gilder 


Gaskin,  Lida  P. — Playing  School. 
"Gasper,  A. ' '     See  Willson,  Arabella  M. 
Gassaway,  Frank  H. — "Advance." 

Bay  Billy. 

Dandy  Fifth,  The. 

Day  Old  Bet  was  Sold,  The. 

Grand  Advance,  The.     See  "Advance." 

Pride  of  Battery  B,  The. 
Gaston,  W: — Intemperance  of  Party. 
Gates,  Mrs.  Ellen  M.  [Huntington]. — -Beautiful  Hands. 

"How  many  times,  as  through  the  rooms  I  hasten." 

My  Mother's  Hands.     See  Beautiful  Hands. 

Vision,  A. 
Gates,  Merrill  E: — "To  the  school  and  the  college  at- 
taches vast  responsibility. ' ' 

Twentieth  Century,  The. 
Gates,  Minnie  W. — Studious  Girl,  A. 
Gatty,  Alfred  S.  Scott.     See  Scott-Gatty,  Alfred  S. 
Gauss.  E.  F.  L.— Sore  Disappointment.  (Tr.) 
Gautier,  Th^ophile. — Departure  of  the  Swallows. 

Escurial,  The. 

Spectre  of  the  Rose,  The. 
Gay,  Ellerton. — What's  in  a  Name? 
Gay,  J: — Acis  and  Galatea. 

"At  setting  day  and  rising  morn."  {Wr.  at.)    See 
Ramsay,  Allan. 

Ballad:  " 'Twas  when  the  seas  were  roaring."     See 
What  d'ye  Call  it.  The. 

Ballad  from  "The  What  d'ye  Call  it."  A.     See 
What  d'ye  Call  it.  The. 

Beggar's  Opera. 

Black-eyed  Susan.     See  Sweet  William's  Farewell 
to  Black-eyed  Susan. 

Butterfly  and  the  Snail,  The. 

Council  of  Horses,  The. 

Epistle  to  the  Right  Hon.  the  Earl  of  Burlington. 

Fox  at  the  Point  of  Death,  The. 

Hare  with  Many  Friends,  The. 

"How  happy  could  I  be  with  either."     See  Beggar's 
Opera. 

Journey  to  Exeter,  A.     See  Epistle  to  the  Right 
Hon.  the  Earl  of  Burlington. 

Lion  and  the  Cub,  The. 

Miser  and  Plutus,  The. 

Monday:  or,  the  Squabble.     See  Shepherd's  Week, 
The. 

New  Song,  of  New  Similes,  A. 

On  a  Lap-dog. 

Painter  who  Pleased  Nobody  and  Everybody,  The. 

Quidnunckis,  The. 

Shepherd's  Week,  The. 

Song:  "O  ruddier  than  the  cherry!"     See  Acis  and 
Galatea. 

Sweet  William's  Farewell  to  Black-eyed  Su.san. 

Thursday;  or,  the  Spell.     See  Shepherd's  Week, 
The. 

Tuesday:  or.  The  Ditty.    SeeShepherd's  Week,  The. 

'Twas  when  the  Seas  Were  Roaring.     See    What 
d'ye  Call  it.  The. 

Warning,  A. 

What  d'ye  Call  it,  The. 

Wine. 
Gaylord,   Orrie   M. — Heavenly   Foundations. 
Gaylord,  Willis. — Lines  Written  in  an  Album. 
Geary,  Eugene. — Nathan  Hale. 
Geddes,  Alex. — Alexander. 

Lewie  Gordon. 
Geibel,  Emanuel. — To  the  Silent  One, 
Geikie,  Cunningham. — David,  the  Patriotic  King. 

New  Country  Occupied,  "The. 

People  Delivered,  A. 
Gellert,  Christian  Furchtegott. — Amen  of  the  Rocks, 
The. 

Widow,  The. 
Gemmer,    Caroline   ("Gerda  Fay"). — Death    of  Cock 

Robin  and  Jenny  Wren,  The. 
Genlis,    Stephanie    Felicity    Ducrest    de    Saint- Aubin, 

Comtesse  de. — True  Charity. 
Gentleman's  Magazine. — -Choosing  a  Wife  by  a  Pipe  of 
Tobacco. 

Plant  Worship. 

To  a  Pipe  of  Tobacco. 
Geoghegan,  Arthur  G: — After  Aughrim. 

Battle  of  Ardnocher,  The. 
George,  H: — American  Republic:  its  Dangers  and  Re- 
sponsibilities, The. 

Liberty.     See  American  Republic :  its  Dangers  and 
Responsibilities,  The. 
George,    Marg.    Oilman.     See  Davidson,  Mrs.  Marg. 

Oilman  [George]. 
Gerhardt,  Paul. — Dying  Savior,  The. 

Give  to  the  Wind  Thy  Fears.    ' 

Joy  after  Sorrow.  * 


German,  Delia  R  — Wood  of  Chancellorsville,  The. 

Gerome  [or  Jerome],  Nellie  G. — Children's  Offering,  The. 

Gerould,  F.  T. — 'Mid  the  Roses. 

Gerry.  C:  F.— Bluebird,  The. 

Gesnard,  J.  W. — Apostrophe  to  the  Oyster,  An. 

Gibbon,  E: — Decline  and  Fall  of  the  Roman  Empire. 

Description  of  the  Ampitheatre  of  Titus.     See  De- 
cline and  Fall  of  the  Roman  Empire. 
Gibbons,    Jas.,   Cardinal. —  Great   American   Republic 
a  Christian  State,  The.     See  Our  Christian  Her- 
itage. 

Our  Christian  Heritage. 
Gibbons,  Dr.  T:— Eternity. 
Gibbs,  R.  E.— All  in  the  Wind. 
Gibbs,  R.  M.— Night  and  Day. 
Gibson,  Frances  W. — Gowans  under  her  Feet. 
Gifford,  Countess  of. — Love's  Language., 
Gifford,  Will.— Spelling  Down. 
Gilbert,  A.  H. — My  Lady  on  the  Links. 
Gilbert,    Mrs.    Ann     [Taylor]. — Boy   and    the   Sheep, 
The. 

Sorrow  for  Sin.     See  also  Taylor,  Ann  and  Jane. 
Gilbert,  Frank  M. — My  Boy. 

Stray  Sunbeam,  A. 
Gilbert,  Howard  Worcester. — Dirge:  "Of  thy  stream, 

Araelete,  who  reaches  the  shore. ' ' 
Gilbert,  Rosa  [Mulholland],  Lady. — Love  and  Death. 

Saint  Brigid. 

Sister  Mary  of  the  Love  of  God. 

Song:  "The  silent  bird  is  hid  in  the  boughs." 
Gilbert,  W:  Schwenck. — Annie  Protheroe. 

Bumboat  Woman's  Story,  The. 

Captain  Reece. 

Captain  Reece  of  the  Mantlepiece.     See  Captain 
Reece. 

Ellen  McJones  Aberdeen. 

Etiquette. 

Ferdinando  and  Elvira;  or,  The  Gentle  Pieman. 

General  John. 

Gentle  Alice  Brown. 

Lost  Mr.  Blake. 

Medical  Man,  A. 

Mister  William. 

Modest  Couple,  The. 

Perils  of  Invisibility,  The. 

Pygmalion  and  Galatea. 

Sing  for  the  Garish  Eye. 

Story  of  Prince  Agib,  The. 

To  Phoebe. 

To  the  Terrestrial  Globe. 

Unfortunate  Likeness,  An. 

Yarn  of  the  "Nancy  Bell,"  The. 
Gilder,  Jos.  B.— Parting  of  the  Ways,  The. 
Gilder,  R:  Watson. — "After  Sorrow's  Night." 

After-song.     See  New  Day,  The. 

"Ah,  be  not  false." 

At  Four-score. 

At  Luther's  Grave,  Wittenberg. 

At  the  President's  Grave. 

Beethoven. 

Birds  of  Bethlehem,  The. 

Celestial  Passion,  The. 

Cello,  The. 

Child,  A. 

Christmas  H   mn,  A. 

Comfort  of  the  Trees,  The. 

Cradle-song. 

Credo. 

Dawn.     See  New  Day,  The. 

Dead  Comrade,  The. 

Dear  Country  Mine! 

'Each  Moment  Holy  Is.' 

Emma  Lazarus. 

Evening  in  Tyringham  Valley. 

Father  and  Child. 

"Great  Nature  is  an  Army  Gay. ' ' 

Great  Remembrance,  The. 

Hast  Thou  Heard  the  Nightingale? 

Heroic  Age,  The. 

Holy  Land.     See  Celestial  Passion,  The. 

I  Count  My  Time  by  Times  that  I  Meet  Thee.     See 
New  Day,  "The. 

John. George  Nicolay. 

"Love  Me  not.  Love,  for  that  I  First  Loved  Thee." 
See  New  Day,  The. 

Madonna  of  Fra  Lippo  Lippi,  A. 

Midsummer  Song,  A. 

Morning  and  Night.     See  Celestial  Passion,  The. 

Music  and  Words. 

My  Love  for  Thee.     See  New  Day,  The. 

"My  Love  for  Thee  doth  March  like  Armed  Men." 
See  New  Day,  The. 

Napoleon. 


455 


Gilder 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Gilder,  R:  Watson  {continued). 

New  Day,  The. 

New  Patriotism,  The. 

Nool. 

"Not  from  the  whole  wide  world   I  chose  thee." 
See  New  Day,  The. 

November  Child,^. 

Ode:  "I  am  the  spirit  of  the  morning  sea." 

Of  Henry  George  [who  Died  Fighting  against  Polit- 
ical Tyranny  and  Corruption]. 

Of  One  who  Neither  Sees  nor  Hears. 

Oh,  Love  is  not  a  Summer  Mood.     See  New  Day, 
The. 

On  a  Portrait  of  Servetus. 

On  the  Life-mask  of  Abraham  Lincoln. 

One  Country — One  Sacrifice. 

Sheridan. 

Sherman. 

Sir  Walter  Scott. 

Smile  of  Her  I  Love.  The.     See  New  Day,  The. 

Song:    "Not   from  the  whole  wide  world  I  chose 
thee."     <Se«  New  Day,  The. 

Song:  "Years  have  flown  since  I  knew  thee  first." 
See  New  Day,  The. 

Song  of  a  Heathen,  The.    See  Celestial  Passion,  The. 

Song  of  Early  Autumn,  A. 

Sonnet,  The. 

Sower,  The.     See  New  Day,  The. 

Temptation. 

There  is  Nothing  New  under  the  Sun.     See   New 
Day,  The. 

To  Austin  Dobson. 

To  the  Spirit  of  Abraham  Lincoln. 

Tower  of  Flame,  The. 

Twelfth  of  December,  The. 

Voice  of  the  Pine,  The.     See  Celestial  Passion,  The. 

Woman's  Thought,  A. 

"Woods  that  Bring  the  Sunset  Near,  The." 
Gildersleeve,  Mrs.  G.  H. — True  Life. 
Giles,  H :— Cost  of  Liberty,  The. 

Falstaff. 
GimUan,  Rob't.— Exile's  Song,  The. 

'Tis  Sair  to  Dream. 
Gill,  Frances  Tyrell.— Beneath  the  Wattle  Boughs. 
Gill,  Julia. — Christ  and  the  Little  Ones. 

Hannah,  the  Mother.     See  Christ  and  the  Little 
Ones. 
GiU,  W:  M.— Umbrellas  to  Mend. 
Gillespie,  N.  H. — Elocution. 
Gillespy,  Jeannette  Bliss. — Angel,  The. 

Forgiven  (?). 

Seaward. 

Valentine,  A. 
Gillett,  Mrs.  A.  D.— Peril  of  the  Passenger  Train,  The. 
Gillett,  F.  W.— Flag  of  Washington,  The. 
Gillette,  G:  H.— Bashful  Johnny. 
Gillilan,  J.  D. — Safety  in  the  Rock. 
Gillilan,  S.  W. — Finnigin  to  Flannigan. 
Gillington,  Alice  E. — Doom-bar,  The. 

Rosy  Musk-mallow,  The. 

Seven  Whistlers,  The. 
Gillington,  Mary  C.      See  Btron,  Mrs.  Mart  C.  [Gil- 
lington]. 
Gilman,  Mrs.  Caroline  [Howard]. — American  Boy,  The. 

Annie  in  the  Graveyard. 

Child's  Wish  in  June  (?). 
Gilman,  Mrs.  Charlotte  [Perkins]  [Stetson]. — Beds  of 
Fleur-de-lys,  The. 

Common  Inference,  A. 

Conservative,  A. 

Obstacle,  An. 

Similar  Cases. 

Wedded  Bliss. 
Gilman,  H: — Brook  of  Lappington,  The. 
Oilman,  S: — Man  of  Expedients,  The. 
Gilmore,  Jas.  Roberts  ("Edmund  Kirke"). — Darkey's 
Counsel  to  the  Newly  Married. 

Three  Days. 

Uncle  Pete's  Counsel  to  the  Newly  Married.     See 
Darkey's  Counsel  to  the  Newly  Married. 
Gilmore,  Minnie. — Adieu. 

Life. 
Gilmore,  Patrick  Sarsfield. — Columbia. 
Gladden,  Rev.  Washington. — Baby  over  the  Way,  The. 

My  Neighbor's  Baby.   See  Baby  overthe  Way.The. 

Pastor's  Reverie,  The. 

Ultima  Veritas. 
Gladstone,  W:  Ewart. — Bulgarian  Horrors. 

Empire  and  Liberty. 

Eulogy  on  John  Bright,  A. 

Home  Rule  for  Ireland. 

Ireland  to  be  Ruled  by  Irishmen. 

Temper  and  Aim  of  the  Scholar,  The. 


Glanville,  Ernest. — Little  Bugler's  Alarm,  The. 
Glase,  Agnes  E. — Three  Kisses  of  Farewell. 
Glazebrook,  Harriet  A. — L,ips  that  Touch  Liquor  Shall 
Never  Touch  Mine. 

Story  of  Santa  Claus,  A. 
Glazier,  W :  Belcher.— Cape-Cottage  at  Sunsfet. 
Gleason's  Monthly. — Mr.  Blifkin's  First  Baby. 
Glen,  Catherine  Y. — Under  the  Rose. 
Glen,  Irving. — No  Royal  Road  to  Victory. 
Glen,  Jessie. — Fire-fiend,  The. 
Glen,  W: — Wae's  Me  for  Prince  Charlie. 
Globe,  r/ie.— "Keats  Took  Snuff." 
Glover,  E.  C. — Song  of  the  Daisy. 
Glover,  R: — Address  of  Leonidas.     See  Leonidas. 

Ballad  of  Admiral  Hosier's  Ghost. 

Leonidas. 

Polydorus  and  Maron.     See  Leonidas. 
Gluck,  Johann  Christoph  von. — To  Death. 
"Glyndon,  Howard."     See  Searing,  Laura  Redden. 
Glynes,  Ella  Dietz. — Unless. 
Goddard,  Julia. — Hide  and  Seek. 
Godwin,  Parke. — Death  of  Lincoln,  The. 

Edwin  Booth. 

Homes  of  the  People. 

Speech  on  the  Death  of  President  Lincoln.     See 
Death  of  Lincoln,  The. 
Goethe,   Johann    Wolfgang   von. — Beauteous   Flower, 
The.     See  Fairest  Flower,  The. 

Brothers,  The. 

Cavalier's  Choice,  The. 

Country  Life. 

Die  Fischerin.     See  Erlking,  The. 

Effect  at  a  Distance.     See  Page  and  the  Maid  of 
Honor,  The. 

Eloquence  that  Persuades. 

Erlking,  The. 

Erlkonig.     See  Erlking,  The. 

Fairest  Flower,  The. 

Faust. 

Fisher,  The. 

"Future  hides  in  it.  The."     See  Symbol,  A. 

Give  Me  Back  my  Youth  Again. 

Harvest  Song. 

Haste  not,  Rest  not. 

Heard  are  the  Voices. 

Hermann  and  Dorothea. 

Iphigenia  in  Tauris. 

King  of  Thule,  The.     See  Faust. 

Loved  One  Ever  Near,  The. 

Margaret's  Song  in  "Faust."     See  Faust. 

Mignon  Aspiring  to  Heaven.     See  Wilhelm  Meis- 
ter's  Apprenticeship. 

Mignon's    Song    from["Wilhelm    Meister"].     See 
Wilhelm  Meister's  Apprenticeship. 

Minstrel,  The.     See  Wilhelm  Meister's  Apprentice- 
ship 

Page  and  the  Maid  of  Honor,  The. 

Pariah,  The. 

Pink,  The. 

Rest. 

Separation.     See  Loved  One  Ever  Near,  The. 

Seven  Sleepers  of  Ephesus,  The. 

Sincerity  the  Soul  of  Eloquence. 

Sleep.     See  Wanderer's  Night-song,  The. 

Song  of  the  Parcse.     See  Iphigenia  in  Tauris. 

Speech  of  the  Erdgeist  in  "Faust."     See  Faust. 

Sweet  is  the  Pleasure.     See  Rest. 

Symbol,  A. 

Thoughts  from  Goethe. 

True  Rest.     See  Rest. 

Ueber  alien  Gipfeln.     See  Wanderer's  Night-song, 
The. 

Wanderer's  Night-song,  The. 

"When  I  look  around  me  and  see  how  few  of  the 
companions  of  earlier  years." 

"Who  ne'er  his  bread  in  sorrow  ate."     See  Wil- 
helm Meister's  Apprenticeship. 

Wilhelm  Meister's  Apprenticeship. 
Goetz,  Philip  Becker. — Whither. 
Going,  C:  B. — Schoolroom  Idyl,  A. 
Golden,  Carmen. — My  Great  Mistake. 
Golden  Days. — Fireman's  Prize,  The. 

Several  Cats. 
Golden  Hours. — Catacombs,  The. 
Goldsmith,  Goldwin. — Monkey's  Glue,  The. 
Goldsmith,    Oliver. — Ballad,    A:     "Turn,    gentle   her- 
mit," etc.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 

Beau  Tibbs,  His  Character  and  Family. 

Better  Country.  The.     See  Traveller,  The;  or,  A 
Prospect  of  Society. 

Captivity,  The. 

Death  of  a  Mad  Dog.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield, 
The. 


456 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Gospel 


Goldsmith,  Oliver  (continued). 

Deserted  Village,  The. 

Edmund  Burke.     See  Retaliation. 

Edwin  and  Angelina.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 

Elegy   on   Madam[e]   Blaize.     See   Elegy   on    the 
Glory  of  her  Sex,  Mrs.  Mary  Blaize. 

Elegy  on  Mrs.  Mary  Blaize.     See  Elegy  on  the 
Glory,  &c. 

Elegy  on  that  Glory  of  her  Sex,  Mrs.  Mary  Blaize, 
An.     See  Elegy  on  the  Glory,  &c. 

Elegy  on  the  Death  of  a  Mad  Dog.     See  Vicar  of 
Wakefield,  The. 

Elegy  on  the  Glory  of  her  Sex,  Mrs.  Mary  Blaize 
[^vr.  Blaze],  An. 

First,  Best  Country,  The.     See  Traveller,  The._ 

"Good  man  suffers  but  to  gain.  A."     See  Captivity, 
The. 

Great  Man,  A.     See  On  the  Death  of  the  Right 
Hon. . 

Hermit,  The.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 

Home.     See   TraveUer,   The. 

Innocence    Rewarded.     See   Vicar   of   Wakefield, 
The. 

Logicians  Refuted,  The. 

Memory. 

Miser  and  His  Three  Sons,  The.     See  On  Happi- 
ness of  Temper. 

Mr.  The.  Cibber. 

Mrs.    Hardcastle's  Journey.     See  She   Stoops   to 
Conquer. 

National  Decay.     See  Deserted  Village,  The. 

On  Happiness  of  Temper. 

On  the  Death  of  the  Right  Hon.  . 

On  Woman.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 

Parson  Gray. 

Retaliation. 

Schoolmaster,  The.     See  Deserted  Village,  The. 

She  Stoops  to  Conquer. 

Stanzas  on  Woman.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 

Traveller,  The ;  or,  A  Prospect  of  Society. 

Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 

Village    Preacher,    The.      See    Deserted    Village, 
The. 

Village  Schoolmaster,  The.     See  Deserted  Village, 
The. 

"When  lovely  woman  stoops  to  foUy."     See  Vicar 
of  Wakefield,  The. 

Woman.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The. 

Wretch,  Condemned  with  Life  to  Part,  The.     See 
Captivity,  The. 
Oood  Cheer. — Little  Light,  The. 

Tarrytown  Romance,  A. 

Trees  of  Corn. 
Good  Housekeeping. — Choir's  Way  of  Telling  It,  The. 

Harvest,  The. 

Message  for  Mama  in  Heaven,  A.     See  Telegram, 
The. 

Telegram,  The. 
Good,  .1:  Mason. — Daisy,  The. 
Good  Times. — Little  Army,  The. 
Good  Words. — Query,  A. 
Good  Words  for  the  Young. — Why? 
Goodale,  Dora  Read. — Clematis. 

Clover. 

Dark  the  Day  but  Bright  the  Heart. 

Flight  of  the  Heart,  The. 

Grumbler,  The. 

Hail,  Bonny  September! 

High  and  Low. 

"I  love  the  fair  lilies  and  roses  so  gay." 

Invincibles,  The. 

Judgments,  The. 

Only  a  Little. 

Ripe  Grain. 

Soul  of  Man,  The. 

Twilight  Fancy,  A. 

Wait. 

Winter. 
Goodale,  Elaine.  See  Eastman,  Mrs.  Elaine  [Goodale]. 
Goodchild,  J:  Arthur. — Parable  of  the  Spirit,  A. 

Schone  Rothraut. 
Goodfellow.  Mrs.  E.  J.  H.— All  Upset. 

Bird  Talk. 

Books. 

Bumble  Bee,  The. 

Butterflies. 

Casting  Bread  upon  the  Waters. 

Catching  a  Whale. 

Children  Should  Be  Seen  and  not  Heard. 

Country  Girl,  A. 

Dr.  Brown. 

Dolly's  Vaccination. 

Drummer  Boy,  A. 


Goodfellow,  Mrs.  E.  J.  H.  (continued). 

Early  Miss  Crocus. 

Frog  in  the  Throat,  A. 

Going  to  Washington. 

Good-night. 

Gracie's  Cake. 

Grandma's  Spectacles. 

Grandma's  Story  and  Mine. 

Keeping  Store. 

Large  Room,  A. 

Lost  Kitten,  The. 

Lost  Opportunity,  The. 

Maids  of  Japan. 

Mamma's  Helper. 

My  Carlo  Talks. 

My  Ride. 

My  Speech. 

Nose  out  of  Joint,  A. 

Old  and  New  Year,  The. 

Old  Folks.     See  Playing  Old  Folks. 

Packing  the  [Knowledge]  Box. 

Patriotic  Boy,  A. 

Playing  Old  Folks. 

Rainbow,  The. 

Sir  Dandelion. 

Speech  is  Silver;  Silence  Golden. 

Taking  Dolly's  Picture. 

Time  Flies. 

Twilight. 

Twins. 

Two  Kittens. 

Vice  Versa. 

What  Boys  are  Good  for. 

Which  Path? 

Wisdom's  Treasures. 
Goodhue,  Isabel  Seeley. — Modern  Youth,  A. 
Goodman,  Minnie  Buchanan. — Pierrot's  Valentine. 
Goodrich,  Orrin. — Borrioboola  Gha. 
Goodrich,  S:  Griswold. — Lake  Superior. 

River,  The. 
Goodwin,  Grace  Duffield. — Eastern  Legend,  An. 
Goodwin,  Helen  Angell. — Christmas  Guest,  The. 

Death's  Blunder. 

Sick  Rooster,  The. 
Goodwin,  Hqpestill. — "Dear  Love,  I  sometimes  think 
how  it  would  be." 

Golden  Rod,  The. 

May  Flower,  The. 
Goodwin,  J.  Cheever. — Awkward. 

Beggar  and  the  King,  The. 
Goodwin,  Jas. — Her  Satin  Fan. 
Goodwin,  Mrs.  Mary. — Is  it  You? 

Goodwin,  Mrs.  Maud    [Wilder].     See    Bellamy,  Mrs. 
Blanche  [Wilder],  and  Goodwin,  Mrs.  Maud 
[Wilder]. 
Goodwin,  Myra  A. — First  Christmas  Tree,  The. 

Lightkeeper's  Daughter,  The. 

Gordon,  Mrs. . — Hours,  The. 

Gordon,  Adam  Lindsay. — From  the  Wreck. 

How  we  Beat  the  Favorite. 

Lay  Me  Low.     See  Valedictory. 

Romance  of  Britomarte,  The. 

Sick  Stock-rider,  The. 

Valedictory. 
Gordon,  Adoniram  Judson. — Fidelity  to  God  is  Fidelity 

to  Man. 
Gordon,  Armistead  Churchill. — Ebo. 

Kree. 

Kyarlina  Jim. 

Roses  of  Memory. 

Uncle  Newton — A  Pinchtown  Pauper 
Gordon,  Rev.  C:  W.  ["Ralph  Connor"]. — Black  Rock. 

Man  from  Glengarry,  The. 

Ride  for  Life,  The.    See  Man  from  Glengarry,    The. 

Winners  by  their  Own  Lengths.     See  Black  Rock. 
Gordon,  G:  A. — Lessons  from  the  Washington  Centen- 
nial. 
Gordon,  Grace. — Mattie's  Wants  and  Wishes. 
Gordon,  H.  E. — House  not  Made  with  Hands,  The. 
Gordon,  Jas.  Lindsay. — At  the  Concert. 

General  Wheeler  at  Santiago. 

Remembered. 
Gordon,  Jessie. — Only. 
Gordon,  J:  B. — Gettysburg;  A  Mecca  for  the  Blue  and 

Gray. 
Gordon,  J:  H. — When  the  Swallows. 
Gore,  Jas.  F. — Plato  and  Diogenes. 
Gormley,  Jane  E. — Persevere. 
Gormley,  J :  J. — Old  Pipe  of  Mine. 
"Gosling,  Fritz." — Gosling's  Wife  Snores. 
Gospel.  Expositor. — Little  Maid's  "Amen,"  A. 

Story  of  Faith,  The.     See  Little  Maid's  "Amen," 
A. 


457 


GoBse 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Gosse,  Edmund. — Anne  Clough. 

Ballade  to  Banville. 

Browning's  First  Manuscript.     See  Robert  Brown- 
ing Personalia. 

Charcoal-burner,  The. 

Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti. 

De  Rosis  Hibenis. 

Death  of  .\rnkel.  The. 

Hans  Christian  Andersen. 

Impression. 

John  Henry  Newman. 

Leconte  de  Lisle. 

Loss  of  the  Eurydice,  The. 

Love  and  Books. 

Love,  the  Musician.     (Tr.) 

Lying  in  the  Grass. 

On  a  Lute  Found  in  a  Sarcophagus. 

Perfume. 

Pipe-player,  The. 

Return  of  the  Swallows,  The. 

Revelation. 

Robert  Browning  Personalia. 

Song  for  Music. 

Song  for  the  Lute. 

Sultan  of  My  Books,  The. 

Theocritus. 

To  Jenny  Lind. 

Voice  of  D.  G.  R.,  The. 

William  Blake. 

With  a  Copy  of  Herrick. 
Gotthold,  Arthur  F. — Grind's  Dream,  The. 
Gough,  Jacob. — Plea  for  "Castles  in  the  Air,"  A. 
Gough,  J:  B. — Account  of  a  Negro  Sermon. 

Apostrophe   to  Cold  Water.     See  Apostrophe  to 
Water. 

Apostrophe  to  Water.     (At.  also  to  A.  W.  Arring- 
ton  and  to  Paul  Denton.) 

Appeal  for  Prohibition,  An. 

Brother  Watkins[— Ah!]. 

Buying  Gape  Seed. 

Cause  of  Temperance,  The. 

Drunkards  not  All  Brutes. 

Dying  Boy,  The. 

Gape-seed.     (At.  also  toG:W.  Bungay.)     See  Buy- 
ing Gape  Seed. 

Glass  of  Cold  Water,  A.     See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 

Heroes. 

How  to  Break  the  Chain. 

"Intemperance  wipes  out  God's  image  and  .stamps 
it  with  the  counterfeit  die  of  the  devil." 

John  Maynard,  the  Hero-pilot.     See  Pilot,  The. 

Missing  Ship,  The. 

Need  for  a  Prohibition  Party,  The. 

"Oh,  if  every  one  could  put  his  arms  round  one 
other  one." 

Pilot,  The[— a  Thrilling  Incident]. 

Poor  Little  Boy's  Hymn,  The. 

Power  of  Habit,  The. 

Story  of  John  Maynard.     See  Pilot,  The. 

Tribute  to  Water,  A.     .See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 

Water.     See  Apostrophe  to  Water. 

Water  and  Rum. 

"Water!  look  at  it,  ye  thirsty  ones."     See  Apo.s- 
trophe  to  Water. 

"We  must  fight  this  temperance  battle  out.  ' 

What  is  a  Minority? 

Word  to  Young  Alen,  A. 
Gould,  B.  A.,  Jr. — Candida. 

Drinking  Song. 

Elsinore. 
Gould,  Cornelia  Brownell. — Dive,  The. 
Gould,  Afr«.  Hannah  Frances  [Flagg].— Aurora  Borealis, 
The. 

Crocus's  Soliloquy,  The. 

Frost,  The. 

Ground  Laurel,  The. 

It  Snows. 

Jack  Frost.     See  Frost,  The. 

Name  in  the  Sand,  A.     (At.  also  to  G:T).  Prentiss.) 

Peach  Blossoms. 

Pebble  and  the  Acorn,  The. 

Storm  in  the  Forest,  The. 

Wild  Violet,  The. 

Winds,  The. 
Gould,  Sabine  Baring.     See  Baring-Gould,  Sabine. 
Gould,  T.  H.— Rhapsody,  A. 

Gouraud,  G:  Fauvel. — Little  Nipper  an'  'is  Ma,  The. 
Gow,  Minnie  For  Winnie]  M. — Baby  in  Church. 
Gowdy,  J: — To  a  Friend. 

Gower,  .J: — Alexander  and  the  Robber.     iSee  Confessio 
Amantis,  The. 

Cinkante  Balades,  Opening  of  the  thirtieth  of. 

Confessio  Amantis,  The. 


Gower,  J:  (continued). 
Nebuchadnezzar. 
Opening  of  the  Original  Prologue  to  the  "Confessio 

Amantis." 
Story  of  Constance,  The.     See  Confessio  Amantis, 
the. 
Grady,  H:  W. — Against  Centralization. 
Appeal  for  Temperance. 
At  the  Boston  Banquet. 
Before  the  Bay  State  Club. 

Bob.  See  "Bob."  How  an  Old  Man  "Came  Home." 
"Bob."  How  an  Old  Man  "Came  Home." 
Business  Side  of  Prohibition,  The.     See  Prohibi- 
tion in  Atlanta. 
Centralization  in  the  United  States.     See  Against 

Centralization. 
Confederate  Soldier,  The.     See  New  South,  The. 
Farmer  and  the  Cities,  The. 
Future  of  the  South,  The.     See  South  and  her 

Problems,  The. 
Home,  The.     See  Before  the  Bay  State  Club. 
Home  in  the  Government,  The.     See  Farmer  and 

the  Cities,  The. 
Homes  of  the  People,  The.     See  Before  the  Bay 

State  Club. 
Lincoln  as  Cavalier  and  Puritan.     See  New  South, 

The. 
Love  and  Loyalty  of  the  Negro.     See  At  the  Bos- 
ton Banquet. 
Love  of  Home,  The.     See  Against  Centralization. 
Negro  Problem,  The.     See  At  the  Boston  Banquet. 
New  South,  The. 

New  South,  The.     See  also  South  and  her  Prob- 
lems, The. 
Old  and  the  New  South,  The.    See  New  South,  The. 
Opportunities  of  the  Scholar.     See  Against  Cen- 
tralization. 
Prohibition  a  Blessing  to  the  Poor.     See  Prohibi- 
tion in  Atlanta. 
Prohibition  in  Atlanta. 
Regard  for  the  Negro  Race.     See  At  the  Boston 

Banquet. 
Scene  on  the  Battlefield,  A.     See  South  and  her 

Problems,  The. 
South  and  her  Problems,  The. 

Southern  Negro,  The.    See  At  the  Boston  Banquet. 
Southern  Soldier,  The.     See  New  South,  The. 
University  the  Training  Camp  of  the  Future,  The. 
See  Against  Centralization, 
Graff,  G:  R. — Napoleon  at  the  Pyramids. 
Graham,  Arthur. — King  Christmas. 

Woman's  "No,"  A. 
Graham,  G:  C. — Aspirant  for  Fame,  An. 
Astonishing  the  Natives. 
■    Book-peddler,  The. 
Burglar  Alarm,  The. 
Critics,  The. 
Doctor  by  Proxy,  A. 
Elocution  Class,  The. 
Empty  Hou.se,  The. 
Expected  Visitors,  The. 
Extremes  Meet. 
Girl  of  the  Period,  The. 
Going!  Going!  Gone! 
Indian  Raid,  An. 
Love  and  Stratagem. 
Missed  His  Chance. 
New  Boy,  The. 
Nightmare  of  India,  A. 
Photograph  Gallery,  The. 
Picnic  Party,  The. 
Strategy. 

Turning  the  Tables. 
Which  was  the  Hero? 
Graham,  R.  P. — Spring-time.     See  'Tis  Spring-time. 

'Tis  Spring-time. 
Graham,    Rob't    [Cunninghame],    of    Gartmore.  —  If 
Doughty  Deeds  [My  Lady  Please]. 
Tell   me    How   to   Woo   Thee.     See    If   Doughty 

Deeds  My  Lady  Please. 
To  His  Lady.     See  If  Doughty  Deeds  My  Lady 
Please. 
Graham,  Sarah  M. — New  Woman  Considered,  The. 
Grahame,  Jas. — Sabbath,  The. 

Seasons,  The.     (?) 
Graham's    Magazine. —  Cho-Che-Bang    and    Chil-Chil- 

Bloo. 
"Grange,  Olrig." — "But  all  through  life  I  see  a  cross." 
Granni.ss,  Anna  Jane.— My  Guest. 

Saints'  Messenger,  The. 
Grant.  Anne. — On  a  Sprig  of  Heath. 
Grant,  C:— Little  Willie. 
Grant,  P: — When  the  Bloom  is  on  the  Heather. 


458 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Greene 


Grant,  Rob't. — Boat  Race,  The  [or  A].     See  Jack  Hall. 

Jack  Hall;  or,  The  School  Days  of  an  American 
Boy. 

Jack  Hall's  Boat-race.     See  Jack  Hall. 

Popping  the  Question. 
Grant.StVRob't.- — Hymn :  '"When  gathering  clouds, "etc. 

Litany. 

When   Gathering    Clouds    around  I    View.      See 
Hymn:  "When,"  etc. 
Grant,  Susan. — June. 

Stupid  Grown  Ups,  The. 
Grant,  Ulysses  Simpson. — General  Grant  to  the  Army 
—1865. 

Speech  at  Hamburg,  July  4. 

What  Saved  the  Union.     See  Speech  at  Hamburg, 
July  4. 
Grattan,  H: — Anti-Union  Speeches. 

Appeal  for  Ireland. 

Catholic  Question,  The,  Feb.  22,  179.3. 

Catholic  Question,  The,  May  13,  1805. 

Catholic  Question,  The,  May  31,  1811. 

Catholic  Question,  The,  April  23,  1812. 

Character  of  Mr.  Pitt.     (Wr.  at.  to  W:  Robertson.) 

Declaration  of  Irish  Rights. 

Disqualification  of  Roman  Catholics.     See  Cath- 
olic Question,  The,  Feb.  22,  1793. 

First   Earl  of  Chatham,  The.     See  Character  of 
Mr.  Pitt. 

Heaven  Fights  on  the  Side  of  a  Great  Principle. 

Invective  against  [Mr  J  Corry. 

Invective  again.st  Mr.  Flood.    See  Philippic  Against 
Flood. 

National    Gratitude.     See    Declaration    of    Irish 
Rights. 

Philippic  against  Flood,  Oct.  28,  1783. 

Religion  Independent  of  Government.     See  Cath- 
olic Question,  The,  May  31.  1811. 

Reply  to  Flood.     See  Philippic  against  Flood. 

Reply    to    Mr.    Corry.       See     Invective    against 
Corry. 

Reply  to  Mr.  Flood.     See  Philippic  against  Flood. 

Sectarian  Tyranny,  1812.     See  Catholic  Question, 
The,  April  2.3,  1812. 

Union     with     Great     Britain.     See     Anti-Union 
Speeches. 

Wrongs    of    Ireland.     See    Declaration    of    Irish 
Rights. 
Graves,  Alfred  Perceval. — Battle  of  the  Boyne,  The. 
{Arr.)     See  Boyne  Water,  The. — Anon. 

Changing  Her  Mind. 

Fan  Fitzgerl. 

Father  O'Flynn. 

Fortune  my  Foe. 

Girl  with  the  Cows,  The. 

Herring  is  King. 

Irish  Lullaby. 

Irish  Spinning-wheel,  The. 

Johnny  Cox. 

Limerick  Las.ses,  The. 

Ould  Doctor  [or  Docther]  Mack. 

Rose  of  Kenmare,  The. 

Sailor  Girl,  The. 

Song  of  the  Exmoor  Hunt,  A. 

Song  of  the  Ghost,  The. 

White  Blossom's  off  the  Bog,  The. 

Wreck  of  the  Aideen,  The. 
Graves,  Clo. — Broken  Sonnet,  A. 
Graves,  Will  L. — Chansonette. 

Sic  Semper. 
Gray,  Alice. — Noblest  Hero,  The. 
Gray,  Arthur  I. — "Free  Puff,  A." 
Gray,  Barry.     See  Coffin,  Rob't  Barry. 
Gray,  Barton. — At  your  Gate. 

Drifting  Away. 
Gray,  D:— Cross  of  Gold,  The. 

Dear  Old  Toiling  One,  The. 

Die   Down,    O   Dismal   Day.     See   Sonnet:   "Die 
down,"  &c.  , 

Divided. 

Golden  Wedding,  The. 

Homesick. 

I  Die,  Being  Young. 

John  Milton.     See  Progress  of  Poesy,  The. 

My  Epitaph. 

O  Winter  1  Wilt  Thou  Never  Go? 

On  Lebanon. 

Sonnet:  "Die  down,"  etc. 
Gray,    Eleanor. — -"We   walk   alone    through    all   life's 

various  ways." 
Gray,  Elliot.— Triolets:    To  Her  Whom  I  Call  Rose. 
Gray,  H:  D:— Record  of  a  Life,  The. 
Gray,  Mrs.  Jane  L. — Morn. 
Gray,  Maxwell.     See  'Tuttiett,  Miss  M.  G. 


Gray,  T:— Bard,  The. 

Cur.se  upon  Edward,  The.     See  Bard,  The. 

Elegy  in  a  Country  Churchyard.  See  Elegy 
Written  in  a  Country  Churchyard. 

Elegy  Written  in  a  Country  Churchyard. 

Eton  College.  See  On  a  Distant  Prospect  of  Eton 
College. 

Fatal  Sisters,  The. 

Hymn  to  Adversity. 

Impromptu,  on  Lord  Holland's  Seat  at  Kings- 
gate. 

Ode  on  a  Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College.  See 
On  a  Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College. 

Ode  on  the  Pleasure  Arising  from  Vicissitude. 

Ode:  On  the  Spring. 

On  a  Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College. 

On  a  Favorite  Cat,  Drowned  in  a  Tub  of  Gold- 
fishes. See  On  the  Death  of  a  Favorite  Cat, 
etc. 

On  the  Death  of  a  Favorite  Cat  [Drowned  in  a  Tub 
of  Goldfishes— C.]. 

On  the  Spring.     See  Ode:  On  the  Spring. 

Progress  of  Poesy,  The. 

Sketch  of  His  Own  Character. 

Sonnet  on  the  Death  of  Mr.  Richard  West. 

Spring.  See  Ode  on  the  Pleasure  arising  from 
Vicissitude. 

Spring.     See  also  Ode:  On  the  Spring. 

"Thoughtless  world  to  majesty  may  bow,  The." 
Greeley,  Horace. — Ambition. 

Self-.sacrificing  Ambition.     See  Ambition. 

Reformer,  The. 
Green,  Anna  Katha.     See  Rohlfs,  Mrs.  Anna  Katha. 

[Green]. 
Green,  Annie  D.  ("Marian  Douglas").     See  Robinson, 

Mrs.  Annie  Douglas  [Green]. 
Green,  Arthur  Leslie. — Life's  Greeting. 
Green,  Corcebus. — Ballad  of  Cassandra  Brown,  The. 
Green,  J:  R :— Death  of  Elizabeth,  The. 
Green,  Matthew. — On     Barclay's     Apology     for     the 
Quakers. 

Spleen,  The. 

Voyage  of  Life,  The.     See  Spleen,  The." 
Green,  R.  M. — -Valentine,  A. 
Green,  S:  Abbott. — Old  State  House,  Boston  (Rededi- 

cated,  1882),  The. 
Greenaway,  Kate. — Lark,  Flower,  Sun,  and  Shower. 
Greene,  Albert  Gorton. — Baron's  Last  Banquet,  The. 

Old  Grimes. 
Greene,  Belle  C. — Our  Weddin'-day. 
Greene,  Clara  Marcelle. — A  la  Mode. 
Greene,  G:  Arthur. — Art  Lough. 

Lines:  "Surely  a  Voice  hath  called  her  to  the  deep." 

On  Great  Sugarloaf. 

Return,  The. 
Greene,  Homer. — Bobby  Shaftoe. 

De  Quincey's  Deed. 

My  Daughter  Louise. 

What  My  I^over  Said. 
Greene,  Rob't. — Content.     See  Farewell  to  Follie. 

Contentment.     See  Farewell  to  Follie. 

"Cupid  abroad  was  'lated  in  the  night."  See  Son- 
net: "Cupid,"  etc. 

Cupid's  Ingratitude.     See  Sonnet:  "Cupid,"  etc. 

Description  of  the  Shepherd  and  His  Wife,  The. 
See  Mourning  Garment,  The. 

Doron's  Description  of  Samela.     See  Menaphon. 

Doron's  Eclogue  Joined  with  Carmela's.  See 
Menaphon. 

Doron's  Jig.     See  Menaphon. 

Farewell  to  Follie. 

Fawnia.     See  Praise  of  Fawnia,  The. 

Hero  and  Leander. 

Infida's  Song.     See  Never  too  Late. 

Menaphon. 

Menaphon's  Roundelay.     See  Menaphon. 

Menaphon's  Song.     See  Menaphon. 

Mourning  Garment,  The. 

Never  too  Late. 

Orpharion,  The. 

Orpheus'  Song.     See  Orpharion,  The. 

Palmer's  Ode,  The.     See  Never  too  Late. 

Pandosto.     See  Praise  of  Fawnia,  The. 

Philomela,  the  Lady  Fitzwater's  Nightingale. 

Philomela's  Ode[  that  she  Sung  in  her  Arbour — C.]. 
See  Philomela,  the  Lady  Fitzwater's  Nightin- 
gale. 

Philomela's  Second  Ode.  See  Philomela,  the  Lady 
Fitzwater's  Nightingale. 

Praise  of  Fawnia,  The. 

Samela.     See  Menaphon. 

Sephestia's  Lullaby.     See  Menaphon. 

Sephestia's  Song  to  her  Child.     See  Menaphon. 


459 


Greene 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Greene,  Rob't  (continued). 

Shepherd  and  the  King,  The.     iSe«  Mourning  Gar- 
ment, The. 

Shepherd's  Wife's  Song,  The.     See  Mourning  Gar- 
ment, The. 

Song:  "Sweet  are  the  thoughts  that  savour  of  con- 
tent."    See  Earewell  to  Follie. 

Sonnet:  "Cupia  abroad  was  'lated  in  the  night." 

Sweet  Content.     See  Farewell  to  Follie. 

We^  not,  My  Wanton.     See  Menaphon. 
Greene,  Roy  Farrell. — In  the  Choir. 

My  Sister  has  a  Beau. 

Post-nuptial  Reverie,  A. 
Greene,  Mrs.  Sarah  Pratt  [McLean]. — Cape  Cod  Folks. 

De  Massa  ob  de  Sheepfol'. 

De  Sheepfol'.     See  De  Massa  ob  de  Sheepfol'. 

Grandma  Keeler  gets  Grandpa  Keeler  Ready  for 
Sunday  School.     See  Cape  Cod  Folks. 

Hoss. 

Lamp,  The. 

Lost  Sheep,  The.     See  De  Massa  ob  de  Sheepfol'. 
Greenhalge,  F.  T. — Age  of  Miles  Standish,  The. 
Greenleaf,  Mrs.  J.  T. — Mistake,  A. 
Greenleaf,  Lawrence   M. — Temple   of   I^iving   Masons, 

The. 
Greenleaf,  Thorpe.     "Again  we  lift  the  veil  amid  our 

tears." 
Greenough,  Emma  P. — Chalcedony. 
Greenslet,  Ferris.— Chappie's  Lament. 

On  the  Weather. 

Whan  Gladys  Plays. 
Green  well,  Dora. — Christmas  Morning. 

Dying  Child,  The. 

Good-night,  Good-by. 

Home. 

Little  Girl's  Lament,  The. 

"Should  I  not  Love  My  Flowers?" 

Song  of  Farewell,  A. 

Story  by  the  Fire,  A. 

To  Christina  Rossetti. 
"Greenwood,    Grace."      Sei   Lippincott,    Mrs.  Sara 

Jane  fCLARKE]. 
Greg,  Walter  Wilson.^-On    the    Tomb    of   Guidarello 

Guidarelli  at  Ravenna. 
Gregg,  Helen  A. — Telephone  Conversation,  A. 
Gregg,  Lucinda  J. — Boston  Grasshopper,  The. 
Gregg,  Rob't  Etheridge. — Love  and  the  Sea. 
Gregory,  C:  N. — Two  Men. 

Gregory,  Sue. — Three  Leaves  from  a  Boy's  Diary. 
Gregory  the  Great.  See  St.  Gregory  the  Great. 
Gregory,  Warren  Fenno. — Broken  Banjo,  The. 

Love's  Roses. 
Gregson,  .1:  Stanley. — Virginia  Tobacco.     (At.) 
Greville,  A  :-^-Sweetheart. 
Greville,  Fanny. — Prayer  for  Indifference. 
Greville,  Fulke.     See  Brooke,  Lord. 
Grevstad,  Nickolay. — Nansen. 

Grey,  C:,  second  Earl. — Necessity  of  Reform  in  Parlia- 
ment. 
Grey,  Ethel.— She  is  so  Pretty.     ( Tr.) 
Grey,  Hamilton. — And  the  Hammock  Swimg  On. 
Grey,  Lilian. — His  Riches. 
Griffin,  B.  F. — Springtime. 
Griffin,  Gerald.— Bridal  of  Malahide,  The. 

C6ad,  Mile  FMte,  Elim!     See  Invasion,  The. 

Eileen  Aroon. 

Gjle  Machree. 

God's  Love. 

Invasion,  The. 

Nocturne. 

Place  in  Thy  Memory,  A.     See  Song:  "A  place," 
etc. 

Scene  in  an  Irish  School. 

Sister  of  Charity,  The. 

Song:  "A  place  in  thy  memory,  dearest." 

"There's  not  a  flower  that  decks  the  vale."    See 
God's  Love. 

Wake  of  the  Absent,  The. 
Griffin,  W.  M. — Pat's  Correspondence. 
Griffith,  B.  L.  C— Afternoon  Tea.  An. 

Between  the  Acts. 

Cloudy  Day,  A. 

Darling  Jennie. 

For  Her  Sake. 

Forget-me-nots. 

His  First  Case. 

His  Wedding  Mom. 

In  Imminent  Peril. 

Pro  Tem. 

Slight  Miscalculation,  A. 

Soldier's  R«turn,  The. 

Wanted,  a  Valet. 

Where  was  I? 


Griffith,  E.  M.— Old  Cradle,  The. 

Griffith,  G:  Bancroft. — Our  Fallen  Heroes. 

Griffiths,  Charlotte  M. — Wedding  Bells. 

Grigg,  Jos. — "Ashamed  of  Me." 

Griggs,  J:  W. — Ideal  Lawyer,  The. 

Grimald,  N: — True  Love,  A. 

Grimke,  T:  Smith. — Duty  of  Literary  Men  to  America. 

Duty   of   Literary   Men   to   Their  Country.     See 
Duty  of  Literary  Men  to  America. 

Our  Coimtry.  See  Duty  of  Literary  Men  to  America. 

Sword,  The. 
Grimshaw,  W:^-Stamp  Act,  The. 
Grinfield,  T: — "Oh,  how  kindly  hast  Thou  led  me." 
Gris,  . — Hans  von  Speigel's  Fourth  of  July  Ora- 
tion. 
Grisham,  G:  Edgar. — Give  Me  Rest. 
Grissem,  A: — Artist,  The. 

Ballade  of  Forgotten  Loves. 
Griswold,  Arthur  Mmer  ("Our  Fat  Contributor"). 

Dream  of  the  "Fat  Contributor." 

"Fat  Contributor"  on  Insurance  Agents,  The. 

Showing  off  an  Elocutionist. 

Snyder's  Nose. 
Griswold,  Carolina. — Beautiful  Snow,  The. 
Griswold,  Eliz.  M. — Freedom's  Natal  Day. 
Griswold,  Mrs.  Hattie  [Tyng]. — "Birkenhead,"  The. 

Gwendolen. 

Under  the  Daisies. 
Groser,  W.  H. — Trees  of  the  Bible. 
Grossmith,  G:— He  Told  Me  So. 
Grosvenor,  Edwin  A. — Andronike.     (Tr.) 

Last  Night  of  Misolonghi.     See  Andronike. 
Grosvenor,  Gilbert  H. — Russia  the  Enigma  of  Europe. 
Grosvenor,  Mary  H. — Thanksgiving  Guest,  The. 
Grove,  Helen  W. — Grammar  Lesson,  A. 
Grover,  Edwin  Osgood. — Banquet  Song,  A. 

Summer  Girl,  The. 
Gruchy,  Augusta  de. — At  the  Dance. 

Love  is  a  Tree. 
Grundy,  Sidney.— Clock  at  Berne,  The. 
Guild,  'Thatcher  H. — My  Rose  and  Hers. 
Guiney,  Louise  Imogen. — Florentin. 

Footnote  to  a  Famous  Lyric. 

In  Leinster.     See  Two  Irish  Peasant  Songs. 

Ivondon. 

M.  A.,  1822-1888. 

Martyr's  Memorial. 

Ode  for  a  Master  Mariner  Ashore. 

Of  Joan's  Youth. 

On  First  Entering  Westminster  Abbey.     See  Lon- 
don. 

Pax  Paganica.     See  M.  A.,  1822-1888. 

Provider,  The. 

Rings,  The. 

Sanctuary. 

Song  in  Leinster.     See  Two  Irish  Peasant  Songs. 

Summum  Bonum. 

Talisman,  A. 

Tarpeia. 

Two  Irish  Peasant  Songs. 

Valse  Jeune. 

Wild  Ride,  The. 
Guiterman,  A. — Call  to  the  Colors,  The. 
Gummere,  Fs.  Barton.— John  Bright. 
Gimdry,  Arthur  W. — My  Cigar. 
Gunnison,  E.  Norman. — Betty  Lee. 

Old  Huldah. 

Women  of  Marblehead,  The.     See  Old  Huldah. 
Gtmsaulus,    Rev.    Dr.     Frank    Wakeley. — Centennial 
Speech. 

Grant. 
Gurley,  Rev.  P.  D. — Religious  Character  of  President 

Lincoln,  The. 
Gumey,  Archer. — Come,  Ye  Lofty. 
Gustavus  Vasa. — Gustavus  Vasa  to  the  Dalecarlians. 
(At.)     See  Lefevre,  Pierre  F. 

Gusun,  Mrs. . — Myself. 

Guthrie,  Fs.  Anstey  ("F.  Anstey"). — Burglar  Bill. 

Obstructive  Hat  in  the  Pit,  The. 

Wooing  of  the  Lady  Amabel. 

Wreck  of  the  Steamship  "Puffin,"  The. 
Guthrie,  T: — Kneeling  at  the  Threshold. 
Gwynn,  Stephen  L. — Mater  Severa. 

Out  in  the  Dark. 
Gyles,  Althea. — Sjonpathy. 

H 

H. — Message,  A. 

Pure  and  True  and  Tender. 
H.,  B.  O.— Evidence. 
H.,  C. — Her  Answer. 


460 


AUTHOR  mDEX 


Hallam 


H.,  C.-F. — Our  Wrongs. 
H.,   E.-^jieorge  Nidiver. 
H.,  E.  A.— Birch-tree,  The. 
H.,  E.  S. — Chimney-sweep,  The. 

Nobly  Bom,  The. 

Wayfarers. 

Wood-fire,  The. 
H.,  F.  B.— Rose's  Plaint,  The. 
H.,  F.  H. — Man  without  a  Country,  The. 
*'H.,  H."     See  Jackson,  Mrs.  Helen  [Hunt]. 
H.,  H.  C— Two  Ways  of  Life. 
H.,  H.  F.— To  the  Cigarette  Girl. 
H.,  H.  M.— Not  Blind. 
H.,  J. — Acrostic. 
H.,  L.  L. — Advice. 
H.,  M.  J.— St.  Nicholas. 

War  Prayer. 
H.,  P. — lii'l  Pickaninny  Coon. 
H.,  R.— Firelight. 
H.,  R.  D.— Lullaby. 
H.,  W.  J. — College  Rowing-song,  A. 
Habberton,  J: — Budge's  Version   of  the  Flood.     See 
Helen's  Babies. 

Evening  with  Helen's  Babies,  An.     See  Helen's 
Babies. 

Helen's  Babies. 

Idea)  Citizen,  The. 

"JefFul,  The."     See  Just  One  Day. 

Just  One  Day. 
Habington,  W: — Against  Them  Who  Lay  Unchastity 
to  the  Sex  of  Women.     See  Castara. 

Castara. 

Cogitabo  pro  Peccato  Meo.     See  Castara. 

Description  of  Castara  [.The].     See  Castara. 

Night.     See  Castara. 

Nox  Nocti  Indicat  Scientiam.     See  Castara. 

Reward  of  Innocent  Love,  The.     See  Castara. 

To  Castara,  in  a  Trance.     <See  Castara. 

To  Castara.     Of  True  Delight.     See  Castara. 

To  Castara:  The  Reward  of  Innocent  Love.     See 
Castara. 

To  Castara,  upon  the  Death  of  a  Lady.     See  Cas- 
tara. 

To  Cupid,  upon  a  Dimple  in  Castara's  Cheek.     See 
Castara. 

To  the  Moment  Last  Past.     See  Castara. 

To  Roses  in  the  Bosom  of  Castara.     See  Castara. 

We   Saw,   and   Woo'd   Each   Other's   Eyes.     See 

Hackley,  R.— Po'  Little  Jude. 

Hadley,  Lizzie  M. — About  the  Size  of  It. 

Bug-a-boo,  The. 

Christmas  Folk  and  Children. 

Christmas  Exercise,  A. 

Cities  of  the  Bible. 

Easter  Exercise. 

From  the  Old  World  to  the  New. 

His  Mother's  Cooking. 

Historical  Trees. 

Just  Like  a  Man._    See  His  Mother's  Cooking. 

Kittens  and  Babies. 

Laurel  Wreath,  The. 

Months,  The. 

Months  and  Holidays,  The.     See  Months,  The. 

New  Year's  Exercise. 

Our  Country's  Flag. 

Resurrexit. 

Star  Exercise. 

Story  of  Thanksgiving,  The. 

Ten  Commandments,  The. 

Thanksgiving  Exercise. 

Vacation. 

Which  One  Was  Kept?     See  Kittens  and  Babies. 
Hageman,   Miller. — Birds'   Convention,   The. 

Cobra,  The. 

Little  White  Angel  of  Connemaugh,  The. 

Periton's  Ride. 

Skylark,  The. 
Hahn,  C:  C. — Mater  Dolorosa. 

Monk's  Prayer,  The. 

Sweet  Peace  is  Born. 

Three  Voices,  The. 

Wait  On. 
Hake,  T:  Gordon. — Old  Souls. 

Our  Book-shelves. 

Sibyl,  The. 
Hale,  E:  Everett. — Ahna  Mater's  Roll. 

Dr.  Hale  on  Emerson. 

Lamentable     Ballad  of  the  Bloody  Brook,  The. 

Man  without  a  Country,  The. 

My  Double  and  how  He  Undid  Me. 

New  England's  Chevy  Chase. 

Omnipresence.     See  Under  Laurels  and  Maples. 


Hale.  E:  Everett  (continued). 

Patriotic  Words  for  the  Yoxmg. 
Susan's  Escort. 
Under  Laurels  and  Maples. 
Hale,  H.  D.— Semper  Idem. 
Hale,  Mary  P. — God  Made  Them  for  Me. 
Hale,  Sir  Matthew. — "Be  careful  that  you  do  not  com- 
mend yourself." 
WeU-spent  Sunday,  The. 
Hale,  Mrs.  Sarah  Josepha  [Buell]. — Alice  Ray. 
Books  (?). 
It  Snows. 
Mary's  Lamb. 
Teachings  of  Nature  (7). 
Watcher,  The. 
Haliburton,  Hugh  (7). — Gucom  and  the  Back-log. 

Talking  Latin. 
Halifax,  Jean. — Daisy  Drill. 

Santa  Claus's  Reception. 
Halket,  G: — Logic  o'  Buchan. 

Hall, . — Enthusiasm. 

Mike  Hooter's  Bear  Story. 
Hall,  Abby  Mary. — Rose's  Mite,  The. 
Hall,  Anne. — Arbutus. 
Hall,    Arthur    Dudley. — Sinking    of    the    Merrimac, 

The. 
Hall,  Arthur  Howard. — Where  Columbia  Stands. 
Hall,  C:  W.— Prairie  Fire,  The. 
Hall,  Christopher    Newman. — My  Times   are   in    Thy 

Hand. 
Hall,  E.  L. — Day's  Oration  is  in  Flowers,  The. 
Hall,  Eliza  Calvert. — ^^Enlisted. 

International  Episode,  An.      * 
Lesson  in  Mythology,  A. 
Modem  Psyche,  A. 
Sally  Ann's  Experience. 
Hall,  Eugene  J. — Annie  Pickens. 
Big  Ben  Bolton. 
Debating  Society,  The. 
Drunkard's  Daughter,  The. 
Engineer's  Story,  The. 
Fourth  of  July  at  Ripton. 
Fritz'  Courtship. 
Going  for  the  Cows. 
Highway  Cow,  The 
"Jesus,  Lover\)f  My  Soul." 
Kate  Shelly. 

King  and  the  Child,  The. 
"Little  Jack." 

Lost  Steamer,  The.'  See  Shady  Side  of  Life,  The. 
Old  Clock  in  the  Comer,  The. 
Only  a  Chicken. 
Ride  of  Death,  The. 
Shady  Side  of  Life,  The. 
Story  of  Little  Moses,  The. 
Victoria  Grey. 
Hall,  Fannie  L. — Robin's  Message. 
Hall,   Mrs.   Florence    [Howe]. — May   Day — a  Moving 

Drama. 
Hall,  Mrs.  G.  S. — Slight  Misimderstanding,  A. 
Hall,  Gertrude. — Angels. 
Blind-man's-buff. 
Dust,  The. 
Mrs.  Golightly. 
My  Old  Counselor. 
HaU,  J.  L.     (Tr.)     Beowulf. 

Grendel's  Mother.     See  Beowiilf. 
Hall,  J.  M.  W. — Pilgrim's  Idea  of  Home,  The. 
Hall,  Rt.  Rev.  Jos. — Advice  to  Marry  Betimes. 
Coxcomb.  A. 
Deserted  Mansion,  A. 
Domestic  Tutor's  Position,  The. 
Golden  Age,  The. 
Hollow  Hospitality. 
Impecunious  Fop,  The. 
On  Simony. 
HaU,  L.  v.— Echo. 
Hall,  Mrs.  Louisa  Jane  [Park]. — Growing  Old. 

Lord's  Prayer,  The. 
Hall,  Rev.  Newman. — "Coming  to  Jesus  is  the  desire 
of  the  heart  after  Him." 
Dignity  in  Labor. 
Dignity  of  Labor,  The. 
Great  Britain  and  America. 
Multitude  of  Littles,  The. 
Hall,  Newton  M. — Shadow  Ships. 
HaU,  Rob't. — Apostrophe  to  the  Volunteers,  The. 

Farewell  to  Departing  Volunteers,  A.     See  Apos- 
trophe to  the  Volunteers,  The. 
HaU,  Susan. — 'Vacation  Fragment,  A. 
Hall,  Tom. — Bachelor's  Views,  A. 

My  Cigarette. 
Hallam,  Arthur  H: — Written  in  Edinburgh. 


461 


Halleck 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Halleck,  Fitz-Greene. — Alnwick  Castle. 

Burns.     (To  a  Rose  Brought  from  near  AUoway 
Kirk  in  Ayrshire.) 

Fanny. 

Field  of  the  Grounded  Arms,  The. 

Fortune.     See  Fanny. 

Green  be  the  TtB-f.     See  On  the  Death  of  Joseph 
Rodman  Drake. 

Joseph  Rodman    Drake.     See   On    the    Death    of 
Joseph  Rodman  Drake. 

Marco  Bozzaris. 

On  the  Death  of  Joseph  Rodman  Drake. 

Patriot's  Death,  The.     See  Marco  Bozzaris. 

Red  Jacket. 

"There  is  an  evening  twilight  of  the  heart."     See 
Twilight. 

To  a  Friend.     See  On  the  Death  of  Joseph  Rod- 
man Drake. 

To  a  Portrait  of  Red  Jacket.     See  Red  Jacket. 

To  William  Cullen  Bryant. 

Twilight. 

Weehawken  and  the  New  York  Bay.     See  Fanny. 
Halleck,  Fitz-Greene,  and  Drake,  Jos.  Rodman   ("The 

Croakers"). — Ode  to  Fortune. 
Hallmark,  Harrydale. — Story  the  Doctor  Told,  The. 
Hallock,  B. — Mrs.  Hemans. 
Halloran,  H: — In  Memoriam  Prince  Leopold. 

Wishes. 
Hall's  Journal  of  Health. — Ideal,  The. 
Halm,  Frd'k. — Ingomar,  the  Barbarian. 
Halm,  Karl  von  (?). — Question,  A. 
Halpine,  Col.  C:  Graham  ("Miles  O'Reilly"). — Canteen, 
The. 

Dolce  Far  Niente. 

Epigram  to  a  Young  Lady  who  Asked   for  his 
Name  in  her  Album. 

Feminine  Arithmetic. 

Formal  Call,  The.     See  Quakerdom. 

Irish  Astronomy. 

Janette's  Hair. 

Last  Resort,  The. 

Loyal  Legion,  The. 

Mushroom  Hunt,  The. 

Poem  Read  at  the  Founding  of  Gettysburg  Monu- 
ment. 

Quakerdom. 

Sambo's  Right  to  the  Kilt. 

Song  of  Sherman's  Army,  The. 

Song  of  the  Soldiers. 

Trooper  to  his  Mare,  The. 
Halse,  G: — Death's  Choice. 

Halsey,  Rev.  Leroy  Jones. — Sublimity  of  the  Bible. 
Halsey,  Lewis. — Arbor  Day. 
Ham,  Marion  Franklin. — Bob  White. 

Edgar  W.  Nye. 

Eugene  Field. 

Soarin'  o'  the  Eagle,  The. 
Hamberlin,  L.  R. — Flossie. 
Hamersley,  J.  Hooker. — Yellow  Roses. 
Hamerton,  Philip  Gilbert. — Sanyassi,  The. 

Wild  Huntsmen,  The. 

Hamilton,  Dr. . — Literary  Attractions  of  the  Bible. 

Hamilton,  Alex. — American  Constitution,  The.  See 
Speech  on  the  Compromises  of  the  Constitu- 
tion. 

Constitution  of  the  United  States.     See  Speech  on 
the  Compromises  of  the  Constitution. 

General  Government  and   the  States,  The.     See 
Speech  on  the  Compromises  of  the  Constitution. 

On  the  Federal  Constitution.     See  Speech  on  the 
Compromises  of  the  Constitution. 

Speech  on  the  Compromises  of  the  Constitution. 
Hamilton,  Anna  E. — Christ's  Giving. 

Sympathy. 
Hamilton,  Edwin. — Chimpanzor  and  the  Chimpanzee, 

The. 
Hamilton,  Mr».  Eliz. — My  Ain  Fireside. 
Hamilton,  Eugene  I^ee.     See  Lee-Hamilton.  Eugene. 
Hamilton,  F.  E.  E. — Dancing  the  Minuet. 
Hamilton,  Gail.     See  Dodge,  Mary  Abby. 
Hamilton,  Jas. — Access  to  God. 
Hamilton,  J:  Alan. — Confession  and  Avoidance. 

Love's  Disguise. 

Three  Triolets. 
Hamilton,  Rev.  J:  W: — One  of  the  Common  People. 
Hamilton,  Kate  W. — Which  General? 
Hamilton  Literary  Monthly. — Ubique. 
Hamilton,  Pierce  Stevens. — Heroine  of  St.  John,  The. 
Hamilton,  Sydney- — Removal,  The. 
Hamilton,  W: — 6raes  of  Yarrow,  The. 
Hamilton,  W:  R.— Field  Battery,  A. 
Hamilton-King,  H.  E.—  Ballad  of  the  Midnight  Sun, 
The. 


Hamp,  Sidford  Frd'k.— Friar  Tuck. 

Hancock,   J: — Boston  Massacre,   The. 

Hancock,  Sallie  J. — Response  to  Beautiful  Snow,  A. 

Handford,  T:  W.  (?)— Bessie  Bo  Peep  of  Engle  Steepe. 

Easter  Song,  An. 

Leaves  from  Fatherland. 

On  Grandpapa's  Knee. 
Handy,  Mrs.  M.  P.— Only  a  Little  Thing. 
Hangford,  G.  W.— Speak  Gently.    (A«.)  See  Bates,  D: 
Hanks,  Annie  D. — Example. 
Hanmer,  J:,  Lord. — Pine  Woods,  The. 
Hannah,  Annie  L. — Which  is  Best? 

White  Rose  and  the  Poppy,  The. 
Hanover,  J:— Miner's  Death,  The. 
Hansbrough,  Mrs.  Mary  Berri  [Chapman]. — Doubt. 

Her  Answer. 

Journey,  The. 

Love's  Course. 
Harbaugh,  H : — Through  Death  to  Life. 
Harbaugh,  T:  Chalmers  (?). — Adam  never  Was  a  Boy. 

Banner  Betsev  Made,  The. 

Grandma's  Wedding-day. 

Trouble  in  the  "Amen  Comer." 
Harbour,  J.  L. — Mourning  Veil.  The. 

Nell's  Christmas  Stocking. 

Papa  and  the  Boy. 

Papa's  Little  Boy.     See  Papa  and  the  Boy. 
Harby,  Lee  C. — Legend  of  the  Missions,  A. 
Harcourt,  T.  A. — Ideal  Future,  An. 

What  a  Christmas  Carol  did. 
Harding,  Eugenie  B. — Cuba's  Maiden  Martyr. 
Harding,  Rev.  W.  W.— Cry  for  Life,  A. 
Hardwick,  C:  (?) — Mr.  and  Mrs.  Skinner. 
Hardv,  Albert. — Sam. 

I'uxedo  Romance,  A. 
Hardy,  Arthur  Sherburne. — Duality. 

Immortality. 

Iter  Supremum. 
Hardy,  Lizzie  Clark. — Hole  in  the  Floor,  The. 

My   Neighbor. 

Tommy  Brown. 
Hardy,  T: — Far  from  the  Madding  Crowd. 

Sword  Exercise,  The.     See  Far  from  the  Madding 
Crowd. 
Hargreaves,  W:  (?) — Song  of  the  Drunkard. 
Harkee,  Kathe.  Van  D.— Robin,  The. 
Harlan,  J:  Marshall. — Washington  and  the  Constitu- 
tion. 
Harley,  T. — "Limpy  Tim." 
Harlow,  Parr. — -Arbor  Day  Greeting. 

Arbor  Day  Ode. 

Invocation. 
Harney,  J:  M.— Fever  Dream,  A. 
Harney,  Will  Wallace. — Adonais. 

Jimmy's  Wooing. 

Stab,  The. 
Harper,  C.  F. — Song  of  the  Battle  Ships. 
Harper,  Clarence  S. — Doris. 
Harper,  Oliver. — International  Band,  The. 
Harper's  Bazar. —  Biddy's  Trials  among  the  Yankees. 

Deacon  Thrush  in  Meeting. 

Fashionable  Call,  A. 

Female  Gossip.     See  Fashionable  Call,  A. 

John  Jankin's  Sermon. 

Naming  the  Baby. 

Nothing. 

Our  Minister's  Sermon.    See  John  Jankin's  Sermon. 

Symphony  in  Smoke,  A. 

Umbrella  on  the  Beach,  The. 

We  Two. 
Harper's  Magazine. — "De  Pen  and  de  Swoard." 

Doing   and    Giving.     See    Resolution. 

Drummer-boy's  Burial,  The. 

Gentle   Hints.     See  Resolution. 

"It  is  a  dear  delight  for  the  soul  to  have  trust  in 
the  fidelity  of  another." 

John  Chinaman's  "Comin'  through  the  Rye." 

One  Bachelor  of  Many. 

Paddy's  Excelsior. 

Pat's  Excelsior.     See  Paddy's  Excelsior. 

Pine  Town  [Darkey]  Debating  Society,  The. 

Resolution. 

Saladin,  Malek  Adhel,  Attendant.      See  Saracen 
Brothers,  The. 

Saracen  Brothers,  The. 

Scotch  Philosophy  of  Kissing. 

Text  without  a  Sermon,  A. 

Untimely  Trumpet,  The. 

Whistling  in  Heaven. 
Harper's  Weekly. — Ballad  of  Capri,  A. 

Dead  Drummer -bov. 

Duel  Between  Mr.  Shott  and  Mr.  Nott,  The.     See 
Mysterious  Duel,  A. 


462 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Harvard 


Harper's  Weekly  (continued). 
I  Want  Mamma. 

Little  Child,  A.     See  I  Want  Mamma. 
Me  and  My  Dog. 
Mysterious  Duel,  A. 

Wonderful  Duel,  A.     See  Mysterious  Duel,  A. 
Harper's     Young     People. — Baby     Sleeps,     The.     See 
Don't  Wake  the  Baby. 
Day  After.  The. 
Doctor's  Visit. 
Don't  Wake  the  Baby. 
Farewell. 

George  Washington. 
Good  Company. 
Little  Grenadier,  The. 
Menagerie  Song,  A. 
Pet  and  Her  Cat. 
Sixty  Years  Ago. 
Spring  Meeting,  A. 
Harpur,  C: — Aboriginal  Mother's  Larnent,  An. 

Midsummer's  Moon  in  the  Australian  Forest,  A. 
Harraden,  Beatrice. — Ships  that  Pass  in  the  Night. 
Traveler  and  the  Temple  of  Knowledge,  The.     See 
Ships  that  Pass  in  the  Night. 
"Harriet  Annie." — Death  of  Gaudentis. 
Harriman,  Josephine  M. — Last  Day  in  District  No.  6. 
Harrington,  J: — Appeal  for  the  Cause  of  Liberty,  .A.n. 
Harrington  [or  Haryngton],  Sir  J: — Epigram:  Treason. 
Epigrams. 
Line.s  on  Isabella  Markham.     See  Sonnet  Made  on 

Isabella  Markham. 
Heart  of  Stone,  A.     See  Sonnet  Made  on  Isabella 

Markham. 
Of  a  Certaine  Man. 
Of  a  Precise  Tailor. 

Of  the  Warres  in  Ireland.     See  Epigrams. 
Sonnet  Made  on  Isabella  Markham. 
Harris,    C.    M.     (Tr.) — God's    Father-care. 
Harris,  Joel  Chandler. — ^Brer  Rabbit  and  the   Little 
Girl.     See  Nights  with  Uncle  Remus. 
My  Honey,  My  Love. 
Nights  with  Uncle  Remus. 
Plough-hands'  Song,  The.     See  Uncle  Remus  and 

his  Friends. 
Revival    Hymn.     See   Uncle   Remus,    His   Songs 

and  his  Sayings. 
Uncle  Remus  and  his  Friends. 
Uncle  Remus,  His  Songs  and  His  Sayings. 
Uncle  Remus'  Tar-baby.     See  Uncle  Remus,  His 

Songs  and  his  Sayings. 
Uncle  Remus's  Revival  Hymn.    See  Uncle  Remus, 

His  Songs  and  His  Sayings. 
Wonderful    Tar  Baby    [Story],    The.     See  Uncle 
Remus,  His  Songs  and  his  Sayings. 
Harris,  Thaddeus  Mason.- — Little  Orator,  The. 
Harris,  T:  Lake.— California. 
Fledglings. 
Sea-sleep. 
Harrison,  Anthony  (7). — Tinker  and  the  Glazier,  The. 
Harrison,  Belle  R. — Darky's  Ideal  Wife,  A. 
Harrison,  B: — ^  Address    before    the   28th  Graduating 
Class  of  the   Pierce    School    of    Business  and 
Shorthand,  Philadelphia,  Dec.  20,  189.3. 
.\im  High. 

Critical  Conditions  of  Labor,  The.     See  Address 
before  the  28th  Graduating  Class  of  the  Pierce 
School,  etc. 
Our  Country. 

Proclamation   of  the  Columbian   Exposition. 
Harrison,     Clifford. — Benediction,     The. 

Faithful  unto  Death. 
Harrison,  J. — Legend  of  Paginini,  A. 
Harrison,  J.  C. — May. 
Harrison,  Jennie. — Out  in  the  Cold. 
Harrison,  Leslie. ^ — ^Fate. 
Harrison,  Morris. — Brave  Boston  Boys. 
Harrison,    Mrs.    S.    Frances    ("Seranus"). — Chftteau 
Papineau. 
November. 
September. 
Villanelle. 
Harrison,  Virginia  B. — Ffeelon's  Prayer. 
Harrison,  Oen.  W:  H.  (?) — Tribute  to  Washington. 
Harryman,  A.   H. — Through  the  Loopholes. 
Hart,  Bessie  G. — Boy's  Mercy,  A. 

Toot  Makes  a  Match. 
Hart,  Edwin  Kirkman. — Sunday  Question  of  To-day, 

The. 
Hart,  F.  W.— Trysting. 

Hart,  Jerome  A.— Phantom  of  the  Rose,  The. 
Hart,  Joel  T. — -Captive  Humming-bird,  The. 
Hart,  J:  S. — Good  Reading  [the  Greatest  Accomplish- 
ment]. 


Hart,  Jos.— Come,  and  Welcome,  to  Jesus  Christ. 
Harte,  (Fs.)  Bret. — After  the  Accident. 

Aged  Stranger,  The. 

Angelus,  The. 

At  the  Hacienda. 

Battle  Bunny — Malvern  Hill. 

Bill  Mason's  Bride.  (?) 

Bill  Mason's  Ride.     See  Bill  Mason's  Bride. 

"But  in  his  eyes  a  mist  unwonted  rises." 

Cadet  Grey. 

Caldwell  of  Springfield. 

Chicago. 

Chimney'sMelody.The.  SeeWhattheChimneySang. 

Chiquita. 

Christmas  Gift  that  came  to  Rupert,  The. 

Crotalus. 

Dickens  in  Camp. 

Doctor's   Story,    The.     See   Christmas   Gift   that 
came  to  Rupert,  The. 

Dow's  Flat. 

Engineer's  Signal,  The.     See  Guild's  Signal. 

Fate. 

Flynn  of  Virginia.     See  In  the  Tunnel. 

Greyport  Legend,  A. 

Grizzly. 

Guild's  Signal. 

Half  an  Hour  before  Supper. 

Heathen  Chinee,  The.     See  Plain  Language  from 
Truthful  James. 

Her  Letter. 

His  Answer  to  "Her  Letter." 

"How  are  you.  Sanitary?" 

I  was  with  Grant.     See  Aged  Stranger,  The. 

In  the  Tunnel. 

Jessie. 

How  Santa  Claus  Came  to  Simpson's  Bar. 

"Jim." 

John  Burns  of  Gettysburg. 

Jovita;  or,  the  Christmas  Gift.     See  How  Santa 
Claus  Came  to  Simpson's  Bar. 

Madroiio. 

Master  Johnny's  Next-door  Neighbor. 

Miggles. 

Miss  Edith  Helps  Things  Along. 

"Not  yet,  O  friend!  not  yet."     See  Cadet  Grey. 

Personified  Sentimental,  The.     See  Songs  without 
Sense. 

Plain  Language  from  Truthful  James. 

Ramon. 

R^veilld,  The. 

Second  Review  of  the  Grand  Army. 

Society  upon  the  Stanislaus,  The. 

Songs  without  Sense. 

Spelling  Bee  at  Angel's,  The. 

Swiss  Air.     See  Songs  without  Sense. 

Throes  of  Science,   The.     See  Society  upon   the 
Stanislaus,  The. 

To  a  Sea-bird. 

To  the  Pliocene  Skull. 

Two  Ships,  The. 

What  Miss  Edith  Saw  from  Her  Window. 

What  the  Bullet  Sang. 

What  the  Chimney  Sang. 

What  the  Drums  Say.     See  R^veill^,  The. 

What  the  Wolf  Really  Said  to  Little  Red  Riding- 
Hood. 
Harte,  Jerome.— Time  Doeth  All  Things  Well. 
Harte,  Walter. — Soliloquy,  A. 
Hartley,  J: — To  a  Daisy. 
Hartley,  Susan. — Holly. 

Marigolds. 

Winter  Song,  A. 
Hartridge,    Emelyn  Battersby. —  Song: — "There    are 

days  when  the  sun  shines  warm  and  bright." 
Hartwell,  Mary. — Pocahontas. 

Sim's  Little  Girl. 
Hartwick,RosaA. — SeeTHORPE,Mr«.Ro8A[HARTWicK]. 
Hartwig,  Gustav.— Last  String,  The. 
Hartzell,  J.  Hazard. — Autumn  is  Ended. 

Fields  of  Corn,  The. 

Golden  Orioles,  The. 

Snow-storm,  The. 
Harvard  Advocate. — Old  Days. 

Perdita. 
Harvard  Lampoon. — As  Usual. 
Ballade  of  Laura's  Fan. 
Idyl,  An. 

Lines  to  a  Transfer  Check. 
Literary  Vampire,  The. 
Logic. 

Outward  Shows,  The. 
That  Sweet  Girl  Graduate. 
Tom's  Philosophy. 


463 


Harvey 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Harvey,  Jaa.  Clarence. — At  the  Stage  Door. 

Bicycle  Ride,  The. 

Challenge.  A. 

Daughter  of  the  Desert,  The. 

Nameless  Guest,  The. 

Rabbi  and  the  Prince,  The. 

Roman  Legend)  A. 

Whistling  liegiment.  The. 
Harwood,  Elna. — Dagmar. 
Haryngton,  Sir  J:     See  Harrington,  Sir  J: 
Hastings,  E.  H. — Over  the  Hill. 
Hastings,  Lady  Flora. — Spring  Morning,  A. 
Hastings,  Frank. — Cripple  Tim. 
Hastings,  Horace  Lorenzo. — Drinking  a  Farm. 

"Savior!  I  follow  on."  (7) 

Sketch  of  Moses,  A. 
Hastings,  Mary  W. — Lover  to  His  Lady-love,  A. 
Hastings,  T: — Exhortation. 

In  Sorrow. 

Latter  Day,  The. 
Hatch,  M.  D. — Debutante's  Bouquets,  A. 
Hathaway,  Mary  E.  N— Reasons,  The.     See  Signs  of 
the  Seasons. 

Signs  of  the  Seasons. 

Two  Visits. 
Hatton,  J  W.— Not  Guilty. 
Haughwout,  I-aura  M. — Happy  Farmer,  The. 
HauHain,  Theodore  Arnold. — Beauty. 
Hauptmann,  Gerhart. — Hannele. 
Hausted,  P: — Have  you  a  Desire? 
Haven,  Albert  R. — Spain's  Hour  of  Doom. 
Haven,  Mrs.  Alice  [Bradley]  [Neal]  ("Cousin  Alice). — 
Bull  Run. 

There's  no  Such  Word  as  Fail. 

Thoughts  on  the  Forest.     See  Trees  in  the  City. 

Trees  in  the  City. 
Havens,  Theo.  F.— Told  at  the  Tavern. 
Havergal,  Frances  Ridley. — "Be  Quiet;  Fear  Not." 

Bells  across  the  Snow. 

Bonnie  Wee  Eric. 

Chosen  Lessons. 

Compensation. 

Consecration  Hymn. 

Daily  Strength. 

Enough. 

Faithful  Promises. 

Flowers. 

Hour  of  Comfort,  The.     See  Secret  of  a  Happy 
Day,  The. 

I  Gave  My  Life  for  Thee. 

".Jesus,  Master,  whom  I  serve." 

Life  Mosaic. 

"Master!  to  do  great  work  for  thee,  my  hand." 
See  Life  Mosaic. 

Message  of  an  iEolian  Harp. 

New  Year's  Hymn.     See  Faithful  Promises . 

"Now!" 

"Oh,  let  me  know." 

Our  Shepherd. 

Secret  of  a  Happy  Day,  The. 

Something  to  Do. 

Song  of  a  Summer  Stream,  The. 

Stars. 

Sunbeam  and  Dewdrop. 

Thanksgiving. 

"That's  not  the  Way  at  Sea." 

"Then  hush!  oh,  hush!  for  the  Father  knows  what 
thou  knowest  not."     See  Compensation. 

We  Cannot  Love  too  Much.     See  Message  of  an 
jEolian  Harp. 

Who  Will  Take  Care  of  Me? 
Havez,  Jean. — Thanksgiving  Turkey. 
Haweis,  Rev.  Hugh  Reginald. — Lowell,  Extract  Con- 
cerning. 

Music  and  Morals. 

Remembrance.     See  Music  and  Morals. 
Haweis,  T: — O  Thou,  from  Whom  all  Goodness  Flows. 
Hawes,  Annie  M.  L. — Happy  Man,  The. 

Last  Tudor,  The. 

Love  Tapped  upon  My  Lattice. 
Hawes,  Joel. — Good  Name,  A. 

Hawes,  Stephen. — Amoure  laments  the  absence  of  La 
Belle  Pucel.     See  Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The. 

Character  of  a  True  Knight,  The.     See  Pastime  of 
Pleasure.  The. 

Description  of  La  Belle  Puoel.     See  Pastime  of 
Pleasure.  The. 

Dialogue  between  Graunde  Amoure  and  La  Pucel. 
See  Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The. 

His  Epitaph. 

Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The. 

True  Knight,  The.     See  Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The. 
Hawes,  W:  Post. (7) — Veny  Raynor's  Bear  Story. 


Hawker,  Rob't  Stephen. — Are  they  not  all  Ministering 
Spirits? 

Cuckoo's  Wit,  The. 

Doom-well  of  St.  Madron,  The. 

Featherstone's  Doom. 

Holly,  The. 

King  Arthur's  Waes-hael. 

Mawgan  of  Melhuach. 

"Pater  Vester  Pascit  lUa." 

Silent  Tower  of  Bottreau[x],  The. 

Song  of  the  Cornish  Men.     See  Song  of  the  West- 
em  Men,  The. 

Song  of  the  Western  Men,  The. 

To  Alfred  Tennyson. 

Wail  of  the  Cornish  Mother,  The. 
Hawkes,  Clarence. — Dial  of  Time,  The. 

Mountain  to  the  Pine.  The. 
Hawkins,  Ethel  W.— Shadow  of  the  End,  The. 
Hawkins,  W.  S. — More  Cruel  than  War 
Hawkins,  Willis  B. — Summerset  Folks,  The. 
Hawks,  A.  W. — Easter  Lily,  An. 

Picture  on  the  Wall,  The. 
Hawks,  Fs.  Lister  (?). — Faith  in  God. 
Hawks,  Wells  T.— Franz. 
Hawthorn,  Kate. — Spring  Song. 
Hawthorne,  Hildegarde. — My  Rose. 

Song:  "Sing  me  a  sweet,  low  song  of  night." 
Hawthorne,  Julian. — Bartholdi  Statue,  The. 

Pockets. 

Were-wolf. 
Hawthorne,  Nathaniel. — Affray  in  King  Street,  Boston, 
1770,  The.     See  Grandfather's  Chair. 

Concord  River. 

Drowne's  Wooden   Image.     See  Mosses  from   an 
Old  Manse. 

Elf-child  and    the    Minister,     The.     See    Scarlet 
Letter,  The. 

Endicott  and  the  Red  Cross. 

Father  Time's  Granddaughters. 

Faun  of  Praxiteles,  The.     See  Marble  Faun,  The. 

Frolic  of  the  Carnival,  A.     See  Marble  Faun,  The. 

Grandfather's  Chair. 

Gray  Champion,  The. 

Great  Stone  Face,  The. 
'       Howe's  Masquerade.     See  Legends  of  the  Province 
House. 

Legends  of  the  Province  House. 

Marble  Faun,  The. 

Miraculous  Pitcher,  The. 

Mosses  from  an  Old  Manse. 

My  Visit  to  Niagara. 

Pandora.     See  Paradise  of  Children,  The. 

Paradise  of  Children,  The. 

Pine    Tree    Shillings,    The.     See    Grandfather's 
Chair. 

Recollections  of  a  Gifted  Woman. 

Scarlet  Letter,  The. 

Snow-image,  The. 

Star  of  Calvary,  The. 

Sunken  Treasure,  The.     See  Grandfather's  Chair. 

Hawtrey.  Mrs. . — Boys'  Play  and  Girls'  Play. 

Hay,  F.  W.  Ijttleton.— Latest  Comfort,  The. 
Hay,  Frd'k. — Sudden  Arrival,  A. 
Hay,  Helen.— Does  the  Pearl  Know? 

Jjove's  Kiss. 

Sigh  not  for  Love. 

To  Diane. 

Was  there  another  Spring? 

Woman's  Pride,  A. 
Hay,  H:  H.— Fragrant  Timber  of  Her  Fan,  The. 
Hay,  J: — Banty  Tim. 

Blind  Man's  Testimony,  The.     See  Religion  and 
Doctrine. 

Christine. 

Curse  of  Hungary,  The. 

Enchanted  Shirt,  The. 

Good  Luck  and  Bad  Luck.    (.Tr.} 

How  it  Happened. 

Jim  Bludso.     See  Jim  Bludso  of  the  Prairie  Belle. 

Jim  Bludso  of  the  Prairie  Belle. 

Kilvany.     See  Law  of  Death,  The. 

Law  of  Death,  The.     (Wr.  at.  to  Edwin  Arnold.) 

Liberty. 

Light  of  Love.  The. 

Little  Breeches. 

Love's  Prayer. 

Miles  Keogh's  Horse. 

On  the  Bluff. 

Our  Recent  Diplomacy. 

Pledge  at  Spunky  Point,  The. 

Religion  and  Doctrine. 

Sir  Walter  Scott  in  Westminster. 

Sphinx  of  the  Tuileries.  The. 


464 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Hebrew 


Hay,  J:  (continued). 

Stirrup-cup,  The. 

Surrender  of  Spain,  The. 

Triumph  of  Order,  A. 

Woman's  Love,  A. 
Hayes,  Mrs.  Edna  L.  Proctor  [Clarke]. — Dancer,  The. 

Deathless,  The. 

Good-by,  A. 

Humming-bird,  The. 

Jacqueminot  Roses. 

Mocking-bird,  The. 

To  a  Wild  Rose  Found  in  October. 
Hayes,  J :  Russell. — Old-fashioned  Garden. 
Hayes,  Will  S.— Contentment. 

Haygood,  Atticus  Green. — Abolition  of  African  Slavery. 
Haynard,  Virginia  May. — If  We  Knew. 
Hayne,  Paul  Hamilton. — "And  we,  poor  waifs,  whose 
life-term  seems." 

Artie's  "Amen." 

Aspects  of  the  Pines. 

Battle  of  Charleston  Harbor,  The. 

Between  the  Sunken  Sun  and  the  New  Moon. 

Bryant  Dead. 

By  the  Autumn  Sea. 

Cambyses  and  the  Macrobian  Bow. 

Carlyle. 

Christian  Exaltation. 

Dean  Stanley. 

Tn  Harbor. 

Little  NeUie  in  the  Prison. 

Tattle  While  I  Fain  would  Linger  Yet,  A. 

Love  Scorns  Degrees.    See  Mountain  of  the  Lovers, 
The. 

Love's  Autumn.  ' 

lArric  of  Action. 

Macdonald's  Raid. 

Mask  of  Death,  The. 

Mountain  of  the  Lovers,  The. 

On  the  Death  of  Canon  Kingsley. 

Praying  for  Shoes. 

Pre-existence. 

Rose  and  Thorn,  The. 

Storm  in  the  Distance,  A. 

Story  of  an  Ambuscade,  The. 

To  Alexander  H.  Stephens. 

To  Bayard  Taylor  beyond  Us. 

To  O.  W.  Holmes. 

Two  Epochs. 

Under  the  Pine. 

Union  of  Blue  and  Gray. 

Upward  and  Onward.     See  Lyric  of  Action. 

Vicksburg. 

Winds  of  the  Winter,  The. 

Yorktown  Centennial  Lyric. 
Hayne,  Rob't  Young. — On  Mr.   Foot's  Resolution  in 
the  United  States  Senate,  Jan.  21,  1830. 

On  Mr.  Webster's  Defence  of  New  England.     See 
On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution  in  the  U.  S.  Senate. 

Reply  to  Mr.  Webster,  January,   1830.     See  On 
\fr.  Foot's  Resolution  in  the  U.  S.  Senate. 

South  Carolina.     See  On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution  in 
the  United  States  Senate. 

South    Carolina    and    the    Union.     See    On    Mr. 
Foot's  Resolution  in  the  United  States  Senate. 

South  Carolina  in  the  Revolution.     See  On  Mr. 
Foot's  Resolution  in  the  United  States  Senate. 

South  during  the  Revolution,  The.     See   On  Mr. 
Foot's  Resolution  in  the  United  States  Senate. 

South  during  the  War  of  1812,  The.     See  On  Mr. 
Foot's  Resolution  in  the  United  States  Senate. 

South   in    the    Revolution.     See   On   Mr.    Foot's 
Resolution  in  the  United  States  Senate. 
Hayne,  W:  Hamilton. — At  My  Father's  Grave. 

Autumn  Breeze,  An. 

Cavalry  Song. 

Charge  at  Santiago,  The. 

Cyclone  at  Sea,  A. 

De  Preacher  an'  de  Hants. 

Exiles. 

Loneliness. 

Moonlight  Song  of  the  Mocking-bird. 

Night  Mists. 

Oliver  Wendell  Holmes. 

Pine-needle[3]. 

R^d  Bird,  The. 

Sidney  Lanier. 

"Sleep  and  His  Brother  Death." 

Southern  Snow-bird,  The. 

Threnody  of  the  Pines, 

To  a  Cherokee  Rose. 

Vernal  Solace. 

Yule  Log,  The. 
Haynes,  Landon  C. — Tribute  to  East  Tennessee,  A. 


Hays,  WiU  S.— O'Grady's  Goat. 
Hay  ward,  Emeroy. — Cakes  and  Pies. 
Haywood,  Delia  A. — Teetotaler's  Story,  A. 
Hazard,  Eliz. — Awakened,  The. 
Haze  well,  E:  Wentworth. — Veteran  and  Recruit. 
Hazlett,  Mrs.  S.  C. — Her  Lover. 

Hazlitt,  W: — Genius  and  Common  Sense.     See  Table 
Talk. 

Table  Talk. 
Head,  Sir  Edmund. — Translation  from  Propertius. 
Head,  W:  H. — Bewildered  Conductor,  A. 

Chinese  Version  of  Jonah  and  the  Whale,  A. 

Dot  New  Song. 

"He  Laughed  at  Five.',' 

Methodist  Camp  Meeting,  A. 

Parting,  The. 

Question,  A. 

That  Little  Girl  of  Mine. 

Trial  at  Elocution,  A. 

Trials  of  a  Columbian  Guard. 

'Way  Down  in  Ole  Virginy. 
Headley,  Rev.  Joel  Tyler. — Bell  of  Liberty,  The. 

Burning  of  Moscow,  The.  <See  Napoleon  and  his 
Marshals. 

Last  Charge  of  [Marshal]  Ney.  See  Napoleon  and 
his  Marshals. 

Macdonald's  Charge  at  Wagram.  See  Napoleon 
and  his  Marshals. 

Marshal  Ney's  Last  Charge  at  Waterloo.  See 
Napoleon  and  his  Marshals. 

Napoleon  and  his  Marshals. 

Tree  Planting. 

Waterloo.     See  Napoleon  and  his  Marshals. 
Hearth  and  Home. — Boy  and  the  Boot,  The. 

Stubborn  Boot,  The.     See  Boy  and  the  Boot,  The. 

Washing-day. 
Heath,  Lyman.— -Grave  of  Bonaparte,  The. 
Heaton,  J:  Langdon. — Sea  Irony. 

Inconsistent  Sex,  The. 
Heavysege,  C: — Coming  of  the  Mom,  The. 

David  Exorcising  Malzah.     See  Saul. 

Flight  of  Malzah,  The.     See  Saul. 

Magnanimous  and  Mean. 

Malzah  and  the  Angel  Zelehtha.     See  Saul. 

Mystery  of  Doom,  The. 

Night. 

Saul. 

Twilight. 
Hebel,  Johann  P: — Sunday  Morning. ' 
Heber,  Reginald. — At  a  Funeral. 

Before  a  Collection  made  for  the  Society  for  the 
Propagation  of  the  Gospel. 

Brightest  and  Best  [of  the  Sons  of  the  Morning]. 
See  Epiphany. 

By  Cool  Siloam['3  Shady  Rill].  See  First  Sunday 
after  Epiphany. 

Early  Piety.     See  First  Sunday  after  Epiphany. 

Epiphany. 

Fifteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity. 

First  Sunday  after  Epiphany. 

Forgive.    See  Twenty-second  Sunday  after  Trinity. 

Fourth  Sunday  after  Epiphany. 

God  Provideth  for  the  Morrow.  See  Fifteenth 
Sundav  after  Trinity. 

Gulistan,  The. 

Hebrew  Capital  Despoiled,  The. 

"Help,  Lord,  or  We  Perish."  See  Fourth  Sun- 
day after  Epiphany. 

Holy,  Holy,  Holy!     See  Trinity  Sunday. 

Hymn  for  First  Sunday  after  Epiphany.  See 
First  Sunday  after  Epiphany. 

Hymn  for  Trinity  Sunday.     See  Trinity  Sunday. 

"If  thou  wert  by  my  side  [my  love]."  See  I,ines 
Addressed  to  Mrs.  Heber. 

Lines  Addressed  to  his  Wife.  See  Lines  Addressed 
to  Mrs.  Heber. 

Lines  Addressed  to  Mrs.  Heber. 

Missionary  Hymn.  See  Before  a  Collection  made 
for  the  Society  for  the  Propagation  of  the 
Gospel. 

O  God  that  Madest  Earth  and  Sky. 

Providence.     See  Fifteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity 

Siloam's  Shady  Rill.  See  First  Sunday  after 
Epiphany. 

Spring  Journey,  The. 

Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  a  Friend.  See  At  a  Fun- 
eral. 

Stream  of  Life,  The. 

Sympathy. 

Thou  art  Gone  to  the  Grave.     See  At  a  Funeral. 

Trisagion.     See  Trinity  Sunday. 

Twenty-second  Sunday  after  Trinity. 
Hebrew  Journal. — So  Much  May  Be  Done. 


465 


Heckman 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Heckman,  G:  C. — "It   is  said  that    at  the  battle  of 

Shiloh." 
Hedderwick,  Jas.  (?). — Joy  and  Sorrow. 
Hedge,  F:  H:— Crucifixion,  The. 

Mighty  Fortress  is  our  God,  A.  (.Tr.) 

Morning  Star,  The. 

Paraphrase  of  Luther's  Hymn.  (Tr.)  See  Mighty 
Fortress  is  •ur  God,  A. 

Questionings. 
Hedrich,  Ida  M. — Welcome  for  School  Entertainment. 
Heermans,  Mary  A. — Tribute  to  Nature. 
Heine,  Heinrich. — Belshazzar's  Downfall. 

Difficulty,  The. 

Du  Bist  wie  eine  Blume.     See  Pictures  of  Travel. 

Excellent  Man,  The. 

Fisher's  Cottage,  The.     See  Pictures  of  Travel. 

Good  Luck  and  Bad  Luck. 

Last  Translation,  The. 

Lorelei,  The.     See  Pictures  of  Travel. 

Pictures  of  Travel. 

Pilgrimage  to  Kevlaar,  The. 

Thine  Eyes.     See  Pictures  of  Travel. 

"Thou  lovest  me  not,  thou  lovest  me  not."  See 
Last  Translation,  The. 

To :  "When  summer  dwells,"  etc. 

Translation  from  Heine. 

Water  Fay,  The.     See  Pictures  of  Travel. 
Hellman,  G:  Sidney. — Coleridge. 

Hudson,  The.     See  Sonnet:  to  the  Hudson. 

In  a  China  Shop. 

Sonnet:  to  the  Hud.son. 
Hemans,  Mrs.  Felicia  Dorothea. — Adopted  Child,  The, 

American  Fore.«t  Girl,  The. 

Ancient  Greek  Chant  of  Victory. 

Ballad  of  Roncesvalles,  A.  See  Siege  of  Valencia, 
The. 

Battle  of  Morgarten.  See  Song  of  the  Battle  of 
Morgarten. 

Bended  Bow,  The. 

Bernardo  del  Carpio. 

Better  Land,  The. 

Birds  in  Summer.  (At.  also  to  Mary  Howitt.) 

"Breaking  waves  dashed  high.  The."     See  Land- 
ing of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers,  etc. 

Breathings  of  Spring. 

Bride  of  the  Greek  Isle,  The. 

Bride's  Farewell,  The.  See  Bride  of  the  Greek 
Isle.  The. 

Bring  Flowers. 

Casabianca. 

Child's  First  Grief,  The. 

Christmas  Carol. 

Cliffs  of  Dover,  The. 

CcEur  de  Lion  at  the  Bier  of  His  Father. 

Corinne  at  the  Capitol. 

Coronation  of  Inez  de  Castro,  The. 

Despair  is  never  Quite  Despair.  See  Lights  and 
Shades. 

Dirge:  "Calm  on  the  Spirit  [Bosom — C]  of  Thy  God." 
See  Siege  of  Valencia,  The. 

Dirge:  "Where  shall  we  make  her  grave." 

Diver,  The 

Edith. 

Fall  of  d'Assas,  The. 

Flower  of  the  Desert,  The. 

Graves  of  a  Household,  The. 

Greeks'  Return  from  Battle,  The.  See  Ancient 
Greek  Chant  of  Victory. 

He  never  Smiled  Again. 

Hebrew  Mother,  The. 

Homes  of  England,  The. 

Hour  of  Death,  The. 

Hour  of  Praver  [,  The]. 

Hymn  for  Christmas.     See  Christmas  Carol. 

Invocation. 

Ivan  the  Czar. 

Landing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.  See  I-and- 
ing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers  in  New  England, 
The. 

Landing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers  in  New  England, 
The. 

Landing  of  the  Pilgrims[,TheJ.  See  Landing  of 
the  Pilgrim  Fathers  in  New  England,  The. 

Last  Tree  of  the  Forest,  The. 

Lights  and  Shades. 

Marguerite  of  France. 

Meeting  of  the  Ships,  The. 

Mignon's  Song.  (Tr.) 

Mozart's  Requiem. 

Music.     See  Voice  of  Music,  The. 

Nightingale's  Death-song,  The. 

"O  Love  and  Death."     See  Edith. 
,  Olive  Tree,  The. 


Hemans,  Mrs.  Felicia  Dorothea  (continued). 

Orchard  Blossoms. 

Partin'J;  Words. 

Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.  See  Landing  of  the  Pil- 
grim Fathers  in  New  England,  The. 

Raimond  Released.     See  Vespers  of  Palermo,  The. 

Return  from  Battle,  The.  See  Ancient  Greek 
Chant  of  Victory. 

Return  of  May,  The. 

Revellers,  The. 

Rocks  of  My  Country.     See  Cliffs  of  Dover,  The. 

Shadow  of  a  Flower,  The. 

Sicilian  Captive,  The. 

Siege  of  Valencia,  The. 

Silent  Multitude,  The. 

Song  of  Mina's  Soldiers  [,tw.  The]. 

Song  of  the  Battle  of  Morgarten.        ' 

Song  of  the  Rose,  A. 

Spartan's  March,  The. 

Storm  of  Delphi,  The. 

Sunbeam,  The. 

To  Corinne.     See  Corinne  at  the  Capitol. 

To  Wordsworth. 

Traveller  at  the  Source  of  the  Nile,  The. 

Treasures  of  the  Deep,  The. 

Trumpet,  The. 

Two  Homes,  The. 

Vespers  of  Palermo,  The. 

Voice  of  Music,  The. 

Voice  of  Spring  [,  The]. 

Wandering  Wind,  The. 

Willow  Song. 

Wordsworth.     See  To  Wordsworth. 
.  Wreck,  The. 
Hempstead,  Fay. — Under  the  Snow. 
Henderson,  Fred. — To  Lucy. 
Henderson,  M. — Outlaw,  The. 
Henderson,  Mary  L. — King's  Daughter,  The. 
Hendry,  Jas. — Aftermath,  The. 
Henley,  W:  Ernest. — Ballad  Made  in  the  Hot  Weather. 

By  the  Swinging  Sea. 

England,  niy  England. 

Her  Little  Feet. 

Home.     See  To  D.  H. 

I.  M.— R.  T.  Hamilton  Bruce. 

I  Met  a  Maiden  To-day.     See  To"  My  Mother. 

If  I  Were  King. 

In  Rotten  Row. 

In  the  Year  that's  Come  and  Gone. 

Invictus.     See  I.  M. — R.  T.  HamiltonlBruce. 

Is  it  Good-bye? 

Love  Notes.     See  To  A.  D. 

Made  in  the  Hot  Weather.  See  Ballad  Made  in 
the  Hot  Weather. 

Margaritse  Sorori. 

Pleasant  Song,  A.     See  To  A.  D. 

To  A.  D. 

To  D.  H. 

To  My  Mother. 

Villon's  Straight  Tip  to  All  Cross  Coves. 

"When  You  are  Old." 

With  Strawberries. 
Henley.   W:  Ernest,    and    Stevenson,    Rob't   L:     See 

Stevenson,  Rob't  L: 
Henniker,  Florence. — Appeal,  An. 
Henry,  Drexa. — Noll's  .Tourney. 
Henry,  Jas. — Old  Story  Over  Again,  The. 
Henry,  Patrick. — Appeal  to  Arras,  An.     See  Speech  in 
the  Virginia  Convention. 

Call  to  Arms,  The.  See  Speech  in  the  Virginia 
Convention. 

Freedom  or  Slavery.  See  Speech  in  the  Virginia 
Convention. 

Liberty  or  Death.  See  Speech  in  the  Virginia 
Convention. 

On  the  Resolution  to  put  the  Commonwealth  into 
a  State  of  Defence — before  Virginia  Conven- 
tion.    See  Speech  in  the  Virginia  Convention. 

Resistance  to  British  Aggression.  See  Speech 
in  the  Virginia  Convention. 

Return  of  British  Fugitives. 

Speech  before  the  Virginia  Convention.  See 
Speech  in  the  Virginia  Convention. 

Speech    in    the    Virginia    Convention,    1775. 

Speech  of  Patrick  Henry.  See  Speech  in  the  Vir- 
ginia Convention. 

War  Inevitable,  The.     See  Speech  in  the  Virginia 
Convention. 
Henry,  Re. — Cabman's  Story,  The. 

Lady  Maud's  Oath. 
Henry,  Mrs.  Sarepta  Irish. — Surrender,  The. 

Why  Should  I  Sign  the  Pledge? 
Henry,  W:  Wirt. — Constitution. 


466 


AUTHOR  INDEX                                                    Herrick 

Henry  son.  Rob't.— Bludy  Serk,  The. 
Garmond  of  Fair  Ladies,  The. 

Herford,  Oliver  (continued). 

Proem. 

Robin  [or  Robyn]  and  Makyne. 

Taill  of  the  Lyoun  and  the  Mous,  The. 

Silver  Question,  The. 

Some  Geese. 

Hensel,  Luise. — Book,  The. 

Thanksgiving  Fable,  A. 

Hensley,  Mrs.  Sophie  M.  [Almon].    See  Almon-Hensley, 

Why  ye  Blossome  Cometh  before  ye  I>eafe. 

Mrs.  Sophie  M. 

Herloszsohn,  Carl. — Love  Test,  A. 

Herbert,  Annie. — Mulligan's  Gospel. 

Herman  and  Wills. — Claudian. 

Rift  of  the  Rock.  The. 

Curse,  The.     See  Claudian. 

We    Shall    Know.     See    When    the    Mists    Have 

Herrick,  Rob't. — Anacreontic. 

Rolled  Away. 

Argument   of   his   Book.     See   Argument   of   the 

When  the  Mists  Have  Rolled  Away. 

Hesperides,  The. 

Herbert,  E:  Herbert,  Lord,  of  Cherbury. — Celinda. 

Argument  of  the  Hesperides,  The. 

Love's  Eternity. 

Art  above  Nature. 

Ode  upon  a  Question  Moved  whether  Love  should 

Bag  of  the  Bee,  The. 

Continue  for  Ever,  An. 

Bracelet,  The:     To  Julia. 

Upon  Combing  her  Hair. 

Bride  Cake,  The. 

Herbert,  G: — Aaron. 

Bucolick  betwixt  Two,  A.     See  Lacon  and  Thyrsis. 

Affliction. 

Candlemas.     See  Ceremonies  for  Candlemasse  Eve. 

Be  Useful. 

Candlemas  Eve.     See  Ceremonies  for  Candlemasse 

Bosom  Sin.     See  Sin. 

Eve. 

Call,  The. 

Ceremonies  for  Candlemasse  Eve. 

Church  Porch,  The. 

Ceremonies  for  Christmas. 

Collar,  The. 

Cheat  of  Cupid,  The.     (Tr.) 

Confession. 

Cherry-ripe. 

Constancy. 

Child's  Grace,  A.     See  Grace  for  a  Child. 

Dialogue,  A. 

Chloris  in  the  Snow.     (At.)     See  On  Chloris  Walk- 

Discipline. 

ing  in  the  Snow. 

Easter. 

Christian  Militant. 

Elixir,  The. 

Comfort  to  a  Youth  that  had  Lost  his  Love. 

Employment. 

Corinna's  Going  a^Maying. 

Flower,  The. 

Corinna's  Maying.     See  Corinna's   Going   a-May- 

Gifts  of  God,  The.     See  Pulley.  The. 

ing. 

Gratefulness. 

Counsel  to  Girls.     See  To  [the]  Virgins,  to  Make 

Life. 

Much  of  Time. 

Life  and  the  Flowers.     See  Life. 

Counsel  to  Virgins.     See  To  [the]  Virgins,  to  Make 

Life's  Lessons.     See  Sin. 

Much  of  Time. 

Love. 

Country  Life,  The. 

Man. 

Daffodils.     See  To  Daffodils. 

Memento  Mori.     See  Virtue. 

Delight  in  Disorder. 

Misery. 

Dirge  for  Dorcas.     See  Widdowes  Teares,  The ;  or. 

Odor,  The. 

Dirge  of  Dorcas. 

Peace. 

Dirge  of  Jephthah's  Daughter,  The. 

Praise. 

Divination  by  a  DaflFodil. 

Easy   Life,   The.     See   Paranaticall,   or  Advisive 

Providence. 

Pulley.  The. 

Verse,  to  his  Friend,  Mr.  John  Wicks,  A. 

Quip,  The. 

Epitaph  upon  a  Child  that  Died.     See  Upon  a 

Said  I  not  So? 

Child. 

Sin. 

Epitaph  upon  a  Child  that  Died.     See  also  Upon  a 

Sunday. 

Child  that  Died. 

"Sundays  the  pillars  are."     See  Sunday. 

Epitaph  upon  a  Virgin,  An. 

To  Keep  a  True  Lent.     {Wr.  at.)     See  Herrick, 

Funeral  Rites  of  the  Ro.se,  The. 

Rob't. 

"Gather  ye  rose-buds  as  ye  may."     See  To  [the] 

Vertue.     See  Virtue. 

Virgins,  to  Make  Much  of  Time. 

Virtue. 

Go,  Happy  Rose.     See  To  the  Ro.se. 

Virtue  Immortal.     See  Virtue. 

Going  a  Maying.     See  Corinna's  Going  a^Maying. 

Virtuous  Soul,  The.     See  Virtue. 

Grace  for  a  Child. 

World,  The. 

Hag,  The. 

Herbert,    Hattie. —  Brought    to   Trial   for  "Blowin'." 

Hi.s  Grange;  or.  Private  Wealth. 

(Ad.) 

His  Letanie  to  the  Holy  Spirit. 

His  Poets.     See  To  Live  Merrily,  and  to  Trust  to 

Grumbling  over  Lessons. 

Turn  about's  Fair  Play. 

Good  Verses. 

Two  Interpreters  of  Dreams,  The. 

His  Prayer  to  Ben  Jonson. 

Two  Teachers,  The. 

His  Winding-sheet. 

Herbert,  H:  W:— Come  Back. 

Hock-cart,  The;  or.  Harvest  Home. 

Herbert,  Sidney. — Bridal  Wine-cup.  The.     See  Bridal 
Feast,  The.— F.  C.  Long. 

Holy  Spirit,  The.     See  His  Letanie  to  the  Holy 

Spirit. 

Herbin,  J:  F: — Across  the  Dykes. 

How  Roses  Came  Red. 

Diver,  The. 

Humility. 

Simon. 

Hymn  to  the  Graces. 

Sonnet,  The. 

Julia.     See  Rock  of  Rubies,  The. 

Herder,  Johann  Gottfried  von. — Among  green  Pleasant 

Kiss,  The. 

Meadows.     See    Ballad,  A;     "Among  green," 

Lachrimse;  or.  Mirth  Turned  to  Mourning. 

etc.                                                                                . 

Lacon  and  Thyrsis.     See  Bucolick  betwixt  Two,  A. 

Ballad,  A:     "Among  green  pleasant  meadows." 

Lines  upon  Himself.     See  Upon  Himself. 

Hereford,  W.  R.— His  Letter. 

Litany  to  the  Holy  Spirit.     See  His  Letanie  to  the 

Herford,  Brooke. — Prayer,  A. 

Holy  Spirit. 

Herford,  Oliver.— Artful  Ant,  The. 

Mad  Maid's  Song,  The. 

Belated  Violet,  A. 

Matins  (Mattens — C.). 

Chimpanzee,  The. 

May-day.     See  Corinna's  Going  a-Maying. 

Cow,  The. 

Meditation  for  his  Mistress,  A. 

Earth.     See  Proem. 

Mrs.  Eliz.  Wheeler. 

Elf  and  the  Dormouse,  The. 

Morning  Prayer.     See  Matins. 

Music.     See  To  Music,  to  Becalm  his  Fever 

Enchanted  Oak.  The. 

Fall  of  .1.  W.  Beane,  The. 

Night-piece,  The  [:  To  Julia]. 
Not  Every  Day  Fit  for  Verse. 
Oberon's  Feast. 

Gold.     See  Overheard  in  a  Garden. 

Hen,  The. 

Hippopotamus,  The. 

Ode  for  fur.  to]  Ben  Jonson,  An. 

Metaphysics. 

Ode  on  the  Birth  of  our  Saviour,  An. 

Mon-goos,  The. 

Ode  to  Endymion  Porter. 

Overheard  in  a  Garden. 

Old  Rhyme,  An.     See  To  Electra. 

Packet  of  Letters,  A. 

On  Chloris  Walking  in  the  Snow.     (At.)              ■  ' 

Platypus,  The. 

On  Himself.                                                             '     . 

467 


Herrick 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Herrick,  Rob't  (eontiniied). 

Paranteticall,  or  Advisive  Verse,  to  his  Friend,  Mr. 

John  Wicks,  A. 
Pastoral  upon  the  Birth  of  Prince  Charles,  A. 
Poetry  of  Dress.  The.     See  Delight  in  Disorder. 
Poetry    of    Dress,    The.     See   also    Upon    Jvilia's 

Clothes.  • 

Poet's  Good  Wishes  for  the  Most  HopefuU  and 

Handsome  Prince,  the  Duke  of  Yorke. 
Prayer  to  Ben  Jonson.     See  His  Prayer  to  Ben 

Jonson. 
Present  Time  best  Pleaseth,  The.     See  This  Age 

Best. 
Primrose,  The. 
Rock  of  Rubies,  The. 
Rose,  The.     See  To  the  Rose. 
St.  Distaff's  Day. 
Star-song,  Thef:     A  Carroll  to  the  Bang,  Sung  at 

Whit«haU— C.l 
Succession  of  the  Four  Sweet  Months,  The. 
Sweet,  Be  Not  Proud.     See  To  Dianeme. 
Temarie  of  Littles,  upon  a  Pipkin  of  Jellie  Sent  to 

a  Lady,  A. 
Thanksgiving  for  his  House.     See  Thanksgiving 

to  God  for  His  House,  A. 
Thanksgiving  to  God,  A.     See  Thanksgiving  to 

God  for  His  House,  A. 
Thanksgiving  to  God  for  His  House,  A. 
This  Age  Best.     See  Present  Time  best  Pleaseth, 

The. 
To  Anthea[,  who  may  Command  him  Anything]. 
To  Ben  Jonson.     See  Ode  for  Ben  Jonson,  An. 
To  Blossoms. 
To  Daffodils. 

To  Daisies[,  not  to  Shut  so  Soon]. 
To  Death. 
To  Dianeme. 
To  Electra. 

To  His  Book.     (2  poeww.) 
To  His  Conscience. 
To  His  Mistress,  Objecting  to  Him  neither  Tosring 

or  Talking. 
To  His  Saviour,  a  Child;  a  Present  by  a  Child. 
To  His  Winding-Sheet.     See  His  Winding-sheet. 
To  Julia.     See  Night  Piece:  To  Julia,  The. 
To  Keep  a  True  Lent.     (Wr.  at.  to  G:  Herbert.) 
To  Live  Merrily  and  to  Trust  to  Good  Verses. 
To  Meadows. 

To  Music,  to  Becalm  his  Fever. 
To  CEnone. 
To  Perilla. 
To  Phillis  \or  Phyllis].     See  To  Phillis  to  Love  and 

Live  with  him. 
To  Phillis  to  Love  and  Live  with  him. 
To  Primroses  Filled  with  Morning  Dew. 
To  Robin  Redbreast. 
To  Silvia. 
To  the  Duke  of  York.      See  Poet's  Good  Wishes 

for  the  Most  Hopefull,  etc. 
To  the  Lark. 
To  the  Rose  [;  a  Song]. 
To  [thelVirgins  [,  to  Make  Much  of  Time], 
To  the  Western  Wind. 
To  the  Willow-tree. 
To  Violets. 
To  Virgins,  to  Make  Much  of  Time.     See  To  the 

Virgins,  etc. 
True  Lent,  A.     See  To  Keep  a  True  Lent. 
Upon  a  Child. 
Upon  a  Child  that  Died. 
Upon  Her  Feet. 
Upon  Himself. 
Upon  Julia's  Clothes. 

Upon  Sappho  Sweetly  Playing  and  Sweetly  Sing- 
ing. 
Upon  the  Loss  of  his  Mistresses. 
Violets.     See  To  Violets 
Wake,  The. 

When  He  would  have  His  Verses  Read. 
Wherias    in    Silks    [My    Julia    Goes].     See    Upon 

Julia's  Clothes. 
White  Island  [;  or.  Place  of  the  Blest],  The. 
Widdowes  Teares,  The;  or,  Dirge  of  Dorcas. 
Wounded  Cupid,  The. 
Hersey,  F.  W.  C— Triolet. 
Harvey,  T:  Kibble. — Cleopatra  at  Actium. 
Dead  Trumpeter,  The. 

Devil  at  Home,  The.     See  Devil's  Progress,  The. 
Devil's  Progress,  The. 
I  Think  on  Thee. 
Love. 
"Hesperion." — Land  of  Liberty,  The.    See  My  Country. 
My   Country. 


Hewins,  Caroline  M. — Troll-man,  The. 
Hewitt,  A.  S.— Brooklyn  Bridge,  The. 
Hewitt,  E.  E. — At  Easter  Time. 
Hewitt,  H.  S. — Soubrette's  Revenge,  The 
Hewitt,  J:  H. — Creation  of  Man,  The. 

Prayer  in  Battle,  The. 
Hewitt,  Mary  E  — Yam,  A. 
Hewitt.  Oscar  F. — Dime  Supper,  A. 

Hey, .  — God's  Father-care. 

Heywood,  Delia  A. — Abigail  Fisher. 

As  Seen  in  Later  Years. 

A-Soak  in  "Wum  Barrels." 

What  I  would  Be. 
Heywood.  J: — Cuckoo's  Voice,  The. 

Praise  of  His  Lady,  A.  (At.  alto  to  T:  Heywood.) 

Praise  of  Princess  Mary,  A. 
Heywood,  T: — Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange,  The. 

Go,    Pretty   Birds.     See   Fair   Maid   of   the    Ex- 
change.  The. 

Good-morrow  [Song].     See  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

Greeting,  A.     See  Rape  of  Ijucrece,  The. 

Greetings  to  My  Love.     See  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

King  Edward  the  Fourth. 

Love's  Ecstasy. 

Matin  Song.     See  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

Message,  The.     See  Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange. 
The. 

Morning.     See  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

"Pack  clouds  away  [.and  welcome  day]."     See 
Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

Phillis.     See  Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange,  The. 

Portrait,   The.     See  Praise   of  his  Lady,   A. — J: 
Heywood. 

Praise  of  Ceres.     See  Silver  Age. 

Princes  in  the  Tower,  The.     See  King  Edward  the 
Fourth. 

Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

Search  after  God. 

Silver  Age. 

Song:  "Pack  clouds  awagr,  and  welcome  day." 
See  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

Song  of  the  Bell.     See  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The. 

To  Diana. 

To  Phyllis.     See  Fair  Maid  of  the  Exchange,  The. 
Hichens,  Rob't  S. — Sacrifice  of  Genius,  The. 
Hickey,   Emily  Henrietta. —  Ballad  of  St.   Swithun's 
Day,  A 

Beloved,  it  is  Morn. 

Sea  Story,  A. 
Hickey,  Emily  M.  P. — "Emperor  Evermore." 

Harebells. 
Hickman,  C:  D. — Obliging  His  Landlady. 
Hickok,  Eliza  M. — Prayer. 
Hickox,  Chauncey. — Under  the  Red  Cross. 
Higbee,  Elnathan  Elisha,  D.D.  —  Arbor  Day  and  the 
Children.     See  Nature  and  the  Children. 

Nature  and  the  Children. 

"Thy   glory   thou   didst   manifest."     See  Water 
into  Wine,  The. 

Water  into  Wine,  The. 
Higgins,  J: — Books. 

Higginson,  Ella. — Always  Some  One  Below.     See  Help- 
ing Hand,  A. 

Beggars. 

Beside  the  Sea. 

Cradle-song  of  the  Fisherman's  Wife. 

Fairy's  Love-song,  A. 

Four-leaf  Clover. 

Grand  Ronde  Valley,  The. 

Helping  Hand,  A. 

"Jest  a-Thinkin'  o'  You." 

Lamp  in  the  West,  The. 

Lullaby. 

Moonrise  in  the  Rockies. 
Higginson,  Mrs.  Mary  Potter  [Thacher]. — Changelings. 

Ghost-flowers. 

In  the  Dark. 

Inheritance. 

Playmate  Hours,  The. 
Higginson,  T:  Wentworth. — Autumn  Leaves. 

Beneath  the  Violets. 

Decoration. 

"Easy  thing  O  Power  Divine,  An."     See  Things 
I  Miss.  The. 

I  Will  Arise  and  Go  imto  My  Father. 

Ode  to  a  Butterfly. 

Oratory  of  Wendell  Phillips,  The.     See  Wendell 
Phillips. 

Pantheism  and  Theism. 

Rabiah's  Defense. 

"Since  Cleopatra  Died." 

Sixty  and  Six. 

Snowing  of  the  Pines,  The. 


468 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Holland 


Higginson,  T:  Wentworth  (continued). 

Sonnet  from  Petrarch.' 

Sonnet  to  Duty. 

"Such  Stuff  as  Dreams  are  Made  of." 

Things  I  Miss,  The. 

To  Duty.     See  Sonnet  to  Duty. 

To  My  Shadow. 

Two  Lessons,  The. 

Two  Voyagers.     See  Two  Voyages. 

Two  Voyages. 

Ulysses  S.  Grant. 

Vestis  Angelica. 

Wendell  PhiUips. 
Higginson,  Mrs.  T:  Wentworth.     See  Higginson,  Mrs. 

Mart  P.  T. 
Higley,  Warren. — Arbor  Day.     See  What  Arbor  Day 
has  Already  Done. 

Cutting  off  the  Forests. 

What  Arbor  Day  has  Already  Done. 
Hildreth,  C:  Lotin. — At  the  Mermaid  Inn. 

Implora  Pace. 

Snow  Sorcery. 

To  an  Obscure  Poet  who  liives  on  My  Hearth. 
Hildreth,  Fred. — Our  Drummer  Boy. 
Hill,  Aaron. — How  to  Deal  with  Common  Natures. 
Hill,  Alex.  D.— Men  of  God. 
Hill,  B:  Dionysiua  ("Father  Edmund").— To  St.  Mary 

Magdalen 
Hill.  C.  L. — In  the  Morning. 
Hill,  G:— Fall  of  the  Oak. 

Good  Night. 

Oak,  The.     See  Fall  of  the  Oak. 

Song  of  the  Elfin  Steersman. 
Hill,  T:— Bobolink,  The. 
Hill,  "Yankee." — Yankee  Fireside,  The. 
Hillard,  G:  Stillman,  LL.D. — Danger  of  Exclusive  De- 
votion to  Business. 

Small    Beginnings    of    Great    Historical    Move- 
ments. 
Hillhouse,    A:    Lucas. — Forgiveness    of    Sins   a  Joy 

Unknown. 
Hillhouse,  Jas.  Abraham. — Absalom's  Vision. 

Demon-lover,  The. 

Hadad. 
Hillis,  Rev.  Newell  Dwight.— Bible,  The. 

Instinct  of  Immortality,  The. 
Hills,  L.  P. — Poetical  Courtship. 
Hills,  W:  H.— City  Sportsman,  The. 
Hillyer,  Lulu  C. — Composition,  The. 
Hinds,  A.  L.— Through  Toil. 
Hinds,  S: — Baby  Sleeps.     iSee  Sleeping  Babe,  The. 

Love  Keeping  Watch. 

Sleeping  Babe,  The. 
Hine,  C:  Potter. — Faint  Heart  ne'er  Won  Fair  Lady. 
Hinkson,  Mrs.  Kathe.  [Tynan]. — De  Profundis. 

Dead  Coach,  The. 

Sad  Mother,  The 

Sheep  and  Lambs. 

Singing  Stars. 
Hinman,  Addison  H. — Longing  for  the  Old  Plantation. 

To  the  CoUege  Idol. 
Hinxham,  Miss  — . — Breeze  in  the  Church,  The. 
Hirsch,  Rabbi  Emil. — Centennial  Speech. 
Hirst,  H:  Beck.— Fringilla  Melodia,  The. 

Funeral  of  Time,  The. 
Hita,  Juan  Ruiz  de. — Praise  of  Little  Women. 
Hitchcock,  Pres.  E:  (?)^True  Science  and  Religion. 

True  Science  Ought  to  be   Religious.     See  True 
Science  and  Religion. 
Hitchcock,  H: — Supreme  Court  and  the  Constitution, 

The. 
Hoar,  G :  Fri.sbee. — Against  Imperialism. 

Daniel  Webster. 

Free  Speech  and  Constitutional  Liberty. 

Law  and  Faith  and  Freedom. 

Nineteenth  of  April,  1775,  The. 

Our  Country's  Greatness. 

Path  of  Duty,  The. 

Puritan  and  the  Pilgrim,  The. 

Puritanism. 

True  War  Spirit,  The. 

United    Country,  A. 
Hoar,  Sherman. — American  Courage. 
Hoare,  Prince. — Arethusa,  The. 
Hobart,  Hon.  Mrs.  C: — Changed  Cross,  The. 
Hobart,  Ethel. — Valentine,  A. 
Hobart,  G:  V. — Out  Sleighing  with  Sophia. 
Hobart,  Sarah  D.— Legend  of  St.  Freda,  The. 

"What  note  of  sorrow  wounds  the  joyous  May?" 
Hobbes,  T: — Memory  and  the  Muses. 
Hobson,  Richmond  Pierson. -linking  of  the  Merrimac, 

The. 
Hoccleve,  T:    See  Occleve,  T: 


Hodge,  Archibald  Alex.,  D.D. — "To  love  satisfies  one- 
half  of  our  nature. ' ' 
Hodge,  C: — "God  can  and  does  render  sinners  happy 

in  spite  of  their  sins." 
Hodge,  Tobe. — Most  Fellows  Know.     See  One  Thing 
He  Forgot. 
One  Thing  He  Forgot. 
Hodgins,  Jas.  Cobourg. — Greek  Reverie,  A. 

Once  More. 
Hodgson,  Fannie    E.     See  Burnett,  Mrs.    Frances 

Eliza  [Hodgson]. 
Hodson,    Mrs.    Harriet    Ward. — Saving    Mission    on 

Infancy,  The. 
Hoey,  C:  [or  G:]. — Asleep  at  the  Switch. 
Hoey,  Fs.  Cashel. — Voyage  and  a  Haven,  A. 
Hofel,  Johann. — Weep  Not. 
Hoffard,  Rev.  M.  L. — Jerusalem  the  Beautifjil. 
Hoffman,  C:  Fenno. — Farewell,  The. 
Mint  Julep,  The. 
Monterey. 

Seek  not  to  Understand  Her. 
Sparkling  and  Bright. 

Storming  of  Monterey,  The.     See  Monterey. 
Think  of  Me,  Dearest. 
Thy  Name. 
Thy  Smiles. 
We  Parted  in  Sadness. 
Hoffman,  Mrs.  Clara. — High  License. 
Hoffman,  Jiidge  Murray.  (?) — "Plea  of  emotional  in- 
sanity or  transitory  mania.  The." 
Hoffman,  Ogden. — Merits  of  Fulton's  Invention. 
Hoffmann,    Dr.    Heinrich. — Story    of    Little    Suck-a- 
thumb.  The, 
Story  of  the  Wild  Huntsman,  The. 
Hoffner,  R.  J. — Mission  of  a  Song,  The. 
Hogan,  M. — Mannix  the  Comer. 
Hoge,  Moses  D. — Unconscious  Greatness  of  Stonewall 

Jackson,  The. 
Hogg,    Jas. — Abbot    M'Kinnon,    The.     See    Queen's 
Wake,  The. 
Boat-race,  The.     See  Queen  Hynde. 
Bonnie  Prince  Charlie. 


Boy'."!  Song[,  A]. 
~ Da 


(Anot}ier  vers,  hy  Rob't 


Charlie  is  My  Darling. 
Burns.) 

Fate  of  Macgregor,  The.     See  Queen's  Wake,  The. 

I  Hae  Naebody  Now. 

Jock  Johnstone,  the  Tinkler. 

Kilmeny.     See  Queen's  Wake,  The. 

Lark,  The.     See  Skylark,  The. 

Liddel  Bower,  The. 

Love  is  Like  a  Dizziness. 

Moon  was  a-Waning,  The. 

Queen  Hynde'. 

Queen's  Wake,  The. 

Skylark,  The. 

Way  for  BiUy  and  Me,  The.     See  Boy's  Song,  A. 

"What  are  the  flowers  of  Scotland?" 

When  Maggy  Gangs  Away. 

When  the  Kye  Come[s]  Hame. 

Witch  of  Fife,  The.     See  Queen's  Wake,  The. 

Women  Fo'k,  The. 
Holbrook,  E.  A.— Child  and  Tree. 

Children's  Arbor  Day  March. 

Life  in  its  Spring-time. 

March  for  the  Children.     See  Children's  Arbor  Day 
March. 

Song  of  Consecration. 

Song  to  the  Maple  Tree. 
Holcomb,  T:  A.  E.— Mischief. 
Holcomb,  Willard.— Lost  Chord  Found,  A. 
Holcombe,  W:  H. — New  Thanatopsis. 
Holcroft,  T: — Gaffer  Gray. 

Road  to  Ruin,  The. 
Holder,  Phebe  A. — Hour  with  Wbittier,  An. 

Woodland  Hymn,  A. 
Holdsworth,  Philip  J. — Hast  Thou  Forgotten  Me. 
Holland,  Josiah  Gilbert. — "Are  there  not  lofty  moments 
when  the  soul."     See  Kathrina. 

Arthur  Bonnicastle. 

Babyhood.     See  Bitter-sweet. 

Bitter-sweet. 

Bluebeard.     See  Bitter-sweet. 

Brotherhood. 

Brought    to    Trial    for    "Blowin'."     See    Arthur 
Bonnicastle. 

Christmas  Carol[,  A]. 

Cradle  Song.     See  Bitter-sweet. 

Daniel  Gray. 

Death  of  the  First-born.     See  Arthur  Bonnicastle. 

Eureka. 

Getting  the  Right  Start.     See  Timothy  Titcomb's 
Letters. 


469 


Holland 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIOXS 


Holland,  Josiah  Gilbert  (continued). 
Give  us  Men.     See  Wanted. 
Glimpse  of  Youth,  A. 
Gradatim. 

Heart  of  the  War.  The 
"Here  on  this  bles.^ed  Thanksgiving  night."     See 

Bitter-sweet.  * 
Hymn.  The:     "For  summer's  bloom,  etc." 
"ff  life  awake  and  will  never  cease." 
Kathrina. 
Lullaby:  "Over  the  cradle,"  etc.     See  Where  Shall 

the  Baby's  Dimple  Be? 
Lullaby:  "Rockaby,  lullaby,"  etc.    See  Mistress  of 

the  Manse,  The 
Mistress  of  the  Manse,  The. 
Only  in  Dreams.     See  Gradatim. 
Palmer's  Vision,  The. 
Picture,  A, 

Rockaby,  Lullaby.     See  Mistres.s  of  the  Manse. 
Sleeping  and  Dreaming. 
"So   every   little   child    I   see."     See  Glimpse   of 

Youth,  A. 
Song  of  Doubt,  A. 
Song  of  Faith.  A 
Temperance  Question,  The. 
Thanksgiving  Ode.  A.     See  Bitter-sweet. 
Timothy  Titcomb's  Letters. 
Titcomb's  Letters.     See  Timothy  Titcomb's  I.«t- 

ters. 
Tramp,  Tramp,  Tramp.     <See  Temperance  Ques- 
tion, The. 
Tribute,  A. 

True  Men.     See  Wanted. 
Wanted. 

Way  to  Heaven,  The.  See  Gradatim. 
Where  Shall  the  Baby's  Dimple  Be? 
"With  the  results  of  Christianity  before  him  and 

in  him"  (?). 
Words. 
Hollands,  H.  T.— Wee-waw  Land,  The. 
Holley,  Marietta  ("Josiah  Allen's  Wife").    Alexander's 

Store.     See  My  Opinions  and  Betsey  Bobbet's. 
Brothers,  The 

Buying  a  Feller.     See  Sweet  Cicely. 
For  a'    that;    or,    Selling    a   Feller.      See  Sweet 

Cicely. 
Fourth  of  July  in  Jonesville.     iSee  My  Opinions 

and  Betsey  Bobbet's. 
Josiah  Allen's  Wife  as  a  P.  A.  and  P.  L;  or,  Sa- 

mantha  at  the  Centennial. 
Josiah  Allen's  Wife  at  a  Fashionable  Restaurant. 

See  Samantha  at  the  World's  Fair. 
Jo.siah  Allen's  Wife  at  A.  T.  Stewart's  Store.     iSee 

My  Opinions  and  Betsey  Bobbet's. 
Josiafi  and  the  Mermaid.     See  Samantha  at  Sara- 
toga. 
Josiah   at   the   Various   Springs.     See   Samantha 

at  Saratoga. 
My  Oi'inions  and  Betsey  Bobbet's. 
Samantha  at  Saratoga. 
Samantha  at  the  Centennial.     See  Josiah  Allen's 

Wife  as  a  P.  \.  and.  P.  L,  etc. 
Samantha  at  the  World's  Fair. 
Samantha   Smith    Becomes   Josiah    Allen's   Wife. 

See  My  Opinions  and  Betsey  Bobbet's. 
Study  in  Dialect,  A.     See  Josiah  Allen's  Wife  as  a 

P.  A.  and  P.  L,  etc. 
Summer. 
Sweet  Cicely. 
Tryi    _ 

What  Makes  the  Summer? 
Widder   Doodle.     See   Josiah   .■Mien's   Wife   as   a 

P  A.  and  P.  L,  etc. 
Wimmen's  Speah.      See  My  Opinions  and  Betsey 

Bobbet's. 
Woman's  Rights.     See  My  Opinions  and  Betsey 

Bobbet's. 
Holliday,  Frank  E.— How  Strange  It  Will  Be. 

My  Little  Bo-peep.     (At.  also  to  S.  B.  M'Manus.) 
Holliday,  G.  Y.— "As  I  Have  Loved  You." 
Hollinger,  Emma  C. — "Little  Angels." 
HoUoway,  H:  H.— Cold  Water 
Holm,  Saxe. — Angel  of  Pain,  The. 
Gospel  of  Mytery.  The. 
Hymn,  A.     See  "I  cannot  think  but  God  must 

know  " 
"I  cannot  think  but  God  must  know." 
Love  of  God,  The. 
Song  of  Clover.  A. 
Waiting  on  God.     See  "I  cannot  think  but  God 

must  know." 
Holman.  Frank  Newton. — In  Wreaths  of  Smoke. 
Holmes,  A.  W. — Charade. 


Holmes.  C.  E.  L. — You  Put  no  Flowers  on  My  Papa's 

Grave. 
Holmes,  Frd'k  Morell. — Owen's  Oath. 
Holmes,  Mrs.  Georgiana  ("George   Klingle").  —  Make 
Thy  Way  Mine. 

Patience  with  Love. 

To-morrow'a  News. 

Why  Mother  is  Proud. 
Holmps.H.  W. — Valentine,  A. 
Holmes,  I:  E: — Death  of  John  Quincy  Adams. 
Holmes,  M.  Sophie. — Heaven. 
Holmes.  Oliver  Wendell. — Additional  Verses. 

iEstivation. 

After  a  Lecture  on  Keats. 

Album  Verses. 

April,  ever  Frail  and  Fair. 

Archbishop  and  Gil  Bias,  The. 

At  a  Birthday  Festival. 

At  the  Atlantic  Dinner. 

Aunt  Tabitha 

Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 

Avis. 

Ballad  of  the  Oysterman,  The. 

Before  the  Curfew. 

"Best  Room,"  The. 

Bill  and  .loe. 

Birthday  of  Daniel  Webster. 

Boys,  The. 

Brother  .Jonathan's  Lament  for  Sister  Caroline. 

"Build  thee  more  stately  mansions,  O  my  soul. ' ' 
See  Chambered  Nautilus,  The. 

Bunker  Hill.  See  Grandmother's  Story  of  Bun- 
ker Hill  Battle. 

Cacocthes  Scribendi. 

Chambered  Nautilus,  The. 

City  Men  in  the  Country.  See  Lines  Recited  at 
the  Berkshire  Jubilee. 

Class  Meeting,  1875.     See  For  Class  Meeting,  1875. 

Contentment. 

Cubes  and  Spheres.  See  Autocrat  of  the  Break- 
fast-table, The. 

Daniel  Webster.  See  Birthday  of  Daniel  Web- 
ster. 

Deacon's  Masterpiece,  The;  or.  The  Wonderful 
"One-hoss  Shay. ' ' 

"Deal  gently  with  us,  ye  who  read!"  See  To  My 
Readers. 

Dilemma,  The. 

Dorothy  Q. 

Emerson,  Extract  Concerning.  See  Ralph  Waldo 
Emerson. 

Epilogue  to  the  Breakfast-table  Series. 

Evening.     By  a  Tailor. 

Faithful  Little  Wife,  A.  See  Professor  at  the 
Breakfast-table,  The. 

Fashionable  Piano  Music.  See  Poet  at  the  Break- 
fast-table, The. 

Father  of  All!  in  Death's  Relentless  Claim. 

Flower  of  Liberty,  The. 

For  Class  Metting,  1875. 

For  the  Moore  Centennial  Celebration. 

Francis  Parkman. 

Gambrel-roofed  House  and  its  Outlook,  The. 
See  Poet  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 

Girdle  of  Friendship,  The.' 

God  Bless  Our  Father  Land.  See  International 
Ode. 

God  Save  the  Flag. 

Golden  Flower,  The. 

Good  Time  Going,  A. 

Grandmother's  Story  of  Bunker  Hill.  See  Grand- 
mother's Story  of  Bunker  Hill  Battle. 

Grandmother's  Story  of  Bunker  Hill  Battle. 

Grandmother's  Story.  The  Battle  of  Bunker 
Hill.  See  Grandmother's  Story  of  Bunker 
Hill  Battle. 

Hats.     See  Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 

Height  of  the  Ridiculous,  The. 

Holmes  Alphabet,  A. 

Homesick  in  Heaven.  See  Poet  at  the  Breakfast- 
table,  The. 

How  the  Old  Horse  Won  the  Bet. 

Human  Voice,  The.  See  Autocrat  of  the  Break- 
fast-table, The. 

Hymn  of  Trust. 

"If  to  embody  in  a  breathing  word. ' '    See  Poetry. 

Illustration  of  a  Picture. 

Inevitable  Trial,  The. 

International  Ode. 

Iris.     See  Professor  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 

Iron  Gate,  The. 

James  Russell  Lowell.  See  To  James  Russell 
Lowell. 


470 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Hood 


Holmes,  Oliver  Wendell  (continued). 

James  Russell  Lowell's  Birthday  Festival.  See 
At  a  Birthday  Festival. 

Katydid.     See  To  an  Insect. 

La  Grisette. 

Language.     See  Rhymed  Lesson,  A  (Urania). 

Last  Leaf,  The. 

Letting  in  Light.  See  Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast- 
table,  The. 

Lexington. 

lanes  Recited  at  the  Berkshire  .Jubilee,  Pittsfield, 
■Mass.,  Aug    23,  1844. 

Little  Saint  Cecilia. 

Living  Temple,  The. 

Meeting  of  the  Dryads,  The. 

Midsummer. 

Music  Grinders,  The. , 

My  Aunt. 

My  Aviary. 

Never  or  Now. 

New  Hail  Columbia.     See  Additional  Verses. 

Now  or  Never.     See  Never  or  Now. 

Ode  for  a  Social  Meeting. 

Ode  for  Washington's  Birthday. 

Old  Constitution,  The.     See  Old  Ironsides. 

Old  Hemlock,  An.  See  Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast- 
table,  The. 

Old  Ironsides. 

Old  Man  Dreams,  The. 

On  Lending  a  Punch-bowl. 

Once  More. 

One-hoss  Shay,  The;  or.  The  Deacon's  Masterpiece. 
See  Deacon's  Ma.sterpiece,  The;  or.  The  Won- 
derful "One-hoss  Shay. ' ' 

Our  Limitations. 

Oysterman,  The.  See  Ballad  of  the  Oy.sterman, 
The. 

Perseverance. 

Pilgrim's  Vision.  The. 

Ploughman,  The.  . 

Poem  for  the  Dedication  of  the  Fountain  at  Strat- 
f ord-on-Avon ,  Presented  by  George  W.  Childs. 
of  Philadelphia. 

Poem  Read  at  the  Dinner  Given  to  the  Author  by 
the  Medical  Profession  of  the  City  of  New  York, 
April  12,  1883. 

Poesy.     See  Poetry. 

Poet  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 

Poetry. 

Profe.ssor  at  the  Breakfast-table,  The. 

Prologue. 

Promise,  The. 

Questions  and  Answers. 

Ralph  Waldo  Emerson. 

Reflections  of  a  Proud  Pedestrian. 

Rhymed  Lesson,  A  (Urania). 

Ilobin.son  of  Levden.  See  Professor  at  the  iJreak- 
fast-table.  The. 

Rudolph  the  Headsman.  See  Autocrat  of  the 
Breakfast-table,  The. 

School-boy,  The. 

September  Gale,  The. 

Soldier's  Faith,  The. 

Spring  Has  Come,  The. 

Steamboat,  The. 

Stratford  Fountain.  See  Poem  for  the  Dedication 
of  the  Fountain  at  Stratford-on-Avon,  etc. 

Strong  Heroic  Line,  The.  See  Poem  Read  at  the 
Dinner  given  to  the  Author,  etc. 

Sunday  Hymn,  A. 

Talks  on  Trees.  See  Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast- 
table,  The. 

Tattered  Ensign,  The.     See  Old  Ironsides. 

Temple,  of  Human  Liberty,  The. 

"Thy  sacred  leaves,  fair  freedom's  flower."  See 
Flower  of  Liberty,  The. 

To  an  Insect. 

To  George  Peabody. 

To  James  Russell  Lowell. 

To  my  Readers. 

To  the  Katydid.     See  To  an  Insect. 

To  the  Portrait  of  "A  Gentleman." 

Toadstool,  The. 

Two  Streams,  The. 

Under  the  Violets. 

Under  the  Washington  Elm,  Cambridge. 

Union,  The.  See  Brother  Jonathan's  Lament  for 
Sister  Caroline. 

Union  and  Liberty. 

Urania,  a  Rhymed  Lesson.  See  Rhymed  Lesson, 
A  (Urania). 

Voiceless,  The. 

War  for  the  Union,  The.  See  Inevitable  Trial,  The. 


Holmes,  Oliver  Wendell  {continued). 

Welcome  to  the  Nations. 

When  We  Plant  a  Tree. 

"Where  we  love  is  home. ' '  See  Poet  at  the  Break- 
fast-table, The. 

Why  They  Twinkle.     See  Album  Verses. 

Wonderful  "One-hoss  Shay,"  The.  See  Deacon's 
Masterpiece,  The;  or,  "The  Wonderful  "One- 
hoss  Shay. ' ' 

Words   on   Language.      See   Rhymed   Lesson,   A 
(Urania). 
Holmes,  Sidney  E. — Child's  Good-night.  The. 
Holmes,  T: — Conjugating  Dutchman,  The. 

Conjugating     German,      The.     See     Conjugating 
Dutchman,  The. 
Holstein,  C:  T... — But  One  Flag  for  Our  Country. 
Holt,  Jos. — Agriculture  and  Love  of  Country. 

Love  of  Country.  See  Agriculture  and  Love  of 
Country. 

Stand  by  tne  Flag. 
Holty,  Ludwig. — Winter  Song. 

Winter's  Snows.     See  Winter  Song. 
Home,  F.  Wyyille.— Dover  Cliff. 

English  Girl,  An.  • 

In  a  September  Night. 
Home,  Hattie. — Seasons,  The. 
Home.  Rev   J: — Douglas. 

Douglas's  Account  of  Himself.     See  Douglas. 

Norval.     See  Douglas. 

Scene  from  Douglas,  A.     See  Douglas. 

Soliloquy  of  Douglas — Solemnity.     See  Douglas. 
Home  Recreations. — Comin'  through  the  Rye. 

Hard  Shave,  A. 

Spirit  of  '7R. 
Homer. — Bending  of  the  Bow,  The.    See  Odyssey,  The. 

Camp  at  Night,  The.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Combat  between  Paris  and  Menelaus.  See  Iliad, 
The. 

Defiance  of  Hector  and  Ajax,  The.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Exploit  of  Hector,  The.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Grief  of  Achilles  for  the  Slaying  of  Patroclus, 
Menoetus'  Son.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Hector  Slain  by  Achilles.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Hector's  Exploit  at  the  Barriers  of  the  Grecian 
Fleet.     See  Iliad,  The, 

Hector's  Farewell  to  Andromache.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Hector's  Rebuke  to  Polydamuc.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Helen  at  the  Scaean  Gates.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Helen  on  the  Rampart.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Hermes  in  Calypso'<<  Island.     Sec  Odyssey,  The. 

Iliad,  The. 

Odysseus  Reveals  himself  to  his  Father.  See 
Odyssey,  The. 

Odysseus'  Speech  to  Nausicaa.     See  Odyssey,  The. 

Odyssey,  The. 

Palace  of  Alcinoiis,  The.     See  Odyssey,  The. 

Parting  of  Hector  and  Andromache,  The.  See 
Iliad,  The. 

Reply  of  Achilles  to  the  Envoys  of  Agamemnon, 
Soliciting  a  Reconciliation.     See  Iliad,  The. 

Song  the  Sirens  Sung,  The,     See  Odyssey,  The. 

Triumph  of  Hector,  The.     See  Iliacl,  The. 

Victory  of  Hector,  The.     See  Iliad,  The. 
Homer,  Florence  E. — George  Birthington's  Washday. 
Honeywell,  J. ^Menagerie,  The. 
Honeywood,  St.  John. — Darby  and  Joan. 

On  Washington's  Farewell  Address. 

Honnas, . — Goin'  to  der  Races. 

Hood,  C:  Newton. — -How  the  La  Rue  Stakes  Were  Lost. 
Hood,  T:— Art  of  Book-keeping,  The.  {At.)     See  also 
Blanchakd,  Laman. 

Autumn.     See  Ode:  Autumn. 

Bachelor's  Dream,  The. 

Ballad:  "It  was  not  in  the  winter." 

Ballad:  "She's  up  and  gone,  the  graceless  girl." 

Ballad:  "Sigh  on.  sad  heart,  for  love's  eclipse." 

Ballad:  "Spring  it  is  cheery." 

Ben  Bluff. 

Blank  Verse  in  Rhyme.  See  Nocturnal  Sketch 
[.Al. 

Boarding-school  Curriculum. 

Bridge  of  Sighs,  The. 

Child  and  Mother.  See  To  a  Child  Embracing 
his  Mother. 

Cigar,  The. 

Cockle  vs.  Cackle. 

Come  with  the  Ring.  See  Please  to  Ring  the 
Belle. 

Comet.  The. 

Death. 

Death  Bed.  The. 

Death's  Ramble. 

Demon  Ship,  The. 


471 


Hood 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Hood,  T:  (continued). 

Die  Herz  Blume. 

Domestic  Asides;  or.  Truth  in  Parentheses. 

Domestic  Poems. 

Dream  of  Eugene  Aram,  The. 

Duel,  The. 

Epicurean  Reminiscences  of  a  Sentimentalist. 

Equestrian  Courtship. 

Eugene  Aram.  See  Dream  of  Eugene  Aram, 
The. 

Eugene  Aram's  Dream.  iSee  Dream  of  Eugene 
Aram.  The. 

Fair  Ines. 

Faithless  Nelly  Gray. 

Faithless  Sally  Brown. 

FareweU,  Life.     >See  Stanzas:  "Farewell,  life,"  etc. 

Flowers. 

Gold.     See  Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her  Precious  I^eg. 

Good-night.     See  Domestic  Poems. 

Happy  Miller,  The. 

Haunted  House,  The. 

Her  Death.  jSee  Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her  Precious 
.  I.<eg. 

Her  Moral.  See  Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her  Pre- 
cious Leg. 

History  of  John  Day.     See  John  Day. 

House  where  I  Was  Bom,  The.  See  I  Remember, 
I  Remember. 

I  Love  Thee. 

I  Remember,  I  Remember. 

I'm  not  a  Single  Man. 

It  was  not  in  the  Winter.  See  Ballad:  "It  was 
not  in  the  winter." 

.John  Day. 

Lady  at  Sea,  The. 

Lady's  Dream,  The. 

"Lake  and  a  Fairy  Boat,  A."     See  Song  for  Music. 

Lay  of  Real  Life,  A. 

Lay  of  the  Laborer,  The. 

Little  Red  Riding-Hood ;  or,  The  Wicked  Wolf  and 

the  Virtuous  Woodcutter  (7). 
Lost  Heir,  The. 
Love  Thee.     See  I  Love  Thee. 
Love  Thy  Mother,   Little   One.     .See  To  a  Child 

Embracing  his  Mother. 
"Lullaby,  oh,  lullaby."     See  Domestic  Poems. 
Maiden's   Request,   The.     (Wr.   at.  to  S:  Lover.) 

See  Please  to  Ring  the  Belle. 
May  Morning,  A.     See  Song:     "O  lady,  leave  thy 

silken  thread." 
Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her  Precious  Leg. 
More  Hullahbaloo! 
Morning  Meditations. 
"My  New  Pittayatees"  (?). 
No!     See  November. 
Nocturnal  Sketch,  A. 
November. 

November  in  England.     See  November. 
Ode :     Autumn. 

Ode  on  a  Distant  Prospect  of  Clapham  Academy. 
Ode  to  an  Infant  Son.     See  Domestic  Poems. 
Ode  to  Autumn.     See  Ode:     Autimin. 
Ode  to  My  Little  Son.     See  Domestic  Poems. 
Ode  to  Perry. 

Ode  to  Rae  Wilson,  Esquire. 
Old  House  at  Home,  The.     See  I  Remember,  I 

Remember. 
On  the  Art-unions. 
Open  Question,  An. 
Pain  in  a  Pleasure  Boat. 
Pansies. 
Parental  Ode  to  My  Son,  Aged  Three  Years  and 

Five  Months,  A.     See  Domestic  Poems. 
Past  and  Present.     See  I  Remember,  I  Remember. 
Pedler  and   His  Trumpet,   The.     See  Tale   of  a 

Tnmipet. 
Please  to  Ring  the  Belle. 
Pompey's  Ghost. 
Queen  Mab. 
Reminiscences  of  a  Sentimentalist.     See  Epicurean 

Reminiscences  of  a  Sentimentalist. 
Ruth. 

Sailor's  Apology  for  Bow-legs,  A. 
Sally  Simpkin's  Lament. 
Sausage-maker's  Ghost,  The. 

Serenade:     "Ah,  sweet!  thou  little  knowest  how." 
Serenade,      A:     "Lullaby,      oh,      lullaby."      See 

Domestic  Poems. 
Silence. 

Singing  for  the  Million.     See  More  Hullahbaloo. 
Song:     "A  lake  and  a  fairy  boat."     See  Song  for 

Music. 


472 


Hood,  T:  (continued) . 

Song:     "O  lady,  leave  thy  silken  thread." 

Song:     "The  stars  are  with  the  voyager." 

Song  for  Music. 

Song  of  the  Shirt,  The. 

Spring. 

Stanzas:     "Farewell,  life,"  etc. 

Sunday  Question,  The.     See  Open  Question,  An. 

Superiority  of  Machinery,  The. 

Tale  of  a  Trumpet. 

Tim  Turpin. 

Time,  Hope  and' Memory. 

Time  of  Roses.     See  BaUad:     "It  was  not  in  the 
winter." 

To  a  Child  [Embracing  his  Mother]. 

To  Charles  Dickens. 

To  Henrietta,  on  her  Departure  to  Calais. 

To  My  Daughter!,  on  Her  Birthday— C.]. 

To  My  Infant  Son.     See  Domestic  Poems. 

Truth  in  Parentheses.     See  Domestic  Asides;  or. 
Truth  in  Parentheses. 

Turtles,  The. 

Water  Lady,  The. 

Waterloo  Ballad,  A. 

"What    Can    an    Old    Man    Do   but    Die?"     See 
Ballad:     "Spring  it  is  cheery." 
Hood,  Tom,  Jr. — Muddled  Metaphors. 
Hoofnagle,  Fritz. — Fritz  Valdher  is  Made  a  Mason. 
Hook,    Theodore. — Pursuit    of    Legal    Advice    under 

Difficulties,  The. — A  Family  Scene. 
Hooker,  R:^ — Law.     See  Necessity  of  Law. 

Necessity  of  Law. 
Hooker,  W.  B.— Habet. 
Hooper,  EUen  Sturgis. — Chimney-sweep,  The. 

Dream,  A.     See  Duty. 

Duty. 
Hooper,    Mr8.    Lucy    Hamilton  [Jones].  —  Civil   War 
[—An  Episode   of  the  Commune].    (.Tr.)     See 
Relenting  Mob,  A. 

Hettv  McEwen. 

Kings's  Ride,  The. 

Relenting  Mob,  A.     (Tr.) 

Three  Loves. 

Three  Visitors. 

Trumpeter's  Betrothed,  The. 
Hope,  Anthony. — Cordial  Relations.     See  Dolly  Dia- 
logues, The. 

DoUy  Dialogues,  The. 

Heart  of  the  Princess  Osra,  The. 

How  they  Stopped  the  Run.     See  Sport  Royal. 

Little  Joke,  A. 

Matter  of  Duty,  A.     See  Dolly  Dialogues,The. 

My  Last  Chance.     See  Dolly  Dialogue3,The. 

Philosopher  in  the  Apple  Orchard,  The. 

Queen's  Letter,  The.     See  Rupert  of  Hentzau. 

Retribution.     See  Dolly  Dialogues,  The. 

Rupert  of    Hentzau. 

Sin  of  the  Bishop  of  Modenstein,  The.     See  Heart 
of  the  Princess  Osra,  The. 

Slight  Mistake,  A.     See  DoUy  Dialogues,  The. 

Sport  Royal. 

That  I-ittle  Wretch.     See  Dolly  Dialogues,  The. 
Hope,  Jas.  Barron.— Cuba. 

Oath  of  Freedom,  The. 
Hopkins,  Alphonso  A. — It  Might  Have  been. 
Hopkins,  Ellice. — Me  and  Thee.     (Tr.) 
Hopkins,  Herbert  MuUer. — My  Pipe  is  Out. 
Hopkins,  Jennie  L. — My  Valentine. 
Hopkins,  Louisa  Parkins. — December. 

Nativity,  The. 

School  Cantata. 
Hopkins,  Mary  S. — Mary  EUen  Attends  a  School  of 

Elocution. 
Hopkins,  Vira. — Why  Ben  Schneider  Decides  for  Prohi- 
bition. 
Hopkinson,  Fs. — Battle  of  the  Kegs,  The. 
Hopkinson,  Jos. — Hail,  Columbia. 

Hail,  Columbia,  Happy  Land.  See  Hail,  Columbia. 

Reverence  for  Law. 
Hopper,  Anna. — Playing  Entertainment. 
Hopper,  Nora. — Dark  Man,  The. 

Kve  of  Mary,  The. 

Fairy  Fiddler,  The. 

Hallow  E'en. 

Phyllis  and  Damon. 
Hoppin,  W:  J. — Charley  [or  Charlie]  Machree. 
Horace  (Quintus  Horatius  Flaccus). — Contentment. 

Death  of  Cleopatra,  The. 

Horace,  Bk.  IV.,  Ode  9. 

Man  in  Conscious  Virtue  Bold,  The. 

"Non  Omnis  Moriar." 

To  his  Books. 
Horn,  E:  Traill.— Three  Wishes,  The. 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Howells 


Home,  Herbert  P. — Amico  Suo. 

Formosffi  Puellse. 

"If  She  be  Made  of  White  and  Red." 

Nancy  Dawson. 
Home,  R:  Hengist. — Akinetos.     See  Orion. 

Distraught  for  Merop€.     See  Orion. 

Eos.     <See  Orion. 

Genius. 

In  Forest  Depths.     See  Orion. 

Laurel  Seed,  The. 

Meeting  of  Orion  and  Artemis.     See  Orion. 

Orion :     An  Epic  Poem. 

Pelters  of  Pyramids. 

Plough,  The'. 

Slave,  The. 

Solitude  and  the  Lily. 

Spoiled  Child,  A. 
Horton,  Jxidge  Albert  H. — Fountain  of  Crime,  The. 
Horton,  Alice. — Tale  of  a  Temptation. 
Horton,  G: — Deakin  Brown's  Way. 

Enj'yin'  Poor  Health. 

Farmer's  Song-bird,  The. 

Night  in  Lesbos,  A. 

Obstinate  Old  Man,  An. 
Hosford,  Maud.— Bargains  in  Hearts. 
Hosmer,  Frd'k  L. — -Found. 

Indwelling  God,  The. 

My  Dead. 

Mystery  of  God,  The. 

On  the  Mount. 

Passing  Understanding. 

Psalm  of  Trust,  A. 
Hoss,  G:  W. — Two  Pictures. 
Hough,  Rev.  Alfred  I.— Devil,  The. 

How  They  Caught  the  Panther. 

"We're  Building  Two  a  Day!" 
Houghton,  A.  B. — Dresden  Shepherdess,  A. 

To  Prue. 
Houghton,  G: — Four-leaf  Clover. 

Handsel  Ring,  The. 

Manor  Lord,  The. 

Sandy  Hook. 
Houghton,  R:  Monckton  Milnes,  Lord. — "Arm  of  aid 
to  the  Weak,  An." 

Brookside,  The. 

Envoy  to  an  American  Lady,  An. 

Finis.     See  "Arm  of  aid  to  the  Weak,  An." 

Forest,  The. 

From  l/ove  and  Nature. 

Good  Night  and  Good  Morning. 

Greek  at  Constantinople,  The. 

Half  Trath. 

Humility. 

I  Wandered  by   the  Brookside.     See  Brookside, 
The. 

In  Memoriam. 

Lady  Moon. 

lafe.     See  "So  should  we  live,"  etc. 

I/ondon  Churches. 

Men  of  Old.  The. 

Moments. 

Nessun  Maggior  Dolore. 

On  the  Death  of . 

Our  Mother  Tongue.     See  Envoy  to  an  American 
Lady,  An. 

Palm  aiid  Pine.     See  Palm-tree  and  the  Pine,  The. 

Palm-tree  and  the  Pine,  The. 

Shadows.     See  Nessun  Maggior  Dolore. 

Small  Things. 

"So  should  we  live  that  every  hour." 

Song:    "I    wandered    by    the  brook-side."     See 
Brookside,  The. 

Song  of  the  Railroad,  The. 

Strangers  Yet. 

To  Charles  Lamb. 

Venetian  Serenade,  The. 

Youth,  that  Pursuest. 
Hours  at  Home. — By  Summer  Woods. 

Elm  Blo.ssom. 

Olive  Trees  of  Palestine. 

Our  Willows. 
Hoiisehold  Words. — Our  Sister. 

"Sow,  and  look  onward,  upward." 
Houser,  Mrs.  Jessie  F. — Woman  Healed,  The. 
Housman,  A.  E. — To  an  Athlete  Dying  Young. 

When  I  was  One  and  Twenty. 
Houston,  Mark. — Among  ^ly  Books. 
Hovel,  E: — See  Thttrlow,  E:  Hovel,  Lord. 
Hovey,  R:— At  the  Club. 

Beethoven's  Third  Symphony. 

Birth  of  Galahad,  The. 

Call  of  the  Bugles,  The. 

Dartmouth  Winter-rsong. 


Hovev,  R:  {continued). 

Envoy — To  "More  Songs  from  Vagabondia. " 

Huntmg-song. 

Laurana's  Song. 

Love  in  the  Winds. 

Talie.sin:  A  Masque. 

Unmanifest  Destiny.  • 

Wander-lovers,  The. 

Ylen's  Song.     See  Birth  of  Galahad,  The. 
How,  W:  Walsham. — Behold,  I  stand  at  the  Door  and 
Knock. 

O  Word  of  God  Incarnate. 

Howard,  Ca-pt. . — Good  for  Evil. 

Howard,  Miss.  . — Jephthah's  Rash  Vow. 

Howard,  Blanche  Willis.     See  Teuffel,  Mme.  von. 

Howard,  Clara  M. — Ghost  of  Lone  Rock,  The. 

Howard,  Mrs.  G.  M. — Secret,  A.  ' 

Howard,  H:     See  Sttrket, /?aW  o/. 

Howard,  Hugh. — Brandy  and  Soda. 

Howard,  Mrs.   M.    F. — How   Mr.    Blinks   Named   the 

Baby. 
Howard,  Norman. — Christmas-tide  Shadow,  A. 
Howard,  S.  L. — Love  up  to  Date. 
Howard,  Sarah  E. — Jubilee  of  the  Flowers,  The. 

Mj-  Baby  Brother. 
Howard,  Rev.  W.  D. — "Young  men,  let  the  nobleness 
of  yciwT  mind  impel  you  to  its  improvement." 
Howarth,  Ellen  Clementine. — Passion  Flower,  The. 

Thou  Wilt  never  Grow  Old. 

'Ti.s  but  a  Little  Faded  Flower. 

Way  of  the  Cross,  The. 
Howarth,  G:  R. — Room  for  You. 
Howe,  Herbert  A. — Life  on  the  Moon. 
Howe,  Jos. — Deserted  Nest,  The. 

Flag  of  Old  England,  The. 
Howe,    Mrs.    Julia    [Ward]. — Battle    Hymn    of    the 
Repuhlic[,  The]. 

Dead  Christ,  The. 

Eucharist  of  Affliction. 

Flag,  The. 

Hamlet  at  the  Boston. 

Our  Orders. 

Pio  Nono. 

Royal  Guest,  The. 
Howe,  Mark  Antonv  De  Wolfe. — Distinction. 

Travellers,  The. 

"Whom  the  Gods  I-ove. " 
Howe,  Martha  C. — Knight  and  the  Page,  The. 
Howell,   Mrs.   Eliz.  [Lloyd]. — Authors.     See    Literary 
Recreations. 

Boys  of  the  Bible. 

Building  the  I/adder. 

Capping  Quotations.     See  Literary  Recreations. 

Flowers.     See  Literary  Recreations. 

Holiday  Acrostic,  A. 

Literary  Recreations. 

Milton's  Prayer  of  Patience. 

Milton's  Soliloquy  in  His  Old  Age.     See  Milton's 
Prayer    of  Patience. 

Old  and  Blind.     {Wr.  at.  to  J:  Milton.)     See  Mil- 
ton's Prayer  of  Patience. 

Our  Holidays. 

Seasons,  The.     See  Literary  Recreations. 

Temperance  Alphabet,  A. 

Ten  Famous  Women. 
Howell,  Jas. — Opinion. 

Words. 
Howells,  Mildred. — Down  a  Woodland  Way. 

Moral  in  Sevres,  A. 

Romance. 
Howells,  W:  Dean.— Battle  in  the  Clouds.  The. 

Before  the  Gate. 

Calvary. 

Caprice. 

Change. 

Earliest  Spring.     See  In  Earliest  Spring. 

From  Generation  to  Generation. 

Gone. 

Hope. 

If. 

In  Augiist. 

In  Earliest  Spring. 

Judgment  Day. 

Mouse  Trap,  The. 

Mysteries,  The. 

Our  Thanksgiving  Accept.     See  Thanksgiving,  A. 

Pilot's  Story,  The. 

Saint  Christopher. 

Song  the  Oriole  Sings,  The. 

"Thanksgiving.  A. 

Two  Wives,  The. 

Vision. 

What  Shall  it  Profit? 


473 


Howells 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Howells,  Winifred. — Forthfaring. 

Mood,  A. 

Past. 

Poet  and  the  Child,  The. 

Wasted  Sympathy,  A. 
Hewitt,  Mary. — April' 

Ballad,  A :  "  Ara^g  green  pleasant  meadows. '  '(Tr.) 

Beaver,  The. 

Birds  in  Summer.  (X<.  also  to  Felicia  D.  Hemans.) 

Broom  Flower,  The. 

Buttercups  and  Daisies. 

Children's  Appeal,  The. 

Child's  Hymn,  The.     See  Poor  Child's  Hymn,  The. 

Cornfields. 

Fairies  of  the  Caldon-Low,  The. 

Father  is  Coming. 

Flax  Flower,  The. 

Kaiser,  The, 

Kingfisher.  The. 

Little  Brawl,  A. 

Little  Children. 

I/ittle  Streams. 

Mabel  on  Midsummer  Day. 

Monkey,  The. 

Northern  Seas,  The.  {At.  also  to  W:  Howitt.) 

Oak  Tree,  The. 

Old  Christmas. 

Poor  Child's  Hymn,  The. 

Sea,  The. 

Sea  Fowler,  The. 

Sparrow's  Nest,  The. 

Spider  and  the  Fly,  The. 

Spring,  The.     See  "Spring,  she  is  a  blessed  thing, 
The." 

"Spring,  she  is  a  blessed  thing.  The." 

Spring  is  Coming. 

Squirrel,  The. 

Summer  Woods, 

Use  of  Flowers,  The. 

Uses  of  the  Flowers.     See  Use  of  Flowers,  The. 

Voice  of  Spring.  The. 

Voyage  with  the  Nautilus,  The. 
Howitt,  W: — Departure  of   the  Swallow,  The. 

Northern  Seas,  The.     {At.  also  to  Mary  Howitt.) 

Summer  Noon,  A. 

Wind  in  the  Frolic,  The. 
Rowland,  E:^-Condemned,  The. 

Howland,  G: — Birthday  of  Washington  ever  Honored, 
The. 

Fading. 
Howland,  H.  E. — After-dinner  Speech  before  the  Har- 
vard Club  of  New  York. 
Howland,  Mra.  Mary  fWoolsey]  {Mrs.  Rob't  G.). — First 
Spring  Flowers. 

In  the  Hospital. 

Requiescam.     .See  In  the  Hospital. 

Rest.     See  In  the  Hospital. 
Hows,  G :  W.— Woolen  Doll,  The. 
Hoyle,  W:  (?)— I'll  Take  what  Father  Takes. 
Hoynton,  J: — ^V/hy  the  Cows  Came  Late. 
Hoyt,  .1.  K. — "Yes,  sing  the  song  of  the  orange  tree." 
Hoyt,  Marv  E.- -Mystery,  A. 
Hoyt,  Ralph.— Old. 

Snow.  — A  Winter  Sketch. 

World  for  Sale,  The. 
Hubbard,  Elbert. — Message  to  Garcia. 
Hubbard,  Eliz.  Ingram.-  Catholic  Psalm,  The. 
Hubbard,  Marion. — "Blyther  than  the  Burnie." 
Hubbard,  R.  B. — Texas  Centennial  Oration. 
Hubbard,  R:  Dudley.— Retrospect,  A. 
Hudson,  iWiss  H.  B. — Newsboy's  Debt,  The.     {At.  also 
to  Helen  Hunt  Jackson.) 

Poet  and  Painter. 

Tit  for  Tat. 
Hudson,  Mrs.  Mary  [Clemmer]  [Ames]. — By  the  Sea. 

"For  they  alone  have  need  of  sorrow." 

Good-by,  Sweetheart. 

Mother  Love. 

Nantasket. 

Peace. 

Something  Beyond. 

Words  for  Parting. 
Hudson,  Sanford  A. — Truant. 
Huestis,  Annie  Campbell. — Gentle-breath. 

Little  White  Sun,  The. 

Twenty-old  and  Seven-wild. 
Hughes.  Annie. — Pussy's  Better  Nature. 
Hughes,  E.  A. — Two  Armies,  The. 
Hughes,  J: — Prince  F^ugene.     {Tr.) 

Ungrateful  Cupid,  The.     {Tr.) 
Hughes,  M.  M.— Ring  Out,  Wild  BeUa. 
Hughes,  Rupert. — For  Decoration  Day. 

Martyrs  of  the  Maine,  The. 


Hughes,   T: — At   Rugby.     »See  Tom    Brown's   School 

Days  at  Rugby. 
Away  to  School.     See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days 

at  Rugby. 
Boat  Race,  The.     See  Tom  Brown  at  Oxford. 
Egg  Hunting.     iSee  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  at 

Rugby.- 
Fighting.     See    Tom    Brown's    School    Days    at 

Rugby. 
Hare    and    Hounds.     See   Tom    Brown's    School 

Days  at  Rugby. 
Keeper,  The.     See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  at 

Rugby. 
Morning     and      Afternoon      Chapel.     See     Tom 

Brown's  School  Days  at  Rugby. 
New  Boy,  The.     See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  at 

Rugby. 
Tom  Brown  at  Oxford. 
Tom  Brown  at  Rugby.     See  Tom  Brown's  School 

Days  at  Rugby. 
Tom     Brown     Starting    for    Rugby.     See    Tom 

Brown's  School  Days  at  Rugbv. 
Tom  Brown's  School  Days  at  Rugby. 
"We  listened,  as  all  boys  in  their  better  moods  will 

listen."     See   Tom    Brown's   School   Days   at 

Rugby. 
Hughes,  T:  Smart. — Belshazzar's  Feast. 
Hugo,  Victor  Marie. — Address  at  the  Peace  Congress, 

1849. 
Against  Curtailing  the  Right  of  Suffrage. 
At  the  Barricade. 

Battle  of  Waterloo,  The.     See  I^es  Mis^rables. 
Billows  and  Shadows.     See  Les  Mis^rables. 
Bishop's  Silver  Candlesticks,  The.     See  Les  Mis^ 

rabies. 
By  Order  of  the  King. 
Carronade.     See  Ninety-three. 
Caught  in  the  Quicksand. 

Children  of  the  Bonnet  Rouge.     See  Ninety-three. 
Civil  War  [ — an  Episode  of  the  Commune].     See 

Relenting  Mob,  A. 
Close  of  the  Battle  of  Waterloo.     See   Les  Mis4- 

rables. 
Combat  with  the  Octopus,  The.     See  Toilers  of 

the  Sea.  The. 
Death  Penalty,  The. 
Desnair.     See  I^es  Mis^rables. 
Djinns.  The. 

Emperor's  Return,  The.     See  Les  Burgraves. 
Envy  and  Avarice. 
Exile's  Hope,  The. 
Extravaganza,  An. 
Father's  Curse,  The.    See  King's  Diversion,  The  (Le 

Roi  s' Amuse). 
Gamin,  The.     See  Les  Mis^rables. 
Gastibelza.     See  Guitare. 
Good-night. 
Grandmother,  The. 
Guitare. 

Hireling  Swiss  Regiment,  The.     See  Swiss  Mer- 
cenaries, The. 
How  Good  are  the  Poor!     See  Poor  Fisher  Folk, 

The. 
In  Defense  of  Universal  Suffrage,  May  20,  1850. 
"In  spite  of  censorship,  in  spite  of  the  Index.  ' 
"It  suppres.ses  duration,  it  suppresses  space,  it 

suppresses  suffering." 
Jean  Valjean.     See  Les  Mi.»6rables. 
Jean  Valjean  and  the  Bishop.       See   Les   Mis^ 

rabies. 
Jean  Valjean's  Sacrifice.     See  Les  Mia^r.ibles. 
John  Valjohn  and  the  Savoyard.     See  I-res  Mis6- 

rables. 
King  and  People.     See  By  Order  of  the  King. 
King's  Diversion,  The  (Le  Roi  s' Amuse). 
L'Ange  qui  Veille.     See  Watching  Angel,  The. 
Last  Days  of  a  Condemned. 
Les  Burgraves. 
Les  Mis^rables. 

"I>et  us  not  fall  into  the  vulgar  whim  and  dis- 
honor the  century  in  which  we  live." 
Liberty  of  the  Press  [;  or.  The  Human  Mind].  1850. 
Little   Gavroche.     See   Les   Misdrables. 
Majesty  of  Trifles,  The. 
Man   Overboard,  A.     See  Les  Mis^rables. 
Monster  Cannon,  The.     See  Ninety-three. 
Monument     to     Shakespeare,     A.     See     William 

Shakespeare. 
Napoleon  le  Petit.     See  Napoleon  the  Little. 
Napoleon  the  Little. 

Napoleon's  Overthrow.     See  Les  Mis^rables. 
Necessity  of  Religion. 
Ninety-tihree. 


474 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Hutton 


Hugo,  Victor  Marie  {continued). 

Poet's  Simple  Faith,  The. 

Poor  Fisher  Folk,  The. 

Poor  Little  Children. 

Practical  Religious  Instruction. 

Present  Age,  The.      See  Napoleon  the  Little. 

Relenting  Mob,  A. 

Republic  or  a  Monarchy,  A? 

Retrospect,  A. 

Rome  and  Carthage. 

Secret  Executions.     See    T^ast    Days    of   a    Con- 
demned. 

Speech  of  the  Grand  Rabbi,  Moses-Ben-Habib,  to 
Ferdinand  and  Isabella.     See  Torquemada. 

Sun  of  Liberty,  The. 

Swiss  Mercenaries,  The. 

"This  century  is  the  grandest  of  centuries."     See 
Napoleon  the  Little.  ^ 

"This  century  proclaims  the  sovereignty  of  the 
citizen."     See  Napoleon  the  Little. 

To  a  Daughter  on  her  Marriage. 

Toilers  of  the  Sea,  The. 

Torquemada. 

Two  Napoleons,  The. 

United  States  of  Europe,  The.     See  Address  at 
the  Peace  Congress,  1849. 

Universal  Suffrage,  May  2nth,  18.50. 

Watching  Angel,  The  (Dans  1' Alcove  Sombre). 

Waterloo.       See  I>es  Mis^rables. 

"Who  art  thou,  shadowy  passer-by?" 

William  Shakespeare. 
Hulme,  E:  M. — Lyric,  A. 
Hume,  Alex. — Story  of  a  Summer  Day,  The. 

Summer  Day,  A.     See   Story  of    a  Summer  Day, 
The. 
Humphrey,   Fs.   A. — Mercantile   Transaction,    A. 
Humphrey.  Heman,  D.D.  (?) — Howard,  the  Prisoners' 
Friend. 

Memory  of  the  Good.     See  Howard,  the  Prison- 
ers' Friend. 
Hungerford,  Mrs.  M.  C. — Oh,  for  a  Man! 

Old  King  Cole. 
Hunneman,  Carleton. — College  Days. 
Hunnis,  W:— Rhymed  Will  of  Hunnis,  The. 
H(mt,  Albert  E. — Evening  Doze,  An. 
Hunt,  Arthur  P. — Voyage  of  the  "Fram,"  The. 
Hunt,  Belle.— But— . 
Hunt,  Freeman. — Behind  Time. 
Hunt,  Geo.  D. — Choosing  a  Trade  or  Profession. 
Hunt,  H.  C— Common  Bond,  The. 

La  .Teime  Malade.. 

Orphan's  Trust,  The. 

Sisters,  The. 
Hunt,  Mrs.  Helen  [Fiske].    See  Jackson,  Mrs.  Helen 

[Hunt]. 
Himt,  Hester. — "Don't  give  up  the  ship." 
Hunt,  (.Jas.  H:)  Tveigh. —  Abou  Ben  Adhem  [and  the 
Angel]. 

Angel  in  the  House,  An. 

"Angel  wrote  and  vanished.  The."     See  Abou  Ben 
Adhem. 

Autobiography  of  Leigh  Hunt,  The. 

Better  Things.     {For  somewhat  diff.  vera,  see  Mac- 
DONALD,  G:) 

Captain  Sword. 

Chorus  of  [the]  Flowers.     See  Songs  and  Chorus 
of  the  Flowers. 

Cupid  Swallowed. 

Dryads,  The. 

Fairies' Song.    {Tr.)     See  Song  of  Fairies  Robbing 
an  Orchard. 

Fancy  Concert,  The. 

Fish,  the  Man,  and  the  Spirit,  The. 

Flowers.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

"For  there  are  two  heavens,  sweet."     See  Heaven 
upon  Earth,  A. 

Garden    and   Summer   House,    A.     See   Story   of 
Rimini,  The. 

Glove  [and  the  laons].  The. 

Grasshopper  and  [the]  Cricket,  The.     See  To  the 
Gras.«nopper  and  Cricket. 

Heaven  upon  Earth,  .\. 

Hero  and  Leander. 

His  Poets.     See  Sonnet:  "Were  T  to  name,"  etc. 

Jaffar  [;  an  Eastern  Tradition]. 

Jenny  Kissed  Me.     See  Rondeau. 

Jovial  Priest's  Confession.  The.     {Tr.) 

Joy  of  Spring. 

Lesson    in    Reading,    A.     See   Autobiography    of 
Leigh  Hunt,  The. 

Lilies.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

Tjove-letters  Made  in  I'lowers. 

Mahraoud. 


Hunt,  (Jas.  H :)  Leigh  {continued). 

Nile,  The. 

Nun,  The. 

Poppies.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

Ravenna  Pine  Forest. 

Rondeau. 

Roses.     See    Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

Sneering. 

Song  of  Fairies  [Robbing  an  Orchard].  {Tr.) 

Song  to  Ceres. 

Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

Songs  of  the  Flowers.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the 
Flowers. 

.Sonnet:  "Were  I  to  name,"  etc. 

Sonnet:  Found  by  Mr.  Alexander  Ireland. 

Story  of  Rimini,  The. 

Sweet-brier.    See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

To  a  Child  During  Sickness.     See  To  T.  L.  H.,  Six 
Years  Old,  during  a  Sickness. 

To  J.  H. 

To  .Tune. 

To  T.  L.  H.  [,  Six  Years  Old,  during  a  Sickness]. 

To  the  Grasshopper  and  [the]  Cricket. 

True  King,  The.     {Tr.) 

Trumpets  of  Doolkamein,  The. 

Two  Heavens.     See  He.iven  upon  Earth.  A. 

Violets.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 
Hunt,  Josephine. — You  Kissed  Me. 
Hunt,  Josie  R.— Katie  Lee  and  Willie  Grey.     {At.  also 

to  J.  H.  Pixley.) 
Hunt,  Leigh.     See  Hunt,  (Jas.  H:)  Leigh. 
Hunt,  Rob't. — Poetry  of  Science. 

Wonders  of  an  Atom,  The.     See  Poetry  of  Science. 
Hunt,  Mrs.  Sara  Keables. — Schoolday. 

Two  Little  Stockings,  The. 
Hunt,  W:  E:— Golden-rod. 

Passing  of  Summer,  The. 

Sea's  Influence,  The. 
Hunter,  Anne. — Indian  Death-song. 

Lot  of  Thousands,  The. 
Hunter,  Rob't  Mercer  Taliaferro. — Aspirations  of  the 

American  People. 
Hunter-Duvar,  J: — Adieu  to  France.    See  De  Roberval. 

Brawn  of  England's  Lay. 

De  Roberval. 

Gallant  Fleet,  The.     See  De  Roberval. 

How  Balthazar  the  King  went  down  into  EgjTit. 

John  Avar's  Last  I-ay. 

Minnesingers  I-ied,  The. 

OhnAwa.     See  De  Roberval. 

Twilight  Song.     See  De  Roberval. 
Hunting,  G:  F. — Help  One  Another. 
Huntington,   Jedediah. — On   the  Coronation  of  Queen 

Victoria. 
Huntington,  M.  H.— Little  Acorn. 
Huntington,  R: — Louisburg. 

Sunrise  on  the  Tusket. 
Huntington,  W:  Reed. — Authority. 

Tellus. 
Huntley,  Stanley. — Mr.  Spoopendyke  Hears  Burglars, 
See  Spoopendyke's  Burglars. 

Spoopendvke's  Burglars. 
Himtr'ess,  H.  P. — Ballad  of  the  Afternoon  Tea. 

Class-day  Hamlet,  A. 
Hurdis,  Jas. — Lessons  from  Birds  and  Bees. 
Hurlej',  T:  H: — Tennvson. 
Hurst,  A.  E.— Brownies'  Drill,  The. 

Doll  DriU. 

Dumb-bell  Drill. 

Flag  Drill. 

Gymnastic  Drill. 

May-pole  Drill. 

Ring  Drill. 

Scarf  r»rill. 

Tambourine  Drill. 

Tennis  Drill. 
Hurst,  Rt.  Rev.  J:  F. — "Church  of  Christ,  if  called  to 
pass   again   through   the   age   of   martyrdom, 
The." 

Churches  and  Saloons. 

Hurwood, . — .lew's  Troubles,  A. 

Husenbeth,  Rev.  Frd'k  C:— Ruins  of  Babylon,  The. 
Huskissoii,  W: — -Conservative  Innovator,  "fhe. 
Husted,  Marg. — Bright  Hours.  * 

Husted,  W:  C— Highway,  The. 
Hutchinson,    Ellen     Mackay.      See    Cortissoz,    Mrs. 

Ellen  Mackat  [Hutchinson]. 
Hutchinson,  Rev.  J.  P. — How  Do  You  Know. 
Hutchinson,  Norman. — In  the  San  Joaquin. 
Hutchinson,  Percy  Adams. — "Bottoms  up"  ad  Finem^ 

Methinks  the  Measure. 
Hutchinson,  R.  K.- -Burial  of  the  Cat,  The. 
Hutton,  I.iaurence. — Doves  of  Venice,  The. 


475 


Huxley 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Huxley,  T:  H: — Education.     See  Liberal  Eklucation 
and  where  to  Find  it,  A. 
laberal  Education  and  where  to  Find  it,  A. 
Tennyson. 
Hyatt,  T:  .1.— Albert  Drecker. 

Hyde,  Doncclas. — Address  of  Death  to  Tomas  de  Roiste, 
The.  ' 

LitUe  ChUd,  I  Call  Thee. 
My  Grief  on  the  Sea. 
My  Ijove — Oh  I  she  is  Mv  Love. 
Ringleted  Youth  of  My  Love. 
Hyde,  G:— Lent. 
Hvde,   W:  De  Witt. — Mission  of  the  Public    School, 

The. 
Hvder  Ali. — Love's  Str.atagom. 
Hynson,  G:  B.— Last  Charge,  The. 

Uncle  Tommy's  Philosophy. 
Hyslop,  .las. — -Cameronian's  Dream,  The. 
\ 


I.,  W.  F.  E.— Twilight's  Hour, 
"ledgari."— -Sable  Theology. 
Image,  Selwyn. — Her  Confirmation. 
Prayer,  A. 
Protestation.  The. 
Tn\bride,  Frank  Morgan. — "District  No.  9." 
Independent,   The. — De  Rev.   Plato  Johnson  on   Free 

Oirkelatin'  Liberies. 
Grasshopper,  The. 
Jack  Frost. 
Just  What  I  Wanted. 
Mes!«ge,  A. 
Ingalls,  J :  Jas. — Eulog>-  on  the  Death  of  Congressman 

James  N.  Burnesof  Missouri. 
Opportunity. 
Prohibition  in  Kansas. 
Senator  Ingalls'  Great   Speech  on  the  Death  of 

Bumes  of  Missouri.    See  I'^.ulogy  on  the  Death  of 

Congressman  James  N.  Rumes  of  Missouri. 
Ingelow,  Jean. — Apprenticed.     See  Songs  of  the  Night 

Watches. 
"Art.  lire<l?"     See  Dominion. 
At  One  Again. 

Better  W^ay,  The.     See  Honors. 
Brides  of  Enderby,  The;  or,  the  High  Tide.     -See 

High  Tide  on  the  Coast  of  Lincolnshire,  The. 
Brothers  and  a  Sermon. 
Divided. 
Dominion. 

Dream[s]  that  Came  True,  The. 
Eagles.  See  Songs  of  the  Voices  of  Birds. 
Easter  Flowers. 
Echo  and  the  Ferry. 

Giving  in  Marriage.     See  Songs  of  Seven. 
God's  Time.     -See  Scholar  and  Carpenter. 
Goldilocks.     Se^  Brothers  and  a  Sermon. 
Gone.     See  Star's  Monument,  The. 
Heigh-Hol  Daisies  and  Buttercups.     See  Songs  of 

Seven. 
High  Tide  on  the  Coast  of  Lincolnshire[,  The] 
High  Tide  [The;  or,  the  Brides  of  Enderby].      See 

High  Tide  on  the  Coast  of  Lincolnshire,  The. 
Honors. 
I  Have  the  Courage  to  be  Gay.     See  Scholar  and 

Carpenter. 
,     "If  there  be  memory  in  the  world  to  come."     See 

Star's  Monument,  The. 
"In  regal  quiet  deep."     See  Song  for  the  Night  of 

Christ's  Resurrection. 
In  the  Nursery. 
Tjke  a  T^averock  in  the  Lift. 
Long  White  Seam,  The. 
T^ionging  for  Home.     See  Songs  of  Seven. 
T^ove.     See  Songs  of  Seven. 
Tx)ver3.     See  At  One  Again. 
Love's  Thread  of  Gold. 
Maiden  with  a  Milking-pail,  A.     See  Reflections. 

Looking  over  a  Gate  at  a  Pool  in  a  Field. 
Noble  Tuck-man,  The. 

Old  Fisherman,  The.     See  Brothers  and  a  Sermon. 
Old  Fisherman's  Prayer,  The.     See  Brothers  and 

a  Sermon. 
Old  Man's  Prayer,  The.     See  Brothers  and  a  Ser- 
mon. 
On  the  Borders  of  Cannock  Chase. 
Over  the  Green  Downs. 
Persephone. 
Reflections.     Iyf>oking  over  a  Gate  atSa  Pool  in  a 

Field, 
i         Regret. 


Ingelow,  Jean  (continued). 
Sailing  beyond  Seas. 
Scholar  and  Carpenter. 
Sea-mews  in  Winter  Time. 
Seven   Times  Four.     [Maternity.]     See   Songs   of 

Seven. 
Seven  Times  One.     [Exultation.]     See  Songs  of 

Seven. 
Seven    Times   Seven. — Longing   for    Home.     See 

Songs  of  Sei^en. 
Seven    Times    Six.  —  Gi^•^ng    in    Marriage.     See 

Songs  of  Seven. 
Seven  Times  Three. — Love.     See  Songs  of  Seven. 
Seven    Times    Two.     [Romance.]     See    Songs    of 

Seven. 
Singing  I^essoUj  A  [or  The]. 
Song  for  the  Night  of  Christ's  Resurrection. 
Song  of  the  Old  Love.     See  Supper  at  the  Mill. 
Songs  of  Seven. 
Songs  of  the  Niijht  Watches. 
Songs  of  the  Voices  of  Birds. 
Sorrows  Humanize  Our  Race. 
Star's  Monument,  The. 
Story  of  Life,  A.     See  Sweet  is  Childhood. 
Supper  at  the  Mill. 
Sweet  is  Childhood. 
"We  shall  walk  no  more  through  the  sodden  plain." 

See  Supper  at  the  Mill. 
When  Sparrows  Build.     See  Supper  at  the  MDl. 
Winstanley. 
Wreck    of    "The    Grace    of  -Sunderland."     See 

Brothers  and  a  Sermon. 
Ingemann,  Bemhard  Severin. — Legend  of  the  Aspen, 

Ingersoll,  Rob't  Green.  —  At  the  Tomb  of  Napoleon. 
See  Liberty  of  Man,  Woman,  and  Child,  The. 

Col.   IngersoU's  Remarkable  Vision.     See  Speech 
at  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Sept.  21,  1876. 

Country  Life. 

Declaration  of  Independence,  The. 

Decoration  Day.     See  Oration  in  New  York  City, 
1882. 

Eulogy  of  Walt  Whitman. 

IngersoU's  Dream  of  the  War. 

Liberty  of  Man,  Woman,  and  Child,  The. 

Liberty  or  'Death.     See  Declaration  of  Independ- 
ence, The. 

Nominating  James  G.  Blaine  for  President. 

Oration  in  New  York  City,  1882. 

Plumed  Knight,  The.     See  Nominating  James  G. 
Blaine  for  President. 

Speech  at  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Sept.  21,  1876. 

Speech     for     Decoration     Day.     See     IngersoU's 
Dream  of  the  War. 

Vision  of  War,  The.     See  Speech  at  Indianapolis, 
Ind.,  Sept.  21,  1876. 
Ingham,  J:  HaU. — Anton  Seidl. 

Beethoven. 

Dreyfus. 

Genesis. 

George  Washington. 

M.  Carnot's  Death. 

Off  Havana. 

Phillips  Brooks. 

Summer  Sanctuary,  A. 

Thought,  A. 
"Ingoldsby,  T:"— See  Bakham,  R:  Harris. 
Ingraham,  E.  R. — Mrs.  Jones's  Revenge.     (Arr.) 
Ingram,  J:  KeUs. — Memory  of  the  Dead,  The. 

Nationality. 

Social  Heredity. 

Sonnet:  Majuba  HiU. 
Inlander. — Coward,  A. 

"Innsly,   Owen."     See  Jennison,  Lucy  White. 
Ireland,  Archbishop  J: — Cry  of  Personal  Liberty,  The. 

Our  Future. 

Patriotism. 

Shall  America  be  Ruled  Forever  by  the  Liquor 
Power? 

Temperance. 
Irish  World. — Rum  Everywhere.     See  Rum  Evil.  The. 

Rum  Evil,  The. 
"Ironquill."     iSee  Ware,  Euoene  F. 
Irons,  W:  J. — Dies  Irse.     (Tr). 
Irvine,  J.  P. — August  Afternoon,  An. 

Indian  Summer. 

Summer  Drought. 
Irving,  E: — David,  King  of  Israel. 
Irving,  Eliz.  Mansfield. — Medley,  A. 
Irving,  Sir  H:— My  First  Reading. 
Irving,  Minna. — Betsy's  Battle  Flag. 

Bugle,  The. 

El  Camilo. 


476 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Janvier 


Irving,  Minna  {continued). 

Grandmother's  Valentine. 

Marching  Still. 

Veteran,  A.  - 
Irving,  Washington. — Abbotsford. 

Album  Verses. 

Alhambra,  The. 

America  and  England. 

Author's  Chamber,  The.     See  Alhambra,  The. 

Bee-hunt  in  the  Far  West,  A. 

Broken  Hearts. 

Charms  of  Rural  Life,  The.  See  Rural  Life  in 
England. 

Columbus  Landing  in  the  New  World.  See  Life 
and  Voyages  of  Christopher  Columbus. 

Death  of  King  Philip.     See  Philip  of  Pokanoket. 

Discovery  of  America,  The.  See  Life  and  Voyages 
of  Christopher  Columbus. 

Discovery  of  the  Hudson  River,  The.  See  Knick- 
erbocker History  of  New  York. 

Dutch  Governor,  The.  See  Knickerbocker  His- 
tory of  New  York. 

English  Scenery.     See  Rural  Life  in  England. 

Forest  Trees. 

"From  that  time  until  the  period  of  arrival."  jSee 
Voyage,  A. 

Governor  and  the  Notary,  The.  See  Alhambra, 
The. 

Governor  Manco  and  the  Soldier.  See  Alhambra, 
The. 

Grave,  The.     See  Rural  Funerals. 

Knickerbocker  History  of  New  York. 

Legend  of  Sleepy  Hollow,  The. 

Legend  of  the  Enchanted  Soldier,  The.  See  Al- 
hambra, The. 

Legend  of  the  Moor's  Legacy,  See  Alhambra, 
The. 

Life  and  Voyages  of  Christopher  Columbus. 

Little  Britain. 

Moonlight  on  the  Alhambra.     See  Alhambra,  The. 

Organ,   The.     See   Westminster   Abbey. 

Origin  of  the  White,  the  Red,  and  the  Black  Men. 
See  Seminoles,  The. 

Philip  of  Pokanoket. 

Reflections  on  Westminster  Abbey.  See  West- 
minster Abbey. 

Renowned  Wouter  Van  Twiller,  The.  See  Knick- 
erbocker History  of  New  York. 

Ride  of  Ichabod  Crane,  The.  See  Legend  of 
Sleepy  Hollow,  The. 

Rip  Van  Winkle. 

Rural  Funerals. 

Rural  Life  in  England. 

Seminoles,  The —  Origin  of  the  White,  the  Red, 
and  the  Black  Men:  The  Conspiracy  of  Nea- 
mathla. 

Sir  Walter  Scott  and  His  Dogs.     See  Abbotsford. 

Sorrow  for  the  Dead.     See  Rural  Funerals. 

Tea  Parties  in  Old  Times.  See  Knickerbocker 
History  of  New  York. 

True  Nobleman,  A.     See  Forest  Trees. 

Uses  of  History,  The.  See  Knickerbocker  History 
of  New  York. 

Voyage,  A. 

Westminster  Abbey. 

Widow  and  Her  Son,  The. 

William  the  Testy.  See  Knickerbocker  History 
of  New  York. 

Wouter  Van  TwiUer.     See  Knickerbocker  History 
of  New  York. 
Irwin,  Emily  D. — True  Incident  of  the  War,  A. 
Irwin,  R:  W. — Historic  Codfish,  The. 
Irwin,  T:  C. — Caesar. 

Character,  A. 

To  a  Skull. 

Window  Song,  A. 
Irwin,  Will  H. — Professor's  Ball  Game,  The. 
Ives,  Daisy  Noble. — Survival  of  the  Fittest,  The. 
Ives,  Ella. — Little  Field  Preachers. 


J. — Elfin  Cruise,  An. 

If. 
J.,  McG. — One  Advantage  of  Volapiik. 
J.,  W.  P.— French  Market,  The. 

Jack,    Rev.    Alex.    P. — "Or,    suppose    on    the    other 
hand  he  had  told  you  the  plea  was  granted." 

"You  say,  preach  away,  tell  us  something  more  of 
this  Fruitless  Fig  "Tree." 
Jack,  Anna  L. — Flowers'  Convention,  The. 

New  Kind  of  Doll,  A. 


Jackson,  Andrew. — Appeal  to  the  Patriotism  of  South 
Carolina,  An. 

Union  Linked  with  Liberty. 
Jackson,  E.  Maude. — Floral  Birthday  Greeting,  A. 
Jackson,   Edgar  Stanway. — Bo's'n  Jack   of  the  "Al- 
batross." 

Dynamiter's  Daughter,  The. 

Wreck  of  the  "Mary  Wiley,"  The. 
Jackson,  Hardy. — Song  of  the  Headlight,  The. 
Jackson,  Mrs.    Helen    [Fiske]    [Hunt].      ("H.  H.")— 
Arbutus,  The. 

Ariadne's  Farewell. 

Best. 

Blind  Spinner,  The.     See  Spinning. 

Burnt  Ships. 

Coronation. 

Courteous  Mother,  A.  (?) 

Doubt. 

"Down  to  Sleep." 

Emigravit. 

Forgiven. 

Fra  Luigi's  Marriage. 

Glimpses. 

Gondolieds. 

Habeas  Corpus. 

Hand-organ  Man's  Little  Girl,  The. 

In  April. 

Joy. 

Last  Prayer,  A. 

Love's  Fulfilling. 

Mom. 

Morning-glory. 

My  Legacy. 

My  Strawberry. 

Newsboy's  Debt,  The.     {At.  also  to  H.  R.  Hudson.) 

Not  as  I  Will. 

October's  Bright  Blue  Weather. 

Parable,  A. 

P9Ppies  in  the  Wheat. 

Riviera,  The. 

Shining  Little  House,  The. 

"Shore  is  lined  with  anchored  ships,  The." 

Skating  hath  charms. 

Spinning. 

That  Things  are  no  Worse,  Sire. 

Thought. 

Triurnph. 

Two  Truths. 

When  the  Baby  Died. 

Wild  Rose  in  September,  A. 

Woman's  Death-wound,  A. 
Jackson,  Gen.  H:  R. — Live  Oak,  The. 

My  Wife  and  Child. 

"With  his  gnarled  old  arms  and  his  iron  form.    See 
Live  Oak,  The. 
Jackson,  Louisa. — Only  for  This. 
Jackson,  R:  A. — Incomplete  Revelation,  An. 
Jackson,  Willa  Lloyd. — Enemies  Meet  at  Death's  Door. 
Jacobs,  Sarah  S. — Changeless  World,  The. 
Jacobus,   Melancthon   Williams. — "Fire   in   nature   is 

not  a  substance." 
Jacopone,  Fra.— Stabat  Mater  Dolorosa. 
Jacque,  G: — Moon  and  the  Child,  The. 
Jacques,  M.   F. — Great-grandmother's  Garden. 
Jacques,  Mary  J. — Children's  Friend,  The. 
Jago,  R: — Absence. 

To  Mabel.     See  Absence. 
Jake  way,  C:  Edwin. — Unfinished  Prophecy,  An. 
Jakeway,  H.  W. — Autograph  Book  of  Blue,  The. 
James,  Mrs.  Alice  Archer  [Sewall], — Butterfly,  The. 

Processional. 

Sinfonia  Eroica. 
James,  D.  T^. — Izaak  Walton's  Prayer. 
James,  Fleming. — Johnston  at  Shiloh. 
James,  H: — Frances  Anne  Kemble. 
James,  J:  A. — "Events,  with  trumpet-call,  summon  us 
to  our  post." 

Inducements  to  Earnestness  in  Religion. 

James  the  First  of  England. 

To  Prince  Henry. 

James  the  First  of  Scotland. 

Gude  and  Godlie  Ballates,  The. 

King's  Quair,  The. 
•    Spring  Song  of  the  Birds. 
James.  T:  D.— What  is  that  to  Thee? 
Jameson,  Anna. — Take  Me,  Mother  Earth. 
Jamison,  Mrs.   Cecile   Viets  [Hamilton]. — Mouse,  The. 
See  'Toinette's  Philip. 

Selling  the  Image.     See  'Toinette's  Philip. 

'Toinette's  Philip. 
Janvier,  Fs.  De  Haes. — God  Save  our  President. 

Sleeping  Sentinel,  The. 

Stigma.  T  e.  j 


477 


Janvier 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIOXS 


Janvier,  Fs.  De  Haes  (.continued).  , 

Thomas  Buchanan  Read. 

Union,  The. 

Voyage  of  Life,  The. 
Janvier,  Marg.  Thomson  ("Marg.Vandegrift"). — Catch- 
ing the  Cat. 

Clown's  Baby,  Tke. 

Culprit,  A. 

Dead  DoU,  The. 

Lazvland. 

Little  Wild  Baby. 

Proposal,  The. 

Sandman,  The. 

Song  of  Degrees,  A. 

They  Will  never  Do  so  Again.     See  Culprit,  A. 
Janvier,  T:  A. — Santiago. 

Janvim,  Mary  W. — Mrs.  Ward's  Visit  to  the  Prince. 
Japp,  Alex.  Hay. — Landor. 

Memories. 

Music  Lesson,  A. 

Shelley. 
Japy,  G: — Mysterious  Portrait,  The;  or,  a  Story  of 

Japan. 
Jaquith,  W.  L. — Oh,  Golden-rod. 
Jarnette,  Eva  M.  de. — Old  Vote  for  "Young  Marster," 

An. 
Jarrold,  Ernest. — Mickey  Coaches  his  Father. 
Jarvis,  Mary  R. — John  Harding. 
"Jay,  W.  M.  L."     See  Woodruff,  Mrs.  Julia  Louisa 

Matilda. 
Jefferson,  Floyd  W. — For  Memory's  Sake. 

Rosemary  and  Rue. 
Jefferson,  Jos. — Rip  Van  Winkle.     (Dram.) 
Jefferson,  T:— Declaration  of  Independence,  The. 

First  Inaugural  Address.  See  Inauguration  Ad- 
dress. 

Inaugural  Address.     See  Inauguration  Address. 

Inauguration  Address. — -March  4,  1801. 

Original  Draft  of  the  Declaration  of  Independ- 
ence, The.  See  Declaration  of  Independence, 
The. 

Party  Spirit  and  Good  Government.  See  Inau- 
guration Address. 

Republic  the  Strongest  Government,  A.     See  In- 
auguration Address, 
.leffrey,  Fs.,  Lord. — Example  of  America,  The. 

"This,  after  all,  we  believe,  is  the  tone  of  true 
wisdom  and  true  virtue." 
Jeffrey,  Rosa  Vertner. — Owl  in  Church. 

Phantom  Ball,  The. 
Jenkins,  Rev.  H.  D. — Tribute  to  Grant,  A. 
Jenkins,  J:  J. — Mrs.  Magoogin  on  Spring  Bonnets  and 

Spring  Poetry. 
Jenkins,  Joshua. — How  We  Hunted  a  Mouse. 
Jenkins,     Lucy. — Pantomime      of      "Lead,      Kindly 

Light." 
Jenkins,  MacGregor. — To  Phyllis  Returned  to  Town. 
Jenks,  E:  A.— Going  and  Coming. 
Jenks,  Tudor.     Christmas  Song,  A. 

Complaint,  A.     (At.  also  to  B.  A.  Pennypacker.) 

Madcap  April. 

On  the  Road. 

Small  and  Early. 

Spirit  of  the  Maine[,  The]. 

Whirling  Wheel,  The. 
Jenkyn,  Ruthven.     See  Jenktns,  Ruthven. 
Jenkyns,  Ruthven. — Good  Bye.     (Wr.  at.  to  T:  Moore.) 
See  Sailor's  Farewell,  The. 

Sailor's  Farewell,  The. 

Sweetheart,  Good-by!  See  Sailor's  Farewell, 
The. 

Though   Lost   to   Sight,   to   Memory   Dear.     See 
Sailor's  Farewell,  The. 
Jenner,  Dr.  E: — Signs  of  Foul  Weather.     See  Signs  of 
Rain. 

Signs  of  Rain, 
.lennings,  J:  A. — Rest. 
Jennison,  Lucy  White  ("Owen  Innsly"). — Bondage. 

Burden  of  Love,  The. 

Dream  of  Death,  A — Helena. 

Her  Roses. 

To . 

Jerome,  Jerome  K. — Babies.     See  On  Babies. 

Charming  Woman,  A. 

Child,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 

Comic  Lovers,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 

Comic  Man,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 

Curate's  Story,  The. 

Dark  Forest  of  Sorrow,  The.  See  Three  Men  in  a 
Boat. 

Detective,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 

Good  Old  Man,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 

Hanging  a  Picture.     See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 


Jerome,  Jerome  K.  (continued). 

Hero,  The.     See  Stage  Land.     , 

Herr  Slossenn  Boschen's  Song.     See  Three  Men  in 

a  Boat. 
How  Uncle  Podger  Hung  a  Picture.     See  Three 

Men  in  a  Boat. 
Imaginary    Invalid,    The.     See  Three  Men  in  a 

Boat. 
Irishman,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 
Lawyer,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 
Mr.  Harris's   Comic    Song.     See  Three  Men  in  a 

Boat. 
Night.     See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
On  Babies. 

Peasants,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 
Sailor,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 
Signing  of  Magna  Charta,  The.     See  Three  Men 

in  a  Boat. 
Stage  Adventuress,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 
Stage   Detective  and  Peasants,  The.     See  Stage 

Land. 
Stage  Hero,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 
Stage  Heroine,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 
Stage  Land. 
That  Telephone. 
Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Trials  of  the  Musical  Amateur.     See  Three  Men 

in  a  Boat. 
Uncle  Podger  Hangs  a  Picture.     See  Three  Men 

in  a  Boat. 
Unexpected  Denouement,  An.     See  Three  Men  in 

a  Boat. 
Victim  to  One  Hundred  and  Seven  Fatal  Mala- 
dies, A.     See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat. 
Villain,  The.     See  Stage  Land. 
Jerome,  Nellie  G.    SeeGEROME  [or  Jerome],  Nellie  G. 
Jerrold,  Douglas. — Caudle  Has  oeen  Made  a  Mason. 
Caudle  whilst  Walking  with  His  Wife  has  been 

Bowed   to  by   a  Younger  and  even   Prettier 

Woman  than  Mrs.  Caudle. 
Caudle's  Wedding  Day.     See  Mrs    Caudle  Thinks 

"it  Would  Look  Well  to  Keep  their  Wedding 

Day." 
Curtain    Lecture    of   Mrs.    Caudle,    A.      See    Mr. 

Caudle  has  Lent  an  Acquaintance  the  Family 

Umbrella. 
Decidedly  Cool. 
Female  Tenderness. 
Fireside  Saints,  The. 
Grey  Head,  The. 

Helpless  Gray  Head,  The.     See  Grey  Head,  The. 
Miser's  Excuse,  The. 
Mr.  Caudle  and  His  Second  Wife. 
Mr.  Caudle  has  been  Made  a  Mason.     See  Caudle 

has  been  Made  a  Mason. 
Mr.  Caudle  has  been  to  Greenwich  Fair. 
Mr.  Caudle  has  Lent  an  Acquaintance  the  Family 

Umbrella. 
Mr.  Caudle  has  not  "Acted  like  a  Husband"  at  the 

Wedding  Dinner. 
Mr.  Caudle,  having  Come    Home  a  Little    Late, 

Declares   that   henceforth    he   "will    Have    a 

Key." 
Mr.  Caudle  Having  Lent  Five  Pounds  to  a  Friend. 
Mr.    Caudle    Wants    a    "Latch-key."     See    Mr. 

Caudle,  having  Come  Home,  etc. 
Mr.  Caudle's  Wedding  Dinner.     See  Mr.    Caudle 

has  not  "Acted  like  a  Husband,"  etc. 
Mrs.  Caudle  has  Taken  Cold. 
Mrs.  Caudle    Needs    Spring    Clothing.     See    Mrs. 

Caudle  Thinks  it  "High  Time,"  etc. 
Mrs.  Caudle  Urging  the  Need  of  Spring  Clothing. 

See    Mrs.    Caudle    Thinks    it    "High    Time/' 

Mrs.  Caudle  Thinks  it  "High  Time  that  the  Chil- 
dren should  Have  Summer  Clothing." 
Mrs.    Caudle's   Lecture   [on    Shirt    Buttons].     See 

On  Mr.  Caudle's  Shirt  buttons. 
Mrs.  Caudle's  Umbrella  Lecture.     See  Mr.  Caudle 
has  Lent  an  Acquaintance   the   Family   Um- 
brella. 
On  Mr.  Caudle's  Shirt-buttons. 
Trouble     about     Miss     Prettyman.     See    Caudle 
whilst  Walking,  etc. 
Jervey,  Mary. — General  Albert  Sidney  Johnston. 
Jessoj),  G:  H. — At  the  Opera. 
Siren's  Wedding-ring,  The. 
Telling  Fortunes. 
Yes! 
.Jewell,  E.  O. — Things  that  Never  Die. 
Jewett,  Ellen  A. — Grandmother's  Sermon. 

Sermon  in  a  Stocking.  The.     Sen  Grandmother's 
Sermon. 


478 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Jones 


Jewett,  J.  H. — Our  Boys  are  Marching  On. 

Those  Rebel  Flags. 

Voice  from  the  Old  Boys  Left  Behind. 
Jewett,  Sara  Orne. — Caged  Bird,  The. 

Discontent. 

Discontented  Buttercup,  The.     See  Discontent. 

Sheltered. 
Jewett,  Sophie  ("Ellen  Burroughs")- — Armistice. 

Entre  Nous. 

Friendship,  A. 

"If  Spirits  Walk." 

When    Nature    Hath    Betrayed    the    Heart    that 
Loved  Her. 

Smiling  Demon  of  Notre  Dame,  A. 

Song:  Thy  face  I  have  seen  as  one  seeth. 
Jewsbury,  Marie  Jane. — "And  this,  O  Spain!  is  thy 
return."     See  Columbus  in  Chains. 

Columbus  in  Chains. 

Flight  of  Xerxes,  The. 
Jillson,  Clark. — Wet  and  Dry. 

Word  for  Each  Month,  A. 
Joachimsen,  Caroline  C. — Solomon  and  the  Sparrow. 
Johnson,  Annie  R. — Strange  Request,  The. 
Johnson,  C:  Frd'k. — Modern  Romans,  The. 

Then  and  Now. 
Johnson,  C:  W. —  Norwegian  Wedding-march  of  Grieg 

in  Verse,  The. 
Johnson,  Clifton. — Christmas  Night. 
Johnson,    E.    Pauline    (Tekahionwake). — At    Husking 
Time. 

Brier. 

Prairie  Greyhounds. 

Shadow  River. 

Song  My  Paddlie  Sings,  The. 

Vagabonds,  The. 
Johnson,  E: — Water  for  me.     See  Water-drinker,  The. 

Water-drinker,  The. 
Johnson,  Frances  A.  M. — My  Boy. 
Johnson,  G.  T. — Smile  and  the  Sigh,  The. 
Johnson,  H.  H.— Old  Church,  The. 
Johnson,  Hannah  More.  —  Nurse  Winnie  Goes*  Shop- 
ping. 
Johnson,  H:  H.— Twelve  Months,  The. 
Johnson,  H:  U. — Against  Expansion. 

Nicknames  of  the  States. 
Johnson.  Rev.    Herrick.  —  Some    Delusions    of    High 
License. 

Sunday  Newspaper,  The. 

Two  Banners  of  America,  The. 
Johnson,  Mrs.  Herrick. — "Faultless." 

Voice  in  the  Twilight,  The. 
.Johnson,  J.  C. — Oaks,  The. 
Johnson,  Jas.  Noel. — Genius,  A. 

How  an  Engineer  Won  His  Bride. 
John.son,  Lionel. — Age  of  a  Dream,  The. 

Church  of  a  Dream,  The. 

Dark  Angel,  The. 

Parnell. 

Saint  Columba. 

Te  Martyrum  Candidatus. 

Ways  of  War. 
Johnson,  M.  R. — Fire-bells. 
Johnson,  Marg. — Bull.  The. 

Child's  Wonder,  The. 

One,  Two,  Three. 
Johnson,  Mary  E.  C. — Scandal. 
Johnson,  Philander. — Stranger,  The. 
Johnson,  Rev.  Plato. — Ter'ble  Sperience,  A. 
Johnson,  Reverdy. — European  Struggles  for  Freedom. 

Influence  of  American  Freedom. 

Tribute  to  the  Supreme  Court. 
Johnson,  Rob't  Underwood. — As  a  Bell  in  a  Chime. 

Blossom  of  the  Soul,  The. 

Browning  at  Asolo, 

Dewey  at  Manila. 

Illusions. 

In  Tesla's  Laboratory. 

September  Violet,  A. 

To  the  Housatonic  at  Stockbridge. 

Voice  of  Webster,  The. 

Wistful  Days,  The. 
Johnson,  Rossiter. — Evelyn. 

Ninety-nine  in  the  Shade. 

Soldier  Poet,  A. 

Woman  of  the  War,  A. 
Johnson,  S: — City  of  God,  The. 

For  Divine  Strength. 

Inspiration. 

Made  Perfect  Through  Suffering. 
Johnson,  Dr.  S: —  Burlesque  of  the  Following  Lines  of 
Lopez  de  Vega. 

Charles  XII.  [of  Sweden].     See  Vanity  of  Human 
Wishes,  The. 


Johnson,  Dr.  S:  (continued). 

Fate  of  Charles  the  Twelfth.    See  Vanity  of  Human 

Wishes,  The. 
Improviso  on  a  Young  Heir's  Coming  of  Age. 
Irene. 
Letter  to  Lord  Chesterfield.     See  To  the   Right 

Honourable  the  Earl  of  Chesterfield. 
Letter  to  the   Earl  of  Chesterfield.     See  To  the 

Right  Honourable  the  Earl  of  Chesterfield. 
Levet,  his  Death. 

Lines  Added  to  Goldsmith's  Traveller. 
Ijondon. 
On  Some  Lines  of  Lopez  de  Vega.     See  Burlesque 

of  the  Following  Lines  of  Lopez  de  Vega. 
On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Levett.    See  Levet,  his  Death. 
On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Robert  Levet,  a  Practiser  in 

Physic.     See  Levet,  his  Death. 
One-and-twenty.     See    Improviso    on    a    Young 

Heir's  Coming  of  Age. 
Parallel  between  Pope  and  Dryden.     See  Pope. 
Pope. 

Prologue  Spoken  at  the  Opening  of  the  Drury  Lane 
Theatre.  See  Prologue  Spoken  by  Mr.  Garrick, 
etc. 
Prologue  Spoken  by  Garrick  at  the  Opening  of 
the  Theatre  Royal.  See  Prologue  Spoken  by 
Mr.  Garrick,  etc. 
Prologue  Spoken  by  Mr.  Garrick  at  the  Opening 

of  the  Theatre  Royal,  Drury  Lane. 
Quiet  Life,  The.     See  Levet,  his  Death. 
Rise   and   Fall   of  Wolsey,   The.     See  Vanity  of 

Human  Wishes,  The. 
Shakespeare.     See  Prologue  Spoken  by  Mr.  Gar- 
rick at   the   Opening   of   the   Theatre    Royal, 
Drury  Lane. 
Thales'  Reasons  for  Leaving  London.     See  Lon- 
don. 
To  the  Right  Honourable  the  Earl  of  Chesterfield. 
To-morrow.     See  Irene. 
True   Objects   of   Desire,   The.      See    Vanity    of 

Human  Wishes,  The. 
Vanity  of  Human  Wishes,  The. 
Wise  Man's  Prayer,  The.     See  Vanity  of  Human 

Wishes,  The. 
Word  to  the  Wise,  A,  Prologue  to. 
Johnson,  W:     See  Cort,  W: 
Johnson,  W:  K. — Anniversary,  An. 
Johnson,  W:  Martin. — On  Snow-flakes  Melting  on  tjis 

Lady's  Breast. 
Johnson,  W:  Preston.     Dawning  Future,  The. 
Johnson,  Willis  Fletcher. — Literature  and  Elocution. 

My  Books. 
Johnston,  Emma  M. — Boy  Who  Went  from  Home,  The. 
Josiah  and  Family  at  the  Centennial. 
My  Mother's  Song. 
Johnston,  J:  H. — Cross-eyed  Lovers,  The. 
Johnstone,  H: — Charm  to  Call  Sleep,  A. 
Gardener's  Burial,  The. 
Guessing  Song. 

Our  Gardener's  Burial.     See   Gardener's    Burial, 
The. 
Jolls,  Amelia  Walstien.     See  Carpenter,  Afrs.  Amelia 

Wal.stien  [Jolls]. 
Jones,  Amanda  T. — Abigail  Becker. 
Apple  Blossoms. 

Teddy  McGuire  and  Paddy  O'Flynn. 
We  Twain. 
Jones,  Brummell. — Quaker  Boy,  The. 
Jones,  C:  A. — Bible  Reading  on  "Rock  of  Ages,"  A. 
Jones,  Ebenezer. — Face,  The. 
Song  of  the  Kings  of  Gold. 
When  the  World  is  Burning. 
Jones,  Rev.  E:  C. — General  Joseph  Reed; or, The  Incor- 
ruptible Patriot. 
Marion's  Dinner. 
Soliloquy  of  Arnold,  The. 
Jones,  Eliz.     See  Pullen,  Mrs.  Eliz   [Jones]. 
Jones,  Ernest  C: — Earth's  Burdens. 
Moonrise. 

Song  of  the  "Lower  Classes." 
Jones,  Gertrude  M. — Cupid's  Blunder. 

Mammy  Gets  the  Boy  to  Sleep. 
Jones,  H.  C. — Cousin  Sally  Dilliard. 
Jones,  I.  Edgar. — "As  it  is  in  Heaven." 
Dead  Leader,  The. 
Dream  Rambles. 
Drunkard's  Death,  The. 
Find  Your  Level. 
Heroes  of  the  Mines. 
Ideal  and  the  Real,  The. 
Judge  Lynch. 
Kingdom  of  Sham.  The. 
Landlord's  Last  Moments,  The. 


479 


Jones 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Jones,  I.  Edgar  (continued^. 
Legend  of  Kalooka,  The. 
Nature  Prayer,  A. 
"Nearer  to  Thee." 
Nickle  Plated. 
On  the  Frontier. 
Popping  the  Qu^tion. 
Sable  Sermon. 
Sambo's  New  Year  Sermon. 
Shadows  on  the  Snow. 
Smoked  American  Theology. 
Sound  the  Reveille. 
Sunbeam's  Mission,  The. 
There  are  None. 
Three  Sunbeams. 
"Vanity  of  Vanities." 
Vigilants,  The. 
Jones,  I.  L. — Sleep,  Baby,  Sleep. 
Jones,  J.  A. — Gladiator,  The. 

Jones,  Senator  J:  Percival.  (7) — Eulogy  on  Emmet. 
Jones,  Julia  Clinton. — Silent  Army  of  Memorial  Day, 

The. 
Jones,  Kob't. — My  Love. 
Old  Lover,  An. 
When  Love  Most  Secret  Is. 
Jones,  Rosaline  E. — January. 
Voice  of  the  Wind,  The. 
Jones,  Samantha. — Samantha's  Talk. 
Jones,  T: — Tobacco. 
Jones,  Mrs.  W.  R. — Perdita. 

Zenobia. 
Jones,  Sir  W: — Babe,  The.     (Tr.) 
Baby,  The.     See  Babe,  The. 
Marayena:  Spirit  of  God.     (Tr.) 
Ode:  "What  constitutes  a  state?"     See  Ode  in 

Imitation,  etc. 
Ode  in  Imitation  of  Alcseus,  An. 
Ode  on    the    State.     See    Ode    in    Imitation    of 

Alcaeus,  An. 
What  Constitutes  a  State?     See  Ode  in  Imitation 
of  Alcseus,  An. 
Jones-Foster,  Ardennes. — Midnight  in  London. 
Jonson,  Ben. — Advice  to  a  Reckless  Youth. 

.iEglamour's  Lament.     See  Sad  Shepherd,  The. 
Banquet  «f  Sense,  The.     See  Poetaster,  The. 
Buz  [or  Buzz],  Quoth  the  Blue  Fly.     See  Masque 

oi  Oberon,  The. 
Catiline  to  His  Army  near  Fsesule  [or  Fsesulse]. 
Celebration  of  Charis,  A. 

Charis'  Triumph.     See  Celebration  of  Charis,  A. 
Chivalry    See  Speeches  at  Prince  Henry's  Barriers, 

The. 
Chorus:  "Spring  all  the  graces  of  the  age."     See 

Fortunate  Isles  and  their  Union. 
Cynthia's  Revels. 

Devil  is  an  Ass,  The.     See  Celebration  of  Charis,  A. 
Discourse  with  Cupid.     See  Celebration  of  Charis, 

A. 
"Drink  to  me  only  with  thine  eyes."     See  Song: 

To  Celia. 
Earine.     See  Sad  Shepherd,  The. 
Echo's  Lament  for  [or  of]  Narcissus.   jSee  Cynthia's 

Revels. 
Echo's  Song.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
Elegy,   An:    "Though  beauty  be    the    mark    of 

praise." 
Epicoene;  or.  The  Silent  Woman. 
Epigram.     "Uvedale.    thou    piece     of    the    first 

times."     See  To  Sir  William  Uvedale. 
Epigram  on  Francis  Drake.     (Tr.) 
Epigram  on  Sir  Francis  Drake.  (Tr.)    See  Epigram 

on  Francis  Drake. 
Epistle    to    a    Friend    to  Persuade   him   to    the 

Wars. 
Epistle  to  Elizabeth,  Countess  of  Rutland. 
Epitaph:  "Underneath  this   sable    hearse."     See 

Epitaph  on  the  Countess  of  Pembroke. 
Epitaph:  "Underneath  this  stone  doth  lye."     See 

Epitaph  on  Elizabeth  L.  H. 
Epitaph  on  Elizabeth  L.  H. 
Epitaph  on  Master  Philip  Gray,  An. 
Epitaph  on  Salathiel  Pavy,  [a  Child  of  Queen  Eliz- 
abeth's Chapel,]  An. 
Epitaph  on  the  Countess  of  Pembroke. 
Epode. 
Equivocal. 

Eupheme,  IX.     Elegy  on  My  Muse. 
"Fairy  beam  upon  you.  The.  '     See  Masque  of  the 

Metamorphosed  Gipsies. 
Fame. 

Fanta-sy.     See  Vision  of  Delight,  The. 
Farewell  to  the  World,  A.     See  To  the  World. 
Fortunate  Isles  and  their  Union. 


Jonson,  Ben  (continued). 

Freedom  in  Dress.     See  Epicoene;  or.  The  Silent 

Woman. 
Gipsies  Metamorphosed,  The.     See  Masque  of  the 

Metamorphosed  Gipsies. 
Good  Life,  Long  Life.     See  To  the  Immortal  Mem- 
ory and   Friendship   of  that  Noble    Pair,   Sir 

Lucius  Cary  and  Sir  Henry  Morrison. 
Hesperus'  Song.  See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
Honour  in  Bud.     See  To  the  Immortal  Memory 

and  Friendship  of  that  Noble  Pair,  Sir  Lucius 

Cary  and  Sir  Henry  Morrison. 
"How  near  to  good  is  what  is  fair!"     See  Love 

Freed  from  Ignorance  and  Folly. 
Hue  and  Cry  after  Cupid,  The. 
Hymensei ;   or.   The    Solemnities   of  Masque   and 

Barriers  at  Court. 
Hymn,  A:  "Hear  me,   O   God!"     See   Hymn    to 

God  the  Father.  A. 
Hymn  on  the  Nativity  of  My  Saviour,  A. 
Hymn  to  Cynthia.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
Hymn  to  Diana.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
Hymn  to  God  the  Father,  A. 
Hymn  to  Pan.     See  Pan's  Anniversary;  or.  The 

Shepherd's  Holiday." 
Karol's  Kiss.     See  Sad  Shepherd,  The. 
Kiss,  The.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 
Life  and  Death.     See  Of  Life  and  Death. 
Lines  on  the  Portrait  of  Shakespeare.     See  On  the 

Portrait  of  Shakespeare. 
Lord  Bacon's  Birthday. 
Love; 

Love  Freed  from  Ignorance  and  Folly. 
Masque  of  Oberon,  The. 
Masque    of   Pleasure    and    Virtue.     See    Pleasure 

Reconciled  to  Virtue. 
Masque  of  the  Metamorphosed  Gipsies. 
Masques.     See  Time  Vmdicated. 
May.     See  Vision  of  Delight,  The. 
Measure  of  the  Perfect  Life,  The.     See  to  the  Im- 
mortal  Memory,  etc. 
Mercury  Vindicated  from  the  Alchemists  at  Court. 
Nature.     See  Mercury  Vindicated,  etc. 
Neptune's  Triumph  for  the  Return  of  Albion. 
New  Cry,  The. 
New  Inn,  The. 
Noble  Balm,  The.     See  Ode,  An:  "High-spirited 

friend." 
Noble  Nature,  The.     See  To  the  Immortal  Mem- 
ory, etc. 
Nymph's  Passion,  A. 
O,  Do  not  Wanton  with  Those  Eyes.     See  Song: 

"Oh,  do  not  wanton  with  those  eyes." 
Ode,  An:  "High-spirited  friend." 
Ode  to  Himself,  An. 

Ode  to  Sir  William  Sidney  on  his  Birthday. 
Of  His  Love's  Beauty.     See  Celebration  of  Charis, 

A. 
Of  Life  and  Death. 
On  Banck,  the  Usurer. 

On  Banks,  the  Usurer.     See  On  Banck,  the  Usurer. 
On  Chevril  the  Lawyer. 
On  Court-worm. 
On  Don  Surly. 
On   Elizabeth  L.   H.     See  Epitath  on   Elizabeth 

L.  H. 
On   Lord   Bacon's   Birthday      See  Lord   Bacon's 

Birthday. 
On  Lucy,  Countess  of  Bedford. 
On    Salathiel    Pavy.     See    Epitaph    on    Salathiel 

Pavy,  a  Child  of  Queen  Elizabeth's  Chapel,  An. 
On  the  Countess  Dowager  of  Pembroke.    (At.  also 

to  W:  Brown.)     See  Epitaph  on  the  Countess 

of  Pembroke. 
On  the  Portrait  of  Shakespeare. 
On  the  Union. 

Pan's  Anniversary;  or,  The  Shepherd's  Holiday. 
Part  of  an  Ode  to  the  Memory  of  Sir  Lucius  Cary 

and  Sir  H.  Morrison,  A.     See  To  the  Immortal 

Memory,  etc. 
Perfect  Beauty.     See  New   Inn.  The. 
Perfect  Life,  The.     See  To  the  Immortal  Memory. 

etc. 
Pleasure  Reconciled  to  Virtue. 
Pleasures    of   Heaven,    The.     See    Eupheme,  IX. 

Elegy  on  My  Muse. 
Poetaster,  The. 
Proper  Man,  A. 
Sad  Shepherd,  The. 
Shadow,  The. 
Shepherd's  Holiday  [or  Holyday],  The.    See  Pan's 

Anniversary. 
Shepherd's  Love,  The.     See  Sad  Shepherd,  The. 


480 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Kavanaugh 


Jonson,  Ben  (continued). 

Simplex  Munditiis.  See  Epiccene;  or,  The  Silent 
Woman. 

So  Sweet  is  She.     See  Celebration  of  Charis,  A. 

Song:  "Follow  a  shadow,  it  still  flies  you."  See 
Song:  That  Women  are  but  Men's  Shadows. 

Song:  "How  near  to  good  is  what  is  fair."  See 
Love  Freed  from  Ignorance  and  Folly. 

Song:  "Oh,  do  not  wanton  with  those  eyes." 

Song:  "See  the  chariot  at  hand."  See  Celebra- 
tion of  Charis,  A. 

Song:  "Spring  all  the  graces  of  the  age."  See 
Neptune's  Triumph,  etc. 

Song:  "Still  to  be  neat,  still  to  be  drest."  See 
Epiccene ;  or.  The  Silent  Woman. 

Song:  "The  owl  is  abroad."  See  Masque  of  the 
Metamorphosed  Gipsies. 

Song  before  the  Entry  of  the  Masquers.  See  For- 
tunate Isles  and  their  Union. 

Song  from  Gypsies'  Metamorphoses.  See  Masque 
of  the  Metamorphosed  Gipsies. 

Song  from  Neptune's  Triumph.  See  Neptune's 
Triumph  for  the  Return  of  Albion. 

Song  of  Echo.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 

Song  of  Nature.  See  Mercury  Vindicated  from 
the  Alchemists  at  Court. 

Song:  That  Women  are  but  Men's  Shadows. 

Song:  To  Celia. 

Speeches  at  Prince  Henry's  Barriers,  The. 

Sweet  Neglect,  The.  See  Epiccene;  or,  The  Silent 
Woman. 

Time  Vindicated. 

To  a  Glove.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 

To  Brainhardy. 

To  Celia.     See  Song:  To  Celia. 

To  Cynthia.     See  Cynthia's  Revels. 

"To  Doctor  Empiric. 

To  Elizabeth,  Countess  of  Rutland.  See  Epistle 
to  Elizabeth,  etc. 

To  Fine  Grand. 

To  Fool  or  Knave. 

To  Heaven. 

To  Himself.     See  Ode  to  Himself,  An. 

To  King  Charles  and  Queen  Mary,  for  the  Loss  of 
Their  First-born.     An   Epigram  Consolatory. 

To  My  Bookseller. 

To  My  Mere  English  Censurer. 

To  Sir  Annual  Tilter  (wr.  Filter). 

To  Sir  Henry  Goodyere. 

To  Sir  William  Uvedale. 

To  the  Countess  of  Rutland.  See  Epistle  to  Eliza- 
beth, Countess  of  Rutland. 

To  the  Immortal  Memory  and  Friendship  of  that 
Noble  Pair,  Sir  Lucius  Cary  and  Sir  Henry 
Morrison. 

To  the  King  on  His  Birthday  [Nov.  19,  16321. 

To  the  Memory  of  My  Beloved  Master,  William 
Shakespeare,  and  What  He  Hath  Left  Us.  See 
"To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved  Mr.  William 
Shakespeare,  etc. 

To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved  Mr.  William  Shakes- 
peare, and  What  he  Hath  Left  Us. 

To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved,  the  Author,  Mr. 
William  Shakespeare,  and  what  he  hath  Left 
Us.  See  To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved  Mr. 
William  Shakespeare,  etc. 

To  the  Memory  of  Shakespeare.  See  To  the  Mem- 
ory of  my  Beloved  Mr.  William  Shakespeare, 

To  the  World. 

To  William  Sidney  on  His  Birthday.     See  Ode  to 

Sir  William  Sidney  on  his  Birthday. 
Triumph,  The.     See  Celebration  of  Charis,  A. 
Triumph    of    Charis,    The.     See    Celebration    of 

Charis,  A. 
True    Balm.        See    Ode,     An:      "High-spirited 

friend." 
Truth.      See    Hymenjei;     or.     The    Solemnities, 

etc. 
Venetian  Song.     See  Volpone;  or.  The  Fox. 
Venus'  Runaway.     See  Hue  and  Cry  after  Cupid, 

The. 
Vision  of  Beauty,  A.     See  New  Inn,  The. 
Vision  of  Delight,  The. 
Volpone;  or.  The  Fox. 

Wish,    A.     See   Masque    of    the    Metamorphosed 
Gipsies. 
Jordan,  D:  Starr. — Viv^rols. 
Jordan,  Mrs.  Dulcie  [Mason]. — Late  October. 

October. 
Jordan,  T: — Coronemus    nos    Rosis    antequam    Mar- 

cescant. 
Josephs,  Lemuel  B.  G. — Jok-er's  Mistake,  The. 


"Josiah  Allen's  Wife."     See  Holi,ey,  Marietta. 
Jot  [or  Tot],  Joe,  Jr. — Country  Dance,  The. 

Country  Dancing.     See  Country  Dance,  The. 

Difficulty  of  Rhyming,  The. 

Pat's  Love. 

Smooth  Day,  A. 
Journal  of  Education. — Finished  Education,  A. 
Jowett,  B:  —  History  of  the  Peloponnesian  War.     {Tr.) 

Speech  of  Pericles.     (Tr.)     See   History    of    the 
Peloponnesian  War. 
Joy,  Jennie. — Christmas  Eve. 

Glad  Surprise,  A. 

Outlaw,   The. 

Pardon,  The. 

Saved. 
Joy,  Sarah. — Little  Margery. 
Joyce,  P.  W.— Lake  of  Coolfin,  The. 
Joyce,  R:  Dwyer. — Blacksmith  of  Limerick,  The. 

Crossing  the  Blackwater. 

Fineen  the  Rover. 

Green  Dove,  and  the  Raven,  The. 

Kilbrannon. 
Juan  II.,  King  of  Castile. — I  never  Knew  it.  Love,  till 

Now. 
Judd,  Abbie  Frances. — Early  Goldenrod. 

Midsummer. 
Jiwfflie.— Gigglety  Girl,  The. 

Little  Boy's  Lament,  The. 
Judkins,  C:  Otis. — Mountain  Brook,  A. 
Judson,  Emily  Chubbuck. — Ministering  Angels. 

My  Bird. 

Watching. 
June,  Jennie.     See  Croly,  Mrs.  Jennie  C. 
"Junius." — To  the  King.     See  To  the  Printer  of  the 
Public  Advertiser. 

To  the  Printer  of  the  Public  Adyertiser. 
Junkerman,  Kathe.  E. — Union,  A. 
"Juvenal." — Lost  Watch,  The. 


K 

K.,  M. — My  Twentieth  Birthday. 

K.,  M.  E. — "God  never  meant  that  we  should  call  this 

home." 
K.,  R.  K. — Plea  for  Spring  Poetry,  A. 

Tastes  of  Yesterday,  The. 

White  Opal,  The. 
K.,  R.  W.— My  Sweetheart. 
Kahn,  Mrs.  Ruth  [Ward].— Flower  of  Love,  The. 

Kathrina." — Discontented  Leader,  The. 
Kavanaugh,  Jane. — Christmas  Story,  A. 
Kavanaugh,  Katie  H. — Treasures. 
Kavanaugh,  Rose. — St.  Michan's  Churchyard. 

Turn  of  the  Tide,  The. 
Kavanaugh,  Mrs.  Russell. — Age  We  Live  In,  The. 

Amateur  Rehearsals;  or,  the  Detective's  Dilemma. 

"Angels  Can  Do  no  More." 

Annabel's  First  Party. 

Apple  of  Discord,  The. 

Aunt  Jerusha's  Mistake. 

Baby's  Dead. 

Balance  Due. 

Be  Prompt  in  what  You  Do. 

Beautiful  Belles. 

Beautiful  Dudes. 

Between  Two  Stools. 

Birth  of  Paris,  The. 

Boy  and  his  Mother,  The. 

Boy  and  Wolf. 

Boys  Will  be  Boys. 

Cardinal's  Godson,  The. 

Choicest  Goods,  The. 

Closing  Song  for  School  Exhibition. 

Cobbler's  Secret,  The. 

Cold  in  the  Head,  A. 

Coming  Woman,  The. 

Confidence  versus  Merit. 

Cure  for  Obstinacy,  A;  or.   How  Charlie  Won  a 
Wife. 

Dialogue  for  a  Boy  and  Girl. 

Dialogue  for  a  Little  Boy  and  Girl. 

Dog  and  his  Shadow,  The. 

Dog  in  the  Manger.  The. 

Dolly  and  Me.  » 

Dumb  Wife,  The.  ' 

Dumpsy-Frumpsy. 

Energy  and  Industry. 

Fair  Fight,  A;  or.  The  Wife's  Allowance. 

Fairy's  Revenge,  The. 

Fanny  Gray 

Farmer  Boy  and  the  City  Dude,  The. 


481 


Kavanaugh 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Kavanaugh,  Mrs.  Russell  (cotUimied). 
Fatal  Bait,  The. 

Kavanaugh,  Mrs.  Russell  (continued). 

Smart  Girl,  A. 

Five  Wishes,  The. 

Speech: — "My  pa  and  ma  will  be  .surprised." 

Fly  and  the  Lamb,  The. 

Speech:— "My  pappy  asked  me  if  I'd  .say." 

Forbearance. 

Speech: — "None  but  a  school-boy  knows  how  hard." 

Four  Musicians,  The. 

Speech  for  a  Boy  Four  or  Five  Years  Old. 

Four  Queens,  Th« 
Four  Years. 

Speech  for  a  Boy  of  Eight  or  Nine. 

Speech  for  a  Girl  Five  Years  Old.     See  I'm  Little 

Fox  and  the  Goat,  The. 

but  I'm  Spunky. 
Speech  for  a  Small  Boy. 

Fox  who  Lost  His  Tail,  The. 

Golden  Rule,  The. 

Speech  for  a  Very  Small  Girl. 

Good  Night. 

Story  of  the  Kinkankee,  The. 

Grandma's  Talk. 

Strike  among  the  Flowers,  A. 

Grandmother's  Beau. 

Ten  Thousand  a  Year. 

Gray  Mare  is  the  Better  Horse,  The. 

Test,  The;  or,  Maud  May's  Lovers. 

Heiress'  Ruse,  The. 

That  Awful  Girl! 

Holiday  Speech. 
Honesty  the  Best  Policy. 
Hopeful  Youth,  A. 

They  Ask  me  why  I  am  so  Bad. 

"They  Say." 

Three  Spectres,  The. 

How  He  Had  Him. 

Too  Late. 

How  I  Made  My  Fortune. 

Truth  and  Falsehood. 

"I  Told  You  So!" 

'Trying  Hard. 
Two  Frogs,  The. 

I'm  Little  but  I'm  Spunky. 

Imaginative  Invention,  An. 

Valedictory.  (2.) 

In  Twenty  Years. 

Valedictory:  "It  now,  kind  friends,  devolves  on 

Interrupted  Recitation,  An. 

me." 

It's  Not  Worth  While  to  Hate. 

Valedictory  for  a  Small  Boy. 

Joyful  Surprise,  A. 

What  Grandma  Thinks. 

Keep  out  of  Debt. 

What  has  been  Done  may  be  Done  again. 

I-ady  Queen  Anne. 

Where  there's  a  Will,  there's  a  Way. 

I-ady-killer.  The. 

Winning  a  Wager. 

Lark  and  Her  Young  Ones,  The. 

Wolf  and  the  Bear,  The. 

Little  Gentleman,  The. 

Year,  The. 

Little  Miss  Ray. 

Young  Critic,  The. 

Little  Mushrooms,  The. 

Kaylor,  Reginald  Whitfield.— "Good  Night." 

Little  Truant,  The. 

Kazinezi,  Fs. — Separation. 

Love-scrape,  The. 

Keats,  J: — Addressed  to  Benjamin  Robert  Haydon. 

Luke  Major. 

Addressed  to  Haydon.    See  Addressed  to  Benjamin 

Man  and  the  Goose,  The. 

Robert  Haydon. 

May  Celebration. 

"And  as,  in  sparkling  majesty,  a  star."     See    To 

Merry  Journey,  A. 

Hope. 

Milkmaid,  The. 

Autumn.     See  To  Autumn. 

Miser's  Fate,  The. 

Bacchus.     See  Endymion. 

Money  is  King. 
Months,  The. 

Bard    Speaks,  The.     See  Epistle  to  my  Brother 

George,  The. 

Never  Look  Back. 

Bards  of  Passion  and  of  Mirth.     See  Ode:  "Bards 

Novel  Christmas-tree,  A. 

of  passion  and  of  mirth." 

Old  Bachelor,  The. 

Beauty.     See  Endymion. 

Old  Maid,  The. 

Bright  Star!     Would   I  were  Steadfast  as  Thou 

Old  Man  and  Death,  The. 

Art.     See  I,ast  Sonnet. 

Old  Year  Out  and  the  New  Year  in,  The. 

Coelus  to  Hyperion.     See  Hyperion. 

Olden  Times,  The. 

Cynthia's   Bridal   Evening.     See   "I   stood  tiptoe 

Old-time  Breakdown,  An. 

upon  a  little  hill." 

Open  the  Gates  as  High  as  the  Sky. 

Daisy's  Song,  The. 

Opening  Recitation. 

December:  See  Stanzas:  "In  a  drear-nighted  De- 

Oration for  a  Boy,  An. 

cember." 

Origin  of  the  Peacock,  The. 

Dove,  The.     See  Song:  "I  had  a  dove,  and  the 

Owl  and  Nightingale,  The. 

sweet  dove  died." 

Pat's  Purchase. 

Endymion. 

Peevish  Boy,  A. 

Endymion.     See  also  "1  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little 

Pet  of  the  School,  The. 

hill." 

Poetry,  Prose  and  Fact. 
Poor  Men  vs.  Rich  Men. 

Epistle  to  my  Brother  George.  The. 

Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The. 

Poor  Old  Maids. 

Faery  Song. 

Power  of  Justice,  The. 

Fairy  Song.     See  Faery  Song. 

Power  of  Temper,  The. 

Fancy.                                                              ' 

Queen  of  a  Night,  The. 

Fear  of  Death,  The.     See  Sonnet:  "When  I  have 

Recitation: — "I  love  my  papa  that  I  do." 

fears  that  I  may  cea.se  to  be." 

Recitation:  "It's  very  hard,  kind  friends,  for  me." 

Flight,  The.     See  Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The. 

Recitation :  — "Much  has  been  said  by  poets  wise." 

Fragment  of  an  Ode  to  Maia. 

Recitation  for  a  Boy. 

Goldfinches.     See  "I   stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little 

Recitation  for  a  Boy  Three  Years  Old. 

hill." 

Recitation  for  a  Dozen  I..itt!e  Girls. 

Grasshopi^er  and  Cricket  [,The].    See  On  the  Grass- 

Recitation for  a  Little  Child. 

hopper  and  Cricket. 

Recitation  for  a  Small  Boy. 

Happy  In.sensibility.     See  Stanzas:  "In  a  drear- 

Recitation  for  a  Very  Little  Girl. 

nighted  December." 

Recitation  for  a  Very  Small  Girl. 

Recitation  for  Any  Number  of  Small  Children. 

Human  Seasons,  The. 

Hymn  to  Pan.     See  Endymion. 

Repartee. 

Riding  in  the  Cars. 

Hyperion. 

Hyperion's  Arrival.     See  Hyperion 
"I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill." 

Robin  Redbreast. 

Ruby's  Stratagem. 

Imitation  of  Spenser. 

Saint  and  Sinner. 

In  the  Country.     See  Sonnet:  "To  one  who  has 

Salutatory  for  a  Small  Boy. 

been   long  in   city   pent." 

Salutatory:  For  Very  Small  Pupils,  either  Girls  or 

Isabella;  or.  The  Pot  of  Basil. 

Boys. 

King  Stephen. 

Santa  Claus. 

La  Belle  Dame  sans  Merci  [or  Mercy]. 

Scene  from  the  Life  of  Robin  Hood,  A. 

Last  Sonnet. 

School-boy,  The. 

Lines  on  the  Mermaid  Tavern. 

Shy  Gallant,  The. 

•      Marigolds. 

Sing  a  Song  of  Christmas. 

Meg  Merrilies. 

Small  Pitchers  Have  Large  Ears. 

Mermaid   Tavern,  The.     See  Lines  on   the  Mer- 

Smallest Grade,  The. 

maid  Tavern. 

482 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Kendall 


Keats,  J:  {continued). 

Minnows.     See  "I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill." 
Morning.     See  "I  stood  tijitoe  upon  a  little  hill." 
Morning.     See  also  Imitation  of  Spenser. 
Music.     See  Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The. 
Nature's   Delights.     See  "T   stood   tiptoe  upon  a 

little  hill." 
Nightingale,  The.     See  Ode  to  a  Nightingale. 
Oceanus.     «See   Hyperion. 
Ode:  "Bards  of  passion  and  of  mirth." 
Ode  on  a  Grecian  Urn. 
Ode  on  Melancholy. 
Ode  on  the  Poets.     See  Ode*  "Bards  of  passion 

and  of  mirth." 
Ode  to  a  Grecian  Urn.     See  Ode  on  a  Grecian  Urn. 
Ode  to  a  Nightingale. 
Ode  to  Apollo. 

Ode  to  Autumn.     See  To  Autumn. 
Ode  to  Psyche. 

On  a  Grecian  Urn.     See  Ode  on  a  Grecian  Urn. 
On  a  Picture  of  Leander. 
On  Fame. 

On  Fir.st  Looking  into  Chapman's  Homer. 
On  the  Grasshopper  and  Cricket. 
Penitent,  The.     See  Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The. 
Poetry  of  Earth,  The.     See  On  the  Grasshopper 

and  Cricket. 
Realm  of  Fancy,  The.     See  Fancy. 
Robin  Hood. 
Saturn.     See  Hyperion. 
Sigh  of  Silence,  The.     See  "I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a 

little  hill." 
Solitude.     See  Sonnet  to  Solitude. 
Song:  "I  had  a  dove,  and  the  sweet  dove  died." 
Song  of  the  Indian  Maid.     See  Endymion. 
Sonnet:  "After  dark  vapours  have  oppressed  our 

plains." 
Sonnet:  "To  one  who  has  been  long  in  city  pent." 
Sonnet:  "When  I  have  fears  that  I  may  cease  to 

be." 
Sonnet:  On  First  Looking  into  Chapman's  Homer. 

See  On  First  Looking  into  Chapman's  Homer. 
Sonnet  to  Solitude. 
Sonnet:  Written  in  January,  1817.     See  Sonnet: 

"After  dark  vapours,  etc." 
Sonnet:  Written  in  January,  1818.     See  Sonnet: 

"When  I  have  fears  that  I  may  cease  to  be." 
Stanzas:  "In  a  drear-nighted   December." 
Sweet  Peas.     See  "I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill." 
Terror  of  Death,  The.     See  Sonnet:  "When  I  have 

fears  that  I  may  cease  to  be." 
Thea.     See  Hyperion. 

Thing  of  Beauty  is  a  Joy  Forever,  A.  See  Endymion. 
To  a  Nightingale.     See  Ode  to  a  Nightingale. 
To  Autumn. 
To  Hope. 
"To  one  who  has  been  long  in  city  pent."     See 

Sonnet:  "To  one  whe  has  been  long  in  city 

pent." 
To  Sleep. 
To  the  Adventurous.     See  On  First  Looking  into 

Chapman's  Homer. 
To  the  Poets.     See  Ode:  "Bards  of  passion  and 

of  mirth." 
When  I  Have  Fears  that  I  May  Cease  To  Be.     See 

Sonnet:  "When  I  have  fears,  etc." 
Winter.     See  Stanzas:  "In  a   drear-nighted    De- 
cember." 
"Wonder  of  all-ruling  Providence,  The." 
Keble,  J:— All  Saints'  Day. 

All  Things  Bright  and  Beautiful. 

Anticipation  and  Retrospection. 

April.     See  First  Sunday  after  Epiphany. 

Burial  of  the  Dead. 

Christmas  Bells. 

Christmas  Day. 

Effect  of  Example. 

Elder  Scripture,  The.     See  Septuagesima  Sunday. 

Evening. 

Example.     See  Effect  of  Example. 

Fifteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity:  The  Lilies  of  the 

Field. 
First  Sunday  after  Epiphany. 
First  Sunday  after  Trinity. 

Flowers.     See  Fifteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity. 
Gathering  of  the  Church,  The. 
Happiness.     See  Saint  Matthew. 
Holy  Matrimony 
Lilies  of  the  Field,  The.     See  Fifteenth  Sunday 

after  Trinity. 
Morning. 

Rainbow,    The.     See    Anticipation     and     Retro- 
spection. 


Keble,  J:  {continued). 

Resignation.     See  Wednesday  before   Easter. 

St.  Peter's  Day. 

Second  Sunday  after  Easter. 

Second  Sunday  after  Trinity. 

Seed  Time  Hymn. 

Septuagesima  Sunday. 

Sun  of  My  Soul.     See  Evening. 

Saint  Matthew. 

There  are  in  this  Loud  Stunning  Tide.     See  Saint 
Matthew. 

Third  Sunday  in  Advent. 

Third  Sunday  in  Lent. 

To on  Her  Sister's  Death. 

To   a   Thrush    Singing   in    January.     See  Winter 
Thrush,  The. 

Twentieth  Sunday  after  Trinity. 

Twenty-first  Sunday  after  Trinity. 

United  States. 

Watch  by  Night,  The. 

Waterfall,  The. 

Wednesday  before  Easter. 

Who  Runs  may  Read.     See  Septuagesima  Sun- 
day. 

Winter  Thrush,  The. 
Keegan,  J: — Caoch  the  Piper. 

"Dark  Girl"  by  the  "Holy  Well,"  The. 

Irish  Reaper's  Harvest  Hymn,  The. 
Keeler,  C:  A: — Camilla. 

To  an  Alaskan  Glacier. 
Keeler,  Fs.  L.— Some  Mother's  Child 
Keese,  W:  L. — After  the  Wedding. 

Old  Dobbin. 
Keife,  C.  A.— Dialogue  for  Five  Boys. 
Keller,  Matthias. — American  Hyrnn. 
Kelley,  Andrew  V.  ("Parmenas  Mix"). — Accepted  and 
will  Appear. 

Constant  Reader,  A. 

He  Came  to  Pay. 

New  Doctor,  The. 

Sly  Old  Rat,  A. 
Kelley,  Ethel  M.— Oh,  Lady  Mine. 

This  Year. 
Kellock,  Harold. — April  Flower-song. 

Arma  Virumque. 
Kellog,  Jas.  H.— Song  to  Mother  Earth,  A. 
Kellog,  Rob't  Jas.— To  a  Dead  Bird. 
Kellogg.  Anita  M. — Dot's  Version  of  the  Text. 

Molly. 
Kellogg,  Rev.  Elijah. — Curse  of  Regulus,  The. 

Professor  in  Shafts,  The. 

Regulus    to    the    Carthaginians.     See    Curse    of 
Regulus,  The. 

Return  of  Regulus,  The.     See  Curse  of  Regulus, 
The. 

Spartacus  to  the  Gladiators  [at  Capua]. 

Supposed  Speech  of  Regulus.     See  Curse  of  Reg- 
ulus, The. 

Vindication  of  Virginius. 
Kellogg,  Kate. — Disappointment. 
Kellogg,  Raymond  N. — Law  and  Humanity. 
Kellogg,  Sarah  Winter. — Commencement. 

Second   Trial,   A.     See  Commencement. 
Kelly,  Mary.— Who  Should  Wipe  the  Dishes. 
Kelly,  Mary  Eva. — Tipperary. 
Kelly,  T:  J. — Newsboy  in  Church,  A. 
Kelly,  W:  D. — Country  Courtship. 

Twilight  of  Thanksgiving,  "The. 
Kelso,  Hugh.— Old  Wood,  The. 

Orchard,  The. 
Kemble,  Frances  Anne.     See  Bctler,  Mrs.  Frances 

Anne  [Kemble]. 
Kempis.  T:  h. — Imitation  of  Christ,  'The. 

"Sigh  and  grieve  that  you  are  yet  so  carnal  and 
worldly."     See  Imitation  of  Chr'st,  The. 

"Think  you  to  escape."     See  Imitation  of  Christ, 
The. 
Ken,  T: — Evening  Hymn. 

Midnight  Hymn. 

Morning  Hvmn. 
Kendall,  Mrs.  E.  D.— Wink. 
Kendall,  H:  Clarence. — After  Many  Years. 

Coogee. 

Last  of  His  Tribe,  The. 

Mooni. 

Orara. 

September  in  Australia. 

To  a  Mountain. 

Voice  in  the  Wild  Oak,  The. 
Kendall,  May. — Board  School  Pastoral,  A. 

Legend,  A. 

Page  of  Lancelot,  The. 

Pure  Hypothesis,  A. 


483 


Kenealy 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Kenealy,  Ed. — Love's  Warning. 
Kenealy.  J.  J.— Tsar  0!eg. 

KennEin,  G: — Sudden  Transformation  from  Winter  to 
Summer.     See  Tent  Life  in  Siberia. 

Tent  Life  in  Siberia. 

Kennedy, . — Long  Life. 

Kennedy,    CrammonA — Greenwood    Cemetery. 
Kennedy,  D: — Saunaers  McGlashan's  Courtship. 

Twa  Courtins,  The. 
Kennedy.  J:  Pendleton. — Age  of    Work,  The.      See 
Mechanical  Epoch,  The. 

Mechanical  Epoch,  The. 
Kennedy,  M.  G. — Address  of  Welcome,  An. 
Kennedy,  S.   R.— Lenten  Maid,  The. 
I^nnedy,  Sarah  Beaumont. — Battle  of  Manila. 

Governor's  Last  I^evee,  The. 
Kennedy,  Susie  E. — Miss  Willow. 
Kennedy,  W:  Sloane. —  Holmes,   Extract   Concerning. 

Shaidows. 
Kent,  A.  F. — Kneel  at  no  Human  Shrine. 
Kent,  C: — Pope  at  Twickenham. 
Kent,  Esther.  — Parting  Words. 
Kent,  H:  S.— Helen  MacTrever. 

Irish  Voter,  The. 

Questions. 

"True  Contentment. 

Wizard  of  Valley  Forge,  The. 
Kentucky  State  Journal. — <ierman  Anniversary  Speech 

of  Herr  Hans  Yager. 
Kenyon,  Jas.  B: — Bedouins  of  the  Skies,  The. 

Bring  'Them  not  Back. 

Challenge,  A. 

Come  Slowly,  Paradise. 

Death  and  Night. 

King  is  Dying,  The. 

Tacita. 

Two  Spirits,  The. 
Kenyon,  J: — Champagne  Ros6. 
Kenyon,  S.  C. — Spirit  of  Summer,  The. 
Keplinger,  Walter  S. — Scipio. 
Keppel,  Ladj/  Caroline  — Robin  Adair. 
Keppel,  Frd'k. — Plain  Man's  Dream,  A. 
Keman,  Will  Hubbard. — Agatha. 
Kemell,  Harry  and  J: — O'Quirk's  Sinecure. 
Kemer,  Andreas. — King  and  the  Poet,  The. 
Kemighan,  Rob't  Kirkland. — Peepy  is  not  Dead. 

Song  of  the  Thaw,  The. 
Kerr,  Jessie  V. — ^Who  Knows? 

Kerr,  Joe. — Italian's   View  on   the    Labor   Question, 
An. 

Monk's  Adventures,  The. 

Over  behind  der  Moon. 

That  Littul  Orfun  Brat. 

Unawares. 

Voices  of  the  Night. 

"You  Get  [or  Git]  Up." 
"Kerr,  Orpheus  C."     See  Newell,  Rob't  H: 
Ketchum,  Mrs,  Annie  [Chambers]. — Benny.     See  Little 
Bennie. 

Bonnie  Blue  Flag,  The. 

"I  cannot  tell  the  spell  that  binds  thine  image." 

Little  Bennie. 
Ketchum,  Arthur. — Ballad  of  Dorothy,  A. 

George  Du  Maurier. 

My  Lady  Goes  to  the  Play. 

Opportunity. 

To  Austin  Dobson. 
Kethe.W— Psalm  C. 

Key,  Fs.  Scott. — "Lord,  with  glowing  heart  I'd  praise 
Thee." 

Star-spangled  Banner,  The. 
Keyes,  E:  lavingston. — Cleopatra's  Protest. 
Khemnitzer  [or  Chemnitzer],  Ivan  Ivanovitch. — Rich 
Man  and  the  Poor,  The. 

Wisdom  and  Wealth. 
Kickham.  C:  J.— Irish  Peasant  Girl,  The 

Myles  O'Hea. 

Rory  of  the  HilLj. 

St.  John's  Eve. 
Kidder,  Mrs.  M.  A.— Bright  Side.  The. 

Cherish  Kindly  Feelings. 

Less  than  Cost. 

Mother's  Mending  Basket. 

What  Became  of  a  Lie. 
Ki'boume,  G:  B. — When  Margaret  Laughs. 
Kilham,  Eiliz. — Tobe'**  Monument. 
Killian.  D.  H.— Roadside  Path.  The. 
Kimball,  Hannah  Parker. — Beyond 

Christ-child  Alone,  The. 

Contrast. 

Light. 

Iiove's  Miracle. 

One  Way  of  Trusting. 


Kimball,  Hannah  Parker  (continue). 

Refuge  of  the  Ideal,  The. 

Soul  and  Sense. 

"Two  Points  of  View. 
Kimball,  Harriet  McEwen. — After  the  Storm. 

All's  Well. 

Angel  of  the  Rain. 

Common  Offering,  The. 

Crickets,  The. 

Feast-time  of  the  Year,  The. 

Flight  of  the  Birds,  The. 

Guest,  The. 

In  Paradise. 

Reverie. 

Song  of  the  Leaves,  The. 

Summer  Vacation. 

Trusting.     See  Flight  of  the  Birds,  The. 

Undowered. 

White  Azaleas. 
Kimball,  Harry  W. — Incident  of  the  War,  An. 
Kimball,  M.  J.— Last  of  the  Choir,  The. 
Kimball,  Mather  Dean. — Mariar  in  Heaven. 

Ol'  Picket's  Nell. 
Kimball,  Orella  L.— Deacon's  Call,  The. 
Kimball-Gardiner,  Ruth.     See  Gardiner,  Ruth  Kim- 
ball. 
King,  Mrs.  Anna  Philipine  [Eichberg]. — Jericho  Bob. 

Meteors. 

To  Thee,  O  Country! 
King,  Annie  B. — Our  Flag  at  Apia. 
King,  Ben.— Didn't  We.  Jimf 

If  I  Should  Die  To-night. 

Jane  Jones. 

Pessimist,  The. 

St.  Patrick's  Day. 

Simi  of  Life,  The.     See  Pessimist,  The. 

Too  Bad.     See  Pessimist,  The. 

Two  Orphans,  The.     -See  Didn't  We,  Jim? 
King,  BjTon  W.— What  Should  a  Young  Maid  Do? 
King.  Gen.  C: — Marion's  Faith. 

Ray's  Ride.     See  Marion's  Faith. 
King,  Pres.  C:  (?)— Future  of  the  United  States,  The. 

Our  Land. 
King,  E: — Tsigane's  Canzonet.  The. 

vVoman's  Execution,  A. 
King,  Georgianna  Goddard. — Love  and  Death. 
King,  Mrs.  Harriet  Eleanor  [Hamilton]. — Crocus,  The. 

Disciples,  The. 

Execution  of  Ugo  Bassi. 

Palermo,     See  Disciples,  The, 

Ugo  Bassi's  Sermon  in  the  [wr.  a]  Hospital. 
King,  Rt.  Rev.  H:,  Bishop  of  Chicester. — Contemplation 
upon  Flowers,  A. 

Exequy,  The.     See  Exequy  on  his  Wife. 

Exequy  on  his  Wife. 

Life.     See  On  the  Life  of  Man. 

Life  of  Man,  The,     See  On  the  Life  of  Man. 

On  the  Life  of  Man. 

Renunciation,  A.     See  Surrender,  The. 

Requiem,  A. 

Sic  Vita.     See  On  the  Life  of  Man. 

Surrender  [,  The]. 
King,  Joshua. — Hosanna! 
King,  T:  Starr.— National  Clock,  The. 

Our  Nationality. 

Peace  Men,  The. 

True  Greatness. 
King,  Mrs.  T:  Starr. — Young  America. 
Kinglake,  Alex.  W. — Eothen. 

Sphynx,  The.     See  Eothen. 
Kingsbury,  H.  T. — Mark  of  the  Rose.  The. 
Kingsley,  C: — Airly  Beacon. 

Alton  Locke. 

Andromeda. 

Andromeda   and    the    Sea-nymphs.     See    Andro- 
meda. 

Bad  Squire,  The.     See  Yeast. 

Ballad.     A.   D.    1400.     See  Ballad  of  Earl  Hal- 
dan's  Daughter. 

Ballad:  I^orraine,  Lorraine,  Lorr^. 

Ballad  of  Earl  Haldan's  Daughter. 

"Be  good,  sweet  maid."     See  Farewell,  A. 

Boat-song,  A.     See  Hypatia. 

Christmas  Day. 

Clear  and  Cool.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 

Crusader  Chorus.     See  Saint's  Tragedy,  The. 

Day  of  the  Lord,  The. 

Dead  Church,  The. 

Delectable  Day,  The. 

Dolcino  to  Margaret. 

Eyes  and  no  Eyes.     See  Madam  How  and  Lady 
Why. 

Farewell.  A. 


484 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Knowles 


Kingsley,  C:  (.continued). 

FareweU  Advice.     See  Farewell,  A. 

Fiahermen,  The.     See  Three  Fishers,  The. 

"Friends,  in  this  world  of  hurry." 

Home  Comfort.     See  Delectable  Day,  The. 

Hope,  A. 

Hypatia. 

Knight'a  Leap,  The. 

Lament,  A. 

I-ast  Buccaneer,  The.     See  Ijast   Buccanier,  The. 

Last  Buccanier,  The. 

Lorraine.     See  Ballad:  I..orraine,  Lorraine,  Lorr^e. 

Lorraine,  Lorraine,  Lorr^e.     See  Ballad*  liorraine, 

etc. 
Lorraine,  Lorr4e.     See  Ballad:  Lorraine,  etc 
Lost  Doll,  The.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Madam  How  and  Lady  Why. 
Merry  Lark,  The.     See  Lament,  A. 
My  Childhood's  Love.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
My  Little  Doll.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Myth,  A.     See  Night  Bird,  The. 
Night  Bird,  The. 
"O  Mary,  go  and  call  the  cattle  home.  "     See  Sands 

of  Dee,  The. 
Ode  to  the  Northeast  Wind. 
"Oh,  be  at  least  able  to  say  in  that  day." 
Oh,    that    We    Two    were    Maying.     See    Saint's 

Tragedy,  The. 
Old  Love,  The.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Old,  Old  Song,  The.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Pallas  in  Olympus.     See  Andromeda. 
Pleasant  Isle  of  Av6s,  The.     See  h&si  Buccanier, 

The. 
Red  King,  The. 

Rough  Rhyme  on  a  Rough  Matter,  A.     See  Yeast. 
Saint  Elizabeth.     See  Saint's  Tragedy,  The. 
Saint's  Tragedy,  The. 
Sands  of  [or  o']  Dee,  The. 
Sea  Fight,  The.     See  Westward,  Ho! 
Sir  Francis  Drake.     See  Westward,  Ho! 
Song   of  Madame  Do-a.s-You-Would-Be-Done-by, 

The.     See  Water  Babies.  The. 
Song  of  the  River.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Song:  "Oh!  that  we  two  were  maying."  See  Saint's 

Tragedy,  The. 
Three  Fishers,  The. 
Three  Fishers  Went  Sailing.     See  Three  Fishers, 

The. 
Tide  River,  The.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
To  Miss  Mitford,  Authoress  of  "Our  Village." 
To  the  Authoress  of  "Our  Village."     See  To  Miss 

Mitford,  Authoress  of  "Our  Village." 
Twin  Stars  Aloft.     See  Hope,  A. 
Waiting  for  the  Armada.     See  Westward,  Hoi 
Water  Babies.  The. 
Weird  Lady,  The. 

Welcome,  A.     See  Ode  to  the  Northeast  Wind 
Westward,  Ho! 
When  all  the  World  is  Young  [,Lad].     See  Water 

Babies,  The. 
Wild  Oats.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Yeast. 

Young  and  Old.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Youth  and  Age.     See  Water  Babies,  The. 
Kingsley,  H: — Blackbird's  Song,  The. 
Kinkel,  J:  Gottfried. — Patriotic  Song. 
Kinne,  Abbie. — Child's  Mirror,  The.     See  True  Story, 

A. 
True  Story,  A. 
Kinney,  Coates. — Rain  on  the  Roof. 
Kinney,  Eliz.  Clementine. — Blind  Psalmist,  The. 
Dream,  A. 
Moonlight  in  Italy. 
Quakeress  Bride,  The. 
Ralph  Waldo  Emerson. 
To  the  Boy  who   goes   Daily  Past   my  Windows 

Singing. 
Kipling,  Rudyard. — Ballad  of  East  and  West,  The. 
Ballad   of  Fisher's  Boarding-house.  The. 
Betrothed.  The. 
B'mi. 

Cecil  Rhodes. 

Coast-wise  Lights,  The.     See  Song  of  the  English. 
Conundrum  of  the  Workshops,  The. 
Cupid's  Arrows. 
Danny  Deever. 
Dedication,  A. 
Dove  of  Dacca,  The. 
Fall  of  Jock  Gillespie,  The. 
Files-on-Parade.     See  Danny  Deever. 
Flag  of  England,  The. 
' '  Fuzzy-wuzzy . " 
His  Majesty  the  King. 


Kipling,  Rudyard  (continued). 
His  Wedded  Wife. 
Last  Chantey,  The. 
Last  of  the  Light  Brigade,  The. 
Law  of  the  Jungle,  The. 
I/Envoi. 

Man  who  Would  Be  King,  The. 
Mandalay. 
My  Rival. 

Overland  Mail.  The. 
Post  that  Fitted,  The. 

Seal  Lullaby,     See  White  Seal,  The. 

Soldier,  Soldier. 

Song  of  the  English,  A. 

Sons  of  the  Widow,  The.     See  Widow  at  Windsor. 
The. 

Thrown  Away. 

Wee  Willie  Winkie. 

"What  Happened." 

White  Man's  Burden,  The. 

White  Seal,  The. 

Widow  at  Windsor,  The. 
Kirby,  W: — At  Spencer  Grange. 

Marquis  of  Lome's  Visit  to  the  North-west,  The. 

Sparrows,  The. 
Kirk,   Eleanor.      See    Ames,    Mra.    Eleanor    Maria 

[EasterbrookI. 
Kirk,  R-  R.— Brother  Toper. 

Comforter,  The. 

Indian  Summer. 

Girl  of  Our  Town,  The. 

Mis'  Rose. 

My  Wine. 

Spring  Rondeau,  A. 

Where  are  You  Sleeping,  Lady  Fair? 
"Kirke,  Edmund."     See  Gilmore,  Jab.  Roberts. 
Kirkham,  B.  W.— Last  Wish,  The. 
Kiser,  S-  Ellsworth. — Boy's  King,  A. 

Budd  Wilkins  at  the  Show. 

Getting  to  be  a  Man. 

His  New  Suit. 

She  Never  was  a  Bov. 

Soldier  Boy  for  Me,  The. 

Visiting  Laura  Belle. 
Kitchell,  W.  L.— "It's  an  lU  Wind." 

Old  Letters. 
Klingle,  G:     See  Holmes,  Mrs.  Gborqiana. 
Knapp,  Adeline. — Bull  of  Bashan,  A. 
Knapp.  I>illian  E. — Arbor  Day  Poem. 
Knickerbocker  — In  the  Garret. 
Kniel,  S.  M. — For  Decoration  Day. 

Let  Little  Hands.     See  For  Decoration  Day. 
Knight,  Mrs. — On  the  Birthday  of  Catherine  of  Bra- 

ganza. 
Knight,  H:  Cogswell. — Lunar  Stanzas. 
Knight,  Matthew  Rickey. — Jacques  Cartier. 

Mercy  of  God,  The. 

Sovereign  Moments. 
Knott,  Proctor. — Proctor  Knott  on  Duluth. 
Knowles,  F:  Lawrence. —  Another  Complaint  against 
Cupid. 

Columbia. 

Funeral,  A. 

HaU,  America. 

Her  Little  Glove. 

.lacqueminot. 

Love's  Entrance. 

Love's  Prayer. 

Nature :  The  Artist. 

Pasture,  A. 

Royalty. 

Soap-bubble,  A. 

Soul  Shadow. 

Tildy  in  the  Choir. 

To  a  Football. 

To  the  American  Poet. 

With  a  Copy  of  Keats. 

Ye  Golde-headed  Cane. 

Yesterday. 
Knowles,   Herbert. — Lines  Written  In   a  Churchyard. 
See  Lines  Written   in  Richmond   Churchyard, 
Yorkshire. 

Lines  Written  in  Richmond  Churchyardf,  York- 
shire]. 

Written  in  the  Churchyard  of  Richmond,  York- 
shire.    See     Lines     Written      in      Richmond 
Churchyard.  Yorkshire. 
Knowles,  Jas.  Sheridan. — Alfred    the    Great;    or.    The 
Patriot  King. 

Alfred   the   Great   to   His   Men.     See  Alfred   the 
Great;  or.  The  Patriot  King. 

Csesar  Passing  the  Rubicon. 


485 


Knowles 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Koowles,  Jas.  Sheridan  (continued). 

Caesar's  Passage  of  the  Rubicon.  See  Csesar  Pass- 
ing the  Rubicon. 

Caius  Gracchus. 

Caius  Gracchus  Cited  before  the  Censors.  App>eals 
to  the  People.     See  Caius  Gracchus. 

Crossing  [of)  th^Rubicon.     .See  Ctesar  Passing  the 


See  Love  Chase,  The. 


See  Willam 


Rubicon. 
Description  of  the  Chase. 
False  Witness  Detected. 
Helen  and  Modus.     See  Hunchback,  The. 
Hunchback,  The. 

Hunt,  The.     See  Love  Cha.se,  The. 
Lessons  in  Love.     See  Hunchback,  The. 
Love  Cha-se,  The. 

"Oh,  with  what  pride  I  used."     See  William  Tell. 
Passing  of  the  Rubicon,  The.     See  Caesar  Passing 

the  Rubicon. 
Rolla's  Address  to  the  Peruvians.     (Wr.  at.)     See 

Sheridan,  R:  Brinslet. 
St.  Pierre  to  Ferrardo.     See  Wife,  The. 
Scene  from  "The  Love  Chase."     See  Love  Chase, 

The. 
Switzerland.     See  William  Tell. 
Tell  on  His  Native  Hills.     See  William  TeU. 
Tell  on  Switzerland.     See  William  Tell. 
Tell's  Address  to  the  Alps.     See  William  Tell. 
Tell's   Address   to   the   Mountains.     See   William 

TeU. 
Virginius. 
Wife,  The. 
William  Tell. 
William  Tell  among  the  Mountains. 

Tell. 

William  Tell  on  Switzerland.     See  William  Tell. 
William  Tell's  Address  to  His  Native  Hills.     See 

William  Tell. 
"Ye  crags  and  peaks,  I'm  with  you  once  again." 

See  William  Tell. 
Knox,  Isa  Craig. — Ballad  of  the  Brides  of  Quair,  The. 

Woodruffe,  The. 
Knox,  J.  Armoy. — Tragedy,  A. 

Knox,  T: — "Though  .scoffers  ask,  where  is  .your  gain?" 
Knox,  W;— Athei.st,  The. 
Curse  of  Cain.  The. 
Mortality.     See   Oh,   Why   Should   the   Spirit   of 

Mortal  be  Proud? 
Oh  [or  O],  Why  Should  the  Spirit  of  Mortal   be 

Proud? 
Kobbd,  Gustav. — Wanted — a  Nurse. 
Koehner,  Iheodore. — Sore  Disappointment. 
Kohaus,  Hannah  More. — Child  Angel,  The. 

Santa  Claus'  Agent. 
Koopman,  Harry  Lyman. — Death  of  Guinevere,  The. 
Icarus. 

John   Brown. 
Revealed. 
Satirist,  The. 
Sea  and  Shore. 
Kopisch,  August. — Blucher  on  the  Rhine. 
Kfimer.  Andreas  Justinus — Richest  Prince,  The. 
Kdrner,  Karl  Theodore. — Battle   Hymnf,  The]. 
Good  Night. 
Men  and  Boys. 
Song  of  the  Sword. 
Sword  Songf,  The]. 
Kossuth,    L :  —  Address 

United  States  in  1851. 
Appeal  to  the  Hungarians. 
Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 
Contentment    of    Europe,    The. 

Manchester. 
Duties  of  Christianity,  The. 
Hereditary  Policy  of  America,  Dec.  11,  1851. 
Heroi.sm  of  the  Hungarian   People.     See  Speech 

at  Birmingham. 
Hungary  and  Austria  in  Religious  Contrast. 
"In   a  Just   Cause."     See   Hereditary   Policy   of 

America. 
Mourning  Hero's  Vision,  Thee. 
No   Peace   without   Liberty.     See   Hungary   and 

Austria  in  Religious  Contrast. 
Peace    Inconsistent   with   Oppression.     See   Hun- 
gary and  Austria  in  Religious  Contrast. 
Roman  Senate  and  the  American  Congress,  The. 

See  Address  before  the  Congress  of  the  United 

States  in  1851. 
Russia  the  Antagonist  of  the  United  States. 
Speech  at  Birmingham,  Nov.   12.   1851. 
Speech  at  Manchester,  Nov.  11,  1851. 

Kotzeoue,  . — Hugo  Grotius. 

Spaniards    in    Peru,    The.     See     Sheridan,     R: 

Brinsley. 


See  Sword  Songf,  The], 
before   the    Congress    of    the 


See    Speech    at 


Krauth,  C.  P. — Martin  Luther. 

Krilof  [or   Kriloff   or   Kryloff],    Ivan   Andreyevitch. — 

Eagle  and  the  Spider,  The. 
Kringle,  G: — To-morrow's  News. 
Krohn,  Rev.   Phillips. — Illustration,  An. 
Krout,  Mary  Hannah. — Little  Brown  Hands. 

Once  at  Battle  Eve. 
Krummacher,  Friederich  Wilhelm. — Alpine  Heights. 

Moss  Rose,  The. 
"Kruna." — Corregio. 
Kryloff,   Ivan   Andreyvitch.      See   Krilof,  Ivan  An- 

DRETVITCH. 

Kunkler,  Marie  E. — But  Little  Folks.     See  We  are  but 
Little  Folks-,  you  See. 

We  are  but  Little  Folks,  you  See. 
Kyle,  G:  W. — Alphabetical  Sermon. 

Anatomical  Tragedian,  The. 

Billy's  Pets. 

Burglar's  Grievances,  The. 

Classical  Music. 

Delancey  Stuyvasant  and  the  Horse-car. 

Dentist  and  Patient.  * 

Dunderburg  Jenkins's  "Forty-graf"  Album. 

Felinaphone,  The. 

Good  Little  Boy  and  the  Bad  I/ittle  Boy,  The. 

High  Art  and  Economy. 

Hoolahan  on  Education. 

Juggler,  The. 

Mrs.  Britzenhoeffer's  Troubles. 

Professor  Gunter  on  Marriage. 

Swell  [in  a  Horse-car],  The.     See  Delancey  Stuyva- 
sant and  the  Horse-car. 


L.— Kiss  A. 

L.,  A.  T. — "When  vanished  in  this  vapor  we  call  life." 

L..  E.  R.— Blest  Spring  Time,     (rr.l 

L.,  G.  T. — Millionaire  and  the  Barefoot  Boy,  The. 

L.,  H.— What  I  Like. 

L.,  J.  M.— One  Summer. 

Questions. 

Stranger,  A. 
L.,  L.  M.— -Sensible  Serenade,  A. 
L.,  M.  A. — Time  Only  for  Love. 
L.,  O. — Prayer  of  the  Satirist. 

River  of  Commerce,  The. 

Verse. 
L.,  R.  A. — Under  False  Colours. 
Laboulaye,     Edouard     Ren6    Lefebvre. — New     Fairy 

Story,  A. 
La  Bruyfire,  Jean  de. — Characters:  Of  Judgments. 

True  Liberty.     See  Characters:  Of  Judgments. 
Lacey  [or  Looey],  Maria.— Loveliness. 
La  Cont«  [or  Lacoste],  Maria. — Somebody's  Darling. 
Ladies'  Home  Journal. — Stars'  Ball,  The. 
La  Fontaine,  ,Tean  de. — Castle-buildfer,  The. 

Council  of  the  Rats,  The. 

Drunkard  and  His  Wife,  The. 

Middle  Aged  Man  and  the  Two  Widows,  The. 
Laidlaw.  W: — Lucy's  Flittin'. 
I^aighton  [wr.  Leignton],  Albert. — Autumn. 

Found  Dead. 

Joe. 

Missing  Ships,  The. 

To  My  Soul. 

Under  the  Leaves. 
Laighton,  Oscar. — Clover  Blossoms,  The. 
Laing,  Alex. — My  Ain  Wife. 

Laird,  Frank  F. — Negro  in  American  History,  The. 
Fjoke  Forest  Student. — Football  Maiden,  The. 
Lamar,  Lucius  Quintus  Cincinnatus. — Nineteenth  Cen- 
tury Ends  Slavery,  The. 
Lamar,  Mirabeau  Bonaparte. — Daughter  of  Mendoza, 

The. 
Lamartine,  Alphonse  de. — Character  of  Napoleon,  The. 

Establishment  of  the  Republic,  The. 

Execution   of  Madame   Roland.     See  Girondists, 
The. 

Execution  of  Queen  Mary.     See  Mary  Stuart. 

Girondists,  The. 

History  of  the  Restoration  of  Monarchy  in  France, 
The. 

Lord  Byron  to  the  Greek.s. 

Mary  Stuart. 

Reign  of  Napoleon,  The.     See  History  of  the  Res- 
toration of  the  Monarchy  in  France,  The. 

Religion  of  Revolutionary  Men. 

Republic  Defined,  A.     See  Establishment  of  the 
Republic,  The. 

Zarafi. 


486 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Landor 


Lamb,  C: — Barbara  S . 

Child.  A.     See  Parental  Recollections. 
Childhood. 
ChristeninK,  The. 

Cold  in  the  Head,  A.     See  Letter  to  Bernard  Bar- 
ton, .Jan.  9th,  1824. 
Confessions  of  p.  Drunkard. 
Cry   from   the   Depths,  A.     See  Confessions  of  a 

Drunkard. 
Death  of  Coleridge,  The.     See  On  the  Death  of 

Coleridge. 
Dissertation  upon  Roast  Pig,  A. 
Dream  Children:  a  Reverie. 
Epigram.   Written  in  the  Last  Reign. 
Farewell  to  Tobacco,  A. 
Fragments  of  Burton.     Extract  TIL — A  Conceipt 

of  Diabolical  Possession. 
Gipsy's  Malison,  The. 
Grandame,  The. 
Hester. 

Housekeeper.  The.     (Tr.) 

Hypochondriacus.     See  Fragments  of  Burton. 
In  Memoriam.     See  Parental  Recollections. 
In  the  Album  of  I>ucy  Barton. 
In  the  Chuichyard.     See  Ro.^amund  Gray. 
Iiett«r  to  Bernard  Barton,  Jan.  9th,  1824. 
Love,  Death,  and  Reputation. 
Margaret  Gray.     See  Rosamund  Gray. 
My  First  Play. 
Nonsense  Verses. 
Old  China. 

Old  Familiar  Faces,  The. 
On  an  Infant  Dying  as  .«oon  as  Born. 
On   Rising  with  the   Lark.     See  That  we  should 

Rise  with  the  Lark. 
On  the  Death  of  Coleridge. 
On  the  Disappointment  of  the  Whig  Associates  of 

the   Prince   Regent,   at   not  Obtaining    Office. 

See  Epigram.     Written  in  the  Last  Reign. 
Origin  of  Roast  Pig,  The.     See  Dis.sertation  upon 

Roa.st  Pig.  A. 
Parental  Recollections. 
Popular  Fallacies      See  That  we  should  Rise  witii 

the  Lark. 
Recollections  of  Childhood.     See  Rosamund  Gray. 
Reflections  in  the  Pillory. 
Rejoicing  [Reioicirigs — C.]  upon  the  New  Year's 

Coming  of  Age. 
Roast  Pig.     See  Disseitation  upon  Roast  Pig,  A. 
Rosamund  Cray. 

That  we  should  Rise  with  the  Lark. 
Valentine's  Day. 
Warning  [to  the  Intemperate],  A.    See  Confessions 

of  a  Drunkard. 
We  Cherish  Dreams.     See  That  we  should   Ri.se 

with  the  Lark. 
Work. 
Lamb.C:  and  Mary. —  Ballad:  Noting  the  Difference  of 

Rich  and  Poor,  in  the  Ways  of  a  Rich  Noble's 

Palace  and  a  Poor  Workhouse,  A. 
Beasts  in  the  Tower,  The. 
Beggar  Man,  The. 
Boy  and  Snake,  The. 
Boy  and  the  Skylark,  The. 
Breakfast. 
Broken  Doll,  The. 
Brother's  Reply,  The. 
Child  and  the  Snake,  The.      See  Boy  and  Snake. 

The. 
Cleanliness 
Coffee  Slips,  The. 
David  in  the  Cave  of  AdiiUam. 
Dialogue  between  a  Mother  and  Child. 
Envy. 

First  Sight  of  Green  Fields,  The. 
First  Tooth,  The. 
Going  into  Breeches. 
Helen. 
Lines  on  a  Picture  by   Leonardo  Da  Vinci,  called 

'The  Virgin  of  the  Rocks."     See  Lines  on  the 

Celebrated,  etc. 
Lines  on  the  Celebrated  Picture  by  Leonardo  Da 

Vinci,  called  The  Virgin  of  the  Rocks. 
Lines  or   the  Same   Picture    being  Removed   to 

Make  Pl.^ce  for  a  Portrait  of  a  Lady  by  Titian. 
Lines  Suggested  by  a  Picture  of  Two  Females  by 

Leonardo  Da  Vinci. 
Love,  Death  and  Reputation. 
Magpie's  Nest,  The.  * 

Memory. 
Nursing. 

On  the  Ijord'a  Prayer. 
5each,  The. 


Lamb,  C:  and  Mary  (continued). 

Queen  Oriana's  Dream. 

Rainbow,  The. 

Rook  and  the  Sparrows,  The. 

Salome. 

Sister's  Expostulation   on  the  Brother's  Learning 
Latin,  'The. 

Three  Friends,  The. 

Time  Spent  in  Dress. 

To  a  River  in  which  a  Child  was  Drowned. 

Vision  of  Repentance,  A. 

Written  in  the  first  leaf  of  a  Child's  Memorandum 
Book. 
Lamb,  Mary. — Child,  A. 

Choosing  a  Name. 

Choosing  a  Profession. 

Feigned  Courage. 

In  Memoriam. 

Spartan  Boy,  The. 
Lambert,  Irvin  C. — Road  to  Wrinkle  Town,  Ihe. 
La  Moille,  T.  G.— Only  a  Tramp. 

Thanksgiving. 

"39." 
Lamont,  Alex. — Round  of  Life,  The.  , 

La  Motte,  Francois  de  Salignac  de.     See  Fenelon. 

Lampertus, . — German  Trust  Song. 

Lampman.  Archibald. — After  Rain. 

Among  the  Millet. 

Between  the  Rapids. 

City  of  the  End  of  Things,  The. 

Evening. 

Forecast,  A. 

Goal  of  Life,  The. 

Heat. 

In  Absence. 

June. 

Loons,  The. 

Organist,  The. 

Outlook. 

Perfect  l/ove. 

Railway  Station,  The. 

September 

Snowbirds. 

Spirit  of  the  House,  The. 

Sun  Cup.  The. 
Lamp.son,  Frd'k  Locker.    See  Lockbr-Lampson,  Frd'k. 
Lampton,  W:  Jas. — Final  Day  Dialogue.  A. 

Lightning  Story,  A. 

Once. 

Unexpected,  The.     See  Once. 
I-anp.han.  J: — God  in  History. 
Lancaster,  A.  E. — Little   Church    Round    the   Corner, 

The. 
Lander,  General  Frd'k.  W : — Rhode  Island  to  the  South. 
Landon,  Letitia  Eliz.      See    Maclean,  Mrs.  Letitia 

Eliz.  [Landon]. 
Landon,  Melville  DeLancey    ("Eli  Perkins"). —  What 

Drove  me  into  a  Lunatic  Asylum. 
I>andor,  Walter  Savage. — Absence. 

Advice. 

"Aged  man  who  loved  to  doze  away   An." 

"Ah!  what  avails  the  sceptered  race!"     See  Rose 
Avlmer. 

Alciphron  and  Leucippe. 

Appeal,  The.     See  Remain! 

Approach  of  Age,  The. 

Autumn. 

Bossuet  and  the  Duchess  of  Fontanges.     See  Im- 
aginary Conversations. 

Brier,  The. 

Child  of  a  Day. 

Children. 

Children  Playing  in  a  Churchyard. 

Cleone  to  Aspasia.     See  Pericles  and  Aspasia. 

Corinna  from   Athens,  to  Tanagra.     See  Pericles 
and  Aspasia. 

Corinna  to  Tanagra,  from  Athens.     See  Pericles 
and  Aspasia. 

Cowslips. 

Death. 

Death  of  Artemidora,  The. 

Death  Undreaded.     See  Death. 

Dirce. 

Examination  of  Shakespeare. 

Faesulan  Idyl. 

Farewell  to  Italy. 

Fault  is  not  Mine,  The. 

Feathers.     See  "There  falls  with  every  wedding 
chime." 

Fiesolan  Idyl.     See  Faesulan  Idyl. 

Finis.     See  On  his  Seventy-fifth  Birthday. 

For  an  Epitaph  at  Fiesole. 

Forsaken.     See  Mother,  I  Cannot  Mind  my  Wheel. 


487 


Liandor 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Landor,  Walter  Savage  {continued). 

Friends. 

Gebir. 

Gifts  Returned. 

Hamadryad,  The. 

Heartsease. 

How  many  Voic«e. 

How  to  Read  Me. 

lanthe. 

lanthe's  Question. 

lanthe's  Troubles. 

Imaginary  Conversations. 

In  After  Time. 

Inscription  on  a  Sea  Shell.     See  Gebir. 

Invocation,  An.     See  Regeneration. 

Iphigenia  and  Agamemnon. 

Ireland. 

Late  Leaves. 

"Lately  our  Songsters  [wr.  Poets]  loitered  in  green 
lanes." 

Leaf  after  Leaf. 

Little  Aglae  to  her  Father. 

I^ing  in  State. 

Macaulay.     See  To  Macaulay. 

Maid's  Lament,  The.  See  Examination  of  Shake- 
speare. 

Man. 

Margaret.     .See  Mother,  I  Cannot  Mind  my  Wheel. 

Memory. 
•Mother,  I  Cannot  Mind  my  Wheel. 

"Myrtis." 

Of  Clementina.     See  Sixteen. 

Old  Poet  to  Sleep,  An. 

On  Catullus. 

On  Himself.     See  On  his  Seventy-fifth  Birthday. 

On  His  Seventy-fifth  Birthday. 

On  Living  too  Long. 

On  Lucretia  Borgia's  Hair.  See  On  Seeing  a  Hair 
of  Lucretia  Borgia. 

On  Music. 

On  Observing  a  Vulgar  Name  on  the  Plinth  of 
an  Ancient  Statue. 

On  Seeing  a  Hair  of  Lucretia  Borgia . 

On  Southey's  Death. 

On  the  Death  of  M.  D'Ossoli  and  His  Wife,  Mar- 
garet Fuller. 

On  the  Death  of  Southey. 

One  Gray  Hair,  The. 

One  White  Hair.  The.     See  One  Gray  Hair,  The. 

One  Lovely  Name. 

Pericles  and  Aspasia. 

Persistence. 

Plays. 

Prayer  to  Fate,  A. 

Prayers.     See  Gebir. 

Prophecy,  A. 

Proud  Word  you  Never  Spoke.     See  Prophecy,  A. 

Regeneration. 

Rernain ! 

Resignation.  See  "Why,  why  repine,  my  pensive 
friend." 

Retrospect,  A. 

Robert  Browning.     See  To  Robert  Browning. 

Rose  Aylmer. 

Rose  Aylmer's  Hair,  Given  by  Her  Sister. 

Rubies. 

Sacrifice.     See  Iphigenia  and  Agamemnon. 

"Say  ye,  that  years  roll  on  and  ne'er  return?"  See 
To  the  Comtesse  de  Molande,  about  to  Marry 
the  Due  de  Luxembourg. 

Separation. 

Shakespeare  and  Milton. 

Shell,  The.     See  Gebir. 

Siddons  and  Her  Maid. 

Sixteen. 

Tamar  and  the  Nymph.     See  Gebir. 

Test,  The. 

"There  are  who  say  we  are  but  dust." 

There  Falls  with  Every  Wedding  Chime. 

Thought,  A. 

Thrasymedes  and  EunSe. 

Time  to  be  Wise. 

To  a  Cyclamen. 

To  a  Fair  Maiden. 

To  Age. 

To  lanthe. 

To  Macaulay. 

To  Robert  Browning. 

To  Sleep. 

To  Tacsea. 

To  the  Comtesse  de  Molande,  about  to  Marry  the 
Due  de  Luxembourg. 

To  the  Sister  of  Elia. 


Landor,  Walter  Savage  (continued). 

To  Youth. 

Twenty  Years  Hence. 

"Twenty  years  hence  my  eyes  may  grow."     See 
Twenty  Years  Hence. 

Under  the  Lindens. 

Verse:  "Past  ruin'd  Ilion  Helen  lives." 

Verses  why  Burnt. 

Washington  and  Franklin.     See  Imaginary  Con- 
versations. 

"When  Helen  first  saw  wrinkles  in  her  face."     See 
Wrinkles. 

Where  are  Sighs? 

"Why,  why  repine,  my  pensive  friend." 

Wrinkles. 

Years. 

"You  smiled,  you  spoke,  and  I  believed."     See  To 
lanthe. 
I.,ane,  A.  K. — Toast,  A 

Lane,  Burneston. — One  Who  Stays  at  Home,  The. 
Lane,  Denny. — Lament  of  the  Irish  Maiden,  The. 
Lane,  J.  Beaufoy. — Knight's  Vow,  The. 
Lanergan,  G:  T. — Duelist's  Victory,  "The. 
Lang,  Andrew. — iEsop. 

Ballad  of  the  Unattainable. 

Ballade  of  Blue  China. 

Ballade  of  his  Choice  of  a  Sepulchre. 

Ballade  of  Life. 

Ballade  of  the  Book-hunter. 

Ballade  of  the  Bookitian's  Paradise. 

Ballade  of  True  Wisdom. 

Ballade  to  Theocritus  in  Winter. 

Catullus  to  his  Book.     (Tr.) 

Colonel  Burnaby. 

Epigram:  "Pest  of  Ihe  muses,"  etc.     (Tr.) 

Erinna.     (Tr.) 

Ghosts  in  the  Library. 

Heliodore  Dead.     (Tr.) 

Lost  Love. 

Melvijle  and  Coghill. 

Odyssey,  The. 

Of  Blue  China.     See  Ballade  of  Blue  China. 

Of  his  Choice  of  a  Sepulchre.     See  Ballade  of  his 
Choice  of  a  Sepulchre. 

Of  Life.     See  Ballade  of  Life. 

Of  the  Book-hunter.     See   Ballade   of   the   Book- 
hunter. 

On  Calais  Sands. 

Romance. 

R6wfant  Books,  The. 

Rowfant  Library,  The. 

San  Terenzo. 

Scot  to  Jeanne  d'Arc,  A. 

Scythe  Song. 

Spring. 

Telling  the  Bees. 

Three  Portraits  of  Prince  Charles. 

To  Theocritus,  in  Winter.     See  Ballade  to  Theoc- 
ritus in  Winter. 

White  Pacha,  The. 

Woman  and  the  Weed. 
Langbridge,  Frd'k. — Parson's  Comforter,  The. 

Sent  Back  by  the  Angels. 

Song  for  the  Girl  I  Love,  A. 
Langdon,  W.  C,  Jr. — Unseen  Depths,  The. 

Langheim, . — I-Have  and  Oh!  Had-I. 

Langhorne,  C:  Hartley. — Theocritus. 
Langhorne,  Dr.  J: — To  a  Redbreast. 
Langland  [or  Langley],  W: — Pilgrimage  in  Search  of 
Do- Well.     See  Vision  of  Piers  [the]   Plowman, 

Vision  of  Piers  [the]  Plowman. 
Langston,  J:  Mercer. — Abraham  Lincoln. 
Lanier,  Clifford  Anderson. — Friar  Servetus. 
Lanier,  Sidney.     America.     See  Centennial  Meditation 
of  Columbia,  The. 

Ballad  [tvr.  Ballade]  of  Trees  and  the  Master,  A. 

Battle  of  Lexington,  The.     See  Psalm  of  the  West. 

Betrayal.     See  Jaquerie,  The. 

Centennial  Cantata.     See  Centennial  Meditation  of 
Columbia,  The. 

Centennial  Meditation  of  Columbia,  The. 

Centennial  Ode,  The.     See  Centennial  Meditation 
of  Columbia,  The. 

Corn. 

Dear  Land  of  All  My  Love.     See  Centennial  Medi- 
tation of  Columbia,  The. 

Dying  Words  of  Stonewall  Jackson,  The. 

Evening  Song. 

Harleauin  of  Dreams,  The. 

Hound,  The.     See  Jaquerie,  The. 

In  Absence. 

Jaquerie,  The. 

Marshes  of  Glynn,  The. 


488 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Lawrence 


Lanier.  Sidney  {continued). 

Larcom,  Lucy  {contimied). 

Mocking  Bird,  The. 

My  Children. 

My  Springs. 

National  Flower,  The. 

Night  and  Day. 

New  Year  Song. 

Nilsson. 

New  Year's  Wishes.' 

On  the  Shore.     See  Evening  Song. 

Nineteenth  of  April,  1861,  The. 

Psalm  of  the  West. 

On  the  Stairway. 

Revenge  of  Hamish,  The. 

Our  Christ. 

Song  of  the  Chattahoochee. 

Peepsy. 

Stirrup-cup,  The. 

Plant  a  Tree. 

Sunrise. 

Playthings. 

Trees  and  the  Master,  The.     See  Ballad  of  Trees 

Prince  Hal. 

and  the  Master,  A. 

Proof,  The. 

Wedding  Hymn. 

Pussy  Clover. 

Lanier,  Sidney  and  Clifford. — Power  of  Prayer[;  or,- the 

Red  Sandwort. 

First  Steamboat  up  the  Alabama],  The. 

Red-top  and  Timothy. 

Lanigan.    G:  T.— Ahkoond  of  Swat,  The.     See  Thren- 

Ring, Happy  Bells. 

ody,  A. 

Rivulet,  The. 

Amateur  Orlando,  The. 

Roadside  Preacher,  The. 

Dirge  of  the  MooUa  of  Kotal. 

School-mistress,  The. 

Golden  Bridge,  The. 

Sing-away  Bird,  The. 

Latest  Version,  The, 

Sir  Robin. 

Threnody,  A. 
Lanigan,  R.  W. — Charity. 
Lansing, . — Deacon  s  Downfall,  The. 

Sister  and  Bluebirds. 

Sister  Months,  The. 

Snow  Song. 

Lantern,  The. — Shadows. 

Spring  Whistles. 

"Lapius,  S.  Q." — In  the  Ol'  Tobacker  Patch. 

Starlight. 

W'en  de  Darky  am  a-Whistlin'  in  de  Co'n. 

Strip  of  Blue,  A. 

Lapraik,  J: — Matrimonial  Happiness. 

Swing  Away. 

La  Ram^e,  Louise  de  ("Ouida"). — Battle  of   Zaraila, 

Swinging  on  a  Birch-tree. 

The.     See  Under  Two  Flags. 

Thanksgiving,  A. 

Dog  of  Flanders,    A. 

Three  Old  Saws. 

Forest  King's  Race.     See  Under  Two  Flags. 

What  Shall  we  Wrap  the  Baby  In? 

In  Pitti. 

What  the  Train  Ran  Over. 

Military  Steeple-chase,  The.    See  Under  Two  Flags. 

Who  Plants  a  Tree.     See  Plant  a  Tree. 

Under  Two  Flags. 

Larminie,  W: — Consolation. 

Larcom,  Lucy. — Across  the  River. 

Epilogue  to  Fand.      See  Fand. 

"And  in  that  twilight  hush.  God  drew  their  hearts." 

Fand. 

At  Nightfall. 

Moytura. 

At  Queen  Maude's  Banquet. 

Speech  of  Emer,  The.     See  Fand. 

Baby's  Day. 

Sword  of  Tethra,  The.     See  Moytura. 

Baby's  Thoughts,  The. 

Lamed,    Frank    Madison. — Oblivion's    Gate. 

Barn-window,  The. 

Larrabee,    W:    Clark. — "Plant    trees    and    care     for 

"Battle  of  our  life  is  won,  The." 

them." 

Berrying  Song. 

Larremore,  Wilbur. — Blossom  Time. 

Between  Winter  and  Spring. 

Madam  Hickory. 

Breezes,  The. 

Lathbury,  Mary  Anne. — Bread  of  Life,  The. 

Bring  Back  My  Flowers. 

Dying  Day,  The.    ^      ..^ 

Brook  that  Ran  into  the  Sea,  The. 

Lathrap,    Mr».    Mary    T. —   Come    out    from    among 

Brown  Thrush,  The. 

them." 

By  the  Fireside. 

Dead  March,  The. 

Calling  the  Violet. 

Dramshop  or  the  Republic,  The. 

Cat-questions. 

God  in  Government. 

Christmas  Green. 

Will  it  Pay? 

Christmas  Thought;  A. 

Lathrop,  G:  Parsons. — Book  Battalion,  The. 

Clock-tinker,  The. 

Cavalry  Charge,  The. 

Do  Something.     See  Three  Old  Saws. 

Child's  Wish  Granted,  The. 

Dumpy  Ducky. 

Flown  Soul,  The. 

Easter  Dawn. 

Keenan's  Charge. 

Face  in  the  Tonga,  A. 

Marthy  Virginia's  Hand. 

Farther  On. 

Phcebe-bird,  The. 

Flower-girls. 

Remembrance. 

Friend,  A. 

Song-  narrow,  The. 
South  Wind. 

Gipsy  Children's  Song. 

Golden-rod. 

Sunshine  of  Thine  Eyes,  The. 
Voice  of  the  Void,  The. 

Gowns  of  Gossamer. 

Grace  and  her  Friends. 

Wedding  of  the  Moon,  The. 

Grace's  Friends.     See  Grace  and  her  Friends. 

Lathrop,    Lena. — Her    Reply.     See    Woman'      Ques- 

Growing Old. 

tion,  A. 

Hal's  Birthday. 

Woman's  Question,  A.     (Wr.  at.  to  Eliz.  B.  Brown- 

Hannah Binding  Shoes. 

ing.) 

Harebell,  A. 

Lathrop,  Mrs.  Rose  [Hawthomel^Clock's  Song,  The. 
Despair.     See  Give  me  not  Tears. 

"He  who  plants  a  tree."     See  Plant  a  Tree. 

Hints. 

Dorothy. 

"I  bring  you  these  little  song-blossoms." 

Give  me  not  Tears. 

If  I  were  a  Sunbeam. 

Joy.     See  Give  me  not  Tears. 

"If  the  world  seems  cold  to  you."     See  Three  Old 

Song  before  Grief,  A. 

Saws. 

Lathrop,  W:  A. — Realism  of  Dickens,  The. 

Immortal. 

Latimer,    Mrs.  (Mary)    Eliz.   [Wormeley]. — Romance 

In  Fairy  Land. 

of  a  Hat.     (Tr.) 

In  the  Air. 

Saint  Anthony. 

In  the  Tree-top. 

St.  George  and  the  Dragon. 

In  Time's  Swing. 

Latta,  E.  R.— Welcome  Spring,  The. 

Jessie's  Book. 

Laughton,  Frances  Parker.     See  Mace,  Mrs.  Frances 

Last  Flower  of  the  Year,  The. 

Parker  fLAUGHTONl. 

Lily's  Word,  A. 

Laurie,  Rev.  Wm. — Answer  to  "I  Am  Dying." 

Little  Brown  Cabin,  The. 

Lavater,  Johann  Caspar  (?). — "Ask  thyself  at  evening: 

Little  Cavalier,  A. 

What  that  is  immortal  have  I  done  to-day?" 

Little  Nannie. 

Lawless,  Marg.  H. — "Bring  out  Your  Dead." 

Little  Tambourine  Girl,  The. 

Fighting  Fire. 

Loyal  Woman'     No,  A. 

Lawrence,  Abbott. — Before  and  Behind. 

Manitou's  Garden. 

Lawrence,  Annie  M. — Ben  Isaac's  Vision. 

Moon  hine. 

Lawrence,  Jonathan. — Look  Aloft. 

489 


Lawrence 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lawrence,  Kate. — Child's  Thoughts  about  God,  A. 

Little  Boy's  Wants,  A. 

Questions. 

Story  of  a  Cent,  The. 

Who  Did  it? 
Lawrence.  S.  St.  G. — ^fe  Attachment,  A. 
Lawson,   Mrs.  Mary  Jane  [Katzmann]. — Face  in  the 

Cathedral.  The. 
Lawton,  D: — Life's  Purpose. 
Lawton,  W:  Cranston. — My  Fatherland. 

Song,  Youth,  and  Sorrow. 
Lay,  E.  Eliz. — Margaret's  Guest. 
Laycock,  S: — Welcome,  Bonny  Brid! 
Layne,   Castle. — Love's   Caramels    Lost. 
Layton,  Addie. — Only  a  Baby.     (At.) 
Lazarus,   Emma. — Banner  of  the  Jew,  The. 

Cranes  of  Ibycus,  The. 

Crowing  of  the  Red  Cock,  The. 

Destiny. 

Gifts. 

Hope. 

Mater  Amabilis. 

New  Ezekiel,  The. 

On  the  Proposal  to  Erect  a  Monument  in  Eng- 
land to  Lord  Byron. 

Patience. 

Raschi  in  Prague. 

To  Carmen  Sylva. 

Venus  of  the  Louvre. 
Leach,  Grace  W. — Skaters,  The. 

"White  Morning,  A."      ,  , 

Leach,  Mary  A. — Better  than  a  Doctor. 
"Leaf,  Olive." — "God  is  Nowhere."    See  Little  Reader, 
The. 

Little  Reader.  The. 
Leahy,  W.  A. — Riding  to  the  Hunt. 
Lear,  E:— Ahkond  of  Swat,  The. 

"Author  of  the  Pobble,"   The.     See  Lines  to  a 
Young  I.,ady. 

Incidents  in  the  Life  of  My  Uncle  Arly. 

.Jumblies,  The. 

Limericks. 

Lines  to  a  Young  Lady. 

Nonsense  Alphabet. 

Owl  and  the  Pussy-cat,  The. 

Pobble  who  has  no  Toes,  The. 

Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo,  The. 
Learned,  Walter. — Consolation. 

Explanation,  An. 

Five  Little  White  Heads. 

In   Explanation.     See  Explanation,  An. 

Last  Reservation,  The. 

On  a  Flv-leaf  of  a  Book  of  Old  Plays. 

On  the  Fly-leaf  of  Manon  Lescaut. 

On  the  Fly-leaf  of  a  Book  of  Old  Plays.     See  On 
a  Fly-leaf,  etc. 

Song  of  the  Vane,  The. 

To   Critics. 

Wayside  Well.  The. 

What  else  could  he  Do?     See  Explanation,  An. 

With  a  Spray  of  Apple  Blossoms. 
Leatherman,  Jos.  W. — Fireside  Colloquy. 
Leavitt,  Mrs.  Mary  Clement. — World's  Problem,  The. 
Lecky,  W:  E:  Hartpole. — On  an  Old  Song. 

Sower  and  His  Seed,  The. 

Undeveloped  Lives,  The. 
I.«  Compte,  Irville  C. — Memory,  A. 
Ledyard,  Ray. — Boat-building  in  Spain. 
Lee,  Fitzhugh. — States,  The. 
Lee,  Fs.— Tree  that  Tried  to  Grow,  The. 
Lee,  Frank. — He'll  See  it  when  he  Wakes. 
Lee.  Franklyn  W. — House-cleaning. 
Lee,  H: — Father  of  His  Country.  The.     See  Funeral 
Oration  on  the  Death  of  General  Washington. 

Funeral  Oration  on  the  Death  of  General  Wash- 
ington. 

Washington's  Birthday.     See  Funeral  Oration  on 
the  Death  of  General  Washington. 
I.«e,  Holme. — Lost  on  the  Shore. 
Lee,  Jas.  Wideman. — Henry  W.  Grady  as  an  Orator. 
Lee,  Laurence. -r-Remarkable  Honeymoon  Trip,  A. 
Lee,  Mrs.  Mary  Eliz. — Blind  Communicant.  The. 

Grandmother's   Hour   with   the    Hymns. 

Speak  Gently  to  the  Erring  (?). 
Lee,  Nathaniel. — Alexander. 

Brutus  and  Titus.     See  Lucius  Junius  Brutus. 

I>uciu9  Junius  Brutus. 
Lee,  R:  H. — Address  to  the  People  of  England. 

For  Independence,  1776. 
liCe,  Gen.  Rob't  E: — "Nearly  one  hundred   years  ago 
there  was  a  day  of  remarkable  gloom  and  dark- 
ness." 
Lee.  Mrs.  Sophia  V.  [Gilberfl. — Brook,  The. 


Lee,  Rev.  W:  .1. — Life's  Loom. 

Shelter. 
Leeds  Mercury. — How  Pat  Went  Courting. 
Lee-Hamilton,   Eugene. — Charles  II.  of  Spain  to  Ap- 
proaching Death. 

Flight  from  Glory,  A. 

Ipsissimus. 

Izaak  Walton  to  River  and  Brook. 

On  His  "Sonnets  of  the  Wingless  Hours." 

Sea-shell  Murmurs. 

Sir  Walter  Raleigh  to  a  Caged  Linnet. 

Sunken  Gold. 

To  My  Tortoise  Chrono  . 

What  the  Sonnet  is. 
Le  Fanu,  Jos.  Sheridan.— Abhrain  an  Bhuideil. 

Fionula. 

Shamus  O'Brien.     (At.  also  to  S:  Lover.) 

Shemus  O'Brien.     See  Shamus  O'Brien. 
Lefevre,  Mrs.  Lily  Alice  ("Fleurange"). — Imprisoned. 

Inspiration. 
Lefevre,  Pierre  Francois. — Gustavus,  King  of  Sweden, 
to  His  Soldiers. 

Gustavus  Vasa  to  the  Dalecarlians.    See  Gustavus, 
King  of  Sweden,  to  his  Soldiers. 
Lefroy,  E:  Cracroft. — ^ Foot-ball  Player,  A. 

Shepherd  Maiden,  A. 

Sicilian  Night,  A. 
Le  Gallienne,  R: — Confessio  Amantis. 

Happy  Smoking-ground,  The. 

Love's  Poor. 

Old  Man'    Song,  An. 

Orbits. 

Passionate  Reader  to  His  Poet,  The. 

Regret. 

Second  Crucifixion,  The. 

Song:  "She's  somewhere  in  the  sunlight  strong." 

To  My  Wife,  Mildred. 

War  Poem. 

With  Pipe  and  Book. 

Woman's  Half-profits,  The. 

Wonder-child.  The. 
Legar^,    Hugh   Swinton.  —  American  Constitution   no 
Experiment,  The. 

Constitution  of  the  United  States  not  an  Experi- 
ment, The.  See  American  Constitution  no  Ex- 
periment, The. 

Emotions  on  Returning  to  the  United  States. 

Laboring  Classes,  The. 

Liberty  and  Greatness.     (?) 
Legar^,  Jas.  Mathews. — Ahab  Mohammed. 

Amy. 

To  a  Lily. 
Legge,  Arthur  E.  J. — Losing  Side,  The. 
Leggett,  W: — Love  and  Friendship. 
Lehigh  Burr. — Applied  Mathematics. 

Gory  Gambols. 

Matnematical. 

Sub-mistletoe. 
Leigh,  Amy  E. — If  I  but  Knew. 
Leigh,  Felix.— Old  Doll  to  the  New  One,  The. 
Leigh.  H:  Sambrooke. — Cossimbazar. 

Getting  Up. 

Maud. 

My  After-dinner  Cloud. 

My  Three  Loves. 

Only  Seven. 

Trials  of  a  Twin.     See  Twins,  The. 

Twins,  The. 
Leighton,  Albert. — Found  Dead. 
Leighton,  Rob't. — Dried-up  Fountain,  The. 

John  and  Tibbie  Davison's  Dispute. 

John  and  Tibbie's  Dispute.  See  John  and  Tibbie 
Davison's  Dispute. 

John  Davidson.  See  John  and  Tibbie  Davison's 
Dispute. 

Scotch  Words. 

Too  Many  Books. 
Leiser,  Jos. — Day  of  Atonement,  The. 

Kol  Nidra.     See  Day  of  Atonement,  The. 
Leland,    C:    Godfrey    ("Hans    Brietmann"). — Ballad: 
"Der  noble  Ritter  Hugo." 

Ballad  of  Charity,  The. 

Ballad  of  the  Green  Old  Man,  The. 

Ballad  of  the  Mermaid.  See  Ballad:  "Der  noble 
Ritter  Hugo." 

Breitmann  in  Maryland. 

Carey,  of  Carson. 

El  Capitan-General. 

Fisher's  Cottage,  The.     ( Tr. ) 

Hans  Breitmann  and  the  Turners. 

Hans  Breitmann's  Party. 

In  Nevada. 

Masher,  The. 


490 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Lincoln 


Leland,  C:  Godfrey  (.continued). 
Maud  MuUer  [in  Dutch]. 
Riddler,  The. 
Ritter    Hugo.     See    Ballad:    "Der    noble    Ritter 

Hugo." 
Romany  Song. 

Schnitzerl's  Philosopede  [or  Velocipede]. 
To  a  Friend  Studying  German. 
Two  Friends,  The. 
Water  Fay.  The.     (Tr.) 
"Lemon,  Mark."     See  Taylor,  Tom. 
Leonard,  Rev.  Adna  B. — Prohibition  Party  a  Necessity, 

A. 
Leonard,  Pri.scilla.— Always  in  a  Hurry. 

In  the  Looking-glass. 
Leonidas  of  Alexandria. — Home. 

Leonidas  to  His  Three  Hundred. 
On  the  Picture  of  an  Infant  [Playing  near  a  Preci- 
pice]. 
Leprohon,  Mrs.  R.  E.  fMullins]. — Huron  Chief's  Daugh- 
ter, The. 
Le  Row,  Caroline  Bigelow. — For  a  Warning. 
"Scallywag." 

Song  of  the  Steamer  Engine. 
Leslie,    Caroline. — "I    stood    beside    my    window   one 
stormy  winter  day." 
Meadow  Talk. 
Leslie,  Norman. — Address  to  the  Jury. 
Leslie's   Weekly.  —  How    Christmas    came    to    Crappy 

Shute. 
Leasing,   Gotthold    Ephraim. — Avaro.     See    Epigram: 
"There  comes  from  old  Avaro's  grave." 
Bad  Orator,  The. 
Bad  Wife,  The. 

Cupid  and  Mercury;  or.  The  Bargain. 
Dead  Miser,  The. 

Epigram:  "There  comes  from  old  Avaro's  grave." 
Fritz. 
Mendax. 

Nathan  the  Wise. 
Nice  Point,  A. 
Niger. 
On  Dorilis. 
On  Fell. 

On  Two  Beautiful  One-eyed  Sisters. 
Opal  Ring,  The.     See  Nathan  the  Wise. 
Per-contra,  or  Matrimonial  Balance,  The. 
Ring,  The.     See  Nathan  The  Wise. 
Specimen  of  the  Laconic. 
To  a  Liar. 

To  a  Slow  Walker  and  Quick  Eater. 
True  Nobilitv. 
Wise  Child,  The. 
Xester,  C.  F.— On  the  Stair. 

Take  it  Like  a  Man. 
L'Estrange,  Sir  Roger. — In  Prison.     See  Loyalty  Con- 
fined. 
Loyalty  Confined. 
Xettsom.  W:  Nanson.     (Tr.) — How  Brunhild  was  re- 
ceived at  Worms.     See  Nibelungen  Lied. 
How   Margrave    Riideger   was   Slain.     See   Nibe- 
lungen Lied. 
How  Siegfried  was  Slain.     See  Nibelungen  Lied. 
Nibelunjren  Lied. 
Leuville,  Marquis  de. — Choice  of  Arms,  The. 
Tvever,  C:  Jas. — Charles  O'Malley,  the  Irish  Dragoon. 
Larry  M'Hale. 
Mickey  Free  and  the  Priest.    See  Charles  O'Malley, 

the  Irish  Dragoon. 
Mickey  Free's  Letter  to  Mrs.  M'Gra.     See  Charles 

O'Malley,  the  Irish  Dragoon. 
Miss  Judith  Macan.     See  Charles   O'Malley,   the 

Irish  Dragoon. 
Why  My  Father  Left  the  Army. 
Widow  Malone. 
Leverett,  Mary  E. — Discovery  in  Biology,  A. 
Leveridge  [or  Loveridge],  R:,  and  Fielding,  H: — Roast 

Beef  of  Old  England,  The. 
Levin,  Lewis  C. — Best  Policy  in  Regard  to  Naturaliza- 
tion. 
Tree-tise  on  Nature,  A. 
Levy,  Amy. — Between  the  Showers. 
N      In  the  Mile  End  Road. 
London  Plane-tree,  A. 
To  Vernon  Lee. 
Levy,  Eugene  H. — Grant  at  Appomattox. 
Lewes,  G:  H. — Life  of  Goethe. 

Lewis,  Mrs.  A.  G. — Daughters  of  the  Regiment  Drill. 
Lewis,  C:  Bertrand  ("M.  Quad"). — As  the  Pigeon  Flies. 
Bijah. 

Bijah's  Story.     See  Bijah. 
Canvassing  under  Disadvantages. 
Champion  Liar,  The. 


Lewis,  C:  Bertrand  ("M.  Quad")  (continued). 
Face  of  a  Demon,  The. 
Goin'  Somewhere. 
His  Time  for  Fiddling. 
In  the  Chimney  Corner. 
Interesting  Traveling  Companion,  An. 
Last  Roll-call,  The. 
Little  Tom. 

Mr.  Bowser  among  the  Dressmakers. 
Mr.  Bowser  Takes  Precautions. 
Rural  Infelicity.     See  Goin'  Somewhere. 
"Shake's  Telephone." 
Wrong  Train,  The. 
Lewis,  D: — Lines  to  Alexander  Pope. 
Lewis,  Mrs.  Jennie  T.  [Hazen]. — "Papa  Says  so.  Too.' 
Lewis,  Matthew  Gregory. — Alonzo  tne  Brave  and  the 
Fair  Imogine. 
Maniac,  The. 

Progress  of  Madness,  The.     See  Maniac,  The. 
Lewis,  W:  E. — Opening  of  the  Mississippi  in  1862,  The. 
Leyden,  J: — Daisy,  The. 
Noontide. 

Ode  to  an  Indian  [Gold]  Coin. 
Sabbath  Morning,  The. 
To  the  Evening  Star. 
Liddell,  Mrs.  Catherine  C.  [Fraser-Tytler]. — Jesus  the 
Carpenter. 
Poet  in  the  City,  The. 
Liddell,  E.  Louise. — Spring  Maiden,  A. 
Life.  —Flag,  The. 
His  Finish. 

That  Fire  at  the  Nolana. 
Woman's  Career. 
Lighthall.  W:  Douw.     See  Schuyler-Lighthall,  W: 

Douw. 
Lilienthal,  Jos. — Full  Edition,  A. 

Large  Edition,  A.     See  Full  Edition,  A. 
"Lilliput  Levee."     See  Rands,  W  :  Brighty. 
Lincoln,  Abraham. — Address  at  Cooper  Institute,  New 
York,  Feb.  27,  1860. 
Address  at  Gettysburg,  1864.     See  Address  at  the 

Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at  Gettysburg. 
Address  at  the  Dedication  of  Gettysburg  Cemetery. 
See  Address  at  the  Dedication  of  the  Cemetery 
at  Gettysburg. 
Address   at   the   Dedication  of  the  C«metery  at 

Gettysburg. 
Address    before    the    Springfield    Washingtonian 

Temperance  Society.  Feb.  22,  1842. 
"Brave  men,  living  and  dead,  who  struggled  here. 
The."     See  Addres    at   the   Dedication  of  the 
Cemetery  at  Gettysburg. 
Constitution  and  the  People,  The.     See  First  In- 
augural Address. 
Cooper  Institute  Address.     See  Address  at  Cooper 

Institute. 
Dedication  of  Gettysburg  Cemetery.     See  Address 
at  the  Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at  Gettys- 
burg. 
Eulogium  on  Henry  Clay.     See  Eulogy  on  Henry 

Clay. 
Eulogy  on  Henry  Clay. 
First  Inaugural  Address. 

Gettysburg  Address.     See  Address  at  the  Dedica- 
tion of  the  Cemetery  at  Gettysburg. 
Inaugural  Address.     See  First  Inaugural  Address. 
Proclamation  of  Emancipation. 
Remarks  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Cem- 
etery at  Gettysburg,  Nov.   19,  186,3.     See  Ad- 
dress  at    the    Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at 
Gettysburg. 
Retribution.     See   Second    Inaugural    Address. 
Second  Inaugural  Address. 

Speech  at  the  Dedication  of  the  National  Cern- 
etery  at  Gettysburg.     See  Address  at  the  Dedi- 
cation of  the  Cemetery  at  Gettysburg. 
Two  Revolutions.     See  Address  before  the  Spring- 
field Washingtonian  Temperance  Society. 
War  or  Peace?     See  First  Inaugural  Address. 
"With  malice  towards  none,  with  charity  for  all." 
See  Second  Inaugural  Address. 
Lincoln,  Faith. — Winter  Gloaming. 
Lincoln,  Jas. — England. 

Simon  de  Montfort,  Earl  of  Leicester. 
Lincoln,  Joe. — Ant  and  the  Grasshopper,  The. 
At  Eventide. 
"Aunt  'Mandy." 

Ballad  of  McCarty's  Trombone,  The. 
Ballade  of  the  Dream-ship,  The. 
Best  Spare  Room,  The. 
Birds'-nesting  Time. 
Bullfrog  Serenade,  The. 
Circle  Day. 


491 


Lincoln 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lincoln,  Joe  {continued). 

Cod-fisher,  The. 

College  Training,  A. 

Croaker,  The. 

Crushed  Hero,  A. 

Cuckoo  Clock,  The. 

"Evenin'  HymS,  The." 

"Fift'  Ward  J'int  Debate,  The." 

Fireman  O'Rafferty. 

Friday  Evening  Meetings. 

Grandfather'.s  "Summer  Sweets." 

Hand-organ  Ball,  The. 

Hezekiah's  Art. 

His  New  Brother. 

In  Mother's  Room. 

"Jim." 

Life's  Paths. 

Life-saver,  The. 

Light-keeper,  The. 

Little  Bare  Feet. 

"Little  Feller's  Stockin',  The." 

Little  Old  House  by  the  Shore,  The. 

Matildy's  Beau. 

May  Memories. 

Mayflower,  The. 

Meadow  Road,  The. 

Midsummer. 

Minister's  Wife,  The. 

My  Old  Gray  Nag. 

Nmety-eight  in  the  Shade. 

November's  Come. 

Old  Carryall,  The. 

Old  Daguerreotypes,  The. 

Old  Sword  on  the  Wall,  The. 

Old-fashioned  Garden,  The. 

O'Reilly's  Billy  Goat. 

Our  First  Fire-crackers. 

Parson's  Daughter,  The. 

Popular  Song,  The. 

Rainy  Day,  A. 

"Reg'lar  Army  Man,  The." 

"Sary  Emma's  Photygraphs." 

School-committee  Man,  The. 

"September  Mornin's." 

Sermon  Time. 

Sister  Simmons. 

"Sister's  Best  Feller." 

Song  of  the  Sea,  The. 

Story-book  Boy,  The. 

Summer  Nights  at  Grandpa's. 

Sunday  Afternoons. 

Sunday-school  Picnic,  The. 

Sunset-land. 

Surf  along  the  Shore,  The. 

Susan  Van  Doozen. 

"Takin'  Boarders." 

Thanksgiving  Dream,  A. 

Through  the  Fog. 

Tin  Peddler,  The. 

Village  Oracle,  The. 

Wasted  Energy. 

Watchers,  The. 

When  Papa's  Sick. 

When  the  Minister  Comes  to  Tea. 

When  the  Tide  Goes  Out. 

"Widder  Clark,  The." 

Wind's  Song,  The. 

Winter  Nights  at  Home,  The. 

"Yap." 
Lincoln,  Kitty. — Troubles  of  a  Wife. 
Linden,  Anna. — Reformed  Man's  Lament,  A. 

Lindsay,  . — Paulus  the  Lawyer. 

Lindsay,  Lady  Anne.    See  Barnard,  Lady  Annb  [Lind- 

satI. 
Lindsay,  Blanche  Eliz.  [FitzRoy],  Lady. —  My  Heart 
is  a  Lute. 

Persian  Love  Song. 

Sonnet,  Suggested  by  Mr.  Watts's  Picture  of  Love 
and  Death. 
Lindsay,  M. — Far  Away. 
Lindsay,  Mrs.  S:— What  is  Worth  While. 
Lindsey,  W: — En  Garde,  Messieurs. 

Hundred-yard  Dash,  The. 
Linn,  Afr«.  Edith  L.  [Willis].— Festival  of  the  Year,  The. 

Where  Shall  We  Find  God? 
"Linn,  Ethel."     See  Beers,  Mr».  Ethelinda  [Euot]. 
Linsley,  Edna  E. — My  Zoological  Flame. 
Linton,  W:  Jas. — Epicurean. 

Eviction. 

Heart  and  Will. 

Love  and  Youth. 

Love's  Blindness. 

Our  Cause. 


Linton,  W:  Jas.  {continued). 

Patience.  ^^ 

Silenced  Singer,  The. 

Spring  and  Autumn. 

'Threnody  in  Memory  of  Albert  Darasz,  A. 

Too  Late. 

Weep  not!  Sigh  not! 
Lippard,  G: — Andrew  Jackson. 

Arnold   the   Traitor.     See   Benedict   Arnold. 

Battle  of  Brandywine,  The.     See  Battle  of  Ger- 
mantown,  The. 

Battle  of  Germantown,  The. 

Benedict  Arnold. 

Benedict     Arnold'."*     Death-bed.     See     Benedict 
Arnold. 

Black  Horse  and  His  Rider,  The.     <See  Benedict 
Arnold. 

Death  of  Robespierre,  The.     See  Fourth  of  July, 
1776,  The. 

Death-bed    of    Benedict    Arnold.     See    Benedict 
Arnold. 

Fourth  of  July,  1776,  The. 

Glass  RaUroad,  The. 

Hero  Woman,  The.     See  Wissahikon,  The. 

Heroes  of  the  Land  of  Penn.     See  Battle  of  Ger- 
mantown, The. 

Patriot  and  Traitor,  The.     See  Benedict  Arnold. 

Rider   of   the   Black   Horse,   The.     See   Benedict 
Arnold. 

Signing  of  the  Declaration,  The.     See  Fourth  of 
July,  1776,  The. 

Traitor's  Death-bed,  The.     See  Benedict  Arnold. 

Unknown    Rider,    The    [or    An].     See    Benedict 
Arnold. 

Unknown   Speaker,   The.      See  Fourth   of    July, 
1776,  The. 

Wissahikon,  The. 
Lippincott,  Mrs.  Sara  Jane  [Clarke]   ("Grace  Green- 
wood"). 

Horseback  Ride,  The. 

Mother's  Excuse,  A. 

Poet  of  To-day,  The. 

"There  is  a  grandeur  in  the  soul  that  dares." 

Wife's  Appeal,  The. 
Lippincott'a  Magazine. — Ballet-girl,  The. 
Lippmann,  Julie  Mathilde. — Love  and  Life. 

Memory-bridges,  The. 

Pines,  The. 

Stone  Walls. 

Who  is  She? 
Lipscomb,  Mrs.  M.  A. — Ladies  of  Athens. 
Lisenbee,  Will. — Colonel's  Experiment,  The. 
Lisle,  Rouget  de.     See  Rouqet  de  Lisle,  Claude  Jos. 
Litchfield,  Grace  Denio. — "Good-by." 

How  it  Really  Was. 

My  Letter. 

My  Other  Me. 

To  a  Hurt.  Child. 

Two  Dutiful  Daughters. 
Littell's  Living  A  ^e.— Wanderer,  The. 
Little,  Lizzie  M. — Life. 
Little,  Noah. — Fate  of  Mackay,  The. 
Little,  W:  H: — Memorial  Day. 
Little  Corporal. — Old   Year,  The. 
Little  Folk^.— Quarrel,  A. 

Little  Rock  Gazette. — Bald-headed  Man,  The. 
Littlefield,  C:  E.— Our  Pledge  to  Puerto  Rico. 
Littlefield,  Walter.— Pipe  Critic,  The. 
Littlejohn,  W: — Mad. 

Livermore,  Mrs.  Mary  Ashton  [Rice]. — "But  time 
would  fail  to  attempt  to  catalogue  the  grand 
women." 

"With  white  wings  spread  she  bounded  o'er  the 
deep." 
Livingston,  Rob't  R. — Aristocracy. 
Livingston,  S.  T.— At  Church. 

Hidden. 
Livingston,  Stuart. — Keats. 

King's  Fool,  The. 

To  E.  N.  L. 

Volunteers  of  '85,  The. 
Livingstone,   D: — "Heart  rhay  often  be   cheered  by 

observing,  The." 
Livy. — Canuleius    against    Patrician    Arrogance.     See 
History  of  Rome. 

Fabius  to  .(Emilius.     See  History  of  Rome. 

Hannibal  Pleads  for  Peace.     See  History  of  Rome. 

Hannibal  to  His  Army.     See  History  of  Rome. 

Hannibal  to  the  Carthaginian  Army.       See  His- 
tory of  Rome. 

Hannibal's  Address  to  his  Army.     See  History  of 
Rome. 

History  of  Rome. 


192 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


London 


Livy  (continued). 

Publiua  Scipio  to  the  Roman  Army,  before  the 

Battle   of  Ticin.     See  History  of  Rome. 
Roman  Liberty  in  Peril.     See  History  of  Rome. 
Scipio  Declines  Hannibal's  Overtures  for  Peace. 

See  History  of  Rome. 
Scipio  to  His  Army.     <See  History  of  Rome. 
Titus  Quintius  against  Quarrels  between  the  Sen- 
ate and  the  People.     See  Histbry  of  Rome. 
Virginius  as  Tribune,  Refuses  the  Appeal  of  Ap- 
pius  Claudius.     See  History  of  Rome. 
Lloyd,  Alfred  H:  (?).— Modulation. 

'"Tis  not  enough  the  voice  be  sound  and  clear" 
See  Modulation. 
Lloyd,  Beatrix  Demarest. — Love  and  Time. 
Night- wind. 
With  Roses. 
Lloyd,  Eliz.     See  Howell,  Mrs.  Eliz.  [Lloyd]. 
Lloyd,  Rob't  (?).— Milkmaid,  The. 
Lloyd,  W. — Song  without  a  Name,  The. 
Locey,  Maria.     See  Lacet,  Maria. 
Locke,  Addie  I. — Song,  A:  "She  sat  alone  by  the  gray 

stone  wall." 
Locke,  Belle  Marshall. — Bessie's  First  Party. 
Hiartville  Shakespeare  Club,  The. 
Little  Heroine,  A. 
Making  Him  Feel  at  Home. 
Mrs.  Tubbs  at  the  Sewing-circle. 
Private  Rehearsal,  A. 
Sister  Ernestine's  Beau. 
Locke,  D:  Ross  ("Petroleum  V.  Nasby"). — Betsy  De- 
stroys the  Paper. 
Hannah  Jane. 
Locke,  J: — Dawn  on  the  Irish  Coast. 
Locke,  Nellie  M. — Heartrending  Affair,  A. 
Locke,  Una. — Humility. 
Locker-Lampson,  Frd'k. — At  Her  Window. 
Baby  Mine. 
Cuckoo,  The. 

Earliest  Recollection.     See  Terrible  Infant,  A. 
From    the    Fly-leaf    of    the    Rowfant    Montaigne 

(Florio,  1603). 
Garden  Idyll,  A. 

Garden  Lyric,  A.     See  Garden  Idyll,  A. 
GeraJdine  and  I.     See  Garden  Idyll,  A. 
Gertrude's  Necklace. 
Mabel.     See  At  Her  Window. 
Mrs.  Smith. 
My  Mistress's  Boots. 
Nice  Correspondent,  A. 
Old  Letters. 
On  an  Old  Muff. 

Only  One.     See  Rhyme  of  One,  A. 
Rhjrme  of  One,  A. 
Rose  and  the  Ring,  The. 
St.  George's,  Hanover  Square. 
Skeleton  in  the  Cupboard,  The. 
Terrible  Infant,  A. 
To  My  Mistress. 
To  My  Grandmother. 
Widow's  Mite,  The. 
Lockhart,  Arthur  J: — Acadie. 
Lonely  Pine,  The. 
Waters  of  Carr,  The. 
Lockhart,  Burton  Wellesley. — By  the  Gaspereau. 
Love  and  Song. 
Retrospect,  The. 
Lockhart,  J:  Gibson. — Avenging  Childe,  The. 
Bernardo  and  King  Alphonso. 
Bridal  of  Andalla,  The.     (Tr.) 
Broadswords  of  Scotland,  The. 
Bull-fight  [of  Gazul],  The.     (Tr.) 
Cid.The.     (Tr.) 

Cid  and  Bavieca,  The.     (Tr.)     SeeCid,The. 
Cid  and  the  Leper,  The.     (Tr.)    See  Cid,  The. 
Garci  Perez  de  Vargas.     (Tr.)     See  Lord   of    Bu- 

trago.  The. 
Lamentation  for  Celin,  The.     (Tr.) 
Lamentation  of  Don  Roderick,  The.     (Tr.) 
Lines: — "When  youthful  faith  hath  fled." 
Lord  of  Butrago,  The.     (Tr.) 
Moor  Calaynos,  The.     (Tr.) 
Napoleon. 

Wandering  Ejiight's  Song,  The. 
Zara's  Ear-rings;     (Tr.) 
Lockport  Express.— No  Room  for  Mother. 
Lockwood,  DeWitt  Clinton. — Landlord's  Visit,  The. 
Lodge,  G:  Cabot.— Song  of  the  Wave,  A. 

Youth. 
Lodge,  H:  Cabot. — Americanism. 

Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.     See  Speech  to  Rob't  E. 

Lee  Camp  Confederate  Veterans. 
Character  of  Washington,  The. 


Lodge,  H:  Cabot  (continued). 
Cuba  and  Armenia. 

Fight  off  Santiago,  The.     See  War  with  Spain,  The 
Great  Peril  of  Unrestricted  Immigration,  The. 
House  of  Representatives,  The. 
Independent  Spirit  of  the  Puritans,  The. 
Man  and  the  Cause. 

Massachusetts.     See  Tribute  to  Massachusetts,  A. 
"Old  Ironsides." 
Pilgrims  as  Conquerors,  The. 
Puritan  of  Essex  Countv,  The. 
Speech  before  the  Republican  State  Convention  of 

Massachusetts,  March  27,  1896. 
Speech  Delivered  at  a  Dinner  of  the  New  England 

Society  of  New  York,  Dec.  22,  1884. 
Speech  to  Robt.  E.  Lee  Camp  Confederate  Veter- 
ans. 
Traditions  of  Massachusetts,  The. 
Tribute  to  Massachusetts,  A. 
True  Americanism.     See   Speech   Delivered   at   a 

Dinner  of  the  New  England  Society. 
Venezuela  Question,  The. 
War  with  Spain,  The. 

What  the  Flag  Means.     See  Speech  before  the  Re- 
publican State  Convention    of    Massachusetts. 
Lodge,  T: — Deceitful  Mistress,  The. 

Do  Me  Right,  and  Do  Me  Reason.     See  Looking- 
glass  for  London  and  England,  A. 
Harmony  of  Love,  The. 

Lament  in  Spring,  A.     See  Scylla's  Metamorpho- 
sis. 
Life  of  Robert,  Second  Duke  of  Normandy. 
Looking-glass  for  London  and  England,  A. 
Love  and  Phillis.     See  Love's  Wantonness. 
Love's  Wantonness. 
Margarite  of  America,  A. 

Montanus'  Sonnet.     (I.  and  II.)     See  Rosalynde. 
On  Phillis'  Sickness. 

Phillis.     (I.)     See  To  Phillis  the  Fair  Shepherdess. 
PhUlis.     (II.)     See  Love's  Wantonness. 
Phillis'  Sickness.     See  On  Phillis'  Sickness. 
Poet's  Vow,  A.     See  Rosalynde. 
Rosader's  Description   of    Rosalynd.     See    Rosa- 
lynde. 
Rosader's  Sonetto.     See  Rosalynde. 
Rosalind's  Complaint.     See  Rosalynde. 
Rosalind's  Description.     See  Rosalynde. 
Rosalind's  Madrigal.     See  Rosalynde. 
Rosaline.     See  Rosalynde. 
Rosalynde ;  or,  Euphues'  Golden  Legacy. 
Rosalynd's  Madrigal.     See  Rosalynde. 
Scylla's  Metamorphosis. 
Solitary  Shepherd's  Song,  The.     See  Margarite  of 

America,  A. 
Spring  and  Melancholy.     See  Scylla's  Metamor- 
phosis. 
To  Phillis  the  Fair  Shepherdess.     (At.  also  to  Sir 

E:  Dyer.) 
Whilst  Youthful  Sports  are  Lasting.     See  Life  of 
Robert,  Second  Duke  of  Normandy. 
LoflSand,  J:  ("Milford  Bard"). — Burning  of  the  Lex- 
ington. 
March  of  Mind,  The. 
Serpent  of  the  Still,  The. 
Logan. — Logan,  a  Mingo  Chief,  to  Lord  Dunmore. 
Logan,  J: — Braes  of  Yarrrow,  The.     See  Song:  The 
Braes  of  Yarrow. 
Cuckoo,  The.     See  To  the  Cuckoo. 
Heavenly  Wisdom. 

Messenger  of  Spring,  The.     See  To  the  Cuckoo. 
Ode  to  the  Cuckoo.     (At.  to  Michael  Bruce.)     See 

To  the  Cuckoo. 
Song:  "Thy  braes  were  bonny."     See  Song:  The 

Braes  of  Yarrow. 
Thy  Braes  were  Bonny.     See  Song:  The  Braes  of 

Yarrow. 
To  the  Cuckoo. 
Logan,  J:  E.  ("Barry  Dane"). — Blood-red  Ring  Hung 
round  the  Moon.     See  Indian  Maid's  Lament, 
The. 
Dead  Singer,  A. 
Indian  Maid's  Lament,  The. 
Nor'-west  Courier,  The. 
Logan,  Walter  Seth.— Dollar,  The. 
Logau,  F.  von. — Retribution. 

Siege  of  Cuantla,  The:  The  Bunker  Hill  of  Mexico. 
Loines,  Russell  HiUard. — On  a  Magazine  Sonnet. 
Lomin,  M. — "Then,  too,  I  love  thee." 
London  Atlas. — Contrast    of    Tact    and    Talent.     See 
Tact  and  Talent. 
Tact  and  Talent. 
London  Chronicle. — Greeting  from  England. 
London  Clarion. — New  "Hey  Diddle  Diddle." 


493 


London 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


London  Economist. — Honor  to  the  Hammer. 
London  Figaro. — Baby's  Reflections,  A. 
London  Fun. — New  Toreador,  The. 
London  Graphic.     Girl  with  Thirty-nine  Lovers,  The. 
See  Thirty-nine  Lovers,  The. 

Thirty-nine  Lovers,  The. 
London  Leader. — Jugiter  Amans. 
London  Public  Opinfbn. — -Christmas  Eve. 
London  Punch.     See  Punch. 
London  Society. — In  the  Hammock. 
London  Speaker. — Emir's  Game  of  Chess,  The. 
London  Spectator. — Last  Pipe,  The. 

Millais's  "Huguenots." 
London  Tid-bits. — Their  First  Spat. 

They  never  Quarreled.     See  Their  First  Spat. 
London  Tobacco. — Two  Other  Hearts. 
I-ong,  F.  C— Bridal  Feast,  The. 

Bridal  Wine-cup,  The.     See  Bridal  Feast,  The. 

Pledge  with  Wine.     See  Bridal  Feast,  The. 
Lonergan,  Annie  L. — Little  Advice,  A. 
Long,  Howard  W. — On  the  River. 
Long.  J:  Davis. — Boy  in  Blue,  The. 

Day  of  Our  Country,  A. 

Declaration  of  Independence,  The. 

Duty  of  the  Enlightened  Clas.«es. 

Forefathers'  Day. 

Great  Man,  A. 

Memorial  Day. 

Oxford  County. 

Philippine  Islands,  The. 

Pilgrim   Commemoration,   The. 

Significance  of  the  Spanish  War,  The. 

Soldier  Boy,  The. 
Long,  J:  Luther. — Lucky  Jim. 
Long,  Lily  A. — His  Reverie. 

Longfellow,    H :   Wadsworth.  —  Abbess's   Story,    The. 
See  Christus:  A  Mystery. 

Abbot  Joachim. 

Afternoon  in  February. 

Age.     See  Morituri  Salutamus. 

"Ah,  me!  how  dark  the  discipline  of  pain!"  See 
President  Garfield. 

"Ah!  when  the  infinite  burden  of  life  descendeth 
upon  us."  See  Children  of  the  Lord's  Supper, 
The. 

"Angel  with  Great  Joy  Received  his  Guests, 
The."     See  King  Robert  of  Sicily. 

April.     See  April  Day,  An. 

April  Day,  An. 

Armory,  The.     See  Arsenal  at  Springfield,  The. 

Arrow  and  Song.  See  Arrow  and  the  Song, 
The. 

Arrow  and  the  Song,  The. 

Arsenal,  The.     See  Arsenal  at  Springfield,  The. 

Arsenal  at  Springfield,  The. 

Ballad  of  Carmilhan,  The. 

Ballad  of  the  French  Fleet,  A. 
■  Beleaguered  City,  The. 

Bell  of  Atri,  The. 

Bells  of  Lynn,  The. 

Bells  of  San  Bias,  The. 

Beware!     (Tr.) 

Birds  of  Killingworth,  The. 

Blind  Girl  of  Cast61  Cuille,  The. 

Boy  and  the  Brook,  The. 

Bridge.  The. 

Builders,  The. 

Building  of  the  Ship.  The. 

Burial  of  the  Minnisink. 

Burial  of  the  Poet,  The. 

Captain  Kempthorn.     See  John  Endicott. 

Carillon. 

Castle  by  the  Sea,  The.     (Tr.) 

Catawba  Wine. 

Chamber  over  the  Gate,  The. 

Charles  Sumner. 

Chaucer. 

Children,  The. 

Children  of  the  Lord's  Supper,  The. 

Children's  Hour,  The. 

Christmas  Bells. 

Christus:  A  Mystery. 

City  and  the  Sea,  The. 

Coliseum,  The.     See  Rome  in  Midsummer. 

Courtship  of  Miles  Standish,  The. 

Crocus. 

Crew  of  the  Long  Serpent,  The.  See  Saga  of  King 
Olaf.  The. 

Cumberland,  The. 

Curfew. 

Dante. 

Day  is  Done,  The. 

Daybreak. 


The. 


See  Evangeline. 

See  Evangeline. 


Longfellow,  H:  Wadsworth  (continued). 

Death  of  Minnehaha,  The.  See  Song  of  Hia- 
watha, The. 

Decoration  Day. 

Disasters.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 

Discoverer  of  the  North  Cape,  The. 

Divina  Commedia. 

Drifting.     See  Seaweed. 

Dutch  Picture,  A. 

Eliot's  Oak. 

Emma  and  Eginhard. 

Emperor's  Bird's-nest, 

Endymion. 

Epimetheus. 

Evangeline. 

Evangeline  in  Acadia. 

Evangeline  on  the  Prairie. 

Excelsior. 

Exile  of  the  Acadians,  The.     See  Evangeline. 

Famine,  The.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 

Fiftieth  Birthday  of  Agassiz,  The. 

Finding  of  Gabriel,  The.     See  Evangeline. 

Finished.     See  Abbot  Joachim. 

Fire  of  Drift-wood,  The. 

Flowers. 

Footsteps  of  Angels. 

.From  my  Arm-chair. 

Ghosts,  The.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 

Glimpses  into  Cloudland.     See  Hyperion. 

Goblet  of  Life,  The. 

God's-acre. 

Golden  Legend,  The.     See  Christus:  A  Mystery. 

Golden  Mile-stone,  The. 

Hanging  of  the  Crane,  The. 

Happiest  Land,  The. 

Harvest  Moon,  The. 

Haunted  House. 

Hawthorne. 

Hemlock  Tree,  The.     (Tr.) 

Hiawatha.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 

Hiawatha's  Brothers.    See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 

Hiawatha's  Chickens.    See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 

Hiawatha's  Childhood.  See  Song  of  Hiawatha, 
The. 

Hiawatha's  Sailing.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 

Hiawatha's  Wedding-feast.  See  Song  of  Hia- 
watha, The. 

Hiawatha's  Wooing.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 

Holidays. 

Home  Song.    See  Song:  "Stay,  stay  at  home,"  etc. 

Household  Sovereign,  The.  See  Hanging  of  the 
Crane,  The. 

"How  beautiful  is  youth  1  how  bright  it  gleams." 
See  Morituri  Salutamus. 

How  Love  Comes.     See  Endymion. 

Hymn    for   my   Brother's    Ordination. 

Hymn  of  the  Moravian  Nuns  of  Bethlehem. 

Hymn  to  the  Night. 

Hyperion. 

"I  do  not  love  thee  less  for  what  is  done."  See 
Masque  of  Pandora,  The. 

Indian  Hunter,  The. 

Janus  and  January. 

John   Endicott. 

Journey  into  Spain,  The.     See  Outre  Mer. 

Judas  MaccabEBUs. 

Jugurtha. 

Kavanagh. 

Killed  at  the  Ford. 

King  Robert  of  Sicily. 

Ladder  of  St.  Augustine,  The. 

Lady  Wentworth. 

Launch  of  the  Ship,  The. 
Ship,  The. 

Launching  of  the  Ship,  The. 
Ship,  The. 

Tjeap  of  Roushan  Beg,  The. 

Legend  Beautiful,  The. 

Legend  of  Rabbi  Ben  I^evi,  The. 

Legend  of  the  Beautiful,  The.  See  Legend  Beau- 
tiful, The. 

Life.     See  Psalm  of  Life,  A. 

Light  of  Stars,  The. 

Lighthouse,  The. 

Lines.     See  Building  of  the  Ship,  The. 

Lives  of  Great  Men.     See  Psalm  of  Life,  A. 

I/ongfellow  Alphabet.  A. 

Longfellow,  From. 

Loss  and  Gain. 

Lost  Found,  The.     See  Evangeline. 

"Love  and  believe:  for  works  will  follow  spon- 
taneous." See  Children  of  the  Lord's  Supper, 
The. 


See  Building  of  the 
See  Building  of  the 


494 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Lovelace 


Longfellow,  H  :  Wadsworth  (continued). 
Maidenhood. 

Masque  of  Pandora,  The. 
Meeting    of    Evangeline    and    Gabriel,    The.     See 

Evangeline. 
Michael  Angelo. 
Miles    Standish's    Encounter    with    the    Indians. 

See  Courtship  of  Miles  Standish,  The. 
Milton. 

Moonlight   on   the  Prairie.     See   Evangeline. 
Morituri  Salutamus. 
Musician's  Tale,  The.     <See  Ballad  of  Carmilhan, 

The. 
Musings. 
My  Books. 
My  Lost  Youth. 
Nature. 

New  England  Tragedies,  The. 
New  Household,  A.     See  Hanging  of  the  Crane, 

The. 
Nuremberg. 

Oaks  of  Monte  Luca,  The. 
Old  Bridge  at  Florence,  The.  , 
Old  Clock,  The.      See  Old  Clock  on  the  Stairs, 

The. 
Old  Clock  on  the  Stairs,  The. 
Old  St.  David's  at  Radnor. 
On    the    Atchafalaya.     See    E^ngeline. 
On  the  Fiftieth  Birthday  of  Agassiz.     See  Fiftieth 

Birt  iday  of  Agassiz,  The. 
Open  Window,  The. 
Outre  Mar. 

Paul   Fleming   Resolves.     See   Hyperion. 
Paul  Revere's  Ride. 
Pegasus  in  Pound. 
■         Phantom  Ship,  The. 

Poetry    of    City    and    Country    Life,    The.     See 

Hyperion. 
"Poor,   sad   Humanity."     See  Christus:  A   Mys- 
tery. 
Praise  of  Little  Women.     (Tr.) 
President  Garfield. 

Primeval  Forest,  The.     See  Evangeline. 
Psalm  of  Life,  A. 
Pulaski's   Banner.     See   Hymn   of   the  Moravian 

Nuns  of  Bethlehem. 
Rain  in  Summer. 
Rainy  Day,   The. 
Reaper  and  the  Flowers,  The. 
Relentless  Time. 

Republic,  The.     See  Building  of  the  Ship,  The. 
Resignation. 
Retribution.     (Tr.) 
Rome  in  Midsummer. 
Rustic  Bridal,  The.    See  Blind  Girl  of  Castel  Cuille, 

The. 
Saga  of  King  Olftf,  The. 
St.    Augustine's    Ladder.     See    Ladder    of    Saint 

Augustine,  The. 
Sandalphon. 
Santa  Filomena. 

Seasons  in  Sweden,  The.     See  Kavanagh. 
Seaweed. 

Secret  of  the  Sea,  The. 
Serenade    [from    "The    Spanish    Student"].     See 

Spanish  Student,  The. 
"Setting  of  a  great  hope  is  like  the  setting  of  the 

sun.  The."     See  Hyperion. 
She  is  a  Maid  of  Artless  Grace.     (Tr.) 
Ship  of  State,  The.     See  Building  of  the  Ship,  The. 
Singers,  The. 
Sir  Humphrey  Gilbert. 
Skeleton  in  Armor,  The. 
Slave  Singing  at  Midnight,  The. 
Sleep,  Comrades,  Sleep.     See  Decoration  Day. 
Snow-flakes. 
"So  these  lives  that  had  run  thus  far  in  separate 

channels."     See  Courtship  of  Miles  Standish. 
Song:  "Stay,  stay  at  home,"  etc. 
Song  of  Birds.     See  Birds  of  Killingworth,  The. 
Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 
Song  of  the  Silent  Land.     (Tr.) 
South  Wind,  The.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The. 
Spanish  Student,  The. 
Spirit  of  Poetry,  The. 
Spring.     See  Hyperion. 
Stars  and  the  Flowers,  The.     See  Flowers. 
Story   of   "Hiawatha,"   The.     See  Song  of  Hia- 
watha,  The. 
Story  of  the  Monk  Felix,  The.      See  Christus:   A 

Mystery. 
Success.     See  Hyperion. 
Sunrise  on  the  Hills. 


Longfellow,  H :  Wadsworth  (continued). 

Tableaux  from  Hiawatha.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha, 
The. 

"There    are    two    angels    that    attend    unseen." 
See  Christus:  A  Mystery. 

There  was  a  Little  Girl. 

Three  Kings,  The. 

Tide  Rises,  the  Tide  Falls,  The. 

To  Alfred  Tennyson.     See  Wapentake. 

To  the  River  Ciiarles. 

To  the  Silent  River.     See  To  the  River  Charles. 

Twilight. 

Two  Angels,  The. 

Two  Locks  of  Hair,  The.     (Tr.) 

Valley  of  the  Loire,  The.     See  Outre  Mer. 

Village  Blacksmith,  The. 

Voices  of  the  Forest.     See  Masque  of  Pandora,  The 

Voices  of  the  Night. 

Wapentake. — To  Alfred  Tennvson. 

Warden  of  the  Cinque  Ports,  'The. 

Warning,  The. 

"Were  half  the  power  that  fills  the  world  with  ter- 
ror."— See  Arsenal  at  Springfield,  The. 

"When   the   hours   of  day   are   numbered."     See 
Footsteps  of  Angels. 

"Whene'er  [tvr.  where'er]  a  noble  deed  is  wrought." 
See  Santa  Filomena. 

Windmill,  The. 

Woods  in  Winter. 

Wreck  of  the  Hesperus,  The. 
Longfellow,  S: — April. 

Church  Universal,  The. 

Glen  Ellis  Falls. 

Golden  Sunset,  The. 

Hymn  of  Winter. 

Looking  unto  God. 

Love. 

November. 

To  a  Daughter  on  Her  Marriage.     (Tr.) 

Vesper  Hymn. 
Loomis,  C:  Battell. — Classic  Ode,  A. 

Grace's  Choice. 

O— U— G— H— . 

Timon  of  Archimedes. 
Loomis,  E.  S. — Rea.son  off  Duty. 
Loomis,  Louise  R — By  the  Roadside. 
Look,  H:  M.— Rescue  of  Chicago,  The. 
Lord,  J: — Woman  as  Friend. 
Lord,  W:  Wilberforce. — Brook,  The. 

Keats.     See  Ode  to  England,  An. 

Ode  to  England,  An. 

On  the  Defeat  of  a  Great  Man.     See  On  the  Defeat 
of  Henry  Clay. 

On  the  Defeat  of  Henry  Clay. 

To  Rosina  Pico. 

Wordsworth.     See  Ode  to  England   An. 

Worship. 
Loring,  C:  G.,  Jr.— To  Peggy. 

Loring,  Frd'k  Wadsworth. — Crimson  and  the  Blue, 
The. 

In  the  Old  Churchyard  at  Fredericksburg. 

Minding  the  Hens. 

Tildy.     See  Minding  the  Hens. 
Los  Angeles  Express. — Story  of  Chinese  Love,  A. 
Lothrop,  Mrs.   Harriet  Mulford  [Stone]  ("Marg.  Sid- 
ney").— Christmas. 

Little  Brown  Seed,  The. 

Memorial  Day. 

Piece  of  News,  A;  or,  Aunt  Ray's  Cat. 

Vacation  Days. 
Loudon,  Jane. — Rats. 
Louther,  Hal. — Yes  or  No. 
Lovejoy,  Mrs.  F.  J. — Goldenrod. 

Lovejoy,  Mary  I.— "Speak  to  the  children,  little  book." 
Lovelace,    R: — From    Prison.     See    To    Althea    from 
Prison. 

Going  to  the  Wars.     See  To  Laucasta[,  on  going  to 
the  Wars]. 

Grasshopper,  The. 

Gratiana    Dancing.     See    Gratiana    Dancing    and 
Singing. 

Gratiana  Dancing  and  Singing. 

Her  Golden  Hair.  See  Song: — To  Amarantha:  that 
She  would  Dishevel  her  Haire. 

Ode  to  Mr.  C.  Cotton.     See  Grasshopper,  The. 

Orpheus  to  Beasts. 

Rose,  The. 

Song: — To  Amarantha:  that  She  would  Dishevel 
her  Haire. 

Song:  To  Lucasta  Going  to  the  Warres.     See  To 
Lucasta[,  on  Going  to  the  Wars]. 

To  Althea.     See  To  Althea  from  Prison. 

To  Althea  from  Prison. 


495 


Lovelace 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lovelace,  R:  {coniimied). 

To  Amarantha,  that  she  would  dishevel  her  Hair. 
See  Song:  —  To  Amarantha:   that  She  would 
Dishevel  Her  Haire. 
To  Lucasta[,  Going  beyond  the  Seas]. 
To  Lucasta,  Going  to  the  Wars.     See  To  Luoasta 

ton  Going  to  the  Wars] . 
ucastaf,  hef' lleaerved  Looks]. 

To  Lucastal,  on  Going  to  the  Wars]. 
Lovell,  Arthur. — Warning,  A. 
Lovell,  Bertha  Chase. — When  Daylight  Dies. 
Lovell,   J.  E.  (?).— True    Eloquence.     (Wr.    at.)     See 

Webstek,  Daniel. 
Lovell,  Maria. — Ingomar,  the  Barbarian.     (.Tr.) 
Loveman,  Rob't. — April. 

Diamond,  A. 

Hobson  and  His  Men. 

March. 

Spring. 

Sunset,  A. 
Lover,  S: — Angel's  Whispier,  The. 

Baby  Dear.     (At.) 

Barney  O'Hea. 

Birth  of  St.  Patrick,  The. 

Carolan  and  Bridget  Cruise. 

Cradle  Song  of  the  Buccaneer's  Wife.     See  Baby 
Dear. 

Dermot  O'Dowd. 

Disgusted  Dutchman,  The.     See  White  Horse  of 
the  Peppers,  The. 

Father  Blake's  Collection.     See  Father  Phil's  Col- 
lection. 

Father  Molloyf;  or.  The  Confession]. 

Father  Phil's  Collection. 

Father  Roach. 

Father-land  and  Mother-tongue.     {Also  at.  to  Lord 
Byron.) 

Fox  and  the  Ranger,  The.  (?) 

Gridiron,  The. 

Handy  Andy. 

Handy  Andy  and  the  Squire.     See  Handy  Andy. 

Handy  Andy's  Little  Mistakes.     See  Handy  Andy. 

Haunted  Spring,  The. 

How  to  Ask  and  Have. 

Jimmy  Hoy.     See  Paddy  at  Sea. 

King  O'Toole  and  Saint  Kevin. 

Lanty  Leary. 

Low-back[ed]  Car,  The. 

Maiden's  Request,  The.     (Wr.  at.)     See  Hood,  T: 

Molly  Carew. 

Never  Despair. 

Old  Ballad,  An.     See  Lanty  Leary. 

Paddy  at  Sea. 

Paddy  Blake's  Echo. 

Paddy  O'Rafther. 

Paddy  the  Piper. 

Paddy  the  Sport. 

Pat  and  the  Fox.     See  Paddy  the  Sport. 

Pat  and  the  Gridiron. 

Quaker  and  the  Robber,  The.     See  Quaker's  Meet- 
ing, The. 

Quaker's  Meeting,  The. 

Roiy  O'More  [;  or,  All  for  Good  Luck].     See  Rory 
O'More;  or.  Good  Omens. 

Rory  O'More;  or.  Good  Omens. 

Rory  O'More's  Present  to  the  Priest. 

Shamus  O'Brien  [tbe  Bold  Boy  of  Glingall].     (,At. 
also  to  Jos.  S.  Le  Fanu.) 

Shemus  O'Brien.     See  Shamus  O'Brien. 

Subscription  liist.  The.  See  Father  Phil's  Collection. 

To  Ask  and  to  Have.     See  How  to  Ask  and  Have. 

What  Will  You  Do,  Love? 

White  Horse  of  the  Peppers,  The. 

Widow  Machree. 

Won't  you  Follow  Me.     See  Lanty  Leary. 
Loveridge,  R:     See  Leveridge,  R: 
Lovett,  Eva. — Philosopher's  Escape,  The. 

Wisest  Fool,  The. 
Low,  Seth. — Address  Delivered  before  the  New  Eng- 
land Society  in  New  York  City,  Dec.  22,  1892. 

Brooklyn  Bridge,  The. 

Teaching  of  the  Colleges,  The.     See  Address  De- 
livered before  the  New  England  Society. 
Lowater,  Ninette  M. — Easter  Bells. 
Lowe,  J: — Mary's  Dream. 
Lowe,  Mrs.  Martha  Ann  [Perry]. — Honor  all  Men. 

Work. 
Lowe,  Rob't.     See  Sherbrooke,  Viscount. 
Lowell,  C:  RusseU. — Reverence  Due  from  the  Old  to 

the  Young,  The. 
Lowell,  Jas.  Russell. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Abraham  Lincoln.     See  also  Ode  Recited  at  the 
Harvard  Commemoration. 


Lowell,  Jas.  Russell  (.contintied). 

After  the  Burial. 

Agassi  z. 

Agro-Dolce. 

AT  Fresco. 

Aladdin. 

All-Saints  [Day]. 

American  Tract  Society,  The. 

Appledore.     See  Pictures  from  Appledore. 

Appledore  in  a  Storm.  See  Pictures  from  Apple- 
dore. 

"At  the  devil's  booth  all  things  are  sold."  Se« 
Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 

At  the  Unveiling  of  the  Gray  Memorial. 

Auf  Wiedersehen! 

Auspex. 

Autograph,  An. 

Beggar,  The. 

Bibliolatres. 

Biglow  Papers,  The. 

Birch  Tree,  The. 

Books  and  Libraries. 

Brook  in  Winter,  The.  See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal, 
The. 

Candidate's  Creed,  The.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 

Candidate's  Letter,  The.  See  Biglow  Papers, 
The. 

Changeling,  Iftie. 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Columbus. 

Commemoration  Ode.  See  Ode  Recited  at  the 
Harvard  Commemoration. 

Courtin',  The.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 

Democracy. 

Disappointment. 

Elegy  on  the  Death  of  Dr.  Ghanning. 

Ember  Picture,  An. 

Extreme  Unction. 

Fable  for  Critics,  A. 

Fatherland,  The. 

Finding  of  the  Lyre,  The. 

First  Snow-fall,  The 

Foreboding,  A. 

Fountain,  The. 

Freedom.     See  Stanzas  on  Freedom. 

God's  Ldve.     See  Incident  in  a  Railroad  Car,  An. 

"Goe,  Little  Booke!" 

Hand  in  Hand.  (7) 

Harvard  Commemoration  Ode.  See  Ode  Recited 
at  the  Harvard  Commemoration. 

Hebe. 

"Her  fittest  triumph  is  to  show  that  good."  See 
Legend  of  Brittany,  A. 

Heritage,  The. 

Hosea  Biglow's  Lament.  See  Biglow  Papers, 
The. 

In  a  Copy  of  Omar  Khayyaria. 

In  the  Twilight. 

Incident  in  a  Railroad  Car,  An. 

International  Arbitration. 

International  Copyright. 

"It  may  be  glorious  to  write."  See  Incident  in  a 
Railroad  Car,  An. 

January.     See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 

Jonathan  to  John. 

June.     See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 

June  Weather.     See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 

Legend  of  Brittany. 

Letter  from  a  Candidate  for  the  Presidency,  A. 
See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 

Letter  from  Mr.  Ezekiel  Biglow,  A.  See  Biglow 
Papers,  The. 

Letter  from  Mr.  Hosea  Biglow  to  the  Hon.  J.  T. 
Buckingham.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 

Lincoln.  See  Ode  Recited  at  the  Harvard  Com- 
memoration. 

Longing. 

Love. 

Lowell  Alphabet,  A. 

Martyr  Chief,  The.  See  Ode  Recited  at  the  Har- 
vard Commemoration. 

Mason  and  SlideU.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 

Midnight. 

Mr.  Ilosea  Biglow  to  the  Editor  of  "The  Atlantic 
Monthly."     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 

My  Garden  Acquaintance. 

My  Love. 

New  House,  The.  See  Unhappy  Lot  of  Mr.  Knott, 
The. 

Newspaper,  The.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 

Nightingale  in  the  Study,  The. 

Oak,  The. 

Ode  of  Thanks  for  Certain  Cigars,  An. 


496 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Lyly 


Lowell,  Jas.  Russell  {continued). 

Ode  Read  at  the  One  Hundredth  Anniversary  of 

the  Fight  at  Concord  Bridge. 
Ode  Recited  at  the   Harvard   Commemoration — 

July  21,  1865. 
Ode  to  France. 

Ode  to  Freedom.     See  Ode  Read  at  the  One  Hun- 
dredth Anniversary  of  the  Fight  at  Concord 
Bridge. 
On  the  Death  of  a  Friend's  Child. 
On  Himself.     See  Fable  for  Critics,  A. 
Once   to   Every  Man   and   Nation.     See   Present 

Crisis,  The. 
Origin  of  Didactic  Poetry,  The. 
Our   Country   Saved.     See   Ode    Recited   at    the 

Harvard  Commemoration. 
Our  Heritage.     See  Heritage,  The. 
Our  Lives  Should  Widen.  (?) 
Out  of  Doors.  (7) 
Palinode. 

Peace  on  Earth.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 
Pictures  from  Appledore. 
Poor  and  the  Rich,  The.     See  Heritage,  The. 
Pregnant  Comment,  The. 
Present  Crisis,  The. 
Protest,  The. 

Revolutionary  Hero,  A.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 
Rhcecus. 
Rose,  The. 

School-house,  The.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The, 
She  Came  and  Went. 
Shepherd  of  King  Admetus,  The. 
Singing  Leaves,  The. 
Sir   Launfal   and  the    Leper.     See  yision   of   Sir 

Launfal,  The. 
Sirens,  The. 

Slavery.     See  American  Tract  Society,  The. 
Song:  "Violet!  sweet  violet." 
Sonnet:  "Give  me  that  growth,"  etc. 
Sonnet:  "I  ask  not,"  etc. 
Sonnet:  "I  cannot  think  that  thou,"  etc. 
Sonnet:  "I  thought  our  love  at  full,"  etc. 
Sonnet:  "My  love,  I  have  no  fear,"  etc. 
Sonnet:  "Our  love  is  not  a  fading,"  etc. 
"Soul  in  grass  and  flowers.  A."     See  Vision  of  Sir 

Launfal,  The. 
Sphinx  (?). 

Spring.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 
Stanza  on   Freedom,   A.     See  Stanzas   on   Free- 
dom. 
Stanzas  on  Freedom. 

Summer.     See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 
Summer  Rain.     See  Summer  Storm. 
Summer  Storm. 
Sunthin'  in  the  [wr.  a]  Pastoral  Line.    See  Biglow 

Papers,  The. 
Telepathy. 

Tender  and  True.       See  Love. 
"They  are  .slaves  who  fear  to  speak."     See  Stan- 
zas on  Freedom. 
'Tis  Sorrow  Builds  the  Shining'  Ladder  up.    See 

On  the  Death  of  a  Friend's  Child. 
To  a  Pine  Tree. 
To  C.  F.  Bradford. 
To  H.  W.  L. 

To  Henry  Wadsworth  Longfellow.    See  To  H.  W.  L. 
To  His  Countrymen.     See  Fable  for  Critics,  A. 
To  John  Greenleaf  Whittier. 
To  the  Dandelion. 
To  W.  L.  Garrison. 
Token,  The. 
Under  the  Old  Elm. 
Under  the  Willows. 
Unhappy  Lot  of  Mr.  Knott,  The. 
Unreturning  Brave,  The.     See  Ode  Recited  at  the 

Harvard  Comfnemoration. 
Violet,  The.     See  Song:  "Violetl  sweet  violet." 
Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 
Washers  of  the  Shroud,  The. 
Washington.     See  Under  the  Old  EUm. 
Wendell  Phillips. 
What  Mr.  Robinson  Thinks.     See  Biglow  Papers, 

The. 
William  Lloyd  Garrison.     See  To  W.  L.  Garrison. 
Winter  Evening  Hymn  to  My  Fire,  A. 
Winter  Morning,  A.     See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 
Winter  Pictures.     See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The. 
"With  my  [thy-CJ  love  this  knowledge  too  was 
given.''     See  Sonnet:   "My   love,    I   have   no 
fear,"  etc. 
Without  and  Within. 
Yussouf. 
Zekle.     See  Biglow  Papers,  The. 


Lowell,  Mrs.  Maria  [White]. — Alpine  Sheep,  The. 
Morning-glory,  The. 

Song:  "O  bird,  thou  dartest  to  the  sun." 
Lowell  New  Moon. — Jealousy  in  the  Choir. 
Lowell,  Rob't  Traill  Spence. — After-comers,  The. 
Brave  Old  Ship,  the  Orient,  The. 
Massachusetts  Line,  The. 
Relief  of  Lucknow,  The. 
Lucas,  Dinah  B. —  In  the  Land  where  We  Were  Dream- 
ing.    • 
Luce,  A.  B.— De  Candy  Pull. 

"Lucette." — "If  you  wish  to  win  bright  laurels." 
Luders,  C:  H:— Four  Winds,  The. 
Haunts  of  the  Halcyon,  The. 
Heart  of  Oak. 
Memory. 

Mountebanks,  The.     See  Passing  Show,  The. 
Old  Thought,  An. 
Passing  Show,  The. 
Time  and  Eternity. 
Ludlow.  Fitz-hugh. — Billy. 
School.  The. 
Too  Late 
Ludlow,  Helen  W.— Little  White  Beggars,  The. 
Ludlow,  Dr.  Jas.  Meeker. — Brudder  Yerkes's  Sermon. 
Ludlum,  J.  K. — Edith's  Secret. 

Luke,  Mrs.  Jemima  Thompson. — Child's  Desire,  The. 
See  "Of  Such  is  the  Kingdom  of  Heaven." 
"I  think  when  I  Read  that  sweet  stoiy  of  old." 

See  "Of  Such  is  the  Kingdom  of  Heaven." 
"Of  Such  is  the  Kingdom  of  Heaven." 
Luke,  Loren  M. — Lines  on  a  Ring. 
Lummis,  C:  Fletcher. — Arizona  Jim.     See  Jim,  Arizo- 
na, 1885. 
Empty  Pocket,  The. 
Fellow  in  Greasy  Jeans,  The. 
Jim,  Arisona,  1885. 

My  Cigarette.    {At.  also  to  Chester  A.  Snyder.) 
My  Meerschaums. 
Lummis,  Dorothea. — Consensus  of  the  Competent,  A. 
Lundt,  Dorothy. — Dikkon's  Dog. 
Lunt,  G: — Requiem  [for  One  Slain  in  Battle]. 
Lunt,  Rev.  W :  Parsons. — Ship  of  State,  The. 
Lushington,  Sir  Franklin. — Alma. 
Fleet  under  Sail,  The. 
No  More  Words. 
Lushington,  H: — Tnkerman. 
Mom  of  Inkerman,  The. 
Road  to  the  Trenches,  The. 
To  the  Memory  of  Pietro  d'Alessandro. 
Luther,  Martin. — Cradle  Hymn. 
Little  Bird,  The. 

Martin  Luther's  Letter  to  His  I^ittle  Son. 
Martyr's  Hymn,  The. 

Mighty  Fortress  is  our  God,  A.     See  Psalm  Forty- 
six. 
Paraphrase  of  Luther's  Hymn.     See  Psalm  Forty- 
six. 
Psalm  Forty-six. 

Safe  Stronghold,  A.     See  Psalm  Forty-six. 
Luzader,  Malcolm  M. — Bachelor's  Hope,  The. 
Lyall,  Sir  Alfred  Comyns. — After  the  Skirmish. 

Hindoo's  Search  for  Truth,  A.     See  Meditations  of 

a  Hindu  Prince. 
Meditations  of  a  Hindu  [or  Hindoo]  Prince  [and 

Skeptic]. 
Night  in  the  Red  Sea,  A. 
Retrospection. 
Theology  in  Extremis. 
Lydgate,  J :— Description  of  the  Golden  Age.    ( Tr.)    See 
Falls  of  Princes. 
Dietary,  The;  or.  Rules  for  Health. 
Falls  of  Princes.     {Tr.) 
London  Lickpenny  [or  Lackpenny],  The. 
Vox  Ultima  Crucis. 
I,yle.  W: — A'  aboot  it. 

Bonny  Wee  Hoose,  The. 
Oor  Wee  Laddie. 
Scottish  Ballad,  A. 
Tit  for  Tat. 
Lyly,  J: — Alexander  and  Campaspe. 

Apelles'  Song.     See  Alexander  and  Campaspe. 
Arrows  for  Love.     See  Sapho  and  Phao. 
Cards  and  Kisses.     See  Alexander  and  Campaspe. 
"Cupid  and  my  Campaspe  play'd."     See  Alex- 
ander and  Campaspe. 
Cupid  and  Campaspe.     See  Alexander  and  Cam- 
paspe. 
Cupid  Arraigned.     See  Galatea. 
Daphne.     See  Midas. 
Endimion. 

Eupheus:  Of  the  Education  of  Youth,  etc. 
Fairy  Revels.     See  Endimion. 


497 


Lyly 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lyly,  J:  (.contimied). 
Galatea. 

Hymn  to  Apollo.     See  Midas. 
In  Praise  of  Daphne.     See  Midas. 
Love's  College.     See  Mother  Bomhie. 
Maydes  Metamorphosis,  The. 
Midas.  ^ 

Mother  Bomhie. 
Pan's  Song.     iSee  Midas. 

Phaon,  the  Ferryman.     See  Sapho  and  Phao. 
Sapho  and  Phao. 

Sappho's  Song.     See  Sapho  and  Phao. 
Song  of  Daphne  to  the  Lute,  A.     See  Midas. 
Song  of  the  Fairies.     See  Maydes  Metamorphosis, 

The. 
Song:    "Pan's   Syrinx   was   a   girl   indeed."     See 

Midas. 
Song  to  Apollo.     See  Midas. 
Song:     "What  bird  so  sings,  yet  does  so  wail?" 

See  Alexander  and  Campaspe. 
Songs  of  Birds,  The.     See  AJexander  and  Cam- 
paspe. 
Sprmg,  The.     See  Alexander  and  Campaspe. 
Spring's  Welcome.     See  Alexander  and  Campaspe. 
Syrinx.     See  Midas. 
Tongue,  The.     See  Eupheus:  Of  the  Education  of 

Youth. 
Urchins'  Dance,  The.     See  Maydes  Metamorpho- 
sis, The. 
"What  bird  so  sings,  yet  does  so  wail?"     See  Alex- 
ander and  C/ampaspe. 
Lyman,  G:  F. — My  Little  Tease. 

Lynch,  . — Silence. 

Lynch,   Anne  C.     See  Botta,  Mrs.  Anne  Charlotte 

[Lynch]. 
Lynch,    Michael. — Frontier    Wedding,     A — Almost    a 

Tragedy. 
Lynde,  Fs. — Phoebe's  Exploit. 

Lyndesay,  Sir  D: — Ane  Satyre  of  the  Threi  Estaitis. 
Carman's  Account  of  a  Lawsuit,  A. 
Dremie,  The. 

Hope  of  Immortality,  The. 
Monarchie,  The. 

Prologue  to  the  Dreme,  The.     See  Dreme,  The. 
Satire  on  the  Syde  Taillis — -Ane  Supplication  Di- 

rectit  to  the  Kingis  Grace. 
Testament  and  Complaynt  of  the  Papingo.The. 
Lynes,  Alfred  M. — Old  Winter,  Esquire. 
"Lynn,  Ethel."     See  Beers,  Mrs.  Ethelinda  [Eliot]. 
Lyon,  Milford  H. — Individualism  in  Society. 
Lyons,  Rev.  Jas.  Gilbourne. — Tempest  Stilled,  The. 

Triumphs  of  the  English  Language. 
Lyons,  J:  P. — Bagged  the  Wrong  Bird. 

Teaching  a  Sunday-school  Class. 
Lysaght,  E: — Kitty  of  Coleraine.     (At.)     See  Shan ly, 

C:  D. 
Lyster.  F: — At  the  Tunnel's  Mouth. 

Wreck  of  the  Solent,  The. 
Lyte,  H:  Fs. — Abide  with  Me. 

"Abide  with  me;  fast  falls  the  eventide."     See 

Abide  with  Me. 
Agnes. 

Jesus,  I  my  Cross  have  Taken. 
Lo,  We  Have  I>eft  All.     See  Jesus,   I  my  Cross 

have  Taken. 
Long  did  I  Toil. 
Lost  Love.  A. 
Psalm  LXXXIV. 
Secret  Place,  The. 
Lytle,  W:  Haines. — Antony  and  Cleopatra. 

Antony  to  Cleopatra.     See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 
"I  am  Dying,  Egypt."   See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 
Lyttelton,  G:,  Lord. — ^James  Thomson. 

Song: — "When  Delia  on  the  plain  appears." 
Tell  Me,  My  Heart  [,  if  This  be  Love].     See  Song: 
— "When  Delia  on  the  plain  appears." 
Lytton,  Sir  E:  Bulwer.     See  Bulwer-Lytton,  E: 
Lytton,  E:  Rob't  Bulwer-Lytton,  Earl  of  ("Owen  Mere- 
dith"). 
Adolphus,  Duke  of  Guelders. 
At  the  Opera.     See  Aux  Italiens. 
Aux  Italiens. 
Babylonia. 

Battle  of  Kossovo,  The.     (Tr.) 
Changes. 

Character  of  Lucile.     See  Lucile. 
Chess-board,  The. 
Dinner-hour,  The.     See  Lucile. 
Evening. 
First  Kiss,  The. 
Good-night  in  the  Porch. 
Indian  Love-song. 
Last  Remonstrance,  The. 


Lytton,  E:  Rob't  Bulwer-Lytton,  Earl  of  ("Owen  Mere- 
dith") (continued). 

Last  Time  I  Met  Lady  Ruth,  The. 

Legend  of  the  Dead  Lambs,  The. 

Love-letter,  A. 

Lucile. 

Midges. 

Mohammed. 

Night  in  Italy,  A.     See  Wanderer,  The. 

"No  stream  from  its  source  flows  seaward." 
See  Lucile. 

One  Isn't  Loved  Every  Day.     See  Aux  Itaiiens. 

Only  a  Shaving. 

Palingenesis.     See  Wanderer,  The. 

Parting  before  Sebastopol,  The.     See  Lucile. 

Portrait,  The. 

Possession. 

Remonstrance,  A.     See  Last  Remonstrance,  The. 

Retrospections. 

Sea  Side  Songs. 

Serenade:  "The  day  is  down  into  his  bower."    See 
Sea  Side  Songs. 

Since  We  Parted. 

Song: — "We  must  love  and  unlove,  and,  it,  may 
be. ' '     See  Wanderer,  The. 

Streets  of  London,  The. 

Tempora  Acta.     See  Babylonia. 

'Tis  the  White  Anemone. 

Under  Canvas.     See  Lucile. 

Utmost,  The. 

Wallenstein's  Death. 

Wanderer,  The. 

Wanderer,  The.     See  also  Retrospections. 

Want. 

White  Anemone.  The.     See  'Tis  the  White  Anem- 


M 

M..  A.  I.— On  the  Hillside. 

Trust.     See  On  the  Hillside. 
M.,  B. — 'Specially  Jim. 
M.,  J.  W. — Battle-ship  and  Torr)edo-boat. 
M.,  L.  F.— Life. 
M.,  M. — Christmas  Eve  Adventure,  A. 

Little  Snowflakes. 
Mabie,  Hamilton  W. — Value  of  Literature,  The. 
MacAIeese,  D. — Memory,  A. 
Macartney,    I^ouise.      See    Crawford,    Mrs.    Louise 

[Macartney]. 
McAthol,  H.  D. — Lassie's  Decision,  The. 
Macaulay,  T:  Babington  Macaulay,  Lord. — Acquittal 
of  the  Bishops,  The. 

Antiquity  of  the  Roman  Catholic  Church,  The. 

Armada,  The. 

Bacon's  Philosophy. 

Battle    of    Ivry,  The.     See  Ivry.  a  Song  of  the 
Huguenots. 

Battle  of  Lake  Regillus,  The. 

Battle  of  Moncontour,  T?he. 

Battle  of  Naseby,  The. 

Charles  the  First.     See  Milton. 

Church  of  Ireland,  The. 

Coming  of  Charlemagne. 

Copyright. 

Corn  Laws. 

Countfy  Clergyman's  Trip  to  Cambridge,  The. 

Courtesies  of  War,  The.     See  On  Mitford's  His- 
tory of  Greece. 

Death  of  Herminius,  The.       See  Battle  of  Lake 
Regillus,  The. 

Distrust  of  Liberty.     See  Milton. 

Epitaph  on  a  Jacobite. 

Established  Church  of  Ireland,  The.     See  Church 
of  Ireland,  The. 

Fate  of  Virginia,  The.     See  Virginia. 

Fruits  of  Liberty,  The.     See  Milton. 

Government   Should   Grow   with   the   People,   A. 
See  Parliamentary  Reform. 

Holland  House.     See  Lord  Holland. 

Horatius. 

Horatius  at  the  Bridge.     See  Horatius. 

Icilius  on  Virginia's  Seizure.     See  Virginia. 

Influence  of  Athens,  The.     See  On  Mitford's  His- 
tory of  Greece. 

Ivry,  a  Song  of  the  Huguenots. 

.Jacobite's  Epitaph,  A.     See  Epitaph  on  a  Jacobite- 
Jewish  Di.sabilities. 

John  Bunyan. 

Labor  Hours  Have  Limits.     See  Ten  Hours  Bill, 
The. 

Last  Buccaneer,  The. 


498 


AUTHOR  INDEX                                               MacCarthy 

Macaulay,  T:  Babington  Macaulay, Lorrf  (continued). 

McBride,  H.  Elliott  (continued). 

Letter  to  Thomas  Flower  Ellis,  March  30,  1831. 

Lament  of  Jacob  Gray,  The. 

Liberty.     See  Milton. 

Lines  Written  in  August,  1847. 

Leaving  Jonah. 
Little  Folks'  Opinions. 

Lord  Chatham's  Eloquence.      See    William  Pitt, 

Love's  Labor  not  Lost. 

Earl  of  Chatham. 

Marrying  for  Money. 

Maud's  Command;  or.  Yielding  to  Temptation. 

Lord  Holland. 

Marriage  of  Tirzah  and  Ahirad,  The. 

Meeting  of  Liquor  Dealers,  A. 

Men  Always  Fit  for  Freedom.     See  Milton. 

"Mind  Your  Own  Business." 

Milton. 

Mournful  Tale,  A. 

Muster,  The.     See  Horatius. 

Mrs.  Bolivar's  Quilting. 

Naaeby.     See  Battle  of  Naseby,  The. 

Mrs.  Smith's  Boarders. 

On  Limiting  the  Hours  of  Labor,  1846.     See  Ten 

Obtaining  a  Promise. 

Hours  Bill,  The. 

Old  Apple-woman,  The. 

On  Mitford's  History  of  Greece. 

Old  House  on  the  Hillside,  The. 

Opening  Scene  at  the  Trial  of  Warren  Hastings, 

Old  School  House,  The. 

The.     See  Warren  Hastings. 

Out  of  the  Depths. 

Parliamentary  Reform. 

Pain  in  the  Side,  A. 

Passage  of  the  Reform  Bill.     See  Letter  to  Thomas 

Pantaloon  Fight,  A. 

Flower  Ellis. 

Pine  Valley  Boys. 

Prophecy  of  Capys,  The. 

Public  Opinion  and  the  Sword.     <See  Parliamen- 

Poisoned Darkys,  The. 

Ralph  Coleman's  Reformation. 

tary  Reform. 

Recess  Speeches. 

Puritan[s],  The.     See  Milton. 

Reclaimed  Brother,  The;  or,  the  Chain  of  Roses. 

Reform  Bill,  The.     See  Speech  Delivered  in  the 

Reclaimed  Father,  The. 

House  of  Commons  on  the  2nd  of  March,  1831. 

Reclaimed ;  or,  Sunshine  Comes  at  Last. 

Reform  Bill  a  Second  Bill  of  Rights,  The.     See 

Reformed  Morman  Tippler,  The. 

Speech  Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons 

Rehearsal,  The. 

on  the  5th  of  July,  1831,  A. 

Returned  Brother,  The. 

Reform  Irresistible.     See  Speech  Delivered  in  the 

Reunion  of  Peter  and  Jane. 

House  of  Commons  on  the  16th  of  Dec,  1831, 

Riches  Have  Wings. 

A. 

Row  in  the  Kitchen,  A. 

Reform  that  You  May  Preserve.     iSee  Speech  De- 

Rumpus, A. 

livered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on  the  2nd 

Rumpus  in  a  Shoemaker  Shop,  A. 

of  March,  1831. 

Running  for  Office. 

Roman  Father's  Sacrifice,  The.     <See  Virginia. 

Scene  in  the  Backwoods  School. 

Spanish  Armada,  The.     See  Armada,  The. 

Scene  in  the  Bobtown  School. 

Speech  Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on 

Scene  in  the  Railway  Station. 

the  2nd  of  March,  1831,  A. 

Second  Prize,  The. 

Speech  Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on 

Silver  Dollar,  The. 

the  5th  of  July,  1831,  A. 

Society  for  Doing  Good,  A. 
Something  to  Our  Advantage. 

Speech  Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on 

the  16th  of  Dec,  1831,  A. 

Stage-struck  Blacksmith,  The. 
Striking  Oil. 

Ten  Hours  Bill,  The. 

Trial  of  Warren  Hastings,  The.     See  Warren  Hast- 

Striking  the  Blow. 

„.  ings- 

Temperance  Meeting,  A. 

Virginia. 

Test,  The. 

Virginius.     See  Virginia. 

Thanksgiving. 

Warren  Hastings. 

Trouble  in  a  Morman  Family. 

William  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. 

Uncle  Jacob's  Money. 

McBeath,  S.  Blair.— Danger  Signal,  The. 

Uncle  Sam's  Wars. 

Joe,  My  Pard,  the  Parson. 

Unfaithfulness. 

Told  by  the  Hospital  Nurse. 
McBride,  H.  Elliott. — Acting  Drunk. 

United  at  Last. 

Unwelcome  Guest,  The. 

Adalina's  Arrival;  or.  There's  no  Place  like  Old 

Vanity  Vanquished. 

Connecticut.                                                         • 

Viola's  Answer. 

Advertising  for  a  Husband. 

Who  Wears  the  Breeches? 

Another  Arrangement. 

Young  Debaters,  The. 

Arabella's  Poor  Relations. 

McBurney,  W:  B.  ("Carroll  Malone"). — Croppy  Boy, 

Arresting  the  March  of  Intemperance. 

The. 

Assisting  Hezekiah. 

Good  Ship  Castle  Down,  The. 

Awful  Boots. 

McCabe,  Jas.  Dabney. — Capture  of  Quebec,  The. 

Bad  Cold,  A. 

Defeat  of  General  Braddock,  The. 

Banishing  the  Bitters. 

MacCabe,  J:  A.— Why  my  Father  Left  the  Army.  (Arr.) 

Barney's  Resolution. 
Beer  Drinker's  Courtship. 

MacCabe,  W:  Bernard. — Irish  Philosopher,  The. 

McCabe,  W:  Gordon.— Christmas  Night  of  '62. 

Ben,  the  Orphan  Boy;  or,  "Honesty  is  the  Best 

Dreaming  in  the  Trenches. 

Policy. ' ' 

Unknown  Hero,  An. 

Boy's  Meeting,  A. 

M'Caig,  Donald.— Tramp,  The. 

McCall,  Patrick  Jos.— Herself  and  Myself. 

Closing  of  the  "Eagle,"  The. 

Commencing  to  Work. 

Old  Pedhar  Carthy  from  Clonmore. 

Courtin'  in  the  Country. 

McCall,  S:  Walker.— Political  Equality  the  Soul  of  the 

Curing  the  Borrowers. 

Republic. 

Dad  Says  So,  Anyhow. 

McCallom,    Dan'l    C— Water-mill,  The.      (At.)      See 

Don't  Marry  a  Drunkard  to  Reform  Him. 

DouDNBY,  Sarah. 

Elwood's  Decision. 

McCann,  J:  Ernest. — America. 

Farmers'  Meeting,  A. 

M'Cardell,  Roy  L. — Marsh  Symphony,  A. 

Frightened  Lodger,  A. 

M'Carroll,  Jas. — Dawn. 

Frog  Hollow  Lyceum,  The. 

Grey  Linnet,  The. 
Irish  Wolf,  The. 

From  Down  East. 

From  Punkin  Ridge.                               ' 
Going  to  a  New  Home. 

Royal  Race,  A. 

M'Cartee,  Jessie  G. — Death  of  Moses,  The. 

Goose  Hollow  Farmer's  Club. 

MacCarthy,   Denis  Florence. — Bell-founder,  The. 

Gumtown  Woman's  Association,  The. 

Bless  the  Dear  Old  Verdant  Land. 

Happy  Couple,  A. 

"Cease  to  do  Evil — Learn  to  do  Well." 

Happy  Family,  A. 

Foray  of  Con  O'Donnell,  The. 

Infernal  Machine,  The. 

Ireland. 

lyery  Inch  a  Gintleman. 

Irish  Wolf-hound,  The.     See  Foray  of  Con  O'Don- 

Jimtown Lyceum. 

nell,  The. 

John  Jones'  Fortune. 

Labor  Song.     See  Bell-founder,  The. 

Jonathan's  Daughter. 

Love  and  Time. 

Josiah's  Proposal. 

Spring  Flowers  from  Ireland. 

Just  from  the  City. 

Summer  Longings.                                                           j 

499 


McCarthy 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


McCarthy,  Justin. — "If  you  mark,  my  lord." 

Sensation  novel  has  had  its  day,  The. 
McCaskey,  J.  P. — Monument  of  Trees,  A. 
McCheyne,    Rob't:    Murray. — "I    feel    when    I    have 
sinned,    an    immediate    reluctance    to    go    to 
Christ."  0 

Jehovah  Tsidkenu. 
MoClure,  Alex.  KeUy. — Agencies  in  our  National  Pro- 
gress. 
McClure,  Bessie  B.— Trials. 
McClure,  C:  Floyd. — Lines  to  Her. 
MacColl,  Evan. — Child  of  Promise,  The. 

Glenorchy. 
McCoUum.  Elsie  Malone. — At  Uncle  Dock's. 

Aunt  Hannah's  Letter. 

My  Aunt  Maria. 
McConaughy,  Mrs.  J.  E. — Aunt  Debby's  Speculation. 

Discontented  Girls,  The. 

Genteel  and  Polite. 

Two  Ways  of  Doing  Good. 
McCook,  H:  Christopher. — Latimers,  The. 

"Settin'  up  with  Elder   McK'ag's    Peggy."     See 
Latimers,  The. 

Settin'   up  with   Peggy  McKeag.     See  Latimers, 
The. 
McCord,  J.  P.— "I  See  the  Point." 
McCrae,  G:  Gordon. — Column  of  July,  The. 

Forby  Sutherland. 
McCreery,   J.  L. — There  are  no  Dead.      See  There  is 
no  Death. 

There  is  no  Death.    (Wr.  at.  to  E:  Bulwer-I,ytton.) 
McCurdy,  Florence. — My  Lover. 

Only  a  Smile. 
McCutchen,  Marg.  Wilson. — I^ong  Ago,  The. 
McDermott  and  Trumble. — All  in  Der  Family. 

"Dark  Noight's  Business,  A." 

"Dot  Quied  Lotgings." 
M'Dermott,  B.  J. — Old  Friends. 

McDermott,    Hugh   Farrar. — Do   not   Sing   that  Song 
Again. 

Fire,  The. 
McDermott,  Jessie. — April. 
MacDermott.  Martin.— -Girl  of  the  Red  Mouth. 
McDonald.  Belle.— How  Girls  Study 
MacDonald,  Mrs.   Eliz.  [Roberts]. -rSong    of  Seasons, 

A- 
McDonald,  Fs.  C:— Bob  White.  ' 

Inconstancy. 

Song,  A:  "This  I  learned  from  the  birds." 
Truth-seekers,  The. 
Macdonald,  Frederika  Richardson. — New  Year's  Eve 

— Midnight. 
Macdonald,  G: — Adela  Cathcart. 

Anxiety.     See  Early  Bird,  The. 

At  the  Back  of  the  North  Wind. 

Baby.     See  At  the  Back  of  the  North  Wind. 

Better  Things.    (For  diff.  vera,  see  Hunt,  Leigh.) 

Cinderella:  or,  The  Glass  Slipper. 

Crimson  Throne,  The. 

Earl  o'  Quarterdeck,  The. 

Early  Bird,  The. 

Endurance. 

Father's  Hymn  for  the  Mother  to  Sing,  The. 

Foolish  Harebell,  The. 

God  Watcheth.     See  My  Child  Woke  Crying  from 

her  Sleep. 
If  the  Heart  be  True. 
"It  is  a  sair  thing  to  be  misjudged." 
Light. 
Like  a  Little  Child.     See  Father's  Hymn  for  the 

Mother  to  Sing,  The. 
Little  Diamond  and  the  Drunken  Cabman.     See 

At  the  Back  of  the  North  Wind. 
Little  White  Lily. 
Marquis  of  Lossie,  The. 
Mr.  Graham  and  Lady  Clementina.     See  Marquis 

of  Lossie,  The. 
My  Child  Woke  Crying  from  her  Sleep. 
O  Thou  of  Little  Faith. 
Over  the  Hill.     See  Tell  Me. 
Owl  and  the  Bell,  The. 
Paul  Faber,  Surgeon. 
Phantastes.     A    Faerie    Romance    for   Men    and 

Women. 
Pity  of  It,  The. 
Polly. 
Rest. 

Sea-shell,  The. 
Shadows,  The. 
Sir  Lark  and  King  Sun:  a  Parable.      See  .\dela 

Cathcart. 
Smoke,  The. 
Smoke  of  Sacrifice,  The.     See  Smoke,  The. 


Macdonald,  G:  (continued). 

Song:  "I  dreamed  that  I  woke  from  a  dream." 
See  Wilfrid  Cumbermede. 

Song:  "  'O  lady,  thy  lover  is  dead,'  they  cried." 
See  Phantastes.  A  Faerie  Romance  for  Men 
and  Women. 

Song  of  Winter  Days. 

Sonnet  Sequence,  A. 

Sweet  Peril.     See  Pity  of  It,  The. 

TeU  Me. 

That  Holy  Thing.     See  Paul  Faber,  Surgeon. 

This  Side  and  That. 

Up  in  the  Tree.  See  At  the  Back  of  the  North 
Wind. 

Waif.     See  Crimson  Throne,  The. 

What  Man  is  There  of  You? 

What  Would  You  See?  See  At  the  Back  of  the 
North  Wind. 

Where  did  You  Come  from  [,  Baby]?  See  At  the 
Back  of  the  North  Wind. 

Wilfrid  Cumbermede. 

Wind  and  the  Moon,  The. 

World  and  Soul. 

Yerl  o'  Waterydeck,  The.     See  Earl  o'  Quarter- 
deck,   The. 
Macdonald,  Hugh. — Birds  of  Scotland,  The. 
MacDoneU,  Agnes. — Incident,  An. 

Only  a  Soldier.     See  Incident,  An. 
M'Donnell,  W: — Manita. 
McDonough,  J.  C— Come  and  Hug  Me! 
McDowell,  Ed.  L. — Crushed  Tragedian,  The. 

Gypsy  Flower  Girl,  The. 
McDowell,  Jas. — Dangerous  Legislation. 
Macduff,  Rev.  J:  Ross. — "Plan  not,  nor  scheme,  but 

calmly  wait." 
McDuffie,  G: — -Political  Corruption. 

Popular  Elections.  See  Popular  Interest  in  Elec- 
tions. 

Popular  Interest  in  Elections. 
Mace,  Mrs.  Frances  Parker  [Laughton]. — Alcyone. 

Angelus,  The. 

Easter  Morning. 

In  the  Breaking  of  the  Day. 

"Only  Waiting." 

Succession,  The. 

Thy  Song. 
M'Evoy,  Bernard. — Photograph  in  a  Shop  Window,  A. 

Revised  Proofs. 
McFadon,  O.  E.     (Arr.) — Erminie. 

Lullaby:  "Bye-bye,  drowsiness  o'ertaking".  See 
Erminie. 

Lullaby:  "Lullaby  and  good-night." 
McFarland,  A. — Doctor  in  Love,  The.  ■* 

Macfarlane,  J:    ("John  Arbory"). — Grave  in  Samoa,  A. 

Midsummer  Madrigal,  A. 

Two  Angels.  The. 
McFetridge,  Rev.  W.  S. — Creeping  up    the  Stairs. 
McGaffey,  Ernest. — As  for  Me,  I  Have  a  Friend. 

As  the  Day  Breaks. 

Geronimo. 

I  fear  no  Power  a  Woman  Wields. 

"Mark." 

Rib,  The. 

"Rise,  A." 

Saint  Valentine's  Eve. 

Yellow  and  White. 
McGee,  T:  D'Arcy.— Celtic  Cross,  The. 

Dead  Antiquary  O'Donovan,  The. 

Exile's  Devotion,  The. 

Infelix  Felix. 

Irish  Wife,  The. 

Our  Ladye  of  the  Snow. 

Randall  M'Donald. 

Rest  at  Eventide. 

Salutation  to  the  Kelts. 

To  Duflfy  in  Prison. 
McGill,  Virgmia. — ^.sthetic  Craze,  The. 
M'Gill.  W:— Elixir  of  Life,  The. 
Macgillivray,  W:  (7). — Thrush's  Song,  The. 
McGlasson,   Eva  Wilder.     See  Brodhead,   Mrs.  Eva 

Wilder  [McGlasson]. 
McGuire,  Mary. — Exiled. 

Ganges,  The. 

Grandfather's  House. 

Little  Jo. 

Old  and  the  New,  The. 

Soldier's  Cradle-hymn,  The. 

Then  and  Now. 
McGuire.  Will  Victor.— College  "Oil  Cans." 

Coriolanus. 

Gambler's  Tale,  The. 

Siege  of  Calais.  The. 
McHale,  Frank. — Her  Photograph. 


500 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


McManus 


Machar,  Agnes  Maude. — Love  and  Faith. 

Mackenzie,  Rob't. — King  Cotton. 

Madonna  of  the  Entry,  A. 

M'Kenzie,  W:  P.— GabrieUe. 

Schiller's  Dying  Vision. 

Lullaby  Song. 

William  Ewart  Gladstone. 

Moonlight. 

Machlin,  C:— Man  of  the  World,  The. 

Mother's  Song,  The. 
Mackey,  Nettie.— Wine  and  Water. 

Utility  of  Booing,  The.     See  Man  of  the  World, 

The. 

McKinley,  W: — Citizen's  Responsibility,  A. 

Mcintosh,  J;  S. — Potency  of  English  Words. 

Duty  of  the  Hour,  The. 

Rats. 

Future  of  the  Philippines. 

Mclntyre,  Rev.  Rob't — Centennial  Speech. 
When  the  Cork  Goes  Down. 

Grant. 

Grant,  the  Soldier  and  Statesman. 

Mclntyre,  W.  T. — Easter  Phantasy,  An. 

Inaugural  Address,  Mar.  4,  1901. 

En  Garde. 

Nashville  Exposition,  The. 

To  Elizabeth. 

National   Progress.     See   Inaugural  Address. 

When  Bess  Goes  Out. 

Our  Duty  to  the  Philippines.     See  Future  of  the 

McK.,  F.— Harbor  Mine,  The. 

Philippines. 

Strike  the  Blow. 

Our   New   Relations.      See   Future   of   the   Phil- 

Mack, Henrietta    Robins.      See  Eliot,  Mrs.  Henri- 

ippines. 

etta  Robins  [Mack]. 
Mack,  J.  .!.,  Jr.— "As  Ye  Sow." 

President  McKinley's  Last  Address  [or  Speech]. 

Republican  Press,  The. 

Rondel:  "I'd  draw  the  knot  as  tight  as  man  can 

Republic's  Duty,  The. 

draw. ' ' 

Reunited  Country,  A. 

Mackail,  J:  W: — Etruscan  Ring,  An. 

Washington  and  the  Nation. 

Mackay,  C: — Be  as  Thorough  as  you  Can.     See  Vicar's 

Washington's   Foreign  Policy. 

Sermon,  The. 

Mackintosh,  Sir  Jas. — Defence    of    M.    Peltier    for    a 

Bit  of  a  Sermon,  A.     See  Vicar's  Sermon,  The. 

Libel  on  Napoleon. 

Bridge  of  Glen  Aray,  The. 

England  and  America. 

Building  of  the  House,  The. 

England's   Relations   to   America.     See    England 

Clansman  to  his  Chief,  The.     See  Maclaine's  Child ; 

and  America. 

a  Legend  of  Lochbuy-Mull. 

Revolutionary  Desperadoes. 

Clear  the  Way. 

Mackintosh,  Newton. — "Cleopatra,  who  thought  they 

Cleon  and  I. 

maligned  her." 

Daily  Work. 

Fin  de  Si6cle. 

Days  that  are  Gone.  The. 

McKnight,  G: — Euthanasia. 

Deed  and  a  Word,  A.     See  Little  and  Great. 

In  Unison. 

Differences. 

Kinship. 

Dream  of  the  Reveler,  The. 

Live  while  You  Live. 

Earl  Norman  and  John  Truman. 

M'Lachlan,  Alex. — Bobolink. 

Eternal  Justice. 

Indian  Summer. 

Golden  City,  The. 

Man  who  Rose  from  Nothing,  The. 

Gone. 

MacLaren,  Ian.     See  Watson,  Dr.  J: 

Good  Time  Coming,  The. 

McLaughlin,  Maurice  E. — And  the  Band  Played. 

Gourd  and  the  Pine,  The.     (Tr.) 

Conductor's  Story,  The. 

Happy  Love. 

If  I  were  a  voice. 

Parlor  Lamp,  The. 

Romance  of  a  Rose. 

I  Lay  in  Sorrow,  Deep  Distressed. 

Maclean,  Mrs.  Clara  Victoria  [Dargan]. — Ruined  Cot- 

I Love  My  Love. 

tage,  The.  (?)                                  ,           ^        .  . 

Inkermann. 

McLean,  Judge  J: — Moral  Power  the  Most    Formid- 

Inquiry, The. 

able. 

Invocation  to  Poesy,  An. 

Maclean,  Kate  Seymour. — Ballad  of  the  Mad  Ladye. 

King  and  the  Nightingales,  The. 

Bird  Song. 

Little  and  Great. 

Silent  Land,  The. 

Love  Extravaganza,  A. 

Maclean,  Mrs.  Letitia  Eliz.  [Landon]  (Mrs.  G:  Maclean). 

Maclaine's  Child;  a  Legend  of  Lochbuy-Mull. 

— Ancestress,  The. 

Miller  of  [the]  Dee,  The. 

Awakening  of  Endymion,  The. 

Mountain  Torrent,  The. 

Banquet.  The. 

New  Version  of  "A  Man's  a  Man  for  a'  That." 

Bonds  of  Affection. 

Now. 

Cedars  of  Lebanon,  The. 

Old  Tubal  Cain.     See  Tubal  Cain. 

Creseentius. 

,  O  Ye  Tears! 

Death  and  the  Youth. 

Phantoms  of  St.  Sepulchre,  The. 

Drooping-willow,  The. 

Philosophy  of  Sport,  The. 

Felicia  Hemans. 

J^  Praise  of  Woman. 
Protestations. 

Female  Convict,  The. 

Grasp  of  the  Dead,  The. 

Quarrel.  The. 

Isabel's  Grave. 

Reveler's  Dream,  The.     See  Dream  of  the  Rev- 

Little Red  Riding  Hood. 

eler,  The. 

Night  at  Sea. 

Ship  on  Fire,  The. 

"(^h,  if  thou  lovest  and  art  a  woman." 

Sisyphus. 

"She  was  sent  forth." 

Small  Beginnings.     See  Little  and  Great. 

Shepherd  Boy,  The. 

Supplication.     See  Maclaine's  Child;  a  Legend  of 

Violet.  The. 

Lochbuy-Mull. 

"Violets!  deep-blue  violets."     See  Violet,  The. 

Tell  Me,  Ye  Winged  Winds.     See  Inquiry,  The. 

Wind,  The. 

Three  Preachers,  The. 

McLean,  Mary  Hollands.. — Senior  Schedule,  A. 

Triumph  of  Truth. 

McLean,  Nancy  Patton. — Unseen  Angel,  An. 

Tubal  Cain. 

McLean,  Sally  [m-  Sarah]  Pratt.      See  Greene,  Mrs. 

Under  the  Holly  Bough. 

Sarah  Pratt  [McLean]. 

Vicar's  Sermon,  The. 

Maclellan,  Rev.  . — Poor  Man  and  the  Fiend,  The- 

What  Might  Be  Done. 

McLellan,  I:— Battle  of  Eylau,  The. 

WiUiam  the  Conquerer. 

Death  of  Napoleon. 

You  and  I. 

Fall  of  the  Indian. 

Mackay,  Eric. — Ecstacy. 

Fields  of  War,  The. 

In  Tuscany. 

Lost  Mexican  City,  The. 
New  England's  Dead. 

Mary  Arden. 

Waking  of  the  Lark,  The. 

Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.     See  Pierpont,  J: 

McKay,  Jas.  T. — Whispering  Gallery,  The. 

MacLeod,  Mrs.  Eliz.  S. — Alexander  Mackenzie. 

Mackay,  Marg. — Asleep  in  Jesus. 

Macleod,   Norman. — "Perish  policy  and   cunning." 

Mackay,  Minnie. — Life  Brigade,  The. 

Rhymes  for  Hard  Times.     See  Trust  in  God. 

McKeever,  J: — Comical  Dun,  A. 

Trust  in  God. 

McKeever,  S.  A. — Oil  on  the  Brain. 

McM.,  S.  J.— Valentine,  A. 

MacKellar,  T:— To  a  Troublesome  Fly. 

McManus,  S.  B. — Flicker  on  the  Fence,  The. 

McKenzie,  Alex.— Truth  of  the  Gospel,  The. 

My  Little  Bo-peep.     {Also  at.  to  Frank  E.  Holliday.) 

Mackenzie,  May  R. — Flibbertygibbet  and  Me. 

Perfect  Faith,  A. 

501 


McMaster 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


McMaster,    Guy    Humphreys. — Carmen  Bellicosum. 

Old  Continentals.  The. 

Song  of  the  War.     See  Old  Continentals,  The. 
MacmUlan's  Magazine. — Half-hearted. 

Somebody's  Mother.  (  v 

McMullen,  Mrs.  Addie  V. — Birch  Tree,  The. 

Plant  the  Oak.     ^ 
McNabb,  May  Rapley. — Auntie's  Education. 

Brother  Jim. 

Cross  at  Santa. 

How  Sad. 

Mrs.  Santa  Claus. 

When  Papa  puts  His  Great  Coat  on. 

Where  Honeysuckles  Grow. 
McNally,  Leonard. — "Robin  Hood." 
McNaughton,  J.  H. — BurningShip,  The.  SeeOnnalinda. 

Onnalinda. 
Macneil,  Hector. — Mary  of  Castle  Cary. 
Macneil,  Mary.     See  Fenollosa,  Mrs.  Mart  [McNeil]. 
Macneill,  A.  D.— Sea-gull,  The. 
McNulty.  J:  A. — Frenchman's  Dilemma,  The. 
McNulty,  Rev.  R.  R. — "Through  court,  and  through 

mart,  and  through  college." 
Macon,  J:  Alfred. — Cabin  Love-song. 

Dancing  in  the  Flat  Creek  Quarters. 

Evening  Song  on  the  Plantation. 

Observations  by   Rev.    Gabe   Tucker.     See   Rev. 
Gabe  Tucker's  Remarks. 

Rev.  Gabe  Tucker's  Remarks. 

Terpsichore    in    the    Flat    Creek    Quarters.     See 
Dancing  in  the  Flat  Creek  Quarters. 

Theology  in  the  Quarters. 

Uncle  Gabe  at  the  Corn-shucking. 

Uncle  Gabe  on  Church  Matters. 
MoPhelim,  E:  J.— Elia. 

Outlaws,  The. 
MacPhenson,   Jas.  ("Ossian").  —  Address  to  the  Sun. 
See  Carthon. 

Carthon. 

Comal  and  Galbina.     See  Fingal. 

Fingal. 

Ossian's  Address  to  the  Sun.     See  Carthon. 
M'Pherson,  J: — In  the  Woods. 

Mayflower,  The, 
Macqueen,  Lucy  Hayes. — Reasonable  Man,  A. 
Macrae,  D: — Four  Brothers,  The. 

Leap-year  Wooing, 

Railway  Chase,  The. 
McRay,  Rae. — "Somebody's." 
MoSparren,  Will  F.— Huskin',  The. 

School-day,  A. 
McVean,  Mrs.  L.  C. — Paving  the  Streets. 
McVey,  Paul  B. — Her  Dilemma. 

McWight,  A. — Honest  Rum-seller's  Advertisement,  An. 
Macy,  Arthur. — Rollicking  Mastodon,  The. 
Macy,  J.  C— Two  Old  Soldiers,  The. 
Macy,  J:  Albert. — Literary  Lottery. 

Vagabonds,  The. 
Madison,  Jas. — Advice  to  My  Country. 

American  Innovations. 

Responsibility  of  Our  Country,  The. 
Magee,  L:  Jones. — District  Telegraph  Boy,  The. 

Spring  Lament,  A. 

Magill,  Rev.  Mr. . — "Are  You  a  Mason?" 

Maginn,  W: — Irishman,  The.     See  Irishman  and  the 
Lady,  The. 

Irishman  and  the  Lady,  The. 

St.  Patrick  of  Ireland,  my  Dear! 

Soldier-boy,  The. 

Waiting  for  the  Grapes. 
Maguire,  Rob't. — Belfry  of  Ghent,  The. 
Mahoney,    Fs.    Sylvester    ("Father    Prout"). — Bells 
of  Shandon,  The. 

Flight  into  Egypt,  The. 

Malbrouck.     (Tr.) 

Obsequies  of  David  the  Painter.     (Tr.) 

Popular  Recollections  of  Bonaparte.     (Tr.) 

Shandon  Bells,  The.     See  Bells  of  Shandon,  The. 

Song  of  the  Cossack  to  his  Horse,  The. 
Mail  and  Express. — At  Set  of  Sun.     See  Our  Daily 
Reckoning. 

Our  Daily  Reckoning. 
Mainwaring,  Eliz.  W. — Coronation,  The. 
:Mair,    C: — Buffalo    Herds,    The.     See    Tecumseh:    a 
Drama. 

How  Burlington  was  Saved. 

Humming  Bird,  The. 

lena's  Song.     See  Tecumseh:  a  Drama. 

Innocence. 

Lefroy  in  the  Forest.     See  Tecumseh:  a  Drama. 

Tecumseh:  a  Drama. 
J         Untamed. 

Voice  of  the  Pines,  The. 


Maitland,  M.  A. — Fought  and  Won. 

True  Victory.     See  Fought  and  Won. 
Mallett,  D: — Funeral  Hymn,  A. 

William  and  Margaret. 
Mallon,  Isabel  A. — "Uncle  Todd." 
Mallory,   Sir  T: — Le   Morte   d' Arthur. 

Sir  Lancelot.     See   Le   Morte   d'Arthur. 
"Malone,  Carroll."     See  McBurney,  W:  B. 
Malone,  Walter. — He  Who  Hath  Loved. 

October  in  Tennessee. 
Manchester,  C.  M. — McKinley's  Funeral  Address. 
Manchester,  Ellen  R. — ^LuUaby,  Rest. 
Mangan,  Jas.  Clarence. — Dark  Rosaleen. 

Dawning  of  the  Day,  The. 

Death  of  Hofer,  The.     (Tr.) 

Gone  in  the  Wind. 

Hofer  the  Tyrolese.     See  Death  of  Hofer,  The. 

Karamanian  Exile,  The. 

Kathaleen  Ny-Houlahan. 

Lament  for  the   Princes  of    Tir-Owen  and    Tir- 
Connell. 

Minstrel,  The.     (Tr.) 

Nameless  One,  The. 

Napoleon's  Midnight  Review.     (Tr.) 

O'Hussey's  Ode  to  the  Maguire. 

Shapes  and  Signs.         * 

Siberia. 

Soul  and  Country. 

Sunken  City,  The.     (Tr.) 

Time  of  the  Barmecides,  The. 

Vision  of  Connaught  in  the  Thirteenth  Century,  A. 

Woman  of  Three  Cows,  The. 

Written  in  a  Nunnery  Chapel. 
Mann,  Prof.  B.  Pickman. — "Project  of  connecting  th 

planting  of  trees.  The." 
Mann,  Horace. — Dangers  to  Our  Republic. 

Education. 

Evils  of  Ignorance,  The. 

Free  Schools. 

Ignorance  a  Crime  in  a  Republic.     See  Ignorance 
in  our  Country  a  Crime. 

Ignorance  in  our  Country  a  Crime. 

Let  there  be  Light. 

Opposite  Examples. 

Orient  Yourself. 

Thoughts  for  Young  Men. 
Manning,  Rev.  Jacob  M. — Address  to  the  Soldiers. 
Manning,    Silvia. — Ambitious.     See    Concert    Recita- 
tion. 

Concert  Recitation. 

Speech  for  a  Little  Boy. 
Manning,  W.  E. — Beneath  the  Beam. 
Mannyng,  Rob't,  of  Brunne. — Praise  of  Women. 
Manrique,  Don  .Jorge.— Coplas  de  Manrique. 

Footprints  of  Decay.     See  Coplas  de  Manrique. 

Life.     See  Coplas  de  Manrique. 

Relentless  Time.     See  Coplas  de  Manrique. 
Mansfield,  R: — Eagle's  Song,  The. 
Mansfield,  W:  Murray,  Lord. — Attempts  to  Bias  Judg- 
ment in  Case  of  Wilkes. 

Motives  of  Action. 

Worth  of  Present  Popularity. 
Manville,  Marion.     See  Pope,  Mrs.  Marion  [Manvili.e]. 
Mapes,  Walter  de. — Jovial  Priest's  Confession,  The. 
Marble,  Earle. — House  not  Made  with  Hands,  A. 

Spelling  in  the  Nursery. 

Wabash  Violets. 
Marc,  Friedrich. — To  Mj^  Cigar. 
March,   C:   W. — Description   of   Webster's  Speech   in 

Reply  to  Hayne. 
March,  Rev.  Dr.  Dan'l  (7). — "Pupil  of  the  eye  is  the 

portal." 
Marcus  Aurelius.      See    Antoninus,  Marcus    Aure- 

LIUS. 

Marion,  Frank. — She  was  Travelling  All  Alone. 
Mark,  Rickman. — Boy  Decides,  The. 

Snow  in  Town. 
Markham,  Edwin. — At  Little  Virgil's  Window, 

Flying  Mist,  The. 

Joy  of  the  Hills,  The. 

Joy  of  the  Morning. 

Last  Furrow,  The. 

Lincoln,  the  Great  Commoner.     See  Lincoln,  the 
Man  of  the  People. 

Lincoln,  the  Man  of  the  People. 

Little  Brothers  of  the  Ground, 

Look  into  the  Gulf,  A. 

Lyric  Seer,  The.     See  Poet-lore, 

Man  with  the  Hoe,  The. 

My  Comrade. 

Poet-lore. 

Poetry. 

Whirlwind  Road,  The. 


502 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Mason 


Markham,  T:  R.— "I  have  sought  to   counsel  you  in 

.  your   perplexities." 
Marlowe,   Christopher. — Ambition.     See   Tamburlaine 
the  Great. 

Doctor  Faustus. 

Edward  II. 

Faustus's    Last    Speech    on    Earth.     See    Doctor 
Faustus. 

Hero  and  Leander. 

King  Edward  the  Second.     iSee  Edward  II. 

Last    Soliloquy    of    Faustus,    The.     See    Doctor 
Faustus. 

Milk-maid's  Song,  The.     See  Passionate  Shepherd 
to  his  Love,  The. 

Pa.ssionate  Shepherd  to  his  Love,  The. 

Shepherd  to  His  Love,  The.     See  Passionate  Shep- 
herd to  his  Love,  The. 

Tamburlaine   the   Great. 
Marlyn,  Eliza  L. — God's  Wonders. 
Marot,  Clement. — Portrait,  The. 

To  Anne. 
Marriott,  J: — How  Marriage  is  Like  a  Devonshire  Lane. 
Marryat,   Captain  Frd'k. — Captain  Stood  on  the  Car- 
ronade.  The.     <See  Old  Navy,  The. 

Old  Navy,  The. 
Marsden,  W:— What  is  Tiaie? 
Marsh,  Annette. — -School-girl's  Troubles,  A. 
Marsh,  C:  Capron. — Death  of  the  Old  Clock,  The. 

Down  the  Road  to  Sally's. 

Homeward  Road,  The. 

Toast,  The.  , 

Marsh,  G:  Perkins. — Man  and  Nature. 
Marsh,  Marie  More. — Emergency,  An. 

From  the  Window. 

My  Dog  and  I. 
Marsh,  Rev.yi.  W. — Brita's  Wedding. 

Jephtha's  Daughter. 

Race  for  Life,  A. 
Marshall,  Anna  P. — Ben  Hazzard's  Guests. 
Marshall,  E: — After  the  Charge  at  La  Quasina. 
Marshall,  Frank  A. — Admiral  Dewey. 
Marshall,    T:  (?),    Dean    of    Gloucester. — Stability  of 
Virtue,  The. 

Sturdy  Rock,  for  all  his  Strength,  The.     See  Sta- 
bility of  Virtue,  The. 
Marshall,  T:  Francis. — Temperance  Pledge,  The. 
Marston.  J: — Philosophy.     See  Scholar  and  his  Dog,  A. 

Scholar  and  his  Dog,  A. 

To  Detraction. 

To  Everlasting  Oblivion. 
Marston,    J:   Westland.— Death-ride,   The. 

Donna  Diana. 

Marie  de  Meranie. 

Parting    of    King    Philip    and    Marie,    The.     See 
Marie  de  Meranie. 

Pride   against   Pride.     See  Donna   Diana. 
Marston,  Philip  Bourke. — After  Many  Days. 

After  Summer. 

At  Last. 

At  the  La.st. 

Ballad  of  Brave  Women,  A. 

Garden  Fairies. 

Greeting,  A. 

Her  Pity. 

How  My  Song  of  Her  Began. 

If  you  Were  Here. 

Love  and  Music. 

Love's  Music. 

No  Death. 

Old  Churchyard  of  Bonchurch,  The.  , 

Parting  Words. 

Rose  and  the  Wind,  The. 

Summer  Changes. 

To  All  in  Haven. 

To  the  Spirit  of  Poetry. 

Vain  Wish,  A. 

What  the  Rose  Saw. 
Marston,  Westland.     See  Marston,  J:  Westland. 
Martial     (Marcus    Valerius    Martialis). — His     Book's 
Patron. 

His  Bookseller's  Address. 

Stingy  Friend,  The. 
Martin,  Ada  Louise. — Sleep. 
Martin,  Arthur  P. — Bush  Study,  a  la  Watteau,  A. 

Cynic  of  the  Woods,  The. 

Love  and  War. 

Romance  in  the  Rough,  A. 
Martin,  E:  Sanford. — Egotism. 

Girl  of  Pompeii,  A. 

Little  Brother  of  the  Rich,  A. 
Martin,  G: — Laleet. 

Shelley. 

To  My  Canary  Bird. 


Martin,     Theodore. — Alpine      Minstrelsy.     (,Tr.)      See 
William  Tell.— Friedrich  Schiller. 
Veiled  Statue  at  Sais,  The.     (Tr.) 
Martin,    W:    Wesley. — Apple    Blossoms. 

Apple   Orchard   in    the   Spring,   An.     See   Apple 
Blossoms. 
Martineau,    Harriet.— -"Beneath     this     starry    arch." 
See  On,  On,  Forever. 
On,  On,  Forever. 
Martley,  J: — Budget  of  Paradoxes,  A. 

Valley  of  Shanganagh,  The. 
Martyn,  M.  E.— Late  Love. 
"Marvel,  Ik."     See  Mitchell,  Donald  G. 
Marvell,  Andrew. — Bermudas  [,  The].     See  Song  of  the 
Emigrants  in  Bermuda. 
Clorinda  and  Damon. 
Cromwell  and  King  Charles.     See  Horatian  Ode 

upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ireland,  A. 
Damon  the  Mower. 
Death  of  Charles  I.,  The.     See  Horatian  Ode  upon 

Cromwell's  Return  from   Ireland,  A. 
Death   of  the  White   Fawn.     See   Nymph  Com- 

Slaining  for  the  Death  of  her  Fawn,  The. 
ague  between  Thyrsis  and  Dorinda,  A. 

Drop  of  Dew,  A. 

Emigrants  in  [the]  Bermudas,  The.     See  Song  of 
the  Emigrants  in  Bermuda. 

Epitaph,  An:   "Enough;   and   leave   the   rest   to 
fame." 

Execution  of  Charles  I.     See  Horatian  Ode  upon 
Cromwell's  Return  from  Ireland,  A. 

Garden,  A.  (?) 

Garden,  The. 

Garden  Scene,  A.     See  Garden,  The. 

Girl  Describes  Her  Fawn,  The.     See  Njonph  Com- 
plaining for  the  Death  of  her  Fawn,  The. 

Horatian  Ode  [upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ire- 
land], A  [or  An]. 

In  Exile.   See  Song  of  the  Emigrants  in  Bermuda. 

Lover  to  the  Glow-worms,  The.     See  Mower  to 
the  Glow-worms,  The. 

Mower  to  the  Glow-worms,  The. 

Nostradamus's  Prophecy. 

Nymph  Complaining  for  the  Death  of  her  Fawn, 
The. 

Nymph  Mourning  her  Fawn,  The.      See   Nymph 
Complaining  for  the  Death  of  her  Fawn,  The. 

On  Milton's  Paradise  Lost. 

Picture  of  Little  T.  C.  in  a  Prospect  of  Flowers, 
The. 

Picture  of  T.  C,  The.     See  Picture  of  Little  T.  C. 
in  a  Prospect  of  Flowers,  The. 

Poet's  Retirement,  The.     See  Garden,  The. 

Song  of  the   Emigrants  in   Bermuda. 

'Thoughts  in  a  Garden,     See  Garden,  The. 

To  His  Coy  Mistress. 

Two  Kings.     See  Horatian  Ode  upon  Cromwell's 
Return  from  Ireland,  A. 

What  Wondrous  Life  is  This  I  Lead?     See  Gar- 
den, The. 

Young  Love. 
Marvin,  Dwight  M. — Land  of  Song,  The. 

Morning. 
"Mary  of    the  Nation."     See  Downing,  Mrs.  Ellen 

Mary  [Patrick]. 
Mary,  Queen  of  Hungary. — Prayer. 
Mary,  Queen    of   Scots    (Mary   Stuart). — Farewell  to 

France. 
Marzials,  Frank  T: — Death  as  the  Fool. 

Death  as  the  Teacher  of  Love-lore. 

Orpheus   and   the    Mariners   Make   Answer.     See 
Two  Sonnet-songs. 

Sirens  Sing,  The.     See  Two  Sonnet-songs. 

Two  Sonnet-songs. 
Marzials,  Th^ophile.— Carpe  Diem. 

Last  Night. 

May  Margaret. 

Pastoral,  A. 

Twickenham  Ferry. 
Mason,  Mrs.  Agnes  Louisa  [Carter]. — Whenever  a  Little 

Child  is  Bom. 
Mason,  Mrs.  Caroline  Atherton  [Briggs]. — Caged. 

Child-song,  A. 

"En  Voyage." 

Eventide. 

June. 

Lost  and  Found. 

Martha  or  Mary? 

Not  Yet. 

Open  Secret,  An. 

Reconciliation. 

Waking. 

When  I  am  Old. 


503 


Mason 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Mason,  E.  B. — Darktown  Nine,  The. 
Mason,  Jonathan. — Columbus  to  Ferdinand. 
Mason,  Mary  Augusta. — My  Little  Neighbor. 

Scarlet  Tanager,  The. 
Mason,  Walt. — Columbian  I^egend,  A. 
Mason,  W:  E. — Centennial  Speech. 
Massey,  Gerald. — Angels. 

Babe  ChristabeR 

Battle  of  Inkerman,  The. 

Christie's  Portrait. 

Death-ride,  The. 

Deserter  from  the  Cause,  The. 

Epigram. 

His  Banner  over  Me. 

Looking  into  the  Future. 

Lowly  Life,  The. 

Nelson. 

No  Jewell'd  Beauty. 

O,  Lay  Thy  Hand  m  Mine,  Dear! 

Our  Wee  White  Rose. 

Parting. 

Promised    Land    To-morrow,    The.     See    To-day 
and  To-morrow. 

Robin  Burns. 

Song:  "All  glorious  as  the  rainbow's  birth" 

Sweet  Song  of  Songs,  A. 

'"Tis  weary  watching  wave  by  wave." 

To-day  and  To-morrow. 
Massillon,  Jean  Baptiste. — Immortality. 
Massinger,   Philip. — Maid   of  Honor,   The. 

New  Way  to  Pay  Old  Debts,  A. 
Masson,  Tom. — All-[a]round   Intellectual  Man,  An. 

At  Last. 

Desolation. 

Her  Fifteen  Minutes. 

Modern  Girl,  The.     See  We  All  Know  Her. 

Only  a  Woman. 

Price,  The. 

Taking  the  Veil. 

We  All  Know  Her. 
Masterson,  Kate. — April  Fools. 

Her  Ideal. 
Matchett,  Ella  Lindsay. — Blind  Flower  Girl  of  Pom- 
peii, The. 
Mather,  Wallace  E. — Scarecrow,  The. 
Mathers,  E.  A. — Robin  Redbreast. 
Matheson,  A. — Into  the  Light. 
Matheson,  E. — For  Love's  Sweet  Sake. 

New  Woman,  The. 

Wilt  Thou  be  Long? 
Mathews, •. — Bashful  Man,  The.    {At.)   See  Smith, 

J  AS. 

Mathews,  Albert.- — To  an  Autumn  Leaf. 
Mathews,  C:- — Nothing  in  It. 
Mathews,  Cornelius. — Poet,  The. 
Mathews,  Joanna  Hooe. — Daisy's  Faith. 

Mischievous  Daisy. 
Matthews,  — — . — Goody  Grim    versus    Lapstone.  (?) 

Mr.  Rogers  and  Monsieur  Denise.  (?) 
Matthews,  Annie  Laura. — "Wild  raged  the  tempest." 
Matthews,  Brander.     See  Matthews,  [Jas.]  Brander. 
Matthews,   Fannie  A.     Silent  Partner,  The. 
Matthews,  [Jas.]  Brander. — American  Girl,  An. 

Ballade  of  Tobacco,  The. 
Matthews,  Jas.  Newton. — Coward,  The. 

When  Jimmy  Comes  from  School. 
Matthison,  Arthur.— Little  Hero,  The.  (?) 

Sentence  of  Death  on  the  High  Seas. 

Stowaway,  The.     See  Little  Hero,  The. 
Matthisson,  Friedrich  von. — I  Think  of  Thee. 
Maughan,  H:  Neville. — Song  of  St.  Francis,  A. 
Maulsby,  D.  L. — Visions. 

Maupassant,    Guy    de — Government     by    Epigrams. 
See  Sur  I'Eau. 

Necklace,  The. 

Piece  of  String,  The. 

String,  The.     See  Piece  of  String,  The. 

Sur  I'Eau. 
Maury,  Matthew  Fontaine. — Air  and  Sea,  The. 

Oratory.  (?)  _ 

"There  is  a  river  in  the  Ocean." 
Max,  Ruth. — Just  Graduated. 
Maxcy,  Jonathan. — First  American  Congress,  The. 

Lo.ss  of  National  Character. 
Maxwell,  W:  Hamilton. — Hector  O'Halloran. 

Matrimonial  Adventures  of  Dick  Macnamara.    See 
Hector  O'Halloran. 
May,  Caroline. — Boy's  Rights. 

"Every  flower  is  sweet  to  me." 
"May,  Edith."     (See  Drinker,  Mrs.  Anna. 
May,  Julia  H. — Scholar's  Convention,  The. 
"May,  Sophie."     See  Clarke,  Rebecca  Sophia. 


Mayhew,  Jonathan. — Repeal  of  the  Stamp  Act,  The. 
Mayne,  Jasper. — Time. 

"Time  is  a  feathered  thing."     See  Time. 
Mayne,  J: — Helen  of  Kirkconnell. 

Logan  Braes. 
Mazzini,  Jos. — Address  to  the  Young  Men  of  Italy. 
Mead,  Leon. — Wish-bone,  The. 
Meader,  Sarah. — At  the  Camp-fire. 
Meagher,  T:  Fs. — Appeal  to  Ireland. 

Condition  of  Ireland,  The. 
,     Examples  for  Ireland. 

Fate  of  European  Kings,  The. 

Meagher's  Defense. 

On  being  Found  Guilty  of  Treason.     See  Meagher's 
Defense. 

Patriotism. 

Sword  and  a  Nation's  Rights,  The. 
Medical  World. — Doctor's  Story,  A  [or  The]. 
Meehan,  J:  Jas. — Dead  Player,  The. 

Grant  at  Rest. 

Race  of  the  "Oregon,"  The. 
Meek,  Alex.  Beaufort  ("Alex.  Smith"). — "All  things 
have  something  more  than  barren  use." 

Among  My  Books. 

Balaklava. 

Barbara.     *See  Life-drama,  A. 

Beauty. 

Duty  and  Fame. 

Dying  King,  The. 

Forerunners.     See  Life-drama,  A. 

Historic  Trees. 

"I  will  go  forth  'mong  men,  not  mailed  in  scorn." 

Lady  Barbara. 

Life-drama,  A. 

Love. 

"Man  does  not  plant  a  tree  for  himself,  A." 

Minor  Poet,  A.     See  Life-drama,  A. 

Miss  Nightingale. 

Night  before  the  Wedding,  The;  or.  Ten  Years 
After. 

"Saddest  thing  that  can  befall  a  soul,  The." 

Sea-marge.     See  Life-drama,  A. 

To . 

Meetkerke,  C.  E. — Shadows. 

Meigs,  Mary  Noel. — June. 

Melcombe,  G:  Bubb  Dodington,  Lord. — Shorten  Sail. 

Meleager. — Heliodore  Dead. 

Vow,  The. 
Mellen,  Grenville. — Bunker  Hill. 

Entrance  of  Columbus  into  Barcelona. 

In  Memory  of  the  Pilgrims. 

Lonely  Bugle  Grieves,  The.     See  Ode  on  the  Cele- 
bration of  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill. 

Ode  on  the  Celebration  of  the  Battle  of  Bunker 
Hill. 
Mellen,  H:  J.— Invocation  to  Tobacco. 
Melone,  Luck. — Mule  and  the  Bees,  The. 
Melroy,  L.  I. — Say! 
Melville,  Ada  M. — My  Little  Newsboy. 
Melville,  Herman. — College  Colonel,  The. 

Crossing  the  Tropics. 

Eagle  of  the  Blue,  The. 

Enviable  Isles,  The. 

On  the  Slain  at  Chickamauga. 

Running  the  Batteries. 

Stonewall  Jackson. 

Uninscribed   Monument   on   One   of   the   Battle- 
fields of  the  Wilderness,  An. 
Melville,  Mark. — Mike  McGaffaty's  Dog. 
Menaid,  J.  Gertrude. — New  Santa  Claus,  A. 
Mendum,  Georgiana. — Tahawus. 

M^nnis,  Sir  J:— -Sir  John  Suckling's  Campaign.     {At.) 
Mercer,  Marg. — Exhortation  to  Prayer. 
Merchant  and  Manufacturer. — High  School  Girl,  The. 
Merchant  Traveler. — Fashionable. 

Hindrances  to  Happiness. 

Tramp's  Philosophy,  A. 
Meredith,  G: — All  Other  Joys.     See  Modem  Love. 

Ballad  of  the  Past  Meridian. 

Coin  of  Pity,  The.     See  Modern  Love. 

Dirge  in  Woods. 

Ferdinand  and  Miranda.     See  Ordeal  of  Richard 
Feverel,  The. 

Head  of  Bran,  The. 

Hiding  the  Skeleton.     See  Modern  Love. 

Juggling  Jerry. 

Lark  A.scending,  The. 

Lines:  "Love  within  the  lover's  breast." 

Love  in  the  Valley. 

Love's  Grave.     See  Modern  Love. 

Lucifer  in  Starlight. 

Martin's  Puzzle. 

Modem  Love. 


504 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Miller 


Meredith,  G:  {continued). 

One  Twilight  Hour.     See  Modern  Love. 

Ordeal  of  Richard  Feverel,  The. 

Past  Meridian.     See  Ballad  of  the  Past  Meridian, 

Phoebus  with  Admetus. 

Question  Whither,  The. 

Spirit  of  Shakespeare,  The. 

Tardy  Spring. 

Two  Maisks,  The. 
"Meredith,  Owen."     iSee  Lttton,  E:  Rob't  Bolweb- 

Lytton,  Earl  of. 
Meredith,  Sir  W: — On  Frequent  Executions. 
Meredith,  W:  Tuckey. — Farragut. 
Merington,  Marguerite. — Hey  Nonny  No. 
Merivale,  Herman  C: — ^Etate  XIX. 

Darwinity. 

New  Birth,  The. 

Ready,  Ay,  Ready. 

Thaisa's  Dirge. 

White  Pilgrim,  The. 
Merivale,  J:  Herman. — Vow,  The.     (Tr.) 
Meriwether,  Mrs.  Lide. — Prohibition's  Bugle  Call. 
Merriam,  Mattie  E. — Little  Boy,  A. 
Merrick,  Jas. — Chameleon,  The. 

Psalm  Twenty-three. 
Merrill,  C:  Edmund,  Jr.— Comfort. 

Persioos  Odi. 
Merrill,  Helen  M. — At  Edgewater. 

Blue  Flower,  The. 

Promise  of  Spring,  The. 

Sun-gold. 

Merrill,  ^abel  S.— Golden  Scepter,  The. 
Merrill.  Marg.  M. — Soul  of  the  Violin,  The. 
Merriman,  Effie  W. — Pards. 
Merritt,  W:— Girl  in  Gray,  The. 

Une  Robe  Angelique. 
Merry  [or  Cherry],  .1.  W. — -Shells  of  Ocean. 
Messares,  Waldo. — Ben  Hassan's  Dream. 
Messenger,  Rob't  Hinckley. — Give  Me  the  Old. 

Winter  Wish,  A.     See  Give  Me  the  Old. 
Metastasio,  Pierre  A.  D.  B. — Without  and  Within. 
Metcalfe,  Jas.  Stetson. — Full  Suite,  The. 

Mystery,  A. 

To  a  Would-be  New  Woman. 
Meteors,  The. — To  the  Tobacco  Pipe. 
Methodist  Recorder. — Negro  Prayer,  A. 
Mevers,  Rob't  C.  V. — -Bill  Jepson's  Wife 
"  Bo. 

Bonnet  for  My  Wife,  A. 

Brother  Ben. 

Burton's  Curtains. 

Cadwalader  Fry  and  his  Theory. 

Colonel's  Orders,  The. 

Coward,  The. 

Curtsy,  The. 

Day  before  the  Wedding,  The. 

Desperate  Encounter,  A. 

Did  You  ever  See  a  Ghost? 

Don  Crambo. 

Don  Pedro  and  Fair  Inez. 

Drummer  of  Company  G,  The. 

Dynamite  Plot,  A. 

Epitaph,  The. 

Eunice. 

For  Christmas'  Sake. 

Four  Knights,  The. 

Fra  Fontl. 

From  the  Iron  Gate. 

Gabe's  Christmas  Eve. 

Game  of  Chess,  A. 

Go. 

Granddad's  Polka.  -. 

Grandfather's  Clock. 

Horse-thief  Jim. 

If  I  should  Die  To-night.     {At.  also  to  Arabella 
E.  Smith.) 

In  the  Elevator. 

Interrupted  Proposal,  An. 

.Tamie. 

.lewels  of  My  Aunt,  The. 

Lady  from  the  West,  The. 

Letters  for  Mr.  Smith. 

Little  Dago  Girl,  The. 

Little  Joe. 

Lizzie. 

Long-lost  Nephew,  The. 

Lost  on  the  Desert. 

Masque,  The. 

Matrimonial  Mix,  A. 

Me  and  Jones. 

On  the  Prairie. 

Our  C'lumbus. 

Pair  of  Gloves,  A. 


Meyers,  Rob't  C.  V.  {continued). 

Parrots,  The. 

Pink  Perfumed  Note,  A. 

Practical  Jokes. 

Quicksand,  The. 

Raggles. 

Revenge,  A. 

Sally. 

Saved  by  a  Boy. 

Sentinel  of  Metz,  The. 

Smith's  Bargain  Day. 

Soft  Black  Overcoat  with  a  Velvet  Collar,  A. 

Song-bird  of  the  Princess,  The. 

Strange   Harvest,   The. 

Strange  Land,  The. 

Tommy  and  the  Crocodile. 

Top  Landing,  The. 

Under  an  Umbrella. 

Veteran,  A. 

When  Grandfather  Went  to  Town. 

Where's  My  Hat. 

You  Must  be  Dreaming. 

Ze  Moderne  Elnglish. 
Meynell,  Alice. — Changeless. 

Lady    of    the    Lambs,    The.     See    Shepherdess, 
The. 

Modern  Poet,  The. 

Renouncement. 

Shepherdess,  The. 

Song:  "My  fair,  no  beauty  of  thine  will  last." 

Song  of  the  Night  at  Daybreak. 
Meyrick,  Geraldine. — Triumph  of  Cupid,  The. 
Michael,  F.  M. — Monarch  of  the  Old  Regime,  A. 
Michelangelo.     See   Buonarkotti,  Michelangelo. 
Michelet,  Madame  — — . — Spare  the  Trees. 
Michelet,  Jules. — History  of  France. 

Joan  of  Arc.     See  History  of  France. 
Michell,  N. — ^Progress. 

Michigan  Christian  Advocate. — Little  Feller,  A. 
Michigan    University    Magazine.— Sophomore's    Solil- 
oquy, The. 

Mickiewicz, . — Moor's  Revenge,  The 

Mickle,   W:    Jas.— Sailor's    Wife,    The.      {At.)      See 
Adam,  Jean. 

There's  Nae  Luck  about  the   House.   {At.)     See 
Sailor's  Wife,  The. 
Mickle,  W:  Julius. — Cumnor  Hall. 

Lusiad,  The.     See  Camoens,  Luts  de. 
Middleton,  T:— Charity.  (?) 

Epigram  on  Waller. 

On  the  Death  of  Burbage. 

What  Love  is  Like. 
Mifflin,  Lloyd.— April.     See  Fields  of  Dawn,  The. 

Autumn.     See  Fields  of  Dawn,  The. 

Demon  Ship,  The. 

Doors,  The. 

Fiat  Lux. 

Fields  of  Dawn,  The. 

Flight,  The. 

He  Made  the  Stars  Also. 

Metamorphosis. 

Milton. 

Night. 

Sesostris. 

Ship,  The. 

Sovereigns,  The. 

Summer.     See  Fields  of  Dawn,  The. 

Take  Back  Your  Words. 

Theseus  and  Ariadne. 

To  a  Maple  Seed. 

To  an  Old  Venetian  Wine-glass. 

To  the  Milkweed. 
Mignonette,    May. — Over    the  Hills    from    the  Poor- 
house. 
Miles,  Alfred  H.— City  Tale,  A. 

Nat  Ricket  at  Cricket. 

Timothy  Grey. 
Miles,  G:  H.— Bill  and  I. 

Ivory  Crucifix,  The. 
Miles,  Sarah  Eliz. — Looking  unto  Jesus. 
"Milford  Bard."     See  Loffland,  J. 
Mill,    J.    Stuart. — Liberty    in    Government.     See    On 
Liberty. 

On  Liberty. 

Uses  of  Poetry  and  Art. 
Millard,  Frances. — Runaway  Ride,  A. 
Miller,  A.  P.— Thunder  Storm,  A. 
Miller,  Mrs.  Alex.  McVeigh.— -Cherished  Letters. 

Parson  Policy. 

Waiting  at  the  Church  Door. 
Miller,  Alice  Duer. — Song:  The  Light  of  Spring. 

Sonnet,  A:     "Dear,  if  you  love  me,  hold  me  most 
your  friend." 


505 


Miller 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Miller,  Cincinnatus  Hiner  ("Joaquin  Miller"). — "Ah, 
there  be  souls  none  understand."  See  Ship 
in  the  Desert,  The. 

Army  of  the  Potomac. 

At  the  Grave  of  Walker.     .See  With  Walker  in 
Nicaragua.     • 

Battle  Flag  at  Shenandoah,  The. 

Bear  Story. 

Bravest  Battle,  The. 

Bravest  Battle  that  ever  was  Fought,  The.     See 
Bravest  Battle,  The. 

By  the  Pacific  Ocean. 

By  the  Sun-down  Seas. 

Columbus. 

Columbus — Westward.     See  Columbus. 

Comanche. 

Como. 

Crossing  the  Plains. 

Cuba  Libre. 

Dead  in  the  Sierras. 

Dead  Millionaire,  The. 

Defence  of  the  Alamo,  The. 

Don't  Stop  at  the  Station  Despair. 

Dreamers      See  Ship  in  the  Desert,  The. 

Flag  at  Shenandoah,  The.     See  Battle   Flag  at 
Shenandoah,  The. 

Hope. 

How  We  Hung  Red  Shedd. 

Ideal  and  the  Real,  The. 

In  a  Gondola. 

Is  it  Worth  While? 

"Is  it  worth  while  that  we  jostle  a  brother."     See 
Is  it  Worth  While? 

Juanita. 

Judge  Not. 

Kit  Carson's  Ride. 

Last  Supper,  The. 

Luther. 

"Oh,  thou  to-morrow  1  Mystery!"     See  Songs  of 
the  Soul. 

Old  Soldier  Tramp,  The. 

People's  Song  of  Peace,  The.   See  Song  of  the  Cen- 
tennial. 

Peter  Cooper. 

Port  of  Ships,  The.     See  Columbus. 

Poveri!  Poveris! 

Sea  of  Fire,  The. 

Ship  in  the  Desert,  The. 

Sierras  [from  the  Sea — C],  The. 

Sioux  Chief's  Daughter,  The. 

Soldiers'  Home,  Washington,  The. 

Song  of  the  Centennial. 

Songs  of  the  Soul. 

Storm  in  Venice,  A.     See  Ideal  and  the  Real,  The. 

Tantalus:  Texas. 

That  Gentle  Man  from  Boston  Town. 

To  Florence.     See  To  the  Jersey  LUy. 

To  Russia. 

To  the  Jersey  Lily. 

"To  the  Lion  of  St.  Mark.     See  Venice. 

Tribute  to  Columbus,  A.     See  Columbus.  • 

Twilight  at  Nazareth. 

Twilight  at  the  Heights  [Hights— C.]. 

Vaquero. 

Venice. 

Voice  of  the  Dove,  The. 

Westward  Ho! 

William  Brown  of  Oregon. 

With  Walker  in  Nicaragua. 

Woman. 
Miller,  Mrs.  Emily  Huntington. — April  Fools. 

Bluebird,  The. 

Bluebird's  Song,  The.     See  Bluebird,  The. 

Coast-guard,  The. 

Declamation  by  a  Little  Tot. 

Easter  Lilies. 

Empty  Nest,  The. 

Grandpa  and  Bess. 

Her  World. 

Letter  to  Santa  Claus. 

Little  May. 

Music.     See  I..ittle  May. 

Music  of  Nature.     See  Little  May. 

My  Beacon. 

My  Good-for-Nothing. 

Once  on  a  Time. 

Sermon  from  a  Thorn-apple  Tree,  A.     See  Thorn- 
apple. 

Song  of  the  Crickets,  The. 

Thorn-apple. 

True  Immortality,  The. 

What    are   You   Good    For?     See   My    Good-for- 
Nothing. 


Miller,  Mrs.  Emily  Huntington  (continued). 

What  Boys  are  Good  For.  See  My  Good-for- 
Nothing. 

When  I  am  a  Man. 
Miller,  Freeman  E. — Angelus,  The. 
Miller,  Mrs.  H.  M.— Echo  Dell. 

Miller,  Hugh. — Babie,  The.     (.At.)     See  Rankin.  Jere- 
miah E. 

Beauty  of  Nature. 

Nature. 
Miller,  Jos.  W. — Song  to  the  Trees. 
"Miller,  Joaquin."     See  Miller,  Cincinnatus  Hiner. 
MiUer,  Kathe.— -Stevenson's  Birthday. 
Miller,  Theodore  D.  C— How  We  Take  It. 
Miller,  T:— Old  Baron,  The. 

Tale  of  a  Leg,  A. 

To  George  M . 

MiUer,  W:— Willie  Winkie. 

Wonderfu'  Wean,  The. 
Miller,  W:  E.— Mustered  Out.     See  Wounded. 

Wounded. 
Millholen,  Herbert  Eugene. — To  a  Picture. 
Milliken,  R:  Alfred. — Groves  of  Blarney,  The. 
Mills,  Frank  V.— Heroism  of  Horatio  Nelson,  The. 
Mills,  Harry  E. — Sod  House  in  Heaven,  The. 
Mills,  H: — Dimes  and  Dollars. 
Mills,  J.  Harrison. — Over  the  Range. 
Milman,  H:  Hart. — Bound  upon  th'  Accursed  Tree. 

Bridal  Song.     See  Fall  of  Jerusalem,  The. 

Burial  Hymn. 

Chorus:  "King  of  kings,"  etc. 

Christ  Crucified. 

Death  of  Yajnadatta.     See  Ramayana,  The. 

Descent  of  the  Ganges,  The.     See  Ramayana,  The. 

Fall  of  Jerusalem,  The. 

Hebrew  Wedding.     See  Fall  of  Jerusalem,  The. 

Hymn:  "Brother,  thou  art  gone  before  us."  See 
Burial  Hymn. 

Hymn  for  the  Sixteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity. 

Jewish  Hymn  in  Babylon. 

Nativity,  The. 

Ramayana,  The.     (Tr.) 

Ride  on  in  Majesty.     See  Christ  Crucified. 

When    our   Heads   are    Bowed    with    Woe.      See 
Hymn  for  the  Sixteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity. 
Milne,  Ruth  Parsons. — Clarissa  Laughs. 
Milne,  Saidee  V. — Automatic  Woman.  The. 
Milnes,  R:  Monckton.     See  Houghton,  Lord. 
Milton,  J: — Adam  and  Eve.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Adam  Describing  Eve.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Adam  Describing  the  Creation  of  Eve.  See  Para- 
dise Lost. 

Adam  to  Eve.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Adam's  Account  of  His  Creation.  See  Paradise 
Lost. 

Adam's  Morning  Hymn  in  Paradise.  See  Paradise 
Lost. 

Apostrophe  to  Light.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Arcades. 

Arms  and  the  Muse.  See  When  the  Assault  was 
Intended  to  the  City. 

At  a  Solemn  MusicFk]. 

Battle  of  the  Angels.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Belial's  Address,  Opposing  War.  See  Paradise 
Lost. 

Blindness.     See  On  His  Blindness. 

Christmas.  See  On  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Na- 
tivity. 

Christmas  Hymn.  ,  See  On  the  Morning  of  Christ's 
Nativity. 

Comus[:  a  Mask]. 

Concorii.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Death  of  Samson,  The.     See  Samson  Agonistes. 

Demeanor  of  Books,  The. 

Departure  from  Paradise,  The.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Destruction  of  the  Philistines.  See  Samson  Ago- 
nistes. 

Discord.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Echo.     See  Comus. 

Epitaph  on  Shakespeare.  See  Epitaph  on  the 
Admirable  Dramatic  Poet,  W.  Shakespeare, 
An. 

Epitaph  on  the  Admirable  Dramatic  Poet,  W. 
Shakespeare,  An. 

Eternal  Spring,  The.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Eve  to  Adam.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Evening.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Evening  in  Paradise.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Eve's  Lament.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Eve's  Lamentation.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Eve's  Mirror.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Eyeless  at  Gaza.     See  Samson  Agonistes. 

Faithful  Angel,  The.     See  Paradise  Lost. 


506 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Mitchell 


Milton,  J:  {continued). 

Fame.     See  Lycidas. 

Flowers.     See  Lycidas. 

Hail,  Holy  Light.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Haunt  of  the  Sorcerer,  The.     See  Comus. 

Hymn,  The.     See  On  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Na- 
tivity. 

Hymn  of  Praise  [by  Adam  and  Eve].     See  Paradise 
Lost. 

Hymn  of  our  First  Parents.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Hymn  on  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity.     See 
On  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. 

Hymn  on  the  Nativity.     See  On  the  Morning  of 
Christ's  Nativity. 

Hymn  to  the  Nativity.     See  On  the  Morning  of 
Christ's  Nativity. 

II  Penseroso. 

"Immortal  amaranth,  a  flower  which  once."     See 
Paradise  Lost. 

Incantation.     See  Comus. 

Invocation  from  Paradise  Lost.    See  Paradise  Lost. 

Invocation  to  Light.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Lady  in  Comus,  The.     See  Comus. 

Lady  Lost  in  the  Wood,  The.     See  Comus. 

L' Allegro. 

Land  of  Eternal  Summer,  The.     See  Comus. 

Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont,  The.     See  On  the  Late 
Massacre  in  Piedmont. 

Light.     See  Comus. 

Light.     See  also  Paradise  Lost. 

March  of  the  Rebel  Angels.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Lycidas. 

May  Morning.     See  Song  on  May  Morning. 

Moloch.      See  Paradise  Lost. 

Moloch  4;o  the  Fallen  Angels.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Morning.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Morning  Hymn   [in   Paradise],   A.     See  Paradise 
Lost. 

Nymph  of  the  Severn,  The.     See  Comus. 

Ode  on  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity.     See  On 
the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. 

Old  and  Blind.     (Wr.  at.)     See  Howell,  Eliz.  L. 

On  His  Being  Arrived  at  the  Age  of  Twenty-three. 

On  His  Blindness. 

On  His  Deceased  Wife. 

On  His  Own  Blindness.     See  To  Cyriack  Skinner. 
(1655.) 

On  May  Morning.     See  Song  on  May  Morning. 

On  the  Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont. 

On  the  Lord  General  Fairfax.     ' 

On  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. 

On  the   Oxford  Carrier.     See  On  the  University 
Carrier. 

On  the  University  Carrier. 

On  Time. 

"On  to  the  sacred  hill."     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Out  of  Adversity.     See  Samson  Agonistes. 

Paradise  Lost. 

Paradise  Regained. 

Raphael's  Accoiint  of  the  Creation.     See  Paradise 
Lost. 

"Ring  out,  ye  crystal  spheres."    See  On  the  Morn- 
ing of  Christ's  Nativity. 

Sabrina  [Fair].     See  Comus. 

Samson  Agonistes. 

Samson  on  His  Blindness.     See  Samson  Agonistes. 

Satan.     See  Paradise  I^ost. 

Satan's    Encounter    with    Death.     See    Paradise 
Lost. 

Satan's   Speech    to   his    Legions.      See    Paradise 
Lost. 

Saviour's  Reply  to  the  Tempter,  The.     See  Para- 
dise Regained. 

Scene  in    Paradise,  A.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Song:  "Nymphs  and  shepherds,  dance  no  more." 
See  Arcades. 

Song:  "O'er  the  smooth  enamelled  green."     See 
Arcades. 

Song:  "Sweet  echo,  sweetest  nymph,  that  livest 
unseen."        See  Comus. 

Song:  A  May  Morning.     See  Song  on  May  Morn- 
ing. 

Song  of  Praise.     See  Paradise  Lost. 

Song  on  May  Morning. 

Sonnet:   On   his  Blindness.      See   On   his  Blind- 
ness. 

Sonnet:  On  the  Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont.     See 
On  the  Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont. 

Sonnet:  To  Sir  Henry  Vane.     See  To  Sir  Henry 
Vane,  the  Younger. 

Sonnet.    To  the  Lord  General  Cromwell,  etc. 

Sonnet  to  the  Nightingale. 

Spirit's  Song  to  Sabrina.     See  Comus. 


Milton,  J:  (continued). 

Spirit-shepherd,  The.     See  Comus. 

Temptation  of  the  Vision  of  the  Kingdoms  of  the 

Earth,  The.     See  Paradise  Regained. 
"These    eyes,    though    clear."     See    To    Cyriack 

Skinner.     (1655.) 
To  Be  no  More.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
To  Christina  of  Sweden. 
To  Cyriack  Skinner  [(1655)— C.l. 
To  Cyriack  Skinner  [(1656)— C.J. 
To  Echo.     See  Comus. 
To  Mr.  Lawrence. 
To  Sir  Henry  Vane,  the  Yoimger. 
To  the  Lady  Margaret  Lay. 
To  the  Lord  General  [Cromwell].     See  Sonnet  to 

the  Lord  General  Cromwell. 
To  the  Nightingale.     See  Sonnet  to  the  Nightin- 
gale. 
"To  the  Ocean  now  I  fly."     See  Comus. 
True  Glory.     See  Paradise  Regained. 
Truth. 

Two  Songs.     See  Arcades. 
When  the  Assault  was  Intended  to  the  City. 
"Whence  and  what  art    thou,  execrable   shape." 

See  Paradise  Lost. 
Wisdom  and  Goodness  of  God,  The.     See  Paradise 

Lost. 
World  Beautiful,  The.     See  Paradise  Lost. 
Mines,  Flavel  Scott. — Reproach,  A. 

World's  Verdict,  The. 
Mink,  Eva  K. — Pierre  La  Forge's  Dream. 
Minot,  J:  Clair. — Little  Parable,  A. 
Minshall,  W.  E.— Golden  Wedding,  The. 
Minster,  Verend. — Carnival  of  Sports,  A. 
Minton,  H:  C. — "But  the  higher  departments  of  moral 
and  religious  thought." 
"But  there  is  a  limit,  both  to  the  necessity  and  the 

capacity  of  this  power  of  invention." 
"History  of  mankind  as  well  shows  forth  the  uni» 

formity  of  law.  The." 
"Present  age,  exultant  oVer  the  many  recent  won- 
derful triumphs,  The." 
"Spirit  of  free  thought  may  be  seen  in  every  de- 
partment of  active  life,  The." 
"This   system   and   order  everywhere   forms  the 
basis  of  all  science." 
Mirabeau,  Gabriel   Honor^   Riquetti,  Comte   de. — Ad- 
dress to  the  Assembly  of  Noblesse. 
Against  the  Nobility  and  Cler^  of  Provence. 
Defence  against  the  Charge  of  Corruption. 
Disobedience  of  Magistrates,  The. 
Eulogium  on  Franklin. 

In  Reply  to  Those  Who  Denied  the  National  As- 
sembly the  Legitimate  Powers  of  a  National 
Convention. 
Necker's  Financial  Plan. 
On  Being  Suspected  of  Receiving  Overtures  from 

the  Court. 
Union  of  Church  and  State,  The. 
Mftchel,    Ormsby   MacKnight. — Astronomer's   Vision, 
The.     (Tr.) 
First  Predicted  Eclipse,  The. 
First  Revolution  of  the  Heavens  [Witnessed  by 

Man],  The. 
Immensity  of  Creation,  The.     See  Infinity  of  the 

Universe,  The. 
Infinity  of  the  Universe,  The. 
Problem  of  the  Universe,  The. 
Study  of  Astronomy,  The. 
Mitchell,  A.  L. — Dispute,  A. 
Mitchell,  Mrs.  Agnes  E. — To  Barbary  Land. 

When  the  Cows  Come  Home. 
Mitchell,  Donald  G.  ("Ik  Marvel"). — Dream  Life. 
My  Farm  of  Edgewood. 
Rain  in  the  Garret.     See  Dream  Life. 
Reveries  of  a  Bachelor. 
Sea,  The.     See  Reveries  of  a  Bachelor. 
Water  in  Landscape.     See  My  Farm  of  Edgewood. 
Mitchell,  Grace. — Lullaby. 
Mitchell,  J.  Stevenson. — Ode  to    Independence    Hall, 

An. 
Mitchell,  Lalia. — Afore  Yo'  Daddy  Comes. 
Mitchell,  Langdor  Elwyn. — Fear. 
Imperial  Soul,  The. 
"Mary,  the  mother,  sits  on  the  hill." 
Purpose.     See  To  a  Writer  of  the  Day. 
Sweets  that  die. 

Technique.     See  To  a  Writer  of  the  Day. 
To  a  Writer  of  the  Day. 
To  One  Being  Old. 
Wayside  Virgin,  The:  France. 
Written  at  the  End  of  a  Book. 
Mitchell,  R.  W.— Game  of  Marbles,  A. 


507 


Mitchell 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Mitchell,  Dr.  STilas]  Weir. — Decanter  of  Madeira,  aged 
86,  to  George  Bancroft,  aged  86,  Greeting. 

Ghost  of  a  Sensation,  The. 

Idleness. 

Mr.  Kris  Kringle. 

Of  One  who  seenoed  to  have  Failed. 

On  a  Boy's  First  Reading  of  "King  Henry  V." 

Quaker  Graveyard,  The,. 

Shriving  of  Guinevere,  The. 

To  a  Magnola  Flower  in  the  Garden  of  the  Arme- 
nian Convent  at  Venice. 
Mitchell,  Walter  F.— Tacking  Ship  off  Shore. 
Mitchell,  W:  H.— In  Msop's  Vein. 

Palace  o'  the  King,  The. 
Mitford,  J: — Roman  Legions,  The. 
Mitford,  Mary  Russell. — Rienzi.     See  Rienzi's  Address 
to  the  Romans. 

Rienzi  to  the  Romans.     See  Rienzi's  Address  to 
the  Romans. 

Rienzi's  Address  [to  "the  Romans]. 
"Mix.  Parmenas."     See  Kelley,  Andrew  V. 
Mobile  Register. — Driving  a  Hen. 
Moffatt,  Marie  L. — Border  Land,  The. 
Moggridge,  G:— Man  in  the  Fustian  Jacket,  The. 
Moir,  D:  Macbeth. — Casa  Wappy. 

Caaa's  Dirge. 

Mansie  Waugh's  First  and  Last  Play. 

Rustic  Lad's  Lament  in  the  Town,  The. 

Spring  Morning.   (?) 
Moliere,  Jean  Baptist*  Poquelin  de. — Debtor  and  the 
Dun,  The. 

Dorcas  and  Gregory.     See  Physician  in  Spite  of 
Himself,  The. 

Imaginary  Sick  Man,  The.     See  Le  Malade  Imagi- 
naire. 

Le  Malade  Imaginaire. 

Physician  in  Spite  of  Himself,  The. 
MoUoy,  J.  L.^Race  for  Life,  A. 
Molloy,  Mary  A. — Suggested  by  Plato's  Bust  in  the 

Logic  Room. 
Mommsen,  Theodore. — History  of  Rome. 

Monarchy  of  Csesar,  The.     See  History  of  Rome 
Moncrieff,  W.  T. — Characteristic  Address. 

Parson  and  the  Corkscrew,  The.  (?) 
Monkhouse,   Cosmo. — Bristol   Figure,   A. 

Dead  March,  A. 

De  Libris. 

Night  Express,  The. 

Secret,  The. 

Song:  "Who  calls  me  bold  because  I  won  my  love.' 

Spectrum,  The. 

"There  once  was  an  old  man  of  Lyme." 
Monod,  Theodore. — None  of  Self  and  All  of  Thee. 
Monroe,  Harriet. — Commemoration       Ode,       World's 
Columbian  Exposition. 

Democracy.     See  Commemoration  Ode. 

Farewell,  A. 

Fortunate  One,  The. 

In  the  Beginning. 

Lincoln.     See  Commemoration  Ode. 

Night-blooming  Cereus,  The. 

Washington.     See    Commemoration    Ode. 
Monroe,  Jas. — Monroe  Doctrine,  The. 
Monsell,  J:  S.  Bewley.— Litany. 

Phantom  Isles,  The. 

"Montebelle, ." — "I  wake!  Ah!  would  that  I  could 

sleep  again." 
Montfort,  T:  P. — Educating  to  a  Purpose. 
Montgomerie  [or  y],  Alex. — Night  is  near  Gone,  The. 

Night  is  nigh  Gone.     See  Night  is  near  Gone,  The. 
Montgomery,  Eleanor. — Adieu. 

New  Zealand  Regret,  A. 
Montgomery,  Flora  Newhouse. — Good  Queen  Bess. 
Montgomery,  G:  Edgar. — At  Night. 

Dead  Soldier,  A. 

England. 

Fallen. 

To  a  Child. 
Montgomery,  Jas. — Alps,  The. 

Arnold  Winkelried.     See  Patriot's  Pass-word,  The. 

At  Home  in  Heaven. 

Battle  of  Alexandria,  The. 

Birds.     See  Pelican  Island,  The. 
I         Bolehill  Trees. 

■Charity. 

•Christ  our  Example  in  Suffering. 

Common  Lot,  The. 

Coral  Reef,  The.     See  Pelican  Island,  The. 

■Crucifixion,  The.     See  Sonnet.  The  Crucifixion. 

Daisy,  The.     See  Field  Flower,  A. 

Daisy  in  India,  The. 

Day  in  the  Lord's  Courts,  A. 

Dial,  The. 


Montgomery,  Jas.  (continued). 

Evening  in  the  Alps.    See  Alps,  The. 

Field  Flower,  A. 

Field  of  the  World,  The. 

Forever  with  the  Lord.     See  At  Home  in  Heaven. 

Friend  after  Friend  Departs.     See  Friends. 

Friends. 

Funeral  Hymn. 

Gethsemane.    See  Christ  our  Example  in  Suffering. 

Home.     See  West  Indies,  The. 

Humility. 

Lord  the  Good  Shepherd,  The.     See  Psalm  XXIII. 

Make  Way  for  Liberty.  See  Patriot's  Pass- 
word, The. 

Mother's  Love,  A. 

Love  of  Country  and  Home.    See  West  Indies,  The. 

My  Country.     See  West  Indies,  The. 

Night. 

Night.     See  also  Alps,  The, 

Oak,  The. 

Ocean,  The. 

Our  Cherished  Flag.     See  Our  Flag. 

Our  Flag. 

Parted  Friends.     See  Friends. 

Patriot's  Pass-word,  The. 

Pelican,  The.     See  Pelican  Island,  The. 

Pelican  Island,  The. 

Prayer.     See  What  is  Prayer? 

"Prayer  is  the  soul's  sincere  desire."  See  What 
is  Prayer? 

Prisoner  to  a  Robin  who  Came,  to  His  Window, 
The.     See  Verses  to  a  Robin  Red-breast,  etc. 

Psalm  XXIII. 

Psalm  LXXII. 

Psalm  XC. 

Reign  of  Christ  on  Earth,  The.     See  Psalm  LXXII. 

Sea  Life.     See  Pelican  Island,  The. 

Song  of  the  Hundred  and  Forty  and  Four  Thou- 
sand, The. 

Sonnet:  "If  in  the  field,"  etc.  See  Sonnet  Imi- 
tated from  the    Italian  of  Gaetana  Passerini. 

Sonnet.  Imitated  from  the  Italian  of  Gaetana 
Passerini. 

Sonnet.    The  Crucifixion.  ' 

Sower,  The.     See  Field  of  the  World,  The. 

Stranger  and  his  Friend,  The. 

Sun-dial,     See  Dial,  The. 

Sun-flower,  The. 

Thou,  God,  Seest  Me. 

Time  Past,  Time  Passing,  Time  to  Come.  See 
Psalm  XC. 

To  Thy  Temple  I  Repair.  See  Day  in  the  Lord's 
Courts,  A. 

True   Aspiration   of  Youth,   The. 

Verses  to  a  Robin  Red-breast  who  Visits  the  Win- 
dow of  my  Prison  every  Day. 

Walk  in  Spring,  A. 

West   Indies,  The. 

What  are  These  in  Bright  Array.  See  Song  of 
the  Hundred  and  Forty  and  Four  Thousand, 
The. 

What  is  Prayer? 
Montgomery,  Lucy  L. — Little  Quaker  Sinner,  The. 
Montgomery,   R: — Marathon  by  Starlight. 
Montgomery,  W:  H. — Faith  and  Works. 
Montreuil,    Mathieu    de. — To    Madame    de    S^vign^ 

(Playing  Blind-Man's-Buff). 
Montrose,   Jas.    Graham,   Marquis   of. — Heroic   Love. 
See  My  Dear  and  only  Love  [,  I  Pray]. 

I'll  never  Love  Thee  More.  See  My  Dear  and 
only  Love  [,  I  Pray]. 

Montrose's  Love.  See  My  Dear  and  only  Lo\'e 
[,  I  Pray]. 

My  Dear  and  Only  Love  [,  I  Pray]. 

Upon  the  Death  of  King  (Charles  I. 

Moodie, . — Beauties  of  Nature. 

Moodie,  Susanna  Strickland. — Canadian  Hunter's  Song. 

Fisherman's  Light,  The. 

Maple-tree,  The. 
Moody,   Dwight   L. — Warning  against  Wine,  A. 
Moody,  W.  S.,  Jr. — Moonshine. 

Moody,  W:  Vaughn. — "No  Hint  of  Stain."     See  Ode 
in  Time  of  Hesitation,  An. 

Ode  in  Time  of  Hesitation,  An. 

Robert  Gould  Shaw.  See  Ode  in  Time  of  Hesita- 
tion, An. 

Serf's  Secret,  The. 
Moor,  Millicent. — Little  Peddlers,  The. 
Moore,   Annie. — Flowers'   Sleep,   The. 
Moore,  Augusta. — Hagar's  Farewell. 

Pauper's  Child,  The. 

"Pitty  Power."  The. 

Widow's  Light,  The. 


508 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Moore 


Moore,  Beverly. — Our  Oriole  Neighbors. 
Moore,  C:  Leonard. — Book  of  Day-dreams. 

Disenchantment.     See  Book  of  Day-dreams. 

Or  ever  the  Earth  Was.  See  Book  of  Day- 
dreams. 

Soul  unto  Soul  Glooms  Darkling.  See  Book  of 
Day-dreams. 

Then  Shall  we  See.     See  Book  of  D^-dreams. 

Thou  Livest,  O  Soul!     See  Book  of  Day-dreams. 

To  England. 
Moore,  Clara  J.— Web  of  Life,  The. 
Moore,  Clement  Clarke. — Christmas  Times.     See  Visit 
from  St.  Nicholas,  A. 

Night  Before  Christmas,  The.  See  Visit  from 
St.  Nicholas,  A. 

St.  Nicholas'  Dashing  Ride.  See  Visit  from  St. 
Nicholas,  A. 

Visit  from  St.  Nicholas,  A. 
Moore,  E: — Happy  Marriage,  The. 
Moore,  Ella  M. — "Rock  of  Ages."     {At.  also  to  E:  H. 

Rice.) 
Moore,  Fs.  W. — His  Guiding  Star. 

"I  Know  a  Maiden  Fair  to  See." 
Moore,  J:  Trotwood. — Die  Mistis. 
Moore,  Kathie. — Bird  Songs. 
Moore,  Lucy. — What  Little  Folks  Cah  Do. 
Moore,  Maud[e]. — -Death  of  Charles  the  Ninth,  The. 

"Only  a  Bit  of  Childhood  Thrown  Away." 

Why? 
Moore,  MoUie   E.     See    Davls,    Mrs.    Mart  Eatelyn 

[Moore]. 
Moore,  Monnie. — Incident  of  the  Johnstown  Flood,  An. 
Moore,  T.  Sturge.— Duet,  A. 
Moore,  T:— After  the  Battle. 

Alas!  how  light  a  cause  may  move.  See  Lalla 
Rookh. 

Anacreontique. 

Antipater,  the  Sidonian,  to  Anacreon. 

And  Doth  not  a  Meeting  like  This. 

Araby's  Daughter.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Arranmore. 

"As  a  beam  o'er  the  face  of  the  waters  may  glow." 

As  by  the  Shore  at  Break  of  Day. 

As  Slow  Our  Ship. 

At  the  Mid  Hour  of  Night. 

"At  the  mid  hour  of  night,  when  stars  are  weep- 
ing."    See  At  the  Mid  Hour  of  Night. 

Ballad  of  Nathan  Hale,  The. 

Ballad  Stanzas. 

Ballad,  A:  The  Lake  of  the  Dismal  Swamp. 

Battle,  The. 

Beauty,  Wit  and  Gold. 

Believe  Me,  if  AU  Those  Endearing  Young  Charms. 

Bird,  The.     See  Bird  Let  Loose,  The. 

Bird,  Let  Loose  [in  Eastern  Skies],  The. 

Black  and  Blue  Eyes. 

By  that  Lake,  whose  Gloomy  Shore. 

Caliph's  Encampment,  The.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Calm.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Canadian  Boat  Song. 

Church  and  State. 

Come  o'er  the  Sea. 

Come,  Rest  in  This  Bosom. 

Come,  Send  Round  the  Wine. 

Come,  Ye  Disconsolate. 

Curse  on  the  Traitor,  A.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Dear  Harp  of  My  Country. 

Denunciation.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Dialogue  between  a  Catholic  Delegate  and  His 
Royal  Highness  the  Duke  of  Cumberland.  See 
Epigram:  "Said  his  Highness  to  Ned,"  &c. 

Donkey  and  His  Panniers,  The. 

Dost  Thou  Remember. 

Echo. 

Echoes.     See  Echo. 

Epigram:  "Said  his  Highness  to  Ned,"  etc. 

Epitaph  on  a  Tuft-hunter. 

Epitaph  on  a  Well-known  Poet  (Robert  Southey). 

Erin  and  the  Days  of  Old. 

Eternal  London.     See  Rhymes  on  the  Road. 

Fare  Thee  Well,  Thou  Lovely  One! 

"Farewell!  but  whenever  [you  welcome  the 
hour]." 

"Farewell  to  thee,  Araby's  daughter."  See  Lalla 
Rookh. 

Feast  of  Roses,  The.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Fill  the  Bumper  Fair. 

Finland  Love-song.     {Tr.) 

Fire-worshippers,  The.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Fly  not  Yet. 

Fly  to  the  Desert  [,Fly  with  me].  See  Lalla 
Rookh. 

Forget  not  the  Field. 


Moore,  T:  {continued). 

Fragment  of  a  Character. 

From  the  French. 

Fudge  Family  in  Paris,  The. 

Garland  I  Send  Thee,  The. 

Gheber  to  his  Followers,  The.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Gheber's  Bloody  Glen,  The.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

Glory  of  God  in  Creation,  The.     See  Thou  Art,  O 

God! 
Go  Where  Glory  Waits  Thee. 
God   the   True   Source    of   Consolation.     See   Oh 

Thou  who  dry'st  the  mourner's  tear." 
Good-bye.     {At.)     See  Sailor's   Farewell,   The. — 

Jenkyns. 
Grief.     See  "As  a  beam  o'er  the  face  of  the  waters 

may  glow." 
Harp  that  Once  through  Tara's  Halls,  The. 
Her  Last  Words  at  Parting. 
High-born  Lady,  The. 

Home  of  Peace,  The.     See  Ballad  Stanzas. 
"How  calm,  how  beautiful."     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
I  Knew  by  the  Smoke  that  so  Gracefully  Curled. 

See  Ballad  Stanzas. 
I  Wish,  I  Were  [Was— C]  by  that  Dim  Lake. 
If  You  Have  Seen.     See  Nonsense. 
Impromptu  upon  being  Obliged  to  Leave  a  Pleas- 
ant Party. 
Irish  Peasant  to  his  Mistress,  The. 
Joke  Versified,  A. 

Journey  Onwards,  The.     See  As  Slow  our  Ship. 
Kiss,  The. 
Lake  of  the  Dismal  Swamp,  The.     See  Ballad,  A: 

The  Lake  of  the  Dismal  Swamp. 
Lalla  Rookh. 

Language  of  Flowers.  The. 
Last  Rose  of  Simimer,  The.     See  'Tis  the  Last  Rose 

of  Summer. 
Lesbia  Hath  a  Beaming  Eye. 
Letters  from  Miss  Biddy  Fudge  at  Paris  to  Miss 

Dorothy ,  in  Ireland.     See  Fudge  Family 

in  Paris,  The. 
Light  of  Other  Days,  The.     See  Oft  in  the  Stilly 

Night. 
Light  of  the  Harem,  The.     See  LaUa  Rookh. 
Light-house,  The. 

Linda  to  Hafed.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Lines   on   Leigh   Hunt.     See  "Living   Dog"   and 

"The  Dead  Lion,"  The. 
Lines  on  Naples.     See  Lines  on  the  Entry  of  the 

Austrians  into  Naples. 
Lines  on  the  Death  of  Sheridan, 
Lines   on   the   Entry  of  the  Austrians  into  Na- 
ples. 
Lines  Relating  to  Curran's  Daughter.     See  She  is 

Far  from  the  Land. 
Little  Grand  Lama,  The. 
"Living  Dog"  and  "The  Dead  Lion,"  The. 
Love  and  Reason. 
Love  is  a  Hunter  Boy. 
Love  Thee?  ' 

Love  thee.  Dearest?     Love  Thee? 
Love's  Young  Dream. 
Lying. 

M.  P. ;  or.  The  Blue  Stocking. 
Meeting  of  the  Waters,  The. 
Millennium,  The. 

Milling-match  between  Entellus  and  Dares,  The. 
Minstrel-boy,  The. 

Miriam's  Song.     See  Sound  the  Loud  Timbrel. 
Miss  Biddy's  Epistle.     See  Fudge  Family  in  Paris, 

The. 
My  Birthday. 
Nets  and  Cages. 
Nights  of  Music. 
No,  not  More  Welcome. 
Nonsense. 

Nourmahal.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
O  Say,  Thou  Best  and  Brightest. 
Occupation  of  Naples  by  the  Austrians.     See  Lines 

on  the  Entry  of  the  Austrians  into  Naples. 
Oft  in  the  Stilly  Night. 

Oh  [wr.  O],  Breathe  not  His  Name!     (Robert  Em- 
met.) 
Oh,  Call  it  by  Some  Better  Name. 
Oh!  Doubt  Me  not. 

Oh,  No — not  E'en  When  First  We  Loved. 
Oh  [wr.  O],  the  Sight  Entrancing. 
"Oh,  Thou  who  dry'st  the  mourner's  tear." 

On  . 

On  a  Squinting  Poetess. 

On  a  Tuft-hunter.     See  Epitaph  on  a  Tuft-hunter. 

On      Anacreon.     See  Antipater,   the  Sidonian, to 

Anacreon. 


509 


Moore 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Moore,  T:  (.continued). 

On  Being  Obliged  to  Leave  a  Pleasant  Party.     See 

Impromptu  upon  being  Obliged,  etc. 
On  Factotum  Ned.     See  Fragment  of  a  Character. 
On  Music. 

On  Taking  a  Wife.     See  Joke  Versified,  A. 
On  the  Death  orMr.  Perceval. 
One  Dear  Smile. 
Orator  PufF. 

Origin  of  the  Harp.  The. 
Paradise  and  the  Peri.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Peace  to  the  Slumberers. 
Pleasures  of  Memory.     See  On  Music. 
Potato,  The. 
Pretty  Rose-tree,  The. 

Pro  Patria  Mori.     See  When  he,  who  adores  thee. 
Rabbinical  Origin  of  Woman  [or  Women],  The. 
Rape  of  the  Bell,  The. 
Rebellion.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Resignation.     See    "Oh,    Thou    who    dry'st    the 

mourner's  tear." 
Rhymes  on  the  Road.  IX. 
Rienzi  to  the  Roman  Conspirators  in  1347. 
Rings  and  Seals. 

Robert  Emmet.     See  Oh,  Breathe  ndt  His  Name. 
Rose,   The.     (Tr.) 
She  is  Far  from  the  Land. 
Song  of  Fionnuala,  The. 
Song  of  Nourmahal.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Sound  the  Loud  Timbrel. 
Speculation  [,  A]. 
"Spirits  of  fire  that  brood  not  long. ' '     See  Lalla 

Rookh. 
Spring.  (Tr.) 
Surprise,  The. 
Sweet  Innisfallen. 

Sweet  Remembrances.     See  "Farewell!  but  when- 
ever you  welcome  the  hour. ' ' 
Syria.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Tear  of  Repentance,  The.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Temple  to  Friendship,  A. 
Then,  Fare  Thee  Well. 
"There's  a  bliss  beyond  all  that  the  minstrel  has 

told."     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
There's  nothing  Bright,  Above,  Below.     See  Turf 

shall  be  my  Fragrant  Shrine,  The. 
They  Know  not  My  Heart. 
They  May  Rail  at  this  Life. 
They  Met  but  Once. 
This  World  is  All  a  Fleeting  Show. 
Those  Evening  Bells. 
Thou  Art,  O  God! 
"Though  Lost  to  Sight,  to  Memory  Dear."     (Wr. 

at.)     See  Sailor's  Farewell,  The. — Jenkyns. 
Time  I've  Lost  in  Wooing,  The. 
'Tis  the  Last  Rose  of  Summer. 

To . 

To  Campbell.     See  Verses  to  the   Poet  Crabbe's 

Inkstand. 
To  Fanny. 
To  Miss- 


To  Sir  Hudson  Lowe. 

To  the  Neapolitans.     See  Lines  on  the  Entry  of 

the  Austrians  into  Naples. 
To  Sigh,  yet  Feel   no   Pain.     See  M.  P.;  or.  The 

Blue  Stocking. 
Torch  of  Liberty,  The. 
Turf  Shall  be  my  Fragrant  Shrine,  The. 
Upon  Being  Obliged  to  I^eave  a  Pleasant  Party. 

See  Impromptu  upon  being  Obliged  to  Leave  a 

Pleasant  Partv. 
Vale  of  Avoca,  Tne.     See  Meeting  of  the  Waters, 

The. 
Vale  of  Cashmere,  The.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 
Verses  to  the  Poet  Crabbe's  Inkstand. 
Verses  Written  in  an  Album.     See  Written  in  the 

Blank  Leaf  of  a  Lady's  Commonplace  book. 
What's  My  Thought  Like? 
When  He,  Who  Adores  Thee. 
"When    I    Remember."      See   Oft   in   the   Stilly 

Night. 
When  'midst  the  Gay  I  Meet. 
When  Thou  Art  Nigh. 
When  Twilight  Dews. 
Who'll  Buy  My  Love-knots? 
Wreathe  the  Bowl. 

Written  in  a  Young  Lady's  Commonplace  Book. 
Written  in  the  Blank  Leaf  of  a  Lady  s  Common- 
place Book. 
Yet,  no — not  words,  for  they."     See  Language  of 

Flowers,  The. 
Young  Jessica. 
Young  May  Moon,  The. 


Moorhouse,  Helen  Isabel. — Secret,  A. 

Moran,  J: — After  a  Dance. 

More,  Ella  Maud. — "Rock  of  Ages."     (.At.  also  to  E: 

H.  Rice.) 
More,  Hannah. — Duty  to  One's  Country.     See  Inflexi- 
ble Captive,  The. 

Humble  and  Unnoticed  Virtue. 

Inflexible  Captive,  The. 

Patriotism.     See  Inflexible  Captive,  The. 

"Prayer  is  the  application  of  want  to  Him  who 
only  can  relieve  it." 

Province  of  Woman,  The. 

Riddle,  A. 

Two  Weavers,   The.     See  Turn   the   Carpet;  or. 
The  Two  Weavers. 

Turn  the  Carpet;  or,  The  Two  Weavers. 
More,  H: — Euthanasia. 

Love  and  Humility. 

Philosopher's  Devotion,  The. 
Morford,  H: — Engineer's  Murder,  The. 

Home  to  Rest  in,  A.  (?) 

Old  Knight's  Treasure,  The. 

Two  Queens  in  Westminster. 

Wrecker's  Oath  on  Barnegat,  The. 
Morgan,  Anna. — Close  of  School. 
Morgan,  Bessie. — "Spacially  Jim." 
Morgan,  Carrie  Blake. — From  the  Valley  o'  the  Shad- 
der. 

Undertow,  The. 
Morgan,  Fred  E. — True  Socialism,  The. 
Morgan,  Jas.  Appleton. — Malum  Opus. 
Morgan,  Mary.— Charity. 

"In  Apprehension,  so  like  a  God." 

Life. 
Morgan,  Tom  P. — How  Ben  Fargo's  Claim  was  Jumped. 

"Jumped,"  The  Story  of  Ben  Fargo's  Claim.    See 
How  Ben  Fargo's  Claim  was  Jumped. 
Morgridge,  Harriet  S. — Jack  and  Jill, 

Mother  Goose  Sonnets. 

Simple  Simon. 
Moriarty,  Eliza  F. — New  Year's  Guest,  A. 
Momingaide. — Quatrain. 
Morrell,  A.  H.— Little  Foxes. 

Little    Foxes    and    Little    Hunters.     See    Little 
Foxes. 

Morris,  Mrs. .  — New-bom  Babe,  The. 

Morris,  A.  H. — Modest  Maid,  The. 

Morris,  G: — "Star  of  love  now  shines  above.  The." 

Morris,  G:  K. — Manhood. 

Morris,  G:  Pope  [or  Perkins]. — Flag  of  Our  Union,  The. 

I'm  with  You  Once  Again. 

Leap  for  Life,  A. 

Jeannie  Marsh. 

Main-truck,  The.     See  Leap  for  Life,  A. 

My  Mother's  Bible. 

Near  the  Lake. 

Retort,  The. 

We  Were  Boys  Together. 

When  Other  Friends  are  Round  Thee. 

Where  Hudson's  Wave.  , 

Woodman,  Spare  that  Tree. 
Morris,  Gouyerneur. — Free  Navigation  of   the  Missis- 
sippi. 

Funeral  Oration  by  the  Dead  Body  of  Hamilton. 

On  the  Judiciary  Act.     See  Second  Speech  on  the 
Judiciary  Establishment. 

Oration  on  Hamilton.     See  Funeral  Oration  by 
the  Dead  Body  of  Hamilton. 

Second  Speech  on  the  Judiciary  Establishment. 
Morris,  Gouvemeur,  tfie  younger. — D'Artagnan's  Ride. 
Morris,  Harrison  Smith. — De.stiny — A.  D.,  1899. 

Fickle  Hope. 

Lonely-bird,  The. 

Mohammed  and  Seid. 

Pine-tree  Buoy,  The. 

Walt  Whitman. 
Morris,  J:  W:(?) — Collusion  between  a  Alegaiter  and 

a  Water-snaik. 
Morris,  Sir  Lewis. — At  Last. 

Aphrodite.     See  Epic  of  Hades,  The. 

Epic  of  Hades,  The. 

Maidens'  Lake,  The. 

Marsyas.     See  Epic  of  Hades,  The. 

Ode  on  a  Fair  Spring  Morning. 

On  a  Birthday.  (Lord  Aberdare's.) 

On  a  Thrush  singing  in  Autumn. 

Saint  Cecilia. 

Song:  "Love  took  my  life  and  thrilled  it." 

What  Shall  I  do  for  My  Love? 
Morris,  Madge. — Rocking  the  Baby. 

Trapper's  Last  Trail,  The. 
Morris,  Rob't. — We    Meet    upon    the    Level   and  We 
Part  upon  the  Square. 


510 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Mowat 


Morris  [or  Norria],  S.  Walter. — Dreams.     See  Dreams 
for  Sale. 

Dreams  for  Sale. 
Morris,  W: — "Ah,  when  will  all  be  ended?"     iSee  Life 
and  Death  of  Jason,  The. 

Antiphony.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Atalanta  Conquered.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Atalanta  Victorious.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Atalanta's  Defeat.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Atalanta's  Race.     iSee  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Atalanta's  Victory.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Blue  Closet,  The. 

Burgher's  Battle,  The. 

Christmas  Carol.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Day  is  Coming,  The. 

Death  Song,  A. 

Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Eve  of  Crecy,  The. 

Gillyflower  of  Gold,  The. 

House  of  the  Wolfings,  The. 

King's  Visit,  The.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Land  across  the  Sea,  A.    See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Life  and  Death  of  Jason. 

Love  is  Enough. 

March.     See-Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Minstrels  and  Maids.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Nymph's  Song  to  Hylas,  The.     See  Life  and  Death 
of  Jason,  The. 

Of  the  Passing  Away  of  Brynhild.     See  Story  of 
Sigurd  the  Volsung,  The. 

Riding  Together. 

Shameful  Death. 

Sigurd  the  Volsung.     See  Story  of  Sigurd  the  Vol- 
sung, The. 

Singer's  Prelude,  The.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Slaying  of  the  Niblungs,  The.     See  Story  of  Sigurd 
the  Volsung,  The. 

Song  from  Jason.    See  Life  and  Death  of  Jason ,  The. 

Song:  To  Psyche.     See  Earthly  Paradise,  The. 

Summer  Dawn. 

Summer  Storm.    See  Life  and  Death  of  Jason,  The. 

War-horn  of  the  Elkings,  The.     See  House  of  the 
Wolfings,  The. 

Writing  on  the  Image,  The.     See  Earthly  Para- 
dise, The. 
Morrison,  Arthur. — On  the  Stairs. 

Morrison,   Mrs.   J. — Nursery  Song.     (At.  also  to  Mrs. 
Carter.) 

Recitation   for  Three  Little  Girls.     See  Nursery 
Song. 

What  tlie  Mother    Heard.     See  Nursery  Song. 
Morrison,  M.  T. — Foolish  Little  Maiden,  A. 

What  the  Choir  Sang  about  the  New  Bonnet.     See 
Foolish  Little  Maiden,  A. 
Morrow,  W.  C. — Inmate  of  the  Dungeon,  The. 
Morse,  E.  M. — Mountains. 
Morse,  .lames  Herbert. — Brook  Song. 

His  Statement  of  the  Case. 

Labor  and  Life. 

Morning  in  August. 

Silence. 

Wayside,  The. 

Who  Knows. 

Wild  Geese,  The. 
Morse,   Philip. — Let   Down  the   Bars.     See  Lovejoy 
Cow,  The. 

Lovejoy  Cow,  The. 

Milking-time.     See  Lovejoy  Cow,  The. 

Summer  Idyl,  The. 
Morse,  Sidney  H. — Sundered. 
Morton,  T:  (?). — Box  and  Cox. 

Not  Ashamed  of  His  Occupation. 

Rival  Lodgers,  The.     See  Box  and  Cox. 
Morton,  Eliza  H. — What  We  Love. 
Morton,  Irene  E14er. — Browning. 

Completeness. 

In  June. 

My  Garden  Wall. 

Song:  "Where  the  soft  shadows  fall." 

Song  of  the  Pagan  Princess. 
Morton,  Levi  P. — Welcome  to  the  Nations. 
Morton,  Marguerite  W. — ^Esthetic  Drill. 

Butterfly  Drill. 

Floral  Drill. 

Flower  Drill,  A. 

Friend  at  Court,  A. 

Last  Days  of  Pompeii,  Scene  from.  (Arr.) 

May-pole  Drill. 

Rainbow  Drill. 

Ribbon  Drill. 

Swing  Song  and  Drill. 

Sword  Drill  and  March. 

Taper  March  and  Drill. 


Morton,  Sue  S. — Christmas  Rose,  The. 

Little  Motto  Bearers,  The. 
Mosby,  V.  Stuart. — After  the  Battle. 

War's  Sacrifice.     See  After  the  Battle. 
Moseley,  Litchfield. — After-dinner  Speech  by  a  French- 
man.    See  Charity  Dinner,  The. 

Badger's  Debut  as  Hamlet. 

Charity  Dinner,  The. 

Frenchman  Proposes  the  Ladies,  A.     See  Charity 
Dinner,  The. 

Love  in  a  Balloon. 

Speech  of  M.  Hector  De  Longuebeau.     See  Char- 
ity Dinner,  The. 
Mosen,  Julius. — Andrew  Hofer. 

Death  of  Hofer,  The.     See  Andrew  Hofer. 

Dying  Trimipeter,  The. 

Hofer  the  Tyrolese.     See  Andrew  Hofer. 
Mosher,  M.  Florence. — It  is  Coming. 
Moses,  T:  P. — Flowers. 
Mosher,  L.  E. — Stranded  Bugle,  The. 
Moss,  T:— Beggar,  The. 

Beggar's  Petition,  The.     See  Beggar,  The. 
Motherwell,  W: — Bloom  hath  Fled  thy  Cheek,  Mary, 
The. 

Cavalier's  Song,  The. 

Covenanters'  Battle-chant,  The. 

I  Plucked  the  Berry. 

Jeanie  Morrison. 

Merry  Summer  Months,   The.     See  They  Come, 
the  Merry  Summer  Months. 

Midnight  and  Moonshine. 

Midnight  Wind,  The. 

My  Heid  is  Like  to  Rend,  Willie. 

"O  God!  This  is  a  Holy  Hour."     See  Midnight 
and  Moonshine. 

Ouglou's  Onslaught. 

Rose  and  the  Fair  Lily,  The. 

Sing  on.  Blithe  Bird!     See  I  Plucked  the  Berry. 

"Tchasson    Ouglou   is    on!"      See   Ouglou's    On- 
slaught. 

They  Come !  the  Merry  Summer  Mentha. 

True  Love's  Dirge. 

Water!  the  Water,  The. 

When  I  beneath  the  Cold,  Red  Earth  am  Sleeping. 
Motley,  J:  Lothrop. — Fall  of  Antwerp,  "rhe.     See  Rise 
of  the  Dutch  Republic,  The. 

Rise  of  the  Dutch  Republic,  The. 
Mott,  C.  C. — Wreck  of  the  Scotch  Express,  The. 
Moulton,    Mrs.  (Ellen)   Louise  [Chandler]. — Alone  by 
the  Bay. 

At  End. 

Childhood's  Country. 

Come  unto  Me. 

Dead  Men's  Holiday. 

Easter  Morning. 

'Fain  Would  I  Climb.' 

For  Easter  Morning.     See  Easter  Morning. 

Help  Thou  My  Unbelief! 

Hie  Jacet. 

House  of  Death,  The. 

In  a  Garden. 

In  Mid-ocean. 

John  A.  Andrew. 

King  is  Dead,  Long  Live  the  King,  The. 

Last  Good-by,  The. 

Late  Spring,  The. 

Laura  Sleeping,. 

Laus  Veneris. 

Long  is  the  Way. 

Louisa  May  Alcott. 

Lover  and  Friend  Hast  Thou  Put  Far  from  Me. 

Love's  Resurrection  Day. 

On  Homeward  Wing. 

Open  Door,  An. 

Painted  Fan,  A. 

Prayer  in  Sorrow,  A. 

Question. 

Selfish  Prayers. 

Shadow  Dance,  The. 

Some  Day  or  Other. 

Song  of  the  Stars,  The. 

To-night. 

We  Lay  us  down  to  Sleep. 

Were  but  My  Spirit  Loosed  upon  the  Air. 
Moulton,  Lillian  A. — Pat's  Bondsman. 
Moulton,  R.  H. — To  Master  Robbie  Miller. 
Moultrie,  J: — Dear  Little  Violets.     See  Violets. 

Forget  Thee? 

Three  Sons,  The. 

Violets. 
Mount  Holyoke. — Verse. 
Mountford,  W:— Plea  for  the  Sailor,  A. 
Mowat,  Helen. — "Cupid  among  the  Strawberries." 


511 


Mozoomdar 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Mozoomdar,  Protap  Chunder. — Emerson,  Extract  Con- 
cerning. 
Muhlenberg,  W:  A: — Heaven's  Magnificence. 
I  Would  not  Live  Alway. 

Saviour,  who  Thy  Flock  art  Feeding. 

Shout  the  Glad  Tidings. 

Soul's  Home,  Tta. 
Mulchinock,  W:  P.— Music  Everywhere. 
MulhoUand,  Rosa.     See  Gilbert,  Lady. 
MilHer,  Max. — "There  is,  between  the  whole  animal 

kingdom  on  the  one  side. ' ' 
MuUer,  Wilhelm. — Beautiful  Spring,  Haste,  oh.  Haste! 

Coming  of  Spring,  The.    (Diff.  and  longer  tr.  of 
foregoing.) 

Sunken  City,  The. 
Muloclc,  Dinah  Maria.     See  Craik,  Mrs.  Dinah  Maria 

[Mulock]. 
Mulvaney,  C:  Pelham. — Emmeline. 

Long  Deserted. 

Poppoea. 
Mumford.W: — Combat  between  Paris  and  Menelaus. 
{Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 

Iliad,  The.     {Tr.)     See  Homer. 

Triumph  of  Hector,  The.     {Tr.)     See  Iliad,  The. 
Munby,  Arthur  Jos. — Apres. 

Beauty  at  the  Plough.     See  Dorothy:  a  Country 
Story. 

Country  Kisses.     See  Dorothy:  a  Country  Story. 

Doris  [:  A  Pastoral]. 

Dorothy  [:  a  Country  Story]. 

Dorothy's  Room.     See  Dorothy:  a  Country  Story. 

Ex  Libris. 

Flos  Florum. 

On  an  Inscription. 

Susan:  a  Poem  of  Degrees. 

Sweet  Nature's  Voice.     See  Susan:  a  Poem  of  De- 
grees. 
Munday,  Anthony. — Beauty  Bathing.     See  To  Colin 
Clout. 

Colin.     See  To  Colin  Clout. 

To  Colin  Clout. 
Munday,  Eugene  H.— Blowing  Bubbles. 
Mundy,  Johnson  M. — My  Meerschaum  Pipe. 
Munger,  Rob't  L: — Evening  Song,  An. 

God's  WiU. 

Where  Cupid  Dwells. 
Munkittrick,  R:  Kendall. — At  the  Shrine. 

Autumn  Haze. 

Bulb,  A. 

Ghosts. 

In  Midsummer. 

June  in  January. 

October. 

Patriotic  Tourist,  The. 

Those  Ashes. 

'Tis  Ever  Thus. 

To  Miguel  de  Cervantes  Saavadra. 

What's  in  a  Name? 

Munro,  Dr.  . — Physician's  Story,  A. 

Munroe,  Harry  Keiser. — Her  Winsome  Smile. 
Munsey'a  Magazine. — Brief  Burlesque,  A. 
Munson,  .Jennie  E. — ^"Get  out  of  My  Shop!" 
Munson,  W.  C. — Correct  Habits. 
Munyon,  J.  M.— Is  Freedom  a  Lie? 

Up  Thar  behind  the  Sky! 

Yes,  I'm  Guilty. 
Murdoch,  Alex.  G.— Convict  Joe. 

Lotty's  Message. 
Murphy,  Arthur  (?). — Arminius  to  His  Soldiers. 
Murphy,  J':  A. — "Get  into  some  good  library  and  read." 
Murphy,  Jos.  Quinlan. — Casey  at  the  Bat.     {At.  also 

to  Phineas  Thayer.) 
Murray,   Charlotte. — "And   this  thought   will  be   our 
.  comfort. ' ' 

Consider  the  Lilies. 

Only. 
Murray,  Ellen. — Agnes  the  Martyr. 

Cain,  Ancient  and  Modern. 

Count  Me. 

Crusaders,  The. 

"De  Lord  Am  Coming." 

De  Ole  Elder's  Mistake. 

Dragon  Drink,  The. 

Elijah  and  the  Rain. 

Esau  and  .lacob. 

Father's  Coun.sel,  The. 

Go  Forward. 

Keep  to  the  Line. 

Last  Battle,  The. 

Leonidas. 

Liquor-seller's  Dream,  The. 

Martyrs  of  Uganda,  The. 

My  Boy  Fritz. 


Murray,  Ellen  {continued). 

New  Story,  The. 

Our  Delight. 

Quest  of  Three  Kings,  The. 

Resurrection  Morn. 

Seer  and  the  Dreamers,  The. 

Shepherd  Dog  of  the  Pyrenees,  The. 

Stars,  The. 

Temperance  Dialogue. 

Three  Nazarites,  "rhe. 

Three  Trees,  The. 

What  I  Said. 
Murray,  Frank. — Blacksmith  of  Ragenbach,  The. 
Murrav,  G: — Lesson  of  Mercy,  A. 

Thistle,  The. 

To  a  Humming  Bird  in  a  Garden. 
Murray,  R.  F. — Banished  Bejant,  The. 
Murray,  W:     See  Mansfield,  Lord. 
Murray,  W:  H:  Harrison. — Adirondack  Adventures. 

Carnping  and  Campers.     See  Cones  for  the  Camp 
Fire. 

Cones  for  the  Camp  Fire. 

Crossing  the  Carry.     See  Adirondack  Adventures. 

Honor  of  the  Woods,  The.     See  Story  of  the  Man 
who  didn't  know  much.  The. 

"It  is  hard  to  say  farewell  to  a  hope  that  has 
cheered  us. ' ' 

Lake  Champlain  and  its  Shores. 

"Luther  reVjelled  against  the  Pope  in  behalf  of  the 
ministrv. ' ' 

"Man's  value  and  progress  in  this  life  must  be 
measured.  A." 

Parson's  Conversion,  The. 

"Public  opinion  employs  no  officers." 

"Public    opinion    is    the    collective    judgment    of 
men." 

Race  with  the  Flames,  The.     See  Who  Was  He? 

Story  of  the  Man  who  didn't  Know  much.  The. 

"Torment  of  hell  is  bred  of  these  two  things.  The." 

Two  Drowned  Lovers.     See  Lake  Champlain  and 
its  Shores. 

"Well-nerved  and  stout  be  the  arm  that  smiteth 
wrong. ' ' 

Who  Was  He? 

"Years  back  of  us  are  full  of  voices.  The." 
Mu8ica  Transalpina. — Brown  is  My  Love. 
Musset,  Alfred  de. — Open  or  Shut. 
Muzzey,  Annie  I. — Deeds  versus  Creeds. 
Myers,  Ernest. — Etsi  Omnes,  Ego  Non. 

Gordon. 

Milton. 

Sea-maids'  Music,  The. 
Myers,  F:  W.  H. — Immortality. 

I  Saw,  I  Saw  the  Lovely  Child. 

Last  Appeal,  A. 

Letter  from  Newport,  A. 

On  a  Grave  at  Grindelwald. 

Saint  Paul. 

Song:  "The  pouring  music,  soft  and  strong." 

Unsatisfactory. 


N 

Nabbes,  T:— Milkmaid,  The. 

Nack,  Jas. — Here  She  Goes: — and  There  She  Goes. 

Naden,     Constance     Caroline     Woodhill. — Pantheist's 

Song  of  Immortality,  The. 
Nadaud,  Gustave  Jean. — Carcasonne. 
Nairne  [or  Nairn],  Caroline  Oliphant,  Baroness. — Cas- 
tell  Gloom. 
Laird  o'  Cockpen,  The. 
Land  o'  the  Leal,  The. 
Lullaby,  A. 
Rest  is  not  Here. 
Wha'll  be  King  but  Charlie? 
Would  You  be  Young  again? 
Napoleon    Bonaparte.— "Acro.ss  a  chasm  of  eighteen 
hundred     years     Jesus    Christ    makes    a    de- 
mand." (?) 
Bonaparte  to  his  Army  in  Italy.     See  To  the  Army 

of  Italy. 
Farewell  to  the  Army  at  Fontainebleau. 
Proclamation  to  the  Army  of  Italy.     See  To  the 

Army  of  Italy. 
To  the  Army  of  Italy,  May  1.5,  1796. 
"Nasby,  Petroleum  Vesuvius.'      See  Locke,  D:  Ross. 
Nash,  Frances. — Elocution  Lesson,  The. 
Nashe,  T: — Birds  in  Spring,  The.     See  Summer's  Last 
Will  and  Testament. 
Death's  Summons.     See  In  Time  of  Pestilence. 
Fading  Summer. 


512 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Nichols 


Nashe,  T:  (continued). 

In  Time  of  Pestilence. 

Spring.     See  Summer's  Last  Will  and  Testament. 

Spring,  the  Sweet  Spring.    See  Summer's  Last  Will 
and  Testament. 

Summer's  Last  Will  and  Testament. 
Nason,  Agnes  Carter. — Whenever  a  Little  Child  is  Bprn. 
Nason,  Mrs.  Emma  [Huntington]. — Bishop's  Visit,  The. 

Child's  Question,  A. 

Mission  Tea  Party,  The. 

Small  Boy's  Questions,  A. 

Unter  den  Linden. 
Nassau  Magazine. — Infelicissime. 

Nation,  The. — "Every  calling  is  constantly  making  a 
silent,  invisible  draft." 

"Within  a  few  years  it  has  become  the  fashion." 
National  Preceptor. — Might  Makes  Right. 

Sowing  and  Reaping.     See  Might  Makes  Right. 

Warrior's  Wreath,  The. 
National  Teacher's  Monthly. — Birth  of  Ireland,  The. 

Origin  of  Ireland,  The.     <See  Birth  of  Ireland,  The. 
Naughton,  Jas.  C. — She  Would  be  a  Mason. 
Naval  Songster. — Wasp's  Frolic,  The. 
Naylor,  C.  C. — American  Laborers. 

Northern   Laborers.     See  American   Laborers. 
Neal,  Mrs.  Alice  [BradleyJ.     See  Haven,  Mrs.  Alice 

[Bradley]  [Ne.^i.J. 
Neal,  J:— Bunker's  Hill. 

Dry  Experiment,  A. 

Little  Child's  Trials,  A. 

Men  of  the  North. 

Music  of  the  Night. 

My  Experience  in  Elocution. 
Neale,  Hannah  Lloyd.— Neglected  Call,  The. 
Neale,  J:  Ma.son. — Art  Thou  Weary?     (Tr.) 

Celestial  Country,  The.      (Tr.) 

Darkness  is  Thinning.     (Tr.) 

Each  Sorrowful  Mourner.     (Tr.) 

Jerusalem  the  Golden.    See  Celestial  Country,  The. 

Martyrdom  of  St.  Lucy,  The. 

Martyrdom  of  the  Archbishop  of  Paris,  The. 

"Well  I  know  thy  trouble." 
Neall,  W.  H. — Economical  Boomerang,  An. 

Quiet  Smoke,  A. 

Raising  the  Wind. 

Squire's  Rooster,  The. 

Uncle  Peter  and  the  Trolly  Car. 

Uncle  Peter  at  the  "Big  House." 
Nealy,  Julia.     See  Finch,  Mrs.  Julia  [Nealy]. 
Neele,  H: — Moan,  Moan,  Ye  Dying  Gales. 

Where  is  He? 
Neish,  R. — -Academy  Episode,  An. 
Nelson,    Julia    Bullard. — Dutchman's    Equal    Rights, 

The. 
Nelson,  T:  A.  R.— Why  Destroy  This  Government? 
Nencione,  Enrice. — St.  Simeon  Stylites. 
Nesbit,  E.     See  Bland,  Mrs.  Edith  [Nesbit]. 
Nesmith,  Jas.  Ernest. — -Point  Sublime,  Colorado  Canon. 

Statue  of  Lorenzo  de'  Medici,  The. 
Neville,  M.  J. — -Keno! 
New,  Egan. — T'ward  Arcadie. 

New  England  Magazine. — -Hebrew  Minstrel's  Lament, 
The. 

Seven  Invincibles,  The. 
New  England  Primer. — Child's  Prayer. 
New  Orleans  Times  Democrat. — -Dreamer's  Pipe,  The. 

Hoffenstein's  Bugle. 
New   Testament  Records. — Hebrew   Codes   Developed, 

The. 
Netv  York  Dispatch. — Bylo  Land. 
New  York  Evangelist. — Saved  by  a  Hymn. 
New  York  Evening  Post. — Recipe  for  a  Poem. 

Uncle  Sam's  a  Hundred. 
New  York  Graphic. — Card  Houses. 
New  York  Herald. — Oh  I  the  Golden,  Glowing  Morning. 

Yacht  Race,  The. 
New  York  Observer. — "Laid  on  thine  altar,  O  my  Lord 

divine!" 
New  York  Star. — Rosebud's  First  Ball. 
New  York  Sitn.^Blue  and  Gray. 

Christmas  Outcasts. 

"Draper  in  his  last  book  tries  to  prove." 

How  it  Once  Was. 

Johnny  and  the  Teacher.     See  Trials  of  a  School- 
mistress. 

Mental   Arithmetic.     See   Trials   of   a   Schoolmis- 
tress. 

Trials  of  a  Schoolmistress  [or  School  Teacher],  The. 
Untimely  Call,  An. 
Wanted  to  see  His  Old  Home. 
New  York  Times. — Tiresome  Insects. 
New  York  Tribune. — International  Good  Will. 
Sailing  of  the  Fleet,  The. 


New  York  Weekly. — Away  from  the  Wine-cup,  Away. 

Bad  Boy's  Diary,  A. 
New  York  World. — My  Big  Brother. 
Newberry,  Fanny  E. — Triumph  through  Faith. 
Newbolt,  H: — Craven. 

Drake's  Drum. 

"Fidele's"  Grassy  Tomb. 

Fighting  T^m^raire,  The. 

Hawke. 

He  Fell  among  Thieves. 
Newcomer,  A.  G. — To  a  Conservatory  Flower. 

Turkish  Refrain. 
Newell,  Howard  Y. — Plain-spoken  Philosophy. 
Newell,  P: — Her  Dairy. 

Her  Polka  Dots. 

Timid  Hortense. 

Wild  Flowers. 
Newell,  Rob't  H:  ("Orpheus    C.   Kerr"). — American 
Traveller,  The. 

Calmest  of  Her  Sex,  The. 

Editor's  Wooing,  The. 

Great  Fit,  A. 

Irish  Picket,  The. 

"Picciola. " 

Poems  Received  in  Response  to  an  Advertised  Call 
for  a  National  Anthem. 

Rejected   "National  Hymns,"   The.     See  Poems 
Received  in  Response,  etc. 

Similia  Similibus  Curantur. 

Widow  MacShane. 
Newell,  W:— He  Careth  for  Us. 

Newman,  G: — "Leave  God  to  order  all  thy  ways." 
Newman,  J:  H:,  Cardinal. — Consolations  in  Bereave- 
ment. 

Daisy,  The. 

Dream  of  Gerontius,  The. 

Elements,  The. 

England. 

Flowers  without  Fruit. 

Knowledge.     See  Voice  from  Afar,  A. 

Lead,   Kindly    Light.     See  Pillar   of    the   Cloud, 
The. 

"Lead,  kindly  light!  amid  the  encircling  gloom." 
See  Pillar  of  the  Cloud,  The. 

Lead  Thou  Me.     See  Pillar  of  the  Cloud,  The. 

Pillar  of  the  Cloud,  The. 

Rest.     See  Waiting  for  the  Morning. 

Reverses. 

St.  Paul  at  Melita. 

Sign  of  the  Cross,  The. 

Thanksgiving,  A. 

Trance  of  Time,  The. 

True  Gentleman,  The. 

Voice  from  Afar,  A. 

Waiting  for  the  Morning. 
Newman,  Bishop  J:  Philip. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Abraham  Lincoln's  Place  in  History.     See  Abra- 
ham Lincoln. 

Eulogy  on  General  Grant. 

Majestic  in  His  Individuality.     See  Abraham  Lin- 
coln. 
Newton,  C.  B. — How  I  Love  Her. 
Newton,  Frances  H. — Iliad,  The. 
Newton,  H :  Chance. — Penny  Showman,  The. 

"Supers." 

Weird  Warble,  A. 
Newton,  J: — Home  in  View. 

How  Sweet  the  Name  of  Jesus  Sounds. 

Psalm  LXXXVII. 

Weeping  Mary. 
Newton,  Mary  L. — Arcady. 

Niccolls,  Dr. . — Grace  of  Fidelity,  The. 

Nichol,  H.  Ernest. — Love  Thought,  A. 
Nichol,  J:— H.  W.  L. 

Mare  Mediterraneum. 
Nichol,  J:  Pringle. — Day  Conceals  What  Night  Reveals. 
Nicholls,  J:  F. — Brave  Woman,  A. 

Brought  Back. 

Crippled  for  Life. 

Hunting  a  Madman. 

Idiot's  Gallantry,  An. 

Little  Fireman,  The. 

Mother's  Daring,  A. 

Pauper's  Revenge,  A. 

Tommy's  Prayer. 

Watchman's  Story,  The. 
Nichols,  Mrs.  C— Midnight  Train,  The. 
Nichols,  J.  B.  B. — From  the  Persian. 
Half-way  in  Love. 
Lines  by  a  Person  of  Quality. 
Pastoral,  A. 
Nichols,  Laura  D. — Dear  Dandelion. 
Midshipman,  The. 


513 


Nichols 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Nichols,   Mrs.  Rebecca  S.  [Reed]. — Philosopher  Toad, 

The. 
Nichols,  W.  C. — Ball-room  Madrigal,  A. 

In  Maiden  Meditation. 

Reveries  of  a  Bachelor. 

Which? 
Nicholson,  E.  J. — ttttle  Nut  People. 
Nicholson,  E:  Byron. — Jim  Lord's  Cat. 
Nicholson,  Mrs.  Eliza  [Poitevent]  ("Pearl  Rivers")- — 
Ha«ar. 

Last  Mile-Stones,  The. 
Nicholson,  J.  G.  F. — My  Heart's  Treasure. 

Told  in  the  Twilight. 
Nicholson,  Meredith. — Old  Artillerist,  The. 
Nickerson,  H.  M. — Recollection,  A. 
Nicoll,  Rob't. — Bonnie  Bessie  Lee. 

Hero,  The. 

We  are  Brethren  A'. 

We'll  a'  Go'  Pu'  the  Heather. 
Nile,  N:— Night  that  Baby  Died,  The. 
Niles,  H.  B. — Reformation. 
Ninde,  W.  X. — "One  thing  is  sure,  the  day  of  the  Lord 

is  h£k8tening  on. ' ' 
Noble,  Frd'k  Alphonso. — "Proposed  religious  amend- 
ment to  the  Constitution,  The." 
Noble,  Jas.  Ashcroft. — George  Eliot. 

Love  and  Absence. 

Only  a  Woman's  Hair. 

Red  Thread  of  Honour,  The. 
Noble,  Lucretia  Gray. — Stars  and  Stripes,  The. 
Noel,  Caroline  M.— Why  WiU  Ye  Call  it  Death's  Dark 

Night? 
Noel,    Hon.    Roden    Berkeley  Wriothesley. — Byron's 
Grave. 

Death  of  Livingstone,  The. 

Dying.     See  Old.  The. 

Lament. 

Merry-go-round,  The. 

Old,  The. 

Sea  Slumber-song. 

Secret  of  the  Nightingale,  The. 

"That  They  All  May  be  One." 

Toy  Cross,  The. 

Water-nymph  and  the  Boy,  The. 
Noel,  T:— Old  Winter. 

Pauper's  Drive,  The. 
Nones,    Jeff.     H.  —  How    the     Fifty-first    Took    the 

Bridge. 
Norris,  Adelaide.— Doll  Drill,  The. 
Norris,  Edith  M. — Leading  the  Choir. 
Norris,  J: — Aspiration,  The. 

Hymn  to  Darkness. 

My  Little  Saint. 

Parting,  The. 

Reply,  The. 
Norris,  S.  Walter.     See  Morris,  S.  Walter. 
North  British  Review. — Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. 
North,  Christopher.     See  Wilson,  J: 
Northrop,  Birdsey  Grant. — Arbor  Day  [,  Its  Educat- 
ing Influence]. 
Norton,  Ajndrews. — After  a  Summer  Shower. 

Dedication  of  a  Church,  The.     iSee  Hymn  for  the 
Dedication  of  a  Church. 

Hymn  for  the  Dedication  of  a  Church. 
Norton,  Caroline  Eliz.  Sarah  [Sheridan].    See  Stikling- 

Maxwell,  Lady. 
Norton,  Rev.  J.  F. — Wasted. 
Norton,  Jessie. — Spring  Song. 
Notes  and  Queries. — Wisdom  of  Krishna. 
Nott,   Eliphalet. — Criminality  of  Duelling.     See  Dis- 
course Delivered  in  the  North  Dutch  Church, 
1804.  A. 

Death   of  [Alexander]   Hamilton.     See  Discourse 
Delivered  in  the  North  Dutch  Church,  1804,  A. 

Discourse  Delivered  in  the  North  Dutch  Church, 
1804,  A. 
Nott,  Martha  J.— William  Tell  and  His  Son. 
Nott,  T:  W. — Rum's  Maniac,     ^ee  also  Fenno,  F.  H. 

One  More  Year. 
Nursery,  The. — Carl's  Menagerie. 

Christmas. 

Johnny-cake,  The. 
Nutting,  J.  K. — Little  Servants. 

Nutting,  M.  L. — Drinking-house  over  the  Way,  The. 
Nye,  Bill.     See  Nye,  Edgar  Wilson. 
Nye,  Edgar  Wilson  ("Bill  Nye"). — Autumn  Thoughts. 

Bill  Nye  on  Hornets. 

Bill  Nye's  Hired  Girl. 

If  I  were  a  Boy  Again. 

Jim  Onderdonk's  Sunday-School  Oration. 

legend  of  the  Knot-hole,  The. 
"Nym  Crinkle."     See  Wheeler,  Andrew  Carpenter. 


O.,  L.  E. — Trials  That  Jar. 
O.,  W.  T.— My  Quest. 

Oakey.  Emily  Sullivan. — Sowing  and  Harvesting. 
Oberholtzer,    ilfr«.    Sara    Louisa    [Vickers].— ^Dhanged 
Housewife,  A. 

Come  for  Arbutus. 

Dawn  of  the  C!entennial,  The. 

Going  to  the  Dentist's. 

Have  a  Shine,  Sah? 

Spirit  of  Liberty,  The. 
O'Brien,  Cornelius.— St.  (Jecilia. 
O'Brien,  Fitz-James. — Ballad  of  the  Shamrock,  The. 

Challenge,    The.       {Wr.   at.    to    Roger    Atkinson 
Pryor.) 

Demon  of  the  Gibbet,  The. 

Kane. 

Legend  of  Easter  Eggs. 

Lost  Steamship,  The.     See  Second  Mate,  The. 

Minot's  Ledge. 

Ormolu's  Tenement  House. 

Second  Mate,  The. 

Wanted  — Saint  Patrick. 
"Occidente,   Maria   del."     See  Brooks,    Mrs.   Maria 

[Go  wen]. 
Oocleve  [or  Hoccleve],  T: — De  Regimine  Principum. 

Lament  for  Chaucer. 
O'Connell,  Dan'l. — Gentleman  Jim. 

Irish  Disturbance  Bill,  The.     See  On  the  Irish  Dis- 
turbance Bill. 

On  the  Irish  Disturbance  Bill. 

Press  the  Protection  of  the  People,  The. 

Repeal  of  the  Union. 

Universal  Religious  Liberty. 

Violation  of  English  Ptomises. 
O'Connor,  Fs. — Country  Courtship,  A. 
O'Connor,  Jos. — Fount  of  Castaly,  The- 

General's  Death,  The. 

What  Was  My  Dream? 

White  Rose,  The. 
O'Connor,  Michael. — Reveille. 
O'Daly,  Carol. — Eileen  a  Roon. 
O'Donnell,  Jessie  Fremont. — Coal  Digger,  The. 

Great  Bell  of  Pekin,  The. 

Sale  of  the  Pig,  The. 

"Star-spangled  Banner,  The." 
O'Donnell,  J:  Fs. — Spinning  Song,  A. 
O'Donovan,  J: — Man's  Mortality.  {Tr.) 

What  is  Man?     See  Man's  Mortality. 
Offord,  Rob't  M. — "Lord,  make  me  quick  to  see." 
Ogden,  Eva  L.— Miller  of  Dee,  The. 

Mistress  Sherwood's  Victory. 

Sea,  The. 
O'Grady,  Standish  Jas. — I, Give  My  Heart  to  Thee- 

Lough  Bray. 
O'Hagan,  J:— Death  of  Roland,  The.  {Tr.)     See  Song  " 
of  Roland,  The. 

Old  Story,  The. 

Ourselves  Alone. 

Protestant  Ascendency. 

Song  of  Roland,  The.     (Tr."* 
O'Hagan,  T: — Another  Year. 

Ripened  Fruit. 

Song  My  Mother  Sings,  The. 
O'Hara,  Theodore. — Bivouac  of  the  Dead,  The. 

Muffled  Drum's  Sad  Roll,  The.     See  Bivouac  of 
the  Dead,  The. 
O'Hare,  Teresa  B.— Play  Softly,  Boys. 
O'Keefe,  J: — I  am  a  Friar  of  Orders  (3ray.    See  Robin 
Hood. 

Robin  Hood. 
Olcott,  Millie  M. — Census  Taker,  The. 

Colorado. 

Floral  Guide,  The. 

Unappreciated  Genius. 
Oldham,  E:  A. — When  the  Hammock  Swings. 
Oldham,  J: — Domestic  Chaplain,  The.     See  Satire  Ad- 
dressed to  a  Friend,  etc. 

Quiet  Soul,  A. 

Satire  Addressed   to  a  Friend  that  is  about   to 
I>eave  the  University,  A. 

Satires  upon  the  Jesuits. 
Oldys,   W: — "Busy,  curious,   thirsty  fly."     See   Fly, 
The. 

Fly,  The. 

On  a  Fly  Drinking  out  of  his  Cup.     See  Fly,  The. 
To  a  Fly.     See  Fly,  The. 
O'Leary,  Cormac. — Paddy's  Reflections  on  Cleopatra's 
[or  Cleopathera's]  Needle. 
Reflections  on  Cleopathera's  Needle.     See  Paddy's 
Reflections  on  (Cleopatra's  Needle. 


514 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Otway 


O'Leary,  Ellen. — My  Old  Home. 

To  God  and  Ireland  True. 
Olin,  Stephen. — Battle  of  Life,  The. 
Oliphant,  Carolina.     See  Nairne,  Baroness. 
Oliphant,  Mrs.  Margaret  Oliphant  [Wilson]. — Mrs.  Har- 
wood's    Secret.     See    Story  of    a    Governess, 
The. 
Story  of  a  Governess,  The. 
Oliphant,  T:— Where  are  the  Men?     (Tr.) 
Olive,  Frank. — Blacksmith's  Story,  The. 

Words  and  Their  Uses. 
Olivers,  T: — God  of  Abraham  Praise,  The. 

Lol  He  Comes,  with  Clouds  Descending! 
OUivant,  Alfred.— Black  Killer,  The.     See  Bob,  Son  of 
Battle. 
Bob,  Son  of  Battle. 

Shepherd's  Trophy,  The.     See  Bob,  Son  of  Battle. 
Omaha  World. — Farmer's  Conclusion,  The. 

Pennsylvanian's  Lament,  The. 
Omar  Kh&yy.lm. — And  yet — ^and  yet!     See  Rubaiy&t. 
Life  and  Death.     See  Rubaiy§.t. 
Master-knot,  The.     See  Rubaiyfit. 
Moving  Finger  Writes,  The.     See  Rubaiy&t. 
Overture.     See  Rubaiy&t. 
Paradise  Enow.     See  Rubaiy^t. 
Phantom  Caravan,  The.     See  Rubaiy&t. 
Rubaiyftt  of  Omar  KhAyyAm. 
Onderdonk,    H:     Ustick.  —  "Spirit    in    Our    Hearts, 

The." 
O'Neill,  Helen  F.— United. 
O'Neill,  Moira. — Corrymeela. 
Johneen. 
Lookin'  Back. 
"Oofty  Gooft." — 'Dis  Den  I'll  Dink  of  Dou. 
Dot  Sunflower. 
He  vas  Dhinkin. 
In  der  Schweed  Long  Ago. 
Katrina  Likes  me  Poody  Veil. 
Schneider's  Ride.     {At.  also  to  Gus  Phillips.) 
Shonny,  Don'd  You  Hear  Me? 
Opie,  Mrs.  Amelia. — Fatal  Falsehood,  The. 
Forget  Me  Not. 
God's  Mark  on  all  Things.     See  Hymn:  "There's 

not  a  leaf,"  etc. 
Hymn:  "There's  not  a  leaf  within  the  bower." 
Orphan  Boy,  The. 

Orphan    Boy's     Tale,    The.     See     Orphan    Boy, 
The. 
Opper,  Emma  A. — Grandma  that's  just  Splendid,  A. 

May  Day. 
Opper,  F:  Burr. — Her  Soliloquy. 
O'Reilly,  J:  Boyle. — Art  Master,  An. 
At  Best. 

At  Fredericksburg.     Dec.  13,  1862. 
Boston. 

Boston  Massacre,  The.     See  Crispus  Attucks. 
Builder's  Lesson,  A. 
Chicago. 

Common  Citizen-soldier,  The. 
Constancy. 
Crispus  Attucks. 
Cry  of  the  Dreamer,  The. 
Daniel  O'Connell.     See  Nation's  Test,  A. 
Dead  Singer,  The. 
Dukite  Snake[:  an  Australian  Bushman's  Story], 

The. 
Dying  in  Harness. 
Fisherman  of.  Wexford,  The. 
Flying  Dutchman,  The. 
Forever. 

Good,  The.  See  What  is  Good? 
How?  See  Builder's  Lesson,  A. 
John  Mitchel. 

Loss  of  the  Emigrants,  The. 
•     Macarius  the  Monk. 
Mayflower. 

Monster  Diamond,  The. 
My  Native  Land. 
Nation's  Test,  A. 
Old  School  Clock,  The. 
Pilgrim  Fathers,  The. 
Press  Evangel,  "the. 
Released  [January,  1878 — C] 
Republic   of  New   England,  The.     See     Common 

Citizen-soldier,  The. 
Ride  of  Collin  Graves,  The. 
Savage,  A. 
Wendell  Phillips. 
What  is  Good? 

What  is  the  Real  Good?     See  What  is  Good? 
White  Rose,  A. 
Wonderful  Country,  The. 
"O'Reilly,  Miles."     See  Halpine,  C:  Graham. 


Oriel,  Patience. — Light  in  the  Window,  The. 

Little  Efrum's  Ride. 
"Orinda."     See  Philips,  Katha. 
Orleans,  Charles  d'.     See  Charles,  Duke  of  Orleans. 
Ormsby,  J:    (Tr.). — Count  Raymond  and  My  Cid.    See 
Poem  of  the  Cid. 

My  Cid's  Triumph.     See  Poem  of  the  Cid. 

Poem  of  the  Cid. 
Ormsby,  Mary  F. — Music  of  Nature,  The. 
Orne,  Caroline  Frances. — Letter  of  Marque,  The. 

No  Work  the  Hardest  Work. 

Toilers,  The.     See  No  Work  the  Hardest  Work. 
Osborne, . — Miser  Fitly  Punished,  The. 

Woman. 
Osborne,  DufEeld.     See  Osborne,  (S:)  Dupfield. 
Osborne,  Rose. — BeU  of  the  Angels,  The.    See  Legend,  A. 

Legend,  A. 
Osborne,  (S:)  DuflBeld. — Ave!  Nero  Imperator. 

Fall  of  Jericho,  The.     See  Spell  of  Ashtaroth,  The. 

Spell  of  Ashtaroth,  The. 
Osborne,  Selleck. — Modest  Wit,  A. 
Osgood,  Mrs.  Frances  Sargent  [Locke]. — "Angel  face, 
its  sunny  wealth  of  hair.  An."     See  Woman's 
Trust.     {Wr.  at.  to  Edgar  Allan  Poe.) 

Bois  Ton  Sang,  Beaimianoir. 

Calumny. 

Dancing  Girl,  A. 

I  Have  Something  Sweet  to  Tell  You. 

Labor.  _    See  Labor  is  Worship. 

Labor  is  Worship. 

Lahore  est  Orare.     See  Labor  is  Worship. 

Little  Things.      {At.')     See  Carney,  Mrs.  Julia 
A.  T. 

On  a  Dead  Poet. 

On  Sivori's  Violin. 

Song:  "Your  heart  is  a  music-box,  dearest." 

To  Labor  is  to  Pray.     See  Labor  is  Worship. 

To  Sleep. 

Woman's  Trust. 
Osgood,  Kate  Putnam. — Cob  House[s],  The. 

Driving  Home  the  Cows. 

Sunset  in  the  Orchard. 

What? 

What  Else? 
O'Shaughnessy,  Arthur  W:  Edgar. — At  Her  Grave. 

Bisclaveret. 

Enchainment. 

Epic  of  Women.     See  Bisclaveret. 

Fair  Maid  and  the  Sun,  The. 

Fountain  of  Tears,  The. 

Greater  Memory. 

Has  Summer  Come  without  the  Rose?     See  Song: 
"Has  summer  come  without  the  rose?" 

Herodias. 

I  Made  Another  Garden.     See  Song:  "I  made  an- 
other garden,  yea." 

If  She  but  Knew. 

In  Love's  Eternity. 

Keeping  a  Heart. 

Love  after  Death. 

Love  Symphony,  A. 

Lynmouth. 

Ode:  "We  are  the  music  makers." 

St.  John  Baptist. 

Silences. 

Song:  "Has  summer  come  without  the  rose?" 

Song:  "I  made  another  garden,  yea." 

Song:  "I  went  to  her  who  loveth  me  no  more.' 

Song  of  Palms. 

Spectre  of  the  Past,  The. 

Zuleika. 
Osier,  E: — Praise. 
Ossian.     See  Macpherson,  Jas. 

Ostrander,  Luther  A. — Opinions  Stronger  than  Armies. 
O'SuUivan,   Dennis. — "Will  My  Soul  Pass  through  Ire- 
land?" 
O'Sullivan,  J:  L.— Djinns,  The.     (Tr.) 
Oswald,  J:  I. — Toast  to  the  Ladies,  A. 
Otis,  Jas. — Mother's  Children.     See  Muzzer's  Children. 

Muzzer's  Children. 

On  the  Stamp  Act. 

On  the  Writs  of  Assistance. 
Otterson,  F.  J.— Bridal  in  Eden,  The. 
Ottolengui,  B.  A.  R. — Switchman's  Story,  The. 
Otway,  T: — Candor. 

Enchantment,  The. 

I  Did  but  Look.     See  Enchantment,  The. 

Jaffier  Parting  with  Belvidera.     See  Venice  Pre- 
served. 

Orphan,  The. 

Poet's  Complaint  of  His  Muse,  The. 

Priuli  and  Jaffier.     See  Venice  Preserved. 

Venice  Preserved. 


515 


Oughton 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Oughton,  Mrs.  T.  S. — Noten  Like  a  Patience. 

"Ouida."     See  La  Rambe,  Louise  de. 

Oulton,  Walley   Chamberlain  (7). — Irishman's  Lesson, 

The. 
"Our  Fat  Contributor."     See  Griswold,  A.  Minor. 
Our  Little  Men  and  Women. — Suppose. 
Our  Little  Ones. — IH 

Two  Little  Bears. 

Where  Did  They  Go? 
Our  Youth. — Which  Side  are  You  On? 
Ousley,  Clarence  N.— Tears. 
Outlook. — Baby  of  the  Future,  The. 
Outram,  G.— Annuity,  The. 
Overton,  Rob't. — Heroes  of  Inkerman. 

Idiot  Lad,  The. 

JaU-bird's  Story,  A. 

Jim:  a  Hero. 

Juberlo  Tom. 

Little    Charlie.      [As    told    by   an    English    Jail 
Bird.] 

Me  and  Bill. 

Peter  Adair. 

Three  Parsons,  The.     [A  Sailor  Deacon's  Story.] 

Turning  the  Points. 
Owen,  F.  M.— Children's  Music,  The. 
Owen,  Rob't  Dale. — Factory  Girl's  Last  Day,  The. 
Owens,  A.  F. — Where  is  my  Hat? 
Owens,  J.  J. — Cleopatra's  Dream. 
Oxenford,  J: — I  Love  Thee. 
Oxenham,  H:  Nutcombe. — "Earth  with  its  bright  and 

glorious  things.  The." 
Oxford,  E:  Vere,  Earl  of. — Fancy  and  Desire. 

Renunciation,  A. 


P.,  D.  D. — "If  she  knew  that  I  am  Cupid  " 

P.,  F.  M. — "Desultory  Reading." 

P.,  G.  A.— Resolved? 

P.,  H.  E. — Banish  the  Snakes. 

P..  H.  K.— Farewell  of  the  Birds. 

What's  the  Matter? 
P.,  M.— Song  of  the  Mad  Poet. 
P.,  M.  A.— Winter  Dawn. 
P..  P.  A.— My  CaUie. 
P.,  R.  S. — Acrostic  Plaint,  An. 
P.,  S.— Song,  A:  "Oh,  the  hopper  grass  is  clattering  and 

flying  all  the  day." 
P.,  S.  F.— American  Girl,  The. 
P.,  T.  G.— Thorn  that  Guards,  The. 
Pabodie,  W:  Jewett. — Forest,  The.     See  Thoughts  on 
the  Forest. 

Our  Country. 

Thoughts  on  the  Forest. 
Packard,  Charlotte  M. — Vespers. 
Pagan,  Isabel. — Ca'  the  Yowes  [to  the  Knowes].     (.At.) 

See  also  Burns,  Rob't. 
Page,  Herman. — Heroic  Medley. 
Page,  Mary  Eli. — Days  of  the  Week. 
Page,  R.  W. — Carolina. 

Sea  Gulls. 
Page,  T:  Nelson. — Ashcake. 

Billington's  Valentine. 

How  Jinny  Eased  Her  Mind. 

Soldier  of  the  Empire,  The. 

Uncle  Gabe's  White  Folks. 

Valentine  Verses.     See  Billington's  Valentine. 
Pain,  Barry. — Martin  Luther  at  Potsdam. 

Oh!  Weary  Mother. 

Poets  at  Tea,  The. 
Paine,  Albert  Bigelow. —  House  of  too  Much  Trouble, 
The. 

In  Louisiana. 

Little  Child,  The. 

Mis'  Smith. 

New  Memorial  Day,  The. 

Sary  "Fixes  up"  Things. 

Tale  of  a  Dog,  The. 

Why  Sammy  I>eft  the  Farm. 
Paine,  Ralph  D. — Sailing. 
Paine,  Rob't  Treat — Columbia  and  Liberty. 

Unselfishness  of  Washington,  The. 
Paine,  T:— Birthday  of  the  Republic,  The. 

Castle  in  the  Air,  The. 

Liberty  Tree[,  The]. 
Painter,   Florence.  — "Choosing   a  State   Tree" —  The 

Hickory. 
Paley,   W:— Happy    World,    A.     See    Natural    The- 
ology. 

Natural  Theology. 
Palfrey,  R.  S. — Three  o'Clock  in  the  Morning. 


Palfrey,  Sarah  Hammond. — Child's  Plea,  The. 

Exchange,  The. 

Fifer  and  Drummer  of  Scituate,  The. 

Pilgrim,  The. 

Sir  Pavon  and  St.  Pavon. 
Palgrave,  Fs.   Turner. — Ancient   and   Modem   Muses. 
The. 

Danish  Barrow,  A. 

Elizabeth  at  Tilbury. 

"If  thou  couldst  know  thine  own  sweetness." 

Little  Child's  Hymn,  A. 

Love's  Language. 

Pro  Mortius. 

To  a  Child. 

William  Wordsworth. 
Pall  Mall  Gazette. — Bachelor's  Invocation,  A. 
Palmer,  Mrs.  Alice  [Freeman]. — Four  Mottoes. 
Palmer,  Arthur.— Epicharis. 
Palmer,  E.  H.— Parterre,  The. 

Shipwreck,  The. 
Palmer,  F.  S. — Nature's  Poem. 
Palmer,  F.  W. — Piece  of  Bunting,  A. 
Palmer,  H:  Robinson. — Two  Views  of  War. 
Palmer,  H:  W.— Soliloquy  at   the   Oak   Grove    (8.56 
_  A.   M.). 

Visitation. 
Palmer,  J:  Williamson. — Fight  at   [the]   San  Jacinto. 
The. 

For  Charlie's  Sake. 

Maryland  Battalion,  The. 

Stonewall  Jackson's  Way. 

Thread  and  Song. 
Palmer,  Loren. — Boat  o'  Dreams. 

My  Fire. 
Palmer,  Rev.  Rav.- — Crown,  The. 

Faith. 

Holmes,  Extract  Concerning. 

I  Saw  Thee. 

My  Faith  Looks  up  to  Thee.     <See  Faith. 

Soul's  Cry,  The. 

Unfaltering  Trust. 

Unseen,  not  Unknown. 
Palmer,  W:  Pitt.— Kiss  in  School,  The.     See  Smack 
in  School,  The. 

Light. 

Smack  in  School,  The. 
Palmerston,  J.  H.  Temple,   Viscount. — Civil  War  the 

Greatest  National  Evil. 
Paradise,    Mrs.    Caroline     Wilder    [Fellowes]. — Little 

Theocritus. 
Pardee,  Julia. — Beacon  Light,  The. 
Pardessus,  S.  J. — Marriage  Tour,  A. 

No.  5  Collect  Street. 
Park,  Mrs.  A.  G. — April's  Fools. 
Park,  Mungo. — Women  of  Sego,  The. 
Park,  W:  G.— May. 

Parke,  J.  R.— When  Should  a  Girl  Marry? 
Parke,  Walter. — "There  was  a  young  man  who  was 
bitten.'" 


lory  in  tree  and  blossom." 
itump  Speech,  A. 

See    Lover's 


Young  Gazelle,  The. 
Parker,  B:  S.— "There  is  a 
Parker,  Fred  A. — Political 
Parker,  H. — Loyal  Hearts. 
Parker,    Sir    (Horatio)    Grilbert. — Art 
Diary,  A. 

Battle  of  the  Strong,  The. 

Envoy.     See  Lover's  Diary,  A. 

I  Loved  my  Art.     <See  Lover's  .Diary,  A. 

Invincible.     See  Lover's  Diary,  A. 

It  is  Enough. 

"Little  Garaine." 

Lover's  Diary,  A. 

Love's   Outset.     See  Lover's   Diary,   A. 

Reunited.     See    Lover's    Diary,    A. 

Scaling  of  Perc^  Rock,  The.     See  Battle  of  »he 
Strong,  The. 

Their  Waving  Hands.     See  Lover's  Diary,  A. 

Woman's  Hand,  A.     See  Lover's  Diary,  A. 
"Parker,  Hyde." — Three  Topers. 
Parker,  J: — His  Care. 
Parker,   Joseph. — Eulogy  on  Henry  Ward  Beecher. 

"If   a   man's   mind  be  thoroughly  alive,  he   can- 
not be  content  with  good  health." 

"There  are  parts  of  our  life  we  do  not  like  to 
think  about." 

"To-day  the  great  question  that  is  stirring  men's 

Parker,  L:  N.— Field  of  Wagram,  The.  (.Tr.) 
Parker,  Martyn. — Ye  Gentlemen  of  England. 
Parker,  Theodore. — Against   the  Fugitive  Slave  Law. 

Almighty   Love,   The. 

Aunt  Kindlv. 

Children  of  the  Poor,  The. 


516 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Peabody 


Parker,  Theodore  (continued). 

Grandfather's  Reverie. 

Higher  Good,  The. 

Hymn:   "In   darker  days  and   nights  of  .storm." 
See  Almighty  Love,  The. 

Jesus. 

Love  of  Justice. 

March  of  Freedom,  The. 

National  Injustice. 

"O,  Thou  Great  Friend  to  all  the  Sons  of  Men." 
See  Way,  the  Truth,  and  the  Life,  The. 

Reminiscence  of  Lexington,  A. 

Slave  of  Boston,  The. 

Thoughts  for  a  New  Year. 

Washington  at  Valley  Forge. 

Way,  the  Truth,  and  the  Life,  The. 
Parkhunst,  C:  H. — Christian  Citizenship. 

Corruption   of   Municipal   Government,   The. 

Moral  Crisis,  A. 

Piety  and  Civic  Virtue. 

Pulpit  and  Politics,  The. 
Parkinson,    Amy. — Messenger   Hours,    The. 
Parkman,  Fs. — Battle  of  the  Plains  of  Abraham,  The. 
See  Montcalm  and  Wolfe. 

Montcalm  and  Wolfe. 
Parlor  Magazine. — Fifty  Years  Apart. 
Parmelee,  M.  L. — Claribel's  Prayer. 
Parmely  [or  Parmele],  Rev.  L. — Independence  Day. 
Parnell,  Frances  [or  Fanny]  Isabel. — After  Death.     See 
Post  Mortem. 

Post  Mortem. 
Parnell,  T:— Bookworm,  The.  (Tr.) 

Hermit,  The. 

Hymn  to  Contentment,  A.  ■ 

"Night-piece  on  Death,  A." 

Song:   "When    thy   beauty   appears." 

When  Your  Beauty  Appears.     See  Song:  "When 
thy  beauty  appears." 
Parry,  Sarah. — Joseph  Clayton. 
Parsons,  Edith  F. — Sea-bird's  Cry,  The. 
Parsons,  Eugene. — -Landlady's  Daughter,  The.  (Tr.) 

Lines  to  the  Des  Moines  River. 
Parsons,  Laura  S. — I  Guess  I'm  the  Man. 
Parsons,  S.  B. — Father's  Choice,  The. 
Parsons,  T:  William. — Andrew. 

Bust  of  Dante.     See  On  a  Bust  of  Dante. 

Dirge  for  One  Who  Fell  in  Battle. 

Epitaph  on  a  Child. 

Everett. 

Groomsman  to  his  Mistress,  The. 

Groomsman  to  the  Bridesmaid,  The.     See  Grooms- 
man to  his  Mistress,  The. 

Her  Epitaph. 

Into  the  Noiseless  Country. 

"Like  as  the  Lark." 

Mary  Booth. 

Mercedes. 

O  ye  Sweet  Heavens! 

Obituary. 

On  a  Bust  of  Dante. 

On  a  Lady  Singing. 

Paradisi  Gloria. 

Saint  Peray. 

Song  for  September,  A. 

Taking  of  Sebastopol,  The. 

To  a  Lady. 

To  a  Young  Girl  Dying. 
Parton,  Mrs.  Sarah  Payson  [Willis]  [Eldridge]  ("Fanny 
Fern").— Little  Allie. 

Quiet  Mr.  Smith,  The. 

Romance  at  Home. 
"Partington,  Mrs."     See  Shil,la.bbr,  B:  Penhallow. 
Partridge,  S:  William. — "Not  to  Myself  Alone."     (At. 

also  to  J.  R.  Webb.) 
Partridge,  W:  Ordway.— Change. 

Master's  Work,  The. 
Pascal,  Blaise. — Greatne-ss  and  Littleness  of  Man,  The. 
See  Thoughts. 

"Man  is  but  a  reed,  the  weakest  in  nature."     See 
Thoughts. 

Profession  of  Faith. 

Thoughts. 
Pastner,  Paul. — Maiden  Missionary,  The. 
Patmore,  Coventry. — Amelia. 

Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Dean's  Consent,  The.    See  Angel  in  the  House, 
The. 

Departure. 

Dragon  of  Wantley,  The. 

Evening  Scene,  An.     See  River,  The. 

Farewell,  A. 

Girl  of  All  Periods,  The. 

Going  to  Church.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 


Patmore,  Coventry  (continued). 

Honoria.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Honoria's  Surrender.     See  Angel  in    the    House, 
The. 

"If  I  were  Dead." 

If    Thou   didst   Bid   thy  Friend    Farewell.      See 
Parting. 

Joy.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Love  Ceremonies.    See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Magna  est   Veritas. 

Married  Lover,  The.     See  Angel  in  the    House, 
The. 

Night  Thoughts.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Nunc  Amet  Qui   Nunquam  Amavit.     See  Angel 
in  the  House,  The. 

Paradox,  The.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Parting. 

Queen,  The.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Regina  Coeli. 

River,  The. 

Rose  of  the  World,  The.     See  Angel  in  the  House, 
The. 

Sentences.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

She  was  Mine.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Sly  Thoughts.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Sweet    Meeting    of    Desires.     See    Angel    in    the 
House,  The. 

Toys,  The. 

Tribute,  The.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 

Truth  is  Great.     See  Magna  est  Veritas. 

Two  Deserts,  The. 

Winter. 

Wisdom.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The. 
Paton,  Sir  Joseph  Noel. — Last  of  the  Eurydice,  The. 

Requiem. 
Patten,    G:   William. — Defiant   Seminole   Chief,    The. 
See  Seminole's  Defiance,  The. 

Seminole's  Defiance.  The. 

Seminole's  Reply,  The.     See  Seminole's  Defiance, 
The. 
Patterson,  C.  H.— Why? 
Patterson,  Jas.  Willis. — Again  Brethren  and  Equals. 

"If   all   our    youth,   sprung    from   whatever   na- 
tionality." 
Patterson,  Minnie  W.— Dot  and  Dolly. 

Paul,  . — Stray   Parrot,   A. 

Paul,  Brother. — -Cordelie. 

Paul,  C.  K.^Lines:  "In  the  merry  hay-time,"  etc. 

Paul,  Howard. — Change  of  System,  A. 

Touch  Snuflf  Story,  The. 
"Paul,  J:"  See  Webb,  C:H: 
Paulding,  .lames  Kirke. — Humbugging  a  Tourist.  (?) 

Old  Man's  Carousal,  The. 

Quarrel   of  Squire   Bull   and   His  Son   Jonathan 


[.  The]. 
1,  Mrs.  G:W. 


Paull,  Mrs.  G:  W. — Chimes  of  Amsterdam,  The. 
Paxton,  J:  R. — Corporal  of  Chancellorsville,  The. 
Payn,  James. — Mrs.  B.'s  Alarms. 
Payne,  J:— Cadences. 
Love's  Autumn. 
Sibyl. 

Songs'  End. 
Thorgerda. 
Payne,  J:  Howard. — Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Lucretia. 
See  Brutus;  or.  The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Brutus;  or.  The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Brutus  over  the  Dead  Lucretia.     See  Brutus;  or. 

The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Brutus  over  the  Body  of  Lucretia.     See  Brutus; 

or.  The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Clari,    the    Maid    of    Milan.     See    Home,    Sweet 

Home! 
Home,  Sweet  Home. 
Home!  Sweet!  Sweet  Home.     See  Home,  Sweet 

Home! 
Lucius  Junius  Brutus['s  Oration]  over  the  Body  of 
Lucretia.     See  Brutus;  or.  The  Fall  of  Tarquin. 
Roman  Father,  The.     See  Brutus;  or.  The  Fall  of 

Tarquin. 
Sweet  Home.     See  Home,  Sweet  Home. 
Payne,  Percy  Somers. — Rest. 

Payne,  Rob't  Treat,  Jr.— Eulogy  on  Washington. 
Payne,  W:  Morton.- Ej  Blot  Til  Lyst. 
Incipit  Vita  Nova. 
Lohengrin. 
Tannhauser. 
Payson,  E: — "What  if  God  should  place  in  your  hand 

a  diamond." 
Payson,  Eliz.     See  Prentiss,  Mrs.  Eliz.  [Payson]. 
Payson,  Lillian. — Sweet  Peas. 
Peabodie,  W:  J.     See  Pabodie,  W:  J. 
Peabody,  Andrew  P. — Idle  Words. 
Peabody,  Clarence  W. — In  Bachelor's  Hall. 


517 


Peabody 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Peabody,  Ephraim.— Skating  Song. 
Peabody,  Josephine  Preston. — After  Music. 

Caravans. 

Changeling  Grateful,  A. 

Far-off  Rose,  A. 

Isolation. 

Prelude.  ♦ 

Rubric. 

Sonnet  in  a  Garden. 

Wood-song. 
Peabody.  S.  C— Contentment. 
Peabody.  W:  J.     See  Pabodie,  W:  J. 
Peabody,  W:  Bourne  Oliver. — Autumn  Evening,  The. 

Lament  of  Anastasius. 

Moses  in  Sight  of  the  Promised  Land. 

Ruth  and  Naomi. 

Spring. 
Peacock,  T:  Love. — Cauldron  of  Ceridwen,  The. 

Crotchet  Castle. 

Flower  of  Love,  The.     See  Melincourt. 

Grave  of  Love,  The. 

Llyn-y-Dreiddiad-Vrawd.     <See  Crotchet  Castle. 

Love  and  Age. 

Margaret  Love  Peacock. 

Melincourt. 

Men  of  Gotham,  The.     See  Nightmare  Abbey. 

Misfortunes  of  Elphin,  The. 

Mr.  Cypress's  Song   in    Ridicule    of   Lord    Byron. 
See  Nightmare  Abbey. 

Nightmare  Abbey. 

Oh!  Say  not  Woman's  Heart  is  Bought.     See  She 
Loves  and  Loves  Forever. 

Pool    of    the    Diving    Friar,    The.     See    Crotchet 
Castle. 

Priest  and  the  Mulberry  Tree,  The. 

Rhododaphne. 

She  Loves  and  Loves  Forever. 

Song:  "For  the  tender  beech  and  the  sapling  oak." 

Song:  "Oh!   say  not   woman's   heart   is   bought." 
See  She  Loves  and  Loves  Forever. 

Spell  of  the  Laurel  Rose,  The.     See  Rhododaphne. 

Three  Men  of  Gotham.     See  Nightmare  Abbey. 

Vengeance  of  Bacchus,  The.     See  Rododaphne. 

War-song  of  Dinas-Vawr,  The.     See  Misfortunes 
of  Elphin,  The. 
Peale,  E:  H. — How  Three  were  Made  One. 
Peale,  Rembrandt. — Don't  be  Sorrowful,  Darling. 

Faith  and  Hope.    See  Don't  be  Sorrowful,  Darling. 
Pearre,  O.  F. — My  Neighbor  Jim. 

Our  Heroes. 

What's  the  Difference? 
Pearson,  Harlan  Colby. — Faint  Heart. 
Pearson,  H:  Clemens. — Purpose,  A. 
Pease,  Calvin.  (?) — Ye  May  Drink,  if  Ye  List. 
Peaslee,  Prof.  J:  B. — Arbor  Day. 

"Broad-minded  selection  of  noble  passages.  A." 
Peat,    Afrs.    C.    M. — Laughter.     See    Philosophy    of 
Laughter. 

Motto;  or.  Example,  The. 

Philosophy  of  Laughter. 
Peck,  Ellen  O. — Good-bye. 

Half  an  Hour  with  the  Poets. 
Peck,  G:  R. — John  A.  Logan. 
Peck,  Georgia  A. — Little  'Turncoats. 

My  Neighbor's  Call. 

Overflow  of  Great  River,  The. 
Peck,  H.  P. — Cannon  Song. 
Peck,  Harry  Thurston. — Heliotrope. 

Jefferson  Davis. 

Other  One,  The. 

Unter  den  Linden. 

Victor  and  Vanquished. 

Wonderland. 
Peck,  Rev.  J.  O. — No  Surrender!  No  Compromise. 
Peck,  Mary  B. — Early  Christmas  Morning. 
Peck,  Philip  C. — Lost  Memory,  A. 
Peck,  S:  Mintum. — All  for  You. 

Among  My  Books. 

Autumn's  Mirth. 

Bessie  Brown,  M.  D. 

Captain's  Feather,  The. 

Cupid  at  Court. 

Dollie. 

Dream-love. 

Fate  of  Sin  Foo,  The;  or.  The  Origin  of  the  Tea 
Plant. 

Grapevine  Swing,  The. 

I  Wonder  What  Maud  Will  Say? 

Kiss  in  the  Rain,  A. 

Knot  of  Blue,  A.     See  Little  Knot  of  Blue,  A. 

Little  Bo-Peep  and  Little  Boy-Blue. 

Little  Knot  of  Blue,  A. 

Love  that  Lives  for  Aye,  The. 


Peck,  S:  Minturn  (continued). 

Mignon. 

My  First  Kiss. 

My  Grandmother's  Fan. 

My  Little  Girl. 

My  Sweetheart. 

Priscilla. 

Sassafras. 

Sea-side  Flirtation,  A. 

Southern  Girl,  A. 

When  Mabel  Smiles. 
Peck's  Sun. — Bad  Boy  and  the  Limburger  Cheese,  The. 

Royal  Bumper  Degree,  The. 
Peel,  Sir  Rob't. — Legislative  Union,  The. 
Peele,  G : — Aged  Man-at-Arms,  The.     See  Farewell  to 
Arms,  A. 

Arraignment  of  Paris,  The. 

Fair  and  Fair. 

Farewell  to  Arms,  [A]. 

Farewell  to  Sir  John  Norris  and  Sir  Francis  Drake, 
A. 

Handiwork   of  Flora,   The.     See  Arraignment  of 
Paris   The. 

Harvester's  Song,  The.     See  Old  Wives'  Tale,  The. 

Harvestmen,  a-Singing.    See  Old  Wives'  Tale,  The. 

Old  Wives'  Tale,  The. 

Song  of  Paris  and  CEnone[,  The].     See  Arraign- 
ment of  Paris,  The. 
Peet,  Kate  E.— New  Muff  and  Collar,  The. 
Pelham,  Nettie  H. — Overdrawn  Accounts. 

Playing  for  Keeps. 

Reply  to  "A  Woman's  Question." 
Pellew,  G:— Death. 

On  a  Cast  from  ail  Antique. 
Peltree,  J.  T.     See  Pettee,  J.  T. 

Pember,  E.  C. — Per  gl'  Occh  Almeno  non  v'^  Claiisura. 
Pemberton,  Harriet  L.  Childe.     See  Childe-Pembek- 

TON,  Harriet  L. 
Pembroke,  Mary  [Sidney]  Herbert,  Countess  of.    Psalm 
XCIII.     (At.  also  to  Philip  Sidney.) 

Psalm  XCVL     (At.  also  to  Philip  Sidney.) 

Psalm  CXXXIX.     (At.  also  to  Philip  Sidney.) 

Sing  unto  the  Lord.     See  Psalm  XCVI. 
Penfield,  Kathe.  C. — Empty  Prayer,  An. 
Penn,  W; — Think  before  You  Speak. 
Pennefather,  Mrs.  C. — Not  Now. 
Pennell,  H :  Cholmondeley.     See  Cholmondelet-Pen- 

nell,  H: 
Pennell,  P.  S. — There's  Business  for  All. 
Penney,  Hattie  A.— Little  Leaf's  Sacrifice. 
Penney,  W:  Edward. — Davy  and  Goliar. 

Kid  Sixey's  Christmas. 

"There  was  a  Crooked  Man." 
Pennypacker,  B.  A. — Complaint,      A.     (At.      also     to 

Tudor  Jenks.) 
Pennypacker,  I:  W. — Tale  of  Providence,  A. 
Pennypacker,  J.  L. — Engaged. 
Pentecost,  Rev.  G:  F. — God's  Clock  Strikes. 

Saloon  in  Relation  to  Morals,  The. 
People's  Magazine. — Memory. 
Percival,  Jas.  Gates. — Coral  Grove,  The. 

Elegiac. 

Graves  of  the  Patriots,  The. 

"In  eastern  lands  they  talk  in  flowers."     Sec  Lan- 
guage of  Flowers,  The. 

It  is  Great  for  our  Country  to  Die.      See  Elegiac. 

Language  of  Flowers,  The. 

Lily  [of  the  VaUey],  The. 

May.     See  Reign  of  May,  The. 

Morning  among  the  Hills. 

My  Love. 

New  England. 

Perry's  Victory  [on  Lake  Erie — C.]. 

Poetry. 

Reign  of  May,  The. 

Remembrance.     See  Retrospection. 

Retrospection. 

Seneca  Lake.     See  To  Seneca  Lake. 

"To  Seneca  Lake. 

Washington's  Name. 
Percy,  Edith  M. — Yesterday. 
"Percy,  Florence."  See  Allen,  Mrs.  Eliz.  Ann  [Chase] 

[Akers]. 
Percy,  T:  (editor).     See  Reliques  of  Ancient  English 

Poetry,  in  Title  Index. 
Pericles. — Glory  of  Athens. 
Perkins,    Charlotte.      See  Oilman,    Mrs.  Charlottb 

[Perkins]  [Stetson]. 
"Perkins,  Eli."     See  Landon,  Melville  De  Lancet. 
Perkins,  G.  M.— Prophet,  The. 

To  the  Evening  Star. 
Perkins,  Helen  Standish. — Little  Visitor,  A. 

Through  the  Lovely  Vale. 


518 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Phillips 


Perronet,  E: — Coronation. 

Perry,  Carlotta  [Charlotte  Augusta — C.]. — Guided  by 
a  Star. 

How  the  Bees  Came  by  their  Sting. 

Little  Boy's  Troubles,  A. 

Love  is  Eternal. 

Love's  Meaning. 

Only. 

Procrustes'  Bed. 

True  Story  of  Little  Boy  Blue,  The. 

Unbidden  Guest,  The. 

With  Clearer  Vision. 

Work  that  is  Best,  The. 
Perry,  H:  G.— Triple  Tie,  The. 
Perry,  Kathe.  H. — Every-day  Botany. 
Perry,  Lilla  Cabot. — Art. 

Life  and  Death. 

Meeting  after  Long  Absence. 
Perry,  Nora. — After  the  Ball. 

Coming  of  Spring,  The. 

Cressid. 

In  June. 

Jim. 

Lesson  of  Trust,  The. 

Loss  and  Gain. 

Love-knot,  The. 

Next  Year. 

Prayer,  A. 

Riding  Down. 

Romance  of  a  Rose,  The 

Some  Day  of  Days.     {At.  also  to  Eliz.  S.  Phelps.) 

That  Waltz  of  Von  Weber. 

To-morrow  at  Ten. 

Tving  Her  Bonnet  under  Her  Chin. 

Who  Knows? 
Perry,  Susan  TeaU. — Katie's  Part. 

Little  Boy  Who  Ran  Away,  The. 

Little  Maid's  Sermon,  The. 
Persell,  G:  A.— On  a  Pet  Cat. 
Peter,  W: — Damon  and  Pythias;  or,  True  Friendship. 

Danae.     (Tr.) 
Peters,  K.  A. — How  Colonel  Ashton  Signed  the  Pledge. 
Peters,  Mrs.  Phillis  [Wheatley].     On  the  Death  of  the 

Rev.  George  Whitefield. 
Peterson,  Arthur. — Kelpius's  Hymn. 
Peterson,    Frd'k. — Solitude. 

Sweetest    Flower  that  Blows,  The. 
Peterson,   H: — Death  of  Lyon,  The.     See  Lyon. 

Execution  of  Andr^,  'The.     See  Pemberton. 

Lyon. 

"Memento  Mori." 

Ode  for  Decoration  Day. 

Pemberton. 

Rinaldo. 
Petit,  Amelie  V.— Sun  and  the  Violet,  The. 
Petrarch,  Francesco. — Sonnet  from  Petrarch. 

Vision  of  the  Fawn,  The. 
Pettee,  G.  W.— Sleigh  Song. 

Pettee  [or  Peltree],  Rev.  J.  T. — Prayer  and  Potatoes. 
Pettinos,  Sarah  J. — Song  of  Arbor  Day. 
Pettit,  W:  S.— At  the  Rock. 

Pfeffel,   Gottlieb    Konrad. — Nobleman   and    the   Pen- 
sioner, The. 
Pfeiffer,  Emily. — Song  of  Winter,  A. 

To  a  Moth  that  Drinketh  of  the  Ripe  October. 

To  the  Herald  Honeysuckle. 
Pfizer,  Gustav." — Two  Locks  of  Hair,  The. 
Phelps,  Amos  A. — Prohibition  the  Ultimatum. 
Phelps,  Austin. — Earnest  Views  of  Life. 

"If  the  sinner  persists  in  rejecting  Christ,  the  ruin 
of  his  soul  will  be  his  own  work." 

"Sin  runs  to  passion;  passion  to  tumult  in  char- 
acter." 
Phelps,  C:  Henry. — Henry  Ward  Beecher. 

Rare  Moments. 

Yuma. 
Phelps,    Mrs.    Dawson    M. — "Lily's"    Thanksgiving, 

The. 
Phelps,  E:  John. — Battle  of  Bennington,  The. 

Chief  Justice  Marshall. 

Farewell  to  England. 

Sovereignty  of  the  People,  The. 
Phelps,  Egbert. — -Life's  Incongruities. 
Phelps,   Eliz.    Stuart.      See  Ward,  Mrs.  Eliz.  Stuart 

[Phelps]. 
Phelps,  L.  L. — Harry's  Logic. 
Phelps,  Pauline. — Average  Boy,  The. 

Back  in  War  Days. 

Firetown's  New  Schoolhouse. 

How  Mr.  Simonson  Took  Care  of  the  Baby. 

Jolly  Brick,  A. 

Just  Commonplace. 

Just  Like  Them. 


Phelps,  Pauline  {continued). 
Old  Benedict  Arnold. 
Scorching  versus  Diamonds. 
Spinster  Thurber's  Carpet. 
Story  of  Hard  Times,  A. 
Phelps,  Mrs.  Phoebe  Harris. — Socks  for  John  Randall. 
Phelps,  Sheffield.— With  Roses. 
Phelps,     Sylvanus     Dryden.  —  Ode     for     Decoration 

Day. 
Philadelphia  Press. — "Great  end  of  education  is  not 
information.  The." 
Modem  Seer,  A. 
Robert  Browning. 
Philadelphia  Record. — War  ship  of  1812,  The. 
Philadelphia  Times. — Pipe,  The. 
Philips,  Ambrose. — Albino. 

Blest  as  the  Immortal  Gods.     {Tr.) 

Fragment  from  Sappho,  A.     {Tr.)   See  Blest  as  the 

Immortal  Gods. 
Ode  to  Miss  Carteret,  The. 
To  Charlotte   Pulteney.     See  To  Miss  Charlotte 

Pulteney,  in  her  Mother's  Arms. 
To  Miss  Charlotte  Pulteney,  in  Her  Mother's  Arms. 
Philips,     Barclay. — Holiday     Task,     A.     See     Polka 
Lyric,  A. 
Polka  Lyric,  A.     {At.  also  to  G.  A.  h  Becket.) 
Philips,  J:— Splendid  ShiUing,  The. 
Philips,   Kathe.    ("Orinda"). — To   One   Persuading  a 
Lady  to  Marriage. 

Phillips,  . — Infidelity  not  Friendly  to  Freedom. 

Phillips,  C: — America. 

American    Republic,    The.     iSee    America. 
Analysis    of    the    Character    of    Bonaparte.     See 

Napoleon  Bonaparte. 
Appeal  to  the  Jury. 
Character  of  Napoleon  Bonaparte.     See  Napoleon 

Bonaparte. 
Character  of  Washington.     See  Washington. 
Destiny  of  America.     See  America. 
For  Decoration  Day. 
Napoleon  Bonaparte. 
Panegyric  on  America.     See  America. 
Value  of  Reputation. 
Washington. 
Phillips,  G:  Searle   ("January  Searle"). — Geordie   to 
his  Tobacco-pipe.      jSee  Gypsies  of  the  Dane's 
Dike. 
Gypsies  of  the  Dane's  Dike. 
Phillips,  Gus. — Schneider's  Ride.     {At.  also  to  "Oofty 

Gooft.") 
Phillips,  Philip. — Home  of  the  Soul. 
Phillips,  Stephen. — Herod.    '. 
Marpessa. 

Paolo  and  Francesca. 
Phillips,  Susan  KeUy. — Between  the  Lines. 
In  November. 
We  Shall  Be  Satisfied. 
Phillips,  Rev.  W.  O. — Frances  E.  Willard  Exercise. 
Phillips,  Wendell. — Burial  of  John  Brown,  The. 
Christian  Citizenship. 
Daniel  O'Connell. 

Daniel  O'Connell  the  Orator.     See  Daniel  O'Con- 
nell. 
Daniel  O'Connell's  Power  over  the  Irish  People. 

See  Daniel  O'Connell. 
Distrust  of  the  People.     See  Scholar  in  a  Repub- 
lic, The. 
Educate  the  Masses.     See  Scholar  in  a  Republic, 

The. 
Eloquence  of  O'Connell,  The.     See  Daniel  O'Con- 
nell. 
Enforcement  of  the  Liquor  Law,  The.     See  Maine 

Liquor  Law,  The. 
Higher  Views  of  the  Union.     See  Lincoln's  Elec- 
tion. 
Idols. 

Is  This  AH?     See  Lincoln's  Election. 
"I  will  not  speak  of  war  in  itself."     See  War  for 

the  Union,  The. 
Lincoln's  Election. 
Lost  Arts,  The. 
Maine  Liquor  Law,  The. 
Murder  of    Lovejoy   [,   at  Alton,   Illinois,    1837], 

The. 
Napoleon  Bonaparte  and  Toussaint  L'Ouverture. 

See  Toussaint  L'Ouverture. 
Necessity  of  Outside  Agitation,  The.     See  Daniel 

O'Connell. 
Old  South  Meeting-house,  The. 
Permanency  of  Empire,  'The. 
Pilgrims,  The. 

Plea  for  the  Old  South  Church,  Boston.     See  Old 
South  Meeting-house,   The. 


519 


Phillips 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Phillips,  Wendell  (continued). 

Public  Opinion. 

Russian  Nihilism. 

Scholar  in  a  Republic,  The. 

Scholar's   Distrust,   The.     See  Scholar   in   a   Re- 
public, The. 

Temperance.     Bee  Maine  Liquor  Law,  The. 

Temt>erance   Question,   The.     iS'ee   Maine   Liquor 
Law,  The. 

Toussaint  L'Ouverture. 

War  for  the  Union,  The. 

What  We  Owe  the  Pilgrims.     See  Pilgrims,  The. 

William  Lloyd  Garrison. 
Philostratus. — Drink   to   me   only   with   Thine    Eyes. 

See  JoNSON,  Ben. 
Philpot,  W: — Maritse  Sua;. 
Phoenix,   The. — Dux's  Speech. 
"Phoster,  Esse." — "Der  Wreck  of  der  Hezberus." 
Piatt,  J:Jas. — Book  of  Gold,  A. 

Child  in  the  Street,  The. 

Farther. 

Glow-worm  and  Star. 

Guerdon,  The. 

Ireland. 

leaves  at  My  Window. 

Lost  Genius,  The. 

Morning  Street,  The. 

Mower  in  Ohio,  The. 

Purpose. 

Rose   and   Root. 

Song  of  Content,  A. 

To  a  Lady. 

To  Abraham  Lincoln. 

Torch-light  in  Autumn. 

Transfiguration. 

Two  Kings. 

"We  may  not  stand  content;  it  is  our  part." 
Piatt,  Mrs.  Sarah  Morgan  [Bryan]. — After  Wings. 

Answer  of  the  Gardener,  The. 

Call  on  Sir  Walter  Raleigh,  A. 

Dance  of  the  Daisies,  The. 

Dream's  Awakening,  A. 

Envoy. 

Faith. 

Gift  of  Tears,  The. 

In  Clonmel  Parish  Churchyard. 

Into  the  World  and  Out. 

Irish  Wild-flower,  An. 

My  Babes  in  the  Wood. 

Questions  of  the  Hour. 

Term  of  Death,  The. 

Tradition  of  Conquest. 

Transfigured. 

Watch  of  a  Swan,  The. 

We  Two. 

When  Saw  We  Thee. 

Witch  in  the  Glass,  The. 

Word  with  a  Skylark,  A. 

Pichat, .— Leonidas  to  His  Three  Hundred.     (Tr.) 

Pickering,  Ellen. — Drawing  a  Long  Bow. 

Fortune  Hunter,  The. 

Matrimonial  Tiff,  A.  (?) 

Now  or  Never, 

Reception,  The. 

Report,  The. 

Scandal  Monger,  The.  (7) 

Shocking  Mistake,  A.  (?) 

Uncle,  The;  or,  "Comparisons  are  Odious." 

Wedding  Day,  The. 

Will,  The. 
Pickering,  Julia. — Meriky's  Conversion. 
Pickering,  Theodosia. — When  George  was  King. 
Pickhardt,  Emile. — Unsophisticated. 
Pier,  R. — Summer's  Day,  A. 

Pierce,  E:  Lillie. — View  from  Lookout  Mountain,  The. 
Pierce,  Etta  W. — Wedding-gown,  The. 
Pierce,  Fred'k.  E. — Moonlight  on  the  Campus. 
Pierce,  G.  W.— My  Politics. 
Pierpont,  J:— Ballot,  The. 

Bunker  Hill. 

Evening  Hymn  for  a  Child. 

Exile  at  Rest,  The.     See  Napoleon  at  Rest. 

"Fourth  of  July." 

Fugitive  Slave's  Apostrophe  to  the  North  Star, 
The. 

Gen.  Joseph  Warren's  Address.     See  Warren's  Ad- 
dress. 

General  Warren  to  His  Troops  at  the  Battle  of 
Bunker  Hill.     See  Warren's  Address. 

Hymn  of  the  Last  Supper. 

Kmdapping  of  Sims,  The. 

Morning  Hymn  for  a  Child. 

Music  of  Nature.  (?) 


Pierpont,  J:  (continued). 

My  Child. 

Napoleon  at  Rest. 

Not  on  the  Battle-field. 

Passing  Away. 

Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.     (W.  add.  by  M'Lellan.) 

Sparkling  Bowl,  The. 

Stand!   the  Ground's  Your  Own.     See  Warren's 
Address. 

"Sword!  a  name  of  dread.  The." 

Two  Hundred  Years.  (?) 

Universal  Worship. 

Warren's  Address. 

Warren's  Address  at  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill. 
See  Warren's  Address. 

Warren's  Address  before  the  Battle  of  Bunker's 
Hill.     See  Warren's  Address. 

Warren's  Address  to  the  American  Soldiers.     See 
Warren's  Address. 

Warren's  Supposed  Address  at  Bunker  Hill.     See 
Warren's  Address. 

Washington  as  a  Leader. 

"Weapon  that  comes  down  as  still.  A."     See  Bal- 
lot, The. 

Whittling. 

Whittling — a  Yankee  Portrait.     See  Whittling. 

Whittling  Typical  of  Young  America.     See  Whit- 
tling. 

Yankee  Boy,  The.     See  Whittling. 
Pierson,  Clarence  H. — Why  Jim  Forsook  the  Ministry. 
Pierson,  E.  De  Lancey. — At  the  Opera. 

Four  Flies[,  a  Boarding  House  Episode],  The. 
Pierson,   Jennie. — Choosing  a  "State  "Tree"- — the  Ash. 
Pifer,  Edwin  F. — Verses. 
Pike,  Albert. — Buena  Vista. 

Dixie. 

Every  Year.     (Also  at.  to  Jas.  W.  Covert.) 

Grow;ing  Old. 

Old  Canoe,  The. 

To  the  Mocking-bird. 

Widowed  Heart,  The. 
Pike,  M.  S. — Home  Again. 

Pike.  Manley  H. — Palmetto  and  the  Pine,  The. 
Pillsbury,  A.  E. — Sense  of  Public  Duty,  The. 
Pillsbury,  Annie  Knowlton. — Silhouettes. 
"Pindar,  Peter."     See  Wolcott,  J: 
Finer,  Howell  L. — After  so  Long. 

Art  Artistic. 

Battle  with  the  Tramp,  The. 

By  Ned ! 

Cuban  Refugee,  The. 

Debutante. 

Did  You— Will  You? 

Dimes  for  Turnips'  Blood. 

Fellow  with  the  Grippe,  The. 

Gamut  of  Merry  Momus,  The. 

Gazelle  and  Swan. 

Hayseed's  Impression  of  the  Snap  Shot  Man,  The. 

If  He's  Bu'sted? 

Joe  and  Meg. 

Little  Cookie-hookie. 

Mrs.  Bacon,  Lawyer.        , 

Mp-ta-ta.  ' 

My  Little  Boy. 

My  Neighbor  Jim. 

My  'Shine. 

Night  Shade. 

Noth'n'  't  All. 

Pantomime  of  Campbell's  "Pleasures  of  Hope." 

Payin'  Honest  Debts. 

Picaninny's  Cyclone,  The. 

Sherman  Tornado,  The. 

Soul  that  Passed  in  the  Night,  A. 

Toast  to  the  Lovers  and  Husbands  of  the  Shakes- 
peare Club. 

To  My  Mother. 

Vanessa. 

'Way  Down  Souf  in  Georgy. 

"We  All  Wishes  You  was  up  Here." 

"Where  the  Lilies  Bloom." 

Where  Thou  Goest  I  Will  Go. 
Pinero,  Arthur  Wing. — Fallen  Star.  \. 
Pinkley,  Virgil  Alonzo. — Better  than  the  Miser's  Gold. 

Model  American  Girl,  The. 

Work,  Work  Away. 
Pinkney,  E:  Coate.— Health,  A. 

Serenade,  A:  "Look  out  upon  the  stars,  my  love." 

Song:  "We  break  the  glass  whose  sacred   wine." 

Votive  Song. 
Pinkney,  W: — Predictions  of  Disunion. 
Piozzi,  Mrs.  Hester  Lynch  [Salisbury]  [Thrale].    Three 
Warnings,  The. 


520 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Pope 


Pitt,  W:     (1708-1778.)     See  Chatham,  £oW  o/. 
Pitt,    W:,the    younger.    ( 1759-1806.)— African   Slave 
Trade. 
Barbarism  of  our  British  Ancestors.     See  African 

Slave  Trade. 
On  a  Motion  to  Censure  the  Ministry.     (1783.) 
See  Parliamentary  Speech  of  Feb.  21,  1783,  on 
American  Peace. 
On  an  Attempt  to  Coerce   Him   to   Resign.     See 

Parliamentary  Speech,  Feb.  20th,  1784. 
Parliamentary  Speech  of  Feb.  21,  1783,  on  Amer- 
ican Peace. 
Parliamentary  Speech,  Feb.  20th,  1784. 
Pitt,    W:     (1749-1823.)— American  War  Denounced, 
The. 
Sailor's  Consolation,  The.     (Also  at.  to  C:  Dihdin.) 
Pixley,  Frank  S. — Chrysanthemum,  The. 

Day  before  Thanksgiving,  The. 
Pixley,  J.  H. — Katie  Lee  and  Willie  Grey.     (Also  at.  to 

Josie  R.  Hunt.) 
Planch^,   Jas.    Robinson. — Collegian   and  the   Porter, 
The. 
One-legged  Goose,  The. 
Sea-serpent,  The. 
They  Parted. 
To  MoUidusta. 

Vat  You  Please.     (At.  also  to  W:  B.  Fowle.) 
Platen-Hallermiinde,  August,  Count. — Before  the  Con- 
vent of  Yuste,  1556. 
Plato. — Apology  for  Socrates. 
Pliny. — -Fabricius  Refuses  Bribes. 
Plough,  Carl.— Sleep,  Weary  Child. 
Plowman,  Idora  M. — -Piecing  the  Preacher's  Quilt. 
Plummer,  Howard  A. — Dutch  Lullaby. 
Plumptre,  E:  Hayes. — Dedication  to  Dante's  Divine 
Comedy  (Vita  Nuova). 
River,  The. 
Plunket,  W:  Conyngham,  Lord. — Irish  Parliament,  The. 
See  Union,  The. 
Union,  The. 
Plutarch.— Of  the  Education  of  Youth.     See  Euphues, 
— J:  Lyly. 
Representative  Government  Trustworthy. 
Plympton,  A.  G. — Dorothy's  Auction. 
Pocklington,  W. — Five  Minutes  with  a  Mad  Dog. 
Poe,  A.  H. — "Gran'ma  Al'aa  [or  Al'us]  Does." 
Poe,  Edgar  Allan.— Alone. 
Annabel  Lee. 
Bells,  The. 

Brazen  Bells,  The.     See  Bells,  The. 
City  in  the  Sea,  The. 
Conqueror  Worm,  The. 
Convalescence.     See  For  Annie. 
Eldorado. 
Eulalie. 
For  Annie. 
"From  childhood's  hour  I  have  not  been  as  others 

were."     See  Alone. 
Gold-bug,  The. 
Haunted  Palace,  The. 

Iron  Bells,  The.     See  Bells,  The. 

Lenore. 

Murderer's  Confession,  A.     See  Tell  Tale  Heart, 

The. 
Poetic  Principle,  The. 
Poetry.     See  Poetic  Principle,  The. 
Raven,  The. 
Silence. 

Silver  Bells,  The.     See  Bells,  The. 
Sleeper,  The. 
Tell  Tale  Heart,  The. 
Three  Sundays  in  a  Week. 
To  F.  S.  O. 
To  Heleii. 

To  One  in  Paradise. 
Ulalume. 

Valley  of  Unrest,  The. 
Wedding  Bells,  The.     See  Bells,  The. 
Pollard,  Josephine. — Annabel's  First  Party. 
Demon  on  the  Roof,  The. 

First  Party,  The.     See  Annabel's  First  Party. 
Funny  Story,  The. 
His  Names.     See  One  of  his  Names. 
In  Trouble. 

Keep  Working.     See  Over  and  Over  Again. 
Love's  Power. 
My  Mother. 

Old  Year  and  the  New,  The. 
One  of  His  Names. 
Over  and  Over  Again. 
Price  of  a  Drink,  The. 
Rough  and  Smooth. 


Pollard,  Josephine  (continued). 

Strange  Experience,  A. 

Tangled  Skein,  A. 

Vagrant,  A. 

What  Ailed  the  Pudding. 
Pollard,  Myra  E.— Chinese  Lilies. 
Pollock,  E:— Olivia. 

Parting  Hour,  The. 
PoUock,  Frank  L. — Ad  Bellonam. 

Trail  of  Gold,  The. 
Pollock,  Sir  Frd'k.— Sin  of  Sir  Pertab  Singh,  The. 

Six  Carpenters'  Case,  The. 
Pollock,  Walter  Herries. — Below  the  Heights. 

Conquest,  A. 

Father  Francis. 

Price,  The. 

Ruined  Library,  A. 
Pollok,  Rob't. — Byron.     See  Course  of  Time,  The. 

Course  of  Time,  The. 

Happiness.     See  Course  of  Time,  The. 

Hypocrite,  The.     See  Course  of  Time,  The. 

"It  was  an  eve  of  autumn's  holiest  mood."  See 
Course  of  Time,  The. 

Lord  Byron.     See  Course  of  Time,  The. 

Miser,  The.  •  See  Course  of  Time,  The. 

Ocean.     See  Course  of  Time,  The. 

Perversion  of  the  Bible. 
Pomeroy,  "Brick."     See  Pomeroy,  Marcus  Mills. 
Pomeroy,  Marcus  Mills. — Pluck. 
Pomeroy,  Millie  C. — Four  Scenes. 

Good-bye,  Old  Church. 

Good-bye,  Old  House. 

Self  Conceit. 

Smooth  Path,  A. 
Pond,     Chester     E.— Theophilus     Thistle's    Thrusted 

Thumb. 
Pond,    Enoch. — "Preaching    may    be    compared    to 

lightning." 
Pond,  S:  N. — Conjugal  Lament. 
Poole,  J: — Disagreeable  Meddler,  The. 

Not  Quite.     See  Paul  Pry. 

Paul  Pry. 

Paul  Pry  at  Doubledot's.     See  Paul  Pry. 

Sketch  of  the  "Old  Coaching  Days,"  A. 
Pope,  Alex. — Addison.     See  Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot. 

Age  of  Queen  Anne,  The.  See  Rape  of  the  Lock, 
The. 

Angling.     See  Windsor  Forest. 

Autumn;  or,  Hylas  and  Aegon. 

Belinda.     See  Rape  of  the  Lock,  The.  . 

Content.     See  Essay  on  Man,  An. 

Death  of  the  Duke  of  Buckingham,  The.  See 
Moral  Essays. 

Defiance  of  Hector  and  Ajax.  (Tr.)  See  Iliad, 
The. 

Descend,  Ye  Nine.  See  Ode  on  St.  Cecilia's  Day, 
The. 

Diversities  of  Judgment.  See  Essay  on  Criticism, 
An. 

Dunciad,  The. 

Dunciad — The  Description  of  Dulness,  The.  See 
Dunciad,  The. 

Dying  Christian,  The.  See  Dying  Christian  to 
his  Soul,  The. 

Dying  Christian  to  His  Soul,  The. 

Elegy  to  the  Memoiy  of  an  Unfortunate  Lady. 

Epilogue  to  the  Satires. 

Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot. 

Essay  on  Criticism,  An. 

Essay  on  Man,  An. 

Fame.     See  Essay  on  Man,  An. 

First  Epistle  of  the  Second  Book  of  Horace. 

Fool  and  the  Poet,  The. 

Greatness.     See  Essay  on  Man,  An. 

Happiness.     See  Essay  on  Man,  An. 

Horace.     See  Essay  on  Criticism,  An. 

Horace  Imitated.  See  First  Epistle  of  the  Second 
Book  of  Horace. 

Humanity's  Heroes.  See  Prologue  to  Mr.  Ad- 
dison's Cato. 

Iliad,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Homer. 

Lines  by  a  Person  of  Quality.  See  Song  by  a 
Person  of  Quality. 

Love  Song,  in  the  Modern  Taste,  A.  (Also  at.  to 
Jonathan  Swift.)  See  Song  by  a  Person  of 
,Quality. 

Man  of  Ross,  The.     See  Moral   Essays. 

Messiah. 

Moral  Essays. 

Nature.     See  Moral   Essays. 

Nature's  Chain.     See  Essay  on  Man,  An. 

Ode  for  Music  on  St.  Cecilia's  Day.  See  Ode  on 
St.  Cecilia's  Day. 


521 


Pope 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Pope,  Alex,  (.continued). 

Ode  on  St.  Cecilia's  Day. 

Ode  on  Solitude. 

Ode  to  Solitude.     See  Ode  on  Solitude. 

On  a  Certain  Lady  at  Court. 

On  Mrs.  Tofts  [A  Famous  Opera  Singer]. 

Order  of  Natme,  The.     See  Essay  on  Man,  An. 

Poet's  Friend,  The.     See  Essay  on  Man,  An. 

Portrait  of  Addison.     See  Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuth- 

not. 
.Prologue  to  Mr.  Addison's  [Tragedy  of]  Cato. 

Prologue  to  the  Satires.  See  Epistle  to  Dr.  Ar- 
buthnot. 

Quiet  Life,  The.     See  Ode  on  Solitude. 

Kape  of  the  Lock,  The. 

Reason  and  Instinct.     iSee  Essay  on  Man,  An. 

Road  to  Happiness  Open,  The.  See  Essay  on 
Man,  An. 

Ruling  Passion,  The.     iSee  Moral  Essays. 

Sandy's  Ghost;  or,  A  Proper  New  Ballad  of  the 
New  Ovid's  Metamorphoses,  as  it  was  Intended 
to  be  Translated  by  Persons  of  Quality. 

Satire  on  the  Whig  Poets. 

Scandal.     See  Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot. 

Solitude.     See  Ode  on  Solitude." 

Song  by  a  Person  of  Quality. 

Sporus.     5ee  Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot. 

To  a  Blockhead. 

Toilet,  The.     See  Rape  of  the  Lock,  The. 

Universal  Prayer,  The. 

Verbatim  from  Boileau. 

Windsor  Forest. 
Pope,  Mrs.  Marion  [Manville]. — Little  Jack  Two-sticks. 

Over  the  Divide. 

Scotch  Heather. 
Popular  Educator. — Christmas  Pantomime. 

Fable,  A. 

George  Washington. 

Life's  Maxims. 

Pretty  is  that  Pretty  Does. 

Tom's  Eyes  and  Mine. 

What  to  do.     See  Life's  Maxims. 

Wonderful  Weaver,  The. 
Porter,  Annie. — Devil  in  Search  of  a  Wife,  The. 
Porter,  Bruce. — "H  was  an  indigent  Hen." 
Porter,  H.  H. — Forty  Years  After. 
Porter,  Horace. — American  Patriotism. 

Courage. 

Hero-president,  The. 

Reverence  for  the  Flag. 

Tribute  to  Gen.  Sherman,  An. 
Porter,  Ivan  M. — "Shot  through  the  Heart." 
Porter,  J:  Addison. — Kalevala,  The.     (Tr.) 

Legend  of  Aino,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Kalevala,  The. 

Wainamoinen's    Sowing.       (Tr.)      See    Kalevala, 
The. 
Porter,  J:  K. — Guiteau  the  Assassin. 
Porter,   Linn   Boyd   ("Albert   Ross"). — Judy   O'Shea 

Sees  Hamlet. 
Porter,  Noah.— Advice  to  Young  Men. 

"Science,  if  true  to  itself,  must  come  back  to  a 
personal  God." 

"Young  men,  you  are  the  architects  of  your  own 
fortunes."     See  Advice  to  Young  Men. 
Porter,  Ray.     "Charge  of  the  Lightning  Judge,  The." 
Porter,    T:    Conrad. — Wanderer's    Night-song,    "The. 

(Tr.) 
Porter,  W.  D. — Commencement  Day. 
Porter,  Walter. — Love  in  Thy  Youth. 

"Love  in  thy  youth,  fair  maid,  be  wise."     See 
Love  in  Thy  Youth. 
Portetis,  BeUby. — Death. 
Portland  Oregonian. — Ninkum  Land,  The. 
Post,    Waldron    Kintzling. — Harvard- Yale    Football 
Game  [or  Match],  A.     See  Jack  Rattleton  Goes 
to  Springfield  and  Back. 

Jack  Rattleton  Goes  to  Springfield  and  Back. 
Potter,    D: — When   Witherspoon   was   President. 
Potter,  H:  Codman. — Royalty  of  Virtue,  The. 
Potter,  Reuben  M. — Hymn  of  the  Alamo. 
Poulsson,   (Anne)   Emifie. — Flower's  Easter  Message, 
The. 

Little  Gardens. 

Sunbeams,  The. 
Powderly,  Terence  Vincent. — Curse  to  Labor,  The. 

Greatest  Curse  to  Labor,  The.  See  Curse  to  La- 
bor, The. 

Knights  of  Labor. 
Powell,  Joseph  C— Tragedy  of  the  North  Sea,  A. 
Powell,  R:  Stillman. — Dirge  of  the  Householder,  The. 

"I  go  Fishin'." 

Two  Kisses. 

Two  Verses. 


Powell,  W:  N. — Approach  of  Night,  The. 
Power,    Marguerite    A. — Hidden    Rose-tree,    A.     See 
Virginia's  Hand. 

Virginia's  Hand. 
Power,  Rev.  P.  B. — Snow  Twins,  The. 
Power,  Sarah  Helen.    See  Whitman,  Mrs.  Sarah  Helen 

[Power]. 
Power,  Tyrone.— Fight  of  Hell-kettle,  The. 
Powers,  Ella  M. — Christmas  Gift,  A. 
Powers,  Horatio  Nelson. — Chimney  Swallows. 

Fireflies. 

My  Walk  to  Church. 

Our  Sister. 
Praed,  Winthrop  Mackworth. — April  Fools. 

Belle  of  the  Ball,  The.     See  Every-day  Charac- 
ters. 

Camp-bell.    See  Charade  on  the  Name  of  Camp- 
bell, the  Poet. 

Charade  [on  the  Name  of  Campbell,  the  Poet]. 

Death    of    Ajax,   The.       See    Ovid's    Metamor- 
phoses. 

Dying  Girl  to  Her  Lover,  The.     See  Last  Words. 

End  of  the  Romance,  The.     See  Every-day  Char- 
acters. 

Every-day  Characters. 

Fairy   Song.    See    Legend  of  the  Haunted  Tree, 
The. 

Knight's  Toast,  The.     See  Toast,  The. 

Last  Words. 

Laugh  and  Grow  Fat. 

Legend  of  the  Haunted  Tree,  The. 

Letter  of  Advice,  A. 

L'Inconnue. 

Mad — Quite  Mad. 

Marius  amidst  the  Ruins  of  Carthage. 

Marston  Moor.     See    Sir     Nicholas    at     Marston 
Moor. 

My  Mother.     See  Toast,  The. 

Mv  Partner.     See  Every-day  Characters. 

Newly  Wedded,  The. 

Ovid's  Metamorphoses.      (Tr.) 

Quince.     See  Every-day  Characters. 

Red  Fisherman,  The;  or,  The  Devil's  Decoy. 

School  and  School-fellows. 

Sir  Nicholas  at  Marston  Moor. 

Sketch  of  a  Young  Lady  Five  Months  Old. 

Song  of  Impossibilities,  A. 

Stanzas  on  Seeing  the  Speaker  Asleep. 

Talented  Man,  The. 

Toast,  The.     (At.) 

Twenty-eight  and  Twenty-nine. 

Verses  on  Seeing  the  Speaker  Asleep  in  His  Chair. 
See  Stanzas  on  Seeing  the  Speaker  Asleep. 

Vicar,  The.     See  Every-day  Characters. 
Pratt,  Agnes  L. — "From  Shadow-pun." 
Pratt,  Anna  Maria. — Charade. 

Early  News. 

Little  Penelope's  Sewing 

May  Song,  A. 

Mortifying  Mistake,  A. 
Pratt,  Florence  E. — Courting  in  Kentucky. 

Kerrected.     See  Courting  in  Kentucky. 

School-ma'am's  Courting,  The.     See  Courting  in 
Kentucky. 
Pratt,  W:  W. — ^Drunkard's  Repentance,  A.     See  Ten 
Nights  in  a  Barroom. 

Ten  Nights  in  a  Barroom. 
Prentice,  G:  Denison. — At  My  Mother's  Grave. 

"Beyond  the  farthest  glimmering  star." 

Charter  Oak,  The. 

Closing  Year,  The. 

Harvest  Hymn. 

In  Memoriam. 

Memories. 

"Men  try  to  drown  the  floating  dead  of  their  own 
souls  in  the  wine-cup." 

Name  in  the  Sand,  A.     (At.  also  to  Hannah  F. 
Gould.) 

New  England. 

Sabbath  Evening. 

Shall  We  Meet  Again? 

Thunder  Storm,  The. 

"  'Tis  a  time  for  memory  and  for  tears." 

To  an  Absent  Wife. 
Prentiss,  Mrs.  Eliz.  [Payson].  (Mrs.  G:  Lewis  Prentiss.) 
Cradle  Song.     (Tr.) 

Kitten  and  the  Mouse,  The.     See  Little  Kitty. 

Little  Angel,  The. 

Little  Kitty. 

Lullaby  Song.     See  Cradle  Song. 

"More  Love  to  Thee,  O  Christ!" 

Mystery  of  Life  in  Christ,  The. 

Sleep,  Baby,  Sleep.      See  Cradle  Song. 


522 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Procter 


Prentiss,  Sergeant  Smith. — Address  on  the  Landing  of 
the  Pilgrims. 

Appeal  in  Behalf  of  Ireland.  See  Relief  for  Starv- 
ing Ireland. 

Defalcation  and  Retrenchment. 

Glorious  New  England.     See  Address  on  the  Land  - 
ing  of  the  Pilgrims. 

In  Behalf  of  Starving  Ireland.  See  Relief  for 
Starving  Ireland. 

New  England.  See  Address  on  the  Landing  of 
the  Pilgrims. 

New  England's  Fairest  Boast. 

Relief  for  Starving  Ireland,  1847. 

Sending  Relief  to  Ireland.  See  Relief  for  Starving 
Ireland. 

Value  of  the  Union,  1847,  The. 
Presbyterian  Journal. — Aunt  Parsons's  Story. 

Brightest  Gift,  The. 
Prescott,  Mary  Newmarch. — Supposing. 

Work. 
Prescott,     W:    Hickling. — Colonization    of    America, 
The. 

History  of  the  Conquest  of  Mexico. 

History  of  the  Reign  of  Ferdinand  and  Isa- 
bella. 

How  Montezuma  Lived.  See  History  of  the  Con- 
quest of  Mexico. 

Return  of  Columbus,  The.  See  History  of  the 
Reign  of  Ferdinand  and  Isabella. 

Sir  Walter  Scott. 

"Triumphs  of  the  warrior  are  bounded  by  the  nar- 
row theatre  of  his  own  age.  The."  See  Sir 
Walter  Scott. 

Venice  of  the  Aztecs,  The.  See  History  of  the 
Conquest  of  Mexico. 

Prest,  . — Frenchman  and   the   Sheep's   Trotters, 

The. 

Frenchman's  Dinner,  A.     See  Frenchman  and  the 
Sheep's  Trotters,  The. 
Preston,  Mrs.  Anna  A. — ^Bessie  Kendrick's  Journey. 

Green  Grass  Under  the  Snow,  The. 

Ideal  is  the  Real,  The. 

Singing  Joseph. 
Preston,  Elliott. — Gambler's  Last  Deal,  The. 
Preston,  Mrs.  Marg.  [Junkin]. — Antonio  Oribono. 

Euthanasia. 

First  Te  Deum,  The» 

For  Love's  Sake. 

'■'Gone  Forward." 

Grave  in  Hollywood  Cemetery,  Richmond,  A. 

Hero  of  the  Commune,  The. 

Hero  of  the  Gun,  The. 

His  Name. 

Little  Watcher,  The. 

Maestro's  Confessions,  The. 

Murillo's  Trance. 

One  of  God's  Little  Heroes. 

Rabboni. 

Read  to  Sleep. 

Recalled. 

Save  the  Other  Man. 

Shade  of  the  Trees.  The. 

Silver  Plate,  The. 

Sir  Walter's  Honor. 

Sonnet:  One  Day. 

"There  is  no  morrow."     See  Sonnet:  One  Day. 

Under  the  Shade  of  the  Trees.  See  Shade  of  the 
Trees,  The. 

Vision  of  the  Snow,  The. 

Wanderer's  Bell,  The. 

We  Two. 

Young  Van  Dyck,  The. 
Preston,  W:  C. — Eloquence  and  Logic. 

On  Eloquence.     See  Eloquence  and  Logic. 
"Pretzel,  Carl." — Carl  Pretzel's  Ride. 

Der  lioddery  Dicket. 

Dot  Loaf  of  Bread.  • 

Dot  Young  Vidow,  Clara. 

Indemberance. 

Pretzel's  Speech  before  the  Illinois  Assembly. 
Price,  Col.  J.  A. — -Tribute  to  Washington. 
Prickett,  J.  P.— Reason  Why,  The. 
Pride,  Anna  R. — Arbor  Day  Poem. 
Priest,  Nancy  Amelia  Woodbury.  See  Wakefield,  Mrs. 

Nancy  Amelia  WooDBtiRT  [Priest]. 
Prince,  J:  G. — Who  are  the  Free? 
Prince,  W.  R. — True  Honor  of  a  Nation,  The. 
Princeton  Tiger. — In  Spring. 

Metamorphosis. 
Prindle,  Emma  M. — Edmund  Burke, 
Pringle,  T: — Afar  in  the  Desert. 

Dearest  Ijove!  Believe  Me. 

Lion  and  the  Giraffe,  The. 


Prior,  Matthew. — "Accept,  my  love,  as  true  a  heart." 
Another  Enigma. 
Better  Answer,  A. 
Bibo  and  Charon. 
Chameleon,  The. 
Cupid  Mistaken. 
Earning  a  Dinner. 
English  Ballad  on  the  Taking  of  Namur  by  King 

of  Great  Britain,  MDCXCV.,  An. 
Epigram  of  Plato,  An. 
Epigram  on  Bishop  Atterbury. 
Epigram  Written  to  the  Duke  de  Noalles.  • 
Epitaph,  An:  "Interr'd  beneath  this  marble  stone." 
Epitaph  Extempore. 
Flies,  The. 

For  My  Own  Monument. 
Forma  Bonum  Fragile. 
"In  vain  you  tell  your  parting  lover." 
Jack  and  Joan.     See  Epitaph,  An:  "Interr'd  be- 
neath this  marble  stone." 
Lady  who  Offers  her  Looking-glass  to  Venus,  The. 

See  Epigram  of  Plato,  An. 
Letter,  A. — (To  Lady  Margaret  Cavendish  [HoUes- 

Harley,  when  a  child].) 
Love's  Disguises.     See  Ode,  An:  "The  merchant  to 

secure  his  treasure." 
"Merchant,  to  secure  his  treasure.  The."     See  Ode. 

An:  "The  merchant  to  secure  his  treasure." 
Merry  Andrew. 

Ode,  An:  "The  merchant  to  secure  his  treasure." 
On  Bishop  Atterbury.     See  Epigram  on  Bishop 

■  Atterbury. 
On  My  Birthday,  July  21. 
On  the  Taking  of  Namur  by  the  King  of  Great 

Britain.     See  English  Ballad  on  the  Taking  of 

Namur  by  the  King  of  Great  Britain. 
Pedant,  The. 
Phillis's  Age. 
Question  to  Lisetta,  The. 
Remedy  Worse  than  the  Disease,  The. 
Secretary,  The. 
Simile,  A. 
Song:   "The   merchant,   to  secure   his   treasure." 

See  Ode,   An:   "The   merchant   to   secure    his 

treasure." 
To  a  Child  of  Quality. 
To  a  Child  of  Quality,  Five  Years  Old.     See  To  a 

Child  of  Quality. 
To  a  Lady:  she  refusing  to  continue  a  dispute. 
To  the  Duke  de  Noalles.      See  Epigram  Written 

to  the  Duke  de  Noalles. 
To  the  Hon.  Charles  Montague. 
Truth  and  Falsehood. 
Two  Enigmas. 
Two  Riddles. 
Probyn,  May. — Bees  of  Myddelton  Manor,  The. 
Christmas  Carol. 
Is  it  Nothing  to  You? 
Procter,  Adelaide  Anne. — Angel's  Story,  The. 
Annunciation,  The. 
Because. 
Chain,  A. 

Christmas  Flowers. 
Cleansing  Fires. 
Comforter,  A. 

Dead  Past,  A.     See  Old  and  the  New  Year,  The. 
Desire,  A. 

Doubting  Heart,  A. 
Dream,  A. 
Envy. 

Evening  Hymn. 
"Fail — yet  rejoice;  because  no  less."     See  Light 

and  Shade. 
Fidelis. 
Hearts. 

Homeward  Bound. 
Hush. 
"I   hold   him   great,   who  for  love's  sake."     See 

Maximus. 
If  Thou  Couldst  Know. 
Incompleteness. 
Judge  Not. 
"Judge   not:   the   workings   of   his   brain."     See 

Judge  Not. 
King  and  Slave. 

Lead  Me,  O  Lord.     See  Per  Pacem  ad  Lucem. 
Legend  of  Bregenz,  A. 
Legend  of  Provence,  A. 
Light  and  Shade. 
Lost  Chord,  A. 
Maximus. 
Nights,  The. 
Now. 


523 


Procter 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Procter,  Adelaide  Anne  (continued). 

Proctor,  Edna  Dean  (continued). 

Old  and  the  New  Year,  The. 

pn  the  Freeing  of  the  Serfs.     See  Russian  Jour- 

One by  One. 

ney,  A. 

Per  Pacem  ad  Lucem. 

Our  Country. 

Pilgrims,  The. 

Perfect  Day,  The. 

Present,  The. 

Prayers  for  the  Dead. 

Requital,  The» 

Return  of  the  Dead,  The. 

"Rise!  for  the  day  is  passing."     See  Now. 

Russian  Journey,  A. 

Sent  to  Heaven. 

Song  of  the  Ancient  People,  The. 
Stripes  and  the  Stars,  The. 

Shadow,  A. 

Sowing.     See  Sowing  and  Reaping. 

Take  Heart. 

Sowing  and  Reaping: 

Waiting  for  Easter. 

Storm,  The. 

Propertius.     Translation  from  Propertius. 

Story  of  the  Faithful  Soul,  The. 

Proudfit,  D:   Law  ("Peleg  Arkwright"). — Bartender's 

Strive,  Wait  and  Pray. 

Through    Peace    to    Light.     See    Per    Pacem    ad 

Story,  The. 

«         Bismillah. 

Lucem. 

Catastrophe,  A. 

Tomb  in  Ghent,  A. 

Christmas  Gift,  A. 

Wayside  Inn,  The. 

Cousin   Floy. 

Wind,  The. 

Daddy  Flick's  Spree. 

Woman's  Answer,  A. 

Demmy  Jake. 

Woman's  Question,  A. 

Father  John. 

Procter,     Bryan     Waller   ("Barry   Cornwall"). — ^Ad- 

Fishin'. 

dress  to  the  Ocean.     See  Ocean,  The. 

Little  Joe's  Flowers.     See  Poor  Little  Joe. 

Autobiographical  Fragment,  An. 

Love  in  the  Kitchen. 

Bacchanalian  Song,  A. 

Love  oM  the  Half-shell. 

Belshazzar. 

Palmer,  The. 

Blood  Horse,  The. 

Poor  Little  Joe. 

Bolivar.     <See  BuUd  a  Column  to  Bolivar. 

Prehistoric  Smith. 

Bridal  Dirge,  A. 

Retribution. 

Build  a  Column  to  Bolivar. 

Warden,  Keep  a  Place  for  Me. 

Courage. 

WiUis,  The. 

Doctor's  Story,  The.     See  Surgeon's  Tale,  The. 

"Prout,  Father."     See  Mahont,  Fs.  Sylvester. 

Drinking  Song,  A. 

Provost,  Agnes  Louise. — Out  of  Muhlqueen's  Alley. 

Fisherman,  The. 

Prudentius,     Clemens       Aurelius. — Each      Sorrowful 

Flowers. 

Mourner. 

For  Music. 

Pryor,   Roger  Atkinson.— Challenge,  The.     (At.)  See 

Golden  Girl,  A.     See  Lucy. 

O'Brien,  FitzJames. 

Golden-tressed  Adelaide. 

Public  Opinion. — At  the  Loom. 

Hermione. 

PmcA;.— Ladies'  Whist  Club,  The. 

History  of  a  Life  [,  The]. 

Magruder's  Lullaby. 

Hunter's  Song,  The. 

Proposal,  A. 

Inscription  for  a  Fountain. 

Pugh,  Edwin.— Hetties. 

King  Death. 

In  His  Way  a  Hero.     See  Settles. 

King  of  the  Night,  The.     See  Owl,  The. 

Pullen,  Mrs.  Eliz.  [Jones]  [Cavazza]. — Alicia's  Bonnet. 

•    Life,  A.     See  History  of  a  Life,  The. 

Derelict. 

Life. 

Her  Shadow. 

Lost  and  Found.     See  Thirteen  Years  Ago. 
Love  Me  if  I  Live.     See  Song:  "Love  me  if  I  live." 

Love  and  Poverty. 

LuUaby:  "Through  Sleepy-land  doth  a  river  flow." 

Lucy. 

Modern  Cymon,  The. 

Mother's  Last  Song,  The. 

Sea-weed,  The. 

When  Angiy,  Count  a  Hundred. 
Pullen,  Eugene  Henry. — Now  I  Lay  Me  Down  to  Sleep. 

My    Books.       See    Autobiographical     Fragment, 

Pulsford,  J:— Self-life. 

An. 

Pulteney,  W: — On  Reducing  the  Army. 

New  Alcestis,  A. 

Punch. — Alarming  Prospect. 

Ocean,  The. 

Amende  Honorable,  The. 

Owl,  The. 

Apple   Pie. 

Peace!  What  do  Tears  Avail? 

Art  of  Conversation,  The. 

Petition  to  Time,  A. 

Ballad  of  Bedlam  [,  A]. 

Poet's  Song  to  His  Wife,  The. 

Bandit's  Fate,  The. 

Poet's  Thought,  A. 

Barber's  Shop,  The.     See  Jones  at  the  Barber's 

Recalled  to  Life.     See  New  Alcestis,  A. 

Shop. 

Repose,  A. 

Barley  Broth. 

Sea,  The. 

Barley  Water. 

Sea-king,  The. 

Bas  Bleu. 

Serenade,    A.     Set    to   Music    by    the    Chevalier 

Beignet  de  Pomme. 

Neukomm. 

Bitter  Cry  of  the  Outcast  Choir  Boy,  The. 

She  was  not  Fair  nor  Full  of  Grace. 

Black  and  White. 

Sit  Down,  Sad  Soul. 

Boa  and  the  Blanket,  The. 

Softly  Woo  away  her  Breath. 

Boiled  Chicken. 

Song:  "Love  me  if  I  live." 

"Book  in  a  Bustle,  A." 

Song  for  the  Seasons,  A. 

Calf's  Heart. 

Song  in  Praise  of  Spring. 

Cardinal  Manning. 

Song  of  the  Sea,  A.     See  Sea,  The. 

Cause,  The. 

Song  of  Wood-nymphs. 

Charles  H.  Spurgeon. 

Stars. 

Chemist  and  [or  to]  His  Love,  The. 

Stormy  Petrel,  The. 

Cherry  Pie. 

Surgeon's  Tale,  The. 

"Children  must  be   Paid  for." 

Thirteen  Years  Ago. 

Christmas  Pudding,  The. 

Time.     See  Petition  to  Time,  A. 

Collegian  to  His  Bride,  The.                    • 

Violet,  The. 

Colloquy  on  a  Cab-stand. 

Way  to  Conquer,  The. 
White  Squall,  The. 

"Come  strike  me  the  harp  with  its  soul-stirring 

twang." 

Proctor,  Edna  Dean. — Brooklyn   Bridge,  The. 

Concerning  Sisters-in-law. 

Columbia's  Banner. 

Conjugal  Conundrum,  A. 

Columbia's  Emblem. 

Courtship  [and  Matrimony]. 

For  Freedom. 

Curry. 

Grave  of  Lincoln,  The. 

Czar,  The. 

Heaven,  0  Lord,  I  cannot  Lose. 

Death  of  King  Bomba,  The. 

Heroes. 

Death-bed  of  Bomba,  King  of  Naples.     See  Death 

Lost  War-sloop,  The. 

of  Kin^  Bomba,  The. 

Matins  [at  St.  Mary's]. 
Minstrel,  The. 

Deviled  Biscuit. 

Dilly  and  the  D's,  The. 

524 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Q,uiz 


Punch  (continued). 

Domestic  Economy. 

Drama  for  Every-day  Life. 

Eating  Soup. 

Elegy,  Written  in  a  Railway  Station. 

Epigram:  Vox  et  Prseterea  Nihil. 

Epitaph  on  a  Candle. 

Epitaph  on  a  Locomotive. 

Exclusive's  Broken   Idol,  The. 

Feast  of  Vegetables  and  the  Flow  of  Water, 
The. 

Fight  over  the  Body  of  Keitt,  The. 

First  Sensible  Valentine,  The. 

Fragment,  A. 

Grammar  for  the  Court  of  Berlin. 

Green  Pea  Soup. 

Greeting  to  the  "George  Griswold." 

His  Eye  was  Stern  and  Wild.     See  Fragment,  A. 

Imaginative  Crisis,  The. 

In  Memory  of  Lewis  Carroll. 

Inquest — not  Extraordinary. 

Invitation  to  the  Zoological  Gardens,  An. 

Irish  Particular. 

Irish  Stew. 

Jones  at  the  Barber['s]  Shop. 

Justice  to  Scotland. 

Kindred  Quacks. 

Last  Appendix  to  "Yankee  Doodle,"  The. 

Last  Kick  of  Fop's  Alley,  The. 

Letter  and  an  Answer,  A. 

Lines  addressed  to ,  on  the  29th  of  Septem- 
ber, when  we  Parted  for  the  Last  Time. 

Lines  for  Music. 

Lines  to  Bessy. 

Lines  Written  After  a  Battle. 

Lobster  Salad. 

Lobsters,  The. 

Love  on  the  Ocean. 

Ludgate  Hill. — A  Mystery. 

Mad  Cabman's  Song  of  Sixpence,  The. 

Madman,  The.     See  Fragment,  A. 

Madness. 

Monody  on  the  Death  of  an  Only  Client. 

Mutton  Chops. 

My  Last  Shirt.     See  Lines  Addressed  to  , 

on  the  29th  of  September,  etc. 

Numbers  Altered. 

Ode  to  the  Great  Sea-serpent  on  His    Wonderful 

"Oh,  Wilt  Thou  Sew  My  Buttons  on?"  and  "Yes, 
I  Will  Sew  Thy  Buttons  On !" 

On  a  Rejected  No.segay. 

On  a  Tear  which  Angelina  Observed  Trickling 
Down  My  No.'?e  at  Dinner  Time.  See  Stanzas 
for  the  Sentimental. 

On  My  Finding  Angelina  Stop  Suddenly  in  a 
Rapid  After-supper  Polka.  See  Stanzas  for 
the  Sentimental. 

On  My  Refusing  Angelina  a  Kiss  under  the  Mistle- 
toe.    See  Stanzas  for  the  Sentimental. 

On  Seeing  an  Execution. 

One  Good  Turn  Deserves  Another. 

Paid  BiU,  The. 

Papa  to  his  Heir. 
•    Parody  for  a  Reformed  Parliament. 

People  and  their  Palace,  The. 

Phrenologist  to  his  Mistress,  The. 

Poet  Foiled,  The. 

Poetical  Cookery-book,  The. 

Poetry  on  an  Improved  Principle. 

Positively  the  Last  Performance! 

Proclivior. 

Pup-Pup-Poetry.  See  Invitation  to  the  Zoologi- 
cal Gardens.  An. 

Railroad  Nursery  Rhyme. 

Railway  Gilpin,  The. 

Railway  of  Life,  The. 

Railway  Traveler's  Farewell  to  His  Family, 
The. 

Red  Herrings. 

Roasted  Sucking-pig.  See  Poetical  Cookery- 
book.  The. 

Sapphics  of  the  Cabstand. 

Sated  One,  The. 

Scene  on  the  Austrian  Frontier,  A. 

Secret  Sorrow,  The. 

Selling  off  at  the  Opera  House. 

Serenade,    A.     "Smile,    lady,  smile." 

Sick  Child,  The. 

Song  for  a  Catarrh,  A. 

Song  for  Punch  Drinkers. 

Song  of  Hiawatha,  The.     An  English  Criticism. 

Song  of  the  Humbugged  Husband,  The. 


Punch  (continued). 

Stanzas  for  the  Sentimental. 

Stanzas  to  an  Egg. 

Stanzas  to  Pale  Ale. 

Steak,  The. 

Stewed  Duck  and  Peas. 

Stewed  Steak. 

Sticky. 

"Swell's"  Homage  to  Mrs.  Stowe,  A. 

Temperance  Song. 

Thomas  Carlyle. 

Ticket  of  Leave,  The. 

To  a  Rich  Young  Widow. 

To  Song-birds  on  a  Sunday. 

To  the  Leading  Periodical. 

Trifle. 

Vigil,  The. 

Voice,  and  Nothing  Else,  A.     See  Epigram:  Vox 
et  Praeterea  Nihil. 

Waiter,  The. 

William  E.  Gladstone. 

Wonders  of  the  Victorian  Age. 
Punch  Bowl. — Is  Love  Blind? 

Lover's  Complaint. 

Taking  the  Veil. 

With  a  Golfer's  Apologies  to  Tennyson. 
Punshon,  W:  M. — Catnerine  de  Medicis. 

Macaulay. 

Savonarola. 
Purdy,  James  C. — Settin'  the  Flags. 
Pushmataha. — To  the  Secretary  of  War,  1824. 
Putnam,  Rev.  Albert  P. — American  Flag,  The. 

"And  every  village  graveyard  will  have  its  green 
mounds."  (?) 

History  of  Our  Flag. 

National  Ensign,  The.     See  Our  Flag. 

Our  Flag. 
Putnam,  G: — Scholar's  Mission,  The. 
Putnam,  Granville  B. — Columbia's  Jubilee. 
Putnam,  M.  S.  H.— Fish  Family,  The. 
Putnam,  Mr8.  Sarah  A.  [Brock]. — Out  of  the  Window. 
Pyatt,  Florence  E.     See  Ph.vtt,  Florence   E. 
Pyle,  Howard. — Tilghman's  Ride  from  Yorktown  to 

Philadelphia. 
Pym,   J: — End   of  Government,   The. 

"Three  Liberties,  The. 


"Quad,  M."     See  Lewis,  C:  Bertrand. 
"Quaker  Poet,"  The.     See  Barton,  Bernard. 
Quarles,   Fs. — Delight  in  God  [Only]. 

Divine  Rapture,  A. 

Mystical  Ecstacy,  A.     See  Divine  Rapture,  A. 

"Phosphor,  bring  the  day." 

Respice  Finem. 

Shortness  of  Life,  The. 

Sonnet:     "How     orient     is     thy    beauty!    How 
divine!" 

Sonnet :  ' '  Nor  myrrh,  nor'  cassia,  nor  the  choice 
perfumes." 

Sonnet:  "Who  ever  smelt  the  breath  of  morning 
flowers." 

True  Repentance. 

Vanity  of  the  World,  The. 

Voyage  of  Life,  The. 
Quarles,  J: — Divine  Ejaculation. 
Quayle,  W.  A. — Nature  of  Oratory,  The. 
"Queerquill." — Pat's  Letter. 
Quencher,  Mark. — Dissibation. 
Quiet,  C: — Failure. 
Quill,  J: — Sorrowful  Tale  of  a  Hired  [or  Servant]  Girl. 

Wilkins  Family,  The. 
Quiller-Couch,    Arthur    T: — Famous    Ballad    of    the 
Jubilee  Cup,  The. 

Sage  Counsel. 

Splendid  Spurt,  The. 

Waiting  Juliet,  The. 

White  Moth,  The. 
Quiller-Couch,  Mabel. — Delayed  in  Transmission. 
Quilp,  T: — Deacon  Stokes. 
Quimby,  Lillian  B. — Four  o'Clocks. 
Quincy,  Josiah. — Against  the  Embargo,   1808. 

British  Aggressions.   ■ 

Embargo,   The.     See  Against  the  Embargo. 

In  Defence  of  the  British  Soldiers. 

Letter-signed  Hyperion. 

"No  Free  Government  was  Ever  Founded." 

Principles  of  the  Revolution,  The. 
Quint,  Wilder  Dwight. — Violiniste. 
"Quiz." — London  Bee  Story,  A. 


525 


B.,  A.  L. 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


R.,  A.  L.— Beautiful  Trees. 
R.,  C.  P.— Nearing  Port. 
R.,  G.  L. — Philosophia  Amoris. 
R.,  J. — Won  the  Fot. 
R.,  M. — Modern  Book,  The. 
R.,  M.  L. — True  Manliness. 
R.,  P.  D. — To  My  Meerschaum. 
R.,  S.  B.— Fra  Moreale. 
R..  S.  J.— His  Father  Took  Him  Home. 
R.,  W.  T. — Song:  "Gray  is  the  sky  but  naught  care  I." 
Rabb,  Mrs.  Kate  [Milner]. — ^neid,  Story  of  the. 
Beowulf,  Story  of. 
Divine  Comedy,  Story  of  the. 
Iliad,  Story  of  the. 
Jerusalem    Delivered,   Story  of  the. 
Kalevala,  Story  of  the. 
Lusiad,  Story  of  the. 
Maha-Bharata,  Story  of  the. 
Nibelungen  Lied,  Story  of  the. 
Odyssey,  Story  of  the. 
Orlando  Furioso,  Story  of  the. 
Paradise  Lost,  Story  of. 
Paradise  Regained,  Story  of. 
Poem  of  the  Cid,  Story  of  the. 
Ramayana,  Story  of  the. 
Shah-Nameh,  Story  of  the. 
Song  of  Roland,  Story  o '  the. 
Rabillon,  Leonce. — Horn,   The.     {Tr.)     See   Song    of 
Roland. 
Roland's  Death.     {Tr.)     See  Song  of  Roland. 
Song  of  Roland.     (Tr.) 
Radcliff,  Emily. — Gods  in  Council,  The. 
Radford,  DoUie. — Ah,  Bring  it  Not. 
If  All  the  World. 
Model,  A. 
My  Little  Dear. 
October. 
Rae-Brown,  Campbell. — Fawcett's  Fame. 
How  We  Beat  the  Captain's  Colt. 
Kissmg  Cup's  Race.     See  Winning  Cup's  Race. 
Ladybird's  Race. 
Shadow  of  a  Song,  The. 
Terrible  Race,  A. 
Winning  Cup's  Race. 
Ragsdale,    Cora    Lee.— Bible    Legend    of   the    Wissa- 

hickon.  The. 
Ragsdale,  Lulah. — Tried. 
Raleigh,  E:  A. — When  Morning  Breaks. 
Raleigh,    Sir    Walter.— As  You  Came  from  the  Holy 
Land. 
Conclusion,  The.     See  Verses  Found  in  his  Bible 

in  the  Gate-house  at  Westminster. 
Death  of  Sir  Walter  Raleigh.     See  Verses  Found  in 
in  his  Bible  in  the   Gate-house  at  Westmin- 
ster. 
Epitaph  on  the  Earl  of  Leicester. 
Epitaph  upon  the  Right  Honourable  Sir  Philip 

Sidney,  An.       •« 
Even  such  is  Time.     See  Verses  Found  in  his  Bible 

in  the  Gate-house  at  Westmin-ster. 
Her  Reply.     See  Reply  to  Marlowe,  A. 
His  Pdgrimage.     See    Sir    Walter    Raleigh's    Pil- 
grimage. 
Last  Lines.     See  Ver.ses  Found  in  his  Bible,  etc. 
Lie,  The. 
Lines  Found  in  his  Bible.    See  Verses  Found  in  his 

Bible,  etc. 
Lines  Written  the  Night  before  his  Execution.  See 

Verses  Found  in  his  Bible,  etc. 
Lye,  The.     See  Lie,  The. 
Milk-maid's  Mother's  Answer,  The.     See  Reply  to 

Marlowe,  A. 
Nymph^  Reply  [to  the  Passionate  Shepherd],  The 

.See  Reply  to  Marlowe,  A. 
Pilgrim,  The.   See  Sir  Walter  Raleigh's  Pilgrimage. 
Pilgrim  to  Pilgrim.     See  As  you  Came  from  the 

Holy  Land. 
Pilgrimage  [,  The].     See  Sir  Walter  Raleigh's  Pil- 
grimage. 
Reply  to  Marlowe,  A. 
Reply  to  Marlowe's  "The  Passionate  Shepherd  to 

His  Love.        See  Reply  to  Marlowe,  A. 
bhepherdess's   Reply,   The.     See   Reply   to   Mar- 
lowe, A. 
Shepherd's  Description  of  Love,  The 
Silent  Lover,  The. 
Sir  Walter  Raleigh's  Pilgrimage. 
Soul's  Errand,  The.     See  Lie,  The. 
Verses  Found  in  his  Bible  in  the  Gate-house  at 
Westminster. 


526 


Raleigh,  Sir  Walter  (continued). 

Vision  upon  the  Faerie  Queen,  A.     See  Vision  up- 
on this  Conceit  of  the  Fairy  Queen,  A. 
Vision  upon  this  Conceit  of  the  Fairy  [or  Faerie] 
Queen,  A. 
Ralston,  Eliz.  E.— Tobacco  Pledge,  The. 
Ramal.  Walter. — Ahilvan. 

As  Lucy  Went  a- Walking. 
Bluebells. 
Buckle,  The. 
Bunches  of  Grapes. 
Captain  Lean. 
Cecil. 

Child  in  the  Story  Awakes,  The. 
Child  in  the  Story  Goes  to  Bed,  The. 
Christening,  The. 
Dame  Hickory. 
Down-adown-Derry. 
Dwarf,  The. 
Englishman,  The. 
Envoy. 

Fairies  Dancing,  The. 
Fly,  The. 
Gage,  The. 
Gnomies.  The. 
Grey  Wolf,  The. 
Hare,  The. 
Haunted. 
Horn,  The. 
I  Met  at  Eve. 
I  Saw  Three  Witches. 
Isle  of  Lone,  The. 
.lohn  Mouldy. 
Lamplighter,  The. 
Lovelocks. 
Lullaby. 

Miller  and  His  Son,  The. 
Mother  Bird,  The. 
Night-swans,  The. 
O  Dear  Me! 
Ogre,  The. 
Pedlar,  The. 
Phantom,  The. 
Pilgrim,  The. 

Portrait  of  a  Warrior,  The. 
Raven'-  Tomb,  The. 
Reverie. 

Silver  Penny,  The. 
Sleeping  Beauty,  "The. 
Song-  "O  for  a  moon  to  light  me  home!" 
Supper,  The. 
Tartary. 

Three  Beggars,  The. 
Rameau,  Jean.— Legend  of  the  Earth,  The. 
Ramsay,  Allan. — An  Thou  were  My  Ain  Thing 

"At  setting  day  and  rising  morn."      See  Gentle 

Shepherd,  The. 
Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 

Jenny  and  Peggy.     See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The 
Lochaber  no  More.     See  Song:  "Farewell  to  Loch- 

aber, '''  etc. 
My  Peggy.     See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 
Patie  and  Peggy.     See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 
Patie  and  Roger.     ,See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 
Peggy .^    See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 
Song:  "At  setting  sun,"  etc.     (At.  also  <o  J:  Gav.) 

See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The. 
Song:  "Farewell  to  Lochaber,"  etc. 
Through  the  Wood,  Laddie. 
Ramsay,  Andrew. — Atkinson's  Mill. 
I  Will  not  Tell. 
Jephtha's  Daughter. 
Ramsav,  C.  F. — Hereafter. 
Rand,  E:  A.^ — Humming  of  the  Wires,  The. 

Little  Ships  in  the  Air. 
Rand,  N.  W.— At  Bethlehem. 
Rand,  Theodore  Harding. — Beauty. 
Carven  Shores,  The. 
Dragonfly,  "The. 
Ghost  Flower,  The. 
Glory-roses. 
Hepatica,  The. 
"I  Am." 
Love. 

Veiled  Presence,  The. 
Whitethroat,  The. 
Randall,  Jas.  Ryder. — Dead  Cannoneer.  The.  See  John 
Pel  ham. 
John  Pelham. 

Maryland.     See  My  Maryland. 
My  Maryland. 

There's  Life  in  the  Old  Land  Yet. 
■r,       ,  ,'^y^®  Robin's  Breast  is  [or  was]  Red. 
Randall,  W.  H.— Decoration  Hymn. 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Bealf 


Randolph, . — Drunkenness. 

L'Envoy. 
Randolph,  Amy. — City  Mystery,  A. 
Randolph,  Anson  Davies  Fitz. — Hopefully  Waiting. 

Master's  Invitation,  The. 
Randolph,   Edmund. — Extent  of  Country  no  Bar  to 
Union. 
In  Defence  of  Aaron  Burr. 

Union  of  the  States,  The.     See  Extent  of  Country 
no  Bar  to  Union. 
Randolph,  Innes. — Back-log,  The:  or.  Uncle  Ned's  Lit- 
tle Game. 
Randolph,  .1: — British  Influence,  1811. 

In  Favor  of  a  State  Law  against  Duelling. 
On  Altering  the  Virginia  Constitution. 
On  the  Greek  Question. 
Randolph,  T: — Amyntis;  or.  The  Impossible  Dowry. 
Cotswold  Eclogue,  The. 
Devout  Lover,  A.     See  His  Mistress. 
Fairies'  Song.     See  Amyntis;  or,  The  Impossible 

Dowry. 
He  Lives  Long  who  Lives  Well.     See  Precepts. 
His  Mistress. 

Ode  to  Master  Anthony  Stafford,  An. 
Pastoral  Courtship,  A. 
Precepts. 

Song  of  Fairies.     See  Amyntis;  or.  The  Impossi- 
ble Dowry. 
Song  of  the  Fairies  Robbing  an  Orchard.     See 

Amyntis;  or.  The  Impossible  Dowry. 
To    a    Lady    Admiring    Herself    in     a    Looking- 
glass 
To  Ben  Jonson. 
To  my  Picture. 
Rands,  W:  Brighty  ("Lilliput  Levee").— Boy's  Dream, 
A.     See  Dream  of  a  Boy  who  Lived  at  Nine- 
elms,  The. 
Child's  World,  The.     {Wr.  at.  to  Matthew  Brown.) 
See  Great,  Wide,  Beautiful,  Wonderful  World. 
Cicely  and   the  Bears.     See  Shockheaded  Cicely 

and  the  Two  Bears. 
Doll  Poems. 

Dolladine.     See  Doll  Poems. 
Dream  of  a  Boy  who  Lived  at  Nine-elms,  The, 
Dressing  the  Doll.     See  Doll  Poems. 
Eggs  and  Birds. 
Flowers,  The. 

Great,  Wide,  Beautiful,  Wonderful  World. 
Happy  Child,  The. 

I  Saw  a  New  World.     See  New  World,  The. 
Lilliput  I^evee. 
Lilliput  Notice. 
Little  Brother,  The. 
Little  Christel. 

Love  and  the  Child.     See  Happy  Child,  The. 
New  World,  The. 

Pedlar's  \or  Peddler's]  Caravan,  The. 
Picture,  The.     See  Doll  Poems. 
Polly. 

Race  of  the  Flowers  [,  The]. 
Shockheaded  Cicely  and  the  Two  Bears. 
Shooting  Song,  .\. 
Thought,  The. 
Topsy-turvey  World. 

Wonderful  World,  The.     See  Great,  Wide,  Beau- 
tiful, Wonderful  World. 
World,  The.     See  Great,  Wide,   Beautiful,   Won- 
derful World. 
Rankin,  Jeremiah  Eames. — America. 

Babie,  The.     {Wr.  at.  to  Hugh  Miller.) 
Jean  .\nderson.  My  Joy,  Jean. 
Let  the  Angels  Ring  the  Bells. 
Nae  Shoon.     See  Babie,  The. 
Word  of  God  to  Leyden  Came,  The. 
Ransom,  Seymour  Herbert. — To  a  Rose. 
Ransome,  J.  W. — Cohen  at  the  Seashore. 
Rascas,  Bernard.- — Love  of  God,  The. 
Raspe,  Rudolph   Erich. — Adventure   of   Baron    Mun- 
chausen in  a  Fight  with  the  Turks.     See  Trav- 
els of  Baron  Munchausen. 
Adventure  of  Baron  Munchausen  with  his  Horse. 

See  Travels  of  Baron  Munchausen. 
Travels  of  Baron  Munchausen. 
RatclifEe,  Walter  A.— Wanted. 
Rave,  Hermann. — Ballad  of  the  Pipe,  The. 
Ravenscroft,  T: — Who  IJveth  so  Merry. 
Rawnsley,   H.  D. — Ballad   of  the  Conemaugh  Flood, 

A. 
Ray,  Dr.  J.  C. — National  Prohibition  Party  Our  Only 

Deliverer,  A. 
Rayhill,  Jas.  H.— Hilda. 
Raymond,  G.  L. — Ethan  Allen. 
Raymond,  Laurie  K. — Miss  Simmons'  New  Bonnet. 
Raymond,  R.  L.— Hymns  Ancient  and  Modern. 


Raymond,  Rossiter  W. — Banner  of  the  Stars,  The. 
Cavalry  Song. 
Christmas  Angel,  The. 
Karl  the  Fiddler. 
Palace  of  the  Days,  The. 
Santa  Claus  in  Spite  of  Himself. 
Trooper's  Death,  The.     (Tr.) 
Rayne,  Mrs.  M.  L.- — Behind  the  Scenes. 
Brave  Kate  Shelley.  * 
Lost  Type,  A. 
Read,  Opie  P.— Boy  Kept  Step,  The. 

How  Buck  was  Brought  to  Time. 
Read,  Thos.   Buchanan. — Angler,  The.     See  Summer 
Story, A. 
Autumn's  Sighing. 
Awakening  Year,  The. 
Bards,  The. 
Brave  at  Home,  The.     See  Wagoner  of  the  Alle- 

ghanies.  The. 
Brushwood. 

Celestial  Army,  The.  , 

Christine. 

Closing  Scene,  The. 
Defenders,  The. 
Drifting. 

Flag  of  the  Constellation,  The. 
Lines  to  a  Blind  Girl. 

"Mother  who  conceals  her  grief.  The."     See  Wag- 
oner of  the  Alleghanies,  The. 
Nativity,  The. 
Oath,  the. 

"Oh,  sweet  is  the  sound  of  the  shuttle  and  the 
'     loom." 

Our  Defenders.     See  Defenders,  The. 
Patriotism   of  American   Women.     See  Wagoner 

of  the  Alleghanies,  The. 
Revolutionary  Rising,  The.     See  Wagoner  of  the 

Alleghanies,  The. 
Rising  in  [or  of]  1776,  The.     See  Wagoner  of  the 

Alleghanies,  The. 
Sheridan's  Ride. 
Song  of  the  Mountaineers.     See  Wagoner  of  the 

Alleghanies,  The. 
"Speed,  Ringbolt,  to  your  leader  speed!"  (?) 
Stranger  on  the  Sill,  The. 
Summer  Shower,  The. 
Summer  Story,  A. 
Wagoner  of  the  Alleghanies,  The. 
"Wild   Wagoner  of  the   Alleghanies,   The."     See 

Wagoner  of  the  Alleghanies,  The. 
Windy  Night,  The. 
Reade,  C : — Course  of  True  Love  never  Did  Run  Smooth, 
The. 
Digging  for  Hidden  Treasure.     See  It  is  Never  Too 

Late  to  Mend. 
Disillusionizing    of    Alexander    Oldworthy,    The. 
See  Course  of  True  Love  never  did  run  Smooth, 
The. 
It  is  never  Too  Late  to  Mend. 
Lark,  The.     See  It  is  never  too  Late  to  Mend. 
Lark  in  the  Gold-fields,  The.     See  It  is  never  too 

Late  to  Mend. 
Mrs.  Woffington'a  Portrait.     See  Peg  Woffington. 
Peg  Woffington. 
Reade,  J: — Dominion  Day. 
In  My  Heart. 
Kings  of  Men. 
Pictures  of  Memory. 
Queen  Vashti's  Lament. 
Rizpah. 

To  Louis  Frechette. 
Reading,  Hon.  3.  N. — Judge's  Temperance  Lecture,  A. 
Real  Life. — Drunkard,  The. 
Realf,  R :— Apocalypse. 

Defense  of  Lawrence,  The.  . 

"Fair  are  the  flowers  and  the  children,  but  their 
subtle  suggestion  is  fairer."     See  Indirection. 
"He  was  a-wearv,  but  he  fought  his  fight."     See 

Written  on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide. 
Holy  Nation,  A.     See  Of  Liberty  and  Charity. 
Indirection. 
Man's  Name,  A. 

My  Slain.  ,       ,  ,  r, 

O  Earth,  thou  hast  not  any  wind  that  blows.     See 

Symbolisms. 
Of  Liberty  and  Charity. 
Old  Man's  Idyl,  An. 

Symbolisms.  ^  ,  .    „    .  .  , 

Vale.     See  Written  on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide. 
"When  for  me  the  end  has  come  and  I  am  dead.' 

See  Written  on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide. 
Word,  The.     See  Symbolisms. 
Written  on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide. 


527 


Beavis 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Reavis,  Rebecca  M. — Love-making. 
Red  and  Blue. — Bit  of  Lace,  A. 

Cuba  Libre. 

Idyl  of  the  Strap,  An. 

Modem  Instance,  A. 
Red  Jacket  (Sa-go-ye-wat-ha). — Speech  of  Red  Jacket. 
Redden,  Laura  C.  •("Howard  Glyndon").     SeeSsAR- 

iNQ,  Mrs.  Laura  [Redden]. 
Redi,  Francesco. — Love,  the  ■Musician. 
Redmond,  Cornelia. — Billy's  Santa  Claus  Experience. 
Redpath,  Jas. — "Ireland  is  the  Gethsemane  of  Europe." 
Reed,  C.  E. — Foundering  of  the  Dolphin. 
Reed,  E:  B.— L'Envoi. 

Picture,  A. 
Reed,  Hodges.— Child's  Prayer,  The. 
Reed,  Jas.  lleann. — Eliab  Eliezer. 

Fisherman  Job. 

Only  Joe. 
Reed,  Rebecca.     See  Nichols,  Mrs.  Rebecca  [Reed]. 
Reed,  T:  Brackett. — Opportunity  to  Labor. 

To  the  Grand  Army  of  the  Republic. 
Reed,  W: — Senex  Jubilans. 
Reese,  lAzette  Woodworth. — Anne. 

Anne^Budbury  Meeting  House,  1653. 

Daffodils. 

Elizabeth. 

Holiday,  A. 

Immortality. 
•      In  Time  of  Grief. 

Keats. 

Lord,  Oft  I  Come.    . 

Lydia. 

Reserve. 

Rhyme  of  Death's  Inn;  A. 

Tears. 

Telling  the  Bees. 

That  Day  You  Came. 

Thomas  k  Kempis. 

To  a  Town  Poet. 

Trust. 
Reese,  Madeleine. — To  St.  Valentine. 
Reeves,  Rev.   H: — Country  Justice,  The.     See  Green 
Mountain  Justice,  The. 

Green  Mountain  Justice,  The. 

William  Goetz. 
Reid,  G.  C— His  Birthday. 
Reid,  Isabel  H. — ^Malaria. 
Reid,  Rob't. — Poesie. 

Song  of  Canada,  A. 
Reiley.  Mary  T. — Valentine.  A. 
Reilly,  Philip  C— My  Fianc(Se. 
Reithard,  J.  J. — Judge  of  Bellinzona,  The. 
Reimer,  Marie.— -Has  it  Come  to  This? 
Remak,  Sue  M. — In  Memory  of  Charles  Dickens. 
Remick,  M. — Grave  of  Mrs.  Judson,  The. 
Remsen,  H.  R. — Song,  A:     "Knowest  thou  but  joy." 
Renaud,  E: — Count  Gaultier's  Ride.      ^ 

King's  Wooing,  The. 

Last  Bantjuet,  The. 
Renninger,  Eliz.  D. — -Tim's  Madonna. 
Requa,  Mrs.  Harriet  W. — Keep  the  Record  Clean! 
Requier,  Augustus  Julian. — Baby  Zulma's  Christmas 

Carol. 
Revell,  Alex.  H. — Chicago's  Greeting  to  Atlanta  and 

the  South  Land. 
Reviere.  Louise. — Little  Lady,  A. 
Rexford,  Eben  Eugene.— Bluebird,  The. 

Boy  and  the  Bird,  The. 

Boy's  Story,  The. 

Flo's  Letter.     See  Oversight  of  Make-up,  An. 

For    the    Slumber    Islands,    Ho!     See    "Ho,    for 
Slumberland !" 

Grandfather's  Bam. 

"Ho,  for  Slumberland!" 

In  April. 

Kissed  His  Mother. 

Li'feht  on  Deadman's  Bar,  The. 

Little  Flo's  I..etter.     See  Oversight  of  Make-up,  An. 

Little  Miss  Trot. 

May. 

"No." 

Old  Year  and  the  New.  The. 

On  the  Road  to  Dreamtown. 

One  of  the  Heroes. 

Oversight  of  Make-up,  An. 

Paul  Venarez.     See  Ride  of  Paul  Venarez,  The. 

Ride  of  Paul  Venarez,  The. 

Saved  by  a  Ghost. 

Song  for  May,  A. 

That  Kiss  of  Martha's. 
Reynolds,  G:  Nugent. — Kathleen  O'More. 
Reynolds,  J: — Nosegay,  A. 
Rhodes,  W:  B. — Bombastes  Furioso. 


Rhys,  Ernest. — Autobiography,  An. 

Brechva's  Harp  Song. 

Diana. 

London  Feast. 

Song  of  the  Wulfshaw  Larches. 

Wedding  of  Pale  Bronwen,  The. 

White  Roses. 
Rice,  A.  H. — Our  National  Anniversary. 
Rice,  C.  S. — Cuba's  Appeal. 
Rice,  Pro/.  E:  H. — "Rock  of  Ages."    (At.)   See  Moore, 

Ella  M. 
Rice,  Lilian  Dynevor. — Ferry  for  Shadowtown,  The. 
See  Shadow-town  Ferry. 

Fourth  of  July  Record,  A. 

Shadow-town  Ferry. 
Rice,  Sara  S. — ^Harvest  Drill. 

Japanese  Wedding,  A. 
Rice,  Wallace. — Battle  of  New  Orleans,  The. 

Battle-song  of  the  Oregon. 

Blood  is  Thicker  than  Water. 

Brooklyn  at  Santiago,  The. 

End,  The. 

Immortal  Flowers. 

Jackson  at  New  Orleans. 

Minute  Men  of  Northboro,  The. 

Peace  Hath  Her  Victories. 

Richard  Hakluyt's  Men. 

Spain's  Last  Armada. 

Sudbury  Fight,  The. 

Under  the  Stars. 
Rich,  ilfrs.  Helen  [Hinsdale].— Justice  in  Leadville,  1878. 

Little  Phil. 
Rich,  Hiram. — In  the  Sea. 

Jerry  an'  Me. 
Richards,  Mrs.  Alice  Lewis. — Alice's  Choice. 

All  Happy  in  Spring. 

April. 

August. 

Auntie's  Parlor. 

Awful  Boy,  An. 

Because. 

Bennie's  Penny. 

Bill  an'  Me. 

Billie. 

Birds'  Good-night,  The. 

Birds'  Party,  The. 

Boasting  Pair,  A. 

Boy  and  Bee. 

Busy  Little  Housekeeper,  The. 

Changes. 

Clarabel's  Valentine. 

Clement's  Day  Dream. 

Clifford's  Way. 

David's  Soliloquy. 

Day  without  a  Sermon,  A. 

December. 

Dedication. 

Different  Kind  er  Boy,  The. 

Does  Jesus  Know? 

Dolly  Days. 

Dot's  New  Leaf. 

Dream  of  Easter,  A. 

Dreaming,  Sweetly  Dreaming. 

Drops  of  Honey. 

Emma's  Ideal. 

February. 

First  Robin,  The. 

Foolish  Flowers,  The. 

Forgetful  Tommie. 

Frogie  on  the  Log. 

George's  Example. 

George's  Letter. 

Good-night. 

Grandma's  Pocket. 

Grandpa  and  Pet. 

Guy's  Ideal. 

Harley's  Trip  to  Dreamland. 

He  and  She. 

Helping  Hand,  A. 

How  Hazel  Kept  House. 

How  Pussy  was -Left. 

If. 

It  Wasn't  Me. 

January. 

Johnny's  Choice.  , 

Johnny's  Sisters. 

July. 

June. 

Kitty  Bell. 

Lila's  Conclusion. 

Lisle's  Dream. 

Little  Brother,  Little  Sister. 

Little  Crib  Bed,  The. 


528 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Riley 


Richards,  Mrs.  Alice  Lewis  (continued). 

Little  Sunbeams. 

Mabel  Gray. 

Mama's  Dear  Lap. 

Man  in  the  Dark,  The. 

March. 

Marion's  Lament. 

Martin's  Reward. 

May. 

May's  Apple-tree. 

Minnie's  Secret. 

Mr.  Hop-toad. 

Mother  Goose's  Dinner  Party. 

Mother  Robin. 

Myrtle's  Letter. 

Naughty  Crow,  The. 

Naughty  Hornet,  A. 

Nellie's  Easter  Eggs. 

New  Sister,  The. 

November. 

October. 

Off  to  School  We  Go. 

Old  and  the  New,  The. 

Olive's  Advice. 

One  Easter  Day. 

Only  a  Sparrow. 

Our  Aunt  Lucy. 

Papa's  Best  Girl. 

Pa's  Mem'ry. 

Pa's  Ways. 

Patsy's  and  Tom's  Thanksgiving. 

Robin's  Farewell. 

Robin's  Return. 

Rob's  Temptation. 

Roger's  Wish. 

Santa's  Queer  Joke. 

September. 

Sis's  Beau. 

Snowdrop's  Call,  The. 

Some  Stylish  "Cumpny. " 

Spider  and  the  Bee,  The. 

Spider's  Parlor,  The. 

Teaching  a  Lesson. 

Thankful  Children. 

Thanksgiving  at  Grandma's.  -_ 

That  Giggle. 

Three  Little  Kittens. 

Tree-toad  on  the  Limb,  The. 

Two  Friends,  The. 

Two  Goslings. 

Two  Little  Boys. 

Us  Boys. 

Us  Two. 

We're  Only  Little  Children. 

What  Good  is  a  Brother? 

What  Janie  Thinks. 

What  Ma  Kin  Do. 

What  Robin  Said. 

What  the  Bells  Said. 

When  a  Feller's  a  Boy. 

When  Brother  was  a  Sister. 

When  Dolly  was  Sick. 

When  Grandpa  was  Little. 

When  I'm  a  Big  Girl. 

When  I'm  Growed  up  Big. 

When  I  was  a  Baby. 

When  I  was  a  Girl. 

When  Ma  Begins  to  Clean. 

When  My  Dollie  Went  to  School. 

When  My  Kitty  was  a  Kitten. 

When  Work  and  Me  Fell  Out. 

Where  Do  Babies  Go? 

Why? 

Wilford's  Piece. 

Will's  Dollar  Bill. 
Richards,  Janet  E.  H. — National  Hymn,  The. 
Richards,   Mrs.   Laura  Elizabeth  [Howe]. — Ballad  of 
Titus  Labieuus,  The. 

In  the  Closet. 

John  Bottlejohn. 

Little  Sunbeam. 

Men  of  Gloucester,  The. 

New  Year's  Talk,  A. 

Our  Presidents. 

Song  of  the  Corn  Popper,  The. 

Song  of  Two  Angels,  A. 

Valentine,  A. 

Where  Helen  Sits. 
Richards,  S: — Christmas-day. 
Richards,  Rev.  W:  C. — Rosalie. 
Songs  in  Sleep. 
Still  Waters. 
Under  the  Cross. 


Richardson, . — Beyond   the   Mississippi. 

Richardson,  Mrs.  Abby  [Sage]. — Little  Boy  Blue. 
Richardson,  B.  W. — Questions  of  Nations,  The. 
Richardson,  C:  Fs. — After  Death. 
Conjecture,  A. 
■     Hymn  at  Nightfall. 
Justice. 
Love. 
Mazurka  of  Chopin's,  A. 

Peace. 

Prayer. 

Wisdom. 
Richardson,  G:  Lynde. — Classical  Criticism. 
Richardson,  Rev.  H.Stone. — Decoration  Day  Address,  A. 
Richardson,  N.  K. — Hail!  to  the  Veterans. 

No  God. 
Richardson,  Sherman  D. — Midnight  Express,  The. 
Riche,  Marion  P.- — Compassion. 

Easter  Poem,  An. 

Memories  of  the  War. 

Rescue,  The. 
Richenbach,  Alcide. — Respect  the  Aged. 
Richmond,  C.  E. — Tramp's  Story,  The. 
Richmond  Christian  Advocate. — Shadows. 
Richmond,  Mrs.  Euphemia  Johnson  [Guernsey]. — Only 
a  Glass  of  Cider. 

Violet's  Prayer,  The. 
Richmond,  H.  A. — Laudo  Puellam. 

Phyllis's  Slippers. 

To  Ruby  Lips. 
Richmond,  T.  C. — How  to  Succeed. 
Richter,   Jean-Paul. — "But   man   is   higher   than    his 
dwelling  place." 

Complaint  of  the  Bird  in  a  Dark  Room. 

Dream  of  the  Universe,  A. 

"My  last  word  to  you  is,  be  courageous!" 

New  Year's  Dream,  A.     See  Two  Roads,  The. 

Two  Roads,  The. 
Ridpath,  J:  Clark. — History  of  the  World. 

Province   of   History,   The.     jSee   History   of   the 
World. 
Rienzi,  Cola  di. — Rienzi's  Last  Appeal  to  the  Romans. 
Riggs,  Mrs.   Kate   Douglas   [Smith]    [Wiggin]. — Aunt 
Hitty  Tarbox.     See  Timothy's  Quest. 

Children's  Rights. 

Timothy's  Quest. 
Ricker,  Ella  W.— Day  after  the  Fourth,  The. 
Ricker,  Helen  Adelaide. — Seasons,  The. 
Rickoff,  Rebecca  D.— My  Elm  Tree. 

Story  of  a  Leaf,  The. 
Riley,  Jas.  Whitcomb. — Absence  of  Little  Wesley,  The. 

Afterwhiles. 

Alex  Tells  a  Bear  Story. 

Almon  Keeper. 

And  Makes  Nursery  Rhymes.     See  Session  with 
Uncle  Sidney,  A. 

At  Aunty's  House. 

At    Noey's  House. 

At  Noon  and  Midnight. 

Away. 

Back  Where  They  Used  to  Be.     See  Griggsby's 
Station. 

Bear  Family,  A. 

Bear  Story,  The.     <See  Alex  Tells  a  Bear  Story. 

Beautiful  City,  The. 

Bereaved. 

Best  Times,  The. 

Bewildering  Emotions. 

Billy  and  His  Drum. 

Book  of  Joyous  Children,  The. 

Born  to  the  Purple. 

Boy  Lives  on  Our  Farm,  The. 

Boy  Patriot.  The. 

Boys'  Candidate,  The. 

Boy's  Mother,  A. 

Bud's  Fairy-tale. 

Bumblebee,  The. 

Canary  at  the  Farm,  A. 

Chant  of  the  Cross-bearing  Child,  The. 

Child-world,  The. 

Christmas  Memory,  A. 

Circus-day  Parade,  The. 

Climatic  Sorcery. 

Clover,  The. 

Coffee  my  Mother  used  to  Make,  The.     See  Like 
His  Mother  Used  to  Make. 

"Company  Manners." 

Cousin  Rufus'  Story. 

Curly  Locks. 

Daring    Prince,    The.     See    Session    with     Uncle 
Sidney,  A. 

Das  Krist  Kindel. 


529 


Riley 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Riley,  Jas.  Whitcomb  {continued). 
Days  Gone  By[.  The]. 
Dead  Wife,  The. 
Delicious  Interruption,  A. 
Diners  in  the  Kitchen.     See  Session  with  Uncle 

Sidney,  A.     • 
Diverted  Tragedy,  A. 
Dolly's  Mother,  The. 
Down  around  the  River. 
Dream-march. 
Dubious  "Old  Kriss,"  A. 

Dwainie.     See  Flying  Islands  of  the  Night,  The. 
Elf-child ,  The .     See  Little  Orphant  Annie. 
Elmer  Brown. 
Envoy. 

Evening  Company,  The. 
Evensong. 
Ever  a  Song  Somewhere.     See  Song,  A:     "There 

is  ever  a  song,"  etc. 
Extremes. 

Fall-Crick  View  of  the  Earthquake,  A. 
Find  the  Favorite. 
First  Blue-bird,  The. 
Fishing  Party,  The. 
Floretty's  Musical  Contribution. 
Flying  Islands  of  the  Night,  The. 
Fool  Youngens. 
Funny  Little  Fellow,  The. 
Gathering  of  the  Clans,  The.     See  Session  with 

Uncle  Sidney.  A. 
Good,  Old-fashioned  People,  The. 
Grandfather  Squeers. 
Granny. 

Griggsby's  Station. 
Gustatory  Achievement,  A. 
Happv  Little  Cripple,  The. 
Heat  Lightning. 
Hik-tee-dik. 

Hired  Man  and  Floretty,  The. 
History. 

Home-made  Fairy  Tale,  A. 
Hon^  Dripping  from  the  Comb. 
Ike  Walton's  Prayer. 
Imperious  Angler,  The.      See  Session  with  Uncle 

Sidney,  A. 
Impetuous  Resolve,  An. 
Impromptu  Fairy-tale,  An. 
In  Fervent  Praise  of  Picnics. 
Intellectual  Limitations. 
Iry  and  BiUy  and  Jo. 
"It."     See  Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
Jaybird,  The. 
Jim. 

Jolly  MiUer,  The. 

Just  Be  Glad.     See  Kissing  the  Rod. 
Katydids,  The. 

Kingly  Presence,  The.     See  Das  Krist  Kindel. 
Kissing  the  Rod. 
Knee-deep  in  June, 
liand  of  Thus-and-so,  The. 
Life  Lesson,  A. 

Like  His  Mother  Used  to  Make. 
Limitations  of  Genius. 
Little  Coat,  The. 
Little  Dick  and  the  Clock. 
Little-Girl-Two-Little  Girls. 
Little  Hunchback,  The.    See  Happy  Little  Cripple, 

The. 
"Little  Jack  Janitor." 
Little  Lady,  The. 
Little  Orphant  Annie. 
Little  Tommy  Smith. 
Little  White  Hearse,  The. 
Loehrs  and  the  Hammonds,  The. 
Longfellow. 
Lost. 

Lost  Kiss,  The. 

Love's  Prayer,     See  Prayer  Perfect,  The. 
Lugubrious  Whing-whang,  The. 
Mabel. 

Mad,  Mad  Muse,  The.     See  Lugubrious  Whing- 
whang,  The. 
Man  by  the  Name  of  Bolus,  A. 
Man  in  the  Moon,  The. 
Mary    Alice    Smith.     See   Where    is    Mary    Alice 

Smith? 
Masque  of  the  Seasons,  A. 
Maymie's  Story  of  Red  Riding  Hood. 
Mr.  Hammond's  Parable — The  Dreamer. 
My  Fiddle. 

Name  of  Old  Glory,  The. 
Naughty  Claude. 
Nine  Little  Goblins. 


Riley,  Jas.  Whitcomb  (continued). 
No  Boy  Knows. 
Noble  Old  Elm,  The. 
Noey  Bixler. 
Noey's  Night-piece. 
"Noted  Traveler,  A." 
Nothin'  to  Say. 
Old  Aunt  Mary's. 
"Old  Bob  White." 
Old  Hay-mow,  The. 
Old  Home  Folks,  The. 
Old  Man  and  Jim,  The. 
Old  Man  Whiskery- Whee-Kum-Wheeze. 
Old  Sweetheart  of  Mine,  An. 
Old  Tramp,  The. 
Old-fashioned  Roses. 

On  the  Death  of  Little  Mahala  Ashcraft. 
On  the  Sunny  Side. 
One    of   His   Animal   Stories.     See   Session    with 

Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
Orchard-lands  of  Long  Ago,  The. 
Our  Hired  Girl. 

"Out  to  Old  Aunt  Mary's."     See  Old  Aunt  Mary's. 
Parent  Reprimanded,  A. 
Pathos  of  Applause,  The. 
Penalty  of  Genius,  The. 
Pet  Coon,  The. 
Pixy  People,  The. 
Prayer  Perfect,  The. 
Prior  to  Miss  Belle's  Appearance. 
Proem  to  "Afterwhiles."     See  Afterwhiles. 
Prospective  Visit,  A. 
Raggedy  Man,  The. 
Rambo-tree,  The. 
Rider  of  the  Knee,  The. 
Runaway,  The.     See  Runaway  Boy,  The. 
Runaway  Boy,  The. 
Runaway  Boy,  The.     (Prose.) 
Sea-song  from  the  Shore,  A. 
Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
She  "Displains"  It. 
Sings  a  "Winky-tooden"  Song.     See  Session  with 

Uncle  Sidney,  A. 
So  I  Got  to  Thinkin'  of  Her. 
Song,  A:     "There  is  ever  a  song  somewhere,  my 

dear." 
Song  of  Singing,  A. 
Song  of  the  BiHlet. 
South  Wind  and  the  Sun,  The. 
Spirk  Troll — Derisive. 
Spring.     See  When  the  Green  Gits  Back  in  the 

Trees. 
Squirtgun  Uncle  Maked  Me,  The. 
Subtlety. 

Sudden  Shower,  A. 
Taste. 

"That  Little  Dog." 
Thomas  the  Pretender. 
Time  of  Clearer  Twitterings. 
To  the  Child  Julia. 
Told  by  "The  Noted  Traveler." 
Traveler's  Story,  The.     See  Told  by  "The  Noted 

Traveler." 
Treasure  of  the  Wise  Man,  The. 
Twins,  The. 
Uncle    Brightens    Up.     See    Session    with    Uncle 

Sidney,  A. 
Uncle  Mart's  Poem. 
Used-to-be,  The. 
Waitin'  fer  the  Cat  tA  Die. 
Wav  the  Baby  Slept,  The. 
Way  the  Babv  Woke,  The. 
Wet  Weather  Talk. 
When  Old  Jack  Died. 
When  she  Comes  Home. 
When  she  Comes  Home  Again.     See  When  she 

Comes  Home. 
"When  the  Frost  is  on  the  Punkin." 
"When  the  Green  Gits  Back  in  the  Trees." 
When  We  First  Played  "Show." 
Where  is  Mary  Alice  Smith? 
Who  Santy  Claus  Wuz. 
Wind  of  the  Sea. 
Winter  Fancies. 

"With  a  hey!  and  a  hi!  and  a  hey-ho  rhyme!" 
"You  who  to  the  rounded  prime. " 
Riley,  Z.  F. — Memorial  Day. 
Thanksgiving  Turkey. 
Vacation. 
Rinkart,  Martin. — "Now  thank  we  all  our  God."     See 

Nun  Danket  alle  Gott. 
Nun  Danket  alle  Gott. 
Riordan,  Julia  T. — Fauntleroy's  Wail. 


530 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Roche 


Ripley.  J:  W. — Choosing  a  "State  Tree" — The  Black 

Walnut. 
Risley,  C:  R. — My  Wife's  Husband. 

Wayback  Temperance  Lecture. 
Risley,  R:  Voorhees. — Dewey  in  Manila  Bay. 
Ritchiei,  Mrs.  Anne  Isabella  [Thackeray]. — Influence  of 
Life,  The.     See  Jane  Austen. 

Jane  Austen. 
Ritchie,  G :  M.— How  I  Kissed  Her. 
Ritchie,  Mary  Helen. — "Give  Me  the  Town." 
Ritter,  Mary  Louise. — Outcast,  The. 

Perished. 

Why? 

Wings. 
"Rivers,  Pearl."     See  Nicholson,  Mrs.  Eliza  [Poite- 

vent]. 
Rives,  Am61ie.     See  Troubetskot,  Princess. 
Rivington's  Gazette. — Siege  of  Savannah,  The. 
Roach,  Sallie  Neill. — Lessons. 
Robb,  . — Courting  in  French  Hollow. 

Old  Sugar's  Courtship. 
Robbins,  Alice. — Joe. 

Left  Alone  at  Eighty. 

What  the  Old  Man  Said. 
Robbins,  Asher. — Washington's  Fame. 
Robbins,  Chandler. — Evening  Hymn. 
Robbins,  R.  C— Call  of  Duty,  The. 
Robbins,  R.  D.  C. — Soldier's  Reprieve,  The. 
Robtsins,  S:  Dowse. — Baca. 

Compass,  The. 
Robert  II.  of  France. — Veni  Sancte  Spiritus. 
Roberts,  C: — Domine,  Cui  Sunt  Pleiades  Curse. 
Roberts,  C:  G:  Douglas. — Afoot. 

Ascription. 

Autochthon. 

Ballad  of  Manila  Bay,  A. 

Ballad  pf  the  Brook,  The. 

Ballad  of  the  "Laughing  Sally  ''  The. 

Bird's  Song,  the  Sun,  and  the  Wind,  The. 

Burnt  Lands. 

Canada. 

Canadian  Streams. 

Deserted  City,  The. 

Epitaph  for  a  Husbandman,  An. 

Epitaph  for  a  Sailor  Buried  Ashore. 

FalUng  Leaves,  The. 

Flight  of  the  Geese,  The. 

Frosted  Pane,  The. 

Hawkbit,  The. 

In  Apia  Bay. 

Isles.  The. 

Keepers  of  the  Pass,  The. 

Marsyas. 

Night  in  a  Down-town  Street. 

Night  Sky,  The. 

Nocturne  of  Consecration,  A.     ' 

Nocturne  of  Spiritu:il  Love,  A. 

Ode  for  the  Canadian  Confederacy,  An. 

Origins. 

Recessional. 

Silver  Thaw,  The. 

Sleepy  Man. 

Song  of  Growth,  A. 

'Tram  among  the  Hills,  The. 

Wrestler,  The. 
Roberts,  Elizabeth.    See  Macdonald,  Mrs.  Elizabeth 

[Roberts]. 
Roberts,  (Jane)  Elizabeth  Gostwycke. — In  the  Golden 

Birch. 
Roberts,  Theodore. — Chase,  The. 

Cold. 

Last  Taps. 

Men  of  My  Heart's  Desire. 

Spears  of  Kan-Mar,  The. 
Roberts,  W:  C. — -Easter  Memory,  An. 

My  Comrade  Canoe. 
Robertson,  Frd'k  W: — "Ask   you  where  the  place  of 
religious  might  is?" 

Colors  of  the  Regiment,  The. 

Elijah. 

"Have  you  ever  seen  those  marble  statues  in  some 
public  square  or  garden?" 

"Hell  is  the  infinite  terror  of  the  soul,  whatever 
that  may  be. ' ' 

"In  that  hour,  which  of  all  the  twenty-four." 
See  Shadow  and  Substance  of  the  Sabbath, 
The. 

Influence  of  Poetry  on  the  Working  Classes. 

"It  is  a  common  saying  that  reUgion  has  nothing 
to  do  with  politics. ' ' 

Last  LTtterancps  of  Christ,  The. 

Pass  in  the  Indian  Hills,  "The. 

Poetry  in  Battle.  See  Influence  of  Poetry  on  the 
Working  Classes. 


Robertson,  Frd'k  W:  {continued). 

Poetry  the  Language  of  Symbolism.  See  Influ- 
ence of  Poetry  on  the  Working  Classes. 

Rights  and  Duties. 

Shadow  and  Substance  of  the  Sabbath,  The. 

True  Liberty.     See  Rights  and  Duties. 

War  and  Peace. 

"We  are  ever  taking  leave  of  something  that  will 
not  come  back  again."  See  Last  Utterances 
of  Christ,  The. 

"We  are  what  the  past  has  made  us." 

"What  is  ministerial  success?"     <See  Elijah. 
Robertson.  Harrison. — How  the  Derby  Was  Won. 

Kentucky  Philosophy. 

Story  of  the  Gate. 

Sunday  Fishin'. 
Robertson,  Peter. — Drops. 
Robertson,  T.  M. — Suppose. 
Robertson,  W.  H. — "Music  of  art  is  but  the  imitation 

of  the  music  of  nature.  The. ' ' 
Robertson,  W:— Character  of  Mr.  Pitt.     {Wr.  at.)  See 

Grattan,  Henrt. 
Robespierre,  Maximilien  Marie  Isidore. — Against  War 
[,  January  1.3,  1792]. 

Defence  from  the  Charge  of  Tyranny. 

Morality  the  Basis  of  Civilized  Society — Belief  in 
God  the  Basis  of  Morality. 

On  the  Punishment  of  Louis  XVI. 

Robespierre's  Last  Speech. 
Robins,  Harry  Douglas. — When  Pa  Begins  to  Shave. 
Robinson,  A.  R. — Man  for  the  Hour,  The. 
Robinson,  Agnes  Mary  Frances.     See  Dvclaux,  Mme. 

Agnes  M.  T.  [Darmesteter]. 
Robinson,     Mrs.    Annie    Douglas    [Green]     ("Marion 
Douglas"). — Catching  the  Colt. 

Cheerfulness.     See  Who  is  She? 

Chimney  Tops. 

Chosen  Princess,  The.  i 

Country  Child,  The. 

First  Parting,  The. 

Freedom's  Flower. 

Bangs  and  Queens. 

Kitty. 

Little  Sorrow. 

Mary  and  the  Swallow. 

Mrs.    Piper. 

Motherless  Turkeys,  The. 

Naming  the  Baby. 

Oh,  Dear  Me. 

One  Saturday. 

Parson  Kelly. 

Politics. 

Pussy  Willow. 

Song  of  the  Bee,  The. 

Two  Pictures. 

White  Kitten,  The. 

Who  is  She? 
Robinson,  D:  C. — Pilgrim  Ancestoio,  xht 
Robinson,  Ednah. — On  Board  the  Victory. 
Robinson,  Edwin  Arlington. — Ballade  of  Dead  Friends. 

Clerks,  The. 

House  on  the  Hill,  The. 

Luke  Havergal. 

Pity  of  the  Leaves,  The. 
Robinson,  G:  D. — Town  of  Concord,  Mass.,  The. 

Ulysses  S.  Grant. 

Webster  Statue  at  Concord,  N.  H.,  The. 
Robinson,  J.  D. — Little  Boy  that  Died,  The. 
Robinson,  J:  Ryley. — Lost  Child,  The. 
Robinson,     Mrs.     Lucy    Catlin     [BuU]. — Ballade    of 
Islands,  A. 

Fore  i'  the  Flint,  The. 

"Hie  me.  Pater  Optime,  Fessam  Deseris. " 
Robinson,  Phil.— Bee  and  the  Fly,  The. 
Robinson,  R.  H. — Light  at  Evening-time. 
Robinson,  Rob't. — ;Come,  thou  Fount  of  Every  Blessing. 
Robinson,  S: — Raja  of  India  Sends  a  Chessboard  to 
Nushirvan,  The.     See  Shah-Nameh,  The. 

Shah-Nameh,  The.     (Tr.) 

Zal  and  Rudabeh.      See  Shah-Nameh,  The. 
Robinson,  Tracy.— Song  of  the  Palm. 
Robinson,  T.  S. — Student's  Frolic,  The. 
Robinson,  Wade. — Singer,  The. 
Roby,  H.  A.— Red  and  the  Blue,  The. 
Roche,  Jas.  Jeffrey. — Andromeda. 

Boston  Lullaby,  A. 

Concord  Love  Song,  A. 

Constitution's  Last  Fight,  The. 

Fight  of  the  "Armstrong"  Privateer,  The. 

Gospel  of  Peace,  The. 

Jack  Creamer. 

Kearsarge,  Thp. 

Men  of  the  Alamo,  The. 

My  Comrade. 


531 


Roche 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


R-Jche,  Jas.  Jeffrey  (continued). 

Rogers,  S:  (continued). 

Reuben  James. 

Sleeping  Beauty,  The  [or  A].    See  On Asleep. 

Tear,  A.     See  On  a  Tear. 

Sailor's  Yarn,  A. 

Sir  Hugo's  Choice. 

To  the  Butterfly. 

Skeleton  at  the  Feast,  The. 

Venice.     See  Italy. 

V-A-S-E,  The.     . 

Wish,  A. 

Rochester,  J:  Wi\mof7 Earl  o/.— Bowl,  The. 

Rohlfs,  Mrs.  Anna  Katherine  [Greenl. — Defence  of  the 

Constancy. 

Bride,  The.     See  Sword  of  Damocles,  The. 

Epigram   Written  on  the  Bed-chamber  Door  of 

Sword  of  Damocles,  The. 

Charles  II.     See  Epitaph  on  Charles  II. 

Tragedy  of  Sedan,  A. 

Epitaph  on  Charles  II. 

Rolleston,  T.  W. — Dead  at  Clonmacnois,  The. 

I^ove  and  Life. 

Lament  of  Maev  Leith-Dherg,  The. 

"My  dear  mistress  has  a  heart."     See  Song:    "My 

Song  of  Maelduin. 

dear  mistress,"  etc. 

Rollins,  Mrs.  Alice  Marland  [Wellington]. — Agony  Bells. 

Return. 

Death  of  Azron,  The. 

Song:     "Absent  from  thee  I  languish  still."     See 
Return. 

Faces  We  Meet,  The. 

I  Know  Myself  the  Best  Beloved  of  All. 

Song:     "Dear,  from  thine  arms  then  let  me  fly." 

Many  Things  Thou  Hast  Given  Me,  Dear  Heart. 
My  Welcome  Beyond. 

Song:     "My  dear  mistress  has  a  heart." 
Song:     "When  on  tho.se  lovely  look.s  I  ^aze." 

Ships  at  Sea. 

Song  from  " Valentinian."     See  Valentinian. 

Vita  Benefica. 

Song  in  Imitation  of  Sir  John  Eaton   A. 

Romaine,  Harry. — All  on  One  Side. 

To  His  Mistress. 

Brief  Description,  A. 

"Too  late,  alas!     I  must  confess."     See  Song  in 

Could  it  Be? 

Imitation  of  Sir  John  Eaton,  A. 

Critic,  A. 

Valentinian. 

Food  of  Love. 

Rock,  Magdalen. — Day  too  Late.  A. 

Miss  Jones. 

Rocke,  Mary  A. — Abandoned  Troop  Horse,  The. 

Our  Hero. 

Rocklind  Courier  [Gazette].     Awful  Squirt,  An. 
Party  at  Mr.  Wigglesworth's,  A. 

Romanes,  G :  J : — Home  at  Last. 

I  Ask  not  for  Thy  Love,  O  Lord. 

Music  Hath  Charms. 

Simple  Nature. 

Rockwell,  J.  O.— Drunkard,  The. 

Ronsard,  Pierre. — Return  of  Spring. 

Rodd,  Rennell. — Actea. 

Rose,  The. 

At  Tiber  Mouth. 

Rook,  E.  Celia.— Don't. 

Daisy,  The. 

Loving  Little  Girl,  The. 
New  Mittens,  The. 

Imperator  Augustus. 

In  Chartres  Cathedral. 

Our  Country's  Wealth. 

Roman  Mirror,  A. 

Rook,  E.  Celia  and  Lizzie  J. — After  the  Explosion 

Song  of  Autumn,  A. 

Almost  a  Man. 

Then  and  Now. 

Among  the  Animals. 

"When  I  am  Dead." 

Art  Critic,  The. 

Rodger,  Alex. — ^Behave  Yoursel'  before  Folk. 

Aunt  Kitty's  Shopping. 

Roe,  Grace  D. — ^Bivouac  by  the  Rappahannock. 

Baby's  Drawer. 

Rog<;,    Mrs.  Charlotte    Fiske    [Bates]. — Character,  A. 

Bandage. 

Clue,  The. 

Be  Polite. 

Delay. 

Before  the  Explosion. 

Evil  Thought. 

Bessie's  Letter. 

Living  Book,  The. 

Best  Beauty,  The. 

Satisfied. 

Bird  that  Sings,  The. 

Woodbines  in  October. 

Bite,  The. 

Rogers,  Charlotte.— Leap  Year  Farce,  A. 

Boys  and  Girls. 

Rogers,  Dollie  Louise. — Tampa  Romance,  A. 

Breakfast. 

Rogers,  Mrs.  Loula  Kendall. — Three  Mission.s,  The. 

Bridget's  Investment. 

Toccoa,  the  Beautiful. 

Broom  Drill. 

Rogers,  Pierre. — "Who  has  not  looked  upon  her  brow.", 

Bunch  of  Flowers,  A. 

Rogers,  Rob't  Cameron. — Colonel's  Story,  The. 

Burlesque  on  Fan  Drill. 

Dancing  Faun,  The. 

Catch  the  Sunshine. 

Doubt. 

Christening  Dolly. 

Health  at  the  Ford,  A. 

Christmas  Bells. 

Rosary,  The. 

Composition  on  Animals. 

Shadow  Rose,  The. 

Counterfeit  Money. 

Sleeping  Priestess  of  Aphrodite,  A. 

Dairy-maids'  Drill,  The. 
Dead  Bird,  The. 

Spaniard  Answered,  The. 

Thackeray's  Birthday. 

Dickey-bird,  The. 

Virgil's  Tomb. 

Doll  Drill. 

Rogers,  S:— Alps,  The.     ,See  Italy. 

Dolls'  Hospital,  The. 

Bergamo.     See  Italy. 

Drill  of  the  Little  Patriots. 

Descent,  The. 

Dumb-bell  Drill. 

Don  Garzia.     See  Italy. 

Eddie  Visits  the  Barber. 

Epitaph  on  a  Robin-redbreast,  An.                        • 

Edna's  Birthday. 

Farewell.     -See  Italy. 

Elsie's  Soliloquy. 

Florence.     See  Italy. 

Evening  Prayer. 

From  a  Greek  Epigram.     {Tr.) 

Exercise  Recitation,  Xa. 

From  an  Italian  Sonnet. 

Fan  Drill. 

Ginevra.     See  Italy. 

Farm  Boys'  Song,  The. 

Human  Life. 

Farmer,  'The. 

Italian  Song,  An. 

Flag. 

Italy. 

Free  Smoke,  A. 

Joras.se.     See  Italy. 

Going  to  the  Train. 

Lost  Bride,  The.     See  Italy. 

Good  Advice. 

Marriage.     See  Human  Life. 

Grace  and  Dolly. 

My  Native  Vale.     See  Italian  Song,  An. 

Grandma's  Schooldays. 

Naples.     See  Italy. 

He  Loves  Me;  He  Loves  Me  Not. 

"Nature  denied  him  much."     See  Italy. 

Holiday  Convention,  The. 

Night  and  Day,  The.     See  Italy. 
On ■ Asleep. 

Hoop  Drill  and  March. 

How  Did  it  Happen? 

On  a  Tear. 

How  the  Quarrel  Began. 

On  Lord  Dudley  and  Ward. 

I  Wonder  whom  it  is  from? 

On  the  Picture  of  an  Infant  Playing  near  a  Preci- 

Idolize. 

pice.     See  From  a  Greek  Epigram. 

Illustrated  Story,  An. 

Plea.sures  of  Memory,  The. 

In  the  Morning. 

Rome.     See  Italy. 
Sasso  di  Dante,  The. 

Independence  Day. 

Is  it  You? 

Sensibility.     See  Human  Life. 

Japanese  Fan  Drill. 

532 


AUTHOR  INDEX                                                    Rossetti 

Rook,  E.  Celia  and  Lizzie  J.  {continued). 

Roscoe,   W: — On  Parting  with  his  Books.     .See  To  My 

Keystone. 

Books  on  Parting  with  Them. 

Kittens,  The. 

On  the  Death  of  Burns. 

Lily  March  and  Song. 

To  My  Books  on  Parting  with  1  hem. 
Roscoe,  W:  Caldwell. — Karth. 

Little  Housekeepers. 

Little  Speech,  A. 

Master-chord,  The. 

Looking  Ahead. 

To  la  Sanscoeur. 

Lost  Kitty,  The. 

Roscoe,  W:  Stanley. — Dirge. 

March,  Song,  and  Drill  with  Dolls. 

Roscommon,   Wentworth   Dillon,   Earl  of. — Essay  on 

Masquerading. 

Translated  Verse,  Th;-. 

Mother  Goose  Medley. 

Rose,  Laura. ^ — Ocean  of  Life,  The. 

Mother  Goose  Reception  and  Drill. 

Rose,  W:  B. — First  Trowsers,  The. 

Moving. 

Rose,  W:  Rus.sell.— Bell  of  Zanora.  The. 

My  Best  Friend. 

Joshua  of  1776,  The. 

My  Dog. 

On  Crutches. 

Ned's  Best  Friend. 

Rose.  W:  Stewart. — Death  of  Zerbino,   The.     See  Or- 

New Tambourine  Drill.              ' 

lando  Furioso. 

New  Toy,  The. 

Orlando  Furioso.     {Tr.) 

Old  Time  Lovers. 

Rosegarten,  Jos.  G:  (?). — Amen   of    the  Rocks,  The. 

Old  Time  Plays. 

(Tr.) 

On  the  Train. 

Through  Trials. 

Our  Work. 

Rosenberg,  Jas.  Naumberg. — Darkness. 

Package. 

Rosenfeld,  Morris. — I  Know  not  Why. 

Parasol  Drill. 

"Ross,  Albert."     See  Porter,  Linn  Boyd. 

Parent. 

Ross,  Bert. — Cup  and  Saucer  Episode,  A. 

Phantom. 

Ross,  I: — All  the  Same  in  the  End. 

Phil's  Complaint. 

Song  on  William  IIL,  A.    See  All  the  Same  in  the 

Pious. 

End. 

Playing  Doctor. 

Ross,  Lawrence  S. — Our  Banner  Unrent;  its  Stars  Un- 

Playing  Grandma. 

obscured. 

Playing  Store. 

Ross,  Lee. — Foxes'  Tails,  The;  or,  Sandy  McDonald's 

Poor  Work  Don't  Pay. 

Signal.     See  Sandy  Macdonald's  Signal. 

Proverbs. 

Sandy  Macdonald's  Signal. 

Proverbs,  or  Rhymes  and  Reasons. 

Rossetti,       Christina      Georgina.     Abnegation.        See 

Rainbow. 

Monna  Innominata. 

Rainy  Day,  The. 

After  Death. 

Sammie — Sallie. 

Aloof.     See  "thread  of  Life,  The. 

Shadows. 

All  Things  Wait  upon  Thee. 

Simple  March,  A. 

At  Home. 

Sixty  Years  Ago. 

Better  Resurrection,  A. 

Snow  Brigade,  The. 

Some  Children  of  the  Bible. 

Birthday,  A. 

Birthday  Gift,  A.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Sunday-school  Acrostic. 

Bourne,  The. 

Tambourine  Drill. 

Bride  Song.     See  Prince's  Progress,  The. 

Thanksgiving. 

Child's  Talk  in  April. 

Those  I  Love. 

Chill,  A. 

Tom's  Practical  Joke. 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Too  Hot. 

Consider. 

'Troublesome  Visitor,  A. 

Death  of  a  Firstborn. 

Umbrella  March. 

Dost  Thou  Not  Care. 

Unjust  Suspicion. 

Dream-land. 

Visitors  from  Story  Land.' 

Easter  Even. 

Waiter  Drill. 

Echo. 

Waylaid. 

Echo  from  Willowwood,  An. 

We  are  Four. 

Farm  Walk,  A. 

What  They  Said. 

First  Meeting,  The.     See  Monna  Innominata. 

Winter  .Jewels. 

Fluttered  Wings. 

Writing  to  Grandma. 

Goblin  Market. 

Rook,  Lizzie  J. — Diligent  Bes.sie. 

Good  Sister,  The.     See  Goblin  Market. 

Ethel's  Birthday  Party. 

Good-by. 

Grandma's  Tea. 

Heaven  Overarches. 

Harry's  Lecture. 

"Heaven  overarches  earth  and  sea."     See  Heaven 

Jolly  March. 

Overarches. 

Little  Army,  The. 

Mamma's  Little  Market  Woman. 

"Hope  is  like  a  harebell,  trembling  from  its  birth." 

In  Patience. 

Mary  and  Dinah. 

In  the  Round  Tower  at  Jhansi. 

Pussy's  Picture. 

Is  it  Well  with  the  Child? 

Things  that  I  Do  not  Like  to  See. 

"Italia,  lo  Ti  Saluto!" 

When  We  Grow  Big. 

It  is  Finished. 

Womanhood. 

Jessie  Cameron. 

Rooney,  J:  Jerome. — Beam  of  Light,  A. 

Lady  Moon.     See  "O  Lady  Moon  [,  your  horns 

Homing.  The. 

point  toward  the  east]. ' ' 

Joined  the  Blues. 

Later  Life. 

M'llrath  of  Milate. 

Listening. 

Men  behind  the  Guns,  The. 

Love  from  the  North. 

New  Beacons  Set. 

Maiden  Sone;. 

RAhat,  The. 

Marvel  of  Marvels. 

Where  Helen  Comes. 

Maude  Clare. 

Roosa,  Lizzie  D. — Hail,  Arbor  Day. 

Meeting.     See  Pause.  A. 

Roosevelt,  Theodore. — Americanism.     See  True  Amer- 

Milking Maid,  The.     See  Farm  Walk,  A. 

icanism. 

Milking  Time. 

National  Duties. 

Monna  Innominata. 

True  Americanism. 

Mother  Country. 

Use  and  Abuse  of  Property,  The. 
Root,  G:  F.— Tramp,  Tramp,  Tramp. 

Next  of  Kin. 

"O   Lady  Moon  [,   your  horns  point   toward  the 

Ropes,  Arthur  Reed. — In  Pace. 

east"— CI 

On  the  Bridge. 

Old  and  New  Year  Ditties. 

Rosaire,     Claudius.  —  Un      Potpourri      d'Elocution. 

Passing  and  Glassing. 

Urr.) 

Passing  Away.     See  Old  and  New  Year  Ditties. 

Ro.scoe,  Mrs.  H: — Butterflv's  Ball,  The.     {At.  also  to 

Pause,  A. 

T:  Roscoe.) 

Prince's  Progress,  The. 

Sonnet:  "As  when,  O  lady  mine."    {Tr.) 

Remember. 

Roscoe,  T:— Butterfly's  Ball,  The.     {At.  also  to  Mrs.  H : 

Rest. 

Roscoe.) 

Ring  Posy,  A. 

533 


Ito98etti 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Roasetti,  Christina  Georgtna  {continued). 
Royal  Princess,  A. 
Sleep  at  Sea. 
Somewhere  or  Other. 
Song:  "O  roses  for  the  flush  of  youth." 
Song:  "Two  doves^unon  the  selfsame  branch." 
Song:  "When  I  am  dead,  my  dearest." 
Sonnet:  "O  my  heart's  heart,  and  you  who  are  to 

me. ' '     See  Monna  Innominata. 
Sonnet:  "Trust  me,  I  have  not  earned  your  dear 

rebuke. ' '     See  Monna  Innominata. 
Summer. 

Summer  Days.     See  Summer. 
Summer  Is  Ended,  The. 
There's  Nothing  Like  the  Rose. 
Thread  of  Life.  The. 
Three  Seasons  [,  The]. 
To  the  End. 

Too  Late.     See  Prince's  Progress,  The. 
Trust.     See  Monna  Innominata. 
Twice. 

Twist  me  a  Crown. 

Unseen  World — at  Home,  The.     <See  At  Home. 
Uphill. 

Weary  in  Well-doing. 
Wife  to  Husband. 
Winter  Rain. 
Year's  Windfalls,  A. 
Rosaetti,  Dante  Gabriel. — Alexander  II.     See  Sonnet : 
Czar  Alexander  the  Second. 
Aspecta  Medusa. 
Ave. 

Ballad  of  Dead  Ladies,  The.     (Tr.) 
Ballad  of  Old  Time  Ladies.     (.Tr.)     See  Ballad  of 

Dead  Ladies,  The. 
Birth-bond,  The.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
31essed  Damozel,  The. 
Broken  Music,     iSee  House  of  Life,  The. 
Dante  Alighieri.     See  Dante  at  Verona. 
Dante  at  Verona. 

Dark  Glass,  The.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
For  a  Venetian  Pastoral  by  Giorgione. 
Her  Gifts.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
His  Lady's  Praise.     See  Vita  Nuova. 
Hope  Overtaken.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
House  of  Life,  The. 

Inclusiveness.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Introductory.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
King's  Tragedy,  The. 
Little  While,  A. 

Lost  Days.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Love  Enthroned.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Love-letter,  The.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Love-lily. 

Love's  Lovers.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Love's  Nocturn. 

Lovesight.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Mary  Magdalene  at  the  Door  of  Simon  the  Phari- 
see. 
Monochord,  The.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Nevermore,  The.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
New  Year's  Burden,  A. 
Newborn  Death.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
One  Hope,  The.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
'         Parted  Love.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Portrait,  The. 

Raleigh's  Cell  in  the  Tower. 
"Retro  Me,  Sathana."     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
St.  Luke  the  Painter.     See  House  of  Life,  "The. 
Sea-limits,  The. 

Sibylla  Palmifera.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Silent  Noon.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Sister  Helen. 

Sonnet :  Czar  Alexander  the  Second. 
Soothsay. 

Soul's  Beauty.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Staff  and  Scrip,  The. 
•         Sudden  Light. 

Sun's  Shame,  The.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Sunset  Wings. 

Superscription,  A.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
■"There  will  I  ask  of  Christ  the  Lord." 
Three  Shadows. 

Venetian  Pastoral,  A.     See  For  a  Venetian  Pas- 
toral by  Giorgione. 
White  Ship,  The. 

Willowwood.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Without  Her.     See  House  of  Life,  The. 
Woodspurge,  The. 
Young  Fir-wood,  A. 
"Rosslyn,    Fs.    St.  Clair-Erskine,  Earl  of. — Among   My 
Books. 
Bedtime. 
Memory. 


Rostand,  Edmond. — Balcony  Scene  from  "Cyrano  de 
Bergerac,"  The.     See  Cyrano  de  Bergerac. 

Cyrano  de  Bergerac. 

Field  of  Wagram,  The.     See  L'Aiglon. 

L'Aiglon. 

Scene  from  Cyrano  de  Bergerac.     See  Cyrano  de 
Bergerac. 
Rothwell,  Annie.     See  Christie,  Mrs.  Annie  [Roth- 
well]. 
Rouget    de    Lisle    [or   Delislel,    Claude   Jos. — French 
National  Hymn.     See  Marseillaise,  The. 

Marseillaise,  The. 

Marseilles  Hymn.     See  Marseillaise,  The. 
Rousseau,  Jean-Jacques. — Days  of  Absence. 

Death  is  Compensation. 
Rowe.  H: — Moon. 

Sun.  • 

Rowe,  M.  F. — *'Buy  Your  Cherries." 
Rowe,  N : — Colin's  Complaint. 
Rowland,  C: — One  Hundred  Years  from  Now. 
Rowlands,  R: — Lullaby,  A:  "Upon  my  lap  my  sov- 
ereign sits." 

"Upon  my  lap  my  sovereign  sita."    See  Lullaby,  A. 
Rowlands,  S : — In  Favor  of  Tobacco. 
Rowley,  Sam. — Sorrow-song. 
Roy,  G : — Young  Donald. 

Royden,  Matthew. — Elegy  on  a  Friend's  Passion  for 
His  Astrophill,  An. 

Lament  for  Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Elegy  on  a 
Friend's  Passion,  etc. 

On  Sir  Philip  Sidney.     See  Elegy  on  a  Friend's 
Passion,  etc. 
Roys,  R.  L. — Old  Woman's  Complaint,  An. 
Riickert,  Friedrich. — Christkindlein. 

Greediness  Punished. 

Greeting  from  Far  Away. 

Love  Doth  to  Her  Eyes  Repair. 

Three  Pairs  and  One. 

Two  and  One. 

Wer  Wenig  Sucht,  der  Findet  Viel. 
Rude,  Mra.  B.  C— Daisy,  The. 

Home  by  the  Warm  Southern  Sea,  A. 

Naming  the  Tree. 

'Neath  the  Cotton-wood  Trees. 

Shut  Your  Cattle  In. 

Si,  Do,  Re. 

Tree  of  State,  The. 
Ruggles,  Lucy  S. — Baby  Sister. 
'It  Rains." 

Morning.     See  Up  and  Doing. 

Old  Speckled  Hen. 

Spider,  The. 

Toad,  The. 

Up  and  Doing. 

Whip-poor-will. 

Ye  Children,  Be  Gay. 
Runcie,  Mra.  Constance  [Faunt  LeRoy]. — Anselmo,  the 
Priest. 

Demetrius. 

Known  unto  God. 

This  Would  I  Do. 
Runkle,  Bertha  Brooks. — Song  of  the  Sons  of  Esau,  The. 
Rusby,  H:  H. — Columbine. 

Ruskin,     J: — Beauty    of    the    Clouds.     See    Modern 
Painters. 

Cloud  Beauty.     See  Modern  Painters. 

Clouds,  The.     See  Modern  Painters. 

Crown  of  Wild  Olive,  The. 

Dawn  of  Peace,  The. 

Death  of  Moses,  The.     See  Modern  Painters. 

Definite  Training. 

Eagle's  Nest,  The. 

Earth's  First  Mercy,  The.     See  Modern  Painters. 

Education.     See  Stones  of  Venice,  The. 

Ethics  of  the  Dust,  The. 

Faults  and  Virtues.     See  Ethics  of  the  Dust,  The. 

Fors  Clavigera. 

Great  Art.     See  Two  Paths  on  Art. 

Humblest     of     the     Earth-children,     The.     See 
Modern  Painters. 

King  of  the  Golden  River,  The. 

Lady,  The.     See  Sesame  and  Lilies. 

Love  of  Change.     See  Stones  of  Venice,  The. 

Madonna  dell'  Acqua. 

Man  of  Genius,  The.     See  Stones  of  Venice,  The. 

Modern  Painters. 

Mosses — Earth's  Humblest  Children.     See  Modern 
Painters. 

Nests.     See  Eagle's  Nest,  The. 

"On  the  whole,  there  are  much  sadder  ages  than 
the  early  ones."     See  Modern  Painters. 

Open  Sky,  The.     See  Modern  Painters. 

Pine  Tree,  The.     See  Modern  Painters. 

Power.     See  True  Kings  of  the  Earth.  The. 


534 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Sabine 


Ruskin,  J:  {continued). 

"Power  to  converse  well  is  a  very  great  charm, 
The." 

Princes.     See  Crown  of  Wild  Olive,  The. 

Reading  for  the  Thought.     See  Sesame  and  Lilies. 

Saint  Ursula.     See  Fors,  Clavigera. 

Sermons.     See  Stones  of  Venice,  The. 

Sesame  and  Lilies. 

Sky,  The.     See   Modern   Painters   and   Stones  of 
Venice,  The. 

Stones  of  Venice,  The. 

"To-day." 

True  Contentment.     See  Modern  Painters. 

True  Kings  of  the  Earth,  The. 

Trust  Thou  Thy  Love. 

Truth  of  Truths,  The. 

Two  Paths  on  Art. 

Tyre,  Venice  and  England.    See  Stones  of  Venice, 
The. 

Utility    of    the     Beautiful,     The.     See    Modern 
Painters. 

Water.     See  Modern  Painter?. 

Wreck,  The. 
Russell,  Sir  C: — Arbitration  and  Civilization. 
Russell,  C:  E. — Benjamin  Harrison. 

Chatterton. 

Chatterton  at  Bristol. 

Defence  of  the  Irish  Party,  A. 

Fifteenth  of  February,  The. 

Fleet  at  Santiago,  The. 

Nikolson's  Nek. 

Sixty-second  Birthday  of  Swinburne,  The. 

To  Philip  Massinger,  "a  Stranger." 
Russell,  G:  R. — Opportunity  for  Effort  [or  Work]. 
Russell,    G:   W:  ("A.  E.").— By   the   Margin    of    the 
Great  Deep. 

Connla's  Well. 

Dana. 

Great  Breath,  The. 

Immortality. 

Inheritance. 

Janus. 

Krishna. 

Man  to  the  Angel,  The. 

Memory  of  Earth,  The. 

Om.  ' 

Our  Thrones  Decay. 

Sacrifice. 

Self-discipline. 

Symbolism. 

Three  Counsellors,  The. 
Russell,  Mrs.  Hattie  S. — Christmas  Song,  A. 
Russell,  Irwin. — "Along  the  Line." 

"Business"  in  Mississippi. 

Christmas  Night  in  the  Quarters. 

De    Fust    Banjo.     See    Christmas    Night    in    the 
Quarters. 

First   Banjo,   The.     See  Christmas  Night  in  the 
Quarters. 

First  Client,  The. 

Half-way  Doin's. 

lyarry's  on  the  Force. 

Mahsr  John. 

Nebuchadnezzar  [or  Nebuchadnezzah]. 

Nine  Graves  in  Edinbro. 

Norvem  People. 

Old  Fiddling  Josey. 

Origin  of  the  Banjo,  The.     See  Christmas  Night 
m  the  Quarters. 

Practical  Young  Woman,  A. 

Sermon  for  the  Sisters,  A. 

Uncle  Pete's  Sermon.     See  Half-way  Doin's. 
Russell,  Lord  J: — On  Parliamentary  Reform. 
Russell,  Lawrence  K. — At  a  Women's  Club. 

lanes  on  an  X-Ray  Portrait. 
Russell,  Paul  M. ^Stonewall  Jackson's  Death. 
Russell.  Percy. — Birth  of  Australia,  The. 
Russell,  T- — Pilgrim  Charter  and  Covenant,  The. 
Russell,  W.  E. — -Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts,  The. 
Ruth.  Anna  L. — Eleventh  Hour,  The. 

Gates  Ajar. 

Little  Steenie. 
Rutherford,  Lily. — ^Spring-time,  The. 
Rutledge,  A.  B.— Blue. 
Rutter,  Edith.  -Without  Him. 

Ryan,  Rev.  Abram  Jos:  ("Father  Ryan"). — Cause  of 
the  South,  The.     See  Sentinel  Songs. 

ChUd's  Wish,  A. 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Christmas  Song,  A. 

Conquered  Banner,  The. 

Erin's  Flag. 

"Follow  Me."     See  Thought,  A. 

Rest. 


Ryan,  Rev.  Abram  Jos:  ("Father  Ryan")  (continued). 

Rosary  of  My  Years,  The. 

Sentinel  Songs. 

Song  of  the  Mysticf,  The]. 

Song  of  the  River. 

Thought,  A. 

Trailed    Banner,    The.     See    Conquered    Banner, 
The. 
Ryan,  Carroll. — Malta. 
Ryan,  J.  H. — Bachelor's  Love  Song,  A. 
Ryan,  J:  W.— Solution,  The. 
Ryan,  Julia  M. — Tintamarre,  The. 
Ryan,  Malachy. — Rose  Adair. 
Ryan,  Archbishop  Patrick  J:  (?).— Eternity  of  Music, 

The. 
Ryan,  R:- — O,  Saw  Ye  the  Lass? 
Ryder,  H.  I.  D.-^Question,  A.     (Tr.) 
Ryder,   Rev.   Father   H:    Dudley.    (?). — Photographic 

Album. 
Ryder,  R.  O. — Panacea,  A. 
Ryman,  Fred   Shelley. — Ideal  India,  The. 


S.,  A.  C— Fireflies. 

S.,  A.  C.  H.— Story  Katie  Told,  The. 

S.,  A.  H. — "Halt!  who  passes,  friend  or  foe?" 

S.,  A.  M.— I  Fill  My  Pipe. 

S.,  C. — "Across  the  Lot." 

Letter,  A. 
S.,  C.  A. —  Lovers,  The.     See  Tragedy  on  Past  Parti- 
ciples, A. 

Tragedy  on  Past  Participles,  A.    (,A  t.  also  to  Phoebe 
Gary.) 
S.,  E.  H.— Ad  Nicotina. 
S.,  E.  v.— Canary's  Story,  The. 
S.,  F. — Unfortunate  Phrase,  An. 
S.,  G.  v.— Questions. 
S.,  L.  D.— Waiting 

S.,  L.  H. — Stars  in  My  Country's  Sky. 
S.,  M.  D.— Fortune  Teller,  The. 

Modern  Chivalry. 
S.,  M.  H. — Hymn: — "I'm  but  a  little  child." 
S.,  M.  W.— Flag,  The. 
S.,  P.  P.— Effigy,  The. 
S.,  R.— Our  Childhood's  Home. 
Sabean,  W.  H. — Uncle  Zeke's  Opinion. 
Sabine,  Julia  A. — Alborak.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Ascutney.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Ascutney  Charades,  The. 

Bedroom.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Blackbird.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Bleak  House.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Bo  Peep.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Catalogue.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Chestnut.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Cockscomb.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Concord.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Conundrum.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Cotton.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Countless.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Cowpens.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Cowslip.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Culdee.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Dog  Days.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Dog  Star.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Dollar.     See  Asctitney  Charades. 

Dormouse.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Edgeworth.     See  Ascutney  Charades.  , 

Excel.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Feline.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Fly  Leaf.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Grimalkin.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Ground  Hog.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Hamilton.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Hedgerow.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Kangaroo.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Kickshaw.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Liberty  Bell.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Linden.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Madrigal.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Mother  Hubbard.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Muffet.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Newness.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Palaver.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Perverse.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Picture.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Plymouth  Rock.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Portiere.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Postage.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Potatoes.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Rubber.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 


535 


Sabine 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOXS 


Sabine,  Julia  A.  (continued). 

Samson.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Sirloin.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Skylight.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Sonnet.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Teacups.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 

Tom  Tom.     See  Ascutney  Charades. 
Sackville,  C:     See  Dorset,  C:  S.\ckville,  Earl  of. 
Sackville,  T:     See  Dorset.  T:  Sackville,  Earl  of. 
Sacramento  Union. — Accursed. 

Safford,  Mary  Joanna. — Lady  of  Gedo,  The.     (Tr.) 
Sage,  Agnes  Carr. — Ambitious  Marguerite,  The. 
Sagebeer,  Jos.  Evans. — Maid  of  Orleans,  The. 
Sa-go-ye-wat-ha.     See  Red  Jacket. 
St.  Albans,  Viscount.     See  Bacon,  Fs. 
St.  Ambrose.— I  Love  Thy  Kingdom,  Lord. 

Love  to  the  Church.     See  I  Love  Thy  Kingdom, 
Lord. 

Veni  Creator  [Spiritus].     (At.) 
Saint-Aubin,  Stephanie  Feliciti?  Ducrest  de.     See  Gen- 

Lis,  Comtesse  de. 
St.    Bernard   of   Cluny.     See   Bernard  of  Cluny  or 

MORLAIX. 

St.  Clair-Erskine,  Fs.     See  Rosslyn.  Earl  of. 
St.  Francis  Xavier. — My  God,  I  Love  Thee. 
St.  Georges,  Jules  Henri  Vernoy  de. — Gypsy's  Warn- 
ing. The.     See  Martha. 

Martha. 
St.  Gregory  the  Great. — Darkness  is  Thinning. 

Veni  Creator  [Spiritus].     (At.) 
Saint  James  Gazette. — Bean-blossoms. 

Patriotic  Smoker's  Lament,  The. 

Still  True. 
St.  Joannes  Damascenus. — "From  my  lips  in  their  de- 
filement. " 
Saint  John  Chrysostom. — Divine  Providence  in  Nature. 
Saint  John,  J.  Hector. — Humming-bird,  The. 
Saint  John,  J:  P. — Bible  and  the  Liquor  Traffic,  The. 

Sparrow  Must  Go,  The. 

Vote  the  Traffic  Down. 
Saint  John,  Keith. — What  the  April  Breeze  Said  to 

the  Trees. 
Saint  John,  P: — Taxation  of  America. 
St.  John,  Rob't  Porter. — Game  of  Chess,  A. 

Thief's  Apology,  A. 
St.  Louis  Chronicle. — Looking  for  Bargains. 
St.  Louis  Republic. — Maine's  Men,  The.     See  Sinking 
of  the  Maine. 

Sinking  of  the  Maine. 
St.  Nicholas. — Arithmetic.     See  Harry's  Arthmetic. 

Bobolink  and  Chick-a-dee,  The. 

Christmas  Morning. 

First  Christmas-tree  in  New  England. 

Grown-up  Land. 

Harry's  Arithmetic. 

How  Persimmons  Took  Cah  ob  der  Baby.     See 
"Take  Good  Care  of  Baby. " 

"I  had  a  little  yellow  bird. " 

Lilac,  The. 

Little  Dora's  Soliloquy. 

Little  Seamstress,  A. 

'Once  from  the  town  a  starling  flew. " 

Sad  Story  of  a  Little  boy  that  Cried,  The. 

Stagnant,  The. 

"Take  Good  Care  of  Baby. ' ' 

What  is  a  Baby  Good  for?    See  Little  Dora's  Solil- 
oquy. 
Saint-Juirs. — Jasmine  Flower,  The. 
Saint  Stephen  the  Sabaite  [St.  Stephanos]. — Art  Thou 

Weary? 
Sala,  G:  A: — Conversion  of  Colonel  Quagg. 
Salis-Seewis,  Johann  Gaudenz  von. — Song  of  the  Silent 

Land. 
Sallume,  Marg. — Growing  Old.  (?) 

Sallust,  Caius  Crispus. — Caius  Marius  to  the  Romans 
on  the  Objections  to  Making  Him  General. 
See  Jugurthine  War,  The. 

Jugurthine  War,  The. 

Merit  before  Birth.     See  Jugurthine  War,  The. 

Prince  Adherbal  before  the  Roman  Senate.     See 
Jugurthine  War,  The. 
Salmon,  Arthur  L.— If  Thou  Wert  False. 

Love  that  Availeth. 
Salsbury  [or  Saulsburyl,  Etta  G. — Willie's  Breeches. 
Salter,  W.  H.— -Queer  Boy,  A. 
Saltus,  Edgar  Evertson. — Chariot-race  in  the  Time  of 

Christ,  A. 
Saltus,  Fs.  Saltus. — Andalusian  Sereno,  The. 

Austerlitz. 

Bayadere,  The. 

Cajsar. 

Chibouque. 

Gaetano  Donizetti. 

Henry  IV. 


Saltus,  Fs.  Saltus  (continued). 

Ideal,  The. 

Jena. 

Judas  the  Second. 

Mario. 

Napoleon. 

Napoleon  II.,  Duke  of  Reichstadt. 

Pastel. 

Richard  III. 

Sphinx  Speaks,  The, 
Sanborn,  FrankUn  B: — Anathemata. 

Ariana. 

Ode  Written  for  the  Consecration  of  Sleepy-Hollow 
Cemetery. 

River  Song. 

Samuel  Hoar. 
Sanborn,  Rev.  J.  W. — Two  Bells. 
Sanborn,  T.  P. — "Ever  so  Long  Ago." 

High-backed  Chair,  The. 

To  MiUicent  Abroad. 
Sand,  G:  See  Dudevant.  Amantine   Lucile  Aurore 

DupiN,  Mme. 
Sanderson,  Eliz. — Last  Word,  The. 
Sands,  Rob't  C: — Good-night. 

Green  Isle  of  Lovers,  The. 
Sandys,  G: — Paraphrase  upon  Luke  1st. 
Sanford,  H.  R. — Pruning  Trees. 
Sanford,  M.  E. — Junior  Partner  Wanted,  A. 
San  Francisco  News  Letter. — Pwize  Spwing  Poem. 
Sangster,  C: — Comet,  The. 

England  and  America. 

Illuminated  Goal,  The. 

Living  Temple,  A. 

Love's  Renewal. 

Snows,  The. 

'Tis  Summer  Still. 
Sangster,    Mrs.    Marg.    Eliz.    [Munson]. — Across     the 
Wheat. 

Are  the  Children  at  Home? 

Autumn  Day,  An. 

Awakening. 

Best  that  I  Can,  The.     See  Do  All  that  you  Can. 

Christmas.     See  Christmas  Tree,  The. 

Christmas  Tree,  The. 

Comfort  One  Another.  (?) 

Dinna  Chide. 

Dinna  Chide  the  Mither.     See  Dinna  Chide. 

Do  All  that  you  Can. 

Eastertide.     See  Splendor  of  Lilies,  The. 

"Elizabeth,  Aged  Nine." 

Growing. 

Growing  Old. 

In  Galilee. 

"It  isn't  the   thing  you  do,  dear."     See  Sin   of 
Omission,  The. 

Katydid. 

Left  Undone.     See  Sin  of  Omission,  The. 

Moth-eaten. 

New  Year,  A. 

Old  Sampler,  The.     See  "Elizabeth,  Aged  Nine." 

Our  Lost. 

Our  Own. 

Overcometh. 

St.  Martin  and  the  Beggar. 

Sin  of  Omission,  The. 

Song  of  Summer,  A. 

Splendor  of  Lilies,  The. 

Thanksgivin'  Pumpkin  Pies. 

Unkind  Words.     See  Our  Own. 

Washington's  Birthday. 

Whittier. 
Santayana,  G: — Faith. 

On  a  Piece  of  Tapestry. 

On  the  Death  of  a  Metaphysician. 
Sappho. — Achilles  Tatius. 

Blest  as  the  Immortal  Gods. 

Fragment    from    Sappho,    A.     See    Blest    as    the 
Immortal  Gods. 

Song  of  the  Rose.     See  Achilles  Tatius. 
Sapte,  William,  Jr. — Advance  of  Science,  The. 

Gallant  Rescue,  A. 

Soft-hearted  Bill. 

Sargeant,  • . — How  Two  Men  Spoke  the  Same  Words. 

Sargeant,  J: — Law  of  Success,  The. 
Sargent,  A.— Boys  We  Want,  The. 
Sargent.  Epes.— Critic,  The.  (?)     (Tr.) 

Deeds  of  Kindness. 

Excitement  at  [or  in]  Kettleville,  The. 

Great  Musical  Critic,  The.     See  Critic,  The. 

Heart's  Summer,  The. 

Life  on  the  Ocean  Wave,  A. 

Lines  for  a  Little  I^assie.     See  Deeds  of  Kindness. 

Little  Cowslip,  The.     See  Deeds  of  Kindness. 


536 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Schiller 


Sargent,  Epes  {continued). 

Little  Things.     See  Deeds  of  Kindness. 

Martyr  of  the  Arena,  The. 

Our  Country. 

Queen  Isabella's  Resolve. 

Reading  the  Will. 

Regulus  to  [or  before]  the  Roman  Senate. 

Resolve  of  Regulus,  The. 

Return  of  Columbus,  The. 

Spartacus  to  the  Roman  Envoys  [in  Etruria]. 

Suppose.     .See  Deeds  of  Kindness. 

TempeiSt,  The. 

Will,   The.     {At.   to  W.  B.  Fowle.)     .See   Reading 
the  Will. 
Sargent,  H.  F. — Land  of  Dreams,  The. 
Sargent,  Harry  S. — Burnt  Corkers. 
Sargent,  J:  Osborne. — Horace. 
Sargent,  Julia  E. — In  the  Rock. 
Saulsbury,  Etty  G.     See  Salsbury,  Etta  G. 
Saunders,  C.  R. — May. 

Saunders,  Capt.  W:  H. — Ocean  Burial,  The. 
Savage,  J.  W. — Tomb  of  Washington,  The. 
Savage,  J: — Shane's  Head. 
Savage,  Louise  H. — Biddy  O'Brien  has  the  Toothache. 

Miss  O'Mulligan  Takes  a  Bicycle  Ride. 

Nora  Mulligan's  Thanksgiving  Party. 
Savage,  Rev.  Minot  Judson. — Christmas  Question,  A. 

City  of  Is,  The. 

Each  and  All. 

Longfellow,  Extract  Concerning. 

Ijove's  Return. 

My  Birth. 

Mystery. 
Savage,  Philip  H: — Infinity. 

Morning. 

Silkweed. 

Solitude. 
Savage,  R:  H: — Ben  Hafiz,  the  Muezzin. 
Savage-Armstrong,  G:  F.  S. — Autumn  Memories. 

"Father,  The." 

Gay  Provence. 

"I  loved  thee  for  that  dear,  deep  lovingness." 

My  Guide. 

Mystery,  The. 

One  in  the  Infinite. 

Scalp,  The. 

Through  the  Solitudes. 

Wicklow. 

Wicklow  Scene,  A. 

Wreck  off  Mizen-Head,  The. 
Savary,  J: — Wedding  Song,  A. 
Savonarola,  Girolamo. — Good  Friday. 
Sawyer,  C:  Carroll. — When  this  Cruel  War  is  Over. 
Sawyer,  Harriet  Adams. — King  Alcohol's  Soliloquy. 
Sawyer,  Jas.  P. — Her  Reason. 

I  Love  My  Love. 

Messages  the  Roses  Bring,  The.     .See  Prom-roses. 

Prom-roses. 

She  Shook  Her  Head. 

Varium  et  Mutabile. 
Sawyer,  W: — Christmas. 

Dving  Chief,  The. 

Flight  for  Life,  The. 

Recognition,  The. 

Rose  Song. 

Two  Loves  and  a  Life. 
Saxby,  J.  E.— Oh,  Ask  not  Thou. 
Saxe,  .1:  Godfrey. — "Allow  for  the  Crawl" — A  Homily. 

Blind  Man  and  His  Candle,  The. 

Blind  Man  and  the  Elephant,  The. 

Bore,  The.     See  My  Familiar. 

Briefless  Barrister,  The. 

Charming  Woman,  A. 

Cold-water  Man,  The. 

Comic  Miseries. 

Connubial  Eclogue,  A. 

Do  I  Love  Thee? 

Early  Rising. 

Echo.     See  Ego  et  Echo. 

Ego  and  Echo.     See  Ego  et  Echo. 

Ego  et  Echo. 

Family  Quarrels. 

Four  Misfortunes,  The. 

Game  of  Life,  The. 

Go  It  Alone.     .See  Game  of  Life,  The. 

Grateful  Preacher,  The. 

Head  and  the  Heart,  The.  • 

How  Cyrus  Laid  the  Cable. 

How  the  Lawyer[.s]  got  a  Patron  Saint. 

Icarus;  or.  The  Peril  of  Borrowed  Plumes. 

I'm  Growing  Old. 

King  Solomon  and  the  Bees. 


Saxe,  J:  Godfrey  {continued). 

Kiss  Me  Softly.     See  To  my  Love. 

Lake  Saratoga. 

Library,  The. 

Life's  Story.     See  Story  of  Life,  The. 

Maiden  to  the  Moon,  The. 

Maximilian. 

Mourner  a  la  Mode,  The. 

My  Eyes!     How  I  Love  You. 

My  Familiar. 

Ode  to  the  Legislature. 

On  a  Recent  Classic  Controversy. 

On  an  Ill-read  Lawyer. 

On  an  Ugly  Person  Sitting  for  a  Daguerreotype. 

Orpheus  and  Eurydice. 

Phaethon;  or.  The  Amateur  Coachman. 

Poor  Tartar.     A  Hungarian  Legend. 

Proud  Miss  MacBride,  The. 

Puzzled  Census-taker,  The. 

Pyramus  and  Thisbe. 

Railroad  Rhyme.     See  Rhyme  of  the  Rail. 

Reflective  Retrospect,  A. 

Rhyme  of  the  Rail. 

Romance  of  Nick  Van  Stann,  The. 

Saint  Jonathan. 

Sheriff  of  Saumur,  The. 

Solomon  and  the  Bees.     See  King  Solomon  and 
the  Bees. 

Song  of  Saratoga. 

Sonnet  to  a  Clam.     See  To  a  Clam. 

Stammering  Wife,  The. 

Story  of  Life,  The. 

Stuttering  Lass,  The.     See  Stammering  Wife,  The. 

Superfluous  Man,  The. 

Tartar,    The.      See  Poor  Tartar.     A   Hungarian 
Legend. 

This,  Too,  Will  Pass  Away. 

To  a  Clam. 

To  my  Love. 

Two  Church-builders,  The. 

When  I  Mean  to  Marry. 

Where  there's  a  Will  there's  a  Way. 

Will   and   the  Way,  The.     See   Where   there's   a 
Will  there's  a  Way. 

Woman's  Will. 
Saxon,  Eliz.  L. — Siege  of  the  Alamo. 
Saxton,  Andrew  Bice. — First  Step,  The. 

Who  Gather  Gold. 
Scanlan,  Michael. — Hero  of  the  Rank  and  File,  The. 
Scannell,  Edith. — Jean  Noel — Christmas  in  France. 
Schaeffer,   E. — Doing  for  Others. 

Schaff,    Philip — "Poetry,    and   its  twin-sister.   Music, 
are  the  most  sublime  and  spiritual  of  arts."(?} 

Thoughts  on  Immortality. 
Schanz,  Frida. — In  Sturmes  Not. 
Scharff.  V.  E.— Pine  Tree  Academy,  The. 
SchaufHer,  Robert  Haven. — Influence. 
SchiUer,  .lohann  Christopher  Friedrich  von.- — Address 
to  the  Swiss.     See  WiUiam  Tell. 

Alpine  Minstrelsy.     See  William  Tell. 

Antique  at  Paris. 

Astrological  Tower,  The.     See  Wallenstein. 

Battle,  The. 

Belief  in  Astrology,  The.     See  Wallenstein. 

Cranes  of  Ibycus,  "The. 

Damon  and  Pythia.?. 

Das  Licht  des  Auges.     See  William  Tell. 

Death  of  Wallenstein,  The.     See  Wallenstein. 

Dirge:  He  is  gone — is  dust.     See  Wallenstein. 

Diver,  The. 

Don  Carlos. 

Duty. 

Fame.     See  Duty. 

Glove,  The. 

Grief  of  Bereavement,  The.     See  Wallenstein. 

Heroism.     See  Wallenstein. 

Hope,  Faith,  [and]  Love.     See  Words  of  Strength. 

Hostage,   The.     See  Damon   and  Pj'thias. 

Invincible  Armada,  The. 

Joan  of  Arc's  Farewell  to  Home.     See  Maid  of 
Orleans,  The. 

Knight  of  'Toggenburg,  The.  • 

Maid  of  Orleans,  The. 

Mary  Stuart. 

Mary    Stuart,    Queen    of    Scotland.     See    Mary 
Stuart. 

Mythology.     See  Wallenstein. 

Piccolomini,  The.     See  Wallenstein. 

Pilgrim,  The. 

Thekla's  Song.     See  Wallenstein. 

Three  Words  of  Strength.     See  Words  of  Strength. 

Veiled  Statue  at  Sais,  The. 

Wallenstein. 


537 


Schiller 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Schiller,  Johann  Christopher  Friedrich  von  (continued), 

Waillenstein's  Soliloquy.     See  Wallenstein. 

William  TeU. 

William  Tell  Describes  His  Escape.     See  William 
Tell. 

William  Tell  in  Jft'ait  for  Gessler.     See  William 
Tell. 

Words  of  Strength. 

World,  The. 
Schley,  Admiral  Winfield  Scott. — Battle  of  Santiago. 
Schmolke,  B. — Heavier  the  Cross. 

Schneckenburger,   Max. — Guard  on  the  Rhine,  The. 
See  Watch  on  the  Rhine,  The. 

Watch  on  the  Rhine,  The. 
Schnezler,  August. — Deserted  Mill,  The. 
Schroeder,  Mrs.  Evelyn  Noble. — Marguerite. 
Schultze,  Martha  M. — Foundations. 
Schurman,  Jacob  Gould. — Hope  of  the  Nation,  The. 
Schurz,     Carl. — American     Battle-flags.     See    Eulogy 
on  Charles  Sumner. 

Battle-flags,  The.     See  Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner. 

Charles  Sumner.     See  Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner. 

Declaration  of  Independence,  The. 

Emancipation  Proclamation,  The. 

Eulogy  on  Charles  Svunner. 

General  Amnesty. 
Schuyler,  Montgomery. — Carlyle  and  Emerson. 
Schuyler-Lighthall,  W:  Douw. — Artist's  Prayer,  The. 

Battle  of  La  Prairie,  I'he. 

Canada  not  Last. 

Confused  Dawn,  The. 

Montreal. 

My  Native  Land. 

Praeterita  ex  Instantibus. 

Sweet  Star.  The. 
Scollard,  Clinton. — A?  I  Came  Down  from  Lebanon. 

Ballad  of  the  Paco  Town[,  The]. 

Be  Ye  in  Love  with  April  Tide? 

Bell,  A. 

Bird's  Song  in  April. 

Book-stall,  The. 

Deeds  of  Valor  at  Santiago. 

Down  in  the  Strawberry  Bed. 

Easter  Eve  at  Kerak-AIoab 

For  Our  Dead. 

In  Solitude. 

In  the  Library. 

Khamsin. 

Melik  the  Black. 
"IVIemnon. 

Men  of  the  "Merrimac,"  The. 

Montgomery  at  Quebec. 

Perpetuity. 

Sidney  Godolphin. 

Song  for  the  Fleet,  A. 
Scott,  Alex. — Bequest  of  His  Heart,  A. 

Rondel  of  I.,ove,  A. 
Scott,  Clement. — Clown's  Lament,  The 

Had  I  but  Known. 

Last  Night. 

Lilian  Adelaide  Neilson. 

Lost  Letter,  A. 

Midnight  Charge,  The. 

Midshipmite.  The. 

Mizpah. 

Noon  of  Life,  The. 

Rus  in  Urbe. 

Story  of  a  Stowaway,  The. 

Stowaway,  The.     See  Story  of  a  Stowaway,  The. 

"Will  Frank  Buchanan  Write?" 

Woman's  Song,  A. 

Women  of  Mumbles  Head,  The. 
Scott,  Duncan  Campbell. — Above  St.  Ir^n^e. 

At  Les  Eboulements. 

At  the  Cedars. 

End  of  the  Day,  The. 

Fifteenth  of  April,  The. 

Flock  of  Sheep,  A. 

Home  Song. 

In  November. 

Life  and  Death. 

Little  Song,  A. 

Memory. 

Off  Riviere  du  Loup. 

Ottawa. 

Reed-player,  The. 
Scott,  Frank  N.— Fall  In! 

Miller  and  the  Maid,  The. 
Scott,  Frd'k  G: — Ad  Majorem  Dei  Gloriam. 

Dawn. 

Dream  of  the  Prehistoric,  A. 

Easter  Island. 

God's  House.  * 


Scott,  Frd'k  G:  (continued). 

Knowledge. 

Reverie,  A. 

Samson, 

Time. 

Van  Elsen. 
Scott,  J.  L. — I  Haven't  much  Religion. 

When  We  Go  Home. 
Scott,  J.  W.— Victory  Deferred. 

Scott,  Lady  J: — Annie  Laurie.     (At.)      See  DouaLAS, 
William,  of  Fingland. 

When  Thou  Art  Near  Me. 
Scott,    Mary   McNeil.    See    Fenollosa,    Mrs.    Mart 

McNeil  [Scott]. 
Scott,  Sir  Walter. — Abbot's  Blessing  on  the  Bruce, 
The.     See  Lord  of  the  Isles,  The. 

Albert  Graeme's  Song.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel. 

Alice  Brand.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Allan-a-Dale.     See  Bokeby. 

Amy  Robsart  and  Richard  Varney.     See  Kenil- 
worth. 

"And  said  I  that  my  limbs  were  old."     See  Lay 
of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Anglo-Norman  Days.     See  Ivanhoe. 

Answer.     See  Old  Mortality. 

Antiquary,  The. 

Archery  Contest,  The.     See  Ivanhoe. 

Ballad  of  Alice  Brand,   The.     See  Lady  of  the 
Lake,  The. 

Bannatyne  Club,  The. 

Bannockburn.     See  Lord  of  the  Isles,  The. 

Baron  and  the  Jew,  The.     See  Ivanhoe. 

Battle  of  Beal'  an  Duine.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 
The. 

Battle  of  Harlaw. 

Beal'  an  Dhuine.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Besieged  Castle,  The.     See  Ivanhoe. 

Beware.     See  Bride  of  Lammermoor,  The. 

Blanche  of  Devan.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Blanche  of  Devan's  Last  Words.     See  Lady  of 
the  Lake,  The. 

Boat  Song.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Bonnets  of  Bonnie  Dundee,  The.     See  Doom  of 
Devorgoil,  The. 

Bonnie  [or  Bonny]  Dundee.     See  Doom  of  Devor- 
goil, The. 

Border  Ballad.     See  Monastery,  The. 

Border  Minstrelsy.     (Ed.)     See  Minstrelsy  of  the 
Scottish  Border,  in  Title  Index. 

Border    Song.     See    Monastery,    The. 

Branksome  Hall.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Breathes    there  the  Man.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 
Minstrel. 

"Breathes  there  the  man  with  soul  so  dead."     Set 
Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Bride  of  Lammermoor,  The. 

Brignall  Banks.     See  Rokeby. 

Bruce    and    the  Abbot.     See  Lord  of  the  Isles, 
The. 

Buccaneer,  The.     See  Rokeby. 

Camp,  The.     See  Marmion. 

Cavalier,  The.     See  Rokeby. 

Charge  at  Waterloo,  The.      See   Field  of  Water- 
loo, The. 

Chase,  The.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Chase,  The.     (Tr.)    See  also  Wild  Huntsman,  The. 

Child  Dyring.     (At.) 

Christmas.     See  Marmion. 

Christmas  Eve  in  the  Olden  Time.     See  Marmion. 

Christmas  in   England.     See  Marmion. 

Christmas  in  [the]  Olden  Time.     See  Marmion. 

Clan-Alpine.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Combat  between  Fitz  James  and  Roderick  [DhuJ. 
See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Constance  de   Beverley.     See  Marmion. 

Contempt.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Convent  Scene  from  Marmion.     See  Marmion. 

Coronach.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Count   Albert  and   the   Fair   Rosalie.     See   Fire- 
king,  The. 

Countess    Amy    and    Her    Husband,    The.     See 
Kenilworth. 

County  Giry.     See  Quentin  Durward. 

Dance  of  Death,  The 

Datur  Hora  Quieti.     See  Doom  of  Devorgoil,  The. 

Davie  Gellatley's  Song.     See  Waverley. 

Death  of  Bertram,  The.     See  Rokebj^. 

Death  of  Marmion,  The.     See  Marmion. 

Death  of  Mr.  Bertram,  The.     See  Guy  Maanering. 

Death  of  Morris.     See  Rob  Roy. 

Death  Struggle,  The.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The 

Defiance.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 


538 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Scott 


Scott,  Sir  Walter  (continued). 

Dies  Irffi.     (Tr.)     See  Lay  of  the  Last  MinstreL 

Doom  of  Devorgoil,  The. 

Douglas.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Douglas  to  the  Populace  of  Stirling.     See  Lady  of 

the  Lake,  The. 
Dreams.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 
Dying  Bard,  The. 
Edmund's  Song.     See  Rokeby. 
Elspeth's  Ballad.     See  Antiquary,  The. 
Erl-king,  The.     (Tr.)     See  Goethe,  Johann  W. 

VON. 

Eve  of  St.  John,  The. 

Evening.     See  Doom  of  Devorgoil,  The. 

Fair  Annie.     (At.) 

Fair  Helen.     (At.) 

Farewell.     See  Pirate,  The. 

Field  of  Waterloo,  The. 

Fire-king,  The. 

Fitz-James  and  Roderick  Dhu.  See  Lady  of  the 
Lake,  The. 

FitzTraver's  Song.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Flight.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Flodden  Field.     See  Marmion. 

Friar  of  Orders  Gray.     See  Rokeby. 

Gathering  Song  of  Donald  [or  Donuil]  Dhu.  See 
Pibroch  of  Donald  Dhu. 

Gathering  Song  of  Donald  the  Black.  See  Pibroch 
of  Donald  Dhu. 

Gay  Goss-hawk,  The. 

Graeme  and  Bewick. 

Guy  Mannering. 

Harold  the  Dauntless. 

Harold's  Song.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel,  The. 

Heart  of  Midlothian,  The. 

Heath  this  Night  must  be  My  Bed,  The.  See  Lady 
of  the  Lake,  The. 

Helvellyn. 

Hie  Away.     See  Waverley. 

Highland  Chase,  The.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Highland  Stranger,  The.  See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 
The. 

Highland  War  Song.     See  Pibroch  of  Donald  Dhu. 

Hunting  Song. 

Hymn  for  the  Dead.  See  Lay  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel, The. 

Hymn  of  the  Hebrew  Maid.     See  Ivanhoe. 

In  Memoriam:  Nelson,  Pitt,  Fox.     See  Marmion. 

Innominatus.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel,  The. 

Interview  between  Amy  and  Lord  Leicester  at 
Kenilworth.     See  Kenilworth. 

Ivanhoe. 

James  Fitz-James  and  Ellen.  See  Lady  of  the 
Lake,  The. 

Jeanie  Deans  and  Queen  Caroline.  See  Heart  of 
Midlothian,  The. 

Jock  of  Hazeldean. 

Kenilworth. 

Kinmont  Willie.     (At.) 

Knight's  Toast,  The. 

Lake  Coriskin.     See  Lord  of  the  Isles,  The. 

Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Last  Minstrel,  The.  See  Lay  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel. 

Lay  of  the  Imprisoned  Huntsman.  See  Lady  of 
the  Lake,  The. 

Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Legend  of  Montrose,  The. 

Leonard  Tarries  Long.  See  Doom  of  Devorgoil, 
The. 

Lighthouse,  The.     See  Pharos  Loquitor. 

Lines  Addressed  to  Monsieur  Alexandre,  the  Cele- 
brated Ventriloquist. 

Lochinvar.     See  Marmion. 

Lochinvar's  Ride.     See  Marmion. 

Lodge,  The.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Lord  of  the  Isles,  The. 

Love  of  Country.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Lucy  Ashton's  Song.  See  Bride  of  Lammermoor, 
The. 

Lucy  Bertam  and  Domine  Sampson.  See  Guy 
Mannering. 

Lullaby  of  an  Infant  Chief. 

Lullaby  on  an  Infant  Chief.  See  Lullaby  of  an 
Infant  Chief. 

Lullaby  to  an  Infant  Chief.  See  Lullaby  of  an 
Infant  Chief. 

Macgregor's  Defence.     See  Rob  Roy. 

Maid  of  Neidpath,  The. 

Marmion. 

Marmion  and  Douglas.     See  Marmion. 

Marmion  Taking  Leave  of  Douglas.     See  Marmion. 

Mass,  The.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 


Scott,  Sir  Walter  (continued). 

Melrose  Abbey.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  MinstreL 

Melrose  by  Moonlight.  See  Lay  of  the  Last  Min- 
strel. 

Monastery,  The. 

Morning  Landscape,  A.  See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 
The. 

My  Mother.     (At.) 

My  Native  Land.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Nelson,  Pitt,  Fox.     See  Marmion. 

'Nora's  Vow.  , 

Norham  Castle.     See  Marmion. 

Nubian,  The.     See  Talisman,  The. 

Old  English  Christmas,  The.     See  Marmion. 

Old  Mortality. 

Omnipotent,  The.     See  Antiquary,  The. 

One  Volume  More.     See  Bannatyne  Club,  The. 

Orphan  Maid,  The.     See  Legend  of  Montrose.  The. 

Outlaw,  The.     See  Rokeby. 

Palmer,  The. 

Parting  of  Douglas  and  Marmion.     See  Marmion. 

Patriotism.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Pharos  Loquitur. 

Pibroch.     See  Pibroch  of  Donald  Dhu. 

Pibroch  of  Donald  [or  Donuil]  Dhu. 

Pirate,  The. 

Pitt  and  Fox.     See  Marmion. 

Poet,  The.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Pride  of  Youth,  The.  See  Heart  of  Midlothian, 
The. 

Proud  Maisie.     See  Heart  of  Midlothian,  The._ 

"Proud  Maisie  is  in  the  wood."  See  Heart  of  Mid- 
lothian, The. 

Quentin  Durward. 

Raleigh.     See  Kenilworth. 

Ravenswood  and  Lucy  Ashton.  See  Bride  of 
Lammermoor,  The. 

Rebecca's  Hymn.     See  Ivanhoe. 

Red  Harlaw,  The.     See  Antiquary,  The. 

Reflections  of  Sir  Walter  Scott. 

Richard  to  the  Princes  of  the  Crusade.  See  Talis- 
man, The. 

Rob  Roy. 

Rokeby. 

Rosabelle.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

"Rose  is  fairest  when  'tis  budding  new.  The." 
See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Rover,  The.     See  Rokeby. 

Rover's  Adieu,  The.     See  Rokeby. 

St.  Swithin's  Chair. 

Scotland.     See  Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel. 

Search  after  Happiness,  The;  or.  The  Quest  of 
Sultaun  Solimaun. 

Serenade,  A.     See  Quentin  Durward. 

Soldier,  Rest!     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Soldier,  Rest!  Thy  Warfare  O'er.  See  Ladv  of  the 
Lake,  The. 

Song:  "A  weary  lot '  is  thine,  fair  maid."  See 
Rokeby. 

Song:  "AUan-a-Dale  has  no  fagot,"  etc.  See 
Rokeby. 

Song:  "O  Brignall  Banks,"  etc.     See  Rokeby. 

Song:  "Soldier,  rest!  thy  warfare  o'er."  See  Lady 
of  the  Lake,  The. 

Song:  "The  heath  this  night  must  be  my  bed." 
See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Song:  "Where  shall  the  lover  rest."  See  Mar- 
mion. 

Song  from  "The  Lady  of  the  Lake."  See  Lady  of 
the  Lake,  The. 

Song  of  Clan-Alpine.  See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 
The. 

Song  of  the  Young  Highlander.  See  Lady  of  the 
Lake,  The. 

Sound,  Sound  the  Clarion.     See  Old  Mortality. 

Stag  Hunt,  The.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Storming  of  the  Castle,  The.     See  Ivanhoe. 

Summer.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. 

Summons,  The.     See  Pibroch  of  Donald  Dhu. 

Sun  upon  the  Lake,  The.  See  Doom  of  Devor- 
goil, The. 

Sun  upon  the  Weirdlaw  Hill,  The. 

Sunset  in  the  Mountains.  See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 
The. 

Talisman,  The. 

Time.     See  Antiquary,  The. 

To  Mr.  Alexandre,  the  Ventriloquist.  See  Lines 
Addressed  to  Monsieur  Alexandre,  the  Cele- 
brated Ventriloquist. 

Trial  of  Rebecca,  The.     See  Ivanhoe. 

Trosachs,  The.     See  Lady  of  the  I>ake,  The. 

Twist  Ye.  Twine  Ye.     See  Guy  Mannering. 

Violet,  The. 


539 


Scott 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Scott,  Sir  WaltT  (continued). 

Waken,    Lords    and    Ladies    Gay.     See    Hunting 

Song. 
Waverley. 

Weary  Lot  is  Thine[,  Fair  Maid],  A.     See  Rokeby. 
"Where  shall  thejfiver  re.st."     See  Marmion. 
Wild  Huntsman,  iTie.     (Tr.) 
Young  Lochinvar.     See  Marmion. 
Youth.     See  Rokeby. 
"Scott,  Sir  We-alter." — Paddy  Dunbar. 
Scott,  W:  Bell.— Below  the  Old  House. 
Glenkindie. 
Hero-wor.ship. 
Lowland  Witch  Ballad,  A. 
My  Mother. 

Norns  Watering  Yggdrasill,  The. 
Parting  and  Meeting  Again. 
Pygmalion. 
To  the  Dead. 
Witch's  Ballad,  The. 
Youth  and  Age. 
Scott-Gatty.  Alfred  Scott.— Three  Little  Pigs,  The. 
Scotus,  Edmundu.s. — Cavalry  Scout,  The. 
Scoville,  D.  C— Truth  and  Victory. 
Scranton,  Bertha  S. — Christmas  Thought  abouf  Dick- 
ens, A. 
Scranton,  J.  H. — Gertrude. 
Summer  Campaign,  A. 
Scribner,  Annie  Nyhan. — Panacea. 
Scribner,  Mrs.  Josephine  E.  [Pittman]. — Sad  Mistake, 

A. 
Scribner' 8  Monthly. — Call  me  not  dead,  when  \,  indeed, 
have  gone. 
"Friend  who  holds  a  mirror  to  my  face.  The." 
Harvesters,  The. 

Isaac  Ro.senthal  on  the  Chinese  Question. 
Lides  to  Bary  .lade. 
Monk  in  His  Cell,  A. 
Nun  at  Her  Devotions,  A. 
Ophelia. 

Rev.  Gabe  Tucker's  Remarks. 
Safest  Plan,  The. 

"Strength  for  the  day!  at  early  dawn  I  stand." 
Terpsichore  in  the  Flat  Creek  Quarters. 
There's  No  Ro.se  without  a  Thorn. 
Undine. 

Vas  Bender  Henshpecked? 

"We   Americans   make   a   God   of   our   common- 
school  system." 
"When  I  am  dead  and  buried." 
"Scroggin,  Andrew." — Piece  of  Red  Calico,  A. 
Scudder,  Eliza. — I^ove  of  God,  The. 
New  Heaven,  The. 
Quest,  The. 
"ro  a  Young  Child. 
Truth. 

Vesper  Hymn. 
Whom  but  Thee. 
Scudder,  Horace  Elisha. — Emerson,  E.xtract  Concern- 
ing. 
Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. 
Scudder,  H.  Martyn. — Destroyer,  The. 

What   Intemperance   Does.     See  Destroyer,  The. 
Seabury,  Emma  Playter. — New  Woman,  The. 
Seagrave,  Robert. — Ri.se,  My  Soul,  and  Stretch  Thy 

Wings. 
Seaman,  Owen. — Bulbul,  The. 
Of  Baiting  the  Lion. 
Presto  Furioso. 
To  Julia  in  Shooting  Togs. 
To  Julia  under  I.,ock  and  Key. 
To  the  Lord  of  Pot.sdam. 
Searing,   Mrs.   Laura  Catherine   [Redden]   ("Howard 
Glyndon").— Battle  of  Gettysburg,  The. 
Disarmed. 
Mazzini. 
Which  is  Best? 
"Searle,  January."     See  Phillips,  G:  Searle. 
Sears,  Edmund   Hamilton. — -Angel's  Song,  The.     See 
It  Came  upon  the  Midnight  Clear. 
Calm  on  the  Ear  of  Night.     See  Christmas  Song. 
Christmas  Hymn.     See  Christmas  Song. 
Christmas  Song. 
Glorious  Song  of  Old,  The.     See  It  Came  upon  the 

Midnight  Clear. 
Ideals. 

It  Came  upon  the  Midnight  Clear. 
Peace  on  Earth.     See  It  Came  upon  the  Midnight 
Clear. 
Seavey,  Gideon  Webster. — Ich  Bin  Dein.  (?) 
Seawell,  Molly  Elliot. — 'Lijah's  Call  to  Preach. 
Sedaine, . — Blondel's  Song  under  the  Prison  Win- 
dow of  Richard  Cceur-de-Lion. 


Sedgwick,  Alfred  B. — Gay  Old  Man  ^m  I,  .\. 
"I^t  Those  Laugh  Who  Win." 
Old   Man's   Laughing  Song.     See  Gay  Old   Man 

am  I,  A. 
Pity  the  Sorrows  of  a  Poor  Old  Man.     See  Gay 

Old  Man  am  I,  A. 
Tootle,  Tootle,  Too. 
Sedley,    Sir    C: — Child    and    Maiden.     See    Mulberry 
Garden,  The. 
Constancy.     See  To  Celia. 

"Love    still    hath    something  of   the   sea."      See 
Song:  "Love  still  hath  something  of  the  sea." 
Mulberry  Garden,  The. 

"Not,  (Jelia,  that  I  juster  am."     See  To  Celia. 
Phillis.     See  Phillis  is  my  Only  Joy. 
Phillis  is'my  Only  Joy. 

Song:  "Love  still  has  something  of  the  sea." 
Song:   "Phillis   is   my   only   joy."     See  Phillis   is 

my  Only  Joy. 
Song  from   "Tne   Mulberry  Garden."     See  Mul- 
berry Garden,  The. 
Song  to  Chloris.     See  Mulberry  Garden,  The. 
To  a  Very  Young  Lady.     See  Mulberry  Garden, 

The. 
To  Celia. 

To  Chloris.     See  Mulberry  Garden,  The. 
Seelye,  Julius  Hawley. — God  Save  Our  Native  Land. 
Demerits  of  High  License,  The.  (?) 

S^gur,  de. — Utility  of  History. 

Seiss,  Jos.  A. — Strong  Drink. 

"Selim."— Brief  Puff  of  Smoke,  A. 

Selinger,  Emily.     James  Henry  in  School. 

Selkrig,  Amanda  P. — Washington's  Vision. 

Sellers,  ,1.  C,  Jr. — Master  Character  of  Victor  Hugo, 

The. 
Sellers,  Minnie  L. — Belshazzar's  Feast. 
Sels,  H. — Christmas  Carol,  A. 
Sample,  Will  H. — In  a  Horse  Car. 
Seneca,  Lucius  AnnsDUs. — Morals. 
True  King,  The. 

"We  all  complain  of  the  shortness  of  time."     See 
Morals. 
Sennott,  G : — Name  Your  Poison. 
Sentleger,  Sir  Antonio. — Sir  Thomas  Wyatt. 
Sergeant,    J: — Military    Qualifications    Distinct    from 

Civil. 
Sertrew,  Saul. — "Der  Dog  und  der  Lobster." 

Humorous  Irish  Sketch. 
Setomi,  Gabriel. — Jack  Frost. 
Romance. 
\^rld's  Music,  The.  ^ 

Sewall, . — Eulogy  on  Laughing. 

Sewalt,  Alice  Archer.     See  James,  Mrs.  Alice  Archer 

[Sewall]. 
Sewall,  Frank.— Roll  Out,  O  Song. 

Sewall,    Mrs.    Harriet    [Winslow]. — Why   Thus    Long- 
ing? 
Seward,  Jonathan  Mitchell. — War  and  Washington. 
Seward,   W:    H. — American    and   the   Corsican,   The. 
See  John  Quincy  Adams. 
America's  True   Greatness.     See  True   Greatness 

of  our  Country,  The. 
Central  American  Treaty,  The. 
Character  of  Henry  Clay.     See  Henry  Clay. 
Corsican    not    Content,     The.     See    John    Quincy 

Adams. 
Daniel  O'Connell. 

Daniel   O'Connell's   Epitath.     See   Daniel   O'Con- 
nell. 
Defence  of  Abel  F.  Fitch  and  Others. 
Defence     of     Alleged     Conspirators     against     the 
Michigan  Central  Railroad  Company.     See  De- 
fence of  Abel  F.  Fitch  and  Others. 
Defence  of  William  Freeman. 
Eulogy  on  O'Connell.     See  Daniel  O'Connell. 
Henry  Clay. 
Home  and  School  the  Bulwark  of  Our  Country. 

See  True  Greatness  of  our  Country,  The. 
Irrepressible  Conflict,  The. 
John  Quincy  Adams. 
Plea  for  the  Union. 
Plea  for  William   Freeman,   A.     See  Defence   of 

William  Freeman. 
True  Greatness  of  our  Country,  The. 
Welcome  to  Louis  Kossuth. 
Sewell,  G: — Dying  Man  in  his  Garden,  The. 
Seymour,  H.  M. — Dakin'  a  Shweat. 
Shafer,  Anna  L. — Oratory  among  the  Arts. 
Shairp,  J:  Campbell. — -Bush' aboon  Traquair,  The. 
Cailleach   Bein-y-Vreich. 
Lost  on  Schihallion. 
Remembrance,  A. 
Return  to  Nature. 


540 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Shakespeare 


Shakespeare,  W: — Absence.     See  Sonnets. 

Abuse  of  Authority.     See  Measure  for  Measure. 

Adam's  Warning.     See  As  You  Like  It. 

Adversity.     See  As  You  Like  It. 

Agincourt.     See  King  Henry  V. 

"Ah  me!  for  aught  that  ever  I  could  read."     See 

Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
Airy  Nothings.     See  Tempest,  The. 
"All  the  World's  a  Stage."     See  As  You  Like  It. 
All's  Well  that  Ends  Well. 
Amor  Omnia  Vincit.     See  Sonnets. 
"And    this    man    is   now   become    a    god."     See 

Julius  Csesar. 
Anger.     See  Coriolanus. 
Ann   Hathaway.     See  Anne   Hathaway. 
Anne  Bullen.     (See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Anne  Hathaway.     {Also  at.  to  C:  Dibdin). 
Antony  and  Cleopatra. 
Antony    and    the    Soothsayer.     See   Antony    and 

Cleopatra. 
Antony  on  the  Death  of  Caesar.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Antony    over    the    Dead    Body    of    Cce.sar.     See 

Julius  Caisar. 
Antony's    Address    to    the    Romans.     See   Julius 

CsDsar. 
Antony's  Address  to  the  Romans  on  the  Death  of 

Csesar.     See  Julius   Csesar. 
Antony's  Lament  over  Cse.sar.     See  Julius  Csesar. 
Antony's  Oration  over  Cajsar.     See  Julius  Csesar. 
Antony's  Oration  over  the  Body  of  Csesar.     See 

Julius  Csesar. 
Approach  of  Age,  The.     See  Sonnets. 
Approach   of  the   Fairies,   The.     See  Midsummer 

Night's  Dream. 
Ariel's  Song[s].     See  Tempest,  The. 
Armado  and  Moth.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Art  and  Nature.     See  Winter's  Tale,  The. 
Arthur  in   King  John.     See  King  John. 
As  You  Like  It. 
Aubade.     See  Cymbeline. 
Balcony    Scene    from    Romeo    and    Juliet.     See 

Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Battle  of  Barnet.     See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III. 
Battle  of  St.  Albans.     See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II. 
Battle  of  St.  Crispian's  Day.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Battle  of  Shrewsbury.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Battle  of  Tewksbury.     See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt. 

IIL 
Battle  of  Towton.     See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III. 
Be  Just,  and  Fear  Not.     See  King  Henry  VJal. 
Bees,  The.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Benedick's     Soliloquy.     See     Much     Ado     about 

Nothing. 
Birds.     See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
Biron's  Canzonet.     See  Love's   Labour's   Lost. 
Black  Prince,  The.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Blind  Love.     See  Sonnets. 
Blossom,  The.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Blow,   Blow,   Thou  Winter  Wind.     See  As  You 

Like  It. 
Bluntness.     See  King  Lear. 
Bolingbroke's  Entrance  into  London.     See  King 

Richard  II. 
Bridal  Song  [A].     See  Two  Noble  Kinsmen,  The. 
Brutus'  Harangue  on  the  Death  of  Csesar.     See 

Julius  Csesar.  « 

Brutus    Justifying    the    Assassination    of    Caesar. 

See  Julius  Csesar. 
Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Csesar.     See  Julius  Ca;sar. 
Brutus  to  Cassius.     See  .lulius  Caesar. 
Buckingham's  Address  on  his  Way  to  E.xecution. 

See  King  Henry  VIII. 
"Canst  thou  not  minister  to  a  mind  diseased." 

,    See  Macbeth. 
Cardinal  Wolsey.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Cardinal    Wolsey    on    Being    Cast    Off    by    King 

Henry  VIII.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Cardinal    Wolsey's    Soliloquy.     See    King    Henry 

VIII. 
Carpe  Diem.     See  Twelfth  Night;  or,  What  vou 

Will. 
Casket  Scene,  The.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Cassio's  Lost  Reputation.     See  Othello,  the  Moor 

of  Venice. 
Cassius.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Cassius  against  Caesar.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Cassius'  Complaint  of  Csesar.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Cassius    Instigating    Brutus    against    Caesar.     See 

Julius  Csesar. 
Cassius  to  Brutus.     See  Julius  Csesar. 
Caution.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Clarence's  Dream.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Cleopatra.     See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 


Shakespeare,  W:  {continued). 

Cleopatra  and  the  Messenger.  See  Antony  and 
Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra's  Barge.     See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra's  Resolution.  See  Antony  and  Cleo- 
patra. 

Closet   Scene   from   Hamlet.     See   Hamlet. 

Clown's  First  Rehearsal,  The.  See  Midsummer 
Night's  Dream. 

Clown's  Second  Rehearsal,  The.  See  Mid.summer 
Night's  Dream. 

Colloquy  between  Portia  and  Nerissa  Regarding 
the  Suitors.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 

Come  Away,  Come  Away,  Death.  See  Twelfth 
Night;  or,  What  you  Will. 

Come  away.  Death.  See  Twelfth  Night;  or.  What 
you  Will. 

Come,  thou  Monarch  of  the  Vine.  See  Antony 
and  Cleopatra. 

"Come  unto  these  yellow  sands."  See  Tempest, 
The. 

Comedy  of  Errors,  The. 

Common  Sense.     See  Sonnets. 

Commonwealth  of  th6  Bees,  The.  See  King 
Henry  V. 

Compliment  to  Queen  Elizabeth.  See  Midsum- 
mer Night's  Dream. 

Conscience.     See    King    Richard    III. 

Consolation,  A.     See  Sonnets. 

Constance's  Denunciation  of  King  Philip  of 
France  and  Lymoges  of  Austria.  See  King 
John. 

Coriolanus. 

Coriolanus  and  Aufidius.     See  Coriolanus. 

Coriolanus  at  Antium.     See  Coriolanus. 

Courage.     See  Antony  and  Cleopatra. 

Courage.     See  also  King  Richard   III. 

Course  of  Love,  The.  See  Othello,  the  Moor  of 
Venice. 

Course  of  True  Love,  The.  See  Midsummer 
Night's  Dream. 

Court  Scene  from  "The  Winter's  Tale."  See 
Winter's  Tale,  The. 

Crabbed  Age  and  Youth.  See  Pa.ssionate  Pil- 
grim, The. 

Crjme.     See  Julius  Caesar. 

Crispian's  Day.     See  King  Henry  V. 

Cymbeline. 

Dagger  of  the  Mind,  A.     See  Macbeth. 

Dagger  Scene,  The.     See  Macbeth. 

Dagger  Soliloquy.     See  Macbeth. 

Dawn.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 

Death  of  Cardinal  Beaufort.  See  King  Henry  VI., 
Pt.  III. 

Death  of  Jack  Cade.     See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II. 

Death  of  Julius  Cajsar,  The.     See  Julius  Csesar. 

Death  of  Prince  Arthur.     See  King  John. 

Dialogue  between  King  John  and  Hubert.  See 
King  John. 

Dirge:  "Come  away,  come  away,  death."  See 
Twelfth  Night;  or.  What  you  Will. 

Dirge:  "Fear  no  more  the  heat  o'  the  sun."  See 
Cymbeline. 

Dirge  of  Imogen,  The.     See  Cymbeline. 

Dirge  of  Love.  See  Twelfth  Night;  or.  What  you 
Will. 

Dirge  of  the  Three  Queens.  See  Two  Noble  Kins- 
men, The. 

Dover  Cliff[s].     See  King  Lear. 

Dream  of  Clarence,  The.     See  King  Richard  III. 

Duke  of  Gloster,  The.     See  King  Richard  III. 

Each  and  All.     See  Measure  for  Measure. 

Earl  of  Richmond  to  His  Army,  The.  See  King 
Richard  HI. 

Exhortation  to  Courage.     See  King  John. 

Fairies'  Lullaby,  The.  See  Midsummer  Night's 
Dream. 

Fairy  Land,  I.     See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 

Fairy  Land,  II.     See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 

Fairy  Land,  III.     See  Tempest,  The. 

Fairy  Land,  IV.     See  Tempe.st,  The. 

Fairy  Land,  V.     See  Tempest,  The. 

Fairy  Life,  The.     See  Tempest,  The. 

Fairy  Song:  "Over  hill,  over  dale."  See  Midsum- 
mer Night's  Dream. 

Fairy  Songs.     See  Tempest,  The. 

Fairy  to  Puck,  The.  See  Midsummer  Night's 
Dream. 

Fairy's  Song,  A.     See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 

Fall  of  Wolsey.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 

Falstaff  and  Prince  Hal.  See  King  Henry  IV., 
Pt.  I. 

Falstaff 's  Boasting.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.   I. 


541 


Shakespeare 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Shakespeare,  W:  (continued). 

FaOstaff's  Honor.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Falstaff's  Instinct.     See  King  Henrv  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Fancy.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Farewell  I     Thou  art  too  Dear.     See  Sonnets. 
"Farewell!  thou  art  too  dear  for  my  possessing." 

See  Sonnets. 
Fear  No  More  the  Heat  o'  the  Sun.     See  Cym- 

beline. 
Fidele.     See  Cymbeline. 
Firmness.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Flowers.     See  Winter's  Tale,  The. 
Fop,  The.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
"For  who  would  bear  the  whips  and  scorns  of  time." 

See  Hamlet. 
Foresight.     See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
Forest  of  Arden,  The.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
Forum  Scene,  The.     See  Julius  Csesar. 
Fourth  Act  of  "The  Merchant  of  Venice."     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Friendship,     See  Hamlet. 
Friendship.     See  also  Sonnets. 
Frustra.     See  Measure  for  Measure. 
"Full  fathom  five  thy  father  lies."     See  Tempest, 

The. 
Garden  of  Love,  The.     See  Sonnets. 
Gentleman,  A.     See  Hamlet. 
Ghost  in  Hamlet,  The.     See  Hamlet. 
Good  Deeds  Past.     See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
Good  Name.     See  Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. 
"Good  name  in  man  and  woman,  dear  my  lord." 

See  Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. 
'    Good  Omens.     See  Sonnets. 

Gracious  Time,  The.     See  Hamlet. 

Graveyard  Scene,  The.     See  Hamlet. 

"Great  man  down,  you  mark  his  favorite  flies, 

The."     See  Hamlet. 
Greenwood  Tree,  The.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
Grief.     See  Hamlet. 
"Grief  fills  the  room  up  of  my  absent  child."     See 

King  John. 
Guidance.     See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet. 

Hamlet  to  the  Ghost.     See  Hamlet. 
•         Hamlet  to  the  Players.     See  Hamlet. 

Hamlet's  Advice  to  the  Players.     See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet's  First  Soliloquy.     See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet's  Ghost.     See  Hamlet. 
•Hamlet's    Instruction[s]     to     the     Players.      See 

Hamlet. 
Hamlet's  Soliloquy.     See  Hamlet. 
Hamlet's  Soliloquy  on  Death.     See  Hamlet. 
Hark!     See  Cymbeline. 
Hark,  Hark!  the  Lark.    See  Cymbeline. 
"Hark!  harki  the  lark  at  heaven's  gate  sings." 

See  Cymbeline. 
Hate  and  Revenge.     See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II. 
Hatred.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Helena    and    Hermia.     See    Midsummer    Night's 

Dream. 
Henry  IV.     See  King  Henry  IV. 
Henry    the    Fourth's   Soliloquy   on    Sleep.       See 

King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II. 
Henry  V.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.  at  Harfleur.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.    at   the   Siege   of   Harfleur.     See   King 

Henry  V. 
Henry  Fifth  Encouraging  His  Soldiers.     See  King 

Henry  V. 
Henry  V.  to  His  Soldiers.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.  to  His  Soldiers  at  the  Siege  of  Harfleur. 

See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.  to  His  T/roops.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.'s  Audience  of  French  Ambassadors.     See 

Kmg  Henry  V. 
Henry  V.'s  Wooing.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Henry  VI.     See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II. 
Henry  VIII.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Henry's  Speech     before     Agmcourt.     See     King 

Henry  V. 
Henry's  Speech  before  Harfleur.     See  King  Henry 

Hesitation.     See  Macbeth. 

Hotspur.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 

Hotspur  and  the  Fop.     See  King  Henrv  IV.,  Pt.  I. 

Hotspur  to  Worcester.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 

Hotspur's  Defence.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 

Hotspur's  Description  of  a  Fop.     See  King  Henrv 

IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Hotspur's    Quarrel    with    Henry    IV.     See    King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Hotspur's  Soliloquy  on  the  Contents  of  a  Letter. 

See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 


Shakesoeare,  W:  (continued). 

"itow  like  a  winter  hath  my  absence  been."  See 
Sonnets. 

How  Should  I  Your  True  Love  Know?  See  Ham- 
let. 

Human  Life.     See  Tempest,  The. 

"I  can  as  well  be  hanged,  as  tell  the  manner  of  it." 
See  Julius  Csesar. 

I  See  Men's  Judgments.  See  Antony  and  Cleo- 
patra. 

If  'twere  Done  when  'tis  Done.     See  Macbeth. 

In  the  Greenwood.     See  As  You  Like  It. 

Inborn  Royalty.     See  Cymbeline. 

Inconstancy.     See  Much  Ado  about  Nothing. 

Influence  of  Music.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 

Insubstantial  Pageant,  An.     See  Tempest,  The. 

Is  This  a  Dagger?     See  Macbeth. 

It  was  a  Lover  and  his  Lass.      See  As  You  Like  It. 

Jog  on,  Jog  On.     See  Winter's  Tale,  The. 

'  'Jog  on,  jog  on,  the  foot-path  way."  See  Winter's 
Tale,  The. 

Julius  Csesar. 

Katharine's  Appeal  to  King  Henry.  See  King 
Henry  VIII. 

Killing  of  Macbeth.     See  Macbeth. 

King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 

King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II. 

King  Henry  V. 

King  Henry  V.  at  Harfleur.     See  King  Henry  V. 

King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  I 

King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II. 

King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  IIL 

King  Henry  VIII. 

King  Henry's  Address  to  His  Soldiers.  See  King 
Henry  V. 

King  Henry's  Ambition.  See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt. 
III. 

King  John. 

King  Lear. 

King  Richard  II. 

King  Richard  III. 

King  Richard's  Soliloquy.     See  King  Richard  III. 

King  to  His  Soldiers  before  Harfleur,  The.  See 
King  Henry  V. 

King's  Repentance.  A.     See  Hamlet. 

Lady  Macbeth — Sleep  Walking  Scene.  See  Mac- 
beth. 

"Let  me  not  to  the  marriage  of  true  minds."  See 
Sonnets. 

Letter  Scene,  The.     See  Macbeth. 

Life  and  Death.     See  Measure  for  Measure. 

Life  without  Passion,  The.     See  Sonnets. 

Little  Princes,  The.     See  King  Richard  III. 

Love.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 

Love.     See  also  Sonnets. 

Love  and  Marriage  of  Ferdinand  and  Miranda,  The. 
See  Tempest,  The. 

Love  Complaining.  See  Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona. 

Love  Dissembled.     See  As  You  Like  It. 

"Love  thyself  last;  cherish  thou  hearts  that  hate 
thee."     See  King  Henry  VIII. 

Lover's  Lament,  A.  See  Twelfth  Night;  or.  What 
you  Will. 

Lover's  Night  Thoughts,  The.     See  Sonnets. 

Lover's  Tears,  The.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 

Love's'  Labour's  Lost. 

Love's  Memory.     See  All's  well  that  Ends  Well. 

Love's  Perjuries.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 

Lucre  ce. 

Lullaby  for  Titania.  See  Midsummer  Night's 
Dream. 

Macbeth. 

Macbeth  and  the  Witches.     See  Macbeth. 

Macbeth  before  the  Murder  of  Duncan.  See  Mac- 
beth. 

Macbeth  to  the  Ghost.     See  Macbeth. 

Macbeth's  Soliloquy.     See  Macbeth. 

Madrigal,  A:  "Crabbed  age  and  youth."  See  Pas- 
sionate Pilgrim,  The. 

Madrigal;  "Take,  O,  take  those  lips  away."  See 
Measure  for  Measure. 

Madrigal:  "Tell  me  where  is  fancy  bred."  See 
Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 

Malice.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 

Man  and  Woman.     See  Much  Ado  about  Nothing. 

Man's  Ingratitude.     See  As  You  Like  It. 

Marc  Antony's  Funeral  Oration.  See  Julius 
Caesar. 

Marcus  Brutus  on  the  Death  of  Csesar.  See  Julius 
CsBsar. 

Mark  Antony  Scene.     See  Julius  Csesar. 

Mark  Antony  to  the  People  on  Csesar's  Death. 
See  Julius  Csesar. 


542 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Shakespeare 


Shakespeare,  W:  (_continued) . 

Marriage  Hymn.     See  Two  Noble  Kinsmen,  The. 

Martial    Friendship.     See    Coriolanus. 

MaruUus   to    the    Roman    Populace.     See   Julius 

Caesar. 
Measure  for  Measure. 
Meeting  of  Orlando  and  Rosalind.     See  As  You 

Like  It. 
Memory.     See  Sonnets. 
Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Merciful  Heaven.     See  Measure  for  Measure. 
Mercutio's  Description  of  Queen  Mab.     iSee  Romeo 

and  Juh^t. 
Mercy.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
Moonlight.     See  Mercnant  of  Venice,  The. 
Morning.     See  Cymbeline. 
Morning.     See  also  Macbeth. 
Morning.     See  also  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Morning  Song,  A.     See  Cymbeline. 
Morning  Song  for  Imogen,  A.     See  Cymbeline. 
Mother's  Blessing.     See  All's  Well  that  Ends  Well. 
Much  Ado  about  Nothing. 
Murder,  The.     See  Macbeth. 
Murder  of  King  Duncan.     See  Macbeth. 
Murder  of  the  Princes  in  the  Tower.     See  King 

Richard  III. 
Music.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Music  by  Moonlight.   See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Music's  SUver  Sound.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
My  Music.     See  Sonnets. 
Nestor  to  Hector.     See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
Night.     See  Macbeth. 
O  Mistress  Mine.     See  Twelfth  Night;  or,  What 

you  Will. 
"O  mistress  mine,  where  are  you  roaming?"     See 

Twelfth  Night;  or.  What  you  Will. 
Oberon  and  Titania  to  the  Fairy  Train.     See  Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream. 
Old  Age  of  Temperance.     iSee  As  You  Like  It. 
Olivia.     See  Twelfth  Night;  or,  What  you  Will. 
"On  a  day,  alack  the  day!"     See  Love's  Labour's 

Lost. 
One  Touch  of  Nature.     See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
Opportunity.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Oracle:  "Mine  honesty  and  I,"  etc.     See  Antony 

and  Cleopatra. 
Oracle:  "The  flighty  purpose,"  etc.     See  Macbeth. 
Oracle:    "There    is    a    history,"    etc.     See    King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.   II. 
Oracle:  "There  is  a  mystery,"  etc.     See  Troilus 

and  Cressida. 
Oracle:   "We   must   not    stint,"    etc.     See    King 

Henry  VIII. 
Oration  of  Mark  Antony.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Orlando's  Wooing.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
Orpheus.     ( Sometimes     at. )     See     King     Henry 

VIII. 
"Orpheus  with  His  Lute."     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Othello.     See  Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. 
Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. 
Othello's  Address  to  the  Duke  of  Venice  and  the 

Senators.     See  Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. 
Othello's    Apology.     See    Othello,   the    Moor   of 

Venice. 
Othello's  Courtship.      See   Othello,  the   Moor   of 

Venice. 
Othello's    Defence.     See    Othello,    the    Moor    of 

Venice 
Othello's    Farewell.     See   Othello,    the    Moor    of 

Venice. 
Othello's  Last  Words.     See  Othello,  the  Moor  of 

Venice. 
Othello's    Remorse.     See    Othello,    the    Moor    of 

Venice. 
Out  and  Inward  Bound.     See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. 
Over  Hill,   over  Dale.     See  Midsummer  Night's 

Dream. 
Passionate  Pilgrim,  The. 
Peace.     See  King  Richard  III 
Perjury  Excused.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Phoenix  and  the  Turtle,  The. 
Phoenix  and  Turtle-dove.     See  Phoenix  and  the 

Turtle,  The. 
Polonius'  Advice  to  Laertes.     See  Hamlet. 
Polonius  to  Laertes     See  Hamlet. 
Pomposity.     See  Merchant  of  Venice.  The. 
Portia  in  "The  Merchant  of  Venice."     See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  The. 
Portia  to  Shylook.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Portia's  Picture.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Portia's  Plea  for  Mercy.     See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. 


Shakespeare,  W:  (continued). 

Portia's    Speech    on    Mercy.     See    Merchant    of 

Venice,  The. 
Portia's  Speech  to  Bassanio  on  his  Choice  of  the 

Casket.     See   Merchant    of   Venice,    The. 
Post  Mortem.     See  Sonnets. 
Potion  Scene.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Power  of  Music,  The.     See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. 
Prayers.     See  Measure  for  Measure. 
Prince  Henry  and  Falstaff.     See  King  Henry  IV., 

Pt.  I. 
Prologue    from    "King    Henry    V."     See    King 

Henry  V. 
Puck    and   the   Fairy.     See   Midsummer   Night's 

Dream. 
Quality  of  Mercv,  The.     See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. 
"Quality  of  mercy  is  not   strained.   The."     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Quarrel  between  Brutus  and  Cassius,  The.     See 

Julius  Caesar. 
Quarrel  of  Brutus  and  Cassius,  The.     See  Julius 

Caesar. 
Quatuor  Novissima.     See  Sonnets. 
Queen  Catherine.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Queen  Catherine  to  the  King  and  Court  of  Car- 
dinals.    See  King   Henry   VIII. 
Queen  Katharine's  Appeal  to  King  Henry  VIII. 

for  Mercy.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Queen  Katherine.     See  King  Henry  VIII. 
Queen  Mab.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Reduction  of  Harfleur,  The.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Regrets   of   Drunkenness.     See   Othello. 
Relief  of  Orleans.     See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  I. 
Remorse.     See  Macbeth. 
Remorse  of  King  Claudius.     See  Hamlet. 
Resignation.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Revolutions.     See  Sonnets. 
Rhyme  of  White  and  Red.     See  I-ove's  Labour's 

Lost. 
Rhymers.     See  Ejng  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 
Ricnard  II.     See  King  Richard  II. 
Richard  III.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Richmond  to  his  Army.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Richmond  to  his  Troops.     See  King  Richard  III. 
Romeo  and  Juliet. 

Romeo's  Presage.  See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 
Ruthless  Time.  See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
Scene    between    Hamlet    and    the    Queen.     See 

Hamlet. 
Scene  from  Hamlet.     See  Hamlet. 
Scene  from  "Henry  IV."     See  King  Henry  IV., 

Pt.  I. 
Scene  from  "Henry  V."     See  King  Henry  V. 
Scene  from  "Julius  Caesar."     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Scene  from  "King  Henry  VIII."  See  King  Henry 

VIII. 
Scene    from    "King    Richard    III."     See    King 

Richard  III. 
Scene    from    "The    Merchant    of    Venice."     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Sea  Dirge,  A.     See  Tempest,  The. 
Seven  Ages,  The.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
Seven  Ages  of  Man.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
"Shall  I  compare  thee  to  a  summer's  day?"      See 

Sonnets. 
"She  thanked  me,  and  bade  me."     See  Othello, 

the  Moor  of  Venice. 
Sheen-shearing,  A.     See  Winter's  Tale,  The. 
Shepherd's  Life,  A.     See  King  Henry  VI..  Pt.  III. 
Short  Selections. 

Shylock.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Shylock  for  the  Jews.     See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. 
Shylock    Lends   the  Ducats.     See     Merchant    of 

Venice,  The. 
Shylock  to  Antonio.    See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Shylock 's  Soliloquy  and  Address.     See  Merchant 

of  Venice,  The. 
Sickness.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II. 
Sigh    no    more.    Ladies.     See    Much    Ado    about 

Nothing. 
Silvia  \or  Sylvia].     See  Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona. 
Sister  Pleads  for  a  Brother's  Life,  A.     See  Measure 

for  Measure. 
Slander.     See  Cymbeline. 
Sleep.     See  King  Henry  IV..  Pt.  II. 
Sleep-walking  Scene,  The.     See  Macbeth. 
Soliloquies  from  Hamlet.     See  Hamlet. 
Soliloquy  of  King  Richard  III.     See  King  Richard 

III. 
Soliloquy  of  Romeo  in  the  Garden.      See  Romeo 
and  Juliet. 


543 


Shakespeare 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Shakespeare,  W:  (continued). 

Soliloquy  on  Character.     See  King  Henry  V. 

Soliloquy  on  Death.     See  Hamlet. 

Song:  "Fear  no  more  the  heat  o'  the  sun."     See 

Cymbeline. 
Song:   "Hark,   h«rk!   the   lark   at  heaven's  gate 

sings."     See  Cymbeline. 
Song:  "How  should  I  your  true  love  know."     See 

Hamlet. 
Song:    "On  a  day,  alack  the  day!"     /Sb*   Love's 

Labour's  Lost. 
Song:  "Orpheus  with  his  lute  made  trees."     See 

King  Henry  VIIL 
Song:  '^^ell  me,  where  is  fancy  bred."     See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  The. 
Song:  "Under  the  greenwood  tree."     <See  As  You 

Like  It. 
Song:    "When   icicles   hang   by    the   wall."     See 

Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Song  from  "Measure  for  Measure."     See  Measure 

for  Measure. 
Song  from  "The  Merchant  of  Venice."     See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice.  The. 
Song  of  Ariel.     See  Tempest,  The. 
Song  of  Autolycus.     See  Winter's  Tale,  The. 
Song  of  the  Fairy.    See  Midsummer's  Night  Dream. 
Song  of  the  Holly.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
Song:  The  Greenwood  Tree.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
Sonnets. 

Soul  and   Body.     See  Sonnets. 
Speech  of  Cassius,  Instigating  Brutus  to  Join  the 

Conspiracy  against  Caesar.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Speech  of  Henry  V.     See  King  Henry  V. 
Speech  of  Pro.soero,  A.     See  Tempest,  The. 
Speech  of  the  Dauphin.     See  King  John. 
Spoils  of  Time,  The.     See  Sonnets. 
Spring.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Spring  and  Winter.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Suspicion.     See  Julius  Caesar. 
Sweet  and  Twenty.     See  Twelfth  Night ;  or.  What 

You  Will. 
"Sweet  are  the  uses  of  adversity."     See  As  You 

Like  It. 
Sylvia.     See   Two    Gentlemen    of   Verona. 
Take,  O,  'Take  Those  Lips  Away.     See  Measure 

for  Measure. 
Taming  of  the  Shrew, 
'fell  Me  where  is  Fancy  Bred.     See  Merchant  of 

Venice,  The. 
Tempest,  The. 

Terror.  See  King  Richard  III. 
That  Time  of  Year.  See  Sonnets. 
"That  time  of  year  thou  mayst  in  me  behold." 

See  Sonnets. 
"That  you  have  wronged  me  doth  appear  in  this." 

See  Julius  Csesar. 
"There  is  a  tide  in  the  affairs  of  men."     See  Julius 

Caesar. 
"This  army  led  by  a  delicate  and  tender  prince." 

See  Hamlet. 
"This  is  the  state  of  man."     See   King  Henry 

VIIL 
"Thou  may.st,  thou  shalt,  I  will  not  go  with  thee." 

See  King  John. 
Threatening,     See  King  John. 
Time  and  Love.     See  Sonnets. 
Timon  of  Athens. 
To  Be  or  Not  To  Be.     See  Hamlet. 
To  His  Love.     See  Sonnets. 
To  Imogen.     See  Cymbeline. 
"To  me,  fair  friend[,  you  never  can  be  old]."  See 

Sonnets. 
To  Sylvia.     See  Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona. 
Tomorrow  and  Tomorrow.       See  Macbeth. 
Tongues  in  'Trees.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
'Tragedy  of  King  John,  The.     See  King  John. 
Trial  of  Queen  Katherine.     See  King  Henry  VIIL 
Trial  Scene,  The.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Triumph  of  Death,  The.     See  Sonnets. 
Troilus  and  Cressida. 

True  Love.     See  All's  Well  that  Ends  Well. 
True   Love.     See  aluo  Sonnets. 
Twelfth  Night;  or.  What  you  Will. 
Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona. 
Two    Noble    Kinsmen,    The. — Shakespeare    and 

Fletcher. 
Ulysses  and  Achilles.     See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
Unchangeable,    The.     See   Sonnets. 
Under  the  Greenwood  Tree.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
Unrequited  Love.     See  Twelfth  Night;  or.  What 

You  Will. 
Venus  and  Adonis. 
Viola    Disguised,    and    the    Duke.     See    Twelfth 

Night;  or.  What  You  Will. 


Shakespeare,  W:  (corUinued). 

Violet  Bank,  A.     See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
"War!  War!  no  peace!      Peace  is  to  me  a  war." 

See  King  John. 
Wedlock  Hymn,  A.     See  As  You  Like  It. 
"When  daisies  pied  and  violets  blue."     See  Love's 

Labour's  Lost. 
"When   he   shall  hear  she   died   upon   his  word." 

See  Much  Ado  about  Nothing. 
"When  Icicles  Hang  by  the  Wall."     See   Love's 

Labour's  Lost. 
When  in  Disgrace.     See  Sonnets. 
"When   in   the   chronicle   of  wasted   time."     See 

Sonnets. 
When  to  the  Sessions  of.  Sweet  Silent  Thought. 

See  Sonnets. 
"When    we    in  our  viciousness  grow  hard."     See 

Antony  and  Cleopatra. 
"Where  the  bee  .sucks,  there  suck  I."     See  Tem- 
pest, The. 
Who  is  Silvia  [or  Sylvia]?     See  Two  Gentlemen  of 

Verona. 
"Who  is  Sylvia?    What  is  She."    See  Two  Gentle- 
men of  Verona. 
Winter.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Winter  Song,  A.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost. 
Winter's  Tale,  The. 
Witches'  Meeting,  The.     See  Macbeth. 
Wolsey's  Advice  to  Cromwell.     See  King  Henry 

VIIL 
Wolsey's  Fall.     See  King  Henry  VIIL 
Wolsey's  Farewell.     See  King  Henry  VIIL 
Wolsey's  Farewell  Address  to  Cromwell.  See  King 

Henry  VIIL 
Wolsey's  Farewell  to  Cromwell.     See  King  Henry 

VIIL 
Wolsey's  Soliloquy.     See  King  Henry  VIIL 
Woodbine.     See  Midsummer  Night's  Dream. 
Wooing  of  the  French  Princess.     See  King  Henry 

V. 
World's  Way,  The.     See  Sonnets. 
Young  Love.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. 
Youth  and  Age.     See  Passionate  Pilgrim,  The. 
Shanly,  C:  Dawson. — Brier-wood  Pipe,  The. 

Broken  Pitcher,  The.     See  Kitty  of  Coleraine. 
Civil  War. 

Fancy  Shot,  The.     See  Civil  War. 
Kitty.     See  Kitty  of  Coleraine. 
Kitty  of  Coleraine.     (At.  also  to  E:  Lysaght.) 
Walker  of  the  Snow,  The. 
Sharp,  W:— Coves  of  Crail,  The. 
Death-child,  The. 
Lsle  of  Lost  Dreams,  The. 
Last  Aboriginal,  The. 
Red  Poppies  in  the  Sabine  Valley  near  Rome.     See 

Sospiri  di  Roma. 
Song:  "Love  in  my  heart;  oh,  heart  of  me,  heart  of 

me!" 
Sospiri  di  Roma. 
Susurro.     See  Sospiri  di  Roma. 
White  Peacock,  The.     See  Sospiri  di  Roma. 

Sharpe, . — Come  and  Go. 

Sharpe,  Marv  E.— Daffodil,  The. 

Dainty  Lady  Daffodil.     See  Daffodil,  The. 
Sharpe,  R.  S. — Conjugal  Love.     See  Love's  Strategy. 
Love's  Strategy. 
Minute-gun,  The. 
Sharpley,  Sam. — Election  Stump  Speech. 
Shaw,  Alfred  C. — Somewhere. 
Shaw,  Anna  H. — Loyalty  to  Truth. 
Shaw,  D:  T. — Columbia,  the  Gem  of  the  Ocean. 

Columbia,  the  Land  of  the  Brave.     See  Columbia, 

the  Gem  of  the  Ocean. 
Red,  White,  and  Blue,  The.     See  Columbia,  the 
Gem  of  the  Ocean. 
Shaw,  Dora. — Out  in  the  Sobbing  Rain. 
Shaw,  Emma. — Night  Ride  on  the  Engine. 

School  Epi.sode,  A. 
Shaw,  Frances  A. — Miss  Margaret.     (Tr.) 
Shaw,  Fs.  A. — Heroes. 

Shaw,  H:  Wheeler  ("Josh  Billings").— Billings  on  "The 
District  Schoolmaster." 
Bull-head,  The. 
Codfish,  The. 

Courting.     See  On  Courting. 
Hornet.  The. 

Josh  Billings  on  Artemus  Ward. 
Josh  Billings  on  Courting.     See  On  Courting. 
Josh  Billings  on  "Gongs."     See  My  Fust  Gong. 
Josh  Billings  on  Laughing.     See  Laughing. 
Josh  Billings  on  "Manifest  Destiny."     See  Mani- 
fest Destiny. 
Josh  Billings  on  the  Mule.     See  Mule,  The. 


544 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Shenstone 


Shaw,  H:  Wheeler  ("Josh  Billings")  (con<mued). 

Laffing.     See  Laughing. 

Laughing. 

Manifest  Destiny. 

Mule,  The. 

My  Fust  Gong. 

On  Courting. 

Receipt  for  Hash. 
Shaw,  J : — Sleighing  Song. 

Song:  "Who  has  robbed  the  ocean  cave." 
Shea,  J:  A: — O'Kavanagh,  The. 

Sheale,  R:— Ballad  oii  Chevy-Chase,  The.     See  Chevy- 
Chase. 

Chevy-Chase  [or  Chace]. 
Shee,  Sir  Martin  Archer. — Alasco  to  His  Countrymen. 
Sheffield,  J: — On  One  who  Died  Discovering  her  Kind- 
ness. 

Reconcilement,  The. 
Shell,  R:  Lalor. — Catholics  of  Ireland,  The. 

Church  of  Ireland,  The. 

Colonna  to  the  King. 

England's  Misrule  of  Ireland. 

Established  Church  of  Ireland,  The.     See  Church 
of  Ireland,  The. 

Irish  Agitators.     See  Repeal  of  the  Union,  The. 

Irish  Aliens.     See  Irish  Aliens  and   English  Vic- 
tories. 

Irish  Aliens  and  English  Victories. 

Irish  Church,  The.     See  England's  Misrule  of  Ire- 
land. 

Irish  Grievances.     See   Resolution    on    the  Pro.se- 
cution  of  Mr.  O'Connell. 

Irish   Loyalty   and   Valor.     See   Irish  Aliens   and 
English  Victories. 

Irish  Municipal  Bill.     See  Iri.sh  Aliens  and  English 
Victories. 

Irish  Valor  and   Loyalty.     See   Irish   Aliens   and 
English  Victories. 

On  Charges  again.st  Roman  Catholics.     See  Cath- 
olics of  Ireland,  The. 

Repeal  of  the  Union,  The. 

Resolution  on  the  Prosecution  of  Mr.  O'Connell. 

Tithes.     See  England's  Misrule  of  Ireland. 
Sheldon,  C:  Munroe. — Duty. 

Sheldon,  F.  L. — Trees  of  History  and  Mythology. 
Sheldon,  G.  M. — Telemachus. 

Sheldon,  Lurana  W. — No  Science   for  Him.     See  Too 
Progressive  for  Him. 

Too  Progressive  for  Him. 
Shelley,  D.  N. — Devotion  to  Duty. 
Shelley,  Percy  Bysshe. — Adonais. 

Alastor;  or,  The  Spirit  of  Solitude. 

Arethusa. 

AutumnF:  a  Dirge]. 

Cenci,  The. 

Charles  the  First. 

Child  of  Twelve,  A.     See  Revolt  of  Lslam,  The. 

Cloud,  The. 

Daybreak. 

Death. 

Dirge,  A. 

Dirge  for  the  Year. 

Dream  of  the  Unknown.  A.     See  Question,  The. 

Drones  of  the  Community,  The.     See  Queen  Mab. 

Elegy   on   the    Death   of   John    Keats,   An.     See 
Adonais. 

Epipsychidion. 

Eternal,  The.     See  Adonais. 

Evening. 

Fear.     See  Cenci,  The. 

Flight  of  Love,  The.     See  Lines. 

"Fountains    mingle    with    the    river.    The."     See 
Love's  Philosophy. 

From  the  Arabic.     An  Imitation. 

Fugitives,  The. 

Hellas. 

"How  beautiful  this  night!     The  balmiest  sigh." 
See  Queen  Mab. 

Hymn  of  Pan. 

Hymn  to  Intellectual  Beauty. 

I  Arise  from  Dreams  of  Thee.     See  Indian  Sere- 
nade, The. 

I  Fear  Thy  Kisses[,  Gentle  Maiden].     See  To : 

"I  fear,"  etc. 

Indian  Serenade,  The. 

Invitation,  The.     See  To  Jane. 

Invocation  to  Nature.     See  Alastor;  or.  The  Spirit 
of  Solitude. 

Italian  Ravine,  An.     See  Cenci,  The. 

Lament,  A:  "O  world!  O  life!  O  time!" 

Lament,  A:  "Swifter  far  than  summer's  flight." 
See  Remembrance. 

Last  Chorus  of  Hellas.     See  Hellas. 


Shelley,  Percy  Bysshe  {continued). 

Lines. 

I>ines  on  the  Death  of  Napoleon. 

Lines  to  an  Indian  Air.  See  Indian  Serenade, 
The. 

Lines  Written  among  the  Euganean  Hills. 

Love's  Philosophy. 

Magic  Car  Moved  On,  The.     See  Queen  Mab. 

Mask  of  Anarchy,  The. 

"Men  of  England,  Heirs  of  Glory."  See  Mask  of 
Anarchy,  The. 

Moon,  The.  See  To  the  Moon  and  Waning  Moon, 
The. 

Music,  when  Soft  Voices  die.  See  To :  "Mu- 
sic, when,"  etc. 

Mutability. 

Night.     See  Queen  Mab. 

Night.     See  also  To  Night. 

Ode  to  a  Skylark.     See  To  a  Skylark. 

Ode  to  the  Assertors  of  Liberty,  An. 

Ode  to  the  West  Wind. 

Ode,  Written  1819,  before  the  Spaniards  had  Re- 
covered their  Liberty,  An.  See  Ode  to  the 
Assertors  of  Liberty,  An. 

On  His  Marriage  to  Mary  Godwin.  See  To  Mary 
Wollstonecraft  Godwin. 

One  Word  is  too  Often  Profaned.     See  To : 

"One  word,"  etc. 

Ozymandias  [of  Egypt].  See  Sonnet. — Ozyman- 
dias. 

Peace  and  War.     See  Queen  Mab. 

Poet's  Dream,   The.     See  Prometheus   Unbound. 

Poet's  World,   The.     See  Prometheus   Unbound. 

Prometheus  Unbound. 

Queen  Mab. 

Question,  The. 

Recollection,  The. 

Remembrance. 

Remorse.     See  Stanzas.  —  April,   1814. 

Revolt  of  Islam,  The. 

Sensitive  Plant,  The. 

Serenade,   The.     See   Indian   Serenade,   The. 

Skylark,  The.     See  To  a  Skylark. 

Song:  "Rarely,  rarely,  comest  thou." 

Sonnet:  Ozymandias. 

Spirit  of  Delight,  The.     See  Song. 

Stanzas.  —  April,  1814. 

Stanzas  Written  in  Dejection  near  Naples. 

Summer  and  Winter. 

Sun  is  Warm,  the  Sky  is  Clear.  The.  See  Stanzas 
Written  in  Dejection  near  Naples. 

Sunbeam,  The. 

Sunrise.     See    Prometheus    Unbound. 

Sunset.     See  Queen  Mab. 

Threnos.     See  Lament,  A:  "O  world!"  etc. 


'I  fear  thy  kisses,"  etc. 
"Music,  when  soft  voices  die." 
"One  word,"  etc. 
To  a  Lady  with  a  Guitar.     See  With  a  Guitar; 


to 


Jane. 

To  a  Skylark. 

To  Constantia — Singing. 

To  lanthe.  Sleeping.     See  Queen  Mab. 

To  Jane. 

To    Jane — the     Recollection.     See    Recollection, 
The. 

To  Mary  Wollstonecraft  Godwin. 

To  Night. 

To  the  Moon. 

To  the  Night.     See  To  Night. 

To  the  Skylark.     See  To  a  Skylark. 

View  from  the  Euganean  Hills,  North  Italy.     See 
Lines  Written  among  the  Euganean  Hills. 

Voice  in   the  Air,  Singing.     See  Prometheus  Un- 
bound. 

Waning  Moon,  The. 

War.     See  Queen  Mab. 

When  the  Lamp  is  Shattered.     See  Lines. 

Widow  Bird,  The  [or  A].     See  Charles  the  First. 

With  a  Guitar;  to  Jane. 

World's  Wanderers,  The. 

Written   among  the   Euganean   Hills.     See   Lines 
Written   among  the   Euganean   Hills. 
Shellman,  Harry  J. — Over  the  Orchard  Fence. 
Shelton,  Ada  S. — In  Santa  Claus  Land. 
Shenstone,  W:— Dying  Kid,  The. 

Hope.     See  Pastoral  Ballad,  A. 

Much  Taste  and  Small  Estate.     See  Progress  of 
Taste,  The. 

Pastoral.     See  Pastoral  Ballad,  A. 

Pastoral  Ballad,  A. 

Progress  of  Taste,   The. 

Schoolmistress,  The. 


545 


Shenstone 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Shenstone,  W:  (continued). 

Shepherd's  Home,  The.     See  Pastoral  Ballad,  A. 
Suffering  and  Sympathy.    See  Schoolmistress,  The. 
Village  Schoolmistress,  The.     See  Schoolmistress, 

The. 
Written  at  an  In%at  Henley. 
Shepherd,  Eli. — To  a  Cricket. 
Shepherd,  Nathaniel  Graham. — Calling  the  Roll.     See 

RoU-caU. 
"I  sit  before  my  fire  alone."    See  Summer  Rami- 

iiisc6ticc    J^m 
Only  the  Clothes  She  Wore. 
Poor  and  Little  Greece. 
Roll-call. 

Summer  Reminiscence,  A. 
Shepherd,  R:  H. — Poet's  Pipe,  A. 
"  Shepherd  Tonie."    See  Monday,  Anthony. 
Sheppard,  C: — Black  Horse  and  His  Rider,  The.     See 

LippARD,  G: 
Sheppard,  S: — Epithalamium.  (?) 
Sheppard,  T. — Arkansaw  Pete's  Adventure. 
Colorado  Hotel  Rules. 
Reasons  Why. 
Sherbrooke,    Rob't    Lowe,    Viscount.  —  Song    of    the 

Squatter. 
Sheridan,  Caroline    Eliz.  Sarah.     See   Stirling-Max- 

WELL,  Lady. 
Sheridan,  Helen  Selina.     See  Dtjpperin,  Lady. 
Sheridan,  G:  A. — Immortal  Memories. 
Sheridan,  R:  Brinsley  Butler. — Against  Political  Job- 
bing. 
Atheistical  Government  Impossible,  An. 
Begum    Speech.     See    Impeachment    of    Warren 

Hastings. 
Challenge,  The.     See  Rivals,  The. 
Character     of     Justice.     See     Impeachment     of 

Warren  Hastings. 
Cool  Reason.     See  Rivals,  The. 
Critic,  The;  or,  A  Tragedy  Rehearsed. 
Dry  be  that  Tear. 
Duel,  The.     See  Rivals,  The. 
Duel  Scene  from  "The  Rivals,"  The.     See  Rivals, 

The. 
Duenna,  The. 
EpUogue   to   Hannah   More's   Play,   "The   Fatal 

Falsehood." 
Impeachment    of    Mr.    Hastings,    The.     See    Im- 
peachment of  Warren  Hastings. 
Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. 
Lady  Teazle  and  Sir  Peter.     See  School  for  Scan- 
dal, The. 
Las  Casas  Dissuading  from  Battle,     See  Pizarro. 
Let  the  Toast  Pass.     See  School  for  Scandal,  The 
Literary   Lady,   The.     See   Epilogue   to   Hannah 

More's  Play,   "The   Fatal   Falsehood." 
Mr.  Puff's  Accoimt  of  Himself.     See  Critic,  The; 

or,  A  Tragedy  Rehearsed. 
Mrs.  Malaprop's  Idea  of  Education.     See  Rivals, 

The. 
Nature    of    Justice,    The.     See    Impeachment    of 

Warren  Hastings. 
Old  Gentleman  who  Married  a  Young  Wife,  The. 

See  School  for  Scandal,  The. 
Orator  Described,  The.     See  Perfect  Orator,  The. 
Perfect  Orator,  The. 
Pizarro.     (Tr.). 

Pizarro  and  Rolla.     (Tr.)     See  Pizarro. 
Popular  and  Kingly  Examples. 
Quarrel  between  Sir  Peter  and  Lady  Teazle.     See 

School  for  Scandal,  The. 
Quarrel  Scene  from  "School  for  Scandal."     See 

School  for  Scandal,  The. 
Rivals,  The. 

Rolla  to  the  Peruvians.     (Tr.)     See  Pizarro. 
Rolla's    Address    to    the    Peruvians.     (Tr.)     See 

Pizarro. 
Scenes  from  "The  School  for  Scandal."   See  School 

for  Scandal,  The. 
School  for  Scandal,  The. 
Sir  Peter  and  his  Lady  Quarrel.     See  School  for 

Scandal,  The. 
Song:  "Had  I  a  heart  for  falsehood  framed."     See 

Duenna,  The. 
Song:  "I  ne'er  could  any  luster  see." 
Speech  of    Rolla  to    the  Peruvian  Army.     (TV.) 

See  Pizarro. 
Swallows,  The. 
Wife,  A. 
Sheridan,  T: — New  Simile  for  the  Ladies,  A. 
On  a  Caricature. 

On  Dean  Swift's  Proposed  Hospital  for  Lunatics. 
To  a  Dublin  Publisher. 
Sherman,  C.  H. — Rainbow  Drill. 


Sherman,  C:  Pomeroy. — Bachelor's  Wedding  Trip,  A. 

Spirits    of   Fire,    The.     See   Bachelor's   Wedding 
Trip,  A. 
Sherman,  E.  B. — Eulogy  on  U.  S.  Grant. 

Tribute  to  Logan. 
Sherman,  Fs. — Between  the  Battles. 

Builder,  The. 

Little  While  before  the  Fall  was  Done,  A. 

Prelude,  A. 
Sherman,  Frank  Dempster. — Allah's  House. 

Anemone. 

April. 

Archer,  The. 

At  Midnight. 

August. 

Bacchus.  ' 

Bees.  > 

Bird's  Music. 

Blossoms. 

Book-hunter,  The. 

Canary,  The. 

Cherries. 

Christmas  Cat,  The. 

Clouds. 

Daisies  [,  The]. 

December. 

Dewdrop,  A. 

Dreams. 

Easter.  • 

Elfin  Lamps. 

Fairies'  Dance,  The. 

Fairy  Jewels. 

Fairy  Shipwreck. 

Fairy  Story,  A. 

Februaiy. 

Flying  Kite. 

Footprints  in  the  Snow. 

Four  Winds,  The. 

Funny  Fellow,  A. 

Ghost  Fairies. 

God's  Miracle  of  May. 

Golden-rod. 

Hide-and-seek. 

Hollyhock,  A. 

Humming-bird  Song. 

In  the  Meadow. 

In  the  Orchard. 

January. 

Jester  Bee. 

Juggler,  The. 

July. 

June. 

King  Bell. 

Kriss  Kringle. 

Last  Letter,  The. 

Leaves  at  Play. 

Library,  The. 

Love's  Seasons. 

Lullaby. 

Madrigal,  A. 

March. 

May-children. 

May. 

Mooprise. 

November. 

October. 

On  a  Clock. 

On  a  Greek  Vase. 

On  some  Buttercups. 

Pebbles. 

Quatrain,  A:  "Hark  at  the  lips,"  etc. 

Rainbow,  The. 

Rain-harp,  The. 

Real  Santa  Claus,  A. 

Rhyme  for  Priscilla,  A. 

Robin's  Apology. 

Rose's  Cup,  The. 

September. 

Shadow  Children. 

Shadow  Pictures. 

Shadows,  The. 

Smiles  and  Tears. 

Snow  Song. 

Snow-bird,  The. 

Snowflakes. 

Snow-weaver,  The. 

Soldiers  of  the  Sun. 

Song  for  Winter. 

Spinning  Top. 

Spring's  Coming. 

Story  of  Omar,  The. 

Story-teller,  The. 

"Then  let  the  holly  red  be  hung." 


546 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Sidney 


Sherman,  Frank  Dempster  (continued). 

To  a  Rose. 

To  the  Little  Readers. 

Vacation  Song. 

Valentine,  A. 

Waterfall,  The. 

Winter  Starlight. 

Winter's  Acrobat.s. 

Wizard  Frost. 
Sherman,  J.  D. — John  Brown's  Body. 
Sherman,  Mary. — When  I  am  Weak  then  I  am  Strong. 
Sherman,  W:  Tecumseh. — Belligerent  Non-combatants. 

Our  Army  and  Navy. 

Sherman  on  the  Veterans.     See  Veterans,  The. 

Veterans,  The. 
Sherwood,  Ada  Simpson. — Adown  the  Years. 
Sherwood,  Mrs.  J:     See  Sherwood,  Mrs.  Mary  Eliz. 

[Wilson]. 
Sherwood,  Mrs.  Kathe.  Marg.  [Brownlee]. — Albert  Sid- 
ney Johnston. 

Drummer  Boy  of  Mission  Ridge,  The. 

Fall  In. 

First  Crocus,  The. 

Men  Who  Wore  the  Shield,  The. 

Mollie  Pitcher. 

Red,  the  White,  the  Blue,  The. 

Soldier's  Retrospect,  A. 

'Thomas  at  Chickamauga. 

Ulruc  Dahlgren. 
Sherwood,    Mrs.    Mary   Eliz.    [Wilson]. — Carcassonne. 
(Tr.) 

Romance  of  a  Year,  The. 
Shields,  Annie  S. — Ann  Rafferty's  Evidence. 
ShiUaber,   B:  Penhallow  ("Mrs.   Partington"). — 

Blifkins  the  Bacchanal. 

Blifkins  the  Ruralist. 

Horse-car  Incident,  A. 

"If  Things  Was  Only  Sich." 

John  Smith's  Will. 

Mrs.  Partington's  Reflections  on  New  Year's  Day. 

Mouse-hunting. 

My  Childhood  Home. 

My  Friend's  Secret. 

Mysterious  Rappings. 

Picture,  A.     See  My  Childhood  Home. 

Sagamore,  The. 

True  Faith. 

What  is  it  to  Me? 
Shinn,  Milicent  Washburn. — Song  and  Science  ("The 
Twilight  of  the  Poets"). 

Washington  Sequoia,  The. 

When  Almonds  Bloom. 

Yosemite. '  See  Washington  Sequoia,  The. 
Shirley,  Jas.— Contention  of  Ajax  and  Ulysses,  The. 

Cupid  and  Death. 

Death  the  Leveller.     See  Contention  of  Ajax  and 
Ulysses,  The. 

Death's  Final  Conquest.     See  Contention  of  Ajax 
and  Ulysses,  The. 

Death's  Triumph.     See  Contention  of  Ajax  and 
Ulysses,  The. 

Dirge,  A:  "The  glories  of  our  blood  and  state." 
See  Contention  of  Ajax  and  Ulysses,  The. 

Garden,  The. 

Holiday  in  Arcadia.    «See  School  of  Compliments, 
The. 

Hymn,  A:  "O  fly  my  soul!  what  hangs  upon." 

Imposture,  The. 

King  of  Kings,  The.     See  Contention  of  Ajax  and 
Ulysses,  The. 

Last  Conqueror,  The.     See  Cupid  and  Death. 

Looking-glass,  "The.     See  To  a  Lady,  upon  a  Look- 
ing-glass Sent. 

Lullaby,  A.     See  Triumph  of  Beauty,  The. 

Might  of  Death,  The.     See  Cupid  and  Death. 

On  Her  Dancing. 

Pan's    Holiday.       See    School    of    Compliments, 
The. 

Peace  Restored.     See  Iinposture,  The. 

School  of  Compliments,  T/he. 

To  a  Lady,  upon  a  Looking-glass  Sent. 

To  King  Charles  and  Queen  Henrietta.     See  Tri- 
umph of  Peace,  The. 

To  One  Saying  She  was  Old.     See  To  One  that 
Said  his  Mistress  was  Old. 

To  One  that  Said  his  Mistress  wa,s  Old. 

Triumph  of  Beauty,  The. 

Triumph  of  Peace,  The. 

Victorious  Men  of  Earth.     See  Cupid  and  Death. 
Shirley,  Moses  Gage. — Before  She  Thought. 
Shoals,  A.  F. — Valedictory. 
Shoemaker,  Dorothy  A. — King's  Decree,  The. 
Shoemaker,  J.  W. — Bible  Reading. 


Shoemaker,   Mrs.    Rachel  [Hinkle]. — Address  to  the 

Class  of  1877. 
Shope.  C:  W.— PoUy. 

Shore,  T:  Teignmouth.     Child's  Tear,  A. 
Short,  Mamie  T. — Mother's  Lullaby. 
Short,  Marion. — Bird  among  the  Blooms. 

Fairy  Bell. 

He  Let  Her  Know. 
Short,  Seymour  S. — Arbor  Day. 

Resurgam. 
Shorter,    Mrs.    Clement    (Dora   Sigerson). — All  Souls' 
Night. 

Ballad  of  Marjorie,  A. 

Cean  Duv  Deelish. 

Ireland. 

One  Forgotten,  The. 

Rose  will  Fade,  A. 

Wind  on  the  Hills,  The. 
Showerman,  Grant. — El  Dorado. 
Shuman,  Edwin  L. — Mission  of  the  Press,  The. 
Shurtleff,  Ernest  Warburton. — Gettysburg. 

Lights  of  Lawrence,  The. 

Old  Thanksgiving  Days,  The. 
Shurtleff,  W:  S.— Way,  The. 
Sibley,  C: — Adoon  the  Lane.     See  Plaidie,  The. 

Plaidie,  The. 
Sibley,  Fred  Warner. — Dad's  Little  Fiddle. 
Sibley,  Jos.  C. — For  Expansion. 
Sickel,  Corinne. — Jog  Alaskar  Nordue. 
Sickels,  D:  Banks. — Reincarnation.  * 

Sidell, . — Yoppy's  Varder  unt  hees  Drubbles. 

Sidey,  Jas.  A. — Irish  Schoolmaster,  The. 

"Sidney,  Marg."     See  Lothrop,  Mrs.  Harriet  Mul- 

fordTStone]. 
Sidney,  Sir    Philip. — Absence.     See     Astrophel      and 
Stella. 

All  Said,  Still  Say  the  Same.     See  Astrophel  and 
Stella. 

Angel's  Sophistrie.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Arcaidia,  The. 

Aspire    to    Higher    Things.     See    Astrophel    and 
Stella. 

Astrologie.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Bankrout.      See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Bargain,  The.     See  Arcadia,  The. 

"Because   I   oft  in   dark  abstracted  guise."     See 
Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Come,  Sleep.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Countess  of  Pembroke's  Arcadia,  The.     See  Arca- 
dia, The. 

Country  Song,  A.     See  Arcadia,  The. 

Covenant.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Dirge,  A:  "Ring  out  your  bells,  etc."     See  Sidera. 

Ditty,  A.     See  Arcadia,  The. 

Do  not  Will  Me  from  my  Love  to  Flie.     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 

Dorus  to  Pamela.     See  Arcadia,  The. 

Dutie  to  Depart.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Eleventh  Song.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Fame.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Golden  Haire.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

"Having  this  day  my  horse,  my  band,  my  lance." 
See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Heart  and  Soul.     See  Pansies  from  Penshurst  and 
Wilton. 

Highway,  The.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

His  Lady's  Cruelty.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Hope  to  Feede.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

I  am  no  Pickpurse  of  Another's  Wit.     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 

I  Might.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Look  in  thy  Heart,  and  Write.     See  Astrophel  and 
Stella. 

Love's  Silence.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Moone,  The.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Morpheus.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Most  Alone  in  Greatest  Company.     See  Astrophel 
and  Stella. 

My  Muse.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

"My  true-love  hath  my  heart  [and  I  have  his]." 
See  Arcadia,  The. 

Nico  and  Dorus.     See  Arcadia,  The. 

Night.     See  Arcadia,  The. 

"Nightingale,  as  soon  as  April  bringeth,  The." 
See  Sidera. 

Nobler  Exercise,  A.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

"O  happy  Thames  that  did  my  Stella  bear."     See 
Astrophel  and  Stella. 

On  Sleep.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Overcome  by  Love.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Pansies  from  Penshurst  and  Wilton. 

Pensiveness.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 


547 


Sidney 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Sidney,  Sir  Philip  (continued). 

Philomela.     See  Sidera. 

Planet  of  my  Light.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Psalm  XCIII.    (At.  also  to  Countess  of  Pembroke.) 

Psalm  XCVI.    (At.  a/«o  to  Countess  of  Pembroke.) 

P.salm  CXXXIA^    (At.  also  to  Countess  of  Pem- 
broke.) 

Questions.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

See  What  it  is  to  Love.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Seventh  Song.     <See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Sidera. 

Sing  unto  the  Lord.     See  Psalm  XCVL 

Sleep  [Sleepe — C.].     See  Astrophel  a.nd  Stella. 

Song:  "Who  hath  his  fancy  pleased." 

Song  from  the  Arcadia.  A.     See  Arcadia,  The. 

Songs  from  "Astrophel  and  Stella."     iSee  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 

Sonnet:  "Come  sleep,  O  sleep,"  etc.     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 

Sonnet:   "In   martial   sports   I   ha<i   my  cunning 
tried."     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Sonnet:  "O  happy  Thames,"  etc.     See  Astrophel 
and  Stella. 

Sonnet:  "With  how  sad  steps,"  etc.     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 

Sonnet:  Eternal  Love.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Sonnet:  Heart   Exchange.     See  Arcadia,   The. 

Sonnet:  Inspiration.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Sonnet :  Love  is  Enough.    See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Sonnet:  Philomela.     See  Sidera. 

Sonnet  to  the  Moon.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Sonnets  from  "Astrophel  and  Stella."     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 

Splendidis   Longum  Valedico   Nugis.     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 
_  Stella  Lookt  On.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
'  "Stella,  the  only  planet  of  my  light."     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella. 

Still,  Still  Kiss.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Sweete  Cruell  Shot.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Tenth  Song.     Absence.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

They  Love  indeed  who  Quake  to  Say  they  Love. 
See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Tho'   Worlds  'quite  Me,   shall   I   Myself  Forgive? 
See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

To  Sleep.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

To  Stella.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

To  the  Moon.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

True  Beautie  Vertue  is.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Unkinde  Guest,  The.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Verses:   "O   fair!   O   sweet!"     See   Pansies   from 
Penshurst  and  Wilton. 

Via  Amoris.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

Voices  at  the  Window.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

What  Now,  Sir  Foole!     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 

"With  how  sad  steps,  O  Moon,  thou  climb'st  the 
skies!"     See  Astrophel  and  Stella. 
Sienkiewicz,  Henryk. — Contest  in  the  Arena,  The.     See 
Quo  Vadis. 

Fight  with  the  Aurochs,  The.     See  Quo  Vadis. 

Quo  Vadis. 

Hescue  of  Lygia,  The.     See  Quo  Vadis. 

Ursus  and  the  Aurochs.     See  Quo  Vadis. 
Sigerson,  Dora.     See  Shorter,  Mrs.  Clement. 
Sigerson,  G: — Blackbird's  Song,  The. 

Calling,  The. 

Dirge  of  Cael,  The. 

Far-away. 

Lay  of  Norse-Irish  Sea-kings. 

Lost  Tribune,  The. 

Love's  Despair. 

My  Mauria  ni  Mille6n. 

Ruined  Nest,  The. 

Solace  in  Winter. 

Things  Delightful. 
Sigourney,  Major. — Beautiful  Snow. 
Sigournev,    Mrs.    Lydia    Howard    [Huntly]. — Adver- 
tisement of  a  Lost  Day. 

Apostrophe  to  Niagara. 

Bell  of  the  "Atlantic,"  The. 

Bernardine  du  Born. 

Bride.  The. 

Camel's  Nose,  The. 

Cold  Water. 

Columbus. 

Coral  Insect,  The. 

Daily  Counsellor,  The. 

Death  of  Cardinal  Mazarin,  The. 
.     Death  of  King  Edmund,  The. 

Faithful  Dog,  'fhe. 

"Give  words,  kind  words,  to  tho.se  who  err."     See 
Daily  Counsellor,  The. 

Go  to  Thy  Rest. 


Sigourney,  Mrs.  Lydia  Howard  [Huntly]  (continued). 

Hebrew  Tale,  A. 

Indian   Names. 

Indian's  Welcome  to  the  Pilgrim  Fathers,  The. 

Know  Thyself. 

Lilac,  The. 

Man — Woman. 

My  Beautiful  Child. 

Prohibition  Song  of  Good  Fellowship. 

Rain-les.son. 

Return  of  Napoleon  from  St.  Helena,  The. 

Sailor's  Funeral,  The. 

Upas-tree,  The. 
Sill,  E:  Rowland.— Among  the  Redwoods. 

Before  Sunrise  in  Winter. 

Coup  de  Grace,  The. 

Cuckoo,  The. 

Eve's  Daughter. 

Five  Lives. 

Fool's  Prayer,  The. 

Force. 

Future,  The. 

Home. 

Life. 

Lover's  Song,  The. 

Morning  Thought,  A. 

Opportunity. 

Prayer,  A. 

Spring  Twilight. 

Tempted. 

Tropical  Morning  at  Sea,  A. 

Truth  at  Last. 
Sill,  Eliz. — Fanny's  Mud  Pies. 
"Silonius." — New  Preacher,  The. 

Simcox,  . — In  the  Jacquerie. 

Simeon,  C.     See  Symon, . 

Simes,  Louisa. — Dedication  of  a  Schoolhouse. 
Simmons,  Bartholomew. — Stanzas  to  the  Memory  of 
Thomas  Hood. 

To  the  Memory  of  Thomas  Hood.     See  Stanzas 
to  the  Memory  of  Thomas  Hood. 
Simmons,    H:   Martyn. — Intimations   of    Immortality. 
Simms,  W:  Gilmore. — Brooklet,  The. 

Decay  of  a  People,  The. 

Grape-vine  Swing,  The. 

Lost  Pleiad,  The. 

Mother  and  Child. 

Shaded  Water,  The. 

Song  in  March. 

Swamp  Fox,  The. 

"'Twas  ever  thus!  each  hour  that  came." 

Union  and  its  Government,  The. 
Simon,  M.  N. — Three  Wishes. 
Simonds,  A.  B. — Reductio  ad  Absurdum. 
Simonides. — Danae. 

Epitaph. 
Simpson,  Rt.  Rev.  Matthew. — Study  of  Elocution,  The. 
Sims,   G:   R. — Actor's  Story,   The.     See  Old   Actor's 
Story,  The. 

Billy's  Rose. 

Bunch  of  Primroses,  A. 

Deadly  Weapon,  A. 

In  the  Harbor. 

In  the  Signal  Box[:  A  Station  Master's  Story]. 

Last  Look,  A. 

Lifeboat,  The. 

Lights  o'  London,  The. 

Little  Jim. 

Little  Worries. 

Magic  Wand,  The. 

Moll  Jarvis  O'Morley. 

Nellie's  Prayer. 

Old  Actor's  Story,  The. 

'Ostler  Joe. 

Road  to  Heaven,  The. 

Sir  Rupert's  Wife. 

Station-master's  Story,  The.  See  In  the  Signal  Box. 

Street  Tumblers,  The. 

Tale  of  Sweethearts,  A. 

Ticket  o'  Leave. 

Valentine,  A. 
Sims,  W:  R.— Mended  Vase,  The. 
Sinnett,  C:  N. — Latches. 

Sinnett,  Percy  F.— Song  of  the  Wild  Storm-waves,  The. 
Skeat,  W.  W.— Fame,  Wealth,  Life,  Death. 
Skelton,  J:— Bowge  of  Courte,  The. 

Chanlet  of  Laurell,  The.     See  G'arlande  of  Laurel, 
.       The. 

Colyn  Cloute. 

Crowne  of  Lawrell,  The.     See  Garlande  of  Laurell, 
The. 

Garlande  of  Laurell,  The. 

Lullabye,  A. 


548 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Smith 


Skelton,  J:  {continued). 

Nun's    Lament    for    Philip    Sparrow,    The.     See 
Phyllyp  Sparowe. 

Phyllyp  Sparowe. 

Picture  of  Riot.     See  Bowge  of  Courte,  The. 

To  Alaystress    Margaret    Hussey.     See   Garlande 
of  Laurell,  The. 

To    Mistress    Isabel    Pennell.     See    Garlande    of 
Laurell,  The. 

To  Mistress  Margaret  Hussey.     See  Garlande  of 
Laurell,  The. 

To  Mistress   Margery  Wentworth.     See  Garlande 
of  Laurell,  The. 
Sketehley,   Arthur. — Mrs.   Brown  on   Modern   Houses 

Mrs.  Brown  on  the  State  of  the  Streets. 
Skill,  F.  J. — Lord  Dundreary  Proposing. 
Skinner,   J: — Tullochgorum. 
Skipsey,  Joseph. — Butterfly,  The. 

Dewdrop,   The. 

Merry  Bee,  A. 

Mother  Wept. 

Songstress,  The. 

Violet  and  the  Rose,  The. 
Skirving,  Adam. — Johnnie  Cope. 
"Skwirt,  A." — Owed  to  the  Steam  Fire  Engine. 
Slade,  Mrs.  M.  B.  C— Choice  of  Trades. 

Columbia's  Centennial  Party. 

Lessons  from  Scripture  Flowers. 

Trees  of  the  Bible,  The. 
Sladen.  Douglas  B.  W.— Charles  II. 

Christmas  I^etter  from  Australia,  A. 

Salopia  Inhospitalis. 

Sunset  on  the  Cunimbla  Valley,  Blue  Mountains. 

Tropics,  The. 

Waterloo. 
Slaeter,  Nick. — Dem  Ole    Dimes  Habbiness  and  Dem 

New. 
Sleeper,  Ethel  E. — Mud  Cakes. 
Sloper,  Mrs.  L.  M. — Saved. 
Slosson,  Mrs.  Annie  [Trumbull]. — Child's  Easter,  A. 

Christmas  Carol,  A. 

Puzzled. 

Uncle  Jotham's  Boarder. 
Slosson,  May  Preston. — Frances  E.  Willard. 
Small,  S:  W. — "Ole  Marster's"  Christmas,  The. 

Them  Yankee  Blankits. 

Treadwater  Jim. 
Smalley,  Bertrand. — She  Sayeth  "No." 
Smarius,  C.  F. — Blessed  are  the  Dead. 
Smart,  Alexander. — Better  than  Gold. 

Still  Small  Voice,  The. 
Smart,  Christopher.— Song  of  David,  The.     See  Song 
to  David,  A. 

Song  to  David,  A. 
Smedley,  Menella  Bute. — Ballad  of  War,  A. 

Bishop  Patteson. 

Little  Fair  Soul,  The. 
Smiles,  S: — Happy  Life,  A. 

Neglect  of  Little  Things.     See  Thrift. 

Thrift. 
Smiley,  Jos.  Bert. — As  She  Says. 

Chinese  Version  of  "Maud  Muller,"  A. 

Dude,  A. 

Galesburg  Fire  Department. 

Garden  Path,  The. 

Oh,  No, — of  Course  not. 

Presto  Change. 

So  Was  I. 

Story  of  Good  Little  Vincent. 

Up  Higher. 

"Well,  then  I'm  Yourn. " 

Smith, . — Auctioneer  and  the  Lawyer,  The. 

Smith,  A.  C— Waif,  The. 

Smith,  A.  L.  A. — Queen  of  Prussia's  Ride,  The. 

Smith,  Mrs.  Albert.     See  Smith,  Mrs.  Mary  Louise 

[Riley]. 
Smith,  Alexander.    See  Meek,  Alexander  Beaufort. 
'Smith,  Alonzo  Washington. — Mother's  Songs. 
Smith,  Arabella  E.— If  I  Should  Die  Tonight.     {At.)  See 

Meyers,  Rob't  C.  V. 
Smith,  Arthur  Maurice. — Vindication. 
Smith,  Belle  E. — See  Smith,  Arabella  E. 
Smith,  Carl. — At  the  Hospital  Window. 
Smith,  Carlisle. — Prophetic  Mirror,  A. 
Smith,  C:  E. — Politics  and  Journalism. 
Smith,  C:  H.  ("Bill  Arp").— Bill  Arp  on  the  Rack. 

Old-time  Negro,  An. 
Smith,  Charlotte.— First  Swallow,  The. 

Nightingale's   Departure,   The.     See   On   the   De- 
parture of  the  Nightingale. 

On  the  Departure  of  the  Nightingale. 

"Queen  of  the  silver  bow,  by  thy  pale  beam." 

Swallow,  The.     See  First  Swallow,  The. 


Smith,  Clara. — Jack  in  the  Pulpit. 
Smith,  Clement  L. — Three  Pairs  and  One.     {Tr.) 
Smith  Colleae  Monthly. — Mountain  Stream,  A. 
Smith,  Dexter. — Ring  the  Bell  Softly. 
Smith,  Dyer. — Now,  Wouldn't  You  Like  to  Know. 
Smith,  Mrs.  Eliz.  Oakes  [Prince]. — Drowned  Mariner, 
The. 

Oak,  The. 

Sinless  Child,  The. 
Smith,  Emeline  Sherman. — Time's  Silent  Lesson. 
Smith,  F.  Burge. — Little  Goldenhair. 
Smith,  Fs.  Hopkinson. — Caleb  West,  Master  Diver. 

Captain  Joe. 

Colonel  Carter  of  Cartersville. 

Equinoctial  Storm,  The.     See  Caleb  West,  Master 
Diver. 

One-legged  Goose    [or   Duck],   The.     See   Colonel 
Carter  otCartersville.  / 

Smith,  Fs.  S.— Chief  Mourner,  The. 

Drunkard's  Dream,  The.    , 

Indian  Brave,  The.  ' 

Playing  Drunkard. 
Smith,  G.  C— Tete-A-tete  with  Phylli.s. 
Smith,  Gerrit. — Free  Speech. 
Smith,  Gertrude. — New  Year's  Deed,  A. 
Smith,  Goldwin. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Flossy  (with  her  own  Portrait)  to  Her  Mistress. 
'  Smith,  H.  Greenhough.— Rivals,  The. 
Smith,  Harry  Baohe. — See  Smith,  H:  Bache. 
Smith,  Harry  Jas. — Song  of  Yesteryear,  A. 
Smith,  H:  Bache. — Armorer's   Song,  The. 

Long  Night,  The. 

My  Angeline.     See  Wizard  of  the  Nile,  The. 

New-fashioned  Singin',  The. 

Song  of  the  Turnkey,  The. 

What  is  the  Song  the  Swallows  Sing? 

Wizard  of  the  Nile,  The. 
Smith,  Horace. — Address  to  the  Mummy  in  [or  at]  Bel- 
zoni's  Exhibition. 

Contrast,  The.     See  On  the  Death  of  George  the 
Third. 

Blindman's  Buff. 

Culprit  and  the  Judge,  The. 

Death. 

Doctor  and  the  Lampreys,  The. 

Drury's  Dirge. 

Effusion  by  a  Cigar  Smoker. 

Farmer  and  the  Counsellor,  The. 

Gouty  Merchant  and  the  Stranger,  The. 

How  to  Have  Just  what  We  Like. 

Hymn  to  the  Flowers. 

.fester  Condemned  [to  Death],  The. 

Lachrymose  Writers.    . 

Moral  Cosmetics. 

Mummy,  The.     See  Address  to  the  Mummy,  etc. 

On  the  Death  of  George  the  Third. 

Poet  and  the  Alchemist,  The. 

Sanctuary  [within  the  Breast],  The. 

Tale  of  Drury  Lane,  A. 

To  a  Mummy.     See  Address  to  the  Mummy,  etc. 
Smith,  Jas.— Baby's  D^but,  The. 

Bashful  Man,  The.     At.  also  to  Mathews. 

Epigram. 

Play-house  Musings. 

Poet  of  Fashion,  The. 

Soldier's  Pardon,  The. 

Theatre,  The. 
Smith,  Mrs.  Luella  [Dftwd]. —  Story  which  the  Ledger 

Told,  The. 
Smith,  Lyman  C. — Canada  to  Columbia. 

Day  with  Homer,  A. 
Smith,   Mrs.   Mary  Louise  [Riley]. — Blessings  of  To- 
day, The.     See  If  we  Knew. 

Chri.stmas  Roses. 

Dandelion  and  Clover-top. 

Departure. 

Elm  versus  Apple. 

God  Knoweth  Best.     See  Sometime. 

If  we  Knew. 

Linings. 

March. 

Milly. 

My  Uninvited  Guest. 

Pompeian  Preacher,  A. 

Sometime. 

"Sometime,    when    all    life's    les.sons    have    been 
learned. ' '     See  Sometime 

Thanksgiving  Prayer,  A. 

'Tired  Mothers. 

To  a  Tired  Mother.     See  Tired  Mothers. 

Trifles. 

Two  Valentines. 

What  March  Does.     See  March. 


549 


Smith 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Smith,  Minna  Caroline. — Laddy  Blue  Eyes. 

Railroad  Train,  The. 
Smith,    Nora    Archibald. — Neighbors    of    the    Christ 

Night. 
Smith,  Rev.  S.— Folly  of  Pride,  The. 
Smith,  S.  Decatur. — Beggar'.s  Gift,  The. 
Smith,  S.  Jennie. — Aunt  Maria  at  the  Eden  Mus^. 

Change  of  Toys. 

Doctor  Cure-all. 

Every-day  Occurrence,  An. 

Examination  Day. 

"Flat"  Contradiction,  A. 

Honesty  is  the  Best  Policy. 

How  He  Teased  Ned. 

How  Mrs.  O'Doolahan  had  Mike  Arrested. 

Johnnie's  Poetry. 

Journey  of  Life,  The. 

Little  Gossips. 

Little  Mimics. 

Mary  Ann's  Escape. 

Mrs.  Guptill  gets  ahead  of  the  Grij). 

Mrs.  McShane's  Shopping  Expedition. 

Mrs.  Murphy's  Recipe  for  Cake. 

Mrs.  O'Toole  and  the  Conductor. 

Mother's  Tinder  Falin's,  A. 

Playing  School. 

Reading  a  Letter. 

Serious  Mishap,  A. 

Susie's  lesson. 

"Tim's  Downfall. 

To  the  Palace  of  the  King. 

Turning  the  Tables. 

Village  Scare,  The. 

Way  to  Freedom,  The. 

What  They  Knew. 
Smith,  S:  Fs. — America. 

Breathe  Balmy  Airs. 

Cherished .  Names. 

Decoration  Day. 

Eloquence  of  Nature,  The. 

Eve  of  Decoration  Day,  The. 

Flag  in  Nature,  The. 

Flowers  in  Winter. 

Memorial  Day. 

Missionary  Hymn. 

My  Country,   Tis  of  Thee.     See  America. 

National  Hymn.     See  America. 

Our  Honored  Heroes.     See  Decoration  Day. 

Patriot  Dead,  The.     See  Breathe  Balmy  Airs. 

Patriot  Sons  of  Patriot  Sires. 

Precious  Lives.     See  Breathe  Balmy  Airs. 

Three  Flowers,  The. 

Tree-planting.  . 

Trees.  See  Tree-planting. 
Smith,  Sarah  F. — Immortality. 
Smith,  Seba  ("Jack  Downing"). — Mother's     Sacrifice, 

The. 
Smith,  Rev.  Sydney. — America. 

Dame  Partington  and  the  Atlantic  Ocean. 

False  Notions  of  Government  Vigor. 

Letters  of  Peter  Pljrmley — on  "No  Popery." 

Love  of  Country. 

Means  of  Acquiring  Distinction. 

Moral  Courage. 

Parody  on  Pope. 

Professional  Education. 

Receipt  for  Salad,  A.    See  Recipe  for  a  Salad,  A. 

Recipe  for  [a]  Salad,  A. 

Rejection    of   the    Reform    Bill.     See   Speech    at 
Taunton  in  1831,  etc. 

Salad.     See  Recipe  for  a  Salad,  A. 

Speech  at  Taunton  in  1831  on  the  Reform  Bill 
not  being  Passed. 

Study    of    Latin    and    Greek.     See    Professional 
Education. 

Taxes  [the  Price  of  Glory].     See  America. 

To  Professor  Airey. 
Smith,  W.  B. — Hazards  of  Our  National  Prosperity. 
Smjth,  W.  H.— Heartless. 
Smith,  W.  L. — Beauty  Everywhere. 
Smith,  Walter  C— Daughters  of  Philistia.     See  Olrig 
Grange. 

"Not  to  be  served,  O  Lord,  but  to  serve  man." 

Olrig  Grange. 

Self-exiled,  The. 
Smith,  Walter  S. — Lesson  from  a  Bell,  A. 
Smith,  W:  Hawley.— Evolution  of  Dodd,  The. 

Other    Fellow,    The.      See    Evolution    of    Dodd, 
The. 
Smith,  W:  Wye. — Canadians  on  the  Nile,  The. 
Smits,  Dirk. — Death  of  an  Infant. 

On   the   Death   of  an   Infant.     See  Death  of  an 
Infant. 


Smollett,  Tobias  G: — Independence.     See  Ode  to  Inde- 
pendence. 

Ode  to  Independence. 

Ode  to  Leven  Water. 

Tears  of  Scotland,  The. 

To  Leven  Water.     See  Ode  to  Leven  Water. 
Smuller,  E.  A. — Thanksgiving  of  Old. 
Smyth,  S.  P.  N.— Old  Faiths  in  New  Light. 
Smythe,  Albert  Ernest  Stafford — Death  the  Revealer. 

Forgotten  Poet,  The. 
Smythe,  G:     See  Stbangpord,  Viscount. 
Smythe,    Percy    Clinton   Sydney.     See    Stbanoford, 

Viscount. 
Snedeker,  Florence  Walters. — House  with  the  Crose, 

The. 
Snow,  Onlie  Ama. — Mat  and  Hal  and  I. 
Snow,  Mrs.  Sophia  P. — Annie  and  Willie's  Prayer. 

Santa  Claus   and   the   Motherless  Children.     See 
Annie  and  Willie's  Prayer. 
Snowden,  Willard. — Challenge,  A. 
Snowden,  Yates. — South  Carolina  Bourbon,  A. 
Snyder,  C:  M. — Agnostic,  The. 

Miillins  the  Agnostic.     (At.  also  to  A.  T.  Worden.) 
See  Agnostic,  The. 

New  Baby,  The. 

Overheard  at  the  Zoo. 
Snyder,  Chester  A. — My  Cigarette.     (At.  also  to  C:F. 

Lummis. ) 
Socrates. — Friendship . 
Somers,  Fred  M. — Madrona,  The. 
Somerset,  Isabel,  Lady  H: — "Thy  Kingdom  Come." 
Somerville,  C.  C. — Home,  Sweet  Home. 

On  the  Rappahannock.     (At.  also  to  C:  H.  Tiffany.) 
See  Home,  Sweet  Home. 
SomerviUe     Journal.  —  Educational     Courtship.     See 
What  He  Called  it. 

How  He  Lost  Her. 

She  Referred  Him  to  Her  Pa. 

"True  Bostonian  [at  Heaven's  Gate],  A. 

What  He  Called  it. 
SomerviUe,  W: — Chase,  The. 

Somerville,  W;,  and  Congreve,  W: — White  Rose,  The. 
Soper,  Dora  Schoonmaker. — ^Ascent  of  Japan's  Sacred 

Mountain — Fusi-Yama. 
Soper,  G:  Albert. — Her  Flower. 
Soper,  H.  M. — Medley. 

True  Manhood  tne  Nation's  Only  Safety. 

Vera  Victoria. 
Sophocles. — Antigone. 

Chariot  Race,  The.     See  Electra.  < 

Electra. 
Soule,  Eva  Linnette. — Senior  and  the  Rose,  The. 
Soule,  J:  B.  L. — Wooing. 
Southern  Collegian. — American  Partridge,  The. 

Portrait,  The. 
Southesk,  Jas.  Carnegie,  Earl  of. — Flitch  of  Dunmow, 
The. 

Good  Old  Souls. 

November's  Cadence. 
Southey,  Mrs.  Caroline  Anne  [Bowles]. — April  Day,  An. 

Autimin  Flowers. 

Birthday,  The. 

Cuckoo  Clock,  The.     See  Birthday,  The. 

"I  never  cast  a  flower  away." 

Ladybird,  Ladybird.     See  Little  Ladybird,  The. 

Last  Journey,  The. 

Little  Ladybird,  The. 

Mariner's  Hymn. 

Once  upon  a  Time. 

Paupe;r's  Death-bed,  The. 

Ranger's  Grave. 

River,  The. 

To  the  Lady-bird.     See  Little  Lady-bird,  The. 

Young  Gray  Head,  The. 

See  also  Southey,  Robert  and  Caroline. 
Southey,  Rob't. — After  Blenheim.     See  Battle  of  Blen- 
heim, The. 

Amatory  Sonnets  of  Abel  Shufflebottom,  The. 

At  Coruna. 

Battle  of  Blenheim,  The. 

Battle  of  Pultowa,  The. 

Bishop  Hatto.     See  God's  Judgment  on  a  Wicked 
Bishop. 

Books. 

Books  and  Reading. 

Cataract  of  Lodore,  The. 

Cid,  The.     (Tr.) 

Cock  and  Hen  Story,  A.     See  Pilgrim  to  Compo»- 
tella,  The. 

Complaints  of  the  Poor,  The. 

Crowning  of  the  King,  The.     See  Joan  of  Arc. 

Curse  of  Kehama,  The. 

Death  of  Nelson,  The. 


550 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Spenser 


Southev,  Rob't  {continued). 
Death  of  Wallace,  The. 
Delia   at    Play.     See   Amatory   Sonnets   of   Abel 

Shufflebottom,  The. 
Emmet's  Epitaph.     See  Writen  immediately  after 

Reading  the  Speech  of  Robert  Emmet. 
Epitaph  on  Algernon  Sidney. 
Father   William.     See  Old   Man's   Comforts   and 

how  he  Gained  Them,  The. 
Funeral  Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Princess  Char- 
lotte. 
God's  Judgment  on  a  Wicked  Bishop. 
His  Books.     See  Books. 
Holly-tree,  The. 
Idiot  Boy,  The. 
Immortality    of    Love.     See   Curse    of    Kahama, 

The. 
In  a  Forest. 
Inchcape  Rock,  The. 

Inscription  for  a  Monument  at  Vimeiro. 
Inscription  for  the  Apartment  in  Chepstow  Castle, 

where  Henry  Marten  was  imprisoned. 
Joan  of  Arc. 

Kehama.     See  Curse  of  Kehama,  The. 
King  Henry  V.  and  the  Hermit  of  Dreux. 
King  of  the  Crocodiles,  The. 
Legend,  The.     See  Pilgrim  to  Compostella,  The. 
Leonard  and  Margaret. 
Llewellyn  and  His  Dog.     {At.)     See  Beth  Gelert. 

— W  :  Rob't  Spencer. 
Library,  The.     See  Books. 
Loss  in  Delay. 

Love  Elegies  of  Abel  Shufflebottom,  The. 
Love's    Immortality.      See    Curse    of     Kehama, 

The. 
March  to  Moscow,  The. 
Mary  the  Maid  of  the  Inn. 
Miracle  of  the  Roses,  The.     See  Rose,  The. 
"Moments  there  are  in  life — alas,  how  few!" 
My    Days    among   the    Dead    [are    Passed].     See 

Books. 
Night.     See  Thalaba  the  Destroyer. 
Night  in  the  Desert.     See  Thalaba  the  Destroyer. 
Oak  of  our  Fathers,  The. 

Ode  Written  during  the  Negotiations  with  Buona- 
parte. 
Old  Man's  Comforts[,  and  How  He  Gained  Them], 

The. 
Pig,  The. 

Pilgrim  to  Compostella,  The. 
Poet  Expatiates  on  the  Beauty  of  Delia's  Hair, 

The.     See  Love  Elegies  of  Abel  Shufflebottom, 

The. 
Poet  Expresses  his  Feelings  Respecting  a  Portrait 

in  Delia's  Parlor,  The.     See  Amatory  Sonnets 

of  Abel  Shufflebottom,  The. 
Poet  Proves  the  Existence  of  a  Soul  from  his  Love 

for  Delia,  The.     See  Amatory  Sonnets  of  Abel 

Shufflebottom,  The. 
Poet   Relates  how   he   Obtained   Delia's  Pocket- 
handkerchief,  The.     See  Love  Elegies  of  Abel 

Shufflebottom,  The. 
Poet  Relates  how  he  Stole  a  Lock  of  Delia's  Hair, 

and  her  Anger,  The.     See  Love  Elegies  of  Abel 

Shufflebottom,  The. 
Prayer,  A. 
Remembrance. 
Roderick. 
Rose,  The. 
St.  Romauld. 
Scholar,  The.     See  Books. 
Seasons  of  Life,  The. 
Ship,  The. 

Siege  of  Zamora,  The.     {Tr.)     See  Cid,  The. 
Snuff. 

Stanzas  written  in  his  Library.     See  Books. 
Thalaba  [the  Destroyer]. 
"They  sin  who  teU  us  love  can  die."     See  Curse 

of  Kehama,  The. 
Traveller's  Return,  The. 
Wat  Tyler. 

Wat  Tyler's  Address  to  the  King.     See  Wat  Tyler. 
Wedding,  The. 
Well  of  St.  Keyne,  The. 
Winter. 
Written  immediately  after  Reading  the  Speech 

of  Robert  Emmet. 
Southey,    Rob't     and    Caroline. — Greenwood    Shrift, 

The. 
Southey,  Rob't,  and  Coleridge,  S:  T.— Devil's  Walk, 

The. 
Devil's  Walk  on  Earth,  The.     See  Devil's  Walk, 

The. 


Southwell,  Rob't. — Burning  Babe,  The. 

Loss  in  Delay. 

New  Prince,  New  Pomp. 

Procrastination.     See  Loss  in  Delay. 

St.  Peter's  Complaint. 

Times  Go  by  Turns. 
Southwestern  Presbyterian. — "It  is  a  fitting  opportunity 

to  advert  to  the  fact  that  a  revival  of  religion. 
Southwick,   H.   C. — Sport. 
Souvestre,  Emile. — Mrs.  Willis's  Will. 
Spalding,  Bishop  J:  Lancaster. — At  the  Ninth  Hour. 
See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Believe  and  take  Heart.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Et  Mori  Lucrum.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Faith  and  a  Heart.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Forepledged. 

God  and  the  Soul. 

Nature  and  the  Child.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Silence.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Sursum  Corda.     See  (jod  and  the  Soul. 

Starry  Host,  The.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Visions  of  Childhood.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 

Void  Between,  The.     See  God  and  the  Soul. 
Spalding,  Archbishop  Martin  J: — Post  Nummos  Virtus. 
Spalding,  Mrs.  Susan  [Marr]. — Fate.  , 

Sea's  Spell,  The. 

Song's  Worth,  A. 
Spangenberg,  Mrs.  F.— Christmas  Time. 
Sparks,  Jared. — Lesson  of  the  Revolution,  The. 

Teachings  of  the  American  Revolution.     See  Les- 
son of  the  Revolution,  The. 
Spaulding,  . — Humbugging  a  Tourist. 

Never-ending  Progress.  / 
Sp?iulding,  Harriet  M. — Peculiar  Neighbor,  The. 
Spearman,  Frank  H. — "Bucks." 
Spectator,  rAe.— Character  and  a  Question,  A. 

Heroic  Death,  A. 

Hindoo  Sceptic,  The. 

Love  of  the  Past,  The.  < 

Ode  in  Memory  of  Dr.  Hoffmann. 

Song  of  the  Rain,  The. 
Speed,  T: — Story  of  Guggle. 
Spence,  W.  Hamilton.— -Washington. 
Spencer,  Alfred  L. — Her  Programme  of  Dance. 
Spencer,  Carl. — King's  Ships,  The.     {At.  also  to  Caro- 
line Spencer.) 

Reawakening. 

Song  of  Joy,  The. 
Spencer,  Caroline  S. — King's  Ships,  The.     {At.  also  to 
Carl  Spencer.) 

Living  Waters. 
Spencer,  E: — Matumus'  Address  to  his  Band. 
Spencer,   Herbert. — Education:   What    Knowledge   is 
of  Most  Worth? 

Genesis  of  Science. 

Mathematics  and  Physics.     See  Genesis  of  Science. 

Poetry  of  Science,  The.     See  Education. 
Spencer,  Hiram  Ladd. — Hundred  Years  to  Come,  A. 

River,  The. 
Spencer,  Wilbur  Daniel. — My  Treasures. 

To-morrow. 
Spencer,  W:  Rob't.— Beth  Gelert[;  or,  The   Grave  of 
the  Greyhound]. 

Llewellyn  andTiis  Dog.  {Wr.  at.  to  Rob't  Southey). 
See  Beth  Gelert. 

To  Lady  Anne  Hamilton. 

Too  I.,ate  I  Stayed.     See  To  Lady  Anne  Hamilton. 

"When  midnight  o'er  the  moonless  skies." 

Wife,  Children  and  Friends. 
Spenser,  Edmund. — Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

April.     See  Shepheardes  Calendar,  The. 

At   Court.     See   Prosopopoia;    or.    Mother   Hub- 
berd's  Tale. 

August.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Autumn.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
'      Beauty.     See  Hymn  in  Honor  of  Beauty. 

Bower  of  Bliss,  The.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Bride,  The.     See  Epithalamion. 

Cave  of  Mammon,  The.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Cave  of  Sleep,  The.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Chase  after  Love.    See  Shepheardes  Calender,  The. 

Claims  of  Mutability  Pleaded  before  Nature.     See 
Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Complaint    of  Age,  The.     See   Shepheardes  Cal- 
ender, The. 

Complaint  of  Thalia.     See  Teares  of   the  Muses, 
The. 

Contentment.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Cupid  and  the  Bee.     See  Epigram:  "Upon  a  day 
as  Love,"  etc. 

Daphnaida. 

December.     See  Shepheardes  Calender,  The. 


551 


Spenser 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Spenser,  Edmund  (continued). 

Description  of  Maying.  See  Shepheardes  Calen- 
der, The. 

Ditty,  in  Praise  of  Eliza,  Queen  of  the  Shep- 
herd.s,  A.     See  Shepheardes  Calender,  The. 

"Doubt  which  ye  »isdeem,  fair  love,  is  vain.  The."- 
See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Easter.     <See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Easter  Morning.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Epigram:  "Upon  a  day,  as  Love,"  etc. 

Epithalamion. 

Fable  of  the  Oak  and  the  Briar.  See  Shepheardes 
Calender,  The. 

Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Fate  of  the  Butterfly,  The.  See  Muiopotmos ;  or, 
The  Fate  of  the  Butterfly. 

(lardens  of  Venus.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Gloriana.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Her  Eyes.     See  Amoretti     and  Epithalamion. 

Herself  all  Treasure.  See  Amoretti  and  Epitha- 
lamion. 

House  of  Busyrane.     <See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

House  of  Pride,  The.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Hymn  in  Honour  of  Beauty. 

Hymn  of  Heavenly  Beauty. 
•        In  Praise  of  Trees.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

January.     See  Shepheardes  Calender,  The. 

June.     See  Shepheardes  Calender,  The. 

Kinds  of  Trees  to  Plant.  See  Faerie  Queene, 
The. 

"Like  as  the  culver  on  the  bared  bough."  See  Am- 
oretti and  Epithalamion. 

May.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

May.     See  also  ShepHeardes  Calender,  The. 

Mini.stry  of  Angels,  The.  See  Faerie  Queene, 
The. 

Months  and  Seasons.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Mother  Hubberd's  Tale.  See  Prosopopoia;  or, 
Mother  Hubberd's  Tale. 

Muiopotmos;  or,  The  Fate  of  the  Butterfly. 

Mutability.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Oak  and  the  Briere,  The.  See  Shepheardes  Cal- 
ender, The. 

Our  Love  shall  Live.  See  Amoretti  and  Epitha- 
lamion. 

Phaedria  and  the  Idle  Lake.  See  Faerie  Queene, 
The. 

Prosopopoia;  or,  Mother  Hubberd's  Tale. 

Prothalamion. 

Quelling  of  the  Blatant  Beast,  The.  See  Faerie 
Queene,  The. 

Red  Cross  Knight  and  Una,  The.  See  Faerie 
Queene,  The. 

Seasons,  The.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Shepheardes  Calender,  The. 

Song:  "Wake  now,  my  love,  awake."  See  Epi- 
thalamion. 

Song  of  Enchantment,  The.  See  Faerie  Queene, 
The. 

Sonnet:  "Fay  re  is  my  Love,  when  her  fay  re  golden 
heares."     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Sonnet:  "Fresh  Spring,  the  herald  of  Love's 
mighty  king. ' '  A^ee  Amoretti  and  Epitha- 
lamion. 

Sonnet:  "Joy  of  my  life!  full  oft  for  loving  you." 
See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Sonnet:  "Lackyng  my  love,  I  go  from  place  to 
place."     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Sonnet:  "Like  [or  Lyke]  as  a  ship,  that  through 
the  ocean  wide. ' '  See  Amoretti  and  Epitha- 
lamion. 

Sonnet:  "  Men  call  you  fair,  and  you  do  credit  it." 
See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Sonnet:  "More  than  most  fair,  full  of  the  living 
fire."     See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Sonnet:  "Most  glorious  Lord  of  life!  that,  on  this 
day."  See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion  (Easter). 

Sonnet:  "Sweet  Smile!  the  daughter  of  the 
Queene  of  Love."  See  Amoretti  and  Epi- 
thalamion. 

Sonnet:  "The  doubt  which  ye  misdeem,  fair  love." 
See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Sonnet:  "Thrise  happie  she  that  is  so  well  assured. " 
See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Sonnet:  "What  guyle  is  this,  that  those  her 
golden  tresses."  See  Amoretti  and  Epitha- 
lamion. 

Spenser  at  Court.  See  Prosopopoia;  or.  Mother 
Hubberd's  Tale. 

Summer.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Sunrise.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Sweet  and  Bitter.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithala- 


Spenser,  Edmund  (continued). 

"Sweet  is   the   rose[,    but  grows  upon  a  brere]. " 
See  Amoretti  and  Epithalamion. 

Teares  of  the  Muses,  The. 

To  His  Book.     Of  His  Lady.     See  Amoretti  and 
Epithalamion. 

Trees.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Una  and  the  Lion.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Una    and    the    Red    Cross    Knight.     See    Faerie 
Queene,  The. 

Una's  Marriage.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 

Wake  Now,  my  Love.     See  Epithalamion. 

Whilst  it  is  Prime.     See  Amoretti  and  Epithala- 
mion. 

Winter.     See  Faerie  Queene,  'The. 

Wooing  of  Amoret.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The. 
Spingarn.  Joel  Elias. — Helios. 

Poet's  Epitaph. 
Spluttermann,  Yawcob  von. — Glory  mit  ter  Stars  und 

Sthripes. 
Spofford,  Mrs.  Harriet  Eliz.  [Prescott]. — Ballad:  "In 
the  summer  even. ' ' 

Between  the  Graves. 

Christmas  Peal,  The. 

Days  of  Rest. 

Evanescence. 

First  and  Last. 

Gingerbread  Tree,  The. 

Hereafter. 

How  We  became  a  Nation. 

Hunt,  The. 

In  Song  Time. 

Measure  for  Measure. 

Music  in  the  Night. 

Night  Sea,  The.     See  Ballad:    "In   the   summer 
even." 

Phantoms  all. 

Phillips  Brooks. 

Pines,  The. 

Sigh,  A. 

Snowdrop,  A. 

Vanity.     (At.)     See  Gary,  Alice. 

Voice.     See  In  Song  Time. 

What  One  Boy  Thinks. 

Witnesses. 
Spooner.  A.  C. — Old  Times  and  New. 
Sprague,    C: — American     Indian,     The.      See    North 
American  Indians. 

Art 

Brothers,  The. 

Centennial  Ode. 

Curiosity. 

Eulogy  on  Lafayette. 

Family  Meeting,  The. 

Fathers  of  New  England,  The.  See  Centennial  Ode. 

Fiction.     See  Curiosity. 

Indians.     See  Centennial  Ode. 

Individual  Purity  the  Hope  of  the  State. 

News,  The:     See  Curiosity. 

North  American  Indians. 

Ocean. 

Ode  on  Art.     See  Art. 

Our  Fathers.     See  Centennial  Ode. 

Stability  of  our  Government,  The.     See  Individ- 
ual Purity  the  Hope  of  the  State. 

To  My  Cigar. 

Winged  Worshippers,  The. 
Sprague,  Sarah  E. — Robin  or  I? 
Sprague,  W:  Buell. — Voltaire  and  Wilberforce. 
Springfield  Republican. — -Aunt  Patience's  Doughnuts. 

Blue  and  Gray.     See  Two  Colors. 

Little  Charlie's  Big  Story. 

"No  candid  observer  will  deny  that  whatever  of 
good  there  may  be." 

Over  the  Crossin'. 

Two  Colors. 

United  at  Last.     See  Two  Colors. 
Sproat,  Eliza  L. — May  Morning. 
Spurgeon,  C:  H. — Goodness  and  Greatness  of  God. 

Songs  of  the  Night. 

Spurgeon's  Advice. 
Stackpoole,  Harry. — Drop  of  Water,  The. 
Stacy,  Joel. — Sweet  Red  Rose,  The. 
Stacy,  T.  H.— In  Days  Like  These. 
Stadmuller,  Henrietta  L. — Change  of  Heart,  A. 
Stafford,  Ezra  Hurlburt.— Chinook. 

lyast  Orison,  The. 

Strange  Vessel,  The. 
Stafford,  Juniata. — My  Country's  Flag. 
Stall,  Sylvanus. — "Church  in  debt  feels  that  prudence 

demands,  The."  . 

Standard  of  the  Cross. — Beautiful  Grandmamma. 
Stanhope,  Philip  Dormer.     See  Chesterfield,  Earl  of. 


552 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Sternhold 


Stanley,  Dean  Arthur  Penrhyn. — -"In  the  transforma- 
tion of  opinion." 
Teach  Us  to  Die. 
"Throughout   the   entire   word   of   God,    we    are 

taught  the  sacred  duty  of  being  happy." 
Till  Death  us  Join. 

"  'Till  death  us  part.'  "     See  Till  Death  us  Join. 
Stanley,  Caroline  F. — -Uncle  Isrul's  Call. 
Stanley,  F.  M. — Jack. 

Stanley,  H:  Morton. — -Through  the  Dark  Forest. 
Stanley,  M.  Lizzie. — Some  Years  in  Washington's  Life. 
Stanley,  T: — Celia  Singing. 
Relapse.  The. 
Tomb,  The. 
Stansbury,  Mary  Anna  P. — -How  He  Saved  St.  Mich- 
ael's. 
Jem's  Last  Ride. 

Surprise  at  [or  of]  Ticonderoga,  The. 
Stansbury,  P.  R.— Botts  Twins,  The. 
Stanton,  Frank  Lebby. — -Annetta  Jones — Her  Book. 
Answering  to  Roll-call. 
"Didn't  'Think  o'  Losin'  Him." 
Dreamin'  o'  Home. 

Dreaming  of  Home.     See  Dreamin'  o'  Home. 
Fallen  Asleep. 
Graveyard  Rabbit,  The. 
"Hangin'  On." 
How  a  Song  Saved  a  Soul. 
In  the  Time  of  Strife. 
Little  Hand,  A. 
Little  Way,  A. 
Love  Lights  of  Home,  The. 
Lucinda's  Fan. 
Matthew  the  Miner. 
]VIocking-bird,  The. 
Old  Battle-field,  An. 
Old  Flag  Forever. 

Old  Pine  Box,  The.     See  Ole  Pine  Box,  The. 
Old  School  Exhibitions,  The. 
Ole  Pine  Box,  The. 
One  Country. 
Picnic  at  Salina,  The. 
Plantation  Ditty,  A. 
Regiment  Song. 
Reunited. 

"Rock  of  Ages."     See  How  a  Song  Saved  a  Soul. 
"Shoutin'." 
Song  of  the  Fleet,  A. 
Story  of  Dick,  The. 
Thankful  Soul,  A. 
That  Boy  Jim. 
This  Old  Country. 
Volunteer,  The. 
War-ship  "Dixie,"  The. 
Wearyin'  for  You. 
When  Summer  Says  Good-bye. 
Stanton,  H:  Thompson. — Moneyless  Man,  The. 

Peter-bird,  The. 
Stapleton,    Mrs.    Patience    [Tucker].  —  Sailor     Santa 
Claus,  A. 
Senator's  Grandmother,  The. 
Starkey,  Rev.  O.  F. — Blowing  Bubbles. 
Patrick  Dolin's  Love  Letter. 

Pat's    Love    Letter.     See    Patrick    Dolin's    Love 
Letter. 
Starkie,  J: — Popular  Error,  A. 
Starr,  Hattie. — Little  Alabama  Coon. 
Start,  Alaric   Bertrand.— Jim-Jam   King  of  the  Jou- 

Jous,  The. 
Stauflfer,  Fs.  H:— Very  Bad  Case,  A. 
Stearns,  E.  F. — Arbor  Day. 

Stebbins,  Mrs.  Mary  Eliz.  [Moore]  [Hewitt]. — Harold 
the  Valiant. 
Sunflower  to  the  Sun,  The. 
Stebbins,  Sarah  B. — Basket  of  Flowers,  A. 
Stedman,  Edmund  Clarence. — Alice  of  Monmouth. 
Autumn  Song. 
Betrothed  Anew. 
Cavalry  Charge,  The. 
Cavalry  Song.     See  Alice  of  Monmouth. 
Comedian's  Last  Night,  The. 
Corda  Concordia. 
Country  Sleighing. 
Discoverer,  The. 
Doorstep,  The. 
FalstafF's  Song. 
Flight  of  the  Birds,  The. 
Gettysburg. 

Going  a-Nutting.     See  Autumn  Song. 
Hand  of  Lincoln,  The. 
Helen  Keller. 
Horace  Greeley. 
How  Old  Brown  Took  Harper's  Ferry. 


Stedman,  Edmund  Clarence  {continued). 
Invocation. 
John  Brown  of  Osawatomie.     See  How  Old  Brown 

Took  Harper's  Ferry. 
Kearny  at  Seven  Pines. 
Laura,  My  Darling. 
Morgan. 
Mors  Benefica. 
Mother's  Picture,  A. 
Old  Admiral,  The. 

On  a  Great  Man  whose  Mind  is  Clouding. 
On  the  Doorstep.     See  Doorstep,  The. 
Ordeal  by  Fire,  The. 
Pan  in  Wall  Street. 
"Perhaps  'twas  boyish  love." 
Prelude:     "England!     Since    Shake.speare    died," 

etc. 
Quest.     See  Corda  Concordia. 
Salem,  A.  D.  1692. 
Seeking  the  May-flower. 
Si  Jeunesse  Savait! 
Singer,  The. 
Song  from  a  Drama. 

Song  from  a  Drama.     See  also  Stanzas  for  Music. 
Stanzas  for  Music. 
Sumter. 
Surf. 

Toujours  Amour. 
Treason's  Last  Device. 
Twelfth  of  April,  The.     See  Sumter. 
Undiscovered  Country,  The. 
Wanted — A  Man. 
Wedding-day,  The. 
What  the  Winds  Bring. 
Wind,  The.     See  What  the  Winds  Bring. 
World  Well  Lost,  The. 
Stedman,  J.  H. — What  is  Fame? 
Steele,  Alice  C. — Easter  Song,  The. 
Steele,  Anne. — Living  to  Thee. 
Steele,  Sir  R: — -Benevolence  and  Charity. 

Commonwealth    of    Lunatics,    The.     See    Tatler, 

The. 
Coverley  Household,  The.     See  Spectator,  The. — 

Jos.  Addison. 
Gentleman,  The. 
Tatler,  The. 
Steele,  Ward.— Wait! 
Stein,  Evaleen. — Budding-time  too  Brief. 
Flood-time  on  the  Marshes. 
In  Mexico. 
In  Youth. 
Stein,  M.  Hallock. — Santa  and  His  Reindeer. 
Stephen,  Jas.  Kenneth. — Elegy  on  De  Marsay. 
Lapsus  Calami. 

Millennium,  The.     See  Lapsus  Calami. 
Pair  of  Fools,  A. 
Sonnet,  A:     Two  Voices  are  There;  One  is  of  the 

Deep. 
Thought,  A. 
Woman's  Face,  A. 
Stephens,   Alex.    Hamilton. — Appeal    to   the   Georgia 
Convention  of  1860  against  Secession. 
Energy. 

Restoration  of  the  Union,  The. 
Separate  as  Billows,  but  One  as  the  Sea. 
Stephens,  Mrs.  Ann  Sophia  [Winterbotham]. — Death- 
fire,  The. 
Polish  Boy,  The. 
Thanksgiving  Dinner,  A. 
Stephens,  Jas.  Brunten. — Dominion  of  Australia,  The. 

My  Other  Chinee  Cook. 
Stephens,  Rowan. — Cradle  Song. 
Sterlend,  Earl  of.     See  Stirling,  Earl  of. 
Sterling,  Harriet  B. — Fa.stidious. 
Sterling,  J: — Alfred  the  Harper. 
Daedalus. 

Husbandman,  The. 
Louis  XV. 

On  a  Beautiful  Day. 

Rose  and  the  Gauntlet,  The.     {At.  also  to  J:  Wil- 
son.) 
San  Miniato. 
Shakespeare. 
Spice-tree,  The. 
To  a  Child. 
Two  Oceans,  The. 
Stern,  Edwin  M. — In  May. 
Sterne,  Laurence. — Ba.stille  and  the  Starling,  The. 

"I  was  ill  of  an  epidemic  vile  fever."     See  Senti- 
mental Journey,  A. 
Sentimental  Journey,  A. 
Sterne,  Stuart.     See  Bloede,  Gertrudf. 
Sternhold,  T:— Psalm  XVIII. 


553 


Sterry 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Sterry,  De Witt.— Ashes. 

To  an  Old  Pipe. 
Sterry,  J.  Ashby. — See  Ashbt-Stkrry,  Jos. 
Stetson,  C:  P. — Rock  and  the  Sea,  The. 
Stetson,  Mrs.  Charlotte  [Perkins].     See  Oilman,  Mrs. 

Charlotte  ^ 
Stetson,    Mrs.  Orace    EUery   [Channing].     See   Chan- 

nino-Stetson,  Mrs.  Grace  Ellery. 
Steubenville  Herald. — Frivolous  Girl,  The. 
Stevens,  B.  R. — War  Hymn. 
Stevens,  G.  A.— Bullum  versus  Boatum. 

Daniel  versus  Dishclout. 
Stevens,  G:  ("Wade  Whipple"). — Orthography. 
Stevens,  G:  Alex. — Storm,  The. 
Stevens,  Jack. — Ye  Sleighride  Partie. 
Stevens,    W. — Sonnet:     "There    Shines    the    Morning 

Star!" 
Stevenson,  Burton  Egbert. — After  the  Play. 

Afterwards. 
Stevenson,  Rob't  Louis. — Armies  in  the  Fire. 

At  the  Sea-side. 

Auntie's  Skirts. 

Autumn  Fires. 

Bed  in  Summer. 

BJock  City. 

Child's  Fancies,  A. 

Cow,  The, 

Difference,  The.     See  "It  is  the  season  now  to  go. ' ' 

Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr.  Hyde.     See  Strange  Case  of 
Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr.  Hyde,  The. 

Dr.  Lanyon's  Narrative  [or  Story].     See  Strange 
Case  of  Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr.  Hyde,  The. 

Dumb  Soldier,  The. 

Escape  at  Bedtime. 

Fairy  Bread. 

Farewell  to  the  Farm. 

Flowers,  The. 

Foreign  Children. 

Foreign  Lands. 

Friends. 

From  a  Railway  Carriage. 

Gardener,  The. 

Good  and  Bad  Children. 

Good  Boy,  A. 

Good  Manners.     See  Whole  Duty  of  Children. 

Good  Night.     See  North-west  Passage. 

Good  Plav,  A. 

Happy  Thought. 

Hayloft,  The. 

Heather  Ale[ :  a  Galloway  Legend]. 

Historical  Associations. 

House  Beautiful,  The. 

In  the  Highlands. 

In  the  Season.     See  "It  is  the  season  now  to  go." 

In  the  States. 

"It  is  the  season  now  to  go." 

Keepsake  Mill. 

Lamplighter,  The. 

Land  of  Counterpane,  The. 

Land  of  Nod,  The. 

Land  of  Story-books,  The. 

Little  Land,  The. 

Looking  Forward. 

Looking-glass  River. 

Marching  Song. 

Moon,  The. 

Mother  and  Son. 

My  Bed  is  a  Boat. 

My  Kingdom. 

My  Shadow. 

My  Ship  and  I. 

My  Treasures. 

Nest  Eggs. 

Night  and  Day. 

North-west  Passage. 

Not  I. 

Other  Children.     See  Foreign  Children. 

Picture-books  in  Winter. 

Pirate  Story. 

Prince  Otto. 

Princess  and  the  Countess,  The.     See  Prince  Otto. 

Rain. 

Requiem,  A. 

Romance. 

Singing?. 

Spaewife,  The. 

Strange  Case  of  Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr.  Hyde,  The. 

Summer  Sun. 

Sun's  Travels,  The. 

Swing,  The. 

System. 

Thought,  A. 

Ticonderoga. 


Stevenson,  Rob't  Louis  {continued). 

Time  to  Rise. 

To  Any  Reader. 

To  Auntie. 

To  Minnie. 

To  Minnie:  A  Picture-frame  for  you  to  Fill. 

To  My  Mother. 

To  My  Name-child. 

To  N.  V.  de  G.  S. 

To  S.  R.  Crockett. 

To  Willie  and  Henrietta. 

Travel. 

Unseen  Playmate,  The. 

Visit  from  the  Sea,  A. 

Whaups,  The.     See  To  S.  R.  Crockett. 

"When  the  golden  day  is  done."     See  Night  and 
Day. 

Where  Go  the  Boats? 

Whole  Duty  of  Children. 

Wind,  The. 

Windy  Nights. 

Winter-time. 

With  a  Hand-glass.     See  To  Minnie:  A  Picture- 
frame  for  you  to  Fill. 

Young  Night  Thought. 
Stevenson,   Rob't  Louis,   and   Henley,  W:   Ernest. — 
Deacon  Brodie[:  or,  The  Double  Life]. 

Stewart,  . — True  Aristocrat,  The. 

Stewart,  Alex.  C: — Wanderer,  The. 

Stewart,  Andrew. — Bob  Johnson's  Visit  to  the  Circus. 

Domestic  Mutual  Improvement. 
Stewart,  C:  D. — Funny  Man,  A.     See  Her  Grandpa. 

Her  Grandpa. 
Stewart,  F.  C. — Choosing  a  State  Tree. — The  Elm. 
Stewart,  Mary. — Alameda. 

Old  Violin,  The. 
Stewart,  Phillips. — Corydon  and  Amaryllis. 

De  Profundis. 

Hope. 
Stickney,   Mrs.   Julia  Granby  [Noyes]. — Hotel  in  the 

Storm,  A. 
Still,  J:— Good  Ale.     See  Jolly  Good  Ale  and  Old. 

Jolly  Good  Ale  and  Old. 
Stillingfleet,  B:  (?).— Raillery. 
Stillman,  Annie  R. — Birth. 
Stilwell,  Emma  Sophie. — Christmas  Week. 

Genevra. 

Ho,  Boat  AhoyI 
Stirling  [or  Sterling],  W:  Alexander,  Earl  of. — Aurora. 

Pride. 

Sonnets  from  "Aurora."     See  Aurora. 

To  Aurora.     See  Aurora. 

Tragedy  of  Darius,  The. 
Stirling-Maxwell,  Caroline  Eliz.  Sarah  [Sheridan]  [Nor- 
ton], Lady. — Allan  Percy. 

Arab   to   His   Favorite   Steed,   The.     See  Arab's 
Farewell  to  his  Horse,  The. 

Arab's  Farewell  to  his  Horse,  The. 

Arab's   Farewell  to  his    Steed,  The.     See  Arab's 
Farewell  to  his  Horse,  The. 

Banner  of  the  Covenanters,  The. 

Bingen  on  the  Rhine. 

Child  of  Earth,  The. 

Haunting  Eyes. 

I  Do  not  Love  Thee. 

King  of  Denmark's  Ride,  The. 

Lady  of  La  Garaye,  The. 

Love  Not. 

Mother's  Heart,  The. 

Soldier  from   Bingen,   The.     See  Bingen   on   the 
Rhine. 

Soldier's  Burial,  The. 

To  My  Books. 

We  Have  been  Friends  Together. 

Wealth  is  not  Happiness. 
Stockard,  H:  Jerome. — As  some  Mysterious  Wanderer 
of  the   Skies. 

Mocking-bird,  The. 

Over  Their  Graves. 

Review  of  the  Dead,  The. 
Stockton,  Fs.  R: — Dusky  Philosophy. 

Our    First    Experience    with    a    Watchdog.     See 
Rudder  Grange. 

Our  Hirpd  Girl.     See  Rudder  Grange. 

Pomona  Describes  Her  Bridal  Trip.     See  Rudder 
Grange. 

Rudder  Grange. 

Story  of  Seven  Devils,  A.     See  Dusky  Philosophy. 

That  Other  Baby  at  Rudder  Grange.     See  Rudder 
Grange. 

Transferred  Ghost.  The. 

Uncle    Peter's   Mtisterly   Argument.     See   Dusky 
Philosophy. 


554 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Stowe 


Stockton,  Commodore  Rob't  Field. — Against  Flogging 

in  the  Navy. 
Against    Whipping   in    the    Navy.     See    Against 

Flogging  in  the  Navy. 
American  Sailor,  The.     See  Against  Flogging  in 

the  Navy. 
"Shall  an  American  Citizen  be  Scourged?"     See 

Against  Flogging  in  the  Navy. 
Stoddard,  A.  C. — Polly's  Thanksgiving. 
Stoddard,  C:  Warren. — Albatross. 
Cocoa-tree,  The. 
Rhyme  of  Life,  A. 
Royal  Mummy  to  Bohemia,  The. 
Wind  and  Wave. 
Stoddard,   Mrs.   Eliz.   Drew  [Barstow].  —  In  the  Still 
Star-lit  Night. 
Last  Days. 
Mercedes. 
November. 
On  the  Campawia. 
Poet's  Secret,  The. 
Summer  Night,  A. 
Unit,  A. 
Unreturning. 
Stoddard,  Lavinia. — Soul's  Defiance,  The. 
Stoddard,  R:  H: — Abraham  Lincoln.  (Sonnet.) 
Abraham  Lincoln[.  A  Horatian  Ode]. 
Adsimi. 
Arab  Song. 
At  Last. 
Birds. 

Birds  are  Singing  Round  My  Window.     See  Birds. 
Boast  Not.     See  Morals  of  Marcus  Aurelius,  The. 
Brahman's  Son,  The. 
Brahma's  Answer. 
Burial    of  Lincoln.      See   Abraham    Lincoln[.    A 

Horatian  Ode]. 
Castle  in  the  Air,  The. 
Catch,  A. 

Companions.  ♦ 

"Day  and  night  my  thoughts  incline." 
Divan,  The. 
Dying  Lover,  The. 

Falcon,  The.     See  "I  am  a  white  falcon,  hurrah!" 
Flight  of  the  Arrow,  The. 
Flight  of  Youth,  The. 
Gazelle,  A. 

"House  is  dark  and  dreary,  The." 
"I  am  a  white  falcon,  hurrah!" 
It  Never  Comes  Again.     See  Flight  of  Youth,  The. 
Jar,  The.  See  "Day  and  night  my  thoughts  incline." 
Legend,  A.     See  Roses  and  Thorns. 
Little  Drummer,  The. 
Longfellow,  Extract  Concerning. 
Lost.     See  Flight  of  Youth,  The. 
Lover,  The.     (Japan.) 
Men  of  the  North  and  West. 
Morals  of  Marcus  Aurelius,  The. 
Mors  et  Vita. 

Never  Again.     See  Flight  of  Youth,  The. 
Old  Song  Reversed,  An. 
"Out  of  the  deeps  of  Heaven." 
Pearls. 
"Perhaps   it   will    all   come   right   at   last."     See 

Wishing  and  Having. 
Roses  and  Thorns. 
Sea,  The  rStorm]. 
Shadow,  The. 

Sky,  The.     See  Sky  is  a  Drinking  Cup,  The. 
Sky  is  a  Drinking  Cup,  The. 
Songs. 

Sorrow  and  >Toy. 
^   There  are  Gains  for  all  our  Losses.     See  Flight  of 

Youth,  The. 
Thomas  Moore. 
Twilight  on  Sumter. 
Two  Anchors,  The. 
Under  the  Rose. 
Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. 
Why  Biddy  and  Pat  Married. 
Wine  and  Dew.     See  "You  may  drink  to  your 

leman  in  gold." 
Wishing  and  Having. 
Witch's  Whelp,  The. 
Without  and  Within. 

"You  may  drink  to  your  leman  in  gold." 
Stoddard,  W:  O. — Deacon's  Prayer,  The. 

Death  of  Garcia,  The.     See  Running  the  Cuban 

Blockade. 
Golden  Street,  The. 
Letter  to  Santa  Claus,  A. 
Parable  of  the  Wrecks,  The. 
Running  the  Cuban  Blockade. 


Stoddart,  Alfred.— Halliday  Hunt  Breakfast.  The. 

Skimpsey. 
Stoddart,  M.  A. — One  Thing  at  a  Time.     See  Work  and 
Play. 

Walk  in  Spring,  A. 

Work  and  Play. 
Stoddart,  T:  Tod.— Angler's  Invitation,  The. 

Angler's  Try  sting-tree,  The. 
Stokes,  Fs.  G. — Blue  Moonshine. 
Stokes,  Whitley.— King  Ailill's  Death. 

Lament  for  King  Ivor. 

Man  Octipartite. 
Stone,  Andrew  Leete.  (?) — Our  Flag. 

"Rally  round  the  Flag."     See  Our  Flag. 
Stone,  C.  S.— Good-by,  Winter! 
Stone,  Eudora  May. — Little  Folks,  The. 
Stone,  H:  Morgan. — Appropriate  Keepsake,  An. 

Tantalizing. 

Toast,  A. 
Stone,  J:  A: — Metamora. 
Stone,  L.  C. — To  Maude's  Guitar. 
Stone,  S.  C. — Notes  from  a  Battle-field. 
Storrs,  J:  W.— Only. 
Storrs,  R:  Salter. — Book  and  the  Building,  The. 

Happiest  Time  in  Life,  The. 

John  Wycliffe  and  the  Bible. 

On  the  Declaration  of  Independence. 

Puritan  Spirit,  The. 

Supremacy  of  Conscience,  The. 

"We  do  not  get  our  best  vision  of  heaven." 

"When   loss  of  property  and  loss  of  repute  are 
come." 
Story,  Jos. — Advice  to  a  Young  Lawyer. 

Advice  to  an  Advocate. 

Advice  to  Young  Lawyers.  See  Advice  to  a 
Young  Lawyer. 

American  Indians,  The.     See  Indians,  The. 

Appeal  for  Liberty,  An. 

Destiny  of  Our  Country. 

Eloquence  or  Oratory.  See  Advice  to  an  Advo- 
cate. 

Indians,  The. 

Our  Duties  [or  Duty]  to  the  Republic.  See  Des- 
tiny of  Our  Country. 

Our  Future.     See  Destiny  of  Our  Country. 

Responsibilities  of  our  Republic.  See  Destiny  of 
Our  Country. 

Responsibility  of  American  Citizens.  See  Destiny 
of  Our  Country. 

Shall  America  Betray  Herself.     See  Destiny  of  Our 
Country. 
Story,  Louisa  F. — Sometimes. 
Story,  Rob't.— Whistle.  The. 

Whistler,  The.     See  Whistle,  The. 
Story,  W :  Wetmore. — Battle  of  Morat,  The. 

Cleopatra. 

Giannone. 

Government  Spy,  The.     See  Giannone. 

English  Language,  The. 

He  and  She;  or,  A  Poet's  Portfolio. 

Henry  Wadsworth  Longfellow. 

lo  Victis.     See  He  and  She;  or,  A  Poet's  Portfolio. 

Leonardo  da  Vinci  Poetizes  to  the  Duke  in  his 
own  Defence.     (Tr.) 

Love. 

Love  and  Prudence. 

O  Filia  Pulchra!  See  He  and  She;  or,  A  Poet's 
Portfolio. 

On  the  Picture  of  the  Last  Supper,  at  Milan.  See 
Padre  Bandelli  Proses  to  the  Duke  Ludovico 
Sforza  about  Leonardo  da  Vinci. 

Padre  Bandelli  Proses  to  the  Duke  Ludovico 
Sforza  about  Leonardo  da  Vinci. 

Pan  in  Love. 

Perseverance.  (.Tr.)  See  Leonardo  da  Vinci  Po- 
etizes to  the  Duke  in  his  own  Defence. 

Praxiteles  and  Phryne. 

Sayings  and  Doings.  See  He  and  She;  or,  A 
Poet's  Portfolio. 

Song  for  the  Conquered,  A.  See  He  and  She;  or, 
A  Poet's  Portfolio. 

"Through  the  tense,  clear  sky  above  us."  See  Un 
Bacio  Dato  non  e  Mai  Perduto. 

Un  Bacio  Dato  non  e  Mai  Perduto. 

Violet,  The. 
Stoughton,  J: — Desirable  Objects  of  Attainment. 
Stout,  W.  Alex. — Pussy  Wants  a  Corner. 
Stover,  G:  H. — Oak's  Farewell,  The. 
Stowe,  Mrs.  C.  M. — Silver  Wedding,  The. 
Stowe,  Mr».  Harriet  Eliz.  [Beecher]. — Abide  in  Me,  and 
I  in  You. 

Canal-boat,  The. 

Cassy.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 


555 


Stowe 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Stowe,  Afrs.  Harriet  Eliz.  [Beecher]  (continued). 

Charmer,  The. 

Cruelty  of  I^egree,  The.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

Day  in  the  Pamfili  Doria,  A. 

Death    of    Uncle    Tom,    The.     See   Uncle    Tom's 
Cabin.  • 

Escape,  The.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin'. 

Eva's  Death.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

Freeman's  Defence,  The.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

Hours  of  the  Night — Third  Hour. 

In  the  Other  World.     See  Other  World,  The. 

Inter\'iew  between  Aaron  Burr  and  Mary  Scudder. 
iSee  Minister's  Wooing,  The. 

Knocking. 

laughing  [or  LaughinH  in  Meeting  [or  Meetin']. 
See  Sam  Law.son's  Fireside  Storie.s. 

Lines  to  the  Memory  of  "Annie." 

Little  Edward. 

Little  Eva.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

Little  Evangelist,  The.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

"Looking  over  the  world  on  a  broad  scale." 

Minister's  Housekeeper,  The.     See  Sam  Lawson's 
Fireside  Stories. 

Minister's  Wooing,  The. 

Only  a  Year. 

Other  World,  The. 

Parson's   Horse   Race,   The.     See  Sam   Lawson's 
Fireside  Stories. 

Peace  in  God.     See  Hours  of  the  Night. 

Poganuc  People. 

Sam  Lawson's  Fireside  Stories. 

Secret,  The. 

Soul's  Answer,  The.     See  Abide  in  Me,  and  I  in 
You. 

Still,  Still,  with  Thee.     See  When  I  Awake  I  am 
Still  with  Thee. 

Topsy.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

Topsy's  First  Lesson.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

Uncle     Abel     and     Little     Edward.     See     Little 
Edward. 

Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

Uncle  Tom's  Testament.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin. 

When  I  Awake  I  am  Still  with  Thee. 

Zeph  Higgins'  Confession.     See  Poganuc  People. 
Stowe,  W.  Walsham. — Poetry  and  the  Poor. 
Strafford,  T:  Wentworth,  Earl  o/.— Earl  of  Strafford's 
Defence,  The. 

Strafford's  Defence  Against  the  Charge  of  High 
Trea.son.     See  Earl  of  Strafford's  Defence,  The. 
Strangford,  G:  A:  F.  P.  S.  Smythe,   Viscount. — Aris- 
tocracy of  France,  The. 

Merchants  of  Old  England,  The. 
Strangford,  Percy  Clinton  Sydney  Smythe,  Viscount.— ■- 
Blighted  Love.     (.Tr.) 

Year  Ago,  A. 
Straton,  Barry. — America. 

Charity. 

Love's  Harvest. 
"Strau.ss,  Yawcob."     See  Adams,  C:  F. 
Streamer,  Col.  D. — Aunt  Eliza. 

Impetuous  Samuel. 

Misfortunes  never  Come  Singly. 

Tender-heartedness. 
Street,  Alfred  Billings.— Death  of  Osceola,  The. 

Gray  Forest  Eagle,  The. 

Loon,  The. 

Nightfall:  a  Picture. 

Settler,  The. 
Street,  Rev.  T:— My  Dog  "Sport." 
Streeter,  R.  M.-^ong  of  the  Maple. 

Wedding  Fee,  The. 
Streeter,  S.  F. — "Oh,  man,  boast  not  thy  'lion  heart.'  " 
Stretch,  Wesley. — Singing  across  the  Water. 

Widow's  Son  Restored  to  Life,  The. 
Stringer,  Arthur  J:  (Arbuthnot). — Beethoven. 

Beside  the  Martyr's  Memorial. 

Canada  to  England. 

Song  in  Autumn,  A. 
Strode,  W: — Kisses. 

Music. 

Praise  of  Music.     See  Music. 

Song:  In  Commendation  of  Music.     See  Music. 
Strong,  Hezekiah. — Railroad  Crossing,  The. 
Strong,  Latham  Cornell. — West  Point. 
Strong,  Philip  B.— Tongue,  The. 

Two  Chimneys,  The. 
Strongfeldt,  J.  Q.— Is  Fidelity  Eternal? 
Strozzi,  Giovanni. — Lines  Found  in  the  Hand  of  the 
Statue  of  Night  at  Florence  in  the  Sixteenth 
Century. 
Stryker,  Melanchthon  WooLsey. — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Simplicity. 
Stuart,  C.  D.— GenHe  Words. 


Stuart,  Esm(?. — Romance  of  the  Matterhorn.  A. 
Stuart,  Mary.     See  Mary,  Queen  of  Scots. 
Stuart,  Mrs.  Ruth  M'Enery. — Christmas  Guest,  A. 
Student,  The. — Arbor  Day. 
Sturm,  Julius. — God's  Anvil. 

I  Hold  Still.     See  God's  AnvU. 
Stuttle  [or  Suttle],  Mrs.  L.  D.  A. — Deacon's  Courtship, 
The. 
Wife-hunting  Deacon,  The.     See  Deacon's  Court- 
ship, The. 
"Stylites. '  '—Ballade. 
Suckling,  Sir  J: — Aglaura. 

Ballad  upon  a  Wedding,  A. 

Bride,  The.     See  Ballad  upon  a  Wedding,  A. 

Constancy.     See  Sir  J.  S. 

Constant  Lover,  The.     See  Sir  J.  S. 

Dance,  The.     See  Song:  "Love,  Reason,"  etc. 

Doubt  of  Martyrdom,  A. 

Encouragements  to  a  I..over.     See 'Aglaura. 

I  Prithee  Send  Me  Back  My  Heart.     See  Song: 

"I  prithee  send,"  etc. 
Lute  Song  in  "The  Sad  One,"  The. 
Moods.     See  Sir  .1.  S. 

Orsames'  Song  [in  "Aglaura"].     See  Aglaura. 
Sir  J.  S. 

Song:  "I  prithee  send  me  back  my  heart." 
Song:  "Love,  Rea.son,  Hate,  did  once  bespeak." 
Song:  "No,  no,  fair  heretic!  it  needs  must  be." 
Song:  "When,  Dearest,  I  but  think  of  thee." 
Song:  "Why  so  pale?"     See  Aglaura. 
Sonnet:     "Of  thee,  kind  boy,   I  ask  no  red  and 

white." 
To  a  Lover.     See  Aglaura. 

True  Love.     See  Song;  "No,  no,  fair  heretic,"  etc. 
Truth  in  I^ove.     See  Sonnet:  "Of  thee,  kind  boy, ' ' 

etc. 
When,  Dearest,  I  but  think  of  Thee.     See  Song: 

"When,  Dearest,"  etc. 
Why    so    Pale    and    Wan    [,    Fond  Lover]?     See 
Aglaura. 
Sullivan,  Alan. — Venice. 
White  Canoe,  The. 
Sullivan,  Ellen  T.— Birds  and  the  Children,  The. 

Three  Little  Lads. 
Sullivan,  Timothy  D. — Dear  Old  Ireland. 
Death  of  King  Conor  Macnessa. 
Michael  Dwyer. 
Steering  Home. 
You  and  I. 
Sullivan,  W: — President  Washington's  Receptions. 

Rum's  Devastation  and  Destiny. 
Summers,  T:  Osmond. — Keep  Those  Banners. 
Sumner,  C: — Age  of  Progress.    See  Scholar,  the  Jurist, 
the  Artist,  the  Philanthropist,  The. 
American  Flag,  The.     See  Are  We  a  Nation? 
Are  We  a  Nation? 
Battle,  A. 

Crime  against  Kansas,  The. 
Duties   of   Massachusetts   at   the   Present   Crisis: 

Foundation  of  the  Republican  Party. 
Horrors  of  War.     See  War  System  of  the  Com- 
monwealth of  Nations. 
Incentives  to  Duty.     See  Scholar,  the  Jurist,  the 

Artist,  the  Philanthropist,  The. 
Judicial  "Tribunals.     See  Duties  of  Massachusetts 

at  the  Present  Crisis. 
Kansas.     <^ee  Crime  against  Kansas,  The. 
Lafayette,  the  Faithful  One. 
I^aw  of  Human  Progress,  The. 
Law  of  Love  as  a  Rule  of  Conduct,  The.     See  True 

Grandeur  of  a  Nation,  The. 
Marquis  de  La  Fayette.     See  Lafayette,  the  Faith- 
ful One. 
National  Flag,  The.     See  Are  We  a  Nation? 
Our  Nation  and  Flag.     See  Are  We  a  Nation? 
Peace.     See  True  Grandeur  of  Nations,  The. 
Progress  is  Constant.     See  Law  of  Human  Pro- 
gress, The. 
Progress  of  Humanity,  The.     See  Law  of  Human 

Progress,  The. 
Scholar,  the  Jurist,  the  Artist,  the  Philanthropist, 

The. 
Sumner's   Tribute    to   William    Penn.     See   True 

Grandeur  of  Nations,  The. 
True  Grandeur  of  Nations,  The. 
"True  honor  of  a  nation  is  to  be  found  only  in 
deeds  of  justice.  The."     See  True  Grandeur 
of  Nations,  The. 
Victories  of  Peace,  The.     See  True  Grandeur  of 

Nations,  The. 
War.     See  War  System  of  the  Commonwealth  of 

Nations. 
War  System  of  the  Commonwealth  of  Nations. 


556 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Swinburne 


Sunday  Afternoon. — In  September. 

"It  sometimes  happens  that  two  friends  will  meet." 
Sunday  Magazine. — "If   you   have   gentle   words   and 
looks,  my  friends. ' ' 
Lord  Careth,  The. 
Moon  and  Dawn. 
Sunday  School  Advocate. — Temperance  Boy,  The. 
Sunday  School  Times. — Nathan's  Cas3. 
Supl(5e,  T:  Danby. — Horatii  and  Curiatii,  The. 
Surrey,  H:  Howard,  Earl  of. — Age  of  Children  Happi- 
est, The.     See  How  no  Age  is  Content. 
Complaint  by  Night  of   the  Lover  not  Beloved, 

A. 
Complaint   of  the    Absence   of  Her  Lover    being 

upon  the  Sea. 
Description  and  Praise  of  his  Love  Geraldine. 
Description  of  Spring. 

Epitaph  on  Clere,  Surrey's  Faithful   Friend  and 
Follower,    An.     See    Epitaph    on    Sir  Thomas 
Clere. 
Epitaph  on  Sir  Thomas  Clere. 
Give  Place,  Ye  Lovers.     See  Praise  of  his  Love, 

etc. 
Harpalus'  Complaint  of  Phillida's  Love  Bestowed 

on  Corin.  (?) 
How  no  Age  is  Content. 
Lines  written  in  Imprisonment  at  Wind.sor.     See 

Prisoned  in  Windsor,  etc. 
Means  to  Attain  Happv  Life,  The. 
No  Age  Content  with  his  Own  Estate.     See  How 

no  Age  is  Content. 
On  the  Death  of  Sir  Thomas  Wyatt. 
Praise  of  his  Love  [wherein  he  Reproveth  them  that 

Compare  their  Ladies  with  his],  A. 
Prisoned  in  Windsor  he  Recounteth  his  Pleasure 

there  Passed. 
Sonnet:  Complaint  of  a  Lover  Rebuked. 
Sonnet:   Description   of  Spring.     See   Description 

of  Spring. 
Sonnet:  Geraldine.     <See  Description  and  Praise  of 
his  Love  Geraldine.  * 

Surtees,  Rob't. — Barthram's  Dirge. 
SurtlefT,  Ernest  Warburton. — Proud  Winter  Cometh. 
Surville,  Clotilde  de. — Child  A.sleep,  The. 
Suter,  W.  E. — Wanted,  a  Young  Lady. 
Sutherland,    Millicent    Fanny    St.    Clair-Erskine    (7), 

Duchess  of. — Farewell,  A. 
Sutphen,  (W:  Gilbert)  Van  Tas.sel.— Deep  Waters. 
Suttle,  L.  D.  A.     See  Stuttle,  Mrs.  L.  D.  A. 
Sutton,  E.  A. — Grandma's  Shamrocks. 
Sutton,  G:  D. — Sara. 
Sutton,  G:  D.,  and  Benjamin,  C:  L. — Flag  that  Has 

never  Known  Defeat,  The. 
Swain,  C: — Child  and  the  Angels,  The. 
Dryburgh  Abbey. 
Heart  for  Every  One,  A. 
I  Waited  till  the  Twilight. 
Life. 
Love. 
"liOve?  I  will  tell  thee  what  it  is  to  love!"     See 

Love. 
Love's  Confession. 

One  Story's  Good  till  Another  is  Told. 
Rcse  thou  Gav'st,  The. 
Smile  and  never  Heed  Me. 
Something  Cheap. 
Take  the  World  as  It  Is. 
Tribute  to  Sir  Walter  Scott,  A.     See  Dryburgh 

Abbey. 
Tripping  down  the  Field-path. 
True  Nobility. 

'Twas  just  before  the  Hay  was  Mown. 
Violet  in  Her  Hair,  A. 
Swain,  Edith  L. — Happiness  and  Duty. 
Swain,  Leonard. — God's  Ownership  of  the  Sea. 
Swan,  E.  M. — Hannibal  on  the  Alps. 

Hannibal's  Address.     See  Hannibal  on   the  Alps. 
Swander,  Mrs.  R.  Morris. — False  Accusation,  The. 
Misfortune  of  Civil  War,  The. 

Mutual  Development  Society,  The ;  or.  Capital  vs. 
Labor. 
Swarthmore  Phoenix. — Ballad  of  College  Days,  A. 
Sweet,  Sarah  O.— Spendthrift  Doll,  The. 
Sweetzer,  Rev.  E.  C. — "Theatre  is  neither  moral  nor 

immoral.  The." 
Swett,  H.  B.— Gathering.  The. 
Swett,  Susan  Hartley. — Blue-jay,  The. 
Complaining  March. 
Julv. 
Swift,   Frances   Dorr.     See   Tatnall,    Mrs.    Frances 

Dorr  [Swift]. 
Swift,  Frd'k  J. — Career  of  Gordon,  The. 
Swift,  J:  Lindsay. — Soldier's  Monument,  The. 


Swift,  Dean  Jonathan. — Apollo's  Edict. 
Baucis  and  Philemon. 
Beasts'  Confession,  The. 
Cadenus  and  Vanessa. 
Cudgeled    Hu.sband,    The.     See    Epigram:     "As 

Thomas,"  etc. 
Day  of  Judgment,  The.  , 

Description  of  a  City  Shower,  A. 
Description  of  the  Morning,  A. 
Die. 

Echo,  An.    (?) 

Elegy  on  Partridge.     See  Grub  Street  Elegy,  A. 
Epigram:  "As  Thomas  was  cudgell'd,"  etc. 
Epigrams  against  Carthy. 
Epitaph  on  Demar  the  Usurer. 
Fan,  A.     See  On  a  Fan. 
Gentle  Echo  on  Woman,  A. 

Grub  Street  Elegy  on  the  Supposed  Death  of  Par- 
tridge the  Almanack  Maker,  A. 
Horace,  Bk.  4,  Ode  9,  Addressed  to  Archbishop 

King.  (Tr.) 
Jove  and  the  Souls.     See  Day  of  Judgment,  The. 
Love  Song,  in  the  Modern  Taste,  A.     (At.  also  to 

Alex.  Pope.) 
Mary  the  Cook-maid's  Letter  to  Doctor  Sheridan. 
Maypole,  A.  (?) 

Meditation  upon  a  Broom-stick,  A. 
Mrs.  Frances  Harris'  Petition. 
Moll.     See  To  Samuel  Bindon,  Esq. 
Morning  in  London.     See  Description  of  the  Morn- 
ing, A. 
Ode  on  Science. 
On  a  Candle.  (?) 
On  a  Cannon.  (7) 
On  a  Circle.  (7) 
On  a  Corkscrew.   (?) 
On  a  Fan. 

On  a  Pair  of  Dice.   (?) 
On  a  Pen.   (?) 

On  a  Shadow  in  a  Glass.   (?) 

On  a  Usurer.     See  Epitaph  on  Demar  the  Usurer. 
On  Burning  a  Dull  Poem. 
On  Ink. 
On  One  Delacourt's  Complimenting  Carthy  on  His 

Poetry.     See  Epigrams  against  Carthy. 
On    Seeing    the    Busts    of    Newton,    Locke,    and 

Others. 
On  Seeing  Verses  Written  upon  Windows  at  Inns. 
On  Snow.  (?) 
On  the  Church's  Danger. 
On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Swift. 
On  the  Five  Senses.  (?) 
On  the  Moon.   (?) 
On  the  Vowels. 

On  Time.  (?) 

Place  of  the  Damned,  The. 

Progress  of  Poetry,  The. 

Relations  of  Booksellers  and  Authors,  The.     See 
Tale  of  a  Tub,  A. 

Rever.se,  The;  or,  Mrs.  Cludd. 

Riddle,  A.     See  On  the  Vowels. 

Tale  of  a  Tub,  A. 

To  a  Lady.     See  To  Mrs.  Houghton  of  Bourmont, 
on  Praising,  etc. 

To  Mrs.  Biddy  Floyd ;  or,  The  Receipt  to  Form  a 
Beauty. 

To  Mrs.  Houghton  of  Bourmont,  on  Praising  her 
Husband  to  Dr.  Swift. 

To  My  Mistre.ss. 

To  Samuel  Bindon,  Esq. 

Tonis  ad  Resto  Mare.   (7) 

Twelve  Articles. 

Verses  on  the  Death  of  Dr.  Swift.     See  On  the 
Death  of  Dr.  Swift. 
Swinburne,  Algernon  C: — Adieux  k  Mary  Stuart. 

Age  and  Song. 

Armada,  The. 

Atalanta  in  Calydon. 

Ave  Atque  Vale. 

Baby's  Eyes.     See  Etitde  R^alist^. 

Baby's  Feet,  A.     See  Etude  R^alis,t(5. 

Baby's  Feet  and  Hands,,  A.     See  Etude  Realist*?. 

Baby's  Hands,  A.     See  Etude  R^alistd. 

Ballad  of  Dead  Men's  Bay,  The. 

Bothwell. 

Bride's  Tragedy,  The. 

Brothers,  The. 

Burton.     See  On  the  Death  of  Richard  Burton 

Casquettes,  The. 

Chastelard. 

Clhild's  Laughter,  A. 

Child's  Song. 


557 


Swinburne 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Swinburne,  Algernon  C:  (continued). 

Chorus:     "We    have    seen    thee,    O    love."     See 

Atalemta  in  Calvdon. 
Chorus:     "When  the  hounds,"  etc.     iSee  Atalanta 

in  Calydon. 
Chorus  from  "^alanta  [in  Calydon]."     See  Ata- 

tanta  in  Calydon. 
Disappointed  Lover,  The.    See  Triumph  of  Time, 

The. 
England.     See  Armada,  The. 
Envoi. 
Epicede. 
£tude  R^ist^. 
Farewell. 
Felise. 

First  Footsteps. 
Forsaken  Garden,  A.       ^ 
Garden  of  Proserpine,  The. 
"Green  earth  has  her  sons  and  her  daughters." 
Had  I  Wist. 
Heptalogia,  The. 
Hertha. 
Hesperia. 

Higher  Pantheism  in  a  Nutshell,  The. 
Hope  and  Fear. 
In  a  Garden. 

In  Memory  of  Barry  Cornwall. 
In  Memory  of  Walter  Savage  Landor. 
In  San  Lorenzo. 
Itylus. 

Jacobite  in  Exile,  A. 
John  Jones. 

John  Knox's  Indictment  of  the  Queen.     See  Both- 
well. 
Kind's  Daughter,  The. 
Kissmg  Her  Hair. 
Love  at  Sea. 

Making  of  Man,  The.     jSee  Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
Match,  A. 
Memorial    Verses    on    the    Death    of    Th^ophile 

Gautier. 
NeU  Gwynn. 

Nephelidia.     See  Heptalogia,  The. 
New  Year's  Eve.     See  Age  and  Song. 
Not  a  Chad. 
Oblation,  The. 
On  the  Cliffs. 

On  the  Death  of  Richard  Burton. 
On  the  Deaths  of  Thomas  Carlyle  and  George  Eliot. 
On  the  Monument  Erected  to  Mazzini  at  Genoa. 
Rondel.     See  Kissing  Her  Hair. 
Rosamond. 

Rosamond  at  Woodstock.     See  Rosamond. 
Roundel,  The. 
Sappho.     See  On  the  Cliffs. 
Sea-swallows,  The. 
Song:     "O  lips  that  mine  have  grown  into."     See 

Felise. 
Soul  and  Body.     See  Atalanta  in  Calydon. 
Statue  of  Victor  Hugo,  The. 
Swimming.     See  Tristram  of  Lyonesse. 
Th^phile  Gautier.     See  Memorial  Verses  on  the 

Death  of  Th^ophile  Gautier. 
To  Dr.  John  Brown. 
Tristram  of  Lyonesse. 
Triumph  of  Time,  The. 

Victor  Hugo.     <See  Statue  of  Victor  Hugo,  The. 
We  Have  Seen  Thee,  O  Love.     See  Atalanta  in 

Calydon. 
When  the   Hounds  of  Spring.     See  Atalanta  in 

Calydon. 
White  Butterflies.     See  Envoi. 
Witch-mother,  The. 
Swinburne.  T:  Thackery. — Parting  Song. 
Swinerton,  J.  G. — Old  Man  Goes  to  Town,  The. 
Swing,  D: — "As  the  highly  colored  birds  do  not  fly 

around  in  the  dull." 
Beautiful  Hands. 

"Clergymen  while  speaking  in  the  pulpit." 
Easter. 
"Let  us  learn  to  be  content  with  what  we  have, 

with  the  place  we  have  in  life." 
Lincoln's  Birthday. — February  12,  1809. 
Memorial  Hymn — J.  A.  Garfield. 
"Of  all  the  solemnities  of  which  the  mind  can 

conceive,  death  is  the  greatest." 
"Supernatural  in  this  Jesus  is  the  best  hope  of 

the  world.  The." 
"Was  James  A.  Garfield  great?     Ask  those  early 

years." 
Yesterday. 
Swingle,  Emma  F. — Rest  for  the  Weary. 
Switer,  W:  H.— Ruling  Passion,  The. 


"Sylva,  Carmen."     <See  Elizabeth  Pauline  Attilia, 

Queen  of  Roumania. 
Sylvester,  Mra.  Clara  A. — Trusty  and  True. 
Sylvester,  Joshua. — Contented  Mind,  The.     See  Con- 
tentment. 

Contentment. 

Love's  Omnipresence. 

"Oh  courage!  there  he  comes." 

Sonnet:     'HiVere  I  as  base  as  is  the  lowly  plain." 
See  Love's  Omnipresence. 

Ubique.     See  Love's  Omnipresence. 

Were  I  as  Base  as  is  the  Lowly  Plain.     See  Love's 
Omnipresence. 
Sjrmon  [C:  Simeon?]. — Lesson  of  Wisdom  for  All  Man- 
ner of  Children. 
Symonds,  J:  Addington. — Christmas  Lullaby,  A. 

Episode,  An. 

Fall  of  a  Soul,  The. 

Farewell. 

II  Fior  degli  Eroici  Furori. 

In  February. 

Jews'  Cemetery  on  the  Lido,  The. 

Lost  Love,  A. 

Lux  Est  Umbra  Dei. 

Mystery,  A. 

Nightingale.  The. 

Parting  in  Dreamland,  A. 

Sonnet,  The. 

Thyself. 

Venice. 
Symons,  Arthur. — After  Love. 

At  Fontainebleau. 

During  Music. 

Javanese  Dancers. 

To  a  Portrait. 
Syracuse  University  Herald. — Beloved  Syracuse. 


T.,  A.  J.— What  is  Love? 

T.,  C.  S.— Poet,  The. 

T.,  E.  M.— Rocks  of  Mt.  Desert,  The. 

T.,  S.  L.— Social  Scale,  The. 

T.,  W.— Awful  Fly,  An. 

For  a  Girl  Ten  Years  Old. 

Quarrelsome  Boy,  The. 
Tabb,  Rev.  J:  Banister. — Alter  Ego. 

Annunciation,  'The. 

Anonymous. 

Assumption,  The. 

At  Bethlehem.     See  Child,  The. 

Becalmed. 

Bubble,  The. 

Bunch  of  Roses,  A. 

Child,  The. 

Childhood. 

Clover. 

Confided. 

Departed,  The. 

Druid,  The. 

Earth's  Tribute. 

Easter. 

Evolution. 

Fame. 

Father  Damien. 

Fern  Song. 

Humming-bird,  The. 

In  Absence. 

Incarnation,  The. 

Indian  Summer. 

Nekros. 

Paschal  Moon,  The. 

Playmates,  The. 

Resurrection. 

Sisters,  The. 

Sunbeam,  The. 

Tax-gatherer,  The. 

To  Shelley. 

To  the  Christ. 

Water-lily,  The. 

White  Jessamine,  The. 
Tacitus,  Caius  Cornelius. — Annals. 

Calgacus  [or  Galgacus]  to  the  Caledonians.       See 
Life  of  Cnaeus  Julius  Agricola. 

Germanicus  to  His  Mutinous  Troops.     See  Annals. 

Life  of  Cnaeus  Julius  Agricola. 
Tadema,  Laurence  Alma.       See  Alma-Tadema,  Lau- 
rence. 
Taggart,  Alice  R. — Love's  Token. 

Tame,  Hippolyte  Adolphe. — "Critic  is  now  aware  that 
his  personal  taste  has  no  value,  A." 


558 


AUTHOR  INDEX                                                     Taylor 

Talbot,  C:  R.— Lesson  in  Weighing,  A. 

Taylor,  Bayard  {continued). 

Number  One. 

Hassan  Ben  Khaled.     See  Temptation  of  Hassan 

Talbot,  J.  J. — Voice  of  Despair,  The. 
Talfourd,  F.— Household  Fairy,  A. 

Ben  Khaled,  The. 

Hylas. 

Talfourd,  Sir  T:  Noon.— Charity. 

Inscription  to  the  Mistress  of  Cedarcroft. 

Death  of  Queen  Carolina,  The. 

King  of  Thule,  The.     {Tr.)     See  Faust.— Johann 
W.  von  Goethe. 

Extension  of  the  Term  of  Copyright. 

International  Copyright,  An. 

Kubleh. 

Ion,  a  Tragedy. 

Reality  of  Literary  Property. 

Sympathy.     See  Ion. 

Lost  May,  The. 

Metempsychosis  of  the  Pine. 

Mon-da-min. 

'Tis  a  Little  Thing. 

National  Ode:  Read  at  the  Celebration  in  Inde- 

World Without  and  Within,  The. 

pendence  Hall,  Philadelphia,  July  4,  1876. 

Talhaiarn, . — Where  are  the  Men? 

Night  with  a  Wolf,  A.     See   Story  for  a  Child,  A. 
Ode  on  a  Jar  of  Pickles.     See  Echo  Club,  The. 

Talmage,  T:  De  Witt.— Archfiend  of  Nations,  The. 

Back  from  the  War. 

On  the  Sea. 

Bible,  The. 

Palabras  Grandiosas.     See  Echo  Club,  The. 

Carlo  and  the  Freezer. 

Palm  and  the  Pine,  The. 

Christmas  Thoughts. 

Phantom,  The. 

Curse  of  Drink,  The. 

Poet's  Journal,  The. 

Cut  Behind. 

Possession. 

Grandmother's  Spectacles. 

Praise.     See  Poet's  Journal,  The. 

Half  was  not  Told  Me,  The. 

Prayer,  A.     See  Poet's  Journal,  The. 

Hand,  The. 

Proposal. 

High  License. 

Quaker  Widow,  The. 

Hobbies. 

Return  of  Spring,  The. 

Home. 

Rose,  The.     See  Temptation  of  Hassan  Ben  Kha- 

National Prohibition. 

led,  The. 

Original  Liquor  League,  The. 

Scott  and  the  Veteran. 

Our  National  Curse. 

"She  takes  but  to  give  again."      See    National 

Our  Regiments  of  Reform. 

Ode. 

Power  of  Music,  The. 

Soldier  and  the  Pard,  The. 

Queen  Vashti. 

Song:  "Daughter  of  Egypt,  veil  thine  eyes." 

Rum  Fiend's  Portrait,  The. 

Song  of  1876,  The. 

Rum  the  Worst  Enemy  of  the  Working-classes. 

Song  of  the  Camp,  The. 

Suicide;  or,  The  Sin  of  Self-destruction. 

Spirit  of  the  Pine,  The.     See  Metempsychosis  of 

Swallowing  a  Fly. 

the  Pine. 

To  the  Dykes! 

Stone-cutter,  The. 

Tragedy,  A. 

Storm  Song. 

Women's  Dispositions. 

Story  for  a  Child,  A. 

World  We  Live  In,  The. 

Sunset.     See  Inscription  to  the  Mistress  of  Cedar- 

Wreck of  the  Huron. 

croft. 

Talmud,  The.— Two  Brothers,  The. 

Sunshine  of  the  Gods,  The. 

Tannahill,  Rob't. — Braes  o'  Balquhither,  The. 

Temptation  of  Hassan  Ben  Khaled,  The. 

Flower  o'  Dumblane,  The. 

"They  turned  to  the  earth,  but  she  frowns  on  her 

Jessie,  the  Flower  o'  Dumblane.     See  Flower  o' 

child." 

Dumblane,  The. 

Through  Baltimore. 

Midges  Dance  aboon  the  Burn,  The. 

Tomb  of  Charlemagne,  The. 

Tappan,  Eva  M. — -Bertie's  Philosophy. 

To  M.  T. 

Tappan,  W:  Bingham. — Hour  of  Peaceful  Rest,  The. 

Tulip  Tree,  The. 

Tarbox,  Rev.  Increase  Niles. — Ride  on  the  Black  Val- 

Wait. (7) 

ley  Railroad  [,  A]. 
Solomon's  Wise  Choice. 

Wind  and  the  Sea,  The. 

Taylor,  B:  Franklin. 

"With  gentle  looks  and  hearts  made  calm  by  sor- 

Baggage. 

row.  ' ' 

Bark  of  True  Love,  The.     See  Bark  "True  Love, ' ' 

Tarson,  C:— Scene  at  Niagara  Falls, 

The. 

Tassin,  Algernon. — Attainment. 

Bark  "True  Love,"  The. 

Autumn  Wedding-song,  An. 

Battle  of  Mission  Ridge,  The.     See  Storming  of 

In  the  Hospital. 

Mission  Ridge,  The. 

Tasso,  Torquato. — Jersalem  Delivered. 

Battle  Poem,  A. 

Shepherd's  Song,  The.      See  .lerusalem  Delivered. 

Bell,  The.     See  Baggage. 

Sophronia  and  Olindo.     See  Jerusalem  Delivered. 

Burning  of  Chicago,  "The.     See  Fort  Dearborn. 

Tastu,  Mme.  Sabine  Casimere  Amable  [Voiart]. — I/ittle 

Capture  of  Lookout  Mountain,  The. 

Nurse,  The. 

Cavalry  Charge,  The. 

To  the  Guardian  Angel. 

Churning,  The. 

Tate,  Nahum.— Christmas. 

Dead  Grenadier,  The. 

While    Shepherds    Watched    [Their    Flocks    by 

Fort  Dearborn. 

Night].     See  Christmas. 

Going  Home. 

Tate,  Nahum,  and  Brady,  N:— Psalm  C. 
Tatlow,  Edson  W.  B. — Borrowed  Baby.  The. 

Gone  Before.                                                                . 

Heroes  and  the  Flowers,  The.     (Rose  Hill.) 

Tatnall,  Mrs.  Frances  Dorr  [Swift].— Art  Thou  the  Same. 

Isle  of  [the— C]  Long  Ago,  The. 

Taylor,  — — . — Frank  Hayman. 

Long  Ago,  The.     See  Isle  of  Long  Ago,  The. 

Still  Waters  run  Deep. 

Mary  Butler's  Ride. 

Taylor,  Ann.     See  Gilbert,  Mr«.,  aZso  Taylor,  Jane 

Money  Musk. 

AND  Ann. 

Month  of  Mars,  The.     See  October. 

Taylor,  Bayard. — America.     See  National  Ode. 

Northern  Lights,  The. 

Arab  to  the  Palm,  The. 

October. 

Ariel  in  the  Cloven  Pine. 

Old  Barn,  The.     See  Money  Musk. 

Ballad   of  Hiram   Hover,  The.     See   Echo  Club, 

Old  Village  Choir,  The. 

The. 

Old-fashioned  Choir,  The.     See  Old  Village  Choir. 

Bedouin  Love-song.     See  Bedouin  Song. 

The. 

Bedouin  Song. 

Psalm-book  in  the  Garret,  The. 

Crimean    Incident,  A.     See    Song  of   the    Camp, 

Rescue,  The. 

The. 

River  Time,  The.     See  Isle  of  Long  Ago,  The. 

Dedicatory  Ode  for  the  Gettyssburg  National  Ceme- 

School "Called." 

tery.     <See, Gettysburg  Ode. 

Storming  of  Mission  Ridge,  The. 

Demon  of  the  Mirror,  The. 

Success. 

Echo  Club,  The. 

Vane  on  the  Spire,  The. 

El  Canalo. 

Taylor,  C:  E:— For  Sale,  a  Horse. 

Fight  of  Paso  del  Mar,  The. 

Taylor,  Emily.— Absence.     {Tr.) 

Friend's  Greeting,  A. 

Contented  John.     {At.  also  to  Jane  Taylor.) 

Gettysburg  Ode. 

Taylor,  Mrs.   Enoch. — Church  Reveries  of  a  School- 

Goblet, The. 

girl. 

559 


Taylor 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Taylor,   G:    Lansing. — Alexander    Breaking    Buceph- 
alus. 
Christmas  Bells. 
God's  Ragamuffin  Army. 
Jehosaphat's  Deliverance. 
No  Slave  benea*  that  Starry  Flag.     See  No  Slave 

beneath  the  Flag. 
No  Slave  beneath  the  Flag. 
Pax  Vobiscum! 

Prohibition  the  Only  Safeguard  for  Youth. 
Temperance  Enlightening  the  World. 
Taylor,  H.  S. — Man  with  the  Musket,  The. 
Taylor,  Sir  H: — Aretina's  Song.  * 

Artevelde.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 

Artevelde's  Vision.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 

Athulf  and  Ethilda. 

Charac  terizat  ion . 

Edwin  the  Fair. 

Elena's  Song.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 

Heart-rest.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 

Hero,  The. 

"How  little  flattering  is  a  woman's  love." 

In   Remembrance   of   the   Hon.    Edward    Ernest 

Villiers. 
John  of  Launoy.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
"Nay,  said  I  not."     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Philip  van  Artevelde  to  the  Men  of  Ghent.     See 

Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Philip  van  Artevelde's  Defence  of  His  Rebellion. 

See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Revolutions.     <See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Scholar,  The.     See  Edwin  the  Fair. 
Song:     "Down  lay  in  a  nook  my  lady's  brach." 

See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Song:     "(^uoth  tongue  of  neither  maid  nor  ivife." 

See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Van  Artevelde  to  the  Men  of  Ghent.     See  Philip 

van  Artevelde. 
Van  den  Bosch  and  van  Artevelde.     See  Philip 

van  Artevelde. 
Voice  of  the  Wind.     See  Edwin  the  Fair. 
What  Makes  a  Hero.     See  Hero,  The. 
Wife,  A.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 
Wind  in  the  Pines,  The.     See  Edwin  the  Fair. 
Taylor,    J.    E. — "If   it   be   true   that    any   beauteous 

thing."     {Tr.)     .See  Sonnet. 
Might  of  One  Fair  Face,  The.     (Tr.) 
"Might  of  one  fair  face  sublimes  my  love.  The." 

(Tr.)     See  Might  of  One  Fair  Face,  The. 
Sonnet:     "If  it  be  true,"  etc.     {Tr.) 
Taylor,  Jane. — "Ah,  dear  papa,  did  you  but  know." 

See  Petition. 
Chatterbox,  The. 

Contented  John.     {At.  also  to  Emily  Taylor.) 
Contrasted  Soliloquies. 
Discontented  Pendulum,  The. 
Forgiveness. 
Fox  and  the  Crow,  The. 
Gleaner,  The. 
God    Made    All    Things.      See    Works    of    God, 

The.   - 
Love  of  Jesus. 
Petition. 

Philosopher's  Scales,  The. 
Poppy,  The. 

Pretty  Cow.     See  Thank  you.  Pretty  Cow. 
Squire's  Pew,  The. 

Star,  The.     See  Twinkle,  Twinkle,  Little  Star. 
•  Thank  You,  Pretty  Cow. 
Toad's  Journal,  The. 
Twinkle,  Twinkle[,  Little  Star]. 
Violet,  The.     (At.  also  to  Jas.  Beatty.) 
Way  to  be  Happv. 

Wooden  Doll  and  the  Wax  Doll,  The. 
Works  of  God,  The. 
Taylor,  Jane  and  Ann. — Another  Plum-Cake. 
Birds,  Beasts,  and  Fishes. 
Boys  and  the  Apple  Tree,  The. 
False  Alarms. 

Frances  Keeps  her  Promise. 
George  and  the  Chimney-sweep. 
Greedy  Richard. 

James  and  the  Shoulder  of  Mutton. 
Last  Dying  Speech  and  Confession  of  Poor  Puss, 

The. 
Little  Fisherman,  The. 
Notorious  Glutton,  The. 
Meddlesome  Matty. 
Plum  Cake.  The. 
Truant  Boys,  The. 
Two  Gardens,  The. 
Vulgar  I>ittle  Lady,  The. 
Taylor,  Jeffreys. — Milkmaid,  The. 


Taylor,    Jeremy. — Christ's    Coming    to    Jerusalem    in 
Triumph.     .See  Second  Hymn  for  Advent,  The. 

Heaven.     .See  Of  Heaven. 

Of  Heaven. 

Prayer. 

Second  Hymn  for  Advent,  The. 
Taylor,  Jerome. — Drunkard,  The. 
Taylor,  J : — Monsieur  Tonson. 
Taylor,  Jos.  Russell. — Flute,  The. 

Veery-thrush,  The. 
Taylor,  M.  J. — Gentle  Words. 
Taylor,   Tom    ("Mark   Lemon"). — Abraham    Lincoln. 

Burlesque  Challenge  to  America,  A. 

Fool's  Revenge,  The. 

"Oh,  would  I  were  a  boy  again." 

Old  Time  and  I. 

On  the  Assassination  of  Lincoln.     .See  Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Patriot  President,  The.     .See  Abraham  Lincoln. 
Taylor,  W :  M.— Put  out  That  Fire. 
Tech,  The.— She  Still  Wins. 
Tekahionwake.     See  Johnson,  E.  Pauline. 
Temple  Bar.— Rest  in  the  Grave. 
Ten  Eyck,  E.  E. — Daniel  in  the  Lions'  Den. 
Tennant,  W : — Anster  Fair. 

Ode  to  Peace. 

Rab  the  Ranter's  Bag  Pipe  Playing.     See  Anster 
Fair. 
Tennessee  University  Magazine. — Our  Favourite  Hymn. 
Tenney,  S.  G. — Ah,  L^issie  Fair! 

"Well,  Dinah  Might." 
Tennyson,  Alfred,  Lord. — "Ah,  When  Shall  All  Men's 
Good."     See  Golden  Year,  The. 

Akbar's  Dream. 

Albert  the  Good.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Alexandra.     See  Welcome  to  Alexandra,  A. 

All  is  Well.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Amphion. 

April.     See  In  Memoriam. 

April  Days.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Arrival,  'The.     See  Day-dream,  The. 

Arthur  Henry  Hallam.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Arthur's  Farewell.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Ask  Me  no  More.    See  Princess,  The. 

As  thro'  the  Land.     See  Princess,  The. 

At  Life's  Best. 

At  the  Window.     See  Enoch  Arden. 

Autumn.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Aylmer's  Field. 

Ballad  of  Oriana,  The. 

Ballad  of  the  Fleet,  A.     See  "Revenge,"  The. 

Becket. 

Becket  Saves  Rosamund.     See  Becket. 

Beggar  Maid,  The. 

Beggar  Maid  and  King  Cophetua,  The.     See  Beg- 
gar Maid.  The. 

Bells  of  Yule.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Bird  and  the  Baby,  The. 

Birdie  and  Baby.     See  Bird  and  the  Baby,  The. 

"Birds  in  the  high  hall-garden." 

Birth  of  Christ.  Ihe.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Blackbird,  The. 

Blow,  Bugle.     .See  Princess,  The. 

Blow,  Bugle,  Blow.     See  Princess,  The. 

Bower  Scene  from  "Becket,"  The.     See  Becket. 

Break,  Break,  Break. 

Brook,  The. 

Bugle,  The.     See  Princess,  The. 

Bugle  Song[,  The].     See  Princess,  The. 

Burial  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington.     See  Ode  on 
the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. 

Captain,  "The. 

Charge    of   the    Heavy   Brigade    [at    Balaklava], 
The. 

Charge  of  the  Light  Brigade  [at  Balaklava],  The. 

Child  and  the  Sunshine,  The. 

Choric  Song.     See  Lotos-eaters,  The. 

Christmas.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Christmas-bells.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Circumstance. 

City  Child,  The. 

Claribel. 

Come  Down,  O  Maid.     See  Princess.  The. 

Come  into  the  Garden,  Maud.     See  Maud. 

Come  not.  when  I  am  Dead. 

Coming  of  Arthur.  The.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Contemplate  all  this  Work.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Cradle  Song.     .See  Bird  and  the  Baby,  The. 

Crossing  the  Bar. 

Crowning  of  Arthur,  The,     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Daisy,  The. 

Day-dream.  The. 

Days  that  are  no  More,  The.     See  Princess.  The. 

Dead,  in  a  Foreign  Land.     See  In  Memoriam. 


560 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Tennyson 


Tennyson,  Alfred,  Lord  {continued). 

Dear  Friend,  The.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Death  in  Life's  Prime.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Death  of  the  Old  Year,  The. 

Dedication  to  Idylls  of  the  King.     See  Idylls  of  the 

King. 
Dedicatory  Poem  to  the  Princess  Alice. 
Defence  of  Lucknow,  The. 
Departure,  The.     See  Day-dream,  The. 
Deserted  House,  The. 
Despair. 
Dirge,  A. 
Dora. 

Dost  Thou  Look  Back?  See  In  Memoriam. 
Dragon-fiy,  The.     See  Two  Voices,  The. 
Dream  of  Fair  Women,  A. 
Duke  of  Wellington,  The.     See  Ode  on  the  Death 

of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. 
Eagle,  The. 
Early  Spring. 
Edward  Gray. 

Elaine.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Eleanore. 

England  and  America  [in  1782]. 
Enid.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Enid's  Song      See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Enoch  Arden. 

Enoch  Arden  at  the  Window.     See  Enoch  Arden. 
Epitaph  on  General  Gordon. 
Eve  of  St.  Agnes.     See  St.  Agnes'  Eve. 
Evening.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Falcon,  The. 
Far — far — away. 
Farewell,  A. 

Farewell  of  Enoch  Arden.  The.     See  Enoch  Arden. 
First  Quarrel,  The. 
Flower,  The. 

Flower  in  the  Crannied  Wall. 
Foolish  Virgins,  The.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
"For  I  tru.st  if  an  enemy's  fleet  came  yonder  round 

by  the  hill."     See  Maud. 
Foresters,  The. 
Frater  Ave  atque  Vale. 

Friendship.     See  To . 

Garden  Song.     See  Maud. 

Gardener's  Daughter,  The. 

Gareth.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Gareth  and  Lynette.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Gate  of  Camelot,  The.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Geraint  and  Enid.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

God  and  the  Universe. 

Godiva. 

Golden  Supper,  The.     See  Lover's  Tale,  The. 

Golden  Year,  The. 

Grandmother's  Apology,  The. 

Grasshopper,  The. 

Grief  Unspeakaple.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Guinevere.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 

Happiest  Hour,  The.     See  Queen  Mary. 

Harold. 

Heavy  Brigade,  The.     See  Charge  of  the  Heavy 

Brigade,  The. 
Hero  to  Leander. 
Higher  Pantheism,  The. 
Home.     See  Princess,  The. 
Home   They   Brought    Her  Warrior  [Dead].     See 

Princess,  The. 
How  to  be  Noble.     See  I^ady  Clara  Vere  de  Vere. 
r"      Hymn:  "Once  again  thou  flamest  heavenward." 

See  Akbar's  Dream. 
;         "I  Live  for  Thee."     See  Princess,  The. 
Idylls  of  the  King. 
In  Memoriam. 
In  the  Children's  Hospital. 
In  the  Fight.     See  Princess,  The. 
In  the  Valley  of  Cauteretz. 

"It  is  the  miller's  daughter."     See  Miller's  Daugh- 
ter, The. 
King  Arthur  and  Queen  Guinevere.     See  Idylls  of 

the  King. 
King  Richard  in  Sherwood  Forest.    See  Foresters, 

The. 
Lady  Clara  Vere  de  Vere. 
I^ady  Clare. 
Lady  of  Shalott,  The. 

Lancelot  and  Elaine.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Land  of  Lands,  The.     See  You  Ask  me  why,  tho' 

111  at  Ease. 
"Land  which  freemen  till.  The."     See  You  Ask  me 

why,  tho'  111  at  Ease. 
Landscape     See  In  Memoriam. 
Late,  Late,  vSo  Late!     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Leolin  and  Edith.     See  Aylmer's  Field. 
Letters,  The. 


Tennyson,  Alfred,  Lord  {continued). 
Lilian. 

Little  Birdie.     See  Bird  and  the  Baby,  The. 
Locksley  Hall. 
Lord  of  Burleigh,  The. 
Lotos-eaters,  The. 
Love  and  Death. 

Love  and  Duty.  » 

"Love  is  come  with  a  song  and  a  smile."     See 

Harold. 
Love  Thou  Thy  Land. 
Lover's  Tale,  The.  . 

"Love's  arms  were  wreatned  about  the  neck  of 

Hope."     See  Lover's  Tale,  The. 
Lullaby:  "Sweet  and  low."     See  Princess,  The. 
Mariana. 

Mariana  in  the  South. 

Marriage  of  Geraint,  The.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Mary.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Maud. 

May  Queen,  The. 
Memory.     See  Ode  to  Memory. 
Merlin  and  Vivien.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Mermaid,  The. 
Merman,  The. 
Miller's  Daughter,  The. 
Milton. 

Minnie  and  Winnie. 
Moral.     See  Day-dream,  The. 
"More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer."     See  Morte 

d'Arthur. 
Morning  Song.     See  Bird  and  the  Baby,  The. 
Morte  d'Arthur. 

Murderer  of  Thomas  k  Becket,  The.     See  Becket. 
My  Love  has  Talked.     See  In  Memoriam. 
"My  own  dim  life  should  teach  me  this."     See  In 

Memoriam. 
Mystery  of  Life. 

National  Song.     See  Foresters,  The. 
New  Y''ear,  The. 

New  Year,  The.     See  also  In  Memoriam. 
New  Year's  Eve.     See  In  Memoriam. 
New  Year's  Eve.     See  also  May  Queen,  The. 
Northern  Cobbler,  The. 
Northern  Farmer.     (New  Style.) 
Northern  Farmer.     (Old  Style.) 
O  Days  and  Hours.     See  In  Memoriam. 
"O  let  the  solid  ground."     See  Maud. 
O  Swallow,  Swairow[,  Flying  South].      See   Prin- 
cess, The. 
O  that  'twere  Possible.     See  Maud. 
O  Yet  We  Trust  [that  somehow  Good].     See  In 

Memoriam. 
Oak,  The. 

Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. 
Ode,  Sung  at  the  Opening  of  the  International 

Exhibition. 
Ode  to  Memory. 

CEnone;  or.  The  Choice  of  Paris. 
Of  old  sat  Freedom  on  the  Heights. 
"Oh,  heart  of  God  that  pities  all!" 
Oh,  that  'twere  Possible.     See  Maud. 
"Oh,  yet  we  trust  [that  somehow  good]."     See  In 

Memoriam. 
Old  Home,  The.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Old  Year  and  the  New,  The.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Olivia.     See  Talking  Oak,  The. 
On  the  Death  of  Duke  of  Wellington.     See  Ode 

on  the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. 
One  Writes  that  Other  Friends  Remain.     See  In 

Memoriam. 
Owd  Roii. 
Owl,  The. 

Passing  of  Arthur,  The.     See  Idvlls  of  the  King. 
Path  of  Duty,  The.     See  Ode  on  the  Death  of  the 

Duke  of  Wellington. 
Peace  of  Sorrow,  The.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Personal  Resurrection.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Poet's  Mind,  The. 
Poet's  Song,  The. 

Poet's  Tribute,  The.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Pray  for  My  Soul.     See  Morte  d'Arthur. 
Prayer.     See  Morte  d'Arthur. 
Prayer,  The.     See  Maud. 

Prince  Consort,  The.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Princess,  The. 
Queen  Mary. 

Reconciliation,  The.     See  Princess,  The. 
Retrospection.     See  Princess,  The. 
"Revenge,"  The:  A  Ballad  of  the  Fleet. 
Revival,  The.     See  Day-dream,  The. 
Ring  out.  Wild  Bells.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Rizpah. 
Round  Table,  The.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 


561 


Tennyson 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Tennyson,  Alfred,  Lord  {continued). 
Sailor  Boy.  The. 
St.  Agnes'  Eve. 

Sea,  The.     See  Break,  Break,  Break. 
Sea  Dreams.     See  Bird  and  the  Baby,  The. 
Second  Song— Ijj  the  Owl.     See  Song— The  Owl. 
Separation.     Se^n  Memoriam. 
Shell,  The.     See  Maud. 
Silent  Voices,  The. 
Sir  Galahad. 
Sir  John  Franklin. 
Sir  Launcelot  and  Queen  Guinevere. 
Sleeping  Beauty,  The.     See  Day-dream,  The. 
Sleeping  Palace,  The.     iSec  Day-dream,  The. 
Sobbing.     <S'ee  Dora. 
Song:  "In  love,  if  love  be  love."     »See  Idylls  of  the 

King. 
Song:  "The  winds  as  at  their  hour  of  birth." 
Song  in  "The  Foresters."     See  Foresters,  The. 
Song  of  Elaine.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Song  of  the  Brook.     See  Brook,  The. 
Song  of  the  Lotos-eaters[,  The].     See  Lotos-eaters, 

The. 
Song  of  the  Maiden.     See  Princess,  The. 
Song  of  the  Milkmaid.     See  Queen  Mary. 
Song  of  Vivien.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Song— The  Owl. 

Spiritual  Communions.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Spiritual  Companionship.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Sfendour  Falls  on  Castle  Walls,  The.     See  Prin- 
cess, The. 
Spring.     See  In  Memoriam. 

Stanzas  from  "In  Memoriam".    See  In  Memoriam. 
Strife,  The.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Strong  Son  of  God,  Immortal  Love.     See  In  Me- 
moriam. 
Summer  is  Coming.     See  Throstle,  The. 
Summer  Night.     See  Princess,  The. 
Sweet  and  Low.     See  Princess,  The. 
Talking  Oak,  The. 

Tears,  Idle  Tears.     See  Princess,  The. 
That    which  We   Dare  Invoke  to  Bless.     See  In 

Memoriam. 
.    Throstle,  The. 

Thy  Voice  is  Heard  [thro'  Rolling  Drums].     See 

Princess,  The. 
Time  and  Eternity.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Tithonus. 

To :  "As  when  with  downcast  eye." 

To  the  Critic.     See  Poet's  Mind,  The. 

To  the  Memory  of  Prince  Albert.     See  Idylls  of 

the  King. 
To  the  Princess  Alice.      See  Dedicatory  Poem  to 

the  Princess  Alice. 
To  the  Queen. 
To  the  Rev.  F.  D.  Maurice. 
To  Victor  Hugo. 
To  Virgil. 
To-morrow. 
"Too  hard  to  bear!  Why  did  they  take  me  thence?" 

See  Enoch  Arden. 
Tribute  to  Motherhood,  A.     See  Princess,  The. 
Tristram's  Song.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Tropical  Scene,  A.     See  Enoch  Arden. 
Turn,  Fortunei,  Turn  Thy  Wheel]!     See  Idylls  of 

the  King. 
Two  Voices,  The. 
Ulysses. 
Vastness. 
Victim,  The. 

Vivien.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Vivien's  Song.     See  Idylls  of  the  King. 
Voyage  of  Maeldune,  The. 
Wages. 

We  are  Free.     See  Song:  "The  winds,  "etc. 
We  Kiss'd  again  with  Tears.     See  Princess,  The. 
Wedding-day,  'The.     See  In  Memoriam. 
Welcome  to  Alexandra  (Princess  of  Wales),  A. 
Welcome  to  Her  Royal  Highness  Marie  Alexan- 

drovna.  Duchess  of  Edinburgh,  A. 
Welcome  to  the  Duke  and  Duchess  of  Edinburgh, 

A.     See  Welcome  to  Her  Royal  Highness  Marie 

Alexandrovna,  Duchess  of  Edinburgh,  A. 
What  Does  Little  Birdie  Say?     See  Bird  and  the 

Baby,  The. 
What  Sequel?     See  Love  and  Duty. 
What  the  Birdie  and  the  Baby  Say.     See  Bird  and 

the  Baby,  The. 
When? 

Widow  and  Child,  The.     See  Princess,  The. 
Window,  The. 

Winter.       See  Window,  The. 
With  Trembling  Fingers  Did  We  Weave.     See  In 

Memoriam. 


Tennyson,  Alfred,  Lord  (continued). 

Woman.     See  Princess,  The. 

Woman's  Cause,  The.     See  Princess,  The. 

Wreck,  The. 

Wyatt's  Harangue  to  the  London  Crowd.  See 
Queen  Mary.  , 

Yorkshire  Cobbler,  The.  See  Northern  Cobbler, 
The. 

You  Ask  me,  why,  tho'  111  at  Ease. 
Tennyjson,  Bertram. — Gordon. 
Tennyson,  Faith. — He  Careth. 
Tennyson,  Frd'k. — Blackbird,  The. 

Dream  of  Autumn,  A. 

Glory  of  Nature,  The. 

Golden  City,  The. 

Holy  Tide,  The. 

"Niobe." 

Skylark,  The. 

Song  of  an  Angel. 

Thirty-Prst  of  May. 
Tennyson-Turner,  C:—  Afternote  of  the  Hour,  The. 

Anastasis. 

Buoy-bell,  The. 

Forest  Glade,  The. 

Going  Home. 

Her  First-born. 

"It  was  her  firs*,  sweet  child,  her  heart's  delight." 
See  Her  First-born. 

Lachrymatory,  The. 

Lattice  at  Sunri.se,  The. 

Letty's  Globe. 

Lion's  Skeleton,  The. 

I^ittle  Sophy  by  the  Seaside. 

Mary. 

Mary — A  Reminiscence. 

Mary  Queen  of  Scots. 

Ocean,  The. 

On  Certain  Books. 

Orion. 

Our  Mary  and  the  Child  Mummy. 

Resuscitation  of  Fancy. 

Rookery,  The. 

Steam  Threshing  Machine,  The. 

To  the  Gossamer-light. 

Vacant  Cage,  The. 
Terhune,  Albert  Payson. — I  Flunked  To-day. 

To  Phyllis. 
Terrett,  W:  B.— Platonic. 
Terry,  Kathe.  H.— Reason  Why,  The. 

Views  of  Farmer  Brown. 
Terry,  Paul. — To  a  Laugh. 

Terry,  Rose.     See  Cooke,  Mrs.  Rose  [Terry], 
Tersteegen,  Gerhard. — Divine  Love. 

Love  of  God  Supreme.     See  Divine  Love. 
Terwilliger,  R.  .L — He  Gave  Him  a  Start. 
TeufEel,  Mtne.  Blanche  Willis  [Howard]  von. — Guenn. 

Popular  Poplar  Tree,  The. 
Texas  Siftings. — Counting  Eggs. 

How  Mo.se  Counted  the  Eggs.     See  Counting  Eggs. 

Nickerdemus  Quadrille. 

Raising  a  Beard. 

Texas  Cow,  The. 

Was  It  Right. 
Thacher^  .1.  H. — -Lawyer's  Daughter,  A. 
Thackeray,  W:  Makepeace. — Abdication  of  Napoleon. 
See  Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The. 

After  the  Storm.     See  White  Squall,  The. 

Age  of  Wisdom,  The. 

At  the  Church  Gate.     See  Pendennis. 

Bachelor's  Cane-bottomed  Chair,  The.  See  Cane- 
bottomed  Chair,  The. 

Ballad  of  Bouillabaisse,  The. 

Ballad  of  Eliza  Davis,  The. 

Barry  Lyndon. 

Battle  of  Limerick,  The. 

Book  of  Snobs,  The. 

Cane-bottomed  Chair,  The. 

Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The. 

Comparison  of  George  Washington  with  George 
the  Fourth,  called  the  First  Gentleman  of 
Europe.     See  George  the  Fourth. 

Crystal  Palace,  The. 

Description  of  the  Venus  of  Milo.  See  New- 
comes,  The. 

Dr.  Birch  and  his  Young  Friends. 

End  of  the  Play,  The.  See  Dr.  Birch  and  his 
Young  Friends. 

Execution  of  Louis  XVI.  See  Chronicle  of  the 
Drum,   The. 

Execiition  of  Marie  Antoinette.  See  Chronicle 
of  the  Drum,  The. 

Execution  of  the  Princess  de  Lamballe.  See 
Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The. 

Garret,  The. 


562 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Thaxter 


Thackeray,  W:  Makepeace  (continued). 

George  the  Third. 

George  the  Fourth. 

How  to  Live  Well  on  Nothing  a  Year.     See  Van- 
ity Fair. 

Jacob  Omnium's  Hoss. 

King  Canute. 

King  of  Brentford's  Testament,   The. 

Lamentable  Ballad   of  the  Foundling  of  Shore- 
ditch,  The. 

Lines  on  a  liate  Hospicious  Ewent. 

Little  Billee. 

Mahogany  Tree,  The. 

Miss-  Pinkerton's   Academy    for    Young    Ladies. 
iSee  Vanity  Fair. 

Mr.  Molony's  Account  of  the  Ball. 

Molony's  Lament. 

Music  at  Mrs.  Ponto's.     See  Book  of  Snobs,  The. 

Newcomes,  The. 

On  a  Hundred  Years  Hence. 

Pen  and  the  Album,  The. 

Pendennis. 

Piscator  and  Piscatrix. 

Pocahontas. 

Prince.ss's  Tragedy,   A.     See  Barry  Lyndon. 

Rose  upon  My  Balcony,  The.     See  Vanity  Fair. 

Snobs.     See  Book  of  Snobs,  The. 

Sorrows  of  Werther. 

Speculators,  The. 

Three  Sailors,  The.     See  Little  Billee. 

Titmarsh's  Carmen  Lilliense. 

Vanitas  Vanitatum. 

Vanity  Fair. 

When  Moonlike  are  the  Hazure  Seas. 

White  Squall,  The. 

Willow-tree,  The. 

Wofle  New  Ballad  of  Jane  Roney  and  Marv  Brown, 
The. 

Yankee  Volunteers,  The. 
Thatcher,  G: — Adhesive  Poem,  An. 

Advice  to  Amateurs. 

Banana. 

Blue  Alsacian  Mountains. 

Census  Enumerator,  The. 

Clippings  from  the  Press. 

Down  on  the  Farm. 

Ex-President     Cleveland's     Anniversary     Letter 
(written  on  his  50th  Birthday). 

Few  Remarks  on  Pants,  A. 

Fowl  Proceeding,  A. 

Grandfather's  Pants. 

Hannah  Beasley. 

Hard  Luck. 

Hebrew  Children,  The. 

Home,  Sweet  Home. 

Horse  Business,  The. 

In  the  Gloaming. 

Lesson  in  Etiquette,  A. 

Minstrel's  Seven  Ages,  The. 

Montravers  O'Brien. 

Moss  Covered  Onion,  The. 

My  Boarding-houses. 

My  Experience  in  the  Dry  Goods  Business. 

Mv  Son  John. 

My  Wife. 

On  Various  Subjects. 

Only. 

Patents  Applied  For. 

Poetic  Inspiration. 

Quiet  Summer  Resort,  A. 

Salt  Water  Adventures. 

Stock-broker.  The. 

Story  of  the  Old  Arm-chair,  The. 

Superstition. 

Think  it  Over. 

Valedictory. 

What  Constitutes  Successful  Management. 

What  I  Saw  in  Washington. 

When  I  was  a  Baker. 

Willie  and  His  Esmeralda. 

Written  under  Difficulties. 

"Yaller"  Dog's  Love  for  a  Nigger,  A. 
Thaxter,  A.  Wallace. — There's  Tan  in  the  Street. 
Thaxter,  Celia. — Albatross,  The. 

All's  Well. 

Almost  a  Tragedy. 

April  and  May. 

August. 

Back  Again. 

Bare  Boughs  and  Buds. 

Be  Lovely  Within. 

Bear  at  Apnledore,  The. 

Bergetta's  Misfortunes. 

Bird's  Orchestra,  The. 


Thaxter,  Celia  {continued) . 
Blackberry  Bush,  The. 
Blind  Lamb,  The. 
Bluebirds  in  Autumn. 
Burgomaster  Gull,  The. 
Butcher-bird,  The. 
Cat's-cradle. 
Chanticleer. 
Chickadee,  The. 
Child  and  the  Year,  The. 
Cockatoos,  The. 
Constant  Dove,  The. 
Courage. 
Cradle,  The. 
Cradle  Song. 
Crocus. 

Cruise  of  the  Mystery,  The. 
Double  Sunflower,  The. 
Dust. 
Fern-seed. 

Flock  of  Doves,  The. 
Flowers  for  the  Brave. 
For  Thoughts. 

Gold  Locks  and  Silver  Locks. 
Good-by,  Sweet  Day. 
Grandmother  to  Her  Grandson. 
Great  Blue  Heron,  The. 
Great  White  Owl,  The. 
Heartbreak  Hill. 
Heavenly  Guest,  The.     (Tr.) 
Hylas,  The. 
In  the  Black  Forest. 
In  the  Lilac-bush. 
Inhospitality. 
Jack  Frost. 
Kaiserblumen,  The. 
King  Midas. 
Kingfisher,  The. 
Kittiwakes,  The. 
Little  Assunta. 
Little  Gustava. 
Lost. 

Lost  Bell,  The. 
Lullaby,  A. 
Madame  Arachne. 
Maize  for  the  Nation's  Emblem. 
March. 
Marjorie. 
May  Morning. 
Milking. 

Mozart  at  the  Fireside. 
My  Lighthouse. 
New  Year,  The. 
Nightingale,  The. 
Nikolina. 
Old  Saw,  An. 
Open  Secret,  An. 

Peggy's  Garden,  and  what  Grew  Therein. 
Perseverance. 
Phantom  Ship,  The.     See  Cruise  of  the  Mysteryi 

The. 
Piccola. 

Poppy  Seed,  A. 
Portent. 
Presage. 
Rescued. 
Robin,  The. 
Robin's  Rain-song. 
Sandpiper,  The. 

Sandpiper  and  I,  The.     <See  Sandpiper,  The. 
Sandpiper's  Nest,  The. 
Scarecrow,  The. 
Seaward. 

Shadow  of  Doom,  The.     See  All's  Well. 
Shag,  The. 

'Sing,  children,  sing!"     See  Song  of  Easter,  A. 
Sir  William  Napier  and  Little  Joan. 
Sir  William  Pepperell's  Well. 
Slumber  Song. 
Some  Polite  Dogs. 

Song;  "We  sail  towards  evening's  lonely  star." 
Song  of  Easter,  A. 
So»row. 
Sparrows,  The. 
Spray  Sprite,  The. 
Spring. 

Spring  Planting-time. 
Sunrise  never  Failed  us  yet.  The. 
Tragedy. 
Triumph,  A. 
Unbidden  Guest,  The. 
Tinder  the  Light-house. 
Waning  Moon,  The. 
Warning. 


563 


Thaxter 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Thaxter,  Celia  (continued). 

Water-bloom,  The. 

Wild  Geese. 

Wounded  Curlew,  The. 

Yellow-bird.         ^ 
Thayer,  Julia  M.  [or  n.] — Easter  Altar-cloth,  The. 

Fighting  the  Kum-hend. 

Little  Boy's  Lecture,  A. 
Thayer,    Phineas. — Casey    at    the   Bat.     (_At.    also   to 

Joseph  Quinlan  Murphj;.) 
Thayer,  Stephen  H: — "Abide  with  Me." 

Europa. 

Poet  of  Earth. 

'Thou  canst  not  frown,  O  Death." 

Waiting  Chords,  The. 
Thayer,  W.  M. — Drive  On!  Drive  On! 
Thayer,  W :  Roscoe. — Last  Hunt,  The. 

Man  in  Nature. 

Perfectibility. 

Violin's  Complaint,  The. 
Theocritus.— Helen's  Epithalamion.     See  Sixe  Idillia. 

Prayer  of  Theocritus  for  Syracuse,  The.     See  Sixe 
Idillia. 

Sixe  Idillia. 
Thierry,   .\ugustin. — Murder  of  Thomas  A  Becket  in 

Canterbury  Cathedral,  The. 
Thorn,  W  .—Blind  Boy's  Pranks,  The. 

Mitherless  Bairn,  The. 
Thomas,  Albert  Ellsworth. — Ajjparent. 

Mores! 
Thomas,  Annie. — Women  of  the  War. 
Thomas,  Brandon. — Fell  from  Aloft. 
Thomas,  C.  H.  N.— Sailor's  Story,  A. 
Thomas,  C:  E.— To  a  Moth. 
Thomas,  Edith  Matilda. — Augury. 

Betrayal  of  the  Rose,  The. 

Breath  of  Hempstead  Heath. 

Constancy. 
'  Fall  Fashions. 

Far  Cry  to  Heaven,  A. 

Far  in  the  Woods  in  May. 

Frost. 

Grasshopper,  The. 

Gray  Hair  in  Youth. 

Heart's  Call,  The. 

"If  still  they  livef,  whom  touch  nor  sight]."     See 
Inverted  Torch.  The. 

Insomnia. 

Inverted  Torch,  The. 

"Let  dead  names  be  eternized  by  dead  stone." 

Liberty. 

Little  Boy's  Vain  Regret,  A. 

Morning  Songs. 

Mother  England. 

Mother  who  Died  too,  The. 

Night  is  Still,  The. 

"Oft  have  I  wakened  ere  the  spring  of  day."     See 
Inverted  Torch,  The. 

Quiet  Pilgrim,  The. 

Revival  of  Romance. 

Solstice. 

Soul  in  the  Body,  The. 

Summer  Solstice,  The.     See  Solstice. 

Sunshine  Land. 

Talking  in  their  Sleep. 

Tears  of  the  Poplars,  The. 

Tell  Me.     See  Inverted  Torch,  The. 

Thefts  of  the  Morning. 

To  Imagination. 

To  Spain— A  Last  Word. 

Vesper  Sparrow,  The. 

What  the  I^ambs  Say. 

When   in   the   First   Great   Hour.     iSee   Inverted 
Torch,  The. 

Will  it  be  so?     See  Inverted  Torch,  The. 

Winter  Sleep. 

Winter  Solstice,  The.     See  Solstice. 
Thomas,  Emma  S. — Arbor  Day  Invocation. 

Class  Tree,  The. 
Thomas,  Frd'k.  W: — Song:  "  'Tis  said   that   absence 
conquers  love!" 

"  'Tis  said  that  absence  conquers  love."     See  Song. 
"  'Tis  .said,"  etc.  • 

Thomas,  J.  R. — Our  Own  Dear  Land. 
Thomas,  Mary  Pettus. — Will's  Desire. 
Thompson,  Carrie  W. — Kitty  Clover. 

"Lulu."     See  Kitty  Clover. 

Naughty  Kitty  Clover.     See  Kitty  Clover. 
Thompson,   C:    Lemuel. — Two    Streams    of    History, 

The. 
Thompson,  C:  West. — American  Eagle,  The. 
Thompson,  D.  W. — Pure  and  Holy  Motive. 
Thompson,  D'Arcy  W. — Poor  Dear  Grandpapa. 
Thompson,  Douglas. — Days  of  Yore,  The. 


Thompson,  Fs. — Daisy. 

Dream  Tryst. 

"Ex  Ore  Infantium." 

Judgment  in  Heaven,  A. 

Poppy,  The. 

To  a  Poet  Breaking  Silence. 
Thompson,  Jas.  M. — Blacksmith  of  Bottledell,  Tho. 
Thompson,  J :  Angus. — To  a  Chrysanthemum. 
Thompson,  J;  Randolph.- — Ashby. 

Burial  of  Latan^,  The. 

Carcassonne.     (Tr.) 

Lee  to  the  Rear. 

Music  in  Camp. 

Obsequies  of  Stuart. 
Thompson,  Maud. — Soul's  Kiss,  The. 
Thompson,  Maurice. — Alice  of  Old  Vincennes. 

Alice's  Flag.     See  Alice  of  Old  Vincennes.  •■ 

Ballad  of  a  Little  Fun,  The. 

Claudius   and   Cynthia.     See   Doom   of   Claudius 
and  Cynthia,  The. 

Creole  Slave-song,  A. 

Doom  of  Claudius  and  Cynthia,  The. 

Early  Bluebird,  An. 

P^arewell. 

Fertility.     See  Prelude,  A. 

Flight  Shot,  A. 

In  the  Haunts  of  Bass  and  Bream. 

Incident  of  War,  An. 

Lincoln's  Grave. 

Lion's  Cub,  The. 

Prelude,  A. 

Prophecy,  A.     See  Lincoln's  Grave. 

Written  on  a  Fly-leaf  of  Theocritus. 
Thompson,  Milton. — Kiss  in  the  Dark,  A. 

Old  Man's  Story,  An. 
Thompson,  Phillips. — Failed. 
Thompson,  T:  R. — Down  Grade,  The. 

Who'll  be  the  Drunkards,  Then? 
Thompson,  Vance. — Linen  Bands. 

Symbols. 
Thompson,  Will  H:— Bond  of  Blood,  The. 

Come  Love  or  Death. 

High  Tide  at  Gettysburg,  The. 
Thompson,  W:  A. — Hard  to  Beat. 
Thomson, . — Philosophy.  « 

Success. 
Thomson,  A.  A.  Vivyan. — Circus  Boy,  The. 
Thomson,  C.  W. — Sympathy. 
Thomson,  E:  W:— Bad  Year,  The. 

Day-dream,  A. 

Ri(le  by  Night,  The. 

Song-sparrow,  The. 
Thomson,  Estelle.^ — Davy,  the  Teamster. 

Hepsy's  Ambition. 

Young  Timothy  and  the  Forget-me-nots. 
Thomson,   Jas.     (1700-1748.) — Address  to  the   Indo- 
lent.    See  Castle  of  Indolence,  The. 

Alfred.     See  Rule,  Brittania. 

Angling.     See  Seasons,  The:  Spring. 

Autumn.     See  Seasons,  The:  Autumn. 

Bathing.     See  Seasons,  The:  Summer. 

Britannia. 

Castle  of  Indolence,  The. 

Coming   of   the    Rain,    The.     See     Seasons,    The 
Spring. 

Connubial  Life.     See  Seasons,   The:   Spring. 

Death  Typified   by   Winter.     See   Seasons,   The: 
Winter. 

Domestic  Birds.     See  Seasons,  The:  Spring. 

Early  Spring.     See  Seasons,   The:   Spring. 

"For  ever,   fortune,   wilt  thou  prove."     See  To 
Fortune. 

Freedom  of  Nature.     See  Castle  of  Indolence,  The. 

"Hence,  let  me  haste."     See  Seasons,  The:  Sum- 
mer. > 

Hymn  on  [or  of]  the  Seasons.     See  Seasons,  The: 
A  Hymn. 

Lilacs.  (?) 

Lost  in  the  Snow.     See  Seasons,  The:  Winter. 

Masque  of  Alfred.     See  Rule  Britannia. 

Nature  in  Spring.     See  Seasons,  The:  Spring. 

Nightingale,  The.     See  Seasons,  The:  Spring. 

"Oh,  bear  me  then."     See  Seasons,  The:  Autumn. 

"Oh,  first  of  human  blessings."     See  Britannia. 

On  the  Death  of  a  Particular  Friend.     See  On  the 
Death  of  Mr.  Aikman. 

On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Aikman. 

Peace.     See  Britannia. 

Plea  for  the  Animals.     See  Seasons,  The:  Spring. 

Rainbow,  The.     See  Seasons,  The:  Spring. 

Rule,  Britannia. 

Seasons.  The. 

Sheep  Washing,  The.     See  Seasons,  The:  Summer. 

Snow  Scene,  A.     See  Seasons,  The:  Winter. 


564 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Times 


Thomson,  Jas.   (1700-1748)  {continued). 

Snow-storm,  The.     See  Seasons,  The:  Winter. 

Song:  "Tell  me,  thou  soul  of  her  I  love." 

Songsters,    The.     See   Seasons,   The:    Spring. 

Soul  Culture.     .See   Seasons,   The:   Spring. 

Spring.     See  Seasons,  The:  Spring. 

Stag  Hunt,  The.     See  Seasons,  The:  Autumn. 

Storm  in  Harvest.     See  Seasons,  The:  Autumn. 

Summer.     .See  Seasons,  The. 

To  Fortune. 

To  Her  I  Love.     .See  Song:  "Tell  me,  thou  soul," 
etc. 

Thunderstorm,  The.     .See  Seasons,  The:  Summer. 

Universal   Hymn   of   Nature,  The.     See  Seasons,- 
The:  A  Hymn. 

War  for  the  Sake  of  Peace.     .See  Britannia. 

"Welcome,  ye  shades,  ye  bowery  thickets,  hail!" 
See  Seasons,  The:  Summer. 

Winter.     See  Seasons,  The. 

Winter   Scenes.     See   Seasons,  The:   Winter. 
Thomson,     .Jas.     ("B.     V.")     (1834-1882).— City     of 
Dreadful  Night,  The. 

E.  B.  B. 

Gifts.     .See  Sunday  up  the  River. 

He  Heard  Her  Sing. 

In  the  Train.     See  Sunday  at  Hampstead. 

Life's  Hebe. 

Melencolia.     See  City  of  Dreadful  Night,  The. 

Sunday  at  Hampstead. 

Sunday  up  the  River. 

To  E.  B.  B.      .See  E.  B.  B. 

Vine,  The.     See  Sunday  up  the  River. 
Thomson,  J:  Stuart. — Eventime. 

Late  Autumn. 

Vale  of  Estabella. 
Thomson,  R:— Book  of  Life,  The. 
Thomson,  W: — Maister  an'  the  Bairns,  The. 
Thoreau,  H:  D: — Brute  Neighbors. 

Cape  Cod. 

Fisher's  Boy,  The. 

Haze.     See  Week  on  the  Concord  and  Merrimac 
Rivers,  A. 

Highland  Light,  The.     See  Cape  Cod. 

Inspiration. 

Mist.     jSee  Week  on  the  Concord  and  Merrimac 
Rivers,  A. 

Nature. 

Smoke.     See  Walden. 

Sounds.     See  Walden. 

Spring.     See  Walden. 

Summer  Rain,  The.     See  Week  on  the  Concord 
and  Merrimac  Rivers,  A. 

Sympathy.     See  Week  on  the  Concord  and  Merri- 
mac Rivers,  A 

Unon  the  Beach.     See  Fisher's  Boy,  The. 

Walden. 

Week  on  the  Concord  and  Merrimac  Rivers,  A. 

Wild  Apples. 
Thorn,   Frank  M. — Adverti.sement  Answered,   The. 
Thornbury,   G:  Walter. — Cavalier's  Escape,  The. 

Cuckoo,  The. 

Dayrise  and  Sunset. 

Death  of  Marlborough,  The. 

Death  of  Oberon. 

Eve  of  St.  Bartholomew,  The. 

Jacobite  on  Tower  Hill,  The. 

Jester's  Sermon,  The. 

La  Tricoteuse. 

Melting  of  the  Earl's  Plate. 

Old  Grenadier's  Story,  The. 

Old  Sir  Walter. 

Pompadour,  The. 

Retreat  from  Moscow,  The. 

Sally  from  Coventry,  The. 

Three  Scars,  The. 

Three  Troopers,  The. 

White  Rose  over  the  Water,  The. 
Thornbury,     W.     G. — Riding     to     the     Tournament, 

The. 
Thorne,  Anna  H. — Dawn  of  the  Century. 
Thorne,  Meta  E.  B.— Path  of  the  Cyclone,  The. 

Songs  of  the  Seasons. 
Thornton,  Abbie  J. — Beauty  of  Face  and  Beauty  of 

Soul. 
Thornton,  Eliza. — Reign  of  Peace,  The. 
Thorpe,  E.  Carson. — Dot  Dutchman  in  der  Moon. 
Thorpe,  Mrs.  Rose  A.  [Hartwick]. — Archie's  Mother. 

Crippled  Joe. 

Curfew  Must  not  Ring  Tonight. 

Down  the  Track. 

Drifted  out  to  Sea. 

Engineer's  Story,  The. 

In  Answer. 

In  the  Mining  Town. 


Thorpe,  Mrs.  Rose  A.  [Hartwick]  {continued). 
One  Flower  for  Nelly. 
Soldier's  Reprieve,  The. 
Station-agent's  Story,   The. 
Thanksgiving  Day. 
Thoughts. 
Thrale,   Mrs.  Hester  Lynch.     See,Piozzi  Mrs.  Hester 

I^YNCH  [Salisbury]. 
Throop,  G.  E. — Two  Professions. 

Thrupp,  Dorothy  Ann. — "I  am  the  Good  Shepherd." 
Thucydides. — Address  of  Nicias  to  His  Troops.     See 
History  of  the  Peloponnesian  War. 
Glory   of  Athens.     See  History   of   the   Pelopon- 
nesian War. 
History  of  the  Peloponnesian  War. 
Speech  of  Pericles.     See  History  of  the  Pelopon- 
nesian War. 
Thurlow,  E :  Hovel,  Lord. — Beauty.     See  Sonnet :  ' '  'Tis 
much,"  etc. 
Lord  Thiirlow's  Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton. 
May.     See  Song  to  May. 
Reply  to  Grafton.     See  Lord  Thurlow's  Reply  to 

the  Duke  of  Grafton. 
Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton.     See  Lord  Thur- 
low's Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton. 
Song  to  May. 
Sonnet:   "The  Crimson  moon  uprising   from  the 

sea." 
Sonnet:   "The  nightingale   is  mute — and   so   art 

thou." 
Sonnet:  "'Tis  much  immortal  beauty  to  admire." 
Sonnet:  "Who  best  can  paint  th'  enameled  robe 

of  spring." 
Sonnet  to  a  Bird  that  Haunted  the  Waters  of 

Laaken  in  the  Winter.     See  To  a  Bird,  etc. 
Summer. 
To  a  Bird  that  Haunted  the  Waters  of  Laaken  in 

the  Winter. 
To  the  Moon. 
Thurston,  Charlotte  W.— Difficult  Problem,  A. 
Thurston,  Hon.  J:  Mellen. — Affairs  in  Cuba. 
Centennial  Speech. 
Cuba. 

Lincoln :  A  Man  Called  of  God. 
Man  Who  Wears  the  Button,  The. 
Monroe  Doctrine,  The. 
Our  Rich  Heritage. 
Plea  for  Cuba,  A. 
Thwing,  Dr.  E.  P. — Decoration  Day. 
Ticheborne,  Chediock.     See  Tychborn,  Chediock. 
Tickell,  T:— Colin  and  Lucy. 

On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Addison.     See  To  the  Earl 

of  Warwick,  etc. 
To  a  Lady  before  Marriage. 

To  the  Earl  of  Warwick,  on  the  Death  of  [Mr.— C] 
Addison. 
Ticknor,  Dr.  Fs.  Orrery. — Gracie  of  Alabama. 
Little  Giffen  [of  Tennessee]. 
"Our  Left." 

Song  for  the  Asking,  A. 
Virginians  of  the  Valley,  The. 
Tieck,  Ludwig. — Spring. 
Tiedge,   Christopher  August. — Wave,  The. 
Tiffany,  C:  H. — On  the  Rappahannock. 

On  the  Rappahannock.     {Diff.  poem — at.  also  to 
C.  C.  Somerville.) 
Tiffany,  Esther  B.; — Applied  Astronomy. 
Tighe,  Mary. — Written  at  Killarnev. 
Tilden,  W.  P.— Our  Banner. 

Tilley,  Lucy  Evangeline. — When  Even  Cometh  On. 
Tillotson,    Archbishop  J: — Advantages   of   Truth    and 
Sincerity. 
Truth  and  Integrity.     See  Advantages  of  Truth 
and  Sincerity. 
Tilney,   Rob't.— Lost  Church,  The.     (Tr.) 

Minstrel's  Curse,  The.     {Tr.) 
Tilton,  Theodore. — All  Things  Shall  Pass  Away. 
"As  other  men  have  creed,  so  have  I  mine." 
"At  the  end  of  life  a  man  finds  himself  rich." 
Baby  Bye.     See  Fly,  The. 
CcEur  de  Lion  to  Berengaria. 
Even  This  Shall  Pass  Away.     See  All  Things  Shall 

Pass  Away. 
Flight  from  the  Convent,  The. 
Fly,  The. 

French  with  a  Master. 
God  Save  the  Nation. 
Great  Bell  Roland,  The. 
In  God's  Acre. 
King's   Ring,    The.     See   All   Things   Shall    Pass 

Away. 
Problem  of  Life.  The. 
Sir  Marmaduke's  Musings. 
Times  of  India. — Transcendentalism. 


565 


Timrod 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Timrod,    H: — At    Magnolia   Cemetery.     <See    Ode    on 
Decorating  the  Graves,  etc. 
Carolina. 
Charleston. 
Common  Thought,  A. 
Cotton  Boll,  The.# 
Cry  to  Arms,  A. 

Decoration  Day  at  Charleston.     See  Ode  on  Dec- 
orating the  Graves,  etc. 
Elusive  Nature. 
Katie. 
Ode  on  Decorating  the  Graves  of  [the]  Confederate 

Dead  [or  Soldiers]. 
Ode    Sung   on   the   Occasion    of  Decorating  the 
Graves  of  the  Confederate  Dead.     See  Ode  on 
Decorating  the  Graves,  etc. 
Quatorzain. 
Spring  [in  Carolina]. 
Tincker,  Mary  Agnes. — Aurora. 

Banquet,  The.     See  Aurora. 
Tindall,  Everett  L.— Choosing  a  "State  Tree."— The 

Maple. 
Tirrell,  Julia  A. — Lazy  Boy's  Lesson,  A. 
Titherington,  R.  N. — Faithful  unto  Death. 
Tobin,  J: — Balthazar  and  the  Quack. 

Confession  of  Love,  A.     See  Honeymoon,  The. 
Honeymoon,  The. 

Taming  a  Wife.     See  Honeymoon,  The. 
Zamora.     See  Honeymoon,  The. 
Tocqueville,  Alexis  de. — Democracy  Adverse  to  Social- 
ism. 
Todd,  J: — "There  is  but  one  thing  in  the  wide  universe 

which  is  really  valuable." 
Todd,  Mrs.  R.  K.— Just  Twenty-one. 
Todhunter,  J. — Aghadoe. 
Banshee,  The. 
Beethoven. 

Druid  Song  of  Cathvah,  The. 
Fairy  Gold^ 
Fate  of  the  Sons  of  Usna,  The.     See  First  Duan, 

The:   The  Coming  of  Deirdre. 
First  Duan,  The :  The  Coming  of  Deirdre. 
First  Spring  Day,  The. 
Laurella. 
Maureen. 

Morning  in  the  Bay  of  Naples.     See  Laurella. 
Rossini, 
y     Song:  "Bring  from  the  craggy  haunts  of  birch  and 
pine." 
Sons  of  Turann,  The. 
Toilet,  Eliz.— To  Mr.  Congreve. 

Tolstoi,  Count  Lyof. — Heavenly  Guest,  The.    See  Where 
Love  is,  there  God  is  also. 
My  Religion. 
Race,  The. 

Where  Love  is,  there  God  is  also. 
"Tom  o'  Bedlam." — "I  know  more  than  Apollo." 
Tomb,  H.  S. — Jim's  Story. 

Tomlinson,  Mrs.  A.  M. — Christmas  Sheaf,  The. 
Tompkins,  Juliet  Wilbur. — For  All  These. 
Humble  Romance,  A. 
"Merry,  blue-eyed  laddie  goes  laughing  through 

the  town.  A." 
Of  Course. 
Rosalie. 

Two  Simple  Little  Ostriches. 
Under  two  Flags. 
"Tomson,     Graham     R."    See    Watson,     Rosamund 

Marriott. 
Tongue,  Rob't  Clarkson. — Elam  Chase's  Fiddle. 

Life  and  Love. 
Tonna,    Mrs.    Charlotte    Eliz.    [Browne]    ("Charlotte 
Elizabeth").— Evils  of  Tight  Lacing,  The. 
Maiden  City,  The. 
Tooker,  Lewis  Frank. — His  Quest. 
Last  Fight,  The. 
Return,  The. 
Sleep. 
Toplady,  A:  Montague. — I^ove  Divine,  All  Love  Excel- 
ling. 
Prayer  Living  and  Dying,  A.     See  Rock  of  Ages. 
Rock  of  Ages. 

"Rock  of  Ages,  cleft  for  me!"     See  Rock  of  Ages. 
Topping,  Mary  E.— Conflict,  The. 
Tormey,  Michael. — Ancient  Race,  The. 
Torrence,  F:  Ridgely. — Carpe  Diem.     See  House  of  a 
Hundred  Lights,  The. 
Compensation.  See  House  of  a  Hundred  Lights,The. 
Conclusion  of  the  Whole  Matter,  The.     See  House 

of  a  Hundred  Lights,  The. 
Hou.se  of  a  Hundred  Lights,  The. 
Young  Lovers,  The.     See   House    of    a    Hundred 

Lights,  The. 
Youth  and  Age.  SeeHouse  of  a  Hundred  Light  s.The. 


"Tot,  Joe,  Jr." — See  "Jot,  Joe,"  Jr. 
Tourgt'e,  Albion  Winegar. — Change  of  Base,  A. 

Daniel  Periton's  Ride. 

Fool's  Errand,  A. 

Lily  Servosse's  Ride,  The.     See  Fool's  Errand,  A. 

Son  of  Abdallah,  A.     See  Son  of  Old  Harry,  A. 

Son  of  Old  Harry,  A. 

"Though  He  Slay!" 

What  Waked  the  World. 
Tourgenieff  [or  Tiirgenief],  Ivan  Sergyevich. — Alms,  An. 

Festival  of  the  Supreme  Being,  The. 

Happy  Land,  The. 

Towne,  Belle  Kellog. — Were  I  You,  Little  Lad. 
Townley,  Mary. — Rose  in  October,  The. 
Townsend,  Eliz.  W.— Baby,  The. 
Townsend,G:  Alfred. — ArmyCorrespondent'sLast  Ride. 

Cow  and  the  Bishop,  The. 

In  Rama. 
Townsend,  M.  E. — "And  now  we  only  ask  to  serve." 

Far  from  Home  and  Country. 

So  Tired. 

"They  who  the  sweetest  rest." 
Townsentl,  M.  G. — Ugliest  of  Seven,  The. 
Townsend,  Mrs.  Mary  Ashley  [Van  Voorhees]. — At  Set 
of  Sun. 

Christening,  The. 

Credo. 

Dead  Singer,  The. 

Down  the  Bayou. 

Embryo. 

Georgia  Volunteer,  A. 

Her  Horoscope. 

How  Much  Do  You  Love  Me? 

Love's  Belief.     See  Credo. 

Reserve. 

Two. 

Virtuosa. 

Woman's  Wish,  A. 
Townsend,  Myra. — Capital  Punishment. 
Townshend,  Chauncy  Hare. — "Reflected  in  the  lake  I 
love  to  mark."  (?) 

Thy  Joy  in  Sorrow. 
Tracy,  F.  P. — Normans,  The. 
Trafton,  E.  H.— All  Right  at  Last. 

Beginning  Right. 

Convict's  Soliloquy  [the  Night  before  Execution], 
The. 

Good  Library  Gone  up  in  Smoke,  A. 

Life:  a  School  Scene. 

Precarious  Predicament,  A. 

Sleeping  Boy,  The. 
Trafton,  Rev.  Mark. — Our  Martyred  Dead. 
Traherne,  T — News. 

Train,  Arthur  Cheney. — RambUngRhyme  of  Dorothy,  A. 
Train,  E.  P. — To  Narcissa. 
Train,  W.  J.  C. — Brothers  Once  More. 

Our  Dead  Heroes. 

Resurrection. 

Royal  Birthday,  A. 
Traquair,  E.  M. — Nameless  Hero,  A. 

Squire's  Bargain,  The. 
Trask,  Mrs.  Kate  [Nichols]  — Aidenn. 

At  Last. 

Love. 

Sorrow. 
Trask,  "Katrina." — See  Trask,  Mrs.  Kate  [Nichols]. 
Traubel,  Horace  Logo.^ — Epicedium. 

I  Served  in  a  Great  Cause. 

If  all  the  Voices  of  Men. 
Traveler's  Magazine. — Cotisolation    even  on  a    Mixed 

Train. 
Traveler's  Record. — Modern  Summer  Hotel,  A. 
Traver,  Georgene.- — Not  so  Well  Acquainted. 

Pauper  Girl,  The. 

Tr<51at,  ■ . — Address  to  the  Chamber  of  Peers. 

Trench,  R:  Chenevix. — After  the  Battle. 

Alma. 

Be  Patient. 

Content  and  Discontent.     See  Difterent  Minds. 

Dew-drop.  The. 

Dewdrop  Falling,  A.     See  Dew-drop,  The. 

Different  Minds. 

Enjoyment  of  the  Present. 

Harmosan. 

Inkerman. 

Kingdom  of  God,  The. 

Mother's  Jewels,  The. 

"O  life,  O  death,  O  world,  O  time."     See  Suffering. 

Our  Father's  Home.     See  Kingdom  of  God,  The. 

Returning  Home. 

"Some   murmur  when   their   sky   is  clear."     Se« 
Different  Minds. 

Spnnet:  "All  beautiful  things  bring  sadness." 


566 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Uncle 


Trench,  R:  Chenevix  {continued). 

Suffering. 

Xerxes  at  the  Hellespont. 
Trinity  Archive. — Let  Me  Forget. 
Trinity  Tablet. — Echo's  Secret. 

Love  Laughs. 

Portrait,  A. 

Reward  of  Merit,  A. 

Sly  Little  Maid,  A. 

Speed. 

White  Alder,  The. 
Troland,  J : — Visit  to  the  Sea,  A. 

Troubetzkoy,   Princess  Amdlie  [Rives]  [Chanler]. — Be- 
fore the  Rain. 

Death. 

Mood,  A. 

Sonnet,  A:     "Take  all  of   me, — I  am  thine  own, 
heart,  soul." 

Unto  the  Least  of  these  Little  Ones. 

Winter  Hymn,  A. 
Trowbridge,  J :  Townsend. — At  Sea. 

Aunt  Melissy  on  Boys. 

Beyond. 

Charcoal  Man,  The. 

Coupon  Bonds. 

Cudjo's  Cave. 

Cup,  The. 

Darius  Green  and  His  Flying-machine. 

Dorothy  in  the  Garret. 

Emigrant's  Story,  The. 

Evening  at  the  Farm. 

Farm-yard  Song.     See  Evening  at  the  Farm. 

Fox  in  the  Well,  The. 

Goat  and  the  Swing,  The. 

How  the  King  Lost  His  Crown. 

Knight  and  the  Lady,  The. 

Midsummer. 

Midwinter. 

Nancy  Blynn's  Lover. 

Old  Robin. 

One  Day  Solitary. 

One  Good  Turn  Deserves  Another. 

Pewee,  The. 

Pomp's  Story.    See  Cudjo's  Cave. 

Sheriff  Thorne. 

Story  of  the  Barefoot  Boy,  A. 

Summer.     See  Midsummer. 

Tom's  Come  Home. 

Trouting. 

Vagabonds,  The. 

Widow  Brown's  Christmas. 

Wolves,  The. 

Wonderful  Sack,  The. 
Trowbridge,  Robertson. — Altruism. 
Troy  Times. — Our  Beloved  Dead. 
True,  J:  Preston. — My  Hero. 
True,  Kate. — Kitty  Malone. 
Truesdell.EUaM.— When  theWindGoesthro'  theMaples. 

Trumble, . — See  McDekmott  and  Trumbull. 

Trumbull,  Annie  Eliot.— To  O.  S.  C. 

Trumbull,  J. — McFingal. 

Truth  Seeker. — Where  are  Wicked  Folks  Buried? 

Tubbs,  Arthur  Lewis. — Bicycling  in  the  Sky. 

King's  Kisses,  The. 
Tucker,  J.  H.— Told  in  the  Stalls. 
Tucker,  Mary  E. — Remember,  Boys  Make  Men. 
Tucker,  St.  George. — Days  of  My  Youth. 
Tuckerman,  F:  Gordon. — Rhotruda. 
Tuckerman,  H:  Theodore. — Newport  Beach. 

To  an  Elm. 

Washington's  Statue. 
Txdane  Collegian. — Mayonette  River,  The. 
TuUoch,  J:,  D.D.  (?). — "We  cannot  say  to  any  young 

man;  Do  not  play  billiards." 
Tully.     See  Cicero,  Marcus  Tullius. 
Tupper,  Edith  S. — Grandmamma's  Fan. 
Tupper,  Martin  Farquhar. — All's  for  the  Best. 

America  an  Aggregate  of  Nations. 

"But  three  feet  good  of  that  old  wood."  (?) 

Hidden  Uses  of  Plants. 

I  am  not  Old.     See  Song  of  Seventy,  The. 

Never  Give  Up. 

Of    Cruelty    to    Animals.      See    Proverbial     Phi- 
losophy. 

Proverbial  Philosophy. 

Song  of  Seventy,  "The. 

To  America  in  1876. 

Truth. 

Wedding  Gifts.  (?) 
Turberville,  G: — Lover  to  his  Lady  that  Gazed  much 

up  to  the  Skies,  The. 
Turgenief,  Ivan.    See  Tourgenieff,  Ivan  Sergtevich. 
Turk,  M.  H.— "Book  Larnin'." 
Turnbull,W :  Watson.—  Dr.  Jotham  Tindale's  Cue  a  Cure. 


Turner,  A.  V. — Light. 

Turner,  C:  H. — Dat  Yaller  Gown. 

Turner,     C:      Tennyson.        See      Tennyson-Turxee, 

Charles. 
Turner,  E:  F. — Fairy  Tale,  A. 

How  Mr.  Smiggles  Went  to  a  Public  Dinner. 

Mr.  Piper's  Mittens. 

My  First  and  Last  Appearance. 

Number  999. 

Our  Debating  Club. 

Underground  Jottings. 
Turner,  Mrs.  Eliza  [Sproat]. — All  Mother. 

Compensation. 

Little  Goose,  A. 

Lost.     See  Little  Goose,  A. 

Stray  Child,  A.     See  Little  Goose,  A. 
Turner,  Eliz. — Ambitious  Sophy. 

Cruel  Boy,  The. 

Dizzy  Girl,  The. 

Falsehood  "Corrected." 

Giddy  Girl,  The. 

Greedy   Boy,   The. 

How  to  Look  When  Speaking. 

How  to  Write  a  Letter. 

Hoyden,  The. 

Lesson,  The. 

Lost  Pudding,  The. 

Maria's  Purse. 

Models,  The. 

Playing  with  Fire. 

Poisonous  Fruit. 

Politeness. 

Rebecca's  After-thought. 

Result  of  Cruelty,  The. 

Richard's  Reformation. 

Rudeness. 

Sash,  The. 

Superior  Boys,  The. 

Wonders,  The. 

Worm,  The. 
Turner,  Rev.  J.  R. — Why  I  Object  to  High  License. 
Turner,  Joseph  Mallord  William. — For  the  Picture. 
Turner,  Mrs.  R.  N.— Song  We  Sing,  The. 
Turner,  W:  Mason. — Dead  Soldier-boy,  The. 
Tuttiett,  Miss  M.  G.  ("Maxwell  Gray"). — Rondel. 
Tuttle,  Hudson. — Soldier's  Return,  The. 
"Twain,  Mark."     See  Clemens.  S:  L. 
Twamley,  L.  A. — Ragged  Robin. 
Twig,  J: — Ballade  of  the  Nurserie,  A. 

Twitchell,   Rev.   Dr.    ■ . — "Only  way   to  clear   the 

track  of  life  is  to  leave  no  enemy  behind.  The." 
Tychborn   [or  Ticheborne],   Chidiock  [or  Chediock].- — 
Chediock    Ticheborne.    See   Lines  Written  by 
One  in  the  Tower. 

Lines  Written  by  One  in  the  Tower[,  being  Young 
and  Condemned  to  Die]. 
Tylee  [or  Tyler],  Florence.- — In  Vanity  Fair. 

Something  Great. 
Tyler,  Royall. — Independence  Day,  1798. 
Tynan-Hinkson,    Mrs.  Katharine. — August    Weather. 

Daffodil. 

Geoffrey  Barron. 

Island  Fisherman,  An. 

Larks. 

Lux  in  Tenebris. 

St.  Francis  and  the  Wolf. 

Summer-sweet. 

Waiting. 

Winter  Evening. 
Tyrrell,  H: — Ethiopiomania. 
Tyrtseus. — Youthful  Valor. 

Tyrwhitt,  R:  St.  John. — Glory  of  Motion,  The. 
Tytler,  C.  C.  Eraser. — Love's  Colors. 


u 

Udall,  N:— Pipe,  Merry  Annot.  (?) 

Ufford,  N.  P.— What  We  Did  with  the  Cow. 

Uhland,  Johann  Ludwig. — Castle  by  the  Sea,  The. 

Goldsmith's  Daughter,  The. 

Landlady's  Daughter,  The. 

Lost  Church,  The. 

Minstrel's  Curse,  The. 

Passage,  The.  ^ 

Song  of  the  Mountain-boy. 

Song  of  the  Mountain  Shepherd  Boy.     See  Song 
of  the  Mountain-boy. 

Song  of  the  Silent  Land.     {At.). 

To  a  Poet  who  Died  of  Want. 
"Uncle  Schneider." — Schneider  Sees  Leah. 

Schneider's  Description  of  the  Play  of  Leah.     See 
Schneider  Sees  Leah. 


567 


Underbill 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Underbill,    E-   F. — Cap'n   Peleg   Bunker   Describes   a 

Game  of  Baseball. 
Underwood,  Frances  H. — Holmes,  Extract  Concerning. 

Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. 

Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. 
Underwood,  J:  Curtis? — Senior's  Plea,  A. 
Underwood,  Sara  J. — Song  for  Tree-planting. 
Underwood,  Wilbur.— Cattle  of  His  Hand,  The. 
United  Irishman,  The. — Kate. 
Vnivertiiu  Herald. — Continuity  and  Differentiation. 

Freshman's  Vacation,  The. 

On  Afric's  Golden  Sands. 

What  the  Wild  Waves  Said. 
University  of  Chicago  Weekly. — Football  Tragedy,  A. 
University  of  Virginia  Magazine. — Evening  Kest,  The. 
Upham,  C:  Wentworth. — Washington's  Training. 
Upham,  Loui.se  S. — Death  Makes  All  Men  Brothers. 

Drink!  Drink!  Drink! 

Knife  of  Boyhood,  The. 

Stepping  in  Father's  Tracks. 

Unequal  Partnership,  An. 
Upton,  Jas. — Lass  of  Richmond  Hill,  The. 
Urmy,  Clarence. — As  I  Came  down  Mount  Tamalpais. 

Blondel. 
L^rner,  Nathan  D. — Bayonet  Charge,  The. 
Urquhart,  Frank  J: — Hortense. 

Urquhart,  W.  A. — "Yes,  I  shall  sleep!  some  sunny  day." 
Usher,  J: — Pipe  of  Tobacco,  A. 

Utter,  Mr«.  Rebecca  [Palfrey]. — King's  Daughter, 'The. 
Utter,  Rob't  Palfrey.— Voice  of  the  West  Wind,  The. 


Vail,  Clara  Warren. — Bed  during  Exams. 

Vail, Madge. —Choosing  a  "State  Tree."— The  Tulip  Tree. 

Valentine, . — Country  Pedagogue,  The. 

Wrangling  Pair,  The. 
Valentine,  Dr. . — Debating  Society,  The. 

Hypochondriac,  The. 

Taking  the  Census. 
Valentine,  E:  Abram  Uffington. — Helen. 

St.  Valentine's  Day. 

Spirit  of  the  Wheat,  The. 
Valentine,  Viola. — Then  and  Now. 

Time  Turns  the  Tables.     See  Then  and  Now. 
Van    Alstyne,    Mrs.    Frances   Jane    [Crosby]. — Three 
Cheers  for  the  Olden  Time. 

What  the  Little  Things  Said. 
Vance,  Salhe  Ada. — Guard  Thine  Action. 
Vance,  Zebulon  B. — Character  of  Washington,  The. 
Van  Cleve,  J:  S. — "Life  is  a  Mystic  flame." 
"Vandegrift,     Marg."       See    Mrs.    Janviek,    Marg. 

[Thompson]. 
Vandenhoff,  G:,  Fiske,  H.  G.,  and  Burnham,  C.  L.- — 
All  at  Sea. 

.Jessie  Brown  at  Lucknow. 

Poor  Player  at  the  Gate,  The. 
Van  Dyke,    H:    (Jackson). — Address    at    the    Annual 
Banquet  of  the  New  England  Society  in  New 
York  City,  Dec.  23,  1895. 

Against  the  Spoils  System. 

Ancestral  Ideals. 

Angler's  Reveille,  The. 

Angler's  Wish,  An. 

Four  Things. 

If  all  the  Skies. 

Lily  of  Yorrow,  The. 

Maryland  Yellow-throat,  The. 

Puritan  Sabbath,  The.     See  Address  at  the  Annual 
Banquet  of  the  New  England,  etc. 

Roslin  and  Hawthornden. 

Snow-song,  A. 

Song-sparrow,  The. 

Tennyson. 

Typical  Dutchman,  The. 

Veery,  The. 

Whip-poor-will,  The. 
Vandyne,  Mary  E. — Bald-headed  Tyrant,  The. 

Nation's  Birthday,  The. 

Some  One  Loves  Us  Best. 
Vane,  Sir  H : —  Against    the    Succession    of    Richard 

Cromwell  to  the  Protectorate. 
Van  Fleet.  A.  B.— Old  Clay  Pipe.  The. 
Vannah,  Kate. — Nice  Distinction,  A. 
Vannan,  Ijilla. — Little  Highland  Shepherdess. 
Van  Norman,  Louis  E. — "Bud's  Charge." 

Nightingale,  The. 
Van  Rensselaer.  Peyton. — At  Twilight. 
Van  Sickle,  .\nnie  D.  G. — Wife's  Prayer,  The. 
Van  Vorst,  Marie. — Sing  Again. 
Van  Wagenen,  Jared,  .Jr. — At  Vespers. 
"Vara." — Blue  Sky  Somewhere. 


Vassar  Miscellany. — Approach  of  the  Storm,  The. 

"Three's  a  Crowd." 
Vaughan,  Rev.  C:  J. — "Of  all  the  reproaches  which  arise 

against  a  man  in  his  chamber  of  study." 
Vaughan,  H: — Beyond    the   Veil.     See   They    are   all 
Gone. 
Burial  of  an  Infant,  The. 

Chosen  Path,  The. 
Feast-,  The. 

Friend  Departed.     See  They  are  all  Gone. 

Friends  in  Paradise.     See  They  are  all  Gone. 

Night,  The. 

Peace. 

Retreat,  The. 

Rules  and  Lessons. 

Son-dayes. 

They  are  all  Gone. 

Timber,  The. 

To  His  Books. 

Vision,  A.     See  World,  The. 

World,  The. 
Vaughan,  V. — To  Admiral  George  Dewey. 
Vautor,  T:— Sweet  Suffolk  Owl.     (At.) 
Vaux,  T:,  Lord. — On  a  Contented  Mind. 
Veazey,  Judge. — Grant's  Strategy. 
Vecaresco,  Helene.- — Soldier's  Tent,  The. 
Vedder,  D: — Nature's  Temple. 
Veitch,  J : — Laird  of  Schelynlaw,  The. 
Veley,  Marg. — First  or  Last? 

Spring. 
Venable,  W:  H. — Forest  Song. 

My  Catbird. 

"Oh,  keep  their  memory  green  who  led." 

School-girl,  The. 

Teacher's  Dream,  The. 

Welcome  to  "Boz,"  A.     (On  His  First  Visit  to  the 
West.) 
Venables,  Gilbert. — Reconsidered  Verdict,  The. 
Vere,  E :     See  Oxford,  Earl  of. 
Verey,  Jos. — Curtain  Falls,  The. 

Modern  Hero,  A. 
Vergil.     See  Virgil. 

Vergniaud,  Pierre  Victurnien. — Against  the  Terrorism 
of  the  Jacobins. 

To  the  French  People. 
Verne,  Jules. — Eight  Hundred  Leagues  on  the  Amazon. 

Joam  Docasta.     iSee  Eight  Hundred  Leagues  on 
the  Amazon. 

Michael  Strogoff. 
Verplanck,  Julian  Crommelin. — American  History. 

America's  Contributions  to  the  World. 

Land  of  Benedictions.     See  America's  Contribu- 
tions to  the  World. 

Our  History.     See  American  History. 
Verulam,  Baron.     See  Bacon,  Fs. 
Very,  Jones.— Barberry-bush,  The. 

"Bud  will  soon  become  a  flower,  The."     See  Now 
is  the  Time. 

Dead,  The. 

Gifts  of  God,  The. 

Idler,  The. 

Labor  and  Rest. 

Latter  Rain,  The. 

Life. 

Light  from  Within,  The. 

Nature. 

New  World,  The. 

Now  is  the  Time. 

October. 

Old  Road,  The. 

Prayer,  The. 

Presence,  The. 

Sabbatia,  The. 

Spirit,  The. 

Spirit  Land,  The. 

Strangers,  'The. 

To  the  Humming-bird. 

Tree,  The. 

World,  The. 

Yourself. 
Vetrepont,  .Joy. — Griffith  Hammerton. 
Vicente,  Gil. — Nightingale,  The. 

She  is  a  Maid  of  Artless  Grace. 
Vickers,  G  :  M. — American's  Farewell,  The 

Aunt  Polly  Green. 

Buzby's  Goat. 

Buzzard's  Point. 

Charity  Collector,  The. 

Cobbler  of  Lynn,  The. 

Dead  Man's  Gulch. 

Dew-drop  Inn,  "The. 

Dying  Child,  The. 

Farewell. 

Four  Kisses,  The. 


568 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Waller 


Vickers,  G:  M.  {continued). 

Gentleman,  A. 

Ghost  of  Crooked  Lane,  The. 

Grain  of  Truth,  A. 

Hold  Fast  to  the  Dear  Old  Sabbath. 

I'm  Getting  too  Big  to  Kiss. 

Jaqueline. 

Little  Fritz. 

Music. 

New  llosette,  The. 

Old  Canteen,  The. 

Pilot's  Bride,  The. 

Potter's  Field,  The. 

Public  Worrier,  The. 

Rizpah. 

Rusty  Sword,  The. 

Sailor's  Story,  The. 

Soldier's  Offering,  A. 

Thief  on  the  Cross,  The. 

Tom's  Thanksgiving. 

Tribulations  of  Biddy  Malone,  The. 

Two  Lives. 
Vick's  Magazine. — Arbor  Day. 

Golden  Rod,  The. 

Tree's  Record  of  its  Life,  A. 

Vicortari, . — Violet's  Grave,  The. 

Viel6,  Herman  K. — To  Robert  Louis  Stevenson. 
Vilas,  W:  F. — Great  and  Noble  Man,  A. 

Our  First  Commander. 

Villejas, . — "  'Tis  sweet  in  the  green  spring." 

Villemain,   Abel   Francois. — Christian   Orator,   The. 
Villiers,  G:     See  Buckingham,  Duke  of. 
Villon,  Francois. — Ballad  of  Dead  Ladies,  The. 

Ballad  of  Old  Time  Ladies.     See  Ballad  of  Dead 
Ladies,  The. 
Vincent,  Ellen  Kingsbury.- — Fair  Easter  Lilies. 
Vincent,  J.  H. — "Benefits  of  college  training  are  five- 
fold. The." 
Vinci,  Leonardo  da. — Leonardo  da  Vinci  Poetizes  to 
the  Duke  in  his  own  Defence. 

Perseverance.     See   Leonardo   da  Vinci   Poetizes 
to  the  Duke  in  his  own  Defence. 
Vinton,  .J.  D.— Not  what  He  Wanted. 

Singing  Temperance  Songs. 

Stealing  Apples. 
Vinton,  Miller. — Cautious  Wooer,  A. 
"Viola." — Because  You  Love  Me,  Dear. 

Her  Eyes. 

On  Receiving  a  White  Pink. 

Why? 
Virgil  (Publius  Virgilius  Maro). — ^Eneid,  The. 

Destiny  of  Rome,  The.     See  ^neid.  The. 

Destruction  of  Troy,  The.     See  iF.neid,  The. 

Dido's  Hunting.     See  .<Eneid,  The. 

Ghost  of  Creusa,  The.     See  ^Eneid,  The. 

Nisus  and  Euryalus.     See  JEneid,  The. 

Sleep.     See  yEneid,  The. 

Tribes  of  the  Dead,  The.  See  ^neid.  The. 
Virginia  City  Chronicle. — "Whar's  de  Kerridge?" 
Viroe. — Just  Like  God. 

Visscher,  Maria  Tesselschade. — Nightingale,  The. 
Voiart,  Sabine  Casimere  Amable.     See  Tastu,  Mme. 
Volk,  Hattie  Town. — Only  a  Beggar  Boy. 
Voltaire,  Francois  Marie  Arouet  de. — Zaire. 
Von  Boyle,  A.  Claud. — Ever  so  Far  Away. 

Pointer's  Dyspepsia  Goat. 

Schlausenheimer's   Alarming-glock. 

Schlausheimer  Don't  Gonciliate. 

Vas  Bender  Henshpecked? 
Von  Brandis,  Annette. — May  Bug,  The. 
Von  Dunkerfoodle,   H.— Hold  Dot   Fort  for  Ve  Vas 

Coming. 
Von  Fallersleben,  Hoffman. — My  Fatherland. 

Von  K.,  Camilla  K.— " ." 

Von  Salis,  Johan  Gaudens. — Harvest-time. 

Song  of  the  Silent  Land.     (Also  at.  to  .1.  L.  Uh- 
land.) 
Vynne,  H.  R.— Cuba— 1898. 


w 

W.— Fate. 

Yours. 
W.,  A. — Dialogue  between  the  Soul  and  the  Body,  A. 

Fiction  how  Cupid  Made  a  Nymph  Wound  Her- 
self with  His  Arrows,  A. 
W.,  B.  B.— Fan  Painted  by  Watteau,  A. 
W.,  E.— Flower  from  the  Catskills,  A. 
W.,  E.  H.— In  Ethics. 
W.,  E.  W.— More  Truth  than  Poetry. 
W.,  F.  A.  F.  W.— Sometime. 
W.,  F.  B.— Villon  to  His  Mistress. 


W.,  G.  F. — Sense  and  Spirit. 
W.,  H.— Sea-shell,  The. 
W.,  H.  E.,  Jr.— Manila  Bay. 
W.,  L.— DeTrop. 

Song  of  the  Smithy. 
W.,  M.  E.— Her  Sofa. 

Marigold  Lane. 
W.,  M.  S. — Cupid's  Metamorphosis. 
W.,  R.  C. — "Ocean  stood  like  crystal,  The." 
W.,  S.  G.— Come  Morir. 

Consolers,  The. 

Shield,  The. 
W.,  W.  F. — Fredericksburg. 
Waddington,  S: — Beata  Beatrix. 

Inn  of  Care,  The. 

Iviterature  and  Nature. 

Soul  and  Body. 
Wade,  Frank  B. — To  a  Poem. 

Wade,  Mrs.  Levi.— To  Whom  Shall  We  Give  Thanks. 
Wade,  T:— Birth  and  Death. 

Half-asleep,  The. 

Net-braiders,  The. 
Wadleigh,  Frances  E. — Pattin'  Juba. 
Wadsworth,  C: — "'Flower  fadeth,'  but  the  seed  and 

the  fruit  come,"  The. 
Wadsworth,  C:,  Jr. — In  Manila  Bay. 
Wadsworth,  Olive  A. — Over  in  the  Meadow. 
Waite,  Morris.' — About  a  Brakeman. 
Waithman,  F.  M. — Summer  Idyll,  A. 
Waithman,  Helen  Maud. — Love's  Young  Dream. 
Wake,  W:  Basil. — Saying  not  Meaning. 
Wakefield,  Mrs.  Nancy  Amelia  Woodbury  [Priest]. — 
Heaven. 

Over  the  River.     (At.  also  to  Mrs.  J.  M.  Winton.) 
Wakeman,  Antoinette  V.  H. — Sower,  The. 
Wakeman,  Edgar  L. — Magdalen. 

Songs  My  Mother  Sung,  The. 
Walbridge,  Helen  I. — Dream  of  the  Boats,  The. 
Walch,  Garnet.— Little  Tin  Plate,  A. 
Walcott,  Julia  A. — America  in  Pinafore. 

Our  Christmas. 
Waldron,  Adelaide  C. — Story  of  the  Swords,  The. 
Waldron,  J.  A. — He  Loved  a  Cross-eyed  Girl. 
Walker,  Fs.  A. — Our  Dead  Soldiers. 
Walker,  H:  A. — "There  are  recollections  as  pleasant 

as  they  are  sacred  and  eternal." 
Walker,  R.  R.— Song  of  the  Road,  A. 
Walker,  Raymond  W. — Aftermath. 

Eighteenth-century  Fan,  An. 

Football  Girl,  The. 

Hunting  Song. 

Junior's  Foxy  Friends,  The. 

Latest  Toast,  The. 

My  Bess. 
Walker,  Timothy. — Dangers  of  Our  Prosperity. 
Walker,  Welby. — He  Has  Been  there  Himself. 
Walker,  W :  Sidney. — Death's  Alchemy.    See  Thou  wert 
liOvely  on  thy  Bier. 

Thou  wert  Lovely  on  thy  Bier. 

"Too  solemn  for  day,  too  sweet  for  night." 
Wall,  Annie. — Legend  of  the  Lily,  The. 
Wall,  Will  H.— Nursery  Fable,  A. 

Wallace, .■ — Speak  Gently.     (.At.  also  to  D:  Bates 

and  to  Hangford.) 
Wallace,  G.  R.— Le  Depart. 
Wallace,  H.  B.— Life. 
Wallace,  Jas.  S. — Moses  on  Pisgah. 
Wallace,  Lew. — Angel  and  the  Shepherds,  The.     See 
Ben-Hur. 

Ben-Hur. 

Ben-Hur  and  Iras.     See  Ben-Hur. 

Chariot  Race,  The.     See  Ben-Hur.  , 

Crucifixion,  The.     See  Ben-Hur. 

First  Christmas,  The.     See  Ben-Hur. 

Race,  The.     See  Ben-Hur. 

Song   from    Ben-Hur.     See    Ben-Hur. 
Wallace,  W:  Ross. — Greenwood  Cemetery. 

Mirabeau  Dying. 

O,  not  by  Graves. 

Psalm  of  the  Union,  A.  See  United  States  Na- 
tional Anthem. 

Sword  of  Bunker  Hill,  The. 

United  States  National  Anthem. 
Waller,  Edmund. — Apology  for  Having  Loved  Before. 

Battle  of  the  Summer's  Islands,  The. 

Bud,  The. 

Epigram  on  a  Painted  Lady  with  111  Teeth,  An. 

Girdle,  A.     See  On  a  Girdle. 

Go,  Lovely  Rose.     See  Song:  "Go,  lovely  rose." 

His  Majesty's  Escape  at  St.  Andrews.  See  Of  the 
Danger  his  Majesty  (being  Prince)  Escaped 
in  the  Road  at  Saint  Andero. 

In  Answer  to  One  who  Writ  a  Libel  against  the 
Countess  of  Carlisle. 


569 


Waller 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Waller,  Edmund  (continued). 

Last    Prospect,    The.     .See    On    the    Foregoing 

Divine  Poems. 
Marriage  of  the  Dwarfs,  The.     See  Of  the  Mar- 
riage of  the  Dwarfs. 
My  Charmer.       • 
Of  the  Danger  his  Maje.sty  (being  Prince)  Escaped 

in  the  Road  at  Saint  Andero. 
Of  the  Marriage  of  the  Dwarfs. 
Old  Age.     See  On  the  Foregoing  Divine  Poems. 
Old  Age  and  Death.     See  On  the  Foregoing  Divine 

Poems. 
On  a  Girdle. 
On  a  Painted  Lady  with  111  Teeth.     See  Epigram 

on  a  Painted  Lady  with  111  Teeth,  An. 
On   His  Divine  Poems.     See  On   the   Foregoing 

Divine  Poems. 
On  the  Foregoing  Divine  Poems. 
On  the  Statue  of  King  Charles  I.  at  Charing  Cross 

in  the  Year  1674. 
Rose,  The.     See  Song:  "Go,  lovely  rose!" 
Rose's  Message,  The.    See  Song:  "Go,  lovely  rose!" 
Song:  "Go,  lovely  rose!" 
Song:  "Whilst  I  listen,"  etc. 

"Soul's  dark  cottage,  battered  and  decayed.  The." 
"Stay,  PhcEbus[,  stay]!" 
To  a  Lady  in  Retirement. 

To  Chloris.     See  Song:  "Whilst  I  listen,"  etc. 
To  Chloris,  Singing  a  Song  of  His  own  Composi- 
tion. 
To  Flavia. 

To  One  who  Wrote  Against  a  Fair  Lady.     See 
In   Answer  to  One  who  Writ  a  Libel  against 
the  Countess  of  Carlisle. 
Waller,  J:  Fs.— Dance  Light.     See  Kitty  Neil. 
Irish  Melody,  An.     See  Kitty  Neil. 
Kitty  Neil. 

Magdalena;  or.  The  Spanish  Duel. 
Spinning-wheel,  The.     See  Spinning-wheel  Song. 

A. 
Spinning-wheel  Song,  A  [or  The]. 
Wallis,  S.  Teackle.— GueriUas,  The.  , 

Walpole,  Sir  Rob't. — Against  Mr.  Pitt. 

Against  Wm.  Pitt.     See  Against  Mr.  Pitt. 

How  Patriots  May  be  Made. 

Sir  Robert  Walpole  against  Mr.  Pitt.     See  Against 

Mr.  Pitt. 
Walpole's  Attack  on  Pitt.     See  Against  Mr.  Pitt. 
Walsh,  E: — Dawning  of  the  Day,  The. 
Have  You  been  at  Carrick? 
Lament  of  the  Mangaire  Sugach. 
Mo  Craoibhin  Cno. 
Walsh,  F.  J. — Mission  of  the  Anglo-Saxons,  The. 
Walsh,  J: — Drimin  Donn  Dilis. 

To  My  Promised  Wife. 
Walsh,  W: — Despairing  Lover,  The. 
Rivalry  in  Love. 
Rivals.     See  Rivalry  in  Love. 
Sonnet:     Death. 
Sonnet: — "What   has   this   bugbear  death  that's 

worth  our  care?"     See  Sonnet:  Death. 
To  His  Book. 
Walster,  Kate  Douglas. — Seasons. 
Walter,  J.  B.— Be  Ye  Readv. 

Walton,  Izaak. — Angler's  Wish,  The.     See  Compleat 
Angler,  The. 
Compleat  Angler,  The. 
Warburton,  Cora  Isabel. — Skating  Song. 
Warburton,  W:— Capture  of  Quebec,  The. 
"Ward,  Artemus."     See  Browne,  C:  Farrar. 
Ward,  C:  F. — Battle  of  Gettysburg. 
Ward,  Mrs.  Eliz.  Stuart  [Phelps]. — Apple  Blossoms. 
At  the  Party. 
Conemaugh. 
"Day  of  Judgment,  The."     See  Trotty's  Wedding 

Tour. 
Fall  of  the  Pemberton  Mill,  The.     See   Tenth  of 

January,  The. 
Feeling  the  Way. 
Gloucester  Harbor. 
How  June  Found  Massa  Linkum. 
Lady  of  Shalott,  The. 
Learning  to  Pray. 
Letter,  A. 

Little  Mud-sparrows,  The. 
I>ost  Colors,  The. 
Room's  Width,  The. 
"Some   day,    some   day   of   days,    threading    the 

street."     (At.)     See  Perry,  Carlotta. 
Tenth  of  January,  The. 
Trot's  Wedding  "journey.     See  Trotty's  Wedding 

Tour. 
Trotty's  Wedding  Tour. 
Ward,  S:— Proem,  A. 


Ward,  W:  Hayes. — New  Castalia,  The. 

To  John  Greenleaf  Whittier,  on  the  Death  of  Lowell. 

Ware, . — Industry  Necessary  to  the  Attainment 

of  Eloquence. 
Ware,  Annie  D. — Relics. 
Ware,  Eugene  Fitch  ("Ironquill"). — Aztec  City,  The. 

Blaine  of  Maine. 

Capers  et  Caper. 

Constant  Friend,  The.  See  Washerwoman's  Song. 
The. 

Decoration  Day. 

John  Brown. 

Neophyte. 

Pass. 

Three  "Rhymes  of  Ironquill." 

Washerwoman's  Friend,  The.  See  Wa.sherwoman'8 
Song,  The. 

Washerwoman's  Song,  The. 
Ware,  H: — Christmas  Gathering. 

Resurrection  of  Christ. 

Vision  of  Liberty,  The. 
Ware,  J.  R. — Dead  Light-house  Keeper,  The. 
Ware,  W: — Aurelian. 

Aurelian  and  Zenobia.     See  Zenobia. 

Christian  Martyr,  The.     See  Aurelian. 

Speeches  of  Zenobia  and  Her  Council  in  Reference 
to  the  Anticipated  War  with  Rome.  See 
Zenobia. 

Zenobia. 

Zenobia  to  Her  People.     See  Zenobia. 

Zenobia's  Ambition.     See  Zenobia. 

Zenobia's  Defence.     See  Zenobia.  \ 

Warfield,  Catharine  M. — Manassas. 

Song:  "I  never  knew  how  dear  thou  wert." 
Waring,  Anna  Lsetitia. — My  Times  are  in  Thy  Hands. 
See  Thy  Will  be  Done. 

Source  of  My  Life. 

Supplication.     See  Thy  WiU  be  Done. 

Tender  Mercies. 

Thy  Will  be  Done. 
Waring,  Carl.^Trout-brook,  The. 
Warman,  Cy. — Memorial  Day. 
Warner,  Anna  B. — Brave  Little  Flower,  The. 

Daffy-down-Dilly.     See  Brave  Little  Flower,  The. 

Ready  for  Duty.     See  Brave  Little  Flower,  The. 
Warner,  C :  Dudley. — Address  at  Unveiling  Hale  Statue 
— June  16. 

Backlog  Studies. 

Being  a  Boy. 

Bookra. 

In  the  Wilderness. 

Martyr-spy,  The.  See  Address  at  Unveiling  Hale 
Statue. 

Mountain  Tragedy,  A.     See  In  the  Wilderness. 

What  is  your  Culture  to  me? 

Young  Scholar,  The.      See  What  is  your  Culture 
to  me? 
Warner,   C:  Dudley,   and  Clemens,    S-    Langhorne. — 

See  Clemens,  S:  Langhorne,  and  Warner,  C: 
Dudley. 
Warner,  Mrs.  J.  O. — Prisoner  of  the  Ba.stile,  The. 
Warner,  Lily.— Chin  Wee. 

"Hold  Fast  what  I  Give  You." 
Warner,  L.  G. — Friends. 
Warner,  Susan.^ — Wind's  Voices,  The. 
Warner,  W: — Albion's  England. 

Before    the    Battle    of    Hastings.     See    Albion's 
England. 
Warren,  Edgar  L. — Schemer,  A. 
Warren,  Emily. — Daisy. 

Our  Little  Queen."    See  Daisy. 
Warren,  G:  M. — Baitsy  and  I  are  Oudt. 

Doketor's  Drubbles,  A. 

Fritz  and  His  Betsy  Fall  Out.     See  Baitsy  and 
I  are  Oudt. 
Warren,  H.  W. — Organ  Creations. 
Warren,  Jos. — American  Rights. 

Constitutional  I^iberty  and  Arbitrary  Power. 

Free  America.  (?) 

Scorn  to  be  Slaves.     See  Constitutional  Liberty 
and  Arbitrary  Power. 
Warren,  S: — Ten  Thousand  a  Year. 

Tittlebat  Titmouse's  Experiment.     See  Ten  Thou- 
sand a  Year. 
Warren,   T.   Herbert.— In   Memoriam.— Alfred,    Lord 

'    Tennyson. 
Warton,  T:    (1687-1745.)— Sonnet— Written  after  See- 
ing Windsor  Castle. 
Warton,  T:     (17?8- 1790.)- Fairies. 

First  of  April,  The. 

Inscription  in  a  Hermitage. 

On  a  Blank  Leaf  of  Dugdale's  Monasticon.  See 
Sonnet  Written  in  a  Blank  Leaf  of  Dugdale's 
"Monasticon." 


570 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Watts 


Warton,  T:  (1687-1745)  {continued). 

On    Revisiting    the   River  Loddon.     See  To  the 

River  Lodon. 
Retirement.     See  Inscription  in  a  Hermitage. 
Sonnet   Written  in   a  Blank   Leaf  of   Dugdale's 

'Monasticon.' 
To  the  River  Lodon. 
Triumph  of  Isis,  The. 
Washburn,  Ahce. — Sound  Monej^. 
Washburn,  H:  Stevenson. — Day  in  June,  A. 
East  Wind,  The. 
Last  Robin,  The. 
Song  of  the  Harvest. 
Sunset  on  Lake  Leman. 
To  the  First  Robin. 
Washburn,  W:  T.— Face,  A. 

Washington,  Booker  Taliaferro. — Address  at  the  Har- 
vard Alumni  Dinner. 
Better  Part,  The. 
Message  from  the  South,  A. 
On  Receiving  the  Master's  Degree  from  Harvard. 

See  Address  at  the  Harvard  Alumni  Dinner. 
Solution  of  the  Southern  Problem,  The. 
Washington  Capitol. — "You  may  get  through  the  world, 

but  'twill  be  very  slow." 
Washington,  G: — Address  to  His  Troops.     <See  To  the 
American  Troops  before  the  Battle  of  Long 
Island. 
Against  Foreign  Entanglements. 
Approach  of  the  Presidency,  The. 
Farewell  Address. 

First  Inaugural  Address.     iSee  Washington's  In- 
augurals, Apr.  30,  1789. 
First  Thank.sgiving  Proclamation  Issued  by  George 
Washington.  The.     See  For  a  National  Thanks- 
giving. 
For  a  National  Thanksgiving. 

France   and   the   United   States.      See   Reply  to 
Address  Presenting  Colors  of  France  to  United 
States. 
General  Washington's  Resignation. 
Maxims  of  George  Washington. 
Original  Maxims  of  George  Washington. 
Our  Relations  with  Europe.     jSee  Farewell  Ad- 
dress. 
Reply  to  Address  Presenting  Colors  of  France  to 

United  States. 
To  the  American  Troops  before  the  Battle  of  Long 

Island,    1774. 
Washington  to  His  Soldiers.     iSce  To  the  Ameri- 
can Troops  before  the  Battle  of  Long  Island. 
Washington's  Address  to  His  Troops.     See  To  the 
American  Troops  before  the  Battle  of   Long 
Island. 
Washington's  Inaugural  Address.     See  Washing- 
ton's Inaugurals,  Apr.  30,  1789. 
Washington's  Inaugurals,  Apr.  30,  1789. 
Washington's  Inaugurals,  Dec.  3,  1793. 
Washington  News. — Brought  Back  by  the  Butcher's  Boy. 
Washington  Po,<<<.— Her  Laugh — in  Four  Fits. 

Husband's  Programme. 
Wasson,  Rev.  D:  Atwood. — All's  Well. 
Ideals. 
Joy-month. 
Love  against  Love. 
Love's  Victory. 
Royalty. 

Scipio  to  the  Senate. 
Seen  and  Unseen. 
Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. 
Wastell,  Simon. — Man's  Mortality.     See  Microbiblion. 
Microbiblion. 

Of  Man's  Mortality.     See  Microbiblion. 
What  is  Man?     See  Microbiblion. 
Waterbury,  Dr.  E.  P. — Planting  the  Tree. 
Waterfield,  W: — St.  Valentine's  Magic  Wand. 
Waterhouse,  A.  J. — ^Price  of  High  License,  The. 
Waterloo,  Stanley. — -Bobolink's  Song,  The. 

Drum,  A. 
Waterman,  Leonine. — Two  Ways  of  Looking  at  It. 
Waterman,  Nixon. — Casey's  Little  Boy. 
Don't. 

When  the  Summer  Boarders  Come. 
When  the  Train  Comes  In. 
Waters,  Fs.  L.  Dominick. — Water  Lily,  The. 
Waterston,  Rob't  C. — Ceaseless  Aspirations. 

Mortal  and  Immortal. 
Watkins,  Jas.  S. — God's  Beverage. 
Watrous,  Andrew  E. — De  Long. 
Fitz-James  O'Brien. 
Her  First  Train. 
In  Memoriam — ,T.  O. 
Lohengrin. 
On  a  Forgotten  By-way. 


Watson,  E:  Willard. — Absolution. 
Watson,  Jas.  W.     See  Watson,  J:  W. 
Watson,  Dr.  J:  ("Ian  MacLaren"). — Beside  the  Bonnie 
Brier  Bush. 

Death  of  the  Country  Doctor,  The.     See  Beside 
the  Bonny  Brier  Bush. 

Doctor  of  the  Old  School,  A.    See  Beside  the  Bonnie 
Brier  Bush. 

His   Mother's   Sermon.     See   Beside    the   Bonnie 
Brier  Bush. 

Through  the  Flood.     See  Beside  the  Bonnie  Brier 
Bush. 
Watson,  J:  [rpr.  Jas.]  W.  — Beautiful  Snow. 

Ring  down  the  Drop — I  Cannot  Play. 

Stick  to  Your  Bush. 

What  Farmer  Green  Said. 

Wounded.     See  Wounded  Soldier,  The. 

Wounded  Soldier,  The. 

Wounded  to  Death.     See  Wounded  Soldier,  The. 
Watson,  Kate  L. — Great-Grandmamma  and  I. 
Watson,  Rosamund  Marriott  ("Graham  R.  Tomson"). 
—All  Soul's  Day. 

Ave  atque  Vale. 

Ballad  of  the  Bird-bride. 

Ballad  of  the  Were-wolf,  A. 

Ballade  of  Biblioclasts. 

Ballade  of  Nicolete. 

Deid  P^olks'  Ferry. 

Farm  on  the  Links,  The, 

Hereafter. 

Le  Mauvais  Larron. 

To  My  Cat. 

Wrecker  of  Priest's  Cove,  The. 
Watson,  T: — Hecatompathia. 

Lament  for  Meliboeus,  A. 

May. 

"Time  wasteth  years,  and  months,  and  hours." 
Watson,  W: — Byron. 

Byron  the  Voluptuary.     See  Byron. 

Domine,  quo  Vadis? 

England  and  Her  Colonies. 

Exit. 

First  Skylark  of  Spring,  The. 

Glimpse,  The. 

Great  Misgiving,  The. 

In  Laleham  Churchyard. 

Insight. 

Lachrymae  Musarum. 

Ode  in  May. 

On  Diirer's  "Melencolia." 

Play  of  "King  Lear,"  The. 

Song:  "April,  April,  laugh  thy  girlish  laughter." 

Song  in  Imitation  of  the  Elizabethans. 

Song  to  April.     See  Song:  "April,  April." 

To  a  Seabird. 

Wordsworth's  Grave. 
Watterson,  H: — Abraham  Lincoln. 

Columbian    Oration.     See    Our    Expanding    Re- 
public. 

Dedication    of    Columbian    Exposition     See    Our 
Expanding  Republic. 

Gray  Honors  the  Blue,  The.     See  Nation's  Dead, 
The. 

"Let  Us  Have  Peace."     See  Nation's  Dead,  The. 

Nation's  Dead,  The. 

New  Americanism,  The. 

Our  Expanding  Republic. 

Retrospect,  A.     See  Our  Expanding  Republic. 

Schools    take   Part,    The.     See    Our    Expanding 
Republic. 

Secret   of  Lincoln's  Power,   The.     See  Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Star  of  Democracy,  The. 

Tribute  to  Grant,  A.     See  Nation's  Dead,  The. 
Watterson,  H:  B.— Cricket,  The. 
Watts,  Alaric  Alex. — Forget  Thee,  No,  Never! 

He  never  Said  He  Loved  Me. 

Maiden's  Soliloquy,  A. 

Ten  Years  Ago. 

You  Ask  Me  for  a  Pledge,  Love. 
Watts,  Alfred.— ;-Burial  of  B^ranger,  The. 
Watts,  I: — Against  Quarreling  and  Fighting. 

Ant,  The. 

Ant  or  Emmet,  The.     See  Ant,  The. 

Busy  Bee,  The. 

Come,  Holy  Spirit[,  Heavenly  Dove]. 

Cradle  Hymn,  A. 

Cradle  Song,  A.     See  Cradle  Hymn,  A. 

Creator  and  Creatures,  The. 

Day  of  Judgment,  The. 

Example  of  Christ,  The. 

Glorying  in  the  Cross. 

Heavenly  Canaan,  The.     See  There  is  a  Land  of 
Pure  Delight. 


571 


Watts 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Watts,  I:  (continued). 

"How  fair  is  the  rose!"     See  Rose,  The. 

Hymn:  "Lord,  when  I  quit  this  earthly  stage." 

I  Give  Immortal  Praise. 

Insignificant    Exutence.     See    Paraphrase    from 
Miscellaneous  Thoughts. 

.lesus  shall  Reign.     See  Psalm  LXXII. 

Morning  Hymn.     See  Morning  Song,  A. 

Morning  Song,  A. 

O  God!  our  Help  in  Ages  Past. 

()  Happy  Soul,  that  Lives  on  High. 

Paraphrase    from    Miscellaneous    Thoughts. 

Psalm  Nineteen. 

Psalm  Forty-six. 

Psalm  Sixty-five. 

Psalm  LXXII. 

Psalm  XC. 

Psalm  XCVIII. 

Psalm  O. 

Psalm  CXVII. 

Psalm  CXXI. 

Rose,  The. 

Summer  Evening,  A. 

There  is  a  Land  of  Pure  Delight. 
Watts,  J:  G.— Kiss  in  the  Dark,  A. 
Watts-Dutton,  Theodore. — Breath  of  Avon,  The. 

Coleridge. 

First  Kiss,  The. 

Ode  to  Mother  Carey's  Chicken. 

SoiMiet's  Voice,  The. 

Toast  to  Qmar  Khayyiim. 

Wassail  Chorus  at  the  Mermaid  Tavern. 
Waugh,  Edwin. — Dule's  i'  this  Bonnet  o'  Mine,  The. 

Owd  Pinder. 

Sweetheart  Gate,  Th'. 

Willy's  Grave. 
Wauless,  Andrew. — She  Liked  Him  Rale  Weel. 
Wayland,  Fs.— Bible  and  the  Iliad,  The. 

Glory. 

Growth  of  International  Sympathies. 

Mental  Faculties,  The. 

Object  of  Missions,  The. 
Wayland,  Heman  Lincoln. — New  Englander  in  His- 
tory, The. 

Puritans,  The. 
Wayland,  .1:  Elton. — Epilogue  at  Wallack's,  An. 
Wayland,  Marion. — Who  Shall  be  Queen  of  May? 
Wayne,  C:  Stokes. — Almost  a  Mormon. 

Best  Policy,  The. 

Bold  for  the  Right. 

Double  Play. 

Joe   Fleming's  Thanksgiving.     (Ad.). 

Ruggles  &  Co. 

Trapped. 
Weatherbee,  Emily  G. — Mother's  Hymns. 

My  Mother's  Hymns.     See  Mother's  Hymns. 
Weatherly,  F:  E:— All  the  Same. 

Angel  Court. 

Bells  of  Lynn,  The. 

Bird  in  the  Hand,  A. 

Cat's  Tea-party.  The. 

Cherries. 

Darby  and  .loan. 

Dog's  Confession,  The. 

Douglas  Gordon. 

Friend  or  Foe? 

God's  Music. 

London  Bridge. 

Love's  Proving. 

Maids  of  Lee,  'The.     See  Bird  in  the  Hand,  A. 

Margery  Daw. 

Men  of  Ware,  The. 

Nancy  Lee. 

Old  City  Church,  The. 

Sea's  Love,  The. 

Sir  Cupid. 

Surgeon's  Child,  The. 

Tommy's  Army. 

Usual  Way,  The. 
Weatherly,  G: — Ere  the  Sun  Went  Down. 

Gleaners,  The. 

"Killed!" 
Webb,  Anna  B.— Sword  Drill,  The. 
Webb.  C.  A.  M.— Apple  Seed,  The. 
Webb,  C:  H:  (".John  Paul").— Alec.  Dunham's  Boat. 

Dum  Vivimus  Vigilamus. 

Gil,  the  Toreador. 

King  and  the  Pope,  The. 

"Last  Night  in  Blue  my  Little  Love  was  Dressed." 

Little  Mamma. 

Maiden's  Last  Farewell.  The. 

March . 

What  a  Little  Boy  Thinks  about  Things. 

With  a  Nantucket  Shell. 


Webb.  Frd'k  G.— Dash  for  the  Colors,  The. 

Mad  Actor.  The. 

Tale  of  the  Crimean  War.  A. 
Webb.  J.  Russell. — "Not  to  Myself  Alone."     (At.  also 

to   S:    W.    Partridge.)    ' 
Webb.  Rebe  S. — La  Vesuviana. 
Webbe.  C: — Against  Indifference. 
Webber,  Harry  C— What's  the  Good. 
Webber,  Jas.  Plaisted. — Note  for  a  Nosegay,  A. 
Webster,  Augusta. — Brook  Rhine,  The. 

Day  is  Dead.     See  Songs  from  Dramas. 

Deaths  of  Myron  and  Klydone,  The.  See  In  a 
Day. 

Happiest  Girl  in  the  World,  The. 

In  a  Day. 

I.,ove's  Silence. 

Message  of  Victory,  The.     See  Songs  from  Dramas. 

News  to  the  King.     See  Songs  from  Dramas. 

Songs  from  Dramas. 

Tell  Me  not  of  Morrows,  Sweet.  See  Songs  from 
Dramas. 

'Tween  Earth  and  Sky.     See  Songs  from  Dramas. 
Webster,  Dan'l. — Adams  and  JeflEerson. 

Addition  to  the  Capitol,  The. 

Address  at  Bunker  Hill.  See  Bunker  Hill  Monu- 
ment, The. 

Address  before  the  New  York  Historical  Society. 

Against  Secession.  See  Constitution  and  the 
Union,  The. 

Age  of  Improvement,  The.  See  Bunker  Hill 
Monument,  The. 

America's  Gifts  to  Europe.  See  Completion  of 
the  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

America's  Greatness.     See  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Anniversary  Address.  See  Address  before  the 
New  York  Historical  Society. 

Apostrophe  to  Washington.  See  Addition  to  the 
Capitol,  The. 

Benefits  of  the  Constitution.  See  Public  Dinner 
at  New  York. 

Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

Bunker  Hill  Monument.  See  also  Completion  of 
the  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

Bunker  Hill  Monument  Completed,  The.  See 
Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument, 
The. 

Bunker  Hill  Speech.  See  Bunker  Hill  Monument, 
The. 

Century  from  Washington,  A.  See  Character  of 
Washington,  The. 

Character  of  True  Eloquence.  See  Adams  and 
.Jefferson. 

Character  of  Washington,  The. 

Close  of  Defense  of  Dartmouth  College.  See  Dart- 
mouth College  Case,  The. 

Completion  of  tTie  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

Compromise  Bill  of  1850,  The.  See  Compromise 
Measures,  The. 

Compromise  Measures,  The. 

Constitution,  The.  See  Constitution  and  the 
Union,  The. 

Constitution  and  the  Union,  The. 

Constitution  and  the  Union,  The.  See  also  Com- 
promise Measures,  The. 

Constitution  not  Unalterable,  The. 

Constitution  the  Safeguard  of  Liberty,  The.  See 
Character  of  Washington,  The. 

Crime  its  Own  Detecter  [or  Betrayer],  See  Mur- 
der of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 

Crime  Revealed  by  Conscience.  See  Murder  of 
Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 

Dartmouth  College  Case,  "The. 

Declaration  of  Independence,  The.  See  Adams 
and  Jefferson. 

Dedication  of  Bunker  Hill  Monument.  See  Com- 
pletion of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

Defence  of  the  Kennistons. 

Departure  of  the  Pilgrims  for  Holland.  See  First 
Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 

Duties  of  American  Citizens.  See  Completion  of 
the  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

Duty  to  Our  Country.  See  Adams  and  Jeffer- 
son. 

Elements  of  the  American  Government.  See  Com- 
pletion of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

Eloquence.     See  Adams  and  .Jefferson. 

Eloquence  of  Action,  The.  See  Adams  and  Jeffer- 
son. 

Eloquence  of  John  Adams,  The.  See  Adams  and 
Jefferson. 

Evil  of  Disunion.  See  Character  of  Washington, 
The. 

Executive  Power  to  be  Dreaded.  See  Presiden- 
tial Protest,  The. 


572 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Weems 


Webster,  Dan'l  (continued). 

First  Bunker  Hill  Monument  Oration.  See  Bun- 
ker Hill  Monument,  The. 

First  Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 

Foundation  of  Bunker  Hill  Monument.  »See  Bun- 
ker Hill  Monument,  The. 

Fourth  of  July,  The.  .See  Addition  to  the  Capi- 
tol, The. 

Fraudulent  Party  Outcries.  See  Natural  Hatred 
of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich,  The. 

Future  of  America,  The.  See  Adams  and  Jeffer- 
son. 

Future  of  America,  The.  See  also  First  Settle- 
ment of  New  England,  The. 

Glorious  Constitution,  The.  See  Public  Dinner  at 
New  York. 

Guilt  Cannot  Keep  its  Own  Secret.  See  Murder 
of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 

Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Kich.  See  Natural 
Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich,  The. 

Independence.     See  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Influence  of  Great  Actions,  The.  See  First  Settle- 
ment of  New  England,  The. 

Justice  to  the  Whole  Country.  See  Compromise 
Measures,  The. 

Liberty  and  Knowledge.  <See  Public  Dinner  at 
New  York. 

Liberty  and   Union   [One  and   Inseparable].     See 
Reply  to  Hayne,  The. 
J        Lines  in  a  Lady's  Album. 

Lines  on  the  Death  of  his  Son  Charles. 

Log-cabin,  The.     See  Mass  Meeting  at  Saratoga. 

Manama  Mission,  The. 

Mass  Meeting  at  Saratoga. 

Massachusetts.     See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The. 

Massachusetts  and  South  Carolina.  <See  Reply  to 
Hayne,  The. 

Massachusetts  and  the  Union.  See  Compromise 
Measures,  The. 

Matches  and  Overmatches.  See  Reply  to  Hayne, 
The. 

Memory  of  the  Heart,  The. 

Mr.  Webster  to  Mrs.  Paige,  1847. 

Moral  Force  against  Physical.  See  Revolution  in 
Greece,  The. 

Moral  Force  of  Public  Opinion.  See  Revolution 
in  Greece,  The. 

Morning.     See  Mr.  Webster  to  Mrs.  Paige. 

Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 

Murder  Will  Out.  See  Murder  of  Captain  Joseph 
White,  The. 

Murderer's  Secret,  The.  See  Murder  of  Captain 
Joseph  White,  The. 

Murderer's  Self-betrayal,  The.  See  Murder  of 
Captain  Joseph  White,  The. 

Name  of  Washington,  The.  See  Character  of 
Washington,  The. 

Natural  Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich,  The. 

Nature  of  [True]  Eloquence,  The.  See  Adams  and 
.Jefferson. 

Ode  to  Tobacco. 

On  Mr.  Clay's  Resolutions.  See  Constitution  and 
the  Union,  The. 

On  Sudden  Political  Conversions.  See  Remarks 
on  the  Political  Course  of  Mr.  Calhoun  in  1838. 

On  the  Death  of  my  Son  Charles.  See  Lines  on 
the  Death  of  his  Son  Charles. 

Opposition  to  Misgovernment. 

Oration  at  the  Laying  of  the  Corner-stone  of  the 
Bunker  Hill  Monument.  See  Bunker  Hill 
Monument,  The. 

Oration  on  the  Death  of  Adams  and  Jefferson. 
See  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Our  Duties  to  Our  Country.  See  Adams  and  Jef- 
ferson. 

Peaceable  Secession.  See  Constitution  and  the 
Union,  The. 

Peroration  of  Webster's  Plymouth  Rock  Oration. 
See  First  Settlement  of  New  England,  The. 

Peroration  of  Webster's  Reply  to  Hayne.  See  Re- 
ply to  Hayne,  The. 

Philanthropic  Love  of  Power. 

Platform  of  the  Constitution,  The.  See  Remarks 
on  the  Political  Course  of  Mr.  Calhoun  in  1838. 

Plymouth  Rock.  See  First  Settlement  of  New 
England,  The. 

Power  of  Conscience,  The.  See  Murder  of  Captain 
Joseph  White,  The. 

Power  of  Public  Opinion,  The. 

Presidential  Protest,  The. 

Public  Dinner  at  New  York. 

Public  Opinion.     See  Revolution  in  Greece,  The. 

Remarks  on  the  Political  Course  of  Mr.  Calhoun 
in  1838. 


Webster,  Dan'l  {continued). 

Reply  to  Hayne[,  The]. 

Representative,  The.  See  Presidential  Protest, 
The. 

Resistance  to  Oppression  in  its  Rudiments.  See 
Presidential  Protest,  The. 

Revolution  in  Greece,  'The. 

Right  of  Free  Discussion. 

Sanctity  of  State  Obligations.  See  Speech  in  Wall 
Street,  1840. 

Second  Bunker  Hill  Monument  Oration.  See 
Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument, 
The. 

Second  Speech  on  Foot's  Resolution.  See  Reply 
to  Hayne,  The. 

Secret  of  Murder,  The.  See  Murder  of  Captain 
Joseph  White,  The. 

South  Carolina  and  Massachusetts.  See  Reply  to 
Hayne,  The. 

Speech  in  the  Knapp  Trial.  See  Murder  of  Cap- 
tain Joseph  White,  The. 

Speech  in  Wall  Street,  1840. 

Spirit  of  Human  Liberty.  See  Character  of  Wash- 
ington, The. 

Standard  of  the  Constitution,  The. 

Supposed  Speech  against  the  Declaration  of  In- 
dependence.    See  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Supposed  Speech  of  John  Adams.  See  Adams 
and  Jefferson. 

Supposed  Speech  of  John  Adams  for  [or  on]  the 
Declaration  of  Independence.  See  Adams  and 
Jefferson. 

Supposed  Speech  of  John  Adams  in  Support  of 
American  Independence.  See  Adams  and  Jef- 
ferson. 

Sympathy  with  South  American  Republicanism. 
See  Manama  Mission,  The. 

"That  motionless  shaft  will  be  the  most  powerful 
of  speakers.",  See  Bunker  Hill  Monument, 
The. 

To  the  Revolutionary  Veterans.  See  Bunker  Hill 
Monument,  The. 

To  the  Survivors  of  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill. 
See  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The. 

Tribute  to  Massachusetts.  See  Reply  to  Hayne, 
The. 

True  Eloquence.     See  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Twenty-second  of  February,  The.  See  Washing- 
ton's Birthday. 

Union  of  the  States,  The.  See  Character  of  Wash- 
ington, The. 

"War  must  go  on.  The. "  See  Adams  and  Jeffer- 
son. 

Washington.     See  Addition  to  the  Capitol,  The. 

Washington.  See  also  Character  of  Washington, 
The. 

Washington  and  the  Union.  See  Character  of 
Washington,  The. 

Washington's  Birthday. 

"We  may  hope  that  the  growing  influence  of  en- 
lightened sentiments." 
Webster,  H :  Kitchell.— Difference,  The. 

To  the  Faculty. 
Webster,  J:— Action.  (7) 

"Call  for  the  robin-redbreast  and  the  wren.  "  See 
White  Devil,  The. 

Devil's  Law-case,  The. 

Dirge,  A:  "Call  for  the  robin-redbreast  and  the 
wren."     See  White  Devil,  The. 

Dirge  from  "The  White  Devil. ' '  See  White  Devil, 
The. 

Duchess  of  Malfi,  The. 

Famous  History  of  Sir  'Thomas  Wyatt,  The. 

Hark,  now  Everything  is  Still.  See  Duchess  of 
Malfi,  The. 

Lady  Jane  Grey.  See  Famous  History  of  Sir 
Thomas  Wyatt,  The. 

Land  Dirge,  A.     See  White  Devil,  The. 

Shrouding  of  the  Duchess  of  Malfi,  The.  See 
Duchess  of  Malfi,  The. 

Vanitas  Vanitatum.  See  Devil's  Law-case, 
The. 

White  Devil,  The. 
Webster's  Spelling  Book. — Fable  of  the  Boy  that  Stole 

Apples. 
Wedderburn,  Jas. — Go,  Heart. 

Leave  me  Not. 
Weeden,  Howard. — Banjo  of  the  Past,  The. 

Borrowed  Child,  The. 
Weeks,  Rob't  Kelly. — In  May. 

Man  and  Nature. 

Medusa. 

Song  for  Lexington,  A. 
Weems,  Mason  L. — Battle  of  Lexington,  The. 


573 


Weir 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Weir,  Arthur. — Christmas  Lullaby,  A. 

Dauntless. 

Little  Miss  Blue  Eyes. 

Little  Trooper,  The. 

Snowshoe  Song,  A. 

Snowshoeing  Soili.     See  Snowshoe  Song,  A. 

Voyageur  Song. 
Weir,  Harrison. — English  Robin,  The. 
Weiss,  Susan  A. — Mammy's  Story. 
Weitzel,  3fr«.  Sophie  Winthrop  [Shepherd]. — From  One 
Who  Went  Away  in  Haste. 

Laws  and  Law. 

Love's  Opportunity. 

Star  at  Dawn,  The. 
Welby,  Mrs.  Amelia  B.  [Coppuck]. — Eloquence. 

Old  Maid,  The. 

Twilight  at  Sea. 
Welch,  Herbert.— Pity  'tis,  'tis  True. 
Welch.  Sarah. — Digger's  Grave,  The. 
Welcker,  Adair. — Convict's  Complaint,  The. 

Meditations  on  Immortality. 

To  the  Stars  and  the  Stripes  from  Abroad. 
Weld,  Theodore  Dwight. — Death  or  Liberty. 

Incident  in  the  Life  of  Wendell  Phillips,  An. 
Weldon,  C: — Poem  of  the  Universe,  The. 
Wellesley  Magazine. — Song:     "The  poets  sing  that  love 

IS  blind." 
Wellington,  AUie.     See  Rollins,  Mrs.   Alice  [Well- 

ingtonI. 
Wells,  Mrs.  Anna  M. — Cow-boy's  Song,  The. 
Wells.  Carolyn.— .\.  B.  C.  of  Literature. 

Poster-girl,  The. 

"There  once  was  a  writer  named  Wright." 
Wells,  C:  Jeremiah. — Joseph  and  his  Brethren. 

Patriarchal  Home,The.  See  Joseph  and  his  Brethren. 

Phraxanor     to     Joseph.     See     Joseph     and     his 
Brethren. 

Rachel.     See  Joseph  and  his  Brethren. 

Triumph   of   Joseph,   The.     See   Joseph   and   his 
Brethren. 
Wells,  Eben  Hale.— Battle  of  Cannae,  The. 
Wells,  K.  G. — Arbor  Day  History. 
Wells,  Lilian  F.— Uncle  Morton's  Gift. 
Wells,  Nellie  F. — Roadside  Lesson,  A. 
Welsh,  Herbert. — Modern  Pirates,  The. 
Welsh,  J.  P.— Beautiful  Sprig. 
Welsh,  Maggie  May. — Ode  to  the  Trees. 
Welsh,  Philip  H.— By  the  Sea. 
Wentworth,  T:     See  Strafford,  Earl  of. 
Werner,  A.— In  the  Theatre. 

Wert,  J.  Howard. — Indian  Warrior's  Last  Song,  The. 
Wesley,  C: — Catholic  Love. 

Christ  our  Example. 

Christ,  the  Refuge  of  the  Soul.     See  Jesus,  Lover 
of  my  Soul. 

Christmas  Day.     See  Hark,  the  Herald  Angels. 

Christmas  Hymn. 

Death. 

Desiring  to  Love. 

Easter  Hymn. 

For  Believers. 

For  One  Retired  into  the  Country. 

Friend  of  All. 

Hark!     How  all  the  Welkin  Rings!     See  Christ- 
mas Hymn. 

Hark,  the  Herald  Angels. 

Hymn  of  a  Child. 

Jesu,  my  Strength,  my  Hope. 

Jesuisl  Lover  of  My  Soul. 

Lord  is  Risen,  The.     See  Easter  Hymn. 

Thou  God  Unsearchable. 

True  Use  of  Mu.sic,  The. 

Wrestling  Jacob. 
Wesley,  J : — Divine  Love.     ( Tr.) 

Hymn  for  Seriousness,  An. 

"I  am  sick  of  opinions.     I  weary  to  hear  them." 

Love  of  God  Supreme,  The.     See  Divine  Love. 

Moravian  Hymn. 
Wesley,  S: — On  Butler's  Monument. 
Wesleyan  Literary  Monthly. — Mutabile. 

Vagabonds. 
West,  A. — White-throated  Sparrow,  The. 
West,  Emma  E. — Young  Lochinvar. 
West,  .1.  Howard. — Dollie  Harris  at  Greencastle,  Pa. 
West,  Marion. — Father  of  His  Country. 
West,  Paul. — Cumberbunce,  The. 
Westcombe,  A.  L. — "If  it  was  not  for  the  drink." 
Westcott.  H.  J.— Bird's  Nest,  The. 
Western  Temperance  Herald. — Angel  in  a  Saloon,  An. 
Westley,  G.  Hembert. — Longing. 

Love. 

To  My  Dear  Friend  Aimc^e. 

Too  Late  We  Met. 

When  She  Comes. 


Weston,  E.  P. — Vision  of  Immortality,  The. 
Weston,  F. — Martyr  to  Science,  A;  or.  Wanted,  a  Con- 
federate. 
Westwood,  T: — In  the  Golden  Morning  of  the  World. 

Kitten  Gossip. 

Little  Bell. 

Mine  Host  of  "The  Golden  Apple." 

My  Little  Lady. 

O  Wind  of  the  Mountain! 

Under  My  Window. 

Voices  at  the  Throne,  The. 
Wetherald,  Agnes  Ethelwyn. — At  the  Window. 

Hay  Field,  The. 

House  of  the  Trees,  The. 

Snow  Storm,  The. 

To  February. 

Wind  of  Death,  The. 
Wetherbee,  Emily  Greene. — My  Mother's  Hymns. 
Wetherbee,  W. — Bessie. 
Wetmore,  Prosper  M. — Lexington. 
Weknore,   Sidney  W. — Der   Nighd    pehind    Grisdmas 

[or  Christmas]. 
Wever,  Rob't. — In  Youth  is  Pleasure. 
Wharton,  Mrs.  Edith  Newbold  [Jones]. — Experience.    - 
Wharton,  T: — Retirement. 

Wheatley,  PhilUs.     See  Peters,  Mrs.  Phillis  [Wheat- 
ley]. 
Wheeler,  Andrew  Carpenter  ("Nym  Crinkle").- — Easter 

in  a  Hospital  Bed. 
Wheeler,  E:  .lewitt. — Boy  to  the  Schoolmaster,  The. 

Wonderful  Dog  Story,  A. 
Wheeler,  Ella.     See  Wilcox,  Mrs.  Ella  [Wheeler]. 
Wheeler,  G:  P. — Two  Answers,  The. 
Wheeler,  Ida  Worden. — My  Poems. 
Wheeler,  Jessie  H. — Signalman's  Story,  The. 
Wheeler,  Leonard.^ — Mad  Mag. 
Wheeler,  Preserved.- — One  Thanksgiving  Day. 
Wheelman,  The. — Morning  Ride,  A. 
Wheelock,  Lucy. — Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

Christmas  Tree,  The. 

Wheelwright,  W:  B. — To  :     "Her  voice  is  one 

of  command." 

Widow,  The. 
Whewell,  W : — Physics. 
Whicher,  G:  Meason.- — Bacchylides. 
Whipple,  Edwin  Percy. — Bryant,  Extract  Concerning. 

Character  of  Washington,  The. 

Croakers  of  Society  and  Literature. 

Power  of  Words,  The.     See  Words. 

Sniveler,  The.     See  Croakers  of  Society  and  Litera- 
ture. 

Words. 
Whipple,  Wade. — Clear  Case,  A. 

Der  Moon. 

Der  Schleighride. 

Diffidence.     See  "Don't  be  Tazin'  Me." 

"Don't  be  Tazin'  Me." 

New  Deacon,  The. 

Parson  .linglejaw's  Surprise. 
Whitcher,  Mrs.  Frances  Miriam  [Berry]. — Elder  Sniffles' 
Courtship.     See  Widow  Bedott  Paners,  'The. 

Hezekiah  Bedott.    See  Widow  Bedott  Papers,  The, 

Recipe  for  Potato  Pudding.     See  Widow  Bedott 
Papers,  The. 

Widow  Bedott  Papers,  The. 

Widow    Bedott    to    Elder    Sniffles.     See    Widow 
Bedott  Papers.  The. 

Widow  Bedott's  Letter  to  Elder  Sniffles,  The.     See 
Widow  Bedott  Papers,  The. 

Widow  Bedott's  Poetry,  The.     See  Widow  Bedott 
Papers,  The. 

Widow's     Mistake,     The.     See     Widow     Bedott 
Papers,  The. 
Whitcomb,  Charlotte.— Glen,  The. 
White, . — Darkey  Debating  Society,  The. 

Examining  de  Bumps. 

Our  Cousins. 

Saratoga  Waiter,  The. 

Soldier's  Return,  The. 

Stage-struck  Darkey,  The. 
White,  A.  M.,  Jr. — At  the  North  Avenue  Fire. 

Christmas  in  Chicago. 
White,  Andrew  Dickson. — Dome  of  the  Republic,  The. 
White,  Annie  R.— Do  not  Tattle. 

Work  and  Wait. 
White,  Blanco.— To  Night. 
White.  C— Coopers.  The. 

Virginia  Mummy,  The. 
White,  E:  Lucas. — Oenius. 

La.st  Bowstrings,  The. 
White,  Eliot.— Uncle  Sam's  Great  Bullfight. 
White,  Emma  Mortimer. — My  Lover. 
White,  Eugene  R :— Of  the  Lost  Ship. 
White,  G.  M.— Old  Canteen,  The. 


574 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Whittier 


White,  Gleeson. — Ballade  of  Playing  Cards,  A. 

Primrose  Dame,  A. 

Sufficiency. 
White,  Harriet  R.— Uffia. 

White,  (II:)  Kirke.— Death  of    the   Duke  d'Enghien, 
The. 

Description  of  a  Summer's  Eve. 

Early  Primrose,  The.     See  To  an  Early  Primrose. 

Gondoline. 

Hymn  for  Family  Worship. 

Retirement. 

Solitude. 

Sonnet  to  my  Mother. 

Star  of  Bethlehem,  The. 

Summer  Evening,  A.     5ee  Description  of  a  Sum- 
mer's Eve. 

To  an  Early  Primrose. 

To  the  Herb  Rosemary. 

To  Love. 

To  my  Mother.     See  Sonnet  to  my  Mother. 

To  the  Harvest  Moon. 
White,  Jos.  Blanco. — Night.     See  Night  and  Death. 

Night  and  Death. 

Sonnet  to  Night.     See  Night  and  Death. 

To  Night.     ,See  Night  and  Death. 
White,  Kirke.     See  White,  (H:)  Kirke. 
White,  Lizzie. — Delsartian  Physical  Drill. 
White,  R:  E: — By  the  Cross  of  Monterey. 

Discovery  of  San  Francisco  Bay. 

.Junipero  Serra. 

Masterpiece  of  Brother  Felix,  The. 

Midnight  Mass,  The. 

Waiting  for  the  Galleon. 
White,  W :  Allen.— Court  of  Boyville,  The. 

King  of  Boyville,   The.     See  Court  of  Boyville, 
The. 
Whitehead,  C: — -As  Yonder  Lamp. 

Night. 
Whitehead,  W:— Ben  Hafed. 

Enthusiast,  The. 

Life's  Conflict. 

Nora  M'Guire's  Lovers. 

On  the  Beach. 

Snow,  The. 

Summer  Eve. 

Thebes. 
Whiting,  C:  Goodrich. — Blue  Hills  beneath  the  Haze. 

Eagle's  Fall,  The. 

Way  to  Heaven,  The. 
Whiting,  Lilian. — Mystery,  The. 
Whiting,  Seymour  W. — Alamance. 
Whiting,  Theodore. — Sue  Waters's  Housekeeping. 
Whitman,  Mrs.  Sarah  Helen  [Power]. — After  the  Sum- 
mer Storm. 

Day  of  the  Indian  Summer,  A. 

Lost  Church,  The.     {Tr.) 

Old  Mirror,  The. 

Song:  "I  bade  thee  stay.     Too  well  I  know." 

Sonnet:  "If  thy;  sad  heart,  pining  for  human  love. " 
.  Sonnet:  "Oft  since  thine  earthly  eyes  have  closed 
on  mine. " 

Sonnet:  "On  our  lone  pathway  bloomed  no  earth- 
ly hopes. ' ' 

Sonnet:  "When  first  I  looked  into  thy  glorious 
eyes. ' ' 

Sonnets  on  Edgar  Allen  Poe.     See  Sonnet:  "When 
first  I  looked  into  thy  glorious  eyes. ' ' 
.   Still  Day  in  Autumn,  A. 

To  Edgar  Allen  Poe.     See  Sonnet:  "When  first  I 
looked  into  thy  glorious  eyes. ' ' 

Trailing  Arbutus,  The. 
Whitman,  Walt. — After  an  Interval. 

Bare-bosom'd  Night.     See  Song  of  Myself. 

Beat!  Beat!  Drums! 

Beginners. 

"Behold  a  Woman!"     /See  Faces. 

Bivouac  on  a  Mountain  Side. 

Broadway  Pageant,  A. 

Cavalry  Crossing  a  Ford. 

Come  up  from  the  Fields,  Father. 

Crossing  Brooklyn  Ferry. 

Dalliance  of  the  Eagles,  The. 

Darest  Thou  Now,  O  Soul. 

Death  Carol. 

Dying  Fireman,  The.     See  Song  of  Myself. 

Expansion.     See  Broadway  Pageant,  A. 

Faces. 

Give  Me  the  Splendid  Silent  Sun. 

Great  are  the  Myths.     See  Leaves  of  Grass.  Part 
IL 

Heroes.     See  Song  of  Myself. 

"I  am  an  Acme  of  Things  Accomplished."     See 
Song  of  Myself. 

Imprisoned  Soul,  The.     See  Last  Invocation,  The. 


Whitman,  Walt  {continued). 

Infinity.     See  Song  of  Myself. 
Last  Invocation,  'Ihe. 
Leaves  of  Grass.     <See  Song  of  Myself. 
Leaves  of  Grass.     Pt.  II. 
Mannahatta. 

Microcosm,  The.     See  Song  of  Myself. 
Mocking-bird,  The.     See  Out  of  the  Cradle  End- 
lessly Rocking. 
My  Captain.     See  O  Captain,  my  Captain. 
My  Portrait. 

Myself.     See  Song  of  Myself. 
Mystic  Trumpeter,  The. 

0  Captain!  My  Captain! 

Old-fashioned  Sea-fight,  An.     See  Song  of  Myself. 

Out  of  the  Cradle  Endlessly  Rocking. 

Oxen  that  Rattle  the  Yoke  and  Chain.     See  Song 
of  Myself. 

Passage  to  India. 

Pensive  and  Faltering. 

Prairie  States,  The. 

Prayer  of  Columbus,  The. 

Sailing  the  Mississippi  at  Midnight. 

Sea  olFaith,  The.     See  Passage  to  India. 

Sea-fight,  A.     See  Song  of  Myself. 

Sight  in  Camp  in  the  Daybreak  Gray  and  Dim,  A. 

Song  of  Myself. 

Still  though  the  One  I  Sing. 

Talk  to  an  Art  Union. 

There  was  a  Child  Went  Forth. 

This  Compost. 

To  the  Man-of-war-bird. 

Two  Veterans. 

Vigil  Strange  I  kept  on  the  Field  [one  Night  J. 

Walt  Whitman.     See  Song  of  Myself. 

Warble  for  Lilac-time. 

Whispers  of  Heavenly  Death. 

You  Sea!     See  Song  of  Myself. 
Whitmore,  W:  H:— Old    State    House,    Boston    (Re- 
stored 1882),  The. 
Whitney,  Mrs.  Adeline  Dutton  [Train]. — Behind  the 
Mask. 

Big  Shoe,  The. 

Bird  Talk. 

Busy  and  Happy.     See  Bird  Talk. 

Equinoctial. 

February. 

Humpty  Dumpty.     See  Mother  Goose  for  Grown 
Folks. 

1  will  Abide  in  Thine  House. 

Jack  Horner.     See  Mother  Goose  for  Grown  Folks. 

Kyrie  Eleison. 

Larvse. 
"Mother  Goose  for  Grown  Folks. 

Our  Homemaker. 

Rags  and  Robes.     See  Mother  Goose  for  Grown 
Folks. 

Released. 

Sparrows. 

Story  of  the  Little  Red  Hin. 

Sunlight  and  Starlight. 

Up  in  a  Wild. 

Victuals  and  Drink.     See  Mother  Goose  for  Grown 
Folks. 

Violet,  The. 
Whitney,  Annie  Weston. — Cat-tails. 

Loyal  to  a  Trust. 
Whitney,  E. — Cricket  Songs. 
Whitney,  Mrs.  E.  C— Court  of  the  Year,  The. 
Whitney,  Hattie. — Little  Dutch  Garden,  A. 

When  Girls  Wore  Calico. 

Winter  Apples. 
Whitney,  Jos.  Ernest. — Drop  of  Ink,  A. 

One  at  a  Time. 
Whitney,  S.  N. — Voice  of  an  Alumnus,  The. 

Whiton,  Mrs.  . — Thoughts. 

Whitson,  J.  M. — How  Norman  Won  the  Race. 
Whittaker,  Frd'k. — Custer's  Last  Charge. 
Whittier,  Eliz.— Charity. 

I>ady  Franklin. 

Wedding  Veil,  The. 
Whittier,  Hope. — Hear  It  and  Wish. 
Whittier,  J:  Greenleaf. — Abraham  Davenport. 

Among  the  Hills. 

Amy  Wentworth. 

"And  present  gratitude  insures  the  future's  good. ' ' 
See  My  Triumph. 

Andrew  Rykman's  Prayer. 

Angel  of  Patience,  The. 

Angels  of  Buena  Vista,  The. 

Angels  of  Grief,  The. 

April. 

Astrsea. 

At  Last. 


575 


Whittier 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Whittier,  J:  Greenleaf  (continued). 

At  Port  Royal. 

Autograph,  An. 

Ballot-box,  The.     See  Eve  of  Election,  The. 

Barbara  Frietchie. 

Barclay  of  Ury.  ^ 

Barefoot  Boy,  The. 

Battle  Autumn  of  1862,  The. 

Bayard  Taylor. 

Beautiful,  The. 

Belated. 

"Believe  me  still,  as  I  have  ever  been." 

Benedicite. 

Boy  Captives,  The. 

Brewing  of  Soma,  The. 

Bright  Days  in  Winter.  See  Dream  of  Summer, 
A. 

Brother  of  Mercy,  The. 

Brown  of  Ossawatomie. 

Burns.  [(On  Receiving  a  Sprig  of  Heather  in 
Blossom.)] 

Captains'  Well,  The. 

Centennial  Hymn. 

Christmas  Carmen,  A. 

Church  Dedication.  See  Hymn  for  the  Opening 
of  Plymouth  Church,  St.  Paul,  Minnesota. 

Cobbler  Keezar's  Vision. 

Common  Question,  The. 

Conductor  Bradley. 

Corn-song,  The. 

Democracy. 

Demon  of  the  Study,  The. 

Disenthralled,  The. 

Dream  of  Summer,  A. 

Eternal  Goodness,  The. 

Eve  of  Election,  The. 

Expostulation. 

Farewell,  The. 

Firelight.     iSee  Snow-bound. 

First  Flowers.  The. 

Fisher  Song.     See  Fishermen,  The. 

Fisherman,  The.     See  Fishermen,  The. 

Fishermen,  The. 

Fitz-Greene  Halleck.  (Read  at  the  Unveiling  of 
His  Statue  in  Central  Park.) 

For  an  Autumn  Festival. 

Forgiveness. 

Friend's  Burial,  The. 

Funeral  Tree  of  the  Sokokis,  The. 

Gift  of  Tritemius.  The. 

Gone. 

Hampton  Beach. 

"Handsome  is  that  Handsome  Does."  See  Beau- 
tiful, The. 

Harvest  Hymn.     iSee  For  an  Autumn  Festival. 

Hope  On.     <See  Dream  of  Summer,  A. 

Huskers,  The. 

Hymn. — "O  painter  of  the  fruits  and  flowers." 

Hymn  for  the  Opening  of  Plymouth  (Church,  St. 
Paul,  Minnesota. 

Ichabod. 

"I'm  sorry  that  I  spelt  the  word."  See  In  School- 
days. 

In  School-days. 

In  the  "Old  South"  [Churchl 

Indian  Summer.     iSee  Eve  of  Election,  The. 

Jack-in-the-Pulpit.     (At.)     See  Smith,  Claha. 

.lohn  Charles  Fremont.     See  To  John  C.  Fremont. 

King  Volmer  and  Elsie. 

"King's  Missive,"  1661,  The. 

Laus  Deo.  , 

Library,  The. 

Light  that  is  Felt,  The. 

Lines.  (For  the  Agricultural  and  Horticultural 
Exhibition  at  Amesbury  and  Salisbury,  Sept. 
28,  1858.)     See  Song  of  Harvest,  A. 

Longfellow,  Extract  Concerning. 

Loved,  not  Lost,  The.     jSee  Snow-bound. 

Mabel  Martin. 

Mantle  of  St.  John  de  Matha,  The. 

Marguerite. 

Maud  Muller. 

Mayflowers,  The. 

Meeting,  The. 

Mogg  Megone. 

Moral  Welfare,  The. 

Mother.     See  Snow-bound. 

Mulford. 

My  Birthday. 

"My  heart  was  heavy,  for  its  trust  had  been." 
See  Forgiveness. 

My  Playmate. 

My  Psalm. 

My  Soul  and  I. 


Whittier,  J:  Greenleaf  (continued). 
My  Triumph. 

New  England  in  Winter.     See  Snow-bound. 
Our  Autocrat. 
Our  Country. 

Our  Countrymen  in  Chains.     See  Expostulation. 
Our  Master. 
Our  State. 
Palestine. 
Palm-tree,  The. 

Pilgrims,  "The.     See  Pilgrims  of  Plymouth,  The.  • 
Pilgrims  of  Plymouth,  The. 
Pipes  at  Lucknow,  The. 
Poor  Voter  on  Election  Day,  The. 
Prayer  of  Agassiz,  The. 
Prayer  Seeker,  The. 
Prisoner  for  Debt,  The. 
Prisoners  of  Naples,  The. 
Proclamation,  'The. 
Proem. 

Prophecy  of  Samuel  Sewall,  The. 
Prophetess.     See  Snow-bound. 
Pumpkin,  The. 
Randolph  of  Roanoke. 
Ranger,  The. 
Raphael. 

Red  Riding-hood. 
Red  River  Voyageur,  The. 
Reformer,  The. 
River  Path,  The. 
Rivermouth  Rocks.     See  Wreck  of  Rivermouth, 

The. 
Robin,  The. 

liuth  Bonython.     See  Mogg  Megone. 
Sacred  Cypress  Tree,  The. 
"Same  old  baffling  questions!  O  my  friend.  The." 

See  Trust. 
"Scarcely  Hope  had  shaped  for  me."     See  Andrew 

Rykman's  Prayer. 
Seed-time  and  Harvest. 
"Self-ease  is  pain;  they  only  rest."     See  Voices, 

The. 
Ship-builders,  The. 
Singer,  The. 

Sister.     See  Snow-bound. 
Sisters,  The. 

Sketches.     See  Among  the  Hills. 
Skipper  Ireson's  Ride. 
Snow-bound :     A  Winter  Idyl. 
Snowstorm,  The.     See  Snow-bound. 
Song  of  Harvest,  A. 

Song  of  the  Negro  Boatman.     See  At  Port  Royal. 
Spring.     See  Mogg  Megone. 

Story  of  Ruth  Bonython,  The.     See  Mogg  Megone. 
Swan  Song  of  Parson  Avery,  The. 
Tauler. 

Telling  the  Bees. 

Thanksgiving  Ode.     See  For  an  Autumn  Festival. 
Three  Bells,  The. 
Thy  Will  be  Done. 
To  Children  of  Girard,  Pa. 
To  Her  Absent  Sailor. 
To  John  C.  Frt^mont. 
To  Lydia  Maria  Child. 
To  my  Sister. 
To  William  H.  Seward. 
Trailing  Arbutus,  The. 
True  Beauty.     See  Beautiful,  The. 
Trust. 

Two  Angels,  The. 
Two  Loves,  The. 
Two  Rabbis,  The. 
Vanishers,  The. 
Vaudois  Missionary,  The.     See   Vaudois  Teacher, 

The. 
Vaudois  Teacher,  The. 
Vesta. 
Voice   of    Calm,    The.      See   Brewing    of    Soma, 

The. 
Voice  of  the   Reader,   The.     See  Demon  of  the 

Study,  The. 
Voices.  The. 

Vow  of  Washington,  The. 
Waiting,  The. 
"We    shape    ourselves    the    joy    or    fear."     See 

Raphael. 
What  the  Birds  Said. 
Whittier  Alphabet,  A. 
Wife,  The.     See  Among  the  Hills. 
Witch's  Daughter,  The.     See  Mabel  Martin. 
"Within    the    master's    desk    is    seen."     See    In 

School-days. 
Wordsworth. 
World  Transformed,  The.     See  Snow-bound. 


576 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Williams 


Whittier,  J:  Greenleaf  (continued). 

Worship. 

Worship  of  Nature,  The. 

Wreck  of  Rivermouth,  The. 

Yankee  Gypsies,  The. 

"Yet  with  hands  by  evil  stained."     iSee  Andrew 
Rykman's  Prayer. 
Whitton,  Jos. — Crazy  Nell. 
Whitworth,  W;  H:— Time  and  Death. 
Whytehead,  Rev.  T:— Mystic  Veil,  The.     See  Second 
Day  of  Creation,  The. 

Second  Day  of  Creation,  The. 

To  a  Spider. 
Wichita  Eagle.^Novf  I  Lay  Me  Down  to  Sleep. 
Wichmann,  Katie  Belle. — -What  Hast  Thou  Done  To- 
day. , 
Wickes,  Forsyth. — Verses. 
Wide  Awake.— Rich  Little  Dolly,  The. 
Widney,  A.  H. — Uncle  Nathan's  Indian. 
Wififen,  Jeremiah  Holme. — Jerusalem  Delivered.     (,Tr.) 
See  Tasso. 

Sophronia  and  Olindo.     (Tr.)     (See  Jerusalem  De- 
livered. 
Wiggin,  Mrs.  Kate  Douglas.      See  Riggs,  Mrs.  Kate 

D.  W. 
Wilberforce,  S: — Just  for  To-day. 
Wilbor,  Elsie  M. — Beruria.     (Tr.) 

Bread. 

Christ  Child,  The. 

Masque  of  the  New  Year,  The. 

Stanzas  to  Eternity. 
Wilcox,     Mrs.    A.    M.  —  Apostrophe   to    the   Missis- 
sippi. 
Wilcox,  Carlos. — God  Everywhere  in  Nature. 
Wilcox,  Mrs.  Ella  [Wheeler]. — Answered  Prayers. 

Barbarous  Chief,  The. 

Beautiful  Land  of  Nod,  The. 

Bedlam  Town. 

"Better  to  mourn  a  blossom  snatched  away." 

Bravest  Sailor  of  All,  The. 

Children's  Vow,  The. 

"Death  has  Crowned  Him  [as]  a  Martyr." 

Decoration  Day.     <See  Memorial  Day,  1892. 

Dorothy's  Mustn'ts. 

Duet,  The. 

Fishing. 

Five  Little  Brothers. 

Friendship. 

Gaining  Ground. 

Gethsemane. 

God's  Work. 

Gossips,  The. 

How  Salvator  Won. 

"I  like  cigars  beneath  the  stars." 

Justice,  not  Charity. 

Land  of  Nod,  The.     See  Beautiful  Land  of  Nod, 
The. 

Land  of  Nowhere,  The. 

Laugh  and  the  World  Laughs  with  You.     See  Soli- 
tude. 

Life. 

Life's  Forest  Trees.  . 

Life's  Journey. 

Little  Girl,  A.     See  Wanted— a  Little  Girl. 

Love  is  Enough. 

"Love  is  enough,  let  us  not  seek  for  gold."     <See 
Love  is  Enough. 

Love  Much. 

Love's  Coming. 

Maurine. 

Memorial  Day,  1892. 

Mother-in-law,  The. 

My  Ships.     <See  Maurine. 

Naughty  Little  Comet,  A. 

New  Year's  Resolve. 

Nowhere.     »See  Land  of  Nowhere,  The. 

Pin,  A. 

Prime  of  Life,  The. 

Princess'  Finger-nail.  The. 

Queen's  Last  Ride,  The. 

Recrimination. 

Sign-board,  The. 

Snowed  Under. 

Solitude. 

Too  Big  to  be  Rocked. 

Tumbler  of  Claret,  A. 

Two  Glasses,  The.     (Wr.  at.  to  C.  B.  A.) 

Two  Sinners. 

Waltz-quadrille,  A. 

Wanted — a  Little  Girl. 

Will. 

Woman. 

World,  The. 

World  as  It  Is,  The.     See  Solitude. 


Wilde,  Jane  Francesca  Speranza  fElgee],  Lady  ("Spe- 
ranza"). — Brothers;  Henry  and  John  Shears, 
The. 

Famine  Year,  The. 

Voice  of  the  Poor,  The. 
Wilde,  Oscar. — At  the  Grave  of  Keats. 

Ave  Imperatrix. 

"For  not  in  quiet  English  fields." 

Gerald  and  His  Mother.     See  Woman  of   no  Im- 
portance, A. 

Grave    of    Keats,  The.      See    At    the  Grave    of 

Grave  of  Shelley,  The. 

Guido  Ferranti. 

Louis  Napoleon. 

Queen  Henrietta  Maria. 

Requiescat. 

Serenade:  "The  western  wind  is  blowing  fair." 

Woman  of  no  Importance,  A. 
Wilde,  R:  H: — Farewell  to  America,  A. 

Life.     See  "My  life  is  like  the  summer  rose. ' ' 

"My  life  is  like  the  summer  rose. ' ' 

Stanzas:  "My  life  is  like  the  summer  rose."     See 
"My  life  is  like  the  summer  rose. " 

To  the  Mocking-bird. 
Wilde,  Mrs.  W.  R. — Man's  Mission. 
Wilder,  J:  Nichols.— Stand  by  the  Flag! 
Wildman,  Rounseville. — Owyhee  Joe's  Story. 
Wiley,  C:  A. — Cought  in  the  Maelstorm. 
Wiley,  F.  B. — To  a  Collection  of  Pastorals. 
Wilford,  T:  F.— BeUs,  The. 

Burgomaster's  Death,  The.     See  Bells,  The. 
Wilkes,  J:- — Bold  Predictions. 

Conquest  of  the  Americans  Impracticable. 
Wilkie,   Fs.   Banks.— That   West-side    Dog;    or,   Wil- 
liam Nye  in  Chicago. 
Wilkins,     Mary   E. — See    Freeman,     Mrs.    Mahy    E. 

[WiLKINS]. 

Wilkins,  W: — Actseon. 

Disillusion. 

Engine  Driver's  Story,  The. 

Magazine  Fort,  Phoenix  Park,  Dublin. 
Wilkinson,  Andrews. — Plantation  Pictures. 
Wilkinson,  J.  J.  G. — Diamond,  "The. 

Turner. 
Wilkinson,  W:  Cleaver. — At  Marshfield.     See  Webster: 
An  Ode. 

Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. 

Webster:  An  Ode. 
Willard,  Mrs.  Emma  [Hart]. — Rocked  in  the  Cradle  of 

the  Deep. 
Willard,  Frances  E. — Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. 

Fallacy  of  High  License,  The. 

Good,  Great  Name,  A. 

Greatest  Party,  The. 

Home  Protection. 

In  Satan's  Council-chamber. 

Individuality  of  Conscience  in  the  Voter. 

Law  of  Habit,  The. 

Legitimate  "Strike,"  A. 

On  Heights  of  Power. 

On  Which  Side  are  You? 

Parties. 

Saloons  must  Go! 

Union  of  North  and  South,  The. 

Widening  Horizon,  The. 

Woman  in  Temperance. 

Women  and  Temperance  Work. 

Worn-out  Parties,  The. 
Willett,  E:— Outside  the  Fold. 
Willey,  A. — National  Constitution  and  Rum,  The. 
William  and  Mary  College  Monthly. — To  an  Old  Por- 
trait of  a  Little  Girl. 
Williams  Argo. — College  Verse. 
Williams,  Sir  C:  Hanbury. — Flattery. 
Williams,  Dwight. — Chicago. 

Chicago  in  Flames.     See  Chicago. 

Down  with  the  Traffic. 

Lottie  Dougherty. 

New  Emancipation,  The. 

Sunset. 
Williams,  Ernest  Aye. — See  Ate-Williams,  Ernest. 
Williams,  Fannie.- — Heart's-ease,  The. 
Williams,  Fs.  C— When  Pa  Takes  Care  of  Me. 
Williams,  Fs.  Howard. — An.swer,  An. 

Electra. 

Love  Came  to  Me. 

Song:  "A  bird  in  My  Bower." 

Walt  Whitman. 
Williams,  Gus. — Burlesque  Temperance  Speech. 

Dutch  Oration  on  Women,  A. 

Mygel  Snyder's  Barty. 

Temperance  Speech.     See  Burlesque  Temperance 
Speech. 


577 


Williams 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Williams,  Helen  Maria. — To  Hope. 

Trust  in  Providence. 

Whilst  Thee  I  Seek. 
Williams,  It— Trust  in  God. 
Williams  Literary  Monthly.— Gipsy  Song. 

Sea  Song,  A.         ♦ 
Williams,  Marie  B.— First  Violet,  The. 
Williams,  R.  F.,  Jr. — Aunt's  Phoebe's  Remonstrance. 
Williams,  R:  Dalton.— Dying  Girl,  The. 

Munster  War-song,  The. 
Williams,  S.  M. — Comforting  Reflections  of  a  Nonen- 
tity. 
Williams,  Sarah. — Omar  and  the  Persian. 

Only  Faithful. 

Queen  Elizabeth. 
Williams,  W.  S.— War  with  Alcohol,  The. 
Williams,  Walter. — How  the  Captain  Saved  the  Day. 
Williams,  W: — Guide  me,  O  Thou  Great  Jehovah! 
Williamson,  D.  B. — Christmas  Pictures. 
Willis,  A.  A. — "God  bless  the  cheerful  people — man, 

woman,  or  child. ' ' 
Willis,  Browne. — St.  Martin's  Day. 
WiUis,  Mrs.  L.  M.— Little  Child  Shall  Lead  Them,  A. 

Naaman,  the  Leper. 
Willis,  Nathaniel  Parker. — Absalom. 

"And  the  frost,  too,  has  a  melodious  ministry." 

Andre's  Last  Request. 

Annoyer,  The. 

April. 

Belfry  Pigeon,  The. 

Boy,  A  [or  The].     See  Torn  Hat,  The. 

Burial  of  Arnold,  The.     See  Burial  of  the  Cham- 
pion of  his  class,  etc. 

Burial  of  the  Champion  of  his  Class,  at  Yale  Col- 
lege. 

Chamber  Scene. 

Child  Tired  of  Play. 

Come  Out,  Love. 

Confessional,  The. 

David's  Lament  for  [or  over]  Absalom.     <See  Ab- 
salom. 

Death  of  Harrison. 

Declaration,  The. 

Dedication  Hymn. 

Dying  Alchemist,  The. 

Going  Home.     See  Lines  on  Leaving  Europe. 

Hagar  in  the  Wilderness. 

Healing  [of]  the  Daughter  of  Jairus. 

"He  did  not  notice  that  I  never  spoke  to  her  in  the 
same  key  of  voice. ' ' , 

"I've  thought  of  thee, — I've  thought  of  thee." 
jSee  Confessional,  The. 

January  1st,  1828. 

Jephtha's  Daughter. 

Lament  for  Absalom.     See  Absalom. 

Leper,  The. 

Lines  on  Leaving  Europe. 

Look  not  uDon  the  Wine  [when  it  is  Red]. 

Love  in  a  Cottage. 

Mary,  the  Mother  of  Jesus. 

My  Mother.     See  Lines  on  Leaving  Europe. 

New  Year,  The.     See  January  1st,  1828. 

Parrhasius  and  the  Captive.     See  Parrhasius. 

Patriot  King  in  Mourning,  The.     See  Absalom. 

Pity  of  the  Park  Fountain,  The. 

Poem  delivered  at  Brown  University  in  1830. 

Saturday  Afternoon. 

Scholar  of  Thebet  Ben  Khorat. 

"She    rose    from    her    untroubled    sleep."     See 
Chamber  Scene. 

Soldier's  Widow,  The. 

Soliloquy  of   the   Dying   Alchemist.     See   Dying 
Alchemist,  The. 

Tired  of  Play.     See  Child  Tired  of  Play. 

To  a  Child.     See  To  Laura  W ,  Two  Years  of 

Age. 

To  Giulia  Grisi. 

To  Helen  in  a  Huff. 

To  Ivaura  W ,  Two  Years  of  Age. 

To  the  Lady  in  the  Chemisette  with  Black  Buttons. 

Torn  Hat,  The. 

Unseen  Spirits. 

TTnwritten  Music. 

What  is  Ambition?     See  Poem  delivered  at  Brown 
University  in  1830. 

White  Chin  Hat,  The. 

Widow  of  Nain,  The. 

You  Know  if  It  was  You. 
Willis,  Rebekah. — Sleeping  May. 
Willmott,  Rob't  Aris.— Child  Praying,  A. 
Wilmot.  J; — See  Rochester,  Earl  of. 
Wills,  W:  Gorman.— Charles  the  First. 

Cromwell  and  Henrietta  Maria.     See  Charles  the 
First. 


Willson,  Arabella  M.  ("A.  Gasper"). — Appeal  to  the 
"Sextant"  for  Air,  An. 

To  the  "Sextant"  [or  Sexton].    See  Appeal  to  the 
"Se.xtant"  for  Air,  An. 
Willson,  (Byron)  Forceythe. — Boy  Brittan. 

Estray,  The. 

In  State. 

No  More. 

Old  Sergeant,  The. 

Voice,  The. 
Willson,  W:  Lyne.— Tariff  Reform. 
Wilson,  Prof.  — — . — Effects  of  Spring. 

Trees. 
Wilson,  Alex.— Blue-bird.  The. 

Fisherman's  Hymn,  "The. 
Wilson,  Bertha  M. — Christinas  Star,  The. 

Chinese  Wedding,  A. 

Nigger  Baby. 

Tragedy  of  Blind  Margaret,  The. 
Wilson,  Mrs.  C.  B. — Answer  to  "The  Hour  of  Death." 
Wilson,  Rev.  D: — Bear  Butte  Mountain. 
Wilson,  Mrs.  E.  V. — His  Mother's  Songs.     (At.) 

Lady  Judith's  Vision,  The. 

Love  is  over  All. 
Wilson,  F.  B.— Profes.sor  Puzzled,  The. 
Wilson,  H.  L.— Elusive  Dollar  Bill,  The. 
Wilson,  H: — Country's  Greatest  Evil,  The. 
Wilson,  Horace  H. — Woman.     (Tr.) 
Wilson,     J:     ("Christopher    North"). —  Emblem    of 
Peace,  An.     See  Evening  Cloud,  The. 

Evening  Cloud,  The. 

"Mournful  funeral  slow  proceeds  behind.  The." 

Rose  and  the  Gauntlet,  The.     {At.  also  to  J:  Ster- 
ling.) 

Work  on  Earth. 
Wilson,  Lewis  G. — Hylodes,  The. 
Wilson,  Mary  Drew. — Tennis  Drill. 
Wilson,  Olivia  G.  L. — My  Song. 
Wilson,  Rob't  Burns. — Ballad  of  the  Faded  Field. 

"Cut  the  Cables." 

Dead  Player,  The. 

It  is  in  Winter  that  We  Dream  of  Spring. 

Passing  of  March,  The. 

Remember  the  Maine. 

Song,  A:     "I  do  not  ask — dear  love — not  I." 

Such  is  the  Death  the  Soldier  Dies. 

Sunrise  of  the  Poor,  The. 

To  a  Crow. 
Wilson,  Ruth. — Pansies,  The. 
Wilson,  Susan. -^Painter  of  Seville,  The. 
Wilson,  V.  B. — Ticonderoga. 
Wilson,  Wood  Levette. — Debt  in  Two  Costumes. 

Easter  Buds. 
Wilstach,    J:   Augustine. — Beatrice   Descending   from 
Heaven.     (Tr.)     See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 

Buonconte    di     Alontefeltro.     (Tr.)     See    Divine 
Comedy,  The. 

Count  Ugolino.     (Tr.)     See  Divine  Comedy,  The. 

Divine  Comedy,  The.    (Tr.)  See  Dante  Aliohieri. 

Exquisite  Beauty  of  Beatrice.     (Tr.)     See  Divine 
Comedy,  The. 
Wilster,  Chr.-^Sorrow. 
Wilton,  R: — On  a  Photograph. 

To  the  Sacred  Poets  of  America. 

Vanished  Village,  A. 
Winchell,  Walter  B. — Shakespeare's  Mark  Antony. 
Winchelsea,  Anne  Finch,  Countess  of. — Fair  Tree.     See 
Tree,  The. 

In  Answer  to  Mr.  Pope. 

Nocturnal  Reverie,  A. 

Ode  to  the  Spleen,  An. 

To  the  Nightingale. 

Tree,  The. 
Wine,  Milotus  J. — Changing  Servants. 
Wing,  G.  C,  Jr. — December  Prayer,  A. 
Winkworth,  Catherine. — Veni  Sancte  Spiritus.     (Tr.) 
Winrow,  Jotham. — Mosaics. 
Winship,  Albert  E: — "It  is  said  that  when   General 

Grant  first  took  command." 
Winslow,  Helen  Maria. — All  for  a  Man. 

August. 

Baby  lyogic.  ^ 

Hope's  Song. 
Winslow,  M.  E. — Main  Hazir  Hun. 
Winter,  G.  M. — Love  on  the  Links. 
Winter,  W: — -Adelaide  Neilson. 

After  All. 

Angel  Death,  The.     See  Angel  of  Death,  The. 

Angel  of  Death,  The. 

Arthur. 

Asleep. 

Beauty. 

Death's  Angel.     See  Angel  of  Death,  The. 

Egeria. 


578 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Wolcott 


Winter,  W:  (continued). 

Fidele.     See  Adelaide  Neilson. 
Field  of  Culloden,  The.     See  Old  Shrines  and  Ivy. 
Golden  Silence,  The. 
I.  H.  B. 
My  Queen. 
Night  Watch,  The. 
Old  Shrines  and  Ivy. 
On  the  Verge. 

Passing  Bell  at  Stratford,  The. 
Relics. 

Right  Standard,  The.     See  Shadows  of  the  Stage. 
Shadows  of  the  Stage. 
Shakespeare's  England. 
Through  the  Darkness. 
Unwritten  Poems. 
Wrecker's  Bell,  The. 
Winthrop,  E: — Inspiration  of  the  Bible,  The. 
Winthrop,  Grace. — Singing  Baby,  The. 
Winthrop,  Rob't  C: — Admonition  to  Coming  Genera- 
tions.    See  Centennial  Oration. 
American  Age,  The.     See  Centennial  Oration. 
American  Education.     See  Free  Schools  and  Free 

Governments. 
American  Example.     See  Hundredth  Anniversary 

of  the  Surrender  of  Lord  Cornwallis,  The. 
Cause  of  the  Union,  The.     See  Flag  of  the  Union, 

The. 
Centennial  Oration. 

Character  of  Washington.  The.     See  Completion 
of  the  National  Monument  to  Washington,  The. 
Completion  of  the  National  Monument  to  Wash- 
ington, The. 
Effect    of    American    Example.     See    Centennial 

Oration. 
Flag  of  Our  Country,  The.     See  Flag  of  the  Union, 

The. 
P'lag  of  the  Union,  The. 
Franklin  as  a  Christian.     See  Inauguration  of  the 

Statue  of  Franklin,  The. 
Franklin  as  a  Philanthropist.     See  Inauguration 

of  the  Statue  of  Franklin,  The. 
Franklin  as  a  Philosopher.     See  Inauguration  of 

the  Statue  of  Franklin,  The. 
Franklin  as  a  Printer.     See  Inauguration  of  the 

Statue  of  Franklin,  The. 
Free  Schools  and  Free  Governments. 
Glorious  Destiny  of  England,  The.     See  Centen- 
nial Oration. 
Hundredth  Anniversary  of  the  Surrender  of  Lord 

Cornwallis,  The. 
Inauguration   of   Franklin    Statue,    Boston.     See 

Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Franklin,  The. 
Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Franklin,  The. 
.John  Hancock.     See  Centennial  Oration. 
National  Ensign,  The.     See  Flag  of  the  Union,  The. 
National  Monument  to  Washington. 
New  England  and  Virginia.     See  Pilgrim  Fathers, 

The. 
Pilgrim  Fathers,  The. 

Thomas  Jefferson  and  John  Adams.     See  Centen- 
nial Oration. 
Universal    Education.     See   Hundredth   Anniver- 
sary of  the  Surrender  of  Lord  Cornwallis,  The. 
Washington  Monument.     See  National  Monument 

to  Washington. 
Washington    Monument    Completed,     The.     See 
Completion    of    the    National    Monument    to 
Washington,  The. 
Washington  Needle,  The.     See  Completion  of  the 

National  Monument  to  Washington,  The. 
Who  and  what  are  Great  Men?     See  Centennial 
Oration. 
Winthrop,  Theodore. — But  Once. 

Gallop  of  Three,  The. 
Winton,  Mrs.  J.  M. — At  the  Last. 

Better  than  Gold.     {For  si.  diff.  vers,  see  Smart, 

Alex.) 
Charity. 

Door  to  Memory's  Hall,  The. 
Human  Life. 
Over   the    River.     (At.)     See   Wakefield,   Mrs. 

Nancy  A.  W.  [P.]. 
Will  the  New  Year  Come  To-night,  Mamma?     {At. 
also  to  Cora  Eager. ) 
Wirt,  W:— Blind  Preacher,  The. 
Burr  and  Blennerhassett. 
Colloquial  Powers  of  Dr.  Franklin. 
Culture,  the  Result  of  Labor. 
'  Decisive  Integrity. 
Instigators  of  Treason,  The. 
No  Excellence  without  Labor.     See  Culture,  the 

Result  of  Labor. 
Reply  to  Mr.  Wickham  in  Burr's  Trial. 


Wirt,  W:  H: — Industry  and  Eloquence. 
Wisconsin  Farmer. — Little  Girl's  Letter,  A. 

Nell's  Letter.     See  Little  Girl's  Letter,  A. 
Wise,  Dan'l. — Mind,  the  Glory  of  Man. 
Wister,  Owen. — Ape  and  the  Thinker,  The. 
Wister,  Mrs.  Sarah  Kemble  [Butler]. — Boat  of  Grass, 

The. 
Witham,  W.  S.— Righteous  War,  A. 
Wither,  G: — Abuses  Stript  and  Whipt. 

Admire   not.    Shepherd's   Boy.     See   Fair-Virtue, 

the  Mistress  of  Philarete. 
At  Sunsetting. 

Author's  Resolution  in  a  Sonnet,  The.     See  Shep- 
herd's Resolution,  The. 
Choice,  The. 
Christmas. 

Christmas  Carol,  A.     See  Christmas. 
Eclogue.     See  Shepherd's  Hunting,  The. 
Eclogue  IV.     See  Shepherd's  Hunting,  The. 
Fair-Virtue,  the  Mistress  of  Philarete. 
Fidelia.     See  Shepherd's  Resolution,  The. 
Flower  of  Virtue,  The. 
For  a  Widower  or  Widow. 
For  Summer  Time.     See  Hallelujah. 
Hallelujah. 
I  lyoved  a  Lass. 
In  a  Clear  Starry  Night.     See  Lord!  When  those 

Glorious  Lights  I  See. 
Lord!  When  those  Glorious  Lights  I  See. 
Love-poems.     See    Fair-Virtue,    the    Mistress    of 

Philarete. 
Lover's  Resolution,  The.      See  Shepherd's  Reso- 
lution, The. 
Manly  Heart,  The.     See  Shepherd's  Resolution, 

The. 
Mistress  of  Philarete,  The.     See  Fair-Virtue,  the 

Mistress  of  Philarete. 
Muse,  The. 

Pipe  and  Can.     See  Tobacco. 
Prayer  of  Old  Age,  The.     See  Hallelujah. 
Psalm  CXLVIII. 
Rocking  Hymn,  A. 

Shall  I,  Wasting  in  Despair.     See  Shepherd's  Res- 
olution, The. 
Shepherd's  Hunting,  The. 
Shepherd's  Resolution,  The. 

Shepherd's  Swain,  A.     See  Fair-Virtue,  the  Mis- 
tress of  Philarete. 
Song  to  Her  Beauty,  A.     See  Fair- Virtue,  the  Mis- 
tress of  Philarete. 
Steadfast  Shepherd,  The. 
Stolen  Kiss,  A.     See  Upon  a  Stolen  Kiss. 
Tobacco. 

Twelfth  Day;  or.  The  Epiphany. 
Unon  a  Stolen  Kiss. 

Weakness.     See  Abuses  Stript  and  Whipt. 
When  We  are  upon  the  Seas.     See  Hallelujah. 
Widow's  Hymn,  A.     See  For  a  Widower  or  Widow. 
Witheridge,  Julia. — Just  as  She  Told  It. 
Withington,  H.— True  To-day,  The. 
Withrow,  W:  H:— Cloud  Castles. 

October. 
Wolcott,  Dixie. — Laurie's  Apology. 

Violet's  Victory. 
Wolcott,  Edwin  O. — Great  Britain  and  America. 
Wolcott,  J:  ("Peter  Pindar"). — Actor,  An. 

Advice  to  Young  Women ;  or,  The  Rose  and  Straw- 
berry. 
Apology  for  Kings. 

Apple-dumplings  and   a  King,   The.     See  Apple- 
dumplings  and  George  the  Third,  The. 
Apple-dumplings  and  George  the  Third,  The. 
Barry's  Attack  upon  Sir  Joshua  Reynolds. 
Bienseance. 

Birth-day  Ode.     See  Progress  of  Curiosity,  The. 
Consolatory  Stanza,  A. 
Country  Lasses,  The. 
Economy. 

Edmund  Burke's  Attack  on  Warren  Hastings. 
Epitaph  on  Peter  Staggs. 
Jewess  and  Her  Son,  The. 
King  Canute  and  His  Nobles. 
King  of  France  and  the  Fair  Lady,  A. 
King  of  Soain  and  the  Horse,  The. 
Kings  and  Courtiers. 

Lex  Talionis  upon  Benjamin  West,  The.     ' 
Lines  on  Doctor  Johnson.     See  On  Dr.  Johnson. 
Man  mav  be  Happy.    ' 
Ode  to  the  Devil. 

On  a  Stone  Thrown  at  a  Very  Great  Man. 
On  an  Artist.     See  Actor,  An. 
On  Dr.  .Johnson. 

On   George  the  Third's  Patronage   of  Benjamin 
West. 


579 


Wolcott 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Wolcott,  J:  ("Peter  Pindar")  (continued). 

Ou  the  Conclusion  of  His  Odes. 

On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Hone,  R.  A. 

Overdone  Economy.     See  FIconomy. 

Petit  Maitre,  and  the  Man  on  thf  Wheel,  The. 

Pig  and  Maspie.A^he. 

Pilgrims  and  the  Peas,  The. 

Praying  for  Rain. 

Progress  of  Curiosity,  The;  or,  A  Royal  Visit  to 
Whitbread's  Brewery. 

Razor-seller,  The. 

Rival  Broom  Makers,  The.  (?) 

Roguery  Taught  by  Confessions. 

Sleep. 

Sailor  Boy  at  Prayers,  The. 

Soldier  and  the  Virgin  Mary,  The. 

Tender  Husband,  The. 

Tinker  and  Miller's  Daughter,  The.  (7) 

To  a  Fish. 

To  a  Fly. 

To  Chloe. 

Tray's  Epitaph. 
Wolcott,  Julia  Anna.— "Oh,  surely  who  will  guide." 

Our  Christmas. 
Wolfe,  C.  Toler. — Deitsche  Advertisement. 

Song  of  the  Railroad. 
Wolfe,   C: — -After  Corunna.     See  Burial   of  Sir  John 
Moore,  The. 

Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore,  The. 

Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore  at  [or  after]  Corunna, 
The.     See  Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore,  The. 

Defence  of  Poetry,  A. 

If  I  had  Thought  thou  Couldst  have  Died.     See 
Lines  Written  to  Music. 

Lines  Written  to  Music. 

"O  [or  Ohl  say  not  that  my  heart  is  cold. ' ' 

"Slowly    and    sadly    we    laid    him    down."     See 
Burial  of  Sir  John  Moore,  The. 

Sonnet  Written  during  His  Residence  in  College. 

To  Mary.     See  Lines  Written  to  Music. 

Wail  of  Jugurtha,  The. 
Wolfe,  General   Jas. — Address   of   General   Wolfe   be- 
fore Quebec.     See  To  the  Army  before  Quebec. 

To  the  Army  before  Quebec  [,  1759]. 
Wolverton,  Mary  L. — Frost-elves,  The. 
Wood,  Beverly  11. — Marco's  Death. 
Wood,  D;  Ward. — Value  of  Character. 
Wood,  Dorothy. — Three  Cunning  Crabs,  The. 
Wood,  Eugene. — Aunt  Susan's  Quilt. 
Wood,  Helen  J. — -Love's  Letter-box. 
Wood,  H:  Firth.— About  Our  Folks. 

(Brooklyn)  Bridge,  The. 

Coney  Island  Down  der  Pay. 

Lost  Puppy,  The. 

Noses. 

Oh!  Promise  Me. 

Will  You  Love  Me  when  I'm  Bald? 
Wood,  Jessie  M. — Chase  of  the  Laurel  Wreath,  The. 

.Justice. 
Wood.  J:  Seymour  (?). — Trick  vs.  Trick. 
Wood,  Lydia  M. — Woman's  Answer,  A. 
Wood,  M.  Berry. — Wellesley  in  Autumn. 
Wood,  Nellie. — Captured  Bumble-bee,  'The. 
Wood,  S: — Friends. 
Woodberry,  G:  E: — Agathon. 

America  and   England   in   Danger  of  War.     See 
America  to  England. 

America  to  England. 

At  Gibraltar. 

Child,  The. 

Divine  Awe. 

Homeward  Bound. 

Love's  Rosary. 

My  Country. 

O,  Inexpres-sible  as  Sweet. 
\  O,  Struck  beneath  the  Laurel. 

On  a  Portrait  of  Columbus. 

Rose  of  Stars,  The. 

Seaward. 

Secret,  The. 

Siena. 

Sil  ence  of  Love,  The.  See  O,  Inexpressible  as  Sweet . 

So  Slow  to  Die. 

Sodoma's  Christ  Scourged.     See  Siena. 

Song  of  Eros,  in  "Agathon."     See  Agathon. 

When  First  I  Saw  Her. 
Woodbury,  I.  B. — Speed  Away. 
Woodbury,  Ida  Vose. — Lincoln's  Birthday. 
Woodland,  Kate. — Who  is  the  Poet? 
Woodruff,  Mrs.  Julia  Louisa  Matilda  [Curtiss]. — That 
Little. 

There  Shall  be  No  Night  There. 
Woods,  Jas.  Chapman. — Soul  Stithy,  The. 

World's  Death-night,  The. 


Woods,  Mrs.  Kate  [Tannatt]. — Dan's  Wife. 
Woods,  Margaret  L. — Genius  Loci. 

Rest. 

To  the  Forgotten  Dead. 

Young  Windebank. 
Woods,  Virna. — Last  Night,  The. 

Woodward,  N.  A. — Student  and  His  Neighbors,  The. 
Woodworth,     Fs.    Channing.   —  Chick-a-de-dee.      See 
Snow-bird's  Song,  'I'he.  ^   , 

Snow-bird's  Song,  The. 
Woodworth,  Mrs.  Nelly  Hart. — Hermit  Thrush,  The.*"] 
Woodworth,  S:— Bucket,  The.     See  Old  Oaken  Bucket, 
The. 

Loves  She  Like  Me? 

Needle,  The. 

Old  Oaken  Bucket,  The. 

WooUey,  J:  g'.— Break  the  Bottle. 
Woolner,  T: — Given  Over. 

My  Beautiful  Lady. 
Woolsey,  Sarah  Chauncey(" Susan  Coolidge"). — Answer 
to  a  Puzzle,  An. 

Apple  Blossoms. 

Bind-weed. 

Building. 

Christmas  Chimes,  The. 

Close  at  Hand. 

Cradle  Tomb  in  Westminster  Abbey,  The. 

Discontent. 

Easter  Song,  An. 

Florentine  Juliet,  A. 

Flowers  Know  Their  Time  to  Go,  The. 

Forward. 

Ginevra. 

Good-bye,  Sweet  Day. 

Grown-up  Birthday,  A. 

Gulf  Stream. 

He  that  Believeth  Shall  not  Make  Haste. 

Helen. 

How  the  Leaves  Come  Down. 

In  the  Mist. 

Laborare  Est  Orare. 

Little  Christmas  Tree,  The. 

Love  and  Life. 

Marble  Queen,  The. 

Mrs.  June's  Prospectus. 

My  Rights. 

Of  such  as  I  Have. 

Old  Stone  Basin,  The. 

One  Little  Star. 

Slow  and  Sure. 

Some  Lover's  Dear  Thought. 

Tempered. 

Time  to  Go. 

When. 

While  We  May. 
Woolsey,    Theodore    Dwight. — "Collegiate    education 
has  this  distinction  and  privilege,  A." 

Eclipse  of  Faith,  The. 
Woolson,  Mrs.  Abba  Louisa  [Goold].— Summer's  Day,  A. 
Woolson,  Constance  Fenimore. — "I  Too." 

Kentucky  Belle. 

March. 

Only  the  Brakesman. 

Tom. 

Tom,  the  Hero.     See  Tom. 

Yellow  .Jessamine. 
Worden,  Alonzo  Teall. — German  Professor   on    Hyp- 
notism, The. 

Just  about  These  Days. 

Mullins  the  Agnostic.   (At.  a?80  to  C.  M.  Snyder.) 

Partridges. 

Trouble  in  the  Choir. 

When  Mandy  Brings  the  Kids. 
Wordsworth,  Christopher. — Giving  to  God. 
Wordsworth,  Dorothy. — Cottager  to  her  Infant,  The. 
Wordsworth,  Edith.— Flower  Girl,  The. 

Legend  of  King  Nilus,  The. 

Triumph  of  the  Ricci,  The. 
Wordsworth,  W: — Acquittal  of  the  Bishop. 

Admonition  to  a  'Traveller. 

Affliction  of  Margaret,  The. 

After  Rain.     See  Written  in  March. 

After-thought. 

Alfred  [and  His  Descendants].     See  Ecclesiastical 
Sonnets. 

Alice  Fell ;  or.  Poverty. 

Among  the  Mountains.     See  Excursion.  The. 

Apparition  on  the  Lake.     See  Prelude,  The. 

Ascent  of  Snowdon.     See  Prelude,  The. 

Aspect  s  of  Christ  ianity  in  America.     See  Ecclesias- 
tical Sonnets. 

At  Florence.     (Tr.)     See  To  the  Supreme  Being. 

At  the  Grave  of  Burns. 


580 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Wordsworth 


Wordsworth,  W:  {continued). 
Blind  Fiddler,  The. 
Blind  Highland  Boy,  The. 
Borderers,  The, 
Boy  of  Egreinond,  The.      See   Force  of    Prayer, 

The. 
Boy  Poet,  The.     See  There  was  a  Boy. 
By    the    Sea.     See    It    is    a    Beauteous    Evening, 

Calm  and  Free. 
Cave  of  Staffa. 

Character  of  the  Happy  Warrior,  The. 
Charles  the  Second. 
Childless  Father,  The. 
Christmas    Carol,    The.     See    To    the    Ilev.    Dr. 

Wordsworth. 
Cloud-visions,     See  Excursion,  The. 
Complaint  of  a  Forsaken  Indian  Woman,  The. 
Composed  at  Cora  Linn. 
Composed   at   Neidpath   Castle,    the   Property   of 

Lord  Queensberry. 
Composed    upon    Westminster    Bridge,    Sept.    3, 

1802. 
Convention    of    Cintra.     See    Sonnet  Composed 

while  the  Author  was  Engaged  in  Writing  a 

Tract,  etc. 
Cranmer. 
Daflfodils[,   The].     See   I   Wandered   Lonely  as  a 

Cloud. 
Defile  of  Gondo.     See  Prelude,  The. 
Departed.     See  "Slumber  did  my  spirit  seal.  A." 
Desideria.     See  Shock  of  Bereavement,  The. 
Destiny. 

Devotional  Incitements. 
Dion. 

Duty.     See  Ode  to  Duty. 
"Earth  has  not  anything  to  show  more  fair."     See 

Composed  upon  Westminster  Bridge,  Sept.  3, 

1802. 
Ecclesiastical  Sonnets. 
Education  of  Nature,  The.     See  Three  Years  She 

Grew. 
Edward  VI. 
Elegiac  Stanzas  Suggested  by  a  Picture  of  Peele 

Castle  in  a  Storm. 
Ellen  Irwin ;  or.  The  Braes  of  Kirtle. 
England.     See  London,  1802. 
England  and  Switzerland,  1802.     See  Thought  of 

a  Briton  on  the  Subjugation  of  Switzerland. 
England,  1802.     See  Written  in  London,  Septem- 
ber, 1802. 
English    Channel.     See    September,     1802,    near 

Dover. 
Evening  on  Calais  Beach.     See  It  is  a  Beauteous 

Evening,  Calm  and  Free. 
Evening  Star,  Th6. 
Evening  Voluntary. 
Excursion,  The. 
Expostulation,  and  Reply. 
Extempore   Effusion   upon   the   Death   of  James 

Hogg. 
Faith  and  Freedom.     See  Destiny. 
Fidelity. 
First    of   May.      See   Ode:    Composed    on     May 

Morning. 
First  Swallow,  The.  (?) 
Flowers  at  Cave  of  Staffa. 
Ff>rce  of  Prayer,  The. 
Fountain,  The.     [A  Conversation.] 
French  Army  in  Russia,  The. 
Gains    of    Restraint,     The.     See    Sonnet,     The: 

"Nuns  fret  not,"  etc. 
George  III.     See  November,  1813. 
Glad  Tidings. 

Glen-Almain,  the  Narrow  Glen. 
God  in  Nature.     See  Excursion,  The. 
Goody  Blake  and  Harry  Gill. 
Green  Linnet,  The. 
Gunpowder  Plot. 
Hapoy  Warrior,  The.     See  Character  of  the  Happy 

Warrior,  The. 
Hart-leap  Well. 
Her  Eyes  are  Wild. 
Home.     See  I  Grieved  for  Buonaparte. 
Honor. 
I  Cannot    Doubt   that  They  Whom  Ye  Deplore. 

See  Excursion,  The. 
I  Grieved  for  Buonaparte. 
"I  travelled  among  unknown  Men." 
I  Wandered  Lonelv  [as  a  Cloud]. 
Ideal.     See  London,  1802. 
Idle  Shepherd-boys,  The. 
Imagination.     See  Excursion,  The. 
Immortality.     See  Ode:     Intimations  of  Immor- 
tality, etc. 


Wordsworth,  W:  {conlinued). 

In  a  Child's  Album.  See  To  a  Child.  Written  in 
Her  Album. 

In  March.       See  Written  in  March. 

Incident.     (Characteristic  of  a  Favourite  Dog.) 

Indignation  of  a  High-minded  Spaniard. 

Influence  of  Natural  Objects  [in  Calling  Forth  and 
Strengthening  the  Imagination].  See  Prelude, 
The. 

Inner  Vision,  The. 

Inside  of  King's  College  Chapel.  See  Ecclesias- 
tical Sonnet,". 

Intimations  of  Immortality  [from  Recollections 
of  Early  Childhood].  See  Ode:  Intimations 
of  Immortality,  etc. 

It  is  a  Beauteous  Evening,  Calm  and  Free. 

.John  Wickliffe.     See  Ecclesiastical  Sonnets. 

King  Henry  the  Eighth.  See  Recollections  of  the 
Portrait  of  King  Henry  VIII.,  etc. 

Kitten  and  [the]  F' ailing  Leaves,  The. 

Laborer's  Noonday  Hymn,  The. 

Laodamia. 

Last  of  the  Flock,  The. 

Laud.     See  Ecclesiastical  Sonnets. 

Laurel,  The.     See  Russian  Fugitive,  The. 

Lesson,  A. 

Liberty. 

Lines  Composed  a  few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey, 
[on  Revisiting  the  Banks  of  the  Wye],  etc. 

Lines  Composed  at  Grasmere  on  Tidings  of  the 
Approaching  Death  of  Charles  James  Fox. 

Lines  Composed  near  Tintern  Abbey.  See  Lines 
Composed  a  few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey, 
etc. 

Lines  I..eft  upon  a  Seat  in  a  Yew-tree,  which 
Stands  near  the  Lake  of  Esthwaite,  etc. 

Lines  Written  at  Grasmere  on  Tidings  of  the 
Approaching  Death  of  Charles  James  Fox.  See 
Lines  Composed  at  Grasmere,  etc. 

Lines  Written  in  Early  Spring. 

London, 1802. 

London,  1802.  See  aZso  Written  in  London,  Sept., 
1802. 

Lost  Love,  The.  See  She  Dwelt  among  the  Un- 
trodden Ways. 

Love  of  Nature,  The.  See  Lines  Composed  a  few 
Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey,  etc. 

Lucy.  ("A  slumber,"  etc.)  See  "Slumber  did 
my  spirit  seal,  A." 

Lucy.  ("I  travell'd,"  etc.)  See  "I  traveled 
among  unknown  men." 

Lucy.  ("She  dwelt,"  etc.)  See  "She  dwelt 
among  the  untrodden  ways." 

Lucy.  ("Strange  fits  of  passion  I  have 
known.") 

Lucy.  ("Three  years,"  etc.)  See  Three  Years 
She  (irew. 

Lucy  Gray[;  or.  Solitude]. 

"Man  is  dear  to  man;  the  poorest  poor." 

March.     See  Written  in  March. 

Mary  Queen  of  Scots. 

Memory. 

Michael  [and  His  Son]. 

Milton.     See  London,  1802. 

"Milton!  thou  shouldst  be  living  at  this  hour." 
See  London,  1802. 

Mind's  Eye,  The.     See  Excursion,  The. 

Mist  Opening  in  the  Hills.     See  Excursion,  The. 

Moon  among  Trees,  The.     See  Excursion,  The. 

Morning  after  the  Ball.     See  Prelude,  The. 

Morning  in  London.  See  Composed  upon  West- 
minster Bridge,  Sept.  3,  1802. 

Morning  in  the  Mountains. 

Motherland,  The.  See  "When  I  have  borne  in 
memory  what  has  tamed." 

Mother's  Lament,  A.  See  Affliction  of  Margaret, 
The. 

Mountain  Ash,  The.     See  Excursion,  The. 

Mountain  Echo,  The. 

Mutability. 

My  Heart  Leaps  up  [when  I  Behold]. 

Nature  and  the  Poet.  See  Elegiac  Stanzas  Sug- 
gested by  a  Picture  of  Peele  Castle,  etc. 

"Nature  never  did  betrav. ' '  See  Lines  Composed 
a  Few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey,  etc. 

Night  Piece,  A. 

Nightingale,  The. 

November,  1813. 

Nutting. 

Ode:  Composed  on  May  Morning. 

Ode:  Intimations  of  Immortality  from  Recollec- 
tions of  Earlv  Childhood. 

Ode  on  Immortality.  See  Ode:  Intimations  of  Im- 
mortality, etc. 


581 


Wordsworth 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Wordsworth,  W:  (continued). 

Ode  on  Intimations  of  Immortality  from  Recol- 
lections of  Early  Childhood.  See  Ode:  Intima- 
tions of  Immortality,  etc. 

Ode  to  Duty. 

Old  Man  by  the  »rook.  The. 

On  a  Picture  of  Peel  Castle  in  a  Storm.  See  Ele- 
giac Stanzas,  Suggested  by,  etc. 

On  Revisiting  the  Banks  of  the  Wye.  See  Lines 
Composed  a  Few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey, 
etc. 

On  the  Beach  at  Calais.  See  It  is  a  Beauteous 
Evening,  Calm  and  Free. 

On  the  Death  of  James  Hogg.  See  Extempore 
Effusion  upon  the  Death,  etc. 

On  the  Departure  of  Sir  Walter  Scott  from  Ab- 
botsford  for  Naples. 

On  the  Extinction  of  the  Venetian  Republic. 

Osmunda  Regalis,  The. 

Outline.     See  Recluse,  The. 

Passing  of  the  Elder  Bards,  The.  See  Extempore 
Effusion  upon  the  Death  of  James  Hogg. 

Pass  of  Kirkstone,  The. 

Past  Years  of  Home. 

Perfect  Woman.  See  "She  was  a  phantom  of  de- 
light." 

Pet  Lamb,  The. 

Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.     »See  Ecclesiastical  Sonnets. 

PiUar  of  Trajan,  The. 

Poems  Composed  [or  Suggested  during  a  Tour]  in 
the  Summer  of  1833. 

Poetry.     See  Preface  to  Lyrical  Ballads. 

Poet's  Epitaph,  A. 

Poor  Susan.     See  Reverie  of  Poor  Susan,  The. 

Portrait,  A.     See  "She  was  a  phantom  of  delight. ' ' 

Preface  to  Lyrical  Ballads. 

Prelude,  The. 

Primrose  of  the  Rock,  The. 

Rainbow,  The.  See  "My  heart  leaps  up  when  I 
behold." 

Reaper,  The.     See  Solitary  Reaper,  The. 

Recluse,  The. 

Recollections  of  the  Portrait  of  King  Henry  VIII., 
Trinity  Lodge,  Cambridge. 

Redbreast  Chasing  the  Butterfly,  The. 

Resolution  and  Independence. 

Reverie  of  Poor  Susan,  The. 

Rob  Roy's  Brave. 

Russian  Fugitive,  The. 

Ruth ;  or.  The  Influences  of  Nature.  ^ 

Sacheverel. 

Sailor's  Mother,  The. 

Scale  of  Minds. 

SchiU. 

"Scorn  not  the  sonnet."  See  Sonnet,  The: 
"Scorn  not,"  etc. 

Sea  Shell,  The.     See  Excursion,  The. 

Sea-shore,  The.     See  Excursion,  The. 

Seen,  Loved,  Wedded.  See  "She  was  a  phantom 
of  delight." 

September,  1802,  near  Dover. 

September,  1815. 

September,  1819. 

Seven  Sisters,  The;  or,  The  Solitude  of  Bin- 
norie 

She  Dwelt  among  the  Untrodden  Ways. 

"She  was  a  phantom  [of  delight]. ' ' 

Shock  of  Bereavement,  The. 

Simon  Lee,  the  Old  Huntsman. 

Skating.     See  Prelude,  The. 

Skeptic,  The.     See  Borderers,  The. 

Sleeplessness.     See  To  Sleep. 

"Slumber  did  my  spirit  seal.  A." 

"Small  service  is  true  service  while  it  lasts."  See 
To  a  Child.     Written  in  Her  Album. 

Snow.     See  French  Army  in  Russia,  The. 

Solitary  Reaper,  The. 

Song  at  the  Feast  of  Brougham  Castle  upon  the 
Restoration  of  Lord  Clifford,  the  Shepherd,  to 
the  Estates  and  Honors  of  his  Ancestors. 

Sonnet:  "Alas,  what  boots  the  long,  laborious 
quest."     See  What  Boots  the  Quest? 

Sonnet:  "It  is  a  beauteous  evening,  calm  and 
free."     See  It  is  a  Beauteous  Evening,  etc. 

Sonnet:  "It  is  not  to  be  thought  of  that  the  flood." 
See  Destiny. 

Sonnet,  The:  "Nuns  fret  not,"  etc. 

Sonnet,  The:  "Scorn  not  the  sound,"  etc. 

Sonnet:  "This  world  is  too  much  with  us."  See 
World  is  too  Much  with  Us,  The. 

Sonnet  Composed  upon  Westminster  Bridge,  Lon- 
,  don,  1802.  See  Composed  upon  Westminster 
Bridge,  Sept.  3,  1802. 


Wordsworth,  W:  (continued). 

Sonnet  Composed  while  the  Author  was  Engaged 
in  Writing  a  Tract,  Occasioned  by  the  Conven- 
tion of  Cintra. 

Sonnet:  London,  1802,     See  London,  1802. 

Sonnet :  To  Toussaint  L'Ouverture.  See  To  Tous- 
saint  L'Ouverture. 

Speak ! 

Steamboats,  Viaducts,  and  Railways. 

Stepping  Westward.  , 

Sunset,  The.     See  Excursion,  The. 

"Sweet  is  the  lore  which  Nature  brings."  See 
Tables  Turned,  The. 

Tables  Turned,  The. 

"Thanks  to  the  human  heart  by  which  we  live." 
See  Ode:  Intimations  of  Immortality,  etc. 

There  was  a  Boy. 

There  was  a  Time.  See  Ode:  Intimations  of  Im- 
mortality, etc. 

Thought  of  a  Briton  on  the  Subjugation  of  Switzer- 
land. 

Thoughts  Suggested  the  Day  Following,  on  the 
Banks  of  Nith,  near  the  Poet's  Residence. 

Three  Years  She  Grew  [in  Sun  and  Shower]. 

Throne  of  Death,  The. 

Timothy.     See  Childless  Father,  The. 

Tintern  Abbey.  See  Lines  Composed  a  Few  Miles 
above  Tintern  Abbey. 

To  a  Butterfly. 

To  a  Child.     Written  in  Her  Album. 

To  a  Distant  Friend.   See  Speak! 

To  a  Highland  Girl.  (At  Inversneyde  upon  Loch 
Lomond.) 

To  a  Skylark:     "Ethereal  Min.strel,"  etc. 

To  a  Skylark:  "Up  with  me,"  etc. 

To  Duty.     See  Ode  to  Duty. 

To  H.  C. 

To  Hartley  Coleridge.     See  To  H.  C. 

To  Joanna. 

To  Lady  Fitzgerald,  in  Her  Seventieth  Year. 

To  Milton.     See  London,  1802. 

To [Miss  Blackett],  on  Her  First  Ascent  to  the 

Summit  of  Helvellyn. 

To  My  Sister. 

To  Sleep. 

To  the  Cuckoo. 

To  the  Daisy. 

To  the  Highland  Girl  of  Inversneyde.  See  To  a 
Highland  Girl. 

To  the  Rev.  Dr.  Wordsworth. 

To  the  Skylark.  See  To  a  Skylark:  "Ethereal 
min.strel,"  etc. 

To  the  Small  Celandine. 

To  the  Supreme  Being.     (Tr.) 

To  Toussaint  L'Ouverture. 

Toussaint  L'Ouverture.  See  To  Toussaint  L'Ou- 
verture. 

Trosachs,  The. 

True  Dignity.  See  Lines  Left  upon  a  Seat  in  a 
Yew-tree,  etc. 

Trust. 

Twin  Peaks  of  the  Valley.     See  Excursion,  The. 

Two  April  Mornings,  The. 

Two  Victories.  See  Song  at  the  Feast  of  Brougham 
Castle,  etc. 

Unknown  Poets.     See  Excursion,  The. 

"Up!  Up!  My  friend,  and  quit  your  books."  See 
Tables  Turned,  The. 

Upon  Westminster  Bridge[,  Sept.  3,  1802].  See 
Composed  upon  Westminster  Bridge,  Sept.  3, 
1802. 

Valedictory  Sonnet  to  the  River  Duddon.  See 
After-thought. 

Varying  Impressions  from  Nature.  See  Lines 
Composed  a  Few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey, etc. 

Venice.  See  On  the  Extinction  of  the  Venetian 
Republic. 

View  from  Fox  How,  The.  See  Past  Years  of 
Home. 

Vision  of  Mist-splendours,  A.     See  Excursion,  The. 

Walton's  Book  of  Lives.  See  Ecclesiastical  Son- 
nets. 

We  are  Seven. 

"We  will  grieve  not. "  See  Ode:  Intimations  of  Im- 
mortality, etc. 

Westmin.ster  Bridge.  See  Composed  upon  West- 
minster Bridge,  Sept.  3,  1802. 

What  Boots  the  Quest? 

"When  I  have  borne  in  memory  what  has  tamed. ' ' 

Wicliffe.     See  Ecclesiastical  Sonnets. 

William  the  Third.     See  Ecclesiastical  Sonnets. 

Within  King's  College  Chapel,  Cambridge.  See 
Ecclesiastical  Sonnets. 


582 


AUTHOR  INDEX 


Yeats 


Wordsworth,  W:  {continued). 
Woodland  Walks. 
World,  The.      See  World  is  too  Much  with  Us, 

The. 
World  is  too  Much  with  Us,  The. 
"World  is  too  much  with  us,  late  and  soon.  The." 

See  World  is  too  Much  with  Us,  The. 
World's  Ravages,  The.     See  World  is  too  Much 

with  Us,  The. 
Wren's  Nest,  A. 
Written  in  Early  Spring.     See  Lines  Written  in 

Early  Spring. 
Written  in  London,  September,  1802. 
Written  in  March. 
Yarrow  Revisited. 
Yarrow  Unvisited. 
Yarrow  Visited. 
"Yes,  hope  may  with  my  strong  desire  keep  pace." 

(To  Vittoria  Colonna.)     (Tr.) 
Yew-trees. 
Work,  H:  Clay. — Marching  through  Georgia. 
Worstell,  Mary  V. — Reward  of  the  Cheerful  Candle, 

The. 
Worthley,  Evelyn  M. — Bird's  Cradle-song,  A. 
Wotton,  Sir  H: — Character  of  a  Happy  Life,  The. 

Description  of  the  Country's  Recreations,  A.     See 

Verses  in  Praise  of  Angling. 
Elizabeth  of  Bohemia.     See  On  His  Mistress,  the 

Queen  of  Bohemia. 
Farewell  to  the  Vanities  of  the  World,  A. 
Happy  Life,  The  [or  A].      See  Character  of  a  Hap- 
py Life,  The. 
In   Praise   of  Angling.     See  Verses  in   Praise   of 

Angling. 
Lord  of  Himself.     See  Character  of  a  Happy  Life, 

The. 
On  a  Bank  as  I  Sat  a-Fishing. 
On  His  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohemia. 
Short   Hymn  upon  the  Birth  of  Prince  Charles, 

A. 
Spring  Idyll,  A.     See  On  a  Bank  as  I  Sat  a-Fish- 
ing. 
Tears  at  the  Grave  of  Sir  Albertus  Morton  Wept 

by  Sir  H.  Wotton. 
Tears  Wept  at  the  Grave  of  Sir  Albertus  Morton. 
See  Tears  at  the  Grave  of  Sir  Albertus  Morton 
Wept  by  Sir  H.  Wotton. 
Thoughts   on   the   Forest.     See   Farewell   to   the 

Vanities  of  the  World,  A. 
To    His    Mistress    (Elizabeth,    Queen    of    Bohe- 
mia).    See    On    His   Mistress,    the  Queen    of 
Bohemia. 
To  his  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohernia.     See  On 

His  Mistress,  the  Queen  of  Bohemia. 
Upon    the    Death    of    Sir    Albertfus]    Morton's 

Wife. 
Upon  the  Sudden  Restraint  of  the  Earl  of  Somer- 
set, then  Falling  from  Favor. 
Verses  in  Praise  of  .4ngling. 

You  Meaner  Beauties.     See  On  his  Mistress,  the 
Queen  of  Bohemia. 
Wotton,  Sir  J: — Damaetas'  Jig  in  Praise  of  his  Love.  (?) 
Wratislaw,  Theodore. — -Expectation. 
Music-hall,  The. 
Vain  Desire,  A. 
Wray,  J.  Jackson. — Methodist  Class-meeting,  A.     See 
Nestleton  Magna. 
Nestleton  Magna. 

Sister  Agatha's  Ghost.     See  Nestleton  Magna. 
Wrigglesworth,  J:— "I  Will  not  Drink." 
Wright,  E.  V. — How  Father  Carves  the  Duck.     See 
When  Father  Carves  the  Duck. 
When  Father  Carves  the  Duck. 
Wright,  Florence  M. — Life's  Common  Things. 
Wright,  Harriet  B. — Planting  for  the  Future. 
Wright,  J:  D.— Orator's  Cause,  The. 
Wright,  Mary  L.— White  Lily,  A. 
Wright,  Merle  St.  Croix. — Cradle  Song. 
Fate. 

Translation  from  Heine. 
Wright,  Rev.  R.  Walter.— Easter  Morn. 

Still  Small  Voice,  A. 
Wright,  W:  Bull.— Brook,  The. 
Wrighton,  W.  T.— Dearest  Spot,  The. 
Wrinkle. — Cheerful  Song,  A. 
Fame. 

How  I  Love  My  Books. 
Impressionistic. 
In  Perpetuum. 
Omen,  The. 
Our  Goddess. 
Song  to  Her,  A. 
"Wrongfellow." — Meerschaum. 
Wyatt,  Mary  L.— Sail  on  the  Clouds,  A. 


Wyatt,  Sir  T: — Appeal,  An.     See   Lover   Beseecheth 
his  Mistress  not  to  Forget,  The. 
Appeal,   The.     See  Earnest   Suit   to  his  Unkind 

Mistress  not  to  i'orsake  Him,  An. 
Blame  not  My  Lute. 
Earnest  Suit  to  his  Unkind  Mistress  not  to  Forsake 

Him,  An. 
Forget  not  Yet.     See  I>over  Beseecheth  his  Mis- 
tress not  to  Forget,  The. 
Lover    Beseecheth    his  Mistress    not   to   P'orget, 

The. 
Lover  Complaineth  of  the  Unkindness  of  his  Love, 

The. 
Lover   having   Dreamed  Enjoying   of    his   Love, 

The. 
Lover   Sheweth  how  he  is  Forsaken    of   such    as 

He  Sometime  Enjoyed,  The. 
Lover  to  His  Lute,  The.     See  Lover  Complaineth 

of  the  Unkindness  of  his  Love,  The. 
Lover's    Appeal,    The.       See    Eapnest    Suit     to 
his    Unkind   Mistress    not    to    Forsake    Him, 
An. 
Of  th^  Courtier's  Life,  Written  to  John  Poins. 
On  his  Return  from,  Spain. 
Re-cured  Lover  Exulteth  in  his  Freedom,  The. 
Second  Satire,  The.     See  Of  the  Courtier's  Life, 

Written  to  John  Poins. 
Supplication,  A.     See  Lover  Beseecheth  his  Mis- 
tress not  to  Forget,  The. 
To    His    Lute.     See    Lover   Complaineth    of    the 

Unkindness  of  his  Love,  The. 
Vixi  Puellis  Nuper  Idoneus.     See  Lover  Sheweth 
how  he  is  Forsaken,  etc. 
Wyeth,  J:  AUan. — My  Sweetheart's  Face. 
Wyeth,  Mary  E.  C. — Gabe  and  the  Irish  Lady. 
Wylie,   Rev.     A.    McElroy.  —  Need    of    Heroism    To- 
day. 
Wyman,    Benson     N.  —  Ancient    and    Modern    Ora- 
tory. 
Wyman,  Emma  F. — Little  Crosses. 
Wynne,  Frances. — Lesson  in  Geography,  A. 

Whisper ! 
Wynter,  Andrew. — Ode  to  My  Pipe. 
"Wyoming  Kit." — Cowboy's  Tale,  The. 


Yale  Record. — At  the  Race. 

Deception. 

Her  Leghorn  Hat. 

His  Oath.     See  Uncertain  Pledge,  An. 

His  Poem. 

It  Was. 

Modest  Poet,  The. 

Phantasy. 

Priscilla. 

Snare  and  a  Delusion,  A. 

Summer  Girl,  The. 

Uncertain  Pledge,  An. 

Upon  Her  Lips. 

Way  of  It,  The. 

"When  the  Sleeper  Wakes." 

Wonders  of  Genealogy,  The. 

Yale,  A.  D.  2000. 
"Yankee."— To  a  Child. 
Yates,  Edmund. — Epigram:     "AU  Saints." 
Yates,  J:  H. — Fast  Mail  and  the  Stage,  The. 

Model  Church,  The. 

No  Mortgage  on  the  Farm. 

Old  Forsaken  Schoolhouse,  The. 

Old  Man  Goes  to  School,  The. 

Old  Man  in  the  Model  Church,  The.     See  Model 
Church,  The. 

Old  Man  in  the  Palace  Car,  The. 

Old  Man  in  the  Styhsh  Church,  The. 

Old  Ways  and  the  New,  The. 

School  Begins  To-day. 

There's  Danger  in  the  Town. 
Yeats,  W:  Butler. — Down  by  the  Salley  Gardens. 

Dream  of  a  Blessed  Spirit,  A. 

Father  Gilligan. 

Folk  of  the  Air,  The. 

Hosting  of  the  Sidhe,  The. 

Indian  Song,  An. 

Island  of  Sleep,  The.     See  Wanderings  of  Oisin, 
The. 

Lake  Isle  of  Innisfree,  The. 

Lamentation  of  the  Old  Pensioner,  The. 

Michael  Robartes  Remembers  Forgotten  Beauty. 

Old  Song  Resung,  An.     See  Down  by  the  Salley 
Gardens. 


583 


Yeats 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Yeats,  W:  Butler  (continued). 

Rose  of  the  World,  The. 

Song  of  the  Old  Mother,  The. 

Stolen  Child,  The. 

Two  Trees,  The. 

Wanderings  of  Oiiin,  The. 

When  you  are  Old. 

Where  my  Books  Go. 

White  Birds,  The. 
Ybarra,  T: — Appeal  to  the  Goddess,  An. 

Lay  of  Ancient  Rome,  A. 
Yeomans,  C.  W. — Ein  Traumbild. 

"Write  a  Poem  for  the  'Lit.'  " 
Yonkers  Gazette. — Modern  Shakespeare,  The. 
York,  Eva  Rose. — I  Shall  not  Pass  this  Way  Again. 
York,  S.  A. — Repartee. 
Yorke,  R: — Modern  Elijah,  A. 
Youl,  E:  [or  J.  L.] — Flowers,  The.    See  Song  of  Spring. 

Song  of  Spring. 

Worship  in  the  Wild-wood. 
Young,  Rev.  Alfred. — Slaughter  House,  The. 
Young,  Andrew. — There  is  a  Happy  Land. 
Young,  Rev.  E.  K.^Saloon  and  the  Home,.  The. 
Young,  Dr.  E: — Aspiration.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

Complaint,  The.     .See  Night  Thoughts. 

Consolation.     iSee  Night  Thoughts. 

Death.     .See  Night  Thoughts. 

Death  of  P>iends,  The.     ,See  Night  Thoughts. 

Hope.     .See  Night  Thoughts. 

Last  Day  [Book],  The. 

Love  of  Fame  the  Universal  Passion. 

Man.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

Narcissa.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

Nature.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

Night.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

Night  Thoughts. 

Old  Coquette,  The.     .See  Satire  V. — On  Women. 

On  Procrastination.     .See  Night  Thoughts. 

Penitence.     .See  Night  Thoughts. 

Procrastination.     .See  Night  Thoughts. 

Pursuit  of  Frivolous  Pleasures,  The.     .See  Night 
Thoughts. 

Revenge[,  The]. 

Satire  V. — On  Women. 

Sleep.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

Socrates.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

Stream  of  Life,  The.     .See  Night  Thoughts. 

Time.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

Time's  Midnight  Voice.     See  Night  Thoughts. 

To  the  Right  Hon.  Mr.  Dodington.     See  Love  of 
Fame  the  Universal  Passion. 

Under  the  Violets. 
Young  Folks'  Rural. — Corporeal  Punishment. 
Young,  G:  W. — Lips  that  Touch  Liquor  Must  never 

Touch  Mine,  The. 
Young  Idea,  TAe.^Feathered  Name-speakers. 
Young,  W: — Bells,  The.     See  Wishmakers'  Town. 

Bridal  Pair,  The.     See  Wishmakers'  Town. 

Conscience-keeper,  The.     See  Wishmakers'  Town. 

Flower-seller,  The.     See  Wishmakers'  Town. 

Judith. 


Y'oung,  W:  (continued). 

Pawns,  The.     See  Wishmakers'  Town. 

Philomel  to  Corydon. 

Wishmakers'  Town. 
Younge,  Leigh. — Fortunes  of  War,  The. 
Youngs,  Louise. — Choosing  a  "State  Tree." — The  Pine 

Tree. 
Youth's    Companion. — At    Bedtime.     See   Two    Little 
Girls  I  Know. 

Aunt  Polly's  "George  Washington." 

Bedtime. 

Bell  of  St.  John's,  The. 

Damaris  Brown. 

Dolly's  Lesson. 

Egg  a  Chicken,  An. 

First  Letter,  The. 

George  Washington's  "Bufday." 

Goosey  Lucy's  New  Year's  Calls. 

List  of  Our  Presidents,  A. 

Little  Planter,  A. 

Little  Song,  A. 

Mick  Tandy's  Revenge.  ' 

Miracle  of  the  Egg,  The.     See  Egg  a  Chicken,  An. 

Month  of  May[,  The]. 

My  Tree. 

New  Year,  The. 

North  and  South. 

Our  First  Thanksgiving  Day. 

Pussy  and  the  Poppies. 

Rob's  Mittens. 

Small  Dress-making. 

Teaching  Dolly.     See  Dolly's  Lesson. 

Thoughts  for  the  New  Year. 

True  Heart,  A. 

Two  Little  Girls  I  Know. 
Youth's  Penny  Gazette. — Robin  Redbreast's  Secret. 
Yriarte,  Don  Tomas  de. — Ass  and  His  Master,  The. 

Country  Squire,  The. 

Eggs,  The. 

Magpie  and  the  Monkey,  The. 
Yule,  Sir  H :— Birkenhead,  The. 
Yule,  Pamelia  Vining. — Beautiful  Artist,  The. 

Warble  thy  Lays  to  me. 


Z.,  X.  Y.— Race,  The. 

Zabriskie,  F.  N. — Poet's  Funeral,  The.     See  Tribute  to 
Longfellow,  A. 

Tribute  to  Longfellow,  A. 
Zangwill,  Israel. — Despair  and  Hope. 
Zeagles,  G: — Tale  of  the  Atlantic  Coast,  A. 
Zedlitz,  Jos.  Christian  von. — Napoleon's  Midnight  Re- 
view. 
Zeliff,  Emma. — Women's  Rights. 
Zion's  Herald. — Hunting  Eggs. 

Little  Girl  that  Grew  Up,  The. 
Zola,  Emile. — Justice  for  Dreyfus. 
Zug,  G :  B.— To  Waltz  with  Thee. 


584 


FIEST  LINE  INDEX 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


A  babe  sleeps  under  the  lilac  tree.     See  Purple  Blos- 
soms.    {Cornell  Era.) 
A  baby  lying  on  his  mother's  breast.    See  Man's  Pillow. 

— Browne. 
A  baby  on  a  woman's  breast.     See  Four  Kisses,  The. 

— -Vickers.  , 

A  baby  once  cried  for  the  moon.     See  Nursery  Fable,  A. 

—Wall. 
A  baby  was  sleeping.     See  Angel's  Whisper,  The. — 

Lover. 
A  baby's  boot,  and  a  skein  of  wool.     See  Unfinished 

Still. — Anon. 
A  baby's  eyes  ere  speech  began.    See  Etude  R^aliste 

(Baby's  Eyes,  A). — Swinburne. 
A  baby's  feet,  like  sea-shells  pink.     See  Etude  Rdaliste 

(Baby's  Feet,  A). — Swinburne. 
A   baby's   hands,   like    rosebuds    furled.     See    Etude 

R^alist6  (Baby's  Hands,  A). — Swinburne. 
A  bachelor,  old  and  cranky.     See  Worse  than  Marriage. 

{Boston  Courier.) 
A  bachelor  squire  of  no  great   possession.      See  Ask 

Mamma. — Bell. 
A   bale-fire   kindled   in   the   night.     See   Carlyle   and 

Emerson . — Schuyler. 
A   ball   of   fire   shoots   through   the   tamarack.      See 

Scarlet  Tanager,  The. — Benton. 
A  banquet-hall   in   a  palace;  drapery  between  open 

columns.     See  Banquet,  'The. — Tincker. 
A  bard  here  dwelt,  more  fat  than  bard  beseems.     See 

James  Thomson. — Lyttelton. 
A  barefooted  child  on   the   crossing.     See  City  Con- 
trasts.— Anon. 
A  barking  sound   the  shepherd  hears.     See  Fidelity. — 

Wordsworth. 
A  basin  of  barley  brotkmake,  make  for  me.      See  Bar- 
ley Broth.     (Punch.) 
A  battery  is  needed  here  at  this  particular  point.     See 

Field  Battery,  A. — Hamilton. 
A  beam  of  light,  from  the  infinite  depths  of  the  mid- 
night sky.     See  Beam  of  Light,  A. — Rooney. 
A  beardless   disciple  of  Themis  rises,   and  thus   ad- 
dresses the  court.      See  Cousin  Sally  Billiard. — 

Jones. 
A  beautiful  babe  in  her  cradle  bed  lay.     See  Smile  and 

the  Sigh,  The. — .Johnson. 
A  beautiful  bird  at  the  casement  sings.     See  Slumber 

Song,  A. — Aiken.  '' 

A  beautiful  boy  with  forehead  fair.     See  Good  All 

Day. — Anon. 
A  beautiful,  delicate,  fragile  vase.     See  Mended  Vase, 

The.— Sims. 
A  beautiful  maiden  was  Echo.     See  Story  of  Echo. — - 

Anon. 
A  bed  of  ashes  and  a  half-burned  brand.     See  Morning 

in  Camp. — Bashford. 
A  beggar  stood   at   the  rich  man's   door.     See  Two 

Beggars,  The. — Anon. 
A  beggar  through  the  world  am  I.     See  Beggar,  The. — 

Lowell. 
A  being  cleaves  the  moonlit  air.     See  Hans  Christian 

Andersen. — Gosse. 
A  Bible  canvasser,  meandering  along  the  street,  halted 

before  a  tumble-down  tenement.     See  His  Time 

for  Fiddling. — Lewis. 
A  big  boy  could  stand  up  here.     See  Short  Speech,  A. — 

Anon. 
A  big,  fat  boy,  named  Robert  Simpson.     See  Big  Bob 

Simpson. — Dane. 
A  bird  has  little — only  a  feather.     See  Only  a  Little. — 

Goodale. 
A  bird  in  my  bower.      See  Song. — Williams. 
A  bird  sat  in  a  maple  tree.     See  Morning  Bird,  The. — - 

Field. 
A   bird   was   singing  to   its   mate.     See   Fate. — Har- 
rison. 
A  birdie  with  a  yellow  bill.      See  Time    to   Rise. — 

Stevenson. 
A  bit  of  crape,  hanging  side  by  side  with  a  strip  of 

satin  ribbon.     See  Sairy  Jackson's  Baby. — Anon. 


A  bit  of  ground,  a  smell  of  earth.  See  T6te-i\-t6te. — 
Chad  wick. 

A  blackbird  was  swinging.  See  Naughty  Crow,  The. 
— -Richards. 

A  blazing  home,  a  blood-soaked  hearth.  See  Comanche. 
— Miller. 

A  blight,  a  gloom,  I  know  not  what.  See  Mood,  A. — 
Aldrich. 

A  blind  boy  stood  beside  the  loom.  See  Blind  Weaver, 
The.— Day. 

A  blind  man,  once  upon  a  time.  See  Blind  Man  and 
•  His  Candle,  The. — Saxe. 

A  block  of  marble  caught  the  glance.  See  Discipline. 
— Anon. 

A  blood-red  ring  hung  round  the  moon.  See  Indian 
Maid's  Lament,  The. — Logan. 

A  blossom  grew  in  lonely  glen.  See  Flower  and  the 
Song,  The. — Anon. 

A  blue  robe  on  their  shoulder.  See  Seven  Fiddlers, 
The. — Evans. 

A  bluebird  lives  in  yonder  tree.  See  To  Miguel  de 
Cervantes  Saavadra. — Munkittrick. 

A  bluebird  met  a  butterfly.  See  Beware  of  the  Flat- 
terer.— Anon. 

A  boat  beneath  a  sunny  sky.  See  Of  Alice  in  Wonder- 
land.— Dodgson. 

A  bobolink  and  a  chick-a-dee.  See  Bobolink  and 
Chick-a-dee,  The.     (St.  Nicholait.) 

A  boding  silence  reigns.  See  Seasons,  The  (Thunder- 
storm, The). — Thomson. 

A  boil  is  generally  very  small  at  first  and  a 
fellow  hardly  notices  it.  See  Speech  on  Boils. 
— Anon. 

A  book  is  good  company.  See  "Book  is  good  com- 
pany, A." — Beecher. 

A  book  i.s  not  merely  so  much  printed  paper  and  the 
binding.     See  Books. — Beecher. 

A  book  of  friends,  who  still  are  friends.  See  Photo- 
graphic Album. — Ryder. 

A  book  of  verses  underneath  the  bough.  See  Ru- 
bAiyAt  of  Omar  Khayyiim  (Omar  Khayyrtcn,  Sel. 
fr.). — Fitzgerald. 

A  book-agent  importuned  James  Watson.  See  Mer- 
chant and  the  Book-agent,  The. — Anon. 

A  bookkeeper  in  a  certain  large  city  one  day.  See 
Saved  by  a  Boy. — Meyers. 

A  Bo.ston  master  said  one  day.  See  Reason  Why,  The. 
— Anon. 

A  bottle  tree  bloometh  in  Winkyway  land.  See  Bot- 
tle Tree,  The.— Field. 

A  bow-shot  from  her  bower  eaves.  See  Lady  of 
Shalott,  The. — Tennyson. 

A  boy  and  a  girl  went  out  to  play.  See  Terrible  Time, 
A.— Denton. 

A  boy,  as  nursery  records  tell.  See  Clever  Idiot,  The. 
— Anon. 

A  boy  crept  slyly  out  of  school.  See  Little  Truant, 
The. — Kavanaugh. 

A  boy  don't  have  much  comfort  in  life  anyway.  See 
Boy's  Complaint,  A. — Anon. 

A  boy  drove  into  the  city,  his  wagon  loaded  down. 
See  Little  Black-eyed  Rebel,  The. — Carleton. 

A  boy  had  a  magnet.  See  Idle  Magnet,  The. — Bel- 
lamy and  Goodwin. 

A  boy  I  loved  sweet  Sally  Pine.  See  Cupid  Peeped  in 
through  the  Blinds. — Dillmore. 

A  boy  is  the  spirit  of  mischief  embodied.  See  What  is 
a  Boy? — Denison. 

A  boy  named  Peter  found  once  in  the  road.  See  Les- 
son of  Mercy,  A. — Cary. 

A  boy  named  Simon  sojourned  in  a  dale.  See  Simple 
Simon. — Morgridge. 

A  boy  not  over  eleven  years  old.  See  To  Mark 
Mother's  Grave. — Anon. 

A  boy  strolled  through  a  dusty  road.  See  Tree  Plant- 
ing.— Butts. 

A  boy  was  set  a  watch  to  keep.  See  Boy  and  Wolf. — 
Kavanaugh. 

A  boy,  you  say,  doctor?  An'  she  don't  know  it  yet? 
See  Christmas  Guest,  A. — Stuart. 

A  brace  of  sinners,  for  no  good.  See  Pilgrims  and  the 
Peas,  The.— Wolcott. 


587 


A  brave 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


A  brave  little  bird  that  fears  not  God.     See  Meadow 

Lark,  The. — Garland. 
A  brave  young  prince  a  young  princes.s  adores.     See 

Es.«!ence  of  Opera,  The. — Anon. 
A  breath  can  fan  love's  flame  to  burning.     See  Breath, 

A. — De  Vere.       • 
.•V  brewer  in  a  country  town.   See  Brown  Stout. — Anon. 
A  bright  little  boy  with  laughing  face.     See  To-morrow. 

— Anon. 
A  British  ship  at  anchor  lay.    See  Nine  Suitors,  The. — ■ 

Anon. 
A  broad  expanse  of  moonlight,  mantling  snow.     See 

Moonlight  on  the  Campus. — Pierce. 
A  broad-breasted  Queen  among  Nations.     See  Boston. 

—O'Reilly. 
A    broad-minded    selection    of    noble    passages.     See 

"Broad-minded   selection   of    noble  passages.  A." 

— Peaslee. 
A  bumblebee,  yellow  as  gold.      See  Meadow  Talk. — 

Leslie. 
A  bunch  of  dry,  dead  leaves.     See  Wonder  Story,  A.— 

Bacon. 
A  bunch  of  golden  keys  is  mine.     See  Golden  Keys. — 

Anon. 
A  burning  summer  sun  had  beaten  down  on  the  nrairie 

for  days.     See  Prairie  Mirage,  The.     {Detroit  Free 

Press.) 
A  business  man  had  purchased.     See  Story  of  a  New 

Hat. — Anon. 
A  busy  dream,   forgotten  ere  it  fades.     See  lAfe. — • 

Anon. 
A  butterfly  basked  on  a  baby's  grave.     See  Butterfly 

on  Baby's  Grave,  A. — Anon. 
A   butterfly,    wing-weary,    came   to    find.     See   Wood 

Orchid,  The.     ( College  Folio. ) 
A  cabin  beside  the  dry,  red  road,  twisting  and  turning. 

See  I  Will  not  Leave  You  Comfortless. — Anon. 
A  cabin  on  the  mountainside  hid    in    a   grassy  nook. 

See  Connla's  Well. — Russell. 
"A  caller!  Who  is  it?"     See  Flowers  of  the  May.^ 

Anon. 
A  calm,  delightful  autumn  night.      See  Romance,  A. — 

Field. 
A  candle  in  the  night.     See  Wisdom. — Richardson. 
A  cannibal  maid  and  her  Hottentot  blade.     See  How 

Three  Were  Made  One. — Peale. 
A  cannibal  maiden   loved  too  well  a  missionary  good. 

See  Love  and  Theology. — Anon. 
A  cannon-ball  rolling  loosely  in  the  cannon's  mouth  is 

simply  a  piece  of  harmless  metal.     See  Lead  the 

Way. — Abbott. 
.\  canvas-back  duck,  rarely  roasted,  between  us.     See 

Per  Aspera  ad  Astra. — Baker. 
.V  capital  ship  for  an  ocean  trip.     See  Walloping  Win- 
dow-blind, The. — Carry]. 
.V  captain  went  to  Gettysburg.     See  Lover  without 

Arms,  A.- — Davenport. 
A  careworn  widow  sat  alone.     See  Unbolted  Door,  The. 

— Garrett. 
.\  carrot  and  turnip  grew  in  the  same  ground.     See 

Boasting  Pair,  A. — Richards. 
.\    cat    I    sing,    of    famous    memory.     See    Caialectic 

Monody,  A.     (Cruikshank' s  Omnibus.) 
A   cat   or  dog  my   First   may  be.      See  Madrigal. — 

Sabine. 
A  cattle  dealer  stopped  at  the  house  of  an  Arkansas 

farmer.     See  Arkansas  Farmer,  The. — Anon. 
A  century  ago  on  sterile  land.     See  First  Battle  of  the 

Revolution,  The. — Anon. 
A  century  since,  out  in  the  West.     See  Betty  Zane.— 

English. 
A  certain  artist,  I've  forgot  his  name.     See  Spectacles, 

or  Helps  to  Read. — Byrom. 
A  certain  colored  brother  had  been  holding  forth  to  his 

httle  flock.     See  Ship  of  Faith,  The.— Anon. 
A   certain   friend   of   mine,    whose   daily   praise.     See 

Masks. — Burton. 
A  certain  man  had  the  good  fortune  to  oossess  a  goose. 

See  Goose  with  the  Golden  Eggs,  The. — ^'^sop. 
A  certain  man  had  two  sons.     See  Prodigal  Son,  The. 

(Bible.) 
A    certain    pasha,    dead    five    thousand    years.     See 

Turkish  Legend,  A. — Aldrich. 
A  certain  professor  of  elocution  was  announced  to  give 

an    entertainment.     See    She    Wanted    to    Learn 

F^locution. — Anon. 
A  chaplain  in  our  army.     See  Tom,  the  Drummer-boy. 

— Anon. 
A  charming,  delightful  day!     See  Perfect  Day,  A. — 

Fitch. 
"A  charming  prospect,  this,  Master  Coffin,  but  rather 

too  much  poetry."     See  Pilot,  The  (Capture  of  the 

Whale,  The).— Cooper. 


A  charming  woman,  I've  heard  it  said.  See  Charming 
Woman,  A. — Saxe. 

A  cheer  and  salute  for  the  admiral,  and  here's  to  the 
captain  bold.  See  Men  behind  the  Guns,  The. — 
Rooney. 

A  cheery  little  sprite  I  know.  See  By  and  By. — Boy- 
Ian. 

A  chicken  is  beautiful,  and  round,  and  full  of  cunning 
ways.     See  Chickens. — Hamilton. 

A  chieftain,  to  the  Highlands  bound.  See  Lord 
Ullin's  IJaughter. — Campbell. 

A  child,  as  from  school  he  was  bounding  by.  See  Only 
a  Shaving. — Meredith. 

A  child  beside  a  rivulet.  See  Bring  Back  My  Flowers. 
— Larcom. 

A  child  looked  up  in  the  summer  sky.  See  Water- 
bloom,  The.— Thaxter. 

A  child  most  infantine.  See  Child  of  Twelve,  A. — • 
Shelley. 

A  child  said  What  is  the  grassf  fetching  it  to  me  with 
full  hands.  See  Song  of  Myself  (Leaves  of  Grass). 
— Whitman. 

A  child  should  always  say  what's  true.  See  Whole 
Duty  of  Children. — Stevenson. 

A  child  sleeps  under  a  rose-bush  fair.  See  Rose-bush, 
The.— Caldwell. 

A  child  was  singing  at  his  play.  See  Hugo's  "Child  at 
Play."— Field. 

A  child's  a  plaything  for  an  hour.  See  Parental  Rec- 
ollections.— Lamb. 

A  child's  round  face  in  the  tongs.  See  Face  in  the 
Tongs,  A. — Larcom. 

A  child-world,  yet  a  wondrous  world  no  less.  See 
Child-world.  The.— Riley. 

A  choir  of  bright  beauties  in  spring  did  appear.  See 
Lady's  Song,  The. — Dryden. 

A  chronic  distrust  of  the  people  pervades  the  book- 
educated  classes.  See  Scholar  in  a  Republic,  The 
(Distrust  of  the  People). — Phillips. 

A  citizen,  for  recreation's  sake.  See  Citizen  and  the 
Thieves,  The.— Anon. 

A  City  Auctioneer,  one  Samuel  Stubbs.  See  Auctioneer 
and  his  Lawyer,  The. — Smith. 

A  city  of  young  life  astir  for  fame.  See  Oxford  in 
1845. — Alexander. 

A  clever  French  author  made  a  book.  See  Sir  Walter 
Scott  in  Westminster. — Hay. 

A  cloud  came  over  a  land  of  leaves.  See  Cloud,  The. — 
Anon. 

A  cloud  lay  cradled  near  the  setting  sun.  See  Evening 
Cloud,  The.— Wilson. 

A  cloud  of  cinder-dotted  smoke,  whose  billows  rise 
and  swell.     See  Fireman  O'Rafferty. — Lincoln. 

A  cloud  possessed  the  hollow  field.  See  High  Tide  at 
Gettysburg,  The. — Thompson. 

A  cold  coiled  line  of  mottled  lead.  See  Massasauga, 
The.— Garland. 

A  collegiate  education  has  this  distinction  and  privi- 
lege. See  "Collegiate  education  has  this  dis- 
tinction and  privilege.  A." — Woolsey. 

A  comparison  has  been  drawn  between  the  events  of  the 
Revolution.  See  Murder  of  Lovejoy,  The. — 
Phillips. 

A  concert  once  by  Mr.  Spring.  See  Concert  in  the 
Wood,  The.— Anon. 

"A  conjunction  connects  the  words  or  sentences  be- 
tween which  it  stands."  See  Temptation  Re- 
sisted.— Anon. 

A  corn-stalk  glanced  down  at  some  grasses.  See  Les- 
son, A. — Anon. 

A  corrupt  public  sentiment  produces  dishonesty.  See 
Public  Dishonesty. — Beecher. 

A  cottage  hidden  in  the  wood.  See  Whittier  Alphabet, 
A. — Whittier. 

A  cottage  home  with  sloping  lawn,  and  trellised  vines 
and  flowers.     See  Ruined  Merchant,  The. — Eager. 

A  cottager  leaned  whispering  by  her  hives.  See  On 
the  Borders  of  Cannock  Chase. — Ingelow. 

A  counsel  in  the  "Common  Pleas."  See  Farmer  and 
the  Counsellor,  The. — Smith. 

A  country  boy  by  the  old  stone  wall.  See  Sam. — 
Hardy. 

A  country  curate  visiting  his  flock.  See  Lucky  Call, 
The. — Anon. 

A  country  fellow  and  his  son,  they  tell.  See  Country- 
men and  the  Ass,  The. — Byrom. 

A  country  lad  as  he  lay  one  day.  See  Acorn  and  the 
Pumpkin,  The. — Anon. 

A  country  life  is  sweet!  See  Useful  Plough,  The. — 
Anon. 

A  country  maid  was  walking  along  with  a  can  of  milk 
upon  her  head.  See  Country  Maid  and  Her  Milk- 
can,  The. — ^Esop. 


588 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


A  family 


A    country    meeting-house.     A    midsummer   Sabbath. 

See  Swallowing  a  Fly. — Talmage. 
A  country  schoolmarm,  the  other  day,  while  working 

an     example     on     the     board.     See     Schoolboy's 

Apples,  The. — Anon. 
A    country     schoolmaster,     height     .lonas     Bell.     <Sce 

Country  Schoolmaster,  The. — Anon. 
A   country  squire,   of   greater  wealth   than   wit.     See 

Country  Squire,  The. — Yriarte. 
A  country  that  draws  fifty  feet  of  water.     See  Holland. 

—Butler. 
A  cow  is  an  animal  with  four  legs  on  the  under  side. 

See  I^aura's  Composition  on  the  Cow. — Anon. 
A  cow  lived  in  a  pleasant  field.     See  Mrs.   Brindle's 

Cowslip  Feast. — Anon. 
A  crash  of  boughs, — one  through  them  breaking!     See 

I..overs. — Ingelow. 
A  crazy  bookcase,  placed  before.     See  Epilogue  to  the 

Breakfast-table  Series. — Holmes. 
A    Creole   boy   from    the   West    Indies   brought.     See 

Choosing  a  Profession. — Lamb. 
A  cricket  sang  on  the  wide  old  hearth.     See  Aftermath. 

— Banta. 
A  crimson  rosebud  into  beauty  breaking.     See  Roses. — 

Anon. 
A  crinkling,  sun-specked  stream,  some  kindly  shade. 

See  Izaak  Walton's  Prayer. — James. 
A  critic  is  now  aware  that  his  personal  taste  has  no 

value.     See  "Critic  is  now  aware,"  etc.— Taine. 
A  cross-eyed  man  in   a  long  linen  duster.     See  Irre- 
pressible, The. — Anon. 
A   crowd  of  newsboys  had   gathered.     See  Snorkey's 

Version  of  the  Flood  and  the  Ark. — Anon. 
A  crown  of  flowers  rare  I  bring.     See  May  Celebration. 

— Kavanaugh. 
A  cuckoo  sat  on  a  tree  and  sang.     See  Song  of  Summer, 

A. — Anon. 
A  cunning  fish  was  nibbling  sly.     See  Fatal  Bait,  A. — 

Kavanaugh. 
A  cunning  fox,  caught  in  a  trap.     See  Fox  who  Lost 

his  Tail,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
A  cup  fell  in  love  with  a  saucer  trim.     See  Rejected. — 

Anon. 
"A  cup  for  hope!"  she  said.     See  Three  Seasons. — 

Rossetti. 
A  cup  of  coffee,  eggs,  and  rolls.     See  Book-hunter,  The. 

Sherman. 
A  curate  once  courted  a  nice  little  miss.     See  After 

Grace. — Anon. 
A    cypress-bough,    and     a    rose-wreath     sweet.     See 

Death's  Jest  Book  (Athulf's  Song). — Beddoes. 
A    dainty    bit    of   satin.     See   My    Christmas    Card. — 

Fowler. 
A  dainty,  delicate  swallow-feather.  •   See  Chimne.y  Nest, 

The. — Dodge. 
A    Danbury    man    named    Reubens.     See   Anger    and 

Enumeration. — Bailey. 
A  dandelion  sprang  on  the  lawn.     See  All  Yellow. — 

Anon. 
A  daring  prince,  of  the  realm  Rangg  Dhune.     See  Ses- 
sion with  Uncle  Sidney,  A  (Daring  Prince,  The). — 

Riley. 
A  dark  and  dreary  night ;  people  nestling  in  their  beds. 

See  Martin  Chuzzlewit  (Wild  Night  at  Sea,  A). — 

Dickens. 
,  A  darkened  hut  outlined  against  the  sky.     See  Sunrise 

of  the  Poor,  The.— Wilson. 
A  day  and  then  a  week  passed  by.     See  Cardinal  Bird, 

The. — Gallagher. 
A  day  of  clouds  and  darkness!  a  day  of  wrath  and  woe! 

See  Martyrdom  of  the  Archbishop  of  Paris,  The. — 

Neale. 
A  day  of  golden  beauty !   Through  the  night.     See  Day 

of  the  Indian  Summer,  A. — Whitman. 
A  day  or  two  ago    during  a  lull  in  business.     See  Two 

Boot-blacks,  The. — Anon. 
A  day  will  come,  when  you,  France,  you,  Russia,  you, 

Italy.     See  United  States  of  Europe,  The. — Hugo. 
A  dead  Soul  lay  in  the  light  of  day.    See  Judgment. — 

Channing-Stetson. 
A  deadly  feud  existed.     See  Struggle  on  the  Pass,  The. 

— Anon. 
A  dear  little  girl  was  Bessie  Bo  Peep.     See  Bessie  Bo 

Peep  of  Engle  Steepe. — Handford. 
A  dear  little  girl  with  her  brain  in  a  whirl.     See  Spelling 

' '  Kitten.' ' — Anon. 
A  dear  little  maid  came  skipping  out.     See  Old  Saw, 

An. — Thaxter. 
A  dear  old  deacon  in  my  State  was  cursed  with  a  high 

license  pulpit.     See  Deacon's  Sunday-school  Ser- 
mon, The. — Ambrose. 
A  death  bed's  a  detector  of    the  heart.     See   Night 

Thoughts. — Young. 


A  debtor  is  a  man  of  mark.     See  Debtor,  The. — Anon. 

A  delicate  pinch!  Oh,  how  it  tingles  up.  See  Snuff. — 
Southey. 

A  delightful  change  from  the  town's  abode.  See  Barn- 
yard Melodies. — Brooks. 

A  despot  gazed  on  sunset  clouds.  See  Laurel-seed, 
The.— Home. 

A  dew-drop  came,  with  a  spark  of  flame.  See  Origin 
of  the   Opal. — Anon. 

A  dewdrop  falling  on  the  wild  sea  wave.  See  Dew- 
drop,  The. ^Trench. 

A  diagnosis  of  our  hist'ry  proves.  See  Rejected 
National  Hymns,  The. — Newell. 

A  dinner  part.v,  coffee,  tea.     See  Breakfast. — I^amb. 

A  dispute  once  arose  between  the  Wind  and  the  Sun. 
See  Wind  and  the  Sun,  The. — ^Esop. 

A  distant  gun  announced  that  the  boats  had  started. 
See  Oxford  Boat  Race. — Coxe. 

A  district  school,  not  far  away.  See  Smack  in  School, 
The. — Palmer. 

A  dog  made  his  bed  in  a  manger,  and  lay  snarling. 
See  Fables. — ^Esop. 

A  dog  once  took  between  his  teeth.  See  Dog  and  His 
Shadow,  The. — Kavanaugh. 

A  donkey  lay  him  down  to  sleep.  See  Donkey's 
Dream,  The. — Anon. 

A  donkey  saw  a  war-horse  bold.  See  Decorated  Don- 
key, The. — Anon. 

A  donkey  whose  talent  for  burden  was  wondrous.  See 
Donkey  and  His  Panniers,  The. — Moore.  ■ 

A  don't  object  at  all  to  war.  See  Exclusive's  Broken 
Idol,  The.— (Pwnc;*.) 

A  downcast,  wretched  sport  am  I.     See  Appeal  to  the 
'  Goddess,  An. — Ybarra. 

A  dramatist  declared  he  had  got.  See  Last  Resort, 
The. — Halpin. 

A  dream  I  had  in  the  dead  of  night.  See  Tiger  Bay. — 
Buchanan. 

A  dream  of  beauty,  dazzling  bright.  See  Popping  the 
Question. — Jones. 

A  dreamer  sat  beneath  a  vine.  See  True  Life. — Gilder- 
sleeve. 

A  Dresden  shepherdess  was  one  day.  See  In  a  China 
Shop. — Hellman. 

A  dress  suit  of  faultless  cut.  See  How  Mr.  Smiggles 
Went  to  a  Public  Dinner. — Turner. 

A  drop  fell  on  the  apple-tree.  See  Summer  Shower. — - 
Dickinson. 

A  drowsy  drone;  a  garden  sweet.  See  Old  and  the 
New,  The. — Anon. 

A  dryad's  home  was  once  the  tree.  See  On  Sivori's 
Violin. — Osgood. 

A  dubious,  strange,  uncomprehended  life.  See  Char- 
acter and  a  Question,  A.     (Spectator,  The.) 

A  duck  who  had  got  such  a  habit  of  stuffing.  See 
Notorious  Glutton,  The. — Taylor. 

A  dude  from  Chicago  went  north  one  July.  See  Dude, 
A. — Smiley. 

A  duel  was  lately  fought  in  Texas  by  Alexander  Shott 
and  John  S.  Nott.  See  Mysterious  Duel,  A. — 
{Harper's  Weekly.) 

A  dull  red  line  thro'  a  gray-ribbed  sky.  See  Winter 
Dawn. — P. 

A  dungeon's  glooms  are  round  the  maid,  and  the  dark- 
browed  men  are  nigh.  See  .Joan  of  Arc  in  Pri.son. 
— Case. 

A  Dutchman's  first  experience  with  the  ague.  See 
Schake  und  Agers. — Brown. 

A  dying  buttercup  cried  to  the  sun. 
Anon. 

A  face  of  a  summer  ago.     See  Fate. 

A  faery  dwells  in  a  cove  by  the  sea. 
The. — Armstrong. 

A  fagot,  a  fagot,  go  fetch  for  the  fire,  son! 
Wolf,  The.— Ramal. 

A  fair  lady  once  with  her  young  lover  walked.  See 
Love's  Warning. — Kenealy. 

A  fair  little  girl  sat  under  a  tree.  See  Good-night  and 
Good-morning. — Houghton. 

A  fair  maid  sat  in  her  bower  door.  See  Fause  Lover, 
The. — Anon. 

A  fair  witch  crept  to  a  young  man's  side.  See  Witch- 
bride,  The. — AUingham. 

A  fair-sized  audience  assembled  last  night.  See  Lec- 
ture by  the  New  Male  Star. — Gardener. 

A  fairy  has  found  a  new  fern.  See  New  Fern,  A. — 
"■A." 

A  fairy  was  mending  a  daisy.  See  Wounded  Daisy, 
The. — Anon. 

A  fallacy  lies  at  the  root  of  the  labor  question.  See 
Idleness  a  Crime. — Carrington. 

A  family  of  some  pretensions,  living  on  Nelson  street. 
See  Irrepressible  Boy,  The. — Anon. 


See  Lesson,  A. — 

—Wright. 
See  Ladye's  Rock, 

See  Grey 


589 


A  famous 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


A  famous  hen's  my  story's  theme.     See  Hen,  The.^ 

Claudius. 
A  famous  king  would  build  a  church. '    See  Two  Church- 
Builders,  The. — Saxe. 
A  famous  man  is  Robin  Hood.     See  Rob  Roy's  Grave. 

—Wordsworth.  ^ 
A  fancy  parlor  lamp  am  I,  with  decorated  shade.     See 

Parlor  Lamp,  The. — McLoughlin. 
A  farmer  once  to  London  went.     See  Farmer's  Blun- 
der, The. — Anon. 
A  farmer  traveling  with  his  load.     See  Lucky  Horse- 
shoe, The. — Fields. 
A  farmer  went  with  his  little  son  into  the  field  to  see  if 

the  corn  were  ripe.     See  Ear  of  Corn,  The. — Bel- 
lamy and  Goodwin. 
A  farmer,  who  owned  a  fine  orchard,  one  day.     See 

Good  Rule,  A. — Gary. 
A    fashionable    woman    in    a    fashionable    pew.     See 

Fashionable.     {Merchant  Traveler.) 
A  father  and  mother,  with  their  two  children.     iSee 

Better  Land,  The. — Anon. 
A  father  said  unto  his  hopeful  son.     See  Pass. — Ware. 
A   father  sat   by  the  chimney-post.     .See  Good   and 

Better.— Anon. 
A  favorite  picture  rises  up  before  me.     See  Millais's 

' '  Huguenots." — Anon. 
A  fellah  once  told  me  that  another  fellah  wrote  a  book 

before   he   was   born.     See   Lord   Dundreary   on 

' '  Pwo  verbs." — Anon. 
A  fellow  in  a  market  town.     See  Razor  Seller,  The. — 

Wolcott. 
"A  fellow's  mother,"  said  Fred  the  wise.     See  Fellow's 

Mother,  A. — Anon. 
A  fever  scorched  my  body,  fired  my  brain !     See  F«ver 

Dream,  A. — Harney. 
A  few  days  afterward  the  Light  of  the  Household  went 

forth.     See  Basket  of  Flowers,  A. — Stebbins. 
A  few  days  ago  a  Boston  girl,  who  had  been  attending 

the  School  of  Philosophy.     See  Awfully  Lovely 

Philosophy. — Anon. 
A  few  days  ago  I  was  returning  home  and  had  taken 

my  seat  in  a  train.     <See  About  a  Brakeman. — 

Waite. 
A  few  days  ago,  Mr.'  Grumbledorf  came  home.     <See 

Dinner  Discussion,  A. — Anon. 
A  few  days  ago  there  went  out  from  our  Brooklyn 

Navy  Yard.     See  Wreck  of  the  Huron. — Talmage. 
A  few  days  ago  young  Gurley,  whose  father  lives  on 

C street.      See    Stage-struck    Hero,    The. — 

Anon. 
A  few  evenings  since,  a  Mr.  Slocum  was  reading  an 

account  of  a  dreadful  accident.     See  ' '  Paper  Don't 

Say,  The."— Anon. 
A  few  faded  rose-leaves.     <See  Senior  and  the  Rose, 

The.— Soule. 
A  few  months  ago.     See  Song  of  a  Summer  Stream, 

The.— Havergal. 
A  few  months  ago  a  daughter  of  a  Nassau  man.     See 

Intensely  Utter.     (Albany  Chronicle.) 
A  few  sdeps,  a  few  sdeps.     See  Charge  of  de  "Dutch 

Brigade,"  The. — Connolly. 
A  few  Sundays  ago  1  stood  on  a  hill  in  Washington. 

See   Farmer  and  the  Cities,    The   (Home  in  the 

Government,  The). — Grady. 
A  few  suns  more,  and  the  Indian  will  live  only  in  his- 
tory.    See  Indian  Eloquence. — Anon. 
A  few  years  ago  my  friend,  Mr.  Alexander  Ireland. 

See  Books  and  Libraries. — I^owell. 
A  few  years  since,  when  the  subject  of  temperance. 

See  Squire's  Pledge,  The. — Anon. 
A   fickle  heart!     Let  subtler  poets  sing.     See  Fickle 

Heart,  A. — Carryl. 
A  fiddler  asked  a  lady  once.     See  Witty  Retort,  A. — 

Anon. 
A  fiend  once  met  a  humble  man.     See  Poor  Man  and 

the  Fiend,  The.— Maclellan. 
A  fiery  sun  throws  shafts  of  red  into  a  room  of  steel. 

See  King's  Decree,  The. — Shoemaker. 
A  fig  for  St.  Denis  of  France!     See  St.  Patrick  of  Ire- 
land, My  Dear! — Maginn. 
A  figure  all  dirty  and  ragged.     See  Song  of  the  Drunk- 
ard.— -Hargreaves. 
A  fire  burned  in  the  far  recess  of  the  cave ;  and  over  it 

was  a  small  caldron.     See  Last  Days  of  Pompeii 

(Witch's  Cavern,  The). — Bulwer-Lytton. 
A  flame  went  flitting  through  the  wood.     See  Scarlet 

Tanager,  The. — Mason. 
A  flash  of  harmless  lightning.      See  Humming-bird, 

The.— Tabb. 
A  flash  of  light  across  the  night.     See  Ulric  Dahlgren. 

— Sherwood. 
A  flash  of  rose  in  the  east  and  west.     See  Springtime. — 

Griffin. 


A  fleet  with  flags  arrayed.  See  Ballad  of  the  French 
Fleet,  A. — Longfellow. 

A  flight  of  fancy  like  a  gleam.  See  Love's  Course. — 
Chapman. 

A  floating,  a  floating.     See  Myth,  A. — Kingsley. 

A  flock  of  merry  singing  birds  were  sporting  in  the 
grove.     See  O'Linzoln  Family,  The. — Flagg. 

A  flock  of  sheep  that  leisurely  pass  by.  See  To  Sleep. 
— Wordsworth. 

A  fly  observed  a  lamb  one  day.  See  Fly  and  the 
Lamb. — Kavanaugh. 

A  flying-fish,  tired  of  her  lot.  See  Flying-fish,  The. — 
Florian. 

A  fool,  a  fool  I — I  met  a  fool  i'  th'  forest.  See  As  You 
Like  It. — Shakespeare. 

A  fool  there  was,  and  he  wrote  a  theme.  See  Literary 
Vampire,  The.     (Harvard  Lampoon.) 

A  foolish  little  maiden  bought  a  foolish  little  bonnet. 
See  What  the  Choir  Sang  about  the  New  Bonnet. 
—Morrison. 

A  footstep  struck  her  ear.  See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The 
(James  Fitz-James  and  Ellen). — Scott. 

A  forethought  of  the  fated  reign  of  peace.  See  Battle- 
call  of  Anti-Christ,  The. — Crofton. 

A  form  not  always  dark,  but  ever  dread.  See  Evil 
Thought.— Rogd. 

A  fox,  in  life's  extreme  decay.  See  Fox  at  the  Point 
of  Death,  The.— Gay. 

A  fox  was  trotting  on  one  day.  See  Sour  Grapes. — 
Anon. 

A  fragment  of  a  rainbow  bright.  See  Rainbow,  The. 
— Keble. 

A!  Fredome  is  a  nobill  thing!  See  Freedom. — Bar- 
bour. 

A  Frenchman  once — so  runs  a  certain  ditty.  See 
Frenchman  and  the  Flea  Powder,.  "The. — Anon. 

A  Frenchman  once,  who  was  a  merry  wight.  See 
Frenchman  and  the  Rats,  The. — Anon. 

A  Frenchman's  idea  of  the  modus  operandi.  See  Eve 
and  the  Serpent. — Anon. 

A  friend  I  met,  some  half-hour  since.  See  New-made 
Honor. — Barham. 

A  friend  of  mine,  seeking  for  objects  of  charity.  See 
Dying  Boy,  "The. — Gough. 

A  friend  of  mine  was  shaving.  See  Character  Stories. 
— Anon. 

A  friend  stands  at  the  door.  See  Psalm  for  New 
Year's  Eve,  A  (New  Year's  Gifts,  The). — Craik. 

A  frog  vas  a-singing  von  day,  in  der  brook.  See  "Don'd 
Feel  too  Big !  "—Adams. 

A  frosty  chill  was  in  the  air.  See  "I  Will  Help  You." 
• — Dixey. 

A  gallant  fleet  sailed  out  to  sea.  See  DeRoberval 
(Gallant  Fleet,  The). — Hunter-Duvar. 

A  garden  is  a  lovesome  thing,  God  wot !  See  My  Gar- 
den.— Brown. 

A  garret  grows  a  human  thing. — See  Psalm-book  in 
the  Garret,  The. — Taylor. 

A  Gascon,  who  had  long  pursued.  See  Culprit  and  the 
Judge,  The.— Smith. 

A  gay  little  fly  on  a  bright  summer's  morn.  See 
House  Full  of  Wine,  The. — Barker. 

A  gay  young  spark  who  long  had  sighed.  See  Law- 
yer's Strategem,  The. — Anon. 

A  generous  tar,  who  long  had  been.  See  Sweets  of 
Liberty,  The. — Anon. 

A  generation  has  passed  since  Daniel  Webster's  death. 
See  Webster  as  an  Orator  and  Statesman. — Bartlett. 

A  generation  which  vaunts  its  descent  from  the  foun- 
ders of  the  Republic.  See  Royalty  of  Virtue, 
The.— Potter. 

A  gentle  Knight  was  pricking  on  the  plaine.  See 
Faerie  Queene,  The  (Una  ,and  the  Red  Cross 
Knight). — Spenser. 

A  gentle  squire  would  gladly  entertain.  See  Domestic 
Tutor's  Position,  The. — Hall. 

A  gentleman,  Mr.  President  [or  Mr.  Chairman],  speak- 
ing of  Csesar's  benevolent  disposition.  See  Pass- 
ing of  the  Rubicon,  The. — Knowles. 

A  gentleman  of  courtly  air.  See  Ballad  of  the  Colors, 
The.— English. 

A  gentleman  once  said  to  a  physician.  See  Do  Your 
Best. — Anon. 

A  gentleman  possessed  a  favorite  spaniel.  See  Parson 
and  the  Spaniel,  The. — Anon. 

A  gentleman  riding  in  an  eastern  railway  car.  See 
Inquiring  Friend,  An. — Anon. 

A  gentleman,  speaking  of  Caesar's  benevolent  dispo- 
sition.    See  Passing  of  the  Rubicon. — Knowles. 

A  giant  came  to  me  when  I  was  young.  See  Lost 
Genius,  The. — Piatt. 

A  giddy  young  girl  was  Victoria  Grey.  See  Victoria 
Grey.- Hall. 


590 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


A  is 


A  gingham  apron — please  don't  stare.  See  One  Sum- 
mer.—J.  M.  L. 

A  girl  is  standing  with  careless  feet.  See  Air  Castles. — 
Bradner. 

A  girl,  who  has  so  many  wilful  ways.  See  Her  Like- 
ness.— Craik. 

A  glamour's  thrown  'round  brave  men's  deeds.  See 
Loyal  Hearts. — Parker. 

A  glorious  tree  is  the  old  gray  oak.  See  Oak,  The. — 
Hill. 

A  glowing  flush  was  on  her  cheek.  See  Dairy  Maid, 
A. — Anon. 

A  golden  bee  a-cometh.  See  Merry  Bee,  A. — Skip- 
sey. 

A  golden  gillyflower  to-day.  See  Gill^ower  of  Gold, 
The. — Morris. 

A  golden  glory  lies  along  the  hills.  See  In  Summer- 
time.— Collier. 

A  golden  twinkle  in  the  wayside  grass.  See  Glow- 
worm and  Star. — Piatt. 

A  goldsmith  stood  within  his  stall.  See  Goldsmith's 
Daughter,  The.— Uhland. 

A  good  deal  of  interest  was  felt  in  the  case  of  Gunn  vs. 
Barclay.     See  Gunn's  Leg. — Anon. 

"A  good,  great  name!"  So  speak  the  bells.  See  Good 
Great  Name,  A. — Willard. 

A  good  man  suffers  but  to  gain.  See  Captivity. 
The  (Good  Man  Suffers  but  to  Gain,  A).— Gold- 
smith. 

A  good  memory's  a  blessing,  isn't  it,  Bones?  See  How 
to  Cure  a  Bad  Memory. — Anon. 

A  good  old-fashioned  Christmas  with  the  logs  upon  the 
hearth.     See  Christmas  Day. — Brotherton. 

A  good  sword  and  a  trusty  hand!  See  Song  of  the 
Cornish  Men. — Hawker. 

A  good  that  never  satisfies  the  mind.  See  Human 
Frailty. — Drummond. 

A  good  time  is  coming — I  wish  it  were  here.  See  When 
Santa  Claus  Comes. — Anon. 

A  good  wife  rose  from  her  bed  one  morn.  See  Love 
frightens  Labor. — Anon. 

A  goodly  host  one  day  was  mine.  See  Mine  Host  of 
"The  Golden  Apple. " — -Westwood. 

A  governess  wanted — -well  fitted  to  fill.  See  Wanted 
— A  Governess. — ^Anon. 

A  government  cannot  have  too  much  of  the  kind  of 
activity.     See  Liberty  in  Government. — Mill. 

A  gown  of  haze  hung  round  the  sleepy  sun.  See  Pot- 
ter's Field,  The. — Vickers. 

A  grace  though  melancholy,  manly  too.  See  In  Re- 
membrance of  the  Hon.  Ernest  Villiers. — Taylor. 

A  grain  of  corn  an  infant's  hand.  See  Grain  of  Corn,  A. 
— Anon. 

A  grand  crash — a  shower  of  flying  splinters.  See  They 
Met  in  Death.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) 

A  grandmother  with  placid  face  and  locks  of  soft,  white 
hair.  See  Grandmother's  Hour  with  the  Hymns. 
— Lee. 

A  granite  cliff  on  either  shore.  See  Brooklyn  Bridge, 
The.— Proctor. 

A  grasshopper  once  had  a  game  of  tag.  See  Game  of 
Tag,  A. — Anon. 

A  grasshopper  sat  in  an  oak  tree  green.  See  Grass- 
hopper, The.     (Independent.) 

A  grassy  mound,  a  simple  stone.  See  Unknown. — 
Gardner. 

A  great  deal  has  been  said  and  written.  See  Elocution. 
— Gillespie. 

A  great  deal  of  talent  is  lost  in  the  world.  See  Moral 
Courage. — Smith. 

A  great  law  chief,  whom  God  nor  demon  scares.  See 
Sailor  Boy  at  Prayers,  The. — Pindar. 

A  great  life,  dedicated  to  the  welfare  of  the  nation.  See 
Grant,  the  Soldier  and  Statesman. — McKinley. 

A  great  man!  ay,  the  greatest  man,  with  Washington 
and  Lincoln.     See  Great  Man,  A. — Long. 

A  great  man  is  always  willing  to  be  little.  See  Com- 
pensation ("Great  man,"  etc.). — -Emerson. 

A  great  many  puzzling  things  come  up  in  the  course  of 
daily  life.     See  Wan  itliightt— (.Texas  Siftings.) 

A  great  mastery — like  that  of  Wellington  or  Bismarck. 
See  Masters  of  the  Situation. — Fields. 

A  great,  still  Shape,  alone.     See  Ireland. — Piatt. 
A  green  silk  frock  her  comely  shoulders  clad.     See 
Britannia's  Pastorals  (Description  of  Walla,  The). 
— Browne. 
A  grey  and  tiny  mouse.     See  Mouse,  A. — Denton. 
A  grim  old  king,  whose  blood  leapt  madly  when  the 
trumpets  brayed.     See  Dying  King,  The. — Smith. 
A  groan  from  a  dim  lit  upper  room.     See  Night  Picture, 

A. — Cranch. 
A  group  of  merry  girls  and  boys.     See  Thankful  Chil- 
dren.— Richards. 


A  gun  in  the  parlor,  a  kite  in  the  hall.     See  There's  a 

Boy  in  the  House.- — Anon. 
A  gun  is  heard  at  the  dead  of  night.     See  Race  for  I>ife, 

A. — Molloy. 
A  gu^t  of  wind  whistled  around  the  little  house.     See 

For  Her  Sake.— Griffith. 
A  gypsy  girl !     Well  I   do   vow.     See  Gip.sy  Fortune- 
teller, The. — Anon. 
"A  gypsy  I    Low-born  gypsy !' '     See  Gypsy  Bride,  The. 

— Banks. 
A    half -reclining    form.     See    Summer    Girl,    The. — 

Grover. 
A  halibut  sang  to  his  lady-love.     See  Halibut  in  Love, 

The.— Anon. 
A  handful  of  moss  from  the  woodside.     See  Pine  Tree, 

The. — Anon. 
A  happy  bit  hame  this  auld  world  would  be.     See  We 

Are  Brethren — NicoU. 
A  happy  day  at  Whitsuntide.     See  Castle  Ruins,  The. 

• — Barnes. 
A  happy  mother  stalk  of  corn.     See  Baby  Corn.— Anon. 
A  hard,  stern   man  upon  a  sick-bed  lay.     See  Little 

Reader,  The. — "Olive  Leaf." 
A  hard-working,   industrious.  God-fearing  man.     See 

Physician's  Story,  A. — Munro. 
A     harder    lesson    to   learne    continence.     See  Faerie 

Queene,The  (Phsedriaand  the  Idle  Lake).— Spenser. 
A  harebell  hung  its  wilful  head.     See  Foolish  Harebell, 

The. — Macdonald. 
A  heap  of  bare  and  splintery  crags.     See  Appledore. — 

Lowell. 
A  heavier  yoke  than  that  the  British  king  placed  upon 

the  neck.  See  New  Declaration  of  Independence,  A. 

— Fisk. 
A  herald  am  I  from  the  Land  of  Dreams.     See  Land  of 

Dreams,  The. — Sargent. 
A  hermit  there  was,  who  lived  in  a  grot.     See  Way  to 

be  Happy,  The. — Anon. 
A  high  class  without  duties  to  do  is  like  a  tree  planted 

on  precipices.    See  Past  and  Present  (Aristocracy). 

— Carlyle. 
A  Highland  boy!   why  call  him  so?     See  Blind  High- 
land Boy,  The. — -Wordsworth. 
A  Highland  family  of  some  dignity.     See  Bobby. — 

Chambers. 
A  Hindoo  Hied;  a  happy  thing  to  do.     See  Hindoo's 

Death,  The. — Birdseye. 
A  holy  man  returned  from  Palestine?     See  Palmer,  The. 

— Proudfit. 
A  home  in  a  quiet  country  place.   See  Empty  Nest,  The. 

— Miller. 
A  hoof-beat  clatter  down  the  road,  a  hundred  years  ago. 

See  Joshua  of  1776,  The.— Rose. 
A  hope  risen  like  the  Stfir  in  the   East   has  fixed  the 

gaze.     See  Advent  of  the  Ballot  Reform,  'The. — 

Cleveland. 
A  hop-toad  came  out.     See  Mr.  Hop-toad. — Richards. 
A    horseshoe    nailed,    for    luck,    upon    a    mast.     See 

Augury. — Thomas. 
A  host  of  angels  flying.     See  Death  of  an  Infant. — 

Smits. 
A  house  of  sleepers — I  alone  unblest.     See  Insomnia. — 

Thomas. 
A  human  form  has  many  weaknesses.     See  Success. — 

Taylor. 
A   hum-m-m!    fellow-citizens.     See    Oration    on    the 

Crisis. — Anon. 
A  hundred,  a  thousand  to  me:  even  so.     See  In  the 

Round  Tower  at  Jhanse. — Rossetti. 
A  hundred  noble  wishes  fill  my  heart.     See  Justice. — 

Richardson. 
A  hundred  years  ago,  our  fathers  announced  this  sub- 
lime  declaration.     See   Plea   for   the   Old   South 

Church,  Boston. — Phillips. 
A  hundred  years  ago  this  morn.     See  Robin  Burns. — 

Massey. 
A   hundred   years   have   rolled   away.     See   Hundred 

Years  Ago,  A. — Anon. 
A  hundred  years  upon  the  stair.     See  Death  of  the 

Clock,  The.— Marsh. 
A  hungry  spider  made  a  web.     See  Shining  Web,  The. 

—  Anon. 
A  huntsman,  bearing  his  gun  a-field.     See  Crow's  Chil- 
dren, The. — Gary. 
A  hurry  of  hoofs  in  a  village  street.     See  Paul  Revere's 

Ride. — Longfellow 
A  is  for  adder.     See  Temperance  Alphabet. — .'Vnon. 
A  is  for  Anthony  Hope.     See  A  B  C  of  Literature. — 

Wells. 
A  is  for  apt  little  Annie.     See  Some  of  the  Children. — 

Bellows. 
A  is  for  the  apple-blossom.     See  Alphabet  of  Summer, 

The.— Dana. 


591 


A  is 


AN  IxXDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


A  is  the  maid  of  winning  charm.     See  And  the  Ham- 
mock Swung  On. — Grey. 
A  jet  of  smoke  issued  from  the  bush.     See  It  is  Never 

too  Late  to  Mend  (Lark  in  the  Gold  Fields,  The). 

— Reade. 
A  jingle  of  bells  and  a^runch  of  snow.     See  Ballade  of 

.Justification. — Carryl. 
A  jolly  dear  .soul  is  old  Saint  Nick.     jSee  Saint  Nick. 

(Boston  Budget.) 
A  jolly  fat  friar  loved  liquor  good  store.     See  Gluggity 

Glug. — Colman. 
A  jolly  little  army — I  seem  to  hear  their  feet.     See 

'•  Here  We  Are !"— Butts. 
A  jolly    old    fellow,  whose    hair's    snow    white.     See 

Santa  Claus. — Anon. 
A  jolly  old  sow  once  lived  in  a  sty.     See  Three  Little 

Pigs,  The.— Scott-Gatty. 
A  jolly  party  in  a  car.     See  Baby's  Dead. — Kavanaugh. 
A  journeying  to  Emmaus.     See  Toward  Emmaus. — 

Clark. 
A  judge  of  one  of  the  inferior  courts  of  Illinois.     See 

Charge  to  the  Jury. — Anon. 
A  jury  of  my  countrymen  have  found  me  guilty.     See 

Meagher's  Defense. — Meagher. 
A  king  is  great,  and  the  gods  are  high.     See  Sin  of  Sir 

Pertab  Singh,  The. — Pollock. 
A  king  lived  long  ago.     See  Pippa  Passes  (King,  A). — 

Browning. 
A  king  of  France  upon  a  day.     See  King  of  France  and 

the  Fair  Lady,  A. — Wolcott. 
A  king  should  listen   when   his  subjects  speak.     See 

Father's  Curse,  The. — Hugo. 
A  kiss  in  the  dark — hal  ha!  nothing  like  it!     See  Kiss 

in  the  Dark,  A. — Thompson. 
A  kiss  is  not  like  the  poems  at  all.     See  Kiss,  A. — L. 
A  kiss  when  I  wake  in  the  morning.     See  Mamma's 

Kisses. — Anon. 
A  kitten  has  no  work  to  do.     See  Contentment. — Pea- 
body. 
A  knight  and  a  lady  once  met  in  a  grove.     See  Sym- 
pathy.— Heber. 
A  knight  of  gallant  deeds.     See  Romaunt  of  the  Page, 

The. — Browning. 
A    knight  there  was,  and  that  a  worthy  man.      See 

Canterbury  Tales,  The  (Knight,  The).— Chaucer. 
A  lad  perched  in  the  upper  story  of  a  barn.     See  False 

Kiss,  The. — Anon. 
A  ladder  from  the  land  of  light.     See  Sunbeam,  The. — 

Tabb. 
A  ladder  life  is  called.     See  Life  is  a  Ladder. — Anon. 
A  lady  asked  one  of  the  children  in  her  Sunday-school 

class.     See  Scripture  Questions. — Anon. 
A  lady  declared  that  she  never  could  see  how  the  men 

could  all  smoke.  See  Remarkable  Longevity. — Anon. 
A  lady  on  one  of  the  sugar  plantations  down  South. 

See  Good  Measure. — Anon. 
A  lady  red  upon  the  hill.     See  Waking  Year,  The. — 

Dickinson. 
A  lady  so  fine  came  out  of  the  woods.     See  Miss  Willow. 

— Kennedy. 
A  lady  stands  beside  the  silver  lake.     See  Lake  Sara- 
toga.— Saxe. 
A  lake  and  a  fairy  boat.     See  Song  for  Music. — Hood. 
A  land  of  settled  government.     See  I>and  of  Lands,  The. 

.  — Tennyson. 
A  lane  of  elms  in  June.     See  Forby  Sutherland. — Mc- 

Crae. 
A  large  Spanish  shio-of-war  was  en  route  from  Spain  to 

a  port  in  the  West  Indies.     See  English  Buccaneer, 

The. — Anon. 
A  lark  lived  in  a  field  of  corn.     See  Lark  and  Her 

Young  Ones,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
A  lark  sprang  up  to  meet  the  dawn.     See  Inspiration. — 

Lefevre. 
A  late  lark  twitters  from  the  quiet  skies.     See  Mar- 

garitiE  Sorori. — Henley. 
A  lawyer  of  Brittany,  once  on  a  time.     See  How  the 

Lawyers  Got  a  Patron  Saint. — Saxe. 
A  lawyer  there  was,  whom  I'll  call  Mr.  Clay.     See  War- 
rantee Deed,  The. — Anon. 
A  lazy  girl  who  liked  to  live  in  comfort  and  do  nothing. 

See  New  Fairy  Story,  A. — Labaulaye. 
A  lazy  lolling  sort.     See  Dunciad,  The. — Pope. 
A  lesson   in   itself  sublime.     See   Lesson   Worth   En- 
shrining. A. — Anon. 
A  letter  from  my  love  to-day !     See  Ballad  of  Hell,  A. — 

Davidson. 
A  lev('-e,  as  usual.     Good  day.     See  Sudden  Fortune, 

A. — Bulwer-Lytton. 
A  life  of  struggle,  grief,  and  pain.     See  To  a  Poet  Who 

Died  of  Want.— Uhlanrl. 
A  life  on  the  ocean  wave.     See  Life  on  the  Ocean  Wave, 

A. — Sargent. 


A  light  is  out  in  Italy.     See  Mazzini. — Redden. 

A  lighter    scarf    of    richer    fold.     See    Baby    Zulma's 

Christmas  Carol. — Requier. 
A  Limerick    Irishman    named    Dennis,    addicted    to 

strong  drink.     See  How  Dennis  Took  the  Pledge. 

— Anon. 
A  line  in  long  array  where  they  wind  betwixt  green 

islands.     See  Cavalry  Crossing  a  Ford. — Whitnaan. 
A  line  of  light !  it  is  the  inland  sea.     See  Mare  Mediter- 

raneum. — Nichol. 
A  lion  cub,  of  sordid  mind.     See  Lion  and  the  Cub, 

The.— Gay. 
A  literature,  embodying  the  romance  of  the  whole  revo- 
lutionary   and    ante-revolutionary    history.     See 

Value  of  Literature  to  the  Union. — Choate. 
A  little  basket  cradle-bed.     See  Life. — Cowan. 
A  little  bird  came  whispering.     See  Little  Bird's  Story, 

A. — Denton. 
A  little  bird  flew  my  window  by.     See  Over  the  Hills 

and  Far  Away. — Craik. 
A  little  bird  once  met  another  bird.     See  Wooing. — 

Soule. 
A  little  bird  sang  in  the  dead  of  the  night.     See  Song 

in  the  Night,  The. — Buckham. 
A  little  bird  sat  in  a  cherry  tree.     See  Gunner  and  the 

Bird,  The. — Anon. 
A  little  bird  sat  on  the  edge  of  her  nest.     See  Anxiety. 

— Macdonald. 
A  little  bird  with  feathers  brown.     See  Little  Bird, 

The. — Anon. 
"A  little  bit  queer" — my  Mary!     See  Sent  Btick  by 

the  Angels. — Langbridge. 
A    little    blind   girl    wandering.     See   Brook,  The. — 

Lord. 
A  little  boat  in  a  cave.     See  Ranger. — Anon. 
A  little  boy  got  out  of  bed.     See   Cock-a-doodle-doo. 

— Anon. 
A  little  boy  had  sought  the  pump.    See  To  Whom  Shall 

We  Give  Thanks?— Wade. 
A  little  boy  in  our  street,   I  will  not  tell  his  name. 

See  No  Stockings  to  Wear. — Anon. 
A  little    boy    named    Thomas,    ate.     See    Remorseful 

Cakes,  The.— Field. 
A  little  boy  once  played  so  loud.     See  Extremes. — 

Riley. 
A  little  boy  or  girl  coming  late  to  school.     See  Things 

that  I  Do  not  Like  to  See. — Rook. 
A  little  boy  sat  at  his  mother's  knees,  by  the  long 

western    window.     See    Blackberry-bush,    The. — - 

Thaxter. 
A  little  boy  was  dreaming.     See  Little  Dreamer,  The. 

— Anon. 
A  little  boy  who,  strange  to  say.     See  Dappledun. — 

.  Cary. 
A  little  boy  with  crumbs  of  bread.     See  Rook  and  the 

Sparrows,  The. — Lamb. 
A  little  brown  bird  sat  on  a  stone.     See  Little  Brown 

Bird,  A. — Anon. 
A  little  brown  birdie  sat  up  in  a  tree.     See  Birds  and 

the  Children,  The.— Sullivan. 
A  little  brown  seed  in  the  furrow.     See  Little  Brown 

Seed  in  the  Furrow,  The. — Benham. 
A  little  chick  one  day.     See  Chicken's  Mistake,  The. — 

Cary. 
A  little  child,  a  little  meek-faced,  quiet,  village  child. 

See  Voices  at  the  Throne,  The. — Westwood. 
A  little  child  I  am  indeed.     See  Little  Efforts. — Anon. 
A  little  child  lay  on  his  bed.     See  Dying  Child,  The. — 

Greenwell. 
A  little  child  one  winter  night.     See  Moon  and  the 

Child,  The. — Jacque. 
A  little  cloud  went  slowly  sailing.     See  Little  Cloud 

Went  Sailing,  A. — Anon. 
A  little  crib  beside  the  bed.     See  What  is  Life. — Anon. 
A  little   dinner   party  was   in   progress   down   below. 

See  Cause  and  Effect. — Anon. 
A  little  dog  I  used  to  know.     See  Spotty.— Anon. 
A  little  downy  chicken  one  day.     See  CJhicken's  Mis- 
take, The. — Cary. 
A  little  elbow  leans  upon  your  knee.  .  See  Tired  Moth- 
ers.— Smith. 
A  little  face  there  was.     See  In  Rama. — Townsend. 
A  little  fair  soul  that  knew  no  sin.     See  Little  Fair 

Soul,  The. — Smedley. 
A  little  fairy  comes  at  night.     See  Queen  Mab. — Hood. 
A  little  farther  on  there  is  a  brook.     See  Brooklet,  The. 

— -Simms. 
A  little  flower  so  lowly  grew.     See  Lowly  Life,  The. — 

Massey. 
A  little    girl,    accustomed    to    play.     See    Throwing 

Kisses. — Anon. 
A  little  girl  am  I,  but  yet  I'm  not  too  small.     See 

Little  Child  Shall  Lead  Them,  A.— Willis. 


592 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


A  man 


Al 
A  1 


A  1 
Al 


A  1 


A  1 
A  1 


A  1 

Al 


A  1: 


A  1 
A  1 


A  1 

Al 


Al 
Al 
A  1 

Ai: 

Ai: 

Al 

Al 

Al 

Al 

A  1 

A  i 

A  1 

Al 

Al 

Al 

Al 
Al 
Al: 

Al 

Al 


Al 
Al 


Al 
Al 


Al 

Ai; 


Al 
Al 


Al 


ittle  girl  one  day.  in  the  month  of  May.     See  Story 

of  the  Morning-glory  Seed,  The. — Eytinge. 
ttle  girl,  with  a  happy  look.     See  Little  Children, 

Love  One  Another. — Fanny, 
ttle  gray  hill-glade,  close-turfed,  withdrawn.     See 

Marsyas. — Roberts. 

ttle  House  of  Life.     See  In  Littles. — Gannett, 
ttle    kingdom    I    possess.     See    My    Kingdom. — 

Alcott. 
ttle  knight  and  little  maid.     See  In  Fairy-land. — 

Larcom. 

ttle  lass  with  golden  hair.     See  Lesson,  A. — Anon, 
ttle  learning  is  a  dangerous  thing.     See  Essay  on 

Criticism,  An. — Pope.  " 

ttle  learning,  scattered  o'er.     See  Way  of  It,  The. 

{Yale  Record. ) 
ttle  longer  in  the  light,  love,  let  me  be.     See  Good- 
night in  the  Porch. — Lytton. 
ttle  love,  of  heaven  a  little  share.     See  Sufficiency. 

—White. 

ttle  low-ceiled  room.     See  Released. — Whitney, 
ttle    maid    at    Sunday-school.     See    Palestine. — 

Brooks, 
ttle  maid  in  a  pale  blue  hood.     See  Little  Maid's 

Sermon,  The. — Perry. 

ttle  maid  of  Astrakan.     See  Divan,  The. — Stod- 
dard, 
ttle  maid,  of  summers  four.     See  Dolly's  Mother, 

The.— Riley, 
ttle  maid  upon  my  knee  sighs  wearily,  sighs  wearily. 

See  True  to  Life. — Burnham. 
ttle  maid  walked  smiling  on  her  way.     See  Easter 

Lilies. — Miller, 
ttle  maiden  with  golden  curls.     See  Spirit  of  Sum- 
mer, The. — Kenyon. 
ttle  man  bought  him  a  big  bass  drum.     See  Family 

Drum  Corps,  A. — Douglas, 
ttle  man  went  hunting.    See  Mr.  Bunting. — Denton, 
ttle  more  toward  the  light.     See  Growing  Gray. — 

Dobson. 
ttle    old    fellow    was    peering    about.     See    Child 

Angel,  The. — Kohans. 
ttle  old  woman  before  me.     See  Masquerade,  A.^- 

Anon. 
ttle    one    played    among    the    flowers.     See    How 

Happy  I'll  Be! — Anon, 
ttle  past  the  village.     See  Wayside  Inn,  The. — 

Procter, 
ttle    pause    in    life — while    daylight    lingers.     See 

Between  the  Lights. — Anon, 
ttle  peach  in  the  orchard  grew.     See  Little  Peach, 

The.— Field, 
ttle  peasant  maiden,  scarce  thirteen  summers  old. 

See  Peasant  Heroine,  A. — Burke, 
ttle  pull-back  sought  one  day.     See  Pull-back,  A. 

— Anon, 
ttle  Quaker  maiden,  with  dimpled  cheek  and  chin. 

See  Little  Quaker  Sinner,  The. — Montgomery, 
ttle  rain  and  a  little  sun.     See  Growing. — Anon, 
ttle  roll  of  flannel  fine.     See  My  Boy. — Johnson, 
ttle  rose  bloomed  in  the  way.     See  Rose  by  the 

Wayside,  The. — Drown, 
ttle,  rudely  sculptured  bed.     See  Cradle  Tomb  in 

Westminster  Abbey,  The. — Coolidge. 
ttle  Saint  best  fits  a  little  Shrine.     See  Ternarie  of 

Littles,  upon  a  Pipkin  of  Jellie  sent  to  a  Lady,  A. 

— Herrick. 
ttle  shadow  make  the  sunrise  sad.     See  Multum 

in  Parvo. — Collins, 
ttle  song  for  bedtime,  when  robed  in  gown  of  white. 

See  Ho,  for  Slumberland. — -Rexford. 
ttle  spring  [or  stream!  had  lost  its  way.     See  Deed 

and  a  Word,  A. — Mackay. 
ttle  sun,  a  little  rain.     See  Earth  and  Man,  The. — 

Brooke, 
ttle  sunbeam  in  the  sky.     See  Little  Sunbeam,  The. 

— Anon, 
ttle  tear  and  a  little  smile.     See  Running  a  Race. — 

C.  W.  F. 
ttle  thing  a  sunny  smile.     See  In  the  Morning. — 

Hill, 
ttle    watchfulness    over    ourselves.     See    "Little 

watchfulness  over  ourselves,  A." — Epictetus. 
ttle  way  below  her  chin.     See  On   Some  Butter- 
cups.— Sherman. 

ttle  way,   more  soft   and  sweet.     See  First   Foot- 
steps.— Swinburne, 
ttle  way  to  walk  with  you,  my  own.     See  Little 

Way,  A. — Stanton, 
ttle  while,  a  little  love.     See  Little  While,  A. — 

Rossetti. 
ttle  while  ago  I  stood  by  the  grave  of  the  old  Napo- 
leon.    See  At  the  Tomb  of  Napoleon. — Ingersoll. 


A  little  while  before    the   fall  was   done.     See   Ivittle 

While  before  the  Fall  Was  Done,  A. — Sherman  . 
A  little  while  (my  life  is  almost  set!).     See  Little  While 

I  Fain  Would  Linger  Yet,  A. — Hayne. 
A  little  while  my  love  and   I.     See  May  Song,   A. — 

Currie. 
A  little  white  dove  fluttered  close  to  my  pane.     See 

Message,  A. — -H. 
A  little    window-garden    plot.     See   Memorial    Day. — 

Sidney. 
A  little  word  in  kindness  spoken.     See    ' '  Little  word 

in  kindness  spoken,  A." — Colesworthy. 
A  little  work,  a  little  play  to  keep  us  going — and  so 

good  day.     See  We  Can  Do  so  Little. — Du  Maurier. 
A  little  yellow  buttercup.     See  Buttercup,  A. — K.  C. 
A  lively  young  turtle  lived  down  by  the  banks.     See 

Song  of  the  Turtle  and  Flamingo. — Fields.       / 
A  local  clergyman  was  down-town  one  of   the  recent 

ultra-zero  mornings.     See  Accommodating  Office 

Boy,  The. — Anon. 
A  lonely  little  tadpole  in  the  water  blue.  ■  See  Five 

Little  Tadpoles. — Denton. 
A  lopely  way,  and  as  I  went  my  eyes.     See  Two  Infini- 
ties.— Dowden. 
A  long,  rich  breadth  of  Holland  lace.     See  Old  Flemish 

Lace. — Carpenter. 
A  long  time  ago  lived  Procrustes.     See  Procrustes'  Bed. 

— Perry. 
A  long  while  ago — you  the  date  must  suppose.     See 

GiHtingen  Barber,  The. — Carpenter. 
A  lord  of  lyric  song  was  born.     See  Thomas  Moore. — 

Stoddard. 
A  lovelorn  lad  wooed  a  coy  maid  once.     See  Sly  Lit- 
tle Muid.  A.— (Trinity  Tablet.') 
A  lovely  little  flow'ret.     See    Forget-me-not,   The. — 

Anon. 
A  lovely  maiden  came  down  the  garden  path  amid  the 

dewy  roses.     See  Time  Doeth  All  Things  Well. — • 

Harte. 
A  lovely  morn,  so  still,  so  very  still.     See  May,  1840. — 

Coleridge. 
A  lovely  rose  was  nodding.      See  Rose's  Mite,  The. — 

Hall. 
A  lover  gave  the  wedding  ring.    See  Ring's  Motto,  The. 

— Anon. 
A  lover  with  his  loved  one  sailed  the  sea.     See  With 

Sa'di  in  the  Garden  ("Lover with  his  loved  one," 

etc.) — Arnold. 
A  low,  full  sweep  of  instrumental  string.     See  Sonnet. — 

(Cornell  Widow.) 
A  lull  in  the  battle's  awful  roar.     See  Our  Drummer 

Boy. — Hildreth. 
A  maid  of  many  moods  is  Bess.     See  To  Elizabeth. — 

Mclntyre. 
A  maid  reclined  beside  a  stream,  at  fall  of  summer  day. 

See  Forever  and  Forever. — Converse. 
A  maid  that  paragons  description.     See  Othello,  the 

Moor  of  Venice. — Shakespeare. 
A  maid  who  mindful  of  her  playful  time.     See  Sibyl, 

The.— Hake. 
A  maiden  blest,  with  loving  eyes.     See  "Will  Frank 

Buchanan  Write?' ' — Scott. 
A  maiden  once,  of  certain  age.     See  Any  One  Will  Do. 

— Anon. 
A  maiden  stood  upon  a  shore.     See  Down  the  Stream. 

— Carey. 
A    maiden  there  is,  with  blue  eyes  that  tease.     See 

Now,  Wouldn't  You  Like  to  Know? — Smith. 
A  maiden's  crown  of  glory  is  her  silken,  rippling  hair. 

See  Why?— Anon. 
A  man  and  a  woman  both  ordered  the  same  luncheon 

during  the  busy  hour.     See  Matter  of  Words,  A.— 

Anon. 
A  man  at  a  tavern  had  made  so  free.     See  Subject  for 

Dissection,  A. — Anon. 
A  man  by  the  name  of  Bolus  (all  'at  we'll  ever  know.) 

See  Man  by  the  Name  of  Bolus,  A. — Riley. 
A  man  came  into  the  office  of  Judge  X.  the  other  day. 

See  Dog  Partnership  Case,  A. — Anon. 
A  man  cannot  choose  his  own  life.     See  "Man  cannot 

choose  his  own  life.  A." — Braddon. 
A  man  cannot  whip  the  world.     See  Things  to  Re- 
member.— Anon. 
A  man  comes  mopin'  round  you  in  a  melancholy  way. 

See  Fellow  with  the  Grippe,  The. — Finer. 
A  man  does  not  plant  a  tree  for  himself.     See  "Man 

does  not  plant  a  tree  for  himself.  A.' ' — Smith. 
A  man  had  once  a  vicious  wife.    See  Troublesome  Wife, 

The. — Anon. 
A  man,  he  two  sons.     Son  -speakee  he  to  fathel.     See 

Chinaman's  Prodigal,  The. — Anon. 
A  man  hobbled  into  the  colonel's  office  upon  crutches.  ' 

See  S'posin'. — Anon. 


593 


A  man 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


A  man  in  his  carriage  was  riding  along.     See  Be  Con- 
tent.— Anon. 
A    man  more  kindly,  in  his  careless  way.     <See  Portrait, 

A. — Duer. 
K  man  of  middle  age,  fast  getting  grey.     See  Middle- 
ag;ed  Man  ani  the  Two  Widows,  The. — La  Fon- 
taine. 
A  man   of   taste   is   Robinet.     See   Ragged   Robin. — 

Twamley. 
A  man  of  wondrous  clarity.     iSee  O'Flaherty  and  John 

Stubbs. — Foss. 
A  man  once  built  a  lighthouse.     See  Lighthouse,  The. 

— Anon. 
A  man  once  lived,  I  have  been  told.     See  Old  Man  and 

Death,  The. — ^Kavanaugh. 
A  man  once  own'd  a  goose  that  laid.     <See  Man  and  the 

Goose,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
A  man  once  own'd  three  animals.     See  Story  of  the 

Kinkankee. — Kavanaugh. 
A  man  once  said  to  me:     "I  was  a  pretty  hard  case." 

See  How  to  Break  the  Chain. — Gough. 
A  man  once  stood  by  the  bedside  of  his  dying  wife. 
See  Sketches  by   Boz   (Drunkard's  Death,  The). 
— Dickens. 
A  man  or  woman  without  gold.     See  Poor  Men  vs. 

Rich  Men. — Kavanaugh. 
A  man  overboard!  What  matters  it?  The  ship  does  not 
stop.     See  Les  Mis^rables  (Man  Overboard,  A). — 
Hugo. 
A  man    overboard  1     What    matters    it?     The    vessel 
does  not  halt.     See  Les  Mis^rables  (Billows  and 
Shadows). — Hugo. 
A  man  prepared  against  all  ills  to  come.     See  Christian 

Militant. — Herrick. 
A  man  reached  a  long  arm  over  the  little  crowd.     See 
Condensed    Telegram,    The. — {Burlington    Hawk- 
eye.) 
A  man  said  unto  his  angel.     See  Kings,  The. — Guiney. 
A  man  sat   on   a  rock  and   sought.     See   Prehistoric 

Smith.— Proudfit. 
A  man  so  various,  that  he  seemed  to  be.     See  Absa- 
lom and  Achitophel  (Character  of  Zimri). — Dry- 
den. 
A  man    there    came,    whence    none    could    tell.     See 

Touchstone,  The. — Allingham. 
A  man  told  of  a  woman  fair — a  wondrous  woman  she. 

See  Man's  Story,  A. — Banks. 
A  man  unknown  this  volume  gave.     See  On  an  In- 
scription.— Munby. 
A  man  was  once  walking  along  one  road,  and  a  woman 
along    another.     See    Nervous    Woman,    The.— 
Anon. 
A  man  went  in  a  wood  one  day.     See  Gratitude  of  the 

World,  The.— Anon. 
A  man  who  had  been  walking  for  some  time  in  the 

downward  path.     See  Praying  for  Papa. — Anon. 
"A  man's  a  man."  says  Robert  Burns.     See  New  Ver- 
sion of  "A  Man's  a  Man  for  a'  'fhat. " — Mackay. 
A  man's  country  is  not  a  certain  area  of  land.     See 

Patriotism. — Curtis. 
A  man's  value  and  progress  in  this  life  must  be  meas- 
ured.    See  "Man's  value  and  progress  in  this  life 
must  be  measured,  A." — Murray. 
A  mariner  sat  on  the  shrouds  one  night.     See  Drowned 

Mariner,  The. — Smith. 
A  master  hand  has  drawn  for  you  the  picture  of  your 
returning  armies.     See  New  South,  "The. — Grady. 
A  nfasterpiece    excites    no    sudden    enthusiasm.     See 

Life  of  Goethe. — Lewes. 
A  meadow  for  the  little  lambs.     See  Sweetest  Place, 

The.— Eutts. 
A  melancholy  Prussian.     See  Verse. — O.  L. 
A  member   of   the   .^sculapian    line.     See   Newcastle 

Apothecary,  The. — Colman. 
A  merchant,  whose  labors  a  fortune  had  made.     See 

Two  Blacksmiths,  The. — Anon. 
A  merry,  blue-eyed  laddie  goes  laughing  through  the 
town.     See  Merry  Blue-eyed  Laddie,  A. — Tomp- 
kins. 
A  merry  Christmas,  uncle!     See   Christmas  Carol,  A 

(Two  Views  of  Christmas). — Dickens. 
A  merry  evening  party  in  an  English  country  town. 

See  Teddy  O'Toole's  Six  Bulls.— Anon. 
A  merry  little  maiden.     See  May  Song,  A. — Anon. 
A  merry  peal  of  marriage  bells.     See  Bridal  Feast,  The. 

— Long. 
A  merry  shepherd  lad  was  Jock.     See  Of  Course. — 

Tompkins. 
A  messenger   from   Glaucus   desires   to   be   admitted. 
See  La.st  Day.s  of  Pompeii  (Happy  Beauty  and  the 
Blind  Slave,  The). — Bulwer-Lytton. 
A  Methodist   circuit-rider,    traveling   through   Central 
Indiana  on  horseback.     See  He  Didn't  Ask.— Anon. 


A  middle-aged  lady,  with  a  black  alpaca  dress.     See 

She  Had  Business  with  the  Boss  Mason. — Anon. 
A  mien  of  modest  loveliness.     See  Madame  Roland. 

Anon. 
A  mighty  and  a  mingled  throtig.     See  Silent  Multitude, 

The. — Hemans. 
A  mighty  elephant,  that  swelled  the  state.     See  Tit  for 

Tat. — Anon. 
A  mighty  fortress  is  our  God.     See  Mighty  Fortress  is 

Our  God,  A. — Luther. 
A  mighty  hand,  from  an  exhaustless  urn.     See  Flood 

of  Years,  The. — Bryant. 
A  mighty    king   on    his    couch   reclined.     See   King's 

Temple,  'The. — Anon. 
A  mighty   man  was   Scyld,   ruler  of  the   Gar-Danes. 

See  Beowulf,  The  Story  of .— Rabb. 
A  mighty  pain  to  love  it  is.    See  Anacreontiques  (Pain 

of  Love,  The). — Cowley. 
A  mighty   spirit   is   eclipsed — -a  power.     See  Monody 

on  the  Death  of  the  Right  Hon.  R.  B.  Sheridan. — 

Byron. 
A  mile  and  a-half,  it  may  be  two  miles,  southeast  of 

Bethlehem.     See  Ben-Hur  (Angel  and  the  Shep- 
herds, The). — Wallace. 
A  milkmaid,  who  poised  a  full  pail  on  her  head.     See 

Milkmaid,  The.— Taylor. 
"A  milk-weed,  and  a  butter-cup,  and  cowslip,"  said 

sweet  Mary.     See  Her  Dairy. — Newell. 
A    million    little    diamonds.       See   Winter    Jewels. — 

Butts. 
A  mimic  I  knew,  who,  to  give  him  his  due.     See  Mimic, 

The. — Anon. 
A  mind  unnerved,  or  indisposed  to  bear.     See  Retire- 
ment (What  to  Read). — Cowper. 
A  minister  who  does  not  believe.     See  Baptism  De- 
fended.— Anon. 
A  minor  poet  chased  a  laurel  wreath.     See  Chase  of  the 

Laurel  Wreath,  The.— Wood. 
A  minstrel  am  I  of  a  single  lay.     See  Main-hatch,  The. 

— Burdette. 
A  mischievous  fairy.     See  My  Little  Tease. — Lyman. 
A  miser,    traversing   his    house.     See   Miser   and    the 

Mouse,  The. — Anon. 
A  mist  was  driving  down  the  British  Channel.     See 

Warden  of  the  Cinque  Ports,  The. — Longfellow. 
A  moment  of  loving  and  laughter.     See  Unequal  Game, 

An. — Anon. 
A  moment  pause,  ye  British  fair.     See  Lesson  of  Water- 
loo, The. — Anon. 
A  moment,  scarcely  more,  I  stood.     See  Waiting  at 

the  Church-door. — Miller. 
A  moment  then  I^ord  Marmion  stayed.     See  Marmion 

(Flodden  Field).— Scott. 
A  monarch  sat,  in  serious  thought,  alone.     See  Rabbi 

and  the  Prince,  The. — Harvey. 
A  monk  ther  was,  a  fayre  for  the  maistrie.    See  Can- 
terbury Tales,  The  (Monk  and  the  Friar,  The). — 

Chaucer. 
A  monk   when    his    rites    sacerdotal    were   o'er.     See 

Philosopher's  Scales,  The.- — Taylor. 
A  monkey,  once,  whom  fate  had  led  to  list.     See  Victim 

of  Reform,  The. — {Blackwood's  Magazine.) 
A  monsieur  from  the  Gallic  shore.     See  Frenchman  and 

the  Sheep's  Trotters,  The. — Prest. 
A  monster  of  iron,  steel  and  brass.     See  As  the  Pigeon 

Flies. — Lewis. 
A  moonbeam  floateth  from  the  skies.      See  Heigho, 

My  Dearie. — Field. 
A  moonless  night — a  friendly  one.     See  Running  the 

Batteries. — Melville. 
A  morning-glory  bud,  entangled  fast.     See  Unto  the 

Perfect  Day. — Allen. 
A  morrow  must  come  oh.     See  Prayer,  A.— -Aldrich 
A  most  characteristic  and  remarkable  speech  was  de- 
livered  by   Franklin.      See    Inauguration    of  the 
Statue  of  Franklin,  The  (Franklin  as  a  Christian). 
— Winthrop. 
A  most  mischievous  sprite  was  abroad  all  last  night. 

See  Troublesome  Visitor,  A. — Rook. 
A  moth  belated,  sun  and  zephyr  kist.     See  To  a  Moth 

that  Drinketh  of  the  Ripe  October. — Pfeiffer. 
A  mother  and  child  wandered  in  the  wilderness.     See 

Boys  of  the  Bible. — Lloyd. 
A  mother  in  the  twilight.     See  Shepherd's  Story,  The. 

— Burrell.  ^ 

A  mother  was  singing  her  boy  to  sleep.     See  God  is 

Everywhere. — Ballam. 
A  mother's  love,  how  sweet  the  name!     See  Mother's 

Love,  A. — Montgomery. 
A  mountain  pass  so  narrow  that  a  man.     See  Gual- 

berto's  Victory. — Donnelly. 
A  mountain   shepherd   boy  am   I.     See  Song  of  the 
Mountain  Shepherd  Boy. — Uhland. 


594 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


A  poor 


A  mouse  saw  his  shadow  on  the  wall.     See  Four  Out- 
lines.— Anon. 
A  moving  form  or  rigid  mass.     See  Song  of  the  Screw. 

— Anon. 
A  Mubid  related,   how   onB   day  the  king.     See  Shah- 

Nameh  (Raja   of    India  Sends   a   Chessboard  to 

Nushirvan,  The). — Robinson. 
A  Munson  street  man,  being  told  that  there  were  sev- 
eral   pieces    of    tinware    which    needed    mending. 

iSee  Domestic  Economy. — Bailey. 
A  must  wead   Uncle  Tom — a  wawk.     See  "Swell's" 

Homage  to  Mrs.  Stowe,  A.^ — {Punch.) 
A  mute  companion  at  my  side.     See  To  My  Shadow. — 

Higginson. 
A  naked  house,  a  naked  moor.     See  House  Beautiful, 

The. — Stevenson. 
A  narrow  home,  but  verj'  still  it  seemeth.     See  Narrow 

House,  The. — Anon. 
A  nation's  real  honor  consists  in  the  practice  of  virtue. 

See  True  Honor  of  a  Nation,  The. — Prince. 
A  nation's  voice,  a  nation's  voice.     See  Nationality. — 

Davis. 
A  native  grace.     See  Seasons,  The:  Autumn. — Thom- 
son. 
A  negro  came  before  a  justice  of  the  peace  and  signed  a 

pledge.     See    How    Old    Erasmus    Doctored    his 

Temperance  Pledge. — Anon. 
A  nervous  old  gentleman,  tired  of  trade.     See  Removal, 

The. — Anon. 
A  new  holiday  is  a  boon  to  Americans.     See  Arbor 

Day. — Curtis. 
A  new  Western  town.     See  Double  Bed,  The. — Anon. 
A  newer  garden  of  creation.     See  Prairie  States,  The. 

— whitman. 
"A  nice  devil'd    biscuit,"   said    .Jenkins,    enchanted. 

See  Deviled  Biscuit. — {Punch.) 


A  n 


A  n 


A  n 
A  n; 


A  n 
A  n: 


A  n 
A  n 


An 
An 


See  Ormolu's  Tene- 


See  Trapped. — 
See  Easter 


See  Morn- 
See  Com- 


ce  little  dinner  at  Ormolu's. 

ment  House. — O'Brien. 

ce  way  to  begin  a  man's  career. 

Wayne. 

ght,  a  day,  another  night  had  passed. 

Poem,  An. — Riche. 

ght  had  passed  away  among  the  hills. 

ing  among  the  Hills. — Percival. 

ght:  mysterious,  tender,  quiet,  deep. 

mon  Inference,  A. — Stetson. 

ght  of  danger  on  the  sea.     See ' '  Now ! " — Havergal. 

ght  time,  black  and  lowering.     See  Count  Me. — 

Murray. 

ghtingale  made  a  mistake.    'See  Singing  Lesson, 

The. — Ingelow. 

ghtingale  once  lost  his  voice  from  too  much  love, 

and  he  who    flees.      See    House    of    a   Hundred 

Light.s,  The  (Youth  and  Age). — Torrence. 

ghtingale  that  all  day  long.     See  Nightingale  and 

the  Glow-worm,  The. — Cowper. 

ne  day's  wonder  had  Tattlerstown.     See  Abner's 

Second  Wife. — Fossett. 
A  noble  man   is  one  who  stands  for  nobleness.     See 

Abstract  of  a  Response  to  a  Toast,   "Noblesse 

Oblige." — Anon. 
A  noble    man,    ordained    and    broadly    planned.     See 

Dead  I.,eader,  The. — .Jones. 
A  noble  range  it  was,  of  many  a  rood.     See  Garden 

and  Summer  House,  A. — Hunt. 
A  noble  ship  lay  at  anchor  in  the  Bay  of  Tangier.     See 

Our  Gunner's  Shot. — Anon. 
A  nobler  want  of  man  is  served  by  nature,  namely,  the 

love  of  beauty.     See  Beauty. — Emerson. 
A  noisette  on  my  garden  path.     See  Shadow   Rose, 

The. — Rogers. 
A  noted  criminal  was  to  die — to  hang.     See  Fra  Fonti. 

— Meyers. 
A  nymph   there   was   in   Arcadie.     See   Alpheus    and 

Arethusa. — Daly. 
A  old  tramp  slep'  in  our  stable  wunst.     See  Old  Tramp, 

The.— Riley. 
A  page  who  seemed  of  low  degree.     See  Game  Knut 

Played,  The.— English. 
A  painter,  who  wanted  a  picture  of  Innocence.     See 

Portraits,  The. — Anon. 
A  painter  wrought  him  a  noble  dream,  deep-toiling  day 

and  night.     See  Rib,  The. — McGaffey. 
A  pair  of  hazel  eyes  I  know.     See  My  Sweetheart. — 

R.  W.  K. 
A  pair  of  steady  rooks.     See  Death  of  Master  Tommy 

Rook,  The.— Cook. 
A  pair  of  very  chubby  legs.     See  Coming  Man,  The.— 

Anon. 
A  pale  and  soul-sick  woman  with  wan  eyes.     See  Age, 

The.— Clarke. 
A  pale   Italian   peasant.     See  At   the   Shrine. — Mun- 

kittrick. 


A  pansy  on  his  breast  she  laid.  See  For  Thoughts. — 
Thaxter. 

A  paradise  of  sunny  skies.     See  Southland. — Case. 

A  paradise  on  earth  is  found.  See  Muses'  Elysium, 
The  (Description  of  ElizJum,  The).  —  Dray- 
ton. 

A  parrot,  from  the  Spanish  main.  See  Parrot,  The. — 
Campbell. 

A  parson  in  a  country  town,  while  preaching.  See 
Test  of  Patience,  The. — Anon. 

A  parson,  who  a  missionary  had  been  fwho  had  a  col- 
porteur been].     See  Clerical  Wit. — Anon. 

A  passenger  going  West  from  Detroit  by  rail.  See 
Beating  a  Conductor.     {Detroit  Free  Press.) 

A  path  across  a  meadow  fair  and  sweet.  See  Two 
Paths. — Dorr. 

A  pause  in  the  din  of  battle!  See  Battle  of  German- 
town,  The. — Lippard. 

A  peacock  came,  with  his  plumage  gay.  See  'Tis  Not 
Fine  Feathers  that  Make  Fine  Birds. — Anon. 

A  peasant  stood  before  a  king,  and  said.  See  Ahab 
Mohammed . — Legart?. 

A  pen — to  register;  a  key.  See  Memory. — Words- 
worth. 

A  pensive  photograph.     See  To  a  Portrait. — Symons. 

A  perfect  artist  hath  been  here;  the  scene.  »See  Sun- 
set, A. — Brown. 

A  perfect  thought  will*  always  clothe  itself  in  appro- 
priate language.  See  Thought  and  Language. — 
Anon. 

A  perilous  life,  and  sad  as  life  may  be.  See  Fisherman, 
The.— Procter. 

A  picture-frame  for  you  to  fill.  See  With  a  Hand- 
glass.— Stevenson. 

A  pilgrim  am  I,  on  my  way.  See  Pilgrim,  The. — 
Palfrey. 

A  pilgrim  once  (so  runs  an  ancient  tale).  See  Two 
Gates,  The. — Conant. 

A  pillar  of  fire  by  night.  See  Song  of  Sherman's 
Army,  The. — Halpine. 

A  pink  and  crimson  sunset  cloud.  See  Life's  Common 
Things.— Wright. 

A  pinsion-claim  agent!  Will,  then,  sor.  See  How 
Mickey  Got  Kilt  in  the  War. — -Anon. 

A  pious  ostler  who  did  much  repent.  See  Roguery 
Taught  by  Confession. — Wolcott. 

A  pious  parson,  good  and  true.  See  Thankful  Parson. 
A. — Anon. 

A  pious  rabbi,  forced  by  heathen  hate.  See  Four 
Misfortunes,  The. — Saxe. 

A  pipe,  a  book,  a  cozy  nook.  See  Bachelor's  Views,  A 
—Hall. 

A  pitcher  of  mignonette.  See  Pitcher  of  Mignonette. 
A. — Bunner. 

A  place  in  thy  memory,  dearest!  See  Place  in  Thy 
Memory,  A. — Griffin. 

A  plague  upon  the  people  fell.  See  Victim,  The. — 
Tennyson. 

A  plague  upon  them!  Wherefore  should  I  curse  them? 
See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  II.  (Hate  and  Revenge). 
— Shakespeare. 

A  plain  man  who  knew  nothing  of  the  curious  trans- 
mutations.    See  Burr  and  Blennerhassett. — ^Wirt. 

A  pledge  we  make  no  wine  to  take.  See  Pledge,  The. 
^Anon. 

A  plenteous  place  is  Ireland  for  hospitable  cheer.  See 
Fair  Hills  of  Ireland,  The. — Ferguson. 

A  plump  little  robin  flew  down  from  a  tree.  See 
Robin  and  the  Chicken,  The. — Anon. 

A  poet  could  not  sleep  aright.  See  Vision  of  Poets,  A. 
— Browning. 

A  poet  in  one  mood  in  all  my  lays.  See  Changeless. — 
■  Meynell. 

A  poet  loved  a  star.     See  Possession. — Bulwer-Lytton. 

A  poet  writ  a  song  of  May.  See  First  Song,  'The. — 
Burton. 

A  poetical  atmosphere,  an  aroma,  hung  about  Long- 
fellow. See  Longfellow,  Extract  Concerning. — 
Frothingham. 

A  poet's  cat,  sedate  and  grave.  See  Retired  Cat,  The. 
— Cowper. 

A  poet's  pipe  am  I.     See  Poet's  Pipe,  A.- — Shepherd. 

A  poet's  soul  has  sung  its  way  to  God.  See  Dead 
Singer,  The. — Townsend. 

A  poor,  coarse-featured  old  woman  lived  on  the  line  of 
the  Baltimore  &  Ohio  Railway.  See  Old  Woman's 
Railway  Signal,  The. — Burritt. 

A  poor  little  bird  trilled  a  song  in  the  west.  See 
Going  Home  in  the  Morning. — Douglas. 

A  poor  little  girl  in  a  tattered  gown.  See  He  Doeth 
His  Alms  to  be  Seen  of  Men. — Anon. 

A  poor  man  went  to  hang  himself.  See  One  Good  Turn 
Deserves  Another. — (Punch.) 


595 


A  poor 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


A  poor  old  cottage  tottering  to  its  fall.  See  My  Old 
Home. — O'Leary. 

A  pooRold  king  with  sorrow  for  my  crown.  See  Lear. 
—Hood. 

A  poor  sequestered  a|Bg.  See  As  You  Like  It. — Shake- 
speare. 

A  poor  wayfaring  man  of  grief.  See  Stranger  and  His 
Friend,  The. — Montgomery. 

A  portal  of  the  arena  opened.  See  Constantius  and 
the  Lion. — Croly. 

A  portly  prince,  and  goodly  to  the  sight.  See  Hind  and 
the  Panther,  The  (Buzzard,  The). — Dryden. 

A  potsdam,  les  totaux  absteneurs.  See  Vers  Non.sen- 
siques. — DuMaurier. 

A  pound  of  butter,  a  dozen  of  eggs,  a  quart  of  molasses 
— yes.  that's  it.  See  Mamma's  Little  Market- 
woman. — Rook. 

"A  pound  of  jumps!"  The  clerk  [or  and  II  looked  in 
surprise.  See  Mercantile  Transaction,  A. — Hum- 
phrey. 

A  pound  of  tea  at  one-and-three.  See  Going  on  an 
Errand.- — Anon. 

A  practical,  plain  young  girl.  See  Model  American 
Girl.  The.— Pinkley. 

A  precocious  little  rascal  was  noticed  on  Jefferson  Ave- 
nue the  other  day.  See  Clergyman  Had  to  Ex- 
plain, The. — Anon. 

A  pretty  girl — a  summer  night.  See  "No  Fellow." — 
Anon. 

A  prtty  little  cloud  away  "up  in  the  sky.  See  Little 
Lazy  Cloud,  The. — Anon. 

A  pretty,  piquant,  pouting  pet.  See  Symphony  in 
Smoke,  A.     (Harper's  Bazar.) 

A  prince  in  the  east  had  taken  a  widow's  field  away 
from  her.     See  Eternal  Burden,  The. — -Anon. 

A  principal  object,  in  his  late  political  movements. 
See  Constitution  and  the  Union,  The  (Platform  of 
the  Constitution,  The). — Webster. 

A  prologue?  Well  of  course  the  ladies  know.  See 
Prologue. — Holmes. 

A  public  haunt  they  found  her  in.  See  Girl  of  Pompeii, 
A. — Martin. 

A  pure,  sweet  spirit,  generous  and  large.  See  Henry 
Wadsworth  Longfellow. — Story. 

A  purple  cloud  hangs  half-way  down.  See  Before  Sun- 
rise in  Winter. — Sill. 

A  Python  I  should  not  advise.  See  Python,  The. — 
Belloc. 

A  quaint  little  maid  went  tripping  along.  See  Little 
Maid's  Prayer  at  the  Shrine  of  St.  Valentine,  The. 
— Anon. 

A  quaint  old  box  with  a  lid  of  blue.  See  Little  Brown 
Curl,  The. — Anon. 

A  queer  little  doll  in  a  very  long  dress.  See  Queer 
Doll,  A. — -Anon. 

A  quiet  and  comfortable  hotel  in  the  charming  hamlet 
of  Bethlehem.  See  Pleasures  of  the  Telephone. — 
Anon. 

A  quiet  home  had  Parson  Gray.  See  Parson  Gray. — 
Goldsmith. 

A  quiet  house,  just  off  the  road.  See  What  Farmer 
Green  Said. — Watson. 

A  rabbi  once,  by  all  admired.  See  Rabbi's  Present. 
(Cornhill  Magazine.) 

A  radiant  bouquet.  See  Birth  of  the  Rainbow,  The. 
— Denison. 

A  railroad  train  was  rushing  along  at  almost  lightning 
speed.     See  Behind  Time. — Hunt. 

A  raindrop  is  a  little  thing.     See  Trifles. — Colesworthy. 

A  rare  old  print  of  Shakespeare — his  works — in  boards 
of  brown.  See  Annetta  Jones — Her  Book. — Stan- 
ton. 

A  rat!  a  rat!  dead  for  a  ducat!     See  Rats. — Mclntbsh. 

A  rather  monotonous  life,  sir?  Well,  yes,  I  just  reckon 
you're  right.  See  Watchman's  Story,  A. — ■ 
Nicholls. 

A  rather  unusual  sensation  has  been  excited  in  the 
village.  See  Out  of  the  Hurly  Burly  ("Morning 
Argus"     Obituary    Department,    The).  —  Clark. 

A  raven  sat  unon  a  tree.  See  Sycophantic  Fox  and 
the  Gullible  Raven.  The.— Carry!. 

A  red  glass  makes  everything  seen  through  it  red.  See 
Hint,  A. — Eliot. 

A  red  rose,  drooping  to  the  ground.  See  Forgiveness. 
— Anon. 

A  regiment  in  the  motion  and  the  rattle  of  a  drum. 
See  Drum,  A. — -Waterloo. 

A  requiem ! — and  for  whom?  See  Mozart's  Requiem. — 
Hemans. 

A  revenue  from  America,  transmitted  hither?  See 
Speech  on  Moving  his  Resolutions  for  Concilia- 
tion with  America  (Magnanimity  in  Politics). — 
Burke. 


See  Rhyme  of  Death's 
See  Charity's 


A  rhyme  of  good  Death's  Inn! 
Inn,  A. — Reese. 

A  rich  man  sat  by  his  chamber  window. 
Meal. — Anon.  j 

A  rich  man  walked  abr(*rfU  one  day.  See  Heart's 
Charity,  The. — Cook. 

A  rich  old  bachelor  once  asked.  See  "Yours  Truly, 
Sir." — Anon. 

.\  right  noble  philosophy  has  taught  us  that  God  has 
divided  the  world.  See  Appeal  to  Ireland. — 
Meagher. 

A  river  went  singing  adown  to  the  sea.  See  Song  of  the 
River. — Ryan. 

A  robin  came  one  day  in  spring.  See  Robin's  Return. 
— Richards. 

A  robin  had  come  to  bid  me  good-by.  See  Robin's 
Farewell. — Richard.*. 

A  robin  sat  upon  a  limb.  See  What  Robin  Said. — 
Richards. 

A  robin  was  sitting  high  up  in  a  tree.  See  Mother 
Robin. — Richards. 

A  rock  there  is  whose  homely  front.  See  Primrose  of 
the  Rock,  The. — Wordsworth. 

A  Rockland  young  man,  until  quite  recently,  was 
courting  a  fat  girl.  See  Awful  Squirt,  An.  (Rock- 
land Courier.) 

A  rocky  channel  from  the  harbor  led.  See  Deepening 
the  Channel. — Eaton. 

A  roguish  old  lawyer  was  planning  new  sin.  See 
Lawyer  and  the  Chimney-sweeper,  The. — Anon. 

A  rollicking  mastodon  lived  in  Spain.  See  Rollicking 
Mastodon,  The. — Macy. 

A  Roman,  an  orator,  and  a  triumvir,  A.  See  Shake- 
speare's Mark  Antony. — Winchell. 

A  rose  and  sunflower  in  the  garden  grew.  See  Rose 
and  the  Sunflower,  The. — Anon. 

A  rose,  as  fair  as  ever  saw  the  North.  See  Vision  of  the 
Rose. — Browne. 

A  rose  in  my  garden,  the  sweetest  and  fairest.  See 
Gossips,  The. — Wilcox. 

A  rose  leaned  over  a  woodland  pool.  See  Woodland 
Tragedy,  A. — Bates. 

A  rose  of  perfect  red,  embossed.  See  Nilsson. — ■ 
Lanier. 

A  rose's  crimson  stain.  See  Roses  of  Memory. — Gor- 
don. 

A  rosy,  merry  maiden  she.  See  Modern  Youth,  A. — 
Goodhue. 

A  round  little  man  with  eyes  of  blue.  See  February. 
— Anon. 

A  roundel  is  wrought  as  a  ring  or  a  star-bright  sphere. 
See  Roundel,  The. — Swinburne. 

A  ruddy  drop  of  manly  blood.  See  Friendship. — Em- 
erson. 

A  ruined  city!  In  the  heart.  See  Lost  Mexican  City, 
The.— McLellan. 

A  ruined  rose — I  hold  it  so.     See  Rondeau. — Anon. 

A  rush,  a  roar,  a  gleam,  a  glow.  See  Christmas  Week. 
— Stilwell. 

A  rushlight  that  had  grown  fat  and  saucy.  See  Far- 
thing Rushlight,  The. — ^sop. 

A'  Russian  sailed  over  the  blue  Black  Sea.  See  Soldier, 
Rest ! — Burdette. 

A  rustle  and  stir  'mid  the  tall  meadow  grasses.  See 
Mayonette  River.  The.     (Tulane  Collepian.) 

A  rustle  of  robes  as  the  anthem.  See  I^ittle  Maid's 
"Amen,"  A.     (Gospel  Expositor.) 

A  sabbath  well-spent  brings  a  week  of  content.  See 
Well-spent  Sunday,  The.— Hale. 

A  sad,  strange  tale  it  is,  and  long  to  tell.  See  Fra 
I^uigi's  Marriage. — H.  H. 

A  safe  stronghold  our  God  is  still.  See  Safe  Strong- 
hold, A. — Luther. 

A  sailor  once,  his  pockets  filled  with  gold.  See  Vat 
Have  I  Got  to  Pay? — Freeman. 

A  saintly  voice  fell  on  my  ear.  See  Voice,  The. — Will- 
son. 

A  sallow-faced  man  dressed  in  faded  and  insufficient 
garments.     See  Horseradish. — Anon. 

A  sanguinary  pirate  sailed  upon  the  Spanish  Main. 
See  Mrs.  Jones'  Pirate. — Clark. 

A  sapient  looking  Fayetteville  darkey,  oscillating  be- 
tween twenty  and  twenty-five  summers.  See 
"De  Pervisions.  Josiar. " — Anon. 

A  scent  of  guava-blos.«oms  and  the  smell.  See  At  Set 
of  Sun. — Townsend. 

A  scientific  association  in  one  of  the  smaller  towns. 
See  Not  Victims  of  Money  Microbes.— Anon. 

A  sculptor  is  the  sun,  I  know.  See  Anemone.— Sher- 
man. 

A  sea-captain,  who  was  asked  by  his  wife  to  '.ook  at 
some  pianos.  See  Mariner's  Description  of  a 
Piano,  A. — .\non. 


596 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


A  stillness 


A  seat   for   three,   where   host   and   guest.     See  Seat 

for  Three,  A. — Crane. 
A  second  weddine;!  Pray,  good  friends,  how's  this?     See 

Poem  for  a  Silver  Wedding,  A. — Anon. 
A  seed  fell  into  the  ground;  it  died.     See  Easter  Lily, 

An. — Hawks. 
A  seed  of  the  beautiful  mistletoe  was  separated.     See 

Oak  and  the  Mistletoe  Seed,  The. — Anon. 
A  seedy  old  beutgar  asked  alms  of  me.     See  If  Things 

Was  Only 'Sioh!"—ShilIaber. 
A  sense  of  an  earnest  will.     See  Small  Things. — Milnes. 
A  sensitive  plant  in  a  garden  grew.    See  Sensitive  Plant, 

The.— Shelley. 
A  sentinel  angel,  sitting  high  in  glory.     See  Woman's 

Love,  A. — Hay. 
A  shabby  fellow  chanced  one  day  to  meet.     See  Actor, 

An.— Wolcott. 
A  shadie  grove  not  far  away  they  spied.     S'ce  Faerie 

Que?ne,  The  (Trees). — Spenser. 
A   shell  lies  silent  on  a  lonely  shore.     See  St.  Cecilia. — 

O'Brien. 
A   shepeheards    boy    (no  better   doe  him    call).     See 

Shepheardes  Calender,  The  (.January). — Spenser. 
A  shining  hour  with  golden  plumes.     See  Hours,  The. 

- — Gordon. 
A  ship  lost  at  sea  for  many  days  suddenly  sighted  a 

friendly    vessel.     See    Solution    of    the    Southern 

Problem,  The. — Washington. 
"A  ship,"  they  cry,  "on  the  Millhead  rock!     See  Mid 

the  Breakers. — Aye-Williams. 
A  shoal  of  idlers,  from  a  merchant  craft.     See  Pelters 

of  Pyramids. — Home. 
A  short  time  after  my  wife  and  I  were  settled  in  our 

pleasant  little  country  home.    See  Rudder  Grange 

(Our  First  Experience  with  a  Watch-dog). — Stock- 
ton. 
A  short  time  ago  a  delegation  of  eminently  learned  and 

scientific  men.     See  Scientific   Party,  A. — Brown. 
A  short  time  since  and  he  who  is  the  occasion  of  our 

sorrows.     See   Death   of   Alexander   Hamilton. — 

Nott. 
A  shrewd   and  wealthy   old   landlord,   away   down   in 

Maine.     See  Frenchman  and  the  Landlord,  The. — 

Anon. 
A  shy  little  mayflower,   I  weave   my  nest.     See    At 

Dame  Nature's  Feet. — Denton. 
A    sight  in  camp  in  the  daybreak  gray  and  dim.     See 

Sight  in  Camp  in  the  Daybreak  Gray  and  Dim,  A. 

— -Whitman. 
A    silly  young  cricket  accustomed  to  sing.     See  Ant 

and  the  Cricket,  The. — Anon. 
A    silver  birch-tree  like  a  sacred  maid.     See  Recollec- 
tion.— Carpenter. 
A  simple  child,  that  lightly  draws  its  breath.     See  We 

are  Seven. — Wordsworth. 
A  simple  ring  with  a  single  stone.     See  Pearl;  a  Girl,  A. 

— Browning. 
A  simple-hearted  child  was  he.     See  Little  Child,  The. 

— Paine. 
A  single  buttercup  I  found.     See  Belated. — Whittier. 
A  single  star  how  bright.     See  Morning  Star,  The.— 

Hedge. 
A  single   step,    that    freed    me    from   the   skirts.     See 

Excursion,  The  (Vision  of   Mist-splendours,  A). — 

Wordsworth. 
A  singular  illustration  of  the  extent  to  which  theory 

often  fails.     See  Professor  in  Shafts,  The. — Kel- 
logg. 
A  sky  all  blue,  a  field  of  green.     See  May. — Harrison. 
A  slanting  ray  of  evening  light.     See  Squire's   Pew, 

The.— Taylor. 
A  slave  to  crowds,  scorch'd  with  the  summer's  heats. 

See  Paulus  the  Lawyer. — Lindsay. 
A  slim,    young    girl,    in    lilac    quaintlv    dressed.     See 

Portrait,  A.     (Trinity  Tablet.) 
A  slumber    did    my    spirit    steal.    See    Departed. — ■ 

Wordsworth. 
A  small  door  at  the  right  of  the  pulpit  opened.     See 

Study  in  Nerves,  A. — Anon. 
A  small,    impalpable   world.     See   Soap-bubble,    A. — 

Knowles. 
A  small  Scotch  boy  was  summoned  to  give  evidence 

against  his  father.     See  Scotch  Witness,  A. — Anon. 
A  smile,  and  then  the  sun  comes  out.     See  Smiles  and 

Tears. — Sherman. 
A  smile  from  you,   my  lady  dear.     See  Spring  Ron- 
deau, A. — Kirk. 
A  smiling  look  she  had,  a  figure  slight.     See  Tomb  in 

Ghent,  A. — Procter. 
A  smith  upon  a  summer's  day.     See  Smith  and  the 

King,  The. — Carpenter. 
A  snowdrop  bloomed  on  a   window   ledge.     See  De- 
filed.—Clarke. 


A  snow-man  stands  in  the  moonlight  gold.     See  Snow- 
man, The. — Goodfellow. 
A  sober  occasion   this,   brother  Currie!     See  Reading 

the  Will.— Sargent. 
A  sodden    gray    in    the    chilly    dawn.     See    March. — 

Anon. 
A  soldier  at   Loretto's  wondrous  chapel.     See  Soldier 

and  the  Virgin  Mary,  The. — Wolcott. 
A  soldier   lay   wounded   on   a   hard-fought   field.     See 

South  and  her  Problems,  The  (New  South,  The). 

— Grady. 
A  soldier   of   the    Cromwell   stamp.     See   Heredity. — 

Aldrich. 
A  soldier    of    the    Legion    lay   dying    in  Algiers.     See 

Bingen  on  the  Rhine. — Norton. 
A  soldier,  so  at  least  the  story  goes.     See  Irish  Drum- 
mer, The. — Anon. 
A  solemn    sabbath    stillness    lies    along    the   Mudville 

lanes.     See  O'Reilly's  Billy  Goat. — Lincoln. 
A  solitary    ship,    in    mid-ocean.     See    Voyage    and    a 

Haven,  A. — Hoey. 
A  song  for  May,  whose  breath  is  sweet.     See  Song  for 

May,  A. — Rexford. 
"A  song  for  our  banner!"  the  watchword  recall.     See 

Flag  of  Our  Union,  The. — Morris. 
A  song  for  the  beautiful  trees.     See  Forest  Song. — 

Venable. 
A  song  for  the  girl   I   love.     See   Song   for   the   Girl    I 

Love,  A. — Langbridge. 
A  song  for  the  old.     See  New  Year,  The. — Cooper. 
A  song  for  the   plant  of  my  own  native  West.     See 

Maize,  The. — ^Fosdick. 
A  song  for  them  one  and  all.     See  Song  for  the  Fleet, 

A. — Scollard. 
A  song  lay  silent  in  my  pen.     See  Song,  The. — Ers- 

kine. 
A  song  of  a  boat.     See  Songs  of    Seven    (Seven  Times 

Seven). — Ingelow. 
A  song  of  a  white  throne  circled.     See  Life. — Gilmore. 
A  song  of  the  man  who  sneezes.     See  Hay-Fever. — 

Anon. 
A  song  to  a  maid  with  eyes  like  stars.     See  Song  to 

Her,  A. — Wrinkle. 
A  song  to  the  oak,  the  brave  old  oak.     See  Brave  Old 

Oak,  The.— Chorley. 
A  song!    What  songs  have  died.     See  Song  for  the  Ask- 
ing, A. — Ticknor. 
A  sonnet   is   a  moment's   monument.     See  House  of 

Life,  The. — Rossetti. 
A  soul  from  earth  to  heaven  went.     See  True  Boston- 

ian  [at  Heaven's  Gate],  A. — {Somerville  Journal.) 
A  soul  inhuman?     No,  not  human  all.     See  Napoleon. 

—Gilder. 
A  sound  came  booming  through  the  air!     See  Saint 

Pancras  Bell. — Brooks. 
A  sound  of  uprising.     See  Last  Battle,  The. — Murray. 
A  Southern  divine,  who  had  removed  to  a  new  field  of 

labor.     See  Brother  Watkins. — Gough. 
A  sower  went  forth  to  sow.     See  Sower,  The. — Gilder. 
A  spade!  a  rake!  a  hoe!     See  Lay  of  the  Laborer,  The. 

—Hood. 
A  spaniel,  Beau,  that  fares  like  you.     See  On  a  Spaniel 

Called  "Beau"  Killing  a  Young  Bird. — Cowper. 
A  sparrow  flew  to  my  window  one  day.     See  Only  a 

Sparrow>— Richards. 
A  sparrow,  perched  upon  a  bough.     See  Might  Makes 

Right. — (National  Precevtor.) 
A  spirit    of   beauty    walks    the    hills.     See   Return    of 

Spring,  The. — Taylor. 
A  spirit  speeding  down  on  All  Souls'  Eve.     See  One 

Forgotten,  The. — Sigerson. 
A  splendid  house!     The  greatest  bargain  in  the  city. 

See  Two  Opinions  of  One  House. — Dallas. 
A  squad  of  regular  infantry.     See  Triumph  of  Order, 

A.— Hay. 
A  stage-struck  hero  while  at  home.     See  Stage-struck 

Hero,  The. — Anon. 
A  stands  for  alcohol,  deathlike  its  grip.     See  Temper- 
ance Alphabet. — Anon. 
A  star  is  gone!  a  star  is  gone!     See  Fallen  Star,  The.^ 

Darley. 
A  star  leant  down  and  laid  a  silver  hand.     See  These 

Three. — Crawford. 
A  steady  and  a  skillful  toiler.     See  Merry  Soap-boiler, 

The. — Anon. 
A  stealing  glory,  still,  intent,  and  sure.     See  Star  at 

Dawn,  The.— Weitzel. 
A  steed,   a  steed  of  matchlesse  speed.     See  Cavalier's 

Song,  The. — Motherwell. 
A  step,    a    single  .step.     See  Excursion,  The  (Cloud- 
visions). — Wordsworth. 
A  stillne.ss  crept  about  the  house.     See  Ballad  of  the 
Brides  of  Quair,  The. — Knox. 


597 


A  stitch 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


A  stitch  is  always  dropping  in  the  everlasting  knitting. 

See  What  One  Boy  Thinks. — Spofford. 
A  stormy  night  on  the  southern  coa.st  at  the  close  of 

an  autumn  day.     See  John  Harding. — Jarvis. 
A  story  is  told  of  a  clothing  merchant.     See  Selling  a 

Coat. — -Anon.      # 
A  story  is  tofd  of  two  artist  lovers.     See  Veiled  Picture, 

The. — Anon. 
A  story,  my  child?    Well,  there's  none  that  T  know. 

See  Joe's  Search  for  Santa  Claus. — Bacheller. 
A  story   worth    telling   our   annals   afford.     See   How 

Burlington  was  Saved. — Mair. 
A  stranded  soldier's  epaulet.     See  Silver  Bird's  Nest, 

The. — Anon. 
A  stranger  came  one   night   to   Yussouf's   tent.     See 

Ytissouf. — Lowell. 
A  stranger  came  to   Nagold  town.     See  Postilion  of 

Nagold.  The.— Catlin. 
A  stranger  craves  admittance  to  your  Highness.     See 

Saracen  Brothers,  The. — (Harper's  Monthly.) 
A  stranger  journeyed  through  the  town.     See  Sacri- 
legious Gamesters,  The. — Cook. 
A  stranger    preached   last   Sunday.     See   Borrioboola 

Gha. — Goodrich. 
A  stranger  to  your  clime,  O  men  of  Greece!     See  Lord 

Byron  to  the  Greeks. — Lamartine. 
A  stream  of  tender  gladness.     See  Shadow  River. — 

Johnson. 
A  street  there  is  in  Paris  famous.     See  Ballad  of  Bouil- 
labaisse, 'The. — Thackeray. 
A  stretch  of  hill  and  valley,  swathed  thick  in  robes  of 

■white.     See  Winter  Nights  at  Home,  The. — Lin- 
coln. 
A  strolling  preacher,  once  upon  a  time.     See  Grateful 

Preacher,  The.— Saxe. 
A  strong  and  majestic  oak  had   fallen.     See   Melendy 

Prize  Oration,  The. — Douglas. 
A  strong  and  mighty  angel.     See  Mantle  of  St.  John  de 

Matha,  The.— Whittier. 
A  strong  wind  blew,  a  chill  wind  blew.     See  Acorn 

Lesson,  An. — Bates. 
A  student  sat  in  his  room  alone.     See  Ein  Traumbild. 

— Yeoman.«. 
A  sturdy  fellow,  with  a  sunburnt  face.     See  Romance 

in  the  Kou^h,  A. — Martin. 
A  sudden  conflict  rises  from  the  swell.     See  Sacheverel. 

— Wordsworth. 
A  sumach  tall.     See  United. — O'Neill. 
A  summer  sunbeam,  peeping  through  a  window-pane 

one  day.     See  Three  Sunbeams. — Jones. 
A  sun  that  entices,  a  breeze  that  beguiles.     See  Hail, 

Bonny  September! — Goodale. 
A  sunbeam  comes  a-creeping.     See  Song   of   Luddy- 

Dud,  The.— Field. 
A  sunny  shaft  did  I  behold.     See  Zapolya  (Glycine's 

Song). — Coleridge. 
A  supercilious  nabob  of  the  East.     See  Modest  Wit,  A. 

— Osborne. 
A  swallow   in   the    spring.      See   Perseverance. — An- 

dros. 
A  sweet,  acidulous,  down-reaching  thrill.     See  Ode  on 

a  Jar  of  Pickles. — Taylor. 
A  sweet,  attractive  kind  of  grace.     See  Sir  Philip  Sid- 
ney.— Royden. 
A  sweet  disorder  in  the  dress.     See  Delight  in  Disorder. 

— Herrick. 
A  sweet  little  baby  brother.     See  Little  Flo's  Letter. — • 

Rexford. 
A  tadpole  sat  on  a  cold,  gray  stone.     See  Tale  of  a  Tad- 
pole, The. — Anon. 
A  tailor,  thought  a  man  of  upright  dealing.     See  Of  a 

Precise  Tailor. — Harrington. 
A  tale  I  will  tell  of  a  priest  and  his  mare.     See  Priest 

and  His  Mare,  The. — Anon. 
A  tale  of  the  siege  of  Lucknow,  though  the  years  have 

rolled    away.     See    Siege    of    Lucknow,    The. — 

Clark. 
A  tall  fir  whispered  in  the  wood.     See  Secret,  A. — 

Howard. 
A  tear  bedews  my  Delia's  eye.     See  Dying  Kid,  The. 

— Shenstone. 
"A   temple  to   friendship,"   cried   Laura,   enchanted. 

See  Temple  to  Friendship,  A. — Moore. 
A  tender  child  of  summers  three.     See  Light  that  is 

Felt,  The.— Whittier. 
A  tender  lily  raised  its  head.     See  Easter  Song,  The. — 

Steele. 
A  terrible  and  splendid  trust.     See  Ways  of  War. — 

Johnson. 
A  terrific  storm  was  raging  on  the  wild  coast.     See 

Dynmouth  Fisherman,  The. — Anon. 
A'  the  boys  of  merry  Lincoln.     See  Hugh  of  Lincoln. — 

Anon. 


A  thieving   fellow,   naturally   sly.     See   Rival   Broom 

Makers,  The. — Wolcot. 
A  thing  of  beauty  is  a  joy  forever      See  Endymion. — 

Keats. 
A  thingamajig  met  a  thingamaree.     See  Ninkum  Land, 

The.     ( Portland  Oregonian. ) 
A  thirsty   little   violet.     See   Violet's    Prayer,   The. — 

Richmond. 
A  thoughtful  mind,  when  it  sees  a  nation's  flag.     Sec 

National    Flag,    The    (American    Flag,    'rhe).— 

Beecher.  . 
A  thousand     godsent     melodies     found     birth.     See 

Gaetano  Donizetti. — Saltus. 
A  thousand  hearts  are  great  within  my  bosom.     See 

King  Richard  III.  (Courage). — Shakespeare. 
A  thousand    knights    have    reined    their   steeds.     See 

Calais  Sands. — Arnold. 
A  thousand  martyrs  I  have  made.     See  Libertine,  The. 

— Behn. 
A  thousand    miles    from    land    are   we.     See    Stormy 

Petrel,  The.— Procter. 
A  thousand    silent    years    ago.     See    Praxiteles    and 

Phryne. — Story. 
A  thousand   sounds   and   each   a   joyful   sound.     See 

Omnipresence. — Hale. 
A  thousand  voices  fill  my  ears.     See  Lost  Voice,  A. — 

Bourdillon. 
A  thousand  years  ago  we  met.     See  Three  Wishes,  The. 

— Horn. 
A  throat  of  thunder,  a  tameless  heart.     See  Cyclone  at 

Sea,  A. — Hayne. 
A  tiger  prowling  in  a  forest.     See  Brahmin    and  the 

Tiger,  The. — Anon. 
A  tight  pair  of  pants,  a  shirt  of  which  the  bosom  shone 

like   a  bald   head.     See   How   He   Paralyzed  the 

Chef.— Anon. 
A  tiny  girl  from  a  tiny  class.     See  For  a  Tiny  Girl.— 

Anon. 
A  tiny,  jumping  apple  seed.     See  California  Flea,  The. 

— Brooks. 
A  tiny  little  polliwog.     See  Polliwog,  The. — Anon. 
A  tiny  rap  fell  on  the  door.     See  "Papa  Says  so.  Too." 

— I^ewis. 
A  tiny  shell.     See  Serving. — Cooper. 
A  tiny  shoot  peeped  out  of  the  ground.     See  How  it 

Came. — Dayre. 
A  tomb  where  legal  ghouls  grow  fat.     See  In  the  Rec- 
ord Room,  Surrogate's  Office. — Baker. 
A  touch,  a  kiss!  the  charm  was  snapped.     See  Day- 
dream, The  (Revival,  The). — Tennyson. 
A  touch,  a  tender  word,  no  more.     See  "Touch,  a  ten- 
der word,"  etc. — Anon. 
A  touch  sets  free  the  prisoned  rage.    See  Camp-fire,  The. 

— demons. 
A  tract  of  land,  swept  by  the  salt  sea-foam.     See  Jew's 

Cemetery  on  the  Lido,  The. — Symonds. 
A  tramp  went  up  to  a  cottage  door.     See  Dog  and  the 

Tramp.  The.— Best. 
A  transient    calm    the     happy     scenes     bestow.     See 

Thales'  Reasons  for  Leaving  London. — Johnson. 
A  transition  from  an  author's  book  to  his  conversation. 

See  Transition  from  an  Author's  Book  to  His  Con- 
versation, A  —.Johnson. 
A  traveler,  from  journeying.     See  Household  Jewels, 

The. — Anon. 
A  traveler,   journeying  through  the  backwoods.     See 

'Way  Down  in  Ole  Virginy. — Head. 
A  traveler  through  [or  on]  a  dusty  road  strewed  acorns 

on  the  lea.     See  Little  and  Great. — Mackay. 
A  traveler  wended  the  wilds  among.     See  Quaker  and 

the  Robber,  The.— Lover. 
A  tree-toad    dressed    in    apple-green.     See    Indignant 

Polly  Wog. — Eytinge. 
A  troop  of  soldiers  waited  at  the  door.     See  Maiden 

Martyr,  The. — Anon. 
A  trouble,  not  of  clouds,  or  weeping  rain.     See  On  the 

Departure  of  Sir  Walter  Scott  from  Abbotsford 

for  Naples. — Wordsworth. 
A  truer  love  the  Muses  never  sung.     See  Britannia's 

Pastorals  (Poet's  Ambition,  The). — Browne. 
A  trusty   statesman   once   was   sent.     See   "He   is   a 

Brick.' ' — Anon. 
A  tumbled  down  and  hurt  his  arm  against  a  bit  of 

wood.     See  Nonsense  Alphabet. — Lear. 
A  turn  and  we  stand  in  the  heart  of  things.     See  By 

the  Fireside. — Browning. 
A  turtle  sat  upon  a  leafless  tree.     See  Rosalynde;  or, 

Euphues'  Golden  Legacy  (Montanus' Sonnet — II.). 

— Lodge. 
A  twangling  harp  for  Mary.     See  Miller  and  His  Son, 

The.— Ramal. 
A  vast  host  started  from  Rameses  under  Moses.     See 

People  Delivered,  A. — Geikie. 


598 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


A  working 


A  verse  to  thee,  dear  one,  I  send.     See  Two  Verses. — 

Powell. 
A  very  amusing  anecdote  is  told  of  an  Irishman.     See 

Pat's  Secret. — Anon. 
A  very  fair  Christian  is  good  Mrs.  Brown.     See  Mrs. 

Brown  and  Mrs.  Green. — Banks. 
A  very  good-natured  but  extremely  uncertain  crowd 

had  assembled  to  view  the  race.     See  Winners  by 

Their  Own  Lengths. — Connor. 
A  very  little  boy  am  I.     See  What  I  Know. — Anon. 
A  very  old  dame  in  a  very  small  cot.     See  Cup  of  Tea, 

A. — Anon. 
A  very  phnnnix,  in  her  radiant  eyes.     See  Harmony  of 

Love,  The. — Lodge. 
A  vessel  was  voyaging  over  the  sea.     See  Thirty-nine 

Lovers,  The.     {London  Graphic.) 
A  vicious  goat,  one  day,  had  found.     See  Goat  and  the 

Swing,  The. — Trowbridge. 
A   view  of  present  life  is  all  thou  hast!     See  Live  while 

You  Live. — McKnight. 
A  viewless  thing  is  the  wind.     See  Love  is  Strong. — 

Burton. 
A  village  cart  and  a  pretty  girl.     See  Wishes. — Banks. 
A  village  pedagogue  announced  one  day.     See  Snuff- 
boxes, The. — Anon. 
A  village  school  room — this  the  scene.     See  Lesson, 

The.— Dodge. 
A  vine  was  growing  beside  a  thrifty  oak.     See  Vine  and 

the  Oak,  The. — Anon. 
A   violet  grew  in  the  meadow-grass.     See  Fringed  Gen- 
tian.—Ford. 
A   violet  in  her  lovely  hair.     See  Violet  in  her  Hair.  A. 

— Swain. 
A  virgin  most  pure,  as  the  prophets  do  tell.     See  Vir- 
gin Most  Pure,  A. — Anon. 
A  voice  by  the  cedar  tree.     See  Maud. — Tennyson. 
A  voice,  from  long  expecting  thousands  sent.     See  Ac- 
quittal of  the  Bishop. — Wordsworth. 
A  voice  from  the  sea  to  the  mountains.     See  Great 

Voices,  The. — Brooks. 
A  voice  resounds  like  thunder-peal.     See  Watch  on  the 

Rhine,  The.— -Schneckenburger. 
A  waggish    cobbler    once,    in    Rome.     See    Cobbler's 

Secret,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
A   wagon-maker    I    will   be.     See  United    Workmen, 

The. 
A  wail  from  beyond  the  deserf !     See  Lament,  A. — 

Frothingham. 
A  wanderer  far  in  the  gloomy  night.     See  Beyond. 

Anon. 
A  wanderer  is  a  man  from  his  birth.     See  Future,  The. 

• — ^Arnold. 
A  wanderer,  Wilson,  from  my  native  land.     See  Ode  to 

Rae  Wilson,  Esquire. — Hood. 
A  warrior  hung  his  plumdd  helm.     See  Challenge,  The. 

O'Brien. 
A  warrior  so  bold,  and  a  virgin  so  bright.     See  Alonzo 

the  Brave  and  the  Fair  Imogine. — Anon. 
A  wasp  met  a  bee  that  was  just  buzzing  by.     See  Wasp 

and  the  Bee,  The. — -Anon. 
A  waste  of  land,  a  sodden  plain.     See  Blue  and  the 

Gray,  The.— Flagg. 
A  weakness  seizes  on  my  mind — I  would  more  pudding 

take.     See  Sick  Child,  The.     (Punch.) 
A  wealthy    gentleman    in    Herefordshire.     See    One- 
legged  Goose,  The. — Planche. 
A  wealthy  old  father  had  three  grown-up  sons.     See 

Son's  Wish,  The. — Anon. 
A  wealthy  young  squire  of  Tamworth,  we  hear.     See 

Golden  Glove,  The. — Anon. 
A  weapon  that  comes  down  as  still.     See  Weapon  that 

Comes  Down  as  Still,  A. — Pierpont. 
A  wearied  pilgrim  I  have  wander'd    here.      See    On 

Himself. — Herrick. 
A  wearily  wan  little  face.     See  Nobody  Cares. — Anon. 
A  weary,  cowering  figure.     See  Woolen  Doll,  The. — 

Hows. 
"A  weary  lot  is  thine,  fair  maid."     See  Rokeby  (Rover, 

The).— Scott. 
A  weary  weed,  tossed   to  and  fro.     See  Gulf-weed. — 

Fenner. 
A  weaver  sat  one  day  at  his  loom.     See  Weaver,  The. — 

Anon. 
A  wee  bird  came  to  our  ha'  door.     See  Wae's  rae  for 

Prince  Charlie. — Glen. 
A  wee  little  nut  lay  deep  in  its  nest.     See  Chestnut 

Burr,  The. — Anon. 
A  wee  little  worm  in  a  hickory-nut.     See  Session  with 

Uncle  Sidney,  A  ("It").— Riley. 
A  week  ago,  and  I  am  almost  glad.     See  Happiest  Girl 

in  the  World,  The.— Webster. 
A  week  ago  to-day,  when  red-haired  Sally.     See  Done 

For. — Cooke. 


A  welcome,  friends,  assembled  here.     See  Salutatory. — 

Crosby. 
A  welcome  warm  awaits  thee.     See  To  the  First  Robin. 

— Washburn. 
A  well  there  is  in  the  west  country.     See  Well  of  St. 

Keyne,  The. — Southey. 
A  well-known   citizen  of  Hartford,  Connecticut.     See 

Inquiring  Yankee,  An. — Anon. 
A  werry  funny  feller  is  de  ole  plantation  mule.     See 

Solium  Fac',  A. — Anon. 
A  wet  sheet  and  a  flowing  sea.     See  Wet  Sheet  and  a 

Flowing  Sea,  A. — -Cunningham. 
A  whiff  o'  good  Virginia  tobacco.     See  Cheerful  Song, 

A. — Wrinkle. 
A  while  their  route  they  silent  made.     See  Lord  of  the 

Isles,  The  (Lake  Coriskin). — Scott. 
A  whisper  on  the  heath  I  hear.     See  Spring. — Love- 
man. 
A  whisper  woke  the  air.     See  Calumny. — Osgood. 
A  white  rat  having  been  caught  in  some  stables.     See 

Rats. — Loudon. 
A  white  rose  had  a  sorrow.     See  Betrayal  of  the  Rose, 

The.— Thomas. 
"A  wicked  action  fair  to  do."     See  Boy  and  the  Sky- 
lark, The. — Lamb. 
A  wicked   one   lies    buried   here.     See   Epitaph   on    a 

Candle.     (Punch.) 
A  wicked  thing,  Athenians,  a  wicked  thing  is  a  calum- 
niator.    See    Oration  on  the  Crown,  The  (Demos- 
thenes not  Vanquished  by  Philip). — Demosthenes. 
A  wide  plain,  where  the  broadening  Floss  hurries  on. 

See  Mill  on  the  Floss,  The.— Eliot. 
A  wide,   uncovered   piazza  ran   along  the  front.     See 

Mourning  Veil,  The. — Harbour. 
A  widow  bird  sate  mourning  for  her  love.     See  Widow 

Bird,  The.— Shelley. 
A  widow  sat  in  her  quiet  room.     See  Story  which  the 

Ledger  Told,  The.— Smith. 
A  widow — she  had  only  one!     See  Widow's  Mite,  The. 

— Locker-Lampson. 
A  wild  and  warlike  Zulu  chief.     See  On  Afric's  Golden 

Sands.     (University  Herald.) 
A  wild  canyon  cut  in  the  mountain  side.     See  Touch  of 

Nature,  A. — Bushnell. 
A  wind  blew  up  from  Pernambuco.     See  Ballad  of  the 

"I-aughing  Sally."  The. — Roberts. 
A  wind  came  up  out  of  the  sea.     See  Daybreak. — 

Longfellow. 
A  wind  of  April  softly  stole.     See  Song  of  the  Pine, 

The.— Buckham. 
A  wind  sways  the  pines.     See  Dirge  in  Woods. — Mere- 
dith. 
A  wind  that  dies  on  the  meadows  lush.     See  Dreamer, 

The.— Furlong. 
A  wink  from  Hesper  falling.     See  Is  it  Good-bye? — 

Henley. 
A  winning  wile.     See  Condensed  Novel,  A. — Anon. 
A  wise  man  said,  hundreds  of  years  ago.     See  Mimick- 
ing Others. — Anon. 
A  wolf  he  pricks  with  eyes  of  fire.     See  Supper,  The. — 

Ramal. 
A  woman  got  into   a  suburban  car.     See  Her  First 

Baby. — Anon. 
A  woman  on  whose  face  deep  lines  had  traced  the 

words,    "Old   without  age."     See  Boy  in  a  Dime 

Museum,  A.     (Arkansaw  Traveler.) 
A  woman  panting,  trembling,  out  of  breath.     See  Too 

Late. — Kavanaugh. 
A  woman  stood    by    the    river.      See    Rjver,  The. — 

Anon. 
A  woman  to  the  holy  father  went.     See  Scandal. — 

Johnson. 
A  woman  watched  the  falling  snow.     See  Shadows  on 

the  Snow. — Jones.     , 
A  wonder    stranger    ne'er    was    known.     See    Suffolk 

Miracle,  The. — Anon. 
A  wonderful  man !     A  wonderful  man !     See  Moses  at 

the  Fair. — Coyne. 
A  wonderful  story  I  will  tell.     See  Only  a  Chicken. — 

Hall. 
A  woodman,  fisher,  and  a  swain.     See  Muses'  Elysium, 

The  (Contest,  A). — Drayton. 
A  woodpecker  and  a  dove  had  been  visiting  a  peacock. 

See   Woodpecker   and   the  Dove,  The. — Bellamy 

and  Goodwin. 
A  word,  but  one;  one  little,  kindly  word.     See  Princess, 

The. — Tennyson. 
A  word    of    encouragement    to    the    Sabbath    school 

teacher.     See  Grace  of  Fidelity,  The. — Niccplls. 
A  word  with  you,  dear  children,  all.     See  Taste  it  not. 

— Anon. 
A  working    smith    all    other    trades    excels.     See    St. 

Clement's  Day  Rhyme. — Anon. 


599 


A  worthy 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


A  worthy    New    England    deacon    once    described    a 

brother.     See  Pilgrims,  The. — Whittier. 
A  worthy  pious  clergyman  of  late.     See  Parson  and 

the  Widow,  The. — Anon. 
A  worthy  squire  of  sober  life.     iSee  Woman's  Curiosity. 

— Anon.  • 

A  wrinkled,    crabbed    man    they    picture    thee.     See 

Winter. — Southey. 
A  Yankee  in  a  restaurant.     See  Yankee  and  the  Butter, 

The.— Anon. 
A  Yankee  ship  and  a  Yankee  crew.     See  Constitution's 

I>ast  Fight,  The.— Roche. 
A  Yankee,    walking   the    streets    of    Ixindon,    looked 

through  a  window.     See  Gape-seed. — Bungay. 
A  year  ago,  a  year  ago.     See  Year  Ago,  A. — Strang- 

ford. 
A  year  ago  how  often  did  I  meet.     See  Samuel  Hoar. — 

Sanborn. 
A  young  girl  of  sixteen,  lithe,  fair  and  fresh.     See  Oh, 

Sir! — Ayres. 
A  young  John  Phoenix  tells  how  it  was.     See  How  He 

Whipped  Him. — Anon. 
A  young  man,  about  twenty-five  [or  twenty-one]  years 

old,  was  sitting.     See  He  Had  Faith. — Anon. 
A  young  man  of  eighteen  or  twenty.    See  Clever  Trick, 

A. — Anon. 
A  yovmg  man,  orjather  a  boy,  for  he  was  not  seventeen 

years    of    age.     See    Strong    Temptation,    A. — 

Anon. 
A  young  officer  (in  what  army  no  matter).     See  Noble 

Revenge. — De  Quincey. 
A  young  rose  in  the  summer  time.     See  Gentle  Words. 

— Stuart. 
A  young  wife  stood  at  the  lattice-pane.     See  Sun  and 

Rain. — Anon. 
A  young-eyed  seer,  amid  the  leafy  ways.     See  Keats. — 

Livingston. 
A  youngster  at  school,  more  sedate  than  the  rest.     See 

Pity  for  Poor  Africans. — Cowper. 
A  youth   in   apparel   that   glittered.     See   Content. — 

Crane. 
A  yoiith,  light  hearted  and  content.     See  Two  Locks  of 

Hair,  The.— Pfizer. 
A   youth  went  out  to  serenade.     See  Serenade,  The: 

"A  youth  went  out." — Anon. 
A    youth   who    determined   to   alter  his  station.     See 

How  to  Choose  a  Wife. — Anon. 
.4l  youth,  who  had  to  Sais  in  the  land.     See  Veiled 

Statue  at  Sais,  The. — Martin  Schiller. 
A  youth  with  shining  locks  of  gold.     See  Has  It  Come 

to  This? — Reimer. 
"Abby,     Abby,     they're    a-cominM"     See    Fifer    and 

Drummer  of  Scituate,  The. — Palfrey. 
Abdallah    sat    at    his    morning    meal.     See    Eastern 

Apologue,  An. — Anon. 
Abdel-Hassan    o'er   the    desert    journeyed    with    his 

caravan.     See  Abdel-Hassan. — Anon. 
Abel,  why  don't  you  read  us  something  out  of  the  paper. 

See  Uncomfortable  Predicament,  An. — Anon. 
.\bide  with  me;  fast   falls   the  eventide.     See  Abide 

with  Me.— Lyte. 
"Abide  with  me;  fast  fails  the  eventide."     See  "Abide 

with  Me." — Thayer. 
Abijah  Dunn!     Abijah  Dunn!     See   House   not  Made 

with  Hands,  A. — Marble. 
Abject,  stooping,  old,  and  wan.     See  Beggar  Man,  The. 

— Lamb. 
Aboard  o'  the  good  ship  Margaret  Ann.     See  Sentence 

of  Death  on  the  High  Seas. — Matthison. 
Abou  Ben  Adhem,  may  his  tribe  increase.     See  Abou 

Ben  Adhem. — Hunt. 
About  At  mile  outside  the  city  gate.     See  Execution  of 

Ugo  Ba.ssi. — King. 
About   Glenkindie   and   his   man.     See  Glenkindie. — 

Scott. 
About  half-past  eleven  o'clock  on  Sunday  night.     See 

Bewitched  Clock,  The. — Anon. 
About   her  head  or  floating  feet.     See  My   Father's 

Child.— Bloede. 
About  midnight  some  on  the  roof  cried  out.     See  Ben- 

Hur. — Wallace. 
About  my  darling's  lovely  eyes.     See  Difficulty,  The. — 

Heine. 
About  the  big  post-office  door.     See  "Limpy  Tim." — 

Harley. 
About  the  room  the  Christmas  greens.     See  God  Bless 

Our  School. — Anon. 
About  the  sweet  bag  of  a  bee.     See  Bag  of  the  Bee, 

The.— Herrick. 
About  the  time  of  Christmas.     See  Jane  Conquest. — 

Anon.  ' 

About  the  year  1800,  Centre  Street  in  the  City  of  New 

York.     See  No.  5  Collect  Street. — Pardessus. 


About  three  months  ago  I  made  up  my  mind.     See  My 

Boarding  Houses. — Thatcher. 
About  to  enter,  fellow  citizens,  upon  the  exercise  of 

duties.     See   Inauguration  Address,  March  4,  1801 

(Inaugural  Address). — Jefferson. 
About  two  thousand  years  before  the  Christian  era. 

See  Seeking  a  Country. — Carrington. 
About  Yule,  when  the  wind  blew  cool.     See  Young 

Waters. — Anon. 
Above    all    things,    raillery    decline.     See    Raillery. — 

Stillingfleet. 
Above  me  sail  the  shadow  ships.     See  Shadow  Ships. — 

Hall. 
Above  the  city  of  Berlin  shines  soft  the  summer  day. 

See  King's  Ride,  The. — Hooper. 
Above   the   frozen    floods   gay    feet   keep    time.     See 

Skaters,  The. — Leach. 
Above  the  pines  the  moon  was  slowly  drifting.     See 

Dickens  in  Camp. — Harte. 
Above  the  seas  of  gold  and  glass.     See  Eucharist  of 

Affliction. — Howe. 
Above    them    spread    a    stranger    sky.     See    Indian's 

Welcome  to  the  Pilgrim  Fathers,  The. — Sigourney. 
Above  us  the  cold,  silent  stars.     See  Cry  for  Life,  A. — 

Harding. 
Above  yon  sombre  swell  of  land.     See  Plough,  The. — 

Home. 
Abraham  Lincoln  stands  in  no  need  of  a  vindicator  or 

a  eulogist.     See  In  Memory  of  Lincoln. — Baldwin. 
Abram  and  Zimri  owned  a  field  together.     See  Abram 

and  Zimri. — Cook. 
Absence,    hear   thou    my    protestation.     See   same. — 

Donne. 
Absent  from  thee,  I  languish  still.     See  Song:  "Absent 

from  thee,"  etc. — Rochester. 
Absent  or  present,  still  to  thee.     See  To  Samuel  Rogers, 

Esq. — Byron. 
Abstain  from  all  appearance  of  evil.     See  Temperance 

Alphabet.  A. — Lloyd. 
Abstracted,    contemplative    air.     See    Robin,    The. — 

Harkee. 
Accept  my  love,  as  true  a  heart.     See  same. — Prior. 
Accept,  thou  shrine  of  my  dead  saint.     See  Exequy  on 

his  Wife. — King. 
Accordin'  to  app'intment,  the  women  folks  all  met  at 

the  Piney  Grove  meetin'  house.     See  Piecing  the 

Preacher's  Quilt. — Plowman. 
"According  to  the  most  authentic  records,   my  dear 

children,"  said    grandfather.     See  Grandfather's 

Chair  (Pine  Tree  Shillings,  The). — Hawthorne. 
Ach!  that  I  cannot  speak  your  tongue  so  good.     See 

My  Boy  Fritz. — Murray. 
Across  a  chasm  of  eighteen  hundred  years.     See  same. 

— Napoleon. 
Across  in  my  neighbor's  window.      See  Baby  over  the 

Way,  The.— Gladden. 
Across  the  blue  sky  together.     See  Disappointment. — 

Kellogg. 
Across  the  brown  and  wintry  morn.     See  "Shot  through 

the  Heart." — Porter. 
Across  the  eastern  sky  has  glowed.     See  Crowing  of  the 

Red  Cock,  The. — Lazarus. 
Across    the    English    meadows    sweet.     See    Elia.— 

McPhelini. 
Across  the  fields  like  swallows  fly.     See  Across  the 

Fields. — Crane. 
Across  the  gardens  of  life  they  go.     See  Love  and 

Time. — Lloyd. 
Across  the  German  Ocean.     See  Little  Gottlieb. — Cary. 
Across  the  gloom  the  gray  moth  speeds.     See  Mignon. 

— Peck. 
Across  the  grass  I  see  her  pass.     See  Milkmaid,  The. — 

Dobson. 
Across  the  heath  and  down  the  hill.     See  Miller  and 

the  Maid,  The. — Scott. 
Across  the  hills  the  screeching  blue  jays  fly.     See  In 

the  San  Joaquin. — Hutchinson, 
Across   the    level    table-land.     See   Mabel    Martin. — 

Whittier. 
Across  the  lonely  [narrow — C]  beach  we  flit.    See  Sand- 
piper, The. — Thaxter. 
Across  the  moorlands  of  the  Not.     See  Moorlands  of 

the  Not. — Anon. 
Across    the    mountains    the    mist    hath    drawn.     See 

Soldier's  Tent,  The. — Vacaresco. 
Across  the  narrow  [wrong  lonely]  beach  we  flit.     See 

Sandpiper.  The. — Thaxter. 
Across  the  noisy  street.     See  Ballad  of  the  Thrush,  The. 

— Dobson. 
Across  the  pathway,  myrtle-fringed.     See  Story  of  the 

Gate. — Robertson. 
Across  the  peach-blow  sky  of  spring.     See  Our  Flag  at 

Apia. — King. 


600 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Against 


Across  the  pearly  distance.     See  Autumn  Haze. — Mun- 

kittrick. 
Across  the  pleasant  valley  our  royal  ranks  their  lines 

displayed.     See  Hero  of  the  Rank  and  File,  The. — ■ 

Scanlan. 
Across  the  rapid  stream  of  seventy  years.     See  Bridge 

of  Life,  The.^Anon. 
Across  the  roaring  board  in  Helgafell.     See  Death  of 

Arnkel.  The. — Gosse. 
Across  the  sea  a  land  there  is.     See  Earthly  Paradise, 

The  (Land  across  the  Sea,  A). — Morris. 
Across  the  sombre  prairie  sea.     See  Prairie. — Bates. 
Across  the  sunlit  Scottish  hills.     .See  Child  Martyr,  The. 

— Anderson. 
Across  the  swi filing  waves  they  went.     .See  Cruise  of 

the  "P.  C."  The.— Anon. 
Across     the     winter's     gloom.      »See     Easter.  —  Sher- 
man. 
Across  this  sea  I  sail  and  do  not  know.     <See  In  Mid- 
ocean. — Moulton. 
Ad  astra,  de  profundis.     See  'Tis  Ever  Thus. — Mun- 

kittrick. 
Adam  never  knew  what  'twas  to  be  a  boy.     See  What 

Adam  Missed. — Anon. 
Adam  the  goodliest  man  of  men  since  born.     See  Para- 
dise Lost  (Scene  in  Paradise,  A). — Milton. 
Adams  and  Jefferson,  I  have  said,  are  no  more.     See 

Adams  and  Jefferson. — Webster. 
Add  bright  buds  and  sun  and  flowers.     See  Out-of-door 

Arithmetic. — Anon. 
Adieu!     Adieu!     See  Tribute  to   an   Old   Shoe,   A. — 

Anon. 
Adieu,  adieu!  my  native  shore.     See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage  (Childe  Harold's  Farewell  to  England). 

— Byron. 
Adieu,  dear,  amiable  youth!     See  Epistle  to  a  Young 

Friend. — -Burns. 
Adieu,  fair  isle!     I  love  thy  bowers.     See  Farewell  to 

Cuba. — Brooks. 
Adieu,  farewell ,  earth's  bliss !   See  In  Time  of  Pestilence. 

— Nashe. 
Adieu,  kind  Life,  though  thou  hast  often  been.     See 

Departure. — Smith. 
Adieu  to  Belashanny,  where  I  was  bred  and  born.     See 

Winding  Banks  of  Erne,  The. — AUingham. 
Adieu  to  France,  my  latest  glance.     See  DeRoberval 

(Adieu  to  France). — Hunter-Duvar. 
Adieu!  To  God!  See  Adieu. — Gilmore. 
Adieu  to  these!     Niagara,  thy  roar.     See  Wanderer, 

The.— Stewart. 
Admiral,  Admiral,  sailing  home.     See  Homing,  The. — 

Rooney. 
Admire   not,  shepherd's  boy.      See    Fair  Virtue,  the 

Mistress    of    Philarete     ("Admire    not,"     etc.). — • 

Wither. 
Admiring  nature  in  her  wildest  grace.     See  Beauties  of 

Nature,  The.- — Burns. 
Adolfo  Rodriguez  was  the  only  son  of  a  Cuban  farmer. 

See  Death  of  Rodriguez.  The. — Davis. 
Adown  beside  an  old  stone  wall.     See  Four  Pictures. — - 

Durfee. 
Adown  the  crags  o'  high  Montrine.     See  To  AUie. — 

Brown. 
Adown  the  darkened  hall  at  twelve  she  crept.     See 

Prophetic  Mirror,  A. — Smith. 
Adown  the  leafy  lane  we  two.     See  Memory,  A. — -Mac- 

Aleese. 
Advance   our  waving  colours  on  the  walls.     See  King 

Henry  VI.,   Pt.    I.    (Relief  of   Orleans).  — Shake- 
speare. , 
Advance,  then,  ye  future  generations!     We  would  hail 

you.     See  First  Settlement  of  New  England  (Pero- 
ration of  Webster's  Plymouth  Rock  Oration). — 

Webster. 
Ae  fond  kiss  and  then  we  sever!     See  Ae  Fond  Kiss. — 

Burns. 
Afar  in  the  desert  I  love  to  ride.     See  Afar  in  the 

Desert. — Pringle. 
Afar  off  confused  sounds  salute  the  quiet  air.     See 

Norwegian   Wedding  March  of  Crieg,   in  Verse, 

The. — Johnson. 
Afar  the  hunt  in  vales  below  has  sped.      See  Orion 

(Meeting  of  Orion  and  ArtemisX — Home. 
Afar,  where  the  rugged  Northland.     See  First  Christ- 
mas Tree,  The. — Goodwin. 
Affection's    charm    no    longer   gilds.     See    Personified 

Sentimental,  The. — Harte. 
Afore  Sue  went  ter  town  ter  school.     See  New-fashioned 

Singin'. — Smith. 
"Afraid    in    the    dark?     Not    I,"    said    the    owl.     See 

Who's  Afraid  in  the  Dark. — Anon. 
Afraid?     Of  whom  am  I  afraid?     See  Needless  Fear. — 

Dickinson. 


After  a  three  days'  march  he  came  to  an  Indian  encamp- 
ment. See  Courtship  of  Miles  Standish  (Miles 
Standish's  Encounter  with  the  Indians). — Long- 
fellow. 

After  a  while — a  busy  brain.  See  Human  Life. — 
Winton. 

After  all.  one  country,  brethren !  See  One  Country. — 
Stanton. 

After  all  our  doubts,  our  suspicions  and  speculations. 
See  Speech  on  the  Compromises  of  the  Constitu- 
tion (American  Constitution,  The). — Hamilton. 

After  an  interval,  reading,  here  in  the  midnight.  See 
After  an  Interval. — Whitman. 

After  awhile  is  a  beautiful  day.  See  After  Awhile. — 
Anon. 

After  dark  vapours  have  oppressed  our  plains.  See 
Sonnet:  "After  dark  vapours,"  etc. — Keats. 

After  dear  old  grandma  died.  See  Little  Homer's 
Slate.— Field. 

After  dinner  the  Widder  Doodle  went  upstairs  and 
laid  down  for  a  nap.  See  Josiah  Allen's  Wife  as 
a  P.  A.  and  P.  I.  (Study  in  Dialect,  A).— Holley. 

After  her  bath,  yet  early  in  the  day.  See  Jeptha's 
Daughter. — -Ramsay. 

After  I  had  solaced  my  mind  with  the  comfortable 
part  of  my  condition.  See  Robinson  Crusoe  (Get- 
ting Supplies  from  the  Wreck). — Defoe. 

After  long  winter  days,  'twill  bring.  See  Charade  for 
Little  Folks. ^Cleveland. 

After  many  strains  and  heaves.  See  Hudibras. — But- 
ler. 

After  many  years  of  domestic  trouble.  See  Exiles  in 
Egypt,  The. — Carrington. 

After  my  death  I  wish  no  other  herald.  See  King 
Henry  VIII. — Shakespeare. 

After  sorrow's  night.     See  same. — Gilder. 

After  supper  the  little  ones  said  their  prayers  to  their 
mother.    See  Emigrant's  Story,  The. — Trowbridge. 

After  the  darkness,  light!     See  same. — Anon. 

After  the  expulsion  from  Paradise  of  Adam  and  Eve. 
See  Paradise  Regained,  The  Story  of. — Rabb. 

After  the  eyes  that  looked,  the  lips  that  spake.  See 
Dedicatory  Ode  for  the  Gettysburg  National 
Cemetery. — Taylor. 

After  the  fall  of  Troy  Agamemnon  returned  to  Argos. 
See  Odyssey,  Story  of  the. — Rabb. 

After  the  hard  and  hurried  march.  See  Once  at  Battle 
Eve. — Krout. 

After  the  last  heavy  snowstorm.  See  Tale  of  the  Big 
Snow,  A. — Bizarre. 

After  the  rain  goes  by.     See  Rainbow,  The. — Sherman. 

After  the  tempest  in  the  sky.  See  Rainbow,  The. — 
Lamb. 

Again  has  come  the  springtime.  See  November  and 
April  (April). — Longfellow. 

Again  I  hear  that  creaking  step.  See  My  Familiar. — 
Saxe. 

Again  I  sit  within  the  mansion.  See  Phantom,  The. — 
Taylor. 

Again  rejoicing  nature  sees.     See  sam,e. — -Burns. 

Again  returned  the  scenes  of  youth.  See  Marmion 
(Dreams). — Scott. 

Again  the  Lord  of  life  and  light.  See  Christ  Risen. — 
Barbauld. 

Again  the  violet  of  our  early  days.  See  Spring. — 
Elliott. 

Again  they  muster  from  the  far-off  hillside.  See  After 
Vacation. — Anon. 

Again  thy  birthday  dawns,  O  man  beloved.  See 
Lincoln's  Birthday. — Woodbury. 

Again  to  the  battle,  Achaians !  See  Song  of  the  (jreeks. 
— Campbell. 

Again  wake  the  song  to  the  nation's  defenders.  See 
Nation's  Defenders,  The. — Butterworth. 

Again  we  come  this  day  to  greet.  See  Arbor  Day. — 
Short. 

Again  we  lift  the  veil  amid  our  tears.  See  Patriotic 
Sentiments. — Greenleaf. 

Again  you  stand  at  the  parting  of  the  ways.  See  New 
Year;  or.  Which  Way,  The.— Abbott 

Against  all  chambermaids,  of  whatsoever  age  or 
nationality,  I  launch  the  curse  of  bachelordom! 
See  Mark  Twain's  Opinion  of  Chambermaids. — 
Clemens. 

Against  her  mouth  she  pressed  the  rose.  See  Her 
Roses. — Innsly. 

Against  the  boundless  night.  See  To  a  Firefly. — 
Bryant. 

Against  the  insidious  wiles  of  foreign  influence.     See 

Against  Foreign  Entanglements.— Washington. 
Against  the  prisoner  at  the  bar,  as  an  individual.     See 
Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The  (Crime  its 
Own  Detector). — Webster. 


601 


Against 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Against  the  sunset  glow  they  stand.      »See  Millet  and 

Zola. — Crewe 
Agatha!     Agatha!     Here    in    the    desolate    shadows. 

See  Agatha. — Kernan. 
Agenor,  hail!     iSVe  Ityi  (Ion,  a  Tragedy). — Talfourd. 
Ages  ago,  when  the  world  was  grand.     See  Fate  of  Sin 

Foo,  The.— Peck. 
Ages  long  since,  upon  the  desert  waste.     iSee  Chalced- 
ony.— Greenough. 
Ages  will  come  and  go ;  nations  will,  rise  and  fall.     See 

Illustration,  An. — Krohn. 
Aggie,  have  you  learned  your  piece?     See  Anniversary 

Meeting,  The. 
Agnes,  thou  child  of  harmony,  now  fled.     <See  Whither. 

• — Goetz. 
Ah!  Ah!  Eet  ees  ze  same,  all  ze  time. — See  "Ze  Day- 
light Veel  Coam." — Anon. 
Ah,  Albert,  so  you  are  awake  at  last.     See  Traveler, 

The. — Anon. 
Ah,  Almon  Keefer!  what  a  boy  you  were.     See  Almon 

Keefer. — Riley. 
Ah,   be  not  false,  sweet  Splendor!     <See  Ah,  be  not 

False. — Gilder. 
Ah,  be  not  vain,  in  yon  flower  bell.     See  Dewdrop, 

The.— Skipsey. 
Ah,  Ben,  say  how  or  when.     See  Ode  for  Ben  Jonson, 

An. — Herrick 
Ah,    blessedness    of   work!     The   aimless   mind.     See 

Work.— Block. 
Ah,  bring  it  not  so  grudgingly.     See  Ah,  Bring  it  Not. 

— Radford. 
Ah,  broken  is  the  golden  bowl,  the  spirit  flown  forever! 

See  Lenore. — Poe. 
Ah,  Chloris,  could  I  now  but  for  that  I  now  could]  sit. 

See  To  a  Very  Young  Lady. — Sedley. 
Ah,  Clemence!  when  I  saw  thee  last.     See  La  Grisette. 

—Holmes. 
Ah,   Colin  I     Canst   thou  leave  thy  sweetheart   true? 

See  Shepherd's  Week,  The  (Tuesday).— Gay. 
Ah,  could    you  see  me  weep    in  anguish  sore?     See 

Appeal,  An. — Henniker. 
Ah,  County  Guy,  the  hour  is  nigh.     See  County  Guy. — 

Scott. 
Ah,  dear  God,  when  will  it  be  day?     See  From  Exile. — 

Anon. 
Ah,  dear!     How  my  heart  palpitates.     See  Advertising 

for  a  Husband. — McBride. 
Ah,  did  you  once  see  Shelley  plain?     See  Memorabilia. 

— Browning. 
Ah,   dinna  chide  the  mither!     See  Dinna  Chide  the 

Mither. — Sangster. 
Ah,  distinctly  I  remember,  it  was  in  the  bleak  Decem- 
ber.    See  Raven,  The. — Poe. 
Ah,   don't  be  sorrowful,   darling.     See  Old   Folks. — 

Anon. 
Ah,  fading  joy,  how  quickly  art  thou  past!     See  Song: 

"Ah,  fading  joy." — Dryden. 
Ah,  Faustus,  now  hast  thou  but  one  bare  hour  to  live ! 

See  Faustus'  Last  Speech  on  Earth. — Marlowe. 
Ah,  fine!     It  was  that  April  time  when  gentle  winds 

were  blowing.     See  Kathie  Morris. — Anon. 
Ah,  for  this  weary  life!     See  "Love,  without  Thee." — 

Aide 
Ah,  gentle  shepherd,  thine  the  lot  to  tend.     See  Fleece. 

The.— Dyer. 
Ah,   God,   for  a  man   with   heart,   head,   hand.     See 

Maud  (Prayer,  The). — Tennyson. 
Ah,   good   evening  to   you.     So   you've  brought  the 

proof  then,  eh?     See  Not  in  the  Programme. — 

CoUer. 
Ah,    happy    hills!     Ah,    pleasing    shade!     See    On    a 

Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College. — Gray. 
Ah !  he  is  a  cute  one,  he  is.     See    Stage  Land  (Stage 

Detective  and  Peasants,  The). — Jerome. 
Ah,   he  is  dead!     A  strange,   sad  story  clings.     See 

Dauntless. — Weir. 
"Ah,  here  it  is!     I'm  famous  now."     See  First  Appear- 
ance in  Type.- — Anon. 
Ah,  here  we  are!     Don't  leave  us  out.     See  Give  the 

Youngsters  a  Chance. — Anon. 
Ah,  here  we  are!     What  good  seats!     See  Ann  Jane's 

Mother  at  a  Classical  Concert. — Anon. 
Ah,  here's  the  little  round  thing  my  papa  talks  into. 

See  Telephone  Message,  A. — Anon. 
Ah,  how  sweet  it  is  to  love.     See  same. — Dryden. 
Ah,    how    the    colder    pulse    still    starts.     See    Life's 

Mysteries. — Cary. 
Ah,  I  remember  Stillwater  as  it  were  yesterday.     See 

Arnold  at  Stillwater. — English. 
Ah!  I  remember  well  (and  how  can  I?).   See  Hymen's 

"Triumph  (Early  Love). — Daniel. 
Ah!  if  it  should  be  Bill  come  from  his  voyage.     See 

Bill  Jepson's  wife. — Meyers. 


"Ah,    if   we   only   knew,"    he   said.     See   George   Du 

Maurier. — Ketchum. 
Ah!  I'm  feared  thou's  come  too  sooin.     See  To  a  Daisy. 

— Hartley. 
Ah,  it  is  very  hard  to  live  in  this  way.     See  Test,  The. — 

McBride. 
Ah,  Jack  it  was,  and  with  him  little  Jill.     See  Jack  and 

Jill. — Morgridge. 
Ah,  Juliet,  if  the  measure  of  thy  joy.     See  Romeo  and 

Juliet. — Shakespeare 
Ah,  June  is  here,  but  where  is  May?     See  Unfulfillment. 

— Bushnell. 
"Ah,  know  you  not,"  said  Martha's  beau.     See  Mattie's 

Retort. — Anon. 
Ah,  lassie  fair!  thine  eyes  of  blue.     See  Ah.  Lassie  Fair! 

— Tenney. 
Ah!  leave  the  smoke,  the  wealth,  the  roar.     See  To 

Theocritus,  in  Winter. — Lang. 
Ah,  leave  to  other  maidens.     See  To  the  Silent  One. — 

Geibel. 
Ah,  liberty!  how  like  thou  art.     See  Empty  Bottle, 

The. — Aytoun. 
Ah!  list  the  music  of  the  whistling  wings.     See  Sport. 

— Anderson. 
Ah,  listen  to  this,  brothers.     See  In  Nonsense  Land. — 

Denton. 
Ah !  little  flower,  upspringing,  azure-eyed.  See  Fruition- 
less. — Coolbrith. 
Ah,  little  ranting  Johnny.     See  To  J.  H.— Hunt. 
Ah!  little  they  know  of  true  happiness,  they  whom 

satiety  fills.     See  Labor  Song. — MacCarthy. 
Ah!  long  ago  since  I  or  thou.     See  Before  and  After. 

— Brown. 
Ah!  love,  impute  it  not  to  me  a  sin.     See  To  One  Ex- 
cusing his  Poverty. — Blunt. 
Ah,  love !  let  us  be  true.     See.  Dover  Beach. — Arnold. 
Ah,  love,  the  teacher  we  decried.     See  Pure  Hypothesis 

A. — Kendall. 
Ah  love!  thy  love  is  like  the  flowers.     See  Thorn,  A. — 

Anon. 
Ah,  love,  thy  sweet,  strange  grace.     See  There  is  a 

Time.— J.  C.  B. 
Ah,    lovely    appearance    of     death!       See    Death.  — 

Wesley. 
Ah,  me!  for  aught  that  ever  I  could  read.     See  Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream  ("Ah  me!  for  aught,"  etc.). 

Shakespeare. 
Ah  me!  full  sorely  is  my  heart  forlorn.     See  School- 
mistress, The. — Shenstone. 
Ah,  me !  how  dark  the  discipline  of  pain.     See  President 

Garfield. — Longfellow. 
Ah,  me '  how  fair  I  thought  her.     See  When  I  was  Ten 

and  She  was  Fifteen. — Anon. 
Ah,  me!  I  know  how  like  a  golden  flower.     See  Grande 

Ilonde  Valley,  The. — Higginson. 
Ah,  me!  It's  no  use  wishing — none  at  all.     See  Mr. 

Caudle's  Wedding  Dinner. — .lerrold. 
Ah  me!  this  is  a  sad  and  silent  city.     See  Hymn  of  the 

Churchyard. — Bethune. 
Ah  me!  those  old  familiar  bounds!     See  Ode  On  a  Dis- 
tant Prospect  of  Clapham  Academy. — Hood. 
Ah,  moment  not  to  be  purchased.     See  Sunshine  of  the 

Gods,  The.— Taylor. 
Ah,  mon  cher  Lord  Dundr^rie.      See   Lord  Dundreary 

and  the  French  Widow. — Anon. 
Ah !  my  heart  is  weary  waiting.     See  Summer  Longings. 

— MacCarthy. 
Ah!  my  Lord,  leave  me  not.     See  Leave  me  Not. — 

Wedderburn. 
Ah,  my  Perilla!  dost  thou  grieve  to  see.     See  To  Per- 

illa. — Herrick. 
Ah!  my  swete  swetyng  [or  my  sweet  sweeting].     See 

My  Swete  Swetyng. — Anon. 
Ah,  never  doubt  that  my  love  is  true.     See  Unspoken. 

— Adcock. 
Ah  night!  blind  germ  of  days  to  be.     See  Ballad  of 

Pligh  Endeavor,  A. — Anon. 
Ah!  not  because  our  soldier  died  before  his  field  was 

won.     See  Raglan. — Arnold. 
Ah,  only  love  I  have  ever  known.     See  Passing  Song,  A. 

— Carry  1. 
Ah,  painful-sweet!  how  can  I  take  it  in!     See  We  Two. 

• — Preston. 
Ah,  Patrick,  how  are  you,  my  friend  and  fellow  citizen? 

See  Irish  Voter,  The.— Kent. 
Ah!  poor  intoxicated  little  knave.     See  To  a  Fly  Taken 

Out  of  a  Bowl  of  Punch. — Pindar. 
Ah !  sad  are  they  who  know  not  love.    See  Two  songs 

from  the  Persian,  II. — Aldrich. 
Ah!  say  you  so,  bold  sailor.     See  Herald  Crane,  The. — 

Garland. 
Ah,  see  the     fair  chivalry  come,  the  companions  of 

Christ !     See  Te  Martyrum  Candidatus. — Johnson . 


602 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Alas 


"Ah!"  sighed  the  imprisoned  bird,  "how  unhappywere 

I  in  my  eternal  night."  See  Complaint  of  the  Bird 

in  a  Dark  Room. — Richter. 
Ah!  Sir  Harcourt,  had  you  been  here  a  month  ago.     See 

London  Assurance   (Scene  from  "London  Assur- 
ance").— Bouoicault. 
Ah,  Sir  Lancelot,  there  thou  liest.     See  Sir  Lancelot. — 

Mallory. 
Ah,  Sunflower,  weary  of  time.     See  Ah,  Sunflower. — 

Blake. 
Ah!  sure,  thin,  love  is  bloind;  fur  whin  Oi  courted  me 

Mary  Ann.     See  Automatic  Woman.  The. — Milne. 
Ah,  sweet  content!  where  is  thy  mild  abode?    See  Son- 
net.— Barnes. 
"Ah,  sweet  Kitty  Neil,  rise  up  from  that  [or  your] 

wheel."     See  Kitty  Neil.— Waller. 
Ah,  sweet!  thou  little  knowest   how.      See  Serenade: 

"Ah,  sweet!  "  etc. — Hood. 
Ah,  the  buxum  girls  that  helped  the  boys.     See  Money 

Musk. — Taylor. 
Ah,  the  moon  is  watching  me!     See  Rising,  Watching 

Moon,  The. — Anon. 
Ah!  the  morning  is  gray.  See  Chimney-tops.— Douglas. 
Ah,  the  post !     By  the  way,  Tom,  I  should  like  to  favor 

you  with  a  few  ideas.     See  Poisoned. — Amcott. 
Ah,  the  quaint  and  curious  carving.     See  When  my 

Mother  Tucked  me  in. — Garland. 
Ah,  the  world  hath  many  a  Horner.     See  Jack  Horner. 

— Whitney. 
Ah,  then  how  sweetly  closed  those  crowded  days !     See 

Boyhood. — Allston. 
Ah,  there   be   souls    none    understand.     See   Ship  in 

the  Desert,   The  ("Ah,  there  be  souls,"    etc.). — 

Miller. 
"Ah!  thou,  too,  sad  Alighieri."     See  Balder  (Dante, 

Shakespeare,  Milton). — Dobell. 
Ah,  to   be   in   England.     See   Home   Thoughts,   from 

Abroad. — Browning. 
Ah,  'twas  long,  long  years  ago,  my  boy.     See  Long 

Ago,  The. — McCutchen. 
Ah,  was   it   nobly   done  of  him.     See   Deserted. — De 

Fonblanque. 
Ah,  well,  another  day's  labor  in  this  dingy  old  school- 
room is  ended.     See  "Boarding  'Round." — Case. 
Ah,  well  do  I  remember  how,  in  the  happy  olden  days. 

See  Mammy's  Story. — -Weiss. 
Ah,  well,  mother,  I  don't  suppose  I  can  ever  quite  re- 
place my  good,  faithful  Maggie.     See  How  Mrs. 

Gaskell  Did  not  Hire  a  Cook. — Anon. 
Ah!  were  she  pitiful  as  she  is  fair.     See  Fawnia. — 

Greene. 
Ah!  what  a  weary  race  my  feet  have  run.     See  To  the 

River  Loddon. — Warton. 
Ah!  what  a  wondrous  age  is  this.     See  Phrenology. — 

Demorest. 
Ah.  what  avails  the  sceptred  race.     See  Rose  Aylmer. 

— Landor. 
Ah!  what  can  ail  thee,  wretched  wight.     See  La  Belle 

Dame  sans  Merci. — Keats. 
Ah,  what  can  ever  be  more  stately  and  admirable  to 

me  than  mast-hemmed  Manhattan?     See  Crossing 

Brooklyn  Ferry. — Whitman. 
Ah!  what  if  the  mind.     See  Day-dreams. — Allen. 
Ah!  what    inventive    skill    has    man    displayed.     See 

War's  End.— Bel!. 
Ah,  what    is    love?       It    is    a    pretty     thing.       See 

Mourning  Garment,  The  (Shepherd's  Wife's  Song, 

The). — -Greene. 
Ah!  what  pleasant  visions  haunt  me.    See  Secret  of  the 

Sea,  The. — Longfellow. 
Ah !  what  would  this  world  be  to  us.     See  Children,  The. 

— Longfellow. 
Ah!  when  shall  all  men's  good.     See  Golden  Year,  The. 

— Tennyson. 
Ah!  when  the  infinite  burden  of  life  descendeth  upon  us. 

5ee  Children  of  the  Lord's  Supper. — Longfellow. 
Ah!  when  will  all  be  ended?     See   Life   and   Death  of 

Jason   ("Ah!  when,"   etc.). — Morris. 
Ah!    whence    yon  glare.     See  Queen    Mab   (War). — 

Shelley. 
Ah!  who  can  tell  how  hard  it  is  to  climb.     See  Minstrel, 

The  (Fame). — Beattie. 
Ah,    with    the    grape    my    fading   life    provide.     See 

Rubftiyfit  of   Omar  Khayyiim    (Omar  KhayyAm, 

Sel.  fr.). — Fitzgerald. 
Ah,   yes!  I  do  remember,   'twas    just    ten    years   last 

June.     See  New  Year's  Story,  A. — Challen. 
Ah,  yes — poor  Jack;  I  mind  him  once.     See  Poor  Jack. 

— Cowan. 
Ah,  yes,  the  fight!  Well,  messmates,  well.     See  Sea- 
fight,  The. — Anon. 
Ah  Yet  was  only  a  poor  little  heathen.     See  Ah  Yet's 

Christmas. — Davis. 


Ah!  you  are  fair,  I  must  confess.     See  Dresden  Shep- 
herdess, A. — Houghton. 
Ah,  you  mistake  me,  comrades,  to  think  that  my  heart 

is  steel!     See  Arnold  at  Stillwater. — English. 
Aha!  a  traitor  in  the  camp.     See  To  a  Usurper. — Field. 
Aha,   this  is  my  birthday !     See  Sword,  The. — Berquin. 
Ahasuerus  reigned.    Kinglier  king.    SeeVashti. — Dorr. 
Aho!    Aho!     Love's     horn     doth    blow.     See  Bride's 

Tragedy,  The  (Love  Goes  a-Hawking). — Beddoes. 
"Ahoy;  and  0-ho;  and  it's  who's  for  the  ferry?"     See 

Twickenham  Ferry. — Marzials. 
Aided  by  a  thousand  men  from  Plataea.     See  Athens: 

Its  Rise  and  Fall  (^larathon). — Bulwer-Lytton. 
Aim  at  perfection  in  everything.     See  Aim  at  Perfec- 
tion.— Chesterfield. 
Aim  at  the  attainment  of  clear  and  accurate  habits  of 

thought.     See  Desirable  Objects  of  Attainment.— 

Stoughton. 
"Aim  not  too  high  at  things  beyond  thy  reach."     See 

Fortune  My  Foe. — Graves. 
Ain't  you  'shamed,  you  naughty  dolly?     See  Washing 

Dolly's  Clothes. — Anon. 
Airly    Beacon,    Airly    Beacon.     See   Airly    Beacon. — - 

Kingsley. 
Airy,  fairy  Lilian.     See  Lilian. — -Tennyson. 
Alabama. — February  22  is  Arbor  Day  in  this  State. 

See    How    ,Arbor    Day    is    Observed    in    Various 

States. — Anon. 
Alack!  alas!  alack!  ah  me.     See  Woful  Tale  of  Jotham 

Brown,  The. — Dowe. 
Alack!  I  am  afraid  they  have  awak'd.     See  Macbeth. 

— Shakespeare. 
Alack!  why    am    I    sent    for    to    a    king.      See  King 

Richard  II. — Shakespeare. 
Alack-a-day !  what  a  world  of  troubles  and  trials.     See 

Glad  Surprise,  A. — Joy. 
Aladdin  was  the  son  of  a  poor  tailor.     See  Aladdin,  or 

the  Wonderful  Lamp. — Anon. 
"Alas,  alas,  how  the  north  wind  grieves!"     See  Bare 

Boughs  and  Buds.- — Thaxter. 
Alas!  alas!  my  reign  is  o'er.     See  Old  Year  Out  and 

New  Year  In,  "The. — Kavanaugh. 
Alas  for  the  oak  of  our  fathers,  that  stood.     See  Oak 

of  Our  Fathers,  The. — Southey. 
Alas!    for   them,    their   day   is   o'er.     See  Centennial 

Ode  (Indians). — Sprague. 
Alas,  Fra  Giacomo.     See  Fra  Giacomo. — Buchanan. 
Alas !  how  bitter  are  the  wrongs  of  love !     See  same. — 

Anon. 
Alas!  how  easily  things  go  wrong.     See  Sweet  Peril. — 

Macdonald. 
Alas!  how  few  of  nature's  faces  are  left  to  gladden  us. 

See  same. — Dickens. 
Alas!  how    hardly   things    go    right!     See    Right    and 

Wrong.— Anon. 
Alas!  how  light  a  cause  may  move.     See  Lalla  Rookh 

(Light  of  the  Harem). — -Moore. 
Alas,  how  soon  the  hours  are  over.     See  Plays.— Landor. 
Alas!   I   am   the  unhappiest  of  men!     See   Ugliest   of 

Seven,  The. — Townsend. 
Alas,  in  how  many  places  is  the  forest.     See  Spare  the 

Trees. — Michelet. 
Alas!  little  Kitty — do  give  her  your  pity!     See  Kitty. 

— Douglas. 
Alas!  my  child,  where  is  the  pen.     See  Hen,  The. — 

Herford. 
Alas  (my  lord),  my  haste  was  all  too  hot.     See  Steel 

Glass,  The  (Epilogus). — Gascoigne. 
"Alas!  no  one  loves  me,"  a  little  maid  sighed.     See  If 

You  Want  to  be  Loved. — Denton. 
Alas!  so  all  things  now  do  hold  their  peace!     See  Com- 
plaint by  Night  of  the  Lover  not  Beloved,  A. — 

Surrey. 
Alas!  that  men   must  see.     See  Love  and   Death. — 

Deland. 
Alas,   that  [the — C]   moon   should  <  ver   beam.      See 

Water  Lady,  The.— Hood. 
Alas,  that  my  heart  is  a  lute.     See  My  Heart  is  a  Lute. 

— Lindsay. 
Alas!  the  breast   that  inward    bleeds.      See   Giaour, 

The.— Byron. 
Alas,  the   [wr.  that]   moon  should  ever  beam.      See 

Water  Lady,  The.— Hood. 
Alas  the  songs! — the  songs  of  Love  and  Youth.     See 

Alas  the  Songs. — De  Lys. 
Alas!  the  weary  hours  pass  slow.     See  Countersign. 

The. — Anon. 
Alas!  they  had  been  friends  in  youth.     See  Christabel 

(Quarrel  of  Friends,  The). — Coleridge. 
Alas,  'tis  true  I  have  gone  here  and  there.     »5ee  Son- 
nets (ex.). — -Shakespeare. 
Alas,  unhappy  land;  ill-fated  spot.     See  Dirge  of  the 

Moolla  of  Kotal. — Lanigan. 


603 


Alas 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOXS 


Alas!  what  boots  the  long,  laborious  quest?     See  Son- 
net: "What  boots,"  etc. — Wordsworth. 
Alas!    what    errors    are    sometimes    committed.     See 

Shadow  on  the  Blind,  The. — Anon. 
Alas,   what    need   yo#  be   so   boisterous-rough?     See 

King  John  (Arthur  in  King  John). — Shakespeare. 
Alas!     what    pity    'tis    that     regularity.      .See    Elder 

Brother,  The  (Toby  Tosspot). — Colman. 
.■\las !  who  knows  or  cares,  my  love.     See  Laura's  Song. 

— Brown. 
Albert,  I  wish  you  would  give  me  seventy-five  cents. 

See  How  the  Money  CJoes. — Anon. 
Alexander  Ypsilanti  sat  in  Muncac's  lofty  tower.     <See 

Alexander  Ypsilanti. — Anon. 
Alexis,  here  she  stay'd;  among  these  pines.    See  Spring 

Bereaved,  III. — Drummond. 
Alice  Lee  stood  waiting  her  lover  one  night.     See  Lips 

that  Touch  Liquor  Shall  never  Touch  Mine,   The. 

— Glazebrook. 
Alike  all  ages :  dames  of  ancient   days.     <See  Traveller, 

The.— Goldsmith. 
Alike,  beneath  thine  eye.     See  Bryant  Alphabet,  A. — 

Bryant. 
All  alone  in  my  room  at  last.     See  After  the  Wedding 

— Keese. 
All  along  the  valley,  stream  that  flashest  white.     See 

In  the  Valley  of  Cauteretz. — Tennyson. 
All  are  architects  of  Fate.     See  Builders,  The. — Long- 
fellow. 
All  are  but  parts  of  one  stupendous  whole.     See  Essay 

on  Man,  An  (Order  of  Nature,  The). — Pope. 
All  are  not  taken!  there  are  left  behind.     See  Conso- 
lation.— Browning. 
All  are  players  of  destiny,  playing  roles  in  the  drama  of 

life.     See  Stage-of  Destiny,  The. — Claxton. 
All  around  our  house,  up  against  the  sky.     See  Over 

the  HUl. — Hastings. 
All  bathed  in  pearl  and  amber  light.     See  Ballade  of 

Nicolete. — Tomgon. 
All    beautiful    things    bring    sadness.     See    Sonnet. 

—Trench. 
"All 'board!"     " Sphee-ee-chee — sphee-ee-ahoof."    See 

Bill  the  Engineer. — Bettersworth. 
All  bones  but  yours  will  rattle  when  I  say.     See  Sea- 
serpent,  The. — Blanche. 
All  business  men  and  women — for  women  require  to  be 

good  "men  of  business."     See  Tide  at  the  Flood, 

The.— Craik. 
All  creature  that  ever  God  creat.     See  Hope  of  Immor- 
tality, The. — Lyndesay. 
All   dainty   meats    I    do   defy.     See   Smoker,    The. — 

Anon. 
All  day,  all  night,  I  hear  the  jar.     See  Loom  of  Life, 

The. — Anon. 
.\11  day  and  all  day,  as  I  sit  at  my  measureless  turning. 

See  Mother's  Song,  The. — Cloud. 
.\11  day  and  many  days  I  rode.     See  Wish,  A. — Gar- 
land. 
All  day  I  slowly  pendulate  'twixt  Sever  Hall  and  Gore. 

See  Grind's  Dream,  The. — Gotthold. 
All  day  in  exquisite  air.     See  Larks. — Tynan-Hinkson. 
All  day  long  roved  Hiawatha.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha, 

The  (Death  of  Minnehaha,  The).— Longfellow. 
All  day  long  the  river  flowed.     See  Daniel  Periton's 

Ride. — Tourgde. 
-.All  day  long  the  storm  of  battle  through  the  startled 

valley  swept.     See  Drummer-boy's  Burial,   The. 

(Harper's  Magazine.) 
All  day  long  they  come  and  go.     See  Pittypat  and 

Tippytoe. — Field. 
All  day  long,  with  a  vacant  stare.     See  Joe. — Laighton. 
All  day  she  hurried  to  get  through.     See  Mis'  Smith  — 

Paine 
All  day  Sunday  at  anchor.      See    Innocents  Abroad, 

The  (Getting  under  Way). — Clemens. 
All  day  the  gusty  north  wind  bore.     See  Snow-bound. 

— Whittier. 
All  day  the  low-hung  clouds  have  dropped.     See  April 

Day,  An. — Southey.  ' 
All  day  the  sky  had  worn  a  lurid  hue.     See  Saved. — 

Bates. 
All  day  the  stormy  wind  has  blown.     See  Take  Heart. 

— Procter. 
All  day  the  sun   drops  gold,  the  grassy  mead.     See 

Sun-gold. — Merrill. 
All  day  the  waves  assailed  the  rock.     See  Waves. — 

Emerson. 
All  day  the  wild  strains  of  Oriental  "music  had  been 

echoing.     See   Russia   the   Enigma   of   Europe. — 

Grosvenor. 
All  day  Theseus  marched,  and  all  th'  ensuing  night. 

See  Canterbury  Tales,  The  (Palamon  and  Arcite). 

— Chaucer  (Dryden). 


All  day  work  in  the  shops.     See  Bread  and  Wine. — 

Cutter. 
All  days   which   are  notable  should  be  remembered. 

See  Lincoln's  Birthday. — Swing. 
All  done  for  effect!     She  thinks   I  shall  admire  her 

spirit!     See  Fauntleroy  and  the  Earl. — Burnett. 
"All  Europe  soon  must  feel  the  sway."     See  Battle  of 

Lepanto,  The. — Anon. 
All  eyes  were  on   Enceladus's    face.     See     Hyperion 

(Hyperion's  Arrival). — Keats. 
"All  folks  hev  some  soft  spot."     See  Pa's  Soft  Spot. — 

Ellsworth. 
All  folks    who    pretend    to    religion    and    grace.     See 

Place  of  the  Damned,  The. — Swift. 
All  for  a  pretty  girlish  face.     See  Long  Years  Ago. — 

Anon. 
All   glorious    as    the    rainbow's    birth.      See   Song.  — 

Massey. 
All  good  people,  you  that  have  thus  far  come  to  pity 

me.     See  King  Henry  VIII.  (Buckingham's  Acf- 

dress ) . — Shakespeare. 
All  good-night!  all  good-night !     See  All  Good-night. — 

Anon. 
All  great  ages  have  been  ages  of  belief.     See  Worship 

(All  great  ages,"  etc.). — Emerson. 
All  great  leaders  have  been  inspired  with  a  great  belief. 

See  Atlantic  Cable,  The. — P'ields. 
All  great  men,  and  especially  philosophers  and  states- 
men.    See  How  to  Head. — Deni.son. 
"All  green  things  on  the  earth,  bless    ye  the    Lord." 

See  Benedicite. — Brackett. 
All  grim   and  soiled   and   brown  with  tan.     See  Re- 
former, The. — Whittier. 
All  hail,   friends  and   neighbors,   I've  opened  a  shop. 

See    Honest    Rumseller's    Advertisement,    An. — 

McWright. 
All  hail !  Holy  Mary,  our  hope  and  our  joy !     See  Irish 

Reaper's  Harvest  Hymn,    The. — Keegan. 
All  hail  the  dawn  of  a  new  day  breaking.     See  Justice, 

not  Charity. — Wilcox. 
All  hail  the  lovely  golden  rod.     See  Golden  Rod,  The. — 

Beed. 
"All  hail  the  power  of  Jesus'  name!"     See  Coronation. 

• — Perronet. 
All  hail  this  day — glad  arbor  day !     See  For  Arbor  Day. 

— Adams. 
All  hail !    thou    noble    land.     See    America    to    Great 

Britain. — Allston. 
All  hail  to  our  glorious  ensign.     See  National  Banner, 

The.— Everett. 
All  hail  to  the  day  when  the  Brittons  came  over.     See 

Flag  of  Old  England,  The.— Howe. 
All  hail  to  the  ruins,  the  rocks,  and  the  shores!     See 

Ocean,  The. — Montgomery. 
All  hail!  unfurl  the  stripes  and  stars.     See  God  Save 

Our  President. — Janvier. 
All  hale!  thou  mighty  annimil — all  hale!    See  Sunnit  to 

the  Big  Ox,  A. — Anon. 
All  heaven  and  earth  are  still — though  not  in  sleep. 

See      Childe     Harold's     Pilgrimage      (Night).  — 

Byron. 
All  holy  influences  dwell  within.     See  Children  Band, 

The.— De  Vere. 
All  houses   wherein   men   have   lived   and   died.     See 

Haunted  Houses. — Longfellow. 
All  human   things   are   subject   to   decay.     See   Mac- 

Flecknoe. — Dryden. 
All  in  a  misty  morning.     See  Wiltshire  Wedding,  The. 

Anon. 
All  in  a  moment,  through  the  gloom  were  seen.     See 

Paradise  Lost  (March  of  the  Rebel  Angels). — Mil- 
ton. 
All  in   flight  the  virgins  scatter'd.     See  Odyssey,  The 

(Odysseus'  Speech  to  Nausicaa). — Chapman. 
All  in  our  marriage  garden.     See  Our  Wee  White  Rose. 

— Massey. 
All  in  solitude  and  silence.     See  Anita. — Camp. 
All  in  the  April  morning.     See  Sheep  and  Lambs. — 

Hinkson.  » 

All  in  the  days  of  long  ago.     See  Difference,  The. — 

Webster. 
All  in  the  downs    the   fleet  was  moored.     See  Sweet 

William's  Farewell  to  Black-eyed  Susan. — Gay. 
All  in  the  leafy  darkness,  when  sleep  had  passed  me  by. 

See  Care. — Cloud. 
AH  in  the  merry  month  of  May.     See  Barbara  Allen's 

Cruelty. — Anon. 
All  is  best,  though  oft  we  doubt.     See  Sam.son  Ago- 

nistes. — Milton. 
All  is  finished,  and  at  length.     See  Building  of  the  Ship, 

The. — Longfellow. 
All  is  of  God '  If  He  but  wave  his  hand.     See  Two 

Angels,  The. — Longfellow. 


604 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


All 


All  June  I  bound  the  rose  in  sheaves.     See  One  Way  of 

Love. — Browning. 
All  love,    at    first,    like   gen'rous   wine.     See   Love. — 

Butler. 
All  men  are  worms,  but  this  no  man.     In  silk.     See 

On  Court-worms. — Jonson. 
All  moveless  stand  the  ancient  cedar-trees.     iSee  In  the 

Dark. — Arnold. 
All  my  daily  tasks  were  ended.     »Siee  Single  Head  of 

Wheat,  The.— Eldred. 
All  my  past  life  is  mine  no  more.     <See  Love  and  Life. — ■ 

Rochester. 
All  my, stars  forsake  me.     See  Song  of  the  Niglit  at 

Daybreak. — Meynell. 
All  nature  is  but  art,  unknown  to  thee.     See  Essay  on 

Man,  An  (Epistle  I). — Pope. 
All  nature  seems  at  work.     Slugs  leave  their  lair.     See 

Work  without  Hope. — Coleridge. 
All  nature  sings  wildly  the  song  of  the  free.     See  Flag 

in  Nature,  The. — Smith. 
All  new  dishes  fade.     See  Apple  Pie.     (Punch.) 
All  night  I  watched  awake  for  morning.     See  Dawn- 
angels. — Darmesteter. 
All  night,  in  the  pauses  of  sleep,  I  heard.     See  After 

the  Storm. — Kimball. 
All  night    long   and    every    night.     See   Young    Night 

Thought. — Stevenson. 
All  night  long  through  the  starlit  air  and  the  stillness. 

See  Cattle  of  his  Hand,  The. — Underwood. 
All  night  the  booming  minute  gun.     See  Wreck.  The. 

— Hemans. 
All  night  upon  the  guarded  hill.     See  Defense  of  Law- 
rence, The. — Realf. 
All    o'    dese    here    doin's    don't  suit  me.    See  Ebo. — 

Gordon. 
All  of  the  woe  of  the  world,  its  hideous  squalor  and  sin. 

See  Frances  E.  Willard. — Slosson. 
All  of  us  in  one  you'll  find.     See  On  the  Five  Senses. — 

Swift. 
All  other  joys  of  life  he  strove  to  warm.     See  Modern 

Love  (All  Other  .loys). ^Meredith. 
All  our  knowledge  of  facts  is  worthless  unless  boys  and 

girls  have  the  life.     See  Patriotic  Words  for  the 

Young. — Hale. 
All  our  little  heartaches.     See  .Jesus  Knows. — Anon. 
All  our  praises  why  should  lords  engross.      See   Moral 

Essays  (Man  of  Ross,  The). — Pope. 
All  outward  wisdom  yields  to  that  within.     See  Spirit 

of  the  Pine,  The. — Taylor. 
All  people  that  on   earth  do   dwell.     See  Psalm  C. — 

Kethe. 
All  pomps    and    gorgeous    rites,    all    visions    old.     See 

Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti. — Gosse. 
All  praise,  all  honor,  to  the  valiant  men.     See  Women 

of  the  W^ar. — Thomas. 
All  praise  to  thee,  my  God,  this  night.     See  Everting 

Hymn. — Ken. 
All  precious  things  discovered  late.     See   Day-dream, 

The  (Arrival,  The). — Tennyson. 
"All  quiet  along  the  Potomac,"  they  say.     See  Picket 

Guard,  The. — Beers. 
All  readers  are  not  critical.     There  are  still  some  who 

are  willing  to  be  pleased.     See  Books  and  Reading. 

— Southey. 
All  ready !     Off  with  the  ropes !     We  move  out  from 

the  dock.     See  Wreck  of  an  Ocean  Steamship,  The. 

— Davenport. 
All  right  activity  is  amiable.     See  Emerson  Alphabet, 

An. — Emerson. 
All    right!     Don't    worry.      I'll    look    after    him.     See 

Making  him  Feel  at  Home. — Locke. 
All  round  the  house  is  the  jet-black  night.    See  North- 
west Passage  (Shadow  March). — Stevenson. 
All  round  the  room  my  silent  servants  wait.     See  My 

Books. — Procter. 
All  seemed   delighted,   though  the   elders  more.     See 

Floretty's  Musical  Contribution. — Riley. 
All  shod  with  steel.     See  Skating. — Wordsworth. 
All  shores  about  and  afar  lie  lonely.     See  Casquettes. 

— Swinburne. 
All  silent  now  the  clash  of  war,  the  Roman  hosts  have 

won.     See  Scipio. — Keplinger. 
All  sobbing,  shrieking,  swirls  the  gale.     See  Peace  Hath 

her  Victories. — Rice. 
All  sorts   of   vot'ries,   that   profess.     See   Marriage. — 

Butler. 
All  summer  I've  worn  a  shocking  hat.     See  To  Phyllis 

Returned  to  Town. — Jenkins. 
All  summer  long  the  people  knelt.     See  At  the  Presi- 
dent's Grave.— Gilder. 
All  that  a  man  can  do  in  this  world  is  to  live  honestly. 

See  Success  and  Failure. — -Anon. 
All  that  I  know.     See  My  Star. — Browning. 


All  that  is  said  of  the  peril  of  riches.     See  Wealth  and 

Work. — Anon. 
All  that  springeth  from  the  sod.     See  Resurrection. — 

Tabb. 
All  that  there  is  in  what  we  call  to-day  is  in  the  life  of 

thought.     See  True  To-day,  The. — Withington. 
All  that  thou  are  not,  makes  not  up  the  sum.     See  In 

Absence.' — Tabb. 
All  the  bells  of  heaven  may  ring.     See  Child's  Laughter, 

A. — Swinburne. 
All  the  birdies  went  to  school.    See  Pine  Tree  Academy, 

The.— Scharff. 
All  the  breath  and  the  bloom  of  the  year  in  the  bag  of 

one  bee.     See  Summum  Bonum. — Browning. 
All  the  buds  and  bees  are  singing.     See  May. — Anon. 
All  the    earth    is    wrapt    in  snow.     See  (^"hickadee. — 

Anon. 
All  the  evils  which  afflict  the  country  are  imputed  to 

opposition.     See  Opposition  to  Misgovernment. — 

Webster. 
All  the  flowers  of  the  spring.     See  Vanitas  Vanitatum. 

Webster. 
All  the  heavy  days  are  over.     See  Dream  of  a  Blessed 

Spirit.  A. — Yeats. 
All  the  lion  in  Macdonald's  nature  was  roused.     See 

Napoleon  and  his  Marshals  (Macdonald's  Charge 

at  Wagram). — Headley. 
All  the    long    August    afternoon.     See    In    August. — - 

Howells. 
.411  the   morning   the   trains    from    New    Haven.     See 

Harvard- Yale  Foot-ball  Match,  A. — Post. 
All  the  names  I  know  from  nurse.     See  Flowers,  The. 

— Stevenson. 
All  the  ocean  isles  and  islets.     See  Kalevala  (Waina- 

moinen's  Sowing). — -Porter. 
All  the  older  people  in  Milton  remember  that  6th  of 

July,  1862.     See  Back  in  War  Days.— Phelps. 
All  the  politics  of  the  great.     See  Politicians. — Butler. 
All  the  republics  in  the  world's  history  have  failed  but 

one.     See  Republic  of  New  England. — O'Reilly. 
All  the  rich  treasures  of  the  past  are  appropriated  by 

Christianity.     See  same. — Cocker. 
All  the  seasons  I  like,  as  they  pass  along.     See  What  I 

Like. — Doolittle. 
All  the  storm  has  rolled  away.     See  On  the  Bridge. — 

Ropes. 
All  the  trees  they  are  so  high.     See  Trees  They  Are  so 

High,  The. — Anon. 
All  the  triumphs  of    truth  and  genius.      See  On  Mit- 

ford's  History  of   Greece  (Influence    of  Athens, 

The). — Macaulay. 
All  the  words  that  I  utter.     See  Where  My  Books  Go. 

— Yeats. 
"All  the  world  is  a  stage,"  so  wise  Shakespeare  has  said. 

See  Tickle  His  Hand  with  a  Ten  Dollar  Bill. — Anon. 
All  the  world  over,  I  wonder,  in  lands  that  I  never  have 

trod.     See  Meditations  of  a  Hindu  Prince. — Lyall. 
All  the  world's  a  fraud.     See  All  the  World's  a  Fraud. 

Anon. 
All  the  world's  a  stage.     See  As  You  Like  It  (Seven 

Ages  of  Man). — Shakespeare. 
All  their  pipes   were   still.     See  Britannia's   Pastorals 

(Praise  of  Spenser,  The). — Browne. 
All  their   wealth   and   vast   possessions.     See   Richest 

Prince,  The. — Korner. 
All  things  are  Thine;  no  gift  have  we.     See  Church 

Dedication.     Whittier. 
All  things  bright  and  beautiful.    See  same. — Alexander. 
All  things  can  never  go  badly  wrong.     See  If  the  Heart 

be  'True. — MacDonald. 
All  things  change  except  barbers,  the  ways  of  barbers, 

and    the    surroundings    of    barbers.     See    About 

Barbers. — Anon. 
All  things  have  something  more  than  barren  use.     See 

same. — Smith. 
All   things    journey;    sun    and   moon.      See    Spanish 

Gypsy,  The  (Song  of  the  Zincali).— Eliot. 
All  things  that  are.     See  Merchant  of  Venice  (Out  and 

Inward  Bound). — Shakespeare. 
All  things  that  are  on  earth  shall  wholly  pass  away. 

See  Love  of  God,  The. — Rascas. 
All  things    that    pa.ss.     See   Passing   and    Glassing. — 

Rossetti. 
All  things  visible  around  us  are  aggregations  of  atoms. 

See  Poetry  of  Science  (Wonders  of  an  Atom,  The). 

— Himt. 
All  this  costly  expense.     See  Two  Points  of  View. — 

Kimball. 
All  this  haste  made  not  his  staid  faith  so  free.     See 

Odyssey,   The  (Odysseus  Reveals   himself  to  his 

Father). — Chapman. 
All  this   is   my  body.     See  Human   Body   Lesson   in 
■  Rhyme. — Badlam.  • 


605 


All 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


All  this  time  I  had  gono  on  lovinjr  Dora  harder  than 

ever.     See   David  Copperfield   (Child-wife,  The). 

— Dickens. 
All  thoughts,  all  passions,  all  delights.     See  Love. — 

Coleridge. 
All  through  night's  ttearying  darkness  snowy  flakes. 

See  Stepping  in  Father's  Tracks. — Upham. 
All  through  the  castle  of  High-bred  Ease.     See  Prin- 
cess'Fingernail,  The. — Wilcox. 
All  through  the  golden  weather.     See  Song  of  Autumn, 

A.— Rodd. 
All  through  the  sesison  they  were  seen.     See  Modern 

Flirtation,  A. — Anon. 
All  through  the  smiling,  resting  land.     See  Sword,  The. 

—Booth. 
All  through  the  sultry  hours  of  June.     See  My  Thrush. 

— Collins. 
All  through   the   town,    upon   fences,    bar-posts.     See 

Dime  Supper,  A. — Hewitt. 
All  true  work  is  sacred.    See  Past  and  Present  (Sacred- 

ness  of  Work,  The). — Carlyle. 
All  unconscious  I  beheld  her.     See  Fate. — Chadwick. 
All  under  the  leaves  and  the  leaves  of  life.     See  Seven 

Virgins,  The. — Anon. 
All  underneath  the  restless  sea.     See  Lost  Friend,  The. 

—Gale. 
All  up  and  down  in  shadow-town.     See  Shadows,  The. 

— Sherman. 
All  upon  a  summer  day.     See  Make-believe.- — Cary. 
All  victory  is  struggle,  using  chance.     See  Progress.— 

Anon. 
All  was  false  and  hollow.     See  Paradise  Lost. — Milton. 
All  was  still  along  Point  Cedar,  for  the  farming  must  be 

done.     Sec  Two  Girls  of  1812.— Anon. 
All  were   quite   gracious   in    their   plaudits   of   Bud's 

Fairy.     See  Delicious  Interruption,  A. — Riley. 
All  without  is  harsh  and  shrill.     See  Saint's  Tragedy, 

The  (Saint  Elizabeth). — Kingsley. 
All  worldly  shapes  shall  melt  in  gloom.     See  Last  Man, 

The. — Campbell. 
All  writers    on    education    agree.     See    Education. — 

Colfax. 
All  ye  that  lovely  lovers  be.     See  Harvestmen  a-Sing- 

ing. — Peele. 
All  ye  who  have  gained  the  haven  of  safe  days.     See 

To  All  in  Haven.— Marston. 
All  ye  who  love  the  springtime — and  who  but  loves  it 

well.     See  Dawning  o'  the  Year,  The. — Blake. 
All  ye  woods,   and   trees,  and   bowers.     See  Faithful 

Shepherdess,  The  (To  Pan).— Fletcher. 
All  yesterday  I  was  spinning.     See  Dream,  A. — Procter. 
All  you  that  to  feasting  and  mirth  are  inclined.     See 

Old  Christmas  Returned. — Anon. 
"Allah,  Allahl"  cried  the  sick  man.     See  Here  am  I. — • 

Clarke. 
Alias!  Custance!  thou  hast  no  champioun.     See  Canter- 
bury Tales,  The  (Tale  of  the  Man  of  Lawe,  The).— 

Chaucer. 
Alias!  my  worthy  maister  honorable.     See  Lament  for 

Chaucer.— Hoccleve. 
Allen-a-Dale  has  no  fagot  for  burning.      See  Rokeby 

(Allen-a-Dale). — Scott. 
All's  for  the  best!  be  sanguine  and  cheerful.     See  All's 

for  the  Best. — Tupper. 
All's  over,  then:  does  truth    sound   bitter.     See  Lost 

Mistress,  The. — Browning. 
"Almiry!  Almiry  Ann!     Ef  you  kin  hear  me  you'd 

better  come."     See  Almiry  Ann. — Anon. 
Almost  afraid  they  led   her  in.     See  Transfigured. — 

Piatt. 
Almost  every  one  must  have  heard  of  the  gentleman 

who    cuts    portraits.     See    Frenchman's    Patent 

Screw,  The. — Anon. 
Almost  ever.v  other  evinin',  .iest  as  reg'lar  as  the  clock. 

See  Sister  Simmons. — Lincoln. 
Almost  time  for  the  pretty  white  daisies.     See  Almost 

Time. — Anon. 
Aloft  he  guards  the  starry  folds.     See  Eagle  of  the 

Blue,  The.— Melville. 
Aloft  upon  an  old  basaltic  crag.     See  Kane. — O'Brien. 
Alone!  Alone!     See  Alone. — Anon. 
Alone,  alone,  all,  all  alone.     See  Rime  of  the  Ancient 

Mariner,  The. — Coleridge. 
Alone,  at  home,  I  dwell,  content  and  free.     See  Old 

Books,  Fresh  Flowers. — Boulmier. 
Alone,  from   earlier  than  I  know.     See  Princess,  The 

(Tribute  to  Motherhood,  A). — Tennyson. 
Alone  I  sit  at  eventide.     See  Our  Native  Birds. — Dole. 
Alone  I  stand.     See  Nightfall. — Ellsworth. 
Alone  I  stay,  for  I  am  lame.     See  Board  School  Pas- 
toral, A. — Kendall. 
Alone  I  walk  the  morning  street.     See  Morning  Street, 

The.— Piatt. 


Alone  1  walked  the  ocean  strand.  See  Name  in  the 
S&>»d>r— Gould. 

Alone,  in  prison,  and  condemned  to  die.  See  Daugh- 
ter's Love  and  Heroism,  A. — Fabes. 

Alone  in  the  dreary,  pitiless  street.  See  Nobody's 
Child.— Cade. 

Alone  in  this  impenetrable  forest!  See  Christian  For- 
giveness.— Anon. 

Alone,  'midst  living  works  of  mighty  dead.  See 
Among  My  Books. — Rosslyn. 

Alone,  through  gloomy  forest  shades,  a  soldier  went  by 
night.     See  Fall  of  d'Assas,  The. — Hemans. 

Alone  thy  spirit  went,  thy  thoughts  alone.  See  To 
Philip  Massinger,  "A  Stranger." — Russell. 

Alone!  to  land  alone  upon  that  shore!  See  From  the 
Shore  of  Paternity. — Faber. 

Alone,  unwedded,  past  her  prime.  See  Little  Story,  A. 
— Aldrich. 

Alone  with  Christ  in  this  sequester'd  place.  See  Epi- 
taph in  Fahan  Churchyard. — Alexander. 

Alone  with  Thee,  my  God!  alone  with  Thee!  See 
Alone  with  God.- — Anon. 

Along  a  river-side.  I  know  not  where.  See  Washers  of 
the  Shroud,  The.— Lowell. 

Along  Ancona's  hills  the  shimmering  heat.  See  Pop- 
pies in  the  Wheat. — Jackson. 

Along  in  November,  when  chill  was  the  weather.  See 
Twin  Ballots,  The. — Anon. 

Along  its  front  no  sabres  shine.  See  Holmes  Alphabet, 
A. — Holmes. 

Along  the  aisle  where  prayer  was  made.  See  Prayer- 
seeker,  The. — Whittier. 

Along  the  broad  high-road,  in  the  neighborhood  of  a 
great  city,  walked  a  sick  old  man.  See  Alms,  An. 
■ — Tourgenieff. 

Along  the  country  roadside,  stone  on  stone.  See 
Stone  Walls. — Lippman. 

Along  the  crowded  path  they  bore  her  now.  See  Old 
Curiosity  Shop,  The. — Dickens. 

Along  the  frozen  lake  she  comes.  See  Our  Skater 
Belle. — Anon. 

Along  the  garden  ways  just  now.  See  Love  Sym- 
phony, A. — O'Shaughnessy. 

Along  the  grass  sweet  airs  are  blown.  See  New  Year's 
Burden,  A. — Rossetti. 

Along  the  hollow  reaches,  where  the  ripples  curve  on 
the  sand.     See  Mad  Luce. — Anon. 

Along  the  margin  of  the  world.  See  Soldiers  of  the 
Sun. — Sherman. 

Along  the  narrow  sand.v  height.  See  Snowbirds. — 
Lampman. 

Along  the  oasis  the  slender  palms.  See  Legend  of 
Arabia,  A. — Anon. 

Along  the  orchard's  fragrant  way.  See  Changelings. — 
M.  V.  B. 

Along  the  Paris  streets  the  dead  carts  rumble.  See 
Tale  of  Two  Cities,  A  (Sydney  Carton's  Death). 
• — Dickens. 

Along  the  pastoral  ways  I  go.  See  Holiday,  A. — 
Reese. 

Along  the  roadside,  like  the  flowers  of  gold.  See 
Among  the  Hills. — Whittier. 

Along  the  shore  the  slimy  brine-pits  yawn.  See 
Witch's  Whelp,  The.— Stoddard. 

Along  the  street.  See  Eve  of  Election,  The  (Ballot- 
box,  The). — Whittier. 

Along  the  valley's  narrow  gorge.  See  How  the  Fifty- 
first  Took  the  Bridge. — Nones. 

Along  the  wayside  path  she  comes.  See  One  of  Many. 
— Bateham. 

Along  this  lane,  green-walled  and  starred  with  flowers. 
See  Chatterton  at  Bristol. — Russell. 

Alow  and  aloof.     See  Windy  Night,  The. — Read. 

Already,  close  by  our  summer  dwelling.  See  Invitation 
to  the  Country,  An. — Bryant. 

Already  evening!  in  the  duskiest  nook.  See  Evening. 
• — Meredith. 

Alter?  when  the  hills  do.  See  Constant. ■ — Dickin- 
son. 

Although  a  curtain  of  the  salt  sea-mist.  See  Farewell 
to  Salvini. — Bunrier. 

Although  I  am  one  of  the  most  powerful  nations.  See 
Nuts  to  Crack,  No.  II. — Denton. 

Although  I  enter  not.  See  At  the  Church  Gate. — 
Thackeray. 

Although  I'm  but  a  little  child.  See  Helping  Rule,  A. 
— Denton. 

Although  she  had  just  married  a  lawyer.  See  Mrs. 
Bacon,  Lawyer. — Anon. 

Although  some  fits  of  small  contest.  See  Hudibras 
(Amantium  Irse). — Butler. 

Although  the  ladies  with  such  beauty  blaze.  See 
Country  Lasses,  The. — Pindar. 


606 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


An 


Although  the  temperance  cause  has  been  in  progress 
many  years.     See  Two  Revolutions. — Lincoln. 

Always  I  see  her  in  a  saintly  guise.  See  Dead  Wife, 
The.— Riley. 

Always  wuz  abusin'  him.  See  Didn't  Think  o'  Losin' 
Him. — Stanton. 

A'm  gettin'  drowsy,  an'  a'll  no  be  able  tae  follow  ye 
sune.  See  Beside  the  Bonnie  Brier  Bush  (Death 
of  the  Country  Doctor,  The). — Maclaren. 

Am  I  a  king  that  I  should  call  my  own.  See  From  My 
Arm-chair. — Longfellow. 

"Am  I  my  brother's  keeper?"  See  Modern  Cain,  The. 
— Edwards. 

Am  I  the  man?  That  rang  within  my  head  last  night. 
See  Becket  (Selected  Scenes). — Tennyson. 

Am  I  the  slave  they  say?  See  Soggarth  Aroon. — 
Banim. 

Am  not  I  the  fairest  flower?  See  Gifts  for  All. — Den- 
ton. 

Amarantha,  sweet  and  fair.  See  To  Amarantha,  that 
She  would  Dishevel  Her  Hair. — Lovelace. 

Amaryllis,  Chloris,  Phyllis.     See  Their  Turn.— K.  H.  A. 

Amaz'd  he  stands,  nor  voice  nor  body  stirs.  See  Sor- 
row.— Daniel. 

Amazed,  confused,  its  fate  unknown.  See  Jove  and 
the  Souls. — Swift. 

'  'Amazin'  Grace,"  said  Mrs.  Pilsbury,  as  she  sat  with 
her  daughter.     See  Yours,  Truly. — Anon. 

Amazing,  beauteous  change  I     See  same. —  Doddridge. 

Ambitious  Nile,  thy  banks  deplore.  See  De  Rosis 
Hibernis. — Gosse. 

America!  dear  brother  land!  See  Greeting  from  Eng- 
land.    (London  Chronicle.) 

America  has  abstained  from  interference  in  the  con- 
cerns of  others.  See  Mission  of  Anjierica,  The. — 
Adams. 

America  has  furnished  to  Europe  proof  of  the  fact  that 
popular  institutions.  See  Completion  of  the  Bunker 
Hill  Monument,  The  (America's  Gifts  to  Europe). 
-;-Webster. 

America  has  furnished  to  the  world  the  character  of 
Washington.  See  Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill 
Monument,  The  (Second  Bunker  Hill  Monument 
Oration). — Webster. 

America!  Mine!  Ay,  comrades,  and  thine.  See  Amer- 
ica.— McCann. 

America,  ray  lords,  cannot  be  reconciled  to  this  coun- 
try. See  First  Step  to  Reconciliation  with 
America,  The. — Chatham. 

American  nationality,  compared  with  that  of  Europe 
and  the  east.  See  Nashville  Exposition,  The. — 
McKinley. 

"Americanism"  of  the  right  sort  we  cannot  have  too 
much.     See  Americanism. — Lodge. 

Americans !  The  saviour  of  your  country  has  obtained 
his  last  victory.  See  Eulogy  on  Washington. — • 
Paine, 

Americans  the  world  over  have  been  proud  of  their 
country.  See  Treason  of  Benedict  Arnold.— 
Anon. 

Americus,  as  he  did  wend.  See  Noble  Tuck-man,  The. 
Ingelow. 

Amid  my  bale  I  bathe  in  bliss.  See  Strange  Passion  of 
a  Lover,  A. — Gascoigne. 

Amid  the  chapel's  chequered  gloom.  See  Heliotrope. 
— -Peck. 

Amid  the  clouds  of  battle  smoke.  See  He'll  See  it 
when  he  Wakes. — Lee. 

Amid  the  dim  ferment  of  Caen  and  the  world.  See 
French  Revolution,  The  (Charlotte  Corday). — 
Carlyle. 

Amid  the  heavenly  bodies  once  was  found.  See  Cow- 
pens. — Sabine. 

Amid  the  loud  ebriety  of  war.  See  Birkenhead,  The. 
—Yule. 

Amid  the  myriad  troubles  that  meet  us  day  by  day. 
See  Plea  for  Castles  in  the  Air,  A. — Gough. 

Amid  the  smoke  of  cities  did  you  pass.  See  To 
.Joanna. — Wordsworth. 

Amidst  the  agitating  throes  of  the  Old  World.  See 
European  Struggles  for  Freedom. — Johnson. 

Amidst  the  fairest  mountain  tops.  See  Cynthia. — • 
Dyer. 

Amidst  the  gay  life,  the  beautiful  forms,  the  brilliant 
colors.     See  Charm  of  Voice. — Anon. 

Amidst  the  massive  sideboard's  burnished  wealth. 
See  Little  Tin  Plate,  A.— Walch 

Among  green,  pleasant  meadows.  See  same.  — 
Herder. 

Among  her  curls  with  wanton  glee.  See  Deception. 
( Yale  Record.) 

Among  my  books — what  rest  is  there.  See  Among  my 
Books. — Peck. 


Among  my  tender  vines  I  spy.     See  Little  Foxes. — 

Morrell. 
Among  my  various  pursuits  in  life.     See  When  I  was 

a  Baker. — Thatcher. 
Among  professors  of  astronomy.     See  Comet,  The  — 

Hood. 
Among  so  many  can  He  care?     See  I  will  Abide  in 

Thine  House. — Whitney. 
Among  the  achievements  of  Sir  Charles  Napier.     See 

Colors  of  the  Regiment,  The. — Robertson. 
Among  the  beautiful  pictures.    See  Pictures  of  Memory. 

• — Gary. 
Among  the   convicts   working   on    the   trans-Siberian 

railroad  was  a  white-haired  old  man.     See  Convict 

and  Soldier. — Anon. 
Among  the   dwellings   framed   by   birds.     See   Wren's 

Nest,  A. — Wordsworth. 
Among   the    evils    of    intemperance.     See    Intemper- 
ance.— Channing. 
Among  the  few  pleasures  which  reward  the  traveler. 

See  Arctic  Aurora,  An. — Anon. 
Among  the  fine  old  kings  that  reign.     See  Royal  Race, 

A. — McCarroU. 
Among  the  flowers  of  field  and  wood.     See  Pine  Trees' 

Choice,  The. — Denton. 
Among  the  gray  old  rounded  hills.     See  Olive  Tress  of 

Palestine.     (Hours  at  Home.) 
Among  the  great  ideas  of  the  age,  we  are  authorized  in 

reckoning.     See  Battle   of    Bunker    Hill     (Peace 

Congress  of  the  Union,  The). — Everett. 
Among  the  hills  of  India.     See  Red  Thread  of  Honour, 

The. — Noble. 
Among  the  inspiring  pictures  that  hi.story  has  given 

us.     See  "Little  David"  of  Nations,  The. — Dun- 
can. 
Among  the  joys,    'tis  one   at   eve  to  sail.     See  Bor- 
ough, The  (Evening  Sail,  The). — Crabbe. 
Among  the  legends  of  our  late  civil  war.     See  Bounding 

the  United  States. — Fiske. 
Among  the  many  memorable  words.     See  Last  Hours 

of  Webster. — Everett. 
Among  the  maple-buds  we  hear  the  tones.     See  April. 

—Mifflin. 
Among  the  merry  little  children.     See  Little  Highland 

Shepherdess. — Vannan. 
Among  the  mountain  passes  of  the  Blue  Ridge  and  the 

AUeghanies.     See    Washington's    Training.- — Up- 

ham. 
Among  the  myriad  ideas  which  bound  man's  life.     See 

Liberty. — Brush . 
Among  the  myrtles  as  I  walkt.    •  See  Mrs.  Eliz.  Wheeler. 

- — Herrick. 
Among  the  passengers  bound  for  Vicksburg  upon   a 

Mississippi  steamer  were  a  Georgian  and  his  wife. 

See  Indignant  Woman's  Raid  on  a  Gambler,  An. — 

Anon. 
Among  the  people  who  first  settled  in  United  States. 

See  Cuba  and  Armenia.— Lodge. 
Among  the  poppies  by  the  well.     See  Parting  in  Dream- 
land, A. — Symonds. 
Among  the   priceless   gems    and    treasures    rare.     See 

Pastel. — Saltus. 
Among  the  sand-hills.     See  Wild  Rabbit,  The. — Anon. 
Among  the  Sinai  monks  the  Brother  John.     See  John 

of  Mt.  Sinai. — Frisbie. 
Among  the  sunny  memories  of  my  own  school-days 

there  glows.     See  Schoolboys'  Strike,  The. — Bur- 

dett. 
Among  the  thistles  on  the  hill.     See  Little  Sorrow. — 

Douglas. 
Among  the  thousand,  thousand  sphere's  that  roll.     See 

Alcyone. — Mace. 
Among  the  various  good  and  bad  qualities  incident  to 

our  nature.     See  Bashful  Man,  The. — Smith. 
Among    the   vicissitudes    incident   to    life,    no    event 

could  have  filled  me  with  greater  anxieties.     See 

Washington's  Inaugurals,  Apr.  30,  1789. — Wash- 
ington. 
Among    their    graven   shapes    to    whom.     See    Fitz- 

Greene  Halleck. — Whittier. 
Among  those  awful  forms  in  elder  time.     See  Don 

Garzia.— Rogers. 
Among  their  fancies  tell  me  this.     See  Kiss,  The. — 

Herrick. 
Amongst  the  great  inventions  of  this  age.     See  More 

HuUahbaloo. — Hood. 
An  accommodation   train   on   a   distant   railroad  was 

dragging    along.     See    Remarkable    Honeymoon 

Trip,  A. — Lee. 
An  acorn  from  the  bough  where  it  had  hung.     See  How 

the  Oak  Grew. — Bates. 
An  aged  colored  man  rose  to  a  standing  position  and  a 

point  of  order.     See  It's  My  Nature. — Anon. 


607 


An 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


An   aged   man  who  loved  to  doze  away.     See  "Aged 

man  who  loved  to  doze  away,  An." — Landor. 
An  aged  man,  without  an  enemy  in  the  world.     See 

Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,   The  (Power  of 

Conscience,  The).— Webster. 
.\ii  American  frigate^-a  frigate   of    fame.     See  Paul 

Jones'  Victory. — Anon. 
.\n  amusing  scene  occurred  in  Justice  Young's  court- 
room.    See  Mr.  O'Hoolahan's  Mistake. — Anon. 
An  ancient  chestnut's  blossoms  threw.     See  Alciphron 

and  Leucippe. — -I.andor. 
.\n  ancient  hallway,  generous  and  square.     See  When 

George  was  King. — IMckering. 
An  ancient  story  I'll  tell  you  anon.     See  King  John  and 

the  Abbot  of  C'anterbury.     (Percy's  Reliques.) 
An  angel  came  and  cried  to  him  by  night.     See  Bishop 

Patterson. — Smedley. 
.\n  angel  face:— Hits  sunny  wealth  of  hair.  See  "Angel 

face: — its    sunny    wealth    of    hair,    An."  —  Os- 
good. 
.\n  animal,   my    first,   with    horns.     See   Newness.— 

Sabine. 
.\n  archfiend  arrived  in  our  world  and  he  built  an  in- 
visible caldron  of  temptation.     See  Archfiend  of 

Nations,  The. — Talmage. 
An  ardent  spirit  dwells  with  Christian  love.     See  Bor- 
ough, The  (Practical  Charity). — Crabbe. 
An  arm  of  aid  to  the  weak.     See  Arm  of  Aid  to  the 

Weak,  An. — Houghton. 
An  a-shen   gray   touched   faint   my   night-dark   room. 

See  Veiled  Presence,  The. — Rand. 
An  ass's  hoof  alone  can  hold.     See  On  Burning  a  Dull 

Poem. — Swift.  / 

An  attorney  was  taking  a  turn.     See(Briefless  Barrister, 

The. — Saxe.  ( 

An  Austrian  army,  awfully  arrayed;     See  Siege  of  Bel- 
grade, The. — ^Anon. 
An  eagle  had  soared     above  the  clouds.     See  P^agle 

and  the  Spider,  The. — Krilof. 
An  easy  task  it  is  to  tread.     See  Path  of  Independence, 

The. — Anon. 
An  easy  thing,  O  Power  Divine.     See  Things  I  Miss, 

The. — Higginson. 
An  editor  is  Mr.  Squibbs.     See  Ye  Editor's  Perplexi- 
ties.— Anon. 
An'  ef  you's  wanting  fishes,  you  mus'  dig  your  wums 

an'  ketch  'em.     See  Safest  Plan,  The.     (Scribner's 

Monthly.) 
"An  egg  a  chicken!      Don't   tell    me!"     See  Egg  a 

Chicken,  An. — ( Yo^ith'a  Companion.') 
An     emigrant  ship  with  a  world  aboard.     See  God 

Knows. — Anon. 
An  empty   sky,  a  world  of  heather.     See  Divided. — 

Ingelow. 
An    engineer   there   was,    and   he   spake    to    a   gang 

of  hiskind  one    day.      See    Zwischen  Trinken. — 

Ayars. 
An  engineer's  story,  in  form  regulation.     See  How  an 

Engineer  Won  His  Bride.*— Johnston. 
An  English  farmer  was  one  day  at  work  in  the  fields. 

See  Obeying  Orders. — Anon. 
An  English  lad,  who,  reading  in  a  book.     See  Keats. — 

Reese. 
An  enterprising  saloon-keeper  on  Grand  River  avenue. 

See  His  Flying-machine. — Anon. 
An  enthusiastic  French  student  of  Shakespeare.     See 

Frenchman  on  Macbeth,  A. — Anon. 
An  envious  dog  laid  down  one  day.     See  Dog  in  the 

Manger,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
An  exquisite  incompleteness,    blossom   foreshadowing 

fruit.     See  Girlhood. — Anon. 
An  exquisite  invention   this.     See  Love-letters  Made 

in  Flowers. — Hunt. 
An  eye  with  the  piercing  eagle's  fire.     See  Thaddeus 

Stevens. — Gary. 
An  heritage   of   hopes   and    fears.     See   Soul,    The. — 

Cawein. 
An  honest  man  was  Deacon  Ray.     See  Honest  Deacon; 

The. — (New  Orleans  Times-Democrat.) 
An  hour,  and  this  majes^tic  day  is  done.     See  Night. — 

Whitehead. 
An  hour  before  sunset,  on  the  evening  of  a  day  in  the 

beginning  of  October,  1815.     See  Les  Mis^rables 

(Jean  Valjean  and  the  Bishop). — Hugo. 
-'    how    is   yer   little    Bridget   gittin"   on    wid   her 

schoolin'?"    See  Her  Shpacial-i-ty. — Anon. 
An  idle  attorney  besought  a  brother.     See  On  an  H'.- 

read  Lawyer. — Saxe. 
"An   idle  straw  to   drift   and   whirl  at   mercy  of  the 

wind?"     See  Society  Flirtation. — Banks. 
An    igstrawnary   tail    I    vill   tell    you   this   veek.     See 

Wofle    New    Ballad    of    Jane    Roney    and    Mary 

Brown,  The. — Thackeray. 


An' 


An  immortal  instinct,  deep  within  the  spirit  of  man,  is 

a  sense  of  the  beautiful.     See  Poetry. — Poe. 
An  infant  is  a  selfish  sprite.     See  Broken  Doll,  The. — 

Lamb. 
An  infant  on  its  mother's  breast.     See  Life. — Coe. 
An  Irishman    sticks    up    for    Robinson's    circus.     See 

Character  Stories. — Anon. 
An  Irishman  traveling,  though  not  for  delight.     See 

Irish  Traveler,  The. — Anon. 
An  Irishman,  walking  down  the  street.     See  Character 

Stories. — -Anon. 
An  officer  stood  at  the  crossing  one  day.     See  Sad  Fate 

of  a  Policeman,  The. — Anon. 
An  old  and  crippled  gate  am  I.     See  Front  Gate,  The. 

— Anon. 
An  old  and  crippled  veteran  to  the  War  Department 

came.     See  Scott  and  the  Veteran. — Taylor. 
An  old  castle  towers  o'er  the  billow.     See  Fineen  the 

Rover. — Joyce. 
An  old  church  in  Belgium  decided  to  repair  its  proper- 
ties.    See  Hard-earned  Wages. — Anon. 
An  old  clock,  that  had  stood  for  fifty  years  in  a  farm- 
er's kitchen.     See  Discontented  Pendulum,  "The. 

■ — Taylor. 
An  old  farm-house  with  meadows  wide.     See  Two  Pic- 
tures.— Green. 
An  old  gentleman  whose  style  was  Germanized.     See 

Signs  and  Omens. — Anon. 
An  old  German  out  West,  who  had  a  horse  stolen  from 

his  barn.     See  Dutch  Advertisement. — Anon. 
An  old  hen  sat  on  turtle's  eggs.     See  Old  Hen,  An. — 

M.  M.  D. 
An  old  lady  sat  in  her  old  arm-chair.     See  Prayer  and 

Potatoes. — Peltree  [or  Pettee]. 
An  old  maid  knelt  beneath  a  maple  tree.     See  Old 

Maid's  Prayer,  The. — Anon. 
An  old  maid  sat  in  her  rocking  chair.     See  Soliloquy, 

A. — Forbes. 
An  old  man  in  a  lodge  within  a  park.     See  Chaucer. — 

Longfellow. 
An  old  ?nan  lived  all  alone,  all  alone.     See  Obstinate 

Old  Man,  An. — Horton. 
An  old  man  sat  by  a  fireless  hearth.     See  Miser,  The. — 

Cutter. 
An  old  man  sits  in  his  garden  chair.     See  Land  of  the 

Afternoon. — Anon. 
An  old  man  stood  in  the  New  Year's  night  at  the  win- 
dow.    See  Two  Roads,  The  (New  Year's  Dream, 

A). — Richter. 
An  old  Quaker  lady,  in  the  time  of  the  crusade.     See 

Women  and  Temperance  Work. — Willard. 
An  old   song  made   by   an   aged   old  pate.     See  Old 

Courtier,  The. — Anon. 
An  old  turkey  gobbler  strutted  around.     See  Thanks- 
giving Turkey. — Riley. 
An  old  wife  sat  by  her  bright  fireside.     See  There's  but 

One  Pair  of  Stockings  to  Mend  To-night. — Anon. 
An  old    wooden    school-house,    worn,    battered,    and 

brown.     See  Debating  Society,  The.- — Hall. 
An  opinion  has  long  prevailed,  Fathers,  that,  in  public 

prosecutions.     See  Verres  Denounced. — Cicero. 
An  opulent  lord  of  Ispahan,  in  luxury  lolled  on  a  silk 

divan.    See  Daughter  of  the  Desert,  "The.— Harvey. 
An  orphan  maid — your  patience !  you  shall  have.     See 

Tales  of  the  Hall  (Entanglement,  An). — Crabbe. 
An  orphan's  curse  would  drag  to  hell.     See  Rime  of 

the  Ancient  Mariner,  The. — Coleridge. 
An  Orpheus!  an  Orpheus!  Yes,  faith  may  grow  bold. 

See  Blind  Fiddler,  The.— Wordsworth. 
An  outlandish   knight    came   from   the   North   lands 

See  Outlandish  Knight',  The. — Anon. 
An  owl  once  wooed  a  nightingale.     See  Owl  and  Nigh-'J 

ingale,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
An  oyster    rushed    wildly.     See    Tragic    Parting,    A. 

(Detroit  Tribune.) 
An'  plaze,  yer  honor,  would  ye  be  after  giving  employ- 
ment.    See  Mike  Gets  a  Job. — Anon. 
An'  [or  and]  shure  [or  sure]  I  was  tould  to  come  here  to 

[or  come  to  or  come  till  or  come  intilll  your  Honor. 

See  Mary  O'C'onnor,  the  Volunteer's  Wife. — Deni- 

son. 
An'  so  you  kinder  wanter  know  w'y  I  broke  ofif  with 

Sal?     See  Fancy  Work  Maiden,  The. — Foss. 
An'  sure  I  was  tould  to  come  till  [or  to]  yer  Honor. 

See  Mary  O'Connor,  the  Volunteer's  Wife. — Deni- 

son. 
An'  the  thought  of  us  each  was  the  boat,  och.  how- 

ever'd  she  stand  it  at  all.     See  Misther  Denis's 

Return. — Barlow. 
An  thou  were  my  ain  thing.     See  same. — Ramsay. 
An  ugly  catterpillar  once  uplooking.     See  Butterflys' 

Revenge,  The. — Alger. 


608 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


And 


An  undergraduate  had  unconsciously  strayed  into  the 
•     garden  of  a  certain  D.  D.     See  Proper  Distinction. 

—{The  Jest  Book.) 
An  unlettered  clergyman  wanting  a  place.     See  Welsh 

Classic,  A. — Ballard. 
Anacreon    of    the    meadow.      See    Bobolink,    The. — 

Anon. 
Anacharsis  went  into  the  Archons'  court  at  Athens. 

See  Scholar  in  a  Republic,  The  (Scholar's  Distrust, 

The).— Phillips. 
Ancient  of  days,  who  sittest,  throned  in  glory.     See 

Ancient  of  Days. — Doane. 
And  after  he  has  come  to  hide.     See  Compensation. 

— Cary. 
And  all  is  well,  though  face  and  form.     See  All  is  Well. 

— -Tennyson. 
And   also,  beau  sire,  of  other  things.     See  House  of 

Fame,  The  (Poet,  The). — Chaucer. 
And  answer  made  King  Arthur,  breathing  hard.     See 

Idylls    of  the  King  (Passing   of  Arthur,   The). — 

Tennyson. 
And  Ardennes  waves   above  them  her  green   leaves. 

See     Childe     Harold's     Pilgrimage    (Unreturning 

Brave,  The). — Byron. 
And  are  ye  sure  the  news  is  true?     See  Sailor's  Wife, 

The. — Mickle  \or  Adam]. 
And  are  you  there,  old  Pas!  in  troth,  I  never  thought. 

See  Arcadia  (Nico  and  Dorus). — Sidney. 
And  as  a  lovely  maiden,  pure  and  chaste.     See  Britan- 
nia's Pastorals  (Metamorphosis,  A). — Browne. 
And  as  for  me,  though  than  I  kon  but  lyte.     See  Le- 

gende  of  Goode  Women  (Prologue). — Chaucer. 
And  as  I  sat,  over  the  light  blue  hills.     See  Endymion 

(Bacchus). — Keats. 
And,    as   imagination    bodies  forth.     See  Midsummer 

Night's  Dream. — Shakespeare. 
And  as   the   moisture,    which   the  thirsty   earth.     See 

Nosce  Teipsum  (Soul  Compared  to  a  River,  The). 

— Davies. 
And  as    within    a    landscape    that    doth    stand.     See 

Britannia's  Pastorals  (Landscape,  A). — Browne. 
And  at  night  the  Septette  of  Beethoven.     See  Home 

Comfort. —  Kingsley. 
And  Balaam  lifted  up  his  eyes,  and  he  saw  Israel  abid- 
ing in  his  tents.     See  Balaam's  Prophecy  in  Be- 
half of  Israel. — Bible. 
And  be  these  juggling  fiends  no  more  believed.     See 

Macbeth. — Shakespeare. 
And  canst  thou,  mother,  for  a  moment  think.     See  To 

My  Mother. — White. 
And  certainly  they  say,  for  fine  behaving.     See  Monks 

and  the  Giants,  The. — Frere. 
And  Constance,    then    is    safe! — Heaven    bless    thee, 

father!     See  Raimond  Released. — Hemans. 
And  dearer  I,  the  pink,  must  be.     See    Pink,  The. — 

Goethe. 
And  didst  thou  love  the  race  that  loved  not  thee?     See 

Better  Way,  The. — Ingelow. 
And  do  I  see  some  cause  a  hope  to  feed.     See  Astro- 

pheland  Stella  (Sonnet  LXVI).— Sidney. 
And  do   our  loves  all  perish   with   our  frames?     See 

Husband's  and  Wife's  Grave,  The  (Immortality). 

— Dana. 
And  do  you  ask  me,  "What  is  Life?"     See  What  is 

Life. — {Blackwood' s  Magazine.) 
And  do  you  think  of  me.     See  Love  Letter,  A. — Anon. 
And  does  that  blessed   Book  of  books,   which  none. 

See  Bible  in  Harmony  with  Temperance,  The.— 

Anon. 
And  don't  you  think  your  father  will  reply  to  your  last 

letter.     See  Billet  Doux,  The. —Anon. 
And  doth  not  a  meeting  like  this  make  amends.     See 

And  Doth  not  a  Meeting  like  this. — Moore. 
"And   even  our  women,"   lastly  grumbles   Ben.     See 

Girl  of  All  Periods,  The. — Patmdre. 
And   ever  when  the  moon  was  low.     See  Mariana. — 

Tennyson. 
And  every    village    graveyard    will    have    its    green 

mounds.     See  same. — Putnam. 
And  first  as  to  the  character  of  war,  or  that  part  of  our 

nature.     See  Character  of  War,  'The. — Anon. 
And  five  of  us  those  summer  days.     See  To'Barbary 

Land. — -Mitchell. 
And  forth  [or  foorth]  they  passe,  with  pleasure  forward 

led.     See  Faerie  Queene,  The  (In  Praise  of  Trees). 

— Spenser. 
And  grummer,    grummer,    grummer.     See   Old   Conti- 
nentals, The. — Anon. 
And  has  it  come  to  this?     Are  we  so  humbled,  so  low. 

See  On  the  Greek  Revolution  (Sympathy  with  the 

Greeks).— Clay. 
And  has  the  Spring's  all  glorious  eye.     See  Tell-tale 

Flowers. — Clare. 


"And  hast  thou  nerve  enough?"  he  said.  See  Raising 
the  Devil. — Barham. 

And  hast  thou  sought  thy  heavenly  home.  See  Casa 
Wappy. — Moir. 

"And  have  these  rebels  dared  complain,  and  murmur 
to  their  king?"  See  William  Tell  and  His  Son.— 
Nott. 

And  he  said,  A  certain  man  had  two  sons.  See  Prodi- 
gal Son,  The.—Bible. 

And  he  showed  me  a  pure  river  of  water  of  life,  clear  as 
crystal.     See  Revelation,  XXII. — -Bible. 

And  he  took  up  his  parable,  and  said.  See  Numbers 
(Balaam's  Parables). — Bible. 

And  her  lips  (that  show  no  dulness).  See  Fair  Virtue, 
the  Mistress  of  Philarete  (Song  to  Her  Beauty,  A). 
—Wither. 

And  here  his  course  the  chieftain  staid.  See  Lady  of 
the  Lake,  The. — Scott. 

And  here  the  hermit  sat,  and  told  his  beads.  See  Hill- 
side Cot,  The. — Channing. 

"And  how  could  you  dream  of  meeting?"  See  Tele- 
pathy.— Lowell. 

And  I  made  a  rural  pen.  See  Piper,  The  ("And  I 
made,"  etc.). — Blake. 

And  I  paused,  held  my  breath  in  such  silence,  and  lis- 
tened apart.  See  Saul  (David  Singing  before 
Saul) . — Browning. 

And  I  shall  sleep;  and  on  thy  side.  See  Rivulet,  The. 
— -Bryant. 

And  I  "was  smart"  and  all  the  springs.  See  Myself. — 
Arey. 

And  if  he  'should  come  again.  See  Ylen's  Song. — 
Hovey. 

And  if  so  be  that  lechis  done  the  faile.  See  Dietary, 
The,  or.  Rules  for  Health. — Lydgate. 

And  if  the  wine  you  drink,  the  lip  you  press.  See 
Rubfliy&t  of  Omar  Khayy&m  (Phantom  Caravan, 
The).— Fitzgerald. 

And  if  we  do  but  watch  the  hour.  See  Mazeppa. — 
Byron. 

And  in  a  launde,  upon  an  hille  of  floures.  See  Parle- 
ment  of  Foules,  The. — Chaucer. 

And  in  that  twilight  hush,  God  drew  their  hearts.  See 
same. — Larcom. 

And  in  the  frosty  season,  when  the  sun.  See  Prelude, 
The  (Skating). — Wordsworth. 

And  is  it  even  so?  And  are  our  brethren  at  such  pains 
to  note  the  infirmities  of  our  natural  temper.  See 
Talisman,  The  (Richard  to  the  Princes  of  the  Cru- 
sade).— Scott. 

And  is  the  swallow  gone?  See  Departure  of  the  Swal- 
low, The.— Howitt. 

And  is  there  care  in  heaven?  And  is  there  love?  See 
J'aerie  Queene,  The  (Ministry  of  Angels,  "The). — 
Spenser. 

And  is  there  then  no  earthly  place.  See  Eternal  Lon- 
don — Moore. 

And  is  this  all  you  have  observed?  I  think.  See  Vir- 
ginius. — Knowles. 

And  is  this — Yarrow?— This  the  stream.  See  Yarrow 
Visited. — Wordsworth. 

And  it  came  to  pass,  after  these  things.  See  Parable 
against  Persecution,  A.- — -Franklin. 

And  it  came  to  pass,  when  Ahab  saw  Elijah.  See 
Elijah  and  the  Prophets  of  Baal. — Bible. 

And  it  has  come  to  this.  My  son  John,  and  his  wife 
Eleanor.  See  Saved  from  the  Poor  House. — 
Anon. 

And  it's  me  recipe  for  cake,  yer  afther  wantin',  is  it? 
See  Mrs.  Murphy's  Recipe  for  Cake. — Smith. 

And  like  a  dying  lady  lean  and  pale.  See  Moon,  The.- — 
Shelley. 

And  like  a  silver  clarion  rung — "Excelsior."  See  Ex- 
celsior.— Longfellow. 

And  lo,  a  voice  from  Italy!     See  Pompeii. — Anon. 

And,  lo;  leading  a  blessed  host  comes  one.  See 
Commemoration  Ode  (Lincoln). — Monroe. 

And,  lo,  the  universal  air.     See  Eugene  Aram. — Hood. 

And  longer  had  she  sung — but,  with  a  frown.  See 
Passions,  The:  An  Ode  for  Music  (Revenge). — 
Collins. 

And  mightier  grew  the  joy  to  meet  full-faced.  See 
Swimming. — Swinburne. 

And  must  I  always  say  my  prayers  before  going  to  bed? 
See  Anxious  Inquirer,  An. — Anon. 

And  near  the  pyramids,  more  wondrous  and  more  awful 
than  all  else.     See  Sphynx,  The. — Kinglake. 

And  ne'er  did  Grecian  chisel  trace.  See  Lady  of  the 
Lake,  The  (Canto  I.).— Scott. 

And  no  one  saw,  while  it  was  dark.  See  Strange  Ves- 
sel, The.— Stafford. 

And  now  all  nature  seem'd  in  love.  See  On  a  Bank  as 
I  Sat  a-Fishing. — Wotton. 


609 


And 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


And  now  approached  their  fleet  from  India,  fraught. 

See  Attempt  at  Berghen,  The. — Dryden. 
And  now    behold    your    tender    nurse,    the    air.     See 
Orchestra:  or  A  Poenae  of  Dauncing  (Dancing  of 
the  Air,  The). — Davies. 

And  now,  dear  friend^)  our  task  is  done.  See  Epilogue. 
— Anon. 

And  now  I  want  to  say  a  word.  <See  Happiest  Time  in 
Life,  The.— Storrs. 

And  now  in  the  forest  the  woodman  doth  stand.  <See 
Plea  of  the  Tree,  The. — Benedict. 

And  now,  Mr.  President,  instead  of  speaking  of  the 
possibility  or  utility  of  secession.  See  Consti- 
tution and  the  Union,  The  (On  Mr.  Clay's  Resolu- 
tions).— Webster. 

And  now  tell  me,  Sarah,  how  do  you  like  your  sewing- 
machine?     See  Buying  a  SewinK-machine.---Anon. 

And  now  the  bell — the  bell.  See  Old  Curiosity  Shop, 
The  (Little  Nell's  Funeral).— Dickens. 

And  now  the  end  of  Ahab's  house  had  come.  iSee 
Death  of  Jezebel,  The. — Anon. 

And  now  the  slowly  fading  light.  See  Winter  Gloam- 
ing.— Lincoln. 

And  now  the  sun  was  growing  high  and  warm.  See 
Hyperion  (Paul  Fleming  Resolves). — Longfel- 
low. 

And  now,  thou  sketch  and  outline  of  a  man.  See  Bal- 
thazar and  the  Quack. — Tobin. 

"And  now,  Tom,  my  boy,"  said  the  squire.  See  Tom 
Brown's  School  Days  (Away  to  School). — Hughes. 

And  now,  unveil'd,  the  toilet  stands  displayed.  See 
Rape  of  the  Lock  (Toilet,  The). — Popet 

And  now  we  only  ask  to  serve.     See  same. — Townsend. 

And,  O  beloved  voices,  upon  which.  See  Futurity. — 
Browning. 

And  oftentimes  excusing  of  a  fault.  See  King  John. — 
Shakespeare. 

And  oftentimes,  to  win  us  to  our  harm.  See  Macbeth. 
— Shakespeare. 

And  oh,  to  think  the  sun  can  shine.  See  Adelaide 
Neilson . — Winter. 

And  on  her  lover's  arm  she  leant.  See  Day-dream, 
The  (Departure,  The). — Tennyson. 

And  one  by  one,  through  a  hole  in  the  wall.  See  Darius 
Green  and  his  Flying  Machine. — -Trowbridge. 

And  only  to  think,  Bessie,  we're  all  alone  in  the  house. 
See  Actions  Speak  Louder  than  Words. — Anon. 

And  panoplied  alike  for  war  or  peace.  See  Victoria. — 
Austin. 

And  passing  here  through  evening  dew.  See  Peasant's 
Return,  The. — ^Barnes. 

And  Paul  stood  in  the  midst  of  the  Areopagus,  and  said. 
See  Acts  of  the  Apostles  (Paul  at  Athens). — Bible. 

And  peace  has  its  own  peculiar  victories.  See  True 
Grandeur  of  Nations,  The  (Peace). — Sumner. 

And  perched  the  glittering,  icy  boughs,  among.  See 
same. — G.  H.  D. 

And  pray,  what  ill  wind  blows  you  here?  See  Bond- 
man, The  (Homeless  Old  Man,  The). — Caine. 

"And  pray,  who  are  you?"  See  Tax-gatherer,  The. — 
Tabb. 

"And  pray,  who  may  you  be?"  asked  de  Cheauvelins 
with  a  sneer.     See  Secret  Dispatches,  The. — Anon. 

And  present  gratitude.     See  same. — Whittier. 

And  Prevye  thought,  rejoycing  of  hym-self .  See  Court 
of  Love,  The. — Chaucer. 

And  said  I  that  my  limbs  were  old.  See  Lay  of  the  Last 
Minstrel  ("And  said  1,"  etc  ). — Scott. 

And  shall  the  mortal  sons  of  God.     See  same. — Elliot. 

.\nd  she  is  dead !  an<!  she  is  dead !  See  Mormon  Widow- 
er's Lament,  The. — Anon. 

And  shure  [or  sure]  I  was  tould  to  come  in  till  yer 
honor.  See  Mary  O'Connor,  the  Volunteer's  Wife. 
— Denison. 

And  so,  as  I  fling  back  to  my  mind  the  pictures  of  the 
war.     See  Retrospect,  A. — Hubbard. 

And  so,  Don  Gomez,  you  think  we  ought  to  dismiss  the 
proposition  of  this  worthy  Genoese?  See  Queen 
Isabella's  Resolve. — Sargent. 

And  so  he  is  to  wed.  Alas!  'twas  only  in  July.  See 
False,  Fickle  Man!     Anon. 

And  so  here's  Rugby,  sir,  at  last,  and  you'll  be  in  plenty 
of  time  for  dinner.  See  Tom  Brown's  School 
Days  (At  Rugby). — Hughes. 

And  so  I  am  a  subscriber.  See  Telephone  at  Home, 
The. — Anon. 

And  so,  I  say,  Delia,  that  although  the  matter  is  re- 
garded.    See  Desperate  Encounter,  A. — Meyers. 

And  so,  like  most  young  noets.  in  a  flush.  See  Aurora 
Leigh  (Ferment  of  New  Wine,  The). — Browning. 

And  so  our  royal  relative  is  dead.  See  Dirge  Concern- 
ing the  Late  Lamented  King  of  the  (Sannibal  Is- 
lands, A. — Croffut. 


And  so  she  smiles!     Nor  frown  nor  pout.     See  EflBgy, 

The.— P.P.  S. 
And  so  she's  engaged  to  be  married.     See  Awkward. — 

Goodwin. 
And  so,  smiling,  we  went  on.     See  Little  Hatchet  Story, 

The.— Burdette. 
And  so  the  new  Juliet  charms  you — her  beauty  has  set 

you  ablaze?     See  Juliet. — Austin. 
And  so  thou  say'st,  my  brother,  to-morrow  the  end  shall 

be.     See  Double  Sacrifice,  The. — Austin. 
And  so  you  are  going  to  encourage  intemperance  by 

setting  out  wine  this  evening.     See  Maud's  Com- 
mand; or.  Yielding  to  Temptation. — McBride. 
And  so  your  sister  will  be  here  to-day,  Tom.     See  Tom's 

Practical  Joke. — Rook. 
And  soon  straight  up  the  hill  there  rode.     See  Marmion 

(Death  of  Marmion,  The). — Scott. 
And,  sooth  to  say,  yon  vocal  grove.     See  September. — 

Wordsworth. 
And  still  I  changed ;  I  was  a  boy  no  more.     See  same. — 

Ingelow. 
And  still  there  came  that  silver  tone.     See  Old  Age. — 

Pierpont. 
And  sure  [or  shure]  I  was  tould  to   come   in   till  yer 

honor.     See  Mary  O  Connor,  the  Volunteer's  Wife. 

— Denison. 
And  the  first  gray  of  morning  fiU'd  the  east.     See 

Sohrab  and  Rustum. — Arnold. 
And  the   frost,   too,   has   a  melodious   ministry.     See 

same. — Willis. 
And  the  Lord  God  planted  a  garden  eastward  in  Eden. 

See  Tree  of  Life,  The.— Bible. 
And  the  newspaper  is  also  the  great  agency  of  progress. 

See  same.- — Bonney. 
And  Thebes,  how  fallen  now!     Her  storied  gates.     See 

Thebes.— Whitehead. 
And  their  hearts  yearned  for  the  dear  old  mountains. 

See  Cheiron,  the  Centaur. — Anon. 
And  then  he  drew  a  dial  from  his  poke.     See  As  You 

Like  It. — Shakespeare. 
And  then  it  started,  like  a  guilty  thing.     See  Hamlet 

(Ghosts  of  the  Dead). — Shakespeare. 
And  then  there  came  beauty  and  joy  in  one.     See  Epic 

of  Hades,  The  (Aphrodite). — Morris. 
And  there  are  such  things  as  friends  that  pass  away? 

See  Past  Friends. — Faber. 
And  there  came  messengers,   vassals,   to  Ruydiez  of 

Bivar,  bringing  him  tribute.     See  Cid,  The  (Siege 

of  Zamora,  The). — Southey. 
And  there,  in  that  ripe  summer-night,  once  more.     See 

Little  .lack  Janitor.- — Riley. 
And  there  they  sat,  a  popping  corn.     See  Popping  Corn. 

Anon. 
And  there   two    runners    did    the    sign    abide.      See 

Earthly     Paradise,    The     (Atalanta's     Race).  — 

Morris. 
And  there  were  in  the  same  country  Shepherds.     See 

Good  Tidings.— Bi6Zf. 
And  there,  where  the  smooth,  wet  pebbles  be.     See 

Sirens,  The. — Lowell. 
And  these  few  precepts  in  thy  memory.     See   Hamlet 

(Polonius  to  Laertes). — Shakespeare. 
And  they  have  thrust  our  shattered  dead  away  in  for- 
eign graves.     See  Martyrs  of  the  Maine,  The. — 

Hughes. 
And  they  serve  men  austerely.     See  Celestial  Love,  The 

— Emerson. 
"And  this  is  freedom,"  cried  the  serf,  "at  last."     See 

Bondage. — Saltus. 
And  this  is  life;  to  live,  to  love,  to  lose!     See  sam,e. — 

Anon. 
And  this  is  Louisburg!  whose  moss-grown  ruin.     See 

Loui.sburg. — Huntington. 
And  this  is  love!  until  this  hour.     See  In  the  Garden. — 

Buchanan. 
And  this  is  the  end  of  it  all!  it  rounds  the  year's  com- 
pleteness.    See  Only. — (.Argosy,  The.) 
And  this  is  the  way  the  baby  woke.     See  Way  the  Baby 

Woke,  The.— Riley. 
And  this  man  is  now  become  a  god.     See  Julius  CaJsar. 

— Shakespeare . 
And  this,  O  Spain,  is  thy  return.     See  Columbus  in 

Chains. — .Tewsbury. 
And  this  thought  will  be  our  comfort.     See  same. — Mur- 
ray. 
And  those  are  the  last,  Rachel?     See  Mrs.  Willis's  Will. 

- — Souvestre. 
And  thou  art  dead,  as  young  and  fair.     See  same. — 

Byron. 
And  thou  art  gone,  most  loved,  most  honored  friend! 

See  On  the  Late  S.  T.  Coleridge.— Allston. 
And  thou  hast  stolen  a  jewel.  Death.     See  Babe  Chris- 
tabel. — Massey. 


610 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Another 


And  thou  hast  walk'd   about  (how  strange  a  story!). 

See  Address  to  the  Mummy  in  Belzoni's  Exhibition. 

—Smith. 
And  thou,  remembered  Sagamore.     See  Sagamore,  The. 

— Shillaber. 
And  thou,  too,  gone!  one  more  bright  soul  away.     See 

To  the  Memory  of  Sydney  Dobell. — Blackie. 
And  thou!  whom  earth  still  holds,  and  will  not  yield. 

See  Ode  to  England,  An  (Wordsworth).— Lord. 
.A.nd  thou  wouldst  know  this  wicked  world?     See  To  a 

Would-he  New  Woman. — Metcalfe. 
And  thus  all-expectant  abiding,  I  waited  not  long,  for 

soon.     See  He  Heard    her   Sing. — Thomson. 
And  thus  from  morn  till  eve  he  cried.     See  Charcoal 

Man,  The. — Trowbridge. 
And  thus   their  studies  J;hey   pursued: — On   Sunday. 

See  Boarding-school  Curriculum.^ — Hood. 
And  truth,    you    say,    is    all    divine.     See    Realism. — 

Benson. 
And  up  I  roos  three  houres  after  twelfe.     See  Flower 

and  the  Leaf,  The. — Chaucer. 
And  was  it  T,  long,  long  ago,  who  sat  within  the  door 

and  spun?     See  Witch,  The. — Cloud. 
And  was  it  thine,  the  light  whose  radiance  shed.     See 

Beata  Beatrix. — Waddington. 
And  we  might  trust  these  youths  and  maidens  fair. 

See  Festus  (Youth,  Love,  and  Death). — Bailey. 
And  we,  poor  waifs,  whose  life-term  seems.     See  name. 

— Hayne. 
And  well   our   Christian   sires   of   old.      See   Marmion 

(Old  English  Christmas,  The).— Scott. 
And  what   are   things   eternal? — Powers   depart.     See 

Excursion,     The     (God     in     Nature).  —  Words- 
worth. 
"And  what  became  of  the  chair?"  inquired  Clara.   See 

Grandfather's  Chair  (Sunken    Treasure,  The). — 

Hawthorne. 
And  what  did  dainty  Babie  Bell.     See  Babie  Bell. — 

Aldrich. 
"And  what  have  you  been  doing."     See  Growing. — 

Sangster. 
And  what  is  so  rare  as  a   day  in   June?     See   Vision 

of  Sir  Launfal,  The  (June). — I-owell. 
"And  what  room  is  this?"  asked  Mrs.  Chrysler.     See 

Flat  Story,  A. — Anon. 
And  what   was    it,    fellow-citizens?      See    Eulogy   on 

Lafayette  (Oration  on  Lafayette). — Everett. 
And  what  will  I  do?     See  Molly  Carew. — Lover. 
And  when  I  seek  the  chamber  where  she  dwelt.     See 

Mary. — Tennyson-Turner. 
And  when — its    force    expended.     See   White    Squall, 

The  (After  the  Storm).— Thackeray. 
And  when  the  stream.     See  Excursion,  The. — Words- 
worth. 
And  when  with  joyous  heart  they  'gan  prepare.     See, 

Chancellor's  Garden,  The. — Courthope. 
And  whence,   then,   came   these   goodly  stones   'twas 

Israel's  pride  to  raise?     See  Spiritual  Temple,  The. 

— Anon. 
"And  where  have  you  been,  my  Mary?"     See  Fairies  of 

the  Caldon  Low,  The. — Howitt. 
"And  where  is  he?"     Not  by  the  side.     See  Where  is 

He? — Neele. 
"And  where  now,  Bayard,  will  thy  footsteps  tend?" 

See  Bayard  Taylor. — Whittier. 
"And  wherefore  do  the  poor  complain?"     See  Com- 
plaints of  the  Poor,  The. — Southey. 
And  wherefore  should  these  good  news  make  me  sick? 

See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II. — Shakespeare. 
And  while  9ome  books,  like  steps,  are  left  behind  us. 

See  same. — Beecher. 
"And  whither  would  you  lead  me  then?"     See  Rokeby 

(Friar  of  Orders  Gray). — Scott. 
"And  why  do  you  throw  down  your  hoe  by  the  way. " 

See  Waiting  for  Something  to  Turn  Up. — Cary. 
"And  why?"  said  Bob,  with  a  scornful  look.     See  Bob 

and  the  Bible. — Anon. 
"And  why's  the  ra'son  ye'U  not  be  my  wife,  Kathlie?" 

See     Mick     Tandy's     Revenge.     {Youth'sr    Com- 
panion.) 
And  Willy,  my  eldest  born,  is  gone,   you  say,  little 

Annie?     See     Grandmother's     Apology,     The. — • 

Tennyson. 
And  wilt  thou  leave  me  thus?     See  Earnest  Suit  to 

his  Unkind  Mistress  not  to  Forsake  him,  An. — 

Wyatt. 
"And  ye  sail  walk  in  silk  attire."     See  Siller  Croun, 

The. — Blamire. 
And  ye  who  fill  the  places  we  once  filled.     See  Mori- 

turi  Salutamus." — I-ongfellow. 
And  yet,  do  you  not  think,  that  who  so  could.     See 

Age  of  the   Pilgrims  the   Heroic    Period  of   our 

History,  The  (Pilgrim  Fathers,  The).— Choate. 


And  yet,  for  chastisement  of  these  regrets.  See  Pre- 
lude, The  (Morning  after  the  Ball). — Wordsworth. 

And  yet  I  cannot  reprehend  the  flight.  See  Sennets 
to  Delia  (Beauty,  Time,  and  Love). — Daniel. 

And  yet  I  know  past  all  doubting,  truly.  See  Divided. 
— Ingelow. 

And  you  have  lost  your  little  boy?  See  Where  Honey- 
suckles Grow. — McNabb. 

And  you  really  think  you  have  succeeded?  See  Na- 
ture versus  Education. — Anon. 

"And  you.  Sir  Poet,  shall  you  make,  I  pray."  See 
Poet  and  the  Child,  The. — Howells. 

And  you,  ye  stars.  See  Empedocles  on  Etna  (Song  of 
Empedocles,  The). — Arnold. 

"And  you,  ye  storms,  howl  out  his  greatness!  See 
Goodness  and  Greatness  of  God. — Spurgeon. 

Andrew's  story  is  the  one  overmastering  romance  of  the 
Revolution.     See  Andrd  and  Hale. — Depew. 

Andromeda,  by  Perseus  saved  and  wed.  See  Aspecta 
Medusa. — Rossetti. 

Andy  Rooney  was  a  fellow  who  had  the  most  singu- 
larly ingenious  knack  of  doing  everything  the 
wrong  way.  See  Handy  Andy's  Little  Mistakes. 
— Lover. 

Ane  Lyoun  at  his  pray  wery  foirrun.  See  Taill  of  the 
Lyoun  and  the  Mous,  The. — Henryson. 

Anear  the  centre  of  that  northern  crest.  See  City  cf 
Dreadful  Night,  The  (Melencolia). — Thomson. 

Angel,  king  of  streaming  morn.     See  Sun. — Rowe. 

Angel  of  pain,  I  think  thy  face.  See  Angel  of  Pain, 
The.— Holm.     ■ 

Angel  spirits  of  sleep.     See  Spirits. — Bridges. 

Angelic  aeronaut,  airy  and  active.  See  Snow-flakes  and 
Snow-drifts. — Gale. 

Angels  and  ministers  of  grace,  defend  us!  See  Hamlet 
(Hamlet  to  the  Ghost). — Shakespeare. 

Angels  have  fallen  ere  thy  time;  by  pride.  See  Lady 
of  Lyons,  The  (Claude  Melnotte's  Apology  and 
Defence). — Bulwer-Lytton. 

Angels  of  growth,  of  old  in  that  surprise.  See  Ideals. 
— Wasson. 

"Angelus  Domini  nuntiavit  Maria!"  See  Songs  my 
Mother  Sung,  The. — Wakeman. 

Angry  words  are  lightly  spoken.  See  Angry  Words-. — 
Anon. 

Anigh  a  frozen  mere  a  cottage  stood.  See  Dream  that 
Came  True,  The. — Ingelow. 

"Ann  Rafferty,"  said  the  judge.  "Here,  yer  Honor." 
See  Ann  Rafferty's  Evidence. — Shields. 

Anna,  I  wish  you  to  understand  that  you  must  keep 
your  place.     See  Aunt  Susan  Jones. — Anon. 

Annan  Water's  wading  deep.  See  Annan  Water. — ■ 
Anon. 

Annie  and  Rhoda,  sisters  twain.  See  Sisters,  The. — 
Whittier. 

Announced  by  all  the  trumpets  of  the  sky.  See  Snow 
Storm,  The. — Emerson. 

Anoint  my  eyes  that  I  may  see.  See  Prayer,  A. — 
Perry. 

Anon  out  of  the  earth  a  fabric  huge.  See  Paradise 
Lost. — Milton. 

Anonymous— nor  needs  a  name.  See  Anonymous. — 
Tabb. 

Another  authenticated  ghost  story.  See  Did  You 
Ever  See  a  Ghost? — Meyers. 

"Another  Daring  Burglary!"  read  Mrs.  Banford.  See 
Banford's  Burglar-alarm. — Anon. 

Another  day  is  numbered  with  the  past.  See  At  Even- 
ing.— Anon. 

Another  day  its  course  hath  run.  See  Evening  Hymn 
for  a  Child. — Pierpont. 

Another  day!  Oh,  holy  calm.  See  Another  Day. — 
Arnold. 

Another  flagon,  old  friend?  Of  course.  See  Told  at 
"The  Flagon."— CoUer. 

Another  general  shout.  See  Julius  Caesar  (Cassius' 
Complaint    of   Caesar).— Shakespeare. 

Another  guest  that  winter  night.  See  Snow-bound 
(Prophetess).— Whittier. 

Another  hand  is  beckoning  us.  See  Gone. — Whit- 
tier. 

Another  hero  of  those  youthful  years.  See  Noey  Rix- 
ler. — Riley. 

Another  King!  they  grow  like  Hydra's  heads.  See 
King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. — Shakespeare. 

Another  lamb,  O  Lamb  of  God,  behold.  See  Con- 
fided.—Tabb. 

Another  little  wave.     See  Baby,  The. — Anon. 

Another  mizzling,  drizzling  day!  See  My  Letters. — 
Barham. 

Another  name  is  added  to  the  roll  of  those  whom  the 
world  will  not  willingly  let  die.  See  Eulogy  on 
General  Grant. — Beecher. 


611 


Another 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Another  night,  and  yet  no  tidings  come.  See  Parting 
of  King  Philip  and  Marie,  The. — Marston. 

.\nother  patient,  I  suppose.  See  Dr.  Brown. — Good- 
fellow. 

.\nother  star  'neath  Time's  horizon  dropped.  See 
Lowell  Alphabet  A.— Lowell. 

.\nother  then:  "Ah,  oe  thy  cherished  aim."  See  Di- 
vine Comedy,  The  (Buonconte  di  Montefeltro). — 
Dante. 

.\nother  year!  another  year!  See  One  More  Year. — 
Norton. 

.\nother  year  has  passsed  away.  See  Our  Anniver- 
sary.— Cornell. 

.\nother  year  passed  over — gone.  See  Another  Year. 
— O'Hagan. 

Another  year's  come  'round  again.  See  Resolved. — 
G.  A.  P. 

Anstice  and  Amalie  watching  late.  See  In  the  Jac- 
querie.— Simcox. 

Answer  me,  burning  stars  of  night!  where  is  the  spirit 
gone?     See  Invocation. — Hemans. 

A'n't  the  stars  purty?  See  At  the  Hospital  Window. 
— Smith. 

Antoine  Philarey,  after  many  years.  See  Marriage 
Tour,  A. — Pardessus. 

"Antoine,"  said  Mirabeau,  returning  gay.  See  Equal- 
ity at  Home. — Anon. 

Any  callers  to-day,  Tom?  See  Intelligence  Office,  The. 
— Anon. 

"Any  fellah  feelth  nervouth."  See  Lord  Dundreary 
Proposing. — Skill. 

"Any  grist  for  the  mill?"  See  Water-mill,  The. — 
"Aunt  Effie." 

"Any  one  can  hang  a  curtain."  See  Burton's  Cur- 
tains.— Meyers. 

Any  one  who  has  mingled  to  any  extent  in  the  society 
of  the  present  day.  See  Selfishness  of  Society. — 
Denison. 

Any  shentleman  vot  vill  go  round  pehind  your  face. 
See  Vas  Bender  Henspecked? — Von  Boyle. 

Appeared  the  princess  with  that  merry  child  Prince 
Guy.     See  Athulf  and  Ethilda. — Taylor. 

.\pplause  to  that  blest  son  of  foresight.  See  Night 
Thoughts. — Young. 

Apple  blossoms  in  the  orchard.     See  June. — Mason. 

Apprehensions  of  the  imputation  of  the  want  of  firm- 
ness. See  On  the  Bank  Veto  (True  Patriotism). 
—Clay. 

Approach,  thou  craven,  crouching  slave!  See  Exhor- 
tationto  the  Greeks. — Byron. 

April,  April,  laugh  thy  girlish  laughter.  See  Song. 
— Watson. 

April  brought  the  blossoms  out.  See  Cherries. — 
Sherman. 

April  brought  you  to  us,  dear.  See  To  Our  Baby. — 
Anon. 

April  cold  with  dropping  rain.  See  April  and  May. — 
Emerson. 

April  flowers  were  in  the  hollows :  in  the  air  were  April 
bells.     See  Lincoln's  Last  Dream. — Butterworth. 

April  is  here!     See  In  April. — Rexford. 

April  the  19th,  1775,  was  the  fatal  day  marked  out  by 
the  mysterious^  Heaven.  See  Battle  of  Lexington, 
The. — -Weems. 

Apron  on  and  dash  in  hand.  See  Churning  Song,  The. 
— Dinsmore. 

Arabella  Atkins  was  her  name.  See  Voyage  of  Ara- 
bella, The.— Deland. 

Arabella  was  a  school-girl.  See  Arabella  and  Sally  Ann. 
— ('arson. 

Arbor  day,  which  is  here  regarded.  See  Arbor  Day 
History. — Wells. 

Arbutus,  thou  dost  faintly  swing.  See  Arbutus. — 
Anon. 

.\rcheson  arches!  as  it  were  that  Rome.  See  Childe 
Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Coliseum,  The). — Byron. 

Archibald  Campbell,  the  engine-driver,  was  a  decent, 
honest,  well-meaning  man.  See  Railway  Chase, 
The. — Macrae. 

Archibald  Edward  Theophilus  Jones.  See  What  might 
Happen. — Carson. 

Archie's  wife?  Yes,  dear,  but  where's  Archie;  See 
Archie's  Mother. — Thorpe. 

Archons  of  Athens,  topped  by  the  tettix,  see,  I  return ! 
See  Pheidippides. — Browning. 

Are  all  content?  See  Damon  to  the  Syracusans. — 
Banim. 

Are  bank-notes  equivalent  to  the  legal  standard  coin 
of  the  realm?  See  Bank-notes  and  Coin. — Can- 
ning. 

Are  the  noises  in  the  woods  the  voices  of  the  birds 
talking  about  school?  See  Bird  Talk. — Good- 
fellow. 


Are  the  posts  of  our  frontier  to  remain  forever  in  the 
possession  of  Great  Britain?  See  British  Treaty, 
The. — Ames. 

"Are  there  any  more  of  those  [or  these]  letters?"  See 
Six  Love-letters. — Anon. 

Are  there  favoring  ladies  above  thee?  See  Valse  Jeune. 
— Guiney. 

"Are  there  no  real  good  Injuns?"  See  Cowboy's  Tale, 
The. — "Wyoming  Kit." 

Are  there  not  lofty  moments  when  the  soul.  See  Kath- 
rina. — Holland. 

Are  there  not  times,  patricians,  when  great  states.  See 
Catiline  (Catiline  to  his  Friends,  etc.). — Croly. 

Are  they  shadows  that  we  see?  See  Eidola. — Dan- 
iel. 

Are  we  a  nation?  Then  must  we  have  that  essential, 
indestructible  unity.  See  Are  We  a  Nation?  (Our 
Nation  and  Flag). — Sumner. 

Are  we  all  here?  Then  let  us  open  our  school  by  sing- 
ing.    See  Schoolday. — Hunt. 

Are  we  all  met?  See  Midsummer's  Night's  Dream 
(Clown's   Second   Rehearsal,  'The). — Shakespeare. 

Are  we  so  low,  so  base,  so  despicable,  that  we  may  not 
express  our  horror.  See  On  the  Greek  Revolu- 
tion (On  Recognizing  the  Independence  of 
Greece,  1824).— Clay. 

Are  ye  all  there?  Are  ye  all  there.  See  Stars  in  My 
Country's  Sky.— L.  H.  S. 

Are  you  a  family  man,  Johnson?  See  Bones  on  Family 
Discipline. — Anon. 

Are  you  a  judge  of  wines,  Johnson-?  See  Mr.  Johnson 
on  Wine. — Anon. 

"Are  you  a  lampoon  man?  Not  really!"  See  Critic, 
The. — Batchelder. 

Are  you  a  musician,  Johnson?  See  De  Lay  ub  de  Last 
Minstrel. — Anon. 

Are  you  alone?  Of  course,  I  am  alone.  See  Sisterly 
Confidence. — Broughton. 

Are  you  filled  with  wonder.  Jacqueminot?  See  Jacque- 
minot.— Knowles. 

Are  you  fond  of  a  game  of  chess.  Bones?  See  Chess  and 
Whist. — Anon. 

Are  you  fond  of  animals,  Johnson?  See  Johnson's  Bed- 
fellows.— Anon. 

Are  you  fond  of  lawyers,  Johnson?  See  Lawyers  and 
Donkeys. — -Anon. 

Are  you  fond  of  mottoes,  Tambo?  See  One  for  Every- 
body.— Anon. 

Are  you  fond  of  rowing,  Johnson?  See  How  to  Make  a 
Boat  Fast. — Anon. 

Are  you  fond  of  your  Sunday,  Tambo?  See  Day  of 
Rest,  The. — Anon. 

Are  you  glad,  my  big  brother,  my  deep-hearted  oak? 
See  Are  You  Glad. — Dandridge. 

Are  you  lost,  dear  child?  See  Lost  Princess,  The. — 
Anon. 

Are  you  married,  Tambo?  See  Tambo  on  Matrimony. 
— Anon. 

Are  you  not  glad,  Jenny  is  to  have  a  doll's  party,  Susy? 
See  Doll's  Sash,  The. — Anon. 

Are  you  ready,  are  you  ready,  for  the  coming  of  the 
Lord.     See  Are  You  Ready? — Eisenbeis. 

"Are  you  ready  for  your  steeplechaise,  Lorraine,  Lor- 
raine, Lorrde?"     See  Lorraine. — Kingsley. 

Are  you  ready,  O  Virginia.  See  Call  to  the  Colors,  The. 
— Guiterman. 

Are  you  the  boy  who  called  me  names  the  other  day? 
See  Kindness  and  Cruelty. — Anon. 

Are  you  tir'd?  See  Rosamond  at  Woodstock. — Swin- 
burne. 

Arethusa  arose  from  her  couch  of  snows.  Se^  Are- 
thusa. — Shelley. 

Argos  was  besieged!  The  Lacedemonians  thundered 
at  its  gates.     See  Telesilla.- — Anon. 

Ariel  to  Miranda:  Take.  See  To  a  Lady,  with  a 
Guitar. — Shelley. 

Ariosto  tells  a  pretty  story  of  a  fairy,  who,  by  some 
mysterious  law  of  her  nature.  See  Milton  (Dis- 
trust  of  liberty). — Macaulay. 

Arise,  arise,  arise!  See  Ode  to  the  Assertors  of  Liberty, 
An. — Shelley. 

Arise!  for  the  day  is  passing.     See  Now. — Anon. 

"Arise,  my  maiden,  Mabel."  See  Mabel  on  Midsum- 
mer Day. — ^Howitt. 

Arise,  my  slumbering  soul !  arise.  See  Soul  and  Coun- 
try.^— Mangan. 

Arise,  O  soul,  and  gird  thee  up  anew.  See  Challenge, 
A. — Kenyon. 

Arise,  oh  my  country!  arise  in  thy  glory.  See  My  Coun- 
try.— .\monson. 

Arise!  'tis  the  day  of  our  Washington's  glory.  See 
Crown  our  Washington.- — Butterworth. 


612 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


As 


Aristotle  has  said  that  poetry  is  the  most  philosophic. 

See  Poetry. — Wordsworth. 
Arm,  arm,  arm,  arm!  the  scouts  are  all  come  in.     See 

Mad  Lover,  The  (.Joy  of  Battle,  The).— Fletcher. 
Around,  above  the  world  of  snow.     See  February. — 

Bensel. 
Around    her   shrine   no    earthly   blossoms    blow.     jSee 

Madonna  dell'  Acqua,  The. — Ruskin. 
Around  my  love  and  me  the  brooding  hills.     See  Lyn- 

mouth. — O'Shaughnessy. 
Around  Sebago's  lonely  lake.     See  Funeral  Tree  of  the 

Sokokis,  The. — Whittier. 
Around  the  board  the  guests  were  met,  the  light  above 

them  beaming.     See  Dream  of  the  Reveler,  The. — 

Mackay. 
Around  the  globe,  through  every  clime.     See  Stained 

by  the  Blood  of  Heroes. — Anon. 
Around    the   lovely   valley   rise.     See   Midsummer. — 

Trowbridge. 
Around  the  stove  at  the  village  inn.     See  How  Tom 

Saved  the  Train. — Birdseye. 
Around  the  tomb,  O  bard  divine.     See  On  Anacreon. — 

Moore. 
Around  the  world  the  fame  is  blown.     See  Man  Who 

Rose  from  Nothing,  The. — M'  Lachlan. 
Around  this  [or  the]  lovely  valley  ri.se.     See  Midsummer 

— Trowbridge. 
Arrah!  hold  your  whist,   now.   Whinny.     See  Biddy 

McGinnis  at  the  Photographers. — Ancfn. 
Arrah!  Nellie  for  Noral,  don't  look  like  a  thunder  cloud, 

darlint.     See  Penitent,  A. — Anon. 
Arrah,  now,  an'  is  it  yourself,  Pat  Noonan?     See  Miss 

Milligan's  Party. — Dane. 
Arras,  blacksmith  and  armorer,  stood  at  the  door  of  his 

hut.     See   Archbishop's    Christmas    Gift,    The. — 

Barr. 
Arrayed — a  half-angelic  sight.     See  Christening,  The. 

— -Lamb. 
Arrayed  in  snow-white  pants  and  vest.     See  Ain't  he 

Cute. — Anon. 
Art  is  long  and  time  is  fleeting.     See  Psalm  of  Life,  A 

(Life). — Longfellow. 
Art  is  true  art  when  art  to.  God  is  true.     See  Fra 

Angelico. — Egan. 
Art  reigned  incarnate  in  thy  lofty  soul.     See  Mario. — 

Saltus. 
Art  thou  a  statist  in  the  van?     See  Poet's  Epitaph,  A. 

— Wordsworth. 
Art  thou  a  type  of  beauty,  or  of  power.     See  Passion 

Flower. — DeVere. 
Art  thou  already  weary  of  the  day?     See  Art  Thou 

already  Weary. — Kemble. 
Art  thou  not  sweet.     See  Bird  Song. — MacLean. 
Art   thou  pale    for  weariness.     See  To  the  Moon. — 

Shelley. 
Art  thou  poor,  yet  hast  thou  golden  slumbers?     See 

Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient  Grissell,  The  (Sweet 

Content). — Dekker. 
Art  thou  some  winged  sprite,  that,  fluttering   round. 

See  To  a  Maple  Seed.— Mifflin. 
Art  thou  the  bird  whom  man  loves  best?     See  Red- 
breast    Chasing     the     Butterfly,      The. — Words- 
worth. 
Art  thou  the  same  mysterious  traveller?     See  Address 

to  the  Comet. — -Anon. 
Art  thou  the  same,  thou  sobbing  winter  wind?     See  Art 

Thou  the  Same. — Tatnall. 
Art   thou   weary,    art   thou   languid?     See   Art    Thou 

Weary. — St.  Stephen. 
Art  tired?     There  is  rest  remaining.    See  "Art  Tired?" 

— ;Ingelow. 
Artemidora.  Gods  invisible.     See  Death  of  Artemidora, 

The. — Landor. 
Article  I. — The  style  of  the  Confederacy  shall  be,  "The 

United  States  of  America."     See  Articles  of    Con- 
federation, The. — -Anon. 
Art's  use;  what  is  it  but  to  touch  the  springs.     See  Art. 

— -Parker. 
Arthur  and  the  rest  of  the  children.     See  Santa  Claus 

in  Spite  of  Himself. — Raymond. 
As  a  beam  o'er  the  face  of  the  waters  may  glow.     See 

Grief. — Moore. 
As  a  bell  in  a  chime.     See  same. — Johnson. 
As  a  fond  mother,  when  the  day  is  o'er.     See  Nature. 

— Longfellow. 
As  a  friend  to  the  children  commend  me  the  Yak.     See 

Yak,  The.— Belloc. 
As  a   king's   daughter,   being   in   person   sought.     See 

Nosce  Teipsum  (Soul  Compared  to  a  Virgin  Wooed 

in  Marriage.  The). — Davies. 
As  a   little   boy    played   in   the   street   one   day.     See 

Retribution. — .4non. 
As  a  little  child  at  play.     See  Soap  Bubbles. — Anon. 


As  a  maid  .so  nice.     See  Decision,  A. — Eno. 

As  a  symbol  of  the  Republic,  a  sign  and  instrument  of 

great  power.     See    Symbols    of    the    Republic. — 

Chapin. 
As  a  twig  trembles,  which  a  bird.     See  She  Came  and 

Went. — Lowell. 
As  a  young  lobster  roamed  about.     See  Lobsters,  The. 

(Punch.) 
As  after  noon,   one  summer's   day.     See  Cupid   Mis- 
taken.— Prior. 
As  an    unperfect    actor   on    the  stage.     See  Sonnets, 

XXII I  .—Shakespeare. 
As  angels  sport  amid  the  stars.     See  Flowers,  The. — ■ 

Bacon. 
As  Annie  was  carrying  the  baby  one  day.     See  Ques- 
tion, A. — Anon. 
As  Artemus  was  once  traveling  in  the  cars.     See  Mark 

Twain  Tells  an  Anecdote  of  A.  Ward. — Clemens. 
As,    at  a    railway    junction,    men.      See    Sic    Itur.  — 

Clough. 
As  at  early  dawn  the  stars  shine  forth  even  while  it 

grows  light.     See  National  Flag,  The  (Our  Flag). 

— Beecher. 
As  at  their  work  two  weavers  sat.     See  Two  Weavers, 

The. — -More. 
As  aw  hurried  throo  th'  toan  to  mi  wark.     See  Bite 

Bigger. — Anon. 
As  beautiful    Kitty    one   morning   was    tripping.     See 

Kitty  of  Coleraine. — Shanly. 
As  "Brudder  Yerkes"  took  his  stand  beside  the  desk. 

See  Brudder  Yerkes's  Sermon. — Ludlow. 
As  by  his  notes  a  bird  is   known.     See  Proverbs. — 

Rook. 
As  by  some  tyrant's  stern  command.     See  Lawyer's 

Farewell  to  his  Muse,  The. — Blackstone. 
As  by  the    instrument    she    took  her  seat.     See  Vir- 

tuosa.' — Townsend. 
As  by  the  shore  at  break  of  day.     See  same. — Moore. 
As  careful  merchants  do  expecting  stand.     See  Britan- 
nia's Pastorals  (Song  of  Tavy,  The). — Browne. 
As  center-rush  he  was  our  pride.     See  Our  Hero. — 

Romaine. 
As  chimes  that  flow  o'er  shining  seas.     See  Far-away. 

— Sigerson. 
As  Death    was    journeying    through    the    land.     See 

Death's  Choice. — Halse. 
As  Dick  and  Bryan  were  at  play.     See  Models,  The.— 

Turner. 
As  doctors  give  physic   by  way  of   prevention.     See 

For  My  Own  Monument. — Prior. 
As  Don  Quixote  and  Sancho  Panza  were  riding,  they 

perceived   some    thirty   or   forty   windmills.     See 

Don  Quixote  and  the  Windmills. — Cervantes. 
As  Dot  sat  by  the  fire  one  night.     See  Dot's  New  Leaf. 

— Richards. 
As  doth  his  heart  who  travels  far  from  home.     See  To 

a  Young  Child. — Scudder. 
As  down  the  distant  halls  of  time  we  turn  our  eyes 

to-day.     See  Adown  the  Years. — Sherwood. 
As  down  through  the  meadow  our  Charley-boy.     See 

Charley's  Butterfly. — Anon. 
As  dozing  I  sat  in  my  chair  by  the  fire.     See  Visit  to 

Hades,  A. — Bates. 
As  due  by  many  titles,  I  resign.     See  Resignation  and 

Despair. — Donne. 
As  dyed  in  blood  the  streaming  wines  appear.     See 

Woodbines  in  October. — Bates. 
As  flake  by  flake,  the  beetling  avalanches.     See  Ode  to 

France. — Lowell. 
As  flame  streams  upward,  so  my  longing  thought.    See 

He  Made  Us  Free. — Egan. 
As  flow    the    rivers    to    the    sea.     See    Inheritance. — 

Russell. 
As  fly  the  shadows  o'er  the  grass.     See  Irish  Wolf- 
hound, The. — MacCarthy. 
As  Frances    was    playing    and    turning    around.     See 

Dizzy  Girl,  The.— Turner. 
As  from  the  East  unto  the  utmost  West.     See  To  the 

Sacred  Poets  of  America. — Wilton. 
As  from  the  house  your  mother  sees.     See  To  Any 

Reader. — Stevenson. 
As  from  the  sultry  town,  oppressed.     See  Character, 

A. — Irwin. 
As  Genius  from  Parnassus  took  her  flight.     See  Ad- 
dress, in  the  Character  of  "Hope." — Anon. 
As  Gertrude  skipt  from  babe  to  girl.     See  Gertrude's 

Necklace. — Locker-Lampson. 
As    God   appeared    to  Solomonan  d  Joseph  in  dreams 

to  urge.      See   His   Choice   and    His   Destiny. — 

Bristol. 
As  Harris  and  I  sat,  one  morning,  at  one  of  the  small, 

round   tables.    See  Tramp  Abroad,  A    (Guessing 

Nationalities ) . — Clemens . 


613 


As 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


See  Night  in  the 


See  Bad 


As  he  leans  over  the  vessel's  side. 

Mediterranean,  A. — Anon. 
As  he  that  makes  his  mark  is  understood. 

Writers. — Butler. 
As  heaven  and  earth  are  fairer.  See  Hyperion. — Keats. 
A.s  here   within    I    vfetch    the    fervid    coals.     See   To 

Bayard  Taylor  beyond  Us. — Hayne. 
As  hills  seem  Alps,  when  veiled  in  misty  shroud.    See 

Kings  of  Men. — Reade. 
As  Huldy    Brown    stood    at    her   kitchen   table.     See 

Huldy's  Pumpkin  Pies. — Balch. 
-As  I  a  fare  had  lately  past.     See   Muses'  Elysium,  The 
(Ferryman,  Venus,  and  Cupid,  The).— Drayton. 

a  rhymer.     See  Expectoration,  An.— Coleridge. 

am  sitting  in  the  sun  upon  the  porch  to-day.  See 
Fire-hangbird's  Nest,  The.— P'ield. 

approached  a  pond,  a  few  days  ago,  where  some 
negroes  were  cutting  ice.  See  Go-morrow,  or 
Lot's  Wife. — Anon. 

came  down  from  lycbanon.  See  same. — ScoUard. 
I  came  down  Mount  Tamalpais.  See  same. — 
Urmy. 

came  down  the  street  to-day.  See  Thankful 
Hearts. — Denton. 

came  round  the  harbor  buoy.  See  Long  White 
Seam,  The. — Ingelow. 

came  wandering  down  Glen  Spean.  See  Emi- 
grant Lassie,  The. — Blackie. 

gaed  doun  by  yon  house-en.  See  Twa  Corbies, 
The. — Anon. 

in  hoary  winter's  night.  See  Burning  Babe, 
The.— Southwell. 

lay  a-thynkynge,  a-thynkynge,  a-thynkynge.  See 
As  I  Lay  a-Thynkynge. — Barham. 

lay  awake  in  the  night.  See  Midnight  Train,  The. 
— Nichols. 

lay  awake  in  the  white  moonlight.  See  Gnomies, 
■The. — Ramal. 

lay  in  my  bed.     See  Lisle's  Dream. — Richards. 

loitered  through  the  village.  See  Blowing  Bub- 
bles.— Munday. 

roved  out,  at  Faha,  one  morning.  See  Maid  of 
Cloghroe,  The. — Anon. 

rowled  on  my  side-car  to  Santry  Fair.  See 
Changing  Her  Mind. — Graves. 

rummaged  through  the  attic. 
Bed. — -Anon. 

sat  at  the  cafe,  I  said  to  myself. 
(Spectator  ab  Extra).- — Clough. 

sat  by  my  study  table.  See  Where  Baby  Joy 
Comes  from. — Calthorp. 

sat  down  to  breakfast  in  state.  See  Country 
Clergyman's  Trip  to  Cambridge,  The. — Macaulay. 

sit  and  watch  at  the  window-pane.  See  Hide  and 
Seek. — Gary. 

sit  at  my  desk  by  the  window.  See  Mignonette. 
— ^Bartlett. 

sit  on  a  log  here  in  the  woods  among  the  clean- 
faced  beeches.     See  Choir  Practice. — Crosby, 
sit  within  the  rood-loft,  and  the  thunder-tones  are 
pealing.     See   Romance   of   the   Rood-loft,   A. — 
Clarke. 

speak  to  you  to-day,  I  wish  to  tell  you  of  a  sol- 
dier.    See  South  and  Her  Problems,  The. — Grady. 

stand  by  the  cross  on  the  ione  mountain's  crest. 
See  Two  Ships,  The.— Harte. 

stood  by  yon  roofless  tower.  See  Vision,  The. — 
Burns. 

strolled  on  the  beach  with  the  fair  Isabella.  See 
Flirtation. — Anon. 

walked   by   myself  and   talked   to   myself.     See 
Song    on    King    William    IIL- — Anon, 
walked  by  myself  I  talked  to  myself.     See  All  the 
Same  in  the  End.- — Ross. 

walked  by  myself,  I  talked  to  myself.  See 
also  Colloquy  with  Myself,  A. — Barton. 

walked  over  the  hill  one  day.  See  Nursery  Song. 
— Carter. 

was  coming  down  the  street.  See  Spendthrift 
Doll,  The.— Sweet. 

was  going  for  a  walk.  See  Who  Was  She? — 
Anon. 

was  going  to  Bethlehem-town.  See  Bethlehem- 
town. — Field. 

was  going  to  market-town.  See  Timely  Hint,  A. 
— Anon. 

was  going  up  the  street  one  day.  See  Blue. — 
Rutledge. 

was  rambling  one  day  about  the  Moorish  halls. 
See  Aihambra,  The  (Moonlight  on  the  Alhambra). 
■ — Irving. 

was  strolling  down  a  woodland  way.  See  Down 
a  Woodland  Way. — Howells. 


As 


As 


As 


See  My  Trundle 
See  Dipsychus 


As  I  was  taking  a  walk,  I  noticed  two  little  boys  on 

their  way   to  school.     See  Better  Whistle   than 

Whine. — .\non. 
As  I  was  walking  all  alane.   See  Twa  Corbies,  The. — 

Anon. 
As  I  was  walking  all  alone  [or  by  my  lane].     See  Wee, 

Wee  Man,  The. — Anon. 
As  I  was  walking  up  the  street.     See  O  Mally's  Meek, 

Mally's  Sweet. — Burns. 
As  I  was  wandering  through  a  "(vood.     See  Voices  of 

the  Wildwood. — Cummins. 
As  I  was  yesterday  morning  walking  with  Sir  Roger. 

See  Spectator,  The  (Will  Wimble).— Addison. 
As  I  wer  readen  ov  a  stwone.     See  Readen  ov  a  Head- 

stwone. — Barnes. 
As  I  were  in  Cupid's  garden.     See  Cupid's  Garden.— 

Anon. 
As  I    yield   to   the   influences   of   this   occasion.     See 

Political  Duties  and  Responsibilities  of  University 

Men. — Cleveland. 
As  if  it  were  but  yesterday.     See  Boy  in  Blue,  The. — 

Long. 
As  in  all  great  and  crowded  fairs.     See  Courtiers. — 

Butler. 
As  in  some  foreign  realm  of  nether  kind.     See  Sug- 
gested  by   Plato's   Bust   in   the   Logic   Room. — 

Molloy. 
As  in  the  good  ship  Annabel.     See  Johnny  Cox. — 

Graves." 
As  in  the  rainbow's  many-coloured  hues.     See   Brit- 
annia's Pastorals  (Colour  Passage,  A). — Browne. 
As  in  the  sunshine  of  the  morn.     See  Butterfly  and  the 

Snail,  The.— Gay. 
As  innocence  went  forth  one  day.     See  Robe  of  Inno- 
cence, The. — Anon. 
As  inward   love  breeds  outward  talk.     See  Angler's 

Song,  The. — Basse. 
As   it   befell   in   midsummer   time.     See   Sir  Andrew 

Barton. — Anon. 
As  it  befell  one  summer  morning.     See  To   Joanna. — 

Wordsworth. 
As  it  began  to  dawn,  you  know.     See  Song  of  Manila. 

The. — Sterne. 
As  it  fell  one  holy  day,  hay  down.     See  Little  Musgrave 

and  Lady  Barnard. — Anon. 
As  it   fell  out  on   a  long  summer's   day.     See    Fair 

_  Margaret  and  Sweet  William.- — -Anon. 
As  it  fell  out  upon  one  day.     See  Lazarus. — Anon. 
As   it   fell   upon    a   day.     See   Cynthia  (Nightingale, 

The).— Barnfield. 
As  it  is  written.  There  is  none  righteous,  no,  not  one. 

See  Need  of  Christ,  The. — Anon. 
As  Johnny  walked  out  one  day.    See  As  Johnny  Walked 

Out. — Anon. 
As  Joseph  was  a-walking  [or  a-waukin'].     See  Christmas 

Carol. — Anon. 
As  late  the  trades'  unions,  by  way  of  a  show.     See 

Epigram. — Smith. 
As  little  children  in  a  darkened  hall.     See  Waiting. — 

Crandall. 
As  little  Lizette  was  out  walking  one  day.     See  Little 

Li  zette . — Alcorn . 
As  Lochinvar  rode  through  the  glinting.     See  Lochin- 

var. — -Anon. 
As  long  as  the  three  great  problems,  which  Victor  Hugo 

mentions.     See  True  Nobility. — Anon. 
As   Lucy  went   a-walking  one  wintry  morning  fine. 

See  As  Lucy  Went  a-Walking. — Ramal. 
As  Mailie  an'   her  lambs  thegither.     See  Death  and 

Dying  Words  of  Poor  Mailie,  The.- — Burns. 
As    Memnon's    marble    harp,    renowned   of   old.     See 

Pleasures  of  Imagination,  The  (Delights  of  Fancy). 

— Akenside. 
As  men  beneath  some  pang  of  grief.     See  Poem  Read 

at  the  Founding  of  the  Gettysburg  Monument. — 

Halpine. 
As  Mr.  Pickwick  contemplated  a  stay  of  at  least  two 

months.    See  Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Most  Extraor- 
dinary Calamity  that  Befell    Mr.  Winkle,    A). — 

Dickens.  i 

As  morning  dawned  and  the  poets  slowly  climbed.     See 

Story  of    the    Divine   Comedy,  The  (Purgatory, 

The).— Rabb. 
As  mother  saw   her   calmly  stand.     See  Trundle-bed 

Theology. — Brown. 
As  my  wife  and  I,  at  the  window  one  day.     See  My 

Wife  and  I. — Anon. 
As  near  Porto  Bello  lying.     See  Ballad  of  Admiral 

Hosier's  Ghost. — Glover. 
As  needy  gallants,  in  the  scriv'ner's  hands.     See  Satire 

on  the  Dutch. — Dryden. 
As  nestling  at  thy  feet  in  peace  I  lay.     See  Mother 

England. — Thomas. 


614 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


As 


As  noble  Sir  Arthur  one  morning  did  ride.     See  Sir 

Arthur  and  Charming  Mollee. — Anon. 
As  none  but  kings  have  power  to  raise.     See  Apology 

for  Plagiaries,  An.— Butler. 
As  o'er  his  furrowed  fields,  which  lie.     See  Seedtime 

and  Harvest. — Whittier. 
As  o'er  the  hill  we  roam'd  at  will.     See  Wanderers. — 

Calverley. 
As  o'er  the  laughter-moving  page.     See  Cervantes. — 

Bryant. 
As  oft  I  fill  my  faithful  pipe.     See  Edifying  Reflections 

of  a  Tobacco  Smoker. — Anon. 
As  on  my  bed  at  dawn  I  mus'd  and  pray'd.     See  Lattice 

at  Sunrise,  The. — Turner. 
As  on  the  gauzy  wings  of  fancy  flying.     See  Iron  Gate, 

The.— Holmes. 
As  on  this  pictured  page  I  look.     See  Piscator  and 

Piscatrix. — Thackeray. 
As  once  Cineas  of  Epirus  stood  among  the  senators  of 

Rome.     See   Roman    Senate   and   the   American 

Congress,  The. — Kossuth. 
As  one  advances  up  the  slow  ascent.     See  Solitude — 


As  one  by  one  those  autumn  leaves  descending.     See 

Lesson  of  the  Leaves,  The. — Anon. 
As  one  dark  morn  I  trod  a  forest  glade.     See  Forest 

Glade,  The.— Turner. 
As  one  that  for  a  weary  space  has  lain.     See  Odyssey, 

The. — Lang. 
As  one  who  cleaves  the  circumambient  air.     See  Timon 

of  Archimedes. — Loomis. 
As  one  who  cons  at  evening  o'er  an  album  all  alone. 

See  Old  Sweetheart  of  Mine,  An. — Riley. 
As  one  who,  destined  frorrj  his  friends  to  part.     See  To 

My  Books  on  Parting  with  Them. — Roscoe. 
As  one  who  follows  a  departing  friend.     See  Last  Days. 

— Stoddard. 
As  one  who  held  herself  a  part.     See  Sister. — Whit- 
tier. 
As  one  who  strives  from  some  fast  steamer's  side.     See 

O.  M.  B.— Brown. 
As  one  would  stand  who  saw  a  sudden  light.     See 

Love's  Outset. — Parker. 
As  other  men  have  creed,  so  have  I  mine.     See  same. — 

Tilton. 
As  passed  the  rector  of  All  Saints  one  day.     See  Little 

Turncoats.— Peck. 
As  Pat,  an  odd  joker,  with  a  Yankee  more  sly.     See 

Pat  and  the  Yankee. — Banks. 
As  Peter  sat  at  heaven's  gate.     See  St.  Peter's  Polite- 
ness.— Anon. 
As    pilot    well    expert  in  perilous  wave.     See  Faerie 

Queene,  The  (Cave  of  Mammon,  The). — Spenser. 
As  pussy  sat  washing  her  face  by  the  gate.     See  Cat's 

Bath,  The. — Anon. 
"As    regards    impromptu    speeches,"    said    Woodtick 

Williams.     See  Jim  Onderdonk's  Sunday  School 

Oration. — Nye. 
As  Richard  and  I  sat  together  one  day.     See  Hole  in 

the  Patch,  The. — Anon. 
As,  rising  on  its  purple  wing.     See  Giaour,  The  (Tran- 
sient Beauty). — Byron. 
As  sailors  watch  from  their  prison.     See  Love  of  the 

Past,  The.     (Spectator,  The.) 
As  Sally  sat  upon  the  ground.     See  Worm,  The. — 

Turner. 
As  shadows,  cast  by  cloud  and  sun.     See  Star  of  Beth- 
lehem, The. — Bryant. 
As  ships,  becalmed  at  eve,  that  lay.     See  Qua  Cursum 

Ventus. — Clough . 
As  Sir  Launfal  made  morn  through  the  darksome  gate. 

See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The  (Sir  Launfal  and  the 

Leper). — Lowell. 
As  slow  our  ship  her  foamy  track.     See  As  Slow  Our 

Ship.-;-Moore. 
As  some  fair  violet,  loveliest  of  the  glade.     See  Province 

of  Woman,  The. — More. 
As  some  mysterious  wanderer  of  the  skies.     See  same. 

— Stockard. 
As  soon  as  a  stranger  is  introduced  into  any  company. 

See  Wealth. — Emerson. 
As  soon  as  I  get  a  tin  cup  of  water  from  the  spring. 

See  April  Fool,  An. — Anon. 
As  soon  as  Mrs.  Olcott  was  well  rid  of  Mrs.  Hawley. 

See  First  Christmas  Tree  in  New  England.     {St. 

Nicholas.) 
As  soon  as  the  colonists  had  fully  decided  to  separate 

from  the  British.     See  Birthday  of  the  Stars  and 

Stripes. — Anon. 
As  soon  as  winter's  snow  and  sleet.     See  Monarch  of 

the  Old  R(?gime,  A. — Michael. 
As  soon  as  you're  up,  shake  blanket  and  sheet.     See 

Health  Alphabet. — Anon. 


As   soon   seek   roses  in   December — ice  in    June.     See 

English  Bards  and  Scotch  Reviewers. — Byron. 
As  sunset's  glow  illumed  the  sea.     See  In  Memory  of 

Charles  Dickens. — Remak. 
As  sunshine  and  rain.     See  Make  the  Best  of  It. — 

Anon. 
As  sweet  as  a  song  on  a  summer's  eve.     See  On  a 

Summer's  Eve.- — G. 
As  the  barometer  foretells  the  storm.     See  Morituri 

Salutamus  (Age). — Longfellow. 
As  the  bear  is  a  heavy,  clumsy  creature.  See  Robinson 
g      Crusoe  (Friday's  Frolic  with  a  Bear). — Defoe. 
AS  the  bee  is  to  the  rose.     See  Summer  Friends. — 

Brougham. 
As  the  breath  of  the  dew  to  the  tender  plant.     See 

Kind  Words. — Anon. 
As  the  chain  gang  was  shuflSing  past  it  was  stopped. 

See  Lucky  Jim. — Long. 
As  the  chameleon  who  is    known.     See    Chameleon, 

The.-^Prior. 
As  the  chill'd  robin,  bound  to  Florida.     See  You  Know 

if  it  was  You. — Willis. 
As  the  cloud  to  the  wind  I  am  docile  to  thee.     See 

Persian  Love  Song. — Lindsay. 
As  the  day's  last  light  is  dying.     See  Bird  of  Passage. — 

Fawcett. 
As  the  dead  year  is  clasped  by  the  dead  December. 

See  New  Year's  Resolve. — Wilcox. 
As  the  flight  of  a  river.     See  Absent,  yet  Present. — 

Lytton. 
As  the  highly  colored  birds  do  not  fly  around.     See 

sam.e. — Swing. 
As  the  insect  from  the  rock.     See  Making  of  Man,  The. 

— Chadwick. 
As  the  light  beyond  draws  nearer.     See  Schiller's  Dying 

Vision . — Machar. 
As  the  little  white  hearse  went  glimmering  by.     See 

Little  White  Hearse,  The.— Riley. 
As  the  marsh-hen  secretly  builds  on  the  watery  sod. 

See  Marshes  of  Glynn,  The. — Lanier. 
As  the  parson  sat  at  his  books  one  day.     See  Minister's 

Quarter  Pay-day,  A. — Anon. 
As  the  rock  in  the  ocean,  the  pine  on  the  plain.     See 

Be  Strong. — Eager. 
As  the  sun  was  sinking  toward  the  horizon.     See   Les 

Mis^rables  (John  Valjohn  and  the  Savoyard).- — 

Hugo. 
As  the  time  for  cold  weather  approached.     See  Raising 

a  Beard. — Anon. 
As  the  transatlantic  tourist.      See  Doves  of    Venice, 

The.— Hutton. 
As   the   twilight's   gray   was   swallowed.     See   Aurora 

Borealis,  The. — Foran. 
As  the  wind  at  play  with  a  spark.     See  Louisa  May 

Alcott. — Moulton. 
As  the  year  roll'd  itself  round  again  to  meet  the  day. 

See  Enoch  Arden  (Farewell  of  Enoch  Arden,  The). 

— Tennyson. 
As  the  youthful  Paris    presses.     See    Puffs   Poetical 

(Paris  and  Helen). — Aytoun. 
As  there  I  left  the  road  in  May.     See  Surprise,  The. — 

Barnes. 
As  they  sat  in  the  parlor  the  conversation  was  more 

connected.     See   Man  Behind,  The  (Ike   Papson's 

Courtship). — Denison. 
.A.S  this  advice,  if  it  ever  see  the  light,  will  not  do  so  till 

I  am  no    more.     See  Advice  to  My  Country. — 

Madison. 
As  this    my   carnal   robe   grows   old.     See  Hallelujah 

(Prayer  of  Old  Age,  The).— Wither. 
As  Thomas  was  cudgel'd  one  day  by  his  wife.     See 

Cudgeled  Husband,  The.— Swift. 
As  those  we  love  decay,  we  die  in  part.     See  On  the 

Death  of  a  Particular  Friend. — Thomson. 
As  thou  these  ashes,  little  brook!     See  John  WickUffe. 

— Wordsworth. 
As  though  there  were  a  tie.      See  McFingal. — Trum- 
bull. 
As  thro'  the  land  at  eve  we  went.     See  Princess,  The 

(As  thro'  the  Land). — Tennyson. 
As  through  the  void  we  went  I  heard  his  plumes.     See 

Doors.  The.— Mifflin. 
"As    thy    day    thy    strength    shall    be!"     See    Daily 

Strength. — Havergal. 
As  time  passed  away  the  poor  creature  Smike  paid 

bitterly.    See  Nicholas  Nickleby  (Nicholas  Nickle- 

by  Leaving  the  Yorkshire  School). — Dickens. 
As   time   past   onwards,    day   by   day.     See   Manita. 

— M'Donnell. 
As  to  a  bird's  song  she  were  listening.     See  Deaf. — 

Bunner. 
As  Tommy  and  his  sister  Jane.     See  Poisonous  Fruit. — 

Turner. 


615 


As 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


As   trees   grow   thickly   together   in   the   forest.     See 

Pruning  Trees. — Sanford. 
As  twilight  fades  upon  the  west.     See  To  a  Friend. — 

Drown. 
As  two  men  upon  a  field.     See  Iliad,  The  (Victory  of 

Hector). — -Homat. 
As  two  proud  ships  upon  the  pathless  main.     See  Fate. 

— ^Anon. 
As  unto  blowing  roses  summer  dews.     See  Love  against 

Love. — Wasson. 
As  unto  the  bow  the  cord  is.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha, 

The  (Hiawatha's  Wooing). — Longfellow. 
.\s  virtuous  men  pass  mildly  away.     See  Valediction 

Forbidding  Mourning,  A. — Donne. 
As  vonce  I  valked  by  a  dismal  swamp.     See  Let  Us 

Alone. — Brownell. 
As  want  of  candor  really  is  not  right.     See  Apology  for 

Kings. — Pindar. 
As  we  cover  the  graves  of  the  heroic  dead  with  flowers. 

See  Speech  for  Decoration  Day. — Ingersoll. 
As  we  feel  upon  our  brows  the  fresh  breath  of  a  new 

life.     See  Liberalism. — Anon. 
As  we  go  to  the  Spartans  to  learn  the  possibilities  of 

physical  culture.     See  Culture  of  the  Moral  Virtues 

• — Baldwin. 
As    we    proceeded,    the    timid    approach    of   twilight 

became  more  perceptible.     See  Uses  of  Astronomy, 

The  (Morning). — Everett. 
As  we  rush,  as  we  rush  in  the  train.     See  In  the  Train. — 

Thomson. 
As  we  sallied  forth,  every  dog  in  the  establishment. 

See  Sir  Walter  Scott  and  His  Dogs.— Irving. 
As  we  speed  out  of  youth's  sunny  station.     See  Life's 

Journey. — Wilcox. 
As  we  the  withered  ferns.     See  Ballade  of  Dead  Friends. 

— Robinson. 
As  we  were  falling  back  upon  Malvern  Hill.     See  Some- 
body's Boy. — Anon. 
As  wearied  traveler  o'er  the  burning  sands.     See  Place 

of  Rest,  The. — Durant. 
As  when  a  maid,  taught  from  her  mother  wing.     See 

Britannia's     Pastorals    (Music     Lesson,     "The). — 

Browne. 
As  when  a  man  along  piano  keys.     See  To  John  Boyle 

O'Reilly.— Bensell. 
As  when  a  woodman  on  the  greeny  lawns.     See  Brit- 
annia's Pastorals  (Comparison,  A). — Browne. 
As  when  far  off  the  warbled  strains  are  heard.     See 

Sonnet :  "As  when  far  off,"  etc. — Coleridge. 
As  when,  O  lady  mine.     See  Sonnet:  "As  when,"  etc. — 

Michelangelo. 
As  when,  on  Carmel's  sterile  steep.     See  Little  Cloud, 

The.— Bryant. 
As  when  on  closing  of  a  well-spent  life.     See  Address  on 

Closing  a  Performance. — Anon. 
As  when  on  some  great  mountain-peak  we  stand.     See 

Glimpses. — Jackson. 
As  when  the  sea  breaks  o'er  its  bounds.     See  Hudibras. 

— Butler. 
As  when  the  weary  traveler  gains.     See  Home  in  View. 

— Newton. 
As  when  with  downcast  eyes  we  muse  and  brood.     See 

Friendship. — Tennyson. 
As  William  and  Thomas  were  walking  one  day.   See 

Boys  and  the  Apple  Tree,  The. — Taylor. 
As    with    gladness    men    of    old.      See   Epiphany. — 

Dix. 
As  withereth  the  primrose  by  the  river.     See  Palinode, 

A. — Bolton. 
As  wonderful  things  are  hidden  away.     See  Seed,  The. 

—Anon. 
As  ye  came  from  the  holy  land.     See  same. — Anon. 
As  yonder  lamp  in  my  vacated  room.     See  As  Yonder 

Lamp. — Whitehead. 
As  you  all  know,  comrades  especially,  I  was  but  one  of 

those  leaders.     See  Veterans,  The. — Sherman. 
As  you   came  from   the  holy   land.     See   Pilgrim  to 

Pilgrim . — R  aleigh . 
As  young  as  I  am,  I  have  observed  these  three  swashers. 

See   King    Henry  V.  (Soliloquy  on  Character). — 

— Shakespeare. 
As    your    chairman    evidently    does    not    know.     See 

Political  Stump  Speech. — Parker. 
Asenath   Martyn   was  slightly  built   and   undersized. 

See  Fall  of  the  Pemberton  Mill,  The.— Phelps. 
Ask  God  to  give  thee  skill.     See  Sympathy.- — Hamil- 
ton. 
Ask  me  no  more;  the  moon  may  draw  the  sea.     See 

Princess,  The  (Ask  Me  no  More). — Tennyson. 
Ask  me  no  more  where  Jove  bestows.     See  Song:  "Ask 

me  no  more,"  etc. — Carew. 
Ask  me  not  which  of  all  my  songs  is  thine!     See  Thy 

Song. — Mace. 


Ask  me  why  I  send  you  here.     See  Primrose,  The. — 

C^arew. 
Ask  not  the  cause  why  sullen  spring.     See  Song  to  a 

Fair  Young  Lady,  Going  out  of  the  Town  in  the 

Spring. — Dryden. 
Ask  nothing  more  of  me,  sweet.     See  Oblation,  The. — 

Swinburne. 
Ask  thyself  at  evening,  what  that  is  immortal  have  I 

done  to-day?     See  same. — Lavater. 
Ask  you  where  the  place  of  religious  might  is.     See 

same. — Robertson. 
Ask  why  I  love  the  roses  fair.     See  Reason  Why,  The. — 

Anon. 
Asleep    at    last!     For    fourscore    years.     See    Oliver 

Wendell  Holmes.- — Hayne. 
Asleep  in  Jesus,  blessed  sleep.     See  Asleep  in  Jesus. — - 

Mackay. 
Assist  me,  ye  friends  of  old  books  and  old  wine.     See 

One  Volume  More. — Scott. 
A-strolling  out  one  morning.     See  Naughty  Hornet,  A. 

— Richards. 
Astronomers  and  star-gazers  this  year.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Burbage. — Middleton. 
Astronomers  estimate  that  some  of  the  most  distant 

stars.     See  Magnificent  Distances.— Anon. 
Astronomy  is  no  feast  of  fancy,  with  music  and  poetry. 

See  Study  of  Astronomy,  The. — Mitchell. 
At  a  certain  town-meeting  the  question  came  up.     See 

Thrilling  Appeal,  A. — Anon. 
At  a  certain  town-meeting  the   question  of   licensing 

certain  persons  to  sell  liquor  was  discussed.     See 

Woman's  Plea,  A. — Anon. 
At  a  dinner  in  London  a  short  time  ago.     See  After- 
dinner  Story,  An. — Anon. 
At  a  distance  down  the  street,  making  music  with  their 

feet.     See  Drum,  The. — Anon. 
At  a  frown  they  in  their  glory  die.     See  Sonnets,  XXV. 

— Shakespeare. 
At   a  pleasant   evening   party   I   had   taken   down   to 

supper.     See    Ferdinando    and    Elvira;    or,    The 

Gentle  Pieman. — Gilbert. 
At  a  pot-house  bar,  as  I  chanced  to  pass.     See  What 

the  Trumpeter  Said. — Evans. 
At  Abbeville  I  resolved  to  pass  the  night.     See  Mr. 

Rogers  and  Monsieur  Denise. — Matthews. 
At  about  .3  p.  M.,  of  August  9,  18 — ,  we  reached,  in  a 

drenching  thunder-storm.     See  Ascent  of  Japan's 

Sacred  Mountain,  Fusi-Yama. — Soper. 
At  Alexandria's  water-gate.     See  Seven  Wonders  of  the 

World,  Thev — Bellamy  and  Goodwin. 
At  an  early  age,  St.  Dolly.     See  Fireside  Saints,  The. — 

Jerrold. 
At  anchor  in  Hampton  Roads  we  lay.     See  Cumber- 
land, The. — Longfellow. 
At  anchor  they're  riding.     See  Dream  of  the  Boats, 

The. — Walbridge. 
At  Bannockburn  the  English  lay.     See  Bannockburn. 

— Burns. 
At  Beauty's  bar  as  I  did  stand.     See  Arraignment  of  a 

Lover,  The. — Gascoigne. 
At   Carmel's  mount  the  prophet   laid.     See  Harvest 

Hymn. — Prentice. 
At  Cato's-Head  in  Russel  Street.     See  On  the  Fly-leaf 

of  a  Book  of  Old  Plays. — Learned. 
At  Cheltenham,  where  one  drinks  one's  fill.     See  My 

Partner. — Praed. 
At  church  I  sat  within  her  pew.     See  Exclamatory. — 

Anon. 
At  cool  of  day,  with  God  I  walk.     See  Eventide. — 

Mason. 
"At  dawn,"  he  said,  "I  bid  them  all  farewell."     See 

Volunteer,  The. — Cutler. 
At  dead  of  night,  when  mortals  lose.     See  Ungrateful 

Cupid,  The. — Hughes. 
At  dinner  she  is  hostess,  I  am  host.     See  Modern  Love 

(Hiding  the  Skeleton). — Meredith. 
At  early  dawn  I  marked  them  in  the  sky.     See  Pelican 

Island,  The  (Pelican,  The). — Montgomery. 
At  early  dawn  I  once  had  been.     See  Dawning  of  the 

Day,  The.— Walsh. 
At  early  morn,  a  valiant  knight.     See  Call  of  Duty, 

The.— Robbins. 
At  Eastertide,  in  gown  of  blue.     See  At  Eastertide. — 

Adams. 
At  eleven  o'clock  the  crowd  at  Tynwald  had  grown  to 

a  vast   concourse.      See  Deemster,   The   (Cut  off 

from  the  People). — Caine. 
At  end  of  love,  at  end  of  life.     See  At  End.— Moul- 

ton. 
At    Eutaw    Springs    the    valiant    died.     See    Eutaw 

Springs. — Freneau. 
At    evening  in   the    port    she    lay.      See    Psyche. — 

Beers. 


616 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


At 


At  evening  when  I  go  to  bed.     See  Daisies,  The. — 

Sherman. 
At  evening,  when  the  lamp  is  lit.     .See  Land  of  Story 

Books,  The. — Stevenson. 
At  exactly  fifteen  minutes  to  eight.     See  Her  Fifteen 

Minutes. — Masson. 
At  first  a  dusky  wreath  they  seem  to  rise.    See  Seasons, 

The  (Coming  of  the  Rain,  The). — Thomson. 
At  first  her  name  was  Susie.     See  Social  Scale,  The. — 

S.  L.  T. 
At  first  sight  it  may  seem  that  religious  principles  were 

entirely  ignored.     See  Great  American  Republic  a 

Christian  State,  The. — Gibbons. 
At  Flores  in  the  Azores  Sir  Richard  Grenville  lay.     See 

Revenge,  The.— Tennyson. 
At  Glendalough  lived  a  young  saint.     See  St.  Kevin.— 

Lover. 
At  God's  right  hand  sits  one  who  was  a  child.     See 

Mary,  the  Mother  of  Jesus. — Willis. 
At  her  easel,  brush  in  hand.     See  Contrast,  A.- — Don- 
nelly. 
At  her  fair  hands  how  have  I  grace  entreated.     See 

How  can  the  Heart  Forget  Her. — Anon. 
At  home  or  away,  in  alley  or  street.    See  Some  Mother's 

Child. — Keeler. 
At  husking  time  the  tassel  fades.     See   At   Husking 

Time. — Johnson. 
At  Jesus'  feet  a  young  disciple  fell.     See  Waiting. — 

L.  D.  S. 
At  last !      At  _  last !     Oh,    joy !     Oh,   victory !     See  In 

Thanksgiving. — Conway. 
At  last   beloved  Nature!    I    have    met.     S«e    Elusive 

Nature. — Timrod. 
At  last,  Dolly — thanks  to  a  potent  emetic.     See  Fudge 

Family  in   Paris,  The  (Letters  from  Miss  Biddy 

Fudge). — Moore. 
At  last  he  stopped — six  papers  left.     See  Newsboy's 

Debt,  The.— Anon. 
At  last    I    am    alone!     Everything    goes    well.     See 

Burgomaster's  Death,  The. — Wilford. 
At  last  I  am  blest    with  a  lover!     See  My   Lover. — 

White. 
At  last  I  have  secured  a  quiet  hour  for  reading.     See 

Turning  the  Tables. — Anon. 
At  last  I  see  my  little  maid  full  grown.     See  Spanish 

Gypsy,  The.— Eliot. 
At  last  I'm  through,  and  I  am  awful  glad,  too.     See 

Samantha's  Talk.- — Jones. 
At  last,  it  seems,  I've  found  a  quiet  nook.     See  Poetry, 

Prose  and  Fact. — Kavanaugh. 
At  last  Maggie's  eyes  glanced  down  on  the  books  that 

lay  on  the  window  shelf.     See  Mill   on  the  Floss, 

The  (Maggie  and  Thomas  a  Kempis).- — Eliot. 
At  last  my  fondest  dreams  are  to  be  realized.     See  Way 

to  Freedom,  The. — Smith. 
"At  last,"  my  wife  said  to  me,  "I  am  to  have  a  good 

servant."     See  Our  New  Servant. — Barrie. 
At  last,  one  bitter  night,  he  [or  the  old  convict]  sunk 

down  on  the  doorstep  faint  and  ill.     See  Sketches 

by  Boz  (Drunkard's  Death,  The). — Dickens. 
At  last  that  speckle  hen  has  gone.     See  Old  Grimes' 

Hen . — Barron. 
At  last  the  cottage  was  rented.     See  Aunt  Polly  Green. 

— Vickers. 
At  last   the    Emancipation    Proclamation   came.     See 

Emancipation    Proclamation,    The. — Schurz. 
At  last  the  golden  oriental  gate.    See  Faerie  Queene, 

The  (Sunrise). — Spenser. 
At  last  the  hour  is  come!     Once  more  I  breathe — I 

move — I  feel.     See  Laureame:  the  Marble  Dream. 

— Banks. 
At  last  the  toil  encumbered  days  are  over.     See  Indian 

Summer. — Irvine. 
"At   last,    'tis   finished!"   cried   the   Spanish   painter. 

See  Picture  of  the  Last  Supper. — Boyd. 
At  last  'tis  gone,  the  fever  of  the  day.     See  Intra  Muros. 

Gillington. 
At  last  we  are  free,  all  hail,  Hymenaeus.     See  Notes 

of  a  Honeymoon. — Dobson. 
At  last  young  April,  ever  frail  and  fair.     See  April, 

Ever  Frail  and  Fair. — Holmes. 
At  least  one  position  ought  to  be  no  longer  questioned. 

See  Newest  Promises  and  Perils  of  the  Temperance 

Reform  (Our  Duty). — Cook. 
At  least  to  pray  is  left — is  left.     See  Prayer.^ — Dick- 
inson. 
At  length  brave   Michael   Dwyer  and   his   undaunted 

men.     See  Michael  Dwyer. — Sullivan. 
At  length,  fellow  soldiers,  we  enter  on  the  last  of  our 

battles.     See  Alexander  the  Great  to  his  Men. — 

Curtius. 
At  length  he  draws  near  his  end.     See  Death  of  Coper- 
nicus, The. — Everett. 


At  length  Mr.  Dombey,  one  Saturday.     See   Dombey 

and  Son  (Scene  at   Doctor  Blimber's). — Dickens. 
At  length   Moscow,   with   its   domes   and   towers   and 

palaces,  appeared  in  sight.     See  Napoleon  and  his 

Marshals  (Burning  of  Moscow,  The). — Headley. 
At  length,  Romans,  we  are  rid  of  Catiline!     See  Catiline 

Expelled. — Cicero. 
At  length  they  came  where,  stern  and  steep.     See  Lady 

of  the  Lake,  The  (Fitz-James  and  Roderick  Dhu). 

— Scott. 
At  Mantua    in    chains   the    gallant    Hofer    lay.      See 

Andrew  Hofer. — Mosen. 
At  Mantua  long   had    lain   in   chains.     S^e   Death    of 

Hofer,  The.— Mosen.     {Dijf.  tr.  of  foregoing.) 
At  mid-forenoon  yesterday,  a  man  who  was  crossing 

Woodward    Avenue.     See    Why    He    Waited    to 

Laugh.- — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
At  midnight,  in  a  chicken  coop.     See  Little  Folks,  The. 

— Stone. 
At  midnight,  in  his  guarded  tent.     See  Marco  Bozzaris. 

— Halleck. 
At  midnight,  in  the  month  of  J^ine.     See  Sleeper,  The. 

— Poe. 
At  mither's  knee  I  waitin'  stood.     See  Mither's  Knee, 

A. — Anon. 
At  morn  unto  my  window  sill.     See  St.  Valentine's 

Day.- — Valentine. 
At  morn,  when  first  the  rosy  gleam.     See  Bob  White. — 

McDonald. 
At    morning  Susie  Bell  and  I.     See  How  Sad. — Mc- 

Nabb. 
At  my  good  inn.  The  World,  you  may  have  rest.     See 

Life's  Greeting. — Green. 
At    Nebra,  by  the  Unstrut.     See  Inn  of  Care,  The. — 

Waddington. 
At  night  what  things  will  stalk  abroad.     See  Lux  in 

Tenebris. — Tynan-Hinkson. 
At  night  when  sick  folk  wakeful  lie.     See  Dead  Coach, 

The. — Hinkson. 
At  no   point   in   his   administration   does   Washington 

appear.     See  Washington's  Foreign  Policy. — Mc- 

Kinley. 
At  Noey's  house — when  they  arrived  with  him.     See 

Noey's  House,  At. — Riley. 
At  noon  a  shower  had  fallen,  and  the  clime.     See  Song 

of  an  Angel.- — Tennyson. 
At  noon  of  an  autumnal  day  more  than  two  centuries 

ago.     See   Endicott   and  the   Red   Cross. — Haw- 
thorne. 
At  noon,  within  the  dusty  town.     See  Birch  Stream;— 

Averill. 
At  one  house  I  saw  the  women  upstairs.     See  Census- 
taker's  Experience,  A. — Anon. 
At  one  in  the  morning.     See  Morning  Songs. — Thomas. 
At  one    of    the    public    meetings    addressed    by    Mr. 

Beecher.     See  Eulogy  on  Henry  Ward  Beecher. — 

Parker. 
At    Paris,  hard  by  the  Maine  barriers.     See  Chronicle 

of  the  Drum,  The. — Thackeray. 
At  Paris  it  was,  at  the  opera  there.     See  Aux  Italiens. — 

Lytton. 
At  Paris    some    time    since,    a    murdering    man.     See 

Petit  Maitre  and  the  Man  on  the  Wheel,  The. — 

Pindar. 
At  Paris  we  have  come  back  to  the  time  of  secret 

executions.     See  Secret   Executions. — Hugo. 
At  present  we  behold  only  the  rising  of  our  sun  of 

empire.     See  America's  True  Greatness. — Seward. 
At  Quatre  Bras,  when  the  fight  ran  high.     See  Lay  of 

the  Brave  Cameron,  The. — Blackie. 
At  setting  [or  set  of]  day  and  rising  morn.     See  Gentle 

Shepherd,  The  ("At  setting,"  etc.). — Ramsay. 
At  Shelley's  birth.     See  To  Shelley.— Tabb. 
At  Stralsund,  by  the  Baltic  Sea.     See  Musician's  Tale, 

The. — Longfellow. 
At   summer    eve,    when    heaven's    aerial    bow.      See 

Pleasures  of  Hope   The  (Hope). — Campbell. 
At  table  yonder  sits  the  man  we  seek.     See  At   the 

Mermaid  Inn. — Hildreth. 
At  ten  a  blithesome  little  maid.     See  Her  Laugh — in 

Four  Fits. — (Washington  Post.) 
At  that  awful  hour  of  the  Passion.     See  Aspen. — Anon. 
At    that  moment  a  low  but  fearful  sound  arose  from 

the  forest.     See  Last  of  the  Mohicans,  The  (Race 

for  Life.  A). — Cooper. 
At  the  approach  of    extreme  peril.     See    Wallenstein 

(Heroism). — Coleridge. 
At  the  Arbor  Day  exercises  held  in  April.     See  Historic 

Tree  of  Chicago,  The. — (Chautauquan.) 
At  the  bar-room    door   sat    drunken    Jim.     See  "Buy 

Your  Cherries." — Rowe. 
At  the  close  of  the  day  Bishop  Bcnno  took  his  way. 

See  Bishop  Benno  and  the  Frogs.- — Baring-Gould. 


617 


At 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


At  the  close  of  the  day,  when  the  hamlet  is  still.     See 

Hermit,  The.— Beattie. 
At  the  close  of  the  day,  when  the  year  was  a-dying. 

See  Feather's  Message,  A. — Dixon. 
At  the  corner  of  Wood  Street,  when  daylight  appears. 

See  Reverie  of  I^»or  Susan,  The. — Wordsworth. 
At  the  dawn  of  civilization.     See  History. — Froude. 
At   the  debatin'  club  last  night  we  all  discussed  a  cure. 

See  No  Hope  for  Literature. — Foss. 
.\t  the  devil's  booth  all  things  are  sold.     See  Vision  of 

Sir  Launfal,  The  ("At  the  devil's  booth,"  etc.). — 

Lowell. 
At  the  end  of  life  a  man  finds  himself  rich.     See  same. 

— Tilton. 
At  the  first  of  the  month  I  grow  morbid  and  sad.     See 

On  Bills.— Burr. 
At  the    foot    of    the    mountain    height.     See    Rustic 

Bridal,  The. — Longfellow. 
At  the  forging  of  the  sword.     See  Sword,  The. — Craw- 
ford. 
At  the   gate  of  old   Granada,  when  all  its  bolts   are 

barr'd.     See  Lamentation  for  Celin,  The. — Lock- 
hart. 
At  the  head  of  a  stretch  of  swiftly  running  water  the 

river  widened.     See  Race  with  the  Flames,  The. 

— Murray. 
At  the  heart  of  our  country  the  tyrant  was  leaping. 

See  Washington's  Name. — Percival. 
At  the  keyboard  still  he  lingered.     See  Organist,  The. — 

Barr. 
At  the  king's  gate  the  subtle  noon.     See  Coronation. — 

Jackson. 
At  the  ladder's  foot  we  will  bear  in  mind.     See  Climb- 
ing.—Denton. 
At  the  last,   tenderly.     See  Last   Invocation,   The. — 

Whitman. 
At  the  mid  hour  of  night,  when  stars  are  weeping,  I 

fly.     See  At  the  Mid  Hour  of  Night. — Moore. 
At  the  midnight,  in  the  silence  of  the  sleep  time.     See 

Asolando  (Epilogue). — Browning. 
At  the   midsummer,   when   the  hay  was   down.     See 

Four  Years. — Craik. 
At  the  north  end  of  Cross  Court  there  yet  stands  a 

portal.     See  My  First  Play. — Lamb. 
At  the  opening  of  the  session,  in  the  fall  of  1872.     See 

Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner. — Schufz. 
At  the  opening  of  the  session  of  Congress  in   1872, 

Charles  Sumner  re-introduced  two  measures.     See 

Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner  (Battle  Flags,  The). 

— Schurz. 
At  the  postern  gate  of  day.     See  Midsummer  Madrigal, 

A. — MacFarlane. 
At  the  present  moment  I  can  see  only  one  question  in 

the   state.      See    Parliamentary  Reform   (Public 

Opinion  and  the  Sword). — Macaulay. 
At  the  professors'  ball  to-night.     See  Old  Storj',  The. — 

Anon. 
At  the  proposal  of  the  Russian  imperial  government. 

See  Monroe  Doctrine,  The. — Monroe. 
At  the  shepherd's  doorway  stands  his  little  son.     See 

Larnb  that  was  Missed,  The. — Anon. 
At  the  time  of  that  disastrous  warfare,  in  which  Wash- 
ington rose  upon  the  ruins.     See  Stamp  Act,  The 

— Grimshaw. 
At   the  time  of  the  outbreak  of  the  Crimean  War  I 

was  sergeant.      See  Heroes  of  Inkerman. — Over- 
ton. 
At  the  time  that  Congress  was  debating  upon  the  bill. 

See   Tsaac    Rosenthal   on   the   Chinese   Question. 

— (Scrihner's  Monthly.) 
At  the  top  of  his  mind  the  devout  scholar  has  a  holy  of 

holies.     See  sam*'.— Alger. 
At  the  wedding  of   Shon   Maclean.     See  Wedding  of 

Shon  Maclean,  The. — Buchanan. 
At  this  moment,  in  every  part  of  the  American  Union. 

See  Our  Expanding  Republic  (Schools  Take  Part, 

The). — Watterson. 
At  this  moment,  in  spite  of  Triplet's  precaution.  See 

Mrs.  WoffLngton's  Portrait. — Reade. 
At  this  moment  the  gates  opened  and  ushers  began  to 

issue  forth.     See  Kenilworth  (Raleigh).— Scott. 
At  this   second   appearing   to   take   the   oath   of   the 

presidential  office.     See  Second  Inaugural  Address. 

— Lincoln. 
At    times    a    little    brawl.      See    Little    Brawl,  A. — 

Bremer. 
At    Trin.  Col.  Cam. — which  means,  in  proper  spelling. 

See  Collegian  and  the  Porter,  The. — Planche. 
At  twilight,  in  old   Hospital  St.   Luke.     See  Willie's 

Signal  for  .lesus. — Anon. 
At  two  o'clock  Sam  and  Andy  brought  the  horses  up 

to  the  posts.     See  Uncle    Tom's  Cabin   (Escape, 

The).— Stowe. 


At  Wapping  I  landed  and   called  to   hail    Mog.     See 

Jack  at  the  Opera. — Dibdin. 
At  West  Point  Grant  was  graduated  without  honor. 

See  Legacy  of  Grant,  The. — Depew. 
At  what  precise  minute  that  little  airy  musician.     See 

That  we  should  Rise  with  the  Lark.- — Lamb. 
At  Yeni-Djami,  after  Rhamadan.     See  Chibouque.- — 

Saltus. 
At     your    service,    sirs. — Ha,    Lopez?     See    Spanish 

Gypsy,  The  (Scene  from,  etc.). — Eliot. 
Athenians,  I  must  remind  you  that  you  left  behind 

you    no    more    such    ships    in    your    docks.     See 

Address  of  Nicias  to  His  Troops. — Thucydides. 
Athwart  the  sky  a  lowly  sigh.     See  London. — David- 
son. 
Athwart  the  sod  which  is  treading  for  God  the  poet 

paced  with  his  splendid  eyes.     See  Judgment  in 

Heaven,  A. — Thompson. 
Atri  in  Abruzzo,  a  small  town.     See  Bell  of  Atri,  The. 

— Longfellow. 
Attend,  all  ye  who  list  to  hear  our  noble  England's 

praise.     See  Armada,  The. — Macaulay. 
Attend  my  words  and  listen.     See  Quest  of  the  Three 

Kings,  The. — Murray. 
Attend   you,    and   give   ear   awhile.     See   Honour  of 

Bristol,  The. — Anon. 
Attending  services  not  long  ago  in  an  elegant  church 

edifice.     See    Choir's    Way  -of    Telling    It,    The. 

(Good  Housekeeping.) 
Audacious  maid,  when  thee  I  meet.     See  Ad  Impuden- 

tissimam. — Anon. 
August,    month    when    summer   lies.     See   August. — 

Sherman. 
Auld  Daddy  Darkness  creeps  frae  his  hole.     See  Auld 

Daddy  Darkness. — Ferguson. 
"Aun'  Chloe,  haint  we  a'mos'  dar  yit?"     See  He  was 

almost  There. — -Anon. 
Aunt  Grace  never  saw  us  children,  nor  a  lot  of  others 

in    the    family.      See    Toot    Makes    a    Match.  — 
.  Hart. 
Aunt  Hitty,  otherwise  Mrs.  Silas  Tarbox,  was  as  cheery 

and  loquacious  a  person.     See  Aunt  Hitty  Tarbox. 

— Wiggin. 
"Aunt,  I  think  you're  a  drefful  stupid."     See  Laurie's 

Apology. — Wolcott. 
Aunt  Jane,  a  colored  woman,  stood  in  the  doorway. 

See    George   Washington's    "Bufday."     (Youth's 

Companion. ) 
Aunt  Mary,  may  I  go  to  the  top  of  the  house  and  fly 

my  kite?     See  Obeying  Pleasantly. — Anon. 
Aunt  Nellie  had  [or  has]  fashioned  a  dainty  thing.     See 

Baby  in  Church. — Gow. 
Aunt  Peggy,  coming  down  from  her  place  in  the  coun- 
try to  visit  a  niece  in  the  city.     See  Aunt  Peggy 

and  High  Art. — Dallas. 
Aunt  Prue  was  a  little  particular.     See  Youthful  Ex- 
periences.— Anon . 
Aunt  Sylvia  was  an  old  domestic  in  the  family  of  Mr. 

Coleman.     See    Aunt    Sylvia's    First    Lesson    in 

Geography. — Anon . 
Auntie,  I  think  you  must  be  tired  of  that  everlasting 

knit,  knit,  knit.     See  Art  Critic,  The. — Rook. 
Aunty,  did  you  hear  what  Uncle  John  said  to-day, 

when  we  were  out?     See  What  are   Little   Boys 

Good  For. — Anon. 
Austin  Landon's   love  affairs   arose  out   of  the  very 

theatre    at    Chucksford.     See   Fallen    Star,    A. — 

Pinero. 
Authority  intoxicates.     See  Authority. — Butler. 
Authors  is  things  that  write  about  everything  they 

don't   know   about.     See  Tommie's   Composition 

on  Authors. — Anon. 
Autumn  has  come,  so  bare  and  gray.     See  Wanderings 

of  the  Birds,  The. — Anon. 
Autumn  nights  grow  chilly.     See  Mozart  at  the  Fire- 
side.— Thaxter. 
Autumn's  sighing.     See  sam.e. — Read. 
Autumn  was  cold  in  Plymouth  town.     See  Her  Picture. 

— Cortis.soz. 
Autumn  winds  are  sighing.     See  Harvest-time. — Von 

Salis.  I 

Aux  fils  des  preux!  ye  sons  of  fame!     See  Norman  Bat- 
tle-song, The. — Anon. 
Avarice  is  the    besetting  sin  of  the  age.     See  Post 

Nummos  Virtus. — Spaulding. 
Avaunt!  and  quit  my  sight.     See  Macbeth  (Macbeth 

to  the  Ghost). — Shakespeare. 
Ave   Maria!    blessed    be    the    hour.     See    Don    Juan 

(Twilight).— Byron. 
Ave  Maria!   o'er   the   earth  and  sea.     See  Don  Juan 

(Evening). — Byron. 
'Ave  vou  'eard  o'  the  Widow  at  Windsor.     See  Sons  of 

the  Widow,  The.— Kipling. 


618 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Baby 


Avenge,  O  Lord,  thy  slaughtered  saints,  whose  bones. 

See  On  the  Late  Massacre  in  Piedmont. — Milton. 
Avid  of  life  and  love,  insatiate  vagabond.     See  Ver- 

laine. — Carman. 
Aw,  I  daresay  you'll  hardly  cwedit  the  story  I'm  going 

to  tell.     See  Gallant  Wescue,  A.— Sapte. 
"Awa'  wi'  ye.  Tammy  man,  awa'  wi'  ye  to  the  schule." 

See  Tammy's  Prize. — Anon. 
Awake,  jiiolian  lyre,  awake.     See  Progress  of  Poesy, 

The.— Gray. 
Awake!  and  to  horse,  my  brothers.     See  Guerillas,  The. 

Wallis. 
Awake  1  arise!  the  hour  is  late!     See  Longfellow  Al- 
phabet, A. — Longfellow. 
Awake,  arise!   The  south  wind  sighs.     See  Song  of  the 

Exmoor  Hunt,  A. — Graves. 
.\wake,  arise,  you  dead  men  all — dead  women  waken 

you.     See  Hallow  E'en. — Hopper. 
Awake!  awake!  all  living  things  that  be.     See  Wish- 
maker's  Town  (Bells,  The).— Young. 
Awake!    awake!    my    gallant    friends.     See   Battle    of 

Tippecanoe,  The. — Anon. 
Awake,  awake,  my  lyre!     See  Supplication,  A. — Cow- 
ley. 
Awake,  awake,  O  gracious  heart.     See  Valentine,  A. — 

Sherman. 
Awake,  for  light  is  growing.     See  Morning. -;-Marvin. 
Awake,  my  country,  the  hour  is  great  with  change! 

See   Ode   for   the   Canadian    Confederacy,    An. — 

Roberts. 
Awake,  my  heart,  to  be  lov'd,  awake,  awake!     See 

Awake,  My  Heart. — Bridges. 
Awake,  my  soul,  and  with  the  sun.    See  Morning  Hymn. 

—Ken. 
Awake,   my    soul,   stretch  every   nerve.     See  same. — 

Doddridge. 
Awake!  nor  longer  sleep.     See  War  with  Alcohol,  The. 

— Williams. 
"Awake,"  said  the  sunshine,  "  'tis  time  to  get  up." 

See  Spring  Song.- — Anon. 
Awake ! — the  crimson  dawn  is  glowing.    See  Thirty-first 

of  May. — Tennyson. 
.4.wake!^the  starry  midnight  hour.     See  Serenade,  A ; 

Set    to    Music    by    the     Chevalier    Neukomm.  — 

Procter. 
Awake  thee,  my  lady-love.     See  Sylvia;  or,  The  May 

Queen  (Call,  The).— Darley. 
Awake,  thou  wintry  earth.     See  Easter  Hymn,  An. — 

Blackburn. 
Awake  thy  cloud-harp,  angel  of  the  rain!     See  Angel 

of  the  Rain. — Kimball. 
Awake,  ye  drowsy  blossoms,  at  the  voice  of  Puck.     See 

Queen  of  a  Night,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
Awake,  ye  forms  of  verse  divine!     See  National  Paint- 
ings, The. — Drake. 
Away  and   away,    o'er   the   deep-sounding   tide.     See 

Skater's  Song. — Anon. 
Away!  away!     See  Complaint,  The, — Akenside. 
Away! — away! — and    on    we    dash!     See   Mazeppa. — 

Byron. 
"Away,  away,"  cried  the  stout  Sir  John.     See  Song  of 

the  North,  A. — Doten. 
Away,   away  in  the   Northland.     See  Legend  of  the 

Northland,  A. — Cary. 
Away-^away  o'er  the  feathery  crest.     See  Fisherman's 

Song,  The. — Davis. 
Away!  away!   our   fires   stream   bright.     See   Skating 

Song,  A. — Peabody. 
Away!  away!   the    king's   highway.     See   Vagabonds. 

(Wesleyan  Literary  Monthly.) 
Away!  away!  through  the  sightless  air.     See  Song  of 

the  Lightning. — Cutter. 
Away!  away!  to  the  mountain's  brow.     See  Sir  Rupert 

the  Fearless. — Barham. 
Away  back  in  the  twenties,  sum  seventy-odd  year  ago. 

See  Ghost  of  Lone  Rock,  The. — Howard. 
Away,  delights!    go    seek    some    other   dwelling.     See 

Away,  Delights ! — Fletcher. 
Away,  far  off  in  China,  many,  many  years  ago.     See 

Cho-Che-Bang      and      Chi-Chil-Bloo.     (Graham's 

Magazine.) 
Away  from  the  town,  in  the  safe  retreat.     See  Lesson 

in  Geography,  A. — Wynne. 
Away  from  the  wine-cup,  away,  my  boy.     See  Away 

from  the  Wine-cup,  Away!     (New  York  Weekly.) 
Away,  haunt  thou  not  me.     See  In  a  Lecture-room. — 

Clough. 
Away  in   a  manger,   no  crib   for  a  bed.     See  Cradle 

Hymn. — Luther. 
Away  in   the   dim   and   distant   past.     See   Sunset. — 

Cary. 
Away  in  the  old  cathedral.     See  King  and  the  Poet, 

The. — Kerner. 


Away!  let  naught  to  love  displeasing.    See  Winifreda.  ' 

— Anon. 
Away!    the    moor   is   dark    beneath    the   moon.     See 

Stanzas — April,  1814. — Shelley. 
Away  to    the   green,    ye   village   swain!     See   Village 

Dance,  The.     (Cornell  Widow.) 
Away  up  high  in  the  placid  sky.     See  Bicycling  in  the 

Sky.— Tubbs. 
Away  up  in  the  heavy  heart  of  Maine  there  is  a  mighty 

lake.     See  Sisterly  Scheme,  A. — Bunner. 
Away  with  melancholy !    See  Kriss  Kringle.     Sherman. 
Away,  ye   gay  landscapes,  ye  gardens  of   roses.     See 

Lachin  Y  Gair. — Byron. 
Aw'd  by  her  own  rash  words  she  was  still,  and  her  eyes 

to    the    seaward.      See  Andromeda   (Andromeda 

and  the  Sea-nymphs). — Kingsley. 
Awf'lest  boy  in  this-here  town.     See  Elmer  Brown. — 

Riley. 
Awful  baddest  Bunny  ever,  ever  knew.     See  Bunny 

Did  It. — Anon. 
Awful  is  the  duel  between  man  and  the  age  in  which  he 

lives.     See  Last  of  the  Barons,  The  (Despondent 

Inventor,  The). — Bulwer-Lytton. 
Ay,  an   old  story,   yet  it   might.     See   Legend,   A. — 

Kendall. 
Ay,  ay,  O  ay — the  winds  that  bend  the  brier!     See 

Idylls  of  the  King  (Tristram's  Song). — Tennyson. 
"Ay,  ay,  sir;  they're  smart  seamen  enough,  no  doubt." 

See  Little  Stow-away,  The. — Anon. 
Ay,  but  I  know.     See     Twelfth  Night;  or.  What  You 

Will  (Unrequited  Love). — Shakespeare. 
Ay,  but  to  die,    and   go  we  know  not  where.      See 

Measure  for  Measure  (Life  and  Death). — Shake- 
speare. 
Ay,  down  to  the  dust  with  them,  slaves  as  they  are! 

See  Lines  on  Naples. — Moore. 
Ay,  Dwainie! — My  Dwainie!     See  Dwainie. — Riley. 
Ay,  here  stands  the  poplar,  so  tall  and  so  stately.    See 

Poplar,  The.- — Barham. 
Ay,  lad,  look  on  yon  ocean,  now,  you  see  it's  calm  and 

still.     See  As  "Old  Giles"  Saw  It. — Cohen. 
Ay,  lay  them  to  rest  on  the  prairie.     See  After  the 

Battle. — Christie. 
Ay,  let  it  rest!     And  give  us  peace.     See  Gospel  of 

Peace,  The. — Roche. 
Ay  me,  poor  soul,  whom  bound  in  sinful  chains.     See 

Dialogue  between  the  Soul  and  the  Body,  A. — 

A.  W. 
"Ay,  not  at  home,  then,  didst  thou  say?     See  Call  on 

Sir  Walter  Raleigh,  A. — Piatt. 
Ay,  note  that  potter's  wheel.     See  Rabbi   Ben   Ezra 

(Potter's  Wheel,  The). — -Browning. 
Ay,  Oliver!     I  was  but  seven,  and  he  was  eleven.    See 

Echo  and  the  Ferry. — Ingelow. 
Ay,  Proteus,   but  that   life  is  altered  now.     See  Two 

Gentlemen  of  Verona,  The  (Love  Complaining). — • 

Shakespeare. 
Ay,  tear   her   tattered   ensign   down!     See  Old   Iron- 
sides.— Holmes. 
Ay,  this  is  freedom! — these  pure  skies.     See  Hunter  of 

the  Prairies,  The. — Bryant. 
Ay,  thou  art  welcome.  Heaven's  delicious  breath.    See 

October. — Bryant . 
Ay!    Unto  thee  belong.     See  Theocritus. — Fields. 
Aye!  Plymouth  is  fair — no   goodlier   spot.     See  Puri- 
tan's Dilemma,  The. — Crosby. 
"Aye,    squire,"    said    Stevens,    "they    back    him    at 

evens."     See    How    We    Beat    the    Favourite. — 

Gordon. 
"Ayr    gurgling    kiss'd    his    pebbled    shore."     See   To 

Mary  in  Heaven. — Burns. 
Azaleas — whitest    of    white!     See    White    Azaleas. — 

Kimball. 


B 

B.  G.  Northrop  says:     "The  observance  of  Arbor  Day 

has  already  led  to  the  planting.     See  Arbor  Day: 

Its  Educating  Influence. — Anon. 
Baby  and  I  were  going  to  Uncle  Brown's  to  spend  the 

day.     See  Blue  Sky  Somewhere. — Vara. 
Baby  Bunting  tumbled  down.     See  Cured  in  a  Minute. 

— Anon. 
Baby  bye,  here's  a  fly.     See  Fly,  The.— Tilton. 
Baby  is  a  sailor  boy.     See  Baby  is  a  Sailor. — Anon. 
Baby  is  clad  in  her  nightgown  white.     See  Ten  Little 

Toes. — Anon. 
Baby  mine,   with   the   grave,   grave  face.     See  Baby 

Mine.     Locker-Lampson. 
Baby,  ope  your  sunny  eyes.     See  In  the  Morning. — 

Denton. 


619 


Baby 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


•  Baby  sat  on  the  window-seat.     See  Baby  and  Mary. — 
Anon. 
Baby,  see  the  flowers.     See  In  a  Garden. ^Swinburne. 
Baby  sleeps,  so  we  must  tread.     See  Don't  Wake  the 

Baby. — Anon. 
Baby  Tommy  stroked  them  gently.     See  Pussy-Wil- 
low.— Anon. 

Baby  wee,  baby  wee!  See  How  the  Babies  Grow. — 
Carroll. 

Baby,  what  do  the  blossoms  say.  See  Flower  Bed,  The. 
— Anon. 

Baby's  brain  is  tired  of  thinking.  See  Boston  Lullaby, 
A. — Roche. 

Bacchus  by  the  lonely  ocean.  See  Khododaphne  (Ven- 
geance of  Bacchus,  The). — Peacock. 

Bacchus  must  now  his  power  resign.  See  Drinking 
Song,  A. — -Carey. 

Bachelor's  Hall!  what  a  quare  lookin'  place  it  is.  See 
Bachelor's  Hall. — Finley. 

Back  and  forth  the  shuttles  go.  See  Snow-weaver,  The 
— Sherman. 

Back  flies  my  soul  to  other  years.  See  Songstress,  The. 
— Shipsey. 

Back  from  a  tedious  holiday  he  comes.  See  Domestic 
Event,  A. — Fertiault. 

Back  from  the  front  there  came.  See  Before  Vicks- 
burg. — Anon. 

Back  from  the  trebly  crimsoned  field.  See  Wanted — 
a  Man. — Stedman. 

Back  in  the  years  when  Phlagstaff,  the  Dane,  was 
monarch.  See  Rejected  Natonal  Hymns,  The,  I. — 
Newell. 

Back,  ruffians,  back!  nor  dare  to  tread.  See  Polish 
Boy,  The. — Stephens. 

Back  to  the  flower-town,  side  by  side.  See  In  Memory 
of  Walter  Savage  Landor. — Swinburne. 

Backward,  turn  backward,  O  Time  in  your  flight.  See 
Rock  Me  to  Sleep. — Allen. 

Bacon  says:  "Reading  makes  a  full  man,  writing  an 
exact  man,  speaking  a  ready  man."  See  Public 
Speech. — Bellows. 

Bad  was  the  wife  of  Barney  O'Linn.  See  Barney 
O'Linn  and  the  Leeches. — Anon. 

Bah!  that's  the  third  umbrella  gone  since  Christ- 
mas. See  Mrs.  Caudle's  Umbrella  Lecture. — ■ 
Jerrold. 

Balder,  the  white  sun-god,  has  departed !  See  Balder. 
— Anon. 

Balmy  zephyrs,  lightly  flitting.  See  Drury's  Dirge. — 
— Smith. 

Baloo,  loo,  lammy,  now  baloo,  my  dear.  See  Lullaby, 
A. — Nairn. 

Balow,  my  babe,  lye  stil  and  sleipe!  See  Lady  Anne 
Bothwell's  Lament. — Anon. 

Bambino  in  his  cradle  slept.     See  Bambino. — Field. 

Banging  of  the  hammer,  whirling  of  the  plane.  See 
Music  of  Labor,  The. — Anon. 

Banished  from  Rome!  What's  banished  but  set  free. 
See  Catiline  (Catiline's  Defiance). — Croly. 

Bankrupt — our  pockets  inside  out.  See  To  George 
Peabody. — Holmes. 

Banner  of  England,  not  for  a  season,  O  banner  of 
Britain,  hast  thou.  See  Defence  of  Lucknow, 
The. — Tennyson. 

Barbarians  must  we  always  be?  See  On  Observing  a 
Vulgar  Name  on  the  Plinth  of  an  Ancient  Statue. 
— Landor. 

Barb'd  blossom  of  the  guarded  gorse.  See  Song  of 
Winter,  A. — Pfeiff'er. 

Bard!  to  no  brave  chief  belonging.  See  Fight  of  the 
Forlorn,  The. — Darley. 

Bards  of  passion  and  of  mirth.     See  Ode. — Keats. 

Barefooted  boys  scud  up  the  street.  See  Sudden 
Shower,  A. — Riley. 

Barnes,  the  pedagogue,  is  a  worthy  man.  See  Swal- 
lowed Frog,  The. — Anon. 

Barnes,  the  schoolmaster  in  a  suburban  town.  See 
Spirited  Object  Les.son.  A. — Anon. 

Barnet's  boy  left  a  sack  of  flour  at  Archibald's  last  even- 
ing.    See  Something  Split. — Anon. 

Bartholomew  Benjamin  Bunting.  See  Singular  Sang- 
froid of  Baby  Bunting,  The. — Carryl. 

Base-ball  was  something.  See  Cap'n  Peleg  Bun- 
ker Describes  a  Game  of  Base-ball. — Under- 
bill. 

Basil  Wolgemuth  lay  asleep  on  his  couch.  He  had 
outwatched  midnight  and  was  very  weary.  See 
Uosicrucian,  The.- — Craik. 

Basking  in  peace  in  the  warm  spring  sun.  See  Romance 
of  the  Carpet,  The. — Burdette. 

Bathed  in  unfallen  sunlight.     See  same. — Bonar. 

Bathsheba  came  out  to  the  sun.  See  "Telling  the  Bees. 
— Reese. 


Battles  nor  song  can  from  oblivion  save.  See  Immor- 
tality.— Reese. 

Bayard  Taylor  and  the  school  he  represents.  See 
same. — Anon. 

Be  a  merchant,  I  will  freight  thee.  See  Gifts  of  For- 
tune and  Cupid,  The. — Dekker. 

Be  brief,  be  pointed ;  let  your  matter  stand.  See  Ad- 
vice to  an  Advocate. — Story. 

Be  calm  in  arguing,  for  fierceness  makes.  See  Argu- 
ment.— Anon. 

Be  careful  that  you  do  not  commend  yourself.  See 
same. — Hale. 

Be  content  with  thy  lot.     See  Content. — Anon. 

"Be  faithful,  Don!"  the  farmer  called,  that  sultry  sum- 
mer morn.  See  Path  of  the  Cyclone,  The. — 
Thorne. 

Be  firm,  be  bold,  be  strong,  be  true.  See  Dare  to 
Stand  Alone. — Anon. 

Be  gentle  to  the  new-laid  egg.  See  How  to  Deal  with 
New-laid  Eggs. — Anon. 

Be  good,  be  good,  my  bright-eyed  boy.  See  Be  Good. 
Anon. 

Be  happy  now  with  him,  and  love  him  who  loves  thee. 
See  To  a  Daughter  on  Her  Marriage. — Hugo. 

Be  in  time  for  every  call.     See  Be  in  Time. — Anon. 

Be  it  not  mine  to  steal  the  cultured  flower.  See  Simple 
Nature. — Romanes. 

Be  it  right  or  wrong,  these  men  among.  See  Nut- 
brown  Maid,  The. — Anon. 

Be  jabers,  an'  wasn't  that  mighty  ioine  actin'  up  last 
wake  down  at  the  village?  See  Mr.  Worth's 
Farm  Hands. — Anon. 

Be  kind  and  tender  to  the  frog.  See  Frog,  The. — 
Belloc. 

Be  kind  to  the  panther!  for  when  thou  wert  young. 
See  Panther,  The. — Anon. 

Be  kind  to  thy  father — for  when  thou  wert  young. 
See  Be  Kind. — Anon. 

Be  like  the  promontory,  against  which  the  waves  con- 
tinually break.  See  Thoughts  of  Marcus  Aurelius 
(Fortitude). — Antoninus. 

Be  mine,  and  I  will  give  thy  name.  See  same. — Ben- 
nett. 

"Be  mine,"  said  the  ardent  young  Sawmilegoff.  See 
Russian  Courtship,  A. — Anon. 

"Be  my  fairy,  mother."     See  Wish,  A.— Terry. 

Be  near  when  I  am  dying.     See  same. — Baker. 

Be  not  afraid  to  pray — to  pray  is  right.  See  Prayer. — 
Coleridge. 

Be  not  gloomy!  catch  the  sunshine!  See  Catch  the 
Sunshine. — Rook. 

Be  not  much  troubled  about  many  things.  See  Light. 
— Cary. 

Be  not  swift  to  take  offense.     See  Let  it  Pass. — Anon. 

Be  patient,  O  be  patient!  Put  your  ear  against  the 
earth.     See  Patience. — Linton. 

Be  pure  as  the  flower,  little  child!  See  White  Blos- 
som, The. — Anon. 

Be  seated,  pray,  A  grave  appeal.  See  Virtuoso,  A. — 
Dobson. 

Be  still,  my  child!  remain  in  statu  quo.  See  Lawyer's 
Lullaby,  The. — Coggswell. 

Be  then  thine  own  home,  and  in  thyself  dwell.  See 
Verses  to  Sir  Henry  Wootton. — Donne. 

Be  thou  a  bird,  my  soul,  and  mount  and  soar.  See  Be 
Thou  a  Bird,  my  Soul.— A.  G.  C. 

Be  thou  blest,  Bertram!  and  succeed  thy  father.  See 
All's  Well  that  Ends  Well  (Mother's  Blessing).— 
Shakespeare. 

Be  thy  dread  of  sin  and  sorrow.  See  Shun  the  Bowl. — 
Barker. 

Be  true,  be  true!  whate'er  beside.  See  Truth. — Tup- 
per. 

Be  true,  O  poet,  to  your  gift  divine!  See  Gifted  for 
Giving. — Burleigh. 

Be  useful  where  thou  livest,  that  they  may.  See  Be 
Useful. — Herbert. 

Be  wi.se  to-day;  'tis  madness  to  defer.  See  Night 
Thoughts  (On  Procrastination). — Young. 

Be  ye  in  love  with  April-tide?     See  same. — Scollard. 

Be  you  to  others  kind  and  true.  See  Golden  Rule,  The. 
{New  England  Primer.) 

Be  young — forever — through  the  centuries.  See  Curse 
from  "Claudian,"  The.— Herman  and  Wills. 

Be  your  words  made,  good  sir,  of  Indian  ware.  See 
Astropheland  Stella,  Sonnet  XCII.^Sidney. 

Bear  it  on  tenderly.     See  O'Connell's  Heart. — Dorsey. 

Bear  lightly  on  their  foreheads,  Time !  See  Philosophy 
of  Short,  The.— Mackay. 

Beat !  beat !  drums ! — blow,  bugles !  blow !  See  Beat ! 
Beat !  Drums !— Whitman . 

Beat  on,  proud  billows;  Boreas  blow.  See  Loyalty 
Confined. — L'Estrange. 


620 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Before 


Beat  the   broad   gates,    a   goodly   hollow   sound.     See 

Deserted  Mansion,  A. — Hall. 
Beating  heart !    we  come  again.     »See  At  Her  Window. 

Locker-Lampson. 
Beauties,  have  ye  seen  this  toy?     See  Venus'  Runaway. 

Jonson. 
Beautiful   are  the  mountains.     iSee  same. — Gallaher. 
Beautiful  belles,    O!    beautiful   belles.     <Sec   Beautiful 

Belles. — Anon. 
Beautiful  bow  in  heaven  above.     See  Rainbow  and  its 

Emblems,  The. — Anon. 
Beautiful  child!  by  thy  mother's  knee.     See  My  Beau- 
tiful Child. — Sigourney. 
Beautiful  cloud!  with  folds  so  soft  and  fair.     See  To  a 

Cloud. — Bryant. 
Beautiful  dudes!  O!  beautiful  dudes!     See  Beautiful 

Dudes. — Anon. 
Beautiful  Evalena,  will  you  be  mine?     *See  Snarl's  Chil- 
dren.— Anon. 
Beautiful  Evelyn  Hope  is  dead!     See  Evelyn  Hope. — 

Browning. 
Beautiful  face    of    a    child.     See    Three    Portraits    of 

Prince  Charles. — Lang. 
Beautiful  faces   are  those   that   wear.     See  Beautiful 

Things. — Allerton. 
Beautiful  for  situation,  the  joy  of  the  whole  earth  was 

Mount  Zion.     See  Destruction  of  Jerusalem,  The. 

— Budlong. 
Beautiful  ground  on  which  we  tread.     See  Beautiful 

Things. — Anon. 
Beautiful  hands    are    those    that    do.     See    Beautiful 

Hands. — Swing. 
Beautiful  in  her  majestic  grandeur.     See  Elm,  The. — 

H.  H.  B. 
Beautiful  in  her  solitary  grandeur.     See  Battle  of  Ger- 

mantown.  The  (Heroes  of  the  Land  of  Penn). — 

Lippard. 
"Beautiful!"   mebby  it  be,   bairn.     See  Tale  of  the 

Yorkshire  Coast,  A. — Anon. 
Beautiful  must   be   the   mountains   whence   ye   come. 

See  Nightingales. — Bridges. 
Beautiful  rose  of   such  fragrance  rare.     See  Voices  of 

the  Flowers.     (Sunny  Side.) 
Beautiful  shadow  of  Thetis's  boy!     See  Invocation  to 

the  Spirit  of  Achilles. — Byron. 
Beautiful!    Sir,   you    may    say    so.     See    Chiquita. — 

Harte. 
Beautiful  snow!  beautiful  snow!     See  Beautiful  Snow. 

— ;-Sigourney. 
Beautiful   spoils!  borne   off   from   vanquished   death! 

See  Rose  Aylmer's  Hair,  Given  by  Her  Sister. — 

Landor. 
Beautiful    spring-time!    bright,    blooming    roses.     See 

Beautiful  Spring-time. — Anon. 
Beautiful,    sublime,    and    glorious.     See   Sea,    The. — 

Barton. 
Beautiful  things  there  are  coming  this  way.     See  Next 

Summer. — Anon. 
Beautiful   vision!  how   bright   it   rose.     See  Reign   of 

Peace,  The. — Thornton. 
Beautiful  was  the  night.     Behind  the  black  wall  of  the 

forest.     See  Evangeline  (Moonlight  on  the  Prairie). 

— Longfellow. 
Beautiful   world!  though   bigots   condemn   thee.     See 

Beautiful  World. — Blackie. 
Beauty,    alas!  where    wast    thou    born?     See   Do    Me 

Right,  and  Do  Me  Reason. — Lodge. 
Beauty  and  majesty  are  fallen  at  odds.     See  Cynthia 

(Sonnet  from  Cynthia). — Barnfield. 
Beauty    and    rags    were    the    portion    possessed.     See 

Peronella. — Anon. 
Beauty,   arise,  show  forth  thy  glorious  shining!     See 

Pleasant  Comedy  of  Patient  Grissell,  The  (Beauty, 

Arise!) — Dekker. 
Beauty    clear  and    fair.     See  Elder  Brother,   The  (To 

Angelina). — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Beauty  may  be  the  path  to  highest  good.     See  Straight 

Road,  The. — Anon. 
Beauty  sat  bathing  by  a  spring.     See  Beauty  Bathing. 

— Munday. 
Beauty    still    walketh    on    the    earth    and    air.     See 

Beauty. — Smith. 
Beauty,    sweet    love,    is   like   the   morning   dew.     See 

Sonnets  to  Delia  ("Beauty,  sweet  love,"  etc). — 

Daniel. 
Beaver  roars  hoarse  with  melting  snows.     See  Biglow 

Papers  (Hosea  Biglow's  Lament). — Lowell. 
Because,  dear  Christ,  your  tender,  wounded  arm.    See 

Brier. — Johnson . 
Because  I  breathe  not  love  to  everie  one.     See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella  (Love's  Silence). — Sidney. 
Because  I  could  not  stop  for  Death.     See  Clhariot,  The. 

— Dickinson. 


Because  I  hold  it  sinful  to  despond. 
Thaxter. 


See  Courage.- 


Because  I  oft  in  dark  abstracted  guise.  See  Astrophel 
and  Stella,  Sonnet  XXVII.— Sidney. 

Because  I  seek  Thee  not,  oh  seek  Thou  me!  See  Help 
Thou  My  Unbelief  !—Moulton. 

Because  I  wear  the  swaddling-bands  of  Time.  See 
Child's  Plea,  The.— Palfrey. 

Because  of  one  dear  infant  head.  See  Mater  Dolorosa. 
— Hahn. 

Because  of  the  failure  of  the  Athenian  opposition  to 
Philip  of  Macedon.  See  Oration  on  the  Crown.— 
Demosthenes. 

Because  the  shadows  deepen'd  verily.  See  At  the 
Last. — Marston. 

Because  thou  com'st,  a  tired  guest.  See  Arab  Wel- 
come, An. — Aldrich. 

Because  thou  hast  the  power  and  own'st  the  grace. 
See  Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese,  XXXIX. — 
Browning. 

Because  we  once  drove  together.  See  Un  Bacio  Dato 
non  Mai  Perduto. — Story. 

Because  you  have  no  golden  hoard.  See  For  Love's 
Sweet  Sake. — Matheson. 

Because  you  passed,  and  now  are  not.  See  Ballad  of 
Heroes,  A. — Dobson. 

Bedad,  an'  I  think  that  Misther  Stafford  is  one  of  the 
quarest  min.  See  I  very  Inch  a  Gintleman,  1. 
— McBride. 

Bedtime's  come  fu'  little  boys.  See  Negro  Lullaby. — 
Dunbar. 

Been  out  in  the  lifeboat  often?  Ay,  ay,  sir,  oft 
enough.     See  Lifeboat,  The. — Sims. 

Bees  don't  care  about  the  snow.     See  Bees. — Sherman. 

Bees  in  the  meadow.  See  Bees  in  the  Meadow. — 
Anon. 

Bee-ull!  Bee-uU!  OBee-ull!  my  gracious.  See  Wakin' 
the  Young  Uns. — Boss. 

Before  all  hearts  and  minds.  See  Death  of  Henry 
Clay. — Butler. 

Before  all  other  titles,  Franklin  placed  that  of  his 
chosen  craft.  See  Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of 
Franklin,  The  (Franklin  as  a  Printer). — Winthrop. 

Before  all  this,  "much  ado  about  nothing."  See 
Beatrice. — Anon. 

Before  and  behind,  before  and  behind.  See  Before 
and  Behind. — Lawrence. 

Before  attempting  to  recite  this  blood-curdling  story. 
See  Ghost  Story,  A. — Twain. 

Before  Grenada's  fated  walls,  encamped  in  proud 
array.     See  Moor's  Revenge,  The. — Mickiewiez. 

Before  her  flew  Affliction,  girt  in  storms.  See  Spirit 
of  Homer,  The  (Procession  of  Time,  The). — Chap- 
man. 

Before  Him  weltered  like  a  shoreless  sea.  See  Judg- 
ment Day. — Howells. 

Before  his  lion-garden  gate.  See  Glove,  The.— Schil- 
ler. 

Before  I  close  my  eyes  in  sleep.  See  Evening  Prayer, 
An. — Barton. 

Before  I  see  another  day.  See  Complaint  of  a  For- 
saken Indian  Woman,  The. — -Wordsworth. 

Before  I  sigh  my  last  gasp,  let  me  breathe.  See  Will, 
The. — Donne. 

Before  I  trust  my  fate  to  thee.  See  Woman's  Ques- 
tion, A. — Procter. 

Before  I  was  famous  I  used  to  sit.  See  Pipes  and 
Beer. — Fawcett. 

Before  Jehovah's  awful  throne.  See  Psalm  C. — 
Watts. 

Before  my  eyes  she  fkts  in  grace.  See  Reveries  of  a 
Bachelor. — Nichols. 

Before  my  love  and  I  had  met.  See  St.  Valentine's 
Magic  Wand. — Waterfield. 

Before  proud  Rome's  imperial  throne.  See  Carac- 
tacus. — Barton. 

Before  the  beginning  of  years.  See  Atalanta  in  Caly- 
don  (Making  of  Man,  The). — Swinburne. 

Before  the  bright  sun  rises  over  the  hill.  See  Gleaner, 
The.— Taylor. 

Before  the  firelight's  genial  glow.  See  Phyllis's  Slip- 
pers.— Richmond. 

Before  the  people  crowned  Prince  Arthur  king.  See 
Idylls  of  the  King  (Elaine). — Tennyson. 

Before  the  starry  threshold  of  Jove's  court.  See 
Comus,  a  Mask. — Milton. 

Before  the  stout  harvesters  falleth  the  grain.  See 
Summer  Shower,  The. — Read. 

Before  the  upturning  of  Southern  society  by  the  Re- 
construction Acts.  See  Separate  as  Billows,  but 
One  as  the  Sea. — Stephens. 

Before  the  wine-shop  which  o'erlooks  the  beach.  See 
Shipwrecked. — Cop<?e. 


621 


Before 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Before  this  present  golden  age  of  writers,  a  Grub- 
street  Garreteer  existed. '  See  Poet  and  the 
Alchemist,  The. — Smith. 

Before  thy  stem  smooth  seas  were  curled.  See  Greet- 
ing to  "The  George  Griswold."     (Punch.) 

Before  us  in  the  stfltry  dawn  arose.  See  Slave,  The. — 
Home. 

Before  Vespasian's  regal  throne.  See  Death  of  Gau- 
dentis. — Annie. 

Before  we  say  good-by,  I  want  to  tell  you  that  I  love 
you  all  very  much.  See  Epilogue  for  a  Tot. — 
Anon. 

Begin,  O  men  of  Athens,  by  not  despairing  of  your 
situation.  See  Philippics  (Against  Philip). — De- 
mosthenes. 

Beginning  and  the  end,  first  following  last.  See  Ivy 
Poem. — Anon. 

Begone,  you,  sir!  Here,  shepherd,  call  your  dog.  See 
Shepherd  Dog  of  the  Pyrenees,  The. — Murray. 

Begotten,  and  born,  and  dying  with  noise.  See  On  a 
Cannon. — Swift. 

Behave  yoursel'  before  folk.     See  same. — Rodger. 

Behind  a  screen  of  western  hills.  See  Evening  on  the 
Campus. — Field. 

Behind  him  lay  the  gray  Azores.  See  Columbus. — 
Miller. 

Behind  Jacques  Cartier's  hills  the  sun  sinks  low.  See 
Death  of  Wolfe,  The. — Anderson. 

Behind  our  books  we  trembling  cower.  See  In  Ethics. 
— E.  H.  W. 

Behind  them  slowly  sank  the  western  world.  See  Her 
World.— Miller. 

Behind  us  at  our  evening  meal.  See  Common  Ques- 
tion, The.— Whittier. 

Behind  yon  hills  where  Lugar  flows.  See  My  Nanie, 
O. — Burns. 

Behold!  a  giant  am  I!  See  Windmill,  The. — Long- 
fellow. 

Behold  a  hag  whom  Life  denies  a  kiss.  See  Oppor- 
tunity.— Caweir. 

Behold  a  pupil  of  the  monkish  gown.  See  Alfred  and 
His  Descendants. — Wordsworth. 

Behold  a  silly  [or  simple],  tender  babe.  See  New 
Prince,  New  Pomp. — Southwell. 

Behold  a  woman!     See  same. — Whitman. 

Behold  a  wonder  for  theatric  story!  See  Prologue  to 
"The  Apprentice." — Anon. 

"Behold  another  singer!"  Criton  said.  See  "Song,  to 
the  Gods,  is  Sweetest  Sacrifice." — Fields. 

Behold  her,  single  in  the  field.  See  Solitary  Reaper, 
The. — Wordsworth. 

Behold  him,  priests,  and  though  he  stink  of  sweat. 
See  Steel  Glass,  The  (Piers  Ploughman). — Langland. 

Behold  His  Satanic  Majestie  in  cabinet  council  assem- 
bled.    See  In  Satan's  Council-chamber.- — Willard. 

Behold,  how  short  a  span.  See  Shortness  of  Life,  The. 
— Quarles. 

Behold,  I  have  a  weapon.  See  Othello,  the  Moor  of 
Venice  (Othello's  Remorse). — Shakespeare. 

Behold  in  awful  march  and  dread  array.  See  Cam- 
paign, The  (Marlborough  at  Blenheim).- — Addison. 

Behold  in  us  three  parties  known  as  "Supers."  See 
"Supers." — Newton. 

Behold  it!  Listen  to  it!  Every  star  had  a  tongue.  See 
Flag  of  the  Union,  The  (National  Ensign,  The).— 
Winthrop. 

Behold,  my  lords.  See  Winter's  Tale,  The. — Shake- 
speare. 

Behold,  out  walking  in  these  valleys.  See  Ode:  "Be- 
hold, out  walking,"  etc. — Barnes. 

Behold  the  bright  and  smiling  spring!  See  Message 
of  the  Seasons,  The. — Anon. 

Behold  the  flood-tide  of  the  year.  See  Midsummer. — 
.ludd. 

Behold  the  foe  of  Grubb  Street's  lettered  fools.  See 
Pope. — Betts. 

Behold  the  fowls  of  the  air:  for  they  sow  not,  neither 
do  they  reap.  See  St.  Matthew  (Trust  in  God). 
—Bible. 

Behold,  the  grave  of  a  wicked  man.  See  Why? — 
Crane. 

Behold!  the  maize  fields  set  their  pennons  free.  See 
Late  Autumn. — Thomson. 

Behold  the  man!  ye  crowned  and  ermined  train.  See 
On  Washington's  Farewell  Address. — Honeywood. 

Behold  the  mansion  reared  by  dsedal  Jack.  See 
Modern  House  that  Jack  Built,  The.— Anon. 

Behold  the  monarch  of  the  woods.  See  Monarch  of 
the  Woods. — Anon. 

Behold  the  portal:  open  wide  it  stands.  See  Garden 
where  there  is  no  Winter,  The. — Block. 

Behold  the  pupil  of  the  monkish  gown.  See  Alfred. — 
Wordsworth. 


Behold  the    rocky    wall.     See    Two    Streams,    The. — 

Holmes. 
Behold  the  sea.     See  Sea,  The. — Emerson. 
Behold  the  spider  in  his  cell!     Spider,  The. — Ruggles. 
.  Behold  the  sun,  that  seem'd   but  now.     See  At  Sun- 
setting. — Wither. 
Behold  the  western  evening  light !     See  Autumn  Even- 
ing, The. — Peabody. 
Behold  the  wonders  of  the  mighty  deep.     See  Sea,  The. 

— Anon. 
Behold  the  world's  great  wonder.     See  Hymn  to  the 

Sun. — Darley. 
Behold  the  wreath  which  decks  the  warrior'.s  brow. 

See  Warrior's  Wreath, The. — {Nationad  Preceptor.) 
Behold  the  young,  the  rosy  spring.     See  Spring. — Ana- 

creon. 
Behold  these  woods,  and  mark,  my  sweet.     See  Pas- 
toral Courtship,  A. — Randolph. 
Behold!  they  come,  those  sainted  forms.     See  Centen- 
nial Ode  (Fathers  of  New  England,  The). — Sprague. 
Behold!  this  ruin!  'twas  a  skull.    See  To  a  Skeleton. — 

Anon. 
Behold  this  tree,   my  sisters.     See  Tree  of  Spiritual 

Blessings,  The. — Cornell. 
Behold  twa  auld  wives  seated  at  the  fireside  drinking 

the  blackest  of  tea.     See  Twa  Courtin's,  The. — 

Kennedy. 
Behold  we   have   gathered    together   our   battleships, 

near  and  far.     See  Mene,  Mene,  Tekel,  Upharsin. — 

Cawein. 
Behold  yon  simple  building  near  the  crossing  of  the 

village  road.     See  New  England's  Fairest  Boast. 

— Prentiss.  , 

Beholding  youth  and  hope  in  mockery  caught.     See 

Sun's  Shame,  The. — Rossetti. 
Being  asked  by  an  intimate  party.     See  His  Answer 

to  Her  Letter. — Harte. 
Being  weary  of  love,  I  flew  to  the  grave.     See  Pretty 

Rose-tree,  The. — Moore. 
Being  your  slave,  what  should     I  do  but  tend.     See 

Sonnets,  LVII. — Shakespeare. 
'Believe  in  me."  the  prophet  cried.     See  Infallibility. 

—Collier. 
Believe  me,  Bess,  when  I  declare.     See  Legal  Attach- 
ment, A. — Anon. 
Believe  me,  if  all  those  endearing  young  charms.     See 

same. — Moore. 
Believe  me  still,  as  I  have  ever  been.     See  same. — 

Whittier. 
Believe  not  those  who  tell  you  that  poetry  will  seduce 

the  youthful  mind  from  severe  occupations.     See 

Defence  of  Poetry,  A. — Wolfe. 
Belinda  was  a  cautious  little  maid.     See  Pickpocket, 

The.— Anon. 
Belle,  I've  sought  you  all  the  morning.     See  On  the 

Beach. — ^Anon. 
Bells  of  the   past,   whose  long-forgotten   music.     See 

Angelus,  The. — Harte. 
Beloved,  do  you  pity  not  my  doleful  case.     See  Lament 

of  the  Mangaire  Sugach. — Walsh. 
Beloved,  gaze  in  thine  own  heart.     See  Two  Trees,  The. 

— Yeats. 
Beloved,  it  is  morn!     See  same.- — Hickey. 
Beloved,  my  beloved,  when  I  think.     See  Sonnets  from 

the  Portuguese,  XX. — Browning. 
Beloved,  on  the  shore  of  this  gray  world.     See  To  Celia 

Thaxter.— Field. 
Beloved,  the  briefest  words  are  best.     See  Four  Words. 

•'     —Allen. 
Beloved,  those  who  moan  of  love's  brief  day.     See  Per- 
fect Love. — Lampman. 
"Beloved,  we  are  met  to  solemnize  the  funeral  of  Mr. 

Prockter."     See  Funeral  Sermon  on  the  Death  of 

a  Good  Man. — Anon. 
Below  lies  one  whose  name  was  traced  in  sand.    See  My 

Epitaph. — Gray. 
Below  me  in  the  garden  there.     See  Two   Kisses. — 

Powell 
Below  the  bottom  of  the  great  abyss.     See  Satan. — 

Crashaw. 
Below  there  in  the  orchard.     See  Love's  Letter-box. — 

Wood. 
Belshazzar  is    king!     Belshazzar    is     lord!     See    Bel- 

shazzar. — Procter. 
Belshazzar  Smith  had  a  very  bad  and  very  dangerous 

habit.     See   Belshazzar    Smith's    Cure   for    Som- 
nambulism.— Anon. 
Belubbed  fellow-trabelers,    in    holdin'    forth    to-day. 

See  Half-way  Doin's. — Russell. 
Ben  Battle  was  a  soldier  bold.     See  Faithless  Nelly 

Gra.y. — Hood. 
Ben  Bluff  was  a  whaler,  and  many  a  day.     See  Ben 

Bluff.— Hood. 


622 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Between 


Ben  Bobstay,  a  tar  of  the  jolly  old  sort.     See  True- 
hearted  Ben. — Anon. 
Ben  Brust  was  driving  his  sheep  from  Newark.     See 

Tale  of  a  Leg,  A. — Miller. 
Ben  Fisher   had   finished   his  hard   day's   work.     See 

Home  Picture,  A. — Gage. 
Ben  Fisher    had    finished    his    harvesting.     See    Ben 

Fisher. — Gage. 
Ben  Hadad,  king  of  Syria,  with  all  Damascus'  hosts. 

See  God's  Ragamuffin  Army. — Taylor. 
Ben  Hazzard's   hut   was   smoky   and   cold.     See   Ben 

Hazzard's  Guests. — Marshall. 
Ben  Isaac    walked    in    solitude    one    day.     See    Ben 

Isaac's  Vision. — Lawrence. 
Ben  Levi  sat  with  his  books  alone.     See  Rabbi's  Vision, 

The. — Brown. 
Be'n  to  that  ole  settlers'  meetunl     See   Ole  Settlers' 

Meetun. — Dawson. 
Ben  won't  be  home  till  Saturday  night.     See  Honest 

and  Honorable. — Coale. 
Bend  low,  O  dusky  night.     See  To-night. — Moulton. 
Bender  vas  somedimes  a  pooty  smart  man.     See  Ben- 
der Buys  a  Delephone. — Anon. 
Beneath  a    laurel,    two    fair    streams    between.     See 

Vision  of  the  Fawn,  The. — Petrarch. 
Beneath  a   palm-tree   by    a   clear,    cool    spring.     See 

Lesson  of  Mercy,  A. — Murray. 
Beneath  a  shady  elm  tree.     See  Selling  the  Baby. — 

Carleton. 
Beneath  a  shivering  canopy  reclined.     See  Noontide. — 

Leyden. 
Beneath  an    arch   of   velvet-blue.     See   El   Camilo. — 

Irving. 
Beneath    an  Indian  palm  a  girl.     See  Palm  [or  Palm- 
tree!  and  the  Pine,  The. — Houghton. 
Beneath  our  consecrated  elm.     See  Under  the  Old  Elm 

(Washington). — Lowell. 
Beneath  the  burning  brazen  sky.     See  Ute  Lover,  The. 

Garland. 
Beneath  the  deep  and  silent  midnight  sky.     See  Father 

and  Child.— Gilder. 
Beneath  the  ever  dense  and  leafy  gloom.     See  Death- 
fire,  The. — Stephens. 
Beneath  the  forest's  skirts  I  rest.     See  West  Wind,  The. 

— Bryant. 
Beneath  the  glory  of  a  brighter  sun.     See  New  Thana- 

topsis. — Holcombe. 
Beneath  the  hot  midsummer  sun.     See  His  Mother's 

Song. — Anon. 
Beneath  the  lilac-tree.     See  Lyric,  A. — Hulme. 
Beneath  the  low  hung  night  cloud.     See  Three  Bells, 

The.— Whittier. 
Beneath  the  meadow  bridge,  whose  arch  was  dry.     See 

Rivals,  The.- — Clare. 
Beneath  the  Memnonian  shadows  of  Memphis,  it  rose 

from  the  slime.     See  Reed,  The. — Carpenter. 
Beneath  the    midnight     moon     of     May.     See    Night 

Watch,  The.— Winter. 
Beneath  the  moonlight  and  the  snow.     See  My  Birth- 
day.— Whittier. 
Beneath  the  rule  of  men  entirely  great.     See  Pen,  The. 

Lytton. 
Beneath  the  shade  a  spreading  beech  displays.     See 

Autumn;  or,  Hylas  and  ^Egon.— Pope. 
Beneath  the  shadow  of  dawn's  aerial  cope.     See  Hope 

and  Fear. — Swinburne. 
Beneath  the  south  side  of  a  craigy  bield.     See  Gentle 

Shepherd,  The  (Patie  and  Roger). — Ramsay. 
Beneath  the  summer  moon,  the  city  lies.     See  Hilda. — 

Rayhill. 
Beneath  the  surface  there  is  wealth.     See  Beneath  the 

Surface. — Fox. 
Beneath  the  tall,  white  light-house  strayed  the  chil- 
dren.    See  Under  the  Light-house. — Thaxter. 
Beneath  the  warrior's  helm  behold.    See  On  an  Intaglio 

Head  of  Minerva. — Aldrich. 
Beneath  these     fruit-tree     boughs     that     shed.     See 

Green  Linnet,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Beneath  these  poppies  buried  deep.     See  Epitaph  on  a 

Well-known  Poet  (Robert  Southey). — Moore. 
Beneath  this  crag.     See  CencI,  The  (Italian   Ravine, 

An).— Shelley. 
Beneath  this    starry    arch.     See    On,    On    Forever. — 

Martineau. 
Beneath  this  stone  two   David   Hallidays.     See  Epi- 
taph.— Anon. 
Beneath  this  stony  roof  reclined.     See  Inscription  in 

a  Hermitage. — Warton. 
Beneath  this  verdant  hillock  lies.     See  On  a  Usurer. — 

'      Swift. 
Beneath  those  buttressed  walls  with  lichen  grey.     See 

Below  the  Old  House. — Scott. 
Beneath  thv  spell,  O  radiant  summer  sea.     See  Sea's 

Spell,  The.— Spalding. 


Beneath  your  lattice,  love,  I   sing.      See  Too-too  Ser- 
enade, A. — Anon. 
Beneathe  an  ancient  oake  one  daye.     See  Enchanted 

Oak,  The.— Herford. 
Benedict  Arnold  sailed  from  our  shores.     See  Benedict 

Arnold  (Arnold  the  Traitor). — Lippard. 
"Bennie,  shut  the  gate!     Shut  it,  I  tell  you!"     See 

Parental  Discipline. — Anon. 
Benny  watched  his  grandmamma.     See  His   Idea  of 

It.— Best. 
Bereft  of  patriotism,  the  heart  of  a  nation  will  be  cold, 

and    cramped,    and    sordid.     See    Patriotism.— 

Meagher. 
Berlubbed  Brederen  and  Sistern :     De  mem'ry  ob  man 

am  mighty  treacherous  and  onreliable.     See  Negro 

Sermon  on  Memory,  A. — Anon. 
Beshrew    the    coin'd    gold — and    so    take    heed.     See 

G  olden-rod. — H  unt . 
Beshrew  your    heart,     for    sending    me     about.     See 

Romeo  and  Juliet. — Shakespeare. 
Beside  a  massive  gateway,  built  up  in  years  gone  by. 

See  Waiting  by  the  Gate. — Bryant. 
Beside  a  window  sits  the  maid,  a  harp  within  her  hand. 

See  Mounted  Knight,  The. — ^Anon. 
Beside  her  ashen  hearth  she  sat  her  down.     See  For- 
tunate One,  The. — Monroe. 
Beside  her  mother  sat  a  darling  child.     See  Mother  and 

her  Child,  The.— Anon. 
Beside  my  window, 'in  the  early  spring.     See   Early 

Work.— Bolton. 
Beside  that   tent   and  under   guard.     See   Ger6nimo. 

McGafifey. 
Beside  the    church    door,    a-weary    and    alone.     Sec 

Purest  Pearl,  The. — Anon. 
Beside  the   covered   grave.     See   To   the   Memory   of 

Pietro  d'Alessandro. — Lushington. 
Beside  the  engine-driver  grim.     See  Night  Ride  on  the 

Engine,  A. — Shaw. 
Beside  the  landsman  knelt  a  dame.     See  Manor  Lord, 

The. — Houghton. 
Beside   the    Moldau's    rushing   stream.      See   Beleag- 
uered City,  The. — I/ongfellow. 
Beside  the  pounding  cataracts.     See  City  of  the  End 

of  Things,  The. — Lampman. 
Beside  the  still  waters!     O,  infinite  peace!     See  Still 

Waters. — Richards. 
Beside  the  toilsome  way.     See  Angel  of  Patience,  The. 

— Anon. 
Beside  the  wall,  and  near  the  massive  gate.     See  Sac- 
rilege.— Collier. 
Beside  yon  straggling  fence  that  skirts  the  way.     See 

Deserted  Village,  The  (Village  Schoolmaster,  The). 

■ — Goldsmith. 
Bess  went   to  church,  one  sultry  day.     See  "Please, 

Preacherman,  Can  I  Go  Home." — Anon. 
Bessie  wanted  to  learn  a  text.     See  Bessie's  Text. — ■ 

Anon. 
Best  and  brightest,  come  away!     Se«  Invitation,  The. 

—Shelley. 
Best  of  all  I  love  my  mamma.     See  Those  I  Love. — - 

Rook. 
Betsey  and  I  are  out  once  more — we've  had  a  tearing 

fight.     See  Betsey  and  I  are  Out   Once  More. — 

Anon. 
Better  be  with  the  dead.     See  Macbeth. — Shakespeare. 
Better  keep  on  with  the  wet  bandages  and  hot  foot- 
bath.    See  Her  First  Shot. — Anon. 
Better  than  gold  in  the  miser's  grasp.     See  Better  than 

the  Miser's  Gold. — -Pinkley. 
Better  than  grandeur,  better  than  gold.     See  Better 

than  Gold. — Smart. 
Better  than  grandeur,  better  than  gold.     See  Better 

than  Gold. — Winton.     (Diff.  vera,  of  foregoing.) 
Better  to  mourn  a  blossom  snatched  away.     See  same. 

— Wheeler. 
Better  to  smell  a  violet  than  sip  the  careless  wine.     See 

Better  Things. — Hunt. 
Better  to  smell  the  violet  cool,  than  sip  the  glowing 

wine.     See  Better  Things. — MacDonald. 
Better  trust  all  and  be  deceived.     See  Faith. — Kemi- 

ble. 
Better?    Yes,    madam,    thank    you;    I     am   a   great 

deal   better    to-day.       See    In    the    Hospital. — ■ 

Tassin. 
Betty  Bouncer  kept   a  stall.     See  To   See   Her  Pipe 

Awry.— C.  F. 
Betty,  what  in  the  world  are  you  doing?     See  Widow 

Muggins — Her   Opinions   of   Cooks,  Suitors,    and 

Husbands,  The.- Bonficld. 
Between  Adam  and  me  the  great  difference  is.     See 

Upon  Being  Obliged  to  Leave  a  Pleasant  Party. 

Moore. 
Between  five  and  six  dense  darkness  prevailed.     See 

Guenn. — Howard . 


623 


Between 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  ANI^  RECITATIONS 


Between  nose  and  eyes  a  strange  contest  arose.     See 

Nose  and  the  Eyes,  The. — Cowper. 
Between  the  acting  of  a  dreadful  thing.     See  Julius 

Cffisar  (Crime). — Shakespeare. 
Between   the   broad   fields   of  wheat   and   corn.     See 

Stranger  on  th§  Sill,  The  — Read. 
Between  the  dark  and  the  daylight.     See  Children's 

Hour,  The. — Longfellow. 
Between  the  dreamy  waltzes.     See  De  Trop. — L.  W. 
Between  the  falling  leaf   and  rose-bud's  breath.     See 

Term  of  Death,  The.— Piatt. 
Between  the  hands,  between  the  brows.     See  Love- 
lily. — Rossetti. 
Between  the  mountains  and  the  sea.     See  Santa  Bar- 
bara.— Browne. 
Between  the    roadside    and    the    wood.     See    Wind- 
flower,  A. — Carman. 
Between  the  showers  I  went  my  way.     See  Between 

the  Showers.— Levy. 
Between  the  songs  and  silences  of  the  flicker  on  the 

fence.     See  Flicker  on  the  Fence,  The. — McManus. 
Between  the  sunken  sun  and  the  new  moon.     See  same. 

— Hayne. 
Between  the  trees  a  hammock  swings.     See  Snare  and  a 

Delu.«ion,  A.     (Yale  Record.) 
Between  two  golden  tufts  of  summer  grass.     See  Lying 

in  the  Grass.— Gosse. 
Between  two  hawks,  which  flies  the  higher  pitch.     See 

King  Henry  VL,  Part  L — Shakespeare. 
Bewailing  in    my    chamber    thus    alone.     See    King's 

Quair.  The. — James  the  First. 
Beware!  The  Israelite  of  old,  who  tore.     See  Warning, 

The.^ — Longfellow. 
Bewitching,   beauteous,   cruel   Jane   McSparrow!     See 

Doctor  in  Love,  The. — McFarland. 
Bewitching  devotee.     See  To   a  Sister  of   Charity. — 

Alexander. 
Beyond  a    hundred    years    and    more.     See    Pope    at 

Twickenham. — Kent. 
Beyond,  beyond  the  mountain  line.     See  Dreams. — 

Alexander. 
Beyond  the  bourn  of  mortal   death  and  birth.     See 

At  Last. — Trask. 
Beyond  the  cheerless  Arctic  Circle.     See  One  Advan- 
tage of  Volapiik. — McG.  J.  ' 
Beyond  the    farthest    glimmering    star.     See    same. — 

Prentice. 
Beyond  the  light-house,  standing  sentinel.     See  Jubi- 
late.— Anon. 
Beyond  the  low  marsh-meadows  and  the  beach.     See 

Pines  and  the  Sea,  The. — Cranch. 
Beyond  the  north  wind  lay  the  land  of  old.     See  To 

Dr.  John  Brown. — Swinburne. 
Beyond  the  purple,  hazy  trees.     See  Used-to-be,  The. 

Riley. 
Beyond  the  Rhine  King  Giinther,  with  many  a  well- 

arm'd  rank.     See  Nibelungen  Lied  (How  Brunhild 

was  Received  at  Worms). — Lettsom. 
Beyond  the  sea,  I  know  not  where.     See    Viv^rols. — 

Jordan. 
Beyond  the   smiling   and   the  weeping.     See  same. — 

Bonar. 
Beyond  the     sunny     Philippines.     See      Eggs,     The. 

— Yriarte. 
Beyond  the  vague  Atlantic  deep.     See  Envoy  to  an 

American  Lady,  An. — -Houghton. 
Beyond  these   chilling  winds   and   winter  skies,.     See 

Heaven. — Wakefield. 
Biblical  criticism  is  very  fashionable.     See  That  Old 

Book. — Anon. 
Bid  me  to  live,  and  I  will  live.     See  To  Anthea,  who 

may  Command  Him  Anything. — -Herrick. 
Bid  that  your  king  Leonidas  should  come.     See  Leoni- 

das. — Murray. 
Biddy   Machree  was   a   gentlewoman — at    lea-st.     See 

Paddy's  Courting. — Eaton. 
Biddy  Moriarity  was  a  virago  of  the  most  abusive  type. 

See  Daniel  O'Connell's  Humor. — Anon. 
Biggsby  and  his   wife  went   around   to   the  Crosby's 

the  other  night.     See  Wives  in  a  Social  Game. — 

Anop. 
Bijf?  Bean  wnz  born  upon  a  farm.     See  Right  Man  for 

the  Place,  The.— Foss. 
Bill  Jones  was  going  to  get  married  a  dp.y  or  two  ago. 

See  Dutchman's  Answer,  A. — Anon. 
Bill  More  and   I,   in   days  gone  by.     See   Politics. — 

Douglass. 
Bill  Nye  has  had  an  attack  of  the  servant  girl.     See 

Bill  Nye's  Hired  Girl.— Nye. 
Bill,  this  jam  is  tip-top,  isn't  it?    See  Scintillate.— Anon. 
Billie  went  a-fishing.     See  Billie. — Richards. 
"Billieer!  Hark!"    Mrs.  McSwat  sat  straight  up  in  bed. 

See  Her  Daring  Protector. — Anon. 


Billings   is   an   unlucky  man.     See   Predestination. — 

Anon. 
Billy's  dead  and  gone  to  glory.     See  Billy's  Rose.— 

Anon. 
Bind  fast  thyself  with  silvery  ties.     See  Right  Build- 
ing.— Duncan. 
Bind  us  the  morning,  mother  of  the  sta.        See  Thefts 

of  the  Morning. — Thomas.  ,^ 

"Bing,  him,  bang,  home!"  sang  the  bf'f  to  himself. 

See  Owl  and  the  Bell,  The.— Macdoi  vld. 
Bird    of    the    heavens!    whose    match'   ':s    eye.     See 

American  Eagle,  The. — ^Thompsjn. 
Bird  of  the  wilderness.     See  Skylark,  The.— Hogg. 
Birdie,  birdie,  will  you,  pet?  See  Bird,  The.— AUingham. 
Birdie,  little  birdie.     See  He  Careth. — Tennyson. 
Birdie,  up  in  your  cage  so  gay.     See  Captive  Bird,  The. 

—Anon. 
Birdies  with  broken  wings.     See  same. — -Anon. 
Birds  all  the  sunny  day.     See  Nest  Eggs. — Stevenson. 
Birds   are   singing   round   my   window.     See   Birds. — 

Stoddard. 
Birds  in  the  high  hall-garden.     See  same. — Tennyson. 
Birds  in  their  little  nests  agree.     See  Our  Dead  Heroes. 

—Train. 
Birds  in  their  nests  are  softly  calling.     See  Lullaby. — 

Mitchell. 
Birds,  joyous  birds  of  the  wandering  wing.     See  Birds 

of  Passage. — Anon. 
Birds  on  the  boughs  before  the  buds.     See  April  and 

May. — Thaxter. 
Birds  that  were  gray  in  the  green  are  blac'c  in  the  yel- 
low.    See  September. — Harrison. 
Birds,  the  free  tenants  of  land,  air  and  ocean.     See 

Pelican  Island,  The  (Birds). — Montgomery. 
Bishop  Potts,  of  Salt  Lake  City.    See  Out  of  the  Hurly 

Burly  (Story  of  Bishop  Potts,  The).— Clark. 
Bite  deep  and  wide,  O  axe,  the  tree.     See  Axe  of  the 

Pioneer,  The. — Crawford. 
Black  bees    on    the    clover-heads    drowsily    clinging. 

See  Summer's  Day,  A. — Woolson. 
Black  Cuffy  had  come  with  the  bluebirds'  train.     See 

Serenade,  The:  "Black  Cuffy  had  come." — Anon. 
Black  it  stood  as  night.     See  Paradise  I.  ^st  (Satan's 

Encounter  with  Death). — Milton. 
Black  riders  came  from  the  sea.     See  Black  Riders, 

The.— Crane. 
Black  Tragedy  lets  slip  her  grim  disguise.     See  Masks. 

— Aldrich. 
Blackboard,  with   ruler   and   rubber  before   me.     See 

After  the  German. — Baker. 
Blackened  and    bleeding,     helpless,    panting,     prone. 

See  Chicago. — Harte. 
Blame  not  my  lute!  for  he  must  sound.     See  Blame 

not  My  Lute. — Wyatt. 
Blame  not  my  verse  if  echoes  of  church  bells.     See 

Preface. — Faber. 
Bland  as  the  morning  breath   of   June.     See    Dream 

of  Summer,  A.     Whittier. 
Blank,  blank,  blank.     See  With  a  Golfer's  Apologies  to 

Tennyson. — {Punch  Bowl.) 
Blaze,  with  your  serried  columns!     I  will  not  bend  the 

knee.     See  Seminole'.s  Defiance,  The. — Patten. 
Blazon    Columbia's    Emblem.     See     Columbia's.    Em- 
blem.— Proctor. 
Bleak  were  the  hills  and  the  cold  wind  was  sweeping. 

Sec  Pauper's  Child,  The. — Moore. 
Bleak  winds  of  the  winter,  sobbing  and  moaning.     See 

Outcast,  The.— Ritter. 
Bless  me!  it  is  eight  o'clock!    See  Won  by  Strategy. — 

Anon. 
Bless  mv  heart!  You've  come  at  last.    See  Plighted. — 

A.  D.  1887.— Brotherton. 
Bless  the  dear  old  verdant    land.     See  same. — Mac- 

Carthy. 
Bless  the  Lord,  O  my  soul,  and  all  that  is  within  me. 

See  Psalms  of  David,  CIII. — Bible. 
Bless  the  Lord,  O  my  soul;  O  Lord,  my  God,  thou  art 

very  great.     See  Psalms  of  David,  CIV. — Bible. 
Blessed  are  the  dead  whose  memory  is  perpetuated  by 

the  flower  service  of  a  grateful  people.     See  Deco- 
ration Day  Address. — Anon. 
Blessed  are  the  poor  in  spirit:  for  theirs  is  the  kingdom 

of  heaven.     See  St.  Matthew  (Beatitudes). — Bible. 
"Blessed  are  the  poor  in  spirit " ;  there,  I'll  just  remem- 
ber that.     See  Sermon  Time. — Lincoln. 
"Blessed    be    nothing'"    an    old    woman    said.     See 

Nothing. — (Harper's  Bazar.) 
Blessed  is  the  country  whose  soldiers  fight  for  it.    See 

Abstract  of  a  Grand  Army  Speech. — Anon. 
Blessed  is  the  man  that    walketh   not.     See    Psalms 

of  David,  J. —Bible. 
Blessed  is  the  nation  whose  God.    See  Psalms  of  David, 

XXXIIL— fiiWe. 


624 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Born 


Blessed  old  Santa  ('laiis,  king  of  delights.     See  Letter 

to  Santa  Claus. — Miller. 
Blessings,  blessings  on  the  beds.     See  Little  Children. 

— (;ary. 
Blessings  light  on  him  who  first  invented  sleep!     See 

Don  Quixote  (Sleep). — Cervantes. 
Blessings  on  .  .hee,  little  man.     See  Barefoot  Boy,  The. 

— Whit'.lir. 
Blessings  o-   ),ftee,  little  man.     See  "Festina  Lente." — 

Burdett;:. 
Blest  as  the^jmrnortal  gods  is  he.     See  Blest  as  the 

Immort:  .  Gq^is. — Sappho. 
Blest  be  tlie;  tie  that  binds.     See  Blest  be  the  Tie. — 

Fawcett.  • 

Blest  be  Thy  love,  dear  Lord.     See  same. — Austin. 
Blest  infant  bud,  whose  blossom-life.     See  Burial  of 

an  Infant,  The. — Vaughan. 
Blest   land   of   Judea!  thrice   hallowed   of   song.     See 

Palestine. — Whittier. 
Blest  of  God,   the  God    of    nations.     See  Columbia's 

Jubilee. — Putnam. 
Blest  pair  of  Sirens,  pledges  of  Heaven's  joy.     See  At 

a  Solemn  Musick. — Milton. 
"B'lieve   I   met  ye  on   the  keei^    Jones  yer  name?" 

See  Senator's  Grandmother,  The. — Stapleton. 
Blifkins  had  leased  a  house.     See  Blifkins  the  Ruralist. 

— Shillaber. 
Blind  as  the  song  of  birds.     See  Lines  to  a  Blind  Girl. 

— Read. 
Blind  Thamyris,  and  Blind  Maeonides.     See  Ode  to  the 

Human  Heart. — Blanchard. 
Blindfolderf  and  alone  I  stand.     See  Not  as  I  Will. — 

Jackson. 
Blissful,  they  turned  them  to  go:  but  the  fair-tressed 

Pallas  Athene.    See  Andromeda  (Pallas  in  Olym- 
pus).— Kingsley. 
Blithe  playtaate  of  the  Summer  time.     See  To  a  Hum- 
ming-bird in  a  Garden.— Murray. 
Blockhead!  Would  you  keep  me  knocking  two  hours 

at  the  door?     See  Fractious  Man,  The. — Brueys. 
Blonde  or  brunette?     Shall   Ethel  fair.     See  Which? 

— Nichols. 
Blossom  of  the  almond-trees.     See  Almond  Blossom. — 

Arnold. 
Blow,   blow,   thou    winter    wind.     See  As  You  Like  It 

("  Blow,  blow,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
Blow,   blustering  wind!  thy  loud  alarms.     See  "Has 

not  Since  been  Heard  of." — Anon. 
Blow,  golden  trumpets,  sweet  and  clear.     See  Easter 

Music. — Deland. 
Blow    high,    blow    low,    let    tempest    tear.     See    Con- 
stancy.— Dibdin. 
Blow,   northern  wind,   send.     See  Old   Love   Song. — 

Anon. 
Blow,  northern  winds!     See  December. — Hopkins. 
Blow,  slow,  fresh  fount,  keep  time  with  my  salt  tears. 

See  Echo's  Song. — Jonson. 
Blow    softly,    thrush,    upon    the    hush.     See    Veery- 

thrush,  The.— Taylor. 
Blow,  wind,  blow.     See  Christmas  Song,  A. — Bennett. 
Blow,  wind,  blow!     See  Winter  Night. — Butts. 
Blow,  winds,  and  crack  your  cheeks!     See  King  Lear. 

— Shakespeare. 
Blown  in  the  morning,  thou  shalt  fade  ere  noon.     See 

Rose,  A. — Fanshawe 
Blows  the  wind  to-day,  and  the  sun  and  rain  are  flying. 

See  Whaups,  The. — Stevenson. 
Blue,  blue  is  the  summer  sky.     See  Candida. — Gould. 
Blue  crystal  vault  and  elemental  fires      See  Narayena: 

Spirit  of  God. — Jones. 
Blue  dusk,  that  brings  the  dewy  hours.     See  Toad,  A. 

— Fawcett. 
Blue  gulf  all  around  us.     See  Burial  of  the  Dane,  The. 

— Brownell. 
Blue  hills  beneath  the  haze.     See  same. — Whiting. 
Blue  skies,  cool  skies.     See  Autumn  Song. — M.  E.  C. 
Blue-bells,  blue-bells,  gently  ringing.     See  Blue-bells. 

— Crocker. 
Blue-bells,  on  blue  hills,  where  the  sky  is  blue.     See 

Harebells. — Hickey. 
Blue-bird,  joyous  blue-bird.     See  Blue-bird. — Anon. 
Blue-black    like    the    breast    of    the    gusty    sea.     See 

Promise  of  Spring,  The. — Merrill. 
Bluff  Harry  the  Eighth  was  out  hunting  one  day.     See 

Abbot  of  Waltham,  The. — Anon. 
Blush,   happy   maiden,   when   you   feel.     See  same. — 

Akers. 
Blythe  bell,  that  calls  to  bridal  halls.     See  Thought,  A. 

— ^^Landor. 
Blyther  than  the  burnie.     See  same. — Hubbard. 
Boat    o'    Dreams!     Boat    o'    Dreams!     See    Boat    o' 

Dreams. — Palmer. 
Boatman,  boatman!  my  brain  is  wild.     See  Comfort. 
— Anon. 


Bob   Miller  was  a  nice  young  man.     See  To  Master 

Robbie  Miller. — Moulton. 
Bob    Scratcherty    was    a    parishioner    of    mine.     See 

Turning  the  Points. — Overton. 
Bob      Southey!  you're     a     poet — poet-laureate.     See 

Don  Juan  (Dedication). — Byron. 
"Bobby  Shaftoe's  gone  to  sea."     See  Bobby  Shaftoe. 

— Greene. 
"Bobolink!    Oh,   Bobolink!"     See    Recitation    for    a 

Boy. — Kavanaugh. 
Bobolink  shall  play  the  violin.     See  Birds'  Orchestra, 

The.— Thaxter. 
Bobolink,  that  in  the  meadow.     See  Bobolink.  The. — 

Hill. 
"Body,  I  pray  you,  let  me  go!"     See  Struggle,  The. — 

Dardridge. 
Bold,  amiable,  ebon  outlaw,  grave  and  wise!     See  To 

a  Crow. — Wilson. 
Bold  knights  and  fair  dames,  to  my  harp  lend  an  ear. 

See  Count  Albert  and  Fair  Rosalie. — Scott. 
Bold  Robin  Hood  is  a  forester  good.     See  Friar  Tuck. 

— Hamp. 
Bone   and   Skin,   two   Millers   thin.     See   Epigram   on 

Two  Monopolists. — Byrom. 
Bones  and  Tambo,  I  have  a  que=tion  for  both  of  you. 

See  Five  Senses,  The. — Anon. 
Bones!  Bones. — What's  de  matter  now?     See  Water- 
melon Talk. — Anon. 
Bones,    did   you    over  bear   arms   in   defense   of   your 

country?     See  Naval  Service. — Anon. 
Bones,  did  you  ever- hear  about  Daniel  going  into  the 

den  if  lions?     See  About  Daniel. — Anon. 
Bones,  do  you  ever  go  to  the  theatre?     See  Bones  on 

the  Theatre. — Anon. 
Bones,   do  you   know,   I  really  think  you  loved  Miss 

Snowdrop.     See  Brndder  Pones  in  l/ove. — Anon. 
Bones,  have  vou  any  cash  to-night?     See  Guess  Again 

— Anon. 
Bones,  have  you  been  to  school  much?     See  Bones  at 

School. — Anon. 
Bones,  how  long  is  it  since  you  returned  from  your  trip 

through  the  Dominion  of  Canada?     See  Bones  as 

an  Artist. — Anon. 
Bones,  I  frequently  see  your  name  written  in  various 

places.     See  Notoriety. — Anon. 
Bones,  I  have  got  a  chimney  that  smokes  very  badly. 

See  How  Bones  Cured  a  Smoky  Chimney. — Anon. 
Bones,  I  hear  you  are  studying  very  hard  now.     See 

Bones'  Discovery. — Anon. 
Bones,   I   hear  you   have  got   a  new  boarding-house. 

See  Spread  Eagle  Oratory. — Anon. 
Bones,  my  dear  boy,  I'm  a  little  short.     See  Bones  not 

to  be  Caught. — Anon. 
Bones,  that  was  a  most  remarkable  feat  which  you 

accomplished    yesterday.     See    Burnt    Corkers. — 

Sargent. 
Bones,  what  has  become  of  the  accomplished  young 

lady  you  said  was  your  intended?     See  Brudder 

Bones'  Duel. — Anon. 
Bones,  who  was  that  young  lady  I  saw  you  with  to-day? 

See  Brudder  Bones'  Sweetheart. — Anon. 
Bonie  lassie,  will  ye  go.     See  Birks  of  Aberfeldy,  The. 

— Burns. 
Bonivard   failed   in   his   efforts   to   free   Geneva.     See 

Bonivard. — Dumas. 
Bonnie  Bessie  Lee  had  a  face  fu'  o'  smiles.     See  Bonnie 

Bessie  Lee. — Nicoll. 
Bonnie  wee  Eric!  I  have  sat  beside  the  evening  fire. 

See  Bonnie  Wee  Eric. — Havergal. 
Bonnie  wee  thing!  cannie  wee  thing.     See  Bonnie  Wee 

Thing. — Burns. 
Bonny   [or  Bonnie]   Kilmeny  gaed  up  the  glen.      See 

Queen's  Wake.  The  (Kilmeny). — Hogg. 
Book  larnin'  is  a  daisy  thing  for  the  chap  what's  got 

the  brains.     See  "Book  Larnin'." — Turk. 
Books   rule  thy  mind,  so  let  it  be!     See  Triolet  to  her 

Husband. — Fertiault. 
Boom,  cannon,  boom  to  all  the  winds  and  waves!    See 

Ode  Recited  at  the  Harvard  Commemoration,  July 

21,  1865  (Our  Country  Saved).— Lowell. 
Boontown  station  at  the  noon  hour.     A  waiting  train. 

See  He  Let  her  Know. — Short. 
Boot,  saddle,  to  horse  and  away!     See  Boot  and  Sad- 
dle.— Browning. 
Bordered  by  bluff  and  meadow,  reflecting  a  golden  day. 

See  Catholic  Psalm,  The.— Hubbard. 
Borgia,  thou  once  wert  almost  too   august.     See  On 

T..ucretia  Borgia's  Hair. — Landor. 
Born  and  bred  in  a  castle  of    France.     See  Simon  de 

Montfort,  Earl  of  I^eicester. — Lincoln. 
Born  free,  thus  we  resolve  to  live.     See  Oath  of  Free- 
dom, The — Hope.       — 
Born    in    stormy    times,  William    Penn.      See    Penn's 

Monument. — Burdette. 


625 


Born 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Bom  in  the  country.     See  Joys  and  Sorrows  of  Eggs. — 

Beecher. 
Born  in  yon  blaze  of  Orient  sky.     See  Song  to  May. — 

Darwin. 
Born  on  the  day  he  died,  the  eleventh  of  June.     <See 

On  Sir  Kenelm  i)igby. — Anon. 
Born,  sir,  in  a  land  of  liberty;  having  early  learned  its 

value.     iSee    France     and    the    United  States. — 

Washington. 
Born  to  the  purple,  lying  stark  and  dead.     See  Des- 
tiny.— Lazarus. 
Born  was  I  to  be  old.     See  .\nncreontic. — Herrick. 
Borne  on  the  wavelets  of  thy  fluent  notes.     Sec  To  My 

Canary  Bird. — Martin. 
Boston  has  seen  sad  days  before  now.     See  Slave  of 

Boston,  The. — Parker. 
Both  thou  and  I  alike,  my  Bacchic  urn.     See  On  an 

Urn. — Garnett. 
Both  young  men  and  maidens,  old  men  and  children. 

See  "Children's  Day"  Service,  A. — Denton. 
"Bother!"  was  all  that  John  Clatterby  said.     See  Boy 

and  the  Boot,  The. — (Hearth  and  Home.) 
Boucher  was  a  grasshopper,  and  painted.     See  Story 

of  Rosina,  The. — Dobson. 
Bound  and  bordered  in  leaf-green.    See  Book  of  Joyous 

Children,  The.— Riley. 
Bound  upon  th'  accurst-d  tree.     See  same. — Milman. 
Bounding  like  a  football.     See  Our  Darling. — Anon. 
"'Bout  three  years  ago,  afore  I  got  this  berth  as  I'm 

in  now."     See  Little  Stowaway,  The. — Anon. 
Bowed  by  the  weight  of  centuries  he  leans.     See  Man 

with  the  Hoe,  The. — Markham. 
Bowing  thyself  in  dusk  before  a  Book.     See  Biblio- 

latres. — Lowell. 
Boy.     See  Brief  Tragedy,  A.-^Anon. 
Boy,  at  all  times  teU  the  truth.     See  Truth. — Anon. 
Boy  Britton,  only  a  lad,  a  fair-haired  boy,  sixteen. 

See  Boy  Britton. — Willson. 
Boy,   I   detest  these  modern   innovations.     See  Per- 

sicos  Odi. — Merrill. 
Boy,  what  sign  is  it  when  a  man  of  spirit  grows  melan- 
choly?    See  Love's  Labour's   Lost  (Armado  and 

Moth). — Shakespeare. 
Boys  and  gals,  no,  it's  jest  boys.    See  Scene  in  the  Bob- 
town  School. — McBride. 
Boys  and  girls,  "hear  me  for  one  cause,  and  be  silent 

that   you   may   hear."     See   Recess   Speeches. — 

McBride. 
"Boys  are  men  that   have  not  got  as  big  as  their 

papas."     See  Girl's  Essay  on  Boys,  A. — Anon. 
Boys,  I  am  going  to  address  a  few  words  to  you.     See 

Girl's  Address  to  Boys,  A. — Anon. 
Boys,  I  have  something  to  tell  you  after  school.     See 

True  Manliness. — M.  L.  R. 
Boys,  I  have  only  a  few  words  to  say  to  you.     See 

Address  to  School-boys,  An. — -Anon. 
"Boys,  I  won't  drink  without  you  drink  what  I  do." 

See  Drinking  a  Tear. — Anon. 
Boys  of  spirit,  boys  of  will.     See  Boys  Wanted. — Anon. 
Boys,    take    another!     To-night    we'll    be    gay.     See 

"Swore  Off." — Fort. 
Boys,  we  want  you — our  country  wants.      See  Boys 

We  Want,  The.— Sargent. 
Boys  will  quarrel,  and  when  they  quarrel  will  some- 
*    times  fight.    See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  (Fight- 
ing).— Hughes. 
"Brace  up!"     We  like  that  slang  phrase.     See  Brace 

Up. — Anon. 
Brahma,  creator  of  the  universe,  though  all  powerful, 

could    not    revoke    a    promise    once    made.     See 

Ramayana,  The  Story  of  the.— Rabb. 
Brave  as  a  falcon  and  as  merciless.     See  To  Manon — 

Comparing  her  to  a  Falcon. — Blunt. 
"Brave  Captain!  canst  thou  speak?  What  is  it  thou 

dost  see?"     See  After  the  Battle. — Anon. 
Brave  comrades!    all  is  ruined!     See  Catiline  (Cati- 
line's Last  Harangue  to  His  Army). — Croly. 
Brave  flowers — that  I  could  gallant  it  like  you.     See 

Contemplation  upon  Flowers,  A. — ^King. 
Brave  hearts  still'd  on  the  Maine,  a  last  good-night! 

See  Maine,  The. — Dichter. 
Brave  Jack  Chiddy!     Oh,  well,  you  may  sneer.     See 

Jack  Chiddy. — Anderson. 
Brave    Morris    saw    the    day    was    lost.     See    Sword 

Bearer,  The. — Boker. 
Brave  Percy,   fare  thee  well!     See  King  Henry  VI., 

Part  I. — Shakespeare. 
Brave   racer,    who   hast   sped   the   living   light.     See 

Torch  Race,  The.— Cone. 
Brave     Schill!  by     death     delivered.     See     Schill. — 

"  Wordsworth. 
Brave  singer  of  the  coming  time.     See  Good  Time 

Going,  A. — Holmes. 


Brave  Sir  Count  Ricci,  in  feudal  days  of  yore.     See 

Triumph  of  the  Ricci,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Bravely  thy  old  arms  fling.     See  To  an  Elm. — Tuck- 

erman. 
Bravest  of  brave  sweet  blossoms  in  all  of  the  garden 

row.     See  Chrysanthemums. — Dodge. 
Bravo,  Jonathan!     Now's  your    time.     See  New  To- 
reador, The. — (London  Fun.) 
Break!  Break!  Break!  O  voice,  on  my  old  top  C.    See 

Bitter    Cry    of    the    Outcast    Choir    Boy,    The. 

— (Punch.) , 
Break,  break,  break!  on  thy  cold  gray  stones,  O  sea. 

See  Break,  Break,  Break !— Tennyson, 
Break  down  the  American  home,  and  the  fabric  of  free 

government  goes  down  with  it.     See  Saloon  and 

the  Home,  The. — -Young. 
Break,  Fantasy,  from  thy  cave  of  cloud.     See  Vision  of 

Delight,  The  (Fantasy). — Jonson. 
Break    forth,    break    forth,    O    Sudbury    town.     See 

Lydia. — -Reese. 
Break  not  his  sweet  repose.     See  Soldier's  Grave,  A. — 

Albee. 
Break  off,  break  off,  I  feel  the  different  pace.     See 

Measure,  The. — Milton. 
Break  thou  my  heart,  ah,  break  it.     See  Arab  Song. — 

Stoddard. 
Break  Thou  the  bread  of  life.     See  Bread  of  Life,  The. 

— Lathbury. 
Break  up  camp,  drowsy  world!     See  Battle  Poem,  A. 

—Taylor. 
Break  up   the   Union  of  these   States.     See  Ship   of 

State,  The.— Lunt. 
Breakfast  is  ready.     See  Two  Families  in  One  Room. 

— Anon. 
Breakfast,    Mr.    A?     No;  I    have   cooked   none.     See 

Frightened  Woman,  A. — Dallas. 
Breaking  from  under  that  thy  cloudy  veil.     See  Upon 

Combing  Her  Hair. — Herbert. 
Breaking  suddenly   through  the  cedar  thicket.     See 

Tragedy  in  the  Sunshine,  A. — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
Breaks  the  joyful  Easter  dawn.     See  Easter  Dawn. — - 

Larcom. 
Breath  is  what  we  breathe.     If  we  didn't  have  breath 

we    couldn't    breathe.     See   Tommy's    Essay    on 

Breath. — Anon. 
Breath  o'  the  grass.     See  Sospiri  di  Roma  (Susurro). 

— -Sharp. 
Breathe  balmy  airs,  ye  fragrant  flowers.     See  Breathe 

Balmy  Airs. — Smith. 
Breathe,  trumpets,  breathe  slow  notes  of  saddest  wail- 
ing.    See  Requiem. — Lunt. 
Breathes    there    tne    man    with    soul    so    dead.     See 

Lay  of  the    Last    Minstrel   (Breathes   there   the 

Man). — Scott. 
Breathing  the  summer-scented  air.     See  My  Walk  to 

Church. — Powers. 
Breddern  an'  Sistern:  I'se  gwine  to  gib  you  what  I 

hope  will  prove  to  you.     See  Brudder  Brown  on 

"Apples." — -Anon. 
Breezes    in    the   tree-tops    high.     See    Lullaby. — Car- 
penter. 
Brekekekex!  coax!  coax!  O  happy,  happy  frogs!    See 

Musical  Frogs,  The. — Blackie. 
Brent's  your  brow,  my  lady  Elspat.     See  Lady  Elspat. 

— Anon. 
"Brethren,"  said  the  aged  minister.     See  Minister's 

Grievances,  The. — Anon. 
"Brethren,  the  words  of  my  text  are:  'Old  Mother 

Hubbard,    she '  went    to    the    cupboard.'"     See 

Model  Discourse,  A. — Anon. 
Bridget,  I  am  going  out  for  a  few  hours.     See  Brid- 
get's Investment.- — Rook. 
Brief  is  Erinna's  song,  her  lowly  lay.     See  Erinna. — 

Lang. 
Brief  was  the  reign  of  pure  poetic  truth.     See  Donne. 

— (Coleridge. 
Bright  as  among  the  stars  the  star  of  all.     See  Iliad, 

The  (Hector  Slain  by  Achilles). — Homer. 
Bright  be   the   skies  that  cover  thee.     See  To  Laura 

W — ,  Two  years  of  Age. — Willis. 
Bright  books:  perspectives  on  our  weak  sights.     See 

To  His  Books. — Vaughan. 
Bright  breaks  the  warrior  o'er  the  ocean  wave.     See 

Ocean  Wanderer,  The. — Anon. 
Bright  Eyes,  Light  Eyes!     Daughter  of  a  Fay  I     See 

Faery  Foster-mother,  The. — Buchanan. 
Bright  flag  at  yonder  tapering  mast.     See  Lines  on 

Leaving  Europe. — Willis. 
Bright  flower,  whose  home  is  everywhere !     See  To  the 

Daisy. — Wordsworth. 
Bright  is  the  moon  that  hangs  aloft.     See  Spirit  of 

Liberty,  The. — Oberholtzer. 
Bright  little  dandelion.     See  Dandelion. — Anon. 


626 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Busk 


Bright  little   dandelion.     See  also  Dandelion   (Bright 

Little  Dandelion). — Anon. 
Bright  on  the  banners  of  lily  and  rose.     See  Welcome 

to  the  Nations. — Holmes. 
Bright    scarlet    poppies    growing   in    the    wheat.     See 

One  Day. — Bensel. 
Bright   shadows   of   true   rest!  some  shoots   of  blisse. 

iSee  Son-Dayes. — Vaughan. 
Bright   shines  the  sun,   but  brighter  after  rain.     See 

Gold  of  Hope,  The.— Burton. 
Bright  star  of  beauty,  on  whose  eyelids  sit.     See  Son- 
net: To  the  Lady  L.  S. — Drayton. 
Bright  star,  would  I  were  steadfast  as  thou  art.     See 

Last  Sonnet. — Keats. 
Bright  was  the  morn,  the  waveless  bay.     See  Perry's 

Victory  on  Lake  Erie. — Percival. 
Brighter  than   the  sunshine  on   a  stormy  April   day. 

See  Sunshine  in  the  House. — Burnham. 
Brightest  and  best  of  the  sons  of  the  morning!     See 

Epiphany — Heber. 
Bright-faced  maiden,  bright-souled  maiden.     See  Pes- 
simism.— (^Blackwood's.) 
Bring  flowers,  to  strew  again.     See  Ode  for  Decoration 

Day. — Peterson. 
Bring  flowers  to  strew  in  the  conqueror's  path!     See 

Bring  Flowers. — Hemans. 
Bring  flowers,  ye  grateful  millions  of  the  land.     See 

Decoration  Ode. — Davis. 
Bring  flowers,  young  flowers,  for  the  festal  board.    See 

Bring  Flowers. — Hemans. 
"Bring    forth     the    horse!"     Alas!    he     showed.     See 

How  the  Old  Horse  Won  the  Bet. — Holmes. 
"Bring  forth   the  Horse!"     The   horse   was  brought. 

See  Mazeppa. — Byron. 
'Bring  forth  the  steed!"     It  was  a  level  plain.     See 

Alexander  Taming  Bucephalus. — Benjamin. 
Bring  from  the  craggy  haunts  of  birch  and  pine.     See 

Song:  "Bring   From  the  Craggy  Haunts,"  etc. — 

"Todhunter. 
Bring  her  here,  my  little  Alice.     See  Jemima  Brown. — 

Anon. 
Bring  him  not  here  where  our  sainted  feet.     See  Little 

Church  around  the  Corner,  The. — Lancaster. 
Bring  in    the    trailing    forest    moss.     See    Christmas 

Green. — Larcom. 
Bring  it  from  the  oaken  press;  full  fifty  years  ago.    See 

Wedding-gown,  The. — -Pierce. 
Bring  me  a  cup  of  good  red  wine.     See  Rinaldo. — 

Peterson. 
"Bring  me  lilies,"    cried    Prince    Eric — -kingly    Eric, 

tall  and  fair.     See  Prince   Eric's  Christ-maid. — • 

Banks. 
Bring  me  my  dead.     See  Tennyson. — Huxley. 
Bring  me    wine,    but    wine    which    never    grew.     See 

Bacchus. — Emerson. 
Bring  no  jarring  lute  this  way.     See  Woodland  Grave, 

A.— be  Tabley. 
Bring  novelist,  your  note-book!  bring,  dramatist,  youi 

pen!     See  Women  of  Mumbles  Head, The. — Scott. 
Bring  snow-white  lilies,  pallid  heart-flushed  roses.     See 

Pantheist's   Song  of  Immortality,   The. — Naden. 
Bring  the  comb  and  play  upon  it!     See  Marching  Song. 

— Stevenson. 
Bring  the  good  old  bugle,  boys!  we'll  sing  another  song. 

See  Marching  through  Georgia. — Work. 
Br'.ng  y  lU  ■  evvs  from  my  L  rd?     Sec  K'r.ilwr:h"( Amy 

R  bs  rt  a'-d  RichTrd  Vnrnfv). — Sc  U. 
Britannia's  gallant  streamers.     See  Yankee  Thunders. 

— Anon. 
Broad  bars  of  sunset-slanted  gold.     See  Ballad  of  the 

Faded  Field.— Wilson. 
Broad  over  the  grisly  caiion  the  noontide  hot  and  red. 

See  Race  for  Life,  A. — Marsh. 
Broad  the  forsst  sti- d  [wr.  spread]  on   the   sloping  [wr.] 

hills  of  Linteged.     See  Rhyme  of  the  Duchess  May. 

■ — Browning. 
Broadly  considered,   O'Connell's  eloquence  ha."?  never 

been  equaled  in  modern  times.     See  I)  •'  i^l  O'Con- 

nell  (Daniel  O'Connell  ths  Orator). — Phillips. 
Broke  down,  have  ye,  stranger?     See  Little  Heroine. 

A. — Locke. 
Broncho  Dan  halts  midway  of  the  stream.     See  Health 

at  the  Ford,  A. — Rogers. 
Bronson  Alcott,    of   Boston,    told   Joseph   Cook,    and 

Joseph  Cook  told  everybody  he  met.     See  School- 
master's Conquest,  The. — Anon. 
Brook,  would  thou  couldst  flow.     See  Brook  Song. — 

Morse. 
Brother  Alumni:     In   your   name   I   salute  and  wel- 
come the  guests.     See  Address  of  Welcome  at  an 

Alumni  Dinner,  An. — Anon. 
Brother!  awake  from  thy  long  lethargy.     See  Purpose, 

— Anon. 


"Brother  Edward  has  been  much  better:  his  cough  is 

abating."     See  They  Say. — Anon. 
Brother    Gardner    was    yesterday    whitewashing    the 

back  end  of  an  old  house.     See  Wounded  in  the 

Corners. — Anon. 
Brother,  listen  to  what  we  say.     See  Speech  of  Red 

Jacket. — Red  Jacket. 
Brother  of  mine,  good  monk  with  cowled  head.     See 

Thomas  a  Kempis. — Reese. 
Brother  Roosevelt's  phrase,  "gave  their  young  lives," 

is  a  common  one  enough.     See  Student  Heroes  of 

Our  War,  The.— Eliot. 
Brother,  thou     art     gone     before     us.     See     Hymn: 

"Brother,  thou  art  gone,"  etc. — Milman. 
Brother  Toper,  sit  you  down.     See  Brother  Toper.— 

Kirk. 
Brother  Will  has  said  his  piece.     See  Charlie's  Speech. 

— Doolittle. 
Brothers,  spare  awhile  your  liquor,  lay  your  final  tumb- 
ler down.    See  Dirge  of  the  Drinker,  The. — Aytoun. 
Brothers,  the  day  declines.     See  Evening  Hymn  of  the 

Alpine  Shepherds. — Beattie. 
Brown  books    of    mine,     who    never    yet.     See    Final 

Word,  A. — Dobson. 
Brown  earth-line  meets  gray  heaven.     See  In  Novem- 
ber.— Aldrich. 
Brown  eyes,  straight  nose.     See  Polly. — Rands. 
Brown  of  Ossawatomie  spake  on  his  dying  day.     See 

Brown  of  Ossawatomie. — Whittier. 
Brush  your   hair   carefully.     See   Visitation. — Palmer. 
Brutus   hath    riv'd   my   heart.     See   Julius   Caesar. — 

Shakespeare. 
Bryant  had  a  wonderful  memory.     See  Bryant,  Ex- 
tract Concerning. — Bigelow. 
Bryant,  whose   songs    are    thoughts    that    bless.     Sse 

William  Cullen  Bryant. — Halleck. 
Bryght  as  the  stem  of  day  begouth  to  schyne.     See 

Goldyn  Targe,  The. — Dunbar. 
Bud,  come  here  to  your  uncle  a  spell.     See  Home-made 

Fairy-tale,  A. — Riley. 
Bud  into  blossom,  flower  into  fruit.     See  Song:  "Bud 

inlo  blossom,"  etc.^ — Cole. 
Bud  was   the   blackest,   fattest,   and   most   contented 

little  darkey  I  ever   saw.      See   Bud's   Charge. — 

Van  Norman. 
Buds  and  bells!    Sweet  April  pleasures.     See  Flowers. 

— Havergal. 
Bugles!     And  the  Great  Nation  thrills   and  leaps  to 

arms.     See  Call  of  the  Bugles,  The. — Hovey. 
Build  a  little  fence  of  trust.     See  Trust. — Butts. 
Build  high  your  white  and  dazzling  palaces.     See  To 

February. — Wetherald. 
"Build  me  my  tomb,"  the  raven   said.     See  Raven's 

Tomb,  The.— Ramal. 
"Build  me  straight,  O  worthy  master!"     See  Building 

of  the  ship,  The. — Longfellow. 
Build  thee  more  stately  mansions,  O  my  soul.     See 

Chambered  Nautilus,  The. — Holmes. 
Build  up  a  column  to  Bolivar.     See  Bolivar. — Procter. 
"Bunches  of  grapes,"  says  Timothy.     See  Bunches  of 

Grapes. — Ramal. 
Bunny,  lying  in  the  grass.     See  Battle  Bunny  (Mal- 
vern Hill). — Harte. 
Bunyan  is  almost  the  only  writer  that  ever  gave  to  the 

abstract.     A^ee  John  Bunyan. — Macaulay. 
Burg  Niedeck  is  a  mountain  in  Alsace,  high  and  strong. 

See  Toy  of  the  Giant's  Child,  The.— Chamisso. 
Burgoyne  is  ru.shing  on  in  que.st  of  blood.     See  Defeat 

of  Burgoyne,  The. — Case. 
Buried  to-day.     When  the  soft  green  buds  are  burst- 
ing out.      See  Buried  To-day. — Craik. 
Burley  and  bluff',  in  St.  John's  vacant  place.     See  Sir 

Robert  Walpole. — Bulwer-Lytton. 
Burley,  dozing  humble-bee.     See  Humble-bee,  The. — 

Emerson. 
Burn  and  destroy  the  idols  of  party  you  have  wor- 
shiped.    See  same. — Dougherty. 
Burning,  burning,  burning  for  ever,  by  night  and  day. 

See  Glacier  Bed,  The.— Blake. 
Burning,  burning,  burning  is  the  sand.     See  Lost  on 

the  Desert. — Meyers. 
Burning  sands,  and  isles  of  palm,  and  the  Mamelukes' 

fierce  array.     See  Little  .Jean. — Rarr. 
Bury  Bdranger!     Well,  for  you.     See  Burial  of  B^r- 

anger,  'The. — -Watts. 
Bury  the  Great  Duke.     See  Ode  on  the  Death  of  the 

Duke  of  Wellington. — -Tennyson. 
Busily,  busily,  to  and  fro.     See  Memory-bridges,  The. 

Lippmann. 
Business?     Well,  it  hain't  be'n  what  ye'd  call  rushin', 

so's  tb  speak.     See  Jolly  Brick,  A.- — Phelps. 
Busk  ye,  busk  ye,  my  bonnie,  bonnie  bride!     See  Braes 

of  Yarrow,  The. — Hamilton. 


627 


Busy 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECTTATIONS 


Busy  and  happy  young  housewives  are  we.     Sre  little 

Housekeepers.  —Rook. 
"Busy  bee!     Busy  hee!"     Set-  Busy  Bee,  The. — Anon. 
Busy,  curious,  thirsty  fly.     See  Fly,  The. — -Oldys. 
Busy  lives,  like  running  water,  are  generally  pure.     See 

Busy  Lives. — An»n. 
Busy-body,  busy-body.     See  To  a  Honey-Bee. — Cary. 
But  a  revulsion  wrought  in  the  brain  and  bosom  of 

Elspie.      See    Hoh.e    of    Tober-.ia-Vuolich,     Thi 

(Elspieand  Philin). — Clough. 
"But  adoration!     Give  me  something  more."     <S«e  Old 

Coquette,  The. — Young. 
But   all   our  praises   why  should   lords  engross.     See 

Moral  Essays  (Man  of  Ross,  The). — Pope. 
But  all  through  life  I  see  a  cross.     See  same. — Grange. 
But  are  ye  sure  the  news  is  true?     See  There's  Nae 

Luck  about  the  House. — Mickle. 
But  as  .some  muskets  so  contrive  it.     See  McFingal. — 

Trumbull. 
But  away  and  away  on  the  midnight  blue.     <See  Flight 

of  the  Wild  Swans,  The. — Faber. 
"But  by  the  piper  that  played  before  Moses,  it's  more 

whipping  nor  gingerbread."     See  Why  my  Father 

left  the  Army. — MacCabe. 
But  chief  at  sea,  whose  every  flexile  wave.     See  Sea- 
sons, The. — Thomson. 
But  chief,  surpassing  all — a  cuckoo  clock!     See  Cuckoo 

Clock,  The. — Bowles. 
But  do  not  go — I  like  to  have   you    near  me.     See 

Modern  Psyche,  A. — Hall. 
But  do  we  truly  mourn  our  soldier  dead?     See  For 

Decoration  Day. — Hughes. 
But  Enoch  yearned  to  see  her  face  again.      See  E  icch 

.\rden  (At  the  Window). — Tennyson. 
"But  er  I  bere  thee  mocho  ferre."     See  Hous  of  Fame, 

The. — Chaucer. 
But  fare  you   weel.  auld  Nickie-hen!     See  Address  to 

the  Deil  (To  the  Devil).— Burns. 
But   flattery   never  seems  absurd.     See  Painter  Who 

Pleased  Nobody  and  Everybody,  The. — Gay. 
"But  for  mine  own  part,  my  lord,  I  could  be  well  con- 
tented to  be  there."     See  King  Hjnry  IV..  Pt.  L 

(Hotspur's  Soliloquy  on  the  Contents  of  a  Letter). 

— Shakespeare. 
But  for  ye  speken  of  such  gentille.sse.      See  Canterbury 

Tales  (Gentility). — Chaucer. 
But  fortune,  like  some  others  of  her  sex.     See  Fanny 

(Fortune). — Halleck. 
But   happy  they!     The  happiest  of  their  kind!     See 

Seasons,  The  (Connubial  Life). — Thomson. 
But  hark!     A  distant  sound  that  grows.     See  Visio  i  of 

Poe  s.   A    (Children  Gathering    Palms).  —  E.    B. 

Browning. 
But    hark!     A    rap   comes    gently    to    the   door.     See 

Cotter's  Saturday  Night,  The. — Burns. 
But  hark!     Upon  the  air  what  bells  are  pealing?     See 

Christmas  Chimes,  The. — Anon. 
But  he,  Leander,  almost  half  across.     See  Hero  and 

Leander. — Hunt. 
But  heard  are  the  voices.    See  Past  and  Present  (Heard 

are  the  Voices). — Carlyle. 
But  here    the    herald    of    the    .self-same    mouth.     See 

Island,  The  (Sublime  Tobacco). — Byron. 
But  hush!     The     voice     from     the     little     bed.     See 

Tommy's  Death-bed. — Anon. 
But  I  behold  a  fearful  sign.     See  Indian's  Prophesy, 

The.— Bryant. 
But  I  can't  pay  the  rent  this  morning.     See  Soldier's 

Return,  The.— Griffith. 
But  I  remember,  when  the  fight  was  done.     See  K'n? 

Hfnry  IV'.,  Ft.  I.  (Hotspur's  Description  of  a  Fop). 

— Shakespeare. 
"But  I  say  this  land  is  mine — is  mine!"     See  Agnes 

Hotot. — Fobes. 
But    I  wol  turne  againe  to  Ariadne.     See  Legende  of 

Goode  Women  (Ariadne). — Chaucer. 
But  if  I  live  with  Idas,  then  we  two.     See  Marpessa. 

—Phillips. 
But  if  you  would  contemplate  nationality  as  an  active 

virtue.    See  American  Nationality  (National  Life). 

; — Choate. 
But  insincerity  is  very  troublesome  to  manage.     See 

Truth  and  Integrity. — Tillotson. 
But  Justice  had  no  sooner  Mercy  seen      See  Christ's 

Victory  in  Heaven. — Fletcher. 
But  lo!  the  dome  —  the  vast  and  wondrous  dome.    See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (St.  Peter's  Church  at 

Rome). — Byron. 
But  look!     O'er  the  fall  see  the  angler  stand.     See 

Angler,  The. — Read. 
"But,  mamma,  now,"  said  Charlotte,  "pray.don't  you 

believe."     See  Vulgar  Little  Lady,  The. —  Taylor. 
"But   man    is   higher   than    his   dwelling-place."     See 

same. — Paul. 


"But,  Mr.  Speaker,  we  have  a  right  to  tax  America.'" 

See  Right  to  Tax  America,  The. — Burke. 
But  more   important   than   the   quest   of   professional 
knowledge.     See  Temper  and  Aim  of  the  Scholar, 
The. — (iladstone. 
But  north  looked  the  dictator.     See  Death  of  Hermi  - 

ius. — Macaulay. 
But  now  our  quacks  are  gamesters,  and  they  play.     See 

Borough,  The  (Quack  Medicines). — Crabbe. 
But  now  the  struggle  is  over;  I  can  survey  the  field 
and   measure   the   losses.     See  Voice  of   Despair, 
The.— Talbot. 
But  now  the  sun  had  pass'd  the    height  of  Heaven. 

See  Incremation,  The. — Arnold. 
But  now  while  the  scapegoats  leave  our  flock.     See 

Holy  Cross  Day. — Browning. 
But  of  much  conver  e   perhaps.    See  Paradise   Lost  — 

Milton. 
But  oh,  the  night!    Oh,  bitter  sweet!   Oh,  sweet!     See 
An-  r  ■   Ljigh  (Romney  and  Aurora). — Browning. 
But     oh,    'twas   hard   to   have   him   go.     See  sam.e. — 

Gardiner. 
But  one  short  week  ago  the  trees  were  bare.     See  First 

Spring  Day,  The. — Todhunter. 
But,    poortith    Peggy  is    the  warst  of   a'.     See  Gentle 

Shepherd.  Th^  (.lenny  and  Peggy). — Ramsay. 
But  scarce  again  his  horn  he  wound.     See  Lady  of  tV"- 

Lake,  The.— Scott. 
But   see — he     starts — what      heard      he      then?      See 
l.'lla     R  oih     (Gheber's    Bloody    Glen,    The).— 
Moore. 
But  see!     Look  up — on  Flodden  bent.     See  Ma-mion 

(Battle  of  Flodden,  The).— Scott. 
But  see   our  statesman   when   the   steam   is   on.     See 

Lord  .John  Russell. —  Hu;wer-Lytton. 
But  she,  in  response,  "Mark  yon  ship  far  away"     See 
Lucil°  (Parting  before  Sebastopol,  The). — L.ytton. 
But,    sirrah,   henceforth.     See    King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 

("But,  sirrah,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
But  slighted  as  it  is,  and    by   the    great.     See  Task, 
The  (Early  Love  of  the  Country  and  of  Poetry). — 
Cowper. 
But  soft!     What  light  through  yonder  window  breaks' 
See  Romeo  and  Juliet  (Soliloquy  of  Romeo  in  the 
Garden). — Shakespeare. 
But    .some    one    perhaps    may    say,    "Are    you    not 
ashamed."     See  Plato's  .Apology    for  Socrates. — 
Plato. 
But  sometimes  these  optical  instruments.     See  Grand- 
mother's Spectacles. — Talmage. 
But  soon  the  steeples  called  good  people  all  to  church. 
See  Christmas  Carol,  A  (Bob  Cratchit's  Dinner). — 
Dickens. 
But  souls    that    of    his    own    good    life    partake.     See 

Euthanasia. — More. 
But.  Su.sie,  you  know  you  are  wrong.     See  Peacemaker, 

A. — Denton. 
But  tell  us,  do  you  hear  whether  Antonio  have  had 
any    loss.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The  (Shylock 
for    the   Jews). — Shakespeare. 
But  that  I  am  forbid.     See  Hamlet. — Shakespeare. 
But  that  the  soul  is  noble.     See  Sphinx. — Lowell. 
But  the  consul's  brow  was  sad.     See  Horatius  at  the 

Bridge. — Macaulay. 
But  the  Deacon  swore,  as  deacons  do.     Sec  Deacon's 

Masterpiece,  The. — Holmes. 

But  the  Dutch  went  and  the  English  came.     See  First 

English  Thanksgiving  in  New  York,  The. — Anon. 

But  the  gentleman   inquires   why    he  was    made    the 

object  of  such  a  reply.     See  Reply  to  Hayne.  The 

(Matches  and  Overmatches). — Webster. 

But  the   higher   departments   of   moral   and    religious 

thought.     See  same. — Minton. 
But  the  majestic  river   floated  on.      See    Sohrab    and 

Rustum  (Oxus). — .\rnold. 
But  the  rain  is  gone  by,  and  the  day's  dying  out  in 
splendour.     Ste    Winter    Evening. — "Tynan-Hink- 
son. 
But  then  I  sigh,  and  with  a  piece  of  scripture.     See 

King  Richard  III. — Shakespeare. 
But  then.  Sir,  the  balance  of  powe^-!     See  Balance  o^ 

Power,  The. — Canning. 
But  then  the.  thrushes  sang.     See  Aurora  Leigh  ("But 

then,"  etc.). — Browning. 
But  there  is  a  limit,   both  to  the  necessity  and  the 
capacity  of  this  power  of  invention.     See  same. — 
Minton. 
But  there  is  one  in    folly   farther   gone.     See  Course  of 

Time,  The  (Miser.  The).— Pollok. 
But  those  that  write  in   rhyme  still    make.     See  Hudi- 

bras. — Butler. 
But  thou,    Clitumnus!    in    thy    sweetest   wnve.     See 
Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Temple  of  Clitumnus). 
— Byron. 


628 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


By 


Hut  though  the  Grekes  hem  of  Troye  in  shetten.     Ser 

Troilus  and   Criseyde   (Troylus  and   (.'riseyde). — 

Chaucer. 
Bttt  time  would  fail  to  attempt  to  fatalogue  the  grand 

women.     See  same. — Livermore. 
But  Truth  shall  conquer  at  the  last.     See  Triumph  of 

Truth. — Macka.v. 
But   vain    the    magic    lay,    the    warbling     lyre.     See 

Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  Thomas  Gray. — Anon. 
But  was  it  thou — I  think.    See  Heine's  Grave. — Arnold. 
But  wele  awaye,  si  is  myn  herte  wo.     See  De  Regimine 

Principum. — Occleve. 
But  what  makes  you  think  Stella  can  help  you,  Grace? 

See  Appointment,  The. — Denton. 
But  what  praise  oouldst  thou  bestow  on  a  deserving 

woiian.    See  Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice  (Act  II., 

Sc.  1). — Shakespeare. 
But  what    the   highe   God   woU   spare.     See  Confessio 

Amantis  (Story   of  Constance,  The). — Gower. 
But  whore    to    find    that    hanpiest    spot    below.     See 

Traveller,  The  (BetterCountry, The).— Goldsmith. 
But  wherefore  do  yoti  droop?  why  look  so  sad?     See 

King    John    (Exhortation    to    Courage). — Shake- 
speare. 
But  wherein  shall  art  work?    Shall  beauty  lead.     See 

Art  (II.). — Parker. 
But  who  can  speak,  what  accents  can  relate.     See  On 

the  Death  of  Washington. — Dwight. 
But  who  comes,  brushing  the  floor.     See  Italy. — Rogers. 
But  who  the  melodies  of  morn  can  tell?     See  Minstrel, 

The  (Summer  Morn.  A). — Beattie. 
"But  why  do  you  go?"  said  the  lady.    See  Lord  Walter's 

Wife. — Browning. 
But  William  answer'd  short.     See  Dora. — Tennyson. 
But  William  said,   "He  don't  deserve."   See  Battle  of 

the  Boyne,  The. — Anon. 
But  winter   has   jet   brighter  scenes — he  boasts.     See 

Winter. — Bryant . 
But  yesterday   he  was,   and   lo!   to-day.     See  Eugene 

Field. — Ham. 
But  yesterday  she  plaved   with  childish  things.     Sec 

Dead  Child,  The.— Barlow. 
But  you    don't    laugh,    (^oldstream!     Come    man,    be 

amused,  for  once  in  your  life!     You  don't  laugh. 

See  Nothing  in  It. — Mathews. 
Buttercup  nodded  and  said  good-by.     See  August. — 

Thaxter. 
Buttercup,  poppy,  forget-me-not.     S''e  same. — Field. 
Buttercups  and  daisies. — See  same. — Howitt. 
Buttercups  and    daisies    in    the    meadow.     See  Fairy 

Gold.— Todhunter. 
Buttercups  by  roads  and  hedges.     See  Buttercups. — 

Crocker. 
Butterfly,  flutter  by.     See  To  a  Butterfly.— Clarke. 
Buy  a  paper,  plaze!     She  is  frozen,  almost.     See  Jerry. 

— Dickinson. 
Buzz,  quoth  the  bhie  fly.     See  same. — .Tonson. 
liuzz !  buzz !  buzz !  See  Song  of  the  Bee,  The. — Douglass. 
Buzz!  quoth  the  Blue-fly.     See  same. — Jonson. 
"Buzz,"  said  the  busy  bee;  "Buzz,"  said  the  fly.     See 

Bee  and  the  Fly,  The. — Robinson. 
Buzzing  and  gay  in  the  early  dawn.     See  Blue-bottle 

Fly,  The.— Anon. 
Buzzing,    buzzing,    buzzing,    my    golden-belted    bees. 

See  Bees  of  Myddelton  Manor,  'The. — Probyn. 
By  a  clear  well,  beside  a  lonely  road.     See  Ministry  of 

Hassan,  The. — Akers. 
By  a  clear  well,  within   a  little   field.     See  Of  Three 

Girls  and  Their  Talk. — Boccaccio. 
By  a  dim  shore,  where  water  darkening.     See  Reed- 
player,  The. — Scott. 
By  a  fountain  where  I  lay.     See  Grace  of  Beauty,  The. 

— Dowland. 
By  Alpine  lake,  'neath  shady  rock.    See  A,  B,  C. — Anon. 
B.v  Alpine  road,   beneath  an   old    fir-tree.     See  Edel- 
weiss.— Dickinson. 
By  ancient  legend  we  are  told.     See  Gray  Mare  the 

Better  Horse,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
"By  and  By"  is  a  very  bad  boy.     See  Little   Foes   of 

Little  Boys. — Anon. 
By    Babylon's  still  waters  we  sat  down  and  wept.     See 

Patriot's  Cry,  The  — Carrington. 
By  Bary  Alle^is  like  the  sul.     See  Song  for  a  Catarrh, 

A.     (Punch.) 
By  birth  I'm  a  slave,  yet  can  give  you  a  crown.     See 

Enigmas.  Two. — Prior. 
By  broad  Potomac's  silent  shore.     See  George  Wash- 
ington.— Anon. 
By  cliffs  grown  gray,  as  men  grow  gray.     See  River, 

The. — Spencer. 
By    Coblentz,  on  a  rise  of  gentle  ground.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Death  of  General  Marceau). 

— Byron. 


By  cool  Siloam's  shady  rill.     See  First  Sunday   after 

Epiphany. — Heber. 
By  copse  and  hedgerow,  waste  and  wall.     See  Knap- 
weed.— Ben.son. 
By  dape  is  Jodes      See  Man  with  a  Cold  in  his  Head, 

The. — Anon. 
By  dint  of  much  elbowing  we  made  our  way  into  a 

crowded  booth.     See  Adventure,  An. — Edwards. 
By  efforts  of  patriotism  alone  can  this  great  and  grow- 
ing   republic    be    preserved.     See    Reverence    for 

Law. — Hopkinson. 
By  energy  I  mean  application,  attention,  activity.     See 

Energy. — Stephens. 
By  every  road  round  Goderville  the  countrymen  with 

their  wives.     See  String,  The. — Maupassant. 
By  fair     Festiniog,     'mid     the     Northern     Hills.     See 

Maiden's  Lake,  The. — Morris. 
By  fair  sufferers   we  mean   about    ninety-nine  out   of 

every  hundred.     See  Fair  Sufferers. — Anon. 
By  feathers  green,  across  Casbeen.     See  Phoenix,  The. 

— Benson 
"By  hammer  and  hand  all  arts  do  stand.     See  Honor  to 

the  Hammer. — {London  Economist.) 
By   happ.v    chance    we   saw.     See  Excursion,   The. — 

Wordsworth. 
By  heaven!  it   is  a  splendid  sight  to  see.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. — Byron. 
By  him  lay  heavy  Sleep,   the  cousin  of  Death.     See 

Sleep. — Sackville. 
By  Jordan's  stream  the  hosts  of  Israel  paused.     See 

Moses  on  Pisgah. — Wallace. 
By  Jove,  this  room  is  in  a  pretty  state!     See  Who  Did 

lt?^(BostonPosi.) 
By  little  and  little,  the  old  man  drew  back  towards  the 

inner    chamber.      See    Old    Curiosity    Shop,    The 

(Death  of  Little  Nell).— Dickens. 
By  Logan    streams    that    rin    sae    deep.     See    Logan 

Braes. — Mayne. 
By  memory  inspired.     See  same. — .\non. 
By  my  troth,  Nerissa,  my  little  body  is  aweary  of  this 

great  world.     See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The  (Collo- 
quy between   Portia  and  Nerissa  Regarding   the 

Suitors). — Shakespeare. 
By  mv  valor,  then.  Sir  Lucius,  forty  yards  is  a  good 

distance     See  Rivals.  The  (Duel.  The). — Sheridan. 
By  myself  walking.     See  Hypochondriacus. — Lamb. 
By  Nature's   law,   what   may   be,   may   be   now.     See 

Night  Thoughts  (Procrastination). — Young. 
By  Nebo's  lonely  mountain,  on  this  side  Jordan's  wave. 

See  Burial  of  Moses,  The. — Alexander. 
By  night  he  spread  his  white  rugs  down.     See  Winter's 

Acrobats. — Sherman. 
By  night  I  am  a  princess  fair.     See  Nights  and  Days. — 

Fox. 
By  none  but  me  can  the  tale  be  told.     See  White  Ship, 

The.   -Rossetti. 
By  our   canip    fires   rose   a   murmur.     See   Battle   of 

Fontenoy. — Dowling. 
By    .some  fern-banked  mossy  stream.     See  Summer's 

Day,  A. — Pier. 
By  some  mischance — how,  none  can  tell.    See  Fox  and 

the  Goat,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
By  .something     form'd,     I     nothing    am.     See    On    a 

Shadow  in  a  Glass. — Swift. 
By  studying  my  lady's  eyes.     See  My  Lady's  Eyes. — 

Anon. 
By  teune  Mershe  ant  Averil.     See  Alison. — Anon. 
By  that  lake,  whose  gloomy  .shore.     See  same. — Moore. 
By  the  banks  of  Chattanooga,  watching  with  a  soldier's 

heed.     See  Battle  above  the  Clouds,  The. — Brown. 
By  the  heard  of  the  Prophet  the  Bashnu-  swore.     See  How 

We  Burned  the  "Philadelphia." — Eastman. 
By  the  bed  the  old  man,  waiting,  sat  in  vigil  sad  and 

tender.     See  Old  Wife,  The.— Brown. 
By  the    blue    Patapsco's    billowy    dash.     See    There's 

Life  in  the  Old  Land  Yet. — Randall. 
By  the  blue  taper's   trembling  light.     See  Night-piece 

on  Death,  A. — Parnell.  , 

By  the  delicious  warmness  of  thy  mouth.     See  Gentle 

Shepherd,  The  (Patie  and  Peggy). — Ramsay. 
By  the  early  morning  light,  a  woman  in  the  dress  of  a 

nun.     See   Romola  (Romola   and   Savonarola). — 

Eliot. 
By  the  embers  so  low,  in  a  room  dark  and  dreary.     See 

Court  of  the  Year,  The. — Whitney. 
By  the   flow  of  the  inland   river.     See  Blue   and   the 

Gray,  The.— Finch. 
By  the  foot  of  old  Keeper,  beside  the  bohreen.     See 

Fionula. — Le  J^anu. 
By  the   glimmer   of   green    and   golden.     See   Passing 

Year,  The. — Anon. 
By  the  hope  within  us  springing.     See  Battle,  The. — 

Moore. 


629 


By 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


By  the  imagination   I   understand  that  energy.     See 

Place  of  the  Imagination  in  the  Art  of  Expression, 

The. — Behrends. 
By  the   introduction    of   Christianity    a   tribune    was 

erected.     See  Christian  Orator,  The. — -Villemain. 
By  the  merest  chanc^p  the  twilight  gloom.     See  What 

My  Lover  Said.— Greene. 
By  the  moon  we  sport  and  play.     See  Maydes  Meta- 
morphosis, The  (Song  of  the  Fairies). — Lyly. 
By  the  next  returning  spring.   See  Ode  to  Miss  Carteret, 

The.— Philips. 
By  the  old  Moulmein  Pagoda,  lookin'  eastward  to  the 

sea.     See  Mandalay. — Kipling. 
By  the  pleasant   fire  they  sat  one  night.     See  True 

Worth.— Anon. 
By  the  rude  bridge  that  arched  the  flood.     See  Concord 

Hymn. — Emerson. 
By  the  shore  a  plot  of  ground.     See  Ruined  Chapel, 

The. — Allingham. 
By  the    shores    of    Gitchee    Gaumee.      See    Song  of 

Hiawatha,  The  (Hiawatha's  Childhood).— Long- 
fellow. 
By  the   shrouded   gleam   of   the   western   skies.     See 

Keenan's  Charge. — Lathrop. 
By  the  side  of  a  murmuring  stream  an  elderly  gentle- 
man sat.     See  Elderly  Gentleman,  The. — Canning. 
By  the  side  of  all  antagonisms,  higher  than  they.     See 

American  Nationality. — Choate. 
By  the  splendor  in  the  heavens  and  the  hush  upon  the 

sea.     See  Das  Krist  Kindel. — Riley. 
By  the  still  lake  margin  I  saw  her  lie.     See  Shelter. — 

Calverley. 
By  the  time  baby  was  ten  months  old  she  had  learned 

many  things.     See  Queer  Word,  A. — Anon. 
By  the  waters  of  Life  we  sat  together.     See  Old  Man's 

Idyl,  An.— Realf. 
By  the  wayside,  on  a  mossy  stone.     See  Old. — Hoyt. 
By  thine  own  soul's  law  learn  to  live.     See  To  Thine 

Own  Self  be  True.— Beatty. 
By  this  time  the  piece  was  reloaded.     See  Death  of  the 

Savage,  The. — Cooper. 
By  this,  lamenting  Philomel  had  ended.     See  Lucrece. 

— Shakespeare. 
By  what  law  fell  King  Charles?     See  Cromwell  on  the 

Death  of  Charles  the  First.— Lytton. 
By  yon  castle  wa',  at  the  close  of  the  day.     See  There'll 

never  be  Peace  till  Jamie  Comes  Hame. — Burns. 
By  yonder  sandy  cove  where,  every  day.  See  Wounded 

Curlew,  The. — Thaxter. 
By-lo,  baby-bunting!     See  Mother  Goose  Lullabies. — 

Anon. 


C   stands   for  children,   who   always   are  ready.     See 

Holiday  Acrostic,  A. — Lloyd. 
Ca'  the  yowea  to  the  knowes.     See  same. — Burns. 
"Ca-a-ash!"  calls  the  Ribbon-clerk  in  Lacy's  dry  goods 

store.     See  Cash. — Anon. 
Cables  entangling  her.     See  Lady  at  Sea,  The. — Hood. 
Cadwalader  Fry  had  a  mind  to  try.     See  Cadwalader 

Fry  and  His  Theory. — Meyers. 
Caesar  sends  health  to  Cato.     See  Cato  (Cajsar's  Mes- 
sage to  Cato). — Addison. 
Caesar's  arms   have  thrown  down  all  distinction.     See 

Cato  (Death  of  Cato). — Addison. 
Call  for  the  robin-redbreast  and  the  wren.     See  Dirge. 

—Webster. 
Call  in  the  messengers  sent  from  the  Dauphin.     See 

King  Henry  V.   (Henry  V.'s  Audience  of  French 

Ambassadors ) . — Shakespeare. 
Call  it  not  vain ;  they  do  not  err.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 

Minstrel  (Poet,  The).— Scott. 
Call  me,  if  you  will,  religion.     See  Breath  of  the  Spirit, 

The. — Anon. 
Call  me  no  more.     See  Lachrimae ;  or,  Mirth  Turned  to 

Mourning. — Herrick. 
Call  me  not   dead  A'hen   I,   indeed,   have  gone.     See 

same.     (Scribner's.) 
Call  me  not  King,  but  Harold.     See  Harold. — Tenny- 
son. 
Call  me  their  traitor!     Thou  injurious  tribune!     See 

Ck)riolanus  (Anger).— Shakespeare. 
Call  the  watch!     Call   the   watch!     See   Loss   of   the 

Hornet,  The. — Anon. 
Called  by  a  power  they  must  obey.     See  Glen  Ellis 

Falls.- — Longfellow. 
Calling  a  boy  up  in  the  morning  can  hardly  be  classed 

under  the  head  of  pastimes.     See  Calling  a  Boy  in 

the  Morning. — Bailey. 
Calling,  the  heron  flies  athwart  the  blue.     See  Creek- 
road,  The. — Cawein. 


Calm  and   still    light    on    y<vi    great   plain.     See    In 

Memoriam  (Landscape). — Tennyson. 
Calm  as    an     under-current,     strong    to    draw.     See 

William  the  Third. — ^ Wordsworth. 
Calm  as   that    second   summer   which   precedes.     See 

Charleston. — Timrod. 
Calm     at   his  station   the    bridge-tender    stood.     See 

Albert  Drecker. — Hyatt. 
Calm  Death,   God   of   crossed   hands   and   passionless 

eyes.     See  Death. — Pellew. 
"Calm  is  now  that  stormy  water — it  has  learned   to 

fear  my  wrath.     See  Xerxes  at  the  Hellespont. — 

Trench. 
Calm  is  the  morn,  without  a  sound.     See  In  Memoriam 

(Autumn). — Tennyson. 
Calm  me,  my  God,  and  keep  me  calm.     See  Inner  Calm, 

The. — Bonar. 
Calm  on  the  bosom  [or  spirit]  of  thy  God.     See  Siege  of 

Valencia,  The  (Dirge,  A). — Hemans. 
Calm  on   the   listening   ear   of   night.     See  Christmas 

Song. — Sears. 
Calme  was  the  day,  and  through  the  trembling  ayre. 

See  Prothalamion. — Spenser. 
Calumniators  of  Catholicism,  have  you  read  the  history 

of  your  country?     See  On  Charges  against  Roman 

Catholics. — Shell. 
Cam'  ye  by  Athol,  lad  wi'  the  philabeg.     See  Bonnie 

Prince  Charlie. — Hogg. 
Came,  on  a  Sabbath  noon,  my  sweet.     See  At  Altenahr. 

— Ashe. 
Came  the  morning  of  that  day.    See  Sumter. — Stedman . 
Can    a  little  child  like  me?     See  We  Thank  Thee.— 

Dodge. 
Can  any  mortal  mixture  of  earth's  mould.     See  Comus 

(Music). — Milton. 
Can  any  pleasure  in   life  compare?     See  Old   Ace. — 

Brooks. 
Can  anybody  tell  why,  when  Eve  was  manufactiired 

out  of  one  of    Adam's  ribs.     See  Reason  Why, 

The. — Anon. 
Can  anything  be  more  absurd  and  untenable  than  the 

argument  of  the  learned  gentleman.    See  Universal 

Religious  Liberty. — O'Connell. 
Can  anything  be  so  elegant  as  to  have  few  wants  and 

serve  them  one's  self.     See  same. — Emenson. 
Can  anything  that  I  have  said,  Mr.  Speaker,  subject  me 

to  be  branded.     See  On  an  Attempt  to  Coerce  Him 

to  Resign. — Pitt. 
Can  freckled  August — drowsing  warm  and  blonde.     See 

Rain-crow,  The. — Cawein. 
Can  I  find  something  to  eat  here  and  lodgings?     See 

Intensity. — Anon. 
Can  I  get  breakfast,  sir?     See  Honesty  the  Best  Policy. 

• — Anon. 
Can  I  not  sin,  but  thou  wilt  be.     See  To  his  Conscience. 

— Herrick. 
Can  I  see  another's  woe.     See  On  Another's  Sorrow. — 

Blake. 
Can  I  see  your  master?     See  Imaginary  Sick  Man,  The. 

— Molii're. 
Can  I  tell  you  the  name  of  the  woman  who  passed? 

See  Mad  Marie. — Anon. 
Can  I,  who  have  for  others  oft  compiled.     See  On  My 

Dear  Son,  Gervase  Beaumont. — Beaumont. 
Can  it  be  right  to  give  what  I  can  give?     See  Sonnets 

from  the  Portuguese,  IX. — Browning. 
Can  it  be  that  a  man  like  this  is  dead?     See  Long- 
fellow, Extract  Concerning. — Savage. 
Can  it  be  that  it  is  snowing?     See  May. — Park. 
Can  the  depthsof  the  ocean  afford  you  not  graves.    See 

Munster  War  Song,  The. — Williams. 
Can  you  an  answer  give  in  rhyme?     See  Repartee. — 

Kavanaugh. 
Can  you  count  the  stars  that  brightly.     See  Can  You 

Count  the  Stars?  —Anon. 
Can  you  listen  to  a  heart-thrilling  story.     See  Lotty's 

Message. — Murdoch. 
Can  you   put   the  spider's  web    back  in   place.     See 

Questions. — Lawrence. 
Can  you  read  in  the  heart  of  a  rose,  love.     See  Rose's 

Message,  The.—  Abbott. 
Can  you  see  her,  O  my  brother?     See  Twins  in  the 

Turret,  The.— Bocock. 
Canada,  Canada,  land  of  the  maple.     See  Dominion 

Day. — Reade. 
Canopied  with  shadows  and  attended  by  the  fair  moon. 

See  Night  and  Morning. — Boyd. 
Canst  thou  count  the  stars  that   nightly.     See  Canst 

Tho'i  Count  the  Stars? — Anon. 
Canst   thou   not   minister  to   a  mind    diseased.     See 

Macbeth. — Shakespeare. 
Can't  I  teach  her?     Let  me  see.     See  Teaching  Dolly  to 

Walk. — Anon. 


630 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Children 


"Can't -do-it"  sticks  in  the  mud.     See  Try. — Anon. 
Canute  was  by  his  nobles  taught  to  fancy.     See  King 

Canute  and  His  Nobles. — Wolcott. 
"Cappen,"  said  Sam  the  other  day  to  pa,  "have  you 

had  your  pictur'  taken  yet?     See  Slowlys  at  the 

Photographers,  The. — Dallas. 
Captain    Graham   [or   Gray,    or   Grey]   the   men   were 

sayin'    \or   saying].     See    Drummer    Roy,    The. — 

Anon. 
Captain  of  the  Western  Wood.     See  Madrofio. — Harte. 
Captain  or  Colonel,  or  Knight  in  arms.     See  When  the 

Assault  was  Intended  to  the  City. — Milton. 
Captain  Sword  got  up  one  day.     See  Captain  Sword. — 

Hunt. 
Captives  to  winter's  cruel  king.     See  May-children. — 

Sherman. 
Cardenio's     fortunes    ne'er    miscarried.     See    Water- 
cure,  The. — Dobson. 
Care  keeps  its  hold  with  constant  clasp.     See  Chickadee 

The.— Thaxter. 
Care-charmer  Sleep,  son  nf  the  saWe  Night.     See  Son- 
nets to  Delia  (Care-charmer  Sleep). — Daniel. 
Care-charming  sleep,  thou  easer  of  all  woes.     See  Val- 

entinian   (Care-charming  Sleep). — Beaumont   and 

Fletcher. 
Carest  thou  not?  O  thou  that  givest  life?     See  same. — 

Anon. 
Careful  observers  may  foretell  the  hour.     See  Descrip- 
tion of  a  City  Shower,  A. — Swift. 
Careless  I  climbed  that  path,  and  just  behind.     See 

Example. — Hanks. 
Careless  seems  the  great  Avenger,  history's  pages  but 

record.     See  Present  Crisis,  The. — Lowell. 
Carol,  Carol,  Christians.     See  Christmas  Carol. — Coxe. 
Carry  him  out  and  put  him  away.     See  Last  Taps. — 

Roberts. 
"Cars   stop   twenty   minutes!"   called   our  Conductor 

Richardson.     See   Bessie    Kendrick's    Journey. — 

Preston. 
Carthage!  O  love  thee!     thou   hast  run.     See  Marius 

amidst  the  Ruins  of  Carthage. — Praed. 
Carve  no  stone  above  her  head.     See  On  the  Death  of 

Mrs.  Holland. — Earl. 
Carved  by  a  mighty  race,  whose  vanished  hands.     See 

Sphinx  Speaks,  The. — Saltus. 
Carved  by  an  angel  in  this  marble  white.     See  Lines 

Found  in  the  Hand  of  the  Statue  of  Night  at 

Florence  in  the  sixteenth  Century. — Strozzi. 
Casey  was  dying  and  sent  for  a  lawyer  to  make  his 

will.     See  Hear  him  Rave. — Anon. 
Casey's  little  boy  was  one  the  neighbors  didn't  like. 

See  Casey's  Little  Boy. — Waterman. 
Cast  by  the  bright  wings  of  a  seraph — the  snow.     See 

Response  to  Beautiful  Snow,  A. — Hancock. 
Cast  on  the  water  by  a  careless  hand.     See  Cocoa-tree, 

The.— Stoddard. 
"Cast  out  the  beam  from  thine  own  eye."     See  Dot's 

Version  of  the  Text. — Kellogg. 
"Cast  thy  bread  upon  the  water."     See  Casting  Bread 

upon  the  Waters. — Goodfellow. 
Castara,  weep  not,  tho'  her  tomb  appear. — See  Castara 

(To  Castara,  upon  the  Death  of  a  Lady). — Habing- 

ton. 
Casting  our  eyes  over  the  history  of  nations.     See  True 

Grandeur  of  Nations,  The. — Sumner. 
Caudle,  love,  do  you  know.     See  Caudle's  Wedding- 
day. — Jerrold. 
Caught    by    an    advertising    sell.     See    Mrs.    Dove's 

Boarding-house.— Barber. 
Cavalier  music!     Shirley  Chase.     See  Shirley  Chase. — 

Collins. 
"Cavalry,  charge!"     Not  a  man  of  them  shrank.     See 

Cavalry  Charge,  The. — Lathrop. 
Caw!     Caw!     Caw!     I  am  a  poor  old  crow.     See  Caw! 

Caw !     Caw ! — Carswell . 
"Caw!     Caw!"    says    the    crow;     "Spring    has    come 

again  I  know."     See  Spring  Voices. — Anon. 
Cdad  mile  fiVilte!  child  of  the  Ithian!     See  Cdad  Mile 

Fitilte,  Ehm!— Griffin. 
Cean    duv   deelish,    beside   the   sea.     See   Cean    Duv 

Deelish. — Sigerson. 
Cease,  rude  Boreas,  blustering  railer!     See  Storm,  The. 

— Stevens. 
Cease,    warring    thoughts,    and    let    his    brain.     See 

Lullaby,  A. — Shirley. 
Ceaselessly  the  weaver.   Time.     See  Weaver,   The. — 

Burleigh. 
Celebrate  the  Arbor  Day.     See  Arbor  Day  March. — 

Beauchamp. 
Centrick,  in  London  noise.     See  Elder  Brother,  The. — 

Colman. 
Centuries  ago,  on  the  rock-bound  coast  of  Massachu- 
setts.    See  New  England  Civilization. — Frye. 


Centuries    since  there  flourished    a  man.     See  Bitter 

Sweet  (Bluebeard).  -  Holland. 
Ceres,  most  bounteous  lady,  thy  rich  leas.     See  Tem- 
pest,  The   (Insubstantial   Pageant,  An). — Shake- 
speare. 
Certainly,  No.  1  Crawlin  Place  was  a  dingy  abode  at 

any  time.     See  They  Sang  for  it. — Anon. 
Chafed  and  worn  with   worldly  care.     See  Prayer  for 

Saturday  Evening. — Anon. 
Channing!     My  Mentor  whilst  my  thought  was  young. 

See  Channing. — Alcott. 
Chaos,    of    old,  was    God's   dominion.     See  Night. — 

Miffiin. 
Chaplain,  I  am  dying,  dying.     See  Dying  Soldier,  The. 

—Cox. 
Character   is   a   fortune.     See  Value  of    Character, — 

Wood. 
Charity  Peekskill  was  a  pretty  nice   gal.     See  Heze- 

kiah's  Proposal. — Anon. 
Charles  —  for  it  seems  you  wish  to  know.     See  Gage 

d'Amour,  A.— Dobson. 
Charles  was  a  very  wayward  youth.     See  Charley,  the 

Story-teller. — Anon. 
Charlie,  didn't  you  say  you  could  make  a  speech  five 

minutes    long   without     any    preparation?       See 

Charlie's  Speech. — Anon. 
Charm  me  asleep  and  melt  me  so.     See  To  Music,  to 

Becalm  his  Fever. — Herrick. 
Charmed  to  escort  you,  I'm  sure.     See  Where  Was  I? — 

Griffith. 
Charmer,  on  a  given  straight  line.     See  Collegian  to  his 

Bride,  The. —  (Punch.) 
Charming  as  is  the  merry  prattle  of  innocent  childhood. 

See  Papa  and  the  Boy. — Harbour. 
Charming    Clorinda,   ev'ry    note.     See    Robin    Hood,_ 

Songs  jr. — MacNally. 
Charybdis,  whirling,  roaring,  drew.     See  Charybdis. — 

Bolton. 
Check!     I  see!     Sec  Which  Was  the  Hero? — Graham. 
Check !     This  ivory  symbol  of  royalty  is  now  defended 

by  the  castle.    See  Slang  versus  Di  ctionary . — Anon . 
Cheeks  as  soft  as  .luly  peaches.     See  Baby  May. — 

Bennett. 
"Cheep,    cheep,"    said    some    little    snow-birds.      See 

What  the  Snow-birds  Said. — Anon. 
Cheer  up  and  bear  up !     Life  should  be  gay.     See  Cheer 

Up. — Anon. 
Cheered  with  the  view,  man  went  to  till  the  ground. 

See  Death. — Porteus. 
Cheeriest  room,  that  morn,  the  kitchen.     See  Flying 

.Jim's  Last  Leap. — Banks. 
Cheerily   with   us   that   great   November   morn.     See 

Inkerman. — Trench. 
Cherish  kindly  feelings,  children.     See  Cherish  Kindly 

Feelings.- — Kidder. 
Cherry  pie!     Cherry  pie!     Pie!  I  cry.     See  Cherry  Pie. 

— {Punch.) 
Cherry  Valley's  finest  raiment.     See  When  My  Cousin 

Comes  to  Town. — Bourke. 
Cherry-ripe,   ripe,    ripe,    I    cry.     See    Cherry-ripe. — 

Herrick. 
Chicken-skin,  delicate,  white.    See  On  a  Fan. — Dobson. 
Chide    mildly    the    erring.     Kind    language    endears. 

See  Chide  Mildly  the  Erring. — Bradbury. 
Chief  of   our   aunts — not   only    I.     See   To   Auntie. — 

Stevenson. 
Chieftains,     forego!      See    Lady    of    the    Lake,    The 

(Douglas). — Scott. 
Child,  amidst  the  flowers  at  play.     See  Hour  of  Prayer, 

The. — Hemans. 
Child  Dyring  has  ridden  him  up  under  oe.     See  Child 

Dyring.- — Scott. 
Child,  I  warn  thee  in  all  wise.     See  Symon's  Lesson  of 

Wisdom  for  all  Manner  of  Children. — Symon. 
Child  in  thy  beauty,  empress  in  thy  pride.     See  Budget 

of  Paradoxes,  A. — Martley. 
Child,  is  thy  father  dead?     See  Song. — Elliott. 
Child  of  a  day,  thou  knowest  not.     See  Child  of  a  Day. 

— Landor. 
Child  of  sin  and  sorrow.     See  Exhortation. — Hastings. 
Child  of  the  later  days,  thy  words  have  broken.     See 

Answer  of  "Belzoni's"  Mummy. — Anon. 
Child  of  the  sun !  pursue  thy  rapturous  flight.     See  To 

the  Butterfly. — R'ogers. 
Child  Waters  in  his  stable  stood.     See  Child  Waters. — 

Anon. 
Child,  weary  of  thy  baubles  of  to-day.     See  Human 

Plan,  The.— Crandall. 
Child  with  the  hungry  eyes.     See  Beggars. — Higginson. 
Childe   Maurice   was    a   handsome   young   man.     See 

Childe  Maurice. — Anon. 
Children  are  what  the  mothers  are.     See  Children. — 

Landor. 


631 


Children 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Children,  behold  the  Chimpanzee.     See  Chimpanzee, 

The.—  Herford. 
Children,  do  not  talk  about  each  other.     See  Do  Not 

Tattle.— White. 
Children,  do  you  ever.     See  My  Other  Me. — Litchfield. 
Children,  do  you  hea^the  music.     iSee  Message  for  the 

Children,  A. — Denton. 
Children,    do    you    know    the    story.     See   Our    First 

Thanksgiving  Day. — (Youth's  Companion.) 
Children,  do  you  love  each  other?     See  Golden  Rule, 

The. — Anon. 
Children,  do  you  see  the  wine.     See  Touch  it  Never. — 

Anon. 
Children,    have   you   seen   the   budding?     See   Forest 

Trees.  —  Anon. 
Children,  I  want  to  .see  if  you  can  tell  me  why  children 

and  all  others  should  not  only  be  temperate?     See 

Reasons  Why. — Anon. 
Children  indeed  are  we — children  that  wait.     See  We 

Are  Children. — Buchanan. 
Children,  keep  uj)  that  harmless  play.     See  Children 

Playing  in  a  Churchyard. — Landor. 
Children  love  to  hear  of  children!     See  Story  by  the 

Fire,  A. — Greenwell. 
Children  love  to  listen  to  stories.     See  Dream  Children : 

A  Reverie. — I>amb. 
Children  of  the  Heavenly  King.     See  same. — Cennick. 
"Children  should  be  seen  and  not  heard."     See  Harry's 

Lecture.— Rook. 
Chiltlren,    thank    God    for    these    great    trees.     See 

Children,  Thank  God. — Anon. 
Children,    that    lay    their    pretty    garlands    by. — See 

Resigning. — Craik. 
Children,  we  are  having  a  nice  time  this  afternoon. 

See  Alice's  Party. — Doolittle. 
Children,  what  becomes  of  the  pins.    See  Pins. — -Anon. 
Children,  who  read  my  lay.  See  Short  Sermon, A. — Cary. 
Children,    you    are    very    little.     See   Good    and    Bad 

Children. — Stevenson. 
Chill  the  winter,  cold  the  wind.     See  Solace  in  Winter. 

— Sigerson. 
Chilly  Dovebber  with  its  boadigg  blast.     See  Belag- 

cholly  Days. — Anon. 
Chime!     Chime!     The    bells     are    tolling    for    matin 

service.     See  Annunciata. — Fanton. 
Chiming  a  dream  by  the  way.     See  I  Met  a  Maiden 

To-day. — Henley. 
"Chirp!     Chipper!    iTwitter!    Trill!"      See  Choosing  a 

Building  Spot. — Braddock. 
Chisel  in  hand  stood  a  [or  the]  sculptor  boy.     See  Life 

Sculpture. — Doane. 
"Chivalry  is  dead  among  us."     See  Story  of  George  Lee. 

—Aide. 
Chloe,    we   must   not   always   be   in   heaven.     See   To 

Chloe.— Wolcott. 
Chloe,  what  brings  you  here? — Quick,  let  me  know. 

See  Outlaw,  The.— Joy. 
Chloe,  why  wish  you  that  your  years.     See  To  Chloe. 

— Cartwright. 
Chloe's  a  Nymph  in  flowery  groves.     See  Chloe  Divine. 

— D'Urfey. 
Chloris,    yourself    you    so    excel.     See    To    Chloris. — 

Waller. 
Choose  the  darkest  part  o'  the   grove.     See   OSdipus 

(Incantation ). — Dryden. 
Choose    yo'    pardners,    time's    er-flying.     See    Nicker- 

demus  Quadrille. — (Texas  Siflings.) 
Christ   died   for   all;   and   on    the   hearts   of   ail.     See 

Christmas  Outca.sts. — (Neiu  York  Sun.) 
Christ,  efter  his  glorious  Ascentioun.     See  Monarchic, 

The. — Lyndesay. 
Christ  fits  his  ministers  through  manifold  experience 

of  sorrow  and  pain.     See  same. — Taylor. 
Chri.st  God,  who  savest  man,  save  most.     See  Count 

Gismond. — Browning. 
Christ  of  .ludea,  look  Thou  in  my  heart.     See  Credo. 

—Gilder. 
Christ  the  Lord  is  risen  to-day.     See  Easter  Hymn. — 

Charles  Wesley. 
Christ  to  the  young  man  said:  "Yet  one  thing  more." 

See  Hymn  for  My  Brother's  Ordination. — Long- 
fellow. 
Christ  was  born  upon  this  night.     See  Christmas  Eve. 

— (London  Public  Opinion.) 
Christ  was  many  ages  in  advance  of  the  world.     See 

same. — Swing. 
Christian   earnestness   in   life.     See   Earnest   Views   of 

Life.; — Phelps. 
Christianity  is  strong  in  its  upity,  strong  in  its  simpli- 
city.    See  same. — Anon. 
Christianity    is    the    true    conserving    and    developing 

power.     See   True    Power   of    a    Nation,    The. — 

Chapin. 


Christianity  now  stirs  men's  thoughts  more  than  ever. 

See  same. — Anon. 
Christians,     awake,     salute    the    happy     morn.     See 

Christmas  Carol. — Byron. 
Christians,  do  not  expect  that  the  apostle  will  flatter. 

See  Eulogium  upon  St.  Paul. — Bossuet. 
Christina;  maiden  of  heroic  mien!     See  To  Christina 

of  Sweden. — Milton. 
"Christine!    May    we    come    in    and  see   you  tonight, 

Christine?"     See  Almost  a  Tragedy. — Thaxter. 
Christmas   again!     How   swiftly   Time   rolls   by!     See 

Christmas  Again. — Anon. 
Christmas  F^ve  everywhere  but  on  the  West  End.     See 

"Bucks." — Spearman. 
Christmas    Eve!     What   magic   there   is   in   the   very 

sound  of  those  two  words!     See  Little  Charlie's 

Christmas. — Anon. 
Christmas  is  bounded  on  the  north  by  Happiness.     See 

Christmas  Bounded. — Anon. 
Chri.stmas  is  here;  winds  whistle  shrill.    See  Mahogany- 
tree,  "The. — Thackeray. 
Christmas    joys    are    more    complete.     See    Christmas 

Good-night,  A. — Denton. 
Christmas  knows  a  merry,  merry  place.     See  Wassail 

Chorus  at  the  Mermaid  Tavern. — Watts-Dunton. 
Christmas  morning  sees  Mrs.  Timothy  Brady  on  her 

unsteady  way.     See  Mrs.  Brady's  Conundrum. — 

Anon. 
Christmas,  New  Year,  the  Fourth  of  July.     See  Thanks- 
giving Dinner,  A. — Stephens. 
Christmas,  the  one  universal  holiday  of  the  world.     See 

Through  the  Loopholes. — Harryman. 
Christmas  time  has  come  again.     See  At  Christmas 

Time. — Denton. 
Christmus  comin',  Christmus  comin'.     See  Christmus 

Comin'. — Anon. 
Christopher,  Christopher!    Where  art  thou?     See  From 

the  Old  World  to  the  New.— Hadley. 
Christopher    Columbu.s — or.     in     his    native     tongue, 

Christofero  Colombo.     See  Columbus. — Dana. 
Church  of  the  living  God!  in  vain  thy  foes.     See  same. 

— Garrison. 
Cider  I  will  not  sip.     See  Children's  Vow,  The. — Wil- 
cox. 
Circling  on  high,  in  cloudless  sky.     See  On  the  Plains. 

— Brooks. 
Citizens  of  a  great,  free,  and  prosperous  country.     See 

Centennial  Celebration  of  Concord  Fight  (Minute- 
men  of  '75,  The). — Curtis. 
Citizens — The  foreigner  is  about  to  inflict  on  France 

the  most   cruel  injury.     See  Prussian  Armistice, 

The.— Gambetta. 
Citizens,  this  is  the  twenty-first  of  September.     See 

New  Republic,  The. — Gambetta. 
City  about  whose  brow  the  north  winds  blow.     See 

Ottawa. — Scott. 
City  of  God,  how  broad  and  far.     See  City  of  God,  The. 

— Johnson. 
City  of    God!     Jerusalem.     See     Crucifixion,     The. — 

— Croly. 
City  of    God,    oh,    how    bright    and    how    fair.     See 

Heavenly  Foundations. — Gaylord. 
Clang,  clang !  the  massive  anvils  ring.     See  Song  of  the 

Forge,  The. — Anon. 
Clang!     There's  a  call  for  engine    "K."     See  Fire! — 

Flowers. 
Clanging,  dinging,      slowly      swinging.     See      Curfew 

Chimes,  The. — Collins. 
Claris.sa  laughs,  I  plead  in  vain.     See  Clarissa  Laughs. 

— Milne. 
Classmates,  this  is  Arbor  day,  and   we   mean  to  plant 

a  tree.     See  Choosing  a  Tree. — Benedict. 
Classmates,  we  stand  with  sublime  connections  with 

the  past.     See  Ivy  Oration  (I.). — Anon. 
Clear   and  cool,  clear  and  cool.     See  Water   Babies, 

The  (Song  of  the  River). — Kingsley. 
Clear  Ankor,   on  whose  silver-sanded  shore.     See  To 

the  River  Ankor. — Drayton. 
Clear  as  the  silver  call.     See  Christmas  Carol. — Anon. 
Clear  had  the  day  been  from  the  dawn.     See  Fine  Day, 

A. — Drayton. 
Clear,  placid  Leman!  thy  contra.sted  lake.     See  Childe 

Harold's     Pilgrimage    (Night    and    Tempest). — 

Byron. 
Clear  the  brown  path,  to  meet  his  coulter's  gleam.     See 

Plowman,  The. — Holmes. 
Clem  Berry,  a  negro  who  was  formerly  a  stage  runner 

in  Virginia  City.     See  He  Woke  the  Dead. — Anon. 
Clemont  was  whiling  the  hours  away.     See  Clemont's 

Day  Dream. — Richards. 
Cleon  hath  a  million  acres.    See  Cleon  and  I. — Mackay 
Cleopatra,  who  thought  they  maligned  her.     See  same. 

— Mackintosh. 


632 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Come 


Clergymen  while   speaking  in   the   pulpit.     See   same. 

— Swing. 
Clerk  Colvill    and  his  lusty  dame.     See  Clerk  Colvill; 

or.  The  Mermaid. — Anon. 
Clerk  Saunders  and  May  Margaret.     See  Clerk  Saun- 
ders.— Anon. 
Click,  click,  click.     See  Song  of  the  Type. — Anon. 
Climb  the  old  tower,  watchman.     See  Old  Man's  Ship 

Comes  Home,  The. — Brown. 
Climb  to  my  knee,  little  boy,  little  boy.      See  Sunset 

Land. — Lincoln. 
Climbin'  the  Mesa  Grande.     See  Jim,  Arizona,  1885. — 

Lummis. 
Climbing   the    Pincian   Hill's    long    slope.     See    Little 

Assunta. — Thaxter. 
Climbing  up  the  hillside  beneath  the  summer  stars. 

See  Man  in  Nature. — Thayer. 
Clime  of  the  brave!  the  high  heart's  home.     See  New 

England. — Prentice. 
Clime    of   the    unforgotten    brave!     See   Giaour,   The 

(Greece). — Byron. 
Cling  to  thy   home!  if  there  the   meanest   shed.     See 

Home. — Leonidas. 
Clink — clink — clink !  goes  our  windlass.     See  Outward 

Bound. — Allingham. 
Clink,  clink,    fill   up   your   glasses.     See   Toast,    A. — 

Stone. 
Clippity-clip !  clippity-clip !    O,  we  will  take  a  jolly  trip ! 

See  Merry  .Journey,  A. — Kavanaugh. 
Close  beside  the  river  Hudson  stood  a  fortress  large 

and     strong.     See     Mad     Anthony's     Charge. — 

Easton. 
Close  by  his  banner,  William  the  Conqueror  pitched 

his    pavilion.     See    Harold   (Search    for    Harold's 

Body,  The).— Bulwer-Lytton. 
Close  by    the    threshold    of    a    door    nail'd    fast.     See 

Colubriad,  The. — Cowper. 
Close  by  those  meads,  for  ever  crown'd  with  flowers. 

See  Rape  of  the  Lock  (Age  of  Queen  Anne,  The). 

— Pope. 
Close    his  eyes,  his  work  is  done!     See  Dirge  for  a 

Soldier. — Boker. 
Close  on  the  edge  of  a  midsummer  dawn.     See  Shadow 

of  the  Night,  A. — Aldrich. 
"Close  up  in  front,  and  steady,  lads!"     See  Death  of 

Burnaby,  The. — Cockin. 
Close  up  the  ledger.  Time!     See  Reckoning  with  the 

Old  Year. — Foxwell. 
Close  your  gates,  O  priests  of  .Janus!  close  your  brazen 

temple  gates!     See  Caractacus. — Duganne. 
Closer,  closer,  let  us  knit.     See  Pleasure  at  Home. — 

Anon. 
"Closing  with  the  Doxology  in  long  meter,"  said  the 

minister.     See  Church  Scene,  A. — Anon. 
Clothed  in  purple  and  fine  linen,  Princess  Imra  from 

her  tower.     See  Princess  Imra  and  the  Goatherd. 

— Banks. 
Clothed  with  state,  and  girt  with  might.     See  Psalm 

XCIII.— Sidney. 
Clouds  drave    along    across    the    trembling    sky.     See 

Grant. — Gunsaulus. 
Cloudy  argosies    are    drifting   down    into    the    purple 

dark.     See  Silent  Land,  The. — Mcl^ean. 
Cloven  with  shovel  and  with  hoe,  pierced  by  axes  and 

by  spades.     See  Ramayana  (Descent  of  the  Gan- 
ges,  The). — Milman. 
Clowns  are   capering   in    motley,    drums    are   beating, 

trumpets     blown.     See     Curtain     Falls,     The. — 

Verey. 
Cocking  his  tail,  a  saucy  prig.     See  Pig  and  the  Magpie, 

The. — Pindar. 
Coesper    erat;    tunc    lubriciles    ultravia    circum.     See 

Mors  labrochii. — Anon. 
Cold  blew  the  wind   along  the  street.     See   What   a 

Christmas  Carol  Did. — Harcourt. 
Cold  Care  and  I  have  run  a  race.     See  Apple  Blossoms. 

— Phelps. 
"Cold,"  cried    the    wind    on    the    hill.     See    Cold. — 

lioberts. 
Cold  in   the   earth — and   the   deep   snow   piled   above 

thee.     See  Remembrance. — IJronto. 
Cold  on  the  lawn  the  dewdrops  lie.     See  November. — 

A.  J.  F. 
Cold!  so   cold!   and   the   night   looks   down.     See   De- 
serted.— Anon. 
Cold  winter  ice  is  fled  and  gone.     See  Summer. — Anon. 
"Cold  winter  is  over."     See    All  Happy  in  Spring. — 

Richards. 
Colder  grow  my  hands  and  feet.     See  Bertha  in  the 

Lane. — E.  B.  Browning. 
Coldly,  sadly  descends.     See  Rugby  Chapel. — Arnold. 
Cold's  the  wind,  and  wet's  the  rain.     See  Shoemaker's 

Holiday,  The  (Troll   the  Bowl!).— Dekker. 


Collisions  four.     See      Epitaph     on      a      Locomotive. 

— {Punch.) 
Colonel  Arden,   who  has  come  to  town.     See  Pursuit 

of    Legal    Advice    under     Difficulties,    a    Family 

Scene,  The. — Hook. 
Colonel  Hof)per's  business  had  kei)t  him  in  Badger  City. 

See  Colonel's  Experiment,  The. — Lisenbee. 
Col.    James   Dinwiddle   was    known   as   the   courtliest 

gentleman. — See  Ole  Mistis. — Moore. 
Colonel  Quagg  and  his  anvil  were,  one  April  evening, 

in  fierce   dispute  about  a  red-hot  horseshoe.     See 

Conv-ersion  of  Colonel  Quagg. — Sala. 
Col.  Will   Middleby,   who  has  just  returned  from  the 

Indian    Territory.     See    Only    Five    Minutes    to 

Live. — (Arkansas  Traveler.) 
Colonos!  can  it  be  that  thou  hast  still.     See  Colonos. — 

Alford. 
Columbia  beside  the  ocean  stands.     See  Where  Colum- 
bia Stands. — Hall. 
Columbia,  Columbia,  to  glory  arise.     See  Columbia. — 

Dwight. 
Columbia!  first    and    fairest    gem.     See    Columbia. — 

Gilmore. 
Columbia's  shores  are  wild  and  wide.     See  Columbia. — • 

Chapman. 
Columbus  came  to    thee    and    called    thee    new!     See 

America. — Straton. 
Columbus,  on  his  rolling  bark,   surveyed  the  distant 

land.     See  Columbian  Legend,  A. — Mason. 
Columbus  stood  upon  the  deck.     See  How  Columbus 

Found  America. — Dodge. 
"Combien  m'aimez-vous?"     See  Tit  for  Tat. — Anon. 
"Come   a   l\ttle   nearer,    doctor — thank   you! — let   me 

take  the  cup."     See  Old  Sergeant,  The. — Willson. 
Come  about  the  meadow.     See  What  May  Happen  to 

a  Thimble.— "B." 
Come,  all  who  love  a  merry  jest,  and  listen  while  I  tell. 

See  Squire's  Bargain,  The. — Traquair. 
Come,  all  ye  Christian  people,  and  listen  to  my  tail. 

See  Lamentable  Ballad  of  the  Foundling  of  Shore- 
ditch,  The. — Thackeray. 
Come,  all  ye  jolly  sailors  bold.     See  Arethusa,  The. — 

Hoare. 
Come,  all    ye   jolly   shepherds.     See   When    the    Kye 

Come  Hame. — Hogg. 
Come  all    ye   who    list    to   hear   our   noble    England's 

praise.     See  Spanish  Armada,  The. — Macaulay. 
Come  all  ye  Yankee  sailors,  with  swords  and  pikes  ad- 
vance.   See  "Constellation"  and  the  "Insurgente," 

The. — Anon. 
Come,  all   you   sailors   of   the   southern   waters.     See 

Phantoms  All. — Spofford. 
Come  along,  dad.     See  Restless  Youth,  The. — Anon. 
"Come  and    fight,"   said   the   pale   young   gentleman. 

See  Pip's  Fight. -^Dickens. 
Come  and  kiss  me,  mistress  beauty.     See  Charles  II. — 

Sladen. 
Come  and  let  me  make  thee  glad.     See  Builder,  The. 

— Sherman. 
Come  and    see   my   baby   dear.     See   Doctor's   Visit. 

— Anon. 
"Come  and  sit  beside  me,  Elsie — put  your  little  wheel 

away."     See  Elsie's  Child. — Dorr. 
Come,  Anthea,  let  us  two.     See  Wake,  The. — Herrick. 
Come,  arouse  thee  up,   my    gallant    horse,   and    bear 

thy  rider  on.     See  Song  of  the  Cossack   to   His 

Horse. — Beranger. 
Come  as  artist,  come  as  guest.     See  Welcome  to  Boz, 

A. — Venable. 
Come  as   the   winds   come,   when   forests   are   rended. 

See   Pibroch  of  Donald   Dhu  (Summons,  The). — 

Scott. 
Come,  away,  away!    See  Julius  Cspsar.— Shakespeare. 
Come  away!  bring  on   the  bride.     See   Little   French 

Ijawyer,     The     (Bridal     Song). — Beaumont     and 

Fletcher. 
Come  away,  come  away,  death.     See  Twelfth   Night ; 

or.  What  you  Will  (Dirge). — Shakespeare. 
Come  away!  come,  sweet  love!     See  same. — Dowland. 
Come  back  and  bring  my  life  again.     See  Come  Back. 

— Herbert. 
Come  back,   come  back,   behold  with  straining  mast. 

See  Songs  in  Absence  (Come  Back). — Clough. 
Come  back,    come    back    together.     See    Little    Red 

Riding  Hood. — Landon. 
Come  back  to  us,  de.ir   little  Lady  Disdain.     See  To 

Millicent  Abroad. — Sanborn. 
Come  back  to  your  mother,   ye  children,   for  shame. 

See  City  Men  in  the  Country. — Holmes. 
Come,  bring  with  a  noise.     See  Ceremonies  for  Christ- 
mas.— Herrick. 
Come,  brother,    turn    with   me   from    pining   thought. 

See  Soul,  The. — Dana. 


633 


Come 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Come,  brothers!  rally  for  the  right!  See  Bonnie  Blue 
Flag,  The. — Ketchum. 

Come,  buy  my  dolls,  my  pretty  dolls.  See  Buy  my 
Dolls. — Anon. 

Come  cats  and  kittens  everywhere.  See  Elegy  on  De 
Marsay. — StephS. 

Come,  cheerful  day,  part  of  my  life  to  me.  See  Sic 
Transit. — Campion. 

Come,  cheerily,  men,  pile  on  the  rails.  See  Stone- 
wall .Jackson's  Way. — Palmer. 

Come,  child,  and  see  our  pet  raccoon.  See  Raccoon,  The. 
— ^Anon. 

Come,  children,  and  listen;  I'll  tell  you  in  rhyme.  See 
Which  Side  are  You  On?— (Our  Youth.) 

Come,  children,  dear,  and  listen  to  me.  See  Fox  and 
Geese.— Ford. 

Come,  come  away!  the  spring.  See  Merry  Beggars, 
The. — Brome. 

Come,  come,  Mister  Peacock,  you  must  not  be  proud. 
See  Peacock,  The. — Anon. 

"Come,  come,"  said  Tom's  father,  "at  your  time  of 
life."     See  On  Taking  a  Wife. — Moore. 

Come,  come,  you  must  have  another  cup,  with  just  a 
flavor  o'  gin.     See  Mrs.  Jones'  Lodger. — CoUer. 

Come,  Corporal  Joe!  See  At  the  Camp-fire.  — - 
Meader. 

Come  cuddle  close  in  daddy's  coat.  See  Fairy  Folk, 
The.— Bird. 

Come,  cuddle  your. head  on  my  shoulder,  dear.  See 
Beautiful  Land  of  Nod,  The.— Wilcox. 

Come  dance,  elfins,  dance;  for  my  harp  is  in  tune. 
See  same. — Anon. 

Come,  dear  children,  let  us  away.  See  Fq^saken  Mer- 
man, The.     Arnold. 

Come,  dear  old  comrade,  you  and  I.  See  Bill  and  Joe. 
— Holmes. 

Come  dine  with  me,  come  dine  with  me.  See  Mutton 
Chops. — (Punch.) 

Come,  Dolly  Toodlekins,  I'm  going  to  take  your  picture. 
See  Taking  Dolly's  Picture. — Goodfellow. 

Come!  don't  refuse  sweet  Nicotina's  aid.  See  Motto 
for  a  Tobacco  .Jar. — Anon. 

Come  down  from  the  heights,  my  bird.  See  Warble 
Thy  Lays  to  Me.— Yule. 

Come  down,  O  maid,  from  yonder  mountain  height. 
See  Princess,  The  (Come  Down,  O  Maid). — Tenny- 
son. 

Come  down  to  our  house,  I  have  something  to  show 
you.     See  My  Baby  Brother. — Howard. 

Come  down,  ye  graybeard  mariners.  See  Cry  from 
the  Shore,  A. — Cortissoz. 

Come,  draw  your  arm-chair  closer,  wife,  there's  some- 
thin'  I've  got  to  say.  See  Day  before  Thanks- 
giving, The. — Pixley. 

Come  drink  to  the  toast  that  I  give  ye.  See  Toast,  The. 
— Marsh. 

Come,  Eddie,  let's  play  go  to  church.  See  Playing 
Church . — Anon . 

Come  erlong,  you  blessed  baby.  See  Mammy  Gets 
the  Boy  to  Sleep. — Jones. 

Come,  fair  maiden,  to  my  snow-sledge.  See  Kalevala, 
The  (Wooing  of  the  Maid  of  Beauty). — Crawford. 

Come,  Father  of  the  Hamlet!  grasp  again.  See  Ex- 
cursion to  the  Mountains,  An. — Elliott. 

Come!  fill  a  fresh  bumper — for  why  should  we  go.  See 
Ode  for  a  Social  Meeting. — Holmes. 

Come  fleetly,  come  fleetly,  my  hookabadar.  See  Cos- 
simbazar. — Leigh. 

Come,  follow,  follow  me.  See  Fairy  Queen,  The. — 
Anon. 

Come  for  arbutus,  my  dear,  my  dear.  See  Come  for 
Arbutus. — Oberholtzer. 

Come!  for  thy  day,  thy  wasted  day,  is  closing.  See 
same. — Anon. 

Come  forth,  all  ye  blossoms !  See  West  Wind. — 
Sylva. 

"Come  forth!"  my  catbird  calls  to  me.  See  Nightin- 
gale in  the  Study,  The. — Lowell. 

Come  from  my  First — ay  come!  the  battle  dawn  is  nigh. 
See  Charade  on  the  Name  of  Campbell,  the  Poet. — 
Praed. 

Come  from  the  woods  with  the  citron  flowers.  See 
Bride  of  the  Greek  Isle,  The. — Hemans. 

Come,  gather  round  me,  children.  See  Story  of  a  Black- 
bird.— Cary. 

Come,  gather  round,  my  boys,  to-night.  See  Siege  of 
the  Alamo. — Saxon. 

Come,  gentle  sleep!  attend  thy  votary's  prayer.  See 
Sleep. — Wolcott. 

Come,  gentle  spring!  ethereal  mildness,  come.  See 
Seasons,  The  (Spring). — Thomson. 

Come,  gentle  spring!  ethereal  mildness,  come!  See 
Spring.     A  New  Version. — Hood. 


Come  gie's  a  sang,  Montgomery  cried.  See  TuUoch- 
gorum. — Skinner. 

Come  girls,  let's  have  a  doll's  party.  See  Bound  Girl, 
The. — Anon. 

Come,  golden  evening,  in  the  west.  See  Evening  in 
the  Alps. — Montgomery. 

Come,  good-night,  my  dolly  dear.  See  Dolly's  Bed- 
time.— Anon. 

Come,  happy  morn,  serene  and  fair.  See  Christmas 
Morn. — Bishop. 

Come,  Harvey,  let  us  sit  awhile  and  talk  about  the 
times.     See  Our  Whippings. — Field. 

Come  hea  an'  T>ut  dis  apron  on.  See  Afore  yo'  Daddy 
Comes. — Mitchell. 

Come,  hear  how  brave  old  Columbus.  See  Ideal  India, 
The. — Ryman. 

Come,  hearken,  lassies,  to  my  voice.  See  Good  Advice. 
—Rook. 

Come  here,  come  here,  and  dwell.  See  Song  of  Wood- 
nymphs. — Procter. 

Come  here!  come  here!  cousin  Mary  and  see.  See 
Peach  Blossoms. — Gould. 

Come  here,  good  people,  great  and  small,  that  wander 
far  abroad.     See  My  Bath. — Blackie. 

Come  here,  little  Robin,  and  don't  be  afraid.  See 
Come  here.  Little  Robin. — Anon. 

"Come  here,  my  bo.v,  hould  up  your  head."  See  Irish 
Schoolmaster,  The. — Sidney. 

Come  here,  my  sleepy  darling,  and  climb  upon  my  knee. 
See  On  the  Road  to  Dream  town. — Rexford. 

Come  here,  pet,  and  sit  down  by  the  fire!  See  Petti- 
coat Government. — Chapman. 

Come  here.  Sis,  and  sit  down  beside  me.  See  This 
Means  You,  Girls. — {Peck's  Sun.) 

"Come  here,  thou  worthy  of  a  world  of  praise."  See 
Odyssey,  The  (Song  the  Sirens  Sung,  The). — 
Homer. 

Come  here,  you  lazy,  good  for  nothing  boy.  See 
Every-day  occurrence.  An. — Smith. 

Come  here,  you  nignoramus!  See  Dolly's  Lesson. 
— {Youth's  Companion.) 

Come  hither,  all  sweet  maidens  soberly.  See  On  a 
Picture  of  Leander. — Keats. 

Come  hither  and  behold  this  lady's  face.  See  Laura 
Sleeping. — Moulton. 

Come  hither  and  listen;  a  tale  I'll  relate.  See  Apple 
Seed,  The.— Webb. 

Come  hither,  boy,  we'll  hunt  to-day.  See  Bookworm, 
The. — Beza. 

Come  hither,  come  hither,  and  view  the  face.  See 
Spring  Morning. — Moir. 

Come  hither,  Evan  Cameron!  See  Execution  of  Mont- 
rose, The. — Aytoun. 

Come  hither,  Hubert !  O  my  gentle  Hubert.  See 
King  John  (Dialogue  between  King  John  and 
Hubert). — Shakespeare. 

Come  hither,  lads,  and  hearken.  See  Day  is  Coming, 
The. — Morris. 

Come  hither,  lyttel  childe,  and  lie  upon  my  breast  to- 
night.    See  Medieval  Eventide  Song. — Field. 

Come  hither,  Marco,  I  would  ask.  See  Four  Queens, 
The. — Kavanaugh. 

Come  hither,  my  heart's  darling.  See  Husband's  Peti- 
tion, The. — Aytoun. 

Come  hither,  my  Wither.  See  Sultan  of  My  Books, 
The. — Gosse. 

Come  hither,  neighbor  Seacoal.  See  Much  Ado  about 
Nothing. — Shakespeare. 

Come  hither,  shepherd's  swain!  See  Fancy  and  De- 
sire.—Oxford. 

Come  hither,  Sleep,  from  Ohio's  isle !  See  Mother's  Song, 
The.— M'Kenzie. 

Come  hither  toward  me,  my  handmaidens.  See  Our 
Country's  Wealth. — Rook. 

"Come  hither,  you  madcap  darling!"  I  said  to  my  four- 
year-old.     See  Lesson  of  Obedience,  The.- — Banks. 

Come,  hoist  the  sail,  the  fast  let  go!  See  Pleasure- 
boat,  The. — Dana. 

Come,  Holy  Ghost,  our  souls  inspire.  See  Veni  Creator 
Spiritus. — {Tr.  by)  Dryden. 

Come,  Holy  Ghost !  thou  fire  divine !  See  Veni  Sancte 
Spiritus. — Robert  II. 

Come,  Holy  Spirit,  Heavenly  Dove.     See  same. — Watts. 

Come  home!  Why  wilt  thou  linger  in  the  scenes  of  earth. 
See  Spirit's  Call,  The. — -Anon. 

Come,  Howard,  from  the  gloom  of  the  prison  and  the 
taint  of  the  lazar-house.     See  sam.e. — Chapin. 

Come,  hurry  there!  mind,  waste  no  time!  See  Mag- 
dalen.— Wakeman. 

Come!  hurry  up,  Jim ;  don't  you  see  the  moon  is  coming 
out?     See  Saved. — Joy. 

"Come  in,  come  in,  sir;  it's  blowin'  a  perfect  gale  to- 
night."    See  Hard  Times. — Anon. 


634 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Come 


Come  in,  Deacon  Tompkins;  your  duty  has  led  you  to 

call   here,   you   say.     See   Deacon's   Call,   The. — 

Kimball. 
Come  in.    Hallo,    Tom!   you're   just   the   fellow.     See 

Choosing  a  Declamation. — Anoil. 
Come  in,  honey;  how  yo'  do?     See  Auntie's   Educa- 
tion.— McNabb. 
Come  in,  O  Judy,  is  it  you?     See  Mrs.  Wright's  Con- 
versation with  her  Irish  Acquaintance. — Anon. 
Come  in  the  evening,  or  come  in  the  morning.     See 

Welcome,  The. — Davis. 
Come!  in  this  cool  retreat.     See  New  Zealand  Regret, 

A. — Montgomery. 
Come  into    great-grandmother's     garden,     my     dears. 

See  Great-grandmother's  Garden. — .Jacques. 
Come    into    the    garden,    Maud.      See  Maud    ("Come 

into,"  etc.). — Tennyson. 
Come,  John,  sit  down  by  me,  it  frets  my  soul.     See 

Failure. — Quiet. 
"Come,  Johnnie  Miller,  tak  these  doggies."     See  Child 

is  Father  to  the  Man,  The. — Bigg. 
"Come  kiss  me  sweet  sun,"  the  violet  said.     See  Sun 

and  the  Violet,  The.— Petit. 
Come,  lassies  and  lads,  take  leave  of  your  dads.     See 

May-pole,  The. — Anon. 
Come  learn  with  me  the  fatal  song.     See  Woodnotes 

(Mighty  Heart,  The). — Emerson. 
Come,  leave  the  loathed  stage.     See  Ode  to  Himself. — 

Jonson. 
Come,  let  us  now  resolve  at  least.     See  Reconcilement, 

The.— Sheffield. 
Come,  let  us  plant  the  apple-tree.     See  Planting  of  the 

Apple-tree,  The. — Bryant. 
Come,  let  us  ponder;  it  is  fit.     See  "Poveri!  Poveris!" 

— Miller. 
Come,  let  us  reason;  heed  what  we  say.     See  Paving 

the  Streets. — McVean. 
Come,  let   us   rejoice.     See   Siege   of   Savannah,  The. 

— {Rivinqton' s  Gazette.) 
Come,  let  us  to  the  castle.     See  Othello,  the  Moor  of 

Venice. — Shakespeare. 
Come,  let's  begin  to  revel  it  out.     See  Revels. — Anon. 
Come,  list  and  hark.     See  Rape  of  Lucrece,  The  (Song 

of  the  Bell). — Heywood. 
Come,  listen  all  unto  my  song.     See  How  Cyrus  Laid 

the  Cable. — Saxe. 
Come,  listen  all,  while  I  relate.     See  Farmer's  Well, 

The. — Anon. 
Come,  listen  all  who  wish  to  learn.     See  Iddes  Napo- 

Idoniennes. — -Aytoun. 
Come,  listen,  little  boys  and  girls,  while  I  a  tale  relate. 

See  Once. — Lampton. 
Come,  listen,   my   men,  while   I  tell  you  again.     See 

Hunting  of  the  Snark,  The. — Carroll. 
Come  listen,  O  Love,  to  the  voice  of  the  dove.     See 

Voice  of  the  Dove,  The. — Miller. 
Come  listen  to  another  song.     See  Old  Scottish  Cava- 
lier, The. — Aytoun. 
Come  listen  to  me,  you  gallants  so  free.     See  Robin 

Hood  and  AUen-a-Dale. — Anon. 
Come,   listen  to  my  song,  it  is  no  silly  fable.     (TFr.) 

See  How  Cyrus  Laid  the  Cable. — Saxe. 
Come,  listen  to  my  story,  while.     See  Nets  and  Cages. 

— Moore. 
Come  listen  to  the  Story  of  brave  Lathrop  and  his  Men. 

See  Lamentable  Ballad  of  the  Bloody  Brook,  The. 

—Hale. 
Come  listen,  you  newcomers.     See  Inkerman. — Lush- 

ington. 
Come,  little  babe,  come  silly  soul.     See  Sweet  Lullaby, 

A.— Breton.  (?) 
Come,  little  children,  come  with  me.     See  Easy  Les- 
sons.— Cary. 
Come,  little  infant,  love  me  now.     See  Young  Love. — 

Marvell. 
"Come,   little  leaves,"  said  the  wind  one  day.     See 

Wind  and  the  Leaves,  The. — Cooper. 
Come,  little  people,  and  listen  here.     See  Santa  and 

His  Reindeer. — Anon. 
Come,  live  with  me,  and  be  my  love.     See  Bait,  The. 

— Donne. 
Come  live  with  me  and  be  my  love.     See  Passionate 

Shepherd  to  His  I>ove,  The. — Marlowe. 
Come,  look  out  here,  Louise  and  Kate.     See  Cousin 

Bell's  Visit. — Anon. 
Come,  lovely  and  soothing  Death.     See  Death  Carol. 

- — Whitman. 
Come,  lovely  tube,  by  friendship  blest.     See  To  a  Pipe 

of  Tobacco. — {Gentleman's  Magazine.) 
Come,  mamma,  tie  on  my  hood,  it  is  time  to  go  to 

school.     See  How  Daisy  Went  to  School. — Anon. 
Come,  Micky  and  Molly  and  dainty  Dolly.     See  Flitch 

of  Dunmow,  The. — Southesk. 


Come,   mother,   set   the   kettle   on.     See   How   Jamie 

Came  Home. — Carleton. 
Come,  my  Celia,  let  us  prove.     See  Venetian  Song. — 

Jonson. 
Come,  my  friend,  and  in  the  silence  and  the  shadow 

wrapt  apart.     See  Christine. — Read. 
Come,  my  lad,  and  sit  beside  me ;  we  have  often  talked 

before.     See  Story  of  a  Stowaway,  The. — Scott. 
Come,  my  little  one,  with  me.     See  Shut-eye  Train, 

The.— Field. 
Come,    my    little    Robert,    near.     See    Cleanliness. — 

Lamb. 
Come,   my  Mignonne,   let   us   go.     See  Rose,   The. — 

Ronsard. 
Come,  my  way,  my  truth,  my  life.     See  Call,  The. — 

Herbert. 
Come,  my  wife,  put  down  the  Bible.     See  Lost  Babies, 

The. — Anon. 
Come  nearer,  my  spotted  leopard,  and  cool  with  your 

tongue    my    hand.     See    Cleopatra's     Protest. — 

Keyes. 
Come  not  again!     I  dwell  with  you.     See  Flown  Soul, 

The. — Lathrop. 
Come  not  in  terrors  clad,  to  claim.     See  To  Death. — 

Southey. 
Come  not,  when  I  am  dead.     See  same. — Tennyson. 
Come,  now  a   roundel,  and    a   fairy    song.     See    Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream  (Fairies'  Lullaby,  The). — 

Shakespeare. 
Come,  now,  my  incredulous  friends.     See  Triumph  of 

Faith. — Buckminster. 
Come,    O    thou    Traveler    unknown.     See    Wrestling 

Jacob. — Wesley. 
Come  o'er  the  sea.     See  sam,e. — Moore. 
Come,  oh  come!  in  pious  lays.     See  Psalm  cxlviii. — 

Wither. 
Come  on,  Cobe,  there's  light  a  plenty.     See  Fishin'. — 

Arkwright. 
Come  on,  come  on,  and  where  you  go.     See  Pleasure 

Reconciled  to  Virtue  (\st  song).- — Jonson. 
Come  on.  come  on;  yon  are  pictures  out  of  doors.     See 

Oihello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. — Shakespeare. 
Come  on,  Frank,  don't  sit  poring  over  that  old  paper. 

See  "Making  an  Orator." — Denton. 
Come  on,  Ned,  let's  play  in  the  parlor.     See  Keeping 

House. — Anon. 
Come   on,  sir,  here's  the  place — stand   still.     See  King 

Lear  (Dover  Cliffs). — Shakespeare. 
Come,  on  thy  swaying  feet.     See  Spirit  of  the  Fall, 

The. — Dandridge. 
Come   one,   come   all,    this   rock   shall   fly.     See   Fitz- 

James's  Defiance. — Scott. 
"Come  out  and  hear  the  waters  shoot,  the  owlet  hoot, 

the  owlet  hoot."     See  Apprenticed. — Ingelow. 
Come  out  here,  George  Burks.     Put  that  glass  down. 

See  Sim's  Little  Girl. — Hartwell. 
Come  out  in  the  garden  and  walk  with  me.     See  Last 

Talk,  The.— Anon. 
Come  out,  love — the  night  is  enchanting!     See  Come 

Out,  Love.— Willis. 
Come  over,  come  over  the  river  to  me.     See  Charlie 

Machree. — Hoppin. 
Come,  pensive  Nun,  devout  and   pure.     See  II   Pen- 

seroso. — Milton. 
Come,  Pepita,  Phyllis,  Griselda,  Jeannette.     See  May 

Day. — Burdette. 
Come.  Phyllis,  the  reign  of  the  winter  is  past.     See 

March. — Burdette. 
Come  pitie  us,  all  ye  who  see.     See  Dirge  for  Dorcas. — 

Herrick. 
Come  plant  the  Oak,  the  grand  old  Oak.     See  Plant  the 

Oak. — McMullen. 
Come,  play  in  my  garden!     See  Manitou's  Garden. — 

Larcom. 
Come!  pledge  again  thy  heart  and  hand.     See  Song 

for  July  12th,  1843.— Frazer. 
Come,  poet,  come!     See  same. — Clough. 
Come,  raise  we  a  Temple  of  purpose  divine.     See  Help- 
less Gray  Head,  'The. — Jerrold. 
Come,  rest  in  this  bosom,  my  own  stricken  deer.     See 

Come,  Rest  in  this  Bosom. — Moore. 
Come  right  in  an'  set  down.     I  was  jest  wishin'  I  had 

somebody  to  talk  to.     See  Sally  Ann's  Experi- 
ence.— Hall. 
"Come  right  in.     How  are  you,  Fred?"     See  Idyl  of 

the  Period,  An. — Baker. 
Come  right  in,  Susv  dear,  you  need  not  be  afraid  of 

old    Hector.     See    Genteel    and    Polite.- — McCon- 

aughy. 
Come,  Robert  and  Henry,  come,  Lily  and  May!     See 

Nutting. — Anon. 
"Come,  Rosy,  come!"     I  heard  the  voice  and  looked. 

See  Crazy  Nell.— Whitton. 


635 


Come 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOXS 


Come,  rosy  Day!  See  Love  Song  of  Henri  Quatre,  A. 
— Arnold. 

Come,  said  Jesus'  sacred  voice.  See  Come  unto  Me. — 
Barbauld. 

Come,  see  the  Dolphins'  anchor  forged — 'tis  at  a  white 
heat  now.  See  ]^rging  of  the  Anchor,  The. — 
Ferguson. 

Come,  seeling  night.  See  Macbeth  (Night). — Shake- 
speare. 

Come,  send  round  the  wine,  and  leave  iioints  of  belief. 
See  Come,  Send  Hound  the  Wine. — Moore. 

Come,  seniors,  come,  and  fill  your  pipes.  See  Cannon 
Song. — Peck. 

Come,  shephertls,  we'll  follow  the  hearse.  See  Cory- 
don,  a  Pastoral. — Cunningham. 

Come,  sign  the  pledge!  ()  thou  whose  hand.  See 
Come,  Sign  the  Pledge. — Frazer. 

Come,  Silence,  thou  sweet  reasoner.  See  Silence. — 
Morse. 

Come  sing,  come  sing,  of  the  great  Sea-king.  See  Sea- 
king,  The. — Procter. 

Come,  Sir  Dandelion,  so  old  and  gray.  See  Sir  Dande- 
lion.— Goodfellow. 

Come  sit  close  by  my  side,  my  darling.  See  Diamond 
Wedding,  The. — Anon. 

Come,  sit  down  by  me,  ("harlie.  See  Who  Works  the 
Hardest? — Anon. 

Come,  Sleep,  and  with  thy  sweet  deceiving.  See 
Invocation  to  Sleep. — Fletcher. 

Come,  Sleep!  but  mind  ye!  if  you  come.  See  To 
Sleep. — Landor. 

Come,  sleep,  O  sleep!  the  certain  knot  of  peace.  See 
Astronhel  and  Stella,  Sonnet  XXXIX. — Sidney. 

Come,  soldiers,  arouse  ye!  See  Dead  Comrade,  The. — 
Gilder. 

Come,  sons  of  summer,  by  whose  toil.  See  Hock-cart 
or  Harvest  Home,  The. — Herrick. 

Come,  spur  away.  See  Ode  to  Master  Anthony  Staf- 
ford, An. — Randolph. 

Come,  stack  arms,  men;  pile  on  the  rails.  See  Stone- 
wall Jackson's  Way. — Palmer. 

Come,  stand  we  here  within  this  cactus-brake.  See 
Sicilian  Night,  A. — Lefroy. 

Come,  sweet  lass.     See  Come,  Sweet  Lass. — D'Urfey. 

"Come,  take  up  your  hats,  and  away  let  us  haste." 
See  Butterfly's  Ball,  The.— Roscoe. 

Come,  tell  me  dearest  mother,  what  makes  my  father 
stay?  See  Sorrowful  Jjamentation  of  Callaghan, 
Greally,  and  Mullen. — Anon. 

Come,  tell  us  the  name  of  the  rebelly  crew.  See 
Patriot  Mother,  The. — Anon. 

Come,  then,  a  song;  a  winding  gentle  song.  See  Tor- 
rismond  (In  a  Garden  by  Moonlight). — Beddoes. 

Come,  then,  as  ever,  like  the  wind  at  morning!  See 
Invocation  to  Youth. ^-Binyon. 

Come  then,  my  friend!  my  genius!  come  along.  See 
Essay  on  Man,  An  (Poet's  Friend,  The). — Pope. 

Come,  then,  tell  me,  sage  divine.  See  On  a  Sermon 
against  Glory. — Akenside. 

Come,  then,  tobacco,  new-found  friend.  See  Ode  to 
Tobacco. — Webster. 

Come,  Thou  Fount  of  every  blessing.  See  same. — 
Robinson. 

Come,  thou  goddess  far  and  Yree.  See  L'AUegro. — 
Milton. 

Come,  thou  monarch  of  the  vine.  See  Antony  and 
Cleopatra  ("Come,  thou,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 

Come  thou,  my  oftimes  sadly  labored  muse.  See 
Arbor  Day  Poem. — Pride. 

Come  thou,  who  art  the  wine  and  wit.  See  His  Wind- 
ing Sheet.— Herrick. 

Come  to  Lico(")!  the  sun  is  riding.  See  Song,  of  the 
Tonga-Islanders. — Anon.  ' 

Come  to  me,  angel  of  the  weary  hearted!  See  To 
Sleep. — Osgood. 

Come  to  me,  dearest  [or  darling],  I'm  lonely  without 
thee.     See  Exile  to  His  Wife,  The. — Brennan. 

Come  to  me  in  my  dreams  and  then.  See  Longing. — 
Arnold. 

Come  to  me  in  the  silence  of  the  night.  See  Echo.— 
Rossetti. 

Come  to  me,  O  my  meerschaum.  See  Meerschaum. — 
Wrongfellow. 

Come  to  me,  O  my  mother!  come  to  me.  See  Home- 
sick.— Gray. 

Come  to  my  home  in  the  wildwood.  See  My  Home 
in  the  Wildwood. — Anon. 

Come  to  the  bridal  chamber.  Death.  See  Patriot's 
Death.  The.— Halleck. 

Come  to  the  crowning  of  the  King.  See  'Sixty-four 
and  'Sixty-five. — Anon. 

Come  to  the  forest,  the  bright  sun  is  shining.  See 
Come  to  the  Forest. — Anon. 


Come   to   the   home   of   the   friendly   mosquito.     See 

Delights  of  Camp-life. — Anon. 
Come  to  the  river's  reedy  shore.     See  River  Song. — 

Sanborn. 
Come  to  the  scenes  of  peace.     See  same. — Bowles. 
Come  to  the  terrace,  May — the  sun  is  low.     See  Sonnet 

in  Dialogue,  A. — Dobson. 
Come  unto  these  yellow    sands.     See    Tempest,  The 

(Ariel's  Songs). — Shakespeare. 
Come  up  from  the  fields,  father;  here's  a  letter  from 

our  Pete.     See  Come  up  from  the  Fields,   Father. 

— Whitman. 
Come   up   here,    O   dusty   feet!     See   Fairy   Bread. — 

Stevenson. 
"Come,   wake  up!"  said  the  Snowdrop.     See  Snow- 
drop's Call,  The. — Richards. 
Come  walk  with  me  along  this  willowed  lane.     See 

May. — Cornwell. 
Come!  walk  with  the  world  and  go  down  to  the  desti- 
tute homes  of  the  poor.     See  Charity. — Straton. 
Come,   Walter  Savage  Landor,   come  this  way.     See 

Landor. — Albee. 
Come,  we  shepherds,  who  have  seen.     See  Hymn  of 

the  Nativity,  A. — Crashaw. 
Come,  we  shepherds,  whose  blest  sight.     See  At  Befh- 

lehem. — Crashaw. 
Come,  when  no  graver  cares  employ.     See  To  the  Rev. 

F.  D.  Maurice. — Tennyson. 
Come    when    the    leaf    comes,    angle    with    me.     See 

Angler's  Invitation,  The. — Stoddart. 
Come  when  the  ray  of  early  morn   is   glowing.     See 

"Come  unto  Me." — Benson. 
Come  while  the  afternoon  of  May.     See  Expectation. — 

Wratislaw. 
Come!  Why,  halloa,  that  you.  Jack?     See  Legend  of 

St.  Valentine,  A. — Baker. 
"Come,    wife,"    says    good    old    Farmer    Gray.     See 

Under  the  Wagon. — Anon. 
Come,  will  you  join  our  Band  of  Hope?     See  Dialogue 

for  Bands  of  Hope. — Crocker. 
Come,    Winnie,    come;   the   clock   strikes   eight.     See 

Frog  Story,  A. — Anon. 
Come  with  a  smile,  when  come  thou  must.     See  Angel 

Death,  The.— Winter. 
Come  with  me,  lady  fair.     See  Barcarole. — E.  G.  B. 
Come   with   me,    my    friends,    a    moment    more.     See 

Against  the  Fugitive  Slave  Law. — Parker. 
Come,  worthy  Greek!  Ulysses,  come.     See  Ulysses  and 

the  Siren. — Daniel. 
Come,    ye    disconsolate,    where're    ye    languish.     See 

Come,  Ye  Disconsolate. — Moore. 
Come,  ye  lofty,  come,  ye  lowly.     See  Come,  Ye  Lofty. 

— Gurney. 
Come,  ye  thankful  people,  come.     See  Thanksgiving 

Hymn. — Alford. 
Come    ye    unto    the    summer    woods.     See    Summer 

Woods. — Howitt. 
Come,  ye  sinners,  poor  and  wretched.     See  Come,  and 

Welcome,  to  Jesus  Christ. — Hart. 
Come,  young  folks  all,  and  learn  my  rhyme.     See  List 

of  Our  Presidents,  A. — (Youth's  Companion.) 
Comes  a  cry  from  Cuban  water.     See  Cuba  Libre. — 

Miller. 
Comes  little  Maud,  and  stands  by  my  knee.     See  My 

Lost  Baby. — Anon. 
Comes  something  down  with  eventide.     See  Eventide 

— Burbidge. 
Comes  the  lure  of  green  things  growing.     See  Afoot. — 

Roberts. 
Cometh  sunshine  after  rain.     See  Joy  after  Sorrow. — 

Gerhardt. 
Comfort  one  another.     See  sam.e. — Sangster. 
Comfort  thee,  O  thou  mourner,  yet  awhile!     See  To 

the  Sister  of  "Elia." — Landor. 
Comfortably  ensconsed  in  a  settee  at  the  railroad  sta- 
tion.    See  It  Was  All  a  Mistake. — Anon. 
Coming,  clean  from  the  Maryland-end.     See  Told  by 

"The  Noted  Traveler."— Riley. 
Coming,    coming    always!     See    Rags    and    Robes.— 

Whitney. 
Coming  down  Twelfth  Street,  yesterday,  we  met  Jacob 

Schneider.     See  Dot  Surprise  Party. — Anon. 
Coming  home  from  my  office.     See  Burial  of  the  Cat, 

The. — Hutchinson. 
Coming  to  Jesus  is  the  desire  of  the  heart  after  Him. 

See  same. — Hall. 
Commencement   Day!  All  hail  the  one  great   college 

holiday!     See  Commencement  Day. — Porter. 
Commend  me  to  the  friend  that  comes.     See  Friend  of 

My  Heart,  The. — Anon. 
Commerce  and  industry  are  the  best  mines  of  a  nation. 

See   Original   Maxims   of   George   Washington. — 

Washington. 


636 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Crabbed 


Common    sense    was    eminently    a    characteristic    of 

Washington.     See  Character  of  Washington,  The. 

— Everett. 
Companion   of   my    lonely    hours.     See    Old    Pipe   of 

Mine. — Gormley. 
Compel,  me,   Lord,  to  bear  Thy  Cross!     See  Simon's 

Burden. — Terry. 
Complexion   like   the  winter  snow.     See   Hymns   An- 
cient and  Modern. — Raymond. 
Comrade,  will  you  give  me  a  lift?     See  Joseph  II.  and 

the  Grenadier. — Anon. 
Comrades,  fill  the  banquet  cup.     See  Banquet  Song,  A. 

— Grover. 
Comrades!  join  the  flag  of  glory.     See  same. — Anon. 
Comrades  known  in  marches  many.     See  Song  of  the 

Soldiers. — Halpine. 
Comrades,  leave  me  here  a  little,  while  as  yet  'tis  early 

morn.     See  Locksley  Hall. — Tennyson. 
Comrades  of  the  Grand  Army  of  the  Republic.     See 

To  the  Grand  Army  of  the  Republic. — Reed. 
Comrades,  our  ranks  are  getting  thin,  our  numbers  less 

and   less.     See   Our   Ranks   are   Getting   Thin. — 

Eissenbeis. 
Condemn'd    to    Hope's    delusive    mine.     See   On    the 

Death  of  Mr.  Robert  Levett,  a  Practiser  in  Physic. 

— .Johnson. 
Conductor    Bradley    (always    may    his    name).     See 

Conductor  Bradley. — Whittier. 
Confederates,    listen    to  the    words   which  God.      See 

William  Tell  (Address  to  the  Swiss). — Schiller, 
('ongreve!  the  justest  glory  of  our  age!     See  To  Mr. 

Congreve. — Toilet. 
Conn's     master,     the     young     Irish     nobleman.     See 

Shaugraun,  The  (O'Kelley   Cabin,   The). — Bouci- 

cault. 
("onscript    Fathers,    a   camp    is    pitched    against    the 

Roman     Republic.      See    First    Oration    against 

Catiline  (Against  Catiline). — Cicero, 
("onscript  Fathers:  I  do  not  rise  to  waste  the  night  in 

words.    See  Catiline  (Catiline's  Defiance). — Croly. 
Consider,  for  a  moment,  what  it  is  to  cast  a  vote.     See 

Ballot,  The.— Chapin. 
Consider  how  large  a  portion  speech  makes  up.     See 

Idle  Words. — Peabody. 
Consider  our  Constitution.     Dwell  long  upon  its  cost. 

See  Our  Constitution. — Bolton. 
Consider  the  lilies  of  the  field,  whose  bloom  is  brief. 

See  Consider. — Rossetti. 
Consider  the  scene  and   the  matchless  heroism.     See 

Trenton's  Cheer  to  the  Caliope,  The. — Anon. 
Consider  the  sea's  listless  chime.     See  Sea-limits,  The. 

— Rossetti. 
("onsolers  of  the  solitary  hours.     See  Consolers,  The. — 

S.  G.  W. 
Contemplate  all  this  work  of  time.     See  Contemplate 

all  this  work. — Tenny.son. 
(.'ontent !  the  good,  the  golden  mean.     See  Content. — 

Anon. 
Contented   I:  then  will   I   sing  his    laye.     See    Shep- 

heardes    Calendar,    The    (April:    Colin's     Lay   of 

Elisa). — Spenser.  > 

Contented  river!  in   thy   dreamy   realm.     See  To  the 

Housatonic  at  Stockbridge. — Johnson. 
Contrast,  O  men  of  Athens,  your  conduct  with  that  of 

your  ancestors.     See    Philippics    (Degeneracy    of 

Athens,  The). — Demosthenes. 
Contrive  me,  Vulcan,  such  a  cup.     See  Bowl,  The. — 

Wilmot. 
Conversation    calls    into    light.     See    Conversation. — 

Anon. 
"Coo!  Coo!  Coo!"   says   Arni^,    calling   the    doves   at 

Mendon.     See  Doves  at  Mendon,  The. — Dorr. 
Cooks  who'd  roa.st  a  sucking-pig.     See  Poetical  Cook- 
ery-book, The   (Roasted    Sucking-pig). — (Punch.) 
Cool,    and    palm-shaded    from    the    torrid    heat.     See 

Pipe-player,  The. — Gosse. 
Cooper,  whose  name  is  with  his  country's  woven.     See 

To  a  Portrait  of  Red  Jacket. — Halleck. 
Cope  sent  a  challenge  frae  Dunbar.     See  Johnnie  Cope. 

— Skirving. 
Cora,  come  here.     See  Generosity. — Anon. 
Corn  in  the  big  crib,  and  money  in  the  pocket.     See 

Toast,  A:   "Peace   and  Plenty." — Anon. 
Corns    are    two    kinds,    vegetable    and    animal.     See 

School-boy  on  Corns,  A. — Anon. 
Cornwallis  led  a  country  dance.     See  Dance,  The. — 

A>on. 
"Corporal  Green!"  the  orderly  cried.     See  Roll-call. — 

Shepherd. 
Corrected  and  revised  the  Ten  Commandments.     See 

Bill  of  Items,  A. — Anon. 
Corydon,    arise,   my   Corydon.     See   Phillida's    Love- 
call. — Ignoto. 


Cospatrick  has  sent  o'er  the  faem.     See  Cospatrick. — 

Anon. 
Could  anything  be  a  subject  of  more  just   alarm  to 

America.     See   Speech  on  American   Taxation. — 

Burke. 
Could  but  this  be  brought  into  your  ken.     See  To   a 

Writer  of  the  Day  (Technique). — Mitchell. 
Could  I  call  around  me  in  one  vast  assembly  the  tem- 
perate young  men.     See  Appeal  to  Young  Men. — 

Beecher. 
Could  I  command,  with  voice  or  pen.     See  Charity. — 

Montgomery. 
Could  I  have  borne  it?     I  often  think.     See  Could  I 

Have  Borne  It? — Dustin. 
"Could  I  have  only  a  few  pesos  to  pay  for  lessons." 

See  Offering  for  Cuba,  An. — Bell. 
Could  I  obtain  a  hearing  of  the  young  men  and  young 

women    who    thus    seek    the    city.     See    same. — 

Beecher. 
Could  I  pass  those  lounging  sentries.     See  Death-bed 

of  Bomba,  King  of  Naples. — (Punch.) 
Could  love  for  ever.     See  Stanzas:  "Could  love,"  etc. 

— Byron. 
Could  she  come  back  who  has  been  dead  so  long.     See 

Vingtaine  (Separation). — Bunner. 
Could  we  but  draw   back  the  curtains.     See  If  We 

Knew. — Anon. 
Could  we  but  know  the  land  that  ends  our  dark,  uncer- 
tain  travel.     See  Undiscovered   Country,   The. — 

Stedman. 
Could  ye  come  back  to  me,  Douglas,  Douglas.     See  Too 

I>ate. — Craik. 
Could  you  have  heard  the  kingfisher  scream  and  scold 

at  me.     See  Kingfisher,  The. — Thaxter. 
Could  you  have  seen  the  violets.     See  Daisy. — Warren. 
Couldst  thou.   Great   Fairy,  give  to  me.     See  Pines, 

The.— Spofford. 
Couldst  thou  look  as  dear  as  when.     See  One  Dear 

Smile. — Moofe. 
Count   each   affliction,   whether   light   or  grave.     See 

Sorrow. — De  Vere. 
Count  Geierflug,  the  brightest  minister  of  the  realm, 

had  breathed  his  last.     See  Humming  Top,  The. 

— Anon. 
Count    Ludwig    rode    through    the    forest    deep.     See 

Count  Ludwig  and  the  Wood-spirit. — Craik. 
Count  me  over  the  chosen  heroes  of  this  earth.     See 

Heroes. — Gough. 
Count  not  thy  life  by  calendars ;  for  years.     See  Long 

Life. — Kennedy. 
Count  the  flashes  in  the  surf.     See  Song  for  Music. — 

Gosse. 
Countess,  I  see  the  flying  year.     See  To  My  Mistress. — 

Locker- Lampson. 
Countless  ages  ago  a  Traveler,  much  worn  with  journey- 
ing.    See  Traveler  and  the  Temple  of  Knowledge, 

The. — Harraden. 
Countrymen  and  Brethren— I  would  gladly  have  de- 
clined an  honor  to  which  I  find  myself  unequal. 

See  American  Independence. — Adams. 
Courage  and  hope,   true  heart!     See   Message  of  the 

Snowdrop,  The. — Anon. 
Courage,  brave  heart,  nor  in  thy  purpose  falter.     See 

To  Those  Who  Fail.— Barlow. 
Courage,  brother!  do  not  stumble.     See  Trust  in  God. 

— Macleod. 
Courage,  considered  in  itself  or  without  reference  to 

its  causes.     See  Courage. — Channing. 
"Courage!"  he  said,  and  pointed  toward  the  land.    See 

Lotos-eaters,  The. — Tennyson. 
Courage  is  one  and  the  same  thing  everywhere.     See 

Heroic  Courage. — Brooks. 
Courage  is  .universally  recognized  as  the  manliest  of  all 

human  attributes.     See  Courage. — Porter. 
Courage,     man;  the    hurt     can     not    be    much.     See 

Romeo     and     Juliet. — Shakespeare. 
Courage!  Nothing    can    withstand.     See    Courage. — 

Procter. 
Courage — the  highest  gift  that  scorns  to  bend.     See 

Courage. — Farquhar. 
Courteous   Reader — I  have  heard  that  nothing  gives 

an  author  so  great  pleasure.     See  Way  to  Wealth, 

The.— Franklin. 
Courting  iz  a  luxury,  it  iz  sallad,  it  iz  ise  water,  it  iz  a 

beveridge.     See  Courting. — Shaw. 
"Cousin  Edward,  what  do  these  scientists  mean  "    See 

Astronomical. — (Daily  Graphic.) 
Cover  them  over  with  beautiful  flowers.     See  Cover 

Them  Over.— Carleton. 
Coward — of  heroic  size.     See  Grizzly. — Harte. 
Cowards  most  insolent  appear.     See  Wolf  and  the  Kid, 

The. — Anon. 
Crabbed  age  and  youth.     See  same. — Shakespeare. 


637 


Crack 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Crack!  Crick  1  Cra-ack!  Confound      them!     See     Jas- 
mine Flower,  The. — Saint-Juirs. 
Crackle  and  blaze.     See  Winter  Song,  A. — Bennett. 
Cradled  in  the  camp,  Bonaparte  was  to  the  last  hour. 

See  Napoleon  Booaparte  (Analysis  of  the  Char- 
acter of  Bonaparte). — Phillips. 
Cradled  within  the  arms  of  night.     iSee  By  the  Fire- 
light.— Ascher. 
Cranks,  my  son,  the  world  is  full  of  them.     See  Word 

of  Cranks. — Anon. 
Creation    sleeps.     'Tis    as    the    general    pulse.     See 

Night     Thoughts     (Time's     Midnight    Voice). — 

Young. 
Creator    Spirit,    by    whose    aid.     See    Veni    Creator 

[SpiritusJ. — Dryden. 
Creep  into  thy  narrow  bed.     See  Last  Word,  The. — 

Arnold. 
Cries  little  Miss  Fret.     See  Miss  Laugh  and  Miss  Fret. 

— Anon. 
Crimson  clover  I  discover.     See  Clover. — Goodale. 
Crimson   sunset   burning   o'er   the   tree-fringed   hills. 

See  Why  the  Cows  Came  Late. — Hoynton. 
Crimson-colored,  fresh  and  fragrant  were  thy  leaves 

long  years  ago.     See  To  a  Rose. — Ransom. 
Crimsoning    the    woodlands    dumb    and    hoary.     See 

Transfiguration. — Piatt. 
Crisp  and  hard  lay  the  snow  beneath.     See  '  'Three's  a 

Crowd." — (Vassar  Miscellany.) 
Criticism  is   neither  hostility   nor  scorn.     See   Right 

Standard.  The.— Winter. 
Critics  are  like  a  kind  of  flies,  that  breed.     See  Critics. 

—Butler. 
Crom  Cruach  and  his  sub-gods  twelve.     See  Burial  of 

King  Cormac,  The. — Ferguson. 
Cromwell,  I  did  not  think  to  shed  a  tear.     See  King 

Henry  VIIL  (Wolsey's  Farewell  to  Cromwell). — 

Shakespeare. 
Cromwell,  our  chief  of  men,  who,  through  a  cloud.   See 

To  the  Lord  General  Cromwell. -rMilton. 
Cross-eyed  cats  don't  live  on  cheese.     See  Think  it 

Over. — Thatcher. 
Crouched  about  each  other  closely,   measuring  each 

glance  morosely.     See  Cobra,  The. — Hageman. 
Crouching  low,  but  not  with  fear.     See  Thief  on  the 

Cross,  The. — Vickers. 
Crouching  on   the  icy  pavement.     See   Little   Dot. — 

Anon. 
Crow,  you're  very  wicked!     See  Lecture  to  the  Crow, 

A. — Anon. 
C!rowded  into  the  long  benches  of  the  court  room.   See 

Reasonable  Doubt,  A. — Bushnell. 
Crowned  monarch  by  sunlight  and  lichens  gray.     See 

In  the  Rock. — Sargent. 
Crush  the  dead  leaves  under  thy  feet.     See  same.— 

Anon. 
Cuckoo:  Cuckoo!  Cuckoo!  Cuckoo!     See    Parrot    and 

the  Cuckoo,  The. — Anon. 
Cupid    abroad  was  'lated  in  the  night.     See  Sonnet. 

— Greene, 
(hipid    and    my    Campaspe    played.      See    Campaspe 

(Apelles'  Song). — Lyly. 
Cupid,  as  he  lay  among.     See  Wounded  Cupid,  The. — 

Herrick. 
Cupid    laughs,  nor    seems    to  care.     See  Wish,  A. — 

A. 
Cupid's    bow    is    lying    broken.       See    O    Mores !  — 

Thomas. 
Curious,  the  ways  of  these  folk  of  humble  and  hardy 

condition.       See    Dorothy    (Country     Kisses). — 

Munby. 
Curly  Locks!  Curly  Locks!  wilt  thou  be  mine?     See 

Curly  Locks. — Riley. 
Curly-haired    Carl!  Were    a    blithesomer    mate.     See 

Carl. — Anon. 
Curse  on  these  taxes^one  succeeds  another.     See  Wat 

Tyler.- Southey. 
Cursed   be  the  verse,   how  well  soe'er  it   flow.     See 

Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot  (Scandal). — Pope. 
Cursed  by  the  gods  and  crowned  with  shame.     See 

Wife  of  Loki,  The.— Elliot. 
Cushions  gay  on  every  chair.     See  Cushions. — Anon. 
Cut  off  even  in  the  blossoms  of  my  sin.    See  Hamlet. 

— Shakespeare. 
"Cut    the   cables!"   the   order   read.     See   ''Cut    the 

Cables. ' ' — Wilson . 
"Cynthia!  Cynthia!  won't  you  tell  us  a  story?"     See 

Mr.  Slocum. — Church. 
Cynthia,  to  thy  power  and  thee.     See  Maid's  Tragedy. 

The  (Bridal  Song).— Fletcher. 
Cyriack,  this  three  years'  day  these  eyes,  tho'  clear. 

See  To  Cyri.ack  Skinner  (1655).— Milton. 
Cyriack,  whose  grandsire,  on  the  royal  bench.     See  To 

Cyriack  Skinner  (1656). — Milton. 


Da  monka  not  feel  ver'  well  in  Newa  Yorka.     See 

Monk's  Adventures,  The. — Kerr. 
Daddy!  Daddy!  What    d'yer    think!     See    Christmas 

Star,  The.— Wilson. 
Daddy    Flick    was    a    queer    old    Dick.     See    Daddy 

Flick's  Spree. — Proudfit. 
Daddy  Neptune  one  day,  to  Freedom  did  say.     See 

Tight  Little  Island,  The.— Dibdin. 
Daffy-down-dilly   came   up   in   the   cold.     See   Brave 

Little  Flower,  The. — Warner. 
Daft  Jean.     See  Daft  Jean. — Dobell. 
D^ly  living  seemeth  weary.     See  Duty. — Sheldon. 
Daily  the  fishers'  sails  drift  out.     See  Beside  the  Sea. 

- — Higginson. 
Daily   the   sun   swung   above   the   rounded   dome   of 

Mount  Carbon  to  the  east.     See  Death  of  Little 

Hacket. — Denison. 
Dainty  little  maiden,  whither  would  ye  wander?     See 

City  Child,  The.— Tennyson. 
Dainty  little  stockings  hanging  in  a  row.     See  Christ- 
mas.— (The  Nursery.) 
Dainty  maid,  fair  maid,  your  name  I  fain  would  know. 

See  Mystery,  A. — Metcalfe. 
Dainty    pussy    willows.     See    Pussy    Willow,    The. — 

Anon. 
Daisies,    bright    daisies,    keep    nodding    at    me.     See 

Daisy,  The.— Rude. 
Daisy  is  "the  eye  of  day."     See  Daisy. — Newman. 
Daisy  time  has  come  again.     See  Daisy  Time-. — For- 
rester. 
Damaris  Brown  is  a  wooden  doll.     See  Damaris  Brown. 

— (Youth's  Companion.) 
Damascus  is  the  oldest  city  in  the  world.    See  Innocents 

Abroad  (Damascus). — Clemens. 
Dame  Hickory,  Dame  Hickory.     See  Dame  Hickory. 

— Ramal. 
"Dame,  how  the  moments  go."     See  Bride's  Toilette, 

The.— Cortissoz. 
Dame  Justice,  weighting  long  the  doubtful  right.     See 

Lawyers  and  Laws. — Pope. 
Dame  Nature  gives  a  party.     See  Nature's  Party. — - 

Coddington. 
Dame  Nature  once  in  godlike  mood.     See  Nature's 

Poem.— Palmer. 
Dame    Nature    ordered    every    bird    and   beast.     See 

Thistle  and  the  Rose,  The  (Dame  Nature  Crowns 

the  Scottish  Lion  King  of  Beasts). — Dunbar. 
Dame  Nature  years  and  years  ago.     See  Marigolds. — 

Hartley. 
Damon,  come  drive  my  flocks  this  way.     See  Clorinda 

and  Damon. — Marvell. 
Dan  Phaethon — so  the  histories  run.     See  Phaethon; 

or.  The  Amateur  Coachman. — Saxe. 
Dance,    little    leaflets,    dance.     See    Leaflets,    The. — 

Brown. 
Dance  to  the  beat  of  the  rain,  little  Fern.     See  Fern 

Song. — Tabb. 
Dancer  of  air.     See  Humming-bird,  The. — Clarke. 
Dancing,  tripping,  light  as  air.     See  La  Vesuviana.— 

Webb. 
Dangerous   rocks,  which  touching  but  my  gentle  ves- 
sels.      See    Merchant    of    Venice,    "The. — Shake- 
speare. 
Daniel  Doogan  has  this  day  lodged  information.     See 

Seizure,  The. — Brown. 
Daniel,  have  you  ever  thought  about  getting  married? 

See  Beer  Drinker's  Courtship,  A. — McBride. 
Daniel  Webster  needs  no  monument  of  bronze.     See 

Webster   the    Successor  of    Washington. — Bing- 
ham. 
Dan'l  wuz  er  good  Christyun  man  wat  lived  in  de 

Bible.       See     Uncle    Bob's    Story    of    Daniel. — 

Anon. 
Dans    I'alcove    sombre.      See    L'ange    Qui    Veille. — 

Hugo. 
Daphnis  is  mute,  and  hidden  nymphs  complain.     See 

Theocritus. — Egan. 
Dar!  shet"  yo'  black  eyes,  Sambo!     See  Sambo's  Lul- 
laby.— Anon. 
Dar  was  singin',  dar  was  dancin',  in  de  cabins  long  ago. 

See  Old  Slave's  Lament,  The. — Anon. 
Dar  wuz  a  hous'   by  itself  in  an  ole  fiel'.     See  De 

Preacher  and  de  Hants. — Hayne. 
Darby,  dear,  we  are  old  and  gray.     See  Darby  and 

Joan. — Weatherly. 
Dare   forsake  what   you   deem   wrong.     See   Dare. — 

Anon. 
Dare  to  be  honest,  good,  and  sincere.     See  Dare  to  Do 

Right. — Anon. 
Dare  to  be  right !     See  same. — Anon. 


638 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Dead 


Dare   you    haunt    our   hallowed    green?     See   Fairies' 

Dance,  The.— Anon. 
Darest  thou  now,  O  soul.     See  same. — Whitman. 
Dark  and  dreary  was  the  night.     See  Potato  Bug,  A. — 

Anon. 
Dark  angel,  with  thine  aching  lust.     See  Dark  Angel, 

The. — Johnson. 
Dark  as  the  clouds  of  even.     See  Black  Regiment,  The. 

— Boker. 
Dark  brown  is  the  river.     See  Where  go  the  Boats?— 

Stevenson. 
Dark,  dark  is  the  night;  not  a  star  in  the  sky.     See 

Sinking  of  the  Ships,  The. — Collison. 
Dark,  deep,  and  cold  the  current  flows.     See  Plaint. — 

Elliott. 
Dark  fell  the  night,  the  watch  was  set.     See  Alfred  the 

Harper. — Sterling. 
Dark  is  the  night!  how  dark!  no  light,  no  fire.     See 

Gambler's  Wife,  The. — Coates. 
Dark  Lily  without  blame.     See  Scot  to  Jeanne  d'Arc, 

A. — Lang. 
Dark   the   day,   but   bright   the   heart.     See  same. — 

Goodale. 
Dark,  thinned,  beside  the  wall  of  stone.     See  In  Time 

of  Grief. — Reese. 
Dark  to  me  is  the  earth.     Dark  to  me  are  the  heavens. 

See  Desolate  City,  The. — Blunt. 
Dark  tresses  made  rich  with  all  treasures.     See  "Pop- 

pcEa." — Mulvaney. 
Darkening  the  azure  roof  of  Nero's  world.     See  Do- 
mine,  Quo  Vadis? — Watson. 
Darkness  and  death?     Nay,   Pioneer,   for  thee.     <See 

Walt  Whitman. — Williams. 
Darkness  closed  upon  the  country  and  upon  the  town. 

See  History  of  the  United  States  (Revolutionary 

Alarm.  The). — Bancroft. 
Darkness  has  settled  down  in  the  shadowy  Wyoming 

Valley.     See  Ray's  Ride. — King. 
Darkness    is    thinning;  shadows    are    retreating.     See 

Darkness  is  Thinning. — St.  Gregory. 
Darkness  was  deepening  o'er  the  seas,  and  still  the 

hulk  drove  on.     See  Beacon  Light,  The. — Pardee. 
"Darling,"    he    said,    "I    never    meant."     See    Two 

Truths. — Jackson. 
Darlings  of  the  forest!     See  Trailing  Arbutus,  The. — 

Cooke. 
Dar's  a  grave  on  de  oder  side  ob  de  creek.     See  "Yal- 

ler"  Dog's  Love  for  a  Nigger,  A. — Thatcher. 
"Dar's    bressing    in    baptizing    drops."     See    Daddy 

Worthless. — Champney. 
Dar's  er  mighty  se'us  question  dat  de  folkses  can't 

decide.     See  Uncle  Nathan's  Creed. — ^Anon. 
Dar'st  thou,  Cassius,  now.     See  Julius  Caesar.- — Shake- 
speare. 
Dat    ole   Aun'    Tempy — she   wot    live.     See   Conjure 

Woman,  The. — Anon. 
Dat  war  a  trick  our  C'lumbus  played.     You's  heered 

hit,     haint    you,     now?     See    Our    C'lumbus.— 

Meyers. 
Dat's  de  cutes'  pickaninny.     See  Dat  Yaller  Gown. — 

Turner. 
Daughter   of    Egypt,    veil    thine    eyes.      See     Song: 

"Daughter  of  Egypt,"  etc. — Taylor. 
Daughter  of  God!  that  sitt'st  on  high.     See  Ode  to 

Peace. — Tennant. 
Daughter  of  Jove,   relentless  power.     See  Hymn   to 

Adversity. — Gray. 
Daughter  of  Venice,  fairer  than  the  moon!     See  To  ah 

Old  Venetian  Wine-glass. — Mifflin. 
Daughter  to  that  good  Earl,  once  President.     See  To 

the  Lady  Margaret  Ley. — Milton. 
Daughters  of  Time,  the  hypocritic  Days.     See  Days. — 

Emerson. 
Dave  was  a  coward  and  every  one  knew  it.     See  Cow- 
ard, The. — Matthews. 
David  and  his  three  captains  bold.     See  David  in  the 

Cave  of  Adullam. — Lamb.  ' 

David    Drummond's    destiny.     See    Weary    Coble    o' 

Cargill,  The. — Anon. 
Dawn  lingers  silent  in  the  shade  of  night.     See  Play- 
mate Hours,  The. — Higginson. 
Dawn  of  a  pleasant  morning  in  May.     See  Lee  to  the 

Rear. — Thompson. 
Day  and  night  my  thoughts  incline.     See  Jar,  The. — 

Stoddard. 
Day  after  day  her  nest  she  moulded.     See  Swallow's 

Nest,  The.— Arnold. 
Day  after  day,  week"  after  week,  from  dawn  of  raojcrc^ 

ing  to  near  eve.     See  Through  the  Dark  Fore^ — 

Stanley. 
Day  by  day  the  Organ-builder  in  his  lonely  chamber 

wrought.     See  Legend  of  the  Organ-builder,  The. 

■ — Dorr. 


Day  dawned; — within  a  curtained  room.     See  History 

of  a  Life. — Procter. 
Day!  Faster  and  more  fast.     See  Pippa   Passes  (New 

Year's  Day  at  Asolo). — Browning. 
Day  has  awakened  all  things  that  be.     See  Daybreak. 

—Shelley. 
Day  hath  put  on  his  jacket,  and  around.     See  Even- 
ing.— Holmes. 
Day,  in  melting  purple  dying.     See  Song  of  Egla. — 

Brooks. 
Day  is  dead,  and  let  us  sleep.     See  Day  is  Dead. — 

Webster. 
Day  is  dying!  Float,  O  song.      See  Spanish   Gypsy, 

The  (Day  is  Dying).— Eliot. 
Day  is  dying  in  the  west.     See  Dying  Day,  The. — 

Lathbury. 
Day,  like  our  souls,  is  fiercely  dark.     See  Battle  Song. 

— Elli  tt. 
Day  of  glory!  welcome  day!     See  "Fourth  of  July." — 

Pierpont.  * 

Day   of   my   life!  Where  can   she   get?     See  "Good- 
night, Babette!" — Dobson. 
Day  of  vengeance,  without  morrow!      See  Dies  Irae. 

— Celano  (Dix). 
Day  of  wrath,   O  day  of  mourning!     See  Dies  Ira. 

— Celano  (Irons). 
Day  of  wrath,  that  day  of  burning.     See  Dies  Irae. 

— Celano  (Coles). 
Day   set   on  Norham's    castled   steep.     See  Marmion 

(Norham  Castle).-^Scott. 
Day  was  breaking,  when  at  the  altar  of  the  temple 

stood.     See  Leper,  The. — Willis. 
Day  will  return  with  a  fresher  boon.     See  Song  of 

Faith,  A. — Holland. 
Day   with  dewy  eve  was   blending.     See  Taken   On 

Trial. — Barlow. 
Days  of  absence,  sad  and  dreary.     See  Days  of  Ab- 
sence.— Rousseau. 
Days  of  my  youth.     See  same. — Tucker. 
Day-stars!  that  ope  your  eyes  with  [or  at]  mom  to 

twinkle  [or  that  ope  your  frownless  eyes  to  twin- 
kle!.    See  Hymn  to  the  Flowers. — Smith. 
Dazzled   thus   with  height   of  place.     See   Upon   the 

Sudden  Restraint  of  the  Earl  of  Somerset,  then 

Falling  from  Favor. — Wotton. 
D'clar',  Miss  Dixie  beat  'em  all.     See  Old-time  Break- 
down, An. — Kavanaugh. 
"De  Bruce!  I  rose  with  purpose  dread."     See  Lord  of 

the   Isle,  The   (Abbot's  Blessing    on    the   Bruce, 

The).— Scott. 
De  cloud    is    scattered    all    away.     See    Uncle    Ned's 

Banjo  Song. — Anon. 
De  door  on  de  latch,  and  nobody  at  home.     See  Bones' 

Dream. — Anon. 
De  gray  owl  sing  fum  de  chimbly  top.     See  Plantation 

Ditty,  A. — Stanton. 
De  man  he  killed  vasn't  killed  at  all.     See  Charge  of 

a  Dutch  Magistrate. — Anon. 
De  massa  of  de  sheepfol'.     See  De  Sheepfol'. — Greene. 
"De  mortuis  nil  nisi  honum.."  ■   When.     See  Written 

on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide  (Vale). — Realf. 
De  night's  a-comin'  on,  honey.    See  De  Tired  Pickan- 

ninny's  Star-song. — Baillie. 
De  night-time  comin'   an'  de  daylight  scootin.'     See 

Evening  Song  on  the  Plantation. — Macon. 
De  place  I  get  born,  me,  is  up  on  the  reever.     See 

Habitant,  The. — Drummond. 
De  room  wha'r  de  squire's   co't  sat  was    packed  to 

suffication.     See    Why    Uncle    Ben    Back-slid. — 

Bingham. 
"De  soun'  of  a  hoss-fiddle,"  says  Brudder  Gardiner. 

See  Brudder  Gardiner  on  Music.-^Anon. 
De  stars  is  shinin'out  de  sky  de  brightes'  eber  seen. 

See  Uncle  Gabe  at  the  Corn-shucking. — Macon. 
De  tex,'    my    b'lubbed    bred'rin.     See    Discontented 

Leader,  The. — Kathrina. 
De  times  is  mighty  stirrin'  'mong  de  people  up  ouah 

way.     See  How  Lucy  Backslid. — Dunbar. 
De  Zion  Chu'ch  has  had  anudder  racket  in  de  fol'. 

See  New  Deacon,  The. — Whipple. 
Deacon  Giles    was    a    man    who    loved    money.     See 

Deacon  Giles's  Distillery. — Cheever. 
Deacon  Grimes  called  the  other  day  upon  Mrs.  Butter- 
wick.     See  Butterwick's  Weakness. — Anon. 
Deacon  Smith's  wagon  stopped  one  morning  before 

Widow    Jones'    door.       See    Buying    a    Cow. — 

Anon. 
Dead  beneath  the  stars  he  lay.     See  Dead  Astronomer, 

The.— Chapin. 
Dead!  dead!  And  now  before.     See  Sir  John  A.  Mac- 
Donald. — Bengough. 
Dead!  dead!  in  sooth  his  marble  brow  is  cold.     See 

Dean  Stanley. — Hayne. 


639 


Dead 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dead!  dead  in  the  fulness  of  his  manly  strength.     See 

"No  Saloons  up  There." — (Baltimore  Methodist.) 

"Dead!"    did    you    say?     "I    had    not    heard."     See 

Glance  Backward,  A. — Blanchard. 
Dead  heat   and   windless   air.     See  August   Weather. 

— Tynan-Hinkso#. 
Dead  is  Columba,  the  world's  arch.    See  Saint  Columba. 

— Johnson. 
Dead,  is  he — in  a  pauper's  bed.    See  Roadside  Preacher, 

The. — Larcom. 
"Dead!"   is  it  iK)ssible7     He,  the  bold  rider.     See  Cus- 
ter's Last  Charge. — Whittaker. 
Dead  is  the  roll  of  the  drums.     See  Abraham  Lincoln. 

— Brownell. 
"Dead  on  the  field  of  honor!"     This,  too,  is  the  record 
of  thousands  of  unnamed  men.     See  Dead  on  the 
Field  of  HoBor. — Chapin. 
Dead!  one  of  them  shot  by  the  sea  in  the  east.     See 

Mother  and  Poet. — Browning. 
Dead  Princess,  living  Power,  if  that,  which  lived.     See 

To  the  Princess  Alice. — Tennyson. 
Dead.     The  dead  year  is  lying  at  my  feet.     See  New 

Year's  Eve — Midnight. — Macdonald. 
Dead  was  Gerard  the  fair,  the  girl-mouthed,  the  gay. 

See  Death  of  Roland. — Buchanan. 
Dead,  with  his  harness  on  him.     See  John  Mitchel. — 

O'Reilly. 
Dead,   with  their  eyes  to  the  foe.     See  Melville  and 

Coghill. — Lang. 
Deah  fyens,   I'se  glad  ter  see  yo'  heah,  I  knows  yo'll 

think  it  funny.     See  Sable  Sermon. — Jones. 
Deal  gently  with  me,  O  my  friends.     See  Love,  the 

Best  Monument. — Anon. 
Deal"  gently    with    us,    ye    who    read !     See    same. — 

Holmes. 
Dear  Abraham:     The  Catholic   not  respect   an   oath! 
See  Letters  of  Peter  Plymley  on  No  Popery,  The. 
—Smith. 
Dear  Alice!  you'll  laugh  when  you  know  it.     See  Tal- 
ented Man,  The. — Praed. 
Dear  and  bles.sed  dead  ones,  can  you  look  and  listen. 

See  Question. — Moulton. 
Dear  and  desired  above  all  things  that  are.     See  De 

Profuntlis. — Anon. 
Dear  and  great  angel,  wouldst  thou  only  leave.     See 

Guardian-angel,  The. — Browning. 
Dear  Anna,  when  I  brought  her  veil.     See  Wedding 

Veil.  The.— Whittier. 
'Dear  baby    spoke   to-day,"    she   cried.     See   Incon- 
sistent Sex,  The. — Heaton. 
Dear  banner  of  my  native  land!  ye  gleaming,   silver 

stars.     See  Flag  of  Washington,  The. — Gillett. 
Dear  Belle,  I  went  to  church  last  night.     See  Changed 

Her  Mind. — Anon. 
Dear  Bob,  I'm  going  to  be  married.     See  Jack's  Letter 

to  Bob. — Foster. 
Dear  Brother  Ben,  I  take  my  pen.     See  Speckled  Hen, 

The. — Denison. 
Dear  Brother   Jacob:     I've   been    round.     See   A-Vis- 

itin'  the  School. — Anon. 
Dear  Brother  John:     We  got  here  safe.     See  Farmer 

Stebbins  at  Ocean  Grove. — Carleton. 
Dear  Century  Plant:     I  love  thy  bismuthed  face.     See 

Funny  Old  Clown,  The.— Burdette. 
Dear  child!  whom  sleep  can  hardly  tame.     See  To  a 

Child. — Sterling. 
Dear  Chloe,   how  blubbered  is  that  pretty  face!     See 

Better  Answer,  A. — Prior. 
Dear  Chloe,  while  the  busy  crowd.     See  Fireside,  The. 

— Cotton. 
Dear  chorister,  who  from  those  shadows  sends.     See 

To  the  Nightingale. — Drummond. 
Dear  common   flower,   that   grow'st   beside  the  way. 

See  To  the  Dandelion.— Lowell. 
Dear  cosmopolitan — ^I   know.     See    Familiar    Epistle, 

A. — Dobson. 
Dear  country  mine!  far  in  the  viewless  west.     See  Dear 

Country  Mine. — Gilder. 
Dear  C^ousin   John — We   got    here    safe — my   worthy 
wife  an'  me.     See  Farmer  Stebbins  on  Rollers. — 
(/arleton. 
Dear  Cousin:     There   is   little   chance   of  our  speedy 

meeting.     See  Baby's  Correspondence. — Carter. 
Dear  dead!  they  have  become.     See  Memory  of  the 

Dead,  The.— Faber. 
Dear,  dear,    dear.     See    Thrush's    Song,    The. — Mac- 

gillivray. 
Dear  dear!  here  it  is  Saturday-morning.     See  Unappre- 
ciated genius. — Millie  M.  Olcott. 
Dear,  dear!  how  very  unfortunate  this  is.     See  Deaf 

a-s  a  Po.«t. — Anon. 
Dear,  dear!   I   wonder   what's   got   in   de   men?     See 
Lixey. — Anon. 


Dear,  dear  me!  What  a  long,  miserable  Thanksgiving 
day   I   have  spent.     See  Joe  Fleming's  Thanks- 
giving.— Wayne. 
Dear!  dear!  what  a  dust!     See  Management;  or,  the 

Folly  of  Fashion. — Boyd. 
Dear  Dennis,  my  darlint,  I  take  up  my  pen.     See  Pat's 

Letter. — Anon. 
Dear,  did  you  know  how  sweet  to  me.     See  Vain  De- 
sire, A. — Wratislaw. 
Dear  doctor,  whose  blandly  invincible  pen.     See  To 

O.  W.  Holmes. — Hayne. 
Dear  Dod,  pwease  to  bwess  my  mamma.     See  Jimmie's 

Prayer. — (Boston  Transcript.) 
Dear  Elm,  it  is  of  thee.     See  Dear  Elm,  it  is  of  Thee. — 

Anon. 
Dear  eyes,  set  deep  within  the  shade.     See  Protesta- 

"-tion,  The. — Image. 
Dear  Fannie,  this  is  so  kind  of  you,  to  give  me  a  nice 
long  day  of  your  company.     See  Amateur  Farm- 
ing.— Anon. 
Dear  Fanny !  nine  long  years  ago.    See  To  My  Daughter. 

—Hood. 
Dear  father,  I  am  almost  afraid  to  venture  my  noble 

charger  to-day.     See  Helen  Mactrever. — Kent. 
Dear      Father:     Once    you    said,     "My    son."     See 

Senior's  Plea,  A. — Underwood. 
"Dear  Father:     Please   excuse,"   he  wrote.     See  His 

I^etter.  — Hereford. 
Dear  fellow,  when  our  college  days  are  over.     See  Col- 
lege Days. — Hunneman. 
Dear  folks,    all    the    other     flowers     are     surly.     See 

Quarrel  of  the  Flowers,  The. — Anon. 
Dear  friend,  I  pray  thee,  if  thou  wouldst  be  proving. 

See  Friendship. — Wilcox. 
Dear  Friend,  whose  presence  in  the  house.    See  Cana. — 

Clarke. 
Dear  friends,  all  things  must  have  an  end.     See  Epi- 
logue.— Bob  o'  Link. 
Dear  friends  and  parents,   gathered  here.     See  Vale- 
dictory.— Anon. 
Dear  friends,    before   you    go    away.      See  Epilogue: 

"Dear  friends,"  etc. — Anon. 
Dear  friends:     My  essay  is  to-night.     See  Graduating 

Essay,  A. — Dodge. 
Dear  friends :     We  have  now  finished  what  we  have  to 

say.     See  Closing  Address. — Anon. 
Dear  friends,    we  thank  you  for  your   condescension. 
See    Prologue    for    a    Performance    by    Boys. — 
Anon. 
Dear  friends,  who  read  the  world  aright.     See  Words- 
worth.— Whittier. 
Dear  friends,  with  joy  we  welcome  you.     See  Welcome 

for  School  Entertainment. — Hedrich. 
Dear,  from  thine  arms  then  let    me    fly.     See    Song: 

"Dear,  from  thine  arms,"  etc. — Rochester. 
Dear   girl!  I  wish  I  knew  her  well.     See  My  Zoological 

Flame. — Linsey. 
Dear  Grandma:     I    am    writing    you    a    letter.     See 

Writing  to  Grandma. — Anon. 
Dear  Grandma,  I  will  try  to  write.     See   Little    Girl's 

Letter,  A. — (Wisconsin  Farmer.) 
Dear  Grannie   is    with    us    no    longer.     See    Granny's 

Trust. — Anon. 
Dear,  had   the   world   in   its   caprice.     See   Respecta- 
bility.— Browning. 
Dear  harp  of  my  country!  in  darkness  I  found  thee. 

See  Dear  Harp  of  my  Country. — Moore. 
Dear  Harry,  I  will  not  dissemble.     See  I  Wonder  what 

Maud  will  Say?— Peck. 
Dear  hearts,  you  were  waiting  a  year  ago.     See  Two 

Waitings,  The. — Chadwick. 
Dear  Honeysuckle!    in    the    silent    eve.     See   To    the 

Herald  Honeysuckle. — Pfeiffer. 
Dear  Huldy;     I  must  tell  you  'bout  the  way  that  our 
new  deacon.     See  Deacon  Thrush  in  Meeting. — 
Anon. 
Dear,  if  you  love  me,  hold  me  most  your  friend.     See 

Sonnet. — Miller. 
Dear,  I'll  tell  you  how  I  love  you.     See  How  I  love 

Her. — Newton. 
Dear  is  my  little  native  vale.     See  Italian  Song,  An. — 

Rogers. 
Dear,  it  is  hard  to  stand.     See  Wistful. — Anon. 
Dear,  it  is  twilight-time,  the  time  of  rest.     See  Rue. — 

Anon. 
"Dear  Jack,"    said    Kate,    with    eyes    of    blue.     See 

Modest  Poet,  The.— (FaZe  Record.) 
Dear  Jack,  your  letter  came  to-day.     See  April  Fools. 

— Masterson. 
Dear  Jesus!  ever  at  my  sfde.     See  Nearest  Friend,  The. 

— Faber. 
Dear  John,  the  sun  is  setting  now.     See  Setting  Sun, 
The. — Anon. 


640 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Death 


"Dear  Jones,"   I  will  not  do  as  he.     See  Signs  of  the 

times. — Dodge. 
Dear  .Joseph,  five  and-twenty  years  ago.     See  Epistle 

to  .Joseph  Hill,  Ksq.,  An. — Cowper. 
Dear  lady,  I  a  little  fear.     See  Lines  Written  in  a  Lady's 

Album    below  the  Autograph  of  .John  Adams. — 

Webster. 
Dear,  let  me  dream  of  love.     See  Prayer,  A. — Image. 
Dear  little  bare  feet.     See  Little  Bare  Feet. — Anon. 
Dear  little  birdie.     See  Little  Birdie. — Anon. 
Dear  little   boys   whose   birthday   comes.     See   Some- 
thing to  Hemember. — Anon. 
Dear  little  bright -eyed  Willie.     See  Planting  Himself 

to  Grow. — Anon. 
Dear  little   children,    where'er   you   be.     See   To   the 

Children. — Gary. 
Dear  little  Dorothy,  she  is  no  more!     See  Dorothy. — 

I^athrop. 
Dear  little  fair  and  fragrarit  flower.     See  On  Receiving 

a  White  Pink.— Viola. 
Dear  little  girl,  chiding  the  morning  long.     See  Answer 

to  a  Puzzle,  An. — Coolidge. 
Dear  little  girl  of  the  long  ago.     See  To  an  Old  Por- 
trait of  a  Little  Girl. —  (William  and  Mary  Col- 
lege Monthly.) 
Dear  little  Madge  went  out  one  day.     See  What  they 

Said. — Rook. 
"Dear  little  singing  bird  out  in  the  tree."     See  Pray, 

I^ove,  Work  and  Sing. — Anon. 
Dear  little  Violet.     See  Calling  the  Violet. — Larcom. 
Dear  Lord  and  Father  of  mankind.     See  Voice  of  Calm, 

The.— Whittier. 
Dear  Lord!  kind  Lord!  See  Prayer  Perfect,  The. — Riley. 
Dear  I>ord,  let  me  recount  to  Thee.     See  "It  Is  Fin- 
ished."— Rossetti. 
Dear  Lord,  receive  my  son,  whose  winning  love.     See 

On  My  Dear  Son,  Gervase  Beaumont. — Beaumont. 
Dear  Lord,  thy  table  is  outspread.     See  Master's  In- 
vitation, The. — Randolph. 
Dear  love,    for  nothing   less   than   thee.     See   Dream, 

The. — Donne. 
Dear  Love,  I  sometimes  think  how  it  would  be.     See 

same. — Goodwin. 
"Dear  Madam,   I   pray,"   quoth  a  magpie,   one  day. 

See  Magpie  and  the  Monkey,  The. — Yriarte. 
Dear  maid,  let  me  speak.     See  Conjugal  Con.iugations. 

— Bellaw. 
Dear  maiden,   when   the   sun   is   down.     See   To   My 

Promised  Wife. — Walsh. 
Dear  mamma,    may    we    speak    to    you?     See   Josie's 

Fault. — Anon. 
Dear  marshes,  by  no  hand  of  man.     See  Flood-time 

on  the  Marshes. — Stein. 
Dear  me,  a  servant  of  all-work  has  a  miserable  life. 

See  Terrible  Secret,  A. — Coyne. 
"Dear    me,"    cried    a    busy   bee.     See^Busy    Bee. — 

Anon 
"Dear  me!  dear  me!"  buzzed  a  little  bee.     See  Bee  and 

the  Butterfly,  The. — Anon. 
Dear  me!  dear  me!  here's  a  pretty  mess  to  be  in.     See 

When  the  Cat's  Away  the  Mice  will  Play. — Anon. 
Dear  me!  I  am  so  very  busy.     See  "Playing  Grownup." 

— Denton. 
Dear  me!    I    can't    work    at    all    this    morning.     See 

Family  Flurry,  A. — Anon. 
Dear  me!  I  do  not  know  what  I  want.     See  Eh!  What 

is  It? — Anon. 
Dear  me!  I  wish  time  wouldn't  go  quite  so  fast.     See 

What  is  Christmas? — Denton. 
Dear  me,  it's  time  to  go  to  bed.     See  Pickwick  Papers, 

The  (Mr.  Pickwick  in  the  Wrong  Room). — Dickens. 
Dear  me!     When  we  think  of  what  we  might  do  and 

don't  do.     See  Aunt  Betsy  on  Marriage. — Dallas. 
Dear  me,   who   would   ever  imagine   that   this   is   the 

Fourth  of  July.     See  Old-fashioned  Fourth,  An. — 

Anon. 
"Dear  me,  you're  so  red!"  cried  the  white  rose.     See 

White  Rose  and  the  Poppy,  The. — Hannah. 
Dear  Miss     Goose:     Accept     apologies     profuse.     See 

Packet  of  Letters,  A. — Herford. 
Dear  Mr.  Delsarte!     See  Delsartean  Plea,  A. — (Boston 

Courier. ) 
Dear  mother,   dear  mother,   the  church  is  cold.     See 

Little  Vagabond,  The. — Blake. 
Dear  mother,    how   pretty   the   moon    looks   to-night. 

See  New  Moon,  The. — Follen. 
"Dear  mother  Ida,  harken  ere  I  die."     See    CEnone; 

or.  The  Choice  of  Paris. — Tennyson. 
Dear  mother,  if  you  just  could  be.     See  Lesson  for 

Mamma,  A. — Dayre. 
Dear  my  friend  and  fellow-student,  I  would  lean  my 

spirit  o'er  you.     See  Lady  Geraldine's  Courtship. 

— Browning. 


Dear  Nature's    child,    he    nestled    close    to    her!     See 

P>merson. — Kinney. 
Dear  Ned,  no  doubt  you'll  be  surprised.     See  Cooking 

and  Courting. — Anon 
Dear  Nell,  'tis  good-bye,  your  train's  nearly  due.     See 

Her  .Answer. — Anon. 
Dear  Nellie:     I  turn  to  your  love,  in  my  trouble.     See 

Young  Wife's  Lament,  The. — Anon. 
"Dear  Nelly :  Come  the  night  before."     See  Christmas 

Ballad,  A. — Dennison. 
Dear  Newspaper:     I   am  a  little  girl  just  nine  years 

,^old.     See  Little  Mabel  at  I>ong  Branch. — Anon. 
Dear!  O!  dear!  Who  could  have  imagined  such  an  end 

to  my  pet  flirtation.     See  Runaway  Match,  A. — 

Anon. 
Dear  old    pipe,    my    oldest    friend.     See   Conditioned. 

(Bntnonian.) 
Dear  ole  untie,  I  dot  oor  letter.     See  Baby's  Letter. — 

Anon. 
Dear  papa,  has  anything  occurred?  pray,  what  is  it? 

See    Charles    O'Malley    (Miss    Judith    Macan). — 

Lever. 
Dear  papas  and  mammas,   and   brothers   and   sisters. 

See  Epilogue. — Anon. 
Dear  piece  of  fascinating  clay !     See  To  the  Tobacco 

Pipe. — (The  Meteors.) 
Dear     Pri&cilla,    quaint,    and    very.     See   Rhyme    for 

Priscilla,  A. — Sherman. 
Dear  Pussy,  I  love  you  and  I's  your  true  friend.     See 

Confession . — Anon . 
Dear  rain,  without  your  help,  I  know.     See  Mamie's 

Request. — Anon. 
Dear  Ray: — Gold  is  money,  and  money  is  gold.     See 

Comical  Dun,  A. — McKeever. 
Dear  singer  of  our  fathers'  day.     See  To  John  Green- 
leaf  Whittier. — Ward. 
Dear  sir: — Ve    haf   received   your   letter.     See   What 

They  Wanted.- — Anon. 
Dear  sir:     You  wish  to  know  my  notions.     See  Biglow 

Papers,  The  (Candidate's  Letter,  The). — Lowell. 
Dear  sister!   while   the   wise   and   sage.     See   To   My 

Sister.— Whittier. 
Dear  Sitty     Kuzzin: — As     yo've     bin     a-payin'.     See 

Uncle  John  Writes  to  His  City  Cousin. — Buchanan. 
Dear  Teacher: — I  have  been  requested  by  the  young 

persons  of  this  school.     See  Presentation  Speech. 

— Anon. 
Dear  Thomas,  did'st  thou  never  pop.     See  Simile,  A. — 

Prior. 
Dear  to  the  loves  and  to  the  Graces  vowed.     See  Mary 

Queen  of  Scots. — Wordsworth. 
Dear  Uncle  Jim,  this  garden  ground.     See  Historical 

Associations. — Stevenson. 
Dear  Uncle  Sam  has  many  girls.     See  Nicknames  of 

the  States. — Johnson. 
Dear  vernal  flowers,  they  bloom  again.     See  Pierian 

Spring,  The. — Burdette. 
Dear,  when  the  sun  is  set.     See  Joy. — Lathrop. 
Dear,  when  you  see  my  grave.     See  Despair. — Lathrop. 
Dear  wife,    last    midnight,    whilst    I    read.     See    Dib- 

din's  Ghost. — Field. 
Dear  wife,  there  is  no  word  in  all  my  songs.     See  To 

My  Wife,  Mildred. — Le  Gallienne. 
Dear  yesterday,  glide  not  so  fast.     See  Gondolieds. — 

Jackson. 
Dearest,  do    not    you    delay    me.     See    Serenade. — 

Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Dearest,  how  hard  it  is  to  say.     See  Peace  of  Christmas- 
time, The. — Field. 
Dearest  love!  believe  me.     See  Dearest  Love!  Believe 

Me. — Pringle. 
Dearest  love,  do  you  remember.     See  When  this  Cruel 

War  is  Over. — Sawyer. 
Dearest  Phyllis,  pray  remember,  when  you're  making 

up  the  list.     See  Christmas   Letter,  A. — Challiss. 
Dearest,  this  one  day  our  own.     See  Love's  Silence. — 

Webster. 
Dearest  wife,  I've  raised  thy  pillow.     See  Answer  to 

I  am  Dying. — Laurie. 
Death,  be  not  proud.     See  Death. — Donne. 
Death  came  out  of  the  black  night's  deep.     See  Sink- 
ing of  the  Maine,  The. — (St.  Louis  Republic.) 
Death  could  not   come  between  us   two.     See  Deep 

Waters. — Sutphen. 
Death  in  this  tomb  his  weary  bones  hath  laid.     See 

Death's  Epitaph. — Freneau. 
Death   is    a    dialogue   between.     See    Dialogue,    A. — 

Dickinson. 
Death    is    but    life's    renewal;  but    the    pause.     See 

Death. — Rives. 
Death  is  here,  and  death  is  there.   See  Death. — Shelley. 
Death    sent    hit.-  messengers    before.     See    Prince    of 

Peace,  The. — Anon. 


641 


Death 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Death  stands  above  me,  whispering  low.     See  Death 

Undreaded. — Landor. 
Death,    though   ab«ady   in   the   world,    as   yet.     See 

Legend  of  the  Dead  Lambs,  The. — Lytton. 
Death,  thou'rt  a  cordial  old  and  rare.     See  Stirrup- 
cup,  The. — Laniv. 
Death   was  full   urgent   with  thee,   sister  dear.     See 

Consolations  in  Bereavement. — Newman. 
Death!  was   the   helmsman's    hail.     See   Skeleton   in 

Armor,  The. — Longfellow. 
Death's   but  one  more  to-morrow.     Thou   art   gray. 

See    Of    One   who    Seemed    to    have    Failed.  — 

Mitchell. 
December:  a  winter  storm  raging;  a  city  enshrouded 

in  snow.     See  Bill  and  Belle. — Fitch. 
December  8,  \%?>T,  witnessed  a  memorable  scene.     See 

Incident  in  the  Life  of  Wendell  Phillips,  An. — 

Weld. 
December   is   here,    and   the   end   of   the   year.     <See 

December. — Richards. 
December  snows   piled   high   the   frozen   earth.     See 

Overflow  of  Great  River,  The. — Peck. 
December's  come  and  with  her  brought.     See  Decem- 
ber.— -Sherman. 
Deem,  if  thou  wilt,  that  I  am  all,  and  worse.     See 

Remonstrance,  A. — Meredith. 
Deem  not  devoid  of  elegance  the  sage.     See  Sonnet 

Written  on  a  Blank  Leaf  of  Dugdale's  Monasticon. 

— Warton. 
Deem  not  that  they  are  blest  alone. Blessed  are      See 

They  that  Mourn. — Bryant. 
Deep  down  within  a  mountain  vale,  where  guardian 

peaks  arise.     iSee  Vigilants,  The. — Jones. 
Deep!  I   own   I   start   at   shadows.     See   Shadows. — 

Lantern. 
Deep  in  a  rose's  glowing  heart.     See  Sent  with  a  Rose 

to  a  Young  Lady. — Stanton. 
Deep  in  Canadian  woods  we've  met.     <See  Dear  Old 

Ireland. — Sullivan. 
Deep  in  the  forest's  heart  a  voice.     See  Cuckoo,  The. — 

Sill. 
Deep  in  the  heart   of  the  forest  the  lily  of  Yorrow 

is  growing.     See  Lily  of  Yorrow,  The.  — Van  Dyke. 
Deep  in  the  past  I  peer,  and  see.     See  Ballade  of  the 

Bookworm. — Lang. 
Deep  in  the  shady  sadness  of  a  vale.      See  Hyperion 

(Saturn). — Keats. 
Deep  in  the  shelter  of  the  cave.     See  Neighbors  of  the 

Christ  Night.— Smith. 
Deep   in   the   valley   the   village   lay   dreaming.     See 

Little  White  Angel  of  Connemaugh,  The.- — Hage- 

man. 
Deep  in  the  wave  is  a  coral  grove.     See  Coral  Grove, 

The. — Percival. 
Deep  in  the  wood's  sequestered  shade.     See  Mocking- 
bird, The. — Anon. 
Deep  indeed  must  be  the  sorrow  which  prohibits  the 

President  of  the  United  States.     See  Welcome  to 

the  Nations. — Morton. 
Deep  into  that  darkness  peering,  long  I  stood  there. 

See  Raven,  The. — Poe. 
"Deep  locked  in  theocean  the  secret  lies."     See  Pilot's 

Bride,  The. — -Vickers.' 
Deep  on  the  convent-roof  the  snows.     See  St.  Agnes' 

Eve. — Tennyson. 
Deep  within  the  tangled  wildwood.     See  Wild  Thorn 
I         Blossoms. — Cutler. 
Deeper  than  all  sense  of  seeing.     See  Right  Living. — 

Anon. 
Deesa  man  liva  in  Italia  a  gooda  longa  time  ago.     See 

Christopher  Columbus. — Anon. 
Defeating  oft  the  labours  of  the  year.      See  Seasons, 

The  (Storm  in  Harvest). — Thomson. 
Defiled  is  my  name  full  sore.     See  Lament  of  Anne 

Boleyn  on  the  Eve  of  her  Execution. — Boleyn. 
Degenerate    Douglas!  oh,    the    unworthy    lord!     See 

Composed  at    Neidpath   Castle,    the   Property   of 

Lord  Queensberry. — Wordsworth. 
Delayed  till  she  had  ceased  to  know.     See  Too  Late. — 

Dickinson. 
Delighted  to  see  you,  Mrs.  Darling.    See  Widow  Bedott 

Papers  (Recipe  for  Potato  Pudding). — Whitcher. 
Delightful  change  from  the  town's  abode.     See  Barn- 
yard Melodies. — Brooks. 
Delightful  task !  to  rear  the  tender  thought.     See  Sea- 
sons, The  (Soul  Culture). — Thomson. 
Delivers  in  such  apt  and  gracious  words.     See  Love's 

Labour's  Lost. — Shakespeare. 
Dem  folks  in  de  Norf  is  de  beatin'est  lot!     See  Norvem 

People. — Russell. 
DeMaiiprat's   new  home — -too   splendid    for  a  soldier! 

See  Richelieu;   or.   The   Conspiracy  (Scene   from 

"Richelieu"). — Bulwer-Lytton. 


Democracy ! — Socialism !  Why  profess  to  associate.   See 

Democracy     Adverse      to     Socialism.  —  Tocque- 

ville. 
Deprived  of  root,  and  branch,  and  rind.     See  May- 
pole, A. — Swift. 
Der  boet  may  sing  off  "Der  Old  Oaken  Bookit."     See 

Dot  Long-handled  Dipper. — Adams. 
Der  Breitmann  mit  his  gompany.     See  Breitmann  in 

Maryland. — Leland. 
Der  key  to  mine  deory  vas  a  monkey,  und  dot  vas 

abarent  mit  you  all.     See  Carl  Pretzel's  Lecture 

on  Man. — Anon. 
Der   many   wrecks   of   human    peobles.     See    Indem- 

berance. — Pretzel . 
Der  meat-chopper  hanged   on   der  vhitevashed   vail. 

See  Der  Shoemaker's  Poy.- — Anon. 
Der  mule  shtood  on  der  steamboad  deck.     See  same. — 

Burdette. 
Der  night  vas  dark  as  anydhing.     See  Zwei  Lager. — 

Adams. 
Der   noble    Ritter    Hugo.     See    Ballad-    "Der    noble 

Ritter  Hugo." — Leland. 
Der  schiltren  dhey  vas  poot  in  ped.     See  Mine  Schild- 

hood. — Adams. 
Dere  am  a  great  many  tings  made  to  sell  dat  am  not  ub 

much  use.      See  Gloves  Were  never  Made  to  Sell. 

— Anon. 
Dere  vas  an  oldt  voman,  und  vot  do  you  t'ink?     See 

Victuals  and  Drink. — Anon. 
Dere  vhas   a  leedle  vomans  once.     See  Dutchman's 

Dog  Story,  A. — Brown. 
Dere's  a  d'eat  bid,  blat  bump  on  my  foUid.     See  Mis- 
chievous Daisy. — Matthews. 
Dere's  a  ting  dat  hab  been  puzzling  me,  Johnson.    See 

Jail-bird,  A. — Anon. 
Descend,    ye   Nine!  descend   and   sing.     See   Ode   on 

St.  Cecilia's  Day. — Pope. 
Deserted   by   the   waning   moon.     See   All's    Well. — 

Dibdin. 
Deserted  nest,  that  on  the  leafless  tree.     See  Deserted 

Nest,  The.— Howe. 
"Deserter!"     Well,-  Captain,  the  word's  about  right. 

See  Deserter,  A. — Barr. 
Design,  or  chance,  makes  others  wive.     See  Of  the 

Marriage  of  the    Dwarfs. — Waller. 
Despair  of  all,  and  hope  for  none!     See  Despair  and 

Hope. — Zangwill. 
Despairing  beside  a  clear  stream.     See  Colin's  Com- 
plaint.— Rowe.  ' 
Despised  by  the  world  and  unblest  with  a  wife.     See 

Peter  Longpocket. — Anon. 
Deth   hez   done   a  cruel   thing  lately.     See   Artemus 

Ward. — Billings. 
Devil's    Elbow   was   clean    gone   wild!     See   Race   at 

Devil's  Elbow,  The. — Buckham. 
Dey  is  times  in  life  when  Nature.     See  When  de  Co'n 

Pone's  Hot. — Dunbar. 
"Dey  must  not  pass!"  was  the  warning  cry  of, the 

Austrian    sentinel.     See   Scene   on    the    Austrian 

Frontier.  A. — (Punch.) 
Dhere  vas  many  qveer  dings  in  dis  land  off  der  free. 

See  Mine  Moder-in-law. — Anon. 
Dhere  vas  vot  you  call  a  maxim.     See  Der  Deutscher's 

Maxim. — Adams. 
Dhere    vasn'd    someding    haf    so    shweed.     Se     Der 

Schleighride. — Whipple. 
Dhree   shkadcrs    vent    ofer    mit    Cendral    Park.     See 

Dhree  Shkaders.- — -Anon. 
Diaphenia    like    the  daffodowndilly.      See  Diaphenia. 

— Constable. 
Dick  Dawdle  had  land  worth  two  hundred  a  year.   See  ' 

Come  and  Go. — Sharpe. 
Dick  kept  the  fashionable  saloon  in  town.     See  Dick 

Johnson's  Picture. — Anon. 
Dickens  has  painted  many  portraits  of  villainy.     See 

Two  of  Dickens'  Villains. — Elliott. 
Dickey-bird  baby  in  the  nest  sleeps.     See  Dickey-bird, 

The. — Anon. 
Did  anybody  have  such  a  bad  time  as  I  do?     See  Two 

Runaways,  The. — Edwards. 
Did  Chaos  form, — and  water,  air,  and  fire.     See  Gene- 
sis.— Ingham. 
Did  I  ever  tell  you  about  Smiley's  dog?     See  Jumping 

Frog,  The  (That  Dog  of  Jim  Smiley's). — Clemens. 
Did  J  ever  tell  you  how  it  happened  that  I  didn't  live 

and  die  an  old  maid?     See  Mrs.   Beau's  Court- 
ship.— "Clara  Augusta." 
Did  I  ever  tell  you  my  first  experience  as  a  teacher  of 

elocution?     See  Private  Rehearsal,  A. — Anon. 
Did  !  know  Comnrt  Joef     Yes,  I  knew  him.     See  Con- 
vict .Toe. — Murdoch. 
Did  it  ever  strike  you  how  utterly  insane  it  'm.     See 

Superstition. — Thatcher. 


642 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Do 


Did  not  the  heavenly  rhetoric  of  thine  eye.    See  Love's 

Labour's  Lost  (Perjury  P^xcused). — Shakespeare. 
Did   they   dare — did   they    dare,    to   slay   Owen   Roe 

O'Neill?     See  Lament  for  the  Death  of  Eoghan 

Ruadh  O'Neill.— Davis. 
Did   ye   [or  you]   hear   of   the   Widow    Malone.     See 

Widow  Malone,  The.— Lever. 
Did    you   alway.s   walk   in   your   sleep,    Jimmy?     See 

Somnambulist,  The. — Anon. 
Did  you  eber  see  de  wi'd  beasts,  Johnson?     See  Which 

Would  you  Rather? — Anon. 
Did  you  eber  travel,  .Johnson?     See  Bones  as  a  Trav- 
eler.— Anon. 
Did  you  ever,  any  of  you,  see  the  f>un  rise?     See  Pro- 
logue for  a  Boy. — Anon. 
Did  you  ever  drive  a  cow  to  pound?     See  Episode  in 

the  Life  of  Miss  Tabitha  Trenoodle. — Belgravia. 
"Did  you  ever  get  a  letter?"     See  First  Letter,  The.— 

(Youth's  Companion.) 
Did  you  ever  go  a  courtin'?  or  to  court?     See  Hannah 

Tripe  in  Court. — Anon. 
Did  you  over  go  courting  your  sweetheart.  Bones?    See 

Bones  on  Courting. — Anon. 
Did  you  ever  have  a  very  bad  cold,  with  a  total  irreso- 
lution to  submit  to  water-gruel  processes?     See 

Cold  in  the  Head,  A. — Lamb. 
Did  you  ever  hear  how  Budge  and  Tod.     See  Land  of 

Nod,  The.— Blinn. 
Did  you  ever  hear  of  Columbus?     See  Song  of  the 

States,  A.— Anon. 
Did  you  ever  hear  of  Jehosaphat  Boggs.     See  Boggs's 

Dogs. — Anon. 
Did  you  ever  hear  of  the  Drummer  Boy  of  Mission 

Ridge,  who  lay.     See  Drummer  Boy  of    Mission 

Ridge,  The.-^Sherwood. 
Did  you  ever  hear  tell  of  old  Timothy  Tuff?     See  Tim 

Tuff.— Capern. 
Did  you  ever  hear  two  married  women  take  leave  of 

each  other?     See  ' '  Good-bye. ' ' — Anon . 
Did   you   ever   love   a   maid?     See   Determination. — 

Fitch. 
Did  you  ever!  No,  I  never!     See  Menagerie,  The. — 

Honej'weU. 
Did  you  ever  notice  how  inclined  most  people  are? 

See  In  a  Horse  Car.— Semple. 
Did  you  ever  pause  before  a  painting?     See  Realism  of 

Dickens,  The. — Lathrop. 
Did  you  ever  sea  a  battery  take  position?     See  Sup- 
porting the  Guns. —  (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
Did  you  ever  see  little  John  Peter?     See  Spoiled  Face, 

The.— W.  O.  C. 
Did  you  ever  see  two  girls  get  together  to  study  of  an 

evening?     See  How  Girls  Study. — McDonald. 
Did  you  ever  stop  to  think  or  ask  what  causes  the 

color  in  the  sky?     See  What  Makes  the  Sky  Blue? 

— Anon. 
Did  you  ever  think  how  different  the  world  would  be. 

See  Flowers  and  Foliage. — Anon. 
Did  you  have  to   eat  the  bread    crust.     See   Bread 

Crusts. — Anon. 
Did  you  hear  about  my  disamination,  Johnson?     See 

Bones'  Examination. — Anon. 
Did  you  hear  about  the  crocodile  and  Tommy  Bow- 
line?    No?     See    Tommy    and    the    Crocodile. — 

Meyers. 
Did  you  hear  of  the  curate  who  mounted  his  mare? 

See   Priest   and    the    Mulberry-tree,   The. — Pea- 
cock. 
Did  you  hear  of  the  fight  at  Corinth?     See  Eagle  of 

Corinth,  The.— Brownell. 
Did   you   for  ye]  hear   of  the   Widow   Malone?     See 

Widow  Malone. — Lever. 
Did  you  ne'er  think  what  wondrous  beings  these?    See 

Birds  of   Killingworth,   The    (Song    of    Birds).— 

Longfellow. 
Did  you  never,  in  walking  in  the  fields,  come  across  a 

large,  flat  stone?     See  Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast- 
table,  The  (Letting  in  Light). — Holmes. 
Did  you  say  you  wished  to  see  me,  sir?  step  in;  'tis  a 

cheerless  place.     See  Poor-house  Nan. — Blinn. 
Did  you  see  me  riding  out  de  oder  day?     See  Bones  as 

a  Doctor. — Anon. 
Did  you  see  the  snowy  castle?     See  Cloud  Castles.— 

Withrow. 
Did  you  think  I  could  forget  it?     See  Silver  Wedding 

The.— Stowe. 
Didn't  know  Flynn, — Flynn  of  Virginia?     See  In  the 

Tunnel. — Harte. 
"Didn't  the  fox  never  catch  the  rabbit,  Uncle  Remus?" 

See  Uricle  Remus.     His  Songs   and  His  Sayings 

(Uncle  Remus'  Tar-baby). — Harris. 
Didn't  you  feel  cross  when  you  heard  that  old  bell? 

See  First  Week  of  School,  The. — Denton. 


Didn't  you  little_  fellows  say  you  wanted  to  learn  to 

debate?     See  Young  Debaters,  The. — McBride. 
Didn't  you  know.  Birdie,  I'se  dot  a  new  doUie?     See 

Little  Folk's  Opinions. — McBride. 
"Didst  ever  see  a  hanging?"     "No,   not  one."     See 

Phantoms  of  St.  Sepulchre,  The. — Mackay. 
Didst  hear  the  sound  of  music?     See  Veiled  Priestess, 

The.— Case. 
"Didst  thou  hear,  the  talk  ran  that  he  had  not  died  at 

all."       See    Light   of    the    World,    The    (Pontius 

Pilate). — Arnold. 
Didst  thou  not  praise  me,  Gaultier,  at  the  ball?     See 

Franoesca  da  Rimini. — Aytoun. 
Die  down,  O  dismal  day!   and  let  me  live.     See  Son- 
net.— Gray. 
Die  when  you  will,  you  need  not  wear.     See  To . 

— Moore. 
"Died,      Lottie     Dougherty,"     to-day.     See     I,ottie 

Dougherty. — Williams. 
Dies  Irse,  Dies  Ilia!     See  Dies  Irae. — Celano. 
Different  species  of  trees  move  their  leaves  very  differ- 
ently.    See  Walk  among  Trees,  A  (Motion  of  the 

Leaves,  The). — Beecher. 
Dimbled  [or  dimpled]  scheeks  mit  eyes  off  plue.     See 

Mine  Vamily. — Adams. 
"Dimes  and  dollars!  dollars  and  dimes!"     See  Dimes 

and  Dollars. — Mills. 
Diminutive  puerile  ultramarine.     See  Little  Boy  Blue. 

— Anon. 
Dimpled   and   flushed   and   dewy   pink   he   lies.     See 

Baby. — Eastman. 
Dimpled  cheeks  and  scarlet  lips.     See  Chansonette. — 

Graves. 
Dimpled  [or  dimbled]  scheeks,  mit  eyes  oflf  plue.     See 

Mine  Vamily. — Adams. 
Ding  dong,   ding  dong,   ding  dong.     See  School-bell, 

The. — Denton. 
"Ding  dong!"  quoth  the  bell,  "I've  a  story  to  tell." 

See  Rape  of  the  Bell,  The. — Moore. 
Diogenes,  surly  and  proud.     See  In  Praise  of  Wine. — 

Anon. 
Dip  down  upon  the  northern  shore.     See  In  Memoriam 

(April  Days). — Tennyson. 
Dip!  dip!  Softly  slip.     Sec  Canoe  Song. — Champney. 
Dire  need  of  a  cook  made  me  acquainted  with  Tilly 

Bones.     See  Tilly  Bones. — Bellamy. 
Dire  rebel  though  he  was.     See  Philip  van  Artevelde. 

—Taylor. 
Dis  meetin'  will  come  to  ordah.     If  we  are  gwine  to  do 

anything    to-night.     See    First    Meeting    of    the 

Cucumber  Hill  Debating  Club,  The. — Anon. 
Dis  must  be  de  place;  every  tree  and  shrub  am  familiar 

to  me.     See  Soldier's  Return,  The.— White. 
Disarmed  with  so  genteel  an  air.     See  In  Answer  to 

Mr.  Pope. — ^Winchilsea. 
Disasters  come  not  singly       See  Song  of  Hiawatha, 

The  (Disa.sters). — Longfellow. 
Discharged  again!  Yes,  I  am  free.     See  Warden,  Keep 

a  Place  for  Me. — Arkwright. 
Disguise  upon  disguise,  and  then  disguise.     See  Soul 

unto  Soul  Glooms  Darkling. — Moore. 
Dish  is  vat  a  coundry!     I  gets  to  feel  pad  pefore  I  am 

dere  one,  two,  t'ree  week.     See  Dakin'  a  Shweat. 

— Seymour. 
Dismiss    your    apprehension,    pseudo    bard.     See    At 

Shakespeare's  Grave. — Browne. 
Distracted  with  care.     See  Despairing  Lover,  The. — 

Walsh. 
Divinely  shapen  cup,  thy  lip.     See  On  a  Greek  Vase. — 

Sherman. 
Divinest     Spenser,     heaven-bred    happy    muse!     See 

Britannia's     Pastorals     (Edmund     Spenser). — 

Browne. 
Diwectly  after  the  season  is  over  in  town,  I  always  go 

into  the  countwy.     See  Dundreary  in  the  Country. 

— Anon. 
Dixon,  a  Choctaw,  twenty  years  of  age*.     See  Savage, 

A.— O'Reilly. 
Do  all  the  good  you  can.     See  Do  Good. — Anon. 
Do  angels  wear  white  dresses,  say?     See  Questions  of 

the  Hour. — Piatt. 
Do  be  calm,  father!     See  Tobias  Turniptop  in  General 

Court. — Anon. 
Do  good,  do  good,  there's  ever  a  way.     See  Do  Good. 

— Anon. 
"Do    I   look  like   a   debauchee?"     See   Blifkins,   the 

Bacchanal. — Shillaber. 
Do  I  love  her?     See  Indecision. — Anon. 
Do  I  love  thee?     Ask  the  bee.     See  Do  I  Love  Thee? — 

Saxe. 
Do?  like  the  things  in  the  garden;  oh.     See  When  It 

Rains. — Anon. 
Do  not  all  Earth  and  Sea.     See  Sisyphus. — Mackay. 


643 


Do 


AN  INDEX  TO  P()E:TRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Do  not  as  some  ungracious  pastors  do.     <S«e  Hamlet. — 

Shakespeare. 
Do  not  crouch  to-day  and  worship.     iSee  Present,  The. 

— Procter. 
Do  not   drop   in  for  an  after-loss.     See  Sonnets,  XC. 

— Shakespeare. » 
Do  not  fear  to  put  thy  feet.     See  Faithful  Shepherdes,s, 

The  (Song,  The). — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Do  not   lift   him   from  the  bracken.     See  Widow  of 

(ilencoe.  The. — Aytoun. 
.  Do  not  quarrel  with  each  other.     See  Little  Brother, 

Little  Sister. — Kichards. 
Do  not  sing  that   .song   again.      See   aame.— McDer- 

mott. 
Do  not  then   tolerate  a  power.     See  Declaration   of 

Rights. — G  rat  tan. 
Do  not  think  of  your  faults.     See  Faults  and  Virtues. 

— Ruskin. 
Do  not  trust  him,  gentle  lady.     See  Gipsy's  Warning, 

The. — Flotow  and  St.  Georges. 
Do  not  waste  your  pity,  friend.     See  Wasted  Sympa- 
thy, A. — Howells. 
Do  not  write.     I  am  sad,  and  would  my  life  were  o'er. 

See  Parted. — Desbordes-Valmore. 
Do  sit  down,  (.'hassie!  and  do  not  be  so  impatient.     See 

That  Awful  Girl! — Kavanaugh. 
Do  stop!  You  make  me  angry.  Bob!     See  Naughty 

Bob. — Anon. 
Do  tell  me,  sister  Marian,  that's  a  dear.     See  Cross 

Purposes. — Anon. 
Do  tell  us,  ?'mma,  what  you  have  summoned  us  here 

for.     See  Curing  a  Pedant. — Anon. 
Do  the  duty  that  lieth  nearest  thy  hand.     See  Do  the 

Duty  that  Lieth  Nearest  Thy  Hand. — Anon. 
Do  the  young  people  ever  think  they  will  be  old?     See 

Old  Folks. — Anon. 
Do  thy  little,  do  it  well.     See  Holiness. — Anon. 
Do  we  have  any  accidents  here,   sir?     Any  children 

run   over,   you    say?      See   Crippled    for   Life. — 

Nicholls. 
Do  we  have  many  accidents  here,  sir?      See   Bridge 

Keeper's  Story,-  The. — Eaton. 
Do  we  heed  the  homely  adage,  handed  down  from  days 

of  yore?     See  Let  E^very  One  Sweep  before  His 

Own  Door. — Anon. 
Do  what  conscience  says  is  right.     See  Do  Right. — 

Anon. 
Do  ye  hear  the  children  weeping,  O  my  brothers?     See 

Cry  of  the  Children,  The. — Browning. 
"Do  ye  loike  spring  poethry,  Mrs.  McGlaggerty?"  the 

widow    began.     See    Mrs.    MaGoogin    on    Spring 

Bonnets  and  Spring  Poetry. — Jenkins. 
"Do  you— ahem! — do  you  ever  print  any  art  items? 

See     Western     Artist's     Accomplishments,     A. — 

Anon. 
Do  you  ask  have  I  wooed  before,  love?     See  Ever  So 

Long  Ago. — Anon. 
Do  you  ask  me  our  duty  as  .scholars?     See  Duty  of  the 

American  Scholar. — Curtis. 
Do  you  ask  what  the  birds  say?     The  sparrow,  the 

dove.     See    Answer    to    a    Child's    Question. — 

Coleridge. 
"Do  you  call  that  manners,  Jacob?     Is  that  the  way 

to  bow?     See  Not  Guilty? — Hatton. 
Do  you  eber  go  to  law,  Johnson?     See  Tambo  and  his 

Mother-in-law. — Anon. 
"Do  you  entertain  any  ill-will  toward  the  prisoner?" 

See  False  Witness  Detected. — Knowles. 
Do  you  ever  lie  awake  at  night?     See  Voices  of  the 

Night. — Kerr. 
Do  you  ever  think,  sweet  Kitty?     See  Stealing  Roses. 

— Gaddess. 
Do  you  fear  the  force  of  the  wind.     See  Do  vou  Fear 

the  Wind?— Garland. 
Do  you  feel  sometimes  in  your  dreaming.    See  Do  You^ 

— Anon. 
Do  you  find  out  the  likeness?     See  Big  Shoe,  The. — 

Whitney. 
Do  you  follow  the  plow  as  a  matter  of    choice?     See 

Room  at  the  Top. — Branson. 
Do  you   hear   an   ominous    muttering   as   of   thunder 

gath'ring  round?     See  It  is  Coming. — Mosher. 
Do  you  hear  the  ocean  moaning.     See  What  the  Wild 

Waves  Said. — (University  Herald.) 
Do  you   hear   the   scandal-mongers   passing   by.     See 

Scandal-mongers. — Anon. 
Do  you  know  Daisy?     She's  a  pretty  nice  little  girl. 

See  Balky  Horse,  The— Denton. 
Do  you  know  Freddie?     He's  the  nicest  boy  I  ever 

saw.     See  About  Freddie. — Denton. 
Do  you  know  how  empires  find  their  end?     See  Na- 
tional Injustice. — Parker. 
Do  you  know  how  many  stars.     See  same. — Anon. 


Do  you  know  much  about  de  sculptists?     See  Tambo 

on  the  English  Language. — Anon. 
Do  you  know  of  the  dreary  land.    See  River  Fight,  The. 

Brownell. 
"Do  you   know,"   said    Dandelion,    growing   stiff   and 

sullen.     See  Dandelion  and  Clover-top. — Smith. 
Do  you  know  that  some  one  really  said.     See  What 

Boys  are  Good  For. — Goodfellow. 
Do  you  know  the  olden  story.     See  Christmas  Time. — 

Spangenberg. 
"Do  you  know  the  prisoner  well?"  asked  the  attorney. 

See  Hard  Witness,  A. — Anon. 
Do  you  know  what  it  is  when  the  clouds  creep  onwards. 

See  Death  of  Hope. — Evered. 
Do  you  know  what  it  means,  you  boys  and  girls.     See 

Memorial  Day. — Anon. 
Do  you  know  what  Jane  Sterling  says?     See  Music. — 

Anon. 
Do  you  know  what  made  my  voice  so  melodious?     See 

Suggestion. — (The  Jest  Book.) 
Do  you    know    what's    in    my    potet?     See   Johnny's 

Pocket. — Anon. 
Do  you    know    where   the   crocus    blowes?     See    First 

Crocus,  The. — Sherwood. 
Do  you  know  where  the  summer  blooms  all  the  year 

round?     See  Land  of  Nowhere,  The. — Wilcox. 
Do  you  know  why  the  snow.     See  Bedtime.     (Youth's 

Companion.) 
Do   you  know  you  have  asked  for  the  costliest  thing. 

See  Woman's  Question,  A. — Lathrop. 
Do  you    love    me.    Mistress    Prue?     See    To    Prue. — 

Houghton. 
Do  you  often   go  to  the  country,   Tambo?     See  Set 

Fair. — Anon. 
Do  you  pay  much  attention  to  de  ladies,   Johnson? 

See  Above  Two  Feet. — Anon. 
Do  you  recall  that  night  in  June.     See  Danube  River, 

The.— Aid6. 
Do  you  remember,  dear,  a  night  in  June.     See  By  the 

Gaspereau. — Lockhart. 
Do  you  remember,  father.     See  Whip-poor-will,  The. 

— VanDyke. 
Do  you  remember,  long  ago.     See  After  Aughrim. — 

Geoghegan. 
Do  you  remember  me?  or  are  you  proud?     See  lanthe's 

Question. — Landor. 
Do  you  remember,  my  sweet,  absent  son.     See  Child's 

Wish  Granted,  The. — Lathrop. 
Do  you  remember  that  most  perfect  night.     See  Love 

and  Prudence. — Story. 
Do  you  remember  when  first  we  met?     See  "Free  Puff, 

A." — Gray. 
Do  you  remember,  when  we  came  from  school.     See 

"Across  the  Lot." — -C.  S. 
Do  you  remember  when  you  heard.     See  Won't  You. — 

Bayly. 
Do  you  see  how  the  Old  Year  hides  his  eyes?     See  King 

is  Dead,  Long  Live  the  King,  The. — Moulton. 
Do  you  see  that  bird  on  t(ie  apple-tree.     See  Feathered 

Name-speakers.     (Young  Idea,  The.) 
Do  you  see  that  ugly  cur  there,  that  wall-eyed  looking 

beast?     See  Moose  Hunt,  The. — Anon. 
Do  you  see  this  little  hatchet?     See  One  Little  Hatchet . 

— Denton. 
"Do  you  see  this  lock  of  hair?"     See  Care  of  God,  The. 

— Anon. 
Do  you  sometimes  feel  discouraged.     See  How  to  be 

Happy. — Anon. 
Do   you  suppose  the  blades  of  grass.     See  Questions. 

—J.  M.  L. 
Do  you  think,  dear  little  children.     See  Christmas. — 

Anon. 
Do  you  think  I  am  pretty?     The  boys  tell  me  so.     See 

Which  Shall  it  be.— "Bob  o'  Link." 
Do  you  think  I  could  forget  it?     See  Silver  Wedding, 

The.— Stowe. 
Do  you  think  my  pet  squirrel  will  go  quite  away.     See 

Mary  and  her  Pet  Squirrel. — Anon. 
Do     you   think  what   a   metaphysician.     See   Say! — 

Melroy. 
Do  you  understand  algebra?     See  Philosopher  and  the 

Ferryman,  The. — Anon. 
Do  you  want  some  day  to  be  great,  boys?     See  Read 

This,  Boys. — -Anon. 
Do  you  want  to  know  who  I  am,  and  why  all  these 

dolls    are    here?      See    Doll's    Hospital,    The. — 

Anon. 
Do  you  want  to  peep  into  Bedlam  Town?     See  Bedlam 

Town. — Wilcox. 
Do  you  wish  to  know  the  reason.     See  Reason  Why, 

The. — Anon. 
Do  you  wonder  what  I  am  seeing.     See  Coast-guard, 

The.— Miller. 


644 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Dot 


Do  your  best,  your  very  best.     See  Do  your  Best. — 

Anon. 
Doan'  look   for   infallibility   in    de   human    race.     See 

Brother    Gardner    on    de  Human  Race. — (Detroit 

Free  Press. ) 
Doan'  you  go,  chile.     See  Sistah  Lize. — Cook. 
Dr.  Edward    Everett    Hale    addressed    the    Twentieth 

Century  Club  last  night.     See  Dr.  Hale  on  Emer- 
son.— (Boston  Herald.) 
Doctor,  if  you  can  wait,  I'll  tell  you  the  tale  of  my  life. 

See  First  Quarrel,  The. — Tennyson. 
Dr.  Liverwort  stepped  quietly  from  the  sick-chamber. 

<See  Clear  Case,  A. — Whipple. 
Doctor  Mac  Lure  did  not  lead  a  solemn  procession.     See 

Beside  the  Bonnie  Brier  Bush  (Doctor  of  the  OKI 

School,  A). — Watson. 
Dr.  Oliver  Wendell   Holmes  says.     See  Other  Fellow, 

The.— Smith. 
Dr.  Willard  was  a  man  about  six  feet  four  inches  high. 

See  Hypochondriac,  The. — Valentine. 
Doeg,    though    without    knowing    how    or    why.     See 

Absalom  and  Achitophel  (Doeg  and   Og). — Dry- 
den. 
Does  a  man  ever  give  up  hope,  I  wonder.     See  Truth 

at  Last. — Sill. 
Does  a  two-year-old  baby  pay  for  itself  up  to  the  time 

it  reaches  that  interesting  age?     See  Does  a  Two- 
year-old  Baby  Pay? — Anon. 
Does  any  man  dream  that  a  Gael  can  fear?     See  Ballad 

of  Athlone,  A. — De  Vere. 
Does  it  make  a  boy  any  more  of    a  man.     See  True 

Manliness. — Anon. 
"Does   Mr.  Sawyer  live  here?"     See  Pickwick  Papers, 

The  (Jack  Hopkins'  Story). — Dickens. 
Does  my  nose  look  crooked?     See  Nose  out  of  Joint, 

A. — Goodfellow. 
Does  the  pearl  know,  that  in  its  shade  and  sheen?     See 

Does  the  Pearl  Know? — Hay. 
Does  the  road  wind  uphill  all  the  way?     See  Uphill. — 

Rossetti. 
Does  the  snow  fall  at  sea?     See   Snow-song,  A. — Van 

Dyke. 
Does  yo'  see  dem  yaller  roses  clingin'  to  de  cabin  wall. 

See  Grandfather's  Rose. — Denison. 
Doff  thy  new  spectacles.     See  Boston  Lullaby,  A. — - 

Anon. 
Doge, — for  such  you  still  are,  and  by  the  law.     See 

Marino  Faliero  (Doge's  Sentence,  The). — Byron. 
Dolly   knows  what's   the  matter — Dolly  and   L     See 

Home.sick. — Anon. 
Dolly,    you're   a   sad   disgrace.     See   Dolly's   Bath. — 

Anon. 
Dolly's  wet  her  feet.     See  Housekeeper's  Troubles,  A. — 

Anon. 
Domestic    love!     Not    in    proud    palace    halls.     See 

Domestic  Love. — Croly. 
Don  Crambo  once  there  was  who  had  for  wife.     See  Don 

Crambo. — Meyers. 
Don  Ditto  was  as  brave  a  knight.     See  Legend  of  Don 

Ditto  and  the  Dutchmen. — Anon. 
Don  Juan  has  ever  the  grand  old  air.     See  Don  Juan. — 

Foote. 
Don  Pedro  loved  the  Donna  Inez.     See  Don  Pedro  and 

Fair  Inez. — Meyers. 
Don  Quixote  and  Sancho  Panza,  issuing  from  a  forest. 

See  Don  Quixote  and  the  Huntress. — Cervantes. 
Don    Surly    to    aspire    the    glorious    name.     See   Don 

Surly. — Jonson. 
Don'd  ask  me,  blease,  dis  efening,  friends.     See  I  Kin 

nod  Trink  Tonighd. — Anon. 
Dong — dong — the  bells  rang  out.     See  Fire-bell's  Story, 

The.— Catlin. 
Don't  be  afraid  of  the  dark.     See  Don't  be  Afraid. — 

Craik. 
Don't  be  frightened.     Sec  Elsie's  Burglar. — Anon. 
Don't  be  in  a  hurry  to  answer  yes  or  no.     See  Don't 

be  in  a  Hurry. — Anon. 
Don't  be  sorry,  mo'ners,  when  de  sun  don't  shine.     See 

Don't  be  Sorry. — Anon. 
Don't  crowd  and  push  on  the  march  of  life.     See  Room 

Enough  for  All. — Anon. 
Don't  cry,  Johnnie.     See  How  Johnnie  Stopped  Crying. 

— Anon. 
Don't  ever  go  hunting  for  pleasures.     See  Sermon  for 

Young  Folks,  A. — Cary. 
Don't  fire  too  high.     See  Rural  Lesson  in  Rhetoric,  A. 

— Anon. 
Don't  go    out    tonight,    Joe.     Please    don't    go.     See 

Drunkard's  Repentance,  A. — Pratt. 
Don't  go  to  the  theatre,   lecture  or  ball.     See  Write 

Them  a  Letter  To-night. — Anon. 
Don't  grow    old    too    fast,    my    sweet!     See   Mother's 

Song. — Anon. 


Don't  kill  the  birds,  the  pretty  birds.     See  Don't  Kill 

the  Birds. — Colesworthy. 
Don't  look  for  the  flaws  as  you  go  through  life.     See 

Current  of  Life,  The. — Anon. 
Don't  say  that  you  think  me  courageous,  for  that's  an 

assertion    I    doubt.     See    Hunting   a   Madman. — 

Nicholls. 
Don't  talk  of  September!     See  Hunting  Sea.son,  The. — 

Bayly. 
Don't  talk   ov   housen   all   o'    brick.     See   Girt    Wold 

House  o'  Mossy  Stwone,  The. — Barnes. 
Don't  talk  to  me,  Belinda;  it's  no  use.     See  Go,  A. — 

Meyers. 
Don't  talk    to    me    of    Olympus'    maids.     See    Little 

Woman,  The. — Barnes. 
Don't  talk  to  me  of  parties,  Nan;  I  really  cannot  go. 

See  Conflicting  Claims. — Beers. 
"Don't  tell  me  'there's  room  at  the  top.'  "  See  Tragedy, 

A. — Knox. 
Don't  thiijk,  dear   friends,  that  I'm  too  small.      See 

Throwing  Kisses. — Anon. 
Don't  think  too  much  of  finery.-    See  Polly's  Lecture 

tt)  Dolly. — Anon. 
Don't   worry,    dear;   the   bleakest   years.     See   Don't 

Worry. — Anon. 
Don't  you  hear  it  humming,  humming?     See  Vacation. 

— Denton. 
Don't  you    hear    the    children    coming.     See    School 

Called. — Taylor. 
Don't  you    hear    the    tramp    of    soldiers?     See    One 

beneath  Old  Glory. — Anon. 
Don't  you  remember  lame  Sally,  Joe  Jones.     See  Joe 

Jones. — Anon. 
Don't  you    remember    sweet     Alice,    Ben    Bolt.     See 

Ben  Bolt.— English. 
Don't  you  talk  to  me  about  women  as  though  they 

were  timid  and  weak.     See  Mother's  Daring,  A. — 

Nicholls. 
"Don't  you  think  it's  a  pity,  Levy."     See  Made  to  Fit. 

• — Anon. 
Don't  you  think  me  rather  bold?     See  Brag. — "Bob  o' 

Link." 
"Don't   you  think,   Minerva,"   said   Mr.    Backenstots, 

anxiously.     See  Who  Should  Wipe  the  Dishes. — 

KeUy. 
Don't  you   think   skating   is    dreadful   good    exercise? 

See   Mrs.    Smart    Learns  How  to  Skate. — "Clara 

Augusta." 
"Don't  you  think  that,"  I  asked  the  coachman.     See 

David  Copperfield  (Death    of    Steerforth,  The).— 

Dickens. 
Don't  you  want  to  hear  me  talk  trees.     See  Autocrat 

of   the   Breakfast-table,   The  (Talks  on  Trees).— 

Holmes. 
Don't  you  wish  you  were  in  my  place,  Stewart?     See 

Counting  the  Chickens  before  they  Were  Hatched. 

— Anon. 
Dorinda's  sparkling  wit  and  eyes.     See  Song:  "Dorin- 

da's  .parkling,"  etc. — Dorset. 
Dorinda's     youthful     spouse.     See     Widow,     The. — 

Gellert. 
"Dorothea,"  said  grandma,  "before  I  was  your  age  I 

had  pieced  two  bed-quilts.     See  Dorry  Learns  to 

Sew. — Dayre. 
Dorothy  goes  with  her  pails  to  the  ancient  well  in  the 

courtyard.    See  Dorothy:  A  Country  Story  (Doro- 
thy).— Munby. 
Dorothy's  daintily  dressed  for  the  dance.     See  Fancy- 
dress  Ball,  The. — Denison. 
Dose  efening  clouds  vas  sedding  fast.     See  Shoo  Flies. 

— Anon. 
Dosh  Tinjey  was  an  enterprising  darkey.     See  Uncle 

PMom  and  the  Flurridy  Nigger. — Andrews. 
Dosn't  thou  'ear  my  'erse's  legs,  as  they  canters  awaay? 

See  Northern  Farmer  (New  Style). — Tennyson. 
Dost  deem  him  weak  that  owns   his  strength  is  tried. 

See  Strong,  The. — Cheney. 
Dost     thou     hear,     Columbia,     O     my    mother?     See 

American  to  His  Mother,  An. — (Boston  Journal.) 
Dost  thou  look  back  on  what  hath  been.     See  "Dost 

Thou  Look  Back?" — Tennyson. 
Dost    thou    not    hear,    amid    dun,    lonely    hills?     See 

^]olian  Harp,  An. — Field. 
Dost  thou  not  know  God's  country,  where  it  lies?     See 

God's  Country. — Auringer. 
Dost  thou  not  perceive  how  this  body  wastes    away. 

See  Divine  Providence  in  Nature. — Chrysostom. 
Dost  thou  remember  that  place  so  lonely?     See  Dost 

Thou  Remember? — Moore. 
Dot  dog  he  vas  dot  kind  of  dog.     See  Der  Dog  und  der 

Lobster. — Sertrew. 
Dot  is  five  and  Jack  is  ten.     See  Puzzling  Example,  A. 

— Anon. 


645 


Dot 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Dot  is  qualidy  vich  is  berfecdly  requiside  in  dis  world. 

See  Cheeg. — Anon. 
Dot  vinder  dime,  dot's  came  again;  der  ground  vas 

hard  mit  freeze.     See  Dot  Vinder  Dime. — Anon. 
Doth  it  not  thrill  thee,  poet?     See  Passionate  Reader 

to  His  Poet.  Th».— Le  Gallienne. 
Doth  Life  survive   the   touch  of   Death?     iSee  Life  or 

Death.— E.  B. 
Doth  then  the  world  go  thus ;  doth  all  thus  move?     See 

aaTne. — Drummond. 
Doth  thy  heart  stir    within  thee  at  the  sight.     iSee 

Orchard  Blossoms. — Hemans. 
Doubt  thou  the  stars  are  fire.  See  Hamlet.— Shakespeare. 
Doubtless  the  law  of  honor  is  only  half  Christian.     iSee 

War  and  Peace. — Robertson. 
Dove  that  found  birth  within  an  eagle's  nest.     See 

Napoleon  II.,  Duke  of  Jleichstadt. — Saltus. 
Down  and  up,  and  up  and  down.     See  Work. — Cary. 
Down  below,  the  wild  November  whistling.     See  Up 

Above  and  Down  Below. — Alexander.     • 
Down  by  a  shining  water  well.     See  My  Kingdom. — 

Stevenson.  , 

Down  by  the  clear  river's  side  they  wandered.     See 

Decoration  Day. — Hussey. 
Down  by  the  gate  of  the  orchard.     See  Spring  Whistles. 

— Larcom. 
Down  by  the  salley  gardens  my  love  and  I  did  meet. 

See  Old  Song  Uesung,  An. — Yeats. 
Down  by  the  wall  where  the  lilacs  grow.     See  Little 

Planter,  A. — (Youth's  Companion.) 
Down  by  yon  garden  green.     See  Laird  of  Waristoim. 

The. — Anon. 
Down  came  the  rain  with  steady  pour.     See  Murder 

of  Darnley,  The. — Aytoun. 
Down  deep  in  a  hollow,  so  damp  and  so  cold.     See 

Philosopher  Toad,  "The.^ — Nichols. 
Down  Dee-side  came  Inverey  whistling  and  playing. 

See  Baron  of  Brackley,  The. — Anon. 
Down,  dogs !     Down,  down !     Lie  there,  red  deer.   ,See 

Esau  and  Jacob.- — Murray. 
'Down,  down,'  cried  Mar.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The 

(Battle  of  Beal  an'  Duine). — Scott. 
Down,  down,  Ellen,  my  little  one      See  Apros. — Munby. 
Down  drop  the  painted  leaves.     See  Autumn  is  Ended. 

— Hartzell. 
Down    from    a   sunken    doorstep    to    the    road.     See 

Romance. — Howells. 
Down  from  the  blue  the  sun  has  driven.     See  Indian 

Summer. — M'Lachlan. 
Down  from  the  hill,  up  from  the  glen.     See  I  Want 

Mamma. — (Harper's  Weekly.) 
Down  from  yon  distant  mountain  height.     See  Boy  and 

the  Brook,  The. — Longfellow. 
Down  in  a  field  one  day  in  June.     See  Discontent. — 

Jewett. 
Down  in  a  garden   olden.     See  Rose's   Cup,   The. — 

Sherman. 
Down  in  a  green  and  shady  bed.     See  Violet,  The. — 

Taylor. 
Down  in  a  street  by  the  river's  side.     See  Cripple  Ben. 

— Catlin. 
Down  in  Coomer's  Alley.     See  Sally. — Meyers. 
Down  in  de  bight  deen  meadow.     See  Daisy's  Faith. — 

Mathews. 
Down  in  my  solitude  under  the  snow.     See  Crocus' 

Soliloquy,  The.— Gould. 
Down  in  the  bleak  December  bay.     See  Mayflower, 

The.— Ellsworth. 
Down  in  the  darkness,  deep  in  the  darkness.     See  Here 

and  There. — Cary. 
Down  in  the  deep.     See  Wary  Trout,  The. — Anon. 
Down  in  the  depths.     See  Ocean's  Dead,  The. — Ford. 
Down  in  the  glen.     See  Two  of  a  Kind. — Arndt. 
Down  in   the   narrow   alley   there  was   the   noise   of 

quarreling    children.     See    Out    of    Muhlqueen's 

Alley.— Provost. 
Down  in  the  valley,  deep,  deep,  deep.     See  Where  They 

Grow. — Anon. 
Down   in   the   valley   were   gathered,    one   day.     See 

Trees'  Choice,  The. — Carter. 
Down  in  the  wide  gray  river.     See  Fishing  Song. — 

Cooke. 
Down    in    yon    garden    sweet    and    gay.     See    Willy 

Drowned  in  Yarrow. — Anon. 
Down  lay  in  a  nook  my    lady's    brach.     See    Philip 

van  Artevelde. — Taylor. 
Down  on  the  north  wind  sweeping.     See  Inhospitality. 

— Thaxter. 
Down  on  the  shadowed  stream  of  time  and  tears.     See 

Christ  and  the  Mourners. — Conway. 
Down  swept  the  chill  wind  from  the  mountain  peak. 

See  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal,  The  (Brook  in  Winter, 

The).— Lowell. 


Down  the  bright  streams  the  fairies  float.     See  Last 

Voyage  of  the  Fairies,  The. — Adams. 
Down    the    broad    hillside    toward    Jerusalem.     See 

Woman's  Love. — Anon. 
Down  the  dark  future,  through  long  generations.     See 

Arsenal  at  Springfield,  Tne. — Longfellow. 
Down  the  deep,  the  miry  lane.     See  Summer  Evening, 

A.— White. 
Down  the  dimpled  greensward  dancing.     See  Gambols 

of  Children,  The. — Darley. 
Down  the  goldenest  of  streams.     See  Mater  Amabilis. — 

Lazarus. 
Down  the  green  hillside  fro'  the  castle  window.     See 

Lady  Jane.— Anon. 
Down  the  hard,  frozen  road  that  leads  to  the  city.     See 

Uncle  Newton — a  Pinchtown  Pauper. — Gordon. 
Down  the  lane,  and  across  the  fields.     See  Doris. — 

Harper. 
Down  the  Little  Big  Horn.     See  same. — Brooks. 
Down  the  long  hall  she  glistens  like  a  star.     See  Venus 

of  the  Louvre. — Lazarus. 
Down  the  long  lanes  of  Arcadie.     See  Chase,  The. — 

Roberts. 
Down  the  picket  guarded  lane.     See  "How  are  You, 

Sanitary  ?'  ■ — Harte. 
Down  the  placid  river  gliding.     See  Incident  of  the 

War,  An.— Kimball. 
Down  the  rippling,  dancing  river.     See  On  the  River. — 

Long. 
Down  the  road  to  Sally's.     See  same. — Marsh. 
Down  the  room  now  swiftl.y  gliding.     See  At  the  Ball. — 

Dunham. 
Down   the   Savoy  valleys   sounding.     See   Church   of 

Brou,  The. — Arnold. 
Down  the  vista  of  the  ages.     See  Endless  Procession, 

The. — Anon. 
Down  the  wintry  mountain.     See  Highland  Cattle. — 

Mulock. 
Down  the   world    with    Mama!     See   Wander-lovers, 

The.— Hovey. 
Down  through  our  crowded  lanes  and  closer  air.     See 

Epitaph  in  the  Cathedral  of  Derry. — Alexander. 
Down  through  the  snow-drifts  in  the  street.     See  Boy, 

The.— Field. 
Down  to  the  stream  they  flying  go.     See  Shibboleth. — 

Cleveland. 
Down  to  the  vale  this  water  steers ;  how  merrily  it  goes ! 

See  Old  Man  by  the  Brook,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Down  to  the  wharves,  as  the  sun  goes  down.     See  My 

Ship. — Allen. 
Down  under  the  ground,  deep  leagues  adown.     See  In 

the  Tenth  Circle. — (Dartmouth  Literary  Monthly.) 
Down    where    the    long,    dark,    wooden    bridge.     See 

Leagued  with  Death. — :Anon. 
Down  with  the  rosemary  and  bayes.     See  Candlemas 

Eve. — Herrick. 
Down  with  the  traffic!     Down,  we  say!     See  Down 

with  the  Traffic. — Williams. 
Down-adown -derry.     See  same.- — Ramal. 
Down-trickling,   soft   and    slow.     See    River,   The. — 

Plumptre. 
Downward  sinks  the  setting  sun.     See  Good  Night. — 

Anon. 
Dow's  Flat,  that's  its  name.     See  Dow's  Flat — 1856. — 

Harte. 
Dozing,  and  dozing,  and  dozing!     See  Cat-questions. — 

Larcom. 
Drake  he  was  a  Devon  man  an'  ruled  the  Devon  seas. 

See  Drake's"  Drum. — Newbolt. 
Drake,  he's  in  his  hammock,  an'  a  thousand  mile  away. 

See  Drake's  Drum. — -Newbolt. 
Draper  in  his  last  book  tries  to  prove.  See  same. — (New 

York  Sun.) 
Draw  down  the  curtains  close,  O  heart!     See  L'Envoy. 

— Randolph. 
Draw  nigh  with  reverence,  Canada.     See  Alexander 

Mackenzie. — Macljcod. 
Draw  oop  dem  bapers,  lawyer,  und  make  'em  shtrong 

und  lawful.     See  Baitsy  and  I  Are  Oudt. — Warren. 
Draw  oud  der  bapers,  lawyer.     See  Betsy  und  I  Hafe 

Bust  Up. — Burdette. 
Draw  round  my  bed.     Is  Anselm  keeping  back?     See 

Bishop  Orders  His  Tomb,  The. — Browning. 
Draw  up  the  papers,  lawyer,  and  make  'em  good  and 

stout. — See  Betsy  and  I  Are  Out. — Carleton. 
Drawn  by  horses  with  decorous  feet.     See  Going  Home. 

— Taylor. 
Dreams  come  true,  and  everything.     See  In  the  Haunts 

of  Bass  and  Dream. — Thompson. 
Dreary,    dreary,    Fundy's    mists    are    sweeping.     See 

When  Dora  Died. — Chandler. 
Drecker,  the  draw-bridge   keeper,  opened  wide.     See 

Draw-bridge  Keeper,  The. — Abbey. 


646 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Early 


Drifting  away  from  each  other.      See  Drifting  Away. — 

Gray. 
Drifting  in  our  frail  canoe.     See  Drifting. — Chamberlin. 
Drifts  away  the  murky  night.     See  Two  Rag  Men.— 

Burdette. 
Drinlt,  and  fill  the  night  with  mirth!     See  Drinking 

Song,  A.— Procter. 
Drink,  comrades,   drink!     Give  loose  to  mirth!     See 

Death  of  Cleopatra,  The. — Horace. 
Drink!     Drink!     Drink!     See  same. — Upham. 
Drink!     Drink!     To  whom  shall  we  drink?     See  Old 

Man's  Carousal,  The. — Paulding. 
Drink,    friends,    the   parting   hour   draws    nigh.     See 

Prohibition  Song  of  Good  Fellowship. — Sigourney. 
Drink  to  me  only  with  thine  eyes.     See  To  Celia. — 

Jonson. 
Drink  to-day,  and  drown    all    sorrow.      See   Bloody 

Brother,    The    (Drink   To-day). — Beaumont   and 

Fletcher. 
Drive  the  nail  aright,  boys.     See  Persevere. — Anon. 
Driven  wild  with  rum,  he  turned  into  the  street.     See 

Drunkard's  Death,  The. — Jones. 
Driver  peeping  through  his  little  window  and  address- 
ing stout  lady.     See  Paying  Her  Fare. — Dallas. 
Driving    the    cows    from    the    upper    meadow.     See 

Country  Courtship. — Kelly. 
Droo  as  I  leeve,  most  every  day.     See  "Dot  Funny 

Leedle  Baby." — Adams. 
Drop,  drop,  slow  tears.     See  same. — Fletcher. 
Drops  of  perspiration  fell  from  Mammy  Washington's 

black  face.     See  When   I   am  Weak  then  I  am 

Strong. — Sherman. 
Drough  der  streeds   of   Frederickdown.     See  Parody 

on  "Barbara  Frietchie." — Anon. 
Drowsy  sunshine,  noonday  sunshine,  shining  full  on 

sea  and  sand.     See  Lost  on  the  Shore. — Lee. 
Dru  as  I  leev,  most  efry  day.     See  Fred  Englehardt's 

Baby. — Adams. 
Drum,     drum,     drum,     der-um,     drum,     drum.     See 

Drummer  of  Company  G,  The. — Meyers. 
Drunk    and  senseless    in    his    place.      See    Ramon. — 

Harte. 
Drunkenness  is  the  greatest  evil  of  this  nation.     See 

Our  National  Curse. — Talmage. 
Dry  be  that  tear,  my  gentlest  love.     See  Dry  he  that 

Tear. — Sheridan. 
Dubious  is  such  a  scrupulous  good  man.     See  Conversa- 
tion.— Cowper. 
"Dudley!"  she  exclaimed,  "Dudley,  and  art  thou  come 

at  last?"    See  Kenilworth  (Countess  Amy  and  Her 

Husband,  The).— Scott. 
Dumb  Mother  of  all  music,  let  me  rest.     See  Sonnet 

in  a  Garden. — Peabody. 
Dumpsy-frumpsy,  patty-pan.     See  Dumpsy-Frumpsy. 

— Kavanaugh. 
Duncan  Gray  cam  here  to  woo.     See  Duncan  Gray. — 

Burns. 
During  a  certain  voyage.     See  Truth  in  the  Ship's  Log. 

— Anon. 
During  a  pause  from  a  breathless  dance.     See  Capric- 

iousness. — Cooper. 
During  his  march  to  conquer  the  world,  Alexander,  the 

Macedonian.     See  Lord  Helpeth  Man  and  Beast, 

The. — Coleridge . 
During  my  residence  in  the  country  I  used  frequently 

to  attend  at  the  old  village  church.     See  Widow 

and  her  Son,  The. — -Irving. 
During   Sir   Charles    Napier's    campaign   against    the 

robber  tribes  of  Upper  Scinde.     See  Pass  in  the 

Indian  Hills,  The. — Robertson. 
During  the  contest  of  opinion  through  which  we  have 

passed.      See   Inauguration    Address,    March    4, 

1801  (Party   Spirit    and    Good    Government). — 

Jefferson. 
During  the  last  day  of  May,  1793,  one  of  the  Parisian 

regiments.      See    Ninety-three   (Children   of    the 

Bonnet  Rouge,  The). — Hugo. 
During    the    Revolutionary    War,    Fort    Henry,    an 

American  border  outpost.     See  Heroism  of  Eliza- 
beth Zane,  The. — Anon. 
During  the  summer  season  a  man  may  expect  to  be 

suddenly    called    at    any   moment.     See   Putting 

Down  the  Window. — Anon. 
During  the  throes  and  convulsions  of  the  ancient  world. 

See  Inauguration  Address, March  4,1801  (Republic 

the    Strongest    Government,    A).— Jefferson. 
During  the  whole  of  one  of  last  summer's  hottest  days. 

See  Courteous  Mother,  A. — Hunt. 
During  the  winter  of  1777-8,  Washington  went  into 
.  winter  quarters  at  Valley  Forge.     See  Washington 

at  Valley  Forge. — Parker. 
During  this  time  the  sea  was  becoming  more  agitated. 

See  Pilot,  The  (Pilot,  The).— Cooper. 


During  this  tyme  Eneas  gan  aduert.     See  .^neid,  The 

(Tribes  of  the  Dead,  The).— Virgil. 
Dust  as  we  are,  the  immortal  spirit  grows.    See  Prelude, 

The  (Apparition  on  the  Lake). — Wordsworth. 
Dust,  dust,  dust!     And  the  more  I  dust,  the  more  dust 

I  make.     See  All  at  Sea. — Fiske,  Vandenhoff  and 

Burn  ham. 
Dust  on  my  mantle !     Dust !     See  August. — Gallagher. 
D'ye  moind  the  new  tathe  arn  me?     See  Biddy  O'Brien 

Has  the  Toothache. — Savage. 
"D'ye  see  it,  pard?"     See  Light  from  Over  the  Range, 

The. — Anon. 
D'ye  see  that  peculiar  object  there,  standing  against 

the  lamp?     See  Idiot's  Gallantry,  An. — NichoUs. 
Dying,  and  loth  to  die,  and  long'd  to  die.     See  Queen 

Elizabeth. — Williams. 
D'you  remember  Hiram   Cawkin.     See  Enj'yin'  Poor 

Health. — Horton. 
Dyspepsia  is  no  longer  the  test  of  scholarship.     See 

Place  of  Athletics  in  College  Life,  The.— Depew. 


Each  care-worn  face  is  but  a  book.     See  Strangers,  The. 

— Very. 
Each  day  and  every  day.     See  same. — Anon. 
Each  day,  beloved,  I  think  I  love  thee  more.     See  For 

Thee  Alone. — Anon. 
Each   day   when   the   glow   of   sunset.     See   Are   the 

Children  at  Home? — Sangster. 
Each  flower  holds  up.     See  For  You. — Bungay. 
Each    golden    note    of    music    greets.     See   Moonlight 

Song  of  the  Mocking-bird. — Hayne.  ■ 
Each  hour  will  behold  this  tide  of  foreign  emigration. 

See   Best   Policy  in   regard   to   Naturalization. — 

Levin. 
Each  life  has  one  grand  day.     See  Life's  Triumph. — 

Collier. 
Each  little  flower  that  opens.     See  All  Things  Bright 

and  Beautiful. — -Keble. 
Each  man's    chimney  is  his  golden  mile-stone.     See 

Golden  Mile-stone,  The. — Longfellow. 
Each  moment  holy  is.  See  same. — Gilder. 
Each  month  hath  praise  in  some  degree.     See  To  the 

Month  of  September. — Davies. 
Each  nation  master  at  its  own  fireside.   See  Nationality. 

— Ingram. 
Each  of  us  is  like  Balboa:     Once  in  all  our  lives  do  we. 

See  Rare  Moments. — Phelps. 
Each  one's  his  faults,  to  which  he  still  holds  fast.     See 

Drunkard  and  His  Wife,  The. — La  Fontaine. 
Each  shining  light  above  us.     See  Light  of  Love,  The. 

—Hay. 
Each  sorrowful  mourner,  be  silent !    See  Each  Sorrowful 

Mourner. — Prudentius. 
Each  thin  hand  resting  on  a  grave.     See  One  in  Blue 

and  One  in  Gray. — Anon. 
Eagle  of  Austerlitz,  where  were  thy  wings?     See  Louis 

Napoleon. — Wilde. 
Eagle  of  flowers!  I  see  thee  stand.     See  Sun  Flower 

The. — Montgomery. 
Earl   Gawain   wooed   the   Lady   Barbara.     See   Lady 

Barbara. — Smith. 
Ead  March  look'd  on  his  dying  child.     See  same. — 

Campbell. 
Earl  Richard  once  upon  a  day.     See  Earl  Richard. — 

Anon. 
Earl  Sigurd,  he  rides  o'er  the  foam-crested  brine.     See 

Earl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve. — Boyesen. 
Early  in  foreign  fields  he  won  renown.     See  Absalom 

and  Achitophel  (Character  of  the  Duke  of  Mon- 
mouth).— Dryden. 
Early  in  May  up  got  the  jolly  rout.     See  "Cotswold 

Eclogue,"  The. — Randolph. 
Early  in  the  morning.     See  To  Grandpapa,   on   His 

Seventieth  Birthday. — Anon. 
Early  on  a  pleasant  day.     See  Mocking-bird's  Song, 

The.— Drake. 
Early  on  a  sunny  morning,  while  the  lark  was  singing 

sweet.     See    Fetching   Water   from    the   Well. — 

Anon. 
Early  on  an  August  morning  a  doe  was  feeding  on 

Basin   Mountain.     See  Mountain   Tragedy,   A. — 

Warner. 
Earl.v   on  the  morning  of  the  2.3d,   intelligence  was 

brought  King  Robert.     See  Battle  of  Bannock- 
burn,  The. — Aguilar. 
Early  one  day  in  leafy  June.     See  Trust  not  to  Appear- 
ances.—Anon. 
Early  one  fine  morning,  as  Terence  O'Fleary  was  hard 

at  work.  See  How  Terry  Saved  His  Bacon. — Anon. 


647 


Early 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Early  they  came,  yet  they  were  come  too  late.     See 

Love's  Opportunity. — Weitzel. 
Early    they    took    Dun-?klin*s    road.     See    Marmion 

(Camp,  The).— Scott. 
"Early  to  bed  and  early  to  rise."     .See  Little  French  for 

a  Little  (!irl.  A.— Anon. 
Early  to  her  slumbeff     See  Mabel  Gray. — Richards. 
Ears  thou  ha.st  two  and  mouth  but  one.     .See  Three 

Pairs  and  (.)ne.— Riickert. 
Earth  gets  its  price  for  what  Earth  gives  us.    See  Vision 

of  Sir  J^aunfal,  The  (June). — Lowell. 
Earth  has  not  anything  to  show  more  fair.     See  Com- 
posed upon  Westminster  Bridge,  Sept.    3,    1802. 

— Wordsworth. 
Earth,  let  thy  softest  mantle  rest      See  Horace  Greeley. 

— Stedman. 
Earth  now  is  green,  and  heaven  is  blue.     See  To  the 

Spring. — Davies. 
Earth,  ocean,  air,  beloved  brotherhood!     See  Alastor; 

or.  The  Spirit  of  Solitude. — Shelley. 
Earth,  of  man  the  bounteous  mother.     See  Husband- 
man, The. — Sterling. 
Earth  to  earth,  and  dust  to  dust.     See  Dust  to  Dust. — 

Croly. 
Earth,  whereon  his  feet  have  pressed.     See  Spiritus 

Intactus. — Cole. 
Earth,   with  her  ten   thousand   flowers.     See  God  is 

Love. — Anon. 
Earth,   with  its  dark  and  dreadful  ills.     See  Dying 

Hymn. — Gary. 
Easier  it  were  to  give  my  life  to  thee.     See  I^ove  that 

Avai4eth. — Salmon. 
Easter   lilies,   pure   and   white.     See   Easter   Lilies. — 

Crofts. 
Eastward  of  Zanesville,  two  or  three.     See  Traveler's 

Story,  The.— Hiley. 
Ebbed  and  flowed  the  muddy  Pei-Ho  by  the  Gulf  of 

Pechi-Li.      See  Blood   is   Thicker  than   Water. — 

Rice. 
Ebenezer  Eastman,  of  Gilmanton,  is  dead.     See  Mary 

Butler's  Ride. — Taylor. 
Ebenezer   Webster,    father   of   Daniel,   was   a   farmer. 

See  Daniel  Webster's  First  Plea. — Anon. 
Echo,   I  ween,  will  in  the  woods  reply.     See  Gentle 

Echo  on  Woman,  A. — Swift. 
Echo,  mysterious  nymph,  declare.     See  Echo  and  the 

Lover. — .4non. 
Echo  was  a  beautiful  nymph,  fond  of  the  woods.     See 

Echo  and  Narcissus. — Bulfinch. 
Economy's    a    very  useful    broom    [wr.     boon].      See 

Economy. — Wolcott. 
Edith,  the  silent  stars  are  coldly  gleaming.     See  Edith. 

— Channing. 
Education,  then,  briefly,  is  the  leading  human  souls 

to  what  is  best.     See  Stones  of  Venice,  The  (Edu- 
cation).— Ruskin. 
"Edward  has  been  much  better  since  he  has  been  living 

with  me."     See  Hearsay. — Anon. 
Edward,  I  may  just  as  well  say  plainly.     See  Unwel- 
come Guest,  The. — McBride. 
E'en  as  a  lovely  flower.     See  Du  Bist  wie  Eine  Blume. 

—  Heine. 
E'en   in   the  spring  and   play-time  of   the  year.     See 

Task,  The  (Woodland  in   Spring,  The).— Cowper. 
E'en  like  two  little  bank-dividing  brooks.     See  Divine 

Rapture,  A. — Quarles. 
E'en  [or  even]  such  is  time,  that  takes  in  [or  on]  trust. 

See  Verse*  Found  in  His  Bible. — Raleigh. 
Ef  gran'paw  was  a  soldier  now.     See  Winning  Company 

A. — Anon. 
Ef  here  ain't  a  terbacker  spit,  right  on  my  nice  new 

mat.     .See  Old  Woman's  Complaint,  An. — Roys. 
Ef  I  could  only  get  him!     Are  you  sure  you  haven't 

met  him?     See  That  Boy  Jim. — Deas. 
Eferywhere,    no    matter    vhere    you    vas.     See    Der 

liOddery  Dicket. — Pretzel. 
Efter  that  I  the  lang  wynteris  nycht.     See  Dreme,  The. 

— Lyndesay. 
Eftsoons  they  heard  a  most   melodious  sound.     See 

Faerie  Queene,  The. — Spenser.  / 

Egeria!    sweet    creation    of    some    h^art!     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. — Byron. 
Eh!     give  you  a  liftt     Why,  surely,  jump  in,  sir,  along 

o'  me.     See  Valentine,  The. — Brine. 
Eh!     Oh!     Eh!     What   have   T   done  to  merit  these 

cruel    sufferings.     See  Franklin  and  the  Gout. — 

Franklin. 
Eh?     What?     What   do  you  say?     See  Santa  Glaus 

Outwitted. — Denton. 
Eh?     Why  am  I  keeping  that  old  crippled  mare?     See 

Be.ss.  — ( "handler. 
Eight  bells!     Eight  bells!     Their  clear  tone  tells.     See 

Alls  Well.— Butler. 


Eight,  nine,  ten,  eleven?     Zounds.     See  Waiting  for  an 

Interview. — ("olman. 
Eight  o'clock  and  no  Bones.     See  Brudder  Bones  as  a 

Carpet-bagger.  — Anon . 
Eight  volunteers,  on  an  errand  of  death!     See  Eight 

Volunteers. — Bailey. 
Eight   years   ago   to-night.     See  New  Americanism. — 

Watterson. 
Eighteen  hundred  and  sixty-two.     See  Fredericksburg. 

— W.  T.  W. 
Eighteen  to-day,  an'  she's  pleasant  to  see.     See  Lariat 

Jim. — {Cleveland  Plain  Dealer.) 
Eighty  and  nine  with  their  captain.     See  Charge  by  the 

Ford,  The.— English. 
Eighty  years  have  passed,  and  more.     See  Under  the 

Washington  Elm,  Cambridge. — Holmes. 
Eileen  of  four.     See  Clock's  Song,  The. — Lathrop. 
Electric  essence  permeates  the  air.     See  Acrostic,  An. — 

F.  A. 
Eleven  men  of  England.     .See  Red  Thread  of  Honour, 

The.— Doyle. 
Eleven  o'clock!     By  .Jove!     Only  an  hour.     See  His 

Wedding  Morn. — Griffith. 
Eleven   o'clock!     Eleven   o'clock!     Ah!   at   last!     See 

Oak  in  a  storm.  An. — Dreyfus. 
Eli,  Eli,  lama  sabacthani?     See  God  and  the  Soul  (At 

the  Ninth  Hour). — Spalding. 
Elijah  Brown,  the  cobbler,  was  enamored  of  the  muse. 

See  Elijah  Brown. — Anon. 
Eliza  Jane,  two  lover.*  had.     See  Art  and  Nature. — 

Anon. 
Elizabeth,  alack,  Elizabeth !     See  Elizabeth. — Reese. 
Elizabeth,  I  beg  of  you,  don't  be  so  foolish.     See  From 

Punkin  Ridge. — McBride. 
Elizabeth,  my  cousin,  is  the  sweetest  little  girl.     See 

Mustard  and  ("ress. — Gale. 
Ellen    was    fair,    and    knew    it,    too.     See    Coquette 

Punished,  A. — Anon. 
Eloquence  comes,  if  it  comes  at  all.     See  Adams  and 

Jefferson    (Eloquence    of     Action,    The). — Web- 
ster. 
Eloquence  is  a  gift  which  in  our  time  enjoys  an  influence 

.See  Orator,  The. — Bismarck. 
Elswitha  knitteth  the  stocking  blue.     See  Elswitha. — 

Barry. 
Elvira,   don't    for  a   moment   think   of   dejecting  Mr. 

Sparrowgrove.     See  Peleg  and  Patience. — Anon. 
Emblem  Tree  of  the  Empire  State!     See  Tree  of  State, 

The.— Rude. 
Emerson  has  fitly  said  in  true  sentiment.     See  Inde- 
pendent Character. — Anon. 
Emerson's  faith  in  America  is  justified.     See  Emerson, 

Extract  Concerning. — Cooke. 
Emer.son's   writings   call   for   thought.     See   Emerson 

Extract  (,'oncerning. — Scudder. 
Emily,  you  do  not  mean  to  say  that  our  engagement  is 

at  an  end?     See  Broken  Promises. — Anon. 
Employed  in  the  service  of  my  country  abroad,  I  first 

saw  the  Constitution.     See  American  Constitution 

Tested,  The.— Adams. 
Empty  the  throne-chair  stood.     See  Cockatoos,  The — . 

Thaxter. 
En  garde,  messieurs,  too  long  have  I  endured.     See  En 

Garde,  Messieurs. — Lindsey. 
Enamoured    architect    of    airy    ryhme.     See    same. — 

Aldrich. 
Enchanter  of  Erin,  whose  magic  has  bound  us.     See 

For  the  Moore  Centennial  (Celebration. — Holmes. 
Enchantress,  touch  no  more  that  strain !     See  Music 

and  Memory. — Albee. 
Encinctured  with  a  twine  of  leaves.     See  Child  in  the 

Wilderness,  The. — Coleridge. 
"Encore!     Encore!"     Though  the  danger's  past.     See 

Encore !     Encore ! — Anon. 
England,    I   stand   on   thy   imperial   ground.     See  At 

Gibraltar. — Woodberry. 
England  ma.v  as  well  dam  up  the  waters  of  the  Nile 

with  bulrushes.     See  Supposed  Speech  of  James 

Otis.— Child. 
England,  queen  of  the  waves,  who.se  green  inviolate 

girdle  enrings  thee  round.     See  England. — Swin- 
burne. 
England !     Since  Shakespeare  died  no  loftier  day.     See 

same. — Stedman. 
England,  thy  strides  are  written  on  thy  fields.     See 

Written  in  Conway  Castle. — Faber. 
England,  with  all  thy  faults,   I  love  thee  still.     See 

Task,  The  (England).— Cowper. 
England's  hold  of  the  colonies.    See  Speech  on  Moving 

his   Resolutions    for   Conciliation     with  America 

(England  and  her  Colonies). — Burke. 
"England's   sun,   bright  setting  o'er  the  hills  so   far 

away."    See  Un  Potpourri  d'Elocution. — Rosaire. 


648 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Every 


England's  sun  was  brightly  [or  slowly]  setting  o'er  the 

hills   so   far  away.      See  Curfew   Must   not   Ring 

To-night. — Thorpe. 
English  literature  is  rich  in  autobiography.     See  Auto- 
biography, An. — Brooks. 
Enoch,  poor  man,  was  cast  away  and  lost.     See  Enoch 

Arden. — Tennyson. 
Enough;  and   leave  the  rest  to  Fame.     See  Epitaph, 

An. — Marvell. 
Enough  is  known  to  show  that  there  is  no  such.     See 

Life  on  the  Moon. — Howe. 
Enough!     The    lie    is    ended.     God    only    knows    the 

land.     See  Restitution. — Bengough. 
P^nough!     We're    tired,    my    heart    and    I.     See    My 

Heart  and  T. — Browning. 
Ensanguined  man  is  now  become,  etc.     See  Seasons, 

The  (Plea  for  the  Animals). — Thomson. 
Enter  not  into  the  path  of  the  wicked.     See  Proverbs 

(Preventive  "No,"  A). — Bible. 
Entombed    within    a    nation's     reverent     love.      See 

same. — Crapsey. 
Envoys  of  Rome,  the  poor  camp  of  Spartacus  is  too 

much  honored  by  your  presence.     See  Spartacus 

to  the  Roman  Envoys  in  Etruria. — Sargent. 
Envy  and  Avarice,  one  summer  day.     See  Envy  and 

Avarice. — Hugo. 
Ephesus  was  upside  down.     See  Christian  Citizenship. 

Phillips. 
Ere  cherries  ripe  and  strawberries  be  gone.     See  New 

Cry,  The. — .lonson. 
Ere  last  year's  moon  had  left  the  sky.     See  My  Bird. — ■ 

Judson. 
Ere  Murfreesboro's  thunders  rent  the  air.     See  Battle 

of  Murfreesboro,  The. — Cornwallis. 
Ere  our  dear  Saviour  spoke  the  parting  word.     See 

Peace. — Dorr. 
Ere  peace  and  freedom,   hand  irl  hand.     See  Song  of 

the  Union. — Cummings. 
Ere  sin  could  blight  or  sorrow  fade.     See  Epitaph  on 

an  Infant. — (joleridge. 
Ere  the  steamer  bore  him  eastward,  Sleary  was  engaged 

to  marry.     See  Post  that  Fitted,  The. — Kipling. 
Ere  their  arrival  Astrophell  had  done.     See  Britannia's 

Pastorals  (Praise  of  Sydney,  The). — Browne. 
Ere  yet  in  Virgil  I  could  scan  or  spell.     See  "Hie  me. 

Pater  Optime,  Fessam  Deseris." — Robinson. 
Ere  you  left  the  room  this  morning.     See  Did  You 

Think  to  Pray? — Anon. 
Erewhile,  on  England's  pleasant  shores,  our  sires.     See 

Yew,  The.— Bryant. 
Ermine  or  blazonry,  he  knew  them  not.     See  Andrew. 

— Parsons.  • 

Erratic    soul   of   some   great    Purpose,   doomed.     See 

Comet,  The.^Sangster. 
Erwacht!     Ein    SchifT    ist   in   Sturmes  Not!     See  In 

Sturmes  Not. — Schanz. 
Escape  me?     See  Life  in  a  Love. — Browning. 
Esteemed,     admired,    beloved,    farewell!     See    Anne 

Clough. — Gosse. 
Eternal  ruler  of  the  ceaseless   round.     See  Prayer  for 

Unity,  A. — Chadwick. 
Eternal  source  of  every  joy!     See  For  New- Year's  Day. 

— Doddridge. 
Eternal  spirit  of  the  chainle.ss  mind!     See  Prisoner  of 

Chillon,  The. — Byron. 
Ethel  asked  me  for  a  ver.se.  See  Conditionally. — Collins. 
Ethel,  I  love  you,  let  it  suffice.     See  Difficult   Love- 
making. — Carleton. 
Ethereal  Minstrel!  Pilgrim  of  the  sky!     See  To  a  Sky- 
lark.— Wordsworth. 
Ettrick  Forest  is  a  fair  forest.     See  Outlaw  Murray, 

The. — Anon. 
European  guides    know    about    enough    English.     See 

Innocents  Abroad  (Mark  Twain's  Description  of 

European  Guides). — Clemens. 
European  Toryism  has  long  regarded  us  as  a  vulgar 

young  giant.     See  Cause  of  Bunker  Hill,  The. — 

Curtis. 
Eva,  after  this,  dechned  rapidly.      See  Uncle  Tom's 

Cabin  (Eva's  Death). — Stowe. 
Even  as   tender   parents   lovingly.     See   Child   in    the 

Street,  The.— Piatt. 
Even  at  their  fairest  still  I  love  the  less.     See  Dream 

of  flowers,  A. — Coan. 
Even  from  this   brief  review  it  is  manifest   that  the 

nation  is  resolutely  facing  to  the  front.     See  In- 
augural Address  ("Even   from  this  brief,"  etc.). 

—Garfield. 
"Even  in  a  palace  life  may  be  led  well!"     See  Even  in  a 

Palace. — Arnold. 
Even  is  come;  and  from  the  dark  park,  hark!     See 

Nocturnal  Sketch,  A. — Hood. 


See 


See 


Even  [or  e'enl  such  is  time,  that  takes  in  trust. 
Verses  Found  in  his  Bible. — Raleigh. 

Even  thus,    methinks,    a   city   rear'd   should   be. 
Written  in  Edinburgh. — Hallam. 

Evening  beamed  upon  the  Highlands.  See  Maiden's 
Mishap,  The. — Anon. 

Evening  exhibitions,  rare  up  to  that  period  and  given 
only  exceptionally.  See  Quo  Vadis  (Fight  with 
the  Aurochs,  The). — Sienkiewicz. 

Rlvening  Express!  Times!  Times!  Evening  Express! 
See  News  of  the  Day. — Anon. 

Evening  is  falling  to  sleep  in  the  west.  See  Falling  to 
Sleep. — Anon. 

Evening  was  falling,  cold  and  dark.  See  Goodest 
Mother,  The. — Anon. 

Events,  with  trumpet-call,  summon  us  to  our  post.  See 
same. — James. 

Ever  a  current  of  sadness  deep.     See  Music. — Hemans. 

Ever  absent,  ever  near.     See  Separation. — Kazinezi. 

Ever  eating,  ever  cloying.     See  On  Time. — Swift. 

Ever  let  the  fancy  roam.     See  Fancy. — Keats. 

Ever  since  I  arrived  at  the  state  of  manhood.  See 
Capture  of  Ticonderoga,  The. — Allen. 

Ever  since  I've  come  down  from  Peekskill  I've  in- 
tended for  to  write  to  Miss  Griffin.  See  Charity 
Grinder  and  the  Postmaster  General. — Dallas. 

Ever  since  my  uncle  in  California  left  me  three  hun- 
dred thousand  dollars.  See  Froward  Duster,  The. 
— Burdette. 

Ever  since  that  whirlwind  of  the  Lord  called  the 
Women's  Crusade.  See  Dramshop  or  the  Re- 
public, The. — Lathrop. 

Ever  would  I  fain  be  reading.     See  Book,  The. — Hensel. 

Evermore  all  the  days  are  long,  and  the  cheerless  skies 
are  gray.     See  Gray  Day,  The. — Burdette. 

Every  age  and  every  nation  has  its  distinguished  men. 
See  Intellectual  Improvement,  an  Aid  to  Works 
of  the  Imagination. — Anon. 

Every  age,  through  being  beheld  too  close.  See 
Aurora  Leigh  (Simile,  A). — Browning. 

Every  calling  is  constantly  making  a  silent,  invisible 
draft.     See  same. — (T'/ie  A^aiion.) 

Ev-er-y  child  who  has  the  use.  See  Some  Geese. — 
Herford. 

Every  country  and  every  period  must  be  judged  by  its 
treatment  of  women.  See  Higher  Education  for 
Women. — Depew. 

Every  day  a  Pilgrim,  blindfolded.  See  Love,  the 
Pilgrim. — Ai'dt;. 

Every  day  brings  a  ship.     See  Letters. — Emerson. 

Every  drunkard  clothes  his  head  with  a  mighty  scorn. 
See  Drunkard,  The. — Taylor. 

Every  educated  man  is  aware  of  a  profound  popular 
distrust.  See  Leadership  of  Educated  Men,  The. 
— Curtis. 

Every  encroachment,  great  or  small,  is  imi>ortant 
enough.  See  Presidential  Protest,  The  (Resistance 
to  Oppression  in  its  Rudiments). — Webster. 

Every  evening,   after  tea.     See  Teeny-Weeny. — Field. 

Every  flower  is  sweet  to  me.     See  sam.e. — May. 

Every  kindness  done  to  others  in  our  daily  walk.  See 
sam,e. — Stanley. 

Every  lily  in  the  meadow.     See  Be  Patient. — Anon. 

Every  lover  has  a  keepsake.     See  Keepsakes. — Anon. 

Every  man  must  patiently  bide  his  time.  See  Hy- 
perion (Success). ^Longfellow. 

Every  man  or  woman  who  feels  the  responsibility  of 
making  the  best  use  of  opportunities.  See  Utiliz- 
ing Our  Failures. — Abott. 

Every  member  of  the  Bangs  family.  See  Bangs 
Family  Tell  a  Story,  The.— Foss. 

Every  monument  to  Washington  is  a  tribute  to  patriot- 
ism.   See  Washington  and  the  Nation. — McKinley. 

Every  nation  is  like  a  clock.  See  National  Clock.  The. 
— King. 

E-v-e-r-y  night!     See  Bill  Arp  on  the  Rack.— Anon. 

Every  night  beside  the  gate.  See  Ladye  Maude. — 
Fabbri. 

Every  night  from  even  to  morn.  See  To  the  Nightin- 
gale.— Davis. 

Every  night  my  prayers  I  say.  See  System. — Steven- 
son. 

Every  one  by  instinct  taught.  See  Pelican  Lsland,  The 
(Coral  Reef,  The). — Montgomery. 

Everyone  is  familiar  with  Tennyson's  story  of  th  eLady 
of  Shallott.     See  Lady  of  Shallott,  The.— Phelps. 

Every  one  must  recollect  the  tragical  story  of  young 
Emmett.     See  Broken  Hearts. — Irving. 

Every  one  thinks  some  face  fairer.  See  I  Love  my 
Love. — Sawyer. 

Every  race  that  ever  has  been  has  had  to  stand  the 
baptism  of  fire.    See  Siege  of  Cuautla,  The. — -Logan. 


649 


Every 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Every  seat  in  the  house  was  filled.  See  At  the  Opera. 
— Jessop. 

Every  solid  statement  of  fact  is  argument.  See  Cor- 
ruption of  Municipal  Government,  The. — Park- 
hurst. 

Every  spring  hundreds  of  our  countrymen  go  west- 
ward.    See  Beyond  the  Mississippi. — -Ricnardson. 

Every  time  the  question  of  amnesty  has  been  intro- 
duced. See  Amnesty  of  Jefferson  Davis,  The. — 
Blaine. 

Every  time  you  mis.<<,  or  fail.    iSee  Up  Higher. — Smiley. 

Every  valley  drinks.     See  Winter  Rain. — Rossetti. 

Every  wedding,  says  the  proverb.  See  Groomsman 
to  his  Mistress,  The. — Parsons. 

Everybody  has  heard  of  St.  Patrick.  See  Last  Ser- 
pent, The. — Croker. 

Everybody  has  heard  of  the  Cave  of  St.  Cyprian  at 
Salamanca.  See  Alhambra,  The  (Legend  of  the 
Enchanted  Soldier,  The). — Irving. 

Everybody  knows,   Mr.   Speaker,  what  has  been  the 

Solicy  of  this  Government.     See  Hazards  of  Our 
ational  Prosperity.— Smith. 
Everybody's  got  a  nose,  but  they  ain't  all  alike.     See 

Nose?..— Wood. 
Everything  pleased  my  neighbor,  Jim.     See  My  Neigh- 
bor Jim. — ^Pearre. 
Everything  which  helps  a  boy's  power  of  observation 

helps  his  power  of  learning.     See  Eyes  and  No 

Eyes.— Kingsley. 
Everywhere,  everywhere.      Christmas     to-night!     See 

Christmas  Carol,  A. — Brooks. 
Everywhere  to-day  we're  hearing.     See  Christmas  Joy. 

— Denton. 
Evil,  if  rightly  understood.     See  On  the  Origin  of  Evil. 

— Byrom. 
Exactly,  how  did  it?  I  really  can't  tell.     See  How  It 

Came  to  Be. — Anon. 
Exactly  three    hundred    years    ago,    great    religious 

changes  were  taking  place  in  England.     See  Ten- 
hours  Bill,  The. — Macaulay. 
Examination  day!     How  many  little  hearts.     See  Ex- 
amination Day. — Doolittle. 
Examples  of  greatness  and  goodness  before  us  bid  us 

work.     See  Opportunity  for  Work. — Russell. 
Excellence  is  not  matured  in  a  day.     See  Cost  of  Writing 

Well. — Anon. 
Excellent  Brutus,  of  all  human  race.     See  Briitus. — 

Cowley. 
Excuse  a  blind  old  soldier  if  too  eager  in  his  quest.     See 

Sherman's  March. — Brooks. 
Excuse  me,  ladies  and  gentlemen,  if  I  am  late.     See 

Journey  to  What's  its  Name,  A. — Anon. 
Exegi  momumentum  aere  perennius.     See  "Non  Omnis 

Mor  iar. ' ' — Flaccus . 
Exert  thy  voice,  sweet  harbinger  of  spring!     See  To 

the  Nightingale — Winchelsea. 
Existence  has  become  almost  a  different  thing  since 

it  began  with  some  of  us.     See  World  Without 

and  Within,  The.— Talfourd. 
Experienced  men  of  the  world  know  very  well  that  it  is 

best.     Sec  Compensation. — Emerson. 
Extent  of  country,  in  my  conception,  ought  to  be  no 

bar.     See  Extent  of  Country  No  Bar  to  Union. — 

Randolph. 
Extremely  small  or  of  giant  size.     See  Modern  Book, 

The.— M.  R. 
Exultation  is  the  going.     See  Setting  Sail. — Dickinson. 
Eye  of  the  garden,  queen  of  flowers.     See  To  the  Rose. 

— Davies. 
Eyes,  hide  my  love,  and  do  not  show.     See  Hymen's 

Triumph  (Song:  Eyes,  Hide  My  Love). — Daniel. 
Eyes  of  blue  and  hair  of  gold.     See  Mother's  World. — 

Alden. 
Eyes  that  are  clear  as  the  snarkling  air.     See  Football 

Girl,  The.— Walker. 
Eyes  that  are  saucy  but  tender.'    See  Intrusion,  An. — 

Brewer. 
Eyes  that  we  look  into — so.     See  Spears  of  Kan-Mar, 

The.— Roberts. 


Facing  the  ocean,  guardian  of  our  land.  See  Halifax. 
— Fairbanks. 

Faculty,  students  and  friends:  I  have  almost  the 
temerity  to  say.  See  President's  Address,  A. — 
Anon. 

"Fadder,  de  shentlemans  vat  puy^  te  tiamond  engage- 
ment ring  yesterday."  See  Why  not.  If  he  Paid 
the  Shot. — Anon. 

Faded  and  fair,  in  an  old  arm-chair.  See  Grand- 
mother Gray. — Boutelle. 


Fading,  fading,  ever  fading!     See  Fading. — Howland. 
Faery  elves,  whose  midnight  revels,  by  a  forest  side. 

'See  Paradise  Lost. — Milton. 
Fail — yet  rejoice,  because  no  less.  See  Light  and  Shade 

("Fail — yet  rejoice,"  etc.). — Procter. 
Failed!  Jim  iVliserton  failed!     You  don't  mean  to  say 

it's  so?     See  Failed. — Thompson. 
Fain  I  would,  but  O  I  dare  not.     See  Fain  I  Would. — 

Ferrabosco. 
Fain  would    I    change    that    note.     See    In    Laudem 

Amoris. — Anon. 
Fain  would  I  climb  the  heights  that  lead  to  God.     See 

"Fain  Would  I  Climb." — Moulton. 
Fain  would  1  have  thee  barter  fates  with  me.     See  To 

a  Seabird. — Watson. 
Fain  wQuld   I   wake  you,   sweet.     See  Wake,   Gently 

Wake. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Faint,  faint,  and  clear.     See  Wind-swept  Wheat,  The. 

— De  Vere. 
Faint  grew    the    yellow    buds    of    light.     See    Om. — 

Russell. 
Faint  not  and  falter  not,  nor  plead.     See  To  Children 

of  Girard,  Pa. — Whittier. 
Fainter  her  slow  step  falls  from  day  to  day.     See  Child 

of  Earth,  The. — Norton. 
Faintly  as    tolls    the    evening   chime.     See   Canadian 

Boat-song,  A. — Moore. 
Fair  Amoret  is  gone  astray.     See  Amoret. — Congreve. 
Fair  and  fair,  and  twice  so  fair.     See  Arraignment  of 

Paris,  The  (Fair  and  Fair). — Peele. 
Fair  are  the  flowers  and  the  children,  but  their  subtle 

suggestion  is  fairer.     See  Indirection. — Realf . 
Fair  as   the   dawn   of   the   fairest   day.     See   By   the 

Autumn  Sea. — Hayne. 
Fair  as  the  woman  whom  the  prophet  old.     See  Ox- 
ford and  Her  Chancellor. — Alexander. 
Fair  bird,  whose  silvjery  pinions  sweep.     See  Sea-gull, 

The.— MacNeill. 
Fair  Catherine  from  her  bower-window.     See  Young 

Redin. — Anon. 
Fair  chance   held  fast   is   merit.     Once  a   king.     See 

Boy  and  the  Ring,  The.— Anon. 
Fair  daffodils,  we  weep  to  see.     See  To  Daffodils. — 

Herrick. 
Fair  Ellen  Irwin,  when  she  sate.     See  Ellen  Irwin;  or, 

The  Braes  of  Kittle. — Wordsworth. 
Fair  flower,    that    dost    so    comely    grow.     See    Wild 

Honeysuckle,  The. — Freneau. 
Fair  flowers   that   bloom   so   richly.     See   Flowers   in 

Winter. — Smith. 
Fair  Gertrude  lives  at  Farmington.     See  Gertrude. — 

Scranton. 
Fair  Greece '  sad  relic  of  d'eparted  worth !      See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Greece). — Byron. 
Fair  in   the   country   of   Arden.     See   Cassamen   and 

Dowsabel. — Drayton. 
Fair  insect,    that,   with   thread-like   legs   spread   out. 

See  To  a  Mosquito. — Bryant. 
Fair  is   each   budding  thing  the   garden  shows.     See 

Old-fashioned  Garden,  The. — Hayes. 
Fair  is  my   love  and  cruel   as  she's   fair.      See  Son- 
nets to  Delia    (Beauty,    Time,   and    Love,    I.). — 

Daniel. 
Fair  is  the  castle  up  on  the  hill.     See  Hushaby,  Sweet 

My  Own. — Field. 
Fair  is  thy  face,  Nantasket.     See  Nantasket. — Ames. 
Fair  Isabella  with  her  two  brothers  dwelt.     See  Isa- 
bella; or.  The  Pot  of  Basil. — Keats. 
Fair  Katharine,  and  most  fair.     See  King  Henry  V. 

(Henry  the  Fifth's  Wooing). — Shakespeare. 
Fair  lady  Isabel  sits  in  her  bower  sewing.     See  Lady 

Isabel  and  the  Elf-knight. — Anon. 
Fair  lady,  when  you  see  the  grace.     See  To  a  Lady 

Admiring    Herself    in    a    Looking-glass.  —  Ran- 
dolph. 
Fair  lady  with  the  bandaged  eye!     See  Ode  to  Fortune. 

— Halleck  and  Drake. 
Fair  laughs  the  morn,  and  soft  the  zephyr  blows.     See 

Bard,  The.— Gray. 
Fair  lies   the  day  on   Gilead   (my  father's   land   and 

rnine).     See  .Jephtha's  Daughter. — Marsh. 
Fair  little  spirit  of  the  woodland  mazes.     See  Dead 

Singer,  A. — Lo^an. 
Fair  Luna  shines  bright.     See  Sailing. — Paine. 
Fair  maid,  had  I  not  heard  thy  baby  cries.     See  To  a 

Lofty    Beauty  from    her    Poor    Kinsman. — Cole- 
ridge. 
Fair  maiden,  thou  didst  wait  for  me.     See  Saint  Val- 
entine's Eve. — McGaffey. 
Fair  maiden,  when  I   look   at   thee.     See  To  a  Fair 

Maiden. — Landor. 
Fair  our  fleet  as  Castle  Swesm.     See  Lay  of  Norse- 
Irish  Sea-kinga. — Sigerson. 


650 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Far 


Fair  pledges  of  a  fruitful  tree.     See  To  Blossoms. — - 

Herrick. 
Fair    Portia's    counterfeit?       What    demi-god.       See 

Merchant    of  Venice,   The     (Portia's     Picture).— 

Shakespeare. 
Fair  Queen,     away!     To    their    charger    speak.     See 

Queen  of  Prussia's  Ride,  The. — Smith. 
Fair  quiet,    have   I  found    thee    here.     See    Garden, 

The  (Poet's   Retirement,  The). — Marvell. 
Fair  Roslin  chapel,  how  divine.     See  Roslin  and  Haw- 

thornden. — -Van  Dyke. 
Fair  ship,  that  from  the  Italian  shore.       See  In  Me- 

rporiam  ("Fair  Ship,"  etc.). — -Tennyson. 
Fair  sight!  for  a  crew  of  Englishmen  true.     .See  Wreck 

of  the  "Northern  Belle,"  The. — Arnold. 
Fair  sir,  to  you  my  maiden  intuitions.     See  Valentine 

to  a  Man  of  Worth. — Church. 
Fair  star,    new-risen    to    our    wondering    eyes.     See 

Bacchyiides. — Whitcher. 
Fair  stood  the  wind  for  France.     See  To  the  Cambro- 

Britons  and  their  harp-     His  Ballad  of  Agincourt. 

— Drayton. 
Fair  streamlet,     running.     See     Mountain     Streamlet, 

The. — Mackay. 
Fair  summer  droops,  droop  men  and  beasts  therefore. 

See  Fading  Summer. — Nash. 
Fair  tree!  for  thy  delightful  shade.     See  Fair  Tree!— 

Winchelsea. 
Fair  were  our  visions!  Oh,  they  were  as  grand.     See  In 

the  Land  where  We  Were  Dreaming. — Lucas. 
Fair  Willie  and  his  Esmeralda.     See  Willie  and  His 

Esmeralda.— Thatcher. 
Faire  daffodils,  we  weep  to   see.     See  To   Daffodils. — 

Herrick. 
Fairest  of  earth!  if  thou  wilt  hear  my  vow.     See  Court- 
ship and  Matrimony.     (Punch.) 
Fairest  of  stars,  last  in  the  train  of   night.     See   Para- 
dise Lost  (Song  of  Praise). — Milton. 
Fairest,  when  by  the  rules  of  palmistry.     See  Sonnet. 

— -Browne. 
Fairfax,  whose  name  in  arms  through  Europe  rings. 

See  On  the  Lord  General  Fairfax. — ^Milton. 
Fairy  spirits  of  the  breeze.     See  Unwritten  Poems. — 

Winter. 
Faith  and  fixt  hope  these  pages  may  peruse.     See  On 

Certain  Books. — Turner. 
Faith!  Ann  Hooligan,  an'  I  don't  deny.     See  Biddy's 

Trials  among  the  Yankees. — (Harper's  Bazar.) 
Faith,  here's  another  hole!  ah,  thin,  it's  shocking i     See 

Babes  in  the  Wood,  The. — -Anon. 
Faith  spread  her  wings  to  seek  the  realms  of  day.     See 

Love  and  Faith. — Machar. 
Faith  thus  dislodged  from  ancient  schools  and  creeds. 

See  Consequences  of  the  Reformation. — I^ytton. 
"Faithful  boys  make  faithful  men."     See  Good  Name, 

A. — Anon. 
Faithful  love  till  death  enduring.     See  My  Fatherland. 

— -Fallerslehen . 
Faithful  reports  of  them  have  reached  me  oft !     See 

Isles,  The. — Roberts. 
Faithless,  perverse,  and  blind.     See  Unbelief. — Cary. 
Fall  in,  fall  in,  old  soldiers.     See  Fall  In. — Sherwood. 
Fallen?  how  fallen?     States  and  empires  fall.     See  On 

the  Defeat  of  Henry  Clay. — Lord. 
Fallen  that    mighty    form.     See    Phillips    Brooks. — 

Ingham. 
Falleth  now  from  off  a  tree.     See  Emblems. — Coe. 
Falling  all  the  night-time.     See  Snowflakes. — Cheney. 
Falling  from   the    antique    chair-back    till   its    length 

trailed  o'er  the  floor.     See  Mother's  Easter  Scarf, 

The.— Banks. 
False  diamond   set   in   flint!   hard   heart   in    haughty 

breast!     See  Fatima  and  Raduan. — Bryant. 
False  love,  and  hast  thou  play'd  me  this.     See  Wav- 

erley  (Davie  Gellatley's  Song).^Scott. 
False  Sir  John   a-wooing   came.     See   May   Colvin. — 

Anon. 
False  though  she  be  to  me  and  love.     See  Song. — Con- 

greve. 
False  world,  good  night!  since  thou  hast  brought.     See 

Farewell  to  the  World,  A. — Jonson. 
False  world,    thou   ly'st:   thou   canst    not    lend.     See 

Vanity  of  the  World,  The. — Quarles. 
Falsely  the  mortal  part  we  blame.     See  Ode  to  the 

Spleen,  An. — Winchelsea. 
Fame  is  the  spur  that  the  clear  spirit  doth  raise.     See 

Lycidas  (Fame). — Milton. 
Fame,  like  a  wayward  girl,  will  still  be  coy.     See  On 

Fame. — Keats. 
Fame,  wisdom,  love,  and  power  were  mine.     See  AH  is 

Vanity,  saith  the  Preacher. — Byron. 
Famed  for  contemptuous  breach  of  sacred  ties.     See 

Windsor  Poetics. — Byron. 


Fancies   are  but  streams.     See  Fancies. — Ford. 
Fancy  many  forms  assumes !     See  Phantasy. — Garvie. 
Fanny,  beware  of  flattery.     See  Flattery. — Williams. 
Far  adown  the  silent  ocean.     See  Coral  Insect,  The.- — - 

Anon. 
Far  are  the  Gaelic  tribes  and  wide.     See  Dead  An- 
tiquary O'Donovan,  The. — McGee. 
Far  away  from  the  earth  on  which  we  dwell.     See  First 

Revolution  of  the  Heavens  Witnessed  by  Man, 

The.— Mitchel. 
Far  away  from  the  world's  busy  haunts  and  its  din. 

See  Truth  and  Falsehood.- — Kavanaugh. 
Far  away  the  camp  fires  burn;  we  can  see  their  ruddy 

light.     See  Far  Away  the  Camp   Fires   Burn. — 

Anon. 
Far  away  under  skies  of  blue.     See  Lily  and  the  Lin- 
den, The. — Crosby. 
Far  back  in  days  of  childhood  stood  a  grove  of  stately 

pines.     See  Pines,  The. — Anon. 
Far,  far  away,  beyond  a  hazy  height.     See  October  in 

Tennessee . — Malone . 
Far,  far  from  here.     See  Empedocles  on  Etna  (Song 

of  Callicles  in  Sicily). — Arnold. 
Far  from  the  ball-room's  crowded  throng.     See  Yale, 

A.  D.  2,000.— (YaZe  Record.) 
Far  from  the  churchyard  dig  his  grave.     See  (grave- 
stone, A. — AUingham. 
Far  from  the  crowd  they  stand  apart.     See    V-A-S-E, 

The.— Roche. 
Far  from  the  glorious  light  of  day.     See  Prisoner  of  the 

Bastile,  The. — Warner. 
Far  from  the  loud  sea-beaches.     See  Visit  from  the  Sea, 

A.— Stevenson. 
Far  from   the   sun    and    summer  gale.     See   Progress 

of  Poesy. — ^Gray. 
Far  from  the  world,  O  Lord,  I  flee.     See  Retirement. — 

Cowper. 
Far  have  I   clambered  in  my  mind.     See  Love  and 

Humility. — More. 
Far  in  a  valley  of  peace  and  rest.     See  Four  Scenes. — 

Pomeroy. 
Far  in  a  wild,  unknown  to  public  view.     See  Hermit, 

The.— Parnell. 
Far  in  the  bosom  of  the  deep.     See  Lighthouse,  The. 

—Scott. 
Far  in  the  corner  on  the  stairs.    See  Thorn  that  Guards, 

The.— T.  G.  P. 
Far  in  the  depths  of  a  sombre  wood.     See  Ballade. — 

Stylites. 
Far  in  the  east  by  Gange's  tide.     See  Reason  Why, 

The. — Anon. 
Far  in  the  night,  yet  no  rest  for  him!     See  At  Noon 

and  Midnight. — Riley. 
Far  in  the  woods  I  found  a  vine,  so  sweet.     See  Para- 
ble, A. — Jackson. 
Far  in  the  woods,  the  fresh  green  woods  in  May.     See 

Far  in  the  Woods  in  May. — Thomas. 
Far  lifted    from    the    city's    jar    and    fret.     See    Ben 

Hafiz,  the  Muezzin. — Savage. 
Far  off  a  young  State  rises,  full  of  might.     See  Farther. 

—Piatt. 
Far  off,  among  the  norland  hills.     See  After  the  Sum- 
mer Storm. — Whitman. 
Far  off,  he  (Zerbino)  saw  that  something  shining  lay. 

See  Death  of  Zerbino,  The. — Rose. 
Far  off  in  the  north  the  bright  lights  glow.     See  Fin- 
land Love-song. — Anon. 
Far  off  in   the  waste   of   desert  sand.     See    Jim-jam 

King  of  the  Jou-jous,  The. — Start. 
Far  off?     Not  far  away.     See  In  the  Twilight. — Cot- 

terell. 
Far  on  yon  heath  so  lone  and  wild.     See  Love  Keeping 

Watch. — Hinds. 
Far  out    at   sea — the   sun   was   high.     See   Genius. — 

Home. 
Far  out  beyond  our  sheltered  bay.     See  Steering  Home. 

— Sullivan. 
Far  over  in  Norway's  distant  realm.     See  Christmas 

Sheaf,  The. — Tomlinson. 
Far  through  fragrant  forest,  lawn  and  lea.     See  April 

Flower-song. — Kellock. 
Far  through    the    Delphian    shades.     See    Storm    of 

Delphi,  The. — Hemans. 
Far  to  the  south  lies  the  fairest  and  richest  domain  of 

this  earth.    See  At  the  Boston  Banquet  (Southern 

Negro,  The). — Grady. 
Far  town-ward  sounds  a  distant  tread.     See  Rokeby 

(Buccaneer,  The). — Scott. 
Far  up  above  the  city.     See  Chimes  of  Amsterdam, 

The.— Paull. 
Far  up  on  a  mountain  side  a  little  brook  flows.     See 

Address  before  the  Order  of  Elks,  An.- — Anon. 


651 


Far 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIONS 


Far  up  on  Katahdin  thou  towerest.     iSee  To  a  Pine- 
tree. — Ivowell. 
Far  up  the  heights,  thou  nobly  planned  of  God.     See 

France.s  E.  Willard  Exercise. — Phillips. 
Far  up  the  lonely   mountain-side.     See  Georgia  Vol- 
unteer, A. — ToWnsend. 
Far  up  the  sides  of  the  rock  bound  cliflf.     iSee  For  the 

Chief's  Daughter. — Anon. 
Fare  thee  well!  and  if  for  ever.     See  Fare  Thee  Well. — 

Byron. 
Fare  thee  well,  dear  Alma    Mater.     See   Ivy   Song. — 

Anon. 
Fare  thee  well,  love,  fare  thee  well.     See  Dying  Girl 

to  her  Lover,  The. — Praed. 
Fare  thee  well,  thou  lovely  one!     See  Fare  Thee  Well. 

Thou  Lovely  One! — Moore. 
Farewell,  a  long   farewell,  to  all   my    greatness.     See 

Henry  V'lII.  (Wolsey's  Fall). — Shakespeare. 
Farewell,  belovefl   France,  to   thee.     See    Farewell    to 

France. — Mary  Queen  of  Scots. 
Farewell;  but  whenever  you  welcome  the  hour.     See 

same. — Moore. 
Farewell,  dear  child.  I  have  no  song  to  give  thee.     See 

Farewell  Advice. — Kingsley. 
"Farewell!  farewell!"  is  often  heard.     See  Good  By. — _ 

Anon. 
Fare^tell,  farewell,    my    dream    is    o'er.     See    Parting 

Words. — Anon. 
Farewell,  farewell,  my  own  dear  land.     See  American's 

Farewell,  The. — Vickers. 
Farewell !  farewell !  the  voice  you  hear.     See  Farewell. — 

Scott. 
Farewell,    farewell    to   thee,    Araby's    daughter!     See 

Lalla  Rookh  (.Araby's  Daughter).— Moore. 
Farewell!  God  knows  when  we  shall  meet  again.     See 

Romeo  and  Juliet   (Potion   Scene,   The). — Shake- 

.speare. 
Farewell,  great  painter  of  mankind.     See  On  William 

Hogarth — In  C'hiswick  ("hurchyard. — Anon. 
Farewell,  high  thought,  and  pride  of  noble  mind!     See 

Mary  Stuart. — Schiller. 
Farewell !  if  ever  fondest  prayer.     See  same. — Byron. 
Farewell!     It  is  no  sorrowful  word.     See  Farewell. — 

Thompson. 
Farewell,     life!    my    seiises     swim.      See     Stanzas. — 

Hood. 
Farewell !  My  blessing  with  you.    See  Hamlet  (Polonius 

to  Laertes). — Shakespeare. 
Farewell,  my    more    than    fatherland!     See    J'arewell 

to  America,  A. — Wilde. 
Farewell,  my  youth!  for  now  we  needs  must  part      See 

Ave  atque  Vale. — Watson. 
Farewell,  O  my  Laughing  Water!     See  Song  of  Hia- 
watha, The. — Longfellow. 
Farewell?   Oh,   no!     It   may   not   be.     See   Ruth   and 

Naomi. — Peabody. 
P'arewell,  old  year;  we  walk  no  more  together.     See 

Farewell  to  the  Old  Year. — Doudney. 
Farewell  rewards    and    fairies.     See    Farewell    to    the 

Fairies. — Corbet. 
"Farewell,  sweet,  my  bride!"  the  gallant  knight  cried. 

See  Knight's  Vow,  The. — Lane. 
Farewell'  the  doom  is  spoken.     All  is  o'er.     See  Lost 

Tribune,  The. — Sigerson. 
Farewell!  thou  are  too  dear  for  my  possessing.     See 

Sonnets,  LXXXVII. — Shakespeare. 
Farewell,  thou  busy  world,  and  may.     See  Retirement, 

The. — Cotton. 
Farewell  to   Lochaber!   and   farewell,   my   Jean.     See 

Lochaber  no  More. — Ramsay. 
Farewell  to  my  Eppie.     See  Kilmarnock's  Lament. — 

Anon. 
Farewell  to    pleasant     Dilston     Hall.     See    Derwent- 

water's  Farewell. — Anon. 
Farewell  to   such   a   world'     Too   long   I    press.     See 

Among  the  Redwoods. — Sill. 
Farewell  to  the  land,  where  the  gloom  of  my  glory.     See 

Napoleon's  Farewell. — Byron. 
Farewell,  we  must  forget.     See  Rosemary  and  Rue. — 

.lefferson. 
Farewell,  ye  dungeons  dark  and  strong.     See  McPher- 

son'a  Farewell. — Burns. 
Farewell,  ye  lofty  spires.     See  Last  Farewell,  The. — 

Emerson. 
Farewell,  ye  mountains,  ye  beloved  glades.     See  Joan 

of  Arc's  Farewell  to  Home. — Schiller. 
Farragut,  Farragjit,  old  hea'-t  of  oak.     See  Farragut. — 

Meredith. 
Fa.scinated  by  the  perfection  of  the  man,  we  are  loath 

to  break  the  mirror  of  admiration.     See  Washing- 
ton and  the  Nation. — Daniel. 
Fashioned   from   lacquer  and  bronze  and  shell.     See 

Chin  Wee. — Warner. 


Fast  and  furious  falls  the  snow.     See  Battle  of  Eylau. 

The.— McLellan. 
Fast  asleep  lies  little  May.     See  Fast  Asleep. — Anon. 
Fast  falls  the  snow,  O,  lady  mine!     See  To  F.  C,  20th 

February,  1875.— Collins. 
Fast  flows  the  wine,   and   faster.     See  Toast-master. 

'The. — Anon. 
Fasten  the      chamber!     See      Bluebeard's      Closet. — 

Cooke. 
Faster,  faster,    O    Circe,   goddess.     See  Strayed   Rev- 
eller, The. — Arnold. 
Faster  than    fairies,    faster   than  witches.     See   From 

a  Railway  Carriage. — Stevenson. 
Fate!  fortune!   chance!   whose   blindness,    hostility   or 

kindness.     See  Death. — Smith. 
Fate!  I  have  asked  few  things  of  thee.     See  Prayer  to 

Fate,  A. — Landor. 
Father  Blake  was  more  familiarly  known  by  the  name 

of  Father  Phil.     See  Father  Phil's  Collection. — 

Lover. 
Father  Burke  was  the  priest  who  made  a  slip  of  the 

tongue    in    preaching    about    the    five    thousand 

loaves.     See    Mickey    Feeny    and    the    Priest. — 

Anon. 
Father,  by  Thy  love  and  power.     See  Evening. — Anon. 
Father  calls    me    William,    sister   calls   me   Will.     See 

Jest  'fore  Christmas. — Field. 
Father  Foley,  a  parish  priest,  was  a  clergyman,  much 

beloved  by  his  own  flock.     See  Widow  O'Brien's 

Toast. — Anon. 
Father,  Harry  Martin  is  going  to  leave  the  academy. 

See  Justice. — Clenient. 
Father,  hold  Thou  my  hands'-.     See  Make  Thy  Way 

Mine. — Klingle. 
Father!  I  have  been  here  at  the  council-house  for  some 

time.     See    To    the    Secretary    of    War,    1824.— 

Pushmataha. 
Father,  I   know  that  all    my  life.     See  Thy  Will  be 

Done. — Waring. 
Father,  I  scarcely  dare  to  pray.     See  Last  Prayer,  A. — ; 

Jackson. 
Father,  I  will  not  ask  for  wealth  or  fame.     See  Higher 

Good,  The.— Parker. 
Father  in  Heaven,  hallowed  be  Thy  name.     See  Lord's 

Prayer  in  Verse,  The. — Anon. 
Father  in    Heaven!     Immortal    Godhead,   Deity   pro- 
found.    See  Father  in  Heaven. — Ashbury. 
Father  in    Heaven !     My  soul   is   dark   with   sin '     See 

Light. — Turner. 
Father,  in    Thy    mysteriou.-    presence    kneeling.     See 

For  Divine  Strength. — Johnson. 
Father  Matthew,  the  apostle  of  temperance  in  Ireland. 

See  Yellow  Pocket,  The. — Anon. 
Father  of  all!  in  death's  relentless  claim.     See  same. — 

Holmes. 
Father  of   all!   in    every   age.     See   Universal   Prayer, 

The.— Pope. 
Father  of  earth  and  Heaven!  I  call  Thy  name!     See 

Battle  Hymn. — Korner. 
"Fatherof  lakes!"  thy  waters  bend.    See  Lake  Superior. 

— Goodrich. 
Father  of  Light!  great  God  of  Heaven.     See  Prayer 

of  Nature,  The. — Byron, 
Father  Roach   was   a   good   Irish   priest.     See  Father 

Roach. — Lover. 
Father'  the   little   girl   we   see.     See   Little   Aglae  to 

her  Father. — I>andor. 
"Father!"     The  old  man   shut   his  mouth  tight  ard 

went  on  harnessing.    See  Revolt  of  Mother,  The. — 

Wilkins. 
Father,  Thy  wonders  do  not  singly  btand.     See  Spirit- 
land,  The.— Very. 
Father  Time    was    swiftly    working.     See    Overdrawn 

Accounts. — Pelham. 
Father  Time,  your  footsteps  go.     See  In  Time's  Swing. 

— Larcom. 
Father,  to  Thee  I  cry!     See  Komer's  Battle  Hymn. — 

Korner. 
Father,  what  is  a  vhife  lie?     See  White  Lies. — Anon. 
"Father'"      "What    is    it?"      See   Revolt  of  Mother, 

The.— Wilkins. 
Father,     whate'er     of    earthly    bliss..     See     same. — 

Steele. 
Father,    who    keepest    the    stars    in    thy    care.     See 

Domine,  Cui  Sunt  Pleiades  Cura;. — Roberts. 
"Father,  who  travels  the  road  so  late?"    SeeCandidate, 

The. — Anon. 
Father!  whose  hard  and  crrel  law.     See  Death  of  Grant, 

The. — Bierce. 
Father  will  have  done.     See  Worsted  Stocking,  The.— 

Anon. 
Fathered  by    March,     the    daffodils    are    here.     See 

DaffodiLs. — Reese. 


652 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Fill 


Fathers,  motherh,  see  us  now.     .See  What  We  Learn 

at  School. — Anon. 
Fathers  of  the  oratory.     6'ee  Wonderful  Whalers,  The. 

— Anon. 
Faultless    in    his    glory's    presence!     <See    Faultless. — 

Johnson. 
Faustina   hath    the    fairest    face.     <See    Madrigal — Tn 

Praise  of  Two. — Anon. 
Fawn-footed  Nannie,     where     have     you     been?     See 

Little  Nannie. — Tyarcom. 
Fayre  is  my  love,  when  her  fayre  golden  heares.     See 

Amoretti   and     Epithalamion   (Sonnet:    "Fayre," 

etc.). — Spenser. 
Fear  death? — to  feel  the  fog  in  my  throat.     See  Pros- 
pice. — Browninjr. 
Fear  hath  a  hundred  eyes  that  all  agree.     See  Gun- 
powder Plot. — Wordsworth. 
Fear  no  more  the  heat   o'  the   sun.      See  Cymbeline 

(Dirge  from  Cymbeline). — Shakespeare. 
Fear  not,  O    little  flock,  the  foe.     See  Swedish  Battle- 
song. — Altenburg. 
February — fortnights  two.     See  February. — Sherman. 
Fee,  faw,   fum!   bubble  and  squeak!     See  Holy  Cross 

Day. — Browning. 
Feed  on,  my  flocks,  securely.     See  Damelus'  Song  to 

His  Flock. — Constable. 
Feel  more  'an  ever  like  a  fool.     See  OV  Pickett's  Nell. — 

Kimball . 
Feelin'  a  hand  on  my  arm,  I  turns  round:  and  who 

.should  I  see.     See  Talking  Latin. — Haliburton. 
Feeling  the  way,  and  all  the  way  uphill.     See  Feeling 

the  Way.— Phelps. 
Feels  and  owns  in  carols  rude.     See  Ode  on  the  Pleasure 

Arising  from  Vicissitude. — Gray. 
Fel'  cit'zens  o'  de  county  of  Fluvanna' — I   ain't  yah 

faw  to  make  a  noration  on  uvvyting  in  ginnul,  an' 

'nuffin  in  puhticlar.     See  Jes'  Nail  Dat  Mink  to  de 

Stable  Do'. — Anon. 
Fell  from   aloft,    in   the   restless   sea.     See   Fell    from 

Aloft. — Thomas. 
Fella  citizens  in  general  an'  yo'  folks  particrally.     See 

Disco'se  by  a  Colored  Man. — Anon. 
Feller  citizens   and   other   people   which    are   a   sittin' 

around  here  upon  these  fences.     See  Speech  by 

Billy  Higgins  on  the  Destruction  of  His  Kambo 

Apple  Tree. — Anon. 
Feller  citizens,   gentlemen  and  ladies,   Mr.   President. 

See  Speech  of  the  Hon.  Perverse  Peabody  on  the 

Acquisition  of  Cuba. — Anon. 
Feller  citizens:     I  hev  riz  up  before  you  for  the  pur- 
pose   of    makin'    a    stump    speech.     See    Stump 

Speech,  A. — Anon. 
Feller  citzens:     T  jest  think  I'm  as  good  as  anybody 

else.     See    Peter    Peabody's     Stump     Speech. — 

Anon. 
Feller-citizens. — I've  bin  honored  with   an   invite  to 

norate.     See    Artemus    Ward's    Fourth    of    July 

Oration. — Browne. 
Feller-citizens  of  Pine  Holler.     See  Hezekiah  Stubbins' 

Oration,  July  4th. — Anon. 
Feller-fellers  and  citizens  generally:     I  rise  to  address 

you   on   the  sub.iect    of  the   kuming  eel-eckshun. 

See  Election  Stump  Speech. — Sharpley. 
Fellow-citizens!  As  it  is  the  hour  named  for  the  meet- 
ing.    See  Town  Meeting,  The. — Anon. 
Fellow-citizens!     Clouds  and  darkness  are  round  about 

him!     See  Memory  of  Abraham  Lincoln,  The  (On 

the  Assassination,  etc.). — Garfield. 
Fellow-citizens,  I  congratulate  you.     See  Washington's 

Birthday  Oration. — Anon. 
Fellow  citizens:     I  join  in  this  argumentation  as  the 

lion  with  his  mate.     See  Stump  Speech. — Anon. 
Fellow-citizens,  I  will  detain  you  no  longer.  See  Adams 

and  Jefferson  (Duty  to  Our  Country). — Webster, 
P^ellow-citizens:     In  performance  of  the  dut.v  assigned 

to    me   on    this    occasion.     See    Garfield    Statue, 

The. — Cleveland. 
Fellow   citizens:     It    is   no   ordinary    cause    that    has 

brought  together.     See  Relief  to  Starving  Ireland 

(Appeal  in  Behalf  of  Ireland). — Prentiss.    • 
Fellow-citizens,  let  us  seize  this  occasion  to  renew  to 

each  other.     See  National  Monument  to  Washing- 
ton.— Winthrop. 
Fellow-citizens  of  my  native  state.     See  Appeal  to  the 

Patriotism  of  South  Carolina.  An. — Jackson. 
Fellow-citizens  of  the  female  sect:     I  suppose  you  are 

not  looking  for  and  expectin'  a  speech  from  me. 

See    Deborah     Doolittle's     Speech    on     Women's 

Rights. — Anon. 
Fellow-citizens  of  the  United   States,   citizens  of  the 

old  Thirteen.     See  Hundredth  .\nniversary  of  the 

Surrender  of  Lord  Cornwallis,  The  (American  Ex- 
ample).— Winthrop. 


Fellow-citizens  of  the  United  States:  In  compliance 
with  a  custom.  See  First  Inaugural  Address. — 
Lincoln. 

Fellow-citizens:  This  is  the  ever  adorable,  commemor- 
able,  and  patriotic  Fourth  of  July.  See  Fourth 
of  July  Oration. — Anon. 

Fellow-citizens: — This  is  the  patriot's  holy  day.'  See 
Centennial  Speech. — Barrows. 

Fellow  citizens:  We  have  met  here.  See  Speech  by 
Obadiah  Partington  Swipes. — Anon. 

Fellow-citizens:  We  stand  to-day  upon  an  eminence. 
See  Inaugural  Address. — Garfield. 

Fellow-citizens:  Were  I  to  echo  the  plaintive  mur- 
murs.    See  Blessed  Are  the  Dead. — Smarius. 

Fellow-citizens:  What  contemplations  are  awakened 
in  our  minds  as  we  assemble  here.  See  Addi- 
tion to  the  Capitol,  The  (Apostrophe  to  Washing- 
ton).— Webster. 

Fellow-citizens:  What  is  this  country?  See  Speech 
at  Union  Square.  N.  Y.,  April  20,  1861. — Baker. 

Fellow-citizens:  Would  you  like  to  know  w^hat  a  boy 
of  my  size  can  do?  See  What  a  Small  Boy  can 
Do. — Anon. 

Fellow  commissioners: — When  we  were  welcomed  in 
Independence  Hall.  See  Our  Centennial  Cele- 
bra*ion. — Cleveland. 

Fellow-countrymen: — At  this  second  appearing  to 
take  the  oath  of  the  Presidential  office.  See  Sec- 
ond Inaugural  Address. — Lincoln. 

Fellow-Irishmen — It  would  be  the  extreme  of  affecta- 
tion in  me.     See  Repeal  of  the  Union. — O'Connell. 

Fellow  scholars: — Another  year  of  our  school  life  is 
finished.     See  For  a  School. — Anon. 

Fellow-soldiers  and  confederated  chiefs!  I  grant  you. 
See  Telemachus  to  the  Allied  Chiefs  — Pension. 

Fellow-trees  of  Michigan,  to  organize  thi:-  meeting. 
See  ('onvention  of  Michigan  Trees,  A. — Beal. 

Fellow-women,  I  am  here  to-night  to  discuss  a  cause 
that's  human.  See  Prisciila  Prim's  Views  on 
Woman's  Rights. — Anon. 

Ferns,  beautiful  ferns.     See  Ferns. — Anon. 

Few  boys  have  grandpas  as  good  as  mine.  See  My 
Grandpa. — Anon. 

Few  have  learned  to  speak  this  word.  See  No. — 
Anon. 

Few,  in  the  days  of  earlv  youth.  See  World  I  am 
Passing  Through,  The.— Child. 

Few  men  of  hero-mould.  See  John  Bright. — Gum- 
mere. 

Few,  who  at  ease  their  member's  speeches  read.  See 
Successful  Politician,  The. — Lytton. 

Ffew  women  are  possessed  of  thorough  executive 
ability  or  marked  business  qualification.  See 
Clearing  up  Technicalities. — Anon. 

Fhairshon  swore  a  feud.  See  Massacre  of  the  Mac- 
pherson. — Aytoun. 

"Fiat!"  The  flaming  word.  See  Annunciation,  The. — 
Tabb. 

Fickle  custom !  Nothing  stays !  See  Spinning  Wheel, 
The. — Carmen. 

Fie  on  ambition!  fie  on  myself.  See  King  Henry 
VI.,  Pt.  II.  (Death  of  Jack  Cade).— Shakespeare. 

Fie  on  the  .sleights  that  men  devise.  See  Pastoral 
Song  between  Phillis  and  Amaryllis,  A. — Con- 
stable. 

Field  flowers,  sweet  field  flowers.  See  Field  Flowers. — 
Anon. 

Fierce  burns  our  fire  of  driftwood:  overhead.  See 
Night  in  Camp. — Bashford. 

Fierce,  fiery  warriors  fought  upon  the  clouds.  See 
Julius  Caesar. — Shakespeare. 

Fierce  flocks  of  sea  gulls,  with  huge  wings  of  white. 
See  To  the  Flying  Squadron. — Anon. 

Fierce  raged  the  combat — the  foemen  pressed  nigh. 
See  Bois  Ton  Sang,  Beaumanoir. — Osgood. 

Fifteen  years  ago  a  clo\id  of  gloom  o'erhung  our  coun- 
try.    See  Battle  of  Gettysburg.--— Ward. 

Fifteen  years  ago  Michigan  attempted  to  stretch  a 
railroad.  See  Defense  of  Alleged  Conspirators 
against  the  Michigan  Central  Railroad  Company. 
— Seward. 

Fifty  leagues,  fifty  leagues — and  I  ride,  and  I  ride. 
See  D'Artagnan's  Ride. — Morris. 

Fifty  years  ago,  in  a  rude  garret,  near  the  loneliest 
suburbs.  See  Benedict  Arnold  (Traitor's  Death- 
bed, The). — Lippard. 

Fifty  years  of  age  and  still  unmarried!  See  Marrying 
a  Poetess. — Anon. 

Fight,  gentlemen  of  England!  fight,  bold  yeomen!  See 
King  Richard  III.  (Richmond  to  his  Troops). 
— Shakespeare. 

Fill,  comrades,  fill  the  bowl  right  well.  See  DeRober- 
val  (OhnAwa). — Hunter-Duvar. 


653 


Fill 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Fill  high  each  glass  with  wine,   my  boys.     See  Our 

Goddess. — ( Wrinkle. ) 
Fill  high  your  bowl  with  fusel  oil!     See  Name  Your 

Poison. — Sennott. 
Fill  me  once  more  the  foaming  pewter  up!     See  Mid- 
night Meditation,  A. — Aytoun. 
Fill  my  wine-glass  brimming  high.     <See  Old  Amon- 
tillado.—M.  E.  W.  G. 
Fill  the  bumper  fair!     See  same. — Moore. 
Fill  up  the  glass ! — but  let  it  be.    See  To  Absent  Friends. 

— Anon. 
Filled   is  life's  goblet  to  the  brim.     See  Goblet  of  Life, 

The. — Longfellow. 
Filled  with  weariness  and  pain.     See  My  Vesper  Song. 

— Butler. 
Filter,  the  most  may  admire  thee,  though  not  I.     See 

To  Sir  Annual  Filter. — Jonson. 
Find  all  his  having  and  his  holding.     See  Hudibras. — 

Butler. 
Finding  Francesca  full  of  tears,  I  said.     See  Obituary. 

— Parsons. 
Fine  knacks  for  ladies!  cheap,  choice,  brave,  and  new. 

See  Pedlar,  A. — Dowland. 
Fingers  on  the  holes,  Johnny.     See  Music  Lesson,  A. — ■ 

Japp. 
Finis  coronal  opus.     The  completion  crowns  the  work. 

See    Completion   of     the   National   Monument  to 

Washington,  The  (Washington  Monument  Com- 
pleted, The).— Winthrop. 
" Finish'd!"  a  disappointed  artist  cries.     See  On  the 

Conclusion  of  his  Odes. — Pindar. 
Fire!  fire!  fire!     See  same. — Anon. 

Fire !  fire  in  Allentown !     See  Old  Braddock. — Cheney. 
Fire    in  nature    is    not    a    substance.       See    same. — 

Jacobus. 
Fired  at  the  sound,  my  genius  spreads  her  wing.     See 

Traveller,  The. — Goldsmith. 
Firmly  catch  and  swiftly  pull.     See  College  Rowing- 
song,  A.— W.  J.  H. 
First  a  soft   and   gentle   tinkle.     See   Piano-music. — 

Anon. 
First  April,  she  with  mellow  show'rs.     See  Succession 

of  the  Four  Sweet  Months. — Herrick. 
Firstr  came  General  Washington.     See  Our  Presidents. 

— Richards. 
First  came  the  primrose.     See  Chanted  Calendar,  A. — - 

Dobell. 
First  catch  your  clams,  along  the  ebbing  edges.     See 

Clam-soup. — Croffut. 
First  catch  your  lover.     See  Useful  Precepts  for  Girls. 

■ — -Anon. 
First  comes   January.     See   Farmer's   Round,   The. — 

Anon. 
First  comes  the  baby  boy  so  sweet.     See  Boys  will  be 

Boys.— Kavanaugh. 
First,  find   our   truth,    and   then.     See   Way,    The.— 

Shurtleff. 
First  he  danced  a  solemn  measure.     See  Song  of  Hia- 
watha,  The  (Hiawatha's  Wedding-feast). — Long- 
fellow. 
First  I  salute  this  soil  of  the  blessed  river  and  rock. 

See  Pheidippides. — Browning. 
First  I  thought,  almost  despairing.     See  Endurance. — 

George  Macdonald. 
First.  I  would  give  thee — nay,  I  may  and  will.     See 

Woman's  Gifts,  A. — -De  Vere. 
First  in  our  regard,  as  it  is  first  in  the  whole  nobility 

of  trees.     See  Walk  among  Trees,  A  ("  First  in  our 

regard,"  etc.). — Beecher. 
First  in  the  list  behold  the  caustic  Dean.     See  Swift. — 

Coleridge. 
First  in    the    ranks   see   Joan    of   Arc    advance.     See 

English    Bards    and  Scotch    Reviewers  (Robert 

Southey). — Byron. 
First  in  war,  first  in  peace,  and  first  in  the  hearts  of 

his  countrymen.     See    Funeral    (Dration   on    the 

Death    of    General    Washington     (Washington's 

Birthday). — Lee. 
First  likes  the  whole,  then  separate  what  he  sees.     See 

Cymon  and  Iphigenia. — -Dryden. 
First  of  all  the  violet,  with  an  eye.     See  Flowers. — 

Cornwall. 
First  party      (opening     conversation):     "  'Ave     you 

'eard."     See  Art  of  Conversation,  The. — (Punch.) 
First  shall  the  heavens  want  starry  light.     See  Rosa- 

lynde;  or,  Euphues'  Golden  Legacy  (Poet's  Vow, 

A). — Lodge. 
First,  somebody  told  it.     See  What  Became  of  a  Lie. — 

Kidder. 
First  take    a    willow    bough.     See    How    to    Make    a 

Whistle. — Anon. 
First  the    fine,    faint,  dreamy  motion.  See    Song,  A: 

"  First  the  fine,"  etc. — Gale 


First  the    grain,    and    then    the    blade.     See    Earth's 

Tribute.— Tabb. 
First,  three  boys  easily  found.     See  Game  of  Marbles, 

A.— Mitchell. 
First  time  he  kissed  me,  he  but  only  kissed.     See  Son- 
nets from  the  Portuguese,  XXXVIII. — Browning. 
First  William  the   Norman.     See  English   History  in 

Rhyme. — Anon. 
First,  worship    God;    he    that    forgets    to    pray.     See 

Precepts. — Randolph. 
Fisherman  Jim    lived    on    the    hill.     See    Fisherman 

Jim's  Kids. — Field. 
Fisherman  John  is  brave  and  strong.     See  Old  Story, 

An.— Anon. 
Fit  theme   for  song,   the   sylvan   maid.     See  Madam 

Hickory. — Larremore. 
Fitz  Sophocles  Simmons  was  down  at  the  heel.     See 

Beautiful  Mind,  The. — Anon. 
Five  and  seven  and  two  and  four.     See  Little  Boy's 

Speech,  A. — Anon. 
"Five  cents  a  glass!"  does  any  think.     See  Price  of  a 

Drink,  The.— Pollard. 
"Five  hundred  pounds  or  more  I've  saved."     See  Little 

More,  A. — Anon. 
Five  little  brothers  set  out  together.     See  Five  Little 

Brothers. — Wilcox. 
Five  little  girls  sat  down  to  talk.     See  Choosing  Occu- 
pations.— Anon. 
Five  little  pussy-cats,  invited  out  to  tea.     See  Cats' 

Tea-party,  The. — Weatherly. 
Five  little   squirrels   up   in   a   tree.     See   Finger   Ex- 
ercise, A. — Denton. 
Five  little  white  heads  peeped  out  of  the  mold.     See 

Five  Little  White  Heads. — Learned. 
Five  minutes  past  eight,  and  the  preacher  not  here. 

See  Sermon,  The. — Anon. 
Five  mites  of  monads   dwelt  in   a  round  drop.     See 

Five  Lives. — -Sill. 
Five  months   ago  that  beautiful  building.     See  Two 

Lives. — Vickers. 
Five  villages  are  all  that  remain.     See  Appeal  of  the 

Missagans. — Anon. 
Five  years  ago,  in  an  obscure  village  of  Ohio,  a  poet 

died.     See  Edward  Rowland  Sill. — Anon. 
Five  years  have  past;  five  summers,  with  the  length. 

See  Lines,  composed  a  few  miles  above  Tintern 

Abbey. — Wordsworth. 
Flag  of  our  country  brave.     See  Our  Flag. — Anon. 
Flag  of  the  free  heart's  hope  and  home!     See  American 

Flag.  The.— Drake. 
Flag  of  the  heroes  who  left  us  their  glory.     See  Union 

and  Liberty. — Holmes. 
Flag  of  the  rainbow,  and  banner  of  stars.     See  Flag  of 

the  Rainbow. — -English. 
Flakes  of  snow,  with  sails  so  white.     See  Little  Ships 

in  the  Air. — Rand. 
Flash  was  a  white-foot  sorrel,  an'  run  on  No.  3.     See 

Flash,  the  Fireman's  Story. — Carleton. 
Fie  fro  [or  fly  from]  the  pres  [or  press]  and  duelle  [or 

dwell]  with  soothfastnesse  [or  sothfastnesse.]     See 

Good  Counseil  of  Chaucer. — Chaucer. 
Fled  are  those  times,  when  in  harmonious  strains.     See 

Village  as  it  Is,  The. — Crabbe. 
Fled  foam  underneath  us  and  round  us,  a  wandering 

and  milky  smoke.     See  Island  of  Sleep,  The. — ■ 

Yeats. 
Fled    now    the    sullen    murmurs    of   the    north.     See 

Farmer's  Boy,  The. — Bloomfield. 
Flee  as  a  bird  to  your  mountain.     See  Flee  as  a  Bird. — 

Dana. 
Fleet,  fleet  and  few,  ay,  fleet  the  moments  fly.     See 

Two  Sonnet-songs,  II.:  Orpheus  and  the  Mariners 

Make  Answer. — Marzials. 
Fleet  the  Tartar's  reinless  steed.    See  French  Army  in 

Russia,  1812-13  (Snow).— Wordsworth. 
Fleet-flying   gem,    of    burnished    crest.     See   Captive 

Humming-bird,  The. — Hart. 
Fleetly  hath  passed  the  year;  the  seasons  came.     See 

New  Year,  The.— Willis. 
Fling  out  our  banner  to  the  breeze.     See  Fourth  of  July 

1876.— Fox. 
Fling  out  the  banner!     Let  it  float.     See  Banner  of  the 

Cross,  The. — Doane. 
Flitting  fancy,  blithe  and  free.     See  Flirtation. — Camp. 
Floating  away  like  the  fountains'  spray.     See  Smoking 

Away. — Finch. 
Flood   tide.      "All    strangers    leave    the    ship."     See 

Sailor's  Story,  The. — Vickers. 
Flora  hath  been  all  about.     See  Second  Pastor's  Song, 

The. — Breton. 
Flora,  well   met,  and   for   thy   taken    pain.     See   Ar- 
raignment of  Paris,  The    (Handiwork    of    Flora, 

The).— Peele. 


654 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


For 


Flow  down,  cold  rivulet,  to  the  sea.     See  Farewell,  A. — 

Tennyson. 
Flow  gently,  sweet  Afton,  among  thy  green  braes.     See 

Sweet  Afton. — Burns. 
Flow  on  forever,  in  thy    glorious    robe.     See    Apos- 
trophe to  Niagara. — Sigourney. 
Flower  in  the  crannied  wall.     See  same. — Tennyson. 
Flower  of  the  deep  red  zone.     See  Sermons  in  Stones.— 

Gary. 
Flower  of  the  medlar.     See  Pastoral,  A. — Marzials. 
Flower  of  the  moon.     See  Night-blooming  Cereus,  The. 

— Monroe. 
Flower  of  the  waste!    the  heathfowl  shuns.     See  On  a 

Sprig  of  Heath. — Grant. 
Flower  of  youth,  in  the  ancient  frame.     See  Judith. — 

Young.  . 
Flower,  that   I   hold  in   my   hand.     See  Tuberose. — 

Block. 
Flowers   are  fresh,    and   bushes  green.     See  Blighted 

Love. — De  Camoens. 
Flowers  for  our  dead.     See  For  Our  Dead. — ScoUard. 
Flowers  for  the  mourned  ones,  fresh  in  their  bloom. 

See  Ode  for  Decoration  Day. — Phelps. 
Flowers   I   would   bring    if  flowers   could   make  thee 

fairer.     See  Flowers  I  would  Bring. — De  Vere. 
Flowers  nodding  gaily,  scent  the  air.     See  Duet,  A. — 

Moore. 
Flowers  open,  smile.     See  same. — Anon. 
Flowers  that  have  died  upon  my  Sweet.     See  Song  of 

Angiola  in  Heaven. — Dobson. 
Flowers  to  the  fair:  to  you  these  flowers  I  bring.     See 

To  a  Lady,  with  Some  Painted    Flowers. — Bar- 

bauld. 
"Floy,"  said  Paul,  "what  is  that?"     See  Dombey  and 

Son  (Death  of  Little  Paul). — Dickens. 
Flung  to  the  heedless  winds.     See  Martyr's  Hymn,  The. 

— -Luther. 
Flush  with  the  pond  the  lurid  furijace  burn'd.     See 

Steam  Threshing-machine,  The. — Turner. 
Fluttering  spread  the  purple  pinions.     See  Lines  by  a 

Person  of  Quality. — Pope. 
Fly  by  steiam  force  the  country  across.     See  Railroad 

Nursery  Rhyme.— (PuncA.) 
Fly  drunkenness,  whose  vile  incontinence.     See  Drunk- 
enness.— Randolph. 
Fly,  envious  Time,  till  thou  run  out  thy  race.     See  On 

Time. — Milton. 
Fly  far  from    me.     See  Tecumseh    (lena's    Song)  — 

Mair. 
Fly  from  [or  fle  fro]  the  press  [or  pres]  and  dwell  [or 

duelle]  with  soothfastness  [or  sothfastnesse].     See 

Good  Counseil  of  Chaucer. — Chaucer. 
Fly  further  off,  my  lord,  fly   further  off.     See   Julius 

Csesar. — Shakespeare. 
Fly    hence,    shadows,    that    do  keep.      See   Lover's 

Melancholy,  The  (Awakening  Song). — Ford. 
Fly,    little  letter.     See  same. — W.  C.  C. 
Fly  not  yet — 'tis  just  the  hour.     Sep  Fly  not  Yet. — 

Moore. 
Fly   to  the  desert,  fly    with  me!     See    Lalla    Rookh 

(Fly  to  the  Desert). — Moore. 
Fly  to  the  mountain !     Fly!     See  Conemaugh. — Ward. 
Fly,  white  butterflies,  out  to  sea.     See  White  Butter- 
flies.— Swinburne. 
Flying  through  the  cloudy  sea.     See  So  the  Snow  Comes 

Down. — Butts. 
Foil'd  by  our  fellow  men,   depress'd,  outworn.     See 

Immortality. — Arnold. 
Fold  away  all  your  bright-tinted  dresses.    See  Woman's 

War  Mission. — Anon. 
Fold  thy  hands,  thy  work  is  over.     See  Lady  Franklin. 

— Whittier. 
Fold  thy  little  hands  in  prayer.     See  Child  Praying,  A. 

— Willmott. 
Fold  up  thy  hands,  my  weary  soul.     See  Rest. — Cooke. 
Fold  ye  the  ice-cold  hands.     See  Rest  at  Eventide. — 

McGee. 
Folks  has  been  to  town,  and  Sahry  fetched  'er  home  a 

pet  canary.     See  Canary  at  the  Farm,  A. — Riley. 
Folks  think  I'm  such  a  tiny  tot.     See  My  Speech. — 

Goodfellow. 
Folkses,  do  you  think  I  look  very  green?     See  Bess. — 

Anon. 
Follow  a  shadow,  it  still  flies  you.     See  Song:  That 

Women  are  but  Men's  Shadows. — Jonson. 
Follow  thy  fair  sun,  unhappy  shadow !     See  In  Imagine 

per  Transit  Homo. — Campion. 
Follow  your  saint,   follow  with  accents  sweet!     See 

Follow  Your  Saint. — Campion. 
Fool,  stand  back,  the  king  is  dying.     See  King  is  Dying, 

The. — Kenyon. 
Foolish  prater,  what  dost  thou.     See  Swallow,  The. — 

Cowley. 


Foolish  things  are  frowns  and  sneers.     See  Frowns  and 

Sneers. — Anon. 
"Fools!  for  ye  know  not  what  ye  say."     See  Burning 

Ship,  The. — McNaughton. 
Foot-sore,  weary,  o'er  the   hills.     See  Mendicants. — 

Everett. 
For   a   cap   and   bells   our  lives  we  pay.     See  Vision 

of  Sir  Launfal,  The  (June  Weather). — Lowell. 
For  a  jug  of  barley  water.    See  Barley  Water. — {Punch.) 
For  a  kiss  or  two,  confess.     See  Lacon  and  Thyrsis. — 

Herrick. 
For  a  name  unknown,  whose  fame  unblown.     See  Why. 

— Carman. 
"For  a'  that,"  sang  Burns,  "a  man's  a  man."     See 

Catholicity  .—Anon . 
For  ages  on  our  river  borders.     See  First  Flowers,  The. 

—Whittier. 
For  all  that  God,  in  mercy,  sends.     See  Give  Thanks. — 

Anon. 
For  all  the  higher  arts  of  construction.     See  Mathe- 
matics and  Physics. — Spencer. 
For  all  the  kindreds  and  tribes  and  tongues  of  men. 

See  Uses  of  Astronomy,  The   (Eternal    Clockwork 

of   the    Skies). — Everett. 
For  all  was  blank,  and  bleak,  and  gray.     See  Prisoner 

of  Chillon,  The.— Byron. 
For  aught  that  ever   I  could  read.     See  Midsummer 

Night's  Dream   (Course  of  True  Love,    The). — 

Shakespeare. 
For  both  armies  the  opening  was  diflScult,  uncertain, 

hesitating,  and  threatening.      See  Les  Misdrables 

(Battle  of  Waterloo,  The).— Hugo. 
For  bud  and  for  bloom  and  for  balm-laden  breeze.     See 

Hymn  for  Thanksgiving. — Adams. 
For    close    designs    and    crooked    councils    fit.     See 

Absalom  and  Achitophel  (Character  of  the  Earl 

of  Shaftesbury). — Dryden. 
For  comradeship  my  first  is  ever  noted.     See  Palaver. — 

Sabine. 
For  courage  and  "dash  there  is  no  parallel  in  history. 

See  Yankees  in  Battle,  The. — Evans. 
For  days  the  peaks  wore  hoods  of  cloud.     See  Septem- 
ber Violet,  A. — Johnson. 
For  death   must  come,    and  change,  and.  though  the 

loss.    See  Vingtaine  (Immutabilis). — Bunuer. 
For  do  but  note  a  wild  and  wanton   herd.     See   Mer- 
chant of   Venice,  The  (Power  of  Music,  The).— 

Shakespeare. 
For  eight  days  now  rumors  of  perfidy,  of  corruption, 

have    been    bruited.     See    Defense    against    the 

Charge  of  Corruption. — Mirabeau. 
For  eighty  days  the  fort  of  Lucknow  had  held  out.     See 

Relief  of  Lucknow,  The. — Anon. 
For  England  when,  with  favoring  gale.     See  Heaving 

of  the  Lead,  The. — Dibdin. 
For  ever.    Fortune,    wilt    thou    prove.     See  same. — 

Thomson. 
For  ever   hallowed    be   this  morning   fair.     See  Glad 

Tidings.- — Wordsworth. 
For  every  shooting  star,  he  claimed  a  kiss.     See  She 

Showed  him  Stars. — Anon. 
For  every  sunny  hour.     See  same. — Anon. 
For  faults  and  follies  London's  doom  shall  fix.     See 

Nostradamus's  Prophecy. — Marvell. 
For  flowers  that  bloom  about  our  feet.     See  We  Thank 

"Thee. — Emerson. 
For  forty  years  the  meeting-house  at  Riverdale  had 

been.     See  Obstinate  Music-box,  The. — Ford. 
For  four  years  our  little  fleet  has  been  riding  in  harbor. 

See  Culture  and  Service. — Anon. 
For,  from  the  rising  of  the  sun  even  unto  the  going  down. 

See  Short  Missionary  Service,  A. — Denton. 
For  full  seven  years  had  Charlemagne  tarried  in  Spain. 

See  Song  of  Roland,  Story  of  the. — Rabb. 
For  gold  could  Memory  be  bought.     See  Memory. — 

Lamb. 
For  government,   though   high,   and  low,   and  lower. 

See  King  Henry  V.  (Commonwealth  of  the  Bees, 

The) . — Shakespeare . 
For  her  gait,  if  she  be  walking.     See  Love's  Reasons. 

— Browne. 
For  his  religion  it  was  fit.     See  Hudibras  (Religion  of 

Hudibras,  The).— Butler. 
For  I  trust,  if  an  enemy's  fleet  came  yonder  round  by  the 

hill.      See  Maud  ("For  I  trust,"  etc.). — Tennyson. 
For  in  many  things  we  offend  all.     See  St.    James 

(Tongue,  The).— BtWe. 
For  it  so  falls  out.     See  Much   Ado  about  Nothmg. 

— Shakespeare. 
For  knyghthode    is    not    the    feates    of    warre.     See 

Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The   (Character  of  a  True 

Knight,  The).— Hawes. 


655 


For 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


For  lack  of  gold  she's  left  me,  O.     See  For  Lack  of 

Gold. — Austin. 
For  lo !  no  sooner  has  the  cold  withdrawn.     See  Joy  of 

Spring. — Hunt. 
For  lo!  the  living  God  doth  bare  his  arm.     See  Com- 
memoration Ode  (Democracy). — Monroe. 
For  lo,  the  winter  ra  past ;  the  rain  is  over  and  gone. 

See  Flower  Service,  A. — Denton. 
For  mamma  I  can  make  the  fire.     See  What  Little 

Folks  can  Do. — Moore. 
For  man   there  still  is  left   one  sacred  charter.     See 

Sanctuary  within  the  Breast,  The. — Smith. 
For  man  to  tell  how  human  life  began.     See  Paradise 
Lo.st  (Adam's  Account  of   his  Creation). — Milton. 
For  many  a  mile  the  tawny  mountains  heaved.     See 

Wicklow  Scene,  A. — Savage-Armstrong. 
For   many  blessings  I  to  God  upraise.     See  God  and 

the  Soul  (Nature  and  the  Child). — Spalding. 
For  many,  many  days  together.     See  Riding  Together. 

— Morris. 
For  many  years  I  have  studied  minutely  the  career. 

See  Character  of  Washington,  The. — Lodge. 
For  many  years  it  has  been  a  matter  of  wonder  to  me. 

See  Alcoholic    and    the    Tobacco  Habit,  The. — 

Dow. 
For  many  years  the  heroic  --Eneas,  who  escaped  from 

falling  Troy   to   seek   the   shores   of   Italy.     See 

.t;neid.  The  Story  of  the.— Rabb. 
For  mart  and  street  you  seem  to  pine.     See  To  His 

Books. — Horace. 
For    me    the    jasmine     buds    unfold.       See    Song. — 

Coates. 
For  me  you  left,  my  dearest,  best.     See  Two  Christmas 

Eves. — Nesbit. 
For  miles  and  miles  the  prairie  stretches  in  a  long, 

monotonous     roll.     See     "Two     Gray     Wolves. — 

Fanton. 
For  months  and  years,  with  penury  and  want.     See 

Loss  of  the  Emigrants,  The. — O'Reilly. 
For  my  part,   I   regard  any  one  who  reproaches  his 

fellow-man.       See    Oration   on   the    Crown,    The 

(Fortune  of  Machines). — Demosthenes. 
For  myself,  I  can  truly  say  that.     See  Land  of  Our 

Forefathers,  The. — Everett. 
For  myself,  1  propose,  sir,  to  abide  by  the  principles. 

See  Compromiss  Measures,  The  (Constitution  and 

the  Union,  The). — Webster. 
For  myself,  if  things  go  badly  in  London,  the  magic 

wand  of  the  unknown  will  be  shivered  in  his  grasp. 

See  Reflections  of  Sir  Walter  Scott. — Scott. 
For  nearly    eleven    months    I    have    been    away   from 

France.     See  Justice  for  Dreyfus. — Zola. 
For  nearly  fifty  years  no  spot  in  any  of  these  states 

had    been   the    scene  of    battle.      See    Strewing 

Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers  (Immor- 
tality of  True  Patriotism). — Garfield. 
For  nearly  two  hundred  years  license  has  had  possession 

of  the  entire  field.     See  Testimony  of  Experience, 

The. — Anon. 
For  nine  years  a  fleet  of  one  thousand  one  hundred  and 

eighty-six  ships.      See  Iliad,  The  Story  of  the  — 

Rabb. 
For  not  in  quiet  English  fields.     See  same. — Wilde 
For.  O  America,  our  country !— land.     See  America  — 

Bates. 
For  olders  to  speak  a  piece.     See  Little  Girl's  Speech 

A. — Anon. 
For  on  every  side  beneath.     See  Odyssey,  The  (Pal- 
ace of  Alcinous,  The). — Homer. 
For  once  I  have  done  right.     I  always  used  to  think  if  I 

'^.        J^.°  >t-     -See  Adventures  of  Jimmy  Brown 

The  (Ghost  Scene,  The).— Alden. 
For  one  long  term,  or  ere  her  trial  came.     See  Inscrip- 
tion for  the  Door  of  the  Cell  in  Newgate,  where 

Mrs.  Brownngg  was  Confined.— (/ln<i-yaco6tn.) 
J?  or  one  whole  week  I  have  "wasted  my  sweetness  on 

the  desert  air"  of  Columbusville.     See  Receiving 

Calls. — Brown. 
For  our  Christ's  saik,  I  am  richt  weill  content.     See 

Ane  Satyre  of  the  Threi  Estaitis.- Lyndesay 
*"'!rl!j'".?"'*''^y''^  Charles  I  pawn'd  my  plate."'   See 

Old  Cavalier,  The. — Doyle. 
For  physic   and  farces.     See  On   Dr.   Hill's   Farce  — 

Garrick. 
For  sale;  a  poet's  quills   and    pen.     See  For  Sale — 

Duffield. 
For  sale:  a  very  fine  line  of  hearts.     See  Bargains  in 

Hearts. — Hosford. 
For  Scotland's  and  for  freedom's  right.     See  Bruce  and 

the  Spider. — Barton. 
For  sixty  day.s  and  upward  a  storm  of  shell  and  shot 

See  Vicksburg. — Hayne. 


656 


For  some  time  past,  Mr.  Speaker,  has  the  Old  World 
been   fed  from  the  New.     See  Speech  on  Moving 
his  Resolutions  for  Conciliation  with  America  (En- 
terprise of  American  Colonists). — -Burke. 
For  Summer's     bloom     and     Autumn's     blight.     See 

Bitter-sweet  (Thanksgiving  Ode,  A). — Holland. 
For  ten  years  Robert  Browning  has  stood  in  a  position. 

See  Robert  Browning. — (Philadelphia  Press.) 
For  that    brave    sun,    the    father    of    the    day.     See 
Orchestra;  or,   A  Poeme  on   Dauncing  (Antinous 
Praises      Dancing     before     Queen     Penelope).  — 
Davies. 

For  the  dead  and  for  the  dying.  See  Pro  Mortuis. — 
Blood. 

For  the  dear  love  that  kept  us  through  the  night.  See 
Matins. — Burleigh. 

For  the  handsome  kingfisher  go  not  to  the  tree.  See 
Kingfisher,  The. — Howitt. 

For  the  hay  and  the  corn  and  the  wheat  that  is  reaped. 
See  Giving  Thanks. — Anon. 

For  the  second  time  in  this  generation.  See  Eulogy 
on  Garfield. — Blaine. 

For  the  tender  beech  and  the  sapling  oak.  See  Song : 
"For  the  tender,"  etc. — Peacock. 

For  the  wealth  of  pathless  forests.  See  Thanksgiving, 
A. — Larcom. 

For  the  wheels  were  just  as  strong  as  the  thills.  See 
One-hoss  Shay,  The. — Holmes. 

For  them,  O  God,  who  only  worship  thee.  See  Wor- 
ship.— Lord. 

For  there  are  two  heavens,  sweet.     See  same. — Hunt. 

For  they  alone  have  need  of  sorrow.  See  same. — 
Clemmer. 

For  thirty  years,  secluded  from  mankind.  See  In- 
scription for  the  Apartment  in  Chepstow  Castle, 
where  Henry  Marten  was  Imprisoned. — Southey. 

For  thou  wert  born  of  woman!  Thou  didst  come.  See 
Nativity,  The. — Milman. 

For  three  long  days  have  I  wandered  through  this 
forest.  See  Where  Thou  Goest  I  Will  Go. — 
Anon. 

For  three  whole  days  across  the  sky.  See  After  Rain. 
— Lampman. 

For  threescore  years  and  ten.  See  Read  to  Sleep. — 
Preston. 

For  thrice  ten  years  the  paladin's  hand  and  brain. 
See  Milton. — Betts. 

For  time  is  like  a  fashionable  host.  See  Troihis  and 
Cressida  (One  Touch  of  Nature). — Shakespeare. 

For  to  whom  can  I  dedicate  this  poem.  See  Epistle  to 
the  Whigs. — Dryden. 

For  toil  that  is  a  medicine  for  woe.  See  Thanksgiving 
Prayer,  A. — Smith. 

For  twenty  days  the  ranks  in  gray.  See  DoUie  Harris 
at  Greencastle,  Pa. — West. 

For  twenty  years  and  over  our  good  parson  had  been 
toihng.     See  Our  Traveled  Parson. — Carleton. 

For  twenty  years  old  Jack  Baldwin.  See  Old  Jack  in 
the  Well. — Anon. 

For  two  years  I  had  been  an  ensign  in  the  Paulovsky 
Regiment.     See  Imperial  Secret,  An. — Dumas. 

For  two  years  it  had  been  notorious  in  the  square. 
See  Courting  of  T'nowhead's  Bell,  The. — Barrie. 

For  weeks  an  impatient  crowd  of  admirers  had  fol- 
lowed the  various  reports.  See  Foot-ball  Game, 
The. — Copland. 

For  weeks  the  clouds  had  raked  the  hills.  See  Among 
the  Hills.— Whittier. 

For  who  would  bear  the  whips  and  scorns  of  time 
See  Hamlet  ("For  who  would  bear,"  etc.).— Shake- 
speare. 

For  why,  who  writes  such  histories  as  these.  See 
Books. — Higgins. 

For  William  Freeman  as  a  murderer  I  have  no  com- 
mission to  speak.  See  Plea  for  William  Freeman, 
A. — Seward. 

For  wonderful  indeed  are  all  his  works.  See  Para- 
dise Lost  (  Wisdom  and  Goodness  of  God,  The) 
— Milton. 

For  years  I've  seen  the  frothy  lines  go  thund'rin'  down 
the  shore.     See  Light-keeper,  The.— Lincoln. 

I'or  years  the  slave  endured  his  yoke.  See  Boat  of 
(jrass.  The. — Wister. 

For  your  own  sakes,  brethren,  for  God's  sake,  let  your 
thought  rise.     See  same. — Liddon. 

Forbear,  bold  youth;  all's  heaven  here.  See  To  One 
Persuading  a  Lady  to  Marriage. — Philips. 

Fore  God,  his  grace  is  bold,  to  trust  these  traitors. 
See  King  Henry  V.— Shake.speare. 

loreigners  have  funny  expressions,  haven't  they, 
Johnson?     See  Striking  Expressions.- Anon. 

I'orenoon  and  afternoon  and  night,— Forenoon.  See 
Life. — Sill. 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Friends 


Foreseen  in  the  vision  of  sages.  See  National  Ode: 
Read  at  the  Celebration  in  Independence  Hall, 
Philadelphia,  July  4,  1876  (America).— Taylor. 

Forest  trees  have  always  "haunted  me  like  a  pas- 
sion."    See  Trees. — For  a  Class  Exercise. — Anon. 

Forever  am  I  conscious,  moving  here.  See  Undis- 
covered Country,  The. — Aldrich. 

Forever  and  ever  the  reddening  leaves.  See  Forever. 
— Anon. 

Forever  past  the  days  of  gloom.  See  Loyal  Legion, 
The. — ^Halpine. 

"Forever  with  the  Lord."  See  At  Home  in  Heaven. — 
Montgomery. 

Forget  not  the  field  where  they  perish'd.  See  Forget 
not  the  Field. — Moore. 

Forget  not  yet  the  tried  intent.  See  Lover  Beseecheth 
His  Mistress  not  to  Forget,  The. — Wyatt. 

"Forget  thee?"  If  to  dream  by  night.  See  Forget 
Thee? — Moultrie. 

Forget  thee, — no,  never!  Why  cherish  a  thought.  See 
Forget  Thee, — No,  Never! — Watts. 

Forgiveness  Lane  is  old  as  youth.  See  Forgiveness 
Lane. — Dickinson. 

Form  as  amiable  sentiments  as  you  ca,n  of  nations, 
communities  of  men,  and  individuals.  See 
Benevolence  and  Charity. — Steele. 

Form  so  neat,  tres  petite.     See  Bessie. — Wetherbee. 

Form'd  half  beneath,  and  half  above  the  earth.  See 
Two  Enigmas. — Prior. 

Forsake  me  not,  my  God.  See  God's  Support  and 
Guidance. — Anon. 

Forsake  me  not  so  soon;  Castara,  stay.  See  Castara 
(To  Castara,  in  a  Trance). — -Habington. 

Forsaken  of  all  comforts  but  these  two.  See  same. — 
Ayton. 

Forth  from  his  dark  and  lonely  hiding-place.  See 
Fears  in  Solitude. — Coleridge. 

Forth  from  his  tent,  the  patriarch  Abraham  stept. 
See  Bismillah. — Proudfit. 

Forth  from  the  chaos  of  party  factions.  See  Wish 
Dearer  than  the  Crown,  The. — -Braidon. 

Forth  from  the  pass  in  tumult  driven.  See  Flight. — 
Scott. 

Fortune  her  gifts  may  variously  dispose.  See  Essay  on 
Man,  An. — Pope. 

Fortune  smiles,  cry  holiday!  See  Praise  of  Fortune, 
The. — Dekker. 

Fortune  will  not  come  with  seeking.  See  Four- 
leaved  Clover. — Anon. 

Forty  Little  Urchins.  See  Teaching  Public  School. — 
Anon. 

Forty  Viziers  saw  I  go.  See  Fair  Circassian,  The. — 
Garnett. 

Forty  years  ago,  when  afar  and  asunder.  See  Forty 
Years  Ago. — Bowen. 

Forty  years  of  experience  and  observation  have  taught 
me.  See  Country's  Greatest  Evil,  The.— Wil- 
son. 

Forward  and  back  and  forward  went  he  thus.  See 
Thames,  The. — -Chapman. 

"Forward!"  he  heard  again  from  the  deep,  guttural 
voice.     See  Death  of  Garcia,  The. — Stoddard. 

"Forward!"  the  brave  old  captain  said.  See  Battle  of 
Inkerman,  The. — Bungay. 

Found  dead, — dead  and  alone.  See  Found  Dead. — 
Laighton. 

Found  in  the  garden,  dead  in  his  beauty.  See  Burial  of 
the  Linnet,  The. — Ewing. 

Fountain  of  Mercy!  God  of  love!  See  same. — Flower- 
dew. 

Fountains  that  frisk  and  sprinkle.  See  Made  in  the 
Hot  Weather. — Henley. 

Foul  canker  of  fair,  virtuous  action.  See  To  Detrac- 
tion.— Marston. 

Four  and  thirty  years  ago.  See  Rab  and  his  Friends. 
— Brown. 

Four  and  twenty  bonny  boys.  See  Hugh  of  Lincoln. 
— Anon. 

Four  and  twenty  Highland  men.  See  Eppie  Morrie. — 
Anon. 

Four  and  twenty  snowflakes  -ame  tumbling  from  the 
sky.     See  Disappointed  Snowflakes,  The. — Anon. 

Four  babies  lay  in  their  cradles  new.  See  Seasons, 
The.— Ricker. 

Four  be  the  elements.  See  Song  for  Punch  Drinkers. 
— (Punch.) 

Four  children  sat  around  a  wood  fire.  See  Mice  at 
Play. — Forrest. 

Four  days  after  the  king's  departure,  Nehushta  was 
wandering  in  the  gardens.  See  Zoroaster  (Mas- 
sacre of  Zoroaster,  The). — Crawford. 

Four  hundred  thousand  men.  See  Nation's  Dead,  The. 
— Anon. 


Four  hundred  years  and  more  ago.     See  Drummer-boy 

of  Kent,  The. — Anon. 
Four   little   feet   pattering   on   the   floor.     See   Early 

Christmas  Morning. — Peck. 
Four  little  mouths  agape  forever.     See  Orioles,  The. — 

Anon. 
Four  little  sunbeams  came  earthward  one  day.     See 

Four  Sunbeams,  The.— M.  K.  B. 
Four  old  cats  sat  down  to  tea.  See  Cat-tails. — Whitney. 
Four  score  and  ten  of  us.     See  Poor  Old  Maids. — 

Kavanaugh. 
Four  seasons  fill  the  measures  of  the  year.     See  Human 

Seasons,  The. — Keats. 
Four  straight  brick  walls,  severely  plain.     See  Quaker 

Graveyard,  The. — Mitchell. 
Four  things  a  man  must  learn  to  do.     See  Four  Things. 

— Van  Dyke. 
Four  years! — and  didst  thou  stay  above.     See  Geist's 

Grave.^- Arnold. 
Four  years  old  when  the  blackberries  come!     See  Hal's 

Birthday. — Larcom. 
Fourscore   and  seven  years   ago  our  fathers  brought 

forth    upon    this    continent    a    new    nation.     See 

Address  at  the  Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at  Get- 
tysburg.— -Lincoln. 
Fourteen   fair   barges  in  a  row.     See  Queen   Hynde 

(Boat-race,  The). — Hogg. 
Fourteen   small   broidered   berries   on   the   hem.     See 

What  the  Sonnet  Is. — Lee-Hamilton. 
Fra  bank  to    bank,  fra  wood   to   wood    I    rin.      See 

Sonet. — Boyd.       _  . 

Frae  fields  where  Spring  her  sweets  has  blawn.     See 

Ode  to  the  Gowdspink. — Fergusson. 
Fragrant  air  everywhere.     See  Fragrant  Air. — Anon. 
Fragrant  odor  of  the  dawn.     See  Morning  in  August. — 

Morse. 
Framed  in  the  cavernous  fireplace  sits  a  boy.     See  Old 

Thought,  An. — Luders. 
Frank  Forethought  was  a  very  careful  fellow.     See 

Bachelor  and  the  Bride,  The.— Anon. 
Frank  Hayman   dearly   loved   a   pleasant   joke.     See 

Frank  Hayman. — Taylor. 
Frank-hearted   hostess   of   the   field   and   wood.     See 

Under  the  Willows. — Lowell. 
Franklin   as  a  philosopher  stands   before  us   as   dis- 
tinctly.    See  Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Frank- 
lin, The  (Franklin  as  a  Philosopher). — Winthrop. 
Franklin    is    dead!     Restored    to    the   bosom    of   the 

Divinity.     See  Eulogium  on  Franklin,  June   11, 

1790. — Mirabeau. 
Friiulein,  the  young  schoolmistress,  to  her  pupils  said 

one  day.     See  Little  Christel. — Bradley. 
Fred,  did  you  ever  notice  how  few  people.     See  Good 

Manners. — Anon. 
Fred  will  be  here  to  the  minute.     See  Splendid  Beau, 

A. — Anon. 
Freddie  saw  some  fine  ripe  cherries.     See  Freddie  and 

the  Cherry-tree. — "Aunt  Effie." 
Fredericksburg  is  not  a  large  city,  and  yet  it  is  rich  in 

incidents.     See  Fredericksburg. — Bryan. 
Free  'ittle  toad-stools.     See  Little  Mushrooms,  The. — 

Kavanaugh. 
Freedom's  first  champion  in  our  fettered  land.     See 

Garrison. — Alcott. 
Freemen    of    Athens!  Fellow    citizens!  Freemen    by 

birth!     See  Clito's  Address  to  the  Men  of  Athens. 

— Anon. 
Fresh  from  the  fountains  of  the  wood.     See  Valley 

Brook,  The. — Bryant. 
Fresh  hope  and  cheer.     See  Flower's  Easter  Message. 

The. — Poulsson . 
Fresh  Spring,  the  herald  of  love's  mighty  king.     See 

Amoretti  and  Epithalamion  (Whilst  it  is  Prime). 

— Spenser. 
Fresh  with  all  airs  of  woodland  brooks.     See  With  a 

Copy  of  Herrick. — Gosse. 
Freshly  the  cool  breath  of  the  coming  eve.     See  Heal- 
ing of  the  Daughter  of  Jairus. — Willis. 
Fret    not    thyself    because  of  evildoers.     See  Psalms 

of  David,  XXXVIL— BibZe. 
Fret,  till  your  proud  heart  break.     See  Julius  Caesar 

(Brutus  to  Cassius). — Shakespeare. 
Friend  after  friend  departs.     See  sam.e. — Montgomery. 
Friend,  come  thou  like  a  friend.     See  Psalm  for  New 
,    Year's    Eve,    A    (Address  to  the    New  Year). — 

Craik. 
Friend  of  all  who  seek  Thy  favor.     See  Friend  of  All. — 

Wesley. 
Friend  of  my  soul,  this  water  sip.     See  Temperance 

Song. — (Punch.) 
Friends  and  Feller-Citizens:     My  feelin's  on  a  'casion 

like  this.     See  Major  Jones'  Fourth  of  July  Ora- 
tion.— Anon. 


657 


Friends 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Friends  and  fellow-citizens:  Called  upon  to  under- 
take the  duties  of  the  first  executive  office  of  our 
country.  See  Inauguration  Address,  March  4, 
1801. — Jefferson. 

Friends  and  Fellow-citizens :  In  looking  forward  to 
the  moment.  See  Farewell  Address. — Washington. 

Friends  and  fillow-citizens  of  this  conflictuous  com- 
munity.    See  Racy  Stump  Speech,  A. — Anon. 

Friends  and  Fellow-citizens:  The  period  for  a  new 
election  of  a  citizen.  See  Farewell  Address. — 
Washington. 

Friends  and  Fellow-sufferers:  I  come  not  here  to  talk. 
See  HoUday  Gobbler's  Address,  The. — Anon. 

Friends  and  Neighbors:  Having  just  opened  a  com- 
modious shop.  See  Rum-seller's  Invitation,  The. 
— Anon. 

Friends,  Countrymen,  and  Brethren: — By  these  and  by 
every  other  appellation.  See  Address  to  the  Peo- 
ple of  England. — Lee. 

Friends,  hear  the  words  my  wandering  thoughts  would 
say.     See  On  Southey's  Death. — Landor. 

Friends,  I  come  not  here  to  talk.  Ye  know  too  well. 
See  Rienzi's  Address  to  the  Romans. — Mitford. 

Friends,  in  this  world  of  hurry.     See  same. — Kingsley. 

"Friends,"  listen  to  the  "Annals  of."  See  Tale  the 
Titles  Told,  The.— Davis. 

Friends  of  faces  unknown,  and  a  land.  See  Only  a 
Curl. — Browning. 

Friends  of  the  Muse,  to  you  of  right  belong.  See 
Strong  Heroic  Line,  The. — Holmes. 

friends,  parents,  and  children,  merry  welcome  to  all ! 
See  Queen  of  the  School. — Anon. 

Friends,  Romans,  countrymen,  lend  me  your  ears. 
See  Julius  Ccesar  (Antony's  Oration  over  Caesar). 
— Shakespeare. 

Friends,  Romans,  countrymen,  lend  me  your  ears. 
See  Rehearsal,  The. — McBride. 

Friends,  whom  she  looked  at  blandly  from  her  couch. 
See  Myrtis.— Landor. 

Friendship  doth  bind,  with  pleasant  ties.  See  Friend- 
ship, Love,  and  'Truth. — Anon. 

iJ'riendsnip,  like  love,  is  but  a  name.  See  Hare  with 
Many  Friends,  The. — Gay. 

Friendship  needs  no  studied  phrases.  See  Friendship. 
— Anon. 

Frightened?  No,  that  ain't  the  word,  sir.  See  Terri- 
ble Race,  A. — Rae-Brown. 

Fringing  cypress  forests  dim.     See  Sassafras. — Peck. 

Fritz  has  had  more  trouble  with  his  neighbor.  See 
Fritz's  Troubles. — Anon. 

"Froebelism,"  or  the  Kindergarten  system  of  educa- 
tion.    See  aawte.— Bittinger. 

From  a  chimney  on  the  roof.  See  Capers  et  Caper. — 
Ware. 

From  a  dungeon  permitted  to  go.  See  Convict's  Com- 
plaint, The. — Welcker. 

From  a  field  of  death  and  carnage.  See  Soldier's 
Cradle-hymn,  The. — McGuire. 

From  a  junto  that  labor  for  absolute  power.  See 
Emancipation  from  British  Dependence. — Fre- 
neau. 

From  a  munster  vale  they  brought  her.  See  Dying 
Girl,  The.— Williams. 

From  a  vision  of  fright.     See  Unrest. — Comwell. 

From  agross  der  rifer,  at  broke  of  tay.  See  Carl 
Pretzel's  Ride. — Pretzel. 

From  agross  der  rifer,  ad  der  broke  of  day.  See 
Schneider's  Ride. — Phillips. 

From  all  that  dwell  below  the  skies.  See  Psalm 
CXVII.— Watts. 

From  Austin,  Texas,  fast  the  north-bound  train.  See 
Dolly  and  Me. — Kavanaugh. 

From  beauteous  Windsor's  height  and  storied  halls. 
See  Sonnet:  Written  after  seeing  Windsor  Castle. 
— Warton. 

From  breakfast  on  through  all  the  day.  See  Land  of 
Nod,  The. — Stevenson. 

From  British  rule  the  States  are  free,  at  length.  See 
My  Country. — Bradbury. 

From  Csesar  to  Bismarck  and  Gladstone.  See  Lincoln 
the  Immortal. — Anon. 

From  childhood  Joe  had  loved  his  faithful  Meg.  See 
Joe  and  Meg. — Anon. 

From  childhood's  hour  I  have  not  been  as  others  were. 
See  same. — Poe. 

From  college  and  from  chapel  spires.  See  Tribute  to 
Longfellow,  A. — Zabriskie. 

From  Cuban  shores  in  ceaseless  pain.  See  Remem- 
bered.— Gordon. 

From  dawn  to  dark  they  stood.  See  "Our  Left." — 
Ticknor. 

From  day  to  day  came  a  heavy  roar.  See  Tilghman's 
Ride  from  Yorktown  to  Philadelphia. — Pyle. 


From  dusk  till  dawn  the  livelong  night.     See  Betsy's 

Battle  Flag. — Irving. 
From  each  age  in  every  story  shines  one  figure-head 

sublime.     See  Woman's  Power. — Cloud. 
From  early  childhood,  even  as  hath  been  said.     See 

Excursion,  The  (Sunrise,  The). — Wordsworth. 
From   early   youth  war   has   my   mistress   been.     See 

Soldier,  A. — Baillie. 
From  1806,  the  period  of  my  entrance  upon  this  noble 

theater.     See  Valedictory  Address  to  the  Senate. 

—Clay. 
From  1829  till  1839,  for  a  period  of  ten  years,  O'Connell 

stood  in  the  British  Parliament.     See  O'Connell. 

— Burke. 
From  Europe  Mr.  Sumner  returned  late  in  the  fall  of 

1872.     See  Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner  (American 

Battle  Flags). — Schurz. 
From    falling    leaf    to    falling    leaf.     See    October. — 

Radford. 
From  far  away,   from  far  away.     See  My   Letter. — 

Litchfield. 
From    far-off    snowy     mountains,    whose    brows    the 

cloudlets  fan.     See  Cold-water  Cro.ss. — Anon. 
From    gold    to   gray.     See    Eve    of   Election,    The.— 

Whittier. 
From    Greenland's    icy    mountains.     See    Missionary 

Hymn. — Heber. 
From  gross  der  rifer,  ad  broke  of  day.     See  Schneider's 

Ride  — Gooft. 
From   Guadiana  comes   he   not,   he  comes   not   from 

Xenil.     See  Bull-fight,  The.— Lockhart. 
"From   hand   to   mouth,"    he   gaily   said.     See   From 

Hand  to  Mouth. — Anon. 
Frdm  harmony,   from   heavenly  harmony.     See  Song 

for  St.  Cecilia's  Day,  A. — Dryden. 
From  Heaven  I  fall,  though  from  earth  I  begin.     See 

On  Snow. — Swift. 
From  her  earliest  history,  the  policy  of  this  country. 

See  Education. — Mann. 
From  her  own  fair  dominions.     See  Beyond. — Trow- 
bridge. 
From    him    did    forty    million    serfs,    endowed.     See 

Sonnet:  Czar  Alexander  the  Second. — Rossetti. 
From  his  brimstone  bed  at  break  of  day.     See  Devil's 

Thoughts,  The. — Coleridge  and  Southey. 
From  homes  of  the  East  and  the  West.     See  Columbia 

and  the  Boys. — Denton. 
From  India's  burning  clime  I'm  brought.     See  Fan,  A. 

—Swift. 
From  Leamington  to  Stratford-on-Avon.     See  Recol- 
lections of  a  Gifted  Woman. — Hawthorne. 
From  little  matters  let  us  pass  to  less.       See  Rhymed 

Lesson,  A:  Urania  (Rhymed  Lesson,  A). — Holmes. 
From  little  signs,  like  little  stars.     See  Angel   in  the 

House,  The  (Honoria's  Surrender). — Patmore. 
From  low  to  high  doth  dissolution  climb.     See  Muta* 

bility. — Wordsworth. 
From  morn  till  noon  the  golden  glow.     See  Outcast's 

Dream,  The.— Bell. 
From  morning  till  night  it  was  Lucy's  delight.     See 

Chatterbox,  The.— Taylor. 
From  mouldering  Abbey's  dark  Scriptorium  brought. 

See  Over  the  Threshold  of  My  Library. — Drury. 
From  my  lips  in  their  defilement.     See  same. — Damas- 

cenus. 
From  Nazareth  to  Bethlehem.     See  Nativity,  The. — • 

Hopkins. 
From  nine  in  the  morning  till  six  at  night.     See  Hand- 
organ  Man's  Little  Girl,  The.— H.  H. 
From    Oberon,    in    fairy-land.     See   Merry    Pranks    of 

Robin  Good-fellow,  The. — Anon. 
From  off  the  hills  the  golden  glow  is  fading,  day  by 

day.     See  Robin's  Flight,  The. — Bates. 
From  one  end  to  the  other  of  the  great  boot-room. 

See  Purpose,  A. — Pearson. 
From  out  Cologne  there  came  three  kings.     See  Three 

Kings  of  Cologne,  The. — Field. 
From  out  his  hive  there  came  a  bee.     See  Waiting  for 

the  May. — Anon. 
From  out  of  the  dreamland  ere  glow  of  the  dawn.     See 

Morning  Sprite,  The. — Collester. 
From  out  the  cold  house  of  the  North.     See  Men  of 

the  North,  The.— Allison. 
From  out  the  grave  of  one  whose  budding  years.     See 

Lachrymatory,  The. — Turner. 
From    out    the    wood    I    watched    them    shine.     See 

Haunted. — Rama!. 
From   pain   and   peril,   by  land  and  main.     See  Cap- 
tain's Well,  The.— Whittier. 
From  past  regret  and  present  faithlessness.     See  Whom 

but  Thee.— Scudder. 
From  plains  that  reel  to  southward,  dim.     See  Heat. — 

Lampman. 


658 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Gamarra 


From    proud    Atlantic's    surging    waves.     See    Starry 

Flag,  The.— Bates. 
From  Rhegium  to  the  Isthmus.     See  Cranes  of  Ibycus, 

The.— Schiller. 
From  romp  upon  the  Autumn  hills.     See  Turning. — 

Bronson. 
From  rosy  lips  we  issue  forth.     See  Words. — Barbauld. 
From  saffron   to  yellow,   from   purple  to  gray.     See 

Summer  Picture,  A. — Anon. 
From   Salisbury  church  to  Wilton   House  so   grand. 

See  Apology  for  Kings. — Pindar. 
From  school,  and  ball,  and  rout,  she  came.  See  Among 

the  Hills  (Wife,  The).— Whittier. 
From  Shediac,  the  Canadian.     See  Glory  of  the  North- 
west.— Burdette. 
From  shuddering     trees     the     painted     leaves.     See 

Chickamauga. — Ferris. 
From   some   dim   height   of   being,    undescribed.     See 

Shall  I  Look  Back? — Anon. 
From  some    sweet    home,    the    morning    train.     See 

School  Girl,  The.— Venable. 
From  Stirling     Castle     we     had     seen.     See     Yarrow 

Unvisited. — Wordsworth. 
B'rom  the  alcove,  screened  with  its  tropic  palms.     See 

Le  Depart. — Wallace. 
From  the  bonny  bells  of  heather.     See  Heather  Ale: 

A  Galloway  Legend. — Stevenson. 
From  the  Book  of  Judges,  as  1  read.     See  Old  Wine  in 

New  Bottles. — Burdette. 
From  the  day  on  which  an  accomrnodation  takes  place 

between    England    and    America. — See    American 

Independence  (Necessity  of  Independence,  The). 

— Adams. 
From  the  depth  of  the  dreamy  decline  of  the  dawn. 

See  Nephelidia. — Swinburne. 
From  the  desert  I  come  to  thee.     See  Bedouin  Song. — 

Taylor. 
From  the    drear    wastes    of    unfulfilled    desire.     See 

Disappointment. — Collier. 
From  the    elm    tree's    topmost    bough.     See    Robin's 

Come. — Caldwell. 
"From  the  far  blue  heaven."    See  Fragment,  A. — Anon. 
From  the  flying  train,  behold.     See  Golden  Rod,  The. 

— {Vick's  Magazine.) 
From  the  forests  and  highlands.     See  Hymn  of  Pan.- — 

Shelley. 
From     the  four  quarters  of  the  year.     See  Holiday 

Convention,  The. — Rook. 
From  the  genius  of  our  government,  the  pathway  to 

honorable  distinction .     See  same. — Garfield . 
From  the    glittering    staff    unfurled.     See     Paradise 

Lost. — Milton. 
From  the  glorious  heaven  where  the  angels  are.     See 

God  is  Love. — Allen. 
From  the  hills  of  the  west,  as  the  sun's  setting  beam. 

See     Hebrew     Minstrel's     Lament,     The. — {New 

England  Magazine.) 
From  the  low  prayer  of  want  and  plaint  of  woe.     See 

Benevolence. — Beattie. 
From  the    madding    crowd    they    stand    apart.     See 

V-A-S-E,  The.— Roche. 
From  the  mint  two  bright  new  pennies  came.     See  Two 

Pennies,  The. — Anon. 
From  the    misty    shores    of    midnight,    touched    with 

splendors  of  the  moon.    See  Tennyson.— Van  Dyke. 
From  the  most  fixed  principles  of  human  nature.     See 

Apostrophe  to  the  Volunteers,  The. — Hall. 
From  the  ocean   half  a  rood.     See  Among  the   Sand 

Hills. — Alexander. 
From  the  oriels,  one  by  one.     See  In  the  Library. — 

ScoUard. 
From  the  plains  of  far  Judea.     See  Be  Ye   Ready. — 

Walter. 
From  the  quaint  old  farm-house,  nestling  warmly.     See 

Coasting  New  Year's  Eve. — Anon. 
From  the  quickened  womb  of  the  primal  gloom.     See 

Light. — Palmer. 
From  the    recesses    of    a    lowly    spirit.     See    same. — 

Bowring. 
From  the   Rio   Grande's   waters   to  the  icy  lakes   of 

Maine.     See  Buena  Vista. — -Pike. 
From  the  sharp  ridges  of  the  hill.     See  Marmion  (Flod- 

den  Field).— Scott. 
From  the  soft  south  the  constant  bird  comes  back. 

See  On  Homeward  Wing. — Moulton. 
From  the  strong  will  and  the  endeavor.     See  Seaweed 

( Drifting) . — Longfellow. 
From   the   sunny    morning.     See    Hymn:   "From  the 

sunny,"  etc. — -Anon. 
From  the  time  of  our  old  revolution.     See  That  Things 

are  no  Worse,  Sire. — Jackson. 
From  the  time  that  theology  received  from  the  Greek 

mind.     See  Nature  of  Christ,  The. — Beecher. 


From  the  top  of  my  head  to  my  tiny  toes.     See  Body, 

The. — Anon. 
From  the  town  of  Bellizona,  several  hundred  years  ago. 

See  Judge  of  Bellizona,  The. — Reithard. 
From  the    tragic-est     novels   at     Mudie's.     See     Dora 

versus  Rose. — Dobson. 
From  the  window  of  the  chapel  softly  sounds  an  organ's 

note.     See  Sunday  Afternoons. — Lincoln. 
From  the  workshop  of   the  Golden   Key  there   issued 

forth  a  tinkling  sound.     See  Cheerful  Locksmith, 

The. — Charles  Dickens. 
From  their  folded  mates  they  wander  far.     See  Black 

Sheep. — Burton. 
From  these  downy  flakes  of  snow.     See  Juggler,  The. — 

Sherman. 
From  this    carved   chair   wherein   I    sit  to-night.     See 

Voice  of  D.  G.  R.,  The.— Gosse. 
From  this  quaint  cabin  window  I  can  see.     See  By  the 

Pacific. — Bashford. 
From  thy  whole  life  take  all  the  sweetest  days.     See 

Question,  A. — Egan. 
From  Tuscane  came  my  lady's  worthy  race.  See  Descrip- 
tion and  Praise  of    his  Love  Geraldine. — Surrey. 
From  upland  slopes  I  see  the  cows  file  by.     See  Even- 
ing.— Lampman. 
From  what  abysses  of  the  unfathom'd  sea.     See  Ode 

to     the    Great     Sea-serpent     on      his    Wonderful 

Reappearance. — {Punch.) 
From  what  dripping  cell,  through  what  fairy  glen.     See 

Abhrain  an  Bhuideil. — Le  Fanu. 
From  women's  eyes  this  doctrine  I  derive.     See  Love's 

Labour's  Lost. — Shakespeare. 
From  words,  which  are  but  pictures  of  the  thought. 

See  Ode  to  the  Royal  Society,  The. — Cowley. 
From  you   have    I    been   absent   in    the   spring.     See 

Sonnets,  XCVIII. — Shakespeare. 
From  you,  lanthe,  little  troubles  pass.     See  lanthe. — • 

Landor. 
Fronting  us  all,  in  a  niche  in  the  wall.     See  Owl  in 

Church. — Jeffrey. 
Frowned  the  Laird  on  the  Lord:     "So,  red-handed  I 

catch  thee?"   See  Muckle-mouth  Meg.— Browning. 
Frowning,  the  mountain  stronghold  stood.     See  Lost 

Colors,  The.— Ward. 
Full  fathom  five  thy  father  lies.      See  Tempest,  The 

(Sea  Dirge,  A). — Shakespeare. 
Full  knee  deep  lies   the  winter  snow.     See  Death  of 

the  Old  Year,  The.— Tennyson. 
Full  little  knowest  thou  that  hast  not  tried.     See  At 

Court. — Spenser. 
Full  many  a  glorious  morning  have  I  seen.     See  Son- 
nets, XXXIII. — Shakespeare. 
Full  many   a   project   that   never  was   hatched.     See 

Humpty  Dumpty. — Whitney. 
Full  many  a  quiet,  modest  man.     See  Junior's  Foxy 

Friends,  'The. — Walker. 
Full  merrily  rings  the  millstone  round.     See  Song  of  the 

Elfin  Miller. — Cuningham. 
Full  oft  doth  Mat.  with  Topaz  dine.     See  Earning  a 

Dinner. — Prior. 
Full  on    his  _  forehead    fell    the    expiring    light.     See 

Benjamin  Harrison. — Russell. 
Full  on  this  casement  shone    the  wintry   moon.     See 

Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The  (Flight,  The).— Keats. 
Full  tender  beamed  the  light  of  love  down  from  his  manly 

face.     See  Two  Other-  Hearts. — {London  Tobacco.) 
Full-armed    I    fought    the    Paynim    foe.     See    Silent 

Watch,  The. — Brown. 
Full-flowered  summer  lies  upon  the  land.     See  Love's 

Calendar. — Anon. 
Funerals  were  not  an  exciting  novelty.     See  Within  the 

Fold. — Anon. 
Fur  out  ter  sea  the  island  lies.     See  Sailor  Santa  Claus, 

A. — Stapleton. 
Furl    that    banner,    for    'tis    weary.     See    Conquered 

Banner,  The.— Ryan. 
Furth  of  the  see,  with  this,  the  dawing  springis.     See 

^neid.  The  (Dido's  Hunting).— Virgil. 


Gailv  bedight,    a    gallant    knight.      See    Eldorado. — 

Poe. 
Gallant  and  gay  in  their  doublets  gray.     See  Swallows, 

The.— Arnold. 
Gallants,  attend,  and  hear  a  friend.     See  Battle  of  the 

Kegs,  The. — Hopkinson. 
Galliant  gents  and  lovely  ladies.     See  Ballad  of  Eliza 

Davis,  The. — Thackeray. 
Gamarra  is  a  dainty  steed.     See  Blood  Horse,  The. — 

Procter. 


659 


Game 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Gam«  there  was  none.     See  Saved  by  a  Rattlesnake. — 

Anon. 
Gane  were  bat  the  winter  cauld.     See  same. — Cunning- 
ham. 
"GarQon!     You — you   snared   along  with  this  cursdd 

crew."     See  nbro  of  the  Commune,  The. — Preston. 
Garlands    upon    his    grave.     See    Charles    Sumner. — 

Longfellow. 
Gather  all  kindreds  of  this  boundless  realm.     See  Poet, 

The. — Mathews. 
Gather  the  garlands  rare  to-day.     See  Memorial  Day. — 

Warman. 
Gather  up  the  money  that  the  working-classes  have 

spent  for  rum.     See  Rum. the  Worst  Enemy  of  the 

Working-classes. — Talmage. 
Gather  we  here  to  plant  the  fair  tree.     See  Planting 

the  Tree. — Waterbury. 
Gather  ye  rosebuds  while  ye  may.     See  To  the  Virgins, 

to  Make  Much  of  Time. — Herrick. 
Gathering  brands  from  the  burning.     See  God's  Work. 

— Wilcox. 
Gaunt   in  the  midst  of  the  prairie.     See  Chicago. — 

O'Reilly. 
Gaunt,  rueful  knight,  on  raw-boned,  shambling  hack. — 

See  Don  Quixote. — Betts. 
Gay,    guiltless     pair.     See      Winged      Worshipers. — 

Sprague. 
Gay  hope  is  theirs,  by  fancy  fed.     See  On  a   Distant 

Prospect  of  Eton  College. — Gray. 
Gay  lilies  on  the  virgin  breast.     See  PansieSj — -Hood. 
Gay  little    dandelion.     See    Little    Dandelion. — Bost- 

wick. 
Gay  was  the  throng  that  poured  through  the  streets. — 

See  Song  of  the  Market-place,  The. — Buckham. 
Gayly  and  gayly  rang  the  gay  music.     See  That  Waltz 

of  von  Weber. — Perry. 
Gayly  have   we   passed  the  time.     See  Good-bye. — 

Peck. 
Gayly    through    the    mountain    glen.     See    Haunted 

Spring,  The.— Lover. 
Gaze  not  at  me,  my  poor  unhappy  bird.     See  Ode  to 

Mother  Carey's  Chicken. — Watts. 
Gazing  where  the  setting  sun-rays.     See  Gates  Ajar. — 

Ruth. 
Gem  of  the  crimson-colour'd  even.      See  To  the  Even- 
ing Star.— Campbell. 
General  Sherman  tells  the  story  of  his  experience  in 

Georgia.     See  Review  of  the  Grand  Army,  The. — 

Anon. 
General — The  House  of  Representatives  of  the  United 

States,  impelled  alike  by  its  own  feelings.     See 

Address  to  La  Fayette. — Clay. 
General  Wolfe,  the  English  commander,  saw  that  he 

must  take  Quebec.     See  Capture  of  Quebec,  The. — 

McCabe. 
Generation    after    generation    has    rolled    away.     See 

Astronomy. — Mitchell. 
Gengulphus  comes  from  the  Holy  Land.     See  Lay  of  St. 

Gengulphus,  A.— Barham. 
Genius  and  its  rewards  are  briefly  told.    See  To  Charles 

Dickens. — Forster. 
Genteel  in  personage.     See  Maiden's  Choice,  The. — 

Carey. 
Genteel  it  is  to  have  soft  hands.     See  Gentility. — Anon. 
Gentle  and  generous,  brave  hearted,  kind.     See  Com- 
fort of  the  Trees,  The.— Gilder. 
Gentle    and    grave,    in    simple    dress.     See    William 

Wordsworth. — Palgrave. 
Gentle  lady!     See  Sea  Captain's  Story,  The.^Lytton. 
Gentle,  modest  little  flower.     See  To  Phoebe.- — Gilbert. 
Gentle    nymphs    be    not    refusing.     See    Britannia's 

Pastorals  (Carpe  Diem). — Browne. 
Gentle    severity,    repulses    mild.     See    Sonnet    from 

Petrarch. — Higginson. 
Gentlefolks,  in  my  time,  I've  made  many  a  rhyme.    See 

Sir  Sidney  Smith. — Dibdin. 
Gentlemen,  a  most  auspicious  omen  salutes  and  cheers 

us  this  day.     See  Twenty-second  of  February,  The. 

— -Webster. 
Gentlemen  appear  to  me  to  forget  that  they  stand  on 

American  soil.     See  Speech  on  the  War  of  1812. — 

Clay. 
Gentlemen,  both  the  capitalist  and  the  labourer  have 

been  gainers.     See  Corn  Laws. — Macaulay. 
Gentlemen  have  passed  the  highest  eulogiums  on  the 

American  War.     See  American  War  Denounced, 

The.— Pitt. 
Gentlemen  have  said  that  it  was  I  who  inspired  the 

Hungarian  people.     See  Heroism  of  the  Hungarian 

People. — Kossuth. 
Gentlemen  here  assembled:    It  seems  to  me  that  the 

time    has    come.     See    Farmer's    Meeting,    A. — 

McBride. 


Gentlemen: — I  address  the  men  who  govern  us,  and 

say  to  them.     See  Against  Curtailing  the  Right  of 

Suffrage. — Hugo. 

Gentlemen :    I  am  now  about  to  speak  the  last  words  of 

hope  or  defence.     See  Address  to  the  Jury. — Leslie. 

Gentlemen:    I   feel  very  highly  the  honor  you  have 

done  me.     See  Debate,  A. — Anon. 
Gentlemen,  I  have  had  my  day.     See  Speech  at  Bristol, 
Previous  to  the  Election,  1780  (To  the  Electors 

of  Bristol). — Burke. 
Gentlemen!    I  would  not  be  disrespectful.     See  Dame 

Partington  and  the  Atlantic  Ocean. — Smith. 
Gentlemen — if  you  still  have  any  doubt  as  to  the  guilt 

or  innocence  of  the  defendant.     See  Description 

of  Mr.  Rowan. — Curran. 
Gentlemen,  it  is  a  most  extraordinary  case.     In  some 

respects  it  has  hardly  a  precedent.     See  Murder 

of    Captain   Joseph  White,  The  (Speech    in   the 

Knapp  Trial). — Webster. 
Gentlemen : — It  is  a  post  of  singular  honor  which  you 

occupy    to-day.     See    Republican    Press,    The. — 

McKinley. 
Gentlemen,  it  is  no  part  of  my  Christianity  to  "send 

the  mother  who  bore  me  into  eternal  bondage." 

See  Love  of  Justice. — ^Parker. 
Gentlemen,  it  is  not  because  I  would  prevent  religious 

instruction.     See  Necessity  of  Religion. — Hugo. 
Gentlemen,  let  us  come  at  the  pith  of  this  debate.     See 

Republic  or  a  Monarchy,  A? — Hugo. 
Gentlemen,  my  task  is  done.     See  Matt  F.  Ward's  Trial 

for  Murder. — Crittenden. 
Gentlemen  of  the  Board  of  Trustees: — We  meet  you 

with  our  greeting  and  our  farewell.     See  For  a 

College. — Anon. 
Gentlemen  of  the  graduating  class  of  the  Yale  Law 

School.     See  Ideal  I^awyer,  The. — Griggs. 
Gentlemen  of  the  Jury : — If  there  is  a  culprit  here,  it  is 

not  my  son.     See  Death  Penalty,  The. — Hugo. 
Gentlemen  of  the  Jury— It  is.  true  that  the  offence 

charged.     See  Defence  of  the  Kennistons. — Web- 
ster. 
Gentlemen   of   the   jury.     It   is   with   feelings   of   no 

ordinary  communion.     See  Bombastic  Appeal  to  a 

Jury. — Anon. 
Gentlemen  of  the  Jury: — -The  Scripture  saith,  "Thou 

shalt    not    kill."     See    Western    Lawyer's    Plea 

against  the  Fact,  The. — Anon. 
Gentlemen,  one  great  object  of  the  Revolution  of  Feb- 
ruary.    See  In  Defence  of  Universal  Suffrage,  May 

20,  1850.— Hugo. 
Gentlemen  say  the  Catholics  have  got  everything  but 

seats     in     Parliament.     See     Against     Religious 

Distinctions. — Curran. 
Gentlemen,  Sir,  have  been  charged  with  giving  birth 

to    sedition.     See    Against    the    Stamp    Act. — 

Chatham. 
Gentlemen:     The  Prime  Minister  (Lord  Beaconsfield), 

in  a  recent  address.     See  Empire  and  I^iberty. — 

Gladstone. 
Gentlemen,  the  question  for  debate  this  evening.     See 

Debating  Society,  The. — Valentine. 
Gentlemen,  there  is  one  point  of  view  in  which  this 

case  seems  to  merit  your  most  serious  attention. 

See  Defence  of  M.  Peltier  for  a  Libel  on  Napoleon. 

— Mackintosh. 
Gentlemen: — This  is  a  most  extraordinary  case.     See 

Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The  (Crime  its 

Own  Detector). — Webster. 
Gentlemen ; — Thought,   which  the  scholar  represents. 

See  Duty  of  the  American  Scholar. — Curtis. 
Gently!   Gently!    Down!  Down!     See  Sylvia;  or,  The 

May  Queen  (Chorus  of  Spirits). — Darley. 
Gently  Lord,  oh,  gently  lead  us.     See  In  Sorrow. — 

Hastings. 
Gently  now!  gently  now!  slumber  falls  on  ev'ry  brow. 

See  Christmas  Folk  and  the  Children. — Hadley. 
Gently    o'er    the    meadows    prigging.     See    Alarming 

Prospect.-;-(PMnc^.  "> 
Genuine  abolitionism  is  not  a  hobby,  got  up  for  personal 

or  associated  aggrandizement.     See  Abolitionism. 

— Garrison. 
Geoffrey  Barron  of  Clonmel.     See  Geoffrey  Barron. — 

Tynan. 
Geoffrey,   surnamed  Winthrop,   sat  in   the  depot   at 

Chicago.     See    Romance    in    Words    Frequently 

Mispronounced,  A. — Anon. 
Geology  may  seem  to  be  audacious  in  its  attempts  to 

unveil  the  mysteries  of  creation.     See  Geology. — 

Dana. 
Georga   Washingdone   vos   a   vera   gooda   man.     See 

Georga  Washingdone. — Anon. 
■'George  Ferguson,  what  does  this  mean?"     See  Those 

Other  Letters. — Anon. 


660 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Give 


"George."  said  his  father,  with  a  countenance  more  in 

sorrow    than    in    anger.     See   New    Version    of   a 

Certain  Historical  Dialogue,  A. — Burdette. 
George  Washington  was  once  a  boy.     See  same. — Anon. 
"George  Washington  was  the  father  of  his  country." 

See    Boy's    Composition     on    Washington,    A.— 

Anon . 
"George  Washin'ton  I"     From  down  the  hill  the  answer 

floated  up.     See  Aunt  Polly's  "George  Washing- 
ton."— (Youth's  Companion.) 
Gertrude  really  seems  very  long.     See  "Cupid  among 

the  Strawberries." — Mowat. 
Get  at  the  root  of  things.     See  same. — ^Anon. 
Get  into  some  good  library  and  read.     See  same. — 

Murphy. 
Get  leave  to  work.     See  Aurora  Leigh  ("Get  leave  to 

work"). — -Browning. 
Get  money  (honestly,  if't  can  be  doneV     See  Death's 

Head,  The. — Freeman. 
Get  not  your  friends  by  bare  compliments.     See  Friend- 
ship.— Socrates. 
Get  thee  behind  me,  even  as,  heavy-curl'd.     See  "Retro 

Me,  Sathana." — Ro.ssetti. 
Get  'up,   get    up,   for    shame;     the    blooming    Morn. 

See  Corinna's  Going  a-Maying. — Herrick. 
Get  up,  little  sister,  the  morning  is  bright.     See  Spring 

Morning,  A. — ^Hastings. 
Get  up,  our  Anna  dear,  from  the  weary  spinning  wheel. 

See  Fairy  Thorn,  "The. — Ferguson. 
Ghosts  of  dead  soldiers  in  the  battle  slain.     See  Guns 

of  Peace. — Craik. 
Giant  aggregate  of  nations,  glorious  whole,  of  glorious 

parts.     See  America  an  Aggregate  of  Nations. — 
.       Tupper. 
Gift  of  the  living  God  to  mortal  man.     See  Dawn  of  the 

Century.— Thorne. 
Gile  Machree.     See  Gile  Machree. — Griffin. 
Gin  a  body  meet  a  body.     See   Comin'  through   the 

Rye. — -Anon. 
Gingerly  is  good   King  Tarquin  shaving.     See  Puffs 

Poetical  (Tarquin  and  the  Augur)  ^Aytoun. 
Girl  of  the  red  mouth.     See  same. — MacDermott. 
Girl  Peepsy  to  the  baby  sang.     See  Peepsy. — Larcom. 
Girlie  on  the  stairway,  mother  up  above.     See  On  the 

Stairway. — -Anon. 
Girls  are  a  nuisance  in  a  family  where  there  is  a  boy 

See  Boy's  Idea  of  Girls,  A. — ^Durkee. 
Girls,  are  you  read.v  for  the  examination?     See  Lost 

Opportunity,  The. — Anon. 
Girls  didn't  wear  a  tailor-suit.    See  In  Mamma's  Day. — 

Curley. 
Girls!  girls!  what  do  you  suppose  has  happened?     See 

Slight  Misunderstanding,  A. — Anon. 
Girls,  I  noticed  on  Sunday  that  none  of  you  were  at  all 

sociable.     See  New  Sunday-school  Scholar,  The. — 

Cornell. 
Girls,  I'm  engaged  to  the  best.     See  Consensus  of  the 

Competent,  A. — -Lummis. 
Girls  is  a  queer  kind  of  varmint.     See  Boy's  Essay  on 

Girls,  A. — Anon. 
Girls  play  with  dollies.     See  Boys  and  Girls. — Anon. 
Girls,  what  do  you  think?     My  beautiful  penknife  is 

lost.     See  Lost  Knife,  The. — Anon. 
Girt  round  by  sunburnt  meadows  newly  mioved.     See 

Picture,  A. — -Anon. 
Girt  round  with  rugged  mountains.     See  Legend  of 

Bregenz,  A. — Procter. 
Git  wa'   dar.   Cuff!     Don't  yer  neber  git  nufif?     See 

Watermelon  Season,  The. — Baldwin. 
Git  yo  pardners,  fust  kwattilion.     See  Old  Fiddling 

,7osey. — -Russell. 
Gitaut,  the  Norman  marquis,  sat  in  his  banquet  hall. 

See  Last  Banquet,  The. — Renaud. 
Give  a  man  a  hor.se  he  can  ride.     See  Sunday  up   the 

River  (Gifts). — -Thomson. 
Give  all  to  love ;  obey  thy  heart.     See  Give  All  to  Love. 

— Emerson. 
Give !  as  the  morning  that  flows  out  of  heaven.     See  It 

is  More  Blessed. — Cooke. 
Give  Beauty  all  her  right.     See  Measure  of  Beauty, 

The. — Campion. 
Give  him  this  money,  and  these  notes,  Reynaldo.     See 

Hamlet  (Scene  from  "Hamlet").^ — -Shakespeare. 
Give  honor  and  love  for  evermore.     See  Peter  Cooper. 

— -Miller. 
"Give  me  a  chance,"  an  acorn  said.     See  Chance,  A. — 

Anon. 
Give  me  a  cottage  on  some  Cambrian  wild.     See  Retire- 
ment.— White. 
"Give  me  a  fillet.  Love,"  quoth  I.     See  Love  and  Life. 

— -Lippman. 
Give  me  a  man  with  an  aim.     See  Better  to  Climb  and 

Fall. — Anon. . 


"Give  me  a  motto,"  said  a  youth.     See  This,  too,  will 

Pass  Away.- — Saxe. 
Give  me  a  nook  and  a  book.     See  Nook  and  a  Book,  A. 

— Freeland. 
"Give  me  a  piece  of  your  candy!"     See  Bite,  The. — 

Anon. 
Give  me  a  race  that  is  run  in  a  breath.     See  Hundred- 
yard  Dash,  The. — Lindsey. 
Give  me  a  spirit  that  on  life's  rough  sea.     See  Master 

Spirit,  The. — Chapman. 
Give  me    another    horse^bind  up  my  wounds.     See 

King  Richard  III.  (Soliloquy  of  King  Richard  III.). 

— Shakespeare. 
"Give  me  but  two  brigades,"  said  Hooker,  frowning  at 

fortified  Lookout.     See  Battle  of  Lookout  Moun- 
tain, The. — Boker. 
Give  me  more  love  or  more  disdain.     See  Give  me  More 

Love. — Carew. 
Give  me  my  cup,  but  from  the  Thespian  well.     See  Ode 

to  Sir  William  Sidney  on  his  Birthday. — .Tonson. 
Give  me,  my  love,  that  billing  kiss.     See  Kiss,  The. — 

Moore. 
Give  me  my  scallop-shell  of  quiet.     See  His  Pilgrimage. 

— Raleigh. 
Give  me,  O  friend,  the  secret  of  thy  heart.     See  Rosa 

Rosarum. — Darmesteter. 
Give  me  of  every  language,  first  my  vigorous  English. 

See  English  Language,  The. — Story. 
"Give  me  of  your  bark,  O  birch-tree!"     See  §ong  of 

Hiawatha,  The  (Hiawatha's  Sailing). — Longfellow. 
"Give  me  rest,  give  me  rest,"  said  a  merry  child.     See 

Give  me  Rest. — Grishman. 
Give  me  some  music;  music,  moody  food.     See  Antony 

and  Cleopatra  (Cleopatra  and  the  Messenger). — 

Shakespeare. 
Give  me  that  growth  which  some,  perchance,  deem 

sleep.     See  Sonnet:  "Give  me  that,"  etc. — Lowell. 
Give  me  the  hand  that  is  kind,  warm  and  ready.     See 

Give  me  the  Hand. — Barnaby. 
Give  me  the  old  songs.     See  Old,  The. — Anon. 
Give  me  the  room  whose  every  nook.     See  Library, 

The. — Sherman. 
Give  me  the  splendid  silent  sun  with  all  his  beams  full- 
dazzling.     See  Give  me  the  Splendid  Silent  Sun. — 

Whitman. 
Give  me  the  thoughts  of  long  dead  years.     See  Decem- 
ber Prayer,  A. — Wing. 
Give  me  the  town;  let  others  go.     See  Give  me  the 

Town. — Ritchie. 
Give  me  three  grains  of  corn,  mother.     See  same. — 

Edwards. 
Give  me  thy  joy  in  sorrow,  gracious  Lord.     See  Thy 

Joy  in  Sorrow.^Townshend. 
Give  me  thy  love,  and  I  will  ask.     See  To  Lucy. — Hen- 
derson. 
Give  me  thyself!     It  were  well  to  cry.     See  Thyself. — 

Symonds. 
Give  me    to    die     unwitting   of   the   day.     See   Mors 

Benefica. — Stedman. 
Give  me  your  hand.     Came  you  from  old  Bellario? 
.   See    Merchant   of    Venice.   The   CTrial  Scene). — 

Shakespeare. 
Give    pardon,    blessed   soul!   to   my   bold    cries.     See 

Sonnet  Prefixed  to  Sidney's  Apology  for  Poetry. — 

Constable. 
Give  place,  ye  lovers,  here  before.     See  Praise  of  his 

Love,  A. — -Howard. 
Give  place,  you  ladies,  and  begone!     See  Praise  of  his 

Lady,  A. — Heywood. 
Give  thanks,  all  ye  people,  give  thanks  to  the  Lord. 

See  Give  Thanks,  All  Ye  People. — Anon. 
Give  the  children  holidays.  See  same. — Anon. 
"Give  the  Christians  to  the  lions!"  was  the  savage 

Roman's    cry.     See    Christian    Maiden    and    the 

Lion,  The. — Durivage. 
Give  the  speedway  to  the  cruiser.     See  Harbor  Mine, 

The.— McK. 
Give  thy  thoughts  no  tongue.     See  Hamlet  (Polonius' 

Advice  to  Laertes). — Shakespeare. 
Give  to  barrows,  trays,  and  pans.     See  Art. — Emerson. 
Give  to  the  wind  thy  fears.     See  same. — Gerhardt. 
Give  up  the  Union?     Never!     See  Shall  We  Give  up 

the  Union?  (Give  up  the  Union?). — Dickinson. 
Give  us  a  call;  we  keep  cool  [or  good]  beer.     See  Give 

Us  a  Call. — Anon. 
"Give  us  a  song!"  the  soldiers  cried.     See  Song  of  the 

Camp,  The. — Taylor. 
Give    us    light    amid    our    darkness.     See    Children's 

Appeal,  The. — Howitt. 
Give  us  that  grand  word,  "  woman,"  once  again.     See 

Woman. — Wilcox. 
Give  us  the  words  that  are  old.      See  Long-felt  Want,  • 

The. — Anon.  j 


661 


Give 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Give  us  your  hand,   Mr.   Lawyer;    how    do    you    do 

to-day?     See  How  Betsy  and  I  Made  Up. — Carle- 
ton. 
Give  words,  kind  words,  to  those  who  err.     See  same. — 

Sigoumey.        ^ 
"Give  your  children  food,  O  Father!"      See  Song  of 

Hiawatha,  The. — Longfellow. 
Given  the  character  of  a  man  and  the  conditions  of 

life  around  him.     See  Memorial  Addres-s  on  General 

George  H.  Thomas. — Garfield. 
Glad  is  tne  ground  of  the  tender  florist  grene.     See 

Prologues  to  the  jEneid  (Spring). — Dougla.s. 
Glad  that  you  thus  continue  .your  resolve.  See  Taming 

of  the  Shrew.  The. — Shakespeare. 
Gladly  to-night  when  for  the  last  time.     See  Common- 
wealth of  Massachusetts,  The. — Russell. 
Glamis  thou  art,  and  Cawdor ;  and  shalt  be.     See  Lady 

Macbeth's  Soliloauy. — Shakespeare. 
Glancing  in  the  moonlight.     See  Don't  you  Wish  you 

Knew!— A.  H.  B. 
Glasgerion  was  a  harper  gude.     iSee  Glasgerion. — Anon. 
Glasgerion  was  a  kings  owne  sonne.     See  Glasgerion. — 

Anon. 
Glass  antique,  'twixt  thee  and  Nell.     See  Nell  Gwynne's 

Looking-glass. — ^Blanchard. 
Glaucus.  an  Athenian,  has  been  adjudged  guilty.     See 

Last  Days  of  Pompeii,  The.— Bulwer-Lytton. 
"Glaucus,  the  Athenian,   thy   time   has   come."     See 

Last  Days  of  Pon;peii  (Vesuvius  and  the  Egyp- 
tian).— Bulwer-Lytton. 
Gleaming   in   the   dew-drop,    singing    in    the  summer 

rain.    See  Apostrophe  to  Water  (Water). — Arring- 

ton. 
Glide  soft,  ye  silver  floods.      See  Britannia's  Pastorals 

(Lament  for  his  Friend,  A). — Browne. 
Glimmers  gray  the  leafless  thicket.     See  Song-sparrow, 

The. — Lathrop. 
Glooms  of  the  live-oaks,  beautiful-braided  and  woven. 

See  Marshes  of  Glynn,  The. — Lanier. 
Gloomy  and    dark    was    the    winter.     See    Pierre    La 

Forge's  Dream.^Mink. 
Glories,  pleasures,     pomps,     delights,    and     ease.     See 

Broken  Heart,  "The  (Calantha's  Dirge). — Ford. 
Glorious  as  the  spectacle  was.     See  History  of  England 

(Coronation    Pageant   of    Anne   Boleyn,   'The). — 

Froude. 
Glorious  New  England!     Thou  art  still  true  to  thine 

ancient  fame.     See  Address  on  the  Landing  of  the 

Pilgrims  (New  England). — Prentiss. 
"  Glorious  news !     Dr.  Cure-all  promises  a  positive  and 

speedy  remedy."     See  Dr.  Cure-all  Smith. 
Glorious    things     of     thee   are    spoken.     See     Psalm 

LXXXVn  .—Newton. 
Gloriously  the    morn    awakened.     See    De    Lord    Am 

Coming. — Murray. 
Glory  and  honor  and  fame  and  everlasting  laudation. 

See  Sherman. — Gilder. 
Glory!  glor.v!    hallelujah!    Christ    is    risen    to    heights 

supreme.     See  Risen  with  Christ. — Anon. 
Glory  of  warrior,  glory  of  orator,  glory  of  song.     See 

Wages. — Tennyson. 
Gloucester,  'tis  true  that  we  are  in  great  danger.     See 

King  Henry  V. — Shakespeare. 
Go    and  catch  a  falling  star.     See   Song:    "Go    and 

catch,"  etc. — Donne. 
Go  away!  go  along,  I  say!  No  boys  here!     See  David 

Copperfield  (Aunt    Betsey  and    Little    Davy;. — 

Dickens. 
Go  back!     How    dare    you    follow    me    beyond.     See 

Hagar. — Nicholson. 
Go  back  to  Cuba?     No!  no!  Gentle  priest.     See  Cuban 

Refugee,  The. — ^Anon. 
Go  bow   thy   head  in  gentle  spite.     See   To  a  Lily. — 

Legar^. 
"Go,  boy,  and  light  the  torch!  the  night."     See  Fisher- 
man's Hut,  The.— Brooks. 
Go,  Cupid,  and  my  sweetheart  tell.     See  Valentine,  A. 

—Field. 
Go,  feel  what  I  have  felt.     See  Woman's  Answer  on 

Being  Accused  of  Being  a  Maniac  on  the  Subject 

of  Temperance,  A. — Anon. 
Go  fetch  to  me  a  pint  o'  wine.     See  My  Bonnie  Mary. — 

Burns. 
Go,  flag  the  train,  boys,  flag  the  train!     See  Flag  the 

Train. — Chisholm. 
Go  for  a  sail  this  mornin'? — This  way,  yer  honor,  please. 

See  In  the  Harbor. — Sims. 
Go,  for  they  call  you,  shepherd,  from  the  hill.     See 

Scholar-Gypsy,  The. — Arnold. 
Go  forth,  defenders  of  your  country.     See  Farewell  to 

Departing  Volunteers,  A.— Hall. 
Go  forth  in   life,  O  friend,  not  seeking  love.     See  Go 

Forth  in  Life  not  Seeking  Love. — Lynch. 


Go  forth  into  the  many  mansions  of  the  house  of  life. 

See  Scholar,  the  Jurist,   the   Artist,  the  Philan- 
thropist, The  (Incentives  to  Duty). — Sumner. 
Go  forth  to  the  battle  of  life,  my  boy.     See  Battle  of 

Life,  The. — Anon. 
Go  forth  under  the  open  sky  and  list.     See  Nature. — 

Anon. 
Go  from  me.     Yet  I  feel  that  I  shall  stand.     See  Son- 
nets from  the  Portuguese,  VI. — Browning. 
Go,  happy  Rose,  and  interwove.     See  To  the  Rose. — 

Herrick. 
Go,  heart,  unto  the  lamp  of  light.     See  Go,  Heart. — 

Wedderburn. 
Go !  leave  me,  priest ;  my  soul  would  be.     See  Extreme 

Unction. — Lowell. 
Go— let  others  praise  the  Chian.     See  Wine  of  Cyprus. 

— Browning. 
Go,  little  book,  and  to  the  world  impart.     See  To  His 

Book.— Walsh. 
Go,  little  book!  the  world  is  wide.     See  Goe,   Little 

Booke. — Lowell . 
Go,  lovely  rose !     See  same. — -Waller. 
Go,  Lyra,  and  from  out  thy  bugle's  throat.     See  May 

Court  in  Greenwood. — Case. 
Go  not  away  from  us;  stay,  O  Rabiah,  son  of  Mukad. 

See  Rabiah's  Defense. — -Higginson. 
Go  not,  sweet  sister,  from  our  home  of  peace.     See 

Sisters,  The. — Hunt. 
Go  not  to  the  hills  of  Erin.     See  Wind  on  the  Hills, 

The. — Sigerson. 
Go  now!   and   with   some  daring   drug.     See  Temper- 
ance; or.  The  Cheap  Physician. — X^rashaw. 
Go  out  beneath  the  arched  heavens,  at  night,  and  say, 

if  you  can  "There  is  no  God."     See  Existence  of  a 

God,  The. — Anon. 
Go  patter  to  lubbers  and  swabs,  do  ye  see.     See  Poor 

.lack. — Dibdin. 
Go,  pretty  child,   and  bear  this  flower.     See  To  H's 

Saviour,  a  Child ;  a  Present  by  a  Child. — Herrick. 
Go,   pretty  Rose,   and    to  her    tell.      See  L'Envoi. — 

Reed. 
Go,  Rose,  and  in  her  golden  hair.     See  To  a  Rose. — 

Sherman. 
"Go!"  said  the  angry  weeping  maid.     See  Rings  and 

Seals. — Moore. 
Go  scatter,  yes  scatter  the  beautiful  flowers.     See  In 

Memoriam. — Denton. 
Go,  sit  by  the  summer  sea.     See  Deceitfulness  of  Love. 

— Anon. 
Go,  soul,  the  body's  guest.     See  Lie,  The. — Raleigh. 
Go  stand  at  night  upon  an  ocean  craft.     See  Illusions. 

— Johnson. 
Go,  thou  gentle  whispering  wind.     See  Prayer  to  the 

Wind,  A. — Carew. 
Go  thou  into  thy  closet,  shut  thy  door.     See  Sonnet 

Sequence,  A. — Macdonald. 
Go  thou  thy  way.     I  do  not  seek  to  share.     See  From 

Afar. — Anon. 
Go,  time  and  tide,  go  as  you  will.     See  All  the  Year 

Round. — Hutchinson. 
Go  to    dark    Gethsemane.     See    Gethsemane. — Mont- 
gomery. 
Go  to  the  western  gate,   Luke    Havergal.     See   Luke 

Havergal. — Robinson. 
Go  to  thy  rest,  fair  child!     See  Go  to  Thy  Re»t. — 

Sigourney. 
Go  to  work!     Nothing  is  more  salutary  to  the  human 

soul  than  the  direct  work  of  saving  man.     See 

same. — Beecher. 
Go  vay,  Becky  Miller,  go  vay.     See  Becky  Miller. — 

Anon. 
Go  way,  fiddle!  folks  is  tired  o'  hearin  '  youa-squawkin'. 

See  Christmas  Night  in  the  Quarters    (De    Fust 

Ban  jo). ^Russell. 
"Go,  weed  in  the  garden,  till  half  after  ten."     See  Boy 

and  the  Bird,  The. — Rexford. 
Go  where  glory  waits  thee.     See  same. — Moore. 
Go  where  the  waters  fall.    See  Waterfall,  The.— Keble. 
Go  ye  and  read  at  length  the  mystic  lore.     See  Elo- 
quence of  Nature,  The. — Smith. 
Go,  youth  beloved,  in  distant  glades.     See  Forget  Me 

Not. — Opie. 
Goats  have  broken  out  in  our  street  violently,  variously 

and    promiscuously.     See    How    Paul    Won    His 

Goat. — ^Borden. 
God  always  has  in  training  some  commanding  genius. 

See  Columbus. — Depew. 
God  be  thanked,  the  meanest  of  his  creatures.     See 

One  Word  More.     To  E.  B.  B. — Browning. 
God  bless  my  little  one!  how  fair.     See  My  Little  One. 

— -Fawcett. 
God  bless  our  fathers'  land!     See  International  Ode. — 

Holmes. 


662 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Gold 


God  bless  our  native  land!     See  God  Save  the  State. — 

Brooks. 
God  bless   our   star-gemmed    banner.     See   Freedom's 

Standard. — Anon. 
God  bless  the  cheerful  people — man,  woman  or  child. — ■ 

See  same. — Willits. 
God  bless  the  king! — I  mean  the  faith's  defender.     See 

Jacobite  Toast. — Byrom. 
God  bless  the  little  feet  that  now  can  never  go  astray. 

See  My  Darling's  Shoes. — Anon. 
God  bless  the  little  stockings  all  over  the  land  to-night. 

See  Christmas  Eve. — Anon. 
"God  bless  the  man  who   first   invented   sleep."     See 

Early  Rising. — Saxe. 
God  called   the   nearest    angels   who   dwell   with   Him 

above.     See  Two  Angels,  The.; — Whittier. 
God  called  up  from  dreams  a  man  into  the  vestibule  of 

heaven.     See  Astronomer's  Vision,  The. — Mitchell. 
God  can  and  does  '•ender  sinners  happy  in  spite  of  their 

sins.     See  name. — Hodge. 
God  cares  for  every  little  child.     See  God  Loves  Me. — • 

Anon. 
God  does  not  send  us  strange  flowers  every  year.     See 

Violet,  The.— Whitney. 
God  draws   a   cloud    over   each   gleaming   morn.     See 

Rich  in  the  Lord. — Cobbe. 
God  dreamed — the  suns  sprang  flaming  into  space. — 

\      Se*^  Creation. — Bieree. 
God  first  made  man  of  common   clay.     See  Perfecti- 
bility.— -Thayer, 
God  give  us  men!     A   time  like  this  demands.     See 

True  Men. — Holland. 
God  gives  not  kings  the  style  of  gods  in  vain.     See  To 

Prince  Henry. — James  L  of  England. 
God  has  given  the  land  to  man,  but  the  sea  he  has  re- 
served to  himself.     See  God's  Ownership  of  the 

Sea. — Swain. 
God  has  made  this  world  very  fair.     See  s^ame.- — Anon. 
God  has    stamped     upon     our    very    humanity.     See 

Freedom  and  Patriotism. — Dewey. 
God  hath  a  presence,  and  that  you  may  see.     See  God 

in  Everything. — Cook. 
God  hath    sent    His    angels.     See    Easter    Angels. — 

Brooks. 
God  hath  so  many  ships  upon  the  sea.     See  King's 

Ships,  The. — Soencer. 
"God  helping  me,"  cried  Columbus,  "though  fair  or 

foul     the     breeze."     See     Columbia's     Banner. — 

Procter. 
God  holds  the  key  of  all  unknown.     See  His  Care. — 

Parker. 
God  is    a   name    my   soul    adores.     See   Creator   and 

Creatures,  The.^Watts. 
God  is  good,  each  perfumed  flower.     See  God  is  Good. 

— Follen. 
(lod  is  love!     His  mercy  brightens.     See  God  is  Love. 

— Bowring. 
God  is  not  very  far  away.     See  Child's  Thoughts  about 

God,  A. — Lawrence. 
God  is  our  refuge  and  strength.    See  Psalms  of  David, 

XLVL— BiMe. 
God  is  the  refuge  of  His  saints.     See  Psalm  XLVI. — 

Watts,. 
God  keep  you,  dearest,  all  this  lonely  night.     See  God 

Keep  You. — De  Vere. 
God  let  never  so  old  a  man.     See  Old  Robin  of  Por- 

tingale. — Anon. 
God  Lyaeus,    ever   young.     See  Valentinian  (Song  to 

Bacchus). — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
God  made  a  little  gentian.     See  Fringed  Gentian. — 

— Dickinson. 
God  made  mv  lady  lovely  to  behold.     See  How  My 

Song  of  Her  Began. — Marston. 
God  made  the  country,  and  man  made  the  town.     See 

Task,  The  (Sofa,  The).— Cowper. 
God  made  the    little  bird  to  sing.     See  What   I    was 

Made  For. — Anon. 
God  made  the  present  earth  as  the  home  of  man.     See 

Literary  Attractions  of  the  Bible. — Hamilton. 
God  made  the  sky  that  looks  so  blue.     See  Works  of 

God,  The.— Taylor. 
God  make  my  life  a  little  light.     See  Child's  Prayer,  A. 

— Edwards 
God  makes    sech    nights,    all    white    an'    still.     See 

Biglow  Papers,  The  (Courtin',  The). — Lowell. 
God  might  have  bade  the  earth  bring  forth.     See  Use 

of  Flowers,  The. — Howitt. 
God  moves  in  a  mysterious  way.     See  Light  Shining 

out  of  Darkness. — Cowper. 
God  never  meant  that  we  should  call  this  home.     See 

same. — M.  E.  K. 
God  of  our  fathers,  known  of  old.     See  Recessional. — 

Kipling. 


God  of  science  and  of  light.     See  House  of  Fame,  The 

(Prayer  to  Apollo). — Chaucer. 
God  of  the  beautiful!  God  of  the  free.     See  Earnest 

Cry,  An. — Gage. 
God  of  the  free!  upon  thy  breath.     See  Psalm  of  the 

Union,  A. — Wallace. 
God  of    the    granite    and    the    rose.     See    Divinity. — 

Anon. 
God  of   the  thunder!   from   whose   cloudy   seat.     See 

•lewish  Hymn  in  Babylon. — Milman. 
God  prosper  long  our  noble  king.     See  Chevy-Chase. — 

Sheale.  (?) 
God  rest  ye.  merry  gentlemen!  let  nothing  you  dismay. 

See  Christmas  Carol,  A. — -Craik.  " 
God  said :  ' '  Let  there  be  light !"    See  Pre.ss,  The. — Elliot. 
God  save  our  native  land.     See  same. — Seelye. 
God  save  the  king,  not  from  those  things.     See  God 

Save  the  King! — Garrison. 
God  save  our  gracious  king!     See  God  Save  the  King. 

— Carey. 
God  scatters  love  on  every  side.     See   Incident   in   a 

Railroad  Car.  An  (God's  Love). — Lowell. 
God  sees  me  all  the  day.     See  God  Sees  Me. — Anon. 
God  send  the  land  deliverance.     See  Death  of  Parcy 

Reed,  The. — Anon. 
God  send  us  peace,  and  keep  red  strife  away.     See  At 

Fredericksburg. — O'Reilly. 
God  sends  his  teachers  unto  every  age.     See  Rhoecus. 

— Lowell. 
God  sent  his  singers  upon  earth.     See  Singers,  The. — 

Longfellow. 
God  sets  some  souls  in  shade,  alone.     See  Sunlight  and 

Starlight.— Whitney. 
God  shield  ye,  heralds  of  the  spring!     See  Return  of 

Spring. — Ronsard. 
"God,"  sing  ye  meadow  streams,  with  gladsome  voice. 

See  Hymn  before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni 

(God  in  Nature). — Coleridge. 
God  spake  in  a  voice  of  thunder.     See  New  Birth,  The. 

— Merivale. 
God  spake  three  times  and  saved  Van   Elsen's  soul. 

See  Van  Elsen.— Scott. 
God  speaks.     Life     beats     within      the     brain.     See 

Ecclesiastes. — Clarke. 
God  the  Father!  be  Thou  near.     See  Evening  Hymn, 

The. — Anon. 
God,  to  whom  we  look  up  blindly.     See- Poet's  Jour- 
nal, The  (Prayer.  A).— Taylor. 
God  who  created  me.     See  Prayers. — Beeching. 
God,  who  gave  iron,  purposed  ne'er.     See  Fatherland. 

— Arndt. 
God,  who  the  universe  doth  hold.     See  Psalm  XXIII. 

— Davison. 
God  with  His  million  cares.     See  Dawn  and   Dark. — 

Gale. 
God  ye  hear  not,  how  shall  ye  hear  me?     See  John 

Knox's  Indictment  of  the  Queen. — -Swinburne. 
God's  love  and  peace  be  with  thee.     See  Benedicite. — 

Whittier. 
God's  order,  "Light,"'  when  all  was  void  and  dark.    See 

Press  Evangel,  The. — O'Reilly. 
God's  providence  has  raised  uo  a  leader.     See  Lincoln: 

a  Man  Called  of  God. — Thurston. 
God's  will  is — the  bud  of  the  rose  for  your  hair.     See 

We  Two.— Piatt. 
Godfrey  Gordon  Gustavus  Gore.     See  Shut  the  Door. 

— Anon. 
Godlike  beneath  his  grave  divinities.     See  Druid,  The. 

— Tabb 
Goe,  happy   Rose,  and   interwove.     See   Rose,  The. — 

Herrick. 
Goe,  soule,  the  bodie's  guest.     See  Lie,  The  (Lye,  The). 

— Raleigh. 
Goethe  in  Weimar  sleeps,  and  Greece.     See  Memorial 

Verses. — Arnold. 
Going  down  town  in  a  Fourth  Avenue  car  the  other 

day.     See  How  Pat  Stopped  the  Car. — Anon. 
Going  east,  sir?     Yes.     See  Competing  Railroads,  The. 

— Anon. 
Going    home    from    the    house    of    God.     See    Little 

Christel.— Rands. 
"Going  north,  madam?"     See  No  Room  for  Mother. 

— 'Lockport  Express.) 
Going  out  to  fame  and  triumph.     See  Going  Out  and 

Coming  In. — Moore. 
Going — the  great  round  sun.     See  Going  and  Coming. 

— Jenks. 
Gold !  gold !  gold !  gold !     See  Miss  Kilmansegg  and  her 

Precious  Leg. — Hood. 
Gold!  gold!  gold!     How  fiercely  it  surges  and  sweeps 

along.     See  Gold. — Anon. 
Gold  on  her  head,  and  gold  on  her  feet.     See  Eve  of 

Crecy,  The. — Morris. 


663 


Golden 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Golden  autumn  comes  again.     See  Autumn. — Anon. 
Golden  head  .so  lowly  bending.     See  Now  I  Lay  Me 

Down  to  Sleep. — Anon. 
Golden  slumbers  kiss  your  eyes.     See  Pleasant  Com- 
edy of  Patieat  Grissell,  The  (Lullaby). — Dekker. 
Golden  volumes  Wche.st  treasure?  1     See  Lines  Imitated 

from  Uantzau.  —  O'lsrael'. 
Goldenhair  climbed  upon  grandpapa's  knee!  See  Little 

Goldenhair. — Smith. 
Goldilocks  sat  on  the  grass.     See  Brothers  and  a  Ser- 
mon (Goldilocks). — Ingelow. 
"Goliath  .lohnsing,  why  you  so  late?"     See  Return  of 

the  Hoe,  The. — ( Drake's  Magarine.) 
Gone  are  her  bir<l  notes,  thin  she  sings,  and  flat.     See 

Diva,  The.— Batchelder. 
Gone  art  thou?  gone,  and  is  the  light  of  day.     See  To 

the  Dead. — Scott. 
Gone  at  last.     See  Old  Admiral,  The. — Stedman. 
Gone!  brother,  lover,  eon!     See  Woman's  Part,  The. — 

Christie. 
Gone,  gone — sold    and    gone.     See    Farewell,    The. — 

Whittier. 
Gone  is   the   freshness    of   my   youthful    prime.     See 

Gone. — Mackay. 
Gone — my  lord!     See  Idylls  of  the  King  (Guinevere). 

— Tennyson. 
"Gone!"  said  the  poet,  "and  about  to  be  forgotten." 

See  Star's  Monument,  The  (Gone). — Ingelow. 
Gone  were  but   the  winter  cold.     See  Spring  of  the 

Year,  The. — (Tunningham. 
Good  advice  for  every  one.     See  Work,  Work  Away. — 

Pinkley. 
Good  afternoon,    folks,    pray   how    do   you   do?     See 

Little  Speech,  A. — Rook. 
Good  afternoon,  Harry.     See  Going  to  the  Comer. — 

Denton. 
Good  afternoon,  Elate.     See  Good  and  not   Stupid. — 

Anon. 
Good  afternoon.    Miss    Robbins.     Come    to    see    the 

funer'l  pass,  I  s'pose.     See  Photograph   Album, 

The. — Bevier. 
Good  afternoon.  Mrs.  Gossip.     You  are  in  good  time, 

I  see.     See  Tea  Party,  The. — Anon. 
Good  and  great  God !  can  I  not  think  of  Thee.     See  To 

Heaven. — Jonson. 
Good  boys  and  girls  should  never  say.     See  Memory 

Gems.— Anon. 
"Good  Christians,  rise,  this  is  the  mom."    See  Christ- 
mas Morning. — Greenwell. 
Good  Christmas  bells,  I  pray  you.     See  Ballad. — De 

Mille. 
Good  Dan  and  Jane  were  man  and  wife.     See  Faith 

and  Works. — Anon. 
Ciood  day  and  happiness,  dear  Rosalind.     See  As  You 

Like  It  (Orlando's  Wooing). — Shakespeare. 
Good  day.     Is  this  Pygmalion's  studio?     See  Pygma- 
lion and  Galatea. — Gilbert. 
Good  day,  Joe.     See  Parrot,  The. — Anon. 
Good  day,  Mirtillo.     See  Pastoral  upon  the  Birth  of 

Prince  Charles,  A. — Herrick. 
Good  day.  Neighbor   Stephen.     See  Where  there's  a 

Will  there's  a  Way. — Anon. 
Good  day,  Sister  Martha!     See  Hannele. — Hauptmann. 
Good  Deacon  Roland — "may  his  tribe  increase."     See 

Inasmuch. ^Ford. 
Good  Elnathan  went  from  Slocum.     See  Cenotaph,  A. 

— Dana. 
Good  evening,  Frau  Fischer.     See  Extracting  a  Secret. 

— Crawford. 
Good    evening,    Marie!      See    La     Jeune    Malade. — 

Hunt. 
Good  evening,  Mr.  Da»h.     See  Trying  to  Keep  up  the 

Appearance  of  a  Gentleman. — Garrett. 
Good  evening.  Professor.     See  Professor  Puzzled,  The. 

— Wilson.  \ 

Good  evening,  venerable  father!     Will  you  direct  me. 

See  Two  Ways  of  Life.— H.  C.  H. 
"Good  for  nothing,"  the  farmer  said.     See  What  the 

Burdock  Was  Good  For. — Anon. 
Good  friends,  I  believe  one  thought  fills  every  mind 

present  here.     See  Zenobia  (Speeches  of  Zenobia 

and  her  Clouncil). — Ware. 
Good  friends,  sweet  friends,  let  me  not  stir  you  up. 

See  Julius  Caesar  (Antony  on  the  Death  of  Csesar). 

— Shakespeare. 
Goodgentle  friends,  there  comes  a  time.     See  Golden 

Wedding,  The— Minshall. 
Good  gracious  me!     What  have  I  done?    See  Little 

Angels. — Hollinffer. 
Good  Halifax  and  pious  Wharton   cry.     See  On  the 

Church's  Danger.— Swift. 
Good  Hamlet,  cast  thy  nighted  color  off.  See  Hamlet 

(Grief). — Shakespeare. 


Good,    honest    Parson    John    M'Knock.     See    Pastor 

M'Knock's  Address. — Anon. 
Good  Junipero,the  Padre,  slowly  read  the  king's  com- 
mands.    See  Discovery  of  San  Francisco  Bay. — 

White. 
Good  Junipero  the  Padre,  when   'twas  dying  of  the 

day.     See  By  the  Cross  of  Monterey. — White. 
Good  Junipero  the  Padre  with  Portala  stood  one  day. 

See  Waiting  for  the  Galleon. — White. 
Good  King    Arthur    gave    orders    for    hunting.     See 

Idylls  of  the  King  (Enid)  — Tennyson. 
Good  little  boys  should  never  say.     See  Politeness. — 

Turner. 
Good  I-ord  Scroope  to  the  hills  is  gane.     See  Hughie  the 

Grseme. — Anon. 
Good  Luck  is  the  gayest  of  all  gay  girls.     See  Good 

Luck  and  Bad  Luck. — Hay. 
Good  marnin'  for  good  mornin'l,  sorr!     Oi  come  to  say 

about  the  advertisement.     See  Pat  Answers  the 

Advertisement. — Anon. 
Good  marnin'  to  yer,  Mrs.  O'Brien.     See  Mary  Ann's 

Escape. — Smith. 
Good  master,  turn  your  face  this  way.     See  Her  Lad- 
die's Picture. — Brainerd. 
Good  master,  you  and  I  were  bom.     See  Decanter  of 

Madeira    to    George    Bancroft,    Greeting,    A. — 

Mitchell. 
Good  men  and  true!  in   this  house  who  dwell.     Sie 

Croppy  Boy,  'The. — McBarney. 
Good  mistletoe,  I  wish  to  say.     See  In  Olden  Style. — 

— Barron. 
Good-mornin'  docthur.     See  Quackery. — Bonfield. 
"Good  mornin',  Miss  Katie,"  cried  young  Dickie  FeCt 

See  Tit  for  Tat.— Anon. 
Good  mornin',  sir,  Mr.  Printer;  how  is  your  body  to- 
day?    See  Makin'   an'   Editor    outen   o'   Him. — 

Carleton. 
Good  mornin'  for  good  marnin'l,  sorr!  Oi  come  to  say 

about  the  advertisement.     See  Pat  Answers  the 

Advertisement.     Anon. 
Good  mornin'  till  yez,  yer  honor!     And  are  yez  the 

gintlemon.     See  Advertisement  Answered,  The. — 

Thom. 
Good  morning,  Cousin  Laura!     I  have  a  word  to  say  to 

you.     See  True  Bravery. — Anon. 
Good  morning,  dear  friends!     I'm  a  clever  young  bee. 

See  Bee's  Sermon,  The — Anon. 
Good  morning.  Dr.  Gregory.     See  Case  of  Indigestion. 

A. — Anon. 
Good  morning,  doctor;  how  do  you  do?     See  Hypo- 
chondriac, The. — Valentine. 
Good  morning.  Dr.  Twist,  I'm  sure  it  is  a  pity.     See 

Different  Ways  of  Saying  Yes. — Anon. 
Good  morning,  Dolores!     You're  looking  quite  bright! 

See  Pepita,  the  Gipsy  Girl  of  Andalusia. — Anon. 
Good  morning,    Emily.     See    Economy   is    Wealth. — 

Anon. 
Good  morning,    Ernest.     What   are   you   doing?     See 

Like  an  Indian. — Denton. 
Good-morning,  fair  maid,  with  lashes  brown.     See  To 

Grown-up  Land 
Good    morning,     Fanny.      See    Dead     Bird,     The. — 

Anon. 
Good  morning,  gentlemen.     See  Temperance  Dialogue. 

— Murray. 
Good  morning!  good  morning,  sir!     See  Will  You  Ad- 
vertise?—Anon. 
Good  morning,  Jennie,  where  are  you  going?     See  In- 
vitation, "The.- — Denton. 
Good  morning,  Jenny.     How  is  that  lamb,  my  uncle? 

See  Sea  of  Troubles,  A. — Baker. 
Good  morning,  Joe.     See  Joe's  Way  of  Doing  Chores. — 

Denton. 
Good  morning,  John.     Where  is  your  craft  bound  for  so 

early?     See  Tobacco  Pledge,  The. — Ralston. 
Good  morning,    ma'am.     Good    morning.     Will    you 

tell  me  your  name  and  errand?     See  Obtaining 

Help  in  the  Country. — Anon. 
Good  morning,  madam.     Is  the  head  of  the  family  at 

home?     See  Taking  the  (Census.- Anon. 
"Good  morning,  merry  sunshine!"     See  some.— Anon. 
Good  morning,  Mr.  Dolrums.    See  Hypochondriac,  The. 

— Anon. 
Good  morning,  Mr.  Doughty.    See  Premature  Proposal, 

The. — Anon. 
Good  morning,  Mr.  Nineteenth  Century.     See  Keeping 

the  Birthday. — Denton. 
Good  morning,  Mr.  Superintendent!     Here  is  another 

youngster.     See  Reformation. — Niles. 
Good  momin<t,    Mr.    Thompson !     See    Patent    Right 

Agent,  The.— Anon. 
Good  morning,  Mrs.  Smith.     See  Wonderful  Scholar, 

The. — Anon. 


664 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Granddad 


Good  morning,  Polly  Ann;  I  thought  I'd  run  across 

to-day.     See  Olden  Times,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
Good  morning,    Ray.   'tis   after  eight.     <See  Youthful 

Dissipation. — Anon. 
Good  morning,  sir!  how  do  you  do?    See  Frenchmen's 

Malady,  The. — Anon. 
Good  morning,  sir;  I  was  just  coming  over  to  have  a 

word  with  you.     <See  Justice  and  Mercy. — Gar- 

dette. 
Good  morning  to  you  all.     Have  any  of  you  heard. 

See  Village  Scare,  The. — -Smith. 
Good  morning  to  vou,  Annie,  dear.     See  Midshipman, 

The.— Nichols. 
Good  morning.  Tom.     Going  to  school  to-day?     See 

Two  Friends,  The. — Atkeson. 
Good  morning,  you're  just  the  one.     See  Weed  and  the 

Boy,  The.— Denton. 
"Good  morning,   world!"   on  the  window  seat.     See 

Good-morning. — Bingham. 
"Good   morrow,   good   morrow,  my  bright-eyed  lad." 

See  Grown-up  Land. — {St.  Nicholas.) 
"Good    morrow,    little    rose-bush."     See    Sweet    Red 

Rose,  The. — Stacy. 
"Good  morrow,  lovely  lady,  is  thy  noble  lord  with 

thee?"     See  Craven  Knight,  The. — Anon. 
"Good  morrow,  my  Lord!"  in  the  sky  alone.     See  Sir 

Lark  and  King  Sun:  a  Parable. — MacDonald. 
Good  morrow  to  the  day  so  fair.     See  Mad  Maid's 

Song,  The. — -Herrick. 
Good   morrow   to   thy  sable  beak.     See  Black  Cock, 

The.— Baillie. 
Good  Muse,  rock  me  asleep.     See  Sweet  Pastoral,  A. — 

Breton. 
Good  name  in  man  and  woman,  dear  my  lord.     See 

Othello  (Good  Name). — Shakespeare. 
Good  night !     Be  thy  cares  forgotten  quite !     See  Good 

Night! — Anon. 
Good  night,  dear  friend!     I  say  good  night  to  thee. 

See  Good  Night. — Benedict. 
Good  night,  dear  friends,  for  now  we  close.     See  Good 

Night. — Richards. 
Good  night,  dear  heart!  What!  dost  thou  surely  deem. 

See  Farewell,  A. — Duchess  of  Sutherland. 
"Good  night,  dear  Maudie,"  I  softly  said.     See  Maude 

and  the  Cricket. — Anon. 
Good   night!  Good   night!  Ah,   good   the   night.     See 

Good  Night. — Anon. 
Good    night!  Good    night!  Far   flies    the    night.     See 

Good  Night. — Hugo. 
"Good  night,"  he  said,  and  he  held  her  hand.     See 

Challenge,  A. — Harvey. 
Good  night!  I  have  to  say  good  night.     See  Palabras 

Carinosas.— Aldrich. 
Good  night,  little  shivering  grasses!     See  November 

Good-night,  A. — Beers. 
Good  night,  little  star.     See  Little  Star. — Anon. 
Good  night,  pretty  Sun,  good  night!     See  Good-night. 

— Dayre. 
"Good  night,"  said  the  robin.     See  Birds'  Good-night, 

The. — Richards. 
"Good  night!"  she  said,  and  laid  her  head  upon  his 

manly  breast.     See  Not  All  Imagination. — Anon. 
"Good  night.  Sir  Rook!"  said  a  little  lark.     See  Lark 

and  the  Rook,  The.^Anon. 
Good   night,   sweetheart!     It   can't   be   ten,   I   know. 

See  Parting  Lovers,  The. — Day. 
Good  night !  the  sun  is  setting.    See  Good-night. — Anon. 
Good  night  to  all  the  world!  there's  none.     See  Good- 
night.— -Sands. 
Good    night,    to    each   weary,    toil-worn    wight!     See 

Good  Night. — Korner. 
Good  oars,  for  Arnold's  sake.     See  Pax  Paganica. — 

Guiney. 
Good  old  earth,  be  thou  my  wine.     See  My  Wine. — - 

Kirk. 
Good  old   Fider   Lamb   had  labored  for  a  thousand 

nights  and  days.     See  Elder  Lamb's  Donation. — 

Carleton. 
Good   old    Mother   Fairie.     See  To   Mother   Fairie. — 

Cary. 
Good  people  all,  of  every  sort.     See  Vicar  of  Wake- 
field, The  (Elegy  on  the  Death  of  a  Mad  Dog). — 

Goldsmith. 
Good  people,  all  with  one  accord.     See  Elegy  on  the 

Glory  of  her  Sex,  Mrs.  Mary  Blaize,  An. — ^Gold- 

smith. 
Good  pipe,  old  friend,  old  black  and  colored  friend. 

See  Gypsies  of  the  Dane's  Dike  (Geordie  to  his 

Tobacco-pipe). — Phillips. 
Good  reader,  if  you  e'er  have  seen.     See  Nonsense. — 

Moore. 
Good  Saint  Valentine,  I  pray.     See  Diana's  Valentine. 

— Bridges. 


Good  speed,   for  I   this  day.     Herrick.     See  To  the 

Lark. — Herrick. 
Good  tidings  every  day.    See  Gospel  of  Mystery,  The. — 

Holm. 
Good  Uncle  Riley  sent  the  lad  a  box  of  little  tools. 

See  As  the  Twig  is  Bent. — Cleveland. 
"Good  wife,   what   are  you  singing  for?     You   know 

we've  lost  the  hay."     See  We've  Always  Been  Pro- 
vided For. — Anon. 
Good-by,  dear  eyes;  a  little  while.     See  Good-by. — 

Anon. 
Good-bye,  Doctor, — -your  orders  will  be  obeyed.     See 

Quiet  Smoke,  A. — Neall. 
Good-by,  good-by !     I  have  no  chain  to  hold  you.     See 

Vale! — Anon. 
"Good-by  in  fear,  good-by  in  sorrow."     See  Good-by. 

— Rossetti. 
Good-by,    little    birdie!      See    Nell    and    her    Bird. — 

Dodge. 
"Good-by,  mother:  don't  worry  about  me."    See  Wrong 

Road,  The. — Adams. 
Good-by :  nay,  do  not  grieve  that  it  is  over.     See  Fare- 
well, A. — Monroe. 
Good-by,  O  love,  once  njore  I  hold  your  hand.     See 

Parting  Words. — Marston. 
Good-by,  sweet  day,  good-by!     See  Good-by,  Sweet 

Day.— Thaxter. 
Good-by,  Sweetheart.     See  same. — Clemmer. 
Good-by!  the  comedy's  over.     See  First  Snow,  The. — 

Dietz. 
"Good-bye,  baby."     Baby  looked  up  from  her  break- 
fast with  a  wondering  smile.     See  Why. — S.  P.  B. 
Good-bye,    chile!  I    ain't   here   for   long.     See    In    de 

Mornin'.— Case. 
Good-bye,  God  bless  you,  God  bless  you  each    day. 

See  Class  Song. — -Anon. 
Good-bye!  good-bye!  How  hard  to   say.     See   Good- 
bye.^Anon. 
Good-bye,    good-bye    to    Summer!     See    Robin    Red- 
breast.— AUingham. 
"Good-bye,"  I  said,  to  my  conscience.     See  Conscience 

and  Remorse. — Dunbar. 
Good-bye,  little  children,  I'm  going  away.     See  Frog's 

Good-bye,  The. — ^Anon. 
Good-bye,  old  house!  the  hurry  and  the  bustle.     See 

Good  Bye,  Old  House. — Pomeroy. 
Good-bye,  Old  Year,  we've  had  our  times  of  fun  and 

play.     See  Child's  Good-bye  to  the  Old  Year,  A. — 

Anon. 
Good-bye,  proud  world!     I'm  going  home.     See  Good- 
bye.— Emerson. 
Good-bye,  sweet  summer  day.     See  Good-bye,  Sweet 

Day. — Coolidge. 
Good-bye,  wits  and  poets — the  volume  we  close.     See 

L'Envoi. — Anon. 
Goodness  airth!  Julia  Ann!  who's  that  'ere  a-coming? 

See  How  They  Kept  a  Secret. — Augusta. 
Goodness,  is  the  greatest  of  all  the  virtues  and  digni- 
ties of  the  mind.     See  Goodness  and  Greatness. — 

Bacon. 
"Goom,  wife,"  says  goot  oldt  farmer  Gray.     See  Dot 

Leetle  Tog  under  de  Vagon. — Anon. 
Goot   evenings,    shentlemens   und   ladies.     See   Little 

Fritz. — Vickers. 
Gorbo,  as    thou    earnest    this    way.     See    Daffodil. — 

Drayton. 
Gosh!  But  Phoebe  did  look  sweet!     See  Knittin'   at 

the  Stockin'. — Bellaw. 
"Got    any    boys?"    the    marshal   said.     See    Puzzled 

Census-taker,  The. — Saxe. 
"Got  one?  Don't  say  so!  Which  did  you  get?"     See 

Best  Sewing-machine,  The. — Anon. 
Government  we  hold  to  be  the  creature  of  our  need. 

See  Union  and  its  Government,  The. — Simms. 
Governor  Bellingham,  in  a  loose  gown  and  cap.     See 

Elf-child  and  the  Minister,  The. — Hawthorne. 
Grace  and  Peace  in  Christ,  my  darling  little  son.     See 

Martin  Luther's  Letter  to  his  Son. — Luther. 
Graceful  may  seem,  the  fairy  form.     See  Household 

Woman,  The. — Oilman. 
Gracie  wuz  alius  a  careless  tot.     See  Diverted  Tragedy, 

A.— Riley. 
Grade's   kitty,   day   by   day.     See   Grade's   Kitty. — 

Anon. 
Grand  are  the  days  we  celebrate.     See  Story  of  the 

Days,  The. — Anon. 
Grand  is   the  leisure  of  the  earth.     See   Scholar  and 

Carpenter  (God's  Time). — Ingelow. 
Grand  the  expanse  of  the  heavens,  but  grander  the 

thoughts   they   suggest.     See   God's   Wonders. — 

Marty  n. 
Granddad    sat    outside    the    door.     See    Granddad's 

Polka. — Meyers. 


665 


Grandfather 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Grandfather  is  old.     His  back  is  bent.     See  Grand- 
father's Reverie. — Parker. 
Grandfather  Watts  used  to  tell  us  boys.     See  Grand- 
father Watts's  Private  Fourth. ^Bunner. 
Grandfather's     barn!     I      shall     never     forget.     See 

Gran<lfather'#Barn. — Uexford. 
Grandfather's   house   was   a  gray   old   building.     iSee 

Grandfather's  House.— McGuire. 
Grandfather's  "summer  sweets"  are  ripe.     See  Grand- 
father's "Summer  Sweets." — Lincoln. 
Grandma,  grandma,  do  you  believe  in  dreams?     See 

Two  Interpreters  of  Dreams,  The. — Herbert. 
Grandma   Gruff  said   a  curious   thing.     See   Reason, 

The. — Anon. 
Grandma  offered  a  prize  the  other  day  to  us  children. 

See  Grandma's  Spectacles. — Goodfellow. 
Grandma  remembers  Washington.     See  Great-grand- 
mamma and  I. — Wat.son. 
Grandma  says  we  little  witches.     See  Where  Did  They 

Go?— (Our  LUtle  Ones.) 
Grandma    sits    in    her    easy    chair.     See    Knitting. — 

Cutter. 
Grandma  told  me  all  about  it!     See  Minuet,  The. — 

Dodge. 
Grandma  was  nodding,  I  rather  think.     See  Rogue,  A. 

— Anon. 
Grandmamma    sits    in    her    quaint    arm-chair.     See 
Beautiful      Grandmamma.  —  (Standard     of     the 
Cross. ) 
Grandma's  eyes  are  dim  and  grandma's  hair  is  sprin- 
kled.    See  Grandma   that's  Just   Splendid,   A. — 
Opper. 
Grandma's  shadow  on   the  wall.     See  Silhouettes. — 

Pillsbury. 
Grandmother   sits   in    her   old  arm-chair.     See  Coin- 
cidence, A. — Cooper. 
Grandmothers    are    very    nice    folks.     See    Johnny's 

Opinion  of  Grandmothers. — Anon. 
Grandmother's  mother!  her  age,  I  guess.     See  Doro- 
thy Q.— Holmes. 
Grandpa  sits   in   his   oaken   chair.     See   Sixteen   and 

Sixty. — Anon. 
Grandpa  was  holding  his  pet  on  his  lap.     See  Grandpa 

and  Pet. — Richards. 
Grandpapa 'looked  at  his  fine  new  chair.     See  Just 

what  I  Wanted. — Anon. 
Grandpapa   questions;   "Now   couldn't   those   boys." 

See  Some  Opinions. — ^Anon. 
Grandpapa's  hair  is  very  white.     See  Grandpapa. — 

Craik. 
Grandpapa's  spectacles  cannot  be  found.     See  Grand- 
papa's Spectacles. — Anon. 
"Granny,  whar  you  gwine?"     See  same. — Anon. 
Granny's  come  to  our  house.     See  Granny. — Riley. 
Grant  him  admittance.     See  Columbus  at  the  Court  of 

Spain. — Boyd. 
Grant  is  one  of  the  few  men  in  history  who  did  more 
than    was    expected.     See    Eulogy    on    General 
Grant,  A. — Newman. 
Grasped  by  a  mighty  power  and,  fearless,  hurled.     See 

Prophet,  The. — Perkins. 
Grate  ingine!  you  have  eradicated  fire  machines.     See 

Owed  to  the  Steem  Engine. — Skwirt. 
Grateful  is  sleep  while  wrong  and  shame  survive.     See 
Reply  to  "Lines  Found  in  the  Hand  of  the  Statue 
of  Night  at  Florence." — Angelo. 
Grave  authors  say  and  witty  poets  sing.     See  Bache- 

lor|s  Reasons  for  Taking  a  Wife,  The.— Anon. 
Gray  distance  hid  each  shining  sail.     See  Jubilate. — 

Arnold. 
Gray   is   the   sky   but    naught    care   I.      See    Song. 

— W.  T.  R. 
Gray  o'er  the  pallid  links,  haggard  and  forsaken.     See 

Farm  on  the  Links,  The. — Watson. 
Gray  winter  hath  gone,  like  a  wearisome  guest.     See 

September  in  Australia. — Kendall. 
Great  actions  and  striking  occurrences,  having  excited 
a  temporary  admiration.     See  First  Settlement  cf 
New   England,  The  (Influence  of  Great  Actions, 
The).— Webster. 
Great  and  understanding  nation.     See  To  America  in 

1876.— Tupper. 
Great  are  the  myths — I,  too,  delight  in  them.     See 
,        Great  are  the  Myths. — Whitman. 
'Great    battle!  Times    extra!"  the     newsboy    cried. 

See  News  of  a  Day,  The. — Bolton. 
Great  big  dog.     See  Tale  of  a  Dog  and  a  Bee. — Anon. 
Great  Ca;sar — how  my  head  aches!  I  must  have  been 
on  a  terrible  tear  last  night!     See  Revelations  of 
a  Po<;ket. — Anon. 
Great    disasters    are   upon    us    and   upon    the   whole 
country.     See  Restoration  of  the  Union,  The. — 
Stephens. 


Great  Doctor  Parr,  the  learned  Whig.     See  Brief  Puff 

of  Smoke,  A. — Selim. — (Eclectic  Magazine.) 
Great  fabric  of  oppression.     See  Protestant  Ascend- 
ency.— O'Hagan. 
Great   Garibaldi,   through   the  streets   one  day.     See 

Respect  the  Burden. — Mulock. 
Great,  glowing  blossoms,  holding  in  their  hearts.      See 

Jacqueminot  Roses. — Clarke. 
Great     God!    greater      than     greatest!       See    Night 
'Thoughts  (Penitence). — Young. 

Great  God !  whose  sceptre  rules  the  earth.  See  Divine 
Ejaculation. — Quarles. 

Great,  good,  and  just!  could  I  but  rate.  See  Upon  the 
Death  of  King  Charles  I. — Montrose. 

Great  in  life,  Garfield  was  great  in  death.  See  Me- 
morial Address  on  the  TiifeandCharacter  of  James 
A.  Garfield  (Death  of  Garfield,  I'he). — Blaine. 

Great  indeed,  is  the  task  assigned  to  woman.  See 
same. — (Blackwood's.) 

Great  is  the  Lord,  and  greatly  to  be  praised.  See 
Psalms  of  David,  XhYlU.— Bible. 

Great  is  the  sun,  and  wide  he  goes.  See  Summer  Sun. 
— Stevenson. 

Great  King  William  spread  before  him.  See  William 
the  Conqueror. — Mackay. 

Great  king,  within  this  coffin  I  present.  See  King 
Richard  II. — Shakespeare. 

Great,  learned,  witty  Ben,  be  pleased  to  light.  See 
Invective  Written  by  Mr.  George  Chapman 
against  Mr.  Ben  Jonson,  An. — Chapman. 

Great  lords,  wise  men  ne'er  sit  and  wail  their  loss. 
See  King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III.  (Battle  of  Tewks- 
bury). — Shakespeare. 

Great  Master!  teach  us  hov/  to  hope  in  man.  See 
Honor  All  Men. — Lowe. 

Great  men  grow  greater  by  the  lapse  of  time.  See 
Daniel  O'ConnelL— O'Reilly. 

Great  Monarch  of  the  World!  from  whose  arm  springs. 
See  Majesty  in  Misery. — Charles  I. 

Great  mustering  there  is  of  Moors  and  Christians 
through  the  land.  See  Cid,  The  (Count  Raymond 
and  My  Cid). — Ormsby. 

Great  nature  is  an  army  gay.     See  sam-e. — Gilder. 

Great?  Nay,  the  man  is  never  great.  See  Great  Man, 
A. — Dallas. 

Great  Ocean!  strongest  of  creation's  sons.  See  Course 
of  Time,  The  (Ocean).— Potlok. 

Great  Sovereign  of  the  earth  and  sea.  See  Europa. — 
Thayer. 

Great  spirits  now  on  earth  are  sojourning.  See  Ad- 
dressed to  Haydt>n. — Keats. 

Great  thoughts  in  crude,  unshapely  verse  set  forth. 
See  On  Reading . — Aldrich. 

Great  truths  are  dearly  bought.  The  common  truth. 
See  How  We  Learn.— Bonar. 

Great  was  the  grief  amongst  the  village  school-boys. 
See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  (Tom  Brown  Start- 
ing for  Rugby). — Hughes. 

Great,  wide,  beautiful,  wonderful  World.  See  Won- 
derful World.  The.— Rands. 

Great  woods  gird  me  now  around.  See  Blackbird's 
Song,  The. — Sigerson. 

Greatest  twain  among  the  nations.  See  England  and 
Anierica. — Sangster. 

Greece  is  a  little  land,  with  no  mountains  of  majestic 
height.     See  Poor  and  Little  Greece. — Shepard. 

Green  be  the  turf  above  thee.  See  On  the  Death  of 
Joseph  Rodman  Drake. — Halleck. 

Green  blood  fresh  pulsing  through  the  trees.  See 
April — and  Dying. — Aldrich. 

Green  earth  has  her  sons  and  her  daughters.  See 
same. — Swinburne. 

Green  grew  the  reeds  and  pale  they  were.  See  Sym- 
bols.— Thompson. 

Green  fields  of  England!  whereso'er.  See  Green 
Fields  of  England. — Clough. 

Green  grow  the  rashes,  O.     See  same. — Burns. 

Green  grows  the  laurel  on  the  banks.  See  Life's 
Incongruities. — Phelps. 

Green,  in  the  wizard  arms.  See  Banshee,  The. — 
Todhunter. 

Green  is  the  plane-tree  in  the  square.  See  London 
Plane-tree,  A. — Levy. 

Green  leaves  panting  for  joy  with  the  great  wind  rush- 
ing through.     See  Summer  Day,  A. — Beeching. 

Green  little  vaulter  in  the  sunny  grass.  See  To  the 
Grasshopper  and  Cricket. — Hunt. 

Green  waves,  green  waves,  whose  thunder  woke.  See 
Turn  of  the  Tide,  The. — Kavanaugh. 

Green  were  the  meadows  with  last  summer's  store. 
See  Merry  Christmas  Time,  The. — Arnold. 

Green  willow!  over  whom  the  perilous  blast.  See 
Drooping-willow,  The. — Landon. 


666 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Hail 


Greeted  me  at  early  day.     See  May  MorninR.— Sproat. 
Grey,  grey  morn  o'er  the  hollow  dark  is  creeping.     See 

Alma. — Lushington. 
Grief  fills  the  room  up  of  my  absent  child.     See  King 

John  ("Grief  fills,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
Grief  hath  been  known  to  turn  the  young  head  gray. 

.See  Young  Gray  Head,  The. — Southey. 
Grieve  not  with  sighing.     .See  To  My  Soul. ^Fleming. 
"Griffith,  dinna  ye  ken  I  canna  be  troubled  wi' ye?" 

See  GrifBth  Hammerton. — Vetrepont. 
Grim  war  has  slain  its  millions.     .See  Drink's  Doings. — 

Anon. 
Grind,   Billie,   grind!     And  so  the  war's  begun?     See 

At    the    Grindstone;  or,    A    Home    View    of   the 

Battle-field. — Buchanan. 
Griper  Greg   of  the  village  of  Willoughby  Waterless. 

See  Griper  Greg. — Anon. 
Grisild  is  deed,  and  eek  hir  pacience.     See  Canterbury 

Tales,  The  (Clerkes'  Tale,  The).— Chaucer. 
Grow  as  the  trees  grow.  See  Growth. — Bugbee. 
Grow  greener,  grass,  where  the  river  flows.     See  Love 

Extravaganza,  A. — Mackay. 
Grow  old   along  with  me'     See  Rabbi   Ben   Ezra. — 

Browning. 
Grow  thou  and  flourish  well.     See  Class  Tree,  The. — 

Thomas. 
Grown    to    man's    stature!     O    my    little    child!     See 

Twenty-one. — Dorr. 
Guard,  my  child,  thy  tongue.     See  Rhyme  Six  Hun- 
dred Years  Ago,  A. — Anon. 
Guard  the  tongue,  and  guard  it  wisely.     See  Guard  the 

Tongue. — Anon. 
Guarding    the    mountains    around.     See    Masque    of 

Pandora,  The  (Voices  of  the  Forest). — Longfellow. 
Guards !  who  at  Smolensko  fled.     See  Louis  Napoleon's 

Address  to  his  Army. — Aytoun. 
Gude  Lord  Graeme  is  to  Carlisle  gane.     See  Graeme 

and  Bewick. — Scott. 
Guess  I've  never  told  you,  sonny,  of  the  strandin'  and 

the  wreck.     See  Tale  of  the  Kennebec  Mariner. — 

Day. 
Guess  what  he  had  in  his  pocket.     See  What  Was  It? 

— Dayre.     . 
Guest  di.'-covered  removing  coat  and  hat.     See  At  a 

Dinner  Party. — Anon. 
Guest  from  a  holier  world.     See  To  My  Soul. — Laigh- 

ton. 
Guide  me,  O  thou  great  Jehovah!     See  same. — Wil- 
liams. 
Guido.    ay,   Guido    of    Ravenna.     See    Francesca    da 

Rimini . — Boker. 
"G-u-n,"  said  Gracie  to  Willie.     See  Spelling  in  the 

Nursery. — Marble. 
Gunther  and  Hagan,  the  warriors  fierce  and  bold.    See 

Nibelungen   Lied  (How    Siegfried   was   Slain). — 

An  en. 
Gusty  and  raw  was  the  morning.     See  Fight  of  Paso 

Del  Mar,  The.— Taylor. 
Guvener  B.   is  a  sensible  man.     See  Biglow  Papers, 

The  (What  Mr.  Robinson  Thinks). — Lowell. 
G'way   and   quit   dat   noise,    Miss    Lucy.     See  When 

Malindy  Sing^.— Dunbar. 
Gwenwynwyn  withdrew  from  the  feasts  of   his  hall. 

See  Llyn-y-Dreiddiad-Vrawd. — Peacock. 


H 

H  was  an  indigent  hen.     See  same. — -Porter. 

Hal  Bully  for  me,  again,  when  my  turn  for  picket  is 
over.     See  Brier-wood  Pipe,  The. — Shanly. 

Ha!  do  I  see  right? — You  weep!  Is  that  the  happy  tem- 
per that  you  boast?     See  Parthenia. — Anon. 

Ha,  ha!  capital!  So  your  uncle  left  for  Richmond. 
See  Sudden  Arrival,  A. — Hay. 

Ha-ha,  ha-ha!  what  do  I  care.  See  Maniac,  The. — 
Beebe. 

Ha!  ha!  ha!  Yesterday  I  was  a  poor  man.  See  Pub- 
lic Worrier,  The. — Anon. 

Ha!  Ha!  Well,  governor,  how  are  ye?  See  Lady  Gay 
Spanker. — Boucicault. 

"Ha,  ha!  well  met,"  said  Twist;  "as  I'm  alive."  See 
Party  Caucus,  The. — Durant. 

Ha!  ha!  we've  stemmed  the  stream.  See  Oaks,  The. — 
.Tohnson. 

Ha!  ha!  you  fonnee  feylow!  by  gar  you  are  de  von 
great  rog.     See  Fox  and  the  Ranger,  The. — Lover. 

Ha!  here  comes  Mr.  Paul  Pry.  See  Paul  Pry  (Paul 
Pry  at  Doubledot's). — Poole. 

Ha,  steward!  How  are  you.  my  old  boy?  How  do 
things  go  on  at  home?  See  How  to  Break  Bad 
News. — Anon. 


Ha!  whare  ye  gaun,  ye  crawlin'  ferlie?     See  To  a  Louse. 

— Burns. 
Habits  are  stubborn  things.     See  Force  of  Habit,  The. 

— Anon. 
Hack  and  Hew  were  the  sons  of  God.     See  Hack  and 

Hew. — Carman. 
Had  a  Declaration  of  Independence  been  made  seven 

months    ago.     See    Predictions    Concerning    the 

Fourth  of  July. — Adams. 
Had  Grant  died  at  the  tan-yard,  or  from  behind  the 

counter.     See  General  Grant. — Anon. 
Had  I  a  heart  for  falsehood  framed.     See  Song:  "Had 

I  a  heart,"  etc. — Sheridan. 
Had  I  a  pound  of  tender  steak.     See  Stewed  Steak. 

— {Punch. ^ 
Had  I  been  there,  when  Christ,  our  Lord,  lay  sleeping. 

See  Child's  Easter,  A. — Slosson. 
Had  I  but  earlier  known  that  from  the  eyes.     See  In 

Love's  Own  Time. — Michelangelo. 
Had  I  but  known,   long  years   ago.     See  Had   I   but 

Known. — Scott. 
Had  I  but  plenty  of  money,  money  enough  and  to  spare. 

See  Up  at  a  Villa — Down  in  the  City.— Browning. 
Had  I  the  power  to  cast  a  bell.  See  Bell,  A. — ScoUard. 
Had  I  two  loaves  of  bread — ay,  ay!     See  Beauty. — 

Rand. 
"Had  I  wist,"  quoth  Spring  to  the  Swallow.     See  Had 

I  Wist. — Swinburne. 
Had  it  not  rained  on  the  night  of  the  17th  of  June,  1815. 

See  Les  Mis^rables  (Battle  of  Waterloo,  The). — 

Hugo. 
Had   it   pleased   Heaven.      See  Othello,  the  Moor  of 

Venice. ^Shakespeare. 
Had  the  great  truths  waited  until  the  majority  voted 

in  their  favor.     See  same. — Cassel. 
Had  this  effulgence  disappeared.     See  Evening  Volun- 
tary.— Wordsworth. 
"Had,    too!"     "Hadn't    neither!"     See    She    "Dis- 

plains"It.- — Riley. 
Had  we  but  world  enough,  and  time.     See  To  His  Coy 

Mistress. — Marvell. 
"Had  we  not  best  buy  a  cradle,  for  the  baby,  Mary 

dear?"     See  Parson's  Cradle,  The. — Diehl. 
"Hadst  thou  stayed,  I  must  have  fled!"     See  Legend 

Beautiful,  The. — Longfellow.  t^ 

Haf    you    seen    mine    leedle    Shonny?     See    Shonny 

Schwartz. — Adams. 
Hail!  abode  of  peace  and  quiet.     See  Midnight  Epi- 
sode, A. — Anon. 
Hail  and  welcome,  brave  son  of  Norway.     .See  Nansen. 

- — Gravsted. 
Hail,  Artaxominous !  yclept  the  Great !     See  Bombastes 

Furio.so. — Rhodes. 
Hail,  beauteous  Dian,  queen  of  shades.     See  To  Diana. 

— Heywood. 
Hail,  beauteous   stranger  of  the  grove!     See  To  the 

Cuckoo. — Logan. 
Hail  Columbia!  happy  land!     See  Hail  Columbia. — 

Hopkinson. 
Hail!  fair  queen,  adorned  with  flowers.     See  Return  of 

May,  The. — Hemans. 
Hail,  first  of  the  spring.     See  Hepatica,  The. — Rand. 
Hail,     Freedom!     Thy    bright    crest.     See    National 

Hymn. — Crawford. 
Hail !  hail !  hail  to  the  beautiful  May.     See  Welcome  to 

May. — Anon. 
Hail,  happy  Genius  of  this  ancient  pile!     See  On  Lord 

Bacon's  Birthday. — Jonson. 
Hail,  happy  saint,  on  thine  immortal  throne.     See  On 

the  Death  of  the  Rev.  George  Whitefield.— Wheat- 
ley. 
Hail,  heroes  of  the  battle!     Hail,  men  who  wore  the 

shield!     See  Men  Who  Wore  the  Shield,  The.— 

Sherwood. 
Hail!     Ho!     See  Sea-song  from  the  Shore,  A. — Riley. 
Hail,  holy  Light,  offspring  of  Heaven  first-born!     See 

Paradise  Lost  (Invocation  to  Light). — Milton. 
Hail  May!  with  fair  queen  and  May-pole.     See  May. — 

Anon. 
Hail,  old  patrician  trees,  so  great  and  good!     See  Of 

Solitude. — Cowley. 
Hail,  sister  springs.     See  Weeper,  The. — Crashaw. 
Hail,  sovereign  of  the  worlds  of  floods.     See  Ode  to 

Niagara. — Anon . 
Hail  the  flower  whose  early  bridal  makes  the  festival 

of  Spring.     See  Arbutus. — Goodale. 
Hail  thou  most  sacred  venerable  thing!     See  Hymn  to 

Darkness . — Norris . 
Hail,  thou  once-despised  .Jesus!     See  same. — Bakewell. 
Hail  to  Hobson !  hail  to  Hobson!  hail  to  all  the  valiant 

set!     See  Men  of  the  "Merrimac, "   The. — Scol- 

lard. 


667 


Hail 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Hail  to  our  banner  brave.     See  Our  Banner. — Tilden. 
Hail  to  our  Keltic  brethren,  wherever  they  may  be. 

See  Salutation  to  the  Kelts. — McGee. 
Hail  to  the  brightness  of  Zion's  glad  morning.     See  I.iat- 

ter  Day,  The. — H^tings. 
Hail  to  the  chief  who  m  triumph  advances !     See  Lady 

of  the  Lake,  The  (Song  of  Clan  Alpine). — Scott. 
Hail  to  the  Czar  Alexander  I     See  On  the  Freeing  of  the 

Serfs. — Proctor. 
Hail  to  the  elm!  the  brave  old  elm!     See  Elm,  The. — 

Dodge. 
"Hail   to   the     King!"     See    Ing^,    the     Boy-king. — 

Boyesen. 
Hail  to  the  land  whereon  we  tread.     See  New  England. 

— Percival. 
Hail  to  the  Lord's    Anointed.     See  Psalm  LXXII. — 

Montgomery. 
Hail  to  the  merry  Autumn  days,  when  yellow  corn- 
fields shine.     See  Village  Coquettes,  The  (Round). 

— Dickens. 
Hail  to  the  pride  of  the  forest — hail.     See  Maple-tree, 

The. — Moodie. 
Hail  to  the  Sabbath  Day.     See  Sabbath  Day,  The. — 

Bulfinch. 
Hail  to  the  trees!     See  Song  of  the  Trees. — Miller. 
Hail  to  thee,  blithe  spirit.     See  To  a  Skylark. — Shelley. 
Hail  to  thy  returning  festival,  old  Bishop  Valentine  ! 

See  Valentine's  Day. — Lamb. 
Hail   to   your   lordship!      See    Hamlet     (Scene   from 

"Hamlet"). — Shajcespeare. 
Half  a  bar,  half  a  bar.     See  Charge  on  "Old  Hundred," 

The. — Anon. 
Half  a  league,  half  a  league.     See  Charge  of  the  I>ight 

Brigade  at  Balaklava.  The. — Tennyson. 
Half  an  hour  till  train   time,   sir.     See  Bill  Mason's 

Bride. — Anon. 
Half  kneeling  yet,   and   half  reclining.     See  Queen's 

Vespers,  The. — De  Vere. 
Half  loving-kindliness  and  half  disdain.     See  To  My 

Cat.— Watson. 
Half -raised    upon    the    dying   couch,    his    hand.     See 

Boy's  Last  Request,  The.— Anon. 
Half -sleeping,  by  the  fire  I  sit.     See  Over  the  Range. — 

Mills. 
Half-wa.v  down  to  the  shore,  Evangeline  waited  in  si- 
lence.    See  Evangeline. — I^ongfellow. 
Hallo!     I  really  believe  this  ih  for  me!     See  Birthday 

Box,  The. — -Anon. 
Hallo!    I'm  glad  you  all  are  here.  See  Curiosity. — Anon. 
Hallo,  Will !     At  it  as  hard  as  ever.     See  Good  Library 

Gone  up  in  Smoke,  A. — Trafton. 
Hallo!  youngster,  do  you  live  in  this  neighborhood? 

See  Farmer  Boy  and  the  City  Dude,  The. — Anon. 
"Halloo,  below  there!"     When  the  signal  man  heard 

my  voice.     See  Signal  Man,  The. — Dickens. 
Halloo,  Bill!  which  way  so  fast?     See  Too  Good  to 

Attend  Common  School. — Doolittle. 
Halloo,  John!  where  are  you  going  with  that  big  book. 

See  Going  to  be  an  Orator. — Forbes. 
Halloo,  Rob!     Do  you  know  it  is  nearly  school-time? 

See  Energy  and  Industry. — Kavanaugh. 
Halloo!  what  old  cove  is  this  coming  up  the  road?    See 

Uncle's  Reception,  The. — Anon. 
Hallow  the  threshold,  crown  the  posts  anew!     See  On 

the  Queen's  Return    from   the  Low  Countries. — 

Cartwright. 
Halt!     Arthur    Bonnicastle,    you    are    arrested.     See 

Arthur     Bonnicastle     (Brought      to ,    Trial     for 

"Blowin'  "). — Holland. 
Halt !     Attention !     Right    about    face!     See   Military 

Dispipline. — Anon. 
Halt !     Who  passes,  friend  or  foe?     See  same. — A.  H.  S. 
Hame,  hame,  hamel  oh  hame  I  fain  wad  [or  would]  be. 

See  Hame,  Hame,  Hame! — Cunningham. 
Hamelin    town's    in    Brunswick.     See   Pied    Piper    of 

Hamelin,  The. — Browning. 
Hamilton  yielded  to  the  force  of  an  imperious  custom. 

See  Criminality  of  Duelling. — Nott. 
Hand  in  hand,  through  the  city  .  treets.     See  Thanks- 
giving Eve. — Anon. 
Hand  me  the  bastin'  thread.     See  Mrs.  Tubbs  at  the 

Sewing-circle. — Locke. 
"Hand  me  the  bowl,  ye  jovial  band."     See  Victim,  The. 

— Anon. 
Handsome?     I  hardly  know.     Her  profile's  fine.     See 

C^ountrywoman  of  Mine,  A. — Eastman. 
Handsome    is    that    handsome   does.      See  Beautiful, 

The   ("Handsome  is,"  etc.). — Whittier. 
Hang  out  our  banners   on   the   outward   walls.     See 

Macbeth. — Shake-speare. 
Hang  there,   my  verse,  in  witness  of  my  love.     See 

As  You  Like  It  (Forest  of  Arden,  The). — Shake- 

itpear^. 


Hang  up  the  baby's  stocking.     See  same. — Anon. 
Hannibal's  Address  to   His   Army.     See  Carthage  in 

Peril.— Li  vy. 
Hans  and  Fritz  were  two  Deutschers  who  lived  ■-•ide  by 

.side.     See  Hans  and  Fritz. — Adams. 
Hans  Baum,  the  cobbler,  lived  in  a  quaint  little  town. 

See  Little  (^arl. — Botsford. 
Hans    Bleimer    shtood    by    dot    burning    shkip.     See 

Hans  Bleimer's  Mool. — Brown. 
Hans    Brietmann    choined    de    Toorners.     See    Hans 

Brietmann  and  the  Turners. — Leland. 
Hans  Brietmann  gife  a  barty — dey  had  piano  blayin'. 

See  Hans  Brietmann's  Part.v.— Leland. 
Hans,  dot  vater  pipe  gifs  no  vater — alretty.     See  Mr. 

Eisseldorf  and  the  Water  Pipe. — Anon. 
Hans  Dunderkopf  stood  on  the  stack.  See  Dutchman's 

Equal  Rights,  The. — ^Nelson. 
Hans  geebs  a  millinery  shtore  py  Shtate  shtreet  out 

See  Tiamondts  on  der  Prain. — Anon. 
Hans  Schnitzerl  made  a  velocipede.     See  Schnitzerl's 

Velocipede, — Leland. 
Hans    Schoppenmeier    geebs    a    millinery    shtore    py 
Shtate  shtreet  out.     See  Tiamondts  on  der  Prain. 
— Anon. 
Hans  was  in  a  terrible  sweat.     See  How  a  Dut/jhman 

was  Done. — Anon. 
"Hans,  what  do  you  think  of  Signs  and  Omens?"     See 

Hans  Sourcrout  on  Signs  and  Omens. — Anon. 
"Hans,  what  keepit  you  oud  so  lade  to-night?"     See 

Hans's  Midnight  Excuses. — Anon. 
Han'som,  stranger?     Yes,  she's  purty  and  ez  peart  ez 

she  kin  be.     See  Engineer's  Story,  The. — Hall. 
Happening  to   pass  through  Mount  V.     See  De  Pen 

and  de  Swoard. — Anon. 
Happy  and  free  are  a  married  man's  reveries.     See 

Married  Man  and  the  Bachelor,  The. — Anon. 
Happy  are  they  and  charmed  in  life.     See  On  the  Slain 

at  Chickamauga. — Melville. 
Happy  are  they  who  kiss  thee,  morn  and  eve.     See 

Happy  are  They  Who  Kiss  Thee. — De  Vere. 
Happy  art  thou,  whom  God  does  bless.     See  Garden, 

The.— Cowley. 
Happy,  happier  far  than  thou.     See  To  Corinne. — He- 
mans. 
Happy  insect!  ever  blest.    See  Soliloquy,  A. — Harte. 
Happy  insect!  what  can  be.     See  Grasshopper,  The. 

— Anacreon. 
"Happy,  oh,  happy,  so  happy,  so  happy ! "     See  Verse. 

— (Moiint  Ilolyoke.) 
Happy   song-sparrow,    that    on    woodland   side.     See 

Fringilla  Melodia,  The. — Hirst. 
Happy  songster,  perched  above.     See  On  the  Grass- 
hopper.— Anacreon. 
Happy  the  man,  that  when  his  work  is  done.     See 

Contentment. — Field. 
Happy  the  man  who  has  the  town  escaped !     See  Coun- 
try Life. — Goethe. 
Happy   the   man    who    so    hath    Fortune   tried.     Sec 
Mano:  a  Poetical  History  (Of  Temperance  in  For- 
tune).— Dixon. 
Happy  the  man,  who,  void  of  cares  and  strife.     See 

Splendid  Shilling,  The.— Philips. 
Happy  the  man  whose  wish  and  care.     See  Ode  on 

Solitude. — Pope. 
Happy  the    nation  whose  God  is  Jehovah.     See  Na- 
tion's Strength,  A. — Bible. 
Happy  those  early  days  when  I.     See  Retreat,  The. — 

Vaughan. 
Happy  was  it  for  America,  happy  for  the  world.     Sec 

Lesson  of  the  Revolution,  The. — Sparkn. 
Happy  were  he  could  finish  forth  his  fate.     See  Pas- 
sion of  My  Lord  of  Essex,  A. — Devereux. 
Happy,   ye    leaves,   when   as    those    lily    hands.     See 
Amoretti   and  Epithalamion  (To  His   Book.     Of 
His  Lady). — Spenser. 
Hard  by  a  poet's  attic  lived  a  chemist.     See  How  to 

have  just  What  We  TAke. — Smith. 
Hard,  hard,  indeed,  was  the  contest  for  freedom.     See 

Tribute  to  Washington. — Harrison. 
Hardly  ever  that  a  body.     See  Music  of  the  Past,  The. 

— Anon. 
Hardy,    thy   brain    is    valient,    'tis    confest.     See   To 

Brainhardy. — .Tonson. 
Hari    Chunder    Mukerji,    pride    of    Bow-Bazar.     See 

"What  Happened." — Kipling. 
Hark!  a-down  the   village  street.     See  Hunko! — Den- 
ton. 
Hark!  ah,  the  nightingale!     See  Philomela.— Arnold. 
Hark  at  the  lips  of  this  pink  whorl  of  shell.     See  Qua- 
train, A. — Sherman. 
Hark!  forth   from  the  abyss   a  voice  proceeds.     See 
Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Death  of  the  Princess 
Charlotte). — Byron. 


668 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Have 


Hark'  from  bracket,  shelf,  and  hall.  See  What  o' 
Clock. — Denton . 

Hark,  hark!  down  the  century's  long  reaching  slope. 
See  Yorktown  Centennial  Lyric. — Hayne. 

Hark!  Hark!  Hark!  See  Chicago  in  Flames.  Wil- 
liams. 

Hark !  Hark !  my  children,  hark !  See  What  do  They 
Say? — Anon. 

Hark!  Hark!  my  soul;  angelic  songs  are  swelling. 
See  Pilgrims  of  the  Night,  The.— Faber. 

Hark!  Hark!  o'er  the  city  alarm  bells  ring  out.  See 
Fire-fiend,  The. — Glenn. 

Hark!  Hark!  the  lark  at  heaven's  gate  sings.  See 
Cymbeline  (Aubade). — Shakespeare. 

Hark!  Hark!  what  does  the  fir- tree  say?  See  Fir- 
tree,  The.— ClBrk. 

Hark !  hear  ye  the  sounds  that  the  winds  on  their  opin- 
ions,    ."^'ee  American  Patriot's  Song,  The. — Anon. 

Hark!  Hear  you  not  that  long  shrill  .strain?  See  Hid- 
den Songster,  The. — Anon. 

Hark,  heard  ye  not  that  trumpet  sound.  See  Hotel  in 
the  Storm,  A. — Stickney. 

Hark,  heard  ye  not  those  hoofs  of  dreadful  note?  See 
Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  ("Hark,  heard  ye 
not,"  etc.). — Byron. 

"Hark!  hearest  thou  that  shout?  Thoy  are  groveling 
over  their  human  blood, "  said  Olinthus.  See 
Last  Days  of  Pompeii  (Glaucus  and  the  Lion). — 
Bulwer-Lytton. 

Hark '  how  all  the  welkin  rings !     See  same. — Wesley. 

Hark,  how  I'll  bribe  you.  See  Measure  for  Measure 
(Prayers). — Shakespeare. 

Hark  how  the  mower  Damon  sung.  See  Damon  the 
Mower. — Marvell. 

Hark'  I  hear  the  tramp  of  thousands.  See  Reveille, 
The.— Harte. 

Hark!  is  Santa  Claus  coming?  See  Christm.aa  Panto- 
mime.— (Popular  Educator.) 

Hark!  is  that  a  horn  I  hear.     See  Horn,  The. — Rama!. 

Hark!  it  is  the  spring  time.  See  Spring  Time,  The. — 
Rutherford. 

Hark!  I've  a  secret  to  whisper!  See  Edith's  Secret. — 
Ludlum. 

Hark!  my  maiden,  and  I'll  tell  you.  See  Fortune-tel- 
ler and  Maiden. — Gaddess. 

Hark,  my  soul!  it  is  the  Lord.  See  Lovest  Thou  Me? — 
Cowper. 

Hark!  Now  everything  is  still.  See  Shrouding  of  the 
Duche.«s  of  Malfi,  The. — Webster. 

"Hark!"  says  the  Morning-glory.  See  Morning- 
glory. — -Anon. 

Hark!  some  wild  trumpeter,  some  strange  musician. 
See  Mystic  Trumpeter,  The. — Whitman. 

Hark!  Spring  is  coming.  Her  herald  sings.  Cuckoo! 
See  In  the  Month  when  Sings  the  Cuckoo. — -Austin. 

Hark!  the  bells  of  Christmas  ringing.  See  Christmas 
Bells.— Taylor. 

Hark,  the  Christmas  bells  are  ringing.  See  Christmas 
Bells. — Anon. 

Hark!  the  clarion  March  wind!  its  wild,  defiant  greet- 
ing.    See  Waiting  for  Easter. — Proctor. 

Hark!  the  cock  crows,  and  yon  bright  star.  See  New 
Year,  The.— Colton. 

Hark !  the  cry  of  Death  is  ringing.  See  Scourge  of  War, 
The.— Burleigh. 

Hark!  the  faint  bells  of  the  sunken  city.  See  Sunken 
City,  The.— Mueller. 

Hark,  the  glad  sound!  the  Saviour  comes.  See  Hark, 
the  Glad  Sound. — Doddridge. 

Hark!  the  herald  angels  sing.  See  Christmas  Day. — 
Wesley. 

"Hark!  the  minute  gun  is  booming."  See  Lover's 
Sacrifice,  The. — Anon. 

Hark !  the  rattling  roar  of  the  musketeers.  See  Cavalry 
Charge,  The.— Taylor. 

Hark,  the  robins  sweetly  sing.  See  Spring  Song. — Nor- 
ton. 

Hark  the  sleigh-bells!  how  they  jingle.  See  Sleigh- 
bells,  The. — Anon. 

Hark  the  trumpet  of  an  angel,  and  behold  a  vision  dire! 
See  Hymn  of  the  Avenger,  The. — Denison. 

Hark!  the  warbling  choir  sings.  See  "Robin  Hood," 
Songs  from. — MacNally. 

Hark — through  the  wild  night's  darkness  rings  out  a 
terrible  ory.     See  One  of  the  Heroes. — Rexford. 

Hark!  'tis  our  northern  nightingale  that  sings.  See 
White-throated  Sparrow,  The. — West. 

Hark,  'ti^  the  bluebird's  venturous  strain.  See  Blue- 
bird, The.— Aldrich. 

Hark!  'tis  the  twanging  horn!  O'Cr  yonder  bridge. 
See  Task,  The  (Post,  The).— Cowper. 

Hark  to  the  measured  march!  The  Saxons  come! 
See  Address  of  Caradoc  the  Bard. — Bulwer. 


Hark,    to    the   shrill    trumpet    calling.     See    Soldier's 

Burial,  The. — Norton. 
Hark  to  the  solemn  bell.     See  same. — Anon. 
Hark!  what  a  sound,  and  too  divine  for  hearing.     See 

Saint  Paul. — Myers. 
Hark!  ....  what  booming.     See  Arcana  Sylvarum. 

-De  Kay. 
Hark,  where  my  blossomed  pear  tree  in  the  hedge.     See 

Home   Thoughts  from   Abroad   ("Hark,  where," 

etc.). — -Browning. 
Harm  is  done  by  everything  which  tends  to  vulgarize 

religion.     See  same.— Anon. 
Harmony  is  the  ideal  of  the  universe.     See  True  Social- 
ism, The. — Morgan. 
Harness  me  down  with  your  iron  bands.     See  Song  of 

Steam,  The. — Cutter. 
Haro!     Haro!     Judge  now  betwixt   this  woman  and 

me.     See  Appeal  to  Harold,  The. — Bunner. 
Haroun,  the  Caliph,  through  sunlit  street.     See  Power. 

— Collier. 
Harp  of  Mennon !  sweetly  strung.     See  Battle  of  Alex- 
andria, The. — Montgomery. 
Harry,  don't  you  wish  there  were  fairies  nowadays? 

See  (Christmas  Eve  Adventure,  A. — Clement. 
Harry  has  a  little  dog.  See  Harry's  Dog. — Anon. 
"Harry,   where   have  you   been   all   morning?"     See 

Fishing. — Baker. 
Harvest  is   home.     The  bins  are  full.     See  Country 

Thanksgiving.  A. — -Anon. 
Has  any  one  seen  my  Fair.     See  Cressid. — Perry. 
Has  Hi  ham  a  Hinglisman.     See  .lewels   of  My  Aunt, 

The. — -Meyers. 
Has  our  love  all  died  out?     See  Brother  Jonathan's 

Lament  for  Sister  Caroline  (Union,  The). — Holmes. 
Has    summer    come    without    the    rose?     See    Song: 

"Has  Summer  come,"  etc. — O'Shaughnessy. 
Has  the  gentleman  donet     Has  he  completely  done? 

See  Reply  to  Mr.  Corry. — Grattan. 
Has  the  learned  gentleman,  who  has  been  so  eloquent. 

See  Reply  to  Macaulay's  "Reform  Irresistible." — 

Croker. 
Has  the  reader  any  distinct  idea  of  what  clouds  are? 

See  Modem  Painters  (Clouds,  The). — Ruskin. 
Has  there  any  old  fellow  got  mixed  with  the  boys? 

See  Boys,  The. — Holmes. 
Has  your  cousin  arrived  yet,  Mary?     See  Very  Bash- 
ful.— Anon. 
Hash  iz  made  out  ov  kast-off  vittles.     See  Receipt  for 

Hash. — ^Billings. 
Hast  thou  a  charm  to  stay  the  morning  star?     See 

Hymn  before  Sunrise,  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. — 

Coleridge. 
Hast  thou  a  lamp,  a  little  lamp.     See  Lamp,  The. — 

Greene. 
Hast   thou  ever  known  the  feeling.     See  Belfrey  of 

Ghent,  The. — Maguire. 
Hast  thou  forgotten  me?     The  days  are  dark.     See 

Hast  Thou  Forgotten  Me? — Holdsworth. 
Hast  thou  named  all  the  birds  without  a  gun?     See 

Forbearance. — Emerson. 
Hast  thou  no  right  to  joy.     See  Ode  on  Conflicting 

Claims. — Dixon. 
"Hast    thou   seen    that    Sivr.  myl  lordly  castle.      See 

Castle  by  the  Sea,  The. — Uhland. 
Hast  thou  seen  the  down  in  the  air.     See  Lute  Song 

in  "The  Sad  One,"  The.— Suckling. 
Haste   not!   rest   not!   calmly   wait.     See  Haste  Not. 

Rest  Not. — Goethe. 
Haste  thee,  nymph,  and  bring  with  thee.     See  L'AUe- 

gro. — Milton. 
Hastening  northward,  a  message  to  bear.     See  Robin's 

Message. — Hall. 
Hath  not  the  dark  stream  closed  above  thy  head.     See 

Tears  of  the  Poplars,  The. — Thomas. 
Hath  not  thy  heart  within  thee  burned.     See  Medita- 
tion.— Bulfinch. 
Hath  this  world,  without  me  wrought.     See  Question- 
ings.— -Hedge. 
Hats  off!     Along  the  street    there  comes.     See  Flag 

Goes  by,  The. — Bennett. 
Haul  in  der  plank,  full  speed  ahead.     See  Hold  Dot 

Fort,  for  Ve  vos  Coming. — Dunkerfoodle. 
Have    a    cigar,    Edgar?     Prime    Havanas.     See    Not 

Worth  Knowing. — Anon. 
Have  a  cigar? — No,  I  thank  you.     I  don't  smoke.     See 

Does  it  Pay  to  Smoke? — Anon. 
Have  any  one  of  you  seen  my  kitty?     See  liOSt  Kitty, 

The.— Rook. 
Have  done  with  care,  my  hearts!  aboard  amain.     See 

Farewell  to  Sir  John  Norris  and  Sir  Francis  Drake, 

A. — Peele. 
Have  I  dreamed?  or  was  it  real.     See  Epimetheus. — 

Longfellow. 


669 


Have 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Have  1  not  been  nigh  a  mother.     See  Bertha  in  the 

Lane. — Browning. 
Have  little  care  that  life  is  brief.     See  Envoy. — Car- 
man. 
" Have  other  lovers — aay,  ray  love."     See  Unsatisfac- 
tory.— Myers. 
Have   the   courage   to   face   a   difficulty.     iSee   Moral 

Courage. — Anon. 
Have  ye  not  seyn  som  tyme  a  pale  face.     See  Canter- 
bury Tales,  The   (Emperor's    Daughter    Stands 

.A.lone,  .\n). — Chaucer. 
Have  you  a  desire  to  see.     See  Have  you  a  Desire? — 

Hausted. 
Have  you  a  dog — a  frisky  dog.     See  Our  Dog. — Daven- 
port. 
Have  you  a  family,  Tambo?     See  Too  Many  Daugh- 
ters.— Anon. 
Have  you  been  at  Carrick,  and  saw  you  my  true-love 

there?     See  Have  You  been  at  Carrick. — Walsh. 
Have  you  been  to  walk,  John?     See  Bird's  Nest,  The. — 

Anon. 
Have  you  been  to  walk,  Susy?     See  Blind  Man,  The. — 

Anon. 
Have  you  brought  my  boots,  Jemima?     Leave  them 

at  my  chamber  door.     See  Getting  Up. — Leigh. 
"Have  you  -called  on   the    Browns   yet?"      See  Un- 
timely Call,  An. — (New  York  Sun.) 
Have   you   cut   the  wheat  in  the  blowing  field.     See 

Thanksgiving. — Barr. 
Have  you  e'er  a  new  song.     See  Limerick  I/asses  The. 

— Graves. 
Have  you  e'er  seen  my  speckled  hen.     See  Old  Speckled 

Hen. — Ruggles. 
Have    you    ever    been    down    to    Dolly-town?      See 

Dolly-town. — Anon. 
Have  you  ever  heard  of  the  many  roads.     See  Roads 

to  Wrinkle  "Town,  The. — Lambert. 
Have  vou  ever  heard  of  the  sugar-plum  tree?    See 

Sugar-plum  Tree,  The. — Field. 
Have  you  ever  heard  of  the  wonderful  land.    See  Land 

of  Make-believe,  The.— Anon. 
Have  you  ever  heard  the  wind  go  "  Y-o-o-o-o-o-o-o?" 

See  Night  Wind,  The.— Field. 
Have  you  ever  seen  a  boy.     See  "Where's  My  Hat. " — 

Denton. 
Have  you  ever  seen  this  aunt  of  papa's?     See  Yankee 

Aunt,  The. — Anon. 
Have  you  ever  seen  those  marble  statues  in  some  pub- 
lic square  or  graden?     See  same. — Robertson. 
Have  you  ever  thought  of  the  weight  of  a  word.     See 

Weight  of  a  Word,  The. — Anon. 
Have  you  ever  traveled  much,  Bones.     See  Huggin' 

Lamp-posts. — Anon. 
Have  you  ever  tried  to  make.     See  Making  a  Cake. — 

Denton. 
Have  you  ever  watched  a  rill.     See  Gentle  Words. — 

Taylor. 
Have  you  got  a  brook  in  your  little  heart?     See  same. 

— Dickinson. 
Have  you  got  any  Aunt  Maria?     An'  does  she  know 

all  about  ghosts?     See  My  Aunt  Maria. — McCol- 

lum. 
Have  you  heard  about  my  papa's  ship?     See  When  the 

Snip  Comes  in. — Denton. 
Have  you  heard   any  news,  Mrs.   Talket?     See  Un- 

buried  Woman,  The. — Anon. 
Have  you  heard  how  a  girl  saved  the  lightning  express? 

See  Kate  SheUy.— Hall. 
Have  you  heard  ot  a  collier,  of  honest  renown?     See 

Patient  Joe. — Anon. 
Have  you  heard  of  Mistress  Whitby?     'Mong  the  ladies 

of  the  land. — See  Case  of  Pedigree,  A. — Anon. 
Have   you   heard   of  our  fighting  Twenty-first.     See 

Dash  for  the  Colors,  The.— Webb. 
Have  you  heard  of  Santa  Rita?     See  Hymn  to  Santa 

Rita. — Adee. 
Have  you  heard  of  the  Apple  of  Discord?     See  Apple 

of  Discord,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
Have  you  heard  of  the  Kaiserblumen.     See  Kaiser- 

blumen,  The. — Thaxter. 
Have  you  heard  of  the  land  called  Phussandphret. 

See  Phussandphret. — Anon. 
Have  you  heard  of  the  wonderful  one-hoss  shay.     See 

Deacon's  Masterpiece,  The. — Holmes. 
Have  you  heard  the  bad  news,  boys?     See  People  will 

Talk. — Buckingham. 
Have  you  heard  the  dreadful  news,  Bella,  about  Ida 

Rue?     See  How  the  Story  Grew. — Anon. 
•  Have  you  heard  the  news  from  Crawfordsville?     See 

"District  No.  9." — Imbrie. 
Have  you  heard  the  olden  storv.     See  Dragon  Drink, 

The. — Murray. 
Have  you  heard  the   sonj;  of    the    daisy    fair?     See 

Motion  Song — Daisy  Fair. — Chase. 


Have  you  heard  the  story  floating.     See  Easter  Joy. — 

Denton. 
Have  you  heard   the  story  of  Deacon   Brown.     See 

Story  of  Deacon  Brown,  The. — Anon. 
Have  you  heard  the  story  that  gossips  tell?     See  John 

Burns  of  Gettysburg. — Harte. 
Have   you   heard   the   tale   of   the   Aloe   Plant.     See 

Through  Death  to  Life. — Harbaugh. 
Have  you  heard  the  waters  singing.     See  Little  May. — 

Miller. 
Have  you  no  pity  in  your  heart?     Is  there  no  tender- 
ness in  your  nature?     See  From  a  Future  Novel. — 

Anon. 
Have  you  not  heard  the  poets  tell.     See  Baby  Bell. — 

Aldrich. 
Have  you  not  noted,  in  some  family.     See  Birth-bond, 

The. — Rossetti . 
Have  you  read  in  the  Talmud  of  old.     See  Sandalphon. 

— Longfellow.  > 

Have    you    seen    an    [or  the]  apple    orchard    in    the 

spring?     See  Apple  Blossoms.— Martin. 
Have  you  seen  but  a  bright  lily  grow.   See  Celebration 

of  Charis,  A  (So  Sweet  is  She). — Jonson. 
Have  you  seen  Erasmus?     See  Walking  Encyclopedia, 

The. — Anon. 
Have  you  seen  my  hat,  Ruth?     See  Place  for  Every- 
thing and  Everything  in  its  Place,  A.— Anon. 
Have  you  seen  my  sister  dear?     See  My  Little  Sister. — 

Anon. 
Have    you    seen    the    famous    clock    at    Berne?     See 

"Clock  at  Berne,  The." — Grundy. 
Have  you  trials  and  temptations?     See  Our  Favourite 

Hymn. — {Tenn.  University  Mag.) 
Havin'  lived  next  door  to  the  Hobart  place  f'r  goin' 

on  thirty  years. — See  Cyclopeedy,  The. — Field. 
Having  a  natural  love  for  music  and  desiring  to  culti- 
vate my  voice.     See  My  First  Singing  Lesson. — • 

Brown. 
Having  carefully  drawn  the  curtains  of  his  bed.     See 

Pickwick   Papers,  The   (Pickwick  in  the  Wrong 

Bedroom). — Dickens. 
Having   interr'd    her   infant-birth.     See    Ode  upon  a 

Question  Moved  whether  Love  should  Continue  for 

Ever,  An. — Herbert. 
Having  often  received  an  invitation  from  my  friend. 

See   Spectator,    The    (Sir  Roger  at  his  Country 

House). — Addison. 
Having  recently  had  my  saloons  closed  up  in  Kansas 

and  Iowa.     See  What  License  Legalizes. — Anon. 
Having  restricted  universal  suffrage  and  the  right  of 

public    meetings.     See    Liberty    of    the    Press. — 

Hugo. 
Having  selected  the  place  in  which  you  wish  to  plant. 

See  Few  Rules  for  Tree  Planters,  A. — Anon. 
Having  this  day  my  horse,  my  hand,  my  lance.     See 

Astrophel  and  Stella,  Sonnet  XLL- — Sidney. 
Having  turned  out  the  last  patient  with  his  hand  to  his 

cheek.     See  Victory  for  the  Dentist. — -Anon. 
Hay!  hi!  there!     Boy!  come  y'ere,  boy.     See  Myste- 
rious Darkey,  The. — Anon. 
Haymakers,  rakers,  reapers,  and  mowers.     See  Sun's 

Darling,  The  (Rustic  Song). — Dekker. 
"Haz  yer  eny  stomped  antelopes  fur  sale,  boss?"     See 

Darky's  Ideal  Wife,  A. — Harrison. 
Hazard,  a  careless  fellow,  known.     See  How  to  Save 

a  Thousand  Pounds.^Anon. 
He  ain't  much  of  a  dog  to  look  at.     See  Jack. — Anon. 
He  ain't  no  gold  laced   "Belvidere."     See  "Reg'lar 

Army  Man,  The." — Lincoln. 
He  alone  remains  unshaken.     See  Leonidas  (Address  of 

Leonidas) . — Glover. 
He  ate  and  drank  the  precious  words.     See  Book,  A. — 

Dickini^on. 
He  boarded  a  car  at  Thirty-ninth  street.     See  Be- 
wildered Conductor,  A. — Head. 
He  boarded  the  train  at  Rochester,  and  came  to  the 

only  vacant  seat.     See  Her  Name  was  Smith. — 

Anon. 
He  bought  two  gaudy,  scarlet  coats.     See  His  Finish. 

—(Life.) 
He  bowed   the  heavens,   also,  and  came  down.     See 

Psalms  of  David. — Bible. 
He  brought   a  lily    white.     See  Child,  The  (To    His 

Mother).— Tabb. 
He    called    aloud    for   Miriam    Lane,    and    said.     See 

Enoch  Arden. — Tennyson. 
He  called  so  loud  that  all  the  hollow  deep  of  hell  re- 
sounded.    See  Paradise  Lost  (Moloch). — Milton. 
He  came   across   the   meadow-pass.     See   Old   Story, 

The.— O'Hagan. 
He  came  in  busy  hours.     See  Triiunph  of  Cupid,  The. 

— Meyrick. 
He  came  in  semblance  of  a  dove.     See  Holy  Spirit, 

The. — Auber. 


670 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


He 


He  came  in  with  an  interrogation-point  in  one  eye. 

See  Our  Visitor  and  What  he  Came  for. — Anon. 
He  came  into  my  office  with  a  portfolio  under  his  ami. 

jSee  Book  Canvasser,  The. — Adeler. 
He  came  into  the  office  of  a  West   End  undertaker. 

See  He  Didn't  Want  a  Coffin. — Anon. 
He  came  into  the  store  with  a  face  full  of  misery.     See 

Tragedy  at  Dodd's  Place,  The. — Dallas. 
He  came  to  call  me  back  from  death.     See  Eurydice. — 

Bourdillon.  .  ,    rr. 

He  came  to  the  bower  of  her  I  love.     See  Inside  Track, 

The.— Burdette.  t      j   •,. 

He  came  to  town  one  winter  day.     See  "Leadville 

Jim. " — Fink. 
He  came  too  late! — Neglect  had  tried.     See  He  Came 

too  Late. — Bogart. 
He  came  too  late!  the  toast  had  dried.     See  He  Came 

too  Late! — Anon.        ^ 
He  came  unlook'  A  for,  undesir'd.     See  Phantasmion 

(He  Came  Unlocked  for). — Coleridge. 
He  cares  for  me!     Why  do  I  fret.     See  Lord  Careth, 

The. — (Sunday  Magazine.) 
He   caught    his   chisel,    hastened   to   his   bench.     See 

Death  of  Azron,  The. — RoUins. 
He  ceas'd,  but  while  he  spake,  Rustum  had  risen.     See 

Sohrab  and  Rustum  (Combat,  The). — Arnold. 
"He  chases  shadows,"  sneered  the  Bristol  tars.     See 

First  Voyage  of  John  Cabot,  The. — Anon. 
He  chose  a  mournful  muse.     See  Alexander's  Feast. 

— Dryden. 
He  clasps  the  crag  with  hooked  hands.     See  Eagle,  The. 

— Tennyson. 
He  comes  along  the  great  highway.     See  Our  Scarlet 

King. — Bowman. 
He  comes  in  the  night!     He  comes  in  the  night!     See 

Santa  Claus. — Anon. 
He  comes  not!     I  have  heard  of  those  who  seemed. 

See  Blot  in  the  'Scutcheon,    A     (Death  of  Md- 

dred.  The). — Browning. 
He  comes  right  down  the  chimney.     See  How  He  Does 

It.— Anon. 
He  comes,  the  happy  warrior.     See  Sinfonia  Eroica. 

— James. 
He  comes  with  herald  clouds  of  dust.     See  Superior 

Nonsense  Verses. — Anon. 
He  could  raise  scruples  dark  and  nice.     See  Hudibras 

(Argumentative  Theology). — Butler. 
He   crawls   along   the   mountain   walls.     See   On   the 

Heights.— Foote. 
He  crawls  to  the  cliff  and  plays  on  a  brink.     See  Sea- 
child,  The.— Cook. 
He   cried    aloud    to    God;     "The    men   below."     See 

Genius. — White. 
He  crouches,  and  buries  his  face  on  his  knees.     See 

Last  of  his  Tribe,  The.— Kendall. 
He  devoted  one  hour  every  other  Tuesday.     See  Presi- 
dent Washington's  Receptions. — Sullivan. 
He  did  not  notice  that  I  never  spoke  to  her  in  the  same 

key  of  voice.     See  same. — Willis. 
He  didn't  know  much  music.     See  Mocking-bird,  The. 

— Stanton. 
He  does  suffer  so  with  his  trousers.     See  Stage  Land 

(Sailor,  The). — Jerome. 
He  does  well  who  does  his  best.     See  Tired  Out. — 

— Anon. 
He  doesn't  like  studj',  it  "weakens  his  eyes."     See 

Queer  Boy,  A. — Salter. 
He  dressed  himself  from  top  ter  toe.     See  Courtin' 

Call,  A. — Anon. 
He  entered  the  hardware  store.     See  Man  Who  Felt 

Sad,  The.— (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
He  examined  the  situation  and  found  it  an  unheard  of 

one.     See  Les  Miserables  (Jean  Valjean). — Hugo. 
He  fareth  in  a  joyous  wise.     See  Ladye  of  the  Lab, 

The.— Field. 
He  filled  the  crystal  goblet.     See  Veteran  and  Recruit. 

— Hazewell. 
He  first  deceased,  she  for  a  little  tried.     See  Upon  the 

Death  of  Sir  Albertus  Morton's  Wife. — Wotton. 
He  follows  the  hero  all   over  the   world.     See  Stage 

Land  (Comic  Man,  The). — Jerome. 
He   found    a   woman   in  the    cave.     See   Thalaba. — 

Southey. 
He  gather'd  blue  forget-me-nots.     See  Lovers. — Anon. 
He  gathered  cherry-stones,  and  carved  them  quaintly. 

See  Art  Master,  An.— O'Reilly. 
He  got  to  Paris  late  at  night.     See  Je  suis  Americain. — 

Anon. 
He  grasped  his  ponderous  hammer;  he  could  not  stand 

it  more.     See  Blacksmith  of  Limerick,  The.— Joyce. 
He  had  been  born  a  destined  work  to  do.     See  Abraham 

Lincoln    (On    the    Assassination    of    Lincoln). — 

Taylor. 


He  had  been  missing  from  the  "Potomac."     See  What 

Ailed  "Ugly  Sam." — Anon. 
He  had  been  sick  at  one  of  the  hotels  for  three  of  four 
weeks.     See    Last    Station,    The. — (Detroit    Free 
Press.) 
He  had  been  to  town-meeting.     See  Goin'  Somewhere. 

— Quad.   • 
He  had  been  trying  all  the  winter  through.     See  Pro- 
posal, The. — Vandegrift. 
He  had  black  eyes,  with  long  lashes.     See  Boy  Lost. — 

Anon. 
He    had   bowed    down   to    drunkenness.     See   Disen- 
thralled, The.— Whittier. 
He    had    fished    in    the    Aroostook.     See    Freshman's 

Vacation,  The. — (University  Herald.) 
He  had   flirted  at   Bar  Harbor  and  at   Narragansett 

Pier.     See  All  for  a  Man. — Winslow. 
He  had  halted  under  an  awning.     See  In  the  Same 

Line. — Anon. 
He  had  hinted  at  diamonds,  a  fan  by  Watteau.     See 

Her  Present. — F. 
He  had  no  times  of  study,  and  no  place.     See  Festus 

(Poet  of  Nature,  The). — Bailey. 
He  had  not  said  that  he  would  come.     See  How  did 

she  Know. — Anon. 
He  had  now  entered  the  skirts  of  the  village.     See  Rip 

Van  Winkle. — Irving. 
He   had   played   for  his   lordship's   levee.     See  Child 

Musician,  The. — Dobson. 
He  had  worn  a  colored  blazer  on  the  Nile.     See  She 

Still  Wins.— (Tech,  The.) 
He  hadn't  been  there  for  fifteen  years.     See  When 

Grandfather  Went  to  Town. — Meyers. 
He   has    arrived!     Arrived    at    last!     See   Tragedy   of 

Blind  Margaret,  The. — Wilson. 
He  has  come  before  the  daffodils.     See  First  Swallow, 

The. — Wordsworth. 
He  has  conn'd  the  lesson  now.     See  Fairy  Song. — 

Praed. 
He  has    done   the    murder.     See   Murder  of  Captain 

Joseph  White,   The    (Secret  of    Murder.  The).— 

Webster. 
He  has  lost  his  wife.     But  he  knows.     See  Stage  Land 

(Good  Old  Man,  The).— Jerome. 
He  has  ta'en  some  twenty  gentlemen,  along  with  him 

to  go.     See  Cid,  The  (Cid  and  the  Leper,  The). — 

Anon. 
He  hath  not  guessed  Christ's  agony.     See  Written  be- 
neath a  Crucifix. — Aldrich. 
He!     He!     He!     Johnson,  can  you  tell  why  fishermen 

possess  extraordinary  powers?     See  Fishy  Joke, 

A. — Anon. 
He  hides  within  the  lily.     See  Consider  the  Lilies.  How 

They  Grow. — Gannett. 
He  in  whose  ear  the  sea-shell  sings.     See  Sea  Song,  A. 

— (Williams  Literary  Monthly.) 
He  is  a  noble  looking  boy.     See  My  Brother  Jean. — 

Anon. 
He  is  a  roguish  little  elf.     See  Dandelion. — Brown. 
He  is  an  industrious  colored  man,   living  in  a  small 

cabin.     See  Uncle  Reuben's  Baptism.— Anon. 
He  is   come!   he  is   come!   a  monarch  he.     See  King 

Christmas. — Graham. 
He  is  come  to  ope.    See  King  Richard  II. — Shakespeare. 
He  is  coming!  he  is  coming!     Like  a  bridegroom  from 

his    room.     See   Execution   of   Montrose,   The. — 

Aytoun. 
He  is  coming,  he  is  coming,  my  true-love  comes  home 

to-day!     See  Regiment's  Return,  The. — Cutler. 
He  is  dead,  I  will  tell  all  as  it  happened.     See  Chariot 

Race,  The. — Sophocles. 
He  is  dead!  the  beautiful  youth.     See  Killed  at  the 

Ford. — Longfellow. 
He  is  fallen !     We  may  now  pause  before  that  splendid 

prodigy.     See  Napoleon  Bonaparte. — Phillips. 
He  is  gone;  better  so.     We  should  know  who  stand 

under.     See  Deserter  from  the  Cause,  The. — Mas- 

sey. 
He  is  gone — is  dust.     See    Wallenstein    (Dirge    from 

Wallenstein). — Coleridge. 
He  is  gone,  O  my  heart,  he  is  gone.     See  Alone  by  the 

Bay. — Moulton. 
He  is  gone  on  the  mountain.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 

The  (Coronach). — Scott. 
He  is  my  friend.     For  many  and  many  a  year  I  have 

looked  to  him.     See  Charles  Sumner  Attacked  in 

the  Senate. — Burlingame. 
He  is  not  at  home  yet.     See  Extracting  a  Secret. — 

Crawford. 
He  is  not  Noah's  son,  nor  any  old  Levite.     See  Who  is 

this  Wonderful  Prophet? — Anon. 
"He  is  so  very  peculiar. "     See  Peculiar  Neighbor,  The. 

— Spaulding. 


671 


He 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


See 


He  is  the  freeman  whom  the  truth  makes  free, 

Task,  The  (Freeman,  The). — Cowper. 
He  is  the  happy  man  whose  life  even  now.     See  Task. 

The  (Happy  Man,  The). — Cowper. 
He  is   the  happy  ^randerer,   who   goes  singing.     See 

Happy  Wanderer,  The. — Addlesnaw. 
He  is  the  only  man   in   the   play.     See  Stage    Land 

(Detective,  The). — Jerome. 
He  is  very  old,  and  very  long.     See  Stage  Land  (Law- 
yer, The). — Jerome. 
He  jests  at  scars  that  never  felt  a  wound.     See  Romeo 

and  Juliet  (Balcony  Scene). — Shakespeare. 
He  killed  the  noble  Mudjokivis.     See  Modern  Hiawa- 
tha, The. — Anon. 
He  kin  pik  up  a  libbin'  wharebber  he  goes.     See  De 

Yaller  Chmee. — Anon. 
He  kissed  me — and  I  know  'twas  wrong.     See  Penance. 

— Anon. 
He  kissed  me  'neath  the  mistletoe.     See  Triolet:  "He 

ki.«sed  me,"  etc. — Craven. 
He  kissed  me,  oh,  how  often!     See  He  Kissed  Me. — 

Anon.  .  . 

He  knelt  alone  on  the  cold  grey  stone.     See  Vision  of 

St.  Dominic,  The. — Anon. 
He  knelt  beside  her  pillow,  in  the  dead  watch  of  the 

night.     See  Asleep. — Winter. 
"He  knows  it  was  me,  then,  wot  hollered?"     See  "I'm 

Glad  he  Knows. " — Brown. 
He  lay  upon  his  dying  bed.     See  Sword  of  Bunker  Hill, 

The.— Wallace. 
He  leant,  at  sunset,  on  his  spade.     See  Answer  of  the 

Gardener,  The.— Piatt. 
He  leaves  the  earth,  and  says,  enough  and  more.     See 

Come  Morir.— S.  G.  W. 
He  left  a  load  of  anthracite.     See  What  was  his  Creed? 

— Anon. 
He  left  the  upland  lawns  and  serene  air.  See  Milton. — 

Myers. 
He  lies  low  in  the  levelled  sand.     See  At  the  Grave  of 

Walker.— Miller. 
He  lies  on  the  grass,  looking  up  to  the  sky.     See  Deaf 

and  Dumb. — "A." 
He  lived  and  died,  and  all  is  passed  away.     See  Record 

of  a  Life,  The.— Gray. 
He  lives  within  the  hollow  wood.     See  Charcoal'-bur- 

ner.  The.^-Gosse. 
He  liveth  long  who  liveth  well!     See  same. — Bonar. 
He  lost  t^  game;  no   matter  for  that.     See  Better 

Way,  A. — Anon. 
He  loved  her,  having  felt  his  love  begin.     See  Con- 
trast, The. — Cone. 
He  loves  not  well  whose  love  is  bold !     See  My  Queen. 

—Winter. 
He  loves  to  hear.     See  Julius  Caesar.— Shakespeare. 
He,  making  speedy  way  through  spers^d  ayre.     See 
Faorie   Queene,    The    (Cave    of     Sleep.    The).  — 
Spenser. 
He  marched   his    men   into    the   field.      See    Captain 

General,  The. — Anon. 
He  might  have  won  the  highest  guerdon  that  heaven 

to  earth  can  give.     See  Saturninus. — Conway. 
He  must    be   young   in    years,    in   wisdom    old.     See 

Wanted — a  Pastor. — Anon. 
He  never  has  talked  of  the  war-time  and  battle.     See 

Old  Artillerist,  The.— Nicholson. 
He  never  said  he  loved  me.     See  same. — Watts. 
"He  niver  plants  but  he  always  rapes."      See  Crow, 

The. — Anon. 
He  nothing  common  did,  or  mean.      See  Horatian  Ode 
upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ireland,  A  (Death 
of  Charles  I.,  The).— Marvell. 
He  pass'd  unquestioned  through  the  camp.     See  King 

Henry  V.  and  the  Hermit  of  Dreux. — Southey. 
He  paused,  and  in  the  pause  she  crept  an  inch.     See 
Idylls  of  the  King  (Arthur's  Farewell). — Tenny- 
son. 
He  paused  for  a  moment  in  the  doorway,  shading  his 
eyes  with  his  hand.     See  Old  Benedict  Arnold. — 
Phelps. 
He  peeps   in   through   the   key-hole.     See   Sand-man, 

The. — Cooper. 
He  planted  an  oak  in  his  father's  park.     See  Sower 

and  his  Seed,  The. — Lecky. 
He  prayeth  best,  who  loveth  best.     See  Rime  of  the 
Ancient  Mariner,  The  (He  Prayeth  Best). — Cole- 
ridge. 
He  prayeth  well,  who  loveth  well.     See  Rime  of  the 
Ancient  Mariner,  The  ("He  prayeth  well,"  etc.). — 
Coleridge. 
He  preached  but  little;  argued  less.     See  Father  John. 

— Anon. 
He  put  his   acorn   helmet  on.     See  Culprit  Fay,  The 
(Fairy  in  Armor,  A). — Drake. 


(He)  quickly  arms  him  for  the    field.     See    Nymphi- 
dia:  The  Court  of  Fairy  (Arming  of  Pigwiggen, 
'     The).— Drayton. 

He  raised  the  cup  to  his  pure,  sweet  lips.  See  Fatal 
Glass,  The.— Case. 

He  rests  from  toil;  the  portals  of  the  tomb.  See  Fran- 
cis Parkman. — Holmes. 

He  rides  at  their  head.  See  College  Colonel,  The. — 
Melville. 

He  rides  away  at  early  light.  See  Heart's  Call,  The. — 
Thomas. 

He  rises  and  begins  to  round.  See  Lark  Ascending, 
The. — Meredith. 

He  rose  at  dawn  and,  fired  with  hope.  See  Sailor  Boy, 
The. — Tennyson. 

He  said  that  he  was  not  our  brother.  See  same. — 
Banim. 

He  said  that  it  was  stupid.  See  Metamorphosis. 
— (Princeton  Tiger.)  ' 

He  sang  of  God,  the  mighty  source.  See  Song  to 
David,  A  (Song   of  David,  The). — Smart. 

He  sang  one  song  and  died.  See  Singer  of  One  Song, 
The. — Beers. 

He  sang  so  wildly,  did  the  boy.  See  Mother's  Love.— 
Burbidge. 

He  sang  the  airs  of  olden  times.  See  Blind  Psalmist, 
The. — Kinney. 

He  sat  aloft  on  the  rocky  height.  See  Great  White 
Owl,  The.— Thaxter. 

He  sat  among  the  woods ;  he  heard.  See  jEsop. — 
Lang. 

He  sat  at  the  dinner  table  there.  See  His  Mother's 
Cooking. — Hadley. 

He  sat  in  musing  mood  on  the  top  rail  of  a  worm  fence. 
See  Uncle  Pete  and  Marse  George. — Anon. 

He  sat  in  silence  on  the  ground.  See  Ivan  the  Czar. — 
Hemans. 

He  sat  in  the  parlor  with  Ray.  See  Interrupted  Pro- 
posal, An. — Meyers. 

He  sat  on  a  bicycle  as  straight  as  an  icicle.  See  She 
Wanted  to  Hear  it  Again. — Anon. 

He  sat  one  winter  'neath  a  linden  tree.  See  Life- 
drama,  A  (Minor  Poet,  A). — Smith. 

He  sat  the  quiet  stream  beside.  See  Greek  Idyl,  A. — 
Collins. 

He  saw  her  lift  her  eyes.     See  In  School  Days. — Anon. 

He  says:  "Shure"  and  "Bedad."  See  Stage  I^and 
(Irishman,  The). — Jerome. 

He  scrupled  not  to  eat.     See  Paradise  Lost. — Milton. 

He  sees  when  their  footsteps  falter,  when  their  hearts 
grow  weak  and  faint.  See  He  Giveth  His  Be- 
loved Sleep. — Anon. 

He  seized  her  in  the  dark  and  kissed  her.  See  It  Was. 
— {Yale  Record.) 

He  sendeth  sun,  he  sendeth  shower.  See  Father, 
Thy  Will  be  Done. — Adams. 

He  sent  her  twelve  Jacqueminot  roses.  See  Unfortu- 
nate Phrase,  An. — F.  S. 

He  sent  it  to  the  Courant.  See  His  Poem. — (Yale 
Record.) 

He  sermonized  industriously  in  his  didactic  way.  See 
Abraham  and  Ephraim. — Foss. 

He  shambled  awkward  on  the  stage,  the  while.  See 
Paganini. — Landor. 

He  sits  at  last  among  his  peers.  See  Browning. — 
Morton. 

He  sleeps  as  he  should  sleep, — among  the  great.  See 
Grave  of  Charles  Dickens,  The. — Anon. 

He  sleeps  at  last — a  hero  of  his  race.  See  Dead  Sol- 
dier, A. — -Montgomery. 

He  sleeps  not  here;  in  hope  and  prayer.  See  Profes- 
sor at  the  Breakfast-table,  The  (Robinson  of 
Leyden). — Holmes. 

He  slipped  into  an  ice-cream  saloon.  See  Inquisitive 
Customer,  An. — Anon. 

He  smiled  blandly  as  he  halted  for  a  moment.  See 
Canvassing  under  Disadvantages. — Quad. 

He  sot  bv  der  fire  a-dhinkin'.  See  He  vas  Dhinkin'. — 
Gooft. 

He  sought  Australia's  far-famed  isle.  See  Digger's 
Grave,  The.— Welch. 

He  speaks  not  well  who  doth  his  time  deplore.  See 
Heroic  Age,  The. — Gilder. 

He  SDoke,  and  as  he  ceased  he  wept  aloud.  See 
Sohrab  and  Rustum.- — Arnold. 

He  spoke,  and  Sohrab  kindled  at  his  taunts.  See 
Sohrab  and  Rustum  (Death  of  Sohrab). — Arnold. 

He  spoke  of  Burns;  men  rude  and  rough.  See  Inci- 
dent in  a  Railroad  Car,  An.— Lowell. 

He  spreads  his  wings  like  banners  to  the  breeze.  See 
Albatross,  The. — Thaxter. 

He  stands  at  the  door  of  the  church  peeping  in.  See 
Little  Pat  and  the  Parson. — Anon. 


672 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


He 


He  stands  before  his  glass  in  doubt.     See  Idyl,  An. 

— {Harvard  Lampoon.) 
He  stole  from  my  bodice  a  rose.     See  Asking. — Anon. 
He  stole  just  one  kiss.     See  Triolet. — Culbertson. 
He  stood  among  the  group  of  men  at  the  door.     See 

Strategy  of  Dave,  The. — Bishop. 
He  stood  at  the  ticket  window,  slowly  unrolling  an 

old-fashioned  leather  wallet.    See  Railroad  Clocks. 

— Anon. 
He  stood   before   the   Sanhedrim.     See   Religion   and 

Doctrine. — Hay. 
He  stood  before  the  village  store.     See  Veteran,  A.— 

Irving. 
He  stood  in  the  station,  she  at  his  side.     See  Our  Rail- 
roads.— Anon. 
He  stood  on  the  track,  young  Jimmy.     See  Coming 

from  the  Picnic. — Banner. 
He  stood  so  close  beside  her  chair,  and  looked  down  in 

her  eyes.     See  Her  Lover. — Hazlett. 
He  stood  the  last — the  last  of  all.     «See  Last  Drunkard, 

The. — Anon. 
He  stood    upon    the    world's    broad    threshold ;   wide. 

See  Wendell  Phillips. — Lowell. 
He  stood  with  a  foot  on  the  threshold.     <See  True  Vic- 
tory— Maitland. 
He  stopped  at  the  wayside  well.     See  Wayside  Well, 

The. — Learned. 
He  strove,  and  yet  he  laboured  not.     See  Poet's  Epi- 
taph.— Spingarn. 
He  struggled  to  kiss  her;  she  struggled  the  same.     See 

Original  Love  Story,  An. — Anon. 
He  swore  he  "loved  her  dearly."     See  Verse. — {Cornell 

Widow.) 
He  that  depends  upon  your  favors.     See   Coriolanus. 

— Shakespeare. 
He  that  did  sing  the-motions  of  the  stars.     See  Or- 
pheus' Song. — Greene. 
He  that  dwelleth  in  the  secret  place  of  the  most  High 

shall  abide  under  the  shadow  of  the   Almighty. 

See  Psalms  of  David,  X.CI.— Bible. 
He  that  has  light  within  his  own  clear  breast.     See 

Comus  (Light). — -Milton. 
He  that  holds   fast  the  golden  mean.     See  Content- 
ment.— Horace. 
He  that  is  by  Mooni  now.     See  Mooni. ^Kendall. 
He  that  is  down  needs  fear  no  fall.     See  Pilgrim's  Pro- 
gress (Shepherd  Boy  Sings  in  the  Valley  of   Hu- 
miliation ^  The). — Bunyan. 
He  that  is  valiant   and  dares   fight.     See    Hudibras 

(Honour) . — Butler. 
He  that  is  weary,  let  him  sit.     See  Employment. — 

Herbert. 
He  that  kills  himself  to  avoid  misery,  fears  it.     See 

Maid  of  Honor,  The. — Massinger. 
He  that  lacks  time  to  mourn,  lacks  time  to  mend.   See 

Philip  van  Artevelde. — -Taylor. 
He  that  loves  a  rosy  cheek.     See  Disdain  Returned. — 

Carew. 
He  that  many  bokes  redys.     See  Books. — .\non. 
He  that  of  such  a  height  hath  build  his  mind.  See  To  the 

Lady  Margaret,  Countess  of  Cumberland. — Daniel. 
He  that  only  rules   by  terror.     See  Captain,   The. — 

Tennyson. 
He  therefore  turning  softly  like  a  thief.     See  Enoch 

Arden . — Tennyson . 
He  thought  he  saw  a  banker's  clerk.     See  Sylvie  and 

Bnmo. — Carroll. 
He  thought  he  saw  a  buffalo.     See  Strange  Wild  Song. 

A.— Carroll. 
He  thought  he  saw  an  elephant.     See  Strange  Wild 

Song,  A  (Some   Hallucinations). — Carroll. 
He  thought  to  serenade  his  love.     See  Beneath  her 

Window. — Anon. 
"He  told  me,"  said  the  modest  maid.     See  Modest 

Maid,  The. — Moris. 
He  took  a  thousand  islands  and  he  didn't  lose  a  man. 

See  Dewey  in  Manila  Bay. — -Risley. 
He  took  in  both  hands  her  lovely  head.     See  Wedded. 

—Blake. 
He  took  me  out  to  see  the  stars.     See  Applied  A."*- 

tronomy . — Ti  ffany . 
He  took  the  children  by  the  hand.     See  Children  in 

the  Wood,  The. — Anon. 
"He  touched  her  hand,  and  the  fever  left  her."     See 

Master's  Touch,  The. — Anon. 
He  tripp'd  up  the  steps  with  a  bow  and  a  smile.     See 

Jacobite  on  Tower  Hill,  The. — Thornburv. 
He  turned  and  tossed  upon  his  bed.     See  Nightmare 

of  a  Freshman  Sign  S-vdper. — Flagg. 
He  visited  all  Europe — not  to  survey  thesumptuous- 

ness  of  palaces.     See  John  Howard. — Burke. 
He  walks  beside  his  mother.     See  Manly,  Loving  Boy, 

A. — Anon. 


He  wandered  down,   an   Orpheus  wilder-souled.     See 

Beethoven. — Stringer. 
He  wanted  to  know  how  God  made  the  worl' !     See  He 

Wanted  to  Know. — Foss. 
He  wants  a  merry  rattle.     See  Little  Boy's  Wants,  A. 

— Lawrence. 
He  warn't  no  long  faced  man  o'  prayer.     See  Father 

John . — Arkwright . 
He  was  a  big,  red-faced  Dutchman,  and,  as  he  entered 

our  office  door.     See  "Took  Nodice." — Anon. 
He  was  a  bold  Theosophist.     See  Astral  Romance,  An. 

— Drake. 
He   was  a  brisk,  waspish^  little  old  gentleman.     See 

Knickerbocker   History    of   New   York   (William 

the  Testy). — Irving. 
He  was  a  Dreamer  of  the  Days.     See  Mr.  Hammond's 

Parable — The  Dreamer. — Riley. 
He  was  a  famous  actor, — the  glory  of  his  time.     See 

Mad  Actor,  The —Webb. 
He  was  a  lad  with  dimpled  chin.     See  He  and  She. — 

Richards. 
He  was  a  lowly  missionary.     See  Rev.  Oleus  Bacon, 

D.  D. — In  Memoriam. — Anon. 
He  was  a  man!     Well  I  remember  the  day  I  waited 

upon  him.     See  Andrew  Jackson. — Lippard. 
He  was  a  man  who  stole  the  livery  of  the  court  of 

heaven.      See  Course  of    Time,  The  (Hypocrite, 

The).— Pollok. 
He  was  a  mighty  rolling  river.     See  He  and  She. — 

Anon. 
He  was  a  new  boot-black,  but  already  seemed  quite  at 

home.     See   "Whar's    de    Kerridge?" — {Virginia 

City  Chronicle.) 
He  was  a  poet,  sure  a  lover,  too.     See  "I  stood   tip- 
toe upon  a  little  hill"  (Endymion). — Keats. 
He  was  a  rat  and  she  was  a  rat.     See  Old  Rat's  Tale, 

An. — Anon. 
He  was  a  scholar,  and  a  ripe  and  good  one.     See  King 

Henry  VIII. — Shakespeare. 
He  was   a  very  courteous   man.     See  How  He   Lost 

Her. — {Somerville  Journal.) 
He  was  a  wonderful  hand  to  moralize,  husband  was. 

See  Widow  Bedott    Papers,  The   (Hezekiah  Be- 

dott).— Whitcher. 
He  was  an  ingenuous  lad,  with  the  callow  simplicity 

of  a  theological  college  still  untouched.     See  Be- 
side the  Bonnie  Brier  Bush  (His   Mother's  Ser- 
mon).— Watson. 
He  was  an  old  man,  and  he  had  a  bit  of  conductor's 

pasteboard  stuck  in  his  hat.     See  He  Didn't  Want 

the  'Scription. — -Anon. 
He  was  an  old  man  who  boarded  the  train  at  a  small 

station  in  western  New  York.     See  Going  Down 

to  Mary's. — Anon. 
He  was  a-weary.  but  he  fought  his  fight.     See  Written 

on  the  Nighi  of  his  Suicide  ("He  was  a-weary," 

etc.). — Realf. 
He  was   black   as   the   ace   of  spades,    you   see.     See 

George  Washington. — {Harper's  Young  People.) 
He  was  brisk,  waspish,  little,  old  gentleman,  who  had 

dried     and     withered     away.     See     William     the 

Testy. — Irving. 
He  was  coming  from  the  altar  when  the  tocsin  rang 

alarm.     See  Defense  of  the  Bride,  The. — Rohlfs. 
He  was  feeble  and  old  and  his  figure  was  drooping 

See  Christmas  Gift,  A.— Proudfit. 
He  was   handsome,    kind   and   gentle.      See   Give   me 

Back  my  Boy. — Garnet. 
He  was  idle  as  a  boy,  he  was  shiftless  as  a  youth.     See 

Army  Overcoat,  The. — -Archibald. 
He  was  in  logic  a  great  critic.     See  Hudibras  (Logic  of 

Hudibras ) . — Butler, 
He  was  in  love  with  truth  and  knew  her  near.     See 

Walt  Whitman. — Morris. 
He  was  in  the  Thirty-first.     It  was  during  the  Soudan- 
ese war.     See  In  his  Way  a  Hero. — Pugh. 
He  was    indeed    eloquent.     See   Character    of    Henry 

Clay. — Seward. 
He  was  jes'  a  plain,  ever'-day,  all-round  kind  of  a  jour. 

See  .lim. — Riley. 
He  was  little  more  than  a  baby,  and  played  on  the 

streets  all  day.     See  Bijah. — Lewis. 
He  was  not  all  unhappy.     See  same. — Tennyson. 
He  was   of  that  stubborn  crew.     See  Hudibras  (Re- 
ligion of  Hudibras.  The). — Butler. 
He  was  old  and  weather-beaten,  and  his  clothes  were 

the  same.     See  Old  Fisherman,  The. — Anon. 
He  was   simply   an   average  boy.     See  Average   Boy, 

The.— {Detroit  Free  Press.) 
He  was  six  years  old  and  his  name  was  Bill.     See  Bill. 

— Adeler. 
He  was  six  years  old,  just  six  that  day.     See  Little 

Boy's  Vain  Regret,  A. — Thomas. 


673 


He 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


He  was  small  and  black — a  child  of  an  inferior  race. 

See  Modern  Elijah,  A. — Yorke. 
He  was  standing  on  the  comer.     See  Christmas-tide 

Shadow,  A. — Howard. 
He  wa.s   tall  and  straif^t  as  a  mountain   pine.     See 

Saved  from  Suicide. — Anon. 
He  was  tall,  solemn  and  dignified.     See  Solemn  Book- 
agent,  The. — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
He  was  the  biggest  fool  on  earth,  and  looked  it,  too! 

See  Silly  BTlly.— Brooks. 
He  was  the  boy  of  the  house,  you  know.     See  Boy  of 

the  House,  The.^Blewett. 
He  was  the  Chairman  of  the  Guild.     See  Meeting  of 

the  Clabberhuses,  The. — Foss. 
He  was  the  "devil,"  that  boy  Jim.     See  That  Boy 

•Jim. — Stanton. 
He  wa.s  the  first  always.  Fortune.     See  Envy. — Proc- 
ter. ^,    . 
He  was  tired  of  being  shackled.     See  Broken  Chams. 

— Cox. 
He  was  uneducated,  as  that  term  goes  to-day.     See 

Greatness  of  his  Simplicity. — Delano. 
He  was  up  in  mathematics.     See  All-round  Intellectual 

Man,  .■Vn. — Masson. 
He  was  very  fond  of  her — loved  her,  perhaps.     See 

Rival  Sweetheart,  The.— Bull. 
He  was  writing  a  note  to  his  mother.     See  At  Board- 
ing-school.— Chahoon. 
He  wasn't  a  good-lookin'  feller.     See  Jack. — Stanley. 
He  wasn't  obliged  to   do  it ;  a  man   had   been   paid 

before.     See  Ringer  of  the  Chimes,  The. — Ewing. 
He  wasn't   one   of   these   shiny,   good-looking   chaps. 

See  Uncut  Diamond,  An. — Anon. 
He  wears  a  clean  collar,  and  smokes.     See  Stage  Land 

(Villain,  The). — Jerome. 
He  went  his  way  to  rest  with  weary  feet.     See  Chat- 

terton. — Russell. 
He  went  into  the  bush  and  passed.     See  Waif,  The. — 

Smith. 
He  went  to  the  war  with  a  general's  hat.     See  Like 

Washington. — Anon. 
He  who    ascends    to  mountain  tops    shall  find.     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Ambition).-7Byron. 
He  who  but  yesterday  would  roam.     See  Epitaph  for 

a  Sailor  Buried  Ashore. — Roberts. 
He  who  checks  the  child  with  terror.     See  Reprove 

Gently. — ^Anon. 
He  who   died   at    Azan  ftw.  Aziml  sends.     See  After 

Death  in  Arabia. — Arnold. 
He  who  has  once  been  happy  is  for  aye.     See  With 

Esther.— Blunt. 
He  who  hath  bent  him   o'er  the  dead.     See  Giaour, 

The  (Aspect  of  Death). — Byron. 
He  who  knows  the  history  of  the  human  family.     See 

Manual  Training  and  Intellectual  Development. — 

Anon. 
He  who  loves  truly,  grows  in  force  and  might.     See 

Ideal  Love. — Angelo. 
He  who  plants  a  tree  plants  a  hope.     See  Plant  a  Tree. 

— Larcom. 
He  who   plants   an   oak  looks   forward.     See  Forest 

Trees. — Irving. 
He  who  sits  at  home  and  dreads.  See  Victor,The. — Anon. 
He  who  thinks  before  he  drinks.      See  Think  before 

You  Drink. — Anon. 
He  who  through  the  lapse  of  years.     See  Coward,  A. 

— (Inlander.) 
He  who    would   echo    Horace's    lays.     See   Horace. — 

Sargent. 
He  who  would  start  and  rise.     See  Epitaph  for  a  Hus- 
bandman, An. — Roberts. 
He  will  come  straight.     Look,  you  lay  home  to  him. 

See  Hamlet.— Shakespeare. 
He  wills   we   may   not   read   life's   book   aright.     See 

Light. — Kimball. 
He  wore  a  brace  of  pistols  the  night  when  first  we  met. 

See  Bandit's  Fate,  The.— (Punch.) 
He  wore  a  pair  of  tattered  pants.     See  "Little  Jack." 

—Hall. 
He  works   in   ring.s,   in   magic   rings   of   chance.     See 

Turner. — Wilkinson. 
He  worried   the   cat,  he  played  rat-tat-tat.     See  Irre- 
pressible Boy,  An. — Anon. 
He  wrought  at  one  great  work  for  years.     See  Ballad 

of  Heaven,  A. — Davidson. 
He  wrought  with  patience  long  and  weary  years.     See 

Artist,  The. — Grissom. 
Headless,  without  an  arm,  a  figure  leans.     See  On  a 

Cast  from  an  Antique. — Pellew. 
Heads  that  think  and  hearts  that  feel.     See  Heads, 

Hearts,  and  Hands. — Bungay. 
Heah  I  is.  brederen  an'  sistahs.     See  Uncle  George 

was  There. — Anon. 


Heah,   yo    Rastus,   shet   yo'   little   sleepy   haid.     See 

Coon's  Lullaby,  The. — Anon. 
Health    is    nerve,    and    nerve    is    man.     See   same. — 

Beecher. 
Heap  cassia,  sandal-buds  and  stripes.      See  Paracelsus 

(Song  from  "Paracelsus"). — Browning. 
Heap  high  the  coals  until  the  fire.     See  Love's  Sacri- 
fice.— Anon. 
Heap  high  the  farmer's  wintry  hoard!     See  Corn-song, 

The.— Whittier. 
Heap  on  more  wood! — the  wind  is  chill.     See  Marmion 

(Christmas  in  the  Olden  Time). — Scott. 
Hear  a  bird  chirp  in   the  sun.      See    Snow    Song. — 

Larcom. 
Hear,  gentle  friends!  ere  yet,  for  me.     See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The  (Douglas  to  the  Populace  of  Stirling). — 

Scott. 
Hear  him  in  senates,  second-rate  at  best.     See  O'Con- 

nell. — -Lytton. 
Hear  me.  Brahma,  bending  lowly  I     See  Pariah,  The. — 

Goethe. 
Hear    me,    O    God!     A   broken    heart.      See    Hymn, 

A:  "Hear  me,"  etc. — Jonson. 
Hear  me  this  once,  my  husband;  you  who  deem.     See 

Wife's  Confession,  A. — Fane. 
Hear  now  a  legend  of  the  days  of  old.     See  Sella. — 

Bryant. 
Hear  now  this  fairy  legend  of  old  Greece.     See  Rhoe- 

cus. — -Lowell.        ' 
Hear,    sweet    spirit,    hear    the   spell.      See  Remorse 

(Song:   "Hear,  sweet  spirit,"  etc.). — Coleridge. 
Hear  the  clatter  of  those  feet.     See  District  Telegraph 

Boy,  The. — Magee. 
Hear  the  fluter  with  his  flute.     See  Amateur  Flute- 
player,  The. — Anon. 
Hear  the  loud  alarum  bells.     See  Bells,  The. — Poe. 
Hear    the    mellow    wedding-bells — golden    bells!     See 

Bells,  The.— Poe. 
Hear  the  quail  in  yonder  glen.     See  Summer  Song. — 

Anon. 
Hear   the   sledges   with   the   bells — silver   bells!     See 

Bells,  The.— Poe. 
Hear  the  tolling  of  the  bells.     See  Bells,  The.— Poe. 
Hear  the  voice  of  the  Bard.     See  Hear  the  Voice. — 

Blake. 
Hear  the  warbling  of  the  cats.     See  Cats,  The. — .\non. 
Hear  then   my   counsel;   hear   the  word   divine.     See 

Doing  for  Others. — Schaeffer. 
Hear  through  the  morning  drums  and  trumpets  sound- 
ing.    See  Jackson  at  New  Orleans. — -Rice. 
Hear  what  God  the  Lord  hath  spoken.     See  Future 

Peace  and  Glory  of  the  Church,  The. — Cowper. 
Hear  what  Highland  Nora  said.     See  Nora's  Vow. — 

Scott. 
Hear,  ye  ladies  that  despise.     See  Valentinian  (Power 

of  Love). — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Heard  vou,    O    little    children.     See    King    Midas. — 

Thaxter. 
Heard'st  thou  over  the  Fortress  wild  geese  flying  and 

crying?     See  Ban-shee,  The. — AUingham. 
Hearing  a  confused  noise.     See  Lodge  Night. — Anon. 
Hearing  that  the  noted  Mormon,  Orson  G.  Pratt,  and 

family.     See    Interviewing   Mrs.    Pratt. — (Denver 

Tribune.) 
Hearken,   child,   unto  a  story!     See  Children  in  the 

Moon. — Anon. 
Hearken  in  your  ear.     See  Biglow  Papers.  The  (Mason 

and  .Slidell:  a  Yankee  Idyll). — Lowell. 
"Hearken  unto  the  statutes  and  the  judgments  which 

I    shall   give  vou!     See  Deuteronomy  (First  Civil 

Code,    The).— Bible. 
Hearken  while  I  sing.     See  King  Christian  the  Dane. — 

Anon. 
Hearken,  ye  bards  who   err  by  rigid  rules.     See  To 

Bryant  on  his  Birthday. — Boker. 
Hear'st   thou.    Mars !     See    Coriolanus  (Coriolanus  at 

Antium). — Shakespeare. 
Heart  affluence  in  discursive  talk.     See  In  Memoriam. 

—Tennyson. 
Heart  all  full  of  heavenly  haste,  too  like  the  bubble 

bright.     See  Florentin. — Guiney. 
Heart  hunger  is  for  me  and  you.     See  Verses. — Pifer. 
Heart  of  earth,  let  us  be  gone.     See  Song  of  the  Wulf-^ 

shaw  Larches. — Rhys. 
Heart  of  the  patriot  touched  by  Freedom's  kindling 

breath.     See  Women^  of  the  Revolution. — -Blake. 
Heart  so  light,  eye  so  bright.     See  Patriotic  Song. — 

Kinkel. 
Heart,  we  will  forget  him!     See  same. — Dickinson. 
Hearts  are    galleries,    wide    and    long.     See    Heart's 

Pictures,  The. — Bice. 
Hearts,  like   doors,   can    ope   with   ease.     See   Useful 

I/ittle  Words. — Anon. 


674 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Her 


Hearts  more  or  less,  I  suppose  we  have.     See  same. — 

Beecher. 
Hearts  often    die    bitter    deaths    before.     See    Heart 

Deaths. — Anon. 
Heave  at  the  windlass! — Heave  O,  cheerly,  men!     See 

Windlass  Song. — Allingham. 
Heaven   doth   with  ns  as   we  with   torches   do.     See 

Measure  for    Measure    (Each    and   All). — Shake- 
speare. 
Heaven  from  all  creatures  hides  the  book  of  fate.     See 

Essay  on  Man,  An. — Pope. 
Heaven  is    mirrored,  love,   deep   in    thine    eyes.     See 

Aidenn. — Trask . 
Heaven  is  not  reached  at  a  single  bound.     See  Grada- 

tim.— Holland. 
Heaven  is  open  every  day.     See  Way  to  Heaven,  The. 

— Whiting. 
Heaven  opened     wide     her    ever-during     gates.     See 

Paradise  Lost  (Raphael's  Account  of  the  Creation). 

-^-Milton. 
Heaven  overarches   earth  and  sea.     iSee  same. — Ros- 

setti. 
Heaven!  'tis   delight   to   see    how     fair.      See    Song: 

"Heaven  !    'tis  delight,"    etc. — Charles,   Duke  of 

Orleans. 
Heaven,  what  an  ai^e  is  this!  vhat  race.     See  Conten- 

tation. — Cotton. 
Heavenly  fair    Urania's    son.     See    Fpithalamiuin. — 

Sheppard.  (?) 
Heavier  the   cross,   the  nearer  heaven.     i5?ee  Hea\ier 

the  Cross. — SchnioHce. 
Heavy  and  solemn  a  cloudy  column.     See  Battle,  The. 

—Schiller. 
Hecca's  done  guv   me  de   shake.     See  Song  without 

Music— Bellaw. 
Hector  and  the  guard  entered.     See  Triumph  through 

Faith. — Newberry. 
Hector  left  in  haste.    See  Iliad,  The  (Parting  of  Hector 

and  Andromache,  The). — Homer. 
He'd  nothing  but  his  violin.    See  Brave  Love.— Dallas. 
Heed  her  not,  O  Cuhoolin,  husband   mine.     See  Fand 

(Speech  of  Emer,  The). — Larminie. 
Heed  not  the  idle  assertion.     See  Literary  Pursuits  and 

Active  Business. — Everett. 
Heed  the  old  oracles.     See    Woodnotes   (Undersong, 

The). — Emerson. 
Heedless  she  strayed  from  note  to  note.     See  Waiting 

Chords,  The.— Thayer. 
Heigh-ho!     Am  I  homesick,  or  ana  I  not?     See  Dr. 

Arnold's  Prescription. — Anon. 
Heigh-ho!  daisies  and  buttercups.     See  Songs  of  Seven 

(Seven  Times  Four). — Ingelow. 
Heigh-ho!     Now   I   can   take   one   long  breath.     See 

Just  Graduated. — Max. 
Heigh-ho!  such  a  stupid  novel!  I  like  something  thrill- 
ing.    See  Visit  to  the  Oil  Regions,  A. — Anon. 
Heigh-ho !     What  frolics  we  might  see.     See  Once-on-a- 

Time.— Miller. 
Heigho!     I  wonder  how  I  shall  like  boarding-school! 

See  New  Boy,  The. — Graham. 
Heigho!     It  is  about  time  that  Monsieur  Poitrine  was 

here. — See  Tootle,  Tootle,  Too. — Sedgwick. 
Heiner,  mine   peau — so  putty  like  snow.'    See  Honez 

.Joseph  Unglesteiner. — Anon. 
"Heigho,"  yawned  one  day  King  Francis.     See  Glove, 

The. — Browning. 
Helen,  thy  beauty  is  to  me.     See  To  Helen. — Poe. 
Hell  is  the  infinite  terror  of  the  soul,  whatever  that 

may  be.     See  same. — Robertson. 
Hello,  All  I  say,  Al,  are  you  deaf?     See  First  of  .\pril. 

— Anon. 
Hello!  boys,   hold  on  a  minute.     See  Two  Ways  of 

Spending  "The  Fourth." — Denton. 
Hello,  Eddie!     Where  are  you  going?     Sec  Bold  for 

the  Right. — Wayne. 
Hello,  Fred,  where  are  you  going?     See  Honor  Thy 

Father  and  Thy  Mother. — Denton. 
Hello,  Harry!  what  have  you  got  in  that  bag?     See 

Honesty  is  the  Best  Policy. — Smith. 
Hello,  Johnnie;   what    are   you  doing?     See  Johnnie's 

Poetry. — Smith. 
Hello,  thar,  stranger!     Whar  yer  frum?     See  Young 

'Tramp,  The. — Adams. 
Helmet  and  plume  and  sabre,  banner  and  lance  and 

shield.     See  Losing  Side,  The. — Legge. 
Helot,  drink — nor  spare  the  wine.     See   Helot,   The. 

— Crawford. 
Help  me,  mister!     Lend  a  hand!     See   Boy  and  the 

Pedant,  The. — Anon. 
"Help  one  another,"  the  snowflakes  said.     See  Help 

One  Another. — Hunting. 
Help  us  to  win,  O  Lord,  on  sea  and  land.     See  War 

Prayer.— M.  J.  H. 


Hem! — So,  Mr.  Caudle;  I  hope  you  have  enjoyed  your- 
self at  Greenwich.     See  Mr.  Caudle  has  been  to 

Greenwich  Fair. — .Terrold. 
Hence,   all    ye    [or   you]   vain    delights.     See    Song: 

"Hence,  all  ye,"  etc. — Fletcher. 
Hence  away,    thou   syren ;   leave   me.     See   Steadfast 

Shepherd,  The.— Wither. 
Hence,  heart,  with  her  that  must  depart.     See  Bequest 

of  his  Heart,  A. — Scott. 
Hence!  home,  you  idle  creatures,  get  you  home!     See 

.Julius    Cffisar     (Scene   from   "Julius    Caesar"). — 

Shakespeare. 
Hence,  let  me  haste.     See  Seasons,   The   ("Hence,  let 

me,"  etc.). — Thomson. 
Hence,  loathed   Melancholy.     See   L'AlIegro. — Milton. 
Hence,  lying  world,  with  all  thy  care.     See  For  One 

Retired  into  the  Country. — Wesley. 
Hence,  rude  Winter!  crabbed  old  fellow.     See  Glee  for 

Winter,  A. — -Domett. 
Hence,  vain  deluding  joys.     See  II  Penseroso. — Milton. 
Hence  with  passion,  .sighs  and  tears.     See  Love's  Ec- 
stasy.— Heywood. 
"Henceforward,  woman,  rise.     See  Drama  of  Exile,  A 

(Tribute  to  Woman,  A). — Browning. 
"Henri  Heine" — 'tis     here!     See     Heine's    Grave. — 

Arnold. 
Henry  W.  Grady  told  us,  and  told  us  truly.     See  New 

Americanism,  The. — Watterson. 
Henry  was   every   morning  fed.     See   Child   and   the 

Snake,  The. — Lamb. 
Heow  dew  yeou  dew,  boys  and  gals.     See  About  the 

Billikinses. — Anon. 
Hepsy  has  just  come  back  from  the  state  convention. 

See  Hepsy  at  the  State  Convention. — Crocker. 
Her  aged  hands  are  worn  with  works  of  love.     See  To 

One  Being  Old.— Mitchell. 
Her  arms  across  her  breast  she  laid.     See  Beggar  Maid, 

The. — Tennyson. 
Her  beaming   eyes    of   deepest   blue.     See   Phantasy. 

— ( Yale  Record. ) 
Her  blue  eyes  shine  with  heavenly  light.    See  Romance 

of  a  Rose. — McLaughlin. 
Her  brother  was  a  man  of  Yale.     See  Crimson  and  the 

Blue,  The. — Loring. 
Her  casement  like  a  watchful  eye.     See  Balder's  Wife. 

— Gary. 
Her  chariot  ready  straight  is  made.     See  Nymphidia : 

The  Court  of  Fairy  (Queen  Mab's  Visit  to  Pigwig- 

gen). — Drayton. 
Her  dimpled  cheeks  are  pale.     See  Southern  Girl,  A. 

—Peck. 
Her  eyes  are  depths  of  dark  delight.     See  Veronica. — 

Craik. 
Her  eyes  are  homes  of  silent  prayer.   See  In  Memoriam 

(Mary). — ^'Tennyson. 
Her  eyes  are  wild,  her  head  is  bare.     See  Her  Eyes  are 

Wild. — Wordsworth. 
Her  eyes  be  like  the  violets.     See  Anne. — Reese. 
Her  eyes  that  shine  with  tender  light.     See  Brief  De- 
scription, A. — Romaine. 
Her  eves  the  glow-worme  lend  thee.     See  Night  Piece. 

To  Julia,  The.—Herrick. 
Her  eyes  were  bright  and  merry.     See  Frivolous  Girl, 

The. — (Steubenviile  Herald.) 
Her  face  is  hushed  in  perfect  calm.     See  Child's  Por- 
trait, A. — ^Dawson. 
Her  face  was  sad,  yet  oh  how  sweet!     See  Bric-a-brac. 

— Cahill.  I 

Her  face   was    very   fair   to    see.     See    Our   Sister. — 

Powers. 
Her  fairy  form,  her  modest  face.     See  She  Referred 

him  to  her  Pa. —  (Somerville  Journal.) 
Her  father  loved  me;  oft  invited   me.      See    Othello, 

the    Moor    of  Venice   (Course  of  Love,  The). — 

Shakespeare. 
Her  finger  was  so  small,  the  ring.     See  Ballad  upon  a 

Wedding,  A. — Suckling. 
Her  fingers  shame  the  ivory  keys.     See  Amy  Went- 

worth. — Whittier. 
Her  fittest  triumph  is  to  show  that  good.     See  same. — 

Lowell. 
Her  form  was  the  perfection  of  childish  beauty.     See 

Uncle  Tom's  Cabin  (Little  Eva). — Stowe. 
Her  fur  was  whiter  than  the  falling  snow.     See  Miaou- 

letta. — Dallas. 
Her  gold  hair  fallen  about  her  face.     See  History. — 

Roberts. 
Her    hair    is    like  a  golden    clue.     See  Robin  Hood, 

Songs  fr. — MacNally. 
Her  hair  was  tawny  with  gold,  her  eyes  with  purple 

were  dark.     See  Court  Lady,  A. — Browning. 
Her  hair  was  yellow,  her  cheeks  were  red.     See  Rich 

Little  Dolly,  The. — (Wide  Awake.) 


675 


Her 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Her  hands  are  cold ;  her  face  is  white.     See  Under  the 

Violets. — Holmes. 
Her  harp  is  of   the    newest  make.     See  Fin  de  Sit^cle 

.^ngel,  The. — Anon. 
Her  heart  she  lockad  fast  in  her  breast.     See  Secret 

Combination,  life. — Butler. 
Her  height?     Perhaps  you'd  deem  her  tall.     See  My 

Sweetheart. — Peck. 
Her  house  is  all  of  Echo  made.     .See  Fame. — .lonson. 
Her  lamp  the  glow-worm  lend  thee!     See  To  Julia. — 

Herrick. 
Her  languid  pulses  thrill  with  sudden  hope.     See  Hope. 

— Lazarus. 
Her  last  night  was  a  busy  one.     As  she  said  herself, 
there   was   much    to    be    done.     See    History    of 
England  (Death  of  Mary  Stuart^. — Froude. 
Her  last  words  at  parting,  how  can  1  forget.     See  Her 

La.st  Words  at  Parting. — Moore. 
Her  leghorn  hat  has  rows  on  rows.     See  Her  Leghorn 

Hat. — (  Yale  Record.) 
Her  lips     were    so     near.     See    Explanation,     An, — 

learned. 
Her  little  feet!     Beneath  us  ranged  the  sea.     See  Her 

Little  Feet.— Henley. 
Her  little  glove,  I  dare  aver.     See  Her  Little  Glove. — 

Knowles. 
Her  little  hand  in  his  he  took.     See  Modem   Instance, 

A.— (Red  and  Blue.) 
Her  little  violin.     See  Little  Dago  Girl,  The. — Meyers. 
Her  long  black  hair  danced  round  her  like   a  snake. 

See  Herodias.^O'Shaughnessy. 
Her  love,  she  said,  in  coldest  tones,  was  dead.     See 

Dead  Love. — Anon. 
Her  majesty  comes  when  the  sun  goes  down.     See  Her 

Majesty. — Abbot. 
Her  Master  gave  the  signal,  with  a  look.     See  Sweet 

Nature's  Voice. — Munby. 
Her  mother  died  when  she  was  young.     See  Kempion. 

— Anon. 
Her  mother  only  killed  a  cow.     See  Witch's  Daughter, 

The.— Whittier. 
Her  name  was  quite  familiar  to  the  Hottentots  and. 

Zulus.     See  Oiily  a  Woman. — Mas?oii. 
Her  name    was    Sarah    .Jane    Donovan.     See    Singing 

Baby,  The.— Winthrop. 
Her  pretty  feet.     See  Upon  her  Fee*. — Herrick. 
Her  prow  was  bright  v/ith  an  evil  light.     See  Demon 

Ship,  The.— \fifflin. 
Her   rosy  cheeks  are  pressed  to  mine.     See  Tintaliz- 

ing. — -Stone. 
Her  satin  fan  is  wondrouo  white.     See  Her  Satin  Fan. 

— Goodwin. 
Her  soft  voice,  singularly  heard.     See  Angel  in  the 

House,  The  (Going  to  (Church). — Patmore. 
Hrr  suffering  ended  with  the  day.     See  Death-bed,  A. 

— Aldrich. 
Her  that  yer  Honor  was  spakin'  to?     Whin,  yer  Honor? 

last  year      See  To-morrow. — Tennyson. 
Her  true  beauty  leaves  behind.    See  J'air  Virtue,  the 
Mistress    of    Philarete    (Love    Poems,    III.).  — 
Wither. 
Her  voice  is  one  of  command.     See  To  -. . — Wheel- 
wright. 
Her  voice — like   rich   and   mellow   notes.     See   Sweet 

Sixteen. — ^Banks. 
Her  voice  was  like  a  song  of  birds.     See  Child.  A. — 

Gilder. 
Her  wa-shing  ended  with  the  day.     See  Wife,  The. — 

Cary. 
Her  ways  were  gentle  while  a  babe.     See  Sinless  Child, 

The.— Smith. 
Her  ways  were  rather  frightened,  and  she  wasn  't  much 

to  see.     See  Humble  Romance,  A. — Tompkins. 
Her  window  opens  to  the  bay.     See  To  Her  Absent 

Sailor.— Whittier. 
Het  Winsome  smile!     It  beams  on  me.     See  Her  Win- 
some Smile. — Munroe. 
Her  wonted  smiles  are  turned  to  frowns.     See  Lenten 

Maid,  The. — Kennedy. 
Here,  a  little  child  I  stand.     See  Grace  for  a  Child. — 

Herrick. 
Here  a  pretty  baby  lies.     See  Upon  a  Child. — Herrick. 
Here,,  a  sheer  hulk,  lies  poor  Tom  Bowling.     See  Tom 

Bowling. — Dibdin. 
Here  a  solemn  fast  we    keep.     See  Epitaph    upon  a 

Virgin.  An. — Herrick. 
Here,  all  of  you — look,  here  is  Lady  Gay  Spanker  com- 
ing across  the  lawn.     See  Lady  Gay  Spanker. — 
Boucicault. 
Here  am  I,  for  what  end  God  knows,  not  I.     See  Co- 
lumbus.— Lowell. 
Here  am  I  starting  alone  uoon  the  wearisome  journey. 
See  Journey  of  Life,  The. — Smith. 


Here  are  bonnie  flowers.     See  Note  for  a  Nosegay,  A. — 

Webber. 
Here  are  crocuses,  white,  gold,  grey!     See  O  Dear  Me! 

— Ramal. 
Here  are  old  trees,  tall  oaks  and  gnarled  pines.     See 

Antiquity  of  Freedom,  The. — Bryant. 
Here  are    questions    on    phy.dcs    and    grammar.     See 

Boy's  Complaint,  The. — Anon. 
Here  are  sweet  peas,  on  tiptoe  for  a  flight.     See   "  I 
stood  tiptoe  upon  a   little  hill"  (Sweet   Peas). — 
Keat^. 
Here  are  the  houses  of  the  dead.     Here  youth.     See 

Greenwood  Cemetery. — Wallace. 
Here  are  the  needs  of  manhood  satisfied!     See  On  the 

Heights. — Dowden. 
Here  at  school  we  gather  daily.     See  Work  and  Play. — 

Anon. 
Here,  at  the  change  of  ways,  the  steel  steed  halts.     See 

Junction,  The. — Fairbanks. 
Here  at  the  country  inn.     See  Forefather,  The. — Bur- 
ton. 
Here  at  the  fountain's  sliding  foot.     See  Garden,  The. 

— Marvoll. 
Here  at  the  halfway  House  of  Life  I  linger.     See  To 

Harriett. — Buchanan. 
Here  awa',  there  awa',  wandering  Willie.     See  Wan- 
dering Willie. — Burns. 
Here  be  grapes  whose  lusty  blood.     See  Faithful  Shep- 
herdess, The  (Satyr,  The).— Fletcher. 
Here  bring  your  purple  and  gold.     See  Flowers  for  the 

Brave. — Thaxter. 
Here  burns  my  candle  out ;  ay,  here  it  dies.     See  King 
Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III.  (Battle  of  Towton).— Shake- 
speare. 
Here,  Charmian,  take  my  bracelets.     See  Cleopatra. — 

Story. 
Here  comes   Jack.     See   King    Henry    IV.,    Pt.    I. — 

Shakespeare. 
Here  continueth  to  rot  the  body  of  Francis  Chartres. 
See  Epitaph  upon  Colonel  Chartres. — Arbuthnot. 
Here  doth  Dionysia  lie.     See  Epitaph  on  Dionysia. — 

Anon. 
Here,  e'en  the  sturdy  democrat  may  find.     See  Library, 

The.— Saxe. 
Here,  ever  since  you  went  abroad.     See  Absence. — 

Landor. 
Here  falls  no  light  of  sun  or  stars.     See  Taliesin-     A 

Masque. — Hovey. 
Here  find  the  poet's  scrip — his  ready  pen.     See  Bayard 

Taylor.— Betts. 
Here  for  the  world  to    see  men  brought  their  fairest. 

See  Tower  of  Flame,  The.— Gilder. 
Here — for  they  could  not  help  but  die.     See  Epitaph. 

— Freneau. 
Here  from  the  brow  of  the  hill  I  look.     See  Old  Mill, 

The  —English. 
"Here  gran 'ma,  here's  a  present,  it  has  come  a  distance 

too.     See  Grandma's  Shamrocks. — -Sutton. 
"Here,  guards!"  pale  with  fear,  Dionysius  cries.     See 

Damon  and  Pythias.^Peter. 
"Here  haply,  too,  at  vernal  dawn."     See  Humble  Peti- 
tion of  Bruar  Water,  The. — Burns. 
Here  Havard,   all  serene,  in    the    same   strains.     See 

Characters  of  Actors. — Churchill. 
"Here  he  is,  Jenny!  what  there  is  of  him."     See  Gabe 

and  the  Irish  Lady. — -Wyeth. 
Here,  here,  oh  here,  Eiirydice.     See  Orpheus  to  Beasts. 

—Lovelace. 
Here  Holy  Willie's  sair  worn  clay.     See  Epitaph  on 

Holy  Willie.— Bums. 
Here  I  am,  a  little  creature.     See  Speech  for  a  Very 

Small  Girl.— Kavanaugh. 
Here  I  am,  and  how  do  you  do?     See  Month  of  May. 

— (Youth's  Companion.) 
Here  I  am.  darling,  at  home  in  time  for  dinner  after 

all.     See  Silent  Partner,  The. — Matthews. 
Here  I  am,  most  four  feet  high.     See  Little  Boy's  Plea, 

A. — Anon. 
"Here  I  am,"  said  the  New  Year.     See  New  Year's 

Talk,  A.— Richards. 
Here  I     come    creeping,     creeping    everywhere.     See 

Voice  of  the  Grass,  The. — Boyle. 
Here  I   keep  a-workin'  and  a-dustin' — a-workin'  and 
a-dustin'.     See  All  the  Comforts  of  a  Home. — 
Crosby. 
Here  I  stand  awaiting  them.     See  Floral  Offerings. — 

Anon. 
Here  I'd  come  when  weariest!     See  Of  His  Choice  of  a 

Sepulchre. — Lang. 
Here  I'm    sitting,    stitching,    darning.     See    "In    the 

Garret  are  Our  Boys." — Anon. 
Here,  in  my  rude  log  cabin.     See  Battle  of  New  Or- 
leans, The. — English. 


676 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Here 


Here,  in  my  snug  little  fire-lit  chamber.     See  Alone  by 

the  Hearth. — Arnold. 
Here  in  the  country's  heart.     See  Country  Faith,  The. 

—Gale. 
Here  in  the  dark  what  ghostly  figures  press!     See  In 

Tesla's  Laboratory. — Johnson. 
Here,  in  this  leafy  place.     See  Before  Sedan. — Dobson. 
Here,  in  this  little  Bay.     See  Magna  est  Veritas. — Pat- 
more. 
Here  in  this  room  where  first  we  met.     See  Meeting 

after  Long  Absence. — Perry. 
Here  in  this  sequester'd  close.     See  Garden  Song,  A. — ■ 

Dobson. 
Here  in  this  wild,  primeval  dell.     See  Pipe  of  Pan,  The. 

—Allen. 
Here  is  a  cruel  Psamtek.  see.     See  Story  of  the  Cruel 

Psamtek,  The. — Anon. 
Here  is  a  lily  and  here  is  a  rose.     <See  Decoration  Day. 

—Best. 
Here  is  a  little  boy.     See  Strange  Little  Boy,  The. — 

Anon. 
Here  is  a  problem,  a  wonder  for  all  to  see.     See  Dust. — ■ 

Thaxter. 
Here  is  a  saloon,  gilded,  glazed,  embossed,  polished, 

and  fairly  phosphorescent.     See  Break  the  Bottle. 

— Woolley. 
Here  is  a  story,  which  in  rougher  shape.     See  Aylmer's 

Field. — Tennyson. 
Here  is  a  thing  that  happened.     Like  wild  beasts  in  a 

den.     See  Halbert  and  Hob. — Browning. 
Here  is  Franco.     Now  for  a  song.     See  Fortune  Teller, 

The.— M.  D.  S. 
Hero  is  money  to  pay  for  your  book,   Robert.     See 

Please  Do  not  Speak  So. — .\non. 
Here  is  my  altar,  naked,  and  I  an;  a  Priestefs!     See 

Beauty  of  Piety,  The. — Edf^arton. 
Here  is  my  hand.     See  Fallen. — Montgomery. 
Here  is  one  leaf  reserved  for  me.     See  Verses  Written 

in  an  Album.  —Moore. 
Here  is  the  breath  of  the  soa.     See  Rifhard  Hakluyt's 

Men. — Rice. 
Here  is  the  old  church.     No*^  I  shall  see  it  all.     See 

Picture?  of  Memory. —Reade. 
Here  is  the  place;  right  over  the  hill.     See  Telling  the 

Bees. — Whittier. 
Here  is  the  poem  of  me,  the  entertainer  of  children. 

See  New  Hey  Diddle  Diddle. — (London  Clnrion.) 
Here  is  your  grand  menagoiie.     See  Carl's  Menagerie. 

— (The  NiiTHery.) 
Here  it  comes  sparkling.     See  Cataract  of  I^odo.re,  The. 

— Southey. 
Here  it  is!     The  same  ungodly  mess  T  have  to  str<<ii;hten 

up. — See  How  I  Made  My  Fortune. — Ka-<'anaugh. 
Here,  .Takie,  I've  just  been  and  borrovved  Mrs.  Brown's 

recipe   book.     See  Watermelon  Pickles. — {Detroit 

Free  Press.) 
Here,  Jennie,  is  a  nice  hood  I  found  on  Fifth  Avenue. 

See  Lost  and  Found. — Brewster. 
Here,  .John,  you  drive  the  ci>ws  up,  while  yer  m.«>r  brines 

out  the  pails.    See  Why  He  wouldn't  Sell  the  Farm. 

— Dayton. 
Here  .Tohnson  lies,  a  sage  by  all  allowed.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Dr.  Johnson. — Cowper. 
Here  let  us  leave  him;  for  his  shroud  the  snow.     See  On 

a  Grave  at  Grindolwald. — Myers. 
Here  let  us  stand — windows,  and  roofs,  and  leafs.     See 

Death  of  Robespierre,  The.-p-Brownell. 
Here   lies   a   common   man.     His   horny   hands.     See 

Mortis  Dignitas. — Burton. 
Here  lies  Factotum  Ned  at  last.    See  On'Factotum  Ned. 

— Moore. 
Here  lies  Fred.     See  Fpitaph  on  Prince  Frederick. — 

Anon. 
Here  lies    good    Witticus,     whose    jests.     See    Wit's 

Epitaph.  A. — Anon. 
Here  lies    Johnny    Pidgeon.     See    On    John    Dove. — 

Burns. 
Here  lies  our  good  Edmund,  whose  genius  was  such. 

See    Retaliation,  The   (Edmund    Burke). — Gold- 
smith. 
Here  lies     our     mutton-loving     king.     See     Epigram 

Written  on  the  Bed  Chamber  Door  of  Charles  II. — 

Rochester. 
Here  lies  our  Sovereign  Lord  the  King.  .  See  Epitaph 

on  Charles  IT. — Rochester. 
Here  lies  sweet  Isabell  in  bed.     See  Ephibol  on  My 

Dear  Love  Isabella. — Fleming. 
Here  lies  the  noble  warrior  that  never  blunted  sword. 

See  Epitaph  on  the  Earl  of  Leicester. — Raleigh. 
Here  lies,  whom  hound  did  ne'er  pursue.     See  Epitaph 

on  a  Hare. — Cowper. 
Here  lieth  one,  who  did  most  truly  prove.     See  On  the 

O.xford  Carrier. — Milton. 


Here  lingering,  Jessie.     See  .lessie's  Book.  -  Larcom. 
Here  lived  the  soul  enchanted.     See  Poe's  Cottage  at 

Fordham . — Boner. 
Here  Love,  the  slain,  with  Love,  the  slayer,  lies.     See 

Play  of  King  Lear,  The. — Watson. 
Here  might  I  pause  and  bend  in  reverence.     See  Scale 

of  Minds. — Wordsworth. 
Here  now  I  stand,  upon  life's  outer  verge.     See  Close 

to  Ninety.— -Bryant. 
"Here,  O  lily-white  lady  mine."     See  Handsel  Ring, 

The. — Houghton. 
Here  of  a  truth  the  world's  extremes  are  met.     See  At 

the  Grave  of  Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti.— Bell. 
Here  on  this  blessed  Thank.sgiving  night.     See  Bitter- 
sweet (Hymn,  The). — Holland. 
Here  on  this  verdant  spot,  where  Nature  kind.     See 

Chase,   The   (Bk   III.— Somerville. 
Here,  passenger,  beneath  this  shed.     See  Epitaph  on  a 

Living  Author. — Cowle.v. 
Here  pause.     These  graves  are  all  too  young  as  yet. 

See  Adonais. — Shelley. 
"Here,   Pedro,  while  I  quench  these  candles,   hold." 

See  Murillo's  Trance.— Preston. 
"Here,    Phoebe,    sweet    Phoebe,    sweet,    .sweet."    See 

Little  Advir.e,  A. — Lonergan. 
Here  pitch  our  tents,  even  here  in  Boswell  field.     See 

King  Richard  III. — Shakespeare. 
Here  rest  the  great  and  good.     Here  they  repose.     See 

Graves  of  the  Patriots,  The. — Persival. 
Here  rest   the   relics   of   a   friend   below.     See   Tray's 

Epitaph. — Pindar. 
Here    rests,  and  let  no  saucy  knave.     See  Epitaph  on 

the  Tombstone  Erected  over  the  Marquis  of  .\ngle- 

sea's  Leg. — Canning. 
Here   rests  his  head  upon  the  lap  of  earth.     See  Elegy 

Written  in  a  Country  Churchyard. — Gray. 
"Here  rests  in  God."     'Tis  .all  we  read.     See  In  a  Grave-, 

yard. — Anon. 
"Here  rests  the  heart  whose  throbbing  shook  the  earth! 

See  At  Luther's  Grave,  Wittenburg. — Gilder. 
Here  room  and  kingly  silence  kcejj.     See  By  the  Pacific 

Ocean. — Miller. 
Here  she  lies,  a  pretty  bud.     See  Upon  a  Child  that 

Died.— Herrick. 
Here  she  was  wont  to  go,  and  heie,  and  here!     See  Sad 

Shepherd,  The  (/Eglamour's  Lament). — Jonson. 
Here  side  by  side  sit  the  Blue  and  the  Gray.     See  Blue 

and  the  Gray,  The.— Willard. 
Here  Sidney  lies,  he  whom  perverted  law.     See  Epitaph 

on  Algernon  Sidney. — Southey. 
Here,  sit  ye  down  'longside  of  me:  I'm  getting  old  and 

gray.     See  Fight  of  Lookout,  The. — Gary. 
Here,  soldiers,  you  must  either  conquer  or  die.     See 

History   of    Rome    (Hannibal   to    his    Army). — 

Livy. 
Here  sparrows  build  upon  the  trees.     See  .My  Early 

Home. — Clare. 
Here  stands  a  good    apple   tree.     See  Apple-howling 

Songs,  Two. — Anon. 
Here  summoned  by  traditions  sweet.     See  Alma  Mater. 

— Anon. 
Here,    sweep    these    foolish    leaves    away.     See   Mid- 
summer.—Holmes. 
Here  the  glacier  ground  the  stone.     Sec  Yosemite. — 

Cook. 
Here  the    San    Antonio    river.     See    Legend    of    the 

Missions,  A. — Harby. 
Here  the  sisters  nine  we  see.     See  Nine  Muses,  The. — 

Bellamy  and  Goodwin. 
Here  their  portraits  hang  together.     See  Thae  Auld 

Laird's  Secret. — Braden. 
Here  they  are,  sir.     See  Stealing  Apples. — Vinton. 
Here  they  give  me  greeting.     See  Changeling  Grateful, 

A. — Peabody. 
Here  through  this  deep  defile  he  needs  must  pass.     See 

William  Tell  (William  Tell  in  Wait  for  Gessler).- 

Schiller. 
Here  unmolested,  through  whatever  sign.     See  Task, 

The  (.Poet  in  the  Woods,  The). — Cowper. 
Here  we    come    with    our    dollies    dear.     See    Little 

Mothers,  The. — Anon. 
Here  we  go  to  the  branches  high!     See  In  the  Swing. — 

Bumstead. 
Here  we   have   been    sitting   as    quiet   as   mice.     See 

Pungent. — ^Anon. 
Here  we  sit  side  by  side,  one  behind    another,  all  in 

rows.     See  Riding  on  a  Rail. — Dallas. 
Here  we  stop  for    the    night.     See    Mouse-hunting. — 

Dodge. 
Here,  where  [vrr.  when]   precipitate  spring,  with  one 

light  bound.     See  Ffesulan  Idyl. — Landor. 
Here  where  the  sunlight.     See  Sospiri  di  Roma  (White 

Peacock,  The). — Sharp. 


677 


Here 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Here,  where  the  world  is  quiet.     Sec  Garden  of  Proser- 
pine, The. — Swinburne. 
Here  where  the  under  earth  his  head.     See  Etsi  Omnes, 

Kgo  Non. — Myers. 
Here  with   my   beer   I   sit. — See  Cigars   and   Beer. — 

Arnold.  ' 

Here  writ  was  the  world's  history  by  his  hand.     See 

Raleigh's  Cell  in  the  Tower. — Rossetti. 
Hero  y'  are?     Black  your  boots,  boss.     See  Bootblack, 

"The. — Anon. 
Here,  you  policeman,  ju-st  step  inside.     See  Retribu- 

tiop. — Proudfit. 
Hereafter,  when   these  thing*  shall  be  hi.story.     See 

Declaration  of  Irish  Rights  (Wrongs  of  Ireland). — 

Grattan. 
Herein  is  love:  to  take  this  strange,  sweet  thing.     See 

Herein  is  I^ove. — Best. 
Here's  a  big  wa«hing  to  be  done.     See  Housekeeper's 

Soliloquy,  The. — Gage. 
Here's  a  hand  to  the  boy  who  has  courage.     See  Our 

Heroes. — Gary. 
Here's    a    health   to    ane   I  lo'e   dear.      See  Jessy.— 

Bums. 
Here's  a  health  to  the  girl  with  hair  of  gold.     See  Girl 

of  Our  Town,  The.— R.  R.  K. 
Here's   a   health   to   them   that's   awa.     See  tame. — 

Burns. 
Here'p  a  lesson  all  should  heed.     See  Try,  Try  Again. 

— Anon. 
Here's  a  letter  from  Robin,  father.     See  Ship-boy's 

Letter,  The. — Anon. 
Here's  a  lyric  for  September.     See  September.— -Sher- 
man. 
Here's  a  man,  sir,  come  after  the  footman's  place.     See 

Footman  Wanted,  A. — Colmari. 
Here's  a  precept,  young  man,  you  should  follow  with 

care.     Sec  Three  Lovers,  The. — Anon. 
Here's  a  pretty  fix  to  be  in.     See  Unwilling  Witness, 

The.— Anon. 
Here's    a    pretty    go!     Elected    to    Parliament.     See 

NicholEis  Nickleby  (Mr.  Gregsbury  and  the  Depu- 
tation).— Dickens. 
Here's  a  song  for  Old  Dobbin,  whose  temper  and  worth. 

See  Old  Dobbin.— Cook.  ^ 

Here's  Autumn,  with  her  horn  of  plenty.     See  Autumn. 

-^-Anon. 
Here's  his  ragged  "roundabout."     See  Little  Coat,  The. 

—Riley. 
Here's   the   garden   she   walked   across.     See  Garden 

Fancies. — Browning. 
Here's  the  gold  cup  all  bossy  with  satyrs  and  saints. 

See  Melting  of  the  Earl's  Plate. — Thornburj'. 
Here's  the  price  for  them  'ere  chickens,  marm.     See 

Aunt  Debby's  Speculation. — McConaughy. 
Here's  the  spot.     Look  aroimd  you.     Above,  on  the 

height.     See  Caldwell  of  Springfield. — Harte. 
Here's  to  him  that  grows  it.     See  Haymaker's  Song, 

The.—  Austin. 
Here's  to  the  boy  who'.s  not  afraid.     See  Boys  We  Need, 

The. — Anor. 
He^e'^  to  thf  end  of  the  century,  lads.     See  Last  Party, 

The.— (Cornell  Widow.) 
Here's  to  the  hearts  that  love  us.     See  "Hearts  of 

Gold." — Anon. 
Here's  to  the  hero  of  Moultrie.     See  Our  Ccjlors  at  Fort 

Sumter. — Aldrich. 
Here's  to  the  maiden  of  bashful   fifteen.     See  School 

for  Scandal,  The  (Let  the  Toast  Pass).— Sheridan. 
Here's  to  thee,   old  apple  tree.      See  Apple-howling 

Songs,  Two. — Anon. 
"Herman,"  said  a  Poydras  street  merchant  clothier. 

See  Teaching  him  the  Business. — Anon. 
"Herman,"   said   HofTeiistein,   ab   he   glanced   over  a 

book.     See  How  to  Get  Rich. — Anon. 
Heroes  and  martyrs!     They  are  the  men  of  the  hour. 

See  Heroes  aiid  Martyrs. — Chapin. 
Heroes  have  gone  out;   quacks   have  come  in.     See 

On    Heroes  and  Hero    Worship    ("Heroes   have 

^one,"  etc.). — Carlyle. 
Heroic  deeds  are  not,  as  some  apostles  of  the  common- 
place.    See  Plain  Tale  of  1893,  A.— (New   York 

Tribune.) 
Heroism  and  history  are  related  as  cause  and  effect. 

See  Heroism  aiid  History. — Bateman. 
Herr    Schnitzerl  made  a  philosopede  [or  velocipede]. 

See  Schnitzerls  Philosopede. — Inland. 
He's  a  blacksmith,  proud  of  his  lot.     See  Ten  Pound 

Ten. — Bungay. 
"He's  a  rare  man."     See  Brothers,    and   a   Sermon 

(Wreck  of  "The  Grace  of   Sunderland"). — Inge- 
low. 


He's  dead    and    gone!     He's    dead    and    gone!     See 
Ranger's  Grave. — Southej'. 


He's  devotion  itself  all  the  summer.     See  Nothing  but 

Leaves.— M.  H.  G. 
He's  drunk!     I    say,    it's    too   much    to    stand.     See 

I'nclc  Deal's  Lecture.—  Coale. 
He's  gane,  he's  gane!     He's  frae  us  torn.     See  F.legj' 

on  Captain  Matthew  Henderson. — Burns. 
"He's  gone  at  last,  old  Niger's  dead."     See  Niger.— 

Lessing. 
He's  gone, — gone  for  two  days.     See  Masked  Ball,  The. 

— Auon. 
He's  juist  as  sweet  as  sweet  can  be.     See  Oor  Wee 

Laddie. — Lyle. 
He's  smart — our  boarder's  smart,  they  s.ay.     See  .\rt 

Critic,  An. — Foss. 
Hester   Prynne   went,    one   day,    to   the   mansion   of 

Governor    Bellingham.     See    Elf-child    and    the 

Minister,  The. — Hawthorne. 
"Hey,  Bud!     O  Bud!"  rang  out  the  gleeful  call.     See 

Loehrs  and  the  Hammonds,  The. — Riley. 
Hey?     I    wa'n't    a    sayin'    nauthin'.     See    Railway 

Matinee,  The. — Burdette. 
"Hey,  .Johnny  McGinius,  where  are  yei!?"     See  Pyro- 
technic Polyglot. — Baker. 
Hey,  laddie    hark,  to   the   merry,    merry    lark.      See 

Master  Sky-lark  (Sky-lark's  Song.  The).— Bennett. 
Hey  nonny,  nf)!     M?u  are  fools  that  wish  to  die.     See 

Hey  Nonny,  No! — Anon. 
Hey!     Now  the  day  dawns.     See  Night  is  Near  Gone, 

The. — Montgomery. 
Hey,  now  the  day's  dawning.     See  Night  is  Nigh  Gone. 

— Montgomery  (Cunningham). 
"Hey,  Swipesey!     Kid  Sixey's  got  hurted."     .See  Kid 

Sixey's  Christmas. — Penney. 
Hey,  you  swelled-up  turkey  feller!     See  November's 

Come. — Lincoln. 
Hey-o,  Lucy!     See  .\nti-slai\g  Society,  The.— Anon. 
Heyo!  you  mergers,  dah,  I  like  to  know.     See  Sunday 

Fishin'. — Robertson. 
Hi  and  whoop-hoorav,  boys!     See  On  the  Sunnj'  Side. 

—Riley. 
Hi,  blackey!     See  Quack  Doctor,  The. — Auon. 
Hi,  chillun!  what  on  earf  dis  mean  dat  yo'  doan'  ansah 

me?     See  My  Chillun's  Pictvah. — Culbertson. 
"Hi,  Harry  Holly,  halt,  and  tell."     See  Our  Folks.— 

Lynn. 
Hid  by  the  garret's   dust,   and  lo.st.     See  Forgotten 

Books,  The.— Collier. 
Hidden  by  the  shad.v  tangle.     See  Finished  Nest,  A. — 

Anon. 
Hide  and  seek!     Two  children  at  play.     See  Hide  and 

Seek. — Goddard. 
Hide  me,  mother.     My  fathers  belong'd  to  the  church 

of  old.     See  Wreck,  The. — Tennyson. 
Hie  away,  hie  away!  See  Waverley  (Hie  Away). — Scott. 
Hie   upon    hielands    [or   high    upon    highlands].     See 

Boimie  George  Campbell. — Anon. 
Hieru.salem,   my  happy  home.     See   New  Jerusalem, 

The. — Dickson. 
High  above  all  a  cloth  of  state  was  spred.     See  Faerie 

Queene,  The  (House  of  Pride,  The). — Spenser. 
High  above  hate  I  dwell.     See  Sanctuary.— Guiney. 
High  above   us,   slowly   sailing.     See   Clouds,    The. — 

Anon. 
High  and  low,  the  spring  winds  blow.     See  How  the 

Wind  Blows! — Anon. 
High  at  the  window  in  her  cage.     See  Caged  Bird,  A. — 

Jewctt. 
High  grace,   the  dower  of    queens;  and    therewithal. 

See  Her  Gifts.— Rossetti. 
High  grew  the  snow  beneath  the  low-hung  sky.     See 

Axe,  The. — Crawford. 
High  hopes  that  burn  [or  burned]  like  stars  sublime. 

See  To-day  and  To-morrow. — Massey. 
High  in    the   breathless   hall   the   minstrel   sate.     See 

Song  at  the  Feast  of  Brougham  Castle  upon  the 

Restoration  of  Lord   Clifford,  the  Shepherd,  etc. 

—  -Wordsworth. 
High  license  puts  no  restriction  upon  the  buyer.     See 

Demerits  of  High  License,  The. — Seelye. 
High  o'er   the    black-backed    skerries,    and    far.     See 

Light-house,  The. — Anon. 
High  o'er  the  snow-capped  poaks  of  blue  and  stars  are 

out  to-night.     See  Jem's  Last  Ride.- — Stansbury. 
High  on  a  bright  and  sunny  bed.     See  Poppy,  The. — 

Taylor. 
High  on  a  leaf-carv'd  ancient   oaken  chair.     See  Old 

Baron,  The. — Miller. 
High  on  a  throne  of  royal  state,  which  far.     See  Para- 
dise Lost  (Satan). — Milton. 
High  on    the    apple-tree    was    a    lovely,    pink    apple- 

blo.=sora.     See  Apple-blossom,  An. — Anon. 
High  on  the  branch  of  a  walnut  tree.     See  Squirrel's 

Arithmetic,  The. — Anon. 


678 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Historically 


High  on  the  Palatine  Hill,   within  the  cool  courts  of 

his  palace.     See  Calpurnia. — Boyesen. 
High  on  the  rocky  steep  did  once  a  gray  old  castle 

stand.     See  Brothers,  The. — Holley. 
High  on  the  top  of  an  old  pine-tree.     See  Little  Doves, 

The. — Anon. 
High  on  the  world  did  our  fathers  of  old.     See  Under 

the  Stars  and  Stripes. — Cawein. 
High  time,  high  time  the  cows  were  home.     See  After 

the  Cows. — Cheney. 
High  towered   the   palace   and   its   massive   pile.     See 

Zophiel ;  or.  The  Bride  of   Seven  (Palace   of    the 

Gnomes). — -Brooks. 
High  up  in  the  tower  of  the  old  moss-covered  church. 

See  Village  Bell,  The.— Anon. 
High  up  within  yon  gray  old  tower.     See  Old  Church 

Bell,  The.— Longfellow. 
High  [or  hie]  upon  Highlands  [or  Hielandsl.     See  Bon- 
nie George  Campbell. — Anon. 
High  walls    and    huge    the    body    may    confine.     See 

Sonnet  Written  in  Prison. — Garrison. 
High-born  Helen,  round  your  dwelling.     See  Helen. — 

Lamb. 
Higher,  higher,  purified  by  suffering  fire.     See  .Aspira- 
tion.— Birkhead. 
Higher,   higher,   will  we  climb.     See  True  Aspiration 

of  Youth,  The. — Montgomery. 
Higher!     It  is  a  word  of  noble  import.     Sec  Higher. — 

Anon. 
High-lving,    sea-blown    stretches    of    green    turf.     See 

Beds  of  Fleur-de-lyt<,   The.— Oilman. 
High-spirited  friend.     See  Noble  Balm,  The. — .lonson. 
Highway,  since  you  mv  chief  Parnassus  be.     See  As- 

trophel  and  Stella,  Sonnet  LXXXIV.— Sidney. 
Hillo,    hillo,   hillo,   hillo!     <Sce   Snowshoe   Song,   A.— 

Weir. 
Him  have  I  seen! — oh,  sigh  to  cheer.     See  Wagoner  of 

the  AUeghanies.  The. — Read. 
Him  only  in  all  I>ondon  mu.st  she  see  to  bid  good-bye. 

See   Mr.    Graham    and    I-ady   Clementina. — Mac- 
Donald. 
Hiram  was  a  quiet,  peaceable  sort  of  a  Yankee.     See 

Yankee  and  the  Dutchman's  Dog,  The. — Anon. 
His  arm  was  round  my  shoulder  laid.     See  Hour  of 

Trial,  .\ii. — Anon. 
His  arms   with   strong   and   firm   embrace   her   dainty 

form  infold.     See  Uncertain  Pledge,  An. — {Yale 

Record.) 
His  biography   is    written   in   blood    and    tears.     See 

Lincoln,  the  Tender-hearted. — Bolton. 
His  body  lies  upon  the  shore.     <See  Richard  Somers. — 

Eahtmau. 
His  book  is  successful,  he's  steeped  in  renown.     See 

I      Poet  of  Fa.shion,  The. — Smith. 
His  broad-brimmed    hat    pushed    back   with    careless 

air.     See  Vaquero. — Miller. 
His  brow  is  seamed  with  line  and  scar.     See  Portrait 

of  a  Warrior,  The. — Ramal. 
His  cap  was  too  thick,  and  his  coat  was  too  thin.     See 

Grumbler,  The. — Ooodale. 
His  cherished  woods  are  mute.     See  At  Chappaqua. — 

Benton. 
His  Christ  came  unto  him,  and  from  the  pain.     See 

Judas  the  Second. — Saltus. 
His  dagger   concealed   for   the   stroke.     See   Hostage, 

The.— Schiller. 
His  echoing  axe  the  settler  swung.     See  Settler,  The. — 

Street. 
His  engagement  is  ended  at  last.     See  Too  Much  of  It. 

— Birdseye. 
His  eye  was  stern  and  wild.     His  cheek  was  pale  and 

cold  as  cl.ay.     See  His  Eye  was  Stern  and  Wild.— 

Anon. 
His  face  js  truly  of  the  Roman  mould.     See  Character, 

A. — T$ates. 
His  falchion   flashed    along  the   Nile.     See   Napoleon 

at  Rest. — Pierpont. 
His  feet  were  shod  with  music  and  had  wings.     See 

Milton.— Mifflin. 
His  figure,  when  he  first  appeared  in  Parliament,  was 

strikingly   graceful   and   commanding.     See   Lord 

Chatham's  Eloquence. — T.  B.  Macaulay. 
His  first   mustache   was    just    in   bud.     See   Football 

Maiden,  The. — {Lake  Forest  Student.) 
His  footprints  have  failed  us.     See  Dead  in  the  Sierras. 

— Miller. 
His  form  was  fair,  his  cheek  was  health.     See  Death 

and  the  Drunkard. — Anon. 
His  fourscore  years  and  five.     See  Whittier.— Sangster. 
His  full    name   was    Percival   William   Williams.     See 

Wee  Willie  Winkie. — Kipling. 
His  golden    locks    Time    hath    to    silver    turn'd.     See 

Farewell  to  Arms,  A. — Peele. 


His  Grace  of  Marlborough,  legends  say.  See  Tradition 
of  Conquest. — Piatt. 

His'  grandeur  he  derived  from  heaven  alone.  See  Poena 
upon  the  Death  of  his  Late  Highness,  Oliver, 
Lord  Protector  of  England,  Scotland,  and  Ireland, 
A  (On  the  Death  of  Oliver  Cromwell). — Dryden. 


H 


hair  was  black,  his  eye  was  blue.     See  Shule  Agra. 

— Anon. 
s  hand  at  last!     By  his  own  fingers  writ.     See  Hope 

Deferred. — Anon . 
s  heart  a  maiden  robbed  him  of.     See  Fair  Exchange, 

A. — Birdseye. 
s  home  is  yonder  in  the  sky.     See  Archer,  The. — 

Sherman. 
s  kiss  is  sweet,  his  word  is  kind.     See  Boatman  of 

Kinsale,  The. — Davis. 
s  laurels  fresh  from  song  and  lay.     See  Our  Autocrat. 

— Whittier. 
s  learning  such,   no  author,   old  or  new.     See  Ben 

.lonson's  Commonplace  Book. — Falkland. 
s  life  was  private;  safely  led,  aloof.     See  Characteri- 
zation, A. — Taylor. 
s  listening  soul  hears  no  echo  of  battle.     See  Nellie. — 

Field. 
s  little   dimpled   hands   were   crossed.     See   Child's 

Prayer,  The. — Anon. 
s  locks    are    whitened    with    the    snows    of    nigh    a 

hundred  years.     See  Myles  O'Hea. — Kickham. 
s  love  enwrapped  her  as  a  robe.     See  Mistress  of  the 

Manse,  The. — Holland. 
s  love  was  mine  no  more,  mother,   I  saw  it  in  his 

eyes.     See  Tale  of  a  Temptation. — Horton. 
s  loving   heart    had    never    learned.     See    Pierrot's 

Valentine. — Goodman. 
s  Majesty,  Satan,  one  morning  awoke.     See  Devil 

in  Search  of  a  Wife,  The.— Porter. 
s  mercies    are    new    every    morning.     See    Sunrise 

among  the  Hills. — Craik. 
s  name  is  George,  generally  speaking.      See  Stage 

Land  (Stage  Hero,  The). — Jerome. 
s  name  was  Alexander  Bartholemew  McKay.     See 

Buster,  The. — Foss. 
s  name  was  Johnny — Johnny  Bohn.     See  Message 

from  Bony,  A. — Anon. 
s  name  was  Schlausheimer,  vot  mendedt  furmtoor. 

See  Schlausheimer  Don't  Gonciliate. — Von  Boyle. 
s  name  was  William   Mullins.     See  Agnostic,  The. 

— Snyder. 
s  petticoats  now  George  cast  off.     See  George  and 

the  Chimney-sweep. — Taylor, 
sport   I   love;  he's  in  a  proper  mood.     See  Douglas 

(Scene  from  Douglas,  A). — -Home. 
s  presence  makes  the  spring  to  blush.     See  Ubique. 

— {Hamilton  Literary  Monthly.) 
8    puissant    sword    unto    his     side.     See    Hudibras 

(Hudibras'  Sword  and  Dagger). — Butler. 
s  real  name  was  Philip  Garner,  but  the  Bar  X  Ranch 

knew  him  only  as  "Boots."     See  "Boots." — Anon. 
s  science  is  inexpressibly  subtle,  directly  taught  him 

by  his  Maker.      See  Stones  of  Venice,  The  (Man 

of  Glenius,  The). — Ruskin. 
s  sorrow  was  my  sorrow,  and  his  joy.     See  Brother 

and  Si.«ter. — Eliot. 
s  soul  extracted  from  the  public  sink.     See  Scurri- 
lous Scribe,  The. — Freneau. 
s  steed  was  old,  his  armor  worn.     See  Cargamon. — 

Beers. 
s  step  was  unsteady  and  his  hands  trembled.     See 

Little  Tom. — Lewis, 
s  study!     With    what    authors    is    it    stored.     See 

Moral  Essays. — Pope. 
s  thoughts    are    whirling,    whirling.     See    Madman, 

The. — Denison. 
s  tongue  was  touched  with  sacred  fire.     See  Henry 

Ward  Beecher. — Phelps. 
s  verse  was  carved  in  ivory  forms  undying.     See 

Leconte  de  Lisle. — Gosse. 
s  was    the    swiftest    foot,    the    merriest    eye.     See 

Promoted. — Bacon. 
s  way  in  farming  all  men  knew.     See  At  Marshfield. 

— Wilkinson. 
s  window   is   over  the   factory   flume.     See   Widow 

Brown's  Christmas. — Trowbridge. 
s  words  seemed  oracles.     See  Effect  of  Oratory  on  a 

Multitude. — Croly. 
s  work  is  done,  his  toil  is  o'er.     See  Faithful  unto 

Death. — Titherington. 
St.  hist,  ye  winds,  ye  whispering  wavelets,  hist!     See 

Two  Sonnet-songs,  I. :    The  Sirens  Sing. — Marzials. 
st!     I  see  the  stir  of  glamour  far  upon  the  twilight 

wold.     See  Vision  of  Battle,  A. — Dobell. 
storically    speaking,    there    is    no    more    pernicious 

saying.     See  Man  and  the  Cause,  The. — Lodge. 


679 


History 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


History  does  not  disclose  a  greater  statesman   than 

tMmund  Burke.     See  Edmund  Burke. — Prindle. 
History  is  a  great  romance.     See  American  Ideals. — 

Anon. 
History  is  full  of  battles.     See  Battle  of  Bennington, 

The.— Phelps.       ^  ^^ 

Hither!  hither!     O,  come  hither!     See  Sylvia;  or,  The 

'  May  Queen  (Osm^'s  Song). — Darley. 
Hither,  meadow  gossip,  tell  me.     See  same. — Beach. 
Hit's  a  mighty  fur  ways  up  the  Far'well  I.ane.     See 

My  Honey,  My  Love. — Harris, 
Ho,  a  song  by  the  fire !     See  Dartmouth  Winter-song. — 

Hovey. 
Ho,  ancient  bully,  beaten  to  your  knees.     See  Nikol- 

son's  Nek. — Russell. 
Hoi  City  of  the  gay !     See  Return  of  Napoleon  from  St. 

Helena,  The. — Sigourney. 
Ho,  every  one  that  thirsteth,  come  ye  to  the  waters. 

See  Isaiah  (Ho,  Every  One    that  Thirsteth!).— 

Bible. 
"Ho,  for  a  frolic,"  said  Johnny  the  ptout.     See  Johnny 

the  Stout. — Anon. 
Hoi  for  the  hills  in  summer!     See  Berrying  Song. — 

Larcom. 
Ho,  girls,  for  a  frolic!     The  sleigh's  at  the  gate.     See 

Old-time  Sleigh-ride,  The. — Anon. 
Ho!  ho!     \t     last     I've     found     you.     See     Death's 

Triumph. — Anon. 
Ho!  it's  come,  kids,  come!      See  Billy  and  his  Drum. — 

Riley. 
Ho !  Moro,  Moro,  my  dog,  where  are  you?     See  Dumb 

Savior,  The. — Bryan. 
Ho!  pony.     Down  the  lonely  road.     See  Army  Corre- 
spondent's Last  Ride. — Townsend. 
Ho,  pretty  bee,  did  you  see  my  croodlin'  doo?     See 

Croodlin'  Doo. — Field. 
Ho!  mretty  page,  with  the  dimpled  chin.     See  Age  of 

Wisdom,  The. — Thackeray. 
Ho,  reapers  of  life's  harvest.     See  same..' — Anon. 
Ho,  sailor  of  the  sea!     See  How's  My  Boy? — Dobell. 
Ho,  skipijer  on  the  sea-shore!     See  Troll-man,  The. — 

Hewins. 
Ho !  the  old   snow-man.     See  Uncle  Mart's   Poem. — 

Riley. 
Ho,  there!  fisherman!  hold  your  hand!     See  Second 

Mate,  The.— O'Brien. 
Ho,  thou  art  a  tardy  comer.     See  To  a  Conservatory 

Flower. — Newcomer. 
Ho!  thou  traveler  on  life's  highway.     See  Hold  the 

Light. — Anon. 
"Ho!  to  the  top  of  the  towering  wall!"    See  Bricklayers, 

The. — Barnes. 
Ho!  watchman,  ho!     See    Watchman's    Call,    The. — 

Anon. 
Ho!  why  dost  thou   shiver   and    shake.     See    Gaffer 

Gray. — Holcroft. 
Ho,  woodsmen  of  the  mountain-side.     See  Cry  to  Arms, 

A. — Timrod. 
Ho!  ye  wardens  of  the  bells.     See  New  Year's  Chime, 

A. — Anon. 
Ho!  ye  who  at  the   anvil   toil.     See   No    Work   the 

Hardest  Work. — Ome. 
Hoarse  Msevius  reads  his   hobbling  verse.     See  Epi- 
grams.— Coleridge. 
Hobbledy  Hops,  he  made  some  tops.     See  Hobbledy 

Hops. — Anon. 
Hobnelia.  seated  in  a  dreary   vale.     See    Shepherd's 

Week,  The  (Thursday,  or  the  Spell).— Gay. 
Hobson  went  toward  death  and  hell.     See  Hobson  and 

his  Men. — I^oveman. 
Hodge  held  a  farm,  and  smiled  content.     See  Case 

Altered,  The. — Anon. 
Hold  back  thy  hours,  dark  Night,  till  we  have  done. 

See    Maid's    Tragedy,    The    (Wedding    Song). — 

Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Hold  diligent  converse  with  thy  children.     See  same. — 

Doudney. 
Hold  fast  to  the  dear  old  Sabbath.     See  Hold  Fast  to 

the  Dear  Old  Sabbath. — Vickers. 
Hold   hard,    Ned!     Lift   me    down   once    more.     See 

Sick  Stock-rider,  The. — Gordon. 
Hold  high  the  woof,  dear  friends,  that  we  may  see. 

See  On  a  Piece  of  Tapestry. — Santayana. 
Hold  on,  Harry,  and  help  me  eat  this  watermelon.     See 

"Only  Cooning." — Denton. 
Hold  on,  stranger?     Turn  out  yonder  close  to  the  wall. 

See  Orthod-ox  Team,  The. — Brooks. 
Hold  the    lantern    aside,    and    shudder    not    so.     See 

Searching  for  the  Slain! — Anon. 
Hold  to  your  ear  the   beautiful  shell.     See  Sea-shell, 

The.— H.  W. 
Hold  you  the  watch  to-night?    See  Hamlet. — Shake- 
speare. 


Hold  your    tongue,    you    foolish    fellow!     See    News- 
telling  Bore,  The. — Anon. 
Holding  aloft  the  bloody  knife,   he  exclaimed.     See 

Vindication  of  Virginius. — Kellogg. 
Holiness  on  the  head.     See  Aaron. — Herbert. 
Hollow-eyed  and  pale,  at  the  window  of  a  jail.     See 

Drummer's  Bride,  The. — Anon. 
Holy  Bible,  book  divine.     See  same. — Burton. 
Holy  Father,  cheer  our  way.     See  Light  at  Evening- 
time. — Robinson. 
Holy,  holy,  holy.    Lord    God    Almighty!     See  Hymn 

for  Trinity  Sunday. — Heber. 
Holy  of   England,   since  my    light   is   short.     See  On 

First  Entering  Westminster  Abbey. — Guiney. 
Home  again,  home  again,  from  a  foreign  shore!     See 

Home  Again. — Pike. 
Home  from  college  came  the  stripling.     See  College 

Training,  A. — Lincoln. 
Home  from  the  observatory.     See  Stella. — Crandall. 
Home,  home,  can  I  forget  thee.     See  Home,  Can  I 

Forget  Thee! — Anon. 
Home!     It    is    a    charmed    word.     See  Home. — Tal- 

mage. 
Home  of  my  childhood!  I   cannot  forget   thee.     See 

Home  of  My  Childhood. — Anon. 
Home  of  the   Percys'   high-born  race.     See  Alnwick 

Castle. — Halleck. 
Home     once     more!     Home     from     California!     See 

Returned  Brother,  The. — McBride. 
Home  they  brought   her   lap-dog  dead.     See  same. — 

Brooks. 
Home  they  brought  her  sailor  son.     See  Recognition, 

The. — Sawyer. 
Home  thev  brought  her  warrior  dead.     See  Princess, 

The  (Home  they  Brought,  etc.). — Tennyson. 
Home  they  brought  him,  slain  with  spears.     See  Prin- 
cess, The  (Home). — Tennyson. 
Home   thou    return'st    from    Thames,    whose    Naiads 

long.     See  Ode  on  the  Popular  Superstitions  of  the 

Highlands  of  Scotland,  An. — Collins. 
Honest  Davy,  the  teamster,  lives  down  by  the  milk 

See  Davy/  the  Teamster.^Thomson. 
Honest  little  Peter  Grey.     See  Peter  Grey. — Cary. 
Honest  Stradivari  made  me.     See  Violin's  Complaint, 

The.— Thayer. 
Honesty,      capacity,     and     industry.     See     National 

Progress. — McKinley. 
Honey-sweet,    sweet   as   honey   smell   the   lilies.     See 

Summer-sweet. — Tynan-Hinkson. 
Honor  and  shame  from  no  condition  rise.     See  Essay 

on  Man,  An  (Greatness). — Pope. 
Honor    is    the    acquisition    and    preservation    of    the 

dignity  of  our  nature.     See  Duelist's  Honor,  The. 

— England. 
Honor  is  the  subject  of  my  story.     See  Julius  Caesar 

(Cassius  against  Caesar). — Shakespeare. 
Honor  to  the  people  of  Massachusetts,  who  for  twenty- 
three  years  kept  in  the  Senate.     See  Eulogy  on 

Charles  Sumner.— Schurz. 
Honored  be  the  hero  evermore.     See  Martyr  of  the 

Arena,  The. — Sargent. 
Hooker's     across!     Hooker's     across!     See     Hooker's 

Across. — Boker. 
Hoot!    ye  little  rascal!     Ye  come  it  on  me  this  way. 

See  Christmas  Baby,  The. — Carleton. 
Hope  humbly,  then ;  with  trembling  pinions  soar.     See 

Essay  on  Man,  An. — -Pope 
Hope  is  like  a  harebell,  trembling  from  its  birth.     See 

sam,e.- — Rossetti. 
Hope,  is  this  thy  hand.     See  Fickle  Hope. — Morris. 
Hope  leads  the  child  to  plant  the  flower,  the  man  to 

sow  the  seed.     See  Hope. — Adams. 
Hope,   of  all  passions,   most  befriends  us  here.     See 

Night  Thoughts  (Hope). — Young. 
Hope  smiled  when  your  nativity  was  cast.     See  Flowers 

on  the  Top  of  the  Pillars  at  the  Entrance  of  the 

Cave. — Wordsworth. 
Hopes  grimly  banished  from  the  heart.     See  Exiles. — 

Hayne. 
Hoping  it's  no  harm,  I've  come  to  interview  you.     See 

Mark  Twain  and  the  Reporter. — Clemens. 
Horace    still    charms    with    graceful    negligence.     See 

Essay  on  Criticism,  An  (Horace). — Pope. 
Horatio,  I  am    dead.     See    Hamlet     (Reputation). — 

Shakespeare. 
Horatio,  of  ideal  courage  vain.     See  Feigned  Courage. 

—Lamb. 
Horatio,  thou  art  e'en   as  just   a  man.      See  Hamlet 

(Friendship). — Shakespeare. 
"Horatius   Flaccus,    B.   C.   8."     See  To   Q.    H.    F.— 

Dobson. 
Horny  hands  and  swarthy  face.     See  Blacksmith  of 

Bottledell,  The. — Thompson. 


680 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Howi  fair 


Horrible  dens,  sir,  aren't  they?     See  Magic  Wand,  The. 

— Sims. 
Hortense  is  haughtye,  and  no  smile.     See  Hortense. — 

Urquhart. 
Hot  coffee  in  an  old  oyster  can.     <See  Army  Bean,  The. 

—Anon. 
Hot  in  the  parching  sunlight  the  Tartar  city  lay.     .See 

"Old  Glory"  at  Pekin. — Brown. 
Hot  philosophers.     See  Philosophy. — Marston. 
Hour  by  hour,  with  skillful  pencil,  wrought  the  artist. 

See  Roman  Legend,  A. — Harvey. 
Hour  of   an   empire's  overthrow.     See  Belshazzer.- — 

Croly. 
Houses,  indeed!     I  calls  'em  reg'lar  ram-shackle  nut- 
shells.    See   Mrs.    Brown   on    Modern    Houses. — 

Sketchley. 
How  absurd  are  the  sophisms  and  predictions  by  which 

the  advocates  of  existing  abuses.     See  Example  of 

America,  The. — Jeffrey. 
How  absurd  it  is!     How  utterly  absurd!     See  Water 

Color,  A. — Anon. 
How  all  occasions  do  inform  against  me.     See  Hamlet 

(Soliloquies  from  Hamlet). — Shakespeare. 
How  amiable  are  thy  tabernacles,  O   Lord  of  Hosts. 

—See  Psalms  of  David,  LXXXIV.— BtWc. 
How  are  songs  begot  and  bred?  See  Songs. — Stoddard. 
How  are  thy  servants  blest,  O  Lord!     See  Ode:  "How 

are  Thy  servants,"  etc. — -Addison. 
How  are  ye,  boys?     No,  thank  ye.  Bill,  nothing  to 

drink  to-day.     See  Signing  the  Pledge. — Anon. 
How  are  you  so  cheerful.     See  School-mistress,  The. — - 

Larcom. 
How,    as   a    spider's    web    is    spun.     See   To    Jessie's 

Dancing  Feet. — Ellwanger. 
How  beautiful  appear  on  the  mountains.     See  Isaiah 

(.Joyful  Messenger,  The). — Bible. 
How  beautiful  is  night!     See  Thalaba  the  Destroyer 

(Night  in  the  Desert). — Southey. 
How  beautiful  is  the  rain!     See  Rain  in  Summer. — 

Longfellow. 
How  beautiful  is  youth!     How  bright  it  gleams.     See 

Morituri    Salutamus  ("How    beautiful,"  etc.).— 

Longfellow. 
How  beautiful  she  was,  the  little  maiden.     See  Laleet. 

— Martin. 
How  beautiful  the  world  is!     The  green  earth  covered 

with   flowers.     See   Fireside   Colloquy. — Leather- 
man. 
How   beautiful   this  night!     The  balmiest  sigh.     See 

Queen  Mab  (Night). — Shelley. 
How  beautiful  to  live  as  thou  didst  live !     See  Tennyson 

— Coates. 
How  big  was  Alexander,  pa?     See  same. — Anon. 
How  bird-like  o'er  the  flakes  of  snow.     See  Christ- 

kindlein. — Ruckert. 
How  bitter  sounds  their  frigid  worldliness!     I  loathe  it 

all.     See  B.  B.  Romance,  The. — ^Fawcett. 
How  bleak  and  drear  the  earth  would  seem.     See  No 

Flowers. — Anon.  i 

How  blessed,  how  beautiful  is  the  rain!     See  Rain,  The. 

— Anon. 
How  blessed  is  he  who  leads  a  country  life.     See  To  My 

Honoured  Kinsman,  John  Dryden. — Dry  den. 
How   blest   has  my   time    been,    what    joys    have   I 

known.     See  Happy  Marriage,  The. — Moore. 
How    bold    the    imagination    and    how    strong.     See 

Carven  Shores,  The. — Rand. 
How  brief  this  drama  of  our  life  appears!     See  same. — 

Anon. 
How  bright  are  the  honors  which  await  those.     See 

Tribute  to  Our  Honored  Dead,  A. — Beecher. 
How  bright   the   unfading  evergreen.     See   Unfading 

Evergreen,  The.— ;- Anon. 
How  calm,  how  beautiful  comes  on.     See  Lalla  Rookh 

(Calm). — Moore. 
How  calm  they  sleep  beneath  the  shade.     See  Green- 
wood Cemetery.- — Kennedy. 
How    calmly    sinks    the    parting   sun!     See    Sabbath 

Evening. — Prentice. 
"How  came,"  I   asked  a  little  maid.     See  How  the 

Dimples  Came. — Anon. 
How  came  I  here?     Is  it  caprice  or  chance?     See  Don 

Carlos. — Schiller. 
How  came  she  by  that   light?     See  Macbeth  (Lady 

Macbeth,  Sleep  Walking  Scene). — Shakespeare. 
How  can  I  cease  to  pray  for  thee?     See  Somewhere. — 

Dorr. 
How  can  I  sing  of  my  mistress's  chiding?     See  Dirge 

of  the  Householder,  The. — Powell. 
How   can   it   be   that    I    forget.     See   Recollection. — 

Aldrich. 
How  can  ye,  being  evil,  speak   good   things?     See  St. 

Matthew  (Idle  Words}.— Bible. 


How  ceaseless  is  thy  flow,   O   sire  of  streams.     See 

Apostrophe  to  the  Mississippi. — Wilcox. 
How  changed  is  here  each  spot  man  makes  or  fills!     See 

Thyrsis. — Arnold. 
How   cold   are   thy   baths,   Apollo.     See   Jugurtha. — 

Longfellow. 
How   could   I,   sweet,   have  sung  another  song?     See 

Dance  Song. — Adams. 
How  cracked  and  poor  his  laughter  rings.     See  Old 

Beau,  The. — Fawcett. 
How  dark  it  grows!     The  griev'd  light  of  day.     See 

Burden  of  Night,  The.— Elliot. 
How   de  do,  mister?     How   de  do?     See  Scene  in   a 

Photograph  Gallery. — Anon. 
How    de    do,    Mrs.    Sinclair?     Thanks,   awfully.     See 

Afternoon  Tea,  An. — Griffith. 
How  dear  to  dis  heart  vas  my  grandschild,  Loweeza. 

See  Dot  Leedle  Loweeza. — Adams. 
How  dear  to  my  [or  this]  heart  are  the  scenes  of  my 

childhood.     See  Old  Oaken  Bucket,  The.— Wood- 
worth. 
How  dear  to  my  heart  are  the  scenes  of  my  childhood. 

See  Old  Oaken  Bucket  (Parody).  The. — ^^Anon. 
How  dear  to  my  heart  is  the  loud-smelling  onion.     See 

Moss-Covered  Onion,  The. — Thatcher. 
How  delicious  is  the  winning.     See  Song:  "How  deli- 
cious," etc. — Campbell. 
How  delighted  Fanny  will  be!     See  Bonnet   for  My 

Wife,  A. — Meyers.    . 
How  delightful  it  is  to  be  in  the  country!     See  Viola's 

Answer. — McBride. 
How    delightfully    cozy    the    parlor   now    looks.     See 

Aline's  I^ove  Song. — Anon. 
How  desolate  were  nature,  and  how  void.     See  God 

Everywhere  in  Nature. — Wilcox. 
How  did  we  beat  the  captain's  colt.     See  How  We 

Beat  the  Captain's  Colt. — Rae-Brown. 
How  difficult)  alas!  to  please  mankind.     See  Praying 

for  Rain. — Wolcott. 
How  do  I  love  thee?     Let  me  count  the  ways.     See 

Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese.  XLIII. — Browning. 
How  do  the  leaves  grow.     See  I>esson  of  the  Leaves. — 

Anon. 
How  do  the-  rivulets  find  their  way?     See  Unseen. — 

Ames. 
How  do  the  robins  build  their  nests?     See  What  Robin 

Told.— Cooper. 
How  do  we  know  what  hearts  have  vilest  sin?     See 

Judge  Not. — Anon. 
How  do  you  do.     See  I'm  a  man. — Anon. 
How  do  you  do,   Cornelia?     I   heard  you  Were  sick. 

See  Aunty  Doleful's  Visit. — Dallas. 
How  do  you  do?     Does  any  one  ob  you  folks  want  a 

situation?     See     Stage-struck     Darkey,     The. — ■ 

White. 
How  do  you  do?     Hallo!  whar'd  yeou  cum  from?     See 

Just  from  the  City. — McBride. 
How  do  you  know  that  she  cannot  hear?     See  Horw 

Do  You  Know? — Hutchinson. 
How  do  you  like  the  new  teacher,  boys?    See  S.  P.  C.  A.,  ■ 

The. — Anon. 
How  do  you  like  to  go  up  in  a  swing.     See  Swing,  The. 

— Stevenson. 
How  does  the  tide  come?     Not  all  in  one  rising.     See 

Slow  and  Sure. — Coolidge. 
How   does    the    water   come   down    at    Lodore?     See 

Cataract  of  Lodore,  The. — Southey. 
How  does  your  lordship?     See  Princes  in  the  Tower, 

The. — -Hey  wood. 
How    doth    the    busy    nurseryman.     See    Seedsman, 

The. — Burdette. 
How  doth  the  little  busy  bee.     See  Baby  of  the  Future, 

The.— (Outlook.) 
How  doth  the  little  busy  bee.     See  Busy  bee.  The. — 

Watts. 
How  doth  the  little  busy  mule.     See  Busy  Mule.  Tho  — 

Anon. 
How  dreary  would  the  meadows  be.     See  Suppose. — 

Gary. 
How  d'ye  do,  big  folks?     I've  come  to  say.     See  Little 

Mischief. — Anon. 
How  d'ye  do,  dear?     I've  been  awaiting  your  appear- 
ance.    See  Lost  and  Won. — Chapman. 
How  eloquent  is  silence!     See  Silence. — Anon. 
How  fades  that  native  breath.     See  Sweets  that  Die. — 

Mitchell. 
How  fading  are  the  joys  we  dote  upon !     See  Parting, 

The. — Norris. 
How  fair  is  the  rose!     See  same. — Watts. 
How  fair  thou  art,  O  little  book.     See  "Owed"  to  My 

Pocket-book. — Anon. 
How  fair  thou  art  the  poets  long  have  known.     See 

Sonnet,  The. — Herbin. 


681 


How  falls 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


How  falls  it,  oriole,  thou  hast  come  to  fly.     See  To  an 

Oriole. — Fawcett. 
How  far,  how  very  far  it  seemed.     See  Brushwood. 

—Read. 
How  far  [or  long],   O   (Sitiline,   wilt   thou   abuse  our 

patience?     See     First    Oration     against    Catiline 

(Catiline  Denounced).— Cicero. 
How  far  to  Oaklands  now,  sir?     Well,  I  should  think 

it  were  five  mile  quite.     See  Sal  Parker's  Ghost. — 

CoUer. 
How  fares  it  with  the  happy  dead.    See  In  Memoriam. 

— Tennyson. 
How  fares  my  lord?     See  Douglas  (Norval). — Home. 
How    fares     my    lord?    speak,    Beaufort.     See    King 

Henry  VI..  Pt.  II.  (Death  of  Cardinal   Beaufort). 

— Shake8p)eare. 
How  fares  your  majesty?      See  King  John. — Shake- 
speare. 
How  fast  you  write,  Lynn.     See  Poor  Work  don't  Pay. 

—Rook. 
How  fine  has  the  day  been!  how  bright  was  the  sun! 

.See  Summer  Evening,  A. — Watts. 
How  fresh,  O  Lord,  how  sweet  and  clean.     See  Flower, 

The. — Herbert. 
How   frightfully   energetic   you   are,    riding   so   early, 

after  dancing  till  three!     See  What's  in  a  Name? 

—Gay. 
How  glorious  fall  the  valiant,   sword  in  hand.     See 

Youthful  Valor. — Tyrtseus. 
How  glows  each  patriot  bosom  that  boasts  a  Yankee 

heart.     See  "United  States"  and  "Macedonian," 

The  (I.).— Anon. 
How  gracefully  the  young  Bertine.     <Se«  Romance  of 

a  Year,  The. — Sherwood. 
How  grateful  the  relief  which  the  friend  of  mankind, 

the   lover   of   virtue,   experiences.     See   Glory   of 

Washington,  The. — Brougham. 
How    great    he    is,    decked    in    gold    and    gems.     See 

Naaman,  the  Ivcper. — Willis. 
How    happy   could   I   be   with    either.     See   Beggar's 

Opera  ("  How  happy,"  etc.). — Gay. 
How  happy  is  he  born  and  taught.     See  Character  of 

a  Happy  Life,  The. — Wotton. 
How  happy  was  I  when  I  saw  her  lead.     See  From  the 

Daphnaida. — Spenser. 
How  hard  a  thing  it  is  to  part.     jSee  Loss,  A. — (Judy.) 
How   hard   is   fortune.     Changeful   hearts   like   these. 

See  Pride  against  Pride. — Marston. 
How  hard,  when  those  who  do  not  wish.     See  Art  of 

Book-keening,  The. — Blanchard. 
How   hardly   here   and  there  a  hackney  coach.     See 

Morning  in  London. — Swift.  ' 

How  he  fell  from  heaven  they  fabled.     See  Paradise 

Lost  (Distance). — Milton. 
How    humble,    yet    how    hopeful    he    could    be!     See 

Abraham     Lincoln     (Patriot  President,    The).  — 

Taylor. 
How  I  do  wish  I  was  a  man.     See  Little  Things. — 

Anon. 
How  I  ever  came  to  do  it,  I  don't  know.     <See  My 

First  and  Last  Appearance. — Turner. 
How    I    hate    to    see    him    there.     See    My    Rival. — 

Chandler. 
How  I  love  the  hour  of  twilight.     <See  Door  to  Memo- 
ry's Hall,  The.— Winton. 
How    I    love   those   dear   old   wrinkles.     See   To   My 

Mother. — Anon. 
"How  1  should  like  a  birthday!"  said  the  child.     <See 

Stevenson's  Birthday. — Miller. 
How    ill    this   taper   burns!     Ha!  who    comes    there? 

See  .lulius  Csesar. — Shakespeare. 
How  in  Heaven's  name  did  Columbus  get  over.     See 

Columbus  Crossing  the  Atlantic. — Clough. 
"How  in   the  world   did   I   happen   to   bloom."     See 

Goldenrod. — Anon. 
How  infinite  and  sweet.  Thou  everywhere.     See  I.abo- 

rare  est  Orare. — Woolsey. 
How  infinitely  superior  must   appear  the   spirit   and 

principles  of  General  Washington.     See  Foreign 

Policy  of  Washington,  The. — Fox. 
How  is  the  boy  this  morning?     Why  do  you  shake 

your  head?     See  Road  to  Heaven,  The. — Sims. 
How  is  the  spirit  of  a  free  people  to  be  formed.     See 

Our  National  Character. — Everett. 
How  it  blows!     How  it  rains!     I'll  not  turn  out  to- 
night.    See  Cigarette  Rings. — Sterry. 
How  it  sings,  sings,  sings.     See  Song  of  the  Sea  Wind, 

The. — -Anon. 
How    kind    and    thoughtful    father    is.     See    Happy 

Christmas,  A. — Anon. 
How  languisheth  the  primrose  of  Love's  garden!     See 

On  Phillis'  Sickness. — Lodge. 
How  large  unto  the  tiny  fly.     See  Fly,  The. — Ramal. 


How  like  a  fawning  publican  he  looks!  See  Merchant 
of  Venice,  The  (Shylock's  Soliloquy  and  Address). 
— Shakespeare. 

How  like  a  Winter  hath  my  absence  been.  See  Son- 
nets, XCVII. — Shakespeare. 

How  like  her!  but  'tis  she  herself.  See  In  the  Mile 
End  Road. — Levy. 

How  like  the  leper,  with  his  own  sad  cry.  See  Buoy- 
bell,  The.— Turner. 

How  little  fades  from  earth  when  sink  to  rest. — 
See  Shake.speare. — Sterling. 

How  little  flattering  is  a  woman's  love!  See  Philip 
van  ArteveUle. — Taylor. 

How  little  reck.s  it  where  men  die.  See  Place  where 
Men  should  Die,  The. — Barry. 

How  long  before  the  snow  comes?  See  same. — Denton. 

How  long,  great  God,  how  long  must  I.  See  Aspi- 
ration, The. — Norris. 

How  long  he  sat — this  Cajsar  of  the  stage.  See  Death 
of  Louis  Napoleon. — Cranch. 

How  long  it  seems  since  that  mild  April  night.  See 
Seaward.— Thaxter. 

How  long  I've  loved  thee,  and  how  well.  See  Love's 
Wisdom. — Deland. 

How  long  [or  far],  fO  Catiline,]  wilt  thou  abuse  our 
patience.  See  First  Oration  against  Catiline  (Ora- 
tion against  Catiline). — Cicero. 

How  long,  O  lion,  hast  thou  fleshless  lain?  See  Lion's 
Skeleton,  The.— Turner. 

How  looks  Appledore  in  a  storm?  See  Appledore  in 
a  Storm. — Lowell. 

How  many  a  mighty  mind  is  shut.  See  Germs  of 
Greatness. — Cook. 

How  many  a  time  have  I.     See  Swimming. — Byron. 

How  many  acts  are  there  in  a  tragedy?  Five,  I 
believe.     See  Tragedy,  A. — Talmage. 

How  many  colonies  have  been  more  wisely  and  hu- 
manely and  liberally  administered.  See  (Centen- 
nial Oration  (Effect  of  American  Example). — Win- 
throp. 

How  many  colors  here  do  we  see  set.  See  Spectrum, 
The. — Monkhouse. 

How  many  deeds  of  kindness.  See  Deeds  of  Kindness, 
— Anon. 

"How  many  in  your  family?"the  census-taker  said. 
See  Out  of  her  Reckoning. — Anon. 

"How  many  miles  to  Baby-land?"  See  Baby-land. — 
Cooper. 

How  many  new  years  have  grown  old.  See  Old  Lover, 
An. — Jones. 

How  many  paltry,  foolish,  painted  things.  See  I 
Give  Thee  Eternity. — Drayton. 

"How  manv?"  said  our  good  captain.  See  Balder 
(Sea  Ballad).— Dobell. 

How  many  strive  to  force  a  way.  See  Forcing  a  Way. 
— Anon. 

How  many  summers,  love.  See  Poet's  Song  to  his 
Wife,  The.— Procter. 

How  many  thousands  of  mv  poorest  subjects.  See 
King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II.  (Henry  the  Fourth's  So- 
liloquy on  Sleep). — Shakespeare. 

How  many  times,  as  through  the  rooms  I  hasten.  ,  See 
same. — Gates. 

How  many  times  do  I  love  thee,  dear?  See  Torris- 
mond  (How  Many  Times). — Beddoes. 

How  many  verses  have  I  thrown.  See  Verses  Why 
Burnt. — Landor. 

How  many  voices  gaily  sing.  See  How  Many  Voices. 
— Landor. 

How  many  went  from  happy  homes.  See  same. — 
Anon. 

How  much  a  man  is  like  his  shoes!  See  Man  and  his 
Shoes. — Anon. 

How  much  do  I  love  thee?  See  How  Much  Do  You 
Love  Me? — Townsend. 

How  much  so  ever  in  this  life's  mutations.  See  same. 
— Anon. 

How  much  the  heart  may  bear,  and  yet  not  break! 
See  Endurance. — Allen. 

How  must  the  soldier's  tearful  heart  expand.  See 
Miss  Nightingale. — Smith. 

How  near  me  came  the  hand  of  death.  See  For  a 
Widower  or  Widow. — Wither. 

How  near  one  to  the  other  is  every  part  of  the  world. 
See  President  McKinley'o  Last  Address. — Mc- 
Kinley. 

How  near  to  good  is  what  is  fair.     See  same. — -Jon^on. 

How  neatly  all  the  seeds  are  laid.  See  Little  Seed- 
cells,  The. — Anon. 

How  nice  the  windows  look  this  evening.  See  Ben, 
the  Orphan  Boy. — McBride. 

How  now! — An't  please  your  grace.  See  King 
Henry  VIII.  (Queen  Catherine). — Shakespeare. 


682 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


How  that 


How  now,  Shylock;  what  news  among  the  merchants? 

See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The. — Shakespeare. 
How    now,    spirit  I  whither    wander    you?     See    Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream  (Puck  and  the  Fairy). — 

Shakespeare. 
How  now,  what  news  with  you?     See  King  Richard 

III. — Shakespeare. 
How  oft   I've  watched  thee  from  the  garden   croft. 

See  Orion. — Turner. 
How  oft,  when  thou,  my  music,  music  play'st.     See 

Sonnets,  CXXVIII.— Shakespeare, 
^low  often  in  the  pummer-tide.     See  Across  the  Fields 

to  Anne. — Burton. 
How  often  is  that  upstart  of  a  Himker  coming  here 

now  to  see  our  Mildred?     See  Tale  of  a  Dog,  The. 

— Anon. 
How  often,  when  life's  summer  day.     See  Friends. — 

Landor. 
"How  old  art  thou?"  said  the  garrulous  gourd.     See 

Gourd  and  the  Palm,  The. — Anon. 
"How  old   I   am!     I'm   eighty  years!"     See  Carcas- 
sonne.— Nadaud  (Sherwood). 
How  old  may  Phillis  be,  you  ask.     See  Phillis's  Age. — 

Prior. 
How  orient  is  Thy  beauty'     How  divine'     See  Sonnet : 

"How  orient,"  etc. — Quarles. 
How  peacefully  the  sunlight  fell.     See  Late  October. — 

Jordan. 
How  plainly  I  remember  all!     See   Schoolroom   Idyl, 

A. — Going.  \ 

How  pleasant  it  is  at  the  end  of  the  day.     See  Way  to 

be  Happy; — Taylor. 
How  pleasant  'tis  the  courtier  clan  to  see!     See  Kings 

and  Courtiers. — Wolcott. 
How  pleasant  the  life  of  a  bird  must  be.     See  Birds  in 

Summer. — Howitt. 
How   pleasant   to   know   Mr.    I.ear!     See   Lines   to   a 

Young  Lady. — I^ear. 
How  pleasant  were  the  songs  of  Toobonai.     See  Island, 

The.— Byron. 
How   poor,   how   rich,   how  abject,   how  august.     See 

Night  Thoughts  (Man). — Young. 
How  pretty  is  each  little  star.     See  Stars.— Anon. 
How    pretty    our   room    will    look,    dear    Ellen.     See 

Jealousy. — Anon. 
How  prone  we  are  to  hide  and  hoard.     See  Lavender 

— Anon. 
How  pure  and  frail  and  white  the  snowdrops  shine. 

See  Annunciation,  The. — Proctor. 
How  pure  at  heart  and  sound  in  head.     See  In  Memo- 

riam  (Spiritual  Companionship). — -Tennyson. 
How  sadly  in  these  latter  days.     See  Ballade  of  the 

Alumna.^Child . 
How  schweed  to  dhink  of  home.     See  Home  Again. — 

Anon. 
How  seldom,  friend,  a  good  great  man  inherits.     See 

Good  Great  Man,  The. — Coleridge. 
How  shall  I  a  habit  break?     See  How?— O'Reilly. 
How  shall  I  bless  thee?    Human  love.    See  To  My  Dear 

Son . — -Dufferin . 
How  shall  I   know  thee  in  the  sphere  which  keeps. 

See  Future  Life,  The. — Br.vant. 
How     shall     I     tell    of    the    ages.      See    Christmas. — 

Sidney. 
How    shall    I    then    begin,    or    where    conclude.     See 

Poem    upon   the   Death    of  his   I^ate    Highness, 

Oliver,  Lord  Protector  of  England,  Scotland,  and 

Ireland  (Oliver  Cromwell). — Dryden. 
How    shall    we    honour    the    young.     See    Haworth 

Churchyard. — Arnol  d . 
'  How  shall  we  know  it  is  the  last  good-by?     See  Last 

Good-by,  The. — Moulton. 
How  shall  we  learn  to  sway  the  minds  of  men.     See 

Sincerity  the  Soul  of  Eloquence. — Goethe. 
How  shall  we  tell  an  angel.  See  Angels. — Hall. 
How  should  I  choose  to  walk  the  world  with  thee. 

See  In  Snow-time. — Anon. 
How   should    I    your   true   love   know?     See  Hamlet 

("How  should  I,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
How   should   little   maidens   grow.     See   To   a   Little 

Maid. — Anon.  • 

How  silent  comes  the  water  round  that  bend.     See 

"I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill"  (Minnows). — 

Keats. 
How  silently,   how  silently.      See  O  Little  Town  of 

Bethlehem  ("How  silently,"  etc.). — Brooks. 
How   simply  fall  the  simple  words.     See  God   Bless 

You. — Anon. 
How   sleep   the   brave,   who   sink   to   rest.     See   Ode 

Written  in   the   Beginning  of  the  Year   1746. — 

Collins. 
How  slight  a  thing  may  set  one's  fancy  drifting.     See 

Honey  Dripping  from  the  Comb. — Riley. 


How  slowly  creeps  th»>  hand  of  Time.     See  Church- 
yard, The. — Buchanan. 
How   small   a   tooth   hath   mined   the   season's   heart. 

Sec  Frost. — Thomas. 
How    small    of    all    that    human    hearts    endure.     See 

Lines  Added  to  Goldsmith's  Traveller. — Johnson. 
How  snowdrops  cold   and  blue-eyed  harebells  blend. 

See  Loves  of  the  Plants. — Darwin. 
How  soft  the  pause!  the  notes  melodious  cease.     See 

Written  at  Killarney. — Tighe. 
How  soon  hath  Time,  the  subtle  thief  of  youth.     See 

On    His    Being   Arrived   at    the   Age  of   Twenty- 
three. — Milton. 
How    spake    of    old    the    Royal    Seer?     See    Vanitas 

Vanitatum. — Thackeray. 
How  splendid  is  the  Jewish  bride.     See  At  the  Altar. — ■ 

Dallas. 
How  stands  the  glass  around?     See  same. — Anon. 
How  steadfastly  .she  worked  at  it!     See  Cradle,  The. — 

Dobson. 
How    still    and    peaceful   is   the    grave.     See    Funeral 

Hymn. — Montgomery. 
How  still  it  is  among  these  ancients  oaks!     See  Oaks 

of  Monte  Luca,  The. — I^ongfellow. 
How  still  she  was.     She  only  knew.     See  Sea  of  Fire, 

The.— Miller. 
How    still    the    morning    of    the    hallowed    day!     See 

Sabbath,  The. — Grahame. 
How   still   the   room   is!     But   a   while   ago.     See   In 

Death. — -Bradley- 
How   strange   a  thing  a   lover   seems.      See  Angel  in 

the  Hou.se,  The  (Paradox.  The). — Patmore. 
How  strange  are  the  freaks  of  memory!     See  Ember 

Picture,  An. — Lowell. 
How  strange  it  is  that,  in  the  after  age.     See  Praeterita 

ex  In.stantibus. — Lighthall. 
How  strange  it  seems,  with  so  much  gone  of  life.     See 

Snow-bound  (Loved,  not  Lost,  The). — Whittier. 
How  strange  it  will  be,  love.     See  How  Strange  it  will 

Be.— Holliday. 
How   strange   the   new,    soft    silence   in   the   air!     See 

First  Snow,  The. — Bridges. 
How  strong  they  are,  those  subtile  spells.     See  Helio- 
trope.— Anon. 
How  stupid  it  is  without  Ned.     See  Rural  Felicity. — 

Anon. 
How   sweet  I  roamed   from  field  to   field.     See  Song: 

"How  sweet  I  roamed,"  etc. — Blake. 
How  sweet  in  winter  time  we  feign  the  spring.     See 

same. — Anon. 
How  sweet  is  the  shepherd's  sweet  lot!     See  Shepherd, 

The.— Blake. 
How    sweet    is    the    twilight    hour.     See    Twilight. — 

Goodfellow. 
How  sweet   it   is  to   instruct   the  infant   mind!     See 

Young  Schoolma'am's  Soliloquy,  The.^Anon. 
How    sweet    it    is,    when    mother    Fancy   rocks.     See 

Woodland  Walks. — Wordsworth. 
How  sweet   it   was  to  breathe  that   cooler  air.     See 

Soldier's  Return,  The. — Bloomfield. 
How   sweet   it   were,    hearing   the   downward   stream. 

See  Lotus-eaters,  "The. — Tenny.son. 
How  sweet  it  were,  if  without  feeble  fright.     See  Angel 

in  the  House,  An. — Hunt. 
How    sweet    the    answer   Echo  makes.     See    Echo. — 

Moore. 
How  sweet  the  chime  of  the  Sabbath  bells!     See  Creeds 

of  the  Bells,  The.— Bungay. 
How  sweet  the  harmonies  of  afternoon!     See  Black- 
bird, The. — Tennyson. 
How  sweet  the  moonlight  sleeps  upon  this  bank.      See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The  (Music). — Shakespeare. 
How  sweet  the  name  of  Jesus  sounds.     See  same. — 

Newton. 
How   sweet    the   tuneful   bells   responsive   peal!     See 

Written  at  Ostend. — Bowles. 
How  sweet  thy  modest  light  to  view.     See  To  the 

Evening  Star. — Leyden. 
How  sweet  to  my  ears  are  the  names  of  my  childhood. 

See     Pennsylvanian's      Lament,      The. — {Om,aha 

World.) 
How.  sweetly   doth   My  Master  sound! — My   Master! 

See  Odor,  The.— Herbert. 
How  sweetly  keen,   how  stirred  the  air!     See  Anni- 
versary, An.— Johnson. 
How   sweetly   on   the  autumn   scene.     See   Hawkbit, 

The. — Roberts. 
"How  sweetly,"  said  the  trembling  maid.     See  Lalla 

Rookh  (Linda  to  H.afed). — Moore. 
How  swift  and  silent  pass  the  ages.     See  Word  for 

Each  Month,  A. — Jillson. 
How  that  north  wind   whistled  and   stung  the  other 

day.     See  "Shiner"  and  the,Waifs,  The. — Anon. 


683 


How  the 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


How  the  band  plays  to-night,  all  those  lovely  Strauss 

airs.     See  To-morrow  at  Ten. — Perry. 
How  the  bayonets  gleamed  and  glistened.     See  Bunker 

Hill.— Holmes. 
How  the  blithe  Lark  •int.  up  the  golden  stair.     See 

Skylark,  The. — Tennyson. 
How  the  earth  bums!     Each  pebble  under  foot.     See 

Oasis  of  Sidi  Khaled.— Blunt. 
How  the  leaves  sing  to  the  wind!     See  In  the  Golden 

Birch.— Roberts. 
How  the  rain  pours  down.     jSee  Age  of  Progress.  The. 

— Anon. 
How   then?    Can  honor  set  a  leg?     See  King  Henry 

rV.,  Pt.  I.  (FaLstaff's  Honor). — Anon. 
How  they  are  provided  for  upon  the  earth  (appearing 

at  intervals).     See  Beginners. — Whitman. 
How  they  go  by — those  strange  and  dreamlike  men! 

See  Wayfarers.— E.  S.  H. 
How   they   praised   and   they   applauded.     <See   Very 

Provoking. — Eytinge. 
How  thick  about  the  window  of  my  life.     See  At  the 

Window. — Wetherald. 
How  things  has  changed  since  I  was  a  girl!     See  Mi.«!8 

Splicer  Tries  the  Toboggan. — "Clara  Augu.ota." 
How  tired  one  grows  of  a  rainy  day.     <See  Rainy  Day, 

A. — Anon. 
How  to  labor  and  find  it  sweet.     See  Labor  and  Life. 

— Morse. 
How  to  live  happiest?  how  avoid  the  pains.     See  Art 

of  Preserving  Health,  The. — Armstrong. 
How  to  thy  sacred  memory  shall  I  bring.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Waller. — Behn. 
How  truly  fortunate  the  age  and  country  in  which  we 

live.     See  Speech-making. — Anon. 
How  vain  are  mortal  man's  endeavours?     See  Quid- 

nunckis.  The. — Gay. 
How  vain,  how  fleeting,  how  uncertain  are  all  those 

faudy  bubbles.      See   Knickerbocker  History  of 
few  York  (Uses  of  History,  The). — ^Irving. 
How  vainly  men  themselves  amaze.     See  Garden,  The. 

— Marvell. 
How  various  and  innumerable.     See  Rabble;  or,  Who 

Pays,  The.— Butler. 
How  very  sad  it  is  to  think.     See  Poor  Brother. — 

Anon. 
How  very  warm  it  is  here!     See  Circumstances  Alter 

Cases. — Anon. 
How  we,  poor  players  on  Life's  little  stage.     See  Self- 
ish Prayer. — Moulton. 
How  well  we  loved,  in  Summer  solitude.     See  Summer. 

—Mifflin. 
How  will  it  dawn,  the  coming  Christmas  Day?     See 

Christmas  Day. — Kingsley. 
How  wilt  thou  cheer  me,  age,  when,  year  by  year. 

See  Gifts  of  Age,  The. — Anon. 
How  winneth  Liberty?     By  sword  and  brand.     See 

Liberty. — Thomas. 
How  wonderful  is  Death!    See  Queen  Mab  (To  lanthe, 

Sleepi  ng) . — Shelley. 
How  would  the  centuries  long  asimder.     See  Hero- 
worship. — Scott. 
"How  would  Willie  like  to  go."     See  Land  of  Thus- 

and-BO,  The. — Riley. 
How   yet   resolves   the   governor   of   the   town?     See 

King  Henry  V.  (Reduction  of  Harfleur,  The). — 

Shakespeare. 
How  young  and  fresh  am  I  to-night.     See  Nature. — 

Jonson. 
How  your  sweet  face  revives  again.     See  He' and  She; 

or,  A  Poet's  Portfolio  (O  Filia  Pulchra!). — Story. 
Howard,  let's — let's — let's  play  Bluebeard!     See  Little 

Bluebeard. — Anon. 
Howe'er  it  be,  it  seems  to  me.     See   Lady  Clara  Vere 

de  Vere  (How  to  be  Noble). — Tennyson. 
However  early  in  the  morning  you  seek  the  gate  of 

access,  you  find  it  already  open.     See  Access  to 

God. — Hamilton. 
However  his  military  fame  may  excite  the  wonder  of 

mankind.     See  Washington  as  a  Civilian. — Ames. 
However.  I  still  think,  with  all  due  deference.     See 

Beppo  (Matrons  and  Maids). — Byron. 
However   viewed,    and    wherever   found.     See   Great 

National  Scourge,  The. — Anon. 
"How's  your  father?"  came  the  whisper.     See  Con- 
versational . — Anon . 
Howsoe'er  the  tale  be  spread.     See  Rhyme  of  Robin 

Puck,  A. — Cone. 
Hrothgar  rejoined,  helm  of  the  Scyldings.     See  Gren- 

del's  Mother. — Hall. 
Hues  of  the   rich   unfolding  mom.     See   Morning. — 

Keble. 
Hug  me  closer,  closer,  mother.     See  Little  Bessie. — 

Anon. 


Huge,  fleecy  clouds,  like  stately  ships,  drift  by.     See 

Buzzard's  Point. — Vickers. 
Hugh  Falcon  learned  this  happy  truth  one  day.     See 

Little  Nellie  in  the  Prison. — Hayne. 
Hugh  Gordon's  iron  mill  employs.     See  Hugh  Gordon's 

Iron  Mill. — Durant. 
Hullo,  Bob  Wren!     See  Spring  Meeting,  A. — (Harper's 

Young  People.) 
"Hullo,    old    chap!     How's   the   leg   to-night?"     See 

"Tim's  Madonna. — ^Renninger. 
Hum — Nine  o'clock.     Take  this   copy.     See  Editor's 

Trials,  An. — Anon. 
Human  Critters.  Hemale  Humbugs,  an'  Female  Wic- 

tims, — Straighten   up,    and   listen    to   ole   Aimty 

Chloey.     See  Burlesque  Oration  on  Matrimony. — 

Anon. 
Human  glory  is  often  fickle  as  the  winds.     See  Abra- 
ham Lincoln's  Place  in  History. — Newman. 
Human    hopes    and    human    creeds.     See    Washer- 
woman's   Song,  The   (Constant   Friend,  The). — 

Ware. 
Human  lives  are  silent  teaching.     See  Man's  Mission. — 

Wilde. 
Humanity,  delighting  to  behold.     See  French  Army 

in  Russia,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Humble  we  must  be.     See  Humility. — Herrick. 
Humming-bird.     See  Humming-bird  Song. — Sherman. 
Humpty  Dumpty  sat  on  a  wall.     See  Humpty  Dump- 

ty. — Whitney. 
Hundreds  of  stars  in  the  lovely  [or  pretty]  sky.     See 

Only  One. — Cooper. 
Hung  be  the  heavens  with  black,  yield  day  to  night! 

See    King    Henry  VI.,  Pt.    I. — Shakespeare. 
Hunting  is  the  noblest  exerci.se.     See  Time  Vindicated. 

— Jonson. 
Hurrah!  boys,  hurrah!  fling  our  banner  to  the  breeze! 

See  Banner  of  the  Stars,  The. — Raymond. 
Hurrah,  boys!     What's  the  use  in  moping?     See  Game 

of  Choice. — Clark. 
Hurrah  for  me,  Catspaw!     See  False  Faces. — Coates. 
Hurrah  for  Merrie  England  now!     See  Battle  of  In- 

kerman.  The. — Massey. 
Hurrah,  for  our  flag!     See  Our  Flag. — Rook. 
Hurrah  for  the  Fourth  av  July.     See  same. — Dickin- 
son. 
Hurrah  for  the  Fourth  of  July!     See  Independence 

Day. — Rook. 
Hurrah!  hurrah!  avoid  the  way  of  the  Avenging  Childe. 

See  Avenging  Childe,  The. — Lockhart. 
Hurrah!  the  seaward  breezes.     See  Fisherman,  The. — 

Whittier. 
Hurrah!  what  a  storm  was  a-brewing.     See  Chronicle 

of  the  Drum,  The.— Thackeray. 
Hurry  up.  Jane,  or  your  table  will  not  be  set.     See 

Jane's  Legacy. — Brewster. 
Husband   and  wife,   no  converse  now  ye  hold.     See 

Husband's  and  Wife's  Grave,  The. — Dana. 
Hush,  bonnie,  dinna  greit.     See  Balow,  My  Bonnie. — 

Field. 
Hush,  bye  baby!     Don't  you  talk  loud,  Lily,  or  you'll 

wake  Dolly.     See  All  about  Two  Dolls. — ^Anon. 
Hush,  hark,  that  knell!     See  Fire,  The. — McDermott. 
Hush!  hear  you  how  the  night  wind  keens  around  the 

craggy  reek?     See  I^ay  of  the  Famine,  A. — Anon. 
"Hush!    nush!"    said   the   little   brown    thrush.     See 

Frightened  Birds. — Anon. 
"Hush,  .Joanna!  'tis  quite  certain. "     See  Quarrel,  The. 

— Mackay. 
Hush!  lightly  tread;  the  weary  eyes  now  close.     See 

Asleep. — Bates. 
Hush,  little  one,  and  fold  your  hands.     See  Oh,  Little 

Child.— Field. 
Hush,  my  dear!     Lie  still  and  slumber.     See  Cradle 

Hymn. — Watts. 
"Hush!"  said  the  leaves.     See  Summer  Shower,  A. — 

Anon. 
Hush!  the  waves  are  rolling  in.    See  Old  Gaelic  Lullaby. 

— Anon. 
Hush !  the  world  is  in  a  dream.     See  Apple  Blossoms. — 

Jones. 
Hush  thee,  hush.     See  Lullaby. — R.  D.  H. 
Hush  thee,  sweet  baby.     See  Lullaby. — Davidson. 
Hushaby,    baby,    thy    cradle    is    green.     See   Mother 

Goose  Lullabies.— Anon. 
Hushed  are  the  pigeons   cooing  low.     See  Christmas 

Silence,  The.— Deland. 
Hushed  are  those  lips,  their  earthly  song  it  ended.     See 

My  Mother's  Hymns.— Wetherbee. 
Hushed  is  the  din  of  tongues;  on  gallant  steeds.     See 

Childe   Harold's   Pilgrimage   (Bull-fight,    The).— 

Byron. 
Hushed  is  the  voice  of  scorn.     See  Easter  Morn. — 

Wright. 


684 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  am 


Hushed  was  the  evening  hymn.     See  Child  Samuel, 

The.— Burns. 
Hushed  were  his  Gertrude's  lips,  but  .still  their  bland. 

See  Oneyda's  Death  Song,  The. — Campbell. 
"Huzza!"     From  box  and  balcony.     (See  Bull,  The. — 

Johnson. 
Huzza!     Hodgson,  we  are  going.     See  Lisbon  Packet, 

The.— Byron. 
Hyacinth  Rondel,  the  very  latest  new  poet,  sat  one 

evening  not  long  ago  in  his  elegant  new  chambers. 

<See  Woman's  Half-profits,  The. — Le  Gallienne. 
"Hybnodism, "   the  German  Professor  said  thought- 
fully.    See    German    Professor    on    Hypnotism, 

The.— Worden. 
Hyd,   Absolon,   thy   gilte  tresses  clere.     See  Balade: 

"Hyd,  Absolon,"  etc. — Chaucer. 
Hyder  iddle  diddle  dell.     See  Hyder  Iddle. — Anon. 
Hymen,  late,  his  love-knots  selling.     See  Who'll  Buy 

my  Love-knots? — Moore. 
Hymettus'  bees  are  out  on  filmy  wing.     See  Sunflower 

to  the  Sun,  The. — Stebbins. 
Hypocrisy    will    serve    as    well.       See    Hypocrisy . — 

Butler. 
Hyuh,  .lack!  ole  boy,  come  hyer  an'  lay  down.     See 

Trapper's  Last  Trail,  The. — Morris. 


I 

I,  a  Princess,  King-descended,  decked  with  jewels, 
gilded,  drest.     See  Royal  Princess,  A. — Rossetti. 

I  address  the  men  who  govern  us  and  say  to  them. 
See  Against  Curtailing  the  Right  of  Suffrage. — 
Hugo. 

I  affirm,  O  Romans,  that  Appius  Claudius  is  the  only 
man.  See  History  of  Rome  (Virginius  as  Trib- 
une Refuses  the  Appeal  of  Appius  Claudius). — 
Livy. 

I  agree  with  the  honorable  gentleman  who  spoke  last. 
See  American  Taxation. — Burke. 

I  ain't  a  politician,  and  never  was.  I  vote  for  Mr. 
Union.  See  Artemus  Ward's  Advice  to  Hus- 
bands.— Anon. 

I  ain't  afeard  uv  snakes,  or  toads,  or  bugs,  or  worms, 
or  mice.     See  Seein'  Things. — Field. 

I  ain't  anybody  in  particular.  See  Love  on  the  Half- 
shell. — Proudfit. 

I  am  a  bluebird;  on  branches  bare.  See  Flock  of 
Birds,  A. — Chase. 

1  am  a  bold  fellow.  See  Young  Dandelion,  The. — Craik. 

I  am  a  Cheap  Jack.  See  Doctor  Marigold  (Cheap  Jack, 
The).— Dickens. 

I  am  a  decent,  hard-workin',  persecuted  man.  See 
Burglar's  Grievances,  The. — Kyle. 

I  am  a  fisherman,  ho,  ho,  ho.  See  Little  Fisherman, 
The.— Denton. 

I  am  a  friar  of  orders  gray.     See  same. — O'Keefe. 

I  am  a  Gypsy,  you  see,  friends.  See  Bundle  of  Loves, 
A. — -Gaddess. 

I  am  a  jovial  cobbler,  bold  and  brave.  See  Jovial 
Cobbler  of  St.  Helen's,  The.— Anon. 

I  am  a  leaf  from  the  tall  elm  tree.  See  Autumn  Leaves, 
The.— Anon. 

I  am  a  little  boy,  about  so  many  years  old.  See 
What  a  Little  Boy  Thinks  about  Things. — Paul. 

T  am  a  little  boy,  of  very  little  height.  See  Myself. — 
Gusun. 

I  am  a  little  boy,  you  see.  See  Speech  for  a  Boy 
Four  or  Five  Years  Old. — Kavanaugh. 

I  am  a  little  country  girl.  See  Four-year-old,  A. — 
Anon. 

I  am  a  little  daisy  right  from  the  dewy  earth.  Se* 
Daisy  and  Snow-drop. — Anon. 

I  am  a  little  man  and  I  wear  a  little  hat.  See  Love- 
scrape,  The. — Kavanaugh. 

I  am  a  little  peasant  girl.  See  Pretty  Pictures,  The. — 
Anon. 

I  am  a  little  snow-drop.  See  What  the  Snow-drop 
Said. — Anon. 

I  am  a  lone,  unfathered  chick.  See  Orphan  Born. — 
Burdette. 

I  am  a  lonely  bachelor,  my  name  is  Jacob  Gray.  See 
Lament  of  .Jacob  Gray,  The. — McBride. 

I  am  a  merry  little  girl.  See  Recitation  for  a  Very 
Small  Girl. — Kavanaugh. 

I  am  a  peevish  student,  I.     See  Melancholia. — Anon. 

"I  am  a  pebble!  and  yield  to  none!"  See  Pebble  and 
the  Acorn,  The. — Gould. 

I  am  a  Prussian!  see  my  colors  gleaming.  See  Prus- 
sian National    Anthem. — Anon. 

I  am  a  scallywag — that  is  the  truth  of  it.  See  Scally- 
wag.— Le  Row. 


I  am  a  statue  of  marble.     See  Statue's  Story,  The. — 

Dallas. 
I  am  a  tiny  tot.     See  Opening  Address. — Anon. 
I  am  a  very  little  boy.     See  Tiny  Boy's  Speech,  A. — 

Anon. 
I  am  a  very  little  girl.     See  Only  Five. — Anon. 
I  am  a  very  little  thing.     See  Speech  for  a  Small  Boy. 

— Kavanaugh . 
I  am  a  wandering  wave  of  the  glorious  sea.     See  Song 

of  the  Sea. — Anon. 
I  am  a  white  falcon, hurrah!     See  Falcon,  The. — Stod- 
dard. 
I  am  a  woful  suitor  to  your  honor.     See    Measure   for 
Measure  (Sister  Pleads  for  a  Brother's  Life,  A). — 
Shakespeare. 
I  am  a  woman,— therefore  I  may  not.     See  Woman's 

Thought,  A.— Gilder. 
I  am  afraid  I'm  a  little  late  this  morning.     See  Vice 
Versa. — Goodfellow. 

I  am  afraid  'taint  no  sort  o'  use,  my  trying  to  be 
learned.  See  Pursuit  of  Knowledge  under  Diffi- 
culties.— Anon. 

I  am  all  alone  in  my  chamber  now.     See  Little  Boy  that 

Died,  The. — -Robinson. 
I  am  all  out  of  sorts;  I  am  miserable,  I   am  wretched. 
See  Haunted  by  a  Song. — Anon. 

I  am  all  right!.  Good-bye,  old  chap!  See  One  Day 
Solitary. — "Trowbridge. 

I  am  always  very  well  pleased  with  a  country  Sunday. 
See  Spectator,  The  (Sir  Roger  de  Coverley's  Sun- 
day).— Addison. 

I  am  amazed  at  the  attack  which  the  noble  Duke  has 
made  on  me.  See  Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton. 
— Thurlow. 

I  am  an  acme  of  things  accomplished.  See  Song  of 
Myself  ("I  am  an  acme,"  etc.). — Whitman. 

I  am  an  officer  of  the  army,  stationed  at  a  large, 
rambling  post.  See  True  Story  of  a  Brie  Cheese, 
The.— French. 

I  am  an  old  maid,  with  gray  hair  and  wrinkled,  care- 
worn face.     See  My  Valentine. — Hopkins. 

I  am  an  old  man,  but  I  know  a  thing  or  two.  See 
Old  Man's  Address  to  Young  Wives,  An. — Anon. 

I  am,  and  therefore  these.     See  I  am. — Rand. 

I  am  apt  to  fancy  I  have  contracted  a  new  acquaint- 
ance. See  Beau  Tibbs,  his  Character  and 
Family. — -Goldsmith. 

I  am  as  black  as  black  can  be.  See  What  the  Coal 
Says. — Anon. 

I  am  as  brown  as  brown  can  be.  See  Brown  Girl,  The. 
— Anon. 

I  am  as  I  am,  and  so  will  I  be.  See  Re-cured  Lover 
Exulteth  in  his  Freedom,  The. — Wyatt. 

I  am  astonished,  shocked,  to  hear  .such  principles  con- 
fessed. See  American  War,  The  (Horrors  of  Sav- 
age Warfare). — Chatham. 

I  am  aware  of  the  difficulties  I  have  to  encounter.  See 
Necessity  of  Reform  in  Parliament. — Grey. 

I  am  aware  that  other  cities  have  claimed  the  pre- 
cedence.    See  City  of  New  York,.  The. — Coudert. 

I  am  aware  that  the  ballot-box.  See  Ballot-box,  The. 
— Chapin. 

I  am  aware  that  there  is  a  prejudice  against  any  man. 
See  What  Intemperance  Does. — Anon. 

I  am  but  a  little  daisy,  the  children  know  me  well. 
See  Daisy,  The. — Anon. 

I  am  but  clay  in  Thy  hands,  but  Thou  art  the  all-lov- 
ing artist.  See  I  in  Thee,  and  Thou  in  Me. — 
Cranch. 

I  am  but  constant  as  yon  constant  rocks.  See  Con- 
stancy.— Thomas. 

"I  am  but  dust!"  See  "Though  He  Slay!" — 
Tourgee. 

"I  am  by  promise  tied."  See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The 
(Fitz-James  and  Roderick  Dhu). — Scott. 

I  am  Captain  Dave,  you  know.  See  Morning  Chat,  A. 
• — -Denton. 

I  am  charged  with  pride  and  ambition.  See  Zenobia 
(Zenqbia's  Defence). — Ware. 

I  am  coming,  I  am  coming!  See  Voice  of  Spring,  The. 
— Howitt. 

I  am  coming,  little  maiden !  See  Spring  is  Coming. — 
Howitt. 

I  am  content,  I  do  not  care.  See  Careless  Content. — 
Byrom. 

I  am  delighted  to  see  you  here.  See  Rivals,  The. — 
Sheridan. 

I  am  desirous  of  establishing  some  kind  of  relation- 
ship. See  New  Englander  as  a  Citizen,  "The. — 
Anon. 

I  am  desolate.     See  Love's  Despair. — -Sigerson. 

"I  am  down  in  the  mouth,  I  am  out  at  the  pocketfs!" 
See  Wo-begone  Lover,  A.— Anon. 


685 


I  am 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  am  dying,  Egypt,  dying.     See  Antony  and  Cleopa- 
tra.— Lytle.       * 
I  am  enjoined  bv  oath  to  observe  three  things.     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The  (Casket  Scene,  The). — 

Shakespeare.         • 
I  am  Ethell,  the  Son  of  Conn.     See  Bard  Ethell,  The. 

— De  Vere. 
I  am  familiar  to  all  as  the  American  Elm.     See  Voices 

of  the  Trees. — Benedict. 
I  am  far  from  miaintaining  that  science  is  a  sufficient 

guide  in  religon.     See  True  Science  and    Religion. 

— Hitchcock. 
I  am  "Father  Time.  "     You  have  seen  me  before.     See 

Time. — Denton. 
I  am  for  gold — her  golden  hair.     See  My  Politics. — 

Pierce. 
I  am    fresh   from   the   conflict — I'm   drunk   with   the 

blood.     iS««  Indian  Brave,  The. — Smith. 
I  am  getting  quite  lonely  without  you.     See  Eugene 

Field  to  his  Children. — Field. 
I  am   glad   that   the   debate   has  come  in  again.     See 

Presiding  Officer's  Address  at  a  Public  Debate, 

The. — Anon. 
I  am  glad  the  holidays  are  over.     See  .Esthetic  Craze, 

The.— McGill. 
I  am  glad  to  again  be  in  the  city  of  Buffalo- and  ex- 
change greetings  with  her  peoiile.     See  President 

McKinley's  Last  Speech. — McKinley. 
I  am  glad  to  .see  so  many  candedates  here  to-day.      See 

"Teacher  Wanted.  " — Crosby. 
I  am  God's  little  lamb.     See  (-'hild-song,  A. — Mason. 
I  am  going  to  give  this  orange.     See  My  Best  Friend. — 

Rook. 
I  am  growing  old,  and  it  is  time  I   had  some  one  to 

take  care  of  me.     See  Something  to  our   Advan- 
tage.— McBride. 
I  am   half   sorry   I   conssented  to   Tom's   mischievous 

plan.     See  "Indian  Raid,  An. — Graham. 
I  am  he  that  walks  with  the  tender  and  growing  night. 

See  Song  of  Myself  (Bare-bosom'd  Night). — Whit- 
man. 
I  am  here.     And  if  this  is  what  they  call  the  world. 

See  Baby's  Soliloquy,  A.— Anon. 
I  am  here  by  command  of  silent  lips  to  speak  once  and 

for  all.     See  Affairs  in  Cuba. — Thurston'. 
I  am  here  from   the   North,  the  frozen   North.     See 

Song  of  the  North  Wind. — Anon. 
I  am  here  to  join  my  fellow-citizens  in  the  congratula- 
tions which  befit  this  occasion.     See  Columbian 

Exposition  Opened,  The. — (Cleveland. 
I  am  holy  while  I  stand.     See  To  Silvia. — Herrick. 
I  am  hoping  that  this  will  reach  you  upon  your  birth- 
day.    See  Eugene  Field  to  his  Children. — Field. 
I  am  hoping  that  you  had  a  pleasant  Christmas.     See 

Eugene  Field  to  his  Children. — Field. 
"I  am  hungry,"  said  the  Grave.     See  Death  and  the 

Grave. — Anon. 
I  am   immortal!     I   know  it!     I   feel  it!     See  Dryad 

Song. — Fuller. 
I  am   in   earnest,   Radcliffe.     See  Fair  Fight,   or  the 

Wife's  Allowance,  A.- — Kavanaugh. 
I  am  in  Rome!     Oft  as  the  morning  ray.     See  Rome. — ■ 

Rogers. 
I  am    Jack    who    built    the    house.     See    Some    Very 

Famous  People.— Denton. 
I  am  jet  black,  as  you  may  see.     See  On  Ink. — Swift. 
I  am  just  a  little  fellow,  and  I  can't  say  much.     See 

Willie's  Speech. — Anon. 
I  am  kneeling  at  the  threshold,  so  weary,  faint,  and 

sore.     See  Kneeling  at  the  Threshold. — Guthrie. 
"I  am  learning  how  to  sew,"  said  an  eager  liitle  maid. 

See  Little  Seamstress,  A. — {St.  Nicholas.) 
I  am  little  Mother  Goose.     See  Little  Mother  Goose. — 

Denton. 
I  am  lodged  in  a  house  that  affords  me  conveniences 

and  comforts.     See  What  a  Common  Man  may 

Say. — Anon. 
I  am  lying  in  the  tomb,  love.     See  Lament. — Noel. 
I  am   mamma's   "Blue   Eyes."     See  Blue   Eyes  and 

Brown  Eyes.— Denton. 
I  am  met  with  the  objection,  "What  good  will  the 

Monument  do?"     See  What  Good  will  the  Monu- 
ment Do? — Everett. 
"I    am    Miss   Catherine's   book."     See   Pen    and   the 

Album,  The. — Thackeray. 
I  am  monarch  of  all  I  survey.     See  Verses  Supposed 

to  be  Written  by  Alexander  Selkirk. — Cowper. 
I  am  musing  amid  the  clover.     See  Summer  Eve. — 

Whitehead. 
I  am  my  mamma's  blue  eyes.     See  Best  of  All,  The. — 

Denton. 
I  mn  my  papa's  little   pet.       See  Speeches  for  Tots 

(Speech  for  a  Very  Small  Child). — Anon. 


I  am  nae  Poet,  in  a  sense.     See  Epistle  to   John  La- 

praik.  An. — Burns. 
I  am  Nicholas  Tachinardi,  hunchbacked,  look  you,  and 

a    fright.       See    Hunchbacked    Singer,     The. — 

Anon. 
I  am  no  love  for  you,  Margaret.     See  Fair  Margaret  s 

Misfortunes. — Anon. 
I  am   not   a   prosperous   man.     See  Compensation. — 

Turner. 
I  am  not  daunted,  no,  I  will  engage.     See  Gebir  (Shell, 

The).— Landor. 
I  am  not  here  to  make  a  speech.     See  How  to  Speak 

a  Piece. — Davenport. 
I  am  not  [old] — I  cannot  be  old.     See  Song  of  Seventy, 

The.— Tupper. 
I  am  not  ignorant,  my  Lords,  that  the  extraordinary 

construction  of  law.     See  Appeal  to  Lord  Avon- 

more.^Curran. 
I  am  not  one  of  those,  sir,  who  esteem  any  tribute  of 

regard.     See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The  (Matches  and 

Over-matches). — Webster. 
I  am  not  one  of  those,  sir.  who  would  hold  out  to  the 

People  vain  hopes.     See  On  Preliminary  Reform. 

— Russell. 
I  am  not  what  I  was  yesterday.     See  Butterfly,  The. — 

•lames. 
I  am  of  a  band.     See  "Are  You  a  Mason?" — Magill. 
I  am  old  and  blind!     See  Milton's  Prayer  of  Patience. 

— Howell. 
I  am  only  a  faded  primrose,  dying  for  want  of  air.     See 

Bunch  of  Primroses,  A.— Sims. 
I  am  only  a  leaf.     My  home  is  one  of  the  great  trees. 

See  Story  of  a  Leaf,  The.— Rickoff. 
I  am  only  a  little  child,   and   I   am   afraid   I   cannot 

speak.     See  Prologue  for  a  Tiny  Tot. — Anon. 
I  am  only  a  little  sparrow.     See  Song  of  the  Sparrow, 

The. — Anon. 
I  am  only  four  years  old.     See  Little  One's  Speech, 

The. — Anon. 
I  am,  or  rather  was,  a  minister,  and  was  settled.     See 

My  Double,  and  how  He' Undid  Me. — -Hale. 
I  am  Policeman  12,004.     See  Policeman's  Story,  The. 

— Birdseye. 
I  am   proud  of  being  an   original  Smith.     See  Smith 

Family,  The. — Anon. 
I  am  quite  small  to  go  to  school.     See  Recitation  for 

a  Boy  Three  Years  Old. — Kavanaugh. 
I  am  reque.sted  to  open  our  performances  by  a  saluta- 
tory address.     See  Salutatory  Address. — Anon. 
"I  am,"  said  he,  "that  spirit  Elysian."     See  Tears  of 

Peace,  The  (Spirit  of  Homer,  The). — Chapman. 
I  am  sick  of  opinions.     I  weary  to  hear  them.     See 

game. — Wesley. 
I  am  sitting  alone  by  the  desolate  hearth-stone.     See 

Cherished  Letters. — Miller. 
I  am  six  years  old  and  I  like  to  play.     See  Woman- 
hood.— Rook. 
I  am  small,  it  is  true,  but  great  on  the  stump.     See 

Take  up  the  Collection. — Anon. 
I  am  so  glad,  dear  mother,  that  I  have  now  time  to 

help  you. — See  Country  Cousins. — Anon. 
I  am  so  glad,  Nellie,  that  we  are  good  friends  again. 

See  How  the  Quarrel  Began. — Rook. 
I  am  so  glad  our  Anniversary  day  has  come  again. 

See  Opening  Dialogue. — Anon. 
I  am  so  glad,  so  very  glad.     See  So  Glad. — Denton. 
I  am  so  glad  you  have  come,  dear  Clara.     See  Country 

Cousins,  The. — Garrett. 
I  am  so  happy,  so  happy  all  over.     See  Summer  Vaca- 
tion.—Kimball. 
I  am  .so  sleepy,  sister,  I  do  wish  mamma  and  papa 

would  come.     See  Lost  Child,  The. — Anon. 
I  am  so  small,  I  am  afraid.     See  Speech  for  a  Tiny  Lit- 
tle Girl. — Anon. 
I  am  so  very  near  asleep.     See  Goodnight. — Goodf el- 
low. 
I  am  so  very  sorry  about  my  Sophie  May.     See  Three 

Little  Mothers. — Denton. 
I  am  so  weak,  dear  Lord,  I  cannot  stand.    See  Enough. 

— Havergal. 
I  am  somethin'  of  a  vet'ran,  just  a-turnin'  eighty  year. 

See  Too  Progressive  for  Him. — Sheldon. 
I  am  sorry  she  is  out!     Tell  the  brougham  to  remain. 

See  Change  of  System,  A. — Paul. 
I  am  sorry  to  tell  you  the  butcher  has  sent  to  say  that 

his  bills  must  be  paid.     See  Shocking  Mistake,  A. 

— Pickering. 
I  am    spring.     They   call    me    beautiful   spring.     See 

Four  Seasons,  The. — Boyd. 
I  am  Spring,  whose  joyous  hand.     See  Seasons,  The. — 

Anon. 
I  am    Storm— the    King!     See    Storm — the    King. — 

Finch. 


686 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  beg 


I  am   struck  with   the   fact   that  Bismarck,  the   great 

statesman  of  Germany.     See  same. — Garfield. 
"I  am  sure,  my  dear  niece,  you  will  be  delighted  to 
hear  that  your  cousin  Emily."     See  Matrimonial 
Tiff,  A. — -Pickering. 
I  am  sure  you  can't  expect  great  things.     iSee  Willie's 

Speech. — Doolittle. 
I  am  that  sort  of  a  tradesman  known  all  over  London 
as  a  Cheap  Jack.    See  Doctor  Marigold.— Dickens. 
I  am  that  which  began;  out  of  me  the  years  roll.     See 

Hertha. — Swinburne. 
I  am  the  American  Eagle.     See  Eagle  Screams,  The. — 

Anon. 
I  am  the  breath  of  Tethra,  voice  of  Tethra.     See  Sword 

of  Tethra,  The. — Larminie. 
I  am  the  Burthen-bearer, — I.  See  Brushwood. — Read. 
I  am  the  Death  who  am  come  to  you.     See  Address  of 

Death  to  Tomas  de  Roiste,  The. — Hyde. 
I  am  the  East  wind.     See  Song  of  the  Winds,  The. — 

Allen. 
I  am   the   expiation.     See  Field   of  Wagram,   The. — 

Rostand. 
I  am  the  goddess  who  presides  at  every  being's  birth. 

See  Parcse,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
I  am  the  herald  of    a    band    of    brothers.     See    Pro- 
logue: "1  am  the  herald  of,"  etc. — Anon. 
I  am  the  honeysuckle.     See  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. — 

Wheelock. 
I  am  the  king  of  strife  and  calm.     See  King  Coal  to 

Uncle  Sam. — Burns. 
I  am  the  little  New  Year,  ho,  ho!     See  New  Year,  The. 

— (Youth's  Companion.) 
I  am  the  Lord  thy  God  who  brought  thee   out  of  the 

land  of  Egypt.     See  Exodus  (First  Constitution, 

The).— Bible. 
I  am   the   mashed    fireman   with   breast-bone   broken. 

See   Song  of    Myself    (Dying    Fireman,    "The). — 

Whitman. 
I  am  the  month  of  the  ice  and  snow.     See  Darling  of 

the  Year,  The. — Anon. 
I  am  the  more  indignant  at  the  designs  of  these  infi- 
dels.    See  Infidelity  not  Friendly  to   Freedom. — 

PhiUips. 
I  am  the  mown  grass,  dying  at  your  feet.     See  Mori- 

tura. — Davidson. 
I  am  the  North  wind,  cruel  and  cold.     See  Four  Winds, 

The.— Denton. 
I  am  the  radiant  Morning  Star!     See  Three  Missions, 

The. — Rogers. 
"I  am  the  Resurrection  and  the  Life!"    See  Only  True 

Life,  The. — Durant. 
I  am  the  Rock,  presumptuous  Sea.     See  Rock  and  the 

Sea,  The. — Stetson. 
I  am  the  rustic  golden  rod.     See  Golden  Rod,  The.— 

Goodwin. 
I  am  the  smallest  boy  in  school.     See  Good  Night. — 

Kavanaugh. 
I  am  the  smallest,  tiniest  mite.    See  Epilogue. — "Bob 

O'Link." 
I  am  the  spirit  astir.     See  Autochthon. — Roberts. 
I  am  the  spirit  of  the  morning  sea.     See  Ode:  "I  am 

the  spirit,"  etc. — Gilder. 
I  am   the   Spring.     I   come  with   smiles  of  gladness. 

See  Seasons,  The. — Anon. 
I  am  the  sun — the   bright   warm    sun.     See  Sun  and 

his  Satellites,  The. — Anon. 
I  am  the  tender  voice  calling  "Away."     See  Dana. — 

Russell. 
I  am  the  Twenty-second  of  February.     See  Our  Holi- 
days.— Lloyd. 
I  am  the  Virgin;  from  this  granite  ledge.     See  Way- 
side Virgin,  The. — Mitchell. 
I  am  thirteen  years  old  and  Jill  is  eleven  and  a  quarter. 

See  "Day  of  Judgment,  The." — Phelps. 
I  am     this    fountain's    God.     Below.     See    Faithful 

Shepherdess,  The  (River  God  to  Amoret,  The). — 

Fletcher. 
I  am  thy  father's  spirit.     See  Hamlet  (Ghost  in  Ham- 
let, The). — Shakespeare. 
T  am  thy  grass,  O  Lord.     See  Trust.— -Reese. 
I  am  tired  of  planning  and   toiling.     See  Cry  of  the 

Dreamer,  The. — -O'Reilly. 
I  am  told  they  triumph  mtjch  in  this  conviction.     See 

Appeal  to  the  Jury. — Phillips. 
I  am   undone-   there  is  no    living,     none.      See    All's 

Well  that  Ends  Well  (I-ove's  Memory).— Shake- 
speare. 
I  am  very  fond  of  pets.     I  just  love  all  kinder  animals. 

See  Billy's  Pets.— Kyle. 
I  am   very   fond   of  the   briny  deep.     See  Salt-water 

Adventures. — Thatcher. 
I  am  very  tired.     We  will  rest  here  a  moment.     See 

True  Charity. — De  Genlis. 


I  am  very  young  and  little.  See  "My  Three  Little 
Texts. " — Anon. 

I  am  waiting  for  the  shadows  round  me  lying.  See 
Sometime. — Blaisdell. 

I  am  waiting,  humbly  waiting.  See  Waiting  on  the 
Lord. — Crane. 

I  am  War.  The  upturned  eyeballs  of  piled  dead  men 
greet  my  eye.     See  War. — Foss. 

I  am  watching  for  the  early  buds  to  wake.  See  First 
Spring  Plowers. — Howland. 

I  am  weary  of  long,  dull  books,  love.  See  Philoso- 
phia  Amoris. — G.  L.  R. 

I  am  weary  wandering  from  room  to  room.  See 
Hunchback,  The  (Helen  and  Modus). — Knowles. 

I  am  weary  with  my  groaning.  See  Washington's 
Vision. — Selkrig. 

I  am  where  snowy  mountains  round  mei  shine.  See 
Genoa. — Faber. 

I  am  Winter,  and  ice  and  snow.  See  Four  Seasons, 
The. — Anon. 

I  am  Winter.  When  I  come.  See  Time  and  the  Sea- 
sons.— Denton. 

I  am!  yet  what  I  am  who  cares,  or  knows?  See  Las- 
ciate  Ogni  Speranza. — Clare. 

I  and  Clive  were  friends — and  why  not?  power  is  pow- 
er, my  boy.     See  Lord  Clive. — Browning. 

I  and  my  cousin  Wildair  met.  See  Praise-God  Bare- 
bones. — Cortissoz. 

I  appeal  to  any  white  man  to  say,  if  ever  he  entered 
Logan's  Cabin  hungry.  See  Logan,  a  Mingo 
Chief,  to  Lord  Dunmore. — Logan. 

I  appeal  to  History!  Tell  me,  thou  reverend  chroni- 
cler of  the  grave.  See  Permanency  of  Empire, 
The.— Phillips. 

I  appeal  to  your  sober  senses;  I  appeal  also  to  your 
love  of  freedom.  See  Appeal  for  Ireland. — Grattan. 

I  arise  from  dreams  of  Thee.  See  Indian  Serenade, 
The.— Shelley. 

I  ask,  in  what  page  of  the  Constitution  you  find  the 
power  of  laying  an  embargo.  See  Against  the 
Embargo,  1808. — Quincy. 

I  ask  no  kind  return  of  love.  See  Prayer  for  indiffer- 
ence.— Greville. 

I  ask  not  for  thy  love,  O  Lord.     See  same. — Romanes. 

I  ask  not  how  the  suffering  came.  See  Fraternity. — 
Aldrich. 

I  ask  not  that  my  bed  of  death.  See  Wish,  A. — 
Arnold. 

I  ask  now,  Verres,  what  you  have  to  advance  against 
this  charge.  See  Verres  Denounced  (Cicero 
against  Verres). — Cicero. 

I  ask  the  young  man  who  is  just  forming  his  habits  of 
life.     See  Opposite  Examples. — Mann. 

I  ask  thee  for  my  home,  my  fate,  my  all!  See  Riche- 
lieu; 01,  The  Con.spiracy. — Bulwer-Lytton. 

I  ask  what  He  would  have  this  evil  do  for  me?  See 
Bitter-sweet. — Holland. 

I  ask  you  to-day  to  consider  well.  See  American 
Citizenship,  its  Privileges,  Rights  and  Duties. — 
Galvin. 

I  asked  a  bee  that  was  flitting  by.  See  My  Question. 
— Anon. 

I  asked  a  blushing  rose.     See  Purpose. — Barrett. 

I  asked  a  maid  with  a  fair  young  face.  See  Two  An- 
swers, The. — Wheeler. 

I  asked  a  sweet  robin,  one  morning  in  May.  See 
Robin's  Song,  The. — Anon. 

I  asked  an  aged  man,  a  man  of  cares  [or  with  hoa-y 
hairs].     See  What  is  Time? — Marsden. 

I  asked  of  Echo,  t'other  day.  See  Ego  et  Echo.^ 
Saxe. 

I  asked  the  heavens:  "What  foe  to  God  had  done." 
See  Crucifixion,  The. — Montgomery. 

I  asked  the  New  Year  for  some  message  sweet.  See 
Message  of  the  New  Year,  The. — -Anon. 

I  asked  the  Sun,  "Can'st  tell  me  what  love  is?"  See 
same. — (Galaxy,  The.) 

I  attended  a  stance  of  mesmerism  a  few  years  ago. 
See  Juggler,  The. — Kyle. 

I  awoke  from  the  dreams  of  the  night.  See  Shadows 
on  the  Curtain. — Dewart. 

I  bade  thee  stay.  Too  well  I  know.  See  Song. — Whit- 
man. 

I  bear  an  unseen  burden  constantl.v.  See  Burden  of 
Love,  The.— Salters. 

I  bear  dis  cross  dis  many  a  mile.     See  Chant   of  the 

Cross-bearing  Child,  "The. — Riley. 
I  beg  pardon,   sir,   but   maybe  I'm  imder  a  mistake. 

See  Gridiron,  The. — Anon. 
I  beg  the  pardon  of  these  flowers.     See  With  Lilacs. — 

Crandall, 
I  beg  you  come  to-night  and  dine.     See  Msecenas  Bids 
his  Friend  to  Dine. — Anon. 


687 


I  beg 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  beg  your  pardon,  miiiters.     See  Up  Thar  Behind  the 

Sky ! — Mun^on. 
I  begin  by  admiring  an  aggregate,  made  up  of  excel- 
lences and  triumphs.     See  Daniel  Webster's  Elo- 
quence.— Choate.     ^ 
I  beliebe,  Johnson,  you  are  fond  ub  de  fair  sex.     See 

Girls  of  the  Period,  The. — .\non. 
I  believe  a  leaf  of   grass  is  no  less  than  the  journey- 
work  of  the  stars.     See  Song  of  Myself  (Micro- 
cosm. The). — Whitman. 
I  believe   I   have  the   worst   memory.     See  Memory- 
tricks. — Anon. 
I  believe  I'd  like  to  be  a  nurse.     See  Choice  of  Occu- 
pation.   (For  girls.) — Anon. 
I  believe  if  I  should  die.     See  Love's  Belief. — Anon. 
I  believe,  i^  there  is  one  word  that  grown-up  folks  are 

more  found  of  using.     See  Don't. — Rook. 
I  believe  in  the  existence  of  one  Mr.   Alcohol.     See 

Drunkard's  Ten  Commandments,  The.— Anon. 
I  believe  it!     'Tis  Thou,  God,  that  givest.     See  Saul. 

— Browning. 
I  believe  now  that  my  true  welfare,  and  that  of  others, 
is  possible  only  when  I  labor.     See  My  Religion. — 
Tolstoi. 
I  believe  that  a  leaf  of  grass  is  no  less  than  the  jour- 
ney-work of  the  stars.     See  Microcosm,   The. — ■ 
Whitman. 
I  believe  that  no  people  ever  yet  groaned  under  the 
heavy  yoke  of  slavery.     See  American   Liberty. 
— Adaiiis. 
I  believe  that  saloon-keepers  are  morally  and  socially 
just  as  good.     See  Vote  the  Traffic  Down. — -St. 
.John. 
I  believe  that  the  breweries  and  the  saloons  are  just 
as  good  and  just  as  bad  as  the  men  runningthem. 
See  Citizen  and  the  Saloon  System,  The. — -Dickie. 
I  believe  there  is  no  permanent  greatness  to  a  nation. 

See  National  Greatness. — Bright. 
I  believe  there  is  nothing  in  nature  which  so  enlaces 

one's  love.     See  Water  in  Landscape. — Mitchell. 
I  bend  above  the  moving  stream.     See  Solitude  and 

the  Lily.— Home. 
I  beside  the  blue-gate  lying.     See  After  the  Soiree. — 

F.  R.  D.  B. 
I  bless  Thee,  Lord,  for  sorrows  sent.     See  Made  Per- 
fect through  Suffering. — Johnson. 
I  b'lieve  I'll  sell  the  farm,  Jane  Ann,  and  buy  a  house 

in  town.     See  Selling  the  Farm. — Anon. 
I  bloom  but  once,  and  then  I  perish.     See  II  Fior  degli 

Eroici  Furori. — Symonds 
I  bought  a  dandy  outfit.     See  City  Sportsman,  The. — 

Hills. 
I  breathe,  I  move,  I  live!     See  Perdita. — Jones. 
I  breathe  a  prayer  one  day.     See  Empty  Prayer,  An. — 

Penfield. 
I  brinK  a  garland  for  your  head.     See  Song  for  the 

l/ute. — Gosse. 
I  bring  fresh  showers   for  the  thirsting  flowers.     See 

Cloud.  The  —Shelley. 
I  bring  my  hymn  of  thankftilness.     See  Thanksgiving, 

A. — Cooke. 
I  bring  this  crown.     See  May  Celebration. — -Anon. 
I  bring  you  these  little  song-blossom?.     See  same. — 

Larcom. 
I  broke  one  day  a  slender  stem.     See  Spray  of  Honey- 
suckle, A. — Bradley. 
I  brought  this  card  from  the  General  Agency  Office, 
«ir.     See  Nicholas  Nickleby   (Nicholas    Nickleby 
Seeking  a  Situation). — Dickens. 
I  build  my  nest  on  the  mountain's  Crest.     See  Song  of 

the  American  Eagle. — Anon. 
I  built  my  castle  upon  the  sea-side.     See  St.  Margaret's 

Eve.— AlUngham. 
I  bum  no  incense,  hang  no  wreath.     See  Votive  Song. 

— Pinkney. 
I  cahnt  endure  the  stoopid,  wude.      See  Unpardonable 

Sin,  The. — Anon. 
I  call  that  mind  free  which  masters  the  senses.     See 

Spiritual  Freedom. — Channing. 
I  call  that  [the  Book  of   Job],  aside  from  all  theories 
about  it.     See  On  Heroes  and  Hero  Worship  ("  I 
call  that."  etc.). — Carlyle. 
I  call  the  war  with  our  brethren  in  America  an  unjust 
and  felonious  war.     See  Conquest  of  the  Americans 
Impracticable. — Wilkes. 
I  call   thee  coward?     I'll   see  thee  hanged   ere.     See 
King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I.  (Prince  Henry  and  Falstaff). 
— Shakespeare. 
I  call  upon  those  whom  I  address  to  stand  up  for  the 
nobility    of    labor.     See    Nobility    of    Labor  — 
Dewey. 
I  call  upon  you,  fathers,  by  the  shades  of  your  ances- 
tors.   See  Appeal  for  Liberty,  An. — Story. 

688 


I  call  you  bad,  my  little  child.     See  Bad  Child's  Book 

of  Beasts.  The. — Belloc. 
I  called  him  the  Old  Man,  but  he  wuzn't  an  old  man. 

See  Old  Man,  The.— Field. 
I  called  on  dreams  and  visions  to  disclose.     See  Skep- 
tic, 'The. — Wordsworth. 
I  called  on  Love  and  I  said.     See  Recompense,  The. — 

Anon. 
I  came,  but  she  was  gone.    See  Bride,  The. — Sigoumey. 
I  came,  but  they  had  passed  away.     See  Weary  Soul, 

The. — Anon. 
I  came  in  li^ht  that  I  might  behold.     See  Parable  of 

the  Spirit,  A. — Goodchild. 
I  came  into  the  city  and   none  knew  me.     See  Upper 

Chamber,  An. — Bannerraan. 
I  came  not  here  to  seek  for  fame.  See  Our  Flag. — Anon. 
I  came  to  a  great  city.     See  Beethoven. — Gilder. 
I  came  to  a  laund  of  white  and   green.     See  Cuckoo 

and  the  Nightingale,  The. — Chaucer. 
I  came  to  town  the  other  day.     See  My  Daughter  Jane. 

— Flowers. 
I  came  to-night  to  try  to  preach.     See  Boy's  Sermon, 

The. — Anon. 
I  came    upon    a   drawer   to-day.     See   Sic   Passim. — ■ 

Ardagh. 
I  can  afford  to  despise  critics  so  long  as  I  am  conscious. 

See  Self-respect. — <3ato. 
I  can   almost   see   to   the  land  of  light.     See  Seeing 

Through. — -Anon. 
I  can  as  well  be  hang'd.    See  Julius  Csesar  ("  I  can  as 

well.' '  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
I  can    bear   it   no    longer — -this   diabolical   invention. 

See  Book  of  Snobs,  The  (Snobs). — Thackeray. 
I  can  do  the  question  easy  enough,  but  when  it  comes 
to  proving  it,  that's  too  much.     See  Proving  the 
Question. — Anon. 
I  can  get  that  boy  to  drink  this  glass  of  wine.     See 

Noble  Answer,  A. — Anon. 
I  can  never  picture  to  yoa  the  rich  red  nose.     See 

Discourse  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Bosan.^ — Eggleston. 
I  can  picture  her  now.     See  same. — G.  D. 
I  can  ride  a  horse.     See  What  I  can  Do. — Denton . 
"I  can  scarcely  hear,"  she  murmured,  "for  my  heart 

beats  low  and  fast."     See  Hush. — Procter. 
I  can  see  him  pale  and  slender.     See  Nathan  Hale. — 

Cone. 
I  can  see  you're  a  gentleman.     See  Told  at  the  Tavern. 

— Havens. 
I  can  tell  just  how  it  happened,  though  it's  fifty  years 

ago.     See  For  a  Warning. — Le  Row. 
"I  can!"     Yes,  sir — we  know  you  can!     See  "I  Can!" 

— Anon. 
I  cannot  always  trace  the  way.     See  God  is  Love. — 

Anon. 
I  cannot  be  a  Washington.     See  Something  Better. — 

Denton. 
I  cannot    boast    of    learning    deep.     See    Comforting 

Reflections  of  a  Nonentity. — Williams. 
I  cannot,  cannot  say.     See  Under  the  Cross. — Rich- 
ards. 
I  cannot  change  as  others  do.     See  Constancy. — Roch- 
ester. 
I  cannot  check  my  thought  these  days.     See  Vagrant, 

A.— Pollard. 
I  cannot  choose  but  think  upon  the  time.     See  Brother 

and  Sister. — Eliot. 
I  cannot  choose;  I  should  have  liked  so  much.     See 

Martha  or  Mary? — Mason. 
I  cannot  conceive  anything  more  excellent.     See  Study 

of  Eloquence,  The. — Cicero. 
I  cannot  count  the  ways  my  soul  has  tried.     See  Sub- 
mission.— Allen. 
I  cannot  describe  the  horror  and  disgust  which  I  felt 
at  hearing  Mr.   Percival.     See  False   Notions  of 
Government  Vigor. — Smith. 
"I  cannot  do  much,"  said  a  little  star.     See  Best  that 

I  Can,  The. — -Anon. 
I  cannot  doubt  that  they  whom  ye  deplore.     See  Ex- 
cursion, The  ("I  cannot  doubt,"  etc.). — Words- 
worth. 
I  cannot  eat  but  little  meat.     See  Jolly  Good  Ale  and 

Old.— Still. 
I  cannot   endure  the   thought   that   Christ's   children 

should  be  less  free.     See  same. — Beecher. 
I  cannot    find    Thee!     Still    on    restless    pinion.     See 

Quest,  The. — Scudder. 
I  cannot  forbear  recalling  how  many  names  and  events 
wreathing  like  garlands.     See  Pilgrim  Commem- 
oration, The.— Long. 
I  cannot    forget    my  Joe.     See    Poor    French  Sailor's 

Scottish  Sweetheart,  A. — Cory. 
I  cannot  heal  thy  green  gold  breast.     See  To  the  Hum- 
ming-bird.— ^Very. 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  deem 


I  cannot  look  above  and  see.     See  Clouds,  The. — Cros- 

well. 
I  cannot  make  him  dead!     See  My  Child. — Pierpont. 

I  cannot,  my  lords,  I  will  not,  join  in  congratulation 
on  misfortune  and  disgrace.  See  American  War, 
The  (Speech  on  the  American  War). — Chatham. 

I  cannot  paint  a  single  line  of  her  dear  head.  See 
Portrait,  The. — Bowman. 

I  cannot  paint  what  then  I  was.  <See  Lines  Com- 
posed a  Few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey,  etc. 
(Varying  Impressions  from  Nature). — Words- 
worth. 

I  cannot  put  the  heavy  shot.  See  Specialist,  A. — 
Easton. 

I  cannot  rest  or  walk  these  halls  by  night.  See  Well 
of  Death,  The. — Anon. 

I  cannot  say,  and  I  will  not  say.     See  Away. — Riley. 

I  cannot  say;  beneath  the  pressure  of  life's  cares  to- 
day.    See  Amen! — Browning. 

I  cannot  sing  the  old  songs.  See  Songs  without 
Words. — Burdette. 

I  cannot  sing  to  thee  as  I  would  sing.  See  Ecstasy. — 
Mackay. 

I  cannot  speak,  I've  got  a  cough.  See  Bad  Cold,  A. — 
McBride. 

I  cannot  speak  of  the  New  England  town-meeting 
without  recalling  its  great  genius.  See  Cen- 
tennial Celebration  of  Concord  Fight  (Father  of 
the  Revolution,  The). — Curtis. 

I  cannot  stand  in  this  generous  presence.  See  Signifi- 
cance of  the  Spanish  War,  The. — Long. 

I  cannot  tell  the  spell  that  binds  thine  image.  See 
same. — Ketchum. 

I  cannot  tell  you,  Genevieve,  how  oft  it  comes  to  me. 
See  Old  Reading  Class,  The. — Carleton. 

I  cannot  tell  you  much  to  do.  See  What  not  to  Do. — 
Anon. 

I  cannot  think  but  God  must  know.     See  same. — Holm. 

I  cannot  think  of  them  as  dead.  See  My  Dead. — Hots- 
mer. 

I  cannot  think  that  thou  shouldst  pass  away.  See 
Sonnet:  "I  cannot  think,"  etc. — Lowell. 

I  cannot  vouch  my  tale  is  true.  See  Romance  of  Nfck 
Van  Stann,  The. — Saxe. 

I  can't  imagine  what  keeps  John  so  late!  See  Burglar 
Alarm,  The. — Graham. 

"I  Can't"  is  a  sluggard,  too  lazy  to  work.  See  "I 
Can't"  and  "I  Can." — Butler. 

I  can't  just  tell  what's  come  to  her,  an'  yet  I  think  it's 
clear.     Dreaming  of  Home.^Stanton. 

I  can't  make  out  for  the  life  of  me,  what  ails  my  eyes 
to-night.     See  Sunset  in  the  Orchard. — Osgood. 

I  can't  quite  thread  my  needle  yet.  See  Little  Seam- 
stress, The. — Anon. 

"I  can't  take  that  nickel,"  said  a  horse-car  conductor. 
See  Mutilated  Currency  Question,  The. — {Brook- 
lyn Eagle.) 

I  can't  tell  much  about  the  thing,  'twas  done  so  power- 
ful quick.     See  Railroad  Crossing,  The. — Strong. 

I  care  not  for  these  ladies.      See  Amaryllis. — Campion. 

I  care  not.  Fortune,  what  you  me  deny.  See  Castle  of 
Indolence,  The  (Freedom  of  Nature). — Thomson. 

I  care  not  how  you  have  been  blest.  See  IVIy  Lover. — 
— Anon. 

I  care  not,  though  it  be.     See  My  Little  Saint. — Norris. 

I  care  nothing  for  passing  renown.  See  same. — Chal- 
mers. 

I,  Catherine,  am  a  Douglas  born  See  King's  Tragedy, 
The.— Rossetti. 

I  celebrate  myself  and  sing  myself.  See  Song  of 
Myself  (Myself) .-^Whitman. 

I  challenge  not  the  oracle.     See  Sundered. — Morse. 

I  chanced,  one  afternoon,  to  pass.  See  When  I  Was 
Young. — Anon. 

I  chant  projected  a  thousand  blooming  cities.  See 
Expansion. — Whitman. 

I  charge  you,  O  winds  of  the  West.  See  Love  Trilogy. 
A.— Blind. 

I  charm  thy  life.  See  Curse  of  Kehama,  The. 
— Southey. 

I  chatter  over  stony  ways.  See  Brook,  The. — 
Tennyson. 

I  climbed  the  dark  brow  of  the  mighty  Helvellyn. 
See  Helvellyn. — Scott. 

I  Colyn  Clout.     See  Colyn  Cloute. — Skelton. 

I  come  before  you  with  this  beautiful  flag  in  my  hand. 
See  Our  Flag. — Anon. 

I  come  from  busy  haunts  of  men.  See  Cynic  of  the 
Woods,  The. — -Martin. 

I  come  from  haunts  of  coot  and  hern.  See  Brook,  The. 
— Tennyson. 

I  come  from  nothing;  but  from  where.  See  Modem 
Poet,  The.— Meynell. 


I  come  from  the  depths  of  the  mountain.     See  Moun- 
tain Brook,  A. — Judkins. 
I  come  from  the  distant  frozen  zones.     See  Seasons, 

The.— Home. 
I  come   half   voiceless   here   and   bring.     See   At   my 

Father's  Grave. — Hayne. 
I  come,  I  come!  ye  have  called  me  long.  See  Voice  of 

Spring,  The. — Hemans. 
I  come  mid  frost  and  snow  to  usher  in  the  New  Year. 

See  Twelve  Months,  The. — Johnson. 
I  come  not   here  to  talk.     You  know  too  well.     See 

Rienzi's  Address  to  the  Romans. — Mitford. 
I  come  now  to  the  war  of  1812 — -a  war  which  I  well 

remember.       See    On    Mr.    Foot's    Resolution    in 

the  U.  S.  Senate,  Jan.  21,  1830  (South  during  the 

War  of  1812,  The).— Hayne. 
I  come  to  add  the  flnal  reason  why  the  workingman. 

See  Consolations  of  Literature,  The. — Choate. 
I  come  to  visit  thee  agen.     See  To  a  Cyclamen. — Lan- 

dor. 
I  come,  ye  lovely  wild-wood  groves.    See  In  the  Woods. 

— M'Pherson. 
"I  come  your  sin-rid   souls  to   shrive."     See   Father 

Francis. — Pollock. 
I  confess  I  feel  a  degree  of  disgust.      See  Arraignment 

of  Ministers. — Burke. 
I  confess  it,  I  am  keenly  sensitive  to  "skyey  influences." 

See  Yankee  Gypsies. — Whittier. 
I  confess  the  pictures  of  the  mere  industrial  value. 

See  Higher  Views  of  the  Union. — Phillips. 
I  congratulate  you,  my  [brave]  countrymen  and  fellow- 
soldiers. — See    To    the    Army    before    Quebec. — 

Wolfe. 
I  congratulate  you  to-day.     See  Our  Country. — Har- 
rison. 
I  conjure  you,  by  that  which  you  profess.     See  Mac- 
beth.— ^Shakespeare. 
I  consider    that    a   conversation    by    telephone.     See 

Telephonic  Conversation,  A. ^Clemens. 
I  continued  in  the  churchyard,  reading  the  various. 

See    Rosamund    Gray    (In     the    Churchyard).— 

Lamb. 
I  could  a  tale  unfold,  whose  lightest  word.    See  Hamlet. 

— Shakespeare. 
I  could  have  stemmed  misfortune's  tide.     See  Wife, 

The.  — Dinnies. 
I  could  not  bear  to  see  those  eyes.     See  Protest,  The. — 

Lowell. 
I  could  not  speak  what  yet  I  often  wished  to  say.     See 

Unlocked. — Fitch. 
I  could  not  waste  myself.     I  had  to  make  my  own  way 

in  the  world.     See  same. — St.  John. 
I  could  resign  that  eye  of  blue.     See  Resignation. — 

Moore. 
I  count  my  time  by  times  that  I  meet  thee.     See  same. 

—Gilder. 
I  count  my  treasures  o'er  with  care.     See  Chri.stmas 

Treasures. — Field. 
I  count  this  thing  to  be  grandly  true.      See   Grada- 

tim  (Only  in  Dreams). — Holland. 
I,  country-born  an'  bred,  know  where  to  find.     See 

Biglow  Papers,    The  (Biglow   Papers,    No.    6). — 

Lowell. 
I  crave,  dear  Lord.     See  Ike  Walton's  Prayer. — Riley. 
I  crossed  the  Forum  to  the  foot  of  the  Palatine.     See 

Coliseum,  The. — Longfellow. 
I  dance  and  dance !     Another  faun.     See  Dancers,  The. 

Field. 
I  dare  not  ask  a  kiss.     See  To  Electra. — Herrick. 
I  dare  not  think  that  thou  art  by,  to  stand.     See  In- 
finity.— Savage. 
"I  dare     not!"     Were    those    cowardly    words.     See 

Courage. — Anon. 
I  dealt  the  "game"  for  twenty  years.     See  Gambler's 

Last  Deal,  The. — Preston. 
I  declare  how  unfortunate  it  is.     See  Aunt  Jemima's 

Money. — Bellows. 
I  declare  it  vas  too  bad.     I  hav'n't  seen  my  Carl  for 

dree  weeks.     See  All  in  der  Family. — McDermott 

and  Trumble. 
I  declare,  Jeremiah,  it's  perfectly  ridiculous  that  you 

haven't  stepped  off  yet!     See  Syke's  Predicament. 

• — Anon. 
I  declare,  John,  you're  the  stupideet  man  to-day  I  ever 

saw.     See  Going  to  See  the  Actors. — Anon. 
I  declare!  my  head  seems  bursting.     See  Soliloquy  by 

a  Girl  of  the  Period. — Anon. 
I  declare   that   it's  nothieg  but   ignorant   stuff.     See 

Popular  Error,  A. — Starkie. 
I  declare,  wife,  that  was  an  awful  accident.     See  Paper 

Don't  Say,  The. — Anon. 
I  deem  his  faith  the  best.     See  True  Faith,  The. — Bur- 
leigh. 


689 


I  deem 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  deem  it  a  very  great  honor  to  have  been  invited  by 

the  Suffolk  Bar  Association.     See  Address  at  the 

Unveiling  of  the  Statue  of  Rufus  Choate. — Choate. 

I  deemed  thy  garments,  O  my  Hope,  were  grey.     jSee 

Hope  Overtaken.— Rossetti. 
I  dell  you  all  apout  vot  dook  blace  mit  me  lasht  sum- 
mer.    See  How  "Sockery"  Set  a  Hen. — Anon. 
I  dells  you,  now,  vot  happen  voss.     See  Mr.  Sprechel- 

heimer's  Mistake. — Crane. 
I  dess  dere's  somfin  de  matter,  dere's  mice  on  de  pan- 
try shelf.     See  In  Trouble.— Pollard. 
I  devise  to  end  my  days  in  a  tavern  drinking.     See 

Jovial  Priest's  Confession,  The. — Hunt. 
I  did  but  look  and  love  awhile.     See  Enchantment, 

The.— Otway. 
"I  did  not  bite  tnat  pear,"  she  said.     See  Trartsposed. 

— Anon. 
I  did  not  choose  thee,  dearest.     It  was  love.     See  To 

Manon,  on  his  Fortune  in  Loving  Her.— Blunt. 
I  did  not  even  know  her  name.     See  Flirtation  on  the 

Cars,  A. — (University  of  Chicago  Weekly.) 
I  did  not  read  books  the  first  summer;  I  hoed  beans. 

See  Walden  (Sounds).— Thoreau. 
I  did  not  take  the  temporary  editorship  of  an  agricul- 
tural   paper    without    misgivings.     See    How    I 
Edited  an  .A.gricultural  Paper. — Clemens. 
I  did  not  think  that  I  should  find  them  there.     See 

Clerks,  The. — Robinson. 
I  did  not  want  to  make  a  speech.     See  Speech  for  a 

Boy. — Anon. 
I  did  not  want  to  speak  to-night.     See  Speech  for  a 

Ten-year-old  Boy. — Anon. 
I  did  not  write  the  line  that  has  been  tampered  with 
hastily.     See  Letter  to  Mr.   Johnson  (Printer). — 
Cowper. 
I  didn't  have  one  bit  o'  fear.     See  When  Ma  Was  Near. 

— Anon. 
I  didn't  know  you  were  back.      See  Dolly    Dialogues 

(Matter  of  Duty,  A). — Hope. 
I  didn't  mean  to  hurt  you,  I  am  very  sorry.     See  Sweet 

.\nswer,  A.— Anon. 
I  didn't  take  it,  indeed,  not  I.     See  Dog's  Confession, 

The. — Weatherly. 
I  died,  they  wrapped  me  in  a  shroud.     See  Dream  of 

Death,  A. — Jennison. 
I  dined  with  a  friend  in  the  East,  one  day.     See  Sun- 
beam, The. — Anon. 
I  dink  dot  der  didle  of  dis  bieces.     See  Dissibation. — 

Anon. 
I  do  affirm  that  thou  hast  saved  the  race.     See  Delay. 

— Bates. 
I  do  believe  though  I  have  found  them  not.  See  Childe 
Harold's   Pilgrimage    ("I   do    believe,"    etc.). — 
Byron. 
I  do  confess,  in  many  a  sigh.     See  Lying. — Moore. 
I  do  confess,  the  over-forward  tongue.     See  On  His 
Majesty's  Recovery  from  the  Small-pox. — Cart- 
right. 
I  do  confess  thou'rt  smooth  and  fair.     See  To  His  For- 
saken Mistress. — Ayton. 
I  do  confess  thou'rt  sweet,  yet  find.     See  I  do  Confess 

Thou'rt  Sweet. — Ayton. 
T  do  not  ask — dear  love — not  I.  See  Song,  A. — Wilson. 
I  do  not  ask,  O  Lord,  that  life  may  be.     See  Per  Pacem 

ad  Lucem. — Procter. 
1  do  not  believe  in  violent  changes,  nor  do  I  expect 

them.     See  Democracy. — Lowell. 
I  do  not  call  him  an  early  riser  who.     See  Sketch  of 

the  "Old  Coaching  Days,"  A. — Poole. 
I  do  not  come  to  weep  above  thy  pall.     See  Elegy  on 

the  Death  of  Dr.  Channing. — Lowell. 
I  do  not  count  the  hours  I  spend.     See  Waldeinsam- 

keit. — Emerson. 
I  do  not  dread  an  alter'd  heart.     See  Foreboding,  A. — 

Carrie. 
I  do  not  know  that  the  hands  are  weak.     See  Patriotic 

Recitations. — Anon. 
I  do  not  know  what  I  want.     See  Eh!    What  Is  It? — 

Kavanaugh. 
I  do  not  know  why  in  the  year  1899  this  Republic. 

See  Our  Duty  to  the  Philippines. — McKinley. 
I  do  not  like  to  hear  him  pray.     See  Bad  Prayers. — 

Alcott. ' 
I  do  not  like  to  mind  the  sheep.     See  Some   Noted 

Characters. — Denton. 
I  do  not  love  thee  for  that  fair.     See  tame. — Carew. 
I  do  not  love  thee  less  for  what  is  done.     See  Masque 
of    Pandora,    The    ("I  ^o   not    love,"    etc.). — 
Longfellow. 
I  do  not  love  thee!-:-no!  T  do  not  love  thee!     See  I  Do 

not  Love  Thee. — Norton. 
I  do  not  murmur,  nay,  I  thank  Thee,  God.     See  Judas 
Maccabeus. — Longfellow. 


I  do  not  own  an  inch  of  land.     See  Strip  of  Blue,  A. — 

Larcom. 
I  do  not  propose  to  dwell  on  the  special  relations  of 
Daniel     Webster     to     Dartmouth     College.     See 
Statue  of  Webster. — Chamberlain. 
I  do  not  rise  to  fawn  and  cringe  to  this  House.     See 

On  the  Iri.sh  Disturbanco  Bill. — O'Connell. 
I  do  not  rise  to  waste  the  night  in  words.     See  Cati- 
line (Catiline's  Defiance). — Croly. 
I  do  not  say,  elect  this  candidate  or  that  candidate. 
See  Appeal  for  the  Cause  of  Liberty,  An. — Har- 
rington. 

"I  do  not  see  any  peculiarity  about  your  people." 
See  Arkansas  Traveller,  The. — (Arkarisaw  Travel- 
ler.) 

I  do  not  see  why  God  should  e'en  permit  some  things 
to  be.  See  Amen  ("I  do  not  see,"  etc.). — 
Browning.  * 

I  do  not  stand  up  in  this  presence.  See  Blue  and  the 
Gray,  The. — Lodge. 

I  do  not  think  I  should  exaggerate  if  I  said.  See 
Eloquence  of  O'Connell,  The.— Phillips. 

I  do  not  think  it  best.  See  Short  Temperance  Speech, 
A.^ — -Anon. 

I  do  not  think  it  is  quite  just.  See  Speech  for  a  Boy. 
— Kavanaugh. 

I  do  not  think  she  loves  me  yet.  See  Eleanor. — Boynton. 

I  do  not  understand.  Why  am  I  here?  See  Deme- 
trius.— lluiicie. 

I  do  not  wonder  that  great  earls  value  their  trees.  See 
Historic  Trees. — Smith. 

I  do  really  believe  I  shall  be  glad  when  the  holi- 
days are  over.  See  Through  Children's  Eyes. — 
Anon. 

I  do  remember  an  apothecary.  See  Romeo  and 
Juliet. — Shakespeare. 

I  do  remember  me  that  in  my  youth.  See  Manfred 
CColiseum,  The). — Byron. 

I  do  wish  it  would  quit  raining.  See  Playing  Fourth 
of  July. — Burlingame. 

I  do  wonder  what  time  the  two  o'clock  train  leaves. 
See  Scene  in  a  Railway  Station.- — McBride. 

I  don'd  [or  don't]  lofe  you  now  von  schmall  little  bit. 
See  Go  Vay,  Becky  Miller,  Go  Vay! — Anon. 

I  don'd  vas  preeching  voman's  righdts.  See  Der  Oak 
und  der  Vine. — Adams. 

I  don't  appwove  this  hawid  waw.  See  Swell's  Solilo- 
quy on  the  War,  A.^Anon. 

"I  don't  ask  you  for  more  than  a  guinea,"  said  Mrs. 
Hilary.  See  Dolly  Dialogues  (Slight  Mistake,  A). 
—Hope. 

I  don't  believe  I  can  ever  do  it!  See  Valentine,  The. — 
Anon. 

I  don't  believe  in  telling  fibs.  See  Her  Dilemma. — 
McVey. 

I  don't  believe,  Nell,  there  ever  was  such  a  thing  as  a 
ghost.     See  Seeing  a  Ghost. — Crouch. 

I  don't  belong  to  the  'Stablished  Church.  See  Three 
Parsons,  The. — Anon. 

I  don't  care,  Charlie,  if  you  are  my  only  brother.  See 
Hiring  Help. — Crosby. 

I  don't  expect  to  do  great  things  here.  See  Artemua 
Ward's  Mormon  Lecture. — Browne. 

I  don't  go  much  on  "loyalty"  in  these  degenerate  days. 
See  Modern  Loyalty. — Anon. 

I  don't  go  much  on  religion.  See  Little  Breeches. — 
Hay. 

I  don't  know  any  greatest  treat.  See  Parterre,  The. — 
Palmer. 

I  don't  know  how  it  is  that  boys.  See  Speech  for  a 
Boy  of  Eight  or  Nine. — Kavanaugh. 

I  don't  know  much  about  this  kind  of  thing.  See  At 
the    Rug    Auction. — Baldwin. 

"I  don't  know  what  day  of  the  month  it  is!"  See 
Christmas  Carol,  A  (Scrooge  Fulfils  his  Vow). — 
Dickens. 

I  don't  know  what  upon  airth  has  come  over  John. 
See  Storm,  The. — Anon. 

I  don't  know  who  makes  New  England  weather.  See 
New  England  Weather. — Clemens. 

I  don't  know  why  I  has  to  tote.  See  "Pa  Never  Does." 
— Anon. 

I  don't  know  why  Josiah  doesn't  come.  See  Josiah's 
First  Courting. — Anon. 

"I  don't  like  grandma  at  all,"  said  Fred.  See  Cause  for 
( V>mplaint. — Anon. 

I  don't  like  horses  that  will  not  spring.  See  What  I 
Don't  Like. — Anon  . 

I  don't  like  John  Jayne.  See  Acting  Drunk. — Mc- 
Bride. 

I  don't  like  Mr.  Travers  as  much  as  I  did.  See  Adven- 
tures of  Jimmy  Brown,  The  (Jimmy  Brown's 
Steam  Chair). — Alden. 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  give 


I  don't  like  your  chopped  music  any  way.     See  Poet 

at  the  Breakfast-table,  The  (Fashionable  Piano 

Music). — Holmes. 
I   don't   [or   don'dl   lofe   you    now   von   schmall  little 

bit.      See  Go     Vay,    Becky    Miller,    Go    Vay. — 

Anon. 
I  don't   see  my   advertisement.     Oh,   here  it  is.     See 

Satisfied  All  Round. — Anon. 
I  don't  see  what  I've  done  to  hurt  her.    See  'Toinette's 

Philip  (Mouse,  The). — .Jamison. 
I  don't  see  why  the  big  folks  all.     See  Mud  Cakes. — 

Anon. 
I  don't  think  I  feel  much  older:  I'm  aware  I'm  rather 

gray.     See    Archbishop     and     Gil     Bias,     The. — 

Holmes. 
I  don't  want  to  compel  you.     See  My  Neighbor's  Call. 

—Peck. 
I  don't  want  to  hear  naughty  words.     See  Naughty 

Words. — Anon. 
I  don't  want   to   'pear  oncanny.     See  Hayseed's  Im- 
pression of  the  Snap  Shot  Man,  The. — Anon. 
"I  don't   want  to  play  in  your  yard."     See  same. — 

Anon. 
I  don't  wear  dresses  any  more.     See  Almost  a  Man. — 

Anon. 
I  doubt  whether  two  young  birds  could   have  known 

less.     See    David  Copperfield    (Housekeeping). — 

Dickens. 
I  doubt  whether  we  can  select  an  illustration  of  the 

mechanical  progress.     See  Printing  Press,  The.^ 

(Jhapin. 
I  dream  of  Flo,   and   memory,   fleeting  light.     See  I 

Dream  of  Klo. — Davis. 
I  dream  of  it,  tossing  about  in  my  skiff.     See  Little 

Brown  Cabin.  The. — Larcom. 
I  dreamed  I  saw  a  little  brook.     See  Vision  of  Children, 

A.— Ashe.  / 

I  dream'd  that  I  woke  froA  a  dream.     See  Song. — Mac- 

donald. 
I  dreamed   a   dream;    I    dreamt   that    I    espied.     See 

Shadow,  The.— Clough. 
I  dreamed  a  dream  in  the  midst  of  my  slumbers.     See 

Bachelor  Sale,  The.— Anon. 
I  dreamed    a    dream    next    Tuesday    week.     See    My 

Dream. — Anon. 
I  dreamed  so  dear  a  dream   of   you   last  night!     See 

Forgiven. — Jackson. 
I  dreamed  that,  as  I  wandered  by  the  way.     See  Ques- 
tion, The.— Shelley. 
"I  dreamed  that  we  were  lovers  still."     See  Reunited 

Love. — Blackmore. 
I  dreamed  two  spirits  came — one  dusk  as  night.     See 

Two  Spirits,  The. — Kenyon. 
I  dreamt   a   dream!  What   can  it   mean?     See  Angel, 

The.— Blake. 
I  dreamt  it!    such    a    funny    thine.     See    What    the 

Prince  of  I  Dreamt. — Cholmondeley-Pennell. 
I  drew    her    head.     See    Kathrina. — Holland. 
1  drew  it  from  its  china  tomb.     See  Dead  Letter,  A. — 

Dobson. 
I  drove  my  old  horse,  Dobbin,  full  slowly  toward  the 

town.     See  Passing  of  the  Horse. — Anon. 
I  du  believe  in  Freedom's  cause.     See  Biglow  Papers, 

The  (Candidate's  Creed,  The).— Lowell. 
I  dug,  beneath  the  cypress  shade.     See  Grave  of  Love, 

'The. — Peacock. 
I  dunno   what's   the   reason   thet   about   this   season. 

See  Just  about  These  Days — Wordene. 
I  dwell  on  a  beautiful  island.     See  Island  of   Home, 

The.— Bailey. 
I  dwelt  alone.     See  Eulalie. — Poe. 
I  earnestly  hope  that  this  resolution  will  be  adopted 

by  the  house.     See  Tomb  of  Washington,  The. — 

Savage. 
I  entered,  upon  a  day,  at  the  house  of  my  friend  (the 

grocer).     See  "Estrangement." — Coggswell. 
I  envy   not    Endymion   now   no   more.     See   Aurora, 

Sonnets  from. — Alexander. 
I  envy    not,    in    any     moods.      See     In     Memoriam. 

— Tennyson. 
I  explain  the  silvered  passing  of  a  ship  at  night.     See 

I  Explain. — Crane. 
I  fain  would  ask  thee  to  forget.     See  same. — Anon. 
I  fear   no    power   a   woman   wields.     See   same. — Mc- 

Gaffey. 
I  fear  thy  kisses,   gentle  maiden.     See  To ■  I 

fear  thy  kisses,  etc. — Shelley. 
I  feed   a   flame   within,   which   so   torments   me.     See 

Hidden  Flame. — Dryden. 
I  feel  a  newer  life  in  every  gale.     See  Reign  of  Mav, 

The.— Percival. 
I  feel  a  poem  in  my  heart  to-night.     See  Embryo. — 

Townsend. 


I  feel   so   vexed   with   Ben   that   I   really   must.     See 

Book  of  Thanks,  The. — Anon. 
I  feel  that  I  am  admired  by  all  the  young  ladies.     See 

Vanity  Vanquished. — McBride. 
I  feel  that  the  honor  which  you  have  conferred  upon 

me.     See  Toast — to  the  Ladies,  A. — Oswald. 
I  feel    that    thou    art    near,     mother.     See    Soldier's 

Mother,  The. — Anon. 
I  feel  the  breath  of  the  summer  night.     See  Summer 

Night,  A. — Stoddard. 
I  feel   the   usual   diffidence  that   should    characterize. 

See  After  Dinner  Speech  before  the  Harvard  Club 

of  New  York. — Howland. 
I  feel,  when  I  have  sinned,  an  immediate  reluctance  to 

go  to  Christ.     See  same. — McCheyne. 
I  fell  asleep,  and  slept  an  hour  or  two.     See  I^egende 

of  Goode   Women,  The  (Queen  Alcestis  and  the 

God  of  Love). — Chaucer. 
I  fell  in  love  with  Arabella  Appleby  when  I  was  very 

yoimg.     See   My    Sweetheart's    Baby   Brother. — • 

Dallas. 
I  fell  in  love  with  Phyllis  Brown.     See  Amateur  Pho- 
tography.— -Dole. 
I  felt  in  no  mood  for  entertaining.     See  "Good  Night." 

— Kaylor. 
I  fill  my  pipe  'mid  thoughts  of  thee.     See  I  Fill  my 

Pipe.— A.  M.  S. 
I  fill   this   cup   to   one   made   up.     See   Health,   A.^ 

Pinkney. 
I  find  myself  compelled  to  believe  that  science  is  a 

rule   or   law   of   God.     See   Value   of   Science. — 

Cooper. 
I  find  that  one  of  the  most   serious  objections.     See 

Out  of  the   Hurly  Burly  (Catching  the  Morning 

Train).— Clark. 
I  fint  'at  'is  worl'  is  too  bad  for  nuffin'.     See  Tommy's 

Twials. — Anon. 
I  first  came  to  understand  anything.     See  Man  with- 
out a  Country,  The. — Hale. 
I  flare    from    a    slender    candle    small.     See    Candle- 
light's Lament,  The. — (Punch  Bowl.) 
I  flatter  my.self  that  I  have  now  got  into  a  business 

which    suits    me.     See    Closing    of    the    "Eagle," 

The.— McBride. 
I  flung-  me  round  him.     See  Water-nymph  and    the 

Boy,  The.— Noel. 
I  flunked  to-day,  "I'm  not  prepared,"     See  I  Flunked 

To-day. — Terhune. 
I  for  fame  have  no  desire.     See  Fame. — (Wrinkle.) 
I  for  thy  sake  was  pierced  with  heavy  sorrow.     See 

Good  Friday. — Savonarola. 
I  fought   under   Lee   and   Stonewall.     See   Enlisted. — 

Hall. 
I  found  a  flower  in  a  desolate  plot.     See  Black  Wall- 
flower, The. — Kemble. 
"I  found  a  Rome  of  common  clay,"  imperial  Csesar 

cried.     See  Burning  of  Chicago,  The. — Taylor. 
I  found   a  yellow   flower  in   the   grass.     See  Summer 

Sanctuary,  A. — Ingham. 
I  found  beside  a  meadow  brooklet    bright.  See  Kin- 
ship.— McKnight. 
I  found  fault,  some  time  ago,  with  Maria  .\nn's  cus- 
tard pie.     See  Husband's  Experience  in  Cooking, 

A. — Anon. 
I  found    him    openly    wearing    her    token.     See    Con- 
quest, A. — Pollock. 
I  found  my  friend  in  his  easy  chair.     See  My  Friend's 

Secret. — Shillaber. 
I  found   my  old   dolls  in  the  attic  to-day.     See  My 

Dolls. — -Davis. 
I  found  the  phrase  to  every  thought.     See  Utterance. 

— Dickinson. 
I  found  them  in  a  book  last  night.     See  Souvenir,  A. — 

Anon. 
I  gaed  to  spend  a  week  in  Fife.     See  Annuity,  The. — 

Outram. 
I  gave  into  a  brown  and  tir6d  hand.     See  Christmas 

Roses. — Smith. 
I  gave  my  life  for  thee.     See  8am.e. — Havergal. 
I  gave  my  love  a  fan  before  she  knew.     See  Love's 

Gifts. — Anon. 
I  gave  my  soldier-boy  a  blade.     See  Soldier  Boy,  The. 

— Maginn. 
I  gazed  upon  the  glorious  sky.     See  June. — Bryant. 
I  geeps  me  von   leetle  schtore  town   Broadway.     See 

Mr.  Schmidt's  Mi.stake. — .Adams. 
I  get  so  tired  'cause  I'm  only  just  me.     See  "Just  Me." 

— Denton. 
I  give  immortal  praise.     See  same. — Watts. 
I  give  mv  heart  to  thee.  O  mother-land.     See  I  Give 

my  Heart  to  Thee. — O 'Grady. 
I  give  thee  all,  I  can  no  more.     See  Stewed  Duck  and 

Peas. — (Punch.) 


\ 


691 


I  give 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  give    thee    treasures    hour   by    hour.     iSe«    Then. — 

Cooke. 
I  glaiice<l    through   the   curtain's   fold.     See   June   in 

January. — Munkittrick. 
I  go  to  concert,  p^y.  ball — what  profit  is  in  these? 

Sfe  My  Rival. — Kipling. 
I  go  to  knit  two  clans  together.     See  Wedding  of  the 

Clans.  The.— De  Vere. 
I  go  to  prove  my  soul.   See  Paracelsus  ("I  go  to  prove," 

etc.). — Browning. 
I  goe.o  to  Utica  last  week,  and  I  meets  a  frint.     iSee 

Dutchman's  Cheese,  The. — Anon. 
I  got    a    position    to    take    the    census.     See    Census 

Enumerator,  The. — Thatcher. 
I  got  acquainted  very  quick.     See  Getting  Acquainted. 

— Dayre. 
I  got  me  flowers  to  strew  Thy  way.     jSe«  Easter. — 

Herbert. 
I  got  soom  leedle  schokes  to  tell.     <See  Dot  Dutchman 

in  der  Moon. — Thorpe. 
I  got  to  thinkin'  of  her,  both  her  parents  dead  and 

gone.     See  So  I  Got  to  Thinkin'  of  Her. — Riley. 
I  got  to  thinkin'  of  him — as  sometimes  a  feller  will. 

See  James  Whitcomb  Riley. — Burdette. 
I  gratefully  acknowledge  your  courtesy,  veterans  and 

members.     See  Memorial  Day. — Long. 
I  grew    assured,    before    I    asked.     See   Angel    in    the 

Hou.se,   "The   (Sweet    Meeting    of   Desires). — Pat- 
more. 
I  grieve  to  say  it,  but  our  people,  I  think,  have  not 

generally  agreeable  voices.     See   Autocrat  of  the 

Breakfast-table,   The     (Human    Voice,     The).— 

Holmes. 
I  8:rinda  de  org'  and  I  plays  de  fid'.     See  Race  Preju- 
dice.— Anon. 
I  groan  as  I  put  out  my  nets  on  the  say.     See  Island 

Fisherman.  An. — Tynan-Hinkson. 
"I  guess   I   haf    to    gif    up    my    delephone    already." 

See   Dutchman's   Telephone,  The. — (Detroit   Free 

Press.) 
"I  guess  I  haf  my  telephone  took  out  of  my  house." 

See  "Shake's  Telephone." — Lewis. 
I  guess  this's  er  right  place — hie !     See  Reformed  Mor- 
mon Tippler'  The. — McBride. 
I  habe  been   studying  geology  lately,   Johnson.     See 

Bones  as  Geologist.— Anon. 
I  had     a     beautiful     garment.     See     Moth-eaten. — 

Sangster. 
I  had  a  chair  at  every  hearth.     See  Lamentation  of 

the  Old  Pensioner,  The. — Yeats. 
I  had  a  dove  and  the  sweet    dove    died.      See  Dove, 

The.— Keats. 
I  had  a  dream! — my  spirit  was  unbound.     See  Dream, 

The. — Browning. 
I  had    a    dream,    one    glorious,    summer    night.     See 

Beauty. — Winter. 
I  had  a  dream,  which  was  not  all  a  dream.     See  Dark- 
ness.— Byron. 
I  had  a  flock  of  chickens.     See  My  Poultry  Yard. — 

Anon. 
I  had  a  fortune  left  to  me  a  short  time  ago,  Johnson. 

See  Bones  in  Luck.- — Anon. 
I  had  a  friend  once,  and  she  was  to  me.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
I  had  a  garden  when  I  was  a  boy.     See  Purple  Asters. 

— Eaton. 
I  had  a  hat — it  was  not  all  a  hat.     See  Old  Hat,  The. — 

Anon. 
I  had   a  little   chamber  in  the   house.      See    Aurora 

Leigh  (Aurora's  Home). — Browning. 
I  had    a    little    daughter.     See    Changeling,    The. — 

Ix)well. 
I  had  a  little  yellow  bird.     See  same. — (St.  Nicholas.) 
I  had  a  love  in  soft  south  land.     See  Love  from  the 

North. — Hossetti. 
"I  had  a  lover  once,"  she  .sighed.     See  Her  Perfect 

Ijover. — Bridges. 
I  had  a  message  to  send  her.     See  Sent  to  Heaven. — 

Procter. 
I  had  a  schoolmate  who  had  come  into  school.     See 

Lesson  in  Reading,  A. — Hunt. 
I  had  a  silver  buckle.     See  Buckle,  The. — Ramal. 
I  had  a  singular  dream  last  night.     See  Dream  of  the 

"Fat  Contributor." — Griswold. 
I  had  a  treasure  in  my  house.     See  Lost  and  Found. — 

Mason. 
I  had  a  true-love,  none  so  dear.     See  Fortune's  Wheel. 

— De  Tabley. 
I  had    a    vision.     All    the    years.     See    Vision,    A. — 

Gates. 
I  had  an  improved  back  yard.     See  London  Bee  Story 

A. — Quiz. 
I  had  an  uncle  once, — a  man.     See  Uncle,  The. — Bell. 


I  had   come   from   the  city  early.     See   Reductio   ad 

Absurdum. — Baker. 
I  had  for  some  time  entertained  a  strong  conviction. 

See  Out  of  the   Hurly  Burly   (My   First  Political 

Speech). — Clark. 
1  had  found  out  a  sweet  green  spot.     See  Lily  of  the 

Valley,  The.— Percival. 
I  had  found  the  secret  of  a  garret-room.     See  Aurora 

Leigh  (Poets,  The). — Browning. 
I  had  gone  on  a  visit  to  Holmesdale,  a  little  town  in 

the  North  of  England.     See  Race  for  Life,  A. — 

Anon. 
I  had  heard  it  was  considerable  of  a  store.     See  My 

Opinions    and    Betsey    Bobbet's  (Josiah  Allen's 

Wife  at  A.  T.  Stewart's  Store).— HoUey. 
I  had  heard  the  muskets'  rattle  of  the  April  running 

battle.     See  Grandmother's  Story  of  Bunker  Hill 

Battle. — Holmes. 
I  had    lately    the    pleasure    of   making   a    visit.     See 

Visit  to  Thompkinsville  University,  A. — Anon. 
I  had  left  school  and  lived  with  my  grandmother  in  a 

big,  gloomy  house,  all  alone.     See  I  Love  You. — 

Anon. 
I  had  my  birth  where  stars  were  born.     See  My  Birth. 

— Savage. 
I  had  never  had  chances  of  schools  and  learning,  you 

see.     See  Robert. — Bishop. 
I  had  never  seen  him  before.     See  My  First  Interview 

with  Artemus  Ward. — Clemens. 
I  had  no  time  to  hate.     See  No  Time  to  Hate. — Dick- 
inson. 
I  had   position  high  and  holy.     See  Confession  of  a 

Drunkard. — Anon. 
I  had   rather  as  a  forgiven   child,   with   all   the   pros- 
pects of  the  future.     See  same. — Brooks. 
I   had  rather  be  a  kitten,  and  cry,  mew.     See  King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I|  (Rhymers). — Shakespeare. 
I  had  rather  you  were  beside  me,  love.     See  Lover  to 

his  Lady-love,  A. — Hastings. 
I  had  ridden  over  hurdles  up  the  country  once  or  twice. 

See  Open  Steeplechase,  The. — Anon. 
I  had  .seen  him   in   battle,   and   he  was  a   man.     See 

Tragedy  of  Sedan,  A. — Rohlfs. 
I  had  six  Moorish  nurses,  but  the  seventh  was  not  a 

Moor.     See  Moor  Calaynos,  The. — Lockhart. 
I  had  sworn  to  be  a  bachelor,  she  had  sworn  to  be  a 

maid.     See  Platonic. — Ferrett. 
I  had  told  him,  Christmas  morning.     See  Little  Ben- 

nie. — Ketchum. 
I  had  two  friends  a  while  ago.     See  De  Gustibus.— 

Erskine. 
I  hae  naebody  now,  I  hae  naebody  now.     See  I  Hae 

Naebody  Now. — Hogg. 
I  hae  seen  great  anes,  and  sat  in  great  ha's.     See  My 

ain  Fireside. — Hamilton. 
I  haf  just  arrive'   in   New   York  from   ze   steamaire. 

See     Frenchman's     Dilemma,     The. — McNulty. 
I  haf  von  funny  [or  a  vunny]  leedle  poy.     See  Leedle 

Yawcob  Strauss. — Adams. 
I  hafe  [or  have]  forgodden  my  nodes.     See  Oration  on 

the  "Labor"  Question. — Anon. 
I  hail  the  merry  autumn  days.     See  Merry  Autumn 

Days. — Dickens. 
I  hain't  no  great  detective,  like  yer  read  about, — the 

kind.     See  Matildy's  Beau. — Lincoln. 
I  hain't  nothin'  agin  boys,  as  sich.      See  Aunt  Melissy 

on  Boys. — ^Trowbridge. 
I  hain't  noth'n  ag'in'  that  po'tion.     See  By  Ned! — 

Anon. 
I  halted   at   a  pleasant   inn.     See  Way-side   Inn — an 

Apple-tree,  The. — Anon. 
I  hardly  know  how  to  begin  what  I've  started  out  to 

tell.     See  .Tamie. — Meyers. 
I  hate  French!     See  French  Lesson,  The. — Anon. 
I  hate  my  geography  lesson!     See  Geography  Demon, 

The. — Anon. 
I  hate  those   pants  that  mother  makes.     See  Small 

Boy's  Loquitur. — Anon. 
"I   hate   you,    I   hate   you!"   the   maiden   said.     See 

Woman's  Hate,  A. — Anon. 
I  have  a  few  words  to  say  to  you  now.     See  Aunt 

Melis.sa's  Money. — Anon. 
I  have  a  friend;  that  is,  he  isn't  a  friend,  but.     See 

Patents  Applied  for. — Thatcher. 
I  have  a  glove,  'twas  once  I  think.     See  Treasures. — 

Kavanagh. 
I  have  a  hot  and  youthful  blood.     See  Sore  Disap- 
pointment.—Koehner. 
I  have  a  kitty,  and,  what  do  you  think?     See  Wink. — 

—Kendall. 
I  have  a  little  comforter.     See  My  Little  Brown  Pipe. 

— Barr. 
I  have  a  little  doggy.     See  My  Doggie. — Anon. 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  have 


I  have  a  little  dolly.     See  My  Dolly. — Anon. 
I  have  a  little  friend.     See  My  Little  Friend. — East- 
man. 
I  have    a    little    kinsman.     See    Discoverer,    The. — 

Stedman. 
I  have  a  little  kitty.     See  Kitty. — ^Anon. 
I  have  a  little  lady.     See  Tattle  Lady,  The. — Reviere. 
I  have  a  little  mistress.     See  Canary's  Story,  The. — 

E.  V.  S. 
I  have  a  little  pony.     See  Tale  of  a  Pony. — Anon. 
I  have  a  little  shadow  that  goes  in  and  out  with  me. 

See  My  Shadow. — Stevenson. 
I  have  a  love,  a  bright-eyed  love.     See  My  Love. — 

Fox. 
I  have  a  lovely  grandma.     See  Grandma's  Pocket. — 

Richards. 
I  have  a  mistress,   for  perfection  rare.     See  Devout 

Lover,  A. — Randolph. 
I  have  a  name,  a  little  name.     See  Pet  Name,  The. — 

Browning. 
I  have  a  new  bonnet ;  I'll  go  up  to  church.     See  Church 

Reveries  of  a  School-girl. — Taylor. 
I  have  a  question  now  to  ask.     See  Which  would  You 

Rather  Be? — Anon. 
I  have  a  secret  I  would  like.     See  Robin  Redbreast's 

Secret. — Anon. 
I  have  a  secret  to  tell  you.     See  Secret,  A. — Moor- 
house. 
I  have  a  son,  a  little  son,  a  boy  just  five  years  old. 

See  Three  Sons,  The. — Moultrie. 
I  have  a  store  of  goodly  things.     See  Comforter,  The. 

—Kirk. 
I  have  a  strain  of  a  departed  bard.     See  Life-drama, 

A  (Forerunners). — Smith. 
I  have  a  tiny  prisoner.     See  Little  Prisoner,  The. — 

Denton. 
I  have  a  wondrous  house  to  build.     See  Building  of 

the  House,  The. — Mackay. 
I  have  almost  forgot  the  taste  of  fear.      See  Macbeth. 

— Shakespeare. 
I  have  always  loved  dogs.     See  My  Dog  "Sport."— 

Street. 
I  have   always   thought   it   strange   that   good,    pious, 

well-meaning  folks.     See     Leap-year     Mishaps. — 

Anon. 
I  have  an  almost  feminine  partiality  for  old  china. 

See  Old  China. — I^amb. 
I  have  an  orange,  too,  like  May's.     See  Ned's  Best 

Friend. — Rook. 
I  have  another  life  I  long  to  meet.     See  Incomplete- 
ness.— Feuillet. 
I  have  asked  that  dreadful  question  of  the  hills.     See 

Ion. — Talfourd. 
I  have  been  accused  of  ambition  in  presenting  this 

measure.     See  Ambition  of  a  Statesman. — Clay. 
I  have  been  always  wonderfully  delighted  with  fables. 

See  same. — Addison. 
I  have  been  asked  to  say  a  few  words.     See  At  the 

Unveiling  of  the  Gray  Memorial.- — Lowell. 
I  have  been  back  to  my  home  again.     See  Some  Old 

School-books. — Anon . 
I  have  been  charged  with  being  the  author  in  some 

instances.     See   Conservative    Innovator,    The. — 

Haskisson. 
I  have   been    charged   with   that   importance   in    the 

efforts    to     emancipate     my    country.       See    On 

being    Found    Guilty    of     High    Treason    (Last 

Speech  of  Robert  Emmet,  The). — Emmet. 
I  have  been  exceedingly  touched  latterly  by  the  kind- 
ness which   I   have  received.     See  International 

Arbitration. — Lowell. 
I  have  been  here  before.     See  Sudden   Light. — Ros- 

setti. 
I  have  been  in  the  meadows  all  the  day.     See  Irrepa- 

rableness. — Browning. 
I  have  been  introduced  to  you  as  an  experienced  agri- 
culturalist.    See    Mark    Twain    as    a    Farmer. — 

Clemens. 
I  have  been  lately  informed  by  the  proprietor  of  The 

World.     See  Letter  to  the  Earl  of  Chesterfield. — 

Johnson. 
I  have  been  looking  on,  this  evening,  at  a  merry  com- 
pany    of    children.     See     Recollections     of     My 

Christmas  Tree. — Dickens. 
I  have  been  out  to-day  in  field  and  wood.     See  Field 

Preaching. — Cary. 
I  have  been  requested  to  repeat.     See  Wayback  Tem- 
perance Lecture. — Risley. 
I  have  been  requested  to  say  something  which  may  be 

of  benefit  to  young  men.     See  Success  in  Life. — 

Childs. 
I  have  been  seeking  an  opportunity  of  conversing  with 

you.     See  Spoiled  Child,  The. — -Anon. 


I  have  been  somewhat  criticised.     See  Lost  Arts,  The. 

—Phillips. 
I  have    been    studying    the    horn.     See    High    Art — 

Music. — Adeler. 
I    have    been    the    victim    of    a    somewhat    singular 

persecution  for  several  weeks  past.       See  Out  of 

the   Hurly  Burly   (Avalanche    of   Drugs,  An). — 

Clark. 
I  have  been  to  a  land,  a  Border  Land.     See  Border 

Land. — Anon. 
"I  have  been  told,"  said  Mr.  Dubious.     See  What  a 

Thirty-ton  Hammer  Can  Do. — Anon. 
I  have  been  wandering  where  the  daisies  grow.     See 

Content. — Almon-Hensley. 
I  have  beheld,  ere  now,  at  break  of  day.     See  Divine 

Comedy,  The  (Beatrice). — Dante. 
I  have  beheld  ere  now,  when  dawn  would  pale.     See 

Divine  Comedy,  The  (Beatrice  Descending  from 

Heaven). — Dante. 
I  have  but  one  lamp  by  which  my  feet  are  guided. 

See    Speech    before    the    Virginia    Convention. — 

Henry. 
I  have  closed  my  books  and  hidden  my  slate.     See 

Vacation  Song. — Bates. 
I    have    come    before    you    this    beautiful    Sabbath 

afternoon.       See    Speech    on   Temperance,   A. — 

Colfax. 
I  have  come  from   the   land   of  ice  and   snow.     See 

Santa  Claus  Reception. — Halifax. 
"I  have  determined  to  die,"  he  said,  as  he  entered 

the  drug-store.      See   Obliging   Druggist,   The. — 

Anon. 
I  have  done  at  length  with  dreaming.     See  Waking. — 

Mason. 
I  have  done  one  braver  thing.     See  Undertaking,  The. 

Donne. 
I  have  entered  the  lists  with  the  actual  ruler  of  Europe. 

See  Napoleon  the  Little.— Hugo. 
I  have  faith  in  the  future,  because  I  have  confidence 

in  the  present.     See  Future  of  the  United  States, 

The.— King. 
I  have  fancied  sometimes  the  Bethel-bent  beam.     See 

Old  Village  Choir,  The.— Taylor. 
I  have    fled   from    her;   have    refused   the   rose.     See 

Paolo  and  Francesca. — Phillips. 
I  have  [or  hafe]  forgodden  my  nodes.     See  Oration  on 

the  "Labor"  Question.^Anon. 
I  have  found  a  nest  full  of  pretty  eggs.     See  Bird's 

Nest,  The.— Westcott. 
I  have    found    [out]    a    gig-gig-gift    [tor.    gig-gig-girl] 

for  my  fuf-fuf-fair.     See  Invitation  to  tne  Zoologi- 
cal Gardens,  An. — (Punch.) 
I  have    found    violets.     April    hath    come    on.     See 

April. — Willis. 
I  have  given  the  matter  a  great  deal  of  thought.     See 

Don't    Marry    a    Drunkard    to    Reform    Him. — 

McBride. 
I  have  got  a  leedle  boy.     See  Leedle  Yawcob  Strauss. 

— Adams. 
I  have  got  a  letter.     See  Bessie's  Letter  — ^Anon. 
I  have  got  a  new-born  sister.     See  Choosing  a  Name. — 

Lamb. 
I  have  got  home  from  the  shop  earlier  than  usual  this 

evening.     See  Obtaining  a  Promise. — McBride. 
I  have  had  for  friends  and  allies.     See  Retrospect,  A. — 

Hugo. 
I  have  had  ladies  say  to  me,  "Mr.  Solitary,  you  really 

are  looking  for  perfection. "     See  Simon  Solitary's 

Ideal  Wife.— Dallas. 
I  have  had  playmates,  I  have  had  companions.     See 

Old  Familiar  Faces,  The. — Lamb. 
I  have  heard  a  robin  singing.     See  First  Robin,  The. — 

Richards. 
I  have  heard  it  said  that,  when  one  lifts  up  his  voice 

against  things  that  are.     See  Fate  of  the  Reformer, 

The. — Brougham. 
I  have  heard  much  and  read  somewhat  of  this  gentle- 
man.    See  Retributive  Justice. — Corwin. 
I  have  heard  of  a  boy  who  lived  long  ago.     See  Queer 

Hole,  A. — Anon. 
I  have  heard  that  guilty  creatures,  sitting  at  a  play. 

See  Hamlet  (Stage,  The). — Shakespeare. 
I  have  heard  that  nothing  gives  an  author  so  great 

pleasure.     See  Poor  Richard's  Almanac. — Frank- 
lin. 
I  have  in  memory  a  little  story.     See  Uncle  Joe. — 

Anon. 
I  have  just  been  learning  the  lesson  of  life.     See  Under 

the  Daisies. — Griswold. 
I  have  just  dreamed  a  dream.     See  Convict's  Solilo- 
quy the  Night  before  Execution. — Trafton. 
I  have   just   received   from   Washington,    D.    C.     See 

What  I  Saw  in  Washington. — Thatcher. 


693 


I  have 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  have  known  a  country  society  which  withered  away. 

See  Evils  of  Gossip. — Anon. 
I  have   known   cities  with   the   strong-armed    Rhine. 

See  .\Ked  Cities.— Faber. 
I  have  laboreil  forthe  continuance  of  the  union.     See 

Union  of  the  Slates,  The.^Randolph. 
I  have  learned  of  dear  Kriss  Kringle.     iSee  West. — 

.\non. 
I  have  learned  to   look   on    Nature.     iSee  Lines   Com- 
posed a  Few  Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey,  etc. — 
Wordsworth. 

I  have  led  her  home,  my  love,  my  only  friend.  See 
Maud. — Tennyson. 

I  have  long  felt  that  it  was  necessary — that  it  was  in- 
evitable we  should  meet  face  to  face.  See  Ad- 
dress to  the  Chambers  of  Peers. — Trelat. 

I  have  looketi  upon  the  earth  with  eyes  of  manhood 
near  two-score  years.  See  Miser's  Excuse,  The. 
— Jerrold. 

I  have  lo.st.  and  lately,  these.  See  Upon  the  Loss  of 
his  Mistresses. — Herrick. 

I  have  lost  my  way,  good  friend.  See  Irish  Courtesy. 
— Anon. 

I  have  lov'd  flowers  that  fade.     See  Elegy. — Bridges. 

I  have  loved  thee,  Elsinore.     See  Elsinore. — Goiild. 

I  have  marked  a  thousand  blushing  apparitions. 
See  Much  Ado  about  Nothing.-7-Shakespeare. 

I  have  never  .saicl  much  about  my  sister  Lizzie.  See 
Adventures  of  Jimmie  Brown,  The  (Jimmy 
Brown's  .\ttempt   to  Produce  Freckles). — Alden. 

I  have  no  appetite  at  all,  not  a  bit!  See  Epicure, 
The. — Anon. 

I  have  no  foolish  fad  for  pets.  See  Fad  Obsolete, 
The. — -Andrews. 

I  have  no  hope  that  does  not  dream  of  thee.  See 
Ancestress,  The. — Landon. 

"I  have  no  name.  "     See  Infant  .loy. — Blake. 

I  have  no  wit,  no  words,  no  tears.  See  Better  Resur- 
rection, A. — Rossetti. 

I  have  not  allowed  myself,  sir,  to  look  beyond  the 
Union.  See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The  (Peroration). 
— Webster. 

I  have  not  blamed  him ;  I  shall  not  blame.  See  House 
on  the  Hill,  The.— Fawcett. 

I  have  not  seen  John  Greenleaf  Whittier.  See  Whit- 
tier,  Extract  Concerning. — Bright. 

I  have  not  told  my  garden  yet.  See  Secret,  The. — 
Dickinson. 

I  have  observed  that  a  reader  seldom  peruses  a  book. 
See  Spectator,  The  (Spectator's  Account  of  Him- 
self, The). — Addison. 

I  have  often  heard  it  said.  See  Salutatory  (2). — 
Denton. 

I  have  often  laughed  at  the  way  an  Irish  help.  See 
Paddy's  Dream. — Anon> 

I  have  read  in  a  worn  old  volume.  See  Two  Mystics. — 
Anon. 

I  have  read,  in  an  Eastern  tradition.  See  Roadside 
Lesson,  A. — Wells. 

I  have  read,  in  some  old  marvelous  tale.  See  Be- 
leaguered City,  The. — -Longfellow. 

I  have  read  of  late  a  great  many  articles  in  the  artistic 
magazines.     See  High  Art  and  Economy. — Kyle. 

I  have  rea.son  to  believe  that  Mrs.  Subtle's  grand  pro- 
ject is  a  marriage  with  my  uncle.  See  Paul  Pry 
(Not  Quite).  — Poole. 

I  have  said,  what  I  solemnly  believe.  See  Dissolution 
of  the  Union. — Clay. 

I  have  seen  a  curious  child.  See  Excursion,  The 
(Sea  Shell,   The).— Wordsworth. 

I  have  seen  a  fiercer  tempest,  known  a  louder  whirl- 
wind blow.     See  Homeward  Bound. — Procter. 

I  have  seen  a  lark  rise  from  his  bed  of  grass.  See 
Prayer. — Taylor. 

"I  have  seen,"  said  the  maid,  "often  seen  in  my 
dreams. "     See  Ideal  and  the  Real,  The. — Jones. 

I  have  seen  the  first  robin  of  spring,  mother  dear.  See 
Little  Mary's  Wish. — Blinn. 

I  have  seen  the  frail  ivy.  See  Safety  in  the  Rock. — 
Gillilan. 

I  have  seen  the  sea  lashed  into  fury  and  tossed  into 
spray.     See  same. — Garfield. 

I  have  ships  that  went  to  sea.  See  Ships  at  Sea. — 
Coffin. 

I  have  something  in  my  pocket.  See  Guess  what's 
in  my  Pocket.^Anon. 

I  have  something  more  to  say  about  trees.  See  Auto- 
crat of  the  Breakfast-table,  The  (Old  Hemlock, 
An). — Holmes. 

I  have  something  nice  to  tell  you.  See  Grade's  Cake. 
— Goodfellow. 

I  have  something  sweet  to  tell  you.  See  same. — Os- 
good. 


have  sometimes  thought  in  my  loneliest  hours.     See 

Rainbow,  The.— Anon, 
have   somewhere   read   in   a  thoughtful  book.     See 

Unseen  yet  Seen. — Anon, 
have  sought  to  counsel  you  in  your  perplexities.     See 

same. — Markham. 
have  stay'd  too  long  from  your  grave,  it  seems.     See 

.\t  her  Grave. — O'Shaughnessy. 
have  subdued  at  last  the  will  to  live.     See  Sanyassi, 

The. — Hamerton. 
had  such  a  wonderful,  wonderful  dream.     See  Gin- 
gerbread Land. — Anon, 
have  summoned  an  assembly  that  I  may  remind  you 

of   your    resolutions.     See    History  of    the    Pelo- 

ponnesian   War,    The     (Speech     of     Pericles). — • 

Thucydides. 
have  tasted   each  varied  pleasure.     See  Wealth   is 

not  Happiness. — Norton, 
have  taught  your  young  lips  the  good  words  to  say 

over.     See  On  the  Lord's  Prayer. — Lamb, 
have  the  courage  to  be  gay.     See     Scholar    and    Car- 
penter (I  Have  the  Courage,  etc). — Ingelow. 
have  the  honor  to  be  your  most  obedient,  humble 

servant.     See  Hypochondriac,  The. — Anon, 
have,  thou  gallant  Trojan,  .seen  thee  oft.  See  Troilus 

and  Cressida  (Nestor    to  Hector). — Shakespeare, 
have  touch'd  the    highest   point  of  all  my  greatness. 

See  King  Henry  VIII.     (Be  Just,  and  Fear  not). — 

Shakespeare, 
have    tucked    away    my    dollies.     See    Dreaming, 

Sweetly  Dreaming. — Richards, 
have  two  friends — two  glorious  friends — two  better 

could  not  be.     See  Two  Friends,  The. — Leland. 
have  two  nights  watched   with   you.     See     Macbeth 

(Sleep-walking  Scene). — Shakespeare, 
have  two  sons,  wife.     See  Two  Sons. — Buchanan, 
have  ventured  to  put  into  verse.     See  Quart  of  Milk 

A. — Banks, 
have   wandered   many   miles  to-day.     See  Growing 

Old.— Chase, 
have  watch'd  thee  with   rapture,  and  dwelt  on  thy 

charms.     See  Lines  Addressed  to  ...   .   when  we 

Parted  for  the  Last  Time. — (Punch.) 
have  wept  a  million  tears.     See  Man  to  the  Angel, 

The.— Russell, 
have  wandered  in  former  days  at  the  patience  of  the 

antediluvian  world.     See  Life  before  the  Flood. ^ 

Cowper. 
have  woven  shrouds  of  air.     See  Earth  Spirit,  The. 

— Channing. 
haven't  been  able  to  write  anything  for  sometime. 

See  Adventures   of    Jimmy  Brown,   The   (Jimmy 

Brown's  Promnt  Obedience). — Alden. 
haven't  much  religion:  least   not  enough  to   spare. 

See  I  Haven't  Much  Religion. — Scott. 
heahs  a  heao  o'  peoi)le  talkin',  ebrywhar  I  goes.     See 

Mahsr  .lohn. — Russell. 
hear  a  dear,  familiar  tone.     See  same. — Gary, 
hear    a    distant    clarion    blare.     See    Adieu. — Arm- 
strong, 
hear    a    loud    protest     against     war.     See    England 

against  War. — Beecher. 
hear  a  voice  you  cannot  hear.     See  sam.e. — Tickell. 
hear  again  the  tread  of  war  go  thundering  through 

the   land.     See   Albert    Sidney    .lohnston. — Sher- 
wood, 
hear,  Bones,  you  have  got  a  baby.     See  Bones  and 

his  Baby. — Anon, 
hear,  from  manv  a  little  throat.     See  Return  of  the 

Birds,  The.— Bryant, 
hear  her  rocking  the  baby.     See  Rocking  the  Baby. — 

Morris. 
hear  in  my  heart,  I  hear  in  its  ominous  pulses.     See 

Wild  Ride,  The.— Guiney. 
hear  no  more  the  locust  beat.     See  Summer  Reminis- 
cence, A. — Shepherd, 
hear  sho  much  dalk  yoost  now  goncerning  der  noble 

ard   of   selfdevence.     See   Der   Schwartz   Egsber- 

ience  mit  a  Bogsing  Lesson. — Anon, 
hear  that  the  prisoner  in  this  case  is  named  Dickey 

Swivel.     See  American  Sam  Weller,  An. — Anon. 
hear  the  bells  at  eventide.     See  End  of  the  Day,  The. 

—Scott. 
hear  the  low  voice  call  that  bids  me  come.   See  Come 

unto  Me. — Moulton. 
hear  the  low  wind  wash  the  softening  snow.     See 

FUght  of  the  Geese,  The.— Roberts, 
hear  the  noise  about  thy  keel.     See  In  Memoriam. 

— Tennyson, 
hear  the   patter  of   childish   feet.     See   Home   and 

Mother. — Anon, 
hear  the  soft  iSeptember  rain  in  tone.     See  Lover  and 

Friend  Hast  Thou  Put  Far  from  Me. — Moulton. 


694 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  know 


I  hear  the  sound  at  midnight  of  the  tramp  of  many 

feet.     See  Hymn  of  Our  Armies,  A. — Auringer. 
T  hear  the  wondrous  lyre.  See  De  Profundis. — Stewari. 
1  hear  thee  speak  of  a  Western  land.     See  Out  West. — 

Anon. 
■'I  hear  thee  speak  of  the  better  land."     See  Better 

Land,  The. — Hemans. 
1  hear   thy   full-voiced  note,  thy  flight  of   song.     See 

Mendicant,  The. — Burdette. 
I  hear  thy  solemn  anthem  fall.     See  Memory. — Chan- 

ning. 
I  hear    you,  little    bird.     See  Joy  of  the  Morning. — 

Markham. 
I  heard   a   gentle   maiden,   in   the   spring.     See  Time, 

Hope,  and  Memory. — Hood. 
"I  heard  a  great  big  lion  in  the  bush."     See  same. — 

Anon. 
I  heard  a  man  of  many  winters  say.     See  Dream  of 

Autumn,  A. — Tennvson. 
I  heard  a  sick  man's  dying  sigh.     See  Twenty-eight 

and  Twenty-nine. — Praed. 
I  heard  a  story  the  other  day,  and  I've  shaped  it  into 

a  rhyme.     See  City  Tale,  A. — Miles. 
I  heard  a  thousand  blended  notes.     See  Lines  written 

in  Early  Spring. — Wordsworth. 
I  heard  a  very  brilliant  thing  said  the  other  day  by  a 

boy.     See  Appeal  to  Young  Men,  An. — Garfield. 
I  heard  a  young  man  in  a  railway  carriage  tell  his  own 

story.     See  Appeal  for  Prohibition,  An. — Gough. 
I  heard   along  the   early   hills.     See   Fairies   Dancing, 

The. — Ramal. 
I  heard  an  angel  singing.     See  I   Heard  an  Angel. — 

Blake. 
I  heard  an  angel  speak  last  nights     Sec  Curse  for  a 

Nation,  A. — Browning. 
I  heard  him,  Joe,  I  heard  him.     See  Last  Look,  A. — 

Sims. 
I  heard  it.     Who  told  you?     See  Fashionable  Call,  A. 

— (Harper's  Bazar.) 
I  heard  last  night  a  little  child  go  singing.     See  Casa 

Guidi  Windows  (Juliet  of  Nations). — Browning. 
I  heard   the   bells   of   Bethlehem   ring.     See   Birds   of 

Bethlehem,  The.— Gilder. 
I  heard  the  bells  on  Christmas  Day.     See  Christmas 

Bells. — Longfellow. 
I  heard  the  bluebird  singing.     See  Song  of  Spring,  A. — 

Bacon. 
I  heard  the   dogs   howl  in  the  moonlight  night.     See 

Dream,  A. — Allingham. 
I  heard  the  robin  singing.     See  He  Careth  for  Us. — 

Newell. 
I  heard  the  trailing  garments  of  the  Night.     See  Hymn 

to  the  Night. — Longfellow. 
I  heard    the  voice    of   Jesus    say.     See  ' '  Come    unto 

Me." — Bonar. 
I  heard  two  robins  singing  in  the  wood.     See  Of  Course 

They  Met. — Anon. 
I  heard  Uncle  Joel  talking  loudly  with  a  man  carrying 

a  peddler's  outfit.     See  Uncle  Joel  on   Peddlers. 

— ( .ilbanij  Arous.) 
I  held  her  hand,  the  pledge  of  bliss.     See  Test,  The. — ■ 

I^andor. 
I   held   it  truth,  with    him  who  sings.     See  In  Memo- 

riam. — Tennyson. 
I  here  present  your  Highness.     See  Epistle  Dedicatory 

to  His  Royal  Highness  Prince  Posterity. — Swift. 
I  here  return,  with  many  thanks.     See  On  Returning 

a  Copy  of  Halleck's  Poems. — Chandler. 
I  hev  been  readin'  about  the  crusaders.     See  Arresting 

the  March  of  Intemperance. — McBride. 
I  hev  called  this  meetin'  as  you  know,  fur  the  purpose 

of  laying  our  heads  together.     See  Striking  the 

Blow. — Anon. 
I  hold  her  hands.     The  lamp's  soft  ray.     See  He  Held 

her  Hands. — Anon. 
I  hold   him    great,    who    for    love's    sake.     See    Max- 

imus  ("  I  hold  him  great,"  etc.). — Procter. 
I  hold  it  better  far  that  one  should  rule.     See  Through 

Toil.— Hinds.. 
I  hold  that  Christian  grace  abounds.     See  My  Creed. — 

Gary. 
I  hold  that  we  are  wrong  to  seek.     See  Silence  of  Love, 

The. — Drummond. 
I  hope  I  don't  disturb  you.     See  Darius  Green  Paro- 
died.— -Anon. 
I  hope  nobody  saw  me  as  I  came  around  the  comer. 

See  Hannah  Beasley. — Thatcher. 
I  hope  that  in  all  that  relates  to  personal  firmness 

See  Public  Virtue. — Clay. 
I  hope  that  young  scamp  I  met  in  the  woods  this  after- 

non.     See  Fairy  Queen's  Decision,  The. — Boyd. 
I  hope  we  shall  finish  the  clothing  for  Widow  .Tones. 

See  Everla.sting  Talker,  The. — Anon. 


hope,  when  we  go  down  to  dinner.     See  During  the 

Quarrel. — Anon. 
'I   hope   you'll  not   accuse  me."     See  Bee  and   the 

Rose,  The. — Anon, 
hung   my    verses   in   the   wind.     See   Test,    The. — 

Emerson, 
hunted  for  flowers,  and  cried  when  I  found.     See 

Jack  Frost. — {The  Independent.) 
idle  stand  that  I  may  find  employ.     See  Idler,  The. — 

Very, 
impeach  him  in  the  name  of  the  Commons  of  Great 

Britain  in   Parliament  assembled.     See  Impeach- 
ment of  Warren    Hastings    (Peroration). — Burke, 
in    these    flowery    meads    would    be.     See    Angler's 

Wish,  The.— Walton, 
intended  an  Ode,   and  it  turn'd  to  a  Sonnet.     See 

Rose-leaves  (Urceus  Exit). — Dobson. 
invent    a    bran-new    joke.     See    New    Joke,    The. — 

Easton. 
isn't  'feard  of  nuffin,  I  isn't.     See  End  Gag. — Anon, 
jess  kind  o'  feel  so  lonesome  that  I  don't  know  what 

to  do.     See  In  the  Ol'  Tobacker  Patch. — Lapius. 
journey  through  a  desert  drear  and  wild.     See  same. 

— Anon, 
joy  not  peace,  where  yet  no  war  is  found.     See  Heca- 

tompathia  (Passion  XL.). — Watson, 
jumped  in  a  hammock.     See  My  Ride. — Goodfellow. 
just   believe    I'll  run  away.    See   Sudden  Change  of 

Mind,  A. — Denton, 
just  believe  I'll  run  away.     See  also  Terrible  Threat, 

A. — Denton, 
just  had  to  telephone  for  Bessie.     See  Ghost  in  the 

Closet,  The.— Denton, 
just  knew  it    when    we    swept.     See    Aurora  Leigh 

(Journey  South,  The). — Browning, 
keeps  dem  chickens  for  mine  vife.      See  Dem  shick- 

ens. — Denison. 
kin  hump   my  back   and  take  the  rain.     See  Fall- 
Crick  view  of  the  Earthquake,  A. — Riley. 
kin  saw  you,  you  shly  leedle  raskel.     See  Dot  Shly 

Leedle  Raskel. — Anon. 
kis.sed   the  bride;  while  the   other   men.     See   Her 

Wedding. — Anon, 
kissed  the  cook.     Ah,  me,  she  was  divine.     See  I 

Kissed  the  Cook. — Anon, 
knew  a  boy  whose  feet  had  trod.     See  Dying  Boy, 

The. — Anon, 
knew  a  lass,   her  eyes  were  blue.     See  Change  of 

Local  Coloring,  A. — Anon, 
knew  a  little  boy.     See  Love  Your  Brother. — Anon, 
knew  a  little  girl. — you?     Oh!  no.     See  How  did  it 

happen? — Anon, 
knew  a  maiden  fair  and  sweet.     See  Fashion's  Folly. 

— Chamberlain, 
knew  a  man  whose  [or  and  his]  name  was  Horner. 

See  Grumble  Corner  and  Thanksgiving  Street. — 

Anon, 
knew  a  palm  tree  upon  Capri.     See  Under  the  Palms. 

—Curtis, 
knew   a   widow   very   poor.     See   Faith   in   God. — 

Hawks, 
knew  by  his  looks  what  he'd  come  for.     See  Popping 

the  Question.' — Grant, 
knew  by  the  smoke,  that  so  gracefully  curled.     See 

Ballad  Stanzas. — Moore, 
knew  he  cut  his  classes,  and  I'd  heard  him  flunk  in 

history.     See  Change  of  Heart,  A. — Stadtmuller. 
knew  it   the  first   of  the  summer.     See  Platonic. — 

Anon, 
knew  she  lay  above  me.     See  White  .lessamine.  The. 

— Tabb. 
know  a  bank  whereon  the  wild  thyme  blows.     See 

Midsummer  Night's  Dream  (Violet  Bank,  A). — 

Shakespeare, 
know  a  boy,  and  who  he  is.     See  Be  a  "Try"  Boy. 

— Anon, 
know  a  dingy  corner  where  a  wicked  spider  clings. 

See  Spider  and  the  Fly,  The. — Anon, 
know  a  duke;  well,  let  him  pass.     See  Two  Men  I 

Know. — Anon, 
know  a  floweret  passing  fair.     See  Fairest  Flower, 

The.— Goethe, 
know  a  forest  vast  and  old.     See  Forest  Scene,  A. — 

May. 
know  a  funny  fellow,  with  locks  of  golden  yellow. 

See  Laughing  Philosopher,  A. — Cooper, 
know   a  funny  little  boy.     See  Boy   that   Laughs, 

The. — Cooper, 
know  a  funny  little  man.     See  Mr.  Nobody. — Anon, 
know    a    green    bank    where    anemones    grow.     See 

Nature's  Secret. — Canning. 
I  know  a  house  so  full  of  noise.     See  Mamma's  Boy. — 

Anon. 


695 


I  know 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


See  Frog  in  the  Throat,  A. — 


<See 


See  White 


See  Four- 
See  Cun- 


kiiow  a  little  animal. 

<  ioodfellow. 
know  a  little  fellow  whose  face  is  fair  to  see. 

Best  Beauty,  The.— Anon, 
know  a  little  garilen-close.     See  Life  and  Death  of 

Jason  (Nympffs  Song  to  Hylas,  The). — Morris,  i 
know  a  little  girl.     See  Two  Little  Girls  1   Know. 

—  (Youth's  Companion.) 
know  a  little    maiden    who   is'  always  in   a   hurry. 

See  Always  in  a  Hurry. — I-eonard. 
know  a  little   saying.     See    Never   out  of   Sight. — 

Anon, 
know  a   maiden   fair  to   see.     See  Beware! — Long- 
fellow, 
know  a  meadow  stream  not  far  away.     See  Mutabile. 

— {Wesleyan  Literary  Monthly.) 
know  a  naval  officer,  the  brave.xt  fighting  man.     See 

Bravest  Sailor  of  All,  The.— Wilcox, 
know  a  nice  new  play,  James.     See  Illustrated  Story, 

An. — Rook, 
know  a  nunnery  which  no  man  heeds. 

Alder,  The.^i Trinity  Tablet.) 
know  a  place  where  a  river  wide.     See    Under  the 

Old  Oak — a  Garland. — Durfee. 
know  a  place  where  the  sun  is  like  gold. 

leaf  Clover. — Higginson. 
know  a  rich  girl  dat  vants  to  get  married 

ning  Jew,  The. — .^non. 
know  a  sanctuary  glen.     See  Glen,  The.— Whitcomb. 
know  a  secret,  such  a  one.     See  Serf's  Secret,  The. — 

MtxKiy. 
know    a    story,    fairer,    dimmer,    sadder.     See    My 

Babes  in  the  Wood. — Piatt, 
know  a  thing  that's  most     uncommon.     See  On  a 

Certain  Lady  at  Court. — Pope, 
know  a  way  of  hearing  what  the  larks  and  linnets 

say.     See  Song  in  the  Dell,  The. — Carryl. 
know  a  winsome  little  maid.     See  Two  Maidens. — 

Cannon, 
know  a  woman  wondrous  fair.     See  Model  Woman, 

The. — Anon, 
know  as  well  as  you  she  is  not  fair.     See  Constant 

Lovers,  The. — Anon, 
know,  blue  modest  violets.     See  Origin  of  Violets. — 

Anon, 
know  exactly  what  I'd  do.     See  What  They  Will  Do. 

— Denton, 
know  full  well  what  saith  Saint  Paul.     See  In  an  Un- 
known Tongue.— Chadwick. 
know  him  by  nis  falcon  eye.     See  Poor  Indian,  The. 

— Anon, 
know,  I  know  where   violets  blow.     See  God's  Will. 

— Munger. 
know — I  sigh  when  I  think  of  it.     See  Religion  of 

Revolutionary  Men. — Lamartine. 
know  I'm  too  old  to  learn,  wife;  my  lessons  and  tasks 
are  done.     See  Old  Man  Goes  to  School,  The. — 
Yates, 
know  it  must  be  winter  (though  I  sleep).     See  Win- 
ter Sleep. — Thomas, 
know  it  will  not  ease  the  smart.     See  Oh!  to  See  Him 

Once  Again. — Butler, 
knows  it's  mighty  weak  in  me  to  cry.     See  Before  the 

Toy  Shop  Window. — Bangs, 
know  more  than  Apollo.     See  same. — Tom  o'  Bed- 
lam, 
know  my  soul  hath  power  to  know  all  things.     See 

Man. — Davies. 
know  my  wife  weeps  tears   of  blood.      See  Drunk- 
ard's Thirst,  The.— Anon, 
know  my.self  the  best  beloved  of  all.     See  same. — 

Rollins, 
know  no  field  in  which  a  wise  statesmanship.     See 

University  and  True  Patriotism,  The. — Anon, 
know   not   by  what   methods  rare.     See   Prayer. — 

Hickok. 
know  not  how  to  call  you  light.     See  To  La  Sans- 

coeur. — Roscoe. 
know  not  if  moonlight  or  starlight.     See  Song  from  a 

Drama. — Stedman. 
know  not  if  or  dark  or  bright.     See  Trust. — Alford. 
know  not  of  what  we  ponder'd.     See  Companions. — 

( "alverle.v. 
know  not  that  the  men  of  old. 

— Houghton, 
know  not  the  way  I  am  going. 

The. — Anon, 
know   not   what   it   presages. 

Heine, 
know   not  what  my  heart   has  lost. 

Fruit. — O'Hagan. 
know  not  what  sly  little  fairy.     See  Fable,  A.— (Pop- 
tUar  Educator.) 


See  Men  of  Old,  The. 
See  Heavenly  Guide, 
See  Lorelei,  The. — 
See  Ripened 


I  know  not  what  the  future  hath  of  marvel  or  sur- 
prise.    See  Eternal  Goodness. — Whittier. 
I  know  not  what  the  future  holds,  but  this  I  know. 

See  Opportunity. — Ketchum. 
I  know  not  what  will  [or  shall]  befall  me:  God  hangs  a 

mist    o'er   my   eyes.     See   Not    Knowing. — Brai- 

nard. 
I  know  not  whence  it  rises.     See  Lore-lei,  The. — Heine. 
I  know  not  which  I  love  the  most.     See  same. — Gary. 
I  know  not  who  the  maid  may  be.     See  So  Sweet. — 

Anon. 
I  know  not  who  thou  art,  thou  lovely  one.     See  To 

the  Lady  in  the  Chemisette  with  Black  Buttons. 

—Willis. 
I   know  of  a  child — a  godly  young  child.     See  Some 

Children  of  the  Bible. — Rook. 
I  know  of  a  dear,  delightful  land.     See  Make  Believe 

Land.- — .\non. 
I  know  .of  a  jeweled  casket.     See  Golden  Key,  The. — 

Anon. 
I  know  of  a  street  on  the  edge  of  the  town.     See  Mari- 
gold Lane. — M.  E.  W. 
I  know  only  two  ways  in  which  societies  can  perma- 
nently be  governed.     See  Parliamentary  Reform 

(Public  Opinion  and  the  Sword). — Macaulay. 
I  know  she  loves  me,  though  with  scorn.     See  Love  up 

to  Date.-r-Howard. 
I  know  something  about  you,  my  boy,  and  I  see  that 

you  are  in  distress.     See  Bread  on  the  Waters.— 

Anon. 
I  know  something,  but  I  sha'n't  tell.     See  Secret,  The. 

— Anon. 
I  know  something— do  you?     See  What  They  Knew. — 

Smith. 
I  know  that  all  beneath  the  moon  decays.     See  same. — 

Drummond. 
I  know  that  death  is  God's  interpreter.     See  Death  the 

Revealer. — Smythe. 
I  know  that  deep  within  your  heart  of  hearts.     See 

Woman's  Complaint,  A. — (Advance,  The.) 
I  know  that  I  am  dying,  Mate ;  so  fetch  the  Bible  here. 

See  Out  at  Sea. — Fletcher. 
I  know  that  my  Redeemer  liveth.     See  same. — Anon. 
I  know  that  some  men  look  upon  the  temperance  cause 

as  bigotry.     See  Fountain  of  Crime,  The. — Horton. 
I  know    that    these    poor    rags    of    womanhood.     See 

Afterward. — Currie. 
I  know  that  virtue  to  be  in  you,  Brutus.     See  Julius 

Caesar  (Cassius  Instigating  Brutus  against  Caesar). 

— Shakespeare. 
I  know  that  your  attendance  here  to-night  is  not  given 

to  me  alone.     See  Spanish-American  War,  The. — 

Chidwick. 
I  know  the  hand  that  is  guiding  me  through  the  shadow 

to  the  light.     See  same. — (British  Evavjelist.) 
"I    know   the   nicest   secret."     See  Bessie's  Secret. — 

Anon. 
I  know  the  song  that  the  bluebird  is  singing.     See 

Bluebird,  The.— Miller. 
I  know  thee  not,  O   spirit  fair!     See  Artist's  Prayer, 

The.— Lighthall. 
I  know  they  are  rosy,  children.     See  Your  Faces. — 

Anon. 
I  know  thou  hast  gone  to  the  place  of  thy  rest.     See 

To  the  Departed. — Anon. 
I  know  'twas  not  the  proper  thing  to  do.     See  At  the 

Masquerade. — Anon. 
I  know  very  well,  Hannibal,  that  it  was  the  hope  of 

your  return.     See  History  of  Rome,  The  (Scipio 

Declines  Hannibal's  Overtures  for  Peace). — Scipio. 
I  know  well  the  common  censure  by  which  objections 

to  the  various  futilities.     See  Definite  Training. — 

Ruskin. 
I  know  what  it  is  to  live  in  a  cabin — a  little  log  cabin, 

hid  under  the  trees.     See  Granger's  Wife,  The. — 

Donovan. 
"I  know  what  silence  means!"     See  Silence. — Anon. 
I  know  what  will  happen,  sweet.     See  You  and  I. — 

Sullivan. 
"I  know  what  you're  going  to  say,"   she  said.     See 

Candor. — Bunner. 
I  know  what  you've  come  for.     See  Mrs.  Harwood's 

Secret. — Oliphant. 
I  know  where  Krishna  tarries  in  these  early  days  of 

spring.     See  Song  of  Krishna,  A. — Arnold. 
"I  know  where  the  timid  fawn  abides."     See  Retribu- 
tion.— Bryant. 
I  know  who  won  the  peace  of  God.     See  King  Ailill's 

Death. — Stokes. 
I  know  why  you  have  gone  from  me.     See  My  Little 

Boy. — Anon. 
I  know  you.  Lion  of  Gray  St.  Mark.     See  To  the  Lion 

of  St.  Mark.— Miller. 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  love 


I  knowed  a  man,  which  he  lived  in  Jones.     See  More  in 

the  Man  than  in  the  Land. — Anon. 
"I  knows  a  vomans  vot  got  a  pearls  from  an  oyster 

oud."     See  same. — Anon. 
I  knows  what  you  mean,  I'm  a  dyin'.     See  Dying  Street 

Arab,  The; — Barr. 
I  labor  under  a  species  of  distress.     <See  Bashful  Man, 

The. — Smith. 
I  lang  hae  thought,  my  youthfu'  friend.     See  Epistle 

to  a  Young  Friend. — Burns. 
I  lately  lived  in  quiet  ease.     See  Love  is  Like  a  Dizzi- 
ness.— Hogg. 
I  lay    condemned    within    the    murderer's    cell.     See 

Beneath  the  Beam. — Manning. 
I  lay  down  a  very  plain  proposition,  and  it  is  this.     See 

Established  Church  of  Ireland,  The. — Shell. 
I  lay  i'  the  bo.som  of  the  sun.     See  Echo  Club,  The 

(Palabras  Grandiosas). — Taylor. 
I  lay  in  silence,  dead.     A  woman  came.     See  Another 

Way. — Bierce. 
I  lay  in  sorrow,  deep  distress'd.     See  same. — Mackay. 
I  lay  me  down  to  sleep.     See  In  the  Hospital. — How- 
land. 
I  lay  my  finger  on  Time's  wript  to  score.     See  What 

Have  I  Done? — Fearing. 
I  lay  on  deck,  fast  bound  with  cords,  disarmed.     See 

William  Tell  (William  Tell  Describes  his  Escape). 

—Schiller. 
I  lay   on    Delos   of   the   Cyclades.     See   Ship,   The. — 

Mifflin. 
I  lay  on  the  rocks  and  watched  the  sea.     See  By  the 

Sea.— Welsh. 
I  lean  from  the  window  at  morning.     See  My  Birds. — 

Anon. 
I  lean  upon  no  broken  reed.     See  Hold  Thou  Me. — 

Bonar. 
I  leaned  out  of  window,  I  smelt  the  white  clover.     See 

Songs  of  Seven  (Seven  Times  Three). — Ingelow. 
I  learn'd  his  greatness  fir.st  at  Lavington.     See  Cardinal 

Manning. — De  Vere. 
I  learnt  to  love  that  England.     Very  oft.     See  Aurora 

Leigh  (Beauty  of  England,  The). — Browning. 
I  leave,  and  unreluctant,  the  repast.     See  Siddons  and 

her  Maid. — Landor. 
I  leave    behind    me    the    elm-shadowed    square.     See 

Outward  Bound. — Aldrich. 
I  leave  thee,  beauteous  Italy!  no  more.     See  Farewell 

to  Italy. — Landor. 
I  left  the  little  town  behind. 

Thomson. 
I  left    thee    last,    a    child    at    heart.     See    Rosalind's 

Scroll. — E.  B.  Browning. 
I  lent  my  love  a  book  one  day. 

and  a  Moral. — Cozzens. 
I  lie  in  heavy  trance.     See  Moments. — Houghton. 
I  lie  on   the  mountains  as  sweet  and  as  mild.     See 

Sunbeam,  The. — -^non. 
I  lift  my  eyes  against  the  sky.     /See  I  Know  not  Why. 

— Rosenfeld. 
I  lift  my  heavy  heart  up  solemnly.     See  Sonnets  from 

the  Portuguese,  V. — Browning. 
I  lift    this    sumach-bough    with    crimson    flare.     See 

Torch  Light  in  Autumn  — -Piatt. 
I  lifted  off  the  lid  with  anxious  care.     See  On  Receipt 

of  a  Rare  Pipe.— W.  H.  B. 
I  like  a  church,  I  like  a  cowl.     See  Problem,  The. — 

Emerson. 
I  like  cigars  beneath  the  stars.     See  same. — Wilcox. 
I  like  Dicky.     He  has  a  nice  round  freckled  face.     See 

Dicky's  Christmas. — -Anon. 
I  like  my  other  clo'es  fust  rate.     See  My  Other  Clo'es. 

— Anon. 
I  like  not,  Julia,  this  your  country  life.     See  Hunch- 
back, The. — Knowles. 
I  like  not  lady-slippers.     See  Tiger-lilies. — Aldrich. 
I  like  pretty  maids  flushed  with  joy.     See  Wealth. — 

Branch. 
I  like  that   ancient   Saxon   phrase,   which  calls.     See 

God's  Acre. — I^ongfellow. 
I  like  that  old  sweet  legend.     See  Little  Mud-sparrows, 

The.— Phelps. 
I  like  the  gentle  oc-to-pus.     See  Arma  Virumque. — 

Kellock. 
I  like  the  hunting  of  the  hare.     See  Old  Squire,  The.— 

Blunt. 
I  like  the  man  who  faces  what  he  must.    See  Inevitable, 

The.— Bolton. 
"I  like  to  ask  you  if  dere  vhas  some  license  to  keep  a 

dog."     See  He  Pays  License  on  a  Dog. — Anon. 
I  like  to  feed  my  pussy.     See  My  Pussy. — Anon. 
I  like  to  see  a  handsome  boy.     See  Emma's  Ideal. — 

Richards. 
I  like  to  see  a  pretty  girl.     See  Guy's  Ideal. — Richards. 


See  Circus  Boy,  The. — 


See  An  Experience 


I  like  winter,  because  it  snows.     See  Good  In  All. — 

Denton. 
I  listen'd  to  the  music  broad  and  deep.     See  Love  and 

Mu.sic. — Marston. 
I  little  see,  I  little  know.     See  Psalm  of  Trust,  A. — 

Hosmer. 
I  liv'd   with   visions   for   my   company.     See   Sonnets 

from  the  Portuguese,  XXVI. — Browning. 
I  live  for  Love,  for  Love  alone.     See  Castle  in  the  Air, 

The.— Stoddard. 
I  live  for  those  who  [or  that]  love  me.     See  My  Aim. 

— Banks. 
I  lived  first  in  a  little  house.     See  Bird's  Experience, 

A. — Anon. 
I  lived    in    a    continual,    indefinite,    pining   fear.     See 

Everlasting  No,  The. — Carlyle. 
I  loathe  all  books.     I  hate  to  see.     See  Warning,  A. — 

Lovell. 
I  loathe  ye  in  my  bosom.     See  Seminole's  Reply,  The. 

— Patten. 
I  loiter  here  within  this  ancient  town.     See  Annapolis 

Royal. — Blackadder. 
I  long  for  household  voices  gone.     See  Eternal  Good- 
ness, The. — Whittier. 
I  long  have  been  puzzled  to  guess.     See  Superfluous 

Man,  The. — Saxe. 
I  long  have  had  a  quarrel  set  with  Time.     See  Two 

Highwaymen,  The. — Blunt. 
I  look  to  Thee  in  every  need.      See  Looking  unto  God. 

— Longfellow. 
I  look  to-day  far  down  the  aisles  of  memory's  happy 

past.     See  Old  School-house,  The. — McBride. 
I  look  upon  thy  happy  face.     See  To  a  Child. — Mont- 
gomery. 
I  look'd  upon  his  brow,  no  sign.     See  Crescentius. — 

Maclean. 
I  looked  across  the  bay.     See  My  Beacon. — Miller. 
I  looked  ^nd  saw  your  eyes.     See  Three  Shadows. — ■ 

Rossetti. 
I  looked  far  back  into  other  years,  and  lo!  in  bright 

array.     See  Mary,  Queen  of  Scots. — Bell. 
I  looked  in  the  brook  and  saw  a  face.     See  Brook,  The. 

—Field. 
I  looked  one  night,  and  there  Semiramis.     See  Look 

into  the  Gulf,  A. — Markham. 
I  looked  where  the  roses  were  blooming.     See  Grass 

and  Roses. — Clarke. 
I  lost  the  brook  as  it  wound  its  way.     See  Lost  and 

Found. — Anon. 
I  love  all  things  the  seasons  bring.     See  Violet,  The. — 

Procter. 
I  love,  and  have  some  cause  to  love,  the  earth.     See 

Delight  in  God  Only. — Quarles. 
I  love,  and  he  loves  me  again.     See  Nymph's  Passion, 

A. — Jonson. 
I  love  and  love  not;  Lord,  it  breaks  my  heart.     See 

Dost  Thou  not  Care? — Rossetti. 
I  love  at  eventide  to  walk  alone.     See  Summer  Moods. 

— Clare. 
I  love   confinement   in   thy   bonds.     See   Marigold. — 

— Candee. 
I  love  contemplating — -apart.     See  Napoleon  and  the 

British  Sailor. — Campbell. 
I  love  freedom  better  than  slavery.     See  Freedom. — 

Baker. 
I  love  it,  I  love  it,  and  who  shall  dare.     See  Old  Arm 

Chair,  The.— Cook. 
I  love  my  adversary's  leg  to  kick.     See  Gory  Gambols. 

— (Lehigh  Burr.) 
I  love  my  books  as  drinkers  love  their  wine.     See  My 

Books. — Bennoch. 
I  love  my  country's  pine-clad  hills.     See  My  Country. 

— "Hesperion." 
I  love  my  God,  my  country,  kind  and  kin.    See  Festus 

(Country  and  Patriotism). — Bailey. 
I  love  my  kitty — handsome  cat.     See  What  We  Love. 

) — Morton. 
I  love  my  lady;  she  is  very  fair.     See  My  Beautiful 

Lady. — Woolner. 
I  love  my  little  brother.     See  Her  Soliloquy. — Opper. 
I  love  my  papa,  that  I  do.     See  Recitation. — Kava- 

naugh. 
I  love  my  pussy  cat,  her  coat  is  so  warm.     See  My 

Pussy  Cat. — Anon. 
I  love  old  women  best,  I  think.     See  Old  Jane. — Ashe. 
I  love  poetry,  because  Jesus  Christ  loved  it.     See  Pro- 
fession of  Faith. — Pascal. 
I  love  the  breath  of    fresh,  damp  earth.     See  Life's 

Day. — -Gaddess. 
I  love  the  cheerful  summer  time.     See  Summer  Time. — 

Anon. 
I  love  the  fair  lilies   and   roses  so  gay.     See  same. — 

Goodale. 


697 


I  love 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  love  the  flowers  that  come  about  with  spring.     See 

Field  Sweet-brier,  The. — ("ary. 
I  love  the  forest;     I  could  dwell  among.     jSee  Forest, 

The.— Milnes. 
I  love  the  luscious  jfrapes  that  cling.     See  Something 

to  Hate. — Anon. 
I  love  the  navy.     When  I  speak  of  the  navy,  I  mean 
the  sailor.     See  Against  Whipping  in  the  Navy.— 
Stockton. 
I  love  the  north,  where  the  bold  rocks  rise.     See  Jog 

Ala.ikar  Nordue. — Sickel. 
I  love  the  old  melodious  lays.     See  Proem. — Whittier. 
I  love  the  proud  grandeur  of  the  old  forest  trees.     See 

Echo.— Hall. 
I  love  the  spring,  the  gentle  spring.     See  Child's  Love, 

A. — .\non. 
I  love  the  state  of  Maine  better  than  any  spot  in  the 
wide,  wide  world.     See  State  of  Maine,   The. — 
Frye. 
I  love  thee  as  the  flow'rets  fair.     See  I  IjOvb  Thee. — 

Oxenford. 
I  love  thee  as  the  good   love  heaven.     See  Spanish 

Student,  The. — Longfellow. 
I  love    thee,    cat;     I    love    thy    pleasant    ways.     jSee 

Cataracket,  A. — Burdette. 
I  love  thee — I  love  thee!     See  I  Love  Thee. — Hood. 
I  love  thee  in  the  spring.     <See  Thoughts  on  the  Forest. 

— Pabodie. 
I  love  thee,  love  thee,  Giulio!     See  Parting  Lovers. — 

Browning. 
I  love  thee,  Mary,  and  thou  lovest  me.     See  Chemist 

to  his  Love,  The. — (Punch.) 
I  love    thee,    pretty    nursling.     See    Ground    Laurel, 

The.— Gould. 
I  love  thee,  puzzling  little  May.     See  Is  Love  Blind? 

— (Punch  Bowl.) 
I  love  thee  when  thy  swelling  buds  appear.     See  Tree, 

The.— Very. 
I  love  thee;  why,  I  cannot  tell.     See  I  Love  Thee. — 

Baines. 
"I  love,  thou  lovest,  he,  she,  or  it  loves;  we  love,  you 
love,   thev   love."     See  Courtships   of  Adulphus 
M'Duff,  The.— .4non. 
I  love  Thy  Kingdom,  Lord.     See  same.^Dwight. 
I  love  thy  .singing,  sacred  as  the  sound  of  hymns.     See 

Sabbath  Morning  in  the  Country. — Bailey. 

I  love  to  believe  that  no  heroic  sacrifice  is  ever  lost. 

See   Strewing    Flowers   on  the   Graves  of   Union 

Soldiers  (Inspiration  of  Sacrifice,  The). — ^Garfield. 

I  love  to  get  the  breakfast.     See  What  Girls  Love  to 

Do. — Anon. 
I  love  to  hear  a  cheerful  voice.     See  Cheerful  Voice, 

The. — Anon. 
I  love  to  hear  thine  earnest  voice.     See  To  an  Insect. — 

Holmes. 
I  love  to  lie  in  the  clover.     See  O  Lark  of  the  Summer 

Morning. — Anon. 
I  love  to  look  on   a   scene  like  this.     See  Saturday 

Afternoon.— Willis. 
I  love  to  see  the  little  goldfinch  pluck.     See  Lessons 

from  Birds  and  Bees. — Hurdis. 
I  love  to  steal  awhile  away.     See  Private  Devotion. — 

Brown. 
I  love  to  wander  through  the  woodlands  hoary.     See 

Still  Day  in  Autumn,  A. — Whitman. 
I  love,  too,  to  be  loved ;  all  loving  praise.     See  Woman's 

Answer,  A. — Procter. 
"I  love  you,  dear!"  and  saying  this.     See  I  Love  You, 

Dear.— Crofts. 
"I  love  you,  dear."     There  is  no  phrase  so  worn  and 

old.     See  "I  Love  You,  Dear." — Anon. 
"I  love  you,  mother,"  said  little  John  [or  Ben].     See 
Which  Loved  Best? — Anon. 

I   love    you — not    because    your  lips.     See    To . 

— Baker. 
I  loved    a  lass,   a   fair   one.   See   I    Loved   a   Lass. — 

Wither. 
I  loved  her  dearly  years  ago.     See  After  the  Wedding. 

— Anon. 
I  loved  him  in  my  dawning  years.   See  Life's  Love,  A. 

— Anon. 
I  loved  him  long,  and  I  loved  him  well.    See  Out  in 

the  Sobbing  Rain. — Shaw. 
I  loved  him  not,  and  yet  now  he  is  gone.     See  Maid's 

Lament,  The. — Landor. 
I  loved  him  so;  his  voice  had  grown.     See  Grandsire, 

The. — Field. 
I  loved  mv  Art.     I   loved  it  when  the  tide.     See  1 

Ixjved  My  Art. — Parker. 
I  loved    thee    for   that    dear,    deep,    lovingness.     See 

tame. — Armstrong. 
I  loved  thee  long  and  dearly.     See  Florence  Vane. — 
Cooke. 


I  loved  thee  once;  I'll  love  no  more.     See  To  an  Incon- 
stant One. — Ayton. 
I  loved  them  so.     See  My  Lambs. — Anon. 
I  made  a  footing  in  the  wall.     See  Prisoner  of  ChiUon, 

The. — Byron. 
I  made  a  posie  [or  posy]  while  the  day  ran  by.     See 

Life. — -Herbert. 
I  made  a  song  for  my  dear  love's  delight.     See  Song's 

Worth,  A. — Spalding. 
I  made  another  garden,  yea.     See    I    Made    another 

Garden. — O  'Shaughnessy. 
I  made   me   a   beautiful   ca.stle.     See   Foundations. — 

Schultze. 
I  made   myself  a  little  boat.     See  Voyage  with  the 

Nautilus,  The.— Howitt. 
I  made  myself  a  poet  in  the  place.     See   In   his  Own 

Country. — Field. 
I  made   the   cross   m.vself   whose   weight.     See   lattle 

Parable,  A. — ,\ldrich. 
I  made  up  my  mind  the  other  day.     See  My  Wife's 

Husband. — R  isley . 
"I  mark  the  hours  that  shine,"  so  runs  the  legend 

graven.     See  Bright  Hours. — Husted. 
I  marked  all  kindred  Powers  the  heart  finds  fair.'   See 

Love  Enthroned. — Rossetti. 
I  married  a  widow  who  had  a  grown  daughter.     See 

Strangely  Related. — Anon. 
I  marvell'd  why  a  simple  child.     See  Only  Seven. — 

Leigh. 
I  may  be  an  enthusiast,  but  I  cannot  but  give  utter- 
ance to  the  conceptions  of  my  own  mind.     See 
America  the  Child  of  Destiny. — Clay. 
I  may  give  these  flowers  to  none  but  thee.     See  Last 
Days  of  Pompeii  (Nydia  and  lone). — Bulwer-Lyt- 
ton. 
I  may    not    do    a    landscape.     See    Impressionistic. 

—(Wrinkle.) 
I    may    not  rightly    call    thy    name.       See    Avis.  — 

Holme.s.  . 

I  may  say  to  you,  my  brethering  [or  breethering],  that 
I    am  not    an   edecated   man.      See    Harp   of    a 
Thousand  Strings,  The. — Anon. 
I  mean  by  a  heroic  age  and  race.     See    Age  of  the 
Pilgrims,  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History,  The 
(Heroic  .\ge.  The). — Choate. 
I  meant  to  write  a  valentine.     See  same. — Anon. 
I  meet  thy  pensive,  moonlight  face.     See  Lost  Love, 

A. — Lyte. 
I  merely  rise  here  to  make  rnention.     See  Imaginative 

Invention,  An. — Kavanaugh. 
I  met  a  dear  creature,  it  matters  not  where.     See  Love 

under  Difficulties. — Anon. 
I  met    a   little    cottage   girl.     See   We   Are    Seven. — 

Wordsworth. 
I  met  a  little  Elf-man,  once.     See  Little  Elf,  The. — 

Bangs. 
I  met  a  little  woman  with  a  very  winning  look.     See 

Very  Humane.— Douglas. 
I  met  a  sailor  in  the  woods.     See  Englishman,  The. — 

Ramal. 
I  met  a  traveler  from  an  antique  land.     See  Ozyman- 

dias. — Shelley. 
I  met  a  youth  whose  brow  was  sad.     See  Rarest  Pearl, 

The.— Fiester. 
I  met  at  eve  the  Prince  of  Sleep.     See  I  Met  at  Eve. — 

Ramal. 
I  met    her   on   a   Pullman   car.     See   My   Mistake.-^ 

E.  P.  G. 
I  met  her  on  the  stairs  one  night.     See  His  Sister. — 

Anon. 
I  met  my  brother  at  the  train.     See  Incident  of  '64, 

An. — Anon. 
I  met  Sophie  Ramsey  when  I  was  out  this  morning. 

See  Chatterbox,  The. — Anon. 
I  met  Sut  one  morning,  weaving  along  in  his  usual 
rambling,   uncertain   gait.     See  Sut   Lovingood's 
Shirt. — Anon. 
I  met    the    Old    Year   in    the   night.     See   Oblivion's 

Gate. — Larned. 
I  met    the    waiter   in    his    prime.     See    Waiter,    The. 

— (Punch.) 
I  met  you,  dear,  I  met  you;  I  can't  be  robbed  of  that. 

See  Pair  of  Fools,  A. — Stephen. 
I  'mid  the  hills  was  born.     See  Harold  the  Valiant. — 

Stebbins. 
I  might    have    just    the    mostest    fun.     See    Don't. — 

_  Waterman. 
I  might  not,  if  I  could.     See  Lines  by  a  Medium. — 

Anon. 
I  might !  unhaopy  word — O  me.  T  might.     See  Astro- 

.  phel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  XXXIII.).— Sidney. 
I  mind   it  weel,   in    earlv    date.      See    To   the    Guid 
Wife  of  Wauchope  House.- -Burns. 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  own 


I  mind  me  in  the  days  departed.     See  Deserted  Gar- 
den, The. — Browning. 
I  mind  me  of  a  pleasant  time.     See  Once  upon  a  Time. 

— Southey. 
I  mind    me    of    the    Shepherd's    saw.     See    Rowfant 

Library,  The. — Lang. 
I  mourn  no  more  my  vanished  years.     See  My  Psalm. 

— Whittier. 
I  murder  hate,  by  field  or  flood.     See  Poet's  Choice, 

The.— Burns. 
I  nius'  take  a  good  smoke,  old  woman,  an'  den  go. 

See  Sara's  Conversion. — Anon. 
I  mu.st  away  to  wooded  hills  and  vales.     See  Summer 

I-onging,  A. — Arnold. 
I  must  complete  the  inventory  of    my  present  collec- 
tion of  curiosities.     See  Kies  in  the  Dark,  A. — 

Anon. 
I  must  confess  I  love  old  books!     See  Old  Books. — 

Anon. 
I  mu.st  go  furnish  up.     See  Breeding  Lark. — Boar. 
I  -must  have  my  bitters  this  morning,  as  I  feel  kind  of 

squeamish.     See     Banishing     the     Bitters. — Mc- 

Bride. 
I  must  make  haste.     Harry  will  be  calling  me.     See 

In  Imminent  Peril. — Griffith. 
I  must  not  forget  the  suddenly  changing  sea.sons.    See 

Seasons  in  Sweden,  The. — Longfellow. 
I  must   not   grieve  my  love,  whose  eyes  would  read. 

See  Sonnets  to  Delia  (Beauty,  Time  and  Love,  VI.  V 

— Daniel. 
I  must  not  say  that  thou  wert  true.     See  Indifference. 

— Arnold. 
I  must  not  speak  an  angry  word.     <Siee  Be  Considerate. 

— Anon. 
I  must  not  think  of  thee;  and,  tired  yet  strong.     .See 

Renouncement. — Meynell. 
I  must  say,  Fanny,  that  for  a  servant  you  give  your 

tongue  many  liberties.     See  Game  of  Chess,  A. — 

Meyers. 
I  must  with   plainness  speak  my  fixed  resolve.     See 

Iliad,  The   (Reply   of  Achilles  to  the  Envoys  of 

Agamemnon,  etc.). — Homer, 
I,  my  dear,  was  born  to-day.     See  On  My  Birthday, 

.luly  21. — Prior. 
I  nobber  breaks  a  colt  afore  he's  old  enough  to  trabbel. 

See  Sermon  for  the  Sisters,  A. — Russell. 
I  nebber  tole  you  what  I  know  about  nabbigation,  did 

I?     See  Brudder  Bones  on  de  Raging  Canawl. — 

Anon. 
I  need  not  dwell  upon  the  mournful  and  tragic  evetit 

by  virtue  of  which  I  am  here.     See  Our  Recent 

Diplomacy. — Hay. 
I  need  not  now  dwell  on  the  waste  and  cruelty  of  war. 

See  War  System  of  the  Commonwealth  of  Nations, 

(Horrors  of  War,  The). — Sumner. 
I  need  not  occup.v  your  time  by  describing  minutely 

what  T  mean  bv  a  Yankee  fireside.     See  Yankee 

Fireside,  The.— Hill. 
I  need  not  praise  the  sweetness  of  his  song.     See  To 

Henry  Wadsworth  Longfellow.— Lowell. 
I  need  not  say  to  you,  young  ladies.     See  Brief  Re- 

martcs  to  a  Class  of  Young  Ladies  on  Graduation 

Day  by  a  Visitor. — -Anon. 
I  need  not  your  needles — thej''re  needless  to  me.     See 

Baker's  Reply  to  the  Needle-peddler,  The. — Anon. 
I  ne'er  couldany  lustre  see.     SeeSong:"I  ne'er  could," 

etc. — Sheridan. 
I  ne'er  imagined,  liOve,  that  thou.     See  I  Never  Knew 

it.  Love,  till  Now. — Juan  II. 
I  ne'er  my  Donald  shall  .see  again.     See  He  Told  Me 

So. — Grossmith. 
I  never  build  a  song  by  night  or  day.     See  My  Com- 
rade.— Markham. 
I  never  but  once  found  anything  here  in  excess  of  my 

expectations.     See  O.vster  Yarn,  .\n. — .4.non. 
I  never  came  upon  a  nest  of  eggs,  secreted  by  the  hen 

mo.-Nt    conscientiously.     See   Beecher   on    Eggs. — 

Beecher. 
I  never  cast  a  flower  away.     See  same. — Southey. 
I  never  co\ild  see  the  use  of  babies.     See  How  Jimmy 

Tended  the  Baby. — Anon. 
I  never  drank  of  Aprnninoe  well.      See   Astrophel    and 

Stella  (Sonnet  LXXIV).— Sidney. 
I  never  expected  to  speak  with  pride  about  the  "solid 

South."     See  Union  of  North  and  South,  The. — 

Willard. 
I  never  gave  a  lock  of  hair  away.     See  Sonnets  from 

the  Portuguese,  XVIII. — Browning. 
I  never  gossip,  as  you  know.     See  Way  of  the  World, 

The. — Anderson. 
I  never  had   a  happier  time.     See  One  Saturday. — 

Robinson. 
I  never  heard  the  name  before.     See  South. — Anon. 


I  never,  in  the  whole  course  of  my  professional  experi- 
ence. See  Pickwick  Papers  (Address  of  Serjeant 
Buzf  u  z  )  .■ — Dicken  s. 

I  never  intended  to  fall  in  love.  See  How  it  was  to 
Be. — Anon. 

I  never  kin  forget  the  day.     See  Josiar. — Anon. 

1  never  knew  how  dear  thou  wert.  See  Song. — Warfield. 

"I  never  like  to  go  to  school."     See  Lazy  Lew.— Anon. 

I  never  look'd  that  he  should  live  so  long.  See  Philip 
van  Artevelde  (John  of  Laimoy). — Taylor. 

"I  never  loved  you  much,  '  she  said.  See  I-ove  on 
Deck. — Barlow. 

I  never  made  a  speech  before,  and  cannot  sav  I  shall 
make  more.     See  First  Speech  in  Pub'.ic. — Anon. 

I  never  made  a  speech  before,  but  that's  no  reason 
why.     Sec  Speech  for  a  Young  Girl. — Anon. 

I  never  pray'd  for  Dryads,  to  haunt  the  woods  again. 
See  Invocation,  An. — Cory. 

I  never  realij'.ed  what  this  country  was  and  is.  See 
Back  from  the  War. — Talmage. 

I  never  saw  a  moor.     See  Chartless. — Dickinson. 

I  never  saw  a  purple  cow.  See  Purple  Cow.  The. — 
Burgess. 

T  never  saw  an  angel.     See  Earth's  Angels. — Anon. 

I  never  was  a  man  of  feeble  courage.  See  Thunder 
Storm,  The. — Prentice. 

I  never  was  at  a  baby  show  afore  and  it  seems  kind  of 
funny.     See  Rumpus,  A. — McBride. 

I  never  was  naturally  vicious.  See  Popular  Song, 
The.— I^incoln. 

I  never  yet  heard  music,  howev'r  sweet.  See  Preface 
to  ''The  Finding  of  the  Book  and  Other  Poems." 
— Alexander. 

I  never  yet  knew.  Soldiers,  that  in  fight.  See  Catiline 
to  his  Army,  near  Fjesulae. — Jonson. 

I  note  this  morning  how  the  sunshine  falleth.  See 
Retrospection. — Freeman. 

T  now  address  you  on  a  question  the  most  vitally  con- 
nected with  the  liberty.  See  Habeas  Corpus  Act, 
The. — Curran. 

I  now  attend  a  public  school.  See  School-girl's  Trou- 
bles, A.- — Marsh. 

I  now  will  introduce  to  you  my  daughters  twelve. 
See  Opening  Pecitation. — Kavanaugh. 

I  object  to  high  license,  first,  because  the  scheme  is 
acceptable  to  the  liquor  interest.  See  Why  I 
Object  to  High  I-icense. — Turner. 

I  observed  a  locomotive  in  the  railroad  yards  one  day. 
See  Sand. — Anon. 

I  often  sit  and  wish  that  I.  See  Flying  Kite. — Sher- 
man. 

I  often  sit  and  wonder  why.     See  Why? — TJichards. 

I  often  think  each  tottering  form.  See  Youth  and  Age. 
— Anon. 

I  often  tried  in  vain  to  find.  See  New  Simile  for  the 
Ladies,  A. — Sheridan. 

I  once  had  a  little  brother.  See  Pictures  of  Memory. 
— Gary. 

I  once  had  a  sweet  little  doll,  dears.  See  Water 
Babies,  The  (My  Little  Doll).— Kingsley. 

I  once  knew  a  woman  and  her  face  would  be  a-bloomin'. 
See  Don't  Fret. — Burdette. 

I  once  knew  all  the  birds  that  came.  See  Long  Ago. — 
Field. 

I  once  saw  a  poor  fellow,  keen  and  clever.  See  Wis- 
dom and  Wealth. — Khemnitzer. 

I  once  spent  a  few  weeks  at  the  house  of  Mr.  Dunder- 
burg  .Tenkins.  See  Dunderburg  Jenkins's  "Forty 
Graf"  Album. — Kyle. 

I  once  took  a  fancy  to  fathom  the  brains.  See  Fath- 
oming Brains. — Bates. 

I  once  was  guest  at  a  nobleman's  wedding.  See  No- 
bleman's Wedding,  The. — Allingham. 

I  once  was  a  stranger  to  grace  and  to  God.     See  Jeho- 
vah Tsidkenu.— McCheyne. 
I  only  know  she  came  and  went.     See  Mosaic  Poetry. 

— Anon^ 
I  opened  the  book  before  me.     See  Mark  of  the  Rose, 

The. — Kingsbury. 
I  opened  the  yard  gate  and  looked  out  into  the  empty 
street.      See  David  Copperfield  (Wreck,  The). — 
Dickens. 
I  ought  to  be  kinder  always.     See  Some  Lover's  Dear 

Thought. — Woolsey. 
I  overheard  two  matrons  grave,  allied  by  close  affinity. 

See  Kindred  Quacks.— (PwncA.) 
I  owe  an  apology  to  the  Irish  Members  for  stepping  in. 
See    Suspension    of    the    Habeas    Corpus    Act. — 
Bright.  , 

I  owe  to  smoking,  more  or  less.     See  Confession  of  a 

Cigar  Smoker. — Anon. 
I  own  a  mule.     It  is  the  first  mule  I  ever  had.     See  My 
Mule. — Crowl. 


699 


I  own 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  own  I  like  not  .lohnson's  turgid  style.     iSe«  On  Dr. 

.Johnson. — Wolcott. 
I  pace  the  sounding  sea-beach  and  behold.     See  Milton. 

— Longfellow. 
I  paced  upon  nay  b^t.     See  Lines  on  a  I^ate  Hospi- 

cious  Ewent. — fljackeray. 
I  pa.«8'd  her  one  day  in  a  hurry.     iSee  White  Chip  Hat, 

The.— Willis. 
I  pasfed  by  a  garden,  a  little  Dutch  garden.     See  Little 

Dutch  Garden,  A. — Whitney. 
I  picked   him  out   as  an   insurance   man.     See   "Fat 
Contributor"  on  Insurance    Agents,    The. — Gris- 
wold. 
I  picture    her    there    in    the    quaint    old    room.     See 

Dreaming  in  the  Trenches. — McCabe. 
I  pin  a  gandidate  for  des  aldermens  mid  dis  vard.    See 

Touching  Appeal,  A. — Blinkerhausen. 
I  pitch  my  tent  in  a  small  town  in  Injianny.     See  Arte- 

mus  Ward  on  Woman's  Rights. — Brown. 
I  pity  any  one  who  does  not  love  classical  music.     See 

Classical  Music. — Kyle. 
I  pity  ba.shful  men,  who  feel  the  pain.     See  Conversa- 
tion (Excessive  Modesty). — Cowper. 
I  pity  the  man  who  has  never  in  his  best  moods.     See 

same. — Brooks. 
I  pity  the  unbeliever — one  who  can  gaze  upon   the 

grandeur.     See  Unbeliever,  The. — Chalmers. 
I  pity  you  from  my  heart,  you  have  lost  a  treasure. 
See  Country  Cousin,  The;  or,  The  Rough  Diamond. 
— Buckstone. 
I  played  with  you  'mid  cowslips  blowing.     See  Love 

and  Age. — Peacock. 
I  plucked  it  in  an  idle  hour.     See  Passion  Flower,  The. 

— Howarth. 
I, plucked  some  simple  flowers  in  the  early  morning 
hours.     See    To    a    Collection      of     Pastorals. — 
Wiley. 
I  pondered  long  upon  my  choice.     See  Don't  Hesitate. 

— Anon. 
I  poured  out  a  tumbler  of  claret.     See  Tumbler  of 

Claret,  A.— Wheeler. 
I  praised  the  speech,  but  cannot  now  abide  it.     See  Of 

the  Warres  in  Ireland.— Harrington. 
I  pray   that,   risen   from   the   dead.     See   Grandma's 

Prayer. — Field. 
I  pray  that  time  full   many  years  may  bring.     See 

Afterglow. — Blanden. 
I  pray  thee  call  not  this  society.     See  Disappointment. 

— Lowell. 
I  pray  thee,  Love  [or  leave],  love  me  no  more.     See  To 

His  Coy  Love.— -Drayton. 
"I  pray  you,  damsels,  tell  me  whither  went."     See 
Iliad,  The  (Hector's  Farewell  to  Andromache). — 
Homer. 
I  pray  you,  do  not  turn  your  head.     See  Tn  an  Atelier. 

— Aldrich. 
I    pray  you,   in   your    letters.     See  Othello. — Shake- 
speare. 
I  pray  you,  is  Signior  Montanto  returned  from  the 
wars,    or   no?     See   Much   Ado    about    Nothing. 
— Shakespeare. 
I  pray  you,  pardon  me,  Elsie.     See  How  it  Happened. 

— Hay. 
I  pray  you,  what's  asleep?    See  As  the  Day  Breaks. — 

McGafFey. 
I  prayed  for  riches,  and  achieved  success.     See  An- 
swered Prayers.-^  Wilcox. 
J  prayed  to  God,  He  heard  my  prayer.      See  Conva- 
lescent.— Anon. 
I  prefer  to  substitute  for  the  official  title.     See  Our 

Country. — Harrison. 
I  presume  you  have  all  occasionally  dipped  into  the 
sort  of  literature.     See  Good  Little  Boy  and  the 
Bad  Little  Boy.  The.— Kyle. 
"I  prithee,"  quoth  the  gentle  youth  unto  the  winsome 

maiden.     See  In  November. — Anon. 
I  prithee   send   me  back   my    heart.     See   Song:    "I 

prithee  send,"  etc.— Suckling.  * 

I  prize  it,  I  love  it,  this  jack-knife  of  mine!     See  Knife 

of  Boyhood,  The. — Upham. 
I  profess,   sir,   in   my  career  hitherto,   to  have  kept 
steadily  in  view.     See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The  (Lib- 
erty and  Union). — Webster. 
I  put  by    [uT.    away]    the    half-written    poem.      See 

Lost  Kiss,  The.— Riley. 
I  put  thy  hand  aside,  and  turn  away.     See  Farewell, 

A. — De  Vere. 
I  questioned:  Why  is  evil  on  the  earth?    See  Answer, 

An. — Williams. 
I  ran  across  what  first  struck  me  as  a  very  singular 

genius.     See  Railroad  Car  Scene,  A. — Anon. 
^  '*^.  *  legend  of  a  monk  who  painted.     See  Monk's 
Vision,  The.— (Boston  Pilot.) 


I  read    before    my    eyelids    dropt    their    shade.     See 

Dream  of  Fair  Woman,  A. — Tennyson. 
I  read  last  night  of  the  Grand  Review.     See  Second 

Review  of  the  Grand  Army. — Harte. 
I  read  not  long  ago,  how  all  the  tide.     See  Ganges,  The. 

— McGuire. 
I  read,  O  friend,  no  pages  of  old  lore.     See  Chrysalis  of 

a  Bookworm,  The.— Egan. 
I  read  of  the  Emperor  Conrad  the  Third.     See  Love's 

Strategy. — Sharpe. 
I  read  on  de  paper  mos'  ev'ry  day,  all  about  Jubilee. 

See  Habitant's  Jubilee  Ode,  The. — Drummond. 
I  read    somewhere    that    a    swan,    snow-white.     See 

.    Watch  of  a  Swan,  The. — Piatt. 
I  read  that  once  in  Africa.     See  King  Cophetua  and  the 

Beggar-maid. — Anon. 
I  read  the  marble-lettered  name.     See  Grave  in  Holly- 
wood Cemetery,  Richmond,  A. — Preston. 
I  read  the  sentence  or  heard  it  spoken.     See  Prime  of 

Life,  The.— Wilcox. 
I  read  to  her,  one  summer  day.     See  Lesson  in  Myth- 
ology, A. — Hall. 
I  reads  aboudt  dot  vater  mill  dot  runs  der  life-long 

day.     See  Der  Vater  Mill. — Adams. 
I  reads  in  Yowcob's  shtory  book.     See  Der  Shpider  und 

der  Fly. — Adams. 
I  really  believe  I  am  tired.     I'll   set   down  my  basket 

and  rest.     See  Jewels  She  Lacked,  The. — Anon. 
I  really  take  it  very  kind.     See  Truth  in  Parentheses. 

—Hood. 
I  received  your  kind  letter,  with  your  excellent  advice. 
'       See  Letter  to  Samuel  Mather. — Franklin. 
I  received  yours  of  the  15th  inst.     See  Letter  to  Ben- 
jamin Webb. — Franklin. 
I  recently  noticed  this  paragraph  in  a  city  paper.    See 

Miss  Witchazel  and  Mr.  Thistlepod. — Burdette. 
I  recently  went  to  a  fair  given  by  the  Little  Busy  Bee 
Missionary  Society.     See  Little  Busy  Bees,  The. 
— (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
I  reckon  I  git  your  drift,  gents.     See  Banty  Tim. — 

Hay. 
I  reckon  yeoii'U  be  done  milkin'  purty  soon,  won't 

yeou?     See  Another  Arrangement. — McBride. 
I  recollect  a  nurse  called  Ann.     See  Earliest  Recollec- 
tion.— Locker. 
I  regret,  gentlemen,  that  this  question  of  the  abolition. 

See  Death  Penalty,  The. — Hugo. 
I  remarked,  on  a  former  occasion.     See  Jere  Lloyd  on 

' '  Phrenology. ' ' — Anon^ 
I  remember  a  song  whose  numbers  throng.     See  Old 

Sweet  Song,  The. — Anon. 
I  remember  Big  Ben  Bolton  and  the  little  Leontine. 

See  Big  Ben  Bolton.— Hall. 
I  remember  going  to  the   British  Museum  one  day. 
See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat  (Imaginary  Invalid,  The). 
— Jerome. 
I  remember  grandrria's  garden  as  it  was  long  time  ago. 

See  Grandma's  Garden. — Anon. 
I  remember,  I  remember  the  hoops  my  best  gal  wore. 

See  Hoop  Skirt,  The. — Anon. 
I  remember,  I  remember,  the  house  where  I  was  born. 

See  I  Remember,  I  Remember. — Hood.     , 
I  remember,  I  remember  when  I  was  a  little  boy.     See 

Nursery  Reminiscences. — Barham. 
I  remember  it  all  so  very  well,  the  first  of  my  married 

life.     See  Inventor's  Wife,  An. — Ewing. 
I  remember  it  well;  'twas  a  morn  dull  and  gray.     See 

Macdonald's  Raid. — Hayne. 
I  remember  meeting  you.     See  All  Sorts.— -Anthony. 
I  remember  once  riding  from  Buffalo  to  the  Niagara 

Falls.     See  Power  of  Habit,  The.— Gough. 
I  remember  the  dear  little  girl.     See  Little  Tambourine- 
girl,  The. — Larcom. 
I  remember  well  the  agonizing  stupidity  of  a  journey. 
See  Traveling   under  the  Care  of  a  Gentleman. — 
Hamilton. 
I  remember  well  the  way.     See  His  New  Suit. — Kiser. 
I  remember,  when  a  youngster,  all  the  happy  hours  I 

spent.     See  Best  Spare  Room,  The. — Lincoln. 
I  remember  when  the  fight  was  on.     See  Corporal  of 

Chancellorsville,  The. — Paxton. 
I  reside  at  Table  Mountain,  and  my  name  is  Truthful 
James.     See  Society  upon  the   Stanislaus,  The. — 
Harte. 
I  rested  on  the  breezy  height.     See  Above  St.  Ir^n^e. 

—Scott. 
I  reverently  believe  that  the  Maker.     See  Mark  Twain 

on  the  Weather. — Clemens. 
I  ride  on  the  mountain  tops,  I  ride.     See  Joy  of  the 

Hills,  The.— Markham. 
I  rise,  gemmen  an'  ladies,  for  de  purpose  of   calling  de 
meetin'    to    order.     See    Possum-Run    Debating 
Society,  The. — Anon. 


7(X) 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  saw 


rise  in  the  dawn,  and  I  kneel  and  blow.   See  Song  of 

the  Old  Mother,  The.— Yeats, 
rise,  my  Lords,  to  declare  my  sentiments  on  this  most 

solemn    and    serious    subject.     See    Speech    on    a 

Motion  for  an  Address  to  the  Throne. — Chatham. 

rise  to  make  this  short  oration.     See  Oration  for  a 

Boy,  An. — Kavanaugh. 
rode  a  horse,  a  dappled  bay.     <See  Ballad  of  a  Little 

Fun,  The. — Thompson, 
said  I  would  not  speak  to-night.     See  Speech  for  a 

Small  Boy. — Anon, 
said,  if  I  might  go  back  again.     See  Woman's  Con- 

clu.sions,  A. — Gary, 
said,  "My  heart,  now  let  us  sing  a  song."     See  Wed- 
ding Song,  A. — Chadwick. 
said  my  pleasure  shall  not  move.     *See  Our  Thrones 

Decay. — Russell . 
said  one  year  ago.     iSee  New  Year   Ledger,  The. — 

Barr. 
I,"  said  the  duck,  "I  call  it  fun."     See  Who  Likes  the 

Rain? — Bates, 
said,    then,    dearest,    since    'tis    so.     See   Last    Ride 

Together,  The. — Browning, 
said  to  Lettice,  our  sister  Lettice.     See  Lettice. — 

Oaik. 
said  to  Sorrow's  awful  storm.     See  Soul's  Defiance, 

The.— Stoddard, 
said  to  the  rose,  "The  brief  night  goes."     See  Maud 

("I  said,"  etc.). — Tennyson, 
said  to  Time,  "This  venerable  pile."     See  From  an 

Italian  Sonnet.— Rogers, 
said,  when  evil  men  are  strong.     See  Song  at  the 

Feast    of    Brougham    Castle    (Two   Victories). — 

Wordsworth, 
said  when  I  began  that  I  was  a  trophy.     See  Drunk- 
ards not  All  Brutes. — Gough. 
said  your  beauty  shamed  the  rose's  blush.     See  To 

Phyllis. — Terhune. 
sail'd  from  the  Downs  in  the  Nancy.     See  Tar  for  All 

Weathers,  The.— Dibdin. 
sailed  by  Tenodos,  in  sight  of  Troy.     See  Taking  of 

Sebastopol,  The. — Parsons, 
sang  the  budding  spring  away.     See  Cricket,  The. — 

Burdette. 
sat  alone  with  my  conscience.     See  Conscience  and 

Future  Judgment. — Anon, 
sat  an  hour  to-day,  John.     See  Old  School  Hou.se, 

The. — Anon, 
sat  and  watched  him  as  he  softly  rocked.     See  In  the 

Chimney  ('orner. — I^ewis. 
sat  and  watched  the  flags  to-day.     See  Flag  at  Half- 
mast,  The. — -Cooke, 
sat  at  Berne,  and  watched  the  chain.     See  Below  the 

Heights. — Pollock, 
sat    at    the    opera — round    me   there    floated.     See 

Drama  of  Three,  A. — Anon, 
sat  at  my  wheezy  organ.     See  Old  Organ,  The. — 

Booth. 
sat  at  work  one  summer  day.     See  Prince's  Feather. 

— Bradley, 
sat  beside  the  streamlet.     See  Remember  or  Forget. 

— Aidd. 
sat  by  my  window  one  night.     See  Musings.^ — ^Long- 

fellow. 
sat  in  the  evening  cool.     See  Forgiveness. — Anon, 
sat  in  the  shade  of  the, ingle;  she  sat  a  little  apart. 

See  Knitting. — Dallas, 
sat  me  down  at  leisure.     See  Pity  'tis,  'tis  true. — 

Welch, 
sat  unsphering  Plato  ere  I  slept.     See  Fall  of  a  Soul, 

The. — Symonds. 
sat  upon  a  windy  mountain  height.     See  Sunset  on 

the  Cuninibla  Valley,  Blue  Mountains. — Sladen. 
sat  with  Doris,  the  shepherd-maiden.     See  Doris:     A 

Pastoral . — Munby . 
sat  with  Love  upon  a  woodside  well.     See  Willow- 
wood. — Rossetti. 
sat  within  my  wagon  on  a  heated  summer  day.     See 

Quarrel  of  the  Wheels. — English, 
sat   within    the   temple   of   her   heart.     See   I/iving 

Temple,  A. — Sangster. 
sauntered    lately    through    the    street.     See    Weird 

Warble,  A. — Newton, 
saw  a  cow-hide  in  the  grass.     See  Odd   See-saws. — 

Anon, 
saw  a  famous  fountain  in  my  dream.     See  Vision  of 

Repentance,  A. — I>amb. 
saw  a  little  bumble  bee.     See  Bumble  Bee,  The. — 

Goodfellow. 
saw  a  little  girl.     See   Heart's   Fine   Gold,   The.- — 

Bourne, 
saw  a  man,  by  some  accounted  wise.     See  What  is 

the  Use?— Ellsworth. 


I  saw  a  new  world  in  my  dream.     See  I  Saw  a  New 

World. — Rands. 
I  saw  a  pale  young  orphan  boy.     See  Charity. — Anon. 
I  saw  a  picture  once  by  Arigelo.    See  Unpraised  Picture, 

An. — Burton. 
I  saw  a  poor  old  woman  on  the  bench.     See  By  the 

Saltp^tri^re. — Ashe. 
I  saw  a  pretty  cottage   stand.     See  What   I   Saw. — 

Akers. 
I  saw  a  ship  a-sailing.     See  Romance. — Setoun. 
I  saw  a  smith  stand  with  his  hammer,  thus.     See  King 

John. — Shakespeare. 
I  saw  a  young  bride   in  her  beauty  and   pride.     See 

Passing  under  the  Rod.^Dana. 
I  saw  an  ann^d  champion  ride.     See  Two  Champions, 

The. — Anon. 
I  saw  de  signs  of  an  early  spring  last  night,  Johnson. 

See  Signs  of  an  Early  Spring. — Anon. 
I  saw   Eternit.v  the  other  night.     See  World,   The. — - 

Vaughan. 
I  saw  fair  Chloris  walk  alone.     See  Chloris  in  the  Snow. 

— Anon. 
I  saw    five    little    fishes.     See    Fish    Family,    The. — 

Putnam. 
I  saw  her  first  on  a  day  in  spring.     See  Idyl,  An. — Buck. 
I  saw  her  going  to  the  game.     See  Varium  et  Mutabile. 

— Sawyer. 
I  saw  her  in  childhood.     See  Agnes.— I^yte. 
I  saw  her  in  the  festive  halls,  in  scenes  of  pride  and  glee. 

See  Lady  of  the  Earl,  The. — Anon. 
I  saw  her  last  night  at  a  party.     See  Mourner  h,  la  Mode, 

The.— Saxe. 
I  saw  her  often  as  I  passed.     See  Five  versus  Twenty- 
five.- — Anon. 
I  saw  her  once,  once  only,  long  ago.     See  Sonnet:  "I 

saw  her  once,"  etc. — Anon. 
I  saw  her  when  Life's  tide  was  high.     See  Life's  Morn- 
ing. Noon  and  Evening. — L.  M.  D. 
I  saw  him  beat  the  surges  under  him.     See  Tempest, 

The. — Shakespeare. 
"I     saw    him    kiss   your    cheek!"    " 'Tis    true."     See 

Angel    in     the    Hou.se,    The    (Sly    Thoughts). — 

Pat  more. 
I  saw  him   kiss  your  hand  before  you  saw  me.     See 

Country  Girl,  The,  Scenes  from. — Anon. 
I  saw   him   last   on   this   terrace   proud.     See   On    the 

Death  of  George  the  Third.— Smith. 
I  saw  him,  Lucy,  only  once.     See  Noble  Stranger,  The. 

— Anon. 
I  saw  him  on  the  battle-eve.     See  Flight  of  Xerxes, 

The. — Jewsbury. 
I  saw  him  once  before.     See  Last  Leaf,  The. — Holmes. 
I  saw  him  standing  in  the  crowd.     See  He  never  Told 

a  Lie. — Anon. 
I  saw,  I  saw  the  lovely  child.     See  same. — Myers. 
I  saw  in  dreams  a  mighty  multitude.     See  No  Death. — 

Marston. 
I  saw  in  Siena  pictures.    See  Sodoma's  Christ  Scourged. 

— Woodberry. 
I  saw  it  all  in  Fancy's  glass.     See  Torch  of  Liberty, 

The. — Moore. 
I  saw  it  in  the  visions  of  the  night.     See  M.v  Heart's 

Treasure. — Nicholson. 
I  saw  Love  stand.     Sec  Forgiven? — Gillespy. 
I  saw  my  lady  weep,  and  Sorrow  proud  to  be  advanced 

so.     See  I  Saw  my  Lady  Weep. — Anon. 
I  saw  my  lady  weeping,  and  Love  did  languish.     See 

Sweet  I^amenting. — .\non. 
I  saw  my  pussy  run  up  a  tree.     See  How  Pussy  was 

Left. — Richards. 
I  saw  my  wife  pull  out  the  bottom  drawer.     See  In  the 

Bottom  Drawer. — Anon. 
I  saw  not  they  were  strange,  the  ways  I  roam.     See 

After  Music. — Peabody. 
I  saw    old  Autumn    in    the    misty  morn.      See  Ode: 

Autumn. — Hood. 
I  saw  old  Time,  de.stroyer  of  mankind.     See  Time  and 

Deat  h . — Whit  worth . 
I  saw  on  earth  another  light.     See  Light  from  Within, 

The.— Very. 
I  saw  Teddy  Reagan  the  other  day.     See  Tim  Murphy's 

Irish  Stew. — Anon. 
I  saw  the  city's  terror.     See  Rescue  of  Chicago,  The. — 

Look. 
I  saw    the    consecrated    water    fall.     See   Christening, 

The. — Town  send. 
I  saw  the  curl  of  his  waving  lash.     See  Reflections  of  a 

Proud  Pedestrian. — Holmes. 
I  saw  the  Master  of  the  Sun.  '  See  Sun  God,  The. — 

De  Vere. 
I  saw  the  moon  rise  clear.     See  Finland  Love-song. — 

Moore. 
I  saw  the  twinkle  of  white  feet.     See  Hebe. — Lowell 


701 


I  saw 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  saw  the  woods  and  fields  at  close  of  day.     See  Task, 

The  (Snow).— Cowper. 
I  saw  the  young  bride,  in  her  beauty  and  pride.     See 

Under  the  Hod. — Dana. 
I  saw  thee,  Netley,  M  the  sun.     See  Netley  Abbey. — 

Barham. 
I  saw  thee  when,  as  twilight  fell.     See  I  Saw  Thee. — 

Palmer. 
I  saw  them  kissing  in  the  shade  and  knew  the  sum  of  all 
my  lore.     See  House  of  a  Hundred  Lights,  The 
(Young  Ijovers,  The). — Torrence. 
I  saw  them  standing  in  a  wood.     See  Love's  Young 

Dream. — Waithman. 
I  saw   these   dreamers   of   dreams  go   by.     See   Gold 

Seekers,  The.— Garland. 
I  saw  three  ships  come  sailing  in.     iSee  I  Saw  Three 

Ships. — Anon. 
I  saw  three  witches.     See  «om«.— Ramal. 
I  saw  through  the  grates  of  a  prison  door.     See  Rum 

Maniac,  The.— -Fenno. 
I  saw  thy  beauty  in  its  high  estate.     See  To  a  Magnolia 
Flower  in  the  Garden  of  the  Armenian  Convent  at 
Venice. — Mitchell. 
I  saw  Time  in  his  workshop  carving  faces.     See  Time. — 

Scott. 
I  saw  to-night  the  man  I  loved  three  little  years  ago. 

See  With  Clearer  Vision.— Perry. 
I  &aw — 'twas  in  a  dream  the  other  night.     See  Monte- 

fiore. — Bierce. 
I  saw  two  clouds  at  morning.     See  Epithalamium.— 

Brainard.  ,     t  • 

I  saw   two   dusty   little   shoes.     iSee   What   the  Little 

Shoes  Said. — Anon. 
I  saw  where  in  the  shroud  did  lurk.     See  On  an  Infant 

Dying  as  Soon  as  Bom. — Lamb. 
I  saw  wife  pull  out  the  bottom  drawer  of  the  old  family 
bureau  this  evening.     See  In  the  Bottom  Drawer. 
— Anon. 
"I  saw  you  take  his  kiss."  'Tis  true.     See  Angel  m  the 

House,  The  (Sly  Thoughts). — Patmore. 
I  saw  you  toss  the  kites  on  high.     See  Wind,  The. — 

Stevenson. 
I  saw  you  was  at  the  lecture  last  night,  Samantha.     See 
My    Opinions    and    Betsey    Bobbet's    (Woman's 
Rights).— HoUey. 
I  saw  young  Harry  with  his  beaver  on.     See  King 

Henry  IV.,  Part  I. — Shakespeare. 
I  sawe  to  me  appeare.     See  Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The 

(Description  of  La  Belle  Pucel). — Hawes. 
I  say,  as  one  who  never  feared.     See  Beard  and  Baby. 

—Field. 
I  say.  Bob !     Well,  you  and  the  rest  of  the  boys  go  and 

get  your  excuses.     See  Mother's  Way. — Anon. 
I  say,  boys,  I  call  Frank  Barrett  just  the  meanest  boy 

in  the  school.     See  Peacemaker,  The. — Anon. 
I  say,  brover  Horace,  I  learn  you  give  Meriky.     See 

Meriky's  Conversion. — Pickering. 
I  say,  Debby.     .See  Tom's  Proposal. — -Anon. 
I  say,  give  me  a  bite.     See  Generosity. — Anon. 
I  say,  I  wonder  why  fellahs  ever  wide  in  horse  cars? 

See  Swell  in  a  Horse  Car,  The.— Kyle. 
I  say  it  under  the  rose.     See  Thalia. — Aldrich. 
I  say,  .Tohn,  do  you  see  that  old  gal  coming  up  the  road. 

See  Old  Aunt,  The.— Anon. 
I  say,  .Tohnson,  were  you  eber  a  salt-sea-sailor-man? 

See  Bones'  Experience  at  Sea. — Anon. 
I  say,  Johnson,  you  hab  heard  of  a  good  many  queer 
things  in  your   time,  haben't    you?     See  Oldest 
Woman  on  Record,  The. — Anon. 
I  say,  Kate,  what  are  you  going  to  do  when  you  leave 

school?     See  .A.fter  School,  What? — Anon. 
I  say,  Mrs.  Green,  if  you  want  peace  with  the  world. 

See  Other  People's  Children.— E.  R.  A. 
I  say  to  thee,  do  thou  repeat.     See  Kingdom  of  God, 

The.— Trench. 
I  say  without  reserve,  speaking  merely  in  the  abstract. 

See  Freedom  of  the  Press,  The. — Erskine. 
I  see  a  dusk  and  awful  figure  rise.     See  Manfred  (Ap- 
parition, The). — Byron. 
I  see  a  gray  coon  in  de  com.     See  Piccaninny  Lullaby. 

—Anon.  _ 
I  see  a  nest  in  a  green  elm  tree.     See  Child  and  the 

World,  The.— Anon. 
T  see  a  schooner  in  the  bay.     See  Memory. — Scott. 
I  see  a  tiny  fluttering  form.     See  Southern  Snow  Bird, 

The. — Hayne. 
I    see    before    me    now    a    traveling    army    halting. 
See     Bivouac     on  ,  a     Mountain     Side.  —  Whit- 
man. 
I  see  before  me  the  gladiator  lie.      See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage  (Gladiator,  The). — Byron. 
I  see  black  dragons  mount  the  sky.     See  Shapes  and 
Signs. — Mangan . 


I  see  bold  Longstreet's  darkening  host.     See  Garfield 

at  Chattanooga. — {Boston  Transcript.) 
I  see  her  face  in  the  distance.     See  Love  on  the  Links. 

— Winter. 
I  see  her  where  the  budding  May.     See  Hawthorn. 

— (All  the  Year  Round.) 
I  see  him  sit,  wild-eyed,  alone.     See  Last  Aboriginal, 

The.— Sharp. 
I  see  it  is  a  trick.     See  Dora. — Tennyson. 
I  see  men's  judgments  are.     See  Antony  and  Cleopatra 

("I  see  men's,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
I  see  no  more  the  gray  an'  blue.     See  Bravest  of  the 

Brave. — Burdette. 
I  see  old  Dobbin  through  the  fence.     How  weak  he 

looks  and  old.     See  Old  Dobbin. — Keese. 
I  see  the  cloud-born  squadrons  of  the  gale.     See  Storm 

in  the  Distance,  A.— Hayne. 
I  see  the  moon  and  the  moon  sees  me.     See  Lady  Moon. 

—Houghton. 
I  see    the    star-lights    quiver.     See    Flight    from    the 

Convent,  The.— Tilton. 
I  see  thee  ever  in  my  dreams.     See  Karamanian  Exile, 

The. — Mangan. 
I  see  thee  pine  like  her  in  golden  story.     See  Coleridge. 

—Watts. 
I  see  thee   still.     Thou   art   not   dead.     See   Remem- 
brance, A. — Clarke. 
I  see  them — crowd  on  crowd  they  walk  the  earth.     See 

Dead,  The.— Very. 
I  see  you,  on  the  zigzag  rails.     See  "Bob  White." — 

Cooper. 
I  seldom  ponder  the  "future  life."     See  Idea!  Future, 

An. — Harcourt. 
I  send  my  heart  up  to  thee,  all  my  heart.     See  In  a 

Gondola.- — Browning. 
I  send  thee  a  shell  from  the  ocean  beach.     See  With 

a  Nantucket  Shell. — Webb. 
I  send   thee   pansies   while   the   year   is   young.     See 

Pansies. — Doudney. 
I  sent  a  ring — a  little  band.     See  To  Helene  on  a  Gift- 
ring  Carelessly  Lost.— -Darley. 
I  sent  for  Radcliffe;  was  so  ill.     See  Remedy  worse 

than  the  Disease.  The. — Prior. 
I  sent  her  a  spoon.     See  Sic  Semper. — Graves. 
I  sent  my  soul  through   the  invisible.     See  RubfliyAt 
of  Omar  KhayyS.m  (Moving  Finger  Writes,  The). 
— Fitzgerald. 
I  serve  the  strongest!     So  spake  Offerus.     See -Legend 

of  St.  Christopher,  The. — Anon. 
I  served  in  a  great  cause.     See  same. — Traubel. 
I  set  off  for  Rome  on  a  journey  to  Russia  in  the  midst 
of  winter.    See  Travels  of  Baron  Munchausen  (Ad- 
venture of  Baron  Munchausen  with  his  Horse). — 
Raspe. 
I  shall    certainly    expire.     See    Soft    Black    Overcoat 

with  a  Velvet  Collar,  A.- — Meyers. 
I  shall  come   and  live  in   the   I>ouvre,  I   think.     See 

Description  of  the  Venus  of  Milo. — "Thackeray. 
I  shall  go  out  when  the  light  comes  in.     See  Death  at 

Daybreak. — Aldrich. 
I  shall  hear  of  ingratitude.     I  name  the  argument  to 
despise  it.     See  Declaration  of  Irish  Rights  (Na- 
tional Gratitude). — Grattan. 
I  shall  lack  voice.     See  Coriolanus. — Shakespeare. 
I  shall  never  forget  a  lesson  which  I  received.     See 

Not  Ashamed  of  Ridiculfe. — Anon. 
I  shall  not  acknowledge  that  the  honorable  member 
goes  before  me.     See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The  (Mas- 
sachusetts and  South  Carolina). — Webster. 
I  shall  not  occupy  time  by  discussing  the  huge  mass  of 
suppositions.  See  Life  and  Voyages  of  Christopher 
Columbus  (Discovery  of  America,  The). — Irving. 
I  shall  not  paint  them.     God  sees  them,  and  I.     See 

Angel  Faces. — -Mulock. 
I  shall  not  pass  this  way  again.     See  same. — York. 
I  shall  not   soon   forget  that   sight.     See  Raphael. — 

Whittier. 
I  shall  now  endeavor  to  be  two  people  at  once.     See 

Dentist  and  Patient. — Kyle. 
I  shall  steer  my  bark  where  the  waves  roll  dark.     See 

Beyond. — Anon. 
I  shall  tell  you  of  two  little  fellows  who  bore  that  name. 

See  Fritz.— Diehl. 
I  shall  treat  the  topic  I  have  selected  without  any 
attempt  to  lead  the  way.     See  Self-made  Man  in 
American  Life,  The. — Cleveland. 
I  shan't  be  able  to  stand  this  sort  of  life  much  longer. 

See  his  First  Brief. — Daryl. 
I  shan't  keep  still.     I've  just  as  much  right.     See  Bob 

and  his  Sister. — Denton 
I  shan't  stand  it!     I  won't!   I  do  declare!     See  Child- 
philosophy. — Duncan. 


702 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  stood 


share  with  you  all  the  pleasure  and  gratitude  which 

Americans  so  far  away.     See  Speech  at  Hamburg, 

July  4.— Grant, 
shiver,  Spirit  fierce  and  bold.     See  At  the  Grave  of 

Bums. — Wordsworth, 
shot  a  rocket  in  the  air.     See  Enough. — Anon, 
shot  an  arrow  into  the  air.     See  Arrow  and  the  Song, 

The. — Longfellow, 
should  be  much  for  open  war,  O  Peers.     <See  Paradise 

Lost  (Belial's  Address  Opposing  War). — Milton, 
should  be  surprised,  indeed,  if,  while  you  are  doing  us 

wrong.     See  Irish  Aliens  and  English  Victories. 

—Shell, 
should  come  early  every  day.     <See  Rules  of  School. — 

Anon, 
should  like  to  be  a  great  author.     <See  Choosing  a 

Trade. — Anon, 
should  like  to  rise  and  go.     <See  Travel. — Stevenson, 
should  think  myself  a  criminal  if  I  said  anything  to 

chill.     See  Young  Scholar,  The. — -Warner, 
shouldn't  like  to  say,  I'm  sure.  iSee  Song:  "I  shouldn't 

like,"  etc. — Baker, 
shtood  on  der  pridge  py  Brooklyn.     See  (Brooklyn) 

Bridge,  The. — Wood, 
sift  the  snow  on  the  mountains  below.     See  Cloud, 

The.— Shelley, 
sighed  as  the  soul  of  April  fled.     See  Inconstancy. — 

McDonald, 
sing  because  I  love  to  sing.     See  Why  I  Sing. — Anon, 
sing  beneath  your  lattice,  love.     See  Sensible  Sere- 
nade, A. — L.  M.  L. 
sing  no  splendid  deed  of  fame.     See  Little  Cloak, 

The.— Barr. 
sing  not  of  beauties  of  nature.     See  Ball  Room  Mad- 
rigal, A. — Nichols, 
sing  of  a  maiden.      See  Carol:  "I  sing,"  etc. — Anon, 
sing  of  a  whistle,  a  whistle  of  worth.     See  Whistle, 

The.— Burns, 
sing  of  brooks,  of  blossoms,  birds  and  bowers.     See 

Argument  of  the  Hesperides,  The. — Herrick. 
sing  of  the  life  of  the  wild  sea-gulls.     See  Sea-gulls. — 

Page, 
sing  that  charming  thing.     See  Sloth,  The. — Kimball- 

Gardiner. 
sing  the  birth  was  born  to-night.     See  Hymn  on  the 

Nativity  of  My  Saviour,  A. — -.lonson. 
sing  the  hymn   of   the   conquered,   who   fell   in   the 

Battle  of  Life.    See  He  and  She;  or,  A  Poet's  Port- 
folio (lo  Victis). — Story, 
sing  the  oyster,  virgin  theme.     See  Apostrophe  to 

the  Oyster,  An. — Gesnard. 
sing  the  poppy,  the  frail,  snowy  weed.     See  Poppy. — 

Barr. 
singularly  moved.     See  Winter. — ^Patmore. 
sit  all  alone  with  my  pipe  by  the  fire.     .See  Bachelor's 

Soliloquy,  A. — {Ciaar  arid  Tobacco  World.) 
sit  at  the  wheel  of  life  to  spin.     See  Life's  Loom. — • 

Lee. 
sit  before  my  fire  alone.     See  Summer  Reminiscence, 

A  ("I  sit,"  etc.). — Shepherd, 
sit  beneath  the  apple-tree.     See  Apple  Blossoms. — 

Phelps, 
sit   beside   my   darling's   grave.     See   To    God   and 

Ireland  True. — O'Leary. 
sit  here   and   the   earth   is  wrapped   in   snow.     See 

Twilight  Fancy,  A. — Goodale. 
sit  upon  the  mountain-top.     See  Becau.'ie. — Anon. 
sit  where  the  leaves  of  the  maple.     See  Time  to  Be, 

The.— Gary, 
sit  within  my  little  room.     See  From  my  Window. — 

Ames, 
sit  within  my  room  and  joy  to  find.     See  Presence, 

The. — Very, 
slept  and  dreamed  that  life  was  Beauty.    See  Duty. — 

Hooper, 
slept  in  an  old  homestead  by  the  sea.     See  Chimney 

Swallows. — -Powers, 
smile  to  see  how  you  devise.     See  Proper  Sonnet,  A. — 

Anon, 
sneered  when  I  heard  the  old  priest  complain.     See 

Night  before  Execution,  The. — Anon, 
softly  sink  into  the  bath  of  sleep.     See  Sleeping  and 

Dreaming. — Holland, 
sometimes  doubt  whether  the  obligation  of  the  state 

to  the  scholar.     See  Scholar  and  the  state.  The. — 

Black, 
sometimes  feel  the  thread  of  life  is   slender.     See 

Thoughts    for    the    New    Year. — {Yovih'a    Com- 
panion.) 
sometimes  have  thought  in  my  loneliest  hours.     See 

Rainbow,  The. — Anon, 
sometimes  hold  it  half  a  sin.     See  Grief  Unspeakable. 

— Tennyson. 


sometimes  quote  the  United  States  of  America.     See 

American  Merchant  Vessels. — (^obden. 
sometimes  wonder  that  if  death  should  come.     See 

Which  Could  I  Spare? — Brotherson. 
sought  Thee  round  about,   Q  Thou  my  God.     See 

Search  after  God. — Heywood. 
sought  to  find  some  fancied  bond.     See  Valentine,  A. 

• — Holmes, 
sought  to  hold  her,  but  within  her  eyes.     See  Angel 

at  the  Ford,  The. — Dawson, 
speak  the  words  of  truth  and  soberness.     See  Greatest 

Party,  The.— Willard. 
speak  to  Time  and  to  Eternity ._    See  Marino  Faliero 

(Dying  Speech  of  Marino  Faliero). ^ — Byron, 
spied  John  Mouldy  in  his  cellar.     See  John  Mouldy 

— -Ramal. 
s'pose  I  hain't  progressive,  but  I  swan,  it  seems  to 

me.     See  When  Nathan  Led  the  Choir. — Lincoln, 
s'pose  it's  about  time  we  was  gitting  to  work.     See 

Goose  Hollow  Farmers'  Club. — McBride. 
sprang  to  the  saddle  and  Joris  and  he.     See  Ride 

from  Ghent  to  Aix,  The. — Beaumont, 
sprang  to  the  stirrup,  and  Joris  and  he.     See  How 

They  Brought  the  Good  News  from  Ghent  to  Aix. 

— Browning, 
spurn  your  gilded  bait,  O  king;  my  faith  you  cannot 

buy.    See    General   Joseph  Reed;  or, The    Incor- 
ruptible Patriot. — Jones, 
stand  and  count  the  flying  years  upon  my  fingers 

See  Soldier's  Retrospect. — Sherwood, 
stand  and  wait,  while  all  around  me  lies.    See  Waiting. 

— Coe. 
stand  at  last  on  Ludgate's  famous  hill.     See  Ludgate 

Hill — A  Mystery. — {Punch.) 
stand  before  the  judgment  throne  of  heaven.     See 

Choice  of  Arms,  The. — Leuville. 
stand  between  the  Future  and  the  Past.     See  Mortal 

and  Immortal. — Waterston. 
stand  by  every  word  I  utter  when  I  sing.     See  same  — 

Sterling, 
stand  here  to  say  the  experience  of  all  these  years. 

See  Constitutional  Prohibition  the  Great  Remedy. 

— Finch, 
stand  in  a  darkened  room.     See  Arthur  Bonnicastle 

(Death  of  the  First-born). — Holland, 
stand  in  the  doorway  and  wait  for  his  coming.     See 

My  Lover. — M 'Curdy, 
stand  in  the  middle  of  Jonathan's  house.     See  Song 

of  the  Chimney. — Anon, 
stand  on  the  brink  of  a  river.     See  Vision,  A. — A.  M. 

E. 
stand  upon  the  hill  and  hear.     See  Old  Year  and  the 

New,  The.— Rexford. 
stand   upon   the  hoary  mountain  of  old  Time.     See 

Infelicissime. — (Nassau  Magazine.) 
stand    upon    my    native    hills    again.     See    At  the 

Old  Home  Again. — -Bryant, 
stand  upon  the  summit  of  my  life  [or  years].     See 

Thalatta. — Brown, 
stand    within    a   garden,    where   the   fairest   flowers 

bloom.     See  Thomas  Buchanan  Read. — Janvier, 
started  from  home  one  Sunday  evening.     See  Jim: 

A  Hero. — Overton, 
stepped  into  my  room  one  day.     See  Proof  Positive. 

— ^Anon. 
still  keep  open  Memory's  chamber;  still.     See  Mem- 
ory.— Rosslyn. 
stole  a  kiss!     What  could  I  do?     See  Thief 's  Apology, 

A.— St.  John, 
stood   and   saw   my   mistress   dance.     See   On    Her 

Dancing. — Shirley, 
stood    and   saw   the   angel   of  the   dawn.     See   Two 

Angels.  The. — MacFarlane. 
stood  and  watched  a  school  boy  group.     See  Keep 

the  Mill  a-Going. — English, 
stood  and  watched  my  ships  go  out.     See  Sad  Ven- 
tures.— (Boston  Cultivator.) 
stood  at  eve  when  the  sun  went  down.     See  'Ostler 

Joe. — Sims, 
stood  at  Rimmel's  window,  and  I   saw  that  there 

were  signs.     See  Valentine,  A. — Sims, 
stood  beneath  a  hollow  tree ;  the  blast  it  hollow  blew. 

See  All  Hollow. — -Anon, 
stood  beside  my  window  one  stormy  winter  day. 

See  same. — -Leslie, 
stood  beside  the  grave  of  him  who  blazed.   See  Church 

hill's  Grave. — Byron, 
stood  by  the  open  casement.     See  Celestial  Army, 

The. — Read, 
stood  in  gladness — for  life's  highest  joy.     See  Life's 

Weaving. — Colcord. 
stood  in  that  cathedral  old,  the  work  of  kingly  power. 

See  "Tomb  of  Charlemagne,  The. — Taylor. 


703 


I  stood 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  stood  in   the  crowded  street,  the  winter  sun    shone 

brightly.     Se«  Better  than  Diamonds. — Anon. 
I  stood  in  Venice,  on  the  Bridg^e  of  Sighs.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Venice). — Byron. 
I  stood  on  a  tower  ii^he  wet.     See  New  Year,  The. — 

Tennyson. 
I  stood  on  the  bridge  at  midnight.     See  Bridge,  The. — 

Longfellow. 
I  stood  on  the  crest  in  the  sunlight.     See  Timber  Line. 

— DeLan. 
I  stood  on  the  Hhore  of  the  beautiful  sea.     See  Secret,  A. 

— Denton. 
I  stood  on  the   shore  of  the  beautiful  sea.     See  also 

Sorrow  of  the  Sea,  The. — Anon. 
I  stood,  one  Sunday  morning.     See  I^ondon  Churches. 

— Houghton. 
I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill.     See  same. — Keats. 
I  stood  to  hear  that  bold  Sentence  of  grit.     See  Earth 

to  Earth.— Field. 
I  stood  to-day  in  that  great  square  of  fountains.     See 

At  the  Council.— De  Tabley. 
I  stood  upon  the  hills,  when  heaven's  wide  arch.     See 

Sunrise  on  the  Hills. — Longfellow. 
I  stood  upon  the  ocean's  briny  shore.     See  Agnes,  I 

Love  Thee. — Anon. 
I  stood  upon  the  pebbly  strand.     See  same.— Anon. 
I  stood  with  my  hand  in  my  friend's  warm  hand.     See 

Lines  to  a  Friend. — Bensel. 
I  stood  within  a  vision's  spell.     See  Niagara. — Anon. 
I  stood  within  the  cypress  gloom.     See  Implora  Pace. 

— Hildreth. 
I  strolled  beside  the  shining  sea.     See  Cumberbunce, 

The.— West. 
I  strove  with  none,  for  none  was  worth  m.v  strife.   See 

On  His  Seventy-fifth  Birthday. — Ijandor. 
I  struck  the  board,  and  cried,  "No  more."     See  Collar, 

The. — Herbert . 
I  studied  my  tables  over  and  over,  and  backward  and 

forward,     too.     See    Mortifying    Mistake,     A. — 

Pratt. 
I  study  Evolution.     See  Relapse. — Field. 
I  suppose  every  husband  is  subject  to  what  might  be 

called  "sudden  fits."     See  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Bowser's 

Family  Jar. — {Detroit  Free  Press.) 
I  suppose  I  may  come  in?     See  Monsieur  Jacques. — 

Barnett. 
I  suppose  if  all  the  children.     See  All  the  Children. — 

Anon. 
I  suppose  it's  myself  that  you're  making  allusions  to. 

See  At  the  Atlantic  Dinner. — Holmes. 
T  suppose  you  all  think  you  know  what  I  am  going  to 

say.     See  Prologue. — Anon. 
I  suppose  you  go  to  church,  Johnson? — Anon. 
I  suppose  you  think  me  rather  small  to  stand  up  here 

and  make  a  speech.     See  Presentation  Speech. — • 

Anon. 
I  suppose  you  wish  me  to  act   as  your   second.     See 

'Tramp  Abroad  A  (French  Duel,  The). — Clemens. 
I  suppose  we're  going  home  pretty  soon.     See  Being 

Thankful.— Denton. 
I  swing  to  the  sunset  land.     See  Prairie  Greyhounds. 

— Johnson. 
I  take  life  jest  as  I  find  it.     See  Thankful  Soul,  A. — 

Stanton. 
I  take  my  chaperon  to  the  play.     See  Chaperon,  The. 

— Bunner. 
I  talk  with  you  of  foolish  things  and  wise.     See  Entre 

Nous. — Jewett. 
I  talked  about  you,  dear,  the  other  night.     See  Noc- 
turne of  Consecration,  A. — Roberts. 
I  talked  with  a  stalwart  young  seaman  last  week  on 

Ratcliff    Highway.     See    Brave     Woman,     A. — 

NichoUs. 
I  tan't  see  what  our  baby  boy  is  dood  for  anyway.     See 

Little  Dora's  Soliloquy. — (St.  Nicholas.) 
I  tell  thee,  Dick,  where  I  have  been.    See  BaUad  upon 

a  Wedding,  A. — Suckling. 
"I  tell  ye  it's  nonsense,"  said  Farmer  Ben.     See  Far- 
mer Ben's  Theory. — Anon. 
I  tell  yer.  boys,  you've  got  to  stop  .ver  noise  over  there. 

See  Scene  in  a  Backwoods  School. — McBride. 
I  tell  you.  Bill  Vinton,  you  can't  cheat  me  that  way. 

See  Reclaimed  Father,  The. — McBride. 
I  tell  you,  Emma,  it  is  your  duty  to  do  something.     See 

Woman's  Rights. — Anon. 
I  tell  you,  hopeless  grief  is  passionless.     See  Grief. — 

Browning. 
I  tell  you,  I  will  not  have  the  king  killed.     See  "Gen- 

tlempn,  the  King!" — Barr. 
I  tell  you,   Imogine,  that  it  is  simply  ruinous.     See 

Fifty  Dollar  Milliner's  Bill,  A.— Booth. 
I  [or  I'll]  tell  you,  Kate,  that  Lovejoy  cow.     See  Love- 
joy  Cow,  The. — Morse. 


I  tell  you,  Maria  Jane,  I  know  my  business.     See  Mrs. 

Thompson's  Nephew. — Anon. 
I  tell  you  mother,  I  cannot  stand  it  any  longer.     See 

He  Was  never  Known  to  Smile.; — Barnard. 
I  tell  you  no!  I  won't  comply,  and  its  my  business  to 
talk  and  command.     See  Dorcas  and  Gregory. — 
Molifere. 
I  tell  you,  pard,  in  this  Western  wild.     See  Sergeant's 

Story,  The. — Anon. 
I  tell  you  ttlain,  if  I  don't  try.     See  Jim's  Story. — 

Tomer. 
"I  tell    you,"    said    Robbie,    eating    his    peach.  See 

Number  One. — Talbot. 
I  thank  all  who  have  lov'd  me  in  their  hearts.     See 

Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese,  XI>L — Browning. 
I  thank  God  as  heartily  as  any  one  that  human  slavery 

has   gone   forever.     See  At  the  Boston  Banquet 

(Negro  Problem,  The). — Grady. 
I  thank  thee.  Lord,  that  I  am  straight  and  strong.     See 

For  All  These. — Tompkins. 
I,  that  am  rudely  stamped  and  want  love's  majesty. 

See  King  Richard  IIL  (Duke  of  Gloster,  The).— 

Shakespeare. 
I  that  in  heill  wes  and  glaidness.     See  Lament  for  the 

Makaris  quhen  He  Was  Seik,  The. — Dunbar. 
I,  the  poet,  mussed  my  hair.     See  Advice. — L.  L.  li. 
I  think  a  great  many  professors  of  religion  are  just  like 

backgammon  boards.     See  same. — Bethune. 
I  think  a  stormless  night-time  shall  ensue.     See  World's 

Death-night.  The. — Woods. 
I  think,  as  for  when]  I  read  that  sweet  story  of  old. 

See  Of  Such  is  the  Kingdom  of  Heaven  (Child's 

Desire,  The). — Luke. 
I  think.   Bones,  you  said  you  were  a  married  man? 

See  Bones'  Wife. — Anon. 
I  think  he  had  not  heard  of  the  far  towns.     See  St. 

John  Baptist.— O'Shaughnessy. 
I  think  I  am  the  most  unfortunate  man.     See  Hard 

Luck. — Thatcher. 
I  think  I  do  not  exaggerate  when  I  say.     See  Cen- 
tennial of  the  Birth  of  O'Connell,  The.— Phillips. 
I  think   I   have  it   now.     See  Missed    his   Chance. — 

Graham. 
I  think  I  know  what  Cupid  is.     See  Discovery  in  Biol- 
ogy. A. — Leverett. 
I  think  I  must  have  caught  cold.     See  Mr.  Perkins  at 

the  Dentist's. — Bailey. 
I  think  I  now  have  the  matter  neatly  arranged.     See 

Wise  Selection,  A. — -Anon. 
"I  think  I  want  some  pies  this  morning."     See  Greedy 

Richard. — Taylor. 
I  think  I  will  write  to  Old  Santa.     See  Myrtle's  Letter. 

— Richards. 
I  think  if  I  should  cross  the  room.     See  Room's  Width, 

The.— Ward. 
I  think  if  thou  couldst  know.     See  If  Thou  Couldst 

Know. — Procter. 
I  think  I'll  be  a  blacksmith.     See  Choice  of  Occupa- 
tion.    (For  boys.) — Anon. 
I  think  it  is  over,  over.     See  In  Harbor. — Hayne. 
I  think  it  really  mean — don't  you?     See  Complaint,  A. 

_ — Jenks  [or  Pennypacker]. 
I  think  it  was  Spring — but   not   certain   I   am.     See 

Epicurean  Reminiscences  of  a  Sentimentalist. — 

Hood. 
I  think  it's  berry  hard  on  dis  child.     See  Barking  up 

the  Wrong  Tree. — Anon. 
I  think  it's  not  an  easy  task.     See  Little  Boy's  First 

Recitation,  A. — Anon. 
I  think  it's  real  mean  of  people,  to  put  me  dow^n  on 

the   program.     See   Oration   for  a  Six  Year  Old 

Boy,  An. — Anon. 
I  think  myself  happy.  King  Agrippa,  because  I  shall 

answer  for   myself.     See   Acts    of    the    Apostles 
,  (Paul's  Defence    before  Festus  and    Agrippa). — 

Bible. 
I  think  not  on  my  father.      See  All's  Well  that  Ends 

Well  (True  Love). — Shakespeare. 
I  think  of  thee  when  nightingale's  sweet  songs.     See 

I  Think  of  Thee. — Matthisson. 
I  think  of  thee,  when  the  bright  sunlight  shimmers. 

See  Loved  One  ever  Near,  The. — Goethe. 
I  think  on  thee  in  the  night.     See  I  Think  on  Thee. — 

Hervey. 
I  think,  Sir,  the  country  calls  upon  us  loudly  and  im- 
peratively.     See   Compromise  Measures  (Justice 

to  the  Whole  Country). — Webster. 
I  think  that  an  angel,  when  nobody  knew.     See  How 

the  Flowers  Came. — Anon. 
I  think  that  every  mother's  son.     See  What  to  Drink. 

— Anon. 
I  think  that  he  loved  me!  at  least,  he  said.     See  After 

All!— Butt. 


704 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  walked 


I  think  that  none  of  us  can  understand.     See  Holmes, 

Extract  Concerning. — Eliot. 
I  think   that   the   world   was   finished    at    night.     See 

Thoughts. — Whiton. 
I  think  that  we  retain  of  our  dead  friends.     See  Re- 
membrance.— Boner. 
I  think  the  pity  of  this  life  is  love.     See  Life's  Pity. — 

Anon. 
I  think    the    song    that's    sweetest.     See    Ideal,    The. 

— (Hall's  Journal  of  Health. ) 
I  think  thei'e  are  some  maxims.     See  Old  Maxims. — 

Gary. 
I  think   there  was  chilens  enough.     See  Big  Enough 

Family,  A. — (Columbus  Morning  News.) 
I  think  this  is  the  jolliest   day  in   all  the  year.     See 

Something  to  be  Thankful  For. — Denton, 
"I  think  this  is  the  result  of  a  burn."     See  Hole  in  the 

Carpet,  The. — Anon. 
I  think    till     I    weary    with    thinking.      See    Hindoo 

Sceptic,  The.— (Spectator,  The.) 
I  think  true  love  is  never  blind.     See  True  Love.^Cary. 
I  think  we  are  too  ready  with  complaint.     See  Cheer- 
fulness.— Browning. 
I  think  we  cannot  too  sharply  draw  the  line  between 

what  really  is  our  duty.     See  Victims  and  Vic- 

timizers. — Craik. 
I  think  we  shall  have  callers,  Mattie  dear.     See  Morn- 
ing Calls. ^-Anon. 
I  think,   when    I   read   that   sweet   story   of  old.     See 

Of  such  is  the  Kingdom  of  Heaven. — I>uke. 
I  think  you  remember  a  man  we  knew,  who  went  by 

the  name  of  "Prince."     See  "Prince." — Pember- 

ton. 
I  thought  as  I  watched  in  the     dawning.     See  Mes- 
senger Hours,  The. — Parkinson. 
I  thought  T  must  be  dreaming.     See  Unspoken  Ques- 
tion, The.— Anon. 
I  thought   I'd   come  into  the   shop   for  awhile.     It  is 
•  lonely  in  the  house.     See  Shoemaker's  Troubles, 

A. — Anon. 
I  thought  I'd  jist  run  in  fur  a  minute  and  hev  a  little 

talk.     See  Curing  the  Borrowers. — McBride. 
I  thought  it  meant  all  glad  ecstatic  things.     See  Love's 

Meaning. — Perry. 
I  thought  it  was  the  little  bed.       See  Half-waking. — 

AUingham. 
"I  thought,  Mr.  Allan,  when  I  gave  my  Bennie  to  his 

country."     See  Soldier's  Reprieve,  The. — Robbins. 
I  thought  myself  indeed  secure.     See  At  the  Door. — 

Field. 
I  thought  of  death  be.side  the  lonely  sea.    See  Life  and 

Death. — Scott. 
I  thought   of  Thee,   my  partner  and  my  guide.     See 

After-thought. — Wordsworth. 
I  thought  once  how  Theocritus  had   sung.     See  Son- 
nets from  the  Portuguese,  I. — Browning. 
I  thought  our  love  at  full,  but  I  did  err.     See  Sonnet: 

"I  thought  our  love,"  etc. — Lowell. 
r  thought  that  I  would  like  to  build.     See  Difficulties. 

— Denton. 
I  thought  to  find  some  healing  clime.     See  Answered. 

^Cary. 
I  thought  to  meet  no  more,  so  dreary  seem'd.     See 

Burial  of  the  Dead. — Keble. 
I  thought  to  pass  away  before,  and  yet  alive  I  am. 

See  May  Queen,  The  (Conclusion). — Tennyson. 
I  thought   to   work   for  him.     "Master,"  I  said.     See 

same. — Anon. 
I  thought   when   I'd  learned   my   letters.     See   Little 

Boy's  Troubles,  A. — Perry. 
"I  thought  you  had  given   up  betting  on  the  horse- 

race.s,"  said  Mrs.  De  Tompkins.     See  She  Earned 

her  Half. — Babcock. 
I  thought  you  was  to  school!     See  Little  Prudy  (Play- 
ing "Hookey"). — May. 
I,  Timothy  Doolan,  of  Barrydownderry,  in  the  County 

Clare. — See  Timothy  Doolan's  Will. — Anon. 
I  tink  I  hear  my    brudder  .say.      See  Stars    Begin  to 

Fall. — Anon. 
I  told   a  little  artless  child.     See  Just    Like     God. — 

Viroe. 
I  told  Hezekiah — that's  my  man.     See  Aunt  Parsons's 

Story. — (Presbyterian  Journal. ) 
I  told  my  secret  to  the  sweet  wild  roses.     See  Couldn't 

Keep  a  Secret. —  (All  the  Year  Round.) 
I  tole  yu,  Petah,  you'd  orte  ben  dah.     See  One-legged 

Duck,  The.— Smith. 
I  too    am    changed — I    scarce    know    why.     See    Ten 

Years  Ago. — Watts. 
I  too    have    suffered.     Yet    I    know.     See    Excuse. — 

Arnold. 
"I    too,    like    them,    from    Lacedremon    spring."     See 

Leonidas  (Polydorus  and  Maron). — Glover. 


I  too     remember,     in    the    after    years.     See     Niobe. 

— Tennyson. 
I  took  a  prism  and  on  the  floor  I   threw.     See  My 

' '  Shine. " — Anon. 
I  took  a  sea-weed  in  my  hand.     See  Sea-weed. — Drom- 

goole. 
I  took  it  for  a  fairy  vision.     See  Comus. — Milton. 
I  took   mine    Katarina   down.     See   Katarina    Sees   a 

Game  of  Foot-ball. — Anon. 
I  took  my  heart  in  my  hand.     See  Twice. — Rossetti. 
I  took  that  glass  marble,  mamma.     See  Johnny's  Con- 
fession.— Anon. 
I  travell'd  among  unknown  men.     See  same. — Words- 
worth. 
I  tried  to  improve  my  mind  one  afternoon.     See  Mrs. 

Smith  Improves  her  Mind. — Dallas. 
I  tripped    along    a   narrow   way.     See   Forthfaring. — 

Howells. 
I  trust  in  God ;  whatever  ills.     See  My  Faith. — Anon. 
I  trust  that  at  length,  the  time  is  come.     See  Negro 

Slavery. — Brougham. 
I  trust  your  lordships  will  not  believe  that.     See  Im- 
peachment of  Warren  Hastings  (Impeachment  of 

Mr.  Hastings,  The). — Sheridan. 
I  try  to  knead  and  spin,  but  my  life  is  low  the  while. 

See  In  Leinster. — Guiney. 
I  turned   and   thought   I   saw  myself.     See   Roadside 

Path,  The.— Killian. 
I  understand  the  large  hearts  of  heroes.     See  Song  of 

Myself  (Heroes). — Whitman. 
I  understand  you  was  at  the  grand  opera  last  night. 

See    How    Hans    Yager    Enjoyed    the    Opera. — - 

Anon. 
I  use?l  to  go  to  bed  at  night.     See  Bed  during   Exams. 

—Vail. 
I  used  to  marry  a  good  many  folks.     See  Pike  County 

Wedding,  A. — Anon. 
I  useter  beg  my  old  gra'ma.     See  Dimes  for  Turnips' 

Blood. — Aiion. 
I  vant  some  invormashun,  shust  so  quickly  vot  I  can. 

See  Der  Coming  Man. — Adams. 
I  vant  to  dold  you  vat  it  is,  dots  a  putty  nice  play. 

See  Schneider  Sees  IjCah. — "Uncle  Schneider." 
I  venture  to  prophesy,  there  are  those  now  living  who 

will  see  this.     See  Return  of  British  Fugitives. — 

Henrv. 
I  very  much  regret  that  it  should  have  been  thought 

necessary    to    suggest    to  you.     See   Murder   of 

Captain  Joseph  White,  The   (Murder   Will   Out). 

— -Webster. 
I  vill  now  make  a  few  remarks  on  demperance.     See 

Burlesque  Temperance  Speech. — -Williams. 
I,  Virgin  of  the  Snows,  have  liv'd.     See  Jungfrau's 

Cry,  The. — Brooke. 
I  vork  in  my  studio  one  day,  ven  one  gentleman.     See 

Popular  Americans. — Anon. 
I  wadna  gi'e  my  ain  wife.   See  My  Ain  Wife. — Laing. 
I  wait  and  watch;  before  my  eyes.     See  Waiting,  The. 

— Whittier. 
I  waited  in  the  little  sunny  room.     See  Eve's  Daughter. 

—Sill. 
I  waited   more   than   two   hours   without   having   an 

opportunity  to  cross  the  river.   .  See  Women  of 

Sego,  The.— Park. 
I  waited  till  the  twilight.     See  same. — Swain. 
I  wake!     Ah!  would  that   I  could  sleep  again!     See 

sam.e. — "Montebello. " 
I  wake!     I  feel  the  day  is  near.     See  Chanticleer. — 

Thaxter. 
I  waked ;  the  sun  was  in  the  sky.     See  On  Waking  from 

a  Dreamless  Sleep. — Fields. 
I  walk    along    the    crowded    streets,    and    mark.     See 

Mystery  of  Life  in  Christ,  The.— Prentiss. 
I  walk  down  the  Valley  of  Silence.     See  Song  of  the 

Mystic,  The. — Ryan. 
I  walk'd  along  a  stream,  for  pureness  rare.     See  Eng- 
land's Parnassus. — Marlowe. 
I  walked    alone    in    the    darkness.     See    Doubting. — 

Downey. 
I  walked  beside  a  dark  gray  sea.     See  Sea-mews  in 

Winter  Time.— Ingelow. 
I  walked  beside  the  evening  sea.     See  Ebb  and  Flow. 

— Curtis. 
I  walked  entranced.     See  Vision  of  Connaught  in  the 

Thirteenth  Century,  A. — Mangan. 
I  walked   in   the   lonesome   evening.     See   Across   the 

Sea. — AUingham. 
I  walked  one  day  with  Phyllith.     See  Chappie's  La- 
ment.— Greenslet. 
I  walked  through  Ballinderry  in  the  spring-time.     See 

Lament  for  Thomas  Davis. — Ferguson. 
I  walked  with  him  one  melancholy  night.     See  Lyci- 

das. — Aldrich. 


705 


I  walked 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  walked  with  the  beautiful  Marcelline.  See  Tell  her 
So. — Anon.  ,     -r,-  -r.  i 

I  wander  lonely  o'er  the  earth.  See  My  Fire. — Pal- 
mer. . 

I  wander'd  by  the  br*»k-side.  See  Brook-side,  The. — 
Houghton.  . 

I  wandered  in  a  lonely  glade.  See  Walk  in  Spring,  A. — 
Montgomery.  -      ,        trr     j 

I  wander'd  lonely  as  a  Cloud.  See  Daffodils. — Words- 
worth. 

I  wandered  lonely  where  the  pine  trees  made.  See 
Trailing  Arbutus,  The.— Whittier. 

1  wandered  through  a  dreary  land.  See  Love  that 
l,ive.s  for  Aye,  The.— Peck. 

I  wandered  through  the  night  alone.  See  Face,  A. — 
Washburn.  ,       „       t->        /-.u 

I  wandered  where  a  curious  crowd.  See  Day  Via 
Bet  was  Sold,  The.— Gassaway. 

I  want  free  life  and  I  want  fresh  air.  See  Lasca. — 
Desprez.  ,...,. 

I  want  no  array  of  figures,  I  want  no  official  documents. 
See  Legislative  Union,  The. — Peel. 

"I  want  something  to  do."  See  Enlisting  as  Army 
Nurse. — Alcott.  ,  ,    r. 

I  want  to  be  a  farmer  See  What  I  Would  Be.— 
Heywood.  ,  ,.     ,       „      _ 

I  want  to  be  a  soldier!  a  soldier!  a  soldier!  See  Boy 
Patriot,  The.— Riley.  .,      ^         ,,.        _,       , 

I  want  to  be  a  soldier,  and  with  the  soldiers  stand. 
See  same. — Childs. 

"I  want  to  be  an  angel."     See  How  to  be  an  Angel. — 

I  want  to  buy  a  doll,  a  very  pretty  doll  I     See  Two 

Dolls,  The.— Boyd.  -^      cr     V    * 

"I  want  to  get  up,      the  Snowdrop  said.     See  J^irst 

Snowdrop,  The.— Dana.  „    ^  „      , 

I  want  to  introduce  my  dog.     See  My  Dog. — Rook. 
I  want   to   know.   Judge.     See  Is  Freedom   a  Lie? — 

Munyon.  „      trr     j 

I  want  to  say  a  word  to  the  young  men.     See  Word  to 

Young  Men,  A. — Gough. 
I  want  to  show  you  something.     See  New  Toy,  The.— 

Rook.  .  o      TT  J 

I  want  to  talk  to  you  of  the  attitude.     See  Use  and 

Abuse  of  Property,  The.— Roosevelt. 
I  want  to  teach  my  dolly — her  ig'rance  is  obsurd.    See 

Dolly's  I^esson. — Anon.  ,  ,  ,    , 

I  want  to  tell  you  a  little  story  about  an  old  lady.     See 

Story  of  tlie  Old  Arm-chair,  The. — Thatcher. 
I  want  to  tell  you  about  my  thorn-apple  tree.     See 

Sermon  from  a  Thorn-apple  Tree,  A. — Miller. 
I  want  to  tell  you  all  about  the  walk  I  took  with  Ned. 

See  Two  Ways  of  Telling  the  Same  Thing. — Duf- 

fey. 
I  want  you — Oh!     I  want  you, now  and  ever!     Seel 

Want  You. — Anon. 
"I  want  you  to  go  to  bed."  said  Mr.  Meeklamore.     See 

Unfinished  Manuscript,  The. — Anon. 
I  want  you  to  take  a  picter  o'  me,  and  my  old  woman 

here.     See  Old  Farmer  Grey  Gets  Photographed. 

— Anon. 
I  wanted  you  when  skies  were  red.     See  Unanswered. 

— Dickinson. 
I  wants  a  piece  of  cal'co  [or   talitoj.       See    Mattie's 

Wants  and  Wishes. — Gordon. 
I  wants   to    mend    my   wagon.     See   "Gran'ma   al'as 

Does. " — Poe. 
I  warn,  like  the  one  drop  of  rain.     See  Voice  of  the 

Void,  The.— Lathrop. 
I  was  a  boy  once,  and  I  was  a  caution.     See  My  Ma- 
tilda .Jane. — Anon. 
I  was  a  boy  ten  years  old  when  the  troops  marched 

away.     See  Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. — Lodge. 
I  was  a  collector  of  donations.     See  Charity   Collec- 
tor, The. — Vickers. 
I  was  a  member  of  the  Delphian  Club.     See  Dry  Ex- 
periment, A. — Neal. 
I  was  a  mother,  and  I  weep.     See  Armenian  Mother, 

The.— Field. 
I  was  a  normal  graduate,  prirnful  of  methods  and  with 

no  experience.     See  My  First  School. — Anon. 
I  was  a  stricken  deer  that  left  the  herd.     See  Task, 

The  (Autobiographical). — Cowper. 
I  wais  walking  along,  comfortable  and   quiet,  with  a 

jar  of  jelly.     See  Her  First  Steam-engine. — Dallas. 
I  was   a   wandering   sheep.     See   Lost   but    Found. — 

Bonar. 
I  was  a  wide  awake  little  boy.     See  Fourth  of  July 

Record,  A. — Rice. 
"I  was  always  so   poor  in   Greek."     See  His   Father 

Took  him  Home.— S.  J.  R. 
I  was  an  English  shell.     See  English  Shell,  An. — Ben- 
son. 


I  was  an  English  workin'  man.  See  Jumberlo  Tom. — 
Overton. 

I  was  as  happy  as  a  young  ambitious  girl.  See  My 
Great  IVlistake. — Golden. 

I  was  as  light  of  heart  the  next  morning  as  any  of  my 
brother  workmen.  See  Beauty  of  Nature. — Mil- 
ler. 

I  was  asking  for  something  specific  and  perfect  for  my 
city.     See  Mannahatta. — Whitman. 

I  was  bitten  severely  by  a  little  dog.  See  Our  Dogs. — 
Brown. 

I  was  bom  as  free  as  the  silvery  light.     See  Man. — 

Co£ttGS 

I  was  born  in  a  land  across  the  seas,  nearly  five  hundred 

years  ago.     See  Ten  Famous  Women. — Lloyd. 
"I  was  bom  in  Indiany, "  says  a  stranger,  lank  and 

slim.     See  Like  his  Mother  Used  to  Make. — Riley. 
I  was  born  in  St.  Louis,  Missouri,  September  3,  1850. 

See  Story  of  his  Life.— Field. 
I  was  bom  of  a  bud  in  spring  time.     See  Voice  of  a 

Leaf,  The. — Chambers. 
I  was   busily   engaged   the   other   day   in   writing   an 

article.     See  Telephone  Conversation,  A. — Gregg. 
I  was  climbing  up  a  mountain  path.     See  Obstacle,  An. 

— Stetson. 
I  was   coming   down    the    street   just    now.     See   Few 

Remarks  on  Pants,  A. — Thatcher. 
I  was  courting  a  beautiful  girl  one  night.     See  Goddess 

of  Slang,  The. — Anon. 
I  was  delving  in  the  garret  and  I  came  upon  it  there. 

See  Old  Arithmetic,  The. — Anon. 
I  was  detained   over  Sunday  in   Barnsbury,   and   on 

Sunday  morning  I  resolved  to  go  to  church.     See 

Banks'  Babies. — -Anon. 
I  was  dozing  comfortably  in  my  easy-chair.     See  How 

We  Hunted  a  Mouse. — Jenkins. 
I  was  foretold  your  rebel  sex.     See  Deposition  from 

Love,  A. — Carew. 
I  was  going  down  the  walk.     See  Who  was   She? — 

Anon. 
I  was  going  into  town  the  other  morning.     See  Piece 

of  Red  Calico,  A. — Scroggin. 
I  was   happy   that    day.     See   Written    Lesson,    A. — 

Chamberlain. 
I  was  hoein'  in  my  cora-field,  on  a  spring  day,  just  at 

noon.   See  Farmer  and  Wheel;  or,  The  New  Loch- 
invar. — Carleton. 
I  was    ill    of    an    epidemic    vile    fever.     See    same. — 

Sterne. 
I  was  in  a  Cedar  Rapids  sleeper.     See  Songs  in  the 

Night. — (Burlington  Hawkeye.) 
I  was  in  a  saloon  the  other  day  and  drank  four  beers. 

See  Good  Bet,  A. — Anon. 
I  was  in  Margate  last  July,  I  walk'd  upon  the  pier. 

See  Misadventures  at  Margate. — Barham. 
I  was  just  a  little  thing.     See  Ganderfeather's  Gift. — 

Field. 
I  was  just  off  to  spend  a  fortnight  with  my  old   friend 

Colonel  Gunton,  in  Norfolk.     See  Little  Joke,  A. — 

Hope. 
I  was   loung'n   amongst   m'   pillows.     See  Lullaby. — 

Higginson. 
I  was  made  to  be  eaten.     See  Song  of  the  Corn,  The. — 

Anon. 
T  was  not  asleep.     See  Happiness  and  Duty. — Swain. 
I  was  not  born  to  Helicon,  nor  dare.     See  To  Ben  Jon- 
son. — Randolph. 
I  was  not  patient  in  that  olden  time.     See  Patient. — 

Anon. 
"I  was  on  the  Merrimac" —     "No  more,"  the  listener 

cried.     See  I  Was  on  the  Merrimac. — Anon. 
I  was  one  day  traveling  in   Calabria.     See  Night   of 

Terror,  A. — Courier. 
I  was  one  evening  on'  the  Ohio,  when  the  river  had 

been    swollen.     See    Fate    of    European    Kings, 

'The. — Meagher. 
I  was  one  of  a  party  of  five  in  the  inside  of  a  stage- 
coach.    See  Female  Tenderness. — Jerrold. 
I  was  one  of  many  men.     See  Habet. — Hooker. 
I  was  out  in  the  country.     See  Rain  and  Sunshine. — 

Cary. 
I  was  out  last  night  in  the  orchard,  a-thinkin'  of  Mary 

Jane.     See  Mary  Jane  and  I. — Rothwell. 
I  was  quick  in  the  flesh,  was  warm,  and  the  live  heart 

shook  my  breast.     See  Resurrection,  A.— Cone. 
I  was  seized  with  an   ambition  to   appear  in  public 

once.  _  See  My  First  Recital. — Eaton. 
I  was  sitting  alone  toward  the  twilight.     See  Voice 

in  [or  of)  the  Twilight,  The. — .Tohnson. 
I    was    sitting    in    my  study.     See   Papa's   Letter. — 

Anon. 
I  was  sitting  in  my  study.     See  Preparing  a  Flunk. — 

Anon. 


706 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I  wish 


I  was  sitting  in  the  twilight.     See  Little  Chariie's  Big 

Story. — (Springfield,  Mass.,  Republican.) 
T  was  smoking  a  cigarette.     See  Duet,  The. — Wilcox. 
I  was  so  small  they  lifted  me  to  see.     See  Then  and 

Now. — M'Guire. 
I  was  so  tired  of  Jack,  poor  boy.     See  Jack  and  I. — 

Anon. 
I  was  so  very  much  afraid.     See  Dolly's  Vaccination. 

— -Goodfellow. 
I  was  sorry  to  see  you  in  that  state  last  night,  Tambo. 

See  Tambo  on  Chess. — Anon. 
I  was  standing  alone  on  a  rocky  height.     See  How  I 

Won  My  Wife. — Eaton. 
I  was  standing  in  a  file  of  cabs.     See  Cabman's  Story, 

The. — Henry. 
I  was  takin'  off  my  bonnet.     See  Darwinism  in  the 

Kitchen. — ^Anon. 
I  was  the  chief  of  the  race — he  had  stricken  my  father 

dead.     See  Voyage  of  Maeldune,  The. — Tennyson. 
T  was  the  last  new  boy  at  school.     See  Nobody  There. 

— Anon. 
I    was   thy   neighbor   once,   thou    rugged    pile!     See 

Elegiac  Stanzas  Suggested  by  a  Picture  of  Peele 

Castle  in  a  Storm. — -Wordsworth. 
I  was  to  preach  for  Brother  Anderson.     See  Brother 

Anderson's  Sermon. — Beecher. 
I  was  unwilhng  to  interrupt  the  course  of  this  debate. 

See  Walpole's  Attack  on  Pitt.— Walpole. 
T  was  up  the  next  morning  before    the  October  sun- 
rise.    See  Lorna  Doone  (October  Morning,  An). — 

Blackmore. 
I  was  visiting  a  gentleman  who  lived  in  the  vicinity  of 

Los   Angeles.     See   Mule   and   the   Bees,    The. — 

Malone. 
I  was  walking  in  Savannah,  past  a  church  decayed  and 

dim.     See  Funeral,  The. — Carleton. 
T  was  wandering  in  a  beautiful  and  romantic  country. 

See  Hill  of  Science,  The. — ^Aiken. 
"I  was  with  Grant" — the  stranger  said.     See  Aged 

Stranger,  The. — Harte. 
I  was  young,   and  my  horse  was  strong.     See  Aunt 

Phillis's  Guest. — Gannett. 
I  watch  afar  the  moving  Mystery.     See  Flying  Mist, 

The. — Markham. 
I  watch    her   in    the    corner   there.     See    Arachne. — 

Cooke. 
I  watch  his  wings  in  thickets  dim.     See  Red  Bird, 

The. — Hayne. 
I  watch  the  drowsy  night  expire.     See  Faces  in  the 

Fire. — Anon. 
I  Watch  the  golden  billows  awaiting  the  sickles  keen. 

See  Harvest,  The. — (Good  Housekeeping.) 
I  watch  the  leaves  that  flutter  in  the  wind.     See  Leaves 

at  my  Window. — Piatt. 
I  watch  the   mowers,   as  they  go.     See  Midsummer. 

— Trowbridge. 
I  watch    the    printer's    clever    hand.     See    Revised 

Proofs. — M'Evoy. 
I  watch  the  ships  by  town  and  lea.     See  I  Watch  the 

Ships. — -Eaton. 
I  watch  them  from  the  window.     See  Winter  Birds. — • 

Cooper. 
I  watch'd  her  as  she  stooped  to  pluck.     See  On  the 

Brink. — Calverley. 
I  watched   her   face,    suspecting   germs   of   love.     See 

Angel  in  the  House,  The  (Honoria). — Patmore. 
I  watched  the  dear  little  blossoms.     See  Cherry  Time. 

— Day  re. 
I  watched     the     Lady     Caroline.     See     Lovelocks. — • 

Ramal. 
I  wear  these  three  colors  to-day.     See  Good  Country, 

A. — Denton. 
I  weep  for  Adonais — he  is  dead  1     See  Adonais. — Shel- 
ley. 
I  weep  those  dead  lips,  white  and  dry.     See   Linen 

Bands. — Thompson. 
T  weigh  not  fortune's  frown  or  smile.     See  Contented 

Mind,  A.— Sylvester. 
I  well   remember  a  certain  evening.     See  Speech  De- 
livered in  the  House  of  Commons  on  the  2nd  of 

March,  1831,  A  (Reform  Bill,  The).— Macaulay. 
I  went    a    roaniing    through    the    woods    alone.     See 

Nightingale,  The. — Symonds. 
1  went  into  a  bakery  the  other  day  and  ordered  two 

hundred  cream  puffs.     See  Cream  Puff  Story,  The. 

—Anon. 
I  went  to  dig  a  grave  for  Love.     See  Love's  Change. — 

Aldrich. 
I  wont  to    her  who   loveth  me   no   more.     See  Song: 

"I  went,"  etc. — O'Shaughnessy. 
I  went  to  sleep;  and  now  I  am  refreshed.     See  Dream 

of  Gerontius,  The. — Newman. 


I  went  to  the  garden  of  love.  See  Garden  of  Love, 
The.— Blake. 

I  went  to  Washington  the  other  day,  and  I  stood 
on  the  Capitol  Hill.  See  Before  the  Bay  State 
Club  (Homes  of  the  People,  The).— Grady. 

T  were  wunst  a  sailor,  yer  honor  knows.  See  Jim 
Lord's  Cat. — Nicholson. 

I  who  essayed  to  sing  in  earlier  days.  See  Vision  of 
Immortality,  The! — Weston. 

I,  who  was  always  counted,  they  say.  See  Over  the 
Hill  from  the  Poor-house. — Carleton. 

I  will  arise  and  go  now,  and  go  to  Tnnisfree.  See 
Lake  Isle  of  Innisfree,  The. — Yeats. 

' '  I  will  be  a  little  helper. "     See  Be  a  Helper. — Anon. 

I  will  detain  you  with  only  just  a  few  words — just  a 
few  thousand  words.  See  General  Grant's  Eng- 
lish.— Clemens. 

I  will  go  back  to  the  great  sweet  mother.  See  Disap- 
pointed Lover,  The. — Swinburne. 

I  will  go  forth  'mong  men,  not  mailed  in  scorn.  See 
same. — Smith. 

I  will  go  home!     See  Honeymoon,  The. — Tobin. 

I  will  lift  up  mine  eyes  unto  the  hills,  from  whence 
Cometh  my  help.  See  Psalms  of  David,  CXXI. — 
Bible. 

I  will  make  you  brooches  and  toys  for  your  delight. 
See  Romance. — Stevenson. 

I  will  not  abate  one  word  of  the  stern  creed  that 
brought  the  Pilgrim  Fathers.  See  Pilgrim  Char- 
ter and  Covenant,  The. — Russell. 

I  will  not  ask  if  thou  canst  touch.  See  To  a  Rich 
Young  Widow. — (Punch.) 

"I  will  not  die."  A  feeble  voice  comes  forth.  See 
Three  Voices,  The.— Hahn. 

"I  will  not  drink!"  The  words  were  grand.  See  "I 
will  not  Drink. " — Wrigglesworth. 

I  will  not  faint,  but  trust  in  God.  See  In  Patience. — 
Rossetti. 

I  will  not  fear.     See  God  is  Near. — Anon. 

I  will  not  have  the  mad  Clytie.     See  Flowers. — Hood. 

I  will  not  join  in  congratulation  on  misfortune  and  dis- 
grace. See  American  War,  The  (War  with 
America,  The). — Chatham. 

I  will  not  let  thee  go.     See  same. — Bridges. 

I  will  not  let  you  say  a  woman's  part.  See  Woman's 
Answer,  A. — Procter. 

I  will  not  look  for  him,  I  will  not  hear.  See  Woman's 
Pride,  A. — Hay. 

I  will  not  rail,  or  grieve  when  torpid  eld.  See  Age. — 
Gamett. 

I  will  not  speak  of  war  in  itself.  See  same. — Phil- 
lips. 

I  will  not  tell  thee  why  the  land.  See  I  will  not  Tell. 
— Ramsay. 

I  will  paint  her  as  I  see  her.  See  Portrait,  A. — Brown- 
ing. 

I  will  paint  you  a  sign,  rumseller,  and  hang  it  above 
your  door.     See  Sign-board,  The. — Wilcox. 

I  will  rise,  I  will  go  from  the  places  that  are  dark 
with  passion  and  pain.  See  Seaward. — -Wood- 
berry. 

"I  will,"  said  Peter,  "  if  Bobby  Toombs  won't  be  too 
hard  on  me."  See  Doctor's  Diploma  in  Court,  A. 
—Anon. 

I  will  shut  these  broken  toys  away.  See  Mother  Love. 
— Clemmer. 

I  will  sing,  if  ye  will  hearken.  See  Laird  o'  Logie,  The. 
- — Anon. 

I  will  sing  you  a  song  of  that  beautiful  land.  See 
Home  of  the  Soul. — Phillips. 

I  will  speak  the  words  of  Freedom.  See  Freedom. — 
Baker. 

I  will  speak  to  him  like  a  saucy  lackey.  See  As  You  ' 
Like  It  (Meeting  of  Orlando  and  Rosalind,  The). 
— Shakespeare. 

I  will  suppose  now  that  the  opposition  made  to  this 
resolution.  See  Welcome  to  Louis  Kossuth. — 
Seward. 

I  will  tell  you  a  tale  that  will  make  you  turn  pale.  See 
Gambler's  Tale,  The. — McGuire. 

I  will  tell  you  the  tale  of  the  terrible  fire.  See  Tale  of 
the  Terrible  Fire. — Anon. 

"I  will  write  little  Ethel  some  verses."  See  St.  Val- 
entine's Eve. — Burlingame. 

I  wind  my  watch  in  the  low  lamp-light.  See  Winding 
my  Watch. — Anon. 

I  wise  for  the  puwpose  of  .making  one  or  two  wemarks. 
See  Meeting  of  Liquor  Dealers,  A. — McBride. 

I  wish  a  little  boy  like  me.  See  Roger's  Wish. — 
Richards. 

I  wish  Albert  would  wake  up.  See  Traveler,  The. — 
Anon. 


707 


I  wish 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I  wish  Alice  and  Harry  would  come  back  with  those 

flowers.     See  Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. — Anon. 
I  wish  I  could  be  a  soldier.     See  Little  Girl's  Wish,  A. 

I  wish  I  could  expreft  my  thanks  for  all  the  kindnesses 

of  to-day.     See  Response  of  a  College  Professor  to 

a  Complimentary  Resolution. — Anon. 
I  wish  I  could  find  a  suitable  ipotto.     <See  Language 

of  Flowers,  The. — Anon. 
I  wish  I  could  remember  that   first   day.     See  Monna 

Innominata  (First  Meeting,  The). — Rossetti 
I  wish  I  could  speak  my  speech  well.     See  Albert  s 

Rehearsal. — Anon.  ■     .  ■  j 

I  wish  I  could  welcome  the  spring,  bonnie  bird,     bee 

Robin,  The.— Cook.  ,        ,    ,^ 

I  wi.sh  1   had  a  dozen  pairs.     See  Perplexed  House- 
keeper, The.— Anon.  ^,  .,  ,,    ™       ,  , 
I  wish  I  knew  my  letters  well.     See  Child  s  Troubles, 

A. — Anon.  ^    ,,     ,     /-, 

I  wish  I  livetl  in  a  caravan.     See  Pedlar  s  Caravan, 

The.— Rands.  „,     .        „     , 

"I  wish  I  was  a  little  fish."     See  Playing  Barber.— 

Anon. 
I  wish  I  was  a  snow-white  lamb.     See  I  Wish. — Anon. 
1  wish  I  was  rich,  mamma.     See  Clara's  Gifts. — Anon. 
"I  wish  I  were  a  cat."     See  Kitty's  Wish.— Anon. 
I  wish  I  were  a  fairy  bright.     See  Five  Wishes,  The. — 

Kavanaugh.  .        „      -.     ^ 

I  wish  I  were  a  snowflake  meek.     See  In  Perpetuum. 

—(Wrinkle.)  ,        r^^         , 

I  wish  I  were  a  woman.     See  Wishes,  The. — Anon. 
I  wish  I  were  by  that  dim  Lake.     See  same. — Moore. 
I  wish  I  were  eloquent  to-day.     See  Centennial  Ad- 
dress.— Hirsch. 
I  wish  I  were  the  little  key.     See  Child  s  Wish,  A.— 

Ryan.  „       „      ,  tt  . 

I  wish  I  were  where  Helen  lies.     See  Burd  Helen. — 

Anon.  ,,     ,     , 

I  wish  I'd  been  the  lily  that  Jesus  talked  about.     Sec 

Children's  Wishes,  The.— Chatfield. 
I  wish  I'd  lived  and  been  a  boy.     See  When  Grandpa 

was  a  Boy. — Denton. 
I  wish  Larry  would  come  back  with  the  news.     See 

O'Quirk's  Sinecure. — Kernel. 
I  wish  me  and  my  chum  had  muzzled  our  goat  with 

a    pillow.     See    Royal    Bumper     Degree,      The. 

— (Peck's  Sun.) 
I  wish  my  arm  would  get  well.     It  does  not  hurt  me 

now.     See  Boat,  The. — Anon. 
I  wish  my  hair  cut.     See  Jones  at  the  Barber's  Shop. 

— (Punch.) 
I  wish  my  seam  was  finished!     See  Place  for  Every- 
thing, and  Everything  in  its  Place,  A. — Anon. 
I  wish,  my  sweet,  thou  wert  a  rose.     See  Wishes. — 

Halloran. 
I  wish  people  would  let  my  things  alone!     See  Turning 

the  Tables. — Graham. 
"I  wish,"  said  greedy  Howard,  with  a  wide  and  beam- 
ing smile.     See  Howard's  Wish. — Anon. 
I  wish   Sophie   would   come   before   those   Americans 

arrive.     See  Prairie  Princesses,  The.- — Anon. 
I  wish    that    I    could    have    my   wish   to-night.     See 

Shakespeare. — Blood. 
I  wish  that  my  big  brother's  here.    See  My  Big  Brother. 

—(New  York  World.) 
I  wish  that  when  you  died  last  May.     See  May  and 

Death. — Browning. 
"I  wish  the  beautiful  sun  would  shine."     See  Sunshine. 

— Dayre. 
I  wish  those  folks  had  stayed  in  their  way  down  East 

home.     See  From  Down  East. — McBride. 
I  wish  to  say  a  few  words  on  temperance.     See  Boy's 

Temperance  Speech,  A. — Anon. 
I  wish  to  tell  in  humble  rhyme.     See  Drunkard's  Wife, 

The.— Cooper. 
I  wish  to  tell  you  all  to-day  of  a  very  queer  table.     See 

Queer  Table,  A'. — Anon. 
I  wish  we  could  banish  epithets.     See  Our  Country. — 

Harrison. 
I  wish  we  could  pay  some  of  these  annoying  clothing 

Jews  back  in  their  own  coin.      See  Queer  Fit,  A. 

— Anon. 
I  wish  you  a  merry  Christmas,  ICate.     See  Christmas 

Dialogue. — Anon. 
I  wish  you  boys  and  girls  would  be  quiet.     See  Pre- 
paring for  a  Picnic. — Anon. 
I  wish  you  could  see  her,  our  little  Miss  Trot!     See 

Little  Miss  Trot. — Rexford. 
I  wish  you  were  a  pleasant  wren.     See  Child's  Talk  in 

Apr)  I. — Rossetti . 
I  wish  you  wouldn't  bother  me  so.     See  Worth  before 

Show.— Butler. 


i  with  borrowed  silver  shine.     See  On  the  Moon.^- 

Swift. 
I  with  whose  colors  Myra  drest  her  head.     See  Myra. — 

Brooke. 
I  woke  before  the  morning,  I  was  happy  all  the  day. 

See  Good  Boy,  A. — Steven.son. 
I  won  a  noble  fame.     See  Sir  Marmaduke's  Musings. — 

Tilton. 
I  wonder  could  I  dare  to  trace.     See  Christmas  Legend, 

A. — Anon. 
I  wonder,  dear,  if  you  had  been.     See  Conjecture,  A. — 

Richardson. 
I  wonder  do  you  feel  to-day.     See  Two  in  the  Cam- 

pagna. — Browning. 
I  wonder  ef  all  wimmin  air.     See  Lizzie  and  the  Baby. 

—Field. 
I  wonder  if  Al  received  any  letters  this  morning.     See 

Putting  on  Airs. — Anon. 
I  wonder  if  anybody  will  call  to  see  us  to-day.     See 

Morning  Call,  The. — Anon. 
"I  wonder  if  Brougham  thinks  as  much  as  he  talks." 

See  Epigram.— Vox  et   Prseterea  Nihil. — (London 

Punch.) 
I  wonder  if  ever  a  song  was  sung.     See  I  Wonder. — 

Anon. 
I  wonder  if  ever  the  angel  of  death.     See  Nameless 

Guest,  The. — Harvey. 
I  wonder  if  he'll  be  here  soon.     Jotham  is  a  nice  peirt 

feller.     See  United  at  Last. — McBride. 
I  wonder   if    Miss    Saunderson    will    be"  there.      See 

Academy  Episode,  An.— Neish. 
I  wonder  if  old  Santa  Claus  will  come  to-night !     See 

Little  Jo. — McGuire. 
I  wonder  if,  some  future  day.     See  My  Great-aunt's 

Portrait. — Anon. 
T  wonder  if  the  angels.     See  To  the  End. — Rossetti. 
I  wonder  if  the  little  birds.     Sec  What's  the  Matter? — 

H.  K.  P. 
I  wonder  if  this  can  be  the  right  path.     See  To  the 

Palace  of  the  King. — Smith. 
T  wonder  if  this  day  seemed  like.     See  Prince  and  his 

Mistress. — Denton. 
"I  wonder  if  this  is  heaven."     See  One   Flower  for 

Nelly. — Thorpe. 
I  wonder  if  you  know  him?     See  Naughty  Little  Fred. 

— Anon. 
"I  wonder,  .Tames,"  said  Mrs.  Meek.     See  Mr.  Meek's 

Dinner. — Anon. 
I  wonder  now  if  anyone.     See  Boy's  Rights. — May. 
I  wonder,  oh!  I  wonder  what  makes  ve  sun  go  wound. 

See  Little  Boy's  Wonder,  A. — Anon. 
I  wonder,    sometimes,   why   I    have   not   dimes.     See 

Dimes!   Oh,  Dimes!     Give  Me  Dimes. — Anon. 
I  wonder    what    day    of    the    week.     See    Untimely 

Thought,  An.— Aldrich. 
I  wonder  what  hour  the  clock  struck  just  now.     See 

Close  Shave,  A. — -"Bob  o'Link." 
I  wonder  what  makes  papa  tell  such  stories  about  hid- 
ing the  schoolmaster's  rattan.     See  I  Wonder. — 

Anon. 
I  wonder  what  mother  will  say  to  that.     See  Day  of 

Misfortunes,  The. — Anon. 
I  wonder  what  spendthrift  chose  to  spill.     See  March. 

— Thaxter. 
"I    wonder    what    the    baby    thinks."     See   Baby's 

Thoughts,  The. — Larcom. 
I  wonder  what  the  clover  thinks.     See  Song  of  Clover, 

A.— Holm. 
I  wonder  what  the  foreman  of  the  jury  has  had  for 

breakfast.     See  Pickwick    Papers,  The  (Pickwick 

Trial,  The).— Dickens. 
I  wonder  what  the  mischief  was  in  her,  for  the  mistress 

was  niver  contrairy.     See  St.  Patrick's  Martyrs. 

— Anon. 
I  wonder  what  this  man  is  doing?     See  Fly's  Cogita- 
tions, A. — Anon. 
I  wonder,   when  I'm  bigger.     See  Which  is  Best? — 

Anon. 
T  wonder  who  w-wote  me  this  letter.     See  Sam's  Let- 
ter.— Anon. 
I  wonder  wl^y  fellahs  ever  wide  in  horse-cars.     See 

Delancey  Stuyvasant  and  the  Horse-car. — Kyle. 
I  wonder  why  Joseph  is  so  long  away.     See  Saved. — 

Anon. 
I  wonder  why  still  the  dear  fairies  stay.     See  Search 

for  the  Fairies,  A. — Denton. 
I  wonder  why  this  world's    good  things.    See  I  Wonder 

Why. — Anon. 
I  wonder  where  Hans  kapes  himself.     See   How   Pat 

Sold  a  Dutchman. — Anon. 
I  wooed   her  in   the   summer  months.     See   Summer 

Girl,  The.— (Yale  Record.) 


708 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


If  all 


I  worship  thee,  sweet  will  of  God!     .See  Will  of  God, 

The.— Faber. 
I  would  all  womankind  were  dead.     See  Lay  of  the 

Lover's  Friend,  The. — Aytoun. 
I  would  be  quiet.  Lord.     See  Quietness. — Dorr. 
I  would  be  willing  to  choose  my  friend  by  the  quality 

of   his   laugh.     See    Personality    and    Uses   of    a 

Laugh,  The.— Anon. 
I  would  build  a  cloudy  house.     See  House  of  Clouds, 

The. — Browning. 
I  would  fiee  from  the  city's  rule  and  law.     See  City 

Man's  Dream  of  the  Country. — Foss. 
I  would  have  gone;  God  bade  me  stay.     See  Weary 

in  Well  Doing. — Rossetti. 
I  would  I  had  been  island-bom.     See  Ballade  of  Is- 
lands, A. — -Robinson. 
I  would  I  had  thy  courage,  dear,  to  face.     See  To  the 

Same — on  her  Lightheartedness. — Blunt. 
I  would  I  were  a  note.     See  Be  Content. — Anon. 
I  would   I   were   a   spider.     See   To   a   Spider-web.— 

Ferris. 
I  would   I    were    an    excellent    divine.     See    same. — 

Breton. 
I  would  I  were  on  yonder  hill.     See  Shule  Aroon. — 

Anon. 
I  would  I  were  that  portly  gentleman.     See  Poet  Ex- 

Sresses    his    Feelings    Respecting   a    Portrait    in 
•elia's  Parlor,  The. — Southey. 
I  would  I  were  where  Helen  lies.     See  Helen  of  Kirk- 

connell. — Anon. 
"I  would  if  I  could,"  though  much  it's  m  use.     See 

"I  Would  if  I  Could."— Anon.  ,  „    <, 

"I  would  like  to  have  an  advertisement  inserted.      See 

Can  this  be  True? — Anon. 
I  would  net  always  reason.     The  straight  path.     See 

Tho.se  Glorious  Stars. — Bryant. 
I  would  not  breathe,  when  blows  Thy  mighty  wind. 

See  Spirit,  The.— Very. 
I  would  not  call  thee  back  unless.     See  Recalled. — 

Preston. 
I  would  not,  could  T,  make  thy  life  as  mine.     See  Vain 

Wish,  A. — Marston. 
I  would  not  die  in  May.     See  Month  of  Mars,  The.^ 

Taylor. 
I  would  not  die  in  springtime.     See  I^ast  Summons, 

The. — Anon. 
I  would  not  divorce  faith  from  reason.     See  same. — 

I  would  not  enter  on  my  list  of  friends.     See  Task,  The 

(Humanity). — Cowper. 
I  would  not  for  ten  thousand  worlds  be  that  man.     See 

same. — Doddridge. 
I  would  not  give  my  Irish  wife.     See  Irish  Wife,  The.— 

McGee. 
I  would  not  listen  to  the  wind  to-day.     See  Voice  of 

the  Wind,  The.— Jones. 
I  would  not  live  alway ;  I  do  not  ask  to  stay  {or  I  ask 

not].     See  I  Would  not  Live  Alway. — -Muhlenberg. 
I  would    not    live    alway — live    alway    below!     See    I 

Would  not  Live  Alway. — Muhlenberg. 
I  would  not   loose  a  single  silvery  ray.     See  Love's 

Autumn. — -Hayne. 
I  would  select  as  a  symbol  of  our  Republic.     See  Dis- 
trict School,  The. — Chapin. 
I  would  that  all  men  my  hard  case  might  know.     Sec 

Behold  the  Deeds! — Bunner. 
I  would  that  thou  might  always  be.     See  To  Laura 

W — ,  Two  Years  of  Age.— Willis. 
I  would  that  we  were,  my  beloved,  white  birds.     See 

White  Birds,  The.— Yeats. 
I  would  that  we  were  only  readers  now.     See  Too  Many 

Books.' — Leighton . 
I  would  the  fount  of  Castaly.     See  Fount  of  Castaly, 

The.— O'Connor. 
I  would  thou  wert  not  fair,  or  T  were  wise.     See  I 

Would  Thou  Wert  not  Fair.— Breton. 
I  would  unto  my  fair  restore.     See  Of  Joan's  Youth.— 

Guiney. 
I  wouldna  gie  a  copper  plack.     See  same. — Barry. 
I  wouldn't  be  a  girl  like  you.     See  Dialogue  for  a  Little 

Boy  and  Girl. — Kavanaugh. 
"I  wouldn't  hev  believed  it  if  I  hadn't  had  the  news 

from    Mistress    Pettibone."     See    Spinster    Thur- 

ber's  Carpet. — Phelps. 
I  write.     He  sits  beside  my  chair.     See  New  Poet,  A. — 

Canton. 
I  write.     My    mother    was  a  Florentine.     See  Aurora 

Leigh  (Motherless). — Browning. 
I  write    my    name    as    one.     See    Autograph,    An. — 

Whittier. 
I  write  to  offer  you  my  heart.     See  Street-car  Romance, 

A. — Ames. 


I  wrote  lots  of  trash  about  Cupid.     See  Ck)Dvent,  The. 

— Carry  1. 
I  wrote  my  name  upon  the  sand.     See  Carving  a  Name. 

— Alger. 
I  wrote  some  lines  once  on  a  time.     See  Height  of  the 

Ridiculous,  The. — Holmes. 
I  wrought  them  like  a  targe  of  hammered  gold.     See 

On  His  "Sonnets  of  the  Wingless  Hours." — Lee- 
Hamilton. 
I  wud  knot  dye  in  Wintur.     See  same. — Anon. 
I  wus  mighty  good-looking'  when  I  wus  young.     See 

"Spacially  Jim." — Morgan. 
I  youst  to  bin  a  doketor  vonce.     See  Doketor's  Drub- 

bles,  A. — Warren. 
Iberian!  palter  no  more!  by  thine  hands,  thine  alone, 

they  were  slain!     See  To  Spain — a  Last  Word. — 

Thomas. 
Ice  everywhere!     The  skater's  iron  heel.     See  Decem- 
ber.— -Cornwell. 
Ichot  a  burde  in  boure  bryht.     See  Blow,  Northern 

Wind. — Anon. 
Icily  sweeps  December's   blast.     See  Lydia's  Ride. — 

Frost. 
I'd  a  dream  to-night.     See  Mother's  Dream,  The. — 

Barnes. 
I'd  always  shine  on  holidays.     See  Were  I  the  Sun. — 

Anon. 
I'd  been  away  from  her  three  years — -about  that.     See 

Faithful  Lovers.  The. — Anon. 
"I'd  draw  the  knot  as  tight  as  a  man  can  draw.     See 

Rondel,  A. — Mack. 
I'd  give.  Girl  (were  I  but  a  king).     See  Extravaganza, 

An. — Hugo. 
I'd  just  love  to  write  a  book,  wouldn't  you,  Inez?     See 

Writing  a  Book. — Denton. 
I'd  like  to  be  a  p'liceman.     See  Boy  Decides,  The.— 

Mark. 
I'd  like  to  go  away  the  day,  ma'am ;  the  work  is  all  done, 

ma'am.     See  Corpse's  Husband,  The. — Anon. 
"I'd  like  to  play  with  your  kitty,"  he  said.     See  Fas- 
tidious.— Sterling.  ..„,., 
I'd  like  to  see  Old  Santa  Claus.    See  What  Janie  Thinks. 

—Richards. 
"I'd  like  to  see  the  President,"  a  timid  woman  said. 

See  True  Story  of  Abraham  Lincoln. — Anon. 
I'd  never  dare  to  walk  across.     See  Invisible  Bridge, 

The. — Burgess. 
I'd  not  complain  of  Sister  Jane,  for  she  was  good  and 

kind.     See  Sister's  Cake. — Field. 
I'd  rather  be  a  daisy.     See  Song  of  the  Daisy. — Glover. 
I'd  rather  have  habits  than  clothes.     See  same. — Bur- 
gess. 
I'd  rather  take  a  whipping  now.     See  Boy  s  Apology, 

A. — Anon.  ^ 

I'd  read    three    hours.     Both    notes    and    text.     See 

Dialogue  from  Plato,  A. — -Dobson. 
I'd  rid  from  far-back  Texas  in  the  spring  o'  '49.     See 

In  the  Elevator. — Meyers. 
I'd  rook  my  own  sweet  childie  to  rest  in  a  cradle  of 

gold  on  a  bough  of  the  willow.     See  Irish  Lullaby. 

— Graves. 
I'd  ruther   be    a   little    boy.     See  .Tohnny's  Choice. — 

Richards.  . 

I'd  ruther    be    a    little    girl.     See  Alice's    Choice. — 

Richards. 
I'd  wandered,  for  a  week  or  more.     See  Retrospection. 

— Baker. 
Id  was    droo    der    sdreeds    of    Fredericksdown.      See 

Barbara  Frietchie  (Parody). — Anon. 
I'd  wed  you  without   herds,   without  money  or  rich 

array.     See  Cashel  of  Munster. — Ferguson. 
Ida,  I've  been  reading  such  a  nice  book  to-day.     See 

Ghost  in  the  Kitchen,  The. — Anon. 
If  a  brother  meet  a  brother.     See  If  a  Brother. — Anon. 
If  a  girl  were  to  fall  in  love  with  you.  Corporal.     See 

Cross  Firing. — Anon. 
If  a  leaf  rustled,  she  would  start.     See  White  Moth, 

The. — Quiller-Couch. 
If  a  man's  mind  be  thoroughly  alive,  he  cannot  be  con- 
tent.    See  same. — Parker. 
If  a  sheet  of  paper  on  which  a  key  has  been  laid.     See 

Silent  Influence. — Anon. 
If  a  string  is  in  a  knot.     See  Useful  Possession,  A. — 

Anon. 
If  all  be  true  that  I  do  think.     See  Reasons  for  Drink- 
ing.—Aldrich. 
If  all  God's  world  a  garden  were.     See  To  Florence. — 

Miller. 
If  all  our  life  were  one  broad  glare.     See  Joy  of  Incom- 
pleteness, The. — Bessemeres. 
If  all  our  youth,  sprung  from  whatever  nationality. 

See  Patriotic  Sentiments. — Patterson. 


709 


If  all 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


If  all  the  good  we  wish  for  you.  See  Birthday  Wish, 
A. — Denton. 

If  all  the  harm  that  women  have  done.  See  Thought, 
A. — Stephen. 

If  all  the  land  were  apple-pie.     See  If. — Anon. 

If  all  the  ships  I  have  at  sea.     See  My  Ships. — Wilcox. 

If  all  the  skies  were  sunshine.  See  If  all  the  Skies. — 
VanDyke. 

If  all  the  trees  in  all  the  woods  were  men.  See  Ciacoe- 
thes  Scribendi. — Holmes. 

If  all  the  trees  were  cherry-trees.  See  Puzzling  Ques- 
tion, A. — Anon. 

If  all  the  voices  of  men  called  out  warning  you.  See 
If  AH  the  Voices  of  Men. — Traubel. 

If  all  [or  that]  the  world  and  love  were  young.  See 
Reply  to  Marlowe,  A. — Ilaleigh. 

If  all  the  world  was  apple-pie.  See  Nursery  Rhymes, 
IV. — Anon. 

If  all  the  world  were  right.  See  If  All  the  World.— 
Radford. 

If  all  the  world  were  sought  full  far.  See  Praise  of 
Princess  Mary,  A. — Heywood. 

If  all  the  world  were  upside  down.  .See  Upside  Down. 
— Cooper. 

If  all  these  boys  could  be  Presidents.  See  "If." — 
Denton. 

If  any  doctor,  after  feeling  my  pulse.  See  Under- 
ground Jottings. — Turner. 

If  any  little  word  of  mine.  See  Pleasant  Words. — Anon. 

If  anybody  had  told  me  when  I  was  first  born  that  I 
would  marry  to  a  widower.  See  My  Opinions  and 
Betsey  Bobbet's(Samantha  Smith  Becomes  Josiah 
Allen's  Wife).— Holley. 

If  anything  unkind  you  hear.  See  When  to  Make 
Ha.ste. — Anon. 

If  aught  of  oaten  stop,  or  pastoral  song.  See  Ode  to 
Evening. — Collins. 

If  aught  that  stumbles  in  my  speech.  See  Abstemia. 
— Burgess. 

If  bees  stay  at  home.  See  Prophets  of  the  Hive,  The. 
— Anon. 

If  boys  should  get  discouraged.  See  Keep  Trying. — 
Anon. 

If  by  any  device  or  knowledge.  See  To  a  Child. — Pal- 
grave. 

If  Candlemas  Day  be  fair  and  bright.  See  Candlemas. 
— Anon. 

If  classical  history  has  been  found  to  be,  is  now,  and 
shall  continue  to  be.  See  Standard  of  the  Con- 
stitution, The. — Webster. 

If  cordial  friendship  can  ever  exist  between  two  com- 
munities.    See  United  Country,  A. — Hoar. 

If  crost  with  all  mishaps  be  my  poor  life.  See  Sonnets 
from  the  Poems. — Drummond. 

If  death  be  final,  what  is  life.  See  Life  and  Death. — 
Cranch. 

I  f  doughty  deeds  my  lady  please.     See  same. — Graham. 

If  down  his  throat  a  man  should  choose.  See  Unsus- 
pected Fact,  An. — Cannon. 

If,  dumb  too  long,  the  drooping  Muse  hath  stay'd. 
See  To  the  Earl  of  Warwick  on  the  Death  of  Mr. 
Addison. — Teckell. 

If  echoes  from  the  fitful  past.  See  Abstrosophy. — 
Burgess. 

If  ever  I  see  on  bush  or  tree.  See  If  ever  I  See. — 
Child. 

If  ever,  O  men  of  Athens,  the  people  of  Greece  felt  the 
rigor  of  your  rule.  See  Philippics  (Venality 
the  Ruin  of  Greece). — Demosthenes. 

If  ever  there  lived  a  Yankee  lad.  See  Darius  Green 
and  his  Flying-machine.— Trowbridge. 

If  ever  you  should  come  to  Modena.  See  Ginevra. — 
Rogers. 

If  every  boy  and  every  girl.     See  If!     If! — Anon. 

If  every  man's  internal  care.  See  Without  and  With- 
in.— Metastasio. 

If  flowers  could  always  bloom  at  eve.  See  same. — Anon. 

If  from  the  public  way  you  turn  your  steps.  See 
M  ichael . — Wordsworth . 

If  He  could  doubt  on  his  triumphant  cross.  See 
Calvary. — Howells. 

If  he  had  come  in  the  early  dawn.  See  Cycle,  A. — 
Brooke. 

If  he  walked  he  could  not  keep  beside.  See  Hunch- 
back, The. — Cary. 

If  Heaven  would  hear  my  prayer.  See  Love's  Prayer. 
— Hay. 

If  I  a  small  bird  were.     See  Absence. — Taylor. 

If  I  am  pushed  to  the  wall,  and  forced  the  speak  my 
opinion.     See  "Measures  not  Men." — Canning. — 

If  I,  athirst  by  a  .stream,  should  kneel.  See  Drifting 
Petal,  A. — Fenollosa. 


If  I  knew  what  the  tree-tops  say.  See  If  I  but  Knew. 
— Leigh. 

If  I  can  stop  one  heart  from  breaking.  See  Not  in 
Vain. — Dickinson. 

"If  I  could  but  drag  myself."  See  Ivanhoe  (Storm- 
ing of  the  Castle,  The).— Scott. 

If  I  could  choose  my  paradise.  See  No  and  Yes. — 
Ashe. 

If  I  could  frame  for  you  in  cunning  words.  See  Songs 
in  Sleep. — Richards. 

If  I  could  have  my  dearest  wish  fulfilled.  See  You. — 
Anon. 

If  I  could  hold  your  hands  to-night.  See  Longings. — 
Anon. 

If  I  could  know.     See  Evelyn. — Johnson. 

If  I  could  love  thee,  Love,  a  little  more.  See  Half- 
hearted.— Macmillan. 

If  I  could  only  change  this  world  to  suit  me.     See  If. — 

If  I  could  paint  you  friend,  as  you  stand  there.     See 

Foot-ball  Player,  A. — Lefroy. 
If  I  could  pass  as  swiftly  as  a  thought.     See  If. — Anon. 
If  I  could  see  with  a  midge's  eye.     See  Midges  in  the 

Sunshine. — Anon. 
If  I  could  stand  for  a  moment  upon  one  of  your  high 

mountain  tops.     See  Freedom. — Anon. 
If  I  could  trust  mine  own  self  with  your  fate.     See 

Monna  Innominata  (Trust). — Rossetti. 
If  I  could  write  a  book  made  sweet  with  thee.     See 

Book  of  Gold,  A.— Piatt. 
If  I    desire    with    pleasant    songs.     See    same. — Bur- 

bidge. 
If  I  foreswear  the  art  divine.     See  Exile's  Devotion, 

The.— McGee. 
If  I  had  an  eagle's  wings.     See  All  Mother.-— Turner. 
If  I  had  been  made  a  rooster.     See  "  If . ' ' — Anon. 
If  I  had  but  ten  thousand  a  year.  Gaffer  Green.     See 

Ten  Thousand  a  Year. — Kavanaugh. 
If  I   had   known  in  the  morning.     See   Our  Own. — 

Sangster. 
If  I  had  taken  the  advice  of  my  sister.     See  My  Wife. — 

Thatcher. 
If  I  had  thought  thou  couldst  have  died.     See  Lines 

Written  to  Music. — Wolfe. 
If  I  had  told  her  in  the  spring.     See  Old,  Old,  Story, 

The. — Anon. 
If  I  had  wit  and  beauty.     See  Ideal,  An. — Denison. 
If  I  have  anything  to  do.     See  Good  Rule,  A. — Anon. 
If  I  knew  it  now,  how  strange  it  would  be.     See  Saint's 

Messenger,  The. — -Graniss. 
If  I  knew  the  box  where  the  smiles  are  kept.     See  If  I 

Knew. — Anon. 
If  I  last  so  long  as  Methuselah  I  shall  never  forgive 

myself.     See  Martin  Relph. — Browning. 
If  I  lay  waste,  and  wither  up  with  doubt.     See  What 

Shall  I  Profit?— Howells. 
If  I  leave  all  for  thee,  wilt  thou  exchange.     See  Sonnets 

from  the  Portuguese,  XXXV. — Browning. 
If  I  may  trust  the  flattering  eye  of  sleep.     See  Romeo 

and  Juliet  (Romeo's  Presage). — Shakespeare. 
"If  I  may  trust  your  love,"  she  cried.     See  Tantalus; 

Texas. — Miller. 
If  I   mistake   not,   thou   art   Harry    Monmouth.     See 

King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I.  (Battle  of  Shrewsbury). — 

Shakespeare. 
If  I  must  die.  the  earth  is  inarticulate  to  sing.     See 

Youth.— -Lodge. 
If  I  read  Irish  history  aright,  misfortune  and  calamity. 

See  Ireland  to  be  Ruled  by  Irishmen. — Gladstone. 
If  I  shall  ever  win  the  home  in  heaven.     See  Daniel 

Gray. — -Holland. 
If  I  should  ask  who  won,  to-day.     See  I  Did  It — not, 

"I  Done  It." — Anon. 
If  I  should  die  to-night  and  you  should  come  to  my 

cold  corpse  and  say.     See  If  I  should  Die  To-night. 

— King. 
If  I  should  die  to-night,  my  friends  would  look  upon 

my  quiet  face.     See  If  I  should  Die   To-night. — 

Meyers. 
If  I  should  see.     See  As  Ye  Would. — Bradt. 
If  I  stood  here  to-night  to  tell  the  story  of  Napoleon. 

See    Toussaint    L'Ouverture. — Phillips. 
If  I  this  night,  at  set  of  sun.     See  I  Wonder. — .^non. 
If  I  tonight  were  lying  dead.     See  When  I  am  Dead. — 

Anon. 
If  I  was  ten  years  old,  or  some  where  near.     See  Line 

for  a  very  Little  Girl  or  Boy. — Denton. 
If  I  were  a  bird  I  would  warble  a  song.     See  If  I  Were 

a  Bird. — Anon. 
If  I  were  a  boy  again,  endowed  with    the  same  wild 

passion  for  plucking  watermelons.     See  If  I  were 

a  Boy  again. — Nye. 


710 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


If  she 


If  I  were  a  cloud  in  heaven.     See  Lise. — Cooke. 
If  I  were  a  flower,  fair.     See  "If  I  Were  a  Flower." — 
Denton. 

If  I  were  a  girl,  a  true  hearted  girl.  See  Ideal  Girl, 
The. — Anon. 

If  I  were  a  leaf  on  a  tree.     See  Valentine,  A. — Reiley. 

If  I  were  a  Prof,  at  O.  S.  U.     See  If.— J. 

If  I  were  a  railway  brakeman.  See  Getting  Even. — 
Burdette. 

If  I  were  a  rose  on  the  garden  wall.  See  "If  I  were  a 
Rose." — Anon. 

If  I  were  a  rc'ie,  this  would  I  do.  See  This  Would  I 
Do. — Runcie. 

If  I  were  a  sunbeam.     See  same.— T^arcom. 

If  I  were  a  voice,  a  per.suasive  voice.  See  If  I  were  a 
Voice. — Mackay. 

If  I  were  as  cold  and  as  brazen  as  the  bonfire  on  the 
top  of  the  monument.  See  Make  your  Wills. — 
Anon. 

If  I  were  asked  my  favorite  poet  among  living  Ameri- 
can women.     See  Ella  Wheeler  Wilcox. — Faxon. 

If  I  were  bis:  and  tall  to-day.  See  What  lattle  Dick 
Would  Do. — Denton. 

If  I  were  blind,  and  Thou  should  enter.  See  l/ove's 
Power. — Pollard . 

If  I  were  called  to  point  out  the  most  alarming  s-'ns  of 
to-day.     See  same. — Crosby. 

If  I  were  called  upon  to  prescribe  a  course  of  policy. 
See  Against  Foreign  Conquest. — Clinton. 

"If  T  were  dead,  vou'd  sometimes  say,  Poor  Child!" 
See  If  I  were  Dead. — Patmore. 

If  I  were  dear  old  Santa  Claus.  See  New  Santa  Claus, 
A. — Menaid. 

If  I  were  given  wishes  three.  See  Three  Wishes. — 
Simon. 

If  I  were  in  your  places,  girls.  See  Grandma's  Ad- 
vice to  the  Girls. — Anon. 

If  I  were  king,  my  pipe  should  be  premier.  See  If  I 
were  King. — Henley. 

If  I  were  Lord  of  Tartary.     See  Tartary. — Ramal. 

"If  I  were  only  a  kitten.  "     See  If. — (Our  Little  Ones.) 

If  I  were  to  tell  you  the  story  of  Napoleon.  See  Tous- 
saint  L'Ouverture. — Phillips. 

If  I  were  told  that  I  must  die  to-morrow.  See  When. — 
Woolsey. 

If  I  were  very  sure.     See  Coup  de  Grace,  The. — Sill. 

If  I  were  you  and  went  to  school.  See  If  I  Were  You. 
— Anon. 

If  I  were  you,  dear  little  girl.  See  Christmas  Gifts. — 
.\non. 

If  I  were  you,  when  ladies  at  the  play,  sir.  See  Tu 
Quoque. — -Dobson . 

If  I  were  your  little  baby.  See  Romany  Song. — 
Leland. 

"If  I'd  nothing  to  do,"  said  Farmer  .Tohn.  See  Far- 
mer John. — Anon. 

If  I'm  not  to  leave  the  house  without  being  insulted. 
See  Trouble  about   Miss    Prettyman. — Jerrold. 

If  in  Ireland,  a  country  that  ought  to  team  with 
abundance.  See  England's  Misrule  of  Ireland. — 
Shiel. 

If  in  my  soul,  dear.     See  King  and  Slave. — Procter. 

If  in  our  ideas  of  the  fine  arts  we  include  all  those  em- 
bellishments. See  Art  of  Reading  Well,  The. — 
Ellis. 

If  in  the  field  I  meet  a  smiling  flowfer.  See  Sonnet. 
— Montgomery. 

If,  in  the  month  of  dark  December.  See  Written  after 
Swimming  from  Sestos  to  Abydos. — Bryon. 

If  in  the  years  that  come  such  thing  should  be.  See 
Ideal  Memory. — Dawson. 

If  it  be  true  that  any  beauteous  thing.  See  Sonnet: 
"If  it  be  true,"  etc. — Michelangelo. 

If  it  were  done,  when  'tis  done,  then  'twere  v/ell.  See 
Macbeth  (Macbeth's  Soliloquy). — Shakespeare. 

If  it  were  land,  oh,  weary  feet  could  travel.  See 
Separation. — Aldrich. 

If  it  were  only  a  dream.  See  "Father,  The." — Sav- 
age-Armstrong. 

If  it  were  only  June!     See  June. — Grant. 

If  it  were  really  true  that  you  were  living.  See  If  it 
were  True. — Anon. 

If  it  will  feed  nothing  else,  it  will  feed  my  revenge. 
See  Merchant  of  Venice.  The  (Shylock). — Shake- 
speare. 

If  I've  a  present  upon  the  tree.  See  My  Present. — 
Anon. 

If  I've  got  to  call  this  misery  life,  the  sooner  I  am  out 

of  it  the  better.     See  Patent  Medicine. — Crosby. 
If  Jesus  Christ  is  a  man.     See  Celestial  Passion,  The 

(Song  of  a  Heathen,  The).— Gilder. 
If  .Jove   would   give   the   leafy   bowers.     See   same. — 
Clodia. 


If  life  awake  and  will  never  cease.     See  same. — Hol- 
land. 
If  life  be  as  a  flame  that  death  doth  kill.     See  Rhyme 

of  Life,  A. — Stoddard. 
If  light  should  strike  through  every  darkened  place. 

See  Light  and  Love. — (Academ,ii,  The.) 
If  love  is  blind,  how  can  it  be.     See  Not  Blind. — H. 

M.  H. 
If  love  make  me  forsworn,  how  shall'I  .swear  to  love? 
See  Love's   Labour's   Lost   (Biron's  Canzonet). — 
Shakespeare. 
If  love  were   dhudeen  olden.     See  Another  Match. — 

(Cope's  Tobacco  Plant). 
If  love  were  what  the  rose  is.     See  Match,  A. — Swin- 
burne. 
If  Marshall  had  been  only  what  I  suppose.     See  Chief 

Justice  Marshall. — Phelps. 
If  men   cared  less  for  wealth   and   fame.     See  World 

Would  be  the  Better  for  It,  The. — Anon. 
If  mine  I  could  but  call  thee.     See  same. — Anon. 
If  Mother  Nature  patches  the  leaves  of  trees  and  vines. 

See  Pine  Needles. — Hayne. 
If  music  and    sweet  poetry  agree.     See  Sonnet  to  his 

Friend  Maister. — Barnfield. 
If  music  be  the  food  of  love,  I  am  rejoiced  to  find. 

See  Food  of  liOve. — Romaine. 
If  music    be  the  food  of   love,  play  on.     See  Twelfth 
Night;  or,  What  You  Will  (Music). — Shakespeare. 
If  my  best  wines  mislike  the  taste.     See  Quits. — -Al- 
drich. 
If  Napoleon's  fortune  was  great,  his  genius  wa.s  trans- 
cendent.    See  Napoleon  Bonaparte. — Phillips. 
If  no  kindly  thought  or  word.     See  In  the  Heart. — 

Cooper. 
If  no  one  ever  marries  me.     See  same. — .4Llma-Tadema. 
If    not    now    soft    airs    may    blow.     See    Absence. — 

Blaikie. 
If  old  Bacchus  were  the  speaker.    See  Wine  of  Cyprus 

—Browning. 
If  older   boys   can    make    a   speech.     See   We    Little 

Boys. — Anon. 
If  on  the  clustering  curls  of  thy  dark  hair.     See  My 

Love. — Percival. 
If  on  this  sad,  this  solemn  occasion,  I  should  endeavor 
to  move  your  commiseration.     See  Funeral  Ora- 
tion by  the  Dead  Body  of  Hamilton. — Morris. 
If  one  could  have  that  little  head  of  hers!     See  Face, 

A. — Browning. 
If  one  find  a  four-leaf  clover.     See  Four-leaf  Clover. —  ■ 

Houghton. 
If  one  had  never  seen  the  full  completeness.     See  Plea 

for  Charity. — Cary. 
If  one  in  prison  may  not  tell  his  wrong.     See  Lament 
of    Richard  during    his   Imprisonment. — .\ytoun. 
If  one  should  give  me  a  heart  to  keep.     See  Keeping 

a  Heart. — O'Shaughnessy. 
If  one  were  called   upon  to   select  the  most  glittering 
of  the  instances  of  military  heroism.     See  Age  of 
the  Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History,  The 
(Heroism  of  the  Pilgrims,  The). — Choate. 
If  only  a  single  rose  is  left.     See  If  Only  thou  Art  True. 

— Barlow. 
If  onlv  in  dreams  may  man  be  fully  blest.     See  First 

Kiss,  The.— Watts-Dunton. 
If  only  once  the  chariot  of  the  Morn.     See  Glory  of 

Nature,  The. — Tennyson. 
If  only   you   were   here   to-night.     See   If   Only   You 

Were  Here. — Benedict. 
If  other  little  girls  can  speak.     See  Loving  Little  Girl, 

The.— Rook. 
If  our  two  children   had   lived   perhaps  she  wouldn't 
have  got  so  bad.     See  Premature  Proposal,  The. — 
Bradley. 
If  our  virtues  did  not  go  forth  of  us.      See  Measure  for 

Measure. — Shakespeare. 
"If  Peepy  had  lived,"  the  mother  sighed.     See  Peepy 

is  not  Dead. — Kernighan. 
If,  Pilgrim,  chance  thy  steps  should    lead.     See    Our 

Ladye  of  the  Snow. — M'Gee. 
If  recollecting  were  forgetting.     See  With  Flowers. — 

Dickinson. 
If  rightly  tuneful  bards  decide.     See  Amoret. — Aken- 

side. 
If  sadly  thinking,  with  spirits  sinking.     See  Deserter's 

Meditation,  The. — Curran. 
If  shame   can   on   a  soldier's  vein-swoll'n   front.     See 

King  Stephen. — Keats. 
If  she  be  made  of  white  and  red.  as  all  transcendent 

beauty  shows.     See  same. — Home. 
If  she  be  made  of  white  and  red  her  faults  will  ne'er 
be  known.     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost  (Rhyme  of 
White  and  Red,  The). — Shakespeare. 


711 


If  she 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


If  she  but  knew  that  I  am  weeping.     See  If  She  but 

Knew.— O '  Shaughnessy . 
If  she  knew  that  I  am  Cupid.     See  aame.—D.  D.  P. 
If  silence  is  ever  golden,  it  must  be    here,  amid  the 

graves.     See  StKwing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of 

Union  Soldiers  decoration  Day  Address  at  Arling- 
ton).— <jiarfield. 
If  sin  be  in  the  heart.     See  Peace. — Richardson. 
If,  sitting  with  his  [or  this]  little  worn-out  shoe.     See 

If. — Anon. 
If  Sleep  and  Death  be  truly  one.     See  In  Memoriam 

(Time  and  Eternity). — Tennyson. 
If  snarls  should  hide  in  the  sunshine.     See  Snarls  and 

Scowls.— Denton. 
If  solitude  hath  ever  led  thy  steps.     See  Queen  Mab 

(Sunset). — Shelley. 
If,  some  day,  I  should  seek  those  eyes.     <See  Presage. — 

Thaxter.  „     -nr    i 

If  some  great  angel  spoke  to  me  to-night.     See  Work. 

— (All  the  Year  Round.) 
If  something  waits,  and  you  should  now.     See  Now. — 

Gary. 
If  spirits  walk,  love,  when  the  night  climbs  slow.     See 

"If  Spirits  Walk."— Jewett. 
If  Spring  has  Maids  of  Honor.     See  Arbutus,  The. — 

Anon. 
If  still  they  live,  whom  touch  nor  sight.     See  Inverted 

Torch,  The  (If  Still  They  Live).— Thomas. 
If  stores  of  dry  and  learned  lore  we  gain.     See  Memory 

of  the  Heart,  The.— Webtser. 
If  suddenlv  upon  the  street.     See  liOve. — ^Richardson. 
If  that  heart  could  throb  and  if  those  lips  could  speak. 

See  Message  from  the  South,  A. — Washington. 
If  that  the  world  and  love  were  young.     See  Reply 

to  Marlowe,  A.— Raleigh. 
If  the  apple  grow  on   the  apple-tree.     See  Protesta- 

If  the   butterfly   courted   the   bee.     See   Topsy-turvy 

World.— Rands. 
"If  the  dishes  would  only  wash  themselves!"     See 

About  Dish-washing. — Denton. 
If  the   evening's   red   and   the   morning's  gray.     See 

Weather  Rule,  A. — Anon. 
If  the  home  life  is  inharmonious,  nothing  can  go  well. 

See  same. — Anon. 
If  the    Indians    had    the    vices    of    savage    life.     See 

Indians,  The  (American  Indians,  The). — Story. 
If  the  Master  came  this  way.     See  Children's  Friend, 

The. — Jacques. 
"If  the  oak  is  out  before  the  ash."      See  Few  Old 

Proverbs,  A. — Anon. 
If  the  old  woman  who  lived  in  a  shoe.     See  If  Ifs  and 

Ands. — Anon. 
If  the  quick  spirits  in  your  eye.     See  Persuasions  to 

Joy :  a  Song.— Carew. 
If  the  red  slayer  think  he  slays.  See  Brahma. — Emerson. 
If  the  road  grow  dark  before  you  reach.     See  Through 

the  Darkness. — Winter. 
If  the  shadow  this  body  casts.     See  Soul  Shadow. — 

Knowles. 
If  the  sinner  persists  in  rejecting  Christ,  the  ruin  of  his 

soul.     See  same. — Phelps. 
If  the  sunshine  never  crept.     See  All  the  Good  We 

Can. — Cooper. 
If  the   water   runneth,   it   holdeth   clear,    sweet,   and 

fresh.     See  Mental  Activity. — Barrow. 
If  the  weary  world  is  willing,  I've  a  little  word  to  say. 

See  Lightning-rod  Dispenser,  The. — Carleton. 
If  the  weather  is  fair  to-day.     See  Butterfly  and  the 

Bee,  The. — Anon. 
If  the  world  seem  cold  to  you.     See  Three  Old  Saws. 

— Larcom. 
If  there  be  a  man  on  earth.    See  Portrait  Gallery  (Dis- 
honest Politician,  The). — Beecher. 
If  there  be  any  one  can  take  my  place.     See  Monna 

Innominata  (Abnegation). — Rossetti. 
If  there  be  any  one  line  of  policy  in  which  all  political 

parties  agree.     See  Moral  Power  the  Most  For- 
midable.— Mcl^ean. 
If  there  be  graveyards  in  the  heart.     See  God  Bless 

You,  Dear,  To-day! — Bennett. 
If  there  be  memory  in  the  world  to  come.     See  Star's 

Monument,  The  ("If  there  be  memory,"  etc.). — 

Ingelow. 
If   there   be   nothing   new,  but    that  which  is.     See 

Sonnets,  LIX. — Shakespeare. 
If  there  be  on  earth  one  nation  more  than  another. 

See  Stability  of  our  Government,  The. — Sprague. 
If  there  be  one  state  in  the  union,  Mr.  President.  See 

On  Mr.  Foot's  Resolution  in  the  U.  S.  Senate,  Jan. 

21,  1830  (South   during  the  Revolution,  The).— 

Hayne. 


If  there  ever  was  a  time,  this  is  the  hour  for  Americans 

to  rouse  themselves.     See  British  Aggressions. — 

Quincy,  Jr. 
If  there  is  a  man  in  this  assembly  who  thinks.     See 

Philippics  (Philip  of  Macedon). — Demo.sthenes. 
If  there  is  a  thing  upon  the  earth.  See  "I  Told  You 

So." — Anon. 
If  there  is  any  one  democratic  principle  known  among 

men.     See  Our  Platform. — Cuyler. 
If  there  is  any  one  in  our  age.     See  Whittier,  Extract 

Concerning. — Underwood. 
If  there  is   anything  in  the  world  I  hate.     See  Mrs. 

Caudle  Needs  Spring  Clothing. — Jerrold. 
If  there  is  one  grand  trumpet-call  that  inspires  the 

Women's     Christian     Temperance     Union.      See 

"Thy  Kingdom  Come.  " — Somerset. 
If  there  is  one  thing  more  than  another  calculated  to 

throw  a  man  into  gnashing-of-the-teeth.     See  He 

Tried  to  Tell  his  Wife.— Anon. 
If  there  is  one  thing  more  than  another  I  am  fond  of 

it  is  chickens.    See  Fowl  Proceeding,  A. — Thatcher. 
If  there  seemed  coldness  in  my  glance.     See  Love's  Con- 
fession.— Swain. 
If  there  should  come  a  time,  as  well  there  may.     See 

same. — (All  the  Year  Round.) 
If  there  were  dreams  to  sell.     See  Dream-pedlary. — 

Beddoes. 
If  there  were  no  fire-crackers.    See  About  Fire-crackers. 

— Denton. 
If  there  were  three  peaches  on  the  table,  Johnny.     See 

Trials  of  a  Schoolmistress,  The. — (New  Yorh  Sun.) 
If  there's  a  hole  in  a'  your   coats.      See  On  Captain 

Grose's  Peregrinations  through  Scotland. — Burns. 
If  there's  a  thing  in  all  creation.     See  Speech  for  a 

School  Exhibitation. — Anon. 
If  there's   anything  in   the  world   I   hate.     See   Mrs. 

Caudle   Urging  the   Need  of   Spring  Clothing. — 

Jerrold. 
If  this  be  all,  for  which  I've  listened  long.     See  Word 

With  a  Skylark,  A.— Piatt. 
If  this  fair  rose  offend  thy  sight.     See  White  Rose,  The. 

— Congreve  and  Somerville. 
If  this   great   world   of   joy   and   pain.     See  Trust. — 

Wordsworth. 
If  this  little  world  to-night.     See  Proem. — Herford. 
If  this  were  all — if  from  life's  fitful  rays.     See  Here- 
after.— Ramsay. 
If  this  were  all — Oh !  if  this  were  all.     See  Rain  in  the 

Heart. — Anon. 
If  thou  be  one  whose  heart  the  holy  forms;     See  True 

Dignity. — Wordsworth. 
If  thou  but  frown  on  me,  or  stir  thy  foot.     See  King 

John  (Threatening). — -Shakespeare. 
If  thou  couldst  know  thine  own  sweetness.     See  same. 

Palgrave. 
If  thou  hast  ever  felt  that  all  on  earth.     See  Reliance 

on  God. — Casket. 
If  thou    hast   known    anywhere   amid   a   storm.     See 

Chamouni. — Dobell. 
If  thou  must  love  me,  let  it  be  for  nought.     See  Son- 
nets from  the  Portuguese,  XIV. — Browning. 
If  thou  shouldst  bid  thy  friend  farewell.  See  Counsel. — 

Davis. 
If  thou  shouldst  ever  come  by  choice  or  chance.     See 

Ginevra. — Rogers. 
If  thou  survive  my  well  contended  day.     See  §onnets, 

XXXII. — Shakespeare. 
If  thou  thinkest  twice  before  thou  speakest  once,  thou 

will  speak  twice  the  better  for  it.     See  Think  be- 
fore You  Speak. — Penn. 
If  thou  wert  by  my  side,  my  love.    See  Lines  addressed 

to  Mrs.  Heber. — Heber. 
If  thou  wert  false  to  me,  what  could  I  do?     See  If  Thou 

Wert  False. — Salmon. 
If  thou  wert  lying  cold  and  still  and  white.     See  Re- 

coriciliation. — Mason. 
If  thou    wert    only,    love,    a   tiny    flower.     See    Love 

Thought,  A.— Nichol. 
If  thou  wilt  ease  thine  heart.     See  Death's  Jest  Book 

(Dirge  for  Wolfram). — Beddoes. 
If  thou   wilt   shut   thy   drowsy   eyes.     See  Armenian 

Lullaby.— Field. 
If  thou  would'st  stand  on  Etna's  burning  brow.     See 

Our  Traveller. — Pennell. 
If  thou  would'st  view  fair  Melrose  aright.     See  Lay  of 

the    Last    Minstrel    (Melrose    by    Moonlight). — 

Scott. 
If  thy  sad  heart,  pining  for  human  love.     See  Sonnet: 

"It  thy  sad  heart,"  etc. — Whitman. 
If  Time  be  of  all  things  the  most  precious,  wasting 

Time  must  be  the  greatest  prodigality.     See  Way 

to  Wealth,  The  (Time).— Franklin. 


712 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I'll 


If  to  be  absent  were  to  be.     See  To  Lucasta  Going  Be- 
yond the  Seas. — Lovelace. 
If  to  do  were  as  easy  as  to  know  what  were  good  to  do. 

See  Merchant  of  Venice,  The  (Portia,  in  the  Mer- 
•       chant  of  Venice). — Shakespeare. 
If  to  embody  in  a  breathing  word.     See  Poetry  ("If  to 

embody,"  etc.). — Holmes. 
If  transmigration  e'er  compel.     See  Paradise  of  Birds, 

The  (In  Praise  of  Gilbert  White). — Courthope. 
If  'twere  done,  when  'tis  done,  then  'twere  well.       See 

Macbeth  (Macbeth's  Soliloquy). — Shakespeare. 
If  two  may  read  aright.     See  To  Willie  and  Henrietta. 

— Stevenson. 
If  war  must  come — if  the  bayonet  must  be  used.     See 

Pretext  of  Rebellion,  The. — Douglas. 
If  we  are  the  friends  of  freedom,  personal  and  political. 

See  On  the  Civil  War  in  America. — Bright. 
If  we  consider  man  [simply]  in  a  commercial  point  of 

view.     See  Ten  Hours  Bill,  The  (On  Limiting  the 

Hours  of  Labor). — Macaulay. 
If  we  had  but  known,  if  we  had  but  known.     See  If 

We  Had  but  Known. — Anon. 
If  we  knew  the  cares  and  crosses.     See  Have  Charity. 

— Anon. 
If  we  knew  the  woe  and  heart-ache.     See  If  We  Knew; 

or.  Blessings  of  To-day. — Smith. 
If  we    knew   what    forms   were   fainting.     See    If   We 

Knew. — Anon. 
If  we  knew  what  friends  who  greet  us.     See  If  We 

Knew. — -Haynard. 
If  we  sit  down  at  set  of  sun.     See  Our  Daily  Reckon- 
ing.— {Mail  and  Express.) 
If  we  were  to  adopt  the  language  which  is  prescribed 

to  us.     See  Irish  Grievances. — Shell. 
If  we  were  to  suggest  one  thing.     See  "How  Mother 

Did  It." — Anon. 
If  we  wholly  perish  with  the  body.     See  Immortality. 

- — Massillon. 
If  we  wish  men  to  practise  virtue,  it  is  worth  while  try- 
ing.    See  Uses  of  Poetry  and  Art. — Mill. 
If  we  would  benefit  the  African  at  the  South.     See 

North  and  the  African,  The. — Beecher. 
If  we  would  but  check  the  speaker.     See  If  We  Would. 

— Anon. 
If,  when  I  kneel  to  pray.     See  Prayer. — Richardson. 
If  when  the  day  has  been  sped  with  laughter.     See 

Who  Knows? — Kerr. 
If  wisdom's  height  is  only  disenchantment.     See  Word 

to  the  Wise,  A. — Duer. 
If  wisdom's  ways  you'd  wisely  seek.     See  Five  Things 

to  Observe.— Anon. 
If  with   light   head  erect   I   sing.     See  Inspiration. — 

Thoreau. 
If  women  could  be  fair,  and  yet  not  fond.     See  Renun- 
ciation, A. — Vere. 
If  women  had  their  way,  and  they  intend  to  have  it. 

Sec  Worn-out  Parties,  The. — Willard. 
If  yonder  ilag,  hanging  in  graceful  folds.     See  Voice 

of  the  Flag,  The. — -Anon. 
If  you  are  a  man,  with  man's  respect  for  woman.     See 

Getting  Letters. — Anon. 
"If  you  are  innocent,"  said  a  lawyer  to  his  client.     See 

No  Chance  for  an  Alibi. — Anon. 
If  you  arp  tempted  to  reveal.     See  Good  Rule,  A. — 

Anon. 
If  you    are   versed   in    fairy    lore.     See   Grimalkin. — 

Sabine. 
If  you  be  that  May  Margaret.     See  May  Margaret. — 

Marzials. 
If  you  bear  in  mind  that  the  aim  of  deliberative  elo- 
quence.    See  Eloquence  of  Revolutionary  Periods, 

The.— Choate. 
If  you  become  a  nun,  dear.     See  Nun,  The. — Hunt. 
If  you  cannot  on  the  ocean.     See  Your  Mission. — Anon. 
If  you  could  know  the  life  of  one  of  those  poor  lepers 

of  Boston.     See  Children  of  the  Poor,  The. — Parker. 
If  you  could  pluck  earth's  emerald.     See  Her  Answer. 

■ — Chapman. 
If  you  cross  the  hill  by  my  father's  mill.     See  Tit  for 

Tat. — Anon. 
If  you  do,  you're  a  fool,  that's  all.    See  Oil  on  the  Brain. 

— McKeever. 
If  you  ever  go  to  races  I  think  that  you'll  agree.     See 

Horse  that  Wins  the  Race,  The. — -Anon. 
If  you  expect  great  things  of  me.     See  Four-year-old, 

The.— Doolittle. 
If  you  go  back  to  the  forks  of  the  road.     See  Which 

Road  ? — Anon . 
If  you  go  over  desert  and     mountain.     See  Fountain 

of  Tears,  The. — O'Shaughnessy. 
If  you  had  a  little  brother  who  was  just  a  perfect  muff. 

See  Wouldn't  You? — Anon. 


If  you  happen  to  mean   anything  wonderful  wicked. 

See  Aunt  Maria  at  the  Eden  Musee. — Smith. 
If  you  have  a  friend  worth  loving.     See  Sermon  in 

Rhyme,   A. — Anon. 
If  you  have  gentle  words  and  looks,  my  friends.     See 

same. — {Sunday  Magazine.) 
If  you  have  occasion  to  use  a  wheelbarrow,  leave  it. 

See  Essay  on  the  Wheelbarrow. — Anon. 
If  you  mark,  my  lord.     See  same. — McCarthy. 
If  you  my  va,lentine  would  be.     See  Man  Behind  it  to 

the  Theater  Bonnet,  The. — Anon. 
If  you  or  I  had  been  consulted  as  to  which  of  all  the 

stars.     See  World  We  Live  In,  The. — Talmage. 
' '  If  you  please,"  and,  "thank  you."     See  Two  Helpers. 

— Denton. 
"If  you  please,  sir."     See  Assisting  a  Poetess. — Anon. 
If  you  searched  the  country  o'  Carlow,  ay,  and  back 

again.     See  Old  Pedlar  Carthy  from  Clonmore. — 

McCall. 
If  you  sit  down  at  set  of  sun.     See  Well  Spent.— Eliot. 
If  you  tried  and  have  not  won.     See  Don't  Give  Up. — 

Cary. 
If  you   want   to   be   respected.     See   Never   Break   a 

Promise. — Anon. 
"If  you  want  to  hear  'Annie  Laurie'  sung  come  to  my 

house    to-night."     See    Singer's    Climax,    The. — 

Anon. 
If  you  want  to  know  of  Santa  Claus.     See  North. — 

Anon. 
If  you  want  to  succeed  in  the  world  you  must  make 

your  own  opportunities.  See  same. — Gough. 
If  you  were  coming  in  the  fall.  See  same. — Dickinson. 
"If  you  were  me,  and  I  were  you."  See  "If." — Anon. 
If  yoii  wish  to  make  a  pudding  in  which  every  one  de- 
lights. See  Christmas  Pudding,  The.  {Punch.) 
If  you  wish  to  win  bright  laurels.  See  same. — Lucette. 
If  you   would    contemplate    nationality    as    an    active 

virtue.     See  American  Nationality  (Nationality). 

— Choate. 
If  you  would  have  a  good  tyke.     See  Perfect  Grey- 
hound, The. — Anon. 
If  you  would  like  to  see  the  height  of  hospitality.     See 

,  Donovans,  The. — Fahy. 
If  you  would  make  men  honest  or  pure.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
If  you  would  see  Venice  as  she  is.     See  Venice. — Sul- 
livan. 
If  your  health  is  not  quite  right.     See  Panacea,  A. — 

Ryder. 
If  your  lips  would  keep  from  slips.     See  Good  Advice 

to  Talkers. — Anon. 
If  your  researches.     See  Rum's  Devastation  and  Des- 
tiny.— Sullivan. 
If  you're  told  to  do  a  thing.     See  Obedience. — Cary. 
If  you're  waking  call  me  early,  call  me  early,  mother 

dear.     See  May  Queen,  The  (New  Year's  Eve). 

— Tennyson. 
"If  you're  waking  call  me  early,  call  me  early,  mother 

dear.     See  Putting  his  Armor  On. — Burdett. 
If  you've  any  task  to  do.     See  Resolution. — {Harper's 

Magazine.) 
If  you've  tried  and  have  not  won.      See  Don't  Give  up. 

— Car>-. 
If  yuh  wants  to  know  what's  good,  des  lis'en.     See 

How  to  Eat  a  'Possum. — Anon. 
If  Zeus  chose  us  a  King  of  the  flowers  in  his  mirth.     See 

Song  of  the  Rose. — Browning. 
"I'll  be  the  goodest  little  girl."      See  "Wash  Dolly  up 

Like  That." — Ames. 
I'll  call  thy  frown  a  headsman,  passing  grim.     See  To 

My  Lady. — -Boker. 
"I'll  choose  this  tree  of  mine!"     See  Chosen  Tree,  The. 

"Estelle." 
I'll  come  in  the  evening,  I'll  come  in  the  morning.     See 

Reply  to  "The  Welcome." — Fox. 
I'll  do  it,  by  jingo!  I'll  do  it.     See  Darling  Jennie. — 

Griffith. 
Ill  does  it  become  me,  O  Senators  of  Rome!     See  Regu- 

lus  to  the  Roman  Senate. — Sargent. 
I'll  example  you  with  thievery.     See  Timon  of  Athens. 

— Shakespeare . 
Ill  fares  the  land,  to  hastening  ills  a  prey.  See    Deserted 

Village,  The  (National  Decay). — Goldsmith. 
I'll  have  it,  I  tell  you!     Curse   you — there'     See  Mon- 
ster Diamond,  The. — O'Reilly. 
"I'll  hie  me  down  to  yonder  bank."     See  What  the 

Little  Things  said. — Crosby.  / 

I'll  love  thee  evermore.     See  Eileen  A  Roon. — O'Daly. 
I'll   make   a  picture   of  puss  and  you.     See   Pussy's 

Picture. — Rook. 
I'll  never  forget  as  long  as  I  live.      See  Stock-broker, 

The.— Thatcher. 


713 


ru 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I'll  not  believe  I  am  not  loved.     See  Maiden's  Soliloquy, 

A.— Watts. 
I'll  not    believe    the    dullard    dark.     See    Rubric. — 

Peabody. 
"I'll  sin^,"  said  the  jJoet,   "a  song  on   Spring."     <Se« 

Spring  Poet,  The. — Berte. 
I'll  sing  you  a  good  old  song.     iSe«  Fine  Old  English 

Gentleman,  The. — Anon. 
I'll  sing  you  a  song  about  a  young  girl.     See  But  the 

Villain  Still  Pursued  Her. — Anon. 
I'll  sing  you  a  song,  and  a  merry,  merry  song.     See 

Ballad  of  Jenny  the  Mare,  The. — Fitzgerald. 
I'll  sing  you  a  song,  not  very  long.     See  True  to  Poll. — 

Bumand. 
I'll  sing  you  a  Song  of  the  Sea.     See  Song  of  the  Sea,  A. 

— Fuller. 
I'll  sing  you  now  a  Deitchen  song,  'bout  Hans  Von 
Krouplegheet.     See  Fine  Old  Dutch  Gentleman, 
The.— Anon. 
I'll  take  some  sugar  and  gin,  if  you  please.     Sec  One 

Night  with  Gin. — Anon. 
I'll  tell,  in  simple  way,  how  I  employ  my  life.     See 

Bon  Jour,  Bon  Soir. — .\non. 
I'll  tell  thee  everything  I  can.     See  Ways  and  Means. — 

Carroll. 
I'll  tell  you  a  story:  but  pass  the  "jack."     See  Romance 

of  Britomarte,  The. — Gordon. 
I'll  tell  you  a  story,  children.     See  Butcher-bird,  The. 

— Thaxter. 
I'll  tell  you  a  story,  mamma.     See  Story,  A. — Anon. 
I'll  tell  you  a  story  that's  not  in  Tom  Moore.     See 

"Please  to  Ring  the  Belle." — Hood. 
I'll  tell  you  all  tny  story  now,  and  ask  you  what  you 

think.     See  Flossie  I.ane's  Marriage. — Anon. 
I'll  tell  you  how    I  speak  a  piece.     See  Way  to  Do  It, 

The.— Dodge. 
I'll  tell    you    how    the    Christmas    came.     See    Little 

Rocket's  Christmas. — Brown. 
"I'll  tell  you  how  the  leaves  come  down."     See  How 

the  Leaves  Came  Down. — Coolidge. 
I'll  tell  you  how  the  sun  rose.     See  Day,  A. — Dickin- 
son. 
I'll  [or  II  tell  you,  Kate,  that  Lovejoy  cow.     See  Love- 
joy  Cow,  The. — Morse. 
I'll  tell  you,  sir,  a  mighty   quare   story.     See  Paddy, 

the  Piper. — Lover. 
I'll  tell  you  something,  darling  [or  dear  little]  Belle  [or 
says  little  Bellel.      See  Bug-a-boo,  The. — Hadley. 
I'll  tell    you    two   fortunes,    my   fine   little   lad.     See 

Telling  Fortunes. — Cary. 
I'll  tell  you  what  I  heard  that  day.     See  Upon  the  Hill 

before  Centreville. — Boker. 
"I'll  try"  is  a  soldier.     See  Good  Company. — (.Harper's 

Young  People.) 
I'll  try   to   be   good.     See  When   I'm   a   Big  Girl. — 

Richards. 
I'll  woo  thee,  world,  again.     See  Worldly  Treasures. — 

Bailey. 
I'll  wreath  my  sword  in  myrtle  bough.     See  Harmo- 

dius  and  .^ristogeiton. — Callistratus. 
I'll  write,  for  I'm  witty,  a  popular  ditty.     See  Susan 

Van  Doozen. — Lincoln. 
Illinois  is  proud  and  happy.     See  John  A  Logan. — 

Peck. 
Illustrious  monarch  of  Iberia's  soil.     See  Columbus  to 

Ferdinand. — Mason. 
I'm  a  beautiful  red,  red  drum.     See  Drum,  The. — 

Field. 
I'm  a  bird  that's  free.     See  Aretina's  Song. — Taylor. 
I'm  a  boy.     I'm  not  so  big  as  some  folks.     See  Boy's 

Story,  The.— Rexford. 
I'm  a  broken  hearted  Deutscher.     See  Puzzled  Dutch- 
man, The. — Adams. 
I'm  a  careles.«  potato,  and  care  not  a  pin.     See  Potato, 

The. — Moore. 
I'm  a  gay  and  pretty  fellow.     See  Autumn  Leaf,  An. — 

Fosdick. 
Fm  a  gay  tra,  la,  la.     See  Swiss  Air. — Harte. 
I  m  a  genius;  don't  you  doubt  it!     I  wuz  in  a  village 

bred.     See  Genius,  A. — Johnson. 
I'm  a  grumpy  old  bachelor.     See  Bachelor's  Growl, 

A. — Anon. 
I'm  a  gwine  to  tell  you  'bout  de  comin'  ob  de  Saviour. 

See  In  dat  Great  Gittin'-up  Mornin'. — Bristol. 
1  m  a  kmg  among  men,  and  no  monarch  of  old.     See 

Song  of  the  Printing  Press,  The. — Davenport. 
I'm  a    left-over    doll,    and    I    grieve    to    relate.     See 

Lament  of  a  Left-over  Doll,  The.— Anon. 
1  m  a  little  Robin  Redbreast.     See  Robin  Redbreast's 

Secret. — Anon. 
I'm  a  little  temperance  boy.     See  Temperance  Boy, 
ine. — (6.  5.  Advocate.) 


I'm  a    married    man;     Busby's    a    single    man.     See 

Buzby's  Coat. — Vickers. 
I'm  a   merry   little   maid.     See   Naming   the   Tree. — 

Rude. 
I'm  a  poor  little  kitty.     See  Sad  Case,  A. — Bates.         • 
I'm  a  pretty  little  thing.     See  Daisy,  The. — Anon. 
I'm  a  showman  by  purfession,  gents,  so  please  to  gather 

round.     See  Penny  Showman,  The.— Newton. 
I'm  a  simple,  wee  white  daisy.     See  Daisies. — Crocker. 
I'm  a  strange  contradiction.     I'm  new,  and  I'm  old. 

See  Riddle,  A  (A  Book).— More. 
I'm  a  temperance  boy!     See  Speech  for  a  Very  Little 

Boy. — Anon. 
I'm  a  tight  Irish  boy  and  from  Dublin  I  came.     See 

Paddy  Fagan's  Pedigree. — Anon. 
I'm  a  very   little  baby.     See  Baby's   Reflections,   A. 

— (London  Figaro.) 
I'm  afraid    you    will    think    I'm    awfully    bold.     See 

Forgetfulness. — Anon. 
"I'm  after  [or  aftherl  axin',  Biddy  dear  "[or  "my  dear"]. 

See  "Don't  be  Tazin'  Me." — Whipple. 
I'm  an  old  man;  I'm  sixty  years.     See  Carcassonne. — 

Nadaud  (Browne). 
I'm  anxious  to  tell  you  a  bit  of  my  mind.     See  Leave 

the  Liquor  Alone. — Anon. 
I'm  awfully  glad  there's  no  one  here.     See  Slight  Mis- 
calculation, A. — Griffith. 
I'm  awfully  sorry  for  poor  Jack  Roe.     See  Mother's 

Room. — Anon. 
I'm  banished  to  the  garret  now;  my  busy  days  are  o'er. 

See  Old  Cradle,  The.— Griffith. 
I'm  but  a  little  child.     See  Hymn. — M.  H.  S. 
I'm  but  a  little  fellow  now.     See  I'll  be  a  Man. — Anon. 
I'm  but  a  little  girl,  you  see.     See  But  Little  Folks. — 

Kunkler. 
I'm  but  a  little  lad,  you  know.     See  Wilford's  Piece. — 

Richards. 
I'm  dreadful  busy  workin'.     See  Little  Housekeeper, 

The. — Anon. 
I'm  dreadfully  tired  of  having  my  hair.     See  Eddie 

Visits  the  Barber. — Anon. 
I'm  far  frae  my  hame,  an'  I'm  weary  aftenwhiles.     See 

My  Ain  Countrie.— Demarest. 
I'm  feelin'  mighty  rocky,  lookin'  rocky,  too,  I  guess. 

See  If  He's  Busted. — Anon. 
I'm  fifty,    I'm   fair,    and   without   a   gray   hair.     See 

Widder  Budd. — Anon. 
I'm  five  years  old  to-day.     See  Maud's   Birthday. — 

Anon. 
I'm  fond  of  the  good  old  apple  tree.     See  Old  Apple 

Tree,  The. — Anon. 
I'm  glad   I   am  a  husbandman.     See   Labor   Song. — 

Anon. 
I'm  glad  I  have  a  good  sized  slate.     See  Harry's  Arith- 
metic.— (Sf.  Nicholas.) 
I'm  glad  I've  found  my  speller.     Grannie  said  if  I'd 
study   my   lesson.     See   Spelling   Lesson,   The. — 
Anon. 
I'm  glad  my  hair  ain't  yellow.     See  Getting  to  be  a 

Man. — Kiser. 
I'm  glad  that  I  am  not  to-day.     See  Something  to  be 

Thankful  For. — Denton. 
I'm  glad  that  it  suited  you,  schoolma'am,  to  spend  a 
few  days  here  with   Kate.      See  Worried  about 
Catherine.— Carleton. 
I'm  glad  vacation's  over,  and  school  is  called  again. 

See  School  Begins  To-day. — Yates. 
"I'm  glad  we  got  here  early,  Nell."     See  In  Church 

During  the  Litany. — Anon. 
I'm  glad    you    dropped    in    this    evening,    .lim.     See 
Reclaimed  Brother;  or  the  Chain  of  Roses,  The. — 
McBride. 
I'm  glad  you've  come.     You're  the  very  boy  I  wanted 

to  .see.     See  Signing  the  Pledge. — Clement. 
"I'm  eoin'    to    die,"    .says    the    widder    Green.     See 

Widder  Green's  Last  Words. — Anon. 
I'm  going  back  to  gran'pa's.     See  Little  Boy's  Lament, 

The. — Anon. 
"I'm  eoing  down  to  cheer  a  flower."     See  Raindrops, 

The. — Anon. 
"I'm   going  now  to  run  away."     See  Little  Boy  who 

Ran  Away,  The. — Perry. 
I'm  going  to   a   felon's  celi.     See   Felon's  Cell,   A.— 

Anon. 
I'm  going  to  be  a  wise  man.     See  Speech  for  a  Little 

Boy. — Manning. 
"I'm  going  to  be  the  housekeeper."     See  How  Hazel 

Kept  House. — Richards. 
"I'm   going  to  die,"  says  the    Widder    Green.      See 

"Widder  Green's"  Last  Words. — Anon. 
I  m  going    to    grandma's.     See    How    do    I    Look? — 
Bohne. 


714 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


I'm 


I'm  going  to  have  a  party.     See  Model  Tea  Party,  A. — 

Donny. 
I'm  going  to  the  shore  to  dig.     See  Catching  a  Whale. — 

Goodfellovv. 
I'm  going  to  write  a  letter  to  our  oldest  boy,  who  went. 

See  Father's  Letter. — Field. 
I'm  growing  old;  I've  sixty  years.     See  Carcassonne. 

— Nadaud  (Thompson). 
I'm  growing    very    old.     This    weary    head.     See    St. 

John  the  Aged. — Anon. 
I'm  hastening  from  the  distant  hills.     See  Brook  Song, 

A.— Field. 
I'm  heartless,  you  say.     See  Heartless. — Smith. 
I'm  here  at  last,  how  strange  to  all.     See  But  Once  a 

Year. — Denton. 
I'm  in   love,   but   I've   never  told   her.     See  Margery 

Daw. — Weatherly. 
I'm  in  love  with  you.  Baby  Louise!     See  Baby  Louise. 

— Eytinge. 
I'm  just  a  country  maiden.     See  Country  Girl,  A. — 

Goodfellow. 
I'm  just  a  little  boy,  you  know.     See  Willie's  Breeches. 

— Salsbury. 
"I'm  just  discouraged,"  said  Mr.  Brown.     See  Tommy 

Brown. — -Hardy. 
"I'm  just  now  in  the  country  for  a  stay."     See  Town 

and  Country. — Anon. 
I'm  keeping  store;  I've  heaps  of  things.     See  Keeping 

Store. — Goodfellow. 
I'm  keeping  them  all  for  the  sake  of  my  darlings.     See 

Old  Letters. — Anon. 
I'm  king  of  the  road.     I  gather.     See  His  Majesty. — 

Brown. 
"I'm  licensed  to  sell:  get  out  of  my  shop."     See  "Get 

Out  of  my  Shop." — Munson. 
I'm  like  the  tiny  tree.     See  Child  and  Tree. — Holbrook. 
I'm  little,  but  I'm  spunky,  too.     See  I'm  Little,  but 

I'm  Spunky. — Kavanaugh. 
I'm  little  Crocus.     See  Early  Miss  Crocus. — Goodfel- 
low. 
I'm  little  Robin  Redbreast,  sir.     See  Robin  Redbreast's 

Secret. — {Youth's  Penny  Gazette.) 
I'm  looking  for  a  little  girl.     See  Little  MoUie  Whimper. 

— Denton. 
"I'm  losted!     Could  you  find  me,  please?"     See  Her 

Name. — Bumham. 
I'm  mamma's  little   baby.     See  Papa's   Best   Girl. — 

Richards. 
I'm  my  mother's  little  helper.     See  What  a  Little  Girl 

Can  Do. — Anon. 
I'm  my  mother's  little  man.     See  Little  Chief,  The. — 

Anon. 
I'm  nine  years  old!  an'  you  can't  guess  how  much  I 
weigh,    I    bet!     See  Happy    Little  Cripple,    The 
(Little  Hunchback,  The).— Riley. 
I'm  not  a  chicken:  I  have  seen.     See  September  Gale, 

The.— Holmes. 
"I'm  not  a  drunkard."     See  Why  Should  I  Sign  the 

Pledge? — Henry. 
"I'm  not  afraid  of  anything."     See  Brave  Little  Maid, 

The. — Anon. 
I'm  not   afraid  of  worms,   or  bugs,   nor  spiders.     See 

Brave  Little  Mary. — Denton. 
I'm  not  going  to  contradict  you.   Caudle.     See  Mrs. 

Caudle  Has  Taken  Cold. — Jerrold. 
I'm  not  too  young  for  God  to  see.     See  God  Sees  Me.— 

Anon. 
I'm  not  where  I  was  yesterday.     See  On  the  Death  of 

. — Houghton. 

I'm  not  worth  much  in  pocket.     See  What  A  Little 

Boy  is  Worth. — ^Anon. 
I'm  nothing  but  a  baby,  and  I  guess  I'm  pretty  small. 

See  Baby's  Remarks. — Anon. 
'I'm  nothing  but  a  little  acorn."     See  Little  Acorn. — 

Huntington. 
"I'm  of  no  use,"  said  a  little  brown  seed.     See  little 

Brown  Seed,  The. — Lothrop.  * 

I'm  old,  my  dears,  and  shrivel'd  with  age  and  work  and 

grief.     See    Bumboat    Woman's    Story,    The. — 
rilbert. 
I'm  one  and  one,  and  one  and  two.     See  My  Age. — 

Anon. 
I'm  only  a  little  [or  very  little]  girl,  but  I  think  I  have 

as  much  right.     See  Naughty  Girl's  Life  in  a  Hotel, 

A. — Anon. 
I'm  only  a  little  sparrow.     See  Song  of  the  Sparrow. — 

Anon. 
I'm  only  a  mite.     See  Epilogue  for  a  Tot. — Anon. 
I'm  only  a  [very]  little  girl,  but  I  think  I  have  just  as 

much  right  to  say  what  I  want  to.     See  Naughty 

Girl's  Life  in  a  Hotel,  A. — Anon. 
I'm  only  des'  a  'ittle  boy.     See  When  I  Dit  Drowed. — 

Anon. 


I'm  Phil,  and  I  have  a  complaint.     See  Phil's  Com- 
plaint.— Rook. 
I'm  prstty  nearly  certain  that  'twas  'bout  two  weeks 

ago.     See  Thanksgiving  Dream,  A. — Lincoln. 
I'm  ready  for  the  party.     See  Bessie's  First  Party. — 

Locke. 
I'm  riding  away  to  Washington.     See  Going  to  Wash- 
ington.— Goodfellow. 
I'm  shtandin'  in  the  mud,  Biddy.     See  Irish  Picket. 

The.— Kerr. 
"I'm  sick  of  mustn'ts,"  said  Dorothy  D.     See  Doro- 
thy's Mustn'ts. — Wilcox. 
I'm  singing  of  you  when  the  darkness  is  falling.     See 

Singing  of  You. — Anon. 
I'm  sittin'  on  the  stile,  Mary.  See  Lament  of  the  Irish 

Emigrant. — Dufferin. 
I'm     sitting    alone    by    the    fire.     See    Her    Letter. — 

Harte. 
I'm  sitting  alone  in  my  silent  room.     See  Christmas 

Carol,  A. — Ryan. 
I'm  sitting  at  dusk  'neath  the  old  beechen  tree.     See 

Smoker's  Reverie,  The. — Anon. 
I'm  sitting  musing  in  my  room.     See  Were   It   Only 

Now.— Bell. 
I'm  six  years  old,  every  day  of  it.     My  name  is  Thoma.«. 

See  What  Tommy  Dislikes. — Anon. 
I'm  so  glad  you  dropped  in  this  afternoon  for  a  cup  of 

tea.     See  Leap  Year  Farce,  A. — Rogers. 
I'm  so  tired  of  winter.     I  want  to  go  out  and  play  in  the 

yard.     See  Edith's  Complaints. — Anon. 
I'm  sorry  that  I  spelt  the  word.     See   In    School-days 

("I'm  sorry,"  etc.). — -Whittier. 
I'm  such  a  lonely  little  girl.     See  Marion's  Lament. — 

Richards. 
I'm  sure   I   don't   know  why   my  father   brought   this 

verdant  Yankee.     See  Jeduthan  and  Jane. — Anon. 
I'm  taught  p-1-o-u-g-h.     See  O-u-g-h. — Loomis. 
I'm  tellin'  this  jest  ez  I  heard  it,  y'  know.     See  Davy 

and  Goliar. — Penney. 
I'm  thankful  that  the  sun  and  moon.     See  Lines  by  an 

Old  Fogy. — Anon. 
I'm  the  captain,  big  and  bold.     See  Little  Army,  The. 

— Rook. 
I'm  the  ghost  of  an  old  continental.     See  Ghost  of  an 

Old  Continental,  The. — Brooks. 
I'm  the  Man  in  the  Moon.     On  this  green  Earth  below. 

See  Courting  of  Mother  Goose,  The. — Castle. 
I'm  the  pumpkin,  ripe  and  big.     See  Perfect  Feast,  A. 

—Denton. 
I'm  thinkin'  of  the  goolden  head.     See  Play  Softly, 

Boys. — O'Hare. 
"I'm  thinkin'  "  said  Mr.  Finn  to  his  son  Mickey,  as 

they  sat   on   the  back   stoop   after  supper.     See 

Mickey  Coaches  his  Father. — Jarrold. 
I'm  thinkin',    wife,    of   neighbor   Jones,    that    man    of 

stalwart    arm.       See    Forty-acre    Farm,     The. — 

Anon. 
I'm  thinking,   Charles,    'tis   just   a   year.     See  Wife's 

Appeal,  The. — Greenwood. 
I'm  thinking  on  thy  smile,  Mary.     See  Lament  of  the 

Widowed  Inebriate. — Duganne. 
I'm  thinking  that  tonight,  if  not  before.     See  Young 

Gray  Head,  The. — Southey. 
I'm  thist  a  little  cripple  boy,  an'  never  goin'  to  grow. 

See  Happy  Little  Cripple,  The. — Riley. 
I'm  tired  of  being  a  little  girl.     See  I  Wish  I  Were  a 

Bird. — -Anon. 
I'm  tired  of  dolls.     Let's  talk.     See  Choosing  Voca- 
tions.— Anon. 
"I'm  tired  of  leather  dolls,"  said  Belle.     See  New  Kind 

of  Doll,  A. — -Jack. 
I'm  twins,  I  guess,   'cause    my    Ma  say.     See  Little- 

Giri-Two-Little-Girls.— Riley. 
I'm  up  and  down,  and  round  about.     See  On  a  Circle. — 

Swift. 
I'm  very  glad  I  did  not  live.     See  Sixty  Years  Ago. — 

Rook. 
I'm  very  glad  the  spring  is  come,  the  sun  shines  out  so 

bright.     See  Walk  in  Spring,  A. — Stoddart. 
I'm  very  happy  where  I  am.     See  same. — Boucicault. 
I'm  very  small,  as  you  can  see.     See  Speech  for  a  Small 

Boy. — -Kavanaugh. 
I'm  very  small,  as  you  can  see.     See  also  Speech  for  a 

Very  Little  Girl. — Kavanaugh. 
I'm  very  small,  as  you  perceive.     See  Midget's  Greet- 
ing, The. — Anon. 
I'm  very  small,  but  I  have  learn'd.     See  Speech  for  a 

Very  Small  Child. — Kavanaugh. 
I'm  very  young  but  what   of  that?      See  I'm   Very 

Young. — Anon. 
I'm  very  young  for  a  soldier.     See  Ambition. — Anon. 
I'm  'vited  to  the  wedding.     See  Doll's  Wedding,  The. — 
Allyn. 


715 


rm 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


I'm  wearin'  awa,  John  [or  Jean].     See  Land  o'  the  Leal, 

The.— Nairn. 
I'm  wearv  wandering  from  room  to  room.     <See  HuncU- 

back.  The  (Helen  and  Modus).— Knowles. 
I'm  with  you  once  isain.  my   friends.     See  I'm  with 

You  Once  Again.— Morris. 
Image  of  beauty,  when  I  gaze  on  thee.     iSee  Janus. 

Russell.  a      K         t 

Imageries  of  dreams  reveal  a  gracious  age.     bee  Ag3  oi 

a  Dream,  The. — Johnson.  „       tv        .  j 

Imagination    fondly    stoops   to    trace.     See   Deserted 

Village,  The.— Gold.^mith. 
Imagine  a  chain  of   Federal   forts.     See  Storming  ot 

Mission  Ridge,  The.— Taylor. 
Imagine,  O  learned   Apelles,  that  it  is  now  the  tenth 

hour    of    the    Roman    day.     See    Revels    of    the 

Caesars,  The. — Edwards.  „    r    * 

Imagine  to  yourselves  a  Demosthenes.     See  t'erlect 

Orator,  The.— Sheridan.  „      ^^     v    r> 

Imagine  two  sunerb  racing  yachts.     See  Yacht  Race, 

The.— (AT.  Y.  Herald.) 
Immortal  Amaranth,  a  flower  which  once.     See  Fara- 

dise  Lost  ("Immortal  Amaranth,"  etc.). — Milton, 
fmmortal    Love,    forever    full.     See    Our    Master.- 

Whittier.  ^  „   ^^ 

Immortal  morn,  all  haili     See  Discovery  Day.— Butter- 
worth.  ^        ,-,,,,       X, 
Immortal  Newton  never  spoke.     See  On  a  Full-length 

Portrait  of  Beau  Marsh.— Chesterfield. 
Imperial  bloom,  whose  every  curve  we  see.     See  White 

Camellia,  A. — Fawcett. 
"Imperious    Csesar  dead   and  turned    to   clay.       See 

Ruined  Library,  A.— Pollock. 
Important  as  I  deem  it  to  discuss,  on  all  proper  occa- 
sions.    See  Right  of  Free  Discussion. — Webster. 
Impossible  the  eagle's  flight.     See  Proof,  The. — Lar- 

com.  , 

Imputations  of  British  influence  have  been  uttered. 

See  British  Influence,  1811.— Randolph. 
In  a  bower   a   widow  dwelt.     See  Beauty,   Wit   and 

Gold. — Moore. 
In  a   branch   of   willow   hid.     See  To   a   Caty-did. — 

Freneau. 
In  a  certain  part  of  the  sea,  very  many  leagues  from 

here.     See  Margaret:  A  Pearl.  — Field. 
In  a    certain    small    town    on    the    Mississippi.     See 

Daddy's  Boy. — Anon. 
In  a  chamber,  grand  and  gloomy,  in  the  shadow  of  the 

night.     See  Stigma,  The. — Janvier. 
In  a  chariot  of  light  from  the  regions  of  day.     See 

Liberty  Tree. — Paine. 
In  a  church  which  is  furnish'd  with  mullion  and  gable. 

See  Epigram:  "All  Saints." — Yates. 
In  a  city  of  churches  and  chapels.     See  Madonna  of 

the  Entry.  A. — Machar. 
In   a  [tCT-.  thel    coign    of  the  cliff,  between    lowland 

and  highland.     See  Forsaken  Garden,  A. — Swin- 
burne. 
In  a  costly  palace  Youth  goes  clad  in  gold.     See  Ballad 

Noting  the   Difference  of   Rich  and   Poor,   A. — 

Lamb. 
In  a  crowded   room   I   seemed   to   stand.     See  After 

Reading  Austin  Dobson. — E. 
In  a  dark  and  dismal  alley,  where  the  sunshine  never 

came.     See  'Tommy's  Prayer.— Nicholls. 
In  a  dark  and  dungeon  room.     See  Death  of  Osceola, 

The.— Street. 
In  a  dark  enchanted  forest  where  the  red  man  loved  to 

roam.     See  Toccoa,  the  Beautiful. — Rogers. 
In  a  Devonshire  lane,  as  I  tottered  along.     See  How 

Marriage  is  Like  a  Devonshire  Lane. — Marriott. 
In  a  dirty  old  house  lived  a  Dirty  Old  Man.     See  Dirty 

Old  Man,  The.— Allingham. 
In  a  dream   of  the  night   I   was  wafted   away.     See 

Cameronian's  Dream,  The. — Hyslop. 
In  a drear-nighted  December.  See  Stanzas:  "In  a  drear- 

nighted,"  etc. — Keats. 
In  a  gallery  in  the  city  of  Brussels  is  a  portrait.     See 

Ivy  Oration. — Anon. 
In  a  glad  hour  Lucina's  aid.      See   Cadenus  and  Va- 
nessa.— -Swift. 
In  a  glittering  glory  of  diamond  dew.     See  Bugle,  The. 

— Irving. 
In  a  golden  cage  hung  a  gold  canary.     See  Cat   and 

Canary. — Bates. 
In  a  grey  cave,  where  comes  no  glimpse  of  sky.     See 

Waiting. — Hinkson. 
In  a  harbour  grene  aslepe  whereas  I  lay.     See  In  Youth 

is  Pleasure. — Wever. 
In  a  home-nest  of  peace  and  joy.     See  Under  the  Apple 

Tree.— Allen. 
In  a  hovel  dark  and  drear  bends  a  mother,  pale  with 

fear.     See  Prohibition's  Might. — Bruce. 


In  a  huge  and  smoky  foundry.  See  Bell  of  St.  John's, 
The.— Anon.  .      ,,       ^  e    a  \-  u 

In  a  humble  farm-house,  m  the  town  of  Sahsbury, 
N.  H.,  Daniel  Webster  was  born.  See  Character 
of  Webster.- Bayard.  ^     .      .       r 

In  a  humble  room,  in  one  of  the  poorest  streets  of 
London.     See  Malibran  and  the  Young  Musician. 

In  a    land    for    antiquities    greatly    renowned.     See 

Toad's  .lourna).  The. — Taylor. 
In  a  land  of  the  West,   that  is  far,   far  away.     See 

King  Dollar. — English. 
In  a  large,  lofty  room  of  The  Turrets  lay,  on  a  sofa. 

See  Miss  Eva's  Visit  to  the  Ogre.— Elmslie. 
In  a  little  bird's-nest  of  a  house.     See  Buried  Gold. — 

Cary. 
In  a  little  brown  house.     See  Shall  the  Baby  Stay?— 

In  a  little  German  village.     See  Blacksmith  of  Ragen- 

bach.  The.— Murray. 
In  a  little  house  that  stood.     See  Nervous  Little  Man, 

The.— Douglas.  ,    ,,  ,    j   u       u     u  i 

In  a  little  roadside  cottage,  half  hid  by  shrubs  and 

vines.     See  Rusty  Sword,  The. — Vickers. 
In  a  long  vanished  age,  whose  varied  story.     See  City 

of  the  Living,  The.— Anon. 
In  a  moment,  Evelyn.     I  will  read  this  one  extract  to 

you.     See  Where's  My  Hat?— Meyers. 
In  a  new  country  a  man  must  possess  at  least  three 

virtues     .See  Country  Life.— Ingersoll. 
In  a  parlor  neat  and  cozy.     See  How  I  Kissed  Her. 

— Ritchie.  o     ti  i.* 

In  a  pioneer's  cabin  out  west,  so  they  say.     See  iJetty 

and  the  Bear.^Anon.         ,  ,  ,  ,        • 

In  a  quaint  German  town,  rich  in   legend    and   ruin. 

See  Too  Zealous  by  Half  .—Anon. 
In  a  quaint  Queen  Anne  chair.     See  Skem  of  Zephyr, 

A. — Anon. 
In  a  queer  old  Irish  village.     See  Strange  Request, 

The. — Johnson. 
In  a  quiet  cemetery  in  Southern  Germany  is  a  grave- 
stone inscribed.     See  Carl  Springel. — Anon. 
In  a  quiet  little  Ohio  village,  many  years  ago.     See 

How  Hezekiah  Stole  the  Spoons. — Anon. 
In  a  quiet  water'd  land,  a  land  of  roses.     See  Dead  at 

Clonmacnois,  The. — Rolleston. 
In  a  railroad  train  in  Scotland  was  an  old  lady  with  a 

large  hand  satchel.     See  same. — Anon. 
In  a    row    of   tenement    houses.     See    Blue    Alsacian 

Mountains. — Thatcher. 
In  a  secluded  and  mountainous  part  of  Styna.     See 

King  of  the  Golden  River,  The. — Ruskin. 
In  a   small   cabin   in   a   California  mining  town.     See 

Santa  Claus  in  the  Mines. — Anon. 
In  a    small    chamber,    friendless    and    unseen.     See 

William  Lloyd  Garrison. — Lowell. 
In  a  small,   pretty  village  in   Nottinghamshire.     See 

Country  Squire,  The. — Anon. 
In  a  small,  quiet  country  town.     See  Two  Stammerers, 

The. — Anon. 
In  a   solitary  house  on  Wandsworth  Common.       See 

Remarkable  Instance  of  Presence  of  Mind. — Anon. 
In  a  stifling  pit  a  miner  worked.     See  Coal  Digger, 

The— O'Donnell. 
In  a  still  room  at  hush  of  dawn.     See  Eavesdropper, 

The. — Carman. 
In  a  tangled,  scented  hollow.     See  Sleep. — Tooker. 
In  a  tenement  house  on  the  west  side.     See  Tenement 

House  Guest,  A. — Garrison. 
In  a  time  of  great  mental  awakening,  of  unparalleled 

scientific     discovery.     See     Liberalistic     Temper, 

The. — Anon. 
In  a  tiny  country  villa  lived  our  Blobbs,  but  all  alone. 

See  Sad  Story  of  Blobbs  and  his   Pullet,  The.— 

Anon. 
In  a  tower  swinging  high  to  the  stars  of  China's  sky. 

See  Great  Bell  of  Pekin,  The.— O'Donnell. 
In  a  [wr.  green]  valley,    centuries  ago.      See   Petrified 

Fern,  The. — Branch. 
In  a  valley  of  this  restless  mind.     See  Quia  Amore. 

Langueo. — Anon. 
In  a  veil  of  white  vapor,  hushed  stars  moving  through. 

See  Bride  o'  the  Sun,  The. — -Bishop. 
In  a  very  humble    cot.      See    Washerwoman's    Song, 

The.— Ware. 
In  a  village  of    Bank-swallows.     See   Bank-swallows, 

The.— Anon. 
In  a  wet  day  the  rain  gathered  in  blobs  on  the  road. 

See  How  Gavin  Birse  Put  it  to  Mag  Lownie. — 

Barrie. 
In  acquired     knowledge,     the     superiority     must    be 

allowed  to  Dryden.     See  Parallel  between  Pope 

and  Dryden. — Johnson. 


716 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


In  former 


In  Adam's      Fall.     See      Theology. — {New      England 

Primer. ) 
In  after  days,  when  grasses  high.     See  In  After  Days. — 

Dobson. 
In  all    climates    spring    is    beautiful.     See    Hyperion 

(Spring).— Ivongfellow. 
In  all  countries,  in  all  ages,  have  aristocrats  implacably 

pursued.     See  Against   the   Nobility  and   Clergy 

of  Provence. — Mirabeau. 
In  all  our  decisions  and  actions,  it  would  be  well  for 

us.     See  same. — Emerson. 
In  all  the  dungeons  of  the  Old  World.     See  Ignorance 

a  Crime  in  a  Republic. — Mann. 
In  all  the  earth  no  marvel  was.     See  Light  of  Asia,  The 

(Great  Renunciation,  The). — Arnold. 
In  all    the    eastern    hemisphere.     See    Fall    of    J.    W. 

Beane,  The. — Herford. 
In  all  the  land,  range  up,  range  down.     See  I^angley 

Lane. — Buchanan. 
In  all  this  Cuban  business  there  is  one  man  stands  out. 

See  Message  to  Garcia. — Hubbard. 
In  an  ocean,  'way  out  yonder.     See  Dinkey-bird,  The. 

—Field. 
In  an  old  abbey  town,  a  long,  long  while  ago.     See 

Pickwick  Papers,  "The  (Goblins,  The). — Dickens. 
In  an  old  churchyard  stood  a  stone.     See  She  Always 

Made  Home  Happy. — Anon. 
In  ancient  times,  as  story  tells.     See  Baucis  and  Phile- 
mon.— Swift. 
In  and  out,  in  and  out.     See  At  the  Window. — Anon. 
In  any    such    moral    struggle    as    temperance    reform 

involves.      See  "Come  out  from  among  Them." — 

Lathrop. 
In  April  come  he  will.     See  Cuckoo,  The. — Anon. 
In  April  the  koo-coo  can  sing  her  note  by  rote.     See 

Cuckoo's  Voice,  The. — Heywood. 
In  Arcadv,  wherever  that  may  be.     See  Fall  of  Cory- 
don,  The.— W.  B.  A. 
In  Armoryke,  that  cleped  is  Britevne.     See  Canterbury 

Tales.  The  (Frankeleynes  Tale,  The).— Chaucer. 
In  arms   the   Austrian    phalanx   stood.     See   Patriot's 

Password,  The  — Montgomery. 
In  as  few  words  as  possible  I  wish  to  lay  before  the 

nation.      See     Great     Beef      Contract,      The. — 

Clemens. 
In  Athens,    when     all    learning    centred    there.     See 

Statue.  The. — Anon. 
In  attempting  to  coerce  her  American  colonies.     See 

History  of  the  United  States  (Great  Britain    and 

her  American  Colonies). — Bancroft. 
In  Autumn's  silent  twilight,  sad  and  sweet.     See  After 

Many  Days. — Marston. 
In  batting,  hold  your  bat  upright.     See  Golden  Rules 

for  the  Young. — (Boy's  Own  Paper,  The.) 
In  battle  line  of  sombre  gray.     See  Spirit  of  the  Maine, 

The.— .lenks. 
In  Being's  floods,  in  Action's  storm.     See  Faust  (Speech 

of  the  Erdgeist  in  "Faust"). — Carlyle. 
In  Brentford  town,  of  old  renown,  there  lived  a  Mr. 

Bray.     See  Duel,  The.— Hood. 
In  Broad  Street  buildings  (on  a  winter  night).     See 

Gouty  Merchant  and  the  Stranger,  The. — Smith. 
In  building  up   natur'   he  thought  the  Creator.     See 

Pessimistic  Philosopher,  The. — Anon. 
In  bursts  of  yellow,  vital  and  intense.     See  October 

Trees.— Abercrombie. 
In  candent  ire  the  solar  splendor  flames.     See  .(Estiva- 
tion.— Holmes. 
In  cap  and  gown  I  saw  her  go.     See  In  Cap  and  Gown. 

— Anon. 
In  Carnival    we   were,    and    supp'd    that  night.     See 

Versailles. — Brooke. 
In  certain  brains  there  is  an  inborn  might.     See  Genius. 

— Coates. 
In  childhood,  when  with  eager  eyes.     See  Trance  of 

Time,  The. — Newman. 
In  childhood's  unsuspicious  hours.     See  Epicurean. — 

Linton. 
In  Christ  I  feel  the  heart  of  God.     See  Our  Christ. — 

Larcom. 
In  Clementina's  artless  mien.     See  Sixteen. — Landor. 
In  college   verse,   both   Love   and   Fun.     See   College 

Verse. — (William's  Argo.) 
In  Common   Prayer  our  hearts  ascend.     See  With  a 

Prayer-book. ^Adams. 
In  company  One  evening.     See  Who  Would  be  a  Boy 

Agai  n  ?— Anon . 
"In  conclusion,"  continued  the  ape,  sadly,  "permit  me 

to  say  things  are  woefully  disproportioned.     See 

Overheard  at  the  Zoo. — Snyder. 
In  considering    the    many    instrumentalities    through 
which  an  institution  of  the  higher  learning  rises. 
See  Situation  of  a  University,  The. — Capen. 


In  Corsica's  far  distant  isle.     See  Corsican  Vendetta; 

or.  Love's  Triumph,  The. — Anon. 
In  Count  Fiilek's  halls  there's  wild  revel  and  gay.     See 

Lady  of  Gedo,  The. — Safford. 
In  courts  and   palaces  he  also  reigns.     See  Paradise 

Lost. — -Milton. 
In  cycles    past,    when    here    on    earth    before.     See 

Affinity. — Anon. 
In  darker  [or  darkest]  days  and  nights  of  storm.     See 

Hymn. — Parker. 
In  days  gone  by  brave  knights  would  vie.     See  Semper 

Idem. — Hale. 
In  days  gone  by,  St.  Valentine.     See  To  St.  Valentine. 

— Reese. 
In  days    of    yore,    when    the    world    was  young.     See 

Jupiter  and  the  Bee. — ^.(Esop. 
In  days  when  George  the  Third  was  king.     See  Miss 

Nancy's  Gown. — Cooke. 
In  days  which  antedate  the  Huns.     See  Hamilton — • 

Sabine. 
In  dealing    with    the    liquor    traffic,    there    are    three 

classes.     See  Bible  and  the  Liquor  Traffic,  The. — 

St.  John. 
In  def-ds  of  love   exceH   excel!     See  Church   Bells. — 

Anon. 
In  der  shweed  long  ago  I  dinked  I  vas   shmard.     See 

In  der  Shweed  Long  Ago. — Gooft. 
In  dim     green     depths     rot     ingot -laden     ships.     See 

Sunken  Gold. — Lee-Hamilton. 
In   discourse    more  sweet.     See  Paradise  Lost. — Mil- 
ton. 
In  distant   countries  have   I   been.     See  Last   of  the 

Flock,  The. — Wordsworth. 
In  dramatic  writing  the  difference  between  the  Grecian 

and      Roman.     See     Dramatic      Styles. — (Black- 
wood's Magazine.) 
In  each  green  leaf  a  memory  let  lie.  See  With  Roses.— 

Lloyd. 
In  early    days,  ere    Common    Sense.     See    Mushroom 

Hunt,  The.— Halpin. 
In  early    youth,    as    you    may    guess.     See    Young 

Gazelle,  The.— Parke. 
In  eastern   lands  they  talk  of  flowers.     See  same. — 

Percival. 
In  eddying   course    when    leaves    began    to    fly.     See 

Echo  and  Silence. — Brydges. 
In  Eden,  ere  yet  innocence  of  heart.     See  Table  Talk 

(Past  and  Future  of  Poetry,  The). — Cowper. 
In  1898   the   army   of   the   United    States.     See   Our 

Pledge  to  Puerto  Rico.— Littlefield. 
In  eighteen  hundred  sixty-one.     See  Substitute,  The. 

— Baskett. 
In  either    hand    the    hastening    angel    caught.     See 

Paradise  Lost   (Departure   from   Paradise,  The). 

— Milton. 
In  England  a  Tory  member  of  Parliament  said  to  me. 

See  Home  Rule  for  Ireland. — Depew. 
In  Esop,  we  are  told,  a  boy.     See  Boy  and  his  Mother, 

The. — -Kavanaugh. 
In  Essex  County  the  Puritan  founded  his  first  town. 

See  Puritan  of  Essex  County,  The. — Lodge. 
In  Europe,  three  centuries  ago.  the  cause  of  the  people 

took    form.     See    Major-General    John  Sedgwick 

(Spirit  of  Puritanism,  The).- — Curtis. 
In  every    strain    of    affectionate    and    discriminating 

admiration.      See    Wendell   Phillips  (Eulogy    on 

Wendell  Phillips).— Curtis. 
In  every  temple,  heritage  and  hall.     See  Jerusalem  De- 
livered (Sophronia  and  Olindo). — Wiffin. 
In  every  village  marked  with  little  spire.     See  School- 
mistress,   The    (Village  School    Mistre.ss,  The). — 

Shenstone. 
In  facile  natures  fancies  quickly  grow.     See  Persever- 
ance.— Vinci. 
In  fair   Naples,    just    at   noonday.     See   Flower   Girl, 

The. — Wordsworth. 
In  Farmingtown    a    maiden    dwelt.     See    Unfaithful- 
ness.— McBride. 
In  finding  herself  once  more  by  ttfe  side  of  Ivanhoe. 

See  Besieged  Castle,  The. — Scott. 
In  five  minutes  after  the  explosion  there  were  scores 

at  the  mouth  of  the  pit.     See  In  the  Pit. — Burnett. 
In  Fleet-street  dwelt,  in   days  of   yore.     See  Magpie, 

The. — Anon. 
In  ffickering  light  and  shade  the  broad  stream  goes-. 

See  September  Days. — Arnold. 
In  Florence,    years   ago,    there    dwelt    a   youth.     See 

Ringer's  Vengeance,  The. — Abbey. 
In  form  and  feature,  face  and  limb.     See  Twins,  The. — 

Leigh. 
In  former  times  there  ruled,  as  governor  of  the    Al- 

hambra.     See  Alhambra,  The  (Governor  and  the 

Notary,  The).— Irving. 


717 


In  front 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


In  front  of  my  pew  sits  a  maiden.     See  Broken  Wing, 

The. — Anon. 
In  front    the    awful    Alpine    track.     See    Stanzas    in 

Memory   of   th^  Author    of    "Obermann." — Ar- 
nold . 
Ill  fro.sty    array    St.    Valentine's    Day.     See    Martin's 

Reward. — Richards. 
In   full-flown   dignity   see  Wolsey   stand.     See  Vanity 

of  Human  Wishes,  The  (Rise  and  Fall  of  Wolsey, 

The). — Johnson. 
In  future  I  am  going  to  be  careful  what   I  do.     See 

Dolly  Dialogues,  The  (Retribution). — Hope. 
In  geniab  mood,  while  at  our  pastoral  banquet  thus  we 

sate.     See   Excursion,    The  (Twin    Peaks   of    the 

Valley). — Wordsworth. 
In  genial   spring,   beneath  the  quivering  shade.     See 

.\ngling. — Pope. 
In  Germantown.  near  Philadelphia,  several  years  ago. 

See  How  .lake  Schneider  Went  Blind. — .■Vnon. 
In  getting  evidence  of  imorovement  or  deterioration. 

See  Prohibition  in  Atlanta  (Business  Side  of  Pro- 
hibition, The). — Grady. 
In  going  to  my  naked  bed  as  one  that  would  have  slept. 

See  Amantium  Ira;. — Edwardes. 
In  golden  youth,  when  seems  the  earth.     See  Geth- 

semane. — Wheeler. 
In  good  condition,  cheap,  on  account  of  Competition. 

See  For  Sale,  a  Horse. — Taylor. 
In  good    King   C^harles'    golden    days.     See   Vicar   of 

Bray,  The. — Anon. 
In  Granada    bells    were    ringing.     See    First    Thanks- 
giving,  The. — Butterworth. 
In  gray  antiquity  there  lived  a  man.     See  Opal  Ring, 

The. — Lessing. 
In  gray  Spielburg"»  dreary    fortress    buried    from  the 

light  of  day.     See  Antonio  Oriboni. — Preston. 
In  green  old  gardens,  hidden  away.     See  In  Green  Old 

Gardens. — Currie. 
In  half-forgotten  days  of   old.     See  Earthly  Paradise, 

The  (Writing  on  the  Image,  The). — Morris. 
In  harvest  time,  when  fields  and  woods.     See  Oppor- 
tunity.— Anon.  . 
In  heaven  a  .spirit  doth  dwell.     Ser  Israfel. — Poe. 
In  heaven  signs  I     See  Harold. — Tennyson. 
In  heavy  sleep  the  Caliph  lay.     See  Caliph  and  Satan, 

The.— Clarke. 
In  her  boudoir,  faintly  perfumed   by  some  faint  and 

subtle  vapor.     See  Wooing  of  Lady  Amabel,  The. 

— Anstey. 
In  her  ear  he  whispers  gaily.     See  Lord  of  Burleigh, 

The. — Tennyson. 
"In  Herkimer   County   there   never   was   seen."     See 

Mournful  Story,  A. — Anon. 
In  him    Demosthenes    was    heard   again.     See   Table 

Talk  (Lord  Chatham). — Cowper. 
In  his  admirable  series  of  studies  of  twentieth-century 

problems.     See  National  Duties. — Roosevelt. 
In  his    deportment,    shape   and    mien    appeared.     See 

Laodamia. — Wordsworth. 
In  his  dim  chapel  day  by  day.     See  Organist,  The. — 

Lampman. 
In  His  glory!  When  the  spheres.     See  Kyrie  Eleison. — 

Whitney. 
In  his  mouth  nations  spake;  his  tongue  might  be.     See 

On  the  Death  of  Lord  Hastings.- — Dryden. 
In  his    own    image    the   Creator   made.     See   Man. — 

Landor. 
In  hi^  recent   work  on   "American   History   from   an 

English    standpoint."     See   Abraham    Lincoln. — 

Smith. 
In  his  room  alone  and  silent.     See  Vision  of  Handel, 

The.— Blatchford. 
In  his  tower  sat  the  poet.     See  Rose,  The. — Lowell. 
In  his    wind-shaken    tent    the    soldier    sits.     See    At 

Christmas-time. — .\non. 
In  holy  night  we  made  the  vow.     See  Vow,  The. — 

Irteleager. 
In  honour   to    thy  .memory,  bles.sed    shade!     See    St. 

Martin's  Day. — Willis. 
In  hood  of  blue  's  soft,  warm  embrace.     See  In  Hood 

of  Blue.— Anon 
In  hope  to  'scape  the  law,  do  naught  amiss.     See  Of 

Circumspection. — Chapman. 
In  Ipswich  town,  not  far  from  sea.     See  Heartbreak 

Hill.— Thaxter. 
In  Ireland,  ferr  over  the  sea.     See  Syr  Cauline. — Anon. 
In  its  summer  pride  array'd.     See  Funeral  Ode  on  the 

Death  of  the  Princess  Charlotte. — Southey. 
In  January,    when    down   the   dairy   the   cream    and 

clabber    freeze.     See    Country    Sleighing. — Sted- 

man. 
In  Junior  year,  ah,  fancies  light.     See  In  Junior  Year. 
— Barney. 


In  Koln,  a  town  of  monies  and  bones.     See  Cologne. — 

Coleridge. 
In  leathern  volume,  old  and  quaint.     See  Knight  and 

the  Page,  The. — Howe. 
In  letters   large   upon   the   frame.     See   What's   in   a 

Name? — Munkit  trick. 
In  life's  rosy  morning.     See  Never  Say  Fail. — Anon. 
In  lighter  vein, — blue    eyes    and    rosy    lips.     See  "In 

Lighter  Vein." — Adams. 
In  little  Daisy's  dimpled  hand.     See  Lost  Penny,  The. 

— Evans. 
In  London  city  was  Beichan  born.     See  Young  Beichan 

and  Susie  Pye. — .\non. 
In  London  once  I  lost  my  way  in  faring  to  and  fro.     See 

Plain  Direction,  A. — .\non. 
In  London,   thirty  years   ago.     See  Old   May   Day. — 

Anon. 
In  looking  forward  to  the  moment  which  is  intended 

to  terminate  the  career.     See  Farewell  Address. — ■ 

Washington. 
In  loopy  links  the  canker  crawls.     See  Indifiference. — 

Anon. 
In  Love,  if  I-ove  be  T^ove,  if  Love  be  ours.     See    Idylls 

of  the  King  (Vivien's  Song). — Tennyson. 
In  lowly  dale,  fast  by  a  river's  side.     See  Castle  of 

Indolence.  The. — Thomson. 
In  Lyons,   on   the   mart   of  that    French   town.     See 

Stranger's  Alms,  The. — -Abbey. 
In  man  or  woman — but  far  most  in  man.     See  Task, 

The  (Affectation  in  the  Pulpit). — Cowper. 
In  Manchester  a  maiden  dwelt.     See  Love  and  Murder. 

— Anon. 
In  man's  capacity  for  education  we  seem  to  see  an 

original  gift.     See  Man's  Capacity  for  Education. 

—Ellis. 
In  many  a  lecture,  many  a  book.     See  Time  Spent  in 

Dress. — Lamb. 
In  many  respects,  the  nations  of  Christendom  collect- 
ively   are    becoming    somewhat    analogous.     See 

Growth  of  International  Sympathies. — Wayland. 
In  marble    Sebastopol   the   bells   to   chapel   call.     See 

Inkermann. — Mackay. 
In  martial  sports  I  had  my  cunning  tried.     See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  LIIL). — Sidney. 
In  mathematics    he    was    greater.     See    Hudibras. — 

Butler. 
Tn  Mather's  Magnalia  Christi.     See  Phantom  Ship,  The. 

— Longfellow. 
In  May  the  valley  lilies  ring.     See  Flower  Dances. — 

Anderson. 
In  May,  when   sea-winds  pierced  our  solitudes.     See 

Rhodora.  The. — Emerson. 
In  meadows  deep  with  hay,  I  see.     See  Even-time. — 

Thom.son. 
In  mediaeval    Rome,    I    know   not    where.     See    Mori- 

turi  Salutamus. — Longfellow. 
In  melancholic   fancy.     See   Hallo,    my   Fancy. — Cle- 

land. 
In  mellowing  skies  the  mated  robins  sing.     See  Plant- 
ing the  Oak. — Butterworth. 
In  men  whom  men  condemn  as  ill.     See  Judge  Not. — 

Miller. 
In  merry  mood  here  roaming.     See  Roaming.— Anon. 
In  mid  whirl  of  the  dance  of  Time  ye  start.     See  Exit. 

— Watson. 
In  midst    of   wild    green    pasture-lands,    cut    through. 

See  Monks'  Magnificat,  The. — Nesbit. 
In  Milwaukee,  a  day  or  two  ago,  during  a  slight  lull  in 

business.     See  Two  Bootblacks,  1116. — .\non. 
In  moods  of  transient  mournfulness.     See  Loneliness. 

— Hayne. 
In  moss-prankt  dells  which  the  sunbeams  flatter.     See 

I.,overs  and  a  Reflection. — Calverley. 
In  mothpr's    room    still    stands    the    chair.     See    In 

Mother's  Room. — Lincoln. 
In  mourning,  in  mourning,  the  kingdom  appears.     See 

Death  of  Queen  Mary,  The. — .\non. 
In  njultitudes  of  cases,  perhaps  in  the  greater  part  of 

them.     See  same. — Dix. 
In  my  collection  framed  of  curios.     See  Master's  Pen — 

A  Confession,  The. — Anon. 
In  my  first  years  and  prime  not  yet  at  height.     See 

Sonnets  from  the  Poems. — Drummond. 
In  my  garden  I  spend  my  days;  in  my  library  I  spend 

my  nights.     See  .\mong  my  Books. — Smith. 
In  my  heart  are  many  chambers  through  which  I  wan- 
der free.     See  In  My  Heart. — Reade. 
In  my  poor  mind  it  is  most  sweet  to  muse.     See  Child- 
hood.— I^amb. 
In  my  school-days,  when  I  had    lost  one  shaft.     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The. — Shakespeare. 
In  my  sleep  I  was  fain  of  their  fellow.ship,  fain.     See 
Sunrise. — Lanier. 


718 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


In  Spenser's 


In  Norfolk  Bay,  long  years  ago,  where  waved.     See 

American  Exile,  An. — Brown. 
In  northwestern    Ohio    there    is    a    settlement    called 

Africa .     See    Blessed    Are    de    Peacemakers. — 

Dension. 
In  numbers,  and  but  these  few.     See  Ode  on  the  Birth 

of  Our  Saviour,  An. — Herrick. 
In  obedience  to  instructions,   I   should  never  dare  to 

disregard.     See     Nominating     General     Grant. — 

Conkling. 
In  obedience  to  your  will,  I  rise  your  humble  organ. 

See    Funeral    Oration    on    the    Death    of    General 

Washington. — Lee. 
In  olden  time,  and  when  Christianity  had  not  inter- 

ferred  with  it.     See  Suicide;  or.  The  Sin   of  Self- 
destruction. — Talmage. 
In  olden  time — in  ages  long  since  flown.     See  Princess 

and  the  Rabbi,  The. — Gardner. 
In   olden  times    a  castle  stood,   so  high   and   stately, 

too.     See  Minstrel's  Curse,  The. — Uhland. 
In  olden  times  when  a  flood  or  an  earthquake,  or  any 

other  great  disaster    came.     See  Dragon,   The. — 

Anon. 
In  one   dread   night   our   city,    saw,    and   sigh'd.     See 

Reopening     of     the      Drury    Lane      Theater.  — 

Byron. 
Ifi  one    of    bonnie    Scotland's    homes.     See    Gowans 

under  her  Feet. — Gibson. 
In  one  of  our  Down-east  churches.     See  He  Loved  to 

Steal. — Anon. 
In  one  of  the  large  and  rich  cities  of  China  there  once 

lived  a  tailor  named  Mustapha.     See  Aladdin;  or, 

The  Wonderful  I>amp. — Anon. 
In  one  of  the  >outh  side  Chinese  Sunday-schools.     See 

Chinese  Version  of  Jonah  and  the  Whale,  A. — 

Head. 
In  one  rich  drop  of  blood,  ah,  what  a  sea.     See  One 

Country — One  Sacrifice. — Gilder. 
In  order   to   lead    a   religious   life   in   the   world.     See 

I^ateiit    Principles   of   Religion. — Caird. 
In  other  days — my  thoughts  retrace.     See  To  a  Picture. 

— Milholen. 
In  other  lands   monumental   arches   and   columns   of 

victory  celebrate  territorial  conquest.     See  Wash- 
ington Arch  in  New  York,  The. — Curtis. 
"In  our  admiration  for  the  manhood  of  General  Grant." 

See  Grant's  Place  in  History. — Anon. 
In  our  period,  no  young  man  and  no  young  woman  can 

hope  to  succeed  in  any  vocation.     See  Success  in 

Life. — Anon. 
In  our  walks  we  see,  almost  daily,  unhappy  matches. 

See  Wrangling  Pair,  The. — Valentine. 
In  Paco  town  and  in  Paco  tower.     See  Ballad  of  Paco 

Town. — ScoUard. 
In  Palestine  long  years  ago.     See  Two  Brothers,  The. 

—Talmud. 
In  palmy  days  of  old,  when  Greece  and  Rome  held 

sway.     See  Carnival  of  Sports,  A. — Minster. 
In  Paris,    monologues    are    the    fashion.     Some    are 

in  verse.     See  Romance  of  a  Hat. — Latimer. 
In  pastures  green?     Not  always.     See  He  Leadeth  Me. 

— Barry. 
In  peace  love  tunes  the  shepherd's  reed.     See  Lay  of 

the  Last  Minstrel. — Scott. 
In  performance  of  the   duty   assigned   to   me  on   this 

occasion.      See     Garfield     Statue,     The. — Cleve- 
land. 
In  petticoat  of  green.     See  Phyllis. — Drummond.- 
In  praise  of  little  children  I  will  say.     See  Laus  Infan- 

tium. — Canton. 
In  praise  of  thee  my  lips  I  ope.     See  Lines  to  a  Trans- 
fer Check. — (Harvard  Lampoon.) 
In  preserving  among  the  sons  that  spirit  of  patriotism. 

See  Reverence  for  the  Flag. — Porter. 
In  pride  of  wit,  when  high  desire  of  fame.     See  To   his 

Fair  Idea. — Drayton. 
In  proceeding  to  answer  the  argument  of  the  gentle- 
man.    See  Reply  to  Mr.  Wickham  in  Burr's  Trial. 

—Wirt. 
In  promulgating      your      esoteric      coagitations.     See 

Don't  Use  Big  Words. — Anon. 
In  Pumpkin  town  there  lived  a  girl  as  fair  as  any  rose. 

See  Mournful  Tale,  A. — McBride. 
In  purple  and  fine  linen.     See  Royalty. — Knowles. 
In  quantity  if  not  in  quality  there  is  something  novel 

in  both.     See  Newest  Promises  and   Perils   of  the 

Temperance    Reform,     The     (Promises     and    the 

Perils,  etc.). — Cook. 
In  radiant   youth   we   walk   among   the   flowers.     See 

"Memento  Mori." — Peterson. 
In  regal  quiet  deepi     See  same. — Ingelow. 
In  Roman  households,  when  their  dear  ones  died.     See 

Adelaide  Anne  Procter. — Arnold. 


In  Rose  Hill,  Chicago,  stands  a  monument  to  the  Boys 

in   Blue.     See   Heroes   and   the   Flowers,   The. — 

Taylor. 
In  Rotten  Row  a  cigarette  I  sat  and  smoked,  with  no 

regret.     See  In  Rotten  Row. — Henley. 
In  ruling   well    what    guerdon?     Life    runs    low.     See 

Two  Old  Kings,  The.— De  Tabley. 
In  running  the  mind  along  the  long  list  of  sincere  and 

devout  Christians.     See  Great  Minds  in  Their  Re- 
lations to  Christianity. — Erskine. 
In  rural  occupation  there  is  nothing  mean  and  debasing. 

See  Charms  of  Rural  Life,  The. — Irving. 
In  Sana,  O,  in  Sana,  God,  the  Lord.     See  Prince  Adeb. 

— Boker. 
In  Scarlet    towne,    where    I  was  borne.     See  Barbara 

Allen's  Cruelty. — Anon. 
In  Scharfenstein  at  noon  of  night  awakes  a  dreadful 

din.     See  Legend  of  Hesse,  A. — Dingelstedt. 
In  schools    of    wisdom    all    the    day    was    spent.     See 

Mother's  Jewels,  The. — Trench. 
In  Scotland  there  was  a  baby  bom.     See  Hind  Horn.- — 

Anon. 
In  search  from   "A"  to   "Z"  they  passed.     See  Her 

Name. — Anon. 
In  secret  aisle  the  abbey's  walls  beneath.     See  Mar- 

mion  (Constance  de  Beverley). — Scott. 
In  se'enteen  hunder  an'  forty-nine.     See  On  Andrew 

Turner. — Burns. 
In  selecting  for  our  topic   "The   Spirit   that    Should 

Accompany   Our   Republican   Institutions."     See 

Spirit  that  Should  Animate,  The. — Anon. 
In  September  last  the  daughter  of  a  Towsontown  man. 

See  Cultured  Daughter  of  a  Plain  Grocer,  The. — 

Anon. 
In  seventeen  hundred   and    fifty-nine.     See  Hawke. — 

Newbolt. 
In  seventeen  hundred  thirty-two  George  Washington 

was  born.     See  Washington's  Life. — Bryant. 
In  seventeen  hundred  thirty-two,  this  very  month  and 

day.     See  February  Twenty-.second. — Allison. 
In  seventeen    hundred    seventy-eight.     See    King    of 

Spain  and  the  Horse,  The. — Pindar. 
In  1777,  within  a  few  days    of  one  year  after  the  Dec- 
laration.    See  National  Flag,  The   (Our  Flag). — 

Beecher. 
In  shadowy  calm  the  boat.     See  Hope. — Stewart. 
In  shining  groups,  each  stem  a  pearly  ray.     See  Ghost- 
flowers. — Higginson. 
In  shirts  of  check  and  tallowed  hair.     See  Money  Musk. 

— Taylor. 
In  Siberia's  wastes.     See  Siberia. — Mangan. 
In  sight  of  home,  the  dear  old  home!     See  Mother's 

Lullaby. — Short. 
"In  silence,  and  at  night,  the  Conscience  feels."     See 

R)chelieu ;  or.  The  Conspiracy  (Cardinal's  Soliloquy, 

The).— Bulwer-Lytton 
In  silence  I  must  take  my  seat.     See  Table  Rules  for 

Little  Folks. — Anon. 
In  silence  mighty  things  are  wrought.     See  Silence. — 

Lynch. 
"In  sin  conceived,"  you  tell  us,  "condemned  for  the 

guilt  of  birth."     See  Snake  and  the  Baby,  The. — 

.\rnold. 
In  '67  Jake  Poole  was  staging  the  route  from  Gallatin 

to  Helena,  in  Montana.     See  Stage-driver's  Story. 

The. — Anon. 
In  slumber  as  the  morning  broke.     See  Dream  of  the 

Spanish  Admiral,  The. — Dorman. 
In  slumbers    of     midnight     the     sailor-boy    lay.     See 

Sailor-boy's  Dream,  The. — Dimond. 
In  sober  mornings,  do  not  thou  rehearse.    See  When  He 

Would  Have  his  Verses  Read. — Herrick. 
In  soil  the  dearest  and  the  best.     See  Song  for  Tree- 
planting. — Underwood. 
In  some  forgotten  ruler's  reign.     See  Brother  Antonio. 

—Allen. 
In  somer  when  the  shawes  be  sheyne.     See  May  in  the 

Green -wood. — Anon. 
In  sooth  he  was  a  mighty   King.     See  King's  Fool, 

The. — Livingston. 
In  sooth    I    have   forgotten,    for   it   is   long   ago.     See 

Hilda's  Little  Hood. — Boyesen. 
In  sooth,  I  know  not  why  I  am  so  sad.   See  Merchant 
of  Venice,  The  (Scene  from  "The  Merchant,"  etc.). 
— Shakespeare. 
In  sorrow   bowed.     See   Loss   of   the    College    Pump, 

The.— Coolidge. 
In  speaking  of  a  person's  faults.     See  Be  Careful   what 

You  Say. — Anon. 
In  speaking  of  the  sons  of  New  England.     See  Tribute 

to  General  Sherman,  A. — Porter. 
In  Spenser's  gallery  of  portraits  among  many  that  are 
richly  warm  in  coloring.     See  "Una.  " — Anon. 


719 


In  spite 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


n  spite  of  all  the  learned  have  said.  See  Indian 
BuryinK-groiind.  The. — Freneau. 

n  spite  "of  censorship,  in  spite  of  the  Index.  See  tame. 
— Huso. 

n  spite  o(  my  phyajfian.  who  is.  entre  notu,  a  fogy. 
Se*  My  Cigar.— uundry.  c      -w 

n  spite  of  outward  blemishes,  she  shone.  See  Kitty 
Clive.— Churchill. 

n  spring  I  found  the  violet.     See  Gentian. — Brown. 

n  spring,  when  branches  of  woodbine.  See  Trailing 
Arbutus. — Abbey. 

n  Spring  [w.  In  the  spring!,  when  the  green  gits 
back  in  the  trees.  See  When  the  Green  Gits  Back 
in  the  Trees. — Riley. 

n  stalwart  contrast,  large  of  heart  and  frame.  See 
Ixird  Melbourne. — Lytton. 

n  stifling  mows  the  men  became  oppressed.  See 
.\ugu.st  .\ftemoon.  An. — Irvine. 

n  such  a  night,  when  every  louder  wind.  See  Noc- 
turnal Reverie,  A. — Winchelsea. 

n  summer,  on  the  headlands.  See  Neckan,  The. — 
.\rnold. 

n  summer,  when  the  days  were  long.  See  Summer 
Days. — Call.  c       o  u 

n  summer  when  the  shaws  be  sheen.  See  Kobin 
Hood  and  the  Monk. — Anon. 

n  sunny  girlhood's  vernal  life.  See  Portrait,  A. — 
Ashbey-Sterry. 

n  sunset's  light  o'er  Afric  thrown.  See  Traveller  at 
the  Source  of  the  Nile,  The. — Hemans. 

n  sweet  dreams  softer  than  unbroken  rest.  See  Mem- 
ory.— Tennyson. 

n  tangled  wreaths,  in  clustered  gleaming  stars.  See 
Yellow  .Jessamine. — rWoolson. 

n  tattered  old  slippers  that  toast  at  the  bars.  See 
Cane-bottomed  Chair,  The. — Thackeray. 

'In  teacup-times!"  The  style  of  dress.  See  Rondeau 
to  Ethel,  A. — Dobson. 

n  tempus  old  a  hero  lived,  'qui  loved  puellas  deux. 
See  Ich  bin  dein. — Anon. 

n  1066,  the  Normans  invaded  England,  and  the  bat- 
tle of  Hastings  broke.  See  Normans,  The. — 
Tracy. 

n  Tennessee,  the  dogwood  tree.  See  Tennessee. — 
Brooks. 

n  that  delightful  land  wl)ich  is  washed  by  the  Dela- 
ware's waters.  See  Evangeline  (Meeting  of  Evan- 
geline and  Gabriel,  The).— Longfellow. 

n  that  enchanted  hour.  See  Love's  Reminiscences. — 
Dallas. 

n  that  hour,  which  of  all  the  twenty-four  is  most 
emblamatical  of  heaven.     See  same. — Robertson. 

n  that  narrow  Venetian  street.  See  Saint  Christo- 
pher.— Howells. 

n  that  soft  midland  where  the  breezes  bear.  See 
Rodney's  ride.— Brooks. 

n  the  academy  I  attended,  elocution  was  taught. 
See  My  Experience  in  Elocution. — Neal. 

n  the  Acadian  land,  on  the  .shores  of  the  Basin  of 
Minas.     See  Evangeline. — Longfellow. 

n  the  ages  of  faith,  before  the  day.  See  Ave  Maria. — 
Austin. 

n  the  ancient  republics  of  Greece  and  Rome.  See 
Industry  and  Eloquence. — Wirt. 

n  the  ancient  town  of  Bruges.  See  Carillon. — Long- 
fellow. 

n  the  Arctic  Ocean  near  the  coast  of  Norway  is  situ- 
ated the  famous  Maelstrom  or  whirlpool.  See 
Caught  in  the  Maelstrom. — Wiley. 

n  the  art  of  speaking,  as  in  all  other  arts.  See 
Eloquence  and  Logic  (On  Eloquence). — Preston. 

n  the  autumn  of  1830  I  attended  a  Methodist  camp- 
meeting.     See  Flood  and  the  Ark,  The. — Anon. 

n  the  backwoods  of  Ohio,  in  the  days  of  long  ago. 
See  When  the  Circuit  Rider  Came. — Adams. 

n  the  barn  the  tenant  cock.  See  Morning. — Cun- 
ningham. 

n  the  beautiful  age  of  fairy  mirth.  See  Story  of  the 
Gentians,  The. — Anon. 

n  the  beautiful  city  of  Worms,  in  Burgundy,  dwelt 
the  maiden  Kriemhild.  See  Nibelungen  Lied, 
The  Story  of  the.— Rabb. 

n  the  beautiful  month  of  October,  I  made  a  foot 
excursion.  See  Outre-Mer  (Valley  of  the  Loire, 
The). — Longfellow. 

n  the  beauty  of  the  lilies  Christ  was  born  across  the 
sea.     See  Battle  Hymn  of  the  Republic. — Howe. 

n  the  best  chamber  of  the  house.  See  Bottom 
Drawer,  The. — Barr. 

n  the  big  soft  easy-ch&ir.  See  T6te-&-t6te  with 
Phyllis.— Smith. 

n  the  bitter  gloom  of  a  winter's  mom.  See  Two. — 
Anon. 


In  the  bitter  waves  of  woe.     See  Ultima  Veritas. — 

Gladden.  ^^        ,^,         ^^         , 

the  black  furrow  of  a  field.     See  Hare,  The. — Ramal. 
the  bleak  midwinter.     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. — 

Rossetti. 
the  bosom  of   one   of  these   spacious  coves.     See 

Legend  of  Sleepy  Hollow,  The. — Irving, 
the  brave  old  days  of  the  Table  Round.     See  Knight 

and  the  Lady,  The. — Trowbridge, 
the  bright  October  morning.     See  Church  of  Brou, 

The  (Hunters,  The).— Arnold, 
the  broad  light  of  the  day  my  grim  visage  I  hide. 

See  King  Alcohol's  Soliloquy. — Sawyer. 
the  brown  of  her  eyes.     See  Auf  Wiedersehen. — 

Candee.  „     ^  ™ 

the  busiest  haunts  of  Florence.     See  Duomo,  The.— 

Anon, 
the  busy  active  duties  of  every  day  life.     See  We 

Do  not  Stop  to  Think. — Anon, 
the  centre  of  the  great  city  of  London.     See  Little 

Britain. — Irving, 
the    chamber    anext    me    the    corpses    sleep.     See 

Tried. — Ragsdale.  ,        „     „,       ^ 

the  chapel  of  Henry  the  Seventh.     See  Two  Queens 

in  Westminister. — Morford. 
the  church  of  San  Marco  is  the  pulpit  from  which 

Savonarola  spoke.     See  Savonarola. — Punshon.  . 
the  church-yard,   up  in  the  old  high  town.     See 

Nine  Graves  in  Edinbro. — Russell, 
the  city  of  Genoa,  over  the  sea.     See  Christopher 

C . — Anon. 

the  city  of  Sevilla.     See  Lady  of  Sevilla,  The. — 

Chanter, 
the  city  of  Venice,  blank-blank  Anno  Domini.     See 

Modern  Version  of  the  Merchant  of  Venice,  A. — 

Barber, 
the  fa— C]  coign  of  the  cliff,  between  lowland  and 

highland.     See  Forsaken  Garden,  A. ^Swinburne. 
the  coiled  shell  sounds  Ocean's  distant  roar.     See 

Tutelage,  The.— Bell, 
the  Convent  of  St.  Joseph,  high  above  the  Pinchon 

Pass.     See  Friar's  Christmas,  The. — Blake, 
the  crimson  of  the  morning,  in  the  whiteness  of  the 

noon.     See  Coming  of  His  Feet,  The. — Allen, 
the  crimson  sunset  of  the  spring.     See  Hylas,  The. — 

Thaxter. 
the  cross  of  Christ  I  glory.     See  same. — Bowring. 
the  dark  silence  of  her  chambers  low.     See  What 

March  Does. — Smith. 
the  dark  Thuringian  forest  stood  a  castle  tall  and 

grim.     See  Wizard's  Spell,  The. — Douglas, 
the  darkness  and  chill  of  the  night.     See  Funeral, 

A. — Knowles. 
the  darkness  deep.     See  Song  of  the  Turnkey,  The. 

—Smith, 
the  day  or  night.    See  Shadow  Pictures. — Sherman, 
the    day    the    sun    is    darkened.     See   At    Last. — 

Brooke, 
the    days    of    old.     See    Modern    Pirates,    The. — 

Welch, 
the  days  of  the  long  gone  by.     See  Song  to  the- 

Queen,  The. — Anon, 
the  days  that  tried  our  fathers.     See  Poems  Re- 
ceived in   Response  to   an  Advertisepient   for  a 

National  Anthem  (National  Anthem  by  Gen.  Geo. 

P.  M ).— Newell. 

the  days  when  great  giants  and  ogres  there  were. 

See  Charm,  The. — Egbert, 
the  Dean's  porch  a  nest  of  clay.     See  In  the  Cathe- 
dral Close. — Dowden. 
the  decline  of  Mr.  Burke's  life,  when  he  was  living 

in  retirement.     See  Edmund  Burke  and  his  Son's 

Horse. — Anon, 
the  deep  shadow  of  the  porch.     See  Bind-weed. — 

Coolidge. 
the  deepening  shades  of  the  twilight  stood  a  maiden 

young  and  fair.     See  Down  the  Track. — Thorpe, 
the  deepest  dearth  of  midnight,  while  the  sad  and 

solemn  swell.     See  Fire-fiend,  The. — Gardette. 
the  desert  of  the  Holy  Land  I  strayed.     See  Sonnet: 

"In  the  desert,"  etc. — Anon, 
the  deserted,  moon-blanch'd  street.     See  Summer 

Night,  A.- — Arnold, 
the  Diamond  Shaft  worked  Gentleman  Jim.     See 

Gentleman  Jim. — O'Connell. 
the     dim     conservatory.     See     Procrastination. — 

Anon, 
the  dirge  we  sung  o'er  him  no  censure  was  heard. 

See  On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Perceval. — Moore, 
the  door  of  the  mill  stood  Richard  Lee.     See  Taking 

Toll.— Anon, 
the  dough!     In  the  dough!     This  is  the  way  we 

make  it  go.     See  Cakes  and  Pies. — Hayward. 


720 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


In  the 


In  the  down-hill  of  life,  when  I  find  I'm  declining. 

See  In  the  Down-hill  of  Life. — Collins. 
In  the    drear-nighted    December.     See    December. — 

Keats. 
In  the  drinking-well.     See  Aunt  Eliza. — Streamer. 
In  the  dusk  of  a  summer  evening.     See  How  the  Ques- 
tion Came  Home. — Anon. 
In  the  dusk  of  the  forest  shade.     See  Men,  The. — Bell. 
In  the  early  days  of  Methodism.    See  Nestleton  Magna 

(Methodist  Class-meeting,  A).— Wray. 
In  the  early  morning-shine.     See  Life's  Hebe. — Thom- 
son. 
In  the  early  spring-time.     See  same. — Anon. 
In  the   early   summer   of   this   year,    there    came      to 

Chicago.     See  Chicago's  Greeting  to  Atlanta  and 

the  South  Land. — -Revell. 
In  the    earth — the    earth — thou    shalt    be    laid.     See 

Warning  and  Reply. — ^Bronte. 
In  the  efforts  of  the  people,  of  the  people  struggling  for 

their    rights.     See    People    Triumphant,     The. — 

Everett. 
In   the  embers  shining   bright.      See  Cradle   Song. — 

Gilder. 
In  the  evening,  I  sit  near  my  poker  and  tongs.     See 

Cricket  on  the  Hearth,  The. — Anon. 
In  the  ever-memorable  year  of  our  Lord   1609,   on  a 

Saturday   morning.     See   Knickerbocker  History 

of   New  York  (Discovery  of   the   Hudson  River, 

The). — Irving. 
In  the  fair  garden  of  celestial  peace.     See  Lines  to 

the  Memory  of  "Annie. " — Stowe. 
In  the    far   distant    times   of   legend   and    story.     See 

Legend  of  King  Nilus,  The. — Wordsworth. 
In  the  far  off  land  of  Norway.     See  Sparrows,  The. — 

Thaxter. 
In  the  farm-house  porch  the  farmer  sat.     See  Two  of 

Them. — Anon. 
In  the  fields,  where  long  ago.     See  Christmas  Hymn, 

A. — Anon. 
In  the  first  drowsy  heat  of  August  noon.     See  Early 

Goldenrod. — Judd. 
In  the   first   place,   and   as   a   matter  of   the   greatest 

necessity.      See  Vanity  Fair  (How  to  Live  Well 

on  Nothing  a  Year). — Thackeray. 
In  the  forest,  high  up  on  the  steep  shore.     See  Last 

Dream  of  the  Old  Oak  Tree,  The. — Anderson. 
In  the  freezing  cold  and  the  blinding  snow.     See  St. 

Martin  and  the  Beggar. — Sangster. 
In  the  frosty  season,  when  the    sun.     See  Skating. — 

Wordsworth. 
In  the  fullness  of  time  a  republic  rose  up  in  the  wilder- 
ness of  America.     See  Growth  of  the  American 

Republic. — Bancroft. 
In  the   gap   of   Dunlo.     See   Paddy   Blake's   Echo. — 

Lover. 
In  the  garden  of  death,  where  the  singers  whose  names 

are  deathless.     See   In   Memory   of   Barry  Corn- 
wall.— Swinburne. 
In  the  gleam  and  gloom  of  the  April  weather.     See 

Mayflower,  The. — Lincoln. 
In  the  gleaming  light  of  the  Old  Regime.     See  Coureur- 

de-Bois,  The. — Baylis. 
In  the    gloaming    of    the    gleaming    I    was    gloaming 

through    the    gleam.      See    In    the    Gloaming. — 

Thatcher. 
In  the    gloomy    ocean    bed.-    See    Kearsarge,    The. — 

Roche. 
In  the    golden    gleam    of    dawn.     See    Tides,    The. — 

Anon. 
In  the    golden    morning   of    the    world.     See    same. — 

West  wood. 
In  the    golden    reign    of   Charlemagne   the    king.     See 

Rhotruda. — Tuckerman . 
In  the  good  old  days  when  I  was  young.     See  How 

the  Cats  Went  to  Boarding-school. — Anon. 
In  the  grass  by  a  lowly  doorway.     See  Rescue.  The  — 

Riche. 
In  the  gray  dawning  across  the  wild  white  lake      See 

March. — Woolson. 
In  the  gray  of  Easter  even.     See  In  the  Breaking  of 

the  Day. — Mace. 
In  the  gray  old  Flemish  city.     See  Young  Van  Dyck, 

The. — Preston. 
In  the   great   drama  of  the  rebellion  there  were  two 

acts.       See    Memory    of    Abraham    Lincoln,    The 

(Abraham  Lincoln). — Garfield. 
In  the  greenest  of  our  valleys.     See  Haunted  Palace, 

The.— Poe. 
In  the  grim  old  light-house  tower,  with  his  daughter, 

lived   "Old   Grey."     See   Keepers  of  the   Light, 

The. — Douglas. 
In  the  groined  alcoves  of  an  ancient  tower.     See  Second 

Volume,  The.— Bell. 


In  the  Guiteau  trial,  Mr.  Porter,  commenting  on  Mr, 

Reed's     reference     to     Charlotte     Corday.     See 

Guiteau  the  Assassin. — Porter. 
In  the  hall  the  coffin  waits,   and  the  idle  armourer 

stands.     See  Laus  Deo. — Dobell. 
In  the  hand — fluttering  fearfully.     See  "Bird  in  the 

Hand  is  Worth  Two  in  the  Bush,  A. " — Anon. 
In  the  happy  time  a  coming  there'll  be  nothing  to  pro- 
voke,    See  Jingles  of  the  Street. — Anon. 
In  the   hard   winter   of    1783   and    1784.     See   Brave 

Peasant,  The. — Anon. 
In  the  heart  of  a  man.     See  Song  of  Growth,  A. — 

Roberts. 
In  the   heart  of  a  seed,   buried  deep,   so  deep.     See 

Little  Plant,  The.— Anon. 
In  the  heart  of  Helen  woke.     See  Iliad,  The  (Helen  at 

the  Scsean  Gates). — -Bryant.  ' 

In  the  heart  of  the  busy  city.     See  Old  Stohe  Basin, 

The.— Coolidge. 
In  the  heart  of  the  Hills  of  Life,  I  know.     See  My 

Springs. — Ijanier. 
In  the  heart  of  the  white  summer  mist  lay  a  green  little 

piece  of  the  world.     See  Karma. — Canton. 
In  the  heart  there  lay  buried  for  years.     See  Greater 

Memory. — O'Shaughnessy. 
In  the  high  turret  chamber  sat  the  sage.     See  Death 

as  the  Fool. — Marzials. 
In  the  highlands,  in  the  country  places.     See  In  the 

Highlands. — Stevenson. 
In  the  hollow  tree,  in  the  old  gray  tower.     See  Owl, 

The. — Procter. 
In  the    hollows    of    the    mountains.     See    Oven-bird, 

The.— Bolles. 
In  the  hour  I  first  beheld  thee.     See  Haunting  Eyes. — 

Norton. 
In  the    hour   of    death,    after   this    life's   whim.     See 

Dominus  Illuminatio  Mea. — Anon. 
In  the  hour  of  my  distress.     See  Litany  to  the  Holy 

Spirit. — Herrick. 
In  the  hour  of  peril  Liberty  called  for  defenders.     See 

Soldier's  Return,  The.— Tuttle. 
In  the  hour  of  twilight  shadows  the  Puritan  looked 

out.     See  Pilgrim's  Vision,  The.— Holmes. 
In  the  hour  when   coldest.     See  Mom  of  Inkerman, 

The. — Lushington. 
In  the  house  of  Too  Much  Trouble,  lived  a  lonely  little 

boy.     See  House  of  Too  Much  Trouble,  "The. — 

Paine. 
In  the  hush  of  early  morning.     See  Merry  Christmas. — 

Anon. 
In  the  hush  of  the  autumn  night.     See  Voice  of  the 

Sea,  The.— Aldrich. 
In  the      Indian-summer      twilight.     See      Grandma's 

Talk. — Kavanaugh. 
In  the   Kingdom  of  Sham.     See  Kingdom  of  Sham, 

The. — .Jones. 
In  the  land  of  Brittany,  and  long  ago.     See  Only  a 

.Jew. — Anon. 
In  the  light  of  the  moon,  by  the  side  of  the  water. 

See  My  Daughter  Louise. — Greene. 
In  the  little  hamlet  of  Daisyoak.     See  Cicely  Croak. — 

Dowd. 
In  the     little     Japanese     village    of    Yowcuski.     See 

Mysterious  Portrait,  The. — Japy. 
In  the   little   southern   parlor  of  the  house  you   may 

have  seen.     See  Opening  of  the  Piano,  The. — {At- 
lantic Monthly.) 
In  the  lone  tent,  waiting  for  victory.     See  Queen  Hen- 
rietta Maria. — Wilde. 
In  the   long   pageant   of   man's   destiny.     See  Christ- 
Child  Alone,  The.— Kimball. 
In  the  loud  waking  world  I  come  and  go.     See  Nihil 

Humani  Alienum. — ^Coan. 
In  the    low-raftered    garret,    stooping.     See    Dorothy 

-in  the  Garret. — Trowbridge. 
In  tne  Mammoth  Cave,  where  the  light  of  day  never 

enters.     See  same. — ^Bittinger. 
In  the  march  of  nations  our  country  has  kept  step. 

See  Compromise  of  Principle. — Beecher. 
In  the  meantime,  the  preparations   for  the  trial   had 

proceeded  rapidly.     See  Warren  Hastings  (Open- 
ing Scene). — Maeaulay. 
In  the  merrie  moneth  of    Maye  [or  merry  month  of 

May!  in  a  morn  by  break  of  day.     See  Phillida 

and  Corydon. — -Breton. 
In  the  merry  hay-time  we  raked  side  by  side.     See 

Lines. — Paul. 
In  the    merry    month    of    May    comes    our    gladsome 

Arbor    Day.     See   Song   to    Mother    Earth,    A. — 

Kellogg. 
In  the  middle  of  the  month  of  October,  in  the  year  of 

1066.     See  Child's  History  of  England,  A  (Death 

of  Harold). — Dickens. 


721 


In  the 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


In  the  midnight  calm  and  holy,  when  the  world  has 
sunk  to  rest.     See  Hum  Evil,  The. — Uriah  World.) 
In  the  midst  of  .sunny  waters,  lo!  the  mighty  ship  of 
State.     See    "Death     has    Crowned     Him     as    a 
Martyr." — Mlilcox. 
In  the  mild  silence  of  the  voiceless  night.     See  Mid- 
night Hymn,  A. — Anon. 
In  the  month  of  .June,  when  the  world  is  green.     jSee 
Solstice  (Summer  Solstice,  The). — Thomas. 

In  the  month  of  December,  when  naked  and  grim. 
See  Solstice  (Winter  Solstice,  The). — Thomas. 

In  the  morning  light  trills  the  gay  swallow.  See 
Snow-bird,  The. — Anon. 

In  the  morning  of  our  life.  See  Life  Maxims. — (Popu- 
lar EductUor.) 

In  the  Morning  of  Time,  when  his  fortunes  began. 
See  Woman  and  the  Weed. — Lang. 

In  the  morning  when  the  sun.  Sec  Off  to  School  We 
Go. — Richards. 

In  the  morning,  when  we  rise.  See  In  the  Morning. — 
Rook. 

In  the  mysterious  economy  of  Nature.  See  Nature. — 
Everett. 

"In  the  name  of  God,  Amen."  See  same. — Breckin- 
bridge. 

In  the  name  of  the  Commons  of  England.  See  Im- 
peachment of  Warren  Hastings. — Burke. 

In  the  name  of  the  Empress  of  India,  make  way.  See 
Overland  Mail,  The. — Kipling. 

In  the  night,  gray,  heavy  clouds  muffled  the  valleys. 
See  Peaks.  The.— Crane. 

In  the  night  she  told  a  story.  See  Love's  Thread  of 
Gold. — Ingelow. 

In  the  old  and  ruined  mansion.  See  Haunted  Cham- 
bers.— Anon. 

In  the  old  church-yard  at  Fredericksburg.  See  same. 
— Loring. 

In  the  old  churchyard  of  his  native  town.  See  Burial 
of  the  Poet,  The. — Longfellow. 

In  the  old  colony  days,  in  Plymouth  the  land  of  the 
Pilgrims.  See  Courtship  of  Miles  Standish,  The. — 
Longfellow. 

In  the  old  days  (a  custom  laid  aside).  See  Abraham 
Davenport. — Whittier. 

In  the  old  days,  while  yet  the  church  was  young.  See 
Macarius  the  Monk. — O'Reilly. 

In  the  old  Liberty  Hall  at  Philadelphia  hangs  an  an- 
cient bell.  See  Scream  from  the  American  Eagle 
in  Dakota,  A. — Anon. 

In  the  old  marble  town  of  Kilkenny.  See  Ninety- 
eight. — Campion. 

In  the  oldest  of  our  alleys.  See  Banished  Bejant,  The. 
— Murray. 

In  the  opening  scene  of  Aristophanes^  Comedy  of  the 
"Clouds."     See  Old  and  New,  The. — Anon. 

In  the  Orient  afar.     See  East. — Anon. 

In  the  other  gardens.     See  Autumn  Fires. — Stevenson. 

In  the  palmy  days  of  the  old  volunteer  fire  department. 
See  "Presentation  of  the  Trumpet,  The." — Anon. 

In  the  past,  many  mission  field  were  so  free  from  the 
drink  curse.     See  World's  Problem,  The.— Leavitt. 

In  the  pasture's  rude  embrace.  See  Golden-rod. — 
Goodale. 

In  the  plea.sant  land  of  f'anaan,  dwelt  the  giant  Offero. 
See  Legend  of  St.  Christopher,  The. — Fletcher. 

In  the  primitive  days  of  our  grandfathers'  time.  See 
Hole  in  the  Floor,  The. — Hardy. 

In  the  principality  of  Hohenlohe.  See  Blacksmith  of 
Hagenbach,  The. — Anon. 

In  the  prison  cell  I  sit.  See  Tramp,  Tramp,  Tramp. — 
Root. 

In  the  procession  that  followed  good  deacon  Jones. 
See  Deaf  as  a  Post. — Anon. 

In  the  quarries  should  you  toil.  See  Make  Your  Mark. 
— Barker. 

In  the  quiet  nursery  chambers.  See  Prayers  of  Chil- 
dren.— •.\non. 

In  the  rain  with  her  train.  See  Lady  with  a  Train,  The. 
— Anon. 

In  the  ranks  of  the  Austrian  you  found  him.  See 
Forced  Recruit,  The. — Browning. 

In  the  rarest  of  English  valleys.  See  Bunch  of  Cow- 
slips, A. — .\non. 

In  the  region  of  clouds,  where  the  whirlwinds  arise. 
See  Castle  in  the  Air,  The. — Paine. 

In  the  regular  evening  meeting.  See  Deacon's  Prayer, 
The.— Stoddart. 

In  the  Rheingan  standeth  Aix.  See  Minnesingers  I/ied, 
The.— Duvar. 

In  the  rift  of  the  rock  He  has  covered  my  head.  See 
Rift  of  the  Rock,  The.— Herbert. 

In  the  room  below  the  young  man  sat.  See  Young 
Man  Waited,  The. — Cooke. 


In  the  room  of  this  grief-shadowed  present.  See  Flood 
of  Years,  The. — Bryant. 

In  the  rosy  light  trills  the  gay  swallow.  See  Snowbird, 
The. — Butterworth. 

In  the  royal  path.  See  Joseph  and  his  Brethren 
(Triumph  of  Joseph,  The). — Wells. 

In  the  rush  of  the  merry  morning.  See  Merry  Christ- 
mas.— Anon. 

In  the  rushing  rue  de  Chatham.  See  Tale  of  the  East 
(Side),  A.— Albro. 

In  the  scale  of  pleasure,  the  lowest  are  the  sensual  de- 
lights.    See  Sensual  Delights  Lowest. — Anon. 

In  the  school  at  Whilomville  it  was  the  habit.  See 
Making  an  Orator. — Crane. 

In  the  search  after  true  dignity,  you  may  point  me  to 
the  sceptred  prince.  See  Dignity  in  Labor. — 
Hall. 

In  the  .secret  council  chambers  of  .a  Masonic  lodge.  See 
Centennial  Speech. — Albertson. 

In  the  shadowy  aisle  she  kneeling.  See  At  Vespers. 
— Van  Wagenen. 

In  the  silence  of  the  morning,  through  the  softly-shin- 
ing mist.     See  Still  Small  Voice,  A. — Wright. 

In  the  silent  midnight  watches.  See  Heart's  Song,  The. 
— Coxe. 

In  the  smoke  of  my  dear  cigarito.     See  same. — Von  K. 

In   the  .snowing  and  the  blowing.     See  Spring. — Dodge. 

In  the  snowy  moonlit  midnight.  See  Dream  of  Sister 
Agnes,  The. — Anon. 

In  the  soft  falling  \or  softly  fadingl  twilight.  See 
Creeping  up  the  Stairs. — McFetridge. 

In  the  .solemn  stillness  of  the  winter  nights.  See  Frost- 
elves,  The. — Wolverton. 

In  the  south  of  San  Francisco  there  is  even  a  greater 
range  of  color.     See  Madrona,  The. — Somers. 

In  the  soring  a  young  man's  fancy.  See  In  Spring. 
— (Princeton  Tiqer.) 

In  the  .spring  of  1859  I  accepted  a  proffered  editorial 
position.  See  Showing  Off  an  Elocutionist. — 
Griswold. 

In  the  spring  of  1861.     See  Soldier  Bird,  The. — Anon. 

In  the  spring  of  1493,  while  the  court  was  still  as  Bar- 
celona.    See  Return  of  Columbus,  The. — Prescott. 

In  [the]  soring  when  the  green  gits  back  in  the  trees. 
See  When  the  Green  Gits  back  in  the  Trees. — Riley. 

In  the  stagnant  pride  of  an  outworn  race.  See  San- 
tiago.— .Janvier. 

In  the  still  air  music  lies  unheard.  See  Master's  Touch, 
The.— Bonar. 

In  the  still,  star-lit  night.     See  same. — Stoddard. 

In  the  stormy  waters  of  Galloway.  See  Ferry  of  Gal- 
loway, The. — Cary. 

In  the  streets  of  Constance  was  heard  the  shout.  See 
Death  of  Huss,  The. — Austin. 

In  the  struggle  of  life,  when  fortune  shall  frown.  See 
Mother's  Angel,  The. — Dyer. 

In  the  Summer  even.     See  Night  Sea,  The. — Spofiford. 

In  the  summer  of  1887,  Victoria,  Queen  of  England. 
See  England  and  the  United  States. — Depew. 

In  the  summer  of  the  year  1860.  See  Texas  Story,  K. 
— Donovan. 

In  the  sweet  May  time,  so  long  ago.  See  May  Days. — 
.\non. 

In  the  sweet  .shire  of  Cardigan.  See  Simon  Lee,  the 
Old  Huntsman. — Wordsworth. 

In  the  tall  elm-tree  sat  the  robin  bright.  See  Robin, 
The.— Thaxter. 

In  the  tempest  of  life,  when  the  wave  and  the  gale. 
See  Look  Aloft. — Lawrence. 

In  the  time  when  herds  and  flowers.  See  Caelica 
(Caelica  and  Philocell). — Brooke. 

In  the  time  when  the  little  flowers  are  born.  See  Black 
Ranald. — Cary. 

In  the  transformation  of  opinion  which  is  impercepti- 
bly affecting  all.     See  same. — Stanley. 

In  the  twilight  hour  of  this  memorable  day.  See  Ivy 
Oration. — Anon. 

In  the  twilight  in  bis  sanctum  sat  the  editor  alone.  See 
Running  the  Weekly.^ — Burdette. 

In  the  valley  of  Craft,  a  dressmaker  lived,  a  smiling, 
angelic  young  lady.  See  Happy  Couple,  A. — 
McBride. 

In  the  valley  of  Shanganagh,  where  the  songs  of  sky- 
larks teem.  See  Valley  of  Shanganagh,  The. — 
Martley. 

In  the  valley  of  the  Pegnitz,  where  across  broad  meadow 
lands.     See  Nuremberg. — Longfellow. 

In  the  very  night  which  followed  old  Sir  Ensor's  funeral. 
See  Lorna  Doone  (Snow-storm,  The). — Blackmore. 

In  the  village  of  Mont  Cheri.  See  Wedding  Gift,  The. 
— Foster. 

In     the    village    of    S ,    Perthshire.     See    Gowk's 

Birrant,  and  what  Cam'  o't. — Ferguson. 


722 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Inducements 


In  the  war  of  1812,  when  an  attack  was  being  made 

upon    Fort    Henry.     See    Story    of    the    "Star- 
Spangled  Banner." — Anon. 
In  the  way  that  He  shall  choose.     See  Chosen  Lessons. 

— Havergal. 
In  the  weird  old  days  of  the  long  agone.     See  City  of 

Is,  The. — Savage. 
In  the  west  country  by  the  sea.     See  Honk!  Honk! — 

Burk. 
In  the  west,  the  weary  Day.    See  In  Reverie. — Kimball. 
In  the  wet  dusk  silver  sweet.     See  Memory  of  Earth, 

The. — Russell. 
In  the  white  moonlight,  where  the  willow  waves.     See 

Graveyard  Rabbit,  The. — Stanton. 
In  the    white-flower'd  hawthorn  brake.     See  Earthly 

Paradise,    The  (Antiphony). — Morris. 
In  the  whole  realm  of  nature  there  is  never  found  an 

unanswerable  instinct.     See  same. — Clark. 
In  the  wild  autumn  weather,  when  the  rain  was  on  the 

sea.     See  Love  and  Death. — MulhoUand. 
In  the  winged  cradle  of  sleep  I  lay.     See  Cradle  Song. 

— Thaxter. 
In  the  winter  when  the  snowdrift   stood  against   the 

cabin  door.     See  Kate  Maloney. — Dagonet. 
In  the  wonderful  century  which  saw  at  its  beginning. 

See  Boston,  Mass.,  and  Charleston,  S.  C. — Courte- 

nay. 
In  the    worst    inn's    room,   with   mat    half-hung.     See 

Moral  Essays  (Death  of  the  Duke  of  Buckingham, 

The).— Pope. 
In  the  year  eighteen  and  nine  we  took.     See  Benedic- 
tion, The. — Harrison. 
In  the  year  1774,  being  much  indisposed.     See  Treat- 
ment of  his  Hares,  The. — Cowper. 
In  the  year  1762  a  miser  by  the  name  of  Foscue,  in 

France.     See    Miser    Fitly    Punished,    The.— Os- 
borne. 
In  the  year  that's  come   and  gone.  Love,  his  flying 

feather.     See  In  the  Year  that's  Come  and   Gone. 

— Henley. 
In  the   year    1270,    Louis   the   IXth   of   France.     See 

Modern  Knighthood. — Anon. 
In  thee  I  fondly  hoped  to  clasp.     See  same. — Byron. 
In  their  dark  house  of  cloud.     See  Bells  at  Midnight, 

The.— Aldrich. 
In  their  ragged  regimentals.     See  Carmen  Bellicosum. 

— McMaster. 
In  these  days  of  rapid  national  growth.     See  Love  of 

('ountry. — Brown. 
In  these  restrained  and  careful  times.     See  Impression. 

— Gosse. 
In  Thibet   once   there   reign'd,   we're   told.     See  Little 

Grand  Lama,  The. — Moore. 
In  thickest   fight   triumphantly   he   fell.     See   General 

Albert  Sidney  Johnston. — Jervey. 
In  this    country,  most     young    men     are     poor.     See 

Thoughts  for  Young  Men. — Mann. 
In  this  dim    world    of    clouding  cares.     See  Angels. — 

Massey. 
In  this  fair  stranger's  eyes  of  gray.     See  Absence. — 

Arnold. 
In  this  glad  hour,  when  children  meet.     See  Christmas 

(lathering. — Ware. 
In  this  lone,  open  glade  I  lie.     See  Lines  Written  in 

Kensington  Gardens. — Ariiold. 
In  this    May-month,    by    grace.     See   Asian    Birds. — 

Bridges. 
In  this  red  wine,  where  Memory's  eyes  seem  glowing. 

See  Toast  to  Omar  Khayyftm. — Watts-Dunton. 
In  this  situation  of  this  Assembly-groping,  as  it  were 

in  the  dark.     See  God  Governs. — Franklin. 
In  this   still    place,    remote   from   men.     See   Glen-Al- 

main,  the  Narrow  Glen. — Wordsworth. 
In  this  world  of  pain  and  pleasure.     See  Take  Courage. 

— Anon. 
In  this  world,  the  Isle  of  Dreams.     See  White  Island, 

The.— Herrick. 
In  this  world,  with  its  wild  whirling  eddies  and  mad 

foam  oceans.     See  Past   and   Present   (Await  the 

I  ssue; .  — Carlyle. 
In  those  happy   days,   a  well-regulated  family  always 

rose  with    the   dawn.     See  Knickerbocker  History 

of  New  York   (Tea  Parties  in  Old  Times). — Irving. 
In  these  high  heavens,  wherein  the  fair  stars  flower. 

See  Song  of  the  Stars,  The. — Moulton. 
In  thy  coach  of  state.     See  Crowned  Poet,  A. — Aldrich. 
In  thy  hammock  gently  sleeping.     See  Baby  Dear. — 

Lover. 
In  thy  western  halls  of  gold.     See  Ode   to   Apollo. — 

Keats. 
In  thy  white  bosom  love  is  laid.     See  Song. — Blaikie. 
In  time  of  yore  when  shepherds  dwelt.    See  Olden  Love- 
making. — Breton. 


In  token    that    thou    shalt    not    fear.     See   Baptismal 

Hymn . — Alf  ord . 
In  torrid  heats  of  late  July.     See  Ballade  of  the  Book- 
hunter. — Lang. 
In  truth,  a  monument  to  Shakespeare,  cui  bono?     See 

Monument  to  Shakespeare,  A. — Hugo. 
In  twenty  years  no  change  comes  o'er.     See  In  Twenty 

Years. — Ka  vanaugh . 
In  Uladh.  near   Magh  Inis,    lived    a  chief.     See  Saint 

Patrick  and  the  Imposter. — DeVere. 
In  vain  all  the  knights  of  the  Underwald  woo'd  her. 

See  High  born  Lady,  The. — Moore. 
In  vain  he  seeks  for  beauty  that  excelleth.     See  Love's 

Perfections. — Anon . 
In  vain  men  tell  us  time  can  alter.     See  Age  and  Song. 

— Swinburne. 
In  vain   the  common  theme  my  tongue  would  shun. 

See  Never  or  Now. — Holmes. 
In  vain  the  cords  and  axes  were  prepared.     See  Ship- 
wreck, The. — Falconer. 
In  vain  through  history  we  search.     See  Old  Tennant 

Church. — Bungay. 
In  vain  to  me  the  smiling  mornings  shine.     See  Sonnet 

on  the  Death  of  Mr.  Richard  West. — Gray. 
In  vain  we  call  old  notions  fudge.     See  International 

Copyright. — Lowell. 
In  vain  you  tell  your  parting  lover.     See  same. — Prior. 
In  Vassar's  halls  a  tutor  young.     See  Mathematical. 

— {Lehigh  Burr.) 
In  venturing  to  invite  the  attention  of  the  House  to  the 

state  of  the  law.     See  International  Copyright,  An. 

— Talfourd. 
In  Virgine  the  sultry  Sun  'gan  sheene.     See  Excellent 

Ballad  of  Charity,  An. — Chatterton. 
In  visions  of  the  night.     See  Solomon's  Wise  Choice. — 

Tarbox. 
In  what  a  strange  bewilderment  do  we.     See  Morn. — 

Jackson. 
In  what  dark  silent  g-rove.     See  Castara  (Coyitabo  pro 

Peccaio  Meo). — Habington. 
In  what  rich  harmony,  what  polished  lays.     See  Mu^ic 

of  Nature. — Pierpont. 
In  what   torn   ship  soever  I   embark.     See  Hymn   to 

Christ,  A. — Donne. 
In  winter  t  get  up  at  night.     See  Bed  in  Summer. — 

Stevenson. 
In  winter,  once,  an  honest  traveler  wight.     See  Guide 

Post,  The.— Anon. 
In  winter,  when  the  wind  I  hear.     See  Four  Winds, 

The. — Sherman . 
In  words  as  fashions,  the  same  rule,  etc.     See  Essay  on 

Criticism,  An. — Pope. 
In  wreaths   of   smoke,    blown   waywardwise.     See   In 

Wreaths  of  Smoke. — -Holman. 
In  Xanadu    did    Kubla    Khan.     See   Kubla    Khan. — 

Coleridge. 
In  years  bygone,  before  the  famous  Rockaway  Pavilion 

was  built.     See   How   a   Frenchman    Entertained 

John  Bull. — Anon. 
In  years  to  come  I  ask  thee  not  to  say.     See  To . 

— Innsly. 
In  yellow  and  in  saffron  it  is  dressed.     See  Wellesley 

in  Autumn. — Wood. 
In  yon  dense  wood  full  oft  a  bell.     See  Lost  Church, 

The.— -Uhland  (Tilney). 
In  yonder  dim  and  pathless  wood.     See  Lost  Church, 

The.— Uhland  (Whitman). 
In  yonder  grave  a  Druid  lies.     See  Ode  on  the  Death 

of  Thomson. — Collins. 
In  youth  exalted  high  in  air.     See  On  a  Pen. — Swift. 
In  youth,  when  blood  was  warm  and  fancy  high.     See 

Mask  of  Death,  The. — Hayne. 
In  youth's  glad  morning  hour.     See  Planting  for  the 

Future. — Wright. 
Inaudible    move    day    and    night.     See    God  and   the 

Soul  (Silence). — Spalding. 
Inconstant!  Oh,  my  God!     See  Inconstant. — Anon. 
Indeed  he  seems  to  me.     See  Idylls  of  the  King  (Albert 

the  Good). — Tennyson. 
Indeed,  ma'am,  I  traversed  half  the  town  in  search  of 
it.     See  Rivals,  The  (Scene  from  "The  Rivals"). 
— Sheridan. 
Indeed,  this  very  love  which  is    my  boast.     See   Son- 
nets from  the  Portuguese,  XII. — Browning. 
Indeed,  wife,  it  is  a  matter  of  hourly  congratulation  to 
me.     See  Misfortune  of  (Uvil  War,  The. — Swander. 
Independence  and  liberty,  the  great  political  objects 
of  all  communities.     See  Arts  and  Letters. — Ev- 
erett . 
Independence  Day!     The   booming   cannon.     See    In- 
dependence Day. — Parmely. 
Inducements!     CanitbenecessarytoofIerthe.se?     See 
Inducements  to  Earnestness  in  Religion. — James. 


723 


Indulgent 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


See 


See 


Indulgent  friends,  you  now  have  heard  us  thro'. 

Closing  Address. — Anon. 
Infatuation! — madness! — to  risk  so  vast  a  sum! 

Yankee  Tar's  Return,  The. — Anon. 
Inglorious  friend!  Maost  confident  I  am.     iSe«  Sonnet 

to  a  Clam. — Saxe. 
Inhuman  man!  curse  on  thy  barb'rous  art.     <See  On 

Seeing  a  Wounded  Hare  Limp  by  Me. — Burns. 
Injurious  charmer  of  my  vanquisned  heart.     See  Val- 

entinian  (Song).- — Rochester. 
Inland  my  life  is  set.     See  Seaward. — Gillespy. 
Inland,  within  a  hollow   vale,   I   stood.     See  English 
Channel. — Wordsworth. 

Inmate  of    a    mountain-dwelling.     See    To (Miss 

Blackett),  on  her  First  Ascent  to  the  Summit  of 
Helvellyn. — Wordsworth. 
Innocent  child  and  snow  white  flower!     iSee  Child  and 

the  Lily,  The — Bryant. 
Innocent  eyes  not  ours.     <See  All  Things  Wait  Upon 

Thee. — Rossetti. 
Innocent  spirits,  bright,  immaculate  ghost!     See  From 

Generation  to  Generation. — Howells. 
Innumerable  are  the  calamities  which  flow  from  an  in- 
terruption of  justice.     See  On  Behalf  of  the  Peo- 
ple of  Boston,  in  Support  of  the  Memorial  of  De- 
cember 18,  1765. — -Aaams. 
Inquirer,  cease!  petitions  yet  remain.     See  Vanity  of 
Human  Wishes,  The  (Wise  Man's  Prayer,  The).— 
John.son. 
Insect  or  blossom?     Fragile,  fairy  thing.        See  Mari- 
posa Lily,  The. — Coolbrith. 
Insensible  fo  high  heroic  deeds.     See  Patriotism  and 

Freedom. — Baillie. 
Inside  a  squalid  chamber.     See  Miser's  Fate,  The. — 

Kavanaugh. 
Inside  its  zig-zag  lines  the  little  camp  is  asleep.     See 
Magazine  Fort,  Phoenix  Park,  Dublin. — Wilkins. 
Inside  the  city's  throbbing  heart.     See  St.   Michan's 

Churchyard. — ICavanagh. 
Inspiring  auspices,  this  day,  surround  us  and  cheer  us. 

See  Washington's  Birthday. — Webster. 
Instead  of  trumpet  and  of  drum.     See  Hudibras  (Mar- 
tial Music). — Butler. 
Intemperance  creates  in  man  an  ungovernable  appetite. 

See  Destroyer,  The.— Scudder. 
Intemperance  cuts    down    youth    in    its    vigor.     See 

Effects  of  Intemperance,  The. — Anon. 
Intemperance  is  not  a  mere  local  affair.     See  Reform 

Will  Go  On,  The.— Anon. 
Intemperance  is  the  strangest  and  most  unaccountable 
mystery.     See    Unaccountable    Mystery,    An. — 
Denton. 
Intemperance  lays  a  foundation  for  all  the  moral  evils. 

See  What  is  Temperance? — Coles. 
Intemperance  of  party,  wherever  found.     See  Intem- 
perance of  Party. — Gaston. 
Intemperance    wipes  out  God's  linage.     See  same. — 

Gough. 
Interr'd  beneath    this   marble    stone.     See   Jack    and 

Joan. — Prior. 
Into  a  famous  toy  shop.     See  Schemer,  A. — Warren. 
Into  a  ward   of  the  whitewashed  walls.     See  Some- 
body's Darling. — La  Conte. 
Into  all  lives  some  rain  must  fall.     See  Some  Sweet 

Day. — Bates. 
Into  her  chamber  went.     See  Child's  Prayer,  The. — 

Reed. 
Into  my  heart  a  silent  look.     See  Love  at  First  Sight. — 

Lytton. 
Into  our  home  one  blessed  day.     See  New-born  Babe, 

The. — Morris. 
Into  the  caverns  of  the  sea.     See  Joy  Enough. — East- 
man. 
Into  the  Devil  tavern.     See  Three  Troopers,   The. — 

Thombury. 
Into  the  great  vestibule  of  heaven.     See  Dream  of  the 

Universe,  A. — Richter. 
Into  the  heaven  of  Thy  heart,  O  God.     See  Immortal. 

— Larcom. 
"Into  the  inmost  Temple  thus  I  came."     See  Faerie 

Queene,  The  (Wooing  of  Amoret). — Spenser. 
Into  the  Land  of  Song,  my  boys.     See  Land  of  Song, 

The. — Marvin. 
Into  the  night  she  steamed  away.     See  Sinking  the 

Merrimac. — Cone. 
Into  the  noiseless  country  Annie  went.     See  Into  the 

Noiseless  Country. — Parsons. 
Into  the  path  of  sin.     See  same. — Anon. 
Into  the  Silent  Land!     See  Song  of  the  Silent  Land. — 

Von  Sahs. 
Into  the  silver  night.     See  Revelation. — Gosse. 
Into  the  skies  one  summer's  day.     See  Thought,  The 
— Rands. 


Into  the  sunshine,  full  of  the  light.     See  Fountain,  The. 

— Lowell. 
Into  the  thick  of  the  fight  he  went,  pallid  and  sick  and 
wan.     See   General    Wheeler   at    Santiago. — Gor- 
don. 
Into  the  town  of  Conemaugh.     See  Man  Who  Rode 

to  Conemaugh,  The. — Bowen. 
Into  the  west  of  the  waters  on  the  living  ocean's  foam. 

See  Homeward  Bound. — Woodberry. 
Into  the  woods  my  Master  went.     See  Ballad  of  Trees 

and  the  Master,  A. — Lanier. 
Into  the  world   he   looked  with   sweet   surprise.     See 

Into  the  World  and  Out. — Piatt. 
lol  they  come,  they  come!  garlands  for  every  shrine! 

See  Return  from  Battle,  The. — Anon. 
Iphigeneia,  when  she  heard  her  doom.     See  Iphigeneia 

and  Agamemnon. — Landor. 
Ireland  is  now  our  royal  care.     See  Apollo's  Edict. — 

Swift. 
Ireland  is  the   Gethsemane  of  Europe.     See  same. — 

Redpath. 
Ireland  never  was  contented.     See  Ireland. — Landor. 
Irish  stew,  Irish  stew !     See  Irish  Stew. — (Punch. ) 
Iry  an'  Billy  an'  Joe!     See  Iry  and  Billy  and  Joe. — 

Riley. 
I's  a  little  Alabama  Coon.     See  Little  Alabama  Coon. 

— Starr. 
Is  all  done  now?     See  Jack's  Nap. — Anon. 
Is    all   our  company  here?     See   Midsummer   Night's 
Dream  (Clown's  First   Rehearsal,   The). — Shake- 
speare. 
Is  Heaven  a  long  way  off,  mother?     See  Little  Girl's 

Lament,  The.— Greenwell. 
Is  it  a  dream?     An  I  once  more  a  child?     See  In  the 

Old  Country  Church. — -Dole. 
Is  it  anybody's  business.     See  same. — Anon. 
Is  it  come?  they  said,  on  the  banks  of  the  Nile.     See 

Is  it  Come? — Browne. 
Is  it  cure  me,  docthor,  darlin'?  an  ould  boy  of  siventy- 

four.     See  Wreck  of  the  Aideen,  The. — Graves. 
Is  it  in  a  hurry  yez  aire,  Mr.  Clarrigon.     See  .^Serious 

Mishap,  A. — Smith. 
Is  it   indeed   so?     If   I   lay   here   dead.     See   Sonnets 

from  the  Portuguese,  XXIII. — Browning. 
Is  it   love   when  your  heart   beats  faster.     See  Is  it 

Love? — Anon. 
"Is  it  my  lead?"  asked  the  first.     See  Ladies'  Whist 

Club,  The.— Anon. 
Is  it  not  better  at  an  early  hour.     See  On  Living  Too 

Long. — Landor. 
Is  it  not  well,  my  brethren?      They  whose  sleep.     See 

Fifteenth  of  February,  The. — Russell. 
Is  it  nothing  to  you,  O  Christians.     See  Is  it  Nothing 

to  You? — Anon. 
Is  it  parting  with  the  roundness.     See  Growing  Old. — 

Sangster. 
Is  it  possible?    Is't  so?    See  Wallenstein  (Wallenstein's 

Soliloquy). — Schiller. 
Is  it  raining,  little  flower?     See  Is  it  Raining.— Butts. 
Is  it  so  far  from  thee.     See  Chamber  over  the   Gate, 

The. — Longfellow. 
Is  it  so  small  a  thing.      See  Empedocles  on  Etna  (Hymn 

of  Empedocles). — Arnold. 
Is  it  strange,  then,  that  some  tears  fall  on  the  pages  of 
his  Bible.     See  Uncle  Tom's  C  bin  (Uncle   Tom's 
Testament). — Stowe. 
Is  it,  that  life  has  sown  her  joys  so   thick.     See   Night 

Thoughts  (Stream  of  Life,  The). — Young. 
Is  it  the  palm,  the  cocoa-palm.     See  Palm-tree,  The. 

— Whittier. 
Is  it  the  shrewd  October  wind.     See  Gone.^Howells. 
Is  it    this    sky's    vast    vault    or   ocean's    sound.     See 

Monochord,  The. — Rossetti. 
Is  it  thus,  O  Shane  the  haughty !     Shane  the  valiant ! 

that  we  meet.     See  Shane's  Head. — Savage. 
"Is   it   true?"    that's   the    doubtful   suggestion.     See 

Yes! — Jessop. 
Is  it  true,  then,  my  girl?  did  you  mean  it. — See  Yes? — 

Bunner. 
Is  it     where    the     spiral     stairway.     See    Heaven. — 

Holmes. 
Is  it  worth  while  that  we  jostle  a  brother.     See  Is  it 

worth  while? — Miller. 
Is  it  you.  Jack?     Old  boy,  is  it  really  you?     See  Old 

Chums. — Cary. 
Is  it  you,  that  preached  in  the  chapel  there  looking  over 

the  sand?  See  Despair. — Tennyson. 
Is  life  worth  living?     Yes,  so  long.     See  Is  Life  Worth 

Living. — Austin. 
Is  love   a   dream?     In   truth,    they   tell   me   so.     See 

Love's  Waking.-^Anon. 
Is  Love     contagious? — I     don't     know. — See     Where 
Ignorance  is  Bliss. — Anon. 


724 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


It  began 


s  my  father  alive?     See  Emigrant's  Return,  The. — 

Anon. 
s  Nature    weak?     Do    her    enchantments    fail?     See 

Restitution. — Anon. 
s  not  he  the  wisest  man  who  rids  his  brow  of  wrinkles? 

See  same. — Anon. 
s   not    the    field,    with    lively    culture    green.      See 

Castle  of  Indolence,  The  (Address  to  the  Indolent). 

— ^Thomson. 
s  not  thilke  the  mery    moneth    of    May.     See    Shep- 

heardes  Calender,  The  (Description  of  Maying). — 

Spenser. 
s  she    not    come?     The    messenger    was    sure.     See 

Tristram  and  Iseult. — Arnold. 
s  she  to  be  buried  in  Christian  burial,  that  wilfully 

seeks   her   own   salvation?     See   Hamlet    (Grave- 
yard Scene). — Shakespeare. 
3  such    a   busy   little   housekeeper.     See  Busy  Little 

Housekeeper,  The. — Richards. 
s  that  a  child.     See  Canute  the  Great   (Canute  the 

Dane).— Field. 
s  that  vou,  Mistress  Dorry?     See  At  the  "Red  Lion." 

— Booth. 
s  the  house  turned  topsy-turvy?     See  That  Boy. — 

Anon. 
s  the  present  condition  of  Europe,  peace?     See  No 

Peace  without  Liberty. — Kossuth. 
s  the    President    of    the    Divorce    Court    here?     See 

Appeal,  An. — Anon. 
s  the  road  very  dreary?     Patience  yet!     See  Bide  A 

Wee,  and  Dinna  Fret.— S.  E.  G. 
s  then  the  dreadful  measure  of  your  cruelty  not  yet 

complete?     See    Pizarro  (Las    Casas    Dissuading 

from  Battle). — Sheridan. 
s  there  a  cross  word  that  tries  to  be  said?     See  Don't 

Say  It. — Anon. 
s  there  a  God,  then,  above  us?     See  Is  There  a  God? — 

Cameron. 
s  there  a  lady  in  the  land.     See  Girl's  a  Girl  for  A' 

that,  A. — Anon. 
s  there  a  way  to  forget  to  think?     See  Vagabonds, 

The.— Trowbridge. 
s  there  a  whim-inspired  fool.     See  Bard's  Epitaph, 

A. — 'Burns. 
'  Is  there  any  news  of  the  war?  "  she  said.     See  Reading 

the  List. — Anon. 
s  there    ever   a  man   in  all    Scotland.     See    Johnnie 

Armstrong.  — Anon . 
s  there  for  honest  poverty.     See  sam?. — Bums. 
s  there  in  the  whole  long  year.     See  Good-bye,  A. — 

Denton. 
s  there  no  God?     The  White  rose  made  reply.     See 

No  God.— Richardson. 
s  there  no  grand,  immortal  sphere.     See  Art  Thou 

Living  Yet? — Clark. 
s  there  no  secret  place  on  the  fp,ce  of  the  earth.     See 

Moneyless  Man,  The. — Stanton. 
s  there  not  an  amusement,  having  an  affinity  with  the 

drama.     See  Recitation. — Channing. 
s  there  one  desires  to  hear.     See  Fand  (Epilogue). — 

Larminie. 
s  there  room  among  the  angels.     See  Is  there  Room 

in  Angel  Land? — Anon. 
s  there  such  a  thing  as  eternal  fidelity?     See  Is  Fideli- 
ty Eternal? — Strongfeldt. 
s  there,  when  the  winds  are  singing.     See  Mother's 

Hope,  The. — Blanchard. 
s  thine  hour  come  to  wake,  O  slumbering  Night?     See 

In  San  Lorenzo. — Swinburne. 
s  thinking  an  art  to  be  acquired?     See  Art  of  Think- 
ing, The.— Anon. 
s  this  a  dagger  which  I  see  before  me.     See  Macbeth 

(Macbeth  before  the  Murder  of  Duncan).— Shake- 
speare, 
s  this  a  fast,  to  keep  the  larder  lean.     See  To  Keep  a 

True  Lent. — -Herrick. 
s  this  a  life,  to  break  thy  sleep.     See  Easy  Life,  The. 

—Herrick. 
s  this  a  time  for  selfish  intrigues,  and  the  little  dirty 

traffic    for   lucre    and   emolument !     See   Against 

Pohtical  Jobbing,  1794. — Sheridan, 
s  this  a    time   to   be   cloudy   Ttyr.  gloomy]   and   sad. 

See  Gladness  of  Nature,  The. — Bryant. 
s  this  all  the  love  that  he  bore  me,  my  husband,  to 

publish  my  face.     See  Queen  Vashti's  Lament. — 

Reade. 
s  this  the  ground  where  generations  lie.     See  Vanished 

Village,  A.— Wilton. 
s  this  the  man  by  whose  decree  abide.     See  Imperator 

Augustus. — Rodd. 
s  this  the  office  of  Cupid's  Express?     See  Traced. — 

Brewer. 


"Is  this  the  place?"     See  "Bud  of  Promise"  Racket, 

The. — -Anon. 
"Is  this  the  region,   this  the   soil,  the  clime."     See 

Paradise  Lost  (Satan). — Milton. 
"Is  this  the  tel'graph  office?"     See  Telegram,  The. — 

(Good  Housekeejnng.) 
Is  this  thy  place  and  city,  this  thy  throne.    See  Hebrew 

Capital  Despoiled,  The. — Heber. 
Is  thy  cruise  [or  cruse]  of  comfort  wasting  [or  failing]? 

Rise   and   share   it   with   another.     See  Unfailing 

Cruise,  The). — Charles. 
Is  thy    face    like    thy    mother's,    my    fair    child!     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Harold  the  Wanderer). 

— Byron. 
Is  true  freedom  but  to  break.     See  Stanzas  on  Freedom. 

— Lowell. 
Is  us  too  many'chillun,  pa?     Us  don't  count  but  eight. 

See  "Too  Many  Chillun,  Pa?" — Anon. 
"Is  water  nigh?"     The  plainsmen   cry.     See  Gift   of 

Water,  The.— Garland. 
Is  your    family    opposed    to    matrimony.     See    Not 

Opposed  to  Matrimony. — Anon. 
I'se  a  poor  'ittle    [or    little]    sorrowful  [or  sowwowful] 

baby.     See  New  Baby,  The. — Anon. 
I'se  boun'  to  see  my  gal  to-night.     See  On  the  Road. — 

Dunbar. 
I'se  got  a  baby  sister.    See  New  Sister,  The. — Rich- 
ards. 
I'se  gwine  dis  ebenin'  fo'  ter  preach  ob  dose  infernal 

vandals.     See  Sable  Theology. — ledgarj. 
I'se  gwine  to  tell  the  story  for  you  folks  as  wasn't  dah. 

See  Cake  Walk,  The.— Anon. 
I'se  on'y  a  pore  ole  nigger,  an'  long  'go  parst  my  prime. 

See  Gabe's  Christmas  Eve. — Meyers. 
Ismeno,  before  the  King  presents  himself,  alone.     See 

Jerusalem   Delivered   (Sophronia  and   Olindo). — 

Tasso. 
Isn't  it  a  pity  there  should  ever  be.     See  Our  Watch 

Words. — Denton. 
"Isn't  it  pretty?"  said  a  little  old  man,  as  he  wheeled 

a    baby    carriage.       See   White    Hearse,    The. — 

Anon. 
Isn't  it  very  sad,  Cornelia,  about  those  poor  people. 

See  Two  Ways  of  Doing  Good.— McConaughy. 
Isn't  it  wonderful,  when  you  think.     See  Wonderful. — 

Cutler. 
Isn't  this  Joseph's  son?" — ay,  it  is  He;     See  Jesus  the 

Carpenter. — Liddell. 
Issaker,  I'd  like  to  know,  what's  come  across  themeetin' 

See  Church  Kitchen,  The. — Eisenbeis. 
"Is't  as  bad  as  yir  lookin',  Doctor?    Tell's  the  truth." 

See  Beside  the  Bonnie  Brier   Bush  (Death  of  the 

Country  Doctor,  The). — Watson. 
Is't  come  to  this?     What  shall  the  cheeks  of  fame. 

See  Scots  Apostasie,  The. — Cleiveland. 
It  a'  cam'  richt  at  las',  just  as  I  ken'd  it  wud.     See 

Fence  o'  Scripture  Faith,  The. — Braden. 
It  aches  awfully,  and  what  a  fellow's  to  do  without  a 

mother.     See    Going    to    the    Dentist's. — Ober- 

holtzer. 
It  ain't  helfy  to  woke  little  boys  up  so  quick  I     See 

' '  Thust  Only  a  Dweam. '  '^Bennett . 
It  aint  jest  the  story,  parson,  to  tell  in  a  crowd  like 

this.     See  "Teamster  Jim. " — Burdette. 
It  aint  no  use  to  grumble  and  complain.     See  Wet 

Weather  Talk.— Riley. 
It  ain't  the  funniest  thing  a  man  can  do.     See  First 

Settler's  Story,  The. — Carleton. 
It  a'n't  accordin'   to  natur'   for  folks  to  turn   right 

askew.     See      Nathan's     Case.     (Sunday     School 

Times.) 
It  appears  as  if  there  were  a  sort  of  match,  or  trial  of 

skill.     See    Tea-kettle    and    the    Cricket,    The.— 

Dickens. 
It  appears  I  am  cited  here  because  I  have  returned. 

See   Caius    Gracchus,    Cited   before    the   Censors, 

Appeals  to  the  Peonle. — Knowles. 
It  appears  that  a  gentleman  by  the  name  of  Smith  had 

recently  moved.     See  Bill  Smith. — Adler. 
It  appears  to  be  a  measure  of  party  to  run  down  the 

fame  of  Mr.  Pitt.     See  Vindication  of  Mr.  Pitt. — 

Canning. 
It  appears  to  me  that  I  heard  you  say  you  always  had 

hard  luck  when  you  played  cards.     See  Brudder 

Bones  in  Hard  Luck. — Anon. 
It  appears  to  some  persons,  that  a  great  deal  too  much 

use  is  made  of  the  symbol.     See  Mass  Meeting  at 

Saratoga  (Log-cabin,  The).— Webster. 
It  befell  at  Martinmas.     See  Captain  Car;  or,   Edom 

o'  Gordon.- — Anon. 
It  began  with  Aunt  Anabel  haying  a  headache.     See 

Scorching  versxis  Diamonds. — Phelps. 


725 


It  bought 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


It  bought  a  stick  of  candy.     See  Story  of  a  Cent,  The. — 

I.jiwrence. 
It  came  u|)on  the  midnight  clear.     See  same. — -Sears. 
It  came  upon  us  by  degrees.     See  Babie  Bell. — Aid- 
rich.  • 
It  can  be  re|>orted  of  Ulysses  S.  Grant,  as  it  was  once 
8aid  of  George  Washington.     See  One  of  the  Com- 
mon People. — -Hamilton. 
It  cannot  be  denied,  but  by  those  who  would  dispute 
against  the  sun.    See  Adams  and  Jefferson  (Future 
of  America.  The). — Webster. 
It  cannot  be  that  He  who  made.     See  Reincarnation. 

— Sickels. 
It  chanced  a  farmer,  with  his  son.   See  Bridge  of  Truth, 

The. — Anon. 
It  chanced   of   late   a   .shepherd's    swain.     See  Fiction 
how  Cupid  Made  a   Nymph  Wound  herself  with 
his  Arrows,  A. — .\non. 
It  chanced  one  pleasant  afternoon  in  town.     See  Wil- 
liam CJoetz. — Reeves. 
It  chanced  that,  on  a  bleak  and  wintry  day.     See  Two 

Monks  and  the  Pilgrim,  The. — Anon. 
It  chanced  to  nie  upon  a  time  to  sail.     See  My  Native 

Land.— OReilly. 
It  chanced   upon   a   winter's  day.     See  Pairing  Time 

Anticipated. — Cowper. 
It  comes  again,   the  blessed  day.     See  Mother's  Ex- 
cuse, A. — Lippincott. 
It  comes  from  childhood  land.     See  Vesper  Sparrow, 

The.— Thomas. 
It  comes  in  darkness  as  the  others  came.     See  New 

Year,  The. — Cameron. 
It  comes!     This   strange   bird   from   a   distant   clime. 

See  Humming  Bird,  The. — Mair. 
It  comes   to   me   when   healths   go   round.     See   Thy 

Name. — Hoffman . 
It  comforts  me  through  all  my  days.     See  Mv  Garden 

Wall. — Morton. 
It  does  appear  to  me  that  if  the  loftiest  of   the  lofty 
spirits.     See     Temperance     Pledge,     The. — Mar- 
shall. 
It  does  seem  as  if  some  one  ought  to  be  able  to  answer 
this    question.     See    Inquisitive    Prince,    The. — 
Denton. 
It  doesn't  seem — now,  does  it.  Jack — as  if  poor  Brown 

were  dead.     See  Dead  Student.  The. — Carleton. 
It  don't  seem  hardly   right,  John.     See  Jonathan  to 

John. — Lowell. 
It  fades!    it    shifts!    and    now    appears.     See    Aurora 

Borealis,  The. — Gould. 
It  fell  about  the  Lammas  tide.     See  Battle  of  Otter- 
burn,  The. — Anon. 
It  fell  about  the  Martinmas.     See  Edom  o'  Gordon. — 

Anon. 
It  fell  in  the  ancient  periods.     See  Uriel. — Emerson. 
It  fell  on  a  day,  and  a  bonnie  simmer  day.     See  Bon- 
nie House  o'  Airlie,  The. — Anon. 
It  fell  upon  a  holy-day.     See  Little  Musgrave  and  the 

Lady  Barnard. — Anon. 
It  fell  upon  a  Wednesday.     See  Brown  Robyn's  Con- 
fession.— Anon. 
It  flows  through  old  hushed  Egypt  and  its  sands.     See 

Nile,  The.— Hunt. 
It  follows  now  you  are  to  prove.     See  Pleasure  Recon- 
ciled to  Virtue  (3rd  song). — Jonson. 
It  fortifies  my  soul  to  know.     See  "With  whom  is  no 
Variableness,    neither    Shadow    of    Turning." — - 
Clough. 
It  had  been  a  circus  day.     See  Address  of  Spottycus. — 

Anon. 
It  had  been  a  day  of  triumph  in[or  at]  Capua.     See 

Spartacus  to  the  Gladiators  at  Capua. — Kellogg. 
It  had  been  raining  in  the  valley  of  the  Sacramento. 

See  Jovita;  or.  The  Christmas  Gift. — Harte. 
It  had  happened  that  amongst  our  nursery  collection 
of  books  was  the  Bible.     See  In  the  Nursery. — 
DeQuincey. 
It  had   pleased   God   to   form    poor   Ned.     See   Idiot 

Boy,  The.— Southey. 
It  had  rained  all  night.     Water  lay  here  and  there  in 
the  hollows  of  the  plain,  as  in  ba.sins.      See  Les 
Mi.s6rables  (Battle  of  Waterloo,  The).— Hugo. 
It  hangs   'mong  a  hundred   others.     See   Story   of  a 

Picture,  A. — Forrester. 
It  hanped    that    I    came    on    a    day.     See   Duehesse 

Blanche .  — Chaucer. 
It  happened   at   Bonn.     One  moonlight   winter's  eve. 

See  Beethoven's  Moonlight  Sonata. — Anon. 
It  haimened  on  a  summer's  day.      See  Castle-builder, 

The. —  La  Fontaine. 
It  happeneil  once  that  a  young  Yorkshire  clown.     See 
Yorkshire  Angling.— Anon. 


It  happened   one    morning    that    little    Bo-peep.     See 

Little  Bo-peep  and  Little  Boy  Blue. — Peck. 
It  happened  'way  back  in  the  fifties.     See  Dead  Man's 

Gulch. — Vickers. 
It  hardly  seems  that  he  is  dead.     See  Dead  Friend,  A. 

—Gale. 
It  has  been  imputed  to  me  by  the  noble  Earl,  on  my 
left.     See  Worth  of   Present   Popularity. — Mans- 
field. 
It  has  been  maintained  that  the  genius  which  con- 
stitutes.    See     Military     Qualifications     Distinct 
from  Civil. — Sergeant. 
It  has  been  obse'ved,  Mr.  Speaker,  by  several   gentle- 
men.    See   How   Patriots   May   be   Made. — Wal- 
pole. 
It  has  been   said   by   a   noble   lord.     See   Motives   of 

Action. — Mansfield. 
It  has  been  said  by  Mr.  Flood,  that  "the  pen  would 
fall  from  the  hand."     See  Philippic  against  Flood 
(Reply  to  Flood). — G rattan. 
It  has  been  said  that  it  is  the  greatest  .sacrifice.     See 

Loyalty  to  Truth. — Shaw. 
It  has  been  well   said  that  the  great  moral  victories 
and     defeats. — See    Culture     in     Emergencies. — - 
Anon. 
"It  has  come  at  last,  old  comrade,  it  has  come  at  last.  " 

See  Soul  of  the  Violin,  The.— Merrill. 
It  has  come,  it  has  come  at  last!     See  Top  Landing, 

The. — Meyers. 
It  has  frequently  been  observed  that  genius  and  mad- 
ness   are  nearly  allied.     See  Mad — Quite  Mad. — - 
Praed. 
It  has    lengthened    life;    it    has    mitigated    pain.     See 

Bacon's  Philosoi)hy. — Macaulay. 
It  has  long  been  known  to  surgeons  that,  when  a  limb 
has   been    cut    off.      See    Ghost    of    a    Sensation, 
The.— Mitchell. 
It  has  not  been  an  unfrequent  charge  against  Macau- 
lay.     See  Macaulay. — Punshon. 
It  has  often  occurred  to  me  that  the  conditions  under 
which    we    live    at    the    present    day.     See    Mark 
Twain  on  the  19th  Century. — Clemens. 
It  hath  been  said  for  all  who  die.     See  For  All  Who 

Die. — Anon. 
It  having  been  announced  to  me,  my  young  friends. 

See  Advice  to  a  Fire  Company. — Anon. 
It  hung  in  the  sun,  the  little  house.     See  Shining  Lit- 
tle House,  The. — Hunt. 
It  ill  becomes  me.   Senators  of  Rome,   me.   Regulus. 
See   Regulus    before    the    Roman    Senate. — Sar- 
gent. 
It  is  a  beauteous  evening,  calm  and  free.     See  same. — 

Wordsworth. 
It  is  a  beautiful  truth  that  all  men  contain.     See  Talk 

to  an  Art  Union. — Whitman. 
It  is  a  bleak  day.      Hjear  the  rain,  how  he  pours,  and 
the  hail.     See  Tramp  Abroad,  A  (Tale  of  the  Fish- 
wife and  its  Sad    Fate). — Clemens. 
It  is  a  bright  summer  day  in  the  valley.     See  Drops. — - 

Robertson. 
It  is  a  careless  pretty  may,   down   by  yon  riverside. 

See  Faithless  Knight,  'The. — Allingham. 
It  is  a  celebrated  thought  of  Socrates.     See  Spectator, 

The  (Mountain  of  Miseries,  The).  —  Addison. 
It  is    a    cloudless    summer    day.     See  Fourth  of  July, 
1776,  The  (Signing   of  the   Declaration,  The).— 
Lippard. 
It  is  a  common  saying  that  religion  has  nothing  to  do 

with  politics.     See  same. — Robertson. 
It  is  a  dang'rous  thing;  it  makes  a  man  a  coward.     See 

,  King  Richard  III.  (Conscience). — Shakespeare. 
It  is  a  dear  delight  for  the  soul  to  have  trust  in  the 
fidelity  of  another.     See  sam,e. — (Harper's  Maga- 
zine. ) 
It  is  a  fact  that  ninety-nine  per  cent  of  all  the  genuine 
temperance  work.     See  No  Surrender!     No  Com- 
promise ! — Peck. 
It  is  a  fair,  even-handed,  noble  adjustment  of  things. 
See    Christmas     Carol,     A    (Christmas    Party    at 
Scrooge's  Nephew's,  The). — Dickens. 
It  is  a  fine  summer  morning.      See  'Three  Men   in   a 
Boat  (Signing  of   Magna   Charta,  'The). — Jerome. 
It  is  a  fitting  opportunity  to  advert  to  the  fact  that  a 
revival     of     religion. — See     same. — (Southwestern 
Presbyterian. ) 
It  is  a  glad  picnic  party.     The  Sabbath-school  has  gone 

out.     See  Day  in  the  Woods,  A.— Burdette. 
It  is  a  grave  thing  when  a  State  puts  a  man  among  her 

jewels.     See  Idols. — Phillips. 
It  is  a  great  pleasure  to  think  of  the  young  people 
assembling.     See    Words    from    the    Tree. — Con- 
way. 


726 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


It  is 


It  is  a  great  thing  to  live  in  such  a  period  as  this.     See 

Responsibilities  of  Young  Men,  The. — Clark. 
It  is  a  happy  day  for  Rome.     <See  Zenobia  (Aurelian 

and  Zenobia). — Ware. 
It  is  a  happy  world  after  all.     See  Happy  World,  A. — 

Paley. 
It  is  a  legitimate  source  of  pleasure      <See  Teaching  of 

the  Colleges,  The. — Low. 
It  is  a  little  American  clock,  which  I  got  as  a  present 

two  years  ago.     See  Mending  the  Clock. — Barrie. 
It  is  a  little  singular,  as  fond  as  I  am  of  dogs.     See 

Mr.  Perkins  Buys  a  Dog. — Bailey. 
It  is  a  man's  chief  blessedness  that  there  lie  in  his 
nature      infinite      possibilities     of     growth.     See 
Never-ending  Progress. — Spaulding. 
It   is  a   marvelous  phantasy,   thou   speakest   of.     See 

Damon  and  Pythias. — Banin. 
It  is  a  mere  wild  rose-bud.     See  Token,  The. — Lowell. 
It  is  a  moat  extraordinary  thing,  but  I  never  read  a 
patent  advertisement.     See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat 
(Victim  of  One  Hundred  and   Seven   Fatal  Mala- 
dies, A). — .Jerome. 
It  is  a  peculiarity  of  some  schools  of  eloquence.     See 

Two  Schools  of  Eloquence. — Choate. 
It  is  a  pity  and  a  shame — alas!  alas!     I  know  it  is. 
See  Class  Meeting,  1875. — Holmes. 

It  is  a  place  where  poets  crowned  may  feel  the  heart's 
decaying.     See  Cowper's  Grave. — Browning. 

It  is  a  principle  amply  borne  out  by  the  history  of  the 
great  and  powerful  nations  of  the  earth.  See 
First  Settlement  of  New  England,  The  (Advan- 
tages of  Adversity  to  the  Pilgrim  Fathers). — 
Everett. 

It  is  a  principle  never  to  be  forgotten,  that  it  is  not  by 
absolute.  See  Parliamentary  Reform  (Govern- 
ment Should  Grow  with  the  People,  A). — Macaulay. 

It  is  a  private  citizen  whom  we  commemorate.  See 
Wendell  Phillips  (Eulogy  of  Wendell  Phillips).— 
Curtis. 

It  is  a  rare  privilege,  sir,  to  have  had  a  part,  however 
humble,  in  this  work.  See  New  South,  The. — 
Grady. 

It  is  a  remarkable  age  in  which  we  live.  See  Hope  of 
the  Nation,  The. — Schurman. 

It  is  a  remarkable  fact  that  for  the  past  twenty-five 
years.     See  American  Shipbuilding. — Blain^. 

It  is  a  sair  thing  to  be  misjudged.  See  sowc.— Mac- 
don  aid. 

It  is  a  singular  fact  that  Longfellow  is  more  popular. 
See  Longfellow,  Extract  concerning. — Stoddard. 

It  is  a  singular  fact  that  the  freer  a  nation  becomes. 
See  Daniel  O'Connell  (Necessity  of  Outside  Agita- 
tion, The).— Phillips. 

It  is  a  strange  thing  how  little  in  general  peonle  know 
about  the  sky.  See  Modern  Painters  (  Sky,  The). 
— Ruskin. 

It  is  a  tiny  thing,  I  ween.     See  Mandolin,  The. — R.  C. 

It  is  a  trying  thing  to  me.  See  Speech  for  a  Small 
Boy. — Anon. 

It  is  a  valuable  exercise  to  copy  passages  of  literature. 
See  Commit  to  Memory. — Brooks. 

It  is  a  vile  weed,  poisons  the  blood.  See  Where  there's 
a  Will  there's  a  Way. — May. 

It  is  a  withered  rose.  See  White  Rose,  The. — O'Con- 
nor. 

It  is  Abou  el  Mahr,  the  gallant  Sheik  of  Al  Azeed. 
See    AJ30U    el    Mahr    and    his    Horse. — Anon. 

It  is  absolutely  necessary  for  the  oration.  See  Oratory. 
—Maury. 

It  is  admitted  that  the  dog  has  intelligence.  See  On 
Dogs  and  Cats. — Dumas. 

It  is  all  like  a  dream.  See  Hero-President,  The. — -Por- 
ter. 

It  is  all  very  well  for  the  ooets  to  tell.  See  Answer  to 
"Five  o'clock  in  the  Morning." — Anon. 

It  is  almost  time  for  Walter  to  come.  See  Slight  Mis- 
take, A. — Anon. 

It  is  almost  time  that  Theodore  was  home  from  school. 
See  Starting  in  Life. — Anon. 

It  is  an  ancient  mariner.  See  Rime  of  the  Ancient 
Mariner,  The. — Coleridge. 

It  is  an  ancient  mariner.  See  Survival  of  the  Fittest, 
The.— Ives. 

It  is  an  ancient  miller.  See  Rime  of  the  Ancient  Miller. 
— Burdette. 

It  is  an  August  day,  1620.  See  Negro  in  American 
History,  The. — Laird.  , 

It  is  an  old  garret  with  big  brown  rafters.  See  Rain  in 
the  Garret. — Mitchell. 

It  is  an  unanswerable  argument  of  a  very  refined  age. 
See  Relations  of  Booksellers  and  Authors,  The. — 
Swift. 


It  is  as  a  writer  of  humorous  poetry.  See  Holmes, 
Extract  Concerning. — Kennedy. 

It  is  bad  enough  to  see  a  bachelor  sew  on  a  button.  See 
How  a  Married  Man  Sews  on  a  Button. — Bailey. 

It  is  better  to  die,  since  death  comes  surely.  See  Sir 
Hugo's  Choice. — Roche. 

It  is  both  a  curious  and  unnatural  condition  of  public 
sentiment.  See  Business  Man's  Political  Obliga- 
tions, A. — Anon. 

It  is  buried  and  done  with.     See  Farewell. — Symonds. 

It  is  but  a  short  time  since  poor  Jenny  Malone.  See 
.Jenny  Malone. — Anon. 

It  is  claimed  that  these  appeals  for  imperialism  have 
the  sympathy  of  the  American  people.  See  Against 
Imperialism. — Hoar. 

It  is  coming — it  is  coming — Ite  the  weather  dark  or 
fair.     See  Grand  Old  Day,  The. — Carleton. 

It  is  dark  and  lonesome  here.  See  Lover,  The. — Stod- 
dard. 

It  is  dearer  to  me  than  earth's  treasures.  See  Her 
Photograph. — McHale. 

It  is  done !  clang  of  bell  and  roar  of  gun.  See  Laus  Deo. 
— Whittier. 

It  is  downright  tyranny,  and  I  will  not  submit  to  it! 
See  Strategy. — Graham. 

It  is  easy  to  accuse  books,  and  bad  ones  are  easily 
found.     See  Books. — Emerson. 

It  is  enough  that  in  this  burdened  time.  See  It  is 
Enough. — Parker. 

It  is  evening;  and  I  sit  in  the  same  chair.  See  David 
Copperfield  (Death  of  Dora). — Dickens. 

It  is  evening.  The  howling  of  the  wind.  See  Violin 
Fantasy,  A. — Fletcher. 

It  is  ever  the  contest  that  pleases  us,  and  not  the  vic- 
tory.    See  same. — Hamilton. 

It  is  ever  to  be  kept  in  mind  that  a  good  name.  See 
Good  Name,  A. — Hawes. 

It  is  finished!  Man  of  Sorrows!  See  Crucifixion,  The. 
— Hedge. 

It  is  fit  to  take  some  notice  of  the  various  terrors.  See 
Attempts  to  Bias  Judgment  in  Case  of  Wilkes. — 
Mansfield. 

It  is  Friday,  and  the  minister  of  Arkland.  See  Rev. 
John  Smith  of  Arkland  Prepares  his  Sermon,  The. 
• — Crockett. 

It  is  generally  better  to  deal  by  speech.  See  Of  Nego- 
tiating.— Bacon. 

It  is  good  to  strive  against  wind  and  rain.  See  Mood, 
A . — Troubetzkoy . 

It  is  good-by,  my  lad?  See  Troop-ship  Sails,  The. — 
(Chambers. 

It  is  gratifying  to  see  such  deep  interest  in  tree-plant- 
ing.    See  Tree  Planting. — Headley. 

It  is  growing  dark.     See  Rizpah. — Reade. 

It  is  hard  to  say  farewell  to  a  hope  that  has  cheered  us. 
See  same. — Murray. 

It  is  high  noon  of  an  August  day.  See  Wild  Prairie 
Fire,  A. — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 

It  is  impossible  for  me  to  settle  myself  to  regular  em- 
ployment. See  Cold  in  the  Head,  A. — Kava- 
naugh. 

It  is  impos.sible  for  us  adequately  to  conceive  the  bold- 
ness of  the  measure.     See  Free  Schools. — Mann. 

It  is  in  battle,  Antietam,  some.  See  Colonel's  Story, 
The. — Rogers. 

It  is  in  Winter  that  we  dream  of  Spring.  See  same. — 
Wilson. 

It  is,  indeed,  the  Queen's  Year.  See  Queen's  Year, 
The.— I.  N.  F. 

It  is,  indeed,  time  that  literature  should  experience 
some  of  the  blessings  of  legislation.  See  Reality 
of  Literary  Property. — Talfourd. 

It  is  just  as  you  say.  Neighbor  Green.  See  Good  Wife, 
"The. — Anon. 

It  is  long  Tom  Yeo  of  the  town  of  Padstow.  See  Mer- 
maid of  Padstow,  The. — Garnett. 

It  is  midnight.  Hark!  the  old  clock  whirs.  See  Dying 
Child,  The.— Vickers. 

It  is  most  true  that  eyes  are  formed  to  serve.  See 
Astrophel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  V.). — Sidney. 

It  is   much   that    a   scholarly   teacher   publishes.     See 

Influence  of  the  Great  Teacher,  The. — Anon. 
It  is  my   First  to-day,  and  so  I  think  I'll  stay.     See 

Bleak  House. — Sabine. 
It   is  my  lady ;  O,  it  is  my  love !     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. 

— Shakespeare. 
It  is  natural  for  man  to  indulge  in  the  illusions  of  hope. 

See  War  Inevitable,  The. — -Henry. 
It  is  natural  in  every  man.     See  Means  of  Acquiring 

Distinction. — Smith. 
It  is  natural  that  the  gratitude  of  mankind.     See  Ora- 
tion on  Washington. — Ames. 


727 


It  is 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


It  is  nearly  a  hundred  years  ago.     See  Romance  of  a 

Ko!H>.  The.— Perry. 
It  is  needless  I  should  tell  you.     See  Decoration  Day. 

— Ironquill. 
It  is  nice  and  quiet,  and  it  talks  pretty.     See  Stage 

Land  (Child,  Ihe). — Jerome. 
It  18  night.     A  great  steamer  is  proudly  gliding.     See 

Lost  Steamer,  The.— Hall. 
It  is  night.     Nature  has  bowed  to  the  inevitable.     See 

Belshazzar's  P'east. — Sellers. 
It  is  no  joy  to  me  to  sit.     <S'ee  Autumn's  Processional 

(October). — Craik. 
It  is  no  use  for  one  to  try.     See  Money  is  King. — Kav- 

anaugh. 
It  is  no  very  uncommon  thing  in  the  world.     See  Gen- 
tleman, The. — Stefle. 
It  is  not  beauty  I  demand.     <See  same. — Darley. 
It  is  not  because  your  heart  is  mine.     See  Because. — 

Procter. 
It  is  not,  Celia,  in  our  power.     See  To  a  Lady  Asking 

how  Long  he  Would  Ix)ve  Her. — Etherege. 
It  is  not  death,  that  sometime  in  a  sigh.     See  Death. — 

Hood. 
It  is  not  death  to  die.     See  same. — Bethune. 
It  is  not  easy  at  this  time  to  comprehend  the  impulse. 

See  Colonization  of  America,  The. — Prescott. 
It  is  not  enough  to  secure  a  lodging  in  the  attic.     See 

London  House-tops. — Lytton. 
It  is  not  every  day  that  is  Washington's  birthday.     See 

Washington's  Birthday. — Anon. 
It  is  not   every  one  that  wears  a  human  form.     See 

True  Manliness. — Eddy. 

It  is  not  for  men  long  to  hinder  the  march  of  human 

_  freedom.     See  March  of  Freedom,  The. — Parker. 

It   is  not  growing  like  a  tree.     See  To  the  Immortal 

Memory  and  Friendship  of  that  Noble  Pair,  iSir 

Lucius  Cary  and  Sir  Henry  Morrison. — Jonson. 

It  is  not  known  to  everyone  that  a  tree.     See  Tree's 

Record  of  its  Life,  A. — ( Vick's  Magazine.) 
It  is  not  life  upon  Thy  gifts  to  live.     See  Life. — Very. 
It  is  not  mere  poetry  to  talk  of  the  "voices  of  summer." 

See  Unwritten  Music. — Willis. 
It  is  not  mine  to  run.     See  Not  Mine. — Dorr. 
It  is  not  poetry  that  makes  men  poor.     See  Poets. — 

Butler. 
It  is  not  repealing  this  or  that  act  of  Parliament.     See 
Repeal  Claimed  by  Americans  as  a  Right. — Chat- 
ham. 
It  is  not  so  much  what  you  say.     See  Words  and  Tones. 

— Anon. 
It  is  not  that  my  lot  is  low.     See  Solitude. — White. 
It  is  not  the  best  way  in  which  to  teach  the  truth  of 

future  puni.«hment.     See  sam.e. — Cook. 
It  is  not  the  deed  we  do.     See  Common  Offering.The. — 

Kiiriball. 
It  is  not  the  fear  of  death.     See  Andre's  Last  Request. 

—Willis. 
It  is  not  the  lark's  clear  tone.     See  What  Makes  the 

Summer? — HoUey. 
It  is  not  the  least  of  the  glories  of  our  period.     See 

Higher  Education,  The. — Anon. 
It  is  not  the  least  of  the  just  claims.     See  Meaning  of 

Victory,  The. — Devens. 
It  is  not  the  slander  of  an  evil  tongue  that  can  defame 
me.     See  Philippic  against  Flood  (Reply  to  Mr. 
Flood).— G  rattan. 
It  is  not  the  waters  of  a  mighty  river.     See  Retribution. 

— Anon. 
It  is  not  to  be  thought  of  that  the  flood.     See  Destiny. 

— Wordsworth. 
It  is  not  yours,  O  mother,  to  co^iplain.    See  Mother  and 

Son. — Stevenson. 
"It  is  nothing  to  me,"  the  beauty  said.     See  Nothing 

and  Something. — Butterbaugh. 
It  is  now  a  long  time.  Conscript  Fathers.     See  First 
Oration  against  Catiline  (Separation  from  Trai- 
tors).— Cicero. 
It  is  now  long  since  women  arrogated.    See  Sesame  and 

Lilies  (Lady.  The). — Ruskin. 
It  is  now  sixteen  or  seventeen  years  since  I  saw  the 
Queen  of  France.     See  Marie  Antoinette,  Queen 
of  France.- — -Burke. 
It  is  now  some  ten  years  since  I  first  spent  a  summer. 

See  Mrs.  Walker's  Betsy. — Bostwick. 
It  is  now  time  to  open  the  meeting.     See  Dew-drop 

Inn,  The. — Vickers. 
It  is  of  greatest  concernment  in  the  church.     See  De- 
meanor of  Books,  The. — Milton. 
It  is  often  said  that  reckless  victims  of  intemperance 
are    brutes.     See    Drunkards    not    all    Brutes. — 
Gough. 
It  is  only  a  glass  of  cider.     See  Only  a  Glass  of  Cider. 
— Richmond. 


It    is  only  a  glove,  Ted,  a  lady's  glove.     See  Only  a 

Glove. — Anon. 
It  is  only  a  knot  of  ribbon  white.     See  White  Ribbon, 

The. — Crocker. 
It  is  our  privilege  and  duty  to  compliment  the  faculty 

of  this  school.     See  Address  to  a  School  Graduat- 
ing Cla.ss  by  a  Clergyman. — .\non. 
It    is    perfect!      My    lord    Cardinal    must    grant  my 

request.     See    Cardinal's    Godson,    The. —  Kava- 

naugh. 
It  is   pleasant   to   think,    just    under   the   snow.     See 

Under  the  Snow. — Hempstead. 
It  is  positively  false  to  call  us  frantic.  See  Chorus  of 

Anglomaniacs. — Fawcett. 
It  is  quite  plain  that  I  belong.     See  Smallest  Grade, 

Tlie. — Kavanaugh. 
It  is  rarely  indeed  that  the  queen  Nehushta  deigns  to 

visit  her  servant.     See  Zoroaster  (Suffering  of  Ne- 
hushta, The). — Crawford. 
It  is  recorded,  in  the  annals  of  the  most  democratic 

republic.     See    Dome    of    the    Republic,    The. — 

White. 
It  is  rather  a  pleasant  coincidence  to  me.     See  Fare- 
well to  England. — Phelps. 
It  is  related   of  General  Scott.     See  Belligerent  Non- 

com-batants. — Sherman. 
It  is  remarkable  how  closely  the  history  of  the  apple- 
tree.     See  Wild  Apples. — Thoreau. 
It  is  sad,  indeed,  to  reflect  on  the  disasters.     See  First 

Settlement  of  New  England,  The  (Sufferings  of  the 

Pilgrims). — Everett. 
It  is  sad  to  see  the  light  of  beauty  fade  away.     See 

Festus  (Waning  Spirit). — Bailey. 
It  is  said,  somewhere  at  twilight.     See  Bell  of  the  An- 
gels, The. — Anon. 
It  is  said  that  at  the  battle  of  Shiloh.     See  sam^e. — 

Heckman. 
It  is  said  that  it  is  impossible  to  civilize  Africa.     See 

Civilization  of  Africa. — Everett. 
It  is  said  that  the  bill  ought  to  pass,  because  the  law 

must  be  enforced.     See  Against  the  Force  Bill. — 

Calhoun. 
It  is  said  that  when  General  Grant  first  took  command. 

See  Patriotic  Sentiments. 
It  is  seldom  pleasant  to  tell  on  one's  self.     See  How  I 

was  Sold. — Clemens. 
"It  is  six,"  the  swallows  twittered,  "and  you're  very 

late  in  rising."     See  Marriage  of  the  Flowers,  The. 

Byers. 
It  is  somewhere  recorded  of  a  certain  traveler.     See 

Tides  are  Rising,  The. — Anon. 
It  is  still  a  city  of  flowers  and  waters;  the  "rivers  of 

Damascus."     See  Innocents  Abroad,  The  (Damas- 
cus).— Clemens. 
It  is  still  night.     See  Daybreak  in  the  camp. — Anon. 
It  is  success  that   colors  all  in   life.     See  Success. — 

Thomson. 
It  is  summer,  a  party  of  visitors  are  just  crossing.     See 

Scene  at  Niagara  Falls. — -Tarson. 
It  is  summer,  says  a  fairy.     See  Roses. — Anon. 
It  is  talked  of  Now!     Was  talked  of  Yesterday!     See 

Boa  and  the  Blanket,  The. — (.Punch.) 
It  is  Thanksgiving  morning,  and  near,  and  far  away. 

See  Waiting  for  the  Children. — Anon. 
It  is  the  ancient  and  constitutional  right  of  this  people. 

See  Right  of  Free  Discussion. — Web-ster. 
It  is  the  bittern's  solemn  cry.     See  Solitude. — Peter- 
son. 
It  is  the  concurring  judgment  of  political  thinkers.     See 

Washington  and  the  Constitution. — Harlan. 
It  is  the  custom  of  your  board,  and  a  noble  one  it  is. 

See  Washington. — Phillips. 
It  is  the  day  when  he  was  born.     See  Arthur  Henry 

Hallam. — Tennyson. 
It  is  the  dead  of  night.     See  Marriage  of  Tirzah  and 

Ahirad,  The. — Macaulay. 
It  is  the  deed  and  the  memorable  last  words  we  think 

of.     See  Martyr-spy,  The. — Warner. 
It  is  the  evening  hour.     See  God's  Rest. — Anon. 
It  is  the  everlasting    glory    of    Stratford-upon-Avon. 

See    Shakespeare's    England. — Winter. 
It  is  the  first  mild  day  of  March.     See  To  My  Sister. — 

Wordsworth. 
It  is   the   fourth   day   of  July,    1776.     See   Fourth  of 
July,   1776,    The    (Unknown     Speaker,     The).— 

Lippard. 
It  is  the  glory  of  this  man  that  his  character  outshone. 

See  Bryant,  Extract  Concerning. — Bellows. 
It  is  the  harvest  moon !  on  gilded  vanes.     See  Harvest 

Moon,  The. — Longfellow. 
It  is  the  hour  when  Arno  turns.     See  Song  of  Arno,  A. 
— Channing-Stetson. 


728 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


It  scares 


It  is  the  hour  when  from  the  boughs.     See   Parisina 

(Twilight).— Byron. 
It  is  the  miller's  daughter.     See  Miller's  Daughter,  The. 

— Tennyson. 
It  is  the  morning  of  Saturday,  the  twenty-second  of 

July,    1403.     See   Battle   of   Shrewsbury,    The.— 

Brooks. 
It  is  the  most  ridiculous  thing  in  the  wold,  Flo!     iSee 

Love  and  Stratagem. — Graham. 
It  is  the  peculiar  good  fortune  of  this  country.     See 

Washington's  Fame. — Robbins. 
It  is  the  poet   Uhland,   from  who.se  wreathings.     See 

Uhland.— Butler. 
It  is  the  popular  cry  now  that  the  age  of  orators  has 

passed.     See  Orator's  Cause,  The. — -Wright. 
It  is  the  pretty  waiter  girl.     See  Waiter  Girl. — Anon. 
It  is  the  property  of  the  religious  spirit.     See  same. — 

Emerson. 
It  is   the   quiet   worker   that   succeeds.     See   same. — 

Anon. 
It  is  the  same  infrequent  star.     See  Star  of  Calvary, 

The. — Hawthorne. 
It  is  the  season  now  to  go.     See  same. — -Stevenson. 
It  is  the  27th  of  August,   1794.     See   Fourth  of  July, 

1776,  The  (Death  of  Robespierre,  The).— Lippard. 
It  is  thy  voice  that  floats  above  the  din.     See  same.^ 

Doudney. 
It  is  time  for  that  stupid  fellow  to  be  back.     See  Handy 

Andy  and  the  Squire. — Anon. 
It  is  time  May  was  here !     See  May's  Five  Dollar  Note. 

— Anon. 
It  is  time  my  friends  were  here.     See  Dandy  and  the 

Boor,  The. — Anon. 
It  is  time  to  be  old.     See  Terminus. — Emerson. 
It  is  to  be  all  bathed  in  tears.     See  What  it  is  to  Love. 

— Barbauld. 
It  is   told   in    Buddhi-theosophic    schools.     See   Tran- 
scendentalism.— {Times  of  India.) 
It  is  too  bad ;  never  was  there  a  woman  so  tormented. 

See  Trusting  Too  Far. — Garrett. 
'  'It  is  too  bad,"  said  Mr.  Robert  Carter.     See  Hero  of 

the  Day,  The. — Anon. 
It  is  too  clear  a  brightness  for  man's  eye.     See  What 

is  Love? — Breton. 
It  is  treason  to  read.     See  Among  My  Books. — Hous- 
ton. 
It  is  true  that  the  offense  charged  in  the  indictment. 

See  Defense  of  the  Kennistons. — Webster. 
It  is  two  miles  ahead  to  the  foot-hills.     See  Skeleton's 

Story,  The. — Anon. 
It  is  unkind  and  improper  to  exult  over  a  triumph. 

See  same. — Anon. 
It  is  useless  and  more  than  foolish  to  enter  into  pre- 
fatory remarks.     See   Add    Ryman's    Celebrated 

Fourth  of  July  Oration. — Anon. 
It  is  very  aggravating.     See  Truth  about  Horace,  The. 

—Field. 
It  is  very  good  fun  to  take  off  your  clothes  and  go  in 

swimming.     See  .John  Spicer  on  Clothes.- — Diass. 
It  is  very  nice  to  think.     See  Thought,  A. — Stevenson. 
It  is  well,  may  be  so,  to  bear  losses.     See  same. — Miller. 
It  is  well  that  in  our  year,  so  busy,  so  secular.     See 

American  Nationality. — Choate. 
It  is  when  the  east  wind  blows.     See  Our  Willows. 

— {Hours  at  Home.) 
It  is  wholly  inconceivable  to  me    how    princes.     See 

Princes. — Ruskin. 
It  is  with  difficulty.  Gentlemen,  that  I  can  repress  an 

emotion  of  indignation.     See  In  Reply  to  Those 

Who  Denied  the  National  Assembly  the  Legitimate 

Powers  of  a  National  Convention. — Mirabeau. 
It  is  with  great  grief  that  I  appear  before  your  Excel- 
lency.    See  On  the  Stamp  Act.— Otis. 
It  is  worth  every  man's  while  to  study  the  important 

art.     See  Happy  Life,  A.- — Smiles. 
It  is     your  throw,  my  dear.     See  Extremes  Meet. — 

Graham. 
It  isn't    enough    that    flowers    bloom.     See    Vacation 

Days. — Sidney. 
It  isn't   much   fun   a-living.     See   Boy's   Belief,   A. — 

Anon. 
It  isn't  polite  to  call  them  fools.     See  Song  of  Degrees, 

A. — -Vandegrift. 
It  isn't  that  I've  got  a  thing  agin'  you.  Parson  Peak. 

See  Reason  Why,  The. — Terry. 
It  isn't  the  thing  you  do,  dear.     See  Sin  of  Omission, 

The. — Sangster. 
It  kindles  all  my  soul.     See  It  Kindles  All  My  Soul.— 

Casimer. 
It  lay  upon  a  pillow  white.     See  Bit  of  Lace,  A. — 

{Red  and  Blue.) 
It  left  upon  her  tender  flesh  no  trace.     See  Woman's 

Death-wound,  A. — Jackson. 


It  little  profits  that  an  idle  king.     See  Ulysses. — Ten- 
nyson. 
It  looked   extremely   rocky   for  the   Boston   [or  Mud- 

ville]  nine  that   day.     See  Casey  at   the   Bat. — 

Thayer  [or  Murphy]. 
It  looks  now  as  if  there  might  be  a  turnin'  point  in  my 

life.     See  Amariah  and  his  Boys. — Anon. 
"It  makes  rpe  shudder,"   she  cried  as  she  emerged 

from  Monsieur  Martin's  menagerie.     See  Passion 

in  the  Desert,  A. — Balzac. 
It  makes  no  difference  that  you  have  seen  forty  or 

fifty  springs.     See  Month  of  Apple  Blo.ssoms,  The. 

— Beecher. 
It  makes  the  blood  tingle  and  the  cheeks  glow  to  read. 

See  Two  Banners  of  America,  The. — Johnson. 
It  matters  little  where  I  was  born.      See  What  Does  it 

Matter. — Anon. 
It  matters  very  little  what  immediate  spot  may  have 

been.     See  Washington. — -Phillips. 
It  may  be   asked,   perhaps.   Supposing  all  this  to  be 

true,  what  can  we  do?     See  Revolution  in  Greece, 

The  (Moral  Force  of  Public  Opinion). — Webster. 
It  may  be  glorious  to  write.    See  Incident  in  a  Rail- 
road   Car,  An   ("It   may    be    glorious,"   etc.).^ 

Lowell. 
It  may  be  in  the  evening.     See  Watch. — Anon. 
It  may   be,    sir,    as    that    you're   right,    tho'     I    don't 

think  you  be.     See  Sailor's  Yarn,  A. — Davis. 
It  may  be  so — perhaps  thou  hast.     See  To  the  Por- 
trait of  "  A  Gentleman. ' ' — Holmes. 
•It  may  be  through  some  foreign  grace.     See  Katie. — 

Timrod. 
It  may  be  we  shall  know  in  the  hereafter.     See  It  May 

Be. — Addleshaw. 
It  may  be  weeds  I've  gathered  too.     See  It  May  Be 

Weeds. — Anon. 
It  may  interest  the  reader  to  know  how  they  "put 

horses  to."     See  Tramp  Abroad.  A. — Clemens. 
It  may  not  be  amiss  to  remark  that  it  was  the  identical 

"Greek  Slave.  "     See  Sculpin. — Anon. 
It  may  not  be — go  maidens,  go.     See  Sated  One,  The. 

— {Punch.) 
It  may  not  be!     I  watch  in  vain.     At  dawn,  at  noon, 

at  eve.     See  Recalled  to  Life. — -Cornwall. 
It  may  not  be  our  lot  to  wield.     See  It  May  not  Be. — 

Anon. 
It  must  be  by  his  death;  and  for  my  part.     See  Julius 

Caesar. — Shakespeare. 
It  must  be  disheartening  work  learning  a  musical  in- 
strument.    See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat  (Trials  of  the 

Musical  Amateur). — Jerome. 
It  must  be  nearly   time   for   them    to  be  home  from 

the  picnic.     See  Picnic  Party,  The. — Graham. 
It  must  be  right  sometimes  to  entertain.     See  Love's 

Justification. — Michelangelo. 
It  must  be  so — Plato,  thou  reason'st  well.      See  Cato 

(Cato's  Soliloquy). — -Addison. 
It  must   be   so!    stomach,    thou    reasonest    well.     See 

Original  Parody,  An. — Anon. 
It  must  be  the  farewell  bell,  yet  how  it  eludes  me. 

See  For  Another's  Sake. — Denton. 
It  must  have  been  a  noble  spectacle  to  have  seen  the 

ship  sail  out  of  port.     See  Loss  of  the  San  Fran- 
cisco, 1853.— Chapin. 
It  never  dies, — a  mother's  holy  love.     See  Things  that 

never  Die. — Jewell. 
It  never  pays  to  fret  and  growl.      See  It  never  Pays. — 

Anon. 
It  now,  kind  friends,  devolves  on  me.    See  Valedictory. 

— Kavanaugh. 
It  oft  times  has  been  told.     See  "Constitution"  and 

"Guerri^re. " — Anon. 
It  once  might  have  been,  once  only.     See  Youth  and 

Art. — -Browning. 
It  owned    not    the   color   that  vanity  dons.     See  My 

Grandmother's  Fan. — Peck. 
It  'peared  to  me  I  wa'nt  no  use  out  in  the  field  to-day. 

See  Over  the  Orchard  Fence. — Shellman. 
It  rains,  but  on  a  dripping  bough.     See  Song  in  the 

Storm,  The. — Buckham. 
' '  It  rains !  it  rains !  oh  dear !  oh  dear ! "     See  ' '  It  Rains. " 

— Ruggles. 
It  really  is  a  comfort  to  have  those  children  out  of  the 

way.     See  Daily  Governess,  The. — -Anon. 
It  really  provokes  me,  Louisa,  to  see  you  wasting  so 

much    precious    time.     See    Too    Fine    and    Too 

Plain. — Anon. 
It  rose    upon    the    sordid    street.     See   Music    in    the 

Street. — Anon. 
It  says  in  the  copy-book  "Wine  is  a  Mocker."     See 

Unwelcome  Intrusion,  An. — Anon. 
It  scares  me,   my  friends,   to  speak  to  you  to-night. 

See  Welcome. — Anon. 


729 


It  seemed 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


It    seemed  a  particularly  happy  and  appropriate  cir- 
cumstance.    See  Boy  Orator  of  Zepata  City,  The. 

— Davi.s. 
It  seemed  to  be  but  chance,  yet  who  shall  say.     See 

May  ."iO,  1893.  JBanp. 
It  seemed  to  me  as  though  I  had  been  suddenly  aroused 
from   my   slumber.     See  Glass   Railroad,   The. — 
Lippard. 
It  seems  a  day.     See  Nutting. — Wordsworth. 
It  seems  a  pity  that  the  glory  of  the.se  bright  May 

days.     See  Mr.  Perkins  Helps  to  Move  a  Stove. — 

Bailey. 
It  seems  as  if  newspaper  wares  were  made  to  suit  a 

market.     See    Monstrous    Relations    in    Newspa- 
pers.— Ames. 
It  seems  comfortable  here  at  home  after  a  hard  day 

among  the  "Bulls  and  Bears."     See  All  Right  At 

Last. — Trafton. 
It  seems  no  work  of  man's  creative  hand.     See  Petra. 

— Burgon. 
It  seems  quite  funny  to  reflect.     See  Lines  to  a  Mon- 
key.— Conger. 
It  seems  to  be  the  fate  of  some  measures  to  be  praised, 

but   not   adopted.     See  Speech   on   the   Internal 

Improvement  Bill. — Calhoun. 
It  seems  to  me  but  yesterday.     See  How  We  Played 

"King  William." — Ewing. 
It  settles   softly   on   your   things.     See   Dust,   The. — 

Hall. 
It  silently  fell  in  the  gloom  and  the  night.     See  First 

Snow,  The. — Benton. 
It  singeth  low  in  every  heart.     See  Auld  Lang  Syne. — 

Chadwick. 
It  sings  to  me  in  sunshine.     See  Segovia  and  Madrid. — 

Cooke. 
It  slaps  and  laps  at  the  city's  wharves.     See  River  of 

Commerce,  The. — O.  L. 
"It  snows!"  cries  the  school-boy,  "Hurrah!"  and  his 

shout.     See  It  Snows. — Hale. 
It  snows!  it  snows!  from  out  the  sky.     See  It  Snows. — 

Gould. 
It  snows!  yes,  it  snows!  and  the  children  are  wild.    See 

It     snows! — It     snows! — (Mother    Truth's    Melo- 
dies.) 
It  sometimes  happens  that  a  man,  traveler  or  fisher- 
man.    See  Caught  in  the  Quicksand. — Hugo. 
It  sometimes  hai>pens  that  two  friends  will  meet.     See 

same. — (Sunday  Afternoon.) 
It  stands  alone,  on  the  brow  of  a  little  hill.     See  My 

Elm  Tree.— Rickoff. 
It  stands  at  the  bend  where  the  road  has  its  end.     See 

Little  Old  House  by  the  Shore,  The. — Lincoln. 
It  stands  in  a  sunny  meadow.     See  Old  House  in  the 

Meadow,  The. — Anon. 
It  stands  in  a  winding  street.     See  Book-stall,  The. — 

Scollard. 
It  stands    in    the    Comitium.     See    Horatius    at    the 

Bridge. — Macaulay. 
It  stands  in  the  comer  yet,  stately  and  tall.     See  Ye 

Golde-headed  Cane. — Knowles. 
It  stands  in  the  lonely  Winterthal.     See  Deserted  Mill, 

The. — Schnezler. 
It  stands  in  the  stable-yard,  under  the  eaves.     See  Old 

Sedan  Chair.  The. — Dobson. 
It  suppresses   duration,    it   suppresses   space,   it    sup- 
presses suffering.     See  same.- — Hugo. 
It  swings    upon     the    leafless    tree.     See    Snow-filled 

Nest,  The.— Cooke. 
It  trailed  on  a  sheltered  hillside.     See  Arbutus,  The. — 

Anon. 
It  trembled  off  the  keys, — a  parting  kiss.     See  Her 

Music. — Dickinson. 
It  vas  der  goot  shkiff  Hezberus.     See  "Der  Wreck  of 

der  Hezberus." — Phaster. 
It  vas   her!     O,    it   vas   mein    luf!     See    Romeo   and 

Juliet. — Anon. 
It  vas  in  a  half-starved  garret-house  dot  a  mudder  and 

a  daughter  lay.     See  Dot  Loaf  of  Bread. — Pretzel. 
It  wan't  so  very  long  ago,  'bout  forty  year,  I  guess. 

See  Grandpa's  Courtship. — Clark. 
It  was  a  balmeous  day  in  May,  when  spring  was  spring- 
ing high.     See  Ballad  of  the  Green  Old  Man,  The. 

— Leland. 
It  was  a  beauteous  lady  richly   dressed.     See  Allan 

Percy. — Norton. 
It  was  a  beautiful  Sunday  morning  in  early  summer. 

See  Mission  of  a  Song,  The. — Hoffner. 
It  was  a  beauty  that   I  saw.     See  Perfect  Beauty. — 

Jon  son. 
It  was  a  bitter  cold  night.     See  Coming  Home.     Anon. 
It  was  a  blind  beggar,  had  long  lost  his  sighte.     See 

Beggar's    Daughter    of    Bednall    Greene,    The.— 
Anon. 


It  was  a  bonny  simmer  morn,  anither  sic  as  this.     See 

Scotch  Jeanie's  Story. — Anon. 
It  was  B  bright  and  cheerful  afternoon.     See  Summer 

and  Winter. — Shelley. 
It  was  a  bright  and  lovely  summer's  morn.     See  Two 

Pictures,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  a  calm,  still  Sabbath  eve.     See  Spirit's  Birth, 

The. — -Anon. 
It  was  a  charmingly  mild  and  balmy  day.    See  Philpso- 

pher  in  the  Apple  Orchard,  The. — Hope. 
It  was  a  Christmas  morning,  the  bells  tolled  loud  and 

clear.     See  Lady  Judith's  Vision,  The. — Wilson. 
It  was  a  clear  case  of  negligence  on  the  part  of  the 

engineer.     See     Farmer     Bofim's     Equivalent. — 

Anon. 
It  was  a  close,  warm,  breezeless  summer  night.     See 

Prelude,  The  (Ascent  of  Snowdon). — Wordsworth. 
It  was  a  cloudy,  dismal  day,  and  I  was  all  alone.     See 

Sheltered. — Jewett. 
It  was  a  cold   winter     vening   that   I   received.       See 

Strange  Case  of  Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr.  Hyde,  The  (Dr. 

Lanyon's  Narrative). — Stevensen 
It  was    a    custom    of    the    ancient     Egyptians.     See 

Completion  of  the  National  Monument  to   Wash- 
ington, The  (Washington  Needle,  The). — Winthrop. 
It  was  a  day  of  great  excitement  in  the  courtroom. 

See  Charlie  and  the  Possum. — Edwards. 
It  was  a  day  of  sun  and  rain.     See  At  Fontainebleau. — • 

Symons. 
It  was   a   dim,   quiet   room   in   an   old-fashioned   New 

York  house.     See  Tenor,  The. — Banner. 
It  was  a  dismal  and  a  fearful  night.     See  On  the  Death 

of  Mr.  William  Hervey. — Cowley. 
It  was  a  dreary  day  in  Padua.     See  Countess  Laura. 

— Boker. 
It   was   a    fearful    night;    [the]    pale    lightning.      See 

Night's  Adventure,  A. — Anon. 
It  was  a  fearful  time  when  the  steamboat  Tyro  was 

lost.     See  Door  of  Heaven,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  a  formidable  business  Hooker  and  his  brigades 

had  in  hand.     See  Capture  of  Lookout  Mountain, 

The.— Taylor. 
It  was  a  friar  of  orders  gray.     See  Friar  of  Orders 

Gray,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  a  gala  day  on  the  avenue.    See  Kit;  or.  Faithful 

unto  Death. — Anon. 
It  was  a  gallant  cavalier  of  honor  and  renown.     See 

Cavalier's  Choice,  The. — Goethe. 
It  was  a  gallant  sailor  man.     See  Two  Anchors,  The. — 

Stoddard. 
It  was   a   game   called   Yes   and   No.     See   Christmas 

Carol,  A. — Dickens. 
It  was  a  glorious  night      The  moon   had   sunk.     See 

Three  Men   in   a  Boat    (Dark  Forest  of  Sorrow, 

The) . — Jerome. 
It  was  a  gorgeous  temple,  form'd.     See  Saint  and  Sin- 
ner.— Kavanaugh. 
It  was  a  gruesome  butcher.     See  Ballad  of  the  Butcher 

and  the  Dear  Little  Children,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  a  happy  lot  to  unite  so  many  attractive  quali- 
ties.    See  Eulogy  of  John  Bright,  A. — Gladstone. 
It  was  a  hungry  pussy  cat,  upon  Thanksgiving  morn. 

See  Thank.sgiving  Fable,  A. — Herford. 
It  was  a  jolly  Miller  lived  on   the   River   Dee.     See 

•lolly  Miller,  The.— Riley. 
It  was  a  laboring  bark  that  slowly  held  its  way.     See 

Mary  Queen  of  Scots. — Bell. 
It  was  a  large  red  brick  house.     See  House  with  the 

Cross,  The. — Snedeker. 
It  was  a  lass,  for  love  a-seeking.     See  It  was  a  Lass. — 

Wilkins. 
It  was  a  litter,  a  litter  of  five.     See  Bagman's  Dog, 

The. — Barham. 
It  was  a  lodge  of  ample  size.     See  Lady  of   the  Lake, 

The  (Lodge,  The).— Scott. 
It  was  a  long  time  ago,  one  winter's  eve.     See  Old 

Woman's  Love  Story. — Anon. 
It  was  a   lovely   day    in    autumn.     See   Some    Polite 

Dogs. — Thaxter. 
It  was  a   lovely   sight  to    see.     See   Christabel. — Cole- 
ridge. 
It  was  a  lover  and  his  lass.     See  As  you  Like   It  (It 

was  a  Lover,  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
It  was  a  maiden  beauteous.     See  Modern  and  Mediae- 
val Ballad  of  Mar.v  Jane,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  a  matter  of  talk.     See  Socks  for  John  Randall. 

—Phelps. 
It  was  a  night  in  harvest  time.     See  Country  Court- 
ship, A.— O'Connor. 
It  was  a  noble  Roman.     See  Will  and  the  Way,  The. — 

Saxe. 
It  was  a  pitiful  mistake,  an  error  sad  and  grim.     See 
Only  Once. — Anon. 


730 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


It  was 


It  was  a  purty  good  idee  tew  organize  a  S'oiety.     See 

Society  for  Doing  Good,  A. — McBride. 
It  was  a  rat-trap  of  an  old  house.      Its   walls   bulged. 

See  Out  of  the  Bottle. — Dallas. 
It  was  a  regular  scarecrow  man.     See  Scarecrow,  The. 

^Mather. 
It  was  a  robber's  daughter,  and  her  name  was  Alice 

Brown.     See  Gentle  Alice  Brown. — Gilbert. 
It  was  a  rule  at   Thornton   Hall.     See  Back-log,   The ; 

or.  Uncle  Ned's  Little  Game.— Randolph. 
"It  was  a  sad  funeral  to  me,"  said  the  speaker.     See 

"Died  Poor.  " — Anon. 
It  was  a    Sergeant    old    and    gray.     See    Picciola. — 

Newell. 
It  was  a  starry  night  in  June,  the  air  was  soft  and  still. 

See  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill. — Cozzens. 
It  was  a  still  autumnal  day.     See  We  Walked  among 

the  Whispering  Pines. — Boner. 
It  was  a   story  the   pilot   told,   with  his  back  to   his 

hearers.     See  Pilot's  Story,  The.— Howells. 
It  was  a   strange  sensation   that   came   o'er  me.     See 

Wallenstein  (Astrological  Tower,  The). — Schiller. 
It  was  a  sultry  noon  and  Jeffersonville  was  brisk  [or 

and  in  the  .Jeffersonville  courthouse!.     See  Trial 

of  Ben  Thomas,  The. — Edwards. 
It  was  a  summer  eve,  and  underneath.     See  Remmis- 

cence. — Anon.  ^  t.i     i_   ■ 

It  was  a  summer  evening.     See  Battle  of  Blenheim, 

The.— Southey. 
It  was  a  summer  holiday,   as  bright  as  ever  shone. 

See  Little  Eloise. — Fletcher.  . 

It  was  a  tall  young  oysterman  lived  by  the  river-side. 

See  Ballad  of  the  Oysterman,  The.— Holmes. 
It  was  a  time  of  sadness,  and  my  heart.     See  Changed 

Cross,  The.— Hobart. 
It  was  a  two-story  framed  house,  shingled  instead  of 

clap-boarded.     See  Lyman  Beecher's  First  Home. 

— Beecher. 
It  was  a  warm  evening  in  the  early  fall.     See  Uncle 

Edom  and  the  Yankee  Book-agent. — Andrews. 
It  was  a  wee  bit  housie.     See   Wren's  Nest,   The.— 

Fleming.  t>  n    i 

It  was   a   wicked   Nephew   bold.     See   Ballad   of   the 

Wicked  Nephew. — Fields. 
It  was  a  wild  and  wintry  Sunday  morning  in  mid- 
ocean.     See  Overboard ! — Elmer. 
It  was  a  wise  custom  among  the  Roman  people.     See' 

Abraham  Lincoln. — Anon. 
It  was    a    young    maiden    went    forth    to    ride.     See 

Equestrian  Courtship. — Hood. 
It  was  about  noon  on  a  sultry  day.     See  Not  Guilty.- — 

Anon.  „       .        , 

It  was  about  the  feast  of  Christmas-tide.     See  Angel, 

"The. — Anon. 
It  was  about  the  middle  of  February,  when  Vendale 

and  Obenreizer.     See  Mountain  Tragedy,  The. — 

Dickens. 
It  was  about   Yule,  when  the  wind  blew  cool.     See 

Young  Waters. — Anon. 
It  was  "after  taps,"  a  sultry.  Southern-summer  night. 

See  Tobe's  Monument. — Kilham. 
It  was  after  the  din  of  the  battle.     See  After  the  Bat- 
tle.— Mosby. 
It  was  almost  morning.     Already  the  black  curtain. 

See  .Terry,  the  Bobbin-boy. — Anon. 
It  wasl  almost  time  for  winter  to  come.     See  Kind  Old 

Oair>The. — Anon. 
It  was  always  the  time  for  a  laugh,  when  the  name. 

See  "Lily's"  Thanksgiving,  The. — Phelps. 
It  was  an  Amateur  Dram.  Ass.     See  Amateur  Orlando, 

The.-/-Lanigan. 
It  was  an  English' lady e  bright.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 

Minstrel  (Albert  Graeme's  Song). — Scott. 
It  was  an, English  summer  day.     See  Duty's  Reward. — 

Anon.; 
It  was  an.  established  custom  on  the  annual  exhibition 

day.     See  Jack  Hall's  Boat-race. — Grant. 
"It  was  aft  eve  of  autumn's  holiest  mood. "     See  Course 

of  Tii^e,  The  ("It  was  an  eve,"  etc.). — Pollok. 
It  was  an  /fevening  of  summer,  when  the  wheat  was  in 

the   efar.     See   War-horn   of   the   Elkings,   The. — 

Morrte. 
It  was   an   honest   fisherman.     See    Cold-water    Man, 

The.-f-Saxe. 
It  was  an' old  distorted  face.     See  Behind  the  Mask. — 

Whitney. 
It  was  an  old  log  schoolhouse  standing  back  from  the 

country  road.     See  Old  Log  Schoolhouse,  The. — 

Anon. 
It  was  an  old,  old,   old,  old  lady.     See  "One,  Two, 

"Three. " — Bunner. 
It  was  as  calm  as  calm  could  be.     See  Becalmed  at  Sea. 

— Cowan. 


It  was  as  fine  a  spectacle  as  anyone  could  see.     See 

Ballotville  Female  Convention,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  as  true  of  Wendell  Phillips  as  of  the  Chevalier 

Bayard.     See  Wendell  Phillips. — Curtis. 
It  was  at  a  charity  fair,  and  he  had  come  there  at  the 

special   request   of  his  "cousin."     See  Victim  of 

Charity,  A. — Anon. 
It  was  at  dusk  of  an  autumn  day.     See  One  of  Christ's 

Little  Ones. — Anon. 
It  was  at  Spirit  Lake,  at  the  very  limit  of  the  pier.     See 

Star-gazing. — Anon. 
It  was  at  the  beginning  of  the  Egyptian  era  in  America. 

See  Wendell  Phillips. — Beecher. 
It  was  at  the  corner  of  Woodward  Avenue  and  Con- 
gress Street.     See  Man  Who  Apologized,  The. — 

{Detroit  Free  Press.) 
It  was    autumn.     Hundreds   had    wended    their   way 

from   pilgrimages.     See  Loss  of  the   "Arctic." — 

Beecher. 
It  was  brave  young  Parson   Webster.     See  Fighting 

Parson,  The. — Blood. 
It  was  but  yerterday,  my  love,  thy  little  heart  beat 

high.     See  Lament  of  Anastasius. — Peabody. 
It  was   buying  an   apron   I    was,   ma'am.     See   Nurse 

Winnie  Goes  Shopping. — Johnson. 
It  was  carnivale  time.     The  merriment  of  this  famous 

festival.     See  Marble  Faun,  The    (Frolic   of  the 

Carnivale,    A). — Hawthorne. 
It  was    Christmas   eve!     See   Curate's    Story,    The. — 

Jerome. 
It  was    Christmas    eve;    a    snow    storm    passed.     See 

Saint  Anthony. — Latimer. 
It  was  Christmas  Eve.     Above  the  broad  river.     See 

Mr.  Kris  Kringle. — Mitchell. 
It  was    Christmas    eve,     and     lonely.     See    Orphan's 

Dream  of  Christmas,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  Christmas  eve  in  a  California  Mining  town  in 

1858.     See  First  Piano  in  the  Mining  Camp,  The. 

— Anon. 
It  was  Christmas  Eve  in  the  year  "fourteen."     See 

Under  the  Snow. — Collyer. 
It  was  Christmas  in  the  city,  people  hurried  to  and 

fro.     See    Christmas    Angel's     Message,     The. — 

Coffey. 
It  was  Christmas   Mom.     See  "Love   is  Over  All.'  — 

Wilson. 
It  was    Christmas    time    and    over    the    world.     See 

Brother  .Jim. — McNabb. 
It  was  close  upon  the  hour  of  midnight.     See  Hour  of 

Horror,  An. — Anon. 
It  was  cold  that   New  Year's  Day.     See  Mr.  Piper's 

Mittens. — Turner. 
It  was  Commencement   at   one  of  our  colleges.     See 

Second  Trial,  A. — Kellogg. 
It  was  dark  before  the  jury  retired  to  consider  of  their 

verdict.     See   Acquittal   of   the   Bishops,   The. — 

Macaulay. 
It  was  Decoration   Day,   some  years  ago.     See  Mar- 
guerite.— Schroeder. 
It  was  down  by  Santiago.     See  On  the  Calendar. — 

Anon. 
It  was  downe  in  the  yeast  part  of  the  city.     See  Butch- 
er's Boy  and  the  Baker's  Girl,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  dreary  and  desolate  weather.     See  Childless. — 

Davis. 
It  was  during  holiday  week.      See  Old  Jack   Watt's 

Christmas. — Anon. 
It  was    during   the    famous   battle   of   Chickamauga. 

See  True  Courage. — Anon. 
It  was  during  the  summer  of  '63  with  the  Army  of  the 

Cumberland.     See  Little  Black  Phil. — Belknap. 
It  was    Earl    Haldan's  daughter.     See  Ballad  of  Earl 

Haldan's  Daughter. — Kingsley. 
It  was  early  in  the  summer,  and  the  school  was  near  its 

close.     See    How    they    Caught    the    Panther. — 

Hough. 
It  was  early  Sunday  morning,  in  the  year  sixty-four. 

See  Kearsarge  and  Alabama. — Anon. 
It  was  eight  bells  ringing.     See  Fighting   T(5m^raire, 

The.— Newbolt. 
It  was  eight  o'clock  at  night.     The  besieged,   at  the 

given  signal.     See  Last  Night  of  Misolonghi,  The. 

— Grosvenor. 
It  was  1801.  At  this  time  Europe  concluded  the  Peace 

of  Amiens.     See  Toussaint  L'Ouverture  (Napoleon 

Bonaparte  and  Toussaint  L'Ouverture). — Phillips. 
It  was  evening  in  the  country.  See  His  Love. — Anon. 
It  was  evident  that  something  of  great  importance  was 

in    contemplation.      See    Pickwick    Papers,  The 

Mr.    Pickwick's     Proposal     to    Mrs.     Bardell). — 

Dickens. 
It  was  fifteen  years  since  Silas  Marner  had  first  come 

to  Raveloe.     See  Silas  Marner. — Eliot. 


731 


It  was 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


It  was  fifty  years  ago.     See  Fiftieth  Birthday  of  Agas- 

siz.  The. — Longfellow. 
It  was  fine  Christmas  weather.     See  Mrs.  Brownlow's 

Christinas  Rarty. — (Every  Other  Saturday.) 
It  was  forty  yeara^go    in  the  merry  month  of  May. 

See  Birkenhead,  The. — Griswold. 
It  was    frosty    winter    season.      See    Philomela,  the 

Lady^Fitzwater's  Nightingale  (Philomela's  Second 

Ode"). — Greene. 
It  was  glad  New  Year's  morn,  and  from  far  and  from 

near.     See  New  Year's  Deed,  A. — Smith. 
It  was  her  first  sweet  child,  her  heart's  delight.     See 

aame. — Turner. 
It  was  here  in  Indiannei.     See  Hoosier  and  his  Han- 

ner.  The. — Fink. 
It  was  here  in  the  wilds  of  the  Wis.sahichon,  on  the  day 

of  battle.     See  Bible  Legend  of  the  Wissahickon, 

The.— Ragsdale. 
It  was  high  noon  on  the  Saranac  and  a  brighter  day 

was  never  seen.     See  Honor  of  the  Woods,  The. — 

Murray. 
It  was  his  greatest  pride  in  life  that  he  had  been  a  soldier. 

See  Soldier  of  the  Empire,  The. — Page. 
It  was  in  a  grocer's  window  that  she  saw  a  simple  sign. 

See  Simple  Sign,  A. — Anon. 
It  was  in  a  plea.sant  deepo,  sequestered  from  the  ram. 

See  Ballad  of  Charity,  The.— Leland. 
It  was  in  ancient   Italy  a  deadly  hatred  grew.     See 

Romeo  and  Juliet  (Altered). — Anon. 
It  was  in  and  about  the  Martinmas  time.     See  Bonny 

Barbara  Allan. — Anon. 
It  was  in  Arcady.     The  Council  of  State.     See  How  to 

Curtail  the  Liquor  Traffic. — Anon. 
It  was    in    eighteen    hundred — yes — and    nine.     See 

Benediction,  The.^Copp6e. 
It  was  in  one  of  my  balloon  ascents.     See  My  Balloon 

Ascent. — Anon. 
It  was  in  the  Californias, — beauteous,  flowery,  sunset 

land.     See  Alameda.^ — Stewart. 
It  was    in    the    days   when    Claverhouse.     See   Jamie 

Douglas. — Anon. 
It  was  in  the  gray  of  the  early  morning,  in  the  season 

of  Lent.     See  Fireman's  Prayer,  The.— Conwell. 
It  was  in  the  Indian  summer-time,  when  life  is  tender 

brown.     See  Masher,  The. — Leland. 
It  was  in  the  mid-splendor  of  the  reign  of  the  Emperor 

Commodus.     See  Doom  of  Claudius  and  Cynthia, 

■The, — Thompson. 
It  was  in  the  sweet  June  afternoon  the  busy  housewife 

sat.     See  Jenny's  White  Rose. — Allen. 
It  was  in  the  valley  of  Shenandoah.     See  Confederate 

Sergeant,  The. — -Anon. 
It  was  intill  a  pleasant  time.     See  Earl  Mar's  Daugh- 
ter.— Anon. 
It  was   just    a   very   merry   fairy   dream!     See   Pixy 

People,  The.— Riley. 
It  was  just  at  sundown,  and  Lily  was  sitting  on  the 

porch.     See  Lily  Servosse's  Ride. — Tourg(5e. 
It  was  late  in  mild  October,  and  the  long  autumnal 

rain.     See  Huskers,  The. — Whittier. 
It  was  just  at  the  dawn  of  day.     See  Maid  of  Orleans, 

The. — Sagerbeer. 
It  was  long  ago  it  happened,  ere  ever  the  signal  gun. 

See  How  He  Saved  St.  Michael's. — Stansbury. 
It  was  long  before  the  cable  stretched  across  the  ocean. 

See  Mis.sing  Ship,  The. — Gough. 
It  was  long  past  the  noon  when   I   pushed  back  my 

chair.     See  Through  the  Solitudes. — Savage-Arm- 
strong. 
It  was  many  and  many  a  year  ago.     See  Annabel  Lee. 
»J     — Poe. 
It  was  May,   1896.     The  city  sat  like  a  queen.     See 

Sherman  Tornado,  The. — Anon. 
It  was  Maytime.     See  Happiest  Hour,  The. — Tenny- 
son. 
It  was  midnight,  deep  and  still,  in  the  mansion  of  Mrs. 

Partington.     See  Mouse-hunting. — Shillaber. 
It  was  Mr.  Stokes  begun  it,  that  spring  Jeremiah  was 

committee.     See  Firetown's  New  Schoolhouse. — • 

Phelps. 
It  was  my  fortune  a  while  ago  for  the  first  time  in  my 

life.     See  Law  and  Faith  and  Freedom. — Hoar. 
It  was  natural  that  when  Gid  Bronxon  realized  he  had 

his  way  to  make.     See  How  the  Derby  Was  Won. 

— Robert.son. 
It  was  near  a  thicky  shade.     See  Mourning  Garment, 

The  (Description  of  the  Shepherd  and  his  Wife, 

The). — Greene. 
It  was  near  Flat  Rock,  I>unenberg  County,  Virginia. 
►•  ■     See  Debil,  Mighty  Debil.— Anon. 
It  was  near  midnight ;  the  moon,  lessened  by  its  de- 
cline.    See  Execution  of  Lady  de  Winter,  The. — 

Duma.s. 


It  was  nearly  two  hours  before  daybreak.     See   Oliver 

Twist  (Murder  of  Nancy  Sikes,  The). — Dickens. 
It  was     Ned     Thornton's     eighteenth     birthday.     See 

Brave  Aunt  Katy. — Eyster. 
It  was  never  imported  from  France.     See  Ballade  of 

Laura's  Fan. — {Harvard  Lampoon.) 
It  was  New  Year's  night.     See  'Two    Roads,   The. — 

Richter. 
It  was  night,  and  softly  o'er  the  sea  of  Galilee.     See 
Healing  the  Daughter  of  Jarius,  The.— rWillis. 

It  was  night  in  Egypt.  The  deep  blue  of  the  southern 
sky.     See  Napoleon  at  the  Pyramids. — Graff. 

It  was  night  in  the  great  city,  and  Pleasure  was  restless 
on  the  Streets.  See  Fantasy,  A. — {Detroit  Free 
Press.) 

It  was  night  on  the  deep,  and  the  dancing  wave.  See 
What  the  Diver  Saw. — Durant. 

It  was  night.  The  boarding  house  was  wrapt  in  tene- 
brous gloom.  See  Story  of  a  Bedstead,  The. — 
Anon. 

It  was  night;  the  pulse  of  human  life  that  through  the 
day.     See  Echoes  from  Bethlehem. — Anon. 

It  was  no  relief  from  temporal  evils  that  the  Apostle 
promised.     See  same. — Butler. 

It  was  noon  in  the  Crescent  City.  See  Sergeant  Pren- 
tiss' First  Plea. — Bachman. 

It  was  noontide.  The  sun  was  very  hot.  See  Mar- 
garet Gray. — Lamb. 

It  was  not  anything  she  said.     See  same. — Anon. 

It  was  not  at  all  like  those  you  see  of  ordinary  men. 
See  Uncle  Nate's  Funeral. — Anon. 

It  was  not  his  olive  valleys  and  orange  groves.  See 
Patriotism   (Nations  and  Humanity).-;-Curtis. 

It  was  not  in  a  feudal  ca.stle,  or  in  mediaeval  days. 
See  Mazurka  of  Chopin's,  A. — Richardson. 

It  was  not  in  the  winter.  See  Ballad:  "It  was  not 
in  the  winter.  " — Hood. 

It  was  not  like  your  great  and  gracious  ways!  See 
Departure. — Patmore. 

It  was  not  many  centuries  since.  See  Meeting  of  the 
Dryads,  The. — Holmes. 

It  was  not  the  fault  of  the  landlady.  See  Ethelinda's 
Recitations. — Anon. 

It  was  not  until  I  came  on  Table'  Rock  and  looked. 
See  American  Notes  (Niagara  Falls). — Dickens. 

It  was  not  until  the  late  civil  war.  See  Thanksgiving 
Day. — Anon. 

It  was  nothing  but  a  rose  I  gave  her.  See  Sigh,  A. — 
Spofford. 

It  was  now  June.  The  snow  was  rapidly  disappearing. 
See  Sudden  Transformation  from  Winter  to  Sum- 
mer.— Kennan. 

It  was  odd,  very  odd. — See  That  Ten   Dollars. — Anon. 

It  was  o'er!  The  trust  I  cherished.  See  To  A.  M. 
Olar.— Dallas. 

It  was  on  a  cold  winter  evening  that  I  received.  See 
Dr.  Lanyon's  Narrative. — Stevenson. 

It  was  on  a  moonlight  night  that  Pennypacker.  See 
Extraordinary  Phenomenon,  An. — Anon. 

It  was  on  a  Sabbath  morn,  and  George  Murgatroyd 
had  just  turned  over  to  .sleep.  See  Fearful 
Fright,  A. — Anon. 

It  was  on  Friday  morning,  the  12th  of  October.  See 
Life  and  Voyages  of  Christopher  Columbus 
(Columbus   Landing  in  the  New  World).— Irving. 

It  was  on  the  first  day  of  May,  in  thj  bright  and  glor- 
ious.    See  Trials  of  a  Columbian  Guard. — -Head. 

It  was  on  the  Mount  Cithaeron,  in  the  pale  and  misty 
morn.     See  Actaeon. — Wilkins. 

It  was  on  the  night  of  April  14,  1865,  that  the  shot  was 
fired.  See  Vengeance  of  the  Flag,  The. — Ester- 
brooke. 

It  was  on  the  Western  Frontier.  See  Clown's  Baby, 
The. — Janvier. 

It  was  one  morning  this  last  April  that  a  blue-bird  lit 
on  my  window-sill.  See  Old  Quarrel,  An. — Bay- 
lor. 

It  was  one  of  the  most  picturesque  moments  in  the  his- 
tory of  Rome.  See  Ulysses  S.  Grant. — Higgin- 
son. 

It  was  one  of  the  solemn  days  along  the  alley.  See 
Newsboy's  Funeral,  A. — Anon. 

It  was  one  of  those  grand  cathedrals.  See  Face  in  the 
Cathedral,  The. — Lawson. 

It  was  one  Sunday,  as  I  was  traveling  through  the 
county  of  Orange,  See  Blind  Preacher,  'The. — 
Wirt. 

It  was  only  a  [little]  blossom.     See  Only. — Perry. 

It  was'only  a  little  thing  for  Nell.  See  Little  Things. 
— Anon. 

It  was  "only"  a  match,  a  splinter  of  pine.     See  Only. 

— Storrs. 
It  was  only  a  simple  ballad.     See  Only  a  Song. — Anon. 


732 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


It  would 


It  was  only  a  tiny  seed.     See  Only  a  Little  Thing. — 

Handy. 
It  was    only   the    clinging   touch.     See   Child,    The. — 

Woodberry. 
It  was  our  Sabbath  eve.     By   set   of   sun.     See  Light 

of  the  World,  The  (Resurrection,  The). ^Arnold. 
It  was  our  wedding-day.     See  Possession. — Taylor. 
It  was   [out!  on  the    VVestern  Frontier,     See  Clown's 

Baby,  The. — Janvier. 
It  was  over  the  sea,   in  the  land  of  tea.     See  Little 

Tee-Hee.— Fink. 
It  was  rumored  abroad  that  the  presiding  elder.     See 

Methodist  Camp  Meeting,  A. — Head. 
It  was   Sabbath  evening.     See  Domestic  Mutual  Im- 
provement.-— Stewart. 
It  was  Saturday  night,  and  the  widow  of  the  pine  cot- 
tage.    See  Righteous  never  Forsaken,  The.— Anon. 
It  was  Saturday  night,  and  two  children  small.     See 

Love  One  Another. — Anon. 
It  was  six  men  of  Indostan.     See  Blind  Men  and  the 

Elephant,  The. — Saxe. 
It  was  some  thirty  years  ago.     See  Plumber's  Revenge, 

The. — Anon. 
It  was   Spring    the   first   time  that  I    saw   her.      See 

Master's  Johnny's  Next-door  Neighbor. — Harte, 
It  was  such  a  funny  story!     [how]  I  wish  you  could 

have  heard  it.     See  Funny  Story,  The. — Pollard. 
It  was  such  a  pretty  nest,  and  in  such  a  pretty  place. 

See  Sandpiper's  Nest,  The. — Thaxter. 
It   was   Sunday   afternoon.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin 

(Little  Evangelist,  The). — Stowe. 
It  was    Sunday.     Mr.    Skinner    was    very    tired.     See 

Happy  Family,  A. — Anon. 
It  was   Sunday   night   in   the   old   stone   church.     See 

How  the  Revival  Came. — Bidwell. 
It  was  Sunday,   Sunday  the  tenth  of   November,   St. 

Martin's  Day.     See  Story  of  a  Short  Life,  The. — 

Ewing. 
It  was  ten  minutes  before  train  time.     See  She  Waved. 

— Anon . 
It  was  terribly  cold ;  it  snowed  and  was  already  almost 

dark.     See  Little  Match-girl,  The. — Andersen. 
It  was  Thanksgiving  Day,   but  the  wildest   flight   of 

fancy.     See  One  Thanksgiving  Day. — Wheeler. 
It  was  that  fierce  contested  field  when  Chickamauga 

lay.     See  Thomas  at  Chickamauga. — Sherwood. 
It  was    that    hushed,    expectant    hour    ere    yet.     See 

Cuba's  Maiden  Martyr. — Harding. 
It  was  that  they  loved  the  children.     See  Four-o'clocks. 

— Quimby. 
It  was  the  autumn  of  the  year.     See  Left  Behind. — 

Allen. 
It  was  the  beginning  of  the  end.     The  last  tie  of  the 

mighty  Union  Pacific.     See  Owyhee  Joe's  Story.- — 

Wildman. 
It  was    the    calm    and    silent    night !     See    Christmas 

Hymn,  A. — Domett. 
It  was    the    Cedar    Rapids    sleeper.     See    Champion 

Snorer,  The. — {Burlington-Hawkeye. ) 
It  was  the  charming  month  of  May.    See  Chloe. — Burns. 
It  was  the  cloister  Grabow,  in  the  land  of  Usedom. 

See  Greediness  Punished. — Rfiokert. 
It  was  the  close  of  a  day  in  the  early  part  of  December. 

See  Fiddle  Told,  The.— Franklin. 
It  was  the  closing  of  a  summer's  day.     See  Karl  the 

Martyr. — Anon. 
It   was   the   day   of   the   great   games   in    Rome.     See 

Threads  from  the  Woof  (Rose  of  Rome,  A). — Gal- 
pin. 
It  was  the  day  of  the  Squire's  annual  banquet  to  his 

tenants.     See  Bob,   Son  of   Battle   (Black  Killer, 

The).— Ollivant. 
It  was  the  eve  of  Christmas,  the  snow  fell  slowly  down. 

See  Tale  of  Christmas  Eve,  A. — Anon. 
It  was  the  fairy  of  the  place.     See  Three  Counsellors, 

The.— Russell. 
It  was  the  first  night  of  "The  Sultana.  "     See  Her  First 

Appearance. — Davis. 
It  was  the  great  Yale-Harvard  game  of  baseball.     See 

Professor's  Ball  Game,  The. — Irwin. 
It  was  the  holy  twilight  hour,  and  clouds  in  crimson 

pride.     See  Last  Prayer  of  Mary  Queen  of  Scots. — 

Clark. 
It  was  the  idle  Margaret,  with  hands  and  face  so  fair. 

See  Miss  Margaret. — Shaw. 
It  was  the  middle  of  the  night.     See  Christmas  Cat, 

The. — Sherman. 
It  was  the  morning  of  a  festival,  and  the  rays  of  the 

rising  sun.     See  Power  of  Love,  The. — Anon. 
It  was   the   morning   of   the   international    race.     See 

International  Race,  The. — DeLeon. 
It  was  the  night  before  Thanksgiving,  and  two  people 

were  unhappy.     See  Sully  the  Rooster. — Anon. 


It  was  the  night  before  the  first  great  rodeo  of  the  sea- 
son.    See  Bull  of  Bashan,  A. — Knapp. 
It  was  the  pleasant   harvest-time.     See  Mabel    Martin 

(Witch's  Daughter,  The).— Whittier. 
It  was  the  prettiest,  daintiest,  little  piece  of   muslin. 

See  Kitty's  Christmas  OfTering. — Anon. 
It  was    the    schooner    Hesperus.     See    Wreck    of    the 

Hesperus,  The. — Longfellow. 
It  WES   the    season    when    there    falls    no    night.     See 

Death  of  Guinevere,  The. — Koopman. 
It  was   the    season    when   through   all   the   land.     See 

Birds  of  Killingworth,  The. — Longfellow. 
It  was  the  7th  of  October,  1777.     Horatio  Gates  stood 

before    his    tent.     See    Benedict   Arnold    (Black 

Horse  and  his  Rider,  The). — Lippard. 
It  was   the    stormiest    rehearsal   of   the    season.     See 

Franz. — Hawks. 
It  was  the  summer  after  the  great  election.     See  Matri- 
monial  Adventures  of  Dick  Macnamara,   The. — 

Maxwell. 
It  was   the    time    I    was   lost    in    crassin'    the   broad 

Atlantic.     See  Pat  and  the  Gridiron. — Lover. 
It  was  the  time  when  lillies  blow.     See  Lady  Clare. — 

Tennyson. 
It  was  the  very  witching  time  of  night  that  Ichabod 

pursued.    See  Legend  of  Sleepy  Hollow,  The  (Ride 

of    Ichabod    Crane,    The). — Irving. 
It  was  the  very  witching  time  of  night,   when   King 

Bibellus.     See  Origin  of  Shoes,  The. — Burk. 
It  was  the  wild  midnight, — a  storm  was  in  the  sky. 

See  Death  of  Leonidas.— Croly. 
It   was   the   Winter   wild.       See    On    the    Morning  of 

Christ's  Nativity  (Hymn,  The). — Milton. 
It  was    three    slim    does    and    ten-tined    buck    in    the 

bracken   lay.     See   Revenge   of   Hamish,    The. — 

Lanier. 
It  was  thy  fear,   or  else,   some  transient  wind.     See 

Cathedral. — Congreve. 
It  was  Tuesday,  January  the  26th,  18.S0.     See  Descrip- 
tion of  Webster's  Speech  in  Reply  to  Hayne. — 

March. 
It  was  twenty  and  a  hundred  years,  O  blue  and  rolling 

sea!     See  Marmara. — Barton. 
It  was  two  rival  drummers.     See  Rival  Drummers. — 

Anon. 
It  was  under  the  burning  influence  of  revenge.     See 

Rob  Roy  (Death  of  Morris). — Scott. 
It  was  upon  a  cold  winter  night  that  Andy  appeared  in 

the  kitchen.     See  Settin'  up  with  Peggy  McKeag. 

— McCook. 
It  was   upon  a  holiday.     See  Shepheardes  Calender. 

"The  (Chase  after  Love). — Spenser. 
It  was  upon  an  April  morn.     See  Heart  of  the  Bruce, 

The. — Aytoun. 
It  was  very  cold,  the  snow  fell.     See  Little  Match-girl, 

The. — Andersen. 
It  was  very  late  Saturday  night.    See  Mr.  Bosbyschell's 

Confession. — Anon. 
It  was  very  singular  how  absent-minded  and  inatten- 
tive  the   operator  was.     See  Telegraphic   Signal, 

The. — Barnard. 
It  was  when  the  heats  of  noon  died  gradually  away 

from  the  earth.    See  Last  Days  of  Pompeii  (Witch's 

Cavern,  The). — Bulwer-I/ytton. 
It  was  whispered  one  morning  in  heaven.     See  How 

the  Gates  Came  Ajar. — Bostwick. 
It  was  Wopsenonic,   the  warrier.     See  Wopsenonic. — 

Boyd. 
It  was  wrought  in  silken  letters.     See,    Our  Mother's 

Sampler. — -Anon.  ' 

It  was  years  ago.     We  were  busy.     See  Told  in  the 

Stalls.— Tucker. 
It  waved  o'er  our  fathers.     See  Flag,  The. — Anon. 
It  were    better.    O    Athenians,    to    die    ten    thousand 

deaths.     See   Philippics  (Against   Bribery). —  De- 
mosthenes. 
"It  were  in  the  Boma  Pass,  time  of  the  Kaffir  War." 

See  Little  Bugler's  Alarm,  The. — Glanville. 
It  were  not  hard  to  suffer  by  His  hand.     See  Ugo  Bas- 

si's  Sermon  in  a  Hospital. — King. 
It  whizzed  and  whistled  along  the  blurred.     See  Song 

of  the  Bullet.— Riley.  ' 

It  will  be  almost  universally  conceded  that  no  other 
N       language.     See  Bible  Reading. — Shoemaker. 
It    will  bs  rare,  rare,  rare!       See  Sad   Shepherd,    The 

(jEglamour's  Lament). — Jonson. 
It  would  be  a  dreadful  thing  to  me  to  lose  my  sight. 

See  Blindness. — Beecher. 
It  would  be  an  important  step  towards  the  reconcilia- 
tion.    See    On     Being     Suspected     of    Receiving 

Overtures  from  the  Court. — -Mirabeau. 
It  would  be  the  extreme  of  affectation  in  me  to  suggest. 

See  Repeal  of  the  Union. — O'Connell. 


733 


It  would 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


It  would  have  been  evident  to  even  the  most  careless. 

See  That  Fire  at  the  Nolans'. — (Life.) 
It  would  in  some  measure  relieve  embarrassment.     See 
On  Receiving  the  Master's  Degree  from  Harvard. 
— Washingtoiff 
It  wuz  a  calm,  fair  mom.     The  sun  streamed  meller 
and  golden.     See  Trying  the  "Rose  Act." — HoUey. 
Italia,  mother  of  the  souls  of  men.     <See  On  the  Monu- 
ment Erected  to  Mazzini  at  Genoa. — Swinburne. 
Italian  lakes,  transparent  blue.     See  Return,  The. — 

Greene. 
It's  a  bonnie,  bonnie  warl'  that  we're  livin'  in  the  noo. 

See  Palace  o'  the  King,  The. — Mitchell. 
It's  a  burning  shame — so   it    is — the    cross   old    cur- 
mudgeon !     See  How  She  Cured  Him.- — Anon. 
It's  a  day  without  a  sermon.      See  Day  without  a 

Sermon,  A.— Richards. 
It's  a  horrible  thing,  of  course.     See  God  Wills  It  So — 

A  plea. — Anon. 
It's   a    month    to-day    since   they    brought    me.     See 

NeUie's  Prayer. — Sims. 
It's  a  purty  hard  thing  for  a  fellow  that's  young.     See 

Pa's  Mem'ry. — -Richards. 
"It's  a  staving  night  for  a  supper;  a  hot  supper,  too." 

See  How  Tim's  Prayer  Was  Answered. — Anon.  ^   . 
It's  a  wonderful  world  we're  in,  my  dear.     See  Life's 

Paths. — -Lincoln. 
It's  all  very  well  for  a  boy  who  can  yell.     See  Under 

"Two  Flags. — Tompkins. 
It's  all  very  well  for  preachin'.     See  Pledge  at  Spunky 

Point,  The.— Hay. 
It's  alone  in  the  dark  of  the  old  wagon  shed.     See  Old 

Carryall,  The. — Lincoln. 
It's  an  owercome  sooth  for  age  an'  youth.     See  Friends. 

— Stevenson. 
It's  astonishing  what  mean  miserable  creatures  boys 

are.    See  Backward  Glance,  A. — Denton. 
It's  curious,  isn't  it,  Billy.     See  Fate  of  a  Fast  Young 

Man,  The. — Anon. 
It's  "Dorothy,     where's    Dorothy?"     See    Ballad    of 

Dorothy,  A. — Ketchum. 
It's  easy  to  talk  of  the  patience  of  Job.     Humph !     Job 

hed   nothin'    to   try   him!     See    Inventor's   Wife, 

The. — Corbett. 
Its  edges  foamed  with  amethyst  and  rose.     See  Great 

Breath,  The. — Russell. 
It's  getting  on  ter  winter  now;  the  nights  are  crisp  and 

chill.     See  "Widder  Clark,  The."— Lincoln. 
"It's  growing  late,"  said  the  honey  bee.     See  Farewell. 

— (Harper's  Young  People.) 
It's  hame,  and  it's  hame,  name  fain  wad  I  be.     See 

Loyalty. — Cunningham. 
It's  hard  to  live  a  saint  on  whey.     See  Hard  Lines. — 

Anon. 
It's  June  ag'in,  an'  in  my  soul  I  feel  the  fillin'  joy.     See 

Picnic  Time. — Field. 
It's  just  a  bit  of  a  story,  sir.     See  We  Two. — Anon. 
It's  Lamkin  was  a  mason  good.     See  Larakin. — Anon. 
Its  masts  of  might,  its  sails  so  free.     See  Wreck,  The. — 

Ruskin. 
It's  moighty  glad  I  am  there's  only  one  train  more. 

See  Dynamite  Plot,  A. — Meyers. 
"It's  my  brother  again,"  said  the  girl  with  the  ostrich 

boa.     See  Case  of  Spoons  and  Brother  Tom,  A. — 

Anon. 
It's  narrow,  narrow  make  your  bed.     See  Fair  Annie. 

— Anon. 
It's  no  in  titles  or  in  rank.     See  Good  Heart. — Burns. 
"It's  no  use  talkin',"  said  Mike.     See  Mike  Hooter's 

Bear  Story.— Hall. 
It's  noon  when  "Thirty-five"  is  due.     See  Engineers' 

Making  Love,  The. — Burdette. 
It's  O  my  heart,  my  heart.     See  In  Blossom  Time. — 

Coolbrith. 
It's  of  no  use,  Kate,  I  can  never  consent  to  such  a  plan. 

See  My  Wife's  Mother. — ^Anon. 
"It's  only  a  little  grave,"  they  said.     See  Little  Grave, 

The. — Anon. 
It's  only  we.   Grimalkin,   both   fond   and   fancy   free. 

See  Ride  to  Cherokee,  The. — Carpenter. 
It's  Patrick  Dolin  meself  [or  myself],   and  no  other. 

See  Patrick  Dolin's  Love  Letter. — Starkey. 
It's  planning  for  a  month  ahead,  and  purchasing  with 

care.     See  What  Vacation  Is. — Dodge. 
It's  putty  plane  to  my  mind  that  we  eamt  to  have 

Peas.     See  Artemus  Ward's  Trip  to  Richmond. — 

Browne. 
Its  seeds   were   in   the   clearing   sown.     See   Orchard, 

The.— Kelso. 
Its  shadow   makes   a    sheltered    place.     See   Wayside 

Calvary.  A. — Aldrich. 
It's  strange  how  little  boys'  mothers.     See  Little  Bird 

Tels,  A. — Anon. 


It's  tellin'  my  story,  ye're  askin'?     See  Kitty  Malone. — 

True. 
It's  the  flag  of  France,  the  flag  of  France  I  see!     See 

Kinship  of  the  Celt,  The. — -Clarke. 
"It's  thru  for  me,  Katy,  that  I  never  seed  the  like  of 

this  people  afore."     See  Biddy's  Troubles. — Anon. 
It's  too  bad,  there!     £»erj/6odi/ says  it's  too  bad.     See 

Hoyden,  The.— Frost. 
It's  two  blue  eyes,  with  their  lashes  long.     See  Con- 
quest.— (Cornell  Widow.) 
It's  vera  weel  throughoot  the  day.     See  It's  vera  Weel. 

— Dunbar. 
"It's  very  hard,  kind  friends,  for  me."      See  Recita- 
tion: "It's  very  hard,"  etc.— Kavanaugh. 
"It's  very   odd,    dear   Chloe,   to   me."     See   Arcadian 

Flirtation,  An.— Anon. 
It's  we  two,   it's  we   two,  it's  we  two,   for  aye.    See 

Like  a  Laverock  in  the  Lift. — Ingelow. 
It's  well  I  ran  into  the  garden.     See  Reminding  the 

Hen. — Chandler. 
It's  when  the  birds  go  piping  and  the  daylight  slowly 

breaks.     See  Happy  Household,  The. — Field. 
Ivan   Petrokoflfsky   of  the   twenty-first   division.     See 

Lay  of  the  Conscription,  A. — Anon. 
I've  a  baby  sister.     See  Baby  Sister. — Ruggles. 
I've  a  friend  whom  I  visit.     See  Recitation  for  a  Very 

Little  Girl. — Chase. 
I've  a  great  deal  to  do,  a  great  deal  to  do.     See  Song 

of  the  Wind,  The. — Anon. 
I've  a  home  in  Elfin  land.     See  Fairy  Land. — Case. 
I've  a  letter  from  thy  sire.     See  Sailor's  Wife,  The. — 

Mackay.  i 

I've  a  mistress,  passing  fair.     See  To  Narcissa. — Train. 
I've  a  rare  bit  of  news  for  you,  Mary  Malone.     See 

Mulligan's  Gospel. — Herbert. 
I've  a  story  that  I'll  tell.     See  Kitty  Bell. — Richards. 
I've  a  story  to  tell  of  naughty  Jack  Grey.     See  Jack 

Grey. — Anon. 
"I've  always  noticed,"  said  Mrs.  Partington  on  New 

Year's  Day.     See  Mrs.  Partington's  Reflections  on 

New  Year's  Day. — Shillaber. 
I've  answered   tin   advertoisements  in  two  days.     See 

Tribulations  of  Biddy  Malone,  The. — Vickers. 
I've  been    among    the    mighty    Alps,    and    wandered 

through   their   vales.     See   Vulture   of   the   Alps, 

The. — Anon. 
I've  been  a-thinkin';  and  I  think.     See  Payin'  Honest 

Debts. — Anon. 
I've  been  goin'  thar,  le's  see.     See  "Hangin'  On." — 

Stanton. 
I've  been  in   love  some  scores  of  times.     See  Latest 

Comfort,  The.— Hay. 
I've  been  lingerin'  by  the  Tomb.     See  Artemus  Ward 

at  the  Tomb  of  Shakespeare.— Brown. 
I've  been  married  two  years  to  John  and  such  years  as 

they  have  been!     See  Sudden  Blow,  A. — Anon. 
I've  Ibeen  off  on  a  journey ;  I  jes'  got  home  to-day.     See 

When  the  Sunflowers  Bloom.— -Paine. 
I've  been  poring  o'er  my  books.     See  How  I  Love  My 

Books. — ( Wrinkle. ) 
I've  been  reading  "Enoch  Arden."     See  Thoughts  of 

"Enoch  Arden." — -Anon. 
I've  been  roaming!  I've  been  roaming.     See  I've  Been 

Roaming. — Darley. 
I've  been   round  this  country  from   Texas  to   Maine. 

See  'Tramp's  Philosophy,  A. — (Merchant  Traveler.) 
I've  been  sick.     See  Little  "Tommie's  First  Smoke. — 

Anon. 
I've  been  soft  in  a  small  way.     See  Rose  of  Kenmare, 

The. — Graves. 
I've  been  thinkin'  of  it  over,  an'  it  'pears  to  me  to-day. 

See  Reunited. — Stanton. 
I've  been  thinking  of  home,  of  "my  Father's  house." 

See  Thoughts  of  Home. — Anon. 
I've  been  thinking,  sister  Mary,  of  our  old  home  on  the 

hill.     See  Doctor's  Choice,  The. — Ball. 
I've  been    thinking    some,    Keziah.     See    Patchwork 

Philosophy. — Anon. 
I've  been  to  Quaker  meeting,  -wife,  and  I  shall  go  again. 

See  Simple  Church,  The. — Anon. 
I've  been  to  school.     See  Speeches  for  Tots  (Speech  for 

a  Very  Little  Child).— Anon. 
I've  begun  to  pack  a  box.     See  Packing  the  Knowledge 

Box. — Goodfellow. 
I've  bin  a  member  most  my  days,  an'  I'm  not  a-tirin' 

yit.     See  Meetin'  House  is  Split,  The. — Eisenbeis. 
I've  boken  my  slate.     See  Margaret's  Broken  Slate. — 

Anon. 
I've  borne  full  many  a  sorrow;  I've  suffered  many  a 

loss.     See  Heaviest  Cross  of  All,  The. — Conway. 
I've  brought  back  the  paper,  lawyer,  and  fetched  the 

parson  here.     See  Betsey  Destroys  the  Paper. — 

Locke. 


734 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


January 


"I've  come" — and    then    he    took    her    hands.     See 

Diffidence. — Anon. 
"I've  come  to  see  the  Count  of  Hentzau,"  said  Rassen- 

dyll,   as  he  crossed  the  threshold.     See  Queen's 

Letter,  The. — Hope. 
I've  come  to  see  the  May-day.     See  May  Celebration. 

• — Kavanaugh. 
I've  conned  the  daintiest  of  poets  lyrical.     See  To  a 

Modern  Girl. — Douglas. 
I've  cried  until  I'm  almost  sick.     See  Bird's  Funeral, 

The. — Anon. 
"I've  done  now,"  said  Sam,  with  slight  embarrassment. 

See  Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Sam  Weller's  Valen- 
tine).— Dickens. 
I've  got  a  good  joke  on  Mariar.     See  Good  Joke  on 

Maria,  A. — Anon. 
I've  got  a  letter,  parson,  from  my  son  away  out  west. 

See  Billy,  he's  in  Trouble  (Bill's  in  Trouble).— 

Anon. 
I've  got     a     little     secret.     See     Minnie's     Secret. — 

Richards. 
I've  got  a  little  yaller  dog,  a  wuthless  kind  of  chap. 

See  "Yap." — Lincoln. 
I've  got  an  awful  piece  of  news.     See  Mind  Your  Own 

Business. — McBride. 
I've  got  an  older  sister.     See  Sis's  Beau. — Richards. 
I've  got  him,  at  last,  in  the  focus.     See  Lines  on  a 

Grasshopper. — Anon. 
I've  got  orders,  positive  orders,  not  to  go  there.     See 

Orders  not  to  Go.— Anon. 
"I've  got  such  a  cold  I  cannot  sing."     See  What  the 

Frogs  Sing. — Gary. 
I've  got   the  dearest  dolly.     See  Nicest  One,  The.^ 

Anon. 
I've  got  two  hundred  soldiers.     See  Tommy's  Army. — 

Weatherly. 
"I've  gofeter  go,"   she   said,   "and   see  if  little   Bob's 

tucked   in."     See   Is    Little    Bob    Tucked  In? — 

Foss. 
I've  had  a  dreadful,  dreadful  time.     See  Why  is  It. — 

Denton. 
I've  had   another  offer,   wife — a  twenty   acres  more. 

See  Land  Poor. — Donovan. 
I've  had  my  share  of  pastime,  and  I've  done  my  share  of 

toil.     See  Sick  Stockrider,  The.— Gordon. 
I've  half  a  mind  to  register  an  oath  that  I'll  never  have 

my  hair  cut     again!     See    Box   and   Cox   (Rival 

Lodgers,   The). — Morton. 
I've  heard  a  good  joke  of  an  Emerald  Pat.     See  Paddy 

ior  Pat]  and  his  Musket.- — Anon, 
leard  a  song  about  the  frogs.     See  Toad,  The. — 

Ruggles. 
I've  heard    about    a    little    boy.     See    Who    is    It? — 

Denton. 
I've  heard  the  grown-ups  say.     See  Not  a  Born  Orator. 

— Denton. 
I've  heard  them  lilting,  at  the  [or  our]  ewe-milking. 

See  Flowers  o'  the  Forest,  The. — Elliott. 
I've  jined  the  church;  I've  seen  enough  of  worldly  fuss 

and    foolin'.     See   Joner    Swallowin'    a    Whale. — 

Eisenbeis. 
I've  just  been  making  the  loveliest  tarts.     See  Royal 

Tarts,  The.— Denton. 
I've  just  been  thinking,  boys,  of  late.     See  By  and  By. 

— Anon. 
I've  just  been  up  to  town  to  see  my  daughter,  Laura 

Belle.     See  Visiting  Laura  Belle. — Kiser. 
I've'  just  bin  down  ter  Thompson's,  boys.     See  Mother's 

Doughnuts. — Adams. 
I've  just  come  in  from  the  meadow,  wife,  where  the 

grass  is  tall  and  green.     See  Old  Ways  and  the 

New,  The.— Yates. 
I've  kep'    summer    boarders    for    years    and    allowed. 

See  Uncle  Jotham's  Boarder. — Slosson. 
I've  learned  to  say  some  words  in  French.     See  Per- 
plexing Question. — Anon. 
I've  lost  de  key  of   my  desk,  Johnson.     See  Picking 

Locks. — Anon. 
I've  made  a  discovery,  Johnson.    See  Bones'  Discovery. 

— Anon. 
I've  maked     b'lieve     I     was    mamma.     See    Making 

B'lieve. — Anon. 
"I've  often  told  you."     See  Whims. — Bower. 
I've  painted    an    old    hen    as    black    as    a    crow.     See 

Recitation  for  a  Very  Little  Girl. — Chase. 
I've  painted  Shakespeare  all  my  life.     See  Unfortunate 

Likeness,  An. — Gilbert. 
I've  plucked  the  berry  from  the  bush,  the  brown  nut 

from    the    tree.     See    Sing    on,    Bhthe    Bird. — 

Motherwell. 
I've  put  me  on  my  old  blue  coat  I  wore  at  Gettysburg. 

See  Veteran,  A. — Meyers. 


I've  run  all  the  old  parties  over.     See  All  Things  to 

All  Men. — Burdette. 
I've  runned  away.     See  Almost  a  Runaway. — Denton. 
I've  sat   at   her  feet   by   the   hour.     See   Engaged. — 

Pennypacker. 
"I've  seen  the  clouds  of  crimson  war  above  my  country 

lower."     See    Dying    Patriot's    Request,    The. — 

Brosnan. 
I've  .something  to  say  to  the  mothers  to-night.     See 

Little  Girl's  Lecture  to  Mothers,  A. — Anon. 
I've  sought    for   Cupid   by   day   and   by    night.     See 

Captive,  The. — Carryl. 
I've  started  a  telephone.     I  mean  I've  had  one  put  up 

in  the  office.     See  That  Telephone. — Jerome. 
I've  stayed  here  watching  all  the  folks.     See   Little 

Boy's  Speech,  A. — ^Anon. 
I've  taught  me  other  tongues.     See  Childe  Harold's  Pil- 
grimage (Love  of  England). — Byron. 
I've  taught     thee     Love's     sweet     lesson     o'er.     See 

Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen  (Romanzo  to   Sylvia). 

— Darley. 
I've  thought  of  thee,  I've  thought  of  thee.     See  Confes- 
sional, The  ("I've  thought  of  thee."  etc.). — Willis. 
I've  travelled  from  the  coast  of  Maine.     See  Summer 

Campaign,  A. — Scranton. 
I've  tried  it  over  and  over.     See  Knitting. — Anon. 
I've  two  pretty  little  kittens;  one  is  brown  and  one  is 

gray.     See  Demon  Kittens,  The. — Anon. 
I've  wander'd  east,  I've  wandered  west.     See  Jeanie 

Morri  son. — Motherwell . 
I've  wandered  to  the  village,  Tom,  I've  sat  beneath 

the  tree.     See  Twenty  Years  Ago. — Anon. 
I've  watch'd   you   now    a  full    half-hour.     See  To   a 

But  terfly . — -Wordswort  h. 
I've  watched  him  stroll  with  Raleigh  by  the  wood. 

See  Spenser. — Betts. 
I've  wished  and  wished  for  Santa  Claus.     See  Coming 

of  Santa  Claus,  The. — Denton. 
I've  worked  in  the  field  all  day,  a-plowin'  the  "stony 

streak."     See  Gone    with  a  Handsomer  Man. — 

Carleton. 
Ivory  sticks  and  painted  face.     See  Grandmamma's 

Fan. — Tupper. 


Jack    and    Joan,  they  think  no    ill.      See   Fortunati 

Nimium — Campion. 
Jack,  dressed     withe  most  scrupulous  care,   is   shown 

into   the  parlor.     See   Popping   the     Question. — 

Fezandi^. 
Jack  Frost  peeped  in  at  the  window.     See  Jack  Frost. 

— Anon. 
Jack,  I  hear  you've  gone  and  done  it.     See  Similar 

Case.  A. — (Acta  Columbiana.) 
Jack  in  the  Pulpit  preaches  to-day.     See  Jack  in  the 

Pulpit. — Smith. 
Jack  Parker  was  a  cruel  boy.     See  Result  of  Cruelty, 

The.— Turner. 
Jackanapes    was    always    very    friendly    with    Tony 

Johnson.     See  Jackanapes. — Ewing. 
Jacob!  I  do  not  like  to  see  thy  nose.     See  Pig,  The. — 

Southey. 
Jacob  Johnson,  the  publisher,  having  refused  to  advance 

Dryden  a  sum  of  money.     See  Force  of  Satire,  The, 

—(Jest  Book,  The.) 
Jafl&r.  the  Barmecide,  the  good  vizier.     See  Jaffar. — 

Hunt. 
.Take   Poole  was  staging  the  route  from  Gallatin  to 

Helena,   in   Montana.     See  Stage  Driver's  Story, 

The. — Anon. 
James  A.  Garfield's  father  dying  before  the  boy  was 

two    years    old.     See  Memorial  Address  on  the 

Life  and  Character  of  James  A.  Garfitld  (Garfield's 

Early  Life). — Blaine. 
James  Wainwright  was  fireman  of  engine  No.  32.     See 

In  the  Tunnel. — Anon. 
James  went  to  the  door  of  the  kitchen  and  said.     See 

Rudeness. — Turner. 
Jamie's  feet  are  restless  and  rough.     See  Out  of  the 

Way. — Dowd. 
"Jane  Eyre,"    "Beneath  the  Greenwood   Tree."     See 

Novel  Poem,  A. — Anon. 
Jane  Jemina!  what?     My  dear  Jane  Jemina,  don't  be 

so  abrupt.     See  Row  in    the    Kitchen,   A. — Mc- 
Bride. 
Jane  Jones  keeps  a  whisperin'  to  me  all  the  time.     See 

Jane  Jones. — King. 
January,  bleak  and  drear.     See  January. — -Sherman. 
January     brings     the     snow.     See     Months,     The. — 

Browning. 


735 


January 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


January  comes  the  first  of  all.     See  Months,  The. — 

Had  ley. 
January  darkness  and   light  reign  alike.     See  Death 

of  Our  Almanac,  The. — Beecher. 
January !  January !  though  cold,  you  have  no  law.     See 

Rhyme  of  the  Yyir,  A. — Anon. 
January,  worn  [or  wfinl  and  gray.     See  Year's  Twelve 

Children,  The. — Anon. 
Janus   am    I,    oldest   of   potentates.     See  Janus   and 

January. — Longfellow. 
Jarl  Sigurd,  he  rides  o'er  the  foam-crested  brine.     <See 

Jarl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve.— -Boyesen. 
Jason   White  has  come  ter  town.     <See  Tin  Peddler, 

"The. — Lincoln. 
Jays  in  the  orchard  are  screaming,   and  hark!     See 

Down  in  the  Strawberry  Bed.— Scollard. 
Jean  Anderson,  my  joy,  Jean.     See  same. — Rankin. 
Jean  Valjean,  whose  soul  the  good  bishop  had  bought 
from  evil.      See  I.ies  Mis^rables  (Jean   Valjean's 
Sacrificed — Hugo. 
Jeannie  Marsh  of  Cherry  Valley.     See  Jeannie  Marsh. — 

Morris. 
Jehoshaphat     reigned     over     Judah     in     peace.     See 

Jeho.shaphat's  Deliverance. — Taylor. 
Jem,    are    you    hungry?     See   Joyful    Surprise,    A. — 

Kavanaugh. 
"Jennie!"  motner  cries,  "Jennie!"     See  Going  after  the 

Cows. — Anon. 
Jennv  Brown  had  as  pretty  a  house  of  her  own.     See 

kobin's  Nest,  The. — Cary. 
Jenny  Dunleath  coming  back  to  the  town?     See  Jenny 

Dunleath. — Cary. 
Jenny  kissed  me  when  we  met.     See  Jenny  Kissed  SJe. 

—Hunt.  ' 

Jenny  Wren  fell  sick.      See    Nursery    Rhymes,   I. — 

Anon. 
Jeremiah    Pimpkin    was    an    honorable    citizen.     See 

Pimpkin  versus  Bodkin. — Anon. 
Jericho  Bob,  when  he  was  four  years  old.     See  Jericho 

Bob. — King. 
Jerrold  was  in  France,  and  with  a  Frenchman  who  was 
enthusiastic.     See  Anglo-French  Alliance,  The. — 
—(Jest  Book,  The.) 
Jeru.<!aleni,  my  happy  home.     See  Heavenly  Jerusalem, 

The. — Anon. 
Jerusalem,  the  beautiful!     See  same. — Hofford. 
Jerusalem,     the     golden.     See     same. — St.     Bernard. 
Jerusalem  valley,  about  twenty  miles  long  and  five 
miles  in  width.     See  What  we  Did  with  the  Cow. 
— Ufford. 
Jes'  a  little  bit  o'  feller,  I  remember  still.     See  Who 

Santy  Claus  Wuz.^ — Riley.  ^ 

Jes'  fly  roun'  now,  Evalena  Diana.     See  Master  of  the 

Situation. — Anon. 
Jes'  turn  de  back  log  ober,  an'  draw  yer  stool  up  nigher. 

See  Cabin  Philosophy. — Anon. 
Jess  and  Jill  are  pretty  girls.     See  Ring  Posy,  A. — 

Rossetti. 
Jessie  is  both  young  and  fair.     See  Jessie. — Harte. 
Jessie,      Jessie      Cameron.     See     Jessie      Cameron. — 

Rosetti. 
Jest  about  the  time  when  Fall.     See  Ingin  Summer. — 

McClasson. 
-Test  a-wearyin'  for  you.     See    Wearyin'    for    You. — 

Stanton. 
Jest  keep  the  heart  a-beatin'  warm.     See  Plain  Spoken 

Philosophy. — Newell. 
Jest  rain  and  snow,  and  rain  again.     See  First  Blue- 
bird, The.— Riley. 
Jesu    \or    Jesus],    lover    of   my    soul.      See    same. — 

Wesley. 
Jesu,  my  .strength,  my  hope. 
Jesu,  wilt  Thou  mind  Thee. 

Country. — Townsend. 
Jesus,  and  shall  it  ever  be. 

Grigg. 

Jesus  bids  us  shine.     See  Little  Lights. — Anon. 
Jesus,  I  my  cross  have  taken.     See  same. — Lyte. 
Jesus,  I  would  be  like  thee.     See  Little  Child's  Prayer, 

A. — Anon. 
Jesus  is  our  Shepherd.     See  Our  Shepherd. — Havergal. 
Jesus,  Jepus.  the  day  is  almost  done.     Se*  Hymn  at 

Nisrhtfall. — Richardson. 
"Jesus,  lover  of  my  soul."     See  Incident  of  the  Johns- 
town Flood,  An. — Moore. 
"Jesus,  Lover  of  my  soul."     See  same. — Hall. 
Jesus  [or  Jesu],  lover  of  my  soul.     See  same. — Wesley. 
Jesus,  Master,  whom  I  serve.     See  same. — -Havergal' 
Jesus  shall  reign  where'er  the  sun.     See  P.salm  LXXII 

— Watts. 
Jesus,  tender  Shepherd,  hear  me.     See  Child's  Evening 
,  Prayer,  A. — Duncan. 


See  same. — Wesley. 
See  Far  from  Home  and 

See  "Ashamed  of  Me." — 


not 

See 


See 


.Jesus,  there  is  no  dearer  name  than  Thine.    See  Jesus. — 

Parker. 
Jesus    these  eyes  have  never  seen.     See    Unseen, 

Unknown. — Palmer, 
.lever    stump    y'r    toe?     M-m,    don't    it    hurt! 

Noth'n'  't  All. — Anon. 
.Tim  Bowker,  he  said,  ef  he'd  had  a  fair. show. 

Jim  Bowker. — P^oss. 
"Jim  has  a  future  front  of  him."     See  Future  in  Front 

of  Him,  A. — Foss. 
Jim  wan't   no   good   to   fish   and   shoot.     See   Young 

Musician,  The.- — Floss. 
Jim  was  a  fisherman ;  up  on  the  hill.     See  Jim's  Kids. — 

Anon.  .^ 

Jim  was  my  friend,  till  one  unhappy  day.     See  Lucky 

Jim.— Anon. 
Jim  Woppit  would  never  have  been  elected  city  marshal 

of    Red    Hoss    Mountain.     See    Wooing    of    Miss 

Woppit,  The.— Field. 
Jimmieboy    had    come   to  town   for  the  winter.     See 

Afternoon  in  a  Hotel  Room,  An. — Bangs. 
Jimmy  Hoy  was  a  County  Cork  boy.     See  Jimmy  Hoy. 

— I^over. 
Jingle,  jingle,  clear  the  way.     See  Sleigh  Song. — Pettee. 
Ji.st   after  [or  afther]  the  war,   in    the  year   '98.     See 

Shamus  O'Brien. — Le  Fanu. 
.lo  is  very  glad  to  see  his  old  friend.     See  Bleak  House 

(Death  of  Little  Jo). — Dickens. 
Joanna  scolds  my  Kitty  every  day.     See  Kitty  Didn't 

Mean   to. — Anon. 
Joe  Beall'ud  set  upon  a  keg.     See  He'd  Had  no  Show. — 

Foss. 
Jog  on,  jog  on,  the  foot-path  way.     See  Winter's  Tale, 

The  (.log  on,  Jog  on). — Shakespeare. 
John  Adams  lies  here,  of  the  parish  of  Southwell.     See 

On  a  Carrier  who  Died  of  Drunkenness. — Byron. 
.John   Alcohol,   my   foe,   John.     See  John   Alcohol. — 

Anon. 
John  Anderson,  my  jo,  John.     See  John  Anderson,  My 

Jo. — Bums. 
John,  are  you  sure  that  you  told  George?     See  Always 

too  Late.— Anon. 
John  Brown  had  land  and  gold  enough,  they  say.     See 

Shadow  from  an  Insane  Asylum,  A. — Durant. 
John  Brown  in  Kansas  settled,  like  a  steadfast  Yankee 

farmer.     See    How    Old    Brown    "Took    Harper's 

Ferry. — Stedman. 
John  Brown  of  Ossawatomie  spake  on  his  dying  day. 

See  Brown  of  Ossawatomie. — Whittier. 
.John  Brown's  body  lies  a-mould'ring  in  the  grave.     See 

Glory  Hallelujah!  or,   John  Brown's  Body. — Anon. 
.John  Bull  can  inform  Jonathan  what  are  the  inevitable 

consequences.     See  Taxes  the  Price  of  Glory. — 

Smith. 
John  Bull  for  pastime  took  a  prance.     See  Nongtong- 

paw. — Dibdin. 
John   Bull  was  a  choleric  old  fellow.     See  Quarrel  of 

Squire    Bull    and    his    Son     Jonathan,      The. — 

Paulding. 
John  Carter  stood  at  his  own  door  with  a  coil  of  rope 

in    his   hand.      See    Delayed   in    Transmission. — 

Quiller-Couch. 
John  Davison  [or  Davidson]  and  Tibbie  [or  Tib],  his 

wife.     See  John  and  Tibbie  Davison's  Dispute. — 

Leighton. 
John  Day,  he  was  the  biggest  man.     See  History  of 

John  Da.v. — Hood. 
.John  Dobbin.s  was  so  captivated.     See  Eggs  and  the 

Horses.  The. — Anon. 
.John  Gilpin  is  a  citizen.     See  Railway  Gilpin,  The. 

— (Punch.) 
.John  Gilpin  was  a  citizen.     See  Diverting  History  of. 

John  Gilpin,  The. — Cowper. 
.John  Hillier  and  his  six  sons,  soldiers  in  the  old  Conti- 
nental army.     See  Little  Regiment,  The. — Anon. 
John,   I   say,   John,   you  rascal,  where  are  you?     See 

Backward. — Anon. 
John   James   Godfrey   was  hired   by   the   Hayblossom 

Mming    Company.     See    Mark    Twain's    Mining 

Story. — Clemens. 
John   loved  his  young  wife  as  the  flower  loves  dew 

See  Jealous  Wife,  The. — Brooks. 
John  Mann  had  a  wife  who  was  kind  and  true      See 

Good  Old  Way,  The. — Anon. 
.John  Maynard  was  well  known  in    the    lake    district 

See  Pilot — a  Thrilling  Incident,  The. — Gough. 
.John  Peabody,  a  Connecticut  grocer,  came  on  to  K 

York.     SeeToughSnufTStory,  A.— Paul. 
John,  said  I,  as  we  stood  looking  at  each  other  across 

the  boat.     See  Crossing  the  Carry. — Murray 
"John,"  said  Mrs.  Sanscript  to  her  husband  one  evening 
last  week.     See  Warning  to  Woman. — Anon 


New 


736 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Just 


John! — sir? — Is  Mr.  Marcus   in   his   room?     See  It's  a 

Poor  Rule  that  Won't  Work  Both  Ways. — Anon. 
John  Smith,  a  young  attorney  just  admitted  to  the  bar. 

See  First  Client,  The. — Russell. 
John    Smith! — -Here,    sir.     See   Corporal    Punishment. 

— (Young  Folks'  Rural.) 
John  Thomas  is  one  of  the  good  old  stock,  and  is  content 

to  be  a  negro.     See  Old-time  Negro,  An. — Smith. 
John   Thomson  fought  against  the  Turks.     See  John 

Thomson  and  the  Turk. — -Anon. 
John  Umph  knew  it  was   Christmas-time.     See  Snow 

Twins,  The. — Power. 
John  was  on  honest  farmer  lad.     See  Somehow. — Anon, 
.lohnnie  rose  up  in  a  May  morning.     See  Johnnie  of 

Breadislee. — Anon. 
Johnnie,  will  you  tell  us  what  great  event  we  are  cele- 
brating    to-day?     See     Primary     Class,     The. — 

Denton. 
Johnny,  Come  here  and  look  at  the  cat.     See  Johnny's 

Lesson. — Anon. 
Johnny  Judkins  was  a  vender.     See  Johnny  Judkins.— 

Adams. 
Johnny  swinging  on  a  gate.     See  Awful   Fly,  An. — 

W.  T. 
Johnny's  sisters  numbered  three.     See  Johnny's  Sisters. 

— Richards, 
.lohn.son,  a  fellow  was  trying  to  stuff  me  dat  when  it  am 

night  here  it  am  day  in  China.     See  Earth's  Axis, 

The. — Anon. 
Johnson,  can  you  tell  me  how  many  feet  dere  am  in  one 

yard?"    See  Figures  sometimes  Lie. — Anon. 
Johnson,  did  you  eber  go  on  a  fishing  excursion?     See 

Dreamers,  The. — Anon. 
Johnson,   did  you  eber  read   about   de  earth   moving 

around    de    sun?     See    Information    Wanted. — 

Anon. 
Johnson,  did  you  hear  a  serenade  in  your  neighborhood 

last  night?      See  Bones  Serenades  his  Sweetheart. 

— Anon. 
Johnson,  hab  you  got  a  dog?     See  Tambo's  Dog. — 

Anon, 
.lohnson,  I  hear  dat  you  hab  for  some  time  been  keeping 

bery  late  hours;  am  dat  true?     See  Very  Much 

Astonished. — Anon. 
Johnson,    I  read  in  de  paper  to-day  dat  a  gal  is  going 

to    sue    a    feller    for    kissin'    her.     See   Suing    for 

Damages.  — Anon . 
Johnson,    I    want   to   speak   to   you.     See   Where   He 

Struck  It. — Anon. 
Johnson!   Johnson!     Well,   brudder   Bones!     See  End 

Gag,  An. — Anon. 
Johnson,  may  I  be  permitted  to  propose  a  proposer  to 

you?     See  Bones  and  the  Ladies. — Anon. 
Johnson,   would   you   like   to   be   a   lawyer?     See   Mr. 

Johnson  on  Lawyers. — Anon. 
.Johnson,  you  can  tell  lots  of  things,  can't  you?     See 

How  to  Keep  a  Bee-hive. — Anon. 
.Johnson,  you  didn't  hear  of  my  marriage?     See  Bones 

Keeping  a  Hotel. — Anon. 
Jolly  old  Kriss,  what  a  fellow  you  are.     See  To  Kriss. — 

Anon. 
Jolly  old  Saint  Nicholas.     See  same. — Anon. 
.Jolly  shepherd,  shepherd  on  a  hill.     See  Damajtas'  Jig 

in  Praise  of  his  Love. — Wotton. 
Jonadab,   the  son  of   Rechab.     See  Father's  Counsel, 

The. — Murray. 
Jonah,   have  you  never  thought   of    getting  married. 

See  Leaving  Jonah  — McBride. 
Jones  was  a  kind,  good-natured  man  as  one  might  wish 

to  see.     See  Playing  Drunkard. — Smith. 
Jorasse    was    in    his    three-and-twentieth    year.     See 

Jorasse. — Rogers. 
Jose    Olivio,    voung,    lithe    and    strong.     See    French 

Market,  The.— W.  P.  J. 
Joseph!     did    you    hear     the     king?      See    Richelieu; 

or,  The  Conspiracy  (Richelieu). — Bulwer-Lytton. 
Joseph,  have  you  no  thoughts  of  taking  to  yourself  a 

wife?     See  Rejected. — Anon. 
Josephus    Macduffus    Florentinus    Bran.     See    Nickel 

Plated. — Jon^s. 
Josh  Billings  relateth  his  first  experience  with  the  gong 

thusly.     See  Josh  Billings  on  "Gongs." — Shaw. 
Josh  Wattles  is  a-comin'  to-night.      See  Dad  Says  so, 

Anyhow. — McBride. 
Josiah  had  to  go  to  Jonesville  to  mill  yesterday.     See 

Sweet  Cicely  (For  a'  That;  or.  Selling  a  Feller). — 

HoUey. 
Joy  came  in  youth  as  a  humming  bird.     See  Song. — 

Almon-Hensley. 
Joy  for  the  sturdy  trees.     See  Tree  Planting. — Smith. 
Joy  holds  her  court   in   great   Belshazzar's  hall.     See 

Belshazzar's  Feast. — Hughes. 


Joy!  joy  forever!     My  task  is  done.     Sec  Exultation. — 

Moore. 
Joy,  joy  in  London  now!     See  Death  of  Wallace,  The. — 

Southey. 
Joy !  joy !     The  day  is  come  at  last,  the  day  of  hope  and 

pride.     See  Muster  of  the  North,  The. — Duffy. 
"Joy  of  my  life!  full  oft  for  loving  you."     See  Amoretti 

and    Epithalamion   (Sonnet:    "Joy    of    my   life," 

etc.). — Spenser. 
Joy  of  the  morning.     See  Sixty  and  Six. — Higgin.son. 
Joy  of  the  Spring  time!     See  Sisyphus. — Burdette. 
Joy  to  Philip!   he  this  day.     See  Going  into  Breeches. 

— Lamb. 
Joy  to  the  thought  of  our  own,  own  tree.     See  Dedica- 
tory Exercises. — Benedict. 
Joy  to  the  toiler! — him  that  tills.    See  Joy  to  the  Toiler. 

— Anon. 
Joy  to    the    world!    the    Lord    is    come.     See    Psalm 

XCVIII.— Watts. 
.Joyful  chimes  are  ringing.     See  Christmas  Song,  A. — 

Ryan. 
Jubilant  the  music  through  the  fields  a-ringing.     See 

World  Music. — Bushnell. 
Judge  Mexford,  one  of  the  sternest  jurists.     See  Mr. 

Haynes's  Able  Argument. — (Arkansaw  Traveller.) 
Judge  not ;  the  workings  of  his  brain.     See  Judge  Not. — • 

Procter. 
.Judge   of  the  earth,   to  whom.     See   Prayer  for  the 

Nation.- — (Boston  Transcript  ) 
Judge  Pitman  is  the  only  man  in  the  world  of  whom  I 

know   anything.      See   Out    of    the   Hurly  Burly 

(Judge  Pitman  on  Various  Kinds  of  Weather). — 

Clark. 
Judging  from  the  past,  what  have  we  not  a  right  to 

expect  in  the  future?     See  Prospects  of  California, 

The.— Bennett. 
.Julia  was  blest  with  beauty,  wit  and  grace.     See  Julia. 

— Coleridge. 
Julius,  I  wants  to  ax  you  a  question.     See  Two  Left. — 

Anon. 
Julius,  suppose  you  gib  a  cat  all  de  milk  she  can  lap. 

See  End  Gag. — Anon. 
.July,  for    you   the   songs   are   sung.   See  July. — Sher- 
man. 
July  the  first,  of  a  morning  clear,  one  thousand  six 

hundred  and  ninety.     »See  Boyne  Water,  The. — 

Anon. 
June  laid  down  her  knives  upon  the  scrubbing  board. 

See  How  June  Found  Massa  Linkum. — Phelps. 
■June   leaves   are   green ;   pink   is   the   rose.     See   Who 

Knows. — Morse. 
June   20  — I'll   have   a   lot   to  write,  now.     See  Three 

Leaves  from  a  Boy's  Diary. — Gregory. 
Just  a  bit  of   drift-wood    gray.     See  Boat-building  in 

Spain. — Ledyard. 
Just  a  few  crocus  leaves.     See  Leaves  from   Father- 
land.— Handford. 
Just  a   glimpse   (the   air  is   clearer),   they   are   nearer, 

nearer,     nearer.     See     Grandmother's     Story     of 

Bunker  Hill  Battle. — Holmes. 
.Just  a   manger,    rude   and   low.     See   First   Christmas 

Night,  The.— Denton. 
.Just  a  note  that  I  found  on  my  table.     See  Sic  Transit. 

— Anderson. 
Just  a    saunter   in   the   twilight.     See   This   is   All.— 

Churchill. 
Just  a  simple  little  picture  of  a  sunny  country  road. 

See  Meadow  Road,  The. — Lincoln. 
Just  a  sprig  of  Scottish  heather,  in  a  letter  where  the 

tears.     See  Scotch  Heather. — Manville. 
.Just  a  tiny  blue-eyed  maid.     See  Spring.— Veley. 
.Just  after  the  sea.son,  in  the  year  '82.     See  Montravers 

O'Brien.— Thatcher. 
.Just  after  the  Wilderness  Battle,  when  the  bugles  had 

blown  retreat.     See  Memorial  Day. — Collier. 
Just  after  we  left  the  Horticultural  Buildin',  I  says  to 

Josiah.     See  Josiah  Allen's  Wife  at  a  Fashionable 

Restaurant. — HoUey. 
.Just  an    evCn    hundred    men    answered    "Here!"     See 

Last  Roll-call,  The. — Lewis. 
.Just  as  Gilliatt  was  making  up  his  mind  to  resign  him- 
self    to     sea     urchins.     See     Combat     With     the 

Octopus,  The. — Hugo. 
Just  as  God  leads  me,  I  would  go.     See  German  Trust 

Song. — Lampertus. 
"Just  as  I  am,"  Thine  own  to  be.     See  Boy's  Hymn, 

A. — Farningham. 
Just  as  I  am,  without  one  plea.     See  Just  As  I  Am. — 

Elliott. 
Just  as  I  expected,  Mrs.  T. !    I  told  you  that  it  would  be 

so.     See    Mutual    Development    Society,    The. — 

Swander. 


737 


Just 


AN  IXDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Just  as  mom  was  fading  amid  her  misty  rings.     See 

Kriss  Kringle. — Aldrich. 
Just  as    of   old,    Babette,    long,    long    ago.     See    For 

Memorj''s  Sake.— Jefferson. 
Just  as  the  earliest  flowers  began  to  blow.     See  Keats. 

— Betts.  ^ 

Just  as  the  spring  came  laughing  through  the  strife. 

See  John  Felham. — Randall . 
"Just  as  we  go  to  press,"  announced  the  New  Boston 

Clarion.     See     How     Ben     Fargo's     Claim     was 

Jumped. — Morgan. 
Just  before  Eckson  and  his  wife  started  on  their  bridal 

tour,  Eckson  said.      See  It  Was  not  a  Success. — 

Anon. 
Just  beyond  the  toiling  town.     See  Little  Parable,  A. — 

Minot. 
Just  beyond  this  field  of  clover,  in  a  pasture  rough  and 

rocky.     See  Sermon  in  Flowers,  A. — Davis. 
Just  before  twelve  o'clock.     See  At  the  Stamp  Window. 

— Anon. 
Just  come   from   heaven,    how   bright   and   fair.     See 

First  and  Last. — SpofTord. 
Just  ere  the  darkness  is  withdrawn.     See  "Sleep  and 

his  Brother  Death." — Hayne. 
Just  fair  enough  to  be  pretty.     See  Bonnie  Lasses. — 

Anon. 
Just  for  a  day  you  crossed  my  life's  dull  track.     See 

Ghmpse,  The.— Watson. 
Just  for  a  handful  of  silver  he  left  us.     See  Lost  Leader, 

The. — Browning. 
Just  for   one   day,    my   heart,   of   all   the   year      See 

Valentine,  A. — McM. 
Just  in  the  dubious  point,  where  with  the  pool.     See 

Seasons,  The  (Angling). — Thomson. 
Just  in   thy  mould  and  beauteous  in  thy  form.     See 

My  Brigantine. — Cooper. 
Just  listen!     Tho.se  children  are  at  it  again.     See  War 

of  the  Months,  The. — "Bob  o'Link." 
Just  lost    when    I    was    saved!     See    Called    Back.— 

Dickinson. 
Just  now  I  've  ta'en  a  fit  of  rhyme.     See  Epistle  to  James 

Smith  (Writing  Verses). — Bums. 
Just  now  there  pass  before  me.     See  As  in  a  Looking- 
glass. — Dinkelspiei. 
Just  one    kiss — two    faces    met.     See    Price,    The. — 

Pollock. 
Just  one    more    kiss    for    good-night,    mamma.     See 

Brave  Little  Girl,  A. — Anon. 
Just  our  rapture  to  enhance.     See  Herv^  Riel. — Brown- 
ing. 
Just  read   this  letter,  old  friend  of  mine.     See  I-ost 

Letter,  A. — Scott. 
Just  take  a  trifling  handful,  O  philosopher!     See  Sky- 
making. — Collins. 
Just  think     of    it '     The    Mayor    and    Council.     See 

Sparrow  Must  Go,  The. — St.  John. 
Just  three  years  old,  the  maid  will  be,  tomorrow.     See 

Rebekah. — Everett. 
"Just  tired  out,"  the  neighbor  said.     See  Tired  Out. 

—(All  the  Year  Round.) 
Just  to  let  thy  Father  do.     See  Secret  of  a  Happy  Day, 

The. — Havergal . 
Just  to  trust,  and  yet  to  ask.     See  Hour  of  Comfort, 

The. — Havergal. 
Just  when  each  bud  was  big  with  bloom.     See  Birth. — 

Stillman. 
Just  when  the  winter  lingers,  loth  to  go.     See  Easter 

Exercise. — Hadley. 
Just  where  the  Treasury's  marble  front.     See  Pan  in 

Wall  Street.— Stedman. 
Just  within  the  fortress  of  the  Alhambra.     See  Alham- 
bra.  The  (Legend  of  the  Moor's  Legacy). — Irving. 
Justinian,  Emperor  and  Augustus,  bent.     See  Building 

of  S.  Sophia,  The.— Baring-Gould. 
Jutland  was  the  native  land  of  the  Anglo-Saxons,    ^ee 

Mission  of  the  Anglo-Saxons,  The. — Walsh. 
Juxtaposition,  in  fine:  and  what  is  juxtaposition?     See 

Amours  de  Voyage  (Juxtaposition). — Clough. 


K 

Kacelyevo's  slope  still  felt.     See  Last  Redoubt,  The. — 

Austin. 
Kaiumers  was  the   first   king  of  Persia.     See  Shah- 

Nameh,  The  Story  of  the.— Rabb. 
Kamal  is  out  with  twenty  men  to  raise  the  border  side. 

See  Ballad  of  East  and  West,  A. — Kipling. 
Kan^s  has  abolished  the  saloon.     See  Prohibition  in 

Kansas. — Ingalls. 
Karl   Kraemer  had   not  walked  for  two  years.     See 

Christ  Child,  The.— Wilbor. 


Kate,    have    you    seen    the    new    scholar?     See    Fine 

Feathers. — Anon. 
Kate,  how  shall  I  say,  "Come  to  me?"     See  Kate's 

French  Lesson. — Anon. 
Kate    Ketchem,    on    a    winter's    night.     See    Kate  , 

Ketchem. — Cary. 
Kathleen  Mavourneen !  the  gray  dawn  is  breaking.     See 

Kathleen  Mavourneen. — Crawford. 
Katie  an'  me  ain't  ingaged  anny  moor.     See  Katie 

an'  Me. — Cooke. 
Katie  takes  her  milking  pail.     See  Twilight  Pastoral, 

A. — Anon. 
Katrina's  hair  so  truly  does  appear.     See  Katrina. — 

Anon. 
Katy,  dot  poy  of  ours — dot  Peely,  is  an  awful  ferry 

shmard  poy.     See  Smart  Boy,  A. — Anon. 
Keen  gleams  the  wind,  and  all  the  ground.     See  Peace. 

— DeKay. 
Keen  is  the  breath  of  the  waning  year.     See  Hunting 

Song. — Walker. 
Keen  was  the  air;  the  sky  was  very  light.     See  Garden 

Fairies. — Marston. 
Keep  a  guard  on  your  words,  my  darlings.     See  "Little 

Children." — Anon. 
Keep  back  the  one  word  more.     See  Reserve. — Rees». 
Keep  good  company  or  none.     See  Maxims  to  Guide 

a  Young  Man. — Anon. 
Keep  it  before  the  people!     See  same. — Duganne. 
Keep  me,  I  pray,  in  wisdom's  way.     See  Bibliomaniac's 

Prayer.  The.— Field. 
Keep  me  very  near  to  Jesus.     See  Light  Shall  be  at 

Eventide. — Evans. 
Keep  out  of  debt  and  you  will  meet. — See  Keep  Out  of 

Debt. — Kavanaugh. 
Keep  the  record  clean,  young  man!     See   Keep  the 

Record  Clean. — Requa. 
Keep  those  banners  red  and  gory.     See  Keep  Those 

Banners. — Summers. 
Keep  watch  of  your  words,  my  darlings.     See  Watch 

Your  Words. — Anon. 
Keep  ye'er  eye  on  th'  Pops,  Jawn.     See  Mr.  Dooley 

on  a  Populist  Convention. — Dunne. 
Keep   your   eye   on    your   neighbors.     See   To    Make 

Mischief. — Anon. 
Keep  your  undrest,   familiar  style.     See  Angel  in  the 

House,  The  (Love  Ceremonious).— Patmore. 
Ken  ye  aught  of  brave  Lochiel?     See  Young  Airly. — 

Anon. 
Kentish  Sir  Byng  stood  for  his  king.     See  Marching 

Along. — Browning. 
Kentucky,  O  Kentucky,   I  love  your  classic  shades. 

See  To  Kentucky. — Anon. 
Ketch,  my  good  fellow,  you  have  a  neat  hand.     See 

Reflections  in  the  Pillory. — Lamb. 
"Kill  me  if  you  will,  but  spare  my  life!"     See  Billy 

the    Bilk;    or.    The    Bandits  of    the    Bowery. — 

Anon. 
"Killed    at ."     What    matters    where?     See 

"  Killed .  "—Weatherly. 
Kin  you  tell  dis  pore  old  darkey  jes'  how  fur'  tis  to  de 

sky?     See  Uncle  Eph's  Heaven. — Brooks. 
Kinder  like  a  stormy  day,  take  it  all  together.     See 

Rainy  Day,  A. — Lincoln. 
Kind  friends,  and  [dear]  parents,  we  welcome  you  here. 

See  Lines  for  an  Exhibition. — Anon. 
Kind  friends,  at  your  call  I'm  come  here  to  sing.  «  See 

Too  Much  Nose. — Anon. 
Kind  friends,  distinguished  far  and  wide  for  Webster- 
like precision.     See  Finished  Education. — Anon. 
Kind  friends,  I'm  glad  to  meet  you  here.     See  What 

Whiskey  Did  for  Me. — Carswell. 
Kind  friends,  we  welcome  you  to-day.     See  Greeting. 

— Anon. 
Kind  friends,  will  you  listen  to  an  outcast's  tale?     See 

Outca.st,  The. — Anon. 
Kind  Friends:     Within  our  school-room  walls  we  gladly 

see  you  meeting.     See  Close  of  school. — Morgan. 
Kind  friends,  within  our  school-room  walls  we  gladly 

you  are  meeting.     See  Closing  Day. — Anon. 
Kind  friends,    you   see   us   mustered   here.     See   Pro- 
logue.— "Bob  o'Link." 
Kind  friends,  your  attention  I  ask.     See  Sneezing  Man, 

The. — Florence. 
Kind  hearts   are   [the!  gardens.     See  Kind  Words. — 

Anon. 
Kind  lady,  I  attend  your  fair  commands.     See  Descrip- 
tion of  the  Chase. — -Knowles. 
"Kind  masters   and   misses,    whoever  you   be."     See 
Last  Dying  Speech  and  Confession  of  Poor  Puss, 
The. — Taylor. 
Kind  of  curyus  fixin' — when.     See  In  the  Spring. — 
McGlasson. 


738 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Ladies 


Kind  teachers,    friends,    and    classmates    dear.     See 

Opening  Address. — Cornell. 
"Kind  traveler,   do   not   pass   me  by."     See  Rover's 

Petition. — Fields. 
Kind  was  my  friend  who,  in  the  Eastern  land.     See 

Crescent  and  the  Cross,  The. — Aldrich. 
Kind  words  are  the  music  of  the  world.     See  same. — 

Faber. 
Kindness  to  animals  is,  like  every  other  good  thing. 

its  own  reward.     See  Nothing  Lost  in  Nature. — 

Hamilton. 
King  Almanzor  of  Granada,  he  hath  bid  the  trumpet 

sound.     .See  Bull-fight  of  Gazul,  The. — Lockhart. 
King  Bruce    of    Scotland    flung     himself    down.     >See 

Robert  Bruce  and  the  Spider. — Cook. 
King  Canute  was  weary-hearted ;  he  had  reigned  for 

years  a  score.     See  King  Canute. — Thackeray. 
King  Charles,  and  who'll  do  him  right  now?     See  Give 

a  Rouse. — Browning. 
King  Cupid  sang  his  song  of  love.     See  Cupid's  Easter 

Composition. — Anon. 
King  David's  limbs  were  weary.    See  Absalom  (Patriot 

King  in  Mourning,  The). — Willis. 
King  Death  was  a  rare  old  fellow!     See  King  Death.— ^ 

Procter. 
King  Edward  dwelt  at  Havering,  at  Bower.     See  King 

and  the  Nightingales,  The. — Mackay. 
King  Erik's  daughter  grew  tall  and  fair.     See  Gyda  of 

Varsland. — Culbertson. 
King  Ferdinand  alone  did  stand  one  day  upon  the  hill. 

See  Garei  Perez  de  Vargas. — Lockhart. 
King  Francis  was  a  hearty  king,  and  loved  a  royal  sport. 

See  Glove  and  the  Lions,  The. — Hunt. 
King  Frederick,  of  Prussia,  grew  nervous  and  ill.     See 

Court  of  Berlin,  The. — {Frankfort  Yeoman.^ 
King  Frost  comes  and  locks  me  up.     See  Brook's  Song, 

The. — Butts. 
King  Henry  sat  upon  his  throne.     See  Bernardine  du 

Born. — Sigourney. 
King  James  one  day  was  hunting.     See  Tables  Turned. 

— Anon. 
King  .Tames  the  Sixth  on  removing  to  London.     See 

Language  of  Signs,  The;  or,  Two  Sides  to  a  Story. 

— Anon. 
King  Jamie  hath  made  a  vow.     See  Flodden  Field. — 

Anon. 
King  Leir  [or  Lear]  once  rulM  in  this  land.     Sec  King 

Leir  and  his  Three  Daughters. — Anon. 
King  of  England.      Petitioning  for  pity  is  most  weak. 

See  Wat  Tyler  (Wat  Tyler's  Address  to  the  King). 

— Southey. 
King  of  kings!  and  Lord  of  lords!     See  Chorus. — Mil- 
man. 
King  PhiUp  had  vaunted  his  claims.*    See  Ballad  to 

Queen  EUzabeth,  A. — Dobson. 
King  Robert  of  Sicily,  brother  of  Pope  Urbane.     See 

King  Robert  of  Sicily. — Longfellow. 
King  Saloman  looked  from  his  donjon  bars.     See  Curse 

of  Hungary,  The. — Hay. 
King  Solomon  stood  in  the  house  of  the  Lord.     See 

Dead  Solomon,  The. — Dorgan. 
King  Solomon,  though  filled  with  earthly  vanity.     See 

Solomon  and  the  Sparrow. — Joachimsen. 
Kings,  queens,  lords,  ladies,  knights,  and  damsels  great. 

See  Faerie  Queene,  The  (House  of   Busyrane). — 

Spenser. 
Kiss  me  but  once,  and  in  that  space  supreme.     See 

Love's  Kiss. — Hay. 
Kiss  me  softly  and  speak  to  me  low.     See  Kiss  me 

Softly. — Saxe. 
Kiss  me,  though  you  make  believe.     See  Make  Believe. 

— Gary. 
"Kiss  me.   Will,"   sang  Marguerite.     See   No   Kiss. — 

Elliott. 
Kissing  her  hair,  I  sat  against  her  feet.     See  Kissing 

her  Hair. — Swinburne. 
Kissing  is  indulged  in  by  everybody.     See  Art  of  Kiss- 
ing, The. — -Anon. 
Kit,  the  recording  angel  wrote.     See  Kitty's  "No." — 

Bates. 
Kitchen  maids  are  so  often  bothered  in  their  household 

duties.     See  Peter  Mulrooney  and  the  Black  Filly. 

— Anon. 
Kitten,  kitten,  two  months  old.     See  Kitten  Gossip. — 

Westwood. 
Kitty,  don't  sit  there  looking  at  me.     See  Diligent  Bes- 
sie.— Rook. 
"Kitty,  kitty,  you  mischievous  elf."     See  Both  Sides. 

— Hamilton.  , 
Kitty,  my  pretty,  white  kitty.     See  Kitty. — Anon. 
Kiver  up   yo'   haid,   my    little     lady.     See     Lullaby: 

"Kiver  up,"  etc. — Dunbar. 


Kneel  not,  oh!  friend  of  mine,  before  a  shrine.     See 

Kneel  at  no  Human  Shrine. — Kent. 
Kneeling,  fair  in  the  twilight  gray.     See  Learning  to 

Pray. — Dodge. 
Kneeling,  white-robed,   sleepy  eyes.     See  Little  Mar- 
gery.— Joy. 
"Kiiight,  as  sister's  love  for  brother,  must  be  mine  for 

thee." — See  Knight  of  Toggenburg,  The. — Schiller. 
Knight  of  the  Eastern  seas,  tliy  fadeless  fame.     See 

Admiral  Dewey. — Marshall. 
Knightly  Rider  of  the  Knee.     See  Rider  of  the  Knee. — 

Riley. 
Knitting  is  the  maid  o'  the  kitchen,  Milly.     See  Kitchen 

Clock,  The.— Cheney. 
Knocking,  knocking,  ever  knocking!     See  Knocking. — 

Stowe. 
Know,  Celia,  since  thou  art  so  proud.     See  Ingrateful 

Beauty  Threatened. — Carew. 
Know  I  not  who  thou  mayest  be.    See  At  the  Hacienda. 

— Harte. 
Know  that  our  city  has  the  greatest  name  in  all  the 

world.     See  History   of   the   Peloponnrsian  War, 

The  (Glory  of  Athens). — Pericles. 
Know  then  this  truth  (enough  for  man  to  know).     See 

Happiness. — Pope. 
Know  ye  not  that  ye  are  the  temple  of  God.     See  Wis- 
dom of  the  Ages. — Anon. 
Know  ye  the  land  where  the  cypress  and  myrtle.     See 

Bride  of  Abydos,  The. — Byron. 
Know  ye   the   willow-tree   whose   gray   leaves   quiver. 

See  Willow-tree,  The. — Thackeray. 
Know  you  me,   Duke?     Know  you  the  peasant  boy? 

See  St.  Pierre  to  Ferrardo. — Knowles. 
Knowest  thou  but  joy.     See  Song,  A. — Remsen. 
Knowing  the  heart  of  man  is  set  to  be.      See  Know- 
ing the  Heart  of  Man. — Daniel. 
Knowledge  and    wisdom,    far    from    being    one.     See 

Task,  The  (Knowledge  and  Wisdom). — Cowper. 
Knowledge — who  hath  it?     Nay  not  thou.     See  Knowl- 
edge.— Aldrich. 
Knows  he  that  never  took  a  pinch.     See  To  My  Nose. — 

Forrester. 
Knows  he   who   tills   this   lonely   field.     See   Dirge. — 

Emerson. 
Know'st  thou  the  land  where  bloom  the  citron  bowers. 

See  Wilhelm  Meister's  Apprenticeship  (Mignon's 

Song). — Goethe. 
Know'st  thou  the  land    where  the  lemon  tree  blows. 

See  Wilhelm   Meister's  Apprenticeship   (Mignon's 

Song) . — Goethe. 
"Kommen  zie  hier,  Pilly,"  cried  Christian.     See  Billy's 

First  and  I^ast  Drink  of  Imager.- — Anon. 
Krinken  was  a  little  child.     See  Krinken. — Field. 
Kulnasatz.  my  reindeer.     See  same. — Anon. 
Kyng  James  the  First,  the  patroun  of  Prudence.     See 

Testament  and  Complaynt  of   the  Papingo.  The. 

— Lyndesay. 


La!  Sakes!  I'll  never  forgit  them  oxen,  no  never!  See 
Them  Oxen. — Raymond. 

Labor  is  heaven's  great  ordinance  for  human  improve- 
ment.    See  Nobility  of  Labor  (Labor). — Dewey. 

Labor  is  man's  great  function.  See  Duty  of  Labor, 
'The. — Anon. 

"Labor  is  worship,"  the  robin  is  singing.  See  Labor. — 
Osgood. 

Labor,  labor — honest  labor.     See  Labor. — Anon. 

Lacking  samite  and  sable.  See  Christmas  Carol. — 
Probjm. 

Lackyng  my  love,  I  go  from  place  to  place.  See  Amo- 
retti  and  Epithalamion  (Sonnet:  "Lackyng  my 
love,"  etc.). — Spenser. 

Ladies  an'  gemmen,  boys  an'  gals,  also  fellah  citizens. 
See  Colored  Man's  Disco'se  on  Different  Subjects, 
A. — Anon. 

Ladies  an'  gentamen:  I  stand  here  in  front  befora  you 
to-day.  See  Italian's  Account  of  George  Wash- 
ington, An. — Anon. 

Ladies  and  gentlemen :  Allow  me  to  offer  you  the 
sincere  thanks.  See  Interrupted  Recitation,  An. 
— Kavanaugh. 

Ladies  and  gentlemen:  Allow  me  to  present  to  you 
Mr.  Michael  Hoolahan.  See  Hoolanan  on  Educa- 
tion.— Kyle. 

Ladies  and  gentlemen,  and  others,  I  have  much. 
See  Burlesque  Lecture  on  "Sound." — Anon. 

Ladies — and — gentlemen:  By — the  request  of  the — 
Chairman  of  the — Comit-tee.  See  Mark  Twain 
Introduces  Himself. — Clemens. 


739 


Ladies 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Ladies  and  gentlemen,  especially  the  gentlemen.     <See 

Art  Artistic. — Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  excuse  my  seedy  looking  plight. 

See  Tight  Times. — Kavanaugh. 
Ladies  and  gcntlemcu^riends  and  delegates;  Manfully 

and    womanfully.     See    Convention    of    Realistic 

Headers. — Braden. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  girls  and  boys:     I  want  you  to 

understand.     See  Prologue. — Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen:     Hear  me  for  my  cause.     See 

Miss  January  Jones'  I-ecture  on  Woman's  Rights. 

— Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  I  am  a  young  man.     I  have  been 

brought  up  regardless  of  expense.     See  Salu-Ta- 

Tat-U-A-R'y.— Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  I   am    about   to   give    you    a 

tragedy.     See  Revenge,  The. — FcSzandid. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :     I  am  small,  it  is  true,  but  great 

on  the  stump.     See  Take  up  the  Collection. — Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen — 1  beg  pardon.     See  Mr.  Diffi- 

dent's  Speech. — Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :     I  come  to  greet  each  welcome 

guest.     See  Salutatory  Speech  for  a  Boy  of  Ten. — 

Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :     I  could  holler — I'm  gay.     See 

Mr.   Styx   Rejoices  on  Account  of  a  New   Well 

Spring. — Anon . 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  I  have  in  my  possession  a  num- 
ber of   wax   figures.     See   Wax   Figures,    The. — 

Anon. 
Ladies  and    gentlemen:     I    have    the    pleasure.     See 

.\dvance  of  Science,  The. — Sapte. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen:     I  presume  you  have  all  heard. 

See  Anatomical  Tragedian,  The. — Kyle. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  I  regret  that  I  cannot  respond. 

See  Encore. — Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen  \or  gintlemen]:     I  see  so  many 

foine  lookin'  people.     See  Irish  Philosopher,  The. 

— MacCabe. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :     If  you  will  give  me  your  atten- 
tion.    See  Boy's  Rights. — Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :       It  is  my  most  agreeable  duty 

to  welcome  you.     See  Dedication  of  a  School  Build- 
ing.— Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  I've  come.     See  Speech  for  a 

Very  Little  Boy. — Kavanaugh. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  let  me  ask.     See  Prologue. — ■ 

"Bob  o'Link." 
Ladies  and  gentlemen:     Manner  means  way.     See  Six 

Kinds  of  Manners. — Diaz. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen ;     Members  of  the  Faculty.     See 

Presentation  Oration. — -Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :     My  name  is  Puff  Stuff.     See 

Lecture  on  Patent  Medicines,  A.— Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen ;  nearly  [or  over]  four  hundred 

years  ago.     See  Little  Boy's  Lecture,  A. — Thayer. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen — Of  course  you  know  my  name 

and  office.     See  Barmecide's  Feast,  The. — Dalton. 
Ladies  and    gentlemen :     Our    performances    are    now 

about  to  commence.     See  Salutatorian's  Difficul- 

ities.  The. — Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen:   Over  [or  nearly]  four  hundred 

years  ago  the  mighty  mind  of  Columbus.     See 

Little  Boy's  Lecture,  A. — Thayer. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :     Permit  me  to  join  you.     See 

Centennial  Speech. — Blake. 
Ladies  and    gentlemen:     Should    you    be    dissatisfied 

with  anything  here  to-night.     See  Artemus  Ward's 

Panorama — "Among  the  Mormons." — Browne. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen:     The  animal  to  which  I  invite 

your  attention.     See  I^ecture  on  Homet-ology,  A. 

— Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :     The  class  of  Ninety-seven  ex- 
tends to  you  a  most  cordial  welcome.     See  Salu- 

tory  Delivered  at  Princeton  University. — Anon. 
Ladies  and   gentlemen:     The  inauguration  of  George 

Washington.     See  Centennial  Speech. — Gunsaulus. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen:      The  inauguration  of  George 

Wa.shmgton.     See  Centennial  Speech. — Thurston. 
Ladies  and   gentlemen:     We   have   formed  a  society 

for  the  purpose  of  improving  ourselves.   See  Break- 
ing up  the  Exhibition. — Anon. 
Ladies  and   gentlemen :     When,   four  years   ago,   the 

tidings  of  our  struggle.     See  Russia  the  Antag- 
onist of  the  United  States. — Kossuth. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen :     You  need  not  shudder  in  an- 
ticipation.    See  Prologue. — Anon. 
Ladies  and  gentlemen,  Zachariah  Popp  was  a  wealthy 

man.     See  Zachariah  Popp's  Courtship  and  Mar- 
riage.— Anon. 
Ladies  and   gentlemens  of  dis  grand   convention-     I 

have  been  invited  here.     See  Dutch  Oration  on 

Women,  A.— Williams. 


Ladies  and  gents:  We  give  to  you.  See  Introductory 
Address. — Anon. 

Ladies  and  gintlemen  for  gentlemen]:  I  see  so  many 
foine-looking  people  sittin'  before  me.  See  Irish 
Philosopher,  The. — MacCabe. 

Ladies  and  gintlemins.  In  the  foreground  over  there 
yez'll  observe  Vinegar  Hill.  See  Irishman's  Pano- 
rama, The. — Burdette. 

Ladies  like  variegated  tulips  show.  See  Moral  Essays. 
— Pope. 

Ladies,  though  to  your  conquering  eyes.  See  same. — 
Etherege. 

Ladies,  we  are  all  assembled.  See  School  Committee, 
The.— Towle. 

Lady  Alice,  Lady  Louise.  See  Blue  Closet,  The. — 
Morris. 

Lady  Alice  was  sitting  in  her  bower  window.  See  Lady 
Alice. — Anon. 

Lady  and  gentlemen  fays,  come  buy!  See  Sylvia; 
or.  The  May  Queen  (Nephon's  Song). — Darley. 

Lady  Anne  Dewhuist  on  a  crimson  couch.  See  Daugh- 
ters of  Philistia. — Smith. 

Lady  Clara-  Vere  de  Vere.     See  same. — Tennyson. 

Lady  fair,  hanging  there.     See  To  a  Picture. — Anon. 

Lady,  I  loved  you  all  last  year.  See  Song  of  Impossi- 
bilities, A. — Praed. 

Lady!  in  this  night  of  June.     See  Night  in  June,  A. — 
•     Austin. 

"Lady  Jane,  O  Lady  Jane!"     See  Gage,  The. — Ramal. 

Lady  Margaret  sits  in  her  bower  door.  See  Young 
Akin. — ^Anon. 

Lady  Marjorie,  Lady  Marjorie.  See  William  and  Mar- 
jorie. — Anon. 

Lady  Moon,  Lady  Moon,  where  are  you  roving?  See 
Lady  Moon. — Houghton. 

Lady  Queen  Anne  sits  in  the  sun.  See  Lady  Queen 
Anne. — Kavanaugh. 

Lady  Teazle,  Lady  Teazle,  I'll  not  bear  it!  See  School 
for  Scandal,   The  (Quarrel   Scene). — Sheridan. 

Lady,  there  is  a  hope  that  all  men  have.  See  Poet's 
Hope,  A. — Channing. 

Lady,  when  I  behold  the  roses  sprouting.  See  Dilem- 
ma, A.  — Anon. 

Lady-bird!  lady-bird!  fly  away  home.  See  Little  Lady- 
bird,   The.— Southey. 

Ladybug,  ladybug,  haste  away  home!  See  Ladybug, 
Ladybug. — Anon. 

Laid  in  my  quiet  bed  in  study  as  I  were.  See  No  Age 
Content  with  his  own  Estate. — Surrey. 

Laid  on  thine  altar,  O  my  Lord  divine!  See  same. 
— (Netv  York  Observer.) 

Laid  out  for  dead,  let  thy  last  kindness  be.  See  To 
Robin  Redbreast. — Herrick. 

I^amar  and  his  Rangers  camped  at  dawn.  See  Christ- 
mas Camp  An  the  San  Gabr'el,  A. — Barr. 

Lamb  of  God,  I  look  to  thee.  See  Christ  Our  Example. 
— Wesley. 

"Lamb  of  God,  who  takest  away."  See  Little  Saint 
Cecilia. — Holmes. 

Lament  him,  Mauchline  husbands  a'.  See  On  a  Wag 
in  Mauchline. — Burns. 

Lament,  lament.  Sir  Isaac  Heard.  See  On  a  Tuft- 
hunter. — Moore. 

Lamkin  was  as  good  a  mason.     See  Lamkin. — Anon. 

Land  of  languor  and  of  beauty,  where  the  tawny  sun- 
set blending.     See  Cuba,  1898. — Vynne. 

Land  of  the  West!  though  passing  brief  the  record  of 
thine  age.     See  Tribute  to  Washington. — Cook. 

Land  of  unconquered  Pelayo !  land  of  the  Cid  Cam- 
peador!     See  Surrender  of  Spain,  The. — -Hay. 

Land  which  the  Norman  would  make  his  own!  See 
Ballad  of  the  Bier  that  Conquered,  The. — De 
Vere. 

Land-locked  I  lie,  in  idleness.     See  Rondeau. — Bates. 

Landlord,  can  you  give  me  a  nice  clean  room.  See  In- 
vestigate.— Denison. 

"Language! — the  blood  of  the  soul.  Sir!"  See  Pro- 
fessor at  the  Breakfast -table.  The. — Holmes. 

Lanty  was  in  love,  you  see.  See  Won't  You  Follow 
Me. — -Lover. 

Lark,  high  up  in  the  summer  sky.  See  Lark's  Song. 
The. — Anon. 

Lars  Porsena  of  Clusium.     See  Horatius. — Macaulay. 

Las'  Sunday  while  I'se  settin'  on  de  bench  beside  d^ 

do.'     See  Uncle  Ike's  Roosters. — Fredericks. 
Las'  time  'at  Uncle  Sidney  come.     See  Boys'  Candi- 
date, The.— Riley. 
Lasd  Duesday  nide,  aboud  dwelve  o'glock.     See  Keno! 

— Ne\nlle. 
Lashed  to  his  flagship's  mast.     See  Blaine  of  Maine. — 

Ironquill. 
Last  April  when  the  winds  had  lost  their  chill.     See 
Dover  Cliff. — Home. 


de 


740 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Lean 


Last  autumn,  when  winter  was  taking.     >See  Venture- 
some Buds,  The.— A.  C. 
Last,  came  Toy's  ecstatic  trial.    See  Ode  to  the  Passions. 

—Collins. 
Last  Christmas  Miss  Burdock's  admirer  presented  her. 

See  Burdock's  Music-box. — Anon. 
Last  fall  I  desired  to  add  to  my  rare  collection  a  large 

hornet's  nest.     See  Bill  Nye  on  Hornets. — Anon. 
Last  left  of  the  mortal  Immortals,  art  thou  too  taken 

at  last.     See  In  Memoriam — Alfred,  Lord  Tenny- 
son . — Warren . 
Last  May  a  braw  wooer  cam  down  the  lang  glen.     <See 

Last  May  a  Braw  Wooer. — -Burns. 
Last  Monday  afternoon  the  eleven  Boblink  boys.     See 

Burdock's  Goat.-r-Anon. 
Last  night    a    mighty    poet    passed    away.     See    Per- 
petuity.— ScoUard. 
Last  night  a  zealous  Irishman  in  town.     See  Neophyte. 

— Ware. 
Last  night  Alicia  wore  a  Tuscan  bonnet.     See  Alicia's 

Bonnet. — PuUen. 
Last  night,  among  his  fellow  roughs.     See  Private  of 

the  Buffs,  The.— Doyle. 
Last  night,   and  there  came  a  guest.     See  Hinc   I'Isb 

Lachryma;  (Hence  these  tears). — Dixon. 
Last  night,  as  my  dear  babe  lay  dead.     See  Dead  Babe, 

The.— Field. 
Last  night    beneath    the    foreign    stars    I    stood.     See 

Common  Grave,  The. — Dobell. 
Last  night  I  held  a  little  hand.     See  Hard  to  Beat. — 

Thompson. 
Last  night  T  searched  the  garret  for  a  long-forgotten 

book.     See  My  Old  Rag  Doll  .—Crocker. 
Last  night  in  blue  my  little  love  was  dressed.     See  same. 

—Webb. 
Last  night   'mid   tears,   a   sorry   shower.     See  Willie's 

Tears.- — Anon. 
Last  night,  my  darling,  as  you  slept.     See  Some  Time. 

—Field. 
Last  night  the  angry  sun  dropped  down.     See  Message 

of  the  Dove,  The.— Nesbit. 
Last  night  the  blush  rose  clustered. 

Rose. — Glen. 
Last  night  the  nightingale  waked  me. 

— Marzials. 
Last  night,  the  stork  came  stalking. 

—Field 
Last  night  they  held  a  meetin',  makin'  agineral  search. 

See  Deacon,  Me  and  Him,  The. — Eisenbeis. 
Last  night,  when  all  the  village.     See  Old  Year,  The. 

— (Little  Corporal.) 
Last  night,  when  my  tired  eyes  were  shut  with  sleep. 

See  Gazelle,  A. — Stoddard. 
Last  night,   whiles  that  the  curfew  bell   ben   ringing. 

See  "Lollyby,  Lolly,  LoUyby."— Field. 
Last  night,  within  the  little  curtained  room.     See  So 

She  Refused  Him. — (Boston  Transcript.) 
Last  night  vou  came  and  woke  me  from  a  sleep.     See 

Last  Night. — Scott 
Last  of  a  stalwart  time  and  race  gone  by.     See  To 

Alexander  H.  Stephens. — Hayne. 
Last  spring    I    foimd    a    pumpkin    seed.     See    John's 

Pumpkin. — Archibald. 
Last  summer  I  made  up  my  mind  to  have.     See  Quiet 

Summer  Resort,  A. — Thatcher. 
Last  Thanksgivin '-dinner  we.     See  Gustatory  Achieve- 
ment, A. — Riley. 
Last  time  I  parted  from  my  Dear.     See  Parting  and 

Meeting  Again. — Scott. 
Last,  to   the   chamber  where   I   lie.     See  North-west 

Passage  (In  Port). — Stevenson. 
Last  week   I   received   orders  to  go   to   the   Britannia 

public  house.     See  Five  Minutes  with  a  Mad  Dog. 

— Pockhngton. 
Last  week  my  dolly  had  a  nawful  sick  spel.     See  Tot's 

Correspondence. — Anon. 
La.st  year  I  knew  not  how  to  live.     See  This  Year. — 

Kelley. 
Last  year  I  trod  these  fields  with  Di.     See-Mrs.  Smith. 

■ — Lampson. 
Last  year  I   was  yours  for  a  look  or  a  word.     See 

Woman's  Answer,  A. — Wood. 
Lastlv  came  Winter  cloath^d  all  in  frize.     See  Faerie 

Queene,  The  (Winter). — Spenser. 
Lat  never  a  man  a  wooing  wend.     See  King  Henry. — 

Anon. 
Late  afternoon.     Car  full  of  business  men  going  home. 

See  Scene  in  a  Street  Car. — Dallas. 
Late  at  e'en,  drinking  the  wine.     See  Dowie  Dens  of 

Yarrow,  The. — Anon. 
Late  at  morning's  prime  I  roved.     See  Hidden  Rose- 
tree,  A. — Power. 


See  Under  the 
See  Last  Night. 
See  Stork,  The. 


Late,  late,  so  late!  and  dark  the  night  and  chill!     See 

Idylls  of  the  King  (Late,  Late,  so  Late!). — Tenny- 
son. 
Late,  late,  yestreen  I  saw  the  new  moon.     See  Dejec- 
tion: an  Ode. — Coleridge. 
I^ate  lies  the  wintry   sun   a-bed.     See  Winter-time. — 

Stevenson. 
I-ate  one  evening  I  was  .sitting,  gloomy  shadows  round 

me     flitting.     See     Mysterious     Rapping?. — Shil- 

laber. 
Late  travelling  along  in  London  way.     See  Coxcomb, 

A.— Hall. 
Lately,  alas!  I  knew  a  gentle  boy.     See  Sympathy. — ■ 

Thoreau. 
Lately  an   equipage   T   overtook.     See   First   Sight   of 

Green  Fields,  The.— Lamb. 
Lately  on    yonder    swelling    bush.     See    Bud,    The. — 

Waller. 
Lately  our  songsters  [wr.  poets]  loitered  in  green  lanes. 

See  same. — Landor. 
Laties  and  shentlemans ;  Ven  a  man  knows  somedings 

he    speaks    mit    hees    sendiments.     See    Professor 

Dinkelspiegelmann  on  the  Origin  of  Life. — Anon. 
Latin  and  Greek  are  useful,  as  they  inure  children.     See 

Study  of  Latin  and  Greek. — Smith. 
Laud  the  first  spring  daisies.     See  Song  of  Spring. — 

Youl. 
Laugh,  and  the  world  laughs  with  you.     See  Solitude. 

— Wilcox, 
Laugh  at  their  whims  and  rigid  tenets  as  we  may.     See 

Pilgrim  Ancestors,  The. — Robinson. 
Laughing  is  strictly  an  amuzement,  altho  some  folks 

make    a   bizzness    ov   it.     See   Josh    Billings    on 

Laughing. — Billings. 
Laughingly  thou  comest.     See  .Tune. — -Meigs. 
Laughter!  'tis  the  poor  man's  plaster.     See  Laughter. — 

Anon. 
Launch  thy  bark,   mariner.     See  Mariner's   Hymn. — 

Southey. 
Launched  upon    ether    float    the    worlds  secure.     See 

Authority. — Huntington. 
Laura,  mv  darling  the  roses  have  blushed.     See  Laura, 

My  Darling. — Stedman. 
"Laura,"  said  George,  with  an  eager,  restless  yearn- 
ing in  his  gaze.     See  He  Had  to  Speak. — Anon. 
Laureate  of  the  Gentle  Heart!     See  To  Austin  Dobson. 

—Gilder. 
Laurels,  bring  laurels,  sheaves  on  sheaves.     See  Tra- 
falgar Day. — Nesbit. 
Lawdy!  TLawzy — C]  don't  I  rickoUeot.     See  Waitin' 

fer  the  Cat  to  Die. — Riley. 
I^awrence  of  vertuous  Father  vertuous  Son.     See  To 

Mr.  Lawrence. — Milton. 
Laws,  as  we  read  in  ancient  sages.     See  Lawyers  and 

the  I.,aws. — Beattie. 
Lawzy!  Itw.  Lawdy![,  don't  I  rickoUect.    See  Waitin' 

fer  the  Cat  to  Die. — Riley. 
Lay  a  garland  on   my   hearse.     See   Maid's  Tragedy, 

The  (Aspatia's  Song). — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Lay  away  the  story.     See  Evensong. — Riley. 
Lay  by  the  weekly,  Betsey,  it's  old  like  you  and  I.     See 

Fast  Mail  and  the  Stage,  The. — Yates. 
Lay  down  the  axe,  fling  by  the  spade.     See  Our  Coun- 
try's Call. — Bryant, 
Lay  him  beneath  his  snows.     See  Dead  Czar  Nicholas. 

The.— Craik. 
•Lay  me  down  beneaf  de  willers  in  de  grass.     See  Death 

Song,  A. — Dunbar. 
Lay  me  low,   my  work  is  done.     See  Valedictory. — 

Gordon. 
Lazy  sheep,  pray  tell  me  why.     See  Boy  and  the  Sheep, 

The.— Taylor. 
Lazy-bones,  wake  up  and  peep!     See  Nonsense  Verses. 

— Lamb. 
Le  chateau  de  Ploerneuf  ^tait  la  terreur  des  Bretons. 

See  Repentir  de  Noel. — Bernhardt. 
"Le  Petit"  call  not  him  who  by  one  act.     See  Jupiter 

Amans. — (London  Leader.) 
Lead,  kindly  light,   amid  the   encircling  gloom.     See 

Pillar  of  the  Cloud,  The. — Newman. 
Lead  us.  Heavenly  Father,  lead  us.     See  same. — Ed- 

meston. 
Lead  us.   Heavenly  Father,  lead  us,   Shepherd  kind. 

See  Prayer,  A. — Herford. 
Leaf  after  leaf  drops  off,  flower  after  flower.     See  Leaf 

after  Leaf. — Landor. 
Leafless  are  the  trees ;  their  purple  branches.     See  same. 

—Elliott. 
Lean  close  and  set  thine  ear  against  the  bark.     See 

Heart  of  Oak. — Luders. 
Lean  closer,  darling,  let  thy  tender  heart.     See  Before 

Sailing. — (All  the  Year  Round.) 


741 


Leaning 


A\  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


LeaninK  against  a  broken  parapet.     See  Bard's  Sum- 
mons to  War,  The. — Bulwer-Lytton. 
Leaning  with  parted  lips,  some  words  she  spake.     See 

Hyperion  (Thea). — Keats. 
Leans   he  'gainst  the  odd  Dutch  ingle.     See  Yes  or  No. 

— Loutner.  * 

Leap  to  the  highest  height  of  spring.     iSee  Early  Blue- 
bird, .\n. — Thompson. 
Lear  and  Cordelia!  'twas  an  ancient  tale.     See  To  Eng- 
land.— Boker. 
Learn,  boy,  from  me  what  dwells  in  man  alone.     <See 

Two  Les.sons,  The. — Higginson. 
Learn  everything  you  can.     It  will  all  come  in  play. 

See  Learn  Everything  You  Can. — Anon. 
Learn  to  live,  and  live  to  learn.     See  same. — Anon. 
Learn  to   wait — life's   hardest    lesson.     See   Learn   to 

Wait. — Anon. 
Learning  condemns   beyond  the  reach  of  hope.     See 

Rhymed  Lesson,  A  (Urania). — Holmes. 
Leave  God  to  order  all  thy  ways.     See  same. — New- 
man. 
Leave  me  a  little  while  alone.     <Sec  At  His  Grave. — 

.\ustin. 
Leave  me,  comrades,  here  I  drop.     See  Road  to  the 

Trenches,  The. — Lu.shington. 
Leave  me!  O,  leave  me!  Unto  all  below.     See  Parting 

Words. — Hemans. 
Leave  me,  O  Love,  which  reachest  but  to  dust.     See 

Astrophel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  CX).-^Sidney. 
Leave  now  our  streets,  and  in  yon  plain  behold.     See 

Borough,  The  (Founder  of  the  Almshouse,  The) 

— Crabbe. 
I^eave  our  schoolroom.     See  Bad  T  Can't. — Anon. 
Leave  the  young  hearts  to   Nature  and  to  God.     See 

same. — {All  the  Year  Round.) 
Leave  wringing  of  your  hands.     See  Hamlet. — Shake- 
speare. 
Leaves  have  their  time  to  fall.     See  Hour  of  Death, 

The. — Hemans. 
Leaving   the   Expedition   outside  to  rest.     See  Tramp 

Abroafl,  A  (American  Specimen,  An). — Clemens. 
Led  by  a  star  they  came.     See  Guided  by  a  Star. — 

Perry. 
Led  by  "his  God,  on   Pisgah's  height.     See  Death  of 

Moses,  The. — M'Cartee. 
Leman!  famed  in  song  and  story.     See  Sunset  on  Lake 

Leman. — Washburn. 
Lend  me  thy  fillet,  Love.     See  Lover's  Song,  The. — 

Sill. 
"Lend  me  your  ears!"  cried  wiped-out  Caesar's  chum. 

See   Prelude  to  an   Evening's   Recitations,   A. — 

— Anon. 
Lenora  waked  at  morning's  red.    See  Lenora. — Bvirger. 
Lenten  ys  come  with  love  to  toune.     See  Spring-tide. — 

Anon. 
Leofifricus  the  noble  earl.     See  LeofTricus.— Anon. 
Leona,  the  hour  draws  nigh.     See  Leona. — Clarke. 
Leonard  was  not  more  than  eight-and-twenty.     See 

Leonard  and  Margaret. — Southey. 
Leonard   was  to   some   extent    a   spoiled   child.     See 

Story  of  a  Short  Life,  The  (Leonard  and  the  V.  C). 

— Ewing. 
Les  morts  vont  vite!     Ay,  for  a  little  space.     See  Les 

Morts  Vont  Vite. — Bunner. 
Lesbia  hath  a  beaming  eye.     See  sam,e. — Moore. 
Lesbia   hath   a   fowl   to   cook.     See   Boiled   Chicken. 

— {Punch.) 
Less  noise  in  the  room,  I  say!     See  Hour  in  School,  An. 

— Crosby. 
Less  worthy  of  applause,  though  more  admired.     See 

Task,  The  (Ice  Palace,  The).— Cowper. 
Lessons  sweet  of  Spring  returning.     See  First  Sunday 

after  Epiphany. — Keble. 
I^st  it  may  more  quarrels  breed.     See  Twelve  Articles. 

—Swift. 
Lest  men  svispect  your  tale  untrue.   See  Painter  Who 

Pleased  Nobody  and  Everybody,  The. — Gay. 
Lestenyt,  lonlynges,  both  elde  and  zynge.     See  Of  a 

Ro.se,  a  Lovely  Rose,  of  a  Rose  is  al  myn  Song. — 

Anon. 
Let  all  good  citizens  in  both  England  and  America,  all 

who    desire    the    world's    progress.     See    Great 

Britain  and  America. — Hall. 
Let  all  the  earth  fear  the  Lord.     See  Psalms  of  David, 

XXXIII.  fNation's  Strength,  A).— Bible. 
IjCt  all  the  fish  that  swim  the  sea.     See  Herring  is 

King. — Graves. 
Let  all  the  good  thou  doest  to  man.     See  Boast  Not. — 

Stoddard. 
Let  boys  have  all  the  sport  they  will.     See  Washing 

Dishes. — Ellis. 
I>et  dead  names  be  eternized  by  dead  stone.     See  same. 

— Thomas. 


Let  dogs  delight  to  bark  and  bite.     See  Against  Quar- 
relling and  Fighting. — Watts. 
Let  down  the  bars,  O  Death!     See  Fold,  The. — Dick- 
inson. 
Let  drum  to  trumpet  speak.     See  Grant. — Fuller. 
"Let  Earth  give  thanks,"  the  deacon  said.     See  Give 

Thanks  fer  What?— Croffut. 
Let  England,  and  Ireland,  and  Scotland  rejoice.     See 

Royal  Victory  over  the  Dutch,  The. — Anon. 
Let  Erin  remember  the  days  of  old.     See  Erin  and  the 

Days  of  Old. — Moore. 
Let  every  sound  be  dead.     See  Baby  Sleeps. — .\non. 
Let   Fate  do  her  worst;  there  are  relics  c^joy.     See 
Farewell!  but  Whenever  you  Welcorriewhe  Hour 
(Sweet  Remembrances). — Moore.        /    ^. 
Let  Granta  boast  the  patrons  of-  her  name.     See  Tri- 
umph of  Isis,  The. — -Warton. 

Let  hammer  on  anvil  ring.  See  Armourer's  Song,  The. 
^Smith. 

"Let  her  sing  if  she  will."  See  Rival  Singer,  The. — 
Anon. 

Let  him  listen,  whoso  would  know.  See  Golden  Bridge, 
The. — Lanigan. 

Let  him  who  will  sing  Beauty's  praise.  See  Constant 
Heart,  A. — (^'lay. 

Let   Honesty  be  as  the  breath  of  thy   soul.     See 
Honesty  and  Economy. — Franklin. 

Let  India  boast  in  spicy  trees.  See  British  Oak,  The. — 
Barton. 

Let  it  be  remembered,  that  it  has  ever  been  the  pride. 
See  Responsibility  of  Our  Country,  The. — Madi- 
son. 

Let  it  be  remembered  that  no  power  is  so  sensibly  felt 
by  society.  See  Judges  Should  be  Free. — Bay- 
ard. 

Let  it  be  remembered  that  the  Constitution  of  the 
United  States.  See  Constitution  not  Unalter- 
able, The.— Webster. 

Let  it  not  be  forgotten  that  patriotism  is  one  of  the 
positive  lessons.     See  Patriotic  Sentiments. 

Let  it  not  grieve  thee,  dear,  to  hear  me  say.  See  Love 
and  Absence. — Noble. 

Let  Liberty  run  onward  with  the  years.  See  Holy 
Nation,  A. — Realf. 

Let  little  hands  bring  blossoms  sweet.  See  For  Decora- 
tion Day. — Kniel. 

Let  me  at  last  be  laid.     See  At  Last. — Morris. 

Let  me  be  with  thee  where  thou  art.  See  Let  Me  Be 
with  Thee.— Elliott. 

Let  me  be  your  servant.  See  As  You  Like  It  (Old  Age 
of  Temperance). — Shakespeare. 

Let  me  begin,  Men  of  Athens,  by  imploring  of  all  the 
Heavenly  Powers.  See  Oration  on  the  Crown, 
The  (Reply  to  ^Oschines). — Demosthenes. 

Let  me  call  the  attention  of  the  court  to  the  magnifi- 
cent paragraph.  See  Impeachment  of  Warren 
Hastings  (Nature  of  .Justice,   The). — Sheridan. 

Let  me  come  in  where  you  sit  weeping — aye.  See 
Bereaved. — Riley. 

Let  me  go  forth,  and  -share.  See  Ode  in  May. — Was- 
son. 

Let  me  have  men  about  me  that  are  fat.  See  Julius 
Cs&sar  (Suspicion). — Shakespeare. 

Let  me  here  say  that  I  hold  judges.  See  Duties  of 
Massachusetts  at  the  Present  Crisis  (Judicial  Tri- 
bunals).— Sumner. 

Let  me  here  speak  plain  words.  See  Against  the  Spoils 
System. — Van  Dyke. 

Let  me  lie  down  just  here  in  the  shade.  See  Wounded. 
—Miller. 

Let  me  move  slowly  through  the  street.  See  Crowded 
Street,  'The. — Bryant. 

Let  me  not  die,  before  I've  done  for  thee.  See  same. — 
Anon. 

Let  m"  not  to  the  marriage  of  true  minds.  See  Sonnets, 
CXVI. — Shakespeare. 

Let  me  now,  for  a  moment  show  you  what  the  two 
systems.     See  Voltaire  and  Wilberforce. — Sprague. 

Let  me  play  the  fool.  See  Merchant  of  Venice, 
The. — Shakespeare. 

"Let  me  put  my  name  down  first."  See  Drunken 
Engineer,  The. — (Occident.) 

Let  me  say  a  few  words  to  you  on  a  cause  that  some 
years  ago.  See  Greatest  Curse  to  Labor,  The. — 
Powderly. 

Let  me  see,  six  and  four  are  ten.  See  Beginning 
Right.— Trafton. 

Let  me  see,  Tom, — how  long  is  it  since  I've  seen  you? 
See  Jack  at  all  Trades. — Crosby. 

Let  me  sit  down  a  minute.  See  Tale  of  a  Tramp,  The. 
— Anon. 

Let  me  stand  still  upon  the  height  of  life.  See  Forward. 
— Coolidge. 


742 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Let 


Let  me  tell  you,  boys,  of  a  run  we  made.     See  Peril  of 

the  Passenger  Train,  The. — Gillett. 
Let  me  tell  you  what  to  do.     See  Olive's   Advice. — 

Richards. 
Let  me  warn  you  most  solemnly  against  the  baneful 

effects.     See    Maxims    of    George    Washington. — 

Washington. 
Let  memories  of  pure  white  snow.     See  Valentine,  A. — 

Hobart. 
Let    merry    England    proudly    rear.     See    Freedom's 

Flower. — Douglas. 
Let    more    than   the    domestic    mill.     See   Charity. — 

Anon. 
Let  no  cold  marble  o'er  my  body  rise.     See  Epitaph  on 

a  Young  Lady  who  Desired  that  Tobacco  might 

be  Planted  on  her  Grave. — Anon. 
Let  no  man  ask  thee  of  anything.     See  Soothsay. — 

Rossetti. 
Let  no  man  be  held  responsible  for  my  death.     See 

Almost  a  Tragedy. — "Bob  o'Link." 
Let  no  man  say,  he  at  his  lady's  feet.     See  In  Absence. 

— Lanier. 
"Let  no  man  write  my  epitaph;  let  my  grave."     See 

Emmet's  Epitaph. — Southey. 
Let  not  woman  e'er  complain.     See  same. — Burns. 
Let  Observation,  with  extensive  view.     See  Vanity  of 

Human  Wishes,  The. — Johnson. 
Let  old  Santa  Glaus  come  in.      See  Let  Santa  Glaus  In. 

— Anon. 
Let    one    .smile    more,    departing,    distant    sun.     See 

November. — Bryant. 
Let  one  who  sips  life's  tears  with  strange  delight.     See 

'Neath  the  Cotton-wood  Trees. — Rude. 
Let    other    men    wrangle  and  strive.     See    In  Medio 

Tutissimus  Ibis. — Burdette. 
Let    other    swains,    upon    the    best    cream-laid.     See 

First  Sensible  Valentine,  The. — {Punch.) 
Let  other  tongues  in  older  lands.     See  This  Canada 

of  Ours. — Edgar. 
Let   others   praise   the   god   of  wine.     See  True   Leu- 

cothoe,  The. — Anon. 
Let  others  sing  of  Knights   and   Paladines.     See  Son- 
nets to  Delia  (Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  VII.). — 

Daniel. 
Let  others  sing  the  praise  of  wine.     See  Ad  Nicotina. — 

E.  H.  S. 
Let  others  write  of  battles  fought.     See  True  Heroism. 

— Anon. 
Let  Poets  rhyme  of  what  they  will.     See  Tobacco. — 

Jones. 
Let   Protestants  freely  allow.     See  Protestants'   Joy, 

The. — Anon. 
Let    sometimes,    in    the    gay    and    noisy    street.     See 

Fall  of  the   Indian,  The. — MoLellan. 
Let  sparkling  wine  o'erbrim  the  glass.     See  Drinking 

Song. — Gould. 
Let  Sporus  tremble. — What?  that  thing  of  silk.     See 

Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot  (Sporus). — Pope. 
Let    still    the    woman    take.      See   Twelfth    Night. — 

Shakespeare.     • 
Let  sybarites  still  dream  delights.     See  My  Friendly 

Pipe. — {Detroit  Tribune.) 
Let    Taylor    preach,    upon    a    morning    breezy.     See 

Morning  Meditations. — Hood. 
Let   the  angels    ring     the      bells.      See     same. — Ran- 
kin. 
Let  the  bird  of  loudest  lay.     See  Phcenix  and  the  Tur- 
tle, The. — Shakespeare. 
Let    the    farmer    praise   his    grounds.     See   Gruiskeen 

Lawn,  The. — Anon. 
Let  the  field  be  joyful,  and  all  that  is  therein.     See 

Scripture  Etchings  for  Arbor  Day. 
Let   the   first   witness   take   the   stand.     See   Trial   of 

Fing  Wing. — Bunnell. 
Let  the  learned  talk  of  books.     See  Pipe  of  Tobacco, 

A. — Fielding. 
Let  the  little  children  come.     See  Room  for  Children. 

— Anon. 
Let  the  past  perish,  let  darkness  shroud  it,  let  it  sleep 

for  ever.     See  Rienzi  (Appeal  to  the  Romans). — 

Bulwer-Lytton. 
Let  the  sower  scatter  seed.     See  As  for  Me,  I  Have  a 

Friend. — McGaffey. 
Let  the  toper  regale  in  his  tankard  of  ale.     See  Pipe  of 

Tobacco,  A. — Usher. 
Let  them  come,  come  never  so  proudly.     See  Elizabeth 

at  Tilbury. — Palgrave. 
Let  them    go    by — the   heats,  the  doubts,  the   strife. 

See  Oasis. — Dowden. 
"Let  there  be  light!"     God  spake  of  old.     See  Library, 

The.— Whittier. 
Let  there  be  no  more  accursed  races  on  the  earth.     See 

sam,e. — Castelar. 


"Let  this  gypsy  tell  our  fortune."  See  Telling  For- 
tunes.— Jessop. 

Let  this  meetin'  come  to  order  forthwith.  See  Bung- 
town  Lyceum,  The. — Anon. 

Let  those  complain  that  feel  I^ove's  cruelty.  See  To 
the  Blest  Evanthe. — Fletcher. 

Let  those  laugh  who  will  about  it.  See  Gaining 
Ground. — Wilcox. 

Let  those  who  are  in  favor  with  their  stars.  See  Son- 
nets, XXV. — Shakespeare. 

Let  thy  devotee  extol  thee.  See  Ode  to  Rum,  An. — 
Brown. 

Let  thy  gold  be  cast  into  the  furnace.  See  Cleansing 
Fires. — Procter. 

Let  time  and  chance  combine,  combine.  See  Adieu. — 
Carlyle. 

Let  Tyranny  tremble  and  Cowardice  quake.  See  Song 
tor  the  Hour. — Dunbar. 

Let  us  be  friends ;  we  may  not  now  be  more.  See 
Friends. — Wood. 

Let  us  be  of  good  cheer.  Humanity  has  ever  advanced. 
See  Progress  is  Constant. — Sumne;r. 

Let  us  begin  and  carry  up  this  corpse.  See  Grammar- 
ian's Funeral,  A. — Browning. 

Let  us  bring  before  us  the  assembly  which  was  about 
to  decide.  See  Adams  and  Jefferson  (Supposed 
Speech  against  the  Declaration  of  Independence). 
— Webster. 

Let  us  bury  him  here.  See  Between  the  Battles. — 
Sherman. 

Let  us  consider  the  problem  of  life.  See  Problem  of 
Life,  The.— Tilton. 

Let  us  drink  and  be  merry,  dance,  joke,  and  rejoice. 
See  Coronemus  nos  Rosis  antequam  Marcescant. — 
Jordan. 

Let  us  drink  the  health  of  the  newly-wedded  pair. 
See  Bridal  Wine-cup,  The. — Herbert. 

Let  us  go  back  and  place  ourselves  in  the  year  1815. 
See  Close  of  the  Battle  of  Waterloo. — Hugo. 

Let  us  go,  lassie,  go.  See  Braes  o'  Balquhither,  The.— 
Tannahill. 

Let  us  kneel.     See  Laus  Deo. — Whittier. 

Let  us  lay  hold  of  common  duties.  See  Common 
Duties. — Brown. 

Let  us  learn  to  be  content  with  what  we  have.  See 
same. — Swing. 

Let  us  live  while  the  heart  is  lightest.  .See  Life  and 
Love. — Tongue. 

Let  us  look  through  sacred  story.  See  Trees  of  the 
Bible,  The.— Slade. 

Let  us  not  fall  into  the  vulgar  whim  and  dishonor  the 
century  in  which  we  live.     See  same. — Hugo. 

Let  us  not,  gentlemen,  undervalue  the  art  of  the  ora- 
tor.    See  Worth  of  Eloquence,  The.^Anon. 

"Let  us  nass  over!"  We  were  far  astray.  See  same. 
— (Friends'  Review.) 

Let  us  play  .school  this  evening.  See  Playing  School. 
— .4non. 

Let  us  proclaim  it  firmly,  proclaim  it  even  in  fall  and 
in  defeat.  See  Napoleon  the  Little  (Present 
Age,  The). — Hugo. 

Let  us  quarrel,  American  kin.smen.  Let  us  plunge  into 
war.  See  Burlesque  Challenge  to  America,  A. — 
Lemon. 

Let  us  reflect  on  the  necessary  limits  of  all  human 
legislation.  See  Religion  Independent  of  Govern- 
ment.— Grattan. 

Let  us  royster  with  the  oyster.  See  Song  of  the  Oy- 
ster, A. — Anon. 

Let  us  seize  this  occasion  to  renew  to  each  other  our 
vows  of  allegiance.  See  Washington  Monument, 
The. — Winthrop. 

Let  us  (since  life  can  little  more  supply).  See  Essay 
on  Man,  An. — Pope. 

Let  us  sing  a  song.     See  New  Rosette,  The. — -Vickers. 

Let  us  sing  of  the  Babe  that  was  born  to-day.  See 
At  Bethlehem. — Rand. 

"Let  us  spread  the  sail  for  purple  islands."  See  "I 
Too." — Woolson. 

Let  us  take  to  our  hearts  a  lesson — no  lesson  can 
braver  be.  See  Tapestry  Weavers,  The. — Ches- 
ter. 

Let  us  thank  God  that  we  live  in  an  age.  See  Bunker 
Hill  Monument,  The  (Age  of  Improvement,  The). 
— Webster. 

Let  us  then,  be  of  good  cheer.  See  Law  of  Human 
Progress,  The  (Progress  of  Humanity,  The). — 
Sumner. 

Let  us  then  labor  for  an  inward  stillness.  See  New 
England  Tragedies,  The. — Longfellow. 

Let  us,  therefore,  stop,  while  to  stop  is  in  our  power. 
See  same. — .Johnson 

Let  us  try  to  be  happy.     See  same. — Anon. 


743 


Let 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Let  us  try  to  be  polite.     See  Be  Polite. — Anon. 
I^et  us  try  to  conceive  the  effects  of  the  fall  of  the 
material  of  a  comet  upon  the  earth.     See  Possible 
Consequences  of  a  Comet  Striking  the  Earth  in 
the  Pre-Glacial  Beriod. — Donnelly. 
Let  us  turn  our  eyes  and  thoughts  back  to  the  log- 
cabin  days.     See  Retrospective,  A. — Anon. 
Let  us  twine  each  thread  of  the  glorious  tissue  of  our 

country's  flag.     See  Stand  by  the  Flag. — Holt. 
Let  us  venerate  the  bones.     See  Patient  Mercy  Jones. — 

Fields.  u 

I>et  us  wreath  the  mighty  cup.     See  aame.— Field. 
Let  who  list  (for  me)  advance.     See  Flower  of  Virtue, 

The.— Wither. 
I/et  whosoever  will,  inquire.     See  New  Haven,  The. — 

Scudder. 
Let  your  imagination  carry  you  back  to  the  year  1776. 

See  Declaration  of  Independence,  The. — Schurz. 
Let  Youth,  who  never  rests,  run  by.     See  Approach  of 

Age,  The. — Landor. 
Let's  fight  life's  battle  bravely.     See  Life's  Conflict. — 

Whitehead.  . 
Let's  have  a  party,  your  doll  to  come  to  tea  with  my 

doll.     See  Party,  The.— Anon. 
Let's  oftener  talk  of  noble  deeds.     See  This  Life  is 

what  we  Make  it. — Anon. 
Let's  play  we're  married,  Clara?     See  Little  Mimics. — 

Smith. 
Let's  see,  where  am  I?     This  is  coal  I'm  lying  on.     See 
Dnmken    Soliloquy   in   a   Coal   Cellar,   A. — Bur- 
nett. 
Let's  spell  awhile.     See  Playing  School. — Anon. 
Let's  talk  of  graves,   of  worms,   and  epitaphs.     See 

King  Richard  II. — Shakespeare. 
Let's  tell  a  story,  you  and  me.     See  Story,  The. — 

Anon. 
Let's  up  and  be  doing.     See  Morning. — Ruggles. 
Let's  up  and  be  doing.      See  also  Up  and  Doing. — 

Ruggles. 
Letter  from  Benton  Fosdick,  Esq.,  of  New  York.     See 

Two  Letters  and  Two  Telegrams. — Fitch. 
Letting  go  the  unworthy  things  that  meet  us.     See 

same. — Brown. 
Letting  I  dare  not  wait  upon  I  would.    See  Macbeth. — 

Shakespeare. 
Letty,  they  will  not  be  here.     See  Practical  Jokes. — 

Meyers. 
Level  with  the  summit  of  that  eastern  mount.     See 

Orion  (Eos). — Home. 
Le^^   Cohen   went  to   Rockaway   Beach  for  the   salt 
water   bathing.     See   Cohen   at    the    Seashore. — 
Ransome. 
Liberty!     Freedom!     Tyranny    is    dead!     See    Julius 

Csesar. — Shakespeare. 
Liberty,  gentlemen,    is   a  solemn  thing.     See  Liberty. 

— Dewey. 
Liberty  has  been  bought  with  a  great  price.     See  Cost 

of  Liberty,  The. — Giles. 
Liberty  has  lost  by  the  sword  far  more  than  she  ever 

gained  by  it.     See  Sword,  The. — Grimkd. 
Liberty  is  a  dear  word.     And  it  is  behind  that  good 

word.     See  Liberty. — Elliott. 
Liberty  is  a  solemn  thing;  a  welcome,  a  joyous  thing. 

See  Liberty. — Dewey. 
Liberty  is  not  idleness,  but  afj  unconstrained  use  of 

time.     See  True  Liberty. — Bruyere. 
Lichens  and  mosses  (though  these  last  in  their  luxu- 
riance).    See  Modem  Painters  (Humblest  of  the 
Earth-children,  The). — Ruskin. 
Li-Chi  was  a  maiden  with  nothing  to  do.     See  Legend 

of  the  Willow-pattern  Plate. — Anon. 
Lie  heavy  on  him,  earth!     See  On  Sir  John  Vanbrugh 

— Poet  and  Architect. — Evans. 
Lie  lightly  on  our  Willie,  earth!     See  Our  Willie.— 

Anon. 
Lie  still,  old  Dane,  below  thy  heap !     See  Danish  Bar- 
row, A. — Palgrave. 
Life  and  Death  are  sisters  fair.     See  Life  and  Death. — 

Anon. 
Life   and   Death   meet.     See  Only  a  Beggar   Boy. — 

Volk. 
Life  and  the  Universe  show  spontaneity.     See  Posi- 

tivists.  The. — Collins. 
Life   and   Thought   have   gone   away.     See   Deserted 

House,  The. — Tennyson. 
Life  appears  to  me  too  short  to  be^ent  in  nursing 

animosity.     See  same. — Bronte. 
Life,  as  a  mle,  is  all  work.     See  Law  of  Labor,  The.— 

Anon. 
Life  bears  us  on  like  the  current  of  a  mighty  river 

See  Stream  of  Life,  The.— Heber. 
Life,    believe,   is   not   a   dream.     See   Good   Cheer  — 
Bronte. 


Life,  death,  eternity.     See  Thoughts  on  Immortality. 

— Schaff. 
Life  gives  us  better  than  it  takes  away.     See  Com- 
pleteness.— Morton. 
Life   has   a   burden    for   every   man's    shoulder.     See 

Somehow  or  Other. — Anon. 
Life    has    two    sovereign     moments.      See    Sovereign 

Moments. — Knight. 
Life  hath  its  barren  years.     See  What  Life  Hath. — 

Doudney. 
Life!     I   know  not   what   thou  art.     See  Life. — Bar- 

bauld. 
Life  is  a  boat  that  is  drifting.     See  Last  Word,  The. — 

Sanderson. 
Life  is  a  burden  to  every  one's  shoulder.     See  Some- 
how or  Other. — Anon. 
Life    is    a    count    of    losses.     See  Every  Year. — Pike 

[or  Covert!. 
Life  is  a  great  battle  field.     There  are  moral  victories. 

See  Life's  Battle  Field. — Brooks. 
Life  is  a  mystic  flame.     See  sam,e. — Van  Cleve. 
Life  is  a  sea;  like  ships  we  meet.     See  Such  is  Life. — 

Brooks. 
Life  is  an  absolute  burden,  and  I  am  wearied  with  it. 

See  Ladies  of  Athens. — Lipscomb. 
Life  is  but  a  tangled  skein.     See  Tangled  Skein,  A. — 

Pollard. 
Life  is  not  ours  to  waste  it  as  we  will.     See  Life's  Pur- 
pose.— Lawton. 
Life  is  not  very  long  at  best.      See  It's  not  Worth 

While  to  Hate. — Kavanaugh. 
Life  is  one  and  universal.     See  Glimpses  into  Cloud- 
land. — -Longfellow. 
Life  is  unutterably  dear.     See  Satisfied. — Rog^. 
Life  is  what  we  make  it.     See  sam-e. — Dewey. 
Life,  like  a  romping  school-boy  full  of  glee.     See  Life. 

— Wilcox. 
Life  may  be  given  in  many  ways.     See  Ode  Recited  at 
the     Harvard     Commemoration,    July    21,    1865 
(Martyr  Chief,  The).— Lowell. 
Life    may   give    for   love   to    death.     See    Epicede. — 

Swinburne. 
Life     of     Ages,     richly     poured.     See     Inspiration.— 

Johnson. 
Life    of   Life!     Thy    lips    enkindle.     See  Prometheus 
Unbound     (Hymn    to    the    Spirit  of  Nature). — 
Shelley. 
Life   offers  Vio  joy  like   a  friend.     See  Friend,   A. — 

Larcom. 
Life  of  the  king,  and  safety  fix  his  throne !     See  Perkin 

Warbeck.— Ford. 
Life!^  we've  [or    we    have]    been    long   together.     See 

"Life's  Good-morning." — -Barbauld. 
Life  without  love  is  like.     See  Life  without   Love. — 

Anon. 
Life's  best  prizes  are  won,  not  by  adroitness  nor  sharp- 
ness.    See  Manhood. — ^Morris. 
Life's    fragile    bonds    united.     See    Sidney    Lanier. — 

Hayne. 
Life's    mystery — deep,    restless    as    the    ocean.     See 

Peace  in  God. — Stowe. 
Life's    not   our   own, — 'tis   but   a   loan.     See   Life. — 

Swain. 
Life's  sunsets  should  have  in  them  the  elements  of 
rest   and   quiet.     See  Life's   Sunsets. — (Christian 
at  Work.) 
Lift  it  high,  our  glorious  banner.     See  American  Flag, 

The.— Faulds. 
Lift  up  the  light,  O  soul,   arise  and  shine.     See  My 

Lighthouse. — Thaxter. 
Lift  up  the  mournful  head,  and  dry  thine  eves.     See 

Cuba  Libre. — (Red  and  Blue.) 
Lift  up  the  years,  lift  up  the  years.     See  Victory  of 

Perry,  The.— Gary. 
Lift  your  glad  voices  in  triumph  on  high.     See  Resur- 
rection of  Christ. — Ware. 
Light  and  Shadow!     Shadow  and  Light!     See  Shadow 

of  the  Cross,The. — Arnold. 
Light    as    a    flake    of    foam    upon    the    wind.     See 
T  •  ,  P^""*'^  Island,  The  (Sea  Life) .—Montgomery. 
Light  flows  our  war  of  mocking  words,  and  yet.     See 

Buried  Life,  The. — Arnold. 
Light  is  presented  to  us  in  ever-varying  conditions. 

See  Light. — Anon. 
Light  of  dim  mornings ;  shield  from  heat  and  cold.     See 

.     To  Duty. — Higginson. 
Light  of  our  fathers'  eyes,  and  in  our  own.     See  To 

Louis  Kossuth. — Anon. 
Light  traverses  space  at  the  rate  of  twelve  million  miles 
a   minute.     See  Immensity   of   Creation,   The.— 
Mitchell. 
Light  words  they  were,  and  lightly,  falsely  said.     See 
Protest,  A. — Clough. 


744 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


List 


Lighter  than  dandelion  down.     See  Silkweed. — Sav- 
age. 
Lightly  He  blows,  and  at  His  Breath  they  fall.     See 

Falling  Leaves,  The. — Roberts. 
Lightly  the  birds  sang  in  the  thorn.     See  Song  of  Yes- 
teryear, A. — Smith. 
Lights  out!     And  a  prow  turned  toward  the  Sotith. 

See  Race  of  the  "Oregon. "  The. — Meehan. 
Light-winged    Smoke!     Tcarian    bird.      See    Walden 

(Smoke) . — Thoreau. 
Lijah,  he  wuz  de  blackes'  nigger  an'  de  hardes'  ter  git 

converted    on    de    Marrowbone    Plantation.     See 

'I-ijah's  Call  to  Preach. — Seawell. 
Like   a   blind   spinner  in   the   sun.     See   Spinning. — 

Jackson. 
Like  a  cathedral   tower,  the  stately  pine.     <See  Tree 

Assembly,  The. — Denton. 
Like  a  cradle,  rocking,  rocking.     See  Love  of  God,  The. 

—Holm. 
Like  a  [or  Like  as  the]  damask  rose  you  see.     See  Man's 

Mortality. — Wastell. 
Like  a  furnace  of  fire  blazed  the  Midsummer  sun.     See 

At  Gettysburg. — Anon. 
Like  a  gale  that  sighs  along.     See  Pleasures  of  Memory. 

— Moore. 
Like   a   great   burst   of  singing   came   the   day.     See 

Morning  in  the  Bay  of  Naples  — Todhunter. 
Like  a  huge  Python,  winding  round  and  round.     See 

Our  Casuarina  Tree. — -Dutt. 
Like  a  jewel  golden-rimmed.     See  Autumn  Day,  An. — 

Sangster. 
Like    a    lackey,    from    the    rise    to    set.     See  King 

Henry  V.  (Labor). — Shakespeare. 
Like  a  light  in  the  skies  he  has  now  passed  below  the 

dews    and    damps    of    the    horizon.     See    Edwin 

Booth. — Godwin. 
Like  a  loose  island  on  the  wide  expanse.     See  To  a 

Deaf  and  Dumb  Little  Girl.— Coleridge. 
Like  a  meteor,  large  and  bright.     See  Easter. — Tabb. 
Like  a  musician  that  with  flying  finger.     See  Master- 
chord,  The. — Roscoe. 
Like  a  poet  hidden.     See  To  a  Sky-lark. — Shelley. 
Like    a    shower,    breeze-suspended.     See    Birch-tree, 

The.— E.  A.  H. 
Like  ^Etna's  dread  volcano,  see  the  ample  forge.     See 

Anchorsmiths,  The.— Dibdin. 
Like  an  awful  alligator.     Sec  In  Nevada. — Leland. 
Like  apple-blossom,  white  and  red.     See  To  Daphne. 

— Besant. 
I-ike  as    a    ship,  that    through  the   Ocean  wide.     See 

Amoretti  and    Epithalamion  (Sonnet:    "Like  as  a 

ship,"  etc.). — Spenser. 
Like  as  the  armed  Knighte.     See  Fight  of  Faith,  The. 

— Askewe. 
Like  as  the   culver,  on  the  bar^d  bough.     See  Amo- 
retti and   Epithalamion    (Sonnet:    "Like   as   the 

culver,"  etc.). — Spender. 
Like  as    the   {or  T>ike    a]  damask   rose  you  see.     See 

Man's  Mortality. — Wastell. 
Like  as  the  lark  that,  soaring  higher  and  higher.     See 

"Like  as  the  Lark." — Parsons. 
Like  as  the  rising  morning  shows  a  grateful  lighten- 
ing.    See  Sixe    Idillia  (Helen's    Epithalamion). — 

Dyer. 
Like  as  the  waves  make  toward  the  pebbled  shore. 

See  Sonnets.  LX. — Shakespeare. 
Like  birds  that  wing.     See  Francesco's  Angel. — -Alt. 
Like   burnt   out   torches  bv  a  sick  man's   bed.     See 

Grave  of  Shelley,  The.— Wilder. 
Like  crowned  athlete  that  in  a  race  hath  run.     See 

Landor. — .Japp. 
Like  Crusoe,  walking  by  the  lonely  strand.     See  same. 

■ — Aldrich. 
Like  Crusoe  with  the  bootless   gold  we  stand.     See 

Experience. — Wharton. 
Like  Dian,  her  trim  ankles  seen.     See  My  Lady  of  the 

Links. — Anon. 
Like  Dian's   kiss,  unasked,  unsought.     See  Endymion 

(How  Love  Comes). — Longfellow. 
Like  drifts  of  tardy  snow.     See  May. — -Deland. 
Like  drooping,  dying  stars,  our  dearly  loved  ones  go 

away  from  our  sight.     See  Gone  out  Forever. — 

Anon, 
liike  fallen  logs  the  sleeping  bandits  lay.     See  Mari- 

quita,  the  Bandit's  Daughter. — Cummins. 
Like  fragments  of  an  uncompleted  world.     See  Sierras, 

The.— Miller. 
Like  gallant  courtiers,  the  forest  trees.     See  October. — 

Withrow. 
Like   Israel's  seer  I   come  from  out  the  earth.     See 

Ghost  Flower,  The.— Rand. 
Like  listless  lullabies  of  sail-swept  seas.     See  With  a 

Copy  of  Keats. — Knowles. 


Like  marble,  nude,  against  the  purple  sky.     See  Diver, 

The. — Herbin. 
Like  merry  Momus,  while  the  gods  were  quaffing.     See 

Eulogy  on  Laughing. — Sewall. 
Like  mists  that  round  a  mountain  gray.     See  Acadie. — 

Lockhart. 
Like  most  singers,  he  kept  them  waiting  a  bit.     See 

It  is   Never    too   Late    to    Mend    (Lark,  The). — 

Reade. 
Like  Noah's  weary  dove.     See  Soul's  Home,  The. — 

Muhlenberg. 
Like    other    tyrants,    death    delights    to    smite.     See 

Death. — Anon. 
Like  patient  saint  of  olden  time.     See  My  Mother's 

Hymn. — Anon. 
Like  pearls  that  lie  hid  'neath  the  ocean's  broad  breast. 

See  Our  Sweet  Unexpressed. — Fox. 
Like  raven's  wings  her  locks  of  jet.     See^Her  Brother's 

Cigarette. — Anon. 
Like    small    curled    feathers,    white    and    soft.     See 

"While     Shepherds    Watched    their     Flocks    by 

Night. " — Deland. 
Like  solest  swan,  that  swims  in  silent  deep.     See  St. 

Peter's  Complaint. — Southwell. 
Like  some  great  pearl  from  out  the  Orient.     See  Night- 
wind. — Lloyd. 
Like  some  huge  bird  that  sinks  to  rest.     See  Sunset. — 

Bashford. 
Like  some  vision  olden.     See  Shepherd  Boy,  The. — 

Landon. 
Like  souls  that  balance  joy  and  pain.     See  Sir  Launce- 

lot  and  Queen  Guinevere. — Tennyson. 
Like   spectral    hounds    across   the   sky.     See   Minot's 

Ledge. — O'Brien. 
Like  the  glad  birds  of  springtime.     See  Arbor  Day 

Invocation. — Thomas. 
Like  the  Idalian  queen.     See  Madrigal:    "Like,"  etc. — 

Drumrnond. 
Like   the  violet,  which  alone.     See  Castara   (Descrip- 
tion of  Castara,  The). — Habington. 
Like  thee  I  once  have  stemm'd  the  sea  of  life.     See 

Epitaph,  An. — Beattie. 
Like   to  a  coin,    passing   from    hand    to    hand.     See 

Like  to  a  Coin. — Bates. 
Like  to  Diana  in  her  summer  weed.     See  Menaphon 

(Samela). — Greene. 
Like  to  hear  how  I  was  crippled?     I'm  loath  to  bring 

the  scene  to  mind.     See  Danger  Signal,  The. — 

M'Beath. 
Like  to  the  clear  in   highest  sphere.     See  Rosalynde; 

or,  Euphues'  Golden  Legacy  (Rosaline). — Lodge. 
Like  to  the  falling  of  a  star.     See  On  the  Life  of  Man. — 

King. 
Like  to  the  leaf  that  falls.     See  Epicedium.- — Traubel. 
Like  to  the  thundering  tone  of  unspoken  speeches. 

See  Like  to  the  Thundering  Tone. — Corbet. 
Like  trains  of  cars  on  tracks  of  plush.     See  Bee,  The. — 

Dickinson. 
Like  twittering  birds  that   flutter  to  the  nest.     See 

Twilight. — Blackburn. 
Like  unto   ships  far  off   at   sea.     See  Building  of  the 

Ship,  The. — I./ongfellow. 
Like  verses?     Why,  of  course,  though  not  in  books. 

See  To  Peggy. — Loring. 
Like  white  feathers  blown  about  the  rocks  I     See  Kitti- 

wakes.  The. — Thaxter. 
Lila,  dearest,  as  I  entered.     See  Economical  Boomer- 
ang, An. — Neall. 
Lilac  of  Persia!  tell  us  some  fine  tale.     See  Lilac,  The. 

— Sigourney. 
Lily  bells;  lily  bells!  swinging  and  ringing.     See  Field 

Lilies. — Anon. 
Lily  gave  a  party.    See  Lily's  Ball. — {Fun  and  Earnest.') 
Lily  on  liquid  roses  floating.     See  Champagne  Pos^. — 

Kenyon. 
Limned  upon  a  square  of  satin,  tinted  with  artistic 

care.     See  St.  Valentine's  and  St.  Patrick's  Day. — 

Banks. 
Lines  that  ripple,  notes  that  dance.     See  Tildy  in  the 

Choir. — Knowles. 
Linger  not  long.     Home  is  not  home  without  thee. 

See  Wife  to  her  Husband,  The. — Anon. 
Lingering   Latimer  lived   up   a   tree.     See   Lingering 

Latimer. 
Linked  to  a  clod,   harassed,   and  sad.     See  Circum- 
stance.— Aldrich. 
Lips,  lips,  open.     See  Sleeping  Child,  A. — Clough. 
List!  the  clamor  of  the  bells.     See  Two  Bells. — San- 
born. 
List!  the  piece  is  about  to  begin.     See  Opera  Music  for 

the  Piano. — Anon 
List  to  a  tale  well  worth  the  ear.     See  Why  Truth  Goes 

Naked . — Anon . 


745 


List 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


List  to  my  tale — as  true  a  tale  as  any  bard  can  sing. 

See  Legend  of  Kingsale,  The. — Anon. 
List  to  that  bird!     His  song  -what  poet  r)ens  it.     See 

Mocking-bird,  The. — Hayes. 
Listed  into  the  caus^of  sin.     See  True  Use  of  Music, 

The. — Wesley. 
Listen  a  moment,  I  pray  you;  what  was  that  sound  that 

I  heard?     See  Bluebird,  The. — Rexford. 
Listen,  darling,  and  tell  me.     <See  Sea-shell,   The. — 

MacDonald. 
Tasten!     I  will  tell  a  legend  of  a  land  beyond  the  .«ea. 

-See  Finding  of  the  Cross,  The. — Brown. 
Listen!  in  the  April  rain.     -See  Brother  Robin. — Ander- 
son. 
Listen,  lordings,  unto  me,  a  tale  I  will  you  tell.     See 

Christmas  Carol. — Anon. 
Listen,  my  boy,  and  you  shall  know.     -See  How  We 

Killed  the  Rooster. — Anon. 
Listen,  my  boy;  I've  a  word  for  you.     -See  Bird's  Song, 

The. — ^Anon. 
Listen,  my  children,  and  you  shall  hear.     See  Paul 

Revere's  Ride. — Longfellow. 
Listen,  now,  O  listen.     -See  "Lost. " — Denton. 
Listen!  the  grand  old  forests.     See  Arbor  Day  Poem. — 

Knapp. 
Listen!    thou    moody,    melancholy    guest.     -See    His 

Guiding  Star. — Moore. 
Listen  to  me,   now,   my  dear  little  lad.     -See  Never 

play  truant. — Anon. 
Listen  to  the  tawny  thief.     -See  Bacchus. — Sherman. 
Listen    to    the    water-mill.     -See    Water-mill,    The. — 

Doudney. 
Listen  when  I  call  de  figgers!     Watch  de  music  as  you 

go!     See  Dancing  in  the  Flat  Creek  Quarters. — 

Macon, 
liisten,  young  heroes!  your  country  is  calling!     -See 

Never  or  Now. — ^Holmes. 
Listening  in  the  twilight,  very  long  ago.     -See  Lost 

Memory,  A. — Peck. 
Listening,  yearning.     -See  Waiting. — Anon. 
List'ning    uxorious,    whilst    a    woman's    prate.     See 

Charles  the  First. — Churchill. 
Literature  has  been  a  most  powerful  agent  in  feeding 

the    warlike    propensity.     -See    Literature     Per- 
verted.— Anon. 
Lithe  and  listen,  gentlemen.     -See  Heir  of  Linne,  The. — 

.\non. 
I-ithe  and  long  as  the  serpent  train.     -See  Grape-vine 

Swing,  The. — Simms. 
Lithe   and   lysten,   gentylmen.     -See   Lytell   Geste   of 

Robyn  Hode.  A. — Anon. 
Little  acts  of  kindness.     -See  same. — Anon. 
Little  Ah  Sid  was  a  Christian  kid.     -See  Little  Ah  Sid. 

— Anon. 
Little  All-Aloney's  feet.     -See  Little  All-Aloney. — -Field. 
Little  and  black,  shining  and  round.     -See  Seed,  The. — 

.A.non. 
Little  ants  in  leafy  wood.     -See  Little  Brothers  of  the 

Ground . — Markham . 
Little  bare   feet,   sunburned  and  brown.     -See  Little 

Bare  Feet. — Lincoln. 
Little  barefooted  Anna  was  trudging  along.      -See  God 

Made  them  for  Me. — Hale. 
Little  Bess,  with  laughing  eyes.     -See  "What's  the  Les- 
son for  To-day?" — Anon. 
"Little    bird!   little    bird!   come    to   me!     -See   Little 

Maiden  and  the  Little  Bird,  The.— Child. 
Little  bird,  little  bird,  tell  me  true.     -See  Little  Mary 

and  her  Birdie. — Anon. 
Little  bird,  with  bosom  red.     -See  To  a  Redbreast. — 

Langhorne. 
Little  birds  sit  on  the  telegraph  wires.     -See  Sparrows. 

— Whitney. 
"Little  Blue  Ribbons!"     We  call  her  that.     -See  Lit- 
tle Blue  Ribbons. — Dobson. 
Little  book,  surnamed  of  white.     See  In  the  Album  of 

Lucy  Barton. — Lamb. 
Little  Boy  Blue,  so  [or  as]  the  story  goes.     -See  True 

Story  of  Little  Boy  Blue,  The. — Perry. 
Little  boy  Love  drew  his  bow  at  a  chance.     -See  Blind 

Archer,  The. — Doyle. 
Little    brother,    darling   boy.     -See   Little    Brother. — 

Anon. 
Little  brother  in  a  cot.     -See  Little  Brother,  The. — 

Rands. 
Little    brown    baby    wif    spa'klin'   eyes.     -See   Little 

Brown  Baby. — Dunbar. 
Little  brown  brother,  oh!  little  brown  brother.     -See 

Baby  Seed  Song. — Nesbit. 
Little   Brown   Bushy-tail  lived  up  a  tree.     -See  Little 

Brown  Bushy-tail. — Baldwin. 
"Little  by  little,''  an  acorn  said.     -See  Little  by  Lit- 
tle.— Anon. 


Little  by  little,  sure  and  slow.     -See  Little  by  Little. — 

Anon. 
"Little  by  little,"  the  tempter  said.     -See  Little  by 

Little. — Anon. 
Little  by  little  the  time  goes  by.     -See  same. — Anon. 
"Little   by  little,"   the   torrent  said.     -See   Little   by 

Little. — Anon. 
Little  child,  I  call  thee  fair.     -See  Little  Child,  I  call 

Thee. — Hyde. 
Little  children  can  you  tell.     -See  Christmas  Carol,  A. — 

Anon. 
Little  children,  love  each  other.     -See  Little  Children. 

— Anon. 
Little  children,  never  give.     -See  Kindness  to  Animals. 

— Anon. 
"Little  children  should  be  seen  and  not  heard."     -See 

Children  Should  be  Seen  and  not  Heard.— Good- 
fellow. 
Little   children,    you   must   seek.     -See   Take   Care.— 

Cary. 
Little  Daisy  is  so  lazy.     -See  Lazy  Daisy. — Anon. 
Little  dimples  so  sweet  and  soft.     -See  Daisy's  Dim- 
ples.— S  terry. 
Little  Dombey  had  never  risen  from  his  little  bed.     -See 

Dombey  and   Son  (Death  of    Paul    Dombey). — 

Dickens. 
Little  Dot  in  gray  coat  and  white  mittens.     -See  Run- 
away Ride,  A. — Millard. 
Little  Drop  of  dew.     -See  Dewdrop,  A. — Sherman. 
Little  drops  of  claret.     -See  Little  Drops. — Anon. 
Little  dun  cow  to  the  apple-tree  tied.     -See  Milking. — 

Thaxter. 
I-ittle   Ellie  sits  alone.     -See  Romance  of  the  Swan's 

Nest,  The. — Browning. 
Little  Evelyn's  cheek.«  bloomed  in  delicate  pink.     -See 

Be  Lovely  Within  .^Thaxter. 
Little  Fairy  snowflakes.     -See  Santa  Claus. — Anon. 
Little  feet  on  the  street.     -See  Une  Robe  Angelique. — 

Merritt. 
Little  flower,  fading,  dying.     -See  Her  Flower. — Soper. 
Little  folks,  little  folks,  where  are  you  straying.     -See 

Going  to  School. — -Anon. 
Little  foot,  whose  lightest  pat.  -See  Parson's  Daughter, 

The. — lincoln. 
Little  fresh  violets.     -See  Country  Children. — Anon. 
Little  gardens  may  have  room.     -See  Little  Gardens. 

— Poulsson. 
Little  gifts  are  precious.     -See  Little  Gifts.^Anon. 
Little  girl  across  the  way.     -See  Little  Boy's  Valentine, 

A. — ^Anon. 
Little  girl  'at  lives  next  door.     -See  Good  Name  more 

Desirable  than  Riches,  A. — Coley. 
Little  girl,  did  you  see  a  rabbit  cross  this  road  just  now? 

See  Hunter  and  the  Child,  The. — Anon. 
"Little  girl,  where  do  you  go  to  school?"     -See  School, 

The.— Ludlow. 
Little  Golden-hair  was  watching,  in  the  window  broad 

and  high.     -See  Little  Golden-hair. — Carleton. 
Little  Gretchen,  little  Gretcben,  wanders  up  and  down 

the  street.     -See  Little  Match-girl,  The  (New  Year's 

Eve) . — Andersen. 
Little  Gustava  sits  in  the  sun.     -See  Little  Gustava. — 

Thaxter. 
"Little  Haly!     Little  Haly!  cheeps  the  robin  in  the 

tree."     -See  On  the  Death  of  Little  Mahala  Ash- 
craft. — Riley. 
Little  hands  will  soon  be  strong.     -See  Give  the  little 

boys  a  chance. — -Anon. 
Little  harp,  at  thy  cry.     -See  Brechva's  Harp  Song. — 

Rhys. 
Little  I  ask;  my  wants  are  few.     -See  Contentment. — 

Holmes. 
Ijittle,   I  ween,   did  Mary  guess.     -See  His   Mother's 

.Toy.^Chadwick. 
Little  ills  may  vex  your  heart.     -See  Little  Things. — 

Anon. 
Little  Indian,  Sioux  or  Crow.     -See  Foreign  Children. — 

Stevenson. 
Little  inmate,  full  of  mirth.     -See  Cricket,  The.— Cow- 

per. 
liittle  .lack  Horner.     -See  same. — Anon. 
Little  Jack  Horner  sat  in  a  corner.     -See  What  is  fame? 

— Stedman. 
Little  Jacqueline  sat  'neath  an  old  oaken  tree.     -See 

Jacqueline. — Vickers. 
Little  Jennie,  fretful,  sitting  in  a  tree.     -See  Fretting 

Jennie. — -Anon . 
Little  Jesus, wast  Thou  shy.     -See  "Ex  Ore  Infantium." 

— Thompson. 
Little  John  Bottlejohn  lived  on  a  hill.     -See  John  Bot- 

tlejohn. — -Richards. 
Little  Julia,  since  that  we.     -See  To  the  Child  Julia. — 

Riley. 


746 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Lo 


"Little  lad,  slow  wandering  across  the  sands  so  yellow." 

See  Rescued. — Thaxter. 
Little    ladies,    white    and    green.     See    Snowdrops. — 

Alma-Tadema. 
Little   lamb,   who   made   thee?     See      Lamb,   The. — 

Blake. 
Little   Leaf   had   never  seen   the  world   before.     See 

Little  Leaf's  Sacrifice. — Penney. 
Little  Lettice  is  dead,  they  say.     See  Lettice. — Field. 
Little  maid  Margaret   and   I.     See  Sir   William   Pep- 

perrell's  Well. — Thaxter. 
Little    maiden,    are    you    lonely.       See    Waiting. — 

Anon. 
Little  masters,  hat  in  hand.     See  Clover. — Tabb. 
Little  Miltiades  Peterkin  Paul.     See  Miltiades  Peter- 
kin  Paul. — Brownjohn. 
Little  Miss  Blue  Eyes  opens  the  door.     See  Little  Miss 

Blue  Eyes. — ^Weir. 
Little  Miss  Brag  has  much  to  say.     See  Little  Miss 

Brag. — Field. 
Little  Miss  Limberkin.     See  Miss  Limberkin's  Mouse. 

— Dodge. 
Little  Miss  Ray.     See  same. — Kavanaugh. 
Little  Miss  Selfish  and   Lend-a-hand.     See  Selfish  and 

Lend-a-hand. — Butts. 
Little  Mistress  Sans-Merci.     See  same. — Field. 
Little  MoUie   and   Faith,    in   the   arbor   at    play.     See 

Faith  and  Works. — Montgomery. 
Little  moments,  how  they  fly.     See  Little  Moments. — 

Anon. 
Little  moments   make  an  hour.     See  Value  of   Little 

Things,  The. — Anon. 
Little  motto  bearers,  we  come  before  you.     See  Little 

Motto  Bearers,  The. — Morton. 
"Little  mouse,  little  mouse,  don't  go  in,  I  say."     See 

Wilful  Little  Mouse,  The. — Anon. 
Little  Muriel  lay,  day  after  day.     See  Little  Muriel. — 

— Craik. 
Little   Nell  was  dead.       No  sleep   so  beautiful.       See 

Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The. — Dickens. 
Little  New  Year,  little  New  Year.     See  New  Year,  The. 

— Butts. 
Little  one,  come  to  my  knee.     See  Night  with  a  Wolf, 

A. — Taylor. 
Little  Orphant  Annie's  come  to  our  house  to  stay.     See 

Little  Orphant  Annie. — Riley. 
Little  Patsy  and  Tom.     See  Patsy's  and  Tom's  Thanks- 
giving.— Richards. 
Little  peach  blossom  has  awakened  at  last.     See  Little 

Peach  Blossom. — Anon. 
"Little  pearl  of  crystal  clear."     See  Dew-drop,  The. — 

Amiel. 
Little  Penelope   Socrates.     See   Christmas    Chimes   in 

Boston,  Philadelphia,  New  York  and  Chicago.— 

Anon. 
Little  Penelope  took  up  her  needle.     See  Little  Pene- 
lope's Sewing. — Pratt. 
Little  Pet,  when  with  dew  the  grass  is  wet.     See  Pro- 
posal, A. — {Puck.) 
I^ittle  Philip  went  to  bed  early.    See  Palace  of  the  Days, 

The. — Raymond. 
Little  Prince  Carl  he  stole  away.     See  What  the  Lord 

High  Chamberlain  Said. — -Cloud. 
Little  rills  make  wider  streamlets.     See  Learn  a  Little 

Every  Day. — -Anon. 
Little  Robbie  Rockaway  has  left  his  playful  fun.  See 

Robbie  Rockaway. — Collester. 
Little  Robert  Robin  sat  on  a  leafless  vine.     See  St. 

Valentirie's  Day  among  the  Birds.- — Anon. 
Little  robin  in  the  tree,  sing  a  song  to  me.     See  Sing  a 

Song  to  Me. — Anon. 
Little  Roger  up  the  long  slope  rushing.     See  Triumph, 

A. — Thaxter. 
Little  Sam   Sugartooth  said  to   himself.     See  Where 

the  Mince  Pie  Grows. — Anon. 
Little  sands  make  up  the  shore.     See  Little  Things, 

The. — Anon. 
Little  Sarah  she  stood  by  her  grandmother's  bed.     See 

Johnny-cake,  The. — Anon. 
Little  Sigrid,  fresh  and  rosy,  was  a  bonny  maid,  indeed. 

See  Little  Sigrid. — Boyesen. 
Little  snatch  of  ancient  song.     See  On  an  Old  Song. — 

Lecky. 
Little  streams    are    light    and    shadow.     See    Little 

Streams. -;-Howitt. 
Little  thinks,  in  the  field,  yon  red-cloaked  clown.     See 

Each  and  All. — Emerson. 
Little  think'st  thou,  poor   flower.     See  Blossom,  The. 

Donne. 
Little  Tommy  and   Peter  and   Archy  and   Bob.     See 

Story  of  an  Apple,  A. — Dyer. 
Little  Tommy  and  Trotty  were  playing.     See  We'd 

All  Like  to  Stop  There. — Anon. 


Little  was  king  Laurin,  but  from  many  a  precious  gem. 

See  Fairies. — Warton. 
Little  white  Lily  sat  by  a  stone.     See  Little  White  Lily. 

— Macdonald. 
Little  white  snowdrop,  I   pray  you  arise.     See  Blue- 
bird. The  (Bluebird's  Song,  The). — Miller. 
Little  white  snowdrop,  just  waking  up.     See  Waiting 

to  Grow. — French. 
Little  Willie  hung  his  sister.     See  Little  Willie. — Anon. 
Little  Willie,  in  the  best  of  sashes.     See  Tender-heart- 
edness.— Streamer. 
Little  yellow  sunbeam.     See  Little   Sunbeam. — Rich- 
ards. 
Live  and  love,  doing  both  nobly.     See  Drama  of  Exile, 

A  (  'Live  and  love"). — Browning. 
Live  for  thyself!  let  each  successive  morn.     See  Whom 

Wilt  thou  Live  for? — Anon. 
Live  in  these  conquering  leaves ;  live  all  the  same.     See 

Flaming  Heart,  The. — Crashaw. 
Live,  live  with  me,  and  thou  shalt  see.     See  To  Phillis, 

to  Love  and  Live  with  him. — Herrick. 
"Live  while   you  live!"   the  epicure  would   say.     See 

Epigram  on  his  Family  Arms. — Doddridge. 
Live  with   me   still,  and  all  the  measures.     See  Sun'.-< 

Darling.  The  (Invitation,  The). — Dekker. 
Live  thy  life,  young  and  old.   See  Oak,  The. — Tennyson. 
Lives  of  great  men  all  remind  us,  we  can  make  our 

fame  eternal.     See  Life. — L.  F.  M. 
Lives  of  great  men  all  remind  us,  we  can  make  our  lives 

sublime.  See  Psalm  of  Life,  A  (Life). — Longfellow. 
Living  here  comfortably  at  home,  do  we  ever  think  of 

the  perils  of  the  poor  sailor?     See  Plea  for  the 

Sailor,  A. — ^Anon. 
Lizzie  and  I  are  one,  and  one  we  mean  to  be.     See 

Lizzie  and  I  Are  One. 
Lizzie!  Lizzie! — Did  you  call  me,  Madge?     See  Playing 

School. 
Lo!  above  the  mournful   chanting.     See  Kol  Nidra. — 

Leiser. 
Lo!  all  thy  glory  gone!     See  Nekros. — -Tabb. 
Lo,  as  some  bard  on   isles   of  the   ^Egean.     See  Saint 

Paul. — Myers. 
Lo,  by  Nitus'  languid  waters.     See  Cleopatra's  Dream. 

— Owens. 
Lo!  Collin,  here  the  place  whose  pleasaunt  syte.     See 

Shepheardes  Calender,  The  (June). — Spenser. 
Lo!  Death  has  reared  himself  a  throne.     See  City  in  the 

Sea,  The.— Poe. 
Lo  gray  hawks  ride  the  rising  blast.     See  Sioux  Chief's 

Daughter,  The. — Anon. 
Lo!  He  comes,  with  clouds  descending!     See  same. — 

Olivers. 
Lo!  here  a  little  volume,  but  great  book.     See  On  a 

Prayer-book  Sent  to  Mrs.  M.  R. — Crashaw. 
Lo,  I  am  weary  of  all.     See  Cry,  A.— Clarke. 
Lo,  mother!  it  is  here — thou  hast  thy  will.     See  Daugh- 
ter of  Herodias,  The. — Anon. 
Lo,  my  shepherd's  hand  divine!     See  Psalm  Twenty- 
three. — Merrick. 
Lo,  now  four  others  act  upon  the  stage.     See  Four  Ages 

of  Man,  The. — -Bradstreet. 
Lo!  on  his  far-resounding  path.     See  Entrance  of  Co- 
lumbus into  Barcelona. — Mellen. 
"Lo,"  quoth  he,  "cast  up  thine  eye."     See  House  of 

Fame,  The  (Milky  Way,  The).— Chaucer. 
Lo!  the  chief  builders,  masons,  engineers.     See  Herod 

—Phillips. 
Lo!  the  day  of  rest  declineth.     See  Evening  Hymn. — 

Bobbins. 
Lo,  the  fading,  dying  year.    See  Story  of  Thanksgiving, 

The.— Hadley. 
Lo!  the  king's  son  hath  taken  prisoner.     See  Hostage, 

The.— Booth. 
Lo,  the  lilies  of  the  field.     See  Providence. — Heber. 
Lo!  the  long,  slender  spears,  how  they  quiver  and  flash. 

See  Song  of  the  Rain,  The. — -{Spectator,  The.) 
Lo!  the  winter  is  past,  the  rain  is  over  and  gone.     See 

Spring  is  Coming. — Bible. 
Lo!  there  he  lies,  our  Patriarch  Poet,  dead!     See  Bry- 
ant Dead. — Hayne. 
Lo!  through  a  shadowy  valley.     See  Funeral  of  Time, 

The.— Hirst. 
Lol  'tis  a  gala  night.     See  Conqueror  Worm,  The. — - 

Poe. 
Lo,  to  the  cruel  hand  of  fate.     See  Tender  Husband, 

The.— Pindar. 
Lo !  Venice,    gay   with    color,    lights    and    song.     See 

Canada  not  Last. — Lighthall. 
Lo,  what  a  golden  day  it  is!     See  Thorgerda. — Payne. 
Lo  what  it  is  to  love.     See  Rondel  of  Love,  A. — Scott. 
Lo,  when  the  Lord  made  north  and  south.     See  Ange! 

in  the  House,  The    (Rose  of  the  World,  The). — 

Patmore. 


747 


liO 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lo!  [or  Loe!]  where  she  comes  along  with  portly  pace. 

See  Epithalamion,  The  (Bride,  The). — Spenser. 
Lo!  where  the  four  mimosas  blend  their  shade.     iSee 

For  an  Epitaph  at  Fiesole. — Landor. 
Lo!  where  the  rosy-l^ysom'd  hours.     iSeeOde:  On  the 

Spring. — Gray. 
Loaded  with  gallant  soldiers.     See  Ready  . — Carey.  _ 
"  Lobelia,  my  love,  another  long  and  delightful  evening 

is  before  us."     See  McSwats   Swear  Off,  The. — 

Anon. 
Lochiell  Lochiel!   beware  of  the  day.     See  Lochiel's 

Warning. — Campbell. 
"Lock  the  dairy  door!"  Oh,  hark,  the  cock  is  crowing 

proudlv!     See  Lost. — Thaxter. 
Loe  where  he  shineth  yonder.     See  Lines  on  the  Prince 

of  Wales. — Frederick. 
Loe!  for  Lo!l  where  she  comes  along  with  portly  pace. 

See  Epithalamion,  The  (Bride,  The). — Spenser. 
Lofty  against  our  Western  dawn  uprises  Achilles.     See 

Song,  Youth  and  Sorrow. — Lawton. 
Logan!     He  hasn't  become  accustomed  to  answering. 

See  Pro  Tem.— Griffith. 
Logicians  have  but  ill  defined.     See  Logicians  Refuted, 

The.— Goldsmith. 
Logicians  used  to  clap  a  proposition.     See  Logicians. 

—Butler. 
London,  thou  art  of  townes  A  per  se.      See  In  Honour 

of  the  City  of  London. — Dunbar. 
Lone  lake,  half  lost  amidst  encircling  hills.     See  Arts 

Lough. — Greene. 
Lone  upon  a  mountain,  the  pine  trees  wailing  round 

him.     See  Awakening  of  Endymion,  The. — Mac- 
lean. 
Lonely  and  cold  and  fierce  I  keep  my  way.     See  Gulf 

Stream. — Woolsey. 
Lonely  once,  my  love  away.     See  On  a  Clock. — Sher- 
man. 
Long  aCter  Washington's  judicious  and  intrepid  con- 
duct in  respect  to  the  French  and  English.     See 

Franklin's  Toast. — Anon. 
Long  ages  ago  when  the  world  was  young.     See  Legend 

of  the  Heather. — Anon. 
Long  ago  a  poet  dreaming.     See  Rain  upon  the  Roof. 

— Gage. 
Long  ago  and  long  ago.     See  Maiden  Song. — Rossetti. 
Long  ago,  in  changeful  autumn.     See  Oak  Tree,  The. 

— Anon. 
Long  ago    in    our    childhood's    years.     See    Childish 

Fancy,  A. — Anon. 
Long  ago,  on  a  bright  spring  day.     See  Old  and  Young. 

— Bourdillon. 
Long  ago,  so  says  my  story,  dwelt  in  some  fair-distant 

land.     See   Legend    of   St.    Christopher,    The. — 

Fletcher. 
Long  ago  there  dwelt  in  India  two  great  Rajas  who 

were  brothers.     See  Maha-Bharata,  Story  of  the. 

— Rabb. 
Long  ago  there  was  a  certain  marquis  of  Saluzzo.     See 

Patient  Griselda. — Boccaccio. 
Long  ago,  when  first  the  human    heart-strings.     See 

Modem  Cain,  The. — Edwards. 
Long  ago,  when  violets  were  blooming.     See  Leaves, 

The. — Anon. 
Long  and  hard  were  the  lessons  studied,  many  years 

ago.     See  Arithmetic  in  Life. — Cooper. 
Long  as  the  fair  old  City  stands,  the  glory  of  the  North. 

See  Moray  and  his  Thirty. — Anon. 
Long  as  thine  art  shall  love  true  love.     See  Centennial 

Meditation  of   Columbia  (Dear  Land  of   all  my 

Love).— Lanier. 
Long  back  in  the  far  off  ages,  when  low  lay  the  might 

of   Rome.     See   St.    George   and   the   Dragon. — 

Latimer. 
'Lone 'bout    June,    when    everything's.     See    "I    go 

Fishin'. ' ' — Powell . 
Long,  but  not  loud,  the  droning  wheel  went  on.     See 

Closing  Scene,  "The. — Read. 
Long  centuries  ago,  in  a  famed  city.     See  Work   that 

is  Best,  The.— Perry. 
Long  centuries   ago,   three   Persian  boys.     See  Story 

of  Omar,  The. — Sherman. 
Long  did  I  toil,  and  knew  no  earthly  rest.     See  Long 

Did  I  Toil.— Lyte. 
Long,  Dodington,  in  debt,  I  long  have  sought.     See 

To  the  Right  Hon.  Mr.  Dodington. — Young. 
Long  expected  one-and-twenty.     See  One  and  Twenty. 

— Johnson. 
Long  fed  on  boundless  hopes,   O  race  of  man.     See 

Better  Part,  The.— Arnold. 
Long  has  the  summer  sunlight  shone.     See  Incognita 

of  Raphael. — Butler. 
Long  hours  we  toiled  up  through  the  solemn  wood.     See 

Mount  Rainier. — Bashford. 


Long!    followed   happy  guides.     See   Forerunners. — 

Emerson. 
Long  is  the  way,  O  Lord !     See  Long  is  the  Way. — 

Moulton. 
Long  lines  of  cliff  breaking  have  left  a  chasm.     See 

Enoch  Arden. — Tennyson. 
"Long  live  our  King,  good  Harry  of  Navarre!"     See 

Henry  IV.— Saltus. 
Long  live  who  knows  humanity.     See  To  Whom  Honor 

Be  Due. — Anon. 
Long,  long  ago,  a  beauteous  maid.     See  Chestnut. — 

Sabine. 
Long,  long  ago,  from  Amsterdam,  a  vessel  sailed  away. 

See  Flying  Dutchman,  The.— O'Reilly. 
"Long,  long  ago,  in  a  far-away  province  of  the  Eastern 

world."     See  Story  of  the  Priest  Philemon,  The. 

— Corelli. 
Long,  long  ago,  it  seems,  this  summer  morn.     See  June. 

— Lampman. 
Long,  long  ago — millions  of  years  ago — no  one  lived 

on  the  earth  but  the  spirits  of  Fire.     See  Spirits 

of  Fire,  The. — -Sherman. 
Long  long  ago,  when  this  world  was  in  its  tender  in- 
fancy.    See  Pandora. — Hawthorne. 
Long,  long  before  the  Babe  could  speak.     See  Child, 

The  (At  Bethlehem).— Tabb. 
Long,  long  had  we  heard  in  India  of  his  name.     See 

Emerson . — Mozoomdar. 
Long  night  succeeds  thy  little  day.     See  Margaret  Love 

Peacock. — Peacock. 
Long  on  Golcqnda's  shore  a  diamond  lay.     See  Value 

of  Education,  The. — {Boston  Transcript.) 
Long  pipes  and  short  ones,  straight  and  curved.     See 

My  Meerschaums. — Lummis. 
Long  pored    St.    Austin    o'er    the    sacred    page.     See 

Passage  in  the  Life  of  St.  Augustine,  A. — Anon. 
Long  the  tyrant   of  our  coast.     See  (Capture   of  the 

Guerrif're  by  the  Constitution,  The. — Freneau. 
Long  they  pine  in  weary  woe — the  nobles  of  our  land. 

See  Kathaleen  Ny-Houlahan. — -Mangan. 
Long  time  a  child,  and  still  a  child,  when  years.     See 

Sonnet:   "Long  time  a  child,"  etc. — Coleridge. 
Long  time  ago,  when  this  old  world  was  young.     See 

Sunbeam's  Mission,  The. — Jones. 
Long  weeks  you  have  stood  in  the  yielding  sand.     See 

Border  Land,  The. — Moffat. 
Long  while  I  sought  to  what  I  might  compare.     See 

Amoretti  and  Epithalamion  (Her  Eyes). — Spenser. 
Long  years   a  sculptor   wrought.     See   True   Immor- 
tality, The.— Miller. 
Long  years  ago,  a  little  band.     See  Pacific  Shore,  The. 

— Anon. 
Long  years    ago    (how    youth    to-day).     See    School 

Episode,  A. — Shaw. 
Long  years  ago  I  wandered  here.     See  Wanderer,  The. 

— Anon. 
Long  years   ago,   in   distant   lands,   when  kings  were 

strong  in  might.     See  Legend  of  the  True,  A. — 

Cloud. 
Long  years   ago,   in   times   so   remote,     See  Why  no 

Scotchmen  go  to  Heaven. — Anon. 
Long  years  ago  there  lived  a  King.     See  King  Bell. — 

Sherman. 
Long  years  ago  there  lived  in  monkish  cell.     See  Elixir 

of  Life,  The.— M'Gill. 
Long  years  agone  a  southern  artisan.     See  Story  of 

Some  Bells,  The. — -Anon. 
Long  years  had  elapsed  since  1  gazed  on  the  scene.     See 

Childhood's  Scenes. — Anon. 
Long  years  he   dwelt  behind  the  latticed  wall.     See 

Postmaster,  The. — Burdette. 
Long  years   their  cabin  stood.     See   Eviction. — Lin- 
ton. 
Long  years  within  its  sepulchre.     See  Last  Letter,  The. 

Sherman. 
Look  above    thee — never    eye.     See   same. — Bowring. 
Look  abroad  over  this  country.     See  Teacher  the  Hope 

of  America,  The. — ^Eells. 
Look  all  around  thee !     How  the  spring  advances !     See 

Spring. — Tieck. 
Look  always  on  the  sunny  side.    See  Look  on  the  Sunny 

Side. — Anon. 
Look,  as    two    little    brothers,    who    address'd.     See 

Britannia's    Pastorals    (C!ountry    Danger,    A). — 

Browne. 
Look  at    all   history — consult    her   pages,    ancient   or 

modern.     See  Sacredness  of  the  Union. — Clay. 
Look  at  her  collar! — Will,  I've  got  your  tag.     See  Col- 
orado.— Olcott. 
Look  at  it  carefully,  Jim,  old  man!     See  High-backed 

Chair,  The. — Sanborn. 
Look  at  it.  Senators  of  the  South.     See  Our  Country's 

Greatness. — Hoar. 


748 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Lord 


Look  at  me  with  thy  large  brown  eyes.     See  Philip, 

My  King. — Craik. 
"Look  at  the  clock!"  quoth  Winifred  Pryce.     See  Look 

at  the  Clock. — Barham. 
Look  at  these  two  questions  for  a  moment.     See  Tradi- 
tions of  Massachusetts,  The. — Lodge. 
Look  back  on  Time  with  kindly  eyes.     See  Time. — 

Dickinson. 
Look  forth,    O    Land,    thy   mountain-tops.     See    My 

Country. — Woodberry. 
Look,  girls,  here  comes  aunt  Kitty  home  from  her  day's 

shopping.     See  Aunt  Kitty's  Shopping. — ^^Rook. 
"Look,    Grandmamma,"    the    soubrette    cried.     See 

•  Soubrette's  Revenge,  The. — Hewitt. 
Look  here,  Johnson!     See  Bones  on  Polygamy. — Anon. 
Look  here,  Jonsing!     See  Bones  on  Adam  and  Eve. — 

Anon. 
"Look  here,"  said  the  teacher  of  the  Possum  Ridge 

school.     See  Educating  to  a  Purpose. — Montfort. 
Look  here  upon  this  picture,  and  on  this.     See  Hamlet. 

— Shakespeare . 
Look  here  upon  thy  brother  Geoffrey's  face.     See  King 

John. — Shakespeare. 
Look !  here's  a  pretty  pigeon  house !     See  Pigeon  House, 

The. — (Blades  and  Floivers.) 
Look  how  it  sparkles,  see  it  greet.     See  Diamond,  A. — 

Loveman. 
Look,  how  the  flower  which  ling'ringly  doth  fade.     See 

No  Trust  in  Time. — Drummond. 
Look  how  the  pale  Queen  of  the  silent  night.     See  Son- 
net to  the  Moon,  A. — -Best. 
Look  in  his  face,  look  in  his  eyes.      See  Why  Mother 

is  Proud. — -Klingle. 
Look  in  my  face;  my  name  is  Might-have-been.     See 

Superscription,  A. — -Rossetti. 
Look,  love,    what    envious    streaks.     See  Romeo  and 

Juliet  (Morning) . — Shakespeare. 
Look  Nature  through,  'tis  revolution  all.     See  Night 

Thoughts  (Nature). — Young. 
Look  not  thou  on  beauty's  charming.     See  Lucy  Ash- 
ton's  Song. — Scott. 
Look  not  upon  the  wine  when  it  is  red  within  the  cup! 

See  Look  not  upon  the  Wine. — -Willis. 
Look  now     abroad— another    race     has     filled.      See 

America. — Bryant. 
Look  now,  directed  by  yon  candle's  blaze.     See  Curios- 
ity (Fiction). — ^Sprague. 
Look  off,  dear  love,  across  the  sallow  sands.     See  Even- 
ing Song. — Lanier. 
Look  on  him! — through  his  dungeon  grate.     See  Pris- 
oner for  Debt,  The.— Whittier. 
Look  on  this  cast,  and  know  the  hand.     See  Hand  of 

Lincoln,  The. — Stedman. 
Look  our   ransomed   shores    around.     See    New    Hail 

Columbia. — Anon . 
Look  out,  bright  eyes,  and  bless  the  air!     See  Look 

Out,  Bright  Eyes. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Look,  out  of  line  one  tall  corn-captain  stands.     See 

Corn. — Lanier. 
Look  out  upon  the  stars,  my  love.     See  Serenade,  A. — 

Pinkney. 
Look  right  into  my  face  with  your  honest  brown  eyes. 

See  My  Dojt  and  T. — -Marsh. 
Look  round  our  world;  behold  the  chain  of  love.     See 

Essay  on  Man,  An  (Nature's  Chain). — Pope. 
"Look!"  she  said;  "I  see  my  father."    See  Song  of  Hia- 
watha, The. — Longfellow. 
Look  through  mine  eyes  with  thine,  true  wife.     See 

Miller's  Daughter,  The. — Tennyson. 
Look  to  your  history,  that  part  of  it  which  the  world 

knows   by   heart.     See  American   Sailor,   The. — 

Stockton. 
Look  up,  and  let  thy  nature  strike  on  mine.     See  At 

Life's  Best. — Tennyson. 
Look  up,  my  young  American!     See  American  Boy, 

The.— Gilman. 
"Look  up,  not  down!"     Do  you  see  how  the  tree-top. 

See  Four  Mottoes. — Palmer. 
"Look  up,"  she  said,  and  all  the  heavens  blazed.     See 

Starlight.— Chadwick. 
Look  you,  now.     See  Eagles. — Ingelow. 
Looking  around  on  all  assembled  here.     See  Epilogue. 

— "Bob  o'Link." 
Looking  around  the  globe  to-day,  we  see  an  unbroken 

line.     See  Sacred  Influences. — Cook. 
Looking  back  a  hundred  years.     See  Then  and  Now. — 

Fish. 
Looking  calmly  yet  humbly  for  the  close  of  my  mortal 

career.     See  same. — Greely. 
Looking  into  the  near  future,  I  see  the  aisles  of  the 

school-room.     See  Schools  and  Teachers. — Anon. 
Looking  over  the  world  on  a  broad  scale.     See  same. — 

Stowe. 


Looking  upward  every  day.     See  same. — Anon. 

Loose  the  sail,  rest  the  oar,  float  away  down.     See 

Hypatia  (Boat-song,  A). — Kingsley. 
Loosed  from  the  bands  of  the  frost,  the  verdant  ground. 

See  Elegy — Written  in  Spring  (Spring  Pointing  to 

God). — Bruce. 
Lord  Audley,  whiles  our  son  is  in  the  chase.     See  King 

Edward  the  Third. — Anon. 
Lord  Beichan  was  a  noble  lord.     See  Lord  Beichan 

and  Susie  Pye. — Anon. 
Lord  Caesar,  when  you  sternly  wrote.     See  After  Con- 
struing.— Ben.son.  ■ 
Lord!  call  thy  pallid  angel.     See  Corn-law  Hymn. — 

Elliott. 
Lord  Cardigan's  eye  glanced  us  over.     See  Graphic 

Story  of  the  Light  Brigade,  A.— -Anon. 
Lord,  come  away.     See  Christ's  Coming  to  Jerusalem 

in  Triimaph. — Taylor. 
Lord  Erskine,  at  women  presuming  to  rail.     See  Wife, 

A. — Sheridan. 
Lord,  for  the  erring  thought.     See  Thanksgiving,  A. — 

Ho  wells. 
Lord,  for  tomorrow  and  its  needs  .     See  Just  for  To- 
day.— Wilberforce. 
Lord,  how  long,  how  long  wilt  Thou.     See  Psalm  Thir- 
teen.— Davison. 
Lord,  I  have  laid  my  heart  upon  Thy  altar.     See  Smoke 

of  Sacrifice,  The. — MacDonald. 
Lord,  in  this  dust  thy  sovereign  voice.     See  Thanks- 
giving, A. — Newman. 
Lord,  in  thy  name  thy  servants  plead.     See  Seed  Time 

Hymn. — Keble. 
Lord  indeed!     He  is  no  more  a  lord  than  I  am  a  baron, 

Bob.     See  British   Lion  and  American   Hoosier, 

The. — Anon. 
Lord    Ingram    and    Child    Vyet.     See  Child   Vyet. — 

Anon. 
Lord,  it  belongs  not  to  my  care.     See  Resignation. — 

Baxter. 
Lord  John  stood  in  his  stable-door.     See  Burd  Ellen. — 

Anon. 
Lord,  let  me  know  mine  end,  and  of  my  days.     See 

End  of  King  David,  The. — Anon. 
Lord,  let  the  angels  praise  Thy  name.   See  Misery. — 

Herbert.  ' 

Lord   Lovel   he   stood   at   his  castle-gate.     See   Lord 

Lovel. — Anon. 
Lord,  make  me  quick  to  see.     See  same. — Offord. 
Lord    Malcolm   of    Ruthven   moimts   his   steed.     See 

Lady  Maud's  Oath. — Henry. 
Lord  Mortimer,    and    Cousin  Glendower.      See    King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. — Shakespeare. 
Lord,  my  weak  thought  in  vain  would  climb  to  search. 

See  Unfaltering  Trust. — Palmer. 
Lord  of  all  being!  throned  afar.     See  Sunday  Hymn 

A. — Holmes. 
Lord  of  the  vale!  astounding  Flood.     See  Composed 

at  Cora  Linn. — Anon. 
Lord  of  the  winds!     I  feel  thee  nigh.     See  Hurricane, 

The.— Bryant. 
Lord,  oft  I  come  unto  Thy  door.     See  Lord,  Oft  I 

Come. — Reese. 
Lord   Ronald  has    come  to   his  halls  in  Clyde.     See 

Lord  Ronald's  Bride. — ^Lytton. 
Lord,  send  us  forth  among   thy   fields  to  work!     See 

Work. — Lowe. 
Lord,  teach  a  little  child  to  pray.     See  Lord,  Teach 

a  Little  Child. — Anon. 
Lord,  teach  us  the  lesson  of  loving.     See  Loving  and 

Giving. — Anon. 
Lord  Thomas  and  Fair  Annet.     See  «awe. — Anon. 
Lord   Thomas   he   was    a   bolde    forester.     See   Lord 

Thomas  and  Fair  Ellinor. — .\non. 
Lord  Thomasine  was  a  bold  forester,  a  chaser  of  our 

king's  deer.     See  Lord  Thomasine  and  Fair  Ellin- 

nor. — Anon. 
Lord,  thou  hast  been  our  dwelling  place  in  all  genera- 
tions.    See  Psalms  of  David,  XC. — Bible. 
Lord,  Thou  hast  been  our   dwelling  place  in  genera- 
tions past.     See  Ninetieth  Psalm. — Anon. 
Lord,  Thou  hast  been  Thy  people's  rest.      .See  Time 

Past,  Time  Passing,  Time  to  Come. — Montgom- 
ery. 
Lord,  thou  hast  given  me  a  cell.     See  Thanksgiving  to 

God  for  His  House,  A. — Herrick. 
Lord,  what  a  change  within  us.     See  sam,e. — Anon. 
Lord,  when   I   quit  this  earthly  stage.      See    Hymn: 

"Lord,  when  I,"  etc. — Watts. 
Lord!  when  these  [or  those]  glorious  lights  I  see.     See 

same. — Wither. 
Lord!  who  art  merciful  as  well  as  just.     See  Prayer, 

A. — Southey. 


749 


Lord 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Lord,    who    ordainest    for    mankind.     .See    Mother's 

Hymn,  The. — Bryant. 
Lord,  with  glowing  heart  I'd  praise  Thee.     See  same. — 

Key. 
Lord,  with  what^are%ast  thou  begirt  us  round!     See 

Sin.— Herb^. 
Lords,  knights,  and  'squires,  the  numerous  band.     See 

To  a  Child  of  Quality  Five  Years  Old.— Prior. 
Lost !  lost  1  lost !     See  Advertisement  of  a  Lost  Day. — 

Sigourney. 
Lot  One,  the  well  known   village,  with  bridge,  and 

church,  and  green.     See  Selling  Off  at  the  Opera 

House. —  (Punch.) 
Lot  Skinner  wa-s  the  meanest  man.     See  Lot  Skinner's 

Elegy. — Fields. 
Lots  of  folks  that  would  really  like  to  do  right.     See 

Cowboy's  Sermon,  The. — Curtis. 
Lottie  Smith  lived  in  the  country.     See  What  Lottie 

Saw. — Brown. 
Loud  and  Clear.     See  City  Bells. — Barham. 
Loud  and  wild  the  storm  is  howling.     See  Old  Letters. — 

— Benners,  .Ir. 
Loud  as  a  scandal  on  the  ears  of  town.     See  Orator, 

The. — Bulwer-Lytton. 
Loud  chilling  winds  may  hoarsely  blow.     See  Tomor- 
row.— Fox. 
Loud  he  sang  the  psalm  of  David!     See  Slave  Singing 

at  Midnight,  The. — Longfellow. 
Loud  is  the  summer's  busy  song.     See  July. — ^Clare. 
Loud  is  the  Vale!  the  voice  is  up.     See  Lines  Written 

at  Grasmere. — Wordsworth. 
Loud    mockers    in    the    roaring    street.     See    Second 

Crucifixion,  The.— LeGallienne. 
Loud  roared  the  dreadful  thunder.     See  Bay  of  Biscay, 

The.— Cherry. 
Loud    roared    the     tempest.     See    Requital,    The. — 

Procter. 
Loud  the  organ  tones  came  swelling  all  the  crowded 

aisles  along.     See  How  the  Organ  was  Paid  for. — 

Bradley. 
Loud  wind!  strong  wind!  sweeping  o'er  the  mountains. 

See  North  Wind.— Craik. 
Louhi,  hostess  of   the  Northland.     See  Kalevala,  The 

(Ilmarinen'a  Wedding  Feast). 
Louis  XIV.  created  the  formula  of  absolute  personal 

power.   See  Government  by  Epigrams.- — Maupas- 
sant. 
"Loui.sa,  my  love,"  Mrs.  Manners  began.     See  How  to 

Look  when  Speaking. — Turner. 
I^ove  and  believe:  for  works  will  follow  spontaneous. 

See   Children  of    the  Lord's  Supper,  The  ("Love 

and  be'.ievo."  etc.). — Longfellow. 
I-ove  and  death  is  all  of  poets'  singing.     See  Love  and 

Death.- — King. 
Love  bade  me  welcome ;  yet  my  soul  drew  back.     See 

Love. — Herbert. 
Love,  banished  heaven,  in  earth  was  held  in  scorn 

See  Love  Banished  Heaven. — Drayton. 
Ix)ve!  blessed  Love!  if  we  could  hang  our  walls.     See 

Bridal  Hour,  The  ("Love!  blessed,''  etc.). — Gary. 
Love  built  a  crimson  house.     See  Crimson  Hou.se,  The 

— Carman. 
Love  built  a  stately  house,  where  Fortune  came.     See 

World,  The.— Herbert. 
Love,  by  that  loosened  chair.     See  Song:    "Love  by 

that,"  etc  — Carman. 
Love  came  a  beggar  to  her  gate.     See  Love  and  Pity. 

— Anon. 
Love  came  to  me  through  the  gloaming.     See  Late 

Ix)ve.— Martyn. 
Love  came  to  me  when  I  was  young.     See  Love  Came 

to  Me. — Williams. 
Love  comes  back  to  his  vacant  dwelling.     See  Wan- 
derer, The.— Dobson. 
Love  divine,  all  love  excelling.     See  same. — Toplady. 
Love  framed  with  Mirth  a  gay  fantastic  round.     See 

Ode  to  the  Passions. — Collins. 
Love  from  that  summer  mom.    See  Alice  of  Monmouth. 

— Stedman. 
Love  gilds  thy  laurel, — love  was  found  thy  blame.    See 

Tasso. — Betts. 
I-X)ve,  give  me  one  of  thy  dear  hands  to  hold.     See 

Rest. — Anon. 
Love  guides  the  roses  of  thy  lips.     See  Love's  Wanton- 
ness.— Lodge. 
Love  has  a  language  that  mocks  at  rules.     See  Love's 

I^anguage. — Gifford. 
Love  held  a  harp  between  his  hands,  and,  lo!     See 

I.iove'8  Music. — Marston. 
Love?     I  will  tell  thee  what  it  is  to  love!     See  Love. — 

Swain. 
Love!  if  Thy  destined  sacrifice  am  I.     See  Acquies- 
cence of  Pure  Love,  The.— Cowper. 


Love  in  fantastic  triumph  sate.     See  Song. — Behn. 
Love  in  her  sunny  eyes  does  basking  play.     See  Love 

in  her  Sunny  Eyes. — Cowley. 
Love  in  my   bosom,  like  a   bee.     See  Rosalynde;  or, 

Euphues'  Golden  Legacy  (Rosalynd's  Madrigal). — 

Lodge. 
Love  in  my  heart :  oh,  heart  of  me,  heart  of  me !     See 

Song:  "Love  in  my  heart."  etc. — -Sharp. 
Love  in  thy  youth,  fair  maid,  be  wise.     See  Love  in 

Thy  Youth. — Porter. 
Love  is  a  hunter  boy.     See  same. — Moore. 
Love  is  a  King  and  every  heart  a  throne.     See  Love. — 

Westley. 
Love  is  a  little  golden  fish.     See  Golden  Fish,  The. — 

Arnold. 
Love  is  a  sickness  full  of  woes.     See  Hymen's  Triumph 

(Love). — Daniel. 
Love  is  a  tree  that  demands.     See  Love  is  a  Tree. — 

De  Gruchy. 
Love  is  and  wa.s  my  Lord  and  King.    See  In  Memoriam. 

— Tennyson. 
Love  is  a  woman  with  soulful  eyes.     See  same. — Anon. 
Love  is  better  than   house  and  lands.     See  Best. — 

Cooke. 
Love  is  come  with  a  song  and  a  smile.     See  Harold 

("Love  is  come,"  etc.). — Tennyson. 
Love  is  enough.     Let  us  not  seek  for  gold.     See  same. — 

Wheeler. 
Love  is  enough-  though  the  World  be  a-waning.     See 

Love  is  Enough. — Morris. 
Love  is  eternal,  so  the  strong  souls  say.     See  Love 

is  Eternal. — Perry. 
Love  is  eternal.     Whatever  dies,  that  lives,  I  feel  and 

know.     See    Philip    van    Artevelde    (Artevelde's 

Vision) . — Taylor. 
Love  is  forever — think  no  more.     See  Love  is  Forever. 

— Bradford. 
Love  is  like  a  lamb,  and  love  is  like  a  lion.     See  What 

Love  is  Like. — Middleton. 
Love   is  like   arbutus  blooming.     See   Hidden. — Liv- 
ingston. 
Love   is   not   a   feeling   to   pass   away.      See    Village 

Coquettes  (Lucy's  Song). — Dickens. 
Love  is  not  made  of   kisses,  or  of  sighs.    See  I^ove. 

— {Chambers'  Journal.) 
Love  is  the  blossom  where  there  blows.     See  Pan- 
glory's  Wooing  Song. — Fletcher. 
Love   is  the   minstrel ;   for   in   God's   own   sight.     See 

Love  the  Musician. — ^Redi. 
Love  is  the  root  of  creation.     See  Children  of  the  Lord's 

Supper,  The. — Longfellow. 
Love  is  too  great  a  happiness.     See  Love. — Butler. 
Love  knock'd  one  night,  at  a  gentleman's  heart.     See 

Love  under  the  Ledger. — -Clarke. 
Love  knoweth  every  form  of  air.     See  Annoyer,  The. — 

Willis. 
"Love   laughs   at   locksmiths,"   laughs  hoi   ho!     See 

Love  Laughs. — (Trinity  Tablet.) 
Love,  like  religion,  has  its  prayer.     See  Love's  Prayer. 

— Knowles. 
Love   making  all  things  else  his  foes.     See  Against 

Love.— Denham. 
Love  me  and  leave  me;  what  love  bids  retrieve  me? 

See  John  Jones. — Swinburne. 
Love  me  for  what  I  am.  Love.     Not  for  sake.     See  Of 

Such  as  I  Have. — Woolsey. 
Love  me  if  I  live !     See  same. — Procter. 
Love  me  little,  love  me  long.     See  same. — Anon. 
Love  me  not,  love,  for  that  I  first  loved  thee.     See 

same. — Gilder. 
Love  much.     Earth  has  enough  of  bitter  in  it.     See 

Love  Much. — Wilcox. 
Love  must  be  a  fearsome  thing.     See  Wood-song. — 

Peabody. 
Love  not,  love  not !  ye  hapless  sons  of  clay !     See  Love 

Not. — Norton. 
Love  not  me  for  comely  grace.     See  same. — Anon. 
Love,  Peace,  and  Repose!  the  tenderest  trio.     See  My 

Early  Home. — Clark. 
Love,  Reason,  Hate,  did  once  bespeak.     See  Dance, 

'The. — Suckling. 
Love  rises  in  the  morning.     See  Love's   Day. — For- 

bush. 
Love  sayeth:  Sing  of  me!     See  Love  and  Song. — Lock- 
hart. 
Love   scorns   degrees;  the  low   he  lifteth   high.     See 

Love  Scorns  Degrees. — -Hayne. 
Love  still  hath  [or  has]  something  of  the  sea.     See 

game.— Sedley. 
Love   strong  as   death — nay,   stronger.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
Love  swore  by  Styx,  while  all  the  depths  did  tremble. 

See  Aurora  (Sonnets  from  "Aurora"). — Alexander. 


750 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Maggie 


Love  tapped  upon  my  lattice.     See  same. — Hawes. 

Love  that  asketh  love  again.     See  same. — Craik. 

Love  that  liveth  and  reigneth  in  my  thought.     <See 

Sonnet :  Complaint  of  a  Lover  Rebuked. — Surrey. 
Love  thee,  dearest?  love  thee?     See  same. — Moore. 
Love  thee? — so  well,  so  tenderly. — See  Love  Thee?— 

Moore. 
Love,  thou  art  absolute,  sole  Lord.     See  Hymn  to  the 

Name  and  Honour  of  the  Admirable  Saint  Teresa, 

A. — Crashaw. 
Love,  thou  art  not  alone  for  gentle  dells.     See  Place  of 

Love,  The. — Brackett. 
Love  thou  thy  land,  with  love  far-brought.     See  Love 

Thou  Thy  Land. — Tennyson. 
Love  thy  country,  wish  it  well.     See  Shorten  Sail. — 

Dodington. 
Love  thy  mother,  little  one !     See  To  a  Child  Embracing 

his  Mother. — Hood. 
Love  thyself  last;  cherish  thou  hearts  that  hate  thee. 

See  King  Henry  VHI.    ("Love  thyself  last,"  etc.). 

— Shakespeare . 
Love  took  me  softly  by  the  hand.     See  same. — Cas- 

sels. 
Love  took  my  life  and  thrill'd  it.     See  Song. — Morris.^ 
Love  we  the  warmth  and  light  of  tropic  lands.     See 

Tropics,  The. — Sladen. 
Love,  when  all  the  years  are  silent,  vanished  quite  and 

laid  to  rest.     See  Hereafter. — Spofford. 
Love,  who  hast  granted  many  prayers  and  set.     See 

Let  me  Forget. — {Trinity  Archive.) 
Love  wing'd  my  hopes  and  taught  me  how  to  fly.     See 

Icarus. — .Jones. 
Love,  work  thy  wonted  miracle  to-day.     See    Love's 

Miracle. — Kimball. 
"Love  you?"  said  I,  then  I  sighed,  and  then  I  gazed 

upon  her  sweetly.     See  Ferdinando   and  Elvira. 

—Gilbert. 
"Love  your  neighbor  as  yourself."     See  Thoughts  on 

the  Commandments. — Baker. 
Lovely  kind,  and  kindly  loving.     See  same. — Breton. 
Lovely,  lasting  peace  of  mind!     See  Hymn  to  Con- 
tentment, A. — Parnell. 
Lovely  Mabel,  were  you  dreaming?     See  As  Toll. — 

Barker. 
Lovely  maid,  with  rapture  swelling.     See  Lines  by  a 

Fond  Ijover. — Anon. 
Lovely  May,  lovely  May.     See  Lovely  May.— Anon. 
Lover  of  children!     Fellow  heir  with  those.     See  In 

Memory  of  Lewis  Carroll. — {London  Punch.) 
Lover  of  Man,  if  not  of  God,  the  Sea.     See  Shelley. — 

Martin. 
Lovers  and  madmen  have  such  seething  brains.     See 

Midsummer    Night's    Dream. — Shakespeare. 
Lovers   by   a   dim   sea   strand.     See  Two   Epochs. — 

Hayne. 
Love's  arms  were  wreathed  about  the  neck  of  Hope. 

See  Lover's  Tale,  The   ('"Love's    arms,"  etc.). — 

Tennyson. 
Love's  light  illumines  the  pathway  ye  trod.     See  On 

Heights  of  Power. — Willard. 
Love's  light  is  strange  to  you?     Ah,  me!      See  sam.e. — 

Gary. 
Love's  priestess,  mad  with  pain  and  joy  of  song.     See 

Sappho. — Swinburne. 
Love's  sun,  like  that  of  day,  may  set,  and  set.     See 

Love's  Renewal.' — Sangster. 
Loving  friends,  the  gift  of  one.     See  To  Flush,  My 

Dog. — Browning. 
Loving  in  truth,  and  fain  in  verse  my  love  to  show. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  I.). — Sidney. 
Loving  .Jesus,  meek  and  mild.     See  Hymn  of  a  Child. — • 

Wesley. 
Loving  words  will  cost  but  little.     See  Kind  Words. — 

Anon. 
Low  anchored  cloud.     See  Mist. — Thoreau. 
liOW  burns  the  summer  afternoon.     See  Nightfall:  A 

Picture. — Street. 
Low  hang  the   clouds   like   a  threatening  pall.     See 

Rescued. — Anon. 
Low  hung  the  moon,  the  wind  was  still.     See  Return 

of  the  Dead,  The. — Procter. 
Low  in  the  troubled  west.     See  Cradle  Song. — Anon. 
Low  lie  your  heads  this  day.     See  Sons  of  Turann, 

The.— Todhunter. 
Low,    like    another's,    lies    the    laurelled    head.     See 

Lachrymje  Musarum. — Watson. 
Low  on  a  sick  bed  she  helplessly  lay.     See  Her  Vision. 

— Anon. 
Low  on  the  utmost  boundary  of  the  sight.     See  Moon- 
light in  Summer. — Bloomfield. 
Low  spake  the  knight  to  the  peasant  maid  [or  girl]. 

See   Rose    and   the    Gauntlet,    The. — Wilson    [or 

Sterling]. 


Lowell  is  a  remarkable  man  and  poet.  See  Lowell, 
Extract  Concerning. — Bartlett. 

Lowliness  is  young  ambition's  ladder.  See  Julius 
Caesar. — Shakespeare. 

Lucasta,  frown,  and  let  me  die!  See  To  Lucasta:  Her 
Reserved  Looks. — Lovelace. 

I..uck,  my  dear  Norton,  still  makes  shifts.  See  Ode  of 
Thanks  for  Certain  Cigars,  An. — Lowell. 

Lucretius — nobler  than  his  mood.  See  Vision  of  Poets, 
A. — Browning. 

Lucy  is  a  golden  girl.     See  Golden  Girl,  A. — Procter. 

Luke  Major  was  a  soldier  bold.  See  Luke  Major. — 
Kavanaugh. 

Lullaby,  lullaby,  night  winds  are  blowing.  See  Lulla- 
by, Rest. — Manchester. 

Lullaby!  O  lullaby!  Baby,  hush  that  little  cry!  See 
Cradle  Song. — Bennett. 

"Lullaby,  oh,  lullaby!"  Thus  I  heard  a  father  cry. 
See  "Lullaby,  oh,  lullaby!" — Hood. 

Lute!  breathe  thy  lowest  in  my  lady's  ear.  See  Sere- 
nade.— -Arnold. 

Luther  rebelled  against  the  Pope  in  behalf  of  the  minis- 
try.    See  same. — Murray. 

Luther,  they  say,  was  unwise;  like  a  half-taught  Ger- 
man he  could  not.  See  Amours  de  Voyage  (Claude 
to  Eustace). — Clough. 

Lycius,  the  Cretan  prince,  of  race  divine.  See  Wine 
Cup,  The. — Anon.  ' 

Lydia's  soul  is  a  golden  sun.  See  Night  and  Day. — 
Gibbs. 

Lying  out  on  the  campus.  See  Last  Spring,  The. — 
R.  D. 

Lying  supine  on  the  soft,  matted  grasses.  See  Dis- 
turbed Reverie,  A. — Anon. 

Lyke  as  a  ship,  that  through  the  Ocean  wyde.  See 
Amoretti  and  Kpithalamion  (Sonnet:  "Lyke  as  a 
ship,"  etc.).- — Spensor. 

Lysander  talks  extremely  well.  See  Pedant,  The. — 
Prior. 

M 

M.  Butterwick.  of  Roxborough,  had  a  fit  of  sleepless-. 

ness  one  night  lately.     See  How  to  Go  to  Sleep.— 

Adeler. 
Ma  pauvre  petite,  my  little  sweet.     See  My  Cigarette. 

—Hall. 
Ma  she's  home — an'   I'm  way  here.      See  Christmas 

Memory,  A. — Riley. 
Ma'amselle  Bas  Bleu,  erudite  virgin.     See  Bas  Bleu. 

—  {Punch.) 
Mabel,  little  Mabel,  with  face  against  the  pane.     See 

Face  against  the  Pane,  The. — Aldrich. 
Mabel  went  a-fishing.     See  Mabel's  Way. — Davis. 
Macgregor,    Macgregor,    remember    our    foemen.     See 

Queen's   Wake.  The   (Fate  of  Macgregor,  The).— 

Hogg. 
M'Kinnon's   tall   mast   salutes  the  day.     See  Queen's 

Wake.  The  (Abbot  M'Kinnon,  The).— Hogg. 
"Maclaine!  you've  [or  yi)u]  scourged  me  like  a  hound." 

See  Maclaine's  Child;  a  Legend  of  Lochbuy-Mull. 

— -Mackay. 
Macphairson  Clonglocketty  Angus  McClan.     See  Ellen 

McJones  Aberdeen. — Gilbert. 
Mad?     Oh,   no,  not   mad!     See  Ere    the    Sun    Went 

Down. — Weatherly. 
"Madam,"  said  a  man  on  a  horse-car  to  the  mother  of  a 

crying  baby.     See  She  Wouldn't  I..isten. — Anon. 
Madam,  there  is  a  lady  in  your  hall.     See  De  Mon- 

fort  (Jane  de  Monfort). — Baillie. 
Madam:     When  for  our  sakes  your  hero  you  resigned. 

See  Verses  to  Her  Royal  Highness  the  Duchess. — 

Dry  den. 
Madam,   whither  walks    your    majesty   so    fast?     See 

Edward  II. — Marlowe. 
"Madam,  we  miss  the  train  at  B."     See  In  Answer. — 

Thorpe. 
Madam,  will   you  please  inform  me  of  the  number  of 

inhabitants  in  this  house?    See  Taking  the  Census. 

— Anon. 
Madame  Arachne  sat  in  the  sun  at  her  door.     See 

Madame  Arachne. — Thaxter. 
Mademoiselle,  it  is  the  King's  desire  that  I  compliment 

you.     See  Imaginar>    Conversations   (Bossuet  and 

the  Duchess  of  Fontanges). — Landor. 
Magdalen   at  Michael's  gate.     See  Blackbird's   Song, 

The. — Kingsley. 
Magdalena's    robes    are    trailing.     See    Magdalena. — 

Anon. 
Maggie  and  Tom  came  in  from  the  garden  with  their 

father.     See  Mil!  on   the  Floss,  The  (Maggie  Cuts 

her  Hair). — Eliot. 


751 


Maggie 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Maggie,  my  lass,  I'm  gaun  awa'."     iSee  Tit  for  Tat. — 

Lyle. 
Maggie  Tulliver  was  kneeling  on  the  floor  in  the  little 
house  by  the    riverside.      See  Mill  on  the  Flosa, 
The  (Flood  on  ^e  Floss,  The).— Eliot. 
Magnificent  thy  fate.     See  Cumberland,  The. — Anon. 
"Muhmud    is    coming,"    the    Brahmins    cried.     See 

Mahmud  and  the  Idol. — Chandler. 
Maid  of    all    work,    as   a    part.    See   Calf's  Heart. — 

{Punch.) 
Maid  of  Athens,  ere  we  part.     See  tame. — Byron. 
Maid  of  my  love,  sweet  Genevieve.     See  Genevieve. — 

Coleridge. 
"Maiden  Agnes,"  said  the  Year  in  going  out.     See 

Agnes  and  the  Years. — Burr. 
Maiden,  thy  cheeks  with  tears  are  wet.     See  April. — 

Loveman. 
"Maiden,   why   that   look  of  sadness."     See  On   My 
Finding  Angelina  Stop  Suddenly  in  a  liapid  After- 
Supper  Polka. — {Punch.) 
Maiden !  with  the  meek,  brown  eyes.     See  Maidenhood. 

— Longfellow. 
Maidens,  kilt  your  skirts  and  go.     See  Celia's  Home- 
coming.— ^Darmesteter. 
Maids  to  bed  and  cover  coal.     See  Bellman's  Song, 

The. — Anon. 
Maine,  from  her  farthest  border,  gives  the  first  exulting 

shout.     See  Fourth  of  July. — Bethune. 
Majestic  flower !    How  purely  beautiful.    SeeMagnolia- 

Grandiflora. — Cranch. 
Majestic  Monarch!  whom  the  other  gods.     See  To  the 

Lord  of  Potsdam.— Seaman. 
Major  Andre's  story  is  the  one  overmastering  romance 

of  the  Revolution.     See  Captain  Hale  and  Major 

Andrd. — Depew. 
Major   Schottgunn   had   been   prowling  around.     See 

Automatic  Cradle,  The. — Anon. 
Make  a   joyful  noise  unto  the  Lord.     See  Psalms  of 

David,  C— Bible. 
Make  a  picture,  dreamy  smoke.     See  Farmer's  Pipe, 

The.— Cooper. 
Make  haste  away,  and  let  one  be.     See  To  His  Book. — 

Herrick. 
"Make  me  a  head-board,  mister,  smooth  and  painted, 

you  see."     See  Little  Phil. — Rich. 
"Make  me  a  statue,"  said  the  King.      See  Statue  in 

Clay,  The. — Anon. 
Make  me  no  vows  of  constancy,  dear  friend.     See  Until 

Death. — Anon. 
Make   me   over,   mother  April.     See  Spring   Song. — 

Carman. 
Make  new  friends,  but  keep  the  old.     See  Friends  Old 

and  New. — Anon. 
Make  room  in  heaven!     A  gifted  child  of  song.     See 

Make  Room  in  Heaven. — Durant. 
Make  the  best  of  yourself.     Watch,  and  plant,  and  sow. 

See  Self-culture. — Anon. 
Make  thyself  know,  Sibyl,  or  let  despair.     See  Leon- 
ardo's "Monna  Lisa." — Dowden. 
"Make  way  for  liberty,"  he  cried.     See  Patriot's  Pass- 
word, The. — Montgomery. 
Make  way,  my  lords;  for  Death  now  once  again.     See 

Charles  II.  of  Spain  to  Approaching  Death. — Lee 

Hamilton. 
Make    yourselves    nests    of    pleasant    thoughts!     See 

Nests. — Ruskin. 
Making     dolly's     dresses.     See    Small     Dressmaking. 

— {Youth's  Companion.) 
Making  toast  at  the  fireside.     See  Misfortunes  Never 

Come  Singly. — Streamer. 
Malbrouck,    the    prince    of    commanders.     See    Mal- 

brouck.^ — ^Mahony. 
Mama,  do  send  for  doctor-man.     See  Dolly's  Broken 

Ana. — Anon. 
"Mamma,  dear  mamma,"  cried,  in  haste,  Mary  Anne. 

See  Wonders,  The.— Turner. 
Mamma,  don't  you  think  I  would  make  a  good  states- 
man?    See  Young  Statesman,  The. — Beno. 
Mamma  gave  us  a  single  peach.     See  Peach,  The. — 

Lamb. 
Mamma  had  ordered  Ann,  the  maid.     See  Sash,  The. — 

Turner. 
Mamma,  I  saved  a  life  to-day,  such  a  tiny,  tiny  life! 

See  Boy's  Mercy,  A. — Hart. 
Mamma,  I  will  play  grocery  store.     See  Little  Grocer 

that  Failed,  The. — Anon. 
Mamma,   I's  been   washin'.     See  Ready  for  a  Kiss 

--{Chrietian  Weekly,  The.) 
"Mamma,  is  there  too  many  of  we?"     See  "Too  Many 

of  We." — Anon. 
Mamma  makes  'e  nices'  cookies.     See  Little  Cookie- 

hookie. — Piner. 


"Mamma,  my  dear,  if    a  robber  should  come."     See 

Brave  Little  Boy,  A. — Anon. 
Mamma,  please  introduce  me  to  your  assistant.     See 

Lessons  in  Cookery. — Anon. 
"Mamma,"  said  little  Isabel.     See  Dew,  The. — Anon. 
Mamma  said:     "Little  one,  go  and  see."     See  Grand- 
ma's Angel. — Dayre. 
Mamma  says  we  can  play  in  your  room  this  afternoon. 

See  Keeping  House. — May. 
Mamma  she  came  down  all  smiles  and  delight.     See 

Baby's  First  Tooth. — Anon. 
Mamma,  sit  down!     I  want  to  ask.     See  Small  Boy's 

Questions,  A. — Nason. 
"Mamma,  what  is  Christmas?"     "How  can  I  say?" 

See  Christ's  Birthday. — Anon. 
"Mamma,  what  kind  of  flowers  has  that  lady  got  in  her 

bonnet?"     See  Tired  of  Church. — Anon. 
"Mamma,  what  makes  your  face  so  sad?"     See  Wind's 

Voices,  'The. — Warner. 
Mamma,  why  do  men  stagger  through  the  street?     See 

Why  Do  They  Ever  Begin? — Anon. 
Mammals,    as   regards   brain,    are   divided    into    four 

classes.     See  My  Sister's  Husband. — Brewster. 
Mamma's   got    a   headache    pain.     See    International 

Band,  The. — Harper. 
Mammon,    the    least    erected    spirit    that    fell.     See 

Paradise '  Lost. — Milton. 
"Mammy"  is  old  and  wrinkled  and  black.     See  Love 

is  Blind.-^Anon. 
Mammy's  li'l  pickaninny  coon.     See  Li'l  Pickaninny 

Coon.— P.  H. 
Mamsel  Marie  she  say  me  no.     See  Parrots,  The. — 

Meyers. 
Man  and  the  pocket  have  advanced  toward  the  millen- 
nium side  by  side.     See  Pockets. — Hawthorne. 
Man,  Blake  was  fine;  ev'ry  word  that  he  spoke.     See 

After  the  Lecture  on  Spion  Kop. — Clarke. 
Man  bom  of  woman  is  of  few  days  and  no  teeth.     See 

Sermon  of  Life,  A. — Burdette. 
Man  counts  his  age  by  years;  the  oak,  by  centuries. 

See  Age  of  Trees. — Anon. 
Man  has  interests  other  than  those  that  are  material. 

See  same. — {Christian  Intelligencer.) 
Man  hath  a  weary  pilgrimage.     See  Remembrance. — 

Southey. 
Man  is  a  most  frail  being,  incapable  of  directing  his 

steps.     See  Mr.  The.  Cibber. — Goldsmith. 
Man  is  but  a  reed,  the  weakest  in  nature.  See  Thoughts 

("Man  is  but,"  etc.). — Pascal. 
Man  is  dear  to  man;  the  poorest  poor.     See  same. — 

Wordsworth. 
Man  is  divided  into  several  parts.     See  Boy's  Composi- 
tion on  Physiology,  A. — Anon. 
Man    is   his   own   star,  and   the   soul   that   can.     See 

Upon  an   Honest   Man's   Fortune  (Our  Acts  Our 

Angels  Are). — Fletcher. 
Man  is  lazy  and  selfish.     See  Dollar,  The. — Logan. 
Man  is  no  mushroom  growth  of  yesterday.     See  Social 

Heredity. — Ingram. 
Man  is  permitted  much.     See  Elements,  The. — New- 
man. 
Man  is  the  only  animal  that  laughs.     See  Gamut  of 

Merry  Momus,  The. — Anon. 
Man  knows  not  love — such  love  as  woman  feels.     See 

Woman's  Love. — Anon. 
"Man  may  be  happy,  if  he  will."     See  Man  May  Be 

Happy. — -Wolcott. 
Man  puts  things  out  of  the  way  whenever  the  necessity 

of  so  doing  presents  itself.     See  How  Man  Puts 

Things  Away. — Anon. 
"Man,"  says  Sir  Thomas  Browne,  "is  a  noble  animal!" 

See  Life. — Wallace. 
Man  that  is  born  of  woman  finds  a  charm.     See  Ex 

Libris. — Munby. 
Man,  thee  behoveth  oft  to  have  this  in  mind.     See 

Inscription  on  a  Wall  in  St.  Edmund's  Church  in 

Lombard  Street,  London. — Anon. 
"Man  wants  but  little  here  below."     See  Wants  of 

Man,  The. — Adams. 
Manchester    Examiner,    Manchester    Guardian.     See 

Railway  Station  in  the  North  of  England,  A. — 

Anderson. 
Mandy,  I  feel  jess  terry-bul  dis  mownin'.     See  Uncle 

Peter  at  the  "Big  House." — Neall. 
Manhood  will  come,  old  age  will  come,  and  the  dying 

bed  will  come.     See  aam,e. — Chalmers. 
Manifest  destiny  iz  the  science  ov  going  tew  bust,  or 

enny  other  place.     See  Josh  Billings  on  "Maniifest 

Destiny. ' ' — Shaw. 
Mankind  are  toiling  for  a  deathless  name.   See  Pyramids 

Not  All  Egyptian. — Barnes. 


752 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Massachusetts 


Mankind,  says  a  Chinese  manuscript.     i5>ee  Disserta- 
tion upon  Roast  Pig,  A. — Lamb. 
Mannix  the  coiner  and  Neville  the  Piper.     See  Mannix 

the  Coiner. — Hogan. 
Man's  home  is  everywhere.     On  Ocean's  Flood.     See 

Man — Woman. — Sigourney. 
Man's  life  is  fleet,  his  years  are  few.     See  Festival  of 

the  Year,  The. — Lmn. 
Man's  love  is  of  man's  life  a  thing  apart.     See  Don 

Juan  (Man's  Love) .•—Byron. 
Man's  use  and  function — and  let  him  who  will  not  grant 

me  this  follow  me  no  further.  See  Modern  Painters 

(Utility  of  the  Beautiful,  The).— Ruskin. 
Many  a  beaming  brow  I've  known.     See  L'lnconnue. 

— Praed. 
Many  a  green  isle  needs  must  be.     See  Lines  Written 

among  the  Euganean   Hills. — Shelley. 
Many  a  hearth  upon  our  dark  globe  sighs  after  many  a 

vanish'd    face.     See    Vastness. — Tennyson. 
Many  a  long,  long  year  ago.     See   Nantucket  Skipper. 

The.— Fields. 
Many  a  morning  the  trees'   slim  fingers.     See  White 

Morning,  A. — Leach. 
Many  a  time  amid  the  roar  of  battle  has  sounded  the 

"Marseillaise."       See      John      Brown's      Body. — 

Sherman. 
Many  a  year  hath  [or  has]  passed  away.     See  Lay  of  the 

Madman. — Anon. 
Many  a  year  is  in  its  grave.     See  Passage,  The.  — 

Uhland. 
Many  and  urgent  are  the  questions  that  the  working 

men  and  women.     See  Legitimate  "Strike,"  A. — 

Willard. 
Many    are    the    sayings    of    the    wise.     See    Samson 

Agonistes. — Milton. 
Many    believed;    but    more    the    truth    of    God.     See 

Perversion  of  the  Bible. — Pollock. 
Many  deeds  of   daring  glory  figure  on  the  roll  of  fame. 

See  Voiceless  Chimes,  The. — Fox. 
Many  love  music  but  for  music's  sake.     See  On  Music. 

— Landor. 
Many  loved  truth  and  lavished  life's  best  oil.     See  Ode 

Recited  at  the  Harvard  Commemoration,  July  21, 

186.5.— Lowell. 
Many,  many  years  ago.     See  Long  Ago. — Anon. 
Many  men  think  a  railroad  journey  is  rendered  really 

pleasant.     See  Interesting  Traveling  Companion, 

An. — Lewis. 
Many  pleasures  of  youth  have  been  buoyantly  sung. 

See  Envoy. — Riley. 
Many    the   lands   that   the    true-hearted    honor.     See 

Mine  Own  Countree. — Bates. 
Many   things   in   life   there  are.     See  Passing   Under- 
standing.— Hosmer. 
Many  things   thou  hast   given   me,   dear  heart.     See 

same. — Rollins. 
Many    years    ago    I    contracted    an     intimacy   with   a 

Mr.    William    Legrand.     See    Gold-bug,    The. — 

Poe. 
Many  years  ago  (I  think  it  was  in  the  autumn  of  1858). 

See  My  First  Reading. — Irving. 
Many   years   ago    in    a   rude   garret,    in    the    loneliest 

suburbs  of  London.     See  Benedict  Arnold  (Patriot 

and  Traitor,  The). — Lippard. 
Many  years  ago   there  lived   in  Georgia  an   eccentric 

bachclnr  planter.     See  Mass'  Crawford,  Isam,  and 

the  Deer. — Edwards. 
Many  years  long  gone,  I  took  my  stand  by  Freedom. 

See  Freedom. — Baker. 
Many  young  persons  are  growing  up   with   the  idea. 

See  Doing  Nothing. — Anon. 
Maple,   from   the  leafy  wild-wood.     See  Song  of   the 

Maple. — Streeter. 
March!   and  all  the  winds  cry,   March!     See  March. — 

Sherman. 
March,   if   you'll    hush   a   moment.     See   Complaining 

March. — Swett. 
March,  march,   Eskdale  and   Liddesdale.     See  Border 

Ballad. — Scott. 
March,  march,  Ettrick  and  Teviotdale!     See   Border 

Ballad. — Scott. 
Marching  down  to  Armageddon.     See  Armageddon. — 

Arnold. 
Margaret  sat  at  her  work  alone.     See  Margaret's  Guest. 

— Lay. 
Margarita  first  possess'd  [or  possest].     See  Chronicle, 

The.     A  Ballad.— Cowley. 
Margery  Brown   in   her  arm-chair  sits.     See  Browns, 

The.— English. 
Maria  Ann  recently  determined  to  go  to  a  picnic.     See 

Jenkins  Goes  to  a  Picnic. — Anon. 
Maria  come  to  me  one  day  last  week  and  says,  says  she. 

See  Smith's  Bargain  Day. — Meyers. 


Maria  had  an  Aunt  at  Leeds.     See  Maria'.s  Purse. — 

Turner. 
Maria  intended  a  letter  to  write.     See  How  to  Write  a 

Letter. — Turner. 
Marian   Drury,  Marian  Drury.     See  Marian  Drury. — 

Carman. 
Marie  Hamilton's  to  the  kirk  gane.     See  Queen's  Marie, 

The. — Anon. 
Marier!     Here's   a  letter  come.     See   Orthography. — 

Whipple. 
Marina's  gone  and  now  sit  I.     See  Britannia's  Pastorals 

(Song  of  Celadyne,  The). — Browne. 
Marit  at  the  brookside  sitting,  rosy,  dimpled,  merry- 
eyed.     See  Marit  and  I. — Anon. 
Marjorie  hides  in  the  deep,  sweet  grass.     See  Marjorie. 

— Thaxter. 
Marjorie,  oh,  how  I   loved  you  once.     See   '  'Ever  so 

Long  Ago." — Sanborn. 
Marjorie,  with  the  waiting  face.     See  His  Messenger. — 

Anon. 
Marjory  May  came  tripping  from  town.     See  Marjory 

May. — Anon. 
Mark   me   how   still   I   am! — The   sound   of  feet.     See 

Statue  of  Lorenzo  De  Medici,  The.— Nesmith. 
Mark  that  swift  arrow,  how  it  cuts  the  air.     See  Time 

not  to  be  Recalled. — Anon. 
Mark    where    the    pressing    wind    shoots    javelin-like. 

See  Modern  Love  (Love's  Grave). — Meredith. 
Marley  was  dead,  to  begin  with.     See  Christmas  Carol, 

A  (Scrooge  and  Marley). — Dickens. 
Marm,  there's  a  man  comin'  right  up  to  the  house.     See 

Taking  the  Cen.sus. — Anon. 
Marry,  I  lent  my  gossip  my  mare,  to  fetch  hame  coals. 

See  Carman's  Account  of  a  Lawsuit,  A. — Lyndsay. 
Martha,  when  will  John  be  home?     See  Daddy  Dumm. 

— Coale. 
Martial,    the    things    that    do    attain.     See    Means    to 

Attain  Happy  Life,  The. — Surrey. 
Martin  .said  to  nis  man.     See  Martin   to  His  Man. — 

Anon. 
Marvel    of    marvels,   if    I    my.self    .shall    behold.       See 

Marvel  of  Marvels. — Rossetti. 
Mary  Ann  was  a  hired  girl.     See  Sorrowful  Tale  of  a 

Servant  Girl. — Quill. 
Mary   Ann   was   alone   with   her   baby   in    arms.     See 

Mary  Ann's  Child. — Barnes. 
Mary  Ann  went  to  the  front  door,  last  evening,  to  see  if 

the  paper  had  come.     See  On  the  Ice. — Anon. 
Mary    Brown's   mother   is   a   very   nice   woman.     See 

Getting  Rid  of  her  Daughter's  Beau. — Anon. 
Mary  Ellen,  me  daughter,  is  as  foine  a  gerrel  as  yez 

could  foind.     See  Mary  Ellen  Attends  a  School  of 

Elocution. — Hoi)kins. 
Mary  entered  the  room  where  Burr  was  seated.     See 

Interview  between  Aaron  Burr  and  Mary  Scudder 

— Stowe. 
Mary   had   a  little  dog.     See   Brought   Back   by   the 

Butcher's  Boy. — {Washington  Nev^s.) 
Mary  had  a  little  lamb. — See  Mary's  Lamb. — Hale. 
Mary  haf  got  a  leetle  lambs  already.     See  Dot  Lambs 

vot  Mary  haf  Got. — Adams. 
Mary,  I  know  it  is  nine  o'clock.     See  Hasty  Opinions. — 

Denison. 
Mary!   I  want  a  lyre  with  other  strings.  See  To  Mrs. 

Unwin. — Cowper. 
Mary,   it   seems  useless  for  me  to   make  any  further 

effort.     See    Reclaimed;    or.    Sunshine    Comes    at 

Last. — McBride. 
Mary,  I've  just  got  home  from  the  post-office,  and  I've 

got  a  letter.     See  Uncle  John. — Anon. 
Mary  Jane  was  a  farmer's  daughter.     See  Mary  Jane. — 

Anon. 
Mary,  let's  kill  the  fatted  calf,  and  celebrate  this  day. 

See  No  Mortgage  on  the  Farm. — Yates. 
Mary    possessed    a    diminutive    sheep.     See    Mary's 

Diminutive  Sheep. — Anon. 
Mary  Richling.  the  heroine  of  the  story,  was  the  wife 

of  ,Iohn  Richling.     See  Dr.  Sevier  (Mary's  Night 

Ride).— Cable. 
Marv,    the    mother,    sits    on    the    hill.     See    same. — 

Mitchell. 
Mary  to  her  Saviour's  tomb.      See  Weeping  Mary. — 

Newton. 
Mary    took    her    singing-book.     See    Mary's    Singing- 

les.son. — Anon. 
Mary,  what  does  prosody  treat  of?     See  Scandinavia. — 

Anon. 
"Ma's  up-stairs  changing  her  dress,"  said  the  freckled- 
faced  little  girl.     See  Freckled-faced   Little  Girl, 

The.— (Boston  Globe.) 
Massachusetts   welcomes    this   grand    addition    to    the 

monuments.     See     Pilgrim     Mcmument,     The. — 

Brackett. 


753 


Massy 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Massy   saiks  alive,   Eb's  hum   again!"   says  Cousin 

Sally.     See  Kbenezer  on  a  Bust. — Anon. 
Ma.ster  I  have,  and  I  am  his  man.     See  Master  and  Man. 

— Anon. 
"Master  of  human  de^nies  am  II"     See  Opportunity. 

— Ingalls.  , 

Master  of  the  murmuring  courts.     See  Love  s  Nocturn. 

— Kossctti . 
Ma.ster  squirrel,  blithe  and  gay.     See  Master  Squirrel. — 

Anon. 
Master!  to  do  great  work  for  thee,  my  hand.     See  same. 

— Havergal. 
Master  went  a-hunting.     See  Master. — Doyle. 
Master,  which  is  worth  more,  man  or  woman?     See 

Bones  His  Own  Grandfather. — Anon. 
Matches  are   made  for  many   reasons.     See   Picture, 

The. — Anon. 
Matchless,  melting  eyes  of  brown.     See  Yours.;— W. 
Mated    to    the    Millennium — Time's    last    heir.     See 

Columbia. — Knowles. 
Maternal  lady  with  the  virgin  grace.     See  I.mes  on 

I^onardo  da  Vinci's  The  Virgin  of  the  Rocks. — 

Lamb. 
Matilda,  now  go  take  thy  bed.     See  Requiem,  A. — 

Davenport. 
Matildy,  jest  you  mind  them  hens.     See  Minding  the 

Hens. — Ixiring.  . 

Matron!  the  children  of  whose  love.     See  Living  Lost, 

The.— Bryant. 
Matted  with  yellow  grass  the  fields  lie  bare.     See  tirst 

Violet,  The.— Williams. 
Matthew,  Mark,   Luke  and  John.     See  White  Pater- 
noster, The. — Anon.  ,  ,,  „     , 
Maud  Muller  on  a  mild  March  day.     See  Maud  Muller  s 

Moving. — Anon. 
Maud  Muller  on  a  summer  day.     See  Bicycle  Girl,  The. 

The. — Ellison. 
Maud  Muller,  on  a  summer's  day.     See  Maud  Muller. — 

Whit  tier. 
Maud  Muller  on  von  schummer  day.      See  Maud  Muller 

(A  New  Version). — Anon. 
Maud  Muller  von  summer  afternoon.     See  Maud  Muller 

in  Dutch. — Anon. 
"Maud,   take  my   heart!"   cried  Algernon.     See   Her 

Answer. — C.  H. 
Mavourneen,    swate   isle.     See   St.    Patrick's    Day. — 

King. 
"Mawnin',"  said  Mistah  Souf  Win'.     See  Mis'  Rose. 

— R.  R.  K. 
Maxwelton['sl  braes  are  bonnie.     See  Annie  Laurie. — 

Douglas. 
May!     Be  thou  never  graced   with   birds  that   sing. 

See  In  Obitum  M.  S.  X".  Maij,  1614. — Browne. 
May,  blighted  by  keen  frosts,  passed  on  to  June.     See 

Bad  Year,  The. — Thomson. 
May  bought   golden  shoes  for  her  boy.     See  Golden 

Shoes. — Anon. 
May    comes    laughing,    crowned   with    daffodils.     See 

May. — Anon. 
May  de  Lord — He  will  be  glad  of  me.     See  Bright 

Sparkles  in  de  Churchyard. — Anon. 
May  his  pretty  Duke-ship  grow.     See  To  the  Duke  of 

York.— Herrick 
"May  I  kiss  you,  dear,"  a  youth  once  cried.     See  She 

Shook  her  Head. — Sawyer. 
"May  I   print  a  kiss  on  your  lips,"  I   said.     See  Full 

Edition,  A. — Lilienthal. 
Mayl  tell  your  fortune,  kind  sir?    See  Vanessa. — A.non 
May  in   the  woods  and   in   my  heart.     See  May   and 

Ix)ve. — Brooke. 
May  is  a  pious  fraud  of  the  almanac.     See  Under  the 

Willows. — Ixjwell . 
May  is  here!     I   know  there's  a  blossom  somewhere 

near.     See  May. — Rexford. 
May  is  here,  the  world  rejoices.     See  Polish  May  Song. 

— Anon. 
May  it  please  the  Court — Gentlemen  of  the  Jury.     See 

Pleading  Extraordinary. — Anon. 
May  it  plea.se  your  honors,  this  may  be  the  last  time. 

See  Tribute  to  the  Supreme  Court. — Johnson. 
May  it  please  your  Honours:     I  was  desired  by  one  of 

the  court  to  look  into  the  books.     See  On  the  Writs 

of  Assistance. — Otis. 
May  nevermore  a  selfish  wish  of  mine.     See  In  Unison. 

— McNight. 
May,  queen  of  blossoms.     See  Song  to  May. — Thurlow. 
May  shall  make  the  world  anew.     See  May. — Sherman. 
May  the  Babylonish  curse.     See  Farewell  to  Tobacco, 

A.— Lamb. 
May  the    glad    dawn    of    Easter    mom.     See    Easter 

Greeting. — Anon. 
May  this  glass  suffocate  me,  but  a  fine  girl.     See  Squire 

Thomhill's  .Argument. — Anon. 


May  time!     May.  time!     See  Cherry  Ripe. — Brown. 
May  you  never  say  of  a  brother  dear.     See    To   the 

Children. — Gary.  t      l    ■_    t^ 

May  you  wander  as  I  wander.     See  I^ah  the  Forsaken. 

—Daly. 
Maybe  a  month  ago,  was  it  not?  news  came  here.     See 

Ivhn  Ivanovitch. — Browning. 
Maybe  [or  maype]  dot  you  don't  [or  don'd]  rememper. 

See  Yawcob's  Dribulations. — Adams. 
Maybe  this  is  fun,  sitting  in  (Jie  sun.     See  Fishing. — 

Wilcox. 
Maype    [or    maybe]    dot    you    don'd   rememper.     See 

Yawcob's  Tribulations. — Adams. 
May's  a  word  'tis  sweet  to  hear.      See  To   June. — 

Hunt. 
Me  an'  Bert  and  Minnie  Belle.     See  Fool  Youngens.— 

Riley. 
Me  an'  Jones  was  down  the  mine.     I'd  never  liked  him 

much.     See  Me  an'  .Jones. — Meyers. 
Me  and  Billy's  in  the  woodshed;  Ma  said,  "Run  out 

doors  and  play."     See  Circle  Day. — Lincoln. 
Me  darlint,  it's  axin'  they  are.     See  Marry  Me,  Darlint, 

To-night.— Fink. 
Me  hither  from  moonlight.     See  Written  in  a  Nunnery 

Chapel . — Mangan . 
Me  mither    mend't     me    auld    breeks.     See     Robbie 

■Tamson's  Smiddie. — Anon. 
Me  so  oft  my  fancy  drew.     See  Choice,  The. — Wither. 
Me  thoghto  thus,  that  hyt  was  May.     See  Boke  of  the 

Duchesse,  The. — Chaucer. 
Me,  whom   no  muse  of  heavenly  birth   inspires.     See 

Description  of  his  Muse. — Churchill. 
"Meanest  boy  in  town,"  they  said.     See  Story  of  Dick,' 

The.— Stanton, 
Meantime,  the  moist   malignity  to  shun.     See  Art  of 

Preserving   Health,    Ttie    (Building    a    Home).— 

Armstrong. 
Meantime,    the    Spanish    cavalry    had    cleft    its    way 

through  the  city.     See  Fall  of  Antwerp,  The. — 

Motley. 
Meantime  we  shall  express  our  darker  purpose.     See 

King  Lear. — Shakespeare. 
Meanwhile  the  bubbling  stream  shall  court  the  shore. 

See  Rapture,  The. — ^Carew. 
Meanwhile  th-;  Son  of  God,  who   yet  some  days.     See 

Paradise  Regained. — Milton. 
Meanwhile  the  Tuscan  army,  right  glorious  to  behold. 

See  Horatius. — Macaulay. 
Measureless   liar!     Thou   hast   made   my   heart.     See 

Coriolanus. — Shakespeare. 
Medina,  the  Admiral,  finding  his  ships  scattering  fast. 

See  Westward.  Ho!  (Sea  Fight,  The).— Kingsley. 
Meditate  long,  meditate  humbly,  on  what  it  is  to  have 

a  Creator.     See  same. — Faber. 
Meek  creatures!     The  first  mercy  of  the  earth.     See 

Modern  Painters  (Mosses — Earth's  Humblest  Chil- 
dren).— Ruskin. 
Meek  Francis  lies  here,  friend:     Without  stop  or  stay. 

See  On  Bishop  Atterbury. — Prior. 
Meerschaum,   thing  with   amber   tip.     See  Dreamer's 

Pipe,  The. — (New  Orleans  Tim.es-Democrat.) 
Meester  Verris :     I  see  dot  mosd  efferpoty  wrides  some- 
thing.    See  "Sockery"  Setting  a  Hen. — Anon. 
Meet    me    at    breakfast    alone.     See    Red    Herrings. 

—  (Pvnch.) 
"Meet   me,"   she   said,   "by   the  orchard   wall."     See 

Left. — Chapman. 
Meeting  our  friend,  .Jean  Mocquard,  a  day  or  two  since. 

See    Monsieur   Mocquard  between   Two   Fires. — 

Anon. 
Mein  shveetheardt  haf  von  brudder  Hans,  von  wicked 

leedle  poy.     See  Mein  Katrine's  Brudder  Hans. — 

Anon. 
Mein  vriend!     Of  you  vant  id  dot  you  vould  heard. 

See  Gosling's  Wife  Snores. — Gosling. 
Melican  man  no  wan  tee  John  Chinaman  ally  mo'.     See 

John  Chinaman's  protest. — Anon. 
Melinda  Jane,  and  Kate  and  Nell.     See  Little  School- 
ma'am,  A. — Anon. 
Melinda  Miranda  Bottletop  was  a  young  lady  who  had 

neither      father     nor     mother.     See     Courtship, 

Marriage,  Separation  and  Re-union.— Anon. 
Mellow    the    moonlight    to    shine    is    beginning.    -See 

Spinning-wheel  Song,  The. — Waller. 
Melpomene  among  her  livid  people.     See  Two  Masks, 

The. — Meredith. 
Members  of  the  graduating  cla.ss:     You  have  come  to 

an    important    period    in    your    own    lives.     See 

Address  to  a  Graduating  Class  by  a  Teacher. — 

Anon. 
Memorial  Day,  or,   as  it  is  called  in   some  sections. 

Decoration    Day.     See   Memorial,   or   Decoration 

Day. — Anon. 


754 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Midget 


Memorial   Day  will   hereafter  gather  around   it.     See 

Soldier  Boy,  The. — Long. 
Memorials  are  always  evidences  of  the  highest  civiliza- 
tion.    See  Memory's  Message. ^Anon. 
Memory  cannot  linger  long.    See  So  Wags  the  World. — 

Cortissoz. 
Memory,  hither  come.       .See  Song:    "Memory,  hither 

come." — Blake. 
Memory  holds  a  sacred  place  for  songs  that   mother 

sung.     See  Mother's  Songs. — Smith. 
Men  and  .systems  change ;  and  in  no  century  has  change 

been   more   marked.      See    Reaction    against   the 

Classics,  The. — Anon. 
Men  and  Women : — You  must  not  expect  me  to  preface 

the  few  remarks  I  have  to  make  with  a  bow.     See 

Profes.sor  Gunter  on  Marriage. — Kyle. 
Men  begin  to  look  at  the  signs  of  the  weather.     See 

Summer  Rain. — Beecher. 
Men,  Brethren,  Fathers  and  Fellow-countrymen:     The 

attentive  gravity.     See  Boston  Massacre,  The. — 

Hancock. 
Men  call  you  fair,  and  you  do  credit  it.  See  Amoretti 

and  Epithalamion  (Sonnet:  "Men  call  you  fair." 

etc.). — Spenser. 
Men  don't  believe  in  a  devil  now,  as  their  fathers  used 

to  do.     See  Devil,  The. — Hough. 
Men,  dying,  make  their  wills,  but  wives.     See  Woman's 

Will.— Saxe. 
Men  give  me  credit  for  genius.     See  same. — Hamilton. 
Men  grew   sae   cauld,    maids    sae    unkind.     See   Blind 

Boy's  Pranks,  The.—Thom. 
Men  have  done  brave  deefls.     See  George  Nidiver.— 

E.  H. 
Men  have  entered  into  a  desire  of  learning  and  knowl- 
edge.    See  Worth  of  Knowledge. — Bacon. 
Men  lie  who  tell  us  what   no   books  can   teach.     See 

Fox. — Lytton. 
Men — not    slaves!      See    Maturnus'    Address    to    his 

Band. — Spencer. 
Men  of  action!     Men  of  might!     See  Battle  Song  for 

Freedom,  A. — Hamilton. 
Men  of  England,  heirs  of  Glory.     See  same. — Shelley. 
Men  of  E)ngland!  who  inherit.     See  Men  of  England. — 

("ampbell. 
Men  of  Gaul!  what  would  you  give  for  Freedom?     See 

Catiline   (Catiline  to    the   Gallic  Conspirators). — 

Croly. 
Men  of  God,  come  take  your  stand.     See  Men  of  God. — 

Hill. 
Men  of     Kent ;     England     of    England.      See     Queen 

Mary  (Wyatt's  Harangue  to  the  London  Oowd). 

— Tennyson. 
Men  of   purpose,   sound   the   tocsin.     See   Prohibition 

Bugle  Call. — Meriwether. 
Men  of  the  North  and  West.     See  same. — Stoddard. 
Men  of  the  North,  look  up!     See  Men  of  the  North. — 

Neal. 
Men  of  thought,  be  up  and  .stirring  Night  and  Day! 

See  ("lear  the  Way. — ^Mackay. 
Men  questioned    thus:     "Where   goes   our   life?"     See 

Three  Nazarites,  The. — Murray. 
Men  say,    C'olumbia.    we    shall    hear    thy    guns.     See 

America. — Dobell. 
Men  say  the  sullen  instrument.     See  In  the  Twilight. 

— Lowell. 
Men  take  the  pure  ideals  of  their  souls.     See  Ideal  is 

the  Real,  The. — Preston. 
Men  try  to  drown  the  floating  dead  of  their  own  .souls 

in  the  wine-cup.     See  same. — Prentice. 
Men! — whose    boast     it     is     that     ye   [ur.    we].       See 

Stanzas  on  Freedom  (Freedom). — Lowell. 
Men's  evil    manners  live   in   brass.     See  King   Henry 

VIII.  (Cardinal  Wolsey). — Shakespeare. 
Merciful   Heaven!     Thou  rather,   with  thy  sharp  and 

sulphurous  bolt.     See  Measure  for  Measure  (Mer- 
ciful Heaven). — Shakespeare. 
Mercy  love  us.     See  Comet,  The. — Burdette. 
Merrily    ring    the    Christmas    Bells.     See    Christmas 

Acrostic. — Anon. 
Merrily  swinging  cm  brier  and  weed.     See  Robert  of 

Lincoln. — Bryant. 
Merry   Christmas!  fair  maid,   with  the  lashes  brown. 

See  Grown-up  Land. — Anon. 
Merry  it  is  in  the  good  greenwood.     See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The  (Alice  Brand). — Scott. 
Merry  it  was  in  green  forest.     See  Adam  Bel,  (^lym  of 

the  Clough,  and  William  of  Cloudesle. — Anon. 
Merry  little  sunbeams.     See  Sunbeams. — Anon. 
Merry  mad-cap  on  the  tree.     See  Bobolink. — M'Lach- 

lan. 
Merry     Margaret,     as     midsummer   flower.     See  (Jar- 
lande  of   Laurell,  The  (To  Mistress  Margaret  Hus- 

sey). — Skelton. 


Merry  Mike  from  the  door  bounded  oflf  to  his  play. 

See  Merry  Mike. — Anon. 
Merry  smiles  and  entrancing  eyes.  See  Circe. — (Colvm- 

bia  Spectator. ) 
Merry   spring,   will   you   bring.     See   Merry   Spring. — 

Anon. 
Merry  the  children,  under  the  castle  wall.     See  "Merry 

Christmas. ' ' — Anon. 
Messages  of  God's  dear  love.     See  Easter  Flowers. — 

Denton. 
Methinks   I   see   his   august   image,   and   I   hear.     See 

Funeral   Oration  on  the   Death  of  General  Wash- 
ington (Father  of  his  t^ountry.  The). — Lee. 
Methinks    I    see    in    dreamland    fancies.     See    Dream 

Rambles. — .Tones. 
Mithinks  I  see  it  now,  that  one  solitary,  adventurous 

vessel.      See  First   Settlement   of    New   England, 

The   (Sufferings  and    Destiny  of  the  Pilgrims). — 

Everett . 
Methinks  it  is  good  to  be  here.     See  Lines  Written  in 

Richmond  Church-yard,  Yorkshire. — Knowles. 
Methinks  it   were  no   pain   to  die.     See  To   Death. — 

Gluck. 
Methinks  the  measure  of  a  man  is  not.     See  Methinks 

the  Measure. — -Hutchison. 
Methinks  the  soul  within  the  body  held.     See  Birth  and 

Death. — Wade. 
Methinks  the  world  seems  oddly  made.     See  Atheist 

and  Acorn,  The. — Anon. 
Methought,  as  I  beheld  the  rookery  pass.     See  Rookery 

The. — Turner. 
Methought  I  heard  a  voice.     See  Macbeth  (Rernorse). 

— Shakespeare. 
Methought    I    saw   my   late   espousi^d   Saint.     See  On 

his  Deceased  Wife. — Milton. 
Methought  I  saw  the  footsteps  of  a  throne.     See  Throne 

of  Death,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Methought    I    saw   the   grave    where    Laura   lay.     See 

Vision  upon  this  (i)nceit    of    the   Faerie  Queene, 

A. — Raleigh. 
Methought    I    stood    again,    at    dead    of    night.     See 

Ab.salom's  Vision. — Hillhouse. 
Methought  the  stars  were  blinking  bright.     See  Sailing 

beyond  Seas. — Ingelow. 
Methought  the  stream  of  Time  had  backward  rolled. 

See  Day  with  Homer,  A. — Smith. 
Michael,  awful  angel  o£  the  world's  last  session.     See 

Victor  Hugo. — Swinburne. 
Michael   McGaffaty — faith,   what  a  name.     See  Mike 

MeGaffaty's  Dog. — Melville. 
Michael,  the  leader  of  the  hosts  of  God.     See  Michael 

the  Archangel. — Craik. 
Mick  doing  lookout  duty  on  board  ship.     See  Character 

Stories. — Anon. 
Mickey    Free    was    a   devout    Catholic.     See     Charles 

O'Malley  (Mickey  Free  and  the  Priest). — I.«ver. 
Micky  Hickey,   £0,  7s,  6d.     See  Subscription  List. — 

Blake. 
Mid  April  seemed  like  some  November  day.     See  San 

Terenzo. — Lang. 
'Mid  Cambrian    heights    around     Dolgelly    vale.     See 

Literature  and  Nature. — Waddington. 
Mid  clamour  and  clang.     See  Song  of  the  Trip-hammer. 

— Collester. 
Mid  dewy  pastures  girdled  with  blue  air.     See  Saint 

■  Brigid. — Gilbert. 
'Mid  dim  and  solemn  forests,  in  the  dawning  chill  and 

gray.     See  .lohnston  at  Shiloh. — James. 
'Mid  fritters  and  lollipops  though  we  may  roam.     See 

Beignet  de  Pomme.  —  (Punch.) 
'Mid  Greenland's  polar  ice  and  snow.     See  Eskimelo- 

drama;  or.  The  Escapade  of  an  Eskama'id.— (Cornell 

Widow. ) 
'Mid  many  strangely  thrilling  tales.     See  Heroes  of  the 

Mines. — Jones. 
'Mid  pleasures  and  palaces  though  we  may  roam.     See 

Home,  Sweet  Home. — Payne. 
'Mid  the  broken  grass  of  a  trampled  glade.     See  After 

the  Skirmish. — Lyall. 
'Mid  the  flower-wreathed  tombs  I  stand.     See  IJecora- 

tion. — Higginson. 
'Mid  the  half-lit  air,  and  the  lonely  place.     See  In  the 

Graveyard. — (Marke. 
'Mid  the  roses  she  is  standing.     See  'Mid  the  Roses. — 

Gerould. 
Mid  the  tawdry  purple  and  tinsel  bright.     See  After  the 

Play. — Stevenson. 
Mid  the  white  spouses  of  the  Sacred  Heart.     See  To 

St.  Mary  Magdalen. — Hill. 
"Midas,  I  want  to  s'posen  a  case  to  you."     See  S'posen 

a  Case. — Anon. 
Midget  and  Fidget,  and  Dumpy  and  Dun.     See  Dog 

Kindergarten,  The. — Anon. 


755 


Midget 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Midget,  gypsy,  big-jved  elf,  little  Kitty  Clover."     See 

Kitty  ("lover.— Tnomson. 
Midnight  past!     Not  a  sound  of  aught.     See  Portrait, 

The.— Lytton. 
Midnight   sounded^ith  a  thin,   jangling  voice.     See 

Sentry  on  theTower,  The. — .\non. 
'Midst  tangled  roots  that  lined  the  wild  ravine.     See 

Dead  Drummer-boy,  The. — (Harper's  Weekly.) 
Midsummer  music   in    the  grass.     See   Golden-rod. — 

I..arcom. 
Mighty,  luminous,  and  calm.     See  Song  of  Palms. — 

O'Shaughnessy. 
Mighty  man's  will,  and  sweeps  a  world-wide  arc.     See 

I^aws  and  l^aw. — Weitzel. 
Mighty  of  heart,  mighty  of  mind — "magnanimous." 

See  True  Kings  of  the  Earth,  The. — Ruskin. 
Mild  is  the  parting  year,  and  sweet.     See  Autumn. — • 

Landor. 
Mild  offspring  of  a  dark  and  sullen  sire!     See  To  An 

Early  Primrose.  — White. 
Mildlv  through  the  m»ts  of  night.     See  Chinook. — 

Stafford. 
Miles   after   miles   of   graves.     See   Catacombs,    The. 

—  (Golden  Hourt.) 
Millburg  was  in  want  of  a  school-teacher.     See  Bridget 

as  a  School-teacher. — Adeler. 
Millee  Maudee  Muller.     See  Chinese  Version  of  "Maud 

Muller,"  A. — Smiley. 
Millennium  at  hand! — I'm  delighted  to  hear  it.     See 

Millennium. — Moore. 
Millions  of  massive  raindrops.     See  Rain. — Anon. 
"Milors  and  gentlenians,"  commences  the   Frenchntan. 

See  Charity  Dinner.  The  (Frenchman  Proposes  the 

Ladies,  A). — Mo.sely. 
Milors  and  gentlemen!     You  excellent  chairman,  M.  le 

Baron   de    Mount-Stuart.      See    Charity    Dinner, 

The  (Speech    of    M.    Hector  de    Longuebeau). — 

Mosely. 
Milton!   thou   shouldst   be   living  at   this   hour.     See 

London,  1802.- Wordsworth. 
Mimi,  do  you  remember.     See  Biftek  aux  Champig- 
nons.— Beers. 
Mind  of  man,  what  have  you  wrought.     See  Song  of  the 

Battle-ships. — Harper. 
Mind,  you  let  me  out  at  one.     Of  course.  I  know  you 

only  obey  orders.     See  In  Pitti. — La  Rame. 
"Mine."     A  gingham  apron — please  don't  stare.     See 

One  Summer. — J.  M.  L. 
Mine  are  the  night  and  morning.     See  Song  of  Nature. 

— Emerson. 
Mine  be  a  cot.  beside  the  hill.     See  Wish,  A. — Rogers. 
Mine  be  the  breezy  hill  that  skirts  the  down.     See 

Minstrel,     The;  or.  The    Progress    of     Genius. — 

Beattie 
Mine  cracious!     Mine  cracioua!     Shust  look  here  und 

see.     See  Dot  Baby  off  Mine. — Adams. 
Mine  eyes  are  dim;  what  hath  she  written?     Read. 

See  Queen  Mary. — Tennyson. 
Mine  eyes  have  seen  the  glory  of  the  coming  of  the 

Ix)rd.     See    Battle    Hymn    of    the    Republic. — 

Howe. 
Mine   eyes   be   closed,    but   open    left   the   cell.     See 

Paradise  Lo.st  (Adam  Describing  Eve). — Milton. 
Mine  eyes  to  mine  eyelids  cling  thickly.     See  Brandy 

and  Soda. — Howard. 
Mine  eyes  were  stiffened  with  the  last  night's  tears. 

See  Blessings  in  Disguise. — Anon. 
Mine  friends,  ven  first  you  come  here,  you  vas  poor. 

See  Dutch  Sermon,  A. — Anop. 
Mine  frients,  it  vas  a  pooty  schmart  feller.     See  Schake 

und  Agers. — Brown. 
Mine  honesty  and  I  begin  to  square.     See  Antony  and 

Cleopatra  ^Oracle). — Shakespeare. 
Mine  horse  is  shloped.     See  Deitsche  Advertisement. — 

Wolfe. 
"Mine  host,"  lay  there  at  dead  of  night.     See  Land- 
lord's La.st  Moments,  The. — Jones. 
Mine  is  a  strange,  wild  \or  wild,  strange]  story — the 

strangest  you  ever  heard.     See  Old  Actor's  Story, 

The.— Sims. 
Mine  name  ish  Hans  Krauples.     I  have  so  pigger  a 

family.     See     Dutchman's     Experience,     The. — 

Anon. 
Mingled  ate  with  fragrant  yearnings.     See  Blue  Moon- 
shine.— Stokes. 
Minnie  and  Winnie  slept  in  a  shell.     See  Minnie  and 

Winnie. — Tenny.son. 
Minnie,  let  us  act  up  like  the  big  girls  do.     See  Person- 
ating Older.*. — Anon. 
Minutely  trace  man's  life;  year  after  year.     See  Man's 

Life. — ("rabbe. 
Mira,  thine  eyes  are  those  twin-heavenly  powers.     See 

Stella  and  Mira. — Fletcher. 


Miraculous     genius,     grasping     at     the     whole!     See 

Richard  III.— Saltus. 
"Mirandy,    I'm   going   up    to   see   the   parson."     See 

Parson's  Conversion,  The. — Murray. 
Mirror  your  sweet  eyes  in   mine,  love.     See  Lover's 

Lullaby,  A.^Sterry. 
Mirry  Margaret,  as  mydsomer  flowre.     See  Garlande 

of  Laurell,  The  (To  Maystress  Margaret  Hussey). 

— Skelton. 
"Mis'  Jones  is  late  agin  to-day."     See  Village  Sewing 

Society,  The. — Anon. 
Misfortune    to    have    lived    not    knowing    thee!     See 

Emerson. — Alcott. 
Mislike  me  not  for  my  complexion.     See  Merchant  of 

Venice,  The. — Shakespeare. 
Miss  Agnes   had  two  or  three   dolls,  and  a  box.     See 

Hoyden,  The. — Turner. 
"Miss  Agnes,"  we  always  had  called  her.     See  Miss 

Agnes. — Ewing. 
Miss  .\lpha,  though  she  led  her  class.     See  Naughty 

Greek  Girl,  The.— Anon. 
Miss  Annabel  McCarty  was  invited  to  a  party.     See 

First  Party,  The. — Pollard. 
Miss  Chrysanth'um  gave  a  party.     See  Foolish  Flowers, 

The. — Richards. 
Miss   Dora   Delaine   of   West   Livingston    Place.     See 

Similia  Similibus  Curantur. — Newell. 
"Miss  Emersonia  Osgoodson  will  now  favor  the  com- 
pany with  a  recitation."     See  "Twinkle,  Twinkle, 

Little  Star." — Anon. 
Miss  Flora     McFlim.sey,     of     Madison     Square.     See 

Nothing  to  Wear. — Butler. 
Miss  Flora !  the  cook  has  given  warning.     See  Romance 

of  the  War,  A. — Anon. 
Miss  Furbelow  is  all  the  go.     See  Coming  Woman,  The. 

— Kavanaugh. 
Miss  Helen  was  always  too  giddy  to  heed.     See  Giddy 

Girl,  The.— Turner. 
Miss  Julia  was  induced  to  give  a  taste  of  her  musical 

powers.     See     Fashionable     Singing. — -(Baltimore 

Elocutionist.) 
Miss  Kindly  is  aunt  to  everybody.     See  Aunt  Kindly. 

— Parker. 
Miss  Kitty  was  rude  at  the  table  one  day.      See  Lost 

Pudding.  The. — Turner. 
Miss  Lucy    was    a    charming    child.     See    Richard's 

Reformation. — Turner. 
Miss  Maggie,  you're  to   come   down  this   minute.    See 

Mill  on  the  Floss,  The  (Maggie  Cuts  her  Hair). — 

Eliot. 
Miss  Marshall   is   late   this   morning,    isn't    she?     See 

Keystone. — Rook. 
Miss  Medairy  Dory-Ann.    See  Session  with  Uncle  Sid- 
ney. A  (Imperious  Angler,  The). — Riley. 
Miss  Melinda  Parkinson  had  come  down  to  New  York. 

See  City  Mystery,  A. — Randolph. 
Miss  Ophelia  began  with  Topsy  by  taking  her  into  a 

chamber.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin   (Topsy's  First 

Lesson). — Stowe. 
Miss  Pallas  Eudora  von  Plurky.     See  Rhyme  of  the 

Time,  A. — Anon. 
Miss  Rosewarne,  I  hope  you  will  believe  me  when  I 

say.     See    When    Angry,    Count    a    Hundred. — 

Cavazzi. 
Miss  Simmons  had  on  her  new  bonnet  to-day.     See 

Miss  Simmons'  New  Bonnet. — Raymond. 
Miss  Sophy,    one   fine    summer   day.     See   Ambitious 

Sophy. — Turner. 
Miss,  will  you  accept  these  flowers?     See  Conversation 

under  Difficulties. — Anon. 
Missal   of  the   Gothic   Age.     See  To   a  Missal   of  the 

Thirteenth  Century. — Dobson. 
Misshapen,  black,  unlovely  to  the  sight.     See  Bulb.  A. 

— Munkittrick. 
Mist  clogs  the  sunshine.     See  Consolation. — Arnold. 
Mr.  Adam  Baines  is  a  little  gray  about  the  temples. 

See  Ride  by  Night,  The. — Thomson. 
Mr.  and  Mrs.   Blinks  were  an  argumentative  couple. 

See    How   Mr.  Blinks   Named    the   Baby. — How- 
ard. 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Bolivar  Pyke  had  been  married  about  six 

weeks.     See  Their  First  Unpleasantness.— Anon. 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Jones  had  just  finished  their  breakfast. 

SeeBaby's  First  Tooth,  The.— Bailey. 
Mr.  Bertram,     paralytic,     and     almost     incapable     of 

moving.     See  Guy  Mannering  (Death  of  Mr.  Ber- 
tram, The). — Scott. 
Mr.  Blake  was  a  regular  out-and-out  hardened  sinner. 

See  Lost  Mr.  Blake. — Gilbert. 
Mr.  Bones,   and   Mr.   Tambo,   I   am   about   to  open   a 

Museum.     See  Curiosities  for  a  Museum. — Anon. 
Mr.  Bones,  we  are  having  fine  weather.     See  End  Gag. 

— Anon. 


756 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Mr.  President 


Mr.  Bowser  doesn't  intend  to  let  sickness  or  death  get 

ahead  of  us.     See  Mr.  Bowser  Takes  Precautions. 

— Lewis. 
Mr.  Bresident  and  Mr.  Schendlemans:     I  haf  me  much 

feel  got  dot  you  meet  me  on  dis  grade  ewent.     See 

German  Anniversary  Speech  of  Herr  Hans  Yager, 

'Yh.e.-—(Ke7ituckn  State  Journal.) 
Mr.  Bret  Harte  once  told  so  charming  a  story  about  a 

bear.     See  Bear  at  Appledore,  The. — -Thaxter. 
Mr.  Brooks,  my  opinion  is  that  that  Western  Union 

stock.     See  Stockade. — Anon. 
Mr.  Brown  is  one  of  our  most  enterprising  merchants. 

See  Mr.  Brown  has  his  Hair  Cut. — Anon. 
"Mr.  Brown,  you  don't  want  to  buy  a  first-rate  wooden 

leg,  do  you!"     See  Wooden  Leg,  The. — -Adeler. 
Mr.  Busyman  Piper  a  family  had.     See  That  "Fellow" 

who  Came  on  Sundays. — Dodge. 
Mr.  Chairman  and    Fellow-Democrats — I  take  this  to 

be  a  dress-parade  of  the  boys  in  the  trenches.     See 

Star  of  Democracy,  The. — Watterson. 
"Mr.    Chairman    and    Gentlemen: — I    plead   guilty    to 

the    soft    impeachment."     See    Tribute    to    East 

Tennessee,  A. — Haynes. 
Mr.  Chairman  and  Gentlemen,  if  it  be  true,  that  I  have 

been   so   fortunate  as  to   contribute.     See  After- 

Dinner  Speech. — Bulwer. 
Mr.  Chairman  and  Gentlemen  of  the  Convention: — I 

would  be  presumptuous,  indeed.     See  Free  Silver 

Coinage. — Bryan. 
Mr.  Chairman:     I  antagonize  the  pending  treaty.     See 

Against  Expansion. — Johnson. 
Mr.  Chairman,  I  feel  most  deeply  the  rejection  of  the 

Reform  Bill.     See  Rejection  of  the  Reform  Bill. — 

Smith. 
Mr.  Chairman,   it   has  been  advanced  as  a  principle. 

See  Speech  on  the  Compromises  o.'  the  Constituti3n 

^General    Govei-nment    and    the    States,  The). — 

Hamilton. 
Mr.  Chairman,  Ladies  and  Gentlemen:     On  an  impor- 
tant occasion  in  the  life  of  the  Master.     See  Better 

Part,  The. — Washington. 
Mr.  Chairman,    our   confederacy    has    within    its    vast 

limits    a    great    diversity    of    interests.     See    On 

American  Industry. — -Clay. 
Mr.  Chairman : — The    resolution    proposed    providing 

the  means  to  defray  the  expenses  of  a  mission. 

See  America's  Duty  to  Greece  — Clay. 
Mr.  Chairman :     When  I  pass  by  the  collective  parties. 

See  Dangerous  Legislation. — McDowell. 
Mr.  Crier,  you  may  open  the  court.     See  Scene  in  Court, 

A. — Anon. 
Mr.  Easyman  sat  in  his  padded  chair.     See  What  is 

it  to  Me?— Shillaber. 
Mr.  Ferdinand    Plum     was   a    grocer  by  trade.      See 

Shadow  on  the  Blind,  The. — Anon. 
Mr.    Fillisy    came  home   in    hot    haste.      See   Burglar 

Alarm,  The  (Mrs.  Fillisy's  Burglar-alarm). — Arnold. 
Mr.  Finney  had  a  turnip.     See  Mr.  Finney's  Turnip. — 

Anon. 
Mr.  Fogg  has  a  strong  tendency  to  exaggeration  in  con- 
versation.    See  Mr.   Fogg's  Account  of  a  Scien- 
tific Experiment. — Anon. 
Mr.  Forbes  is  rather  a  nervous  man,  and  it  is  not  sur- 
prising.    See     Driving     the     Cow. — (Burlington 

Hawkeye.) 
Mr.  George   Adair   rents   houses   to   thirteen   hundred 

tenants.     See  Prohibition  in  Atlanta. — Grady. 
Mr.  Hastings,  in  the  magnificent  paragraph  which  con- 
cludes   this    communication.     See    Imp  'aahment 

of  Warren  Hastings  (Character  of  Justice). — -Sheri- 
dan. 
Mr.  Hawkins  he  left  the  app'intin'.     See  Our  Weddin'- 

day. — Greene. 
Mr.  Hawkins,  Q.  C,  engaged  in  a  cause  before  the  late 

Lord  Campbell.     See  Rowland  for  an  Oliver,  A. 

—  {Jest  Book,  The.) 
"Mr.  Hoffenstein,"  .said    Herman,  as  he    folded  up  a 

pair  of  pants.     See  Hoffenstein's  Bugle. — (A''.  O. 

Times-Democrat. ) 
Mr.  John  Winfield,  proprietor  of  the  Winfield  Ranch. 

See  Nine  Cent  Girls,  The. — Bunner. 
Mr.  Johnson,  can  you  tell  me  why  a  baby  should  neber 

be  taken  into  a  painter's  studio.     See  Tambo  on 

Babies. — Anon. 
Mr.  Johnson,  did  you  hear  about  my  getting  discharged 

from  de  hotel?     See  Waiting  to  see    Him  off. — 

Anon.  N 

Mr.  Johnson,  hab  you  eber  seen  my  gal?     See  Musical 

Mary  .lane. — Anon. 
Mr.  Jonathan  Bangs  was  an  honest  old  man.     See  Mr. 

Jonathan  Bangs. — Cole. 
Mr.  Jonsing,  did  you  eber  go  out  on  one  ob  dose  little 

nic-pics?     See  Bones  at  a  Pic-nic. — Anon. 


Mr.  Jonsing,  do  you  know  de  difference  between  a 
donkey  and  a  postage  stamp?  See  Tambo's 
Postage  Stamp  Gag. — Anon. 

Mr.  Jonsing,  whar  did  you  spend  your  holidays  last 
summer?     See  Bones  goes  a-Hunting. — Anon. 

Mr.  Lowell  says  somewhere  that  the  art  of  writing. 
See  Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. — Haweis. 

Mr.  Middlerib  paused  with  his  coffee-cup  raised  half 
way  to  his  lips.  See  Mrs.  Middlerib's  Letter. 
— {Burlington  Hawkeye.) 

Mr.  Mildmay. — Bravissimo!  See  Still  Waters  Run 
Deep. — -Taylor. 

Mr.  Mills,  the  minister,  was  a  stranger.  See  Mrs. 
Brown's  Husbands. — Anon. 

"Mister,  no  doubt  you  have  all  the  learnin'.  See  Slim 
Teacher  of  Cranberry  Gulch,  The. — Anon. 

Mr.  Orator  Puff  had  two  tones  in  his  voice.  See 
Orator  Puff. — Moore. 

Mr.  Percival  Satterlee  was  anxiously  considering  a 
communication.  See  Halliday  Hunt  Breakfast, 
The.— Stoddart. 

Mr.  Pickwick,  in  company  with  a  japanned  candle- 
stick. See  Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Mr.  Pickwick's 
Romantic  Adventure  with  a  Middle-aged  Lady  in 
Yellow  Curl-papers). — -Dickens 

Mr.  Pickwick's  apartments  in  Goswell  street.  See 
Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Mr.  Pickwick  in  a  Dilemma) . 
— Dickens. 

Mr.  Plum  was  retiring  to  rest  one  night.  See  Shadow 
on  the  Blind,  The.— Anon. 

Mr.  President  and  Fellow-Citizens  of  New  York: — The 
facts  with  which  I  shall  deal.  See  Cooper  Insti- 
tute Address. — Lincoln. 

Mr.  President  and  Gentlemen:  It  would  in  some 
measure  relieve  my  embarrassment.  See  Address 
at  the  Harvard  Alumni  Dinner. — Washington. 

Mr.  President,  and  Gentlemens  of  this  here  lyceum. 
See  Egyptian  Debate. — -Burnett. 

Mr.  President,  as  the  architect  selected  by  your  com- 
mittee. See  Presentation  of  the  Keys  of  a  New 
School  Building  by  the  Architect. — Anon. 

Mr.  President,  Classmates,  Ladies  and  Gentlemen.  See 
Du-x's  Speech. — {Phoenix,  The.) 

Mr.  President,  do  men  propose  to  us  seriously.  See 
Free  Press,  A. — -Baker. 

Mr.  President,  eloquent  allusions  have  been  made  here 
to  the  ominous  condition  of  Europe.  See  On  Pre- 
cedents in  Government. — Cass. 

Mr.  President, — For  the  second  time  in  this  generation. 
See  Memorial  Address  on  the  Life  and  Character 
of  James  A.  Garfield  (Eulogy  on  Garfield). — Blaine. 

Mr.  President,  Friends:  Ninety-seven,  about  to  die, 
salutes  you !     See  Class  Will. — Anon. 

Mr.  President. — Happiness  is  like'a  crow  perched  upon 
the  neighboring  top.  See  Speech  on  Happiness. 
— Anon. 

Mr.  President,  I  am  coming  very  close.  See  True 
Americani  sm.  ^Lodge . 

Mr.  President:  I  am  here  by  command  of  silent  lips. 
See  Affairs  in  Cuba  (Plea  for  Cuba,  A).— Thurs- 
ton. 

Mr.  President,  I  am  not  ashamed  to  say  in  any  pre.sence. 
See  New  England  Character. — Blaine. 

Mr.  President, — I  am  oppressed  with  a  sense  of  the  im- 
propriety. See  Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of 
Unio.T  Soldiers  (Decoration  Day  Address). — Gar- 
field. 

Mr.  President,  I  have  designedly  dwelt  so  long  on  the 
probable  effects.  See  Plea  for  the  Union. — 
Seward. 

Mr.  President,  I  have  thus  stated  the  reasons  of 
my  di.ssent  to  the  doctrines.  See  Reply  to 
Hayne,  The  (Liberty   and  Union). — Webster. 

Mr.  President,  I  regret,  speaking  for  myself.  See  True 
War  Spirit,  The.— Hoar. 

Mr.  President,  I  shall  entes  on  no  encomium  upon  Mas- 
sachusetts. See  Reoly  to  Hayne,  The  (Tribute  to 
Ma.ssachusetts) . — -Webster, 

Mr.  President,  I  shall  not  acknowledge  that  the  hon- 
orable member  goes  before  me.  See  Reo'y  to 
Hayne,  The  (South  Carolina  and  Massachusetts). 
— Webster. 

Mr.  President:  I  should  have  much  preferred  to  hear 
\or  I  should  much  prefer  to  have  heard]  from 
every  member  on  this  floor.  See  Constitution 
and  the  Union,  The  (Peaceable  Secession). — Web- 
ster. 

President:  if  the  Senate  is  not  responsible.     See 
Great  Britain  and  America. — Wolcott. 
President,  in  the  Committee  on  Foreign  Relations. 
See  Cuba. — Frye. 

President,  it  is  gravely  argued.     See  Monroe  Doc- 
trine, The. — Thurston. 


Mr. 
Mr. 
Mr. 


757 


Mr.  President 


A\  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECTTATIOXS 


Mr.  President:     It  is  natural  to  man  to  indulge  in  the 
illusions  of  ho|>e.     See  Speech  in  the  Virginia  Con- 
vention, 1775.  —  Henry. 
Mr.  President,  l^adies  and  Gentlemen: — The  wi.«e  man 

Solomon.     Seo^entennial  Speech. — Mclntyre. 
Mr.  President,  men  mu.<!t    have    liberty.     See    Affair.- 

in  Cuba  (Cuca). — Thurston. 
Mr.  President: — No  man  thinks  more  highly  than  I  do 
of  the  patriotism.  See  Si-eech  in  the  Virginia 
Convention  (Call  to  Arms,  The). — Henry. 
Mr.  President:  On  the  great  questions  which  occupy 
us.  See  Natural  Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich, 
The  (Fraudulent  Party  Outcries). — Webster. 

Mr.  President,  public  men  must  certainly  be  allowed  to 
change  their  opinions.  See  Constitution  atid  the 
Union,  The  (On  Sudden  Political  Conversions). — ■ 
Webster. 

Mr.  President :  The  eagle  is  a  noble  bird.  See  Ameri- 
can Eagle,  The. — Anon. 

Mr.  President— The  great  events  on  which  niy  resigna- 
tion depended.  See  General  Washington's  Resig- 
nation.— Washington. 

Mr.  President,  the  State  in  whose  representation  I  bear 
apart.  See  Comi)romis3  Measures,  The  (Ma.ssa- 
chu.vetts  and  the  Union). — Webster. 

Mr.  President,  the  subject'  afore  the  meetin'  for  debate 
this  evenin'  is  Newspapers.  See  Crab  Village 
Lyceum. — Anon. 

Mr.  President,  the  uneasy  desire  to  augment  our  ter- 
ritory. See  Unjust  National  Acquisitions. — Cor- 
win. 

Mr.  President: — These  are  the  culminating  hours  of  a 
closing  scene.  See  Eulogy  on  Representative 
Bums  of  Missouri. — Ingalls. 

Mr.  President,  this  question  of  our  duty.  See  America's 
Mission. — Beveridge. 

Mr.  President,  we  had  a  short  discussion  the  other  day 
upon  the  subject.  See  Monroe  Doctrine,  The. — 
Cass. 

Mr.  President,  we  must  distinguish  a  little.  See  En- 
mity toward  Great  Britain. — Choate. 

Mr.  President: — When  the  mariner  has  been  tossed. 
See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The. — Webster. 

Mr.  Secretary,  what  is  our  business  with  these  lads? 
See  Brave  Boston  Boys. — Harrison. 

"Mr.  Shaker, "sed  I,  "you  see  before  you  a  Babe  in  the 
Woods,  so  to  speak."  See  Artemus  Ward  Visits 
the  Shakers. — Brown. 

Mr.  Shbeaker  und  Shendlemen  of  der  Shoory.  See 
Pretzel's  Speech  before  the  Illinois  Assembly. — 
Pretzel. 

Mr.  Skinner,  a  respectable  middle-aged  gentleman.  See 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Skinner. — Hardwick. 

Mr.  Smith  is  a  quiet,  respectable  citizen  of  Frost  Hol- 
low.    See  Night  of  Horror,  A. — Anon. 

Mister  Socrates  Snooks,  a  lord  of  creation.  See  Soc- 
rates Snooks. — Anon. 

Mr.  Speaker, — Among  all  the  people  of  the  univer.se. 
See  A^inst  the  Succession  of  Richard  Oomwell 
to  the  Protectorate. — Vane. 

Mr.  Speaker:  As  to  those  great  trunk-lines.  See 
Duluth. — Knott. 

Mr.  Speaker,  I  have  one  word  to  say,  before  I  sit  down, 
to  the  gentleman  from  Kentucky.  See  Cumber- 
land Road,  The. — Corwin. 

Mr.  Speaker:  I  rise  to  ask  you  to  place  in  the  new 
House  of  Representatives.  See  Historic  Codfish, 
The. — Irwin. 

Mr.  Speaker,  it  behooves  the  piety  as  well  as  the  wis- 
dom of  Parliament.  See  Folly  of  Religious  Per- 
secution, The. — Anon. 

Mr.  Speaker, — Now,  there  has  been  a  great  deal  of 
bombast  here  to-day.  See  Buncombe  Speech. — 
Anon. 

Mr.  Speaker:  The  Address  to  the  King,  upon  the  dis- 
turbances in  North  America.  See  Bold  Predic- 
tions.— Wilkes. 

Mr.  Speaker:  The  mingled  tones  of  sorrow,  like  the 
voice  of  many  waters.  See  Death  of  John  Q. 
Adams. — Holmes. 

Mr.  Speaker:  Whether  this  measure  shall  prevail. 
See  Tribute  to  the  Men  of  Maine,  A.— Cousins. 

Mr.  Speaker,  why  .shall  we  destroy  this  Government? 
See  Why  Destroy  this  Government?— Nelson. 

Mr.  Spectator: — Women  are  armed  with  fans  as  men 
with  swords.  See  Spectator,  The  (Fan-drill,  The). 
— Addison. 

"Mister,"  the  little  fellow  said.  See  My  Bread  on  the 
Waters. — Catlin. 

Mr.  Thikhed  called  on  Miss  Brightlooks  last  Monday. 
See  Thikhed's  New  Year's  Call. — Anon. 


Mr.  Timothy  Figg  got  lost  in  the  fog.     See  Rescue  of 
Mr.  Figg,  The. — .\non. 


Mr.  Thorpe  had  lost   his  position  at  Jonathan   Black 

and  Brothers.    See  Dorothy's  Auction. — Plympton. 

Mr.  Travers    had    told    me    mornamillion    times.     See 

Jimmy  Brown's  Dog. — Alden. 
Mr.  Tulkinghorn,  the  lawyer,  smoke-dried  and  faded. 
See  Bleak  House  (Tulkinghorn,  the  Lawyer,  and 
Mademoiselle  Hortense). — Dickens. 
Mr.  Watkins  is  a  gentle  old  man,  living  on  Ninth  .Ave- 
nue.    See   Fourth   of   July,    The. — {Detroit    Free 
Press.) 
Mr.  Watson!     Mr.  Watson!     I  wonder  why  Mr.  Wat- 
son doesn't  come.     See  Striking  Oil. — McBride. 
Mr.  Weller  having  obtained  leave  of  absence  from  Mr. 
Pickwick.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Elder   Mr. 
Weller  Delivers  some  Critical  Sentiments  Respect- 
ing Literary  Composition,  The). — Dickens. 
Mrs.  B.  is  my  wife;  and  her  alarms  are  those  produced 

by  a  delusion.     See  Mrs.  B's  Alarms. — Payn. 
Mrs.  Catherine  Lavina  Fairweather;  that  must  mean 

the  old  lady.     See  Deaf  Uncle  Zed. — Anon. 
Mrs.  Centre  was  jealous.     See  Schooling  a  Husband. — • 

Anon. 
Mrs.  Chertsy    loved    to    curtsy.     See    Curtsy,    The. — 

Meyers. 
Mrs.  Chub  was  rich  and  portly.     See  Jupiter  and  Ten. 

—Fields. 
Mrs.  Corney,  the  matron  of  the  workhouse,  sat  herself 
down    before  a   cheerful    fire.     See  Oliver   Twi.«t 
((,'ourtship  of  Mr.  Bumble  and  Mrs.   Corney,  The). 
— Dickens. 
"Mrs.  Gray  has  sent  home  my  new  bonnet,  Bes.sy." 
See  Mill  on    the   Floss.   The  (Aunt   Pullet's  Bon- 
net).—Eliot. 
Mrs.  Guptill  was  a  woman  who.     See  Mrs.  Guptill  Gels 

Ahead  of  the  Grip. — Smith. 
Mrs.  June  is  ready  for  school.     See  Mrs.  June's  Pros- 
pectus.— Cot)lidge. 
Mrs.  Kemble  often  used  to  say  of  people  who  met  her. 

See  Frances  Anne  Kemble. — James. 
"Mrs.  Leo  Hunter,  The  Den,  Eatanswille."     See  Pick- 
wick Papers,  The  (Mrs.  Leo  Hunter). — Dickens. 
Mrs.  Lofty  keeps  a  carriage.     See  Mrs.   Lofty  and  I. — 

Anon. 
Mrs.  Luvoffame    was    studying   elocution.     See    Trial 

at  Elocution,  A. — Head. 
"Mrs.  M'Gra. — Tear-an'-ages,  sure  I  need  not  be  treat- 
ing her  that  way."     See  Charles  O'Malley  (Mickey 
Free's  Letter  to  Mrs.  M'Gra). — Lever. 
Mrs.  McShane  decided  one  day.     See  Mrs.  McShane's 

Shopping  Expedition. — Smith. 
Mrs.  Marigold  is  a  dear  old  lady.     See  Mrs.  Marigold. — 

Anon. 
Mrs.  Mulkittle  started  on  a  visit  to  friends  living  in  the 

suburbs.     See  Inquisitive  Boy,  The. — -Anon. 
Mrs.  Nipkin,    West    Twenty-fifth    Street,   has    rooms. 

See  What  Will  Become  of  the  Children. — Croly. 
"Mistress  of  gods  and  men!     I  have  been  thine."     See 

Pygmalion. — Scott. 
Mrs.  Opie,  in  her  "Illustrations  of  Lying."     See  Fatal 

Falsehood,   The. — Anon. 
Mistress  Penelope  Penwick,  she.     See  Ballad  of  Sweet 

P.,  The.— Cloud. 
Mrs.  Perkins,  it's  a  burning  shame — so  it  is — the  cross 
old   curmudgeon.     See   How   She   Cured   Him. — 
Anon. 
Mrs.  Piper  was  a  widow.     See  Mrs.  Piper. — Douglas. 
Mrs.  Pussy,  sleek  and  fat.     See  Mrs   Pussy. — -Anon. 
Mrs.  Rogers  lay  in  her  bed.     See  Doctor's  Story,  "The. 

— {Medical  World.) 
Mixed  with  the  masque  of  death's  old  comedy.     See 

Tht-ophile  Gautier. — Swinburne. 
Moan,  moan,  ye  dying  gales!     See  same. — Neele. 
Moans  the  bay.     See  Dirge  of  Gael,  The. — Sigerson. 
Moderation  is  counseled.     See  Arraignment  of    Rum, 

The. — Foster. 
Moderation!  You,  Mr.   Renwick,  counsel  moderation. 

See  Covenanters  and  Charles  Stuart,  The. — Gait. 
Mohammed,  Emir  of  Granada,  kept.    See  Emir's  Game 

of  Chess,  The. — {London Speaker.) 
Mohammed,  the  divine,  ere  yet   his   name.     See  Mo- 
hammed.— Meredith. 
Mollie  had  a  little  ram  as  black  as  a  rubber  shoe.     See 

MoUie's  Little  Ram. — Anon. 
"Molly,  and  Maggie,  and  Alice."     See  Hold  Fast  what 

I  Give  You. — -Warner. 
Mollie  Muldoon  was  an  Irish  girl.    See  Mollie   Muldoon. 

— Anon. 
Momentous   to   himself   as  I    to   me.     See  Insight. — 

Watson. 
Moments  there  are  in  life — alas,  how  few!     See  same. 

— Southey 
Monarch  of  floods!     How  .shall  I  approach  thee?     See 
Niagara. — Anon 


758 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Mother 


Monday's  bairn  is  fair  in  the  face.  See  Birthday  Week, 
The. — Anon. 

Monday's  child  is  fair  of  face.  See  Days  of  Birth. — 
Anon. 

'Mongst  all  your  virtues.     See  Charity. ^Middleton. 

Monkey,  little  merry  fellow.  See  Monkey,  The. — 
Howitt. 

Monseigneur.  monseigneur!  does  your  Grandeur  know 
where  the  plate  basket  is?  See  Le^  Miserp.bles 
(Bishop's  Silver  Candlesticks,  The). — Hugo. 

"Monsieur  Adam,  he  wakes  [or  vake]  up."  See  French- 
man's Account  of  the  Fall,  A. — Anon. 

Monsieur  Adam  was  all  alone  in  ze  garden.  See  Mme. 
Eef. — Anon. 

Monsieur  ("habot  was  a  Frenchman  of  high  connections. 
See  Frenchman's  Revenge,  The. — Anon. 

Monsieur  McGint(5  allait  en  bas  jusqu'au  fond  du  mer. 
See  Monsieur  McGintf^. — Anon. 

Monsieur  the  Cure,  down  the  street.  See  Curt^'s  Pro- 
gress, "The. — Dobson. 

Monsieur  the  Under-prefect  is  on  his  rounds.  See 
Under-prefect  The. — ^Anon. 

Mont  Blanc  is  the  monarch  of  mountains.  See  Man- 
fred.— Byron. 

Montcalm  and  his  chief  officers  held  a  council  of  war. 
See  Battle  of  the  Plains  of  Abraham,  The. — Park- 
ham. 

Monuments  and  birthday  anniversaries  should  be  com- 
memorative. See  Obligations  of  Wealth,  The. — 
Anon. 

Mony  a  time  and  often  I  had  heard  of  play  acting.  See 
Mansie  Waugh's  First  and  Last  Play. — Moir. 

"Mooly  cow,  mooly  cow,  home  from  the  wood."  See 
Cow-boy's  Song,  The.— Wells. 

Moon,  moon,  where  are  you  going?  See  Child's  Good- 
night, The. — Holmes. 

Moon  of  Harvest,  herald  mild.  See  To  the  Harvest 
Moon. — White. 

Moon  so  bright,  stars  alight.  See  Skating  Song. — War- 
burton. 

Moon,    so  round  and  yellow.     See  same. — Anon. 

"Mordaunt,"  she  called  him.  In  a  novel  book.  See 
Baby's  Name,  The. — Anon. 

More  can  truthfully  be  said  to  the  praise  of  the  worthies, 
the  Pilgrims.  See  Fidelity  to  God  is  Fidelity  to 
Man. — Gordon. 

More  in  the  garden  grows  than  what  is  sown.  See 
same. — Bonar. 

More  love  or  more  disdain  I  crave.  See  Against  In- 
di  (Terence .  — Webbe. 

More  love  to  Thee,  O  Christ!     See  same. — Prentiss. 

More  men  are  trying  to  be  prosperous  than  are  trying 
to  be  good.  See  Pursuit  of  Character  and  Service. 
— Brooks. 

More,  more!  My  cry  is  never  stilled.  See  Grave,  The. 
— Davenport. 

More  of  good  than  we  can  tell.  See  Temperance. — 
Anon. 

More  servants  wait  on  man.     See  Man. — Herbert. 

More  she  had  spoke,  but  yawn'd— all  nature  nods.  See 
Dunciad,  The. — Pope. 

More  shy  than  the  shy  violet.  See  Quaker  Ladies. — 
Cortissoz. 

More  than  a  century  gone  to-day.  See  Elopement  in 
Seventy-five. — Anon. 

More  than  I  have  said,  loving  countrymen.  See  Kin? 
Richard  IIL  (Earl  of  Richmond  to  his  Army, 
The) . — Shakespeare. 

More  than  most  fair,  full  of  the  living  fire.  See  Amo- 
retti  and  EpithalamLon  (Sonnet:  "More  than  most 
fair,"  etc.). — Spenser. 

More  than  the  soul  of  ancient  song  is  given.  See  Poet 
of  To-day,  The. — Lippincott. 

More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer.  See  Morte 
d'Arthur  ("More  thing.s  are  wrought,"  etc.). — 
Tennyson. 

Moreover,  brethren,  I  declare  unto  you  the  gospel. 
See  First  Corinthians,  XV. — Bible. 

Mor.T  is  the  time  to  wak*.     See  Mom. — Gray. 

Mornin',  sir.  I  see  you  want  a  boy.  See  Brave 
Woman,  A. — Anon. 

Morning!  all  speedeth  well:  the  bright  sun.  See  Ship 
on  Fire,  The. — Bateman. 

Morning!  Baby  on  the  floor.  See  Mother's  Diary, 
A. — Anon. 

Morning  dawns  on  the  heights  of  Sedan.  See  Rider- 
less Steeds,  The. — Anon. 

Morning,  evening,  noon  and  night.  See  Boy  and  the 
Angel,  The. — Browning. 

Morning,  sir!  Good-morning.  See  Train  to  Mauro, 
The.— Frost. 

Mornings  frosty  grow,  and  cold.  See  In  September. 
—  (Sunday  Afternoon.) 


Morpheus,  the  humble    god,    that    dwells.     See    Song 

from  "The  Sonhy." — Denham. 
Morpheus,  the  lively  son  of  deadly  Sleep.       See   Astro- 

phel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  XXXT I.). -Sidney. 
Mortal  mixed  of  middle  clay.     See  Guy. — Emerson. 
Mortality,   behold   and   fear!     See  On   the   Tombs   in 

Westminster  Abbey. — Beaumont. 
Mortals  there  are  who  seem,  all  over,  flame.     See  On 

the  Death  of  Canon  Kingsley.— Hayne. 
Moses  led  the  world's  first  emancipation   movem3nt, 

liberating    three    million    slaves.     See    Sketch    of 

Moses,  A. — Hastings. 
Moses   Sparrow  was   very,   very  green.     See  Summer 

Boarder,  The. — Anon. 
Moses,  who  spake  with  God  as  with  his  friend.     See 

Death  of  Moses,  The. — Eliot. 
Most   glorious   Lord  of  lyfe!  that,   on   this  day.     See 
,  Amiretti   and  Epithalamion  (Easter  Morning). — 

Spenser. 
Most  like  it  was  this  kingly  lad.     See  Bom  to  the  Pur- 
ple.— Riley. 
Most  men  know  love  but  as  a  part  of  life.     See  Quator- 

zain. — Timrod. 
Most  potent  grave  and  reverend  signiors.     See  Othello. 

the  Moor  of  Venice  (Othello's  Defense). — Shake- 
speare. 
"Most    potent,    grave    and    reverend  signiors."      See 

Toast  to  the  Lovers  and  Husbands  of  the  Shake- 
speare Club. — -Anon. 
Most  strange!     Most  queer — although  most  excellent  a 

change!     See  Rationalistic  Chicken,  The. — Anon. 
Most  sweet  is  it  with  unuplifted  eyes.     See  Inner  Vis- 
ion, The. — Wordsworth. 
Most  welcome.  Calumny!  come  speak!     See  Power   of 

Justice,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
Most  wives  will  end  their  story  with.     See  Model  Hus- 
band, The. — Denny. 
Mother  birdie  stiff  and  cold.     See  Poor  Little  Children. 

— Hugo. 
Mother  dear,  what   is  the  water  saying?     See   High 

Tide,  The.— Anon. 
Mother  has  gone  out  for  the  day,  Joe.     See  Civility 

Never  Lost. — Anon. 
Mother,  has  the  dove  that  nestled.     See  Ministering 

Angels. — Judson. 
Mother,  Home,  and  Heaven.     See  same. — Anon. 
Mother,  I  cannot  mind  my  wheel.     See  sam^. — ^Lan- 

dor. 
Mother,  I  feel  death's  icy  chill.     See  Just  Twenty-one. 

—Todd. 
Mother,  I  see  with  your  nursery  light.     See  Best. — 

Jackson. 
Mother,  I  want  a  piece  of  cake.     See  Domestic  Scene, 

A. — Anon. 
Mother,  if  I  were  a  flower.     See  Harebell,  A. — -Lar- 

com. 
Mother!  is  that   the  passing  bell?     See  "Dark  Girl" 

by  the  "Holy  Well,"  The. — Keegan. 
"Mother,  it  rains!"  and  tears  like  rain  fell  down.     See 

Rain-lesson,  The. — ^Sigourney. 
Mother,  may  I  go  down  to  the  skating  pond  to-night? 

See  Evening  at  Home,  An.^Anon. 
Mother,  mother,  the  winds  are  at  play.     See  Child's 

Wish  in  June. — Oilman. 
Mother,   mother,   up  in  heaven.     See  Bertha  in  the 

Lane. — Browning. 
Mother,  move  a  little  nearer — I'm  so  lonely  in  the 

dark.     See  Willie  Clark. — Garrett. 
Mother  of  Hermes!  and  still  youthful  Maia!     See  Frag- 
ment of  an  Ode  to  Maia. — Keats. 
Mother  of  nations,  of  them  eldest  we.     See  America  to 

England. — -Woodberry. 
Mother  of  our  own  dear  mother,  good  old  grandam, 

wake    and    smile !       See    Grandmother,    The.  — 

Hugo. 
Mother  of  Swords!  while  the  river  runs.     See  Ad  Bello- 

nam. — Pollock. 
Mother  of  the  Fair  Delight.     See  Ave. — Rossetti. 
Mother?     Oh,   you   mean   my  mamma.     See  Mothers 

and  Fathers :  Two  Pictures. — Dallas. 
"Mother,"  quoth  Ambrose  to  his  thrifty  dame.     See 

Young    Gray    Head,    The. — {Blackwood's    Maga- 
zine. ) 
Mother,  see!  the  stars  are  out.     See  Starlight. — Lar- 

com. 
Mother,  the  birdies  all  love  father.     See  Love  Wins 

Love. — Anon. 
Mother  was  away,  and,  in  consequences,  Bess,  Bob, 

Archie,  and  Tom.     See  Mice  at  Play. — Forest. 
Mother,  watch  the  little  feet.     See  Mother,  Watch! — 

Anon. 
Mother  wept,  and  father  sighed.     See  Mother  Wept. — 

Skipsey. 


759 


Mother 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


.Vother,  what  ugly  feet  Clara  Harvey  has.     See  Beau- 
tiful Feet. — .\non. 
"Mother,   where  are  the   flowers  gone?"     See  God's 

Work. — Brooke. 
Mother,  who  i  <  the  daj-s  of  childhood.     See  Mother's 

Prayer. — Crawford^ 
Mother,  who  make  the  stars  which  light.     See  Who 

Made  Them. — Anon. 
Mother,  will  you  tell  us  more  about  those  beautiful 

countries.     See  Little  Travelers,  The. — Anon. 
Mother's     quite     distracted.     See     Baby's     Ring. — 

Cary. 
Motionless,  in  a  dark,  cold  cell  in   Rome.     See  Epi- 

charis. — Palmer. 
Motions  and  means,  on   land  and   sea  at   war. — See 

Steamboats,    Viaducts,    and    Railways. — Words- 
worth. 
Moimt    Flibbertygibbet?     Of    course,    Ben:    don't    I 

know  horse  and  tricks  full  well?     See  Flibberty- 
gibbet and  Me. — Mackenzie. 
Mount    Vesuvius    was    fast    burying    the    city.     See 

Last   Days  of  Pompeii  (Nydia's  Sacrifice). — Bul- 

wer-Lytton. 
Mountains!  who  was  your  builder?    See  Mountains. — 

Morse. 
Mounted   on   Kyrat   strong  and   fleet.     See   Leap   of 

Roushan  Beg,  The. — I,ongfeIlow. 
Mourn,     great     McGregor,     mourn!     Thou     youngest. 

See  Funeral  of  the  Mountains,  The. — Brooks. 
Mourn,  hapless  Caledonia,  mourn.     See  Tears  of  Scot- 
land. The.— Smollett. 
Mourn,  hills  and  groves  of  Attica!     See  Dion. — Words- 
worth. 
Mourn,  O  rejoicing  heart !     See  Time's  Cure. — Anon. 
Mournfully!    oh,    mournfully.     See    Midnight    Wind, 

The. — Motherwell. 
Mournfully,  sing  mournfully.     See  Nightingale's  Death 

Song,  The. — Hemans. 
Move  along  a  trifle,  stranger,  just  a  little;  don't  you 

see.     See  Ole  Bull's  Christmas. — Bruce. 
Move  me  that   jasmine   further   from   the    bed.     See 

Deaths  of  Myron  and  Klydone,  The. — Webster. 
"Move  my  arm-chair,  faithful  Pompey. "     See  On  the 

Shores  of  Tennessee. — Beers. 
Mowers,  weary  and  brown,  and  blithe.     See    Scythe 

Song.— Lang. 
Mozzer  bought   a  baby.     See  Nose    out  of  Joint.  — 

Adams. 
Much  as  we  are  indebted  to  our  observatories.      See 

Uses  of  .Astronomy.  The  (Wonders  of  the  Dawn, 

The).— Everett. 
Much    has    been  said  by  poets  wise.     See  Recitation 

for  a  Small  Boy.— Kavanaugh. 
Much  have  I  spoken  of  the  faded  leaf.     See  November. 

— Stoddard. 
Much  have  1  travelled  in  the  realms  of  gold.     See  On 

First  looking  into  Chapman's   Homer. — Keats. 
Much,  however,  as  we  are  indebted  to  our  observa- 
tories.    See  Uses  of  A.stronomy,  The  (Sunrise).- — 

Everett. 
Much  lately  have  I  thought,  my  darling  wife.     See 

Connubial  Eclogue,  A. — Saxe. 
Much  of  Whittier's  work  has  been  in  the  form  of  con- 
tributions.    See  Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. — 

Scudder. 
Much  strange  is  true.     And  yet  so  much.      S«e  Virgin 

with  the  Bells,  The.— Dobson. 
Much  victuals  serves  for  gluttony.     See  In  Favor  of 

Tobacco. — Rowlands. 
Muffled   tones   in   secret   conclave.     See   Dynamiter's 

Daughter,  The. — Jackson. 
M-u-1-a-t-t-o,    pwtato,    tomato, — oh,    there.     See    All 

Ending  in  "O". — Caldwell. 
"Murphy,    what's    the    meaning   of    mystery?"     See 

Murphy's  Mystery  of  the  Pork-barrel. — Anon. 
Muse  of  the  many-twinkling  feet,  whose  charms.     See 

Waltz,  The.— Byron. 
Muses  and  (Jraces  appear!     See  Her  First   Train. — 

Watrous. 
Muses,  that  sing  Love's  sensual  em ')irie.     See  same. — 

Chapman. 
Music  as  of  the  winds  when  they  awake.     See  Bee- 
thoven.— Todhunter. 
Music  is  the  most  spiritual  of  all  human  enjoyments. 

See  Power  of  Music,  The. — Burke. 
Music,  music    hath  its    .sway.      See    Saul    (Flight  of 

Malzah,  The). — Heavysege. 
Music  of  bells  when  the  night  is  gone.     See  Children's 

Voices. — Chatfield. 
Music,  when  soft  voices  die.     See  same. — Shelley. 
Musical!  how  much  lies  in  that.     See  On    Heroes    and 

Hero  Worship   ("Musical!    how  much,"    etc.). — 

Carlyle. 


Must  all  tradition  then  be  set  aside?  See  Tradition. — 
Dry  den. 

Must  I  budge?  Must  I  observe  you?  See  Julius 
Caesar. — Shakespeare. 

Must  I  despise  thee  too,  as  well  as  hate  thee?  See 
Revenge. — Young. 

Must  I  thus  leave  tliee,  Paradise!  thus  leave.  See 
Parad'se  Lost  (Eve's  Lamentation). — Milton. 

Mute,  sightless  visitant.  See  Helen  Keller. — Sted- 
man. 

Muzzer's  bought  a  baby.  See  Charley's  Opinion  of  the 
Baby. — Anon. 

My  absent  daughter— gentle,  gentle  maid.  See  I^iv- 
ing  Memory,  A. — Croffut. 

My  aunt!  my  dear  unmarried  aunt!  See  My  Aunt. — 
Holmes. 

My  auntie  has  a  parlor  grand.  See  Auntie's  Parlor. — 
Richards. 

My  baby  boy  sat  on  the  floor.  See  Baby's  Visitor. 
— (Atlant t  Constitution.) 

My  bachelor's  den  is  a  queer  old  pen.  See  Bachelor's 
Ijove  Song,  A. — Ryan. 

My  banks  they  are  furnished  with  bees.  See  Pas- 
toral Ballad  (Shepherd's  Home,  The). — Shenstone. 

My  beautiful!  my  beautiful!  that  standest  meekly  by. 
See  Arab's  Farewell  to  his  Horse,   The. — Norton. 

My  beautiful  new  watch  had  run  eighteen  months. 
See  Mark  Twain's  Watch. — Clemens. 

My  bed  is  like  a  little  boat.  See  My  Bed  is  a  Boat. — 
Stevenson. 

Mv  beloved  brethe'-ing,  before  I  take  my  text  I  must 
tell  you.     Sei-  Broths- Watkins. — Giugh. 

My  Beloved  Brethering:  I  am  a  unlarnt  hard-shell 
Baptist  preacher.  See  Hard-shell  Sermon,  A.— 
Anon. 

My  better  half  desired  a  wheel,  I  argued  and  I  thun- 
dered.    See  Price,  The. — Masson. 

My  birthday!  what  a  different  sound.  See  My  Birth- 
day.— Moore. 

My  birthplace,  the  home  of  my  childhood  and  earlier 
and  later  boyhood.  See  Poet  at  th?  Br  >r,kfast- 
table,  The  (Gambrel-roofed  House  and  its  Outlook, 
The).— Holmes. 

My  blessing  with  thee  [or  you]!  See  Hamlet  (Polonius 
to  Laertes). — Shakespeare. 

My  blood  hath  been  too  cold  and  temperate.  See 
King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. — Shakespeare. 

My  blood  so  red  for  thee  was  shed.  See  Call,  The. — 
Anon. 

My  boat  is  on  the  shore.  See  To  Thomas  Moore. — 
Byron. 

My  body  answers  you,  my  blood.  See  Music  of  Hun- 
gary.— Aldrich. 

My  body,  eh?  Friend  Death,  how  now?  See  Habeas 
Corpus. — Jackson. 

My  body  sleeps;  my  heart  awakes.  See  Indian  Love- 
song. — Lytton. 

My  body  was  part  of  the  sun  and  the  dew.  See  In 
Love's  Eternity. — O'Shaughnessy. 

My  books  I'd  fain  cast  off,  I  cannot  read.  See  Summer 
Rain,  The. — Thoreau. 

My  boy  and  I  rode  in  the  train.  See  His  Profession. — 
Anon. 

My  boy,  do  you  know  the  boy  I  love?  See  Boy  I 
Love,  The. — -Anon. 

My  boy  Kree?     See  Kree.— Gordon. 

My  boy  left  me  just  twelve  years  ago.  See  Ballad  of 
the  Shamrock,  The. — O'Brien. 

My  boy  sat  looking  straight  into  the  coals.  See  Their 
Mother. — Anon. 

My  brave  associates,  partners  of  my  toil,  my  feelings 
and  my  fame!  See  Pizarro  (Rolla  to  the  Peru- 
vians) . — Sheridan. 

My  bredren!  one  time,  long,  long  time  ago.  See 
Noten  like  a  Patience. — Oughton. 

My  Breethering  and  sistering  of  Skilletville;  I  rise  this 
mornin'  full  of  indignation.  See  Burst  of  Indig- 
nation, A. — McBride. 

My  breethering  I  am  a  plain  spoken  preacher.  See 
Sarmon  to  the  Skillettvillers. — McBride. 

My  brethren,  be  not  many  masters.  See  St.  James 
(Power  of  the  Tongue,  The). — Bible. 

My  brier  that  smelledst  sweet.  See  Brier,  The. — Lan- 
dor. 

My  brigantine!     See  same. — Cooper. 

My  brother  Jack  was  nine  in  May.  See  Baby's  Debut, 
The.— Smith. 

My  brother  Jim,  he's  in  the  regiment.  See  Guards- 
man, The.^Finnegan. 

My  brother  Tom  is  just  too  mean.  See  Tom's  Eyes 
and  Mine. — (Popular  Educator.) 

My  brudder  sittin'  on  de  tree  of  life.  See  Roll,  Jordan, 
Roll. — Anon. 


760 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


My  father 


My  business  on  the  jury's  done — the  quibblin'  all  is 
through.     See  Goin'  Home  To-day. — Carleton. 

My  Callie  is  a  winsome  lass.     See  My  Callie. — P.  A.  P. 

My  child  and  schollar,  take  good  heed.  See  same. — 
Anon. 

My  child  is  lying  on  my  knee.  See  Like  a  Little  Child. 
— Macdonald. 

My  child,  my  child,  my  son.     See  Zenobia. — Jones. 

My  child,  the  duck-billed  platypus.  See  Platypus, 
The.— Herford. 

My  child  woke  crying  from  her  sleep.  See  God  Watch- 
eth. — Macdonald. 

My  children,  come  near  to  me.  See  Out  of  the  Depths. 
— McBride. 

My  chile?  Lord,  no,  she's  none  o'  mine.  See  Bor- 
rowed Child,  The. — Weeden. 

My  chil'ren,  lub  one  anoder;  b'ar  wid  one  anoder. 
See  Uncle  Pete's  Counsel  to  the  Newly  Married. — 
Kirke. 

My  Christmas  gifts  were  few:  to  one.  See  To  a  Lady. 
— Parsons. 

My  cigarette!  The  amulet.  See  My  Cigarette. — 
Lummis. 

My  coachman,  in  the  moonlight  there.  See  Without 
and  Within. — Lowell. 

My  country,  'tis  of  thee.     See  America. — Smith. 

My  countrymen,  one  and  all,  think  calmly  and  well 
upon  this  whole  subject.  See  First  Inaugural 
Addre.-is  (War  or  Peace?). — Lincoln. 

My  Countrymen: — The  century  that  has  gone  by  has 
changed  the  face  of  nature.  See  Centennial  Ad- 
dress (Valley  Forge). — Brown. 

My  countrymen !  the  moments  are  quickly  passing. 
See  Centennial  Oration  ("My  countrymen!  the," 
etc.). — Brown. 

My  Countrymen :  The  tide  of  battle  never  ebbed  and 
flowed  upon  these  banks.  See  Centennial  Ad- 
dress Delivered  at  Vabey  Forge,  June  19,  1878 
(Valley  Forge). — Brown. 

My  Countrymen!  this  anniversary  has  gone  by  for- 
ever. See  Centennial  Oration  ("My  countrymen, 
this."  etc.). — Brown. 

My  cousin  Vernon!  welcome.  See  King  Henry  IV., 
Pt.  I. — Shake=ipeare. 

My  curse  upon  thy  venom 'd  stang.  See  Address  to 
the  Toothache. — Burns. 

My  daily  walk  was  through  a  garden  fair.  See  Lost 
and  Found. — Appleget. 

My  dame  is  old,  and  I  am  old.  See  Good  Old  Souls. 
— Southesk. 

My  Damon  was  the  first  to  wake.  See  Tales  of  the 
Hall  (Meeting). — Crabbe. 

My  Daphne's  hair  is  twisted  gold.  See  Midas  (Daphne). 
-Lyly. 

My  darling  doll,  so  young  and  tender.  See  Sad  Acci- 
dent, A. — -Anon. 

My  darling  dolly  is  one  week  old.  See  Nam.ing  Dolly. 
— Anon. 

My  darling,  I'm  close  to  your  bed.  See  Answer  to 
"Leona. " — Anon. 

My  darling  kneeled  down  for  her  evening  prayer. 
See  Perfect  Faith,  A. — M'Manus. 

My  darling,  my  darling,  my  darling.  See  At  Your 
Gate. — Gray. 

My  darling  Roy's  a  splendid  boy.  See  What  Grandma 
Thinks . — Kavanaugh . 

"My  darter?"  Yes,  thet's  Lizy  Ann.  See  Lizy  Ann. 
— Davis. 

"My  daughter, "  and  his  voice  was  stern.  See  Applied 
Mathematics.—  (/ycW^A  Burr.) 

My  days  among  the  Dead  are  pass'd.  See  same. — 
Southey. 

My  days  are  full  of  pleasant  memories.  See  Phan- 
toms.— Ashe. 

My  days  pass  pleasantly  away.  See  I'm  Growing  Old. 
— Saxe. 

My  dear  and  only  Love,  I  pray.  See  sam,e  — Gra- 
ham. 

"My  dear,  be  sensible!  Upon  my  word."  See  Love's 
Logic. — (Chambers'  Journal.) 

My  dear  boy,  men  have  fought,  bled  and  died,  but  not 
for  beer.  See  What  Men  Have  Fought  for. — 
Burdette. 

My  dear  Boys ;  I  wonder  whether  you  miss  me  as  much 
as  I  miss  you.  See  Eugene  Field  to  his  Children. 
—Field. 

My  dear,  do  you  know  that  a  long  time  ago.  See 
Babes  in  the  Woods,  The. — Anon. 

My  dear  Fellow-Grumblers: — Poets,  philosophers,  and 
fools.     See  Grizzly  Grumbler's  Advice.— Anon. 

My  dear  Friends:  When  the  Emperor  Maximus 
Gorillus  entered  Rome.  See  Felinaphone,  The. — 
Kyle. 


My  dear,  if  only  I  might  write.     See  If  Only  I  Might 

Write. — Anon. 
"My  dear,  I'm  delighted  to  see  you."     See  Pet  and 

Bijou. — Bean. 
My  dear  Josephine.     See  Children  in  the  Wood,  The. — 

Anon. 
My  dear  Mary,  the  darlint  of  my  heart  and  sowl,  I  am 

well.     See  Jimmy  McBride's  Letter. — Anon. 
My  dear  mistress  has  a  heart.     See  same. — Rochester. 
My  dear  Mrs.  M :     Every  time  I  think  of  you, 

my  heart.     See  Model  Love-letter,  A. — Anon. 
My  Dear  Nephew:     I  have  not  heard  anything  of  you 

sens  the  last  time  I  wrote  ye.     See  Affectionate 

Letter,  An. — Anon. 
My  dear  Nephew:     I  haven't  sent  ye  a  letther  since 

the  last  time  I  wrote  to  ye.     See  Bridget  O'Hoo- 

legoin's  Letter. — Anon. 
My  dear  niece — I  know  that  you  are  expecting  your 

cousin's    arrival  from   Europe.     See  "Let   those 

Laugh  who  Win." — -Sedgwick. 
My  dear,  precious  dolly,  I  love  you,  you  know.     See 

Good-bye  to  Dolly. — Anon. 
My  dear  pupils!     I  desire  to  say  a  few  words  to  you. 

See  School  Affairs  in  Riverhead  District. — Deans. 
My  dear  Redeemer,   and  my  God.     See   Example  of 

Christ,  The.— Watts. 
"My  dear  Rootle,"  says  my  wife.     See  Mr.  Rootle's 

Economy. — Anon. 
"My  dear,"  said  Mr.  Spoopendyke,  rumpling  his  hair 

around  over  his  head.     See  Spoopendyke  Stops 

Smoking. —  (Brooklifn  Eagle.) 
"My  dear,"  said  Mrs.  Policy.     See  Parson  Policy. — 

Miller. 
"My  dear,"  said  Mrs.  Popperman  to  her  husband  one 

evening.     See  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Popperman. — Anon. 
My  Dear  Sir:    Having  now  a  little  peace  and  quietness 

I  sit  down  to  inform  you  of  the  dreadful  bustle. 

See  Irish  Letter,  An. — Anon. 
My  dear  sir,  I  thank  you  heartily  for  the  kindness. 

See  Contesting  for  a  Prize. — -Avery. 
"My  dear  sister,  I  hasten  to  inform  you."     See  I  Guess 

I'm  the  Man. — Parsons. 
My  dear,  there's  rare  news  'from  the  exchange.     See 

Out  Daughter. — Anon. 
My  dear,  you  would  have  forgotten  to  purchase  me  a 

muflf.     See  New  Muff  and  Collar,  The.— Peet. 
My  dear  young  friend,  whose  shining  wit.     See  Comic 

Miseries. — Saxe. 
My  Dearling! — thus,    in    days    long    fled.     See    "My 

Dearling. " — Allen. 
My  delicate  lily.     See  Lily's  Word,  A. — Larcom. 
My  delight  and  thy  delight.     See  same. — Bridges. 
My  doll  got  sick  one  summer  day.     See  When  Dolly 

Was  Sick. — Richards. 
My  dolly  is  a  dreadful  care.     See  Naughty  Doll,  The. — 

Field. 
My  dolly  is  a  Japanese.     See  Japanese  Doll,  The. — 

Anon. 
My  dolly  is  so  happy.     See  Dolly's  Pocket. — Anon. 
My  dolly  was  going  to  be  married.     See  Dolly's  Wed- 
ding.— -Anon. 
My  dream  was  lengthened  after  life.     See  King  Rich- 
ard III.  (Clarence's  Dream). — Shakespeare. 
My  dreams  so  fair  that  used  to  be.     See  Margins. — - 

Burdette. 
My  dream-ship's  decks  are  of  beaten  gold.     See  Bal- 
lade of  the  Dreamship,  The. — Lincoln. 
My  early   love!     I'll   think  on   thee.     See   My    Early 

Love. — -Anon. 
My  ear-rings,  my  ear-rings!  they've  dropped  into  the 

well!     See  Zara's  Ear-rings. — Lockhart. 
My  eye,  descending  from  the  hill,  surveys.     See  Coop- 
er's Hill  (Praise  of  the  Thames). — Denham. 
My  eyes  are   filled  with  blinding  tears.     See  Baby's 

Drawer. — Rook. 
My  eyes  are  filmed,  my  beard  is  grey.     See  Time  of  the 

Barmecides,  The. — Mangan. 
My  eyes  are  full  my  silent  heart  is  stirred.     See  Septem- 
ber Robin,  A. — Craik. 
My  eyes !  how  I  love  you.     See  same. — Saxe. 
My  faint  spirit  was  sitting  in  the  light.     See  From  the 

Arabic.     An  Imitation. — Shelley. 
My  Fair,  no  beauty  of  thine  wiU  last.     See  Song. — 

Meynell. 
My  fairest  child,  I  have  no  song  to  give  you.     See  Fare- 
well, A. — Kingsley. 
My  faith  looks  up  to  Thee.     See  same. — Palmer. 
My  faithful   dog — his   actions   fairly   talk.     See   Dog- 
matic Philosophy.^Burdette. 
"My  Fanny,  I  have  news  to  tell."     See  Frances  Keeps 

her  Promi.se. — Taylor. 
My  father    bought    an    undershirt.     See  Song  of  the 

All-wool  Shirt. — Anon. 


761 


My  Father 


AX   INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECTTATIOXS 


My  Father  God,  lead  on !     See  Father,  Lead  on. — Anon. 
My  f.ither    had    a    fair-haired    harvester.     See    Fatal 

Arrow,  The. — Anon. 
My  father  had  a  farm  hvi<J-     See  Little  Child's  Trials, 

A.— Neal.  • 

My  father  is  decea.*i'd!     C'<iine  Claveston.     See  Edward 

the  .Second  (KinK  Edward  the  Second).— Marlowe. 

My  father  left  a  park  to  me.     See  Amphion. — Tennyson. 

My  father  left  me  three  acres  of  land.     See  Three  Acres 

of  I.And. — Anon. 
My  father   loved   a   trete   as   men.     See   Dreamer   and 

Reaper,  The. — Ecob. 
My  father  w&s  a  farmer  upon  the  ("arrick  border,  O. 

See  My  Father  was  a  Farmer. — Burns. 
My  fat  her  was  tui  pessimist ;  he  loved  the  things  of  earth. 

See  Father's  Way. — Field. 
My  father  was  the  finest    watermelon    grower  in   the 
country.     See  .Judge  Brown's  Watermelon   Story. 
(Arkansaw  Traveller.) 
My  father's  half-bushel  comes  oft  to  my  mind.     See 

My  Father's  Half-bushel. —  »non. 
My  feet  are  wearied  and  my  hands  are  tired.     See  Rest. 

— Ryan. 
My  feet  strike  an  apex  of  the  apices  of  the  stairs.     See 

S.)ng  <.f  Myself  (Infinity). — Whitman. 
My  feet  they  haul  me  round  the  hou.se.     See  My  Feet. 

—  Burgess. 
My  fiddle?     Well,  I  kind  o'  keep  her  handy,  don't  you 

know?     See  My  Fiddle.— Riley. 
My  First,  a  tale  of  history.     See  Teacups. — Sabine. 
My  First    are   .seen    in    feathered    bands.     See   Cocks- 
comb.— Sabine. 
My  First  destroys,  consumes  and  wastes.     See  Mother 

Hubbard. — Sabine. 
My  First  goes  a  bumping  and  buzzing  around.     See 

Dormouse. — Sabine. 
My  First   goes   frequently   by   train.     See  Postage. — 

Sabine. 
My  First  hard  by  the  waters  cool  are  seen.     See  Cow- 
slips.— Sabine. 
My  First  has  always,  as  I  have  been  told.     See  Dog 

Days. — Sabine. 
My  First,  if  he  were  saucy  to  his  brother.     See  Pota- 
toes.— Sabine. 
My  First  in  ancient  Rome  was  used.     See  Ascutney. — 

Sabine. 
My  First  is  a  dunce,  he  has  no  ideas.     See  Muffet. — 

Sabine. 
My  First   is  a   familiar  preposition.     See  Perverse. — 

Sabine. 
My  First  is  a  genial  old  uncle.     See  Samson. — Sabine. 
My  First  is  a  lake.     See  Linden. — Sabine. 
My  First  is  a  picturesque  kind  of  fence.     See  Hedge- 
row.— Sabine. 
My  first  is  brought  from  lands  across  the  sea.     See 

Charade. — Pratt. 
My  First  is  but  a  bitter  word.     See   Rubber.— Sabine 
My  First  is  but  a  simple  decoration.     See  Bo  Peep. — 

Sabine. 
My  Fir.st  is  he  of  whom  a  jest.     See  Culdee.— Sabine 
My  First  is  marked  by  want  of  light.     See  Blackbird. — 

Sabine. 
My  First  is  powerful,  to  will  and  do 

Sabine. 
My  First    is    privilege    that    may. 

Sabine. 
My  First  is  seen  in  pageants  great 

Sabine. 
My  First  is  simply  an  abbreviation. 

— Sabine. 
My  First  is  .so  versatile  that  it  is  more 

hog. — Sabine. 
My  First  is  the  price  of  a  lawyer's  brief.     See  Feline  — 

Sabine. 
My  First  is  to  enumerate.     See  Countle.ss.— Sabine 
My  First  IS  what  a  king  must  be.     See  Sonnet.— Sabine 
.My  hrst  lesson  on  the  wheel.     See  Wheel  and  I   The  — 

Anon. 
My  First  may  be  a  twist  or  simple  fold 
Rock. — Sabine. 


See  Kangaroo. — 

See    Kickshaw. — 

See  Alborak. — 

See  Conundrum. 

See  Ground- 


See  Plymouth 


My  First,   my   Second,   and   my   Third.     See   Liberty 

Bell. — Sabine. 
My  first,  my  very  fir.st,  his  name  was  Will.     See  Her 

\^\'eT».^" Bachelor  Ben." 
My  First  the  helmsman  guides  aright.     See  Concord  — 

nabine. 
My  First,   though   .sometimes  horned,   is  a   fish      See 

Uog-.star. — Sabine. 
*'y  1w!,  .t|j""Kht    was.    he   lied   in   every   word.     See 
«  nilde    Roland    to   the    Dark    Tr^nro,.   r^^.* 


Browning, 


My  First  was  a  musician's  son.  See  Tom  Tom. — Sabine. 
My  P'irst  was  known  in  the  remotest  times.     See  Dol- 
lar.— Sabine. 
My  First  was  once  a  part  of  one.     See  Cotton. — Sabine. 
My  First  was  worshiped  like  a  queen.     See  Catalogue. 

— Sabine. 
My  First's    a    quiet    place    of    rest.     See    Bedroom. — 

Sabine. 
My  foe  was  dark,  and  stern,  and  grim.     See  My  Enemy. 

— Brotherton. 
"My  Fred,  I  can't  understand  it."     See  Soldier's  Re- 
prieve, The. — Thorpe. 
My  friend,    adown    Life's  valley,   hand   in    hand.     See 

Hand  in  Hand. — Lowell. 
My  friend  holds  careless  in  his  palm.     See  Gift,  A. — 

Cutter. 
My  friend,   I   .see  the  lines  of  cai-e.     See  To  the   Dis- 
couraged.— Crofts. 
My  friend,  Mr.  Tongue,  he  lives  in  my  mouth.     See  Mr. 

Tongue.  — Anon . 
My  friend,  my  chum,  my  trusty  crony!     See  Dolce  Far 

Niente. — Halpine. 
My  friend.  Mynheer  Steven  Van  Brammelendam.     See 

Dutchman  in  England,  A. — Bell. 
My  friend,   pray   don't   hug   up    your    pile.     See  Tim 

Titus. — Abrahams. 
My  friend,  thou  sorrowest  for  thy  golden  prime.     See 

Return  of  Youth,  The. — Bryant. 
My  friends  and  brethren.  Templars  true.     See  Who'll 

be  the  Drunkards  Then. — 'Thomp.son. 
My  friends,  are  you  growing  discouraged.     See  Living 

Stones. — Anon. 
My  friends,  hesitate  before  you  vote  liquor  back  into 

Atlanta.     See  Appeal  for  Temperance. — Grady. 
My  friends,  I'm  glad  to  see  you  all.     See  Modern  Chiv- 
alry.—M.  D.  S. 
My  friends,  our  country  must  be  free!     See  Alfred  the 

Great  to  his  Men. — Knowles. 
My  friends.    Thanksgiving   Day   comes.     See   Thanks- 
giving Sermon,  A. — Anon. 
My  friends,  the  business  for  which  this  meeting  was 

called.     See  Temperance  Meeting,  A. — McBride. 
My  fugitive  years  are  all  hasting  away.     See  Poplar 

Field,  The  — Cowper. 
My  garden  grows  beside  a  wall.     See  Two  Gardens. — 

Anderson. 
My  gentle  Puck,  come  hither,  thou  remember" st.     See 
Midsummer  Night's  Dream  (Compliment  to  Queen 
Elizabeth) . — Shakespeare. 
My  gettin'  the  better  of  my  wife's  father  is  one  of  the 
richest  things  on  record.     See  How  I  Got  Invited 
to  Dinner. — Anon. 
My  girl  hath  violet  eyes  and  yellow  hair.     See  Little 

Milliner,  The. — Buchanan. 
My  girl,   thou  gazest  much.     See  Lover  to  his  Lady 
that  Gazed  Much  up  to  the  Skies,  The. — Tu  ber- 
ville. 
My  goblet's  golden  lips  are  dry.     See  Song:  "My  gob- 
let's golden,"  etc. — Beddoes. 
My  God  and  Father,  while  I  stray.     See  Thy  Will  be 

Done. — Elliott. 
My  God,  I  heard  this  day.     See  Man.— Herbert. 
My  God,  I  love  thee!     Not  because.     See  My  God,  I 

Love  Thee. — Francis  Xavier. 
My  God.  now  I  from  sleep  awake.    See  Midnight  Hymn. 

— Ken. 
My  God  (oh,  let  me  call  thee  mine).     See  Prayer,  A. — 

Bronte. 
My  God,  who  makes  the  sun  to  know.     See  Morning 

Hymn. — Watts. 
"My  golden  spurs  now  bring  to  me."     See  Vision  of 

Sir  Launfal,  The. — Lowell. 
My  good  blade  carves  the  casques  of  men.     See  Sir 

Galahad. — Tenny.son . 
My  grandfather  he,  at  the  age  of  ninety-three.     See 

Grandfather's  Pants. — Thatcher. 
"My  grandfather  Squeers."  said  that   Raggedy  Man 

See  Grandfather  Squeers. — Riley. 
My  Grandma    tells     lovely    stories.     See    Grandma's 

.story  and  Mine. — Goodfellow. 
My  grandmamma  says  that  the  right  way  to  sew.     See 

Learning  to  Sew. — Anon. 
My  grandmother's  garden !  how  well  I  remember.     See 

Old  Flower-beds,  The. — Butterworth 
My  grandpa  is  the  Strangest  man !     See  Grandpa's  Way 

— Anon. 
My  Grandpa   promis'd   if   I'd  stand.     See  Speech   for 

a  Small  Boy. — Anon. 
My  grandpa  was  a  soldier.     They  tell  about  the  day. 

See  Best  Tribute,  The.— Anon. 
My  grandpa   went   to   war   long   years   ago.     See   For 
Grandpa's  Sake. — Anon. 


762 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


My  little 


My  grau'pa   is   a   funny   man.     See   Her   Grandpa. — 

Stewart. 
My  grief  on  the  sea,  how  the  waves  of  it  roll !     <See  My 

Grief  on  the  Sea. — Hyde. 
My  gun  shines  in  the  misty  air.     See  Picket  before  Bull 

Run,  The.— Day. 
My  hair  is  gray,  but  not  with  years.     See  Prisoner  of 

Chillon,  The.— Byron. 
My  half-day's  work  is  done.     See  same. — Anon. 
My  harp  is  on  the  willow  tree.     See  Jewish  Lullaby. — 

Field. 
My  Harry  and  his  sister  Nan.     See  Harry's  Logic. — 

Phelps. 
My  hawk  is   tired   of   perch   and  hood.     See   Lady   (f 

the  Lake,   The  (Lay    of    the    Impri-soned   Hunts- 
man).— Scott. 
My  head  feels  fairly  dizzy  over  these  problems.     See 

Ambition. — Anon. 
My     head   is   like  a  title-deed.      See   Lines  to   Bessy. 

—  {Punch.) 
My  hearers — male  and   female,  squenchin'  my  native 

modesty.     See  Woman's  Rights,  by  Miss  Tabitha 

Primrose. — Anon. 
My  heart  aches,  and  a  drowsy  numbness  pains.     See 

Ode  to  a  Nightingale. — Keats. 
My  heart  and  I  but  lately  were  at  strife.     See  Content. 

— Anon. 
My  heart,  I  cannot  still  it.     See  Auspex. — Lowell. 
My  heart,   I  will  put  thee  a  question.     See  Question, 

A. — Hahn. 
My  heart    is    at    Thy    feet — my    helpless    heart!     See 

Prayer  in  Sorrow,  A. — Moulton. 
My  heart  is  awed  within  me,  when  I  think.     See  Forest 

Hymn,  A. — Bryant. 
My  heart  is  breaking,  dear  Tittie.     See  Tam  Glen. — 

Burns. 
My  heart   is  chilled   and   my   pulse  is   slow.     See  Old 

Story,  The.— Allen. 
My  heart  is  far  from  Liffey's  tide.     See  Mo  Craoibhin 

Cno.— Walsh. 
My  heart  is  high  above,  my  body  is  full  of  bliss.     See 

My  Heart  is  High  Above. — Anon. 
My  heart  is  like  a  fountain  true.     See  Mother's  Song. 

— Anon. 
My  heart  is  like  a  singing  bird.     See  Birthday,  A. — 

Rossetti. 
My   heart    is    set    down   'twixt    hope  and    fears.     See 

Hecatompathia   (Passion  IL). — Watson. 
My  heart  is  wasted  with  my  woe.     See  Ballad  of  Ori- 

ana.  The. — Tennyson. 
My  heart  leaps  up  when  I  behold.     See  same. — Words- 
worth. 
My  heart  was  heavy,  for  its  trust  had  been.     See  same. 

— Whittier. 
My  heart  will  break — I'm  sure  it  will.     See  False  Love 

and  True  Logic. — Blanchard. 
My  heart  yearns  to-day  for  a  land  far  away.     See  To 

the    Stars     and    the     Stripes     from    Abroad.  — 

Welcker. 
My  heart's  in  the   Highlands,   my  heart   is  not   here. 

See  My  Heart's  in  the  Highlands. — Burns. 
My  heid  is  like  to  rend,  Willie.     See  sam.e. — Mother- 
well. 
My  hero  is  na  deck'd  wi'   gowd.     See  Hero,   The. — 

Nicoll. 
My  highway    is    unfeatured    air.     See    Hymn    of    the 

Earth. — Channing. 
My  home  is  on  the  rolling  deep.     See  My  Home. — 

Anon. 
My  home  was  in    the  wilderness;  I  dwelt.     See  Lost 

Child,  The.— Robinson. 
My  home  was  on  the  mountain  side.     See  Sailor's  Story, 

A. — Thomas. 
My  home — yes,  it's  bright  and  clean,  sir.     See  Child's 

Tear,  A. — Shore. 
My  homeless    friend    with    the    chromatic    nose.     See 

Drinking  a  Farm. — Hastings. 
My  honorable  and  learned  friend  (Sir  James  Mackin- 
tosh) began  by  telling  us.     See  Collision  of  Vices, 

A. — Canning. 
My  "Hope"    and    "Faith"    bought    a   modish    gown. 

See  My  Poems. — Wheeler. 
My  hopes  retire;  my  wishes  as  before.     See  Persistence. 

— Landor. 
My  house  and  barn  have  recently  been  destroyed  by 

fire.       See     Bereaved     Editor's    Speech,     The. — 

.\non. 
"My  husband  cost  me  a  good  girl  last  week  by  one  of 

his  whims."     See  Hen-hussey,  The. — Anon. 
My  incorrigible  nephew,  Billy,  aged  eleven.     See  Billy. 

— Ludlow. 
My  inmost   soul,  O   Lord,  to  Thee.     See  I^earning  to 

Pray. — Phelps. 


My  intimates  the  best  men  ever  had.  See  Savonarola 
and  Lorenzo. — Austin. 

My  Jessie  lives  beyond  the  town.  See  My  .Jessie. — 
Edwards. 

My  jewels  are  the  drops  of  dew.  See  My  Treasures. — 
Spencer. 

My  kingdom  is  my  sweetheart's  face.  See  My  Sweet- 
heart's Face. — Wyeth. 

My  lack  of  noble  blood!  Then  that's  the  bar.  See 
Pride  of  Ancestry. — Croly. 

My  lad,  I  should  like  to  tell  you  a  story.  See  It  is 
Never  To:>  Late  to  Mend  (Digging  for  Hidden 
Treasure). — Reade. 

My  lad,  who  sits  at  breakfast.  See  Recipe  for  an  Ap- 
petite.— Cary. 

My  lady  carries  love  within  her  eyes.  See  Vita  Nuova 
(His  Lady's  Praise). — Dante. 

My  lady  fair,  her  golden  hair.  See  Faint  Heart. — 
Pearson. 

My  lady  Gwendolen  would  ride.  See  Gwendolen. — 
Griswold. 

My  lady  has  a  tea-gown.     See  Tea-gown,  The. — Field. 

My  lady  hath  a  sable  coach.  See  My  Lady's  Coach. — 
Anon. 

My  lady  is  fair  as  the  flowers  that  grow.  See  Trouba- 
dour's Song. — Fellows. 

My  Ian',  how  you  is  growed,  honey !  See  Tom  and  Roxy. 
— Clemens. 

My  last  word  to  you  is,  be  courageous!  See  same. — 
Richter. 

My  late  washerwoman  was  a  humorist.  See  She 
Washed  for  Him. — Fielding. 

My  letters!  all  dead  paper,  mute  and  white.  See  Son- 
nets from  the  Portuguese,  XXVIII — Browning. 

My  liege,  I  did  deny  no  prisoners.  See  King  Henry 
IV.,  Pt.  I.  (Hotspur's  Defence). — Shakespeare. 

"My  liege,"  said  Warwick,  "I  crave  pardon  for  pre- 
senting myself."  See  Last  of  the  Barons,  The 
(Warwick,  the  King-maker). — Bulwer-Lytton. 

My  liege,  your  anger  can  recall  your  trust.  See  Riche- 
lieu; or,  'The  Con.spiracy  (Richelieu  and  France). — • 
Bulwer-Lytton. 

My  life  closed  twice  before  its  close.  See  Parting. — 
Dickinson. 

My  life  ebbs  from  me — I  must  die.  See  First  or  Last? 
— Veley. 

My  life  is  a  wearisome  journey.  See  End  of  the  Way, 
The. — Anon. 

My  life  is  like  a  stroll  upon  the  beach.  See  Fisher's 
Boy,  The.— Thoreau. 

My  life  is  like  the  summer  rose.     See  sam.e. — Wilde. 

My  life  was  a  long  dream ;  when  I  awoke.  See  Duty 
and  Fame. — Smith. 

My  life,  which  was  so  straight  and  plain.  See  Web  of 
Life,  The. — Moore. 

My  light  thou  art,  without  thy  glorious  sight.  See  To 
His  Mistress. — -Wilmot. 

My  lips  are  not  to  speak  General  Grant's  eulogy.  See 
Ulysses  S.  Grant. — Robinson. 

My  little  bird,  how  canst  thou  sit.  See  Of  the  Child 
with  the  Bird  at  the  Bush. — Bunyan. 

My  little  book,  that's  neat  and  new.  See  Catullus  to 
his  Book. — Catullus. 

My  little  Bo-Peep  is  fast  asleep.  See  My  Little  Bo- 
Peep. — Holliday  [or  M'Manus]. 

My  little  boy  at  Christmas-tide.  See  Toy  Cross,  The. 
—Noel. 

My  little  boy,  with  pale,  round  cheeks.  See  Shadows, 
The. — Macdonald. 

My  little  boy,  with  voice  and  eyes.  See  On  the  Coast 
of  Man. — Burdette. 

My  little  dear,  so  fast  asleep.  See  My  Little  Dear. — 
Radford. 

My  little  girl  is  nested.     See  My  I-ittle  Girl. — Peck. 

My  little  girl  ran  in  and  out,  uneasy  at  her  pla.v.  See 
Why  Don't  You  Tell  Me  Yes?— Archibald. 

My  little  kitty's  been  so  bad.     See  Kitty  and  I. — Anon. 

My  little  kitty's  gone  astray.  See  Lost  Kitten,  The. — 
Goodfellow. 

My  little  love,  do  you  remember.  See  Chess-board, 
The. — Bulwer-Lytton. 

My  little  love!  my  little  .speechless  child.  See  Born 
Dumb. — Gale. 

My  little  love  sits  in  the  shade.  See  Priscilla. — Hutch- 
inson. 

My  little  Miidchen  found  one  day.  See  Chrysalis,  A. 
— Bradley. 

My  little  maiden  of  four  years  old.  See  Larvse. — 
Whitney. 

My  little  neighbor's  table's  set.  See  My  I^ittle  Neigh- 
bor.— Mason. 

My  little  niece  and  I — I  read.  See  Card  Houses. 
— (New  York  Graphic.) 


763 


My  little 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIONS 


My  little  one  begins  his  feet  to  try.  See  First  Step, 
The. — Saxton. 

My  little  pet  sat  in  the  moonshine.  See  Moonshine. — 
lArcom. 

My  little  son,  who  look'd  from  thoughtful  eyes.  See 
Toys,  The. — #atmore. 

My  little  speech,  dear  friends,  to-night.  See  Books. — 
Goodfellow. 

My  little  story,  Cousin  Rufus  said.  See  Cousin  Rufus' 
Story. — Riley. 

My  little  white  kitten's  asleep  on  my  knee.  See  White 
Kitten.  The. — Douglas. 

My  lonely  heart  is  brimming  o'er  to-night.  See  Mem- 
ories of  the  War. — Uiche. 

My  lord,  do  the  gods  assemble  to-day  in  council?  See 
Gods  in  Council,  The. — Radcliffe. 

My  lyord — I  have  been  lately  informed.  See  Letter 
to  Lord  Chesterfield. — Johnson. 

My  lord  rides  through  his  palace  gate.  See  Farmer 
Feedeth  All.  The.— Anon. 

My  lord,  the  Duke  of  Brittany.  See  Trumpeter's  Be- 
trothed, The. — Hooper. 

My  I^ord,  the  Irish  Catholics  never,  never  broke  their 
faith. — See  Violation  of  English  Promises. — 
O'Connell. 

My  Lord  Tomnoddy  got  up  one  day.  See  Execution, 
The.— Barham. 

My  Lord  Tomnoddy's  the  son  of  an  earl.  See  My  Lord 
Tomnoddy. — Brough. 

My  lord,  you  told  me  you  would  tell  the  rest.  See 
King  Richard  IL  (Bolingbroke's  Entrance  into 
London). — Shakespeare. 

My  Lords,  at  this  awful  close,  in  the  name  of  the  Com- 
mons. See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings 
( Peroration ). — Burke. 

My  Jjords,  I  am  amazed;  yes,  my  I^ords,  I  am  amazed. 
See  Ix)rd  Thurlow's  Reply  to  the  Duke  of  Grafton. 
— Thurlow. 

My  Lords!  I  am  charged  with  being  an  emissary  of 
France.  See  On  being  Found  Guilty  of  High 
Treason  (Robert  Emmet's  Last  Speech). — Emmet. 

My  Lords:  I  cannot  concur  in  a  blind  and  servile 
address.     See  American  War,  The. — Chatham. 

My  lords,  I  care  not,  if  my  actions.  See  King  Henry 
VIII.  (Queen  Catherine,  Henry  VIII.).— Shake- 
speare. 

My  Lords,  I  contend  that  we  have  not.  See  Concilia- 
tion Preferable  to  War. — Chatham. 

My  Lords,  I  do  not  disguise  the  intense  solicitude  which 
I  feel.     See  Parliamentary  Reform. — Brougham. 

My  Lords,  I  do  not  mean  now  to  go  further  than  just 
to  remind  your  Lordships  of  this.  See  Impeach- 
ment of  Warren  Hastings. — Burke. 

My  Lords,  I  have  done ;  the  part  of  the  Commons  is  con- 
cluded. See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings 
(Close).— Burke. 

My  Lords,  it  is  hard  to  be  questioned  upon  a  law  which 
cannot  be  shown.  See  Earl  of  Strafford's  Defense, 
The.— Strafford. 

My  Lords,  many  days  have  been  spent  in  maintenance 
of  the  impeachment  of  the  Earl  .of  Strafford.  See 
End  of  Government,  The.— Pym. 

My  Lords,  we  have  endeavored  to  lay  our  case  before 
you.  See  Defence  of  the  Irish  Party,  A. — Rus- 
sell. 

My  Lords-  What  have  I  to  say  why  sentence  of  death. 
See  On  Being  Found  Guilty  of  High  Trea.son 
(Speech  of  Vindication). — Emmet. 

My  Lords,  what  is  it  that  we  want  here  to  a  great  act. 
See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings.— Burke. 

My  Lords,  what  is  my  present  misfortune  may  be  for- 
ever yours.  See  Strafford's  Defense  against  the 
Charge  of  High  Treason. — Strafford. 

My  Lords — Who  is  the  man  that,  in  addition  to  the 
disgraces  and  mischiefs  of  the  war.  See  American 
War.  The  (Employment  of  Indians  in  the  American 
War). — Chatham. 

My  I.,ords,  you  have  now  heard  the  principles.  See 
Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings. — Burke. 

My  Ix)rds,  your  House  yet  stands;  it  stands,  a  great 
edifice.  See  Impeachment  of  Warren  Hastings 
(To  the  House  of  Lords). — Burke. 

My  love  and  I  among  the  mountains  strayed.  See 
Pastoral,  A. — Nichols. 

My  love  and  I  for  kisses  play'd.     See  Kisses. — Strode. 

My  love  and  I  went  maying.  See  My  Love  and  I. — 
Ficke. 

My  love,  braid  up  thy  golden  locks.  See  Kilbrannon. 
— Joyce. 

My  love  (dear  man!)  turns  in  his  toes.  See  My  Love. 
— Anon. 

My  love  dwelt  in  a  Northern  land.  See  Romance. — 
Lang. 


My  love  for  thee  doth  march  like  armed  men.     See 

game. — Gilder. 
My  love  has  long  brown  curls.     See  To  My  Big  Sweet- 
heart.— Cozzens. 
My  love  has  talked  with  rocks  and  trees.    See  In  Memo- 

riam  (My  Love  has  Talked). — Tennyson. 
My  love  he  built  me  a  bonnie  bower.     See  Lameht  of 

the  Border  Widow. — Anon. 
My  love  he  went  to  Burdon  Fair.     See  Memories. — 

Japp. 
My  love,  I  have  no  fear  that    thou  shouldst  die.     See 

Sonnet:  "My  love,  I  have,"  etc. — Lowell. 
My  love  in  her  attire  doth  shew  \or  show]  her  wit.     See 

Madrigal. — Anon. 
My  love  is  far  away  from  me  to-night.     See  In  Ab- 
sence.— Lampman. 
My  love  is  like  a  parlor  car.     See  Brakeman's  Sweet- 
heart, The. — Burdette. 
My  love  is  like  an  even  star.     See  Triolet. — Hersey. 
My  love  is  neither  young  nor  old.     See  My  Love. — 

Jones. 
My  love  is  strengthen'd,  though  more  weak  in  seeming. 

See  Sonnets.  CII. — Shakespeare. 
My  love  leads  the  white  bulls  to  sacrifice.     See  Pro- 
cessional.— James. 
My  love — my  chosen — but  not  mine!     See  Love-letter, 

A. — Meredith. 
"My  love,  my  only  love!     The  time  will  soon  be  here." 

See  Innocent  Drummer,  The. — Adams. 
My  love  o'er  the  water  bends  dreaming.     See  Sunday 

up  the  River. — Thomson. 
My  love,  on  a  fair  May  morning.     See  Marit. — Ashe. 
My  love,  still  I  think,  that  I  see  her  once  more.     See 

Kathleen  O'More. — Reynolds. 
My  love  to  fight  the  Saxon  goes.     See  Spinning  Song, 

A.— O'Donnell. 
My  I>ove  too  stately  is  to  be  but  fair.     See  Electra. — 

Williams. 
My  loved,  my  honoured,  much  respected  friend!     See 

Cotter's  Saturday  Night,  The. — Burns. 
My  love's  face  is  exceeding  fair.     See  Problem,  A. — 

Day. 
My  love's  worth  all  the  world  to  me.     See  My  Love. — 

Aid.5. 
My  Loving  People  ■ — We  have  been  persuaded  by  some 

that  are  careful  of  our  safety.     See  Speech  to  the 

Army  at  Tilbury. — Queen  Elizabeth. 
My  lute,  awake!  perform  the  last.     See  Lover  Com- 

plaineth  of    the  Unkindness  of  his  Love,  The. — 

Wyatt. 
My  lute,  be  as  thou  wert  when  thou  didst  grow.     See 

To  His  Lute. — Drummond. 
My  luve  is  like  a  red,  red  rose.     See  Red,  Red  Rose, 

A. — Bums. 
My  Maggie,   my   beautiful   darling!     See   Before   and 

After. — Anon. 
My  maiden     Isabel.      See  Garlande  of  Laurell,   The 

(Mistress    Isabel    Pennell). — Skelton. 
My  Maker!  of  Thy  power  the  trace.     See  Hymn,   A: 

"My  Maker!  of  Thy  power,  "  etc. — Coleridge. 
My  mama  says  that  I'm  too  old.     See  Dolly  Days. — 

Richardo. 
My  Mamma  said  that  Santa.     See  Cross  at  Santa. — 

McNabb. 
My  mamma  to  my  papa  said.     See  Fate  of  Charlotte 

Russe,  The. — Donnelly. 
My  marriage  is  a  failure!     All  my  troubles  should  have 

ended  to-day  at  noon.     See  Fly,  The. — Anon. 
My  married  daughter  could  you  see,  I'm  sure  you  would 

be   struck.     See  Match-making   Mamma,   The. — 

Anon. 
My  masters  twain  made  me  a  bed.     See  Canoe,  The. — 

Crawford. 
My  mate  and  I  had  a  cosy  nest.     See  Empty  Nest,  The. 

—Case. 
My  Maudie  sat  in  her  cushioned  chair.     See  Adhesive 

Poem,  An. — Thatcher. 
My  May  of  life  is  fall'n  into  the  sear.       See  Macbeth. — 

Shakespeare. 
My   memory   is    shocking.     See    Open    or    Shut? — De 

Mus.set. 
My  men  were  all  my  First,  brave,  stalwart,  true.     See 

Picture. — Sabine. 
My  merry  men  I  now  must  call.     See  Scene  from  the 

Life  of  Robin  Hood,  A. — Kavanaugh. 
"My  mind,  gentle  maiden,  is  more  disturbed  by  anxiety 

than  my  body  with  pain. "    See  Ivanhoe  (Besieged 

Castle,  The).— Scott. 
My  mind  lets  go  a  thousand  things.     See  Memory. — 

Aldrich. 
My  minde  to  me  a  kingdom  is.     See  same. — Dyer. 
My  missin!     You  gwine  to  marry  her,  you  say!     See 

Aunt  Phoebe's  Remonstrance. — Williams. 


764 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


My  sistern 


My  mistress's    eyes    are    nothing    like    the    sun.     See 

Sonnets,    CXXX. — Shakespeare. 
My  mother  bore  me  in  the  southern  wild.     See  Little 

Black  Boy,  The.— Blake. 
My  mother  has  but  just  gone  out.     See  Little  Nurse, 

The.— Tastu. 
My  mother,    my    kind    mother.     See    My    Mother. — 

Anop. 
My  mother  oft  said  to  me,   "Jamie,  my  boy."     See 

Me  and  My  Dog. —  (Harper's  Weekly.) 
My  mother    says — "Empty    your    pocket,    Jo."     See 

Boy's  Pocket,  A. — Anon. 
"My  mother  says  I  must  not  pass."     See  Witch  in  the 

Gla.ss,  The.— Piatt. 
My  mother  she's  so  good  to  me.     See  Boy's  Mother,  A. 

—Riley. 
My  mother,  when  I  learned  that  thou  wast  dead.     See 

On  the  Receipt  of  My  Mother' .s  Picture. — Cowper. 
My   mother's    almost    crazy.      See    Muzzer't^   Chirr>n 

(Mother's  Children;. — Otis. 
My  much-esteemed   Pupils — As   our   school    has   now 

drawn  to  a  close.     See  Correct   Habits. — Munson. 
My  mule    refreshed,    his    bells.     See    Descent,    The. — 

Rogers. 
My  muzzer's  almos'   trazy.     See  Muzzer's  Chil'ren. — 

Otis. 
My  name  is  Hans  von  Hillon,  and.      See  Over  behind 

der  Moon. — Kerr. 
My  name   is   Meek.     I   am,   in   fact,   Mr.   Meek.     See 

"Births.     Mrs.  Meek,  of  a  Son.  " — Dickens. 
My    name    is    Norval.     On    the   Grampian    hills.     See 

Douglas  (Douglas's  Account  of   Himself;. — Home. 
My  name  is  Spring;  I  bring  warm  showers.     See  Four 

Seasons,  The. — Anon. 
My  name  is  Tommy,  an'  I  hates.     See  So  I  Was. — 

Smiley.  ■ 
My  name  is  winter.     My  scepter  I  sway.     See  Winter's 

Wgrk. — Anon. 
My  name  it  is  Hugh  Reynolds,  I  come  of  honest  par- 
ents.    See  Lamentation  of  Hugh  Reynolds,  The. — 

Anon. 
My  name,  sir,  is  Bill,  but  they  call  me  Swipes.     See 

Swipes's  Dinner. — Anon. 
My  name's  Jack,  and  I'm  eight  years  old.     See  Arathu- 

sa's  Torment. — Anon. 
My  name's  John  White:  I  am  a  warder.     See  Mouse, 

The.— Cox. 
My  native    country,    thee.     See    America. — Smith. 
My  native    land,    my    native    land.     See    American 

E)agle,  The. — Thompson 
My  native   Land — thy   Puritanic   stock.   See   Rejected 

National  Hymns,  The,  IL — Newell. 
My  neat  and  pretty  book,  when  I  thy  small  lines  see. 

See  Written  in  the  First  Leaf  of  a  Child's  Memo- 
randum Book. — Lamb. 
My  neighbor  met  me  on  the  street.     See  My  Neighbor. 

— Anon, 
My  new    pittayatees — my — a — new    pittayatees!     See 

My  New  Pittayatees. — Hood. 
My  new-cut  ashlar  takes  the  light.     See  Dedication, 

A. — -Kipling. 
My  noble  lord.     See  Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice  (Act 

IIL,Sc.  3). — Shakespeare. 
My  noble,  lovely,  little  Peggy.     See  Letter  to   Lady 

Margaret  Cavendish,  A. — Prior. 
My  nose!  m.v  nose!     Oh!  mercy  me!  my  dreadful  little 

nose!     See  Stanzas  to  My  Nose. — Anon. 
My  old  Uncle  Tommy,  why,  he  alius  used  to  say.     See 

Uncle  Tommy's  Philosophy. — Hynson. 
My  old  Welch  neighbor  over  the  way.     See  Robin,  The. 

— Whittier. 
My  Ornaments    are    arms.     See    Wandering    Knight's 

Song,  The. — Lockhart. 
My  own   acquaintance   with   Philip    Nolan.     See   Man 

without  a  Country,  The. — Hale. 
My  own   beloved,   who   hast   lifted   me.     See   Sonnets 

from  the  Portuguese,  XXVIL — Browning. 
My  own !     Clossr,    closer    yet !     See    Fool's    Revenge, 

The.— Taylor. 
My  own  dim  life  should  teach  me  this.     See  In  Memo- 

riam  ("My  own  dim  life,"  etc.). — Tennyson. 
My  pa  and  ma  will  be  surprised.       See  Speech:  "My 

pa."  etc. — Kavanaugh. 
My  pa,  he  scolds  me  jes'  becuz.     See  My  Ma,  She  Knows. 

— Anon. 
My  pa,  he's  got  the  funniest  ways.     See  Pa's  Ways. — 

Richards.  ' 
My  papa  he's  the  bestest  man.     See  Boy's  King,  A. — 

Kiser. 
My  Pa  is  a  travelling  man,  so  he  calls  himself.     See 

Colorado  Hotel  Rules. — Anon. 
My  papa  sometimes  scolds  and  says.     See  Little  Mid- 
get.— Anon. 


My  papa's  all   dressed   up   today.     See   U.    S.    Spells 

"Us." — Bradford. 
My  pappy   asked   me   if    I'd   say.      See  Speech:  "My 

pappy,"  etc. ^Kavanaugh. 
My  passion  is  as  mustard   strong.     See  New   Song,   of 

New  Similes,  A. — Gay. 
My  patron  saint,  St.  Valentine.     See  Valentine  Verses. 

— Page. 
My  Peggy  is  a  young  thing.     See  Gentle  Shepherd,  The 

(My  Peggy). — Ramsay. 
My  pensive    Public,    wherefore    look    you    sad?     See 

Play-house  Musings. — Smith. 
My  pensive  Sara!  thy  soft  cheek  reclined.     See  Eolian 

Haro.  The. — Coleridge. 
My  people! — the  cause  of  your  pre.sent  assemblage  too 

well  is  known  to  you.     See  Peasant  Boy's  Vindica- 
tion, The. — Dimond. 
My  Phillis  hath  the  morning-sun.     See  Phillis. — Lodge 

[or  Dyer]. 
My  Phyllis,  O  my  Phyllis.     See  My  Phyllis.— Fitch. 
My  pipe    is    lit,    my    grog    is    mixed.     See    Bachelor's 

Dream,  The. — Hood. 
My  pipe  is  out ;  the  hour  is  late.     See  My  Pipe  is  Out. — 

— Hopkins. 
My  Poins,   I   cannot  frame  my  tongue  to  feign.     See 

Second  Satire,  The.— Wyatt. 
My  pony  and  I !     See  My  Pony. — Denton. 
My  pony  toss'd   his  sprightly  head.     See  My  Pony. — 

"A." 
My  poor,   dear  Grandma  is   so   sick.     See  Grandma's 

Tea.— Rook. 
"My  poor  father!     I  am  thy  only  son! — if  I  were  to 

fall."     See  Last  Day.s  of  Pompeii   (Last  Night  of 

Pompeii,  The). — Bulwer-Lytton. 
My  practice's  out!     See  Musical  Threnody,  A. — Anon. 
My  pretty  budding,  breathing  flower.     See  Sketch  of  a 

Young  I,ady  Five  Months  Old. — Praed. 
My  pretty  little  Dora  is  well  and  happy?     See  David 

Copperfield     (Disastrous     Announcement,     A). — 

Dickens. 
My  prime  of  youth  is  but  a  frost  of  cares.     See  Lines 

Written  by  One  in  the  Tower. — Tychborn. 
My  prow  is  tending  toward  the  west.     See  My  New 

World. — Browne. 
My  pure.st  longings  spring.     See  same. — Eaton. 
My  (jueen  is  tired  and  craves  surcease.     See  At  the 

Dance. — DeGruchy. 
My  race  is  o'er. — But  now,  before.     See  Year,  The. — 

Kavanaugh. 
My  rauist  spreit  in  that  desert  terribill.      See  Palice 

of  Honour,  The  (Desert  Terrible,  The). — Douglas. 
My  reason  for  loving  a  republican  form  of  government 

See  Free  Speech. — Smith. 
My  recollectsst    thoughts  are  those.     See  My   Recol- 

lectest  Thoughts. — Carryl. 
My  risen  Lord,  I  feel  Thy  strong  protection.     See  same. 

Anon. 
My  roof  is  hardly  picturesque.     See  Autumn  Flitting, 

An. — Cotterell. 
My  rose  of  crimson  peeped  over  the  sweet  brier.     See 

My  Rose  and  Hers. — Guild. 
My  roses  blossom  the  whole  year  round.     See  same. — 

Bennett. 
My  sandalled  feet  are  firm  and  fleet.     See  Song  of  the 

Thaw,  The. — Kernighan. 
My  Saviour,  dare  I  come  to  Thee.     See  Wanderer,  The 

(Palingenesis). — Lytton. 
My  sentence  is  for  open  war-  of  wiles.     See  Paradise 

Lost  (Moloch  to  the  Fallen  Angels). — Milton. 
My  shag-hair  Cyclops,  come,  let's  ply.     See  Sapho  and 

Phao  (Arrows  for  Love). — Lyly. 
My  sheep  are  thoughts,  which  I  both  guide  and  serve. 

See  Arcadia  (Dorus  to  Pamsla). — Sidney. 
My  sheep  I  neglected,  I  broke  my  sheep  hook.     See 

Amynta. — Elliot. 
My  silks  and  fine  array.     See  Sorg:  "My  silks,"  etc. — 

Blake. 
My  .sin-stricken  bretherin   and  sisters,  thar  Lord  only 

knows.     See    Sermon    on    Keards,    Horses,    Fid- 
dlers and  Foolin'  with  the  Gals,  A. — Anon. 
My  sis'er  Sue  she's  little  'n  me.     See  Us  Two. — Rich- 
ards. 
My  sister!  my  sweet  sister!  if  a  name.     See  Epistle  to 

Augusta. — Byron. 
My  sister,  you  are  faint,  exhausted!  you  can  bear  no 

more.     See    Execution    of    Louis    XVI.,    The. — 

Anon. 
"My  sister'U  be  down  in  a  minute,  and  says  you're  to 

wait,  if  you  please."    See  Miss  Edith  Helps  Things 

Along. — Harte 
My  sistern    an'    brcdrin    dear.     See    Brudder    Jones  s 

Heterodoxy.— Anon. 


765 


My  sister's 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETOY  AND  RECITATIONS 


My    sister's   best    feller   is    'most    six-foot-three.     See 

"Sister's  Best  Feller."— Lincoln. 
My  skiff  is  of  bark  from   the  white  birch-tree.     Aee 

Fairy  Barcarolle,  .\.— Eddy. 
My  Skillettville  br«6therinK.  of  the  masculine  and  al.so 

of  the  feminine  gender.     See  Trumpet  Sermon,  A. 

My  son,  a  father's  warning  heed.     See  Papa  to  his  Heir. 

My  son.  b^^'this  thy  simple  plan.  See  Advice  to  the 
Young. — Anon.  . 

My  son  Hezekiahs  a  painter;  ves,  that  s  the  pur- 
fession  he's  at.     See  Hezekiah  s  Art.— Lincoln. 

My  son,  thou  wast  my  heart's  delight.  See  On  the 
Death  of  my  Son  Charles.— Webster 

My  son,  what  does  this  mean?     See  Effects  of  War, 

Mv  son^'~What!"    Drafted!    My    Harry!     Why,    man, 
he's  a  boy  at  his  books.     See  Drafted.— Bostwick. 
My  .song  is  silenced,  yet  the  echo  stays.     See    Quat- 
rain.— Banning.  ,     ,     ,.  o.,,   e,>.,i 
My  soul,   asleep   between   its   body-throes.     See   boul 

Stithy,  The.— Woods. 
My  soul  its  secret  has,  my  life  too  has  its  mystery. 

See  Secret,  The.— Arvers.  „      t,       • 

My  soul,   sit  thou  a  patient   looker-on.     See  Respice 

Finem. — Quarles.  ,r       u 

My  soul,  there  is  a  country.     See  Peace.— Vaughan. 
My  soul  to-day  is  far  away.     See  Drifting.— Head. 
My  soul,  where  is  the  fruit  of  thy  long  pain.     See  l^ove 

Unreturned.— Beeching.  ,•        o      i- 

Mv   spirit   longeth   for  Thee.     See  Desponding   boul  s 
Wi:*h,  The  (My  Spirit  Longeth  for  Thee).— Byrom. 
My  spirit's  on   the  mountains,   where  the  birds.     See 
Sonnet  Written  during  his  Residence  in  College. 
—Wolfe.  ,  „ 

My  spotless  love  hovers  with  purest  wings.  See 
Sonnets  to  Delia  (Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  IL). 
— Daniel.  ,  t    i      >    i  a 

My  story  is  a  simple  one.  its  moral  1  don  t  know,     bee 

Stray  Sunbeam.  A. — Gilbert.  ^ 

My  story,  marm?  well,  really  now,  T  haven  t  much  to 
say.       See    What    the    Temperance    Cause    Has 
Done  for  John  and  Me. — Coles. 
My  story  opens  in  the  classic  presinks  of  Bostin.     See 
Moses,    the    Sassy;    or.  The    Disguised    Duke- 
Ward. 
My  sunbeam  children  must  work  and  play.     See  Sun- 
beam Fairies. — Anon.  „      r^    ^ 
My  sweetest  Lesbia,  let  us  live  and  love.     See  lo  Les- 

bia. — Campion. 
My  tea  is  neaily  ready  and  the  sun  has  left  the  sky. 

See  Lamplighter,  The. — Stevenson. 
My  teacher    told    me,    yesterday.     See    Butterflies. — 

Goodfellow.  .         ,         ,  „      ^ 

My  teacher  told  me  the  other  day.     See  Large  Room, 

A. — Goodfellow. 
My  text,   dear  brethren,   may  be   found.     See   Early 

Bird,  The. — Anon. 
My  thoughts  are   all   in    yonder  town.     See   Friend  s 

Burial,  The.— Whittier. 
My  thoughts  hold   mortal  .strife.     See  Lament,   A. — 

Drummond. 
My  time,  O  ye  Muses,  was  happily  spent.     See  Pas- 
toral, A. — Byrom. 
My  times  are  in  thy  hand!     See  same. — Hall. 
My  Tito,  you  are  tired;  it  has  been  a  fatiguing  day. 

See  Roniola  (Tito's  Armor). — Eliot. 
My  train  left  Dantzic  in  the  morning.     See  Mad  Engin- 
eer, 'The. — Anon. 
My  train  ran  from  Dantzic  to  Bromberg,  one  hundred 
miles.     See  Prussian  Railway  Conductor's  Story. 
The. — Fobes. 
My  true  love  hath   my  heart,  and   I   have  his.     See 

Arcadia,  The  (  Bargain,  The). — Sidney. 
My  Valentine    I    prithee    be.     See    Rondeau    for    St. 

Valentine's  Day. — Fitch. 
My  very  dear  friend.     See   Bit  of  Shopping  for  the 

Country,  A. — Anon. 
My  vife  all  de  time  .says  to  me,  "Carl  Dunder. "     See 
Initiated  as  a  Member  of  the  United  Order  of  Half- 
sheWn.-' {Detr oil  Free  Press.) 
My  voice  is  still  for  war.     See  Cato  (Speech  of  Sem- 

pronius  for  War). — Addison. 
My  voice   shrinks   from    the   task.     See   Bunker   Hill 

Monument,  The. — Kossuth. 
My   warning  to  the  idlers.      See  Clyrano    de   Bergerac 

(Scene  from.  etc.). — Rostand. 
Mv  wawst  fearws  are  wealized:  the  Op'wa  is  na  maw. 

See  Last  Kick  of  Fop's  Alley,  The.— ( Punch.) 
My  wife  and  I  live  all  alone.     See  Rumpus  in  a  Shoe- 
maker Shop,  A. — McBride. 


My  wife  is  a  woman  of  mind.     See  some.— Anon 

My  wife  looked  o'er  a  valentine.     See  Old  Valentine, 

An. — Birdseye. 
My  wife  worked  along  side  o'  me,  sewing  new  seats  on 

the  boy's  pants.     See  Broken  Home,  A.^Anon. 
My  wind  has  turned  to  bitter  north.     See  No  More.— 

My  window  is  the  open  sky.    See  Immortality. — Hardy. 
My  work   is   fini-shed;   I   am   strong.     See   Finished.— 

Longfellow.  .       ^.  „      xt        n 

My  worthy  friend,  A.  Gordon  Knott.     See  New  House, 

The.— Lowell. 
My  youngest    doll    is    very    sick.     See    Dr.    Johnny  s 

Visit. — Anon.  „      ,-.  •  j 

Mynheer,  blease  helb  a  boor  oldt  man.     See  tritz  and 

I. — Adims.  ,      L    ■      fl  o 

Myriads  of  daisies  have  shown  forth  in  Hower.     See 

Poems    Composed    in    the    Summer    of    1833. — 

Wordsworth. 
Myriads    of    motley    molecules    through    space.     See 

Soul  and  Sense.— Kimball. 
Myrtle,     and     eglantine.      See      Wishmaker  s     Town 

(Flower-seller,  The). — Young. 
Mysterious  Death!  who  in  a  single  hour.     See  Trans- 
figuration.  Alcott.  err 

'Mysterious  Life,  we  speak  as  if  we  know.     See  Life. — 

Morgan. 
Mysterious  Night,   when  our  first  parent   knew.     See 

Night  and  Death.— White. 
Mysterious   Presence,    source   of   all.     See   Inspiration 

of  the  Spirit  The.— Beach. 


N 

"N"  for  Nannie  and  "B"  for  Ben.     See  same. — Dal- 
las. 
Naiiy,  noii  mander  o'use  to  be  callin'  'im  Roa,  Roii, 

Roa.     See  Owd  Roii. — Tennyson. 
Nae  ane's  wae  worn  and  weary.     See  Far  Awa  Lan', 

The — .\non. 
Nae  palace  hae  I  wi'  gilded    ha's.     See   Bonny    Wee 

House,  The.— Lyle.  \^ 

Nae  shoon  to  hide  her  tiny  taes.     See  Babie,  The. — 

Miller. 
Nae  star  was  glintin'   out  aboon.     See  Nae  Star  Was 

Glintin'. — Cook. 
Naiad,  hid  beneath  the  bank.     See  Dirge,  A.— Cory. 
Naiads  and    the    nymphs    extremely    overjoy'd.    The. 

See  Polyolbion. — Drayton. 
Naiads,  and  ye  pastures  cold.     See  Telling  the  Bees. — 

Lang. 
Naked  and  shaggy,  they  herded  at  eve  by  the  sound  of 
the    seas.     See   Dream    of    the    Prehistoric,    A. — 
Scott. 
Naked  on  parents'  knees;  a  newborn  child.     See  Babe, 

The. — Jones. 
Name  me  the  fairest  flower  of  earth.     See  Challenge. 

A. — Snowden. 
NftnSic  the  faithful  pausing  once  to  pr^y.     See  Allah's 

House. — Sherman. 
Nancy  Dawson,  Nancy  Dawson.     See  Nancy  Dawson. 

— Home. 
Nancy  Matilda  .Jones  was  a  gal  which  didn't  have  a 
mind  of  her  own.     See  Nancy  Matilda  Jones. — 
Anon. 
Napoleon  Bonaparte  took  a  great  fancy  to  Talma.     See 

Napoleon's  Advice  to  an  Actor. — Anon 
Napoleon !    he    hath   come    again— borne   home.     See 

Napoleon's  Final  Return. — Browning. 
Napoleon  sent  an  army  to  conquer  Tyrol.     See  Hans, 

the  Useless. — Fobes. 
Napoleon  was  sitting   in  his  tent.     See  Victor  of  Ma- 
rengo, The.— Anon. 
Napoleon,   Wellington,  Von   Moltke, — it  is   with   such 
names  as  these  the  name  of  General  Grant  belongs. 
See  Our  Happy  Warrior. — Collier. 
Napoleon's  banners  at  Boulogne.     See  Napoleon  and 

the  Sailor. — ('ampbell. 
Narrow,  wretched,   and   solitary  is  the  self-life!     See 

Self-life.— Pulsford. 
Nat  Ricket  at  cricket  was  reckoned  a  don.     See  Nat 

Ricket  at  Cricket. — ^Miles. 
National  policies   can.  encourage    industry    and    com- 
merce.    See  Duty  of  the  Hour,  The. — McKinley. 
National  security   depends   upon   the  manhood   of   its 
voters.     See   True   Manhood,   the    Nation's   only 
Safety. — Soper. 
Nations  have  armies  in  the  plentitude  of  power.     See 

Opinions  Stronger  than  Armies. — Ostrander. 
Nature,  a   jealous   mistress,    laid   him    low.     See    Ep\- 
•gram  on  the  Death  of  Edward  Forbes. — Dobell 


766 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Never 


Nature  admits  no  lie.     Most  men  profess  to  be  aware 

of  this.     See  Nature  a  Hard  Creditor. — Carlyle, 
Nature  and  he  went  ever  hand  in  hand.     <See  Priest,  A. 

—Gale. 
Nature  denied  him  much.     See  same. — Rogers. 
Nature,  ever  fickle   jade.     See   Miller's   Maid,    The.— 

Brooks. 
Nature  is  interesting  in  all  its  multifold  phases.     See 

Nature's  Monotony. — Anon. 
Nature    is    made    better   by    no   mean.     <See  Winter's 

Tale,  The  (.A.rt  and  Nature). — Shakespeare. 
Nature  never  did  betray.     See  Lines  Composed  a  Few 

Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey,  etc.  ("Nature  never," 

etc.). — Wordsworth. 
Nature  reads    not   our   labels,    "great"    and    "small." 

Sec  Man  with  the  Shoe,  The. — Cheney. 
Nature,  that  framed  us  of  four  elements.     See  Ambi- 
tion.— Marlowe. 
Nature,  they  say,  doth  dote.     See  Abraham  Lincoln. — 

Lowell. 
Nature  will    be    reported — all    things    are    engaged    in 

writing  it's  history.     See  Nature. — Miller. 
Nature's     children,     beautiful     trees!     See     Beautiful 

Trees.— A.  L.  R. 
Naught  is  the  same  "as  if  Love  had  not  been!"     See 

With  Sa'di  in   the  Garden  ("Naught  is  the  same," 

etc.). — Arnold. 
Nay  but  you,  who  do  not  love  her.     See  Song:    "Nay, 

but  .you,"  etc. — Browning. 
Nay!  Byron,    nay!    not    under   where   we    tread.     See 

Byron's  Grave. — Noel. 
Nay,  Death,  thou  art  a  shadow!     Even  as  light.     See 

Lux  Est  Umbra  Dei. — Symonds. 
Nay,  fond  one!  I  will  ne'er  reveal.     See  On  a  Tear  An- 
gelina     Ob.served      Trickling     down     my     No.se. 

—  (Punch.) 

Nay,  fond  one,  shun  that  mistletoe.     See  On  my  Re- 
fusing   Angelina    a    Kiss    under    the    Mistletoe. 

—  (Punch.) 

"Nay,  give  me  back  my  blossoms."     See  Gain  of  Loss, 

The. — Bonar. 
Nay,  T   cannot  come  into  the  garden  just  now.     See 

Maud. — Leigh. 
Nay,  I  have  loved  thee!     See  Theseus  and  Ariadne. — 

MifRin. 
Nay,  I  must  knit  till  my  task  is  done.     See  Fidelity. — 

M.  F.  B. 
Nay!  I  will  pray  for  them  until  I  go.     See  Prayers  for 

the  Dead. — Proctor. 
Nay!  if  you  will  not  sit  upon  my  knee.     See  Pan  in 

Love. — Story. 
"Nay,  I'll  stay  with  the  lad."     See  Heroic  Death,  A. 

—  (Spectator.) 

Nay,  it  may  not  be  otherwise,   darling.     See  Isle  of 

Yew. — Anon. 
Nay,  ladv,  one  frown  is  enough.     See  To  Helen  in  a 

Huff.— Willis. 
Nay,  nay,   another  fortnight.     See  His  Own   Pills. — 

Anon. 
Nay,  nay,   dear  child,    I   cannot    let   you   slight.     See 

Linings. — Smith. 
Nay,  only  look  what   I   have  found!     See  Sparrow's 

Nest,  The.— Howitt. 
Nay,  said  I  not,  and  if  I  said  it  not,  I  say  it  now.     See 

Philip  van  Artevelde  ("Nay,  said  I  not,"  etc.). — 

Taylor. 
Nay,  then,  farewell.     See  King  Henry  VIII.  (Cardinal 

Wolsey,  on  being  Cast  off  by  King  Henry  VIII.). — 

Shakespeare. 
Nay,  this  is  Hope;  a  gentle  dove.     See  Answer  to  "Cui 

Bono?"  An. — Carlyle. 
Nay,  ye  shall  hear  how  it  befell!     See  Count  Gaultier's 

Ride. — Renaud. 
Nay,  you  wrong  her.  my  friend,  she's  not  fickle.     See 

Out  grown . — Dorr. 
Near  a  shabby  village,  which  was  caving.     See  Gilded 

Age,  The  (Uncle  Dan'I's  Prayer). — Clemens. 
Near  a  small  village  in  the  West.     See  Quince. — Praed. 
Near  Erie  there  lives  a  colored   person.     See  Chicken 

on  the  Brain. — Anon. 
Near  ould  Skibbereen,  in  the  gim  of  the  ow.shun.     See 

Widow  MacShane. — Newell. 
Near  our    south-western    border,  when    a    child.     See 

Tree  Burial. ^Bryant. 
Near  strange,  weird  temples,  where  the  Ganges'  tide. 

See  Bayadere,  The. — Saltus. 
Near  the  campfire's  flickering  light.     See  Now  I  Lay 

Me  down  to  Sleep. —  (Wichita  Eagle.) 
Near  the  city  of  Sevilla.     See  Magdalena;  or,  the  Span- 
ish Duel. — Waller. 
Near  the  King's  court  was  a  young  child  born.     See 

Hynd  Horn. — Anon. 


Near  the  lake  where  drooped  the  willow.     See  Near  the 

Lake. — Morris. 
Near  the  statel.v  German  palace.     See  Marble  Queen, 

The. — Woolsey. 
Near  the  town  of    Reading,  in  Berks  County,  Pennsyl- 
vania.    See  Dutchman's  Snake,  The. — Anon. 

Near  the  tumultuous  brook  of  Green-head  Ghyll.  See 
Michael  and  his  Son. — Wordsworth. 

Near  to  a  farm-house,  and  bordered  round.  See  Gris- 
elda  Goose. — Cary. 

Near  to  Clapham  town-gate  lived  an  old  Yorkshire  tike. 
See  Yorkshire  Horse-dealer,  The. — Anon. 

Near  to  that  part  of  the  Thames.  See  Death  of  Bill 
Sikes,  The. — Dickens. 

Near  to  the  silver  Trent.     See  Sirena. — Drayton. 

Near  where  yonder  evening  star.  See  Cockayne  Coun- 
try.— Darmesteter. 

Near  yonder  copse,  where  once  the  garden  smiled.  See 
Deserted  Village,  The  (Village  Preacher,  The).— 
Goldsmith. 

Nearer  and  nearer  and  nearer  and  near!  See  Indian 
Attack,  The. — Brownjohn. 

Nearer,  my  God,  to  Thee.     See  same. — Adams. 

"Nearer  my  God  to  Thee,"  rose  on  the  air.  See 
"Nearer  to  Thee." — .Jones. 

Nearly  four  thousand  years  ago  history  parted  into 
two  streams.  See  Two  Streams  of  History,  'The. 
—Thompson. 

Nearly  one  hundred  years  ago,  there  was  a  day  of  re- 
markable gloom  and  darkness.     See  sam.e. — Lee. 

'Neath  cloister'd  bough  each  floral  bell  that  swingeth. 
See  Hymn  to  the  Flowers. — Smith. 

'Neath  summer's  sun  and  winter's  blast.  See  Realiza- 
tion.— Burdette. 

Neber  hearn  tell  o'  dat,  honey?  'Twas  more'n  twenty 
year  ago.     See  Carmelita. — Dunn. 

Necks  are  very  convenient  to  have.  Bull-frogs  and 
toads  don't  need  them.  See  Essay  on  Necks. — 
Bronson. 

Necks  is  a  very  convenient  things  to  have.  See  Necks 
— a  Boy's  Composition. — Bronson. 

"Needy  knife-grinder,  whither  are  you  going?"  See 
Friend  of  Humanity  and  the  Knife-grinder,  The. — 
Canning. 

"Ne'er  have  I  seen  the  market  and  streets  so  empty!" 
See  Hermann  and  Dorothea. — Goethe. 

Neglect  of  small  things  is  the  rock.  See  Neglect  of 
Little  Things. — Smiles. 

Neglected  minstrel  of  the  single  song.  See  American 
Partridge,  The. — (Southern  Collegian.) 

Neighbor  Silas  sung  a  song.  See  Song  that  Silas 
Sung,  The. — Foss. 

Neither  realism  nor  romance  furnishes  a  more  .striking 
and  picturesque  figure.  See  Columbus  the  Dis- 
coverer of  America. — Depew. 

Nellie,  please  don't  sing  any  more.  See  Two  Faults. — 
Coale. 

Nellie  was  my  eldest  doll.  See  Dolls'  Tea-party,  The. 
— Anon. 

Nello  and  Patrasche  were  left  all  alone  in  the  world. 
See  Dog  of  Flanders,  A. — La  Ramoe. 

Nelson,  having  dispatched  his  business  at  Portsmouth. 
See  Death  of  Nelson,  The. — Southey. 

Neow,  look'ee  here,  feller  citizens,  and  the  wimmin. 
See  Lecture  by  a  Yankee. — McBride. 

Neow,  Si,  I'll  jest  tell  yeou  how  it  is.  See  Josiah's  Pro- 
posal.— McBride. 

Nestleton  Abbey,  in  the  East  Riding  of  Yorkshire. 
See  Ne.-stleton  Magna  (Sister  .■Vgatha's  Ghost). — 
Wray. 

Never  a  beak  has  my  white  bird.  See  Thistle-down. — 
Bates. 

Never  a  boy  had  so  many  names.  See  One  of  his 
Names. — Pollard. 

Never  a  fairer  maiden  breathed.  See  Acrostic  Plaint, 
An.— R.  S.  P. 

Never  a  leaf  falls.     See  Work. — Anon. 

Never  any  more.     See  In  a  Year. — Browning. 

Never  be  ashamed  to  say,  "I  do  not  know."  See  Be 
in  Earnest. — Bulwer-Ivytton. 

Never  bo  it  said  that  fate  itself.  See  King  Richard  III. 
— Shakespeare. 

Never  did  a  pilgrim  approach  Niagara  with  deeper  en- 
thusiasm. See  My  Visit  to  Niagara. — Haw- 
thorne. 

Never  did  the  Nine  impart.  See  Shepherd's  Hunting, 
The  (Eclogue  I  v.). —Wither. 

Never  did  there  devolve  on  any  generation  of  men 
higher  tru.sts  than  now.  See  Constitution  and  the 
Union.  The  (Constitution,  The). — Webster. 

Never  from  lips  of  cunning  fell.  See  Problem,  The 
(Responses). — Emerson. 


767 


Never 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOXS 


Never,  from  the  foundation  of  the  earth.     See  Joan  of 

Arc  (Execution  of  Joan  of  Arc). — DeQuincey. 
Never  have  I  known  such  a  fireside  companion  as  he 

was!     iSee  Colloquial  Powers  of  Dr.   Franklin. — 

Wirt. 
Never  give  up ! — it  is  wiaer  and  better.     See  Never  Give 

Up. — Tupper.  * 

Never,  lago.     Like  to  the  Pontic  Sea.     <See  Othello, 

the  Moor  of  Venice. — Shakespeare. 
Never  let  it  be  said  the  d^s  of  chivalry  are  fled.     See 

Fight  of  Hell-kettle,  The.— Power. 
Never  lived  a  Yankee  yet.     See  In  the  Catacombs. — 

Ballard. 
Never  look  behind,  boys.     See  Climbing  up  the  Hill. — 

Anon. 
Never  look  sad;  nothing  so  bad.     See  Don't  Look  Sad. 

— Anon. 
Never  love  unless  you  can.     See  Advice  to  a  Girl. — 

Campion. 
Never  mind  how  the  pedagogue  proses.     See  To  Fanny. 

— Moore. 
Never  mind  me,  Uncle  Jared;  never  mind  my  bleeding 

brea.st!     See  Ensign  Bearer,  The. — Anon. 
Never,   my  heart,  wilt  thou  grow  old!      See  Growing 

Old.— Hall. 
Never  saw  anything  like  it!     See  Rebellion,   The. — 

Denton. 
Never  seek  to  tell  thy  love.     See  Love's  Secret  — Blake. 
Never  sleeping,  still  awake.     See  Echo,  An. — Swift. 
Never  stoops  the  soaring  vulture.     See  Song  of  Hia- 
watha, The  (Ghosts,  The), — Longfellow. 
Never  tell  a  man  that  he  is  a  liar,  unless  you  are  certain 

that  you  can  lick  him.     See  Don't  Call  a  Man  a 

Liar. — Anon. 
Never  the  time  and  the  place.     See  same. — Browning. 
Never  weather-beaten  sail  more  willing  bent  to  shore. 

See  O  Come  Quickly ! — Campion. 
Never    wedding,    ever   wooing.     See    Maid's    Remon- 
strance, The. — Campbell. 
Never    yet    was    a    springtime.     See    Awakening. — 

Sangster. 
New  dotn  the  sun  appear.    See  Change  should  Breed 

Change. — Drummond. 
New  England  has  furnished  us  so  many  shining  lights 

of    feminine    poetic    genius.     See   Three    Women 

Poets  of  New  England. — Faxon. 
New  England's  dead !     New  England's  dead  I     See  New 

England's  Dead. — M'Lellan. 
New  England's  poet,  rich  in   love  as  years.     See  To 

John  Greenleaf  Whittier. — Lowell. 
New  Year   comes.^so    let's   be    jolly.     See  Feast    of 

Vegetables,  and  the  Flow  of  Water,  The.— (Ptmch.) 
New  Year's  morning  softly    broke.     See    New  Year's 

Wishes. — Larcom. 
News  from    a    foreign    country    came.     See    News. — 

Traherne. 
News    o'  grief  had  overteiiken.     See  Broken  Heart, 

The. — Barnes. 
News  of  battle!     Hear  it  ringing.     See  Silent  Army 

of  Memorial  Day,  The. — Jones. 
News  of  battle !     News  of  battle !   hark !   'tis   ringing 

down  the  street.     See  Edinburgh  after  Flodden. — 

Aytoun. 
"News  to  the  king,  good  news  to  all!"     See  News  to 

the  King. — Webster. 
Next  comes  the  dull  disciple  of  thy  school.    See  English 

Bards    and    Scotch    Reviewers    (Wordsworth). — 

Byron. 
Next  mom  the  Baron  climbed  the  tower.     See  Mar- 

mion  (March,  The). — Scott. 
Next  to  the  notice  which  the  opposition  has  found  itself 

called  upon  to  bestow.     See  Defence  of  Jefferson  — 

t'lay. 
Next  to  the  worship  of  the  Father  of  us  all.     See  Agri- 
culture and  I>ove  of  Country. — Holt. 
Next  to  thee,  O  fair  gazelle.     See  Arab  to  the  Palm, 

The. — Taylor. 
Next  week  will  be  published  (as  "Lives"  are  the  rage) 

See  Lines  on  Leigh  Hunt. — Moore. 
"Next  year,  next  year,"  we  say.     See  Next  Year.— 

Perry. 
Niagara  Falls  is  one  of  the  finest  structures  in  the 

known  world.  See  Day  at  Niagara,  A.— Clemens. 
Nice  distmctions  are  troublesome.  See  same. — Eliot 
Nicolo    Paginini    strode    with    downca.st    eyes.     See 

Legend  of  Paginini,  A. — Harrison. 
Nicotia,   dearer  to   the   Muse.     See   Winter   Evening 

Hymn  to  my  Fire.  A. — Lowell. 
Nigger  mighty    happy  w'en  he    layin'  by  co'n.     See 
..XT    t'ouRh-nantls'  Song,  The. — Harris. 
Nigh  on  to  twenty  years."     See  Aged  Prisoner,  The.— 

Anon. 


Nigh  one  year  ago.     See  Festus  (Lucifer  and  Elissa). — 

Bailey. 
Nigh  to  a  grave  that  was  newly  made.     See  Old  Sextoft, 

The. — Benjamin. 
Night  after  night  we  dauntlessly  embark.     See  Night 

after  Night. — Bloede. 
Night  saw  the  crew  like  pedlers  with  their  packs.     See 

Lunar  Stanzas. — Knight. 
Night  and  Morning  were  at  meeting.     See  Dance  of 

Death,  The. — Scott. 
Night  came  at  last.     The  noisy  throng  had  gone.     See 

Rizpah. — Vickers. 
Night  clos'd  around  tha  conqueror's  way.     See  After 

the  Battle. — Moore. 
Night  in  a  great  city.     What  a  world  of  meaning.     See 

Fire!     Fire!— Eaton.  J 

Night    in    Arabia.     An    hour    ago.     See    Scholar    of 

Thebet  Ben  Khorat,  The.— Willie. 
Night   in  the   Baron's  castle.     See  Christmas  Guest, 

The. — Goodwin. 
Night  is  fair  virtue's   immemorial   friend.     See   Night 

Thought.s  (Socrates). — ^ Young. 
Night  is  the  time  for  rest.     See  Night.— Montgomery. 
Night  kissed  the  young  rose,  and  it  bent  softly  to  sleep. 

See  Charity. — Winton. 
Night  of  the  Tomb!     He  has  entered  thy  portal.     See 

Webster. — Sargent. 
Night  on  the  great  grass  plains  of  Africa.     See  Martyrs 

of  Uganda,  The.— Murray. 
Night  rested  on  the  sea — the  moon  alone.     See  Burning 

of  the  Lexington. — Bard. 
Night  spread  its  starry  mantle!     See  Drunkard,  The. 

-^(Real  Life.) 
Nightingales    warble    about    it.     See    Secret,    The. — 

Woodberry. 
Night's    diadem    around    the   head.     See   America. — 

Rankin. 
Nights  of  music,  nights  of  loving.     See  Nights  of  Music. 

— Moore. 
Nihilism  is  the  righteous  and  honorable  resistance  of  a 

people  crushed.     See  Russian  Nihilism. — Phillips. 
Nikolas  roused  the  watchman,  the  bridge  was  let  down. 

and    the    steward    summoned.     See    Sin    of    the 

Bishop  of  Modenstein,  The. — Hope. 
Nilus!  Nilus!  and  before  them  rolled.     See  How  Bal- 
thazar the  King  Went  down  into  Egypt. — Duvar. 
Nimble  boy,  in  thy  warm    flight.       See    Castara    (To 

Cupid,  upon  a  Dimple  in  Castara's  Cheek). — Hab- 

ington. 
"Nine,"   by   the  cathedral  clock.     See  Child  Lost. — 

Anon. 
Nine  grenadiers  with   bayonets   on   their  guns.     See 

Boy's  Dream,  A. — Levee. 
Nine  o'clock.     'Tis  time  for  school.     See  Little  Teacher, 

The. — Eastman. 
Nineteen!   of  years  a   pleasant   number.     See  ^Etate 

XIX.— Merivale. 
Nineteen  out  of  twenty  in  this  country  receive  all  their 

education.     See      Country      Pedagogue,      The. — 

Valentine. 
Nine-tenths  of  all  that  goes  wrong.     See  Mind  Your 

Business. — Dixey. 
Nisus  was   guardian   of   the  gate.     See    ^Eneid,    The 

(Nisus  and  Euryalus). — Conington. 
No   abbey's   gloom,   nor   dark   cathedral   stoops.     See 

Sleepy  Hollow. — Channing. 
No  account  of  John  Boyle  O'Reilly  would  be  complete. 

See  John  Boyle  O'Reilly. — Capen. 
No  baby  in  the  house,  I  know.     See  No  Baby  in  the 

House. — Dolliver. 
No  beard  on  thy  chin,  but  a  fire  in  thine  eye.     See 

Anne  Hathaway. — Falconer. 
No  bird  had  ever  lifted  note  so  clear.     See  "Love  that 

never  Cold  Can  Be." — Erskine. 
No  bird-song  floated  down  the  hill.     See  River  Path, 

The. — Whittier. 
No  black-plumed  hearse  goes  slowly  sweeping  by.     See 

Night  that  Baby  Died,  The.— Niles. 
No  candid  observer  will  deny  that  whatever  of  God 

there    may   be.      See  same. —  (Springfield   Repub- 
lic j.n.) 
No  cause  is  so  bound  up  with  religion  as  the  cau.se  of 

political  liberty.     See  Moral  and  Physical  Science 

Friendly  to  Freedom. — Chapin. 
No  ceaseless  vigil  with  hard  toil  we  keep.     See  Com- 

Kensation. — (Collier, 
ance  has  brought  this  ill  to  me.     See  My  Web  of 
Life. — Anon. 
No,  children,  my  trips  are  over.     See  Engineer's  Story, 

The. — Thorpe. 
No  cloud,  no  relict  of  the  sunken  day.     See  Nightin- 
gale, The.^ — Coleridge. 


768 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


No 


No  clouds  are  in  the  morning  sky.     See  Autumn  Song. 

- — Stedman. 
No  common  object  to  your  sight  displays.     iSee  Human- 
ity's Heroes. — Pope. 
No,  comrades,  I  thank  you,  not  any  for  me.     See  I 

Have  Drank  my  Last  Glass. — Aiion. 
No  coward  soul  is  mine.     See  Last  Lines. — Bronti*. 
No  cymbal  clashed,  no  clarion  rang.     <See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The  (Battle  of  Beal'  an  Duine). — Scott. 
No   factious    voice.      See    Graves   of   the    Patriots. — 

Percival. 
No  fairies  left?     You  need  not  tell  me  so.     See  Frost 

Work. — Bradley. 
No,  fellow-citizens,  we  dismiss  not  Adams  and  Jeffer- 
son.    iSee  Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jefferson  (Adams 

and  Jefferson). — Everett. 
No  fi.sh  stir  in  our  heaving  net.     See  Fisherman's  Song. 

— Baillie. 
No  flame    of    war    was    he,    no    flower   of   grace.     See 

Jacques  Cartier. — Knight. 
No  free  government   was  ever  founded.     See  same. — 

Quincy. 
No  freeman,  saith  the  wise,  thinks  much  on  death.     See 

End,  The. — Rice. 
No  god  to  mortals  oftener  descends.     See  Old  Poet  to 

Sleep,  An. — Landor. 
No  graceful  shape  like  a  Grecian  urn.     See  Churning, 

The. — Taylor. 
No  harbor  of  all  harbors  'neath  God's  sun.     See  De 

Long. — Watrous. 
No  heavenly  maid  we  here  behold.     See  Madonna  of 

Fra  Lippo  Lippi,  A. — Gilder. 
No  help  in  all  the  stranger-land.     See  Faith. — Cheney. 
No  human  being  who  saw  that  sight.     See  Catastrophe, 

A. — Arkwright. 
No  human  eyes  Thy  face  may  see.     See  Pantheism  and 

Theism. — Higginson. 
No,  I  am  not  working  on  a  farm  for  my  health  now. 

See  Following  the  Advice  of  a  Physician. ^-(7>afco<a 

Hell.) 
No,  I  tell  you!     I  cannot  bear  a  hand  upon  my  person. 

See  Becket  (Murder  of  Thomas  A  Becket,  The). — 

Tennyson. 
No,   I   thank   you,   I   can't,   possibly.     See   Kisses   all 

Round. — Anon. 
No,  I  won't  forgive  our  parson — not  down  to  my  dyin' 

day.     See  Christening,  The. — Corbett. 
No!     I'm  no  longer  an  aspirant  for  histrionic  honors. 

See  Coaching  the  Rising  Star. — De  Lorez. 
No,  Impudence,  you  sha'n't  have  one!     See  Her  No. — 

Anon. 
No!  is   my   answer   from   this   cold   bleak   ridge.     See 

Loyal  Woman's  No,  A. — Larcom. 
No,  it's  not  because  he  has  the  suffrage  that  I  should 

like  to  be  a  man.     See  Mrs.  Pickles  Wants  to  be  a 

Man. — Dallas. 
No  jewell'd    beauty    is    my    love.     See    No    Jewell'd 

Beauty. — Massey. 
No  less  than  five  of  the  eight  zones.     See  Trees  of  the 

Bible. — Groser. 
No!  let    me    alone! — 'tis    better    so.     See    Her    Last 

Words. — Anon. 
No  life  in  earth,  or  air,  or  sky.     See  Crotalus. — Harte. 
No  little  step  [or  steps]  do  I  hear  in  the  hall.     See  Papa 

Can't  Find  Me. — -Anon. 
No  longer  mourn  for  me  when  I  am    dead.     See   Son- 
nets, LXXI. — Shakespeare. 
No  longer  sleep.     See  Awake. — Dutt. 
No  man    can    be    truly    great    without    money.     See 

Office-seeker's  Platform,  The. — Anon. 
"No  man  can  come  unto  me  except  the  Father  draw 

him."     See  God's  Love  to  Man. — Beecher. 
No  man  ever  stood  for  so  much  to  his  country  and  to 

mankind.     See     Superiority     of     Washington. — 

Depew. 
No  man  has  ever  sunk  so  low.     See  Old  Violin,  The. — 

Stewart. 
No  man    is    the   lord    of   anything.     See   Troilus    and 

Cressida  fP^oresight). — Shakespeare. 
No  man  thinks  more  highly  than  1  do  of  the  patriotism. 

See  Call  to  Arms,  The. — Henry. 
No  matter  how  the  chances  are.     See  Jerry  an'  Me. — 

Rich. 
No  matter  what  horse-car.     See  Horse-car  Incident,  A. 

— Shillaber. 
No  matter    where    you    meet    a    dozen    earnest    men 

pledged   to   a   new   idea.     See   Public   Opinion. — 

Phillips. 
No  mercy,   traitor! — Now   at   his   heart!     See   Pizarro 

(Pizarro  and  Rolla). — Sheridan. 
No  more  happy  expedient  for  raising  the  revenues  of 

the  church  could  have  been  found.     See  Mt.  Pis- 

gah's  Christmas  'Possum. — Dunbar. 


No  more!     I'll  hear  no  more!     Begone,  and  leave  me! 

See  Venice  Preserved  (Priuli  and  Jaffier). — Otway. 
No  more,  my  dear,  no  more  these  counsels  try.     See 

Astrophel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  LXIV). — Sidney. 
No  more — -no     more — O,      nevermore     on     me.     See 

Don  Juan  (Nevermore). — Byron. 
No  more,  no  more,  shall  come  the  brave.     See  New 

Beacon's  Set. — Rooney. 
No  more   shall    meads    be    decked   with   flowers.     See 

Protestation,  The. — Carew. 
No  more  the  battle  or  the  chase.     See  Indian  Summer. 

— Tabb. 
No  more  the  pleasing  jest,  the  genial  flow.     See  Edgar 

W.  Nye. — Ham. 
No  more  these  simple   flowers  belong.     See   Burns. — 

Whittier. 
No  more  words.     See  same. — Lushington. 
No  mortal  power  shall  turn  me!    I  arise.     See  Death  of 

Livingston,  The. — Noel. 
"No;  my  boys,  they  don't  amount  to  no  great."     See 

Hoss. — Greene. 
No,  my  dear  neighbor,  I  don't  reckon  as  how  it's  pos- 
sible.    See  Born  Inventor,  A. — Edwards. 
No,  my  own  love  of  other  years!     See  In  After  Time. — 

Landor. 
No,   my  son,   cheek  is  not  better  than  wisdom.     See 

Advice  to  a  Young  Man. — Anon. 
No,  never,  never  will  I  live  at  a  hotel  again;  not  unless 

I  come  to  my  dotage.     See  Mrs.  Slowly  at  the 

Hotel. — Dallas. 
No  night   of  gloom   to   drop   between  our  eyes.     See 

There  Shall  be  no  Night  There. — Jay. 
No!  No!  Bird  in  the  darkness  singing.     See  Tzigane's 

Canzonet,  The.^King. 
No,  no,  fair  heretic !  it  needs  must  be.     See  True  Love. 

— Suckling. 
No,  no!  go  not  to  Lethe,  neither  twist.     See  Ode  on 

Melancholy. — Keats. 
No!  no!  I  don't  defend  him.     See  At  the  Court-house 

Door. — Anon. 
No,    no,    I    well    remember — proofs,    you    said.     See 

Demon  Lover,  The. — Hillhouse. 
No,  not  despairingly.     See  Unto  Thee. — Bonar. 
No,    not   in   the   halls   of  the   noble   and    proud.     See 

Quakeress  Bride,  The. — Kinney. 
No,   not   more  welcome  the  fairy  numbers.     See  No. 

not  More  Welcome. — Moore. 
"No  one  can  tell,"  said  little  Nell.     See  Stranger,  The. 

— Johnson. 
No  one  could  tell  me  where  my  Soul  might  be.     See 

Search,  The. — Crosby. 
No  one  failed   him!     He   is   keeping.     See   Edinburgh 

after  Flodden  (James  IV.  at  Flodden). — Aytoun. 
No  one  has  a  greater  admiration  than  I.     See  What 

the  Flag  Means. — Lodge. 
No  one  is  more  like  an  honest  man  than  a  thorough 

rogue.     See    Spurgeon's    Advice. — Charles    Spur- 

geon. 
No  one  saw  me !     This  time  I  shall  get  off.     See  Orange 

Tree,  The. — Anon. 
No  paltry  promptings  of  unglutted  hate.     Sec  Jeffer- 
son Davis. — Peck. 
No  party  has  ever  risen  into  power  so  rapidly  as  the 

Prohibition.     See      National      Prohibition. — ^Tal- 

mage. 
No  people  can  be  bound  to  acknowledge.     See  Maxims 

of  George  Wa.shington. 
No  power  is  so  sensibly  felt  by  society  as  that  of  the 

judiciary.     See  Judges  Should  be  Free. — Bayard. 
No  power  so  completely  sways  the  hearts  and  wills  of 

mankind.     See  Plea  for  Enthusiasm,  A. — Anon. 
No  precedent,  ye  say.     See  For  Cuba. — Bell. 
No  rain,  no  rain;  the  long,  hot  hours  rolled  by.     See 

Main  Hazir  Hun. — Winslow. 
No  roofs    of    gold    o'er    riotous    tables    shining.     See 

Description  of  a  Religious  House. — Crashaw. 
"No  rose  may  bloom  without  a  thorn?"     See  Thorn- 
less  Roses. — Dorr. 
No  royal  governor,   indeed.     See  Centennial    Celebra- 
tion of  Concord  Fight  (Minute  Men  of  '76).— Curtis. 
No  ruffling  wind  or  howling  storm  disturbed  the  placid 

sea.     See  Foundering  of  the  Dolphin. — Reed. 
"No,"  said  the  lawyer,  "I  sha'n't  press  your  claim." 

See  Claim  Was  Met,  The. — Anon. 
No  screw,  no  piercer  can.     See  Confession. — Herbert. 
No  sculptured  marble  greets  the  pilgrim's  view.     See 

Ode  to  Independence  Hall,  An. — Mitchell. 
No  seas  again  shall  sever.     See  All  Well. — Bonar. 
\o  shout   disturbed  the  night.     See  Bunker's  Hill. — 

Neal. 
No,  sir,  we   are   above   all   this.     See  Enmity   toward 

Great  Britain  (Old  Grudge  against  England,  The). 

— Choate. 


769 


No 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


No  slave  beneath  that  sftarry  flan.     See  same. — Taylor. 
No   sleep    like    hers,    no  rest.     See   White    Roses. — 

Rhys. 
"No  smoking  allowed."   met   the  eye  of  the  crowd. 

See  No  Smoking  .\llowed. — Bailey. 
No  soldier,   staltesman,   hierophant,   or   king.     See  To 

the  Memory  of  Fletcher  Harper. — Craik. 
No  song  of  a  soldier  riding  down.     See  Ride  of  Collins 

Graven,  The.— O'Reilly. 
No  sooner  is  mention  made  of  laws  affecting  the  liquor 
traffic.     See    Cry    of    Personal    Liberty,    The. — 
Ireland. 
No  soul  did  hear  her  lips  complain.     See  Ellen  Brine 

of  .\llenburn. — Barnes. 
No  .specious    splendor   of   this    stone.     See   Cornelian, 

The. — Byron. 
No  splendor  'neath  the  sky's  proud  dome.     See  Angel 

in  the  Hou.se,  The  (Tribute,  The). — Patmore. 
No  stately    column    marks    the    hallowed    place.     See 

.\lamance. — Whiting. 
No  stir  in  the  air,  no  stir  in  the  sea.     See  Inchcape 

Rock,  The.— 3outhey. 
No  stream  from  its  source  flows  seaward.     See   Lucile 

("No  .--tream,' '  etc.). — Lytton. 
No  sun — no  moon!     See  November. — Hood. 
No  sweeter   girl   ewe   ever   gnu.     See   Zoological    Ro- 
mance, A. — .\dams. 
No,  the  bugle  sounds  no  more.     See  Robin  Hood. — 

Keats. 
No!  there  ain't  no  use  of  talkin'.     See  Wife's  Lament, 

A. — Cadmus. 
No!  those  days  are  gone  away.     See  Robin  Hood. — 

Keats. 
No  thyng  ys  to  man  so  dere.     See  Prai.se  of  Women. — ■ 

^lannyng. 
No,  Tom.  you  niay  banter  as  much  as  you  please.    See 

Shelling  Peas. — Cranch. 
No  twenty  centuries  can  be  compared  with  these  four 
centuries.     See  Our  Expanding  Republic  (Dedica- 
tion of  Columbian  Exposition). — Watterson. 
No  two  are  alike,  and  no  one  is  alike  more  than  once. 

See  Woman. — Anon. 
No  united  nation  that  resolves  to  be  free  can  be  con- 
quered.    See  Greek  Revolution. — Clay. 
No  use  denyin',  Haines;  it's  all  my  fault.     See  Repa- 
ration.— Anon. 
No  vesper-breeze  is  floating  now.     See  Marathon  by 

Starlight. — Montgomery. 
No  voter  can  help  holding  one  of  the  four  following 
relationships  to  the  saloons.     See  On  Which  Side 
Are  You?— Willard. 
No  vulture's   eye   hath   seen    the   path.     See   Hidden 

Path ;  or,  The  Atlantic  Cable,  The.— Cleaveland. 
No,  we  ain't  performin'  to-day,  sir,  and  the  boys  are 
all  on  the  gape.     See  Positively  the  Last  Perform- 
ance!— (Punch.) 
No  wonder  he  creaks  as  the  winds  go  by.     See  Weather- 
cock's Complaint,  The. — Anon. 
"No    wonder    me    darling    is    cross-eyed."     See   "No 

Wonder. ' ' — Easton . 
Noah   did   the  best   and   worst    thing  for   the   world. 

See  Curse  of  Drink,  The.— Talma'  e. 
Noble  Republic!  happie.st  of  lands.     See  Viva  1' Amer- 
ica.— Anon. 
Nobles  and  he  aids,  by  your  leave.     See  Epitaph  Ex- 
tempore.— Prior. 
Noblest    Charis,     you    that     are.     See   Celebration   of 

Charis,  A  (Di.scourse  with  Cupid). — .Jonson. 
Nobly,  nobly  Cape  Saint   Vincent  to  the  North-west 
died  away.     See  Home-thoughts,  from  the  Sea. — 
Browning. 
Nobody  here?     I  suppose  somebody  will  come  pres- 
ently.    See  At  Cross  Purpo.ses. — Anon. 
Nobody  knows  how  hard  I've  tried.     See  Trying  Hard. 

— Kavanaugh. 
Nobody   knows   how   I   want   to   grow.     See   Coming 

Woman,  The. — (Christian  Union.) 
"Nobody  knows  how  much  that  man  thought  of  me." 
See  .losiah  Allen's  Wife  as  a  P.  A.  and  P.  I.  (Wid- 
der  Doodle). — HoUey. 
Nobody  knows  of  the  work  it  makes.     See  Nobody 

Knows  but  Mother. — Anon. 
Nobody  knows  the  nerve  it  takes.     See  "Angels  Can 

Do  no  More." — Kavanaugh. 
Nobody  sees  a  battle.     See  Battle,  A. — Sumner. 
Nodded  his  liege  assent,  and  straightway  bade.     See 

Rab  the  Ranter's  Bag-pipe  Playing. — Tennant. 
Noey  Bixler  ketched  him,,  and  fetched  him  in  to  me. 

See  Pet  Coon   The.— Riley. 
None  are  so  wise  as  they  who  make  pretense.     See 

Chinese  Story,  A. — Cranch. 
None  but  a  school-boy  knows  how  hard.     See  Speech 
for  a  Small  Boy. — Kavanaugh. 


None  call  the  flower!  ...   I  will  not  so  malign.     See 

To  the  Milkweed. — -Mifflin. 
None  ever  climbed  to  mountain  height  of  song.     See 

Woman's  Hand,  A. — Parker. 
None  will  dwell  in  that  cottage.     See  Ruined  Cottage, 

The. — Maclean. 
Noon    o'er    Judea!     All    the    air    was   beating.      See 

Palmer's  Vision,  The. — Holland. 
Noon-time  an'  June-time,  down  around  the  river.    See 

Down  around  the  River. — Riley. 
Noozell  was  alone  in  his  glory.     See  Noozell  and  the 

Organ-grinder. — "  Ah-Mie." 
Nope,  I  reckon  'tain't  no  problem  why  our  Sammy  went 

away.     See  Why  Sammy  Left  the  Farm.^Paine. 
Nor  Bethlehem  nor  Nazareth.     See  Assumption,  The. 

—  Tabb. 
Nor  force  nor  fraud  shall  sunder  us!     See  America. — 

Dobell. 
Nor  lack  I  friends,  long  tried  and  near  and  dear.     See 

Prisoners     of     Naples,      The. — Whittier. 
Nor  martial  shout,   nor  minstrel  tone.     See  Marmion 

(Flodden  Field). — Scott. 
Nor  myrrh,  nor  cassia,  nor  the  choice  perfumes.     See 

Sonnet:  "Nor  myrrh,"  etc. — Quarles. 
Nor  second  he,  that  rode  sublime.     See  John  Milton. — 

Gray. 
Nor  shall  it   hope  in   vain:  the  time  draws  on.     See 

Grave,  The  (Resurrection,  The). — Blair. 
Norfolk  sprung  thee,  I^ambeth  holds. thee  dead.     See 

Epitaph  on  Clere. — Surrey. 
"  Norroway  hills   are   grand   to  see."     See  Sailing  of 

King  Olaf,  The. — Brotherton. 
North  of  the  North  Star.     See  Song  of  the  Mad  Poet. — 

M.  P. 
North  Wales  is  a  land  of  mountains  and  rocks.     See 

Blind  Mary  of  the  Mountain. — Anon. 
North  Wind  came  whistling  through  the  wood.     See 

Friends. — Warner. 
Northward    he    turneth    through    a   little    door.     See 

Eve  of  St.  Agnes,  The  (Music).— Keats. 
Nose    and    chin    would    shame    a    knocker.     See    On 

Samuel  Rogers. — Byron. 
"Not  a  child;  I  call  myself  a  boy."     See  Not  a  Child. — 

Swinburne. 
Not  a  drum  was  heard,  not  a  funeral  note.     See  Burial 

of  Sir  John  Moore  at  Corunna,  The. — Wolfe. 
Not  a  fine  work  of  art ;  the  keen  critic  would  have  pro- 
nounced it  a  daub.     See  Picture  on  the  Wall,  The. 

— Hawks. 
Not  a  hand  has  lifted  the  latchet.     See  House  of  Death. 

The. — Moulton. 
Not  a  kiss  in  life,  but  one  kiss  at  life's  end.     See  To  a 

Dead  Woman. — Bunner. 
Not  a  man  of  iron,  but  of  live  oak.     See  Golden  Grains. 

—Garfield. 
Not  a  sound  disturbs  the  air.     See  Midsummer's  Noon 

in  the  Australian  Forest,  A. — Harpur. 
Not  a  sound,  not  a  breath.     See  Bayonet  Charge,  The. 

— Urner. 
Not   a  sound   through   the   forest's    deep   silence   was 

heard.     See  Woodland  Lesson,  The. — Bouton. 
Not  a  sous  had  he  got — not  a  guinea  or  note.     See  Not 

a  Sous  Had  He  Got. — Barham. 
Not  all  the  beauties  of  this  joyous  earth.     See  Cease- 
less Aspirations. — Waterston. 
Not  all  thy  flushing  suns  are  set.     See  Ode  to  Endym- 

ion  Porter. — Herrick. 
Not  all  who  seem  to  fail  have  failed  indeed.     See  same. 

— Anon. 
Not  alone  for  the  rich  and  great.     See  People's  Holi- 
days, The. — Farningham. 
Not  alone  in  grand  Cathedrals,  not  alone  in  Concert 

Hall.     See  Music  of  Nature,  The. — Ormsby. 
Not    alone    in    pain   and    gloom.     See   Temptation. — 

Gilder. 
Not  always  on  the  mount  may  we.     See  On  the  Mount. 

— Hosmer. 
Not  an  Indian  had  been  seen  all  the  afternoon.     See 

Cry  in  the  Darkness — the  Sentinel's  Alarm. —  (De- 
troit Free  Press.) 
Not  another  day  of  the  year  comes  upon  the  earth. 

See  Easter  Morning. — Beecher. 
Not  any  of  earth's  happiness  she  knew.     See  Charlotte 

Bronte. — Becker. 
Not  as  all  other  women  are.     See  My  Love. — Lowell. 
Not  as  when  some  great  Captain  falls.     See  Abraham 

Lincoln. — Stoddard. 
Not  as   you  meant,   O  learned   man,   and  good!     See 

Hopefully  Waiting.— Randolph. 
Not  at  home  to  any  one,  excepting  Colonel  Harrington 

and  Mr.  Carter.     See  Testing  the  Suitors. — .\non. 
Not   beauty  which  men   gaze  on  with  a  smile.     See 

Gougane  Barra  -De  Vere. 


770 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Not 


Not  because  of  their  courage,  O  soldiers,  but  because 
an  engagement  is  now  inevitable.  See  History 
of  Rome  (Scipio  to  his  Army). — I.ivy. 

Not  bed-time  yet!  The  night-winds  blow.  See  Be- 
fore the  Curfew. — Holmes. 

Not  by  [the]  ball  or  brand.  See  Vanquished. — 
Browne. 

Not  care  to  know  your  future,  blue-eyed  maiden?  See 
Orphan's  Trust,  The. — Hunt. 

Not,  Celia,  that  I  juster  am.     See  same. — Sedley. 

Not  changed  but  glorified!  Oh,  beauteou.s  language. 
See  Not  Changed  but  Glorified.— Anon. 

Not  charity  we  ask.     See  Promise,  The. — Holmes. 

Not  costly  domes,  nor  marble  towers.  See  Memorial 
Day. — Smith. 

Not  drowsihood  and  dreams  and  mere  idleness.  See  In 
Sleep. — Burton. 

Not  even  in  the  magnificent  harbor  of  Constantinople. 
See  Harbor  of  San  Francisco,  The. — Anon. 

Not  every  danger  is  physical.  See  Man  Behind,  The 
(Sword  of  Damocles,  The). — Denison. 

Not  every  thought  can  find  its  words.  See  Undevel- 
oped Lives. — Lecky. 

Not  far  advanced  was  morning  day.  See  Marmion 
(Marmion  and  Douglas). — Scott. 

Not  far  from  old  Kinvara,  in  the  merry  month  of  May. 
See  Ould  Plaid  Shawl,  The.— Fahy. 

Not  far  from  town  there  is  a  country  inn.  See  Matri- 
monial Bugs  and  the  Travelers,  The. — Anon. 

Not  for  that  neither; — here's  the  pang  that  pinches. 
See  King  Henry  VIII.  (Anne  BuUen). — Shake- 
speare. 

Not  for  the  Puritan,  in  his  reserved  and  haughty  con- 
sciousness.    See  Puritan  Spirit,  The. — Storrs. 

Not  for  the  splendor  of  the  brow  that  shines.  See 
Why  I  Love  Thee.— Aid6. 

Not  forever  on  thy  knees  See  Deeds,  not  Words. — 
Alton. 

Not  from  a  vain  or  shallow  thought.  See  Problem, 
The. — Emerson. 

Not  from  his  throat  there  came.  See  Anton  Seidl. — 
Ingham. 

Not  from  the  grave  our  journey  home  begins.  See 
Heavenward. — Dickenga. 

Not  from  the  pestilence  and  storm.  See  In  Extremis. 
— Brown. 

Not  from  the  whole  wide  world  I  chose  thee.  See 
same. — Gilder. 

Not  going  abroad?  What,  to-morrow?  See  Farewell, 
The. — Anon. 

Not  greatly  moved  with  awe  am  I.  See  Two  Deserts, 
The. — Pat  more. 

Not  he  who  displays  the  latest  fashion.  See  Real  Gen- 
tleman, The. — Anon. 

Not  he  who  rides  through  conquered  city's  gates.  See 
Triumph. — Anon. 

Not  here!  not  here!  not  where  the  sparkling  waters. 
See  I  Shall  be  Satisfied. — Anon. 

Not  here!  the  white  North  has  thy  bones.  See  Sir 
John  Franklin. — Tennyson. 

Not  I  myself  know  all  my  love  for  thee.  See  Dark 
Glass.  The. — Rossetti. 

Not  in  anger,  not  in  pride.  See  Ode  Recited  at  the 
Harvard  Commemoration,  July  21,  1865. — Lowell. 

Not  in  prosperity's  broad  light.  See  Robert  Bruce  and 
the  Spider. — Barton. 

Not  in  the  eyed,  expectant  gloom.  See  Night  in  a 
Down-town  Street. — Roberts. 

Not  in  the  haunts  of  the  wicked.     See  God's  Beverage. 

— Watkins. 
Not  in  the  laughing  bowers.     See  Dreamer,  The. — Anon. 

Not  in  the  simmering  still,  over  smoky  fires.  See 
Glass  of  Cold  Water,  A. — Denton. 

Not  in  the  sky  where  it  was  seen.     See  Lost  Pleiad, 

The. — Simms. 
Not  in  the  solitude.     See  Hymn  of  the  City. — Bryant. 
Not  in  the  swaying  of  the  summer  trees.     See  Woman's 

Voice. — Arnold. 
Not  in  the  time  of  pleasure.     See  Tears. — Cheney. 

Not  in  the  world  of  light  alone.  See  Living  Temple, 
The. — Holmes. 

Not  in  this  world  to  see  his  face.  See  First  Lesson 
The. — Dickinson. 

Not  in  vain  the  distance  beacons.     See  Locksley  Hall. 

— Tennyson. 
Not  knowing,  or  looking,  or  heeding  what  happened 
behind.     See  Under  Two  Flags  (Military  Steeple- 
chase, The). — La  Ram(*e. 
Not  least,  'tis  ever  my  delight.     See  Morning.- — Sav- 
age. 
Not  less  than  eighty  thousand  victims  go  annually  to 
the   drunkard's   grave. — See   New   Declaration  of 
Independence,  A. — Fisk. 


Not  like  clouds  that  cap  the  mountains.     See  Song  of 

the  Smoke-wreaths. — Ij.  T.  A. 
Not  like  the  tombs  where  sleep  Egyptian  kings.     See 

Grant  at  Rest. — Meehan. 
Not  lips  of  mine  have  ever  said.     See  In  Youth. — 

Stein. 
Not  long  after  we  were  settled  in  our  new  abode.     See 

Aristarchus  Studies  Elocution. — Bisbee. 
Not  long  ago  I  wandered  near.     See  Letting  the  Old 

Cat  Die. — Dodge. 
Not   long  ago   I   was  slowly   descending  the   carriage 

road,  after  you  leave  Albano.      See  Modern  Paint- 
ers (Sky,  The). — Ruskin. 
Not   long  since   a  sober   middle-aged   gentleman   was 

quietly  dozing.     See  Frenchman's   Mistake,   The. 

— Anon. 
Not  long  since  I  was  walking  with  Jimmy  Butler.     See 

Paddy   McGrath's   Introduction   to   Mr.   Bruin. — 

Anon. 
Not  many  friends  my  life  has  made.     See  Tribute,  A . — 

Holland. 
Not  many  generations  ago,  where  you  now  sit.     See 

North  American  Indians. — Sprague. 
Not  many  leagues  from  here,  and  e'en  not  many  months 

ago.     See  Orphan's  Prayer,  The.— Anon. 
Not  many  years  since,  a  young  married  couple.     See 

Give  me  back  my  Husband. — Anon. 
Not  marble,  nor  the  gilded  monuments.     See  Sonnets, 

LV. — Shakespeare. 
Not   merely  for  our  pleasure,   but   to   purge.     See  Ej 

Blot  Til  Lyst. — Payne. 
Not  'mid  [or  midst]  the  lightning  of  the  stormy  night. 

See  Death  of  Stonewall  Jackson. — Flash. 
Not   'mid  the  thunder  of  the  battle  guns.     See  Birth 

of  Australia,  The. — Rus.sell. 
Not  'mid  the  world's  vain   objects   that  enslave.     See 

Sonnet  Composed  while  the  Author  was  Engaged 

in  Writing  a  Tract,  occasioned  by  the  Convention 

of  Cintra. — -Wordsworth. 
Not  midst  [or  'mi<l]  the  lightning  of  the  stormy  fight. 

See  Death  of  Stonewall  Jackson. — Flash. 
Not  rriighty  deeds  make  up  the  sum.     See  Little  Deeds. 

— Anon. 
Not  mine  own  fears,  nor  the  prophetic  soul.     See  Son- 
nets, CVII. — Shakespeare. 
Not  mine  to  draw  the  cloth-yard  shaft.     See  Satirist, 

The. — Koopman . 
Not  more  than  a  dozen  persons  were  in  the  car.     See 

Fleeting  Show  of  Hen,  A. — Anon. 
Not  much  doing  to-day — that's  certain!     See  Silver 

Dollar,  The.— McBride. 
Not  much  to  make  us  happy.     See  Playthings. — Lar- 

com. 
Not  now,  my  child — a  little  more  rough  tossing.     See 

Not  Now. — Pennefather. 
Not  on  a  prayerless  bed,  not  on  a  prayerless  bed.     See 

Exhortation  to  Prayer. — Mercer. 
Not   on  some   despot   drunk   with  slaughtering.     See 

M.  Carnot's  Death. ^-Ingham. 
Not  on  the  neck  of  prince  or  hound.     See  Splendid 

Spur,  The.— Quiller-Couch. 
Not    one    pretty    flower    would    stay.     See    Holly. — 

Hartley. 
Not    only   talked   of,  but   absolutely  settled,    signed, 

sealed,    and    delivered.     See   Will,    The.^Picker- 

ing. 
Not  only  that  thy  puissant  arm  could  bind.     See  Wel- 
lington.— Beaconsfield. 
Not  only  we,  the  latest  seed  of  Time.     See  Godiva. — 

Tennyson. 
"Not   ours,"   say  some,    "the   thought   of   death   to 

dread.  "     See  Great  Misgiving,  The. — Watson. 
Not  ours  the  vows  of  such  as  plight.     See  Not  Ours 

the  Vows. — Barton. 
Not  out  of  books,  legal  researches,  historical  inquiry. 

See     On     the     Declaration     of     Independence. — 

Storrs. 
Not  she  with  traitorous  kiss  her  Saviour  stung.     See 

Woman. — Barrett. 
Not  since  last  year!     So  glad  again  to  find  you!     See 

After  a  Dance. — Moran. 
Not  since  the  death  of   Moses   has  a  man  so  gone  up 

into    a   mountain.     See   Tribute    to    Grant,    A. — 

Jenkins. 
Not  so  in  haste,  my  heart !     See  Wait. — Taylor. 
Not  so  the  son;  he  marked  this  oversight.     See  Moral 

Essays,  Epistle  III. — Pope. 
Not  that  which  men  do  covet  most  is  best.     See  Fae- 
rie Queene,  The  (Contentment). — Spenser. 
Not  the  last  struggles  of  the  Sun.     See  On  the  Death 

of  Southey. — Landor. 
"  Not  the  Mr. ,  really?"     See  Charming  Woman, 

A. — Jerome. 


771 


Not 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Not  then  forget  that  Chamber  of  the  Dead.     See  Night 

and  Day,  'I"he. — Rogers. 
Not  to  be  conquered  by    the.se    headlong   days.     See 

Outlook. — 'Lampman. 
Not  to  be  served,  O   Lord,   but   to  serve  man.     See 

lame. — Smith.     • 
Not  to  know  vice  at  all,  and   keep  true  state.     See 

Epode. — Jonson. 
"Not  to  myself  alone."     See  same. — Webb  [or  Part- 
ridge]. 
Not  trust  you,  dear?     Nay,  'tis   not   true.     See  One 

Way  of  Trusting. — -Kimball. 
Not  twice  a  twelvemonth  you  appear  in  print.     .See 

Epilogue  to  the  Satires.— Pope. 
Not  understood.     We  move  along  asunder.     See  Not 

Understood. — Bracken. 
Not  until  after  tea.     Mamma  said  that  we  must  not 

go.     See  Book-peddler,  The. — Graham. 
Not  unto  us,  O  I..ord.     See  Non  Nobis. — Anon. 
Not  unto  you  the  gods  gave  wings.     See  To  Austin 

Dobson. — Ketchum. 
Not  violets  I  gave  my  love.     See  Love's  Colors. — Fra- 

icer-Tytler. 
Not   what  the  chemists  say  they  be.     See  Pearls. — 

Stoddard. 
Not  what  we  think,  but  what   we  do.     See  Faith  and 

Works. — Cary. 
Not  where  high  towers  rear.     See  True  Temple,  The. — 

.\non. 
Not  where  the  chimes  of  the  Sabbath  bell.     See  Grave 

of  Mrs.  .ludson.  The. — Jiemi'^k. 
Not  with  a  craven  spirit  he.     See  Maximilian. — Saxe. 
Not    with    more    glories,    in   th'    ethereal    plain.     See 

Hape  of  the  Lock,  The. — Pope. 
Not  with  slow,  funereal  sound.     See  Ode  on  the  Unveil- 
ing of  the  Shaw  Memorial,  An. — Aldrich. 
Not  worlds  on  worlds,  in  phalanx  deep.     See  Daisy, 

The.— Good. 
"Not  ye  who  have  stoned,  not  ye  who  have  smitten 

us, "  cry.     See  Arraignment. — Cone. 
Not  yet!     Along  the  purpling  sky.     See  Not  Yet. — 

Mason. 
Not  yet,  dear  love,  not  yet:  the  sun  is  high.     See  Part- 
ing Hour,  The. — Custance. 
Not  yet !     No,  no, — you  would  not  quote.     See  Come- 
dian's Last  Night,  The. — Stedman. 
"Not  yet,  not  yet;  steady,  steady!"     See  Bunker  Hill. 

—Calvert. 
Not  yet,  O  friend'  not  yet.     See  game. — Harte. 
"  Not  yet,  the  flowers  are  in  my  path. "     See  Death  and 

the  Youth. — Landon. 
Not  yet  will  Cold,  the  tyrant,  abdicate.     See  January. 

^-Comwell. 
Not  your  sweet,  red  lips,  dear.     See  Soul's  Kiss,  The. — 

Thompson. 
Nothin'  to  say,  my  daughter!     Nothin'  at  all  to  say! 

See  Nothin'  to  Say. — Riloy. 
Nothing  at  all  in  the  paper  to-day!     See  same. — Anon. 
Nothing  but  flags!  but  .simple  flags!     See  Nothing  but 

Flags. — Anon. 
Nothing  but  leaves;  the  spirit  grieves.     See  Nothing 

but  Leaves. — Akerman. 
Nothing  could  be  rougher  and  more  rustic.     See  Zeph 

Higgins'  Confession. — Stowe. 
Nothing  exceeds  in  ridicule,  no  doubt.     See  Pride  and 

Vanity. — Young. 
Nothing  from  the  pen  of  Dickens  or  Thackeray  goes 
nearer  to  the  fount  of  tears.     See  Boys — and  the 
Bottle. — Cuyler.  \ 

Nothing,  in  fact,  is  small,  and  any  one  who  is  aflfected 
by    the    profound    penetrations    of    nature.     See 
Majesty  of  Trifles,  The. — Hugo. 
Nothing  in  his  life  became  him  like  the  leaving  of  it. 

See  Macbeth. — Shakespeare. 
Nothing  is  a  mystery.     See  Misfortune. — Fletcher. 
Nothing  is   lost;  the   drop   of  dew.     See   Nothing   is 

Lost. — Anon. 
Nothing  is  quite  so  quiet  and  clean.     See    Snow    in 

"Town. — Mark. 
Nothing  of  this  now;  nothing  but  incessant  eulogy. 
See  Idols.— Phillips.  *^ 

Nothing  resting  in  its  own  completeness.     See  Incom- 
pleteness.— Procter. 
Nothing  so   difficult   as  a  beginning.     See  Don  Juan 

(Haidee  and  Juan). — Byron. 
Nothing  to  do  but  work.     See  Pessimist,  The. — King. 
"Nothing  to  do!"  in  this  world  of  ours!     See  Nothing 

to  Do. — Anon. 
Nothing  to  wear!     Now,  as  this  is  a  true  ditty.     See 

Nothing  to  Wear. — Butler. 
Nothing  under  the  sun  is  new.     See  same. — Cook. 
Nothing  was  heard  in  the  library  of  the  Ringwood 
household.     See  Busy. — Burk. 


Notis, — On  de  occasion  of  a  vedding  celebration.     See 
Charge    of    the    "Dutch    Brigade,"    The. — Con- 
nolly. 
"Nought  loves  another  as  itself."     See  Orthodoxy. — 

Blake. 
"Nought  to  be  done," — eh?     See  For  Life  and  Death. 

— Anon. 
November  chill  blaws  loud  wi'  angry  sugh.     See  Cot- 
ter's Saturday  Night,  The.— Burns. 
November  has  one  day  which  is  sacred  in  the  family 

calendar.     See  Thanksgiving  Speech,  A. — Anon. 
November  wind.s,  blow  mild.     See  November  Child,  A. 

—Gilder. 
November  woods  are  bare  and  still.     See  "Down  to 

Sleep. " — Jackson. 
November's  hail-cloud  drifts  away,   November's  sun- 
beam wan.     See  Orphan  Maid,  The. — Scott. 
Now,  a  boy  is  one  kind  of  person.     See  David's  Solil- 
oquy.— -Richards. 
Now  a  strong,  fair  shoot,  from  the  forest  bring.     See 

Arbor  Day. — Anon. 
Now  all   the  cloudy  shapes  that    float  and  lie.     See 
"Such  Stuff  as  Dreams   are   Made  of." — Higgin- 
son. 
Now   all   the   flowers   that   ornament   the   grass.     See 

Unreturning. — Stoddard. 
Now  all  ye  flowers  make  room.     See  Memorial  Hymn 

— J.  A.  Garfield. — Swing. 
Now   along   the   solemn   heights.     See   Recessional. — 

Roberts. 
Now  are  our  brows   bound   with   victorious   wreaths. 

See  King  Richard  IIL  (Peace). — Shakespeare. 
Now  are  the  winds  about  us  in  their  glee.     See  Song  in 

March. — Simms. 
Now  as    an    angler   melancholy  standing.      See   Brit- 
annia's  Pastorals  (Riot's   Climbing  of   a  Hill). — 
Browne. 
Now,  as  fame  does  report,  a  young  Duke  keeps  a  court. 

See  Frolicksome  Duke,  The. — Anon. 
Now    at    last    I    am    at    home.     See    Return,    The. — 

Tooker. 
Now,  believe  me,  God  hides  some  ideal  in  every  human 

soul.     See  same. — Collyer. 
Now,  Bell  has  gone,  and  Charley  too.     See  I>eft  Alone. 

— Denton. 
Now,  Bones,  I  think  I  shall  be  able  to  puzzle  you  this 

time.     See  Bones  on  Mensuration. — Anon. 
Now,   Bones,   tell  me  what   you  are  thinking  about? 

See  Fresh  Set  of  Teeth,  A. — Anon. 

Now,  boys,  are  we  all  of  one  mind  with  regard  to  Mr. 

Stephen  Slipperton?     See  Going!     Going!     Gone! 

— Graham. 

Now,  boys,  are  we  ready?    See  Rehearsal,  The. — Anon. 

Now,  boys,  I  promised  you  a  new  study  for  Monday. 

See  Noblest  Hero,  The. — Gray. 
Now,   boys,   I   want   you  to   form   into   a   class.     See 

Spelling  Class,  The. — Brubaker. 
Now,  boys,  let  us  teach  each  other.     See  Dialogue  for 

Five  Boys. — Keife. 
Now  bring  we  sweet   flowers,   bring  lilies  and   roses. 

See  Silent  Grand  Army,  The.— E.  M.  H.  C. 
Now,  bumble-bee,  you  just  keep  still.     See  Captured 

Bumble-bee,  The. — Wood. 
Now,  butt  an'  ben,  the  change-house  fills.     See  Holy 

Fair,  The. — Burns. 
Now,   by  heaven,   they  may  be  cool  who  can.     See 

Strafford. — Browning. 
Now,  by  the  blessed  Paphian  queen.     See  Dilemma, 

The. — Holmes. 
Now,  by  the  rood,  as  Hamlet  says,  it  grieves  me  sore 

to  say.     See  Other  One  was  Booth,  The. — Cooke. 
Now  by  your  children's  cradles, — now,  by  your  fath- 
ers' graves.      See  Virginia   (Icilius    on  Virginia's 
Seizure) . — Macaulay. 
Now  came  still  Evening  on,  and  Twilight  gray.     See 

Paradise  Lost  (Evening  in  Paradise). — Milton. 
Now  Camilla's  fair  fingers  are  plucking  in  rapture  the 

pulsating  strings.     See  Camilla. — Keeler. 
Now  can  the  world  once  more  the  glory  see.     See  Our 

Flag.^Alsop. 
Now,  captain,  what  is  a  sloop?     See  Nautical  Conver- 
sation, A. — Anon. 
Now,  children,  all  sit   down.     See   Rehearsal,   The. — 

Clement. 
"Now,  children,"  said  Puss,  as  she  shook  her  head. 

See  Pussy's  Class. — M.  M.  D. 
Now,   children,   there's  somebody  coming.     See  Who 

is  It? — Anon. 
Now  comes  the  graybeard  of  the  north.     See  Winter 

Days. — Abbey. 
Now,  comrades,  as  ye  love  the  hills.     See  Last  Charge, 
The. — Hynson. 


772 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Now  Jack 


Now  Councilman  O'Hoolihan  don't  b'lave  in  annixa- 

tion.     See   "  Fift'    Ward   J'int    Debate,    The." — 

Lincoln. 
Now  dandelions  in  the  short,  new  grass.     See  Dande- 
lions.— Albee. 
Now,  darn  if  I  han't  jist  about  sick  of  being  boddered 

by  dese  boys.      iSee  Snackin'-turple  Man,  The. — 

Anon. 
Now,  dear  Aunt  Bethiah,  do  tell  us  all  about  your 

journey.     See  Aunt  Bethiah's  Journey. — Anon. 
Now  deeper  roll  the  maddening  drums.     See  Bunker 

Hill.— Mellen. 
'"Now,  des'  oo  wait,  my  papa  dear."     See  Little  Doro- 
thy's Sayings. — Bible. 
Now,  Dolly,  listen  to  me.     See  Grace  and  Dolly. — ^Anon. 
Now,  Dolly,  really  I  can't  see.     See  Nerves. — Denton. 
Now,  don't  look  so  glum  and  so  sanctified,  please.    See 

There's    never   any   Harm  in  Good  Company.^ 

Brooks. 
"Now,    Dyonysius — tyrant — die!"    See    Damon    and 

Pythias. — Schiller. 
Now  each  creature  joys  the  other.     See  Ode:  "Now 

each  creature,"  etc. — Daniel. 
Now  England  lessens  on  my  sight.     See  To  England. — 

Moore. 
Now  fades  the  last  long  streak  of  snow.     See  In  Memo- 

riam  (Spring). — -Tennyson. 
Now  fair  Arbor  Day  is  here.     See  Hail,  Arbor  Day. — 

Roosa. 
Now,    Faith,   Hope,   and  Love.     See  Easter  Wreath, 

The.— Denton. 
Now  Fannie,  my  love,  our  honey-moon  is  ended.     See 

Mr.  Hunter's  Mistake. — Anon. 
Now  fill  the  bowl,   now  join  the  dance  and  see.      See 

Death  of  Cleopatra,  The. — Horace. 
"Now  for  a  beautiful  night's  rest."     See  Night  with  a 

Ventriloquist,  A. — Cockton. 
"Now  for  a  brisk  and  cheerful  fight!"     See  Fight  at 

the  San  Jacinto,  The. — Palmer. 
Now  for  a  parental  lecture.     Sir,  I  am  delighted  to  see 

you  here.     See  Rivals,  The. — Sheridan. 
Now  for  the  fight!     Now  for  the  cannon  peal!     See 

Battle  Cry. — Anon. 
Now  from  the  chamber  all  are  gone.     See  Lying  in 

State. — Landor. 
Now  gather  all  our  Saxon  bards — let  harps  and  hearts 

be  strong.    See  Triumphs  of  the  English  Language. 

— Lyons. 
Now   gentle   sleep    hath   closed   up   those   eyes.     See 

Upon  a  Stolen  Kiss. — Wither. 
Now,  girls,  and  boys  too.     See  Getting  up  a  Picnic. — 

Anon. 
"Now,  girls,"  said  Aunt  Hetty,  "put  down  your  em- 
broidery and  worsted  work."     See  Aunt  Hetty  on 

Matrimony. — Anon. 
Now,  girls,  the  teacher  has  gone  after  her  dinner.     See 

Grumbling  over  Lessons. — Herbert. 
Now  glory  to  the  Lord  of  hosts,  from  whom  all  glories 

are!     See    Ivry.— A    Song    of    the    Huguenots. — 

Macaulay. 
"Now,  good  wife,  bring  your    precious  hoard,"     the 

Norland  farmer  cried.     See  Christmas  Sheaf,  The. 

— Gary. 
Now  good-bye  to  play,  'tis  the  first  of  September.     See 

First  Day  of  School,  The. — Denton. 
Now,  Grandpa,  as  I  sit  and  knit.     See  Playing  Old 

Folks. — Goodfellow. 
"Now,  Gudhand,  have  you  sold  the  cow."     See  Happy 

Little  Wife,  The.— Gary. 
"Now  half  a  hundred  years  had  I  been  born."     See 

His  Statement  of  the  Case. — Morse. 
No^  hands  to  seed-sheet,  boys!     See  Sower's  Song.^ — 

Carlyle. 
Now  hardly  here  and  there   a  hackney  coach.     See 

Description  of  the  Morning,  A. — Swift. 
Now  has  the  lingering  month   at  last    gone  by.     See 

Earthly     Paradise,    The     (Atalanta's   Defeat). — 

Morris. 
Now  hath  the  summer  reached  her  golden  close.     See 

September. — Lampman . 
Now  hand  your  tongue,   baith  wife  and  carle.     See 

Battle  of  Harlaw. — Scott. 
Now  he  who  knows  old  Christmas.     See  Old  Christ- 
mas.— Howitt. 
Now  heap  the  branchy  barriers  up.    See  Keepers  of  the 

Pass,  The. — Roberts. 
Now  here's  a  hand-glass,  let  rhe  try.     See  What'Mother 

Says. — Anon. 
Now  he's  gittin'  ready  to  go  off  to  town.     See  Happy 

Woman,  A. — Anon. 
Now  hide  the  flowers  beneath  the  snow.     See  Hide- 
and-seek. — Sherman. 


Now,  how  can  anybody  look  upon  me  and  say  I  ain't 

to    be    commiserated.     See   Missionary    Work    at 

Home. — Anon. 
Now  I  am  alone.    See  Hamlet  (Soliloquy  from  Hamlet). 

— Shakespeare. 
"  Now  I  can  wait  on  baby, "  the  smiling  merchant  said. 

See  No  Telephone  in  Heaven. — Anon. 
Now  I  find  thy  looks  were  feigned.     See  Deceitful  Mis- 
tress, The. — Lodge. 
"  Now  I  lay  me  down  to  sleep. "     See  same. — Pullen. 
Now  I  lay  me  down  to  take  my  sleep.     See  Child's 

Prayer.  —  (New  England  Primer.) 
"Now    I    lay,"    repeat    it,    darling.     See    Unfinished 

Prayer,  The. — Anon. 
Now  I  must  hurry  up  and  get  this  coat  finished.     See 

False  Notions. — Anon. 
Now  I  saw  in  my  dream,  that,  by  this  time,  the  pil- 
grims were  got  over  the  Enchanted  Ground.  See 

Pilgrim's     Progress    (^Land     of     Beulah,   The). — 

Bunyan. 
Now,  I  should  rather  be  a  robin.     See  Bird  Dialogue, 

The.— Diaz. 
Now  I  tell  you  a  poem  must  be  kept  and  used.     See 

Poems. — Holmes. 
Now   I   think  I  shall  have  some  help  in  getting  the 

work   done.     See  Advertising    for    a    Servant. — 

Anon. 
Now,  I  want  it  distinctly  understood  before  I  begin. 

See  Doctor's  Story,  The. — Harte. 
Now,   I   want  to  say  to  all  of  you  that  you  needn't 

be  partic'lar  how  you  quilt  this  quilt.     See  Mrs. 

Bolivar's  Quilting. — Anon. 
Now  if  I  could  only  make  this  jelly  a  success.     See 

Jelly  for  the  Minister. — Anon. 
Now,  if  the  fish  will  only  bite.    See  Timid  Hortense. — 

Newell. 
Now,  if  to  be  an  April-fool.     See  First  of  April,  The. — 

Collins. 
Now,  if  we  had  another  couple,  we  could  have  a  dance. 

See  Restraining  Jotham. — Anon. 
Now  I'll  tell  the  truth  though  it  carries  my  own  boy 

to  prison.     See  Sick  Boy's  Plan,  The. — Anon. 
Now,  I'll  unfold  a  secret  to  you,  Pauline.     See  Heze- 

kiah's  Arrival. — Anon. 
Now,  I'm  determined  I'll  not  be  so  cheated  any  longer. 

See  Watching  for  Santa  Glaus. — Denton. 
Now,  I'm  goin'  for  till  become  famous  and  rise  up  in 

the  world.     See  Tom  and  Sally. — Anon. 
Now,   in   dese   busy  wukin'   days,   dey's   changed    de 

Scripter  fashions.     See  What  Sambo  Says. — Anon. 
Now  in  her  green  mantle  blythe  Nature  arrays.     See 

My  Name's  Awa. — Burns. 
Now  in  his  crystal  palace.     See  King  Winter. — Anon. 
"Now  in  the  place  where  he  was  crucified  there  was  a 

garden."     See  Sepulcher  in  the  Garden,  The. — 

Beecher. 
Now  in  the  west  is  spread.     See  Evening. — Kemble. 
Now  is  done  thy  long  day's  work.     See  Dirge,  A. — 

Tennyson. 
Now,  I's  got  a  notion  in  my  head  dat  when  you  come  to 

die.     See  Theology  in  the  Quarters. — Macon. 
Now,  is  it  contrition?     See  Lent. — Hyde. 
Now,  is  not  this  the  most  insufferable  nuisance.     See 

My  Next  Door  Neighbor. — Anon. 
Now  is  the  cherry  in  blossom,  love.     See  Now  is  the 

Cherry  in  Blossom. — Wilkins. 
Now  is  the  city  great!     See  Of  Henry  George. — Gilder. 
Now  is  the  gentle  season,  freshly  flowering.     See  Love 

and  May. — Morley. 
Now  is  the  month  of  maying.     See  Month  of  Maying, 

The. — Anon. 
"Now"  is  the  syllable  ever  ticking  from  the  clock  of 

time.     See  "Now." — Anon. 
Now  is  the  time  for  mirth.     See  To  Live  Merrily,  and 

to  Trust  to  Good  Verses. — Herrick. 
Now  is  the  time  when  all  the  lights  wax  dim.     See  To 

Anthea. — Herrick. 
Now  is  the  time,  while  yet  the  dark-brown  water  aids 

the  guile.     See  Seasons,  The. — -Thomson. 
Now  is    the    winter    of    our    discontent.     See     King 

Richard  III.  (King  Richard's  Soliloquy). — Shake- 
speare. 
"Now,  is't  for  bond  or  faith  you  come."     See  Heart  of 

the  Bruce,  The. — Aytoun. 
Now,    it   is    trying,    very.     See   Lost    Letter,    The. — 

Denton. 
Now  it's   hail   to  the  commander.     See  Song  of  the 

Sailor-men,  A. — (Baltimore  News.) 
Now  I've  got  things  fixed.     See  Swinging  on  the  Gate. 

— Anon. 
Now  Jack  looked  up — it  was  time  to  sup.     See  Here  is 

the  Tale. — Deane. 


773 


Now.  Jennie 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOX8 


Now.  Jennie  dear,  I   thirk  you  will  agree.     See  Love 

Making. — Keavis. 
Now,  .lerry,  sit  down  and  have  something  before  you 
go  <lown  street.     See  Demons  of  the  Cila^s,  The. — 
Adams. 
Now,  Jinnie,  my  dea*  to  the  dwarf  be  off.     See  Dwarf, 

The.— Ramal. 
Now  Joe's  a  splendid  fellow,  but  I  do  abominate.     See 

Expecting  to  Get  F-ven.     (Bonton  Post.) 
Now,    John     bring   in    the   electrical  mat.     Sec   Four 

Photographs,  The. — Denton. 
"Now  John."  says  apothecary  Jones,  "Fm  going  home 

to  tea."     See  Apothe?;;iry  Man,  The. — Anon. 
"Now  John,"  the  district   teacher  says.     See  School- 
day,  A. — McSparran. 
Now,  John.son,  are  you  awake?     See  Gather  this  Up. — 

Anon. 
Now  Johnson,  I've  got  a  question  to  ask  you  which 
you   must   answer   "yes"    to.     See   Tambo's    Bet 
with    Mr.  Johnson. — .\non. 
Now  Josie,  you  may  as  well  understand.     See  Wrong 

Man.  The. — Anon. 
Now    kitten-cat    Daisy,    just    hear    me.     See    Daisy's 

Thanksgiving. — Anon. 
Now  Ladies  and  gents,  who  here  I  see,  Shappo!     See 

Arkansaw  Pete's  Adventure. — Sheppard. 
Now,  lads,  a  short  yarn  Fll  just  spin  you.     See  Stow- 
away, The. — Matthison. 
Now,  lads  and  la.ssies,  cea.se  youi  mirth.    See  On  a  Pet 

Cat.— Persell. 
Now.  lady,  hear  me.     See  Ladv  of  Lyons,  The  (Claude 

Melnotte's  Apology). — Bulwer-Lytton. 
Now,  lawyer,  Fll  tell  you  my  story — you'll  have  to  be 
patient  with  me.     See  I  Sue  for  Damages. — Anon. 
Now  let  me  alone,  though  I  know  you  won't.     See 

Barney  O'Hea. — Lover. 
Now,  let  me  say  a  few  words  on  a  cause.     See  Curse  to 

Labor,  The. — Powderly. 
Now  let  the  solemn  minute  gun.     Sfe  On  the  Death  of 

General  Worth. — Cutter. 
"Now  let  us  sing,"  the  preacher  said.  See  Missionary 

Hymn,  The. — Anon. 
"Now,  let's  have  a  game  of  play."     See  Boy's  Play  and 

Girl's  Play. — Hawtrey. 
Now  Liddesdale  has  ridclen  a  raid.     See  Jock  o'  the 

Side. — Anon. 
Now  look  here.  Jack;  I  know  this  track.     See  Fauntle- 

roy. — Butler. 
Now,   look  here,   Rain,   said  the  Sun  one  day.     See 

Rainbow,  The. — Goodfellow. 
"Now   Maitre,   this   is   the  Tintamarre."     See  Tinta- 

marre.  The. — R.yan. 
"Now,  mamma,  if  only  you'll  promise  me  true."     See 

My  Sweetheart. — Dayre. 
Now,  mamma,  take  me  on  your  lap  and  hold  me  tight — 

just  .so.     See  Missionary  Doll,  The. — Anon. 
Now  Mary,   I   am  going  to  read   you  a  lecture.     See 

Arabella's  Poor  Relations. — McBride. 
Now  Memory,  false,  spendthrift,  Memory.     See  Lough 

Bray. — O'Grady. 
Now,  merry  hearts,  let  games  begin.     See  Genevra. — 

Stilwell. 
Now  might  I  do  it  pat,  now  he  is  praying.     See  Ham- 
let fSoliloguies  from  Hamlet). — Shakespeare. 
Now    mind,    Miss    Grey,    your    name    to-night.     See 

Cousin  Floy. — Proudfit. 
"Now  mind,"  said   Mrs.   Hilary  Musgrave.     See  Dolly 

Dialogues,  The  (My  Last  Chance). — Hope. 
Now   mirk   December's   dowie   face.     See  Daft   Days, 

The. — Fergusson. 
Now,  Mr.  Caudle;  Mr.  Caudle,  I  say.  Oh,  you  can't  be 
asleep.     See  Mr.  Caudle  has  been  Made  a  Mason.- 
Jerrold. 
"Now,  Mr.  Malone,  whin  yer  spakin'  like  that."     See 

Love  in  the  Kitchen. ^Arkwright. 
Now,  Mr.  Smith,  who  had  taken  his  leave.     See  John 

Smith's  Will.— Shillaber. 
Now,  Mrs.  Caudle,  I    should   like   to   know   what   has 
become  of  my  hat?     See  Mr.  Caudle's  Hat.— Anon. 
Now,  Mrs.  Pringle,  once  for  all,  I  say.     See  Matrimony. 

— Anon. 
Now  more  the  bliss  of  love  is  felt.     See  Home  at  L  st. — 

Romanes. 
Now  morn,  her  ro.sy  steps  in    the   Eastern   clime.     See 

Paradise  Lost. — Milton 
Now  morning   from   her  orient  chambers   came.     See 

Morning. — Keats. 
Now    mother,  my  kitchen  work  is  done.     See  Double- 
faced. — Anon. 
Now,    mother,    what's    the    matter?       See     Hamlet 

(Closet  Scene). — Shakespeare. 
Now  must  tlie  storied  Potomac.     See  Grave  of  Lincoln. 
The. — Proctor. 


Now    my    blood    with    long-forgotten    fleetness-     See 

Tulip  Tree,  The. — Taylor. 
Now,  my  co-mates  and  brothers  in   exile.     See  As  You 

Like  It  (Tongues  in  Trees). — Shakespeare. 
"Now,  mv  dear,"  said  Mr.  Spoopendyke,  hurrying  up 

to   his   wife's    room.     See   Spoopendykes,    The. — 
Anon. 
"Now,  my  dear,"  said  Mr. Spoopendyke,    opening  the 

book.     See  Spoopendyke's  Private  Theatricals. — 

Anon. 
Now,  my  gay  little  lad,  trolling  out  your  blithe  air.     See 

Were  I  You,  Little  Lad. — Towne. 
Now  Nature  hangs  her  mantle  green.     See  Lament  of 

Mary  Queen  of  Scots,  on  the  Approach  of  Spring. — 
Burns. 
Now  nerve  th.v  spirit  to  the  proof.     See  Battle  of  Life, 

The. — Bryant. 
Now,    nur.sey,   won't   you   just   sew  this   ruffle   in   my 

dress.     See  Choo.se    your  Words. — Broome. 
Now  o'er  the  one  h.alf  world  Nature  seems  dead.     See 

Macbeth   (Macbeth:    Selection  from  the  Dagger 

Scene). — Shakespeare. 
Now,  of  all  the  birds  that  keep  to  tree.     See  Cuckoo's 

Wit,  The.— Hawker. 
Now  of  all  the  trees  by  the  King's  highway.     See  Holly, 

The. — Hawker. 
Now,  on  a  sudden,  I  know  it,  the  secret,  the  secret  of 

life.     See  Reveale<l. — Hoopman. 
Now  on  land  and  sea  descending.     See  Vesper  Hymn. — 

Longfellow. 
Now   on    the   hills    I    hear   the   thunder   mutter.     See 

Summer  Storm  (Summer  Rain). — Lowell. 
Now  over  intervening  waste.     See  Epic  of  Women. — 

O'Shaughnessy. 
Now    over-head    a    rainbow,    bursting    through.       See 

Don  Juan  (Rainbow,  The). — Byron. 
Now  peace  to  his  ashes  who  planted  yon  trees.     See 

Bolehill  Trees. — Montgomery. 
Now.  Petah,  go  and  sot  down  dali.     See  Petah.^Anon. 
Now  ponder  well,  you  parents  dear.     See  Children  in 

the  Wood,  The. — Anon. 
Now   poor  [or  that]  Tom   Dunstan's   cold.     See  Tom 

Dunstan;  or,  the  Politician. — Buchanan. 
Now  praise  to  God's  oft-granted  grace!     See  Centen- 
nial   Meditation    of    (Columbia,  The    (America). — 

Lanier. 
Now,  prosp'rous  gales  the  bending  canvas  swell'd.     See 

Lusiad,  The  (Spirit  of  the  Cape,  The).— Mickle. 
Now,  pussy,  I've  something  to  tell  you.     See  Pet  and 

her  Cat. — (Haruer's  Young  People.) 
Now,  Rachel,  seriously,  you  are  not  vexed  with  me? 

See  Golden  Pippins. — Anon. 
Now  rank  and  beauty  is  all  agog.     See  Latest  Toast, 

The.— Walker. 
"Now.  right  about  face!"  September  cries.     See  "Right 

about    Face." — Brine. 
Now,  Rose    I  shan't  stay  a  single  minute.     See  Affec- 
tion of  the  Heart,  An. — Coggins. 
Now,  Rose,  school  will  close  to-day.     See  Last  Parting, 

The. — Denton. 
Now,  Rover,  I  am  very  sure.     See  Rover. — S.  D. 
Now  saddle  El  Canalo — the  freshening  wind  of  morn. 

See  El  Canalo.— Taylor. 
"Now,"  said  Wardle,   after  a  substantial  lunch,     [or 

"Now,"  said  Wardle, "what  say  you 

to    an    hour   on  the  ice?"]     See  Pickwick  Papers. 

The  (Mr.  Winkle  on  Skates).— Dickens. 
Now   saucy   Phoebus'   scorching  beams.     See  Humble 

Petition   of   Bruar    Water  to  the   Noble  Duke   of 

Athole,  The  (River's  Supplication,  The). — Burns. 
Now  say,  what  would    Augustus  Caesar  with  us.     Sfe 

Cymbeline  (Cymbeline,  Act  IH,  Scene  1). — Shake- 
speare. * 
Now  shall   I  eat   it   all  my.self?     See  Question,   A. — 

Anon. 
"Now   show  something   not   so   grand."     See   Maiden 

Husking  Corn,  The. — Blow. 
"Now  since  mine  even  is  come  at  last."     See  Ride  to 

the  Lady,  The.— Cone. 
Now  sinks  the  summer  sun  into  the  sea.     See  Summer. 

— Holley. 
Now,  sir,  I  ave  hincurred  a  great  expense  in  the  French 

and    Hindian    war.     See    Uncle    Sam's    Wars. — 

McBride. 
Now  sir,  what  was  the  conduct  of  your  own  allies  to 

Poland?     See  Partition  of  Poland,  The.— Fox. 
Now,  sitting  by  her  side,  worn  out  with  weeping.     See 

Dream    of    the    World     without    Death,    The. — 

Buchanan. 
Now  slain  is  King  Amulius.     See  Prophesy  of  Capys, 

The. — Macaulay. 
Now  sleeps  the  crimson  petal,   now  the  white.     See 

Princess,  The  (Summer  Night). — Tennyson. 


774 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Now,  who 


Now,  Solomon  Gundy,  how  are  they  going  on  in  the 

village?     See  Prompt  Messenger,  A. — Colman. 
Now  something's  the  matter  with  Tabby,  I  see.     See 

Sick  Kitty,  The. — Anon. 
Now,  sometimes  in  my  sorrow  shut.  See  In  Memoriam. 

— Tennyson. 
Now,  soul,  be  very  still  and  go  apart.     See  same. — 

Barr. 
"Now  start  me  true,"  cried  Fred.     See  Start  True. — 

Blakeslee. 
Now,  stay  right  still  and  listen,  kitty-cat,  and  I'll  tell 

you    a    story.     See    Story    Kathie    Told,    The. — 

A.  C.  H.  S. 
Now   stir  the   fire,   and   close   the  shutters   fast.     See 

Task.  The. — Cowper. 
Now  storming  fury  ro.se.     See  Paradise  Lost. — Milton. 
Now  stretch  your  eye  off  shore,  o'er  waters  made.     See 

Ocean,  The. — Dana. 
Now  strike   the   golden   lyre   again.     See  Alexander's 

Feast. — Dry  den. 
Now  Summer  finds  her  perfect  prime.     See  Heaven, 

O  Lord,  I  Cannot  I^ose. — Proctor. 
Now  Tab,  be  a  sensible  cat,  I  say.     See  Fred's  F.xperi- 

ment. — Anon. 
"Now  tell  me,  my  merrv  woodmen."     See  Estray,  The. 

— Willson. 
Now  thank  we  all  our  God.     See  Nun  Danket  Alle 

Gott.— Rinkart. 
Now  that   all   hearts   are  glad,   all   faces   bright.     See 

George  III. — Wordsworth. 
Now  that  I  have  a  new  sled,  what  shall  I  do  with  the 

old  one?     See  Good  for  Evil. — Anon. 
Now  that  I,  tying  thy  glass  mask  tightly.     See  Labora- 
tory, The. — Browning. 
Now  that  she  is  gone.     See    Michael    Angelo. — Long- 
fellow. 
Now  that  the  green  hill-aide  has  quite.     See  In  May. — 

Weeks. 
Now  that  the  pain  is  gone,   I.  too,  can  smile.     See 

Then  and  Now. — Anon. 
Now  that  the  village  reverence  doth  lie  hid.     See  New 

Year's  Gift  to  Brian  Lord  Bishop  of  Sarum,  A. — 

Cartwright. 
Now  that  the  winter's  gone,  the  earth  hath  lost.     See 

Spring. — Carew. 
Now   that   [or  poor]   Tom   Dunstan's   cold.     See  Tom 

Dunstan;or,  the  Politician. — Buchanan. 
Now   that   we   are   all   here,    what   shall   we   do?     See 

Parlor  Entertainment,  A. — Anon. 
Now  the  bright  crocus  flames,  and  now.     See  Spring. — 

Lang. 
Now  the  bright  morning  star,   Day's  harbinger.     See 

Song  on  May  Morning. — Milton. 
Now  the  Consul's  brow  was  sad.     See  Horatius  at  the 

Bridge. — Macaulay. 
Now  the  day  is  over.     See   Child's   Evening   Hymn. — 

Baring-Gould. 
Now  the  deacon  maintained  stoutly,  and  with  energy 

and    vim.     See    Deacon's    Downfall,    The. — Lan- 
sing. 
Now  the  Eraser  gleamed.     See  Eos. — Davin. 
Now  the  frosty  stars  are  gone.     See  Ariel  in  the  Cloven 

Pine. — Taylor. 
Now  the  gloom  of  a  mist-laden  evening.     See  Banjo 

Mine.^-Anon. 
Now  the  glories  of  the  year.     See  Hallelujah  (For  Sum- 
mer Time). — Wither. 
Now  the  golden  morn  aloft.     See  Ode  on  the  Pleasure 

Arising  from  Vicissitude. — Gray. 
Now  the  hour  has  arrived  and  soon  they'll  be  here. 

See  Coming  to  an  Understanding. — Anon. 
Now      the     hungry      lion      roars.       See     Midsummer 

Night's   Dream   (Approach    of   the    Fairies,  The). 

— Shakespeare. 
Now  the  joys  of  the  road  are  chiefly  these.     See  Joys  of 

the  Road,  The. — Carman. 
Now  the  last  day  of  many  days.     See  Recollection,  The. 

—Shelley. 
Now  the  lovely  spring  has  come.     See  Spring  Song. — • 

Hawthorn. 
Now    the    lusty    Spring     is     seen.      See    Valentinian 

(Spring). — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Now  the  noisy  winds  are  still.     See  same. — Dodge. 
Now   the    North   wind   ceases.     <See   Tardy    Spring. — 

Meredith. 
Now  the  Philistines  gathered  together  their  armies  to 

battle.     See  David  and  Goliath. — Bible. 
Now  the  rite  is  duly  done.     See  Newly  Wedded,  The. — 

Praed. 
Now  the  scarlet  tints  the  tree-tops,  and  the  robin-birds 

repair.     See  Indian  Summer. — Collester. 
Now  the  spring  is   coming  on.     See  Snowdrop,   The. 

— {Songs  for  the  Little  Ones  at  Home.) 


Now  the  storm  begins  to  lower.     See  Fatal  Sisters,  The. 

— Gray. 
Now   the   student    tosses   reason   to   the   breeze.     See 

Spring  on  the  Heights. — M.  H.  C. 
Now   the   summer     days     are   come.     See  Wreath   of 

Flowers,  A. — Denton. 
Now  the  sun  is  sinking.     See  same. — Anon. 
Now  the  third  and  fatal  conflict  for  the  Persian  throne 

was  done.     See  Harmosan. — Trench. 
Now  the  widow  McGee.     See  Larrie  O'Dee. — Fink. 
Now  then  for  the  opening  speech.     See  Boys'  Meeting, 

A. — Anon. 
"Now  then,  look  alive  there!"     See  Ventriloquist  on  a 

Stage  Coach. — Cockton. 
"Now,    then,"    said    the   short    and   fat    and   anxious- 
looking   man,    as   he   sat   down.     See   It    Made   a 

Difference. — Anon. 
"Now,  then,"  says  Jone,  after  he'd  been  thinkin' awhile. 

See  Rudder  Grange  (Pomona  Describes  her  Bridal 

Trip) . — Stockton. 
Now  then,  take  your  seats!  for  Glasgow  and  the  North. 

See     Night     Mail     North,     The. — Cholmondeley- 

Pennell. 
Now,  then,  to  polish  up  these  boots.     See  Medical  Man, 

A.— Gilbert. 
Now  then!   You!  come  out  o'  that!     See  Black  Zenh's 

Pard. — Anon. 
Now  there  was  one  who  came  in  later  days.     See  Last 

Caesar,  The. — Aldrich. 
Now,    there    was    Uncle    Elnathan    Shaw.     See    Aunt 

Shaw's  Pet  .lug. — Day. 
Now,  there's  a  nice  looking  young  man  for  a  wedding- 
party.     See  Not  Ashamed  of    his  Occupation. — 

Morton. 
Now  there's  peace  on  the  shore,  now  there's  calm  on 

the   sea.     See   Broadswords   of   Scotland,    The. — 

Lockhart. 
Now  this  is  the  law  of  the  jungle — as  old  and  as  true 

as    the    sky.     See    Law    of    the    Jungle,    The. — 

Kipling. 
Now  Titus  Labienus.     See  Ballad  of  Titns  Labienus, 

The. — Richards. 
Now,  trumpeter!  for  thy  close.     See  Mystic  Trumpeter, 

The. — Whitman. 
Now  Tudens,  you  sit  on  this  knee.     See  Session  with 

Uncle  Sidney,  A  (One   of  his  Animal  Stories). — 

Riley. 
"Now    unto    yonder    wood-pile    go."     See    Saddened 

Tramp,  A. — Anon. 
Now,  upon    Syria's  land  of  roses.      See  Lalla     Rookh 

(Syria). — Moore. 
"Now  wake  me  up  at  six  o'clock."     See  Sleepy. — Anon. 
Now,  we  are  all  here  but  Mr.  Puffy,  and  your  friend. 

See  Tailor  of  Tipperary,  The. — Anon. 
Now  we   can   talk.     Thank   goodness,   that    old   bore. 

See  Two  Simple  Little  Ostriches. — Tompkins. 
Now  we  have  all  our  arrangements  complete,  I'  think. 

See  Three  Smart  Girls. — Anon. 
Now  welcome,   welcome,   baby-boy,   unto   a  mother's 

fears.     See  Irish  Mother  in  the  Penal  Days,  The. — 

Banim. 
Now  went  forth  the  morn.     See  Paradise  Lost    (Battle 

of  the  Angels). — Milton. 
Now  westward  Sol  had  spent  the  richest  beams.     See 

Nightingale's  Song,  The. — Crashaw. 
"Now  what  I  want  is  facts."     See  Hard  Times  (Grad- 

grind's  Idea  of  Education). — Dickens. 
"Now  what  is  that  noise?"  said  the  glad  New  Year. 

See  New  Year's  Vows. — Anon. 
"Now,  what  shall  I  send  to  the  Earth  to-day?"     See 

Sunbeams,  The. — Poulsson. 
Now  what  should  a  young  maid  do?     See  What  Should 

a  Young  Maid  Do? — King. 
Now,  what  was  the  Venezuela  Question?     See  Vene- 
zuela Question,  The. — Lodge. 
Now   what's   the   use   of  wondering.     See   Because. — 

Richards. 
Now  when   the  giant  in  us  wakes   and   broods.     See 

Symbolism. — Russell. 
Now  when  the  glorious  lady  reached  the  room.     See 

Odyssey,    The    (Bending    of    the    Bow,    The). — 

Homer. 
Now  when   the   troops   together  with  their   captains. 

See    Iliad,    The    (^Combat     between     Paris     and 

Menelaus). — Homer. 
"Now  where  are  you  going,  little  May,  little  May?" 

See  Little  May's  Answer. — Anon. 
Now  wherefore  trembles  still  the  string.     See  Visit  of 

the  Prince  of  Wales  to  Laura  Secord. — Curzon. 
Now  whilst  he  dreams,  O  Muses,  wind  him  round!     See 

For  Music. — Procter. 
"Now,  who  shall  get  my  valentine?"     See  Clarabel's 

Valentine.— Richards. 


775 


Now  who 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Now  who  shall  tackle  the  Golfer  mad?     See  Golf  Fiend, 

The.— II.  F.  B. 
Now  who  would  ever  think  that  one  long  yellow  hair. 

See  Sister  Ernestine'.-*  Beau. — Locke.  ^ 

Now  winter  fMm  the  world  with  snow.     See  Song  fori 

Winter. — ^Sherman. 
Now  winter    nights   enlarge.     See   Winter    Nights. — 

Campion. 
Now  wol  1    turn  unto    my  tale  agen.     See    Canter- 
bury Tales,  The  (Fox  and  Cock).— Chaucer. 
"Now,  woman,  why  without  your  veil?"     See  King 

of  the  Crocodiles,  The. — Southey. 
Now,  work  and  me  could  ne'er  agree.     See  When  Work 

and  Me  Fell  Out. — Richards. 
Now  yield  thee,  or,  by  Him  who  made.     See  Death 

Struggle,  The. — Scott. 
Now  vou  may  think  it  very  nice.     See  Not  so  Easy. — 

Coolittle. 
Now  you  must  take  your  things  right  off.     See  Tiny 

Quarrel,  A. — May. 
Now  young  gentleman,  we  have  met  to  learn  the  won- 
derful  art   of  elocution.     See   Real   Elocution. — 

Anon. 
Now,  you've  sung  your  roundelay.     See  Fairy  Joke, 

A. — -Anon. 
Nowhere    fairer,    sweeter,    rarer.     See    Ranger,    The. 

— Whittier. 
"Number   106"  must  have  been  a  beautiful  woman 

once.     See  Easter  in  a  Hospital  Bed. — Crinkle. 
"Number  twenty-five!"     See  same. — Anon. 
Nuns  fret  not  at  their  convent's  narrow  room.     See 

Gain«  of  Restraints,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Nurse  of  the  Pilgrim  Sires,  who  sought,  beyond  the 

Atlantic  foam.     See  England. — Elliot. 
Nymphs  and  Shepherds,  dance  no  more.     See  Arcades 

(Song:  "Nymphs  and  Shepherds,"  etc.). — Milton. 


O  [Oh — C.J  a  dainty  plant  is  the  ivy  green.  See  Pick- 
wick Papers,  The  (Ivy  Green,  The). — Dickens. 

O  [Oh — C.\  a  wonderful  stream  is  the  river  Time.  See 
Isle  of  the  Long  Ago,  'phe. — Taylor. 

O  Adam  was  a  ploughboy.  when  plowing  first  began. 
See  Painful  Plough,  The. — Anon. 

O  Albuera,  glorious  field  of  grief!  See  Childe  Harold's 
Pilgrimage  (Battle  of  Albuefa). — Byron. 

O  Alison  Gross,  that  lives  in  your  tower.  See  Alison 
Gross. — Anon. 

O  Arranmore.  loved  Arranmore.  See  Arranmore. — 
Moore. 

O  Austria,  proud  Austria,  thou  wert  a  bitter  foe.  See 
Renyi. — Booth. 

O  Babe  of  Bethlehem,  I  pause  to  hear.  See  O  Christ, 
Our  King. — Anon. 

O  Babip,  dainty  Babie  Bell.     See  Baby  Bell.— Aldrich. 

O  babbling  brook  of  Lappington.  See  Brook  of  I.iap- 
pington,  The. — Gillman. 

O  babbling  spring,  than  glass  more  clear.  See  "O 
Fons  Bandusiae." — Dobson. 

"O  bairn,  when  I  am  dead."  See  "O  Mither,  Dinna 
Dee!" — Buchanan. 

O  bear  him  where  the  rain  can  fall.  See  Elegy  on 
William  Cobbett.— Elliott. 

O  beauteous  God!  Uncircumscribed  treasure.  See 
Of  Heaven.— Taylor. 

O  beauteous  things  of  earth!  See  Under  the  Cloud.— 
Ames. 

O  beautiful  faith  of  childhood!  How.  See  Baby 
Faith.— (C/iri8<tan  Observer.) 

O  beautiful  world  of  green!  See  Round  the  Year.— 
Cooper. 

O,  Bella  fior  del  mondo!  to-morrow.     See  Malta.— Ryan. 

O  Bertha,  aren't  you  sorry  school  begins  next  Monday? 
See  Two  Ways  of  liOoking  at  It. — -Waterman. 

O  Bessie  Bell  and  Mary  Gray.  See  Bessie  Bell  and 
Mary  Gray. — Anon. 

O  better  that  her  shattered  hulk.  See  Old  Ironsides. 
— Holme*. 

O  big  old  tree,  so  tall  an'  fine.  See  Noble  Old  Flm, 
The.— Riley. 

O  bird,  thou  dartest  to  the  sun.  See  Song,  "O  bird, 
thou  dartest,"  etc. — Lowell. 

O  blackbird!  sing  me  something  well.  See  Blackbird, 
The. — Tennyson. 

O  blessed  angel  of  the  All-bounteous  King.  See  Invo- 
cation to  Rain.— Ciirzon. 

O  blessed  Dead!  beyond  »11  earthly  pains.  See  Thren- 
ody in  Memory  of  Albert  Darasz,  A.— Lin- 
ton. 

O  blessed  pipe.     See  Ode  to  My  Pipe.— Wynter. 


O  blest  of  Heaven,  whom  not  the  languid  songs.     See 

Pleasures   of  the    Imagination  (Compensations  of 

the  Imagination). — Akenside. 
O  blithe    new-comer!     I    have    heard.     See    To    the 

Cuckoo. — Wordsworth. 
O  bloom  of  the  apple  so  bright!     See  Apple  Blossom, 

The. — Anon. 
O  blue   eyes    close   in   slumber.     See   Cradle   Song. — 

Brooke. 
O  blue-jay,  up  in  the  maple  tree.     See  Blue-jay,  The. — 

Swett. 
O  boat  of  my  lover!  go  softly,  go  safely.     Sec  Boat  of 

My  Lover,  The. — Craik. 
O  bonnie    Bird,    that    in    the    brake,    exultant,    dost 

prepare  thee.     See  Waking  of  the  Lark,  The. — 

Mackay. 
O  born  in  days  when  wits  were  fresh  and  clear.     See 

Scholar-Gipsy,  The  (Flee  fro'  the  Press). — Arnold. 
O  bright  ideals,  how  ye  shine.     See  Ideals. — Seas. 
"O  brightest   of    my   children   dear,  earthborn."     See 

Hyperion  (Ccclus  to  Hyperion).— Keats. 
O   [Oh — C]l    breathe   not  his   name,   let    it   sleep   in 

the    shade.     See  Oh!   Breathe  not   His   Name. — 

Moore. 
O,  [  wr.  Oh]    Brignall  banks  are   wild  and   fair.     See 

Rokeby  (Edmund's  Song). — Scott. 
O  brother  man'  fold  to  thy  heart  thy  brother.     See 

Worship. — Whittier. 
O  brother  Planets,  unto  whom  I  cry.     See  Isolation. — 

Peabody. 
O  brotherhood,  with  bay-crowned  brows  undaunted. 

See  Invocation  in  a  Library,  An. — Cone. 
O  brothers!  thro'  how  many  lands.     See  Retrospect,, 

The. — Lockhart. 
O  brothers,  who    must  ache  and  stoop.     See  To  My 

Brothers. — Gale. 
O  brown  boughs,  lovely  boughs.     See  Apple  Blossoms. 

— Coolidge. 
"O,  bury  me  not  in  the  deep,  deep  sea."     See  Ocean 

Burial,  The. — Saunders. 
O  Caledonia!  stern  and  wild.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 

Minstrel  (Scotland). — Scott. 
O  [or  Oh]  call  my  brother  back  to  me.     See  Child's, 

First  Grief,  The. — Hemans. 
O  [or  Oh],  came  ye  ower  by  the  Yoke-burn  Ford.     See 

Jock  Johnstone  the  Tinkler. — Hogg. 
O  Captain!  my  Captain!  our  fearful  trip  is  done.     See 

O  Captain!  my  Captain! — Whitman. 
O  Castell  Gloom!  thy  strength  is  gone.     See  Castell 

Gloom. — Nairne. 
O  Charlie  was  juist  a  king  to  see.     See  Scottish  Ballad, 

A.— Lyle. 
O  child,  had  I  thy  lease  of  time!     Such  unimagined 

things.     See  Child  of  To-day,  A. — Buckham. 
O  child!  O  child!  my  soul,  and  not  my  child!     See 

Romeo  and  Juliet  (Resignation). — Shakespeare. 
O  Child    of    Nations,    giant-limbed.     See    Canada. — 

Roberts. 
O  children's   eyes   unchildlike!— Children's   eyes.     See 

Unto  the  Least  of  These  Little  Ones. — Rives. 
O  Christ  of  God!  whose  life  and  death.     See  Vesta. — 

Whittier. 
O  Christian  soldier!  shouldst  thou  rue.     See  Christian 

Exaltation.— Hayne. 
O  Christmas    Girl,    whose    dainty    feet.     See    Laudo 

Puellam. — Richmond. 
O  Christmas,  merry  Christmas!     See  Bells  across  the 

Snow. — Havergal. 
O  Columbia,   the  gem   of  the  ocean.     See  Columbia, 

the  Land  of  the  Brave. — Shaw. 
"O  come  and  be  my  mate!"  said  the  Eagle  to  the  Hen. 

See  Wedded  Bliss. — Oilman. 
O,   come  let  us  sing.     See  Old  Time  Plays. — Rook. 
O  come,   let   us  sing  unto  the   Lord.     See  Psalms  of 

David,  ^C\. —Bible. 
O  come,  soft  rest  of  cares!     Come,  Night!     See  Bridal 

Song. — Chapman. 
O  comrades,  on  each  lonely  grave  we  place  one  flower 

to-day.     See  Red,  the  White,   the  Blue,  The.— 

Sherwood. 
O  cool  in  the  summer  is  salad.     See  Salad. — Collins. 
"O  Cosette,   you  are  the  dearest  kitty!"     See  Cat's- 

cradle. — Thaxter. 
O,  could   I  flow  like  thee,  and  make  thy  stream     (See 

Cooper's  Hill  — Denham. 
O  covering  grasses!     O   unchanging  trees!     See   Pre- 
lude, A. — Sherman. 
O  cruel  Love!  on   thee  I  lay.     See  Sapho  and    Phao 

(Sappho's  Song). — Lyly. 
O  cubic  foot  of  healthful  sport.     See  To  a  Football. 

— Knowles. 
O  Cupid!  monarch  over  kings.     See  Love's  College. — 

Lyly. 


776 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


O  fortunate 


O  curfew  of  the  setting  sunl     O  bells  of  Lynn!     See 

Bells  of  Lynn,  The. — Longfellow. 
O  d'  hear  the  seas  complainin'.     See  Doom-bar,  The. 

— Gillington. 
O  dandelion  yellow  as  gold.     See  Dandelion,  The. — 

Anon. 
O  dappled  throat   of  white!     Shy,   hidden  bird.     See 

Lonely  Bird,  The. — -Morris. 
O  dark,    dark,    dark,    amid    the    blaze    of    noon.     See 

Samson  Agonistes. — Milton. 
O  darkling    River!     Through   the   night   I    hear.     See 

Night  Journey  of  a  River,  The. — Bryant. 
O  dat  Gawgy  watahmillon,  an'  dat  gal  ob  Gawgy  wif 

'im!     iSee  Dat  Gawgy  Watahmillon. — Cooke. 
O  dawn  upon  me  slowly.  Paradise.     See  Come  Slowly, 

Paradise. — Kenyon . 
O  day  and  night,  but  this  is  wondrous  strange.     See 

Hamlet. — Shakespeare. 
O  day!  he  cannot  die.     See  Death-scene,  A. — Bronte. 
O  day  most  calm,  most  bright !     See  Sunday. — Herbert. 
O  days  and  hours,  your  work  is   this.     See  In    Memo- 

riam  (O  Days  and  Hours). — Tennyson. 
O  de'!     O  de'!     I'se  out  of  bwef.     See  Repentance. — 

Anon. 
O  dear,  dear  Jeanie   Morrison.     See   Jeanie   Morrison. 

— Motherwell. 
O  dear!  I  am  so  very  tired.     The  wind  has  been  blowing 

so  fiercely.     See  .lean  Noel :     A  Story  of  Christmas 

in  France. — Scannell. 
O  dear!  I'm  afraid  I  can  never  make  anything  present- 
able.    See  Unexpected  Company. — Anon. 
"O  dear!  I'se  so  tired  and  lonesome!"     See  Licensed 

to  Sell ;  or.  Little  Blossom. — Bidwell. 
O  dear  life,  when  shall  it  be.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella 

(Tenth  Song). — Sidney. 
"O   dear  me!"   cried  the  April  sky.     See  Caprice. — 

Anon. 
O  dear!     Oh!    dear    me!     What    does    ail    me?     See 

Heartrending  Affair,  A. — Locke. 
O  dear  saint!     If  I  have  been  too  daring,  pardon  me. 

See  Guido  Ferranti. — Wilde. 
O,  dear!  this  age  is  far  too  cross.     See  Ta!  Ta! — Anon. 
O  dear!    this    pain   in   my   side.     See   Idle    Hands. — 

Arthur. 
O  dear!   to  have  a  lover  you   never  set  your  eyes  on. 

See  Long  Lost  Nephew,  The. — Meyers. 
O  death!  thou  tyrant  fell  and  bloody!     See  Elegy  on 

Captain  Matthew  Henderson. — Burns. 
O  death,  when  thou  shalt  come  to  me.     See  Strong 

as  Death. — Bunner. 
O  deep  of  Heaven,  tis  thou  alone  art  boundless.     See 

Night  Sky,  The.— Roberts. 
O  Deirdr^,  terrible  child.     See  Druid  Song  of  Cathvah, 

The.— Todhunter. 
O  destined  land,  unto  thy  citadel.     See  My  Country. 

— Woodberry. 
O  did  you  ever  hear  o'  brave  Earl  Bran?     See  Brave 

Earl  Brand,  The. — -Anon. 
O  dig  a  grave,  and  dig  it  deep.     See  Dirge. — Roscoe. 
O    [or  Oh]  dinna  ask  me  gin  I  lo'e  ye.     See  Dinna  Ask 

Me. — Dunlop. 
O  distant  Christ!  the  crowded  darkening  years.     See 

Doubt. — Deland. 
O  divine  star  of  Heaven.    See  Mad  Lover,  The  (Venus). 

— Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
O   [wr.    Oh],  do    not  wanton  with    those    eyes!     See 

same. — Jonson. 
O  do  you  hear  the  merry  waters  falling.     See  Waters 

of  Carr,  The.— I..ockhart. 
O,    Dolly,  school  is  out  at  last.     See  School  is  Out. — 

Denton. 
O,    Dolly,  you  are  getting  old.     See  Grandma  Doll,  A. 

—Denton. 
O  don't  be  sorrowful,  darling.     See  Don't  be  Sorrowful, 

Darling. — Peale.  • 

O  don't  go  away  until  you  hear.     See  Irish  Sleigh  Ride 

The.— Anon. 
O  draw  me.  Father,  after  thee.     See  Moravian  Hymn. 

— Wesley. 
O  dreadful     Memory!     why     dost     thou     tread.     See 

Memory. — (People's  Magazine.) 
O  earth,  art   thou  not  weary*  of  thy  graves?      See  O 

Earth,  Art  Thou  not  Weary? — Dorr. 
O  earth,    lie    heavily    upon    her    eyes.     See    Rest. — 

Rossetti. 
O  earth!   thou   hast   not   any  wind   that   blows.      See 

Symbolisms  ("O  earth!  thou,"  etc.). — -Realf. 
O  Easter    lilies,    pure    and    sweet!     See    Fair    Easter 

Lilies. — Vincent. 
O,     eine  edle    Himmelsgabe   ist.       See  William    Tell 

(Das   Licht   des   Auges). — Schiller. 
O  elder  sister,  though  thou  didst  of  yore.     See  Canada 

to  Columbia. — Smith. 


O  Ellen,  do  pray  tell  me  what  did  Miss  Brown  say. 

See  Composition,  The. — Hillyer. 
"O  Elsie,  ye  will  drive  me  mad."     See  "It  War  Crackit 

Afore." — Brittle. 
O  [Oh^C],    England    is     a    pleasant    place    for  thera 

that'*  rich  and  high.     See  Last  Buccaneer,  The. — 

Kingsley. 
O,  ever  from  the  deeps.     See  Soul's  Cry,  The. — Palmer. 
O,  fain  would  I,  before  I  die.     See  O  Fain  Would  I. — 

Anon. 
O  faint,    delicious,    spring-time     violet!     See    Violet, 

The. — Story. 
O  fair  and  stately  maid,  whose  eyes.     See  To  Eva. — 

Emerson. 
O  fair!     O  sweet,  when  I  do  look  on  thee.     See  Heart 

and  Soul. — Sidney. 
O  fair,  sweet  face !     O  eyes  celestial  bright !     See  To 

My  Mistress's  Eyes. — Fletcher. 
O  fairer  than  vermilion.  See  Eleanor  of  Castile. — Anon. 
O  fairest  lady  ever  seen.     See  Cruel  Brother,  The. — 

Anon. 
O  fairest  of  creation,  last  and  best.     See  Paradise  Lost 

(Adam  to  Eve). — Milton. 
O  fairest  of  the  blue  Antilles.     See  Cuba's  Appeal. — 

Rice. 
O  fairest  of  the  rural  maids !     See  same. — Bryant . 
O  Falmouth  is  a  fine  town  with  ships  in  the  bay.     See 

Home. — Henley. 
O    fame,    thy    laurels    graced    a    blighted    pall!     See 

Byron. — Betts. 
O  far-off  darling  in  the  South.      See  CcBur  de  Lion  to 

Berengaria. — Tilton. 
O  far-oflf  rose  of  long  ago.      See  Far-off  Rose,   A. — 

Peabody. 
O  fate,  O  fault,  O  curse,  child  of  my  bliss.     See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella  (Sonnet  XCIII.).— Sidney. 
O  Father,  let  me  not  die  young!     See  Prayer  for  Life, 

A. — Burleigh. 
"O  father,"  shouted  Johnny  Leach.      See  LTnder-tow, 

The. — Anon. 
O  Father,    Thou    art    near — so    near.     See    Morning 

Hymn. — Anon. 
O,  fear  me  not.     I  stay  too  long.     See  Shakespeare 

Improved. — Anon. 
O  fields  in  June's  fair  verdure  drest.     See  Day  in  June, 

A. — Washburn. 
O  finest    essence    of    delicious    rest !     See    Destiltory 

Reading.— F.  M.  P. 
O  first  of  human  blessings,  and    supreme.      See  Bri- 
tannia (War  for  the  Sake  of  Peace). — Thomson. 
O  fir-tree  green!     O  fir-tree  green!      See  To  the  Fir- 
tree. — Bellamy  and  Goodwin. 
"O,   Flamen !  why  trembles  Jove's  altar?     O,  Vesta,  why 

quivers  thy  flame?     See  Battle  of  Cannse,  The. — 

Wells. 
O  fling   not   this   receipt   away.     See   Paid   Bill,  The. 

—  (Punch.) 
O  flower    of    passion,    rocked    by    balmy    gales.     See 

Gold  of  Ophir  Roses. — Dennen. 
O  fly,  my   Soul!    What   hangs  upon.     See  Hymn,  A: 

"O  fiy,  "  etc. — Shirley. 
O  fly    not    Pleasure,    pleasant-hearted    Pleasure.     See 

same. — Blunt. 
O    LOh — C]    for    a    lodge    in   some   vast    wilderness. 

See  Task,  The  (Love  of  Liberty). — Cowper. 
O  for  a  moon  to  light  me  home!      See  Song:  "O  for  a 

moon,"  etc. — Ramal. 
O  for  a  Muse  of  fire,  that   would  ascend.     See  King 

Henry  V.  (Agincourt). — Shakespeare. 
O  for   a   sculptor's    hand.     See   Second   Sunday   after 

Easter. — Keble. 
O  [Oh — C]  for  a  tongue  to  curse  the  slave.     See  Lalla 

Rookh  (Curse  on  the  Traitor,  A).— Moore. 
O,  for  my  sake  do  you  with  Fortune  chide.      See  Son- 
nets, CXI. — Shakespeare. 
"O  [Oh — C]  for  one  hour  of  youthful  joy!    See  Old  Man 

Dreams,  The. — Holmes. 
O  for  some  honest  lover's  ghost.     See  Doubt  of  Mar- 
tyrdom, A. — Suckling. 
O,  for  that  warning  voice,  which  he,   who  saw.     See 

Paradise  I^ost. — Milton. 
O  for  the  look  of  those  pure  grey  eyes.    See  Regrets. — 

Sterry. 
O  for  the  mighty  wakening  that  aroused.     See  Half- 
asleep,  The. — Wade. 
O,  for  the  times  which  were.     See  Tempora  Acta. — 

Lytton. 
O  force    of   faith!    O    strength    of   virtuous    will!     See 

Curse  of  Kehama,  The. — Southey. 
O,  formed  by  Nature,  and  refined  by  Art.     See  To  a 

Lady  before  Marriage. — Tickell. 
O  fortunate,  O  happy  day.     See  Hanging  of  the  Crane, 

The  (New  Household,  A). — Longfellow. 


777 


O  fountain 


A\  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


O  fountain  of  Bandusia!  See  To  the  Fountain  of  Ban- 
dusia. — Field. 

O  freedom,  thou  art  not,  as  poets  dream.  See  Free- 
dom.— Bryant. 

O  friend!  I  k^w  not  which  way  I  must  look.  See 
Written  in  London,  September,  1802. — Word.s- 
worth. 

O  friend,  like  .some  cold  wind  to-day.  See  To  a  Deso- 
late Friend. — Dawson. 

O  friend,  your  face  I  cannot  see.  See  In  June. — C^had- 
wick. 

O  friends!  with  whom  my  feet  have  trod.  See  Eternal 
Goodness,  The. — -Whittier. 

O  gallant  brothers  of  the  generous  South.  See  Ode 
for  Decoration   Day.   An.— Peterson. 

O  [Oh — C],  Galuppi  Baldassaro  [Baldassare — C],  this 
is  very  sad  to  find.  See  Toccata  of  Galuppi's,  A. 
— Browning. 

O  gather,  gather!  stand.  See  Vestis  Angelico. — Hig- 
ginson. 

O  gay,  yet  fearful  to  behold.  See  Lord  of  the  Isles, 
The  (Bannockburn). — Scott. 

O  gentle,  gentle  summer  rain.  See  Invocation  to  Rain 
in  Summer. — Bennett. 

O  gentle  Jennie  Eaglehart,  I  know  not  where  you  be. 
See  Rhyme  of  .Jennie  Eaglehart,  The. — Anon. 

O  gifted  son  of  our  dear  land  and  thine.  See  To  Louis 
Frechette. — Reade. 

O,  girls,  did  you  ever?  There  come  Florence  and  Liz- 
zie tojtether.     See  Four  Judges,  The. — Denton. 

O,  girls!  did  you  hear  about  Mr,«.  I^awrence's  girl  Han- 
nah?    See  Little  Gossips. — Smith. 

O,  girls,  don't,  don't.  See  Professor's  Present,  The. — 
Denton. 

O  girls,  ha-ha-ha!  I  have  just  written  another  letter  for 
Aunt  Hannah.  See  Aunt  Hannah's  T^etter. — 
McCoUum. 

O,  girls,  I  know  the  nicest  game.  See  Bunch  of  Flow- 
ers, A. — Anon. 

O  girls,  my  father  has  bought  a  beaiitiful  sail-boat. 
See  Knowing  the  Circumstances. — Anon. 

O  give  thanks  unto  the  Lord;  for  He  is  good.  See 
Thanksgiving. — Rook. 

O  glad  New  Year!  O  glad  New  Year!  See  New 
Year's  Day. — Anon. 

O  glorious  Easter  morning.     See  same. — Bolton. 

O  [uT.  Ohl,  go  not  yet,  my  love!  See  Hero  to 
Leander. — Tennyson. 

O  God,  I  thank  Thee  that  the  night.  See  Morning 
Hymn  for  a  Child. — Pierpont. 

O  God!  methinks,  it  were  a  happy  life.  See  King 
Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III.  (Shepherd's  Life,  A).— Shake- 
speare. 

O  God !  my  sins  are  manifold !  against  my  life  they  cry. 
See  Forgive. — Heber. 

O  God,  my  strength  and  fortitude,  of  force  I  must  love 
Thee.     See  Psalm  Eighteen. — Sternhold. 

O  God  of  Battles,  who  art  still.  See  On  the  Eve  of 
War. — Dandridge. 

O  God  of  ho.>-ts,  whose  mighty  hand.  See  In  Days  Like 
These. — Stacy. 

O  God,  our  Father,  if  we  had  but  truth!  See  Prayer, 
A.— Sill. 

O  God !  our  help  in  ages  past.     See  same. — Watts. 

O  God!  that  I  might  breathe  of  Freedom's  air.  See 
Cuba,   1897.— Bashford. 

O  God  that  madest  earth  and  sky,  the  darkness  and  the 
day.  See  O  God  that  Madest  Earth  and  Sky. — 
Heber. 

O  God,  that  men  should  put  an  enemy  in  their  mouths 
to  steal  away  their  brains.  See  Othello. — Shake- 
speare. 

O  God,  the  cleanest  oflfering.  See  Father  Damien. — 
Tabb. 

O  God!  this  is  a  holy  hour.     See  same. — Motherwell. 

O  God!  though  sorrow  be  my  fate.  See  Prayer. — ' 
Mary,  Queen  of  Hungary. 

O  God,  thy  moon  is  on  the  hills.  See  Kelpius's  Hymn. 
— Peterson. 

O  God,  unseen  but  not  unknown.  See  Thou,  God, 
Seest  Me. — Montgomery. 

O  God!  who  wert  my  childhood's  love.  See  God  of  my 
Childhood,  The.— Faber. 

O  God!  whose  thunder  shakes  the  sky.  See  Resigna- 
tion.— Chatterton. 

O  goddess!  hear  the.se  tuneless  numbers,  wrung.  See 
Ode  to  Psyche. — Keats. 

O  gold  Hyperion,  love-lorn  Porphyro.  See  Ode  to 
England,  An  (Keats). — Lord. 

O  good  gray  head  which  all  men  knew.  See  Ode  on 
the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. — Tennyson. 

O  good  New  Year!  we  clasp.  See  Address  to  the  New 
\  ear. — Craik. 


O   [Oh — C],   good  painter,    tell  me   true.     See  Order 

for  a  Picture,  An. — Cary. 
O  granite  nature!  like  a  mountain  height.     See  Car- 

lyle. — Hayne. 
O  great  Republic,  rise  and  shake.     See  New  Emanci- 
pation, The. — Williams. 
O  [ii'r.  Ohl,  greenly  and  fair  in  the  lands  of  the  sun. 

See  Pumpkin,  The. — Whittier. 
O    Hamlet!    speak   no  more.      See    Hamlet. — Shake- 
speare. 
O    [Oh— C]    happiness!    our    being'.s    end    and   aim! 

See  Es.say  on  Man,  An  (Happiness). — Pope. 
O  hai)py  buds  of  violet!     See  Violets  at  Home. — Col- 
lins. 
O  happy  dames!  that  may  embrace.     See  Complaint 

of  the  Absence  of  her  Lover  being  upon  the  Sea. — 

Howard. 
O  happy  day  returning.     See  Arbor  Day. — Halsey. 
O  happy,  golden  age!     See  Pastoral,  A. — Daniel. 
O  happy  hours !  O  compensation  ample.     See  Dipsychus 

(In  Venice;  Dipsychus  Speaks). — Clough. 
O  happy  hush  of  heart  to  heart!     See  First  Kiss,  The. 

— Meredith. 
O  happy  shades!  to  me  unblest.     See  Shrubbery,  The. 

— Cowper. 
O  happy    sleep!  that    bear'st    upon    thy    breast.     See 

Sleep. — Martin. 
O  happy  soul,  that  lives  on   high.     See  same. — Watts. 
O  happy  [or  happie]  Thames  that  didst  my  Stella  bear! 

SeeAstrcphel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  cm.). —Sidney. 
O  happy    Tithon!  if    thou    know'st     thy     hap.     See 

Aurora. — Alexander. 
O  hark,  O  hear,  how  thin  and  clear.     See  Bugle  Song. 

— Tennyson. 
O  [ur.    Oh]   have   ye  na  heard  o'  the  fause    Sakelde? 

See  Kinmont  Willie. — Anon. 
(3,  have  you  been  in  Gudbrand's  dale.     See  Thoralf 

and  Synniiv. — Boyesen. 
O   [or^  Oh],   he   was   a   Bowery   bootblack   bold.     See 

Total  Annihilation. — Brine. 
O  [«T.    Oh],    heard   ye   yon    pibroch    sound  sad  in  the 

gale?     See  Glenar.a. — Campbell. 
O  hearken,    all    ye    little    weeds.     See    Candlemas. — 

Brown. 
O   hearkener  to    the   loud-clapping  shears.     See   En- 

dymion  (Hymn  to  Pan). — Keats. 
"O  heart,  my  heart!"  she  said.     See  Silly  Song,  A. — 

Craik. 
O  [uT.  Oh]  heart  of  mine,  we  shouldn't.     See  Kissing 

the  Rod. — Riley. 
O  heart   sore-tried!  thou   hast   the    best.     See   Snow- 
bound.— Whittier. 
O  hearts  that  never  cease  to  yearn!     See  Grief  for  the 

Dead. — Anon. 
O,    heavenly    born!    in    deepest    dells.     See    Ode    on 

Science. — Swift. 
O  Heavens,  if  you  do  love  old  men.     See  King  Lear. — 

Shakespeare. 
O  hemlock  tree!     O  hemlock  tree!  how  faithful  are  thy 

branches!     See  Hemlock  Tree,  The. — Longfellow. 
O,  here  comes  Auntie  Dimple.     See  Auntie  Dimple. — - 

Anon. 
O  here's  a  little  rhyme  for  the  Spring  or  Summer-time. 

See  Session  with  Uncle  Sidney,  A  (Sings  a  "  Winky- 

tooden"  Song). — I?iley. 
O  Hetty      McEwen!     Hetty      McEwen!     See      Hetty 

Mc  K  wen . — Hooper. 
O  [or   Oh]   hideous   leagues    of   straining   woods.     See 

Flight  for  Life,  The. — Sawyer. 
O  hie  honour,  sweit  heuinlie  flour  degest.     See  Palice 

of   Honour,   The   (Ballade   in   Commendation    of 

Honour,  A). — Douglas. 
"O,  ho!  he  has  drunk  one  glass  too  much!"     See  One 

Glass  too  Much. — Anon. 
O,  ho.  you  laiy  Boy  Blue.     See  Scene  from  "Mother 

Goo.se,"  A. — Denton. 
O,    ho'-ye-ho,     ho-ye-ho,   who's    for    the    ferry?      See 

Diamond  Cut  Diamond. — Banks. 
O  hoi-ye-ho,  ho-ye-ho,   who's   for  the  ferry!     See  also 

Twickenham  Ferry. — Anon 
O    horror!    horror!    horror!     Tongue  and   heart.      Set! 

Hamlet. — Shakespeare. 
O  hour  of  all  hours,  the  most  blest  upon  earth.     See 

Lucile  (Dinner-hour,  The). — Lytton. 
O  how  canst  thou  renounce  the  boundless  store!     See 

Minstrel,  The;  or,  The  Progress  of  Genius  (Nature). 

— Beattie. 
O  how  comely  it  is,   and   how  reviving.     See  Sam.son 

Agonistes  (Out  of  Adversity). — Milton. 
"O.  how  feeble  is   man's   power  "     See  Song:  "Sweet- 
est love,"  etc. — Donne. 
O   [wr.   Oh]   how   much   more   doth  [ur.  does]  be,auty 

beauteous  seem.    See  Sonnets,  LI  V. — Shakespeare. 


778 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


O  Lord 


O  how  my  heart  is  beating  as  her  name  I  keep  repeat- 
ing.    See  Mine. — Craik. 
O,  how   the   thought    of   God   attracts.     See   same. — 

Faber. 
O,  how  tired  T  am!     I  cannot  walk  any  further.     See 

Good  Way  to  Play  a  Joke,  A. — Anon. 
O  hush,    my    little    baby    brother!     See    Nursing. — 

Lamb. 
O,  hush  thee,  my  babie,  thy  sire  was  a  knight.     See 

Lullaby  of  an  Infant  Chief. — Scott. 
"O,   I   am  so  happy!"   a  little  girl  said.     See  Good- 
morning. — Anon. 
O,    I   die,   Horatio!     See  Hamlet. — Shakespeare. 
O  I  forbid  ye   maidens  a',  that  wear  gowd  on  your  hair. 

See  Young  Tarn  Lin. — Anon. 
O  I  forbid  ye,  maidens  a',  who  are  sae  sweet  and  fair. 

See   Tamlane. — Anon.       {Another    version    of    the 

foregoing. ) 
O  T   hae  come  from  far  away.     See  Witch's   Ballad, 

The.— Scott. 
O  iwr.  Oh],  I  have  passed  a  miserable  night.     See  King 

Richard  III.  (Clarence's  Dream). — Shakespeare. 
O  if    I    had    a   thousand    a    year.    Gaffer    Green.     See 

Thousand  a  Year,  A. — Anon. 
O!   if  I  wake,  -shall  I  not   be    distraught.     See    Romeo 

and  .luliet  (Potion  Scene). — Shakespeare. 
O,  if  thou  knew'st  how  thou  thyself  dost  harm.     See 

To  Aurora. — Alexander. 
O,  if  you  teach  me  to  believe  this  sorrow.     See  King 

John. — Shakespeare. 
O   [ivr.    Ohl,    inexpressible    as    sweet.       See    same. — 

Woodbcrry. 
O,  is  it  a  phantom,  a  dream  of  the  night.      See   Lucile 

(Under  Canvas). — Lytton. 
O  [or  Oh],  it  is  great  for  our  country  to  die,  where 

ranks  are  contending!     See  FJegiac. — Percival. 
O  \or  Oh],  it  is  hard  to  work  for  God.     See  Right  Must 

Win,  The. — Faber. 
O!  [uT.  Oh]  it   is  pleasant,   with  a  heart  at- ease.      See 

Fancy  in  Nubibus. — Coleridge. 
O  Italy,  how  beautiful  thou  art!     See  Italy. — Rogers. 
O,  it's  Christmas  eve,  and  moonlight,  and  the  Christ- 
mas  air   is   chill.     See  "Little   Feller's   Stockin', 

The." — Lincoln. 
O  it's  I  that  am  the  captain  of  a  tidy  little  ship.     See 

My  Ship  and  I. — Stevenson. 
O  it's  up  in  the  Hielands.     See  Bonny  James  Camp- 
bell.— Anon. 
O  Jesu,  Thou  art  standing.     See  Behold,  I  Stand  at 

the  Door  and  Knock. — How. 
O,  Jesus,  dear  Jesus,  we  need  Thee  each  day.     See 

Prayer,  A.  — Anon. 
O  Johnny  was  as  brave  a  knight.     See  Johnny  Scott. 

— Anon. 
O  Joy,  hast  thou  a  shape?     See  Joy. — Jackson. 
O  joy  of  creation,  to  be!     See  What  the  Bullet  Sang. — 

Harte. 
O  joy  of  life,  O  joy  of  love!     See  Piero  da  Castiglione. 

— Sterne. 
O,    joy!   thou   welcome   stranger,    twice   three    years. 

See  Revenge. — Young. 
O  joy  too  high  for  my  low  style  to  show !     See  Astrophel 

and  Stella  (Sonnet  LXIX.).— Sidnoy. 
O  judge  not  from  the  ripple.     See  Under-current,  The. 

— Fiester. 
O  judgment,    thou    art    fled    to    brutish    beasts.     See 

Julius  Caesar. — Shakespeare. 
O  June!   delicious  month   of  June.     See  June. — Sher- 
man. 
O  Jupiter,    and    thou    Minerva    fierce    in    fight.     See 

Sixe  Idillia   (Prayer   of   Theocritus    for   Syracuse, 

The).— Dyer. 
O  Karol,    Karol!    call     him     back     again.       See     Sad 

Shepherd,  The  (Karol's  Kiss). — Jonson. 
O  keeper  of  the  Sacred  Key.     See  In  State. — Willson. 
O  ken  ye  no'  my  ain  wife.     See  My  Ain  Wife. — Ben- 

noch. 
O,  Kenmure's  on  and   awa,    Willie!        See    Kenmure's 

On  and  Awa. — Burns, 
O  kisse,    which    doe.st    those    ruddie    gemmes    impart. 

See  Astrophel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  LXXXI.). —Sid- 
ney. 
O  lady  fair!     O  lady  fair!     See  Why? — Patterson. 
"0[wr.  Oh]  lady  fair,   these  silks  of  mine  are    beau- 
tiful  and   rare."     See   Vaudois   Teacher,    The. — 

Whittier. 
O  lady,    lay   your   costly   robes    aside.     See    Dialogue 

between  a  Mother  and  Child. — Lamb. 
O  lady,  leave  thy  silken  thread.      See  Song:  "O  Lady, 

leave,"  etc. — Hood. 
O,  Lady  Mary  Ann.     See  Lady  Mary  Ann. — Burns. 
O  Lady  Moon,  your  horns  point  toward  the  east.     See 

O  Lady  Moon. — Rossetti. 


O  lady,     rock     never    your    young    son.     See    Young 

Hunting. — Anon. 
"O  lady,  thy  lover  is  dead,"    they    cried.     See    Song; 

"O  Lady  thy  lover,"  etc. — Macdonald. 
O  {or  Oh],  lady  wake! — the  azure  moon.     See  Ballad 

of  Bedlam,  A. — {Punch.) 
O  land,  of  every  land  the  best.     See  Peace. — Cary. 
O  land  of  happiness!     O  land  of  joy,  of  light,  of  youth. 

See  Happy  Land,  The. — Turgenief. 
O  large  of  heart,  and  grand,  and  calm.     See  John  A. 

Andrew. — Moulton. 
O  lark!    sweet  lark!     See  Singer,  The. — Stedman. 
O     late-remembered,      much-forgotten.      See     Martin 

Chuzzlewit  fWhen  Duty  Begins). — Dickens. 
O,  lay  thy  hand  in  mine,  dear!     See  same. — Massey. 
O   [wr.    Oh],    leave    this    barren    spot    to   me!       See 

Beech  Tree's  Petition,  The. — Campbell. 
O  lend    to    me,    sweet    nightingale.     See   Daughter   of 

Mendoza,  The. — Lamar. 
O  let  me  die  a-singing!     See  Morning  Fancy. — Fenol- 

losa. 
O  [iw.  Oh]  let  me  dream  of  happy  days  gone  by.      See 

O  let  me  dream. — Aide. 
O  let  me  love  my  love  unto  myself  alone.     See  Hidden 

Love,  The. — Clough. 
O  let  the  solid  ground.     See  Maud     ("O   let,"    etc.). — 

Tennyson. 
O  let    the   soul    her   slumbers    break.     See   Coplas   de 

Manrique     (Relentless    Time). — ^Manrique    (Long- 
fellow). 
O  life!   how   pleasant  is  thy  morning.     See  Epistle  to 

.lames  Smith. — Burns. 
O  life,  O  death,  O  world,  O  time.     See  same. — Trench. 
O  Life,  O  silent  shore.     See  same. — Craik. 
O  life!  that  mystery  that  no  man  knows.     See  Life. — 

Little. 
O  lifted    face    of   mute    appeal!     See   Come    Love    or 

Death. — Thompson. 
O  li'l'  lamb  out  in  de  col'.     See  Hymn:  "O,  li'l'  lamb," 

etc. — Dunbar. 
O  lilies    fair,    O    emblems    meet.     See    Consider    the 

Lilies.— Murray. 
O,  limM  soul!    that,  struggling  to   be  free.     See  Ham- 
let.— Shakespeare. 
O  lips   that    mine    have   grown   into.      See    Felise. — 

Swinburne. 
O  [ivr.    Oh],    listen,    listen,    ladies    gay!       See  Lay  of 

the  Last  Minstrel  (Rosabelle). — Scott. 
"O  listen,  man."     See    Husband's    and    Wife's    grave. 

The.— Dana. 
O  little  bird!  sing  sweet  among  the  leaves.     See  Nest- 
lings.—F.  A.  C. 
"O  little  brook,"  the  children  said.     See  Brook  that 

Ran  into  the  Sea,  The. — Larcom. 
O  little  buds,  break  not  so  fast.     See  Budding-time  too 

Brief. — Stein. 
O  little  child,  lie  still  and  sleep.     See  Mother's  Cradle- 
song,  The. — -Anon. 
O  little  city-gals,   don't    never    go    it.      See    Biglow 

Papers,  The  (Spring). — Lowell. 
O  little   flowers,   you   love   me  so.      See  Little    Girl's 

Fancies,  A. — "A." 
O  little  lambs!  the  month  is  cold.     See  Lambs  in  the 

Meadow. — Alma-Tadema. 
O  little  town  of  Bethlehem.     See  same. — Brooks. 
O  lively,    O    most    charming    pug.     See    Sonnet    to    a 

Monkey. — Fleming. 
O  living  image  of  eternal  youth.     See  Trilby. — Brown. 
O  Logie    o'  Buchan,    O    Logic    the   laird.     See  Logie 

o'  Buchan. — Halket. 
O  lonely  day!     No  sounds  are  heard.     See  February 

Rain. — Dazey. 
O  lonely  tomb  in  Moab's  land.     See  Burial  of  Moses, 

The. — Alexander. 
O  lonesome  sea-gull, floating  far.     See  Sea-birds. — Allen. 
O  long   ago,    when    Faery-land.       See    Riquet    of    the 

Tuft  (Prince  Riquet's  Song). — Brooke. 
O  Lord,  another  day  is  flown.     See  Hymn  for  Family 

Worship. — White. 
O  Lord,  bless  de  teacher  who  come  so  far  to  'struct  us 

in  de  way  to  heaven.     See  Negro  Prayer. — Anon. 
O  Lord,  in  me  there  lieth  nought.    See  Psalm  CXXXIX. 

— Sidney. 
O  Lord  my  God,   do  thou  thy  holy  will.     See  Resig- 
nation.— Keble. 
O  Lord,  my  God,  Thou  art  very  great.     See  Psalms  of 

David,  ClY. —Bible. 
O  Lord  of  heaven  and  earth,  and  sea!     See  Giving  to 

God. — Wordsworth. 
O  Lord   of  life,    and   truth   and     grace.     See   Church, 

The. — Frothingham. 
O  Lord!  oh,  dear!  my  heart  will  break;  I  shall  go  stick, 

stark,  staring  wild!     See  Ijost  Heir,  The. — Anon. 


779 


O  Lord 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


O    Ixjrd   our    Lord,  how   excellent.      See    Psalms    of 

David.  VIII.— Bf./e. 
"O    Lord!    take    thou    my    heart."     See    F^nelon's 

Prayer. — Harrison. 
O  Lord,  thy  wing  out.spread.     See  same. — Blew. 
()  Lords!     ()     ruler*    of    the     nation!     iSee    People's 

Petition,  The. — Call. 
O  los,s  of  sight,  of  thee  I  most  complain!     See  Samson 

Agoniste)  (Samson  on  His  Blindness). — Milton. 
O  Lou!  see  here,  my  birdie's  dead!     See  Dead  Bird, 

The. — Anon. 
'O  Love  and  Death!     See  same. — Hemans. 
O  Love  builds  on  the  azure  sea.     See  Master-builder, 

The. — Crawford. 
O  love,  can  the  tree  lure  the  summer  bird.     See  Song 

in  Autumn,  A. — Stringer. 
O  Love  divine,  how  sweet  Thou  art!     See  Desiring  to 

Love. — Wesley. 
O  Love  Divine,  that  stooped  to  share.     See  Hymn  of 

Trust. — Holme^. 
O  love,  if  life  should  be.     See  same. — Anon. 
O,  Love,  if  you  were  here.     See  If  You  Were  Here. — 

Marston. 
O    love   is   like   the   roses.      See   Love   in   Winter. — 

Buchanan. 
O  Love,  so  sweet  at  first.     See  Di.sarmed. — Searing. 
O  Love,  sweet  Love,  who  came  with  rosy  sail.     See 

Burnt  Ships. — Jackson. 
O  Love!  thou  makest  all  things  even.     See  Love. — 

Adams. 
O  Love,  what  hours  were  thine  and  mine.     See  Daisy, 

The. — Tennyson. 
O  love,   when  life  was   young,   I   knew.     See  In   the 

Evening. — Aide*'. 
O  Love,  whose  patient  pilgrim  feet.     See  Golden  Wed- 
ding, The. — Gray. 
O  [or  Ohi  lovely  Mary  Donnelly,  it's  you  I  love  the 

best!   [or   my   joy,    my    only   best!]     See    Lovely 

Mary  Donnelly. — Allingham. 
O  [ur.  Oh]   lovely   voices  of   the  sky.     See  Christmas 

Carol.— Hemans. 
O  lovers'  eyes  are  sharp  to  see.     See  Maid  of  Neidpath, 

The. — Scott. 
O  Love's  but  a  dance,  where  Time  plays  the  fiddle! 

ASee  Cupid's  Alley. — Dobson. 
O  lusty  May,  with  Flora  queen!     See  Lusty  May. — 

Anon. 
O  lyric  love,  half  angel  and  half  bird.     See  Ring  and 

the  Book,  The. — Browning. 
O  maiden    crowned    with    tresses    silken    black.     See 

Soliloquy    at    the    Oak    Grove    (8:55    a.    m.). — 

Palmer. 
O  majestic   Night!     See   Night    Thoughts    (Night). — 

Young. 
O  Maker  of  sweet  poets!  dear  delight.     See  "I  stood 

tiptoe  upon  a  little   hill"    (Nature's    Delights). — 

Keats. 
"O  Mammy,  have  you  heard  the  news?"     See  South- 
ern Scene,  A. — Anon. 
O  man  who  art  nursed  by  blind  fortune.     See  Stanzas 

to  Eternity. — Wilbor. 
O  [or  Oh],  many  a  day  have  I  made  good  ale  in  the 

glen.     See  Outlaw  of  Loch  Lene,  The. — Callanan. 
O  many  a  time  it  hath  been  told.     See  Centennial  Ode 

(  Our  Fathers). — Sprague. 
O,  many  are  the  poets  that  are  sown.    See  Excursion, 

The  (Unknown  Poets). — Wordsworth. 
O  Marcius!  Marcius!  Each    word    thou    hast    spoke. 

See  Coriolanus(Martial  Friendship). — Shakespeare. 
O  mare   jBva  si   forme.     See  Tonis   ad   Resto    Mare. 

—Swift. 
O,  Marian,  I  want  to  ask  you  a  question.     See  Genius 

and  Application. — Kavanaugh. 
"O  Maro,  doff  your  cestus,  and  drop  your  garments 

white.     See  Roman  Valentine,  A. — Anon. 
O  martyr-soul,  the  infamy  they  speak.     See  Dreyfus. 

— Ingham. 
O  marvel,  fruit  of  fruits,  I  pause.     See  My  Strawberry. 

— Jackson. 
O  [wr.   Oh]    Mary,     at    thy     window  be!     See  Mary 

Morison . — Burns. 
"O  [wr.  Oh]    Mary,    go    and    call  the  cattle  home." 

See  Sands  of  Dee,  The. — Kingslev. 
"O  Mary,  will  you  gang  wi'  me."     .$ee  A'  aboot  It. — 

Lyle. 
O  Maryanne,  you  pretty  girl.     See  Venus  of  the  Needle. 

— .Mlingham. 
O  maHler-builder,  blustering  as  you  go.     See  To  Feb- 
ruary.— Wetherald. 
O,  May,  gentle  May.     See  Crowninu'  the  May  Queen. — 

Denton. 
/  O  [wr.    Oh]   may   I    join    the    choir    invisible.       See 

same. — (VoRs. 


O  may  she   comes,   and   may  she   goes.     See   Bonny 

Hind,  The.— Anon. 
O  May,  thou  art  a  merry  time.     See   Sylvia;   or,  The 

May  Queen  (May  Day). — Darley. 
O  me,   what  eyes  hath    Love  put  in  my  head.     See 

Sonnets,   CXLVIII. — Shakespeare. 
O!   Meiiry,    when    the   zun   went   down.     See  Woone 

Smile  Mwore. — Barnes. 
O  melancholy  bird,  a  winter's  day.     See  To  a  Bird. — 

Thurlow. 
O  memories  of  green  and  pleasant  places.     See  Days 

that  Are  no  More,  The. — Anon. 
O  memory,     thou     fond     deceiver.     See     Memory. — 

(Goldsmith. 
O  men  with  sisters  dear.     See   Song   of   the   Shirt. — 

Hood. 
O  Merop(5!  See  Orion  (Distraught  for  Meropd!).— Home. 
0  merry  are  the  hours.     See  Fairy,  A. — Anon. 
0  messenger,  art  thou  the  king,  or  I?     See  Thought. — 

Jackson. 
O  miekle  yeuks  the  keckle  doup.     See  Justice  to  Scot- 
land.— (Punch.) 
O  mighty  Cffisar!  dost  thou  lie  so  low.    See  Julius  Caesar. 

— Shakespeare. 
O  mighty  mouth'd  inventor  of  harmonies.     See  Milton. 

— Tennyson. 
O    mistress    mine,    where    are    you     roaming?      See 

Twelfth  Night ;  or,  What   you    Will    (O,    Mistress 

Mine). — Shakespeare, 
O,  mither,  sing  a  sang  to  the  bairns.     See  O,  Mither, 

Sing  a  Sang  to  the  Bairns. — Anderson. 
O  modern  girl,  we  know  you  well.     See  "O  Modern 

Girl." — Adams. 
O  Mollie,  my  love,  is  it  you  that  I  see.     See  Family 

Quarrel,  The. — Anon. 
"O  monstrous,  dead,  unprofitable  world."     See  Writ- 
ten in  Emerson's  Essays. — Arnold. 
O  moon!  did  you  see.     See  Maiden  to  the  Moon,  The. 

— Saxe. 
O  Moon,  said  the  children,  O  Moon,  that  shineth  fair. 

See  Moon,  The. — Anon. 
O  Moon,  that  shinest  on  this  heathy  wild.     See  To  the 

Moon. — Thurlow. 
O  more  and  more,   this    was   so   well.      See   Pleasure 

Reconciled  to  Virtue  (Song  II.). — Jonson. 
O  mortal   folk,    you   may   behold   and   see.     See   His 

Epitaph. — Hawes. 
O  mortal  man,  who  livest  here  by  toil.     See  Castle  of 

Indolence,  The. — Thomson. 
O  mother  dear,  Jerusalem.     See  New  .lerusalem,  The. 

— Dickson. 
O,  Mother  Earth,  thy  task  is  done.     See  Elisha  Kent 

Kane. — Boker. 
O  Mother    Earth!   upon    thy   lap.     See    Randolph    of 

Roanoke. — Whittier. 
O,    Mother   Goose!   did   you   sail   away.     See  Mother 

Goose  Medley. — Rook. 
O  mother,  how  pretty  the  moon  looks  to-night.     See 

New  Moon,  The. — Anon. 
O  mother,  mother,  I  swept  the  hearth.     See  All  Souls' 

Night. — Sigerson. 
O  |Oh — C]  mother  of  a     mighty    race.     See   same.- — 

Bryant. 
"O  [or  Oh],  mother,  what  do  they  mean  by  blue?    See 

Two  Colors. — {S])ringfield  Republican.) 
O  mother,    what    will    grandpa    do?     See    Grandpa's 

Spectacles . — Anon . 
O  mother-my-love,  if  you'll   give  me  your  hand.     See 

Child  and  Mother.— Field. 
O  mothers    whose   children   are   sleeping.     See   same. 

— {Christian  Union.) 
O  mount  and  go.     See  Captain's  Lady,  The. — Burns. 
O  much  has  been  told  our  dear  girls  and  boys.     iSce 

Mrs.  Santa  Claus. — McNabb. 
O  my  beloved  ones.     See  In  Paradise. — Kimball. 
O,  my  brother,  heardst  thou  the  news  the  stripling 

Joseph   hath   brought.     See    From    Captivity    to 

Power. — Denton. 
O  [or  Oh]  my  dark  Rosaleen.     See  Dark  Rosaleen. — 

Mangan. 
O  my  daughter!  lead  me  forth  to  the  bastion  on  the 

north.     See  Siege  of  Derry,  The. — Alexander. 
O  my    dear    sister,    my    best-beloved    Ismene!     See 

Antigone. — Sophocles. 
O  my  deir  hert,  young  Jesus  sweit.     See  Cradle  Song. 

— Anon. 
O  my  earliest  love,  who,  ere  I  number'd.     See  First 

Love. — Calverley. 
O  my    God,    my    Giod.     See  Aurora    Leigh  (By    Soli- 
tary   Fires;. — Browning. 
O  my  heart's   heart    and    you  who  are  to  me.      See 

Monna  Innominata  (Sonnet  V.). — Rossetti. 
O,  my  little  sea-side  girl.     See  Flower  Girls. — Larcom. 


780 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


O  shepherds 


O   my  lord,  we  were  prompt.     See    Richelieu;  or,  The 

Conspiracy. — Bulwer-Lytton. 
O  [_or  Oh],  my  love's  like  the  steadfast  sun.     See  Poet's 

Bridal-day  Song,  The. — Cunningham. 
O    [or  Oh],   my    luve    is     [or    love's]     like    a   red,  red 

rose.     -See  Red,  Red  Rose,  A. — Burns. 
O,  my  offense  is  rank,  it  smells  to  heaven.     iSee  Ham- 
let (Remorse  of  King  Claudius). — Shakespeare. 
O,  my   poor   sorrowing   heart!     What   is   earth?     jSee 

Mourner,  The. — Anon. 
O  my  son!     The  o.stentatious  virtues  which  still  press. 

See  Humble  and  Unnoticed  Virtue. — More. 
O  name,     all    other    names     above.      See     Found. — 

Hosmer. 
O  Nanny,  wilt  thou  go  with  me  [or  gang  wi'  me]?     See 

same. — Percy. 
O  nature!  all  thy  seasons  please  the  eye.     See  Seasons, 

The. — Grahame. 
O  nature!     I  do  not  aspire.     See  Nature. — Thoreau. 
O  near  ones,   dear  ones!  you,   in   whose  right   hands. 

See  O  Near  Ones,  Dear  Ones. — Bulwer-Lytton. 
O,  Nelly  Gray!     O,   Nelly  Gray!     See  Nelly  Gray.— 

Hood. 
O,  never  despair!  for  our  hopes,  oftentime.     See  Never 

Despair. — Lover. 
O,  never  from  thy  tempted  heart.     See  Fortitude  amid 

Trials.- — Anon. 
O  never  rudely  will  I  blame  his  faith.     See  Wallenstein 

(Mythology) . — Coleridge. 
O  [wr.  Oh],  never  say  that   I  was  false  of  heart.     See 

Sonnets,  CIX. — Shakespeare. 
O  never  yet  was  theme  so  meet  for  roundel  or  romance. 

See  Aristocracy  of  France,  The. — Strangford. 
O  night,  look  down  through  cloud  and  star.     See  Under 

the  Stars. — Hutchinson. 
O  night,  the  ease  of  care,  the  pledge  of  pleasure.     See 

Arcadia,  The  (Night). — Sidney. 
O  nightingale,  that  on  yon  bloomy  spray.     See  To  the 

Nightingale. — Milton. 
O  nightingale,  the  poet's  bird.     See  Song  about  Sing- 
ing, A. — Aldrich. 
O   nightingale!    thou    surely    art.     See    Nightingale, 

The. — Wordsworth. 
O  no,  beloved:  I  am  most  sure.     See  Love's  Eternity. 

— Herbert. 
"O,   no,   Mr.   Crane,   by   no   manner  o'   means."     See 

Widow  Berlott  Papers  (Widow's  Mistake,  The). — 

Whitcher. 
O  [or  Oh],  no,  no — let  me  lie.     See  Not  on  the  Battle- 
field.— Pierpont. 
O  not  by  graves  should  tears  be  shed.     See  O,  Not  by 

Graves. — Wallace. 
O!    now    for    ever    farewell    the    tranquil    mind!     See 

Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice  (Othpllo's  Farewell). 

— Shakespeare. 
O  now,  my  true  and  dearest  bride.     See  Plorata  Veris 

Lachrymis . — Barnes . 
O  once  I  had  plenty  of  thyme.     See  Thyme  and  Rue. 

—Anon. 
O  once  I  lay  in  stable,  a  hunter  well  and  warm.     See 

Poor  Old  Horse. — Anon. 
O  only   Source    of   all    our   light    and    life.     See   Qui 

Laborat,  Orat. — Clough. 
O  pa,  dear  papa!  we've  had  such  a  fine  game.     See 

Voyage  in  the  Arm-chair,  A. — Anon. 
O  painted  gauds  and  mimic  scenes.     See  Ring    down 

the  Drop — I  Cannot  Play. — Watson. 
O  painter  of  the  fruits  and  flowers.     See  Hymn — "O 

Painter  of  the  Fruits  and  Flowers. " — Whittier. 
O  pallid  student !  leave  thy  dim  alcove.     See  Midsum- 
mer Invitation. — Benton. 
O  Paradise,  O  Paradise.     See  Paradise. — Faber. 
O  pardon    me,    thou    bleeding    piece    of    earth.       See 

Julius    Csesar    (Antony's    Lament  over  Csesar). — 

Shakespeare. 
O!  Patent    Pen-inventing    Perrian    Perry!     See   Ode 

to  Perry. — Hood. 
O  patient  Chri.st,  when  long  ago.    See  Hymn. — Deland. 
O  patient     lives    that     sunless    are.     See    Pompeian 

Preacher,  A. — Smith. 
O  Peace!   thou   source   and   soul   of  social    life!     See 

Britannia  (Peace). — Thomson. 
O  peerless  shore  of  peerless  sea.     See  Riviera,  The.— 

.Jackson. 
O    pensive,   tender    maid,     downcast     and    shy.     See 
Earthly  Paradi.se,  The  (Song  to  Psyche). — -Morris. 
O  perfect  Light,   which  shaid  away.     See  Story  of  a 

Summer  Day,  The. — Hume. 
O  piety!     O,  heavenly  piety!     See  same. — Anon. 
^  O  [or  Oh],  Pilot!  'tis  a  fearful  night. — there's  danger  on 
the  deep.     See  Pilot,  The. — Bayly. 
O  pious  mother!  kind,  good,  brave  and  truthful.     See 
same. — Carlyle. 


"O  pitying  angel,  pause,  and  say."     See  In  Paradise. 

— Bates. 
O  poet  rare  and  old!     See  Astraea. — Whittier. 
'O  pour  upon  my  soul  again."     See  Rosalie. — Allston. 
O  power  of  love,  O  wondrous  mystery!     See  Love. — 

Trask. 
O,  praise  an'  tanks!     De  Lord  he  come.     See  at  Port 

Royal  (Song  of  the  Negro  Boatman). — Whittier. 
O  praise  the  Lord,  his  wonders  tell.     See  Paraphrase 

upon  Luke  I. — Sandys. 
O  pretty  Lady  Golden-rod.    See  Golden-rod. — Bronson. 
O  Proserpina,  for  the  flowers  now,  that  frighted,  thou 

let'st  fall.     See  Winter's   Tale,    The    (Flowers). — 

Shakespeare. 
O  ragged,     ragged    Sailors!     See     Ragged    Sailors. — 

Anon. 
O  rainy  days !     O  days  of  sun !     See  April. ^Foster. 
O  reader!    hast   thou   ever  stood   to  see.     See  Holly- 
tree,  The. — Southey. 
O  red,  red  cloud.s  in  the  westering  sky.     See  Evening 

Song,  An. — Munger. 
O  remnant  of  that  perished  host.     See  Army  of  the 

Potomac. — Miller. 
O,  Reverend    sir,  I    do    declare.     See    Widow    Bedott 

Papers     (Widow     Bedott     to    Elder    Sniffles).— 

Whitcher. 
O  Richard,     my     King,     lion-hearted,     behold.     See 

Troubadour,  The.-r-Breakenridge. 
O  Richard,  O  my  King.     See  Blonde! 's  Song  under  the 

Prison    Window  of    Richard    Cceur-de-Lion. — Se- 

daine. 
O    ivers  rolling  to  the  sea.     See  Canadian  Streams. — 

Roberts. 
O  robin  in  the  cherry-tree.     See    In    the   Orchard. — 

Sherman. 
0  lobin,   pipe  no  more  of  rain.     See  Robin's    Rain- 
song. — Thaxter. 
O  [wr.  Oh]  Rome!  my  country!  city  of  the   soul!      See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Rome). — Byron. 
O  Rosamond,    thou   fair   and   good.     See   Dreams  and 

Realities. — Cary. 
O  rose!  who  dares  to  name  thee.     See  Dead  Rose,  A. — 

Browning. 
O  roses  for  the  flush  of   youth.     See   Song:    "O   roses 

for,"  etc.). — Rossetti. 
O  ruddier  than  the  cherry!     See  Song. — Gay. 
O  ruddy  liOver.     See  Clover,  The. — Deland. 
O  ruthful   scene!    when    from    a    nook    obscure.     See 

Schoolmistress,  The  (Suffering  and  Sympathy). — 

Shenstone. 
O  sacred   Head,  now  wounded.     See  Dying  Saviour, 

The.— Gerhardt. 
O  Sacred    Providence,    who    from    end    to    end.     See 

Providence. — Herbert. 
O  [Oh — C]  sacred  Truth,  thy  triumph  ceased  awhile. 

See    Plea.sures  of    Hope,    The   (Downfall    of     Po- 
land, The). — Campbell. 
O  [Ah — C  ]  sad   are  they   who   know   not   love.     See 

Two  Songs  from  the  Persian.  II. — Aldrich. 
O  [or  Oh],  St.  Patrick  was  a  gentleman.     See  St.  Pat- 
rick Was  a  Gentleman. — Bennett. 
O,  sairly  may  I  rue  the  day.     See  Women  Fo'k,  The. — 

Hogg. 
O  Sandy,  why  leaves  thou  thy  Nelly  to  mourn?     See 

Through  the  Wood,  Laddie. — Ramsay. 
O  [iir.  Oh],  saw    ye  bonnie  Lesley?     See  Bonnie  Les- 
ley.— Burns. 
O   [ur.    Oh]    saw  ye  not  fair  Ines?     See  Fair  Ines. — 

Hood. 
O,  saw  ye  the  lass  wi'  the  bonny  blue  een?     See  O, 

Saw  Ye  the  Lass? — Ryan. 
O  [or  Ohl!  say,  can  you  see.  by  the  dawn's  early  light. 

See  Star-spangled  Banner,  The. — Key. 
O  say,   have   you   heard   of  the  sing-away   bird.     See 

Sing-away  Bird,  The. — Larcom. 
O  say,  my  flattering  heart.      See  Loves  She  like  Me? — 

Woodworth. 
O  [or  Oh]  say  not  that  my  heart  is  cold.     See  Song. — 

Wolfe. 
O  say,  thou  best  and  brightest.     See  same. — Moore. 
O  for  Oh]  say  what  is  that   thing    call'd  I-ight.     See 

Blind  Boy,  The.— Cibber. 
O  say,   what   sums   that   generous   hand   supply.     See 

Moral  Essays  (Epistle  III.). — Pope. 
O  sextant  of  the  meetin'  house,   which  sweeps.     See 

To  the  "Sextant."— Willson. 
O  shadow  in  a  sultry  land!     See  Vespers. — Packard. 
O  shady  vales,  O  fair  enriched  meadows.     See  Solitary 

Shepherd's  Song,  The. — Lodge. 
O,    shameless   thief,    a   nation    trusted   thee.     See   To 

Louis  Napoleon. — Boker. 
O  shepherds!  take  my  crook  from    me.     See  Adieu. — 

Montgomery. 


781 


O  ship 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


O  ship  incoming  from  the  sea.     .S***"  Off   Riviere  du 

Loup. — Scott. 
()  [or  Ohl!  shun  the  spot,  my  youthful  friends,  I  urge 

you  to  beware.     See  Street  of  By-and-bye,  The. — 

Abdy. 
O  .sigh  of  the  Sea,  %  soft  lone-wandering   sound.     See 

Calling,  The. — Sigerson. 
O  silent  lan<l  to  which    we  move.     See  Singer,  The. 

— Whittier. 
O  [«r.  Oh]  sing  unto  my  roundelay  (O!  Synge  untoe 

mie  Houndelaie).     See  MWa.  (Minstrel's   Song;. — 

Chatterton. 
O  sing  unto   the   I/ord   a   new   song.     .Sec   Psalms   of 

David  (Song  of  Praise,  A).— Bible. 
O  singer  of  the   field   and   fold.     See  For   a  Copy   of 

Theocritus. — Dobson. 
O  sister  Sophie!  we've  got  a  letter,  by  the  evening's 

mail!     See  Mendicant. — Anon. 
O  sleep,  my  babe,  hear  not  the  rippling  wave.     .See 

O  Sleep,  my  Babe. — Coleridge. 
O  sleep,  O  gentle  sleep.     See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  II. 

(Sleep). — Shakespeare. 
O,  snatched  away  in  beauty's  bloom.  See  same. — Byron. 
O  soft  embalmer  of  the  still  midnight!     See  To  Sleep. — 

Keats. 
O  Soggarth  aroon!    sure  I  know   life  is    fleeting.     See 

"Will  My  Soul  Pass  through  Ireland?  "—O'Sulli  van 
O  solitude!  if  I  must  with  thee  dwell. — See  Solitude. — 

Keats. 
O  somewhere,   somewhere,   God   unknown.     See  Last 

Appeal. — Myers. 
•  O  son  of  Virginia,  thy  mem'ry  divine.     See  Our  Wash- 
ington.— Durbin. 
O  sons  of  men,   that   toil,   and  love  with  tears!     See 

Fair  Maid  and  the  Sun,  The. — O'Shaughnessy. 
O  sorrow,  sorrow,  say   where   dost   thou   dwell?      See 

Sorrow-song. — Rowley. 
O  sorrow!  why  dost  borrow?     SeeEndymion  (Song  of 

the  Indian  Maid). — Keat.s. 
O  .soul!  however  sweet.     See  Prayer,  A. — Coolbrith. 
O  spare  my  child,  my  joy,  my  pride.     See  McLaine's 

Child  (Supplication). — Mackey. 
O  spirit  of  the  Summertime!     See  Song:  "O  spirit  of 

the  Summertime!". — Allingham. 
O  Spirits  of  the  Beautiful.     See  Queen  of  Beauty,  The. 

• — Anon. 
O  Spring-time  sweet !     See  Spring  Song,  A. — Clarke. 
O  Star  of  mine,  lone  Star  of  mine!     See  To  the  Even- 
ing Star. — -Perkins. 
"O  star  <m  the  breast  of  the  river!"     See  Water-lily, 

The.— Butts. 
O  star-spangled   banner!   the   flag  of   our   pride!     See 

Stripes  and  the  Stars,  The. — Proctor. 
(),  stay,  sweet  warbling  wood-lark,  stay.     See  O,  Stay, 

Sweet  Warbling  Wood-lark. — Burns. 
O  steadfa.st  trees  that  know.     See  Man  and  Nature.— 

Weeks. 
O  still,  white  face  of  perfect  peace.     See  Ripe  Grain. — 

Goodale. 
O  stoodent  A  has  gone  and  spent.     See  Ballad  with  an 

Ancient  Refrain. — Anon. 
O  strange    sweet    loveliness!      O    tender    grace.     See 

Love's  Transfiguration. —  (Chambers'  Journal.) 
O  stream  descending  to  the  sea.     See  Stream  of  Life, 

The. — Clough. 
O  strong  soul,  by  what  shore      See  Rugby  Chapel. — 

Arnold. 
O,  struck  beneath  the  laurel,  where  the  singing  foun- 
tains are.     See  O,  Struck  beneath  the  Laurel. — 

Woodberry. 
O  suflfering,  sad  humanity!     See  Goblet  of  Life,  The. 

■ — Longfellow. 
O  sunbeam,  O  sunbeam!     See  Sunbeam  and  Dewdrop. 

— Havergal. 
O  sunflower,  what  is  the  secret  thing?     See  Secret  of 

the  Sunflower,  The. — Anon. 
O  suns  and  skies  and  clouds  of  June.     See  October's 

Bright  Blue  Weather. — .Jackson. 
O  swallow,  swallow,  flying,  flying  South.     See  Princess, 

The  (0  Swallow,  Swallow,  Flying  South). — Tenny- 
son. 
O,  sweet  as  the  lapse  of  water  at  noon.     See  Voice  of 

the  Reader,  The. — Whittier. 
O  sweet  Sabbath  bells!     See  Sabbath  Bells  —.Anon. 
O  sweet   September  rain!     See  Rain  in  September. — 

Collins. 
O  sweet    September!    thy    first    breezes    bring.     See 

September  Days  (Sweet  September). — Arnold. 
O  sweet  unto  my  heart  i«  the  song  my  mother  sings. 

See  Song  mv  Mother  Sings,  The. — O'Hagan. 
O  |«T.  Ohl,  sweeter  than  the  marriage-feast.     See  Rime 

of  the  Ancient  Mariner.  The  (Love  and  Prayer). — 

Coleriilge. 


O  swete  Lady,  the  good  perfect  starre.  See  Pastime 
of  Pleasure,  The  (Dialogue  between  Graunde 
Amoure  and  La  Pucel). — Hawes. 

O  [Oh — C.]\  talk  not  to  me  of  a  name  great  in  story. 
See  Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road  between  Flor- 
ence and  Pisa. — Byron. 

O  tell  me,  pretty  river!  See  River,  The. — Good- 
rich. 

"O  [Oh — C.]\  tell  me,  sailor,  tell  me  true."  See  Gray 
Swan,  The. — Cary. 

O  tender  love  of  long  ago.     See  Reverie,  A. — Scott. 

O  tenderly  the  haughty  day.  See  Ode,  Sung  in  the 
Town  Hall,  Concord,  .Jul.v  4,  18.57. — Emerson. 

(),  terribly  proud  was  Miss  MacBride.  See  Proud 
Miss  MacBride,  The. — Saxe. 

O  than  the  fairest  day,  thrice  fairer  night!  See  Shep- 
herds, The. — Drummond. 

O  [or  Ohl,  that  last  day  in  Lucknow  fort!  See  Relief 
of  Lucknow,  The. — Lowell. 

O  that  the  chemist's  magic  art.  See  On  a  Tear. — 
Rogers. 

O  that  the  pines  which  crown  yon  steep.  See  Even- 
ing Melody. — De  Vere. 

O  that  this  too,  too  solid  flesh  would  melt.  See  Ham- 
let (Hamlet's  First  Soliloquy). — Shakespeare. 

O  [uT.  Ohl  that  those  lips  had  language!  Life  has 
pass'd.  See  On  the  Receipt  of  my  Mother's  Pic- 
ture.— Cowper. 

O  [wr.  Ohl  that  'twere  possible  after  long  grief  and 
pain.  See  Maud  (O  that  'twere  Possible). — 
Tennyson. 

O  that  we  now  had  here.  See  King  Henry  V.  (Battle 
of  St.  Crispian's  Day). — Shakespeare. 

O  [uT.  Ohl  that  word  Regret!     See  Regret. — Ingelow. 

(_),  the  billows  of  fire!     See  His  Name. — Preston. 

O,  the  birds  of  bonnie  Scotland.  See  Birds  of  Scot- 
land, The. — Macdonald. 

O  the  Broom,  the  yellow  Broom.  See  Broom  Flower, 
The. — Howitt. 

O  the  charge  at  Balaklava!  See  Balaklava. — Smith 
[or  Meekl. 

O  the  dark  days  are  over.    See  Spring  is  Coming.— Anon. 

O,  the  dark  days  of  vanity!  See  Night  Thoughts 
(Pursuit  of  Frivolous  Pleasures, The). — Young. 

O  [Oh — C-l!  the  days  are  gone,  when  Beauty  bright. 
See  Love's  Young  Dream. — Moore. 

0[i"r.  Ohl  the  days  gone  by!  O  the  days  gone  by! 
See  Days  Gone  By,  The. — Riley. 

O,  the  difference  between  sea  and  land !  See  Plea  for 
the  Sailor,  A. — Mountford. 

O,  the  East  is  but  the  West,  with  the  sun  a  little  hotter. 
See  Canadians  on  the  Nile,  The. — Smith. 

O  [or  Ohl!  the  French  are  on  the  say  [or  .oea].  See 
Shan  van  V^ocht. — Anon 

O  [or  Oh]!  the  g'allant  fisher's  life.  See  Angler,  The. — 
Chalkhill. 

O  [u>r.  Oh],  the  green  things  growing,  the  green  things 
growing.     See  Green  Things  Growing. — Craik. 

O  [uyrong,  Oh]  the  happy  meeting  from  over  the  sea. 
See  Three  Meetings. — Craik. 

O  the  Little  Lady's  dainty.  See  Little  Lady,  The. — • 
Riley. 

O  the  long  and  dreary  winter.  See  Song  of  Hiawatha, 
The  (Famine,  Tiie). — Longfellow. 

O  [ivr.  Oh]  the  Man  in  the  Moon  has  a  crick  in  his 
back.     See  Man  in  the  Moon,  The. — Riley. 

O,  the  month  of  May,  the  merry  month  of  May.  See 
Shoemaker's  Holiday,  The  (Merry  Month  of  May, 
The;. — Dekker. 

O  the  night  was  dark  and  the  night  was  late.  See 
Treasure  of  the  Wise  Man,  The. — Riley. 

O  [or  Oh],  the  old,  old  clock  of  the  hou.-ehold  stock. 
See  Old  Clock  against  the  Wall,  The.— Anon. 

O  [or  Oh],  the  pleasant  days  of  old,  which  so  often  peo- 
ple praise!  See  O,  the  Pleasant  Days  of  Old. — 
Browne. 

O  the  ploughboy  was  a  ploughing.  See  Simple 
Ploughboy,  The. — Anon. 

O  the  raggedy  man!  He  works  fer  Pa.  See  Raggedy 
Man,  The. — Riley. 

O  the  sad  day!  when  friends  shall  shake  their  heads, 
and  say.     See  Sad  Day,  The. — Flatman. 

O,  the  sight  entrancing.     See  same. — Moore. 

O  [or  Ohl.  the  snow,  the  beautiful  snow.  See  Beau- 
tiful Snow. — Watson. 

O  the  South  Wind  and  the  Sun.  See  South  Wind  and 
the  Sun,  The.— Riley. 

O!  the  Spring!  the  beautiful  Spring!  See  Seasons, 
The.— Walster. 

O  the  summer  Night  has  a  smile  of  light.  See  Night,  / 
The. — Procter. 

O,  the  wrath  of  the  Lord  is  a  terrible  thing!  See  Curse 
of  Cain,  The. — Knox. 


782 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


O  where 


O,  then.  I  see,  Queen  Mab  hath  been  with  you.     See 

Romeo  and  Jiiliet  (Queen  Mab). — Shakespeare. 
O  then  what   soul   was   his,   when,   on  the  tops.     See 

Morning  in  the  Mountains. — Wordsworth. 
O,  there.  Sis,  do  .stop  lecturing  me.     See  Served  Him 

Right. — Denton. 
O  thorn-crowned     Sorrow,     pitiles.s     and     stern.     See 

Sorrow. — Trask. 
O  those  days  of  Elizabeth!     See  Klizabethan  Poets. — 

Browning. 
O  [or   Oh],   those   little,    those   little   blue   shoes!     See 

Baby's  Shoes. — Bennett. 
"O  thou  bressed  Jesus,  who  has  met  wid  dy  c-h-i-l'n." 

— See  Negro  Prayer,  A. — (Methodist  Recorder.) 
O  thou,  by  Nature  taught.     »S'ee  Ode  to  Simplicity. — 

Collins. 
O  [or  Oh]!  thou  eternal  One!  whose  presence  bright. 

See  Ode  to  the  Deity. — Derzhaven. 
O  thou  ever  restles.s  sea.     See  Missing  Ships,  The. — 

Laighton. 
O  Thou,  from  whom  all  goodness  flows.     See  same. — 

Haweis. 
O  thou  goddess.       See  Cymbeline    (Inborn   Royalty). 

— Shakespeare. 
O  thou   great    arbiter    of   life   and    death.     See    Night 

Thoughts  (Aspiration). — Young. 
O  Thou  great  Friend  to  all  the  sons  of  men !     See  same. 

— Parker. 
O  thou  great  Movement  of  the  Universe.     See  Even- 
ing Revery,  An. — Bryant. 
O  thou   great    Wrong,    that,    through    the   slow-paced 

years.     See  Death  of  Slavery,  The. — Bryant. 
O  Thou,  in  all  Thy  might  so  far.     See  Mystery  of  God, 

The. — Hosmer. 
O  thou  of  home  the  guardian  Tar.     See  Winter  Even- 
ing Hymn  to  my  Fire,  A. — Lowell. 
O  thou    that    cleavest    heaven.     See    Bird's    Song    at 

Morning. — Dawson. 
O  thou  that  roUest  above,  round  as  the  shield  of  my 

fathers!     See    Ossian's    Address    to    the    Sun. — 

McPherson. 
O  Thou,  that  sendest  out  the  man.     See  England  and 

America. — Tennyson. 
O  thou  that  sit'st  upon  a  throne.     See  Song  to  David, 

A. — Smart. 
O  thou    that    swing'st    upon    the    waving    hair.     See 

Grasshopper,  The. — Lovelace. 
O  thou  that,  with  surpassing  glory  crowned.  See  Para- 
dise Lost. — Milton. 
O  Thou,  the  contrite  sinner's  friend.    Seesame. — Elliott. 
O  thou,  the  wonder  of  all  dayes !     See  Dirge  of  ,Jeph- 

thah's  Daughter. — Herrick. 
O  thou    to    whom,    athwart    the    perished    days.     See 

Mary  Arden. — Mackay. 
O  Thou,    to    whom    in    ancient    time.     See    Universal 

Worship. — Pierpont. 
O  thou  undaunted  daughter  of  desires!     See  Upon  the 

Book  and  Picture  of  the  Seraphical  Saint  Teresa. 

— Crashaw. 
O  thou  unknown,  Almighty  Cause.     See  Prayer  in  the 

Prospect  of  I)eath,  A. — Burns. 
O  [or  Oh]  thou   vast    Ocean!  ever-sounding  Sea!     See 

Ocean,  The. — Procter. 
O  Thou,  that  [or  wha]  in   the  Heavens    does    [or    dost] 

dwell.     See  Holy  Willie's  Prayer. — Burns. 
"O  thou,  whatever  title  please  thine  ear."     See  To  My 

Poland  Rooster. — Cozzens. 
O  thou!  whatever  title  suit  thee.     See  Addre.ss  to  the 

Deil. — Burns. 
O  thou  who  bearest  on  thy  thoughtful  face.     See  Au- 
tumn Leaves. — Higginson. 
O    [Oh — C]    Thou    who    dry'st     the    mourner's    tear. 

See  sam,e. — Moore. 
O  Thou  who  hast  beneath  Thy  hand.     See  Ascription. 

— Roberts. 
O  Thou    who   mak'st    the   sun   to    rise.     See   Morning 

Prayer. — Anon. 
O  thou  whom  sacred  duty  hither  calls.     See  "Cease  to 

do  Evil — Learn  to  do  Well." — McCarthy. 
O  thou,  whose  dim  and  tearful   gaze.     See  To ,  on 

Her  Sister's  Death. — Keble. 
O  thou  whose  fancies  from  afar  are  brought.     See  To 

Hartley  Coleridge. — Wordsworth. 
O  thou,    whose   mighty   palace    roof   doth   hang.     See 

Endymion  (Hymn  to  Pan). — Keats. 
O  thou  with  dewy  locks,  who  lookest  down.     See  To 

Spring. — Blake. 
O  Tim,   did  you  hear  of  thim  Saxons.     See  Molony's 

Lament. — Thackeray.  ' 
O  Time!   kind   Time,    you've   brought    thus    far.     See 

I^ifting  the  Veil. — Anon. 
O  Time!  O  Death!  I  clasp  you  in  my  arms.     See  Poet's 

Hope,  A. — Channing. 


O  Time,  who  knowest  a  lenient  hand  to  lay.     See  In- 
fluence of  Time  on  Grief. — Bowler. 
O!  'Tis  wondrous  much.     See  Praise  of  Homer,  The. — 

Chapman 
O  Tityrus,   thy  plaint  is   over-long.     See  Lament   for 

Meliboeus,  A. — Watson. 
O  [Oh — C]    to     be     in     England     now    that     April's 

there.     See     Home     Thoughts     from     Abroad. — 

Browning. 
O  to  lie  in  long  grasses !     See  In  the  Grass. — Garland. 
O  to  part  now,  and  parting  now.     See  After  liove. — • 

Symons. 
O  touch    me    not,     unless    thy    soul.     See    Unless. — 

Glynes. 
O  true  and  tried,  so  well  and  long.     See  In   Memoriam 

(Wedding-day,    The). — Tennyson.' 
O  turn    away   those   cruel  eyes.     See  Relapse,  The. — 

Stanley. 
O  Twenty,  running  through  the  wood!     See  Twenty- 
old  and  Seven-wild. — Huestis. 
O  unexpected  stroke,  worse  than  of  Death!     See  Para- 
dise Lost  (Eve's  Lament). — Milton. 
O  unhatch'd  Bird,  so  high  preferred.     See  Paradise  of 

Birds,  The  (Ode — to  the  Roc). — Courthope. 
O  unknown   Belov'd  One!  to  the  perfect  season.     See 

Therania. — Allingham. 
O,  unlucky  me!     Little  did  I  think.     See  Gold  Spinner, 

The. — Denton. 
O  unseen  Spirit!  now  a  calm  divine.     See  On  a  Beauti- 
ful Day. — Sterling. 
O  vat  is  dis  has  come  to  pass?     See  Life,  Liberty  and 

Lager. — Anon. 
O  Venice!  Venice!  when  thy  marble  walls.     See  Race 

with  Death,  The. — Byron. 
O  very,  very  far  from  our  dull  earth.     See  Poet,  The. — 

Cotes. 
O  Victor  Emmanuel  the  King.     See  same. — Browning. 
O,  wad  that  my  time  were  owre  but.     See  Ru.-tic  Lad's 

Lament  in  the  Town,  The. — Moir. 
O,  waly,   waly,   my  gay     gos«-hawk.     See   Gay   Goss- 

hawk,  The. — Anon.  (Scott). 
O  [or  Oh]  waly,  waly  up  the   bank.       See  Waly,  Waly, 

but  Love  be  Bonny. — Anon. 
O  wanderer  in  the  southern  weather.     See  Indian  Song, 

An. — Yeats. 
O.  [or  oh]   water  for  me!   bright   water   for  me!     See 

Water-drinker,  The. — Johnson. 
O  weary  feet  that  on  Life's  stony  way.   *  See  Forbidden. 

— Anon. 
O  weel's  me,  my  gay  goss-hawk.     See  Gay  Goss-hawk, 

The. — Anon. 
"O  well   is  me,   my  gay  gos-hawk."      See    Gay    Gos- 

Hawk,  The. — Anon. 
O  well  is  me,  my  jolly  goshawk.     See  Jolly  Goshawk, 

The. — Anon. 
O,  were   I   a   cross   on   thy  ."nowy   breast.     See  same. 

—  {Eton  Mapazi7ie.) 
O  were  my  Love  yon  lilac  fair.     See  same. — Burns. 
0'[i/r.  Oh],  wert  thou  in    the   cauld    blast.     See   same. 

— Burns. 
O  western  wind,  when  wilt  thou  blow.     See  Lover  in 

Winter  Plaineth  for  the  Spring,  The. — Anon. 
O  wha  wad  wi  .h  the  wind  to  blaw.     See  Brown  Adam. 

— Anon. 
O  [or  Oh]    wha  [or  who]  will    shoe  my  bonny  [or  fair] 

foot.     See   Fair  Annie  of  Lochroyan. — Anon. 
O  what  a  day  it  was  to  us.     See  Tricksey's   Ring. — 

Cary. 
O  [or  Oh]  what  a  plague  is  love!     See  Phillida  flouts 

Me. — Anon. 
O,  what  a  sight  it  was,  wistly  to  view.     See  Venus  and 

Adonis. — Shakespeare. 
"0[mt.     Oh],    what    can    ail    thee,   knight-at-arms." 

See  La  Belle  Dame  .sans  Merci. — Keats. 
O  what  can  little  hands  do.     See  same. — Anon. 
O  what   harper  could   worthily   harp   it.     See  School- 
master, The. — Calverley. 
O,    what  shall  I  do  with  them  both?     See  Rivals,  The. 

— Chandler. 
O,  what  wonders  the  day  hath  brought.     See  Snow. — 

Akers. 
O,  when  I  hear  at  sea.     See  Wind  and  Wave. — Stod- 
dard. 
O  when  the  half-light  weaves.     See  Sad  Mother.  The. — 

Hinkson. 
O  [or  Oh],  when  't  is  summer  weather.     See  Greenwood, 

The. — Bowles. 
"O  where  are  you  going  so  early,"  he  said?     See  Milk- 
maid, The. — Allingham. 
"O  where  are  you  going  with  your  love-locks  flowing." 

See   Facilis    Descensus. —  {Ccvyreralicvalitt.  The.) 
"O  where  do  you  come  from,  berries  red?"     See  Plant 

Song. — Brown. 


783 


O  where 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


O  where  do  you  go,  and  what's  your  will.    See  London 

Feast.— Rhys. 
O  where  hae  ye  been  a'  day.  Lord  Donald,  my  son? 

See  Lord  Randal  [Lord    Donald]. — Anon. 
O,  where  hae  [orjiave]  ye  been.  Lord  Randal  [or  Ronald], 

my  son?    Me  ]>ord  Randal  [or  Ronald]. — Anon. 
O  where  hae  ye  been,  my  lang-lost  lover.     See  Ship  o' 

the  Fiend,  The. — Anon. 
O,  where  have  you  been    my  long,   long  love.      See 

Demon  Lover,  The.— Anon. 
O  [or  Oh]  where  is  the  knight  or  the  squire  so  bold.     See 

Diver,  The. — Schiller. 
O  where  will  ye  gang  to  and  where  will  ye  sleep.     See 

Witch-mother,  The. — Swinburne. 
O   [Oh— C],    wherefore  come    ye   forth,    in   triumph 

from  the  north.     See  Battle  of  Naseby,  The. — 

Macaulay. 
O  which  is  the  last  rose?     A  blossom  of  no  name.     See 

I-ast  Rose,  The. — Davidson. 
O  whistle,  and  I'll  come  to  you,  my  lad.     See  Whi.'itle 

and  I'll  Come  to  You,  My  Lad. — Burns. 
O  white  an<l  midnight  sky,  O  starry  bath!     See  Celes- 
tial Pa.-sion,  The.— Gilder. 
O  white  moon  sailing  down  the  sky.     See  Fairy  Jewels. 

— Sherman. 
O  white,  white,  light  moon,  that  sailest  in  the  sky.     See 

Donald. — Abbey. 
O  whither  dost  thou  fly?  cannot  my    vow.      See    Cas- 

tara  (To  the  Moment  Last  Past). — Habington. 
O  whither  goest  thou,  pale  student.     See  Ye  Laye  of 

ye  Wooilpeckore. — Beers. 
O,  whither  sail  you,  Sir  John  Franklin?  See   Ballad  of 

Sir  .John  Franklin,  A. — Boker. 
O  whither  will  you  lead  the  fair.     See  On  the  Cap- 
tivity of  the  Countess  of  Anglesey. — Davenant. 
O,  who  can  hold  a  fire  in  his  hand.     See  King  Richard 

1 1 . — Shakespeare. 
O,  who   could   lie   a-snoring.     See   Wreck   off   Mizen- 

Head,   The.   Savage-Armstrong. 
O,  who  is  there  within  whose  heart.     See  Ode  to  the 

Trees.— Welsh. 
O  who  rides  by  night  thro'  the  woodland  so  wild?     See 

Erl-king,  The.— Goethe. 
O!  [or  Oh]  who  shall  lightly  say  that  Fame.    See  Worth 

of  Fame,  The. — Baillie. 
O  why  are  darkness  and  thick  cloud.     See  Mystery. — 

Savage. 
O  [or  Oh],  why  should  the  spirit  of  mortal  be  proud. — 

See  same. — Knox. 
O  Widow  Mysie,  smiling  soft  and  sweet!     See  Widow 

Mysie,  The. — Buchanan. 
O  wild  red  rose,  what  spell  has  stayed.     See  Wild  Rose 

in  September,  A. — Jackson. 
O  wild  West  Wind,    thou  breath  of  Autumn's  being. 

See  Ode  to  the  West  Wind.— Shelley. 
O  [wr.  Oh]  will  ye  choose  to  hear  the  news.     See   Mr. 

Molony's  Account  of  the  Ball. — Thackeray. 
O,  Willie  brewed  a  peck  o'  maut.     See  Happy  Trio, 

The. — Burns. 
O  Willie's  gane  to  Melville  Castle.     See  Willie's  Visit 

to  Melville  Castle. — Anon. 
O  Willie's  [or  Willy's]  large  o'  limb  and  lith.     See  Birth 

of  Robin  Hood,  The. — Anon. 
O  willows,  why  forever  weep.    See  Willow,  The. — Allen. 
O  wilt  thou  go  wi'  me.     See  Tibbie  Dunber. — Burns. 
O  Wind  of  the  Mountain,  Wind  of  the  Mountain,  hear! 

See  O  Wind  of  the  Mountain. — Westwood. 
O  Wind,   thou  hast  thy  kingdom  in  the  trees.     See 

Wind  of  Summer. — Field. 
O  winds!  ye  are  too  rough,  too  rough!     See  same. — 

Cary. 
O  Winter,  ruler  of  the  inverted  year.     See  Winter. — 

Cowper. 
O!  winter  twilight,  while  the  moon.     See  same — Bour- 

dillon. 
O  winter!  wilt  thou  never,  never  go?     See  O  Winter! 

Wilt  Thou  never  Go? — Gray. 
O  wise  Assembly!  and  O  wiser  Senate!     See  Ode  to  the 

Legislature. — Saxe. 
O  [or  Oh]  wise  little  birds,  how  do  ye  know.     See  Flight 

of  the  Birds,  The.— Kimball. 
O,  woe  to  you,  ye  lofty  halls!  may  no  sweet  sounds 

resound.  See  Minstrel's  Cur.se,  The.— Uhland. 
O  woman,  let  thy  heart  not  cleave.   See  Forepledged. 

— Spalding. 
O  woman!    lovely    woman!    nature    made    thee.     See 

Venice  Preserved. — Otway. 
O  woman  of  the  Piercing  Wail.     See  Lament  of  the 

Princes  of  Tir-Owen  and  Tirconnell. — Mangan. 
O  woman  of  Three  Cows,  agra!  don't  let  your  tongue 

thus  rattle!     See  Woman  of  Three  Cows,  The. — 

Mangan. 


O  Word  of  God  incarnate.     See  same. — How. 

O  world,  be  nobler,  for  her  sake!     See  O  World,  be 

Nobler. — Binyon. 
O  world,  great  world,  now  thou  art  all  my  own.     See 

We  Conquer  God. — Egan. 
O  world,  in  very  truth  thou  art  too  young.     See  Writ- 
ten at  Florence. — Blunt. 
O    World!    O    Life!     O    Time!      See    Lament,    A. — 

Shelley. 
O  World,  thou  choosest  not  the  better  part!  See  Faith. 

— Santayana. 
"O  [ur.  Oh]  World-God,  give  me  wealth!"  the  Egyptian 

cried.     See  Gifts. — Lazarus. 
O  would  God  call  a  halt, — one  moment's  halt.     See  In- 
somnia.— Aldrich. 
O,  would  you  be  a  sunbeam.     See  Little  Sunbeam. — • 

Anon. 
"O,  wusha  thin,  tis  the  sore  thrubble."     See  Nora  Mul- 
ligan's Thanksgiving  Party. — Savage. 
O  ye  feline  brutes  erotic.     See  Quousque  Tandem,  O 

Catilina? — Frisbie. 
O  ye  sweet  heavens !  your  silence  is  to  me.     See  O  Ye 

Sweet  Heavens! — Parsons. 
O  ye  tears!  O  ye  tears!  that  have  long  refused  to  flow. 

See  O  Ye  Tears ! — Mackay. 
O  [ur.  Oh]   ye,   wha   are   sae   guid    yoursel.     See   Ad- 
dress to  the  Unco  Guid,  or  the  Rigidly  Righteous. 

— Burns. 
O  ye  who  see  with  other  eyes  than  ours.     See  Life  and 

Death. — Perry. 
O  year  that  is  going,  take  with  you.     See  To  the  Old 

and  the  New  Year. — Armitage. 
O  years,   you  have  vanished   like  shadows.     See  "O 

Years,  You  Have  Vanished." — Anon. 
"O,  yes!  O,  yes!  O,  yes!  ding-dong."     See  Cicely  and 

the  Bears. — Rands. 
O    yes!  O  yes!  O  yes!  Madame  Bonne  Bouche!  Direct 

from  Paris!     See  Latest  Sensation  in  Podunk. — 

Crosby. 
O,  yes,  you  are  a  handsome  Miss!     See  Birthday  Doll, 

The. — Denton. 
O  [tvr.  Oh]  yet  we  trust   that  somehow  good.     See  In 

Memoriam  (O  yet  we  Trust). — Tennyson. 
O  yonge   fresshe   folkes,  he   or  she.     See  Troilus    and 

Criseyde  (Love  Unfeigned,  The). — Chaucer. 
O  you  boys  grown  gray  and  bearded,  you  that  u?ed  ter 

chum  with  me.     See  Our  First   Fire-crackers.— 

Lincoln. 
O  you  plant  the  pain  in  my  heart  with  your  wistful 

eyes.     See  Maureen. — Todhunter. 
O  [Oh — C],  young  Lochinvar's  come  out  of  the  west. 

See  Marmion  (Lochinvar). — Scott. 
O  youth,  beware!  that  laurel-rose.     See    Rhododaphne 

(Spell  of  the  Laurel -rose). — Peacock. — Bridges. 
O  youth  whose  hope  is   high.     See  same. 
Oak,  Caroline!  fir  yew  I  pine.     See  Poet-tree. — Dodge. 
Oak  leaves  are  big  as  the  mouse's  ear.     See  Every  One 

to  his  Own  Way. — Cheney. 
Obedience, — the  true  school  of  empire,  has  two  ap- 
plications.     See  Greatness  of  Obedience,  The  — 

Farrar. 
Obedient  to  his  summons,  there  ranged  themselves  in 

front   of   the   schoolmaster's   desk.     See   Nicholas 

Nickleby  (Squeers'  School). — Dickens. 
Obscurest  night  involved  the  sky.     See  Castaway,  The. 

— Cowper. 
Observe  good  manners.     See  Twelve  Golden  Rules  for 

Boys. — Anon. 
Obviously  a  government  resting  upon  the  will.     See 

Political  Duties  and  Responsibilities  of  University 

Men  (College  and  the  Nation,  The). — Cleveland. 
Occasions  drew    me    early    to    this  city.     See  Samson 

Agonistes  (Death  of  Samson,  The). — Milton. 
Och,  Barney,  go  way  now,  for  sure  I'll  not  hear  till  yez. 

See  Sorra  the  Day. — Best. 
Och,  be  aisy  now,  darlint!     Don't  I  tell  yees  the  b'y 

don't  be  wid  me  all  the  day.     See  Lost  Child,  The. 

— Gushing. 
Och,  Biddy!  'tis  bad  news  I'm  bringin'.     See  Sale  of 

the  Pig,  The.— O'Donnell. 
Och!  but  it's  an  illigant  counthry  entirely.     See  Pat's 

Dilemma. — Anon. 
Och!   don't   be  talkin'.     Is  it  howld  on,  ye  say?     See 

Mi.ss  Malony  on  the  Chinese  Question. — Dodge. 
Och,  girls,  did  you  ever  hear,  I  wrote  my  love  a  letter. 

See  Kat[e]y's  Letter. — Dufferin. 
Och  hone,  and  it's  Biddy  McClooney.     See  Pat's  Love. 

—Jot. 
Och  hone!  and  what  will  I  do?     See  Molly  Carew. — 

Lover. 
Och!  it's  deceivin'  that  all  men  are!     See  Pat's  Ex- 
cuse.— Anon. 


784 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Of 


Och,  Katie's  a  rogue,  it  is  thrue.  See  Katie's  Answer. 
— Anon. 

Och,  Mollie  Moriarity,  I've  been  havin'  the  quare  iks- 
paryincis  since  yiz  hurrud  from  me.  See  Bridget 
O'Flannagan  on  Christian  Science  and  Cock- 
roaches.— Bourchier. 

Och,  Nora,  so  swate,  an'  so  purty,  the  darlint!  See 
Love  Song,  A. — Anon. 

Och.  Oolaghaun!  Och,  Oolaghaun!  See  Shaugraun, 
The  ("Oolaghaun,"  The). — Boucicault. 

Och!  Paddy  Dunbar  is  come  out  of  the  West.  See 
Paddy  Dunbar. — Scott. 

Och,  Paddy  O'Flynn,  are  yez  at  it  agin.  See  Teddy 
McGuire  and  Paddy  O'Flynn. — Jones. 

Och!  the  Coronation!  what  celebration.  See  Mr.  Bar- 
ney Maquire's  Account  of  the  Coronation. — Bar- 
ham. 

October  fields  are  hazy.  See  October  Love  Song. 
— (Campus.) 

October  gave  a  party.  The  leaves  by  hundreds  came. 
See  October's  Party. — Cooper. 

October  is  here,  so  gay  and  bright.  See  October. — 
Richards. 

October  is  the  month  that  seems.  See  October. — 
Sherman. 

October  turned  my  maple's  leaves  to  gold.  <See  Maple 
Leaves. — Aldrich. 

O'Driscoll  drove  with  a  song.  See  Folk  of  the  Air, 
The. — Yeats. 

O'er  a  low  barn,  the  setting  sun.  See  Baron  Grimal- 
kin's Death. — Carleton. 

O'er  a  low  couch  the  setting  sun  had  thrown  its  latest 
ray.     See  Baron's  Last  Banquet,  The. — Greene. 

O'er  a  wild  heath,  as  the  decline  of  day.  See  Fright- 
ened Traveller,  The. — Anon. 

O'er  all  the  hilltops  is  quiet  now!     See  Sleep. — Goethe. 

O'er  Lucknow's  walls  bursts  war's  red  thunder  storm. 
See  Jessie  Brown  at  Lucknow. — Vandenhoff. 

O'er  many  roods  of  restless  blades.  See  Fields  of  Corn, 
The.— Hartzell. 

O'er  moorlands  and  mountains,  rude,  barren,  and  bare. 
See  Content.  A  Pastoral. — Cunningham. 

O'er  Provence  breathing,  nimble  air.  See  Gay  Pro- 
vence.— Savage-Armstrong. 

O'er  royal  London  in  luxuriant  May.  See  St.  James' 
Street  on  a  Summer  Morning. — Bulwer-Lytton. 

O'er  swift  Niagara's  echoing  shore.  See  Niagara's 
Sacrifice. — Anon. 

O'er  the  cheerless  common.  See  Ballad  of  the  Way- 
farer, The. — Buchanan. 

O'er  "The  Devil's  Gulch,"  a  chasm  wide.  See  Boy 
Here,  A. — -Anon. 

O'er  the  forest  of  Judea.  See  Legend  of  the  Aspen. — 
Anon. 

O'er  the  glad  waters  of  the  dark  blue  sea.  See  Co  .sair. 
The  (Song  of  the  Rover). — Byron. 

O'er  the  purple  hills,  O  Cuba.     See  Cuba. — Hope. 

O'er  the  rough  main  with  flowing  sheet.  See  Victory 
of  the  "Bonhomme  Ricliard"  over  the  "Serapis." 
— Freneau. 

O'er  the  silent  meadows.     See  Carol,  A. — Brewer. 

O'er  the  smooth  [or  sweet]  enamelled  green.  See  Ar- 
cades (2nd  song). — Milton. 

O'er  the  sunlit  hills  of  Berkshire.     See  At  Last. — Anon. 

O'er  the  waste  of  waters  cruising.  See  On  Captain 
Barney's  Victory  over  the  Ship  General  Monk. — 
Freneau. 

O'er  the  wet  sands  an  insect  crept.  See  Autograph, 
An. — Lowell. 

O'er  the  white  waste  of  drifted  sands  unstable.  See 
Recollection,  A. — Nickerson. 

O'er  the  yellow  crocus  on  the  lawn.  See  Russian  Fan- 
tasy, A. — Dole. 

O'er  western  tides  the  fair  Spring  Day.  See  Pilot's 
Daughter,  The. — -Allingham. 

Of  a'  the  airts  the  wind  can  blaw.  See  Of  a'  the  Airts. 
— Burns. 

Of  a  thousand  things  that  the  year  snowed  under. 
See  Snowed  Under. — -Wilcox. 

Of  all  beasts  he  learned  the  language.  See  Song  of 
Hiawatha.  The  (Hiawatha's  Brothers). — Long- 
fellow. 

Of  all  inhabitants  on  earth.     See  On  a  Candle. — Swift. 

Of  all  inorganic  substances,  acting  in  their  own  proper 
nature.     See  Modern  Painters   (Water).— Ruskin. 

Of  all  men.  saving  Sylla  the  man-slayer.  See  Don 
Juan  (Daniel  Poone). — Byron. 

Of  all  miracles,  far  the  most  wonderful  is  that  of  life. 
See  Mystery  of  Life. — Tennyson. 

Of  all  monopolies  that  disgrace  civilization  a  monopoly 
in  sin.    See  Fallacy  of  High  License,  The. — Willard. 

Of  all  old  women  hard  of  hearing.  See  Tale  of  a 
Trumpet. — Hood. 


Of  all  political  characters,  Demo.sthenes  is  the  most 
sublime.     See  Demosthenes. — Creasy. 

"Of  all  sad  words  of  tongue  or  pen."  See  Twentieth 
Birthday.— M.  K. 

Of  all  speculations  the  market  holds  forth.  See  Specu- 
lation, A. — Moore. 

Of  all  the  blessings  which  can  befall  a  community.  See 
Address  at  the  Dedication  of  a  Memorial  Tablet, 
An. — Anon. 

Of  all  the  bonny  buds  that  blow.  See  Heart 's-ease. — 
Bradley. 

Of  all  the  books  with  which,  since  the  invention  of 
writing.    See  Bible  and  the  Iliad,  The. — Wayland. 

Of  all  the  brave  captains  that  ever  were  seen.  See  Sir 
Dilberry  Diddle. — Anon. 

Of  all  the  busy  people.  See  In  Santa  Claus  Land. — 
Shelton. 

Of  all  the  customs  of  Eastern  countries.  See  Chinese 
Wedding,  A. — Wilson. 

Of  all  the  dancing  academies  that  ever  were  estab- 
lished. See  Sketches  by  Boz  (Signer  Billsmethi's 
Dancing  Academy). — Dickens. 

"Of  all  the  days  of  all  the  year  ."  See  Which  is  Best? 
— Hannah. 

Of  all  the  days  that  come.s  around.  See  When  Ma 
Begins  to  Clean.-^-Richards. 

Of  all  the  delicacies  in  the  whole  world  of  eatables. 
See  Dissertation  upon  Roast  Pig  (Roast  Pig). — 
Lamb.  • 

"Of  all  the  disagreeable  people,  of  all  the  horrible, 
cross  old  men."     See  Uncle  Ben. — Bradley. 

Of  all  the  dispositions  and  habits  which  lead  to  politi- 
cal prosperity.  See  Maxims  of  George  Washing- 
ton.— Washington. 

Of  all  the  faithful  friends  we  had.  See  Old  Canteen, 
The. — Vickers. 

Of    all  the  floures  [or  flowers]  in  the    mede.     See  Le- 

fende  of  Goode  Women   (Daisy,  The). — Chaucer, 
the    flowers    rising    now.     See   Maritae    Suae.— 

Philpot. 
Of  all  the  girls  that  are  so  smart.     See  Sally  in  Our 

Alley. — Carey. 
Of  all   the  institutions  now  existing  in  the  civilized 

world.     See  Established  Church  of  Ireland.  The. — 

Macaulay. 
Of  all  the  joys  that  summer  brings.     See  Umbrella  on 

the  Beach,  The. — (Harj-.er's  Bdzar.) 
Of  all  the  lines   that   volumes   fill.     See   Evidence. — 

B.  O.  H. 
Of  all  the  martial  virtues,  the  one  which  is  perhaps 

most  characteristic  of  the  truly  brave.     See  Get- 
tysburg:     A'  Mecca    for  the    Blue   and   Gray. — 

Gordon. 
Of  all  the  men  one  meets  about.     See  same. — Moore. 
Of  all  the  men  the  world   has  seen.     See  Adam  never 

was  a  Boy. — Harbaugh. 
Of  all  the  months,  of  all  the  year.     See  Jolly  March. — 

Rook. 
Of  all  the   myriad  moods   of  mind.     See  Longing. — 

Lowell. 
Of  all  the  nights  of  most  mysterious  dread.     See  Rab- 

boni. — Preston. 
Of   all  the  nuisances  abroad.     See  Riding  in  the  Cars. 

{For  a  girl.) — Kavanaugh. 
Of  all  the  reproaches  which  arise  against  a  man  in  his 

chamber  of  study.     See  same. — Vaughan. 
Of  all  thfe  rides  since  the  birth  of  time.     See  Skipper 

Ireson's  Ride. — Whittier. 
Of  all  the  ships  upon  the  blue.     See  Captain  Reece. — 

Gilbert. 
Of  all  the  solemnities  of  which  the  mind  can  conceive, 

death  is  the  greatest.     See  same. — Swing. 
Of  all    the    souls    that    stand    create.     See    Choice. — 

Dickinson. 
Of  all  the  thoughts  of  God  that  are.     See  Sleep,  The. — 

Browning. 
Of  all  the  tiny  race  of  Skye.     See  Flossy  (with  her  own 

Portrait)  to  her  Mistress. — Smith. 
Of  all  the  torments,  all  the  cares.     See  Rivalry  in  Love. 

—Walsh. 
(.)f  all   the   vile  inventions,   misbegotten  by  mistake. 

See  Song  of  the  Bicycle,  The. — Anon. 
Of  all  the  ways  of  travelling.     See  Canal-boat,  The. — 

Stowe. 
Of  all  the  wives  as  e'er  you  know.     See  Nancy  Lee. — 

Weatherly. 
Of  all  the  wondcs  that  I  yet  have  heard.     See  Julius 

Caesar. — Shakespeare. 
Of  all  the  words  in  English  tongue.     See  Balance  Due. 

— Kavanaugh. 
Of  course  I  don't  believe  in  any  such  person  as  Santa 

Claus.     See    Billy's    Santa    Claus    Experience. — 

Redmond. 


785 


Of 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Of  course  I  love  the  house  o'  God.     See  When  Sam'wel 

Led  the  Singin' .—(Boston  Globe.) 
Of  course  it  was  a  sin.     See  Getting  at  the  Point. — 

Anon. 
Of  course  Johnny   wanted   to  stay   in   town   for  the 

Fourth.     See  Jolfciny's  Fourth  of  July. — Anon. 
"Of  course,"  said  Miltiades  Peterkin  Paul.     See  Mil- 

tiades  Gets  the  Best  of  Santa  Glaus. — Brownjohn. 
Of  course,  ye  read  about  it  in  the  papers,  sir.     See 

Story  of  Hard  Times,  A. — Phelps. 
Of  every  ill  is  love  the  cure.     See  Reductio  ad  Absur- 

dum. — Simonds. 
Of   Februar   the    fiftene    nycht.     See   Dance    of    the 

Seven  Deadly  Sins  [or  Sevin  Deidly  Synnis,  The]. 

— Dunbar. 
Of  fine  maize  flour,  yellow  as  the  locks  of  the  lovely 

Lenore.     See  Making  Brown-bread  Cakes. — Ham- 
ilton. 
Of  Florence  and  of  Beatrice.     See  Dante  Alighieri. — 

Rossetti. 
Of  happiness  terrestrial,  and  the  source.     See  Wine. — 

Gay. 
Of  Heaven   or   Hell   I   have   no   power  to  sing.     See 

Earthly  Paradise,  The  (Singer's  Prelude,  The). — 

Morris. 
Of  heavenly    stature,    but    most    human    smile.     See 

Written  in  the  Visitor's  Book  at  the  Birthplace  of 

Robert  Burns. — Cable. 
Of  hem,  that  ivriten  us  to-fore.     See  Confessio  Amantis 

(Opening  of  the  Original  Prologue). — Gower 
Of  him,  whom  all  this  erthe   dradde.    See   Confessio 

Amantis  (Alexander  and  the  Robber). — Gower. 
Of  its  own  beauty  is  the  mind  diseased.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage. — Byron. 
Of  jes'  no  'count  an'  mebbe  wuss.     See  Why  Jim  For- 
sook ths  Ministry. — Pierson. 
Of  late  I  sat  within  tlie  night-fire's  gleam.     See  Villon. 

— (Cornell  Widoiv.) 
Of  law  there  can  be  no  less  acknowledged.     See  Neces- 
sity of  Law  (Law). — Hooker. 
Of  Leinster,  famed    for  maidens  fair.     See  Colin  and 

Lucy. — -Tickell. 
Of  Lentren  in  the  first  morning.     See  All  Earthly  Joy 

Returns  in  Pain. — Dunbar. 
Of  love  that   never  found  his  [tvr.  its]  earthly  close. 

See  Love  and  Duty. — Tennyson. 
Of  manners   and   tricks,    as   erratic.     See   My   Owl. — 

Corn  well. 
Of  Man's  first  disobedience,  and  the  fruit.     See  Para- 
dise   Lost    (Invocation    from    Paradise    Lost). — 

Milton. 
Of  mornings,    bright   and   early.     See   Googly-Goo. — 

Field. 
Of  mortal  glory,  O  soon  darkened  ray!     See  Sonnet: 

■'Of  mortal  glory,"  etc. — Drummond. 
Of  nature  broad  and  free.     See  Tribute  to  Nature. ^ — 

— -Heermans. 
Of  Nelson  and  the  North.     See  Battle  of  the  Baltic, 

The.— Campbell. 
Of  Neptune's  empire  let  us  sing.     See  Hymn  in  Praise 

of  Neptune,  A. — Campion. 
Of   no  distemper,  of  no  blast  he  died.     See  ffidipus. 

— Dryden. 
Of  old,  a  man  who  died.     See  Immortal  Flowers. — 

Rice. 
Of  old    sat    Freedom    on    the    heights.     See    same. — 

Tennyson.  t 

Of  old,   when   Scarron   his   companions   invited.     See 

Retaliation,  The. — Goldsmith. 
Of  one  that  is  so  fayr  and  bright.     See  Hymn  to  the 

Virgin,  A. — Anon. 
"Of  one  blood,"  the  Father  "all  nations,  made."     See 

Congress  of  Nations,  The. — (Chicaqo  Inter-Ocean.) 
Of  Pan  we  sing,  the  best  of  singers,  Pan.     See  Pan's 

Anniversary;  or,  The  Shepherd's  Holiday  (Hymn 

to  Pan). — Jonson. 
Of  priests    we    can    offer    a     charmin'    variety.     See 

Father  O'Flynn. — Graves. 
Of  Salisbury,  who  can  report  of  him.     See  King  Henry 

VI.   Pt.  II.  (Battle  of  St.  Albans).— Shakespeare. 
Of  speckled  eggs  the  birdie  sings.     See  Singing. — Ste- 
venson. 
Ofsteak--of    steak— of     prime     Rump     Steak.     See 

Steak,  The. — (Punch.) 
Of  the  infinite  variety  of  fruith.     See  Rural  Hours  — 

Cooper. 
Of  the  many  misstatements  in  regard  to  the  Pilgrim 

Fathers.     See    Pilgrims    as    Conquerors,    The. — 

Lodge. 
Of  the   million   or   two,    more    or   less.     See   Instans 

TyrannuR. — Browning. 
Of  the  mission  church  San  Carlos.     See  Midnight  Mass, 


The.— White. 


Of  thee,  kind  boy,  I  ask  no  red  and  white.     See  Truth 

in  Love. — Suckling. 
Of  these  the  false  Achitophel  was  first.     See  Absalom 

and  Achitophel  (Achitophel). — Dryden. 
Of  this    fair   volume  which   we   World  do   name.     See 

'  Lessons  of  Nature,  The. — Drummond. 
Of  this  man  I  will  say  little.    See  Pickwick  Papers,  The 

(Peroration  of  Buzfuz). — Dickens. 
Of  thy  stream,  Amelete,  who  reaches  the  shore.     See 

Dirge. — Gilbert. 
Of  Truth,  of  Grandeur,  Beauty,  Love,  and  Hope.    See 

Outline. — Wordsworth. 
Of  what    am    I    dreaming? — of    Violet's    glance.     See 

After  the  Waltz. — Davis. 
"Of    what    are    you    afraid    my    child?"     See    Wild 

Flowers. — Newell. 
Of  worthy  Captain  Lovewell,  I  purpose  now  to  .*ing. 

See  Lovewell's  Fight. — Anon. 
Of  yore,  in  Old  England,  it  was  not  thought  good.     See 

To  Mr.  Alexandre,  the  Ventriloquist. — Scott. 
Of  yore,  when  books  were  few  and  fine.     See  From  the 

Fly-leaf  of  the  Rowfant  Montaigne. — Locker. 
Of  your  trouble,  Ben,  to  ease  me.     See  Proper  Man,  A. 

— .lonson. 
Off  the  first  of  next  week !     My  goodness!     What  a  lot 

of  things  to  be  done!     See  Fashionable  Vacation, 

A.— Dallas. 
Off  to  the  woods !     Off  to  the  woods !     See  Arbor  Day. 

— Anon. 
"Off  with  it,  old  fellow,  before  you  start!"     See  Last 

String,  The. — Hartwig. 
"Off  with  the  saddle  and  shoot  him ! "     Ten  miles  from 

the  camp   he   fell  lame.     See  Abandoned  Troop 

Horse,  The. — Rocke. 
Off  with   your   hat   as   the   flag   goes   by!     See  Salute 

the  Flag. — Bunner. 
Officer  Brady  was  passing  in  front  of  a  large  tenement 

house.     See    How    Mrs.    O'Doolahan    Had    Mike 

Arrested. — Smith. 
Officer,    what   is    the   charge   against    this    man?     See 

Italian  from  Cork,  The. — Daly. 
Oft  as  my  lady  sang  for  me.     See  On  a  Lady  Singing. 

— Parsons. 
Oft,  as  sitting  in  my  study.     See  That  Little  Girl  of 

.Mine. — Head. 
Oft  has  it  been  my  lot  to  mark.     See  Chameleon,  The. 

— Merrick. 
Oft  have  I  gathered  flowers  for  thee.     See  To  My  Dear 

Friend  Aimoe. — Westley. 
Oft  have  I  heard  of  Lucy  Gray.     See  Lucy  Gray;  or. 

Solitude. — Wordsworth. 
Oft  have  I  seen  at  some  cathedral  door.     See  Divina 

Commedia. — Longfellow. 
Oft  have  I  stood  upon  the  foaming  strand.     See  Dark- 
ness.— Rosenberg. 
Oft  have  I  wakened   ere   the   spring   of  day.     See    In- 
verted To-ch,  The  (Will  it  Be  So).— Thomas. 
Oft  have  I  walked  these  woodland  paths.     See  Under 

the  Leaves. — Laighton. 
Oft  have  the  nymohs.     See  Fai-  Virtue,   the  Mistress 

of  Philarete  (Love-poems,  I.). — Wither. 
Oft  I  had  heard  of   Lucy  Gray.     See  Lucy  Gray;  or. 

Solitude. — Wordsworth . 
Oft  I  have  met  her.     See  Innocence. — Mair. 
Oft  I  see  at  twilight.     See  Old  Mirror,  The.— Whitman. 
Oft  I    see   her   at    the   opera.     See   At   the   Opera. — 

Pierson. 
Oft  in  the  pleasant  summer  years.     See  Theology  in 

Extremis. — Lyall. 
Oft,  in  the  stilly  night.     See  same. — Moore. 
Oft  I've  heard  a  gentle  mother.     See  Be  a  Woman.— 

Brooks. 
Oft  may  the  spirits  of  the  dead  descend.     See  Pleas- 
ures of  Memory,  The. — Rogers. 
Oft  o'er  my  brain  does  that  strange     fancy  roll.     See 

Sonnet    Composed   on   a   Journey    Homeward. — 

Coleridge. 
Oft  since  thine  earthly  eye^  have  closed  on  mine.     See 

Sonnet:  "Oft  since  thine  earthly,"  etc. — Whitman. 
Oft  through  the  summer  vacation.     See  Two  Seasons. 

— Burleigh. 
Oft  when,  returning  with    her    loaded    bill.     See  Sea- 
sons, The  'Nightingale,  Thej. — Thomson. 
Oft  with  true  sighs,  oft  with  uncalled  tears.  See  Astro- 

phel     nd  Stella  (Sonnet  LXI.). — Sidney. 
Oft  you  have  ask'd  me,  Granville,  why.     See  Epistle 

from  Lord  Boringdon  to  Lord,  Granville.^Can- 

ning. 
Often  as  it  has  been  repeated,  it  will  bear  another  repe- 
tition.    See  Men  and  Deeds  of  the  Revolution, 

The.— Everett. 
Often  have  I  [or  I  have]  heard  it  said.     See  Rubies. — '■ 

Landor. 


786 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Oh,  dear 


Often  have  I  heard  of  Comal.     See  Comal  and  Galbina. 

— Ossian. 
Often  have   I   swept   backward,   in  imagination.     See 

First  View  of  the  Heavens,  The. — Mitchel. 
"Often  have  strange  cases?"      Yes,  sir;  frequently  a 

case  lies  here.     .See  Told  by  the  Hospital  Nurse. — 

McBeath. 
Often  I  have  [or  have  I]  heard  it  said.     See  Rubies. — 

Landor. 
Often  I  linger  where  the  roses  pour.     See  same. — Dorr. 
Often  I  sit  and  spend  my  hour.     See  Dreams. — Gary. 
Often   I   think   of  the   beautiful   town.     See  My   Lost 

Youth. — Longfellow. 
Often  rebuk'd,  yet  always  back  returning.  See  Stanzas. 

— Bronte. 
Often,  trifling  with  a  privilege.     See  Osmunda  Regalis, 

The. — Wordsworth. 
Often,  when  o'er  tree  and  turret.     See  "Hie  Vir,  Hie 

Est." — Calverley. 
Ofttimes  I  have  seen  a  tall  shij;  glide  by.    See  Profes- 
sor at  the  Breakfast-table  (Faithful    Little    Wife, 
.  A). — Holmes. 
O'Grady  lived  in  Shanty  row.     See  O'Grady's  Goat. — 

Hays. 
Oh,    a  dainty  craft  has  just  put  out.     See  Dream-ship, 

The. — Edmondson. 
Oh  [mt   O],  a  dainty  plant    is    the    Ivy    green.      See 

Pickwick  Papers,  The  Hvy  Green,  The). — Dickens. 
Oh,  a  queer  little  chap  is  the  honest  old  toad.     See 

Honest  Old  Toad,  The. — Anon. 
Oh!  a  splendid  Soup  is  the  true  Pea  Green.     See  Green 

Pea  Soup. — (Punch.) 
Oh,  a  tempered  sword.     See  Song   of   the   Smithy. — 

L.  W. 
Oh,  a  wonderful  horse  is   the   Fly-away   Horse.     See 

Fly-away  Horse,  The. — Field. 
Oh    [wr.  O],  a   wonderful    stream    is    the    river  Time. 

«See  Isle  of  the  Long  Ago,  The. — Taylor. 
Oh,  aged  Time!  how  far,  and  long.     See  Roman  Le- 
gions, The. — Mitford. 
Oh,  agony  of  fear!  would  that  he  yet  might  live!     See 

Cenci,  The  (Fear J. —Shelley. 
Oh,  ah!     You  are  worse,  dear  father.     See  One  Good 

Turn  Deserves  Another. — Trowbridge. 
Oh,  Alice!     She   has   actually   pushed    him    over    the 

chalk  pit  and  killed  him.     See  Haunted  Chamber, 

The. — Anon. 
Oh,  .\lice,  what  shall  I  do?     Aunt  Dorothy  is  coming. 

See  Threatened  Visit,  The. — Anon. 
Oh!  Amos  Cottle!  —  Phoebus!  what  a  name.  See  English 

Bards  and  Scotch  Reviewers. — Byron. 
Oh,  Anna,  see  what  I  have  got!     See  New  Quarters, 

The. — Anon. 
Oh!  ask  me  not  to  take  the  cup.     See  Temperance 

Speech. — Anon . 
Oh,  ask  not  thou  how  shall  I  bear.      See  Oh,  Ask  not 

Thou.— Saxby. 
Oh,  Aunt  Martha!  only  hear  this!  it's  in  the  Chronicle. 

See    Matrimonial    Advertisement,    The. — "Clara 

Augusta." 
Oh,  band  in  the  pine-wood,  cease!     See  Band  in  the 

Pines,  The. — Cooke. 
Oh,  be  at  least  able  to  say  in  that  day.     See  sarne.—^ 

Kingsley. 
Oh,  be  not  ether-borne,  poet  of  earth.     See  Poet  of 

Earth. — Thayer. 
Oh,  be  not   faithless!  with  the  morn.     See  Cast  Thy 

Bread  upon  the  Waters. — Barton. 
Oh!  be  the  day  accurst  that  gave  me  birth!     See  Poet 

Relates  how  he  Stole  a  Lock  of  Delia's  Hair,   and 

her  Anger,  The. — Southey. 
Qh!  bear   me  then  to   vast    embowering  shades.     See 

Seasons.  The  ("Oh!  bear  me  then."  etc.). — Thom- 
son. 
Oh!  bells  of  jov,  how  sweet  they  ring.     See  Old-time 

Bells,  The.— Anon. 
Oh,  bells  that  chime  your  sweetest!     See  Merry  Christ- 
mas and  a  Glad  New  Year,  A. — Cooper. 
Oh,  bird  of  the  avenue,  strong  is  thy  wing.     See  Hod- 
fellow,  The. — Burdette. 
(^h,  birds  that  sing  such  thankful  psalms.     See  Nature 

Prayer,  A.— .Tones. 
Oh,  Bisham   Banks   are   fresh   and   fair.     See  Marlow 

Madrigal,  A. — Ashby-Sterry. 
Oh,  bless  us,  we  are  young  and  small.     See  Oh,  Bless 

Us! — Anon. 
Oh,  blushing,  youthful  maiden.     See  To  My  Love. — 

Eaton. 
Oh!Lw.  O]  breathe  not  his  name,  let  it  sleep  in  the 

shade.      See    Oh!     Breathe    not     His.  Name. — 

Moore. 
Oh  [O — CI,   Brignall   banks   are  wild    and   fair.     See 

Rokeby  [Edmund's  Song]. — Scott. 


Oh,  brother,  schoolmaster,  let  us  remember  evermore. 

See  Pure  and  Holy  Motive. — Thompson. 
Oh,  call  it  by  some  better  name.     See  same. — Moore. 
"Oh  [or  O],  call  my  brother  back  to  me."     See  Child's 

First  Grief. — Hemans. 
Oh  \or  Ol,  came  ye  ower  by  the  Yoke-burn  Ford.     See 

.Jock  Johnstone  the  Tinkler. — Hogg. 
Oh!  Carrie,   wait  a  minute,   I   want  to  tell  you  some- 
thing.    See  Christmas  Dialogue. — Anon. 
Oh!  carry  me  'long.     See  O,  Boys,  Carry  Me  'Long. — - 

Foster. 
Oh!  carve   me   yet   another  slice.     See   Eating   Song. 

— (Punch.) 
Oh  cash!  Thou  potent  thing;  to  thee.     See  Cold,  Hard 

Cash. —  (Chicago  Herald.) 
Oh,  cease  thy  murmurs,  bleedng  heart.     See  Psalm  of 

Hope,  A. — Fox. 
Oh,  Charlie,  guess  what  I  have  just  found.     See  What 

Tommy  Found. — Anon. 
Oh!  Christmas  is  coming  again,  you  say.     See  Christ- 
mas Thought,  A. — Larcom. 
Oh,  Colonel  Marvel!  have  you  read  Mr.  Ranger's  new 

book   of   travels?     See   Drawing   a   Long   Bow. — 

Pickering. 
Oh,  Columbia,  the  gem  of  the  ocean.    See    Columbia, 

the  Gem  of  the  Ocean.  -  Shaw. 
Oh  come  away!     Make  no  delay.     See  Feast,  The. — 

Vaughan. 
Oh!  come,   let   us  wander  alone  i'  the  gloamin'.     See 

Bonnie  Sweet  .Jessie. — Anon. 
Oh!  come  to  the  woodlands,   'Tis  joy  to  behold.     See 

Thoughts  on  the  Forest. — Anon. 
"Oh!  come  you  from  the  Indies,  and  soldier,  can  you 

tell."     See  From  India. — Bennett. 
Oh,  Constance!     What     have     I     done?     See     Stupid 

Lover,  The. — Anon. 
Oh,  could  there  in  this  world  be  found.     See  Mischief 

Makers. — Anon. 
Oh,  country,  marvel  of  the  earth.     See  Our  Country. 

— Bryant. 
Oh  courage!  there  he  comes.     See  same. — Sylvester. 
Oh!  cradle  me  on  your  knee,   mamma.     See  Infant's 

Dream. — Anon. 
Oh  (cried   the   goddess)   for  some   pedant   reign!     See 

Dunciad,  The. — Pope. 
Oh,  dainty   little   pussies.     See  First   Pussy  Willows, 

The. — Armitage. 
Oh,  darn  it  all!  afeared  of  her.     See  Afeared  of  a  (Sal. 

— Anon. 
Oh,  de  good  ole  chariot  swing  so  low.     See  Swing  Low, 

Sweet  Chariot. — Anon. 
Oh,  dear!  all  my  lessons  to  get  for  to-morrow,  and  it's 

eight    o'clock    already.     See  Studious    Girl,    A. — 

Gates. 
Oh,  dear,  Charles,  how  sick  and  tired  I  am  of  house- 
work!    See    In     Want    of    a    Servant. — "Clara 

Augusta." 
Oh,  dear!     How  I  do  hate  to  rip!     See  Work  or  Play. 

— Anon. 
Oh  dear,  how  I  hate  this  cold  weather!     I  am  almost 

frozen.     See  Snow,  The. — Anon. 
Oh!  dear,  how  very  tired  I  am.     See  Lenna's  Dream. 

— Anon. 
Oh!  dear,'  I  believe  it  is  going  to  rain.     See  Cloudy 

Day,  A.— Griffith. 
Oh!  dear,  I  fear  I  can  never  get  all  these  things  into 

this  small  vali.se.     See  Package. — Rook. 
Oh!  dear  me!     I  am  tired  out  for  the  want  of  some- 
thing to  do.     See  How  He  Teased  Ned. — Smith. 
Oh,  dear   me!     I    feel    so    dull    and   stupid    after   last 

night's     dissipation.     See    Winning    a    Wager. — 

Kavanaugh. 
Oh,  dear!  I    shall    never    do    these    sums.     See    That 

Echo. — Anon. 
Oh  dear!     If  ever  I  try  to  learn  another  piece.     See 

Studying  for  the  Contest. — Anon. 
Oh  dear,  if  this  isn't  tormentin'  a  body.     See  Respect 

the  Aged. — Richbrook. 
Oh  dear!  I'm  in  such  trouble.     See  Trials. — McClure. 
Oh!  dear.     Is  it  any  wonder  I  feel  cross?     See  Elsie's 

Soliloquy. — Anon. 
Oh  dear!  it's  so  far  to  next  Christmas!     See  Day  After, 

The. — (Harp(r's  Young  Peovle.) 
Oh,  dear  little   daisy,    come   whisper   me   softly.     See 

"He  Loves  Me,  Troves  Me  Not." — Anoii. 
Oh,  dear   me!  What   shall    I    do?     I    really   believe   I 

shall  melt.     See  Not  what  He  Wanted. — Vinton. 
Oh,  dear!      My    poor    baby    is    very   sick!     See,   Sick 

Doll,  The. — Anon. 
Oh,  dear!     Now  for  another  long,  tiresome  day,  I  sup- 
pose.    See  Idolize. — Rook. 
Oh,  dear!  oh,  dear!     How  lonesorhe  I  am!     See  Scan- 
dal on  the  Brain. — Beebe. 


787 


Oh  dear 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Oh  dear!     Oh  dear!     I  declare  I  don't  know  what  I 

shall  do.     See  "He  Laughed  at  Five." — -Head. 
Oh  dear,  oh  dear,  I  feel  so  queer.     See  All  Upset. — 

Goodfellow. 
"Oh  dear!  Oh  dear!  Oh  dear  me,  suz!     I  feel's  if  I 

sh'u'd  die!     Se«%Iedley. — Banks. 
Oh  dear!  Oh  dear!    Oh  dear!    What   is  it,   husband! 

See  Illinois. — Anon. 
Oh!  dear;  oh!  dear;  what  shall  we  do?      Sef  Christmas 

Pastime,  A;  or.  The  Crying  Family.— Bradbury. 
Oh!   d?ar.      Whit   a  troubl^somj  sH   of  children   the 

"I    can'ts"    are.     See    "I    Can't"    Army,    The. 

— Anon. 
Oh!    dear!    what    can    the    matter    be.     See   same. — 

Fielding. 
Oh,  dear!  What  is  the  matter  now?     See  Oh,  Dear. — 

Anon. 
Oh,  dear,  what  will  become  of  me?     See  Man  of  Nerve, 

A. — Anoti. 
Oh,    dear! — Why    Susie,    what    is    the    matter?     See 

Writing  a  Lett  ^r. — Anon. 
Oh,  deem  not  that  earth's  crowning  bliss.     See  Blessed 

Are  They  that  Mourn. — Burleigh. 
Oh,  deem  not  they  are  blessed  alone.     See  "Blessed 

Are  They  that  Mourn.  " — Bryant. 
Oh  dem  that  absawd  Cwystal  Palace!  alas.     See  Peo- 
ple and  Their  Palace,  The. — (Punch.) 
Oh,  did  you  see  him  riding  down.     See  Riding  Down. — 

Perry. 
Oh  lor  O],  dinna  ask  me  gin  I  lo'e  ye.     See  Dinna  Ask 

Me. — ^Dunlop. 
Oh,  do  go  on,  miss!  you  does  it  beautiful.     See  Ama- 
teur Rehearsals ;  or.  The  Detective's  Dilemma. — 

Kavanaugh. 
Oh  [O — C],    do    not   wanton    with   those   eyes.      See 

same. — Jon.son. 
Oh,  do   you   know,   and   do   you   know.     See  Ginger- 
bread Tree,  The. — ^Spofford. 
Oh,  dolly    dear,    your    hair's    too    long.     See    Dolly's 

Toilet. — Anon. 
Oh,  don't  go  in  to-night,  John!     See  Wife's  Appeal, 

The.— Bennett. 
Oh,  don't  you  remember  our  grandfather's  barn.    See 

Grandfather's  Barn. —  (Arkansaw  Traveller.) 
Oh!  don't  you  remember  .sweet  Alice,  Ben  Bolt?     See 

Ben  Bolt.— Edwards. 
Oh!  don't  you  remember  Sweet  Alice,  Ben  Bolt.     See 

also  Ben  Bolt. — English. 
Oh,  dose  shildren,  dose  shildren,  dey  bodder  mine  life! 

See  Mine  Shildren. — -Adams. 
Oh,  dot  shnow,  dot  goot  lookin'  shnow.     See  Der  Goot 

Lookin'  Shnow. — Anon. 
"Oh!  Dottie  and  Rose,  come  over  and  play."     See  A- 

Soak  in  "  Wum  Barrels." — Heywood. 
Oh!  doubt  me  not — the  season.     See  Oh!     Doubt  Me 

Not.— Moore. 
Oh!  drimin  donn  dilis!   the  landlord  has  come.     See 

Drimin  Donn  Dilis.— Walsh. 
Oh,  earth  and  heaven  are  far  apart!     See  We  Twain. — 

Jones. 
Oh,  East  is  East,  and  West  is  West,  and  never  the  twain 

shall  meet.     See  Ballad  of  East  and  West,  The. — 

Kipling. 
Oh,  Echo,  tell  me,  nymph  divine.     See  Echo's  Secret. 

—(Trinity  Tablet). 
Oh,  Eddie,    here    you    are!     See   Poor   Sick    Lucy. — 

Anon. 
Oh,  Edith,  I'm  so  glad  you've  come.     See  Gretchen.^ 

Anon. 
Oh,  egotism  of  agony!     See  In  Shadow.— Bates. 
Oh  [wr.    O]!    England    is    a    pleasant    place  for    them 

that's  rich  and  high.     See  Last  Buccaneer,  The. — 

Kingsley. 
Oh,  Ernest  Montague. — He  promised  to  meet  me  here 

by  eight.     See  Wife  and  a  Home,  A. — Anon. 
Oh,    ever   skill'd    to   wear   the    form    we    love!       See 

To  Hope. — Williams. 
Oh,  ever  thus  from  childhood's  hour.     See  Muddled 

Metaphors. — Hood. 
"Oh,  ever  thus  from  childhood's  hour. "     See  Wail  of  a 

Disappointed  Candidate. — Anon. 
Oh,  everyone  was  sorry  for  Ned !     See  Changing  Color. 

— Canfield. 
Oh!  fairer  than  the  lily  tall,  and  sweeter  than  the  rose. 

See  Irish  Molly  O.— Fahy. 
Oh  Fanny,  dear  Fanny.     See  Doll  Babies. — Anon. 
Oh,  father's  gone  to  market-town:  he  was  up  before 

the  day.     See  Midsummer  Song,  A. — Gilder. 
Oh,  fear  not  thou  to  die.     See  same. — Anon. 
Oh,  fill    me   flagons    full    and    fair.     See   Ballad   of   a 

Bridal.— Bland, 
Oh,  fine  old  times  were  those,  I  ween.     See  Stately 

Minuet,  The. — Butterworth. 


Oh,    fireflies,    fireflies,    light     all    your    candles.     See 

Fairy's  Love-song,  A.^Higginson. 
Oh,  first  of  human  blessings!  and  supreme!     See    Bri- 
tannia ("Oh,  first,"  etc.) — Thomson. 
Oh,  flag  of  a  resolute  nation.     See  Our  Flag. — Mont- 
gomery. 
Oh,  fly  to  your  nest,  pretty  sparrow.     See   Recitation 

for  a  Very  Little  Girl. — Kavanaugh. 
Oh  for  a  breath  o'  the  moorlands.     See  Song  for  the 

Hot  Winds,  A. — Davidson. 
Oh  for  a  closer  walk   with  God.     See  Walking  with 

God. — Cowper.  , 

Oh.  for  a  glance  of  that  gay  Muse's  eye.     See  Search 

after  Happiness,  The.— Scott. 
Oh  for  a  lodge  in  a  garden  of  cucumbers!     See  Ninety- 
nine  in  the  Shade. — Johnson. 
Oh  [wr.    O]    foi*  a    lodge    in    some    vast    wilderness. 

See  Task,  The  (Love  of  Liberty). — Cowper. 
"Oh,  for  a  man!"  the  clear  voice  sanir.     See  Oh,  for 

a  Man ! — Hungerford. 
Oh  [wr.  O]  for    a    tongue    to    curse    the   slave.      See 

Lalla  Rookh  (Curse  on  the  Traitor,  A). — Moore. 
Oh  [wr.  O]  for    one    hour    of  youthful    joy!     See  Old 

Man  Dreams,  The. — Holmes. 
Oh,  for  the  glimpse  of  a  natural  boy.     See  Lost  Type, 

A. — -Rayne. 
Oh,  frame  some  little  word  for  me.     See  Clue,  The. — 

Bates. 
Oh,    [wr.    O],    Galuppi    Baldassare     [iw.     Baldassaro], 

this  is  very  sad  to  find!     See  Toccata  of  Galuppi's, 

A. — Browning. 
Oh.  Gentle-breath  goes  singing,  goes    singing   through 

the  grass.     See  Gentle-breath. — Huestis. 
"Oh,    George!"   cried   young  Mrs.   Merry,   running  to 

meet  her  husband  at  the  door.     See  Phenomenal 

Baby,  A. — Anon. 
Oh,  girls!     Have  you  made  your  selections  yet?     See 

Half  an  Hour  with  the  Poets. — Peck. 
Oh!  girls,  I  am  so  glad  to  see  you.     See  Like  a  Nettle. — 

Denton. 
Oh,  give  me  a  home  by  the  warm  Southern  sea!     See 

Home  by  the  Warm  Southern  Sea,  A. — Rude. 
Oh!  give    me    a    name   that   shall    live   forever.     See 

Name,  A. — Fox. 
Oh,  give   me   back   that   royal    dream.     See   Patriot's 

Bride,  The.— Duffy. 
Oh,  give  me  but  Virginia's  weed.     See  Ballad  of  the 

Pipe,  The. — -Rave. 
Oh!   give   thanks   for   the  summer   and   winter.     See 

Thanksgiving.— Anon. 
Oh  [O— C],  go  not  yet,  my  love!     See  Hero  to  Leander. 

— Tennyson. 
Oh,  gold-green   wings     and   bronze-green   wings.     See 

Winged  Seeds.' — Cone. 
Oh  [im-.    O],   good  painter,   tell    me  true.      See    Order 

for  a  Picture,  An. — Cary. 
Oh,   Gracie  dear!     I'm  so  glad  to  find  you  at  home. 

See  Shy  Gallant,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
Oh,  grandly  flowing  river.     See  On  the  Bluff. — Hay. 
Oh,  green  was  the  corn  as  I   rode  on  my  way.     See 

Spring  Journey,  The.— Heber. 
Oh,  Greencastle  streets  were  a  stream  of  steel.     See 
,         Greencastle  Jenny. — Cone. 
Oh!  had  you  eyes,  but  eyes  that  move.     See  Formosae 

Puellae. — Home. 
Oh,  hadst  thou  never  shared  my  fate.     See  To  My 

Wife. — -Bayly. 
Oh  [wr.   O]    happiness!    our    being's    end    and    aim! 

See  Essay  on  Man,  An  (Happiness). — Pope. 
Oh,  happy    birds    among    the    boughs.     See    Reason 

Why,  The. — Cooper. 
Oh,  happy  day  that  fixed  my  choice.     See  Confirma- 
tion Hymn. — Doddridge. 
Oh,    happy,    happy,    maid.     See    Nuptial    Eve,    A. — 

Dobell. 
"Oh!  happy  is  he  that  giveth."     See  Lady  of  the  Cas- 
tle, The. — Anon. 
Oh,  happy  is  the  man  who  hears.     See  Heavenly  Wis- 
dom.— -Logan. 
Oh,    happy   land,    with   ca.stles    fair.     See   Vifions. — 

Maulsby. 
Oh,  happy  trees  which  we  plant  to-day.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
Oh,   harV   to   the  brown   thrush!     See  Joy-month. — 

Wasson. 
Oh,  haunting  dreams  of  a  sweet  summer  dead!     See 

October. — Jordan. 
Oh   lO— C]  have  ve  na  heard  o'  the   fause    Sakelde? 

See  Kinmont  Willie. — Anon. 
Oh,  he  (fft  he  said)  was  a  millionaire.     See  Summer 

Deceit,  A. — Anon. 
Oh  [or  OJ,   he  was   a  bowery  boot-black  bold.     See 

Total  Annihilation. — Brine. 


788 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Oh  let 


Oh!  he  was  a  student  of  mystic  lore.     See  Language  of 

Love,  The. — Baker. 
Oh,  hear  a   pensive   prisoner's   prayer.      See   Mouse's 

Petition,  The.— Barbauld. 
Oh    [O — C],  heard    ye    yon    pibroch    sound   sad    in 

the  gale?     See  Glenara. — Campbell. 
Oh,  hearing  sleep,  and  sleeping  hear.     See  Serenade. — 

Allingham. 
Oh  heart  of  God  that  pities  all!     See  same. — Tennyson. 
Oh     [O — C.]  heart      of     mine,     we     shouldn't.      See 

Kissing  the  Rod. — Riley. 
Oh!     Here  you  are  again!     See  Trying  to  be  Literary. 

— Dickens. 
Oh,  here  you  are.     We  were  afraid  you  were  not  com- 
ing.    See  True  Charity. — Anon. 
Oh!  Hezekiah's  a  pious  soul.     See  Deacon  Hezekiah. — 

Anon. 
Oh  [or  O],   hideous  leagues   of  straining  woods.     See 

Flight  for  Life,  The. — Sawyer. 
Oh,  ho!  little  chicks,  I'm  on  time,  now,  you  see.     See 

Santa  Claus'  Speech. — Butt«. 
Oh  ho!  oh  ho!     Pray,   who  can   I  be?     See  Guessing 

Song. — Johnstone. 
Oh  horror!    horror!    horror!      Tongue  nor  heart.     See 

Macbeth. — ^Shakespeare. 
Oh  how  comely  it  is  and   how  reviving.     See  Samson 

Agonistes.— Milton. 
Oh,  how  hard  it  is  to  be  sick  and  have  to  lie  here  all 

day.     See      Ralph      Coleman's      Reformation. — 

McBride. 
Oh,  how  I  wish  I  was  a  man,  to  do  just  as  I  please! 

See  Harry's  Wish. — Anon. 
Oh,  how  it  rains!     I  cannot  go  out,  and  I  have  no  one 

to  play  with.     See  Guess! — Anon. 
Oh  how  kindly  ha.st  Thou  led  me.     See  same. — Grin- 
field. 
Oh  [O — C],  how  much    more  doth  [wr.  does]  beauty 

beauteous     seem.      See     Sonnets,     LIV. — Shake- 
speare. 
Oh,  how  she  plough'd  the  ocean,  the  good  ship  Castle 

Down.     See    Good     Ship     Castle    Down,     The. — 

McBurney. 
Oh !  how  the  wind  blows ;  how  cold  it  is !     See  Good 

for  Evil.'— Howard. 
Oh,  how  the  world  remembers!     See  Washington. — 

Anon. 
Oh,  how  tired  I  am. — Are  you?     See  Little  by  Little. 

— Anon. 
Oh,  hum!  this  is  insufferably  dull.     See  Precarious  Pre- 
dicament. A. — Trafton. 
"Oh,  husband,  what  one  boarder  eats.     See  Hungry 

Boarder,  The.— Anon. 
Oh,  hush  thee   [listen — C],  little  Dear-my-Soul.     See 

Fairy  and  Child.— Field. 
Oh,  hush  thee  my  baby,  the  'night  is  behind  us.     See 

Seal  Lullaby. — -Kipling. 
Oh,   1    am  a  woman's   watch,   am   I.     See  Woman's 

Watch,  A. — Anon. 
Oh,  I  am  weary  of  a  heart  that  brings.     See  Helios. — 

Spingarn. 
Oh,  I  got  me  so  much  droubles,  I  can't  toled  you  how 

much   droubles   I    have   got.     See  Mrs.   Britzen- 

hoeffer's  Troubles. — Kyle. 
Oh!     I  had  de  vorst  dime  lasd  veek  dot  you  effer  saw. 

See  Sockery  Kadahcut's  Kat. — Anon. 
Oh!  I  have  loved  thee  fondly  ever.     See  Stanzas  to 

Pale  Ale.— (Punch.) 
Oh  [O — C],  T  have  passed  a  miserable  night.     See  King 

Richard  III.  (Clarence's  Dream). — Shakespeare. 
Oh,    I   have  such   a   hard   time!     Father   drinks,    and 

mother  is  sick.     Sec  Silver  Lining,  The. — Anon. 
Oh,  I  know  a  certain  woman,  who  is  reckoned  with  the 

good.     See  Pin,  A. — -Wilcox. 
Oh,  I  know  a  little  queen.     See  Good  Queen  Bess. — 

Montgomery. 
Oh,   I  love  the  merry  gurgle  of  my  pipe.    '  See  Pipe, 

The. — (Philadelphia  Tim-en.) 
Oh,  I  see  with  sight  prophetic  thro'  the  mists  of  coming 

years.     See  Hymn  for  America,  A. — Best. 
Oh,  i  shall  die,  I  know  I  shall.     I  can't  hold  out  until 

to-morrow.     See  Pain  in  the  Side,  A. — McBride. 
Oh,  I  so  love  to  wander  near  to  Jeduthan's  house.     See 

Pantaloon  Fight,  A. — McBride. 
Oh,   I   wad  like  to  ken — to  the    beggar-wife    says    I. 

See  Spaewife,  The. — Stevenson. 
Oh!  I  will  give  you  a  paper  of  pins.     See  Old  Ballad, 

An. — -Anon. 
Oh,  I  wish  I  was  a  grown-up.     See  I  Wish  I  Was  a 

Grown-up. — Butts. 
Oh!     I    wish   that   the   strange   kith   and   kin    of   my 

father.     See  Poor  Irish  Boy,  The. — Cook. 
Oh,  I  wish  the  winter  would  go.     See  Winter  and  Sum- 
mer.— Anon. 


Oh,  if  every  one  could  put  his  arms  round  one  other 

one.     See  same. — Gougli. 
Oh,  if  I  were  a  humming  bird.     See  Oh,  Dear  Me. — 

Douglas. 
Oh,  if  I  were  a  little  bird.     See  Happy  Bird,  The. — 

Anon. 
Oh,  if  it  wasna  lawful.     See  Scotch  Philosophy  of  Kiss- 
ing.—  (Harper's  Magazine.) 
Oh,  if  my  love  offended  me.     See  Love's  Punishments. 

— Ashby-Sterry. 
Oh,  if  thou  be'st  true  lover.     See  same. — Arnold. 
Oh,   if  thou   lovest   and   art   a  woman.     See  same. — 

Landon. 
Oh!  ignorant  boy,  it  is  the   secret  hour.      See  Joseph 

and  His  Brethren  (Phraxanpr  to  Joseph). — Wells. 
Oh,  I'm  a  ferry  wretched  man;  I've  got  an  aching  head. 

See  About  Katarine. — Anon.  1^  F 

Oh!  in  the  quiet  haven,  safe  for  aye.     See  Inscription 

on  the  Statue  Erected  to  Captain  Boyd.- — Alex- 
ander. 
Oh    [O — C],    inexpressible    as    sweet.     See    O,   Inex- 
pressible as  Sweet. — Woodberry. 
Oh,  is  it  a  phantom?  a  dream  of  the  night?     See  Lucile 

(Under  Canvas). — Lytton. 
Oh,  is  not  this  a  holy  spot!     See  Bunker  Hill.- — Pier- 

pont. 
Oh!     Is  that  you,  Annie?     See  Seeing  Santa  Claus. — 

Bradbury. 
Oh  Israel,    thou    hast    destroyed   thyself.     See   Elijah 

and  the  Rain. — Murray. 
Oh!  it   is   excellent   to   have   a   giant's  strength.     See 

Measure    for    Measure    (Abuse    of    Authority).— 

Shakespeare. 
Oh  [or  O] !  it  is  great  for  our  country  to  die,  where  ranks 

are  contending.     See  Elegiac. — Percival. 
Oh  [or  O],  it  is  hard  to  work  for  God.     See  Right  Must 

Win,The.— Faber. 
Oh   [O — C]!   it    is    pleasant,   with    a   heart    at  ease. 

See  Fancy  in  Nubibus. — Coleridge. 
Oh,  it  is  so  pleasant  this  afternoon.     See  Old  Maid, 

The.— Garrett. 
Oh.  it  is  veriest  vanity  to  love!     See  Isabel's  Grave. — 

Landon. 
Oh,  it  was  a  dainty  maid  that  went  a-maying  in  the 

morn.     See  Ballad  of  the  Brook,  The. — Roberts. 
Oh,  it  was  a  musical  old  Beetle!     See  Concert  Rehear- 
sal, The. — Dixey. 
Oh!  it  was  a  sight  right  fearsome.     See  Lass  Dorothy. 

— Anon. 
Oh,  it's  Fannie  Day!     See  Annie's  Party. — L.  A.  B.  C. 
Oh,  it's  Hynde  Horn  fair,  and  it's  Hynde  Horn  free. 

See  Hynde  Horn.     Anon. 
Oh,  it's  nice  to  grow  big.     See  Mamma's  Dear  Lap. — 

Richards. 
Oh,  it's  the  boys  who  did  that!     See  Us  Boys. — Rich- 
ards. 
Oh,  it's   twenty  gallant  gentlemen.     See  Last   Hunt, 

The.— Thayer. 
"Oh,  I've  got  a  plum-cake,  and  a  feast  let  us  make." 

See  Another  Plum-cake.- — Taylor. 
"Oh!     I've   got   a   plum-cake,    and   a   fine   feast   I'll 

make. "     See  Plum-cake,  The. — Taylor. 
Oh,  I've  such  a  lot  of  dollies.     See  Helen's  Babies. — 

Anon. 
Oh,  Johnny  Bull!  you  know,  .lohn.     See  Red  and  the 

Blue,  The.— Roby. 
"Oh,  jolly  crow!"     See  Kept  In. — Beers. 
Oh,  just  burning  up  some  old  papers.      See  Auto-da- 

f^.— Baker. 
Oh,  keep  their  memory  green  who  led.     See  same. — 

Venable. 
Oh,  Kenmure's  on  and  awa,  Willie!     See  Kenmure's 

On  and  Awa. — Burns. 
Oh  [O — C]  lady  fair,  these  silks  of  mine  are  beautiful 

and  rare.     See  Vaudois  Teacher,  The. — Whittier. 
Oh  [or  O],  lady  wake!  the  azure  moon.     See  Ballad 

of  Bedlam,  A. — (Pvnch.) 
Oh,  Larry  M'Hale,   he   had  little  to  fear.     See  Larry 

M'Hale. — Lever. 
Oh!  lay    the    burden    care    aside.      See    New    Year's 

Guest,  A. — Moriarty. 
Oh!  leave  the  past  to  bury  its  own  dead.     See  To  One 

Who  would  Make  a  Confession. — Blunt. 
Oh  [O — C]  leave  this  barren  spot  to  me!     See  Beech 

Tree's  Petition,  The. — Campbell. 
Oh !  [O — C]  let  me  dream  of  happy  days  gone  by.     See 

Oh,  Let  Me  Dream. — Aidc^. 
Oh!  let  me  from  the  festive   board.     See  Secret  Sor- 
row, The. —  (Punch.) 
Oh,  let  me  know.     See  same. — Havergal. 
Oh!    let   the    soul    its    slumber[s]    break.     See  Coplas 

de  Manrique    (Footprints    of   Decay). — Manrique 

(Longfellow). 


789 


Oh,  let 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  REGIT  ATI  OX8 


Oh,  let  us  carry  hence,  each  one.     See  same. — Anon. 
Oh,  let  us  go  home  in  the  Kloaming.     See  Told  in  the 

Twilight. — -Nicholson. 
Oh  Liberty,     thou     goddess     heav'nly     bright.     iSee 

Bles.sings  of  Libaiity,  The. — Addison. 
Oh,  life  in  the  Lab.  is  a  frolic.     See  Life  in  the  Chem. 

Lab. — Eliot. 
Oh,  life  is  fair  when  the  eyes  are  bright.     See  Boating- 
song. — Freeman. 
Oh,  life  to   me  is   a  thing  of  pleasure!     See  Life;  a 

School  Scene. — Trafton. 
Oh,  Lily  sweet,  I  saw  a  pleasant  sight.     See  What  the 

Rose  Saw. — Marston. 
Oh,  limpid  stream  of  Tyrus,  now  I  hear.     See  Clas«ic 

Ode,  A. — Loomis. 
Oh,  list  the  boat-horn's  wild  refrain.     See  Boat-horn, 

The. — .\non. 
Oh  list  to  the  .song  of  an  old  dollar  bill.     See  Song  of  an 

Old  Dollar  Bill.— Curtis. 
Oh,  listen,  friends,  and  hear  me  tell.     See  Echo  Dell. — 

Miller. 
Oh  [O — C],  li.«ten,  listen,  ladies  gay!     See  l^y  of  the 

Last  Minstrel  (Rosabelle). — Scott. 
Oh,    listen    [wr.     hush     thee],     little     Dear-my-Soul. 

See  Fairy  and  Child.— Field. 
Oh!  listen   man!      See  Husband's  and  Wife's  Grave, 

The  ( Immortality ^ — Dana. 
Oh,  listen  to    me,  darkies.     See   Cabin    Love-song. — 

Macon. 
Oh!  listen  to  the  tale  of  little  Annie  Protheroe.     See 

Annie  Protheroe. — Gilbert. 
Oh,  listen  to  the  tale  of  Mister  William,  if  you  please. 

See  Mister  William. — Gilbert. 
Oh!  listen  to  the  water-mill,  through  all  the  livelong 

day.     See  Water-mill,  The. — Doudney. 
"Oh,  listen  to  the  water-wheel  through  all  the  live- 
long day. "     See  Sic  Transit. — Burdette. 
Oh,  little  girl,  whose  twenty  years.     See  Partial  Critic, 

A. — Anon. 
Oh!  little  loveliest  lady  mine.     See  Valentine,   A. — 

Richards. 
Oh,  look  at  my  hat,  how  nicely  it  suits!     See  Charlie 

Boy. — Anon. 
Oh,  look  at  the  moon!     See  same. — Follen. 
Oh!  look  at  the  snow,   the  pretty  white  snow.     See 

Winter. — Anon. 
Oh,  look,   where  the  lilac-bush,  stout  and  tall.     See 

In  the  Lilac-bush. — Thaxter. 
Oh,  loosen  that  snood  that   you  wear,  ,Tanette.     See 

Janette's  Hair. — Halpine. 
Oh,  love  is  not  a  summer  mood.     See  same. — Gilder. 
Oh,  Love  is  weak.     See  Love's  Fulfilling. — Jackson. 
Oh  [or  O],  lovely  Mary  Donnelly,  it's  you  I  love  the 

best  lor  my  joy,  my  only  best]!     See  Lovely  Mary 

Donnelly. — AUingham. 
Oh  [O — C]  lovely  voices  of  the  sky.     See  Christmas 

Carol. — Hemans. 
Oh,  Lowbury  pastor  is  fair  and  young.     See  Christ- 
mas Greens. — Baker. 
Oh,  Lucy,  I'm  so  glad  my  education  at  last  is  finished. 

See  Finished  Education,  A. — {Journal  of  Educa- 
tion.) 
Oh,  Lulu,  here  is  the  frame  for  papa's  new  picture! 

See  Lulu's  Picture. — Anon. 
Oh,  make  me  not  as  other  men.     See  Prayer  of  the 

Satirist.— O.  L. 
Oh,  man,  boast  not  thy  "lion  heart!"     See  same. — 

Streeter. 
Oh!  man  may  bear  with  suffering.     See  same. — Willis. 
Oh  [or  O],  many  a  day  have  I  made  good  ale  in  the 

glen.     See  Outlaw  of  Loch  Lene,  The. — Callanan. 
Oh,  many  a  leaf  will  fall  tonight.     See  Dear  Old  Toil- 
ing One,  The. — Gray. 
Oh  [O — C]  Mary,  at  thy  window  be!     See  Mary  Mori- 
son. — Burns. 
Oh,  Mary,  I  have  searched  for  you.     See  Novel  Christ- 
mas tree,  A. — Kavanaugh. 
"Oh  [O— C],  go  and  call  the  cattle  home."     See  Sands 

of  Dee,  The. — Kingsley. 
Oh,  Mary  McGallagher,  see  phat  you've  done  now.     See 

Paddy's  Lament. — Anon. 
Oh,  Mary,    wait   a   minute,    won't   you?     See   Secret, 

The.— Cousin  Fannie. 
Oh  [O— C]  may  I  join  the  choir  invisible.     See  same. 

—Eliot. 
Oh!   may  I  live  exempted  (while  I  live).     See  Task, 

The  (Relish  of  Fair  Prospect). — Cowper. 
Oh!  merry  is  the  Madrepore  that  sits  beside  the  sea. 

See  Zoology. — (Punch.) 
Oh,  minstrel  of  these  borean  hills.     See  Golden  Crown 

Sparrow  of  Alaska. — Burroughs. 
Oh,  mis'ry  in  de  mornin'  come  wid  de  turnout  horn. 

See  Plantation  Pictures.— Wilkinson. 


Oh,   mistress    mine,    where    are    you   roaming?      See 

Twelfth  Night;  or.  What  you  Will  (Oh,  Mistress 

Mine). — Shakespeare. 
Oh,  Mrs.  Chatter — dear,  dear — do  sit  down.     See  What 

Old  Mrs.  Ember  Said.— Dallas. 
Oh!  Mona's  waters  are  blue  and  bright.     See  Mona's 

Waters. — Anon. 
"Oh!    mother,  mother,  steik    the    door."     See  Adam 

O'Fintry.— Black. 
Oh  [tar.  O]   mother    of    a    mighty    race.      See    same. 

— Bryant. 
"Oh    [or  O],   mother,  what  do  they  mean   by  blue? 

See  Two  Colors. — (Springfield  Republican.) 
"Oh,  mother,    what  good   neighbors."     See  Falling  in 

and  Falling  Out. — Coates. 
Oh,  murder!  but  it  fale-i  quare.     See  "Dark  Noight's 

Bu.'^iness,  A." — McDermott  and  Trumble. 
Oh,  muse!  grant  me  the  power.     See  Virginia's  Kingly 

Plant. — Anon. 
Oh!  my  aged  Uncle  Arly.      See  Incidents  in  the  Life  of 

My  Uncle  Arly. — Lear. 
Oh,  my  baby,  my  child,  my  darling!     See  Lost  on  the 

Prairie. — Cooke. 
Oh  [or  O]!  my  dark  Rosaleen.     See  Dark  Rosaleen. — 

Mangan. 
Oh,  my  dear  Gold,  I  am  so  delighted  to  see  you.     See 

Scandal  Monger,  The. — Pickering. 
Oh,    my   dear,    only   think!     Selina   Audrey    is   going 

to  marry.     See  Report,  The. — Pickering. 
Oh,  my  Geraldine.     See  same. — Burnand. 
Oh  [or  O],  my  love's  like  the  steadfast  sun.     See  Poet's 

Bridal-day  Song,  The. — Cunningham. 
Oh  [or  O],  my  love  is  [or  luve's]  like  a    red,    red    rose. 

See  Red,  Red  Rose,  A. — Burns. 
"Oh,    my,    my!"   says   a   leetle   feller.     See  Dem   Ole 

Dimes  Habbiness  and  dem  New. — Slaeter. 
Oh!  my  people — thou  heart  of  my  heart,  thou  life  of 

my  life.     See  Duties  of  Christianity,  The. — Kos- 
suth. 
Oh,  Nell,  do  stop  awhile  and  rest  under  these  bushes. 

See  Be  Prompt  in  what  You  Do. — Kavanaugh. 
Oh,  never   mind,    .Timmie,    don't   whine.     See   Better 

Whistle  than  Whine. — Anon. 
"Oh!  never    mind,    they're    only    boys."     See    Boy's 

Complaint,  The. — Anon. 
Oh  [O — C.]   never  say    that    I    was    false    of    heart. 

See  same. — Shakespeare. 
Oh,  never  sit  we  down,  and  say.     See  Looking  into  the 

Future. — Massey. 
Oh,  never  talk  again  to  me.     See  Girl  of  Cadiz,  The. — 

Byron. 
Oh!  never  wear  a  brow  of  care.     See  same. — Anon. 
Oh,  no,  I  never  mention  her.     See    Love  of  his  Life, 

The. — Anon. 
Oh,  no!  I'll  never  see  him  more.     See  Irresolute  Reso- 
lution.— Anon. 
Oh,  no!  it  is  no  flattering  lure,  no  fancy  weak  or  fond. 

See  Immortality. — Smith. 
Oh  no  more,  no  more,  too  late.     See  Broken  Heart, 

The  (Penthea's  Dying  Song). — Ford. 
Oh  [or  O]  no,  no, — let  me  lie.     See  Not  on  the  Battle- 
field.— Pierpont. 
Oh,  no, — not  e'en  when  first  we  loved.     See  same. — 

Moore. 
Oh!  no,  'tisn't  so!     See  Papa's  Watch. — Anon. 
"Oh,  not  for  long,  ah,  not  for  long  i  hall  I  be  lingering." 
*       See  In  the  King's  Garden. — Brown. 
Oh,  not   in   distant   Palestine.     See   God   with   Us. — 

Anon. 
Oh  not  in  ladies'  gardens.     See  Succory,  The. — Deland. 
Oh,  nothing  in  all  life  worse  is.     See  Unwilling  Mufe, 

The.; — Carryl. 
Oh!  nothing  now  can  please  me.     See  Grief. — Dryden. 
Oh,  oh,  how  the  wild  winds  blow!     See  Wild  Winds. — 

Butts. 
Oh,  Paddy  dear!  an'  did  ye  hear  the  news  that's  goin' 

round?     See  Wearin'  o'  the  Green,  The. — Anon. 
"O  patient  Christ  !  when  long  ago."     See    Hymn:  "O 

Patient  Christ,"  etc. — Deland. 
Oh!  Phaidrig  Crohoore  was  the  Ijroth  of  a  boy,  and  he 

stood  six   feet  eight.     See  Phaidrig  Crohoore.— 

Anon. 
"Oh  [or  O]!  pilot,  'tis  a  fearful   night — there's  danger 

on  the  deep."     See  Pilot,  The. — Bayly. 
"Oh,  please  let  me  go!  my  mother  is  sick  in  bed."     See 

Child  and  the  Flowers,  The. — Anon. 
"Oh,  plea.se  sir,  do  buy  a  paper!     Plea-'e  do!"  See  My 

Little  Newsboy. — Melville. 
Oh,  pleasant     land    of    childhood.     See    Childhood's 

Country. — Moulton. 
"Oh,  pray,  do  you  know  of  those  wonderful  styles." 

See  Fashions  at  the  Court  jof  Queen  Flora. — Far- 
mer. 


790 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Oh,  the 


Oh,  precious   drop   of  crystal   dew.     See  Lines   on   a 

Ring. — Luke. 
Oh!  promise  me  that  some  day  you  and  I.     See  "Oh! 

Promise  Me"  (after  De  Koven). — Wood. 
"Oh  proud  am  I,  exceeding  proud,  I've  mustered  the 

Elite!     See  Poppy,  The.— Bayly. 
Oh,  rare  as  the  splendor  of  lilies.      See  Easter-tide. — 

Sangster. 
Oh  rich  man !  from  your  happy  door.     <See  Passing  By. 

— Mulock. 
Oh.  rise  up  in  your  glorious  might.     See  War  Hymn. — 

Stevens. 
Oh!  rise  up.   Willie  Reilly,  and  come  along  with  me. 

See  Willy  Reilly. — Anon. 
Oh  [O — C],    Rome!   my    country!    city   of    the   soul! 

See     Childe      Harold's     Pilgrimage       (Rome).  — 

Byron. 
Oh    [ivr.    O]!     sacred    Truth!     thy     triumph     ceased 

awhile.     See  Pleasures  of  Hope,  The  (Downfall  of 

Poland)  The).— Campbell. 
Oh  [Ah — C],  sad  are  they  who  know  not  love.     See 

Two  Songs  from  the  Persian,  II. — Aldrich. 
"Oh,"  said  Daisy  to  her  mama,  "I  was  in  the  parlor 

last  night  behind  the  sofa."      See  Daisy's  Story. 

— Anon. 
Oh  [or  O],  St.  Patrick  was  a  gentleman.     See  St.  Pat- 
rick was  a  Gentleman. — Bennett. 
Oh  [or  O],  saw  ye  bonnie  Lesley.    See.  Bonnie  Lesley. 

— Burns. 
Oh  fO — C],  saw  ye  not   fair   Ines?     See    Fair   Ines. — 

Hood. 
Oh  [or  O],  say  can  you  see,  by  the  dawn's  early  light. 

See  Star-spangled  Banner,  The. — Key. 
Oh!  say  can  you  see,  by  the  moon's  soft  light.     See  , 

Cuba's  Banner. — De  Long. 
Oh  [or  O],  say  not  that  my  heart  is  cold.     See  Song. — 

Wolfe. 
Oh!    say  not  woman's   heart  is   bought.       See    Song: 

"Oh  !  say  not,"  etc. — Peacock. 
Oh  [or  O],  say  what  is  that  thing  call'd  Light.     See 

Blind  Boy,  The.— Cibber. 
Oh,  say,  what  is  this  fearful,  wild.     See  Hippopotamus, 

The. — Herford. 
Oh,  see  how  glorious  show.     See  Ode  on  a  Fair  Spring 

Morning. — Morris. 
Oh,  see  the  lovely  grasses.     See  Gathering  Grasses. — 

Anon. 
Oh  seek  not  destin'd  evils  to  divine.  See  Gebir  (Tamar 

and  the  Nymph). — Landor. 
Oh!  send  Lewie  Gordon  hame.     See  Lewie  Gordon. — 

Geddes. 
Oh,  she  was  so  utterly  utter!     See  Girl  of  the  Period,  A. 

— Anon. 
Oh  [or  O]!  shun  the  spot,  my  youthful  friende,  I  urge 

you  to  beware.    See  Street  of  By-and-bye,  The. — 

Abdy. 
Oh  [O — C]  sing  unto  my  roundelay.     See  .Eellad  Min- 
strel's Song.— Chat  terton. 
Oh!  sir,  have  you  seen  her?     See  Frances  Edwena. — 

Dunn. 
Oh!  sir;  there  are  times  in  the  history  of  men  and 

nations.     See  Memory  of  Abraham  Lincoln,    The 

(On  the  Assassination  of    President    Lincoln). — 

Garfield. 
Oh,  sixty  years  ago  to  a  day.     See  Sixty  Years  Ago. 

— {Harper's  Young  People.) 
Oh,  slow  to  smite  and  swift  to  spare.     See  Abraham 

Lincol  n . — Bryant. 
Oh  ["''■•   O]!   snatch'd  away  in  beauty's   bloom.    See 

game. — Byron. 
Oh,  so  pure  the  white  syringas!     See  God's  Acre. — 

Field. 
Oh  solemn   harmonies   that   sound.     See   Parsifal — at 

Baireuth. — Browne. 
Oh,  solitude!  thou  wonder-working  fay.     See  Imagina- 
tive Crisis,  The. — {Punch.) 
Oh,  Spirit  of  Love  and  of  Light.     See  Winter  Hymn, 

A. — Rives. 
Oh,  Spirit!   Spirit   of  Literature.     See  Dilly  and   the 

D's,  The:.— {Punch.) 
Oh,  starlit-skies,  what  generations  have.     See  Trip  to 

the  Stars,  A.^Durant. 
Oh,  stay  not  thine  hand,  when  the  winter's  wind  rude. 

See  Christian  Charity. — Coates. 
Oh,  such  a  commotion  under  the  ground.    See  Laugh- 
ing Chorus,  A. — Anon. 
Oh,    such  a  dismal  night  to  be  out.     See  Out  All 

Around. — Anon. 
Oh,  Sue,  I'm  so  glad  to  see  you.     See  America  in  Pina- 
fore.— Walcott. 
Oh,  Summer  has  the  roses.     See  Winter  Song,  A. — 

Hartley. 
Oh,  surely  who  will  guide.     See  same.— Wolcott. 


Oh,  swate  Kitty  Galore  was  but  jist  twinty-one.     See 

Squeeze  in  the  Dark,  A. — Banks. 
Oh,  swear  not  by  the  moon,  the  inconstant  moon.     See 

Romeo    and     Juliet    (Balcony     Scene).  —  Shake- 
speare. 
Oh,  sweet  but  short  experience.     See  Kindness.^ — Bar- 
rett. 
Oh,  sweet  is  the  sound  of  the  shuttle  and  the  loom.     See 

same. — Read. 
Oh   [O — C],    sweeter  than    the    marriage   feast.     See 

Rime  of  the  Ancient   Mariner,  The  (He  Prayeth 

Well  who  Loveth  Well). — Coleridge. 
Oh!  sweetest  words  that  Jesus  could  have  sought.     See 

Weep  Not.— Hofel. 
Oh,  sweetly  the  robin  warbled,  wooing  his  little  mate. 

See  Unbidden  Guest,  The. — Thaxter. 
Oh!  take  away  my  wig  and  gown.     See  Monody  on  the 

Death  of  an  Only  Client. —  (London  Punch.) 
Oh,  take  me  back  to  Mapsa  an'  ma  ole  Virginy  home. 

See  Longing  for  the  Old  Plantation. — Hinman. 
Oh!  take  the  maddening  bowl  away.     See  Maddening 

Bowl,  The. — Anon. 
Oh!  talk  as  we  may  of  beauty  as  a  thing  to  be  chiseled. 

See  Beautiful,  The  (True  Beauty).— Whittier. 
Oh  [urr.  O],    talk   not    to    me  of  a  name  great  in  i-tory. 

See  Stanzas  Written  on  the  Road    between  Flor- 
ence and  Pisa. — Byron. 
Oh!  tell  me  have  you   ever  'seen  a  red,  longleg'd  Fla- 
mingo?    See  Flamingo,  The. — Clark. 
Oh,  tell   me,  little  children,  have  you  seen  her.     See 

Nikolina. — Thaxter. 
Oh,  tell   me   not   that   they  are   dead.     See  Honored 

Dead,  The. — Beecher. 
"Oh  [i^T.  O]!  tell  me,  sailor,  tell  me  true."     See   Gray 

Swan,  The. — Cary. 
Oh,  that  I  could  only  live  my  life  again!     See  David 

Copperfield  (Rosa  Dartle's  Revenge). — Dickens. 
Oh  that    joy    so    soon    should  waste!     See    Cynthia's 

Revels  (Kiss,  The). — Jonson. 
Oh  [or  O]!  that  last  day  in  Lucknow  fort.     See  Relief  of 

Lucknow,  The. — Lowell. 
Oh  that  my  Lungs  could  bleat  like  butter'd  Pease.     See 

Nonsense. — ^Anon. 
Oh  that  my  soul  a  marrow-bone  might  seize!     See  Son- 
net Found  in  a  Deserted  Mad  House. — Anon. 
Oh,  that    the    Desert    were    my    dwelling-place.     See 

Childe  Harold's   Pilgrimage    (Apostrophe   to   the 

Ocean). — Byron. 
Oh,  that  the  golden  lyre  divine.     See  To  Carmen  Syl- 

va. — Lazarus. 
Oh  [O — C]    that    those    lips    had     language !        Life 

has  passed.     See  On  the  Receipt  of  my  Mother's 

Picture. — Cowper. 
Oh  [O — CI    that    'twere    possible    after     long     grief 

and  pain.     See  Maud    (O  that  'twere    Possible). 

— Tennyson. 
Oh,  that  we  two  were  Maying.      See  Saint's  Tragedy, 

The  ("Oh,  that  we  two,"  etc.). — Kingsley. 
Oh  [O — C]  that  word  Regret!     See  Regret. — Ingelow. 
Oh!  the  beautiful  home  of  the  sunset.     See  Finding  the 

Sunset . — Anon . 
Oh,  the  beautiful  old  story!     See  Beautiful  Old  Story, 

The.— Alcott. 
Oh,  the  beauty  of  the  Christ  Child.  See  Offertory,  An. — 

Dodge. 
Oh,  the  bitter  pain  and  sorrow.     See  None  of  Self  and 

All  of  Thee. — Monod. 
Oh,  the  Circus-day    parade!     How  the  bugles  played 

and    played!     See    Circus-day    Parade,     The. — 

Riley. 
Oh,  the  cool  September  mornin's !  now  they're  with  us 

once    again.     See    "September    Mornin's." — Lin- 
coln. 
Oh,  the  dancing  leaves  are  merry.     See  Rain. — Deland. 
Oh  [urr.  O]!  the  days  are  gone,   when   Beauty  bright. 

j^ee  Love's  Young  Dream. — Moore. 
Oh[0 — C]  the  days  gone  by!  Oh  the  days  gone  by!  See 

Days  Gone  by.  The. — Riley. 
Oh,  the  dear,  delightful  sound.     See  Crocus. — Thaxter. 
Oh,  the  faces  we  meet,  the  faces  we  meet.     See  Faces 

•    We  Meet,  The.— Wellington. 
Oh  [or  O]!  the  French  are  on  the  say  [  cr  sea].    See  Shan 

van  Vocht. — Anon. 
Oh,  the  Friday  evening  meetings  in  the  vestry,  long 

ago.     See  Friday  Evening  Meetings. — Lincoln. 
Oh  [or  O],  the  gallant  fisher's  life!     See  Angler,  The. — 

Chalkhill. 
Oh,  the  gay  and  festive  Freshman  has  appeared  upon 

the  scene.     See  As  Usual. —  {Harvard  Lampoon.) 
Oh!  the  gigglety   girl — gee   whiz!     See  Gigglety  Girl, 

The. — {Judge.) 
Oh,  the   glorious   'Thanksgivings.     See   Thanksgivings 

of  Old.— SmuUer. 


791 


Oh,  the 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Oh!  the  Roin'  was  deliglitful — never  saw  sich  slidey 
snow!     See  Out  Sleighing  with  Sophia. — Hobart. 

Oh!  the  golden,  glowing  morning.  See  same. — (New 
York  Herald.) 

Oh,  the  gorgeous  city.    See  Golden  City,  The. — Mackay. 

Oh,  the  grave!  the  nave!  It  buries  every  error.  See 
Rural  Funerals  (Grave,  The). ^Irving. 

Oh  [O— r.],  the  green  things  growing,  the  green  things 
growing.     See  Green  Thing-s  Growing. — Craik. 

Oh  [O — C]  the  happy  meeting  from  over  the  sea.  See 
Three  .Meetings. — Craik. 

Oh  the  heights  of  Killiecrankie.  See  Burial  March  of 
Dundee,  The.^Aytoun. 

Oh!  the  home  we  loved  by  the  bounding  deep.  See  Old 
Mountain  Tree,  The. — Anon. 

Oh,  the  hopper  gra.«8  is  clattering  and  flying  all  the  day. 
See  Song,  A.— S.  P. 

Oh!  the  horns  are  all  a-tootin'  as  we  rattle  through  the 
town.     See  Sunday-school  Picnic,  The. — Lincoln. 

Oh,  the  houses  are  all  alike,  you  know.  See  House 
that  was  just  like  its  Neighbors,  The. — Anon. 

Oh,  the  joy  of  a  wooUess  pate.  See  Phantasy,  A. 
— (Campus.) 

Oh,  the  little  flax  flower!  See  Flax  Flower,  The. — 
Howitt. 

Oh  [i/T.  O],  the  long  and  dreary  winter!  See  Song  of 
Hiawatha,  The  (Famine,  The). — Longfellow. 

Oh,  the  long,  long  years  are  flown.     See  same. — Anon. 

Oh  [O — C.].  the  man  in  the  moon  has  a  crick  in  his 
back.     See  Man  in  the  Moon,  The. — Riley. 

Oh  the  merry  Chnst-church  bells.  See  Merry  Bells 
of  Oxford,   The. — Anon. 

Oh  [or  O],  the  old,  old  clock  of  the  household  stock. 
See  Old  Clock  against   the  wall.   The. — Anon. 

Oh,  the  old  school  exhibitions!  will  they  never  come 
again?    See  Old  School  Exhibitions,  The.— Stanton. 

Oh  [or  O]!  the  plea-sant  days  of  old,  which  so  often  peo- 
ple praise!  See  Oh!  the  Pleasant  Days  of  Old. — 
Browne. 

Oh!  the  pride  of  Portsmouth  water.  See  Lost  War- 
sloop,  The. — Proctor. 

Oh,  the  queen  in  her  carriage  is  passing  by.  See  Queen 
in  Her  Carriage  Riding  by.  The.- — Anon. 

Oh,  the  queen  of  all  the  roses  it  cannot  be  denied.  See 
Roses. — Fawcett. 

Oh,  the  queerest  land  is  the  Wee-waw  Land.  SeeWee- 
waw  Land,  The. — Hollands. 

Oh!  the  quietest  home  on  earth  had  I.  See  Bald- 
headed  Tyrant,  The.  — Vandyne. 

Oh!  the  regular  round  is  a  kind  of  a  grind!  See  Whirl- 
ing Wheel,  The.— Jenks. 

Oh!  the  Roman  was  a  rogue.  See  Lay  of  Ancient 
Rome,  A. — Tbarra. 

Oh,  the  roses  we  plucked  for  the  blue.  See  New  Memo- 
rial Day,  The. — Paine. 

Oh,  the  shambling  sea  is  a  sexton  old.  See  Grave- 
digger,  The. — Carman. 

Oh  [or  O],  the  snow,  the  beautiful  snow!  See  Beautiful 
Snow. — Watson. 

Oh,  the  song  of  the  Sea.  See  Song  of  the  Sea,  The. — 
Lincoln. 

Oh,  the  sports  of  childhood !  See  Swinging  'neath  the 
Old  Apple-tree. — Barrows. 

Oh!  the  stars  one  and  all.  See  Stars'  Ball,  The. 
— (Ladies'  Home  Journal.) 

Oh,  the  story-book  boy!  he's  a  wonderful  youth.  See 
Story-book  Boy,  The. — Lincoln. 

Oh,  the  sun  is  bright  and  the  day  is  fair.  See  Long 
Sermon,  The. — Anon. 

Oh,  the  sweet  contentment.  See  Coridon's  Song. — 
Chalkhill. 

Oh,  the  weary,  solemn  silence.  See  Without  the  Chil- 
dren.— Anon. 

Oh,  the  wild  November  wind.  See  Wind's  Song,  The. 
— Lincoln. 

Oh,  the  wind  from  the  desert  blew  in!  See  Khamsin. — 
Scollard. 

Oh!  the  woe  that  woman  brings!  See  Differences  of 
Opinion. — Anon. 

Oh,  the  wonder  of  our  life.     See    Query,    A. — (Gpod 

Words.) 
Oh!  then  nothing    pleases    'em.     See    How   the  Gen- 
tlemen Do  after  Marriage. — Anon. 
Oh,  then  tell  me.  Shawn  O'Ferral.     See  Rising  of  the 

Moon,  The. — Casey. 
Oh!  then  they  come  flattering.     See  How  the  Gentle- 
men Do  before  Marriage. — Anon. 
Oh,  there  is  a  little  artist.   See  Little  Artist,  The.— Anon. 
Oh!  there  you  are,  doctor.     How  is  she  to-day?     See 

Merely  Players. — Clarke. 
Oh,  there's  a  heart  for  every  one.     See  Heart  for  Every 
One,  A. — Swain. 


Oh,  there's   many  a  lovely  picture.     See  My  Mother 

at  the  Gate. — Edwards. 
Oh,  there's  mony  a  gate  eawt  ov  eawr  teawn-end.     See 

Sweetheart  Gate,  The.^Waugh. 
Oh,  they  sang  a  song  of  Wind  and  Sail.     See  Song  of 

Then  and  Now,  The. — Barnes. 
Oh!  they've  swept  the  parlor  carpet,  and  they've  dusted 

every  chair.     See  When  the  Minister  Comes  to 

Tea. — Lincoln. 
Oh,  this  beautiful  island  of  Ceylon.     See  Beautiful  Is- 
land of  Ceylon,  The. — Brooks. 
Oh!  this    is    a   happy,    beautiful    world!     See    Edna's 

Birthday. — Anon. 
Oh,  those  blessed  times  of  old.     See  Oh,  the   Pleasant 

Davs  of  Old  ("Oh,  those  blessed,"  etc.).— Brown. 
Oh  [or  O],   tho.se   little,    those   little   blue  shoes!     See 

Baby's  Shoes. — Bennett. 
Oh,  those  sweet  old-fashioned  posies,  that  were  moth- 
er's pride  and  joy.    See  Old-fashioned  Garden,  The. 

— -Lincoln. 
Oh  [  or  O]!  Thou  Eternal  One!  whose  presence  bright. 

See  Ode  to  the  Deity. — Derzhavin. 
Oh,  Thou,  Grand  Builder  of  the  Universe !     See  Thanks- 
giving Prayer,  A. — Anon. 
Oh,  thou  northland  bobolink.     See     To  the  Lapland 

Longspur. — Burroughs. 
Oh,  thou  that  swing'st  upon  the  waving  eare  [or  haire]. 

See  Grasshopper,  The. — Lovelace. 
Oh,  thou  to-morrow!     Mystery!     See  same. — Miller. 
Oh  [cr  O]  thou  vast  ocean!     ever-sounding  sea!      See 

Ocean,  The. — Procter. 
Oh  [ur.  O],  Thou  who  dry'st  the  mourner's  tear.      See 

same. — Moore. 
Oh,  thoughts  that  go  in  with  the  stitches.     See  Little 

Stitches. — Anon. 
Oh!  thtay  one  moment,  love  implorth.     See  Lisping 

Lover,  The. — Anon. 
Oh,  time  keeps  steadily  on  and  on.     See  Thanksgiving 

Exercise. — Hadley. 
Oh,  'tis  bland,  and  oh,  'tis  blooming,  for  it's  May!     See 

May  Day.^Opper. 
"Oh,  'tis  time  I  should  talk  to  your  mother."     See 

How  to  Ask  and  Have. — Lover. 
Oh,  'tis  well  and  enough  a  whiff  or  a  puff.     See  Good 

Cigar.  A.— Bull. 
Oh  to  be  home  again,  home  again,  home  again!     See 

In  a  Strange  Land. — Fields. 
Oh  [wr.  O],  to  be  in  England  now   that  April's  there. 

See  Home  Thoughts  from  Abroad. — Browning. 
Oh  to  be  ready  when  death  shall  come.  See  same. — Anon. 
Oh!  to  be  wafted  away.     See  Quatrain. — Anon. 
Oh,  to   have   dwelt   in   Bethehem.     See   Desire,    A. — 

Procter. 
Oh,  touch  that  rosebud!  it  will  bloom.     See  Conceit, 

A.— Collins. 
"Oh,  Uncle  Sam,"  they  said,  "has  grown  fat  and  loves 

his  ease."     See  Awakening  of  Uncle  Sam,  The. — 

Foss. 
Oh,  up  the  brae,   and  up  and  up,   beyont  the  fairy 

thorn.     See  Out  in  the  Dark. — ^Gwynn. 
Oh,  wad  some  pow'r  the  giftie    gie    us.      See    To    a 

Louse  (We   All  Have  Faults). — Burns. 
Oh,  waken  up,  my  darlin',  my  Dermot,  it  is  day.     See 

Dermot's  Parting. — Anon. 
Oh  [or  O]  waly,  waly  up  the  bank.     See  Waly,  Waly, 

but  Love  be  Bonny. — Anon. 
Oh  [or  O],  water  for  me!  bright  water  for  me!     See 

Water-drinker,   The. — Johnson. 
Oh,  we  met  the  Spanish  squadron.     See  Soarin'  o'  the 

Eagle,  The. — Ham. 
Oh!    we  were  fain  for  sorrow  and  for  shame.       See 

Light  of  the  World,  The  (Mary's  Story  of  the  Cru- 
cifixion).— Arnold. 
Oh  wearisome  condition  of  Humanity.     See  Mustapha 

(Chorus  of  Priests;. — Brooke. 
Oh,  weel  may  the  boatie  row.     See  Boatie  Rows,  The. 

— Ewen. 
Oh!  weep  for  Moncontour!  Oh!  weep  for  the  hour.     See 

Battle  of  Moncontour,  The.- — Macaulay. 
Oh  welcome,  bat  and  owlet  gray.     See  Song  Written 

for  a  Welsh  Air,  etc. — Baillie. 
"Oh!  were  you  at  war  in  the  red  Eastern  land?"     See 

Ballad  of  War,  A. — Smedley. 
Oh   (O— C.l,  wert  thou   in   the  cauld   blast.      See  O, 

Wert  thou,  etc. — Burns. 
"Oh,  wha  hae  ye  brought  us  hame  now,  my  brave  lord." 

See  Muckle-mou'd  Meg. — Ballantine. 
"  Oh  I  or  O],  wha  will  shoe  my  fair  [or  bonny]  foot?"    See 

Fair  Annie  of  Lochroyan. — Anon. 
Oh!  whar  shall  we  go  w'en  de  great  day  comes.     See 
Uncle  Remus.     His  Songs   and  his  Sayings   (Re- 
vival Hymn). — Harris. 


792 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Old 


Oh,  what  a  dull  book!     Nothing  interesting  in  it.     See 

Advertising  for  a.  Companion. — Anon. 
Oh,  what  a  face!     What  is  the  matter,  Harry?     See 

It  never  Rains  but  it  Pours. — Anon. 
Oh!  what    a   lot    of   folks    to-night.     See    Prologue. — 

"Bob  o'Link." 
Oh  [or  O],  what  a  plague  is  love!     See  Phillida  Flouts 

me. — Anon. 
Oh,  what  a  set  of  Vagabundos.     See  Morgan. — Sted- 

man. 
Oh,  what  a  thing  is  love.     "What  is  it  the  poet  says. 

See  Completely  Sold. — Anon. 
Oh,  what   are  all  life's  treasures  worth.     See  Grand- 
mother to  her  Grandson. — Thaxter. 
Oh  [O — C.],  what   can  ail  thee,   knight-at-arms?     See 

La  Belle   Dame  sans  Merci. — Keats. 
Oh!  what  is  home?     That  sweet  companionship.     See 

What  Is  Home? — Anon. 
"Oh,  what  is  love?"  the  fair  maid  sighed.     See  What 

is  Love?— A.  J.  T. 
Oh!  what  is  man,  great  Maker  of  mankind!     See  same. 

— Davies. 
Oh,  what  is  so  rare  as  a  day  in    June?      See    Vision 

of  Sir  Launfal,  The  (June). — Lowell. 
Oh!  what  is  that  comes  gliding  in.     See  Sally  Simp- 
kin's  Lament. — Hood. 
Oh  what    is    that    country.     See    Mother    Country. — 

Rossetti. 
Oh,  what  is  the  matter  with  Robin.     See  Poor  Robin. 

— Anon. 
Oh,  what  is  the  song  that  the  winter  winds  sing.     See 

Song  of  the  Winter  Winds.— Clark. 
Oh,  what  is  the  use  of  such  pretty  wings.     See  Sweet 

Peas. — Anon. 
Oh,  what  is  this  splendor  that  beams  on  me  now.     See 

Heaven. — Faber. 
Oh,  what  shall  I  do,  dear.     See  Words  for  Parting. — 

Clemmer. 
Oh,  what  will  a'  the  lads  do.     See  When  Maggy  Gangs 

Away. — Hogg. 
Oh,  what  will  be  our  future  work?     See  Our  Future 

Work. — Anon. 
Oh,  what  would  people  do.     See  Oh! — Anon. 
Oh!  what's    the     matter?    what's    the     matter?     See 

Goody  Blake  and  Harry  Gill. — Wordsworth. 
Oh,  what's  the  news,  Beatrice.     See  Piece  of  News;  or, 

Aunt  Ray's  Cat,  A. — Sydney. 
Oh,  what's  the  use  of  this  Junior  Mesh.     See  Tirade 

Explained,  A. — {Cornell  Widow.) 
Oh,  what's  the  way  to  Arcady.     See  Way  to   Arcady, 

The. — Bunner. 
Oh!  when    a   Mother   meets   on   high.     See   Curse    of 

Kehama,  The. — Southey. 
Oh,  when  I'm  a  man.     See  When  I'm  a  Man. — Anon. 
Oh,  when    shall    the    boatman    ferry    me    o'er.     See 

Angel  Ferry.  The. — Cornwell. 
Oh,  [or  Ol,  when   'tis  summer  weather.     See  Green- 
wood, The. — Bowles. 
Oh!  where  do  fairies  hide  their  heads.     See  same. — 

Bayly. 
Oh,  where  do  you  come  from.'     See  Little  Rain-drops. 

— Anon. 
"Oh,  where  do  you  come  from,  little  Tomtit?"     See 

Little  Tomtit,  The.— Anon. 
"Oh!  [or  O]  where  hae  [or  have]  ye  been.  Lord  Ran- 
dal [or  Ronald],  my  son?"    See  Lord  Randal   [or 

Ronald]. ^Anon. 
"Oh,  where   is   my   bell,"    sighed   the   brownie.     See 

Lost  Bell,  The.— Thaxter. 
Oh,  where  is  the  boy,  dressed  in  jacket  of  gray.     See 

Lost :  Three  Little  Robins. — Anon. 
"Oh  [or  O],  where  is  the  knight  or  the  squire  so  bold." 

See  Diver,  The.— Schiller. 
Oh,  where  shall  a  wandering  pilgrim  through  life.     See 

Rest  for  the  Weary. — Swingle. 
Oh,  where  will  be  the  birds  that  sing?     See  Hundred 

Years  to  Come,  A. — Brown. 
Oh,  wherefore  cam  ye  here,  Ailie?     See  Lost  on   Schi- 

hallion.— Shairp. 
Oh  [wr.  O]!  wherefore  come  ye  forth,  in  triumph  from 

the  North.    See  Battle  of  Naseby ,  The. — Macaulay. 
Oh!  who  is  that  poor  foreigner  that  lately  came  to 

town?     See  Irish  Molly  O. — Anon. 
Oh  [or  O],  who  shall  lightly  say  that  Fame.     See  Worth 

of  Fame,  The. — Baillie. 
"Oh,  who  [or  O  wha]  will  shoe  my  bonny  foot?"     See 

Lass  of  Lochroyan,  The. — Anon. 
Oh,  who   would   stay    indoor,    indoor.     See    Hunting 

Song. — Hovey. 
"Oh!  why  did  you  marry  him,   Biddy?"     See  Why 

Biddy  and  Pat  Married. — -Stoddard. 
Oh!  why   do   critics   insist.     See   Crushed   Tragedian, 

The.— McDowell. 


Oh,  why  do  the  waves  so  ceaselessly  roll.     See  Question, 

A. — Head. 
Oh!  why  left  I  my  hame?     See  Exile's  Song,  The. — 

Gilfillan. 
Oh!     Why  must  I  always  be  washed  so  clean.     See 

Little  Boy's  Lament,  The. — Anon. 
"Oh,  why  should  the  spirit  of  mortal  be  proud?"     See 

Different  Tastes. — Anon. 
Oh  [or  O]!  why  should  the  spirit  of  mortal  be  proud? 

See  same. — Knox. 
Oh   [O— C]   will   ye   choose   to   hear  the  news.     See 

Mr.  Molony's  Account  of  the  Ball. — Thackeray. 
Oh,  will  ye  walk  the  wood,  lady?     See,  Liddel  Bower, 

The.— Hogg. 
"Oh!  William,"  James  was  heard  to  say.     See  Colloquy 

on  a  Cab-stand. — {Punch.) 
"Oh!  wilt   thou   sew   my    buttons  on?"     See  same. — 

{Punch.) 
Oh,  Wing  Tee  Wee.     See  Wing  Tee  Wee. — Denison. 
Oh  [or   O]   wise   little   birds,   how    do   ye   know.     See 

Flight  of  the  Birds,  The.— Kimball. 
Oh,  with  what  pride  I  used.     See   William  Tell  (Tell 

on  his  Native  Hills). — Knowles. 
Oh,  woman  born  first  to  believe  us.     See  Woman. — 

Miller. 
Oh!  woodland   paths   she   ne'er  again   may   see.     See 

Lady  of  La  Garaye,  The. — Norton. 
"Oh   [O— C]    World-God,     give     me     wealth!"    the 

Egyptian  cried.     See  Gifts.- — Lazarus. 
Oh,  would  I  were  a  boy  again.     See  same. — Lemon. 
Oh  would   that   thou   wert   with   me,   my   own.     Se« 

Longing. — Westley. 
Oh  ye  powers!  what  a  roar.     See  Uncle  Sam's  a  Hun- 
dred.— (iVeif  York  Evening  Post.) 
Oh  [O — C]    ye,  who  are  sae    guid    yoursel.     See  Ad- 
dress to  the   Unco   Guid,   or  the  Rigidly  Right- 
eous.— Burns. 
Oh  ye  who  love  to  overhang  the  springs.     See  Among 

the  Trees. — Bryant. 
Oh,  ye  wild  waves,  shoreward   dashing.     See  Song  of 

the  Wild  Storm-waves,  The. — Sinnett. 
Oh !  yes,  I  do — I  know  a  lot  about  'em.     See  On  Ba- 
bies.— Jerome. 
Oh  yes,  I'm  fixed  as  solid,  sir,  as  most  of  folks  you  see. 

See  Ancient  Miner's  Story,  The.- — Carleton. 
Oh,  yes!     Oh  yes !  if  any  maid.     See  Cupid  Arraigned. 

— Lyly. 
Oh,  yes,  we  mean  all  kind  words  that  we  say.     See  We 

Love  but  Few. — Anon. 
Oh,  yes,  we've  be'n  fixin'  up  some  sence  we  sold  that 

piece  o'  groun'.     See  Sary  "Fixes  up"  Things. — 

Paine. 
Oh  [O — C]  yet  we   trust    that  somehow  good.     See 

In  Memoriam  ("Oh,  yet  we  Trust,"  etc.;.— Tenny- 
son. 
Oh,  you  dear,  darling,  sweet  girl,  have  you  brought 

me  the  third  volume?     See  Novel  Readers,  The. 

— Anon. 
Oh,  you  foolish  child ;  to  spend  all  the  money  you  have 

saved  to  buy  your  wedding  outfit.     See  Susette. — 

Fobes. 
Oh,  you      pussy-willow!     Pretty      little      thing.     See 

Pussy-willow. — Anon. 
Oh!  young  Lochinvar  has  come  out  of  the  West.     See 

True  Story  of  Young  Lochinvar  in  Blank  Verse. — 

Fay. 
Oh  [vrr.    O],  young    Lochinvar   is    come    out    of    the 

west.     See  Marmion  (Lochinvar). — Scott. 
Oh,  you're  a  good  brother.     Now  I  will  see  if  my  poem 

is  published.     See  Who  is  the  Poet? — Woodland. 
"Oh,  you're  so  sleepy,  doUie  dear."     See  Doll's  Lulla- 
by, The. — Anon. 
Oh  youth  beware !  that  laurel-rose.     See  Rhododaphne 

fSpell  of  the  Laurel-rose,  The), — Peacock. 
Oho!  this  is  the  tree  I  am  to  fill.     See  Christmas  Tree, 

The. — Anon. 
Oi'U  be  afther  wagerin'  a  considherable  poile  av  money. 

See  Making  Soap.— Anon. 
Ol'   marster  is  a  cur'us  man,  as  sho  as  yo'  is  bom. 
See    Uncle     Mellick    Dines    with    his    Master. — 

Eggleston. 
Old  Adam,  the  carrion  crow.     See  Death's  Jest  Book 

(Wolfram's  Song). — Beddoes. 
Old  [or  Oldt]  jEsop   wrote  a  fable  vonce.     See   Qets 

Dhere. — Adams. 
Old  Ajax  was  a  faithful  dog.     See  Ajax. — Cary. 
Old,  and  abandoned  by  each  venal  friend.     See  Im- 
promptu on  Holland's  Seat  at  Kingsgate. — Gray. 
Old  as  history  is,  and  manifold  as  are  its  tragedies,  I 
doubt   if   any   death.     See   Death   of   Lincoln. — ■ 

Emerson. 
Old  Bergetta  lay  asleep  on  the  doorstep  in  the  sun. 


See  Bergetta's  Misfortunes. — Thaxter. 


793 


Old 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


OKI  Biddy  Brown,  a  nice  old  hen.     See  Nellie's  Easter 

Hggs. — Uichanls. 
Old  Birch  [or   Nick],   who  taught    the  village  school. 

See  Retort,  The. — Morris. 
Old     Bob    White's   a   funny    bird!     See    "Old    Bob 

While."— Kiley.  • 
Old   books  are   best!     With   what   delight.     See  Old 

Books  are  Best.^ — -Chew. 
Old!  call  you  me?     See  Time's  Soliloquy. — Anon. 
Old  Chaucer,   like  the  morning-star.     See    Elegy  on 

Cowley,  The. — Denham. 
Old  Church,  thou  still  art  Catholic — e'en  dream  they 
as  they  may.     See  Old  Church  at  Lismore,  The.— 
Downing. 
Old  coat,  for  some  three  or  four  sea.sons.     <See  "Le 

Dernier  Jour  d'un  Condamni'.  " — Baker. 
Old  Daddy  MugAump.     See  Recitation    for  a  Little 

Child. — Kavanaugh. 
Old  Dan'l  Hanks  he  says  this  town.     See  Village  Ora- 
cle, The. — Lincoln. 
Old  Deakin  Brown  lives  out  f'um  town.     See  Deakin 

Brown's  Way. — Horton. 
Old  Death  proclaims  a  holocaust.     See  Mines  of  Avon- 
dale,  The.^C'ary. 
Old  England's  sons  are  English  yet.     See  Ready,  Ay, 

Ready. — Merivale. 
Old   Farmer  B.  is  a  stingy  man.     See    Best  Cow  in 

Peril,  The.— Anon. 
Old  Farmer  Ray  came  home  one  day.     See  Lesson  in 

Weighing,  A.— Talbot. 
Old  Farmer  Hough  was  grim  and  gruff.     See  Rough 

and  Smooth. — Pollard. 
Old  Farmer  Smith  came  home  in  a  miff.     See  That 

Line  Fence. — Anon. 
Old  P'armer    Winrow    raised    his     head.     See    Rural 

•   Remonstrance,  A.-    (Boston  Courier.) 
Old  Fezziwig  laid  down  his  pen,  and  looked  up  at  the 
clock.     See  Christmas    Carol,    A    (Old   Fezziwig's 
Ball ) . — Dickens. 
Old  Giles,  the  undertaker,  sat.     See  Giles  and  Abra- 
ham.— Coates. 
Old  girl  that  has  borne  me  far  and  fast.   See  Trooper 

to  his  Mare,  The. — Halpine. 
Old  Glory!  say,  who,  by  the  ships  and  the  crew.     See 

Name  of  Old  Glory,  The.— Riley. 
Old  Grandma  Robbins  bent  down  low  and  smoothed 
the  curling  hair.     See  Grandma  Robbins'   Tem- 
perance Mis.sion. — Banks. 
Old  Grimes  is  dead ;  the  good  old  man.     See  Old  Grimes. 

— Greene. 
Old  Hodge  was  sick;  so  very  sick,  in  sooth.     See  Pro- 
visional Forgiveness. — Anon. 
Old    Horace  on   a   summer  afternoon.     See  Classical 

( Viticism. — Richardson. 
Old  Ironsides  at  anchor  lay.     See  Main-truck,  The. — 

Morris. 
Old  Isaac  was,  or  rather  believed  himself  to  be,  a  very 
devout    Christian.       See    He    Wasn't    Ready. — 
Anon. 
Old  ivory  and  yellow  lace.     See  Fan  Painted  by  Wat- 

teau.  A.— B.  B.  W. 
Old  Joe  is  gone,  who  saw   hot  Percy  goad.     See  Big- 
low     Papers,     The    (Revolutionary    Hero,   A). — 
Lowell. 
Old  Judge  Grepson,  a  justice  of  the  peace,  was  never 

known  to  smile.     See  His  Last  Court. — Anon. 
"Old  King  Cole  was  a  jolly  old  soul."     See  Old  King 

Cole. — Hungerford. 
Old    King  Cole   was   a   merry   old   soul.     See   Mother 

Goose,  Tal>.  fr. — Anon. 
Old  lady,  put  your  glasses  on.     See  Old  Photographs. — 

Baker. 
Old  letters!  wipe  away  the  tear.     See  Old  Letters. — 

Ivocker. 
Old  lion  the  Hermitage,  again.     See  To  Andrew  Jack- 
son.— Boker. 
"Old  man.  God  bless  you !  does  your  pipe  taste  sweetly  7" 

See  Nobleman  and  the  Pensioner,  The. — Pfeffel. 
Old  man  never  had   much  to  say.     See  Old  Man  and 

Jim,  The. — Riley. 
"Old  man,  the  charge  is  assaulting  an  officer  of  the 

court."     See  Old  Darky's  Defense.  The.— Anon. 
Old  Man  Whiskery- Whee-Kum- Wheeze.     See  same  — 

Riley. 
Old  Margery  Miller  sat  alone.     See  Margery  Miller. — 

Anon. 
Old    Master    Brown    brought    his    ferule    down.     See 

Old-.school  Punishment. — Anon. 
Old    meerschaum    pipe,    I'll    fondly    wipe.     See    My 

Meerschaum  Pipe. — Mundy. 
Old  Meg  she  was  a  gipsy.     See  Meg  Merrilies. — Keats. 
Old  memories  rush  o'er  my  mind  just  now.     See  Old 
School  Clock,  The.— O'Reilly. 


Old  Menalcas.  on  a  day.     See  Never  too  Late  (Palm- 
er's Ode.  The). — Greene. 
Old  Mistress  Chestnut  once  lived  in  a  burr.     See  Little 

Nut  People. — Nicholson. 
Old  Mose[sl  who  sells  eggs  and  chickens  on  the  streets. 

— See  Counting  Eggs.  -(Texas  Siftings.) 
Old  Mother  Duck  has  hatched  a  brood.     See  Dame 
Duck's     First     Lecture    on     Education. — "Aunt 
Effie." 
Old  Mother  Earth  woke  up  from  her  sleep.     See  Spring 

Song,  A. — (Children's  Friend  and  Kindergarten.) 
Old  Motner  Goose  rode  in  her  caboose.     See  Mother 

Goose's  Dinner  Party. — Richards. 
Old  mother-wit  and  nature  gave.     See  Elegy  on  Cow- 
ley (Abraham  Cowley). — Denham. 
Old  mountains!  dim  and  gray  ye  rise.     See  Mountains, 

The.— Bartol. 
Old  Nathan  was  out  in  the  garden.     See  Puzzle,  A. — 

Eytinge. 
Old  Nature  teems  with  many  things.     See  Tree-tise 

on  Nature,  A. — Levin. 
Old  Nick  for  Birchi,  who  taught  the  village  school. 

See  Retort,  The. — Morris. 
"Old   pard,   come  near  and  raise  my  head."-   See  Jo, 

the  Tramp. — Chipman. 
Old    Parson    Kelly's    fair    young    wife.     See    Parson 

Kelly. — Douglas. 
Old  Peter  led  a  wretched  life.     See  Perils  of  Invisi- 
bility, The.— Gilbert. 
Old  Quizzle  was  a  man  of  great  discerning.     See  Old 

Quizzle. — Anon. 
Old  Reuben  Fisher,  who  lived  in  the  lane.     See  True 

Faith.     Shillaber. 
Old  Ripton  is  a  Yankee  town,  amid  the  fair  green 
mountains.     See    Fourth    of    July    at    Ripton. — 
Hall. 
Old  Rodillard,  a  certain  cat.     See  Council  of  the  Rats, 

The. — Fontaine. 
Old  Satan  lubs  to  come  out  to  de  meetin's  now-a-days. 

See  Uncle  Gabe  on  Church  Matters. — Macon. 
Old  Seth  Peters  once  heard  Daniel  Webster.     See  Seth 
Peters's  Report  of    Daniel    Webster's    Speech. — 
Foss. 
Old  soldiers  true,  ah,  them  all  men  can  trust.     See 

Prophecy,  A. — Thompson. 
Old  Sorrow  I  shall  meet  again.     See  Childhood. — Tabb. 
"Old    Speckle"    rose   from   off   her   nest.     See   "C3id 

Speckle.  "—-Anon. 
Old  stories  tell  how  Hercules.     See  Dragon  of  Wantley, 

The. — Patmore. 
Old  things  need  not  be  therefore  true.     See  Ah!  Yet 

Consider  it  Again. — Clough. 
Old  Thomas  stood  surveying  the  beautifully  laid  dinner- 
table.     See   Thanksgiving    Guest,    The. — Grosve- 
nor. 
Old  Time  and  I  the  other  night.     See  Old  Time  and  I. 

—Lemon. 
Old  Time  has  turned  another  page.     See  Song  for  the 

New  Year. — Cook. 
Old  tree,  how  low  you  seem  to  stoop.     See  Old  Tree, 

The. — Anon. 
Old  Tubal  Cain  was  a  man  of  might.     See  Tubal  Cain. 

— Mackay. 
Old, — we  are  growing  old.     See  Growing  Old. — Lar- 

com. 
Old  Widow  Clare,  in  a  low-backed  chair.     See  Land- 
lord's Visit,  The. — Lockwood. 
Old    Winchester   and    "Little    Phil,"    our   Sheridan's 
glorious    ride.     See    How    Congress    Fought    for 
Sheridan. — Banks. 
Old  wine  to  drink!     See  Give  Me  the  Old. — Messinger. 
Old  Winter,   Esquire,   is  now  on   his  way.     See  Old 

Winter,  Esquire. — Lynes. 
Old  winter  is  a  sturdy  one.     See  Winter. — Anon. 
Old  Winter  sad,  in  snow  yclad.     See    Old  Winter. — 

Noel. 
Oldt  [or  oldl  ^sop  wrote  a  fable,  vonce.     See  Gets 

Dhere. — Adams. 
Ole    "Cross-roads     Brown,"    he    give    a     bee.      See 

Huskin',  The. — McSparran. 
Ole  man,  what  day  de  monf  am  dis?     See  Ginger  and 

the  Preacher.— Anon. 
Oliver  Trvist  who  had  some  very  Hard  Times  in  th» 
Battle  of  Life.     See  Catalogue  of  Dickens'  Works. 
— Anon. 
Olympian  sunlight  is  the  Poet's  sphere.     See  Crystal, 

"The. — Coan. 
Omnibus  nunc  rite  et  feliciter  peractis.     See  Perduret 

atque  Valeat. — Anon. 
On  a  bank  with  roses  shaded.     See  Queen  Oriana's 

Dream. — Lamb. 
On   a   bleak    ridge,   from   whose   granite   edges.     See 
Mother  Margery. — Burleigh. 


794 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


On 


On  a  board  of  bright  mosiac  wrought  in  many  a  quaint 

design.     See  College  "Oil  Cans." — McGuire. 
On  a  brick  by  the  curb-.stone  a  little  peal  lay.     See 

Banana. — That  cher. 
On  a  bright  June  morning,  1759,  Wolfe,  sailing  proudly 

up  the  St.   Lawrence.     See  Wolfe  at   Quebec. — 

Budlong. 
On  a  bright  November  afternoon,  when  the  autumn 

leaves  were  tinged.     See  Lincoln  at  Gettysburg.— 

Carr. 
On  a  certain  mild    March    evening,  A.D.,   1864,    the 

Ducklow    kitchen.     See    Coupon    Bonds. — Trow- 
bridge. 
On  a  Christmas  morning,  many  years  ago,  I  stood  upon 

the  deck  of  a  merchantman.     See  Piece  of  Bunt- 
ing, A. — Palmer. 
On  a  dark  November  morning.     See  Praying  for  Shoes. 

— Hayne. 
On  a  day,  alack  the  day!     See  Love's  Labour's  Lost 

(Love's  Perjuries). — -Shakespeare. 
On  a  desolate,  storm-beaten  island.     See  Parable  of 

the  Wrecks,  The. — Stoddard. 
On  a  far  shore  my  land  swam  far  from  my  sight.     See 

same. — Anon. 
On  a  green  slope,  most  fragrant  with  the  spring.     See 

My  Rose. — Hawthorne. 
On  a  hill  that  graced  the  plain.     See  Thirsis'  Praise  of 

his  Mistress. — Browne. 
On  a  hill  there  grows  a  flower.     See  Pastoral,  A. — 

— Breton. 
On  a  log  behind  the  pigsty  of  a  modest  little  farm.     See 

Crushed  Hero,  A. — Lincoln. 
On  a  lone  barren  isle,  where  the  wild  roaring  billow. 

See  Grave  of  Bonaparte,  The. — Heath. 
On   apine  woodshed,  in  an  alley  dark.    See  Catastrophe, 

A. — Anon. 
On  a  poet's  lips  I  slept.     See  Prometheus  Unbound 

(Poet's  World,  The).— Shelley. 
On  a  starr'd  night  Prince  Lucifer  uprose.     See  Luci- 
fer in  Starlight. — -Meredith. 
On  a  stone  by  the  wayside,  half-naked  and  cold.     See 

Tramp,  The.— M'Caig. 
On  a  sultry  April  evening,  more  than  twenty  years 

ago.     See  Anne  Pickens. — Hall. 
On    a    summer   evening,    Mr.    Ellis    Henderson.     See 

Twilight  Idyl,  A.— Burdette. 
On  a  time  the  amorous  Silvy.     See  Wakening,  The. — 

Anon. 
On  a  weary  slope  of  Apennine.     See  Brushwood. — 

Read. 
On  a  window-sill  one  morning  still.     See  Four  Flies, 

The. — Pierson. 
On  a  winter's  night. — See  Greedy  Fox,  The. — Anon. 
On  account  of  Conn's  fondness  for  the  "juice  of  sod. " 

See    Shaugraun,  The  (Tailor's  Thimble,  The).— 

Boucicault. 
On  Atric's  coast  at  morning  dawn.     See  African  Moth- 
er, The. — Anon. 
On  afternoons,  when  baby  boy  has  had  a  splendid  nap. 

See  "Booh! "—Field. 
On  Alpine  heights  the  love  of  God  is  shed.     See  Alpine 

Hei  ghts. — Krummacher. 
On  an  important  occasion  in  the  life  of  the  Master. 

See  Better  Part,  The. ^Washington. 
On    an    olive-crested    steep.     See     Virgil's    Tomb. — - 

Rogers.  , 
On  Bellosguardo,  when  the  year  was  young.     See  To 

Vernon  Lee. — Levy. 
On  Calais  Sands  the  gray  began.     See  On  Calais  Sands. 

— ^Lang. 
On     California's     verdant     slopes.     See     Portiere. — 

Sabine. 
On  came  the  whirlwind — like  the  last.      See  Field  of 

Waterloo,  The  (Charge  at  Waterloo,  The).— Scott. 
On  Carrigdhoun   the  heath  is  brown.     See  Lament  of 

the  Irish  Maiden,  The. — Lane. 
On  Christmas  day  in  seventy  six.     See  Battle  of  Tren- 
ton.— Anon. 
On  Christmas  day,  when  fires  were  lit.     See  December. 

— Anon. 
On  Christmas  eve  the  bells  were  rung.     See  Marmion 

(Christmas  in  the  Olden  Time). — Scott. 
On  de  night  befo'  Thanks-gib-bin,  oh,  I  tells  yo'  things 

looked  blue.     See  Thanksgiving  Turkey. — Havez. 
On  deck  beneath  the  awning.     See  White  Squall,  The. 

— Thackeray. 
On  dun  Cithseron's  ridge  appears.     See  Siege  of  Cor- 
inth, The.— Byron. 
On    dusty   shelves   in    seried    rows   they   stand.     See 

Books  I  Ought  to  Read,  The. — Brown. 
"On  earth  be  peace,  be  peace,"  the  angels  sang.     See 

Coronation.  The.— Main  waring. 


On  either  side  a  window.     See  Two. — Field. 

On  either  side  the  river  lie.     See  Lady  of  Shalott,  The. 

— Tennyson. 
On  entering  the  room  we  find  more  than  two  hundred 

noblemen   and   gentlemen.     See  Charity   Dinner, 

The.— Mosely. 
On  Euripides'  plays  we  debated.     See  Blind  Student, 

The. — Armstrong. 
On  every  side  of  me  I  see  causes  at  work.     See  False 

Coloring  Lent  to  War. — Chalmers. 
On    foot    they   came,    chieftain    and    men   alike.     See 

Roderick. — Southey. 
On  Friday  morning  as  we  set  sail.     See  Mermaid,  The. 

— Anon. 
On  going  forth  last  night,  a  friend  to  see.     See  Poetry 

on  an  Improved  Principle. — (Punch.) 
"On  good  and  bad  an  equal  value  sets."     See  Ass  and 

his  Master,  The. — Yriarte. 
On  gossamer  nights  when  the  moon  is  low.     See  Fairy 

Thrall,  The.— Byron. 
On  Hallow-Mass  eve,  ere  you  boune  ye  to  rest.     See 

St.  Swithin's  Chair. — Scott. 
On  Haverhill's  pleasant  hills  there  played.     See  Story 

of  the  Barefoot  Boy,  The. — Trowbridge. 
On  Helen's  heart  the  day  were  night!     See  First  Kiss. 

The.— Gale. 
On  Hellespont,  guilty  of  true  love's  blood.     See  Hero 

and  Leander. — -Marlowe. 
On  her  lap  gran'ma  did  hoi'  me.     See  Long  Ago. — 

Baer. 
On  her  white  breast  a  sparkling  cross  she  wore.     See 

Rape  of  the  Lock,  The  (Belinda). — Pope. 
On  his  bold  visage  middle  age.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake, 

The.— Scott. 
On   his  morning  rounds    the    master.       See    Incident 

(Characteristic    of    a    Favourite    Dog). — Words- 
worth. 
On  history's  crimson  pages,  high  up  on  the  roll  of  fame. 

See  Flag  that  has  never  Known    Defeat,  The. — 

Benjamin  and  Sutton 
On  hoary  Conway's  battlemented  height.     See  With 

a  Rose  from  (3onway  Castle. — Dorr. 
On  in  the  snow — on  in  the  snow.      See  Faithful  unto 

Death. — Harrison. 
On  its  straight  iron  pathway  the  long  train  was  rush- 
ing.    See  Beside  the  Railway  Track. — Anon. 
On    Kingston    Bridge    the    starlight    shone.     See    On 

Kingston  Bridge. — Cortissoz. 
On  leaving  Fagin's,  without  one  pause  or  moment's 

consideration.        See     Oliver     Twist    (Murder    of 

Nancy,  The). — Dickens. 
On  Leven's  banks,  while  free  to  rove.     See  Ode  to 

Leven  Water. — Smollett. 
"On  Linden  when  the  sun  was  low."     See  Critics,  The. 

— Graham. 
On  Linden,  when  the  sun  was  low.     See  Hohenlinden. 

— Campbell. 
"On  Linden,  when  the  sun  was  low."     See  Medley,  A. 

— Irving. 
On  long,  serene  midsummer  days.     See  Wild  Roses. — 

Fawcett. 
On  man,  on  nature,  and  on  human  life.     See  Excur- 
sion, The  (Mind's  Eye,  The). — Wordsworth. 
On  March  7th,   June,   July.     See   Nones  and  Ides. — 

Anon. 
On  me  and  on  my  children  I     See  Cromwell  and  Hen- 
rietta Maria. — Wills. 
On  me  he  shall  ne'er  put  a  ring.     See  Feminine  Arith- 
metic.— Halpine. 
On  Monday  I  wash  my  dollie's  clothes.     See  My  Week. 

— Anon. 
On  Monday,  the  Fourteenth  of  October,  1793,  a  cause 

is  pending  in  the  Palais  de  Justice.     See  French 

Revolution,  The  (Marie  Antoinette). — Carlyle. 
On  Monday  we  will  wash  our  clothes.     See  Week  of 

Work,  A. — Anon. 
On  mountains  cold  and  bold  and  high.     See  Whistling 

Marmot,  The. — Garland. 
On  my  cornice  linger  the  ripe,  black  grapes  ungath- 

ered.     See  Third  of  November,  The. — Bryant. 
On  my  first  like  a  feather  the  proud  ship  is  tossed. 

See  Charade. — Anon. 
On  my  study  shelves  they  stand.     See  My  Books. — 

Johnson. 
On  my  word,  Mr.  jCaudle,  I  think  it  a  waste  of  time. 

See  Mr.  Caudle  Wants  a  Latch-key. — Jerrold. 
On  New  Yeah's  day  resolbe  straightway  to  minimize 

yo'  ills.     See  Sambo's  New  Year  Sermon. — Jones. 
On,  on,  my  brown  Arab,  away,  away!     See  Arab,  The. 

— Calverley. 
On  other  fields  and  other  scenes  the  morn.     See  Burnt 

Lands. — Roberts. 


795 


On 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


On  our    border,    looking    westward.     See    Canada. — 

Anon. 
On  our  lone  pathway  bloomed  no  earthly  hopes.     See 

Sonnet:  "On  oiir  lone."  etc. — Whitman. 
On  parents'    knees,    a    naked,    new-born    child.     iSee 

Baby,  The. — JontB. 
On  Paris,  when  the  sun  was  low.     See  Battle  of  the 

Boulevard,  The. — Aytoun. 
On  pKJttery  my  love  was  pleased  to  paint.     See  Fiery 

Ordeal,  The. — Anon. 
On  pride  of  wit,  when  high  desire  of  fame.     See  To  His 

Fair  Idea. — Drayton. 
On  Richmond   Hill   there   lives  a   lass.     See   Lass  of 

Richmond  Hill,  The.— Upton. 
On  Saturdays  she    walks    abroad.     See    High  School 

Girl,  The.     (.Merchant  and  Manufacturer.) 
On  scent  of  game  from  town  to  town  ne  flew.     See  On 

a  Traveling  Speculator. — Freneau. 
On  shores  of  Sicily  a  shape  of  Greece!     See  Shepherd 

Maiden,  A. — Lefroy. 
On  softest   pillows   my   dim   eyes   unclose.     See   Vita 

Benefica.— Rollins. 
On  some  of  the  Western  roads  they  attach  a  passenger 

car  to  a  freight  train.     See  Consolation  Even  on  a 

Mixed  Train. — {Traveler's  Magazine.) 
On,  sons  of  mighty  stature.     See  Gracie  of  Alabama. 

— Ticknor. 
On  spinet  old,  Clarissa  plays.     See  Picture,  A. — Reed. 
On  sunny  Capri's  mountain   heights.     See  Ballad  of 

Capri,  A. — (Harper's  Weekly.) 
On  sunny  slope  and  beechen  swell.     See  Burial  of  the 

Minnisink. — Longfellow. 
On  sure  foundations  let  your  fabric  rise.     See  Essay 

on  Translated  Verse,  The.— Roscommon. 
On  that   ancient   seat.     See  Sasso   di   Dante,   The. — 

Rogers. 
On  that  mo.st  eventful  morning  of  the  world's  history. 

See   Presentation   Ajddress   to   a   Foreman   by   a 

Workman,  A. — Anon. 
On  the  ^gean  shore  a  city  stands.     See  Athens. — 

Milton. 
On  the  Bank  of  the  Rhine,  on  the  site  of  the  ancient 

Roman  camp.     See  Book  and  the  Building,  The. 

— Storrs. 
On  the  banks  of  the  Xenil  a  dark  Spanish  maiden. 

See  Pumpkin,  The.— Whittier. 
On  the  beach  near  a  summer  hotel,  up  in  Maine.     See 

Sisterly  Scheme,  A. — Bunner. 
On  the  bloody  field  of  Monmouth  flashed  the  guns  of 

Greene  and  Wayne.     See  Captain  Molly  at  Mon- 
mouth.— Collins. 
On  the    bluff    of    the    Little     Big-Horn.     See    Miles 

Keogh's  Horse. — Hay. 
On  the  bosom  of  a  river.     See  In  Memoriam. — Prentice. 
On  the  braes  around  Glenfinnan.     See  Return  to  Na- 
ture.— Shairp. 
On  the   broad   Manila   Bay.     See   In   Manila   Bay. — 

Wadsworth. 
On  the  Coast  of  Coromandel.     See  Yonghy-Bonghy  - 

Bo.  The.— Lear. 
On  the  crimson  cloth.     See  Only  an  Insect. — Allen. 
On  the  crimson  edge  of  the  eve.     See  Song  of  the 

Nightingale,  The. — Scollard. 
On  the   cross-beam   under  the   Old   South   bell.     See 

Belfry  Pigeon.  The.— Willis. 
On  the  deck  of  a  home-bound  steamer. ,   See  Saved  by 

a  Hymn. — Anon. 
On  the  deck  of  a  steamer  that  came  up  the  Bay.     See 

Foreign  Views  of  the  Statue. — Brooks. 
On  the  deck  of  Patrick  Lynch's  boat  I  sat  in  woful 

plight.     See  County  of  Mayo,  The. — Fox. 
On  the  deck   stood  Columbus;  the  ocean's  expanse. 

See  Three  Days  in  the  Life  of  Columbus. — Dela- 

vigne. 
On  the  eighth  day  of  March  it  was,  some  people  say. 

See  Birth  of  St.  Patrick,  The. — Lover. 
On  the  eve  of  St.  Laurence,  at  the  cross  of  Glenfad. 

See  Battle  of  Ardnocher,  The. — Geoghegan. 
On  the  field  of  Balaklava.     See  Little  Grenadier,  The. 

— (Harper's  Young  People.) 
On  the  fifth  day  of  the  moon,  which,  according  to  the 

custom   of   my  forefathers.     See   Spectator,  The 

(Vision  of  Mirza,  The^ — Addison. 
On  the  first  day  of  March  it  was,  that  Tommy  Taft  had 

been  unquietly  sleeping.     See  Norwood  (Tommy 

Taft).— Beecher. 
On  the  flowery  bank  of  a  purling  stream.     See  Ships 

at  Sea. — Wellington. 
On  the  fourth  day  of  July,  1776.     See  Eulogium  on 

Henry  Clay. — Lincoln. 
On  the  Fourth  of  July,  1776,  the  representatives  of  the 

United  States  of  America.     See  Addition  to  the 

Capitol,  The  (Fourth  of  July,  The). — Webster. 


On  the  girdling  circuit.     See  Hobson  and   his  Men.— 

Bums. 
On  the  grave  of  Parson  Williams.     See  How  the  Par- 
son Broke  the  Sabbath. — Anon. 
On  the  great  day  of  my  life.     See  Spectre  of  the  Past. 

— O'Shaughnessy. 
On  the  green  banks  of  Shannon  when  Sheelah  was 

nigh.     See  Poor  Dog  Tray. — Campbell. 
On  the  green  hill  top.     See  Grandame,  The. — Lamb. 
On  the  ground  lived  a  hen.     See  Envious  Wren,  The. 

—Gary. 
On  the  heights  of  Killiecrankie.     See  Burial  March  of 

Dundee,  The. — Aytoun. 
On  the  helpless  Flemish  village.     See  How  the  Ransom 

Was  Paid. — Anon. 
On  the  hills  of  Porto  Rico.     See  Flag,  The.     ("Life.") 
On  the  isle  of  Penikese.     See  Player  of  Agassiz,  The. — 

Whittier. 
On  the  limb  of  an  oak  sat  a  cunning  old  crow.     See 

Cunning  Old  Crow,  The. —Anon. 
On  the  limb  of  an  oak  sat  a  jolly  old  crow.     See  Jolly 

Old  Crow,  The.— Anon. 
On  the   liquor  vender   stern   Death   had   called.     See 

Closing  Scene,  The. — Anon. 
On  the  lofty  brow  of  Monticello,  under  a  greeri  old  oak. 

See  Daniel  O'Connell's  Epitaph. — Seward. 
On  the    lofty    mountain,    elevate    the    banner.     See 

Isaiah  (Despoiler  Doomed,  The). — Bible. 
On  the  lone  deserted  cross-road.     See  Robber,  The. — 

Anon. 
On  the  lowest  round  of  the  ladder  I  firmly  planted  my 

feet.     See  Helping  Hand,  A. — Higginson. 
On  the  morning  of  (Dctober  7,   at   ten  o'clock.     See 

Burgoyne's  Surrender. — Curtis. 
On  the  morning  of  Saturday,  July  2,  President  Garfield. 

See  Memorial  Address  on   the   Life  and  Character 

of  James  A.  Garfield  (Death  of  Garfield,  The).-*- 

Blaine. 
On  the  morning  of  the  31st  of  May,  the  families  of  the 

London  citizens.     See  History  of  England  (Corona- 
tion of  Anne  Boleyn,  The). — Froude. 
On  the  morning  of  the  trial  of  the  great  action  for 

breach  of   promise.     See    Pickwick    Papers,    The 

(Bardell  and  Pickwick). — Dickens. 
On  the    morning   of    Waterloo,    then.    Napoleon    was 

cheerful.     See  Les  Mis>5rables  (Battle  of  Waterloo, 

The).— Hugo. 
On  the  mountain's  side  th'  battle  raged,  there  was  no 

stop  nor  stay.     See  Battle  of  Dundee,  The. — Anon. 
On  the  night  of  the  earthquake  shock  I  was  sitting  with 

Millie.     See  Earthquake  in  Egypt,  The. — Anon. 
On  the  ninth  of  January  I  received  by  the  evening 

delivery.     See  Strange  case  of  Dr.  Jekyll  and  Mr. 

Hyde,  The  (Dr.  Lanyon's  Story). — Stevenson. 
On  the  noon  of  the  14th  of  November.     See  Barbara  S. 

— Lamb. 
On  the  plains  of  Kalevala.     SeeKalevala,  The  (Legend 

of  Aino,  The). 
On  the  plains  of  New  Jersey,  one  hot  summer  day. 

See  How  the  Yankee  Answered  the  Englishmen. — - 

Anon. 
On  the  Potomac's  peaceful  breast.     See  True  Incident 

of  the  War,  A. — Irwin. 
On  the  ramparts  bare  stood  the  lady  fair.     See  same. 

— Anon. 
"On  the  right  by  file  into  line!     Forward!     Charge 

bayonets!"     See  Quaker  Boy,  The. — ^Jones. 
On  the  right  of  the  battalion  a  grenadier  of  France. 

See  Dead  Grenadier,  The. — Taylor. 
On  the  road  from  Springfield  to  Boston.     See  Railroad 

Car  Scene,  A. — Anon. 
On  the  road  once  more,  with  Lebanon  fading  away  in 

the  distance.     See  Brakeman  at  Church,  The.— 

Burdette. 
On  the    road,    the    lonely    road.     See    Stab,    The. — 

Harney. 
On  the  Sabbath-day,  through  the  church-yard  old  and 

gray.     See  Barbara. — Smith, 
e  sea  and  at  the  Hogue,  sixteen  hundred  ninety- 
two.     See  Hervo  Riel. — Browning. 

On  the  snowy  branch  of  the  holly-bush.  See  Robin's 
New  Year. — Anon. 

On  the  Sunday  in  question  Father  Phil  intended  de- 
livering an  address.  See  Father  Phil's  Collection. 
— Lover. 

On  the  sunny  hillside  sleeping.  See  Beneath  the  Flag. 
— (Cleveland  Plain  Dealer.) 

On  the  sward  at  the  cliff-top.  See  Empedocles  on 
Etna  (Callicles'  Song  of  Apollo). — Arnold. 

On  the  30th  of  April,  1864,  President  Lincoln  wrote  to 
Lieutenant-General  ^Grant.  See  Major-General 
John  Sedgwick  (General  Grant,  the  Silent  Captain)! 
— Curtis. 


796 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Once 


On  the   tossing   sea,    the    heaving   sea.     See   Men   of 

Gloucester,  The. — Richards. 
On  the   warm   and   perfumed   dark.     See   Fireflies. — 

Powers. 
On  the  wealthy  Larica's  worn  features  I  wrote.     See 

Equivocal . — Johnson . 
On  the  Wednesday  after  Trinity  Sunday  in  1431.    See 

•Joan  of  Arc  (Martyrdom  of  Joan  of   Arc,   The). — 

De  Quincey. 
On  the  white  head  of  the  old  man  divine.     See  St. 

Simeon  Stylites. — -Nencione. 
On  the  whole,  there  are  much  sadder  ages  than  the 

early  ones.  <See  Modern  Painters  ("On  the  whole," 

etc.). — Ruskin. 
On  the  whole,  with  few  exceptions  which  have  turned 

out     disastrously.     See    Ancestral     Ideals. — Van 

Dyke. 
On  the    wide    lawn    the    snow    lay    deep.      See    Red 

Riding  Hood. — Whittier. 
On  the  wide  level  of  a  mountain's  head.     See  Time, 

Real  and  Imaginary. — Coleridge. 
On  the    wide    veranda    white.     See    Corn-song,    A. — 

Dunbar. 
On  the  wind  of  January.     See  Year's  Windfalls,  A. — 

Rossetti. 
On  this  day  Browning  died.     See  Twelfth  of  Decem- 
ber, The.— Gilder. 
On  this    fair    valley's    grassy    breast.     See    Battle    of 

Bennington,  The. — Bryant. 
On  this  great  memorial  day  of  the  American  nation. 

See  Washington's  Birthday  Address. — Anon. 
On  this    night    we    made    our    camp.     See    Panther's 

Choice,  The. —  (Chicago  Times.) 
On  this  side  and  on  that  men  see  their  friends.     See 

Grave.  The  (Omnes  Eodem  Cogimur). — Blair. 
On  this  solemn  and  joyful  day,  we  again  lift  to  the 

breeze  our  father's  flag!     See  Raising  the  Flag  at 

Sumter. — Beecher. 
On  this  wondrous  sea.     See  Eternity. — Dickinson. 
On  those    great    waters    now    I    am.     See    Hallelujah 

(When  We  Are  upon  the  Seas). — Wither. 
On  three  notable  occasions  and  by  three  remarkable 

speeches.    See  Henry  W.  Grady  as  an  Orator. — Lee. 
On  through  the  Libyan  sand.'    See  Gordon. — Myers. 
On  thy  fair  bosom,  silver  lake.     See  To  Seneca  Lake. 

— Percival. 
On  tidings  of  the  wreck  of  Vrishni's  race.     See  Maha- 

Bharata,  The  (Great  Journey,  The). — Arnold. 
On  to  Freedom!     On  to  Freedom!     See  On  to  Free- 
dom.— Duganne. 
"On  to  Richmond!"  came  the  unthinking  cry.     See 

Army  of  the  Potomac,  The. — Depew. 
On  to    the    goal    the    impatient    legions    come!     See 

Austerlitz. — Saltus. 
On  to  the  sacred  hill.  See  Paradise  Lost  ("On  to  the," 

etc.). — Milton. 
On  Trinitye  Mondaye  in  the  morne.     See  King  Ar- 
thur's Death. — Anon. 
On  Tuesday,  April  18,  1775,  Gage,  the  royal  governor. 

See  Centennial  Celebration  of  Concord  Fight  (Paul 

Revere's  Ride). — Curtis. 
On  Vorska's  glittering  waves.     See  Battle  of  Pultowa, 

The.— Southey. 
On  wan  dark  night  on  Lac   St.  Pierre.     See  Wreck  of 

the  "Julie  Plante,"  The. — Drummond. 
On  what  foundation  stands  the  warrior's  pride.     See 

Vanity  of   Human  Wishe.«,   The  (Charles  XIL  of 

Sweden). — Johnson. 
On  what  ground  is  it  asserted  that  Csesar  secured  the 

greatness    of    his    country?     See    Passing    of    the 

Rubicon,  The. — Knowles. 
On  what  side  soever  I  turn  my  eyes.     See    History    of 

Rome     Hannibal  to  the   Carthaginian   Army). — 

Livy. 
On  wings  of  glory,  swift  as  light.     See  Our  Navy. — 

Anon. 
On  wings  of  lightning  the  message  came.     See  Bells  of 

Brookline,  The. — Downing. 
On  with  the  dance!  let  joy  be  unconfined.     See  Childe 

Harold's     Pilgrimage     (Battle    of    Waterloo). — 

Byron. 
On  woodlands  ruddy  with  autumn.     See  My  Autumn 

Walk.— Bryant. 
On  yonder  hill  a  castle  standes.     See  Child  of  EUe.  The. 

— Anon. 
On  your   bare   rocks,    O   barren   moors.     See   Barren 

Moors,  The. — Channing. 
Once  a  child  is  born,  one  of  his  inalienable  rights.    See 

Children's  Rights. — Riggs. 
Once  a  funny  old  man  down  in  Wheeling.     See  Funny 

Old  Man,  A. — Denton. 
Once   a   funny   old   woman   in    Waring.     See   "There 

Yet." — Denton. 


Once  a  learned  Boston  maiden  was  besought  for  one 

sweet  kiss.     See  Her  Reason. — Sawyer. 
Once  a  little  baby  lay.     See  First  Christmas,  The. — 

Anon. 
Once  a  little  boy.  Jack,  was,  oh!  ever  so  good.     See 

Sad  Story  of  a  Little  Boy  that  Cried,  The.— (S<. 

Nicholas.) 
Once  a  little  lady  dressed  in  black  and  red.     See  Poor 

Little  Mother,  A. — Branch. 
Once  a  little  Pine-tree.     See  Little  Pine-tree,  The. — 

Bumstead. 
Once,  a  little  while  ago,  'twas  so  warm  and  still.     See 

Mystery,  A. — Hoyt. 
Once,   a   long   time   ago,   so   good   stories  begin.     See 

Landlord  of  "The  Blue  Hen." — Cary. 
Once,   a  maid  with  golden   tresses.     See  Mp-ta-ta. — 

Anon. 
Once  a  mighty  potentate.     See  "As  it  is  in  Heaven." 

— Jones. 
Once  a  poet  wrote  a  sonnet.     See  Which? — Anon. 
Once  a  shining   penny.     See   Bennie's   Penny. — Rich- 
ards. 
Once  a  trap  was  baited.     See  They  Didn't  Think. — 

Cary. 
Once   again   the   flowers   we   gather  on   these   sacred 

ntounds   to   lay.     See   Flowers   for  the   Brave- 
Chapman. 
Once  again  we  are  gathered  here.     See  Vacation  Hymn, 

A. — Anon. 
"Once  as  our  Saviour  walked  with  men  below."     See 

same. — Anon. 
Once  at  eve  a  soldier  brave.     See  La  Tour  d'Auvergne. 

■ — Buon. 
"Once   at   midnight,    just   as   Arktos."     See  sam.e. — 

Anacreon. 
Once  at   the  Angelus.     See   "Good    Night,    Babette" 

(Angelus  Song). — Dobson. 
Once  before,  this  self-same  air.     See  Once  Before. — 

Dodge. 
Once — but    no    matter    when.     See    Chronicle,    A. — 

Anon. 
Once,  by  the  edge  of  a  pleasant  pool.     See  Croaker, 

The. — Lincoln. 
Once  came  to  our  fields  a  pair  of  birds  that  had  never 

built  a  nest  nor  seen    a    winter.       See    Norwood 

(Coming  and  Going). — Beecher. 
Once  did  she  hold  the  gorgeous  East  in  fee.     See  On 

the     Extinction    of    the    Venetian     Republic. — 

Wordsworth. 
Once  Fate,  with  an  ironic  jest.     See  Jest  of  Fate,  The. 

.    — Foss. 
Once,  from  the  parapet  of  gems  and  glow.     See  Flight 

from  Glory,  A. — Lee-Hamilton, 
Once    from   the   town   a   starling   flew.     See   same. — • 

(St.  Nicholas. ) 
Once  git  a   smell  o'  musk  into   a   draw.     See    Biglow 

Papers,    The    (Sunthin'    in     a     Pastoral  Line). — 

Lowell. 
Once  he  sang  of  summer.     See  Snow   Flake,   A. — Al- 

drich. 
Once    hoary    Winter    chanced — alas.      See    Why    ye 

Blossome  Cometh  before  ye  Leafe. — Herford. 
Once  I  knew  a  fine  song.     See  'Scaped. — Crane. 
Once  I  knew  a  little  girl.     See  Loveliness. — ^Lacey. 
Once — I  remember  well  the  day.     See  Enthusiast,  The: 

An  Ode. — Whitehead. 
Once  I   sat  on  a  crimson  throne.     See  Waif. — Mac- 
Donald. 
Once  I  saw  mountains  angry.     See  Ancestry. — Crane. 
Once  I  was  quite  a  singer.     See  Horse  Business,  The. — 

Thatcher. 
Once  in  a  barn  theatric,  deep  in  Kent.     See  Theatrical 

Curiosity,  A. — (Cruikshank's  Om.nibiis.) 
Once,  in  a  good  old  college  town.     See  Cow  and  the 

Bishop,  The. — Townsend. 
Once  in  a  golden  hour.     See  Flower,  The. — Tennyson. 
Once   in   a   merry  tavern   in    Brabrant.     See  Gasper 

Schnapp's  Exploit. — Anon. 
Once  in  a  race   I   stood  well  front.     See  Charity. — 

Lanigan. 
Once,  in  a  rough,  wild  country.     See  Wise  Fairy,  The. 

— Cary. 
Once  in  an  eastern  palace  wide.     See  First  Tangle, 

The. — Biirnham. 
Once  in  his  shop  a  workman  wrought.     See  Camel's 

Nose,  The. — Sigourney. 
Once   in   old   Rome,   long   centuries   ago.     See   Samt 

Cecilia. — Morris. 
Once   in    Persia    ruled    [or   reigned]   a    king.     See  All 

Things  Shall  Pass  Away. — Tilton. 
Once  in  Royal  David's  city.     See  Christmas. — Anon. 
I    Once  in  the  chase,  this  monarch  drcning.     See  Apple- 
dumplings  and  George  the  Third,  The. — Wolcott. 


797 


Once 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIOXS 


Once   in   the   days  of  old.     <Se«  Sea's   Love,   The. — 

Weatherly. 
Once,  in  the  flight  of  aRes  past.     See  Common  Lot,  The. 

— Montgomery. 
Once  in  the  icy  wintef  weather.     See  Boy  and  Girl. — 

Bradley. 
Once  in  the  leafy  prime  of  Spring.     See  Agassiz. — 

Fields. 
Once  in  the  morning  when  the  breeze.     See  Fairies' 

Dance,  The. — Sherman. 
Once  into  a  quiet  village.     See  Pega.sus  in  Pound. — 

Ix)ngfellow. 
Once  it  smiled  a  silent  dell.     See  Valley  of  Unrest,  The. 

—Foe. 
Once  more  at  Church  is  seized  with  sudden  fear.     See 

WiclifTe. — Wordsworth. 
Once   more,   Cesario.     See   Twelfth    Night;  or.  What 

You   Will    (Viola    Disguised   and   the     Duke). — 

Shakespeare. 
Once  more,  once  more,  my  Mary  dear.     See  Memories. 

— Prentice. 
Once  more  the  Heavenly  Power.     See  Early  Spring. 

— Tennyson. 
Once  more  the  liberal  year  laughs  out.     See  Thanks- 
giving Ode. — Whittier. 
Once  more  the  robin  flutes  in  glee.     See  Once  More. — 

Hodgins. 
Once  more  through  God's  high  will,  and  grace.     See 

Year  of  Sorrow    Ireland,  1849,  The.— De  Vere. 
Once  more  to  distant  ages  of  the  world.     See  Excur- 
sion,   The    (Among    the    Mountains).  —  Words- 
worth. 
Once  more  unto  the  breach,  dear  friends,  once  more. 

See    King    Henry   V.    (Henry  V.  at   Harfleur). — 

Shakespeare. 
Once  more  we  gather  under  skies  of  May.     See  O  Mar- 
tyrs Numberless. — Anon. 
Once   more   we   stand   with   half-reluctant   feet.     See 

Upon  the  Theshold.— G.  E. 
Once    my    love    and    I    together.     See    Lemonade. — 

Chandler. 
Once  on   a  charger  there   was   laid.     See  Salome. — 

Lamb. 
Once,   on   a   golden    afternoon.     See   Bobolink,    The. 

— (The  Aldine.) 
Once  on  a  time,  a  certain  man  was  found.     See  Pond, 

The. — Byrom. 
Once  on  a  time  a  little  leaf  was  heard  to  sigh  and  cry. 

See  Norwood  (Little  Leaf,  The). — Beecher. 
Once  on  a  time,  a  monarch  tired  with  whooping,  whip- 
ping and  spurring.     See  Apple-dumplings  and  a 

King,  The.— Wolcott. 
Once  on  a  time  a  rustic  dame.     See  Milkmaid,  The. — 

Lloyd. 
Once  on  a  time,  a  son  and  sire,  we're  told.     See  Gre- 
cian Fable,  A. — Anon. 
Once  on  a  time  an  artful  Ant.     See  Artful  Ant,  The. — 

Herford. 
"Once  on  a  time."  as  fairy  tales  begin.     See  Relentless 

Tyrant,  A. — Anon. 
Once  on  a  time  Bo-Peep  and  Boy  Blue.     See  Bo-Peep's 

Party. — Anon. 
Once  on  a  time,  in  a  queer  little  town.     See  Christmas 

Eve  Adventure,  A. — M.  M. 
Once  on  a  time,  in  sunshine  weather.     See  Truth  and 

Falsehood. — Prior. 
Once  on  a  time.  Love,  Death,  and  Reputation.     See 

Love,  Death,  and  Reputation.— Lamb. 
Once,  on  a  time,  some  little  hands.     See  Garden  on  the 

Sands,  The. — Anon. 
Once  on  a  time,  some  years  ago.     See  Wax  Work. — 

Anon. 
Once  on  a  time,  the  nightingale,  whose  singing.     See 

Critic,  The. — Sargent. 
Once  on  a  time  there  lived  a  king.    See  True  Happiness. 

— Anon. 
Once  on  a  time  there  was  a  knight.     See  Ye  Olde  Tyme 

Tayle  of  ye  Knighte,  ye  Yeomanne  and  ye  Faire 

Damosel . — Bennett . 
Once  on  a  time  three  Pilgrims  true.     See  Cock  and 

Hen  Story,  A. — Southey. 
Once  on  a  time,  'tis  said.     See  Remedy  as  Bad  as  the 

Disease,  The. — Anon. 
Once  on  a  time  two  little  boys.     See  What  Echo  Said. — 

Anon. 
Once    on    a    time,    when    jewels    flashed.     See   Anne 

Hathaway. — Anon. 
Once  on  a  winter^  night — the.se  things  were  written. 

See  Adolphus,  Duke  of  Guelders. — Meredith. 
Once  on  my  mother's  breast,  a  child,  I  crept.     See 

Mysteries,  The. — Howells. 
Once,  on  New  England's  bloody  heights.     See  Rhode 

Island  to  the  South. — Lander. 


Once  or  twice  in  a  life-time,  we  are  permitted  to  enjoy. 

See  Manners. — Emerson. 
Once,  Paumonok.      See  Out  of  the  Cra-lle  Endlessly 

Rocking  (Mocking-bird,  The).- — Whitman. 
Once  Santa  Claus  sobered,  and  said  with  a  sigh.     See 

Marriage  of  Santa  Claus,  The. — Anon. 
Once,  seeking  truth,  I  wholly  lost  my  way.     See  Deeds 

versus  Creeds. — Muzzey. 
Once  ."ihe  was  fair  as  thou.     See  Old  Apple  Woman, 

The. — Anon. 
Once  Switzerland  was  free !  With  what  a  pride.  See  Wil- 
liam "Tell  (William  Tell  on  Switzerland).— Knowles. 
Once  the  Emperor  Charles  of  Spain.     See  Emperor's 

Bird's  Nest,  The. — Longfellow. 
Once  the  head  is  gray.     See  Catch,  A. — Stoddard. 
Once  there  lived  a  wise  philosopher.     See  Philosopher's 

Escape,  The. — Lovett. 
Once  there  was  a  bad  little  boy.     See  Story  of  the  Bad 

Little  Boy  Who   Didn't  Come   to  Grief,  '1  he. — 

Clemens. 
Once  there  was  a  good  little  boy.     See  Mark  Twain's 

Story  of  "The  Good  Little  Boy." — Clemens. 
Once  there  was  a  little  boy.     See  Tale  of  a  Cigarette, 

The.— Denton. 
Once  there   was  a  little   kitty.     See   Little   Kitty. — 

Prentiss. 
Once  there  was  a  little  maid.     See  Foolish  Maid,  A. — • 

Denton. 
Once  there  was  a  robin  lived  outside  the  door.     See 

Foolish  Little  Robin. — Anon. 
Once  they  was  a  man  without  no  hairs.     See  Unawares. 

— Kerr. 
Once  this  soft  turf,  this  rivulet's  sands.     See  Battle- 
field, The.— Bryant. 
Once  to  every  man  and  nation  comes  the  moment  to 

decide.     See  Present  Crisis,  The  (Once  to   Every 

Man  and  Nation). — Lowell. 
Once  upon  a  midnight  dreary.     See  Attitudes  Illus- 
trated in  Verse. — Barbour. 
Once    upon    a    midnight    dreary.     See    Medley,    A. — 

McHenry. 
Once  upon  a  midnight  dreary,  while  I  pondered  weak 

and  weary.     See  Raven,  The. — Poe. 
Once  upon  a  time  a  little  leaf  was  heard  to  sigh  and  cry. 

See  Norwood  (Anxious  Leaf,  The). — Beecher. 
Once  upon  a  time  a  little  princess,  whose  name  was 

Theodosia.     See    Christmas    Angel,    The. — Ray- 
mond. 
Once  upon  a  time,  a  thousand  years  ago,  there  dwelt 

by  the  sea  a  little  maid.     See  Spray  Sprite,  The. — 

Thaxter. 
Once  upon  a  time,  after  a  long  and  honorable  reign. 

See  King's  Bell,  The. — Anon. 
Once  upon  a  time,  fatigued  and  out  of  breath.     See 

Battle  of  the  Frogs  and  Mice. — Anon. 
Once  upon   a  time,   in   beautiful   Dreamland,   Queen 

Fancy.     See  Song  Revels. — ^Allen. 
Once   upon   a   time   in    Sky-land.     See   IjCgend,    A. — 

Badlam. 
Once  upon  a  time,  it  does  not  matter  when  or  where. 

See  Parrot  in  a  Deacon's  Meeting,  A. — Anon. 
Once  upon  a  time  life  lay  before  me.      See  Once  upon 

a  i'ime. — Bushnell. 
Once  upon  a  time  the  Supreme  Being  gave  a  large 

festival  in  his  azure  palace.     See  Festival  of  the 

Supreme  Being,  The. — Tourgenieff. 
Once  upon  a  time  there  lived  an  old  gentleman  in  a 

large  house.     See  (Jil  Yourself  a  Little. — Anon. 
Once  upon  a  time,  there  lived  at  Simla,  India,  a  very 

pretty  girl.     See  Cupid's  Arrows. — Kipling. 
Once  upon  a  time  there  was  a  very  small  child.     See 

Fairy  Tale,  A. — Turner. 
Once  upon  a  time  there  was  in  Japan  a  poor  stone- 
cutter.    See  Stone-cutter,  The. — Taylor. 
Once  upon  a  time  there  were  four  brothers.     See  Four 

Brothers,  The. — Macrae. 
Once  upon  a  time  two  little  candles  lay  side  by  side 

in  a  big  box.     See  "Reward  of  the  Cheerful  Candle, 

The.— Worstell. 
Once    upon    an    evening    bleary.     See    "Ager,"    The. 

—  (Boston  Gazette.) 
Once  Venus,  deeming  Love  too  fat.     See  Such  a  Duck. 

— Anon 
Once  we  built  our  fortress  where  you  see.     See  Moun- 
tain, The. — Channing. 
Once,  when  I  was  a  little  boy.     See  Reminiscence,  A. — 

Anon. 
Once  when  morn  was  flowing  in.     See  Spider  and  Fly. — 

Cary. 
Once,  when  old  winter  was  shaking  the  snow  down. 

See  Euterpe's  Visit. — Cook. 
Once,    when    the    days    were    ages.     See    Brahma's 

Answer. — Stoddard. 


798 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


One 


Once,    when    the    King    was    traveling   through.     See 

Sheriff  of  Saumur,  The. — Saxe. 
Once  when  the  wind  was  on  the  roof.     <See  Beyond. — 

Kimball. 
Once   when   the   world   was  younger  than   now.     See 

Union,  A. — .Junkermann. 
Once,    when    this    grand    old    earth   was   young.     See 

Legend  of  the  Lily,  The.— Wall. 
Once,  when  to  the  busy  city.     See  "Pitty  Fower." — 

Moore. 
Once  where  our  city  farmers  .sat.     See  Vegetable  Con- 
vention, A. — Bungay. 
Once  with  an  honest  Dutchman  walking.     See  Perverse 

Hen,  The. — Anon. 
Once   ye   were   happy,   once   by   many   a   shore.     See 

Loons,  The. — Lampman. 
Once  your  smoothly  polished  face.     See  To  an   Old 

Pipe. — Sterry. 
Onct  'pon  a  time  dere  wus  a  woman,  an'  she  wus  a 

widder.     See  Story  of  Guggle. — Speed. 
Onct  there  was  a  little  boy  that  hadn't  any  pa!     See 

That  Littul  Orfun  Brat.— Kerr. 
Onc't  there  was  a  spellin'  school.     See  Spellin'  School, 

A. — Buchanan. 
One  afternoon,  as  Joseph  West.     See  Lesson,  The. — 

Turner. 
One  afternoon   in    April,    1689,    Sir   Edmund   Andros. 

See  Gray  Champion,  The. — Hawthorne. 
One  afternoon  in  the  month  of  June.     See  Angel  in  a 

Saloon,  An. — Anon. 
One  afternoon,     last     summer,    while    walking    along 

Washington    street.     See   Howe's    Masquerade. — 

Hawthorne. 
One  afternoon    of    a    cold    winter's    day.     See  Snow- 
Image,  The. — Hawthorne. 
One  afternoon,  when  the  sun  was  going  down,  a  mother 

and  her  little  boy.     See  Great  Stone  Face,  The. — 

Hawthorne. 
One  April  day,  our  little  May.     See  May 's  Apple-t  ree. — 

Richards. 
One  asked  of  Regret.     See  Regret. — Le  Gallienne. 
One  autumn  eve,  when  clouds  unfurled.     See  Hunter's 

Last  Ride,  The. — Anon. 
One  Balaam    Vermicelli    Lepidoptera    Fitz-Ape.     See 

Chimpanzor  and  the  Chimpanzee,  The. — Hamil- 
ton. 
One  ballade    more    before    we    say    good-night.     See 

Ballade  to  Banville. — Gosse. 
One  Biddy  Brown,  a  country  dame.     See  How  to  Cure 

a  Cough. — Anon.  , 

One  bleak  and  blustering  winter  day.     See  One  Easter 

Day. — Richards. 
One  bright  day  in  June,  I  strolled  out  into  the  woods. 

See  Night  Shade. — Anon. 
One  by  one  the  kind  and  gentle,  loving  spirits  glide 

away.      See     Vacant     Places.  —  (Friends'     Intelli- 
gencer. ) 
One  by  one  the  old-time  fancies.     See  One  by  One. — 

Anon. 
One  by  one  the  sands  are  flowing.     See  One  by  One.— 

Procter. 
One  by  one  they  pass  away.     See  At   Edgewater. — 

Merrill. 
One  by  one  we  are  turning.     See  Historical  Trees. — 

Hadley. 
One  calm  and  cloudless  winter  night.     See  Medusa. — 

Weeks. 
One  Christmas  Eve  a  strange  tragedy  was  enacted  in 

the  far  Northwest.     See  How  the  Gospel  Came  to 

Jim  Oaks. — Anon. 
One  Christmas  Eve,  when  Santa  Claus  came  to  a  certain 

house.     See  Santa  Claus  and  the  Mouse. — Anon. 
One  Christmas  time  some  roots  and  bulbs.     See  Said 

Tulip,  "That  is  So."— Elliot. 
One  circumstance  troubled  Mr.  Swiveller's  mind.     See 

Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The  (Dick  Swiveller  and  the 

Marchioness) . — Dickens. 
One  cold  December  morning,  about  eighty  years  ago. 

See  Drummer-boy,  The. — Anon. 
One  day  a  bookseller,  who  had  grown  rich.     See  My 

Fountain  Pen. — Burdette. 
One  day  a  harsh  word,  rashly  said.     See  Words. — Anon. 
One  day,   a   lazy   farmer's   boy.      See   Hoe   out    Your 

Row. — Anon. 
One  day  a  politician  said.     See  Hopeful  Youth,  A. — 

Kavanaugh. 
One  day,  a  poor  peddler.     See  Grateful  Swan,  The. — • 

Cary. 
One  day,   a  rich  man,   flushed   with   pride   and   wine. 

See  Retort,  The. — Anon. 
One  day  after  Brer  Rabbit   fool   Brer   Fox    wit    dat 

calamus  root.     See  Uncle  Remu^.    His  Songs  and 

his  Sayings  (Wonderful   Tar-baby,  The). — Harris. 


One  day,  as  a  very  susceptible  young  man.     See  Sad 

Mi.stake,  A. — Scribner. 
One  day  as  I  wandered,  I  heard  a  complaining.     See 

Housekeeper's  Tragedy,  A. — Anon. 
One  day,  as  I  was  going  by.     See  Lost  Heir,  The. — 

Hood. 
One  day  between  the  Lip  and  the  Heart.     See  Lip  and 

the  Heart,  The. — Adams. 
One  day  Bill  and  me  both  got  a  cent.     See  Bill  an' 

Me. — Richards. 
One  day  I  saw  a  ship  upon  the  sands.     See  Sea  Irony.— 

Heaton. 
One  day   I   wandered   where   the   salt,    sea-tide.     See 

Seaside  Well,  The. — Anon. 
One  day   I    wrote    her    name   upon   the    strand.     See 

Amoretti  and  Epithalamion  (Our  Love  Shall  Live;. 

■ — Spenser. 
One  day,  in  a  crowded  Gates  Avenue  car.     See  Pat's 

Reason. — (Brocklyn  Eagle.) 
One  day  in  der  summer  times,  dhere  was  two  peobles. 

See  Reckermemper  der  Poor. — Anon. 
One  day,  in  his  garden,  he  observed  an  apple  falling. 

See  Christopher  Columbus. — -Anon. 
One  day   in    June    Peter   discovered   a   young   couple. 

See  Two  Gentlemen  of  Kentucky. — Allen. 
One  day,  in  one  of  the  West  India   Islands,  the  sons 

and    daughters    of    the    planters.     See    Death    or 

Liberty. — Weld. 
One  day,  it  matters  not  to  know.     See  St.  Romauld. — • 

Southey. 
One  day,  it  was  before  a  civic  dinner.     See  Turtles, 

The.— Hood. 
One  day  Josiah  came  in,  an'  sez  he,  "The  Everlastin' 

Spring  is  the  one  for  me,  Samantha!"     See  Sama;i- 

tha  at  Saratoga  (Josiah  at  the  Various  Springs). — 

HoUey. 
One  day  little  Mary  most  loudly  did  call.     See  False 

Alarms. — Taylor. 
One  day,   mamma   said:     "Conrad   dear."     See  Story 

of  Little  Suck-a-Thumb,  The. — Hoffmann. 
One  day  my  grandma  said  to  me.     See  Grandmother's 

Beau. — Kavanaugh. 
One  day,  nigh  wearie  [or  weary]  of  the  yrkesome  [or 

irksome]  way.     See  Faerie  Queene,  Tne  (Una  and 

the  Lion). — Spenser. 
One  day,  not  a  great  while  ago,  Mr.  Middlerib.     See 

Movement    Cure    for    Rheumatism,    The. —Bur- 
dette. 
One  day  Sail  fooled  me;  she  heated  the  poker  awful 

hot.     See  Peter  Sorghum  in  Love. — Burnett. 
One  day  the  bad  spirits  met  together.     See  Original 

Liquor  League,  The. — Talmage. 
One  day  the  dreary  old  King  of  Death.     See  Death's 

Ramble. — Hood. 
One  day  the  Queen  of  Sheba  gave  Solomon  a  ring.     See 

Solomon  and  his  Sages. — Anon. 
One  day    there    entered   at    my    chamber   door.     See 

My  Uninvited  Guest. — Smith. 
One  day  thou  didst  desert  me — then  I  learned.     See 

To  Imagination. — Thomas. 
One  day,  through  a  narrow  and  noisome  street.     See 

Street  Musicians,  The. — Catlin. 
One  day  through  the  primeval  wood.     See  Calf  Path, 

The. — Anon. 
One  day   when   the  birds  had   sung  themselves  quite 

weary.     See  Parable  of  Nature,  A. — Anon. 
One  day  when  the  ocean  was  at  rest,  and  its  waters 

sheened    and    sparkled.      See    By    the    Shore. — 

Anon. 
One  day  when  the  studies  were  over.     See  Brightest 

Gift,  The. ^  (Presbyterian  Jourruil.) 
One  day,    while    .lupiter,    the    great    Olympian.     See 

Sorrow. — Volk. 
One  day,  while  yet  the  gods  of  Greece  were  young.     See 

How  it  Happens. — Anon. 
One  December   night   there   fell   a   heavy   snow.     See 

Battle  with  the  Tramp,  The. — Anon. 
One  early  .spring  morn,  w'ile  de  sun  shine  bright.     See 

'Ter'ble  Sperience,  A. — Johnson. 
One  effort  more,  my  altar  this  bleak  sand.     See  Prayer 

of  Columbus,  The. — Whitman. 
One  elf,  I  trow,  is  diving  now.     See  Song  of  the  Elfin 

Steersman. — Hill. 
One  eve  I  knelt  in  a  Franciscan  Church.     See  Monk's 

Prayer,  The. — Hahn. 
One  eve,   I  musing,   paced  the  sands.     See  Stranded 

Bugle,  The. — Mosher. 
One  eve  of  beauty,  when  the  sun.     See  Constancy. — 

Anon. 
One  evening  a  red-headed  Connaught  swell.     See  Pat 

and  the  Oysters. — Anon. 
One  evening  as  they  sat  beneath  the  moon's  soft  rays 

so  pale.     See  Taking  the  Veil. — Masson. 


799 


One 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


One  evening,  in  times  long  ago,  old  Philemon  and  his  old 

wife,    Baucis.     <See    Miraculous    Pitcher,    The. — 

Hawthorne. 
One  evening   two   pussies,   a  tabby   and   white.     See 

Tabby's  Tea-fight. — Anon. 
One  evening  under  the  laoplar's  shade.     <See  Hundred 

Louis  d'Or,  The. — Dow. 
One  evening  when  a  gale  blew  so  roughly  that  January 

seemed  to  have  returned.    jSee  Les  Mis^rables  (  Little 

Gavroche). — Hugo. 
One  evening  when  Luther  saw  a  little  bird  perched  on  a 

tree  to  roost.     See  Little  Bird,  The. — -Luther. 
One  evening  while  reclining.     See  Accepted  and  Will 

Appear. — Mix. 
One  eye  screwed  up,  cheek  out  of  joint.     See  Biologic 

Face,  The.— L.  B. 
One  face  alone,  one  face  alone.     jSee  Phantasmion  (One 

Face  Alone). — C!oleridge. 
One  face  looks  up  from  every  page.     .See  One  Face. — 

Bolton. 
One  famous  day  in  great  July.     See  Day  We  Do   not 

Celebrate,  The. — Burdette. 
One  feast,  of  holy  days  the  crest.     See  All-Saints. — 

Lowell. 
One  finds   nowhere  in   Holmes's   volumes  crude   and 

unformed  thoughts.     See  Holmes,  Extract    con- 
cerning.— Palmer. 
One  Fourth  of  July,  when  Abraham  Lincoln  was  a 

boy,  he  heard  an  oration.     See  Young  Patriot, 

Abraham  Lincoln,  The. — Anon. 
One  fully  enjoys  being  wracked  with  diseases.     <See  Lay 

of  the  Grateful  Patient.— F.  D. 
One  Garrick   said,    as   in   this   tale   you'll   find.     See 

Pussy's  Better  Nature.- — Hiighes. 
One  glance  at  the  platform  is  sufficient  to  convince  the 

audience.     See    Charles    Dickens    the    Reader. — - 

Field. 
One  heart's  enough  for  me.     See  same. — Cheyney. 
One  holy  church  of  God  appears.     See  Church  Univer- 
sal, The. — Longfellow. 
One  honest  John  Tomkins,  a  hedger  and  ditcher.     See 

Contented  John. — Taylor. 
One  hour  before  the  Spaniards  appeared.     See  Battle 

of  Santiago. — Schley. 
One  hue  of  our  flag  is  taken.     See  Rejected  National 

Hymns,  The.  VI.— Newell. 
One  hundred   years   ago,   and   something  more.     See 

Lady  Wentworth. — Longfellow. 
One  hundred  years  ago  in  the  goodly  city  of  New 

York.     See  Our  Army  and  Navy. — Sherman. 
One  hundred  years  ago  tne  United  States  began  their 

existence.     See  Problem  of  Self-government,  The. 

— Depew. 
"One  I  love ;"  a  pretty  face.     See  Coimting  the  Seeds. — 

Anon. 
One  idiotic  habit  of  the  people  is  to  attribute  to  the 

King.     See  King  and  People. — Hugo. 
One  in  herself,  not   rent   by  schism,  but  sound.     See 

Hind  and  the  Panther,  The  (Unity  of  the  Catholic 

Church,  The).— Dryden. 
One  is  bad  enough,  two  are  worse.     See  Looking  for 

Bargains. — (.St.  Louis  Chronicle.) 
One  is   the   engine,    large   and   grand.     See   Railroad 

Train,  The.— Smith. 
One  kiss  from  all  others  prevents  me.     See  Agro-dolce. 

— Lowell. 
One  little  black  duck.     See  Ducks,  The.— Anon. 
One  little  grain  in  the  sandy  bars.     See  One  at  a  Time. 

— Whitney. 
One   little  head  of    yellow   hair.     See    Our   Baby. — 

Anon. 
One  little  kitten  with  a  jingling  bell.     See  Coimting. — 

Brewer. 
One  little  row  of  ten  little  toes.     See  That's  Baby. — 

Anon. 
One  little  star  in  the  starry  night.     See  One  Little 

Star. — Coolidge. 
One  little  sunbeam.     See  All  Together. — Eddy. 
One  long  summer  afternoon  there  came  to  Mr.  David- 
son's.    See  Courtship  Fair  and  Square. — Anon. 
One  loved  her  for  her  beauteous  face.     See  A  la  Mode. 

— Greene. 
One  lovely  name  adorns  my  song.     See  One  Lovely 

Name. — Landor. 
One  man    looka   at    da   labor   quest'    one   way.     See 

Italian's  Views  on  the  Labor  Question,  An. — Kerr 
One  merry   summer   day.     See   Two    Little   Roses  — 

Ballard. 
One  mild  October  afternoon  Wendell  Phillips  sitting  in 

his  law-oflSce.     See  Wendell  Phillips  (Wendell  Phil- 
lips at  Faneuil  Hall). — Curtis. 
One  moment,  oh,  stay  one  moment,  and  give  me  a  coin 

for  bread.     See  Pauper's  Revenge,  A. — NichoUs. 


One  moment,    poised   above   the    flashing   blue.     See 

Dive,  The.— Gould. 
One  moment  the  boy,  as  he  wander'd  by  night.     See 

"Sea-maids'  Music,  The." — Myers. 
One  more    great    Voice    gone    silent !     See    Cardinal 
Manning. — (London  Punch.) 
-  One  more  polygamous.     See  To  the  Memory  of  the 
Late  Brigham  Young. — Anon. 
One  more  unfortunate.     See  Bridge  of  Sighs,  The. — 

Hood. 
One  morn  a  Peri  at  the  gate.     See  Lalla  Rookh   (Tear 

of  Repentance,  The). — Moore. 
One  morn   an    angel   stopped    beside   my   door.     See 

Angel  of  Dawn,  The. — Cutler. 
One  morn    as    Flora    chanced    to    stray.     See    Strike 

among  the  Flowers,  A. — Kavanaugh. 
One  morn,   hard  by  a  slumberous  streamlet's  wave. 

See  Cambyses  and  the  Macrobian  Bow. — Hayne. 
One  morn,  two  friends  before  the  Newgate  drop.     See 

On  Seeing  an  Execution. — (Punch.) 
One  morning,  all  alone,  out  of  his  convent  of  gray 

stone.      See   Cliristus:   a  Mystery    (Story   of  the 

Monk  Felix,  The). — Longfellow. 
One  morning  among  the  high  alps.     See  Moral  Courage. 

— Farrar. 
One  morning  fair.     See  Wolf  and  the   Bear,   The. — 

Kavanaugh. 
One  morning,  fifty  years  ago.     See  Wedding  Fee,  The. 

— Streeter. 
One  morning  in  January,  when  the  ice  in  the  Hudson 

river.     See  Captain  .toe. — -Smith. 
One  morning  in  the  garden.     See  Robin's  Apology. — 

Sherman. 
One  morning  just  ten  years  ago.     See  For  a  Wedding 

Anniversary. — Denton. 
One  morning,  Mr.  Simpson,  a  worthy  man,  and  a  happy 

husband.  See  Inconsolable  Husband,  The. — Anon. 
One  morning  my  heart  can  remember.     See  Unofficial. 

— Nesbit. 
One  morning    (raw    it    was    and    wet).     See    Sailor's 

Mother,  The. — Wordsworth. 
One  morning,  the  24th  of  December,  a  little  ragged 

urchin.     See  Boy  Wanted. — Anon. 
One  morning  when  I  was  about  eight  years  old.     See 

Evils  of  Tight  Lacing,  The.—'  'Charlotte  Elizabeth." 
One  morning,  when   I   went  to  school.     See  Smooth 

Path,  A. — -Pomeroy. 
One  morning  when  Spring  was  in  her  teens.     See  Two 

Fishers. — Anon. 
One  morning,  when  the  hands  were  mustered  for  the 

field.     See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin  (Cassy). — Stowe. 
One  morning   when   the    rain   was   done.     See   Fairy 

Shipwreck. — Sherman. 
One  morning,  while  Miss  Ophelia  was  busy  in  some 

of  her  domestic  cares.     See  Uncle  Tom'.*  Cabin 

(Topsy) . — Stowe. 
One  name  from  Illinois  comes  up  in  all  minds.     See 

Abraham  Lincoln. — Fowler. 
One  night  came  on  a  hurricane.     See  Sailor's  Consola- 
tion, The.— Dibdin. 
One  night  came  Winter  noiselessly  and  leaned.     See 

Frosted  Pane,  The. — Roberts. 
One  night  during  the  recent  troubles  in  the  Pennsyl- 
vania coal  regions.     See  Mrs.   Potts'   Dissipated 

Husband . — Anon. 
One  night    I    lay    asleep    in    Africa.     See    Bookra. — 

Warner. 
One  night    little    Diamond    woke    up    suddenly.     See 

Little    Diamond    and    the    Drunken    Cabman. — 

Macdonald. 
One  night  mid  swarthy  forms  I  lay.     See  Wrecker's 

Oath  on  Barnegat,  The. — Morford. 
One  night,    returning    from    my    twilight    walk.     See 

Past  Meridian. — Meredith. 
One  night  when  I  climbed  into  bed.     See  Harley's  Trip 

to  Dreamland. — Richards. 
One  night  when  the  wind  it  blew  cold.     See  Mary  of  the 

Wild  Moor. — Anon. 
One  of  the  ablest  writers  that  England  ever  produced. 

See  Macaulay's  Prophecy. — Garfield. 
One  of  the  best  of  those  paintings  which  have  made 

the    name    of    Edouard    Di?taille    famous.     See 

American  Courage. — Hoar 
One  of  the  best  things  in  the  world  to  be  is  a  boy.     See 

Being  a  Boy. — Warner. 
One  of  the  carronades  of  the  battery,  a  twenty-four 

poimder,  had  got  loose.     See  Ninety-three  (Car- 

ronade,  The). — Hugo. 
One  of  the  exhibitors  at  the  recent  Texas  State  Fair. 

See  Number  Ninety-one. — Anon. 
One  of  the  greatest  delights  in  boarding  in  the  country 

for  the  summer.       See  Out  of  the  Hurly  Burly 

(Reaching  the  Early  Train). — Adeler. 


800 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Only 


One  of   the    kings    of    Scanderoon.     See   Jester   Con- 
demned to  Death,  The. — Smith. 
One  of  the  many   popular  delusions  wespecting  the 

Bwitish.     See  Lord  Dundreary  at  Brighton  and 

the  Riddle  he  Made  there. — Anon. 
One  of    the    most    delightful    books    in    my    father's 

library.     <See  My  Garden  Acquaintance. — Lowell. 
One  of  the  most  important  questions  pressing  for  your 

investigation.     See  Judge's  Charge  to  the  Grand 

Jury,  The.— C.  E.  B. 
One  of  the  most  melancholy  productions  of  a  rnorbid 

condition   of   life   is   the   sniveler.     <See  Sniveler, 

The.— Whipple. 
One  of  the  parish  sent  one  morn.     <See  Dressed  Turkey, 

The. — Anon. 
One  of  the  strongest  muniments  to  save  us  from  all 

harm.     iSee     Example     of     Washington,     The. — • 

Adams. 
One  of  us,  dear — but  one.     See  Which  One? — Brown. 
One  of  your  old  world  stories.  Uncle  John.     >See  Little 

People  of  the  Snow,  The. — Bryant. 
One  only    rose    our    village    maiden    wore.     <See   Flos 

Florum. — Munby. 
One  pale    November    day.      <S'ee    Affaire    d'Amour. — 

Deland. 
One  part,  one  little  part,  we  dimly  scan.     See  Minstrel, 

The;    or,    Tne    Progress   of    Geniu.s    (Reasons    for 

Humility) . — Beattie. 
One  phantom  was  a  girl,  who  here.     See  Queen's  Ball, 

The.— Clive. 
One  pleasant  day  in  October,  an  acorn  and  a  chestnut. 

See  Acorn  and  Chestnut. — Anon. 
One  quiet  eve,  some  years  ago,  whilst  lingering  by  a 

stile.     See  Water  and  the  Flower,  The. — Anon. 
One  rainy  morning,  just  for  a  lark.     See  Among  the 

Animals. — Anon. 
One  raw  morning  in   spring — it   will  be  eighty  years 

the  19th  day  of  this  month.     See  Reminiscence  of 

Lexington,  A. — Parker. 
One  righteous  word  for  Law — the  common  will.     See 

Pilgrim  Fathers,  The.— O'Reilly. 
One  rule   to   guide   us   in   our   life.     See   Follow   the 

Golden  Rule. — Anon. 
One  Sabbath   morn   in   lovely   June.     See   What   the 

Bells  Said. — Richards. 
One  said:     "To  one  great  end."     See  Advice. — Anon. 
One  sat  within  a  hung  and  lighted  room.     See  Love 

and  Poverty. — Pullen. 
One  sees  in  Viteall  Yard.     See  Jacob  Omnium's  Hoss. 

— Thackeray. 
One  shadow  glides  from  the  dumb  shore.     See  Glou- 
cester Harbor. — Ward. 
One  silent  night  of  late.     See  Cheat  of  Cupid,  The. — ■ 

Anacreon. 
One  star     is     trembling     into     sight.     See     Evening. 

—  (.Chambers'  Journal.) 
One  steed  I  have  of  common  clay.     See  Comrades. — 

Blood. 
One  step  and  then  another,  and  the  longest  walk  is 

ended.     See  Little  by  Little. — Anon. 
One  stormy  morn  I  chanced  to  meet.     See  Kiss  in  the 

Rain,  A. — Anon. 
One  summer  afternoon  Mr.  Malcolm  Anderson.     See 

Unexpected  Son,  The. — Anon. 
One  summer  afternoon,  within  his  palace.     See  Beggar 

and  the  King,  The. — Goodwin. 
One  summer  day,  a  country  youth,  arrayed  in  kilt  and 

plaid.     See  Sandy's  Romance.— Davenport. 
One  summer  day,  to  a  young  child  I  said.    See  Knowing. 

— Dorr. 
One  summer  eve,   with  [or  in]  pensive  thought.     See 

Shells  of  Ocean. — Merry. 
One  summer    evening,    a    maiden    fair.     See    Broken 

Token,  The.— Anon. 
One  summer  morning  a  daring  band.     See  Ballad  of 

Ishmael  Day,  The. — Anon. 
One  summer  night,  in  twilight  dim.     See  Cruel  Maid, 

The.— Bradley. 
One  summer's  evening  ere  the  sun  went  down.     See 

Little  Pilgrim,  A.^Anon. 
One  Sunday  morn  good  parson  Jones.     See  Wet  and 

Dry.— Jillson. 
One  Sunday  mornin'  years  ago,  along  in  May  or  June. 

See  Matildy  Goes  to  Meetin'. — Eisenbeis. 
One  sunshiny  morning,  in  the  good  old  times  of  the 

town  of  Boston.     See  Drowne's  Wooden  Image.- — 

Hawthorne. 
One  sweet  spring  morn,  when  skies  were  bright.     See 

Voyage  of  Life. — Janvier. 
One  sweetly   solemn   thought.     See   Nearer   Home.- — 

Cary. 
One  tear-drop   from   a   mother's   eye.     See  Woman's 

Day. — Anon. 


One  there  is  who  has  silently  advanced  through  time 

from  the  beginning.     See  some.^Bremer. 
"One    thing    is    certain,"    said    Mr.    Hathaway.     See 

Saving  the  Cider.— Anon. 
One  thing  is  sure,  the  day  of  the  Lord  is  hastening  on. 

See  same. — Ninde. 
One,  three,  nine,  seven  days  to  Christmas.     See  Till 

Chri  stmas. — Anon . 
"One  time  after  Brer  Rabbit  done  bin  trompin'  'roun' 

huntin'  up  .some  sallid."     See  Brer  Rabbit  and  the 

Little  Girl. — Harris. 
One  time  there  was  a  seed  that  wished  to  be  a  tree. 

See  Tree  that  Tried  to  Grow,  The.— Lee. 
One  time,    when    we'z    at    Aunty's    house.     See    At 

Aunty's  House. — Riley. 
One  touch   there   is  of  magic  white.     See  Very   Far 

Away. — -Alexander. 
One  touch  to  her  hand  and  one  word  in  her  ear.     See 

Marmion  (Lochinvar). — Scott. 
One,  two,  three,  a  bonny  boat  I  see.     See  One,  Two, 

Three. — Johnson. 
One,  two,  three,  four,  five,  six,  seven,  eight,  nine.     See 

Truth  Speaker,  The. — Anon. 
One  ugly   trick   has   often   spoiled.     See   Meddlesome 

Matty.— Taylor. 
One  unto   his   Beloved   came.     See   Me   and   Thee. — 

Hopkins. 
One  very  hot  day,   a  great  lion.     See  Lion  and  the 

Mouse,  The. — Anon. 
One  was  a  king,  and  wide  domain.     See  Two  Men. — 

Gregory. 
One  was  the  loveliest  thing!  a  pink  sachet.     See  Two 

Valentines. ^Smith. 
One  wet  day  the  rain  gathered  in  blobs  on  the  road 

that   passed  our  garden.     See  How  Gavin   Birse 

Put  it  to  Mag  Lownie. — Barrie. 
One  who  does  not  believe  in  immersion  for  baptism. 

See  I  Vash  so  Glad  I  Vash  Here. — Anon. 
One,  who  is  not,  we  see;  but  one,  whom  we  see  not,  is. 

See    Higher    Pantheism    in    a    Nutshell,    The.— 

Swinburne. 
One  who  took  manhood  for  his  art.     See  To  George 

Edward  Woodberry. — Erskine. 
One  winter     evening,     a     country     storekeeper.     See 

Melting  Moments. — Anon. 
One  winter's  day  long,  long  ago.     See  Caoch,  the  Piper. 

— -Keegan. 
One  winter's  evening  toward  the  close  of  the  year  1800. 

See  Black  Veil,  The.— Dickens. 
One  word  and  only  one.     See  Burnt  Out. — Anon. 
One  word  is  too  often  profaned.     See  To :    "One 

word,"  etc. — Shelley. 
One  word  only  is  a  sufficient  characterization  of  Wash- 
ington— disinter  stedness.   See  Washington's  Char- 
acterization.— Eliot. 
One  writes,  that,  "Other  friends  remain."     See  In  Me- 

moriam  ("One  writes."  etc.l. — Tennyson. 
One  year  ago — ^a  ringing  voice.     See  "Only  a  Year." — 

Stowe. 
One  year  ago,   in   lonely   state.     See  His   Neighbor's 

.  Wife. — Anon. 
One  yellow    rushlight     glimmered     dim     among    the 

shadows    deep.     See    Wrecker    of    Priest's    Cove, 

The.— Tomson. 
One  young  life  lost,  two  happy  young  lives  blighted. 

See  Death  of  a  First-born. — Rossetti. 
Only  a  baby,  fair  and  small.     See  George  Washington. 

— Anon. 
Only  a  baby,  kissed  and  caressed.     See  Seven  Stages, 

The. — Anon. 
Only  a  baby  small,  dropped  from  the  skies.     See  Only 

a  Baby  Small. — Barr. 
Only  a  baby  'thout  any  hair.     See  Only  a  Baby. — 

Anon. 
Only  a  baby's  rattle.     See  Baby's  Rattle,  A. — Anon. 
Only  a  boy,  with  his  noise  and  fun.     See  Only  a  Boy. — 

Anon. 
Only  a  bimch  of  roses  fair.     See  Prom-roses. — Sawyer. 
Only  a  cup  of  water.     See  Cup  of   Water,  A. — Ben- 
nett. 
Only  a  dirty  white  and  black  dog!     See  Nobody's  Do^. 

— Anon. 
Only  a  drop  in  the  bucket.     See  Mite  Song,  A.     Anon. 
Only  a  drunkard,  reeling  around.     See  Only  a  Drunk- 
ard.— Anon. 
"Only    a    drunken    man,"    they    said.     See    Only    a 

Drunkard. — Clingan. 
Only  a  fallen  horse,  stretched  out  there  on  the  road. 

See  Dying  in  Harness. — O'Reilly. 
Only  a  flower!  but,  dear,  it  grew.     See  On  a  Cyclamen. 

— Arnold. 
Only  a  frown!  yet  it  pressed  a  sting.     See  Smile  and  a 

Frown,  A. — Dowd. 


801 


Only 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Only  a  hut,  as  mean,  to  Thee.     See  Transformation. — 

Dennison. 
Only  a  little  bird  am  I.     See  Thankfulne.ss. —  Cooper. 
Only  a  little  child !     See  same. — .\non. 
Only  a  little  dust.     See  Fallen  Asleep. — Stanton. 
Only  a  little  pinlrrosebud.     See  Recitation. — Chase. 
Only  a  little  tomato-can.     See  Only. — Thatcher. 
Only  a  man  dead  in  his  bed — that  is  all!     See  Dead 

in  his  Bed. — Ballou. 
"Only   a   pauper,"   the   neighbors   said.     See   Pauper 

Girl,  The.— Traver. 
"Only  a  penny  a  box,"  he  said.     See  Keeping    his 

Word. — Anon. 
"Only  a  penny.  Sir!"     See  Glory-roses. — Rand. 
Only  a  pin,   yet  it  calmly  lay.     See  Only  a   Pin. — 

Brown. 
"Only    a    player    dead!"     See    Dead    Player,    The. — 

Meehan. 
Only  a  rose  in  a  glass.     See  Message  of  the  Rose,  The. — 

Anon. 
Only   a   seed — but   it   chanced   to   fall.     See   Only. — 

Gordon. 
Only  a  shelter  for  my  head  I  sought.      See  Wer  wenig 

Sucht,  der  Find  t  Viel. — Riickert. 
Only    a    tender    little    thing.     See    Snowdrop,    A. — 

Spofford. 
Only  a  touch  and  nothing  more!     See  Kate  Temple's 

.    Song. — Collins. 
Only  a  touch  of  your  hand,  ma  belle.     See  Girl  in  Gray, 

The.— Merritt. 
"Only  a  tramp!"     The  farmer  sneered.     See  Only  a 

Tramp. — La  Moille. 
Only  a  week  more,  and  Christmas  will  be  here.     See 

Self-denial . — Anon . 
Only  a  woman,  shrivelled  and  old !     See  Only  a  Woman. 

— Benedict. 
"Only  a  woman's  hair!"  we  may  not  guess.     See  Only 

a  Woman's  Hair. — Noble. 
Only  a  word  for  the  Master.     See  Only. — Murray. 
Only  an  hour  more,  and  1  shall  have  finished  my  work. 

See  Novel  Reading. — -Anon. 
Only  by  giving  gifts  can  the  true  meaning  of  the  great 

gift.     See  Christmas  Tree,  The. — Wheelock. 
Only  eighteen!     And  yet  I'm  to  have  company  to-night, 

sure  enough  company.     See  Debutante. — Anon. 
Only  five   dollar.-*   in   my   pocket.     See  Marrying  for 

Money. — McBride. 
Only  in  dreams  she  appears  to  me.     See  Beauty. — 

Haultain. 
Only  last    year,  at    Christmas-time.     See  Newsboy's 

Debt,  The.— Hudson. 
Only  one  moment  unfettered  by  care.     See  Give  Me 

Rest. — Anon. 
Only  sixteen,  so  the  papers  say.     See  Only  Sixteen. — 

Anon. 
Only  tell  her  that  I  love.     See  S  ing. — Cutts. 
Only   that,    dear,    neither   wise   nor   fair.     See   Only 

Faithful.— Williams. 
"Only  the  brakeman  killed" — say,  was  that  what  they 

said?     See  Only  the  Brakeman. — Woolson. 
Only  the  grasses.     See  Little  P'ield  Preachers. — Tves.' 
Only  the  leaf  of  a  rosebud,  thaffell  to  the  ballroom 
floor.     See  Things  not  always  what  they  Seem. — 
Anon. 
Only  to  find  Forever,  blest.     See  Heaven. — Dickinson. 
Only  two  years  after  the  birth  of  .John  Quincy  Adams. 

See  Cor.sican  not  Content,  The. — Seward. 
Only  waiting  till  the  shadows.     See  Only  Waiting. — 

Mace. 
"Oo  s'an't  have  my  bwed  and  butter!"     See  Watching 

for  Crumbs. — Anon. 
Ope  your  doors  and  take  me  in.     See  House  of  the 

Trees,  The.— Wetherald. 
Open  afresh  your  round  of  starry  folds.     See  Marigolds 

— Keats. 
Open  his  books  and  bid  them  forth.     See  Thackeray's 

Birthday. — Rogers. 
Open,  my  heart,  thy  ruddy  valves.     See  Magnanimous 

and  Mean. — Heavysege. 
"Open    the    door,    some  pity  to  show!"     See  Palmer, 

The.— Scott. 
Open  the  door,  will  yer,  Bill?     Hush!  take  the  gentle- 

man's  dicer.     See  Frank,  the  Fireman.— Frost. 
Open  the  old  cigar  b  >x,  get  me  a  Cuba  stout.     See 

Betrothed,  The.— Kipling. 
Open  thy  lattice,  O  lady  bright!     See  Soft  Guitar,  The 

— Bowne. 
Open   your   doors,   open   your   heart.     See   Beautiful 

Spring,  Haste,  oh  Haste!- Miiller. 
Open  your  eyes,  mamma.     See  Baby's  Day.— Larcom 
Open  your  eyes,  my  pansies  sweet.     See  Pansy  Song 
— Anon.  I 


Opening   one    day    a    book   of   mine.     See    Pregnant 

Comment.  The. — Lowell. 
Opinion  governs  all  mankind.     See  Opinion. — Butler. 
Opinion  is  that  high  and  mighty  dame.     See  Opinion. — 

Howell. 
Opinions   become   dangerous   to   a   State   only   when 

eersecution  makes  it  necessary.     See  Liberty  is 
trength. — Fox. 
Or  else  I  sat  on  in  my  chamber  green.      See    Aurora 

Leigh  (Books). — Browning. 
Or  ere   those   shoes   were  old.     See   Hamlet. — Shake- 
speare. 
Or  if  the  soul  of  proper  kind.     See  House  of  Fame,  The 

(Foreca.st).-— Chaucer. 
Or  rushing  thence,  in  one  diffusive  band.     SeeSea.'Jons, 

The  (Sheep  Washing,  The).— Thomson. 
Or,  suppose  on  the  other  hand,  he  had  told  you  the 

plea  was  granted.     See  same. — Jack. 
Or  view  the  lord  of  the   unerring  bow.     See   Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage, — Byron. 
Oratory  has  this  test  and  mark  of  divine  providence. 

See  Oratory. — Beecher. 
Oratory  is  the  cornerstone  in  the  Temple  of  Arts.     See 

Oratory  among  the  Arts. — Shafer. 
Oratory    is    the    corona    of    speech.     See    Nature    of 

Oratory,  The. — Quayle. 
Orb  from  a  chaos  of  good  things  evolved.     See  To  a 

Christmas  Pudding. — Anon. 
Orphan  Hours,  the  Year  is  dead!     See  Dirge  for  the 

Year. — Shelley. 
Orpheus  with  his  lute  made  trees.       See   King    Hfnry 

VIII.  (Influence  of  Music). — Shakespeare. 
O'Ryan  was  a  man  of  might.     See  Irish  Astronomy.^— 

Halpine. 
Ostera!  spirit  of  spring-time.     See  Easter  Morning. — 

Mace. 
"Othellum's    occupation's    gone!"     See    Bones    at    a 

Raflfle. — -Clipper. 
Other  ages  have  had  their  designations,  local  or  personal 
or    mythical.     See  Centennial  Oration  (American 
Age,    The).^Winthrop. 
Other    nations    with    abilities    far    less    eminent.     See 

Examples  for  Ireland. — Meagher. 
Other  people  have  their  faults.     See  Speak  nae  III. — 

Anon. 
Othere,  the  old  sea-captain.     See  Discoverer  of  the 

North  Cape,  The. — Longfellow. 
Others    abide    our    question.     Thou    art    free.     See 

Shakespeare. — Arnold. 
Others  may  need  new  life  in  Heaven.     See  Speculative. 

— Browning. 
Ought  we  to  exclude  the  Chinese?     See  Chinese  Immi- 
gration.—Blaine. 
Ouphe  and  goblin!  imp  and  sprite!     See  Culprit   Fay, 

The  (Elfin  Song).— Drake. 
Our  aims  are  all  too  high;  we  try.     See  Aspirations.— 

Anon. 
Our  Aunt  Lucy,  she  lives  'ith  us.     See  Our  Aunt  Lucy. 

— Richards. 
Our    Aunt    'Mandy   thinks    that    boys.     See    "Aunt 

'Mandy." — Lincoln. 
Our  author  by  experience  finds  it  true.     See   Aureng- 
Zebe;  or.  The   Great  Mogul   (Prologue). — Dryden. 
Our  baby  lay  in  its  mother's  arms.     See  Malaria.— 

Reid. 
Our  band  is  few,   but  true  and  tried.     See  Song  of 

Marion's  Men. — Bryant. 
Our  bark  is  on  the  waters;  wide  around.     See  "Pater 

Vester  Pascit  Ilia." — Hawker. 
Our  beloved  country  is  more  than  a  hundred  years  old. 

See  Day  of  Our  Country,  A. — Long. 
Our  beloved  Old  State  House  is  now  restored.     See  Old 
State    House,    Boston    (Restored   1882),     The. — 
Whitmore. 
Our  best    beloved    of   all   the    brave.     See    Nelson. — 

Massey. 
Our  better  part  remains.     See  Paradise  Lost. — Milton. 
Our  boat  to  the  waves  go  free.     See  Our  Boat  to  the 

Waves. — Channing. 
Our   brethren    of  New  England  use.      See  Hudibras 

(Puritans). — Butler. 
Our  brows  are  wreathed  with  spindrift.     See  Coast- 
wise Lights,  The. — Kipling. 
Our  bugles  sang  truce,  for  the  night-cloud  had  lower'd. 

See  Soldier's  Dream,  The. — Campbell. 
Our  bugles  sound  gayly.     To  horse  and  away !     See 

Caval^f  Song. — Raymond. 
Our  camp-fires  shone  bright   on  the  mountain.     See 

Sherman's  March  to  the  Sea.— -Byers. 
Our  cause  is  a  progressive  one.     See  Cause  of  Temper- 
ance, The. — Gough. 
"Our  church  has  got  a  bran'  new  man."     See  Law 
agin  it,  A. — Archibald. 


802 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Our 


Our  constitution  since  its  adoption  has  been  amended. 

See  Our  Constitution. — Depew. 
Our  country  has  produced  at  least  three  great  men. 

See  Abraham  Lincoln. — Langston. 
Our  country   is   a   whole,    my   Publius.     See   Duty  to 

One's  Country. — More. 
Our  country! — 'tis  a  glorious  land!     See  Our  Country. 

— Pabodie. 
Our  country !  whose  eagle  exults  as  he  fli*».     See  Our 

Country. — Proctor. 
Our  cousin    king   is    dead.     See    Lady    Jane    Grey. — 

Webster.  . 

Our  Daisy  lay  down.     See  Hint,  A. — Anon. 
Our  darling  little  Florence,  our  blessing  and  our  pride. 

See  Christmas  Tree,  The. — Sangster. 
Our  dim  eyes  seek  a  beacon.     See  same. — Anon. 
Our  disposition    is    much    of    our    own    making.     See 

Women's  Dispositions. — Talmage. 
Our  doctor  had  called  in  another,  I  never  had  seen  him 

before.     See  In  the  Children's  Hospital. — Tenny- 
son. 
Our  dog  Fred.       See   Session    with    Uhcle    Sidney,    A 

(Diners  in  the  Kitchen). — Riley. 
Our  doll-baby  show  it  was  something  quite  grand.     See 

Doll-baby  Show,  The. — Cooper. 
Our  dying   friends   come     o'er   us   like   a   cloud.     See 

Night  Thoughts  (Death  of  Friends,  The). — Young. 
Our  England's  heart  is  sound  as  oak.     See  Heart  and 

Will.— Linton. 
Our  enterprise  is  in  advance  of  the  public  sentiment. 

See  Cause  of  Temperance,  The. — Gough. 
Our  entertainment     now     is     through.     See     Closing 

Address. — Cornell 
Our  exercises  for  the  day.     See  Valedictory  for  a  Small 

Boy. — Kavanaugh. 
Our  exhibition  has  begun.      See  Salutatory  for  a  Small 

Boy. — Kavanaugh. 
Our  eyeless     bark     .sails     free.     See     Earth,     The.— 

Emerson. 
Our  Father,  by  right  of  creatioh.     See  Lord's  Prayer 

Illustrated,  The. — Anon. 
Our  Father-land!     And     wouldst     thou     know.     See 

Father-land  and  Mother-tongue. — Lover. 
Our  Fatherland  is  in   danger!     Citizens!  to  arms!   to 

arms.     See  Appeal  to  the  Hungarians. — Kossuth. 
Our  Father's  God !  from  out  whose  hand.     See  Centen- 
nial Hymn. — Whittier. 
Our  fathers  rejected  the  holidays  of  the  church.     See 

Family  as  an  Amer'can  Institution,  The  (Thanks- 
giving Day). — Beecher. 
Our  fellow-countrymen  in  chains!     See  Our  Country- 
men in  Chains. — Whittier. 
"Our  First  Commander.  General  U.  S.  Grant."     See 

Our  First  Commander. — Vilas. 
Our  first  young  love  resembles.     See  Our  First  Young 

Love. — Anon. 
Our  flag  is  there!     See  same. — Anon. 
Our  flag  means,  then,  all  that  our  fathers  meant  in  the 

Revolutionary    War.      See    National    Flag,    'The 

(Meaning  of  the   Flag,  The). — Beecher. 
Our  flag  on  the  land,  and  our  flag  on  the  ocean.     See 

Our  Defenders. — Read. 
Our  floods'    queen,    Thames,    for   ships   and   swans   is 

crowned.     See  Rivers  of  England,  The. — Dra.yton. 
Our  folks    have    been    cleaning    hou.se.     See    Hattie's 

Views  on  House-cleaning. — -Anon. 
Our  forests  are  fast  disappearing.     See  Forest  Flowers. 

— Frankenstein. 
Our  girl's   name  was  Pomona.      See  Rudder  Grange 

(Our  Hired  Girl). — Stockton. 
Our  God,  our  help  in  ages  past.     See  Psalm  XC. — 

Watts. 
Our    good    steeds  snuff   the   evening  [wr.  winter]   air. 

See  Alice  of  Monmouth  (Cavalry  Song). — Stedman. 
Our  gracious    queen — long   may    she    fill    her    throne. 

See  Wonders  of  the  Victorian  Age. —  {Punch.) 
Our  grandmothers  tell  us  that  when   then  were  little 

girls.     See    Epilogue    for    a    Boy    and  a    Girl. — 

Anon. 
Our  happiness  went  on  till  she  was  sixteen  years  old. 

See    Dr.   Marigold    (Dr.  Marigold   and   his   Dumb 

Girl). — Dickens. 
Our  hearts  are  full  of  joy  to-night.     See  Address  on  the 

Occasion  of  a  New  Pastor. — Anon. 
Our  hearts  grow  cold,  we  lightly  hold.     See  Eve  of 

Election,  The.— Whittier. 
Our  heroes  and  martyrs!  they  are  identified  with  the 

names  that  live.     See  Our  Heroes  and  Martyrs. — 

(3hapin. 
Our  hired  girl,  she's  Lizabuth  Ann.     See  Our  Hired 

Girl.— Riley. 
Our  historian  Bancroft  says  of  the  Federal  Constitu- 
tion.    See  Our  Federal  Constitution. — Fuller. 


Our  honored  dead!  how  calm  they  sleep.  See  Our 
Honored  Dead.: — Anon. 

Our  hopes,  like  towering  falcons,  aim.  See  To  the 
Hon.  Charles  Montague. — Prior. 

Our  horsis  pasturit  in  ane  plesand  plane.  See  Palice 
of  Honour,  The  (Fote  Champi'tre,  The). — Douglas. 

Our  house  is  topsy-turvy.     See  Moving. — Rook. 

Our  kind  hostess  has  asked  me  to  recite  something. 
See  By  Special  Request. — Castles. 

Our  King  has  wrote  a  long  letter.  See  Lord  Derwent- 
water. — Anon. 

Our  king  he  has  a  secret  to  tell.  See  Bonny  Lass  of 
Anglesey,  The. — Anon. 

Our  life  is  comely  as  a  whole ;  nay,  more.  See  Woman's 
Four  Reasons. — Bailey. 

Our  life  is  twofold;  Sleep  hath  its  own  world.  See 
Dream,  The. — Byron. 

"Our  little  babe,"  each  said,  "shall  be."  See  Wonder- 
child,  The. — Le  Gallienne. 

Our  little  bark  seem'd  a  mere  speck.  See  Touching 
Incident,  A. — Anon. 

Our  little  bird  in  his  full  day  of  health.  See  Vacant 
Cage,  The. — Turner. 

Our  little  boy  who  went  away.  See  Little  Boy  Who 
Went  Away,  The. — Foss 

Our  little  Daisy  is  rosy  and  sweet.  See  Our  Daisy. — 
Anon. 

Our  little  Jim  was  such  a  limb.  See  Little  Jim. — 
Sims. 

Our  lives  are  songs;  God  writes  the  words.  See  Our 
Lives. — Anon. 

Our  long  dispute  must  close.  See  Catiline  (Expulsion 
of  Catiline  from  the  Senate). — Croly. 

Our  lords  are  to  the  mountains  gane.  See  Hughie 
Graham. — Anon. 

Our  love  is  not  a  fading,  earthly  flower.  See  Sonnet: 
"Our  love  is  not,"  etc. — Lowell. 

Our  love  was  most  like  other  loves.  See  End  of  the 
Romance,  The. — Praed. 

Our  ma,  why  she  kin  do  most  anything.  See  What 
Ma  Kin  Do. — Richards. 

Our  many  years  are  made  of  clay  and  cloud.  See 
Destiny. — Morris. 

Our  martyred  dead.     See  same. — Trafton. 

Our  men  fought  well  at  Morat !  They  fought  like  lion.s, 
boy.     See  Battle  of  Morat,  The.— Story. 

Our  minister,  good  Dr.  Kane,  a  highly  "proper  man." 
See  Shouting  Jane. — Ford. 

Our  modern  institution — Arbor  Day.  See  Arbor  Day. 
— ( Vick's  Manazine.) 

Our  Mother  Earth  is  in  her  loom.  See  Spring  Har- 
bingers.— Anon. 

Our  mother  is  the  good  green  earth.  See  Voyageur 
Song. — Weir. 

Our  Mother,  loved  of  all  thy  sons.  See  Sea  and  Shore. 
— Koopman. 

Our  mother,  while  she  turned  her  wheel.  See  Snow- 
bound (Mother). — Whittier. 

Our  name  is  Perkins.  I  alius  thought  that  was  a  nice 
name.     See  About  our  Folks. — Wood. 

Our  nationality  has  its  charter  and  seal,  not  in  a  writ- 
ten constitution  so  much  as  in  the  trend  of  a  coast. 
See  Our  Nationality. — King. 

"Our  nation's  foes  lament  on  Fox's  death."  See  On 
the  Death  of  Mr.  Fox. — Byron. 

Our  new  flag-bearer,  pale  and  slim.  See  Incident  of 
War,  An. — Thompson. 

Our  night  repast  was  ended;  quietness.  See  Youth  and 
Age. — Scott. 

Our  object  will  not  have  been  accomplished.  See  Ob- 
ject of  Missions.  The. — Wayland. 

Our  old  brown  homestead  reared  its  walls.  See  Our 
Homestead. — Cary. 

Our  old  mother  country  has  had  indeed  a  peculiar 
destiny.  See  Centennial  Oration  (Glorious  Des- 
tiny of  England,  The). — Winthrop. 

Our  opponents  have  charged  us  with  being  the  pro- 
moters.    See  Appeal  to  the  People,  An. — Bright. 

Our  own  dear  land,  our  native  land.  See  Our  (i)wn 
Dear  Land. — Thomas. 

Our  pains  are  real  things,  and  all.  See  Upon  the  Weak- 
ness and  Misery  of  Man. — Butler. 

Our  parts  are  performed  and  our  speeches  are  ended. 
See  Epilogue  for  a  School  Performance. — Anon. 

Our  party  has  been  called  in  half  derision  a  conscience 
party.     See  Conscience  in  Politics. — Funk. 

Our  past  is  bright  and  grand.  See  Nation's  Hymn, 
'The. — Anon. 

Our  people,  in  a  day,  assumed  a  place  among  the  na- 
tions of  the  earth.  See  People  of  the  United 
States. — Cleveland. 

Our  play  is  short,  requiring  little  casting.  See  T'ward 
Arcadie. — New. 


803 


Our 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Our  popular  inKtitutioiis  demand  a  talent  for  speaking. 

See  Eloquence  and  Logic— Preston. 
Our  President  is  dead      We  can  hardly  believe  it.     See 

McKinley's    Funeral    Address.— Manchester. 
Our  program  we  have  put  in  print      -See  Salutatory. 

— Anon.  • 

Our  revels  now  are   ended.     These   our  actors.     .See 

Tempest,  The  (Airy  Nothings).— Shakespeare. 
Our  Hob  has  mittent.  new  and  red.     See  Rob's  Mittens. 

-    (Youth's  Companion.) 
Our  Sary  Emma  is  possessed  ter  be  at  somethin  queer. 

See  "Sary  Emma's  Photographs." — lincoln. 
Our  Senator  was  a  man  who  by  mere  force  of  char- 
acter.    See  Senator  Entangled.  A. — De  Mille. 
Our  share  of  night  to  bear.     See  Life. — Dickinson. 
Our  sheriff  is  a  man  of  rather  high  intelligence.     See 

.Joe  St  riker  and  the  Sheriff. — Anon. 
Our  sires  were  rocked  in  Faneuil  Hall.     See  Temper- 
ance.   -Bungav.  .  C.       /-V1J 
Our  six  little  stockmgs  we  hung  in  a  row.     See  Old 

Christmas  Forty  Years  Ago!— Candy. 
Our  souls  are  sick  for  permanence;  this  world.     See 

Refuge  of  the  Ideal,  The. — Kimball. 
Our  sweet,     autumnal     western-scented     wind.     See 

Sweetbrier,  The. — Brainard 
Our  Tabby,  she  is  very  wise.     See  Praise  of  the  Cat. — 

Anon. 
Our  three  cats  is  Maltese  cats.     See  Find  the  Favorite. 

—Riley. 
Our  two  souls,  therefor,  which  are  one.     See  Valedic- 
tion    Forbidding    Mourning. — Donne. 
Our  warrior  was  conquer'd  at  last.     See  Abdication  of 

Napoleon , — Thackeray. 
Our  wean's  the  most  wonderfu'  wean  e'er  I  saw.     See 

Wonderfu'  Wean,  The.— Miller. 
Our  Will  had  earned  a  dollar  bill.     See  Will's  Dollar 

Bill. ^Richards. 
Our  window's  not  much — though  it  fronts  en  the  street. 

See  What  Miss  Edith  Saw  from  her  Window.— Harte. 
Our  world  has  battle-fields  where  truth  and  right.     See 

Heroes. — Shaw. 
Ours  all  are  marble  halls.     See  Song  of  the  Kings  of 

Gold. — .Jones. 
Ours   is  a  wise  and  earnest  age,  an  age  of  thought  and 

science.     See  New  Guides  to   Faith  and   Belief, 

The. — Anon. 
Ours  is  and  always  has  been  a  government  controlled 

by  lawyers.     See  Lawyer  and  Free  Institutions, 

The. — Depew. 
Out  again!     What  a  mania  that  boy  has  for  agricul- 
ture.    See  Martyr  to  Science,  A;  or.  Wanted — a 

Confederate. — Weston. 
Out  and  in  the  river  is  winding.     See  Red  River  Voy- 

ageur.  The. — Whittier. 
Out  from  behind  this  bending,  rough-cut  mask.     See 

My  Patriot — Whitman. 
Out  from   the   city's   dust   and   roar.     See   Forgotten 

Grave.  The. — Dobson. 
Out  from  the  comers  and  over  the  floor.     See  Bed- 
time Fancies. — Anon. 
Out  from  the  hearthstone  the  children  go.     See  Will 

it  Pay?— Lathrap. 
Out  from  the  home  of  the  Christmas  tree.     See  Christ- 
mas Exercise,  A. — Hadley. 
Out  from   the   mine   and  the   darkness.     See  In   the 

Crucible. — Anon. 
Out  from  tower  and  from  steeple  rang  the  sudden  New 

Year  bells.     See  Masque  of  the  New  Year,  The.— 

Wilbor. 
Out  I  went  in  the  morning,  to  look  at  my  garden  gay. 

See  Perseverance. — Thaxter. 
Out  in  a  fog-bank  we  went  down.     See  Jim. — Perry. 
Out  in     the    beautiful    country.     See    Thanksgi\ing 

Elopement,  A. — Emerson. 
Out  in  the  cornfield,  grouried  together.     See  Farmer 

Nick's  Scarecrow.— Crosby. 
Out  in  the  dark  it  throbs  and  glows.    See  On  the  Verge. 

— Winter. 
Out  in  the  garden  wee  Elsie.     See  Butterfly,  The. — 

Anon. 
Out  in  the  hilly  patch.     See  Dear  Lads  and  Las.ses. — 

Anon. 
Out  in  the  meadows  the  yoimg  grans  springs.     See  Re- 
turn of  the  Swallows.  The.- — Gosse. 
Out  in  the  midnight's  white  and  starry  splendor.     See 

Christmas  Carol. — Carpenter. 
Out  in  the  misty   moonlight.     See  Ghosts. — Munkit- 

triok. 
Out  in  the  pleasant  sunshine  of  a  bright  October  day. 

See  Nutting. — Blinn. 
Out  into  the  mud  and  the  wet  he  goes.     See  Hero,  A. — 

Field. 


Out  it  spake  Lizzie  Lindsay.     See  Lizzie  Lindsay. — 

Anon. 
Out,  John!  out,  John!  what  are  you  about,  .John?     See 

Out. — Bayly. 
Out  of  a  cavern  on  Parnassus'  side.     See  New  Castalia, 

The.— Ward. 
Out  of   a    Northern    city's   bay.     See    Cruise   of   the 

"Monitor,"  The. — Baker. 
Out  of  a  pel  ucid  brook.     See  Pebbles. — Sherman. 
Out  of  blackened  clouds  of  powder.     See  Sergeant  of 

the  Fiftieth,  The.— Anon. 
Out  of    Flanders    did    we    ride.     See    Four    Knights 

The. — Meyers. 
Out  of  my  door.vard  maple.     See  Memory.- Luders. 
Out  of  my  window  I  could  see.     See  Blossoms. — Sher- 
man. 
Out  of  shadow  into  sunlight.     See  Out  of  Shadow. — 

Chellis. 
Out  of   the    bosom    of   the   Air.     See   Snow-flakes. — 

Longfellow. 
Out  of   the   church   she   follow'd    them.     See   Maude 

Clare. — Rossetti . 
Out  of  the  cloud-world  sweeps  thy  awful  form.     See 

To  an  Alaskan  Glacier. — Keeler. 
Out  of  the  clover  and  blue-eyed  grass.     See  Driving 

Home  the  Cows. — Osgood. 
Out  of  the  cottage   looked  Meg  May.     See  Meg  May's 

Valentine. — Anon. 
Out  of    the    cradle    endlessly    rocking.     See    same. — 

Whitman. 
Out  of  the  deep.  O  Lord,  Thy  Spirit  moves,  and  passes 

and  none  knows.     See  Battle  of  Manila,  The. — 

Burr. 
Out  of  the  deeps  of  heaven.     See  same.- — Stoddard. 
Out  of  the  distance  and  darkness  so  deep.     See  Out  and 

Into. — Anon. 
Out  of  the  dreams  that  heap.     See  Origins. — Roberts. 
Out  of  the  dusk  a  shadow.     See  Evolution.— Tabb. 
Out  of  the  East  a  hurricane.     See  Captain  Lean. — 

Ramal. 
Out  of  the  east  comes  up  the  morning  sim.     See  Out 

of  the  East. — Bates. 
Out  of  the  far  sea,   vaporous,   ghost-like  arms.     See 

South  Fork. — Bates. 
Out  of  the  focal  and  foremost  fire.     See  Little  G  iff  en 

of  Tennessee. — Ticknor. 
Out  of  the  frozen  earth  below.     See  Crocus,  The. — 

King. 
Out  of  the  golden   remote  wild  west  where  the  sea 

without  .shore  is.     See  Hesperia. — Swinburne. 
Out  of  the  heart  it  came,  the  impulse  strong.     See  Out 

of  the  Heart. — Chadwick. 
Out  of  the  heart  there  flew  a  little  singing  bird.     See 

Youth.— Cloud. 
Out  of  the  hills  of  Habersham.     See  Song  of  the  Chat- 
tahoochee . — Lanier. 
Out  of  the  Latin  Quarter.     See  Sphinx  of  the  Tuileries, 

The.— Hay. 
Out  of  the  mighty  Yule  log  came.     See  Yule  Log,  The. 

— -Hayne. 
Out  of   the  mist  came   the  voice  of  Gavin,  clear  and 

strong.     See  Little  Minister,  The  (Rescue  of  Gavin, 

The).— Barrie. 
Out  of  the  mists  of  childhood.     See  Fairy  Faces. — 

Anon. 
Out  of   the   night   that   covers   me.     See   Invictus. — 

Henley. 
Out  of  the  North  the  wild  news  came.     See^Revolu- 

tionary  Rising,  The. — Read. 
Out  of  the  old  house,  Nancy — moved  up  into  the 'new. 

See  Out  of  the  Old  House,  Nancy. — Carleton. 
Out  of    the    past    remembered    eyes.     See    Rondel. — 

Gray. 
Out  of  the  sky  they  come.     See  Snowflakes.— Sher- 
man. 
Out  of  the  tavern  I've  just  stepped  to-night.     See  As- 
tonished Tippler,  The. — Anon. 
Out  of  the  uttermost  ridge  of  dusk.     See  Tryst  of  the 

Night,  The.— Byron. 
Out  of  the  way  in  a  comer.     See  "Elizabeth,  Aged 

Nine." — Sangster. 
Out  of  the  window,  as  I  lie.     See  Sick  Little  Giri,  The. 

— Anon. 
Out  of  this  town  there  riseth  a  high  hill.     See  Mano: 

a  Poetical  History   (Of   a  Vision  of  Hell,  which  a 

Monk  Had).- — Dixon. 
Out  of  water,  clear  and  white.     See  Rainbow,  The. — 

Anon. 
Out  on  the  field  in  red  o'  rain.     See  How  She  Was 

Consoled. — Anon. 
Out  on  the  lawn  in  the  evening  gray.     See  Croquet. — 

Anon. 


804 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Paddy 


Out  on  the  lawn,  one  summer's  day.     See  Grandpa 

and  Baby. — Anon. 
Out  on   the   margin   of   moonshine   land.     See  Lugu- 
brious   Whing-whang,     The. — Riley. 
Out  on  the  mountain  over  the  town.     See  Gold  and 

Love  for  Dearie. — Field. 
Out,  out    at    sea,    the    light.     See    Dead    Light-house 

Keeper,  The. — Ware. 
Out,  out   in  the  night,  in  the  chill  wintry  air.     See 

Turned  out  for  Rent. — Burke. 
"Out,  out.  Old  Age!  aroint  ye!"     See  Crabbed  Age  and 

Youth. — Anon. 
Out  she  swung  from  her  moorings.     See  Sealed  Orders. 

— Anon. 
Out  upon  it,  I  have  loved.     See  Constancy. — Suckling. 
Out  upon  the  Bay  of  Filey.     See  Wreck  of  the  "Mary 

Wiley,"  The. — -.lackson. 
Out  upon  Time,  who  will  leave  no  more.     See  Siege  of 

Corinth,  The  (Hurts  of  Time).— Byron. 
Out  where  the  sky  and  the  sky-blue  sea.     See  Flying- 
fish. — Fenollosa. 
Out  yonder  in  the  moonlight,  wherein  God's  Acre  lies. 

See  Singing  in  God's  Acre,  The.^ — Field. 
Outdoors  the  white  rain  coming  down.     See  April. — 

Sherman, 
Outillon  saidi!  Corlanafaci!  SeeOutillon  Saidi.— Anon. 
Outlanders,  whence  come  ye  last?     See  Earthly   Para- 
dise, The  (Minstrels  and  Maids). — -Morris. 
Outside  my  garret  window  there's  a  roof.     See  Spar- 
rows, The. — Anon. 
Outside  the  fort,  the  Creoles  were  beginning  a  noise  of 

jubilation.     See  Alice's  Flag. — Thompson. 
Outside  the  village,  by  the  public  road.     See  Dried-up 

Fountain,  The. — liCighton. 
Outstretched  beneath    the    leafy    shade.     See    Green- 
wood Shrift,  The.—Southey. 
Outstretching  flameward    his    upbraided    hand.     See 

Cranmer. — Wordsworth. 
Over  all  the    hill-tops.      See   Wanderer' .s     Night-song, 

The.^Goethe. 
Over  all  the  raindrops  fall.     See  Preparation. — Butts. 
Over  and  over  again.     See  same. — Pollard. 
Over  and  under,  and  in  and  out.     See  Mother's  Mend- 
ing Basket. — -Kidder. 
Over  here  in  England  I'm  helpin'  wi'  the  hay.     See 

Corrymeela. — O'Neill. 
Over  hill,  over  dale.     See  Midsummer   Night's   Dream 

(Fairy  Land,  I.). -^Shakespeare. 
Over  hills  and  over  woodlands.     See  Where  Shall  We 

Find  God. — -Linn. 
Over  hills  and  uplands  high.     See  Nepenthe. — Darley. 
Over  his  keys  the  musing  organist.     See  Vision  of  Sir 

Launfal,  The. — Lowell. 
Over  his  millions  death  has  lawful  power.     See  On  the 
Death  of  M.  d'Ossoli  and  his  Wife,  Margaret  Ful- 
ler.— Landor. 
Over  in  the  meadow.     See  same. — Wadsworth. 
Over  meadows    purple-flower'd.     See    Riding    to    the 

Tournament,  The. — Thornbury. 
Over  mossy  stone  and  mound.     See  To-morrow  is  An- 
other Day. — Choate. 
Over  my  shaded  door  way.    See  Bird's  Nest,  A. — Percy. 
Over  my  soul  the  great  thoughts  roll.     See  Music  in  the 

Soul. — Anon. 
Over  my  window  the    ivy  climbs.      See  My  Window 

Ivy. — Dodge. 
Over  our  head   [or  heads]   the   branches   made.     See 

Passing  Show,  The. — Luders. 
Over  the  Alban  mountains  the  light  of  morning  broke. 

See  Virginia. — Macaulay. 
Over  the   bare   hills,   far  away.     See  Over  the   Bare 

Hills. — Anon. 
Over  the  borders,  a  sin  without  pardon.     See  Keep- 
sake Mill. — Stevenson. 
Over  the  chimney  the  night  wind  sang.     See  Chimney's 

Melody,  The. — Harte. 
Over  the  cradle  the  mother  hung.     See  Where  Shall 

the  Baby's  Dimple  Be? — Holland. 
Over,  the  crumbs  of  Southern  camp  shaded  with  palm 

and  pine.     See  Bird's  Convention. — Hageman. 
Over  the  dim  blue  hills.     See  Maire  My  Girl. — Casey. 
Over  the  dim  confessional  cried.     See  Priest's  Prayer, 

A. — Dickinson. 
Over  the  dumb  campagna-sea.     See  View   across  the 

Roman  Campagna,  A. — Browning. 
Over  the  dusky  verge.    .See  In  the  'Twilight. — Anon. 
Over  the  field  the  bright  air  clings  and  tingles.     See 

Flock  of  Sheep,  A. — Scott. 
Over  the   field   the   grass   is   red.     See   Star-spangled 

Banner,  The.— O'Donnell. 
Over  the  fields  the  daisies  lie.     See  Summer  Day,  A. — 
Anon. 


Over  the  fields  where  the  soft  wind  blows.     See  Ro- 
salie.— Tompkins. 
Over  the  fence  is  a  garden  fair.     See  Over  the  Fence. — 

Anon. 
Over  the  green  downs  when  I  do  wander.     See  Over 

the  Green  Downs. — Ingelow. 
Over  the  happy  mother's  bed.     See  Little  Dead  Prince, 

A. — Craik. 
Over  the  hill  the  farm-boy  goes.     See  Evening  at  the 

Farm. — Trowbridge. 
Over  the  hill  to  the  poor-house  I'm  trudgin'  my  weary 
way.     See   Over   the   Hill   to   the   Poor-house.— 
Carleton. 
Over  the  hills  and  far  away.     See  sam.e. — Field. 
Over  the  hills,  at  the  close  of  day.     See  Cloudland. 

— {Columbia  Literary  Monthly.^ 
Over  the   hills   through   the   valley   away.     See   Mill 

River  Ride. — Donovan. 
Over  the  hills  to  the  poor-house  sad  paths  had  been 
made  to-day.     See  Over  the  Hills  from  the  Poor- 
house. — Mignonette. 
Over  the  hills  where  March  winds  sweep.     See  Sleeping 

May. — Willis. 
Over  the  lattice  there  clambered  a  vine.      See  same. — 

Anon. 
Over  the  lofty  Ben-Lomond.     See  Mother's  Answer, 

A. — Barr. 
Over  the  meadow  and  over  the  hill.     See  My  Quest. — 

W.  T.  O. 
Over  the  monstrous,  swashing  sea.     See  March  Song. — 

Sunrise. — -Field. 
Over  the  mountains  and  over  the  waves.     See  Truth's 

Integrity. — Anon. 
Over  the  mountains  we  trample,  the  troop  of  us.     See 

Vagabonds,  The. — Macy. 
Over  the  plains  where  Persian  hosts.     See  Cyclamen, 

The.— Bates. 
Over  the  ribs  of  the  salt  sea  sand.      See  Widow's  Light, 

The. — Moore. 
Over  the  river  and  through  the  wood.     See  Thanks- 
giving Day.— Child. 
Over  the  River  of  Drooping  Eyes.     See  sam,e. — Anon. 
Over  the  river  on  the  hill.     See  Two  Villages,  'The. — 

Terry. 
Over  the  river  they  beckon  to  me.     See  Over  the  River. 

—Wakefield. 
Over  the  rope  and  under  the  rope.     See  Skipping. — 

Anon. 
Over  the  sea  our  galleys  went.     See  Paracelsus  (Song 

from  "Paracelsus"). — Browning. 
Over  the  Snows.     See  Snows,  The. — Sangster. 
Over  the  telegraph  wires.     See  Humming  of  the  Wires, 

The.— Rand. 
Over  the  threshold  a  gallant  new-comer.     ^See   New 

Year,  A. — Anon. 
Over  the    turret,   shut    in   his  ironclad   tower.      See 

Craven . — Newbolt . 
Over  the  undulated  prairie.  See  Prairie  Fire,  The.— Hall. 
Over  the  village  on  the  hill.     See  Two  Villages,  The. — 

Cooke. 
Over  the  west  the  glory  dies  away.     See  Yearning. 

— {All  the  Year  Round.) 
Over  their  graves  rang  once  the  bugle's  call.     See  Over 

Their  Graves. — Stockard. 
Over  valley,  over  hill.     See  Snow  Song. — Sherman. 
Overburden  not  thy  memory  to  make  so  faithful  a 

servant  a  slave.     See  Memory. — Fuller. 
Overloaded,  undermanned.     See  Coasters,  The. — Day. 
Overtopping  all  others  in  character,   LaFayette  was 
conspicuous  in  debate.     See  Lafayette,  the  Faith- 
ful One  (Marquis  de  LaFayette) .—Sumner. 
Owd  Pindar  were  a  reckless  foo.     See  Owd  Pinder. — 

Waugh. 
Owen  Moore  went  away.     See  Owen  Moore. — Anon. 
Oxcoose  me  if  I  shed  some  tears.     See  Shacob's  La- 
ment.— Anon. 
Oxen  that   rattle  the  yoke  and  chain.     See  Song  of 

Myself  ("Oxen  that  rattle,"  etc.). — Whitman. 
Oxford  County  to  me,  sir,  is  a  volume  of  poems.     See 
Oxford  County. — Long. 


Pa  he  bringed  me  here  to  stay.  See  Christmas  Mem- 
ory, A. — Riley. 

Pack  clouds  away  and  welcome  day.  See  Rape  of 
Lucrece,  The  (Pack  Clouds  Away). — Heywood. 

Paddy,  in  want  of  a  dinner  one  day.  See  Paddy 
O'Rafther. — Lover. 

Paddy  McCabe  was  dying  one  day.  See  Father  Mol- 
loy;  or.  The  Confession. — Lover. 


805 


Paddy 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Paddy  M'>ore  wan  all   Irish,  and  no  doubting  it.     See 

Paddy  Moore.  —  Brook.s. 
"Paddy,"  said  the  squire,  "perhaps  you  would  favor 
the  gentlemen  with  that  story.     iSee  Pat  and  the 
P"ox. — I^ver. 
Pain's   furnace   h^Rt    within    me   quivers.     See  God's 

Anvil. — Sturm. 
Paint  me  your  perfect  lady.     I  have  seen.     See  Por- 
trait of  a  Lady. — Anon 
Paint  you  a  perfect  man?     I  cannot  tell.     See  Per- 
fect Man,  The. — Anon. 
Pale  and  weary,  strangely  old.     See  Beggar  Baby,  The 

— Anon. 
Pale  beryl  sky,  with  clouds.     See  Winter  Twilight,  A. 

— Bates. 
Pale  Brussels!  then  what   thoughts  were  thine.     See 

Field  of  Waterloo,  The.— Scott. 
Pale,  climbing  disk,  who  dost  lone  vigil  keep.     See  To 

the  Moonflower. — Betts. 
Pale,  faded  and  withered  flowers.     See  Faded  Flowers. 

— Buxton. 
Pale  in  the  pallid  moonlight,  white  as  the  rose  on  her 

breast.     See  In  a  Garden. ^Moulton. 
Pale    is    the    February    sky.     See    Twenty-second    of 

February,  The. — Bryant. 
Pale  melancholy,  faithfully  thou  lov'st.     See  Corydon 

and  Amarylli.s. — Stewart. 
Pallid  saffron  glows  the  broken  stubble.     See  Fifteenth 

of  April,  'The. — Scott. 
Pallid  white  the  moonlight   gloweth.     See  Accursed. 

— (Sacramento  Union.) 
Pallid  with  too  much  longing.     See  Laus  Veneris. — 

Moulton. 
Palmerston  traced  his  lineage  to  the  time  of  the  (,"on- 
queror.     See     Palmerston     and     Lincoln. — rBan- 
croft. 
Pan's  Syrinx  was    a    girl    indeed.     See  Midas  (Pan's 

Song). — Lyly. 
Pansies,   lilies,   kingcups,   daisies.     See  To   the   Small 

Celandine. — Wordsworth. 
Pansies?     You  praise  the  ones  that  grow  to-day.     See 

Hugh  Sutherland's  Pansies. — Buchanan. 
Panting    and    pensive    now    she    ranged    alone.     See 
Hind  and  the  Pa-.ither,  The  (Sects,  The.     Private 
Judgment). — Dryden. 
Papa,  don't  you  know  it  is  my  birthday?     See  Birth- 
day Gifts. — Anon. 
Papa,  I'd  like  to  have  some  change.     See  How  He  Had 

Him. — Kavanaugh. 
"Papa, "  said  a  little  West  End  girl  the  other  evening. 

See  Papa  Was  Stumped. — Anon. 
Papa,  what  is  the  reason  that  some  days  are  so  lucky 
and  other  days  so  unlucky.     See  Katy  Didn't. — 
Anon. 
Papa  will  soon   be  here.      See  Afraid  of  the  Dark. — 

Anon. 
Papa's  coming!     Does  he  see.     See  Papa's  Coming. — 

Carlos. 
Papers,    boss?     Times,    Press,    Herald,    Record.     All 
the  latest  news.     See  Have  a  Shine,  Sah?^Ober- 
holtzer. 
Papers!     Papers!   wanter   paper,    mister?     Yes?     See 

Heart  of  Old  Hickory,  The. — Dromgoole. 
Pap's  got  his  patent  right  and  rich  as  all  creation.     See 

Back  Where  they  Used  to  be. — Riley. 
Parading  near  Saint  Peter's  flood.     See  Battle  of  Lake 

Champlain,  The. — Freneau. 
Paradoxical  as  it  may  appear,  war,  the  demon  scourge 

of  humanity.     See  same. — Anon. 
Pardon   a   friend    who    ventures   to   give.     See   Good 

Maxims. — Anon. 
"Pardon  me  for  disturbing  you,  sir,  but  there  is  a  little 
fellow  here."     See  How  the    LaRue   Stakes  were 
Lost. — Hood. 
"Pardon  me  for  troubling  you,  sir,  but  did  you  drop 
a  twenty  dollar  gold  piece?"     See  Loser  of  Money. 
— Anon. 
Pardon  me,  my  fellow-citizens,  I  know  you  want  not 
zeal  or  fortitude.     See  American  Rights. — Warren. 
Pardon  the  faults  in  me.      See  Wife  to  Husband. — 

Rossetti. 
Parent  of  golden  dreams,  Romance.     See  Romance. — 

Byron. 
Parents  and  friends.     Our  performances  are  ended  and 

we  are  glad.     See  Valedictory. — Anon. 
Parents  and  friends,  you  have  come  in  here  to-night. 

See  Salutatory,  A. — Anon. 
Parents,  friends,  we  bid  you  welcome.     See  Welcome. 

— Anon. 
Paris,  from  throats  of  iron,  silver,  brass.     See  Destiny. 

— I^azarus. 
Paris  has  a    child;    the    forest    has    a    bird.    See    I.«s 
Mi»«?rables  (Gamin,  The). — Hugi>. 


Parrhasius  stood,  gazing  forgetfully.     See  Parrhasius. 

—Willis. 
Parties   are   the   molds   into   which   God   pours.     See 

Parties. — Willard. 
Partly  work  and  partly  play.     See  St.  Distaff's  Day. — 

Herrick. 
Parunts  knows  lots  more  than   us.     See  Intellectual 

Limitations. — -Riley. 
Pass  the  word  to  the  boys  to-night!  lying  about  midst 

dying  and   dead!     See  Midnight   Charge,   The. — 

Scott. 
Passage,  immediately  passage!  the  blood  burns  in  my 

veins.     See  Sea  of  Faith,  The. — Whitman. 
Passing  away,   saith  the   World,   passing  away.     See 

Pa.ssing  Away. — Rossetti. 
Passing  feet  pause,  as  they  pass.    See  Marian. — Thomas 

Ashe. 
Passing  from  Italy  to  Greece,  the  tales.     See  I^ove  's 

Malanch)ly,    The    (Lutist    and    the    Nightingale, 

The).— Ford. 
Passion   and    pain,    the   outcry  [wr.  outcome]  of  des- 
pair.       See     Beethoven's     Third      Symphony. — 

Hovey. 
"Passion  o'  me!"  cried  Sir  Richard  Tyrone.    See  Sally 

from  Coventry,  The. — Thornbury. 
Passion   the   fathomless   spring,    and   words   the   pre- 
cipitate  waters.     See   Lyrical   Poem,   The. — Gar- 

nett. 
Passions  are  liken'd  be.st  to  floods  and  streams.     See 

Silent  Lover,  The.- -Raleigh.  , 

Past  ruin'd  Ilion  Helen  lives.     See  Verse. — Landor. 
Past  two    o'clock,  and    not  yet  returned.     See  Road 

to  Ruin,  The. — Holcroft. 
Pat    Flynn    had    sixty-seven    hats.     See   What's    the 

Difference? — Pearre. 
Pat   Murphy   had   been   on   a   fishing  excursion.     See 

Pat's  Perplexity. — Anon. 
Patience,  my  lord!  why   'tis  the  soul  of  peace.     See 

Honest  Whore,  The. — Dekker. 
Patient    creature,    sitting   here.     See  To   a   Spider. — 

Whytehead. 
Patrick  Flanigan,    stand   up   and  plead  guilty  or  not 

guilty.     See  Pat  Flanigan's  Logic. — Anon. 
Patrick  O'Flanigan,  from  Erin's  isle.     See  Pat  O'Flani- 

gan's  Colt. — -Anon. 
Patrick  O'Mars,  a  private  in  the  Ninth  Rejtulars  went 

to  the  colonel  of  his  regiment.     See  IVo  of    a 

Kind. — Anon. 
Patriotism  is  love  of  country.     See  Patriotism. — Ire- 
land. 
Patriots   have   toiled,   and   in    their   country's   cause. 

See  same. — Cowper. 
Patter,  patter  all  day  long.     See  Mothers,  watch  the 

Little  Feet. — Anon. 
Patter,    patter,    let    it    pour.     See    April    Shower. — 

Anon. 
Patter!  patter!  running  feet!     See  Friend  or  Foe? — 

Weatherly. 
Pattie,  have  you  put  the  pies  to  bake?     See  Grateful.— 

Anon. 
Paul    Denton,   a   Methodist   preacher  in   Texas.     See 

Apostrophe  to  Water  (Apostrophe  to  Cold  Water). 

— Gough. 
Paul  had  never  risen  from  his  little  bed.     See  Dom- 

bpy  and  Son  (Last  Hours  of  Little  Paul  Dombey, 

The) . — Dickens. 
Paul    Louis    Courier    thus    writes    to    a    cousin.     See 

Night  of  Terror,  A. — Courier. 
Paul   Revere  was  a  rider  bold.     See  Ride  of  Jennie 

McNeal,  The. — Carleton. 
Paul — that's   me!     Peter    is    my    father-in-law.     See 

Pity  the  Poor  Blind. — Anon. 
Paul  Venarez  heard  them  say,  in  the  frontier  town 

that   for  one]   day.     See   Ride  of  Paul    V'enarez. 

The.— Rexford. 
Pauline,   by   pride  angels    have  fallen   ere  thy  time. 

See  Lady  of   Lyon.«,  The  (Claude  Melnotte  to  Pau- 
line).— Bulwer-Lytton. 
Pause  for  awhile,  ye  travelers  upon  the  earth.     See 

Beauties  of  Nature. — Moodie. 
Pause   not    to    dream   of   the   future   before   us.     See 

Labor  is  Worship. — Osgood. 
Pavements    a-frying    in    street    and    in    square.     See 

Ninety-eight  in  the  Shade. — Lincoln. 
"Pax  Vobiscum!"     Peace  be  with  ye!     Hark  the  In- 
dependence bells!     See  Pax  Vobiscum! — Taylor. 
Peace!     Be  .still!     See  same. — Anon. 
Peace!  for  my  brain  is  on  the  rack!     See  Fisherman's 

Wife,  The.— Cary. 
Peace  hath  its  victories  more  renowned  than  war.     See 

Father's  Choice,  The. — Parsons. 
Peace  in  the  clover  scented  air.     Heart  of  the  War, 
The.— Holland. 


806 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Piping 


Peace!     Let  the  long  procession  come.     See  Abraham 
Lincohi:  A  Horatian  Ode   (Burial   of  Lincoln). — 

Stoddard. 
"Peace  on  earth  and  mercy  mild."     See  Winning  and 

Losing. — Craik. 
Peace,  peace,  peace,  do  you  say?     See  First  News  from 

Villafranca. — Browning. 
Peace,  Shepherd,  peace!     What  boots  it  singing  on? 

See  Genius  Loci. — Woods. 
Peace!  there  is  nothing  more  for  men  to  speak.     See 

Misrepresentation. — DeTabley. 
Peace  through  the  mountain  and  the  vale,  the  night. 

See  Avalanche,  The. — Anon. 
Peace  to  all  such!  but  were  there  one  whose  firps.     See 

Ernstl?   to   Dr.  Arbuthnot   (Portrait  of  Addison). 

— Pope. 
Peace  to  the  brave  who  nobly  fell.   See  Peace. — Adams. 
Peace  to  the  slumberers !     See  same. — Moore. 
Peace    to    the    virgin    heart,    the    crystal    brain!     See 

John  Henry  Newman. — Gosse. 
Peace  to  Torquato's  injurjd  shade!   SeeChilde  Harold's 

Pilgrimage  (Tasso). — Byron. 
Peace,  troubled  heart!  the  way's  not  long  before  thee. 

See  Peace. — Ames. 
Peace!  what  do  tears  avail?     See  same. — Procter. 
Pearls  and  patches,  powder  and  paint.     See  Portrait, 

The. — (Southern  Colleaian.) 
Peeping,   peeping,   here  and  there.     See  Song  of  the 

Grass  Blades. — Anon. 
Peers  to  me  that  clock  ticks  louder'n  common.     See 

Slight  Misunderstanding,  A. — Hall. 
Peggy,  Peggy,  Come  here.     See  Rose  and  a  Thorn,  A. — 

Boyd. 
"Peggy!     Peggy!"     Who    was    calling    Peggy?     See 

Peggy's    Garden,    and     what    Grew     Therein. — 

Thaxter. 
"Penalties!"  quarrel  not  with  the  old  phraseology. — 

See  same. — Carlyle. 
Pendent  from  my  chandelier.     See  German  Favors. — 

Clarke. 
Pensive  and  faltering.     See  same. — Whitman. 
Pentecost,  day  of  rejoicing,  had  come.     The  church  of 

the  village.     See  Children  of  the  Lord's  Supper, 

The. — Jyongfellow. 
People  talk  of  Liberty  as  if  it  meant.      See  True  Lib- 
erty.— Robertson. 
People's  Attorney,   servant  of  the  Right.     See  Wen- 
dell Phillips.— Alcott. 
Perceiv'st   thou  not   the  change    of  day.     See  Ober- 

maiin  Once  More. — Arnold. 
Perchance  you  cannot  see  his  face.     See  Father  Christ- 
mas.— Gale. 
Perched   upon    a   maple   bough.     See   Bird's   Song   in 

April. — Scollard. 
Perfect  little   body,   without   fault   or  stain   on   thee. 

See  On  a  Dead  Child. — Bridges. 
Perhaps  it    may    have    been    little    thought    of.     See 

same. — Chalmers. 
Perhaps  ne\-er  before  in  its  eventful  history.     See  His 

Sweetheart's  Song. — Dayton. 
Perhaps  one  of  the  prettiest  themes  for  declamation 

ever  presented.     See  On  the  Greek  Question. — 

Randolph. 
Perhaps  the  best  collection  of  blunders.     See  Letter 

of  Blunders,  A. — Anon. 
Perhaps  there  are  tenderer,  sweeter  things.     See  Lit- 
tle Hand,  A. — Stanton. 
Perhaps  'twas  boyish  love.     See  same. — Stedman. 
Perhaps  we   do    not    know   how   much   of   God.     See 

Phillips  Brooks. — Spoflford. 
Perhaps  you  have  heard  of  Jack  Frost.     See  Guest, 

The. — Anon. 
Perhaps  you'll  hardly  believe  it  all.     See  What  Grand- 
mother Says. — Anon. 
Perish  policy  and  cunning.     See  same. — Macleod. 
Perkins  sat  in  the  chair.     When  I  say  that  he  sat  in 

the  chair.     See  Our  Debating  Club. — Turner. 
Perplexed  with  deciding.    See  Omen,  The. — (Wrinkle.) 
Perry's  famous  battle  on  Lake  Erie  raised  the  spirits 

of   the   Americans.     See   Perry's   Celebrated   Vic- 
tory on  Lake  Erie. — Anon. 
Perseverance!     Can    you   spell   it?     See   Hard    Word, 

A. — Anon. 
Persimmon  was  a  colored  lad.     See  "Take  Good  Care 

of  Baby." — (St.  Nicholas.) 
Personal  glory  will  be  always  spoken  of  as  character- 
izing.      See     Character     of      Napoleon. — Lamar- 

tine. 
Personal  influence  is  inseparable  from  the  mental  and 

moral      faculties.        See      Personal      Influence. — 

Branch. 
Persons  who    patronize   papers   should  pay  promptly. 

See  Mind  Your  P's.— Anon. 


Persuasion,  friend,  comes  not  by  wit  or  art.     See  Elo- 
quence that  Persuades. — Goethe. 
Perugia    holds   a    picture  wrought  by  one.     See   Per 

gl'  Occh'  Almeno  non  v'O  Claiisura. — Pember. 
Pest  of  the  Muses,  devourer  of  pages,  in  crannies  that 

lurkest.     See  Epigram. — Evenus. 
Pete,  you  know  Mr.   Simpson,   de  head  waiter  up  to 

Slamatoga  Springs?     See  Saratoga  Waiter,  The. 

—White. 
Peter  Adair  was  a  native  of  Slushington-in-the-Mud. 

See  Peter  Adair. — Overton. 
Peter  Klaus  was  a  goatherd  of  Sittendorf.     See  Peter 

Klaus. — Anon. 
Peter  was  a  tip  up  baggage-man,  he  ran  on  Number 

4.     See  Ye  Baggage  Smasher. — Anon. 
Peter  would    ride    to    the    wedding,    he    would.     See 

Peter's  Ride  to  the  Wedding. — Anon. 
Petite  moskeetare,     your    time    it     have    come!     See 

Frenchman  and  the  Mosquitoes,  The. — Anon. 
Phil  Fawcett   had   written    a   drama.     See   Fawcett's 

Fame. — Rae-Brown. 
Philarete    on    Willy     calls.     See  Shepherd's   Hunting, 

The.— Wither. 
Philemon  Hayes  and  Fanny  Ray  had  been  just  three 

weeks  married.     See  Family  Jar,  A. — Anon. 
Philip  and  Mary,  Philip  and  Mary!     See  Queen  Mary. 

— Tennyson. 
Philip  Ray  and  Enoch  Arden.     See  Improved  "Enoch 

Arden." — Anon. 
Philippa  of  Hainault,   the  Good,   Philippa,   England's 

Queen.      See    Burghers    of    Calais,    The. — Brad- 
dock. 
Phillida  was  a  fair  maid.     See  Harpalus'  Complaint  of 

Phillida's  Love  Bestowed  on  Corin. —  Howard. 
Phillis,  a  herd-maid  dainty.     See  Phillis. — Anon. 
Phillis,  for  shame,  let  us  improve.     See  Song:  "Phillis, 

for  shame,"  etc. — Dorset. 
Phillis  is  my  only  joy.     See  Song:  "Phillis  is  my,"  etc. 

— Sedley. 
Philonicus,  the  Thessalian,  brought  to  Philip's  court  a 

steed.     See    Alexander    Breaking    Bucephalus. — ■ 

Taylor. 
Philosophy  consists  not  in  airy  schemes,  or  idle  specu- 

tions.     See  Philosophy. — Thomson. 
Philo.sophy  has  sometimes  forgotten  God,   as  a  great 

people  never  did.     See  sam.e. — Bancroft. 
"Phoebe!  Phoebe!  Phoebe!"  the  trees  were  bare  and 

the   sky  was  gray.     See  St.    Valentine's   Day. — 

Clark. 
Phoebe  sat,  sweet  she  sat.   See  Rosalynde :  or,  Euphues' 

Golden  I.«gacy  (Montanus'  Sonnet,  I). — Lodge. 
Phoebus  arise,  and  paint  the  sable  skies.     See  Phoebu.'', 

Arise. — Drummond. 
Phyllis  and    Damon    met   one    day.     See   Phyllis   and 

Damon. — Hopper. 
Phyllis  took  a  red  rose  from  the  tangles  of  her  hair. 

See  Phyllis  and  Corydon. — Cotton. 
Piano  put  away  in  de  garret  for  to  stay.     See  Ethio- 

piomania. — Tyrrell. 
Pibroch  of  Donuil  Dhu.     See  same.— Scott. 
Picnics  is  fun  'at's  purty  hard  to  beat.     See  In  Fer- 
vent Praise  of  Picnics.— Riley. 
Picture  to  yourselves  the  joy  and  expectation  of  that 

day.     See  Lessons  from  the  Washington  Centen- 
nial.— Gordon. 
Pictures  on  the  window.     See  Frost  Pictures. — Anon. 
Piero  Luca,   known  of  all  the  town.     See  Brother  of 

Mercy,  The. — Whittier. 
"Pile  in  the  diamonds,  Tom,  for  the  run  is  long."     See 

Engineer's  La.st  Run,  The. — Anon. 
Pilgrim,     burdened     with    thy    sin.       See     H.vmn. — 

Crabbe. 
Pillowed  on    crimson    clouds,    the    golden    sun.     See 

Corregio. — "Kruna." 
Pinch  him,    pinch    him    black    and    blue.     See    Fairy 

Revels. — Lyly. 
Pins  are  very  useful.     They  have  saved  the  lives  of 

many  men.     See  My  Composition  about  Pins. — 

Anon. 
Pip !  Pop !  flipperty  flop !     See  Song  of  the  Corn  Popper, 

The. — Richards. 
Pipe,  little  minstrels  of  the  waning  year.     See  Crickets, 

The.— Kimball. 
Pipe,  merry  Annot.     See  same. — ^Udall. 
Piped  a  tiny  voice  hard  by.      See  Titmouse,    The. — 

Emerson. 
Piped  the   blackbird   on   the   beechwood   spray.     See 

Little  Bell. — Westwood. 
Piper  with  the  rusty  quill.     See  To  a  Cricket. — Shep- 
herd. 
Pipes  of  the  misty  moorlands.     See  Pipes  at  Lucknow, 

The.— Whittier. 
Piping  down  the  valleys  wild.    See  Piper,  The. — Blake. 


807 


Pitch 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Pitch  here  the  tent,  while  the  old  horse  grazes.     See 

Juggling  Jerry. — Meredith. 
Pity  now  poor  Mary  Ames.     See  Mary  Ames. — Anon. 
Pity  the  sorrows  of  a  poor  old  man.     See  Beggar's 

Petition,  The. — Moss. 
Place  for  the  quAn  of  song.     iSee  Armgart.  — Eliot. 
"Place  there  the  boy,"  the  tyrant  said.     See  William 

Tell.— Baine. 
Placing  the   little  hats  all   in   a  row.     See  Saturday 

Night. — Anon. 
Plague  on   her   ladyship's   ugly   cur!     See   Irishman's 

Lesson*  The.— -Oulton. 
Plague  take  Mr.  Paul  Pry!     See  Disagreeable  Meddler, 

The.— Poole. 
Plain  red-brick  walls.     See  Bell-ringer  of  '76,  The. — 

Anon. 
Plan  not,  nor  scheme,  but  calmly  wait.     See  same. — 

Macduff. 
Plant  in  the  springtime  the  beautiful  trees.     See  Ar- 
bor Day. — •-A.non. 
Plant   trees  and    care    for    them.     See   same. — Larra- 

bee. 
Planting  the  corn  and  potatoes.     See  Little  Helpers. 

— Anon. 
Play  it  slowly,  sing  it  lowly.     <See  Old  Love  Song,  The. 

— Gannett. 
Play  me  a  march  low-toned  and  slow,  a  march  for  a 

silent  tread.     See  Dead  March,  A. — Monkhouse. 
Play  on!  play  on!  as  softly  glides.    See  At  the  Piano. 

— Anon. 
Play  that  my  knee  was  a  calico  mare.     See  Ride  to 

Bumpville,  The.— Field. 
Play  that  you  are  mother  dear.     See  At  Play. — Field. 
"Play  us  a  tune,"  cried  the  children.     See  Song  with- 
out Words,  A.— M.  E.  B. 
Pleasant  are  Thy  courts  above.     See  Psalm  LXXXIV. 

— Lyte. 
Pleasant  it  was,  when  woods  were  green.     See  Voices 

of  the  Night. — Longfellow. 

Pleasant  little  Ruth!     Cheerful,  tidy,  bustling,  quiet, 

little  Ruth.   See  Martin  Chuzzlewit  (Ruth   Pinch's 

Housekeeping — and  what  Came  of  it). — Dickens. 

Pleasant  words     never    come     amiss.     See     Pleasant 

Words. — Anon. 
"P-1-e-a-s-e    h-e-l-p  a  p-o-o-r  b-1-i-n-d  m-a-n."      See 

Blind  Beggar,  The. — Davis. 
Please,  sir,  I  have  brought  you  the  ticket.     See  Annie's 

Ticket. — Anon. 
"Please  wear  my  rosebud,  for  love,  papa."     See  Sweet 

Pease. — Payson. 
Pleased  we  remember  our  august  abodes.     See  Gebir 

(Inscription  on  a  Sea  Shell). — Landor. 
Pleasing  't  is,  O  modest  Moon!     See  To  the  Harvest 

Moon. — White. 
Pleasures  lie  thickest  where  no  pleasures  seem.     See 

Hidden  Joys. — Blanchard. 
Pledge  of  a  feather'd  pair's  affection.     See  Stanzas  to 

an  Egg.— {Punch.) 
"Pledge   with   wine — pledge  with  wine."     See  Bridal 

Feast,  The  (Bridal  Wine-cup.  The). — Long. 
Pluck  the  fruit  and  taste  the  pleasure.     See  Whilst 

Youthful  Sports  are  Lasting. — Lodge. 
Plunge  thy  right  hand  in  St.   Madron's  spring.     See 

Doom-well  of  St.  Madron,  The. — Hawker. 
Plunged  in  night,  I  sit  alone.     See  Samson. — Scott. 
Po'  little  Jude!     See  Po'  Little  Jude.— Hackley. 
Poet  and  Saint!  to  thee  alone  are  given.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Mr.  Crashaw. — Cowley. 
Poet  beloved,  again  I  come.     See  Hour  with  Whittier, 

An. — Holder. 
Poet !  I  come  to  touch  thy  lance  with  mine.     See  .Wa- 
pentake.— Longfellow. 
Poet  of  Nature,  thou  didst  teach  to  see.  See  To  Words- 
worth.— Emerson. 
Poet  of  the  Pulpit,  whose  fuU-chorded  lyre.     See  Bar- 

tol. — Alcott. 
"Poet,  sit  and  sing  to  me."   See  Poetic  Mystery,  The. 

— .\non. 
Poet  who  sleepest  by  this  wandering  wave!   See  Words- 
worth's Grave. — Watson. 
Poetry,  and  its  twin-sister.  Music,  are  the  most  sub- 

lime  and  spiritual  of  arts.     See  same. — Schaff. 
Poeto'  is   not   imagination,   but   imagination   shaped. 
See  Poetry  the  Language  of  Symbolism. — Robert- 
son. 
Poets  are  singing  the  whole  world  over.     See  Rus  in 

Urbe. — Scott. 
Poets  have   well   described   and   artists   have   vividly 

painted.     See  Beauties  of  Nature,  The. — Anon. 
PoetSj^  like    painters,    thus    unskilled    to    trace.     See 
_       Essay  on  Criticism.  An. — Pope. 
Poets  may  be  bom,  but  success  is  made.     See  Success 
in  Life.— Garfield.  I 


Poets  may  sing  their  plaintive  wails.     See  Experience. 

— Anon. 
Poets  of  old  have  sung  of  tea  and  scandal.     See  Gossip. 

— Anon. 
Pointer  rushes  indo  mine  house  de  oder  day.  Pointer's 

Dyspeptic  Goat.— Von  Boyle. 
Poisons,   be   their   drink.     See   King  Henry   VI.,    Pt . 

III. — Shakespeare. 
Politeness  is  to  do  and  say.     See  Politeness. — Anon. 
Politeness  was  born  in  him,  and  he  couldn't  help  it. 

Ser  He  Guessed  he'd  Fight. — Anon. 
Polly!  Polly!— Well,     ma'am!     See    Old     Heads    on 

Young  Shoulders. — -Boyd. 
Polydamas  to    dauntless    Hector    spake.      See   Iliad, 

The  (Hector's  Rebuke  to  Polydamas). — Homer. 
Pompey,  I  hab  jined  a  'ciety  lately.     See  Darkey  De- 
bating Society,  The. — White. 
Pomposo,  insolent  and  loud.     See  Description  of  John- 
son.— Churchill. 
Poor  Blanche!  no  more  by  Devon-side.     See  Lady  of 
the  Lake,  The  (Combat  between  Fitz  James  and 
Roderick  Dhu).- — Scott. 
Poor  creature!  nay,  I'll  not  say  poor.     See  To  a  Moth. 

— Thomas. 
Poor  Cupid   froze    his    wings   one    day.     See   Cupid's 

Blunder. — .Tones. 
Poor  Deacon  Brown,  in  the  prime  of  life.     See  Wife- 
hunting  Deacon,  The. — Stuttle. 
Poor  Dick,  the  happiest  silly  fellow  I  ever  knew.     See 

Miser  and  his  Three  Sons,  The. — Goldsmith. 
Poor  Edmund    sees    poor    Britain's    setting    sun.     See 
Edmund  Burke's  Attack  on  Warren  Hastings. — 
Wolcott. 
' '  Poor  fool !"  the  base  and  soulless  worldling  cries.     See 

Student,  The. — -Anon. 
Poor  Friar  Philip  lost  his  wife.  See  Friar  Philip. — Anon. 
Poor  Grandma,  I  do  hate  to  tell  her.     See  Grandma's 

Mi  stake. — Anon . 
Poor  little  Bessie!     She  tossed  back  her  curls.     See 

Stranger  in  the  Pew,  A. — Dodge. 
Poor  little  boy — only  nine  years  old.     See  Cartwheels. 

—Elliot. 
Poor  little    daffy-down-dilly.      See    Daffy-down-Dilly. 

^Anon. 
Poor  little  Johnnie  longed  to  go.     See  Took  Johnnie 

to  the  Show.^Carleton. 
Poor  lone    Hannah.     See   Hannah    Binding    Shoes. — 

Larcom. 
Poor  Matthias!  found  him  lying.     See  Poor  Matthias. — 

Arnold. 
Poor  Matthias!      Wouldst     thou     have.      See     Poor 
Matthias  (On  the  Death  of  a  Favorite  Canary). — 
Arnold. 
Poor  Mistress  Levi  had  a  luckless  son.     See  Jewess 

and  her  Son,  The. — Wolcott. 
Poor  naked  wretches,   whosoe'er  you  are.     See  King 

Lear. — Shakespeare. 
Poor  Nell,   she  is  in   trouble  again.     See  Country  or 

City. — Anon. 
Poor  old  pilgrim  Misery.      See  Bride's  Tragedy,  The 

(Hesperus  Sing<). — Beddoes. 
Poor  papa  has  a  toothache  this  morning,  Edith.     See 

Two  Dutiful  Daughters. — Litchfield. 
Poor  Peter    Staggs    now  rests  beneath  this  rail.    See 

Epitaph  on  Peter  Staggs. — Pindar. 
Poor  prisoned  bird,  that  sings  and  sings.     See  Caged. 

— Mason. 
Poor  Puss  is  gone! — 'Tis  Fate's  decree.     See  On  a  Cat 
Killed  while  Attempting  to  Rob  a  Dove-cote. — 
Alwaharwany. 
Poor  rose!     I  lift  you  from  the  street.     See  Romaunt 

of  the  Rose,  The. — Dobson. 
Poor,  sad  Humanity.     See(3hristus:  a  Mystery  ('"Poor, 

sad  Humanity"). — Longfellow. 
Poor  soul,  the  center  of  my  sinful  earth.     See  Sonnets, 

CXLVI. — Shakespeare. 
Poor,  sweet    Piccola!    did   you   hear.     See   Piccola. — 

Thaxter. 
Poor  wither'd  rose  and  dry.     See  Poor  Withered  Rose. 

— Bridges. 
"Pop,"  said  young  Philip  Gratebar  to  his  father.      See 

Dream  of  a  Smart  Boy,  The.— Anon. 
Pop!  went  the  gray  cork  flying.     See  Toast,   The.— 

Dallas. 
Poppies  red,  and  pink,  and  white.     See  Pussy  and  the 

Poppies. — {Youth's  Companion.) 
Possibly  the  reader  may   have  undergone.     See  Writ- 
ten under  DifHculties. — Thatcher. 
'Possum  mighty  nice  fer  fryin'.     See  Husking  Song. — 

Bellaw. 
Posterity  admires,  and  will  long  admire,  the  awful  re- 
mains.    See  Description  of  the  Amphitheatre  of 
Titus.— Gibbon. 


808 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Proud 


Pour  out  thy  love  like  the  rush  of  a  river.  See  same. — 
Cooke. 

Pour,  varlet,  pour  the  water.  See  Poets  at  Tea,  The. 
— Pain. 

Power  of  thine  elbow,  thou  newest  of  sciences.  See 
Darwinity. — Merivale. 

"Poy  Pilly"  was  the  adopted  son  of  Father  Zende. 
See  His  First  and  Last  Drink. — Anon. 

"Praise  God  from  whom  all  blessings  flow."  See  Lan- 
cashire Doxology,  A. — Craik. 

Praise  him,  Al-Barr,  whose  goodness  is  so  great.  See 
Clemency  of  Salah-ud-deen,  The. — Arnold. 

Praise  is  devotion  fit  for  mighty  minds,  SeeGondibert 
(Praise  and  Prayer) . — Davenant. 

Praise  me  no  Csesars,  Alexanders,  all.  See  Royal  Saint, 
The.— Blackie. 

Praise  the  Lord,  my  Christian  friends.  See  Old  Method- 
ist's Testimony,  The. — Anon. 

Praise  they  that  will  times  past,  I  joy  to  see.  See 
This  Age  Best. — Herrick. 

Praise  to  God,  immortal  praise.  See  Praise  to  God. — 
Barbauld. 

Praise  ye  the  Lord.  Praise  the  Lord.  See  Psalms  of 
David,  CXINI.— Bible. 

Praise  ye  the  Lord.  Praise  ye  the  Lord  from  the 
Heavens.  See  Psalms  of  David,  CXLVIII. — 
Bible. 

"Praise  ye  the  Lord!"  The  psalm  to-day.  See 
Thanksgiving  in  Boston  Harbor,  The. — Butter- 
worth. 

Praised  be  Diana's  fair  and  harmless  light.  See  Shep- 
herd's Praise  of  his  Sacred  Diana,  The. — Anon. 

Pray  but  one  prayer  for  me  'twixt  thy  closed  lips. 
See  Summer  Dawn. — Morris. 

Pray  for  my  soul.  More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer. 
See  Pray  for  My  Soul. — Tennyson. 

Pray  for  the  dead— who  bids  thee  not?  See  Pray  for 
the  Dead. — Eaton. 

Pray,  have  you  seen  our  Tommy?  See  Lost  Tommy. 
— Dana. 

Pray,  how  comes  Love?     See  Love. — Anon. 

Pray,  how  should  I,  a  little  lad.  See  Little  Orator, 
The. — Harris. 

Pray  listen  to  my  song — I'll  endeavor,  if  you  please. 
See  All  Mankind  are  Trees. — Anon. 

"Pray,  Mr.  Dram-drinker,  how  do  you  do?"  See 
Drunkard,  The. — Rockwell. 

Pray  tell  me  aright,  through  the  darkness  of  night. 
See  St.  Nicholas.— M.  J.  H. 

Pray  tell  me,  my  own  dainty  darling.  See  Way  they 
Pop  in  Boston,  The. — Anon. 

"Pray  tell  me  where  ye've  been  sae  lang,  guid  Nan." 
See  Shall  Bess  Come  Hame? — Brooks. 

"Pray  what  do  they  do  at  the  Springs?"  See  Song  of 
Saratoga. — Saxe. 

Pray,  where  are  the  little  bluebells  gone?  See  About 
the  Fairies. — Anon. 

Pray,  why  do  maidens  ever  stand  beneath.  See  Vin- 
dication.— Smith. 

Pray  you,  wherefore  are  the  village  bells.  See  Wed- 
ding, The. — Southey. 

Prayer  is  the  application  of  want  to  Him  who  only  can 
relieve  it.     See  same. — -More. 

Prayer  is  the  soul's  sincere  desire.  See  same. — Mont- 
gomery. 

Preaching  may  be  compared  to  lightning.  See  some. 
—Pond. 

Precisely.  I  see  it.  You  all  want  to  say.  See  SmUing 
Ijistener,  The. — Anon. 

Prejudged  by  foes  determined  not  to  spare.  See  Laud. 
— Wordsworth. 

Prejudice  is  prejudgment.  It  is  forming  an  opinion 
without  examining.     See  sam,e. — Anon. 

Preparations  for  war  are  manifest  on  our  frontiers. 
See  'To  the  French  People. — -Vergniaud. 

Presentiment  is  that  long  shadow  on  the  lawn.  See 
Poems.  XVI. — Dickinson. 

Presently  the  pilot  said :  ' '  By  George,  yonder  comes 
the  Amaranth!"  See  Gilded  Age,  The  (Steam- 
boat   Race,    The) . — Clemens. 

Preserve  thy  sighs,  unthrifty  girl.  See  Soldiers  Going 
to  the  Field,  The. — -Davenant. 

Press  me  closer,  all  mine  own.  See  Pulmonic  Passion. 
— Burdette. 

Press  on !  .surmount  the  rocky  steeps.  See  Press  On. — 
— Benjamin. 

Press  on!  there's  no  such  word  as  fail!  See  Press  On. 
— Benjamin. 

Press  the  grape,  and  let  it  pour.  See  Anacreontique. 
— Moore. 

Presumption,  her  pavilion  spread.  See  Lady  of  Vain 
Delight,  The.— Fletcher. 

Pretty  and  sweet,  ever  so  neat.     See  Inviting. — Brewer. 


'  Pretty  birds,  pretty  birds,  what  do  you  play. "     See 

Summer  Games. — Cooper. 
Pretty  little  blue-bird,  singing  in  the  trees.     See  Pretty 

Little  Blue  Bird. — Anon. 
Pretty  little  maiden.     See  Discouraging.— Brewer. 
Pretty    little    violets,    waking    from    your   sleep.     See 

May. — Anon. 
Pretty  maiden  passing  by.     See  Sport. — Sou^hwick. 
Pretty?     Rather!     Her    teeth    were    like    pearl.?,    sir. 

See  College  Widow,  A. — Anon. 
Pretty    Robin    Redbreast.     See    Robin    Redbreast. — 

Mathers. 
"Pretty  warm,"  the  man  with  the  thin  clothes  said. 

See  All  about  the  Weather. — Anon. 
Pride  by  presumption  bred,  when  at  a  height.     See 

Pride. — Sterlenc. 
" Pride  goeth  before  destruction."     See  Decisive  Bat- 
tle of  the  Rebellion,  The. — Anon. 
Priest  of  God,  unto  thee  I  come.     See  Absolution. — 

Watson. 
Prime  cantante!     See  My  Cat  Bird. — Venable. 
Prince,    and    Bishop,    and    Knight,    and    Dame.     See 

Wishmaker's  Town  (Pawns,  The). — Young. 
Prince   Bail^   of   Ulster   rode   out   iii   the   morn.     See 

Noble  Lay  of  Aillinn,  The. — Brooke. 
Prince  Eugene,  our  noble  leader.     See  Prince  Eugene. 

— Hughes. 
Prince   Hal  is   a  widow's   baby.     See   Prince   Hal. — 

Larcom. 
Prince  of  the  dark  abodes!     I  ween.     See  Ode  to  the 

Devil. — Pindar. 
Prince   William,   of  the   Brunswick   race.     See  Royal 

Adventurer,  The. — Freneau. 
Princes!     Potentates!     Warriors!     See   Paradise   Lost 

(Satan's  Speech  to  his  Legions). — Milton. 
Princess    of   pretty    pets.     See   Little    Rebel,    The.— 

Ashby-Sterry.  . 

Princesses  are  they,  of  a  royal   line.     See  Daughters 

of  the  Kin^,  The. — Anon. 
Priscilla  hath  come  back  to  town.     See  Priscilla. — 

Peck. 
Priscilla    in    the    garret    loft.     See    Priscilla. — {Yale 

Record.) 
Priscilla  is  a  maid  devout.     See  Lent. — Clarke. 
Prithee,  honey-sweet  husband,  let  me  bring  thee  to 

Staines.     See  King  Henry  V.  (Act  II.,  Scene  III.). 

— Shakespeare. 
Prithee,  tell  me.  Dimple-chin.     See  Toujours  Amour. — 

Stedman. 
Prize  thou  the  nightingale.     See  Nightingale,  The. — 

Visscher. 
Probably  no  man  since  the  days  of  Washington.     See 

Religious  Character  of  President  Lincoln,  The. — 

Gurley. 
Probably  there  is  not  the  remotest  corner.     See  Bene- 
fits of  Laughter. — Anon. 
Prodiggus   reptile!   long   and  skaly   kuss.     See   Some 

Verses  to  Snaix. — Anon. 
Profaneness  is  a    low    grovelling    vice.     See  same. — ■ 

Chapin. 
Professor   Artichoke   Huggins    recently   delivered   his 

celebrated  lecture.     See  "Am  Life  Wuf  de  Lib- 

in." — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
Professor  coming,  John?     See  Elocution  Class,  The. — 

Graham. 
Professor,  hab  you  got  a  cousin?     See  Our  Cou.sins. — 

White. 
Professors,    in   your   plan   there   seems.     See   On   the 

Windows  of  King's  College  Remaining  Boarded.— 

Barham. 
Progress  has  its  deepest  root  in  history.     See  Hebraism 

and  Culture. — Anon. 
Progress!   progress!   all   things   cry.     See   Progress. — 

Michell. 
Prohibition  is  a  grand  and  glorious  fact.     See  Prohi- 
bition the  True  Anti-poverty  Paity.— Demorest. 
Prop  yer  eyes  wide  open,  Joey.     See  Poor  Little  Joe. — ■ 

Proudfit. 
Prope  ripam  fluvii  solus.     See  Malum  Opus.— Morgan. 
Prophet,     whose    straining    eyes.     See    Sixty-second 

Birthday  of  Swinburne,  The. — Russell. 
Propt  on  the  marsh,  a  dwelling  now  I  see.     See  Biglow 

Papers,  The  (Schoolhouse,  The). — Lowell. 
Proserpine    may   pull    her   flowers.     See   Song   of   the 

Stygian  Naiades. — Beddoes. 
Protect  us  through  the  coming  night.     See  Protect  Us 

through  the  Coming  Night. — Anon. 
Proud  and  lowly,  beggar  and  lord.     See  London  Bridge. 

— Weatherly. 
Proud,  languid  lily  of  the  sacred  Nile.     See  Egyptian 

Lotus,  The. — Eaton. 
Proud  Maisie  is  in  the  wood.     See  Heart  of  Midlothian, 

The  (Proud  Maisie).— Scott. 


809 


Proud 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Proud  of  you,  fond  of  you,  clinging  so  near  to  you. 

See  My  Owen. — Downing.  „     t^        . 

Proud  Winter  cometh  like  a  warrior  bold!     See  Proud 

Winter  Cometh. — ShurtlefT. 
Proud  word  you  aever  spoke,  but  you  will  speak.     See 

Proud  Word  you  never  Spoke. — -Landor. 
Prune   thou   thy   words;   the   thoughts   control.     See 

Flowers  without  Fruit. — Newman. 
Prythee,  Willy!  tell  me  this.     See  Shepherd's  Hunting, 

The.— Wither. 
Pshaw!  away  with  leaf  and  berry.     See  To  Charles 

Dickens. — Hood. 
Public  life  has  been  in  all  free  states  the  highest  and 

noble-st  of  ambitions.     See  Scholar  in  Public  Life, 

Public  Notice.— This  is  to  state.     See  Lilliput  Notice. 

— Rands. 
Public  opinion  employs  no  officers,  yet  it  follows  and 

captures  men.     See  same. — Murray. 
Public  opinion  is  the  collective  judgment  of  men.     See 

tame. — Murray. 
Puer  ex  Jersey.     See  «ome.— Anon. 
"Pufessor,  I's  bout  come  to  de  conclusion  dat  you's 

triflin'  wid  me. "     See  He  Had  Changed  his  Mind. 

— Anon. 
Puffed  up  with  luring  to  her  knees..    See  Flute,  The. — 

Taylor. 
Pulling  the  weeds  from  the  garden.     See  Farm  Boys' 

Song,  The.— Rook. 
Punctuality!  punctuality!  this  must  be  inquired  into. 

See  Little  Gradgrinds,  The. — Broome. 
Pupil  and  master  together.     See  Gold  Locks  and  Silver 

Locks. — Thaxter. 
Pure  and  true  and  tender.      See  same. — H. 
Pure   stream,    in   whose   transparent   wave.     See   To 

Leven  Water. — -Smollett. 
Purple  waves  of  evening  play  upon  the  western  shores 

of  day.     See  Oflf  for  Slumber-land. — -Anon. 
Purty  big  place — this  country — to  ever  be  laid  on  the 

shelf.     See  This  Old  Country. — Stanton. 
"Purty  night,  ain't  it,  Tillie?"     See  At  a  Rural  Gate. 

— Anon. 
Pushing  the  clods  of  earth  a^ide.     See  Ivy,  The. — • 

Burton. 
Pussy-cat  lives  in  the  servants'  hall.     See  Pussv-cat. 

— ".\unt  Effie." 
Pussy   Clover's    running    wild.    See    Pussy   Clover. — 

Larcom. 
Pussy-willow  had  a  secret  that  tbo  snowdrops  whispered 

her.     See  Open  Secret,  An. — Anon. 
Put  a  'velop  on  it,  and  write  his  name.     See  Letter  to 

Santa  Claus,  A.— Stoddard. 
Put  away  the  little  coal-hod  that  our  darling  wants  to 

paint.     See     Decorative     Mania,     The. — {Chicago 

Rambler. ) 
Put  every  tiny  robe  away!     See  In  Vain. — Cooke. 
Put  flowers  in  your  window,  friend.     See  Put  Flowers 

in  your  Window. — Anon. 
Put  forth  thy  leaf,  thou  lofty  plane.     See  In  a  London 

Square. — Clough. 
Put  off,  put  off,  your  mail,  O  kings.     See  Dawn  of 

Peace,  The. — Ruskin. 
Put  out  the  light,  and  then— put  out  the  light.     See 

Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. — Shakespeare. 
Put   the   broidery-frame   away.     See    Bertha    in   the 

Lane. — Browning. 
Put  them  in  print?     See  Posthumous. — Beers. 
"Put  to  the  door — the  school's  begun." — See  Country 

School,  The. — Anon. 
Put   your  head,   darling,  darling,  darling.     See  Cean 

Dubb  Deelish. — Ferguson. 
Putting  up  a  stove  is  not  so  difficult  in  itself.     See 

Struggle  with  a  Stove-pipe,  A. — Gailey. 
Pwist!  here,   Rover;  we  must  be  going.     See  Empty 

Pocket,  The. — Lummis. 
Py  shiminy!  dot  vos  de  kind  of  dings  for  me.     See 

"  Dot  Quied  Lotgings. "— McDermott  and  Trumble. 
Pygmalion! — Who  called?     See  Pygmalion   and   Gal- 
atea.— Gilbert. 
Pygmies  are  pygmies  still,  though  perched  on  .\lps. 

See  Night  Thoughts. — Young. 


Quack,  quack,  quack!     See    Dumpy  Ducky. — Larcom 
"Quack!"    said    the    duck,    "quack!    quack!"     See 

Quarrel,  A.-  (Lillle  Folks.) 
"Quarter  to  [or  of]  nine!     Boys  and  girls,  do  you  hear?" 

See  Before  and  After  School. — Anon. 
Quebec,  the  grey  old  city  on  the  hill.     See  At  Quebec. 

— Blewett. 


Queen  and   huntress,  chaste  and  fair.     See  Cynthia's 

Revels  (Hymn  to  Diana). — Jonson. 
Queen   Bonduca,    I    do   not  grieve   your  fortune.     See 

Bonduca. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Queen  Elizabeth  is  dead.    See  Queen  Elizabeth. — -Anon. 
Queen   Guinevere   had   fled   the   court,    and   sat.     See 

Idylls  of  the  King  (Guinevere). — Tennyson. 
Queen  Jane,  O!  Queen  Jane,  O.     See  Death  of  Queen 

Jane,  The. — Anon. 
Queen  of  fragrance,  lovely  Rose.     See   Rosebud,   The. 

— Broome. 
Queen  of  my  tub,  I  merrily  sing.     See  Little  Women 

(Song  from  the  Suds,  A). — Alcott. 
Queen  of  the  lute  and  lay!  whose  song  of  yore.     See 

Mrs.  Hemans. — Hallock. 
Queen  of  the  silver  bow,  by  thy  pale  beam.     See  same. 

—Smith. 
Queen  of  wondrous  beauty!  it's  no  marvel  that  kings 

and  princes.     See  Beauty  of  Face  and  Beauty  of 

Soul. — Thornton. 
Queen  rose  of  the  rosebud  garden  of  girls.     See  Maud. 

— Tennyson. 
Queer  cattle  is  women  to  deal  with?    Lord  bless  ye,  yer 

honor,    they   are!     See   Moll   Jarvis    O'Morlev. — 

Sims. 
Questioned  in   trust   and   honor,   I   could  speak.     See 

Scipio  to  the  Senate. — Wasson. 
Quhen  Flora  had  o'erfret  the  firth.     See  When  Flora 

had  O'erfret  the  Firth. — Anon. 
Quhen    Merche   wes   with   variand   windis   past.     See 

Thistle  and  the  Rose,  The  (Thrissill  and  the  Rois, 

The). — Dunbar. 
Quhy  dois  zour  brand  sae  drop  wi'  bluid.     See  Edward,, 

Edward.- — Anon. 
Qui  nunc  dancere  vult  modo.     See  Polka  Lyric,  A. — 

Philips  [or  Becket]. 
Quick  gleam  that  ridest  on  the  gossamer!     See  To  the 

Gossamer-light. — Turner. 
Quick!  man  the  life-boat!     See  yon  bark.     See   Life- 
boat, The. — Anon. 
Quiet  as  are  the  quiet  skies.     See  Smiling  Demon  of 

Notre  Dame,  A. — Jewett. 
Quietly,  like  a  child.     See  Sheridan.— -Gilder. 
Quite    by   themselves,    a   knot    of   violets    blue.     See 

Nellie's  Decorations. — Davis. 
Quite  spent  and   out   of  breath  he  reached  the  tree. 

See  Rhojcus. — Lowell. 
Quivering   fears,    heart-tearing  cares.     See  Verses   in 

Praise  of  Angling. — Wotton. 
Quompegan    is    a   town   some   ten   miles   south   from 

Jethro.     See     Uncle     Reuben's     Tale. — (Atlantic 

Monthly.) 
Quoth  he;  "Sweetheart,   thou  art  young  and  fair." 

See  "  For  Better,  for  Worse. " — Fowler. 
Quoth  the  boy,  "I'll  climb  that  tree."     See  Bird's-eye 

View,  A. — Anon. 
Quoth  tongue  of  neither  tAaid  nor  wife.     See   Philip 

van  Artevelde  (Elena's  Song). — Taylor. 


Rabbi  Ben  Levi,  on  the  Sabbath,  read.  See  Legend 
of  Rabbi  Ben  Levi,  The. — Longfellow. 

Rabia,  sick  upon  her  bed.     See  Rabia. — Clarke. 

Rachel,  the  beautiful  (as  she  was  called).  See  .loseph 
and  his  Brethren  (Rachel). — Wells. 

Radiant  month  of  beauty.  See  Month  of  Apple  Blos- 
som".— Anon. 

Ragged?  So  ragged  a  dog  would  sniff.  See  Outcast, 
The. — Anon. 

"Rain,  rain,  go  away."     S'-e  Rain. — Deland. 

Rain!  rain,  rain!  I  wish  it  would  stop  and  not  rain 
for  a  year.     See  Rain  Fairy,  The. — Anon. 

Rainbow-hued,  ragged,  wild,  and  terrible.  See  Point 
Sublime,  C^olorado  Cafion. — Nesmith. 

Raise  a  song  of  gladness  on  this  festal  day.  See  Arbor 
Day  Ode. — Harlow. 

Raise  me  up  gently — there!  See  Death  of  an  Inebriate. 
— Anon. 

Raise  my  pillow,  husband  dearest.  See  I  am  Dying.— 
Anon. 

Raise  the  Cromlech  high!  See  Lament  of  Maev 
Leith-Dherg,  The.— RoUeston. 

Raise  thy  majestic  voice,  thou  grand  old  singer,  Atlan- 
tic !     See  Columbus. — Davis. 

Raise  thy  tender  eyes  to  mine.  See  Dancing  the  Min- 
uet.— Hamilton. 

Raised  on  a  little  carven  corner-shelf.  See  Bristol 
Figure,  A. — Monkhouse. 

Rake  the  embers,  blow  the  coals.  See  King  is  Cold, 
The. — Browning. 


810 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Bighd 


Rally  round  the  flag,   boys.     See  Stars  and  Stripes, 

The.— Fields. 
Rambling  along  the  marshes.     See  Flight  of  the  Wild 

Geese. — Channing. 
"Randy,"  said  Uncle  Mose.     See  Little  Efrum's  Ride. 

—Oriel. 
"Rap!  rap!  rap!  how  the  shingles  clap.     See  Playing 

Carpenter. — Anon. 
Rare   voice,   the   last   from   vernal   Hellas   sent.     See 

Keats. — Brodie. 
Rarely,  rarely,  comest  thou.     See  same. — Shelley. 
Raschi,  of  Troyes,  the  Moon  of  Israel.     See  Raschi  in 

Prague. — Lazarus. 
Ra.shly,  and  praised   be  rashness  for  it.     See   Hamlet 

(Guidance) .  —  Shakespeare. 
Ravish  my  beauty,  O  mind,  O  breeze.     See  Jealous 

Rose,  The. — Anon. 
Read   boldly,    and   unprejudiced   peruse.       See  Taste, 

an  Epistle  to  a  Young  Critic. — Armstrong. 
Read  in  these  roses  the  sad  story.     See  Red  and  White 

Roses. — Carew. 
Read  me  no  moral,  priest,  upon  my  life.     See  Con- 
demned, The.-^Howland. 
Read   me   no   more — leave   me,   for   pity's   sake.     See 

Avenged ! — Berlyn. 
"Read  out  the  names!"   and   Burke  sat  back.     See 

Fighting  Race,  The.— Clarke. 
Read  this  declaration  at  the  head  of  the  army.     See 

Independence. — Webster. 
"Read   us   a   psalm,    my    little   one."     See   Morning 

Psalm,  The. — Farningham. 
Reader,  stay;  and  if  I  had  no  more  to  say.     See  Epi- 
taph on  Master  Philip  Gray,  An. — Jonson. 
Rear  high  thy  bleak  majestic  hills.     See  On  the  Death 

of  Burns. — Roscoe. 
Reason  off  duty,  nerves  all  unstrung.    See  Reason  off 

Duty. — Loomis. 
Reason  thus  with  life.     See  Life  and  Death. — Shake- 
speare. 
Rebecca  Jane  Fermosie  Lee.     See  McSwinger's  Fate. — 

Anon. 
Rebellion!  foul,  dishonoring  word.     See  Lalla  Rookh 

(Rebellion). — Moore. 
Recall   the   quaint   and  homely  city   of  Philadelphia. 

See  Declaration  of  Independence,  The. — Long. 
Recall  to  your  recollection  the  free  nations  which  have 

gone  before  us.     See  Military  Supremacy  Danger- 
ous to  Liberty. — Clay. 
Recently  a  couple  of  miners  were  seated  on  a  boulder. 

See  Gentle  Mule,  The. — Anon. 
Recently  our  churcn  has  had  a  new  minister.     See 

Big  Mi.stake,  A. — Anon. 
"Reck'n  dey  ain't  no  hope."     See  Loyal  to  a  Trust. — 

Whitney. 
Red  on  the  morn's  rim  rose  the  sun.  See  De  Quincey's 

Deed. — Green. 
Red    Riding-Hood!     Red    Riding-Hood,    I    say!     See 

Little  Red  Riding-Hood;  or.  The  Wicked  Wolf  and 

the    Virtuous    Woodcutter. — Hood. 
Red-top  and  Timothy.     See  same. — Larcom. 
Reflected  in  the  lake,  I  love.     See  same. — Townshend. 
Reflecting  on  the  origin  of  this  war.     See  Galgacus  to 

the  Caledonians. — Tacitus. 
Regent  of  song!  who  bringest  to  our  shore.     See  To 

Rosina  Pico. — Lord. 
Reign    on,    majestic    Ville    Marie!     See    Montreal. — 

Lighthall. 
Rejoice,  ye  men  of  Anglers,  ring  your  bells.     See  Her- 
ald's Call,  The. — Anon. 
Released   from   her  fetters,    all   nature   rejoices.     See 

Song  of  Consecration. — Holbrook. 
Relentless  misfortune  pursued  the  exiles  wherever  they 

fled.     See  History  of  the  United   States  (Acadian 

Exiles,  The). — Bancroft. 
Religious,  punctual,  frugal,  and  so  forth.     See  Moral 

Essays  (Epistle  III.). — Pope. 
Reluctantly  I  laid  aside  my  smiles.     See  Journey,  The. 

— Hansbrough. 
Remain,  ah  not  in  youth  alone!  See  Remain! — Landor. 
Remember,    Dennis,    all    I    bade    you    say.     See  Irish 

Widow  to  her  Son,  The. — Forrester. 
"Remember  me,"  the  Savior  said.     See  Communion 

Hymn. — Frothingham. 
Remember  me  when  I  am  gone  away.      See  Remem- 
ber.— -Rossetti. 
Remember,  my  son,  you  have  to  work.     See  Advice  to 

a  Young  Man. — Burdette. 
Remember  now  thy  Creator  in  the  days  of  thy  youth. 

See  Remember   now  Thy  Creator. — Bible. 
Remember,  remember.     See  Oxfordshire  Guy  Fawkes' 

Song. — Anon. 
Remember,  though  box  in  the  plural  makes  boxes.    See 

Remember. — Anon. 


Remember   three   things   come   not   back.     See   They 

Come  not  Back. — Anon. 
Remember  us  poor  Mayers  all!     See  Hitchen  May-day 

Song,  The. — Anon. 
Remembering  his  taste  for  blood.     See  Of  Baiting  the 

Lion. — Seaman. 
Remote,   unfriended,    melancholy,   slow.     See   Travel- 
ler, The. — Goldsmith. 
Remote,   upon  the  sunset  shrine.     See  Lonely  Pine, 

The. — Lockhart. 
Remove  yon  skull  from  out  the  scatter'd  heaps.    See 

Childe   Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Skull,  The). — Byron. 
Repent,  O    ye,    predestinate   to  woe!     See  Wishmak- 

ers'  Town  (Conscience-keeper,  The). — Young. 
Republican    institutions    have    been    vindicated.     See 

Abraham     Lincoln     (Death    of    Lincoln,  The). — 

Beecher. 
Respected   Wife:     From   these   few   lines   my   where- 
abouts thee'll  learn.     See  Words  and  Their  Uses. 

—Olive. 
Rest  here,  at  last.     See  At  Last. — Marston. 
Rest!   how  sweet   the   sound!     See  Vision  of   Future 

Bliss,  A. — Baxter. 
Rest  in  the  grave!  but  rest  is  for  the  weary.     See  Rest 

in  the  Grave. — {Temple  Bar.) 
Rest    is   not    quitting   the   busy   career.     See    Rest. — - 

Goethe. 
Rest  .shall  come  to  all.     See  Man  after  All. — Anon. 
Rest   there  awhile,   my  bearded  lance.     See  Tale  of 

Drury  Lane,  A. — Smith. 
Rest!     This  little  Fountain  runs.     See  Inscription  for  a 

Fountain. — Procter. 
Rest  ye — set  down  the  bier.     See  Funeral  Custom  in 

Egypt. — Anon. 
Re.stless  forms  of  living  light.     See  Address  to  Certain 

Goldfishes. — Coleridge. 
Restless,  to-night,  and  ill  at  ease.     See  In  the  Dark. — 

Bushnell. 
Return,   return!  all  night  my  lamp  is  burning.     See 

Return!— Dobell. 
Revered,  beloved — O  you  that  hold.     See  To  the  Queen. 

—Tennyson. 
Reverend    sir:     I  received  your  obliging    favor.      See 

Letter  to  the  Rev.  Dr.  Lathrop,  Boston. — Frank- 
lin. 
Revolving  deeply  as  he  went.     See  Ape  and  the  Think- 
er, The. — Wister. 
Rhaicos    was   born    amid    the    hills    wherefrom.     See 

Hamadryad,  The. — Landor. 
Rhinoceros,  your  hide  looks  all  undone.     See  Ode  to  a 

Rhinoceros. — Belloc. 
Rhodora!  if  the  sages  ask  thee  why.     See  Rhodora, 

The. — Emerson. 
Rhyme  the  rudder  is  of  verses.     See  Distichs  and  Saws. 

—Butler. 
Rhymers  and  writers  of  our  day.    See  Sir  Walter  Scott. 

—Gilder. 
Rich  man,  poor  man,  beggar  man,  thief.     See  Magic 

Buttons. — Dowd. 
Rich  Mr.  Dombey  sat  in  the  corner.     See  Dombey  and 

Son  (Birth  of  Little  Paul,  The).— Dickens. 
Richard  is  a  cruel  boy.     See  Cruel  Boy,  The. — Turner. 
Richard  jumped  into  his  boat,  and  pulled  down  the 

tide.     See  Ferdinand  and  Miranda. — Meredith. 
Richard  surveyed  the  Nubian  in  silence  as  he  stood 

before  him.     See  Talisman,  The  (Nubian,  The). — 

Scott. 
Richard   Swiveller    being  often  left   alone,   began  to 

find  the  time  hang    heavy.     See    Old    Curiosity 

Shop    (Dick     Swiveller    and    the    Marchioness). 

— Dickens. 
Richard,  the  lion-hearted.     See  Matins  at  St.  Mary's. 

— Procter. 
Riches  I  hold  in  light  esteem.     See  Old  Stoic,  The. — 

Bronto. 
Rid  of  the  world's  injustice  and  his  pain.     See  Grave 

of  Keats,  The.— Wilde. 
Ride  on,  ride  on  in  majesty!     See  Christ  Crucified. — 

Milman. 
Ridiculous  to  some  may  seem.     See  South  Carolina 

Bourbon,  A. — Snowden. 
Riding  out  of  town  a  few  days  since.     See  "Woodman, 

Spare  that  Tree."     History  of  the  Poem. — Anon. 
"RiEN, "  he  wrote,  because  it  chanced  that  day.     See 

King's  Diary,  The. — Chadwick. 
Rienzi,  the  Roman  Senator.     See  Rienzi  (Last  of  the 

Roman  Tribunes,  The). — Bulwer-Lytton. 
"Rifleman,  shoot  me  a  fancy  shot."     See  Civil  War. — 

Shanly. 
Righ  Shemus  he  has  gone  to  France,  and  left  his  crown 

behind.     See  Irish  Rapparees,  The. — Duffy. 
Righd  from  der  front  one  putiful  day.     See  Schlosser's 

Ride. — Anon. 


811 


Bight 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Right  and  wrong,  justic  and  crime.  See  Patriotism 
(True  Patriotism  is  Unselfish). — Curtis. 

Right  into  our  house  one  day.  See  Little  Angel,  The. 
— Prenti.ss. 

Right  on  our  flank  the  crimson  sun  went  down.  See 
lyoss  of  the  'Birkenhead,'  The. — Doyle. 

Right  stout  and  strong  the  worthy  burghers  stood. 
See  How  it  once  Was. — (JVew  York  Sun.) 

Rightwisenes  chastised  al  robbours.  See  Description 
of  the  Golden  Age. — Lydgate. 

Ring,  bells,  from  every  lofty  height!  See  New  Year, 
The.— Fuller. 

Ring,  bells  of  Freedom,  from  your  brazen  throats ! 
See  Soldiers'  Re-union. — Bennett. 

Ring,  Christmas  bells,  ring,  merrily,  ring.  See  Christ- 
mas Bells. — ^Rook. 

Ring  from  the  rim  of  the  glass,  boys.  See  same. — • 
Anthony. 

Ring,  happy  bells  of  Easter  time!  See  Ring,  Happy 
Bells. — Larcom. 

Ring,  joyous  chords! — ring  out  again!  See  Revellers, 
The. — Hemans. 

Ring,  New- Year  bells,  ring  loud  and  clear.  See  Ring 
out  the  Old. — Anon. 

Ring  out,  glad  bells,  your  merry  chime.  See  Indepen- 
dence Day,  1776. — Anon. 

Ring  out  merril> .     See  Old  Church  Belb. — Anon. 

Ring  out,  O  bells!  ring  f-ilver-sweet  o'er  hill  and 
moor  and  fell!  See  On  the  Threshold. — Bald- 
win. 

Ring  out,  oh  gladsome  Easter  bells.  See  Easter  Bells. 
— Lowater. 

Ring  out,  ring  out,  ye  Christmas  bells!  See  Christmas 
Bells. — Brine. 

Ring  out  the  joy  bells!  Once  again.  See  Nation's 
Birthday,  The. — Vandyne. 

"Ring  out,  wild  bells,"  the  radiant  moon.  See  Ring 
out.  Wild  Bells.— Hughes. 

Ring  out,  wild  bells,  to  the  wild  sky.  See  In  Memo- 
iam  (Ring  out.  Wild  Bells). — Tennyson. 

Ring  out,  ye  crystal  spheres.  See  On  the  Morning  of 
Chri-t's  Nativity  (Hymn.  The).— Milton. 

Ring  out  your  bells,  let  mourning  shows  [or  shews] -be 
spread.     See  Sidera  (Dirge,  A). — Sidney. 

Ring,  silver  bells  of  memory,  ring.  See  Memorial 
Day  Poem.— Bennett. 

Ring,  sing!  ring,  sing!  pleasant  Sabbath  bells!  See 
Green  Gnome,  The. — Buchanan. 

Ring  soft  across  the  dying  day.  See  Angelus,  The. — 
Mace.  , 

Ring  the  bells,  nor  ring  them  slowly.  See  Cedar  Moun- 
tain.— Fields. 

Ringed  about  with  the  flame  and  smoke  of  rebel  bat- 
teries.    See  Our  Flag. — Stone. 

Ringleted  youth  of  my  love.     See  same. — Hyde. 

Ring-tinsc!  I  wish  I  were  a  Primrose.  See  Wishing. 
— Allingham. 

Ripple,  ripple,  ripple.     See  Brook,  The. — Lee. 

Rippling  through  thy  branches  goes  the  sunshine.  See 
Birch  Tree,  The.— Lowell. 

Rise  after  rise  bow  the  phantoms  behind  me.  See 
Song  of  My=elf .  The.— Whitman . 

Rise!— for  the  dav  is  passing.     See  same: — Procter. 

Rise,  heart!  thy  Lord  is  risen.  Sing  His  praise.  See 
Ea=ter. — Herbert. 

Rise,  honest  Mu.se!  and  sing  the  Man  of  Ross.  See 
Moral  Essays  (Man  of  Ross,  The). — Pope. 

Rise!  man  the  wall!  Our  clarion  bla.st.  Sec  Hymn  of 
the  Alamo. — Potter. 

Rise,  my  soul,  and  stretch  thy  wings.  See  same. — 
Seagrave. 

"Ri.se,"  said  the  Master,  "come  unto  the  feast."  See 
same. — Alford. 

Rise!  Sleep  no  more!  'Tis  a  noble  morn.  See  Hun- 
ter s  Song,  The. — Procter. 

Rise  up,   my  song!  stretch  forth  thy  wings  and  fly. 

^^     _  See  Greeting,  A. — Marston. 
Rise  up,  rise  tip,  now.  Lord  Douglas,"  she  says.     See 

,         Douglas  Tragedy,  The. — Anon. 
Rise  up,  rise  up,  Xarifa!  lav  the  golden  cushion  down. 
See  Brulal  of  Andalla,  The.— Lockhart. 

Rising  in  the  pine  forests  of  the  North.  See  Opening 
of  the  Mississippi  in  1862,  The.— Lewis. 

River  of  billows  to  whose  mighty  heart.  See  Shannon, 
I  he. — De  Vere. 

River!  river!  little  river!     See  River.  The.- Southey. 

River!  that  in  silence  windest.  See  To  the  Silent 
River. — Longfellow. 

Rivermotjth     Rocks     are     fair    to    see.      See    Wreck 

2?,.  •'^!^'®'™°"**>'     'The     (Rivermouth     Rocks).— 
Whittier. 
Rob   is   the   nicest   baby.      See  Taking  Care   of  him 
Nights. — Anon. 


Robene    sat    on    gud    greene    hill.      See    Robin   and 

Makyne. — Henryson. 
Robert  Browning  can  hardly  remember  a  time.     Sep 

Browning's  First  Manuscript. — Gosfc. 
Robert  of  Lincoln  is  going  awa.v.     See  Birds'  Depart- 
ure, The. — Anon. 
Robert  of  Sicily,  brother  of  Pope  Urbane.     See  King 

Robert  of  Sicily. — Longfellow. 
Robert,   the  Bruce,   in   his  dungeon  stood.     See  Per- 
severe.— Brougham. 
Robin  and  Joe,  and  Ruth  and  Ann.     See  Four  Mufi-, 

cians.  The. — Kavanaugh. 
Robin   comes   with  early  spring.     See  Robin  or  I?— 

Sprague. 
Robin,  have  you  seen  the  cat?     See  Little  Boy's  Argu- 
ment, A.— Anon. 
Robin,  holding  his  mother's  hand.     See  How  an  Angel 

Looks. — Anon. 
Robin  rashly  kissed  my  hand.     See  He  Ijnderstood.— 

Culbertson. 
Robin  sat  on  gude  green  hill.     See  Robin  and  Makyne. 

— Henryson. 
Robin  the  Miller,  he  kept  a  mill.     See  Happy  Miller, 

The.— Hood. 
Robin.s   in   the   tree-top.     See  Marjorie's   Almanac. — 

Aldrich. 
Robinson  Crusoe  went  to  sea.     See  Robinson  Crusoe  in 

Verse. — Brown. 
Rock  of  Ages,  cleft  for  me.   See  Bible  Reading  on  "Rock 

of  Ages, "  A. — Jones. 
"Rock  of  Ages,  cleft  for  me."     See  How  a  Song  Saved 

a  Soul. ^Stanton. 
Rock  of  Ages,  cleft  for  me.     See  Rock  of  Ages. — Top- 
lady. 
"Rock    of    ages,    cleft    for    me."     Thoughtlessly    the 

maiden   sung.     See   "Rock    of    Age-." — Moore. 
Rock-a-by,  baby,  on  the  tree-top.    See  JAttle  Mothers, 

The.— Floyd. 
Rock-a-bye,    baby,  on    the    tree    top.      See    same. — 

Anon. 
Rockaby,  baby,  the  days  will  grow  long.     See  Rockaby. 

— Anon. 
Rockaby,    baby,    thy   cradle   is   green.     See  Lullaby: 

" Rockabv,  baby, "  etc. — Anon. 
"Rock-a-by,  baby,  up  in  the  tree-top!"     See  In  the 

Tree  Top. — Larcom. 
Rockabj',   lullaby,  bees   on    \v)r.  in]  the   clover!        See 

Mistress  of  the  Manse,  The  (Lullaby). — Holland. 
Rocked  in  the  cradle  of  the  deep.     See  same. — Wil- 

lard. 
Rocks  of  my  country,  let  the  cloud.     See  Rocks  of  My 

Country. — Hematis. 
Roget,    droop   not,   see,    the   spring.     See  Shepherd's 

Pine,  The  (Invitation,  An). — Browne. 
Roguish,   laughing,   saucy  eyes.     See  Twin  Jewels.— ^ 

Anon. 
Roland  feeleth  his  death  is  near.     See  Song  of  Roland, 

The  (Death  of  Roland,  The).— O'Hagan. 
Roll  a  river  wide  and  strong.     See  Flag,  The. — M.  W. 

Roll  back  the  tide  of  eighteen  hundred   years.     See 

Pompeii. — Anon. 
Roll    forth,    my    song,    like    the    rushing    river.     See 

Nameless  One,  The. — Mangan. 
Roll  on,  and  with  thy  rolling  crust.     See  One  in  the 

Infinite. — Savage-Armstrong. 
Roll  on,  thou  ball,   roll  on!     See  To  the  Terrestrial 

Globe.— Gilbert. 
Roll  on,  thou  deep  and  dark  blue  Ocean,   roll!     See 

Childe   Harold's   Pilgrimage    (Apostrophe  to  the 

Ocean). — -Byron. 
Roll  on,  thou  Sun,  forever  roll.     See  Roll  On. — Anon. 
Roll  out,  O  song  to   God.      See   Roll  out,  O  Song.— 

Sewell. 
Roll,  roll,  roll  on,  O  dark  blue  sea!      See  Love  and  the 

Sea.— Gregg. 
Rolland   now   feels   his   death   is    drawing   nigh.     See 

Song  of  Roland,  The  (Roland's  Death).— Rabillon. 
Rollicking  Robin  is  here  again.     See  Sir  Robin. — Lar- 
com. 
Rolling    and    pitching.     Not    hungry    as    usual.     See 

Diary  of  a  Sea  Voyage. — Anon. 
Rolling  up  to  the  hillside.     See  Pickett's  Charge  at  Ge't- 

tysburg. — {Chicago  Ledger.) 
Roman  and  Jew  upon  one  level  lie.     See  In  Galilee.—^ 

Butts. 
Roman   Virgil,    thou   that   singest.     See  To   Virgil.— 

Tennyson. 
Romancer,    far    more    coy   than    that   coy   sex!     See 

Hawthorne. — Alcott. 
Romans,  countrymen  and  lovers!     Hear  me  for  my 

cause.     See  Julius  Caesar  (Brutus  on  the  Death  of 

Caesar). — Shakespeare. 


812 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Safe 


Romans!  look  round  you — on  this  sacfed  place.     See 

Rienzi    to    the    Roman    Conspirators    in    1347. — 

Moore. 
Roman.s,  the  blood  which  hath  been  shed  this  day. 

See   Brutus;    or.    The    Fall    of   Tarquin    (Roman 

Father,  The). — Payne. 
Rome   and    Carthage! — Behold    them    drawing    near 

for   the    struggle.     See  Rome    and    Carthage. — 

Hugo. 
Rome,  Florence,  Venice — noble,  fair  and  quaint.     See 

My  Native  Land.^Lighthall. 
Rome  had  its  Caesar,  great  and  brave ;  but  stain  was  on 

his  wreath.     iS'ee  Washington. — Cook. 
Rome   shook    with    tyrannies.     A    bloated    face.     See 

Tears  of  TuUia,  The. — P'awcett. 
"Romeo,   Romeo,   wherefore  art  thou  Romeo?"     See 

Shakespearean  Perversion,  A. — Anon. 
Romola  was  waked  by  a  tap  at  the  door.     See  Romola 

(Romola's  Flight).— Eliot. 
Room  after  room.     See  Love  in  a  Life. — Browning. 
Room  for  a  soldier!  lay  him  in  the  clover.      See  Dirge 

for  One  Who  Fell  in  Battle. — ^Parsons. 
"Room  for  the  leper!     Room!     And  as  he  came.     See 

Leper,  The. — Willis. 
Room,  my  lords,  room.      See  Richelieu;  or,  The  Con- 

spi  acy     (Scene     from      "Richelieu"). — Bulwer- 

Lytton. 
"Room    there!    stand   back! — give    way.      See    Last 

Days  of  Pompeii  (Destruction  of  Pompeii,  The). — 

Bulwer-Lytton. 
Rorate  coeli  desuper!     See  On  the  Nativity  of  Christ. — 

Dunbar. 
Rosanna  Brent  an'  me  got  to  be  good  friends.     See 

Surly  Tim's  Trouble. — Burnett. 
Rose  dreamed  she  was  a  lily.      See  What  they  Dreamed 

and  Said. — M.  E. 
Rose  kissed  me  to-day.     See  Rose  at  it  Again. — Fol- 

lansbee. 
Rose    kissed    me    to-day.       See    Rose-leaves    ("Rose 

kissed,"  etc.). — Dobson. 
Rose  o'  the  World,  she  came  to  my  bed.     See  Dark 

Man,  The. — Hopper. 
Rose!  thoii  art  the  sweetest  flower.     See  Rose,  The. — 

Anacreon. 
Rose !  what  dost  thou  here.     See  Song  of  the  Rose,  A. — 

Hemans. 
Rose  who  do  you  think  will  call  first?     See  New  Year 

Calls. — Denison. 
Rose-cheeked  Laura,  come.     See  Rose-cheeked  Laura. 

— Campion. 
Roses  and  butterflies  snared  on  the  fan.     See  Painted 

Fan,  A. — Moulton. 
Roses  at  first  were  white.     See  How  Roses  Came  Red. 

— Herrick. 
Roses  fill  the  air  with  fragrance,  in  the  month  of  balmy 

June.     See    Jacqueminot     Rose     Sunday,     A. — 

Banks. 
Roses  in  breathing  forth  their  scent.     See  Celia  Sing- 
ing.— Stanley. 
Roses,  their  .-harp  spines  being  gone.     See  Two  Noble 

Kinsmen,    The    (Bridal    Song,    A). — Shakespeare 

and  Fletcher. 
Rosina   of   Liliengarten   it   was,   indeed — such   a   full 

blown  Rosina  I  have  seldom  seen.     See  Princess's 

Tragedy,  A. — Thackeray. 
Rough  and  feady  the  troopers  ride.     See  Baby's  Kiss, 

The. — Emerson . 
Rough    pastui'e    where    the    blackberries    grow!     See 

Pasture,  A. — -Knowles. 
Rough   wind,   that   moanest   loud.     See   Dirge,    A. — 

Shelley. 
Round  about  in  a    fairy    ring-a.     See  Elves'  Dance, 

The. — Anon. 
Round  among  the  quiet  graves.     See  Love's  Resurrec- 
tion Day. — Moulton. 
Round  de  meadows  am  a-ringing.     See  Massa's  in  de 

Cold  Ground. — -Foster. 
Round  my  own  pretty  rose  I  have  hovered  all  day. 

See  Nightingale's  Song,  The. — Bayly. 
Round   Quebec's   embattled  walls.     See  Montgomery 

at  Quebec. — -ScoUard. 
Round  the  cape  of  a  sudden  came  the  sea.     See  Parting 

at  Morning. — Browning. 
Round  the  green  play-ground  the  dear  children  stand. 

See  "Plant  the  Trees,  Children." — Anon. 
Round  their  flag,  on  the  bank  of  a  railway,  the  regi- 
ment stood. — See  French  Ensign,  The. — Daudet. 
Round-a,  round-a,  keep  your  ring.     See  Satyrs'  Dance, 

The. — Anon. 
Rout  and  defeat  on  every  hand.     See  Contrast. — Kim- 
ball. 
Row  me  o'er  the  strait,  Douglas  Gordon.     See  Douglas 
Gordon . — Weatherly. 


"  Row  me  out  to  the  sunset — row  me,  fisher-boy  Ben." 

See  Into  the  Sunset. — Anon. 
Row  us  out  from  Desenzano,  to  your  Sirmione  row! 

See    Frater  Ave  atque  Vale. — Tennyson. 
Row-diddy,  dow  de,  my  little  sis.     See  Grampy  Sing» 

a  Song. — Day. 
Royal  and  Saintly  Cashel!     I  would  gaze.     See  Rock 

of  Cashel,  The. — De  Vere. 
Royal  Egypt!     Empress.     See  Antony  and  Cleopatra 

(Cleopatra's  Resolution). — Shakespeare. 
Rudolph,    professor    of    the    headsman's    trade.     See 

Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast-table,  The  (Rudolph  the 

Headsman). — Holmes. 
Rudolph  Swackhamer  ga^■e  a  ball.     See  Swackhamer's 

Ball. — Anon. 
Rugged  wanderers  out  in  the  cold.     See  Chry.«anthe- 

mums. — Elliot. 
Ruggles  &  Co.,  29  Bond  Street ;  Messrs.  Nicholas  Rug- 

gles  &  Co.     See  Ruggles  &  Co. — Wayne. 
Ruin  and  death  held  sway.     See  In  Apia  Bay. — Rob- 
erts. 
"Ruin   seize  thee,  ruthless  King!"     See  Bard,  The. — 

Gray. 
Rum,  we  yield  not  to  thy  unhallowed  influence.     See 

Water  and  Rum. — (5ough. 
Rumble  thy  belly-full !     Spit,  fire!     Spout,  rain!     See 

King  Lear. — Shakespeare. 
Rumbling  and  rolling,  and  rocking,  the  battle  swept 

up  from  the  valley.     Sec  Chickamauga. — Anon. 
Run.  little  rivulet,  run!     See  Rivulet,   The.— Larcom 
Run?     Now  you  bet  you;  I  rather  guess  so.     See  Kit 

Carson's  Ride. — Miller. 
Run,  shepherds,  run  where  Bethlehem  blest  appears. 

See  Angels,  The. — Drummond. 
Run  up  our  flag  in  the  breeze.     See  Flag  Day. — Banks. 
Runs   the  wind  along  the  waste.     See  Were-wolf. — 

Hawthorne. 
Rustic  mirth  goes  round .    See  Seasons ,  The. — Thomson . 
Rustily  creak  the  crickets ;  Jack  Frost  came  down  last 

night.     See  Jack  Frost. — Thaxter. 
Rustling  billows  of  silk  'neath  the  foam  of  old  lace. 

See  Society  Martyr,  A. — Anthony. 
Rusty  and  dusty,  long  out  of  date.     See  Old  Fire-dog, 

The.— Frost. 
Ruth's  mamma  sang  out:  "Ruthie!  Ruthie!  Ru — th — i 

— el"     Called  her  thrice.     See  Ruthie's  Faith  in 

Prayer. — Anon. 


S  stands  for  Sabbath — day  of  rest.     See  Sunday-school 

Acrostic — Rook . 
Sabrina    fair,    listen    where  thou    art    sitting.      See 

Comus  (Sabrina  Fair). — Milton. 
Sachems,  chiefs,    and   warriors!     Metamora   has    told 

his  brothers  of  the  many  aggressions.     See  Meta- 
mora to  his  Warriors. — Anon. 
Sad  are  they  who  know  not  love.     See  Two  Songs  from 

the  Persian,  II. — Aldrich. 
Sad  are  the  words  that  men  have  spoken.     See  Un- 
spoken.— Anon. 
Sad  happy  race!    Soon  raised  and  soon  depressed.    See 

Borough,  The  (Strolling  Players). — Crabbe. 
Sad  is  my  lot;  among  the  shining  spheres.     See  Earth. 

• — Roscoe. 
Sad  is  our  youth,  for  it  is  ever  going.     See  Human 

Life. — De  Vere. 
Sad  is   yonder   blackbird's    song.     See   Ruined    Nest, 

The. — Sigerson. 
Sad  Mayflower!  watched  by  winter  stars.     See  May- 
flowers, The. — Whittier. 
Sad  souls,  that  harbor  fears  and  woes.     See  Exchange, 

The.— Palfrey. 
"Saddleand  mount  and  away!" — loud  the  bugles  in 

Durban  are  pealing.     See  In   Matabele  Land. — 

Baylis. 
Sad-hearted,  be  at  peace!  the  snow-drop  lies.     See  O 

Thou  of  Little  Faith.— MacDonald. 
Sadly  as  some  old  mediaeval  knight.     See  My  Booko. — 

Longfellow. 
Sadly  the  dead  leaves  rustle  in  the  whistling  wind.     See 

Church  of  a  Dream,  The. — Johnson. 
Safe  at  anchor  in  Drontheim  Bay.     See  Crew  of  the 

Long  Serpent,  The. — Longfellow. 
Safe  'neath  the  violets.     See  •  Beneath  the  Violets. — 

Higginson. 
Safe  stands  our  simple  shed,  despised  our  little  store. 

See  Jerusalem   Delivered   (Shepherd's  Song,  The). 

— Tasso. 
Safe  to  the  fold  the  shepherd  leads.     See  At  Mother's 

Knee. — Anon. 


813 


Safe 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOXS 


Safe  where  1  cannot  die  yet.     See  Is  it  Wei!  with  the 

Child? — Kossetti. 
Said  a  little  wandering  maiden.     See  Bee's  Wisdom, 

The. — .\non. 
Said  an  ancient  hermit,  bendins.     See  Olive  Tree,  The. 

— Baring-(io«id. 
Said  Brier-Roae's  mother  to  the  naughty  Brier-Hose. 

See  Brier-Rose. — Boyesen. 
Said  Burgoyne  to  his  men,  as  they  pas.sed  in  review. 

See  Progress  of  Sir  Jack  Brag,  The. — Anon. 
Said  Farmer  .Tones,  in  a  whining  tone.     See  Hoeing  and 

Praying.— Anon. 
Said  Folly  to  Wisdom.     See  On  the  Road. — Jenk«. 
Said  he    "Did  you  recollect,  my  dear."     See  June  2lst. 

— Bird.seye. 
Said  I  not  so, — that  I  would  sin  no  more?     See  Said  I 

not  So? — -Herbert. 
Said  I  to  myself,  here's  a  chance  for  me.     See  Speci- 
mens.—Itands. 
Said  .Fake  Met  7,enm.aker  to  his  sweetheart.     See  Dutch 

Security.— Anon. 
Said  Life  to  Death:     "Methinks,  if  T  were  you."     See 

Recrimination.— Wilcox. 
Said  little  Miss  Nanc.v,  I've  taken  a  fancy.     See  Spring 

Maiden,  A. — Liddell. 
Said  Mrs.  A.  to  Mrs.  J.     See  Origin  of  Scandal,  The. 

— (Arnnnaut,  The.) 
Said  O'Flaiierty  to  Muggins,  "Do  you  call  yourself  a 

man?"     See  Coward,  The. — -Meyers. 
Said  one  little  raindrop.     See  Race,  The. — X.  Y.  Z. 
Said  our    bright-eyed   boy,   with  curls  of  gold.      See 

Yesterday. — Percy. 
Said    Stiggins   to   his  wife,   one   day.      See  Domestic 

Economy. — (Punch.) 
Said  the  archangels,  moving  in  their  glory.     See  Voice. 

— Spofford. 
Said  the  burghers  of  Cologne,  "We  have  voted  a  new 

bell."     See  Great  Bell  of  Cologne,  The. — Anon. 
Said  the  child  to  the  youthful  year.     SeeChild  and  the 

Year,  The.— Tha.xter. 
Said  the  corn  to  the  lilies.     See  Corn  and  the  I^ilies, 

The. — Anon. 
Said  the  Englishman:    "W'at's  all  this  bloomin'  wow?" 

See  Foreigners  at  the  Fair. — Brooks. 
Said  the  fir.ft  little  chicken.     See  Chickens,  The. — Anon. 
Said  the  Grocer's  Scale  to  the    Orange-peel.     See  In 

.(ICsop's  Vein. — Mitchell. 
Said  the  little  shepherdess.     See  What  the  Lambs  say. 

—Thomas. 
Said  the    needle,    "I've    swallowed    a    thread."     See 

Mistake,  A. — Greenleaf. 
Said  the  Raggedy  Man  on  a  hot  afternoon.     See  Man 

in  the  Moon,  The. — Riley. 
Said  the  rose  to  the  pansies.     See  Some  One  Loves  Us 

Best. — Vandyne. 
Said  the  sch)ol  teacher,  who  lives  at  a  hotel.     See  Her 

Excuse. — Anon. 
Said  the  Shagbark  to  the  Chestnut.     See  Gossip  of  the 

Nuts,  The. — .\non. 
Said  the  Wind  to  the  Moon,   "I  will  blow  you  out." 

See  Wind  and  the  Moon,  The. — Macdonald. 
Said  Wind    to    the   bright    little    weather    vane.     See 

Points  of  the  Compass,  The. — Anon. 
Sailing  away!     lK)sing  the  breath  of  the  shores  in  May. 

See  Skipper  Ben. — Anon. 
Sailing  like   a   stately    ship.     See   Samson    Agonistes. 

— Milton. 
"Sailorman,  I'll  give  to  you."     See  Silver  Penny,  The. 

— Ramal. 
St.  Agnes'  Eve— .\h,  bitter  chill  it  was!     See  Eve  of 

St.  Agnes.  The. — Keats. 
St.  Anthony  at  church.     See  St.  Anthony's  Sermon  to 

the  Fishes. — Anon. 
St.  Anthony  sat  on  a  lowly  .stool.     See  Temptations 

of  St.  Anthony .  -(Bentley'a  Miscellany.) 
Samt  Augustine!  well  hast  thou  said.     See  Ladder  of 

St.  Augustine.  The.— Longfellow. 
Samt  Brandan    sails    the    northern    main.     See   Saint 

Brandan .  — A  mold. 
St.  Mark's  hushed  abbey  heard.     See  Sir  Pavon  and 

St.  Pavon. — Palfrey. 
Saint  Patrick  did  a  vast  deal  of  good  in  his  day.     See 

Patrick  O'Rouke  and  the  Frogs. — Bungay. 
Saint  Patrick,  slave  to  Milcho  of  the  herds.     See  Proc- 
lamation, The.— Whit  tier. 
Samt  Peter  sat  by  the  celestial  gate.     See  Vision  of 

Judgment.  The. — Byron. 
St.  Peter  stood  guard  at  the  go' den  gate.     See  Thirty 

Years  with  a  Shrew.— ( flrooA-/.?/7?  Earj'e.) 
Peters  spacious  plaza  with  a  mighty  throng  was 

nlled.     See  Bresca. — Ewing. 
^'"'t>P.^.'''R.   ^'"■''    *•''    o'd    readings    .say.     See   Saint 

Phihp  Neri  and  the  Youth.— Byron. 


St.  Stephen's  cloistered  hall  was  proud.     See  Colum- 
bus.— Sigourney. 
St.  Swithin's  Day,  if  thou  dost  rain.     See  St.  Swithin. 

— Anon. 
"St.     Valentine!"        What     tender     thoughts     come 

wreathed  around  the  honored   name.     See  First- 
Valentine,  The. — Anon. 
St.  Wilfrid  oiice,  aware  of  love  grown  cold.     See  J^ost 

Legend,  A. — Bourdillon. 
Sally  Saltre  for  Salter]  she  was  a  [young]  teacher  and 

For  who]  taught.     See  Tragedy  on  past  Participles, 

A— C.  A.  S. 
Salome,   waken!  waken!     Dost  thou  sleep?     See  Res-. 

ur.-ection   Morn. — Murray. 
Sam  Brown  was  a  fellow  from  way  down  East.     See 

In  the  C'atacombs. — Ballard. 
Sam,  did  you  eber  go  huntin'  in  the  winter  time  way 

out  West?     See  Wonderful  Dream. — (Christy. 
Sam  had  spirits  naught  could  check.     See  Impetuous 

Samuel. — Streamer. 
Sam,  I  tell  you  what  it  is,  hoeing  potatoes  is  a  swindle. 

See  Runaways,  The. — Anon. 
Sam,  I   went  an   answered  an  advertisement   a  week 

ago.     See  De  Necessary  Consequences. — Anon. 
Sam,  you've  got  along  pretty  well  in  the  world.     See 

First  Thing  that  Tiirn'd  up.  The. — Anon. 
Samanthy  Price  and  Rebecca  .Jane  .ludd  was  real  close 

and  pertickeler  friends.     See  Rebecca's  Reve.ige. 

—Dallas. 
Sambre  and  Maese  their  waves  may  join.     See  On  the 

Taking  of  Namur  by  the  King  of  Great  Britain. 

^Prior. 
Sammy  Smith  would  drink  and  eat.     See  Greedy  Boy, 

The.— Turner. 
Sammy,  stop  your  whittlin'.     See  Happy  Family.  A. 

— McBride. 
Samples  of  wine,  and  samples  of  beer.     See  Sample 

Rooms. — Anon. 
Sanctioned  by    custom,    licensed   by    the    State.     See 

Touch  it  Not. — Eaton. 
Sandy  and    Ned   were   brothers.     See   Problem,    A. — 

Chandler. 
Sang  one  of  England  in  his  island  home.     See  Canada 

to  England. — Stringer. 
Sang  the  lily  and  sang  the  rose.     See  Summer  Changes. 

— Marston. 
Sans  peur  sans  reproche! — our  lion-heart.     See  Will- 
iam Ewart  Gladstone. — Machar. 
Santa  Ana  came  storming,   as  a   storm   might  come. 

See  Defence  of  the  Alamo,  The. — -Miller. 
Santa  Claus,  I  hang  for  you.     See  Real  Santa  Claus,  A. 

— Sherman. 
Santa  Claus!    Santa   Claus!     Where   have   you   been? 

See    Short    Christmas    Performance,     A. — Anon. 
Sarah,  thine   act   hath   made   me     what    I    am.      See 

Hagar's  Farewell. — Moore. 
Sarcastic  people  are  wont  to  say  that  poets  dwell  in 

garrets.     See  In  the  Garret.— (Knickerbocker.) 
Sarsarty  was    the    fiddler's    name.     See    Dad's    Little 

Fiddle.— Sibley. 
Sarsfield  rode  out  the  Dutch  to  rout.     See  Ballad  of 

Sarsfield,  A;  or.  The  Bursting    of  the  Guns. — De- 

Vere. 
Sarvent,  Marster!     Yes,    sah,    dat's    me.     See    Uncle 

Gabe's  White  Folks.— -Page. 
Saturnian  mother!  why  dost  thou  devour.     See  Rus- 
sia.— Dole. 
Saunders  McGlashan    was    a    hand-loom-weaver    in    a 

rural  part  of  Scotland.     See  Saunders  McGla.shan's 

Courtship. — Kennedy. 
Sauntering  hither  on   listless  wings.     See  To  a  Sea- 
bird. — Harte. 
Savage  I   was   sitting  in    my   house,    late,    lone.     See 

Fifine  at  the  Fair  (Householder,  The)N-Browning. 
Save  through  the  flesh  Thou  wouldst  not  come  to  me. 

See  Incarnation,  The.— Tabb. 
Saved!    And  the  alibi!     See  Deacon  Brodie. — Henley 

and  Stevenson. 
Saviour,  again  to  thy  dear  name  we  raise.     See  Grant 

us  Thy  Peace. — Anon. 
Saviour!  I  follow  on.     See  same. — Hastings. 
Saviour!  like   a   shepherd   lead   us.     See   "I    Am    the 

Good  Shepherd." — Thrupp. 
Saviour,  sprinkle    many    nations.     See   Desire   of    All 

Nations,  The.^-Coxe. 
Saviour,  when  in  dust  to  Thee.     See  Litany. — Grant. 
Saviour,  who    Thy    flock    art    feeding.     See    anm  \ — 

Muhlenberg. 
"Saw  ye  my   wee  thing?  saw  ye  my  ain  thing?"     See 

Mary  of  Castle  Cary. — Macneil. 
Saw  ye  ne'er  a  lonely  lassie.     See  Be  Content. — Anon. 
Saw  you  never  in  the  twilight.     See  Adoration  of  the 

Wise  Men,  The. — Alexander. 


814 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Scotland 


Saws't  thou  ever  Sinuis  patcht  on  Paul's  Church  door. 
See  On  Simony. — Hall. 

"Say,  are  you  a  Mason,  or  a  Nodfellow,  or  anything?" 
See  Royal  Bumper  Degree,  The. —  (Peck's  Sun.) 

Say,  Bill,  I've  been  a-thinkin'!  you  know  how  a  feller 
feels.     See  Don't  you  Think  so.  Bill? — Brooks. 

Say,  crimson  Rose  and  dainty  Daffodil.  See  Nose- 
gay, A. — Reynolds. 

Say,  darkeys,  hab  you  seen  de  massa.  See  Year  of 
Jubilee,  The. — Anon. 

Say,  darling,  do  you  love  me  true?  See  To  an  Im- 
aginary One. — Eddy. 

Say,  did  his  sisters  wonder  what  could  Joseph  see. 
See  Regina  Cceli. — Patmore. 

Say'  did  you  ever  get  right  angry?  See  Did  You — ■ 
Will  You?— Anon. 

Say,  doctor,  may  I  not  have  rum.  See  Rum  Maniac, 
■  The.— Allison. 

Say,  does  Fact  or  Reason  err.  See  Logic.  —  {Harvard 
Lampoon.) 

Say,  fair  maids  maying.     See  Of  Ijfe. — Lang. 

Say,  fellers!  there's  a  man  down  in  the  other  part  of  the 
school-yard.     See  Reading  a  Letter. — Smith. 

Say,  from  what  golden  quivers  of  the  sky.  See  Hymn 
to  Light,  The. — ("owley. 

"Say,  General,  say!"  the  courier  said.  See  Caliber 
Fifty-four. — ('arleton. 

Say,  girls,  'tisn't  time  for  the  bell  to  ring  yet.  See 
Playing  School. — Smith. 

Say,  girls,  you  know  Mr.  Smith,  don't  you?  See 
Fanny's  Secret. — Anon. 

Say,  guiltless  pair.  See  Winged  Worshippers,  The. 
— Sprague. 

Say!  hullo,  dere,  du  Yacob  Stein!  See  Rip  Van  Win- 
kle.— Irving  and  Jefferson. 

Say,  I  was  going  down  Broadway  de  oder  day.  See 
Examining  de  Bumps. — White. 

Say,  in  a  hut  of  mean  estate.  See  Soul  of  Man,  The. — 
Goodale. 

Say,  I've  got  a  little  brother.  See  His  New  Brother. 
— lyincoln. 

"Say,  Jim,"  I  said,  "I'd  like  to  get."  See  My  Neigh- 
bor Jim. — Anon. 

Say,  Johnnie,  who  was  that  tall  man  that  was  to  your 
hou.se  the  other  night.  See  Susie's  I^esson. — 
Smith. 

Say,  Johnson,  I  want  to  ask  you  something.  See 
That's  what  I  Thought. — Anon. 

Say,  Johnson,  what  has  become  ob  your  brother?  See 
Shakes. — Anon. 

Say!  little  Pup,  what's  up?  See  Lost  Puppy,  The. — 
Wood. 

Say,  Louie.  See  Nell's  Christmas  Stocking. — Har- 
bour. 

Say,  ma,  need  I  go  to  bed  now?  See  Troublesome  In- 
vestment, The. — Bradley. 

Say,  Miss  Judith  has  company  in  the  parlor.  See  Ex- 
amination  Day. — Smith. 

Say,  Mr.  Gray,  Sis  is  our  housekeeper,  nowadays.  See 
Sue  Waters's  Housekeeping. — Whiting. 

Say,  Mr.  Johnson,  you  don't  come  to  see  us  now  like 
you  used  to  one  time.  See  Awful  Responsibility, 
An. — Anon. 

Say,  mother  earth.  See  Liquor-seller's  Dream,  The. — 
Murray. 

"Say.  my  dear,"  ejaculated  Mr.  Spoopendyke.  See 
Mr.  Spoopendyke  Hears  Burglars. — Huntley. 

Say  never,  ye  loved  once.     See  same.— rBrowning. 

Say  not  adieu,  but  au  revoir.  See  Parting  Song. — 
Swinburne. 

Say  not  good-by!  dear  friend,  from  thee.  See  Good- 
night, Good-by. — Greenwell. 

Say  not  the  struggle  nought  availeth.  See  same. — 
Clough.'^^ 

Say  on!  What  was  the  dream  that  waked  thy  soul? 
See  Seer  and  the  Dreamers,  The. — Murray. 

Say  over  again,  and  yet  once  over  again.  See  Sonnets 
from  the  Portuguese.  XXI. — Browning. 

Say  Paddy!  D'  you  mind  the  ould  grog-shop.  See 
Slaughter  House,  The. — Young. 

Say,  pipe,  let's  talk  of  love.  See  Pipe  Critic,  The. — 
Littlefield. 

Say,  sire  of  insects,  mighty  Sol.  See  Flies,  The. — 
Prior. 

Say,  sis,  where's  ma?  See  Census  Taker,  The. — 
.  Olcott. 

Say,  Sunday's  lonesome  fur  a  little  feller.  See  Little 
Feller,  A. —  (Michigan  Christian  Advocate.) 

Say,  Swain,  who,  that  is  now  in  this  school.  See 
Choosing  a  Trade  or  Profe.ssion. — Hunt. 

Say  there!     P'r'aps.     See  "Jim." — Harte. 

Say,  this  lodgin'-house  fur  new,sboy«.  See  Demmy 
Jake, — Ark  Wright. 


Say  to    me    whose    fortunes    shall    rise    higher.     See 

Antony  and   Cleopatra    (Antony^  and   the   Sooth- 
sayer) . — Shakespeare. 
Say,  'tother  day  Kip  Elbert,  that's  my  beau,  was  going 

to  go  out  fishin'.     See  Naughty  Zell. — Anon. 
Say,  what  is  Honor?     See  Honor. — Wordsworth. 
Say,    what  is  it,  Eyes,  ye  see?     See  Senses,  The. — 

Anon. 
Say,  what  is  life?     'Tis  to  be  born.     See  Life's  Story. — 

Saxe. 
Say,  what  is  the  spell,  when  her  fledglings  are  cheeping. 

See  Song  of  I^ove,  A. — (Carroll 
Say  which  enjoys  the  greater  bli.sses.     See  Nice  Point, 

A. — Lessing. 
Say,  why  was  man  so  eminently  raised.     See  Pleasures 

of  Imagination,  The  (Mind  of  Man,  The). — Aken- 

side. 
Say,  will  you  love  me  when  I'm  bald?     See  Will  You 

Love  Me  when  I'm  Bald? — Wood. 
Say,  wilt    thou   think   of   me   when    I'm    away.     See 

Filiolae  Dulcissima;. — Alford. 
Say,  ye  that  know,  ye  who  have  felt  and  seen.     See 

Lambs  at  Play. — Bloomfield. 
Say  ye,  that  years  roll  on  and  ne'er  return?     See  same. 

— Landor. 
Says  bould  Barney  Milligan.     See  Not  Willin'.— Anon. 
Says  John  to  his  mother,  "Look  here!  look  here!     See 

Nut  Hard  to  Crack,  A. — Cary. 
Says   Patrick   to   Biddy,   "Good-morning,   me   dear!" 

See  Irish  Coquetry. — Anon. 
Says  Sammy  to  Dick.     See  Two  Little  Rogues. — Diaz. 
Says  Stonewall  Jackson  to  "Little  Phil."     See  Joined 

the  Blues. — Rooney. 
Says  the  Colonel  to  the  sergeant,  "I  was  kept  awake 

all  night."     See  Raggles. — Meyers. 
Says  the  pipe  to  the  snuff-box,  "I  can't  understand." 

See  To  the  Rev.  Mr.  Newton. — Cowper. 
Says  Tweed  to  Till,  "What  gars  ye  rin  sae  still?"     See 

Two  Rivers. — Anon. 
Scamper,  little  leaves,  about.     See  Leaves  at  Play. — 

Sherman. 
Scant  along  the  ridgy  land.     See  First  of  .A.pril,  The. 

— Warton. 
Scarce  grown  to  womanhood,   to  die  a  Queen!     See 

Mercedes. — Parsons. 
Scarce  Rama  to  the  wilderness  had  with  his  younger 

brother  gone.     See  Ramayana  (Death   of    Yajna- 

datta) , — Milman. 
Scarce  were  the  splintered  lances  dropped.     See  Count 

Candespina's  Standard. — Boker. 
Scarcely     Hope    had    shaped    for    me.     See    Andrew 

Rykman's    Prayer     ("Scarcely    Hope,"     etc.). — 

Whittier. 
Scarcely  were  the  archbishop's  feet  upon  the  steps  of 

the  altar.     .See  Murder   of    Thomas  :^    Becket   in 

Canterbury  Cathedral,  The. — Thierry. 
Scatter  in  spring-time  a  handful  of  seeds.     See  same. — 

Anon.  m 

Scatter  the  germs  of  the  beautiful.     See  Scatter  the 

Germs  of  the  Beautiful. — Anon. 
Scattered  here  and  there  over  this  beautiful  land  of 

ours.     See  Grove  of  Historic  Trees,  A, — Anon. 
Scattered  over  glade  and  dingle.     See  Wild  Flowers. — 

Doudney. 
Scene,   a  drug  store.     Enter  a  tall  and  rather  mild- 
looking  young  man.     See  Drug  Clerk's  Trials,  A. — 

Anon. 
Scenes  that  are  brightest.     See  With  no  One  to  Love 

Us.— Ball. 
Schelynlaw  Tower  is  fair  on   the  brae.     See  Laird  of 

Schelynlaw. — Veitch. 
Schir!   though   your   Grace   has   put   gret   order.     See 

Satire  on  Syde  Taillis — Ane  Supplicatioun  Directit 

to  the  Kingis  Grace, — Lyndsay. 
Schneider  is  very  fond  of  tomatoes.     See  Schneider's 

Tomatoes. — Adams. 
Science,  if  true  to  itself,  must  come  back  to  a  personal 

God.     See  sam,e. — Porter. 
Science  is  necessary  not  only  for  the  most  successful 

production.     See     Poetry     of     Science,      The. — - 

Spencer. 
Science  long  watched  the  realms  of  space.     See  World 

Beyond,  A, — Bowditch, 
Scion  of  a  mighty  stock,  hands  of  iron,  hearts  of  oak. 

See  Young  American,  The. — Everett. 
Scores  of  women,  old  and  young.     See  Skipper  Ireson's 

Ride.— Whittier. 
"Scorn  not  the  sonnet,"  though  its  strength  be  sapped. 

See  On  a  Magazine  Sonnet. — Loines. 
Scorn  not  the  sonnet ;  Critic,  you  have  frown'd.     See 

Scorn  not  the  Sonnet. — Wordsworth. 
Scotland!     There  is  a  magic  in  the  sound.     See  Scot- 
land.— Flagg. 


815 


Scots 


AN  INDEX  TO' POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Scots,   wha  hae  wi'   Wallace  bled.     See  Scots,   Wha 

Hae. — Burns. 
Scrooge   is  finally   haunted   in   his   dreams   by   three 

spirits.     See  Christmas  Canil,  A    (Scrooge's   Re- 
formation) . — Dickens. 
Sea-birda  are  asle4t>.     iSee  Sea  Slumber-song. — Noel. 
Sea-king's  daughter  from  over  the  sea.     See  Welcome 

to  Alexandra,  A. — Tennysoi. 
Seal  thou  the  window!     Yea,  shut  out  the  light.     See 

Cloistered. — Brown. 
Seamen   three!     What    men   be   ye?     See   Nightmare 

Abbey  (Men  of  Gotham,  The;. — Peacock. 
Search  creation  around,  where  can  you  find  a  country. 

iSe«  Destiny  of  America. — ^Phillips. 
Search   there;   nay,   probe   me;  search   my   wounded 

veins.     See  Alexander. — Lee. 
Search    thou   the   ruling   passion;   there,    alone.     See 

Moral  Es-oay.-*  (Ruling  Pa.ssion,  The). — Pope. 
Searching  for  strawberries  ready  to  eat.     See  On  the 

Hillside.— A.  I.  M. 
Season    of    mists    and    mellow    fruitfulness!     iSee   To 

Autumn. — Keats. 
Seated  by  the  glowing  embers,  in  the  pleasant  firelit 

hall.     .See  Two  iTianksgiving  Dances. — Banks. 
Seated  I  see  the  two    again.      iSee    Hanging    of    the 

Crane,  The  (Household  Sovereign.  The). — -Long- 
fellow. 
Seated  one  day  at  the  organ.     See  Lost  Chord,  A. — 

Procter.  ■ 
Secession!     Peaceable  Secession !    See  Constitution  and 

the  Union,  The  (Peaceable  Secession). — Webster. 
Sech  an  exp)erience  as  I  hev  hed  this  mornin'.  Tirzah 

Ann'.      See    Sweet    Cicely    (Buyin?  a   Feller).^ 

HoUey. 
Secure  in   his  prophetic   strength.     See   St.    Paul   at 

Melita. — Newman. 
Securely   cabined   in   the   ship   below.     See   Faith. — 

Botta. 
See  Antonina    playing   her   guitar.     See   Antonina. — 

Boyne. 
See,  around  you  gathered.     See  Floral  Birthday  Greet- 
ing, A. — Jackson. 
See,  Chloris,    how    the    clouds.     See    To    Chloris. — 
'        Drummond. 
See,  from  this  counterfeit  of  him.     See  On  a  Bust  of 

Dante. — Parsons. 
See  how    a    king    can    slumber    on    his   throne.     See 

Winter-song  for  Pan. — Erskine. 
See!  how  he  strives  to  rescue  from  the  flood.     See 

Faithful  Dog,  The. — Sigoumey. 
See  how   she   leans  her  cheek   upon   her  hand.     See 

Romeo  and  Juliet.     The  Way  it  i^hould   be    Read 

in  1880. — {Burlington  Hnwkeye.) 
See  how  the  flowers,  as  at  parade.     See  Garden.  A. — 

Marvell. 
See  how    the    Mom    awakes.     Along    the    sky.     See 

Coming  of  the  Mom,  The. — Heavysege. 
See  how   the   orient   ctew.     See   Drop   of   Dew,    A. — 

Marvell. 
See  how  yon  flammg  herald  treads.     See  Steamboat, 

The. — Holmes. 
See!     I'm  making  patchwork.     See  Little  Seamstress, 

The. — .\non. 
See!     Fse  a  nigger  baby!     Se^  Nigger  Baby. — ^ Wilson. 
See  living  vales  by  living  waters  blessed.     See  Ocean. — 

Sprague. 
See  Lucifer  like  lightning  fall.     See  Third  Sunday  in 

I-ent. — Keble. 
"See   mamma,   the   crumbs  are   flying."     See  Snow- 
shower,  The. — Duncan. 
See  my  new  dmm,  Fred!     See  Drum,  The. — Anon. 
See  my  slate!     I  dot  it  new.     See  New  Slate,  The.— 

Anon. 
See,  O  see!     How  every  tree.     See  Elvira. — Digby. 
See,    on  yon  shoal  amid  the  blast.     See  Grace  Vernon 

Bussell. — Drayton. 
See  aome  queer  thinqe,  we  traveling  folk?     Well,   yes, 
that's  perfectly  true.     See  Not  in  the  Programme. 
— Coller. 
See,  see.  King  Richard  doth  himself  appear.    See  King 

Richard  IL — Shakespeare. 
See  that  thou  have  no  gods  but  me.     See  Ten  Com- 
mandments, The. — Anon. 
See,    the  birds  together.     See  Worship  in  the  Wild- 
wood. — Youl. 
See  the  chariot  at  hand  here  of  I<ove!     See  Celebration 

of  Charis,  A  (Charis'  Triumph). — .Tonaon. 
See  the  course  throng'd  with  gazers,  the  sports  are 

begun.     See  High-mettled  Racer,  The. — Dibdin. 
See  the  day  begins  to  break.    See  Faithful  Shepherdess, 

The  (Daybreak). — Fletcher. 
See  the  frog,  the  slimy,  green  frog.     See  Boy  and  the 
Frog.  The. — .\non. 


See!  the  hour  for  school  is  near.     See  Late  at  Break- 
fast.— Anon. 
See  the   kind   Shepherd,   .Jesus,   stands.     See  JChrist's 

Love. — Doddridge. 
See  the  Kitten  on  the  Wall.     See  Kitten  and  Falling 

Leaves,  The. — Wordsworth. 
See  the  morning  sunbeams  lighting  up  the  wood.     See 

God  is  Good. — -Anon. 
See,    the    pretty    Planet!     See    Blowing    Bubbles. — 

Allingham. 
See  the  pretty  snow-flakes  falling  from  the  sky.     See 

Falling  Snow,  The. — Anon. 
See  the  smoke-wreaths  how  they  curl  so  lightly  sky- 
ward.    See  Bush  Study,  a  la  Watteau,  A. — Martin. 
See,  the  stars  are  coming.     See  Stars  are  Coming,  The. 

— Anon. 
See  the  swift  and  busy  bee.     See  Wily  Bee,  The. — 

Cahill. 
See  them  go  forth  like  the  floods  to  the  ocean.     See 

Dawn  of  Redemption,  The. — Clark. 
See,  this    is    my    Christmas    dolly.     See    Christening 

Dolly.— Rook. 
See  those  five  talking  earnestly,  in  the  center  of  a  ring. 

See  Westward  Ho!   (Waiting  for  the  Armada).— 

Kingsley. 
'See,  valient  war  friends,  yonder  be  the  first,  the  last, 

and  all.'     See  Before  the  Battle  of  Hastings. — 

Warner. 
See,  what  a  beauty!     Half  Shut  eyes.     See  Hebe. — 

Anon. 
See,  what  a  grace  was  seated  on  his  brow.     See  Hamlet 

(Gentleman,  A). — Shakespeare. 
See  what  a  heap  of  flowers  I  have.     See  May's  Flowers. 

— Anon. 
See  what  a  lovely  shell.     See  Maud  (Shell,  The). — Ten- 
nyson. 
See,  what  a  wonderful  garden  is  here.     See  Little  Oh- 

Dear.— Field. 
See  where  my  love  a-maying  goes.     See  A-Maying. — 

Anon. 
See  where   she   comes   adown   the   lane.     See   School 

Ma'am,  The.^Burdette. 
See  where  she  issues  in  her  beauty's  pomp.     See  Her 

Coming. — Chapman . 
See  where  she    sits    upon    the    grassie    greene.     See 

Shepheardes  Calender,  The    (In    Praise  of    Eliza, 

Queen    of    the    Shepherds). — Spenser. 
See  with  what  simplicity.     See  Picture  of  Little  T.  C. 

in  a  Prospect  of  Flowers,  The. — -Marvell. 
See  yon  blithe  child  that   dances  in  our  sight!     See 

Child,  The.— Coleridge. 
See  yon  Robin  on  the  spray.     See  English  Robin,  The. 

— Weir. 
See  yonder  hill,  so  green,  so  round.     See  Much  Taste 

and  Small  Estate. — Shenstone. 
See  yonder  poor,    o'er-labored   wight.     See   Man    was 

Made  to  Mourn  (Melancholy). — -Burns. 
See!  yonder  stately,   lordly  spire.     See  Known  unto 

God. — Runcie. 
See,   yonder,   the  belfry  tower.     See  At  Midnight. — 

Sherman. 
Seeds  with  wings,  between  earth  and  sky.     See  'Tween 

Earth  and  Sky. — Webster. 
Seedy    Cab-driver,     whither    art     thou    going?     See 

Sapphics  of  the  Cabstand. — (Punch.) 
Seeing  our  lives  by  Nature  now  are  led.     See  Euthan- 
asia.— McKnight. 
Seeing  so   many  warriors   fall'n   around.      See  Sing 

of  Roland,  The  (Horn.  The).— Rabillon. 
Seeing  that  little  Johnny  'Tompkins  was  safely  out  of 

the  cotintry.      See   Dolly  Dialogues,  The    'That 

Little  Wretch).— Hope. 
Seeing  the  two  men  together  and  knowing  that  one 

of  them  was  a  murderer.    See  Sunshine  Johnson .  — 

Anon. 
Seek  music  in  the  wolf's  fierce  howl.     See  Irish  Wolf, 

The.— McCarroll. 
Seek    not,    Leuconoe,    to    know    how    long.     See    To 

Leuconoe. — Field. 
Seek  not   the  tree  of  silkiest  bark.     See  Song:  "Seek 

not  the  tree,"  etc. — De  Vere. 
Seek  out  "acceptable  words."     See  Potency  of  English 

Words. — Macintosh. 
Seems  not  our  breathing  light?     See  Renunciants. — 

Dowden. 
Seen  you  down  at  chu'ch  las'  night.     See  Discovered. — 

Dunbar. 
Sees  not  my  love,  how  Tinie  resumes.     See  To  a  Lady 

in  Retirement. — Waller. 
See'st  thou  how  gaily  my  young  master  goes.     See 

Impecunious  Fop,  The. — Hall. 
See'st  thou,  my  daughters,  yon  blue  outline  against  the 

sky.     See  Farewell,  The. — Anon. 


816 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Shame 


See'st    thou    my    home? — 'tis    where    yon    woods  are 

waving.     See  Two  Homes,  The. — Hemans. 
Selestial  apoley  which  didest  inspire.     See  Odd    to  a 

Krokis. — Anon. 
Se!f,  Soul  &  Co.,  Architects.     See  Letter,  A. — C.  S. 
Self-denial  and  discipline  are  the  foundation  of  all  good 

character.  See  Law  of  Success,  The. — Sargeant. 
Self-ease  is  pain,  thy  only  rest.  See  same. — Whittier. 
Self-murder!   name   it   not:   our  island's   shame.     See 

Grave,  The  f Self-murder). — Blair. 
Sell  old  Robin,  do  you  say?     Well,  I  reckon  not  to-day! 

iSee  Old  Robin. — Trowbridge. 
Sempronius    Prigg    and    Miltiades    Piso.     See    Presto 

Change. — Smiley. 
Sen  throw  vertew  incressis  dignitie.     See    Gude  and 

Godlie  Ballates,  The. — .Tames  the  First. 
Senators  of  Rome, — Whither,  oh  whither  shall  I  fly? 

See  Jugurthine  War,  The  (Prince   Adherbal  before 

the  Roman  Senate). — Sallust. 
Sence  little  Wesley  went,  the  place  seems  all  so  strange 

and  still.     See  Absence  of  Little  Wesley,  The. — 

Riley. 
Sence  the  first  time  I  heered  you  preach.     See  Widow 

Bedott  Papers  (Widow  Bedott  s    Letter  to   Elder 

Sniffles,  The).— Whitcher. 
Send  danger  from  the  east  unto  the  west.     See  King 

Henry  IV.,  Part  I. — Shakespeare. 
Send  it  up  to  the  garret?     Well,  no.     See  Old  Canteen, 

The.— White. 
Send  us  your  prisoners.      See  King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. 

(Hotspur) . — Shakespeare. 
Sense  with  keenest  edge  unused.     See  Pater  Filio. — 

Bridges. 
September  has  come,  a  month  so  fair.     See  September. 

— Richards. 
September  strews  the  woodland  o'er.     See  Song  for 

September,  A. — Parsons. 
September  sunshine,  warm  and  low.     See  .School-time. 

— Anon. 
Seraglio    of   the    Sultan    Bee.     See    Hollyhock,    A. — 

Sherman. 
Seraphina,  young  and  lovely,  with  a  fortune  at  com- 
mand.   See   Ideal   with   a    Roma,n    Nose,    An. — • 

Anon. 
Serene,   I  fold  my  hands  and  wait.     See  Waiting. — 

Burrough.s. 
Serene,    vast    head,    with   silver   cloud    of   hair.     See 

Tribute  of  Grasses,  A. — Garland. 
Sergeant  of  Police  Reynolds,  Forty-eighth  district.    See 

Every-day  Case,  An. — -Bloomingdale. 
Set  as    a    challenge    at    the    mountain's    side.     See 

Escurial,  The. — ^Gautier. 
Set  in  this  stormy  northern  sea.     See  Ave  Imperatrix. 

—Wilde. 
Set  me  where  Phoebus'  heat  the  flowers  slayeth.     See 

Test,  The.— Anon. 
Set   the  bells  a-ringing,  ringing.     See  While  the  Joy 

Goes  on. — Denton. 
Set  where    the    upper    streams    of    Simois    flow.     See 

Palladium. — Arnold. 
Settin'    round    the    stove    last    night.     See    Taste. — 

Riley. 
Setting    aside    the    palpable    injustice.     See    Death 

Penalty  for  New  Offences,  The. — Byron. 
Seven  colors  in  heaven  combined.     See  Rainbow,  The. 

— Anon. 
Seven    daughters    had    Lord    Archibald.     See    Seven 

Sisters,     The ;    or,   The    Solitude    of   Binnorie.^ 

Wordsworth. 
Seven  little  girls  are  we.     See  Seven  Days  in  a  Week. — 

Foster. 
Seven  maidens  'neath  the  midnight.     See  Romance  of 

the  Ganges,  A. — Browning. 
Seven  patriot  soldiers,  the  father  and  six  .stalwart  sons. 

See     Seven     Invincibles,     The. — {New     England 

Mnijazine.) 
Seven  sheep  were  standing.     See  Kitty  Knew. — -Anon. 
Seven  wee  birds  on  the  limb  of  a  tree.     See  Ten  Little 

Songsters,  The. — Anon. 
Seven  weeks  of  sea,  and  twice  seven  days  of  storm. 

See  GibraltTr.— Blunt. 
Seven  years  had  we  been  married.     See  Naming  the 

Baby. — Anon. 
Seventeen    hundred    and   thirty-nine.     See   Ballad    of 

"Beau  Brocade,"  The. — Dobson. 
Several  passengers  were  sitting  in  the  waiting  room. 

See  Two  Absent-minded  Men. — Anon. 
Several  years  ago   the   steamboat   Buckeye  blew   up. 

See  Dutchman's  Testimony  in  a  Steamboat  Case, 

A. — Anon. 
Several  years  ago  there  dwelt — and  for  aught  I  know 

there  still  dwells.     See  Dutchman  and  the  Yankee, 

The. — Anon. 


■'Sexton,"  Bessie's  white  lips  faltered,  pointing  to  the 

prison  old.     See  Curfew  must  not  Ring  To-night. 

— ^Thorpe. 
Sexton,  we  go  to-morrow.     It  is  foolish.     See  Good- 
bye, Old  Church. — Pomeroy. 
Sez    Alderman    Grady.       See  Officer   Brady. — Cham- 
bers. 
Sez    Corporal    Madden    to    Private    McFadden,     See 

Recruit,  The. — Chambers. 
Sh,  Arthur!     Not  so  loud!     Is  everything  ready?     See 

Love  Stronger  than  Locks. — Anon. 
Sh — I've  got  out  of  bed,  just  a  minute.     See  Santa's 

Secret. — Anon. 
Shade  of  Herrick,  Muse  of  Locker.     See  Knickerbocker. 

— Dobson. 
Shade  of  our  greatest,  O  look  down  to-day!     See  To 

the  Spirit  of  Abraham  Lincoln. — Gilder. 
Shades  of  evening,  close  not  o'er  us.   See  Isle  of  Beauty. 

— Bayly. 
Shadows  up  the  hillside  creeping.     See  Memory,  A. — 

Le  Compte. 
Shady    tree — babbling    brook.     See    Romance    of    a 

Hammock. — Anon. 
"Shake   off  your  heavy  trance."     See  Song:   "Shake 

off,"  etc. — Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Shakespeare  and  Milton — what  third  blazoned  name. 

See  Tennyson. — Aldrich. 
Shakespeare  says  something  about   worms.     See  His 

Wedded  Wife. — Kipling. 
Shakespeare  tells  us  seven  years  con.stitute  of  life  a 

span.     See  Min.strel's  Seven  Ages,  The. — Thatcher. 
Shakespeare,    thy   legacy    of    peerless    .song.     See   At 

Stratforid-on-Avon. — Bell. 
Shakey,    take    a    fader's    plessing.     See    Polonius    to 

Laertes — "Renewed." — Anon. 
Shall   atoms  be  eternally  active,   and  intellect.     See 

Intimations  of  Immortality. — Simmons. 
"Shall  I,  a  priest  of  God,  live  on  in  sin?"     SeeAnselmo, 

the  Priest. — Runcie. 
Shall   I   be   like   grandmamma   when   I   am   old?     See 

Secret,  A. — Anon. 
Shall  I  breathe  it?     Hush!  'twas  dark.     See  Ballad  of 

"Bonny  Portmore";  or,  The  Wicked   Revenge. — 

De  Vere. 
Shall  I  come,  sweet  Love,  to  thee.     See  Love's  Request. 

— Campion. 
Shall  I  compare  thee  to  a  summer's  day?     Sep  Sonnets, 

XVIII.— Shakespeare. 
Shall  I  ever  be  a  drunkard.     See  Wise  Resolution,  A. — 

Allen. 
"Shall  I  go  and  call  them  up."     See  Calling  Them  up. 

— Cooper. 
Shall  I  grieve  because  a  maid  swore  to  love  me.     See 

Philosophy. — Crannell. 
Shall  I  meet  you  again.     See  Triolets:    To  her  whom  I 

Call  Rose. — Gray. 
"Shall  I  sing?"  says  the  Lark.     See  I^ark,  Flower,  Sun, 

and  Shower. — Greenaway. 
Shall  I  strew  on  thee  rose  or  rue  or  laurel.     See  Ave 

atque  Vale. — Swinburne. 
"Shall  I  take,  and  take,  and  never  give?"     See  Receiv- 
ing and  Giving. — Anon. 
Shall  I  tell  you  whom  I  love?    See  Britannia's  Pa-storals 

(My  Choice). — Browne. 
Shall  I  thus  ever  long,  and  be  no  whit  the  nearer?     See 

To  Her  Sea-faring  Lover. — Anon. 
Shall  I,  wasting  in   despaire.     See  Shepherd's   Resolu- 
tion, The.^  Wither. 
Shall  mine  eyes  behold  thy  glory,  O  my  country.     See 

Post  Mortem. — Parnell. 
Shall  pride  aheap  of  sculptured  marble  raise.   See  On 

Laurence  Sterne. — Anon. 
Shall  we  await  the  orders  of  the  War  Office  to  overturn 

thrones?     See  Against  War. — Robespierre. 
Shall  we  carry  now  your  bundle.  ■  See  Pilgrim,  The. — 

Ramal . 
Shall  we  keep  the-  Philippine  Archipelago.     See  For 

Expansion. — Sibley. 
Shall  we  know  in   the   hereafter.      See  Wings. — Dan- 

dridge 
Shall  we  meet  again,  love.     See  Concord  Love  Song,  A. 

-^Roche. 
Shall  we  meet  no  more,  my  love,  at  the  binding  of  the 

sheaves.     See  Adonais. — Harney. 
Shall  we  not  weary  in  the  windless  days.     See  Here- 
after.—Watson. 
Shall  we  send  back  the  Johnnies  their  bunting.     See 

Those  Rebel  Flags. — Jewett. 
Shall  we  then  surrender  to  turbulence.     See  Shall  We 

Give  UD  the  Union? — Dickinson. 
Shame  on  thee,  savage  monarch-man,  proud  monopo- 
list   of    reason.     See    Of   Cruelty    to    Animals.— 

Tupper. 


817 


Shame 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Shame  up>on  you,  llobin.     Sec  Queen  Mary  (Song  of  the 

Milkmaid). — Tennyson. 
Shameful  imposture,  truly  I     I  wonder  who  the  kind 

friend  in.     See  Reception,  The. — Pickering. 
Sha'n't  and  Won^  were  two  little  brothers.     See  Won't 

and  Will.^Inon. 
Shapcot!  to  thee  the  Fairy  State.     See  Oberon'.s  Feast. 

— Herrick. 
Shaper  of  breathing  lives,  and  Lord  of  all  above.     See 

I.,ast  Orison,  The. — Stafford. 
Shawondasee,  fat  and    Ia7.y.     ^ee   Song  of  Hiawatha, 

The  (South  Wind,  The)  .—Longfellow. 
She  always  stood  upon  the  steps.     See  Watching  for 

Papa. — ^Anon. 
She  beat  the  happy  pavement.     See  Gratiana  Dancing. 

— Ixjvelace. 
She  began  ripping  the  binding  from  the  bottom  of  the 

skirt.     See'Jefful,  The." — Habberton. 
She  bids  you  on  the  wanton  rushes  lay  you  down.     See 

King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I.  (Night  and  Sleep). —Shake- 
speare. 
She    blos.somed  in  the  country.     See  Country  I^iassie, 

The. — .4non. 
She  bought  them  in  the  town  one  day.  See  Her  $  Shoes. 

— Anon. 
She  bounded  o'er  the  graves.     See  Annie  in  the  Grave- 
yard.— Gilman. 
She  brought  it  over  to  our  house,  Mrs.  Bascomb  did. 

See  Bascomb's  Baby. — Anon. 
She  calls  him  cruel — he  has  crushed  a  rose.     See  Nice 

Distinction,  A. — Vannah. 
She  came  among  the  glittering  [gathering — C]  crowd. 

See  Common  Sense. — Fields. 
She  came  and  stood  in  the  Old  South  Church.     See 

In  the  "Old  South."— Whittier. 
She  came  and  went  as  comes  and  goes.     See  Under  the 

Red  Cross. — Hickox. 
She  came  from   Detroit  and  her  great   pride  was  in 

being   an    invalid.     See   Remarkable   Case,    A. — 

Anon. 
She  came  here  from  the  middle  west.     See  Combine, 

A. — Anon. 
She  came  in  from  the  country.     See  She  Wanted  an 

Epitaph. — Anon. 
She  came      tripping      from      the      church-door.     See 

"Course  of  Love"  too  "Smooth,"  The. — Anon. 
She  casts  a  spell — oh!  casts  a  spell.     See  My  Love — 

Oh!  She  is  My  Love.— Hyde. 
She  clung  to  him,  the  game  was  o'er.     See  Football 

Tragedy,  A. — ( University  of  Chicago  Weekly. ) 
She   comes  like   the  hush  and  beauty  of   the   night. 

See  Poetry. — Markham. 
She  comes,  she  comes — the  Burden  of  the  Deeps.     See 

Invincible  Armada,  The. — Schiller. 
She  comes — the    spirit    of    the    dance!     See    Dancing 

Girl,  A. — Osgood. 
She  comes  to  the  Quad  when  her  Ladyship  pleases. 

See  Prof.'s  I-ittle  Girl,  The.— Field. 
She  comes    with    fairy    footsteps.     See    Little    Rose. 

— (Blackwood's  Magazine.) 
She  dances,  and  I  seem  to  be.     See  Perdita.— Coates. 
She  dared  not  wait  my  coming,  and  shall  look.     See 

Canute  the  Great. — ^Field. 
She  decided  that  the  only  way  to  run  a  house  econom- 
ically.    See  When  not  to  Keep  Books. — Anon. 
She  died^as  die  the  roses.     See  Child  of  Promise,  The. 

— MacCoU. 
She  died  in  June,  while  yet  the  woodbine  sprays.     See 

Mary — A  Reminiscence. — Turner. 
She  died — this  was  the  way  she  died.     See  Vanished. 

— Dickinson. 
She  does   not   "languish    in   her  bower."     See   "New 

Woman,"  The. — Matherson. 
She  does  not  live  at  my  house,  O  dear  no!     See  Cross 

Betsy. — Chatfield. 
She  dreams    of    Love    upon    the    temple    stair.     See 

Sleeping  Priestess  of  Aphrodite,  A. — Rogers. 
She  dressed  herself,  she  made  her  will,  she  bade  them 

all    good-by.     See    Her    First    Railroad    Ride. — 

.A.non. 
She  dwelt  among  the  untrodden  ways.     See  same. — 

Wordsworth. 
She  entered  a  crowded  car  and  was  followed  by  five 

blooming  children.     See    Mrs.    O'Toole    and  the 

Conductor. — Smith. 
She  fell  away  in  her  first  ages  spring.     See  Daphnaida. 

— Spenser. 
She  felt,  I  think,  but  as  a  wild-flower  can.     See  Irish 

Wild  Flower,  An.— Piatt. 
She  filled  her  shoes  with  fem-.seed.     See  Fern-seed. — 

Thaxter. 
She  flushed  and  paled,  and,  bridling,  raised  her  head. 

See  Whispermg  Gallery,  The. — McKay. 


She  fluttered  gaily  down  the  hill.     See  Polly. — Shope. 
She  folded  up  the  worn  and  mended  frock.     See  Com- 
pensation . — Anon . 
She  gamboll'd  on  the  greens.     See  Olivia. — Tennyson. 
She  gathered    at    her    slender    waist.     See    Girdle    of 

Friendship,  The. — Holmes. 
She  gave  her  life  to  love.     She  never  knew.     See  Old 

Maid,  The. — Barlow. 
She  gave  him  her  book  to  write  in.     See  Autograph 

Book  of  Blue,  The. — Jakeway. 
She  gazed    upon    the    burnished    brace.     See   Tender 

Heart,  The. — Cone. 
She  glided    on    her    peaceful    quest.     See    Nemesis. — 

Crandall. 
She  grasped  the  bar,  arranged  her  skirts.     See  Fulfill- 
ment.— Anon. 
She  had   a   parcel,    small   and   round.     See  Woman's 

"No,"  A. — Graham. 
She  had    lingered    long    by    the    window-pane.     See 

Weather  Bureau,  The. — Anon. 
She  had  looked  for  his  coming  as  warriors  come.     See 

Love's  Coming. — Wilcox. 
She  had   never   mailed   a   letter  before.     See   Ruling 

Passion,  The. — Switer. 
"She  hailed  from  round  Boston  somewheres,  and  she 

came  out  here."     See  Kindergarten  Chri.stmas,  A. 

— -Carruth. 
She  has  a  beauty  of  her  own.     See  Australian  Girl,  An. 

— Castilla. 
She  has  a  primrose  at  her  breast.     See  Primrose  Dame, 

A.— White. 
She  has  gone. — ^she  has  left  us  in  passion  and  pride. 

See  Brother  Jonathan's  Lament  for  Sister  Caroline. 

— Holmes. 
"She  has  gone  to  be  with  the  angels."     See  Vision  of  the 

Snow,  The. — Preston. 
She  has  gone  to  the  bottom!  the  wrath  of  the  tide. 

See  Alabama,  The.— Bell. 
She  has    laughed    as    softly    as    if    she    sighed!     See 

Woman's  Shortcomings,  A. — Browning. 
She  hath  no  gems  of  lustre  bright.     See  Little  Knot  of 

Blue,  A.— Peck. 
She  hed  no  maw  ner  paw,  ner  any  blood  er  kin.     See 

Jinny. — McGlasson.  lAiJ 

She  held  a  Citp  and  Ball  of  ivory  white.     See  Delia  at 

Play. — -Southey. 
She  hid  herself  in  the  soiree  kettle.     See  Ballade  of  the 

Nurserie,  A. — Twig. 
She  hung   the   cage   at   the   window.     See  Caprice. — 

Howells. 
She  is  a  maid  of  artless  grace.     See  same. — Vicente. 
She  is  a  winsome  wee  thing.     See  My  Wife's  a  Win- 
some Wee  Thing. — Burns. 
She  is  always  in  trouble — and  don't  she  let  you  know 

it,  too!     See   Stage  Land  (Stage  Heroine,  The). 

— .ferome. 
"She  is  dead!"  they  said  to  him.     "Come  away."     See 

She  and  He. — Arnold. 
"She  is  dead!"  they  say!  she  is  robed  for  the  grhve. 

See  Dead  Singer.  The.— O'Reilly. 
She  is  far  from  the  land  where  her  young  hero  sleeps. 

See  She  is  Far  from  the  Land. — Moore. 
She  is  fighting  for  her  freedom,  striving  hard  to  rend  in 

vain.     See  Cuba.— Gardner. 
She  is  like  Nature,  and  I  love.     See  All  on  One  Side. — 

Romaine. 
She    is    mine    own!     See   Two   Gentlemen  of  Verona, 

The. — Shakesoeare. 
She  is  my  only  girl.     See  Dumb  Child,  The. — Anon. 
She  is  not  fair  to  outward  view.      See  same. — Cole- 
ridge. 
She  is  not  yet,  but  he  whose  ear.     See  Dominion  of 

Australia,  The. — Stephens. 
She  is  not  young  and  fair.     See  Miss  Milly  O'Naire. — 

Bleyer. 
She  is  old,   and   bent,   and    wrinkled.     See  Marching 

Still. — Irving. 
She  is  so  pretty,  the  girl  I  love.     See  She  is  so  Pretty. — 

BC'ranger. 
She  is  so  tall,  so  slender .  and  her  boues.     See  lanes  on 

an  X-Ray  Portrait  of  a  Lady. — Russell. 
She  is  so  winsome  and  so  wise.     See  She  Just  Keeps 

House  for  Me. — Blewett. 
She  is  talking  aesthetics,  the  dear  clever  creature.     See 

Midges. — Lytton. 
She  isn't  half  so  handsome  as  when  twenty  years  agone. 

See  Hannah  Jane. — Locke. 
She  just   had   left   the  Latin   school.     See  Love   and 

Latin. — ^Anon. 
She  kept  her  secret  well,  oh  yes.     See  My  Ani?eline. — 

Smith. 
She  knelt    upon    her    brother's    grave.     See    Dor.a. — 

Brown. 


818 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


She 


She  knew   that    she    was   growing   blind.     See   Blind 

Louise. — Dewey. 
She  laid  it  where  the  sunbeams  fall.     See  Motherhood 

— Calverley. 
She  lay  unconscious,  in  dreamy  sleep.     See  Beautiful 

Dreams. — Anon . 
She  lay    upon    the    couch — -the    prisoner   queen.     See 

Death  of  Cleopatra,  The. — Anon. 
She  leads  me  on  through  storm  and  calm.     See  My 

Guide. — Savage-Armstrong. 
She  leaned  her  cheek  upon  her  hand.     See  Ballad  of 

Oriskany,  The. — Auringer. 
She  let    her    hand    be    taken     and    with    confidence 

unshaken.     See  At  Last. — Masson. 
She  listened    like    a    cushat    dove.     See    Listening. — 

Rossetti. 
Shp  lived  beside  the  Anner.     See  Irish  Peasant  Girl, 

The. — Kickham. 
She  lived  where  the  mountains  go  down  to  the  sea.     See 

Golden  Rowan. — Carman. 
She  lives   in    light,    not    shadow.     See   Of     One   who 

neither  Sees  nor  Hears. — Gilder. 
She  looked    just    like    that    kind    of    a    woman.     See 

Emancipation  of  Man,  The. — Burdette. 
She  looks   "up   to   it,"   quite.     See  Three  Trir>lets. — 

Hamilton. 
She  makes   no   moan   above   her  faded    flowers.     See 

Goine  Softly. — Anon. 
She  might  have  known  it  in  the  earlier  spring.     See 

F'eminine. — Bunner. 
Sh".  moved  through  the  garden  in  glory,  because.     See 

Marigr>ld. — Garnett. 
She  must  be  courteous,  she  must  be  holy.     See  My 

Queen.— Anon. 
She  never  sighs.     See  Girl  Who  is  always  Good,  The.— 

Anon. 
She,  of  whose  soul,  if  we  may  say,  'twas  gold.     See 

Elegy  on  Mistress  Elizabeth  Drury. — Donne. 
She  once  was  a  lady  of  honor  and  wealth.     See  Sister 

of  Charity,  The.— Griffin. 
She  pass'd  away  like  morning  dew.     See  Early  Death. 

— (Joleridge. 
She  pass'd  up  the  aisle  on  the  arm  of  her  sire.     See  St. 

George's,  Hanover  Square. — Locker 
She  passes  in  her  beauty  bright.     See  Secret,  The. — 

Monkhouse. 
She  picked  up  the  fencing  foils  and  ran  up  the  stairs. 

See  New  Woman  C'onsidered,  The. — Graham. 
She  played  upon  her  music-box  a  fancy  air  by  chance. 

See  Her  Polka  Dots. — Newell. 
She  plucked  a  rosebud  by  the  wall.     See  Rosebuds. 

— (Bowdnin  Orient.) 
She  prayed,  her  withered  hand  uprearing.     See  Goody 

Blake  and  Harry  Gill. — Wordsworth. 
She  promised  me  a  kiss  the  other  day.     See  Extending 

Credit. — Anon. 
She  rose  from  her  untroubled  sleep.     See  game.^Willis. 
She  roves  through  shadowy  solitudes.     See  Tacita. — 

Kenyon. 
She  rushed  to  the  telephone  and  rung  it  madly.     See 

Expensive  Chicken,  An. — Anon. 
She  sat  alone  by  the  gray  stone  wall.     See  Song,  A. 

— -Locke. 
She  sat  and  wept  beside  His  feet;  the  weight.     See 

"Multum  Dilexit." — Coleridge. 
'She  sat  beside  me  in  the  train,   pain   flitted  o'er  her 

face.     See  Difference,  A. — Anon. 
She  sat  beside  the  mountain  springs.     See  Forsaken, 

The.— Aid<'. 
She  sat  down  below  a  thorn.     See  Fine  Flowers  in  the 

Valley. — Anon. 
She  sat  in  Philip's  vacant  chair.     See  Mildred  in  the 

Library. — Holland. 
She  sat  on  the  porch  in  the  sunshine.     See  Kissed  his 

Mother. — Rexford. 
She  sat  on  the  sliding  cushion.     See  Laugh  in  Church, 

\. — Anon. 
She  sauntered    by    the    swinging    seas.     See    By    the 

Swinging  Seas. — ^Henley. 
She  sayeth    "No,"— my    lady   fair.     See   She   Sayeth 

"No." — Smalley. 
She  says,     "The    cock    crows — hark!"     See    Parting 

Lovers,  The. — Alger 
She  screamed  in  terror  when  her  purse.     See  Shopping. 

— Anon. 
She  seemed  an  angel  to  our  infant  eyes.     See  Mother's 

Picture,  A. — Stedman. 
She  sees  her  image  in  the  glass.     See  Shadow  Dance. 

The.— Moulton. 
She  should  never  have  looked  at  me  if  she  meant  I 

should  not  love  her.     See  Cristina. — Browning. 
She  .shrank  from  all,  and  her  silent  mood.     See  Female 

Convict,  The.t—I'andon. 


She  sits  all  day  plaiting  a  wild-rose  wreath.     See  .June. 

— Anon. 
She  sits  beneath  the  elder-tree      See  Death-child,  The. 

— Sharp. 
She  sits  in  a  fashionable  parlor.     See  Modem   Belle, 

The. — Anon. 
She  sits  on  a  table  and  smokes  a  cigarette.     See  Stage 

Land  (Stage  Adventuress,  The). — Jerome. 
She  sits  within  the  white  oak  hall.     See  Helen. — Val- 
entine. 
She  sleeps  amongst  her  pillows  soft.     See  Repose,  A. — 

Procter. 
She  smiled!  she  did — she  smiled  at  me!     See  All  in  the 

Wind.— Gibbs. 
She  smiles  but  her  heart  is  in  sable.     See  Rose  and  the 

Ring,  The. — Locker-Iiampson. 
She  smiles;   the    cruel   world    seems    bright.     See   My 

Fiancee. — Reilly. 
She  sowed  at  morn  with  eager  hand.     See  Sower,  The. 

— Wakeman. 
She  spake  so  kindly  unto  all.     See  Metamorphosis. — 

Mifflin. 
She  spoke  of  the  Rights  of  Woman.     See  Lecture,  The. 

— Corbett. 
She  spoke  to  me,  her  voice  was  low.     See  Idyl  of  the 

Strap.  An. — (Red  and  Blue.) 
She  sports  a  witching  gown.     See  Dollie. — Peck. 
She  stands,   a  thousand-wintered   tree.     See  England 

and  her  Colonies — Wat.son. 
She  stands  on  the  corner.     See  Woman  Who  Lingers, 

The. — Anon. 
She  stands  upon  the  border  land.     See  Mv  Mother. — 

Pollard. 
She  stepped  upon  Sicilian  grass.     See  Persephone. — 

Ingelow. 
She  stood   alone   amidst   the   April   fields.     See   Late 

Spring.  The. — Moulton. 
She  stood  at  the  bar  of  justice.     See  Guilty  or  not 

Guilty. — Anon. 
She  stood  at   the  clum.sy  loom.     See  At   the   Loom. 

— {Public  Opinion.) 
She  stood   at   the   glass   with   a   glowing   cheek.     See 

Domestic  Episode,  A. — Anon. 
She  stood  before  a  chosen  few.     See  Her  Creed. — Bol- 
ton. 
She  stood    before    her    father's    gorgeous    tent.     See 

.Jephtha's  Daughter.— Willis. 
She  .stood  before  the  dying  man      See  Dying  Brigand, 

The. — Anon. 
She  stood   breast-high   amid   the   corn.     See   Ruth. — 

Hood. 
She  stood  on  the  tender  twilight.     See  Homeless. — 

Anon. 
She  studies   Henrik   Ibsen   "to   cultivate   her  mind." 

See  Fin  de  Si(>cle  Girl,  A. — (Concordientis) 
She  takes  but  to   give   again.     See  National   Ode,   The 

(  'She  takes."  etc.). — Taylor. 
She  thanked    me,    and    bade    me.      See    Othello,    the 

Moor  of  Venice  ("She  thanked  me,"  etc.). — Shake- 
speare. 
She  thanked  them  all  for  everything.     See  Her  Thanks. 

— Follansbee. 
She  told  him  surely  'twas  not  right.     See  Conversion, 

The. — Bergengren. 
She  told  him  that  men  were  false.     See  Old  Story,  The. 

— Anon. 
She  told  the  story,  and  the  whole  world  wept.     See 

Harriet  Beecher  Stowe. — -Dunbar. 
She  tole   me   sumfin    defful.     See   What    She   Said. — 

Gam  well. 
She  took   her   song  to   beauty's   side.     See   Woman's 

Song,  A. — -Scott. 
She  took  the  veil — how  light  a  thing.     See  Taking  the 

Veil.— (PuncA  Bowl.) 
She  turn'd  the  fair  page  with  her  fairer  hand.     See 

Home  in  War-time. — -Dobell. 
She  turned,  smiled,  and  passed  up  the  twilight.     See 

Lucile  (Character  of  liUcile). — Lytton. 
She  turns    her    great    grave    eyes    toward    mine.     See 

Other  Side  of  the  Moon,  The. — Fawcett. 
She  twirled  the  string  of  golden  beads.     See  Illustra- 
tion of  a  Picture. — Holmes. 
She  walks  in  beauty,  like  the  night.     See  She  Walks 

in  Beauty. — Byron. 
She  walks — the  lady  of  my  delight.     See  Shepherdess, 

The.— Meynell. 
She  wandered  alone  at   midnight,   through   alley  and 

court  and  street.     See  Brought  Back. — Nicholls. 
She  wanders  in  the  .A.pril  wood=!.     See  Agatha.—  -Austin. 
She  wanders   through    St.    Peter's.     See   Critic,    A. — 

Romaine. 
She  wanders  up  and  down  the  main.     See  Derelict. — 

Pullen. 


819 


She 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOXS 


She  wanted  to  reach  an  ideal.     See  Her  Ideal. — Mas- 

terson 
She  warbled  the  soprano  with  dramatic  sea.sibility.   See 

We  all  Know  Her. — Masson. 
She  was  a  bea«4^  in  the  days.     See  She  was  a  Beauty. 

— Bunner. 
She  was  a  Boston  [or  cultured]  lady    or  maidenl,  and 

she'd    scarcely    passed  eighteen.     See    What   He 

( "ailed  \t.~-(Somerville  Journal.) 
She  was  a  bright  and  beautiful  child.     See  Drunkard's 

Daughter.  The.— Hall. 
She  was  a  creature  framed  by  love  divine.     <See  Philip 

van  Artevelde  (Wife,  A). — Taylor. 
She  was  a  fair  girl  graduate,  enrobed  in  spotless  white. 

See  Woman's  Career. — (Life.) 
She  was  a  girl  as  neat  and  trim.     See  Asking  Mother. — 

Davenport. 
She  was  a  handsome  and  wealthy  young  widow.     See 

How  a  Widow  Mourned. — Anon. 
She  was  a  little  Irish  maid.     See  Daisies. — Anon. 
She  was  a  little  old  woman.     Set-.  There'll  be  Room  in 

Heaven. — Anon. 
She  was  a  maid  with  rosy  cheeks.     See  She  was  Trav- 
eling all  Alone. — Marion. 
She  wa.s  a  meek  little  woman,  and  she  carried  a  fretting 

baby  in  her  arms.     See  How  Mr.  Simonson  Took 

Care  of  the  Baby. — Phelps. 
She  was  a    phantom  of  delight.     See  same. — Words- 
worth. 
She  was   a   queen   of   noble   Nature's   crowning.     See 

Stanza.":  "She  was  a  queen."  etc — Coleridge. 
She  was  a  theosophic  miss.     See  Theosophic  Marriage, 

A. — Dam. 
She  was  a  Vassar  graduate,  and  didn't  know  a  little  bit 

about  housekeeping.     See  Aired  Her  Knowledge. 

—  (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
She  was  a  very  pretty  ifirl — although  that  counted  for 

little  with  either  of  us.     See  Platonic  Friendship, 

A. — Barrie. 
She  was  a  widow  stern  and  spry.     See  Widow's  Mite, 

The. — (Columbia  Spectator.) 
She  was  a  winsome  country  lass.     See  Billet-doux,  A. 

— Anon. 
She  was  about  forty-five  years  old.     See  Jiners,  The. — 

Anon. 
She  was  an  actress,  famous,  rich,  and  fair.     Sec  Sac- 
rifice of  Genius,  The. — Hichens. 
She  wa.s  bashful,   self-conscious,   but   rosy.     See   Un- 
sophisticated.— Pickhardt. 
She  was  but  an  average  American  girl.     See  Unpaid 

Seamstress,  The. — Anon. 
She  was  dead.     Dear,  gentle,  patient,  noble  Nell,  was 

dead.    See  Old  Curio.sity  Shop,  The  (Death  of  Little 

Nell,  The).— Dickens. 
She   was   dead.      No    sleep   so    beautiful    and    calm. 

See  Old   Curiosity   Shop.  The  (Death  of    Little 

Nell,  The).— Dickens. 
She  was  dead.     There  upon  her  little  bed,  she  lay  at 

rest.     See  Old  Curiosity  Shop,  The  (Death  of  Little 

Nell  The).— Dickens. 
She  was   ironing   her   dolly's   new   gown.     See   Baby 

Logic— Bellamy. 
She  was   just    a   little   curly-headed   school-girl.     See 

School  Episode,  A. — Anon. 
She  was  just  the  prettiest  little  maiden  that  you  ever 

knew.     See  Soldier's  Joys,  The. — Anon. 
She  was  milking  an  Alderney  cow.     See  Amaryllis. — 

Anon. 
She  was   my   dream's   fulfillment    and   my   joy.     See 

Mother-in-law,  The. — Wilcox. 
She  was  no  armoured  cruiser  of  twice  six  thousand 

tons.     See  War-ship  of  1S12,  The.— (Philadelphia 

Record. ) 
She  was  not  as  pretty  as  women   J   know.     See  My 

Kate. — Browning. 
She  was  not  fair,  nor  full  of  grace.     See  same. — Proc- 
ter. 
She  was  one  of  those  pretty  and   charming  girls.     See 

Necklace,  The. — Maupassant. 
She  was  pretty  and  happy  and  young!     See  Pardon 

Complete.— Dolliver. 
She  was  rich  and  of  high  degree.     See  Sea,   The.— 

Ogden. 
She  was  sent  forth.     See  same. — Landon. 
She  was  sitting  up  .straight  in  a  straight-backed  chair. 

See    Little    Girl    that    Grew    Up,    The.— (/ion'« 

Herald.) 
She  was  so  little— little  in  her  grave.     See  Mother  who 

Died  too.  The.— Thomas. 
She  was  the  daughter  of  John  Artley.     See  Phoebe's 

Exploit.— Lynde. 
She  was  the   premi  re  danaeuse  of  the  ballet.     See  Out- 
ward Shows,  The.— (Harvard  Lqmpoon.) 


She  was  the  prettiest  girl,  I  ween.     See  History  of  a 

Pretty  Girl. — .\.non. 
She  was  walking  in  the  springtime,  in  the  morning- 
tide  of  life.     See  Curtain,  The. — Anon. 
She  wasn't  on  the  playground,  she  wasn't  on  the  lawn. 

See  Message,  A. — Dayre. 
She  wears  a  rose  in  her  hair.     See  Under  the  Rose. — 

Stoddard. 
She  wears  no  crown.     See  At  Queen  Maud's  Banquet. 

— Larcom. 
She  wears  no  jewel  upon  hand  or  brow.     See  King's 
Daughter,  The. — Utter. 

She  went  round  and  asked  subscriptions.  See  Cosmo- 
politan Woman,  A. — Foss. 

She  who  to  Heaven  more  Heaven  doth  annex.  See 
To  a  Virtuous  Young  Gentlewoman  that  Died 
Suddenly. — Cartwright. 

She  wore  a  little  knot  of  blue.  See  At  the  Race. 
— (Yale  Record.) 

She  wore  a  wreath  of  roses.     See  same. — Bayly. 

She  wrote  to  her  daddy  in  Portland,  Maine,  from  out 
in  Denver,  Col.  See  Cure  for  Homesickness.— 
Day.  ' 

She  wuz  a  old  maid.  Aunt  Sue  wuz.  See  Boy's  Conclu- 
sion, A. — Anon. 

Shed  no  tear!  oh  shed  no  tear!  See  Faery  Song. — 
Keats. 

Sheddad,  the  son  of  Ad,  of  Hadramant.  See  King 
Sheddad's  Paradise. — Arnold. 

Shemuel.  the  Bethlehemite.     See  Shemue'.. — Bowen. 

Shepherd  Jesus,  in  Thy  arms.  See  Child's  Evening 
Hymn,  A. — Clarke. 

Shepherd,  what's  love,  I  pray  thee  tell?  See  Shep- 
herd's Description  of  Love,  The. — Raleigh. 

Shepherd,  wilt  thou  take  counsel  of  the  bird.  See 
Philomel  to  Corydon. — Young. 

Shepherds  ail,  and  maidens  fair.  See  Faithful 
Shepherde.-i.s,  The  (Priest's  Evening  Song,  The). — 
Fletcher. 

Shepherds  rise,  and  shake  off  sleep.  See  Faithful 
Shepherde.ss,  The  (Priest's  Morning  Song,  The).— 
Fletcher. 

She's  a  floating  boiler,  crammed  with  fire  and  steam. 
See  Torpedo-boat,  The. — Barnes. 

She's  all  my  fancy  painted  him.     See  same. — Carroll. 

She's  consinted  at  last!  See  How  Pat  went  Courtir:g. 
— (Leeds  Mercury.) 

'She's  cursed,'  said  the  skipper,  'speak  her  fair.'  See 
Wreck  of  Rivermouth,  The. — Whitticr. 

She's  gane  to  dwall  [or  dwell]  in  heaven,  my  lassie. 
See  She's  Gane  to  Dwall  in  Heaven. — Cunningham. 

She's  had  a  Vassar  education.  See  American  Girl, 
An. — Matthews. 

She's  little  and  modest  and  purty.  See  Ministers 
Wife,  The.— Lincoln. 

She's  loveliest  of  the  festal  throng.  See  Rose  and 
Thorn,  The.— Hayne. 

She's  lovely!  Her  eyes  are  as  blue.  See  They  Don't 
Agree. — Anon. 

She's  not  what  fancy  painted  her.  See  Song  of  the  Hum- 
bugged Hu.sband,  The. — (Punch.) 

She's  only  a  singin'  a  tune  that  he  taught  'er.  See 
Si,  Do,  Re.— Rude. 

She's  somewhere  in  the  sunlight  strong.  See  Song. — 
Le  Gallienne. 

She's  still  asleep — worn  out  for  want  of  rest.  See 
Death  of  Poe's  Wife,  The.— Bleyer. 

She's  up  and  gone,  the  graceless  girl!  See  Ballad: 
"She's  up  and  <<one"  etc. — Hood. 

She's  up  there, — Old  Glory, — where  lightnings  are  sped. 
See  Old  Flag  Forever." — Stanton. 

Shine! — All  right ;  here  y'  are,  boss!  See  Jack  and  Me. 
— Baker. 

Shine  brighter  than  the  sun  in  heaven,  O  eyes,  beloved 
so  long!     See  Winter  Sunshine. — Anon. 

Shine  kindly  forth,  September  sun.  See  Ode  Written 
for  the  Consecration  of  Sleepy  Hollow  Cemetery. 
— Sanborn. 

"Shine?  shine,  sor?  Ye  see,  I'm  just  a  dien'."  See 
Over  the  C!rossin'. — (Springfield  Republican.) 

Shine,  sir?  Have  a  shine?  make  them  look  like  pat- 
ent leather.  See  Young  Bootblack,  The. — Bur- 
roughs. 

Shining  patent  leather.  See  Making  New  Year's  Calls. 
— Baker. 

Ship,  to  the  roadstead  rolled.  See  "O  Navis. " — Dob- 
son. 

Sho',  dere,  ma  honey,  don't  ye  neber  hab  a  fear.^  See 
Ephraim's  Storm  Lullaby. — Collester. 

Shock's  fate  I  mourn;  poor  Shock  is  now  no  more. 
See  On  a  Lapdog. — Gay. 

Shonny,  my  poy,  come  here  bv  me.  See  Shonny, 
Don'd  You  Hear  Me? — "Gooft." 


820 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Since 


Shoot,  false  Love!     I  care  not.     See  Defiance  to  Love. 

— Drayton. 
Shorter    and    shorter    now    the    twilight    clips.     See 

Autumn. — Gary. 
Shortly  before  the  conclusion  of  the  war  with  Napo- 
leon.    <See  I  Vant  to  Fly. — Anon. 
Should  auld  acquaintance  be  forgot.     See  Auld  Lang 

Syne. — Burns. 
Should  I  long  that  dark  were  fair?     See  Spanish  Gypsy, 

The  (Dark,  The).— Eliot. 
Should  there  be  schools  of   elocution?     See  Study  of 

Elocution,  The. — Simpson. 
Should  you  ask  me  whence  these   stories?     See  Song 

of  Hiawatha,  The  (Story  of  "Hiawatha,"  The). — 

Ijongfellow. 
Shout  for  the  banner  bright.     See  Our  Flag. — Anon. 
Shout  for  the  mighty  men  {or  dead].     See  liConidas. — 

Croly. 
Shout  the  glad  tidings,  exultingly  sing!     See  Shout  the 

Glad  Tidings. — Muhlenberg. 
Shove  off  there! — ship  the  rudder.  Bill — cast  off!  she's 

under  wav.     See  Pain  in  a  Pleasure  Boat. — Hood. 
Show  me  a  sight  bates  for  delight.     See  Irish  Spinning- 
wheel,  The. — Graves. 
Shrewd  Simon  Short  sewed  shoes.     See  Simon  Short's 

Son  Samuel. — Anon. 
Shrill  and  clear  from  coppice  near.     See  Bob  White. 

— Ham. 
Shrouded  by  the  evening  shadows.     See  Trysting.— 

Hart. 
Shrubs  there  are.     See  Lilacs. — Thomson. 
Shufiie-Shoon  and  Amber-Locks  sit  together,  building 

blocks.     See  Shuffle-Shoon   and   Amber-Locks. — 

Fields. 
Shun  delays,  they  breed  remorse.     See  Loss  in  Delay. — 

Southwell. 
Shure,  an'  I  think  Barney  is  sthayin'  away  an  awful 

long  spill.     See  Barney's  Resolution. — McBride. 
Shure,  is  this  the  road   to   Da-throitf     See  Bound  for 

Detroit. — Anon. 
Shut  fast  the  door!  let  not  one  vulgar  din.     See  Thomas 

Carlyle. — (London  Punch.) 
Shut  in  a  close  and  dreary  sleep.     See  Dream's  Awak- 
ening, A. — Piatt. 
Shut  in  from  all  the  world  without.    See  Snow-bound 

(Firelight).— Whittier. 
Shut  not  so  soon ;  the  dull-eyed  night.     See  To  Daisies, 

Not  to  Shut  so  Soon. — Herrick. 
Shut    these   odious   books   up,   brother.     See   Sister's 

Expostulation  on  the  Brother's  Learning  Latin, 

The. — Ijamb. 
Shuttle  of  the  sunburnt  grass.     See  Grasshopper,  The. 

— Thomas. 
Shy  bird  of  the  silver  arrows  of  song.     See  White- 
throat,  The. — Rand. 
Shy  little  pansies.     See  April  Fools. — Miller. 
Shy   violets   among  the   tangled  grass.     See   By   the 

Roadside. — Loomis. 
Si  bene  commemini  causae  sunt  quinque  bibere.     See 

Why  Drink  Wine? — Aldrich. 
Si   com   la   nief,    quant   le   fort   vent   tempests.     See 

Cinkante  Balades. — Gower. 
Si  Todd,  our  Freshman  from  Podunk,  last  Sunday — 

shame  to  tell!     See  "When  the  Sleeper  Wakes." 

—  (Yale  Record.) 
Siccine    separat    amara   mors?     See  Knowledge  after 

Death. — Beeching. 
Sick  of  myself  and  all  that  keeps  the  light.     See  Mira- 
cles.— Aldrich. 
Sickles  sound;  on  the  ground.     See  Harvest  Song.^ 

Goethe. 
Side  by  side  with  Lady  Mabel.     See  Lady  Mabel. — • 

Austin. 
Sigh  and  grieve  that  you  are  yet  so  carnal  and  worldly. 

See  Imitation  of  Christ,  The  ("Sigh  and  grieve," 

etc.). — Kempis. 
Sigh,  heart,  and  break  not;  rest,  lark,  and  wake  not! 

See  Nuptial  Song. — De  'Tabley. 
Sigh  his  name  into  the  night.     See  Love's  Secret  Name. 

— Blaikie. 
Sigh  no  more,  ladies,  sigh  no  more.     See  Much  Ado 

about    Nothing  ("Sigh   no   more,"  etc.).^Shake- 

speare. 
Sigh  not  for  love, — the  ways  of  love  are  dark!     See 

Sigh  not  for  Love. — Hay. 
Sigh  on,   sad  heart,   for    love's   eclipse.     See  Ballad: 

"Sigh  on,  sad  heart,"  etc. — Hood. 
Sighing  like  a  furnace.     See  Three  Stages. — Anon. 
"Sign  the  petition!"     "Write  my  name!"     See  Eight 

Hours. — Baker. 
Signior  Antonio,  many  a  time  and  oft.     See  Merchant 

of   Venice,   The    (Shylock    to    Antonio). — Shake- 
speare. 


Silence.     A  while  ago.     See  Sea  Story,  A. — Hickey. 
Silence,  all!  ye  winged  choir.     See  To  Song-birds  on  a 

Sunday. — ( Punch. ) 
Silence    and    Solitude    may    hint.     See    Uninscribed 

Monument    on    One    of    the    Battle-fields    of    the 

Wilderness,  An. — Melville. 
Silence    augmenteth    grief,    writing    increaseth    rage. 

See  Elegy  on  Sir  Philip  Sidney,  An. — Greville. 
Silence,  in  truth,  would  speak  my  sorrow  best.     See 

Tears  Wept  at  the  Grave  of  Sir  Albertus  Morton. — 

Wotton. 
Silence    instead    of   thy    sweet    song,    my    bird.     See 

I-ament  of  a  Mocking-bird. — Kemble. 
Silence!     Nobody  is  making  a   noise  but  you.     See 

Schoolmaster  Abroad,  The. — Anon. 
Silence   sleeping  on   a  waste  of  ocean.     See  Rest. — 

Payne. 
Silence  was  envious  of  the  only  voice.     See  Voice  of 

Webster,  The. — .lohnson. 
Silent    amidst    unbroken    silence    deep.     See    India. — 

Coates. 
Silent  and  lone,  silent  and  lone!    See  Mother's  Thought, 

A. — Gage. 
Silent  as  thou,  whose  inner  life  is  gone.     See  To  a 

Skull. — Irwin. 
Silent   companions  of  the  lonely  hour.     See  To   My 

Books. — Norton. 
Silent  it  stands,  the  shrine  within  whose  halls.     See 

Vigil,  The. — (London  Punch.) 
Silent  nymph,  with  curious  eye!  See  Grongar  Hill. — 

Dyer. 
Silent,  O  Moyle,  be  the  roar  of  thy  water.     See  Song  of 

Fionnuala,  The. — Moore. 
Silently  musing  a  maiden  sat.     See  Out  of  the  Window. 

— Brock. 
Silently,     tenderly,     mournfully     home.     See     Dead 

Volunteer,  The. — Barker. 
Silly  Swain,  sit  down  and  weep.     See  Clorus'  Song. — 

Basse. 
Silver  stars  shining.     See  Stars,  The. — Murray. 
Silvery  noted,  lily-throated.    See  Jealousy  in  the  Choir. 

—  (Lowell  New  Moon.) 
Simon  bent  to  his  hissing  saw.     See  Simon.- — Herbin. 
Simon  Danz  has  come  home  again.     See  Dutch  Pic- 
ture, A. — Longfellow. 
Simon  Wadso,  returning  home  with  his  arms  full  of 

groceries.     See  Spring  House-cleaning.— Anon. 
Simple,  erect,  austere,  sublime.     See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage  (Pantheon,  The). — Byron. 
Simpson  Green  I  hate  like  smoke.     See  Mitten,  The. — 

Bellaw. 
Sin  runs  to  passion:  passion  to  tumult  in  character. 

See  same. — Phelps. 
Since  all  that  I  can  ever  do  for  thee.     See  Last  Wish, 

The.— Bulwer. 
Since  brass,  nor  stone,  nor  earth,  nor  boundless  sea. 

See  Sonnets,  LXV. — Shakespeare. 
"Since  Cleopatra  died!"     Long  years  are  past.     See 

"Since  Cleopatra  Died." — Higginson. 
Since  Eden,  it  keeps  the  secret!     See  Hidden  Life. — 

Ames. 
Since  ever  the  world  was  fashioned.     See  God's  Music. 

— Weatherly. 
Since  fate  has  so  ordained  it  that  T,  who  began  the  war. 

See  History  of  Rome  (Hannibal  Pleads  for  Peace). 

— liivy. 
Since  first  I  saw  your  face  I  resolved  to  honour  and 

renown  ye.     See  Since  First  I  Saw  Your  Face. — 

Anon. 
Since  for  kissing  thee,  MingiuUo,  my  mother  scolds  me 

all  the  day.     See  Ancient  Spanish  Lyric, — Anon. 
Since  gratitude,   'tis  said,  is  not  o'er  common.     See 

Tinker  and  the  Glazier,  The. — Harrison. 
Since  honour  from  the  honourer  proceeds.     See  Con- 
cerning the  Honour  of  Books. — Daniel. 
Since  I  am  coming  to  that  holy  room.     See  Hymn  to 

God,  my  God,  in  my  Sickness. — Donne. 
Since  I  had  the  honor — I  should  say  the  dishonor.     See 

Infamous  Legislation. — Burke. 
Since  I  have  heard  so  much  about  the  dismemberment 

of  Mexico.     See  Spirit  of  Conquest,   The. — Cor- 

win. 
Since  I  noo  mwore  do  zee  your  feiice.     See  Wife  a- 

Lost,  The. — Barnes. 
Since  I'm  somewhat  known  to  fame.     See  Puzzle,  A. — 

Denton. 
Since  I  rose  out  of  child-oblivion.     See  Their  Waving 

Hands. — Parker. 
Since  I've  got  used  to  city  ways  and  don't  scare  at  the 

cars.     See  Budd  Wilkins  at  the  Show. — Kiser. 
Since  my  father's   death  our  family  have  resided  in 

London.      See  Rosamund  Gray  (Recollections  of 

Childhood) . — Lamb. 


821 


Since 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Since  Nature's  works  be  good,  and  death  doth  serve. 

See  Arcadia,  The  (Song  from,  etc.). — Sidney. 
Since  o'er  thy  foot-stool  here  below.     See  Heaven's 

Magnificence. — Muhlenberg. 
Since    our    country,    our    God — Oh  I    my    sire!     See 

Jepht hah 's  Daughter. — Byron. 
Since   Phyllis  vouchsafed   me   a   look.     See   Pastoral 

Ballad. — Shenstone. 
Since  she  went  home,  the  evening  shadows  linger  longer 

here.     See  Since  She  Went  Home. — Burdette. 
Since  the  avowal  [Mr.  Chairman]  of  that  [or  the]  un- 
principled and  barbarian  motto.     See  Defalcation 
and  Retrenchment. — Prentiss. 
Since    the    commencement   of  the  term.     See  Wash- 
ington's Inaugurals,  Dec.  3,  1793. — Washington. 
Since  the  excavations  of  Pompeii  commenced,  many 
strange  things  have  been  brought  to  light.     See 

Touching  llelic  of  Pompeii,  A. — Anon. 
Since  the  final  end  of  life  is  the  development  of  charac- 
ter.    See  Tendencies  of  Self-government,  The. — 

Abbott. 
Since  the  first  dominion  of  men  was  asserted  over  the 

ocean.     See  Stones  of  Venice,  The  (Tyre,  Venice, 

and  England). — Ruskin. 
Since  the  night  when  Ike  went  to  the  opera.     See  Ike 

after  the  Opera. — Anon. 
Since  the  ominous  declaration  of  Lord  Beaconsfield  on 

the  status  quo.     See  Bulgarian  Horrors. — Glad- 
stone. 
Since  the  Sun,  the  absolute,  the  world-absorbing  one. 

See  Evening  Star,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Since  the  sweet  knowledge  I  possess.     See  Happy  Love. 

— Mackay. 
Since  the  unfortunate  accident  to  Mr.  CJoville.     See 

Mr.  Coville's  Easy  Chair. — Bailey. 
Since  there's  no  help,  come  let  us  kiss  and  part.     See 

Parting,  The. — Drayton. 
Since  thou  art  dead,  Clifton,  the  world  may  see.     See 

Lady  Penelope  Clifton. — Beaumont. 
Since  through  the  open  window  of  the  eye.     See  On  a 

Photograph. — Wilton. 
Since  we  parted  yester  eve.     See  Since  We  Parted. — 

Meredith. 
Since  what  I  am  to  say  must  be  but  that.     See  Win- 
ter's Tale,  The  (Court  Scene). — Shakespeare. 
Since  you  desire  of  me  to  know.     See  Reply,  The. — 

Norris. 
Sing  a  song  of  Christmas  pocket  full  of  fun.     See  Sing 

a  Song  of  Christmas. — Kavanaugh. 
Sing  a  song  of  Christmas!     Pockets  full  of  gold.     See 

Ye  Ballad  of  Christmas.— Anon. 
Sing  a  song  of  old  days.     See  Old  Days.— (if aruard 

Advocate.) 
Sing  a  song  of  rapture.     See  Song  We  Sing,  The. — 

Turner. 
Sing  a  song  of  sixpence.     See  Golden  Rule,   The. — 

"Bob  o'Link." 
Sing  a  song  of  springtime!     See  Song  of  Seasons,  A. — 

MacDonald. 
Sing  a   song  of   summer-time.     See   Little   Song,   A. 

— (YotUh's  Companion.) 
Sing  again  the  song  you  sung.     See  EgjTptian  Serenade. 

— Curtis. 
Sing  aloud!     His  praise  rehearse.     See  Philosopher' 

Devotion,  The. — More. 
Sing,  and  let  your  song  be  new.      See  Sing  unto  the 

Lord. — Sidney. 
Sing,   bird,   on  green   Missouri's  plain.     See  Lyon. — 

Peterson. 
Sing,  children,  sing!     And  the  lily  censers  swing.     See 

Song  of  Easter,  A. — Thaxter. 
Sing  Erlington  and  Cowdenknowes  where  Homes  had 

ance   commanding.     See   Leader   Haughs. — Min- 
strel Burn. 
Sing  for  the  garish  eye.     See  Sing  for  the  Garish  Eye. — 

Gilbert. 
Sing  for  the  oak  tree,  the  monarch  of  the  world!     See 

Oak  Tree,  The.— Howitt. 
Smg!   gangling   lad,    along   the   brink.     See   Song   of 

Smgmg,  A. — Riley. 
Sing^is  praises  that  doth  keep.     See  Faithful  Shep- 

herdes.«,  The   (Hymn   to   Pan).— Beaumont    and 

Fletcher. 
Sing,  I  pray,  a  little  song.      See  Golden-tressed  Ade- 
laide.— Procter. 
Sing  little  bird,  when  skies  are  blue.     See  Sing. — Car- 
ter. 
Sing  lullaby,  as  women  do.     See  Lullaby  of  a  Lover, 

The. — Gascoigne. 
Sing  me  a  hero!  quench  me  thirst.     See  Tray. — Brown- 
„.      '"^• 
Sing  me  a  song  of  the  great  Dominion.     See  Song  of 

Canada,  A. — Reid. 


Sing  me  a  sweet,  low  song  of  night.     See  Song. — Haw- 
thorne. 
Sing,  O  goddess,  the  wrath,  the  ontamable  dander  of 
Keitt.     See  Fight  over  the  Body  of  Keitt,  The. 

—(Punch.) 
Sing  of  the  one  now  whose  birthday  we're  keeping. 

See  Laurel  Wreath,  The. — Hadley. 
Sing,  oh  sing  for  the  cotton  plant!     See  Cotton  Plant, 

The. — Anon. 
Sing  out,  O  heart  of  mine!  sing  out.     See  Thanksgiving 

Song. — -Anon. 
Sing  out,  and  with  rejoicing  bring.     See  Eve  of  Mary, 

The. — Hopper. 
Sing,  pretty  birds  and  build  your  nests.     See  Sing, 

Pretty  Birds. — Anon. 
Sing,   sweet  thrushes,   forth  and   sing!     See  Angler's 

Trysting-tree,  The. — Stoddart. 
Sing  the  bridal  of  nations!  with  chorals  of  love.     See 

Christmas  Carmen. — Whittier. 
Sing  the  old  song,  amid  the  sounds  dispersing.     See 

Song:  "Sing  the  old  song,"  etc. — De  Vere. 
Sing  the  song  of  the  singer,  merrily  ring  the  rhymes. 

See  Between  the  Lines. — Phillips. 
Sing  the  song  of  wave-worn  Coogee.     See  Coogee. — 

Kendall. 
Sing  to   Apollo,   god   of  day.     See  Midas  (Hymn   to 

Apollo). — Lyly. 
Sing  to  me.  nightingale,  that  sweet  tune.     See  Once. — 

(.Child  World.) 
Sing  we  and  chant  it.     See  Hence  Care ! — Morley. 
Sing  we  of  the  summer.     See  Sotto  Voce. — Bowman. 
Sing! — Who    sings.     See    Bacchanalian     Song,    A. — 

Procter. 
Singing  in  the  rain,  robin?     See  Spring  Twilight. — Sill. 
Singing  through  the  forests.    See  Rhyme  of  the  Rail. — 

Saxe. 
"Sink  or  swim,  live  or  die,  survive  or  perish."     See 

Adams  and  Jefferson   (Supposed  Speech  of  .Tohn 

Adams,  etc.). — Webster. 
Sink, — slide — confound  the  first  inventors  of  cotillions, 

say    I.       See    Rivals,    The    (Challenge,    The).— 

Sheridan. 
Sin-satiate,    and    haggard   with    despair.     See   Tann- 

hiiuser. — Payne. 
Sion    lies    waste,  and    Thy    Jerusalem.      See    Cajlica 

(Sonnet). — Greville. 
Sir,  a  charge  is  brought  against  gentlemen  sitting  in 

this   house.     See   In   Reply   to   Mr.    Grenville. — 

Chatham. 
Sir  Arthur's  foot  is  on  the  sand.     See  Sir  Arthur  and 

Lady  Ann. — Ainslie. 
Sir,  at  the  period  of  the  birth  of  Washington,  there 

existed  in  Europe.     See  Character  of  Washington, 

The  (Spirit  of  Human  Liberty). — Webster. 
Sir,   before   God,    I    believe   the   hour   is   come.     See 

Adams  and  Jefferson   (Independence). — Webster. 
Sir  Cupid  once,  as  I  have  heard.     See  Sir  Cupid. — 

Weatherly. 
Sir,  did  you  hear  of  that  celebrated  dwarf  that  has  ar- 
rived in  the  city?     See  Conjugating  German,  The. 

— Chester. 
Sir  Easy  Lovewell  chanced  to  fall  in  love.     See  Pea- 
cock on  the  Wall,  The. — Anon. 
Sir    Edward    Templerow,    with    whom    Steven     von 

Brammelendam  was  staying  for  a  couple  of  days. 

See   Dutchman's    Sjjeech    at   an    Institute,    A. — 

Anon. 
Sir  Eldric  rode  by  field  and  fen.     See  Sir  Eldric. — 

Robinson. 
Sir  G.  Staunton  related  a  curious  anecdote  of  old  Kien 

Long,  Emperor  of  China.     See  Emperor  of  China. 

— Anon. 
Sir — gentlemen  appear  to  me  to  forget  that  they  stand 

on   American   soil.     See  Speech   on   the   War  of 

1812.— Clay. 
Sir,  good  motives  may  always  be  assumed,  as  bad 

motives   may   always  be  imputed.     See   Philan- 
thropic Ijove  of  Power. — Webster. 
Sir,  he  who  sees  these  States  now  revolving  in  har- 
mony.     See   Constitution    and    the   Union,    The 

(Peaceable  Secession). — Webster. 
Sir  Hudson  Lowe,  Sir  Hudson  Lew.     See  To  Sir  Hud- 
son Lowe.— Moore. 
Sir — I  agree  with  the  honorable  gentleman  who  spoke 

last.     .See  American  Taxation. — Burke. 
Sir,  I   am  delighted    to   see  you       See   Rivals,  The. 

— Sheridan. 
Sir,  I  am  growing  old.     I  have  had  some  little  measure 

of  experience.     See  Reply  to  John  Randolph. — 

Clay. 
Sir,  I  dare  not  trust  myself  to  speak  of  my  country. 

See  Emotions  on  Returning  to  the  tlnited  States. 

— Legar^. 


822 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Six 


Sir,  I  desire  you  do  me  right  and  justice.  See  King 
Henry  VIII.  (Queen  Katharine's  Appeal  to 
Henry  VIII.).— Shakespeare. 

Sir,  I  have  entreated  an  attendance  on  this  day.  See 
Declaration  of  Irish  Rights. — Grattan. 

8ir,  I  have  from  the  beginning  of  these  discussions, 
supported  reform.  See  Reform  Irresistible. — 
Macaulay. 

Sir,  I  have  to  say  a  few  words  about  the  accusation 
which  has  been  brought.  See  General  Amnesty. — 
Schurz. 

Sir — I,  in  the  most  express  terms,  deny.  See  Irish 
Parliament,  The. — Plunket. 

Sir,  I  make  no  secret  of  the  trade  I  follow.  See  Mr. 
Puff's  Account  of  Himself. — Sheridan. 

Sir.  I  must  detain  you  no  longer.  <See  National  En- 
sign, The. — Anon. 

Sir,  I  see,  in  those  vehicles,  which  carry  to  the  People. 
iSee  Natural  Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich,  The 
(Hatred  of  the  Poor,  etc.). — Webster. 

Sir,  I  see  no  wisdom  in  making  this  provision  for 
future  changes.  See  On  Altering  the  Virginia 
Constitution. — Randolph. 

Sir, — I  was  unwilling  to  interrupt  the  course  of  this 
debate.     See  Against  Mr.  Pitt. — Walpole. 

Sir,  I  wish  for  peace ;  I  wish  the  negotiation  may  succeed. 
See  Free  Navigation  of  the  Mississippi. — Morris. 

Sir,  if  the  people  have  a  right  to  discuss  the  official 
conduct.  See  Presidential  Protest,  The  (Repre- 
sentatives, The). — Webster. 

Sir,  if  there  be  within  this  hall.  See  Temperance 
Pledge,  The.— Marshall. 

Sir,  if  there  is  any  spectacle  from  the  contemplation  of 
which  I  would  shrink.  See  Popular  Elections. — 
M'Duffie. 

Sir,  in  the  efforts  of  the  People.  See  People  always 
Conquer,  The. — Everett. 

Sir,  it  ill  becomes  the  duty  and  dignity  of  Parliament. 
See  Conquest  of  the  Americans  Impracticable. — 
Wilkes. 

Sir,  it  is  amusing  to  compare  the  manner  in  which  the 
question  of  Catholic  emancipation.  See  Jewish 
Disabilities. — Macaulay. 

Sir,  it  is  an  insult  to  our  laboring  classes.  See  Labor- 
ing Classes,  The. — Legare. 

Sir,  it  matters  very  little  what  immediate  spot.  See 
Washington  (Character  of  Washington). — Phillips. 

Sir  John  got  him  an  ambling  nag.  See  Sir  John  Suck- 
ling's Campaign. — Mennis. 

Sir  John  was  old,  and  grim,  and  gray.  See  Old 
Knight's  Treasure,  The. — ^Morford. 

Sir  Marmaduke  was  a  hearty  knight.  See  Sir  Mar- 
maduke. — Colman. 

Sir  Orpheus,  whom  the  poets  have  sung.  See  Orpheus 
and  Eurydice. — -Saxe. 

Sir,  our  country  stands,  at  the  present  time,  on  com- 
manding ground.  See  Public  Dinner  at-  New 
York  (Liberty  and  Knowledge). — Webster. 

Sir,  our  institutions  are  telling  their  own  story  by  the 
blessings  they  impart  to  us.  See  Influence  of  Ameri- 
can Freedom. — Johnson. 

Sir  Plume  (of  amber  snuff-box  justly  vain).  See  Rape 
of  the  Lock  (Pride  and  Vanity). — Pope. 

Sir,  revering  as  I  do,  the  great  abilities  of  the  honorable 
gentleman.  See  On  a  Motion  to  Censure  the 
Ministry. — Pitt. 

Sir  Reynard  once,  as  I've  heard  tell.  See  Fox  in  the 
Well,  The.— Trowbridge. 

Sir  Roland's  sword  was  brave  and  keen.  See  Love's 
Roses. — Gregory. 

Sir  Rupert  the  Fearless,  a  gallant  young  knight.  See 
Sir  Rupert  the  Fearless. — Barham. 

Sir  Rupert,  unstained  by  dishonor,  unsullied  by  fear. 
See  Si''  Rupert  the  Fearless  (Lurline;  or.  The 
Knight's  Visit  to  the  Mermaids). — Barham. 

Sir, — The  atrocious  crime  of  being  a  young  man.  See 
Reply  of  Pitt  to  Walpole. — Chatham. 

Sir,  the  gentleman  inquires  why  he  was  made  the  ob- 
ject of  a  reply.  See  Renly  to  Hayne,  The  (Matches 
and  Overmatches) . — Webster. 

Sir,  the  People  of  the  United  States,  if  I  do  not  wholly 
mistake  their  character.  See  Predictions  of  Dis- 
union.— Pinkney. 

Sir — The  two  honorable  and  learned  gentlemen  who 
spoke  in  favor  of  this  clause.  See  Against  Search- 
warrants  for  Seamen. — Chatham. 

Sir,  there  is  a  gentleman  below  desires  to  see  you.  See 
Rivals,  The  (Cool  Reason). — Sheridan. 

Sir,  this  proposition  is  so  glaring.  See  Reply  to  Lord 
North. — Barr(^. 

Sir,  under  the  cover  of  the  roofs  of  the  capital. — See 
Natural  Hatred  of  the  Poor  to  the  Rich,  The. — 
Webster. 


Sir   Walter    Raleigh    has   built    a   ship.     See   (Jolden 

Vanitee. — Anon. 
Sir,  we  are  at  the  point  of  a  century  from  the  birth  of 

Washington.     See  Character  of  Washington,    The 

(Century  from  Washington,  A). — Webster. 
Sir,  we  have  heard  a  great  deal  about  Parliamentary 

armies.     See  On  Reducing  the  Army. — Pulteney. 
Sir,  we  shall  not   fight  our  battles  alone.     See  War 

Inevitable. — Henry. 
Sir,  welcome:     It  is  my  father's  will  I  should  take  on 

me.     See  Winter's  Tale,  The    (Sheep-shearing,  A). 

— Shakespeare. 
Sir,  what  is  to  be  gained  by  this  change  in  the  Repre- 
sentation?    See  Perils  of  Parliamentary  Reform. 

— Croker. 
Sir,  when  I  flew  to  seize  the  bird.     See  Beau's  Reply. — 

Cowper. 
Sir  William  Napier,  one  bright  day.     See  Sir  William 

Napier  and  Little  Joan. — Thaxter. 
Sirs,  ye  have  heard  these  knights  discourse  to  you. 

See  Philip  van  Artevelde  (Van    Artevelde    to  the 

Men  of  Ghent). — Taylor. 
Sirs,  you  have  been  told.     See  Texas  Centennial  Ora- 
tion.— Hubbard. 
Sister,  awake !  close  not  your  eyes.     See  Sister,  Awake. 

— Anon. 
Sister,  fie,  for  shame,  no  more!     See  Brother's  Reply, 

The.— Lamb. 
Sister  Mary,  our  teacher  told  us  yesterday.     See  Motto; 

or,  Example,  The. — Peat. 
Sister  says  I  mustn't  tell  yer.     See  Telling  Tales. — 

Barnard. 
Sister  Simplicitie.     See  Fragment  of  a  Sleep-song. — 

Dobell. 
Sit    down,    Carmela;   here    are    cobs    for    kings.     See 

Menaphon    (Doron's    Eclogue   Joined    with    Car- 

mela's) . — Greene. 
Sit  down.     It  may  be  you  can  be  made  to  listen  to 

reason.     See  Ruby's  Stratagem. — Kavanaugh. 
Sit  down,  sad  soul,  and  count.     See  Sit  Down,  Sad 

Soul. — Procter. 
Sit  here  and  muse! — it  is  an  antique  room.     See  Souls 

of  Books,  The. — Lytton. 
Sit  stern  in  your  saddles !  grip  tighter  each  blade !     See 

Death-ride,  The. — -Massey. 
Sittin'    around    the    stove    last    night.     See  Taste. — 

Riley. 
Sitting  all  day  in  a  silver  mist.     See  In  the  Mist. — 

Woolsey. 
Sitting   by    a   river's    side.     See    Philomela's    Ode. — 

Greene. 
Sitting  here  by  my  desk  all  day.     See  Telegraph  Clerk, 

The.— Anon. 
Sitting  in  a  station  the  other  day.     See  Sermon,  The. — 

Alcott. 
Sitting  in  my  humble  doorway.     See  Footsteps  on  the 

Other  Side. — Anon. 
Sitting  in  my  window.     See  Love  at   First  Sight. — 

Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Sitting  'mid  the  gathering  shadows,  weary  with  the 

Sabbath's  care.-^See  Teacher's  Diadem,  The. — 

Anon. 
Sitting  silent  by  the  window  while  the  evening's  fading 

beam.     See  Old  Thanksgiving  Days,  The. — Shurt- 

leff. 
Sitting  there  by  the  side  of  this  prone  Monarch.     See 

Fallen  Monarch,  The. — Bromley. 
Sitting  upon  our  cottage  stoop.     See  'Tis    Five    and 

Twenty  Years. — Anon. 
Sitting-room,  bedroom,  lumber-room,  all  as  they  should 

be.     See  Christmas  Carol.  A. — Dickens. 
Six  and  nine  had  a  falling  out.     See  Tit  for  Tat. — 

Hudson. 
Six  fools,   the  story  runs.     See  Wisest   Fool,  The. — 

Lovett. 
Six  frogs  went  out  one  pleasant  night.    See  Froggie's 

Fate. — ^Anon. 
Six  hundred  souls  one  summer's  day.     See  "Nay,  I'll 

Stay  with  the  Lad. " — Barr. 
Six  hundred  years   ago  in   Dante's  time.     See  How 

Lisa  Loved  the  King. — Cross. 
Six  little  maids  from  school  are  we.     See  Six  Little 

Maids  from  School. — Anon. 
Six  little  words  arrest  me  every  day.     See  Six  Little 

Words. — Anon. 
Six  months  had  elapsed  since  the  first  chest  of  th6 

Useful     Knowledge.     See  Popanilla     on     Man. — 

Disraeli. 
Six  or  eight  congenial  spirits  sat  around  a  stove.     See 

Mr.  Hopweli's   Theory   of   Suppressing  a  Fire  in  , 

a  Theatre. — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
Six  skeins  and  three,  six  .skeins  and  three!     See  Spin- 
ster's Stint,  A. — Gary. 


823 


Six 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Six   years  had  passed,  and    forty  ere   the   six.      See 

Tales  of  the  Hall  (Approach  of  Age,  The). — Crabbe. 

Six    younfj    men    of    Cassar's    household.     <See    Seven 

Sleepers  of  Ephesus,  The. — Goethe. 
Sixty  seconds  make  a  minute,  how    much   good  can 

I  do  in  it?     >S«%My  Time  Table. — Anon. 
"Sixty  seconds  maice  a  minute,  sixty  minutes  make 

an  hour.  "     iSee  Time. — Anon. 
Sixty  years  through  shine  and  shadow.     See  Last  Mile- 
stones, The. — Rivers. 
'Skeeters  am  a  hummin'  on  de  honeysuckle  vine.     See 

Kentucky  Babe. — Buck. 
Skim,    skim,    skim;   with    the    skimmer    bright.     See 

Making  Butter. — Anon. 
Skimpsey  wa.s  a  jockey,  and  made  his  living  on  the  race- 
track.    See  Skimpsey. — Stoddart. 
Skin  creamy  as  the  furled  magnolia  bud.     See  Dancer, 

The. — Hayes. 
Skirting  the  river  road  (my  forenoon  walk,  my  rest). 

See  Dalliance  of  the  Eagles,  The.— Whitman. 
Sky  in  its  lucent  splendor  lifted.     See  Tropical  Morn- 
ing at  Sea,  A. — Sill. 
Sky,  mountains,  river,  winds,  lake,  lightnings!  ye.     See 
Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Poet's  Impulse,  The). 
— Byron. 
Slave  of  the  dark  aiid  dirty  mine!     See  Ode  to  an 

Indian  Gold  Coin. — Leyden. 
Slave  to  no   sect,    who   takes    no    private    road.     See 

Moral  Essays  (Epistle  IV.). — Pope 
Slavery  is  dead, — buried  in  a  grave  that  never  gives  up 
its  dead!     See  Nineteenth  (Century  Ends  Slavery, 
The.^Lamar. 
Slayer  of  Winter,  art  thou  here  again?      See    Earthly 

Pa  adise,  Tne  (March). — Morris. 
Sleep,  angry  beauty,  and  fear  not  me!     See  same. — 

Campion. 
Sleep,  baby,  sleep!     Fondly  I  keep.     See  Sleep,  Baby, 

Sleep. — Jones. 
Sleep,  baby,  sleep.     Gone  the  sun  to  other  skies.     See 

In  Santa-Claus  Land. — Denton. 
Sleep,  baby,  sleep  •  The  Mother  sings.     See  Christmas 

Lullaby,  A. — -Symonds. 
Sleep,   baby,   sleep!  thy  father  watches  his  [or  the] 

sheep.     See  Lullaby  Song. — Prentiss. 
Sleep  breathes  at  last  from  out  thee.   See  To  T.  L.  H., 

Six  Years  Old,  during  a  Sickness. — Himt. 
Sleep,  comrades,  sleep  and  rest. — See  Decoration  Day. 

— Longfellow. 
Sleep  is  like  death,  and  after  sleep.     See  Morning. — 

Allingham. 
Sleep,  little  baby  of  mine.     See  Cradle  Song. — Anon. 
Sleep,  little  pigeon,  and  fold  your  wings.     See  Japanese 

Lullaby.— Field. 
Sleep,  love,  sleep!     See  Watching. — Judson. 
Sleep,   Mr.    Speaker,   tis   surely   fair.     See   Verses   on 

Seeing  the  Speaker  Asleep  in  his  Chair. — Praed. 
Sleep,  Motley,  with  the  great  of  ancient  days.     See  In 

Memory  of  John  Lothrop  Motley. — Bryant. 
Sleep,    my    child;    no    care    can    cumber.    See  Greek 

Mother's  Lullaby. — Cocke. 
Sleep,  my  darling,  sleep!     See  Lullaby,  A. — Thaxter. 
Sleep,    my   little   Jesus.     See   Mary's  Manger-song. — - 

Gannett. 
Sleep  on,  and  dream  of  Heaven  awhile.     See  Sleeping 

Beauty,  The. — Rogers. 
Sleep  on,  baby  on  the  floor.    See  Child  and  the  Watcher, 

The. — Browning. 
Sleep  on,  my  Love,  in  thy  cold  bed.     See  Requiem,  A. 

— King. 
Sleep,   silence'   child,  sweet  father  of   soft   rest.     See 

Sleep,  Silence'  Child. — Drummond. 
Sleep,   sleep,  beauty  bright.     See  Cradle  Song,  A. — 

Blake. 
Sleep,  Sleep,  come  to  me,  Sleep.     See  Charm  to  Call 

Sleep,  A. — Johnstone. 
Sleep,  sleep,  imperious  heart!     Sleep,  fair  and  unde- 
filed!     See  Nocturne  of  Spiritual  Love,  A. — Rob- 
erts. 
Sleep,  sleep,  lovely  white  soul!     See  Lullaby. — Ramal. 
Sleep,  sleep,  my  treasure. — See  Sleep,  My  Treasure. — 

Nesbit. 
Sleep,  sleep,  sleep  in  thy  folded  waves,  O  Sea!       See 

Sea-.sleep. — Harris. 
Sleep,  sleep  today,  tormenting  cares.     See  Sabbath  of 

the  Soul,  The.— Barbauld. 
Sleep,  .soldier,  sleep.     See  same. — Anon. 
Sleep  sweet ,  beloved  one,  sleep  sweet !     See  Serenade. — 

Buch'inan. 
Sleep  sweetly  in  your  humble  graves.     See  Ode  Sung  on 
the  Occasion  of  Decorating  the  Graves  of  the  Con- 
federate Dead. — Timrod. 
Sleep  that  like  the  couched  dove.     See  Nocturne. — 
Griffin. 


Sleep !  the  bird  is  in  its  nest.     See  Cradle  Song. — Ben- 
nett. 
Sleep! — The  ghostly  winds  are  blowing!     See  Mother's 

Last  Song,  The. — Procter. 
Sleep  time,  mah  honey!  evenin'  shadows  fallin'.     See 

Darktown  Lullaby,  A. — Anon. 
Sleep'ry  Sim  of  the  Lamb-hill.     See  Fray  o'   Suport, 

The.— Anon. 
Sleeves  to  the  dimpled  elbow.     See  Mother's  Girl. — 

Anon. 
Slow,    groping    giant,     whose    unsteady    limbs.     See 

Doubt. — Rogers. 
Slow  paced,  with  listless  steps  he  moved  along.     See 

Tramp,  The.^Burdette. 
Slow,  slow,  fresh  fount,  keep  time  with  my  salt  tears. 
See  Cynthia's  Revels  (Echo'sLament  of  Narcissus). 
— Jonson. 
Slowly  and  sadly  we  laid  him  down.     See  Burial  of  Sir 
John   Moore,    The   ("Slowly  and  sadly,"   etc.)- — 
Wolfe. 
Slowly,  by  Thy  [or  God's]  hand  unfurled.     See  Night- 
fall.— Furness. 
Slowly  England's  sun  was  setting  o'er  the  hilltops  far 
away.     See  Curfew   Must    not    Ring   Tonight. — 
Thorpe. 
Slowly    forth    from    the    village    church.     See    Little 

Christel. — Rands. 
Slowly  rose  the  dsedal   Earth.     See  Illumined   Goal, 
The. — Sangster. 

Slowly,  steadily,  under  the  moon.  See  By  the  Sea. — 
Anon. 

Slowly  the  dawn  a  magic  paleness  drew.  See  Trafalgar 
Square. — Binyon. 

Slowly  the  invaders  emerged  from  the  groves.  See 
Fall  of  .lericho,  The. — Osborne. 

Slowly  the  mist  o'er  the  meadow  was  creeping.  See 
Lexington. — Holmes. 

Slowly  the  twilight  was  gathering  in.  See  Resur- 
rected Hearts,  The. — Cappleman. 

Slowly  the  weary,  dispirited  creatures  wound  their  way 
into  the  room.  See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin  (Cruelty 
of  Legree,  The). — Stowe. 

Slowly,  with  measured  tread.  See  Last  Journey,  The. 
— Southey. 

Slumber,  Sleep, — they  were  two  brothers.  See  Broth- 
ers, The. — Goethe. 

Slumber,  slumber,  little  one,  now.  See  Lullaby. — 
Sherman. 

Sly  Beelzebub  took  all  occasions.  See  Epigram  on 
Job  and  the  Devil. — Coleridge. 

Sly  Cupid  late  with  Maia's  son.  See  Cupid  and  Mer- 
cury; or,  The  Bargain. — Lessing. 

Sly  Eros  once  knocked  at  the  door.  See  Love's  Dis- 
guise.— Hamilton. 

Sly  Merry  Andrew,  the  last  Southwark  fair.  See 
Merry  Andrew. — Prior. 

Small  boy  Bertie.  See  Bertie's  Philosophy. — Tap- 
pan. 

Small  current  of  the  wilds  afar  from  men.  See  Brook 
Rhine,  The. — Webster. 

Small  fellowship  of  daily  commonplace.  See  Friend- 
ship, A. — Jewett. 

jSmall  have  continual  plodders  ever  won.  See  Love's 
Labour's  Lost. — Shakespeare. 

Small  oaks  from  mighty  acorns  grow.  See  Salutatory. 
(I  ). — Denton. 

Small  service  is  true  service  while  it  lasts.  See  To  a 
Child. — Written  in  her  Album. — Wordsworth. 

Smile,  lady,  smile!  (,Ble88  me!  what's  that?)  See 
Serenade,  A. — {Punch.) 

Smiling  river,  smiling  river.  See  To  a  River  in  Which 
a  Child  was  Drowned. — Lamb. 

Smith  had  just  asked  Mr.  Thompson's  daughter.  See 
Asking  the  Gov'ner. — Anon. 

Smith— Smith— Smith.  See  Letters  for  Mr.  Smith. — 
Meyers. 

"Smith  was  asking  me  to-day,"  said  Mr.  Bowser.  See 
Quiet  Evening  at  Cards,  A. — Lewis. 

Smooth  and  lean, — they  have  stripped  her  clean.  See 
Battle-ship  and  Torpedo-boat. — J.  W.  M. 

Smooth  it  slides  upon  its  travel.  See  Looking-glass 
River. — Stevenson. 

Smoothing  soft  the  nestling  head.  See  Two  Lovers, 
The.— Whittier. 

Snare  me  the  soul  of  a  dragon-fly.  See  Miyoko  San. — 
Fenollosa. 

Snatch  the  departing  mood.  See  To  a  Town  Poet. — 
Reese. 

Snow  so  fair.     See  Snow. — A.  E.  C. 

Snow-bound  for  earth,  but  summer-souled  for  thee. 
See  Friend's  Greeting,  A. — Taylor. 

Snyder  kept  a  beer-saloon  some  years  ago  "over  the 
Rhine. "     See  Snyder's  Nose. — Griswold. 


824 


FIRST  LL\E  INDEX 


So 


So,  after  all,  'tis  better  that  we  err.     See  Though  Oft 

Deceived. — Anon. 
So  all  day  long  I  followed  through  the  fields.     See 

Gentian. — Crane. 
So  all  day  long  the  noise  of  battle  roU'd.     See  Morte 

d' Arthur. — Tennyson. 
So  all  night  long  the  storm  roared  on.     See  Snow-bound 

(Snowstorm,  The). — Whittier. 
So  am  I  as  the  rich,  whose  blessed  key.     See  Sonnets, 

LII. — Shakespeare. 
So  are  the  stars  and  the  arching  skies.     See  It  is  Com- 
mon.—Anon. 
So  are  you  to  my  thoughts,  as  food  to  life.     See  Sonnets, 

LXXV. — Shakespeare. 
So,  as  I  sat  upon  Appledore.     See  Wreck  of  River- 
mouth,  The.— Whittier. 
So,  boys,  you  want  a  story,  well,  mine's  not  one  of 

mirth.     See  On  the  Sun.set  Line.^Claxton. 
So  busy  is  the  dear  old  earth.    See  Nature's  Thought- 
fulness. — Butts. 
So    careful    of   the    type.     See    In   Memoriam.— Ten- 

ny.son. 
So  cold  was  the  night.     See  Skating  Hath  Charms. — 

H.  H. 
So  cruel  prison  how  could  betide,  alas!     See  Prisoned 

in  Windsor   He   Recounteth  His   Pleasure   There 

Passed. — Howard. 
So  dainty  in  plumage  and  hue.     See  English  Sparrow, 

The. — Forsyth. 
So   doth   one   sound   the    sleeping   spirit    wake.     See 

Woman's  Voice. — Arnold. 
So  ended  Saturn ;  and  the  God  of  the  Sea.   See  Hyperion 

(Oceanus). — Keats. 
So  equal,  then,  the  war  and  battle  hung.     See  Iliad,  The 

(Triumph  of  Hector,  The).^Homer. 
So  every  spirit,  as  it  is  most  pure.     See  Hymn  in  Honor 

of  Beauty  (Beauty). — Spenser. 
So  fair  and  yet  so  wild  of  face.     See  "Beauty  of  St. 

Giles,  A." — Bradley. 
"So,   Fairy   Bell,   you've  come  at   last."     See  Fairy 

Bell.— Short. 
So  fallen !  so  lost !  the  light  withdrawn.     See  Ichabod. — 

Whittier. 
So    fell    our    stateman — for    he    stood    sublime.     See 

Everett. — Parsons. 
So  forth  issued  [or  issew'dl  the  seasons  of   the   year 

[or  yeare].     See  Faerie  Queene,  The  (Seasons,  The). 

■ — Spenser. 
So,  Freedom,  thy   great   quarrel  may  we  serve.     See 

Our  Cause. — Linton. 
So  go  forth  to  the  world,  to  the  good  report  and  the  evil. 

See  Amours  de  Voyage  (Epilogue). — Clough. 
So  goes  the  world ;  if  wealthy,  you  may  call.     See  Rich 

Man  and  the  Poor,  The. — Khemnitzer. 
So  good  of  you  to  come  in  an  early  train.     See  Day 

before  the  Wedding,  The. — Meyers. 
So,  good  Old  Year,  we  part  to-day.     See  Old  and  New 

Year,  The. — Goodfellow. 
So  grew  Osseo,  as  a  lonely  pine.     See  Mon-da-min. — 

Taylor. 
So  happy  were  Columbia's  eight.     See  Crew  Poem,  A. 

— Blount. 
So  he  trassed  away  dreamin'  of  Nora  na  Mo.      See  Gill 

with  the  Cows,  The. — Graves. 
So  help  me  gracious,   efery  day.     See  Der  Baby. — - 

Anon. 
So,  Henry,  your  father  has  given  his  consent  to  your 

leaving  school.     See  School  or  Work. — Anon. 
So  here  hath  been  dawning  another  blue  day.     See 

Today .  — Carly  le . 
So  hung  the  wa'-  in  balance.     See  Iliad,  The  (Hector's 

Exploit  at  the  Barriers  of  the  Grecian   Fleet). — • 

Homer. 
So  I  am  watching  quietly.     See  Coming. — Anon. 
So  I  arm  thee  for  the  final  night.     See  Page  of  Lance- 
lot, The.— Kendall. 
So  I  saw  in  my  dream  that  he  made  haste,  and  went 

forward.    See  Pilgrim's  Progress  (Palace  Beautiful, 

The) . — Bunyan. 
So,  I  shall  see  here  in  three  days.     See  In  Three  Days 

— Browning. 
So,  T  think  that  'ooks  very  neat.     See  Ijadv  of  I,yons, 

The.— Bulwer-I,ytton. 
So  is  it  not  with  me  as  with  that  Muse.     See  Sonnets. 

XXI . — Shakespeare. 
So  it  all  ends.     I  came  here  with  the  hope.     See  Elec- 
tric Episode,  An. — Booth. 
So  it  all  ends  like  a  Chr-stmas  tale.     See  For  Christ- 
mas' Sake. — Meyers. 
So  it  is  come.     The  doctor's  glossy  smile.     See  Gin- 

evra. — Coolidge. 
So  it's  just  a  year  since  I  severed  my  matrimonial  bonds. 

See  Uncomfortable  Call,  An. — Anon. 


"So,  John,  I  hear  you  did  not   pass."     See  Did  not 

Pass. — Burnett. 
So  "Keats    took    snuff"?     A    few    more    years.     See 

"Keats  Took  Snuff."— (0/o6e,  r/-e.) 
So  Kings  and  Chiefs  and  Bards,  in  Eman  of  the-  Kings. 

See  Fate  of  the  Sons  of  Usna,  The. — Todhunter. 
So,  Lady  Flora,   take   my  lay.     See  Day-dream,   The 

(Moral). — Tennyson. 
So  let  him  lie  here  in  our  midst  to-day.     See  Lincoln, 

the  Shepherd  of  the  People. — Brooks. 
So  lightly   still  the   mother  sleeps.     See   Rustle  of  a 

Wing,  The. — Carter. 
So  little,  and  yet  mamma  say.«.     See  So  Little. — Anon. 
So  live,  that  when  thy  summons  comes  to  join.     See 

Thanatopsis  (How  to  Live). — Bryant. 
So  long  ago,  a  part  we  were  of  all  that  glorious  show. 

See  Great  Remembrance,  The. — Gilder. 
So  long  aTO,  so  long  ago,  a  fair-haired  shepherd-boy. 

See  Shepherd  Boy's  Carol,  The. — Anon. 
So  long  as  fortune  would  permit  the  same.     See  Com- 
plaint   of    the    Duke    of     Buckingham. — Buck- 
hurst. 
So  long  he  rode  he  drew  anigh.     See  Earthly  Paradme, 

The  (King's  Visit,  The).— Morris. 
So  Love  is  dead  that  has  been  quick  so  long.     See  Hie 

Jacet. — Moulton. 
So  many  are  more  beautiful?     See    No    One  Else  is 

You. — Anori. 
So  many  days  the  birds  have  been  calling.     See  Begun 

at  Last. — Denton. 
So  many  folks  dese  lattah  days  am  gwine  an  gittin' 

married.     See      Smoked-Arnerican      Theology. — 

Jones. 
So  many  friends  are  gathered  here.    See  For  a  Birthday 

Celebrati  on . — Denton . 
So  many  hill-sides,  crowned  with  rugged  rocks!     See 

At  Bethlehem. — Arnold. 
So  many  stars  as  shine  in  the  sky.     See  Greeting  from 

Far  Away.— Ruckert. 
So  many  talents   are   wasted,    so   many   enthusiasms 

turned  to  smoke.     See  Heroism  in  Housekeeping. 

— Carly  le. 
So  many  worlds,  so  much  to  do.     See  Death  in  Life's 

Prime. — Tennyson . 
So  Mary   said,  and    Dora    hid    her    face.     See    Dora 

(Sobbing). — Tennyson. 
So  may  Abraham,  Jacob,  and  all  the  fathers  of  our 

people  assist  me.     See  Ivanhoe    (Baron   and  the 

Jew,  The).— Scott. 
So  Mistress  Liberty,  we  are  met  together  again.     See 

Brother  Jonathan's  Birthday. — Denton. 
So  much  to  do;  so  little  done!     See  Three   Days. — 

Gilmore. 
So,  my  Kathleen,  you're  going  to  leave  me.     See  Ter- 
ence's Farewell. — Dufferin. 
So,  my  lord,  the  Lady  Giovanna,  who  hath  been  away 

so  long.     See  Falcon,  The. — Tennyson. 
So  my    pretty    flower-folk,    you.     See   Dance    of   the 

Daisies,  The. — -Piatt. 
So  my  uncle  is  not  at  home.     See  Rose-colored  Note, 

'The. — Anon. 
So,  Nell,  at  last  we  are  alone.     See  Masquerading. — 

Rook. 
So  nigh  is  grandeur  to  our  dust.     See  same. — Emer- 

.son. 
So  now  is  come  our  joyful'st   feast.      See  Christmas 

Carol,  A.— Wither. 
So!  one   stage   of  our   journey  is  accompli.shed!     See 

Stage  Struck. — Anon. 
"So,  Pat,  you've  bought  a  house  I'm  told."     See  Pat's 

Purchase. — Kavanaugh. 
"So  please  your  grace!  once  more  upon  your  clemency 

I  call."      See   Cii!,  The   (My   Cid's   Triumph).— 

Ormsby. 
So  poor    Mr.s.    Mulligan's    gone,    rist    her    sowl!     See 

Mother's  Tinder  Falin's,  A. — Smith. 
So  pride   has   had   a   fall   at   last !     See   Unfortunate 

Scholar,  The. — Anon. 
So   rest,    forever,  O    princely  Pair!     See    Church   of 

Brou,  The  (Tomb  in  the  Church  of  Brou,  The).— 

Arnold.  i 

So  Sallie  has  been  to  the  city?     See  Sallie's  Visit  to  the 

City. — Anon. 
So  sat  I  yesterday,  with  weary  eyes.     See  Sparrows, 

The.— Kirby. 
So  Saturn,  as  he  walked  into  the   midst.     See  Hype- 
rion (Saturn). — Keats. 
So  saA^ing,  her  rash  hand  in  evil  hour.     See  Paradise 

Lost. — Milton. 
So  shaken  as  we  are,   so  wan  with  care.     See  King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I. — Shakespeare. 
So  shall  it  be ;  your  grace  shall  stay  behind.     See  King 

John. — Shakespeare. 


825 


So 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"So  she's    here,    your    unknown    Dulcinea — the    lady 

you  m<»t  on  tne  train."     See  Half  an  Hour  before 

Supper. — Harte. 
So  should  we  live  that  every  hour.     See  game. — Milnes. 
So  shuts    the   mariBold    her    leaves.     See   Memory. — 

Browne. 
So  sinks  the  day  star.     See  Lycidas. — Milton. 
So,  so!   all   safe!     (^ome   forth,    my    pretty   sparklers. 

See  Miser  Fitly  Punished,  The. — Osborne. 
So,  so;  I  feel  the  "signal.     See  Saul  (Malzah   and   the 

Angel  Zelehtha). — Heavysege.^ 
So,  so,  rock-a-by  so!     See  fame. — Field. 
So,  s.ime  tempestuous  morn  in  early  June.     <See  Thyr- 

sis  (Departure  of  the  Cuckoo,  The). — Arnold. 
So  spake  the  Son  of  God;  and  Satan  stood.     iSec  Para- 
dise Regained. — Milton. 
So  stately    and    .so    dignified.     See   That    Sweet    Girl 

Graduate.—  (ffanmrd  Lampoon.) 
So  sweet  a  kiss  the  golden  .sun  gives  not.     »See  Love's 

Labour's  Lost  (Lover's  Tears,  The). — Shakespeare. 
So  sweet  love  seem'd  that  April  morn.     See  So  Sweet 

Love  Seemed. — Bridges. 
So'sweet.  so  sweet,  the  roses  in  their  blowing.     See 

In  June. — Perry.  • 
So  that  soldierly  legend  is  stil'  on  its  journey.     See 

Kearny  at  Seven  Pines. — Stedman. 
So  that's  Cleopathera's  Naadle  \or  Needle],  bedad.     See 

Paddy's    Reflections    on    Cleopatra's    Needle. — 

O'l-eary. 
So  the  boys  have  told  you,  have  they,  to  ask  me  for 

that  tale.     See  Horse-thief  Jim. — Meyers. 
So  the  foemen  have  fired  the  gate,  men  of  mine.     See 

Knight's  Leap,  The. — Kingsley. 
So  the  Freshmen   aped  and  bored   him.     See  Sopho- 
more,  The. — Anon. 
So,  the  powder's  low,  and  the  larder's  clean.     See  Last 

Cup  of  Canary,  'The. — Co*s. 
So  the  record  flashed  over  the  telegraph  wires.     See 

Fall  of  Pemberton  Mill,  The.— Phelps. 
So,  the  truth's  out.     I'll  grasp  it  like  a  snake.     See 

Only  a  Woman. — Craik. 
So  then,  at  last,  let  me  awake  this  sleep.     See  To  a 

Writer  of  the  Day  (Purpose). — Mitchell. 
So  these  lives  that  had  run  thus  far  in  separate  channels. 

See  Courtship  of  Miles  Standish,  The  ("So  these 

lives,"  etc.). — Longfellow. 
So,  this    is    my    erratic    son's    studio.     See    Painter's 

Studio,  The. — Anon. 
"So  this  is  our  new  cabin-boy."     See  Brave  Boy,  A. — 

Anon. 
So  this    is    the    grand-duke's    workshop-  where.     See 

Masque,  The. — Meyers. 
"So  this  is  the  uproar?     Well,  isn't  this  a  monster  big 

building?"   See  Aunt  Sophronia  Tabor  at  the  opera. 

— Anon. 
So  tired;  I  fain  would  rest.     See  So  Tired. — Townsend. 
So  tired     looking     out    of    the    window.     See    Little 

Watcher,  The. — Preston. 
So  'tis  seven  years  since  you  went  away,  and  I  have 

been  married  five.     See  Blind  Poet's  Wife,  The. — 

Coller. 
So,  to-morrow  is  Washington's  birthday.     See  Break- 
ing the  Colt. — Denton.  • 
So  tremulous  the  flame  of  thinking  bums.     See  Moon- 
light.— M'Kenzie. 
So  was  he  lifted  gently  from  the   ground.     See   Kx- 

cur.sion.  The  (Mist  Opening  in  the  Hills). — Words- 
worth. 
So,  we'll  go  no  more  a  roving.     See  same. — B.yron. 
So  we've  got  to  wait  an  hour  and  better  before  the 

stage  starts?     See  Waiting  for  the  Stage. — Crosby. 
So  when  the  ghostly  man  had  come  and  gone.     See 

Idylls  of  the  King  (Elaine).— Tennyson. 
So  when  the  old  delight  is  bom  anew.     See  Immor- 
tality.— Myers. 
So,  when  their  feet  were  planted  on  the  plain.     See 

Idylls    of    the   King    (Gate   of    Camelot,  The). — 

Tennyson. 
So  work   the   honey  bees.     See  King  Henry  V.   (Bees, 

The). — Shakespeare. 
"So  you   are   going    out    to    your    little    missionary 

society."     See   Little   Mis.sion    Band,   The. — (Ar- 

thtir't  Home  Manazine.) 
So,  you  are  ready  for  school,  are  you?     See  Discon- 
tented Cirls,  The. — McConaughy. 
So  you  beg  for  a  story,  my  darling,  my  brown-eyed 

I^eopold.     See   How   He   Saved    St.    Michael's. — 

Stansbury. 
So  you  bid  me  to  Thanksgivin' !     Thank  you,  neighbor. 

It   IS   kind.     See  Thanksgivin'   Pumpkin    Pies. — 

Sangster. 
80  you  have  changed  your  mind  again,  Simon,  and  will 

not  be  a  sailor?     See  Model  Farmer,  The.— Anon. 


So  you  knew  Lizzie  well,  ma'am.,  and  being  down  this 

way.     See  Lizzie. — Meyers. 
So  you  think  our  language  very  difficult,  Mons.  Bon- 
jean?     See  Fix. — Anon. 
So  you  were  sitting  and  singing.     See  At  the  Window. 

— Foster. 
So,  you  will  fly  out.     See  Rivals,  The. —  Sheridan. 
So  you're  a  writer,  and  you  think  I  could.     See  Old 

Roundsman's  Story,  An. — Eytinge. 
So!  you're  all  the  way  from  Kansas.     See  That  Baby 

in  Tuscaloo. — Campbell. 
So  you're  going  to  give  up  flirtation,  my  dear.     See 

Piece  of  Advice,  A. — Baker. 
So  you're  going  to  Scotland  to-morrow.     See  On  the 

Terrace. — Nesbit. 
So  you're  takin'  the  census,  mister?     There's  three  of 

us  livin'  st'H.     See  Whisperin'  Bill. — Bacheller. 
So  you're  the  latest  victim — no.     See  Old  Doll  to  the 

New  One,  The. — Leigh. 
So  you're  the  senior  of  the  firm,  the  head.     See  Bank- 
rupt's Visitor,  The. — English. 
So  you've  brought  me  this  costly  Bible.     See  Grand- 
mother's Bible. — Cooley. 
So  you've  come  here  to  ask  me  for  Susie — don't  stand 

there  ahangin'  your  head.     See  Going  Away. — 

Frost. 
So  you've  gotten  an  offer  of  marriage?     See  Tale  of 

Sweethearts,  A. — Sims. 
So  you've  lost  your  race,  lad.      See  Take  it  Like  a  Man. 

— ^Lester. 
Societ.v  can  no  more  exist  without  government.     See 

Liberty  the  Meed  of  Intelligence. — Calhoun. 
Socrates  was  the  reverse  of  a  sceptic.     See  Last  Hours 

of  Socrate^?,  The. — Anon. 
Soe,  Mistress  Anne,  faire  neighbour  myne.     See  Salem. 

— Stedman. 
Soft  and  sweet  the  zephyrs  sigh.     See  Soft  and  Sweet 

the  Zephyrs  Sigh. — -Anon. 
Soft  and  white  the  dew  was  falling  on  the  wild  rose  and 

the  daisies      See  Whip-poor- Will. — Bennett. 
Soft  fell  the  tender  shades  of  eve,  the  coming  night 

foretelling.     See  Unseen  Angel,  An. — McLean. 
Soft  heath  this  elevated   spot    supplied.      See   Excur- 

.sion,  The  (Sunset,  The). — Wordsworth. 
Soft  is   the    strain    when    zephyr   gently    blows.     See 

Essay  on  Criticism,  An. — Pope. 
Soft  is  thy  rest,  O  silent  sea.     See  "Soft  is  Thy  Rest." 

— Baker. 
Soft  on  the  sunset  sky.     See  Ashes  of  Roses.— East- 
man. 
Soft — soft — soft.     See  Snow-flakes. — Benjamin. 
Soft,  sweet,    and    sad   in    its    pathetic    glory.     See    In 

November. — Phillips. 
Soft  the  angelus  at  even.     See  Rhapsody,  A. — Gould. 
Soft  were  my  numbers,  who  could  take  offence.     See 

Satire  on  the  Whig  Poets. — Pope. 
Soft  you;  a  word  or  two  before  you  go.     See  Othello, 

the    Moor   of    Venice    (Othello's    Last    Words). — r 

Shakespeare. 
Soft-breathing  Spring!  how  many  pleasant  thoughts. 

See    Outre-Mer    (Journey     into    Spain,    The). — 

Longfellow. 
Softer  than  silence,  stiller  than  still  air.     See  Snowing 

of  the  Pines,  The.— Higginson. 
Softly  fell  the  touch  of  twilight  on  Judea's  silent  hills. 

See  Beautiful  Legend,  A. — Anon. 
Softly  now  the  light  of  day.     See  same. — Doane. 
Softly,  O  midnight  Hours!     See  Serenade. — De  Vere. 
Softly,  oh  softly,  the  years  have  swept  by  thee.     See 

Growing  Old. — Anon. 
Softly!  .she  is  lying.     See  Dirge. — Ea.stman. 
Softly  the   evening  breezes.     See  Two  of  a   Kind. — 

Banks. 
Softly  the  evening  shadows.     See  same. — Brewer. 
Softly  through  my  soul  to-night.  See  Dreaming. — Anon. 
Softly  woo  away  her  breath.     See  same. — -Procter. 
Soft-sandalled  twilight,  handmaid  of  the  night.     See 

Winter  Twilight.— Elliot. 
Soft -throated  South,  breathing  of  summer's  ease.     See 

South  Wind. — Lathrop. 
Soldier  and  statesman,  rarest  unison.     See  Under  the 

Old  Elm  (Washington). — Lowell. 
Soldier,  rest !  thy  warfare  o'er.      See  Lady  of  the  I^ake, 

The  (Soldier,  Rest!).— Scott. 
Soldier,  soldier,    come    from    the    wars.     See    Soldier, 

Soldier. — Kipling. 
Soldiers  and  countrymen: — We  have  met  this  evening. 

See  Revolutionary  Sermon,  A. — Breckenridge. 
Soldiers  and   Fellow-Citizens. — The  unjust   reproaches 

of  our  enemies  we  could   easily    disprove.     See 

Caesar's  Death  Justified. — Ca.ssius. 
Soldiers  and  friends!  we  .soon  shall  reach  the  ground. 

See  Arminius  to  his  Soldiers. — -Murphy. 


826 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Some 


Soldiers  from  the  army  and  navy.  »See  Address  to  the 
Soldiers. — Manning. 

Soldiers  of  the  Armies  of  the  United  States !  See  Gen- 
eral Grant  to  the  Army,  1865. — Grant. 

Soldiers  of  the Regiment:     The  occasion  which 

has  brought  together.  See  Presentation  of  a  Flag 
to  a  Regiment  Departing  for  War. — Anon. 

Soldiers!  receive  my  adieu.  See  Farewell  to  the  Army 
at  Fontainebleau,  1814. — Bonaparte. 

Soldiers,  the  chief,  Malinski,  has  betrayed  his  post  and 
fled.     See  Alasco  to  his  Countrymen. — Shee. 

Soldiers!  who  freely  for  our  country's  glory.  See 
Decoration  Hymn. — Randall. 

Soldiers:  You  have  in  a  fortnight  gained  six  victories. 
See  Bonaparte  to  his  Army  in  Italy. — Napoleon 

Soldiers,  you  have,  in  fifteen  days,  gained  six  victo- 
ries. See  Bonaparte  to  his  Army  in  Italy  (Procla- 
mation to  the  Army  of  Italy). — Napoleon. 

Soldiers!  You  have  precipitated  yourselves  like  a  tor- 
rent from  the  Apennines.  See  Bonaparte  to  his 
Army  in  Italy  (To  the  Army  of  Italy,  May  15, 
1796). — Napoleon. 

Sole  Lord  of  liords  and  very  King  of  Kings.  See 
Seso.stris. — MifHin. 

Solemn  days  of  Lent  are  closing,  and  in  soft  ethereal 
light.     See  Easter  Altar-cloth,  The.— Thayer. 

Solemn  he  paced  upon  that  schooner's  deck.  See  (Jap- 
tain,  'The. — Brainard. 

Solemnly,  mournfully,  dealing  its  dole.  See  Curfew. — - 
Longfellow. 

Solid  bronze  never  looked  more  ethereal.  See  Bar- 
tholdi  Statue,  The. — Hawthorne. 

Solomon  Grub  is  a  peculiar  old  man.  See  Solomon 
Grub. — Cook. 

Solomon  never  said  a  truer  word  than  what  he  says. 
See  Warning  against  Wine,  A. — Moody. 

Solomon  says,  in  words  so  mild.  See  Solomon  and 
Mamma. — Anon. 

Solomon!  where  is  thy  throne?  It  is  gone  in  the  wind. 
See  Gone  in  the  Wind. — Mangan. 

Some  ask'd  me  where  the  Rubies  grow.  See  Rock  of 
Rubies,  The. — Herrick. 

Some  bad  little  girls  hate  the  boys.  See  Use  for  Boys, 
A. — Denton. 

Some  boys  were  once  engaged  in  play.  See  Little  Gen- 
tleman, The. — Kavanaugh. 

"Some  charity  for  Christ's  sake!"  At  the  door.  See 
"Dead!     Name  Unknown." — Durant. 

Some  clerks  aver  that  as  the  tree  doth  fall.  See  Ut- 
most, The. — Lytton. 

Some,  Cupid  kills  with  arrows.     See  Strategy. — Field. 

Some  day  I  think  you  will  be  glad  to  know.  See  Con- 
stancy in  Absence. — Anon. 

Some  day  or  other  I  shall  surely  come.  See  Some  Day 
or  Other. — Moulton. 

Some  day,  some  day  of  days,  threading  the  street.  See 
Some  Day  of  Days. — Perry. 

Some  day  soon  this  rhyming  volume,  if  you  learn  with 
proper  speed.  See  To  My  Name-child. — Steven- 
son. 

Some  day  the  daisies  will  all  be  dead.  See  Mamma's 
Flower. — Cass. 

Some  doubt  the  courage  of  the  negro.  See  Toussaint 
L'Ouverture. — Phillips. 

Some  dreams  we  have  are  nothing  else  but  dreams. 
See  Haunted  House,  The. — -Hood. 

Some  eight  and  twenty  years  ago,  I  knew.  See  Lost. 
— Cunard. 

Some  evil  god,  or  an  avenging  spirit.  See  Battle  of 
Salamis,  The. — ^schylus. 

Some  find  Love  late,  some  find  him  soon.  See  When 
Will  Love  Come?— Beatty. 

Some  find  work  where  some  find  rest.  See  Why  Is  it 
So? — Anon. 

Some  folks  're  allers  findin'  fault  'nd  frettin'  round, 
y'  know.  See  "There  Was  a  Crooked  Man." — 
Penney. 

Some  folks  tell  dis  story  one  way,  an'  some  tell  hit  er- 
nuther.     See  Uncle  Dick's  Version. — Anon. 

Some  folks  the  Old  World  find  so  fair.  See  Patriotic 
Tourist,  The. — Munkittrick. 

Some  folks  thought  Hepsy  had  talent.  See  Hepsy's 
Ambition. — Thom.son. 

Some  future  day  when  what  is  now  is  not.  See  Songs 
in  Absence  (Some  Future  Day). — Clough. 

Some  glad  thing  comes  to  me.     See  In  .Tune. — Morton. 

Some  hae  meat  and  canna  eat.  See  Child's  Grace,  A. 
— Burns. 

Some  have  denied  a  soul!  They  never  loved.  See 
Poet  Proves  the  Existence  of  a  Soul  from  his  Love 
for  Delia,  The. — Southey. 

Some  hearts  go  hungering  through  the  world.  See 
same. — Anon. 


Some  high  or  humble  enterprise  of  good.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
Some  horses   have   high-toned    names,    but    it    didn't 

matter  with  him.     See  Jim. — Beliaw. 
Some  hundreds  of  years  ago  in  the  quaint  old  city  of 

Nuremberg.     See  Folded  Hands,  The. — Anon. 
Some  in  the  promise  of  an  early  prime.     See  William 

E.  Gladstone. — (London  Punch.) 
Some  innocent  girlish  kisses  by  a  charm.      See  Wild 

Rose. — .\llinghain. 
Some  ladies  love  the  jewels  in  liOve's  zone.     See  Love's 

Lovers. — Rossetti . 
Some  laws   there   are   too  sacred   for  the  hand.     See 

Liberty  of  the  Press. — DeVere. 
Some  like  drink  in  a  pint  pot.     See  Not  I. — Stevenson. 
Some  little  boys  are  very  shy.     See  Speech  for  a  Very 

Little  Boy. — Kavanaugh. 
Some  little  drops  of  water.     See  Raindrops'  Ride,  The. 

— Anon. 
Some  little  folks  are  apt  to  say.      See  I'll  Put  it  Off. — 

Anon. 
Some  little   girls   are   lazy.     See   Helping   Mamma. — 

Anon. 
Some  love  is  light  and  fleets  away.     See  True  Love's 

Dirge. — Motherwell. 
Some  love  the  glow  of  outward  show.     See  What  House 

to  Like. — Anon. 
Some  men   have   "greatness    thrust    on    them."     See 

What  has  been  Done  may  be  Done  again. — Kav- 
anaugh. 
Some  men  look  upon  this  temperance  cause  as  whining 

bigotry.     See      Temperance      Question.      The. — 

Phillips. 
Some  men   strut   proudly,   all  purple  and   gold.     See 

Good  of  it.  The.— Craik. 
Some  men   were   born    for   great    things.     See   Uncle 

Sammy. — Carleton. 
Some  miners  were  sinking  a  shaft  in  Wales.     See  Lost 

and  Found. — Ai'do. 
Some  months  ago — I  need  not  mention  where.     See 

Little  Shoes  Did  it.  The. — Anon. 
Some  months  ago  one  of  the  janitors  of  a  certain  school. 

See  His  Limitation. — Anon. 
So  much  true  resolution  wrought  in  those.     See  Death 

of  Talbot,  The.— Daniel. 
Some  murmur  when  their  sky  is  clear.     See  Different 

Minds. — Trench. 
Some  of  my  friends  (for  friends  I  must  suppose).     See 

Journey,  The. — Churchill. 
Some  of  the  best  friends  I   have  are  Hebrews.     See 

Hebrew  Children,  The.— Thatcher. 
Some  of  the  boys  in  our  school.     See  Fellow  Who  Is 

Game,  A. — Anon. 
Some  of  the  down-town  merchants  put  in  a  stock  of 

books.     See  At  the  Book  Counter. — Anon. 
Some  of  the  figures  presented  to  the  Forestry  Congress. 

See  Destruction  of  the  Forests. — Anon. 
Some  of  the  most   renowned  American  orators  were 

still  in  their  prime.     See  Wendell  Phillips  (Wen- 
dell Phillips  as  an  Orator). — Curtis. 
Some  of  their  chiefs  were  princes  of  the  land.     See 

Absalom  and  Achitophel  (Zimri). — Dryden. 
Some  of  these  views,   Bella,  are  lovely!     See  Bella's 

Visit  to  Camp. — -Anon. 
Some  opulent    force    of    genius,    soul    and    race.     See 

Abraham  Lincoln. — Benton. 
Some  parts  of  Holland  keep  out  the  ocean  only  by 

dykes.     See  To  the  Dykes. — Talmage. 
Some  people  say  that  dogs  can't  talk.     See  My  Carlo 

Talks. — Goodfellow. 
Some  people  think  it's  nothing  much.     See  Confidence 

versus  Merit. — Kavanaugh. 
Some  peoples  thinks  they  ain't  no  Fairies  now.     See 

Bud's  Fairy-tale. — Riley. 
Some  person    accidentally    upset  a  bucket  of  water. 

See  Mumford's  Pavement. — Anon. 
Some  poets  sing  of  sweethearts  dead.     See  Ballade  of 

Forgotten  Loves. — Grissom. 
Some  praise  taking  snuff.     See  Pot,  and  a  Pipe  of  To- 
bacco,   A. — Anon. 
Some  quick  and  bitter  words  we  said.     See  Wedded.— 

Anon. 
Some  reckon  their  age  by  years.     See  Rosary  of  My 

Years,  The. — Ryan. 
Some  say  Love,  foolish  Love,  doth  rule  and  govern  all 

the  gods.     See  Menaphon    (Menaphon's    Song). — 

Greene. 
Some  say  that  ever  'gainst  that  season  comes.     See 

Hamlet  (Gracious  Time,  The). — Shakespeare. 
Some  say  that  kissing's  a  sin.     See  Kissing's  no  Sin. — 

Anon. 
Some  say  the  soul's   secure.     See  Hudibras  (Spiritual 

Trimmers) . — Butler. 


827 


Some 


A\  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Some  say  thy  fault  is  youth,  some  wantonness.     See 

Sonnets,  XCVI. — Shakespeare. 
Some  sigh  for  this  and  that.     See  Cigar,  The. — Hood. 
Some  sings  of  the  lily,  and  daisy,  and  rose.     See  Clover, 

The.— Riley, 
Some  sombre   evening,    when    1    sit.     See   My   After- 
dinner  Cloud. — Leigh. 
Some  space  beyond  the  garden  close.     See  Hollyhocks, 

The. — Betts. 
Some  take  their  gold.     See  Gold. — Herford. 
Some  talk  of  Alexander,  and  some  of  Hercules.     See 

British  Grenadiers,  The. — Anon. 
Some  tangled    hair,    with    ribbons   there.     See    Some 

Tangled  Hair.— Anon. 
Some  tell  us  'tis  a  burnin'  shame.     iSee  Sambo's  Right 

to  be  Kilt. — Halpine. 
Some  ten  or  fifteen  years  ago.     See  Ix>st  Watch,  The. 

— "Juvenal." 
Some  there  are  who  urge  that  "the  liquor  traflSc  is  an 

old    institution."     See    Liquor    Traffic    Antagon- 
istic to  American  Liberty. — Finch. 
Some  things  look  mighty  easy  until  you  try  them.     See 

Elusive  Dollar  Bill,  The.— Wilson. 
Some  think  that  all  the  great  liars  go  to  perdition.     See 

Legend  of  the  Knot-hole,  The. — Nye. 
Some  think  themselves  exalted  to  the  sky.     See  Do-. 

mestic  ('haplain.  The. — Oldham,. 
Some  tiny   elves,   one  evening,   grew  mischievous,   it 

seems.     See  Dreams  for  Sale. — Morris. 
Some  to  Conceit  alone  their  taste  confine.      See  Essay 

on  Criticism,  An. — Pope. 
Some  undone   widow  sits  upon  mine  arm.     See  New 

Way  to  Pay  Old  Debts,  A. — Massinger. 
Some  vast  amount  of  years  ago.     See  Tommy's  First 

Love. — Calverley. 
Some  vex  their  souls  with  jealous  pain.     See  On  One 

who    Died    Discovering  her  Kindness. — Sheffield. 
Some  water  and  oil.     See  How  Soap  Was  First  Made. 

— Anon. 
Some  will  talk  of  bold  Robin  Hood.     See  Robin  Hood 

and  the  Bishop  of  Hereford. — Anon. 
Some  wit  of  old — such  wits  of  old  there  were.     See 

Paper. — Franklin. 
Some  words  on   language  may  be  well  applied.      See 

Rhymed  Lesson,  A:  Urania  (Words on  Language). 

— Holmes. 
Some  years  ago,   a  droll   sort   of  a   Dutchman.     See 

Dutchman  who  Gave  Mrs.  Scudder  the  Small-pox, 

The.— Anon. 
Some  years  ago,  ere  civil  war's  alarms.     See  Judging 

by  Appearances. — Anon. 
Some  years  ago,  ere  time  and  taste.     See  Vicar,  The. — 

Praed. 
Some  years  ago,  in  an  Eastern  town.     See  Poetical 

Court.ship. — Hills. 
Some  vears  ago,  in  Georgia.     See  Untimely  Trumpet, 

The. — (Harper's  Monthly.) 
Some  years  ago,   when   civil   faction.     See   Vat    You 

Please. — Planche. 
Some  years  agone,  one  summer's  mom.     See  Ho,  Boat 

Ahoy!— Stilwell. 
Some  years  since  I  attended  the  National  Peace  Jubilee. 

See  Power  of  Music,  The. — Talmage. 
Somebody  asked  me  to  take  a  drink.     See  No!^Anon. 
Somebody  has  said  that  in  order  to  know  a  commu- 
nity. See  Roughing  It  (Buck  Fanshaw's  Funeral). 

— Clemens. 
"Somebody  is  coming."     See  Stranger,  A. — J.  M.  L. 
Somebody  loves    her    little    bed.     See    Somebody. — 

Anon. 
Somebody  tells  of  the  good  old  days.     See  New  Girl's 

Logic,  The. — Curtis. 
Somebody  told    me,    one    bright    summer    day.     See 

"Somebody." — Anon. 
Somebody  tum  to  us  las'  night.     See  New  Baby,  The. 

— Snyder. 
Somebody's  baby,  with  laughing  eyes.     See  "Some- 
body's."— McRay. 
Somebody's  courting     somebody.     See     Somebody. — 

Anon. 
Somebody's    dead;  there's    crape    on   the    door.     See 

Crape  on  the  Door. — Anon. 
Somebody's  dying  tonight!     Alas!     See  Agony  Bells. 

— Wellington. 
Somebody's  heart  is  gay.     See  Two  Pictures. — Anon. 
Somedimes  ven  I'm  a-feeling  bad.     See  Katrina  Likes 

Me  Poody  Veil.— Gooft. 
Someone,  a  figure  arrayed  in  white.     See  Load  on  his 

Mind,  The. — (Burlington  Hawkeye.) 
Someone  asked   the  Duke  of  Wellington.     See  Battle 

of  Life,  The.— Olin. 
"Someone  has  been  in  the  garden."     See  Jack  Frost. — 

Anon. 


Someone  has  gone  from  this  strange  world  of  ours.     See 

Ring  the  Bell  Softly.— Smith. 
Some  one  has  said,  and  I  think  it  was  Mr.  Moody.     See 

Account  of  a  Negro  Sermon. — Gough. 
Someone  has   taken    the    trouble.     See  Beatitudes  in 

Broad  Scotch,  The. — Anon. 
Some'ow  I  don't  mind  talkin'  about  myself.     See  Lit- 
tle Charlie. — Overton. 
Some'ow  I  don't  mind  talking  about  myself.     See  Jail- 
bird's Story,  A. — Anon. 
Somethin'  cur'ous  in  his  air.     See  His  Sunday  Clothes. 

— Anon. 
Something  beyond!  Though  now,   with  joy  unfound. 

See  Something  Beyond. — (^lemmer. 
Something  each  day, — a  smile.     See  Something  Each 

Day. — Anon. 
Something  is    on    your    mind    this    evening.    Brother 

Bones.    See  Brudder  Bones  as  a  Log-roller. — Anon. 
Something  more  than  the  lilt  of  the  strain.     See  Poetry. 

— Foote. 
Something  put  Bateman  in  mind  of  old  Bill  Stevens. 

See  Old  Bill  Stevens. — Anon. 
Something  round    which    it    may    twine.     See    God 

Careth.— Anon. 
Something  startles  me  where  I  thought  I  was  safest. 

See  This  Compost. — Whitman. 
"Something  to  do,  mamma,  something  to  do!"     See 

Something  to  Do. — Havergal. 
Something's  wrong  in  this  house;  can't  tell  what  it  is. 

See  New  Christmas,  The. — Denton. 
Sometime  ago  I  was  staying  with  Sir  George  Flasher. 

See  Love  in  a  Balloon. — Moseley. 
Sometime  before   young   Paris'    birth.     See    Birth    of 

Paris,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
Sometime,  dear  heart,  yes,  sometime.     See  Sometime. 

— F.  A.  F.  W.  W. 
Sometime,  it  may  be,  you  and  I.     See  To  Faustine. — 

Colton. 
Sometime  there  ben  a  lyttel  boy.     See  Lyttel  Boy,  The. 

—Field. 
Sometime,  when  all  life's  lessons  have  been  learned. 

See  Sometime. — Smith. 
Sometimes  a  light  surprises.     See  Joy  and   Peace  in 

Believing. — Cowper. 
Sometimes  at  lonely  dead  of  night.     See  In  Solitude. — 

Scollard. 
Sometimes  goldfinches  one  by  one  will  drop.      See  "I 

."tood  tiptoe    upon    a  little   hill"   (Goldfinches). — 

Keats. 
Sometimes  I  have  seen  a  tall  ship  glide  by.     See  Pro- 
fessor at  the  Breakfast -table,  The  (Faithful  Little 

Wife,  A). —Holmes. 
Sometimes  I  keep  from  going  to  sleep.     See  Katydids, 

The.— Riley. 
Sometimes  I  smile,  sometimes  I  sigh.     See  Shadows. — 

Anon. 
Sometimes  I  think  'at  parunts  does.     See  Parent  Rep- 
rimanded, A. — Riley. 
Sometimes  I  think  I  will  be  cold  with  her.     See  When 

She  Comes. — Westley. 
Sometimes  I  think  I'll  thrash  him  good.     See  'Nough 

for  Me. — Foley. 
Sometimes  I  think  that  those  we've  lost.     See  Our 

Dead. — Argyll. 
Sometimes  I  wonder  what  a  mean  man   thinks  about 

when  he  goes  to  bed.     See  Don't  be  Mean,   Boys. 

— Burdette. 
Sometimes  in  passing  along  the  street.     See  Man  Who 

Wears  the  Button,  The. — Thurston. 
Sometimes  mamma  calls  me  "general."     See  Which 

General  7 — Hamilton . 
Sometimes  my   darling,   I   have   suffered   doubt.     See 

Doubt .  — Chapman . 
Sometimes  my   First  will  hide  its  smiling  face.     See 

Skylight. — Sabine. 
Sometimes — not  often — when  the  days  are  long.     See 

Sometimes. — Story. 
Sometimes  she  spake  with  those  who  had  seen  her  be- 
loved and  known  him.     See  Evangeline. — Long- 
fellow. 
Sometimes  when  after  spirited  debate.     See  Change. — 

Howells. 
Sometimes  when  I  get  to  feelin'.     See  Elam  Chase's 

Fiddle. — Tongue. 
Sometimes  when  I've  been  'spesh'ly  good.     See  "Ma's 

Attic." — Crissey. 
Sometimes,  when     Nature    falls    asleep.     See     Night 

Mists. — Hayne.  * 

Sometimes,  when  rude,  cold  shadows  run.     See  Last 

and  Best. — Gary. 
Sometimes  when  we  re  in  school,  and  it's  the  afternoon 

and    late.     See    School  Committee  Man,    The  — 

Lincoln. 


828 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Speed 


Somewhat  apart  from  the  village,  and  nearer  the  Basin 
of  Minas.  See  Evangeline  (Evangeline  in  Acadie). 
— Longfellow. 

Somewhat  back  from  the  village  street.  See  Desola- 
tion.— Masson. 

Somewhat  back  from  the  village  street !  See  also  Old 
Clock  on  the  Stairs,  The. — Longfellow. 

Somewhere  beneath  the  sun.     See  Amaturus. — Cory. 

Somewhere  in  cloudland,  but  I  won't  say  where.  See 
Perfect  Wife,  The.— Anon. 

Somewhere,  in  deeps.     See  Sport. — Garland. 

Somewhere — in  desolate  wind-swept  space.  See 
Identity. — Aldrich. 

Somewhere  in  Leather  Lane.  See  Sausage  Maker's 
Ghcst,  The.— Hood. 

Somewhere  in  the  world  there  hide.  See  In  Twos. — ■ 
Gannett. 

Somewhere  on  this  earthly  planet.  See  Common 
Thought,  A. — Tirnrod. 

Somewhere  or  other  there  must  surely  be.  See  Some- 
where or  Other. — Uofsetti. 

Somewhere,  out  on  the  blue  seas  sailing.     See  When 

My  Ship  Comes  in. — Burdette. 
'Somewhere  the  wind  is  blowing,"  I  said,  and  toiled 
along.     See  Somewhere. — Shaw. 

Somewhere  there  waiteth  in  this  world  of  ours.  See 
Destiny. — Arnold. 

Son  of  Erebus  and  night.  See  Inner  Temple  Masque, 
The  (Charm,  The).— Browne. 

"Son  of  I^ight,"  I  murmured  lowly.  See  Behind  the 
Veil.— DeMille. 

Son  of  the  Brittannia's  isle.     See  Gordon. — -Tennyson. 

Sons  of  New  England  in  the  fray.     See  Treason's  Last 

Device . — Stedman . 
•Sons  of  the  nation,  to  glory  restored.     See  Sonn  of  the 
.    Nation. — Anon. 

Soon  after  I  came  to  live  in  this  house,  as  I  was  paint- 
ing the  palisades.  See  Man  in  the  Fustian  Jacket, 
The. — Moggridge. 

Soon  after  the  French  war.  See  Grandfather's  Chair 
(Affray  in  King  Street,  Boston,  1770,  The).— 
ifawthorne. 

Soon  after  two  o'clock  yesterday.  See  He  Wanted  it 
Let  Alone. — Anon. 

Soon  as  her  lover  to  the  war  had  gone.  See  Night- 
watch,  The.- — Coppee. 

Soon  as  the  sun  begins  to  rise.  See  Strawberry 
Woman,  The. — Denton. 

Soon  the  steeples  called  good  people  all  to  church  and 
chapel.  See  Christmas  Carol,  A  (Bob  Cratchit's 
Dinner). — Dickens. 

Soon  they  the  palace  reached  of  Astragon.  See 
Gondibert.— Davenant. 

Sooner  or  later,  in  some  future  date.  See  Last  Day 
Book,  The.— Young. 

Sophia  Saunders  searching  scrutinized  Sarah.  See 
Short  Sensational  Story. — Anon. 

Sorrow,  my  friend.  See  Song  before  Grief,  A. — Lath- 
rop. 

Sorrows  humanize  our  race.     See  same. — Ingelow. 

Soul  of  a  tree  ungrown,  new  life  out  of  God's  life  pro- 
ceeding.    See  Yosemite. — Shinn. 

Soul,  wherefore  fret  thee?  Striving  still  to  throw. 
See  Soul,  wherefore  Fret  Thee? — Bloede. 

Soulless,  colorless  strain,  thy  words  are  the  words  of 
wisdom,     See  Didactic  Poem,  The. — Garnett. 

Souls  are  built  as  temples  are.    See  Building. — Coolidge. 

Soul's  joy,  bend  not  those  morning  stars  from  me.  See 
Astrophel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  XLVIIL). — Sidney. 

Souls  of  men!  why  will  ye  scatter.     See  same. — Faber. 

Souls  of  poets  dead  and  gone.  See  Lines  on  the  Mer- 
maid Tavern. ^Keats. 

Souls  of  the  patriot  dead.  See  Kidnapping  of  Sims, 
The. — Pierpont. 

Sound  all  to  arms !  See  Catiline  (Catiline  to  the  Roman 
Army). — Crol.y. 

Sound  fife,  and  cry  the  slogan.  See  Burial  March  of 
Dundee,  The. — Aytoun. 

Sound  over  all  waters,  reach  out  from  all  lands.  See 
Christmas  Carmen,  A. — Whittier. 

Sound  seeks  for  sympathetic  things.  See  Organ  Crea- 
tions.— Warren. 

Sound,  sound  the  clarion,  fill  the  fife!  See  Sound, 
Sound  the  Clarion. — Scott. 

Sound  the  deep  waters.     See  Sleep  at  Sea. — Rossetti. 

Sound  the  loud  timbrel  o'er  Egypt's  dark  sea!  See 
Sound  the  Loud  Timbrel. — Moore. 

Source  immaterial  of  material  naught.  See  Rejected 
National  Hymns,  The,  IV. — -Newell. 

Source  of  my  life's  refreshing  springs.  See  Source  of 
My  Life, — Waring. 

South  Florida,  where  the  sunlight  dances.  See  Tampa 
Romance,  A. — Rogers. 


South  Mountain  towered   upon   our  right,  far  off  the 

river  lay.     See  Pride  of  Battery  B,  The. — Gas.sa- 

way. 
South  Pokus    is    religious, — that's    the   honest,  livin' 

truth.     See  Wasted  Energy. — Lincoln. 
Southrons,  hear  your  country  call  you!     See  Dixie. — 

Pike. 
Southward    the    swallow    flies,    south    to    the     sun- 
lands.      See    Autumn    Wedding-song,    An. — Tas- 

sin. 
Southward  with  feet  of  ice.     See  Sir  Humphrey  (Gil- 
bert.— I>ongfellow. 
Sow,  and  look  onward,  upward.     See  8am,e. — {Hoxise- 

hold  Words.) 
Sow  in  the  morn  thy  seed.     See  Sower,  The. — Mont- 

goniery. 
Sow  with  a  generous  hand.     See  Sowing  and  Reaping. 

— Procter. 
Spain's  hour    has    struck.     No    more    her    flag.     See 

Spain's  Hour  of  Doom. — Haven. 
Spake  full   well,   in   language   quaint   and   olden.     See 

Flowers. — Longfellow. 
Spare  all  who  yield;  alas,  that  we  must  pierce.     See 

Death  of  Hampden,  The. — Beatty. 
Spare,  generous   Victor,    spare   the   slaves.     See   To   a 

Lady:     She    Refusing  to   Continue  a   Dispute. — 

Prior. 
Spare  her  at  least ;  look,  you  have  taken  from  me.     See 

Old  and  the  New  Year,  The. — Procter. 
"Spare  man  nor  steed,  use  utmo.st  speed;  before  the 

sun    goes    down."     See    Cavalry    Scout,    The. — - 

Scotus. 
Spare,  O  spare!  the  noble  youth  of  our  country.     See 

Spare  the  Youth. — Brosius. 
Sparkling  and   bright    in   liquid   light.     See   Sparkling 

and  Bright. — Hoffman. 
Speak  and  tell  us,  out  Ximena,  looking  northward  far 

away.     See  Ar.gels  of  Buena  Vista,  The. — Whit- 
tier. 
Speak  gently;  in  this  world  of  ours.     See  Speak  Gently. 

— Anon. 
Speak  gently;  it  is  better  far.     See  Speak  Gently. — 

Bates. 
Speak  gently  to  the  erring — ye  know  not  all  the  power. 

See  Speak  Gently  to  the  Erring. — Lee. 
Speak  gently  to  the  herring,  and  kindly  to  the  calf. 

See  snm.e. — Ashby-Sterry. 
Speak  kindly  to  that  poor  old  man.     See  Way  to  Be 

Brave,  The. — Anon. 
Speak  low  to  me,  my  Saviour,  low  and  sweet.     See 

Comfort. ^Browning. 
Speak  low!    tread    softly    through    these    halls.     See 

Thoughts  in  a  Library. — Botta. 
"Speak,  O   man,    le«8    recent!     Frazmentary    fossil!" 

See  To  the  Pliocene  Skull. — Harte. 
Speak,  quiet  lips,  and  utter  forth  my  fate.     See  Eng- 
lish Girl,  An. — Home. 
Speak,  Roman !  wherefore  does  thy  master  send.     Se' 

Spartacus  and  .Jovius. — Bird. 
"Speak!"  sai«l  the  high  priest  of  Tanit.     "What  do  you 

wish?"     See  Salammbo's  Appeal. — Flaubert. 
Speak,  satire;  for  there's  none  can  tell  like  thee.     See 

True-born  Englishman,  The. — DeFoe. 
"Speak!  speak!  thou  fearful  eue.st!"     See  Skeleton  in 

Armor,  The. — Longfellow. 
Speak  the  speech.  I  pray  you,  as  I  pronounced  it  to  you. 

See  Hamlet  (Hamlet's  Instruction  to  the  Players). 

— Shakespeare. 
Speak  the  truth!     See  some. — Anon. 
Speak  thou  the  truth!     Let  others  fenr*".     See  Be  Just, 

and  Fear  not. — Alford. 
Speak    to    the    children.    Little    Book.     See    same. — 

Lovejoy. 
Speak   ye   unto  all   the   congregation   of   Israel.     See 

EAster  Service,  An. — Denton. 
Speaker,   hark  here!     How  can   you  hope  to     reach. 

See  How   Two   Men   Spoke  the   Same    Words. — 

Sargeint. 
Speakin'  of  dorgs,  my  bench-legged  fyce.     See  Bench- 
legged  Fyce,  The. — Field. 
"Speaking  ob  'lectricity  "  [said  the  Rev.  Plato  John- 
son], "it  'pears  to  me."     See  Brudder  Johnson  on 

'Lectricity. — Anon. 
Speaking  of  Anthems,  says  a  writer  in  the  Nautical 

Gazette.     See  H'Anthem,  The. — Anon. 
Specklety  flew  from  the  haymow  dim.     See  "Planting" 

Wheat. — Anderson. 
Speech    is   a    Divine   gift    bestowed    upon    man.     See 

Ancient  and  Modem  Oratory. — -Wyman. 
Speechless  Sorrow  sat   with  me.     See  Guest,  The. — 

Kimball. 
Speed  away!  speed  away!   on  thine  errand  of  light! 

See  Speed  Away. — Woodberry. 


829 


Speed 


AX  INDEX'  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIOXS 


Speed  on,  speed  on,  good  master!     See  Walker  of  the 

Snow,  The. — Shanly. 
Speed  our  Repubhc,  O  Father  on  high.     See  American 

Hymn. — -Keller. 
Speed,  Kingbolt#to  your  leader  s.ieed!     See  same. — 

Head. 
"Speed,    speed   thee   forth,"    said   Washingfton.     See 

Nathan  Hale. — Geary. 
Speed  the  news;  speed  the  news!     See  One  of  the  Six 

Hundred.— Anon. 
Speeding  before  the  gale.     See  With  Gleaming  Sail. — 

Gardiner. 
Sphinx   was   a   monster   that    would   eat.      See   Two 

Riddles. — Prior. 
Spices  for  love's  service  bringing.     See  When  the  Stone 

was  Rolled  Away. — Denton. 
Spinning,  spinning  by  the  sea.     See  Hilda,  Spinning. — 

Anon. 
Spirit,  1  know  thee  not,  I  look  on  thee.     See  White 

Pilgrim,  The. — Merivale. 
Spirit  of  "fire  and  dew. "     See  To  O.  S.  C— Trumbull. 
Spirit  of  song,  whose  shining  wings  have  borne.     See 

Song  and  Science.— Shinn. 
Spirit  of  Spring,  thy  coverlet  of  snow.     See  Waking 

of  Spring,  The. — Custance. 
Spirit  of  Twilight,   through  your  folded  wings.     See 

Twilight. — Custance. 
Spirit  that  breathest  through  my  lattice:  thou.     See 

Evening  Wind,  The. — Bryant. 
Spirit  that  moves  the  .sap  in  spring.     See  Fertility. — 

Thompson. 
Spirits  of  fire,  that  brood  not  long.     See  Lalla  Rookh. 

— Moore. 
Spite  of  storm  and  stress  of  weather,  in  a  gale  that 

lashed  the  land.     See  Story  of  a  Stowaway,  The. 

—Scott. 
Splendors  of  morning  the  billow-crests  brighten.     See 

Surf. — Stedman. 
Spontaneous  Us!     See  Presto  Furioso. — Seaman. 
Sjjorting  through  the  forest  wide.     See  Little  Children. 

— Howitt. 
Spose  man  lun  slam — -bang  flont  of  gal.     See  John 

Chinaman's  "Comin'  through  the  Rye." — (Har- 
per's Magazine.) 
S'pose  ye've  noticed  that  there  cunnin'  little  rascal 

taggin'    Dan    about,    heven't    ye?     See    Lumber 

Camp  Romance,  A. — Crocker.  . 

Spouse!  sister!  angel!  pilot  of  the  fate.     See  Epipsy- 

chidion. — Shelley. 
Sprawling  down  one  hill  and  half-way  up  another.     See 

Dave  Flint's  Temptation. — Anon. 
Spread  a  feast  with  choicest  viands.     See  Cleopatra  to 

Antony. — Doudney. 
Spread  straw  and  tan-bark  on  the  street.     See  After 

the  Battle. — Burdette. 
Sprig,   sweet    sprig,  is  cobig.     See  Beautiful   Sprig. — 

Welsh. 
"Spring  all  the  graces  of  the  age."     See  Song  before 

the  Entry  of  the  Masquers. — .lonson. 
Spring  came  with  tiny  larces  thrusting.     See  Blossom 

Time. — Larremore. 
Spring  comes  hither.     See  Spanish  Gypsy,  The  (Spring 

Song).— Eliot. 
Spring  gives  the  order,  "Forward,  March!"     See  For- 
ward, March! — -Anon. 
Spring  is  coming!     Everywhere  there  is  a  fragrance  in 

the  air.     See  Spring  Comes. — Anon. 
Spring  is  coming,  spring  is  coming.     See  Oxfordshire 

Children's  May  Song. — Anon. 
Spring  is  coming!  Spring  is  coming.      See  also  Spring 

is  Coming. — Anon. 
Spring  is  growing  up.     See   Spring   and   Summer. — 

Anon. 
Spring  is  on  the  mountain.     See  Spring  Time.-^Anon. 
Spring  is  the  morning  of  the  year.      See  Golden-rod. 

— Sherman. 
Spring  it  is  che-ry.     See  Ballad :  "  Spring,"  etc. — Hood. 
Spring,  summer,  autumn,  winter.     See  Builders.  The  — 

Elliott. 
Spring!     The  beautiful  spring  is  coming.     See  April. — 

Howitt. 
Spring,  the  sweet  Spring,  is  the  year's  pleasant  king. 

See  Spring,  the  Sweet  Spring. — Nashe. 
Spring,   with   that   nameless  pathos  in  the  air.     See 

Spring  in  Carolina. — Timrod. 
Spring-time  is  coming  again,  my  dear.     See  Song,  A: 

"S'lring-time  is  coming,"  etc. — Baker. 
Sprinkle,  sprinkle,  comes  the  rain.     See  Merry  Rain. — 

Anon. 
Sprinkle,   sprinkle,   water-cart.     See  Aquarius. — Bur- 
dette. ^ 
Spruce  Macaronis,  and  pretty  to  see.     See  Maryland 

Battalion,  The.— Palmer. 


Sprung  from  a  race  of  soldiers.     See  Career  of  Gordon, 

The.— Swift. 
Sprung  from  a  sword-sheath  fit  for  Mars.     See  Villa- 

nelle. — Harrison. 
Sprung  from  the  blood  of  Israel's  scattered  race.     See 

Rachel. — Arnold. 
Squeak  the  fife  and  beat  the  drum.     See  Independence 

Day— 1798 —Tyler. 
Squire  Peleg  Sanford  and  all  his  family.  "     See  Gucom 

and  the  Backlog. — Haliburton. 
"Stack    Arms!"     I've    gladly    heard    the    cry.     See 

"Stack  Arms." — Alston. 
"Stand,    Bayard,    stand!"     The    steed    obeyed.     See 

Lady  of  the   Lake,   The. — Scott. 
Stand  by  the  flag!     Its  stars,  like  meteors  gleaming. 

See  Stand  by  the  Flag'.— Wilder. 
Stand  by   the  fiaz!  on  land  and  ocean  billow.     See 

Stand  by  the  Flag. — Wilder. 
Stand   close   around,    ye   Stygian    set.     See   Dirce. — 

Landor. 
Stand  here  by  my  side  and  turn,  I  pray.     See  Snow- 
shower,  The. — Bryant. 
Stand,  in  imagination,  of  a  summer's  morning.     See 

Triumph  of  Peace,  The.— Chapin. 
Stand  still,  and  I  will  read  to  thee.  See  Lecture  upon 

the  Shadow,  A. — Donne. 
Stand  still,  my  soul,  in  the  silent  dark.     See  My  Soul 

and  I. — Whittier. 
Stand!  the  ground's  your  own,  my  braves!     See  War- 
ren's Address. — Pierpont. 
"Stand  to  your  guns,  men!"    Morris  cried;  small  need 

to  pass  the  word.     See  On  Board  the  Cumberland, 

March  7,  1862.— Boker. 
Stand  up — erect!     Thou  hast  the  form.     See  Laborer, 

The.— Gallagher. 
Stand   up,   ye   spellers  now  and   sjjell.     See  Spelling 

Class,  The.— Dyer. 
Standing  at   the   portal.     See  New  Year's   Hymn. — 

Havergal. 
Standing  forth  on  life's  rough  way.     See  Our  Children. 

— Bryant. 
Standing  here  on  the  threshold  of  Happy  New  Year. 

See  Which  Path?- Goodfellow. 
Standing    on    Saxon    foundations    and    inspired.     See 

Scholar  in  a  Republic,  The  (Educate  the  Masses). 

—Phillips. 
Standing  on  tiptoe  ever  since  my  youth.     See  Stand- 
ing on  Tip-tos. — Cameron. 
Standing   with   her  palms  together.     See  Fireflies. — 

AC.  S. 
Star  of  the  flowers,  and  flower  of  the  stars.     See  Dia- 
mond, The. — Wilkinson. 
Star  of  the  mead!     Sweet  daughter  of  the  day.     See 

Daisy,  The. — Leyden. 
Star   of  the   North!   though   night   winds   drift.     See 

Fugitive  Slave's  Apostrophe  to  the  North  Star, 

The. — Pierpont. 
Star  that  bringest  home  the  bee.     See  Song  to  the 

Evening  Star. — Campbell. 
Star-dust  and  vaporous  light.     See  Noel. — Gilder. 
Stars  of  the  summer  night!    See  Spanish  Student,  The 

(Serenade) . — Longfellow. 
Stars  trembling  o'er  us,  and  sunset  before  us.     See 

In  Our  Boat. — Craik. 
"Star-spangled  battle-flag,  tattered  and    torn."     See 

Song  of  the  Battle-flag. — Anon. 
Starting,     starting,    from    the     earth.      See    May. — 

Curtis. 
Stately  yon  vessel  sails  down  the  tide.     See  Ship,  The 

— Southey. 
States  are  not  great.     See  John  Brown. — Ironquill. 
Statesman,  I  thank  thee!  and,  if  yet  dissent.     See  T.o 

William  H.  Seward. — Whittier. 
"Stay   at   home,"    said   Inclination.     See   Duty   and 

Inclination. — Anon. 
Stay,  I  fell  asleep.     Jaikes,  you  don't  know  what  a 

murderer's     sleep     is?     See     Wilfred     Den\'er's 

Dream. — Anon. 
Staj%  jailer,  stay,  and  hear  my  woe.     See  Maniac,  The 

— Lewis. 
Stay,  lady,  stay,  for  mercy's  sake.     See  Orphan  Boy's 

Tale.  The.— Opie. 
Stay,  mortal  stay;  nor  heedless  thus.     See  One  Glass 

More. — Anon. 
Stay.   O   sweet,  and  do  not  rise  I    See  Daybreak. — 

Donne. 
Stay  one  moment,  ere  you  leave  me.     See  Noon  of 

Life,  The.— Scott. 
Stay,  Phoebus,  stay!     See  same. — ^ Waller. 
Stay,  Roman,  in  pity!^if  not  for  thy  life.     See  Resolve 

of  Regulus,  The. — Sargent. 
Stay,  stay  at  home,  my  heart,  and  rest.       See   Song. 

— Longfellow. 


830 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Strive 


Stay  with  me,  Poesy!  playmate  of  my  childhood!.    See 

Invocation  to  Poesy,  An. — Mackay. 
Stay  you,  that  bear  the  course,  and  set  it  down.     See 

King  Richard  III. — Shakespeare. 
Steadfast  as  sorrow,  fiery,  sad  and  sweet.     See  For  a 

Portrait  of  Felice  Orsini. — Anon. 
Steady,   boys.  Steady!     Keep  your  arms  ready.     See 

Wounded  Soldier,  The. — Watson. 
Steer  hither,  steer   your   wingod    pines.      See    Inner 

Temple  Masque,  The  (Siren's  Song,  The).— Browne. 
Stella,  since  thou  so  right  a  princess  art.     See  Astro- 

phel   and   Stella  (Sonnet  CVII.). — Sidney. 
Stella,  the  only  planet  of   my   light.      See    Astrophel 

and  Stella  (Sonnet  XLVl II.). —Sidney. 
Stella,  think  not  that  I  by  verse  seek  fame.    See  Astro- 
phel and  Stella  (Sonnet  XC.). — Sidney. 
Step  by  step  onward.     See  Keep  to  the  Line. — Mur- 
ray. 
"Step    gently,    sir,    step    gently."     See    Wee,    Wee 

Bairnie,  The. — Anon. 
Stern  be  the  pilot  in  the  dreadful  hour.     See  To  Abra- 
ham Lincoln. — Piatt. 
Stem  Daughter  of  the  Voice  of  God!     See  Ode  to  Duty. 

— Wordsworth. 
Stern  granite  Gate  of  Wicklow,  with  what  awe.     See 

Scalp,  The. — Savage-Armstrong. 
Stem  land!     We  love  thy  woods  and  rocks.     See  New 

England. — Anon. 
Stick  to  your  aim;  the  mongrel's  hold  will  slip.     See 

Perseverance. — Holmes. 
Stiff  are  the  warrior's  muscles.    See  Lines  Written  after 

a  Battle. —  (Punch.) 
Still  and  dark  along  the  sea.     See  Twilight  on  Sumter. 

— Stoddard. 
Still  and  gentle  all  around.     See  Little  Snowfiakes. — 

Anon. 
Still  and  sweet  was  the  home  that  stood.     See  Bride 

of  the  Greek  Isle,  The. — Hemans. 
Still  are  the  ships  that  in  haven  ride.  See  Outwards  or 

Homewards. — Bourdil.  on. 
Still  as  I  move  thou  movest.     See  Her  Shadow. — Pul- 

len. 
Still,  as  we  saunter  down  the  crowded  street.     See 

Old  and  New  Rome. — Merivale. 
Still  do  the  stars  impart  their  light.     See  Falsehood. — 

C'artwright. 
Still  dumb  thou  sittest,  with  a    downcast  look.      See 

Love  and  Books. — Gosse. 
Still  farther  woul4  I   ^Y,  my  child.     See  Aboriginal 

Mother's  Lament,  An. — fiarpur. 
Still  first,  as  long  and  long  ago.     See  Massachusetts 

Line,  The. — Lowell. 
Still  I  am  patient,   tho'   you're  merciless.     See  Joseph 

and    his    Brethren    (Patriarchal    Home,     The). — 

Wells. 
Still,  in  the  light  of  morning  gray.     See  Sunset  on  the 

Tusket. — Huntington. 
Still  in  thy  love  I  trust.     See  same. — Fields. 
Still  let  my  tyrants  know,  I  am  not  doom'd  to  wear. 

See  Prisoner,  The. — Bronte. 
Still  may  the  Muses  foster  thee,  O  friend.     See  To 

Lord  De  Tabley. — Dobson. 
Still  more,  still  more:     I  feel  the  demon  move.     See 

Saul  (David  Exorcising  Malzah).- — Heavysege. 
Still  on  the  lips  of   all   we   question.     See  To   Lydia 

Maria  Child. — Whittier. 
Still  on  the  tower  stood  the  vane.     See  Letters,  The. — 

Tennyson. 
Still  onward  swept  the  hurricane  of  strife.     See  Battle 

of  Fredericksburg,  The. — Comwallis. 
Still  she  stood  in  the  shunning  crowd.     See  Shriving  of 

Guinevere,  The. — Mitchell. 
Still  sits  the  school-house  by  the  road.     See  In  School- 
days.— Whittier. 
Still,  still,  with  thee,  when  purple  morning  breaketh. 

See  When  I  Awake  I  am  Still  with  Thee. — Stowe. 
Still  Sundays,  rising  o  'er  the  world.     See  Days  of  Rest. 

— Spofford. 
Still  thirteen  years:  'tis  autumn  now.     See  Palinode. — 

Lowell. 
Still  though  the  one  I  sing.     See  same. — Whitman. 
Still,  though  the  sun  is  setting.     See  Blue  Flower,  The. 

— Merrill. 
Still  to  be  neat,  still  to  be  drest.     See  Simplex  Mundi- 

tiip. — Jonson. 
Still  will  we  trust,  though  earth  seem  dark  and  dreary. 

See  Trust. — Burleigh. 
Stillness    reigned    in    the    vast    amphitheatre.     See 

Gladiator,  The. — Anon. 
Stir  in  a  fool  to  make  us  laugh.     See  Receipt  for  a 

Modem  Novel. — Anon. 
Stirring  drums  in  a  sunny  street.     See  Two  Views  of 

War. — Palmer. 


"Stitch,  stitch,  stitch,  in  poverty,  hunger,  and  dirt." 

See  Second  Prize,  The. — McBride. 
Stone  by  stone  the  marble  palace  reared  its  snowy 

front  on  high.     See  Palace,  The. — Denison. 
Stood  the  afflicted  mother  weeping.     See  Stabat  Mater 

Dolorosa. — Jacopone. 
Stop  a  moment,  boy.     I've  a  word  to  say.     See  Axe  to 

Grind,  An. — -Anon. 
Stop  and  tell  us  all  the  story.     See  New  Story,  The. — 

Murray. 
Stop,    (Christian  passer-by — stop,  child  of  God.     See 

Epitaph  on  Himself. — Coleridge. 
Stop ! — for  thy  tread  is  on  an  Empire's  dust.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Field  of  Waterloo,  The).— 

Byron. 
Stop,    Mortal!     Here    thy    brother    lies.     See    Poet's 

Epitaph,  A. — Elliott. 
Stop  on  the  Appian  Way.     See  On  the  Campagna. — 

Stoddard. 
Stop,  stop,  pretty  water!     See  same. — Follen. 
Stop!  stranger,  may  I  speak  with  you?     ah!  yes,  you 

needn't  fear.     See  Where's  Annette? — Aden. 
Stop  that,  or  I'll  open  the  door  and  make  you.    See 

Little  Women  (Reconciliation,  The). — Alcott. 
Stop  up  th'  access  and  passage  to  remorse.      See  Mac- 
beth.  -Shakespeare. 
Stop  yer  kickin'  'bout  the  times.     See  Stop  yer  Kickin' ! 

— Anon. 
Stork,  I  am  justly  wroth.  See  Cobbler  and  Stork. — Field. 
Storm-wearied  Argo  slept  upon  the  water.     See  Hylas. 

—Taylor. 
Stout  Sir  Walter  was  old  but  hearty.     See  Old  Sir 

Walter. — Thornbury. 
Straight  to  his  heart    the  bullet  crushed.     See  Apoca- 
lypse.— Realf. 
Straightway  Virginius  led  the  maid  a  little  space  aside. 

See  Virginia. — Macaulay. 
Strain,  strain  thine  eyes,  this  parting  is  for  aye!     See 

Lohengrin. — Payne. 
Strange  fits  of  passion  have  I  known.     See  Lucy. — 

Wordsworth. 
Strange  I  can't  find  it.     See  Pink  Perfumed  note,  A. — 

Meyers. 
Strange   that   an   innocent,   girlish   way      See   Derby 

Day. — Clark. 
Strange   that   the   city  thoroughfare.     See  Hi-Spy. — 

Field. 
Strange  here?     Yes,  come  from  Varmount.    See  When 

Greek  Meets  Greek. — Anon. 
Stranger,  if  thou  hast  learned  a  truth  which  needs. 

See  Inscription  for  the  Entrance  to  a  Wood. — 

Bryant. 
"Stranger,  it  is  in  vain,"  she  cried.     See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The    (Blanche  of  Devan's  Last  Words). — ■ 

Scott. 
Stranger!  whose  steps  have  reached  this  solitude.     See 

In  a  Forest. — Southey. 
Strangers   visiting   the   beautiful   city   of   Burlington. 

See  Settling  under  Difficulties. — Burdette. 
Strangers  yet !     See  sam.e. — Houghton. 
Stream!  meandering  through  the  plain.     See  Lines  to 

the  Des  Moines  River. — Parsons. 
Streaming  down   the  ages,   blighting  the   rose  buds. 

See  Harvest  of  Rum,  The. — Denton. 
Strength  for  the  day!     At  early  dawn  I  stand.     See 

sam,e. —  (Scrtftner's  Magazine.) 
Strew  not  earth  with  empty  star.     See  Second  Brother, 

The.— Beddoes. 
Strew  on  her  ro.ses,  roses.     See  Requiescat. — Arnold. 
Strew  the  fair  garlands  where  slumber  the  dead.     See 

Decoration  Day. — Smith. 
Stricken  in  the  midst  of  public  service.     See  American 

and  the  Corsician,  The. — Seward. 
Strictly  speaking,  I  never  had  a  brother  Henry.     See 

My  Brother  Henry. — Barrie. 
Strictly  speaking,  there  were  only  six  Poor  Travellers. 

See  Seven  Poor  Travellers,  The. — Dickens. 
Strike  for  prohibition.     See  same. — Anon. 
Strike    for    the     Anglo-Saxon!     See    War     Poem. — 

LeGallienne. 
Strike  for  your  altars.     See  I^one  Star  of  Cuba,  The. — 

Adee. 
Strike  the  concertina's  melancholy  string!     See  Story 

of  Prince  Agib,  The.— Gilbert. 
Strike  up,  you  lusty  gallants.     See  Captain  Ward  and 

the  Rainbow. — Anon. 
Strikes  are  quite  proper,  only  strike  right.  See  Strikes. 

— -Anon. 
String  your  arrow  to  my  lips,   Harry  Lincoln.     See 

Riding  to  the  Hunt. — I^eahy. 
Strive  to  live  well.     See  sam.e. — Anon. 
Strive:  yet  I  do  not  promise.     See  Strive,  Wait,  and 

Pray. — Procter. 


831 


strong 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Strong  are  the  mountains,  Lord,  but  stronger  Thou! 

See  same. — Anon. 
Strong  in  the  steadfast  purpose,  be.     See  Purpose. — 

Piatt. 
Strong   men    have   strong   convictions.     See   same. — 

Garfield.  ^ 

Strong    Son    of   Goa,    immortal    Love.     See  In  Me- 

moriam  ("Strong  son,"  etc.). — Tennyson. 
Students    and    reviewers    of    American    history.     See 
Foreign    Influence     upon    American    University 
■  Life. — Anon. 
Studies  serve  for  delight,  for  ornament,  and  for  ability. 

See  Of  Studies. — Bacon. 
Stumpy  Wicks  was  dead.     See    Over    the    Range. — 

Anon. 
Sturdy  saint  militant,  stout  genial  soul.     See  Charles 

H.  Spurgeon. — (London  Punch.) 
Sturdy  Sammie  Simpson  sought  sweet  Sallie  Stevens' 

society.     See  Sammie— Sallie. 
Sturdy  Steenie,  rose-cheeked,  bright-eyed.     See  Little 

Steenie. — Ruth. 
Sublime — invention  ever  young.     See  Song  to  David. — 

Smart. 
Sublime  is  patriotism  that  faces  death  for  the  right ! 

See  Soldier,  The. — Anon. 
Sublime  tobacco!  which  from  east  to  west.     See  Island, 

The.— Byron. 
Such  a  bustle  ensued  that  you  might  have  thought  a 
goose    the    rarest    of    all    birds.     See    Christmas 
Carol,  \  (Christmas  Goose,  The). — Dickens. 
Such  a  funiw  Kttle  roly-poly  Polly  as  she  was.     See 

Polly's  Thanksgiving. — Stoddard. 
Such  a  horrid  jogafry  lesson!     See  Indignant  Scholar, 

An. — Anon. 
Such  a  muff!     Too  cross  and  disagreeable  for  any- 
thing!    See  Rule  Golden,  The. — Anon. 
"Such  a  quantity  of  them,"  said  the  Widow  Winton. 

See  Wild  Grapes. — Anon. 
Such  a  scene  as  the  division  of  last  Tuesday.     See 

Passage  of  the  Reform  Bill. — Macaulay. 
Such  a  starved   bank  of  moss.      See   Two    Poets  of 

Croisic  ("Such  a  starved,"  etc.). — Browning. 
Such  a  wee,   mischievous  lassie.     See  Her   Name. — • 

Anon. 
Such   age   how  beautiful!     O   Lady   bright.     See  To 
Lady    Fitzgerald,    in      her    Seventieth    Year. — 
Wordsworth. 
Such  as  are  thy  habitual  thoughts,  such  also  will  be 
the  character  of  thy  mind.     See  Thoughts  of  Mar- 
cus Aurelius  (Even  in  a  Palace). — Antoninus. 
Such  beautiful,  beautiful  hands!     See  Beautiful  Hands. 

— Anon. 
Such    doleful    faces!    what's   the    matter,    girls?     See 

Better  than  a  Doctor. — Leach. 
Such,    fellow-citizens,    as   I    contemplate    them.     See 

Great  Issue,  The. — Everett. 
Such  hints  as  untaught  Nature  yields.     See  Nature: 

the  Artist. ^Knowles. 
Such  is  my  name,  and  such  my  tale.     See  Giaour,  The 

("Such  is  my  name,"  etc.). — Bvron. 

Such  is  the  death  the  soldier  dies.     See  same. — Wilson. 

Such  is  the  destiny    of    all    on    earth.     See   Minstrel, 

The;  or.  The  Progress  of  Genius  (Life  beyond  the 

Tomb) .— Beattie. 

Such  is  the  intrinsic  excellence  of  Christianity.     See 

Inspiration  of  the  Bible,  The. — Winthrop. 
Such  is  the  mould  that  the  blest  tenant  feeds.     See 

Battle  of  the  Summer's  Islands,  The. — Waller. 
Such  let  me  seem  till  such  I  be.  See  Wilhclm  Meister's 
Apprenticeship  (Mignon  Aspiring   to   Heaven). — 
Goethe. 
Such  natural  debts  of  love  our  Oxford  knows.     See 

Martyr's  Memorial. — Guiney. 
Such  often,  like  the  tube  they  so  admire.     See  Conver- 
sation.— Cowper. 
Such  souls,  whose  sudden  visitations  daze  the  world 

See  Philip  van  Artevelde. — Taylor. 
Such  special  sweetness  was  about.     See  That  Day  You 

Came. — Reese. 
Such  times  as  windy  moods  do  stir.     See  Spirit  of  the 

Wheat,  The. — Valentine. 
Such  was  he,  our  Martyr-chief.     Sec  Ode  Recited  at 
the  Harvard  Commemoration.  July  21 .  1865  (Abra- 
ham Lincoln). — Lowell. 
Such  was  old  Chaucer:   such  the  placid  mien.     See 
Inscription  for  a  Statue  of  Chaucer  at  Woodstock 
— Akenside. 
Such  was  that  happy  garden-state.     See  Solitude.— 

Marvell. 
Such  was  the  Child-world  of  the  long  ago.     See  Old 

Home  Folks,  The. — Riley. 
Such  waa  the  poise  in  which  the  battle  hung.     See 
Iliad,  The  (Exploit  of  Hector,  The).— Homer.  ' 


Such  was  the  rise  of  this  prodigious  fire.     See  Fire  of 

London,  The. — Dryden. 
Such  was  Zuleika!  such  around  her  shone.     See  Bride 

of  Abydos,  The. — Byron. 
Such  were  the  shepherds  of  Judea!     See  Angel  and  the 

Shepherds,  The.— Wallace. 
"Suck,  baby,  suck!  mother's  love  grows  by  giving." 

See  Gipsy's  Malison,  The.— Lamb. 
Suddenly — all  the  sky  is  hid.     See  Summer  Storm. — 

Lowell. 
Suddenly  an  enormous  mass  of  snow  and  ice.     See 

Avalanches  of  the  Jungfrau. — Cheever. 
Suddenly,    shrill    and   clear,    the    bugle    sounded   the 

garde  a  vous.     See  Fine  Battle  Picture. — Anon. 
Suddenly  the  notes  of  the  deep-laboring  organ  burst 
upon  the  ear.      See  Westminster  Abbey  (Organ, 
The). — Irving. 
Sue  and  Sally  jor  Sallie]  went  a-fishing.     See  Queer 

Fish  They  Caught,  The. — Brine. 
Sue  ought   to   have   been   married  a  long   while   ago. 
See  Adventureji  of    Jimmy    Brown,    The  (Jimmy 
Brown's  Sister's  Wedding). — Alden. 
"Sue,"  said  Tom,  "did  you  hear  this?"     See  Highly 

Evangelical  Osculation. — Anon. 
Sugar-toothed  Dick  for  dainties  was  sick.     See  Stolen 

Custard,  The.— -Anon. 
Sullen   and   dull,    in   the   September   day.     See   Last 

Reservation,  The. — Learned. 
Sumer  [or  summer]  is  icumen  [or  i-cumin  or  i-cummen] 

in.     See  Coming  of  Spring,  The. — Anon. 
Summer  at  the  seaside.     See  Love  at  the  Seaside. — 

Anon. 
Summer  dieth  :^o'er  his  bier.     See  Dirge  for  Summer, 

A. — Evans. 
Summer  fading,  winter  comes.     See  Picture-books  in 

Winter. — Stevenson . 
Summer  has  gone.     See  Life  in  the  Autumn  Woods. — 

Cooke. , 
Summer  is  coming,  summer  is  coming.     See  Throstle, 

The. — -Tennyson. 
"Summer   is   dead! — it    was   the   wind   that    spake." 

See  Passing  nf  Summer,  The. — Hunt. 
Summer  is  fading,  the  broad  leaves  that  grew.     See 

Farewell  to  Summer. — Arnold. 
Summer  [or  sumer]  is  i-cummen  [or  i-cumin  or  icumen] 

in.     See  Coming  of  Spring,  The. — Anon. 
Summer  is  over,  and  the  leaves  are  falling.     See  Noc- 
turne.— Baker. 
Summer  is  the   time   for   swings.     See  Jumping  the 

Rope. — Denton . 
Summer  joys  are  o'er.     See  Winter  Song. — Holty. 
Summer  moon,  summer  moon!  across  the  west  you  fly. 

See  Summer  Moon. — Buchanan. 
Summer    nights    at    Grandpa's — ain't    they  soft  and 
still!      See  Summer   Nights  at   Grandpa's. — Lin- 
coln. 
Summer  of   'sixty-three,    sir,    and   Conrad   was  gone 

away.     See  Kentucky  Belle. — Woolson. 
Summer  or  Winter  or  Spring  or  Fall.     See  Masque  of 

the  Seasons,  A. — Riley. 
Summer  set  lip  to  earth's  bosom  bare.     See  Poppy, 

The. — Thompson. 
Sumter    and    Appomattox!     See    Citizen's    Responsi- 
bility.— McKinley. 
Sun  am  des  a  golden  ball.     See  Sleep  Time  in  Dark- 
town. —  {Baltimore  American.) 
Sun   and   skies  and   clouds   of   June.     See   October's 

Bright  "Blue  Weather. — Jackson. 
Sun,  bright  sun,  what  dost  thou  here.     See  Song  of 

the  Waters. — Anon. 
Sun  comes,  moon  comes.     See  When? — Tennyson. 
Sun  like   a   furnace   hung   up    over    head.     See   Mid- 
summer.— -Lincoln . 
Sun  of  my  soul,  thou  Saviour  dear.     See  Sun  of  My 

Soul.— Keble. 
Sun  of  the  stately  Day.      See  National  Ode:  Read  at 
the  Celebration  in   Independence  Hall,   Philadel- 
phia, July  4,  1876.— Taylor. 
Sunday  morning  in   Plymouth   Church.     See  Slave's 

Auction,  A. — Eaton. 
Sundays  the  pillars  are.     See  Sunday. — Herbert. 
Sunny  breath  of  roses.     See  Rose  Song. — Sawyer. 
Sunset!  a  hush  is  on  the  air.     See  Dream  of  Home,  A. 

— Cary. 
Sunset   and   evening   star.     See   Crossing   the   Bar. — 

Tennyson. 
Sunset  at  last,  and  the  evening  came.     See  Bivouac  by 

the  Rappahannock. — Roe. 
Sunset  glories  are  smiling  down.     See  At  Sunset. — 

Clark. 
Sunset  with  its  rosy  feet.     See  same. — Anon. 
Superb  and  sole,  upon  a  plum(5d  spray.     See  Mocking- 
bird, The. — Lanier. 


832 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Sweet 


Superintindint     wuz     Flannigan.     See     Finnigan     to 

Flannigan. — Gillilan. 
Suppose  a  bright   green  leaf  that  grows.     See  Every 

Little  Helps. — Anon. 
Suppose,   Fadettc,   that   I,   instead  of  keeping  tryst. 

See  Suppo.se. — Robertson. 
Suppose  it  were  perfectly  certain  that  the  life  and  for- 
tune.    See  Liberal  Education  and  where   to  Find 

it,  A  (Education). — Huxley. 
Suppose,  my  little  lady.     See  Suppose! — Gary. 
Suppose  the  Jack  who  went  with  Jill.     See  Jack  and 

Jill. — Denton. 
Suppose  the  little  breezes.     See  Breezes,  The. — Larcom. 
Sappos3  the  little  cowslip.     See  Deeds  of  Kindness.— 

Sargent 
Suppose  we  think  little  about   "Number  One.'      See 

Suargestion  fo    a  Happy  New  Year,  A. — Doc^ge. 
Suppo.«e,  when  now  the  house  is  dumb.     See  Ghosts  in 

the  Library. — Lang. 
Suppose  you  lived  in  a  little  green  house.     See  Sup- 
pose.— (Our  Little  Men  and  W omen^ 
Suppose  you  screeve?  or  go  cheap-jack?     See  Villon's 

Straight  Tip  to  all  Cross  Govs. — Henley. 
Suppose  your  ta.sk,  my  little  man.   See  Suppose  ("Sup- 
pose your  task,"  etc.). — Gary. 
Suppo.sin',   ez   I'm   settin'   upon  this  corn-field   fence. 

See  Supposin'. — M'Glasson. 
Supposing  all  the  teachers.     See  Some  Suppositions. — 

Denton. 
Supposing  the  grass  should  forget  to  grow.     See  Sup- 
posing.— Prescott. 
Sure,  an'  did  T  tell  yez  how  I  wint  to  the  dintist  yister- 

day?     See  Miss  Maloney  Goes  to  the   Denti.st. — 

Anon. 
Sure  and  exact, — the  master's  quiet  touch.     See  Dead 

Player,  The. — Wilson. 
Sure  enough!     That  Miss  Abigail  Fisher.     See  Abigail 

Fisher. — Haywood. 
Sure,  Felix  McGarty  he  lived  all  alone.     See  Ballad    of 

McCarty's  Trombone,  The. — Lincoln. 
Sure,   he's  five  months  an'   he's  two   foot  long.     See 

Johneen .— O'  Neill. 
Sure  now,  ladies  and  gintlemen,  if  ye  plaze,  I'll  relate 

the  great  mistake  1  made.     See  Paudeen  O'Kaf- 

ferty's  Say-voyage. — Anon. 
Sure    the   Shak-a-spear   class   is   comin'    here   to-day. 

See  Hiartville  Shakespeare  Club,  The. — Locke. 
Sure  there's  a  dale  o'  dustin'  to-day.     See  Love  in  High 

Life. — Denison. 
Sure,    thou    didst    flourish    once!    and   many    springs. 

See  Timber,  The. — Vaughan. 
Sure,    'tis  a  serious  thing  to   die!     See  Grave,   The. 

—Blair. 
Surely  a  Voice  hath  called  her  to  the  deep.     See  Lines. 

— Greene. 
Surely,  if  happiness  can  ever  come  from  the  honors  or 

triumphs  of  this  world.     See  Memorial  Address  on 

the  Life  and  Character  of  James  A.  Garfield  (Death 
,  of  Garfield). — Blaine. 

Surely  there  is  a  vein  for  the  silver,  and  a  place  for 

gold    where    they    find    it.     See  Job  (Knowledge 

and  Wisdom). — Bible. 
Surely  yon  heaven,  where  angels  see  God's  face.     See 

Not  Verv  Far. — Bonar. 
Surging  in  the  heart  of  man  is  an  indefinable  unrest. 

See  Philosophy  of  Progress,  The. — Dunlavy. 
Surly  Tim  is  represented  to  have  been  an  operative. 

See  Surly  Tim's  Trouble. — Burnett. 
Surprised  by   joy — impatient   as   the  Wind.     See  De- 

sideria. — Wordsworth. 
Surrounded    by    unnumber'd    foes.     See    His    Banner 

over  Me. — Massey. 
Sursum  corda.     We  have  in  our  own   time  seen  the 

Republic    survive    an    irrepressible    conflict.     See 

Lift  up  Your  Hearts. — Anon. 
Survey  this  shield,  all  bossy  bright.     See  Tale  of  Drury 

Lane,  A. — Smith. 
Susan  Ellsworth  lived  just  out  from  Boston  and  was  a 

schoolmistress.     See  Susan's  Escort. — Hale. 
Susan  poisoned  her  grandmother's  tea.     See  Susan. — 

Anon. 
Susie,  my  baby's  very  sick!     See  Sick  Doll,  The. — 

Anon. 
"Suspense  is  worse  than  bitter  grief."     See  "I  Canna' 

Turn  the  Key  and  My  Bairn  Outside." — Anon. 
Suspicions  amongst  thoughts  are  like  bats.     See  Of 

Suspicion. — Bacon. 
Suthin'  to  put  in  a  story.     See  Romance  of  the  Saw- 
dust, A. — Baker. 
Svend  Vonved  binds  his  sword  to  his  side.     See  Svend 

Vonved. — Borrow. 
Swallow,   my  sister,   O  sister  swallow.     See  Itylus. — 

Swinburne. 


Swans    sing    before    they    die — 'twere    no    bad    thing. 

See  Epigram  on  a  Bad  Singer. — Coleridge. 
Sway  to  and  fro  in  the  twilight  gray.     See  Shadow- 
town  Ferry. — Uice. 
Swedes!  countrymen!  behold  at  last.     See  Gustavus, 

King  of  Sweden,  to  his  Soldiers. — Lefevre. 
"Sweep  ho!     Sweep  ho!"     See  Chimney-sweep,  The. 

— Hooper. 
Sweep  the  floor  and  then  sweep  the  floor.     See  Sweep- 
ing the  Floor. — Anon. 
Sweet  Adon,  dar'st  thou  not  glance  thine  eye.     See 

Never  too  Late  (Infida's  Song). — Greene. 
Sweet   after  showers,   ambrosial  air.     See  Evening. — 

Tennyson. 
Sweet   and    low,    sweet    and   low.     See    Princess,   The 

( Lullaby) . — Tennyson. 
Sweet  are  the  charms  of  her  I  love.     See  Sweet  Are  the 

Charms. — Booth. 
Sweet  are  the  rosy  memories  of  the  lips.     See  Wande  er, 

The  (Night  in  Italy,  A).— Lytton. 
Sweet  are  the  thoughts  that  savour  of  content.     See 

Content. — Greene. 
Sweet  are  the  uses  of  adversity.     See  As  You  Like  It 

(Adversity). — Shakespeare. 
Sweet  are  the  ways  of  peace,  and  sweet.     See  Chorus 

of  Islanders. — Austin. 
Sweet    Auburn!    loveliest    village    of   the    plain.     See 

Deserted  Village,  The. — Goldsmith. 
Sweet   Autumn  is  no   longer  bright.     See  Winter. — 

Goodale. 
Sweet  babe!  true  portrait  of  thy  father's  face.     See 

Child  Asleep,  The.— Surville. 
Sweet  baby,  sleep!     What  ails  my  dear?     See  Rock- 
ing Hymn,  A. — Wither. 
Sweet,  be  not  proud  of  those  two  eyes.     See  To  Dia- 

neme. — Herrick. 
Sweet,  beautiful  water!     See  Water. — Anon. 
Sweet  bell  of  Stratford,  tolling  low.     See  Passing  Bell 

at  Stratford,  The.— Winter. 
Sweet  Betty  Lee,  the  village  lass.     See  Betty  Lee. — 

Gunnison. 
Sweet  bird,  in  life  thy  tuneful  voice.     See  To  a  Dead 

Bird. — Kellogg. 
Sweet  bird,   that  shunn'st  the  noise  of  folly.     See  II 

Penseroso. — Milton. 
Sweet  bird,  that  sing'st  away  the  early  hours.     See 

Sonnet:    Sweet  Bird. — Drummond. 
Sweet  bird!  up  earliest  in  the  morn.     See  To  a  Thrush 

Singing  in  January. — -Keble. 
Sweet  child  of  an  April  showfer.     See  Mayflower,  The. 

— M'Pherson. 
Sweet  child  of  April,   I   have  found  thy  place.     See 

Pyxidanthera,  The. — Bristol. 
Sweet   country  life,   to   such   unknown.     See  Country 

Life,  The. — Herrick. 
Sweet  daughter  of  a  rous'h  and  stormy  sire.     See  Ode 

to  Spring. — Barbauld. 
Sweet  Day,  so  cool,  so  calm,  so  bright  1     See  Virtue. — 

Herbert. 
Sweet,  do  you  ask  me  if  you  love  or  no?     See  Love 

'   Test,  A. — Herloszsohn. 
Sweet    Echo,    sweetest    Nymph,    that    livest    unseen. 

See  Comus  (Echo). — Milton. 
Sweet  Emma  Moreland  of  yonder  town.     See  Edward 

Gray.- — Tennyson. 
Sweet  eyes  by  sorrow  still  unwet.     See  Wonderland. — 

Peck. 
Sweet  flower  of  the  golden  horn.     See  Columbine. — - 

Rusby. 
Sweet  friends,  I  could  not  speak  before  I  went.     See 

From  One  Who  Went  away  in  Haste. — Weitzel. 
Sweet,  good-night!     See  Romeo    and    Juliet. — Shake- 
speare. 
Sweet  guitar,  so  old  thou  art.     See  To  Maude's  Guitar. 

— Stone. 
Sweet    hand   that,    held   in   mine.     See   same. — (Fra- 

zier's  Magazine.) 
Sweet  heart,  that  no  taint  of  the  throne  or  the  stage. 

See  Noll  Gwynn. — Swinburne. 
Sweet  Highland  Girl,  a  very  shower.     See  To  a  High- 
land Girl. — Wordsworth.  > 
Sweet  in  her  green  dell  the  flower  of  beauty  slumbers. 

See  Song.— Darley. 
Sweet  in  the  innocence  of  youth.     See  Eve  of  Deco- 
ration Day,  The.— Smith. 
Sweet   Innisfallen,   fare   thee  well.     See   Sweet    Innis- 

f  alien. — Moore. 
Sweet   is  a  voice  in  the  land  of    gold.     See  Things 

Delightful. — Sigerson. 
Sweet  is  childhood — childhood's  over.     See  Sweet  is 

Childhood. — Ingelow. 
Sweet  is  our  youth.    See  Sonnet:  "Sweet  is  our  youth." 

— Dp  Vere. 


833 


Sweet 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Sweet  is  the  breath  of  Morn,  her  riaini?  sweet.     See 

Paradise  Lost  (Morning). — Milton. 
"Sweet  is  the  holiness  of  Youth."     See  Edward  VI. — 

Wordsworth. 
Sweet  is  the  lore  which   nature    brinits.     See    Tables 

Turned,  The  ('46weet  is  the  lore,"  etc.). — Words- 
worth. 
Sweet  is  the  pleasure.     See  same — Dwight. 
Sweet  is  the  rose,  but  grows  upon  a  brere.    See  Amoretti 

and   Epithalamion    (Sweet    and    Bitter). — Spen- 
ser. 
Sweet  is  the  scene  when  virtue  dies!     See  Dejith  of  the 

Virtuous,  The. — Barbauld. 
Sweet  is  the  sound  of  infant  voice.     See  "Children 

must  be  Paid  for." — (Punch.) 
Sweet  is  the  time  of  joyous  folk.     See  Hora  Christi. — 

Brown. 
Sweet    is    the    voice    that    calls.     See    September. — 

Arnold 
Sweet  is  true  love,  tho'  given  in   vain,  m   vain.     See 

Idylls   of    the    King    (Song  of    Elaine). — Tenny- 
son. 
Sweet  ladv,  let  vour  lids  unclose.     See  Phantom  of 

the  Rose,  This.— Hart. 
Sweet    letters    of    the    angel    tongue.     See    xame. — 

Ballou 
Sweet  little  Bennie.  with  thoughtful  face.     See  Com- 
passion.— Riche. 
Sweet    little   Dot   on   the   doorstep   sits,    with    Dolly 

wrapped    in    a    shawl.     See    Dot    and    Dolly. — 

Patterson. 
Sweet  little  face,  so  full  of  slumber  now.     See  Mabel. ^ 

Riley. 
Sweet  little  maid  with  winsome  eyes.     See  Other  One, 

The.— Peck. 
Sweet  little  Major,  he  mounts  my  knee.     See  Private's 

Glory,  The.— Burdette. 
Sweet  love,  if  thou  wilt  gain  a  monarch's  glory.     See 

Picture,  A. — Anon. 
Sweet  maiden  of  Passamaquoddy.     See  Lines  to  Miss 

Florence  Huntingdon. — -Anon. 
Sweet  Malvern  Hill  is  wreathed  in  flame.     See  Un- 
known Hero,  An. — McCabe. 
Sweet  Marv,  pledged  to  Tom,  was  fair.     See  Tom's 

liittle  Star. — Foster. 
Sweet    mouth!     O    let    me    take.     See    Kiss,    A. — 

Domett. 
Sweet  names,  the  rosary  of  my  evening  prayer.     See 

Jjove's  Rosary. — Woodberry. 
Sweet   Nea! — for  your  lovely  sake.     See  Because. — 

Fitzgerald. 
Sweet  nurselings  of  the  vernal  skies.     See  Fifteenth 

Sunday  after  Trinity. — Keble. 
Sweet  order  hath  its  draught    of    bliss.     See    Angel 

in  the  House,  The  (Joy). — -Patmore. 
Sweet  Peace,  where  dost  thou  dwell?     I  humbly  crave. 

See  Peace. — Herbert. 
Sweet  poet  of  the  woods — a  long  adieu!     See  On  the 

Departure  of  the  Nightingale. — Smith. 
Sweet  Robin,  I  have  heard  them  say.     See  Robin  Red- 
breast.— Doane. 
Sweet  rois  of  vertew  and  of  gentilness.     See  To  a  Lady. 

— Dunbar. 
Sweet  rose!  whence  is  this  hue.     See  Madrigal:  Sweet 

Rose!   Whence  is  this  Hue. — Drummond. 
Sweet  saint !  whose  rising  dawned  upon  the  ^ight.    See 

Ariana. — Sanborn. 
Sweet  Saviour!  bless  us  ere  we  go.     See  Evening  Hymn. 

— Faber. 
Sweet  scented  flower!     Who  art  wont  to  bloom.     See 

To  the  Herb  Rosemary. — White. 
Sweet  scented  flowers  on  beauty's  grave.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Decatur. — Crafts. 
Sweet,  serene,  sky-like  flower.     See  Rose,  The. — Love- 
lace. 
Sweet  singer  of  the  Spring,  when  the  new  world.     See 

On  a  Thrush  Singing  in  Autumn. — Morris. 
Sweet  Smile!  the  daughter  of  the  Queene  of  Love.    See 

Amoretti   and    Epithalamion,  Sonnet  XXXIX. — 

Spenser. 
Sweet  smoking  pipe;  bright  glowing  stowe.     See  Sweet 

Smoking  Pipe. — Anon. 
Sweet  Spring,  thou  turn'st  with  all  thy  goodly  train. 

See  Spring  Bereaved,  II. — Drummond. 
Sweet  stream,  that  winds  through  yonder  glade.     See 

Comparison,  A.    Addressed  to  a  Young   Lady. — 

Cowper. 
Sweet  Suffolk  owl,  so  trimly  dight.     See  Sweet  Suffolk 

Owl. — Vautor. 
Sweet  summer  girl  with  curling  tresses.     See  Summer 

Girl,  The.— Anon. 
Sweet,  sweet,  sweet  is  the  wind's  song.     See  Harvest. — 

Cortissoz. 


Sweet,    sweet,    sweet!     Oh,    happy   that    I    am!     See 

Meadow  Larks. — Coolbrith. 
Sweet  the  chime  of  vesper  bell.     See  Vesper  Bell,  The. 

— ^Davis. 
Sweet,  thou  hast  trod  on  a  heart.     See  False  Step,  A. — 

Browning. 
Sweet   thrall,  first  step  to  Love's  felicity!     See  Pas- 
toral Catch,  A. — Dickenson. 
Sweet  to  the  morning  traveller.     See  Traveller's  Re- 
turn, The. — Southey. 
Sweet    violets.    Love's    paradise,    that    spread.     See 

Shepherd  to  the  Flowers,  The. — Anon. 
Sweet  was  the  sound,  when  oft,  at  evening's  clo.se. 

See  Deserted  Village,  The  (Village  Preacher,  The). 

— Goldsmith. 
Sweet  welcome  to  thee,  dainty  winsome  flower!     See 

Arbutus. — Hall. 
Sweet  western  wind,   whose  luck  it  is.     See  To  the 

Western  Wind. — Herrick. 
Sweet  wild  roses  by  the  roadside.     See  Wild  Roses. — 

Crocker. 
Sweet  Willy's  ta'en  him  o'er  the  faem.     See  Willy's 

Lady. — Anon. 
"Sweet  wind,  fair  wind,  where  have  you  been?"     See 

Work. — -Prescott. 
Sweet  wooded  way  in  life,   forgetful  Sleep!     See  To 

Sleep. — Fleming. 
Sweet  world,  if  you  will  hear  me  now.     See  Envoy. — 

Piatt. 
Sweet-breathed  and  young.     See  Woman's  Execution, 

A. — King. 
Sweeter  and  sweeter.     See  Thread  and  Song. — Palmer. 
Sweetest    love,    I    do    not   go.     See  Song:     "Sweetest 

love,"  etc. — Donne. 
Sweetest     of    all     childlike     dreams.     See    Vanishers, 

The.— Whittier. 
Sweetest  of  all  the  traditions.     See  Legend  of  the  Fleur- 
de-lis,  The. — Cronise. 
Sweetest  Savior,  if  my  soul.     See  Dialogue,  A. — Her- 
bert. 
Sweetest  sweets  that  time  hath  rifled.     See  Song  in 

Imitation  of  the  Elizabethans. — Watson. 
Sweetheart,  good-by!  The  [or  That]  fluttering  sail.    See 

Sailor's  Farewell,  The. — Jenkyns. 
Sweetheart,  I  have  no  hero's  face. — See  Sweetheart. — 

Aide. 
Sweetheart,  in  thee  my  hopes  behold.     See  Villon  to 

his  Mistress. — F.  B.  W. 
Sweetheart,  name  the  day  for  me.     See  Wedding-day, 

The. — Stedman. 
Sweetheart,    the  year  is  young.     See  Madrigal,  A. — 

Sherman. 
Sweetly  breathing,   vernal   air. — See  Airs   of   Spring, 

The. — Carew. 
Sweetness,  truth,  and  every  grace.     See  My  Charmer. — 

Waller. 
Sweets  to  the  sweet:  farewell.     See  Hamlet. — Shake- 
speare. 
Sweet-voiced    Hope,    thy    fine    discourse.     See    All's 

Well. — -Wasson. 
Swept    by    the    hot    wind,    stark,    untrackable.     See 

Mohammed  and  Seid. — Morris. 
Swift  across  the  palace  floor.     See  Little  Guinever. — 

Fields. 
Swift  o'er  the  sunny  grass.     See  Shadow-evidence.— 

Dodge. 
Swift,  though  some  trap  mine  eyes  have  never  found. 

See  Harlequin  of  Dreams,  The. — Lanier. 
Swift  to  the  dust  descends  each  honored  name.     See 

Lines    on    the    Death    of    Gen.    Joseph    Reed. — 

Freneau. 
Swift   troopers   twain   ride  side  by  side.     See   Little 

Trooper,  The. — Weir. 
Swifter  far  than  summer's  flight.     See  Remembrance. 

-Shelley. 
Swifter  the  flight !     Far,  far  and  high.     See  Skater  and 

Wolves. — Clarke. 
Swiftly  walk  over  the  western  wave.     See  To  Night. 

—Shelley. 
Swing  away,  from  the  great  cross-beam.     See  Swing 

Away. — Larcom. 
Swing  dat  gate  wide,  'Postle  Peter.     See  De  'Sperience 

of  de  Reb'rend  Quacko  Strong. — Anon. 
Swing  high  and  swing  low.     See  same. — Field. 
Swing  inward,  O  gates  of  the  future.     See  Voice  of  the 

People,  The.— Clarke. 
Swing!     Swing!     Swing!     See  Swing  Song  and  Drill. 

— Morton. 
Swinging    across    the    belfry    tower.     See    Christmas 

Peal,  The.— Spofford. 
Swinging  on  a  birch-tree.     See  same. — Larcom. 
Sword,   on  my  left  side  gleaming.     See  Sword  Song, 

The. — Korner. 


a34 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Tears 


Swords    crossed, — but    not    in    strife.     See    Crossed 

Swords,  The. — Frothingham. 
Swung  in  the  hollows  of  the  deep.     See  Cradle  Song  of 

the  Fisherman's  Wife. — Higginson. 
Symphorien!    Symphorien.     See  Symphorien. — Cooke. 
Symple   is    my   goste.    and  scars   my   letterure.     See 

De  Regimine  Principum. — Occleve. 


Tabitha,  sweet  Tabitha,  I  never  can  forget.     iSee  Con- 
cerning Tabitha's  Dancing  the  Minuet. — Colton. 
Taddeo  Gaddi  built  me.     I  am  old.     See  Old  Bridge  at 

Florence,  The. — Longfellow. 
Tagus  farewell !  that  westward  with  thy  streams.     See 

On  his  Return  from  Spain. — Wyatt. 
Tah^wus  had  conquered  the  tempest.     See  Tahawus. 

— Mendum. 
'Taint  no  use  b'  argying  de  pint    wid  me.     See  I's 

Gwine  to  .line  de  Masons. — Anon. 
Take  a  cigar, — draw  up  your  chair.     See  Government 

Spy,  The.— Story. 
Take   a   robin's    leg    (mind,    the    drumstick   merely). 

<See  Homo'opathic  Soup. — Anon. 
Take  a  seat  in  the  shade,  here,  lady.     See  Station- 
agent's  Story,  The. — Thorpe. 
Take  all  of  me, — I  am  thine  own,  heart,  soul.     See 

Sonnet,  A. — Troubetzkoy. 
Take  along  with  thee.     See  Epistle  to  a  Friend,  to 

Persuade  him  to  the  Wars. — Jonson. 
Take  as  gold  this  old  tradition.     See  Schone  Rothraut. 

— Goodchild. 
Take  away  that  star  and  garter.     See  Charles  Edwards 

at  Versailles. — Aytoun. 
Take  back  all  the  words  thou  hast  breathed  in  my  ear. 

See  Awakened,  The. — Haxard. 
Take  back  into  thy  bosom.  Earth.     See  Stanzas  to  the 

Memory  of  Thomas  Hood. — Simmons. 
Take  back  your  suit.     See  Song  of  Faith  Forsworn,  A. 

— De  Tabley. 
Take  back  your  words  and  dry  your  tears.     See  Take 

Back  Your  Words. — Mifflin. 
Take  care  of  the  minutes,  they  are  priceless,  you  know. 

See  Take  Care  of  the  Minutes. — Anon. 
Take   down  your  map,   sir,   and  you   will  find.     See 

Crime  against  Kansas,  The  (Kansas). — Sumner. 
Take  for  your  hero  some  thoroughbred  scamp.     See 

Recipe  for  a  Poem. — (New  York  Evening  Post.) 
Take  from  dead  Rome  the  home.     See  Bacchic  Lyric, 

A. — Doggett. 
Take  heed,   O   Youth,   both   brave  and   bright.     See 

Warning. — Thaxter. 
Take,    Lord,   the  little  I   can  do.     See  Simplicity. — 

Stryker. 
Take  me,  Mother  Earth,  to  thy  cold  breast.     See  Take 

Me,  Mother  Earth. — Jameson. 
Take  my  life,  and  let  it  be.     See  Consecration  Hymn. 

^Havergal. 
Take  not  from  me  my  lutel     See  John  Avar's    Last 

Lay. — Duvar. 
Take,  O,  take  those  lips  away.     See  Measure  for  Mea.s- 

ure   ("Take,  O   take,"   etc.). — Shakespeare;    also. 

Bloody  Brother,  The   ("Take,  oh  take,"  etc.). — 

Beaumont  and  Fletcher. 
Take  one  example — to  our  purpose  quite.     See  C!ourse 

of  Time.  The  (Lord  Byron).— Pollok. 
Take,    proud    ambition,    take   thy   fill.     See   Sigh    for 

Knockmany,  A. — -Carleton. 
Take  rather  a  coarse  view  of  things  in  general.     See 

How  to  Make  an  Imitation  of  Browning. — Anon. 
Take  some  quiet,  sober  moment  of  life.     See  Folly  of 

Pride,  The.— Smith. 
Take,  take,  lobsters  and  lettuces.     See  Lobster  Salad. 

(Punch.) 
Take  Temperance  to  thy  breast.     See  Talisman,  A. — 

Guiney. 
Take  the  banner  down!  'tis  weary.     See  Trailed  Ban- 
ner, The. — ^Ryan. 
Take  the  dead  Christ  to  my  chamber.     See  Dead  Christ, 

The. — Howe. 
Take  the  mouldering  dust.     See  In  Apprehension,  so 

Like  a  God. — Morgan. 
Take  the  New  England  climate  in  summer. — See  New 

England  Climate  in  Summer,  The. — Choate. 
Take  the  open  air.     See  Sensible. — -Anon. 
Take  the  world  as  it  is — there  are  good  and  bad  in  it. 

See  Take  the  World  as  it  Is. — Swain. 
Take  them  into  the  church.     See  Tact  and  Talent. — 

Anon. 
Take  these  missives  white.     See  St.  Valentine's  Re- 
venge.— Denton. 


Take  this  for  granted,  once  for  all.    See  To  the  Despond- 
ing.— Cary. 
Take  this  slave  of  music.     See  With  a  Guitar,  to  Jane. 

—Shelley. 
Take  thy  lute,  wench,  my  soul   grows  sad.     See  King 

Henry  VIII.  (Scene  from  King  Hen  y  VIII.).— 

Shakespeare. 
Take  up  the  white  man's  burden.     See  White  Man's 

Burden,  The. — Kipling. 
"Take  up  the  foxes,  the  little  foxes,  that  spoil  the 

vines."     See  Little   Foxes  and  Little  Hunters. — 

Anon. 
"Take  your  places.     Goodness  gracious."     See  Coun- 
try Dance,  The.— Jot. 
Talbot,  Elizabeth  will  soon  be  here.     See  Mary  Stuart 

-Schiller. 
Talent    is    something,    but    tact    is    everything.     See 

Tact  and  Talent.^ — (London  Atlas.) 
Talk  about  boys!     I've  got  one.     See  My  Son  John. — 

Thatcher. 
Talk  about  the  anxious  mothers.     See  Twenty-six  of 

Them. — -Denton. 
Talk  about  weather!     I  never  did  in  all  my  born  days. 

See  Mrs.   Brown  on  the  State  of  the  Streets.— 

Sketchley. 
Talk  not  of  temples — there  is  one,  built  without  hands, 

to  mankind  given.     See  Nature's  Temple.- — Ved- 

der. 
Talk    of    sleighing!     Talk    of    dancing!     See    At    the 

Skating  Rink. — Anon. 
Talk  of  study!     Talk  of  learning!     See  Closing  Song 

for  School  Exhibition. — Kavanaugh. 
Talk  to  the  point,  and  stop  when  you  reach  it.     See 

Be  Comprehensive. — Anon. 
Talking  about  flies,  Bones,  what  was  the  largest  trout 

you  ever  caught  with  a  fly?     See  Early  Fly,  The. — 

Anon. 
"Talking    of    preachers,"    said    Caleb    Parker. — See 

Uncle  Cephas'  Yarn. — (Century  Magazine.) 
Talking  of  river-locks  reminds  me  of  an  accident.     See 

Three  Men  in  a  Boat   (Unexpected  Denouement, 

An) . — Jerome. 
Talking  of  sects  till  [or  quite]  late  one  eve.     See  No 

Sects  in  Heaven.— Cleveland. 
Tall  grew  a  weed  outside  a  garden  gate.     See  Weed's 

Mission,  The. — Eytinge. 
Tall,   sombre,    grim,   against   the   morning  sky.     See 

Aspects  of  the  Pines. — Hayne. 
Tambo,  do  you  know  much  of  natural  history?     See 

Tambo  on  Natural  History. — Anon. 
Tambo,   I  hear  you  are  trying  to  learn  the  French 

language      See  Advantage   of   Knowing   French, 

The. — Anon. 
Tambo,  I  know  a  man  who  am  de  mos'  absent-minded 

nigger   I    ebber   saw.     See  Absent-mindedness. — 

Anon. 
Tambo,  my  boy!     See  How  Tambo  Got  Shot. — Anon. 
Tambo,   what    would    you  call   a  handy  thing.     See 

Questions  Easily  Answered. — Anon. 
Tambo,  you  seem  to  be  in  a  brown  study,  what  is  the 

matter?     See  Tambo  on  Kisses. — Anon. 
Tameless  in  his  stately  pride,  along  the  lake  of  islands. 

See  Loon,  The. — Street. 
Tanagra!  think  not  I  forget.     See  Pericles  and  Aspasia 

(Corinna,  from  Athens  to  Tanagra). — Landor. 
Tang!  tang!  went  the  gong's  wild  roar.     See  Night 

Quarters. — Brownell. 
Ta-ratta,  ta-ratta,  tum-tum,  tum-tum.     See  Drummer 

Boy,  A. — Goodfellow. 
Tary    no    longer;    toward    thyn    heritage.     See    Vox 

Ultima  Crucis. — Lydgate. 
Taste  and  genius   are  two  words   frequently  joined. 

See  Taste  and  Genius. — Blair. 
Tasteful    illumination    of     the    night.      See   To    the 

Glowworm. — Clare. 
Tauler,  the  preacher,  walked,  one  autumn  day.     See 

Tauler.— Whittier. 
Tax    not    the    royal    Saint    with    vain   expense.     See 

Inside   of   King's    College    Chapel,  Cambridge. — 

Wordsworth. 
Tchassan  Ouglou  is  on  I     See  same. — Motherwell. 
Te  Eagle  vot  is  American!     I  speaks  mit  it  ^o  prout  as 

nefer  vas!     See  Glory  mit  ter  Stars  und  Shtripes. 

— Spluttermann. 
Teach  me,  my  God  and  King.     See  Elixir,  The. — Her- 
bert. 
Teach  me  the  secret  of  thy  loveliness. — -Cawein.    ' 
Teach  me  to  live  1     'Tis  easier  far  to  die.     See  same. — 

(Hymnal.) 
Teach   you   French?     I    will,   my  dear!     See   French 

with  a  Master. — Tilton. 
Tears   for  my  lady   dead.       See    Heliodore    Dead. — 

Lang. 


835 


Tears 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Tears,  idle  tearp'     I  know  not  what  they  mean.     See 

Princess,  The  (Tears,  Idle  Tears). — Tennyson. 
Tears  in  your  eyes,  and  whv7     Becauseyou  find.     See 

Ilearls,  not  Hear's,  are  Trumps. — Fieltl. 
Tears  of  gold  the  heaveps  wept.     6'ee  Meteors. — Eich- 

berg.  • 

Tears  stood  in  the  eyes  of  the  cid  as  he  looke<l  at  his 

pillage<l  cattle.     <See  Poem  of  the  Cid,    Story  of 

the. — Uahb. 
Tears  wat>h  away  the  atoms  in  the  eye.     See  Compen- 
sation.— Cranch. 
Teddy    O'Rourke's    my  chum   you    see.     See   Teddy 

O'Rourke. — Douglas. 
Telemachus,  it  will  do  you  ever  so  much  good.     See 

Get  Acquainted  with  Yourself.— Burdette. 
Telemachus,    the    monk,    sat   in   his  cell.     See  Tele- 
machus.— Sheldon. 
Tell  all  I  know  about  the  case,  about  the  dead  man 

there?  See  Stranger  on  the  Stand,  The.— Blount. 
Tell  me  again  you  love  me.     See  Cup  of  Youth,  The. 

—Mitchell. 
Tell  me,  Effie,  while  you  are  sitting.     See  Effie's  Rea- 
sons.— Gary. 
"Tell    me,    gray-headed    lor   gray-haired]   sexton,"    I 

said.     See    Where    are    Wicked    Folks    Buried? 

— (Truth  Seeker.) 
Tell  me,  is  there  sovereign  cure.     See  Inverted  Torch, 

The  (Tell    Me).— Thomas. 
Tell  me,  my  secret  soul.     See  Inquiry,  The. — Mackay. 
Tell  me  not  in  idle  jingle.     See  Psalm  of  Marriage. — 

Cary. 
Tell   me   not,   in   mournful   numbers.     See   Psalm   of 

I..ife,  A. — Longfellow. 
Tell  me  not  of  a  face  that's  fair.     See  Resolve,  The. — 

Brome. 
Tell  me  not  of  morrows,  sweet .     See  same. — Webster. 
Tell  me  not  of  the  honor  of  belonging  to  a  free  country. 

See  Spiritual  Freedom  (Liberty). — Channing. 
Tell  me  not.  Sweet,  I  am  unkind.     See  Song:  To  Lu- 

ca.sta  on  Going  to  the  Warres. — Lovelace. 
Tell  me  not  Time  hath  played  the  thief.     See  To  One 

Saying  She  Was  Old.— Shirley. 
Tell  me  not  what  too  well  I  know.     See  On  Catullus. — 

Landor. 
Tell  me  now  in  what  hidden  way  is.  See  Ballad  of  Dead 

Ladies,  The.— Villon. 
Tell  me,  O  paradox  inscrutablel     See  Dude,  The. — 

Anon. 
Tell  me,  O  tell,  what  kind  of  thing  is  wit.     See  Ode  to 

Wit.— Cowley. 
Tell    me,    shade    of    Walter    Raleigh.     See    Patriotic 

Smoker's  Lament,  The.— (.St.  James  Gmelie,  The.) 
Tell  me,  sunny  goldenrod.  See  Goldenrod. — Lovejoy. 
Tell  me,   thou  skilful  shepherd  swain!     See  Song  of 

Motto  and  Perkin. ^Drayton. 
Tell  me.  thou  soul  of  her  I  love.     See  To  Her  I  Love. — 

Thomson. 
Tell  me,  thou  star,  whose  wings  of  light.     See  World's 

Wanderers,  The. — She.ley. 
Tell   me  what    brings  you,   gentle   you*h,   to   Rome? 

See  St.  Philip  Neri  and  the  Youth. — Anon. 
Tell  me,  what  is  a  poet's  thought?     See  Poet's  Thought, 

A. — Procter. 
Tell    me  what  is  sorrow?     Is  it    a   garden-bed.     See 

Sorrow  and  Joy. — Stoddard. 
Tell  me  what  is  this  innumerable  throng.     See  Christ- 
mas Hymn,  A. — -Gilder. 
Tell  me    what  sail  the  seas.     See  Under  the  Stars. — 

Rice. 
"Tell   me  where  is   fancy  bred."      See  Merchant   of 

Venice,  The  ("Tell  me,"  etc.).— Shakespeare. 
Tell  me,  who  can,  about  our  flag.     See  Our  Flag. — 

Anon. 
Tell  me  who  is  this  pompous  signor.     See  Humbug- 
ging a  Touribt. — Paulding. 
Tell  me,  wide  wandering  soul,  in  all  thy  quest.     See 

But  Once. — Winthrop. 
Tell  me,  ye  bloody  butchers!  ye  villains,  high  and  low! 

See  Boston  Massacre,  The. — Hancock. 
Tell  me,  ye  winds,  if  e'er  ye  rest.     See  Carolina  and 

Mecklenburg. — Delke. 
Tell  me,  ye  winged   winds,  that  round  mv  pathway 

roar.     See  Inquiry,  The. — Mackay. 
Tell  me  your  joy,  that  I  may  tune  my  life.      See  To 

. — Anon. 

"Tell  me  your  story,"  the  lady  said.     See  Flossie. — 

Hamberlin. 
Tell  my  maidens,  sirrah,  that  the   queen  would    rest. 

See  Pardon,  The. — Jov. 
Tell  the  .story  to  your  sons.     See  Fight  of  the  "Arm- 

strong     Privateer.  The.— Roche. 
„Tell  us  a  story,  grandpa."     See  Grandfather's  Story. 

— Field. 


Tell  us,  thou  clear  and  heavenly  tongue.     See  Star 

Song,  The. — Herrick. 
Tell  ye  the  story  far  and  wide.     See  Men  of  Monomoy, 

The. — Cone. 
Tell  you  a  story,  children?     Well,  gather  around  my 

knee.     See   Wreck    of   the    Steamship    "Puffin, 

The. — Anstey. 
Tell  you  a  story,  darling.     See  Heart's-ease,    The. — 

Williams. 
'Tell  you  a  story."  my  beautiful  dear.     See  Poppy 

Seecl,  A. — Thaxter. 
Tell  .vou  about  it?     Of  course,  I  will!     See  Bishop's 

Visit,  The. — Nason. 
"Tell  you  how  grandpa  proposed?     Dear  me!"     See 

How  Grandpa  Proposed. — Anon. 
Tell  you  what  I  like  the  best.     See  Knee-deep  in  June. 

—Riley. 
Tell  Youth  to  play  with  Wine  and  Love.     See  House 

of    a    Hundred     Lights,   The    (Compensation). — 

Torrence. 
"Tempus   fugit,"    said   the    Romans.     .See   Flight    of 

Time,  The.— Blake. 
Ten   dollars.     Quite   a   sum   to   pay.     See   After   the 

Theatre. — Anon. 
Ten  little  fingers,   dimpled  and  fat.     See  Ten  Little 

P^ingers. — Anon. 
Ten  little  schoolboys  sitting  in  a  line.     See  Tragedy  of 

the  Ten  Little  Boys,  The. — Anon. 
Ten  o'clock,  and  neither  Victim  nor  Tactic  come.    See 

Stage-struck  Clerk. — Anon. 
Ten   o'clock!     Well,    I'm   sure   I    can't   help   it!     See 

Matinal  Musings. — Baker. 
Ten  rag  babies  standing  in  a  row.     See  Rag  Babies. — 

Anon. 
Ten  small  hands  upon  the  spread.     See  Intra,  Mintra, 

Cutra,  Corn. — Anon. 
Ten  thousand  sowers  through  the  land.     See  Sowers. 

The. — Anon. 
Ten  true  friends  you  have.     See  Ten  True  Friends. — 

Anon. 
Ten  years  ago,  when  she  was  ten.     See  Then  and  Now. 

— Valentine. 
Tender  mercies  on  my  way.     See  Tender  Mercies. — - 

Waring. 
Tender-handed  stroke  a  nettle.     See  How  to  Deal  with 

Common  Natures. — -Hill. 
Terrace  and  lawn  are  white  with  frost.     See  Game  of 

Chess,  A. — Collins. 
Te-whit!   te-whit!   te-whee!      Will   you  listen  to  me? 

See  Who  stole  the  Bird's  Nest?— Child. 
Th'  Anam  tho'  Diah!  but  there  it  is.     See  Dawn  on 

the  Irish  Coast. — I<ocke. 
"Thackeray   had    no    heart,"  says  popular   criticism. 

See   Pathos   of  Thackeray   and   Dickens,   The. — - 

Elliott. 
Thaisa  fair,  under  the  cold  sea  lying.     See  Thaisa's 

Dirge. — Merivale. 
Thank'ee,  sir,  kindly  for  calling:  my  cough's  mending 

slowly  but  sure.     See  Wreck  of  the  Scotch  Ex- 
press, The. — Mott. 
Thank    God    for    pleasant    weather!     See    Pleasant 

Weather. — -Anon. 
Thank  God!  some  of  us  have  an  old-fashioned  mother. 

See  Old-fashioned  Mother,  The. — Anon. 
Thank  God  that  God  shall   judge   my  soul,  not  man! 

See  Eternal  Justice,  The. — Aldrich. 
Thank  God,  there's  still  a  vanguard.     See  same. — Arey. 
Thank  God!     'Tis  the  war  cry!     They  call  us!     We 

come!     Sec  For  Freedom. — Proctor. 
Thank   Heaven,   Tanthe,    once   again.     See  lanthe. — 

Landor. 
Thank  heaven,  that  is  over!     It  must  be  very  late! 

See  When  I  Am  Married. — Anon. 
Thank   Heaven!  the  crisis,   the  danger  is  past.     See 

For  Annie. — -Poe. 
Thank  the  lady,  Johnny,  and  give  the  money  to  dad. 

See  Street  Turnblers,  The. — Sims. 
"Thank    you — much    obliged,    old    boy."     See    Mar- 
riage h.  la  Mode. — Baker. 
Thank  you,  pretty  cow,  that  made.     See  Thank  You, 

Pretty  Cow. — Taylor. 
Thanks  be  to  God!  to  whom  earth  owes.     See  Thanks- 
giving.—Havergal. 
Thanks  be  to  God,  who  overrules  everything  for  good. 

See  Centennial  Oration  (Admonition   to   Coming 

Generations) . — Winthrop. 
Thanks  for  the  lessons  of  this  spot,  fit  school.     See 

Cave  of  Staffa. — Wordsworth. 
Thanks!  thanks!     With  the  Muse  is  always  love  and 

light.     See  Festus  (Poet,  The). — Bailey. 
Thanks  to  the  Gods!  my  boy  has  done  his  duty.     See 

Cato  (Cato  over  the   Dead  Body  of  his  Son). — 

Addison. 


836 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


That 


Thanks  to  the  human  heart  by  which  we  live.  See 
Ode:  Intimations  of  Immortality  ("Thanks  to 
the    human,"  etc.). — Wordsworth. 

Thanks,  under  God,  to  him  whose  singular  greatness. 
See  Abraham  Lincoln. — Stryker. 

Thanks  untraced  to  lips  unknown.  <See  Snow-bound. 
— Whittier. 

Thanksgiving  Day  is  the  one  national  festival.  <See 
Family  as  an  American  Institution,  The  (Day  of 
Thanksgiving,  The). — Beecher. 

"Thanksgiving  Day!  Thanksgiving  Day!"  See  Na- 
tion's Day  of  Praise,  The. — Denton. 

"Thanksgiving! — for  what?" — and  he  muttered  a 
curse.     See  John  White's  Thanksgiving. — Anon. 

Thanksgiving  to  the  Gods!  See  Seeker  in  the  Marshes, 
The. — -Dawson. 

Thar  wuz  Si,  thar  wuz  Hi,  thar  wuz  Alec  an'  Dan.  See 
'Ceptin'  Ike. — Devere. 

Thar's  he'n  some  trubble  in  the  choir.  See  Leading 
the  Choir. — Norris. 

Thar's  folks  eroun  this  mounting  side.  See  Content- 
ment.— McGlasson. 

Tha'rt  welcome,  little  bonny  brid.  See  Welcome, 
Bonny  Brid. — -Laycock. 

That  a  man  stand  and  speak  of  spiritual  things  to  men ! 
See  same. — Carlyle. 

That  Adam  was  a  lonely  man.  See  Fun  that  Adam 
Missed,  The. — Anon. 

That  afternoon  I  devoted  to  making  a  bouquet  for 
Miss  Mayton.  See  Helen's  Babie.s  (Budge's  Ver- 
sion of  the  Flood). — Habberton. 

That  brief  phrase — the  schools  and  colleges  of  the 
United  States.  See  Washington  and  our  Schools 
and  Colleges  (Schools  and  Colleges  of  Our 
Country,  The). — Eliot. 

That  Charles  himself  might  chase.  See  Horatian  Ode 
upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ireland  (Execution 
of  Charles  I.). — Marvell. 

That  day  I  oft  remember,  when  from  sleep.  See  Para- 
dise Lost  (Eve's  Mirror). — Milton. 

That  day  of  wrath,  that  dreadful  day.  See  Dies  Irse. — 
Celano  (Scott). 

That  doll's  necklace  is  mine,  Annie.  See  Forbearance. 
— Kavanaugh. 

That  each,  who  seems  a  separate  whole.  See  In  Memo- 
riam  (Personal  Resurrection). — Tennyson. 

That  face  which  no  man  ever  saw.  See  Sargent's  Por- 
trait of  Edwin  Booth  at  "The  Players." — -Aldrich. 

"That  fellow  Bixby  is  th'  derndest  chap  I  ever  see. 
See  Only  a  Little  Chinese  Talk. — Anon. 

"That  gal  of  old  Fecho's  wur  about  the  pootyest 
creatur."  See  Courting  in  French  Hollow. — 
Robb. 

That  General  Garfield  was  the  man  for  the  crisis.  See 
Man  for  the  Crisis,  The. — Anon. 

That  God  rules  in  the  affairs  of  men  is  as  certain  as  any 
truth  of  physical  science.  See  God  in  History. — • 
Bancroft. 

That  high-gifted  man.  See  Lines  on  the  Death  of 
Sheridan. — Moore. 

That  I  am  a  dude  you  see  at  a  glance.  See  Open  the 
Gates  as  High  as  the  Sky. — Kavanaugh. 

That  I  did  love  thee,  Csesar,  O,  'tis  true.  See  Julius 
Caesar. — Shakespeare. 

That  I  love  thee,  charming  maid,  I  a  thousand  times 
have  said.  See  Waiting  for  the  Grapes. — Ma- 
gin  n. 

That  I  should  be  sheriff  and  keep  the  jail.  See  Sheriff 
Thorne. — Trowbridge. 

That  I  went  to  warm  myself  into  Lady  Betty's  cham- 
ber, because  I  was  cold.  See  Mrs.  Frances  Harris' 
Petition. — Swift. 

That  instrument  ne'er  heard.  See  Harp,  The. — 
Drayton. 

"That  is  the  school  house,  is  it?"  See  How  Jim  Tur- 
ner Broke  up  the  School. — Anon. 

That  is,  undoubtedly,  the  wisest  and  best  system. 
See  Physical  Education. — Anon. 

That  it  was  May  me  thoughte  the.  See  Romaunt  of 
the  Rose,  The. — Chaucer. 

That  Kittyboy  was  lost  was  an  evident  fact.  See  Kit- 
tyboy's  Christmas. — Blanchard. 

That  last  drear  mood  of  envious  sloth.  See  Hypatia 
(Hypatia,  Sel.  fr.}. — Kingsley. 

That  law  and  system,  self  caused  and  self  directed. 
See  same. — Anon. 

That  leg  and  arm?  'Twas  at  Bull  Run.  See  Street 
Incident,  A. — -Anon. 

That  Life  is  a  Comedjy  oft  hath  been  shown.  See  Book 
of  Life,  The. — Thomson. 

That  light  fringing  the  far  hills.  See  That  Light. — 
Craik. 

That  little  hand!     See  Won  the  Pot.— J.  R. 


That  longed-for  door  stood  open,  and  he  passed.  See 
Open  Door,  An. — Moulton. 

That  love  of  liberty  which  led  our  fathers  to  declare 
their  independence.  See  Political  Equality  the 
Soul  of  the  Republic. — McCall. 

That  man  has  had  a  liberal  education.  See  Liberal 
Education  and  where  to  Find  it,  A  (Liberal  Edu- 
cation, A). — Huxley. 

That  man  is  not  perfect  who  is  so  in  and  for  himself 
alone.     See  Each  and  All. — Savage. 

That  man's  actions  here  are  of  infinite  moment  to  him. 
See  On  Heroes  and  Hero  Worship  (Mohammed). — 
Carlyle. 

That  mist  which  lies  in  the  morning  so  softly  in  the 
valley.  See  Modern  Painters  (Cloud  Beauty). — 
Ruskin. 

That  motionless  shaft  will  be  the  most  powerful  of 
speakers.  See  Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill 
Monument  (Duties  of  American  Citizens). — Web- 
ster. 

That  mystic  word  of  Thine,  O  sovereign  Lord.  See 
Soul's  Answer,  The. — Stowe. 

That  night  I  think  that  no  one  slept.  See  Last  Night, 
The. — Tooker. 

That  nightee  teem  he  come  chop-chop  [or  That  nightey- 
time  begin  chop-chop].  See  Chinese  Excelsior, 
The. — Anon. 

That  ocean  you  of  late  surveyed.  See  To  the  Rev.  Mr. 
Newton,  on  His  Return  from  Rarosgate. — Cow- 
per. 

"That  puts  me  in  mind,"  said  Veny  Raynor,  "about 
what  I've  heered  tell."  See  Veny  Raynor's  Bear 
Story. — Hawes. 

That  rake  up  near  the  rafters.  See  Rory  of  the  Hills. 
— Kickham. 

That  regal  soul  I  reverence,  in  whose  eyes.  See  Roy- 
alty.— Wasson. 

That  seat  of  Science,  Athens.  See  Free  America. — 
Warren. 

That  so  Thy  blessed  birth,  O  Christ.  See  Twelfth  Day; 
or,  The  Epiphany. — Wither. 

That  soft  autumnal  time.  See  Indian  Summer,  The. 
— -Bryant. 

That  son  of  Italy  who  tried  to  blow.  See  Austerity  of 
Poetry. — -Arnold. 

That  sovereign  thought  obscured?  That  vision  clear. 
See  On  a  Great  Man  Whose  Mind  is  Clouding. — 
Stedman. 

That  stubborn  crew.  See  Hudibras  (Presbyterians, 
The).— Butler. 

That  such  have  died  enables  us.  See  That  Such  Have 
Died. — Dickinson. 

That  the  First  Charles  does  here  in  triumph  ride.  See 
On  the  Statue  of  King  Charles  I.  at  Charing  Cross 
in  the  Year  1674.— Waller. 

That  the  truths  of  the  Bible  have  the  power  of  awak- 
ening.    See  Truths  of  the  Bible.-;— Anon. 

That  there  exists  in  this  country  an  intense  sentiment 
of  nationality.  See  Barbarity  of  National  Ha- 
treds.— Choate. 

"That  there  missionary  box,"  said  Mrs.  Pickett.  See 
Mrs.  Pickett's  Missionary  Box. — Eddy. 

That  thou  art  blamed  shall  not  be  thy  defect.  See 
Sonnets,  LXX. — Shakespeare. 

That  time  of  year  thou  mayst  in  me  behold.  See  Son- 
nets, LXXIII. — Shakespeare. 

That  was  a  bitter  winter.  See  Good  Little  Sister,  The. 
—Gary. 

That  was  a  brave  old  epoch.  See  Battle  of  La  Prairie, 
The.— Lighthall. 

That  was  a  day  of  delight  and  wonder.  See  Maple. — 
English. 

That  was  a  strangely  shaped  hat  I  saw  yoii  wearing  the 
other  day,  Tambo.     See  Tambo's  Hat. — Anon. 

That  was  Nottman  waving  at  me.  See  How  Little 
Tom  was  Saved. — Anderson. 

That  was  sage  advice  from  the  mouth  of  a  sage.  See 
Need  of  Heroism  To-day. — Wylie. 

That  way  look,  my  infant,  lo!  See  Kitten  and  Falling 
Leaves,  The. — Wordsworth. 

That  weary  time  which  comes  between.  See  Between 
Winter  and  Spring. — Larcom. 

That  which  has  been  done  once  is  easier  done  the  sec- 
ond time.     See  Law  of  Habit,  The. — Willard. 

That  which  hath  made  them  drunk  hath  made  me 
bold.  See  Macbeth  (Murder,  The).  —  Shake- 
speare. 

That  which  her  slender  waist  confined.  See  On  a  Gir- 
dle.—Waller. 

That  which  shall  last  for  aye  can  have  no  birth.  See 
Or  Eyer  the  Earth  Was. — Moore. 

That  which  we  dare  invoke  to  bless.  See  In 
Memoriam  ("That  which  we,"  etc.). — Tennyson. 


837 


That 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


That    year   the   apple-bluoms  came   late,   late   in   the 

month  of  May.     See  Memorial  Day  at  the  Farm. 

— Anon. 
That    vear?      Yes,    doubtless   I    remember   still.     See 

World  Well  Lost.  The. — Stedman. 
That  you  have  wronnen  me  doth  appear  in  this.     See 

Juliu!)    Cte^ar     (Quarrel     between      Brutus     and 

Cassius,    The).  —Shakespeare. 
That  you   may    not    be    unapprise<l.     See    History   of 

Rome  (Publius  Scipio  to  the  Roman  Army  before 

the  Battle  of  Ticin). — Livy. 
That    zephyr    every  year.     See  Spring  Bereaved,  I. — 

Drummond. 
That's    all     risht.     Good-bye    boys.     See    Billy     K. 

Simes, — Coates. 
That's  Jerry  now  callinK  me  over  the  river.     See  Hess. 

— Finer.. 
That's   just    my    luck!     See   .John    Hasty    and    Peter 

Quiet. — Anon. 
That's  my  last  Duchess  painted  on  the  wall.     See  My 

Last  Duchess. — Browning. 
"That's  not  the  way.  at  sea,  my  boys."     See  That's 

Not  the  Way  at  Sea. — Havergal. 
That's  our  choir  singing;  Dr.  Dodd  is  the  basso.     See 

Tn  Amity  of  Soul. — Dallas. 
"That's    something    like    a    bill,"    said    Jobson.     See 

Badger's  D^but  as  Hamlet. — Moseley. 
"That's   the   third   umbrella   gone   since   Christmas." 

See  Mrs.  Caudle's  Umbrella  Lecture. — Jerrold. 
The  Abbot  aro.se,  and  closed  his  book.      See  Red  Fish- 
erman, The:  or,  The  Devil's  Decoy. — Praed. 
The  Abbot  of  Inisfalen.     See  Abbot  of  Inisfalen,  The. 

— Allingham. 
The  Abbot  of  Innisfallen.     See  Legend  of  Innisfallen, 

The. — Bateham. 
The  Abbot  on  the  threshold  stood.     See  Lord  of  the 

Isles,  The  (Bruce  and  the  Abbot). — Scott. 
The  above  numerals  do  not  represent  the  inscription 

on  my  front  door.     See  No.  999. — Turner. 
The   actor's   dead   and    memory   alone.     See  J.    B. — 

Bunner. 
The  actress  was  occupied  in  the  study  of  her  role. 

See  Disillusionizing  of  Alexander  Oldworthy,  The. 

— Reade. 
The   admiration    which  every    one    has  for  the   hero 

springs.     See  Hero,  The. — Cardwill. 
The  admired  mirror,  glory  of  our  isle.      See    Britan- 
nia's Pastorals  (Sir  Philip  Sidney). — Browne. 
The  advance  of  the  British  army  was  like  a  solemn 

pageant.     See    Battle    of    Bunker    Hill,    The. — 

Anon. 
The  advantages  arising  from  a  system  of  copyright  are 

obvious.     See  Copyright. — Macaulay. 
The  advent  of  Col.  Bob.  Ingersoll  in  Louisville  was  not 

unnoticed    by    Uncle    Jim    Johnson.     See    Rev. 

Uncle  Jim's  Sermon,  The. — Anon. 
The  advocates  of  Charles,  like  the  advocates  of  other 

mal"?  factors.     See   Milton  (Charles  the    First). ^ 

Macaulay. 
The    .\frican    day   was   at    its  noon.     See  Under  Two 

Flags  (Battle    of  Zaraila).— Ouida. 
The  age  is  tempestuous  with  speculation.     See  "Age 

is  tempestuous  with  speculation.  The."— Anon. 
The  age  of  chivalry  has  gone.     An  age  of  humanity 

has  come.     See  Scholar,  the  Jurist,  the  Artist,  the 

Philanthropist,  The  (Age  of  Progress).— Sumner. 
The  aged  and  venerable  maternal  representative.    See 

New  "Old  Mother  Hubbard."— Anon. 
The  air  bites  shrewdly;  it  is  very  cold.     See  Hamlet. 

— Shakespeare. 
The  air  is  keen,  the  sky  is  clear.     See  Winter  Starlight. 

— Sherman. 
The  air  is  soft  and  balmy.     See  In  April. — Arnold. 
The  air  is  still,  the  night  is  dark.     See  Fisherman's 

Light,  The. — Moodie. 
The  air  is  sweet  with  promising.     See  Oh,  Lady  Mine 

— Kelley. 
The  air  was  still  o'er  Bethlehem's  plain.     See  Nativity 

The. — l{ead. 
The  alder  by  the  river.     See  Spring. — Thaxter. 
The  Almighty  has  his  own  purposes.     See  Second  In- 
augural Address  (Retribution).— Lincoln. 
The  aloes  grow  upon  the  sand.     See  He  that  Believeth 

Shall  not  Make  Haste. — Woolsey. 
The  American  liner,  Pennland.     See  Case  of  Go  Hang 

— .\non. 
The  American  nation  stands  pre-eminent  as  a  typi- 
cally  magnanimous   people.     See   Memorial    Day 

Exercise,  A.. — Anon. 
The  American   Revolution  was  not  the  struggle  of  a 

class,  but  of  a  people.     See  Power  of  Free  Ideas, 

The. — Curtis. 


The  American  saloon  sits  supreme  in  American  poli- 
tics.    See  Saloon  in  Politics,  The.— Fisk. 
The  amount  of  suffering  and  mortality  inseparable. 

See  Traffic  in  Ardent  Spirits. — Beecher. 
The  analytic  method  applied  to  Puritan  and  Dutch- 
man.    See   Puritan   and   the    Dutchman,   The. — 

Anon. 
The  anatomist,  gazing  upon  the  conformation  of  the 

human   body,    exclaims.     See   Hand,    The. — Tal- 

mage. 
The   ancient    memories   buried   lie.     See   Cadences. — 

Payne. 
The  ancient   river  glimmer'd  in  its  bed.     See  Going 

Home. — Turner. 
The  angel  came  by  night.     See  Adsum. — Stoddard. 
The  Angel  of  Renunciation  came.     See  Angel,  The. — . 

Gillespy. 
The  angel  of  the  flowers,  one  day.      See    Moss  Rose. 

The. — Krummacher. 
The  angel  of  the  nation's  peace.     See  Our  Fallen  He- 
roes.— Griffith. 
The   angel   with   great   joy   received   his   guests.     See 

King  Robert  of  Sicily  ("Angel  with  great   joy," 

etc.).— -Longfellow. 
The  angel  wrote  and  vanished.  See  Abou  ben  Adhem 

("Angel  wrote,"  etc.). — Hunt. 
The  annual  ceremony  of  taking  up  and  whipping  and 

putting  down  carpets.     See  Taking  Up  Carpets. — 

Anon. 
The   anti-slavery   contest    had    closed   many   a   door. 

See  Charles  Sumner. — Curtis. 
The     appellation     "gentleman,"     too     frequently     is 

bought.     See  Gentleman,  A. — Vickers. 
The    apple    blooms    come    falling    down.     See    Bird 

among  the  Blooms,  The. — Short. 
The  apple  boughs  half  hid  the  house.     See  Wonderful 

Sack,  The. — Trowbridge.  • 
The  apples  are  ripe  in  the  orchard.     See  After  All. — 

Winter. 
The  approach  to  the  Abbey  through  gloomy  monastic 

remains.     See  Westminster  Abbey. — Irving. 
The  April  sun  smiles  bright   above.      See   "April  sun 

smiles  bright  above.  The." — Eaton. 
The  Archey  Road  literary  Club  was  holding  a  meet- 
ing.    See  Mr.  Dooley  Defines  a  Poet. — Dunne. 
The  ark  of  God  is  in  the  field.     See  Watch  by  Night, 

The.— Keble. 
The  armaments  which  thunderstrike  the  walls.     See 

Childe   Harold's    Pilgrimage    (Apostrophe   to   the 

Ocean.  The). — Byron. 
The  armor  hung  high  in  the  tapestried  hall.   See  Court 

of  the  King,  The.— Alt. 
The  army  is  gathering  from  near  and  from  far.     See 

Marching  Along. — Bradbury. 
The  arrangement    of    God    which    makes   man's    con- 
science his  guide  to  action.     See  Supremacy  of 

Conscience.  The. — Storrs. 
The  art  of  making  daily  bread.     See  Lost  Arts,  The. — 

Anon. 
The  art  of  reading  well  is  an  accomplishment  that  all 

desire  to  possess.     See  Art  of  Reading,  The.- — Rush. 
The  ascent  to  Paradise  was  accomplished  by  a  fixed 

gaze.     See  Story  of  the  Divine  Comedy.  'The  (Par- 
adise, The).— Rabb. 
The  ash-berry  clusters  are  darkly  red.     See  Fall  Song. 

— Anon. 
The  Assyriancame  down  like  the  wolf  on  the  fold.     See 

Destruction  of  Sennacherib,  The. — Byron. 
The  asylum  in  France  so  dark  and  cold.     See  May  Bug, 

The.— Brandis. 
The  Athenians  never  were  known  to  live  contented. 

See  Oration  on  ths  Crown,  The  (Public   Spirit   of 

Athenians). — Demosthenes. 
The  atmosphere  forms  a  spherical   shell,   surrounding 

the  earth.     See  Air  and  Sea,  The. — Maury. 
The  atrocious  crime  of  being  a  young  man,  which  the 

honorable    gentleman.      See    Reply     of    Pitt    to 

Walpole. — Chatham. 
The  attempt  to  fight  the  liquor  traffic  successfully  out- 
side.    See   Prohibition   Party   a   Necessity,    A. — 

Leonard. 
The  Attorney-General  has  talked  of  his  impartiality. 

See  Press  the     Protection  of  the  People,  The. — 

O'Connell. 
The  auctioneer  leaped  on  a  chair,  and  bold  and  loud 

and  clear.     See  Auctioneer's  Gift,  The. — Foss. 
The  audience    entire    seemed    pleased,    indeed.     See 

Limitations  of  Genius. — Riley. 
The  auld  wife  sat  at  her  ivied  door.     See  Auld  Wife. 

The.— Cah'erley. 
The  Autumn  has  filled  me  with  wonder  to-day.     See 

Autumn  Song  of  a  Little  Girl. — H.  C.  B. 


838 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  bird's 


The  Autumn  is  old.     See  Autumn. — Hood. 

The  Autumn  leaves  are  falling.     See  Autumn  I-eaves, 

The.— Anon. 
The  autumn  seems  to  cry  for  thee.     See  Helen. — Wool- 

sey. 
The  autumn    time    is    with    us.     Its    approach.     See 

Autumn  in  the  West.—  Gallagher. 
The  average   man   is   perfectly   inconsolable   when  he 

loses  his  hat.     See  Where  is  My  Hat? — Owens. 
The  average  person  notices  the  arrangement  of  a  room 

surprisingly  little.     See  After  a  Match. — Anon. 
The  awful  shadow  of  His  too  great  light.     See  God  and 

the  Soul  (Sursum  Corda). — Spalding. 
The  awful  shadow  of  some  unseen  power.     See  Hymn 

to  Intellectual  Beauty. — Shelley. 
The  awfulest   times  that   ever   could   be.     See   Little 

Girl  Who  Wouldn't  Eat  Crusts,  The.— Dodge. 
The  Babies — As  they  comfort  us  in  our  sorrows.     See 

Babies,  The. — Clemens. 
The  baby    knelt    down    to    whisper    her  >  prayer.     See 

Baby  Logic. — Winslow. 
The  baby    sits    in    her    cradle.     See    Silent    Baby. — 

Currier. 
The  baby    sits    on    his    mammy's    knee.     See    Baby's 

Thoughts,  The. — Anon. 
The  baby  wept.     See  Sleeping  Babe,  The. — Hinds. 
The  baobab-trees    of    the    Cape    Verde    Islands.     See 

Some  Famous  Trees. — -Anon. 
The  bairnies  cuddle  doon  at  nicht.     See  Cuddle  Doon. 

— Anderson. 
The  ballot-box  is  a  symbol  of  political  equality  in  our 

Republic.     See  Ballot-box,  The. — Chapin. 
The  "Ballyshannon"  foundered  off  the  coast  of  Cariboo. 

See  Etiquette. — Gilbert. 
The  band  of  Pilgrim  exiles  in  tearful  silence  stood.     See 

Embarkation,  The. — Doten. 
The  band  was  playing  a  waltz-quadrille.     See  Waltz- 
quadrille,  A. — Wilcox. 
The  band    was    playing    "Dixie"    when  he    marched, 

marched    away.        See    Volunteer,    The.  —  Stan- 
ton. 
The  banks  are  all  a  bustin',  Nance.     See  Contentment. 

— Hayes. 
The  banner    of    Freedom  high    floated    unfurled.     See 

"United  States"  and  "Macedonian,"    The  (II.). — 

Anon. 
The  banners  of  the  world  are  met  upon  that  wild  blue 

wave.     See  Cleopatra  at  Actium. — Hervey. 
The  banquet-cups,    of   many   a   hue   and    shape.     See 

Zophiel;  or.  The  Bride  of  Seven  (Respite,  The).— • 

Brooks. 
The  bar  is  crossed ;  but  Death — the  pilot — stands.     See 

Becalmed .  — Tabb . 
The  bard   has   sung,   God   never   formed   a   soul.     See 

Zophiel;  or,  The  Bride  of  Seven  (Disappointment). 

— Brooks. 
The  bare  text  of  this  ludicrous,  desultory  speech.     See 

Oration  on  the  "Labor"  Question. — -Anon. 
The  barge   she   sat  in,   like   a  burnished   throne.     See 

.\ntony  and  Cleopatra  (Cleopatra). — Shakespeare. 
The  bark   that    held   a   prince,    went   down.     See   He 

Never  Smiled  Again. — Hemans. 
The  barn  was  low  and  dim  and  old.  See  Cradle,  The. — 

Thaxter. 
The  baron  hath  the  landward  park,  the  fisher  hath  the 

sea.     See  Sea-fowler,  The. — -Howitt. 
The  Baron  of  Smaylho'me  rose  with  day.     See  Eve  of 

St.  John,  The.— Scott. 
The  Barons  bold  on  Runnymede.     See  Barons  Bold, 

The.— Fox. 
The  Baron's      daughter     would     ride      abroad.     See 

Wanderer's  Bell,  The. — Preston. 
The  Bastille — the  terror  is  in  the  word.     See  Bastille 

and  the  Starling,  The. — Sterne. 
The  battle  blood  of  Antrim  had  not  dried  on  freedom's 

shroud.     See  Kathleen  Ban  Adair. — Davis. 
The  battle  had  ceased  and  the  victory  was  won.     See 

Jephthah's  Rash  Vow. — Howard. 
The  battle  of  Lexington  infused  into  the  life  of  this 

people  the  first  sentiment  of  American  nationality. 

See  Merchants  of  the  Revolution. — Cowdin. 
The  battle  of  our  life  is  won.     See  "Battle  of  our  life 

is  won.  The." — Larcom. 
The  battle  of  Sedgemoor  had  been  fought  and  lost. 

See  Rivals,  The.— Smith. 
The  battle  of  Waterloo  is  an  enigma.     See  Les   Mis^r- 

ables  (Waterloo). — -Hugo. 
The  battle  was  over  and  the  sun  had  gone  down.     See 

Enemies  Meet  at  Death's  Door. — Jackson. 
The  battleships  Brooklyn,  Oregon  and  Texas  pushed 

ahead.     See  Race  for  Dear  Life,  A. — Anon.  , 
The  bay  is  set  with  ashy  sails.     See   At  Les  Eboule- 

ments. — Scott. 


The  beams  of  the  rising  sun  had  gilded  the  lofty  domes 

of  Carthage.     See  Regulus  to  the  Carthaginians. — 

Kellogg. 
The  bearded  grass  waves  in  the  summer  breeze.     See 

Death  and  Night. — Kenyon. 
The  beauteous  Ethel's  father  has.     See  Piazza  Tragedy, 

A.— Field. 
The  Beautiful  City!  forever.  See  Beautiful  City,  The. — 

Riley. 
The  Beautiful,  which  mocked  hie  fond  pursuing.     See 

Beautiful,  The. — Dorgan. 
The  beauty  and  the  life.     See  Her  Passing. — Drum- 

mond. 
The  beauty  of  the  northern  dawns.     See  Christine.— 

Hay. 
The  beauty  of  the   sky   and  the  delights  of  night  in 

Venice.     See  Nights  of  Venice,  The. — Sand. 
The  beaver    cut    his    timber.     See    Cobbler    Keezar's 

Vision. — Whittier. 
The  bees    about     the    linden-tree.     See    November's 

Cadence. — Southesk. 
The  bees  in  the  clover  are  making  honey.     See  Mower 

in  Ohio,  The.— Piatt. 
The  bell  strikes  one:  we  take  no  note  of  time.     See 

Night  Thoughts  (Time).— Young. 
The  bell  struck  one,  and  shook  the  silent  tower.     See 

Fair  Eleanor. — Blake. 
The  bell  that  rang  at  Lexington.     See  Ethan  Allen. — 

Raymond. 
The  bells  chime  clear.     See  Christening.  The. — Ramal. 
The  bells  of  Mount  Vernon  are  ringing  to-day.     See 

Washington's  Birthday. — Anon. 
The  benefits    of    college    training    are    five-fold.     See 

"Benefits  of  college  training  are   five-fold.  The." 

— Vincent. 
The  benefits  of  the  Constitution  are  not  exolu.sive.     See 

Public  Dinner  at  New  York  (Benefits  of  the  Con- 

.st  itution ) . — Webster. 
The  best  of  all  the  pill-box  crew.     See  Three  Good 

Doctors. — Duffield. 
The  best  of  things,  as  well  as  the  worst.     See  Epilogue. 

— Anon. 
The  best  thoughts  of  the  day  ought  to  be  in  the  daily 

papers.     See  "Best  thoughts  of  the  day  ought  to 

be  in  the  daily  |)apers.  The." — Babb. 
The  betrothal  and  marriage  of  the  Princess  Charlotte. 

See  How   Kaiser  Wilhelm's  Sister  Was   Won. — 

Anon. 
The  Bible  is  a  handbook  for  right  living.     See  Bible, 

The.— Hillis. 
The  Bible  is  fragrant  with  the  breath  of  new-mown 

grass.     See  Bible,  The.Ta — Image. 
The  Bible  is  not  only  the  revealcr.     See  Sublimity  of 

the  Bible,  The.— Halsey. 
The  bilder  oke,  and  eke  the  hard  asshe.     See  Parle- 

ment  of  Foules,  The  (Trees,   Flowers  and  Birds  . 

— Chaucer. 
The  bill  under  consideration  is  intended  to  authorize 

the  Treasury  Department.     See  On  Government 

E^travagance. — Crittenden. 
The  bill  which  has  been  read.  Mr.  Speaker,  claims  the 

serious  attention  of  this  House.     See  In   Favor 

of  a  State  Law  against  Duelling. — Randolph. 
The  billowy  headlands  swiftly  fly.     See  Battle  Song  of 

the  Oregon. — Rice. 
The  birch  tree  swang  her  fragrant  hair.     See  Amphion. 

—Tennyson. 
The  bird,    let   loose   in   eastern   skies.     See   Bird,    Let 

Loose,  The. — Moore. 
The  bird  that  soars  on  highest  wing.     See  Humility. — 

Montgomery. 
The  bird  to  the  nest  and  the  bee  to  the  comb.     See 

Love  Lights  of  Home,  The. — Stanton.  ~w 

The  birds,    against    the    April    wind.     See   What    the 

Birds  Said.— Whittier. 
The  birds  all  held  a  party.     See  Birds'  Party.  The.— 

Richards. 
The  birds    are    coming    home   soon.     See    Coming    of 

Spring,  The. — Anon. 
The  birds  can  fly,  an'  why  can't  I?     See  Darius  Green 

and  his  Flying  Machine. — Trowbridge. 
The  birds  have  been  singing  to-day.     See  In  February. 

— -Symonds. 
The  birds  have  hid,  the  winds  are  low.     See  Evening 

Songs. — Cheney. 
The  birds  must  know.     Who  wisely  sings  will  sing  as 

they.     See  Way  to  Sing,  The. — Anon. 
The  birds  no  more  in  dooryard  trees  arc  singing.     See 

In  Bay  Chaleur. — Butterworth. 
The  birds  of  the  woodland,  in  soft  summer  weather. 

See  Birds'  I-awn  Party,  The.— (Child  Garden.) 
The  bird's   song,  the  sun    and    the  wind.     See   Bird's 

Song,  the  Sun  and  the  Wind,  The. — Roberts. 


839 


The  birds 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  birds  their  love-notes  warble.     See  Alice  Ray. — 

Hale. 
The  birds   their   quire   apply;  airs,   vernal   airs.     See 

Paradise  Lost  (Eternal  Spring,  The). — Milton. 
The  birds,   when   winter   shades  the   sky.     See   Love 

and  Friendiihip. — Legett. 
The  birthday  of  tne  "Father  of  hia  Country!"     See 

Birthday  of  Washington. — Choate. 
The  bison    is  vain,  and  (I  write  it  with  pain).     See 

Bison,  The. — BelToc. 
The  black-bird    early    leaves    its    nest.     See   There's 

Wr>rk  Enough  to  do. — Anon. 
The  blackcaps  pipe  among  the  reeds.     See  Before  the 

llain. — Troubetzkoy. 
The  black-eyed    children    of    the    desert    drove.     See 

Kubleh. — Taylor. 
The  black-haired,    gaunt    Paulinus.     See    Edwin    and 

Paulinus. — Anon. 
The  blast   has  swept   the  clouds  away.     See   Perfect 

Day,  The. — Proctor. 
The  blesst^d  Damozel  lean'd  out.     See  Blessed  Dam- 

ozel.  The. — Rossetti. 
The  blessed  hush  of  eventide.     See  Sister  Madeline- 
Everest. 
The  blessed    morn   has   come   again.     See   Snow.     A 

Winter  Sketch.— Hoyt. 
The  blessed  old  fireplace!  how  bright  it  appears!     See 

Old  Fireplace,  The.— Anon. 
The  blessed  Poster-girl  leaned  out.     See  Poster-girl, 

The.— Wells. 
The  blessings  which  the  weak  and  poor  can  scatter. 

See  Charity. — Talfourd. 
The  blinded  Parisian.-^  nresuilie  to  call  themaelves  free. 

See   Against    the   Terrorism    of   the    Jacobins. — 

Vergniaud. 
The  bliss  of  man  (could  pride  that  blessing  find).     See 

Essay  on  Man,  An  (Ontent). — -Popfi. 
The  bloated    Boggaboon.     See    Bloated    Boggaboon, 

The. — Cholmondeley-Pennell. 
The  bloom   hath  fled  thy  cheek,   Mary.     See  Bloom 

Hath  Fled  Thy  Cheek,  Mary,  The.— Motherwell. 
The  bloom  of  the  elm  is  falling.     See  Elm  Blossom. 

— {Hours  at  Home.) 
The  bloom  of  the  roses,  the  youth  of  the  fair.     See 

Sense  and  Spirit.— G.  F.  W. 
The  bloom  that  lies  on  Hilda's  cheek.     See  Elective 

CJourse,  An. — Aldrich. 
The  blooming    flowers,    the    galaxies    of    space.     See 

Love. — -Rand. 
The  Blue  is  marching  South  once  more.     See  Union  of 

Blue  and  Gray. — Hayne. 
The  bluebirds  and  the  violets.     See  Awakening  Year, 

The.— Read. 
The  bluebirds,   the  bluebirds.     See  Sister  and   Blue- 
birds.— Larcom. 
The  bluest   gray — the   grayest   blue.     See   Moon   and 

Dawn. — {Sunday  Maqazine.) 
The  Board  of  State  Prison  Directors  was  sitting  in 

session.     See    Inmate    of    the    Dungeon,    The. — ■ 

Morrow. 
The  boarding  nettings  are  triced  for  fight.     See  Jack 

Creamer. — Roche. 
The  boat   is   chafing    at   our  long   delay.     See   Song. 

— Davidson. 
The  boatman    sate    with    brawny    arms    embrowned. 

See  Ferryman,  The. — Moore. 
The  body,  moulded  by  the  clime,  endures.     See  Art  of 

Preserving  Health,  The. — .Armstrong. 
The  bogs  show  greerj  in  the  meadow.     See  Redwing's 

Song. — Douglass. 
The  bolt  on  the  back  door  had  needed  replacing  for  a 

long  time.     See  Gimlet  versus  C!orkscrew.     Anon. 
The  bond  that  links  our  souls  together.     See  Chain,  A. 

,    — Procter. 
"The  boneless    tongue,    so    small    and    weak."     See 

Tongue.  The. — Strong. 
The  bonnie.  bonnie  bairn  [who]  sits  poking  [or  pokin'] 

in  the  ase.     See  Castles  in  the  Air.— Ballantyne. 
The  bonniest    bairn    in    a'   the  warl'.     See    Bonniest 

Bairn  in  a'  the  Warl,  The.— Ford. 
The  booby!  he  must  fall  in  love,  indeed!     See  Love 

Chase,  The   (Scene    from  "The   Love  Chase"). — 

Knowles. 
The  bood  is  beabig  brighdly,  love.     See  Lides  to  Bary 

Jade. — {Scrihver'a  Monthly.) 
The  Book  of  the  New  Year  is  opened.     See  Book  of  the 

New  Year,  The. — Anon. 
The  books  I  cannot  hope  to  buy.     See  Ballad  of  the 

Unattainable.— Lang. 
The  Books  say  well,   my  Brothers!  each  man's  life. 

See  Light  of  Asia,  The  (Nirvana).— Arnold. 
The  bootblack  at  the  corner-stand.     See  Darkey  Boot- 
black, The. — Anon. 


The  bootblacks  and  the  newsboys  had  mis.sed  Cripple 

Tim.     See  Cripple  Tim. — Hastings. 
The  boy  from  his  bedroom  window.     See  Boy,  The. — 

Allingham. 
The  boy   lives  on  our  farm.     See  Boy  Lives  on  Our 

Farm,  The.— Riley. 
The  boy  so  late ;  pray  God,  he  be  not  lost.     See  Becket 

(Bower  Scene,  The). — Tennyson. 
The  boy  stood  in  the  burning  block.     See  At  the  North 

Avenue  Fire. — White. 
The  boy  stood  on  the  back-yard  fence,  whence  all  but 

him  had  fled.     See  Parody  on  Casablanca,  A. — 

Anon. 
The  boy  stood  on  the  burning  deck.     See  Casablanca. — 

Hemans. 
"The  boy  stood  on  the  burning  deck."     See  Medley,  A. 

— Denton. 
The  boy  who   does  a   stroke   and   stops.     See  Rome 

Wasn't  Built  in  a  Day. — Cary. 
The  boy  who  sells  fruit  and  confectionery  on  the  train. 

See  Difficult  Love-making. — Anon. 
The  boy  who's  always  wishing.     See  Luck. — Anon. 
"The  boys  are  coming  home  tomorrow."     See  Boys, 

The.— Lynn. 
The  boys    have    come    back    to    school.     See    School 

"Takes  Up." — Burdette. 
The  boys    insisted    that    I    needed    relaxation.     See 

Mule  Ride  in  Florida,  A.  —Anon. 
The  boys  were   coasting   down   the   hill  last   evening. 

See  Mr.  Sanscript's  Slide  Down  Hill. — Anon. 
The  braggart  March  stood  in  the  season's  door.     See 

Passing  of  March,  The. — Wilson. 
The  Brahmin's  son  was  dead;  the  Brahmin's  heart. 

See  Brahmin's  Son,  The. — Stoddart. 
The  branches  creaked  on  the  garret  roof.     See  Grand- 
mother's Valentine. — Irving. 
The  brave  man  is  not  he  who  feels  no  fear.     See  Brave 

Man,  The.— Baillie. 
The  brave  men,  living  and  dead,  who  struggled  here. 

See  Address  at  the  Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at 

Gettysburg. — Lincoln. 
The  brave    young    city    by    the    Balboa    Seas.     See 

Twilight  at  the  Heights. — Miller. 
The  bravest  battle  that  ever  was  fought.     See  Bravest 

Battle  that  ever  was  Fought,  The. — Miller. 
The  bravest  names  for  fire  and  flames.     See  General 

.lohn. — Gilbert. 
The  break  o'  the  dawn,  and  the  plain  is  a-smoke  with 

the  breath  of  the  frost.     See  Race  of  the  Boomers, 

The.— Burton. 
The  breaking  waves  dashed  high.     See  Landing  of  the 

Pilgrim  Fathers  in  New  England,  The. — Hemans. 
The  breast  that  nursed  thee,   shrunk  with  age.     See 

Hail,  America. — Knowles. 
The  breath  of  June,  with  faint  perfume.     See  Master 

Sleeps,  The. — Burdette. 
The  breaths  of    kissing    night  and   day.     See  Dream 

Tryst. — Thompson. 
The  breeze  blew  fair,   the  waving  sea.     See  Charnel 

Ship,  The. — Davidson. 
The  breeze  of  the  evening  that  cools  the  hot  air.     See 

"Quien  Sabe." — Waller. 
The  breezes  went  steadily  through  the  tall  pines.     See 

Ballad  of  Nathan  Hale,  The. — Moore. 
The  brethering  in  Lucre  Hollow  were  disturbed  a  heep 

in  mind.     See  Church  in  Lucre  Hollow. — Eisen- 

beis. 
The  Brewers  should  to  Malt-a  go.     See  Grand  Scheme 

of  Emigration. — Anon. 
The  bridal   is   over,    the   joy-bells   have   ceased.     See 

Wedding-day,  The. — Anon. 
The  bride,  she  bound  her  golden  hair.     See  Sir  Tur- 

lough;  or,  The  Churchyard  Bride. — Carleton. 
The   bride    she    is    winsome    and   bonny.     See  Song, 

Woo'd  and  Married  and  A'. — Baillie. 
The  bridges   mingle  with   the  river.     See  Tom's  Phi- 
losophy.—  {Harvard  Lampoon.) 
The  brief  phrase,  the  schools  and  colleges  of  the  United 

States.     See   Washington   and   Our   Schools   and 

Colleges. — Eliot. 
The  bright  sea  washed  beneath  her  feet.     See  Return, 

The.— Fields. 
The  brilliant  black  eye.     See  Black  and  Blue  Eyes. — 

Moore. 
The  brine  is  in  your  blood  from  days  of  yore.     See 

Sea's  Influence,  The. — Hunt. 
The  British    Parliament,    in    a    former    session.     See 

Speech  at  Bristol,  Previous  to  the  Election,  1780 

(Wisdom  Dearly   Purchased). — Burke. 
The  British  Parliament  in  1774  had  voted  a  law.     See 

Nineteenth  of  April,  1775,  The. — Hoar. 
The  broad    moon   lingers   on   the    summit    of   Mount 

Olivet.     See  Jerusalem  by  Moonlight. — Disraeli. 


840 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  chime 


The  broad,  round-shouldered  giant  Earth.     See  By  the 

St.  John. — Currie. 
The  broken   moon   lay   in   the   autumn   sky.     See.  To 

. — Smith. 

The  brook  and  road  were  fellow  travelers.     See  Pre- 
lude, The  (Defile  of  Gondo). — Wordsworth. 
The  brook  is  brimmed  with  melting  snow.     See  Pussy 

Willow. — Anon. 
The  brooks  are  full,  and  busy.     See  Good-by,  Winter! 

— Stone. 
The  brooks  are  running  swift  and  clear.     <See  Spring. — 

Anon. 
The  brown  leaves  rustle  under  our  tread.     See  Death 

and  Life. — Anon. 
The  bubbling  brook  doth  leap  when  I  come  by.     See 

Nature. — Very. 
The  bud  will  soon  become  a  flower.     See  Now  is  the 

Time. — Very. 
The  budding  floweret  blushes  at  the  light.      See  JEWa. 

(Minstrel's  Marriage  Song). — Chatterton. 
The  buds    awake    at    touch    of    spring.     See    Spring's 

Immortality. — Bell. 
The  buds  in  the  tree's  heart  safely  were  folded  away. 

See  When  the  Apple  Blossoms  Stir. — Anon 
The  buds  that  bloom  on  Easter  Day.     See  Easter  Buds. 

— -Wilson. 
The  bulbul  mummeth  like  a  book.     See  Bulbul,  The. — 

Seaman. 
The  bulbul   wail'd,  "Oh,  Rose!  all  night  I  sing."     See 

With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden ;  or.  The   Book  of  Love 

(Song  without  a  Sound). — Arnold. 
The  bumble-bee,   the  bumble-bee.     See  Bumble  Bee, 

The. — Anon. 
The  Bunker  Hill  Monument  is  finished.    Here  it  stands! 

See   Completion   of   the   Bunker   Hill    Monument, 

The   (Dedication  of   Bunker  Hill  Monument). — 

Webster. 
The  burglar     entered.     He     carefully     reconnoitered, 

then  rose.     See  Apparition,  An. — Anon. 
"The  burn  runs  swiftly,  my  dainty  lass."     See  Faint 

Heart  ne'er  Won  Fair  Lady. — Hine. 
The  bush  that  has  most  briers  and  bitter  fruit.     See 

Barberry-bush,  The. — Very. 
The  business    of    the    day    now    went    forward.     See 

Bride  of   Laramermoor,    The    (Ravenswood   and 

Lucy  Ashton). — Scott. 
The  busy  larke,   messager  of  daye.     See  Canterbury 

Tales,  The  (Morning  in  May). — Chaucer. 
The  butterfly   from   flower   to   flower.     See   Butterfly, 

The. — Skipsey. 
The  cactus  towers,  straight  and  tall.     See  In  Mexico. — 

Stein. 
The  caller    presented    a    "little    work."     See    Baby's 

Offering. — Burnham. 
The  calm  dispassionate  muse  of  history  has  pronounced 

her  unequivocal  award.     See  Inauguration  of    the 

Statue  of  Franklin,  The  (Inauguration  of  Franklin 

Statue,  Boston). — Winthrop. 
The  calm  Rappahannock  flowed  on  to  the  sea.     See 

On  the  Rappahannock. — Tiffany. 
The  camp  has  had  its  day  of  song.      See   Workshop 

and  the  Camp,  The. — Anon. 
The  cane  is  growin'  juicy  for  the  grindin'  at  the  mill. 

See  When  Summer  Says  Good-bye. — Stanton. 
The  Cap'n   was   such   a   little   fellow.     See   How   the 

Captain  Saved  the  Day. — Williams. 
The  Captain  galloped  to  the  front.     See  Hero  of  the 

Gun,  The. — Preston. 
The  captain  of  the  Shannon  came  sailing  up  the  bay. 

See   "Shannon"    and   the   "Chesapeake,"   The.^ 

Bouve. 
The  captain    stood    on    the    carronade — "First    Lieu- 
tenant,"   says    he.     See    Captain    Stood    on    the 

Carronade,  The. — Marryat. 
The  car  he  waited  for  came  down.     See  Trolley  La  I^a! 

— Burdette. 
The  careful  hen  calls  all  her  chirping  family  around. 

See  Seasons.  The  (Domestic  Birds). — Thomson. 
The  careful  winter  was  hardly  gone.     See  Busy  and 

Happy. — Whitney. 
The  carrier  cannot  sing  to-day  the  ballads.     See  Old 

Sergeant,  The. — Willson. 
The  carved  doors  were  open.     See  Death's  Blunder. — 

Goodwin. 
The  castle   clock   had   tolled   midnight.     See   On   the 

Funeral  of  Charles  First,  at  Night,  in  St.  George's 

Chapel,  Windsor. — Bowles. 
The  castled  crag  of  Drachenfels.     See  Childe  Harold's 

Pilgrimage  (Longing). — Byron. 
The  catastrophe  of  this  stupendous  drama  is  at  hand. 

See  Rome  and  Carthage. — Hugo. 
"The  cause  of  education   be   hanged,"   he   muttered. 

See  Going  to  School. — Anon. 


The  Cavalier  as  well  as  the  Puritan  was  on  this  conti- 
nent   in    early    days.     See    New    South,    The. — 

Grady. 
The  cedars  of  Mount  Lebanon  are,  perhaps,  the  most 

renowned.     See    Famous    and    Curious    Trees. — 

Anon. 
The  celebration  was  held  in  Josiah's  sugar  bush.     See 

My  Opinions  and  Betsey  Bobbet's  (Fourth  of  July 

in  Jonesville). — HoUey. 
The  Central  American  Treaty  was  fully  ratified  on  the 

4th  of  July,  1S50.     See  Central  American  Treaty, 

The. — Seward. 
The  central    figure    was    a    bareheaded    woman.     See 

Young  America. — Anon. 
The  century  that  has  gone  by  has  changed  the  face  of 

Nature.     See  Centennial  Address  delivered  at  Val- 
ley Forge,  June  19,  1878  (Valley  Forge). — Brown. 
The  champions   had   come    from   their    fields   of   war. 

See  Sicilian  Captive,  The. — Hemans. 
The  Chancellor    mused    as    he    nibbled    his   pen.     See 

Love  and  War. — Martin. 
The  changing  guests,  each  in  a  different  mood.     See 

Inclusiveness. — Rossetti. 
The  chapel-bell  began  to  ring  at  a  quarter  to  eleven. 

See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  (Morning  and  After- 
noon Chapel). — Hughes. 
The  character  of  a  nation  is  often  known  by  its  festivals. 

See  Decoration  Day. — Cochran. 
The  character  of  Catherine  de  Medicis  is  a  study.     See 

Catherine  de  Medicis. — Punshon. 
The  character    of    Jesus    is     perfectly     original.     See 

Character  of  Our  Saviour,  The. — Anon. 
The  character  of  Washington!     Who  can  delineate  it 

worthily?     See  Completion  of  the  National   Mon- 
ument to  Washington,  The   (Character  of   Wash- 
ington, The). — Winthrop. 
The  characters  of  great  and  small.     See  Skeleton  in 

the  Cupboard,  The. — Locker-Lamp.«on. 
The  charge  of  the  gallant  Three  Hundred,  the  Heavy 

Brigade!     See  Charge   of  the   Heavy   Brigade   at 

Balaklava,  The. — Tennyson. 
The  charitable  ladies  from  the  hospital  stood  beside  a 

little  newly-made  grave.     See  Souarest  Un  among 

'Em,  The.     (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
The  chateau  of  Ploerneuf  was  the  terror  of  the  Breton 

people.     See    Christmas    Repentance,    A.— Bern- 
hardt. 
The  chestnuts    shine    through    the    cloven    rind.     See 

Song. — Aldrich. 
The  chief  agency  in  the  progress  and  development  of 

the  law.     See  "Chief  agency  in   the  progress  and 

development  of  the  law.  The." — Bonney. 
The  chief  in  silence  strode  before.      See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,    The    (Fitz-James   and   Roderick     Dhu). — 

Scott. 
The  Chief  Magistrate  derives  all  his  authority  from  the 

people.     See  First  Inaugural  Address. — Lincoln. 
The  Chief  of  Police  yesterday  had  a  visit  from  an  old 

farmer.     See  Tickled  all  Oafer. — Anon. 
The  chiefest  action  for  a  man  of  spirit.     See  Action. — 

Webster. 
The  chiefs  were  seated  in  a  ring  beneath  the  starry  sky. 

See  Legend  of  Crystal  Spring. — Austin. 
The  chieftain   gazed   with   moistened   eyes   upon   the 

veteran  band.     See  Washington's  Farewell  to  his 

Army. — Anon. 
"The  child  is  father  to  the  man."     See  Wonders  of 

Genealogy,  The. — (Yale  Record.) 
The  child  leans  on  its  parent's  breast.     See  Trust  in 

God.- — Williams. 
The  child   looked   out   upon  the  field.     See  Trees  of 

Corn. —  (Good  Cheer.) 
The  child  was  so  sensitive,  so  like  that  little  shrinking 

plant.     See  Kiss  Me,  Mamma,   I   Can't  Sleep. — 

Anon. 
The  children    crowned    themselves    with    roses.     See 

Crowns  for  Children. — Anon. 
The  children  kept  coming,  one  by  one.     See  Children 

We  Keep,  The. — Anon. 
The  children  of  a  neighbor  of  mine  had  a  leveret  given 

them.     See  Tame  Hares. — Cowper. 
The  children  tucked  away.     See  At  the  Hearthside. — 

Cheney. 
The  children  wandered  up  and  down.     See  Phantom 

Ship,  The.— Thaxter. 
The  children's  world  is  full  of  sweet   surprises.     See 

"Children's     world    is    full    of     sweet     surprises. 

The." — Doudney. 
The  chill  November  day  was  done.     See  Little  Goose, 

A. — Turner. 
The  chill   snows  lingered,   the   spring   was  late.     See 

Back  Again. ^ — Thpxter. 
The  chime  of  a  bell  of  gold.     See  Songs'  End. — Payne 


841 


The  chime 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  chime  of  bells  across  the  waking  year.  See 
Easter  Memory,  An. — Roberts. 

The  chimes,  the  chimes  of  Motherland.  See  Chimes 
of  Old  England,  The.— Coxe. 

The  chimney  soot  w^  falling  fast.  iSee  Char-co-o-al. 
— Anon.  . 

The  choicest  and  the  costliest  goods.  See  Choicest 
Goods,  The. — Kavanaugh. 

The  choir  was  singing  the  new  arrangement  of  the 
beautiful  anthem.  iSe«  Considering  the  Lilies. — 
Anon. 

The  chough  and  crow  to  roost  have  gone.  See  Chough 
and  Crow,  The. — Baillie. 

The  Christmas  chimes  are  pealing  high.  See  Christ- 
mas Chimes,  The. — CooUdge. 

The  Christmas  Day  was  coming,  the  Christmas  Eve 
drew  near.  See  Little  Christmas  Tree,  The. — 
Coolidge. 

The  Christmas  is  coming,  the  fairies  are  hummmg. 
See  Little  Barefoot. — Anon. 

The  church  bells  were  ringing,  the  devil  sat  singing. 
See  Parable  from  Liebig,  A.— Kingsley. 

The  church  in  debt  feels  that  prudence  demands.  See 
"Church  in  debt  feels  that  prudence  demands. 
The."— Stall.  ,  ,     ^ 

The  church  of  Christ,  if  called  again  to  pass  through  the 
age  of  martyrdom.  See  "Church  of  Christ,  if 
called  again  to  pass  through  the  age  of  martyrdom, 
The."— Hurst. 

The  church  was  still,  as  the  parson  read.  See  Proto- 
type, A. — Anon. 

The  church  was  vast  and  dim.  The  air  was  fragrant 
with  pine  boughs.  See  How  Dot  Heard  "The 
Messiah." — Butterworth. 

The  churchyard  leans  to  the  sea  with  its  dead.  See 
Old  Churchyard  of  Bonchurch,  The. — Marston. 

The  circle  formed,  we  sit  in  silent  state.  See  Conversa- 
tion (Afternoon  Call,  An). — Cowper. 

The  circling  century  has  brought.  See  Battle  of 
Lexington,  The. — Bungay. 

The  circling  year  again  brings  round.  See  Memorial 
Day. — Riley. 

The  citizen  who  can  claim  America  for  his  home.  See 
American  Patriotism. — Porter. 

The  City  is  of  Night;  perchance  of  Death.  See  City  of 
Dreadful  Night,  The. — Thomson. 

The  city  of  Sidon  having  surrendered  to  Alexander. 
See  Virtue  Uncorrupted  by  Fortune. — Curtius. 

The  city  slumbers.  O'er  its  mighty  walls.  See  Fire- 
man, The.— Conrad. 

The  city's  shining  towers  we  may  not  see.  See 
Heaven  .—Wakefield . 

The  clear  smiling  lake  woo'd  to  bathe  in  its  deep.  See 
William  Tell  (Alpine  Minstrelsy).— Schiller. 

The  clock  is  on  the  stroke  of  six.  See  Father  is 
Coming. — Howitt. 

The  clock  says,  "Tick!  Tick!"  See  Lazy  Boy's 
Lesson,  A. — Tirrell. 

The  clock  strikes  seven  in  the  hall.  See  Children's 
Bedtime,  The. — Anon. 

The  clock  struck  nine,  when  I  did  send  the  nurse.  See 
Romeo  and  Juliet. — Shakespeare. 

The  closing  scene  of  French  dominion  in  Canada  was 
marked.  See  Capture  of  Quebec,  The. — War- 
burton. 

The  cloud,  which  had  scattered  so  deep  a  murkiness 
over  the  day.  See  Last  Days  of  Pompeii  (De- 
struction   of    Pompeii). — Bulwer-Lytton. 

The  clouds  are  flying,  the  woods  are  sighing.  See 
Wallenstein  (Thekla's  Song).— Schiller. 

The  clouds  are  scudding  across  the  moon.  See  Storm 
Song.— Taylor. 

The  c'ouds  grew  dark  as  the  people  paused.  See  Our 
Country's  Call. — Barry. 

The  clouds  hang  dark,  the  surging  waves.  See  How 
Cushing  Destroyed  the  Albemarle. — Anon. 

The  clouds  hang  heavy  round  my  way.  See  Shadows. 
— (Richmond  Chriidian  Advocate?) 

The  clouds  that  rest  on  the  mountain's  breast.  See 
Kisoing  Inducements. — Anon. 

The  clouds  that  wrapt  the  setting  sun.  See  Second 
Sunday  after  Trinity. — Keble. 

The  clover  blossoms  kiss  her  feet.  See  Clover  Blos- 
soms, The. — -Laighton. 

The  Club  will  please  come  to  order.  See  Little 
Women  (Little  Women's  Pickwick  Club,  The). — 
Alcott. 

The  coach  is  at  the  door  at  last.  See  Farewell  to  the 
Farm. — Stevenson. 

The  coals  have  lower,  fainter  burned.  See  Auf  Wied- 
ersehen . — Abbot  t . 

The  cock  is  crowing.  See  Written  in  March. — Words- 
worth. 


The  codfish  is  a  child  ov  the  oshun.    See  Codfish,  The. — 

Shaw. 
The  coffin  was  a  plain  one — a  poor,   miserable  pine 

coffin.     See  Noble  Revenge,  The. — Anon. 
The  cold   blast   at  the  casement  beats.     See  Heart's 

Summer,  The. — Sargent. 
The  cold,    feeble    dawn    of    a   January    morning   was 

stealing  in  at  the  windows.   See  Nicholas  Nickleby 

(Schoolmaster  Beaten,  The). — Dickens. 
The  cold,  gray  light  of  the  dawning.     See  Ticonderoga. 

— Wilson. 
The  cold    gray   m.ion   of   a   winter's   sky.     See   Dead 

Soldier-boy,  The. — Turner. 
The  cold  hands  call  upon  abysmal  Gloom.     See  Death 

of  Livingston,  The. — Noel. 
The  cold,  red  sun  is  going  down.     See  Valentine,  A. — 

Green. 
The  cold  that  winter  had  been  more  persistent  and 

severe     in    the     mountains.     See     Fire,     The. — 

Deland. 
The  cold  wind  [or  winds!  swept  the  mountain  height . 

See  Mother's  Sacrifice,  The. — Smith. 
The  cold  winter-wind  rushed  noisily  forth.     See  New 

Theory  of  Frost,  A. — Brackett. 
The  Colonel  had  been  detained  at  his  office.     See  One- 
legged  Goose,  The. — Smith. 
The  Colonel  loved  sweet  Cicely — alas!   she   loved   not 

him.     See  Colonel's  Orders,  The. — Meyers. 
The  colonel  rode  by  his  picket-line.     See  Two  Wives, 

The.— Howells. 
The  "C^olored  Debating  Society,"  of  Mount  Vernon,  O. 

See     "De     Pen      and     de     Swoard." — {Harper's 

Magazine.') 
The  colour  gladdens  all  your  heart.     See  Sympathy. — 

Gyles. 
The  comb  between  whose  ivory  teeth  she  strains.     See 

Poet  Expatiates  on  the  Beauty  of  Delia's  Hair, 

The.— Southey. 
The  combat  raged  not  long,  but  ours  the  day.     See 

Burial  of  Latane,  The.— Thompson. 
The  combatants  are   women,   the  weapons  treachery 

and  intrigue.     See  Two  Queens.— Addingtim. 
The  commandant      stands     shouting.     "Dress!"     See 

Quite  Possible. — Anon. 
The  commissioner  bet  me  a  pony — I  won.     See  Song 

of  the  Squatter. — Sherbrooke. 
The  communion  service  of  January  was  just  over.     See 

Deacon's  Week,  The. — Cooke. 
The  compliment,   especially   the   mark   of   confidence 

you  have  now  bestowed  upon  me.     See  Address 

on  Receiving  the  Degree  of  Doctor  of  Laws,  An. — 

Anon. 
The  compliment    of    this    graceful    self-respect.     See 

Manners. — Emerson. 
The  composition  of  man  is  threefold.     See  Character 

of  Washington,  The. — Vance. 
"The  concept,  the  being,  the  essence,  the  part."     See 

Promenading  Ontology. — E.  T.  D. 
The  concluding  paragraphs  of  a  historical  work.     See 

Province  of  History,  The. — Ridpath. 
The  conditions    of    life    are    always    changing.     See 

Centennial  Oration. — Brown. 
The  conduct  of  England  toward  us  resembles  that  of 

Ebenezer  Bullock.     See  Imaginary  Conversations 

(Washington  and  Franklin). — Landor. 
The  conference-meeting  thro\igh  at  last.     See  Doorstep, 

The.— Stedman. 
The  conflict  is  over!     Day  by  day  the  material  evi- 
dences of  war.     See  No  Conflict  Now. — Devens. 
The  conflict  is  over,  the  struggle  is  past.     See  Farewell, 

The.— Hoffman. 
The  conflict  which  tried  Washington  and  gave  birth 

to  the  Republic.     See  Washington  as  a  Soldier. — 

Carrington. 
The  Connaught  Castle  had  arrived  in  New  York.     See 

Annie  O'Brien. — Dallas. 
The  Connecticut  editor  who  wrote  the  following.     See 

Calling  a  Boy  in  the  Morning. — Bailey. 
The  conqueror  moves  in  a  march.     See  School-teacher, 

The. — Brougham. 
The  conquest  of  the  "Promised  Land"  did  not  prevent 

long  and  painful  contests.     See  David,  the  Patri- 
otic King. — Geikie. 
The  consul's  brow  was  sad,  and  the  consul's  speech  was 

low.     See  Horatius  at  the  Bridge. — Macaulay. 
The    convent-bells     are     ringing.       See     Parisina.  — 

Byron. 
The  conversation,  which  was  at  a  high  pitch  of  anima- 
tion.     See    Silas   Marner   (Discussion    at     "The 

Rainbow,"   A). — Eliot. 
The  cordiality    of    your    greeting,    your    unbounded 

hospitality.     See     Address     to      Northern      and 

Southern  Veterans,  An. — Anon. 


842 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  day 


The  corn    crop's    ruther    light    this    year    ag'in.     See 

Adalina's  Arrival. — -McBride. 
The  corn,  oh,  the  corn,  'tis  the  ripening  of  the  corn! 

See  Lorna  Doone  (Harvest  Song,  A). — Blackmore. 
The  Cornish    king    had    heard    a    minstrel    say.     See 

Idy'ls  of  the  King  (Vivien). — Tennyson. 
The  cosiest    place    and    the    snuggest    spot.     See   On 

Grandpapa's  Knee. — Handford. 
The  cottage  was  a  thatched  one,  the  outside  old  and 

mean.     See  Little  Jim. — Anon. 
The  Countess  Amy  with   her  hair  and   her  garments 

dishevelled.     See  Kenilworth  (Interview  between 

Amy  and  Lord  Leicester  at  Kenilworth). — Scott. 
The  Countess  di  Nottinero  was  not  exactly  a  Recamier. 

See  Senator  Entangled,  A. — De  Miile. 
"The  Countess  Vera  von   Liningen."     See  Fleurange. 

— Craven. 
The  countless   stars,    which   to   our   human   eye.     See 

God  and  the  Soul  (Starry  Host,  The). — Spalding. 
The  country  is  now  emerging  from  trying  conditions. 

See  Future  of  the  Nation,  The. — Anon. 
The  country  lanes  are  bright  with  bloom.     See  Early 

Autumn. — Fairthorne. 
The  country  residence  of  John  Hickman  was  a  delight- 
ful place  to  me.     See  Transferred  Ghost,  The.- — 

Stockton. 
The  country  ways  are  full  of  mire.     See  Night  before 

the  Wedding. — Smith. 
The  course  of  the  boat-race  was  to  be  two  miles.     See 

Boat-race,  The. — Grant. 
The  course  of  the  weariest  river.     See    We  shall  be 

Satisfied . — Phillips . 
The  course  of  things  below.     See  Life's  Battle. — -Anon. 
The  courteous    citizen    bade    me    to    his    feast.     See 

Hollow  Hospitality. — Hall. 
The  court-house  where  the  trial  was  held  was  as  bare 

of  ornaments  as  the   cell.     See  Prisoner's  Plea, 

The. — Anon. 
The  courting   of   T'nowhead's    Bell    reached   its   crisis 

one  Sabbath.     See  Race  for  a  Wife,  A. — Barrie. 
The  Court's  assembled — no  grave  court  of  law.     See 

Prologue  to  an  Evening's  Entertainment. — Anon. 
The  cow  is  a  good  animal.     She  has  two  horns  and  two 

eyes.     See  Cow,  The. — -Anon. 
The  cow  is  too  well  known,  I  fear.     See  Cow,  The. — 

Herford. 
The  cows  in   the   farm-yard  know  me.     See  Bessie's 

Dilemma. — Dallas. 
The  coyote  of  the  farther  deserts  is  a  long,  slim,  sick 

and    sorry-looking    skeleton.      See    Roughing   It 

(Coyote,  The).— Clem -ns. 
The  crab,    the    bullace,    and    the    sloe.      See    Prince 

Lucifer  (Gravedigger's  Song). — Austin. 
The  crackling  embers  on  the  hearth  are  dead.     See 

Night. — -Coleridge. 
The  crafty  Nix,  more  false  than  fair.     See  Nix,  The. — 

Garnett. 
The  Crankadox  leaned  o'er  the  edge  of  the  moon.     See 

Spirk  Troll — Derisive. — Riley. 
The  crew  had  just  finished   their  early  dinner.     See 

Tom    Brown    at     Oxford    (Boat    Race,    The).— 

Hughes. 
The  cricket  chirps  all  day.     See  September. — Arnold. 
The  crickets  in  the  corner  sing.     See  Cradle  Song. — 

Stephens. 
The  crimson  leafage  fires  the  lawn.     See  Letter  from 

Newport,  A. — Myers. 
The  crimson     moon     uprising     from     the      sea.     See 

Sonnet:  "The  crimson  moon,"  etc. — Thurlow. 
The  crimson    sun    was    sinking    down    to    rest.     See 

Columbus. — Devere. 
The  crimson  tide  was  ebbing,  and  the  pulse  grew  weak 

and  faint.     See  Very  Dark. — Anon. 
The  crisis  has  come.     By  the  people  of  this  generation. 

See  National  Morality. — Beecher. 
The  crocuses  in  the  square.     See  "Extras." — Burton. 
The  crow    doth    sing    as    sweetly    as    the    lark.     See 

Merchant  of  Venice,  The. — Shakespeare. 
The  crowd  was  famished  by  degrees.     See  Darkness 

(Dream  of  Darkness). — Byron. 
The  crowning  glory  of  Franklin's  career.     See  Inaugu- 
ration of  the  Statue  of  Franklin,  The  (Franklin  as 

a  Philanthropist). — Winthrop. 
The  crowns  of  earth  are  jewelled  dust.     See  Crown, 

The.— Palmer. 
The  crows  were  wheeling  behind  the  plow  in  scattering 

clusters.     See  Stickit  Minister,  The. — Crockett. 
The  crudest  lies  are  often  told  in  silence.     See  Truth. — 

Anon. 
The  crumbling  tombstone,  and  the  gorgeous  mauso- 
leum.    See  Glory. — -Wayland. 
The  cuckoo's   a   fine   bird.      See   Cuckoo's   Character, 

The. — Anon. 


The  cunning  hand  that  carved  this  face.     See  On  an 

Intaglio  Head  of  Minerva. — Aldrich. 
The  Cup  day  broke  calm  and  beautiful,  no  cloud  on  the 
horizon.       See   Bob,    Son    of   Battle    (Shepherd's 
Trophy,  The).— Ollivant. 
The  cup  I   sing  is  a  cup  of_gold.     See  Cup,  The. — 

Trowbridge. 
The  curfew   tolls   the  knell  of  parting  day.     See  Elegy 

Written  in  a  Country  Churchyard. — Gray. 
"The  curfew  tolls  the  knell  of  parting  day."  See  Mosaics. 

— Winrow. 
The  curious  wits,  seeing  dull  pensiveness.      See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  XXIII.).— Sidney. 
The  current,    that    with    gentle    murmur    glides.     See 

Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona,  The. — Shakespeare. 
"The  curse  of  St.  Withold  upon  these  infernal  porkers." 

See  Ivanhoe  (Anglo-Norman  Days). — Scott. 
The  curtain  had  fallen,  the  lights  were  dim.     See  At 

the  Stage-door. — Harvey. 
The  curtain  on  the  grouping  dancers  falls.     See  Music- 
hall,  The. — Wratislaw. 
The  curtain  rises  on  a  hundred  years.     See  Old  Thir- 
teen, The. — Brooks. 
The  curtains  were   half-drawn,    the   floor   was   swept. 

.See  After  Death. — Rossetti. 
The  Cynic  is  one  who  never  sees  a  good  quality  in  a 
man.       See     Portrait     Gallery     (Cynic,     The). — 
Beecher. 
The  cypress  swamp  arotind  me  wraps  its  spell.     See 

Down  the  Bayou. — Townsend. 
The  cypresses   of   Scutari.     See   Greek   at    Constanti- 
nople, The.— Houghton. 
The  Daffodil  sang:    "Darling  of   the  sun."    See  Field- 
lily,  The. — Anon. 
The  daily  work  of  the  pulpit  is  not  to  convince  the 

judgment.     See  Pulpit  Oratory. — Dougherty. 
The  dainty  Lady  Daffodil.     See  Dainty  Lady  Daffodil. 

— Sharpe. 
The  daisies  peep  from   every  field.     See  May-day. — 

Anon. 
The  daisies     white     are     nursery-maids.     See     Daisy 

Nurses. — Anon. 
The  daisy  follows  soft  the   sun.     See  Daisy   Follows 

Soft  the  Sun,  The. — Dickinson. 

The  daisy  is  the  meekest  flower.  See  Daisy,  The. — Anon. 

The  daisy   scatter'd   on   each   mead   and   down.     See 

Britannia's    Pastorals    (Shepherdesses'    Garlands, 

The). — Browne. 

The  "Dame  with  the  Camelias — ."     See  Tragedy,  The. 

— Aldrich. 
The  dandelions    and    buttercups.     See    Al    Fresco. — 

Lowell. 
The  danger,  my  countrymen,  is  that  we  shall  become 
intoxicated.     See  Dangers  of  Our  Prosperity. — 
Walker. 
The  Danube  to  the  Severn  gave.     See  Arthur  Henry 

Hallam.— Tennyson. 
The  darkness    brings    no    quiet    here.     See    Railway 

Station,  The. — Lampman. 
The  daughter  of  a   king,   how   should   I   know.     See 

Ariadne's  Farewell. — H.  H. 
The  daughter  of  a  Saxon  king       See  Ride  of  Death, 

The.— Hall. 
The  daughter  sits  in  the  parlor.     See  Modern  Belle, 

The. — Anon. 
The  dawn  came  in  through  the  bars  of  the  blind.     See 

Triumph. — Bunner. 
The  dawn  of  new  ages  is  breaking.     See  Banner  that 

Welcomes  the  World,  The. — Butterworth. 
The  dawn  of  peace  is  breaking!  breaking!     See  Dawn 

of  the  Centennial,  The. — Oberholtzer. 
The  day    appointed    iFor    the    death    of    Probus    had 

arrived.     See  Christian  Martyr,  The. — Ware. 
The  day  before  Christmas  dawned  frosty  and  bright. 

See  Santa  Claus'  Agent. — Kohaus. 
The  day   begins   to   droop.     See   Winter   Nightfall. — 

Bridges. 
The  day  dies  slowly  in  the  western  sky.     See  Home- 
ward.— Anon. 
The  day    for    the    contest    that  was    to  decide.     See 

Harvard- Yale  Football  Game,  A. — Anon. 
The  day  grows  brief;  the  afternoon  is  slanting.     See 

Ivife's  Forest  Tree. — Wilcox. 
The  day  had  been  a  calm  and  sunny  day.     See  Winter. 

— Bryant. 
The  day  has  lengthened   into   eve.     See  Twilight   of 

Thanksgiving,  The. — Kelly. 
The  day  is  cold,  and  dark,  and  dreary.     See  Rainy 

Day,  The.^ — -Longfellow. 
The  day  is  done,  and  the  darkness.     See  Day  is  Done, 

The. — Longfellow. 
The  day  is  done;  the  weary  day  of  thought  and  toil  is 
past.     See  Vesper  Hymn. — Scudder. 


843 


The  day 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The   day    is   down   into   his   bower.        See  Sea    Side 

Songs  (Serenade). — Meredith. 
The  day  is  ended.     Ere   I   sink  to  sleep.     See  All  s 

Well.— Kimball. 
The  day    is   ending.     %e   Afternoon   in    February. — 

Longfellow. 
The  day  is  fixed  that  there  shall  come  to  me.     See 

My  Guest. — Granniss. 
The  day  is  gone,   its  hours  have  run.     See  Evenmg 

Hymn. — Faber. 
The  day  is  long,  and  the  day  is  hard.     See  Close  at 

Hand. — Coolidge. 
The  day  is  quenched,  and  the  sun  is  fled.     See  Song 

of  Doubt,  A.— Holland.  \ 

The  day  is  set,  the  ladies  met.     See  Quilting,  The. — 

Bache. 
The  day  of  Gettysburg  had  set.     See  Brotherhood. — 

Holland. 
The  Day  of  the  Lord  is  at  hand,  at  hand.     See  Day  of 

the  Lord,  The. — Kingsley. 
The  day  of  the  race  was  all  that  could  be  desired.     See 

Son  of  Abdallah,  A. — Tourg^e. 
The  day  of  tumult,  strife,  defeat,  was  o'er.     See  Lines 

Written  in  August,  1847. — Macaulay. 
The  day  on  which  the  battle  of  Lexington  occurred. 

See  People  always  Conquer,  The. — Everett. 
The  day  retires  as  o'er  the  plain.     See  Ben  Hafed. — 

Whitehead. 
The  day  returns,  my  bosom  bums.     See  Day  Returns, 

The.— Burns. 
The  day  set  for  Arbor  Day,  and  the  weather  on  that 

day.     See  How  to  Plant  Trees — What  to  Plant. 

— {Department  of  Agriculture.) 
The  day  so  mild  is  Heaven's  own  child.     See  Drifting. 

— Read. 
The  day  unfolds  like  a  lotus  bloom.     See  Sunrise  in 

the  Hills  of  Satsuma. — Fenollosa. 
The  day  was  becoming  warm,  and  the  girls  plunged 

more  deeply  into  the  forest.      See  Encounter  with 

a  Panther,  An. — Cooper. 
The  day    was    breaking    over    Persia's    realm.     See 

Golden  Scepter,  The.— Merrill. 
The  day  was  dawning  clear,  mild,  entering  the  narrow 

room.     See  Boum-Boum.- — ^Clar^tie. 
The  day  was  gloomy  and  chill.  See  Little  Allie. — Parton. 
The  day   was   lingering  in   the   pale  northwest.     See 

Twilight. — Heavysege. 
The  day,  with  cold  gray  feet,  clung  shivering  to  the 

hills.     See  Claribel's  Prayer. — Parmelee. 
The  day,  with  its  sandals  dipped  in  dew.    See  Memory's 

Wildwood. — Anon. 
The  days  are  cold,  the  nights  are  long.     See  Cottager 

to  her  Infant,  The. — Wordsworth. 
The  days  are  sad,  it  is  the  Holy  tide.     See  Holy  Tide, 

The. — Tennyson. 
The  days    begin    to    wane,    and    evening    lifts.     See 

"There  Sat  the  Women  Weeping  for  Thammuz." 

— Allison. 
"The  days  keep  coming.  Mamma,"  said  little  Serious 

Eyes.     See  "Days  Keep  Coming,  The." — Anon. 
The  days  of  infancy  are  all  a  dream.     See  Seasons  of 

Life,  The.— Southey. 
The  days  of  June  were  nearly  done.     See  Battle  of 

Gettysburg,  The. — Glyndon. 
The  days  of  our  youth  are  numbered.     See  Address  to 

a  College  Graduating  Class,  An. — Anon. 
The  days   of   the    week   once   talking   together.     See 

Days  of  the  Week. — Page. 
The  day's  oration  is  in  flowers.      See  Day's  Oration 

is  in  Flowers,  The. — Hall. 
The  days   passed   on,   gloomy   days   they   were.     See 

How  Randa  Went  over  the  River. — Coffin. 
The  day's  work  is  ended,  all  cares  are  forgot.     See 

When  the  Hammock  Swings. — Oldham. 
The  dead   abide   with   us!     Though   stark   and   cold. 

See  Dead,  The.— Blind. 
The  dead  leaves  their  rich  mosaics.      See  November 

and  April  (November). — Longfellow. 
The  deadly  cup,  while  [or  which]  others  drink.     See 

Deadly  Cup,  The.— Anon. 
The  dear  little   pansies  are  lifting  their  heads.     See 

Pansies.  The. — Wilson. 
The  dear  old  Bell  is  silent  now  that  rang  the  anthem 

grand.     See  Immortal  Washington. — Dillmore. 
The  dearest  spot  of  earth  to  me.      See  Dearest  Spot, 

The. — Wrighton. 
The  dearest   things  in  this  fair  world  must   change. 

See  Change. — Pp.rtridge. 
The  death  of  Moses  himself  is  more  easily  to  he  con- 
ceived.     See  Modem  Painters  (Death  of   Moses, 

The).— Ruskin. 
The  debutantes  are   in   force  to-night.     See  Mothers 

of  the  Sirens,  The.— Baker. 


The  Declar.-ition  of  American  Independence  has  become 

the  Declaration  of  the  Rights  of  Men.    See  Tribute 

to  Washington.— Price. 
The  Declaration      of      Independence!     The      interest 

which  in   that   paper   has   survived.     See   Nation 

Born  in  a  Day,  A.-- Adams. 
The  Declaration  of  Independence  was,  when  it  occurred. 

a  capital  transaction.     See  Dignity  of  our  Nation's 

Founders,  The. — Evarts. 
The  deed  was  executed  with  a  degree  of  self-posses.sion. 

See  Murder  of  Captain  Joseph  White,  The  (Crime 

Revealed  by  Conscience). — Webster. 
The  deep  affections  of  the  breast.     See  Parrot,  The. — 

Campbell. 
The  defender  of  his  country — the  founder  of  liberty. 

See  Epitaph  on  Washington,  An. — Anon. 
The  deference    showed    by    youth    to    old    age.     See 

Reverence  Due  from  the  Old  to  the  Young,  The. — 

Lowell. 
The  deliberations  of  great  councils  have  vitally  affected. 

See   Constitutional   Convention   of    1787,    The. — 

Depew. 
The  demand    for    cheapness    has    compacted    capital. 

See  Critical  Conditions  of  Labor,  The. — Harrison. 
The  departure  of  the  Pilgrims  for  Holland  is  deeply 

interesting.     See  First  Settlement  of  New  England, 

The  (Departure  of    the  Pilerims  for  Holland). — 

Webster. 
Thf;  desert  was  my  dwelling — and  I  stood.     See  Ruins 

of  Babylon,  The. — Husenbeth. 
The  despot  treads  thv  sacred  sands.     See  Carolina. — 

Timrod. 
The  despot's  heel  is  on  thy  shore.     See  My  Maryland. — 

Randall. 
The    Destiny,     Minister     General.       See    Canterbury 

Tales,  The  (Destiny).— Chaucer. 
The  destiny  of  man  is  +he  ijoncern  of  the  world.     See 

National  Prohibition  Party  our  only  Deliverer,  A. 

—Ray. 
The  details  (of  the  fight  off  Santiago).      See  Fight  oft 

Santiago,  The. — Lodge. 
The  Detroit  brigade  of  boot-blacks  was  increased  by 

one    yesterday.     See    "Come    and    be    Shone." 

— {Detroit  Free  Press). 
The  development    of    society    is    directly    dependent. 

See  Individualism  in  Society, — Lyon. 
The  devil  came  up  to  the  earth  one  day.     See  Devil 

and  the  I.awyers,  The. — Anon. 
The  Devil  can  cite  Scripture  for  his  purpose.    See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  The. — Shakespeare. 
The  Devil  sits  in  his  easy  chair.     See  Devil  at  Home, 

The. — Hervey. 
The  devil  was  piqued  such  saintship  to  behold.      See 

Moral' Essays  (Epistle  III.). — Pope. 
The  dew  is  gleaming  in   the  grass.     See  Among  the 

Millet. — Lampman. 
The  dew  is  on  the  heather.     See  Captain's  Feather, 

The.— Peck. 
The  dew  was  falling  fast,  the  stars  began  to  blink. 

See  Pet  Lamb,  The. — Wordsworth. 
The  dewdrops  on  the  summer  morn.     See  Dewdrops. — 

Anon. 
The  dews  of  [the]  summer  night  did  fall.     See  Cumnor 

Hall.— Mickle. 
The  dignity  of  labor!     Consider  its  achievements!     See 

Dignity  of  Labor,  The.— Hall. 
The  dining-room  of  a  house   on   Fifth  Avenue.     See 

When  Angry,  Count  a  Hundred. — Cavazza. 
The  dirge  is  sung,  the  ritual  said.     See  I.  H.  B. — Win- 
ter. 
The  discipline  of  the  wilderness  had  done  its  work.     See 

New  Country  Occupied,  The. — Geikie. 
The  dismal   yew  and  cypress  tall.     See  Wake  of  the 

Absent,  The.— Griffin. 
The  distinction  of  our  volunteer  army  over  all  other 

armies.     See  Our  Fallen  Heroes. — Depew. 
The  distinguishing   trait    of   Grubbins   was   his   unex- 
pectedness.    See  Dikkon's  Dog. — I-undt. 
The  district  school-master  was  sitting  behind  his  great 

book-laden     desk.     See   School-master's    Guests, 

The.— Carleton. 
The  doctor  said  it  was  no  unusual  thing  in  delirium. 

See  Child  Once  More,  A. — Anon. 
The  doctor  said  we  needed  exercise.     See  Base  Ball. — 

Anon. 
The  doctors  say  'tis  good  for  health.     See  Philosophy 

of  Laughter. — Peat. 
The  dog   will   come   when   he   is   called.     See    Birds, 

Beasts,  and  Fishes. — Taylor. 
The  domestic  establishment  of  Montezuma  wa.s  on  the 

same  scale  of  barbaric  splendor.     See  History  of 

the  Conquest  of  Mexico  (How  Montezuma  Lived). 

— Prescott. 


844 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  evening 


The  door  is  shut — I  think  the  fine  old  face.     See  Last 

of  the  New  Year's  Callers,  The. — -Bunncr. 
The  door  of  many  a  maiden's  heart.     See  Safe  Attach- 
ment, A. — Lawrence. 
The  door  of  Scrooge's  counting-house  was  open.     See 

Christmas     Carol     (Christmas    Invitation,    A). — 

Charles  Dickens. 
The  door   was   shut,   as   doors  should   be.     See  Jack 

Frost. — Setoun. 
The  door  was  thrown  open  wide.     See  Les  Mis^.ables 

(Jean  Valjean  and  the   Bishop). — Hugo. 
The  doors  are  shut,  the  windows  fast.     See  Canadian 

Folk-song,  A. — Campbell. 
The  doubt  which  ye  misdeem,  fair  love,  is  vain.     See 

Amoretti  and  Epithalamion  (Sonnet:  "The doubt," 

etc.). — Spenser. 
The  dragon-fly  and  T  together.     See  Two  of  a  Trade. — 

Duffield. 
The  dram-seller's   wife   wears  fine   silken   robes.     .See 

Two  Pictures  from  life. — Anon. 
The  dread   of   death   is  but   an   animal   instinct.     See 

Dread  of  Death.  The.— Belford. 
The  dreamy    crags    with    raucous    voices    croon.     See 

Hymn  to  the  Sunrise. — Anon. 
The    dreamy   rhymer's  measured  snore.     See  To  Ma- 

caulay. — Landor. 
The  dreary    days    of    November.     See    November. — 

Richards. 
The  drops  of  water  slung  across  the  camel's  back.     See 

World's  Verdict,  The. — Mines. 
The  drums  are  all  muffled,  the  bugles  are  still,     See 

After  the  Battle. — Anon. 
The  drums  are  beat,  the  trumpets  blow.     See  Stars  and 

Stripes,  The. — Noble. 
The  drum's  wild  roar  [or  roll]  wakes  [or   awakes]  the 

land;  the  fife  is  calling  shrill.     See  Drum-call  in 

1861,  The.— Cutler. 
The  drunkard  dreamed  of  his  old  retreat.     See  Drunk- 
ard's Dream,  The. — -Denison. 
The  drunkard  lay  on  his  bed  of  straw.     See  Drunkard's 

Dream,  The. — Smith. 
"The  ducats  take!     I'll   sign  the  bond  to-day."     See 

Two  Argosies. — Bruce. 
The  Duke  of  Argyle  made  a  signal  for  Jeanie  to  ad- 
vance.    See   Heart    of    Midlothian,    The    (Jeanie 

Deans  and  Queen  Caroline). — Scott. 
The  Duke  of  Gordon's  three  daughters.     See  Duke  of 

Gordon's  Daughter,  The. — Anon. 
The  dule's  i'  this  bonnet   o'  mine.     See  Dule'.s  i'   This 

Bonnet  o'  Mine,  The. — Waugh. 
The  dusky  night  rides  down  the  sky.     See  A-Hunting 

We  Will  Go.— Fielding. 
The  dusky  warriors  stood  in  groups  around  the  funeral 

pyre.     See    Huron    Chief's    Daughter,   The. — I^e- 

prohon. 
The  dying  man  now  told  how  cruelly  he  had  burned 

and  plundered  the  land.     See  William  the  Con- 
queror.— Freeman . 
The  dykes  half  bare  are  lying  in  the  bath.     See  Across 

the  Dykes. — Herbin. 
The  eagle,  did  ye  see  him  fall?     See  Eagle's  Fall,  The. 

— Whiting. 
The  eagle  nestles  near  the  sun.     See  Song  of  Content, 

A.— Piatt. 
The  eagle  of  the  armies  of  the  West.     See  Flight  of  the 

War-eagle.  The. — Auringer. 
The  Earl  of  Wigton  had  three  daughters.     See  Richie 

Story. — Anon. 
The  Earlsburn  Glen  is  gay  and  green.     See  Ro.se  and 

the  Fair  Lily,  The. — Motherwell. 
The  early    morning    air,    refreshing,    cool    and    sweet. 

See  September. — Finch. 
The  early  settlers  of  Concord,  we  must  believe,  could 

not  have  fully  anticipated.     See  Town  of  Concord, 

Mass.,  The. — Robinson. 
The  earth  goes  on,  the  earth  glittering  in  gold.     See 

Inscription  on  Melrose  Abbey. — Anon. 
The  earth  has  treasures  deep.     See  Where  Are  Your 

Treasures? — Durant. 
The  earth  is  so  bleak  and  deserted.     See  Christmas 

Flowers. — Procter. 
The  earth  is  the  cup  of  the  sun.     See  Sun  Cup,  The. — 

Lampman. 
The  earth  is  the  Lord's,  and  the  fullness  thereof.     See 

P.salms  of  David,  XXIY .—(Bible.) 
The  earth,  late  choked  with  showers.     See  Spring  and 

Melancholy. — Lodge. 
The  earth  seems  a  desolate  mother.    See  March. — Webb. 
The  earth  was  made  from  nothing,  and  man  was  made 

from  the  earth.     See  Wilkins  I^amily,  The. — Quill. 
The  earth,   with  its  bright   and  glorious  things.     See 

"Earth,  with  its  bright  and  glorious  things,  The." 

— Oxenham. 


The  East  was  crowned  with  snow-cold  bloom.  See 
Krishna. — Russell. 

The  East  Wind  is  coming,  all  moist  with  the  spray. 
See  East  Wind,  The. — Washburn. 

The  Easter  praise  may  falter.  See  "Easter  praise  may 
falter.  The." — Dickinson. 

The  Eastern  day  was  well-nigh  o'er.  See  Corporal 
Dick's  Promotion. — Doyle. 

The  easy-chair,  all  patched  with  care.  See  Old  Farm- 
house, The. — Anon. 

The  echoes  of  Sumter  had  thrilled  through  the  land. 
See  O'Branigan's  Drill. — Fink. 

The  edge  of  thought  was  blunted  by  the  stress.  See 
Resuscitation  of  Fancy. — Turner. 

The  editor  ate  too  much;  the  editor  ate  too  long.  See 
Vision,  A. — Craig. 

The  editor  of  St.  Twel'mo,  noted  for  his  love  of  a  prac- 
tical joke.  See  Man  Who  Hadn't  Any  Objection, 
The.— Anon. 

The  editor  sat  with  his  head  in  his  hands.  See  He 
Came  to  Pay. — -Kelley. 

The  education,  moral  and  intellectual,  of  every  indi- 
vidual.    See  Culture  the  Result  of  Labor. — Wirt. 

The  effects  of  alcohol  are  a  crowning  curse.  See  Pro- 
hibition the  Ultimatum. — Phelps. 

"The  ego,  non-ego,  the  body,  the  soul,"  See  Prom- 
enading Psychology. — Curtis. 

The  elder  folk  shook  hands  at  last.  See  Meeting,  The. 
— Whittier. 

The  electric  nerve,  whose  instantaneous  thrill.  See 
Agassiz. — Lowell. 

The  elephant  said,  "If  my  trunk  I  could  check."  See 
Too  Much  of  a  Good  Thing. — Anon. 

The  elm  belongs  to  the  order  of  ulmacese  or  elmworts. 
See  Choosing  a  "State  Tree.'' — The  Elm. — Stewart. 

The  elm,  in  all  the  landscape  green.  See  Elm  versus 
Apple. — Smith. 

The  elms  are  clad  in  brown  and  gold.  See  October 
Here  Again. —  \non. 

The  eloquence  of  Mr.  [iw.  John]  Adams  resembled 
his  general  character.  See  Adams  and  Jefferson 
(Eloquence  of  John  Adam?,  The). — Webster. 

The  Emperor  Charlemagne  was  at  war  with  the  Moors. 
See  C>rlando  Furioso,  Story  of  the. — Rahb. 

The  Emperor  Nap  he  would  set  off.  See  March  to 
Moscow,  The. — Southey. 

The  Emperor  of  China  had  something  on  his  mind. 
See  I^eveling. — Anon. 

The  end  draws  near.  By  Fates  unseen  directed.  See 
Finis. — Anon. 

The  enemies  of  popular  might  and  power.  See  Strength 
of  the  American  Government,  The. — Bright. 

The  enemies  of  the  Republic  call  me  tyrant!  See 
Robespierre's  I^ast  Speech. — Robespierre. 

The  English  colonists  in  America,  generally  speaking. 
See  (Ilompletion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The 
(Elements  of  the  American  Government). — Web- 
ster. 

The  English  language  abounds  in  words  and  phrases. 
See  Double  Meaning. — Anon. 

The  Englishman's  waked  by  the  lark.  See  Street 
Cries . — Eggleston . 

The  envoy  that  come  from  Patsy  Burns'  yesterday. 
See  Justice  in  a  Quandary. — Anon. 

The  epic  poem  on  which  I  shall  ground  my  present 
critique.  See  Reformation  of  the  Knave  of  Hearts. 
— Canning. 

The  essence  of  patriotism  lies  in  a  willingness  to  sac- 
rifice for  one's  country.  See  Memorial  Day  Ad- 
dress.— Bryan. 

The  Eternal  Father  looked  down  from  His  lofty  throne. 
See  Jerusalem  Delivered,  Story  of  the. — Rabb. 

The  eulogium  pronounced  [by  the  honorable  gentle- 
man] on  the  character  of  the  State  of  South  Caro- 
lina. See  Reply  to  Hayne,  The  (South  Carolina 
and  Massachusetts). — Webster. 

The  evening  and  the  morning  have  joined  in  fight  at 
last.     See  1898  and  1 562.— Foss. 

The  evening  comes,  the  fields  are  still.  See  Baccha- 
nalia; or.  The  New  Age. — Arnold. 

The  evening  heavens  were  calm  and  bright.  See 
Visions  of  I/iberty,  The. — Ware.  .Ir. 

The  evening  shadows  lengthen  on  the  lawn.  See  Sun- 
set.— "Taylor. 

The  evening  star  its  vesper  lamp.  See  Evening  Idyl, 
An. — -Anon. 

The  evening  star  rose  beauteous  above  the  fading  day. 
See  Virgin  Mary's  Bank,  The. — Callahan. 

The  evening  was  glorious,  and  light  through  the  trees. 
See  Rainbow,  The. — Anon. 

The  evening  weather  was  so  bright  and  clear.  See 
"I  stood  tiptoe  upon  a  little  hill"  (Cynthia's 
Bridal  Evening). — Keats. 


845 


The  evenings 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  evenings  are  damper  and  colder.  See  "Stay-at- 
Home's"  P»an,  The. — Baker. 

The  examination  and  trial  of  Madame  Roland.  -  See 
Execution  of  Madame  Uoland,  The. — Lamartme. 

The  expense  of  spirit  in  a  waste  of  shame.  See  Son- 
nets, CXXIX. — Shakespeare. 

The  experience  of  years  proves  that  the  legislature.  See 
Constitutional  Prohibition. — Finch. 

The  face  of  the  world  is  changing.  See  1  ruth  and 
Victory. — .*co\  ille.  „     ^    „    ,      j. 

The  face,  which  duly  as  the  sun  See  De  Profundis.— 
Browning.  .    •   • 

The  factory  was  situated  on  the  outskirts  of  a  thriving 
country  town.  See  Surly  Tim's  Troub.e. — Bur- 
nett. 

The  facts  in  the  following  case  came  to  me  by  letter. 
■See  Aurelia's  Unfortunate  Young  Man. — Clem- 
ens. „  „        TT 

The  fair  breeze  blew,  the  white  foam  flew.     iSee  Rime 

of  the  Ancient  Marmer,  The  (Dead  Calm  at  Sea>. — 

Coleridge. 
The  fair  maid  who,  the  first  of  May.     See  First  of  May, 

The. — Anon. 
The  fair  Pamela  came  to  town.     See  Pamela  in  Town. 

— Cortissoz. 
The  fair  varieties  of  earth.     See  Life  is  Love. — Fox. 
The  fairest  action  of  our  human  life.     See  Revenge  of 

Injuries.— -Carew. 
The  fairest  flower  upon  the  vine.     See  Ah!  Me. — Anon. 
The  fairest  thing  in  all  the  world.     See  Moonshine.^ — 

Moody. 
The  fairies  who  attend  the  birth.   See  Fairy  s  Revenge, 

The. — Kavanaugh. 
The  Fairy  and  the  Soul  proceeded.     See  Queen  Mab 

(Magic  Car  Moved  on.  The). — Shelley. 
The  fairy  beam    upon    you.      See  Gipsies   Metamor- 
phosed (Wish,  A).— Jonson. 
The  faithful  helm  commands  the  keel.     See  At  Best. 

—O'Reilly. 
The  fall  of  her  did  make  the  god  below.     See  Britan- 
nia's   Pastorals    (Marina   and   the    River-god). — 

Browne. 
The  fallen  cause  still  waits.    See  Sentinel  Songs  (Cause 

of  the  South,  The).— Ryan. 
The  fame  of  Franz  Schubert  is  now  an  established  fact. 

See  Er!-k6iig,  The. — Biggart. 
The  fam'ly  of  the  Sniggles  has  just  come  to  town.     See 

Sniggles  Family,  The. — Minster. 
The  fan  no  longer  flutters.     See  In  Memoriam — J.  O. — 

Watrous. 
The  fancy    I    had    to-day.      See   Fifine  at   the   Fair 

(Amphibian) . — Browning. 
The  farmer  and  the  farmer's  wife.     See  Notes  from  a 

Battle-field.— Stone. 
The  farmer  came  in  from  the  field  one  day.  See  Farmer's 

Wife,  The.— Anon. 
The  farmer  had  five  buxom  girls.     See  Blind-man's- 

buflf.— Hall. 
The  farmer  is  a  happy  man.     See  Happy  Farmer,  The. 

— Anon. 
The  farmer  looked  at  his  cherry-tree.     See  Scarecrow, 

The.— Thaxter. 
The  farmer  planted  a  seed.     See  Seed,  The. — -Anon. 
The  farmer  sat  in  his  easy  chair,  between  the  fire  and 

the    lamp-light's    glare.     See    Saving    Mother. — 

Anon. 
The  farmer  sat  in  his  easy  chair,  smoking  his  pipe  of 

clay.     See  Picture,  A. — Eastman. 
The  farmer  stood  by  his  open  door.     See  Lightning 

Story,  A. — Lampton. 
The  farmer's  goose,   who  in   the   stubble.     See  Pro- 
gress of  Poetry,  The. — Swift. 
The  farmer's  wife  sat  at  the  door.     See  "They're  Dear 

Fish  to  Me." — Anon. 
The  fastidious  reader  will  doubtless  smile  when  he  is 

informed.     See  Jack  and  Gill.     (A  Criticism.) — 

Dennie. 
The  fate  of  the  man-child.     See  Fate  of  the  Man-child, 

The. — Emerson. 
The    father    asked:     "How    have    you    done.'"     See 

Reward  of  Merit,  A.—(Trinitii  Tablet.) 
The   fault   is  not  mine,  if  I  love  you  too  much.     See 

Fault  is  not  Mine,  The. — Landon. 
The  fault  with  the  mass  of  civic  virtue.     See  Piety  and 

Civic  Virtue. — Parkhurst. 
The  Faun  is  the  marble  image  of  a  young  man,  leaning 

his  right   arm.     See  Marble   Faun,  The  (Faun   of 

Praxiteles,  The). — Hawthorne. 
The  favor  that  I  ask  is  one,  my  liege.     See  Colonna 

to  the  King.— Shiel. 
The  favorite  hooks  of  Tennyson  were  the  Bible  and 

Shakespeare.     See    Good    Memory    Work. — -Mc- 

Caskey, 


The  feast  is  o'er! — Now  brimming  wine.     See  Knight's 

Toast,  The. — Anon. 
The  feast  prepared,  the  splendor  round.     See  Chinese 

Dinner,  The. — Anon. 
The  feast  was  over  in  Branksome  tower.     See  Lay  of 

the  Last  Minstrel,  The  (Branksome  Hall). — Scott. 
The  feast  was  spread,  the  solemn  words  were  spoken. 

See  "As  I  Have  Loved  You.  " — Holliday. 
The    feathered    songster    chanticleer.     See    Bristowe 

Tragedy. — Chatterton. 
The  festive  Ah  Goo.     See  Story  of  Chinese  Love,  A. — 

(Loa  Anaeles  Exprena.) 
The  fettered  Spirits  linger.     See  Story  of  the  Faithful 

Soul,  The.— Procter. 
The  fiat  of  death  is  inexorable.     See  Shall  We  Meet 

Again. — Prentice. 
The  fields  of  Gettysburg  are  green.     See  Gettysburg. 

— Anon. 
The  fields  were  silent,  and  the  woodland  drear.     See 

In  the  Dark. — Higginson. 
The  fierce  exulting  worlds,  the  motes  in  rays.     See 

Love. — Smith. 
The  fierce  March  winds  were  blowing.     See  Nothing  to 

Wear. — Crocker. 
The  fiery  mid-March  sun  a  moment  hung.     See  Easter 

Eve  at  Kerak-Moab. — ScoUard. 
The  fifteenth  of  July.     See  Brave  Lord  Willoughby. — 

Anon. 
The  fifth  from  the  north  wall.     See  Cross  of  Gold,  The. 

— Grav. 
The  fight  is  o'er,  the  day  is  done.     See  Hans  Vogel. — 

Buchanan. 
The  figure  is  by  no  means  novel.     See  Snow  of  Age, 

The. — Anon. 
The   fire  beneath   his  crucible  was  low.     See  Dying 

Alchemist,  The.— Willis. 
The  fire  in  the  kitchen  was  out.     See  Two  Visits. — 

Hatheway. 
The  fire  in  the  west  burns  low.     See  Twilight  Reverie, 

A. — Anon. 
The  fire  of  love  in  youthful  blood.     See  Fire  of  Love, 

The.— D-rset. 
The  fire  on  the  hearth  has  almost  gone  out  in  New 

England.     See  Backlog  Studies. — Warner. 
The  fire  "upon  the  hearth  is  low.     See  In  the  Firelight. — 

Field. 
The  first  astronomer  announces  to  a  startled  world. 

See  First  Predicted  Eclipse,  The. — Mitchel. 
The  first  baby  was  a  great  institution.     See  Mr.  Blif- 

kin's  First  Baby. — ^Anon. 
The  first  creature  of  God  in  the  works  of  the  days.     See 

Truth.— Bacon. 
The  first  forty  years  of  the  seventeenth  century.     See 

Small  Beginnings  of  Great  Historical  Movements. 

— Hillard. 
The  first  great  fight  of  the  war  is  fought!     See  Manila 

Bay.— H.  E.  W.,  Jr. 
The  first  great  lesson  a  young  man  should  learn.     See 

Getting  the  Right  Start. — Holland. 
The  first  imposing  armed  movement  against  the  colo- 
nics.  See  Centennial  Celebration  of  Concord  Fight 

(Paul  Revere's  Ride). — Curtis. 
"The  first,  in  the  hearts  of  his  countrymen!"     Yes, 

first!     See     Washington's     Birthday,      February 

22,  1732.— Choate. 
The  first  law  of  success.     See  Employ  Your  Own  Intel- 
lect.— Anon. 
The  first  letter  our  Captain  wrote.     See  Captain  Gold 

and  French  Janet. — Robinson. 
The  first  morn  of  April,  so  balmy  and  fair.     See  April's 

Fools. — Park. 
The  first  Nowell  the  Angel  did  say.     See  First  Nowell, 

The. — Anon. 
The  first  of  our  society  is  a  gentleman  of  Worcester- 
shire.     See  Spectator,   The  (Club,   The). — Addi- 
son. 
The    first    public   man    I    ever    saw     ....     was 

Charles    Sumner.     See   Traditions    of    Massachu- 
setts, The. — Lodge. 
The  first  sparrow  of  Spring!     The  year  beginning  with 

younger  hope.     See  Walden  (Spring). — Thoreau. 
The  first  step  a  person  takes  [toward  putting  up    a 

stovel.     See  Putting  up  Stoves. — Anon. 
The  first  thing  in  order  will  be  to  choose  some  one.     See 

Women's  Rights. — Zeliff. 
The  first  thing  that  I  remember  was  Carlo  tugging 

away.     See  Asleep  at  the  Switch. — Hoey. 
The  first  time  I  saw  him  I  was  hurrying  up  the  stair- 
way.    See  Little  Bill. — Anon. 
The  first  time  that  I  began  to  sneeze.     See  Curing  a 

C!old. — Anon. 
The  first  time  that  the  sun  rose  on  thine  oath.     See 

Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese,  XXXII. — Browning. 


846 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  gaudy 


The  first  train  leaves  at  six  P.   M.     See  Poppyland 

Limited  Express,  The. — Abbott. 
The  first  wild  rose  in  wayside  hedge.     See  Wild  Rose, 

A. — Austin. 
The  first  world-sound  that  fell  upon  my  ear.     See  Sea 

Longings. — Aldrich. 
The   fisher  is  out   on   the  sunny   sea.     See  Voice  of 

Spring,  The. — Hemans. 
The  fisher  who  draws  in  his   net   too   soon.     See  Per- 
severe.— Anon. 
The  fisherman  stood  all  day  by  the  beach.     See  Women 

of  Marblehead,  The. — Gunnison. 
The  fisherman's  wife  went  down  to  watch.     See  Father 

Paul. — Dallas. 
The  fitful  April  sunshine.     See  Sunshine. — Anon. 
The  five  years  following  the    final    .separation    of    the 

colonies.     See  Wa.shington. — Spence. 
The  fiver's  spread  upon  the  plate,  its  right  side  up  with 

care.     See  About  Contributions. — Anon. 
The    flag  of  the  Union — what    precious    associations 

cluster   around   it!     See  American    Flag,   The. — 

Putnam. 
The   flags   of   war   like   storm-birds   fly.     See   Battle 

Autumn  of  1862,  The.— Whittier. 
The  flame  of  love  assauges.     See  Love's  a  Riddle.— 

Carey. 
The  flame-wing'd  seraph  spake    a  word.     See  Poeta 

Nascitur. — Ashe. 
The  flighty  purpose  never  is  o'ertook.     See  Macbeth 

(Oracle). — Shakespeare. 
The  floor  had  been-  swept  and  the  furniture  dusted. 

See  Thanksgiving  Day. — Thorpe. 
"The  flower  fadeth."  but  the  seed  and  the  fruit  come. 

See  "  'Flower  fadeth,'  but  the  seed  and   the   fruit 

come,  The." — Wadsworth. 
The    flower    that    smiles    to-day.     See    Mutability. — 

Shelley. 
The   flower  that's   bright   with   the   sun's  own   light. 

See  "Flower  that's  bright  with   the    sun's    own 

light.  The."— Anon. 
The  flowers  have  no  tongues.     See  Silence  is  Golden. 

—  (Chautauirunn.) 
The  flowers  were  never  more  lovely  and  bright.     See 

Jubilee  of  the  Flowers,  The. — Howard. 
The  flowers  were  nodding  and  tossing,  one  day.     See 

Violet's  Victory,  The. — Wolcott. 
The  flying  sea-bird  mocked  the  floating  dulse.     See 

Sea-weed,  The. — Pullen. 
The  foes  of  Rohab  thrust  the  tongue  in  cheek.     See 

Sorrow  of  Rohab,  The. — Bates. 
The  fog  had  been  so  thick.     See  Tragedy  of  the  North 

Sea,  A. — -Powell. 
The  fog  was  so  thick  yer  could  cut  it.     See  Through 

the  Fog. — Lincoln . 
The  folk  who  lived  in  Shakespeare's  day.     See  Guil- 

ielmus  Rex.— -Aldrich. 
The  following  communication.     See  Effective  Narra- 
tion, An. — Anon. 
The  following  is  a  vivid  description  of  the  terrible 

disaster.     See  Fall  of  the  Pemberton  Mill,  The. — 

Phelps. 
The  following  is  the  Chinese  version.     See  Medley — 

Mary's  Little  Lamb. — Anon. 
The  following  tale  was  found  among  the  papers  of  the 

late  Diedrich  Knickerbocker.    See  Rip  Van  Winkle. 

— Irving. 
The  fool  hath  said  "There  is  no  God."     See  Atheist. 

The.— Knox. 
The  forest  leaves  lay  scattered  cold  and  dead.     See 

Field  of  the  Grounded  Arms,  The. — Halleck. 
The  forest  trees  are  transient   things  and  frail.     See 

Changeless  World,  The. — Jacobs. 
The  forty  little  ducklings  who  lived  up  at  the  farm. 

See  Forty  Little  Ducklings.  The. — Anon. 
The  forward  violet   thus  did   I  chide.       See  Sonnets, 

XCIX.  — Shakespeare. 
The  forward  youth  that  would  appear.     See  Horatian 

Ode  upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ireland,  An. — 

Marvell. 
The  foundation  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monument  we  have 

now    laid.     See     Bunker     Hill     Monument,     The 

(Foundation  of  Bunker  Hill  Monument). — Web- 
ster. 
The    fountains    mingle    with    the    river.     See    Love's 

Phi  losophy . — Shelley . 
The  fountains  smoke,  and  yet  no  flames  they  show. 

See.  When  Love  Most  Secret  Is. — Jones. 
The  fourteenth  of  July  had  come.     See  La  Tricoteuse. 

— Thornbury. 
"The  Fourth  of  July,  1776,  will  be  the  most  remark- 
able epoch."     See  Independence  Day. — Parmele. 
The  four-way  winds  of  the  world  have  blown.     See 

Strike  the  Blow.— McK. 


The  fox  and  the  cat,  as  they  travell'd  one  day.  See 
Fox  and  the  Cat,  The. — Cunningham. 

The  framers  of  our  national  Constitution  carefully 
stated  the  objects.  See  National  Constitution 
and  Rum,  The.— Willey. 

The  fray  began  at  the  middle-gate.  See  Ballad  of 
Orleans,  A. — Darmesteter. 

The  freckle-faced  girl  went  over  to  a  neighbor's  house. 
See  That  Freckle-faced  Girl. — Anon. 

The  free  man  cannot  long  be  an  ignorant  man.  See 
Abstract  of  an  Address  at  the  Dedication  of  a 
Hall  of  Science  and  Art. — -Anon. 

The  freed  dove  flew  to  the  Rajah's  tower.  See  Dove 
of  Dacca.  The. — -Kipling. 

The  French  Revolution  began  with  great  and  fatal 
errors.  See  Revolutionary  Desperadoes. — Mack- 
intosh. 

The  fresh,  bright  bloom  of  the  daffodils.  See  April 
Fantasie. — Cortissoz. 

The  Freshman  hies  him  to  the  shop.  See  Decora- 
menta. — Ely. 

The  friend  who  holds  a  mirror  to  my  face.  See 
"Friend  who  holds  a  mirror  to  my  face.  The.  "  — 
{Scribner's  Monthly.) 

The  friendly  cow  all  red  and  white.  See  Cow,  The. — 
Stevenson. 

The  friends  of  little  Mary  Green.  See  Playing  with 
Fire. — Turner. 

The  friends  of  my  childhood  with  pleasure  I  greet. 
See  I'm  Getting  too  Big  to  Kiss. — Vickers. 

The  friendship  of  Holland!  The  independence  of 
Spain!     See  On  Mr.  Tierney's  Motion. — Canning. 

The  frost  and  snow  of  mistletoe.  See  Love's  Token. — 
Taggart. 

The  frost  is  here.     See  Winter. — Tennyson. 

The  frost  is  out,  and  in  the  open  fields.  See  October. — 
Very. 

The  frost  looked  forth  one  [or  on  a]  still,  clear  night. 
See  Frost,  The.— Gould. 

The  frost  performs  its  secret  ministry.  See  Frost  at 
Midnight,  The.^Coleridge. 

The  frost  will  bite  us  soon.  See  Harvest  Home  Song. 
— Davidson. 

The  frosty  regioun  ringis  of  the  zeir.  See  Pro- 
logues to  the  Aeneid  (Scottish  Winter  Land.scape, 
A). — Douglas. 

The  frosty  wind  was  wailing  wild  across  the  wintry 
wold.     See  Willy's  Grave. — Waugh. 

The  frugal  crone,  whom  praying  priests  attend.  See 
Moral  Es.says  (Ruling  Passion,  The). — Pope. 

The  frugal  snail,  with  forecast  of  repose.  See  House- 
keeper, The. — Lamb. 

The  fruit  full  well  the  schoolboy  knows.  See  Bramble. 
—Elliot. 

The  fundamental  service  which  the  church  has  to 
render.  See  Christian  Citizenship.  —  Park- 
hurst. 

The  funeral  of  the  late  Mr.  Bertram  was  performed. 
See  Guy  Mannering  (Lucy  Bertram  and  Dominie 
Sampson). — Scott. 

The  funeral  services  were  ended.  See  Old  Wife's 
Kiss,  The. — Anon. 

The  funniest  story  [or  thing]  I  ever  heard.  See  She 
Would  be  a  Mason. — Naughton. 

The  furrows  of  life  Time  is  plowing.  See  Love's  Har- 
vest.— Straton. 

The  future  hides  in  it.  See  "Future  hides  in  it.  The." 
— Goethe. 

The  gallant  Youth  who  may  have  gain'd.  See  Yar- 
row Revisited. — Wordsworth. 

The  game  is  mine,  Julius.  See  Fourth  of  July  Ora- 
tion, The. — Anon. 

The  game  was  over  and  Yale  had  won.  See  l-nder 
False  (Colours. — -R.  A.  L. 

The  garden  beds  I  wandered  by.  See  Conservative, 
A. — Stetson. 

The  garden  is  a  royal  court.  See  Jester  Bee. — Sher- 
man. 

The  garden  path  runs  north.  See  Garden  Path,  The. — 
Smiley. 

The  garden  within  was  shaded.     See  Thisbe. — Cone. 

The  gardener  does  not  love  to  talk.  See  Gardener, 
'The. — -Stevenson. 

The  gardener  stands  in  his  bower  door.  See  Gardener, 
The. — Anon. 

The  garland  I  send  thee  was  cuU'd  from  those  bowers. 
See  Garland  I  Send  Thee.  The.— Moore. 

The  garlands  wither  on  your  brow.  See  Death's  Final 
Conquest . — Shi  rley . 

The  gate  was  thrown  open,  I  rode  out  alone.  See 
How  Salvator  Won.— Wilcox. 

The  gaudy  peacock's  origin.  See  Origin  of  the  Pea- 
cock, The. — Kavanaugh. 


847 


The  gay 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOXS 


The  say  belles  of  fashion  may  boast  of  excelling.     See 

Needle,  The. — Woodworth. 
The  gayest  hours  trip  lightly  by.     See  Joy  and  Sor- 
row.— Hedderwick. 
The   general   dashe<L  along  the   road.     See  General's 

Death,  The.—CrCounor. 
The  gentian  was  the  year's  last  child.     See  Last  Flower 

of  the  Year,  The. — -Larcom. 
The  gentle  child,  who  lives  to  please.     See  Gentle  Child, 

The. — Anon. 
The  gentle  Elise  sat  drearily  in  the  gloaming  in  the 

front    room.     See    Unexpected    Greeting,    An. — 

Anon. 
The   gentle    shepheard    satte   beside   a   springe.     See 

Shepheardes  Calender,  The  (December). — Spenser. 
The  gentleman  from  South  Carolina  taunts  us.     See 

New  England  in  the  War  of  1812. — Cushing. 
The  gentleman  [sir!  has  misconceived  the  spirit  and 

tendency  of  northern  institutions.     See  Northern 

Laborers. — Naylor. 
The    gentleman,    who    has    so    copiously    declaimed 

against      all     declamation.     See     Aristocracy. — • 

Livingston. 
The  gentleman,  with  his  usual  skill.     See  Tariff  Re- 
form.— Wilson. 
The  German  may  sing  of  his  rosy-cheeked  lass.     See 

American  Girl,  The.— S.  F.  P. 
The  Ghost  of  Christmas  Present  rose.     See  Christmas 

Carol,    A    (Christmas    at    Bob    Cratchit's,  A). — 

Charles  Dickens. 
The   ghostly    wind   of   Weber's   northern    pines.     See 

Rossin  i . — Todhunter. 
The  ghosts  of  flowers  went  sailing.     See  Changelings. — 

Higginson. 
The  gingham  dog  and  the  calico  cat.     See  Duel,  The.^ 

Field. 
The  gipsies  came  to  our  good  lord's  gate.     See  Gipsy 

Laddie,  The. — Anon. 
The  girl  from  Chicago  arose  sharp  at  eight.    See  Christ- 
mas in  Chicago. — White. 
The  girls  may  have  their  dollies.     See  Boy's  Opinion, 

A. — Anon. 
The  girls  that  are  wanted  are  home-girls.     See  Girls 

who  are  in  Demand  (Girls  that  are  Wanted,  The). 

— Anon. 
The  girls  who  are  wanted  are  good  girls.     See  Girls 

who  are  in  Demand. — Anon. 
The  girt  woak  tree  that's  in  the  dell.     See  Girt  Woak 

Tree  that's  in  the  Dell,  The.— Barnes. 
The  glad  Dawn  sets  his  fires  upon  the  hills.     See  For 

Easter  Morning. — Moulton. 
The  glad  harvest  greets  us;  brave  toiler  for  bread. 

See  Song  of  the  Har^'est. — Washburn. 
The  glamour  of  the  after-light.     See  Aftermath,  The. 

— Hendiy. 
The  gloom  of  the  sea-fronting  cliffs.     See  Aboard  the 

' '  Sea-swallow . ' ' — Do  wden . 
The  gloomiest  day  hath  gleams  of  light.     See  Lights 

and  Shades. — Hemans. 
The  glories  of  our  blood  and  state.     See  Dirge,  A. — 

Shirley. 
The  glorious  days  of  September.     See  Chronicle  of  the 

Drum.  The  (Execution  of  the  Princess  de  Lam- 

balle) . — Thackeray. 
The  glow  and  the  glory  are  plighted.     See  Nice  Cor- 
respondent, A. — Locker. 
The    goblin    marked   his  monarch  well.     See  Culprit 

Fay,  The  (First  Quest,  The).— Drake. 
The  God  of  Abraham  praise.     See  God  of  Abraham 

Praise,  The. — Olivers. 
The  God  of  Love,— aA,  benedicite'     See  Cuckoo  and  the 

Nightingale,  The. — Chaucer. 
The  gods  be  praised!     The  morn  is  here  at  last!     See 

Within  the  Gates. — Clement. 
The  gold  I  gave  to  Dromio  is  laid  up.     See  Comedy 

of  Errors. — Shakespeare. 
'^^  ,?.°!?^    th"**    with    the    sunlight    lies.      See    Dead 

Millionaire,  The. — Miller. 
The   golden    dreams   of   youth.     See   Hope's   Song  — 

Winslow. 
"The  golden  gates  are  open   now."     See   Final   Day 

Dialogue.  A. — Lampton. 
'^^  S"},1^"  Kate^  of  day  in  quiet  close.     See  Sunset.— 

Williams. 
The  golden  glow  is  paling.     See  Stars.- Havergal. 
Ihe  golden  glow  of  a  summer's  day.     See  Valedictory. 

— Shoals. 
The  golden  robin  came  to  build  his  nest.      See  Golden 

Hobin's  Nest,  The. — Chadwick. 
The  golden  sea  its  mirror  spreads.     See  Golden  Sunset, 

I  he. — Longfellow. 
The  golden  rod  is  tossing.     See  Katydid.— Sangster. 
Ihe  goldenrod  is  yellow.     See  September.— Jackson 


The    gondolier,    in    music    clear.     See    Barcarolle. — 

Davis. 
The  good  a  man  does  from  time  to  time.     See  Woman's 

Face,  A. — Stephen. 
The  good  dame  looked  from  her  cottage.     See  Leak  in 

the  Dike,  The. — Cary. 
The  good  people  of  the  United  States.     See  Protection 

of  Americans  in  Armenia,  The.— Frye. 
The  good   ship  "Albatross"    sailed    out.     See   Bos'n 

Jack  of  the  "Albatross." — Jackson. 
The  good  ship  lies  fast  at  her  mooring.     See  Pound, 

Sir,  A. — Anon. 
The  gorse  is  yellow  in  the  heath.     See  First  Swallow, 

The.— Smith. 
The   government   of   the   republic   by   a   congress   of 

States.     See  Convention  of  1787,  The. — Depew. 
The  grace  and  gayety,  the  pathos  and  melody.     See 

Holmes,  Extract  Concerning. — Curtis. 
The  graduates  are  going  forth.     See  At   Graduating 

Time. — Anon. 
The    grain    is    gathered   in.     See    Indian    Summer. — 

Bumstead. 
The  grammars  and  the  spellers.     See  Vacation  Time. 

— Anon. 
The  Grand  Army  of  the  Republic,  organized  to  foster 

the  friendships.     See  Tribute  to  Logan. — Sherman . 
The    grand    days    of   oratory    are  gone  forever.     See 

Oratory  and  the  Press. — Dougherty. 
The  grand  idea  of  humanity.     See  Present  Age,  The. — 

Channing. 
The  grandest  dream  the  human  heart  has  ever  cher- 
ished.    See  Immortality. — Anon. 
The  grandeur   of  this   earthly   round.     See  Plato   to 

Theon. — Freneau. 
The  grass  has  so  little  [so  little  has — C]  to  do.     See 

Grass,  The. — Dickinson. 
The    grass   hung   wet    on    Rydal    Banks.     See    With 

Wordsworth  at  Rydal. — -Fields. 
The  grass  is  green  on  Bunker  Hill.     See  People's  Song 

of  Peace,  The. — Miller. 
The  grass  of  fifty  Aprils  hath  waved  green.     See  On 

the  Proposal  to  Erect  a  Monument  in  England  to 

Lord  Byron. — Lazarus. 
The  grass  so  little  has  [tw.  has  so  little]  to  do.     See 

Grass,  The. — Dickinson. 
The  grass  that  is  under  me  now.     See  Dying  Lover, 

The.— Stoddard. 
The   grave   buries  every   error,   covers   every   defect. 

See  "Grave  buries  every  error,"  etc. — Irving. 
The  gray  sea  and  the  long  black  land.     See  Meeting  at 

Night. — Browning. 
The  gray  waves  rock  against  the  gray  skyline.     See 

When    Nature    Hath    Betrayed   the    Heart    that 

Loved  Her. — Jewett. 
The  great  bell  swung  as  ne'er  before.     See  Indepen- 
dence.— Read. 
The  great  [or  gret]  big  church  wuz  crowded  full  uv 

broadcloth   an'    of   [or   uv]    silk.     See   Volunteer 

Organist,  The. — Foss. 
The  great  blue  heron  stood  all  alone.     See  Great  Blue 

Heron,  The.— Thaxter. 
The  great  captain  of  our  cause — Abraham   Lincoln. 

See  Death  of  Lincoln,  The. — Godwin. 
The  great  charm,  however,  of  English  scenery.     See 

Rural  Life  in  England  (English  Scenery). — Irving. 
The  great  distinction  of  a  nation — the  only  one  worth 

pos.sessing.     See  Spiritual  Freedom  (Great  Distinc- 
tion of  a  Nation,  The). — Channing. 
The  great  element  of   reform    is  not  born  of  human 

wisdom.     See   True    Source    of    Reform,    The. — 

Chapin. 
The  great  end  of  education  is  not  information.     See 

"Great  end  of  education  is  not  information."  etc. 

— (Philadelphia  Press.) 
The  great  face  was  so  sad,  so  earnest,  so  longing,  so 

patient.       See    Innocents   Abroad,    The    (On   the 

Sphinx). — Clemens. 
The  great  man  down,  you  mark  his  favorite  flies.    See 

Hamlet  ("Great  man  down,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
The    great    old-fashioned    clock    struck    twelve.     See 

Swan  Song,  The. — Brooks. 
The  great  Pacific  journey  I  have  done.     See  Cockney 

Wail,  A. — Anon. 
The  great  procession  came  up  the  street.     See  How 

we  Kept  the  Day. — Carleton. 
The  great  question  is  settled.     Upon  this  field  conse- 
crated by  American  valor.     See  Great  Question 

Settled,  The.— Curtis. 
The  great  Republic  goes  to  war.     See  War. — Stetson. 
The  great  rule  of  conduct  for  us  in  regard  to  foreign 

nations.    See  Farewell  Address  (Our  Relations  with 

Europe). — Washington. 


848 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  history 


The  great  soft  downy  snow  storm  like  a  cloak.     See 

Snow  Storm,  The.^Wetherald. 
The  great  struggle  for  victory  on  the  heights  of  Inker- 
man.     See  Spike  that  Gun. — ^Anon. 
The  great  sun,  scattering  the  clouds  with  a  resistless 

smile.     See  Effects  of  Spring. — Wilson. 
The  Great  Sword  Bearer  only  knows.     <See  House  of  a 

Hundred   Light.s,  The  (Conclusion  of  the    Whole 

Matter,  The). — Torrence. 
The  great  trees  of  California  must  be  classed  among  the 

wonders.     See  California's  Giant  Trees. — Anon. 
The  greatest  liberty  of  the  Kingdom  is  religion.     See 

Three  Liberties,  The. — Pym. 
The  greatest  of  all  the  fruits  of  the  Charter  of  Inde- 
pendence.    See  Greatest  Fruit  of  the  Declaration. 

— Adams. 
The  greatness  of  some  men  only  makes  us  feel.     See 

Martin  I.uther. — Krauth. 
The   greatness   of   Stonewall   Jackson   was   an   uncon- 
scious greatness.     See  Unconscious  Greatness  of 

Stonewall  .lackson,  The. — Hoge. 
The  Grecian  Muse,  to  earth  who  bore.     See  California. 

— Harris. 
The    Greek    rhetorician,    Longinus,    quoted    from    the 

Mosaic    account.     See    Let     there     be     Light. — 

Mann. 
The  Greeks  held  the  grandest  feast  of  all  the  year. 

See  Thanksgiving  among  the  Greeks. — Anon. 
The  green  boughs  rustle  by  my  window.     See  Nest- 
builders,  The. — Anon. 
The    greenhouse    is    my    summer    seat.     See   Faithful 

Bird,  The.— Cowper. 
The  greeting  of  the  company  throughout.     See  Pathos 

of  Applause,  The.— Riley. 
The  gret   [or  great]  big  church  wuz  crowded  full   uv 

broadcloth    an'    uv   [or   of]   silk.     See   Volunteer 

Organist,  The. — Foss. 
The  grog-seller  sat  by  his  bar-room  fire.     See  Satan 

and  the  Grog-seller. — Burleigh. 
The  ground  I  walk'd  on  felt  like  air.     See  Secret  of 

the  Nightingale,  The. — Noel. 
The  ground  was  all  covered  with  snow  one  day.     See 

Snow-bird's  Song,  The. — ^Woodworth. 
The  ground  was  still  covered  with  snow.     See  Robin- 
son Crusoe  (Crusoe's  Fight  with  Wolves). — Defoe. 
The  grove  was  gloomy  all  around.     See  Dream,  The. — 

Behn. 
The  groves  of  Blarney  they  look  so  charming.     See 

Groves  of  Blarney,  The. — Milliken. 
The    groves    were    God's    first    temples.     Ere    man 

learned.     See  Forest  Hymn,  A. — Bryant. 
The  guardian  pines  upon  the  hill.     See  Threnody  of 

the  Pines. — Hayne. 
The  gudewife  sits  i'  the  chimney-neuk.     See  Ballad  of 

the  Werewolf,  A. — Tomson. 
The  gunny  time,  the  funny  time.     See  July. — Rich- 
ards. 
The  guns  are  hushed.     On  every  field  once  flowing. 

See  Rear  Guard,  The. — Brown. 
The  haddock's  feet  are  on  thy  shore.     See  Owed  to 

Halifax. — Burdette. 
The  hag  is  astride.     See  Hag,  The. — Herrick. 
The  half-seen  memories  of  childish  days.     See  Early 

Friendship. — De  Vere. 
The  half-world's  width  divides  us;  where  she  sits.    See 

Divided. — Gray 
The   Hall  of   Sleep  is  a   welcome  hall.     See  Hall  of 

Sleep,  The.— Bates. 
The  hand   I   love   has  dropped  a  spray.     See  Haw- 
thorne.— Anon. 
The  hand  of  God  never  tires,  nor  are  its  movements 

aimless.     See  God  in  History.— Lanahan. 
The  hand  of  time  was  heavy  on  the  brow.     See  Story 

of  Rebekah,  The. — Armstrong. 
The  hand  that  swept  the  sounding  lyre.     See  On  a 

D<?ad  Poet. — Osgood. 
The  handful  here,  that  once  was  Mary's  earth.     See 

Her  Epitaph. — Parsons. 
The  hands  are  «uch  dear  hands.     See  While  We  May. 

— Coolidge. 
The  hands  that  do  God's  work  are  patient  hands.    See 

Master's  Work,  The. — Partridge. 
The  happiness  and  the  progress  of  mankind  have  as 

often    been     advanced.     See    Capture    of    Major 

Andre,  The. — Depew. 
The  happy  Christmas-time  draws  near.     See  Christ- 
mas 'Time. — Festellis. 
The  harp  at  Nature's  advent  strung.     See  Worship  of 

Nature,  The.— Whittier. 
The  harp  of  Ziou's  psalmist  now  is  still.     See  Silent 

Harp,  The. — Anon. 
The  harp  that  once  through   Tara's  halls.     See  Harp 

that  once  through  Tara's  Halls,  The. — Moore. 


The  hawthorn  whitens,  and  the  .iuicy  groves.  See 
Seasons,  The  (P^larly  Spring). — Thomson. 

The  Hawthorne  children — i>even  in  all.  See  Haw- 
thorne Children,  The. — Field. 

The  hawse  is  a  noble  animal.  See  Horse, — A  Boy's 
Composition,  The. — Anon. 

The  head  is  stately,  calm,  and  wise.  See  Head  and 
the  Heart,  The. — Saxe. 

The  heart  is  a  garden,  and  never  a  .seed.  See  Thoughts. 
— Thorpe. 

The  heart  leaps  with  the  pride  of  their  story.  See 
Fleet  at  Santiago,  The. — Russell. 

The  heart  may  often  be  cheered  by  observing.  See 
"Heart  may  often  be  cheered  by  observing, 
The." — Livingstone. 

The  heart  never  grows  old.  See  Heart  never  Grows 
Old,  The.— Adams. 

The  heart  of  man,  walk  it  which  way  it  will.  See 
Philip  van  Artevelde  (Heart-rest).- — Taylor. 

The  heart  of  Merrie  England  sang  ia  thee.  See  Chau- 
cer.— Betts. 

The  heart  soars  up,  like  a  bird.  See  Flight  of  the 
Heart,  The.— Goodale. 

The  heart  swells  with  unwonted  emotion  when  we 
remember  our  sons  and  brothers.  See  Our  He- 
roes.— Andrew. 

The  heart  when  broken,  is  like  .sweet  gums  and  spices 
when  beaten.  See  "Heart  when  broken,  is  like 
sweet  gums  and  spices  when  beaten,  "The." — 
Bunyan. 

The  heart! — Yes,  T  wore  it.     See  Hearts. — Procter. 

The  heath  this  night  must  be  my  bed.  See  Lady  of 
the  Lake,  The  (Song  of  the  Young  Highlander). — 
Scott. 

The  heave,  the  wave,  and  bend.  See  Thoughts  on  the 
Forest. — Neal. 

The  heaven  doth  not  contain  so  many  stars.  See 
Sextain. — Dnimmond. 

The  heavens  and  the  earth,  and  the  great  as  well  as 
number'ess  events.  See  Glory  of  Nature,  The. — 
Dwight. 

The  heavens  are  our  riddle ;  and  the  sea.  See  Heavens 
are  Our  Riddle,  The. — Bates. 

The  heavens  declare  the  glory  of  God.  See  Psalms 
of  David,  XIX.— Bible. 

The  heavens  declare  Thy  glory.  Lord!  See  Psalm 
XIX.— Watts. 

The  heavens  on  high  perpetually  do  move.  See  Swift- 
ness of  Time,  The. — Gascoigne. 

The  heavy  mists  have  crept  away.  See  "Mark." — 
McGaffey. 

The  hedges  on  both  sides  of  the  road  from  Inverness. 
See  Field  of  Culloden,  The.— Winter. 

The  hen  that  cackles  loudest.  See  "Hen  that  cackles 
loudest.  The." — Anon. 

The  herald  ends;  the  vaulted  firmament.  See  Canter- 
bury Tales,  The  (Palamon  and  Arcite).— Chaucer 
(Drvden). 

The  herald  note  of  summer  days.  See  Hear  it  and 
Wish  !-^ Whit  tier. 

The  herald  of  the  flowers.  See  Snowdrop,  The. — 
Anon. 

The  heroi.sm  and  perfection  of  .John  Brown's  life  and 
character.     See   John    Brown    of   Osawatomie.— 
Anon. 

The  herring  loves  the  merry  moon-light.  See  An- 
tiquary, The  (Elspeth's  Ballad).— Scott. 

The  hill  opposite  one  end  of  Bathsheba's  dwelling. 
See  Sword  Exercise,  The. — Hardy. 

The  hills  are  bright  with  maples  yet.  See  Faded 
I^eaves. — Cary. 

The  hills,  rock-ribbed  and  ancient  as  the  sim.  See 
Thanatopsis. — Bryant. 

The  Hired  Man's  supper,  which  he  sat  before.  See 
Hired  Man  and  Floretty,  The. — Riley. 

The  history  of  humanity  is  a  history  of  progress.  See 
Our  Future. — Ireland. 

The  history  of  mankind  as  well  shows  forth  the  uni- 
formity of  law.  See  "History  of  mankind  as 
well  shows  forth  the  uniformity  of  law.  The." 
— Minton. 

The  history  of  New  England  to  this  hour.  See  Puri- 
tanism.— Hoar. 

The  history  of  our  glorious  old  flag  is  of  exceeding 
interest.     See  History  of  Our  Flag. — Putnam. 

The  history  of  persecution.  See  Compensation. — 
Emerson. 

The  history  of  strong  drink  is  the  history  of  ruin.  See 
Strong  Drink. — Seiss. 

The  history  of  that  plain  and  simple  sect.  See  Twenty- 
second  of  December,  The. — Bulwer. 

The  history  of  the  world  does  not  furnish  an  instance. 
See  War  Deprecated. — Douglas. 


849 


The  history 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  hi8tor>'  of  the  world  is  full  of  testimony  to  prove 

how  much  depends  upon  industry.     See  Industry 

Necessary    to    the   Attainment    of    Eloquence. — 

Ware. 
The  history  of  this  city  has  reached  a  point  of  moral 

crisi.s.     See  M«ral  Crisis,  A. — Parkhurst. 
The  holiest  of  all  holidays  are  those.     See  Holidays. — 

Longfellow. 
The  hollow  sea-shell,  which  for  years  hath  stood.    See 

Sea-shell  Murmurs. — ^Lee-Hamilton. 
The  hollow  winds  begin  to  blow.     »See  Signs  of  Rain. — 

.Tenner. 
The   holly'   the   holly!   oh,   twine   it   with  bay.     See 

Christmas  Holly.  The.— Cook. 
The  homely  words,  now  often  read!     See  What  Man  is 

there  of  You? — Macdonald. 
The  honest  man  could  contain  himself  no  longer.    See 

Hip  Van  Winkle. — Irving. 
The  honey-bee  that  wanders"  all  day  long.     See  Hidden 

Sweets.     Botta. 
The  honey-bees  on   Mount  Hymettus.  long  and  long 

ago.     See  How  the  Bees  Came  by  Their  Sting. — 

Perry. 
The  honor  has  been  conferred  upon  me  of  addressing 

you.     See  For  a  Dental  College. — Anon. 
The  Hon.   Demshire   Hornet   bad  a  very   unpleasant 

experience    lately.       See    Wrong    Man,    The. — 

Anon. 
The  honorable  gentleman     from  Massachusetts,  after 

deliberating  a   whole   night.     See  On  Mr.  Foot's 

Resolution  in  the  U.  S.  Senate,  Jan.  21,  1830  (Re- 
ply   to   Mr.  Web.ster,  .Ian..  1830). — Hayne. 
The  honorable  gentleman  has  asked.     See  America's 

Obligations  to  England. — Barr^. 
The  honorable  member  complained  that  I  had  slept  on 

his  speech.     See  Reply  to  Hayne. — -Web.ster. 
The  honored  daughter  of  Connecticut,  the  author  of 

"Uncle  Tom."     See  New  Englander  in  History, 

The  — Wayland. 
The  honor-!  w^e  grant  mark  how  high  we  stand.     See 

Idols.— Phillips. 
The   hornet   is  an   inflammibel  buzzer.     See   Hornet, 

The. — Billings. 
The  horsemen  and  the  footmen.     See  Horalius  (Mus- 
ter, The). — Macaulay. 
The  host  is  ridinir  from  Knocknarea.     See  Hosting  of 

the  Sidhe,  The.— Yeats. 
The  hosts  of  JDon  Rodrigo  were  scatter'd  in  dismay. 

See  Lamentation  of  Don  Roderick,  The. — Lock- 
hart. 
The  hottest  time  in  any  clime.     See  August. — Rich- 
ards. 
The  hound  was  cuffed,  the  hound  was  kicked.     See 

Hound,  The. — Lanier. 
The  hour  for  conciliation  is  passed.      See  Speech  at 

Union  Square.  N.  Y   (To  Young  Men  of  New  York 

in  1861).— Baker. 
The  hour  had  struck,  but  still  the  air  was  fill'd.     See 

Aftemote  of  the  Hour,  The. — Turner. 
The  hour  has  come.     I   expect  to  see  Mr.   Hopkins 

soon.     See  Unsuccessful  Advance,  An. — Anon. 
The  hour  has  come  to  part  us.     See  Hour  Has  Come, 

The. — Anon. 
The  hour  is  come!     What  mean  these  words  full  of 

gloom'     See  Blind  Flower  Girl  of  Pompeii,  The. — 

Matchett. 
The  hour  of  meeting  having  arrived,  the  Association 

will   please   come   to   order.     See   City   and   the 

Country,  The. — Anon. 
The   hour   of   noon    had   been    appointed   for   Major 

Andri^'s  execution.     See  Execution  of  Andre,  The. 

— Peterson. 
The  hours  I  spent  with  thee,  dear  heart.     See  Rosary, 

The. — Rogers. 
The  hours  of  this  day  are  rapidly  flying.     See  First 

Settlement  of  New  England  (Future  of  America. 

The).— Webster. 
The  hours  went  on  as  Darnay  walked  to  and  fro.     See 

Tale  of  Two  Cities,  A  (Execution  of  Sydney  Car- 
ton, The). — Dickens. 
The  house  had  been  "genteel."     See  On  the  Stairs. — 

Morrison. 
The  hou.se  in  question  faced  a  street  and  the  back 

looked  over  a  turfed  garden.     See  Waiting  Juliet, 

The.-^Quillnr-Couch. 
The  house  is  dark  and  dreary.     See  House  is  Dark  and 

Dreary,  The.— Stoddard. 
The  house  lay  snug  as  a  robin's  nest.     See  Fairy  of  the 

Dell,  The.— Carv. 
The    house    of    Chivalry    decayed.     See    Chivalry  — 

Jonson. 
The  housewife  woke  with  sudden   fright.     See  Con- 
sternation.— Anon. 


The  hue  of  her  hide  was  dusky  brown      See  Highway 

Cow,  The.— Hal!. 
The    human    will,    that    force    unseen.     See    Will. — 

Wilcox. 
The  hunt  for  the  runaway  slaves  was  long,  animated, 

and  thorough,  but  unsuccessful.     See  Uncle  Tom's 

Cabin  (Death  of  Uncle  Tom,  The).— Stowe. 
The  hunt  is  up,  the  hunt  is  up.     See  Hunt  is  up.  The. 

—Anon 
The  hunt  is  up,  the  hunt  is  up.     See  Master  Sky-lark 

(Song  of  the  Hunt,  The;. — Bennett. 
The    hunter    mist    creeps    slowly    o'er    the    sea.     See 

Approach   of  the   Storm,   'The. — (.Vassar   Miscel- 
lany.) 
The    Hylodes!     The   Hylodes!     See   Hylodes,   The.— 

Wilson. 
The  idea  of  a  Supreme  Being  and  of  the  immortality  of 

the   soul.     See   Mortality    the    Basis   of   Civilized 

Society — Belief  in  God  the  Basis  of  Morality. — 

Robespierre. 
The  idea  of  writing  a  National  hymn  to  order.     See 

National  Hymn,  The. — Richards. 
The  idea  that  alcohol  is  necessary  to  enable  men.    See 

Quection  of  Nations,  The. — Richardson. 
The  ideal  citizen  is  the  man  who  believes  that  all  men 

are  brothers.     See  Ideal  Citizen,  The. — Habber- 

ton. 
The  ideal  co-ed  is  a  thing  of  books.     See  Ideal  Co-ed, 

The.— Field. 
The  ideals  of  the  past  for  men.     See  Soldier's  Faith, 

The.— Holmes. 
The  idle  groups  upon  the  streets,  hearing  the  well- 
known  sounds  of  Bud's  war-whoops.     See  Stirring 

up  of  Billy  Williams,  The. — Edwards. 
The   imagination    follows   the   lines   of    Nature.     See 

Imagination  and  Fancy. — Everett. 
The  "Imitation  of  Christ"  was  written  by  a  hand  that 

waited  for  the  heart's  prompting*.     See  Mill  on  the 

Floss,  The   ("  'Imitation  of  Christ'  was  written." 

etc.).— Eliot. 
The  immediate  occasion  of  the  first  thanksgiving.    See 

First  National  Thanksgiving,  The. — Anon. 
The    immortal    spirit    hath    no   bars.     See    Dawn. — 

Scott. 
The  imperial  boy  had   fallen  in  his  pride.     See  My 

Fatherland. — Lawton . 
The  imperial   stature,  the  colossal  stride.     See  King 

Henry  the  Eighth. — Wordsworth. 
The  impulse  came  upon  me,  one  Saturday  afternoon. 

See  How  Norman  Won  the  Race. — Whitson. 
The  increasing  exactions  of  the  church  and  the  world 

upon    ministers.      See   "Increasing    exactions   of 

the  church,  The."— Coif elt. 
The  increasing  moonlight  drifts  across  my  bed.     See 

Fredericksburg. — Aldrich. 
The  Indian  weed  witherc^d  quite.     See  Pipe  and  Can. 

— Anon. 
The  infidels,   a  motley  band.     See  "We're  Building 

Two  a  Day!" — Hough. 
The  influence  of  Christianity  upon  the  political  con- 
dition of  mankind.     See  Christianity  as  a  Political 

Force. — Dix. 
The  influence  of  well-selected  books  in  a  school.     See 

School  I>ibraries. — Anon. 
The  injury  of  unrestricted  immigration  to  American 

wages.     See  Great  Peril  of  LTnrestricted  Immigra- 
tion, The. — Lodge. 
The  innocent,  sweet  Day  is  dead.     See  Night  and  Day. 

I>anier. 
The  inquiry  is  whether  presence  at  the  overt  act  be 

necessary.     See    Instigators    of   Treason,    The. — 

Wirt. 
The  instinct  of  animals,  in  many  cases.     See  Instinct 

of  Locality  in  Animals  and  Birds. — Anon. 
The  Lis  was  yellow,  the  moon  was  pale.     See  Iris. — 

Field. 
The  irresponsive  silence  of  the  land.     See  Thread  of 

Life,  The. — Rossetti. 
The  island  lies  nine  leagues  away.     See  Island,  The. — 

Dana. 
The  isles  of  Greece!  the  isles  of  Greece!    See  Isles  of 

Greece,  The. — Byron. 
The  .1.  Nigra  of  the  .luglans  genus  is  a  native  of  America. 

See  Choosing  a  "State  Tree." — The  Black  Walnut. 

— Ripley. 
The  Jackdaw  sat  on  the  Cardinal's  chair!     See  .lack- 
daw  of  Rheims,  The. — Barham. 
The  Jaybird  he's  my  favorite.     See  Jaybird,  The. — 

Riley. 
The  jester  shook  his  hood  and  bells,  and  leaped  upon 

a  chair.     See  .Tester's  Sermon,  The. — Thornbury. 
The  jingling  of  a  harp  and  piano.  See  Book  of  Snobs, 

The  (Music  at  Mrs.  Ponto's). — Thackeray. 


850 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  lawns 


The  jolly    month    of    winter    time.     See    February. — 

Richards. 
The  journals    this  morning    are  full  of    a  tale.      See 

.Johnny  Bartholomew. — English. 
The  joy-bells  are  ringing  in  gay  Malahide.     See  Bridal 

of  Malahide,  The.— Griffin. 
The  joyous  Prom,  is  past  and  gone.     See  Aftermath. — 

Walker. 
The  jury  having  found  you  guilty  of   selling   intoxica- 
ting liquors.     See  Judge's  Temperance  Lecture,  A. 

Reading. 
The  Kaiser's  hand  from  all  his  foes.     See  Kaiser,  The. 

— Howitt. 
The  keener    tempests    come:    and    fuming    dun.     See 

Seasons,  Tne   (Snow  Scene,  A). — Thomson. 
The  keenest  pangs  the  wretched  find.  See  Giaour,  The. 

— Byron. 
The  key  of  some  charm'd  music  in  your  voice.     See 

Sea  Captain's  Story,  The. — Lytton. 
The  keynote  to  the  oratory  of  Wendell  Phillips  lay  in 

this.     See   Oratory    of    Wendell    Phillips,    The. — 

Higginson. 
The  kindly  words  that  rise  within  the  heart.     See  Un- 
spoken Words. — Anon. 
The  King  and  the  Pope  together.     See  King  and  the 

Pope,  The.— Webb. 
The  king  but  an  his  nobles  a'.     See  Brown  Robin. — 

Anon. 
The  king    called    his    best    archers.     See    William    of 

Cloudeslo. — Anon. 
The  king  can  drink  the  best  of  wine.     See  Differences. 

— Mackay. 
The  king  from  the  council  chamber.     See  King's  Pic- 
ture, The. — Bostwick. 
The  king  is  full  of  grace  and  fair  regard.     See  King 

Henry  V. — Shakespeare. 
The  king  is  kind,  and  well  we  know.    See  King  Henry 

IV.,  Pt.  I.  (Hotspur's  Quarrel  with  Henry  IV.). — 

Shakespeare. 
The    king    looked    on    him    kindly,  as    on    a    vassal 

true.     See  Cid,   The   (Cid  and  Bavieca,  The).— 

.\non. 
The  King  of  Love  my  Shepherd  is.     See  Lord  is  My 

Shepherd,  The.— Baker. 
The  king  of  the  day  is  exerting  his  power.     See  Songs 

of  the  Seasons. — Thorne. 
The  King  said,  "Come."     See  Light  of  Asia,  The  (Sor- 
row of  Buddha,  The). — Arnold. 
The  king  sent  forth  an  edict  through  the  land.     See 

King's  Joy  Bells,  The. — Bradley. 
The  king  sits  in  Dunfermline  town.     See  Sir  Patrick 

Spens. — Anon. 
The  king  stood  still  till  the  last  echo  died.  See  Absalom 

(David's  Lament  over  Absalom). — Willis. 
The  King  was  drinking  in  Malwood  Hall.     See  Red 

King,  The. — Kingsley. 
The  king  was  on  his  throne.     See  Vision  of  Belshazzar. 

— Byron. 
The  king    was    sick.     His    cheek    was    red.     See    En- 
chanted Shirt,  The. — Hay. 
The  king  was  walking  through  the  street.     See  King's 

Kisses.  The.— Tubbs. 
The  king  was  weary  of  his  part.     See  Search  for  Hap- 
piness.— Gaddess. 
The  king  with  all  his  kingly  train      See  Louis  XV — ■ 

Sterling. 
The  Kingdom   of   Ireland,   with   her  imperial   crown, 

stands  at  your  Bar.     See  Heaven  Fights  on  the 

Side  of  a  Great  Principle. — Grattan. 
The  kingdoms    of   this    world    shall    pass    away.     See 

Realm  of  Love,  The. — Bispham. 
The  King's  men,  when  he  had  slain  the  boar.     See  How 

the  King  Lost  his  Crown. — Trowbridge. 
The  Kings  were  moved;  conviction  hung.     See  Death 

of  Ajax,  The. — Praed. 
The  kings  who  ruled  mankind  with  haughty  .sway.     See 

Whiskers,  The. — -Woodworth. 
The  kiss,  dear  maid!  thy  lip  has  left.     See  Kiss,  Dear 

Maid,  The. — Byron. 
The  knell  that  dooms  the  voiceless  and  obscure.     See 

Survival. — Coates. 
The  Knight  had  ridden  down  from  Wensley  Moor.     See 

Hart-leap  Well. — Wordsworth. 
The  knightliest  of  the  knightly  race.     See  Virginians 

of  the  Valley,  The.— Ticknor. 
The  lad  Kullervo  laid  his  luncheon  in  his  basket.     See 

Kalevala,  The  (Kullervo   and   the   Cheat-cake). 
The  lad  Philisides.     See  Arcadia  (Country  Song,  A). — ■ 

Sidney. 
The  lad  who  wrote  that  little  note.     See  Other  Side, 

The.— (Corne/Z  Widow.) 
The  ladies  of  St.  James's.     See  Ladies  of  St.  James's, 

The.— Dobson. 


The  ladies  rose.     I  held  the  door.      See     Angel    in    the 

House,  The  (Dean's  Consent,  The  . — Patmore. 
The  Lady  Blanche,  regardless  of  all  her  lovers'  fears. 

See  Lines  Suggested  by  a  Picture  of  Two  Females. 

— Lamb. 
The  lady  from  the  West  was  fair.     See  Lady  from  the 

West,  The. — Meyers. 
The  Lady  Jane  was  tall  and  slim.     See  Knight  and  the 

Lady,  The. — Barham. 
The  lady  lay  in  her  bed.     See  Lady's  Dream,  The. — 

Hood. 
The  Lady  Mary  Villiers  [ut.  Villers]    lies.  See  Epitaph 

on  the  Lady  Mary  Villiers. — Carew. 
The  Lady  May  went  forth  at   morn.     See  Legend  of 

Ogre  Castle,  The. — English. 
The  lady  of  Antrim  rose  with  the  mom.     See  Randall 

M'Donald. — M'Gee. 
The  Lady  Rohesia  lay  on  her  death-bed!     See  Lady 

Rohesia,  The. — Barham. 
The  lady  stands   in  her   bower   door.     See  Two  Magi- 
cians, The. — Anon. 
The  lady-bug  sat  in  the  rose's  heart.     See  Lady-bug 

and  the  Ant,  The. — Anon. 
The  laird  o'  Cockpen,  he's  proud  an'  he's  great.     See 

Laird  o'  Cockpen,  The. — Nairne. 
The  Laird  o' Drum  is  a  wooing  [or  a   hunting]  gane. 

See  Laird  o  'Drum,  The. — Anon. 
The  lake  comes  throbbing  in  with  voice  of  pain.     See 

Lake  Memory,  A. — Campbell. 
The  lake  one  lucent  pearl,  its  depths  aglow.     See  Sun- 
set.—L.  F.  B. 
The  lamps  now  glitter  down  the  street.     See  Armies 

in  th^  Fire. — litevenson. 
The  Land  beyond  the  Sea!     See  I..and  beyond  the  Sea, 

The.— Faber. 
The  Land,  it  boasts  its  titled  hosts — they  could  not  vie 

with  these.     See  Merchants  of  Old  England,  The. 

— Strangford. 
The  land  which  freemen  till.     See  You  Ask   me  why, 

tho'  ill  at  Ease  ("Land  which  freemen   till.  The"). 

— Tennyson. 
The    large    purple   beech   at    Waltham.     See    Purple 

Beech,  The. —  {Garden  and  Forest.^ 
The  lark  above  our  heads  doth   know.     See  Violinist, 

A. — Bourdillon. 
The  lark   is   singing   in   the  blinding   sky.      See   Life- 
drama.  A  (Sea-marge). — Smith. 
The  lark  now  leaves  his  watery  [or    wat'ry]    nest.     See 

Song. — Davenant. 
The  lark   sings   for  joy   in   her  own   loved   land.     See 

Lines  to  the  Stormy  Petrel. — Anon. 
The  last  and  greatest  Herald  of  Heaven's  King.     See 

Saint  John  Baptist. — Drummond. 
The     last    beams     of     day     were     faintly   streaming 

through   the    painted    windows.      See     Westmin- 
ster Abbey  (Reflections  on  We.stminster  Abbey). — 

Irving. 
The  last  gleam  o'  sunset  in  ocean  was  sinkin'.     See 

Mary  MacNeil. — Conolly. 
The  last  light  lingers  in  the  west.     See  Influence. — 

Schauffler. 
"The  last  of  England!     O'er  the  sea.  my  dear.     See 

For  the  Picture  "The  Last  of  England." — Brown. 
The  last  of  Winter's  melancholy  train.     See  February. 

— Comwell. 
The  last  sunbeam.     See  Two  Veterans. — Whitman. 
The  last  tall  son  of  Lot  and    Bellicent.     See  Idylls   of 

the  King  (Gareth). — Tennyson. 
The  last  time  I  ran  home  over  the  Chicago,  Burlington 

and    Quincy.     See    Railway    Matinee,    A. — Bur- 

dette. 
The  last  time  I  visited  the  tomb  of  Washington.     See 

Centennial  Address. — Mason. 
The  late  Charles  F.  Browne  was  a  great  quiz.     See  Lit- 
erary Question  Discussed,  A. 
The  late  Henry  W.  Grady,  of  Atlanta.  Ga.     See  Ap- 
peal for  Temperance. — Grady. 
The  latter  rain, — it  falls  in  anxious  haste.     See  Latter 

Rain.  The. — Very. 
The  laurel  wreath  of  glory.     See  Soldier's  Offering,  A. 

— Vickers. 
The  law,  as  quoted,  lays  down  a  fair  conduct  of  life. 

See  Man  who  would  be  King,  The. — Kipling. 
The  law  is  more  than  a  great  river,  rising  in  the  far  ofl 

mountains.       See     "Law    is  more    than    a    great 

river,   rising    in    the   far  off    mountains.  The." — 

Bonney. 
The  law  of  "the  survival  of  the  fittest."     See  Survival 

of  the  Fittest  in  Literature,  The.- — Anon. 
The  law  of  virtue  is  the  same  in  God  and  man.     See 

Law  of  Virtue,  The. — Cicero. 
The  lawns  were  dry  in  Euston  park.     See  Fakenham 

Ghost,  The.— Bloomfield. 


851 


The  laws 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  laws  of  England,  founded  on  princiijles  of  liberty. 

See  England's  Relations  to  America. — Macintosh. 
The  lazy,  languid  breezes  sweep.    See  In  the  Hammock. 

— {London  Soc^y.) 
The  leaders  of  our  Revolution  were  men  of  whom  the 

simple  truth  is  the  hi(?hest  praise.     See  Element 

of  Justice,  The. — (Jurtis.  ,  .    a,    . 

The  leaders  of  the  Greeks,  worn  with  war  and  baffled 

by  fate.     See  .Eneid,  The  (Destruction  of  Troy, 

The). — Virgil. 
The  leafless  trees  are  brown  and  bare.     See  Old  Clock 

in  the  Comer,  The. — Hall. 
The  leaf-tongues  of  the  forest,  the  fiower-hps  of  the 

sod.     See  Sweet  Song  of  Songs,  A. — Massey. 
The  leafy  city  of  the  birds.   .  See  By  Summer  Woods. 

—(Hours  at  Home.) 
The  leaves  are  dead,  you  say?     See  Winter  Leaves. — 

Anon. 
The  leaves  are  fading  and  falling.     See  November. — 

Cary. 
The  leaves  are  falling;  so  am  I.     See  Late  I.«ave8. — 

Landor. 
The  legend  says:     In  Paradise.     See  Gift  of  Tears,  The. 

—Piatt.  ,         ,  , 

The  legislation   of   Moses!     Let   me  ask,   what   other 

legislation  of  ancient  times.     See  Moses  in  Sight 

of  the  Promised  Land. — Peabody. 
The  lessening  cloud.     See  Seasons,   The:  Summer. — 

Thom.son. 
The  letter  ran  thus :     My  Dear  Neph., —     See  Nothing 

for  Use. — C/oates. 
The  letter  which  you  wrote  me.     See  Translation  from 

Heine. — Wright. 
The  liberallv  educated  young  men  in  our  country.     See 

Scholar  in  Public  Life,  The. — Depew. 
The  liberty  of  the  press  is  the  highest  safeguard  to  all 

free   government.     See   Liberty   of   the   Press. — 

The  life  of  man.     See  Flight  of  the  Arrow,  The.— Stod- 
dard. 
The  life-boat  is  a  gallant   bark,  that  bears  no  pennon 

gay.     See   Life-boat   is  a  Gallant   Bark,   The. — 

Cook. 
The  lifeless    son — the    mother's    agony.     See    Three 

Marys  at  Castle  Howard,  The. — Elliott. 
The  light  burned  low  in  the  drawing-room  of  the  Gar- 

siae   mansion.     See  He  Gave  him  a  Start. — Ter- 

williger. 
The  light  is  shining  through  the  window-pane.     See 

Out  in  the  Streets. — English. 
The  light  of  dawn  rose  on  my  dreams.     See  Child  in 

the  Story  Awakes,  The. — Ramal. 
The  light  of  nature,  the  works  of  creation,  the  general 

consent  of  nations.     See  Goodness  of  God.— Anon. 
The  light    of    spring.    See    Light    of    Spring,    The. — 

Miller. 
The  light  shone  dim  on  the  headland.     See  Little  Light, 

The.— (Goorf  Cheer.) 
The  light  that  fills  thy  house  at  morn.     See  Gifts  of 

God,  The.— Very. 
The  light-house  flashed  from  the  rocky  isle.     See  Light- 
house May. — Faxton. 
The  lighthouse   keeper's  daughter  looked   out   across 

the  bay.     See  Light  on  Deadman's  Bar,  The. — 

Rexford. 
The  lightning  flashed  across  the  heaven,  the  distant 

thunder  rolled.     See  Stonewall  Jackson's  Death. — 

Russell. 
The  lightning  rends  the  goodly  tree.     See  In  Memo- 

riam  Prince  I^eopold. — Halloran. 
The  lights  blaze  high  in  our  brilliant  rooms.     See  Pro 

Patria  et  Gloria. — Baker. 
The  lights  burn  dim.     A  sea  fog  drifts  in  dank.     See 

Cobbler  of  Lynn,  The. — Vickers. 
The  lights  extinguished,  by  the  hearth  I  leant      See 

I.«gencl  of  Provence,  A. — Procter. 
The  lights  from  the  parlour  and  kitchen  shone  out. 

See  E.scape  at  Bedtime. — Stevenson. 
The  lights  were  gleaming  and  the  feast  was  spread. 

See  Death  of  the  Reveller,  The.— Eaton. 
The  lilac  stood  close  to  Elizabeth's  window.     S«e  Lilac, 

The.— (St.  Nicholas.) 
The  lilac,   various   in   array — now  white.     See   Lilac, 

The. — Anon. 
The  lilacs  are  in  blos.'wm,  the  cherry  flowers  are  white. 

See  Mary  and  the  Swallow. — Douglas. 
The  lilied  fields  behold.     See  Song  of  Faith.— Croswell. 
The  lilies   lie   in    my    lady's   bower.     See   Oh!    Weary 

Mother. — Pain 
The  lilies  of  the  field,  whose  bloom  is  brief.     See  Con- 
sider.— Rossetti. 
The  lilies  were  swinging  their  fair,  white  bells'.     See 

Butterfly's  I>esson,  The.— Anon. 


The  lily  drinks  the  sunlight.     See  What'  to  Drink. — 

Burleigh. 
The  lily  has  an  air.     See  There's  Nothing  Like  the 

Rose. — Rossetti. 
The  lineal  descendants  of  the  Pilgrims  are  as  numerous 

as  the  army  of  Xerxes.     See  Age  of  Miles  Standish, 

The. — Greenhalge. 
The  linnet  in  the  rocky  dells.     See  Song. — Bronte. 
The  lion  is  the  beast  to  fight.     See  Sage  Counsel. — 

Quiller-Couch. 
The  lion  is  the  desert's  king:  through  his  domain  so 

wide.     See  Lion's  Ride,  The. — Freiligrath. 
The  lion,  the  lion,  he  dwells  in  the  waste.     See  Lion, 

The. — Belloc. 
The  lioness  whelped,  and  the  sturdy  cub.     See  Eagle's 

Song,  The. — Mansfield. 
The  listening  Dryads  hushed  the  woods.     See  Pewee, 

The. — Trowbridge. 
The  literature  of  the  world  is,  in  a  very  deep  sense. 

See  Value  of  Literature,  The. — Mabie. 
The  little  bird  stood  on  the  roof  of  the  cowshed.     See 

Latest    Form    of    Literary    Hysterics.     (Chicago 

Tribune.) 
The  little  birds  are  wide  awake.   See  Wakeful   Birds. 

The. 
The  little  birds  fly  over.     See  Spring  Holiday,  A. — 

Anon. 
The  Little  Black  Rose  shall  be  red  at  last.     See  Little 

Black  Rose,  The.— De  Vere. 
The  little  boy  who  says  "I'll  try."     See  I'll  Try  and  I 

Can't. — Anon. 
The  little  boys  in   Labrador.     See  North  and  South. 

(Youth's  Companion.) 
The  little  brown  squirrel  hops  in  the  corn.     See  Re- 
jected National  Hymns,  The,  VII. — Newell. 
The  little  cares  that  fretted  me.     See  Out  in  the  Fields. 

— Anon. 
The  little  children  on  the  stairway.     See  On  the  Stair- 
way.— Larcom. 
The  little   cup-bearer   entered   the   room.     See   Little 

Cup-bearer,  The. — Anon. 
The  little   dimpled    baby    girl.     See   As    She   Says. — 

Smiley. 
The  little  fragment  of  time  that  is  left  for  me,  may  it 

please   your   honors.     See   In    Defence   of   Aaron 

Burr. — Randolph. 
The  little  French  doll  was  a  dear  little  doll.     See  Doll's 

Wooing,  The.— Field. 
The  little  frog  sits  on  the  bank  of  the  pool.     See  Marsh 

Symphony,  A. — M'Cardell. 
The  little  gate  was  reached  at  last.     See  Auf  Wieder- 

sehen. — Lowell. 
The  little  lame  tailor  sat  stitching  and  snarling.     See 

Starling,  The. — Buchanan. 
The  little  leaves  upon  the  trees.     See  Birds'  Music. — 

Sherman. 
The  little  Sister  of  Mercy  sighed!     See  Little  Sister  of 

Mercy,  The. — Booth. 
The  little  stars  sang  sweetly  to  the  birds  up  in  the  sky. 

See  Poetic  Inspiration. — Thatcher. 
The  little  things  of  to-day  may  grow  into  great  things 

of  to-morrow.     See  Little  'Things. — Anon. 
The  little  things  which  you  may  do  for  those  about  you. 

See  Small  Things. — Anon. 
The  little  toy  dog  is  covered  with  dust.     See  Little  Boy 

Blue.— Field. 
The  lone  proud  man!    for  him  no  graces  smiled.     See 

Pitt.— Lytton. 
"The  loneliest   night   of  all   the   [lonely]  year!"     See 

Christmas  Guests. — Duncan. 
The  lonely  valley  of  Thingvellir,  in  southern  Iceland. 

See    Bondman,    The    (Mount    of    Laws,   The). — 

C^aine. 
The  long,  bright  day  of  the  harvest  toil  is  past.     See 

Rizpah. — Blinn. 
The  long  grass  burned  brown.     See  Prarie  on   Fire, 

The.— Cary. 
The  long,  gray  moss  that  softly  swings.     See  In  Louis- 
iana.— Paine. 
The  long  lines  stretched  from  west  to  east.     See  Bird 

on  the  Telegraph  Wire,  The. — Anon. 
The  long,  long  wished-for  hour  has  come.     See  Cushia 

Gal  mo  Cnree.  A. — Doheny. 
The  long-expected   discovery   of   the   Mississippi    was 

accomplished   by    James    Marquette    and    Louis 

Joliet.     See  History   of  the    United    States  (Dis- 
covery of  the  Mississippi,  The). — Bancroft. 
The  look  of  sympathy,  the  gentle  word.     See  Not  I..ost. 

— Doudney. 
The  looks  of  yer,  ma'am,  rather  suits  me.     See  Cook 

of  the  Period,  A. — Anon. 
The  loppC-d  tree  in  time  may  grow  again.     See  Times 

Go  by  Turns. — Southwell. 


852 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  means 


The  Lord  descended  from  above.     See  Psalm  XVIII. — 

Sternhold. 
The  Lord  is  good  unto  all,  and  His  tender  mercies  are 

over  all  His  works.      See  Seed-time. — Bradbury. 
The  Lord  is  in  His  Holy  Place.     See  Secret  Place  of  the 

Most  High,  The. — Gannett. 
The   Lord    is  merciful   and    gracious.     See   Psalms  of 

David,  Clll.^Bi'le. 
The  Lord  is  my  shepherd,  I  shall  not  want.     See  Psalms 

of  David.  XXUl.     Bible. 
The  Lord  is  my  shepherd,  no  want  shall  I  know.     See 

Lord  the  Good  Shepherd,  The. — Montgomery. 
The  Lord    my  pasture  shall  prepare.     <See   Spectator, 

The  (Psalm  XXIII.).— Addison. 
The  Lord   of   Glen   Allen   came   home   from   far.     See 

Glen  Allen's  Daughter. — Anon. 
The  Lord  of  Life  walked  in  the  forest  one  morn.     See 

Legend  of  the  Aspen-tree,  A. — Darby. 
The  Lord  who  fashioned  my  hands  for  working.     See 

Failure .  ^  Anon . 
The  lordly  manor,  Cordelie,  stood  by  the  river  Tweed. 

See  Cordelie.  —Brother  Paul. 
The  Lords    of   Thule    did    not   please.      See    I^ords    of 

Thule,  Th3.— Anon. 
The  loss  of  a  firm  national  character,  or  the  degrada- 
tion of  a  nation's  honor.     See  Loss  of  National 

Character. — Maxcy. 
The  lost  days  of  my  life  until  to-day.     See  Lost  Days. 

— Rossetti. 
The  lounger  must  oft,  as  he  walks  through  the  streets. 

See  Numbers  Altered.  -  (Punch.) 
The  love  Alexis  did  to  Damon  bear.     See  Sonnet  to 

Sir  W.  Alexander. — Drummond. 
The  love  for  fatherland  was  deep.     See  Sleep,  Weary 

Child.— Plough. 
The  love  in  my  heart  is  as  strong  as  the  hills.     See 

All  for  You.— Peck. 
The  love  of  man  and  woman  is  as  fire.     See  My  Com- 
rade.— Roche. 
The  love  that  I  hae  [or  have]  chosen.     See  Lawlands  o' 

[or  of]  Holland,  The. — Anon. 
The  love  the  people  of  the  South  feel  for  the  negro  race. 

See  At  the  Boston  Banquet  (Love  and  Loyalty  of 

the  Negro). — Grady. 
The  love  wherewith  my  heart  is  big  for  thee.     See 

Mystery,  A. — Symonds. 
"The  loved  and  lost!"     Why  do  we  call  them  lost? 

See  Loved  and  Lost,  The. — Anon. 
The   lovely   lass   o'    Inverness.     See   Lovely   Lass    of 

Inverness,  The. — Bums. 
The  "Lovely  Mary,"  on  her  way.     See  Altruism. — 

Trowbridge. 
The  lovely  moss!  on  the  lowly  cot.     See  Mosses,  The. — 

Browne. 
The  lovely  purple  of  the  noon's  bestowing.     See  Night 

at  Sea. — Landon. 
The  lover  of  child  Marjory.     See  Sea  Child,  A. — Car- 
man. 
The   loves  that   doubted,   the   loves  that  dissembled. 

See  Lines  by  a  Person  of  Quality. — Nichols. 
The  low  desire,  the  base  design.     See  Ladder  of  St. 

Augustine,  The. — Longfellow. 
The  low  plains  stretch  to  the  west  with  a  glimmer  of 

rustling  weeds.     See  At  Tiber  Mouth. — Rodd. 
The  lowest  of  politicians  is  that  man  who  seeks  to 

gratify    an   invariable    selfishness.     See    Portrait 

Gallery  (Demagogue,  The). — Beecher. 
The  lowest    trees    have    tops;  the  ant  her  gall.     See 

Natural  Comparisons  with  Perfect  Love. — .A.non. 
The    luxury    derived    in    doing    good.     See    Grain    of 

Truth,  A.— Vickers. 
The  I^yceum  will  come  to  order  at  once.     See  Debating 

Society,  The. — Denison. 
The  Lyceum  will  please  come  to  order.     See  Reading 

Works  of  Fiction. — Crosby. 
The  magic  voice  of  spring  is  gone.     See  Glad  Autumn 

Days. — Anon. 
The    magnetism    of    I^ongfellow's    touch.     See    Long- 
fellow, Extract  Concerning. — Curtis. 
The  maid,  and  thereby  hangs  a  tale.     See  Bride,  The. — 

Suckling. 
The  maid,  as  by  the  papers  doth  appear.        See  Too 

Great  a  Sacrifice. — Anon. 
The  maid  I  loved,  and  still  shall  love.     See  Maid  I 

Iioved,  The. — Anon. 
The  maid  who  binds  her  warrior's  sash.     See  Wagoner 

of  the  AUeghanies,  The  (Brave  at  Home,  The). — 

Read. 
The  maiden  aunt,  in  her  straight  backed  chair.     See 

Culprit,  A. — Vandegrift. 
The  mail  has  just  brought  me  my  letters — a  baker's 

dozen  or  more.     See  Saving  Mission  of  Infancy, 

The.— Hodson. 


The  Maister  sat  in  a  wee  cot  house.  See  Maistcr  an' 
the  Bairns,  The. — Thomson. 

The  man  in  conscious  virtue  bold.  See  "Man  in  con- 
scious virtue  bold.  The.  " — Horace. 

The  man  in  righteousness  arrayed.  See  To  Sally. — 
Adams. 

The  man  in  the  wilderness  asked  of  me.  See  Riddle,  A. 
— Anon. 

The  man  is  thought  a  knave  or  fool.  See  Eternal 
.Justice. — Maokay. 

The  man  of  expedients  is  he  who.  See  Man  of  Expe- 
dients, The. — Gilman. 

The  man  of  life  upright.  See  Man  of  Life  Upright, 
The. — Campion. 

The  man  sank  back  in  the  barber's  chair  with  a  sigh 
of    relief.     See    Modern    Seer,    A. — (Philadelphia 


Pres8.) 
tha 


See  On  Friend- 


See  Friends 


The  man  that  hails  you  Tom  or  Jack. 

ship. — Cowper. 
The  man  that  has  a  thousand  friends. 

and  Enemies. — Anon. 
The  man  that  joins  in  life's  career.     See  Parting  Glass, 

The. — Freneau. 
The  man  who  fiercest  charged  in  fight.     See  Stonewall 

Jackson. — Melville. 
The  man  who  frets  at  worldly  strife.     See  Man  Who 

Frets  at  Worldly  Strife,  The.— Drake. 
The  man  who  hath  no  music  in  himself.     See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  The. — Shakespeare. 
The  man  who  is  so  conscious  of   the   rectitude  of   his 

intentions.     See  Decisive  Integrity. — Wirt. 
The  man  who  kindles  the  fire  on  the  hearthstone  of  an 

honest   and   righteous    home.     See    Against  C'en- 

tralization  (^Love  of  Home,  The). — Grady. 
The  man  who  wears  the  shoulder  straps.       See  Soldier 

Boy  for  Me,  The. — Kiser. 
The  "man  without  a  country"  was  in   such  a  sorry 

plight.     See    Man     without    a    Country,    The. — 

H.  F.  H. 
The  manliest  man  of  all  the  race.     See  Manliest  Man, 

The. — Bungay. 
The  man's  actions  here  are  of  infinite  moment  to  him. 

See  On   Heroes  and   Hero  Worship  (Mohammed). 

— Carlyle. 
The  maple  buds  are  red,  are  red.     See  Song  of  Waking, 

A. — Bates. 
The  maple  does  not  shed  its  leaves.     See  Daily  Dying. 

— Anon. 
The  Maple  owned  that  she  was  tired  of  always  wearing 

green.     See  Fall  Fashions. — Thomas. 
The  maple  trees  are  tinged  with  red.     See  When  Mary 

was  a  Lassie. — Anon. 
The  March  wind  whistles  through  the  somber  pines. 

See  March. — (All  the  Year  Round.) 
The  marvellous  devotion  of  the  Hebrew  people  to  their 

new  country.     See  Hebrew  (>odes  Developed,  The. 

—  (New  Testament  Records.) 
The   mask   of   peace   was   thrown   aside;   the   war-cry 

thundered  forth.     See  Tale  of  the  Crimean  War, 

A.— Webb. 
The    massive    structure    which    crowns    this    hill.  See 

Garfield    Memorial    at    Cleveland,    Ohio,    The. — 

Cox. 
The  master  came  to  his  garden.     See  My  Garden  Plot. 

— Anon. 
"The  Master  has  come  over  Jordan,"     See  Christ  and 

the  Little  Ones. — Gill. 
The  Master  walked  in  Galilee.     See  In  Galilee. — Sang- 

ster. 
The  master's  face  is  wrinkled  now.     See  Old  School- 
master, The. — Bungay. 
The  match  of  Love  is  of  so  quick  a  sort.     See  Match  of 

Love,  The. — Anon. 
The  matron  watched  Tom  for  a  moment.     See  Tom 

Brown's      School      Days      (New     Boy,     The). — 

Hughes. 
The  May  sun  sheds  an  amber  light.     See  May  Sun 

Sheds  an  Amber  Light,  The. — Bryant. 
The  Mayor  of  Scuttledon  burned  his  nose.     See  Mayor 

of  Scuttledon,  The. — Dodge. 
The  meadow  is  a  battle-field.     See  In  the  Meadow. — 

Sherman. 
The    meanest    creature    somewhat    may    contain. 

Tinker  and  Miller's  Daughter,  The. — Wolcott. 
The  meanest  floweret  of    the   vale.     See   Ode   on 

Pleasure  Arising  from  Vicissitude. — Gray. 
The    meanest    way  a  man    can    ride.     See    Sheriff    of 

Cerro-Gordo,  The. — Brooks. 
The  means  of  extending  knowledge    and    influencing 

the  human   mind.   See  Modern  Facilities  for  Evan- 
gelizing the  World. — Beecher. 
The    means,    therefore,    which   unto    us    is    lent.     See 

Hymn  of  Heavenly  Beauty. — Spenser. 


See 
the 


853 


The  meeting 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  meeting  having  been  called  to  order,  the  chairman 
said.  See  Pine  Town  Debating  Society,  The. 
-  -(.Harper's  Afagazine.) 
The  melancnoly  days  are  [wr.  have]  come,  the  sad- 
dest of  the  year^  See  Death  of  the  Flowers,  The. — 
Bryant .  * 

The  melancholy  days  have  come  that  no  householder 

loves.     See  Putting  up  o'  the  Stove. — Anon. 
The  mellow  year  is  hasting  to  its  close.     See  Novem- 
ber.— f'oleridge. 
The  members  of  a  republic,  above  all  other  men.     See 

American  and  England. — Irving. 
The  members  of  the  Boys'  Debating  Club.     See  Boys' 

Debate,  A. — Anon. 
The  men  of  culture  are  those  who  have  had  a  passion 
for  diffusing.     See  Duties  of  the  Scholar. — Arnold. 
The  men  of  learning  say  .she  must.     See  Given  Over. — 

Woolner. 
The   men   to  make  a  state  must   be  intelligent  men. 

See  Men  to  Make  a  State,  The. — Doane. 
The  mention  of  America  has  never  failed  to  fill  me 
with  the  mo.st  lively  emotions.     See  Panegyric  on 
.\raerica. — Phillips. 
The  merchant  to  secure  his  treasure.     See  Love's  Dis- 
guises.— Prior. 
The  mercury  lay  in  her  bulb  at  mom.  See  Personal. 

— (Chicago  Tribune.') 
The  merriment  that  followed  was  subdued.    See  Be- 
wildering Emotions. — -Riley. 
The  merry  boats  of  Brixham.     See  Wives  of  Brixham, 

The. — Anon. 
The  merry  brown   hares  came  leaping.     See  Rough 

Rhyme  on  a  Rough  Matter,  A. — Kingsley. 
The  merry  heart,  the  merry  heart.     See  Merry  Heart, 

A. — Anon. 
The  merry,  merry  lark  was  up  and  singing.     See  Merry 

Lark,  The. — Kingsley. 
The  merry  mice  stay  in  their  holes.     See  Mice,  The. — 

.\non. 
The  merry  world  did  on  a  day.     See  Quip,  The. — Her- 
bert. 
The  merry-go-round,  the  merry-go-round,  the  merry- 
go-round  at  Fowey!     See  Merry-go-round,  The. — 
Noel. 
The  mess-tent  is  full,  and  the  glasses  are  set.     See 

Battle-eve  of  the  Brigade,  The. — Davis. 
The  mice  had  been  in  council.    See  Catching  the  Cat. — 

Vandegrift. 
The  midges  dance  aboon  the  bum.    See  Midges  Dance 

aboon  the  Burn,  The.— Tannahill. 
The  midnight  hour  was  drawing  on.     See  Belshazzar's 

Downfall. — Heine. 
The  might  of  one  fair  face  sublimes  my  love.     See 

Might  of  One  Fair  Facs,  The. — Michael  Angelo. 
The  mighty  Minstrel  breathes  no  longer.     See  Extem- 
pore   Effusion   UDon    the    Death   of    James   Hogg 
(Passing  of  the  Elder  Bards,  The) . — Wordsworth. 
The  mighty  mother,  and  her  son,  who  brings.     See 
Dunciad,   The    (Description  of   Dulness,    The). — 
Alexander  Pope. 
The  mighty  ocean  rolls  and  raves.     See  Songs  in  Ab- 
sence ("Mighty  ocean  rolls  and  raves,  The.") — 
Clough. 
The  mighty  soul  that  is  ambition's  mate.     See  Dis- 
enchantment.— Moore. 
The  mighty  sun  had  just  gone  down.     See  Napoleon. — 

Lockhart. 
The  mill  goes  toiling  slowly  aroimd.     See  Nightfall  in 

Dordrecht.— Field. 
The    mind   a   highway   is.     A   constant   throng.     See 

Highway.  The. — Husted. 
The  mind  is  the  glory  of  man.     See  Mind,  the  Glory  of 

Man. — Wise. 
The  minister  misrepresents  the  sentiments  of  the  Peo- 
ble.     See  Anti-union  Speeches  (Union  with  Great 
Britain). — Grattan. 
The  minister  of  finance  has  presented  a  most  alarming 
picture.     See    Neeker's     Financial     Plan. — Mira- 
beau. 
The  minister  said  [or  sed]  last  night,  said  [or  aed]  he.    See 

John  Jankin's  Sermon. — (Harper's  Bazar.) 
The  minstrel  boy  to  the  war  is  gone.   See  Minstrel  Boy, 

1  h';  — Moore. 
The  Minstrel  came  once  moro  to  view.     See  Lady  of 
the  Lake.  The  (Battle  of  Beal'  an  Duine).— Scott 
The  mmstrel  touched  his  silver  strings.     See  Old  Song 

— Anon. 
The    minstrels    played    their    Christmas    tune.     See 

Christmas  Carol,  The. — Word-words. 
The  mmute-hand  points  to  the  quarter.     See  Late. — 

Anon. 
The  mistakes  of  my  life  are  many.     See  Hximility. — 


"The  misthress  is  dyin',  the  doctors  have  said  so. "     See 

Kitty's  Prayer. — Anon. 
The  mistletoe  hung  in  the  castle  hall.     See  Mistletoe 

Bough,  The.— Bayly. 
The  mists  of  Easter  morning.     See  Easter  Song,  An. — 

Hanford. 
The  mob  was  fierce  and  furious.     They  cried.     See 

Relenting  Mob,  A. — Hugo. 
The  modern  newspaper  is  not  merely  a  private  enter- 
prise.     See  "Modern  newspaper  is  not  merely  a 
private  enterprise,  The.  " — Bonney. 
The  modem  process  of  varnishing  over  wicked  char- 
acters.    See  Marc  Antony. — Anon. 
The  monarch  oak,  the  patriarch  of  the  trees.     See  Oak, 

The.— Dryden. 
The  monarch   sat  on  his   judgment-seat.     See  Culprit 

Fa.y,  The  (Fay's  Sentence,  The). — Drake. 
The  monarch  of  glory !     There  are  a  class  of  monarchists 

in  France.     See  Two  Napoleons,  The. — Hugo. 
The  Monk  Servetus  sits  alone.     See  Friar  Servetus. — 

Lanier. 
The  monkey  married  the  Baboon's  sister.     See  Mon- 
key's Wedding,  The. — -Anon. 
The    monks    had    endless    power,    and    with    power 
the  usual   greed.     See   Strange   Harvest,   The. — 
Meyers. 
The  monopoly  of  fame  by  the  few  in  this  world  comes 
from    an    instinct.     See    Permanence    of    Grant's 
Fame,  The. — Blaine. 
The  month  of  June  brings  roses  sweet.     See  June. — 

Richards. 
The  month  of  March  has  come  again.     See  March. — 

Richards. 
The  month  was  August  and  the  morning  cool.     See 

Truant  Boys,  The.— Taylor. 
The  monument   outlasting  bronze.     See  Ancient  and 

Modern  Muses,  The. — Palgrave. 
The  monument,  tipped  with  electric  fire.     See  Soldiers' 

Home,  Washington,  The.— Miller. 
The  moon  a  light-hung  world  of  gold.     See  Shadows. — 

Kennedy. 
The   moon    and   the   stars   were   shining   down.     See 

Old  City  Church,  The.— Weatherly. 
The  moon  had  climbed  the  highest  hill.     See  Mary's 

Dream. — Lowe. 
The  moon  had  just  gone  down,  sir.     See  Bill  and  I. — 

Miles. 
The  moon  has  a  face  like  the  clock  in  the  hall.     See 

Moon,  The. — Stevenson. 
The  moon  has  left  the  sky.     See  Night  in  Lesbos,  A. — 

Horton. 
The  moon  is  at  her  full,  and,  riding  high.     See  Tides, 

The.— Biyant. 
The  moon  is  tired  and  old.     See  Waning  Moon,  The. — 

Thaxter. 
The  moon  is  up,  and  yet  it  is  not  night.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Sunset). — Byron. 
The    moon    is    up    in    splendor.     See    Night    Song. — 

Claudius. 
The  moon  is  up!  the  moon  is  up.     See  Moon  is  Up, 

The. — Anon. 
The  moon  rose  up  and  laughed  to  see.     See  Night 

before  Christmas,  The. — Agave. 
The  moon  shines  dim  in  the  open  air.      See   Chris- 

tabel  (Lady's  Chamber,  A). — Coleridge. 
The  moon  shines  white  and  silent.     See  Midnight. — 

Lowell. 
The    moon    was   afloat.     See   Miller   of    Dee,    The. — 

Ogden. 
The  moon  was  a-waning.     See  Moon  was  a-Waning, 

The.— Hogg. 
The  moonbeams  over  Arno's  vale  in  silver  flood  were 

pouring.     See  Veery,  The. — Van  Dyke. 
The  moon'.s  gray  tent  is  up :  another  hour.    See  Bridal 

Hour,  The.— Cary. 
The  moon-white  waters  wash  and  leap.     See  Coves  of 

Crail,  The.— Sharp. 
The    Moorish    king   rides    up    and    down.     See   Very 
Mournful  Ballad  on  the  Siege  and  Conquest  of 
Alhama,  A. — Byron. 
The  Moorland  waste  lay  hushed  in  the  dusk  of  the 

second  day.     See  I>e  Mauvais  Larron. — Watson. 
The  moral  and  intellectual  education  of  every  individ- 
ual.    See  No  Excellence  without  Labor. — Wirt. 
The  more  a  man  accomplishes  the  more  he  may.     See 

Industry.— Anon. 
The  more  intimately  I   enter  into  communion   with 
myself.     See     Death     is     Compensation. — Rous- 
seau. 
The  more  we  live,  more  brief  appear.     See  River  of 

Life,  The.— Campbell. 
The  morn  is  clear;    with   frosty  light.     See  Song  of 
Winter  Days. — Macdonald. 


854 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  new 


The  morn  was  fair.     See  Crowning  of  the  King,  The. — 

Southey. 
The   morning   broke.     Light    stole   upon   the   clouds. 

See  Hagar  in  the  Wilderness. — ^ Willis. 
The  morning  is  chesry,  my  boys,  arouse!     See  Reveille. 

— ^O'Connor. 
The  morning  light  falls  gently  on  the  eyes.     See  Daily 

Task,  The. — -Farningham. 
The  morning  light  is  breaking.     See  Missionary  Hymn. 

— Smith. 
The  morning  mist  is  clear'd  away.     See  Twenty-first 

Sunday  after  Trinity.— Keble. 
The  morning  of  the  launch  was  fair  and  bright.     See 

L  lunching  of  (^ortez'  Ships,  The. — Cornwallis. 
The  morning  of  the  year  flushes  again  these  northern 

glades.     See  Greenwood  Greetings. — Benedict. 
The  morning  on   which   Reginald   Gloverson   was  to 

leave.     See  Gloverson  the  Mormon. ^Ward. 
The  morning  papers  contained  among  their  casualties 

the    following    paragraph.     See    Casualty,     A. — 

Anon. 
The  morning  pearls.      See  Chastity. — Chamberlayne. 
The  morning  sun  rose  from  his  crimson  couch.     See 

Roman  Sentinel,  The. — Florence. 
The   morning  was   gray  and  cloudy.     See  Bluebirds 

in  Autumn. — Thaxter. 
The   morning   was   sunshiny,   lovely,    and   clear.     See 

How  Two  Birdies  Kept  House  in  a  Shoe.^Anon. 
The  morns  are  meeker  than  they  were.     See  Autumn. — 

Dickinson. 
The  Moslem  spears  were  gleaming.     See  Marguerite  of 

France. — Hemans. 
The    most    characteristic    and    most    essential.     See 

Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. — Wilkinson. 
The  most  difficult  thing  to  reach  is  a  woman's  pocket. 

See  Woman's  Pocket,  A. — Bailey. 
The  mo.st  effective  working-force  in  the  world.     See 

Old  Woman's  Railway  Signal. — Burritt. 
The  most  exquisite  article  of  domestic  torture  is  the 

modern     window-curtain     fixture.     See     Curtain 

Fixture,  The. — Bailey. 
The  most  fearful  and  impressive  exhibitions  of  power. 

See  Grandeur  of  the  Ocean. — Colton. 
The  most  important  thing  that  a  community  can  do  is 

to  accumulate  wealth.     See  Wealth  and  Progress. 

— Anon. 
The  most  marvelous  mortal  that  ever  was  born.     See 

Timothy  Horn. — Fink. 
The  most  remarkable  boy  in  the  village  of  Samoset. 

See  What  Came  from  a  Ride. — Anon. 
The  most  tiresome  insect  in  existence  is  probably  the 

ant.     See  Tiresome  Insects. — {New   York   Times.) 
The  most  tremendous  word  in  the  English  language. 

See  Mighty  Word,  "No,"  The.— Cuyler. 
The  motes  up  and  down  in  the  sun.     See  Motes  and 

Mountains. — Anon. 
The  mother  and  child  took  the  train  for  Long  Branch. 

See  "We  All  Wishes  You  Was  up  Here." — Anon. 
The  Mother  of  God  at  Kevlar  her  best  dress  wears  to- 
day.    See  Pilgrimage  to  Kevlar,  The. — Heine. 
The  Mother  of  the  Muses,  we  are  taught.     See  Mem- 
ory.— Landor. 
The   mother   who   conceals   her   grief.     See  Wagoner 

of  the  AUeghanies,  The  ("Mother  who  conceals," 

etc.).— Read. 
The  mother  will  not  turn,  who  thinks  she  hears.     See 

Broken  Music. — Rossetti. 
The  mother-heart  doth  yearn  at  even-tide.     See  When 

Even  Cometh  on. — Tilley. 
The  moth's  kiss,  first!     See  In  a  Gondola  (Song). — 

Browning. 
The  mountain  and  the  squirrel.     See  Fable. — Emer- 
son. 
The  mountain  ash,  deck'd  with  autumnal  berries  that 

outshine.       See  Excursion,   The   (Mountain    Ash, 

The).  — Wordsworth. 
The   mountain   peaks   put   on   their  hoods.     See    De 

Roberval  (Twilight  Song). — Hunter-Duvar. 
The  mountain  sheep  are  sweeter.     See  War-song  of 

Dinas  Vawr,  The. — Peacock. 
The  mountain  shepherd-boy  am  I!     See  Song  of  th? 

Mountain-boy. — Uhland. 
The  mountain  that  the  morn  doth  kiss.     See  Celestial 

Passion,  The  (Morning  and  Night). — Gilder. 
The   mountain    wooded    to    the    peak.       See    Enoch 

.\rden  (Tropical  Scene,  A). — Tennyson. 
The  mountains  of  this  glorious  land.     See  Alps,  The. — 

Montgomery. 
The    mournful    funeral    slow    proceeds    behind.     See 

"Mournful  funeral   slow   proceeds  behind.  The." 

— -Wilson. 
The  muffled  drum's  sad  roll  has  beat.     See  Bivouac  of 

the  Dead,  The.— O'Hara. 


The  mule  is  half  hoss,  and  half  jackass,  and  then  kums 
tu  a  full  stop.  See  Josh  Billings  on  the  Mule. — 
Billings. 

The  mule  seemed  pensive,  even  sad.  See  Nobody's 
Mule. — -Anon. 

The  multitude  of  Angels,  with  a  shout.  See  Paradi.se 
Lost  (Concord).— Milton. 

The  murmur  of  the  morning  ghost.  See  Ballad  of 
Keith  of  Ravelston,  The. — Dobell. 

The  Muse,  disgusted  at  an  age  and  clime.  See  On  the 
Prospect  of  Planting  Arts  and  Learning  in  Ameri- 
ca.— Berkeley. 

The  Muse  doth  tell  me  where  to  borrow.  See  Muse, 
The.— Wither. 

The  Muse,  nae  poet  ever  fand  her.  See  Inspiration. 
— Burns. 

The  Muse's  fairest  light  in  no  dark  time.  See  To  the 
Memory  of  Ben  Jonson. — Cleveland. 

The  Muses  wrapped  in  mysteries  of  light.  See  Whirl- 
wind Road,  The. — -Markham. 

The  music  had  the  heat  of  blood.  See  During  Music. — 
Symons. 

The  music  of  art  is  but  the  imitation  of  the  music  of 
nature.  See  "Music  of  art  is  but  the  imitation  of 
the  music  of  nature.  The." — Robertson. 

The  Musical  Tree  has  a  peculiar  shaped  leaf.  See 
Grove  of  Curious  Trees,  A. — Benedict. 

The  Musmee  has  brown  velvet  eyes.  See  Musmee,  The. 
— Arnold. 

The  muster-place  is  Lanrick  mead.  See  Message,  The. 
—Scott. 

The  mystery  of  our  being,  and  the  mystery  of  our  ceas- 
ing to  be.     See  Poetry  of  Science. — Hunt. 

The  name  of  Bryant  cannot  be  mentioaed.  See  Bryant, 
Extract  Concerning. — Whipple. 

The  name  of  Republic  is  inscribed  upon  the  most  im- 
perishable monuments.  See  Liberty  and  Great- 
ness.— -Legare. 

The  name  thou  wearest  does  thee  grievous  wrong. 
See  Mocking-bird,  The. — Stockard. 

The  narration  would  interest  you  were  it  repeated  in  the 
most  simple  manner.  See  Gypsy  Flower  Girl,  The. 
— McDowell. 

The  narrator,  knocking  the  ashes  out  of  his  pipe.  See 
Little  Stowaway,  The.^ — -Anon. 

"The  nation  has  been  at  war,  not  within  its  own 
shores."     See  Reunited  Country,   A.— McKinley. 

The  nation  rises  up  at  every  stage  of  his  coming.  See 
Abraham  Lincoln  (Funeral  Oration  on  Abraham 
Lincoln). — Beecher. 

The  national  triumph  in  our  civil  war  led  to  social  and 
political  changes.  See  View  from  Lookout  Moun- 
tain, The. — Pierce. 

The  Nation's  sire,  four-score  of  years  had  toiled.  See 
Patriotic  Prince,  The. — Carrington. 

The  naturalists  say  that  these  singular  creatures.  See 
Bachelors,  The. — Anon. 

The  naughty  girl  never  minds  mamma.  See  Naughty 
Girl,  The.— Anon. 

The  nearest  woodlands  wore  a  misty  veil.  See  Au- 
tumn.— -MifHin. 

The  neatest  housewife  in  the  land.  See  Charade  (Soap- 
stone). — Holmes. 

The  necessity  of  amusement  is  admitted  on  all  hands. 
See  Nature  Designed  for  Our  Enjoyment. — 
Beecher. 

The  need  of  the  hour  is  a  grand  tidal-wave  of  total 
abstinence.     See  Temperance. — Ireland. 

The  needles  have  dropped  from  her  nerveless  hands. 
See  Christmas  Shadows. — Anon. 

The  negro  church  which  stood  in  Pine  Valley  near  the 
little  village  of  Oxford.  See  Uncle  Peter's  Mas- 
terly Argument. — Stockton. 

The  neighyinge  of  the  war-horse  prowde.  See  Cav- 
alier's Song. — Motherwell. 

The  nervous,  dapper,  "peart"  young  man  took  the 
chair  I  offered  him.  See  Mark  Twain  and  the 
Interviewer. — Clemens. 

The  new  era  began  •.  the  King  was  tried,  doomed  and 
beheaded.  See  Tale  of  Two  Cities,  A  (Guillotine, 
The).— Dickens. 

The  new  mistress  of  that  brand  new  house  on  Park 
avenue.     See  Practical  Regeneration,  A. — Anon. 

The  new  moon  hung  in  the  sky.  See  Prescience. — 
Aldrich. 

The  new  South  is  enamored  of  her  new  work.  See  New 
South,  The.— Grady. 

The  New  World's  sweetest  singer!  See  Longfellow. — 
Betts. 

The  New  Year  comes  in  with  shout  and  laughter.  See 
Dance  of  the  Months. — -Anon. 

The  New  Year  gave  a  dinner  to  twelve  little  brothers. 
See  Twelve  Little  Brothers,  The. — Cone. 


855 


The  news 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  news  frae  Moidart  cam"  yestreen.     Sef  Wha'U  be 

King  but  Charlie? — Nairn. 
The  news!  our  morninn,  noon,  and  evening  cry.     See 

Curiosity  (News,  The).— Sprague. 
The  news  ran  fastjthc  man  of  mirth  was  dead.     See 

Happy  Man,  iTie. — Hawes. 
The  next  raurtiing  at  first  lesson  Tom  was  turned  back 
in  his  lines.     See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  (Egg 
Himting). — Hughes. 
The  next    morning  at   sunrise   Monseigneur  Welcome 
was  walking  about  the  garden.   SeeLe--  Mi.-6rable« 
(Jean  Valjean  and  tho  Bishop/. — Hugo. 
The  next  Saturday  evening  there  was  much  excited  dis- 
cussion at  the  Donnitnorne  Arms.     See  Mrs  Poy- 
ser  "Has  Her  Say  Out." — -Eliot. 
The  next  train  for  New  York  starts  in  half  an  hour. 

Sec  Budget  of  Blunders,  A. — Anon. 
The  night   and  the  storm  fell   together  upon   the  old 
town  of  Dundee.     See  Death-bridge  of  the  Tay, 
The. — ("arleton. 
The  night  before  Larry  was  stretched.     See  Night  be- 
fore Larry  was  Stretched,  The. — Anon. 
The  night  came  down  in  terror.     See  Tempest,  The. — 

Sargent. 
The  night   comes  stealing  o'er  me.     See  Water  Fay, 

The.— Heine. 
The  night    has   a  thousand  eyes.     See   Light. — Bour- 

dillon. 
The  night  hours  wane,  the  bleak  winds  of  December. 

See  Dreams. — -.^non. 
"The   night   is   cold,"   said    Willie    Ware.     See   Little 

Willie  Ware. — .Ainon. 
The  night  is  come,  but  not  too  soon.     See  Light  of 

Stars,  The. — I>ongfellow. 
The  ni^t  is  come,  like  to  the  day.    See  Evening  Hymn. 

— -Browne. 
The  night  is  dark.     All  can  be  repaired.     See   Cyrano 

de  Bergerac  (Balcony  Scene). — Rostand. 
The  night  is  dark,  and  the  winter  winds.     See  Without 

and  Within. — Stoddard. 
"The  night    is   dreary  and  cold."     See  Magdalena. — 

Anon. 
The  night  is  late,  the  house  is  still.     See  For  Charlie  s 

Sake. — Palmer. 
The  night  is  [or  was]  made  for  cooling  shade.     See  At 

Sea. — Trowbridge. 
The  night   is   mother  of  the  day.     See  Dream  of  Sum- 
mer, A  (Hope   On). — Whittier. 
The  night  is  PRst  and  shines  the  sun.     See  Siege  of 

Corinth,  The. — Byron. 
The  night  is  silent,  the  wind  is  still.     See  Christus: 

a  Mystery  (Abbess's  Story,  The). — Longfellow. 
The  night  is  still,  the  moon  looks  kind.     See  Night  is 

Still.  -The.- Thomas. 
The  night  it  is  so  cold,  so  cold!     For  weeks  the  snow 

has  lain.     See  Sentinel  of  Metz,  "The. — Meyers. 
Tne  night  it  was  still,  and  the  moon  it  shone.     See 

Gondoline.^White. 
The  night  that  has  no  star  lit  up  by  God.     See  New 

World,  The.— Very. 
The  night  was  clear,  with  a  touch  of  frost  in  the  air 

S'e  Ride  for  I,ife,  The.— Gordon. 
The  night  was  dark  and  fearful.     See  Watcher,  The. — 

Hale. 
The  night  was  dark,  though  sometimes  a  faint  star. 

See  Dawn. — Gilder. 
The  night   was  dark  when  Sam  set  out.     See  Rustic 

Courtship. — Anon. 
The  night  was  dark  with  murky  clouds.     See  Watch- 
ing.—  Kavnnaugh. 
The  night  was  falling  dreary,  in  merry  Bandon  town. 

See  Orange  and  Green. — Anon. 
The  night  was  growing  old.     See  In  the  Night.— Anon. 
The  night  was  [or  is]  made  for  cooling  shade.     See  At 

Sea. — Trowbridge. 
The  night  was  stormy  and  dark.     See  Speculators,  The. 

— Thackeray. 
The  night  was  thick  and  hazy.     See  Robmson  Crusoe. 

— Carryl. 
The  night  was  winter  in  his  roughest  mood.     See  Task, 

Thf  (Winter  Noon). — Cowper. 
The  night  wind  with  a  desolate  moan  swept  by      See 

Soliloquy  of  the  Dying  Alchemist. — Willis 
The  nightmgale.  as  soon  as  April  bringeth.     See  Sidera 

(I'hilomela). — Sidney. 
The  nightingale  has  a  lyre  of  gold.     See  Ix3ve  Notes.— 

Henley. 
^^  nJKhtingale  is  mute— and  so  art  thou.     See  Sonnef: 

The  nightmgale,"  etc. — Thurlow. 
The  night-mist  dim  and  darkling.     See  Carey,  of  Car- 
son.—  Iceland. 
The  night's  dark  curtain  trails  the  East.     See  I  ights 

of  I^wrence,  The.— ShurtlefT. 


The  noble  Duke  is  extremely  angry  with  me,  that  I  did 
not  consult  him.     See  Lord  North's  Ministry  De- 
nounced.— Chatham. 
The  noble    king    of    Brentford.     See    King    of    Brent- 
ford's Testament,  The. — Thackera.v. 
The  noble  Lord's  purpose  is  to  prove  that  France  began 
the  war.     See  Atheistical   Government   Impossi- 
ble, An. — Sheridan. 
The  noble  Mumbo  Jumbo  sat.     See  Cannibal  and  the 

Skeleton,  The. — Fezandi'. 
The  noble  river  widens  as  we  drift.     See  Nearing  Port. 

— C.  P.  R. 
The  noblest  men  that  live  [or  I  know]  on  earth      See 

Noblest  Men,  The. — Bungay. 
The  noon  was  shady,  and  soft  airs.     See  Dog  and  the 

Water-lily,  The. — Cowper. 
The  north  wind  doth  blow,  and  we  shall  have  snow. 

See  First  Snow,  The. — Anon. 
The  Northern     Lights    are     flashing.     See    Canadian 

Hunter's  Song. — Moodie. 
The  northern  part  of  the  United  States  and  (^anada. 
See  Choosing  a  "State  Tree" — 'The   Hemlock. — 
Bachelder. 
The  Northern  Star  sail'd  over  the  bar.     See  Northern 

Star,  The. — Anon. 
The  noted   divine,    Richard   Hooker,   once   said.     See 

Law  and  Humanity. — Kellogg. 
The  notes  of  the  deep-laboring  organ.     See  Westmin- 

.ster  Abbey. — Irving. 
The  nurse-life  wheat  within  his  green  husk  growing. 

See  Caelica  (Seedtime  and  Harvest). — Greville. 
The  nycht  followis,  and  euery  wery  wicht.    See  .Eneid 

(Sleep). — Virgil. 
The  Nyum-N.yum  chortled   by  the  sea.     See  Nyum- 

Nyum,  The. — Anon. 
The  oak,  for  grandeur,  strength,  and  noble  size.     See 

Oak,  The.— Anon. 
The  oak  is  a  strong  and  stalwart  tree.     See  Christmas 

Song,  A. — Russell. 
The  oak  is  a  very  common  tree.   See  Choosing  a  "State 

Tree."— The  Oak.— Brobeck. 
The  oak-tree  [or  oak  tree's]  boughs  once  touched  the 

grass.     See  Bits  of  Things. — Anon. 
The  objects  of  the  restoration  of  the  forests.     See  Man 

and  Nature. — Marsh. 
The  observance  of  Arbor  Day  has  already  led  to  the 

planting.     See  Arbor  Day. — Northrop. 
The  observance  of  Arbor  Day  in  New  York  State.     See 

Arbor  Day.— (T^e  Student.) 
The  ocean  at  the  bidding  of  the  moon.     See  Ocean, 

The. — Turner. 
The  ocean  bursts  in  very  wrath.     See  Resentment. — 

(Clarke. 
The  ocean  old,  centuries  old.     See  Building  of  the  Ship, 

The. — Longfellow. 
The  ocean  stood  like  crystal.     See   "Ocean  stood  like 

crystal.  The."— R.  C.  W. 
The  odor  of  a  rose :  light  of  a  .star.     See  Shellej- — Japp. 
The  officer  at  last.     See  Night  Watch,  The. — Coppee. 
The  old  barn  window,  John.     See  Barn  Window.  "The. 

— Larcom. 
The  old  clock  croons  on  the  sun-kissed  wall.     See  Old 

Clock,  The. — Carleton. 
The  old  familiar  sights  of  ours.     See  Snow-bound. — 

Whittier. 
The  old  flag  is  a  doin'  of  her  very  level  best.     See  Regi- 
ment Song. — Stanton. 
The  old   gentleman   who   sits  opposite.     See  Autocrat 

of  the  Breakfast-table,  The  (Hats).— Holmes. 
The  old  hay-mow's  the  place  to  play.     See  Old  Hay- 
mow, The. — Riley. 
The  old  house  by  the  lindens.     Sec  Open  Window,  The. 

— Longfellow. 
The  old  man  had   "billy-goat "  whiskers.     See  Emer- 
gency, An. — Marsh. 
The  old  man  said,  "Take  thou  this  shield,  my  son." 

See  Shield,  The.— S.  G.  W. 
The  old  man  sat  by  the  chimney  side.     See  Old  Folk"' 

Room,  The. — Anon. 
The  old  man  sits  in  his  easy-chair.     See  Sabbath  Bells, 

The. — Anon. 
The  old  man.  sitting  by  the  way.     See  Picture,  A. — 

Anon. 
The  old  mayor  climbed  the  belfry  tower.     See  High 
Tide  on  the  Coast  of  Lincolnshire,  The. — Ingelow. 
The  old  men  sat  with  hats  pulled  down.     See  White 

Ro.se  over  the  Water.  The. — Thornburv. 
The  old  priest   Peter  Gilligan.     See  Father  Gilligan. — 

Yeats. 
The  old  professor  taught  no  more.     See  Old  Professor. 

The. — Anon. 
The  old  publishing    house    of    T.   Copernicus  &  Son. 
See  Mr.  Copernicus  and  the  Proletariat. — Bunner. 


866 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  pastor's 


The  old  South  rested  everythini?  on  slavery  and  agricul- 
ture.     See  New   South,  The  (Old  and  the  New 

South,  The).— Grady. 
The  Old  State  House  is  to-day  rededicated.     See  Old 

State  House,  Boston  f Rededicated,  1882),  Thf.— 

Green. 
The  old  wine  filled  him,  and  he  saw  with  eyes.     See 

Maurice  de  Gu^rin.— Egan. 
The  old   witch-wife    beside   her   door.      See   Lowland 

Witch  Ballad,  A.— Scott. 
The  old  wives  sit  on  the  heaving  brine.     See  Burgo- 
master Gull,  The. — Thaxter. 
The  old  woman  was  standing  at  the  door  of  a  mudhouse. 

See  Little  Minister,  The  (Nanny  Saved  from  the 

Poorhouse) . — Barrie. 
The  Old  World  has  already  revealed  to  us,  in  its  un- 
sealed books.     See  Our  Duties  to  the  Republic. — 

Story. 
The  old  year  and  the  new!     With  faltering  feet.     See 

Old  and  the  New,  The. — McGuire. 
The  Old  Year  being  dead,  and  the  New  Year  coming 

of    age.      See    Rejoicings    upon  the  New  Year's 

Coming  of  Age. — Lamb. 
The  old  year,  hoary  with  the  snows  of  age,  exhausted 

with  the  labors  of  its  life.     See  New  Year's  Ad- 
dress, A. — Brooks. 
The  old  year  is  passing  away,  Maud.     See  Old  and  the 

New  Year,  The. — ,\non. 
The  Old  Year  knocks  at  the  farm-house  door.     See  As 

Dies  the  Year. — Austin. 
The  Old  Year  sat  beside  the  hearth.     See  Old  Year  and 

the  New,  The.— Pollard. 
The  one  is  a  city  of  life.     See  Two  Cities. — -Anon. 
The  One  remains,  the  many  change  and   pass.     See 

Eternal,  The.— Shelley. 
The  only  amaranthine  flower  on  earth.     See  Task,  The 

(Truth).— Cowper. 
The  only  incident  worth  recording  here,  however,  was 

his  first  run.     See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  (Hare 

and  Hounds). — Hughes. 
The  only  way  of  conducting  the  war  against  Hannibal. 

See    History   of    Rome  (Fabius    to    ^miliua). — 

Levy. 
The  only  way  to  clear  the  track  of  life  is  to  leave  no 

enemy  behind.     See  "Only  way  to  clear  the  track 

of   life   is    to   leave  no   enemy  behind.    The." — 

Twitchell. 
"The    ony   objection    ever   made   to  me  in   this  arr 

county"     See  Old  Sugar's  Courtship. — -Robb. 
The  Opera  Hall  was  crowded.     See  Old  Minstrel,  The. 

— Anon. 
The  opera  is  an  experiment,  bold  even  to  the  verge  of 

absurdity.     See  "Opera  is   an    experiment,  bold 

even  to  the  verge  of  absurdity,  The." — Edwards. 
The  Opera  Season  cannot  fail.     See  At  the  Opera. — 

Anon. 
The  orang-outang  in  the  big  iron  cage  lashed  to  the 

sheep-pen    began    the    discussion.     See    Bimi. — 

Kipling. 
The  orb  I  like  is  not  the  one.     See  Quiet  Eye,  The. — 

Cook. 
The  orchard  is  a  rosy  cloud.     See  May  Song,   A. — 

Pratt. 
The  orchard  trees  are  white.     See  Apple  Blossoms.- 

Anon. 
The  orchard-lands  of  Long  Ago!     See  Orchard-lands 

of  Long  Ago,  The. — Riley. 
The  orchards   that    climb   the   hillsides.     See   Flower 

from  the  CatskiUs,  A.— E.  W. 
The  "Orchids"   were  as  tough  a  crowd.     See   Bohe- 
mians of  Boston,  The. — Burgess. 
The  ordeal's  fata!  trumpet  sounded.     See  Adelgitha. — 

Campbell. 
The  origin  of  this  distressful  thing  was  this.     See  Facts 

in  the  Case  of  the  Great  Beef  Contract,  The  (Mark 

Twain's  "Great  Beef  Contract"). — Clemens. 
The  originality  of  the  Pucelle,  the  secret  of  her  success. 

See  .Joan  of  Arc. — Michelet. 
The  osprey  sails  above  the  sound.     See  Fisherman's 

Hymn,  The. — -Wilson. 
The  other  day  a  lady,  accompanied  by  her  son,  a  very 

small  boy.     See  Bald-headed  Man,  The. — (Little 

Rock  Gazette.) 
The  other  day  a  stout  woman,  armed  with  an  umbrella. 

See  Banging  a  Sensational  Novelist. — Anon. 
The  other  day  as  I  rambled  down.     See  Scenes  at  the 

Police  Court. — Anon. 
The  other  day  going  back  to  Cleveland.     See  What 

Three  Women  Said. — Anon. 
The  other  day  I  paid  a  call  on  Miss  Dolly  Foster.     See 

Dolly  Dialogues,  Th^  (Cordial  Relations). — Hope. 
The  other  day  I  was  at  Tom  McGinnis'  house,  and  he 

had  some  company.     See  Santa  Claus. — Anon. 


The  other  day,  while  waiting  at  a  desolate  way  station 

in  Illinois.     See  Boy  Kept  Step,  The.— Read. 
The  other  evening,  old  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Coffin,  who  live 

on  Brush  Street.     See  How  Mr.  Coffin  Spelled   it. 

—  {Detroit  Free  Prefs.) 
The  other  evening  there  was  a  little  company  up  on 

Joralemon  Street.     See  Society  Boy,  'The. — -Anon. 
The  other  girls  and  boys  in  school.     See  Speech  for  a 

Small  Girl. — -Anon. 
The  other    morning    at    breakfast.     See    Mr.    Stiver's 

Horse. — Bailey. 
The  other  morning  two  gentlemen,  looking  out  of  a 

window.     See  Street  Crowd,  A.— Anon. 
The  other    morning     while     Mr. — ■ •.      See     Facts 

Concerning  "Jay  Gould." — Anon. 
The  outmost  crowd  have  heard  a  sound.     See  Rokeby 

(Death  of  Bertram,  The).— Scott. 
The  overworked  scribe  of  the   Mudville  Gazette.     See 

Constant  Reader,  A.- — Mix. 
The  Owl  and  the  Pussy-cat  went  to  sea.     See  Owl  and 

the  Pussy-cat,  The. — Lear. 
The  owl  is  abroad,   the  bat,   the  toad.      See  Gipsies 

Metamorphoses,  The  (Song). — Jonson. 
The  owl,   they  say,   is  a  very   nice  bird.     See  Owl's 

Court,  The. — Agave. 
The  oxen  are  such  clever  beasts.     See  Oxen,  The. — 

Anon. 
The  packs  are  on,  the  cinches  tight.     See  Line  Up, 

Brave  Boys. — Garland. 
The  pains  1  have  taken  none  ever  could  guess.     See 

Gay  Christmas  Ball,  A. — Denton. 
The  painter  employed  by  the  King's  command.     See 

Our  Expanding  Republic  (Retrospect,  A.) — Wat- 

terson. 
The  palace   gardens   shone   with   flowers.     See  Angel 

Court. — Weatherly. 
The  palace  of  the  Duke  was  decorated  for  a  banquet. 

See  Silver  Cup,  The. — Anon. 
The  palaces  and  domes  of  Carthage  were  burning  with 

the  splendors  of  noon.     See  Regulus  to  the  Car- 
thaginians (Curse  of  Regulus,  The). — Kellogg. 
The  pale  moon  hid  her  face;  the  glittering  stars.     See 

Lightkeeper's  Daughter,  The. — Goodwin. 
The  pale  primrose  her  petals  fain  would  hide.     See 

Oh,  Golden-rod. — Jaquith. 
The  pale,   transparent    Autumn   mists.     See  Yard   in 

December,  The. — Ficke. 
The  pall  of  the  past  with  its  woes  and  joys.     See  Long 

Ago. — Denison. 
The  pall   was   settled.     He   who   slept   beneath.     See 

Absalom  (David's  Lament  for  Absalom). — Willis. 
The  palm — the    vine — the    cedar — each    hath    power. 

See  Olive  Tree.  The. — Hemans. 
The  panting  city  cried  to  the  Sea.     See  City  and  the 

Sea,  The. — Longfellow. 
The  papers  blew  a  perfect  gale.     See  That  Autograph 

Sale. — Coates. 
The  Paradise  of  Dante  consists  of  nine  heavens.     See 

Divine  (3omedy,  Story  of  the  (Paradise,  The). — 

Rabb. 
The  Parliament  of  Ireland! — of  that  assembly  I  have 

a  parental   recollection.     See  Catholic   Question, 

The.— Grattan. 
The  parson  goes  about  his  daily  ways.     See  Parson's 

Comforter,  The. — -Langbridge. 
The  partial  power  that  to  the  female  race.     See  "Book 

in  a  Bu.stle,  A." — (Punch.) 
The  particular  political  stripe  of  municipal  administra- 
tion.     See    Pulpit    and     Politics,     The. — Park- 
hurst. 
The  pa'son's  been  preachin'  'bout  heaven.     See  Maria 

in  Heaven. — Kimball. 
The  pass   is  barred!     "Fall   back,"   cries  the   guard; 

"cross  not  the  French  frontier."     See  Obsequies 

of  David  the  Painter. — Mahony. 
The  passion  of  despair  is  quelled  at  last.     See  Patience. 

— Lazarus. 
The  passionate  chapter  in  our  history  known  as  the 

Abolition   Agitation.     See   Rub-a-dub   Agitation, 

A.— Curtis. 
The  past,  as  it  were,  rises  before  me  like  a  dream.     See 

Col.  Ingersoll's  Remarkable  Vision.^Ingersoll. 
The  past  century  has  not,  the  century  to  come  will  not 

have,  a  figure  so  grand.     See  Abraham  Lincoln. — 

Castelar. 
The  past  rises  before  me  like  a  dream.     See  Vision  of 

War,  The. — Ingersoll. 
The  Past  walks  here,  noiseless,  unasked,  alone.     See 

Old  Street,  An.— Cloud. 
The  pastor  sits  in  his  easy-chair.     See  Pastor's  Reverie, 

The. — Gladden. 
The  pastor's  little  daughter.     See  Old,  Old  Story,  The. 

— Dallas. 


857 


The  pastry 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Th  •  pastry  was  delicioux,  and  I  wanted  it  myself.     See 

Ant  an  Engineer,  The. — .\non. 
The  path  by  which  We  twain  did  go.     See  Dead  Friend, 

The. — Tennyson. 
The  path  of  duty  i«»the  way  of  glory.      -See  Ode  on 

the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington   (Path  of 

Duty,  The). — Tennyson. 
The  path  of  sorrow,  and  that  path  alone.     See  Path  of 

Sorrow,  The. — ("owper. 
The  path    through    which    that    lovely    twain.     See 

Prometheus  Unbound.— Shelley. 
The  path   we   planned    beneath   October's   Sky.     See 

Path,  The.— Bryant. 
The  pathway  of  the  sinking  moon.     See  On  the  Sea. — 

Taylor. 
The  pathways   of   thy   land   are   little  changed.     See 

Pathways  in  Palestine. — .\non. 
The  patter  of  feet  was  on  the  stair.     See  One  of  God's 

Little  Heroes. — Pre.ston. 
The  peaceful   western  wind.     See  "Peaceful  western 

wind.  The." — Campion. 
The  pent  sea  throbbed  as  if  racked  with  pain.     See 

Storm  in  Venice,  A. — Miller. 
The  people     always     conquer.     They     always     must 

conquer.     See    People    Always    Conquer,    The. — 

Everett. 
The  people  of  a  certain  locality  in  Japan.     See  Monu- 
ment of  Trees,  A. — Mc(,'askey. 
The  people  who  have  been  abroad.     See  Just  Tribute, 

A.— Eliot. 
The  peple  of  vdyr  realmis,  son,  sayd  he.     See  ^^Sneid, 

The  (Destiny  of  Rome,  The). — V'irgi!. 
The  perceptive    faculties    are    those    by    which.     See 

Mental  Faculties,  The. — Wayland. 
The  Percy    [or    Perst"*]    out    of    Northumberland.     See 

Hunting  of  the  ('neviot,  The. — Anon. 
The  perfect    world   by    Adam    trod.     See    Dedication 

Hymn. — Willis. 
The  period  for  a  new  election.     See  Farewell  Address. 

— Wa.shington. 
The  Perse   [or    Percy!   out   of    Northumberland.     See 

Hunting  of  the  Cheviot,  The. — Anon. 
The  Phantom     isles    are    fading     from    the    sea.     See 

Phantom  Isles,  The. — Monsell. 
The  phantom  sea  serenely  blue.     See  Phantoms,  The. 

— (BaUimore  News.) 
The  pickaninny  was  alone  in  bed.     See  Pickaninny, 

The. — Anon. 
The  picnic  at  Selina — it  covered  lota  o'  ground.     See 

Picnic  at  Selina,  The. — Stanton. 
The  picture  being  unfinished,  gentlemen.     See  Portrait 

and  the  Critics,  The. — Anon. 
The  pig  and  the  hen,  they  both  got  in  one  pen.     See 

Pig  and  the  Hen,  The.— Cary. 
The  pilgrim  and  stranger  who  through  the  day.     See 

Charity. — Whittier. 
The  Pilgrim    Fathers,   after  ten   months   of   sickness. 

See  How  the  Pilgrims  Gave  Thanks. — Anon. 
The  Pilgrim   Fathers — where  are   they?     See   Pilgrim 

Fathers,  The. — Pierpont. 
The  Pilgrim  of   Plymouth  has  a  character  in  history 

distinct   from  any  other.      See   Puritan  and  the 

Pilgrim,  The. — Hoar. 
The  pine  tree  grew  in  the  wood.     See  Three  Trees. — 

Crandall. 
The  pines  were  dark  on  Ramoth  Hill.     See  My  Play- 
mate.— Whittier. 
The  pines,  which  are  distinguished  from  all  other  trees. 

See  Choosing  a  "State  Tree." — The  Pine  Tree. — 

Youngs. 
The  pipe  came  safe,  and  welcome,  too.     See  To  C.  F. 

Bradford. — Ixiwell. 
The  pipe  of  the  quail  in  the  .stubblefield.     See  In  Time 

of  Peace. — Burdette. 
The  pipe,  with  .solemn    interposing    puff.      See   Con- 
versation (Pernicious  Weed!). — Cowper. 
The  pipers  are  not  made  of  pipes.     See  Funny,  Isn't 

it? — Anon. 
The  place  of  crucifixion  was  a  space  upon  the  top.     See 

Ben-Hur  (Crucifixion.  The). — Wallace. 
The  place  was  worthy  of  such  a  trial.      See  Warren 

Hastmgs   (Trial    of    Warren    Hastings,    The).— 

Macaulay. 
The  jilague   has  come  among  us.     See  Letter  and  an 

Answer,  A. — (Punch.) 
The  plain   people  have  reason   to  be  proud  of  their 

appellation.     See  Plain  People,  The.— Anon. 
The  plan  is  fixed;  1  fluctuate  no  more.     See  Soliloquy 

of  Arnold. — Jones. 
The  plant  worship  which  holds  so  prominent  a  place 

See  Plant  Worship.     (Gentleman's  Magazine.) 
The  play  is  done— the  curtain  drops.     See  End  of  the 

Play,  The.— Thackeray. 


The  play  was  done ;  the  mimic  lovers  of  the  stage.     See 

Epilogue  at  Wallack's,  An. — Wayland. 
The  plea  of  emotional   insanity   or  transitory   mania. 

See    "Plea    of    fmotional    insanity  or  transitory 

mania.  The." — Hoffman. 
The  pleasant  town  of  Hinckley.     See  Modern  Hero,  A. 

— Verey. 
The  pleasure  I  receive  from  the  warbling  of  the  birds 

in    the    spring.     See    Humming    Bird,    The. — St. 

John. 
The  plowman   homeward  plods  his  weary  way.     See 

Trans])ositions. — Fox. 
The  pobble  who  has  no  toes.     See  Pobble  Who  Has  no 

Toes,  The. — Lear. 
The  poem  of  the  Universe.     See  Poem  of  the  Universe, 

The.— Weldon. 
The  poet  Dante,  in  the  thirty-fifth  year  of  his  life.     See 

Divine  Comedy.  Story  of  the  (Hell,  The).— Rabb. 
The  poet   dreamt   of   Heaven!     See   Poet    Dreamt    of 

Heaven,  The. — Anon. 
The  poet   is  forever  young.     See  Lyric   Seer,   The. — 

Markham. 
The  poet  leads  us, — as  I  think.     See  With  Sa'di  in  the 

Garden  (Book of  Love,  The). — Arnold. 
The  poet   or  priest  who  told  us  this.     See  There's  a 

Silver  Lining  to  Every  Cloud. — Cook. 
The  poet  plowman  wrote,  long  years  ago.     See  f)de  to 

Burns. — Anon. 
The  poet  stood  in  the  sombre  town.     See  Poet  in  the 

City,  The.— Liddell. 
The  poet    tells    us,    in    pathetic    cadence.     See    True 

Greatness. — King. 
The  poet   thus   shut   out   from   the   busy   world.     See 

Shakespeare, — Bryan. 
The  poet,  to  whose  mighty  heart.     See  Resignation. 

— Arnold. 
The  poetry  of  earth  is  never  dead.     See  On  the  Grass- 
hopper and  Cricket. — Keats. 
The  poet's  secret   I   mus>t   know.     See  Poet's  Secret, 

The.— Stoddard. 
The  poets    sing    that    love    is    blind.      See    Song. — 

(Wellesley  Magazine.) 
The  point    is    turned;    the  twilight   shadow  fills.     See 

Between  the  Rapids. — Lampman. 
The  point   of   honor   has   been    deemed   of   use.     See 

Conversation  (Duelling). — Cowper. 
The  point   of   one   white   star   is   quivering   still.     See 

Prometheus  Unbound  (Sunrise). — Shelley. 
The  point  of  view  from  wh'ch  T  shall  speak  is  that  of 

total  abstinence.     See  Public  Opinion. — Farrar. 
The  polls  was  in  my  cabin  to-day.     See  Shaugraun,  The 

(Conn's  Description   of  the  Fox  Hunt). — Bouci- 

cault. 
The  political     prosperity     which     this     country     has 

attained.       See    Character    of     Washington,    Tne 

(Evil  of  Disunion).— Webster. 
The  poplar  drops  beside  the  way.     See  Spring  at  the 

Capital. — Allen. 
The  poplars  and  the  ancient  elms.     See  Theocritus. — 

Gosse. 
The  poplars   are   felled;   farewell   to   the   shade.     See 

Poplar  Field,  The. — Cowper. 
The  populace  was  stirred,  and  here  and  there.     See 

Herod. — Brooks. 
The  population  of  Ireland  has  doubled  since  the  union. 

See  Repeal  of  the  Union,  18  '4,  The.— Shell. 
The  port  of  peace  and  Perfect  Day.     See  Bark  of  True- 

Love,  The.— Taylor. 
The  ports  of  death  are  sins;  of  life,  good  deeds.     See 

Life  and  Death. — .lonson. 
The  post-boy  drove  with  fierce  career.     See  .A^lice  Fell; 

or.  Poverty. — Wordsworth. 
The  potter  stood  at  his  daily  work.     See  Bit  of  Potteri  , 

A. — Anon. 
The  pouring  music,  soft  and  strong.    See  Song. — Myers. 
The  Power  that  led  his  chosen,  by  pillared  cloud  and 

flame.     See  Oliver's  Advice. — Blacker. 
The  power  to  converse  well  is  a  very  great  charm.     See 
'Power  to  converse  well  is  a  very  great  charm. 

The." — Ruskin. 
The  practical  way  for  Christians  to  reform  the  theatre. 

See  Practical  Way  for  Christians  to   Reform  the 

Theatre,  The. — (Baltimore  American.) 
The  prairie    stretched    as    smooth    as    a    floor.     See 

Burning  Prairie,  The. — Cary. 
The  prayers  I   make  will  then  be  sweet  indeed.     See 

Sonnet:  "The  prayers  I  make,"  etc.— Michelangelo. 
The  preacher's    evening    task    was    done.     See    Mr. 

Beecher  and  the  Waifs. — Anon. 
The  preparations  were  now  complete.     See  Ben-Hur 

(Chariot  Race,  The).^ Wallace. 
The  presences  of  woods  informed  his  soul.     See  Words- 
worth,— Betts. 


858 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  Republicans 


The  present    age,    exultant    over    the    many    recent 

wonderful  triumphs.     See  "Present  age,  exultant 

over    the     many     recent      wonderful      triumphs. 

The." — Minton. 
The  Present  Age.     In  those  brief  words.     <See  Present 

Age,  The. — {."hanning. 
The  present   attitude   of   the   temperance   cause   is   a 

bewilderment    in    many    minds.     .See    Our    Regi- 
ments of  Reform. — Talmage. 
The  pretty  black  eyes  of  a  little  field-mouse.     See  t;at- 

tails. — -Anon. 
The  prettv    black    squirrel   lives   up   in    a   tree.     See 

S  luirrel.  The.— Howitt. 
The  primwrose   in   the   sheiide   do   blow.     See  Black- 

mwore  Maidens. — -Barnes. 
The  princess    was  queenly  and  fair  in  the  face.     See 

Jester,  The. — Anon. 
The  princess  with  her  women -train  without  the  fort 

he     found.     See     Congal. — Ferguson. 
The  principal    earthly    work    of    John    Wycliffe.     See 

John  Wycliffe  and  the  Bible. — Storrs. 
The  prison  for  felons  awaiting  trial  in  ths  civil  courts 

was    in     Castle     Rushen.      See    Deemster,.    The 

(Father  and   Son). — Caine, 
The  prisoner  being  arraiened.  and  the  formalities.     See 

Trappine  a  Witness. — Anon. 
The  problem  before  the  convention.     See  Constitution, 

The  — Henry. 
The  products  of  the  whole  world  are,  or  soon  may  be 

found.     See    Future    of    Our    Language,    The. — 

Bethune. 
The  project  of  connecting  the  planting  of  trees.     See 

"Project  cf  connecting,"  etc. — Mann. 
The  promi.se   of  these   fragrant   flowers      See  With   a 

Spray  of  Apple  Blossoms. — Learned. 
"The  proper  way  for  a  man  to  pray."     See  Prayer  of 

Cyrus  Brown,  The. — Foss. 
The  proposed  religious  amendn>ent  to  the  Constitution. 

See    "Proposed     religious      amendment     to     the 

constitution.  The." — Noble. 
The  prosecuting  attorney  sat  down.     See  Foraging  or 

Stealing? — Anon. 
The  proudest  motto  for  the  young!     See  There's  no 

Such  Word  as  Fail. — Neal. 
The  proudest  now  is  but  my  peer.     See  Poor  Voter  on 

Election  Day,  The.— Whittier. 
The  Prussian  eagle  in  its  eyrie  screamed.     See  Jena. — 

Saltus. 
The  pulpit    plagiarist    ruins    his    style.     See    "Pulpit 

plagiarist  ruins  his  style.  The." — Buckley. 
The  pump,   straight  as  a   soldier  stands.     See  Town 

Pump,  The. — Bungay. 
The  pupil  of  the  eye  is  the  portal  through  which  light. 

See  "Pupil  of  the  eye  is  the  portal  through  which 

light.  The."— March. 
The  "pure    dairy    milk"    which    the    Texas    milkman 

ladled  out  to  his  customers.     See  Texas  Cow,  The. 

—  (Texas  Si'tings.) 
The  pure,  the  bright,  the  beautiful.      See  Things  that 

never  Die. — Dickens. 
The  pure  white  snow  is  falling  fast.     See  Christmas 

Eve.— Fuller. 
The  Purgatory  of  Dante  is  situated  on  a  mountain  top. 

See  Purgatory,  The. — Rabb. 
The  Puritan    came    to    America    seeking    freedom    to 

worship  God      See  Puritan,  The. — Curtis. 
The  Puritan    fenced    in    his    Sabbath.     See    Puritan 

Sabbath,  The.— Van  Dyke. 
The  Puritan    Spring   Beauties   stood   freshly   clad    for 

church.     See  Spring  Beauties.  The. — Cone. 
The  Puritans    are    the    patriarchs    of    liberty.     See 

Tribute  to  Lincoln. — Castelar. 
The    Puritans   were    men    who   [or  whose  minds  had] 

derived  a   peculiar  character.     See  Milton  (Puri- 
tans, The). — Macaulay. 
The  Puritans  were  the  most  remarkable  body  of  men. 

See  Milton  (Puritans,  The). — Macaulay. 
The  purple  shadows  dreamingly.     See  Summer  Night, 

A. — Chapman. 
The  quality  of  bribery  is  deep  stained.     See  Parody 

for  a  Reformed  Parliament. — (Punch.) 
The  quality  of  mercy  is  not  strained.      See  Merchant 

of  Venice,  The  (Quality  of   Mercy,  The). — Shake- 
speare. 
The  quarry   whence   thy   form   majestic   sprung.     See 

Washington's  Statue. — Tuckerman. 
The  Queen  arrived  in  the  hall  of  death.     See  Execution 

of  Queen  Mary. — I>amartine. 
The  Queen  becoming  conscious  of  the  fact.     See  Idylls 

of  the  King  (King  Arthur  and  Queen  Guinevere). 

— Tennyson. 
The  queen   is   proud   on   her  throne      See  My   Little 

Lady. — Westwood. 


The  Queen    is   taking   a   drive   to-day.     See   Queen's 

Last  Ride,  The.— Wilcox. 
The  Queen   looked   up,   and   said.     See  Idylls  of  the 

King  (Foolish  Virgins,  The). — Tennyson. 
The  Queen  sat  in  her  balcony.     See  Gil,  the  Toreador 

—Webb. 
The  Queen's  in  the  hall  where  the  torches  .are  bright. 

See  Pafje  and  the  Maid  of  Honor,  The. — Goethe. 
The  question  ari.ses  in  my  mind,  what  are  we  going  to 

do   this   evening?     See   Boy's   Meeting,    A. — Mc- 

Bride. 
The  question  is,  shall  we  confide  the  public  education 

of    youth    to    a    clerical     party.     See    Practical 

Religious  Instruction. — Hugo. 
The  question  of  the  desolation  of  the  American  home 

and  its  protection.     See  American  Home,  The. — 

Bain. 
The  question,    the    comprehensive    question,    is.     See 

Contentment  of  Europe,  The. — Kossuth. 
The  quiet  graves  of  our  country's  braves.     See  Decora 

tion  Day. — Wilcox. 
The  Rabbi  Nathan,  two  score  years  and  ten.     See  Two 

Rabbis,  The.— Whittier. 
The  race  had   been   fixed  for  ten   o'clock.     See  Boat 

Bace,  The.— Grant. 
The  race  of  yore.     See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The. — Scott. 
The  race   problem   was   launched   in    the   South,     See 

Negro  and  the  South,  The. — Anon. 
The  radiant    ruler   of   the   year.     See   On   the   Winter 

Solstice. — Akenside. 
The  rain  had  fallen;  the  poet  arose.     See  Poet's  Song, 

The. — Tennyson. 
The  rain   has   ceased,   and   in   my    room.     See   After 

the  Rain. — Aldrich. 
The  rain  is  o'er.     How  den.se  and  bright.     See  After  a 

Summer  Shower. — Norton. 
The  rain  is  pouring  down.     See  "It's  an  Til  Wind." — 

Kitchel. 
The  rain  is  raining  all  around.     See  Rain. — Stevenson. 
The  rain  set  earl.v  in  to-night.     See  Porphyria'?  Lover. 

— Browning. 
The  rainbow  on  the  ocean.     See  So  Slow  to  Die. — 

Woodberry. 
The  rain-drops  plash,  and  the  dead  leaves  fall.     See 

Departure  of  the  Swallows. — Gautier. 
The  Ram,  the  Bull,  the  Heavenly  Twins.     See  Signs  of 

the  Zodiac. — Anon. 
The  rays  of  warning  sunlight  steal.      See  Unter  den 

Linden. — Peck. 
The  reader   must   picture   a   stout,   big-bellied,    short- 
haired  recruiting  officer.     See  Dutch   Recruiting 

Officer,  A. — Anon. 
The  reason  why  I'm  single  now.  so  many  people  want 

to  know.     See  Old  Maid's  Warning,  An. — Caslin 
The  recent   remarkable  experience   of   Professor   Von 

Schweinhund.     See  Remarkable  Experience,  A.— 

Anon. 
The  reception   is  in   full  blast.     See   Nellie  Walsh. — 

Barnard. 
The  reception,  manner  of  attendance.     See  Spectator, 

The  (Coverley  Household,  The). — Addison. 
The  recluse   hermit   ofttimes   more   doth    know.      See 

Eclogue.  December   26,   1613   ("Reclu.se  hermit,  ' 

etc.). — Donne. 
The  red  room  with  the  giant  bed.     See  To  Minnie. — 

Stevenson. 
The  red    rose   petals   droop   and   fall.     See   Quatrain. 

— ( Morningside. ) 
The  red  rose  whispers  of  passion.     See  White  Rose,  A. 

—O'Reilly. 
The  red  tiled  towers  of  the  old  Chateau.     See  Chateau 

Papineau. — Harrison. 
The  red-clad    fishers    row    and    creep.     See    Como. — 

Miller. 
The  reek  it  rose,  and  the  flame  it  flew.     See  Fire  of 

Frendraught,  The. — Anon. 
The  regular  auctioneer  was  ill,  and  in  the  emergency 

the  auctioneer  from  the  horse  stables.     See  Hor.«e 

Auctioneer,  The. — Anon. 
The  reign  of  Napoleon  may  be  defined  as  the  old  world 

reconstructed.     See   Reign    of    Napoleon,    The. — 

I>amartine. 
The  reivers  they  stole  Fair  Annie.     See  Fair  Annie. — 

Anon. 
The  religion    of   Mr.    Rudyard    Kipling   and   his   men. 

See  Kipling's  Religion. — Anon. 
The  renowned  Wouter   (or  Walter)  Van   Twiller  was 

descended.       See  Knickerbocker  History  of   New 

York  (Dutch  (Governor,  The). — Irving 
The  representatives  of  the  people  assembled  in  solemn 

conclave.     See  Bell  of  Liberty,  The. — Headley. 
The  Republ'cans  of  the  United  States.     See  Plumed 

Knight,  The. — Ingersoll. 


859 


The  resolute 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIOXS 


The  resolute,  clear-headed,  broad-minded  men  of  the 

South.     .See  At  the  Eiorton  Banquet  (Regard  for 

the  NeRTO  llace). — -Grady. 
The  resolution  proposed  providing  the  means  to  defray 

the   expanse   oft  a    mission.     See   On   the  Greek 

Revolution  (America's  Duty  to  Greece). — <;iay. 
The  reftless    clock    is    ticking    out.     Sef    Christmas 

Lullaby,  A.— Weir. 
The  Rev.  Abijah  Blackmore  had  received  a  letter.     See 

Early  Start,  An.— Chaffee. 
The  Reverend    Eliab    Eliezer.     See    Eliab    Eliezer. — 

Reed 
The  Rev.  Mr.  Mulkittle.  having  surcessfuUy  organized 

a  church  fair.     See  "Calls." — Anon. 
The  Rhine  is  running  deep  and  red.     <See  Island  of  the 

Scots.  The. — Aytoun. 
The  rhyme    o'    The    Raggedy    Man's   at's    best.     See 

Lugubrious  Whing-Vvhang,  The. — Riley. 
The  rich  man  sat  in  his  father's  seat.     iSec  This  Side 

and  That. — MacDonald. 
The  rich  man's  son  inherits  lands.     See  Heritage,  The. 

— lyowell. 
The  riches  of  scholarship,  the  benignities  of  literature. 

<Se*  Dedication  of  a  Public  Library. — Anon. 
The  richest  garments  round  her  careless  thrown.     See 

\A9t  Tudor,  The.— Hawes. 
The  ring,  so  worn  as  you  behold.     See  Marriage  Ring, 

A.— Crabbe. 
The  ringing  laugh  of  a  joyous  heart,  and  the  glance  of  a 

smiling  eye.     .See  Afterwards.— -Stevenson. 
The  rir>e  red  berries  of   the  wintergreen.     See  Wood 

of  Chancellorsville,  The. — German. 
The  rising  moon  has  hid  the  stars.     See  Endymion. — 

Longfellow. 
The  river  Avon  at  Rugby  is  a  slow  and  not  very  clear 

stream.     See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  (Keeper, 

The).— Hughes. 
The  river  lifts  its  morning  mist.     See  Morning  Miracle, 

A. — Dickinson. 
The  river  widens  to  a  path'ess  sea.     See  On  a  Ferry 

Boat. — Burton. 
The  rivers  that  sweep  to  the  Rea.     See  Song  of  the 

Pagan  Princess. — Morton. 
The  road  is  left  that  once  was  trod.     See  Old  Road, 

The.— Very. 
The  road  was  straight,  the  afternoon  was  gray.     See 

Beyond  the  Haze. — (Comhill  Magazine.) 
The  roar  of  Niagara  dies  away.     See  H.  W.  L. — Nichol. 
The  roar  of  watersl     From  the  headlong  height.     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Fall  of  Temi,  The). — 

Byron. 
The  robin  and  the  red-breast.     See  Rule  for  Birds' 

Nesters,  A. — Anon. 
The  robin    chants    when    the    thrush    is    dumb.     See 

To-morrow. — Coates. 
The  robin  repeats  his  two  beautiful  words.     See  Words. 

—Holland 
The  cobins  sang  in  the  orchard,  the  buds  into  blossoms 

grew.     See  Marguerite. — Whittier. 
The   Rock-a-by    Lady    from    Hushaby     Street.     See 

Rock-a-by  Lady,  The.— Field. 
The  rocky  ledge  runs  far  into  the  sea.     See  Lighthouse, 

The. — Longfellow. 
The  rocky  nook  with  hill-tops  three.     See  Boston. — 

Emerson. 
The  Roman    knight    who    rode.     See    Bell,     The  — 

Taylor. 
The  Roman    sentinel    stood    helmed    and    tall.     See 

Widow  of  Nain,  The.— Willis. 
The  roof  it  has  a  lazy  time.     See  Lazy  Roof,  The. — 

Burgess. 
The  rook's  nest  do  rock  on  the  tree-top.     See  Lullaby. 

— Barneb. 
The  room  is  ablaze  with  countless  lights,  the    faces 

catch  the  glow.     See  Reproach,  A. — Mines. 
The  room  occupied  b.v  the  prisoner  was  nothing  like 

one    of   our    modem    penetentiary    system.     See 

.loam  Dacosta. — Verne. 
The  room  was  cold  and  cheerless  and  bare.     See  Drink- 

ing-house  over  the  Way,  The. — Nutting. 
The  room   was   large,   but   with   a   low   ceiling.     See 

"Gentlemen,  the  King!" — Barr. 
The  rose  aloft  in  sunny  air.     See  Rose   and  Root. — 

Piatt. 
The  rose  had  been  washed,  just  washed  in  a  shower 

See  Rose,  The. — Cowper. 
The  rose  in  the  garden  slipped  her  bud.     See   Fancy 

from  Fontenelle,  A. — Dobson. 
The  rose  is  fairest  when  'tis  budding  new.      See  Lady 

of  the  Lake,  The  ("Rose  is  fairest,"  etc.).— Scott. 
The  rose  is  praised  for  its  beaming  face.     See  Grass  — 

Fawcett. 


The  rose  is  weeping  for  her  love.     See  Festus  (Helen's 

Song). — Bailey. 
The  rose  looks  out  in  the  valley.     See  Nightingale,  The. 

— Vicente. 
The  rose  o'er  crag  or  vale.     See  Rose,  The. — Anon. 
The  rose  that  all  are  praising.     See  "Rose  that  all  are 

praising.  The." — -Bayly. 
The  rose  that  blushes  like  the  mom.     See  Sentimental. 

— Coleridge. 
The  rose    thou    gav'st    at    parting.     See    Rose    Thou 

Gav'st,  The. — Swain. 
The  rose  upon  my  balcony,  the  morning  air  perfuming. 

See  Vanity  Fair  (Rose  upon   My   Balcony,   The). 

— Thackeray. 
The  rose  was  rich  in  bloom  on   Sharon's  plain.     See 

Hebrew  Mother,  The. — Hemans. 
The  rose   was   sick   and   smiling   died.      See   Funeral 

Rites  of  the  Rose. — Herrick. 
The  roses  are  a  regal  troop.     See  Bluebells  of  New 

England,  The.— Aldrich. 
The  roses    are    gone,    little    one.     See    Next    Year. — 

Anon. 
The  roses    of    yesteryear.     See    At    Twilight. — Rens- 
selaer. 
The  rosy  clouds  float  overhead.     See  Sandman,  The. — 

Vandegrift. 
The  rosy  mouth  and  rosy  toe.     See  Bunch  of  Roses, 

A.— Tabb. 
The  rosy  musk-mallow  blooms  where  the  south  wind 

blows.     See  Rosy  Musk-mallow,  The. — Gillington. 
The  rowan  tree  grows  by  the  tower  foot.     See  Ballad 

of  the  Mad  Ladye.^ — MacLean. 
The  Rowfant  books,  how  fair  they  show.     See  Row- 

fant  Books,  The. — Lang. 
The  royal  banners  forward  go.     See  Passion  Sunday. — 

Fortunatus. 
The  royal    feast    was    done;    the    King.     See    Fool's 

Prayer,  The.— Sill. 
The  ruddy  poppies  bend  and  bow.     See  To  Diane. — 

Hay. 
The  ruddy  sun  was  setting  behind  the  Murchian  hills. 

See  Bell  of  Zanora,  The. — Rose. 
The  ruling  passion,  be  it   what   it   will.     See    Moral 

Essays  '  Ruling  Passion,  The). — Pope. 
The  rumseller  sat  in  his  den  alone.     See  Rumseller's 

Song,  The. — Denison. 
The  Sabbath  day  was  ending  in  a  village  by  the  sea. 

See  Drowning  Singer,  The. — ^Farningham. 
The  Sabbath  was  made  for  man — not  to  be  contemned 

and     forgotten.     See     Sabbath,     The. — Freling- 

huysen. 
The  Sabbath's  sun  was  setting  low.     See  Child  and  the 

Angels,  The. — Swain. 
The  sad  and  solemn  night.     See  Hymn  to  the  North 

Star. — Bryant. 
The  saddest  days  of  all  the  year.     See  Year  in  Paradise, 

A. — -Cross. 
The  saddest  thing  in  the  Union  meetings  of  1859.     See 

Is  This  All  7— Phillips. 
The  saddest  thing  that  can  befall  a  soul.     See  "Saddest 

thing  that  can  befall  a  soul.  The." — Smith. 
The  sage   Ceridwen   was   the   wife.     See  Cauldron   of 

Ceridwen,  The. — Peacock. 
The  sage,  who  said  he  should  be  proud.     See  On  Seeing 

Verses  Written  upon  Windows  at  Inns. — Swift. 
The  sailing    Pine;   the    Cedar,    proud    and    tall.     See 

Faerie  Queene.  The  (Kinds  of  Trees  to  Plant), — 

Spenser. 
The  sailor  says,  "I  like  your  rig."     See  How  They  Pop 

the  Question. — Anon. 
The  sainted  Isle  of  old.     See  Shan  Van  Vocht. — Anon. 
The  sale  and  use  of  intoxicating  beverages  is  a  most 

potent  force.     See  Churches  and  Saloons. — Hurst. 
The  saleswoman's  form  was  like  this.     See  .lustice. — 

Wood. 
The  saloon  is  an  agent  for  the  corruption  of  the  morals 

of  the  home.     See  Saloon  in  Relation  to  Morals, 

The. — Pentecost. 
The  salt  wind  blows  upon  my  cheek.     See  In  the  Sea. — 

Rich. 
The  same  majestic  pine  is  lifted  high.  See  Under  the 

Pine. — Hayne. 
The  same  old  baffling  questions!  O  my  friend.     See 

"Same  old  baffling,"  etc. — Whittier. 
The  same  year  calls,  and  one  goes  hence  with  another. 

See  Farewell. — Swinburne. 
The  sanguine    sunrise,    with    his    meteor    eyes.     See 

Cloud,  The.— Shelley. 
The  sapphire  walls  of  Paradise.     See  Bridal  in  Eden,' 

The. — Otterson. 
The  savior,  and  not  the  slayer,  he  is  the  braver  man. 

See  David  Shaw,  Hero. — Buckham. 


860 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  silent 


The  Saviour,  bowed  beneath  his  cross.     See  Why  the 

Robin's  Breast  is  Red. — Randall. 
The  Saviour's  feast  was  spread.     Group  after  group. 

See  Blind  Communicant,  The. — Lee. 
The  Saxon    Edmund   reigned   o'er   Albion's   isle.     See 

Death  of  King  Edmund,  The.^Sigourney. 
The  Saxons  had   met,   and   the   banquet   was  spread. 

See  O'Kavanaugh,  The. — Shea. 
The  saying  of  an  ancient  sage.     See  Life's  Lessons. — 

Anon. 
The  scaffold  had  been  awkwardly  erected.      See  His- 
tory of  England  (Execution  of  Sir  Thomas  More, 

The).— Froude. 
The  scarlet  tide  of  summer's  life.     See  To  An  Autumn 

Leaf. — Mathews. 
The  scene  is  a  turret  chamber  of  Torquilstone  Castle. 

See  Ivanhoe  (Scene  from  "Ivanhoe"). — Scott. 
The  scene  is  laid  in  the  mountainous  regions  of  Georgia. 

See     How     a     Blacksmith     Was     Converted. — 

Anon. 
The  scene   is   that    fair   island,   which    its    discoverer, 

Columbus,  described.     See  Sinking  of  the  Merri- 

mac.  The. — Hall. 
The-scene  of  the  following  anecdote  is  laid  in  a  drawing- 
room    in  Paris.     See  Circumstantial   Evidence. — 

Anon. 
The  scene  opens  on  a  clear,  crisp  morning.     See  Cut 

Behind. — Talmage. 
The  scene  opens  with  a  view  of  the  great  natural  bridge 

in  Virginia.     See  One  Niche  the  Highest. — Bur- 

ritt. 
The  scene  was  in  a  drawing-room  in  West  Brompton. 

See  And  She  Was  His. — Anon. 
The  scene   was  more  beautiful   far  to   the   eye.     See 

Light-house,  The. — Moore. 
The  scent  of  a  blossom  from  FMen!     See  In  the  Air. — 

Larcom. 
The  scent   of  bramble  sweets  the  air.     See  Sleeping 

Beauty,  The. — Ramal. 
The  scepter  that  rules  mankind — who  holds  it?     See 

Mission  of  the  Press,  The. — Shuman. 
The  schades    of    night    vas    falling    down.     See    Ein 

Deut.sches  Lied. — Anon. 
The  school  was  out,  and  down  the  street.     See  Boy's 

Promise,  A. — Cooper. 
The  school-house   of   Glendalough.     See  Scene   in   an 

Irish  School. — Griffin. 
The  schoolmaster    was    weary.      See    Schoolmaster's 

Sleep,  The.— Davis. 
The  scimetar   was    sharp,    through    air   it    flew.     See 

Edgeworth. — -Sabine. 
The  sea  at  the  crag's  base  brightens.     See  Exiles,  The. 

— {Chambers'  Journal.) 
The  sea  crashed  over  the  grim  gray  rocks.     See  Flotsam 

and  Jetsam. — {All  the  Year  Round.) 
The  sea  hath  many  thousand  sands.     See  Advice  to  a 

Lover. — Anon. 
The  sea  is  a  jovial  comrade.     See  Wind  and  the  Sea, 

The.— Taylor. 
The  sea  is  calling,  calling!     See  Fisherman's  Summons, 

The.— Anon. 
The     sea    is  calm    to-night.        See    Dover    Beach. — 

Arnold. 
"The  sea  is  His,  and  He  made  it."     See  Beauty  of  the 

Sea,  The. — Anon. 
The  sea  it  is  deep,  the  sea  it  is  wide.     See  Sea,   The. — 

Howitt. 
The  sea  rolls  vaguely,  and  the  stars  are  dumb.     See 

^olian  Harp. — AUingham. 
The  sea  swings  owre  the  .slants  of  sand.     See  Ballad  of 

Dead  Men's  Bay,  The. — Swinburne. 
The  sea    tells    something,    but    it    tells    not    all.     See 

Reserve. — Townsend. 
The  sea!    the    sea!   the    open    sea!     See   Sea,    The. — 

Procter. 
The  sea   was   bright,    and   the   bark   rode   well.     See 

White  Squall,  The.— Procter. 
The  sea-bound  landsman,  looking  back  to  shore.     See 

John  Brown. — Koopman. 
The  sea-gull  is  so  sorry!     See  Sorrowful  Sea-gull,  The. 

-{Child-World.) 
The  seal   is   set.     Now  welcome,   thou   dread   power! 

See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Dying  Gladiator, 

The).— Byron. 
The  seas  are  quiet  when  the  winds  give  o'er.     See  Old 

Age  and  Death. — Waller. 
The  season  of  music  was  closing.     See  White  Lily,  A. 

—Wright. 
The  Second  Charles  of  England.     See  Knighting  of  the 

Sirloin   of   Beef  by   Charles  the  Second,   The. — 

Anon. 
The  secret  then  is  mine.     I  have  sworn  the  oath.     See 

Carpenter  and  his  Apprentice,  The. — Anon. 


The  secretary  stood  alone.     Modern  degeneracy   had 

not  reached  him.     See  Character  of  Mr.  Pitt.— 

Grattan. 
The  Senator  from  Massachusetts  has  thought  proper 

to  cast  the  first  stone.     See  On  Mr.  P^oot's  Reso- 
lution in  the  U.  S.   Senate,  Jan.   21,   1830   (South 

Carolina  and  the  Union). — Hayne. 
The  sensation    novel    has  had  its  day.      See  "Sensa- 
tion novel  has  had  its  day,  The." — McCarthy. 
The  sensation  of  being  at  work  again.     See  Mark  "Twain 

Edits  an  Agricultural  Paper. — Clemens. 
The  sense  of  national  honor  beats  high  in  the  American 

heart.     See  Aspirations  of  the  American  People. — 

Hunter. 
The  sense  of  the  world  is  short.     See  Eros. — Emerson. 
The  serajjh     Andiel,     faithful     found.     See    Paradise 

Lost  (Faithful  Angel,  The).— Milton. 
The  setting  of  a  great  hope  is  like  the  setting  of  the 

sun.     See    Hyperion    ("Setting  of  a  great   hope. 

The") . — Longfellow. 
The  setting  sun,  with  dying  beams.     See  To-morrow. — 

Anon. 
The  "seven  days"  fight  was  ended.     See  Tobe's  Monu- 
ment.— Kilham. 
The  shabby  str  et-cars  jingling  go.    See  On  a  Forgotten 

By-way. — Watrous. 
The  shades  of  eve  come  slowly  down.     See  Highland 

Stranger,  The. — Scott. 
The  shades  of  eve  had  crossed  the  glen.     See  Pretty 

Girl  of  Loch  Dan,  The. — Ferguson. 
The  shades   of   night    'ad   closed   round   Seving   Dials. 

See  Jail-bird's  Story,  A. — Overton. 
The  shades  of  night  were  falling  fast.     See  Excelsior. 

— Longfellow. 
The  shades  of  night  were  falling  fast.     See  Proclivior. 

— {Punch.) 
The  shadow  of  the  mountain  falls  athwart  the  lowly 

plain.     See  "Follow  Me."- — Ryan. 
The  Shadow  of  the  Rock!     See  Shadow  of  the  Rock, 

The. — Faber. 
The  shadow  on  the  dial's  face.     See  Sun-dial. — Mont- 
gomery. 
The  shadows  and  the  firelight  gleams.     See  Poet  and 

Painter. — Hudson. 
The  shadows  deepen  down  the  woodland  road.     See 

Nightfall. — Carver. 
The  shadows  gather  round  me,  while  you  are  in  the 

sun.     See  Next  of  Kin. — Rossetti. 
The  shadows     lay     along     Broadway.     See     Unseen 

Spirits.— Willis. 
The  shadows  lengthen,  night  draws  on.     See  Shadows 

Lengthen,  The. — Anon. 
The  shadows  of  night  were  a  comin'  down  swift.     See 

Higher. — Anon. 
The   shadows  of    the    evening    hours.     See    Evening 

Hymn. — Procter. 
The  Shakers  is  the  strangest  religious  sex  I  ever  met. 

See  Artemus  Ward  Visits  the  Shakers. — Brown. 
The  shape  alone  let  others  prize.     See  "Shape  alone 

let  others  prize.  The." — Akenside. 
The  shapes  that  frowned  before  the  eyes.     See  Eclipse 

of  Faith,  The. — Woolsey. 
The  sheep-bell     toUeth     curfew-time.     See     Evening 

Scene,  The. — Patmore. 
The  shepherds  went  their  hasty  way.     See  Christmas 

(Darol,  A. — Coleridge. 
The  ship  is  sinking,  slowly  sinking,  and  no  help  is  near! 

See  Stewart  Holland. — Fobes. 
The  ship  may  sink.     See  Athanasia. — Ames. 
The  ship's  bell  tolled,  and  slowly  o'er  the  deck.     See 

Sailor's  Funeral,  The. — Sigourney. 
The  ships  glide  in  at  the  harbor's  mouth.     See  Song 

of  Summer,  A. — Sangster. 
The  shore  is  lined  with  anchored  ships.     See  "Shore  is 

lined  with  anchored  ships.  The." — Jackson. 
The  showers   fall    as   .softly.     See    High    and    Low. — 

Goodale. 
The  shroud  is  yet  unspread.     See  Young  Queen,  The. — 

Browning. 
The  sight  of  a  faded  flower  pressed  in  a  book  brings 

back.     See  Remembrance. — Haweis. 
The  signs  of  the  times  are  full  of  promise.     See  Words 

of  Cheer. — Barker. 
The  silent  and  deserted  street.     See  "Bring  out  Your 

Dead."-r-Iiawless. 
The  silent  bird   is  hid  in   the  boughs.     See  Song. — 

Gilbert. 
The  silent    city   .steeped   and   bathed    itself   in    rose- 
tints.      See  Fall  of  the  Pemberton  Mill,  The. — 

Phelps. 
The  silent  heart,  which  grief  assails.     See  Hymn  to 

Contentment,  A. — Parnell. 


861 


The  silver 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  silver  birch  is  a  dainty  lady.     See  Child's  Song  in 

Spring. — Nesbit. 
The  silver  rain,  the  golden  rain.     See  Rain-drops,  The. 

— -Colton. 
The  similarity     of    xnan     is     very     perplexing.     See 

Thoughts  at  a  Mirty. — Dallas. 
The  .singer  stood  in  a  blaze  of  light.     See  Encore. — 

Anon. 
The  single  eye,  the  daughter  of  the  light.     See  To  the 

.\uthores8  of  "Our  Village." — Kingsley. 
The  sinking  of  the  ship  Merrimac  at  the  mouth  of  San- 
tiago harbor.     See  Sinking  of  the  Merrimac,  The. — 

Hobson. 
The  sinking  sun  is  taking  leave.     See  Summer  Evening, 

The.— Clare. 
The  situation   at   the  R —  Western  Agency   was  des- 
perate.    See  Gordon's  Reprieve. — Anon. 
The  sixth  wa.s  August,  being  rich  arrayed.     See  Faerie 

Que?ne,  The  (August). — Spenser. 
The  skies  are  low,  the  winds  are  slow.     See  Under  the 

Blue. — Browne. 
The  skies  have  sunk,  and  hid   the  upper  snow.     See 

'Ite  Domum  Saturic.  Venit  Hesperus. — Clough. 
The  skies  they  were  ashen  and  sober.     See  Ulalume. — 

Poe. 
The  skilful    listener,    he,    methinks,    may    hear.     See 

Skilful  Listener,  The. — Cheney. 
The  skipper  stood  on  the  windy  pier.     See  Skipper's 

Love;  or.  The  Tide  Will  Turn,  The.— Barr. 
The  sky  had  a  gray,  gray  face.     See  Little  White  Sun, 

The.— Huestis. 
The  sky  is  a  drinking-cup.      See  Sky,  The. — Stoddard. 
The  sky  is  blue,  the  sea  is  bright,  the  sunny  day  is  long. 

See  Boston  Grasshopper,  The. — Gregg. 
The  sky  is  changed;  and  such  a  change!     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Storm,  The). — Byron. 
"The  sky  is  clouded,  the  rocks  are  bare."     See  Fate. — 

Harte. 
The  sky  is  dark  and  the  hills  are  white.     See  Norse 

Lullaby. — Field. 
The  sky    is    full    of    clouds    to-day.     See    Clouds.— 

Sherman. 
The  sky  is  low,  the  clouds  are  mean.     See  Beclouded. — 

Dickinson. 
The  sky   is  overcast.     See   Night   Piece,   A. — Words- 
worth. 
The  sky  is  ruddy  in  the  east.     See  Ship-builders,  The. 

— Whittier. 
The  sky  was  clear,  the  stars  were  bright.     See  Running 

Away.— Anon. 
The  sky  was  dark  and  gloomy.     See  Close  of  a  Rainy 

Day,  The.— Dole. 
The  skylark's    nest    among    the    grass.     See    Birds' 

Nests.— Anon. 
The  slant  sun  falls  at  shut  of  day.     See  Our  Comrades. 

— Anon. 
The  slave   system    is    one   of   constant    danger.     See 

Irrepressible  C'onflict,  The. — Seward. 
The  slave  who  is  bound  down  to  the  earth  by  the  weight 

of  his  chains.     See  Eulogy  on  Emmet. — .Jones. 
The  sleep  of  the  fugitives  lasted  for  several  hours.     See 

Prairie  on  Fire,  The. — Cooper. 
The  sleeping  earth,  with  thick  white  veil.     See  Flower 

Dreams. — .\non. 
The  small  boy  is  a  terror.     See  Small   Boy,   The. — 

Anon. 
The  small  life  coiled  within  the  seed.     See  Patriot  Sons 

of  Patriot  Sires. — Smith. 
The  small  poet  is  one  who  would  fain  make  himself 

that  which  nature  never  meant  him.     See  Char- 
acter of  a  Small  Poet,  The. — Butler. 
The  small  waves  came  frolicking  in  from  the  sea.     See 

Little  White  Beggars,  The. — Ludlow. 
The  smile  of  her  I  love  is  like  the  dawn.     See  Smile 

of  Her  I  Love,  The.— Gilder. 
The  smile  of  spring  is  blessing  all  the  hills.     See  Lines 

to  a  Mule. — Burdette. 
The  smoke    of    the    Indian    Summer.     See   Chopper's 

Child,  The.— Cary. 
The  smoke  rose  straight  from  the  chimney.     See  Tom's 

Thanksgiving. — Vickers. 
The  smooth-worn  coin  and  threadbare  classic  phrase. 

See  Andromeda. — Aldrich. 
The  snow  had  begun  in  the  gloaming.     See  First  Snow 

Fall.  The.— Ixiwell.  ^i 

"The   snow   is   deep,"    the   .Justice   said.     See   Green 

Mountain  .Justice,  The. — Reeves. 
The  snow  is  white,  the  wind  is  cold.     See  Night. — 

Butts. 
The  snow  lies  still  and  white.     See  New  Year,  The. — 

Thaxter. 
The  snow,  the  snow,  downy  and  bright.     See  Snow, 

The.— Whitehead. 


The  snow-capped  summits  of  the  Alps  were  darkened 

with  the  legions  of  Carthage.     See  Hannibal  on  the 

Alps. — Swan. 
The  snowfall    had    ceased,    the    wind    had"  sunk.  See 

Passing  of  Olaf,  The. — Corelli. 
The  snowflakes    are    falling    swiftly.     See    Beautiful 

Snow,  The.^Gri.swold. 
The  snowflakes  fall  so  gently.     See  Little  Snowflakes. — 

M.  M. 
The  snows  are  gone  at  last,  lad.     See  Song  of  the  Road, 

A. — Walker. 
The  snows  ari.se,  and,  foul  and   fierce.     See  Seasons, 

The  (Lost  in  the  Snow). — Thomson. 
The  society  will  please  come  to  order.     See  Society  for 

the  Suppression  of  Gossip,  The. — Anon. 
The  soft  light  of  the  setting  sun.     See  Rocks  of  Mt. 

Desert,  The.— E.  M.  T. 
The  softest   whisperings   of   the    scented   South.     See 

Old  Battlefield,  An. — Stanton. 
The  soldier  said,  as  he  was  called  to  die.     See  Con- 
tented.— Sylva. 
The  soldiers  of  1776  did  not  march  away  with  music 

and  banners.     See  Liberty  or  Death. — Ingersoll. 
The  soldiers    stepped    from    the    trenches.     See   ^ew 

South,  The.— Grady. 
The  solemn   hush   of   midnight   is   brooding   over   the 

earth.     See  Old  Sermon,  The. — Anon. 
The  solemn  old  bells  of  the  steeple  are  ringin'.     See 

Deacon's  Story,  The. — Emerson. 
The  solemn  wood  had  spread.     See  Sure  Witness,  The. 

— Cary. 
The  sombre    pall    of    night    had    spread.     See    King 

William  Thanks  His  God. — Anon. 
The  Son  of  God  goes  forth  to  war.  a  kingly  crown  to 

gain.     See  Church  Militant,  The. — Anon. 
The  Son  of  him  with  whom  we  strove  for  power.     See 

Welcome  to  the  Duke  and  Duchess  of  Edinburgh, 

A. — Tennyson. 
The  Son  of  Man  must  die.     See  Resurrection. — Train. 
"The  song  is  ended  and  the  singer  fled."     See  After. — 

Bates. 
The  song  of  Kilvani  [tor.  Kilvany}.     Fairest  she.     See 

Law  of  Death,  The.— Hay. 
The  song  of  Nature  is  forever.     See  Music  of  Nature, 

The.— Cheney. 
The  song  that  once  I  dream 'd  about.     See  After  Many 

Years. — Kendall. 
The  song  unsung  more  sweet  shall  ring.     See  Ideal. — 

Cochrane. 
The  song-birds?     Are  they  flown  away?     See  Flight. — 

Cawein. 
The  sonnet  is  a  diamond  flashing  round.     See  Sonnet, 

The. — Brownlow. 
The  sonnet   is   a   fruit   which   long   hath   slept.      See 

Sonnet,  The. — Symonds. 
The  sonnet    is    an    opal.     See    WTiite    Opal,    The. — 

R.  K.  K. 
The  soote  [or  sweetl  season,  that  bud  and  bloom  forth 

brings.     See  Description  of  Spring. — Howard. 
The  sorrow  for  the  dead  is  the  only  sorrow  from  which 

we   refuse   to   be   divorced.     See   Rural    Funerals 

(Sorrow  for  the  Dead). — Irving. 
The  sorry  world  is  sighing  now.     See  Fin  de  Siecle. — 

Mackintosh. 
The  soul    of    man,    evolving    more    and    more.     See 

Thought,  A. — Ingham. 
The  soul  of  man  is  larger  than  the  sky.     See  Shake- 

.«peare. — Coleridge. 
The  soul  of  music  slumbers  in  the  shell.     See  Sensi- 
bility.— -Rogers. 
The  soul  of  the  world  is  abroad  to-night.     See  Soul  of 

the  World,  The.— Crosby. 
The  soul,  secured  [ut.  secure]  in  her  existence,  smiles. 

See  Cato  (Immortal  Part,  The). — Addison. 
The  soul  which  animates  Nature  is  not  less  significantly 

published.     See  Behavior. — Emerson. 
The  soul's  dark  cottage,  battered  and  decayed.     See 

"Soul's  dark  cottage,  battered  and  decayed.  The." 

—Waller. 
The  souls   of   women    are    so    small.     See  ,Women. — 

Butler. 
The  sounding  cataract.       See   Lines   Composed  a  Few 

Miles  above  Tintern  Abbey  (Love  of  Nature,  The). 

— Wordsworth. 
The  South  wind  brings  life,  sunshine,  and  desire.     See 

Threnody. — -Emerson. 
The  South  wind  brings  wet  weather.     See  Four  Winds, 

The. — Anon. 
The  south-land    boasts    its   teeming   cane.     See    Our 

State. — Whittier. 
The  sovereignty  of  the  people  is  the  basis  of  our  sy.s- 

tem.     See    Government    of    the    People,    The. — 

Bancroft. 


862 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  subject 


The  spacious  firmament  on  high.     See  Spectator,  The 

(Spacious  Firmanent  on  High,  The). — Addison. 
The    spacious    hippodrome    is    packed.     See    Serapis 

(Hippodrome  Race,  The). — Ebers. 
The  spacious    hippodrome    was     filled.     See     Serapis 

(("hariot  Race  in  Alexandria). — -Ebers. 
The  spark  of  life  is  like  a  spark  of  fire.     See  Life. — 

Anon. 
The  sparrow  told  it  to  the  robin.     .See  Early  News.— 

Pratt. 
The  spearmen   [or  spearman]  heard  the  bugle  sound. 

S'-e  Beth-CJelert ;  or,  The  Grave  of  the  Greyhound. 

— Spencer. 
The  speckled  sky  is  dim  with  snow.     See  Midwinter. — 

Trowbridge. 
The  spectacle   .\merica   presents   this   day   is   without 

precedent  in  hi.story.     See  Meaning  of  the   Four 

Centuries,  The. — Anon. 
The  spice-tree  lives  in  the  garden    green.     See  Spice- 
tree,  The. — Sterling. 
The  spider  wears  a  plain  brown  dress.     See  Pretty  is 

that  Pretty  Does. — Gary. 
The  spinner  twisted  her  slender  thread.     See  Spinner, 

The.— De  Vere. 
The   spirit  in  our  hearts.     See  "Spirit  in  our  hearts. 

The." — Onderdonk. 
The  Spirit  of   Earth  with  still,   restoring  hands.     See 

Last  Furrow,  The. — Markham. 
The  spirit  of  free  thought  may  be  seen  in  every  depart- 
ment of  active  life.     See  "Spirit  of  free  thought 

may  be  seen  in  every  department  of  active  life, 

The." — Minton. 
The  spirit    of    self-sacrifice.     See    Christ's    Giving. — 

Hamilton. 
The  spirit  of  the  nation  is  at  the  highest.     See  ("en- 

tennial  of  1876,  The.— Evarts. 
The  spirits  I  have  raised   abandon   me.     See   Manfred 

(Soliloquy  of  Manfred). — Byron. 
The  spirits  of  the  North  were  out  last  night.     See  Snow 

Sorcery. — Hildreth. 
The  spiritual    body    will    be    the    soul    set    free.     See 

Spiritual  Body,  The. — Ayres. 
The  splendor  falls  on  castle  walls.     See  Princess,  The 

(Bugle  Song). — Tennyson. 
The  splendor    of    the    kindling    day.     See    Fluttered 

Wings. — Rossetti. 
The  sprightly  youth.     See  Season--,  The   (Bathing). — 

Thomson. 
The  spring  came  earlier  on.     See  Song  for  Le.xington, 

A. — Weeks. 
The  spring  had  brought  out  the  green  leaf  on  the  trees. 

See  She  Liked  Him  Rale  Weel.— Wauless. 
The  spring  has  gone,  the  summer's  come.     See  Com- 
plication. A. — {Cornell  Widow.) 
The  Spring  has  grown  to  Summer.     See  Stay-at-Home's 

Plaint,  The.— Baker. 
The  spring  has  less  of  brightness.     See  Every  Year.^ 

Pike. 
The  spring  is  come;  warm  breezes  blow.     See  Spring 

Lament,  A.— Magee. 
The  Spring, — she   i.s   a   blessed   thing!     See   Spring. — 

Howitt. 
The  spring   sun   flashes  a   rapier  thrust.     See  Bird.s'- 

nesting  Time.-^Lincoln. 
The  spring  was  in  our  valley  now.     See  Lorna  Doone. 

— Blackmore. 
The  Soring  will  come  again,  dear  friends.     See  Song 

of  Farewell,  A. — Greenwell. 
The  spring-scented  buds  all  around  me  are  swelling. 

See  Spring. — Clark. 
The  spring-time   is   coming,   the   winter  is   past.     See 

Spring-time  is  Coming. — Anon. 
The  squadrons  of  the  sun  still  hold.     See  De  Lunatico. 

— Baker. 
The  Squire    sat    propped    in    a    pillowed    chair.     See 

"Fidele's"  Grassy  Tomb. — -Newbolt. 
The  stag  at  eve  had  drunk  his  fill.     See  Stag  Hunt, 

The.— Scott. 
The  stag  too,  .singled  from  the  herd  where  long.     See 

Seasons,  The  (Stag  Hunt,  The). — Thomson. 
The  stage  from  the  depot.     See  Sarah's  Proposal. — 

Barnard. 
The  star  I  worship  shines  alone.     See  Egeria. — Win- 
ter. 
The  star  is  not  extinguished  when  it  sets.     See  Life 

from  Death. — -Bonar. 
The  star  must  cease  to  burn  with  its  own  light.     See 

God  and  the  Soul  (Et  Mori  Lucrum). — Spalding. 
The  star  of  love  now  shines  above.     See  "Star  of  love 

now  shines  above.  The." — Morris. 
The  Star  that  bids  the  Shepherd  fold.     See  Comus. — 

Milton. 


The  stars  above  will  make  thee  known.     See  Epigram 

on  Sir  Francis  Drake. — Cowley. 
The  stars  are  forth,  the  moon  above  the  tops.     See 

Manfred   (Coliseum  by  Moonlight,  The). — Byron. 
The  stars  are  on  the  moving  stream.     See  Evening. — 

Drake. 
The  stars  are  with  the  voyager.  SeeSong:  "The  •stars," 

etc. — Hood. 
The  stars  know  a  secret.     See  Force. — Sill. 
The  stars  of   Night   contain   the  glittering  Day.     See 

Dying  Words  of  Stonewall  Jackson. — Lanier. 
The  stars  of  our  morn  on  our  banner  borne.     See  Flag 

of  the  Constellation,  The. — Reid. 
The  stars  were  out  and  the  moon  was  bright.     See  At 

the  Junior  Promenade. — Culbertson. 
The  State  of  Maine  stands  here  to-day.     See  Maine  at 

Gettysburg. — Chamberlain. 
The  State  of  New  York  is  not  alone  a  vast  area.     See 

Empire  State,  The. — Cleveland. 
The  stateliness  of  houses,  the  goodliness  of  trees.     See 

Necessity  of  Law. — Hooker. 
The  stately  homes  of  England!     See  Homes  of  Eng- 
land, The. — Hemans. 
The  statesman   at   the   council.     See   Grounds   of   the 

Terrible. — Begbie. 
The  Station   clock   proclaims   the   close   of   day.     See 

Elegy  Written  in  a  Railway  Station.     (Punch.) 
The  stern  old  judge,  in  relentless  mood.-    See  Smiting 

the  Rock. — Anon. 
The  still   small   voice  that   speaks  within.     See  Voice 

Within,  The. — Fagan. 
The  still  white  coast  at  Midsummer.     See  Ballad  of  the 

Midnight  Sun,  The. — Hamilton-King. 
The  stings    of    Falsehood    those   shall  try.     See  On  a 

Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College. — Gray. 
The  stoic's  plan  is   futile,  which  requires.     See  Occa- 
sional Prologue,  An. — A-.on. 
The  storm  had  spent  its  rage,  the  sea.     See  Save  the 

Other  Man. — Preston. 
The  storm  in  the  forest  is  rending  and  sweeping.     See 

Storm  in  the  Forest,  The. — Gould. 
The  storm  is  out ;  the  land  is  roused.       See  Men  and 

Boys. — Korner. 
The  storm  o'er  the  ocean  flew  furious  and  fast.     See 

Burning  Ship,  The. — Anon. 
The  stormy    March   is   come   at    last.     See   March. — 

Bryant. 
The  story  from  the  first  book  of  Samuel  is  one  of  the 

most  beautiful.     See  To  be  Kings  among  Men. — 

Anon. 
The  story  is  told  of  a  mason's  wife.     See  Secrets  of 

Ma,sonry,  The. — Anon. 
The  story  that  I  am  about  to  tell  is  of  a  tradition  of  past 

times.     See  German  Fire-eater,  A. — Fay. 
The  story-books    have    told    you.     See    Fairy-folk. — 

Gary. 
The  stoutest  heart  in  this  assembly  would  recoil.     See 

Miseries  of  War,  The. — Chalmers. 
The  stranger  wandering  in   the   Switzer's   land.     See 

Beyond. — Cooke. 
The  stream  is  calmest  when  it  nears  the  tide.     See  At 

the  Last. — Winton. 
The  stream  through  the  valley  ran  smoothly  and  still 

See  Periton's  Ride. — Hageman. 
The  stream  was  smooth  as  glass.     We  said:     "Arise 

and  let's  away."     See  Ballad  of  the  Boat,  The. — 

Garnett. 
The  streams  that  wind  amid   the   hills.     See   Sylvia; 

or,  The  May  Qu'^en  (Sylvia's  Song). — Darley. 
The  streets  were  filled  with  passers-by.     See  Panto- 
mime, A. — Anon. 
The  streets  were  rife  with  joyous  life.     See  Temper- 
ance Star,  The. — .\non. 
The  strong   hot   breath   of   the   land   is   lashing.     See 

Night  in  the  Red  Sea,  A.— Lyall. 
The  strong  sob  of  the  chafing  stream.     See  Orara. — 

Kendall. 
The  strong  winds  burst  on  Judah's  sea.     See  Tempest 

Stilled,  The.— Lyons. 
The  strongest   influence   in   the   world  is   recollection. 

See  Recollection,  the  Strongest  Influence. — Anon 
The  struggle  over,  we,  yet  in  the  grime.     See  Dying 

Chief,  The.— Sawyer. 
The  students  of  District  No.  6  had  never  given  an  ex- 
hibition.    See  Last  Day  in  District  No.  6. — Har- 

riman. 
The  study  of  the  history  of  most  other  nations.     See 

American  History. — Verplanck.  ^ 

The  sturdy  rock,  for  all  his  strength.     See  Stability  of 

Virtue.  The. — Marshall. 
The  subject  of  forestry  is,  of  course,  an  appropriate  one. 

See  Use  of  Arbor  Day,  The. — (Garden  and  Forest.) 


863 


The  subject 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  subject  of  my  speech  is  one.  See  "They  Say." — 
Anon. 

The  subieck  app'inted  fur  debate  last  Sadday.  See 
Debatin'  S'ciety,  The. — Andrews. 

The  success  or  failure  of  the  united  colonies.  See  Cap- 
ture of  Andre,  T^. — Depew. 

The  sudden  glow  of  a  summer's  day.  See  Valedic- 
tory, A. — Shoals. 

The  sudden  thrust  of  speech  is  no  mean  test.  See  Fire 
i'  the  Flint,  The. — Robinson. 

The  sufferings  of  animal  nature,  occasioned  by  intem- 

gjrance.     See  Moral  Effects  of  Intemperance. — 
eecher. 
The  Sultan  awoke  with  a  stifled  scream.     iSee  Way  It 

is  Said,  The. — Anon. 
The  sultan  of  Damascus  found  asleep.     See  Sultan  and 

the  Potter,  The.— Arnold. 
The  sultry  day  has  closed  at  night  on  Syria's  glowing 

plain  [or  plains].     See  Zarafi. — Lamartine. 
The  sultry  stillness  of  a  summer's  day.     See  On  the 

Weather. — Greenslet. 
The  summer  and  autumn  had  been  so  wet.     See  God's 

Judgment  on  a  Wicked  Bishop. — Southey. 
The  Summer  comes  and  the  Summer  goes.     See  Love's 

Calendar. — Aldrich. 
The  Summer    dawn's    reflected     hue.     iSee    Lady    of 

the  Lake,  The  (Summer). — Scott. 
The  Summer  lias  come!  oh,  the  Summer  has  come! 

See  Welcome  to  Summer,  A. — Anon. 
The  summer  sun  is  beating  down  on  a  blue  Norwegian 

fiord.     See  Voyag;e  of  the  ' ' Fram,"  The. — Hunt. 
The  summer  sun  is  falling  soft  on  Carbery's  hundred 

isles.     See  Sack  of  Baltimore,  The. — Davis.. 
The  summer  sun  was  sinking.     See  Fairy  Child,  The. 

— Anster. 
The  Summer,  the  divinest  Summer  bums.     See  Sum- 
mer.— Thurlow. 
The  Sun,  a  shining  orb,   descends.     See  Good-night, 

Good-morning. — Bowen. 
The  Sun  appeared  so  smug  and  bright.     See  Silver 

Question,  The. — Herford. 
The  sun   came   through   the   frosty   mist.     See   From 

Love  and  Nature. — Houghton. 
The  sun  comes  up  and  the  sun  goes  down,  and  the  day 

and  the  night  are  the  same  as  one.     See  Vanity. 

—Gary. 
The  sun  comes  up  and  the  sim  goes  down,  the  night 

mist    shrouds    the    sleeping    town.     See    Fallow 

Field,  The.— Dorr. 
The  Sun,    departing,    kissed    the    summer    Sky.     See 

Sunset,  A. — Loveman. 
The  sun  descending  in  the  west.     See  Night. — Blake. 
The  sun   deserts   his    flaming   car.     See   When   Nelly 

Hangs  her  Stocking  Up. — Eaton. 
The  sun    does    arise.      See    Echoing    Green,   The. — 

Blake. 
The  sun  does  not  shine  for  a  few  trees  and  flowers. 

See  God  the  Father. — Beecher. 
The  sun  gives  ever;  so  the  earth.     See  Giving. — Anon. 
The  sun  goes  down,  and  over  all.     See  Low  Tide  on 

Grand  Pr^. — Carman. 
The  sun  grew  low  and  left  the  skies.     See  Hudibras 

(Night).— Butler. 
The  sun  had  closed  the  winter  day.     See  Vision,  The. 

— Bums. 
The  sun  had  dropped  into  the  distant  west.     See  Home, 

Sweet  Home. — Somerville. 
The  sun  had  dropped  low  down  the  Western  sky.     See 

How  the  Refugees  were  Saved. — Bradford. 
The  sun  had  long  since  in    the    lap.      See    Hudibras 

(Morning). — Butler. 
The  sun  had  set  behind  Robinson  Robb's  com  crib. 

See  Sad  Story,  A. — Anon. 
The  sun  had  set  behind  the  mountains,  and  darkness 

palled  the  vale.     See  Prayer  in   Battle,   The. — 

Hewitt. 
The  sun  had  [uvr.  wa^l  set ;  the  leaves  with  dew  were 

wet.     See  Keenan  s  Charge. — Lathrop. 
The  sun  has  gane  down  o'er  the  lofty  Benlomond.     See 

Jessie,  the  Flower  o'  Dumblane. — Tannahill. 
The  sun  has  gone  down  in  liquid  gold.     See  On  the 

Ottawa. — Dewart. 
The  sun  has  gone  from  the  shining  skies.     See  Summer 

Lullaby,  A. — Bumstead. 
The  sun  has  kissed  the  violet  sea.     See  Betrayal. — 

Lanier. 
The  sun  has  stricken  the  armor  splendid.     See  Lohen- 
grin.— Wjatrous. 
The  sun  has  sunk  behind  the  hills.    See  Good-night. — 

Hill. 
The  sun  in  gorgeous  and  transcendent  splendor.     See 

Approach  of  Night,  The. — Powell. 


The  sun  in  martial  splendor  rose.     See  Poet's  Morn, 

The. — Bigelow. 
The  sun  is  bright,  the  sky  is  clear.     See  Doncaster  St. 

Leger,  The. — Doyle. 
The  sun  is  clear  of  bird  and  cloud.     See  Alulvan. — 

Ramal. 
The  sun  is  in  the  sky,  mother,  the  flowers  are  springing 

fair.     See  Biter  Bit,  The. — Aytoun. 
The  sun  is  low,  the  ocean's  flow.     See  On  the  Beach. — 

Whitehead. 
The  sun  is  nearly  set ;  the  city  gates.     See  Ingomar,  the 

Barbarian. — Halm. 
The  sun  is  not  a-bed,  when  I.     See  Sun's  Travels,  The. 

— Stevenson. 
The  sun  is  not  yet  risen.     See  Alice  Du  Clos. — Coleridge. 
The  sun  is  set;  the  swallows  are  asleep.     See  Evening. 

—Shelley. 
The  sun  is  setting,  and  the  toiler  halts.     See  Dignity  of 

Labor,  The. — Anon. 
The  sun  is  sinking  in  the  west.     See  Wife's  Prayer,  The. 

— Van  Sickle. 
The  sun  is  sinking  over  hill  and  sea.     See  At  Night. — 

— Montgomery. 
The  sun  is  warm,  the  sky  is  clear.     See  Stanzas  Writ- 
ten in  Dejection  near  Naples. — Shelley. 
The  Sun  looked  from  his  everlasting  skies.     See  My 

Old  Counselor. — Hall. 
The  sun  looks  down.     See  Day  after  the  Fourth,  The. 

'  — Ricker. 
The  sun  now  rose  upon  the  right.     See  Rime  of  the 

Ancient  Mariner,  The. — Coleridge. 
The  sun  of  life  has  crossed  the  line.     See  Equinoctial. 

— Whitney. 
The  sun  of  May  was  bright  in  middle  heaven.     See  Old 

Man's  Counsel,  The. — Bryant. 
The  sun  on  Ivera.     See  Dirge  of  O'Sullivan  Bear. — 

Callanan. 
The  sun  rises  bright  in  France.     See  My  Ain  Countrie. 

— Cunningham. 
The  sun  set,  but  set  not  his  hope.     See  Character. — 

Emerson. 
The  sun  sets  in  the  night,  and  the  stars  shun  the  day. 

See  Indian  Death-song. — Hunter. 
The  sun  shines  bright  in  the  [or  our]  old  Kentucky 

home.     See    My    Old    Kentucky    Home,    Good- 
night.— Foster. 
The  sun  shines  not  upon,  has  never  shone  upon  a  land. 

See  Our  Land. — King. 
The  sun  shines  on  the  chamber  wall.     See  Death  of 

Marlborough,  The. — Thornbury. 
The  sun  shone  bright  from  a  clear,  blue  sky.     See  Mis- 
takes Will  Occur. — Anon. 
The  sun  shone  in  at  the  window.     See  Silent  Warriors, 

The. — Anon. 
The  sun  shone  in  through  waving  boughs.     See  Smack 

"Out "  of  School,  The. — Anon. 
The  sun  shone  warm,  and  the  lilac  said.     See  I/ilac, 

The.— Bates. 
The  sun  sinks  down  the  distant  west.     See  Evening. — 

Burdette. 
The  sun  sinks  softly  to  his  evening  post.     See  Reject- 
ed National  Hymns,  The,  V. — Newell. 
The  sun  strikes,  through  the  windows,  up  the  floor. 

See  Casa  Guidi  Windows  (Sursum  Corda). — Brown- 
ing. 
The  sun  that  brief  December  day.     See  Snow-bound. — 

Whittier. 
The  sun,  the  moon,  the  stars,  the  seas,  the  hills,  and 

the  plains.     See   Higher  Pantheism,   The. — Ten- 

n>  son. 
The  sun  upon  the  lake  is  low.     See  Doom  of  Devorgoil, 

•     The  (Evening).— Scott. 
The  sun  upon  the  Weirdlaw  Hill.     See  Sun  upon  the 

Weirdlaw  Hill,  The.— Scott. 
The  sun  was  drowned  in  the  western  tide,     See  Easter- 
tide Deliverance,  An. — Bulfinch. 
The  sun  was  going  down.     See  Miner's  Death,  The.' — 

Hanover. 
The  sun  was  setting  o'er  Mount  Zion's  top.     See  Be- 

ruria. — Wilbor. 
The  sun  was  shining  on  the  sea.     See  Walrus  and  the 

Carpenter,  The. — Carroll. 
The  sun  was  shining  softly.     See  Queer  Scholars,  The. 

— Anon. 
The  sun  was  sinking  on  the  shore.     See  Revenge. — 

Blount. 
The  sun  was  slumbering  in  the  west,  my  daily  labors 

past.     See  Good-night. — Hood. 
The  sun  went  down  beyond  yon  hills.     See  Farmer's 

Boy. — Anon. 
The  sun,  with  his  great  eye.     See  Daisy's  Song,  The. — 

Keats. 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  time 


The  sun,  yon  glorious  orb  of  day.     See  Sun,  The. — 

Davis. 
The  sunbeams,  lost  for  a  half  a  year.     See  Spring  Has 

Come,  The. — Holmes. 
The  sunburnt  mowers  are  in  the  swath.     See  Mowers, 

The. — Benton. 
The  sunflowers  hung  their  banners  out  in  the  sweet 

September  weather.     See  Double  Sunflower,  The. 

— Thaxter. 
The  sunlight   fills  the  trembling  air.     See  Betrothed 

Anew. — Stedman. 
The  sunlight  glitters  keen  and  bright.     See  Hampton 

Beach. — Whittier. 
The  sunlight  on  a  waveless  sea.     See  Twilight's  Hour. 

— W.  F.  E.  I. 
The  sunlight  shone  on  walls  of  stone.     See  King  and 

the  Child,  The.— Hall. 
The  sunlight  slants  through  the  tremulous  trees.     See 

Turkish  Refrain. — Newcomer. 
The  sunny  wisdom  of  the    Greeks.     See  Therapia.— 

Faber. 
"The  sun's  heat  will  give  out  in  ten  million  years  more." 

See  He  Worried  about  it. — Foss. 
The  sun's  text  is:    "  Begin  the  day."     See  Sunny-day 

Sermons. — -Anon. 
The  sunset  in  the    rosy  west.     See  Little  Song  A. — 

Scott. 
The  sunset  light  is  on  the  sail.     See  Wings. — Ritter. 
The  sunshine  of  thine  eyes.     See  Sunshine  of  Thine 

Eyes,  The. — Lathrop. 
The  supernatural  in  this  Jesus  is  the  best  hope  of  the 

world.       See  "Supernatural  in   this   Jesus  is  the 

best  hope  of  the  world.  The." — Swing. 
The  supper  is  o'er  [or  over],  the  hearth  is  swept.     See 

Grandmother's  Sermon. — Jewett. 
The  supreme  want,  as  well  as  the  supreme  blessing  of 

man  is  truth.     See  Truth  the  Object  of  All  Studies. 

— Frayssinous. 
The  surging  sea  of  human  life  forever  onward  rolls. 

See  Hundred  Years  from  Now,  A. — Ford. 
The  swallow,  bonny  birdie,  comes  sharp  twittering  o'er 

the  sea.     See  Swallow,  The. — Aird. 
The  swallow  is  a  mason.     See  Bird  Trades. — Anon. 
The  swallow  is  flying  over.     See  Tears    in  Spring. — 

Channing. 
The  swarthy  bee  is  a  buccaneer.     See  More  Ancient 

Mariner,  A. — Carman. 
The    sweet    [or   soott'l   season,    that   bud   and   bloom 

forth     brings.       See     Description     of    Spring. — 

Howard. 
The  sweet  star  of  the  Bethlehem  night.     See  Sweet 

Star,  The. — Lighthall. 
The  sweet-brier  rose  has  not  a  form  more  fair.     See 

Sabbatia,  The.— Very. 
The  sweetest  flower  that  blows.     See  Sweetest  Flower 

that  Blows,  The. — Peterson. 
"The  sweetest  lass  in  all  the  land."     See  Jennie. — 

Brooks. 
The  sweetest  sound  our  whole  year  round.     See  Seek- 
ing the  May-flower. — Stedman. 
The  sweetest  time  of  all  the  year.     See  May. — Rich- 
ards. 
The  swevens  came  up  round  Harold  the  Earl.     See 

Weird  Lady,  The. — Kingsley. 
The  sword! — a  name  of  dread;  but  when.    See  "Sword! 

a  name  of  dread.  The. " — Pierpont. 
The    sword   of   Washington!     The    staff   of   Franklin! 

See  Washington's  Sword  and  Franklin's  Staff. — 

Adams. 
The  sword  was  sheathed:  in  April's  sun.     See  Vow  of 

Washington,  The. — Whittier. 
The  tale  was  this.      See   Edwin   the    Fair  (Wind    in 

the   Pines,   The) .—Taylor. 
The  tall  clock  in  the  great  hallway.     See  Joseph  Clay- 
ton.— Parry. 
The  tall  green  tree  its  shadow  cast.   ■  See  Tale  of  Provi- 
dence, A. — Pennypacker. 
The  tall  oak,  towering  to  the  skies.     See  Oak,  The. — 

Montgomery. 
The  task  had  fallen  to  my  share.     See  Valedictory. — 

Kavanaugh. 
The  tattoo  beats — -the  lights  are  gone.     See  My  Wife 

and  Child. — Jackson. 
The  teacher  had  a  class  of  one.     See  Grammar  Lesson, 

A. — -Grove. 
The  teacher  stood  upon  the  floor.     See  Elocution  T^es 

son.  The. — Nash. 
The   tear  down   Childhood's  cheek  that   flows.      See 

Rokeby  (Youth). — Scott. 
The  tempest   over  and   gone,   the  calm  begun.     See 

Easter  Even. — Rossetti. 
The  tempest  rages  wild  and  high.     See  Storm,  The. — 

Procter. 


The  temple  made  of  wood  and  stone  will  crumble  and 

decay.     See   Temple   of    Living   Masons,    The. — 

Greenleaf. 
The  tendency  of  everything  is  to  go  to   ruin.     See 

Keeping  in  Repair. — Anon. 
The  tender  and  beautiful  floral  service  of  this  Memo- 
rial Day  is  completed.     See  Decoration  Day. — 

Thwing. 
The  tender  smile  of  parting  day.     See  My  First  Kiss. — 

Peck. 
The  tented  field  wore  a  wrinkled  frown.     See  Battle 

Flag  at  Shenandoah,  The. — Miller. 
The  10th  of  June  was  a  delightful  summer  day.     See 

Boat  Race,  The. — Anon. 
The  tent-lights  glimmer  on  the  land.     See  At   Port 

Royal.— Whittier. 
The   terms   lady   and   gentlewoman   are  often  in  our 

mouths.     See  True  Politeness. — Anon. 
The  territory  which  we  occupy  is  at  least  three  million 

square  miles.     See  Elements  of  National  Wealth, 

The.— Blaine. 
The  terror  of  the  boys  and  girls  am  I.     See  Obedient 

Servants,  The. — Denton. 
The  text  was  this-     "Inasmuch  as  ye."     See  Simon 

Grub's  Dream. — Anon. 
The    theater    is    neither    moral    nor    immoral.     See 

"Theater  is  neither  moral  nor  immoral.  The." — 

Sweetzer. 
The  themes  you  write  as  you  ought  to  write.     See 

Literary  Lottery. — Macy. 
"The  thing  is  but  a  statue  after  all!"     See  Pygmalion 

and  Galatea. — Gilbert. 
The  things  to  be  desired  for  man  in  a  healthy  state. 

See     Modem     Painters    (True     Contentment). — 

Ruskin. 
The    third    quarter    of     the     eighteenth     century    is 

commonly    called.       See    Thomas    Chatterton. — 

Anon. 
The  thirsty  earth  soaks  up  the  rain.     See  Drinking. — 

Anacreon. 
The  thirsty  flowerlets  droop;  the  parching  grass.     See 

Cold  Water. — Sigourney. 
"The  thistle,"  the  thistle,  the  bonnie  brown  thistle. 

See  Old  Home  and  the  New,  The. — Bleakie. 
The  thoughts  are  strange  that  crowd  into  my  brain. 

See  Niagara. — Brainard. 
The  throne  of  France  is  maintained  by  the  cap  and 

bells   of   the    jester.     See    Government    by    Epi- 
grams.— Maupassant. 
The   throng  was  great.     Back  from   the   Gaderenes. 

See  Woman  Healed,  The. — Houser. 
The   thrush   that   carols   at   the   dawn   of   day.     See 

Birds  of  Killingworth,  The. — Longfellow. 
The  tide  flows  in  and  out  and  leaves.     See  Meadow- 
Lands,  The. — Eaton. 
The  tide  is  high,  and  stormy  beams.     See  Lost  Love, 

A. — Symonds. 
The  tide  of  war  first  penetrated  Kentucky,  in  the  sum- 
mer   of    1862.     See    Fortunes    of    War,    The.— 

Younge. 
The  tide  rises,  the  tide  falls.     See  Tide  Rises,  the  Tide 

Falls,  The.— Longfellow. 
"The  tide  runs  strong,  and  the  .sea  grows  dark."    See 

Nix's  Mate. — Butterworth. 
The  tide   slips  up  the  silver  sand.     See  Sea-way. — 

Cortissoz. 
The  tide  was  well  out,  the  moon  shining  brightly.    See 

Scaling  of  Perc^  Rock,  The. — Parker. 
The   time   draws   near   the   birth   of   Christ.     See   In 

Memoriam  (Bells  of  Yule). — Tennyson. 
The  time  for  toil  has  passed,  and  night  has  come.     See 

Bringing  Our  Sheaves  with  Us. — Allen. 
The  time  had  come  when  he  who  should  unite  the  Gor- 

dian  knot  of  slavery.     See  Change  of  Base,  A. — 

Tourg^e. 
The  time  has  been.  Sir,  indeed,  when  fleets  and  armies. 

See    Revolution    in    Greece,    The    (Moral    Force 

against  Physical). — Webster. 
The  Time  hath  laid  his  mantle  by.     See  Spring. — 

Orleans. 
The   time    is    come,  fathers.     See  Verres   Denounced 

(Against  Caius  Verres). — Cicero. 
The  time  is  come  to  speak,  I  think.     See  Mrs.  Go- 
lightly.— Hall. 
The  time  is  coming  when  the  stars  cannot  take  refuge. 

See  Problem  of  the  Universe,  The. — Mitchej. 
The  time  is  now  near  at  hand  which  must  probably 

determine.     See  To  the  American  Troops  Before 

the  Battle  of  Long  Island,  1774. — Washington. 
The  time  I've  lost  in  wooing.     See  Time  I've  Lost  in 

Wooing,  The. — Moore. 
The  time  of  the  singing  of  birds  is  come.     See  Time  of 

the  Singing  of  Birds,  The. — Anon. 


865 


The  time 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The    time    shall    come    when    wrong   shall    end.     See 

("hartift  Song. — Cooper. 
The  time  will  certainly  come  when  the  fated  separation. 

See  For  Independence. — l^ee. 
The  time  you  won  Hour  town  the  race.      See    To  an 

.\thlete  Dying  Young. — Housman. 
The  times  that  tried  men's  souls  are  over.     See  Birth- 
day of  the  Republic,  The. — Paine. 
The  tiny  cradle  is  empty  now.     See  Babies  .\11  Are 

Grown,  The.— Colson. 
The  tired  breeres  are  tucked  to  rest.     See  At  Even- 
tide.— Lincoln. 
The  toil  is  very  long  and   I   am  tired.     See  Golden 

Street,  The. — Stoddard. 
The  toil  worn  cotter  frae  his  labor  goes.     See  Cotter's 

Saturday  Night,  The. — Bums. 
The  tomb  of  God  before  us.    See  Saint's  Tragedy ,  The. 

— Kingsley. 
The   tongue   of    England,   that    which   myriads.     See 

Shakespeare  and  Milton. — Landor. 
The  tangues  of  dying  men.     See  King   Richard  II. — 

Shakespeare. 
"The  top  av  the  morning  to  ye,  Father  Ray."     See 

Pat's  Bondsman. — Moulton. 
The  top  it  hummeth  a  sweet,  sweet  song.     See  Hum- 
ming Top.  The.— Field. 
The  top  o'  the  momin'  to  ye,  Mrs.  McAllister.     See 

Judy  O'Shea  Sees  Hamlet. — Porter. 
The  top  o'  the  momin'  to  you,  Mick.     See  Seed-time. 

—Coleman.  , 

The  topsy-turvy  doctors  have.     See  Delightful  Cus- 
tom, A. — Goodfellow. 
The  torment  of  hell  is  bred  of  these  two  things.     See 

"Torment  of  hell  is  bred,"  etc. — Murray. 
The  tossing,  frothing,  raging  sea.     See  Fair  Enthu- 
siast, A. — Anon. 
The  town  of  Hay  is  far  away.     See  Town  of  Hay,  The. 

— Foss. 
The  town  of  Haverhill,  even  as  late  as  the  close  of  the 

seventeenth  century.     See  Boy  Captives,  The.^ 

Whittier. 
The   train   from   out   the  castle  drew.     See  Marmion 

(Marmion  and  Douglas). — Scott. 
The  train  from  the  north  had  halted  and  then  rushed 

on.     See  Depot  Incident,  A. — Garrison. 
The  train  leaves  at  6  P.   M.     See  Rapid  Transit. — 

Abbot. 
The  train  of  cars  in  which  I  was  to  trust  my  walerable 

life.     See    Mr.    Artemus    Ward    Crossing    Dixie's 

Line. — Browne. 
The  training-ship  Eurydice.     See  Last  of  the  Eury- 

dice.  The. — Paton. 
The  traveler  from  his  native  land.     See  Love  of  Home. 

— Anon. 
The    traveler   o'er    the    desert    wild.     See    Encore. — 

Anon. 
The  travelers'  room  at  the  White  Horse  Cellar  is  very 

uncomfortable.     See   Pickwick   Papers,  The  (Mr. 

Winkle's  Adventure).— Dickens. 
The    treaty    of    r>eace    with    Spain.     See    Philippine 

Islands.  The. — Long. 
The  tree  of  deepest  root  is  found.     See  Three  Warn- 
ings, The. — Piozzi. 
The  tree  of  which  I  am  about  to  tell.     See  Twig  that 

Became  a  Tree.  The. — Anon. 
The  tree  we  are  planting  this  May  day.     See  Song  of 

Dedication. — Beaucnamp. 
The  trees  and  the  flowers  seem  running  a  race     See. 

Race  of  the  Flowers,  The. — Rands. 
The  trees  are  yet  bare.     See  Bluebird's  Message,  The. 

— Armitage. 
The  tree's  early  leaf-buds  were  bursting  their  brown. 

See  Tree,  The. — Bjfirnson. 
The  trees  which  the  children  plant.     See  Arbor  Day. — • 

Pea.slee. 
The  trembling  dew-drops  fall.     See  At  My  Mother's 

Grave.— Prentice. 
The  trembling  train  clings  to  the  leaning  wall.     See 

Moonrise  in  the  Rockies. — Higginson. 
The    tremendous    unity    of    the    pine.     See    Modern 

P.iinter.x  (Pine  Tree,  The).— Ruskin. 
The  trial  was  ended,  the  vigil  [wasl  past.     See  Some- 
thing Great.— Tyler. 
The  triumph  of  Montjoy,  successor  to  the  young  Earl 

of  Essex.     See  Death  of  Elizabeth,  The. — Green. 
The  triumphs  of  the  warrior  are  bounded  by  the  nar- 
row theatre  of  his  own  age.     See  "Triumphs  of 

the  warrior."  etc. — Prescott. 
The  troops  exulting  sat  in  order  round.     See  Iliad, 

The. — Homer. 
The  troops,  refreshed  by  a  night's  rest.     See  History 

of  the  Conquest  of  Mexico  (Venice  of  the  Aztecs, 

The) . — Prescott. 


The  true  gentleman   carefully  avoids   whatever  may 

cause  a  jar  or  jolt.     See  True  Gentleman,  The. — 

Newman. 
The  true  grandeur  of  passing  historic  events  is  not 

seen.  See  Again  Brethren  and  Equals. — Patterson. 
The  true  greatness  of  a  nation  cannot  be  in  triumphs 

of    the    intellect    alone.     See   True  Grandeur   of 

Nation.'-,,  The  (Victories  of  Peace,  The). — Sumner. 
The  true    honor    of    a    nation  is  to  be  found  only  in 

deeds  of  justice.     See  True  Grandeur  of  Nations, 

The  ("'True  honor  of  a  nation,"  etc.). — Sumner. 
The  true  power  of  the  court  has  resided,  and  must  ever 

dwell.     See  Supreme  Court  and  the  Constitution, 

The. — Hitchcock. 
The  true  teacher  must  have  the  faith  of  martyrs.     See 

Educational  Power. — Anon. 
The  trump  hath  blown.     See  Lonely  Bugle  Grieves, 

The.— Mellen. 
The  trumpets  blew,  the  cross-bolta  flew.     See  Heart  of 

the  Bruce,  The. — Aytoun. 
The  trumpet  sounded  short  and  sharp.     See  Ben-Hur 

(Chariot  Race,  The).— Wallace. 
The  trumpet's  loud  clangor.     See  Song  for  St.  Cecilia's 

Day,  A  (Fife  and  Drum).^-Dryden. 
The  trumpet's  voice  hath  roused  the  land.     See  Trum- 
pet, 'The. — Hemans. 
The  trustees  of  a  school  on  Staten  Island.     See  Modern 

Education. — Anon. 
The  Turkman  lay  beside  the  river.     See  Greek  and 

Turkman,  The.— Croly. 
The    turtle    on    yon    withered    bough.     See    Song    of 

Thyrsis. — Freneau. 
The  twentieth  year  is  well-nigh  past.     See  To  Mary. — 

Cowper. 
The   twenty-third    psalm    is    the    nightingale    of    the 

psalms.     See      Twenty-third      Psalm,      The. — 

Beecher. 
The  twilight  gray  is  fading.    See   Childhood  Fancies. 

—  Anon. 
The  twilight  hours  like  birds  flew  by.     See  Twilight  at 

Sea.— Welby. 
The    twilight    is    sad    and    cloudy.     See    Twilight. — 

Longfellow. 
The  twilight  land  toyed  with  the  night.     See  Unfin- 
ished Prophecy,  An. — Jakeway. 
The  twilight  twiles  in  the  vernal  vale.     See  In  the 

(Gloaming. — Bayles. 
The  two,  alas!  were  very  poor.     See  Sudden  Revul- 
sion, A. — Anon. 
The    two    honorable    and    learned    gentlemen.     See 

Against  Search-warrants  for  Seamen. — Chatham. 
The  two  words  "character"  and  "service"  describe 

the  higher  regions.     See  Character  and  Service.— 

Brooks. 
The  tyrannous  and  bloody  deed  is  done.     See  King 

Richard  III.  (Murder  of  the  Princes  in  the  Tower). 

— Shakespeare. 
The  undersigned  desires,  in  a  modest  sort  of  way.    See 

Weather  in  Verse,  'The. — Brown. 
The  unearthly  voices  ceased.     See  Lay  of  the  Last 

Minstrel  (Defiance). — Scott. 
The  unfathomable  sea,  and  time,  and  tears.     See  To 

N.  V.  De  G.  S.— Stevenson. 
The  unfortunate  Rebecca  was  conducted  to  the  black 

chair  placed  near  the  pile.     See  Ivanhoe  (Trial  of 

Rebecca,  The).^Scott. 
The  Union  cannot  expire  as  the  snow  melts  from  the 

rock.     See    Our    Responsibility    as    a    Nation. — 

Boardman. 
The  union  of  lakes,  the  union  of  lands.     See  Plag  of 

Our  Union. — -Morris. 
The  Union!     The  Union!     The  hope  of  the  free!     See 

Union,  The. — -Janvier. 
The  United  Sisterhood  of  Colchester  were  holding  its 

weekly  session.     See  Strike  at  Colchester,  The. — 

Exeter. 
The  United  States  frigate  Constitution  has  come  back 

to  Boston.     See  "Old  Ironsides." — Lodge. 
The  United  States  is  the  only  country  with  a  known 

birthday.     See  Independence  Day. — Blaine. 
The  unmistakable  danger  that  threatens  free  govern- 
ment in  America.     See  Against  Centralization. — 

Grady. 
The    usual    collection    will    now    be    taken    up.     See 

Alphabetical  Sermon. — Kyle. 
The  vale  of  Tempe  had  in  vain  been  fair.     See  Ideality. 

—Coleridge. 
The  valley  rings  with  mirth  and  joy.     See  Idle  Shep- 
herd Boys,  The. — Wordsworth. 
The  value  of  your  teaching  is  not  the  information  you 

have    put    into    the    mind.     See    Enthusiasm. ^ — 

Anon. 


866 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  white 


The  varying  year  with  blade  and  sheaf.     See  Day- 
dream, The. — Tennyson. 
The    venerable    Bede,    with    age    grown    blind.     See 

Amen  of  the  Rocks,  The. — Gellert. 
The  venerable  Past — \h  past.     See  Now. — Mackay. 
The  vesper  hymn  had  died  away.     See  Idiot  Lad,  The. 

— Overton. 
The  vice  of  intemperance  is  the  arch-abomination  of 

our  natures.     <See  Vice  of  Intemperance,  The. — 

Everett. 
The  vicomte  is  wearing  a  brow  of  gloom.     See  Chez 

Brdbant. — Durivage. 
The  victor  stood  beside  the  spoil,  and  by  the  grinning 

dead.     See  Omur  and  the  Persian. — Williams. 
The   Victory  had  been  out  ten  days.     See  On  Board 

the  Victory. — Robinson. 
The  view  from  this  spot  bears  some  resemblance.    See 

Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers 

(Graves  of  Union  Soldiers  at  Arlington,  The). — 

Garfield. 
The  village   sleeps,   a  name  unknown,   all   men.     See 

Distinction. — Howe. 
The  villeins  clustered  round  the  bowl.     See  Brawn  of 

England's  Lay. — Hunter-Duvar. 
The  violet  in  her  greenwood  bower.     See  Violet,  The. 

— Scott. 
The  violet  invited  my  kiss.     See  Violet  and  the  Rose, 

The.— Skipsey. 
The    violet    loves    a    sunny    bank.     See    Proposal. — 

Taylor. 
The  violets  are  coming.     See  Spring  Violets. — Anon. 
The  violets  blossom,  the  grass  is  green.     See  Content- 
ment.— M.  B. 
The  violets  that  you  gave  are  dead.     See  Relics. — 

Winter. 
The    virgin    Member    takes    his    honored    place.     See 

Orator's  First  Speech  in  Parliament,  An. — Bell. 
The  virtues  and  traditions  of  both  happily  still  live. 

See    New   South,    The    (Lincoln    as  Cavalier  and 

Puritan). — Grady. 
The   vital   bond   between   literature   and   elocution   is 

that  of  thought.     See  Literature  and  Elocution. — 

Johnson. 
The  voice  of  England  is  a  trumpet  tone.     See  England. 

— Montgomery. 
The  voice  of  him  that   crieth  in  the  wilderness.     See 

Isaiah  (Voice  in  the  Wilderness,  The).— Bi6/e. 
The  voice  of  your  father's  blood  calls  [or  cries  to  you] 

from  the  ground.     See  Constitutional  Liberty  and 

Arbitrary  Power  (Scorn  to  be  Slaves). — Warren. 
The  voice  that  breath'd  o'er  Eden.     See  Holy  Matri- 
mony.^Keble. 
The  wail  of  Irish  winds.     See  Parnell. — Johnson. 
The  waiting  women  wait  at  her  feet.     See  Old  Story, 

The.— Gary. 
The  wakening  bugles  cut  the  night.     See  Good-by,  A. 

— Hayes. 
The  wall  is  high,  and  yet  will  I  leap  down.     See  King 

John  (Death  of  Prince  Arthur). — Shakespeare. 
The  wanton  troopers,  riding  by.     See  Nymph  Com- 
plaining   for    the    Death   of   her    Fawn,    The. — 

Marvell. 
The  wants  of  our  time  and  country,  the  constitution 

of   our   modern   society.     See   Scholar's   Mission, 

The. — Putnam. 
The   war  in   the   east   had   ended.     See  Mission   Tea 

Party,  The. — Nason. 
The  war  is  over,  and  it  is  well  over.     See  "Let  Us 

Have  Peace." — Watterson. 
The  war    is  over.     It   is  for   us   to   bury.     See  Gray 

Honors  the  Blue,  The. — Watterson. 
The  war  [then!  must  go  on.     We  must  fight  it  through. 

See    Adam?:   and    Jefferson    (Supposed   Speech    of 

John  Adams,  etc.). — Webster. 
The  war  of  centuries  is  at  a  close.     See  Condition  of 

Ireland,  The. — Meagher. 
The  war  was  not  without  its  benefits  to  us.     See  Bene- 
fits of  the  Civil  War. — Busbee. 
The  warm  sun  is  failing,  the  bleak  wind  is  wailing. 

See  Autumn :    A  Dirge. — Shelley. 
The  warmth  of  thy  glow.     See  To  My  Cigar. — Marc. 
The  war-path  is  true  and  straight.     See  Just  One  Sig- 
nal.—  (Chicago  Record.) 
The  warrior  bowed  his  crested  head,  and  tamed  his 

heart  of  fire.     See  Brenardo  del  Carpio. — Hemans. 
The  \varrior  suddenly  paused  and  bent  his  face  aside. 

See  Prairie,  The  (Stampede,  The). — Cooper. 
The  wars  we  wage  are  noble.     See  Ode  in  Time  of  Hes- 
itation, An  (Robert  Gould  Shaw). — -Moody. 
The   water   sings   along   our   keel.     See   Armistice. — 

Jewett. 
The  water!  the  water!     See  Water!  the  Water,   The. 

— Motherwell. 


The  waterpots  were  filled  at  God's  behest.     See  Miracle 

of  Cana,  The. — Brooks. 
The  waters  are  flashing.     See  Fugitives,  The. — Shelley. 
The  waters  have  gone  over  me.     See  Warning,  A. — 

Lamb. 
The  waters — O  the  waters! — wild  and  glooming.     See 

Spanish  Point. — De  Vere. 
The  waters  purled,  the  waters  swelled.     See  Fisher, 

The.— Goethe. 
The  waters  skirt  me  right  and  left.     See  Sea,  The. — 

Marvell. 
The  waters     slept.     Night's     silvery    veil     hung    low. 

See   Absalom      David's    Lament    for  Absalom). — - 

Willis. 
The  wattles  were  sweet  with  September's  rain.     See 

Beneath  the  Wattle  Boughs. — Gill. 
The  waves  are  still,  and  touched  with  crimson  light. 

See  Sea-bird's  Cry,  The.— Parsons. 
The  waves  forever  move.     See  Sisters,  The. — Tabb. 
The  waves  rolled  over  the  pebbled  beach.     See  Dag- 
mar. — Harwood. 
The  waves  were  white,  and  red  the  morn.     See  Sea, 

The. — Procter. 
The  way  at  times  may  dark  and  dreary  seem.     See 

"Way  at  times  may  dark  and  dreary  seem.  The." 

— Carleton. 
The  way  is  dark,  my  child!  but  leads  to  light.     See 

Gracious  Answer,  The. — Cobb. 
The  way  is  dark,  my  Father!     Cloud  on  Cloud.     See 

"Father,  Take  My  Hand." — Cobb. 
The  way   is   long   and   dreary.     See   Pilgrims,   The. — 

Procter. 
The  way  is  steep  and  hard  to  tread,  and  drear.     See 

Love  and  Life. — Woolsey. 
The  way    to    destruction    is    pointed    and    clear.     See 

Down  Grade,  The. — Thompson. 
The  way  was  long  and  weary.     See  Lights  o'  London, 

The.— Sims. 
The  way  was  long,  the  wind  was  cold.     See  Lay  of  the 

Last  Minstrel  (Last  Minstrel,  The). — Scott. 
The  wayfarer,  perceiving  the  path  to  truth.     See  Way- 
farer, The. — Crane. 
The  ways  of  life,  mysterious.     See  At  Last. — Clothier. 
The  weary  day  ru  is  down  and  dies.     See  Jacobite  in 

Exile,  A. — Swinburne. 
The  weary  night  is  o'er  at  last!     See  Trooper's  Death, 

The. — Raymond. 
The  weary  teacher  sat  alone.     See  Teacher's  Dream, 

The.— Venable. 
The  weather-brown    windmill    swings    to    rest.     See 

Dutch  Lullaby. — Plummer. 
The  weather-leech  of  the  topsail  shivers.     See  Tack- 
ing Ship  Off  Shore.— Mitchell. 
The  weaver  at  his  loom  is  sitting.     See  Mystic  Weaver, 

The. — Anon. 
The  weaver  sat  one  day  at  his  loom.     See  Neglected 

Pattern,  The. — Cary. 
The  wedding,  last  night,  was  a  royal  affair.     See  Post- 
nuptial Reverie,  A. — Greene. 
The  wee  flowers  are  nodding;  so  sleepy  they  grow.     See 

Flowers'  Sleep,  The. — More. 
The  welcome  month  of  April.     See  April. — Richards. 
The  welcome  spring,  with  days  of  calm.     See  Welcome 

Spring,  The. — Latta. 
The  Wellesley  girls  say.    See  Waban  Ripple,  A. — Anon. 
The  well-recognized  fact  that  nursing  is  not  only  art. 

See  Address  to  a  Graduate  Class  of  Nurses. — Anon . 
The  western  skies  were  all  aglow.     See  Going  for  the 

Cows.— Hall. 
The  western  sky  blazed  through  the  trees.     See  Whip- 

poorwill . — Dodge. 
The  western  waves  of  ebbing  day.     See   Lady    of    the 

Lake,  The  (Trosachs,  The).— Scott. 
The  western  wind  is    blowing    fair.      See    Serenade: 

"The  western  wind,"  etc. — Wilde. 
The  west-wind    laden    with     fragrance,    blows.     See 

Farewell,  A. — Arnold. 
The  wet  wind  sobs  o'er  the  sodden  leas.     See  Ash  Pool, 

The. — Anon. 
The  Weverwend  Awthur  Murway  Gween.     See  Mod- 
ern Martyrdom,  A. — Foss. 
The  wheat  has  stood' like  a  golden  sea.     See  Gleaners, 

The.— Weatherly. 
The  wheels  of  the  world  go  round  and  round.     See  One 

Who  Stays  at  Home,  The. — Lane. 
The  whelp  that  nipped  its  mother's  dug  in  turning  from 

her  breast.  See  Lion's  Cub,  The. — Thompson. 
The  whistle,  shrill.  See  Little  Martyr,  The.— Anon. 
The  white  ash  is  one  of    the    most    interesting.     See 

Choosing  a  "State  Tree." — The  Ash. — Pierson. 
The  white  blossom's  off  the  bog  and  the  leaves  are  off 

the  trees.     See  White  Blossom's  off  the  Bog,  The. 

— Graves. 


867 


The  white 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  white  dove  sat  on  the  sunny  eaves.     See  Constant 

Dove,  The.— Thaxter. 
The  white  snow  veils  the  earth's  brown  face.     See  Two 

Christmas  Eves. — Nesbit. 
The  white  turkey  wa§  dead!     The  white  turkey  was 

dead!  See  Motherless  Turkeys,  The. — Robinson. 
The  white-rose  garland  at   her   feet.     See  E.  B.  B. — 

Thomson. 
The   whole    continental    struggle    exhibited    [wr.  ex- 
hibits] no  sublimer  spectacle.      See  Napoleon  and 

his  Marshals  (Marshal  Ney's  Last  Charge  at  Water- 
loo).— Headley. 
"The  whole  earth,     said  Pericles,  as  he  stood  over  the 

remains  of  his  fellow-citizens.     <See  Gettysburg. — 

Everett. 
The  whole  family  came  in  with  Darling  Petkin  in  the 

centre.     See  Spoiled  Child,  A.— Home. 
The  whole  of  history  shows  that  all  great  revolutions. 

See  Reform  Bill  a  Second  Bill  of  Rights,  The.— 

Macaulay. 
The  wickedness  and  the  blindness  of  the  subjects  are 

the  judgments  of  Heaven  for  the  neglect  of  the 

sovereign.  See  Evils  of  Ignorance,  The. — Mann. 
The  wide  gates  swung  open.  See  Little  Nan. — Anon. 
The  widow  Cummiskey  was  standing  at  the  door  of  her 

little   millinery   store.     iSee   Widow   Cummiskey, 

The. — Anon. 
The  widower  was  seated  at  a  small  round  table.     See 

Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Mr.  Weller  in  Affliction). 

— Dickens. 
The  wife  in  the  cot  is  lonely.     See  Loyal  Fisher,  The. — 

Anon. 
The  wife  sat  thoughtfully  turning  over.     See  Wife,  A. 

— Allingham. 
The  wild  azaleas  sweeten  all  the  woods.     See  Briar- 
bloom. — Allen. 
The  wild  birds  strangely  call.     See  Grave  in  Samoa,  A. 

MacFarlane. 
The  wild  geese,  flying  in  the  night,  behold.     See  Wild 

Geese,  The. — Morse. 
The  wild  wind  blows,  the  sun  shines,  the  birds  sing 

loud.     See  Wild  Geese. — Thaxter. 
The  wild  winds  raved,  the  tempest  roared,  the  waves 

rolled  mountains  high.     See  Wreck  of  the  Solent, 

The. — Lyster. 
The  wild  winds  weep.     See  Mad  Song. — Blake. 
The  wilderness  a  secret  keeps.     See  Ecce  in  Deserto. — 

Beers. 
The  wilderness  and  the  solitary  place  shall  be  glad  for 

them.     See  Isaiah  (Isaiah  XXXV).— fitWe. 
The  Wildgrave  winds  his  bugle-hom.     See  Wild  Hunts- 
man, The. — Biirger. 
The  Willis  are  out  to-night.     See  Willis,  The.— Proud- 
fit. 
The  wind  ahead,  the  billows  high.     See  Seen  and  Un- 
seen. — Wasson . 
The  wind  blew  wide  the  casement,  and  within.     See 

Mother  and  Child. — Simms. 
The  wind  bloweth  wildly ;  she  stands  on  the  shore.     See 

Fisherman's  Wife,  The. — Anon. 
The  wind  blows,  the  sun  shines,  the  birds  sing  loud. 

See  Wild  Geese.— Thaxter. 
The  wind  blows  wild  on  Bos'n  Hill.     See  Bos'n  Hill. — 

Albee. 
The  wind  came  blowing  out  of  the  west.     See  Jimmy's 

Wooing. — Harney. 
The  wind  came  over  the  southland  pines.     See  Matthew 

the  Miner. — Stanton. 
The  wind  doth  blow  to-day,  my  love.     See  Unquiet 

Grave,  The. — Anon. 
The  wind  exultant  swept.     See  Mood,  A. — Howells. 
The  wind  flapp'd  loose,  the  wind  was  still.      See  Wood- 
spurge,  The. — Rossetti. 
The  wind  from  out  the  west  is  blowing.     See  "Woods 

that  Bring  the  Sunset  Ncir,  The." — Gilder. 
The  wind  from  the  hills  of  Finnmark,  came  o'er  the 

icy  Hord.     See  Brita's  Wedding. — Marsh. 
The  wind  has  a  language,  I  would  I  could  learn.     See 

Wind,  The.— Landon. 
The  wind  is  awake,  pretty  leaves,  pretty  leaves.     See 

Way  of  It.  The.— Cheney. 
The  wind  it  blew,  and  the  ship  it   flew.      See  Yerl   o' 

Waterydeck.  The. — Macdonald. 
The  wind  \t  wailed,  the  wind  it  moaned.     See  Alec 

Yeaton's  Son. — Aldrich. 
The  wind  of  death  that  softly  blows.     See  Wind  of 

Death.  The.— Wetherald. 
The  wind  of  Hampstead  Heath  still  bums  my  cheek 

See  Breath  of  Hampstead  Heath. — Thomas 
The  Wind  of  the  East  and  the  Wind  of  the  North.     See 

Voice  of  the  West  Wind,  The.— Utter. 
The  wind  of  the  morning  was  in  the  sky.     See  Lesson 

of  Trust,  The. — Perry. 


The  wind   one   morning   sprang   up   from   sleep.     See 

Wind  in  a  Frolic,  The. — Howitt. 
The  wind  sits  in  the  shoulder  of  your  sail.  See    Ham- 
let (Polonius  to  Laertes). — Shakespeare. 
The  wind,    the     wandering     wind.     See    Wandering 

Wind,  The. — Hemans. 
The  wind,  the  wind  where  Erie  plunged.     See  Abigail 

Becker.— Jones. 
The  wind  was  [wr.  is]  high,  the  window  shakes.      See 

Miser  and  Plutus,  Tne. — Gay. 
The  wind  was  soft  and  heavy.     See  Heroes. — Anon. 
The  wind  was  waked  by  the  morning  light.     See  Wed- 
ding of  Pale  Bronwen,  The. — Rhys. 
The  wind    wears    roun',    the    day    wears    doun.     See 

Bride's  Tragedy,  The. — Swinburne. 
The  wind  went  forth  o'er  land  and  sea.     See  Wind,  The. 

— Procter. 
The  wind,  when  first  he  rose  and  went  abroad.     See 

Voice  of  the  Wind. — Taylor. 
The  wind,  wife,  the  wind,  how  it  blows,  how  it  blows! 

See  January  Wind. — Buchanan. 
The  winding  road,  the  air  like  wine.     See  Shadow  of 

the  End,  The. — Hawkins. 
The  windmill'-e  fans,  around  they  go.     See  Windmill, 

The. — Anon. 
The  window  over  the  veranda  was  opened  with  a  sud- 
den dash.     See  From  the  Valley  o'  the  Shadder. — 

Morgan. 
The  windows  of  Heaven  were  open  wide.     See  Ballad 

of  the  Connemaugh  Flood,  A. — Rawnsley. 
The  winds  are  hushed;  the  peaceful  moon.     See  Hymn 

of  the  Last  Supper. — Pierpont. 
The  winds  are  sweet  with  mignonette.     See  Nation's 

Dead.  The. — Anon. 
The  winds  are  whispering  over  the  sea.     See  Cradle 

Song. — Wright. 
The  winds,  as  at  their  hour  of  birth.     See  We  are  Free. 

— Tennyson. 
The  winds  blow  up  through  the  blooming  vale.     See 

Trysting-place.  The. — Everette. 
The  winds    have    talked    with    him    confidingly.     See 

Longfellow. — Riley. 
The  winds  of  the  winter  have  breathed  their  dirges. 

See  Winds  of  the  Winter.  The. — Hayne. 
The  winds  stir  idly  by  this  knoll  of  bloom.     See  Little 

Graves. — Curry. 
The  winds  that  once  the  Argo  bore.     See  Heroes. — 

Proctor. 
The  winds  transferred  into  the  friendly  sky.     See  Iliad, 

The  (Camp   at   Night.   The).— Homer. 
The  winds  were  yelling,  the  waves  were  swelling.     See 

Last  Buccaneer,  The. — Macaulay. 
The  windy  forest,  rousing  from  its  sleep.     See  Silence 

of  the  Hills.  The.— Foster. 
The  wine  of  life  tastes  stale  and  sour.     See  Passion  and 

Patience. — Fowler. 
The  wine  of  Love  is  music.     See  Vine,  The. — Thomson. 
The  wine-month  shone  in  its  golden  prime.     See  Song 

of  the  Battle  of  Morgarten. — Hemans. 
The  winter  being  over.     See  Winter  Being  Over,  The. 

— Collins. 
The  winter  is  gone,  and  at  first  Jack  and  I  were  sad. 

See  Our  Garden. — Ewing. 
The  winter  is  pathless  in  the  distant  valleys.     See  Skee- 

race.  The. — Boyesen. 
The  winter  night  shuts  swiftly  down.     Within  his  lit- 
tle humble  room.     See  Heavenly  Guest.   The. — 

Tolstoi. 
The  winter  season  is  now  begun.     See  Ballad  of  the 

Afternoon  Tea. — Huntress. 
The  winter  storms  have  passed  away.     See  Hymn  in 

Praise  of  the  Natural  World,  A. — Beauchamp. 
The  winter  weather  it   waxeth   cold.     See  Take  Thy 

Old  Cloak  about  Thee. — Anon. 
The  winter  wind  is  wailing,  sad  and  low.     See  You  and 

I.— Alford. 
The  Winter's  gone,  come  hail  the  Spring.     See  Spring 

Song,  A. — Anon. 
The  wintry    blast    goes    wailing    by.     See    Christmas 

Night  of  '62.— McCabe. 
The  wintry  sky  may  be  chill  and  drear.     See  Friends. 

— Carryl. 
The  wintry  west  extends  his  blast.     See  Winter.- — A 

Dirge.— Burns. 
The  wintry  winds  are  never  drear.     See  In  Jamaica. — 

Denison. 
The  wise  forget,  dear  heart.     See  Valentine,  A. — Gil- 

lespy. 
The   wise  man  always  shows  himself  on  the  side  of  his 

assailants.    See  Compensation  ("Wise  man,"  etc.). 

— Emerson. 
The  wise  men  of  Gotham,  who  sailed  away.     See  Wise 

Men  of  Gotham,  The. — Denton. 


868 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


The  years 


The  wi?est  of  the  wise.  See  One  Gray  Hair,  The. — 
Landor. 

The  wish  that  of  the  living  whole.  See  In  Memoriam 
(Strife,  The). — Tennyson. 

The  wistful  hound  creeps,  listening,  to  the  door.  See 
After  the  Battle.^Braddon. 

The  wittiest  thoughts  in  aptest  words  expressed.  See 
Epilogue. — Anon. 

The  woggly  bird  sat  on  the  whango  tree.  »See  Whango 
Tree,  The.— Anon. 

The  woman  still  was  young  and  should  be  fair.  See 
Streets  of  London,  The. — Meredith. 

The  woman  was  old,  and  ragged,  and  gray.  <See  Some- 
body's Mother. — Macmillan. 

The  woman's  cause  is  man's:  they  rise  or  sink.  <See 
Princess,  The  (Woman). — Tennyson. 

The  woman's-rights  movement.  See  Fair  Play  for 
Women  (Woman's  Rights). — Curtis. 

The  wonder  of  all-ruling  Providence.  See  "Wonder 
of  all-ruling  Providence,  The." — Keats. 

The  wondering  sage  pursues  his  airy  flight.  See  Dis- 
pensary, The. — Garth. 

The  wood  is  dyed  with  varied  hue.  See  Indian  War- 
rior's Last  Song,  The. — Wert. 

The  woodland,  and  the  golden  wedge.  See  Violet's 
Grave,  The. — Vicortari. 

The  woodland  brooks  that  murmur  as  they  go.  See 
Spring's  Coming. — Sherman. 

The  woods  are  full  of  fairies!  See  Child  and  the 
Fairies,  The. — "A." 

The  woods  decay,  the  woods  decay  and  fall.  See 
Tithonus. — Tennyson . 

The  woods  grew  dark,  as  though  they  knew  no  noon. 
See  Life  and  Death  of  Jason  (Summer  Storm). — 
Morris. 

The  woosel-cock,  so  black  of  hue.  See  Midsummer 
Night's  Dream  (Birds). — Shakespeare. 

The  word  of  God  to  Leyden  came.  See  Word  of  God 
to  Leyden  Came,  "The. — Ranken. 

The  word  of  the  Lord  by  night.  See  Boston  Hymn. — 
Emerson. 

The  words  of  a  blue-eyed  child  as  she  kissed  her  chubby 
hand.  See  "Good-night,  Papa." — {American 
Messenger.) 

The  words  of  a  rebel  old  and  battered.  See  Bond  of 
Blood.  The.— Thompson. 

The  words  that  trembled  on  your  lips.  See  Half  Truth. 
— Houghton. 

The  work  of  the  sun  is  slow.  See  Green  Grass  under 
the  Snow,  The. — Preston. 

The  work  proceeds  without  intermission.  See  Soul- 
building  ("Work  proceeds,"  etc.).— Beecher. 

The  work  that  should  to-day  be  wrought.  See  Our- 
selves Alone. — O'Hagan. 

The  workshops  open  wide  their  doors.  See  Six  o'Clock 
P.  M. — Anon. 

The  world  ascribed  to  Napoleon  great  and  noble  quali- 
ties.    See  True  and  False  Glory. — Eddy. 

The  world,  dear  John,  as  the  old  folks  told  us.  See 
Home  to  Rest  in,  A. — ^Morford. 

The  world  for  sale ! — hang  out  the  sign.  See  World  for 
Sale,  The.— Hoyt. 

The  world  goes  up  and  the  world  goes  down.  See 
Dolcino  to  Margaret. — Kingsley. 

The  world  has  seen  empires  and  dynasties  without 
number.  See  Sovereignty  of  the  People,  The. — 
Phelps. 

The  world  hath  its  night.  See  Songs  of  the  Night. ^ 
Spurgeon. 

The  world  is  a  battle-field.  See  South  and  her  Prob- 
lems, The  (Future  of  the  South,  The).— Grady. 

The  world  is  a  queer  old  fellow.  See  World,  The  — 
Wilcox. 

The  world  is  always  full  of  pestilential  bores.  See 
Climax,  The. — {Boston  Courier.) 

"The  world  is  ever  as  we  take  it."  See  Cheerful 
Heart,  The. — Anon. 

The  world  is  filled  with  folly  and  sin.  See  Aux  Ital- 
ien.s  (^One  isn't  Loved  Every  Day). — Lytton. 

The  world  is  filled  with  the  voices  of  the  dead.  See 
Voices  of  the  Dead,  The. — Dewey. 

The  world  is  full  of  care.  See  Captain  Kempthorn. — 
Longfellow. 

The  world  is  full  of  poetry — the  air.  See  Poetry. — ■ 
Percival. 

The  world  is  full  of  proofs;  on  every  side.  See  Criti- 
cal Moment,  The. — Brown. 

The  world  is  glad  when  I  appear.  See  Months,  The. — 
Kavanaugh. 

The  world  is  great;  the  birds  all  fly  from  me.  See 
Spanish  Gypsy,  The  (I  am  Lonely). — Eliot. 

The  world  is  growing  better  every  year.  See  Senex 
Jubilans. — Reed. 


The  world  is  naught  till  one  is  come.     See  One. — Bates. 
The  world  is  not  so  bad  a  world.     See  World,  The. — 

Anon. 
The  world  is  now  entering  upon  the  Mechanical  Epoch. 

See  Mechanical  Epoch,  The.— Kennedy. 
The  world  is  quite  as  good  a  world.  See  How  We  Take 

it. — Miller. 
The  world  is  so  full  of  a  number  of  things.     See  Happy 

Thought. — Stevenson. 
The  world   is   sympathetic ;   the   statement   none   can 

doubt.     See  Men  who  Do  not  Lift,  The. — Anon. 
The  {wr.  This]  world   is  too  much  with  us;   late  and 

soon.     See  World  is  too  Much  with  Us,  The. — 

Wordsworth. 
"The  world  is  very  beautiful;"  I  said.    See  Poetry  and 

the  Poor. — Stowe. 
The  world  is  very  evil.     See  Celestial  Country,  The. — 

St.  Bernard. 
The  world     keeps     festival     to-day.     See     Christmas 

Tho  ught  s. — Talmage. 
The  world   must   be   amused.     See  Value   of  Amuse- 
ments.— Anon. 
The  world,  not  hush'd,  lay  as  in  a  trance.     See  Old 

Souls. — Hake. 
The  world  of  fiction  hardly  contains  a  more  thrilling 

chapter.     See  Thrilling  Incident,  A. — Anon. 
"The  world  owes  you  a  living!"     Does  it,   Mr.   Do- 
nothing?     See  "World  Owes  Me  a  Living,  The." — 

Anon. 
The  world  puts  on  its  robes  of  glory  now.    See  Autumn. 

— Laighton. 
The  world  recedes!  it  disappears!     See  Dying  Chris- 
tian to  his  Soul,  The. — ^Pope. 
The  world,  so  full  of  talent.     See  Balance  Wheel,  The. 

Coates. 
The  world    wants    men — light-hearted,    manly    men. 

See  Wanted. — Chester. 
The  world  was  like  a  wilderness.     See  Flock  of  Doves, 

The.— Thaxter. 
The  world  was  void.     See  Darkness. — Byron. 
The   worldly   hope   men   set   their  hearts  upon.     See 

RubaiyAt    of    Omar    KhAyyAm,    The    (Life    and 

Death). — Fitzgerald. 
The  world's  a  bubble,   and  the  life  of  a   man.     See 

World,  The.— Bacon. 
The  world's  a  sea;  my  flesh  a  ship  that's  manned.     See 

Voyage  of  Life,  The. — Quarles. 
The  world's  a  very  happy  place.     See  World's  Music, 

The.— Setoun. 
The  world's  great  age  begins  anew.     See  Hellas  (Last 

Chorus  of  "Hellas"). — Shelley. 
The  world's  history  is  a  divine  poem.     See  "World's 

history  is  a  divine  poem.  The." — Garfield. 
The  worm  of  conscience  still  be-gnaw  the  soul !     See 

King  Richard  III.  (Hatred). — Shakespeare. 
The  worst  thing  that  can  come.     See  Just  'Sposin'. — 

Denton. 
The  wreath  that  star-crowned  Shelley  gave.     See  After 

a  Lecture  on  Keats. ^Holmes. 
The  wren  had  built  within  the  porch,  she  found.     See 

Haunted  House,  The. — Hood. 
The  wretch,  condemned  with  life  to  part.     See  Captiv- 
ity, The  (Wretch  Condemned,  etc.). — Goldsmith. 
The  Yankee    boy,    before    he's    sent    to    school.     See 

Whittling. — Pierpont. 
The  year  begins.     I  turn  the  leaf.     See  Turning  over 

the  New  Leaf. — Anon. 
The  year  decays,  November's  blast.     See  Thanksgiv- 
ing Day. — -Anon. 
The  year  had  all  the  days  in  charge.     Sw  Why  it  was 

Cold  in  May. — Eliot. 
The  year  has  past  and  gone  at  last.     See  Old  and  the 

New,  The. — ^Richards. 
The  year  of  my  birth  is  unknown.     See  Nuts  to  Crack, 

No.  1. — Denton. 
The  year  1784  was  remarkable  in  the  life  of  our  friend 

the  First  Gentleman  of  Europe.     See  Comparison 

of   George   Washington  with  George  the  Fourth, 

called  the  First  Gentleman  of  Europe.— Thackeray . 
The  year  stood  at  its  equinox.     See  Milking  Maid,  The. 

— Rossetti. 
The  yearly   miracle  of  spring.      See    Yearly   Miracle 

of  Spring,  The. — -Boker. 
The  years  are  flowers  and  bloom  within.     See  God's 

Garden.— Burton. 
The  year's  at  the  spring.     See  Little  Tommy  Smith. 

—Riley. 
The  year's  at  the  Spring.     See  Pippa  Passes  (Pippa's 

Song) . — Browning. 
The  years  back  of  us  are  full  of  voices.     See  "Years 

back  of  us  are  full  of  voices,  The." — Murray. 
The  years  come  in  and  the  years  go  out.     See  Months 

and  Holidays,  The. — Hadley. 


869 


The  yellow 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


The  yellow  death  came  stealing.     See  New  Magdalen, 

The.— ('ary. 
The  yellow  goldenrotl  i.n  dressed.      See  August. — Win- 

^^low. 
The  yellow  snow-fog  ibrdl  Hit  hick.     See  Retreat  from 

Moscow.  The. — Thornbury. 
The  vellow-hammer  came  to  build  his  nest.     See  Yel- 

iow-haminer's  Nest,  The. — Chadwick. 
The  young  child  .Jesus  had  a  garden.     See  Legend,  A. — 

Stoddard. 
The  young  May  moon  is  beaming,  love.     See  Young 

May  Moon,  The. — Moore. 
The  young  oak  grew,  and  proudly  grew.     See  Oak,  The. 

—Smith. 
Thee  finds  me  in  the  garden,  Hannah — come  in!     'Tis 

kind  of  thee.     See  Quaker  Widow,  The.— Taylor. 
Thee  I   would  think  one  of  the  many  wise.     See  To 

Charles  I^amb. —  Houghton. 
"Thee,  Mary,  with  this  ring  I  wed."     See  To  Mary. — 

Bishop. 
Thee  need  not  close  the  shutters  yet;  and,  David,  if 

thee  will.     See  Vacant  Chair,  The. — Anon. 
Thee,  too,  modest   tressod   maid.     See  Moon. — Rowe. 
Thees  man  come  into  my  shop  already  and  he  don't 

.say  a  word.     See  One  Cent  and  Costs. — {Boston 

Globe.) 
Their  advent   is   as   silent   as   their  going.     See   Lost 

Hours. — Duke. 
Their  lips  are  still  as  the  lips  of  the  dead.     See  Sher- 
man's March. — By  a  Soldier. 
Their  little  language  the  children.     See  Love's   Lan- 
guage.— Palgrave. 
Their  manners  had  a  formal  cast.     See  When  Wither- 

spoon  was  President. — Potter. 
Their  noonday  never  knows.     See  Fame. — Tabb. 
Their    only  labor  was  to   kill  the   time.     See  Castle  of 

Indolence,  The. — Thomson. 
Their  very  gods,  it  seems,  we  have  forgot.     See  Beside 

the  Martyr's  Memorial. — Stringer. 
Then  a    chief    of  the    great   ones    around    him.     See 

Shah-Nameh  (Zal  and  Rudabeh). — Robinson. 
Then  agayne    I    went    to   the   tower   melodious.     See 

Pastime  of  Pleasure,  The  (Amoure    Laments  the 

.Absence  of  La  Belle  Pucel). — Hawes. 
Then  Agrippa  said  unto   Paul,   "Thou  art   permitted 

to    speak    for  thyself."     See  Acts  of  the  Apostles 

(Paul    before    King  Agrippa). — Bible. 
Then  as  a  nimble  squirrel  from  the  wood.     See  Britan- 
nia's     Pastorals      (Hunted      Squirrel,      The). — • 

Browne. 
Then  awake! — the  heavens  look  bright,  my  dear!     See 

Young  May  Moon. — Moore. 
Then  before  all  they  stand — -the  holy  vow.  See  Human 

Life  (Marriage). — Rogers. 
Then  came  a  bloody  battle  in  the  clouds.     See  Battle 

of  Lookout  Mountain,  The. — Comwallis. 
Then  came  fair  May,  the  fairest  maid  on  ground.     See 

F'aerie  Queene,  Th?  (May). — -Spenser. 
Then  came  jolly    summer,    being    dight.     See    Faerie 

Queene,  The  (Summer). — Spenser. 
Then  catne    the    Autumn    all    in    yellow    clad.     See 

Faerie  Queene,  The  (Autumn). — Spenser. 
Then  came  the  fair  Queen  Kriemhild ;  she  too  had  seen 

full  well.     See  Nibelungen    Lied    (How  Margrave 

Riideger  was  Slain). — Lettsom. 
Then  came   the   mad    retreat;    the    whirlwind    snows. 

See  Retreat  from  Moscow,  The. — Anon. 
Then  come  we  to   the   last   remedy, — civil  war.     See 

Civil  War  the  Greatest   National   Evil. — Palmer- 

ston. 
Then,  fare  thee  well,  my  own  dear  love.     See  Then, 

Fare  Thee  Well. — Moore. 
Then  felt  1  like  some  watcher  of  the  skies.     See  On 

First  Ix)oking  into  Chapman's  Homer. — Keats. 
Then  forth    he   called    that    his   daughter   fayre.     See 

F'aerie  Qu'-ene.  The  (Una's    Marriage). — Spenser. 
Then  from  those  dark  and  dreadful  precincts  passing, 

ghostly  fields.     See  Epic  of  Hades  The  (Marsyas). 

— Morris. 
Then,  gazing,    I   beheld    the    long-drawn    street.     See 

Casa  Guidi  Windows. — -Browning. 
Then  gently    .scan    your    brother   man.     See    Address 

to  the  UncT  duid  '"Then  gently,"  etc.).— Bums. 
Then  give  me  back  that  time  of  plea.sures.     See  Give 

Me  back  My  Youth  again. — Goethe. 
Then  haste  ye,   Prescott  and   Revere!     See  Battle  of 

I.«xington,  The. — Lanier. 
Then  hate  me  when  thou  wilt ;  if  ever,  now.     See  Son- 
nets, XC. — Shakespeare. 
Then    hear    me,    bounteous     Heaven.       See     Venice 

Preserved     (Jaffier    Parting    with     Belvidera). — 

Otway. 


Then  his  hand  he  placed,  as  ever.     See  When  Greek 

Meets  Greek. — Anon. 
Then  hush!  oh,  hush!  for  the  Father  knows  what  thou 

knowest  not.     See  same. — Havergal. 
Then  I   tuned  my  harp, — took  off  the  lilies  we  twine 

round  its  chords.     See  Saul  (David  Playing  before 

Saul) . — Browning. 
Then  in  a  free  and  lofty  strain.     See  Banquet  of  Sense , 

The. — Jonson. 
Then,  in  that  time  and  place,   I   spoke  to  her.     See 

Gardener's  Daughter,  The. — Tennyson. 
Then  is  she  gone?     O  fool  and  coward  I!     See  Sonnets 

from  the  Poems. — Drummond. 
Then  it  came  to  pass  that  a  pestilence  fell  on  the  city. 

See  Evangeline  (Finding  of  Gabriel). — Longfellow. 
Then    let  the   holly   red   be  hung.     See  same. — Sher- 
man. 
Then  looking  upward  to  the  heaven's  leams.     See  In- 
duction, The. — Buckhurst. 
Then,  methouht,  the  air  grew  denser,  perfumed  from 

an  unseen  censer.     See  Raven,  The. — Poe. 
Then  Oberon  spake  the  word  of  might.     See  Flitting 

of  the  Fairies,  The. — Barlow. 
Then  out  spake  brave  Horatius.     See  Horatius. — Ma- 

caulay. 
Then  sang  Moses  and  children  of  Israel  this  song  unto 

the  Lo'-d.    See  Exodus  (SDng  of  Mo<es). — Bible. 
Then  saw  I,  with  gray  eyes  fulfilled  of  rest.     See  In 

Hades. — -Brackett. 
Then  saw  they  how  there  hove  a  dusky  barge.     See 

Idylls  of  the  King   (Passing  of    Arthur.    The). — 

Tennyson. 
Then  shall  He  answer  how  He  lifted  up.     See  "When 

Saw  We  Thee?"— Piatt. 
Then  shall  the  kingdom  of  heaven  be  likened  unto  the 

ten  virgins.     See  St.  Matthew.  XXV. — Bible. 
Then  shall  we  see  and  know  the  group  divine.      See 

Then  i-hall  We  See. — Moore. 
Then  sighed   the  Wandering  Angel   sore.     See  Water 

Lily,  The.— Waters. 
Then  sing,    ye   birds,    sing,    sing   a   joyous   song!     See 

Ode:  Intimations  of  Immortality. — Wordsworth. 
Then  spake  .Jehovah  to  Job  out  of  the  whirlwind  and 

said.       See    .Job    (Omnipotence    of    Jehovah). — 

Bible. 
Then  spake  King  Arthur  to  Sir  Bedivere.     See  Idylls 

of  the   King  (Passing   of    Arthur,  The). — Tenny- 
son. 
Then  step    by    step    walks    Autumn.       See     October 

(Autumn's  Processional). — Craik. 
Then  that    dread   angel   near   the   awful   throne.     See 

Fiat  Lux.— Mifflin. 
Then  the  little  Hiawatha.     See  Song  of  Hiawatha,  The 

(Hiawatha's  Chickens). — Longfellow. 
Then  the  Lord  answered  Job  out  of  the  whirlwind,  and 

said.     See  Job. — Bible. 
Then  the   master   with   a   gesture   of   command.     See 

Building  of  the  Ship,  The. — Longfellow. 
Then  the  night  wore  on,  and  we  knew  the  worst.     See 

Maiden's  Last  Farewell,  The. — John  Paul. 
Then  to  my  room  I  went.     See  Angel  in  the  House, 

The. — Patmore. 
Then,  too,  I  love  thee.     See  same. — Lomin. 
Then  took  the  generous  host.     See  Rose,  The. — Tay- 
lor. 
Then  walked  they  to  a  grove  but  near  at  hand.     See 

Britannia's     Pastorals    (Scented    Grove,   The). — - 

Browne. 
Then,  while  the  first  day  of  the  week  was  dark.     See 

Light  of  the  World,  The  (Mary  at  the  Sepulchre). 

— -Arnold. 
Then  you  acknowledge  that  it  is  yours?     See  Mouse 

Tran,  The.— Howells. 
Then  you  have  not  hsard  his  adventures?     See  Mun- 
chausen Outdone. — -Anon. 
Then  you  think  everybody  ought  to  stop  and  weigh 

their    words.     See    I    Didn't    Mean    Anything. — 

Anon. 
Then  you  think  you  hain't  got  nothin'  to  give  to  the 

Persians?     See  Subscribing  to  Missionary  Fund. — 

Anon. 
Thence  passing  forth,   they   shortly  doe  arryve.     See 

Faerie    Queene,    The     (Bower    of    Bliss,     The). 

— -Spenser. 
Thence  to   the  famous  orators  repair.     See  Paradise 

Regained. — Milton. 
Theocritus!  Theocritus!  ah,  thou  hadst  pleasant  dreams. 

See  Theocritus. — Langhorne. 
Theophilus  Thistle,  that  sifter  of  thistles.     See  Theo- 

philus  Thistle's  Thrusted  Thumb.— Pond. 
Ther  is  right  at  the  West  side  of  Itaille.     See  Canter- 
bury Tale.-    The  (Griselda), — Chaucer. 


870 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


There  are 


There  ain't  no  pleasure  in  being  a  boy  these  days, 
there  ain't!     See  Fauntleroy's  Wail. — Riordan. 

There  all  the  happy  souls  that  ever  were.  See  Pleas- 
ures of  Heaven,  The. — Jonson. 

There  ance  was  a  may,  and  she  lo'ed  na  men.  See 
Werena  my  Heart's  Licht  I  wad  Dee. — Baillie. 

There  are  a  great  many  kinds  of  animals.  See  Com- 
position on  Animals. — Rook. 

There  are  a  number  of  us  creep.  See  Insignificant  Ex- 
istence.— Watts. 

There  are  a  sort  of  men  whose  visages.  See  Mer- 
chant of  Venice,  The  (Pomposity).  —  Shake- 
speare. 

There  are  a  thousand  foxes  to  one  lion.  See  Little 
Foxes . — Burdette . 

There  are  a  thousand  pretty,  engaging  little  ways. 
See  Engaging  Manners. — Anon. 

There  are  about  fifty  species  of  maple.  See  Choosing 
a  "State  Tree. "—The  Maple.— Tindall. 

There  are  beautiful  songs  that  we  never  sing.  See  Way 
of  the  World,  The. — Anon. 

There  are  blossoms  that  hae  budded.  See  Scotch 
Hymn. — Anon. 

There  are  bonds  of  all  sorts  in  this  world  of  ours.  See 
Canteen,  The. — O'Reilly. 

There  are  books  which  take  rank  in  our  life  with 
parents  and  lovers.  See  Books  ("There  are  books," 
etc.). — Emerson. 

There  are  but  three  individuals.  See  Character  of 
Washington[,  The]. — Everett. 

There  are  certain  things — as  a  spider,  a  ghost.  See 
Englishman's  Sea-dirge,  An. — Anon. 

There  are  circum-stances  of  peculiar  and  beautiful  cor- 
respondence in  the  careers  of  Virginia  and  New 
England.  See  Pilgrim  Fathers,  The  (New  England 
and     Virginia). — Winthrop. 

There  are  days  of  silent  sorrow.  See  Hardest  Time  of 
All,  The.— Doudney. 

There  are  days  when  the  sun  shines  warm  and  bright. 
See  Song.^Hartridge. 

There  are  faces  just  as  perfect.  See  My  Love  of  Long 
Ago. — Browne. 

There  are  few  faithful  portraits.  See  Daniel  Webster. 
— Hoar. 

There  are  four  things — four  indubitable  things  that 
make  high  license.  See  Some  Delusions  of  High 
License. — Johnson. 

There  are  gains  for  all  our  losses.  See  Flight  of 
Youth,  The.— Stoddard. 

There  are  generally  about  six  of  them  in  a  bunch.  See 
How  Girls  Fish. — Anon. 

There  are  harps  that  complain  to  the  presence  of  night. 
See  Music  of  the  Night. — Neal. 

There  are  in  this  loud  stunning  tide.  See  St.  Matthew 
(Happiness). — Keble. 

There  are  lessons  to  learn  through  the  school-time  of 
life.     See  Lessons. — Roach. 

There  are  living  organisms  so  transparent.  See  Emer- 
son, Extract  concerning. — Holmes. 

There  are  lots  of  things  a  girl  doesn't  know.  See 
Things  a  Girl  doesn't  Know. — Denton. 

There  are  many  flags  in  many  lands.  See  Hurrah  for 
the  Flag. — Anon. 

There  are  many  friends  of  summer.  See  Cling  to  Those 
Who  Cling  to  You. — Anon. 

There  are  many  phases  through  which  the  soul  must 
pass.     See  same. — Anon. 

There  are  many  things  that  boys  may  know.  See  No 
Boy  Knows. — Riley. 

There  are  men  who  dispute  what  they  do  not  under- 
stand. See  How  Mr.  Coville  Counted  the  Shingles 
on  his  House. — Bailey. 

There  are  moments  in  life  that  are  never-  forgot.  See 
Remembrance. — Percival. 

There  are  new  developments  of  human  character.  See 
Drunkard's  Wife,  The. — Burritt. 

There  are  no  bargains  driven.  See  Hudibras  (Marriage) . 
—Butler. 

There  are  no  colors  in  God's  heaven-bent  bow.  See 
My  Mother. — Currie. 

There  are  no  colors  in  the  fairest  sky.  See  Walton's 
Book  of  Lives. — Wordsworth. 

There  are  no  ghosts.  Could  they  return  to  earth.  See 
Ghosts. — Anon. 

There  are  no  infidels.  All  unbelief.  See  There  are 
None. — Jones. 

There  are  occasions  in  life,  in  which  a  -gre.at  mind  lives 
years.  See  Uses  of  Astronomy,  The  (Discoveries 
of  Galileo) . —  Everett. 

There  are  one  or  two  things  I  should  just  like  to  hint. 
See  Fable  for  Critics,  A  (To  his  Countrymen). — 
Lowell. 


There  are  other  fellows  nearer.     See  Lines  to  Her. — 

McClure. 
There  are  parts  of  our  life  we  do  not  like  to  think  about. 

See  same. — Parker. 
There  are  people  who  say  they  can  never  succeed.     See 

Where  there's  a  Will  there's  a  Way. — Kavanaugh. 
There  are  persons  among  you,  O  Athenians,  who  think 

to  confound  a  speaker.     See    Philipnics  (Democ- 
racy Hateful  to  Philip,  A). — Demosthenes. 
There  are   poems   unwritten   and   songs   unsung.     See 

Unwritten  Poems. — Anon. 
There  are  points  from  which  we  can  command  our  life. 

See  Festus  (Forecast). — Bailey. 
There  are  recollections  as  pleasant  as  they  are  sacred 

and  eternal.     See  sam,e. — Walker. 
There  are  several  sovereignties  in  this  country.     See 

sam,e. — Garfield. 
"There   are   silver   pines   on   the   window-pane."     See 

Gift  that  None  could  See,  The. — Wilkins. 
There  are  so  many  birds  and  bugs.     See  Time  Flies. — 

Goodfellow. 
There  are  so  many  things,  I  think,  we  do  not  under- 
stand.    See  Brother  Ben. — Meyers. 
There  are  soft  words  murmured  by  dear,  dear  lips.     See 

Mother. — =Anon. 
There  are  some  great  troubles  that  only  time  can  heal. 

See  same. — Anon. 
There   are   some  hearts  like  wells,   green-mossed   and 

deep.     See  Living  Waters. — Spencer. 
There  are  some  hearts,  that,  like  the  roving  vine.     See 

Trodden  Flowers. — -Anon. 
There   are   some  ills  which  affect   all   society   and   all 

government.     See  Sense  of  Public  Duty,  The. — 

Pillsbury. 
There  are    some    qualities — some    incorporate   things. 

See  Silence. — Poe. 
There  are  some  quiet  ways.    See  Wayside,  The. — Morse. 
There  are  some  things  hard  to  understand.     See  Last 

Time  I  Met  Lady  Ruth,  The.— Lytton. 
There  are  some  things  that  puzzle  me.     See  Recitation 

for  a  Small  Boy. — Kavanaugh. 
There  are  some  wishes  that    may    start.     See    Retro- 
spect, A. — Landor. 
There  are  sounds  in  the  sky  when  the  year  grows  old. 

See  Christmas  Bells. — Anon. 
There  are  stages  of  the  progress.     See  Graduation. — 

Brooks. 
There  are  stepping-stones  in  the  deepest  waters.     See 

As  Thy  Day  Thy  Strength  shall  Be.— H.  B.  C. 
There  are  strong  powers  of  love  that  early  years.     See 

Love's  Final  Flowers. — Barlow. 
There  -are   sweeter  words  than   were   ever   said.     See 

Life's  Unexpressed. — Elders. 
There  are  those,  though,  whom  monuments  can  never 

honor.     See  Bombast. — Anon. 
There  are  three  green  eggs  in  a  small  brown  pocket. 

See  At  Virgil's  Window. — Markham. 
There  are  three  lessons  I  would  write.     See  Words  of 

Strength.— Schiller. 
There  are  three  preachers,  ever  preaching.     See  Three 

Preachers,  The. — Mackay. 
There  are  three  tests  by  which  races  love  to  be  tried. 

See  Toussaint    L'Ouverture  (Toussaint    L'Ouver- 

ture's  Place  among  Great  Men). — Phillips. 
There  are  three  ways  in  which  men  take.     See  Music 

Grinders,  The. — Holmes. 
There   are   times   when   arms   alone   will   suffice.     See 

Sword  and  a  Nation's  Rights,  The.— Meagher. 
There  are  twelve  months  in  all  the  year.     See  Robin 

Hood  Rescuing  the  Widow's  Three  Sons. — Anon. 
There  are  two  angels  that  attend   unseen.     See  Christ- 

us:  AMystery("Therearetwo,"etc.). — Longfellow. 
There   are   two  births;  the   one   when   light.     See   To 

Chloe . — Cart  Wright . 
There  are  two  little  songsters  well  known  in  the  land. 

See  I  Have  and  Oh!  Had  I. — Langheim. 
There  are  two  smithies  in  our  little  town.     See  Haunted 

Smithy,  The. — Eaton. 
There   are   two    very   funny   fellows   in    Harlem.     See 

Ever  so  Far  Away. — Von  Boyle. 
There    are    two    ways    of    regarding    a    sermon.     See 

Stones  of  Venice  (Sermons). — Ruskin. 
There  are  veils  that  lift,  there  are  bars  that  fall.     See 

Song  of  Maelduin. — RoUeston. 
There    are    who    blame    sensations    of    delight.     See 

Bamberg. — Faber.  ' 

There   are   who   say   the   lover's   heart.     See   Love. — 

Hervey. 
There   are   who   say  we  are  but   dust.     See  same. — 

Ijandor. 
There   are   wild   theories   abroad.     See   Against    Lord 

John  Russell's  Motion. — Canning. 


871 


There  as 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


There,  as  she  sewed,  oame  floating  through  her  head. 

See  Past. — Howells. 
There   be   in    plants   influences   yet   unthought.     <See 

Hidden  Uses  of  Plants. — Tupper. 
There  be  many  kidds  of  parting — yes,  I  know.     See 

Separation. — Dickinson. 
There  be  none  of  Beauty's  daughters.     See  Stanzas 

for  Music. — Byron. 
There  be  the  greyhounds!  lo'k!  an'  there  s  the  hearel 

iS«e  Heiire,  The. — Barnes.  ,     „,. 

There  be  those  who  sow  beside.     See  There  be  Those. — 

Barton. 
There  bloom  three  young  flowers  so  sweet  and  fair.     See 

Three  Flowers,  The.— Smith. 
There  breathes  no  being  but  has  some  pretence.     See 

Poetry  (Poesy). — Holmes. 
There  came  a  day  of  showers.     See  Silver  Thaw,  The. — 

Roberts. 
There  came  a  ghost  to  Marjorie's  [or  Margaret  s]  door. 

See  Sweet  William'    Ghost. — Anon. 
There   came   a   man,   making   his   hasty   moan.     See 

Mahmoud.— Hunt. 
There  came  a  message  to  the  vine.     iSee  God  s  Miracle 

of  May. — -Sherman. 
There  came  a  pedlar  to  an  evening  house.     See  Pedlar, 

The.— Ramal.  '  „      „  ,, 

There  came  a  soul  to  the  gate  of  Heaven.      See  Self- 
exiled,  The. — Smith. 
There  came  a  sound  of  drums.     Twice  on  such  a  day. 

See  Dr.  Sevier  (Fall  In!— 1860).— Cable. 
There  came  a  stirring  of  wind  from  the  east.     See 

MacLeod  of  Dare. — Black. 
There  came  a  time  when  roses  bloomed  again.     See 

May. — Saunders. 
There  came  a  youth  upon  the  earth.     See  Shepherd  of 

King  Admetus. — Lowell. 
There  came  at  night  a  clarion  call  from  Heaven.     See 

Off  Havana.— Ingham. 
There  came  from  the  Rhineland  three  travelers  gay. 

See  Landlady's  Daughter,  The. — Parsons. 
There   came   to   Cameliard.      See  Idylls  of    the  King 

(Crowning  of  Arthur,  The). — Tennyson. 
There   came   to   port    last    Sunday   night.     <See   New 

Arrival,  The.— Cable. 
There  came  to  the  beach  a  poor  exile  of  Erin.     See 

Exile  of  Erin,  The.— Campbell. 
There  can  be  no  prosperity  nor  virtue  nor  glory  in  the 

aggregate.     See  same. — Chapin. 
There  can  be  nothing  sadder  than  the  solemn  hush  of 

nature.     See  Autumn  Thoughts. — Nye. 
There   clung  three   roses  to   a   stem.     See   Envoy. — 

Ramal. 
There    come    the    boys!     Oh,    dear,    the    noise!     See 

There  Come  the  Boys. — Anon. 
There  comes  a  month  in  the  weary  year.     See  October. 

— Anon. 
There  dawn  dear  memories  of  the  past.     See  Memories. 

— Anon. 
There  died  upon  the  Miraj  height.     See  Good  Deeds. — 

Arnold. 
There,  don't  cry  any  more,  Arty,  and  you  shall  have 

Sissy's  new  wax  doll.     See  Brave  Little  Sister, 

The. — Anon. 
There!  don't  that  look  nice?     I  know  mamma  thought 

I  couldn't  do  this.     See  Pious. — Rook. 
There  dwelt  a  miller  hale  and  bold.     See  Miller  of  [the] 

Dee,  The. — Mackay. 
There  dwelt  in  Bethlehem  a  Jewish  maid.     See  Miracle 

of  the  Roses,  The.— Southey. 
There  dwelt  in  far  Japan.     See  Stone-cutter,  The. — 

Allen. 
There  dwelt  the  Man,  the  flower  of  human  kind.     See 

Mount  Vernon,  the  Home  of  Washington.— Day. 
There  fall?  with  every  wedding  chime.     See  sanie. — 

Landor. 
There   fell   a   King.     Not    King  alone  in  blood.     See 

Frederick  III. — Coolbreth. 
There   fell    an    April    shower,    one   night.     See   April 

Showers. — Wilkins. 
There  go  those  men  again,  from  morning  till  night. 

See  Removal,  The. — Hamilton. 
There  goes  in  the  world  a  notion  that  the  scholar 

should  be  a  recluse.     See  American  Scholar,  The. — 

Emerson. 
There  goes  Johnnie  on  a  run.     See  Johnnie's  Gun. — 

Denton. 
There  goes  the  old  bell  again,  swinging  out  from  the 

old  stone  arch.     See  Cherokee  Roses. — Anon. 
There  grew  a  little  flower  once.     See  Die  Herz  Blume. 

— -Hood. 
There  grewe  an  aged  tree  on  the  greene.     See  Shep- 

heardes  Calender.  The  (Oak  and  the  Briere,  The). 

— Spenser. 


There  grows  a  fail  palmetto  in  the  sunny  southern  lands. 

See  Palmetto  and  the  Pine,  The. — Pike. 
There  had  been  a  gloomy  silence  in  the  room.     See' 

Oliver  Twist  (Death  of  Bill  Sykes,  The).— Dickens. 
There  hangs  a  saber,  and  there  a  rein.     See  All. — 

Durivage. 
There  happened  to  be  only  four  bedrooms.     See  Night 

with  a  Ventriloquist,  A. — Cockton. 
"There  has  been  a  heap  of  rubbish  dumped  about  the 

patient  seas."     See  Uncle  Sam's  Spring  Cleaning. 

— -Foss. 
There  ha.s  been  considerable  excitement  in  Harlem. 

See     Schlausenheimer's     Alarming     Glock. — -Von 

Boyle. 
There  has  come  to  my  mind  a  legend, — a  thing  I  had 

half  forgot.     See  Legend,  A. — Osborne. 
There  has  something  gone  wrong.     See  "Keep  a  Stiff 

Upper  Lip." — Cary. 
There  have  been  a  number  of  trees  suggested.     See 

Choosing     a     "State     Tree." — The     Hickory. — 

Painter. 
There  have  been  many  painful  crises  since  the  impa- 
tient  vanity   of   South   Carolina.     See   Abraham 

Lincoln. — Lowell. 
There  have  been  those  who  have  denied  to  Lafayette 

the  name  of  a  great  man.     See  Eulogy  on  Lafay- 
ette.— Everett. 
There    he    lay    upon    his    back.     See    Aurora    Leigh 

(Marian's  Child). — Browning. 
There    he  repeated  with  a  look.     See  Aoo.strophe  to 

Water  (Apostrophe  to  Cold  Water). — Arrington. 
There  he  stands,  in  his  pitiful  parti-hues.     See  Circus 

Clown,  The. — Urner. 
There!     I  have  finished  my  algebra  lesson  at  last.     See 

Behind  the  Scenes. — Rayne. 
There,  I  knew  they'd  begin  before  we  could  get  there. 

See  Ways  of  Some  Girls  at  the  Play,  The. — Anon. 
There,  I  know  my  lesson!     See  Cow  in  the  Garden, 

The. — Anon. 
There!     I  knowed  it  would  be  so,  spite  of  all  my  word 

and  prayer.     See  Church  Fair,  The. — Eisenbeis. 
There,    I   think   that   will   do.     Pink   suits  my   com- 
plexion.    See  Golden  Rule,  The.— Kavanaugh. 
There  in  her  high-backed  chair  she  sits.     See  Mother's 

Blessing,  The. — Anon. 
There  in  his  room,  whene'er  the  moon  looks  in.     See 

Ode  for  a  Master  Mariner  Ashore. — Guiney. 
There  in  its  old  historic  splendour  stands.     See  Sonnet 

to  the  Hudson. — -Hellman.  % 

There  in  seclusion  and  remote  from  men.    See  Nathaniel 

Hawthorne. — Longfellow. 
There  in  stupendous  horror  grew.     See  For  the  Picture. 

— Turner. 
There  in  the  fane  a  beauteous  creature  stands.     See 

Woman. — Calidasa. 
There  is  a  beauty  at  the  goal  of  life.     See  Goal  of  Life, 

The. — -Lampman. 
There  is  a  bird,  a  plain,  brown  bird.     See  Nightingale, 

The.— Thaxter. 
There  is  a  bird  I  know  so  well.     See  Song-sparrow,  The. 

— Van  Dyke. 
There  is  a  bird  that  comes  and  sings.     See  Song  the 

Oriole  Sings,  The. — -Howells. 
There  is  a  bird  who  by  his  coat.     See  Jackdaw,  The. — 

Cowper. 
There  is  a  boat  upon  a  sea.     See  Silver  Boat,  The. — 

Anon. 
There   is   a   book,    who   runs   may   read.     See   Elder 

Scripture,  The. — Keble. 
There  is  a  child — a  boy  or  girl.      See  Is  it  You? — 

Goodwin. 
There  is  a  city,  builded  by  no  hand.     See  Paradisi 

Gloria. — -Parsons. 
There  is  a  cla^s  of  men  rebellious  to  all  law.     See  Shall 

America  be  Ruled  Forever  by  the  Liquor  Power? 

— Ireland. 
There  is  a  clouded  city,  gone  to  rest.     See  Aztec  City, 

The.— Ware. 
There  is  a  creed  whose  pure  and  gentle  teaching.     See 

Creeds.— Anon. 
There  is  a  dance  of  leaves  in  that  aspen  bower.     See 

Gladness  of  Nature,  The. — Bryant. 
There  is  a  danger  from  suppressed  repudiation.     See 

Suppressed  Repudiation. — Beecher. 
There  is  a  day  which  never  comes.     See  To-morrow. — 

Spencer. 
There  is  a  difference  worth  while  to  note.    See  Heroism 

of  Horatio  Nelson,  The. — Mills. 
There  is  a  dungeon  in  whose  dim  drear  light.     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Filial Love). — Byron. 
There  is  a  family  out  on  the  west-side  who  had  a  visit 

one  day  from  a  strange  dog.     See  That  West-side 

Dog;  or,  William  Nye  in  Chicago. — Wilkie. 


872 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


There  is 


There  is  a  fellow  across  the  way.     See  Banjo  Fiend, 

The.— Bleyer. 
There  is  a  fever  of  the  spirit.     See  Nightmare  Abbey 

(Mr.  Cypress's  Song  in  Ridicule  of  Lord  Byron). — 

Peacock. 
There  is  a  flower,  a  little  flower.     See  Daisy,  The. — 

Montgomery. 
There  is  a  flower  I  wish  to  wear.     See  Heartsease. — 

Landor. 
There  is  a  flower,  the  lesser  Celandine.      See  Lesson,  A. 

— Wordsworth. 
There  is  a  flower  which  dares  the  storms  and  winds. 

See  Flower  of  Love,  The. — Kahn. 
"There  is  a  fountain  filled  with  blood."     See  Outside. 

— Anon. 
There  is  a  fountain  fiU'd  with  blood.     See  Praise  for 

the  Fountain  Opened. — Cowper. 
There   is   a   funny   fellow.     See    Funny    Fellow,    A. — 

Sherman. 
There  is  a  funny  little  man.     See  Mr.  Nobody. — Anon. 
There  is  a  Garden  in  her  face.     See  Cherry  Ripe. — 

Champion. 
There  is  a  gentle  nymph  not   far   from  hence.     See 

Comus  (Nymph  of  the  Severn,  The). — Milton. 
There  is  a  glorious  city  in    the  Sea.     See  Venice. — 

Rogers. 
There  is  a  glory  in  tree  and  blossom.     See  same. — 

Parker. 
.There  is  a  God!  The  herbs  of  the  valley,  the  cedars  of 

the  mountains,  bless  Him.     See  Genius  of  Chris- 

tianity.The  (Nature  Proclaims  a  Deity). — Chateau- 
briand. 
"There  is  a  good  time  coming,   boys."     See  Now. — 

Anon. 
There  is  a  grandeur  in  the  soul  that  dares.     See  same. — 

Clarke. 
There  is  a  great  hope  for  the  Prohibition  Party.     See 

Go  Forward  to  Victory. — Funk. 
There  is  a  green  hill  far  away.     See  There  is  a  Green 

Hill. — Alexander. 
There  is  a  green  island  in  lone  Gougaune  Barra.     See 

Gougaune  Barra. — Callanan. 
There  is  a  happy  land.     See  same. — Young. 
There  is  a  Heaven,  or  here,  or  there.     See  Ballade  of 

the  Bookman's  Paradise. — Lang. 
There  is  a  history  in  all  men's  live.?      See  King  Henry 

IV.,  Pt.  II.  (Oracle).— Shakespeare. 
There  is  a  knack  in  doing  many  a  thing.     See  Pilgrims 

and  the  Peas,  The. — Pindar. 
There  is  a  lady  sweet  and  kind.     See  There  is  a  Lady. 

— Anon. 
There  is  a  lady  with  a  baby,  and  it  looks  like  a  new 

one.     See  New  Baby,  The. — Burnett. 
There  is  a  land,  of  every  land  the  pride.     See  West 

Indies,  The  (My  Country). — Montgomery. 
There  is  a  land  of  pure  delight.     See  same. — Watts. 
There  is  a  little  bird  that  sings.     See  Sweetheart. — 

Greville. 
There  is  a  little  maiden,  who  has  an  awful  time.     See 

Awful  Story,  An. — Anon. 
There  is  a  little  maiden.     Who  is  she?     Do  you  know? 

See  Who  is  She? — Douglass. 
There  is  a  little  moral  thing  in  France.     See  Bien- 

seance. — Wolcott. 
There  is  a  little  mystic  clock.     See  Life  Clock,  The.— 

Anon. 
There  is  a  love  of  country  which  comes  uncalled.     See 

American      Nationality     (Love     of     Country). — ■ 

Choate. 
There  is  a  madness  of  the  heart,,  not  head.     See  Mad- 
ness.— {Punch.) 
There  is  a  man  of  great  abilities.     See  Irish  Aliens. — 

Shiel. 
There  is  a  mansion  vast  and  fair.     See  World,  The. — 

Schiller. 
There  is  a  mate  for  every  heart.     See  Dream-love. — 

Peck. 
There  is  a  mountain  and  a  wood  between  us.     See 

Separation. — Landor. 
There  is  a  mystery  in  the  =oul  of  state.     See  Troilus 

and  Cressida  (Oracle). — Shake.speare. 
There  is  a  National  Flag!     See  American  Flag,  The. — 

Sumner. 
"There  is  a  niland  on  a  river  lying."     See  Collusion 

between  a  Alegaiter  and  a  Water  Snaik. — Morris. 
There  is  a  perennial  nobleness,  and  even  sacredness  in 

work.     See  Past  and  Present  (Work). — Carlyle. 
There  is  a  plant  you  often  see.     See  Corn. — Anon. 
There  is  a  pleasure  in  the  pathless  woods.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Apostrophe  to  the  Ocean). — 

Byron. 
There  is  a  question  that  comes  down  to  all  of  us.     See 

Momentous  Question,  A. — Colfax. 


There  is  a  quiet  garden.     See-Love's  Garden. — Field. 
There  is  a  quiet  spirit  in  these  woods.     See  Spirit  of 

Poetry,  The. — Longfellow. 
There  is  a  race  from  eld  descent.     See  Hey  Nonny  No. 

— Merington. 
There  is  a  rainbow  in  the  sky.     See  Promise. — Anon. 
There  is  a  Reaper,  whose  name  is  Death.     See  Reaper 

and  the  Flowers,  The. — Longfellow. 
There  is  a  river  clear  and  fair.     See  Imitation  of  Words- 
worth, An. — Fanshawe. 
There  is  a  river  in  the  ocean.     See  same. — Maury. 
There  is  a  safe  and  secret   place.     See  Secret   Place, 

The. — Lyte. 
There  is  a  sect  of  ancient  philosophers.     See  Common- 
wealth of  Lunatics,  The. — Steele. 
There  is  a  shadow  on  the  wall.     See  Shadow  on  the 

Wall,  The.— Anon. 
There  is  a   silence  where  hath  been   no   sound.     See 

Silence. — Hood. 
There  is  a  singing  in  the  summer  air.     See  Summer 

Pool,  The. — Buchanan. 
There   is   a   soft   green    darkness    'round.     See   Forest 

Silence.     {Harper's  Magazine.) 
There  is  a  sort  of  courage,  which,  I  frankly  confess  it. 

See  Noblest  Public  Virtue,  The.— Clay. 
There  is  a  soul  above  the  soul  of  each.     See  Humanity. 

— Dixon. 
There    is   a   sound   I    would   not    hear.     See   Fear. — 

Mitchell. 
There  is  a  stir  of  expectation,  a  burst  of  trumpets  from 

the  Capitol.     See  Festival  of  Mars,  The.— Brooks. 
There  is  a  story,  I  have  heard.     See  Bluebell,  The. — 

Eastman. 
There  is  a  story  that  I  have  been  told.     See  Ten  Robber 

Toes. — Barr.  .        ... 

There  is  a  stream  (I  name  not  its  name,  lest  mquisitive 

tourist).     See    Bothie    of    Tober-na-Vuolieh,    The 

(Bathers,  The).— Clough.  r  r.     -     u 

There  is  a  temple  in  ruin  stands.     See  Siege  of  Cormth. 

The  (Alp's  Decision). — Byron. 
There  is  a  tide    in  the    affairs    of    men.     See    Julius 

Cffisar  ("There  is  a  tide,"  etc.).— Shakespeare. 
There  i^  a  time,   we  know   not   when.     See  same. — 

Alexander. 
There    is    a    tomb     in     Arqua,    rear'd     in     air.       See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Petrarch's  Tomb). — 

Byron.  . 

There  is  a  vignette  representing  a  heavy  sword.     ^>ee 

Opinions  Stronger  than  Armies. — Ostrander. 
There    is    a    virtuous,     glorious    courage.     See    True 

Courage  in  Life. — Channing.  c     td   u 

There  is  a  white  hatchment  over  the  portal.     See  Baby 

is  Dead,  The. — Browne. 
There  is  a  woman  down  town  who  delights  to  find  a 

case.     See  Uncle  Tom  and  the  Hornets.     {Detroit 

Free  Press.) 
There  is  a  yew-tree,  pride  of  Lorton  Vale.     See  Yew- 
trees. — Wordsworth. 
There  is  abundant  evidence  in  America.     See  Cutting 

off  the  Forests. — Higley. 
There  is  an  affinity  between  all  natures,  animate  and 

inanimate.     See  True  Nobleman,  A. — Irving. 
There     is    an     apostolical*    succession.     See    same. — 

Boardman. 
There  is  an  earthly  glimmer  in  the  Tomb.     See  Love 

after  Death. — O'Shaughnessy. 
There  is  an  editor  on  Harvard  Street  who  never  gets 

home  till  long  after  midnight.     See  Ruining  the 

Minister's  Parrot. — Anon. 
There  is  an  element  of  p6etry  in  us  all.     See  Poetry  in 

Battle. — Robertson. 
There  is  an  end  to  kisses  and  to  sighs.     See  To  Love 

there  is  no  End. — Anon.  ' 

There  is  an  evening  twilight  of  the  heart.    See  Twilight. 

— Halleck. 
There  is  an  hour  of  peaceful  rest.     See  Hour  of  Peaceful 

Rest,  The. — Tappan. 
There  is   an  isle  beyond  our    ken.     See   Isle  of  Lost 

Dreams,  The. — Sharp. 
There  is  an  old  tradition  sacred  held  in  Wexford  town. 

See  Fishermen  of  Wexford,  The.— O'Reilly. 
There  is  an  old  woman  down  town.     See  Uncle  Tom 

and  the  Hornets. — Anon. 
There  is  an  old  yew  tree.     See  Old  Church-yard  Tree, 

■The. — Anon. 
There  is   an   opinion   that   littleness  muse   necessarily 

be  mean.     See  Napoleon's  Ambition  and  Shelley's 

Doubt.— De  Shon. 
There  is  an   unseen   battle-field.     See   Unseen  Battle- 
field, The. — Anon. 
There  is  another  fact  which  strikes  one  in  looking  at 

these  nests.     See  Birds  Choose  the  Maple,  The. — 

Cooper. 


873 


There  is 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


There  is  beauty  in  the  forest.  See  Beauty  Everywhere. 

—Smith. 
There  is,  between  the  whole  animal  kingdom  on  the 

one  side.     See  same. — Miiller. 
There  is  but  one  gceat  sorrow.     See  Shadow,  The. — 

St9ddard. 
There  is  delight  in  singing,   though  none  hear.     See 

Robert  Browning. — Landor. 
There  is  dignity  in  toil.     See  Dignity  of  Labor,  The. — 

Hall. 
There  is  enjoyment  in  the  pathless  woods.     See  Quiet 

Street,  The. — Anon. 
There  is  ever  a  song  somewhere,  my  dear.     See  Song, 

A.— Riley. 
There  is  going  on  to-day  an  organized  conspiracy.     See 

In  Defence  of  the  Christian  Sunday. — Doyle. 
There  is  hope  in  the  world  for  you  and  me.     See  Look 

Up.— Bolton. 
There  is  in  life  no  blessing  like  affection.     See  Bonds 

of  Affection. — Landon. 
There  is  in  the  fate  of  these  unfortunate  beings  much 

to  awaken  our  sympathy.     See  Indians,  The. — 

Story. 
There  is  Lowell,  who's  striving  Parnassus  to  climb.    See 

Fable  for  Critics,  A  (On  Himself). — Lowell. 
There  is  many  a  rest  in  the  road  of  life.     See  Bright 

Side,  The.— Kidder. 
There  is  much  declamation  about  the  sacredness  of  the 

compact.     See     Keynote     of    Abolition,     The. — 

Garrison. 
There  is  much  in  every  way  in  the  city  of  Florence  to 

excite  the     curiosity.      See  Uses  of   Astronomy, 

The  (Galileo). — Everett. 
There  is  much  that  is  awe-inspiring  about  the  death 

of  soldiers  on  the  battlefield.     See  After  the  Charge 

at  La  Quasina. — Marshall. 
There  is  much  that  may  be  done.     See  So  Much  May 

be  Done. — (Hebrew  Journal.) 
There  is  much  to  be  said  in  favor  of  keeping  a  regular 

account.     See  Boy's  Journal,  A. — Anon. 
There  is  music  in  the  ocean.     See  Music  Everywhere. — 

Mulchinock. 
There  is  naught  that  is  new,  saith  the  preacher.     See 

To  Robert  Louis  Stevenson. — Viel6. 
There  is  no  architect.     See  House,  The.^ — Emerson. 
There  is  no  birdling  in  the  nest  the  breeze  rocks  in  the 

tree.     See  God's  Father  Care. — Harris. 
There  is  no  breeze  upon  the  fern.     See  Lady  of  the 

Lake,  The  (Beal'  an  Dhuine). — Scott. 
There  is  no  charm  in  time,  as  time,  nor  good.     See 

Time  and  its  Changes. — -Bailey. 
There  is  no  dearer  love  of  lost  hours.     See  Idleness.— 

Mitchell. 
There  is  no  death,  the  stars  go  down.     See  There  is  No 

Death. — McCreery. 
There  is  no  doubt  of  the  sovereignty  of  the  United 

States.     See   Sovereignty   of   the   United   States, 

The. — Anon. 
There  is  no  excuse  for  neglect  of  duty  more  common. 

See  I  Forgot. — Anon. 
There  is  no  flock,  however  watched  and  tended.     See 

Resignation. — I<ongfellgw. 
There  is  no  friend  like  a  sister.     See  Good  Sister,  The. — 

Rossetti. 
There  is  no  God!     If  one  should  stand  at  noon.     See 

There  is  no  God. — Almon-ITensley. 
"There  is  no  God,"  the  wicked  saith.     See  Dipsychus 

( Atheism)  .—Clough . 
There  is  no  historic  figure  more  noble  than  that  of  the 

Jewish  lawgiver.     See  Abraham  Lincoln  (Martyr 

President,  The). — Beecher. 
There  is  no  joy  in  the  world  like  you.     See  Baby  Mine. 

— Burdette. 
There    is  no  land  like  England.     See  Foresters,   The 

(King  Richard  in  Sherwood  Forest). — Tennyson. 
There  is    no    laughter    in    the    natural    world.     See 

Laughter  and  Death. — Blunt. 
There  is  no  life  in  which  there  is.     See  Sweet  Peace  is 

Born. — Hahn. 
There  is  no  life  on  earth,  but  being  in  lovel     See  Love. 

— Jonson. 
There  is  no  more  worthv  mission  for  the  poet.     See 

Mission  of  Thomas  Hood,  The. — Anon. 
There  is  no  morrow.     See  same.- — -Preston. 
There  is  no  name  so  sweet  on   earth.     See  Blessed 

Name,  The. — Bethune. 
There  is  no  one  that  dies  whose  death  is  not  momentous. 

See  Horace  Greeley. — Beecher. 
There  is  no  [other!  one  quality  that  so  much  attaches 

man    to    his    fellow-man    as    cheerfulness.     See 

Cheerfulness. — Anon. 
There  is  no  other  place  under  the  heavens.     See  Daddy 

Benson  and  the  Fairies. — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 


There   is   no   other   word   in    the   vocabulary   of   our 

language.     See  Cones  for  the  Camp  Fire  (Camp- 
ing andf  Campers). — Murray. 
There  is  no  permanent   greatness  to  a  nation.     See 

Moral  Law  for  Nation. — Bright. 
There  is  no  pleasure  like  the  pleasure  of  doing  good. 

See  Multitude  of  Littles,  The.— Hall. 
There  is  no  reason  why  the  inventor  of  a  remedy.     See 

She  Meant  Business. — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
There  is  no  rest.     'Tis  but  an  empty  sound.     See  Rest. 

— Anon. 
There  is  no  rhyme  that  is  half  so  sweet.     See  Proem. — 

Cawein. 
There  is  no  roof  i in  all  the  world,  of  palace  or  of  cot. 

See  same. — Anon. 
There    is    no    sadness    so    unutterable.     See  same. — 

Brooke. 
There  is  no  social  disease  so  widespread.     See  Piano 

Mania,  The. — Croly. 
There  is  no  summer  ere  the  swallows  come.     See  Love's 

Meinie. — Bourdillon. 
There  is  no  sunshine  that  hath  not  its  shade.     See 

Compensation. — Anon. 
There  is  no  time  like  the  old  time,  when  you  and  I 

were  young.     See  No  Time  Like  the  Old  Time. — 

Anon. 
There  is  no  use  in  talking.     Say  what  you  will.     See 

Love  in  a  Cottage. — Anon. 
There  is  no  virtue  without  a  characteristic  beauty. 

See  Good  Son,  The. — Dana. 
There  is  no  worldly  pleasure  here  below.     See  On  Love. 

— Ayton. 
There  is  none,  O,  none   but   you.     See  same. — Cam- 
pion. 
There  is  not,  and  there  never  was  on  this  earth.     See 

Antiquity  of  the  Roman  Catholic  Church,  The. — 

Macaulay. 
There  is  not  in  all  the  north  countrie.     See  Burial  of 

the  Old  Flag,  The.— Barr. 
There  is  not  in  the  [ivr.  this]  wide  world  a  valley  so 

sweet.     See  Meeting  of  the  Waters,  The.- — Moore. 
There  is  nothing  beautiful,  sweet,  or  grand  in  life,  but 

in  its  mysteries.     See  Mysteries  of  Life,  The. — 

Chateaubriand. 
There  is  nothing  more  beautiful  and  interesting  than 

to  watch  the  gradual  development.     See  Juvenile 

Inquisitor,  A. — Dane. 
There  is  nothing  new  under  the   sun.     See  same. — 

Gilder. 
There  is  nothing  nicer  for  an  Exhibition,  or  other  like 

occasion.     See  Floral  Guide,  The. — Olcott. 
There   is   nothing   so    scarce   as   good    nonsense.     See 

Uncle  Esek's  Wisdom. — (Century  Magazine.) 
"There  is  nothing  that  adds  so  much  to  the  enjoyment 

of  home."     See  Mrs.   Brindle's  Music   Lesson.— r 

Anon. 
There  is  nothing  which  the  adversaries-of  improvement 

are  more  wont  to  make  themselves  merry  with. 

See  Teachers  of  Mankind,  The. — Brougham. 
There  is  now  no  nation  which  is  not  familiar  with  the 

Stars  and  Stripes.     See  Stars  and  Stripes,  The. — 

Anon. 
There  is  one  accomplishment,  in  particular,  which  I 

would  earnestly  recommend  to  you.     See  Good 

Reading. — Hart. 
There  is  one  broad  proposition  [.senators,!  on  which  I 

stand.     See  Against  Flogging  in  the  Navy  (Against 

Whipping  in  the  Navy). — Stockton. 
There  is  one  grand  and  sublime  ceremony,  the  Miserere 

of  St.  Peter.     See  Miserere  of  St.  Peter's  Church 

at  Rome,  The. — Castelar. 
There  is  one  great  historic  fact  which  in  my  sober 

judgment.     See  Abolition  of  African   Slavery. — 

Haygood. 
There  is  one  lady  in  Indianapolis.     See  Mrs.  McDuflFy 

on  Baseball. —  (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
There  is  one  man,  of  great  abilities.     See  Irish  Aliens 

and  English  Victories. — Sheil. 
There  is  one  part  of  our  mental  nature  which,  it  has 

occurred  to  me.     See  Culture  of  the  Imagination, 

The. — Anon. 
There  is  one  respect  in  which  men  differ.     See  Strong 

Heart,  The. — Chapin. 
There  is  one  spot  for  which  my  soul  will  yearn.     See 

same.- — Benton. 
There  is  one  spot  on  all  the  earth.     See  Our  Childhood's 

Home.— R.  S. 
There  is  one  thing  in  the  wide  universe  which  is  really 

valuable.     See  same. — Todd. 
There   is   only   one   cure   for  the   evils  which   newly 

acquired  freedom  produces.      See  Milton  (Men  al- 
ways Fit  for  Freedom). — Macaulay. 


874 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


There  sat 


There  is  perhaps  no  pursuit  which  leads  the  mind  more 

directly.     See  Study  of  Trees  and  Flowers,  The. — 

Chambers. 
There  is  rain  upon  the  window.     See  Home  Song. — 

Scott. 
There  is  right  at  the  west  side  of  Itaille.     <See  Canter- 
bury Tales,  The  (Griselda). — Chaucer. 
There  is  room  in  this  our  country  but  for  one  flag.     See 

But  One  Flag  for  Our  Country. — Holstein. 
There    is    sad    news    from    Genoa.     See    Eulogy    on 

O  'Connell . — Seward . 
There  is   something  bright   and   precious.     See  Great 

Treasure,  A. — Denton. 
There  is  something  cordial  in  a  fat  man.     See  Falstaff. 

—Giles. 
There  is  something  in  the  Autumn  that  is  native  to  my 

blood.     See  Vagabond  Song,  A. — Carman. 
There  is  something  in  the  word  home.     See  Home.— 

Anon. 
There  is  something  most  refreshing.     See  Visit  to  the 

Sea,  A. — Troland. 
There  is  something  on  earth  for  the  children  to  do.     See 

Something  to  Do. — Anon. 
There  is  something  pathetic  in  the  life  of  every  man. 

See  True  Heart,  A.     ( Youth's  Companion.) 
There  is  something,  sir,  peculiarly  unjust  in  bounding 

the  term  of  an  author's  property.     See  Extension 

of  the  Term  of  Copyright. — Talfourd. 
There  is  something  sustaining  in  the  very  agitation. 

See  Mill  on  the  Floss,  The  ("There  is  something," 

etc.;. — Eliot. 
There  is  something  that  fills  me  with  wonder.     See 

Difficult  Problem,  A. — Thurston. 
There    is    strange    music    in    the    stirring    wind.     See 

November,  1793. — Bowles. 
There  is  strength  for  a  school  as  there  is  for  a  state. 

See  Inaugural  Address. — Anon. 
There   is   such   power   even   in   smallest   things.     See 

Sonnets  in  Shadow. — Bates. 
There  is  sweet  music  here  that  softer  falls.     See  Lotos- 

eater.ii.  The  (Choric  Song).— Tennyson. 
There  is  the  hat.     See  Only  the  Clothes  She  Wore. — 

Shepherd. 
There  is  the  national  flag.     He  must  be  cold  indeed. 

See  Flag  of  the  Union,  The  (Flag  of  our  Country, 

The).— Winthrop. 
"There   is   work,    good   man,   for  you  to-day!"     See 

Might  of  Love,  The. — Cary. 
There !     It  is  all  ready.     See  Cats. — Anon. 
There  it  lies,  a  little  shoe.     See  Little  Shoe,  A. — Anon. 
There  it  lies  before  you,  that  moving  panorama.     See 

Midnight  in  London. — Jones-Foster. 
There!     I've   got   my   morning   work   all   done.     See 

After  a  Fa.shion. — Dufifey. 
There!     I've   lost   my   hat   getting   in.     See   Cassius' 

Whistle. — Meyers. 
There  iz  one  man  in  this  basement  world.     See  Billings 

on  "The  District  Schoolmaster." — Shaw. 
There!     John,  hitch  Dobbin  to  the  post;  come  near  me 

and  sit  down.     See  There's  Danger  in  the  Town.— 

Yates. 
There  lay  upon  the  ocean's  shore.     See  Finding  of  the 

Lyre,  The. — Lowell. 
There  lies  a  little  city  [tm-.  little  omitted]  in  the  hills. 

See  Home. — Sill. 
There  lies  a  little  city  leagues  away.     See  Deserted 

City,  The.— Roberts. 
There  lies  a  lone  isle  in  the  tropic  seas.     See  Easter 

Island. — Scott. 
There,  like  a  rich  and  golden  pyramid.     See  To  the 

Countess  of  Rutland. — Jonson. 
There,  like  ebon  statues  in  the  starlight,   stood  the 

Black  Brigade.     See  Reason  Why,  The. — Prickett. 
There!  little  girl;  don't  cry!     See  Life  Lesson,  A. — 

Riley. 
There  lived  a  little  laddie  once.     See  It  wasn't  Me! — • 

Richards. 
There  lived  a  man  named  Ferguson.     See  Suicidal  Cat, 

The. — Anon. 
There  lived  a  parson,  as  we're  told.     See  Loud  Call, 

The. — Anon. 
There  lived  a  shining  bumble-bee.     See  Boy  and  Bee. 

— Richards. 
There   lived   a   wife   at    Usher's   Well.     See   Wife   of 

Usher's  Well,  The. — Anon. 
There  lived  a  young  man  called  Mackay.     See  Fate  of 

Mackay,  "The. — Little. 
There  lived  and  flourished  long  ago,  in  famous  Athens- 
town.     See    Icarus;   or.  The    Peril    of    Borrowed 

Plumes. — Saxe. 
There  lived,  as  Fame  reports,  in  days  of  yore.     See . 

Monsieur  Tonson. — Taylor. 


There  lived  in  Florence,  many  years  ago.     See  Gonello. 

— Anon. 
There  lived  in  France,  in  days  not  long  now  dead.     See 

Galley-flave,  The. — Abbey. 
There  lives  within  our  land  to-day  a  greater  slaver. 

See  New  Slavery,  The. — Anon. 
There  may  be  comrades  in  this  world.     See  My  Pipe 

and  I. — Buckley. 
There,   Mr.   Caudle,   I  hope  you're  in  a  little  better 

temper.     See    Mrs.    Caudle's    Lecture    on    Shirt 

Buttons. — Jerrold. 
There  must  be  something  after  all  this  woe.     See    At 

the  Last.— Bensee. 
There,  my  composition  is  finished  at  last.     See  Slang. — 

Anon. 
There,  my  dear,  I  think  that  will  do.     See  All  that 

Glitters  is  not  Gold. — Frost. 
There!     My  tragedy  is  complete.     The  last  line  is  the 

best.     See  Writing  a  Tragedy. — Anon. 
There  needs  no  other  charm,  nor  conjurer.     See  Fear. — 

Butler. 
"There    never  was    a    grandma    half  so   good!"     See 

Bamboozling  Grandma. — Anon. 
There  never  was  a  specimen  of  manhood  so  rich.     See 

David,  King  of  Israel. — Irving. 
There  never  was,  in  any  age  or  nation,  a  body  of  men. 

See  First  American  Congress,  The. — Maxcy. 
There  never  were  such  radiant  noons.     See  Then  and 

Now." — Rodd. 
There!  now  Betsey,  don't  be  long!     See  Martin  Chuzzle- 

wit  (Quarrel  of  Sairey  Gamp  and  Betsey  Prig). — 

Dickens. 
There  now,  my  missus  is  gone  out,  the  cook  is  busy.    See 

Stage  Struck  Darkey,  The. — Anon. 
There  now,   she's  asleep!     Dear   me!   dear  me!     See 

Almost  a  Mormon. — Wayne. 
There   often   wanders   one,    whom   better   days.     See 

Task,  The  (Crazy  Kate.  The  Gypsies). — Cowper. 
"There,  on  the  left!"  said  the  colonel;  the  battle  had 

shuddered    and    faded    away.     See   Marthy    Vir- 
ginia's Hand. — Lathrop. 
There  once  lived  a  creature — if  I've  not  been  deceived. 

See  CJossip. — Cooper. 
There   once  lived   in   the  famed  town   of  Hull.     See 

Quart  of  Milk,  A. — Anon. 
There  once  lived  one  Asa  Stokes.     See  Deacon  Stokes. 

— Quilp. 
There  once  was  a  bird  that  lived  up  in  a  tree.     See 

"Fiddle-dee-dee." — Field. 
There   once   was   a   blundering,    ignorant    King.     See 

King  and  the  Spelling  Book,  The. — Denton. 
There  once  was  a  boy,  but  his  name  I  forget.     See 

Peevish  Boy,  A. — Kavanaugh. 
There  once  was  a  founder  who  trafficked  in  bells.     See 

Lesson  from  a  Bell,  A. — Smith. 
There  once  was  a  kitten   who  wished  that  he.     See 

Kitten  that  Never  Grew  Old,  The. — Anon. 
There  once  was  a  maiden.     See  Bessie's  Troubles. — 

Anon. 
There  once  was  a  man  who  always  would  go.     See 

Word  of  Warning,  A. — Denton. 
There  once  was  a  period,  when,  why,  or  where.     See 

Scientific  Genesis,  The. — Anon. 
There  once  was  a  time  when,  as  old  songs  prove  it.     See 

Wonderful  Country,  The.— O'Reilly. 
There  once  was  a  toper — I'll  not  tell  his  name.     See 

There  Once  was  a  Toper. — Anon. 
There  once  was  a  woman,  and  what  do  you  think.     See 

Victuals  and  Drink. — Whitney. 
There  once  was  an  old  man  of  Lyme.     See  same. — 

Monkhouse. 
There  once  were  two  knights  full  of  mettle  and  merit. 

See  Invincibles,  The. — Goodale. 
There  our  murdered  brother  lies.     See  Wake  of  William 

Orr,  The. — Drennan. 
There,  out  by  the  sand-heap,  his  barrow  fast  filling. 

See  Mother's  Hired  Man. — Baker. 
There  passed  a  weary  time.     See  Rime  of  the  Ancient 

Mariner,  The  (Phantom  Ship,  The). — Coleridge. 
There  reigned  a  king  in  Yvetot.     See  King  of  Yvetot, 

The. — Beranger. 
There  resteth  to  Servia  a  glory.     See  Battle  of  Kossovo, 

The.— Meredith. 
There  rolls  the  deep  where  grew  the  tree.     See  In  Me- 

moriam  ("There  rolls,"  etc.). — Tennyson. 
There  sat  a  little  weary  bird.     See  Sympathy. — Bates. 
There  sat  an  old  man  on  a  rock.     See  Too  Late. — 

Ludlow. 
There  sat  one  day  in  quiet.     See  Happiest  Land,  The. — 

Longrfellow. 
There  sat  two  glasses,  filled  to  the  brim.     See  Two 

Glasses,  The. — Wilcox. 


875 


There  sat 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


There  sat  two  kings  upon  Orkadal.     <See'Zwei  Konige 

auf  Orkadal. — Baker. 
There  shall  be  no  more  sea;  no  wild  winds  bringing. 

See  No  More  Sea. — Anon. 
There  she  goes  up  the  street  with  her  book  in  her  hand. 

See  Martin's  Puzzle. — Meredith. 
There  she  goes,  with  schemes  proli6c  for  the  heathen- 

isled    Pacific.     See    Maiden    Missionary,    The. — 

Pastnor. 
There  she  lies  at  her  moorings.     See  Alec.  Dunham's 

Boat.— Webb. 
There  she  sees  a   damsel    bright.     See   Christabel. — 

Coleridge. 
There  shines  the  morning  star!     See  Sonnet. — Stevens. 
"There,  Simmons,  you  blockhead!     Why  didn't  you 

trot  that  old  woman  aboard  her  train?"     See  On 

the  Other  Train. — Anon. 
There,    Sir    Anthony,    there    stands    the    deliberate 

simpleton.     See  Rivals,  The. — Sheridan. 
There  sits  he  with  the  wits  around   his  chair.     See 

Dryden. — Betts. 
There  sitteth  a  dove,  so  white  and  fair.     See  Swedish 

Mother's  Hymn. — Bremer. 
There  smiled  the  smooth  Divine,  unused  to  wound. 

See  Smooth  Divine,  The. — Dwight. 
There,  speak  in  whispers;  fold  me  to  thy  heart.     See 

same. — Anon. 
There  sprang  a  tree  of  deadly  name.     See  Upas-tree, 

The. — Sigourney. 
There   stands  a  city, — neither  large  nor  small.     See 

Ghost,  The. — Barham. 
There  stands  a  tree.     See  Three  Trees,  The. — Murray. 
There  stood  a  church   that   men  would  praise.     See 

Virgin  with  the  Bells,  The. — Dobson. 
There   stood   a   young  form  in   the  mild.     See   Nola 

Kozmo. — Baine. 
There    stood    an    unsold    captive    in    the    mart.     See 

Parrhasius. — Willis. 
There  studious  let  me  sit.      See  Seasons,  The:  Winter. 

— Thomson . 
There  sunk  the  greatest,  nor  the  worst  of  men.     See 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Napoleon). — Byron. 
There  surely  is  a  gold  mine  somewhere  underneath  the 

grass.     See  Dandelions. — Anon. 
There  swells  a  cry,  as    thunders    crash.     See    Guard 

on  the  Rhine,  The.- — Schnechenburger. 
There,  the  buttons  are  all  on.     See  Private  Rehearsal, 

A, — Monologue,  A. — -Locke. 
There    the    moon    leans    out    and    blesses.     See   In    a 

September  Night. — Home. 
There    the    most    daintie    paradise    on    ground.     See 

Faerie    Queene,    The    (Bower   of    Bliss,    The). — 

Spenser. 
There  the  voluntuous  nightingales.     See  Prometheus 

Unb-^und  (Semichorus  II.).— Shelley. 
There  the  wrinkled  old  Nokomis.     See  Song  of  Hiawa- 
tha, The  (Hiawatha's  Childhood). — Longfellow. 
"There,  there,  there."    See  Magruder's  Lullaby. — Anon. 
There — there  they  are!     There  are  the  horses!     See 

Ladybird's  Race. — Rae-Brown. 
There!     There's  the  morning  mail  of  an  obscure  minor 

poet.     See  Morning's  Mail,  A. — Cooke. 
There  they  are,  my  fifty  men  and  women.     See  One 

Word  More. — Browning. 
There,   through   the   long,   long   summer  hours.     See 

.Tune. — Bryant. 
There  used  to  be  a  family  living  uptown  [or  on  the 

north  side].     See  Facial  Family,  The. — Anon. 
There  was  a  beautiful  bakeshop  smell  in  the  kitchen. 

See  Pete  Ivory's  Ordeal. — Anon. 
There  was  a  boy  once  who  had  been  brought  up  under 

the     "sheltered     life."     See     Thrown     Away.— 

Kipling. 
There  was  a  Boy;  ye  knew  him  well,  ye  cliffs.     See 

There  was  a  Boy. — Wordsworth. 
There  was  a  captain-general  who  ruled  in  Vera  Cruz. 

See  El  C^apitan-General. — Leland. 
There  was  a  certain  king.     See  King  and  the  Locusts, 

The. — Anon. 
There  was  a  /child  went  forth  every  day.     See  There 

was  a  Child  Went  Forth. — Whitman. 
There  was  a  cunning  spider  once.     See  Spider's  Parlor, 

The. — Richards. 
There   was   a   curious   quiet   for  a   space.     See   Heat 

Lightning. — Riley. 
There  was  a  dove  with  wings  of  green.     See  Green 

Dove  and  the  Raven,  The. — .Joyce. 
There  was  a  famous  washing  day,  its  action  near  the 

Hub.     See     George     Birthington's     Washday. — 

Homer. 
There  was  a  feast  that  night.     See  Banquet,  The. — 

Landon. 


There  was  a  feller  here  once  by  the  name  of  Jim  Smiley. 

See  Celebrated  Jumping  Frog,  The. — Mark  Twain. 
There  was  a   female  millinery  establishment  on  the 

third  floor.     See  Calmest  of  her  Sex,  The. — Kerr. 
There  was  a  fern  on  the  mountain,  and  moss  on  the 

moor.     See  Fern  and  the  Moss,  The. — Cook. 
There  was  a  frog  swum  in  the  lake.     See  There   was  a 

Frog.— Anon. 
There  was  a  gather'd  stillness  in  the  room.     See  My 

Mother. — Scott. 
There  was  a  gathering  a  short  time  ago  at  a  neat  house 

in  an  Ohio  village.     See  Last  of  the  Choir,  The. — 

Kimball. 
There  was  a  gay  damsel  of  Lynn.     See  same. — Anon. 
There  was  a  gay  maiden  lived  down  by  the  mill.     See 

Ferry,  The. — Boker. 
There  was  a  general  air  of  festive   preparation.     See 

Friend  at  Court,  A. — Morton. 
There  was  a  girl  once  in  our  class.     See  Smart  Girl,  A. — 

Kavanaugh. 
There  was  a  good  deal  of  pleasant  gossip  about  old 

Captain  "Hurricane"  Jones.     See  Captain  Hurri- 
cane Jones  on  the  Miracles. — 'Clemens. 
There  was  a  grand  time  over  Buck  Fanshaw  when  he 

died.     See  Roughing  It  (Buck  Fanshaw's  Funeral). 

— Clemens. 
There  was  a  holy  hermit.      See  Spanish  Gypsy,   The 

(Hermit,  The).— Eliot. 
There  was  a  jolly  miller  once  lived  on  the  river  Dee. 

See  There  was  a  Jolly  Miller. — Bickerstaffe. 
There  was  a  jovial  beggar.     See  Jovial  Beggar,  The. — 

Anon. 
There  was  a  jovial  blade.     See  Dumb  Wife,  The. — 

Kavanaugh. 
There  was  a  king  in  Thule.     See  Faust  (King  of  Thule, 

The).— Goethe. 
There  was  a  king   that   much   might.     See   Confessio 

Amantis  (Nebuchadnezzar). — Gower. 
There    was    a    kingdom    known    as    the    Mind.     See 

Barbarous  Chief,  The. — Wilcox. 
There  was  a  knight  and  a  lady  bright.     See  Broomfield 

Hill,  The.— Anon. 
There  was  a  Knight  of  Bethlehem.     See  Song  of  Saint 

Francis,  A. — Maugham. 
There  was  a  knight  was  drunk  with  wine.     See  Baffled 

Knight,  The;  or,  Lady's  Policy. — Anon. 
There  was  a  lady  all  skin  and  bone.     See  Gay  Lady 

that  Went  to  Church,  The.— Anon. 
There  was  a  lady  liv'd  at  Leigh.     See  Irishman  and 

the  Lady,  The. — Maginn. 
There  was  a  land  where  lived  no  violets.     See  Violets, 

The. — Crane. 
There  was  a  laughing  devil  in  his  sneer.     See  Corsair, 

The.— Byron. 
There  was  a  little  boy  and  a  little  girl.     See  Nursery 

Rhymes,  V. — Anon. 
There  was  a  little  boy  whom  his  mother  did  employ. 

See  Johnny-jump-up. — Anon. 
There  was  a  little  boy,  with  two  little  eyes.     See  There 

was  a  Little  Boy. — Anon. 
There  was  a  little  busy  bee.     See  Drops  of  Honey. — 

Richards. 
There  was  a  little  comet  who  lived  near  the  Milky  Way. 

See  Naughty  Little  Comet,  A. — Wilcox. 
There  was  a  little  fellow  once.     See  Little  Fisherman, 

The.— Taylor. 
There  was  a  little  frogie.     See  Frogie  on  the  Log. — 

Richards. 
There  was  a  little  girl  and  s'he  had  a  little  curl.     See 

There  was  a  Ivittle  Girl.— Longfellow. 
There  was  a  little  girl,  she  wore  a  little  hood.     See 

.Temima. — Anon. 
There  was  a  little  grasshopper.     See  Conceited  Grass- 
hopper, The. — A-'on. 
There  was  a  little  laddie  once.     See  Awful  Boy,  An. — 

Richards. 
There  was  a  little  Guinea-pig.     See  Guinea-pig,  The. — 

Anon. 
There  was  a  little  Prince  of  Spain.     See  Prince's  Bow 

and  Arrow,  The. — Fqss. 
There  was  a  little  tree-toad  once.     See  Tree-toad  on 

the  Limb,  The.— Richards. 
There  was  a  maid,  richly  array'd.     See  Blancheflour 

and  Jelly florice. — Anon. 
There  was  a  maid  came  out  of  Kent.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
There  was  a  maiden  simple.    See  Good  for  Evil. — Anon. 
There  was  a  man,  a  Roman   soldier,  for  some  daring 

deed.         See  Roman  Soldier  at  the  Destruction 

of  Herculaneum,  The. — Atherstone. 
There  was  a  man  in  Arkansaw.     See  Great  Fit,  A. — 

Kerr. 


876 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


There  was 


There  was   a   man,   it   was   said   one   time.     See   Two 

Sinners. — Wilcox. 
There  was  a  man  named  Ferguson.     See  Suicidal  Cat, 

The. — Anon. 
There  was  a  man  named  Tom  O'Connor.     See  Tom 

O'Connor's  Cat. — -Anon. 
There  was  a  man,  so  legend  says.     See  History,  A. — ■ 

Anon. 
There  was  a  man  who  watched  the  river  flow.     See 

Cranes  of  Ibycus,  The. — Lazarus. 
There  was  a  may,  and  a  weel-fared  may.     See  Kath- 
arine Janfarie. — Anon. 
There  wa.s  a  monkey  climbed  up  a  tree.     See  There 

was  a  monkey. — Anon. 
There  was    a    negro    preacher,     T     have    heard.     See 

Learned  Negro,  The. — iCongreaationiliat.') 
There  was  a  parlor  in  the  house,  a  room.     See  "Best 

Room,"  'The. — Holmes. 
There    was    a    poor    old    man.     See     Brothers    and  a 

Sermon  (Old  Fisherman's  Prayer.  The). — Ingelow. 
There  was  a  pretty  dandelion.     See  Dandelion's  Hair. 

— Anon. 
There  was  a  rich  lord,   and  he  lived   in   Forfar.     See 

Bonny  Annie. — Anon. 
There  was  a  roaring  in  the  wind  all  night.     See  Resolu- 
tion and  Independence. — Wordsworth. 
There  was  a  rose-bush  in  a  garden  growing.     See  Rose- 
bush, The. — Anon. 
There  was  a  rose-tree  grew  so  high.     See  White  Roses. 

— ^Fabbri. 
There  was  a  rover  from  a  western  shore.     See  Mother 

England. — Thomas. 
There  was  a  run  on  the  Sandhill  and  District  Bank. 

See  How  they  Stopped  the  Run. — Hope. 
There  was  a  Russian  came  over  the  sea.     See  Russian 

and  "Turk. — Anon. 
There  was  a  slight  blaze  on  the  roof  of  a  house  on  Rus- 
sell   Street.     See    "Two    ToUar?"— (Detroit    Free 

Press.) 
There  was  a  social  gathering  at  the  residence  of  Mr. 

Wigglesworth.     See  Party  at  Mr.  Wigglesworth's, 

A. — (Rockland  Courier.) 
There  was  a   social  gathering  in   Rockland  the  other 

evening.     See    Music    Hath    Charms. — (Rockland 

Courier  Gazette.) 
There  was  a  sound   of  revelry   by  night.      See  Chiide 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Waterloo). — Byron. 
There  was  a    South    of     secession     and     slavery   [xvr. 

slavery  and  secession] — that  South  is  dead.     See 

New  South,  The.— Grady. 
There  was  a  time,  betwixt  the  days.     See  When  Girls 

Wore  Calico. — Whitney. 
There  was  a  time,  in  the  better  days  of  the  Republic. 

See  Piirse  and  the  Sword,  The. — Calhoun. 
There  was   a  time  on   this  fair  continent.     See  Un- 
tamed.— Mair. 
There  was  a  time,  Sir,  which  it  may  be  fit  sometimes  to 

revive.     See  Barbarism  of  our  British  Ancestors. 

—Pitt. 
There  was  a  time,  so  ancient  records  tell.     See  Philip 

van  Artevelde  (Revolutions) ^^Taylor. 
There  was  a  time  when  death  and   I.     See  Beyond 

Recall. — Bradley. 
There  was  a  time,  when  meadow,  grove  and  stream. 

See  Ode:  Intimations  of  Immortality  from  Recol- 
lections of  Early  Childhood. — Wordsworth. 
There  was  [a]  tumult  in  the  city.     See  Independence 

Bell— July  4,  1776.— Anon. 
There  was  [or  were]  a  watermillion.     See  Watermillion, 

The. — Anon. 
There  was  a  well-to-do  Irishman  up  on  O'Fallon  Street. 

See  Maloney's  Will. — Anon. 
There  was  a  young  lady  of  Niger.     See  same. — Anon. 
There  was  a  young  maid  who  said,  "Why."     See  same. 

— Anon. 
There  was  a  young  man  of  Cohoes.     See  same. — Bur- 

dette. 
There  was  a  young  man  who  was  bitten.     See  same. — 

Parke. 
There  was  a  youth  who  kept  a  store.     See  Alexander. — 

Geddes. 
There  was  a  youthe,  and  a  well-beloved  youthe.     See 

Bailiff's  Daughter  of  Islington,  The. — Anon. 
There  was  an  air  of  desolation  about  the  grim  old  State 

House.     See  Heart  of  Old  Hickory,  The. — Drom- 

goole. 
There  was  an  ape  in  the  days  that  were  earlier.     See 

Darwin. — Collins. 
There  was  an  honest  fisherman.     See  Cold-water  Man, 

The.— Saxe. 
There  was  an  old  chap  in  the  west  coimtry.     See  King 

and  the  Countryman,  The. — Anon. 


There  was  an  old  decanter,  and  its  mouth  was  gaping 

wide.     See  Song  of  the  Decanter. — Anon. 
There  was  an  old  lady  all  dressed  in  silk.     See  Differ- 
ence, The. — Anon. 
There  was  an  old  man    lived  out  in  the  wood.     See 

Green  Broom. — Anon. 
There  was  an  old  man  who  lived  in  the  [or  a]  wood  [or 

woods].     See  Old  Man  in  the  Wood,  The. — Anon. 
There  was  an  old  man   who  lived  on  a  common.     See 

Wonderful  Old  Man,  The — Anon. 
There  was  an  old  person  of  Ware.     See  Limericks  — 

Lear. 
There  was   an   old   shoemaker,   sturdy   as   steel.     See 

Pegging  Away. — Anon. 
There   was  an  old  woman,   as   I've  heard    tell.     See 

Nursery  Rhymes,  III. — Anon. 
There  was  an   old   woman  in   Fife.     See  Funny  Old 

Woman,  A. — Denton. 
There  was  an  old  woman  named  Barbara  Blue.     See 

Barbara  Blue. — Cary. 
There  was  an  old  woman  who  always  was  tired.     See 

Tired  Old  Woman,  The.— Anon. 
There  was  an  old  woman  who  lived  in  a  shoe.     See  Big 

Shoe,  The. — Anon. 
There  was  anguish  in  the  faces  of  those  who  bent  over 

the  little  white  bed.     See  "Help  Me  Across,  Papa." 

— Anon. 
There  was    Bijah,     Ben    an'    Bart.     See    He    Didn't 

Amount  to  Shucks. — Foss. 
There  was  but  a  sparse  congregation.     See  Story  of 

Little  Moses,  The.— Hall. 
There  was  certainly  something  going  on  out  under  the 

locusts.     See  Uncle  Isrul's  Call. — Stanley. 
There  was  ease  in  Casey's  manner  as  he  stepped  into 

his   place.     See   Casey   at   the   Bat. — Thayer   [or 

Murphy]. 
There  was   feasting   in   the   hall.     See   King   Eklwin's 

Feast . — Chad  wick . 
There  was  growling  and  grumbling  all  over  the  world. 

See  "Confusion  Worse  Confounded." — Anon. 
There  was   heard   the   sound   of   a   coming   foe.     See 

Bended  Bow,  The. — Hemans. 
There  was  in  Charles  Sumner  as  a  public  man,  a  pecu- 
liar power  of  fascination.     See  Eulogy  on  Charles 

Sumner. — Schurz. 
There  was  in  the  breast  of  Washington  one  sentiment 

so  deeply    felt.     See    Character    of    Wa.'<hington, 

The  (Washington  and  the  Union). — Webster. 
There  was  joy  in  the  ship  as  she  furrowed  the  foam. 

See  Ship  on  Fire,  The. — Mackay. 
There  was  just  room  on  the  teacher's  little  platform. 

See    Spelling-match    at    Grande    Pointe,    'The. — 

Cable. 
There  was    monie    a    braw    noble.     See    Glenlogie.— 

Anon. 
There  was  music  on  the  midnight.     See  Coronation  of 

Inez  De  Castro,  The. — Hemans. 
There  was  never  a  leaf  on  bush  or  tree.     See  Vision  of 

Sir  Launfal,  The  (January). — Lowell. 
There  was  no  day  in   all  the  year  that   Mr.   Barnard 

loved  so  well  as  Christmas.     See  Christmas  Rose, 

The. — Morton. 
There  was  no  fierceness  in  the  eyes  of  those  men  now. 

See  Foes  United  in  Death. — Anon. 
There  was  no  sound  save,  faintly  heard.     See  Solitude. 

— E.  R.  G. 
There  was  no  west,  there  was  no  east.     See  Demon  of 

the  Gibbet,  The.— O'Brien. 
There  was  (not  certaine  when)   a  certaine  preacher. 

See  Of  a  Certaine  Man. — Harrington. 
There  was  not  very  much  on  the  table — in  fact.     See 

Swipesy's  Christmas  Dinner. — Anon. 
There  was   once   a  boat   on    a    billow.     See   Songs  of 

Seven  (Seven  Times  Seven). — Ingelow. 
There  was  once  a  boy,  an  aggrieved,   unappreciated 

boy.     See  Runaway  Boy,  The. — Riley. 
There  was  once  a  child,  and  he  strolled  about  a  good 

deal.     See  Child's  Dream  of  a  Star,  A. — Dickens. 
There  was  once  a   just  and   most   Christian   king  of 

Britain.     See  Saint  Ursula. — Ruskin. 
There  was  once  a  little  animal.     See  Similar  Cases.— 

Stetson. 
There  was   once   a'  little   child.     See   Self   Conceit.^ 

Pomeroy. 
There  was  once  a  little  flower  growing  where  weeds 

were  tall.     See  Flower  Mission,  The. — Anon. 
There  was  once  a  little  man,  and  his  rod  and  line  he 

took.     See  Usual  Way,  The. — Weatherly. 
There  was   once   a   perfectly   modern   girl.     See   Per- 
fectly Awfully,  I,ovely  Story,  A. — Anon. 
There  was    once    a    pretty  chicken.      See  Advice. — 

Anon. 


877 


There  was 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


There  was  once  a  school.     See  Misses  at  School,  The. 

— Anon. 
There  was  once  an  ancient  city.     See  Legend  of  St. 

Freda,  The.— Hobart. 
There  was  once't  upmi  a  time.     Sec  Story  of  the  Little 

Rid  Hin.  The  —  [^Rivrrside  Magazine.) 
There  was  one  thing  Piggy  Pennington  could  not  do. 

See  King  of  Boyville,  The. — White. 
There  was  only  one  vacant  chair  in  a  down-town  bar- 
ber-shop.    See  Dimple  and  Dumpling. — Davies. 
There  was  plenty  of  gold  in  his  coffer  last  week.     See 

Man  in  the  Moon  and  T,  The. — Esprit. 
There  was  something  so  unusual  in  the  singing  of  the 

choir.     See  Trouble  in  the  Choir. — -Worden. 
There  was  something  very  beautiful  in  that  picture. 

See  Hero  Woman,  The. — -Lippard. 
There  was  strife  'twixt  Rome  and  .\lba.     See  Hora- 

tii  and  the  (^uriatii.  The. — Sulpee. 
There  was   [tor.   were  or  went]  three   kings    into    the 

East.     See  John  Barleycorn. — Burns. 
There  was  three  ladies  play'd  at  the  ba'.     See  Cruel 

Brother,  The. — Anon. 
There  was  tumult  [or  a  tumult]  in  the  city.     See  In- 
dependence Bell — .July  4,  1776. — Anon. 
There  was  twa  sisters  in  a  bow'r.     See  Twa  Sisters, 

The. — Anon. 
There  wasn't  a  better  doctor.     See  Our  Old  Doctor. — 

Anon. 
There  we  aro!     Some  nice  cold  ham.     See  Best  Policy, 

The.— Wayne. 
There  went  a  rider  on  a  roan.     See  Riddler,  The. — 

Leland. 
There  went    a    stranger    child      See    Strange    Child's 

Christmas,  The. — Anon. 
There  went  an  incense  through  the  land  one  night.     See 

Monk's  Song. — Dobell. 
There  were  [or  wasl  a  waterraillion.     See  Watermillion, 

The. — Anon. 
There  were  eight  hundred  men  at  Kehoe's  Bar.     See 

How  the  Church  was  Built  at  Kehoe's  Bar. — Ben- 
nett. 
There  were  ferns  on  the  mountain,  and  moss  on  the 

moor.     See  Fern  and  the  Moss,  The. — Cook. 
There  were   four   lads   of   us   an'    a   lattle   lass.     See 

Charlie. — Clark. 
There  were  four  little  boys  .     See  Taking  Aim. — Anon. 
There  were  four  of  us  about  that  bed.     See  Shameful 

Death. — Morris. 
There  were  many  women  during  the  French  Revolu- 
tion.    See  Tale  of  Two  Cities,  A  (Death  of  Mme. 

Defarge,  The). — -Dickens. 
There  were  never  two  people  exactly  alike.     See  Bash- 
ful Boys'  Piece,  The. — Anon. 
There  were    ninety    and    nine    that    safely    lay.     See 

Ninety  and  Nine,  The.^ — Clephane. 
There  were  only  sixty  of  us  cavalry  to  guard  a  train  of 

thirty   wagons.     See   Face  of  a  Demon,   The. — 

Quad. 
There  were  seven  fishers,  with  nets  in  their  hands.     See 

Fire  by  the  Sea,  The.— Cary. 
There  were  six  little  crows  so  terribly  thin.     See  Piggy 

and  the  Crows. — Anon. 
There  were  six  little  girls  in  the  Sunday-school  class. 

See  Bridget's  Mission  Jug. — Anon. 
There  were    sounds    of    mirth    and    joyousness.     See 

Revellers,  The. — Anon. 
There  were  thirty  million  English  who  talked  of  Eng- 
land's might.     See  Last  of  the  Light  Brigade,  The. 

— Kipling. 
There  were  three  demons  came  out  of  the  deep.     See 

Three  Fiends,  The.— Burdette. 
There  were  three  jovial  huntsmen.  ■  See  Three  Jovial 

Huntsmen.  — -Anon. 
There    were    three    jovial    Welshmen.     See    Nursery 

Rhymes.  IT. 
There  were   three   maidens   who    loved    a   king.     See 

Three  Loves. — Hooper. 
There  were   three   ravens  sat   on   a  tree.     See  Three 

Ravens,  The. — Anon. 
There   were    three    sailors    of   [tw.   in]    Bristol    City. 

See  Little  Billee. — Thackeray. 
There  were  three  young  maids  of  liCe.     See  Maids  of 

Lee,  The.— Weatherly. 
There  were  three  young  men  of  Ware.     See  Men  of 

Ware,  The. — Weatherly. 
There  were    twa    brethren    in    the    north.     See    Twa 

Brothers,  The. — Anon. 
There  were    twa    brothers    at    the    scule.     See    Twa 

Brothers,  The. — Anon. 
There  were  twa  [or  two]  sisters  sat  in  a  bower  [or  bour, 

or  bouir].     See   Twa   Sisters  O'Binnorie,   The. — 

Anon. 


There  were  two  brethren  fell  on  strife.     See  Brothers. 

The. — Swinburne. 
There  were  two  friends,  a  very  charming  pair!     See 

Wooden  Doll  and  the  Wax  Doll,  The.— Taylor. 
There  were  two  ^or  two  little]  kittens,  a  black  and  a 

gray.     See  Kittens  and  Babies. — Hadley. 
There  were   two   little   chickens   hatched   out   by   one 

hen.     See  Naming  the  Chickens. — Bacon. 
There  were  two  [little]  kittens,  a  black  and  a  gray. 

See  Kittens  and  Babies. — Hadley. 
There  were  two  [or  twa]  sisters  sat  in  a  bour  [or  bouir 

or  bower].     See  Twa  Sisters,  o'  Binnorie,  The. — 

Anon. 
There  were  two  squirrels.     See  Two  Squirrels,  The. — 

Anon. 
There,  where  'death's  brief  pang  was  quickest.     See 

Murat. — Byron. 
There  will     be     news    to-morrow.     See    To-morrow's 

News. — Kiingle. 
There  will  come  a  maiden  soon,   I  ween.     See  Four 

Sisters,  The. — Anon. 
There  will  I  ask  of  Christ  the  Lord.     See  same. — Ros- 

setti. 
There  wor  once  a  mason  at  Guiseley  gat  intor  his  heead. 

See  Text  without  a  Sermon,  A. —  (Harper's  Maga- 
zine. ) 
There  yet  lingered  sufficient  light  in  the  heavens.  See 

Last  of  the  Mohican.s,  The  (Running  the  Gauntlet  j. 

— Cooper. 
There  you  are!  I've  conquered  you  at  last.     See  Trusty 

and  True. — Sylvester. 
Thereat,  within    the    house    in    Magdala.     See    Light 

of  the  World,  The  (Great  Consummation,  The). — 

Arnold. 
Therefore  it  is  with  confidence.     See  Impeachment  of 

Warren  Hastings   (Oration,  etc.). — Burke. 
Therefore,  to  whom  turn  I  but  to  Thee,  the  ineffable 

Name?     See  Abt  Vogler. — Browning.  i 

Thereon     that     noble     lady,     hastening    near.        See 

Maha-Bharata   (Savitri,  or    Love   and  Death). — 

Arnold. 
There's  a  baby  moon  rocking  far  up  in  the  sky.     See 

Oadle  Song. — Camp. 
There's  a  battle  to  be  fought.     See  Something  to  be 

Done.— Chellis. 
There's  a  beautiful  artist  abroad   in  the  world.      See 

Beautiful  Artist,  The. — Yule. 
There's  a  beautiful  cloud-fleet   passing  by.     See  Sail 

on  the  Clouds,  A. — Wyatt. 
There's  a  beautiful  face  in  the  silent  air.     See  Gone 

Before. — Taylor. 
There's  a  beauty,  forever  unchangingly  bright.     See 

Lalla  Rookh  (Nourmahal). — Moore. 
There's  a  blare  of  bugles  blowing.     See  Battle  of  New 

Orleans,  The. — Rice. 
There's  a  bliss  beyond  all  that  the  minstrel  has  told. 

See  Lalla  Rookh   (Power  of  Love   and   Beauty). 

- — Moore. 
There's  a  bower  of  roses  by  Bendemeer's  stream.     See 

Lalla  Rookh. — Moore. 
There's  a  burden  of  grief  on  the  breezes  of  spring.     See 

In  Memoriam — A.  Lincoln. — Bugbee. 
There's  a  busy  little  fellow.     See  Little  Visitor,  A. — 

Perkins. 
There's  a  charm  in  deliv'ry,  a  magical  art.     See  Elo- 
quence.— Welby. 
There's  a  charm  in  the  sun-crested  hills.     See  To  My 

Meerschaum. — P.  D.  R. 
There's  a  church-tower  gray.     See  Just  over  the  Way. 

— Anon. 
There's  a  city  that  lies  in  the  kingdom  of  clouds.     See 

Sunset  City,  The.— Cornwell. 
There's  a  club  in  this  place  that  is  growing  apace.     See 

Back-work  Club,  The. — Chamberlain. 
There's  a  dance  of  leaves  in  that  aspen  bower.     See 

Gladness  of  Nature,  The  (Summer). — Bryant. 
There's  a  dandy  little  fellow.     See  Dandelion. — Gara- 

brant. 
There's  a  dear  little    home   in    Good-children    street. 

See  Good-children  Street. — Field. 
There's  a  dolorous  cheat  in  the  words  so  sweet.     See 

It  might  have  Been. — Hopkins. 
There's  a  face  that  haunts  me  ever.     See  Picture,  A. — 

Anon. 
There's  a  flag  hangs  over  my  threshold.     See   Flag, 

The.— Howe. 
There's  a  flower  that  grows  by  the  greenwood  tree. 

See  Trailing  Arbutus,  The. — Whitman. 
There's  a  funny  little  army.     See  Little  Army,  The. 

— (Good  Times.) 
There's  a  funny  tale  of  a  stingy  man.     jSee  "Penny 

Ye  Meant  to  Gi'e,  The." — Anon. 


878 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


There's 


There's  a   game   much   in   fashion,  I  think   it's   called 

Euchre.     See  Game  of  Life,  The. — Saxe. 
There's  a  gilded  vane  on  the  tall  church  spire.     See 

Song  of  the  Vane,  The. — Learned. 
There's  a  glade  in  Aghadoe,  Aghadoe,  .Aghadoe.     See 

.\ghadoe. — Todhunter. 
There's  a  good    time    coming,  boys.     See    Good  Time 

Coming,  The. — Mackay. 
There's  a  grim  one-horse  hearse  in  a  jolly  round  trot. 

See  Pauper's  Drive,  The. — Noel. 
There's  a  jolly  Saxon  proverb  that  is  pretty  much  like 

this.     See  Concerning  Kisse.«. — Anon. 
There's  a  joy  without  canker  or  cark.     See  Ballade  of 

Blue  China. — Lang. 
There's  a  junior  partner  wanted.     See  Junior  Partner 

Wanted,  A. — Sanford. 
There's  a  land  far  away,   'naid  the  stars,  we  are  told. 

See  Mountains  of  Life,  The. — Clark. 
There's  a   legend   that's   told   of  a   gypsy   who   dwelt. 

See  Flight  into  Egypt,  The. — Mahony. 
There's  a  letter  from  home    ]  was  dreading.     See  Old 

Letters. — Kitchel.  / 

There's  a  little  brown  wren  that  has  built  in  our  tree. 

See  Little  Brown  Wren,  The. — Anon. 
There's  a  little  crib  bed  that  is  unused  now.-    See  Lit- 
tle Crib  Bed,  The.—Hichards. 
There's  a  little  gray  friar  in  yonder  green  bush.     See 

Gray  Linnet,  The. — M'CarroU. 
There's  a  little  low  hut   by  the  river's  \or  river!  side. 

See  My  Childhood  Home. — Shillaber. 
There's  a  little  mischief-maker  that  is  stealing  half  our 

bliss.     See  By-and-by. — Anon. 
There's  a  little  mischief-making  elfin,  who  is  ever  nigh. 

See  By-and-by. — .\non. 
There's  a  little  old  man  with  silvery  hair.     See  Christ- 

mastide. — .4non. 
There's  a  lonely  grave  in  Virginia.     See  Mustered  Out. 

— Anon. 
There's  a  lot  of  solid  comfort.     See  Old  Clay  Pipe,  The. 

—Van  Fleet. 
There's  a    lurid    light    in    the    clouds    to-night.     See 

Wrecker's  Bell,  The. — Winter. 
There's  a  magic  isle  in  the  River  of  Time.     See  Magi- 
cal Isle,  The. — Anon. 
There's  a  magical  tie  to  the  land  of  our  home.     See 

Land  of  My  Birth,  The.— Cook. 
There's  a  man  in  the  dark,  so  the  big  folks  say.     See 

Man  in  the  Dark,  The. — Richards. 
There's  a  maxim  that  all  should  be  willing  to  mind. 

See    One    Story's    Good    till    Another  is  Told. — 

Swain. 
There's  a  merry  brown  thru.sh  sitting  up  in  the  [u>r.  a] 

tree.     See  Brown  Thrush,  The. — Larcom. 
There's  a  mine  of  comfort  for  you  and  me.     See  One 

Step  at  a  Time. — Anon. 
There's  a  neat  little  clock.     See  Little  Clock,  The. — 

.\non. 
There's  a  never-dying  chorus.     See  Toil. — Anon. 
There's  a  new  hired  girl   at   our  house.     See  Nursery 

Stove,  The. — Denton. 
There's  a  New  Year   coming,  coming.     See  New  Year 

Song. — Larcom. 
There's  a  noisy  way  and  a  quiet  way.     See  Aunty's 

Lesson. — Anon. 
There's  a  perennial  nobleness.     See  Past  and  Present. 

— Carlyle. 
There's  a   place   in    Florence,    the   world    knows   well. 

See  Statue  and  the  Bust,  The. — Browning. 
There's  a  purple  cloud  with  a  fringe  of  pink.     See  Song 

in  Color.  A.— Anon. 
There's  a  quee*-  little  house,  and  it  stands  in  the  sun. 

See  Queer  Little  ITou.se,  The. — Anon. 
There's  a  song  in  my  heart.  Dear  Love.     See  My  Song. 

— Wilson. 
There's  a  song  in  the  air!     See  Christmas  Carol,  A. — 

Holland. 
There's  a  song  in  the  maple,  thrilling  and  new.     See 

April  Time. — Anon. 
There's  a   song   that   riiiprs  in   my  ears  to-night.     See 

Voice  of  an  Alumnus,  The. — Whitney. 
There's  a  song  that's  very  popular  that's  sung  in  every 

clime.     See  Home,  Sweet  Home. — Thatcher. 
There's  a  spider  crab  that  lives  in  the  sea.     See  Three 

Cunning  Crabs,  The. — Woods. 
There's  a  star  in  the  west  that  shall  never  go  down. 

See  Star  in  the  West,  A. — Cook. 
There's  a  staunch  old  Southern  mansion  near  the  broad 

Potomac      river.     See     Phantom      Ball.      The. — 

.Jeffrey. 
There's  a  stir  among  the  trees.      See  Christmas  Trees, 

The.— Butts. 
There's  a  .story,  once  current,  and  sometimes  still  told. 

See  Plato  and  Diogenes. — Gore. 


There's  a    story    that's    old.     See    Pat's    Criticism. — 

Adams. 
There's  a  story  told  through  ages,  which  .shall  yet  live 

ages  more.     See  Old,  Old  Story,  The. — Anon. 
There's  a  strangely  solemn  moment.     See  Doorway  of 

Sleep,  The. — Beers. 
There's  a  tender  Eastern  legend.     See  Eastern  Legend, 

An. — Goodwin. 
There's  a  thing  that  grows  by  the  fainting  flower.     See 

Toadstool,  The. — Holmes. 
There's  a  time  in  happy  boyhood.     See  Too  Old  for 

Father's  Kisses. — Bingham. 
There's  a    tree    that    blossoms    in    winter    time.     See 

There's  a  Tree  that  Blossoms.— Anon. 
There's  a  vast  amount  of  murderin'  and  robberin'  goin' 

on.     See  Robber  under  the  Bed,  A. — Anon. 
There's  a  verse  in  the  Psalms,  or  a  bit  of  a  verse.     See 

In  the  Hospital  Ward. — Anon. 
There's  a  wail  in  the  mansion.     See  There's  Tan  in  the 

Street, — Thaxter. 
There's  a  way  and  you  will  find  it.     See  Helping  Hand, 

A. — Richards. 
There's  a  wedding  in  the  orchard,  dear.     See  There's 

a  Wedding  in  the  Orchard. — Dodge. 
There's  a  wedding  in  the  orchard,  dear,  I  know  it  by 

the  flowers.     See  Marriage  of  the  Flowers.  The.— 

Byers. 
There's  a  whisper  down  the  field  where  the  year  has 

shot  her  yield.     See  L'Envoi. — Kipling. 
There's  a  whisper  of  leaves  in  the  woods  to-day.     See 

In  the  Woods. — Anon. 
There's  a  whisper  of  life  in  the  dull  dead  trees.     See 

White  Canoe,  The.— Sullivan. 
There's    a    wideness   in    God's,  mercy.     See    same. — 

Faber. 
There's  a  willow  near  my  casement.     See  Alice  Maude. 

— ^Anon. 
There's  a  woman  and  two  boys  comin'.     See  Visitors 

from  the  city. — Anon. 
There's  a  woman  like  a  dew-drop,  she's  so  purer  than 

the  purest.      See  Blot  in  the  'Scutcheon,  A  (Earl 

Mertoun's  Song). — Browning. 
"There's  a    wonderful    tree,    a    wonderful    tree."     See 

Wonderful  Tree,  The. — Anon. 
There's  a  wonderful  weaver  high  up  in  the  air.     See 

Wonderful  Weaver,  The. — Cooper. 
There's  a  young  man  on  the  corner.     See  Eggs  that 

never  Hatch,  The. — Anon. 
There's  a  youth  of  great  renown.     See  His  Name. — • 

Coleman. 
There's  always  a  river  to  cross.     See  same. — Anon. 
There's  an  adage  trite  and  golden.     See  Learn  to  Labor 

and  to  Wait. — Denison. 
There's  an   arrow   aloft   with   a   feathered   shaft.     See 

Vane  on  the  Spire,  The. — Taylor. 
There's  an    illigant    place    for     you.     See     Disgusted 

Dutchman,  The. — Lover. 
There's  an  oriole's  nest  in  the  elm-tree  boughs.     See 

Our  Oriole  Neighbors. — Moore. 
There's  another  boy  what  I  know.     See  Different  Kind 

er  Boy,  The. — Richards. 
There's  beauty  in  the  deep.     See  Deep,  The. — Brainard. 
There's  been    a    wedding    to    Hopeville — they    say    it 

can't  be  beat.     See  Jerry  an'  Me. — Anon. 
There's  Bob  Bunker  comin'  up  to  the  door  with  a  box. 

See  Infernal  Machine,  The. — McBride. 
There's  business  for  all  in   this  world,   my   boy.     See 

There's  Business  for  All. — Pcnnell. 
There's  clay    pipes    an'    brier    pipes    an'    meerschaum 

pipes  as  well.     See  Pipe  You  Make  Yourself,  The. 

— Brown. 
There's  doubtless  something  in  domestic  doings.     See 

Don  Juan  (Matrons  and  Maids). — Byron. 
There's  freedom    in    the    farmer's    life.     See    Farmer's 

Life,  The. — Beard. 
There's  .lane  Sophia,  and  Ann  Maria.     See  Our  Choir. 

— Anon. 
There's  just   one   thing   a   man    can   have.     See   Easy 

Wife,  The. — Anon. 
There's  lots  an'  lots  of  people  (if  you'l  just  believe  my 

song).     See  Shoutin'? — Stanton. 
There's  lots  of  folks  that  has  good  times.     See  "You 

Git  Up! "—Kerr. 
There's  many   a  life   chained   down   by   circum.stance. 

See  fame. — Anon. 
There's  many  a  rest  on  the  road  of  life.     See  Golden 

Side,  The. — Anon. 
There's   many  a  trouble.     See  Trouble    Borrowers.  — 

Anon. 
There's  many  an  excellent  Saint.     See  Saint  .Jonathan. 

— Saxe. 
There's  mony   a  wee  sweet  lily  sair  nipped  wi'  the  cold. 

See  Shelter. — Lee. 


879 


There's 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIOXS 


There's  naught  but  ceaseless  moaning.  See  Presen- 
timents.— Denison. 

There's  no  dew  left  on  the  daisies  and  clover.  See 
Songs  of  Seven  (Seven  Times  One). — Ingelow.    ' 

There's  no  faith  in  ohrth.  See  Catiline  (Bitter  Disap- 
pointment).— Croly. 

There's  no  one  on  the  long  white  road.  See  Irish 
Mother's  Lament,  The. — Alexander. 

There's  no  use  of  your  talking,  for  mamma  told  me  so. 
See  Nelly  Tells  how  Baby  Came.— Collier. 

There's  no  use  trying  to  keep  anything  in  order.  See 
Changed  Housewife,  A. — Oberholtzer. 

"There's  none  can  tell  about  my  birth."  See  Archae- 
ological (Congress. — Burdette. 

There's  not  a  breath  the  dewy  leaves  to  stir.  See 
Moonlight  in  Italy. — Kinney. 

There's  not  a  cheaper  thing  on  earth.  See  Something 
Cheap. — Swain. 

There's  not  a  flower  that  decks  the  vale.  See  God's 
Love. — Griffin. 

There's  not  a  hearth,  however  rude.  See  Hidden 
Brightness. — Anon. 

There's  not  a  joy  the  world  can  give  like  that  it  takes 
away.     See  Stanzas  for  Music. — Byron. 

There's  not  a  leaf  within  the  bower.  See  Hymn. — 
Opie. 

There's  not  a  nook  within  this  solemn  pass.  See 
Trosachs,  The. — Wordsworth. 

There's  not  a  plant  that  springeth.  See  Teachings  of 
Nature. — Hale. 

There's  not  a  spider  in  the  sky.  See  Love  Song  by  a 
Lunatic,  A. — -Anon. 

There's  not  a  tint  that  paints  the  rose.  See  God's  Wis- 
dom and  Power. — -Anon. 

There's  not  a  wild  flower  blossoming.  See  Love  Uni- 
versal.— Anon. 

There's  not  in  the  wide  world  so  tempting  a  sweet. 
See  Trifle.— (PMnc/i.) 

There's  nothing  bright,  above,  below.  See  Turf  shall 
be  my  Fragrant  Shrine,  The. — Moore. 

There's  nothing  here  on  earth  deserves.  See  Laugh 
and  Grow  Fat. — Praed. 

There's  one  R.  A.  more  dead!  stiff  is  poor  Hone.  See 
On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Hone. — Pindar. 

There's  one  thing  I  can't  understand.  See  Uncle  Mor- 
ton's Gift.— Wells. 

There's  one  thing  that's  important  in  those  hustling, 
bustling  days.  See  Keep  up  with  the  Times. — 
Burdick. 

There's  one  thing  to  the  ladies  I  plainly  wish  to  say. 
See  One  Bachelor  of  Many. — (Harper's  Mafiazine.) 

There's  sadness  in  the  Union  camp.  See  Garfield  at 
the  Wheel. — Anon. 

There's  Sandy,  the  miller,  wi'  siller  in  kist.  See  T>as- 
sie's  Decision,  The. — McAthol. 

There's  some  is  born  with  their  straight  legs  by 
natur'.  See  Sailor's  Apology  for  Bow-legs,  A. — • 
Hood. 

"There's  some  think  Injins  pison.  ..."  (It  was  Par- 
son Pete  who  [or  that]  spoke.)  See  Phil  Blood's 
Leap. — -Buchanan. 

There's  somebody  coming  up  the  lane.  See  Aunt  Vir- 
ginia's Ear  Trumpet. — Anon. 

There's  somebody  knocking.  Hark!  who  can  it  be? 
See  Somebody's  Knocking. — Anon. 

There's  something  in  a  noble  boy.  See  Boy,  The. — 
Willis. 

There's  something  in  the  air.  See  Coming  of  Spring, 
The. — Perry. 

There's  something  in  the  name  of  Kate.  See  Lines  to 
Kate.^Anon. 

There's  something  in  "the  parting  hour."  See  Parting 
Hour,  The.— Pollock. 

There's  something  that  I've  thought.  See  Polly's 
Dilemma.^.\non. 

There's  somewhat  on  my  breast,  father.  See  Con- 
fession, The.; — Barham. 

There's  sumpen  in  a  woman's  tears  that  makes  you 
wanter,  sorter.     See  Tears. — Ousley. 

There's  that  old  hag  Moll  Brown,  look,  see,  just  past! 
See  Witch,  A. — -Barnes. 

There's  the  birds  as  has  just  come,  and  there's  the 
breakfast.     See  Student's  Frolic,  The.^Robinson. 

There's  the  man  who  lets  you  shake  his  limpy  hand. 
See  Bores,  The. — Anon. 

There's  time  for  work  and  time  for  play.  See  Time 
Only  for  liOve.— M.  A.  L. 

There's  trouble  in  Hungary,  now,  alas.  See  Tartar, 
The. — Saxe. 

These  abominable  principles,  and  this  more  abomin- 
able avowal  of  them.     See  American  War,  The. —  ■ 
Chatham. 


These  are  fragments  again  without  date  addressed  to 
Adam.      See    Bothie    of    Tober-na-Vuolich,  The 
(Philip  to  Adam). — Clough. 
These  are  little  lambkins.     See  Little  Lambkins,  The. 

— Anon. 
These  are  my  scales  to  weigh  reality.     See  Reality. — 

Dickinson. 
These  are  some  of  the  things  that  a  boy  can  do.     See 

What  a  Boy  can  Do. — Anon. 
These  are   the   days  that   try   us.     See   November. — 

Harrison. 
These  are  the  days  when  the  birds  come  back.     See 

Indian  Summer. — Dickin.son. 
These  are  the  Janissaries  of  the  cause.     See  Jesuits, 

The.— Oldham. 
These  are  the  letters  she  sent  mie.     See  I.,ast  Straw, 

The. — Anon. 
These  are  the  merry  hours  they  say.     See  Christmas 

Pictures. — Williamson . 
These  are  the  tawny    dryads,    who    love    nooks.     See 

Dryads,  The.— Hunt. 
These  are  they  who,  with  the  Bible  in  their  hands.     See 

same. — Anon. 
These  are  thy  glorious  works.   Parent   of  Good.     See 
Paradise  Lost  (Adam's    Morning    Hymn  in  Para- 
dise).— Milton. 
These  are   unquestionably   the   two   most    remarkable 
epistles  I  ever  received.     See  Adventures  in  the 
Wrong  House. — Brown. 
These,  as  they  change.  Almighty  Father,  these.     See 
Seasons,  The  (Hymn  of  the  Seasons). — Thomson. 
These  brilliant  October  days,  when  there  is  one  glory 

of  luminous  blue.     See  Autumn. — Anon. 
The.se  dreary  hours  of  hopeless  gloom.     See  Face,  The. 

— Jones. 
These  emmets;  how  little  they  are  in  our  eyes!     See 

Ant,  The.— Watts. 
These   eyes,   though  clear.     See  To    Cyriack  Skinner, 

1655  ("These  eyes,"  etc.). — Milton. 
These  four  gray  walls  are  but  the  bodily  shell.     See 

Spirit  of  the  House,  The. — Lampmaii. 
These  had  been  together  from  the  first.     See  Aylmer's 

Field  (Leolin  and  Edith). — Tennyson. 
These  hallowed  precincts,  long  to  memory  dear.     See 

School-boy,  The. — Holmes. 
These  lands  are  clothed  in  burning  weather.     See  Arid 

Lands,  The. — Bashford.  '' 

These  little   firs  to-day  are  things.     See  Young   Fir- 
wood,  A. — Rossetti. 
These  little  songs.     See  Day  and  Night  Songs. — Ailing- 
ham. 
These  loving  eyes  may  never  more  behold  thee.     See 

same. — {Blackwood's . ) 
These  nuts,  that  I  keep  in  the  back  of  the  nest.     See 

My  Treasures. — Stevenson. 
These  pearls  of  thought   in   Persian   gulfs  were   bred. 

See  In  a  Copy  of  Omar  KhayyAm. — Lowell. 
These  sheets  primaeval  doctrines  yield.     See  On  Bar- 
clay's Apology  for  the  Quakers. — Green. 
These  things    are    but    toys.     See    Of    Masques    and 

Triumphs. — Bacon. 
These  things  premised,  you  have  my  full  consent.     See 
Honeymoon,  The  (Contes.sion  of  Love,  A). — Tobin. 
These  to  His  memory — -since  he  held  them  dear.     See 
Idylls  of  the    King  (To  the  Memory    of    Prince 
Albert). — Tennyson. 
These  two  girls  were  the  only  witnesses  of  the  deed. 
See  Shaugraun,  The  (O'Kelley  Cabin,  The).— Bou- 
cicault. 
These  United  States  are,  as  a  whole,  and  always  have 
been.    See  Importance  of  the  Agricultural  Interest. 
— Cushing. 
These  winter  nights,   against  my  window  pane.     See 

Frost-work. — Aldrich. 
"They  ain't  much  'tale'   about  it!"   Noey  said.     See 

Noey's  Night-piece. — Riley. 
"They  am't  no  jury  that'll  hang  him,"  said  Bill  Towne 

doggedly.     See  Sheriff's  Honor,  The. — Anon. 
They  ain't    no    style    about    'em.     See    Old-fashioned 

Roses. — Riley. 
"They  ain't  no  use  o'  talkin',"  said  Uncle  Jerry  Green- 
ing.    See  Squire  Billings'  Pickerel. — Anon. 
They  ain't  performin'  to-day,  sir,  and  the  boys  are  all 
on  the  gape.     See  Positively  the  Last  Perform- 
ance.— (Punch.) 
They  all  climbed  up  on  a  high  board-fence.     See  Nine 

Little  Goblins,  The.— Riley. 
They  all  were  looking  for  a  king.   See  That  Holy  Thing. 

— MacDonald. 
They  are   a   beauteous   family.     See   My   Children. — 

Larcom. 
They  are  all  gone  away.     See  House  on  the  Hill,  The. 
— Robinson. 


880 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


They 


They  are  all  gone  into  the  world  of  light.     See  They  are 

All  Gone. — Vaughan. 
They  are   all   in   the   lily-bed,   cuddled  close   together. 

See  Vagrant  Pansies. — Hutchinson. 
They  are  always  at  the   gate.     See  They  are  Always 

at  the  Gate. — Anon. 
They  are  at  rest.     See  Rest. — Newman. 
They  are  building  as  Babel  was  built,  to  the  sky.     See 

Man  with  the  Musket,  The. — Taylor. 
They  are     camped     on     Chickamauga!     See    Chicka- 

mauga — 1898. — (Baltimore  Neu's.) 
They  are  dying!  they  are  dying!  where  the  golden  corn 

is  growing.     See  Ireland. — MacCarthy. 
They  are  free  at  last!     They  can  face  the  sun.     See 

Released. — ( ) '  Reill  v. 
They  are  funny !   They  have.     See  Stage  Land   (Comic 

Lovers.  Tne).  — Jerome. 
They  are  gone  from  their  own  green  shore!     See  Fleet 

under  Sail,  The. — Lushington. 
They  are  gone  into  the  world  of  light.     See  They  are 

All  Gone. — Vaughan. 
They  are  idols  of  hearts  and  of  households.     See  Chil- 
dren, The. — Dickenson. 
They  are  marching  from  the  Southland,  from  the  North, 

and    from    the    West.     See    Recompense,    The. — 

Dorrie. 
They  are     my     laddie's     hounds.     See    My     Laddie's 

Hounds. — Easter. 
They  are    not    dead    whose    names    we    breathe.     See 

Heroic  Dead,  The. — Emery. 
They  are  slaves  who  fear  to  speak.   See  Stanzas  on  Free- 
dom ("They  are  slaves,"  etc.). — Lowell. 
They  are  so  clean.     We    have  seen.     See  Stage   Land 

(Peasants,  The). — Jerome. 
They  are  sowing  their  seed  in  the  daylight  fair.     See 

Sowing  and  Harvesting. — Oakey. 
They  are  such  tiny  feet.     See  Patience  with  Love. — 

Klingle. 
They  are  waiting  on  the  shore.     See  Old,  The. — Noel. 
They  ask  me  to  vote  for  a  national  flower.     See  Na- 
tional Flower,  The. — Larcom. 
They  ask   me  why  I   am  so    bad.     See    same. — Kav- 

anaugh. 
They  bade   me  cast   the  thing  away.     See  Doubt. — 

Jackson. 
They  bore    three   corpses   through    the   crowded   city. 

See  Deed  of  Grace,  A. — Childe-Pemberton. 
"They  both  came  aboard  there  at  Cairo."     See  Pilot's 

Story,  The. — Howells. 
They  both  were  artists,  gathering  hair  and  hay.     See 

Golden  Orioles,  The.— Hartzell. 
They  break  the  kitchen  windows.     See  Mice. — Anon. 
They  brought  one  Pinch,  a  hungry,  lean-faced  villain. 

See  Comedy  of  Errors. — Shakespeare. 
They  brought  their  flowers  to  the  altar.     See  Easter 

Flowers. — Ingelow. 
They  brushed  the  clothes  all  clean.     See  Lulu  Takes 

Care. — Anon. 
They  built  a  church  at  his  very  door.     See  "He  wasn't 

in  it." — (Detroit  Free  Press.) 
They  call  her  fair.     I  do  not  know.     See  Love's  Blind- 
ness.— Linton. 
They  call  me  a  tyrant !     See  Defence  from  the  Charge  of 

Tyranny. — Robespierre. 
They  call  me  "Little  Chatterbox."     See  Chatterbox. 

— Anon. 
They  call  me  the   forester,  I  am   the   man.     See  Fra- 
grant Timber  of  her  Fan,  The. — Hay. 
They  call  me  the  queen  of  the  garden.     See  Message' 

of  the  Flowers.  The. — Anon. 
They  call  thee  Nightingale,  who  know  thee  not!     See 

To  Jenny  Lind. — Gosse. 
They   called   him  Bill,  the  hired    man.     See  William 

Brown  of  Oregon. — Miller. 
They  called  the  place  Crappy  Shute.     See  How  Christ- 
mas carne  to  Crappy  Shute. — (Leslie's  Weekly.) 
They  came  in  sight  of  a  lovely  shore.     See  Sunshine 

Land. — Thomas. 
They  can  talk  about  the  country,  'n'  how  it's  good  for 

boys.     See  Average  Boy,  The. — Phelps. 
Thev  cannot  wholly  pass  away.     See  Departed,  The. — 

Tabb. 
They  carried  the  pie  to  the  parson's  house.     See  Par- 
son's Sociable,  The. — Anon. 
"They  certainly  are  nice  people,  and  I'll  bet  that  their 

three  children. '|     See  Nice  People,  The. — Bunner. 
They  chained  her  fair  young  body  to  the  cold  and  cruel 

stone.     See  Andromeda. — Roche. 
They  come  in  the  quiet  twilight  hour.     See  Twilight 

Dreams. — (Chambers'  Journal.) 
They  come!  the  merry  summer  months  of  beauty,  song, 
and  flowers.     See  They  Come !  the  Merry  Summer 

Months. — Motherwell. 


"They  corne!  they  come!  the  paleface  come!"  See 
Fall  of  the  Indian  Heroes. — Miller. 

Tjiey  considered  the  pastor  a  trifle  too  young.  See  Sus- 
ceptible Parson,  The. — Anon. 

They  course  the  gWss,  and  let  it  take  no  rest.  See 
Vanity  of  the  Beautiful,  The. — Gascoigne. 

They  die  —  the  dead  return  not.  See  Death.— 
Shelley. 

They  do  me  wrong,  and  I  will  not  endure  it.  See 
King  Richard  III. — Shakespeare. 

They  do  neither  plight  nor  wed.  See  City,  The. — Bur- 
ton. 

They  drew  him  to  my  very  feet,  insensible,  dead.  See 
David  Copperfield. — Dickens. 

They  drive  home  the  cows  from  the  pasture.  See  Lit- 
tle Brown  Hands. — Krout. 

They  dropped  like  flakes,  they  dropped  like  stars.  See 
Battlefield,  The. — Dickinson. 

They  dwell  in  the  odour  of  camphor.  See  My  Books. 
— Dobson. 

They  err,  who  count  it  glorious  to  subdue.  See  Para- 
dise Regained  (True  Glory). — Milton. 

They  fed  me  with  fire  and  heaped  me  with  coal.  See 
Song  of  the  Locomotive,  The. — Anon. 

They  fell  devoted,  but  undying.  See  Siege  of  Corinth, 
The  (Dead  Heroes). — Byron. 

They  fired  the  shot  o'er  Sumter's  walls.  See  Memorial 
Day.— Little. 

They  flee  from  me,  that  sometime  did  me  seek.  See 
"Lover  Sheweth  how  He  is  Forsaken  of  such  as 
He  Sometime  Enjoyed,  The." — Wyatt. 

They  fling  their  flags  upon  the  morn.  See  Spain's  Last 
.A.rmada. — Rice. 

They  fought  still  like  the  rage  of  fire.  And  now  An- 
tilochus.  See  Iliad,  The  (Grief  of  Achilles  for 
the  Slaying  of  Patroclus,  The).-^Homer. 

They  found  him  by  the  roadside,  dead.  See  Tiny  Shoe, 
A. — Anon. 

They  found  it  in  her  hollow  marble  bed.  See  Roman 
Mirror,  A. — Rodd. 

They  gather  round  him,  one  and  all.  See  Story-teller, 
The. — Sherman. 

They  gave  me  advice  and  plenty  of  praise.  See  Ex- 
cellent Man,  The. — Heine. 

They  gave  the  whole  long  day  to  idle  laughter.  See 
Before  the  Gate. — Howells. 

They  glare — those  stony  eyes!  See  Sphinx,  The. — 
Brownell. 

They  glide  upon  their  endless  way.  See  Stars. — Proc- 
ter, 

They  grew  in  beauty  side  by  side.  See  Graves  of  a 
Household,  The. — Hemans. 

They  had  a  quarrel,  and  she  sent.  See  Reciprocity. — 
Anon. 

They  had  been  keeping  company  a  year.  See  Ker 
Chew  Duet,  A.— Anon. 

They  had  been  married  three  weeks,  and  had  just  gone 
to  housekeeping.  See  Their  First  Spat. — (London 
Tid-bits.) 

They  had  been  married  two  months  and  gone  to  house- 
keeping. See  She  didn't  Want  to  Meddle. — 
Anon. 

They  had  brought  in  such  sheafs  of  hair.  See  Last 
Bowstrings,  The.— White. 

They  had  pressed  us  sore,  and  we  fled  from  them.  See 
Quicksand,  The. — Meyers. 

They  had  whirled  around  in  the  steps  of  the  waltz. 
See  Repartee. — York. 

They  hasten,  still  they  hasten.  See  Were-wolves,  The. 
— Campbell. 

They  have  a  saying  in  the  East.  Mercy  of  God,  The. — 
Knight. 

They  have  asked  me  to  vote  for  a  national  flower. 
See  National  Flower,  The. — Larcom. 

They  have  chained  me  in  the  central  hall.  See  Drop  of 
Water,  The.— Stackpole. 

They  have  fetched  the  steed  with  care,  in  the  harness 
he  did  wear.  See  Rhyme  of  the  Duchess  May 
(End  of  the  Siege,  The). — Browning. 

They  have  had  more  trouble  at  our  Methodist  meeting- 
house.    See  Disturbance  in  Church,  A. — Anon. 

They  have  met  at  last — as  storm-clouds.  See  Man- 
assas.— Warfield. 

They  have  no  care.  See  Consider  the  Lilies. — Far- 
ningham. 

They  have  not  come!  And  ten  is  past.  See  In  the 
Royal  Academy. — Dobson. 

They  heard  a  noise  unlike  anything  usually  heard.  See 
Ninety-three  (Monster  Cannon,  The). — Hugo. 

They  heaved  the  stone;  they  heaped  the  cairn.  See 
Aideen's  Grave. — Ferguson. 

They  hide  within  the  hollows,  thev  creep  into  the  dell. 
See  Vale  of  Estabelle,  The. — Thomson. 


881 


They 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Thev  journeyed   sadly,    slowly  on.     See  Two  Marys, 

The. — Blewett. 
They  knelt    around    the    cross   divine.'    See   Wexford 

Massacre,  The.— ^arry. 
They  know  not  my  teart,  who  believe  there  can  be. 

See  They  Know  not  My  Heart. — Moore. 
They  know  the  time  to  go.     See  Flowers  Know  Their 

Time  to  Go,  The. — Coolidge. 
They  led  a  lion  from  his  den.     iS««  Gladiator,  The.^ 

Jones. 
They  lifted  her  up  tearfully,  they  shuddered  as  they 

said.     See  I.iittle  Gretchen. — -Anon. 
They  lingered  at  the  garden  gate.     See  At  the  Garden 

Gate. — Anon. 
They  lived  in ,  and  the  farmer  was  well-to-do.     See 

Mrs.  .Tones'  Pudding. — Anon. 
They  looked  on  each  other  and  spake  not.     See  Story 

of  Sigurd  the  Volsung,  The  (Of  the  Passing  Away 

of  Brynhild). — Morris. 
They  looked  so  alike  as  they  sat  at  their  work.     See 

Concerning  Sisters-in-law. — {Punch.) 
They  made  her  a  grave  too  cold  and  damp.     See  Lake 

of  the  Dismal  Swamp,  The. — Moore. 
They  made  the  chamber  sweet  with  flowers  and  leaves. 

See  Meeting. — Ros.«etti. 
They  made  them  ready  and  we  saw  them  go.     See 

Travellers,  The. — -Howe. 
They  marched  away  from  Scranton  in  a  company  one 

hundred      strong.     See      Just     Commonplace. — 

Phelps. 
They  may  rail  at  this  life.     See  same. — Moore. 
They  may  talk  of  love  in  a  cottage.     See  Love  in  a 

Cottage.— Willis. 
They  meet  but  with  unwholesome  springs.  See  Castara 

(.\gainst  Them  Who  Lay  Unchastity  to  the  Sex  of 

Women). — Habington. 
They  met  but  once,  in  youth's  sweet  hour.     See  They 

Met  but  Once. — Moore. 
They   met   me  in  the  day  of  success.     See  Macbeth 

(lietter  Scene,  The). — Shakespeare. 
They  met,  't  was  in  a  storm.     See  Love  on  the  Ocean. 

—(Punrh.) 
They  met,  when  they  were  girl  and  boy.     See  .\\l  the 

Same. — Weatherley. 
They  mock'd  the  Sovereign  of  Ghaznin;  one  saith.     See 

With  Sa'di  in  the  Garden  (Mahmud  and  Ayaz). 

— Arnold. 
They  nearly  strike  me  dumb.     See  My  Mistress's  Boots. 

— Locker-Lampson. 
They  never  come  back,  tho'  I  loved  them  well.     See 

Ballad  of  the  Bird-bride. — Tomson. 
They  never  fail  who  die.     See  Marino  Faliero  ("They 

never,"  etc.). — -Byron. 
They  never  quite  leave  us,  our  friends  who  have  passed. 

See  Our  Lost. — Sangster. 
They  parted — ^if  it  be  to  part.     See  They  Parted. — 

Planche. 
They  parted  with  clasp  of  hand.  See  Comedy.— Aldrich. 
They  passed  it  along  from  pew  to  pew.     See  Silver 

Plate,  The.— Preston. 
They,  passing  by,  were  guyded  by  degree.     See  Faerie 

Queene,  The  (Gloriana). — Spenser. 
They  planted  them  together — our  gallant  sires  of  old. 

See  Palmetto  and  the  Pine,  The.— French. 
They  played  at  cards  on  the  yellow  sand.     See  After 

the  Game. — (Columhia  Spectator.) 
Thejr  played  at  tennis  that  summer  day.     See  Lesson 

in  Tennis,  A. — Coburn. 
They  put  me  in  the  great  spare  bed,  and  there  they 

hade  me  sleep.     See  Christmas. — Dodge. 
They  ran  through  the  streets  of  the  seaport  town.     See 

Greyport  Legend,  A. — Harte. 
They  reach'd  the  Scaean  towers.     See  Iliad,  The  (Helen 

on  the  Rampart). — Homer. 
They  rise,  by  stream  and  yellow  shore.     See  Fields  of 

War,  The.— M'Lellan. 
They  rise  to  mastery  of  wind  and  snow.     See  Pioneers. 

— Garland. 
They  rode  from  the  camp  at  morn.     See  Sidney  Godol- 

phin. — ScoUard. 
Thev  roused   him  with  muffins.     See  Hunting  of  the 

Snark,  The  (Baker's  Tale,  The).— Carroll. 
They  said,  "  Don't  plant  them,  mother."     See  Morning 

Glories. — Anon. 
They  said  the  btiUs  were  wondrous  breed,  in  horn  and 

hoof  and   brawn.     See  Uncle  Sam's  Great   JBull 

Fight.— White. 
They  said  to  me  at  the  friendly  board.     See  What  I 

Said. — Murray. 
They  sat  alone  by  the  bright  wood  fire.     See  Three 

Little  Chairs,  The. — Anon. 
They  sat  and  comb'd  their  beautiful  hair.     See  After 

the  Ball.— Perry. 


They  sat  in  silent  watchfulness.     See  Sacred  Cypress 

Tree,  The.— Whittier. 
They  sat  on  the  trunk  of  a  fallen  pine.     See  Marion's 

Dinner. — Jones. 
They  sat  together,  hand  in  hand.     See  First  and  Last. 

— Anon. 
They  sat  together  side  by  side,  absorbed  in  Cupid's 

mission.     See  Woman's  Way. — Anon. 
They  sat  together,   side  by  side,  in  the  shade  of  an 

orange  tree.     See  Blue  and  the  Gray,  The.-^Anon. 
They  sat  upon  the  rocks  beside  the  sea.     See  Woman's 

Praise,  A. — Anon. 
They  say  I  missed  my  callin' ;  I  might  have  been  a  sage. 

See  "Good  Enough  fer  Me." — Anon. 
They  say  if  our  beloved  dead.     See  Our  Beloved  Dead. 

-^{Troy  Times.) 
They  say,  sometimes,  that  walls  have  ears.     See  Ad- 
dress of  Welcome.  An.- — ^Kennedy. 
They  say  that,  afar  in  the  land  of  the  west.     See  Green 

Isle  of  Lovers,  The. — Sands. 
They  say  that  God  lives  very  high.   See  Child's  Thought 

of  God,  A. — Browning. 
They  say  that   Hope  is  happiness.     See  Stanzas  for 

Music. — -Byron. 
Thej;  say  that  I've  "passed  off  the  stage."     Ah,  well! 

it  may  be  true.     See  Passed  off  the  Stage. — Buck- 
ham. 
They  say  that  Michael  Angelo  once  entered  a  palace 

at    Rome.     See   What    We   Owe  the  Pilgrims. — 

Phillips. 
They  say  that  Pity  in  Love's  service  dwells.     See  Mod- 
ern Love  (Coin  of  Pity,  The). — Meredith. 
They  say  that  speech  is  silver.     See  Speech  is  Silver; 

Silence  Golden. — Goodfellow. 
They  say  that  thou  wert  lovely  on  thy  bier.     See  Thou 

wert  Lovely  on  Thy  Bier. — Walker. 
They  say  that  you're  a  flirt  at  best.     See  Confession 

and  Avoidance. — Hamilton. 
They  say  the  boy-god    Love    was    born.     See    What 

They  Say  about  Cupid.— Anon. 
They  say  the  lion  and  the  lizard  keep.    See  RubSiyAt 

of  Omar  Khayyiim. — Fitzgerald. 
They  say  'tis  a  sin  to  sorrow.     See  Wail  of  the  Cornish 

Mother,  The. — ^^Hawker. 
They  say  to-night  is  Christmas  Eve,  and,  high  as  I 

could  reach.     See  Christmas  Eve. — Bellaw. 
They    seem'd    to    those    who    saw    them    meet.     See 

Nessun  Maggior  Dolore. — Houghton. 
They    shot    him    dead    on    the    Nine-stone    Rig.     See 

Barthram's  Dirge. — Surtees. 
They  shot  young  Windebank  just  here.     See  Young 

Windebank. — Woods. 
They    sin   who    tell    us    Love    can  die.     See  Curse  of 

Kehama,  The  (Love's  Immortality). — Southey. 
They  sit   in   the   winter  gloaming.     See  Fifty   Years 

Apart.^ — {Parlor  Magazine.) 
They  sit  with  gods  in  slumber-breathing  bowers.     See 

Helen  in  Argos. — Clapp. 
They  sleep  in  shelter'd  rest.     See  Tristam  and  Iseult 

(I'Seult's  Children). — Arnold. 
They  soon  grow  old  who  grope  for  gold.     See  Who 

Gather  Gold. — Saxton. 
They  speak  in  riddles  north  beyond  the  Tweed.     See 

Scotch  Words. — Leighton. 
They  stand  on  his  dressing-table,  with  the  things  that 

are    next    his    heart.     See    Story    of    Two    Little 

Shoes,  The.— Ewing. 
They    stood   above   the    world.     See   "Yes." — Black- 
more. 
They  stood  at  the  altar  one  short  year  ago.     See  First 

Cloud,  The.— Anon. 
They  stood  in  the  moonlight,  under  a  large  spreading 

elm.     See  "Well,  then,  I'm  Yourn." — Smiley. 
They  stood  on  the  beach  by  the  billowy  sea.     See  Her 

Preference. — Anon. 
They  strike!  hurrah!  the   foe   has  surrendered!     See 

Victory. — Anon . 
They  talked  of  their  concerts,  and  Cramers  and  Spohrs. 

See  Fancy  Concert,  The. — Hunt. 
They  tell  a  lovely  story,  in  lands  beyond  the  sea.     See 

Christmas  in  Sweden. — Anon. 
They  tell  about  the  happy  days.     See  "I  Don't  See  It." 

— Anon. 
They    tell    how    fast    the    arrow    sped.     See    Speed. 

—  {Trinity  Tablet.) 
They  tell  me  I  am  beautiful ;  they  praise  my  silken  hair. 

See  Sad  Memories. — Calverley. 
They  tell  me  I  am  shrewd  with  other  men.     See  Royal 

Guest,  The. — Howe. 
They  tell  me,  liberty!  that  in  thy  name.     See  Liberty 

for  All. — Garri.son. 
They  tell  me  of  the  Egyptian  asp.     See  Serpent  of  the 

Still,  The.— Lofland. 


882 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Think 


They  tell  me,  Tambo,  you're  a  man  of  taste.     See  Mr. 

Johnson  on  the  Beautiful. — Anon. 
They  tell  me  that  I  must  not  love.     See  Love  Unsought. 

— Embury. 
They  tell  me  'tis  decided  you  depart.     See  Don  Juan 

(Donna  Julia's  Letter). — Byron. 
"They  tell   me   you   work   for  a   dollar  a   day.''     See 

Family  FinancierinK. — Anon. 
They  tell  me  you're  a  great  ladies'  man,  Tambo,  is  that 

true?     See  Tambo  a  Ladies'  Man. — Anon. 
They  tell  me  you're  goin'.  Robbie,  away  from  home 

and  all.     See  Life's  Game  of  Ball. — Anon. 
They  tell  this  story  of  Queen  Arjamand.     See  With 

Sa'di  in  the  Garden  (Queen  Arjamand's  Dagger). — 

Arnold. 
They  tell  us,  love,  that  you  and  L     See  Happiest  Days. 

— Anon. 
They  tell  us,  sir,  that  we  are  weak.     See  Speech  in  the 

Virginia  Convention,  1775  (War  Inevitable,  The). 

— Henry. 
They  tell  you  that  Death's  at  the  turn  of  the  road.     »S'ee 

"Unillumined  Verge,  The." — Bridges. 
They  tell   us  that   Woman   was   made   of  a  rib.     See 

Rabbinical  Origin  of  Woman,  The. — Moore. 
They  that  die  for  a  good  cause  are  redeemed  from  death. 

See  Honored  Dead,  The. — Beecher. 
They  that  do  write  in  authors'  praises.     See  Puffing. — 

Butler. 
They  that  have  power  to  hurt  and  will  do  none.     See 

Sonnets,  XCIV. — Shakespeare. 
They  that  never  had  the  use.     See  Apology  for  having 

fjoved  Before. — Waller. 
They   that    were    never    happy    hours.     See   To    King 

Charles  and  Queen  Henrietta.-  -Shirley. 
They  thought  I  couldn't  make  a  speech.     See  Declama- 
tion by  a  Little  Tot. — Miller. 
They  thought  they  had  come  to  their  port  that  day. 

See  First  Christmas  in  New  England,  The. — Butter- 
worth. 
They  threw  my  dearest  doll  away.     See  Stupid  Grown 

Uns,  The.— Grant. 
They  toiled  together  side  by  side.     See  Pitcher  or  Jug. 

■—Chick. 
They  told  me,  Heraclitiis  [or  Heracleitus].  they  told 

me  you  were  dead.     See  Callimachus  (Heracleitus). 

— Cory. 
They  told  me  T  was  heir;  I  turned  in  haste.     See  My 

liegacy. — Jackson. 
They  told  me  in  their  shadowy  phrase.     See  To  Alfred 

Tennyson. — -Hawker. 
They  took  the  little   London   girl   from   out  the   city 

street.     See  Strange  Experience,  A. — -Pollard. 
They  took   their   stand   where  the   appointed   judges. 

See  Chariot  Race,  The. — Sophocles. 
They   tossed   him   and   they   squeezed   him   and   they 

kissed  him,  one  and  all.     See  Little  Paul's  Thanks- 
giving.— Anon. 
They  turned  to  the  earth,  but  she  frowns  on  her  child. 

See  same. — Taylor. 
They  wait  all  day  unseen  by  us,  unfelt.     See  Stars,  The. 

— -Dodge. 
They  waked  me  from  my  happy  sleep.     See  Broken 

Dreams. — -Dallas 
They  walked  together,  in  the  dusk.     See  What  Else? — 

Osgood. 
They  went  to  sea  in  a  sieve,  they  did.     See  Jumblies, 

The.— Lear. 
They  were  born  in  the  mountains,  in  the  desert,  among 

the  caresses  of  Nature.     See  Gladiators,  The. — 

Castelar. 
They  were  dining— he  and  she.     See  Wish-bone,  The. — 

Mead. 
They  were  friends,  not  a  bit  sentimental.     See  Oh,  No; 

of  Course  not. — Smiley. 
They  were  from  the  country  and  had  probably  never 

eaten  in  a  restaurant  in  their  lives.     See  W'aiter's 

Trials,  A. — Anon. 
They  were  gazing  through  the  winflow.     See  Teaching 

a  Lesson. — Richards. 
They  w£re  in  the  shadowy  gray.     See  On  the  Stair. — 

Lester. 
They  were  islanders,  our  fathers  were.     See  Knowledge. 

— Scott. 
They  were  living  to  themselves,  self,  with  its  hopes  and 

promises.     See  same. — Anon. 
They  were  lunching  one  day.     See  Repartee.—  Davis. 
They   were   Methodists  twain,   of  the  ancient   school. 

See  Artie's  "Amen." — Hayne. 
They  were   not   married  by  a  muttering  priest.     See 

Fragments      (by      a      Free-lover). — (Blackwood's 

Magazine  ) 
They  were  practical  statesmen,  these  Pilgrims.     See 

Pilgrims,  The. — Depew. 


They  were  rowing  over  a  summer  lake.     See  Autumn 

Tourists. — Anon. 
They  were    sitting  by  the    fireside.        See   Caught. — 

Barry. 
They  were  sitting  five  seats  back,  but  I  plainly  heard 

the  smack.     See  Kiss  in  the  Tunnel,  The. — Anon. 
They  were  sitting  side  by  side.     See  Love  Scene,  A. — 

Anon. 
They  were  the  last  Italians  of  the  year.     See  Uncle 

Billy's  Disaster. — Anon. 
They  were  three  bonny  mowers.     See  Mowers,  The. — 

Robinson. 
They  were  three  jolly  sailors  bold.     See  Discovery  of 

Tobacco,  The. —  {Cigar  and  Tobacco  World.) 
They    were   together — her   eyes   were   wet.     See  Too 

Late. — Becquer. 
They  were  walking   silently  and  gravely  home.     See 

Norwood  ('Biah  Cathcart's  Proposal). — Beecher. 
They  were  young  and  glad  together.     See  Together. — 

Barlow. 
They  who  create  rob  death  of  half  of  its  stings.     See 

Sovereigns,  The. — Mifflin. 
They  who  may  blame  my  tenderness.     See  same. — • 

D'Anduze. 
They  who    may  tell    love's   wistful    tale.     See   Song: 

"They  who  may  tell,"  etc. — Baillie. 
They    who    sought    Truth    since    dawn.     See    Truth- 
seekers,  The. — McDonald. 
They  who  the  sweetest  rest.     See  same. — Townsend. 
They  whose  hearts  are  whole  and  strong.     See  Hints. — 

Larcom. 
They  will  ask  thee  of  Dhoulkarnain  [the  two-horned]. 

See  Koran,  The  (Dhoulkarnain). — Anon. 
They  will  send  you  off  to  college.     See  He  Has  Been 

There  Himself. — Walker. 
They  win  who  never  near  the  goal.     See  William  Blake. 

— Go.sse. 
They'll  talk  of  him  for  years  to  come.     See  Popular 

Recollections  of  Bonaparte. — Mahony. 
They're  always  abusing   the   women.     See  Chorus   of 

Women. — Aristophanes. 
They're   hastening   up   across  the   fields.     See   Gowns 

of  Gossamer. — Larcom. 
They're  making  a  fuss  about  George's  birthday.     See 

Boy's  Poem  on  Washington,  A. — Davenport. 
They're    serenading    me    tonight.     Their    voices'  clear 

and  strong.     See  Minstrels  of  the  Marshes,  The. — 

Anon. 
"They're    swarming,    Mirandy.     There    they    are^ — see 

them?     See  Mr.  Skiff  and  his  Bees. — Anon. 
They's  fellers  a-writing  about  the  wa'.     See  Bravest 

of  the  Brave. — Burdette. 
They've   cut   the   wood   away.     See  same. — Anon. 
They've  got  a  brand-new  |«t.   bran  new]  organ.  Sue. 

See  New  Church  Organ,  The. — Carleton. 
They've   left   the   school-house,   Charlie   lor   Charley], 

where    years    ago    we    sat.     See    Old    Forsaken 

School-house,  The. — Yates. 
They've   named   a  cruiser  "Dixie" — that's  what  the 

papers      say.     See     War-.ship     "Dixie,"     The. — 

Stanton. 
They've  taken  away  the  ball.     See  In  the  Closet. — 

Richards. 
Thick  green  leaves  from  the  soft  brown  earth.     See 

Under  the  Leaves. — Anon. 
Thick     lay     the     dust,     uncomfortably     white.     See 

Summer  Rain. — Coleridge. 
Thick  rise  the  spear-shafts  o'er  the  land.     See  Burghers' 

Battle,  The.— Morris. 
Thin  and  graceful  like  a  clipper  Thora  was  from  top 

to  toe.     See  Thora. — Boyesen. 
Thine   is   a    strain  to  read  among    the  hills.     See  To 

Wordsworth. — Hemans. 
Thine  is  the  mystic  melody.     See  Coleridge. — Hellman. 
Thine  old-world  eyes — each  one  a  violet.     See  On  a 

Miniature. — Beers. 
Things  has  come  to  a  pretty  pass.     See  My  Josiar. — 

Anon. 
Things  have   certainly  come  to   a  pretty  pass.     See 

Raising  the  Wind. — Neall. 
Things  of  high  import  sound  I  in  thine  ears.     See  To  a 

Child. — "Yankee." 
Think   every   morning  when   the   sun   peeps  through. 

See  Birds  of  Killingworth,  The. — Longfellow. 
Think,   in   this   batter'd   caravanserei.     See  RubAiyjit 

of   Omar    Khayyiim. — Fitzgerald. 
Think  no  more  of  the  matter,  for  I  assure  you.     See 

Wizard  of  Valley  Forge,  The. — Kent. 
Think  not  I  love  him,  though.  I  ask  for  him.     See  As 

You  Like  It  (I^ove  Dissembled). — Shakespeare. 
"Think  not  that  I  have  come  to  urge  thy  crimes."     See 

Idylls    of    the-'King    (King    Arthur    and    Queen 

Guinevere). — Tennyson. 


883 


Think 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONH 


"Think  of  Death,"  the  grave-stones  say.  See  Two 
Epitaphs. — Anon. 

Think  of  me,  dearest,  when  round  thee  smiling.  See 
Think  of  Me.  Dearest. — Hoffman. 

Think  of  me! — whe§7     See  Think  of  Me  Then. — Anon. 

Think  of  the  changes  wrought  by  the  enormous  influx 
into  the  United  States.  See  Centennial  Celebra- 
tion of  Concord  Fight  (Changes  of  a  Hundred 
Years). — Curtis. 

Think  of  the  country  for  which  the  Indians  fought! 
See  Indian  Chief  to  the  White  Settler,  The.— 
Everett. 

Think  on  thy  wants,  on  thy  faults.  See  same. — 
Bremer. 

Think  truly,  and  thy  thought.  See  Think,  Speak,  and 
Live  TrUly. — Anon. 

Think  we  King  Harry  strong.  See  King  Henry  V. 
(Black  Prince.  The). — Shake.«ipeare. 

Think  well,  I  beg  of  you,  of  the  Fourth  of  July.  See 
Independence  Day  Address. — Anon. 

Think  you  to  escape.  See  Imitatipn  of  Chri.st  ("Think 
you,"  etc.). — Kempis. 

Think'st  thou  there  are  no  serpents  in  the^orld.  See 
Deceit . — Baillie. 

"Third,  an'  lass,  de  cirkelatin'  libery  muss  be  kep' 
open  on  Sundays.  See  De  Rev.  Plato  .lohnson  on 
Free  Cirkelatin'  Liberies.  —  (Independent.) 

Thirsty,  I  walked  beside  a  brook.  See  Verdict,  The. — 
Ballard. 

Thirteen,  fourteen,  fifteen,  seventeen — seventeen  more 
manuscripts.  See  Aspirant  for  Fame,  An. — 
Graham. 

Thirteen  years  ago,  mother.  See  Lost  and  Found. — 
Procter. 

Thirty  days  hath  September.  -See  Calendar,  The. — 
Anon. 

Thirty-two  years  have  passed.  See  Grant  at  Appo- 
mattox.— Levy. 

This  ae  nighte,  this  ae  nighte.  See  Lyke-wake  Dirge, 
A. — Anon. 

This,  after  all,  we  believe,  is  the  tone  of  true  wisdom 
and  true  virtue.     See  same. — Jeffrey. 

This  ain't  Joe  Brown.  Is  it?  Why,  Joe!  See  Settin' 
the  Flags. — Purdy. 

This  ancient  silver  bowl  of  mine,  it  tells  of  good  old 
times.     See  On  Lending  a  Punch-bowl. — Holmes. 

This  argufyin'  useless  pints.  See  Farmer's  Conclu- 
sion, "The. — (Omaha  World.) 

This  army  led  by  a  delicate  and  tender  prince.  See 
Hamlet  ("This  army,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 

This  battle  fares  like  to  the  morning's  war.  See  King 
Henry  VI..  Pt.  III.  (King  Henry's  Ambition). — 
Shakespeare. 

This  bears  the  seal  of  immortality.  See  Living  Book, 
The.— Bates. 

This  book  is  all  that's  left  me  now!  See  My  Mother's 
Bible. — Morris. 

This  bright  wood  fire.     See  Wood-fire,  The. — E.  S.  H. 

This  bronze  doth  keep  the  very  form  and  mould.  See 
On  the  Life-mask  of  Abraham  Lincoln. — Gilder. 

This,  by  the  way,  is  a  casual  remark.  See  Knicker- 
bocker History  of  New  York  (Wouter  Van  Twiller). 
— Irving. 

This  can  be  no  trick;  the  conference  was  sadly  borne. 
See  Much  Ado  about  Nothing  (Benedick's  Solil- 
oquy).— Shakespeare. 

This  can't  last  much  longer.  It'll  kill  him  sure.  See 
Forget-me-nots. — Griffith. 

This  case  befell  at  four  of  the  clock.  See  Six  Car- 
penters' Case,  The. — Pollock. 

This  castle  hath  a  pleasant  seat.  See  Macbeth 
(Morning). — Shakespeare 

This  century  is  the  grandest  of  centuries.  See  Na- 
poleon the  Little  ("This  century  is,"  etc.).— 
Hugo. 

This  century  proclaims  the  sovereignty  of  the  citizen. 
See  Napoleon  the  Little  ('This  century  pro- 
claims," etc.). — -Hugo. 

This,  children,  is  the  famed  Mon-goos.  See  Mon-goos, 
The.— Herford. 

This  compliment,  great  sir,  O  take.  See  To  the  Lead- 
ing Periodical. — (Punch.) 

This  country,  with  its  institutions,  belongs  to  the 
people  who  inhabit  it.  See  First  Inaugural  Ad- 
dres.i  (Constitution  and  the  People,  The). — Lincoln. 

This  day  belongs  not  to  America,  but  to  the  World. 
See  Columbian  Oration. — Depew. 

This  day,  beyond  all  contradiction.  See  April  Fools. — 
Praed. 

This  day.  Conscript  Fathers,  has  brought  with  it.  See 
Panegyric  on  Julius  Casar. — Cicero. 

This  day.  Dame  Nature  seemed  intlove!  See  Spring 
Idyll,  A.— Wotton. 


This  day   I    heard   such   music   that   I    thought.     See 

Music  and  Words. — Gilder. 
This  day  I  wish  to  begin  life  anew.     See  Conflict,  The. 

— Topping. 
This  day  is  sacred  to  our  heroes,  dead.     See  Decora- 
tion Day. — Anon. 
This  day,    my    Julia,    thou    must    make.     See    Bride 

Cake,  The. — Herrick. 
This  day,    O    friends    and    Englishmen,    sons    of    our 

common     land.       See     Harold     (King     Harold's 

Speech  to  his  Army  before  the  Battle  of  Hastings). 

— Bulwer-Lytton. 
This  day,  O  soldiers,  will  terminate  or  establish  the 

largest     empire.     See     Darius     to     His    Army. — 

Curtius. 
This  day,   this  very  day,   gave  birth.     See  Birth-day 

Ode. — Pindar. 
This  day,     two     hundred     years     ago.     See    same. — 

Whittier. 
This  dear    English    land!     See    Balder    (England). — 

Dobell. 
This  dear  resemblance  of  thy  lovely  face.     See  Portrait, 

"The. — Marot. 
This  diploma  which  I  present  to  you,  young  gentlemen. 

See    Military  Training   in   the   Schools. — Carring- 

ton. 
This  doll,  Kris  Kringle  brought  last  year.     See  Christ- 
mas Gift,  A. — Powers. 
This   drop   of   ink   chance   leaves   upon   my   pen.     See 

Drop  of  Ink,  A. — Whitney. 
This  fell  in  my  factor  days.     See  Clive. — Browning. 
This  fell  when  Christmas  lights  were  done.     See  Sea 

Swallows,  The. — Swinburne. 
This  fell  when  dinner-time  was  done.     See  Fall  of  Jack 

(Gillespie,  The. — Kipling. 
This  figure,  that  thou  here  seest  put.     See  Lines  on  the 

Portrait  of  Shakespeare. — Jon.son. 
This  flower  that  Jesus  bids  us  consider  was  the  Chalce- 

donian  Lily.     See  Lessons  from  Scripture  Flowers. 

— Slade. 
This  foul   thing  gives    one    swing.     See   Rum  Fiend's 

Portrait,  The. — Talmage. 
This  garden    does    not    take    my   eyes.     See    Garden, 

The. — Shirley. 
This  gentle  and  half  melancholy  breeze.     See  Autumn 

Breeze,  An. — Hayne. 
This  goodly  masque  but  lacked  a  fool!     See  Emperor's 

Return,  The. — Hugo. 
This  grave   were    ye   meanin',    stranger?     Oh,    there's 

nobody  much  lies  here.     See  Only  Joe. — Reed. 
This  happy    day    two    lights    are    seen.     See    On    the 

Birthday  of  Catherine  of  Braganza. — Knight. 
This  hinder  yeir  I  hard  be  tald.     See  Bludy  Serk,  The. 

— Henryson. 
This  hotel  has  been  built  and  arranged  for  the  special 

comfort    and    convenience    of    summer    boarders. 

See  Model  Summer  Hotel,  A. —  (Traveler's  Bcrord.) 
This  House  and  the  world  have  been  told  that  Robert 

Fulton    was    not    the    inventor.     See    Merits    of 

Fulton's  Invention. — Hoffman. 
This  house  might  have  come  to  order.     See  Plunket- 

ville  Literary  Society,  The. — Anon. 
This  I  beheld,  or  dreamed  it  in  a  dream.     See  Oppor- 
tunity.—Sill. 
This  I  got  on  the  day  that  Goring.     See  Three  Scars, 

The. — Thornburv. 
This  I  learned   from   the   birds.     See  Song,    A:  "This 

I  learned,"  etc. ^McDonald. 
"This  I   say,  then;  walk   in  the   Spirit."     See  Lesson 

from  "Fruit  of  the  Spirit." — Garrett. 
This  illustrious  man,   at  once  the  world's  admiration 

and  enigma.     See  Character  of  Washington,  The. 

-;— Whipple. 
This  immortal   state   paner,   which   for  its  composer. 

See  History  of  the  United  States  (Character  of  the 

Declaration  of  Independence). — Bancroft. 
This  in   defense   of  poesie   to   say.     See  Weakness. — 

Wither. 
This  Indian  weed,  now  withered  quite.     See  Smoking 

Spiritualized. — Anon. 
This  infant  world  has  taken  long  to  make!     See  World 

and  Soul.— Macdonald. 
This  is  a  beautiful  world!     See  Destiny  of  the  Empress 

.Josephine,  The.- — Barritt. 
^This  is  a  breath  of  summer  wind.     See  On  Reading  a 

Poet's  First  Book. — Bunner. 
This  is  a  glorious  country!     It  has  larger  rivers  and 

more  of  them.     See  America. — Cox. 
This  is  a  little   drama — a   regular  little   drama.     See 

Little  Drama,  A. — Anon. 
This  is  a  mighty  matter.  Van  den  Bosch.     See  Philip 

van  Artevelde  (Van  den  Bosch  and  Van  Artevelde). 

—Taylor. 


884 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


This 


This  is  a  pleasant  palace,  your  majesty.     See  Chosen 

Princess,  The. — Douglas. 
This  is  a  predicament !     Nobody  in  the  drawing-room. 

See  "You  Must  be  Dreaming." — Meyers. 
This  is  a  spray  the  bird  clung  to.     See  Misconceptions. 

— Browning. 
This  is  a   story   of   strange   old   times.     See  Karl   the 

Fiddler. — Raymond. 
This  is  a  very  valuable  book  on  the  application  of  the 

leech.     See     Ghost     of    Crooked     Lane,     The. — 

Vickers. 
This  is  a  wise  old  world  of  ours.     See  This  Old  World 

of  Ours. — Bungay. 
This  is    a    world    of    inflexible     compensations.     See 

Danger  of  Exclusive  Devotion  to  Business,  The. — 

Hillard. 
"This  is  an  educational  war."     See  Righteous  War,  A. 

— Witham. 
This  is  Bridget's  room.     See  Little  Prudy   (Inkstand, 

The).— May. 
This  is  delightful !     In  the  country  quiet.     See  Country 

Quiet. — Anon. 
This  is  East,  and  this  is  West.     See  same. — Anon. 
This  is   our   Flag,    and   may   it   wave.     See   American 

Flag,  The. — Anon. 
This  is   fortunate   indeed   to   find   you   at   home,    and 

alone.     See  Cure  for  Obstinacy;  or.  How  Charlie 

Won  a  Wife,  A. — Kavanaugh. 
This  is  God's  House;  the  blue  sky  is  the  ceiling.     See 

God's  House. — Scott. 
This  is    grandma's    birthday.     See    Cherry   Cheeks. — 

Anon. 
This  is  her  picture  as  she  was.     See  Portrait,  The. — 

Rossetti. 
This    is     her     jjicture  —  Dolladine.     See    Doll   Poems 

(Dolladine). — Rands. 
This  is   her   story   as   once   told   to   me.     See   Patient 

Mercy  Jones. — Fields. 
This  is  how  the  pupil  put  it.     See  Cows — a  Composi- 
tion.— Anon. 
This  is,  indeed,  a  new  move.     Sell  out!     See  Oh,  What 

a  Sell. — Denton. 
This  is  indeed  unexpected  news!     See  Caught  in  Their 

Own  Trap. — "Bob  o'  Link." 
This  is  King  Charles  his  day.     Speak  it,  thou  Tower. 

See  To  the  King  on  his  Birthday. — .lonson. 
This  is  Mr.  Harrison,  I  believe?     See  Examination  of  a 

Candidate  for  a  Position  as  Teacher. — Anon. 
This  is  my  birthday  and  I  am  going  to  have  a  party. 

See  Ethel's  Birthday  Party. — Rook. 
This  is    my    birthday,    baby.     Did    you    know.     See 

Grown-up  Birthday,  A. — Coolidge. 
This  is  my  country's  flag.     See  My  Country's  Flag. — 

Stafford. 
This  is  my  dolly  Mary.     See  Mary  and  Dinah. — Rook. 
This  is  my  grandson,   Billy,   Mr.   Bernacle.     See  Mrs. 

Winkle's  Grandson. — Dallas. 
This  is  my  Mamma's  calendar.     See  Mamma's  Helper. 

— Goodfellow. 
This  is  no  my  ain  lassie.     See  same. — Burns. 
This  is  not  the  first  time,  O  Romans,  that  Patrician 

arrogance  has  denied  to  us.     See  History  of  Rome 

(Canuleius       against      Patrician     Arrogance).  — 

Livy. 
This   is    one    of    those   subjects,    Mr.    Chairman.     See 

Speech  on  the  Compromises  of    the  Constitution 

(On  the  Federal  Constitution). — Hamilton. 
This  is  Palm  Sunday;  mindful  of  the  day      See  To  a 

Young  Girl  Dying. — Parsons. 
This  is  some  fellow,  who,   having  been  praised.     See 

King  Lear  (Bluntness). — Shakespeare. 
This  is  terrible,   terrible!     Thermometer  ninety-eight. 

See  Manly  Boy,  A.  — Anon. 
This  is  that  day  of  the  year  which  announced  to  man- 
kind  the   great   fact   of  American   Independence! 

See  Addition  to  the  Capitol,  The  (Fourth  of  July, 

The).— Webster. 
This  is     the     Arsenal.     From     floor    to     ceiling.     See 

Arsenal  at  Springfield,  The. — Longfellow. 
This  is  the  bait  the  fishermen  take.     See  Bait  of  the 

Average  Fisherman. — Dodge. 
This  is  the  bird  that  sweeps  o'er  the  sea.     See  Stormy 

Petrel,  The. — Benjamin. 
This  is   the   Burden   of   the   Heart.     See   No   More. — 

Willson. 
This  is  the   convent   where   they  tend   the   sick.     See 

Sister  Mary  of  the  Love  of  (jod. — Mulholland. 
This  is  the  day,  the  glorious  day.     See  Vacation. — 

Riley. 
This  is  the  earth  He  walked  on  not  alone.     See  Holy 

Land. — Gilder. 
This  is  the  end  of  the  book.     See  Written  at  the  End 

of  a  Book. — Mitchell. 


See  Feast -time  of 


See  Two  Com- 


This  is  the  feast-time  of  the  year. 

the  Year,  The. — Kimball. 
This  is  the  fi'st  and  great  command. 

mands.  The. — Anon. 
This  is  the  first  day  of  a  new  year.     See  Thoughts  for 

a  New  Year. — Parker. 
This  is  the  forest  primeval.     The  murmuring  pines  and 

the  hemlocks.     See  Evangeline. — Longfellow. 
This  is  the  glamour  of  the  world  antique.     See  Sibyl. 

— Payne. 
This  is  the  grave  prepared;  set   down  the  bier.     See 

Gardener's  Burial,  The. — Johnstone. 
This  is  the  great  danger.     See  What  is  Worth  While. — 

Lindsay. 
This  is  the  house  she  was  born  in,  full  four-score  years 

ago.     See  At  Four-score. — Gilder. 
This  is  the  loggia  Browning  loved.     See  Browning  at 

Asolo. — .lohnson. 
This  is  the  month,  and  this  the  happy  morn.     See  On 

the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. — Milton. 
This  is  the  old  gold-stoled  October.     See  October. — 

Munkittrick. 
This  is  the  pathway  where  she  walked.     See  Amy. — 

Legarc?. 
This  is   the   purple   sea   of  ancient   song.     See   Greek 

Reverie,  A. — Hodgins. 
This  is  the  recreation  ground,  or  a  part  of  it.     See  Pet 

of  the  School,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
This  is  the  room  to  which  she  came  that  day.     See  Her 

Pity. — Martin. 
This  is  the  rugged  face.     See  Michael  Angelo  Buona- 

rotti. — Cranch. 
This  is    the    season    of    the    year.     See    Pleasures    of 

Picnicing. — Anon. 
This  is  the   seed,  so   yellow  and   round.     See  Johnny- 
cake,  The. —  {T^e  Nxirsery.) 
This  is   the    ship    of   pearl,    which,    poets   feign.     See 

Chambered  Nautilus,  The. — Holmes. 
This  is  the  song  of  a  nameless  man.     See  Nameless 

Hero,  A. — Traquair. 
This  is  the  song  of  the  birds  in  the  bowers.     See  Spring- 
time.— Anon. 
This  is  the  song  of  the  wave!     The  mighty  one!     See 

Song  of  the  Wave,  A. — Lodge. 
This    is   the   state   of  man.      See    King    Henry   VIII. 

("This  is  the  state,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
This  is  the  story  my  grandmother  told.     See  Story  of  a 

Little  Red  Hen,  The. — Eastman. 
This  is  the  story  of  Renyi,  and  when  you  have  heard  it 

through.     See  Ballad  of  Splendid  Silence,  The. — 

Nesbit. 
This  is   the   sunset   of  the   passing   year.     See  Indian 

Summer. — Kirk. 
This  is    the    tale    of 

Stevenson. 
This  is  the  tale  that  was  told  to  me. 

A. — Roche. 

This  is  the  top  of  my  little  head.     See  Exercise  Recita- 
tion, An. — Anon. 
This  is  the  very  coinage  of  your  brain.     See  Hamlet. — 

Shakespeare. 
This  is  the  way  the  baby  slept.     See  Way  the  Baby 

Slept,  The.— Riley. 
This  is  the  way  the  happy  farmer.     See  Farmer,  The. — 

Anon. 
This  is   the   way   the   morning   dawns.     See   Summer 

Day,  A. — Anon. 
This  is  the  way  we  dress  the  doll.     See   Doll   Poems 

(Dressing  the  Doll). — Rands. 
This  is  the  white  winter  day  of  his  burial.     See  Phillips 

Brooks. — Carman. 
This  is  the  Wild  Huntsman  that  shoots  the  hares.     See 

Story  of  the  Wild  Hunt.sman,  The. — Hoffman. 
This  is  the  worst  thing  I   ever  heard  of.     See  "That 

Other  Fourth." — Denton. 
This  is    Vimeiro;    yonder    stream,    which    flows.     See 

Inscription  for  a  Monument  at  Vimeiro. — Southey. 
This  is   what   a   fairy   heard.     See   Fairy   Story,    A. — 

Sherman. 
This  is    what    the    robin    sings.     See    Bird    Songs. — 

Moore. 
This  is  your  month,  the  month  of  perfect  days.     See 

James  Russell  Lowell. — Holmes. 
This  journal  of  folly's  an  emblem  of  me.     See  Written 

in  a  Young  Lady's  Commonplace  Book. — Moore. 
This  kind   o'    sogerin'    ain't   a   mite   like   our   October 

trainin'.     See   Biglow   Papers,    The   (Letter   from 

Mr.  Hosea  Biglow  to  the  Hon.  J.  T.  Buckingham). 

— Lowell. 
This  kitten,   sir,  of  the  Colonel's?     I'll  tell  the  story. 

See  Kitten  of  the  Regiment,  The. — Buckham. 
This  knight  a  doughter  hadde  by  his  wif.     See  Canter- 
bury Tales,  The  (Virginia). — Chaucer. 


the 


See    Ticonderoga. — 
See  Sailor's  Yarn, 


885 


This 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


This,    ladies    and    gentlemen,    is    the    distinguished 

hanimal.     See  Showman  on  the  Woodchuck,  A. — 

Anon. 
This  life,  and  all  that  it  contains,  to  him.     See  Edwin 

the  Fair  (Sch^r,  The).— Taylor. 
This  life    iS    a    school.     There    are    many   lessons   to 

learn.     See  Pluck. — Pomeroy. 
This  life    is    given    us    for    work.     jSee    Persevere. — ' 

Gormley. 
This     life,    which     seems    so    fair.     See   Madrigal. — 

Drummond. 
This  lighthouse,  known  to  mariners  as  the  Cape  Cod 

or  Highland  Light.     See  Highland  Light,  The.— 

Thoreau. 
This  little  blue  card  I  found  on  the  floor.     See  Her 

Programme  of  Dance. — Spencer. 
This  little  seed  of  life  and  love.     See  Epitaph  on  a 

Child. — Parsons. 
This  little  vault,  this  narrow  room.     <See  Epitaph  on 

the  Lady  Mary  ViUiers. — Carew. 
This  lovely  land,  this  glorious  liberty,   these  benign 

institutions.     See     Adams     and     Jefferson    (Our 

Duties  to  Our  Country). — Webster. 
This  man  loved  Lincoln,  him  did  Lincoln  love.     See 

John  George  Nicolay.^Gilder. 
This  man  was  very  ostentatious  of  his  affected  knowl- 
edge of  the  History  of  England.     See  Highgate 

Butcher,  The. — -Anon. 
This  man    whose   homely   face   you   look   upon.     See 

Abraham  Lincoln. — Stoddard. 
This  meetin'  has  met  for  the  purpose  of  doin'  business. 

See     Gumtown     Woman's     Association,     The. — ■ 

McBride. 
This  meetin'    has    now    come    till    order.     See    Anti- 
Railroad  Meeting,  An. — Anon. 
This  meetin'  will  now  come  to  order.     See  Frog  Hollow 

Lyceum,  The. — McBride. 
This  meeting  will  now  come  to  order.     See  Jimtown 

Lyceum. — McBride. 
This  monument,    faultless    as    a    work    of    art.     See 

Soldier's  Monument,  The. — Swift. 
"This  mom   T  will  weave  my  web,"   she  said.     See 

Weaving  the  Web. — Dorr. 
This  morning  I  was  late  in  going  to  school.     See  Last 

Lesson,  The. — Daudet. 
This  morning,  timely  rapt  with  holy  fire.     See  On  Lucy, 

Countess  of  Bedford. — Jonson. 
This  morning,  when  all  of  the  rest  had  gone  down.     See 

What  Bessie  Saw. — Bronson. 
This  morning  when  I  first  awoke.     See  Young  Mother's 

Perplexity,  A. — Denton. 
This  mortal  body  that  I  wear.     See  "  ?" — F.  A.  Le  H. 
This  mossy  bank  they  press'd.     That  aged  oak.     See 

Pastoral  Dialogue,  A.- — Carew. 
This  must  be  the  place.     Let  me  see  again  what  the 

note  says.     See  Unjust  Suspicion. — Rook. 
This,  my  Lords,  is  a  perilous  and  tremendous  moment. 

See  American  War,  The  (America  Unconquerable). 

— Chatham. 
This  new    Diana    makes   weak    men    her    prey.     See 

Diana. — Rhys. 
This  night  about  our  cheerful  hearth  we  gather  once 

again.     See  Christmas. — Sawyer. 
This  night  is  my  departing  night.     See  Armstrong's 

Good  Night. — Anon. 
This  night   presents  a   play  which   public   rage.     See 

Word  to  the  Wise,  A. — Johnson. 
This  night,  while  sleep  begins  with  heavy  wings.     See 

A.strophel     and    Stella    (Sonnet     XXXVIIL).— 

Sidney. 
This  old  watchword  so  often  heard  by  travellers.     See 

"Step    to    the    Captain's    Office    and    Settle." — 

Cheever. 
This  one   fought   with  .Tackson,   and   faced  the   fight 

with  Lee.     See  Answering  to  Roll  Call. — Stanton. 
This  only  grant  me,  that  my  means  may  lie.     See  Of 

Myself. — Cowley. 
This  passeth  yeer  by    veer,   and    day    by   day.     See 

Canterbury  Tales,   The  (Knightes  Tale,  The).— 

Chaucer. 
This  peach  is  pink,  with   such  a  pink.     See  same. — 

Gale. 
This  place. — the  center  of   the  grove.     See    Douglas 

(Soliloquy  of  Douglas — Solemnity). — Home. 
This  polyglot  of  wealth,  this  museum  of  curiosities, 

the    Pension    List.     See    Satire    on    the    Pension 

System. — Curran. 
This  realm   is   sacred   to   the   silent   past.     See  In   a 

Garret. — Allen. 
This  region  is  as  lavish  of  its  flowers.     See  Tecumseh 

(Ijefroy  in  the  Forest). — Mair. 
This  region,  surely,  is  not  of  the  earth.     See  Naples. — 

Rogers. 


Th 


See  To  My  Grandmother.- 


See  Miser's 
Under     an 


See  Circe. - 


is  relative  of  mine. 

Locker-Lampson. 
This  remarkable  beast  of  prey  dwells  in  mill  ponds. 

See  Bull-head,  The.— Billings. 
This  river  of  azure  with  many  a  weed  in.     See  Atkin- 
son's Mill. — Ramsay. 
This  rose-tree   is    not    made    to    bear.     See    Envy. — • 

Anon. 
This  royal  throne  of  kings,  this  sceptered  isle.     See 

King  Richard  IL — Shakespeare. 
This  scene  opens  at  the  time  when  Ivan  Ogareff.     .See 

Michael  Strogoff. — Verne. 
This  single  stick,  which  you  now  behold  ingloriously 

lying  in   that   neglected   comer.     See  Meditation 

upon  a  Broom-stick,  A. — Swift. 
This,  sir.  is  my  case.     It  is  the  case  not  merely  of  that 

humble  institution.     See  Close  of  Defence  of  Dart- 
mouth College. — Webster. 
This  song  of  mine  is  a  song  of  the  vine.     See  Catawba 

Wine. — Longfellow. 
This  song's  of  a  beggar  who  long  lost  his  sight.     See 

Blind  Beggar's  Daughter  of  Bednall  Green,  The.— 

Anon. 
This  sounds  very   wise   in   a   galloping  reading.     See 

True  Contentment. — Kent. 
This  story  I'm  going  to  sing.     See  Saddle  to  Rags. — 

Anon. 
This  story's  very  fine  indeed.     See  George  Washing- 
ton's Little  Hatchet. — Anon. 
This  summer   night    is    neither    cool    nor   warm.     See 

Thunder  Storm,  A. — Miller. 
This  sweet  child  which  hath  climbed  upon  my  knee. 

See  My  Slain.— Realf. 
This  system  and  order  everywhere  forms  the  basis  of 

all  science.     See  name. — Minton. 
This  tale  is  true,  for  so  the  records  show. 

Will,  The.— Birdseye. 
This  tantalizing     sudden     shower!     See 

Umbrella. — -Meyers. 
This  the  house  of  Circe,  queen  of  charms. 

De  Tabley. 
This  the  true  sign  of  ruin  to  a  race.     See  Decay  of  a 

People.  The. — Simms. 
This,  then,  is  the  theatre  on  which  the  intellect  of 

America    is    to    appear.     Seer  Prospects    of    the 

Republic,  The. — Everett. 
This,  this  is  he :  softly  a  while.     See  Samson  Agonistes 

(Eyeless  at  Gaza). — -Milton. 
This  thrilling  story  is  furnished  by  a  Prussian  railroad 

conductor.     See  Mad  Engineer,  The. — Anon. 
This  time,  four  years  ago,  I  lodged  in  Bath  Street.     See 

Leap-year  Wooing,  A. — Macrae. 
This  town  is  decidedly  the  best  place  I  ever  struck. 

See  Quack,  The. — Anon. 
This  tragical  tale,  which,  they  say,  is  a  true  one.     See 

Pyramus  and  Thisbe. — ^Saxe. 
This  tree,  which  surpasses  all  others  of  North  America. 

See  Choosing  a  "State  Tree."— The  Tulip  Tree. 

—Vail. 
This  uncounted  multitude  before  me,  and  around  me. 

See  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The  (Oration  at  the 

Laying  of  the  Comer  Stone,  etc.). — Webster. 
This  was  our  poet — one  who  strode.     See  Fitz-James 

O'Brien.— Watrous. 
This  was  the  cause  of  all  the  trouble.     See  Difficulty 

about  that  Dog,  The. — Anon. 
This  was  the  man  God  gave  us  when  the  hour.     See 

George  Washington. — Ingham. 
This  was  the  picture  in  front  of  "Old  Daddy  Turner's" 

cabin  in  the  "Kaintuck"  quarter.     See  Old  Daddy 

Turner. — {Detroit  Free  Press.) 
This  was   the    ruler   of   the    land.     See    Pericles   and 

Aspasia. — Croly. 
This  was  your  butterfly,  you  see.     See  After  Wings. — 

Piatt. 
This  way  is  long,  my  darling.     See  Sojourners. — Anon 
This  way.     No,     this    way.     This    way,     then.     See 

Secrets  of  the  Heart,  The. — Dobson. 
This  way  the  noise  was,  if  my  ear  be  true.     See  Comu.s 

(Lady  Lost  in  the  Wood.  The). — Milton. 
This  way,  this  way  come,  and  hear.     See  Little  French 

Lawyer,     The     (Charm,    The). — Beaumont     and 

Fletcher. 
This  winter  [or  winter's]  weather  it  waxeth  cold.     See 

Take  thy  Old  Cloak  about  Thee. — Anon. 
This  wintry    month    of    storm    and    cold.     See    Some 

Years  in  Washington's  Life. — Stanley. 
This  wolf  for  many  a  day.     See  St.  Francis  and  the 

Wolf. — Tyman-Hinkson . 
"This   woman   walketh   in   the   smile   of   God!"     See 

■Tudith. — Aldrich. 
This  world  a  hunting  is.     See  Madrigal:  "This  world, 

etc. — Drummond. 


886 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Thou 


This  world  I  deem  but  a  beautiful  dream.     See  Second 

Day  of  Creation,  The.— Whytehead. 
This  world  is  all  a  fleeting  show.     See  same. — Moore. 
This  world  is  but  the  sun's  kaleidoscope.     See  Medita- 
tions on  Immortality. — -Welcker. 
This  world  is  like  a  looking-glass.   See  In  the  Looking- 
glass. — Leonard. 
This  world  is  made  a  hell.     .See  Damon's  Lament. — 

Drummond. 
This  [The— C.l  world  is  too   much  with   us.  late  and 

soon.      See  World  is  too  Much  with  Us,  The. — 

Wordsworth. 
This  world   may   be   considered   as   a   great   mart   of 

commerce.     See      Inconsistent      E.xpectations. — : 

Barbauld. 
This  world  was  not  as  it  now  is  seen.     See  Golden  Age, 

The. — -FenoUosa. 
This  world's   a    scene   as   dark    as    Styx.     See    Lines 

Written  in  an  Album. — Gaylord. 
This  wot  ye  all  whom  it  concerns.     See  Dinner  at  the 

House  of  Dugal  Stewart,  A. — Bums. 
This  yaller  dog  I  have  in  mind.     See  Yaller  Dog,  The.^ 

Anon. 
This  year — next     year — -sometime — never.     See    This 

Year — Next  Year. — Anon. 
This  year,  till  late  in  April,  the  snow  fell  thick  and 

light.     See    Nineteenth    of    April,    1861,    The.— 

Larcom. 
Thistledown,  motionless  over  the  hill.     See  Autumn 

Cry,  The.— (CorneZ?  Widow.) 
Tho'  a  crumpled  glove  it  be.     See  Di's  Mitten. — Fitch. 
Tho'    death   met    love    upon    thy    dying   smile.     See 

Anastasis. — Turner. 
Tho'  I  met  her  in  the  summer.     See  Cassandra  Brown. 

— Anon. 
Tho'  yer  lamp  o'  life  is  bumin'  with  a  clear  and  steady 

light.     See  When  the  Light  Goes  Out. — Chester. 
Thomas  Jefferson  of  Virginia  and  .lohn  Adams  of  Massa- 
chusetts.    See  Centennial  Oration  (Thomas  Jeffer- 
son and  John  Adams). — Winthrop. 
Thomas  Ruffin  had  been  found  guilty  of  treason.     See 

Governor's  Last  Levee  The. — Kennedy. 
"Thomas    Watson,    Jeweler."     That's   a    mighty   big 

hou.se.     See  Only  Another  Footprint. — Anon. 
Thorowe  the  halle  the  bell  han  sounde.     See  Accounte 

of  W.  Canvnge's  Feast,  The.— Chatterton. 
Those   Christmas    bells   as    sweetly   chime.     See   Old 

Christmas. — Anon. 
Those  days  we  spent  on  Lebanon.     See  On  Lebanon. — 

Gray. 
Those  delicate  wanderers.     See  Sacrifice. — Russell. 
Those  earlier  men  that  owned  our  earth.     See  After- 
comers,  The. — -Lowell. 
Those  evening  bells!     Those  evening  bells.     See  Those 

Evening  Bells. — -Moore. 
Those  far-off  fields,  how  fair  they  seem.     See  Those 

Far-off  Fields. — Fairbanks. 
Those  few  pale  Autumn  flowers.     See  Autumn  Flowers. 

— Southey. 
Those  !?et  the  least  that  take  the  greatest  pains.     See 

Laborious  Writers. — Butler. 
Those   gilded    flies.     See   Queen   Mab   (Drones   of   the 

Community,  The). — Shelley. 
Those  glorious  wars  are  long  since  sped.     See  Wash- 
ington.—Bocock. 
Those  guests  from  many  climes  had  often  heard.     See 

New  Liberty  Bell,  The.— H.  B.  C. 
Those  ob  you  who  hea'd  de  o'ator  a-week  ago.     See 

"Sound  Money." — Washburn. 
Those  same  noble  Scots  that  are  your  prisoners.     See 

King  Henry  IV.,  Pt.  I.  (Hotspur  to  Worcester). — 

Shakespeare. 
Those   slumbering   lids   unclose,    where   pure   dreams 

hover  so  light!     See  Spectre  of  the  Rose,  The. — 

Gautier. 
Those  spirits  God  ordained.     See  To  the  Memory  of 

Channing. — Lynch. 
Those  violets  blue  on  my  lady's  breast.     See  Those 

Violets  Blue. — Banks. 
Those  we  love  truly  never  die.     See  Forever. — Anon. 
Those  were  good  times,  in  olden  days.     See  Written 

on  a  Fly-leaf  of  Theocritus. — ^Thompson. 
Those  were  wonderful  days  of  long  ago.     See  What 

Grandma  Says. — Cooper. 
Those    who    carry    latch-keys.     See    Locked    Out. — 

Anon. 
Those  who  do  not  control  their  passions.     See  Wisdom 

of  Krishna. — (Notes  and  Queries.) 
Those  who  have  stood  amid  the  sublime  scenery.     See 

Eagle's  Flight,  An. — Bedinger. 
Those    who    love    truly    never    die.     See    Forever. — 

O'Reilly. 


Those  who  much  read  advertisements  and  bills.  See 
Cockle  t)s.  Cackle. — Hood. 

Thothmes,  who  loved  a  pyramid.  See  Story  of 
Pyramid  Thothmes,  The. — -Anon. 

Thou  ancient  oak!  whose  myriad  leaves  are  loud.  See 
Eliot's  Oak. — Longfellow. 

Thou  art  a  ferryman,  Phaon,  yet  a  freeman.  See 
Sapho  and  Phao  (Phaon,  the  Ferryman). — Lyiy. 

"Thou  art  a  fool,"  said  my  head  to  my  heart.  See 
Retort. — Dunbar. 

Thou  art  alive,  O  grave.     See  In  God's  Acre. — Tilton. 

Thou  art  as  a  lone  watcher  on  a  rock.  See  England.— 
Day. 

Thou  art  as  welcome  as  the  summer  rain.  See  Love's 
Return. — Savage. 

Thou  art  gone  from  us,  and  with  thee  departed.  See 
Felicia  Hemans. — Maclean. 

Thou  art  gone  to  the  grave;  but  we  will  not  deplore 
thee.  See  Stanzas  on  the  Death  of  a  Friend. — - 
Heber. 

Thou  art  lost  to  me  forever! — I  have  lost  thee.  Isadore! 
See  Widowed  Heart,  The.— Pike. 

Thou  art  mine,  thou  hast  given  thy  word.  See  Song 
from  a  Drama. — Stedman. 

Thou  art  my  very  own.     See  Unborn,  The. — Finch. 

Thou  art  no  lingerer  in  monarch's  hall.  See  Sunbeam, 
The. — Hemans. 

Thou  art  not,  and  thou  never  canst  be  mine.  See  To 
Imperia. — Burbidge. 

Thou  art  not  fair,  for  all  thy  red  and  white.  See 
Renunciation,  A. — -Campion. 

Thou  art  not  gone,  being  gone.  See  Eclogue,  Decem- 
ber 26,  1613  (Love).— Donne. 

Thou  art,  O  God,  my  East!  In  thee  I  dawned.  See 
Compass,  The. — Robbins. 

Thou  art,  O  God,  the  life  and  light.  See  Thou  Art,  O 
God. — Moore. 

Thou  art  sleeping,  brother,  sleeping.  See  Brother's 
Tribute,  A. — Anon. 

Thou  art  so  very  sweet  and  fair.     See  To  a  Girl.- — Anon. 

Thou  art  the  flower  of  grief  to  me.  See  WoodrufTe, 
The.— Knox. 

Thou  art  the  joy  of  age.  See  Light. — George  Mac- 
don  aid. 

Thou  art  the  rock  of  empire,  set  mid-seas.  See  At 
Gibraltar,  II. — Woodberry. 

Thou  art  to  all  lost  love  the  best.  See  To  the  Willow- 
tree. — Herrick. 

Thou  art  to  me  as  is  the  sea.     See  Alter  Ego. — Tabb. 

Thou  art  to  me  like  all  the  days.  See  Yesterday. — 
Knowles. 

Thou  art  too  hard  for  me  in  I^ove.  See  Love. — 
Herbert. 

Thou  askest  not  to  know  the  creed.  See  Charity. — 
Morgan, 

Thou  bay-crowned  living  One  that  o'er  the  bay- 
crowned  Dead  art  bowing.  See  To  L.  E.  L.,  on 
the  Death  of  Felicia  Hemans. — Browning. 

"Thou  bearest  flowers  within  Thy  hand."  See  "Should 
I  not  Love  My  Flowers?" — Greenwell. 

Thou  beauteous  flower,  with  heart  of  gold.  See  To  a 
Chrysanthemum. — -Thompson. 

Thou  bidst  me  come  away.     See  To  Death. — -Herrick. 

Thou  blossom,  bright  with  autumn  dew.  See  To  the 
Fringed  Gentian. — Bryant. 

Thou,  bom  to  sip  the  lake  or  spring.  See  To  a  Honey 
Bee. — Freneau. 

Thou  canst  not  be  the  child  of  solitude.  See  Genius 
to  Her  Poet. — Dutton. 

Thou  canst  not  forget  me,  for  memory  will  fling.  See 
Thou  canst  not  Forget. — Anon. 

Thou  canst  not  frown,  O  Death.     See  same. — Thayer. 

Thou  canst  not  hope  acquittal  from  the  Volscians. 
See  Coriolanus  (Coriolanus  and  Aufidius). — Shake- 
speare. 

Thou  can,st  not  say  I  did  it.  See  Macbeth. — Shake- 
speare. 

Thou  damn'd  antipodes  to  common-sense.  See  Satire 
on  a  Conceited  Playwright. — Dorset. 

Thou  dancer  of  two  thousand  years.  See  Dancing 
Faun,  The. — Rogers. 

Thou  dark-robed  man  with  solemn  pace.  See  Winter. 
— (Chambers'  Journal.) 

Thou  didst  delight  my  eyes.     See  same. — Bridges. 

Thou  divinest,  fairest,  brightest.  See  Faithful  Shep- 
herdess, The  (Satyr's  Service.  The). — Fletcher. 

Thou  dost  not  sing  of  sorrow,  being  too  vast.  See 
Beethoven. — Ingham. 

Thou  ever  young!  Persephone  but  gazes.  See  To 
Demeter. — Fleming. 

Thou  fair  haired  Angel  of  the  Evening.  See  To  the 
Evening  Star. — Crabbe. 


887 


Thou 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Thou  foolish  blossom,  all  untimely  blown!     See  To  a 

Wild  Rose  Found  in  October. — Hayes. 
Thou  for  whose  birth  the  whole  creation  yearned.     See 

Hise  of  Man,  The. — ("hadwick. 
Thou  from  primeval  nothingness  didst  call.     See  God. 

— De'-zhavin.      # 
Thou    glorious    mirror,    where    the    Almighty's    form. 
<See  Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Apostrophe  to  the 
Ocean). — Byron. 
Thou    glorious    mocker    of    the    world!     See    To    the 

Mocking-bird. — Pike. 
Thou  God  of  glorious  majesty.     See  Hymn  for  Serious- 
ness, An. — Wesley. 
Thou   God   unsearchable,   unknown.     See   Thou   God 

Unsearchable. — Wesley. 
Thou    God,    who    high,    eternal    love.     See    Wedding 

Hymn. — Lanier. 
Thou  golden  sunshine  in  the  peaceful  day !     See  I.,ament 

for  King  Ivor. — Stokes. 
Thou  Grace  Divine,  encircling  all.     See  Love  of  God, 

The. — Scudder. 
Thou  grim  and  haggard  wanderer,  who  dost  look.     See 

On  a  Portrait  of  Servetus. — Gilder. 
Thou  half-unfolded  flower.     See  Blossom  of  the  Soul, 

The. — .Johnson. 
Thou    happiest    thing    alive.      See    To    the    Boy.  — 

Kinney. 
Thou  happy,  happy  elf!     See  Parental  Ode  to  My  Son, 

Aged  "rhree  Years  and  Five  Months,  A. — Hood. 
Thou  hast  beauty  bright  and  fair.     See  Hermione. — 

Cornwall. 
Thou  ha.st  been  where  the  rocks  of  coral  grow.     See 

Diver,  The. — Hemans. 
Thou  hast  diamonds  and  pearls  of  rare  beauty.     See 

Thine  Eyes — Heine. 
Thou  hast  done  evil.     See  .Judgment,  The. — Goodale. 
Thou  hast  fill'd  me  a  golden  cup.     See  To  Christina 

Rossetti. — Greenwell. 
Thou  hast  learned  the  woes  of  all  the  world.     See  Poet, 

The.— C.  S.  T. 
Thou  hast  lost  thy  love,  poor  fool.     See  Simple  Maid, 

A.— De  Tabley. 
Thou  hast  not  been  with  the  festal  throng.     See  Siege 
of  Valencia,  The  (Ballad  of   Roncesvalles,  A). — • 
Hemans. 
Thou  hast  not  drooped  thy  stately  head.     See  Savan- 
nah.— Burroughs. 
Thou  hast  not  gold?     Why,  this  is  gold.     See  Undow- 
ered.— Kimball. 
Thou  hast  on  earth  a  Trinity.     See  To  the  Christ. — 

Tabb. 
Thou  hast  sworn  by  thy  God,  my  Jeanie.     See  same. — 

Cunningham. 
Thou  hast  thy  calling  to  some  palace  floor.     See  Son- 

npts  from  the  Portuguese,  IV. — Browning. 
Thou  hast  two  ears  and  but  one  mouth.     See  Two  and 

One. — Ruckert. 
Thou  hast  vowed  by  thy  faith,  my  Jeanie.     See  Thou 
Hast  Sworn  by  thy  God,  my    Jeanie. — Cunning- 
ham. 
Thou  heart !  why  dost  thou  lift  thy  voice?     See  Singing 

Heart,  The. — Dandridge. 
Thou  hidden  love  of  God!  whose  height.     See  Divine 

Love. — Tersteegen . 
Thou  hidden  source  of  calm  repose.     See  For  Believers. 

— Wesley. 
Thou  in  the  moon's  bright  chariot  proud  and  gav.     See 

Hymn  to  Light,  The  — Cowley. 
Thou  knowest  best,  my  Father.     See  Thou  Knowest 

Best. — Farningham. 
Thou    larcce-brained  woman    and    large-hearted    man. 

See  Desire.  A. — -Brownins:. 
Thou_  layest   thy  hand   on   the    fluttering  heart.     See 

"Be  Quiet:  Fear  Not." — Havergal. 
Thou,  leaf-bound,  hill-built  Nazareth.     See  Twilight  at 

Nazareth. — Miller. 
Thou  ling'ring  star,  with  less'ning  ray.     See  To  Mary 

in  Heaven. — Burns. 
Thou  little  bird,  thou  dweller  by  the  sea.     See  Little 

Beach  Bird,  The. — Dana. 
Thou    little    child,    with    tender    clinging    arms.     See 

Slumber  Song. — Thaxter. 
Thou  livest,  O  soul'  be  sure,  though  earth  be  flames. 

See  Thou  Livest.  O  Soul!— Moore. 
Thou  long  disowned,  reviled,  opprest.     See  Truth. — 

Scudder. 
Thou  love.st  me  not,  thou  loveth  me  not !     See  same. — 

Browning. 
Thou    mny'st    have    read,    my    little    boy    Ned.     See 

Witches'  Frolic,  The. — Barham. 
Thou  mayst.  thou  shalt,  I  will  not  go  with  thee.     See 
King  John  ("Thou  mayst,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 


Thou  mighty  gulf,  in.satiate  cormorant!     See  To  F.ver- 

lasting  Oblivion. — Marston. 
Thou   more    than    most    sweet    glove.     See    Cynthia's 

Revels  (To  n  Cjlove). — .lonson. 
Thou  must  be  true  thyself.     See  Be  True. — Br.nar. 
Thou  need'st  not  re.'^t;  the  shining  spheres  are  Thine. 

Sei?  Labor  and  Rest. — V^ery. 
Thou  neither  dost  persuade  me  to  seek  wealth.     See 
Paradise     Regained      (Saviour's     Replv     to     the 
Tempter,  The).— Milton. 
Thou  only  bird  that  singest  as  thou  flyost.     See  Mano: 

a  Poetical  History  (Skylark,  The).— -Dixon. 
Thou  priest  that  art  behind  the  screen.     See  Ipsissi- 

inus. — Hamilton. 
Thou  record  of  the  votive  throng.     See  Album  Verses. 

— Irving. 
Thou  robb'st  my  days  of  business  and  delights.     See 

Thief,  The.— Cowley. 
Thou  shalt  have  no  other  gods  before  me  .     See  Exo- 
dus (Ten  Commandments,  The). — Bible. 
Thou  shalt  have  one  God  only.     See  Latest  Decalogue, 

The.— Clough. 
Thou  shalt  not  all  die;  for,  while  love's  fire  shines. — 

See  Lines  uoon  Himself. — Herrick. 
Thou  should'st  have  had  more  faith!     SeePio  Nono. — 

Howe. 
Thou,     Sibyl     raot!     whose     sympathetic     soul.     See 

Margaret  Fuller. — Alcott. 
Thou   spark  of  life   that   wavest  wings  of  gold.     See 

Ode  to  a  Butterfly. — Higginson. 
Thou    sparkhng    bowl!     Thou    sparkling    bowl!     See 

Sparkling  Bowl,  The. — Pierpont. 
Thou    standest    there,    O    image    green.     See    To    the 

College  Idol. — Hinman. 
Thou  still  unravish'd  bride  of  quietness!     See  Ode  on 

a  Grecian  Urn. — Keats. 
Thou  sweet-souled  comrade  of  a  time  gone  by.     See 

To  E.  N.  L.— Livingston. 
Thou  sword  at  my  left  side.     See  Sword  Song,  The. — 

Korner. 
Thou  tall,  majestic  monarch  of  the  wood.     See  Moun- 
tain to  the  Pine,  The. — Hawkes. 
Thou  that  art  our  Queen  again.     See  Song  to  Ceres.— 

Hunt. 
Thou    that     ha.st     a     daughter.     See    Sailor,    The. — 

Allingham. 
Thou  that  hast  given  so  much  to  me.     See  Gratefulness. 

— Herbert. 
Thou  that  mak'st  gain  thy  end,  and  wisely  well.     See 

To  My  Bookseller. — .Jonson. 
Thou    that    on    every    field    of    earth    and    sky.     See 

Colonel  Burnaby. — I^ang. 
Thou  that  once,  on  mother's  knee.     See  Little  (^hild's 

Hymn,  A. — Palgrave. 
Thou    that    with    ale    or  viler   liquors.     See  Hudibras 

(Muse  of  Doggerel,  The). — Butler. 
Thou    thrice    denied,    yet    thrice    beloved.     See    St. 

Peter's  Day. — Keble. 
Thou  tiny  solace  of  these  prison  days.     Ser-  Si»-  Walter 

Raleigh  to  a  Caged  liinnet. — Lee-Hamilton. 
Thou,  too,  art  worthy  of  all  praise,  whose  pen.     See 

Addison. — Eames. 
Thou,  too,   hast   traveled,  little  fluttering  thing.     See 
To  a  Swallow  Building  under  the  Eaves  at  Craig- 
enputtock. — Carlyle. 
Thou  too,  hoar  Mount!  with  thy  sky-pointing  peaks. 
See  Hymn  before  sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. 
— Coleridge. 
Thou,  too,  sail  on,  O  Ship  of  State.     See  Building  of  the 

Ship,  The  (Ship  of  State,  The).— Longfellow. 
Thou  unrelenting  Past!  See  To  the  Past. — Bryant. 
Thou  vague  dumb  crawler  with  the  groping  head.     See 

To  my  Tortoise  Chronos. — Lee-Hamilton. 
Thou  wast  all  that  to  me,  love.     See  To  One  in  Para- 
dise.— Poe. 
Thou  wast  not  born  for  death,   immortal  bird!     See 

Nightingale,  The. — Keats. 
Thou  wert    fair.    Lady    Mary.     See    Lady    Mary. — Al- 

ford. 
Thou,  who  didst  lay  all  other  bosoms  bare.     See  To 

Shakespeare. — Day. 
Thou,  who  didst  stoop  below.     See  Looking  unto  Jesus. 

— Miles. 
Thou  who  dost  all  things  give.     See  Remembrance  of 

God. — Furness. 
Thou  who  dost  build  the  blind  bird's  nest.     See  Blind 

Bird's  Nest,  The.— Dorr. 
Thou  who  dost  dwell  alone.     See  Desire. — ,\rnold. 
Thou  who  dost  feel  life's  vessel  str.and.     See  Ordeal 

by  F"ire,  The. — Stedman. 
Thou  who  hast  slept  all  night  upon  a  storm.     See  To 
the  Man-of-war  Bird. — Whitman. 


888 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Three 


Thou  who    ordainest,    for    the    land's    salvation.     See 

God  Save  the  Nation. — Tilton. 
Thou  who  sendest  sun  and   rain.     See  Poet's  Journal, 

The  (Praise). — Taylor. 
Thou  who,  when  fears  attack.     See  Ode  to  Tobacco. — 

Calverley. 
Thou,  who  wouldst  wear  the  name.     See  Poet,  The. — 

Bryant. 
Thou  whom  these  eyes   saw  never,  say  friends  true. 

See  Epitaph  for  Levi  Lincoln  Thaxter. — Brown- 
ing. 
Thou, — whose  endearing  hand  once  laid  in  sooth.     See 

Invocation. — Stedman. 
Thou  whose  sweet  youth  and  early  hopes  enhance.     See 

Church  Porch,  The.— Herbert. 
"Thou  wilt  forget  me."     "Love  has  no  such  word. 

See  Spring  and  Autumn. — Linton. 
Thou  wilt  never  grow  old.     See  same. — Howarth. 
Thou  window,   once  which   served  for  a  sphere.     See 

Sonnets  from  the  Poems. — Drummond. 
Thou  wouldst  be  loved?  then  thy  heart.  See  To  F.  S.  O. 

— Poe.  ^, 

Thou  youngest  virgin-daughter  of  the  skies.     See  Ode 

to  the  Pious  Memory  of  the  Accomplished  Young 

Lady,  Mrs.  Anne  Killigrew. — Dryden. 
Though  all  the  winds  of  doctrine  were  let  loose.     See 

Truth.— Milton. 
Though  all    things    breathe    or    sound    of    fight.     See 

Adieux  a  Mary  Stuart. — Swinburne. 
Though   beauty  be  the  mark  of    praise.     See  Elegy. 

— Jonson. 
Though  blind  with  age,  forth  Beda  went  with  zeal. 

See  Amen  of  the  Rocks,  The. — Rosegarten. 
Though  clock  to  tell  how  night  draws  hence.     See  His 

Grange:  or.  Private  Wealth. — Herrick. 
Though  cruel  fate  should  bid  us  part.     See  My  Jean. — 

Burns. 
Though  dusty  wits  dare  scorn  Astrology.     See  Astro- 

phel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  XXVL).— Sidney. 
Though  Emerson  had  reached  a  great  age.     See  Emer- 
son, Extract  concerning. — Bartol. 
Though  eminent  and  able  in  many  ways.     See  Lowell, 

Extract  concerning. — Underwood. 
Though  facts  will  swell  as  stories  fly.     See  Cat-eater, 

The. — Anon. 
Though  gifts  like  thine  the  fates  gave  not  to  me.     See 

To  Hafiz. 
Though  high    license    should    reduce    the    number    of 

saloons  slightly.     See  High  License. — Hoffman. 
Though  his  limbs  were  very  tottering,  and  'twas  hard 

to  travel  there.     See  Parson's  Vacation,  The. — 

Eisenbeis. 
Though  I,  alas!  a  prisoner  be.     See  On  a    Corkscrew. 

—Swift. 
Though  I  am  conscious  of  no  fault,  O  Romans,  it  is  yet 

with  the   utmost   shame.     See  History  of    Rome 

(Titus  Quintius  against  Quarrels  between  the  Sen- 
ate and  the  People). — I^ivy. 
Though  I  am  humble,  slight  me  not.  See  Moss  Suppli- 

cateth  for  the  Poet,  The. — Dana. 
Though  I  am  native  to  this  frozen  zone.     See  Remin- 
iscence.— Aldrich. 
Though  I  am  only  six  years  old.     See  Very  Little  Boy, 

A. — Anon. 
Though  I  have  twice  been  at  the  doors  of  death.     See 

Sonnet  to  Sir  W.  Alexander. — Drummond. 
Though  I  look  old.     See  As  You  Like  It  ("Though  I 

look,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
Though  I  met  her  in  the  summer,  when  one's  heart  lies 

round  [or  off]  at  ease.     See  Ballad  of  Cassandra 

Brown,  The. — Green. 
Though  I  speak  with  the  tongues  of  men  and  of  angels. 

See  First  Corinthians  (Charity). — Bible. 
Though  its  coming  be  slow,  we  can  all  feel  we  know. 

See  Typewriter  Tune,  The. — Anon. 
Though  largely  developed's  my  organ  of  order.     See 

Phrenologist  to  his  Mistress,  The. — {Punch.) 
Though  love  repine,  and  reason  chafe.     See  Sacrifice. 

— Emerson . 
Though  many  and  bright  are  the  stars  that  appear. 

See  E  Pluribus  Unum. — Cutter. 
Though  many  ills  may  hamper  life.     See  Little  Wor- 
ries.— Sims. 
Though  oak,  and  elm,  and  maple  tree.     See  Birch  Tree, 

The.— McMullen. 
Though  others  at  thine  outline  scoff.     See  Still  True. 

— {St.  James  Gazette.) 
Thovigh  others  may  her  brow  adore.     See  Love's  In- 
sight.— Anon. 
Though  our  great  love  a  little  wrong  his  fame.     See 

Charles  Lamb. — -Beatty. 
Though  rude     winds    usher    thee,     sweet    day.     See 

Christmas  Day. — Richards. 


Though  rudely  blows  the  wintry  blast.     See  Charcoal 

Man,  The. — Trowbridge. 
Though  scoffers  ask,  where  is  your  gain?     See  same. — 

Knox. 
Though  singing  but  the  shy  and  sweet.     See  Content. 

—Gale. 
Though  the  day  of  my  destiny  's  over.     See  Stanzas  to 

Augusta. — Byron . 
Though  the  earth  were  to  be  burned  up,  though  the 

trumpet  of  its  dissolution  were  sounded.     See  In- 
significance of  Earth. — Chalmers. 
Though  the  hills  are  cold  and  snowy.     See  Day  in  the 

Pamfili  Doria.  A — Stowe. 
Though  the  life  of  the  Reformer  may  seem  rugged  and 

arduous.     See  Reformer,  The. — Greeley. 
Though  the  mills  of  God  grind  slowly,  yet  they  grind 

exceeding  small.     See  Retribution. — Logau. 
Though  the    people    were    sated    already    with    blood 

spilling.     See  Quo  Vadis  (Ursus  and  the  Aurochs). 

— Sienkiewicz. 
Though  the  [Roman]  people  were  sated  already.     See 

Quo   Vadis    (Rescue    of     Lygia,    The). — Sienkie- 
wicz. 
Though  the  roving  bee,  as  lightly.     See  Wishmaker's 

Town  (Bridal  Pair,  The). — Young. 
Though  they  whisper,  hs  and  May.     See  Rose's  Plant, 

The.— F.  B.  H. 
Though  thy  constant  love  I  share.     See  To  M.  T. — 

Taylor. 
Though  till  now  ungraced  in  story,  scant  although  my 

waters  be.     See  Alma. — Trench. 
Thougn  tuneless,  stringless,  it  lies  th^re  in  dust.     See 

Old  Violin,  The.— Egan. 
Though  we  climb  fame's  proudest  height.     See  Uses 

of  Life,  The. — Anon. 
Though,  when  other  maids  stand  by.     See  Smile  and 

Never  Heed  Me. — Swain. 
Though  Winter  come  with  dripping  skies.     See  Song 

with  a  Discord,  A. — Colton. 
Though  you  are  young,  and  I  am  old.     See  fame. — 

Campion. 
Though  you  be  absent  here,  I  needs  must  say.     See 

Mistress,  The  (Spring,  The). — Cowley. 
Though  you  see  no  banded  army.     See  Right  Makes 

Might. — Anon. 
Thought  is  deeper   than  all  speech.     See  Thought. — 

Cranch. 
Thought  never   knew  material  bound  or  place.     See 

Cloister,  The.— Child. 
Thousand  minstrels  woke  within  me.     See  Monadnoc. 

— -Emerson. 
Thousands  of  men  breathe,  move,  and  live.     See  Good 

Deeds. — (Chalmers. 
Thrash  away,  you'll  Aei>  to  rattle.     See  Biglow  Papers, 

The  (Letter  from  Mr.  Ezekiel  Biglow,  A).— Lowell. 
Three  barefoot  children  were  threading  the  slopes  of 

Howth   toward    Raheny.     See    Provider,    The. — 

Guinev. 
Three  bright   stars!     Three   bright   stars!     See   Three 

Bright  Stars. — Anon. 
Three  cats  went  out  on  a  cat-amaran.    See  Several  Cats. 

— {Golden  Days.) 
Three  cheers,  three  cheers,  for  the  olden  time.     See 

Three  Cheers  for  the  Olden  Time. — Crosby. 
Three  children   crouched   in   an   archway,   for   shelter 

from  the  rain.     See  Golden  Rain. — Anon. 
Three  children  sliding  on  the  ice.     See  Warning,  A. — 

Gay. 
Three  days  longer  Penn  lay  there  on  his  rude  bed  in 

the  cave.     See  Pomp's  Story. — Trowbridge. 
Three  days  through  sapphire  seas  we  sailed.     See  Bay 

Fight,  The. — Brownell. 
Three  dwarfs  there  were  which  lived  on  an  isle.     See 

Isle  of  Lone,  The. — Ramal. 
Three  fair-haired  youths  sailed  out  to  sea.     See  Three 

Sailor-boys. — Anon. 
Three  fishers  went  sailing  away  to  [rvr.  out  into]  the 

West.     See  Three  Fishers,  The. — Kingsley. 
Three  happy  beings  are  there  here.     See  Curse  of  Ke- 

hama,  The  (Immortality  of  Love). — Southey. 
Three  horsemen  galloped  the  dusty  way.     See  On  the 

Road  to  Chorrera. — Bates. 
Three  horsemen    halted    the    inn    before.     See    Three 

Horsemen,  The. — Anon. 
Three  hundred  and  ten  years  ago  our  forefathers  passed 

through  the  same  experience.     See  Cross  of  War, 

The. — Anon. 
Three  hundred  years  ago  or   so.     See  On  a  Tobacco 

Jar. — Barker. 
Three  Kings  came  riding  from  far  away.     See  Three 

Kings,  The. — Longfellow. 
Three  little  beggars  ai-e  standing  at  the  gate.     See  Lit- 
tle Beggars,  The. — Anon. 


889 


Three 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Three  little  boys  in  a  rollicking  mood,  out  in  the  snow 

at  play.     See  I  Can't.  I  Won't,  and  I  Will. — Anon. 
Three    little  bugs  in    a  basket.     See   Three    Bugs. — 

Cary. 
Three  little    children  •hliding   on    the    ice.     See   Three 

Children. — Anon. 
Three  little  faces,  so  round  and  fair.     See  Trundlf-bed 

Treasures. — Bell. 
Three  little  kittens,  all  sleek  as  a  mouse.     See  Three 

Little  Kittens. — Richards. 
Three  little   kittens   in   a   row.     See   Kittens,    The. — 

Rook. 
Three  little  kittens,   so  downy  and   soft.    See  Three 

Little  Kittens. — Anon. 
Three  little  leaflets  on  the  treetop  high.     See  Leaflets 

and  Lady-bugs. — Denton. 
Three  little  noses  are  flattened  against  the  pane.     See 

Ballad  of  St.  Swithin's  Day,  A.— Hickey. 
Three  little   stockings — two   blue,    and   one   red.     See 

Christmas  Dream,  A. — Fo.ster. 
Three  little    toad-stools,    don't    you    see?     See   Three 

Little  Mushrooms. — .\non. 
Three  little  Tom-cats  went  out  for  a  spree.     See  Cats 

Serenade,  The. — Anon. 
Three  little  words  you  often    see.     See  Grammar  in 

Rhyme. — Anon. 
Three  locks  of  hair  in  my  hand  I  hold.     See  Bachelor's 

Reverie,  A. — Anon. 
Three  maids  together  sat  one  eve.     See  Her  Wish. — - 

Dewey. 
Three  months  had  pa«sed  since  she  had  knelt  before. 

See  Absolution. — Nesbit. 
Three  of  us  afloat  in  the  meadow  by  the  swmg.     See 

Pirate's  Story. — Stevenson. 
Three,  only  three,  my  darling.     See  Three   Kisses  of 

Farewell . — Glase . 
Three  or  four  days  ago  a  colored  man,  living  in  Detroit. 

See  His  Sign. — Anon. 
Three  pairs  of  dimpled  arms,  as  white  as  snow.     See 

Angels  in  the  House.  The. — Anon. 
Three  poets,  in  three  distant  ages    bom.     See  Under 

the  Portrait  of  Milton. — Dryden. 
Three  pounds  of  veal  my  darling  girl  prepares.     See 

Curry. — (Punch.) 
Three  rats,  a  trio  sleek  and  keen.     See  Sly  Old  Rat,  A. 

—Mix. 
Three  roses,   wan  as  moonlight,   and  weighed   down. 

See  Destiny. — Aldrich. 
Three  shining,  silken  rings  of  hair.     See  Relics. — Ware. 
Three  ships  of  war  had  Preble  when  he  left  the  Naples 

shore.     See  Reuben  James. — Roche. 
Three  spectres  armed  and  in  a  rage.  See  Three  Spectres, 

The. — Kavanaugh. 
Three  steps  and  I  reach  the  door.     See  Fate. — Block. 
Three  students  were  travelling  over  the  Rhine.     See 

Landlady's  Daughter,  The. — Uhland. 
Three    thousand    ducats,  —  well.      See    Merchant     of 

Venice.  The  (Shylock  Lends  the  Ducats). — Shake- 
speare. 
Three  thousand  years  ago  witnessed  the  Jewish  Feast 

of    Tabernacles.     See     Thanksgiving    among    the 

.lews. — Anon. 
Three  times,  all  in  the  dead  of  night.     See  Colin  and 

Lucy. — Tickell. 
"Three  times   one  are   three."     See   New   Multiplica- 
tion Table,  A. — Denton.  ' 
Three  times  shall  a  young  foot  page.     See  Romance 

of  the  Swan's  Nest. — Browning. 
'Three  to  one  on   scarlet!"     See  Chariot-race  in   the 

Time  of  Christ,  A.— Saltus. 
Three  topers  went  strolling  out  into  the   East.     See 

Three  Topers. — Parker. 
Three  travelers  wandered  along  the  strand.     See  I,azy- 

land. — Vandegrift. 
Three  twangs  of  the  horn,  and  they're  all  out  of  cover! 

See  Glory  of  Motion,  The. — Tyrwhitt. 
Three  ways    (whom    some    fastidious    carpers').     See 

Blindman's  Buff. — Smith. 
Three  women  in  the  waning  of  a  drear  November  day. 

See  Three  Women. — Anon. 
Three  words   fall   sweetly   on    my   soul.     See   Mother, 

Home,  Heaven. — Brown. 
Three  years  she  grew  in  sun  anc  shower.     See  Lucy. — 

■  Wordsworth. 
Three  young  gentlemen   who   had   finished   the   most 

substantial  part.     See  Three  Cherry-stones,  The. 

— Anon. 
Three  young  girls  in  friendship  met.   See  Three  Friends, 

The.— Lamb. 
Three  young    maids    in    friendship    met.     See    Three 

Friends,  The. — Lamb. 
Three.score  and  ten!     See  Maestro's  Confession,  The. — 

Preston. 


Threescore  o'  nobles  rade  up  [or  to]  the  king's  ha'. 

See  Glenlogie. — Anon. 
Thrice,  at  the  huts  of  Fontenoy,  the  English  column 

fail'd.     See  Fontenoy. — Davis. 
Thrice  happy  he  who  by  some  shady  grove.     See  On 

Solitude. — Drummond. 
Thrice  happy  isles  that  stole  the  world's  delight.     See 

Encomium  on  Tobacco,  An. — Anon. 
Thrice,  O  thrice  happy  shepherd's  life  and  state!     See 

Shepherd's  Life,  The.— Fletcher. 
Thrice  round  the  earth  in  graceful  measures  gliding. 

See  Columbus. — Adams. 
Thrice   the   brinded   cat    hath    mew'd.     See    Macbeth 

(Macbeth  and  the  Witches). — Shakespeare. 
Thrice  toss  these  oaken  ashes  in  the  air.     See  Charm, 

The . — Campion. 
Thrice  welcome,  little   English   flower!     See'  Daisy  in 

India,  The. — Montgomery. 
Thrise  happie   phe  that   i.«  .so  well  assu-ed.     See  Amo- 

retti  and  Epithalamioii   (Sonnet :  "Thrise  happie," 

etc.). —  Spenser. 
Thro'  the  forest  deep  comes  a  maiden  fair.     See  Vil- 

lanelle. — Allen. 
Thronged  were    the    streets    of    Andover    town.     See 

Washington's  Kiss. — Downs. 
Through  a    Geth^emane  of   city  streets.     See   Photo- 
graph in  a  Shop  Window,  A. — M'F.voy. 
Through  a  window  in  the  attic  brawny  Burglar  Bill  has 

crept.     See  Burglar  Bill. — Anstey. 
Through  a    window,    old    and    broken.      See    Little 

Gretchen. — Anon. 
Through  all   disguise,   form,   place  or  name.     See  De- 
mocracy.— Whittier. 
Through  all  estates  he  found  that  he  had  past.     See 

Faerie  Queene,  The  (Quelling of  the  Blatant  Beast, 

The). — Spenser. 
Through  all  history,  from  the  beginning.     S'"'' Pat  riot- 
ism  ("Through  all  history,"  etc.). — Curtis. 
Through  all  my  little  daily  cares  there  is.     See  God 

Knows. — .\non. 
Through  all  the  days  of  his  gallant  youth.     See  King's 

Tragedy,  The. — Rossetti. 
Through  all  the  history  of  the  contest  for  liberty      See 

Presidential  Protest.  The  (Executive  Power  to  be 

Dreaded) . — Webster. 
Through  all  the  long  midsummer  day.     See  Midsum- 
mer.— Trowbridge. 
Through  all  the  pleasant  meadow-side.     See  Hayloft, 

The. — Stevenson. 
Through  Alpine  meadows  soft -suffused.     See  Stanzas 

from  the  Grande  Chartreuse. — Arnold. 
Through  and  through  the  inspired  leaves.     See  Book- 
worms, The. — Burns. 
Through  Baca's  vale  my  way  is  cast.     See  Baca. — 

Robbins. 
Through  court,  and  through  mart,  and  through  college. 

See  same. — McNulty. 
Through  Goshen  Hollow,  where  hemlocks  grow.     See 

Ghost  of  Goshen,  The. — Anon. 
Through  great   Earl  Norman's  acres  wide.     See  Earl 

Norman  and  .lohn  Truman. — Mackay. 
Through  grief    and    through    danger    thy    smile    hath 

cheer'd  my  way.     See  Irish  Peasant  to  his  Mis- 
tress. The. — Moore. 
Through  her  forced,  abnormal  quiet.     See  Quakerdom. 

— Halpine. 
Through  his  million  veins  are  poured.     See  Brook,  The. 

—Wright. 
Through  its  feathery  bars  twinkled  little  twin  stars. 

See  Lucinda's  Fan. — Stanton. 
Through  laughing  leaves  the  sunlight  comes.     See  In 

the  Wood. ^Clarke. 
Through  love  to  light !  Oh,  wonderful  the  way.     See 

After-song. — Gilder. 
Through  memory's  haze.     See  Homeward  Road,  The. 

— Marsh. 
Through  my    north   window   in   the   wintry   weather. 

See  My  Aviary. — Holmes. 
Through  my  open  window  comes  the  sweet  perfuming. 

See  Attainment. — Tassin. 
Through  my  open  window,  summer  breezes  straying. 

See  Playing  for  Keeps. — Pelham. 
Through  night  to  light.     And  though  to  mortal  eyes. 

See  Through  Trials. — Rosengarten. 
Through  Sleepy-land  doth  a  river  flow.     See  Lullaby. 

— Cavazza. 
Through  some  strange  sense  of  sight  or  touch.     See 

Death. — Cawein. 
Through  storm  and  fire  and  gloom,  I  see  it  stand.     See 

Celtic  Cross,  The.— McGee. 
Through  storms  you  reach  them  and  from  storms  are 

free.     See  Enviable  Isles,  The. — Melville. 


890 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Thy 


Through  sun    and    shower    the    pumpkin    grew.     See 

Pumokin-pie. — Anon. 
Through  the  black,   rushing  smoke-bursts.     .See  Em- 

pedocles    on    Etna   (Song     of     Callicles,     The). — 

Arnold. 
Through  the   blue   and   frosty  heavens.     See   Angel's 

Story,  The. — Procter. 
Through  the  (Christian  centuries.     See  Puritans,  The. 

— Wayland. 
Through  the  crowded  ranks  of  the  hospital.     See  Last 

Roll-call.  The.— Anon. 
Through  the  crowded  streets  returning,  at  the  ending 

of  the  day.     See  Victor  and  Vanquished. — Peck. 
Through  the  door-way  flowed  the  sunshine.     See  Child 

and  the  Sunshine,  The. — Tennyson. 
Through  the  fierce  fever  I  nursed  him,  and  then  he  said. 

See  Little  Wild  Baby. — .Janvier. 
Through  the  gray  willows  the  bleak  winds  are  raving. 

See  By  the  Shore  of  the  River. — Cranch. 
Through  the  great  sinful  streets  of  Naples  as  I  passed. 

See  Easter  Day. — Clough. 
Through  the  green  twilight  of  a  hedge.     See  Mother 

Bird,  The.— Ramal. 
Through   the  house  give  glimmering  light.     See  Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream   (Oberon  and   Titania   to 

the  Fairy  Train). — Shakespeare. 
Through  the  house  what  busy  joy.     See  First  Tooth, 

The.— Lamb. 
Through  the   long  bending   grass.     See   Heroes'   Day, 

The. — Anon. 
Through  the  long  night  the  surges  roared.     See  Equi- 
noctial, The. — Blake. 
Through  the  mist  of  the  years  in  the  long,  long  ago. 

See  Two  Temnles.  The.— Corlis. 
Through  the  mould  and  through  the  clay.     See  Song 

of  the  Railroad. — Wolfe. 
Through  the  night,  through  the  night.     See  Sea,  The. 

— Stoddard. 
Through  the  packed  horror  of  the  night.     Sec  Man's 

Name,  A.. — Realf. 
Through  the  "Philadelohy"  college  he  went  in  a  week. 

See  New  Doctor,  The. — Mix. 
Through  the  physical  horrors  of  warfare,   poetry  dis- 
cerns   the    redeeming    nobleness.     See    War    and 

Peace. — Robertson. 
Through  that  pure  virgin  shrine.     See   Night,  The.— 

Vaughan. 
Through  the  ranks  of  the  gathered  people.     See  Little 

Child  Shall  Lead  Them,  A.— Anon. 
Through  the  seeding  grass.     See  Sospiri  di  Roma  (Red 

Ponpies). — Sharp. 
Through  the  shrubs  as  I  'gan  crack.     See  Menaphon 

("Doron'h  .Tig).^Greene. 
Through  the  silver  mist.     See  Spring  Lilt,  A. — Anon. 
Through  the  somber  arch  of  that  gateway  tower.     See 

Woman  of  the  War,  A. — .Tohnson. 
Through  the  straight  pass  of  suffering.     See  Martyrs, 

The. — -Dickinson. 
Through    the    tense,    clear    sky    above    us.     See    Un 

Bacio  Dato    non    6    Mai   Perduto   ("Through   the 

tense."  etc.). — Story. 
Through  the  weary  day  on  his  couch  he  lay.     See  When 

the  Tide  Goes  Out. — Anon. 
Through  the  whirl  of  wind  and  water.     See  Brave  Kate 

Shelley. — Rayne. 
Through  the  whole   afternoon   there   had  been   a  tre- 
mendous cannonading.     See  Fort  Wagner. — Dick- 
inson. 
Through  the  windows  on  the  park.     See  Chinese  T^n- 

terns. — Baker. 
Through  thick  Arca,dian  woods  a  hunter  went.     See 

Earthly    Paradise,    The    (Atalanta's    Victory). — 

Morris. 
Through    untraced    ways  and    airy  paths  I  fly.     See 

Cooper's  Hill  (View of  London  from  Cooper's  Hill). 

— Denham. 
Through  Vanity  Fair,  in  days  of  old.     See  In  Vanity 

Fair.— Tyler. 
Through  yonder    windows    stained    and    old.     See  In 

Chartres  Cathedral. — Rodd. 
Throughout  Russia    in    December    glitter   icicles    and 

snow.     See  Russian  Christmas,  A. — Anon. 
Throughoiit  the  entire  word  of  God,  we  are  taught  the 

sacred     duty    of     being     happy.      See     same.  — 

Stanley. 
Throughout  the  soft  and  simlight  day.     See  Pines,  The. 

— Lippmann. 
Thoughout  the  wild  contention  that  preceded  the  war. 

See  Abraham  I^incoln. — Watterson. 
Throw  away  Thy  rod.     See  Discipline. — -Herbert. 
Thunder  and  lightning!  I  do  hate  to  be  engaged  in  such 

a  mean  business  as  washing  clothes.     See  When 

Women  have  their  Rights. — Anon. 


Thunder  of  Funeral  Guns!     See  Berlin — the  Sixteenth 

of  March. — Arnold. 
Thunder  our   thanks   to   her — guns,   hearts,   and   lips! 

See  Mayflower. — O'Reilly. 
Thunder  peal  and  roar  and  rattle  of  the  ships  m  line  of 

battle.     See  Hobson's  Daring  Deed. — Anon. 
Thus  Adam  to  himself  lamented  loud.     See  Paradise 

Lost. — Milton. 
Thus   all    day   long   the   full    distended    cloud  .     See 

Seasons,  The  (Rainbow,  The). — Thomson. 
Thus  came  the  welcome  favor.     See  Children's  Praise 

Song. — Downer. 
Thus  charged  he;  nor  Argicides  denied.     See  Odyssey, 

The  (Hermes  in  Calypso's  Island). — Homer. 
Thus  every  good  his  native  wilds  impart.     See  Trav- 
eller, The;  or.  A  Prospect  of  Society. — Goldsmith. 
Thus  far   our   fortune   keeps  an   upward   course.     See 

King  Henry  VI.,  Pt.  III.     (Battle  of   Bamet).— 

Shakespeare. 
Thus  far  we  have  run  before  the  wind.     See  Dick,  the 

Apothecary's  Apprentice. — Anon. 
Thus  have  I  seen  a  child,  with  smiling  face.     See  On 

George  the  Third's  Patronage  of  Benjamin  West. 

— Pindar. 
Thus  having  past   all  perill,  I  was  come.     See  Faerie 

Qucene,  'The  (Gardens  of  Venus).— Spenser. 
Thus  I  sat  one  night  by  a  blue-eyed  girl.     See  Categor- 
ical Courtship. — Anon. 
Thus,  in  the  march  of  time,  and  long  procession.     See 

Dawning  Future,  The. — Johnson. 
Thus  Lays  of  Minstrels — may  they  be  the  last!     See 

English  Bards  and  Scotch   Reviewers   (Sir  Walter 

Scott). — Byron. 
Thus  lieth   the   dead,   that   whilome   lived   here.     See 

Sir  Thomas  Wyatt. — Sentleger. 
Thus  rank  on  rank  the  thick  battalions  throng.     See 

Iliad,  The  (Defiance  of  Hector  and  Ajax,  The). — 

Homer. 
Thus  said  the  Lord  in  the  Vault  above  the  Cherubim. 

See  Last  Chantey,  The. — Kipling. 
Thus  saith  my  soul.     "The  path  is  long  to  tread."     See 

Seeking  Rest. — Anon. 
Thus  sang  the  sages  of  the  Gael.    See  Man  Octipartite. 

— Stokes. 
Thus  saying,  from  her  side  the  fatal  key.     See  Paradise 

Lost  (Discord). — Milton. 
Thus  says  the  prophet  of  the  Turk.     See  Love  of  the 

World  Reproved;  or,  Hypocrisy  Detected,  The. — 

Cowper. 
Thus,  some  tall  tree  that  long  hath  stood.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Benjamin  Franklin. — Freneau. 
Thus,  still,  whene'er  the  good  and  just.     See  No  Man 

Knoweth  His  Sepulchre. — Bryant. 
Thus  the  Mayne  glideth.     See  Paracelsus  ("Thus  the 

Mayne,"  etc.). — Browning. 
Thus,  then,  I  steer  my   bark,   and   sail.     See  Spleen, 

The  (Voyage  of  Life,  The).— Green. 
Thus  then,  one  beautiful  day,  in  the  sweet,  cool  air  of 

October.     See  Dorothy  (Beauty  at  the  Plough). — 

Munby. 
Thus,  thus   begin   the  yearly  rites.     See   Pan's  Anni- 
versary (Shepherd's  Holyday,  The). — Jonson. 
Thus,  thus,   my  friends!  fast  as  our  breaking  hearts. 

See  Brutus;  or.  The  Fall  of  Tarquin  (Brutus  on 

the  Death  of  Lucretia). — Payne. 
Thus  to  be  lost,  and  thus  to  sink  and  die.     See  To  Con- 

stantia — Singing. — Shelley. 
Thus  when   the   silent   grave  becomes.     See  Belinda's 

Recovery  from  Sickness. — Broome. 
Thus  while  on  earth  iniquities  abound.     See  Triumph 

of  Truth,  The.— De  Mille. 
Thus  y-robed  in  russet  romed  I  about.     See  Vision  of 

Piers  the  Plowman  (Pilgrimage  in  Search  of  Do- 
Well). — Langland. 
Thy  bosom  is  endeared  with  all  hearts.     See  Sonnets, 

XXXI. — Shakespeare. 
Thy  braes  were  bonny,  Yarrow  stream.     See  Braes  of 

Yarrow,  The. — Logan. 
Thy  breath  was  fire!     And  fire  was  on  thy  brow!     See 

Napoleon. — Saltus. 
Thy  cheek  is  o'  the  roses'  hue.     See  My  Only  Jo  and 

Dearie,  O.— Gall. 
Thy  cruise  is  over  now.     See  Mr.  Merry's  Lament  for 

"Long  Tom." — Brainard. 
Thy  dark    eyes    open'd    not.     See    Eleanore. — Tenny- 
son. 
Thy  error,    Fremont,    simply   was   to    act.     See   John 

Charles  Fremont. — Whittier. 
Thy  face  I  have  seen  as  one  seeth.     See  Song. — Jewett. 
Thy  face  is  whitened  with  remembered  woe.     See  Pas- 
chal Moon,  The.— Tabb. 
Thy  fruit  full  well  the  school-boy  knowF.     See  Bram- 
ble Flower,  The.— Elliott. 


891 


Thy 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Thy  glory  alone.  O  God,  be  the  end  of  all  that  I  say. 
See  Ad  Majorem  Dei  Gloriam. — Scott. 

Thy  glory,  O  Israel,  is  slain  upon  thy  high  places!  See 
Second  Samuel  (Saul  ana  .Jonathan). — Bible. 

Thy  glory  thou  didst*  manifest,  O  Christ,  by  miracle 
divine.     See  Water  into  Wine,  The. — Anon. 

"Thy  grandmother,"  said  Uncle  Toby,  addressing  him- 
self to  young  Laura.  See  Musical  Instrument, 
The.— Anon. 

Thy  greatest  knew  thee.  Mother  Earth;  unsour'd. 
See  Spirit  of  Shakespeare,  The. — Meredith. 

Thy  heart  is  like  some  icy  lake.  See  Thy  Heart. — 
Anon. 

Thy  laugh's  a  song  an  oriole  trilled.  See  Kitty's 
Laugh . — Bates . 

Thy  marvelou.s  genius,  perfect  as  the  sun.  See  Cspsar. 
—Salt  us. 

Thy  name  of  old  was  great.  See  To  my  Totem. — 
Beeching. 

Thy  neighbor?  It  is  he  whom  thou.  See  Who  is  My 
Neighbor? — Anon. 

Thy  one  white  leaf  is  open  to  the  sky.  See  To  a  Chero- 
kee Rose. — -Hayne. 

Thy  pencil,  too, — with  what  a  force.  See  Ode  in  Mem- 
ory of  Dr.  Hoffmann. — (Spectator.) 

Thy  praise  or  dispraise  is  to  me  alike.  See  To  Fool  or 
Knave. — Jon  son. 

Thy  prayer  is  granted;  thou  hast  joined  the  Choir. 
See  George  Eliot. — Noble. 

Thy  restless  feet  now  cannot  go.  See  Christ  Crucified. 
— Crashaw. 

Thy  rosary  the  flowers  shall  be.  See  Rosary,  A. — 
Chapin. 

Thy  sacred  leaves,  fair  Freedom's  flower.  See  Flower 
of  Liberty,  The  ("Thy  sacred,"  etc.). — Holmes. 

Thy  soul  within  such  silent  pomp  did  keep.  See  Quiet 
Soul,  A.— Oldham. 

Thy  span  of  life  was  all  too  short.  See  To  a  Withered 
Rose. — Bangs. 

Thy  spirit,  Independence,  let  me  share.  See  Inde- 
pendence.— Smollett. 

Thy  tears  o'erprize  thy  loss!  See  Angel  in  the  House, 
The  (She  was  Mine). — Patmore. 

Thy  trivial  harp  will  never  please.  See  Merlin. — Em- 
erson. 

Thy  tuwhits  are  luli'd,  I  wot.  See  Song:  The  Owl 
(Second  Song). — Tennyson. 

Thy  verse  is  "sad"  enough,  no  doubt.  See  To  the 
Author  of  a  Sonnet  Beginning  "  'Sad  is  my  Verse,' 
you  say,  'and  yet  no  tear.'  " — Byron. 

Thy  voice  is  heard  thro'  rolling  drums.  See  Princess, 
The  (Thy  Voice  is  Heard). — Tennyson. 

Thy  way,  not  mine,  O  Lord.  See  Thy  Way,  not  Mine. 
— Bonar. 

Thy  will  'tis  I  renew.  See  Divine  Comedy,  The  (Count 
Ugolino) . — Dante. 

Thy  witching  look  is  like  a  two-edged  sword.  See  Thy 
Witching  Look. — Anon. 

Thy  works,  O  Lord,  interpret  Thee.  See  Known  by 
His  Works. — Gary. 

Thy  younglings.  Cuddy,  are  but  just  awake.  See  Shep- 
herd's Week,  The  (Monday;  or,  the  Squabble). — 
Gay. 

"Tick,"  the  clock  says,  "tick, tick, tick;'  SeeWbatthe 
Clock  Says. — Anon. 

Tick,  tick,  tock,  don't  you  hear  the  clock.  See  Child's 
Time-table. — Elton. 

Tick,  tock,  tick,  tock.  goes  the  clock.  See  Grand- 
father's Clock. — Meyers. 

Tied  with  bonds,  and  over  his  lips.  See  Song-bird  of 
the  Princess,  The. — Meyers. 

Tiger,  tiger,  burning  bright.     See  Tiger,  The.— Blake. 

"Till  Death  us  part."  So  speaks  the  heart.  See  Till 
Death  us  Join. — Stanley. 

Till  each  man  finds  his  own  in  all  men's  good.  See 
Ode  Sung  at  the  Opening  of  the  International  Ex- 
hibition.— Tennyson. 

Till  he  has  fairly  tried  it,  T  suspect  a  reader  does  not 
know  how  much.  See  On  Learning  by  Heart. — 
Lushington. 

Till  the  cricket  came,  nature  had  remained  voiceless. 
See  Nature. — Flammprion. 

Tim  Dolan  and  his  wife,  wan  night.  See  Pat's  Wis- 
dom.— Anon. 

Tim  Twinkleton  was,  1  would  have  you  to  know.  See 
Tim  Twinkleton 's  Twins.- Bell. 

Tim  Turpin  he  was  gravel  blind.  See  Tim  Turpin. — 
Hood. 

Tim  Weeks,  who  was  a  man  precise.  See  Cat-eater, 
The. — Anon. 

Time  and  education  beget  experience ;  experience  begets 
memory.  See  Memory  and  the  Muses. — 
Hobbes. 


Time  cannot  age  thy  sinews,  nor  the  gale.     See  Alba- 
tross.— Stoddard. 
Time  fled.     The  world  moved  faster  than  ever  before. 

See  What  Waked  the  World.— Tourgee. 
Time  flows  from  instants;  and,  of  these,  each  one.     See 

Time. — Beaumont. 
Time  goes,  you  say?     Ah,  no!     See  Paradox  of  Time. 

— Dobson. 
Time:    half -past    six    o'clock.     Place:    The    London 

Tavern.     See  Charity  Dinner,  The.^ — Mosely. 
Time  has   a   magic   wand!     See   On   an    Old   MufT. — 

Locker-Lampson . 
Time  has  no  flight — 'tis  we  who  speed  along.    See  Time. 

—Collier. 
Time  hath,  my  lord,  a  wallet  at  his  back.     SeeTroilus 

and  Cressida  (Ruthless  Time). — Shakespeare. 
Time  is  the  feather'd  thing.     See  Time. — Mayne. 
Time  may  steal  the  dewy  bloom.     See  same. — Blandon. 
Time  of  crisp  and  tawny  leaves.     See  Time  of  Clearer 

Twitterings. — Riley. 
Time,  through    Jove's    judgment    just.     See    Tragedy 

of  Darius,  The. — Alexander. 
Time  to  me  this  truth  hath  taught.     See  "Time  to 

Me." — Anon. 
Time  was,  and  that  was  termed  the  time  of  gold.     See 

Golden  Age,  The.— Hall. 
Tinae  wa&,  ere  the  bright  presence  bathed  the  "Place." 

See  Column  of  July,  The. — McCrae. 
Time  wa.steth    years,    and    months,    and    hours.     See 

same. — Watson . 
Timely  blossom,   infant   fair.     See  To   Miss   Charlotte 

Pulteney,  in  Her  Mother's  Arms.^Philif>.5. 
Times  is  mighty  dull  at  Squawville,  an'  we've  nothin' 

else  to  do.     See  Patriotism  at  Squawville. — (Den- 
ver Post.) 
Timothy  Grey,   at   school   or  at   play.     See  Timothy 

Grey. — Miles. 
Tin  o'clock  an'  the  masther  not  cum  yit.     See  Army 

of  Applicants. — Anon. 
Tinged  with  the  blood  of  Aztec  lands.     See  El  Vaquero. 

— Tilton. 
Tinker,  may  I  learn  the  trick.     See  Clock-tinker,  The. 

— Larcom. 
Tinkle,  tinkle!     Listen    well!     See   Waterfall,    The. — 

Sherman.  , 

Tintagel  bells  ring  o'er  the  tide.     See  Silent  Tower  of 

Bottreau,  The. — Hawker. 
Tiny  little  snowflakes.     See  same. — Anon. 
Tiny  rags  of  golden  light.     See  Memories. — Anon. 
Tiny  seeds,  tiny  seeds,  under  the  ground.     See  Little 

.  Seeds,  The. — Cooper. 
Tiny  slippers  of  gold  and  green.    See  Egyptian  Slippers. 

— Arnold. 
Tired  Nature's  sweet  restorer,  balmy  Sleep!     See  Night 

Thoughts  (Sleep). — Young. 
Tired  of  play!  tired  of  play!     See  Tired  of  Play.— Wil- 
lis. 
Tired!     Well  [and]  what  of  that?     See  What  of  That? 

— Anon. 
Tired  with  all  these,  for  restful  death  I  cry.     See  Son- 
nets, LXVI. — Shakespeare. 
Tired  with  the  toils  that  know  no  end.     See  Loss  of 

the  Eurydice,  The. — Gosse. 
'T  is  a  beautiful   time   when   Christmas   comes.     See 

Christmas. — Sangster. 
'Tis  a  bicycle  man,  o'er  his  broken  wheel.     See  Bicycle 

and  the  Pup,  The. — Anon. 
'Tis  a  cold,  bleak  night!  with  angry  roar.     See  Red 

Jacket,  The. — Baker. 
«  'Tis  a  curious  fact,  but  a  fact  very  old.     See  Paradox, 

A.— Day. 
'Tis  a  dark  lantern  of  the  spirit.     See  Hudibras  (' '  New 

Light").— Butler. 
'T  is  a  dozen  or  so  of  years  ago.     See  Deborah  Lee. — 

Burleigh. 
'Tis  a  dull  sight  to  see  the  year  dying.     See  Old  Song. — 

Fitzgerald. 
"  'Tis  a  fair  country,   Marian."     See   On   the   Devon 

Coast .  — Chamberlai  n . 
'Tis  a  fearful  night  in  the  winter  time.     See  Snow- 
storm. The. — Eastman. 
'Tis  a  fine  fable  for  the  advantage  of  character.     See 

Works  and  Days. — -Emerson. 
'Tis  a   little  roadside   flower.     See   Red    Sandwort. — 

Larcom. 
'T  is  a  little  thing.       See  Ion   (Sympathy). — Talfourd. 
'Tis  a  political  maxim  that  all  government  tends  to 

despotism.     See      Letter — Signed      Hyperion. — 

Quincy. 
"  'Tis  a  poor  Thanksgiving,"  said  Farmer  Jack.     See 

His  Riches. ^Grey. 
'Tis  a  simple  little  story.     See  Nothing  More. — Deni- 

8on. 


892 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


'Tis 


'Tis  a  song  of  a  snow-flake  cold  and  white.     See  Val- 
entine, A. — Anon. 
'Tis  a  stern   and    startling   thing   to    think.     See  Miss 

Kilmansegg  and  her  Precious  Leg  (Her  Death). 

—Hood. 
'Tis  a  story  told  by  Kalidasa.     See  Urvasi. — Best  wick. 
'Tis  a  time  for  memory  and  for  tears.     See  same. — 

Prentice. 
'Tis  a  world  of  silences.     I  gave  a  cry.     See  Silences. — 

O'Shaughnessy. 
'Tis  about  twenty  years  since  Abel  Law.     See  Ghost, 

The. — Anon. 
'Tig  all  a  great  show.     See  World,  The. — Very. 
'Tis  all  a  myth  that  Autumn  grieves.     See  Autumn's 

Mirth.— Peck. 
'Tis  all  men's  office  to  speak  patience.     See  Much  Ado 

about  Nothing. — Shakespeare. 
'Tis  all  right,  as  I  knew  it  would  be  by  and  by.     See 

Coming  Round. — Cary. 
* '  'Tis  an  everlasting  pity  that  the  yorungsters  in  the 

city."     See  Glorious  Fourth,  The. — Anon. 
'T  is  an  old  dial,  dark  with  many  a  stain.     See  Sun- 
dial, The. — Dobson. 
"  'Tis  baking  day,  and  I  must  make,"     See  Troubles  of 

a  Wife. — Lincoln. 
'Tis  beauteous  night ;  the  stars  look  brightly  down.    See 

Memory.- — Garfield. 
'Tis  beautiful  to  see  a  forest  stand.     See  Trees  in  the 

City. — Neal. 
'T  \^  beauty  truly  blent,  whose  red  and  white.     See 

Twelfth  Night;   or,  What    You    Will    (Olivia).— 

Shakespeare. 
'Tis  bedtime;  say  your  hymn,  and  bid  "Good-night." 

See  Bedtime. — Rosslyn. 
'Tis  believed  that  this  harp,  which  I  wake  now  for  thee. 

See  Origin  of  the  Harp,  The. — Moore. 
'Tis  but  a  little  faded  flower.     See  same.-  -Howarth. 
'Tis  by    Thy    strength    the    i;nountains    stand.      See 

Psalm  Sixty-five. — Watts. 
'Tis  close  upon  the  midnight  chimes.     See  "If  It  was 

not  for  the  Drink." — Westcombe. 
'Tis  Christmas,     and     the     North     wind     blows.     See 

Christmas  Letter  from  Australia,  A. — Sladen. 
'Tis  Christmas  morn.     In  other  lands  they  sing.     See 

Ode  on  Christmas. — Clinton. 
'Tis  dawn;  but  not  such  morning-tide.     See  Heroine 

of  St.  .John,  The.— Hamilton. 
'Tis  death!  and  peace  indeed  is  here.     See  Youth  and 

Calm. — Arnold. 
'Tis  dolly's  turn  to  speak  a  piece.     See  Who  Made  the 

Speech  ? — -An  on . 
'Tis  done — dread  winter  spreads  his  latest  gloom.     See 

Seasons,    The    (Death    Typified    by    Winter). — 

Thomson. 
'Tis  early    dawn — and    all    around.     See    Flowers. — 

Moses. 
'Tis  early  morn.     The  clash  of  arms.     See  Gloria  Bell. 

— Benners. 
'Tis  early  spring;  the  distant  hills.     See  Bluebird,  The. 

— Gerry. 
'Tis  evening,  and  the  round  red  sun  sinks  slowly  in  the 

west.     See  Millionaire  and  the  Barefoot  Boy,  The. 

— G.  T.  L. 
'Tis  evening  now!     See  Abide  with  Us. — Bonar. 
'Tis  gone  at  last,  and  I  am  glad ;  it  stayed  a  fearful 

while.     See  Mortgage  on  the  Farm,  The. — (Farm, 

Field  and  Fireside.) 
'Tis  gone,  that  bright  and  orbed  blaze.     See  Evening. 

— Keble. 
'Tis  good  to  be  abroad  in  the  sun.     See  Out  of  Doors. — 

I.,owell. 
'Tis  hard    to    share  her  smiles   with  many !     See  Thy 

Smiles. — Hoffman. 
'Tis  he  whose  every  thought  and  deed.     See  Gentle- 
man, A. — Anon. 
'Tis  here,  the  Book  you  begged  for  so.     See  Traitor,  A. 

— Fertiault. 
'Tis  home  where'er  the  heart  is.     See  Home  is  where 

the  Heart  Is. — Anon. 
'Tis  I  go  fiddling,  fiddling.     See  Fairy  Fiddler,  The.— 

Hopper. 
'Tis  just  as  Fag  told  me,  indeed !     See  Rivals,  The. 

— Sheridan. 
'Tis  like  stirring  living  embers  when,  at  eighty,  one  re- 
members.— See  Grandmother's    Story  of    Bunker 

Hill  Battle.— Holmes. 
'Tis  long  ago — we  have  toiled  and  traded.     See  If  That 

were  True! — Brown. 
'Tis  madness  to  resist  or  blame.    See  Horatian  Ode  upon 

Cromwell's  Return  from  Ireland,  A  (Cromwell  and 

King  Charles). — Marvell. 
'Tis  merry  in  greenwood,  thus  runs  the  old  lay.     See 

Harold  the  Dauntless. — Scott. 


'Tis  midnight,  and  the  setting  sun.     See  'Tis  Midnight. 

— Anxin . 
'Tis  midnight ;  falls  the  lamp-light  dull  and  sickly.     Sie 

Brothers;  Henry  and  John   Shears,  The. — Wilde 
'Tis  midnight's    holy    hour, — and    silence    now.     See 

Closing  Year,  The. — Prentice. 
'Tis  mine!  what  accents  can  my  joy  declare?     See  Poet 

Relates   how    he    Obtained    Delia's    Pocket-hand- 
kerchief, The. — Southey. 
'Tis  moonlight  on  Trebarwith  Vale.     See  Ogre,  The. — 

Ramal. 
'Tis  morn ;  and  on  the  mountain  top  the  outlaw  rested 

now.     See  Outlaw,  The. — Henderson. 
'Tis  morn: — the   sea-breeze   seems  to   bring.      See   To 

an  Absent  Wife. — Prentice. 
'Tis  morning;  and  the  .sun,  with  ruddy  orb.     See  Task, 

The  (Winter  Morning). — Cowper. 
'Tis  much  immortal   beaiity  to  admire.     See  Sonnet: 

"  'Tis  much  immortal  beauty,"  etc. — Thurlow. 
'Tib  night,   and  storms  continually  roar.     See  Before 

the  Convent  of  Yuste,  1556. — Platen. 
'Tis  night,  and  the  landscape  is  lovely  no  more.   See 

Hermit,  The  (Night).— Beattie. 
'Tis  night   in   the   forest,    the   long   day   is   over.     See 

Nightingale,  The. — Normar. 
'Tis  night   upon   the   lake.     Our  bed  of  boughs.     See 

Voice  of  the  Pine,  The.— Gilder. 
'Tis  night,  when  Meditation  bids  us  feel.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Night). — Byron. 
'Tis  night — within    the    close-shut    cabin    door.     See 

How  Good  are  the  Poor. — Hugo. 
'Tis    no    time    for    vain    surmising.     See   Fall    In ! — 

Scott. 
'Tis  noonday  by  the  buttonwood,  with  slender-shad- 
owed bud.     See  Minute  Men  of  Northboro,  The. — 

Rice. 
'Tis  not  enough  the  voice  be  sound  and  clear.     See 

Modulation . — Lloyd. 
'Tis  not  enough  to  say.     See  Sorrow  for  Sin. — Taylor. 
'Tis  not  every  day  that  I.     See  Not  Every  Day  Fit  for 

Verse. — Herrick. 
'Tis  not  for  man  to  trifle;  life  is  brief.     See  Only  One 

Life. — Anon. 
'Tis  not   in   battles   that   from   youth  we   train.     See 

Home. — Wordsworth. 
'Tis  not  the  richest  plant  that  folds.     See  Appearances 

Deceptive. — Anon. 
'Tis  not  to  cry  God  mercy,  or  to  sit.     See  True  Re- 
pentance.— Ouarles. 
'Tis  not  wealth  that  makes  a  King.     See  True  King, 

The. — Seneca. 
'Tis  not  your  beauty  can  engage.     See  To  Flavia. — 

Waller. 
'Tis  of  a  gallant  Yankee  ship  that  flew  the  stripes  and 

stars.     See  Yankee  Man-of-war,  The. — Anon. 
'Tis  of  a  little  drummer.     See  Little  Drummer.  The. — 

Stoddard. 
'Tis  only  a  pair  of  woman's  eyes.     See  Bit  of  Human 

Nature,  S.. — Coleman. 
'Tis  only  an  old  man's  story, — a  tale  we  have  oft  heard 

told.     See  Old  Man's  Story,  An. — Thompson. 
'Tis  over  a  hundred  years  ago.     See  Romance  of  the 

Revolution,  A. — Anon. 
'Tis  past ;    the  iron    North   has   spent   his   rage.     See 

Elegy — Written  in  Spring. — Bruce. 
'Tis  past, — the  sultry  tyrant  of  the  South.     See  Sum- 
mer Evening's  Meditation,  A. — Barbauld. 
"  'Tis  plain  [enough]  to  see  [or  me],"  said  a  farmer's 

wife.     See  Mother's  Fool. — Anon. 
'Tis  pretty   to   see   the  girl   of   Dunbwy.     See  Girl   of 

Dunbwy,  The. — Davis. 
"  'Tis  really  time  you  were  out,  I  think."     See  Rose- 
bud's First  Ball.— (A'^ew  York  Star.) 
'Tis  right  for  her  to  sleep  between.     See  In  Memoriam. 

— Houghton. 
'Tis  said  fantastic  ocean  doth  enfold.     See  Fish-women 

at  Calais. — Anon. 
'Tis  said  "Fine  feathers  make  fine  birds."     See  Prin- 
cess Fuzz. — Anon. 
'Tis  said    that    absence   conquers   love!     See   Song.— 

Thomas. 
'Tis  said  that  in  the  sun-embroidered  East.     See  Lost 

Lotus.  The. — Anon. 
'Tis  said  that  old  philosopher.     See  Star  Exercise. — 

Hadley. 
'Tis  said  that  the  gods  on  Olympus  of  old.     See  Mint 

■TuleT),  The. — Hoffman. 
'Tis  said  the  rose  is  Love's  own  flower.     See  Flower  of 

Ijove,  The. — Peacock. 
'Tis  said  the  Turk,  when  passing  down.     See  Turkish 

Tradition,   A. — Anon. 
'Tis  said  there  is  a  fount  in  Flower  Land.     See  Per- 
petual Youth. — Egan. 


893 


'Tis 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIOXS 


'Tis  said  when  Schiller's  death  drew  nigh.     Sec  Death 

of  Schiller,  The. — Bryant. 
'Tis  sair  to  dream  o'  them  we  like.     See  'Tis  Sair  to 

Dream. — Gilfillan. 
*'  'Tis   Saturday  night,  and  o>ir   watch   below."     See 

Yarn.  A. — Ilewilt. 
'Tis  Saturday  night,  and  the  chill  rain  and  sleet.     See 

Pawnbroker's  Shop,  The. — .^non. 
'Tis  she,    no    doubt.     Brunette — and    tall.     See   "Au 

Iievoir." — Dobsoii. 
'Tis  silence  on  the  enchanted  lake.     See  Night-swans, 

The.— Ramal. 
'Tis  slander  whose  edge  is  sharper  than  the  sword.     See 

Cymbeline  (Slander).— Shakespeare. 
'Tis  solemn    darkness;    the    sublime    of    shade.     See 

Night. — Heavysege. 
'Tis  some  two  hundred  years  ago.     iSee  Dr.   Jotham 

Tinsdale's  Cue  a  Cure. — TurnbuU. 
'Tis  somethmg  from   that  tangle  to  have  won.     See 

Icarus. — Koopman. 
'Tis  sorrow  buiids  the  shining  ladder  up.     See  same.— 

Lowell. 
'Tis  splendid    to   live   so   grandly.     See  Washington's 

Birthday. — Sangster. 
'Tis  spring-time,    bright    sprmg-time!     All    nature    is 

gay.     See  'Tis  Sprmg-tiroe. — Graham. 
'Tis  springtime   on   the   eastern  hills!     See  Mogg  Me- 

gone  (Spring). — Whittier. 
'Tis  summer  eve,   when   heaven's  ethereal   bow.     See 

Pleasures  of  Hope,  The. — Campbell. 
'Tis  Summer  still,  yet  now  and  then  a  leaf.     'Tis  Sum- 
mer Still. — Sangster. 
'Tis  sung  in  ancient  minstrelsy.     See   Laurel,   The. — - 

Wordsworth. 
'Tis  sweet  in  the  green  spring.     See  same. — Br.vant. 
'Tis  sweet  to  hear  at  midnight.     See  Don  Juan  (First 

Love).— Byron. 
'Tis  sweet  to  hear  the  merry  lark.     See  Song:   '"Tis 

.sweet,"  etc. — Coleridge. 
'Tis  sweet  to  linger  in  the  mellow  grass.     See  In  Mid- 
summer.— Munkittrick. 
'Tis  .sweet  to  roam  when  morning's  light.     See  Mesopo- 
tamia.— Anon. 
'Tis  sweet  to  view,  from  half  past  five  to  six.     See 

Theatre,  The.— Smith. 
'Tis  sweeter  than   all  else  below.       See  Angel  in  the 

House,  The  (Night  Thoughts) .-Patmore. 
'T'S  the  blithest,  bonniest  weather  for  a  bird  to  flirt  a 

feather.     See  Robin's  Secret. ^Bates. 
'Tis  the  day  before  Chiistmas,   and  all  through   the 
house.     See  Day  before  Christmas,  The. — Carter. 
'Tis  the   djinns'  wild-streaming  swarm.      See  Djinns, 

The. — Hugo. 
'Tis  the  fortress  of  St.  Louis.     See  Star  in  the  West, 

The. — Butterworth. 
'Tis  the  golden  gleam  of  an  autumn  day.     See  Autumn. 

— (Blackivood's.) 
'Tis  the  hour  of  fairy  ban  and  spell.     See  Culprit  Fay, 

The.— Drake. 
'Tis  the  last  rose  of  summer,  left  blooming  alone.     See 

Last  Rose  of  Summer,  The. — -Moore, 
"  'Tis  the  last  time,  darling,"  he  gently  said.     See  In 

the  Mining  Town. — Thorpe. 
'Tis  the  laughter  of  pines  that  swing  and  .sway.     See 
Phantom  Light  of  the  Bale  des  Chaleurs,  'The. — 
— Eaton . 
'Tis   the   middle  of  night   by  the  castle  clock.     See 

Christabel. — Coleridge. 
'Tis  the  middle  watch  of  a  summer's  night.     See  Cul- 
prit Fay,  The. — Drake. 
'Tis  the  noon  [ivr.  moon]  of  the  spring-time,  yet  never 

a  bird.     See  April. ^Whittier. 
'Tis  the  "old,  old  story"  of  youth  and  maid,  through 
memory's   chasms,    re-echoing   low.     See   Yellow 
Roses. — Hamersley. 
'Tis  the  part  of  a  coward  to  brood.     See  Lyric  of  Ac- 
tion.— Hayne. 
'Tis  the  part  of  truest  wisdom.     See  Truest  Wisdom. 

— Anon. 
'Tis  the  soft  twilight.     Round  the  shining  fender.     See 

Vision  of  the  Monk  Gabriel,  The. — Donnelly. 
'Tis  the  sound  of  silver-toned  bell.     See  Gabrielle. — 

M'Kenzie. 
'Tis  the  time  to  be  cheerful,  when  nature  is  gay.     See 

Life  in  its  Spring-time. — Holbrook. 
'Tis  the  tree  of  the  state,  and  most  wi.sely  selected.     See 

Song  to  the  Maple  Tree. — Holbrook. 
'Tis  the  white  anemone,  fashioned  so.     See  'Tis  the 

White  Anemone. — Lytton. 
'Tis  the  wind  that's  groaning.     See  Eve  of  Saint  Bar- 
tholomew, The. — Thornbury. 
'Tis  the  year's  midnight,  and  'tis  the  day's.     See  Noc- 
turnal upon  St.  Lucie's  Day,  A. — Donne. 


'Tis  they  of  a  veritie.    See  Deid  Folks'  Ferry. — Watson. 
'Tis  time  Doll  Rosy  had  a  bath.     See  Doll  Rosy's  Bath. 

— Anon. 
'Tis  time  this  heart  should  be  unmoved.     See  On  This 

Day  I  Complete  My  Thirty-sixth  Year. — Byron. 
'Tis  to  yourself  1  speak;  you  cannot  know.     See  Your- 

.self. — Very. 
'Tis  true,  one  half  of  woman's  life  is  hope.     See  Her 

Horoscope. — Townsend. 
'Tis  true  that  when  the  dust  of  death  has  choked.    See 
Casa    Guidi    Windows    (Death  of   Savonarola). — 
Browning. 
'Tis  truth,  although  this  truth's  a  star.       See  Angel  in 

the  House,  The  (Sentences). — Patmore. 
'Tis  twelve  o'clock  within  my  prison  dreary!     See  New 

Year's  Eve. — Bartleson. 
'Tis  twent.v  years,  and  something  more.     See  Reflect- 
ive Retrospect,  A. — Saxe. 
'Tis  very  sad  to  see  a  tear  bedim  a  loved  one's  eye.     See 

Signals  of  Distress! — Crompton. 
'Tis  weary  watching  wave  by  wave.     See  same — Mas- 

sey. 
'Tis  well  to  woo,  'tis  well  to  wed.     See  Building  upon 

the  Sand. — Cook. 
'Tis  when  the  dark  goes  soaring.     See  Kissing  Time. — 

Field. 
'Tis  while  reviewing  o'er  my  life  that's  past.     See  Mat 

and  Hal  and  I. — Snow. 
'Tis  winter.     Now  no  longer  can  Mabel,  rarest  maid. 

See  Mabel. — Anon. 
'Tis  winter    now;    the    fallen    snow.     See    Hymn     of 

Winter. — Longfellow. 
'Tis  with  our  judgments  as  our  watches — none.     See 
Essay  on  Criticism,  An  (Diversities  of  .ludgment). 
— Pope. 
'Tis  woman's  smile  that  greets  us  all.     See  Old  Canteen, 

-  The.— Edwards. 
'Tis  written  in  the  chapter  "of  the  Cave."     See  Moses 

and  the  Angel. — Arnold. 
'Tisn't  so  much  that  the  Sunday  harness  never  seems  to 
fit.     See    Sunday    Talk    in    the    Horse    Sheds. — 
Burdette. 
Tit.an!  to  whose  immortal  eyes.     See  Prometheus. — 

Byron. 
Tittlebat   Titmouse  was   an   ignorant,   vain   fop.     See 

Tittlebat  Titmouse's  Experiment. — Warren. 
To  a  dairy  a  crow.     See  Fox   and  the  Crow,   'The.^ 

Taylor. 
To  a  drowsy  country  village.     See  Parson  Lee. — Anon. 
To  a  high  hill  where  never  yet  stood  tree.     See  Poet's 

Complaint  of  his  Muse,  The. — Otway. 
To  all,  "Good-night!"  the  touch  of  hands.     See  Good- 
night.— Everette. 
To  all  who  dwell  within  the  confines  of  Massachusetts 
[or  her  confines].     See  Tribute  to  Massachusetts, 
A. — Lodge. 
To  all  you  ladies  now  at  land.     See  Song  Written  at 

Sea  in  the  First  Dutch  War. — Sackville. 
To  Americans  the  name  of  Washington  will  be  forever 
dear.     See    Washington    a    Model    for    Youth. — 
Dwight. 
To  arms!     From  your  homes  on  the  seashore  and  hill- 
side come  forth.     See  Long  Ago. — Bradbury. 
To  arms,  to  arms!  my  jolly  grenadiers!     See  Song  of 

Braddock's  Men,  The. — Anon. 
To  ask  for  all  thy  love,  and  thy  whole  heart.     See  Two 

in  One. — Dowland. 
To  battle!  to  battle!     See  Covenanter's  Battle  Chant, 

The. — Motherwell. 
To  be  a  King,  and  wear  a  crown.     See  "Golden  Speech, 

The." — Queen  Elizabeth. 
To  be  as  great  as  Washington.     See  Our  Very  Best. — 

Anon. 
To  be  cold  and  breathless,  to  feel  not  and  speak  not. 
See  Eulogy  on  Adams  and  .Jefferson    (Fathers  of 
the  Republic,  The). — Everett. 
To  be  furious  is  to  be  frighted  out  of  fear.     See  Antony 

and  Cleopatra  (Courage). — Shakespeare. 
To  be  in  love  where  scorn  is  bought  with  groans.     See 

Two  Gentlemen  of  Verona,  The. — Shakespeare. 
To  be  in  love's  a  stern  condition.     See  Lover's  Com- 
plaint.— (Punch  Bowl.) 
To  be  let,  at  a  very  desirable  rate.     See  Heart  to  Let, 

A. — Anon. 
To  be  no  more — sad  cure;  for  who  would  lose.     See 

Paradise  Lost  (To  be  no  More). — Milton. 
To  be.  or  not  to  be,  that  is  the  question.     See  Hamlet 

( Hamlet 's  Soliloquy) . — Shakespeare. 
"To  be,  or  not  to  be,  that  is  the  question!"     See  Med- 
ley.— Soper. 
"To  be,  or  not  to  be?"  was  Hamlet's  question.     See 
Sophomore's  Soliloquy,  The. — (.Michigan  Univer- 
sity  Magazine.") 


894 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


To 


To  be  sure.     It  is  a  sad  world,  Prudy.     <See  Changing 

the  Hundred  Dollar  Note. — Bradley. 
"To  be  sure,"  said  I  to   myself,  one  year  ago  the  last 

week    in     December.     See    Story    of     Fifty-two 

Prayer-meetings. — Anon. 
To  bear  false  witness  against  a  neighbor.     See  Inter- 
national Good  Will. — (New  York  Tribune.) 
To  bear  the  burden  of  an  Empire's  care.     See  Dedica- 
tion to  Dante's  Divine  Comedy. — ^Plumptre. 
To  bear,  to  nurse,  to  rear.     See  Songs  of  Seven  (Seven 

Times  Six). — Ingelow. 
To  begin  in  things  quite  simple.     See  Dan  and  Dimple, 

and  How  they  Quarreled. — Gary. 
To  bright  Arbor  Day  a  welcome  we  sing.     See  Arbor 

Day. — Stearns. 
To  calumniate  innovation,  and  to  decry  it,  is  prenos- 

terous.     See    On    Parliamentary    Innovations.— 

Beaufoy. 
To  claim    the    Arctic    came    the    sun.     See    Northern 

Lights,  Tho.- -Taylor. 
To  come  back  from  th  j  sweet  South  to  the  North.     See 

"Italia,  lo  Ti  Saluto'" — Ros.setti. 
"To   court    I    .shall   go!"   wee   Marguerite   cried.     See 

•Ambitious  Marguerite,  The. — Sage. 
To  cure  the  mind's  wrong  bias.  Spleen.     See  Spleen, 

The. — -Green. 
To  die  is  not  the  work  of  one  brief  hour.     See  What 

it  Is  to  Die. — Anon. 
To  do  to  all  men  as  I  would.     See  Golden  Rule,  The. — 

Anon. 
To  do  to  others  as  I  would.     See  Golden  Rule,  The. — 

Anon. 
To  draw  no  envy  (Shakespeare)  on  thy  name.     See 

To  the  Memory  of  my  Beloved,  Mr.  William  Shake- 
speare, and  what  he  hath  Left  Us. — .Tonson. 
To  draw,   or  not  to  draw,  that  is  the  question.     See 

Poker. — Anon. 
To  drum-beat   and  heart-beat.     See  Nathan   Hale. — 

Finch. 
To  each  weary,  toil-worn  wight  I     See  Good  Night. — 

Korner. 
To  ea.stward  ringing,  to  westward  winging.     See  When 

the  Great  Gray  Ships  Come  in. — Carryl. 
To  enable  you  to  guess  my  name  I  must  give  you  some 

insight.     See  Three  Enigmas. — Anon. 
To  every   question   ever  sprung.     See   Riding  in   the 

Cars  (for  a  boy). — Kavanaugh. 
To  fair  Fidel^'s  grassy  tomb.     See  Dirge  in  Cymbeline. 

—Collins. 
To  fence    with    Phyllis   is   a    joy.     See    En    Garde. — 

Mclntyre. 
To  further  this,  Achitophel  unites.     See  Absalom  and 

Achitophel  (Malcontents,  The — Zimri). — Dryden. 
To  General  Thomas  a  battle  was  neither  an  earthquake. 

See  Generd    George   H.  Thomas:     His   Life    and 

Character  (General    Thomas   at   Chickamauga). — 

Garfield. 
To  gild  refined  gold,  to  paint  the  lily.     See  King  John. 

— Shakespeare. 
To  give  a  cup  of  water;  yet  its  draught.     See  'Tis  a 

Little  Thing.— Talfourd. 
To  go  or  stay,  I  scarcely  knew.     See  Doubt  Resolved, 

The. — -Anon. 
To  God  my  soul  I  do  bequeathe,  because  it  is  His 

own.     See     Rhymed     Will    of     Hunnis,     The. — 

Hunnis. 
To  grass,  or  leaf,  or  fruit,  or  wall.     See  Snail,  The. — 

Bourne. 
To  hear    the    lark    begin    his    flight.     See    L'AUegro. 

— Milton. 
To  heaven    approached    a    Sufi    Saint.     See    same. — 

Rumi. 
To  heroism  and  holiness.     See  Angel  in  the  House,  The 

(Queen,  The). — Patmore. 
To  him  that  overcometh.     See  Overcometh. — Sangster. 
To  him  who  in  the  love  of  Nature  holds.     See  Thana- 

topsis. — Bryant. 
To  horse,  to  horse.  Sir  Nicholas!  the  clarion's  note  is 

high.      See    Sir    Nicholas     at    Marston    Moor. — 

Praed. 
To  horse,    to   horse!   the   bugles   call.     See   Trooper's 

Dirge,  The. — Anon. 
To  horse!     To   horse!   with   the   stirrup's   clink.     See 

Cavalry  Song. — Hayne. 
To  HoTiston  at  Gonzales  town,  ride.  Ranger,  for  your 

life.     See  Men  of  the  Alamo,  The. — Roche. 
To  Jennie  at  play  in  the  garden.     See  Farewell  of  the 

Birds —H.  K.  P. 
To  keep  the  lamp  alive.     See  Dependence. — Cowper. 
To  kiss  my  Celia's  fairer  breast.     See  On  Snow  Flakes 

Melting  on  his  Lady's  Breast. — Johnson. 
To  Lake   Aghmoogenegamook.     See   American   Trav- 
eller, The. — Newell. 


To  leave  unseen  so  many  a  glorious  sight.     See  Return- 
ing Home. — Trench. 
To  lie  with  half-closed  eyes,  as  in  a  dream.     See  What 

I  Like.— H.  L. 
To  live  a  hero,  then  to  stand.     See  At  the  Farragut 

Statue. — Bridges. 
To  live  in  hell,  and  heaven  to  behold.     See  same. — 

Constable. 
To  live  the  sorrow  down,  and  try  to  be.     See  Without 

Him. — Rutter. 
To  live  within  a  cave — it  is  most  good.     See  Salve! — 

Brown. 
To  London   once   my   step[p]s   I    bent.      See  London 

Lickpenny. — Lydgate. 
To  look  for  thee — sigh  for  thee — cry  for  thee.     See 

Love  Song. — Anon. 
To  love  and  seek  return.     See  Love. — -Longfellow. 
To  love  satisfies  one-half  of  our  nature.     See  fame. — 

Hodge. 
To  make  my  lady's  obsequies.     See  Fairest  Thing  in 

Mortal  Eyes,  The. — Orleans. 
To  make  this  condiment,  your  poet  begs.     See  Recipe 

for  a  Salad,  A. — Smith. 
To  marry, — or  not   to   marry, — that  is  the   (juestion! 

See  Bachelor's  Soliloquy,  The. — Anon. 
To  me.  fair  friend,  you  never  can  be  old.     See  Sonnets, 

CIV. — Shakespeare. 
"To  mc,  I  swear,  you're  a  volume  rare."     See  Lawyer's 

Daughter,  A. — Thacher. 
To  me  men  are  for  what  they  are.     See  Humility. — 

Milnes. 
To  me,  no  dull  insensate  growth.     See  Old  Wood,  The. 

— Kelso. 
To  me  the  earth  once  seemed  to  be.     See  Then  and 

Now.  —Johnson. 
To  me,  whom  in  their  lays  the  shepherds  call.     See 

For  a  Grotto. — Akenside. 
To  men  of  other  minds  my  fancy  flies.      See   Travel- 
ler,    The;    or,    A    Prospect    of    Society. — Gold- 
smith 
To  most  people  a  grove  is  a  grove,  and  all  groves  are 

alike.     See  Grove  of  Pines,  A. — Anon. 
To  murder  one  so  young!     See  Christmas  Hymn,  A. 

— Domett. 
To  mute  and  to  material  things.  SeeMarmion  (Nelson, 

Pitt,  Fox). — Scott. 
To  my  lot  has  fallen  the  pleasant  duty  of  welcoming 

you.     See  Opening  Address. — Rook. 
To  my   office   window,   gray.     See   May   Memories. — 

Lincoln. 
To  my  son,  Lisle  Clinton.     See  Dedication. — Richards. 
To  my  sweet  cigarette  I  am  singing.     See  My  Cigarette. 

— Barnard. 
To  my  true  king  I  offered  free  from  stain.     See  Epitaph 

on  a  Jacobite. — Macaulay. 
To  Nebraska  belongs  the  distinction  of  inaugurating 

the  observance  of  Arbor  Day.     See  Institution  of 

Arbor  Day,  The. — Anon. 
To  Oggier  spake  King  Didier.     See  Coming  of  Charle- 
magne.— Macaulay. 
To  one   he   brought   the  rarest   flowers.     See  Two. — 

Town.send. 
To  one  who  has  been  long  in  city  pent.    See  same. — Keats. 
To  parents  and  friends      Mrs.  June.     See  Mrs.  June's 

Prospectus. — Coolidge. 
To  plant,  to  build,  whatever  you   intend.       See   Moral 

Essays  (Nature). — Pope. 
To  praise   the    little   women    Love    besought    me   in 

my  musing.     See    Praise    of     Little     Women. — 

Hita. 
To  praise  thy  life,   or  waile  thy  worthie  death.     See 

Epitaph   upon    the    Right  Honourable  Sir  Philip 

Sidney,  An. — Raleigh. 
To  predict  an  eclipse  of  the  sun,  the  astronomer  must 

sweep  forward.     See  First  Predicted  Eclipse,  The. 

— Mitchel. 
To  Priamus  palice    eftir    socht  I  than.      See    ^neid. 

The  (Ghost  of  Creusa,  The).— Virgil. 
To  prove    that    Washington    never    attached    to    his 

doctrine  of  neutrality.     See  In  a  Just  Cause. — 

Kossuth. 
To  put  new  shingles  on  old  roofs.     See  Little  Brother 

of  the  Rich,  A. — Martin. 
To  Rathlin's  Isle  I  chanced  to  sail.     See   Enchanted 

Island,  The.— Conolly. 
To  rear  a  boy  under  what  parents  call  the  "sheltered 

life  system."     See  Thrown  Away. — Kipling. 
To  Rome  a  scout  came  flying,  all  wild  with  haste  and 

fear.     See  Horatius  at  the  Bridge. — Macaulay. 
To  say  my  prayers  is  not  to  pray.     See  True  Prayers. 

— Anon. 
To  sea!   to   .sea!   the  calm   is   o'er.     See  Death's  Jest 

Book  (Sea,   The). — Beddoes. 


895 


To 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


To  search   for  truth  and  wisdom.     See  What  is  My 

Work  To-day. — Anon. 
To  shoot,  to  shoot,  would  be  my  delight.     See  Shooting 

Song,  A. — Hands. 
To  shore  the  sca-nymphs  buoyed  their  captive  dead. 

See  Shelley.— B«ts. 
To  sigh,  yet  feel  no  pain.     See  same. — Moore. 
To  sit  in  front  of  the  open  grate.     See  In  Bachelor's 

Hall.— Peabody. 
To  sleep  I  give  myself  away.     iSee  Voyage  of  Sleep, 

The.— Eaton. 
To  Kome  field  of  labor,  mental  or  manual.     See  I^abor. — 

Dewey. 
To  soothe  a  mad  King's  fevered  brain.     <See  Ballade 

of  Plaving  Cards,  A. — White. 
To  spend  the  long  warm  days.     See  Rest. — Woods. 
To  spend  uncounted  years  of  pain.     See  Perche  Pensa? 

Pensando  s'Invecchia. — Clough. 
To  spread,  or  not  to  spread,  that  is  the  question. — See 

Class-day  Hamlet,  A. ^Huntress. 
To  spring   belongs   the   violet,   and   the   blown.     See 

Petition,  A. — Aldrich. 
To  stand  within  a  gently  gliding  boat.     See  Haunts 

of  the  Halcyon,  The. — Luders. 
To  the  Army  of  the  Potomac  belongs  the  unique  dis- 
tinction of  being  its  own  hero.     See  Army  of  the 

Potomac.  The. — Depew. 
To  the  belfry  one  by  one,  went  the  ringers  from  the 

sun.     See  Rhyme  of  the  Duchess  May. — Brown- 
ing. 
To  the  best  archer  a  prize  was  to  be  awarded.     See 

Ivanhoe  (Archery  Contest,  The). — Scott. 
To  the  Board  of  Education.     See  Sarah  Ann  Miranda. 

— Anon. 
To  the  brave  all  homage  render.     See  Ashby. — Thomp- 
son. 
"To  the  church  Pasquale."    See  Threads  from  the  Woof 

(Lie  for  a  Life,  A). — Galpin. 
To  the  Cowpens  riding  proudly,  boasting  loudly,  rebels 

scorning.     See    Battle    of    the    Cowpens,    The. — 

English. 
To  the  forgotten  dead.     See  tame. — Woods. 
To  the  friends  gathered  here,  to  the  professors  who 

have  been  our  guides.     See  Good  Day. — Anon. 
To  the    Giver    of    all    blessings.     See    Thanksgiving 

Hymn. — .\non. 
To  the  great  brown  house  where  the  flowers  live.     See 

Rain,  The. — Anon. 
To  the   great  tree-loving  fraternity  we   belong.     See 

Walk   among  Trees,    A    (Love  of  Trees,  The). — 

Beecher. 
To  the  historian  few  characters  appear  so  little.     See 

Panegyrics  on  Washington. — Anon. 
To  the  instincts  of  God  and  conscience  let  us  hasten 

to  add  the  instincts  of  immortality.     See  Instinct 

of  Immortality,  The. — Hillis. 
To  the  Lake  of  Coolfin  the  companions  soon  came.     See 

Lake  of  Coolfin,  The. — Joyce. 
To  the  little  brown   cradles.     See  Sunshine's  Caress, 

The. — Anon. 
To  the  Ijords    of    Convention     'twas    Claver'se    [u^. 

Claverhousel  who  spoke.      See  Doom   of    Devor- 

goil,  The  (Bonny  Dundee). — -Scott. 
"To  the  manly  will  there's  ever  a  way."     See  Arabian 

Tale,  An.— Anon. 
"To  the  memory  of  Patrick  Connor."     See  Connor. — 

Anon. 
To  the  men  at  work  in  the  field  Ruth  came  running  and 

crying.     See  Ride. — Bate. 
To  the  men  who  fought  with  Decatur.     See  Message,  A 

—P.  B. 
To  the  minstrel  said  the  king.     See  Minstrel,  The.— 

Proctor. 
To  the  ocean  now  I  fly.     See  Comus  (Land  of  Eternal 

Summer,  The). — Milton. 
To  the    pen   of   the   historian.     See   Unselfishness   of 

Washington,  The. — Paine. 
To  the  President : — I  esteem  it  among  the  rarest  of  my 

present  privileges.     See  Service. — Anon. 
To  the  pure  mind  alone  hath  solitude  its  charms.     See 

same. — Anon. 
To  the  question  "what  have  the  People  ever  gained  " 

See  Sword,  The.— Grimk^. 
To  the  quick  brow  Fame  grudges  her  best  wreath.     See 

Guerdon,  The.— Piatt. 
"To  the  red,  white  and  blue."     See  Little  Flag-bearer 

The. —  Anon.  ' 

To  the  scafifold's  foot  she  came.     See  Two  Loves  and  a 

Life. — Sawyer. 
To  the  school  and  the  college  attaches  vast  responsi- 
bility.    See  Patriotic  Sentiments. — Gates. 
To  the  sea-shell's  spiral  round.     See  Appreciation  — 

Aldrich. 


To  the  sound  of  timbrels  sweet.     See  Bridal  Song. — 

Milman. 
To  the  wake  of  O'Hara.     See  Wake  of  Tim  O'Hara. 

The. — -Buchanan. 
To  the   wall   of   the   old    green    garden.     See   Yellow 

Pansy,  A. — Cone. 
To  the  yard,  by  the  barn,  came  the  farmer  one  morn. 

See  That  Calf.— Cary. 
To  the  youthful  aspirant  of  to-day,  who  is  willing  to 

take  so  humble  a  sentiment.     See  Fruits  of  Labor, 

The.— Bates. 
To  thee,  beneath  whose  eye.     See  Washington  as  a 

Leader. — Pierpont. 
To  thee,    blest    weed,    whose    sovereign    wiles.     See 

Acrostic.  —J.  H. 
To  thee,  fair  Freedom,  I  retire.     See  Written  at  an 

Inn  at  Henley.— -Shenstone. 
To  thee,  my  way  in  epigrams  seems  new.      See  To  My 

Mere  English  Censurer. — Jonson. 
To  thee,   O  country,   great  and  free.     See  To  Thee, 

O  Country ! — Eichberg. 
To  thee,   O   father  of  the   stately   peaks.     See   To  a 

Mountain. — Kendall. 
To  them  his  heart,  his  love,  his  griefs  were  given.     See 

Deserted  Village,  The. — Goldsmith. 
To  these  [wr.  those]  whom  death  again  did  wed.    See 

Epitaph     upon      Husband     and      Wife,     An. — 

Crashaw. 
To  Thine  eternal  arms,  O  God.     See  I  Will  Arise  and 

Go  unto  My  Father. — Higginson. 
To  think  that  over  twenty  years  have  gone  by.     See 

After  Twenty  Years. — Booth. 
To  this  audience  what  name  shall  I  give?     See  German- 

icus  to  his  Mutinous  Troops. — Tacitus. 
To  thy  lover,  dear,  discover.      See  Out  of  Italian:    A 

Song. — Crashaw. 
To  Thy  temple  I  repair.     See  same. — Montgomery. 
To  touch  a  broken  lute.     See  Saddest   Fate,   The. — 

Anon. 
To  tremble,    when    I    touch    her    hands.     See    Divine 

Awe. — Woodberry. 
To  turn  my  volume  o'er  nor  find.     See  How  to  Read 

Me. — Landor. 
To  understand  all  that  she  did.     See  Put  Yourself  in 

her  Place. — Barnard. 
To  us,  citizens  of  America,  it  belongs  above  all  others 

to  show  respect  to  the  memory  of  Washington. 

See  Character  of    Washington,  The  (Memory   of 

Washington,  The). — Everett. 
"To  wait!"     Epitome  of  life.     See  Wait  On. — Hahn. 
To  wake    the    soul    by    tender    strokes    of    art.     See 

Prologue  to  Mr.  Addison's  Tragedy  of  "Cato." — 

Pope. 
To  waltz  with  thee,  my  pretty  belle.       See  To  Waltz 

with  Thee.— 7ug. 
To  Waterloo,  with  sad  ado,  and  many  a  sigh  and  groan. 

See  Waterloo  Ballad,  A. — Hood. 
To  wear  the  blue  I  think  it  best.     See  Gallant  Grahams, 

The. — Anon. 
To  weary  hearts,  to  mourning  homes.     See  Angel  of 

Patience,  The.— Whittier. 
To  wed,   or  not   to  wed,— that  is  the  question.     See 

Bachelor's  Soliloquy,  The. — Anon. 
To  what  causes,  Athenians,  is  the  prosperity  or  the 

calamity  of  a  State  to  be  ascribed?     See  Invective 

against  Demosthenes. — Dinarchus. 
To  what  new  fates,   my  country,   far.     See  Manifest 

Destiny. — Hovey. 
To  what    punishment    shall   we    condemn    Louis    the 

Sixteenth?     See    On    the    Punishment    of    Louis 

XVI .  ^Robespierre . 
To  whit!     To   whit!     To   whee!     Will   you   listen   to 

me?     See  Who  Stole  the  Bird's  Nest?— Child. 
To  whom  shalt  Thou  be  dedicate?     See  His  Book's 

Patron. — Martial. 
To  William  Penn  belongs  the  distinction.      See  True 

Grandeur  of   Nations,  The  (Sumner's  Tribute  to 

William  Penn). — Sumner. 
To  write  a  verse  or  two  is  all  the  praise.     See  Praise. — 

Herbert. 
To  write  as  your  sweet  mother  does.     See  Advice. — 

Ivandor. 
To  yon  fause  stream  that,  near  the  sea.     See  Mermaid, 

The. — Anon. 
To  you,    Charlotte,    my    first,    my    only    love.     See 

Household  Fairy,  A. — Talfourd. 
To  you,  my  purse,  and  to  noon  [cr  none]  other  wight. 

See  Compleynte  of  Chaucer  to  His  Purse,  The. — 

Chaucer. 
To  you.sir,  the  President  of  this  College.     See  For  a 

College  Commencement. — Anon. 
To  you,   whose   temperate   pulses  flow.     See  On   the 

Fly-leaf  of  Manon  Lescaut. — Learned. 


896 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Touch 


Tobacco's  but  an  Indian  weed.     See  Tobacco  is  an 

Indian  Weed. — Anon. 
To-day  a  cripple  passed  me  on  the  way.     See  Solution, 

The. — Ryan. 
To-day,  all  day,  I  rode  upon  the  down.     See  St.  Valen- 
tine's Day. — Blunt. 
To-day,  as  1  went  down  the  street.     jSee  "Try"  Boysv 

The. — Anon. 
To-day  as  the  pulses  powerful.     See  Memorial  Day. — 

Fawcett. 
To-day,  dear  heart,  but  just  to-day.     See  Her  Answer. 

— Bennett. 
To-day  Death  seems  to  me  an  infant  child.     See  New- 
born Death. — Rossetti. 
To-day  I  saw  the  dragon-fly.     See  Dragon-fly,  The. — 

Tennyson. 
To-day   I   was  let  sit   up,   tucked  up  in   a  quilt   in   a 

arm-chare.     See  Photographs,  The. — Anon. 
To-day  is  the  fourth  anniversary  of  the  revolution  in 

Hungary.     See   Mourning   Hero's    Vision,    The. — 

Kossuth. 
To-day  is  theirs — the  unforgotten  dead.     See  All  Soul's 

Day. — Wat.son. 
"To-day,    my    dear    child,"    said    mamma    just    now, 

"to-day   you  are   sixteen   years  old.     See   Before 

the  Mirror. — Anon. 
To-day    the    birth    of    Christ,    the    Lord.     See    Royal 

Birthday,  A. — Train. 
To-day  the  birlhright  of  her  hopes  the  marching  nation 

sings.     See  Festal  Day  Has  Come,  The. — Butter- 
worth. 
To-day  the  great  question  that  is  stirring  men's  hearts. 

See  same. — Parker. 
To-day    the    United    States    and    Great    Britain    are 

striving  to  crown  the  glories.     See  Nation's  Honor, 

The. — Coudert. 
To-day  the  woods  are  trembling  through  and  through. 

See  Corn. — Lanier. 
To-day,  unsullied,  comes  to    thee.      See  "To-day." — 

Ruskin. 
To-day  we  are  poor;  but  1  buy  liinette.     See  Linette. — 

Folsom. 
To-da.v  we  have  been  inaugurating  the  world-renowned 

Statue  of  Liberty   Enlightening  the  World.     See 

Temperance     Enlightening     the     World.  —  Ta.y- 

lor. 
To-day !  We  stand  on  the  threshold !     We  stand  there, 

waiting!     See  Modern  High  School  Valedictory. — 

Burdette. 
To-day  what  is  there  in  the  air.     See  Carpe  Diem. — - 

Marzials. 
To-day  with  reverent  hand  we  draw.     See  Cities  of  the 

Bible.— Hadley. 
Toddlekins   and    Tidkins   were   two   naughty    kittens. 

See  Two  Kittens. — Goodfellow. 
Together  to  the  church  they  went.     See  Pharisee  and 

Sadducee. — Anon. 
Toil  on,  faint  not,  keep  watch  and  oray.     .Set  Perse- 
verance.—Bonar. 
Toil  on,  poor  muser,  to  attain  that  goal.     See  Ideal, 

The.— Saltus. 
Toil  on!  toil  on!  ye  ephemeral  train.     See  Coral  Insect, 

The. — Sigourney. 
Toil  swings  the  axe,  and  forests  bow.     See  Labor. — 

Bungay. 
Toiling    in    the    naked    fields.     See    Laborer,  The. — 

Clare. 
Tolerably  successful,  I  guess.     Made  a  sensation,  'pon 

honor.     See  Fortune  Hunter,  The. —  Pickering. 
Toll  for   the  brave.     See   On   the   Loss   of   the   Royal 

George. — Cowper. 
Toll!    Roland,    toll!     See   Great    Bell    Roland,    The.— 

Tilton. 
Toll  the  lilies'  silver  bells!     See  Death  of  Oberon. — 

Thornbury. 
Toll  the  slow  bell.     See  Fallen,  The.— Cheney. 
Toll!   toll!   toll!   for   the   old   year   slowly   dying.     See 

New  Year's  Chime,  A. — Anon. 
Toll,  toll,  toll,  thou  bell  by  billows  swung.     See  Bell  of 

the  "Atlantic,"  The. — Sigourney. 
Tom  and  Charles  once  took  a  walk.     See  Superior  Boys, 

The.— Turner. 
Tom  and  Joe  quarrelled.     Sec  Dispute,  A. — Mitchell. 
Tom  appeared  on  the  sidewalk  with  a  bucket  of  white- 
wash.    See  Tom  Sawyer  (How  Tom  Sawyer  Got 

his  Fence  Whitewashed). — Clemens. 
"Tom,  I   invite  you   to  a  walk."     See  It  is  never  too 

Late  to  mend  (Lark  in   the  Gold  Fields,  The). — 

Reade. 
Tom  Pearse,  Tom  Pearse,  lend  me  your  old  gray  mare. 

See  Widdicombe  Fair. — Anon. 
Tom  Poplin  was  a  I^ondon  modem  spark.     See  Guess, 

The. — Anon. 


Tom   Sawyer,   a  lad  of   twelve  years,   lived   with   his 

guardian.  Aunt    Polly.     See   Tom  Sawyer  (Tom 

Sawyer  Treated  for  Lovesickness) . — Clemens. 
Tom  Sawyer,  having  offended  his  sole  guardian.     See 

Tom    Sawyer   (How    Tom   Sawyer  Got  his  Fence 

Whitewashed) . — Clemens. 
Tom.  soon  as  e'er  thou  strik'st  thy  golden  lyre.     See 

Progress  of  Curiosity,  The. — Pindar. 
Tom  Twist  was  a  wonderful  fellow.     See  Tom  Twist. — 

Anon. 
Tommy    didn't     see    the    use.     See    Warning,    A. — 

Anon. 
Tommy  .Jones,  across  the  street.     See  What  He  Has. — 

Denton. 
Tommy    Linn    is    a    Scotchman    born.     See    Tommy 

Linn. — Anon. 
Tommy    thought    there    was    nobody    looking.     See 

Truant. — Hudson. 
Tommy's  alluz  playin'  jokes.     See  Thomas  the  Pre- 
tender.— Riley. 
To-morrow,     and     to-morrow,     and     to-morrow.     See 

Macbeth    ("Tomorrow    and     tomorrow,"    etc.). — 

Shakespeare. 
To-morrow,  brightest-eyed  of  Avon's  train.     See  To 

Tacsea. — Landor. 
To-morrow,     didst     thou     say?     See     To-morrow.- — 

Cotton. 
To-morrow  is  the  day  for  Valentines.     See  Four  Valen- 
tines.— Field. 
To-morrow,  ma,  I'm  sweet  sixteen.     See  Billy  Grimes, 

the  Drover. — Anon. 
To-morrow    our    troubles    will    all    be    ended.     See 

To-morrow. — Anon. 
To-morrow's    action!    can    that    hoary    wisdom.     See 

To-morrow. — .Johnson. 
To-night   I   watch   the   fireflies  rise.     See   Fireflies. — 

Robinson. 
To-night  retired,  the  queen  of  heaven.     ASee  Nightin- 
gale, The. — Akenside. 
To-night    she  will   dance   at  the  palace.     See    Retro- 
spections.—  Lytton. 
To-night  the  scenes  of  boyhood  years  come  thronging 

to  my  gaze.     See  Old  House  on  the  Hillside,  The. — 

McBride. 
To-night  the  winds  begin  to  ri.se.     See  In  Memoriam. 

— Tennyson. 
To-night  this  sunset  spreads  two  golden  wings.     See 

Sunset  Wings. — Rossetti. 
To-night's  the  time  for  Santa  Claus.     See  Watching 

for  Santa  Claus. — Denton. 
Tony  Marvin,  the  keeper  of  the  Keyport  Light,  was  in 

his  little  room.     See    Equinoctial  Storm,  The. — 

Smith. 
Too  avid  of  earth's  bliss,  he  was  of  those.     See  Byron 

the  Voluptuary. — Watson. 
Too    early,  of  course!     How  provoking!     See  Reverie 

in  Church. — Baker. 
Too  fair,   I  may  not  call  thee  mine.     See  Parting. — 

Massey. 
Too  frail  to  keep  the  lofty  vow.     See  Thoughts  Sug- 
gested the  Day  Following,  on  the  Banks  of  Nith, 

near  the  Poet's  Residence. — Wordsworth. 
Too  hard  to  bear!  why  did  they  take  me  thence?     See 

Enoch  Arden. — Tennyson. 
Too  late,  alas!     I  must  confess.     See  same. — Wilmot. 
Too  late  for  love,  too  late  for  joy.     See  Bride  Song. — 

Rossetti. 
Too  late   I  stay'd — forgive  the  crime!     See  To  Lady 

Anne  Hamilton. — Spencer. 
Too  late  we  met,  love,  you  and  I.     See  Too  Late  We 

Met.— Westley. 
Too  long,    too    long    we    keep    the    level    plain.     See 

Revival  of  Romance. — Thomas. 
Too  poor  for  a  bribe,  and  too  proud  to  importune.     See 

Sketch  of  his  Own  Character. — Gray. 
Too  rare  a  flower  is  love  its  bloom  to  keep.     See  Fare- 
well, A. — Anon. 
Too  solemn  for  day,  too  sweet  for  night.     See  same. — 

Walker. 
Too  wearily  had  we  and  song.     See  To  a  Poet  Breaking 

Silence . — Thompso  n . 
Torches  were  blazing  clear.     See  Coeur  de  Lion  at  the 

Bier  of  his  Father. — Hemans. 
Tossed    through    the    dark    and    stormy    night.     See 

Temperance  Ship,  The. — {Banner,  The.) 
Tossed  with  rough  winds  and  faint  with  fear.     See 

'Tis  I,  be  not  Afraid. — Charles. 
Tossing    his    mane    of    snows    in    wildest    eddies    and 

tangles.     See  In  Earliest  Spring. — Howells. 
T'other  day,  as  I  was  twining.     See  Cupid  Swallowed. 

— Hunt. 
Touch    not    that    maid.     See    Salopia    Inhospitalis. — 

Sladen. 


897 


Touch 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIOXS 


Touch  us  (tently,  Time!  See  Petition  to  Time,  A. — 
Procter. 

Toussaint,  the  most  unhappy  man  of  men.  See  To 
Toussaint  L'Ouverture. — Wordsworth. 

Toys  and  treats  and  pleasures  pass.  See  Happy  Child, 
The. — Rand.        ^ 

Trace,  for  a  moment,  the  history  of  commerce,  from 
the  earliest  period.     See  Commerce. — Everett. 

Traditions  say  that  when  of  old.  See  Man  for  the 
Hour,  The. — Robinson. 

Tramp,  tramp,  tramp,  in  the  drunkard's  way.  See 
Dead  March,  The. — Lathrop. 

Tramp,  tramp,  tramp,  the  boys  are  marchini;.  How 
many  of  them?  See  Tramp,  Tramp,  Tramp. — 
Holland. 

Tramp,  tramp,  tramp!  With  the  morning  clocks  at 
ten.     See  ('ountermarch.  The. — Burdette. 

Trample!  trample!  went  the  roan.  See  Cavalier's 
Escape,  The. — Thombury. 

Tranquillity!  Thou  better  name.  See  Ode  to  Tran- 
quillity.— t'oleridge. 

Travel,  in  the  younger  sort,  is  a  part  of  education.  See 
Of  Travel. — -Bacon. 

Traveler,  what  lies  over  the  hill?  See  Over  the  Hill. — 
Mactlonald. 

Tread  lightly  here;  for  here,  'tis  said.  See  Epitaph 
on  a  Robin  Redbreast,  An. — Rogers. 

Tread  lightly,  she  is  near.     See  Requiesoat. — -Wilde. 

Tread  softly — -bow  the  head.  See  Pauper's  Death- 
bed, The.— Southey. 

Treason  doth  never  prosper;  what's  the  reason?  See 
Epigram:  Treason. — Harrington. 

Treat  not  with  such  wanton  disdain.  See  To  an 
' '  Instructor. " — Furbur. 

Tree  of  the  gloom,  o'erhanging  the  tomb.  See  Willow 
Tree,  The.— Cook. 

Tree  of  the  olden  time!  A  thousand  storms.  See 
Charter  Oak,  The. — Prentice. 

Tree  planting  on  Arbor  Day,  for  economic  pur- 
poses. See  What  Arbor  Day  has  Already  Done. 
— Higley. 

Tree,  what  makes  you  frow  so  high?  See  Tottie's 
Tree-talk.— Butler 

Trees  are  indeed  the  glory,  the  beauty,  and  the  delight 
of  nature.     See  Trees. — Wilson. 

Trembling  before  thine  awful  throne.  See  Foj-give- 
ness  of  Sins  a  Joy  Unknown  to  Angels.^ — Hill- 
house. 

Tried  to  fin'  you  las'  night.  See  Where  are  You 
Sleeping,  I-ady  Fair? — Kirk. 

Trinity  bells,  with  their  hollow  lungs.  See  Legend  of 
Easter  Eggs,  The. — O'Brien. 

Tripping  down  the  field-path.     See  same. — Swain. 

Tritemius  of  Herbinolis  one  day.  See  Gift  of  Trite- 
mius,  The. — Whittier. 

Triumph  now  with  joy  and  mirth!  See  Triumph  Now. 
— Campion. 

Triumphal  arch  that  fill'st  the  sky.  See  To  the  Rain- 
bow.— Campbell. 

Triumphing  chariots,  statues,  crowns  of  bays.  See 
Sonnet:  "Triumphing,"  etc. — Drummond. 

Trochee  trios  from  long  to  short.  See  Metrical  Feet. — 
Coleridge. 

True,  all  we  know  must  die.  See  Answer  to  "The  Hour 
of  Death." — Wilson. 

True  as  the  needle  to  the  pole.     See  Song. — Booth. 

True  bard  and  simple, — as  the  race.  See  To  Campbell. 
— Moore. 

True  Comrade,  we  have  tasted  life  together.  See  My 
Comrade  Canoe. — Roberts. 

True  ease  in  writing  comes  from  art,  not  chance.  See 
Essay  on  Criticism,  An  (Criticism  and  Satire). — 
Pope. 

True  education  means  the  drawing  out  and  develop- 
ment. See  Education  as  Related  to  Civic  Pros- 
perity.— .\non. 

True  eloquence  [indeed]  does  not  consist  in  speech. 
See  Adams  and  JefiFer.son  (Nature  of  'True  Elo- 
quence, The).— Webster. 

True  genius,  but  true  woman!  dost  deny.  See  Recog- 
nition, A. — Browning. 

True    happiness    had    no    localities.     See    Course    of 

Time,  The  (Happiness).— Pollok. 
True,  I  am  old,  but  'tis  not  years  alone.    See  Mendicant, 

The.— Bard. 
True  in  substance,  though  I  tell  it  from  a  memory  not 
very  retentive.     See  Reconsidered  Verdict,  The. — 
Venables. 
True  it  is  that  clouds  and  mist.     See  Sunrise  Comes 

To-morrow. — Anon. 
True  love  can  ne'er  forget.     See  Carolan  and  Bridget 
Cruise. — Lover. 


True  love  is  but  a  humble,  low-born  thing.     See  I^ove. 

— Lowell. 
True  love's  own  talisman.     See  Footnote  to  a  Famous 

Lyric,  A. — Guiney. 
True! — nervous — very,  very  dreadfully  nervous  I  had 

been  and  am.     See  Tell  Tale  Heart,  The. — Poe. 
True — there  are  books  and  books.     There's  Gray.     See 

De  Libris. — Monkhou.se. 
True  Thomas  lay  on  [or  o'er  yon]  Huntlie  [or  Huntley, 

or   grassy]   bank.     See   Thomas    the    Rhymer. — 

Anon. 
True  to  the  promise  of  thy  far-off  youth.     See  same. 

—  (All  the  Year  Rmind.) 
True  worth  is  in  being,  not  seeming.     See  Nobility. — 

Cary. 
Trust  me,  I  have  not  earned  your  dear  rebuke.     See 

Monna  Innominata  (Sonnet:   "Trust  me,"   etc.). 

— Rossetti. 
Trust  not,  Sweet  Soul !  those  curled  waves  of  gold.     See 

same. — Drummond. 
Trust  thou  thy  Love;  if  she  be  proud,  is  she  not  sweet? 

See  Trust  Thou  Thy  Love.— Ruskin. 
Truth  anil  integrity  have  all  the  advantages  of  appear- 
ance, and  many  more.     See  Truth  and  Integrity. — 

Tillotson. 
Truth,  as  hvimanity  knows  it,  is  not  what  the  school- 
men call  it.     See  same. — Bulwer. 
Truth  crushed  to  earth  shall  rise  again.     See  Be  Truth- 
ful.— Bryant. 
Truth  is  to  be  discovered,  and  Pardon  to  be  won.     See 

Truth  of  Truths,  The.— Ruskin. 
Truths  half-drawn  from  Nature's  breast.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
Tsar  Oleg  was  riding  through  holy  Kieflf.     See  Trar 

Oleg. — Kenealy. 
T-t-there's  no  use  talking,  landlord,  I  m-must   have 

just  one  more  drink.     See  Saved. — Anon. 
Tube,  I  love  thee  as  my  life.     See  Choosing  a  Wife  by 

a  Pipe  of  Tobacco. — (Gentleman's  Magazive.) 
Tugged   and   patient,    panting   horses,    as   the    colter, 

keen  and  thorough.     .See  Fight,  The. — English. 
TuUia,  wife  of  Tarquin,  was  the  incarnation  of  iniquity. 

See  Drive  On!     Drive  On! — Thayer. 
Tullymucclescrag.     Parish  of  Ballyraggett.     See  Irish 

Witticism. — Anon. 
Turn  back,  you  wanton  flyer.     See  Basia. — Campion. 
Turn,  Fortune,  turn  thy  wheel  and  lower  the  proud. 

See  Idylls  of  the  King  (Enid's  Song\ — Tennyson. 
Turn,  gentle  hermit  of  the  dale.     See  Vicar  of  Wake- 
field, The  (Hermit,  The).— Goldsmith. 
Turn,  hell-hound,  turn!     See  Macbeth  (Killing  of  Mac- 
beth) . — Shakespeare. 
Turn   I   my  looks    unto    the    skies.     See    Rosalynde; 

or,  Euphues'  Golden  Legacy  (Rosader's  Sonetto). 

— liodge. 
"Turn   out,   boys" — "What's  up  with  our  super  to- 
night?"    See  From  the  Wreck. — Gordon. 
Turn   out   more    ale,    turn    up   the   light.     See   Dum 

Vivimus  Vigilamus. — Webb. 
Turn,  turn,  for  my  cheeks  they  bum.     See  Milkmaid's 

Song,  The.— Dohell. 
Turn  where  we  may — within,   around — the  voice  of 

great    events    in    proclaiming  to  us.     See  Speech 

Delivered  in  the  House  of  Commons  on  the  2nd 

of  March,   1831,  A  (Reform,  that  You  may  Pre- 
serve) . — Macaulay. 
Turn  with  me  from  the  city's  clamorous  street.     See 

Thomas    k    Kempis;     De    Imitatione    Christ!. — 

Bowker. 
Turning  from  Shelley's  sculptured  face  aside.     See  On 

a  Grave  in  Christchurch,  Hants. — Adams. 
Tuscan,  that  wanderest  through  the  realms  of  gloom. 

See  Dante. — T  ongfellow. 
'Tvas  der  nighd  pehind  Grisdmas,  und  all  ofer  der  haus. 

See  Der  Nighd  pehind  Gristmas.^ — Wetmore. 
'Twas  a  balmy  summer  evening,  and  a  coodh-  crowd 

was    there.      See    Face     on    the    Floor,    The. — 

D'Arcy. 
'Twas  a  balmy  summer  morning.     See  Dawning  of  the 

Day,  The. — Mangan. 
'Twas  a  beautiful  Christmas  morning.     See  Bessie's 

Christmas  Dream. — ^Anon. 
'Twas  a  cold  autumn  morning  when  ,Jenny  Wren  died. 

See  Death  of  Cock  Robin  and  Jenny  Wren,  The. 

—Fay. 
'Twas  a  curious  bimdle  of  sticks,  strings,  and  cotton. 

See  Outrageous  Fortune. — Anon. 
'Twas  a  day  full  of  sorrow  for  Ulster.     See  Death  of 

King  Conor  Macnessa. — Sullivan. 
'Twas  a  debating  club  for  women.     See  At  a  Woman's 

Club.— Russell. 
'Twas  a  dream  of  olden  days.     See  Shadow  of  a  Flower 

The. — Hemans. 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


'Twas 


'Twas  a  drear  November  evening;,  shadowy  and  damp 

and  chill.     See  Old  Folks'  Thanksgiving. — Anon. 
Twas  a  drowsy  night  on  Tompkins  Hill.     See  How  We 

Fought  the  Fire. — Carleton. 
'Twas  a  Duke's  fair  orphan  girl,  and  her  uncle's  ward, 

the    Earl.     See   Rhyme   of   the   Duchess   May. — 

Browning. 
'Twas  a  ferocious  baggage-man,  with  Atlantean  back. 

See  Baggage  Fiend,  "The. — Anon. 
'Twas   a   fierce   night   when   old   Mawgan   died.     See 

Mawgan  of  Melhuach. — Hawker. 
Twas  a  funny  little  fellow.     See  Funny  Little  Fellow, 

The.— Riley. 
'Twas    a    golden     summer's    afternoon.     See    Not    so 

Well  .Acquainted. — Traver. 
'Twas  a  hard  case,  that  which  happened  in  Lynn!     See 

Tale  of  a  Nose,  A. — Adams. 
'Twas  a  hazy,  mazy,  lazy  day.     See  Big  Oyster,  The. — 

.\rnold. 
'Twas   a   hovel   all  wretched,   forlorn   and   poor.     See 

Little  Mag's  Victory. — Catlin. 
'Twas  a  jolly  old  pedagogue,  long  ago.     See  .Tolly  Old 

Pedagogue,  The. — Arnold. 
'Twas    a   little    sermon    r'reached   to    me.     See   Little 

Messenger  of  Love,  The. — Anon. 
'Twas  a  little  thing,  only  one  kind  word,  in  the  hurry 

and  bustle  of  every  day.     See  Only  One   Kind 

Word. — Dare. 
'Twas  a  long  time  ago,  so  histories  tell.     See  George's 

Example. — Richards. 
'Twas  a  lovely  night  at  Grimsby  Camp.     See  Temper- 
ance Echo,  The. — Carswell. 
'Twas  a  merry,  glad  Thanksgiving,  and  relations  from 

the  west.'    See  One  Thanksgiving  Day  out  West. 

— Anon. 
'Twas    a    moonlight    night,    the    trapper   began.     See 

Trapper's  Story,  The. — Adams. 
'Twas  a  mother's  good  bye  at  the  old  cabin  door.     See 

After  so  Long. — Anon. 
'Twas  a  night  of  dread  in  Charleston,  and  the  air  was 

thick  with  fear.     See  Pra.ver,  The. — Carleton. 
'Twas  a  poor  old  church  in  our  village;  its  days  were 

almost  done.     See  How  Larry  Sang  the  "Agnus." 

— Ewing. 
'Twas     a     Saturday     night,     midwinter.     See     Lady 

Yeardley's  Guest. — Anon. 
'Twas  a  scene  of  brilliant  splendor,  gents  and  ladies 

richly  dressed.     See  Saved. — Sloper. 
'Twas  a  sight  to  be  long  remembered.     See  Blue  and 

Gray. — (New  York  Svn.> 
Twas    a    'sperience     meetin'.     Brother     Brown,    the 

leader    of    the    class.     See    No    Royal    Road    to 

Victory. — Glen. 
'Twas  a  strange  picture  upon  which  the  sun  looked. 

See  Noll's  .Journey. — Henry. 
'Twas   a   stylish   congregation,    that   of   Theophrastus 

Brown.     See  Trouble   in   the   "Amen   Corner." — 

Harbaugh. 
'Twas  a  summer  ago,  when  he  left  me  here.     See  liOst. 

—Riley. 
'Twas  a  summery  day  in  the  last  of  May.     See  Pity 

of  the  Park  Fountain,  The. — Willis. 
'Twas  a  Sunday  morning  in  early  May.     See  Rover  in 

Church. — Bickham. 
'Twas   a    sunny    day,    and    the   morning   psalm.     See 

Breeze  in  Church,  The. — Hinxham. 
'Twas  a   terrible    day,  and    we    spent   it    fighting   the 

third  division  of  Hill's  command.     See  Little  Jack 

Two-sticks. — Manville. 
'Twas  a  testimony  meeting,  in  the  old  church  on  the 

hill.     See  What  the  Lord    had    Done  for  Him. — 

Braden. 
'Twas    a    widow's    home    and    a    winter    night.     See 

Surrender,  The. — Henry. 
Twas  a  wild,  dreary  night,  in  cheerless  December.     See 

Sign  of  Distress,  The. — Anon. 
'Twas  a  wild  mad  kind  of  night,  as  black  as  the  bottom- 
less pit.     See  Death  of  the  Old  Squire,  The. — Anon. 
'Twas  a  wild  September  evening.     See  Grace  Darling. — 

Anon. 
'Twas  a  youthful  would-be  poet.     See  El  Dorado. — 

Showerman. 
'Twas  after  a  game  of  tennis.     See  Love  Game,  A. — 

Anderson. 
'Twas  after  a  supper  of  Norfolk  brawn.     See  Turvy 

Top. — -Anon. 
'T  was  all  in  the  leafy  month  o'  June.     See  Knight's 

False  Vow,  The. — Anon. 
'Twas  All-soul's  eve,  and  Surrey's  heart  beat  high.     See 

Lav  of  the  La.st  Minstrel    (Fitz  Traver's  Song). 

— Scott. 
Twas  an  ancient  legend  they  used  to  tell.     See  Demon 

on  the  Roof,  The.— Pollard. 


'Twas  an  early  summer  morning.     See  Nature  of  Man, 

The. — Beecher. 
'Twas  an  old-time  Southern  darky.     See  Uncle  Pete's 

Plea. — Allgood. 
'Twas  April;  'twas  Sunday,  the  day  was  fair.     See  Re- 
miniscence, A. — Clarke. 
'Twas  April  when  she  came  to  town.    See  Bessie  Brown, 

M.  D.— Peck. 
'Twas  at  a  ball.     In  vain  I  tried.     See  To . — El- 

dririge. 
'Twas  at  a  ball  they  met  one  night.     See  And  the  Band 

Played. — McLaughlin. 
'Twas  at  the  oratorio.     See  At  the  Oratorio. — Anon. 
'T  was  at  the  royal  feast  for  Persia  won.     See  Alex- 
ander's Feast;  or.  The  Power  of  Music. — Dryden. 
'Twas  at   the   silent,   solemn   hour.     See  William   and 

M  argaret . — Mallet . 
'Twas  at  this  season,  year  by  year.     See  In  Laleham 

Churchyard. — Watson. 
'Twas  at  "Tuxedo — let  me  see.     See  Tuxedo  Romance, 

A. — Hardy. 
'Twas  autumn,  and  the  leaves  were  dry.     See  Three 

Little  Graves. — Anon. 
'Twas  autumn   daybreak   gold   and   wild.     See  Three 

Beggars,  The. — Ramal. 
'Twas  autumn  when  first  they  stood  on  the  bridge. 

See  Year's  Wooing,  A. — Anon. 
'Twas  beyond  at  Macreddin,  at  Owen  Doyle's  weddin'. 

See  Herself  and  Myself  .—McCall. 
'Twas  brillig,  and  the  slithy  toves.     See  Jabberwocky. 

— Dodgson. 
'Twas  built    for    some    great-grandmamma.     See    Her 

Sofa.— M.  E.  W. 
'T  was  business  call'd  a  father  to  travel  by  the  rail. 

See  Railway  Traveler's  Farewell  to    his    Family, 

The.— (Punch.) 
'Twas  but  a  breath.     See  Slander. — Anon. 
'Twas  but  a  poor  little  room;  a  farm-servant's  loft  in  a 

garret.     See  Dorothy:  A  Country  Story  (Dorothy's 

Room) . — Munby . 
'Twas  but  last  night  I  traversed  the  Atlantic's  fur- 

row'd  face.     See  To  Duffy  in  Prison. — McGee. 
'Twas  calm  at  eve  as  childhood's  sleep.     See  Lexing- 
ton.— Wetmore. 
'Twas  Christmas  Eve,  I  fell  asleep,  despite  a  Christ- 
mas drum.     See  Christmas  a  Hundred  Years  to 

Come. — Eisenbeis. 
'Twas  Christmas  Eve,  the  feast  so  dear.     See  Bell  of 

Innisfare,  The. — Anon. 
'Twas  Christmas  Eve.     The  frost  lay  on  the  road.     See 

Christmas-eve  Redemption,  A. — Aid(5. 
'Twas  Christmas  Eve;  the  snow  fell  down.     See  Story 

of  Santa  Claus,  A. — Glazebrook. 
'Twas  Christmas  eve;  the  snowflakes  fell.     See  Christ- 
mas Story,  A. — Kavanaugh. 
'Twas  Commencement   eve,   and   the   ballroom   belle. 

See  West  Point. — Strong. 
'Twas  "composition   day"    in   school.     See   Composi- 
tion Day. — Bruce. 
'Twas  dusky  eve.     The  cooling  shadows.     See  Salve! — 

Butterworth. 
'Twas  Easter  night  in  Milan,   and  before.     See  First 

Te  Deum,  The.— Preston. 
'Twas  eighteen  hundred  years  ago.     See  Day  of  Days, 

The. — Anon. 
'Twas  eve — a  glorious  eve!     See  Chief  Mourner,  The. — 

Smith. 
'Twas  eve,   and  Time,  his  vigorous  course  pursuing. 

See  Orion  (Akinetos).- — Home. 
'Twas  eve,  and  twilight's  Canopy,  by   autumn   zephyrs 

swayed.     Sec  My  Ships. — Bunn. 
'Twas  even — the  dewy  fields  were  green.     See  Lass  o' 

Ballochmyle,  The. — Burns. 
'Twas  evening  and  the  rain  was  falling.     See  Annihila- 
tion.— Chinn. 
"  'Twas  evening,  though   not   sunset,  and   the   tide." 

See  Gebir  (Tamar  and  the  Nymph). — Landor. 
'Twas  ever  thus!  each  hour  that  came.     See  same. — 

Simms. 
'T  was  ever  thus  from  childhood's  hour.     See  Disaster. 

— Calverley. 
"  'Twas  five   and  forty  years  ago."     See  In  Swanage 

Bay. — Craik. 
'Twas  Friday  morn ;  the  train  drew  near.     See  Through 

Baltimore. — Taylor. 
'Twas  Fultah  Fisher's  boarding-house.     See  Ballad  of 

Fisher's  Boarding-house,  'The. — Kipling. 
'Twas  Gastibelza,  ranger  bold,  and  thus  it  was  he  sung. 

See  Guitare. — Hugo. 
'Twas  good  St.  John's,  and  the  mountain  woods.     See 

Little  Willie.— Grant. 
'Twas  growing  dark  so  terrible    fasht.      See    Paddy's 

Excelsior. — -{Harper' a  Magazine). 


899 


Twas 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


'Twas  Harry  who  the  silence  broke.     See  Like  a  Tree. 

— Anon. 
'Twas  hurry  and  scurry  at  Monmouth  town.     See  Mol- 

lie  Pitcher. — Sherwood. 
'Twas  in  a  little  couq^ry  town.     .See  Race  for  Life,  A. 

— Anon. 
'Twas  in  a  southern  hospital,  a  month  ago  or  more. 

See  Old  Surgeon's  Story,  The. — Donnelly. 
'Twas  in     green-leafy  springtime.     See  Hose  Adair. — 

Ryan. 
'Twas  in  heaven  pronounced,  and  ['twas]  muttered  in 

hell.     See  I.#tter  H,  The. — Fanshawe. 
'Twas  in  June  when  I  first  met  her  and  I  never  will 

forget  her.     See  Modern  Athenian,  A. — Anon. 
'Twas  in  midautumn,  and  the  woods  were  still.     See 

Death  as  the  Teacher  of  Love-lore. — Marzials. 
'Twas  in  my  easy  chair  at  home.     See  Old  Times  and 

New. — Spooner. 
'Twas  in   Persia   (the  legends  say   so).     See   Prince's 

Hunting,  The. — Austin. 
'Twas  in  Queen  Bess's  golden  days.     See  Song  without 

a  Name,  A.— Lloyd. 
'Twas  in    the   days   when   Claverhouse   was   scouring 

moor  and  glen.     See  Jamie  Douglas. — Anon. 
'Twas  in  the  now'ry  month  of  June.     See  I'll  Take 

What  Father  Takes.— Hoyle. 
'Twas  in  the  olden  time,  long,  long  ago.     See  Little 

People  of  the  Snow,  The. — Bryant. 
'Twas  in  the  prime  of  summer  time.     See  Dream  of 

Eugene  Aram,  The. — Hood. 
'Twas  in  the  sultry-summer  time,  as  war's  red  records 

show.     See  Sleeping  Sentinel,  The. — Janvier. 
'Twas  in  the  summer  of  '46  that  I  landed  at  Hamilton. 

See  Jimmy  Butler  and  the  Owl. — Anon. 
'Twas  in  the  summer  time  so  sweet.     See  Love  and 

Reason. — Moore. 
'Twas  in  the  year  of  battles,  the  red  year  ninety-three. 

See  Duelist' s  Victory,  The. — Lanergan. 
'Twas  in  the  year  that  gave  the  nation  birth.     See 

Nathan  Hale,  the  Martyr  Spy. — Brown. 
'Twas  in  Trafalgar's  bay.     See  Death  of  Nelson,  The. 

Arnold. 
'Twas  in    ye    pleasant    olden    time.     See    Tarrytown 

Romance,  A. — (Good  Cheer.) 
'Twas  just  a  waltz  the  musicians  played.     See  Between 

the  Galop  and  the  Lanciers. — Curtis. 
'Twas  just  before  the  hay  was  mown.     See  game. — ■ 

Swain. 
'Twas  just  behind  the  woodshed.      See  My  First  Cigar. 

— Burdette. 
'Twas  late,  and  the  gay  company  was  gone.     See  Decla- 
ration, The.— Willis. 
'Twas  late  in  the  autumn  of  '53.     See  Indian  Chieftain, 

The. — Anon. 
'Twas  long  ago — ere   the   signal   gun.     See   How   He 

Saved  St.  Michael's. — Stansbury. 
'Twas  long  ago,  the  legends  say.     See  How  Came  the 

Holly  Berries  Red? — Chapin. 
'Twas  many  years  since  I  had  left  my  home.     See  Mad. 

— -Littlejohn. 
'Twas   May   upon   the   mountains,   and   on   the    airy 
wing.     See  Surprise  at  Ticonderoga,  The. — Stans- 
bury. 
'Twas  midnight!     Darkness,  like  the  gloom  of  some 

funersal  pall.     See  Thistle,  The. — Murray. 
'Twas  midnight ;  not  a  sound  was  heard.     See  Little 

Conqueror,  The.— Adam. 
'Twas  midsummer;    cooling   breezes    all    the    languid 
forests  fanned.     See  Death  of  Jefferson,   'The. — 
Anon. 
"Twas  moonlight  in  Eden!     Such  moonlight,  I  ween. 

See  Night  in  Eden. — -Evans. 
'Twas  mom,  and  beautiful  the  mountains'  brow.     See 

On  the  Rhine.— -Bowles. 
'Twas  mom — but  not  the  ray  which  falls  the  summer 

boughs  among.     See  Dryburgh  Abbey. — Swain. 
'Twas  mom — the  rising  splendor  rolled.     See  Seventh 

Plague  of  Egypt,  The.— Croly. 
'Twas  mom  upon  the  Grecian    hills,  where  peasants 
dressed  the  vines.     See  Spartans'  March,  'The. — 
Hemans. 
'Twas  moming  in  Seville;  and  brightly  beamed.     See 

Painter  of  Seville,  The.— Wilson. 
'Twas  moming  over  Galilee.     See  Christ  Calming  the 

Tempest . — Durant . 
'Twas  near  the  break  of  day.     See  Countersign  Was 

Mary,  The. — Eytinge. 
"^'"L^'K'^*-     a.  lurid  light.     See  Review  of  the  Dead 

The.— Stockard. 
'Twas  night   in   the   beautiful  city.     See   Burning  of 

Chicago,  The. — Carleton. 
'Twas  night  in  Venice.     Then  down  to  the  tide.     See 
In  a  Gondola. — Miller. 


'Twas  night — mirk    night — the    sleet    beat    on.     See 

Murder  of  Riccio,  The. — Aytoun. 
'Twas  night — the  clock  had  just  struck  ten.     See  Mys- 
terious Guest,  The. — Brannock. 
'Twas  night'  the  stars  were  shrouded  in  a  veil  of  mist. 
See  Bombastic  Description  of  a  Midnight  Murder. 
• — Anon. 
'Twas  nightfall  on  the  tropic  sea.     See  Battle  of  Manila. 

— Kennedy. 
'Twas  nothing— a  mere  idle  word.     See  Seed  Word. — 

— Anon. 
'Twas  off  the  blue  Canary  isles.     See  'Twas  off  the  Blue 

Canaries. — Fabens. 
'Twas  off   the   Wash — the   sun   went    down — the   sea 
looked  black  and  grim.     See  Demon  Ship,  The. — 
Hood. 
'Twas  on  a  bleak,  chill,  cold  and  stormy  day.     See 

Borrowed  Baby,  The. — Tatlow. 
'Twas  on  a  cold  and  fro.sty  night  when  snow  and  hail 

fast  fell.     See  Old  Friends. — M'Dermott. 
'Twas  on   a  dark   December  evening.     See  Surgeon's 

Tale,  The.— Procter. 
'Twas  on  a  day,  and  in  high,  radiant  heaven.     See  Mys- 
tery of  Doom,  The. — Heavysege. 
'Twas  on  a  Holy  Thursday,  their  innocent  faces  clean. 

See  Holy  Thursday.— Blake. 
'Twas  on  a  lofty  vase's  side.     See  On  a  Favourite  Cat, 

Drowned  in  a  Tub  of  Gold  Fishes. — Gray. 
'Twas  on  a  Monday  moming.     See  Charlie  He's  My 

Darling. — Burns. 
'Twas  on  a  Sabbath  morning  in  the  sunny  month  of 
June.     See  Battle  of  Bothwell  Bridge,  The. — Curr. 
'Twas  on  a  street,  two  strangers  met,  in  a  citv  far  away. 

See  Triple  Tie,  The.— Perry. 
'Twas  on  a  summer  evening.     See  Battle  of  Blenheim. 

— Southey. 
'Twas  on  a  winter  morning.     See  Factory  Girl's  Last 

Day,  The. — Anon. 
'Twas  on   board   the   sloop-of-war    Wasp,   boys.     See 

Wasp's  Frolic,  The. — Anon. 
'T  was  on  Lake  Erie's  broad  expanse.     See  John  May- 

nard. — Alger. 
'Twas  on  the  Crimea's  dreary  plain.     See  Lost  Colors, 

The.— Barr. 
'Twas  on  the  day  that  city  dames  repair.     See  Journey 

to  Exeter,  A. — Gay. 
'Twas  on  the  eve  of  good  St.  Valentine.     See  Aurelia's 

Valentine. — Dallas. 
'Twas  on  the  famous  trotting-ground.     See  How  the 

Old  Horse  Won  the  Bet. — Holmes. 
'Twas  on  the  Rhine  the  armies  lay.   See  Blucher  on  the 

Rhine. — Kopisoh. 
'Twas  on  the  shores  that  round  our  coast.     See  Yarn 

of  the  "Nancy  Bell,"  The.— Gilbert. 
'Twas    one    of  the    charmed    days.       See   Woodnotes 

(Heart  of  All  the  Scene,  The). — Emerson. 
'Twas  only  a  missing  sheep.     See  Lost  Found.  The. — 

Anon. 
'Twas  only  a  smile  that  was  given.     See  Only  a  Smile. 

— McCurdy. 
'Twas  only  a  tiny,  withered  rose.     See  Perdita. — (Har- 
vard Advocate.) 
'Twas  only  coffee,  yet  we  both  drank  deep.     See  Cup 

and  Saucer  Episode,  A. — Ross. 
'Twas  St.  Patrick — good  luck  to  the  day  he  was  bom 

in.     See  Banish  the  Snakes. — H.  E.  P. 
'Twas  Saturday  night,  and  a  teacher  sat.     See  Nine- 
teenth Century  Teacher,  The. — Anon. 
'Twas  spring  when  I  first  found  it  out.     See  Love's 

Seasons. — Sherman. 
'Twas  springtime  of  the  day  and   year.     See  Love's 

Life,  A. — (Chamhers'  Jovrnal.) 
'Twas  summer  and  softly  the  ocean.     See  Blind  Lamb, 

The.— Thaxter. 
'T  was  summer,  and  the  spot  a  cool  retreat.    See  Dream , 

A. — Kinney. 
'Twas  Sunday   after   conference,    and   word   had   got 

around.     See  New  Preacher,  The. — Bui). 
'Twas  Sunday   morning   in    summer.     See   Story   the 

Doctor  Told,  The.— Hallmark. 
'Twas  Thanksgiving  on  the   farm.     See  Thanksgiving 

at  Grandma's. — Richards. 
'Twas  the  battle-field  and  the  cold  pale  moon.     See 

Grasp  of  the  Dead,  The. — Landon. 
'Twas  the  body  of  Judas  Iscariot.     See  Ballad  of  Judas 

Iscariot,  The. — Buchanan. 
'Twas  the  breaking  of  the  tempest  when  rebellion  broke 

the  law.     See  Gettysburg. — Shurtleff. 
'Twas  the  day  beside  the  Pyramids,  it  seems  but  an 
hour    ago.     See    Old    Grenadier's    Story,    The. — 
Thombury. 
'Twas  the  dead  of  the  night.     By  the  pine-knot's  red 
light.     See  New  England's  Chevy-Chase. — Hale. 


900 


FIRST  LIx\E  INDEX 


Two 


'Twas  the  dream  of  a  God.     See  Ireland. — Sigerson. 
'T was  the  eve  before   Christmas:   "Good   night"   had 

been  said.     See  Annie  and  Willie's  Prayer.— Snow. 
'Twas  the   fisher's   wife   at   her   neighbor's   door.     See 

Nora's  Charm. — Cary. 
'Twas  the  golden  eagle's  rock,  craggy  and  wild  and 

lone.     See  Eagle's  Rock,  The. — Anon. 
'Twas  the  hour  of  prayer,  and  the  farmer  stood      See 

Child's  Wisdom,  A. — Anon. 
'Twas  the  last  fight  at  Fredericksburg.    See  Bay  Billy. 

— Gassaway. 
'Twas  the  love  that  lightened  service!     See  As  Jacob 

Served  for  Rachel. — Anon. 
'Twas  the  night  after  Christmas,  when  all  through  the 

house.     See  Night  after  Christmas,    The. — Anon. 
'Twas  the  night  before  Christmas,  when  all  through 

the  house.    See  Visit  from  St.  Nicholas,  A. — Moore. 
'Twas  the  ominous  month  of  October.     See  Kin_dom, 

The.— Doten. 
'Twas  the  time  of  the  workingmen's  great  strike,  when 

all  the  land  stood  still.     See  Dandy  Fifth,  The.— 

Gassaway. 
'Twas  the  very  verge  of  May.     See  Dewey  at  Manila. — 

Johnson. 
* '  'Twas  thirty  years  ago,  and  now."     See  Old  Time. — 

Anon. 
'Twas  to  be  a  grand  Thanksgiving.     See  Thanksgiving 

Story,  A. — Anon. 
Twas  twelve  o'clock,  along  the  line.     See  "39." — La 

Moille. 
'Twas  twelve  o'clock,  not  twelve  at  night.     See  Pom- 

pey's  Ghost. — Hood. 
'Twas  twilight,  for  the  sunless  day  went  down.     See 

Don  Juan  (Shipwreck,  The). — Byron. 
'Twas  when   the   seas   were   roaring.    See   Ballad   from 

the  "What  d'ye  Call  It."  A.— Gay. 
'Twas  when  the  spousal  time  of  May.    See  Angel  in  the 

House,  The  (Nunc  Amet  Qui  Nunquam  Amavit). 

— Patmore. 
'Twas  when  the  wan  leaf  frae  the  birk  tree  was  fa'in'. 

See  Lucy's  Flittin'. — Laidlaw. 
'Twas  whispered  in  Heaven,   'twas  muttered  in  hell. 

See  Letter  .H,  The. — Fanshawe. 
'Twas  whispered  one  morning  in  heaven.     See  How 

the  Gates  Came  .■X.jar. — Bostwick. 
'Twas  years  ago.     The  .scene  comes  back  like  life.     See 

Soldier  and  the  Pard,  The.— Taylor. 
Tweedle-dum  and  Tweedle-dee.     See  same. — Anon. 
Twelve  friends,  much  about  the  same  age.     See  First 

and  Last  Dinner,  The. — Anon. 
Twelve  o'clock — ^a   misty    night.     See    Highwayman's 

Ghost,  The.— Garnett. 
Twelve  parsons  once  went  to   a  squire's  to  dine.     See 

Parsons  and  the  Corkscrew,  The. — Moncrieff. 
Twelve  years  ago  I  made  a  mock.     See  School  and 

School-fellows. — Praed. 
Twelve  years  ago.  when  I  could  face.     See  Voice  in  the 

Wild  Oak,  The.— Kendall. 
Twenty  froggies  went  to  school.     See  Frogs  at  School. 

— Anon. 
"Twenty  years  ago  last  May."     See  Peril  of  the  Mines, 

'The. — Anon. 
Twenty  years  editorial  experience.     See  Sunday  Ques- 
tion of  To-day,  The.— Hart. 
Twenty  years  hence  my  eyes  may  grow.     See  same. — 

I^andor. 
Twice  had  the  changing  seasons  ruh  their  round.     See 

Love's  Victory. — Wasson. 
Twice  one  are  two.     See  May  Morning  Lesson,  A. — 

Anon. 
Twice  up  and  down  the  garden-walka.     See  Lost  Doll, 

'The. — Anon. 
Twilight  and  trees.     See  From  the  Depths. — Anon. 
Twilight  is  here  and  the  baby  is  weary.     See  Sand- 
man, The. — Coates. 
Twilight  was    deepening   with    a    tinge    of    eve.     See 

Hebrew  Tale,  A. — Sigourney. 
"  'Twill  be  all  the  same  in  a  hundred  years!"     See  In 

a  Hundred  Years. — Anon. 
'Twill  not    be   long — this   wearying   commotion.     See 

'Twill  not  be  Long. — Anon. 
Twin  stars,  aloft  in  ether  clear.     See  Twin  Stars  Aloft. 

— Kingsley. 
Twine  then  the  rays.     See  Psycholophon. — Burgess. 
Twinkle,  twinkle,  little  star.     See  same. — Taylor. 
Twist  me  a  crown  of  wind-flowers.     See  Twist  Me  a 

Crown. — Rossetti . 
Twist  thou  and  twine !  in  light  and  gloom !    See  Feather- 
stone's  Doom. — Hawker. 
Twist  ye,  twine  ye !  even  so.     See  Guy  Mannering  (Twist 

Ye,  Twine  Ye).— Scott. 
Twitched  strings,  the  clang  of  metal,  beaten  drums. 

See  Javanese  Dancers. — Symons. 


'Twixt  clouded  heights  Spain  hurls  to  doom.  See 
Brooklyn  at  Santiago,  The. — Rice. 

Two  aged  men,  that  had  been  foes  for  life.  See  Golden 
City,  The. — Tennyson. 

Two  angels  came  through  the  gate  of  Heaven.  See 
Song  of  Two  Angels,  A. — Richards. 

Two  angels,  one  of  Life  and  one  of  Death.  See  Two 
Angels,  The. — Longfellow. 

Two  Arkansas  lawyers  were  domesticated  in  the  rude 
hotel.     See  Lawyers  and  the  Cat,  The. — Anon. 

Two  armies  covered  hill  and  plain.  See  Music  in  Camp. 
— Thompson. 

Two  artist  lovers  sought  the  hand  of  a  noted  painter's 
daughter.     See  Veiled  Picture,  The. — Anon. 

Two  babes  were  born  in  the  self-same  town.  See  Two 
Lives,  The. — Anon. 

Two  barks  met  on  the  deep  mid-sea.  See  Meeting  of 
the  Ships,  The. — Hemans. 

Two  bills  were  waiting  in  the  bank  for  their  turn  to  go 
out  into  the  world.     See  Two  Bills,  The. — Anon. 

Two  birds  within  one  nest.     See  Home. — Greenwell. 

Two  boxers  long  enrolled  by  fame.  See  Pugilists,  The. 
—Anon. 

Two  boys  were  given  a  lesson  to  master.  See  Why 
One  Excelled  the  Other. — Anon. 

Two  bright  heads  in  the  corner.  See  Grandpa  and 
Bess. — Miller. 

Two  bright  little  eyes.     See  Senses,  The.^ — Anon. 

Two  brown  heads  with  tossing  curls.  See  Katie  Lee 
and  Willie  Gray. — Hunt. 

Two  centuries  of  steps  and  then.  See  Church  Steps, 
The.— Foster. 

Two  chambers  have  the  heart.  See  Heart,  The. — 
Anon. 

Two  children  down  by  the  shining  strand.  See  Round 
of  Life,  The. — Lamont. 

Two  children  in  two  neighbour  villages.  See  Circum- 
stance.— Tennyson. 

Two  children  on  their  way  from  school.  See  Gather- 
ing Flowers. — Anon. 

Two  children  sat  in  the  twilight.  See  Wooden  Legs. — 
Anon. 

Two  crabs  who  were  on  the  beach  to  walk.  See  Escap- 
ing the  Shower. — Anon. 

Two  cross-eyed  lovers  in  a  horse-car  sat.  See  Cross- 
eyed Lovers,  The. — Johnston. 

Two  dark-eyed  maids,  at  shut  of  day.  See  Burial  of 
Love,  The. — Bryant. 

Two  dimpled  hands  the  bars  of  iron  grasped.  See  Be- 
yond the  Gate. — Anon. 

Two  doves  upon  the  selfsame  branch.  See  Song: 
"Two  doves,"  etc. — -Rossetti. 

Two  ears  and  only  one  mouth  have  you.  See  Two  and 
One. — Anon. 

Two  families  in  Slawson  had  a  somewhat  singular  ex- 
perience.    See  Penning  a  Pig.— Bailey. 

Two  fishermen  stood  on  the  beach,  the  types  of  youth 
and  age.     See  Young  Doland. — Roy. 

Two  fleets  have  sailed  from  Spain.  The  one  would 
seek.  See  Sailing  of  the  Fleet,  The. — (New  Ycrk 
Tribune:) 

Two  foot-companions  once  in  deep  discourse.  See 
Nimmers,  The. — Byrom. 

Two  Frenchmen  [who]  had  just  come  over.  See  Vat 
You  Please. — Fowle. 

Two  frogs,  upon  a  summer  day.  See  Two  Frogs,  The. 
— Kavanaugh. 

Two  gay  young  frogs,  from  inland  bogs.  See  Tale  of 
Hard  Times,  A. — Anon. 

Two  gaz'd  into  a  pool,  he  gaj-.'d  and  she.  See  Echo 
from  Willowwood,  An. — Rossetti. 

Two  gentlemen  their  appetite  had  fed.  See  Saying 
not  Meaning. — -Wake. 

Two  gods  with  Saturn's  rings  one  day.  See  Eureka. — 
Bates. 

Two  goslings  fair,  a  venturous  pair.  See  Two  Goslings. 
— Richards. 

Two  gray  hawks  ride  the  rising  blast.  See  Sioux 
Chief's  Daughter,  The.— Miller. 

"Two  hands  upon  the  breast."  See  Now  and  .After- 
wards.— Craik. 

Two  honest  tradesmen  meeting  in  the  Strand.  See 
Three  Black  Crows,  The. — Byrom. 

Two  hours,  or  more,  beyond  the  prime  of  a  blithe  April 
day.     See  Battle  of  Charleston  Harbor. — Hayne. 

Two  human  lives,  two  kindred  hearts.  See  Forever. — 
Berry. 

Two  hundred  and  more  years  ago.  See  Story  of  a 
Great  Artist,  The. — Allen. 

Two  hundred  years  ago,  Mary  Shepherd,  a  girl  of  fifteen 
was  watching  the  savages.  See  Centennial  Cele- 
bration of  Concord  Fight  (Who  Was  the  Minute- 
man?). — Curtis. 


901 


Two 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Two  hundred   years! — two   hundred   years!     See  Two 

Hundred  Years. — Pierpont. 
Two  ideas  there  are  which,  above  all  others,  elevate 
and  dignify  a  raqy.     See  Love  of  Country.— Booth. 
Two  idle  eyes,  'neath  lashes  fine.     See  At  Church. — 

Livingston. 
Two  Irishmen  meet  in  depot.     See  Character  Stories. — 

Anon. 
Two  kings  ruled  in  an  eastern  land.     See  Two  Kings. — 

Piatt. 
Two  kittens  there  were,  a  black  and  a  gray,  and  grand- 
mamma   said    with   a    frown.     See    Kittens    and 
Babies. — ITadle.v. 
Two  ladies  chanc'd    one    day    to    meet.     See  Reason 

Why,  The.— Anon. 
Two  letters  will  spell  me,  or  f?ve  if  you  choose.     See 

Excel. — Sabine. 
Two  little  boys  went  out  to  play.     See  Two  Little  Boys. 

— Richards. 
Two  little  boys  were  once  at  pla.y.     See  Quarrelsome 

Boy,  The.— W.  T. 
Two  little  brothers,  the  livelong  day.     See  Conundrum, 

A.— Allen. 
Two  little  busy  hands  patting  on  the  window.     See 

TxDoking  out  for  Me. — Anon. 
Two  little  cousins  once  there  were.   See  Kiss  Deferred, 

The. — Anon. 
Two  little  cub-beai-s,  frisky  and  strong.     See  Two  Lit- 
tle Bears.— (Owr  Little  Ones.) 
Two  little   eyes,    blue,    blue.  ,  See   Little   Servants. — 

Nutting. 
Two  little  eyes  to  look  to  God.     See  Two  Little  Eyes. 

— Anon. 
Two  little  feet   running  up  and   down.     See  I'd   Be, 

Wouldn't  You? — Anon. 
Two  little  feet,  so  small  that  both  may  nestle.     See 

Little  Feet.— Allen. 
Two  little   feet   went   pattering  by.     See  Two    Little 

Feet. — Anon. 
Two  little    friends    went     off    to     school.     See    Two 

Friends,  The. — Richards. 
Two  little  girls  are    better    than    one.     See  One  and 

One. — Anon. 
Two  little  hands,  so  soft  and  white.     See  Hands  and 

Fingers. — Anon. 
Two  little    kittens,    one    stormy    night.     See    Little 

Kittens,  The. — Anon. 
Two  little  old  dames  T   know.     See  Two   Little   Old 

Dames.— Anon. 
Two  little  ones,  grown  tired  of  play.     See  Drifted  Out 

to  Sea. — Thorpe. 
Two  little   squirrels,   out   in  the   sun.     See  Squirrel's 

I^esson,  The. — Anon. 
Two  little    stockings    hung    side    by    side.     See    Two 

Little  Stockings.  The. — Hunt. 
Two  little  tots  on  the  carpet  at   play.     See  Pla.ving 

School. — Caskin. 
Two  little  urchins  started  out.     See  Unequal  Partner- 
ship, An. — Upham. 
Two  lovers  by  a  moss-grown  spring.     Se?  Two  Ijr>-\  ers. 

—Eliot. 
Two  lovers  lean  on  the  garden  gate.     See  Midnight 

Tragedy,  A. — Anon. 
Two  lovers  'mong  the  weedy  brake.     See  From  June  to 

June. — Dike. 
Two  lovers   were   strolling  in   May.     See   In   May. — 

Stem. 
Two  loves  had   I.     Now   both   are   dead.     See  Dead 

Love. — Adams. 
Two  loves,  took    lodgings    in   a    heart.     See   Terrible 

Example,  A. — Brewer. 
Two  low    whistles,    quaint    and    clear.     See    Guild's 

Signal. — Harte. 
Two  magpies  sat  on  a  garden  rail.     See  Two  I^ittle 

Magpies  Sat  on  a  Wall. — Anon. 
Two  maiden  dames  of  sixty-two.    See  Virginia  Tobacco. 

— Gregson. 
Two  men   fighting  in  mid-air.     See  Duel  on  a  High 

Tower,  A. — Anon. 
Two  men  I  honor,  and  no  third.    See  Pa.st  and  Present 

(Honor  of  Labor,  The). — Carlyle. 
Two  monks  were  in  a  cell  at  close  of  day.     See  Master- 
piece  of  Brother  Felix,  The.— White. 
Two    months."    the    questioned    hearer    said.     See 
Death  of  Cardinal  Mazarin,  The. — Sigourney. 
Two  more  fences  came,  laced  high  and  stiff  with  the 
Shire  thorn.     See  Under  Two  Flags  (  Forest  King's 
Race). — La  Ram^e. 
Two  nights  thus  pass'd;   the  lily-handed  mom.     See 
Brrtannia's   Pastorals  (Description  of   a   Musical 
Consort  of  Birds,  A). — Browne. 
Two  of  far  nobler  shape,  erect  and  tall.     See  Paradise 
Lost  (Adam  and  Eve). — Milton. 


Two  old  crows  confabulous  sat  perched  upon  a  tree. 

See  IVo  Old  Crows. — Anon.  i 

Two  peasants  homeward  from  the  fields  of  toil.     See 

Angelus,  The. — Miller. 
Two  people,  young  and  fresh  and  fair.     See  Old  Story, 

An. — Kavanaugh. 
Two  pilgrims  came  to  a  castle  gate.     See  Two  Pilgrims. 

— Anon. 
Two  pilgrims  from  the  distant  plain.     See  Love  and 

Time. — MacCarthy. 
Two  qualities,     Athenians,     an     upright     statesman 
should    possess.     See    Oration    on  the   Crown. — 
Demosthenes. 
Two  robin  redbreasts   built   their   nests.      See   Robin 

Redbreasts,  The. — "Aunt  Effie." 
Two  robin  redbreasts  in  their  nest.     See  Two  Robin 

Redbreasts. — Anon. 
Two  roses   growing   on   a   single   tree.     See   Wedding 

Song,  A. — -Savary. 
Two  ruby  lips  are  hers;  a  pair.     See  To  Ruby  Lips. — 

Richmond. 
Two  scraps   of   foundation,    some   fragments   of   lace. 

See  Recipe  for  a  Modern  Bonnet. — Anon. 
Two  seas,  amid  the  night.     See  Two  Oceans,  The. — 

Sterling. 
Two  shall  be  born  the  whole  wide  world  apart.     See 

Fate. — Spalding. 
Two  slender  hands  upon  Time's  dial-plate.     See  Dial 

of  Time,  The. — Hawkes. 
Two  small  boys  were  looking  at  the  large  black  and  red 
posters.     See  Street  Gamin's  Story  of  the  Play, 
A. — Anon. 
Two  snowy    arms    around    his    neck.     See    Woman's 

Wiles. — Chapman. 
Two  soldiers  lay  on  the  battlefield.     See  As  the  Sun 

Went  Down. — Anderson. 
Two  soldiers,  lying  as  \or  where]  they  fell.     See  Death, 

the  Peace-maker. — Flagg. 
Two  souls  diverse  out  of  our  human  sight.     See  On 
the  Deaths  of  Thomas  Carlyle  and  George  Eliot. — 
Swinburne. 
Two  spiders,  so  the  story  goes.     See  Church  Spider, 

The. — Anon. 
Two  stars  once  on  their  lonely  way.     See  Orbits. — 

Le  Gallienne. 
Two  steps,  your  Highness, — let  me  go  before.     See  (J)n 

the  Picture  of  the  Last  Supper,  at  Milan. — Story. 
Two  Sundays  in  the  year  are  now  dedicated  to  the  spirit 

of  happiness.     See  Easter. — Swing. 
Two  things  love  can  do.     See  Letter,  A. — Phelps. 
Two  things  there  are  with  Memory  will  abide.     See 

Memories. — Aldrich. 
Two  times    eleven    are    twenty-two.     See   Arithmetic 

Lesson,  The. — Anon. 
Two  travelers    started    on    a    tour.     See    Faith    and 

Reason. — Case. 
Two  travelers  through  the  gateway  went.     See  Seeing 

and  not  Seeing. — Brooks. 
Two  voices  are  there ;  one  is  of  the  deep.   See  Sonnet,  A. 

—  Stephen. 
Two  Voices  are  there;  one  is  of  the  sea.     See  Thought 
of  a  Briton  on  the  Subjugation  of  Switzerland. — 
Wordsworth. 
Two  webfoot  brothers  loved  a  fair.     See  That  Gentle 

Man  from  Boston  Town. — Miller. 
Two  went  to  pray?     O  rather  say.     See  Two  Went 

up  into  the  Temple  to  Pray. — Crashaw. 
Two  winged  genii  in  the  air.     See  Love  and  Youth. — 

Linton. 
Two  women  met  in  Paradise,  where  they  had  recently 

arrived.     See  Unrest  in  Paradise. — Anon.    ' 
Two  worlds  hast  thou  to  dwell  in.  Sweet.     See  First 

Skylark  of  Spring,  The. — Watson. 
Two  worlds  there  are.     To  one  our  eyes  we  strain. 

See  Two  Worlds. — Collins. 
Two  worthy  farmers  once  fell  out.     See  "I   See  the 

Point . ' ' — McCord . 
Two  yachtsmen,    after    storm — out    of    whose    clutch 
their     yacht     had     been     wrenched.     See     Two 
Drowned  Lovers. — Murray. 
Two  Yankee  wags,  one  summer  day.     See  Here  She 

Goes  and  there  She  Goes. — Nack. 
Two    young  fair  lovers.     See  Consolation  (Lovers). — 

Arnold. 
Two  young    men,    when    I    was    poor.     See    Unwise 

Choice,  The. — Cary. 
Two  young,  short-sighted  fellows,  Chang  and  Ching. 

See  Test  of  Sight,  The.— Cranch. 
'Twuz  jest  this  way:    I  saw  one  day  a  chipper,  cross- 
eyed  girl.     See  He   Loved   a  Cross-eyed   Girl. — 
Waldron. 
Tying   her   bonnet    under   her   chin.     See    Love-knot, 
The. — Perry. 


902 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Unfurl 


Tying  her  shoe,   I   knelt  at   Daphne's  feet.     See  On 

Tying  Daphne's  Shoe. — Bryan. 
Tyre  of  the  farther  West!  be  thou,  too,  warned.     See 

United  States. — Keble. 
Tyre  of  the   West,   and  glorying  in   the  name.     See 

England. — Newman. 


u 


Ueber    alien    Gipfeln.     See    Wanderer's    Night-song, 

The.— Goethe. 
Ugh,  how  cold  the  night  grows!     <See  While  Shepherds 

Watched. — Denton. 
"Ugh,  ugh!     I'm  awful  sick,  mister,  I  am."     See  Sue 

an'  Me. — Belasco. 
Ugh,  ugh,  ugh!     Well,  they  tell  me  I'm  growing  old. 

<See  Gay  Old  Man  am  I,  A. — Sedgwick. 
Ugh!  when  the  wolf  strays  in  the  snare.     See  Poca- 
hontas.— Hartwell. 
Ulysses  S.  Grant  was  a  man  of  destiny.     See  Great  and 

Noble  Man,  A. — Vilas. 
Unanswered  yet!  the  prayers  your  lips  have  pleaded. 

iSee  Sometime — Somewhere. — Browning. 
Unarmed     and     unattended,     walks    the     czar.     See 

Incident,  An. — Macdonell. 
Unborn  ages  and  visions  of  glory  crowd  upon  my  soul. 

See    Address    before    the    New    York    Historical 

Society. — Webster. 
Unbounded    courage    and    compassion    joined.     See 

Campaign,  The. — Addison. 
Uncle  Abe  an'  Aunt  Maria.     <See  Character  Sketch,  A 

— Anon. 
Uncle  Ben  Williamson  was  as  well  known  in  the  town 

as  the  mayor  or  the  governor.     See  How  Jinny 

Eased  Her  Mind. — Page. 
Uncle    Benjamin   thinks    he   is  growing    worse.     See 

Brought  to  his  Senses. — Anon. 
Uncle    Caleb,  why  don't    you   buy    some  cheese  and 

some  good  butter.     See  Heavy  Shower,  A. — Anon. 
Uncle    Ethan   had   a   theory   that   a   man's   character 

could  be  told.     See  Uncle  Ethan  Ripley's  Specu- 
lation.— Garland. 
Uncle    Finn   is   a   typical   backwoodsman.     See   How 

Uncle  Finn  had  the  Laugh  on  the  Boys. — Anon. 
Uncle  he  says  'at   'way  down  in  the  sea.     See  Session 

with   Uncle   Sidney,  A  (Uncle    Brightens  up). — 

Riley. 
Uncle  Jack  came  to  our  house  the  other  day.     See 

Lost  Opportunity,  The. — Goodfellow. 
Uncle    Nathan,    you    promised    us    boys    that    if    we 

wouldn't  pester  you.     See  Uncle  Nathan's  Indian. 

— Widney. 
Uncle   Noah  Clayton,  with  promise  of  bettering  his 

business  condition.     See  Uncle  Noah's  Ghost. — 

Cobb. 
"Uncle  Peter,   I   find  that  after  you  finished  white- 
washing my  cellar."     See  Squire's  Rooster,  The. — 

Neall. 
Uncle  Peter  Tascus  Runnels  has  been  feeble  some  of  late. 

See  Uncle  Tascus  and  the  Deed. — Day. 
Uncle  Sam  has  omitted  from  his  census  questions  a 

great  many  queries.     See  New  Series  of  Census 

Questions,  A. — Anon. 
Uncle  Sam  is  growing  old.     See  Uncle  Sam's  Birthday. 

— Denton. 
Uncle    Sidnev,    when    he    wuz    here.     See    Squirtgun 

Uncle  Maked  Me,  The.— Riley. 
Uncle  Simon  he  clum  up  a  tree.     See  Uncle  Simon  and 

Uncle  Jim. — Ward. 
Unconquerably,  men  venture  on  the  quest.     See  Polar 

Quest,  The. — Burton. 
Uncover  to  the  flag;  bare  head.     See  Uncover  to  the 

Flag. — Cheverton . 
Under  a  spreading  chestnut  tree.     See  Village  Black- 
smith, The. — Longfellow. 
■  Under  a  sultry,  yellow  sky.     See  Mercedes. — Stoddard. 
Under  a  throne  I  saw  a  virgin  sit.      See  Cselica  (Eliza- 

betha  Regina). — Brooke. 
Under  a  toadstool  crept  a  wee  elf.     See  Elf  and  the 

Dormouse,  The. — Herford. 
Under   an  aged  oak  was  Willy  laid.     See  Shepherd's 

Pipe,  The  (Death   of  Philarete,  The).— Browne. 
Under  her  gentle  seeing.     See  On  a  Young  Poetess's 

Grave . — Buchanan . 
Under   hostile    fire,    on    a   foreign    soil,    fighting   in    a 

common    cause.     See    Republic's    Duty,    The. — 

McKinley. 
Under  my  keel  another  boat.     See  Shadow  Boat,  A. — 

Bates. 


Under  my   window,   under  my   window.     See   Under 

My  Window. — Westwood. 
Under  the  alders,  along  the  brooks.     See  Partridges. — 

Worden. 
Under     the      apple      bough.     See     Remembrance. — 

Lathrop. 
Under    the    apple    trees,    spreading   and    thick.     See 

Fanny's  Mud  Pies. — Sill. 
Under  the  arch  of  Life,  where  love  and  death.     See 

Soul's  Beauty. — Rossetti. 
Under  the  cooling  shadow  of  a  stately  elm.     See  Con- 
templation.— Bradstreet. 
Under  the  coverlet's  snowy  fold.     See  Oldest  Story, 

The.— Chadwick. 
Under  the  drifted  snows,  with  weeping  and  holy  rite. 

See  Under  the  Snows. — Bates. 
Under    the    drifting    winter    snow.     See    New    Year's 

Exercise,  A. — Hadley. 
Under  the  grass,  in  the  bright  summer  weather.     See 

Song  of  the  Cricket,  The.— Miller. 
Under    the     great     hill     sloping    bare.     See    "King's 

Missive,  1661,  The."— Whittier. 
Under  the  green  hedges  after  the  snow.     See  Violets. — 

Moultrie. 
Under    the    greenwood    tree.     See   As   You    Like    It 

(Greenwood  Tree,  The). — Shakespeare. 
Under  the  hay-stack  little  Boy  Blue.     See  Little  Boy 

Blue. — Richardson. 
Under  the  lamp-light,  dead  in  the  street.     See  Dead 

in  the  Street. — Anon. 
Under  the  lamplight,  watch  them  come.     See  Under 

the  Lamplight. — Blount. 
Under  the  lindens  lately  sat.     See  Under  the  Lindens. — 

Landor. 
Under   the   maple   boughs   we   sat.     See   Chivalrie. — 

Baker. 
Under  the  maples  the  mourners  met  to  bury  the  beau- 
tiful Violet.     See  Skylark,  The. — Hageman. 
Under  the  open  sky,  in  the  odorous  air  of  the  orchard. 

-'See  Evangeline.— Longfellow. 
Under  the  reign  of  the  Moorish    caliphs.     See    game. 

— Anon. 
"Under  the  roots  of  the  roses."     See  Mors  et  Vita. — 

Stoddard. 
Under  the    shadow  of   a  cliff.     See  "Rise,"  A. — Mc- 

Gaflfey. 
Under  the  slanting  light  of  the  yellow  sun  of  October. 

See  Modern  Romans,  The. — Johnson. 
Under  the  snow  our  baby  lies.     See  Under  the  Snow. — 

Anon. 
Under    the    tree    the    farmer    said.     See    Cherries. — 

Weatherley. 
Under  the  violets,   blue  and  sweet.     See  Under  the 

Violets. — Young. 
Under  the  ward  of  the  Polar  star.     See  Trail  of  Gold, 

The.— Pollock. 
Under  the  wide  and  starry  sky.     See  Requiem,  A. — 

Stevenson. 
Under  this  stone  doth  lie.     See  Epitaph  on  Sir  Thomas 

Fairfax . — Buckingham . 
Under  what   circumstances,   O   Athenians,   ought   the 

strenuous   and    patriotic   orator   to    appear?     See 

Oration  on  the  Crown,  The  (Reply  to  yEschines). 

— Demosthenes. 
Under  yonder  beech-tree   single  on   the   green-sward. 

See  Love  in  the  Valley. — Meredith. 
Under  your  rounded  chin.     See  Violoniste.— Quint. 
Underneath  an  old  oak  tree.     See  Raven  and  the  Oak, 

The.— Coleridge. 
Underneath  the  growing  grass.     See  Bourne,  The. — 

Rossetti. 
Underneath  the  sod  low-lying.     See  Dirge  for  a  Young 

Girl.— Fields. 
Underneath  this  myrtle  shade.     See  Epicure,  The. — ' 

Cowley. 
Underneath  this  sable  hearse.     See   Epitaph  on   the 

Countess  of  Pembroke. — Jonson. 
Underneath  this  stone  doth  lye.     See  Epitaph  on  Eliz- 
abeth L.  H. — Jonson. 
Undeveloped  man  is  the  embodiment  of  possibilities. 

See   Master    Character   of    Victor    Hugo,    The. — 

Sellers. 
Une  petite  pt^che  dans  un  orchard  fleurit.     See  Little 

Peach,  The.- — Anon. 
"Unearthing  old  treasures.  Miss  Olive?"     See  As  Seen 

in  Later  Years. — Heywood. 
Unfading  Hope!  when   life's  last  embers  bum.     See 

Pleasures  of  Hope.  The  (Hope). — Campbell. 
Unflinching  Dante  of  a  later  day.     See  To  an  Imperilled 

Traveler. — Dole. 
Unfurl  the  starry  banner.     See  That   Starry   Flag  of 

Ours. — Anon. 


903 


Unhappy 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Unhappy  dreamer,  who  out  winged  in  flight.     See  On 

the  Death  of  a  Metaphysician. — Santayana. 
Unheard  in  Summer's  flaring  ray.     iSee  To  the  Red- 
breast.— Cornish. 
"Union  for  the  sake^f  the  Union."     See  Flag  of  the 
Union,  The  (Cause  of  the  Union,  The). — Winthrop. 
Universal  education,  without  distinction  of  race,  must 
be   encouraged.     See  Hundredth  Anniversary  of 
the  Surrender  of  Lord   Cornwallis,  The  (Universal 
Education). — Winthrop. 
Universal  Suffrage! — what  i.s  it  but  the  overthrow  of 
violence  and  brute  force.     See  Universal  Suffrage. 
— Hugo. 
Unless   coupled   with   greatness,   individual   littleness 
seldom   becomes   notorious.     See   Human   Little- 
ness.— De  Shon. 
Unless  my  senses  are  more  dull.     See  Where  are  Sighs? 

— Landor. 
Unless  you  can  think  when  the  song  is  done.     See 
Woman'.s   Shortcomings,   A   (Unless). — Browning. 
Unlike  are  we,  unlike,  O  princely  Heart!     See  Sonnets 

from  the  Portuguese,  III. — Browning. 
Unlock  the  door;  let   no   foot-fall   from   the   present 
disturb  this  shadowy  scene.     See  Dream  Power, 
The. — Anon. 
Unmannered  March  hath  many  a  prank.     See  Madcap 

April. — Jenks. 
Unmoored,   unmanned,   unheeded  on   the   deep.     See 

Derelict,  The.— Foote. 
Unnoted   as   the   setting  of   a   star.     See   Mulford. — 

Whittier. 
Unravel  all  your  tangled  cheats.     See  To  the  American 

Poet. — Knowles. 
Unroll  Erin's  flag!  fling  its  folds  to  the  breeze.     See 

Erin's  Flag. — Ryan. 
Unsere  Geschichte  spielt  in  einer  Weinhandlung.     See 

Der  I^etzte  Gast. — -Drobisch. 
Unstable  dream,  according  to  the  place.     See  Lover 
Having  Dreamed  Enjoying  of  his  Love,  The. — 
Wyatt. 
Until  my  system  collapsed.     See  Invalid  in  Lodgings, 

An. — Barrie. 
Until  1768  Samuel  Adams  did  not  despair  of  a  peaceful 
issue.     See    Centennial    Celebration    of    Concord 
Fight  (Samuel  Adams  and  the  New  England  Town 
Meeting). — Curtis. 
Until  the  7th  of  March,  1850.     See  Daniel  Webster. — 

Hoar. 
Until  we  know  why  the  rose  is  sweet.     See  Greatness 

of  the  Poet,  The.— Curtis. 
Untrammelled  Giant  of  the  West.     See  Parting  of  the 

Ways,  The.— Gilder. 
Untremulous  in  the  river  clear.     See  Summer  Storm. — 

Lowell. 
Untwine    those    ringlets.     Ev'ry    dainty    clasp.     See 

Frangipanni. — Anon. 
Unveil  the  statue  vast  and  tall.    See  Statue  of  Liberty 

Unveiled,  The. — Bungay. 
Unwarmed   by   any   sunset   light.     See   Snow-bound. 

—Whittier. 
Un watched,  the   garden    bough   shall   sway.     See    In 

Memoriam. — Tennyson. 
Up  and  away!     For  the  east  wind  is  blowing.     See 

Sea-song. — Baker. 
Up  and  away,  like  the  dew  of  the  morning.     See  Ever- 
lasting Memorial,  The. — Bonar. 
Up  and  down   the  village   streets.     See  Prophecy  of 

Samuel  Sewall,  The. — Whittier. 
Up  before   the   bar  of   justice.     See   His   Sentence. — 

Eliot. 
Up,  Fairy!  quit  thy  chick-weed  bower.     See  Culprit 

Fay.  The  (Second  Quest,  The).— Drake. 
Up  for  the  conflict !  let  your  battle  peal.     See  To  the 

Rescue. — Anon. 
Up  from   earth's   centre   through   the   Seventh   Gate. 
See  Rubftiyilt    of  Omar  KhayyAm  (Master-knot, 
The).— Fitzgerald. 
Up  from  the  bench  the  other  day.     See  "Charge  of  the 

Lightning  Judge,  The." — Porter. 
Up  from  the  meadows  rich  with  com.     See  Barbara 

Freitchie. — Whittier. 
Up  from  the  South  at  break  of  day.     See  Sheridan's 

Ride. — Read. 
Up,  Gregory!  the  cloudy  east.     See  Christmas  Story, 

_A. — Gary. 
Up  in  a  wild  where  no  one  comes  to  look.     See  Up  in  a 

Wild.— ^Vhitney. 
Up  in  early  morning  light.     See  Dan's  Wife.— Woods. 
Up  in  the  attic  I  found  them,  locked  in  the  cedar  chest. 

See  Old  Daguerreotypes,  The. — Lincoln. 
Up  inthe  attic  stowed  away.     See  Song  of  the  Spinning 
Wheel,  The. — Anon. 


Up  in  the  attic  where  I  slept.     See  When  I  Was  a  Boy. 

—Field. 
Up  in  the  east  a  lark  was  springing.     See  Singer,  The. — 

Robinson. 
Up  in  the  loft,   'mid  scented  clover.     See  Up  in  the 

Lof  t . — Carleton . 
Up  in  the  morning's  no'  for  me.     See  Up  in  the  Morning 

Early. — Bums. 
Up  in  the  north  if  thou  sail  with  me.     See  Beaver,  The. 

— Howitt. 
Up  in  the  tree  top,  down  in  the  ground.     See  Summer 

is  Coming. — Anon. 
Up  in  your  cage  of  gold.     See  Canary,  The. — Sherman. 
Up  into    the    cherry    tree.       See    Foreign    Lands. — 

Stevenson. 
Up  many    flights    of    crazy    stairs.     See    Our    Sister. 

—  (Household  Words.) 
Up,  my  dogs,  merrily.      See  Nor'-west  Courier,  The. — 

Logan. 
Up!  quit  thy  bower!  late  wears  the  hour.      See  Beacon, 

The  (ilorning  Song). — Baillie. 
Up  rose  the  sun  o'er  Egypt's  tents.     See  Petit  Jean. — 

Barr. 
Up  spoke  a  little  lady.     See  At  the  Party. — Phelps. 
Up  sprang  the  sturdy  miner,  whose  locks  were  streaked 

with  gray.     See  Judge  Lynch. — Jones. 
Up    springs  the   lark.      See    Seasons,    The    (Songster, 

The).— Thomson. 
Up  the  airy  mountain.     See  Fairies,  The. — AUingham. 
Up  the  dale  and  down  the  bourne.  ,  See  Song  of  the 

Summer  Winds. — Darley. 
Up  the  hill,  whip  me  not,  down  the  hill,  hurry  me  not. 

See  Horse's  Petition  to  his  Driver.  A. — Anon. 
Up  the  idling  reef-set  bell.     See  White  Gull,  The. — 

Carman. 
Up  the  sea-saddened  valley,  at  evening's  decline.     See 

Dirge  of  Rory  O'More. — De  Vere. 
Up  the  streets  of  Aberdeen.     See  Barclay  of  Ury. — 

Whittier. 
Up  the  street[s]of  Slumber  town.     See  Dream  Peddler, 

The.— Blinn. 
Up  thro'  the  woodpath  with  bird  songs.     See  Beautiful 

May. — Anon. 
Up  through  the  great  Black  Forest.     See  In  the  Black 

Forest. — Thaxter. 
Up  through  the  rocky  pastures.     See  "Queen  Anne's 

Lace." — Benedict. 
Up,  Timothy,    up    with    your    staff    and    away!     See 

Childless  Father,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Up  to      her      chamber      window.     See      Nocturne. — 

Aldrich. 
Up  to    me    sweet    childhood    looketh.     See    Mother's 

Morning  Prayer,  A. — Anon. 
Up  to  the  frescoed  ceiling.     See  Those  Ashes. — Mun- 

Up  to  the  hills  I  lift  mine  eyes.     See  Psalm  CXXI.— 

Watts. 
Up  to   the   throne   of   God   is   borne.     See   Laborer's 

Noonday  Hymn,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Up!  up!  let  us  a  voyage  take.     See  Northern  Seas,  The. 

— Howitt. 
Up,  up,  my  friend!  and  quit  your  books.     See  Tables 

Turned,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Up!  up!  ye  dames,  ye  for  audj  lasses  gay!  See  Zapolya 

(Choral  Song  of  Illyrian  Peasants). — Coleridge. 
Up  with  me!  up  with  me  into  the  clouds!     See  To  a 

Skylark.— Wordsworth. 
Up  with   the  banner  of  the  free!     See  Flag,   The. — 

Flash. 
Up  with  the  lark  in  the  first  flush  of  morning.     See 

Morning  Ride,  A. — Anon. 
Up  with   windows,    up   with   hearts !     See   Coming   of 

Spring,  The. — Miiller. 
Up  with    your   heads,    ye    sylvan    lords!     See    Forest 

Trees,  The.— Cook. 
Up  yonder   in    Buena    Park.     See    Delectable    Ballad 

of  the  Waller  Lot,  The.— Field. 
Upo'  this  tree  there  grows  sic  fmit.     See  Heard  Ye 

o'  the  Tree  o'  Liberty. — Bums. 
Upon  a  barricade  thrown  'cross  the  street.     See  At  the 

Barricade. — Hugo. 
Upon  a  cliff  that  frowned  above  the  sea.     See  Time's 

Silent  Lesson. — Smith. 
Upon  a  cloud  among  the  stars  we  stood.     See  Flight, 

The.— Miflain. 
Upon  a  day,  as  Love  lay  sweetly  slumbering.     See 

Cupid  and  the  Bee. — Spenser. 
Upon  a  day  in  Ramadan.     See  Caliph's  Draught,  The. 

— Arnold. 
Upon  a  hundred  thousand  plains.     See  Maize  for  the 

Nation's  Emblem. — Thaxter. 
Upon    a    mountain    height,    far    from    the    sea.     See 

Wanderer,  The. — Field. 


904 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Veil 


Upon    a    rock    that,    high    and    sheer.     See    Hunter's 

Vision,  The. — Bryant. 
Upon  a  rock  yet  uncreate.     See  Cosmic   Egg,  The. — 

Anon. 
Upon   a   showery   [or  shadowy]   night   and    still.     See 

Dandelions,  The. — Cone. 
Upon    a   snowy   Christmas   eve.     See   Note   to    Santa 

Claus,  A. — Anon. 
Upon  a  time  a  neighing  steed.     See  Council  of  Horses, 

The.— Gay. 
Upon  ane  \or  one]  stormy  Sunday.     See  Plaidie,  The. — 

Sibley. 
Upon  every  teacher  in  the  public  schools  of  the  United 

States.      See    Public  School  Teacher    in    the    He- 
public,  The.— Balch. 
Upon  her  head  she  wears  a  crown  of  stars.     See  Truth. 

— Jonson. 
Upon   her   head   the   snow-hills.     See  Our   Delight. — 

Murray. 
Upon  her  lips  I  pressed  a  kiss.     See  Upon  Her  Lips. 

—  ( Yale  Record. ) 
Upon  her  snowy  couch  she  drooping  lies.     See  Mother. 

— Goodale. 
Upon  her  throne  of  hills  in  fear  and  trembling.     See 

Coriolanus. — McGuire. 
Upon  his  royal  throne  reclined  the  King.     See  King's 

Wooing,  The. — Renaud. 
Upon  his  wooden  hobby-horse.     See  Prophecy. — Alt. 
Upon  life's  highway  I  was  hastening.     See  Last  and 

Worst. — Allison. 
Upon  my  bier  no  garlands  lay.     See  Now. — Dodge. 
Upon    my   head  they  placed   a  fruitless   crown.      See 

Macbeth. — Shakespeare. 
Upon    my    heart    thy    accents    sweet.     See    On    His 

Marriage  to  Mary  Godwin. — Shelley. 
Upon  my  lap  my  sovereign  sits.     See  Lullaby. — Row- 
lands. 
Upon  my  lips  she  laid  her  touch  divine.     jSee  Sorrow. — 

Thaxter. 
Upon    my    mantel-piece    they    stand.     <See    Moral    in 

Sevres,  A. — Howells. 
Upon    Niagara's   glorious   fall.     <See   Average    Modern 

Traveler,  The. — Anon. 
Upon   Nirwi^na's  brink  the  rAhat    stood.     See  RAhat, 

The. — Rooney. 
Upon  our  return   to   London  this  morning  we  found 

your   letter   awaiting   us.    '  Eugene    Field    to    his 

Children. — Field. 
Upon  St.  Michael's  Isle.     See  Burial  of  Robert  Brown- 
ing, The.— Field. 
Upon  that  night  when  fairies  light.     See  Halloween.^ — 

Burns. 
Upon  the  brown  and  frozen  sod.     See  Prairie  Path, 

The. — Anno. 
Upon   the   car.s — in   spirit   gay.     See   Pretty    Maid   of 

Kissimmee,  The. — Benton. 
Upon  the  day  I  meet  thee  face  to  face.     See  I^ove- 

message,  A. — Barnes. 
Upon  the  field  of  battle  the  d.ving  trumpeter  lay.     See 

Dying  Trumpeter,  The. — Moser. 
Upon  the  heights  of  Sillery  one  day.     See  At  Spencer 

Grange. — Kirby. 
Upon  the  hills  the  wind  is  sharp  and  cold.     See  Evening 

Brings  Us  Home. — Anon. 
Upon  the  hurricane  deck  of  one  of  our  gunboats.     See 

De  Pint  wid  Ole  Pete. — Anon. 
Upon  the  king!  let  us  our  lives,  our  souls.     See  King 

Henry  V. — Shakespeare. 
Upon  the  kitchen  table  with  her  work  unfinished  yet. 

See  Lost  Page,  The. — Anon. 
Upon  the  lilac-bush  I  heard.     See  Kings  and  Queens. 

— Douglas. 
Upon    the    lonely    shore    I    lie.     See    By   the    Sea. — 

Clemmer. 
Upon  the  poop  the  captain  stands.     See  Shipwreck, 

The.— Palmer. 
Upon  the  sadness  of  the  sea.      See  Sunrise  never  Failed 

Us  yet.  The.— Thaxter. 
Upon  the  shore  of  Zuyder  Zee,  where  lands  are  broad 

and  low.     See  StaVoren. — Conant. 
Upon    the    stairs    his    loud    tip-toes.     See    Conjugal 

Lament. — Pond. 
Upon    the    triangle    would    he    play.     See   Triangular 

Tragedy. — Anon. 
Upon  the  white  sea-sand.     See  Losses. — Brown. 
Upon  their  arms  they  lay  and  slept.     See  Reawakening. 

— Spencer. 
Upon  their  tree-crowned  hills  the  gods  reclined.     See 

Flight  of  the  Gods,  The.— Biddies. 
Upon  thy  pictured  lineaments  1  looked.     See  To  the 

Portrait  of  One  "Gone  Before." — Butterfield. 
Upon     two     neighboring     village     houses.     See     Two 

Chimneys,  The. — Strong. 


Upon  Wahsatch's  peaks  of  snow.  See  BinJey  and 
"46." — Anon. 

Uprising  see  the  fitful  lark.     See  same. — Anon. 

Upstairs  in  the  large  closet,  child.  See  Phantom,  The. 
— Ramal. 

Uranian  Aphrodite,  far.  See  Hymn  to  Aphrodite,  A. — 
De  Tabley. 

Urge  me  no  more — your  prayers  are  vain.  See 
Regulus. — Dale. 

Urns  and  odours  bring  away!  '  See  Two  Noble  Kins- 
men, The  (Dirge  of  the  Three  Queens). — Shake- 
speare and  Fletcher. 

Us  two  wuz  boys  when  we  fell  out.  See  Our  Two 
Opinions. — Field. 

Use  sin  as  it  will  use  you;  spare  it  not,  for  it  will  not 
spare  you.     See  Sin. — Baxter. 

Us-folks  is  purty  poor.  See  Dubious  "Old  Kriss,"  A. — 
Riley. 

Utter  the  song,  O  my  soul !  See  The  Flight  and  Return 
of  Mahomet. — Coleridge. 

Uvedale,  thou  piece  of  the  first  times.  See  Epigram : 
"Uvedale,  thou,"  etc. — Jonson. 


Vacation   is    coming   and   we    are   all   glad.     See   For 

Vacation. — Anon. 
Vacation  is  coming,  oh,  oh!  oh,  oh!     See  Daisy  Drill. — 

Halifax. 
Vacation  is  coming;  the  good  time  is  near.     See  Vaca- 
tion.— Hadley. 
Vagation  dime  vas  coom  again.     See  Strauss'  Boedry. 

— Adams. 
Vain  Britons,  boast  no  longer  with  proud  indignity. 

See  War  and  Washington. — Seward. 
Vain  human  kind!  fanta.stic  race!     See  Verses  on  the 

Death  of  Dr.  Swift.— Swift. 
Vain  is  the  dream!     However  hope  may     rave.     See 

White  Pacha,  The. — Lang. 
Vain  the  concern  which  you  express.     See  To  the  Duke 

de  Noalles. — Prior. 
Vain — vain — give     o'er!     His     eye.     See     Parrhasius. 

—Willis. 
Vainly  for  us  the  sunbeams  shine.     See  Casa's  Dirge. — 

Moir. 
Vake  up,  my  schveetl     Vake  up,  my  lofe!     See  Dutch- 
man's Serenade,  The. — Anon. 
Valdemar  Svenson  was  conscious  of  staggering.     See 

Crimson  Shroud  of  Olaf  Guldmar,  The. — Corelli. 
Valiant,  defiant  and  free.     See  Luther. — Miller. 
Vane,  young  in  years,  but  in  sage    counsel    old.       See 

Sonnet:  To  Sir  Henry  Vane. — Miltcto. 
Vanity  Fair,  Vanity  Fair.     See  Vanity  Fair. — Anon. 
"Vanity   of   Vanities,"   the  world  is  full   of   sin.     See 

"Vanity  of  Vanities." — Jones. 
Vanity,  saith  the  preacher,  vanity!     See  Bishop  Orders 

His    Tomb    at    Saint    Praxed's    Church,    The. — 

Browning. 
Various  are  the  appellations  given  to  life.     See  Ocean 

of  Life,  The.— Rose. 
Various    his    subjects,    yet    they    jointly    warm.     See 

Epigram  on  Waller. — Middleton. 
Various  occurrences  had  led  to  the  broadest   excite- 
ment.    See  Lorna  Doone  (Deathof  Carver  Doone). 

— Blackmore.         "^ 
Various    the    trees,    and    passing    foliage    here.     See 

Ravenna  Pine  Forest. — Hunt. 
Vas    marriage    a    failure?     Veil,     now,     dot     depends. 

See  "Vas  Marriage  a  Failure?" — Adams. 
Vasari  tells  that  Luca  Signorelli.     See  Episode,  An. — 

Symonds. 
Vast  and  starless,  the  pall  of  heaven.     See  Sailing  the 

Mississippi  at  Midnight. — Whitman. 
Vast  as  our  firmament  may  be,  has  it  boundaries.     See 

Day  Conceals  what  Night  Reveals. — Nichol. 
Vast    bodies    of    philo.sophy.     See   To    Mr.    Hobbs. — - 

Cowley. 
Vast  hollow  voids,  beyond  the  utmost  reach.     See  He 

Made  the  Stars  also. — Mifflin. 
Vast  superstition!     Glorious  style  of   weakness!     See 

Mustapha  (Chorus  of  Tartars). — Brooke. 
Vast,  unrevealed,  in  silence  and  the  night.     See  Train 

among  the  Hills,  The. — Roberts. 
Vastness  which  grows,  but  grows  to  harmonize.     See 

St.  Peter's  at  Rome. — Byron. 
Veil,  now,  O  Liberty,  thy  blushing  face.     See  Ode  on 

the  Assassination  of  President  Garfield. — Anon. 
Veil  den,  I  dells  you  mit  te  dime  I  goed  a  huntin'.     See 

How    the    Dutchman    Killed    the    Woodchuck. — 

Anon.  . 


905 


Veil 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Veil,    der   sirous   am    out;   der    shpan^led-bandyloon 

ladies.     See  "Uncle   Schneider     visits  the   Side. 

Shows. — Anon . 
Veil,  I  baed  you  she  vas  handsome,  mid  ackomblish- 

mendts  rare  and  fine.     See  Dot  Young  Viddow 

Clara.— Pretzel.  * 
Veil,  I  tinks  I  has  done  pooty  veil.     See  Who  Wears 

the  Breeches? — M'Bride. 
Veil,  mine  freund,  you  know  dat  I  hav  on  my  het  dat 

leedle  bump.     Se-e  Dutchman's  Dolly  Varden,  The. 

— Anon. 
Veil,  now,  I  haf  got  started  in  dis  courtin'  peesness. 

See  Narrow  Escape,  A. — Anon. 
Veil,  now,  vat  you  s'pose  I  haf  corned  up  here  for? 

See  How  to  Make  Hasty  Pudding. — Anon. 
Veil,  of  you'll  only  lisden,  I  will  told  you  aboud  dot 

bart.v.     Se?  Mygel  Snyder's  Barty. — Williams. 
"Veil,    Sammy." — "Veil,    my    Prooshan     Blue." — See 

Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Sam  Weller's  Valentine;. — - 

Dickens. 
Veil,  ven  I  vas  a  leedle  young.     See  Dot  New  Song. — 

Head. 
Veil,  von  morning  I  says  to  Hans.     See  Katrina's  Visit 

to  New  York. — Anon. 
Vellow  mit  der  Zitizens: — Vat  for  ve  meets  here  to-day, 

hey?     See   Hans   von   Speigel's    Fourth   of    July 

Oration. — Gris. 
Ven  a  prig  has  come  to  grief.     See  Ticket  of  Leave, 

The.— {Punch.) 
Ven  der  shbring  dot  is  coming.    See  "Dis  den  I'll  Dink 

of  Dou." — Gooft. 
Ven  I  come  home  py  nighd  dimes,  yet.     See  I  Vunder 

•     Vy? — -Anon. 
Ven  I  lays  myself  down  in  mine  lonely  pedroom.     See 

Hans  in  a  Fix. — Anon. 
Venerable,  ancient,  solitary  mound.     See  Bear  Butte 

Mountain. — Wilson. 
Venerable  Men :     You  have  come  down  to  us  from  a 

former  generation.     See  Bunker  Hill  Monument, 

The  (Address  at  Bunker  Hill). — Webster. 
Vengeful  across  the  cold  November  moors.     See  Pity 

of  the  Leaves,  The. — Robinson. 
Veni,  Creator  Spiritus.     See  same. — St.  Gregory. 
Veni    Sancte    Spiritus.     See   aame. — Robert  II. 
Venice,  thou  siren  of  sea-cities,  wrought.     See  Venice. 

— Symonds. 
Venus  fair  did  ride.     See  Shepherd's  Song  of  Venus  and 

Adoni.s,  The.— Constable. 
Venus  has  lit  her  silver  lamp.     See  Lamp  in  the  West, 

The. — Higginson. 
Venus  one  day,  as  story  goes.     See  Reverse;  or,  Mrs. 

Cludd,  The.— Swift. 
Venus,  take  my  votive  glass.     See  Lady  who    Offers 

her  Looking-glass  to  Venus,  The. — Prior. 
Vera  Victoria!     What  is  it?     'Tis  a  query  that  has 

ever    vexed    the    ages.      See    Vera    Victoria. — 

So  per. 
Versailles! — Up  the  chestnut  alley.     See  Pompadour, 

The.— ThornbuiY. 
Verse,  a  breeze   'mid  blossoms  straying.     See  Youth 

and  Age. — Coleridge. 
Very  dark  the  autumn  sky.     See  Belated  Violet,  A. — 

Herford. 
Very  high  in  the  pine  tree.     See  Turtle  Dove's  Nest, 

The.— ".\untEfBe." 
"Very  interesting  conversation  in  here?"  asked  papa. 

See  Lisping  Child,  The. — Anon. 
Very  little  ones  are  we.     See  same. — Anon. 
Very  right — but  hold!     What  wonder  meets  my  sight? 

See    Yankee's    Stratagem,    The. — Dale. 
Very  well,  ma'am,  very  well.     See  School  for  Scandal, 

The. — Sheridan. 
Very  well,  Martha,  show  the  gentleman  in.     See  In- 
compatibility.— Clement. 
Very  wet  weather  lately,  Johnson !     See  Bones  on  Bad 

Weather. — Anon. 
Vesper  bells  were  softly  chiming.     See  Grave  by  the 

Sorrowful  Sea,  The. — Bayley. 
Vespers  were  ended.     The  last  clouds  of  incense.     See 

Angelo. — Sterne. 
Vex  not  the  grave  with  tears;  its  shadows  deep.     See 

Translation  from  Propertius. — Head. 
Vex  not  thou  the  poet's  mind.     See  To  the  Critic. — 

Tenny.son. 
Vexing  little  trials.     See  Little  Crosses. — Wyman. 
Vhen  in  der  nighd  der  sun  goed  oud.     See  Der  Moon. — 

Whipple. 
Vhen  Shicago  vas  a  leedle  villages.     See  Dyin'  Vords 

of  Isaac. — Anon. 
Vhen  shnow  und  ice  vas  on  der  ground.     See  "Cut, 

Cut  Behind." — Adams. 
Victor  in  poesy!  Victor  in  Romance!     See  To  Victor 

Hugo. — Tennyson. 


Victorious  men    of   earth,    no    more.     See    Last    Con- 
queror, The. — Shirley. 
"Victory!"     This   was  the   first   that   she   read.     See 

Unter  den  Linden. — Nason. 
View  now  the  winter  storm!'  above,  one  cloud.     See 

Borough,  The  (Storm  on  the  East  Coast,  A). — 

Crabbe. 
Viewed  from  the  standpoint  of  a  foreigner,  our  Gov- 
ernment.    See  Public  Opinion  the  Reliance  of  Our 

Government. — Garfield. 
Vigil  strange  I  kept  on  the  field  one  night.     See  Vigil 

Strange  I  Kept  on  the  Field. — Whitman. 
Vil  ze  professeur  be  arrive  present !     See  Professor,  The. 

— Crosby. 
Vill  you/nefer  git  de  tinner  ready?     See  Wash  Day  at 

Zofflecoffers. — Anon. 
Vill'st  dou    learn    de    Deutsche    Sprache?     See    To    a 

Friend  Studying  German. — Leland. 
Vine  leaves    rustled,    moonbeams    shone.     See    After- 
thought, An. — Baker. 
Violet!  sweet  violet!     See  Violet,  The. — Lowell. 
Violet,  violet,  sparkling  with  dew.     See  Wild  Violet, 

The.— Gould. 
Violets!  deep-blue  violets!     See  same. — -Landon. 
Violets,     violets,     sweet     March  [wr.   spring]  violets. 

See  Violets. — Craik. 
Virginia  Cleveland,  I  declare!     See  Careless  Doll,  A. — 

Anon. 
Virtue  concealed    within    our    breast.     See    Horace, 

Book  4,  Ode  9.     Addressed  to  Archbishop  King. — 

Swift. 
Virtue,  liberty  and  law  are  the  acknowledged  and  essen- 
tial   elements    of    our    civilization.     See   Voter's 

Responsibility,  The. — Demorest. 
Virtuous   and    faithful    Heberden,   whose    skill.      See 

Retirement  (Dejection  and  Retirement). — Cowper. 
Vital  spark  of  heavenly  flame!     See  Dying  Christian 

to  His  Soul,  The.— Pope. 
Vocalize  in  silver  strains,  and  with    pennies  six.     See 

Sing  a  Song  a  Sixpence.- — ^Anon. 
Voice  of  Summer,  keen  and  shrill.     See  To  a  Cricket. — 

Bennett. 
Voice  of  the  'deeps  thou  art !     But  not  the  wild.     See 

Emerson. — -Betts. 
Voice  of  the  summer  wind.     See  Grasshopper,  The. — 

Tennyson. 
Voice'.ess  lies  the  broken  banjo.     See  Broken  Banjo, 

The. — Gregory. 
Volumes  have    been    written    telling.     See    Power    of 

Temper,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
Von  day  I  shpeak  mit  a  friend  von  me.     See  Fritz 

Valdher  is  Made  a  Mason. — Hoofnagle. 
Vonce  I  dook  a  trib  to  Coney.     See  Coney  Island  down 

der  Pay. — -Wood. 
Vonce  upon  a  midnite  dreary,  as  I  pondered,  veak  and 

veary.     See  Dutchman   and   the   Raven,   The.— 

Anon. 
Vonst  ubon  ur  dime,  Yoppy  und  me — dot  ish  Yoppy's 

varder — und    mine    vrow.     See    Yoppy's    Varder 

unt  hees  Drubbles. — Sidell. 
Vot  a  coundry  dot  is  anyways!  unt  vat  a  peebles!     See 

Jew's  Troubles,  A.— Hurwood. 
Vot  vas  id  mine  baby  was  trying  to  say.     See  Ah-Goo. 

— Adams. 
"Vote  for    Edmunds!"    exclaimed    a    politician.     See 

Country  Meeting  Talk.— Anon. 
Voyager  on  golden  air.     See  To  a  Humming-bird.  — 

Cheney. 
Voyager  upon  life's  sea.     See  Paddle  Your  Own  Canoe. 

— Bolton. 


w 

Waait  till  our  Sally  cooms  in,  fur  thou  mun  a'  sights  to 

tell.     See  Northern  Cobbler,  The. — Tennyson. 
Waal,  girls — if  you  must  know.     See  Aunt  Jemima's 

Courtship. — Anon. 
Waes-hael  for  knight  and  dame!     See  King  Arthur's 

Waes-hael. — Hawker. 
Wail  for  Dsedalus,  all  that  is  fairest!     See  Dtedalus. — 

Sterling. 
Wail,  winter  Winds,  o'er  moor  and  fell.     See  Old  Year, 

The.— Fuller. 
Wailing,  wailing,  wailing,  the  wind  over  land  and  sea. 

See  Rizpah. — Tennyson. 
Wainamoinen,  ancient  minstrel.      See    Kalevala,  The 

(Birth  of  the  Harp,  The). 
Wainamoinen  was  born  upon  the  ocean  after  his  mother. 

See  Kalevala,  Story  of  the. — Rabb. 
"Wait  a  little,"  you  say;  right;  an'  I  work  an'  I  wait  to 

the  end.     See  First  Quarrel,  The. — Tennyson. 


906 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Was 


Wait  but  a  little  while.     See  Song:  "Wait  but  a  little," 

etc. — Gale. 
Wait  for  me,  Mary,  since  you  don't  seem  to  be  in  a 

hurry.     .See  Last  Pay  of  School,  The. — Denton. 
Wait  not  the  morrow,  but  forgive  me  now.     ;See  For- 
give Me  Now. — Anon. 
Wait  not  till  the  little  hands  are  at  rest.     See  Make 

Childhood  Sweet. — Anon. 
Waiting  on  Him  who  knows  us  and  our  need.     .See 

Summum  Bonum. — Guiney. 
Waiting  to-night  for  the  moon  to  rise.     .See  Yosemite, 

The.— Bruce. 
Wake!     For  the  sun  who  scattered  into  flight.     .See 

RubiViyilt   of  Omar  Khayyi'im  (Overture). — Fitz- 
gerald. 
Wake  her  with  the  voice  of  cannon — give  her  colors  to 

the  morn!     .See  Freedom's  Natal  Day. — Griswold. 
Wake,  Israel,    wake!     Ilecall   to-day.     .See    Banner  of 

the  Jew,  The. — Lazarus. 
Wake  me  to-night,  my  mother  dear.     .See  Christmas 

Bells.— Keble. 
Wake  not,  but  hear  me,  love!     .See  Ben-Hur  (Song). — 

Wallace. 
Wake  now,    my    Love,    awake!    for   it    is   time.     .See 

Epithalamion    (Wake   now,  my  Love).— Spenser. 
Wake,  soldier!  wake!  thy  war-horse  waits.     .See  Dead 

Trumpeter,  The. — Hervey. 
Wake  the  world  to  new  conditions.     .See  Sound  the 

Reveille. — Jones. 
Wake  up,  little  daisy,  the  summer  is  nigh.     See  Daisj', 

The. — Anon. 
Wake  up,  wake  up,  you  pretty  buds,  and  shake  your 

green  capes  out.     See  What  the  April  Breeze  Said 

to  the  Trees. — St.  John. 
Wake!  wave  aloft,  thou  Banner!  let  every  snowy  fold. 

See  Banner  of  the  Covenanters,  The. — Norton. 
Wake   your    harp's    music!    louder!    higher!     See    In 

Memory  of  the  Pilgrims. — Mellen. 
Waken,  lords  and  ladies  gay.     See  Hunting  Song. — 

Scott. 
Waken,  voice   of  the   land's   devotion!     See  Song   of 

1876,  The.— Taylor. 
Wal,  I  feel  like  an  eel.     See  Mister,  Yer  Gittin'  Old.— 

Cake. 
Wal,  Kern'l,  this  'ere's  th'  shanty,  an'  this  all 'round's 

th'  camp.     See  Over  the  Divide. — Manville. 
Wal,  Mr.  Brown,  how's  things  goin'  on  with  >'  there 

daown  below?     See  Old  Yankee  Farmer,  The. — 

Anon. 
Wal,  yes,   we   quarrelled   eoiit   and   eout,   old   Deacon 

Jones    and    me.     See    Aunt    Rhod.v's    Dream. — • 

Banks. 
Wal,  you  see,  when   Parson    Carryl's  wife  died.     See 

Sam  Law.son's  Fireside  Stories  (Minister's  House- 
keeper, The).— Stowe. 
Wald  my  gud  Lady  lufe  me  best.     .See  Garmond  of 

Fair  Ladies,  The. — llenryson. 
Wales  England  wed;  so  I   was  bred.     See  Autobiog- 
raphy, An. — Rhys. 
Walk  in,    sir;   your    servant,    sir,   your   servant.     See 

Genius  for  the  Stage,  A. — Carey. 
Walk  in,  walk  in  to  the  great  show.'    See  Menagerie, 

The. — Anon. 
"Walk  right  in!     How  are  you,  Fred?"     .See  Idyl  of 

the  Period,  An. — ^Baker. 
Walk  right  in  the  settin'-room,  Deacon;  it's  all  in  a 

muddle,   you  see.     See  Foreclosure  of  the  Mort- 
gage. The. — Corbett. 
Walk  with  the  Beautiful  and  with  the  Grand.     See 

Beautiful,  The. — Borrington. 
Walk  in'  wid  Pat  Magee.     See  Pat  Magee. — Anon. 
Walking  thus  towards  a  pleasant  grove.     See  Celinda. 

—Herbert. 
Wall,  at  last  I've  got  our  house  kind  of  decent  like. 

See  Surprise  Party,  A. — Anon. 
Wall,  I  can't  make  eout  what  upon  airth  ola  Obadiah 

Oakwood's  a  comin'  here  for  to-day.    See  Looking 

around  for  a  Wife. — Anon. 
Wall,  I  feel  purty  outrageous  mean  goin'  along  the  road 

this  way.     See  Poihoned  Darkys,  The. — McBride. 
Wall.  I  kalkilate  I'm  purty  well  fixed.     .See  Married  by 

the  New  Justice  of  the  Peace.- — Anon. 
Wall,  I  'spose  I'll  hev  tew  stop  here  and  stay  o\'er 

night.     See  Frightened  Lodger,  A. — McBride. 
Wall,  I'm    home    again.     I've    had    consid'able    of    a 

tramp.  _   See  Village  Meddler,  The. — Anon. 
Wall,  I'm  tired,  and  I'm  gettin'  tireder  every  day  of 

my  life.     .See  "Pardnership." — -Kirk. 
Wall,  it  never  entered  my  head  that  any  of  Jonathan 

Slyker's  children.     See  Jonathan's  Daughters. — 

McBride. 
Wall,  I've  got  here  at  last,  and  I'm  awful  tired.     See 

Trouble  in  a  Mormon  Family. — McBride. 


Wall,  I've  got  here  at  last.     I've  come  over  a  courtin'. 

See  Assisting  Hezekiah. — McBride. 
Wall,  naow  that  we've  got  here.     See  One  of  the  Dew- 

senburys. — Anon. 
Wall  \wr.  Well],  no!  I  can't  tell  whar  he   lives.     See 

Jim  Bludso,  of  the  Prairie  Belle. — Hay. 
Wall,  now.  Miss  Pettengill,  I  s'pose  you've  come  over 

to   hear   about   my   seein'   the   Prince!     See  Mrs. 

Ward's  Visit  to  the  Prince. — Janvirn. 
Wall,  wife,     it's     fifty    years     ago.     See    Prosperous 

Couple,  A. — Anon. 
Walls  of  granite,  upward  towering.     See  Midnight  Ex- 
press, The. — Richardson. 
Walt  Whitman  is  no  more.     See  Eulogy  of  Walt  Whit- 
man.— Ingersoll. 
Waltz  in,  waltz  in,  ye  little  kids,  and  gather  round  my 

knee.      See    Spelling     Bee    at    Angel's,    The. — 

Harte. 
Wan  brightener  of  the  fading  year.     See  To  the  Chrys- 
anthemum.— -Bennett. 
Wan  day  Roily  was  walking  along  the  sthreets  of  Lon- 
don.    See  Sir  Walter  Raleigh  and  Queen  Elizabeth. 

—Allen. 
Wandering  away  on  tired  feet.     See  Wedding  Bells. — 

Griffiths. 
Wandering  through  the  city.     See  Rest. — Jennings. 
Wandering  up  and  down  one  day.     See  Cobbler,  The. 

— Anon. 
Wansfell!   this    household    has   a   favoured   lot.     See 

Past  Years  of  Home. — Wordsworth. 
Want  any    papers.    Mister?     See    Newsboys,    The. — 

Corbett. 
Want  to  see  me,  hey  old  chap?     See  "Jim." — Lincoln. 
"Wanted — a  boy."    How  often  we.    See  Boys  Wanted. 

— (Chicago  Post.)  / 

Wanted,  a   perfect   lady.     See   Wanted,    a   Minister's 

Wife. — Anon. 
Wanted,  a  stalwart  man!     See  Wanted. — Ratcliffe. 
Wanted,  no    drunkards,   or   dead-beats   or   bummers. 

See  ' '  Not  Wanted." — Anon. 
Wanting  is — what?     See  same. — Browning. 
Wanton  droll,  whose  harmless  play.     See  Kitten,  The. 

— Baillie. 
War  came!     It  was  not  the  result  of  men's  ambition. 

North    or    South.     See    Immortal    Memories. — 

Sheridan. 
"War  is  coming!     Blood  must  flow!"     See  Peace  at- 

any-price  Man,  A. — (Baltimore  Life.) 
War  is  dread  when  battle  shock  and  fierce  affray.     See 

sam,e. — Birch. 
War  is  emphatically,  and  more  especially  a  war  be- 
tween brethren.     See  Evils  of  War,  The. — Dick- 
inson. 
War!  war!  no  peace!  peace  is  to  me  a  war.     See  King 

.lohn  ("War!   War!"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
War  was  in  the  old  dominions,  and  proud  Austria's 

pride    and    boast.     See    Death    Makes    All    Men 

Brothers. — Upham. 
War  will  yet  cease  from  the  whole  earth.     See  Spirit  of 

the  Age  Adverse  to  War,  The. — Beckwith. 
Warble  me  now  for  joy  of  lilac-time.     See  Warble  for 

Lilac-time. — Whitman. 
Warlike  fife!     See  Fife,  The.— Eberhart. 
Warm  summer  dwells  upon  thy  cheeks.    See  To — — 

— Heine. 
Warm  Sunshine  came  down.     See  Crocus. — Anon. 
"Warm  weather,  Walter!     Welcome  warm  weather!" 

See  Winnifred,  Walter,  and  the  W's. — Anon. 
Warm,  wild,   rainy  wind,   blowing  fitfully.     See  May 

Morning. — Thaxter. 
Warmed  by  her  hand  and  shadowed  by  her  hair.     See 

Love-letter,  The. — Rossetti. 
Warrior  of  God,  man's  friend,  and  tyrant's  foe.     See 

Epitaph  on  General  Gordon. — Tennyson. 
Warriors  and  chiefs!    should  the  shaft  or  Uor.  or  the] 

sword.     See  Song  of  Saul  before  his  Last  Battle. 

— Byron. 
Warriors!  who   from   the   cannon's   mouth   blow   fire. 

See  Effusion  by  a  Cigar  Smoker.- — Smith. 
Wars,  God  forfend!  may  God  defend  from  war.     See 

Advice  to  Marry  Betimes. — Hall. 
Warsaw's  last   champion   from   her   height   surveyed. 

.See  Pleasures  of  Hope,  The  (Poland). — Campbell. 
Warwick!    Gloucester!   Clarence!   See  King  Henry  IV., 

Pt.  II. — Shakespeare. 
War-worn,  sun-scorohed,  stained  with  the  dust  of  toil. 

See  Welcome  Home. — Christie. 
Was  ever  a  soul  so  pestered?  dear  me!  what  shall  I  do? 

See  Little  Maid  with  Lovers  Twain. — Dowe. 
Was  ever  a  man  so  tormented?     See  Spanish  Valet  and 

the  Waiting  Maid,  The. — Anon. 
Was  ever  sorrow  like  to  our  sorrow.     See  Voice  of  the 

Poor,  The.— Wilde. 


907 


Was 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Was  evpr  woman  iu  this  humor  wooed?     <S«>e  Soliloquy 

of  Richard  III. — ^Shakespeare. 
Was  stal  name  Moll  had   lamb.     See   Medley — Mary's 

Little  Lamb. — Anon. 
Was  I  to  blame7     1%  tell  you  how.     .See  Was  1  ^o 

Blame? — Bonde. 
Was  it  a  dream  or  not?     .See  Dream,  A. — Dallas. 
Was  it  a  lie  that  they  told  me.     .See  Night  and  Morn- 
ing.— (Good  Words.) 
Was  it  for  this,  dear  heart,  we  met?     See  Only  for  This. 

— Jackson. 
Was  it  not  delightful  that  your  brother  and  mine.     .See 

Army  and  Navy,  The. — Anon. 
Was  it  the  chime  of  a  tiny  bell.     See  Passing  Away. — 

Pierpont. 
Was  James  A.  Garfield  great?     Ask  those  early  years. 

.See  tame. — Swing. 
Was  not  Aunt  May  kind,  to  bring  us  these  nice  gifts? 

See  Which  is  the  Best. — Anon. 
Was  not  Count  John  here  at  supper?     See  Much  Ado 

about  Nothing. — Shake.'spcare. 
Was  sorrow  ever  like  unto  our  sorrow?     .See  Voice  of 

the  Poor,  The.— Wilde. 
Was  the  pai  ting    verj-   bitter?      See    By   and    By. — 

Anon. 
"Was  the  play  good,  my  dear?'"  asked  Mr.  Greylock 

the  other  night.     See  Mrs.  Greylock  Tells   about 

the  Play. — Anon. 
Was  there  another  Spring  than  this?     .See  Was  there 

Another  Sprrng. — Hay. 
Was  there  ever  a  more  signal  distinction  vouchsafed 

to   mortal   man.      See  Centennial  Oration  (John 

Hancock). — Winthrop. 
Was  there  ever  such  a  stone?  a  stockfish?     .See  Wedding 

Day,  The. — Pickering. 
Was  this  his  face,  and  these  the  finding  eyes.     Sre  On 

a  Portrnit  of  Columbus. — Woodberry. 
Wash!     Whar's  yo'  daddy?     .See  Never  Mine  de  Why 

en  Wharfo'.— Anon. 
Wflsh  your  hands,  and  wash  your  face.     See  Cleanli- 
ness.— Anon. 
Washed  in  the  blood  of  the  brave  and  the  blooming. 

See  God  Save  the  Fl.ig. — Holmes. 
Washing  and  wiping  the  dishes.     See  Little  Helpers. — 

Anon. 
Washington,  as  President  of  the  United  States.     See 

Washington's  Proclamation. — Anon. 
Washington  nas  said      "There  can  be  no  greater  error." 

.See  Intervention  in  the  Wars  of  Europe. — Clemens. 
Washington,  Idaho  and  Arizona,  the  States  of  Oregon. 

See  Argonauts,  The. — Anon. 
Washington  Johnson     Leiand     Fine.     See    Darktown 

Nine.  The. — Mason. 
Washington'  Methinks  I  see  his  venerable  form  now 

before    me.      See    Addition  to   the  , Capitol,  The 

(Washington). — Webster. 
Washington  was  greatly  pleased  with  the  Sellers  Man- 
sion.     See  Gilded  Age,  The  (Washington  Hawkins 

Dines  with  Colonel  Sellers). — Clemens. 
Washington  was  not,  like  Bonaparte,  of  a  race  which 

surpasses    the    stature    of    numanity.     .See    Com- 
parison of  Washington  and  Napoleon. — Chateau- 
briand. 
Washington,  who  at  this  time,  was  a  subordinate  officer. 

.See  Defeat  of  General  Braddock,  The. — McCabe. 
Washington,  why  did  you  come  so  early  this  evening? 

See  Rosabella's  Lovers. — Anon. 
Wa.sn't  intended,    sah!     Don't    menshin    it.     See   Zip 

Johnson's  Return. — Anon. 
Wasn't  it  a  funny  dream! — perfectly  bewild'ring!     See 

Dream-march. — Riley. 
Wasn't  it  a  good  time.     See  When  We  First  Played 

"Show."— Riley. 
Wasn't  it  pleasant,  O  brother  mine?     See  Old  Aunt 

Mary's. -^Riley. 
"Wasn't  that  a  lovely  sermon?"     See  Coming  out  of 

Church. — Anon. 
Wa.ste  not  your  precious  hours  in  play.     See  Always 

Learning. — Anon. 
Wasted!     Precious    pearls    of    time.     See    Wasted. — 

Norton. 
Watch  and  pray!  fast  fades  the  day.     See  Watch  and 

Pray. — Anon. 
Watch!  boys,  watch!     The  signal  lights  are  flashing. 

See  Three  W's,— Work,  Watch,  Wait,  The.— Car- 

rington. 
Watch,  brethren,  watch!     See  Watch  Night. — Bonar. 
Watch  over  me  while  I'm  asleep.     See  To  the  Guardian 

Angel. — Tastu. 
Watchman,   tell  us  of  the  night.      See   Watchman's 

Report,  The.^ — Bowring. 
Water,  for  anguish  of  the  solstice — nay.     See  Venetian 

Pastoral,  .A.— Rossetti. 


Water  is    beautiful,    variantly    beautiful.     See    Cold 

Water. — Holloway. 
Water!  look  at  it,  ye  thirsty  ones!     See  Apostrophe  to 

Water  ("Water!   look,"  etc.). — Arrington. 
Water!     There  is  no  poison  in  that  cup.     See  Water 

and  Rum. — Gougn. 
Water-lilies  in  myriads  rocked  on  the  slightest  undula- 
tions.    See  Evangeline  (On  the  Atchafalaya). — 

Ivongfellow. 
Wathers     o'   Moyle   an'   the  white  gulls   flying.     See 

Lookin'  Back. — O'Neal. 
Wave  after    wave    of    greenness    rolling    down.     See 

Perished. — Ritter. 
Wave  after  wave  successively  rolls  on.     See  Newport 

Beach. — Tuckerman. 
Wave  by  wave  o'er  the  sandy  bar.     See  With  the  Tide. 

— Anon. 
Wave  high  our  flag.     See  Little  Patriot,  The. — Anon. 
Wave,  wave  your  glorious  battle  flags,  brave  soldiers 

of  the  North.     See  Gettysburg. — Stedman. 
'Way  back  from  the  echoing  ages.     See  What  Might 

Have  Been? — Anon. 
'Way  down  a  narrow  alley  lived  a  little  girl  named 

Dot.     See  Dot's  Christmas;  or,  the  Sober  Hat. — 

Anon. 
'Way  down   in   the   buttercup   meadow.     See   Katie's 

Questions. — Anon. 
Way  down  in  the  meadow,  and  close  by  the  brook. 

See  Golden  Rod. — Anon. 
Way  down  upon  the  Swanee  Ribber.     See  Old  Folks 

at  Home. — Foster. 
Way  over  the  seas,  in  a  far,  far  land.     See  Where  Cupid 

Dwells. — Munger. 
We  all  complain  of  the  shortness  of  time.     See  same. — 

Seneca. 
"We  all  do  fade  as  a  leaf."     See  Fading  Leaf,  The. — 

Dodge. 
We  all  feel  certainly  a  disposition  of  the  best.     See 

Present  and  Future  P'aiths,  The. — Brooks. 
"We  all  like  sheep,"  the  tenors  shrill.     See  "We  All 

Like  Sheep." — Anon. 
We  all  look  on  with  anxious  eyes.     See  When  F.ather 

Carves  the  Duck. — Wright. 
We  all  look  with  pride  and  joy  at  the  United  States. 

See  Democracy. — Dana. 
We  all  ride  something.     It  is  a  folly  to  expect  us  always 

to  be  walking.     .See  Hobbies. — Talmage. 
We  Americans     have     many     grave     problems.     See 

Americanism. — Roosevelt. 
We  Americans   make   a   God    of   our   common-school 

system.     See  same. — (Scribner's  Monthli/.) 
We  are  a  band  of  Temperance  boys.     See  ("old  Water 

Boys. — Anon. 
We  are  a  class  of  little  tots.     See  Our  Work. — Rook. 
We  are  a  goodly  colony — we  like  our    quarters  here. 

.See  Menagerie  Song,  The. — (Harper's  Young  Peo- 
ple.) 
We  are  a  jolly  set  of  boys.     See  Snow  Brigade,  The. — 

Rook. 
We  are  all  at  school  in  this  world  of  ours.     .See  At 

School. — Chandler. 
We  are  all  here.     See  Family  Meeting,  The. — Sprague. 
We  are  all  waiting,  wait,  wait,    waiting.     See  Santa 

Claus  Frolic. — Baker. 
We  are  always  striving  for  the  things  just  out  of  reach. 

See  Unattainable,  The. — Anon. 
We  are  apt  to  treat  the  idea  of  our  own  corruptibility. 

See  Political  Corruption. — McDuffie. 
We  are  as  mendicants  who  wait.     See  Mendicants,  The. 

• — Carman. 
We  are  asked,  "What  have  we  gained  by  the  war?" 

See  National  Glory. — Clay. 
We  are  assembled  here  to-day  in  pursuance  of  an  an- 
nual   custom.     See    Decoration    Day    Oration. — 

Che\«rton. 
We  are  at  a  point  in  reformatory  movements  in  this 

country.     See  High  License. — Talmage. 
We  ara  blushing  Roses.     See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the 

Flowers  (Roses). — Hunt. 
We  are  born;  we  laugh;  we  weep.     See  Life. — Procter. 
We  are  builders,  and  each  one.     See  same. — Anon. 
We   are    building    every    day.      .See    Building. — Die- 

kenga. 
We  are  building  little  homes  on  the  sands.     See  Chil- 
dren on  the  Shore. — Anon. 
We  are  busy  little  bees.     See  Concert   Recitation. — 

Manning. 
We  are  hut  little  children  yet.     See  Recitation  in  Con- 
cert.— Anon. 
We  are  but   minutes,  little  things.     See  Take  Care  of 

the  Minutes. — Anon. 
We  are  but  two — the  others  sleep.     .See  Brothers,  The. 

— Sprague. 


908 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


We  call 


We  are  c-alled  upon  to  act.  See  Speech  at  Union 
Square,  N.  Y.,  April  20,  1861.— Dickenson. 

We  are  charged  with  expressing  .joy  at  the  triumphs 
of  America.  See  Results  of  the  American  AVar. — 
Fox. 

We  are  coining,  children,  coming,  with  the  springtime 
and  the  rose.  See  What  the  Robin  Can  Tell. — 
Anon. 

We  are  coming,  Cuba — coming;  our  starry  banner 
shines.     See  Gathering,  The. — Swett. 

We  are  coming.  Father  Abraham,  three  hundred  thou- 
sand more.  See  Three  Himdred  Thousand  More. 
— Anon. 

We  are  coming  from  the  wild  woods.  See  May  Celebra- 
tion.— Kavanaugh. 

We  are  either  to  execute  this  treaty,  or  break  our  faith. 
See  Sanctity  of  Treaties. — Amos. 

We  are  ever  taking  leave  of  something  that  will  not 
come  back  again.     See  same. — Roberts-on. 

Wo  are  fighting  a  great  moral  battle.  See  Military 
Insubordination. — Clay. 

We  are  firmly  persuaded  that  the  separation  of  the 
people  into  two  distinct  armies.  See  Individuality 
of  Conscience  in  the  Voter. — Willard. 

We  are  followers  of  Jesus.  See  Jesus  Loves  Me. — Cor- 
nell. 

We  are  fortunate  that  we  behold  this  day.  .See  Cen- 
tennial Celebration  of  Concord  Fight  (Heroes  of 
'76,  The).— Curtis. 

We  are  four  little  girls  and  two  little  boys.  See  Little 
Helpers. 

Wb  are  four  little  girls.  We  play  we  are  flowers.  See 
Bunch  of  Flowers,  A. — Rook. 

We  are  four  little  rot.e-buds.  See  Four  I-ittle  Rose- 
buds.— Anon. 

We  are  free!  we  are  free!  the  snowflakes  cried.  See 
Snow-storm,  The. — Anon. 

We  are  gathered  here  to-day  in  honor  of  the  founder. 
See  Faith  of  Washington,  The; — Coudert. 

We  are  ghost-ridden.  See  Dead  Moon,  The. — Dan- 
dridge. 

We  are  glad,  dear  friends,  to  greet  you  with  a  merry 
tuneful  strain.     See  Welcome. — Anon. 

We  are  going  homeward,  homeward,  soon  must  fall 
the  parting  tear.     See  Parting  Words. — Kent. 

We  are  here  to-day  to  fling  a  new  banner  to  the  breeze. 
See  Old  Glory. — Anon. 

We  are  in  love's  land  to-day.  See  Love  at  Sea. — 
Swinburne. 

We  are  in  Russia.  The  Neva  is  frozen.  See  Sun  of 
Liberty,  The. — Hugo. 

We  are  joyous  flowers,  found  in  field  and  dell.  See 
Bouquet  of  Flowers,  A. — Anon. 

We  are  Knights  of  Labor  because  we  believe  that  law 
and  order  should  prevail.  See  Knights  of  Labor. 
— Powderly. 

We  are  leaflets,  growing,  growing.  See  Little  Things. 
— Anon. 

We  are  lilies  fair.  See  Songs  and  Chorus  of  the 
Flowers  (Lilies). — Hunt. 

We  are  little  airy  creatures.  See  On  the  Vowels. — 
Swift. 

We  are  little  brethren  twain.  See  On  a  Pair  of  Dice. — 
Swift. 

We  are  living  in  a  time  in  the  history  of  the  United 
States.     See  How  to  Succeed. — Richmond. 

We  are  marching  for  the  arbor.  See  Children's  Arbor 
Day  March. — Holbrook. 

We  are  merry  maidens  sitting  in  a  ring.  See  Wash 
Day. — Anon. 

We  are  met,  not  to  lay  our  garlands  on  the  graves  of  the 
Pilgrims.    See  Pilgrims'  Idea  of  Home,  The. — Hall. 

We  are  met  to  testify  our  regard  for  him.  See  Char- 
acter of  Washington,  The. — Webster. 

We  are  not  a  warlike  nation ;  here  of  old  our  fathers 
settled.     See   Spaniard   Answered,   The. — Rogers. 

We  are  not  yet  far  enough  from  General  Grant's  per- 
sonality.    See  General  Grant. — Depew. 

We  are  now  in  the  gloaming,  but  the  morning  is  break- 
ing.    See  Reinforcement. — Anon. 

We  are  now  ready  to  take  up  the  case  of  Slack  versus 
Evans.     See  Lawsuit,  A. — Denison. 

We  are  often  told  that  we  must  keep  the  temperance 
question  out  of  politics.  See  God's  Clock  Strikes. 
— Pentecost. 

We  are  only  common  people.  See  Henry  George. — 
Carman. 

We  are  only  little  boys,  but  couldn't  we  do  something 
in  the  temperance  cause?  See  Commencing  to 
Work. — McBride.  • 

We  are  our  fathers'  sons;  let  those  who  lead  us  know! 
See  Ode  in  Time  of  Hesitation,  An  ("No  Hint  of 
Stain ' ') . — Moody. 


We  are  poor  and  lowly  born.  See  Child's  Hymn,  The. 
— Howitt. 

We  are  ready  for  work.  See  Song  of  the  Steamer  En- 
gine.— Le  Row. 

We  are  reproached  with  having  refused  to  decree  that 
the  Catholic  religion.  See  Union  of  Church  and 
State,  The. — Mirabeau. 

We  are  sitting  to-night  by  the  fire.  See  Tale  of  the 
Atlantic  Coast,  A. — Zeagles. 

We  are  slumberous  poppies.  See  Songs  and  Chorus  of 
the  Flowers  (Poppies). — Hunt. 

We  are  sowing,  daily  sowing.     See  Seeds. — Anon. 

We  are  standing  in  the  daybreak  of  the  second  cen- 
tury of  this  Republic.  See  Against  Centralization 
(University  the  Training  Camp  of  the  Future, 
The).— Grady. 

We  are  standing  on  the  threshold,  we  are  in  the  opened 
door.     See  Threshold  of  the  New  Year. — Anon. 

We  ar  estanding  upon  Tara  of  the  Kings.  See  Repeal 
of  the  Union. — O'Connell. 

We  are  summoned  to  new  energy  and  zeal  by  the  high 
nature  of  the  experiment.  See  American  Experi- 
ment of  Self-government,  The. — Everett. 

We  are  the  Ancient  People.  See  Song  of  the  Ancient 
People,  The. — Proctor. 

We  are  the  hours,  the  fair  young  hours.  See  Record 
of  the  Hours,  The. — Denton. 

We  are  the  little  flowers.  See  Chorus  of  the  Flowers.- — 
Wheelock. 

We  are  the  music  makers.  See  Ode.^ — O'Shaugh- 
nessy. 

We  are  the  sweet  flowers.  See  Songs  and  Chorus  of 
the  Flowers  (Chorus  of  Flowers). — Hunt. 

We  are  the  voices  of  the  wandering  wind.  See  Light  of 
Asia,  The  (Song  of  the  Devas  to  Prince  Siddartha, 
The).— Arnold. 

We  are  three  true-hearted,  loving  sisters.  See  Tri- 
colors, The. — Fields. 

We  are  told  of  the  danger  of  war.  See  On  the  Pros- 
pect of  War  with  Great  Britain,  1811. ^Calhoun. 

We  are  told  that  our  constitution is  a  mere  ex- 
periment. See  American  Constitution  no  Experi- 
ment.— Legare. 

We  are  told  that  the  country  is  deluded  and  deceived 
by  cabalistic  words.  See  Sympathy  with  South 
American  Republicanism. — Webster. 

We  are  told  that  the  inevitable  result  of  democracy. 
See  Democracy. — Ivowell. 

We  are  told  to  look  to  the  example  of  France.  See 
Popular  and  Kingly  Examples. — Sheridan. 

We  are  two  dusky  owls,  and  we  live  in  a  tree.  See  Two 
Wise  Owls. — Anon. 

We  are  two  travellers,  Roger  and  I.  See  Vagabonds, 
The. — Trowbridge. 

We  are  violets  blue.  See  Songs  and  Cho  us  of  the 
Flowers  (Violets). — Hunt. 

We  are  what  suns  and  winds  and  waters  make  us.  See 
Invocation,  An. — Landor. 

We  are  what  the  past  has  made  us.  See  same. — Robert- 
son. 

We  are  wiser  than  we  were;  our  intellects  ought  to  be 
all  aflame.  See  Woman  in  Temperance. — Wil- 
lard. 

We  asked  where  the  magic  came  from.  See  Children's 
Music,  The. — Owen. 

We  base  our  plea  for  prohibition  on  the  principles  set 
forth.     See  Home  Protection: — Willard. 

We  behold  at  present  only  the  rising  of  our  sun  of 
empire.  See  Home  and  School  the  Bulwark  of 
Our  Country. — Seward. 

We  believe  that  poetry,  far  from  injuring  society.  See 
Defense  of  Poetry. — Canning. 

We  birdies  once  loved  little  Kitty.  See  Kitty's  Birds. 
— Chase. 

We  bore  to  see  the  summer  go.  See  Easter  Song,  An. 
— Coolidge. 

We  boys  'u'd  run  and  romp  an'  play.  See  "  'Ceptin 
Jim." — Clement. 

We  break  the  glass,  whose  sacred  wine.  See  Song. — 
Pinkney. 

We  breath  with  our  lungs,  o>ir  lights,  our  kidneys,  and 
our  livers.  See  Boy's  Composition  on  Breathing, 
A. — Anon. 

We  bring  the  flowers  of  the  May-time.  See  Spring- 
time Flowers. — Dutcher. 

We  bring  the  holly,  the  ivy,  the  pine.  See  Carol: 
"We  bring,"  etc. — -Anon, 

We  built  a  ship  upon  the  stairs.  See  Good  Play,  A. — 
Stevenson. 

We  but  teach  bloody  in.structions.  See  Macbeth. — 
Shakespoare. 

We  call  it  hallowed  ground.  See  Dedication  of  a 
School  House. — Simes. 


909 


We  came 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


We  came  to  fair  Lucerne  at  even.  See  Organ-tempest 
of  Lucerne,  The. — Butterworth. 

We  camped  at  Delhi, — by  the  Kashmir  gate.  <See 
Dancing  Girl,  Tha. — Arnold. 

We  can  best  judge  of  the  present  by  comparing  it  with 
the  past.      See  Age  We  Live  in.  The. — Kavanaugh. 

We  can  endure  that  he  should  waste  our  lands.  See 
Indignation  of  a  High-minded  Spaniard. — Words- 
worth. 

We  can  no  longer  stay  on  shore.  See  Greenland 
Whale  Fishery. — -Anon. 

We  can  only  live  once ;  and  death's  terrors.  See  Living. 
-(London  Fun.) 

We  can  undoubtedly  provide  some  additional  legal 
.safeguards.  See  Free  Speech  and  Constitutional 
Liberty. — Hoar. 

We  cannot  despair  of  success.     See  same. — Dale. 

We  cannot  do  with  less  than  the  whole  union.  See 
Value  of  the  Union,  The,  1847.— Prentiss. 

We  cannot  honor  our  country  with  too  deep  a  rever- 
ence. See  Duty  of  Literary  Men  to  their  Country. 
— Grimke. 

We  cannot  kindle  when  we  will.  See  Morality. — 
Arnold. 

We  cannot  say  to  any  young  man:  "Do  not  play 
billiards."      See  same. — TuUoch. 

We  catch  the  fleeting  perfume  of  roses.  See  L' Amour, 
I'Amour. — Carryl. 

We  celebrate  to-day  no  idle  tradition.  See  Our  Na- 
tional Anniversary. — Rice. 

We  celebrate  to-day  the  Centenary  of  our  Nationality. 
See  Washington's  Inauguration. — Depew. 

We,  children  of  the  free,  come  here  to  plant  this  tree. 
See  Invocation.^Harlow. 

We  choose  our  blossoms,  sitting  on  the  grass.  See 
Umpires. — Dodge. 

We  climbed  to  the  top  of  Goat  Point  Hill.  See  Forty 
Years  after. — Porter. 

We  come,  fair  flowers,  two  and  two.  See  Bouquet,  A. 
— Kavanaugh. 

We  come  in  arms,  we  stand  ten  score.  See  School 
Fencibles. — Cory. 

We  come,  not  to  mourn  our  dead  soldiers,  but  to  praise 
them.     See  Our  Dead  Soldiers. — Walker. 

We  come  now  before  you.  See  Buy  a  Broom. — Kav- 
anaugh. 

We  come  to-day  rejoicing.  See  Song  of  the  Leaves, 
The.— Kimball. 

We  come!  we  come!  and  ye  feel  our  might.  See  Winds. 
The.— Gould. 

We  could  not  pause,  while  yet  the  noontide  air.  See 
Obssquies  of  Stuart. — Thompson. 

We  count  the  broken  lyres  that  rest.  See  Voiceless, 
The.— Holmes. 

We  crossed  Champlain  to  Keeseville  with  our  friends. 
See  Adirondacs,  The. — Emerson. 

We  crown'd  the  hard-won  heights  at  length.  See 
After  the  Battle. — Trench. 

We  dance  on  hills  above  the  wind.  See  Fairies'  Song, 
The. — Anon. 

We  deck  to-day  each  soldier's  grave.  See  Decoration 
Day. — Bruce. 

We  didn't  care  in  the  long-ago.  See  Ole  Pine  Box,  The. 
— Stanton. 

We  didn't  have  much  of  a  Christmas.  See  Our  Christ- 
mas.— -Wolcott. 

We  die,  but  we  leave  an  influence  behind  us  that  sur- 
vives.    See  Voices  of  the  Dead. — Camming. 

We  die  not  at  all,  for  our  deeds  remain.  See  Love  and 
Labor. — Anon. 

We  dined.  A  fish  from  the  river  beneath.  See  Mem- 
orable Dessert,  A. — Anon. 

We  dismiss  them  not  to  the  chambers  of  forgetfulness 
and  death.  See  Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jefferson 
(Immortals,  The). — Everett. 

We  do  lie  beneath  the  grass.  See  Death's  Jest  Book 
(Second   Dirge). — Beddoes. 

We  do  not  get  our  best  vision  of  heaven.  See  same. — 
Storrs. 

We  do  not  make  our  thoughts ;  they  grow  in  us.  See 
Thoughts. — Bailey. 

We  do  not  stand  to  receive  lectures  about  peace.  See 
Peace  Men,  The. — King. 

We  don't  take  vagrants  in,  sir.     See  Joe. — Robbins. 

We  establish  the  Republic.  The  Republic!  It  is  the 
Government.  See  Establishment  of  the  Republic, 
The. — Lamartine. 

We  fear  not  the  thunder,  we  fear  not  the  rain.  See 
Voice  of  the  Pines.  The. — Mair. 

We  figure  to  ourselves.  See  Philip  van  Artevelde. — 
Taylor. 

We  flirted  together  a  week  at  the  shore.  See  Appro- 
priate Keepsake,  An. — Stone. 


We  follow  where  the  Swamp  Fox  guides.     See  Swamp 

Fox,  The.— Simms. 
We  found  it  under  the  apple  tree.     See  Empty  Nest, 

The.— Miller. 
We  gather  to  the  sacred  board.     See  Communion  of 

Saints,  The.— Bulfinch. 
We  gaze  with  patriotic  pride  upon  the  grand  rivers. 

See  States,  The. — Lee. 
We  gazed  on  Cnrryvrekin's  whirl.     See  lona. — Gore. 
We  get  no  good  by  being  ungenerous,  even  to  a  book. 

See  Aurora  Leigh  (Reading). — Browning. 
We  give  thy  natal  day  to  hope.     See  Our  Country. — 

Whittier. 
We  go  on  our  walk  together.     See  Three  Companions. 

— Craik. 
We  grasp  a  hand,  we  think  it  true  and  strong.     Sci* 

False  and  True. — Anon. 
We  greet  thee,  merry  spring-time.     See  same. — Anon. 
We  greet  you,  brethren  of  the  mystic  tie.     See  Knightly 

Welcopae,  A. — Cox. 
We  grow  wrong.     We  allow  ourselves  to  crystallize  in 

habits.     See  same. — -Cook. 
We  had  a  tiff:     "John  Jones,"  .^aid  I.     See  John  Jones 

and  I. — Ames. 
We  had  been  long  in  mountain  snow.     See  Greeting  of 

the  Roses,  The. — Garland. 
We  had  been  married  three  years,  and  no  couple  were 

ever  happier.     See  Rudder  Grange    (That    Other 

Baby  at  Rudder  Grange) — Stockton. 
We  had  been  to  town-meeting,  had  once  voyaged  a 

hundred  miles  on  a  steamboat.     See  Wrong  Train. 

The. — Lewis. 
We  had  crossed  the  river  to  hunt  for  Lee.     See  Drum- 
head Court-marshal,  A. — -Anon. 
We  had  not  been  long  in  the  camp  when  a  party  set  out. 

See  Bee-hunt  in  the  Far  West,  A. — Irving. 
We  had  sailed  out  a  Letter  of  Marque.     See  Letter  of 

Marque,  The. — Orne. 
We  had  stopped  at  a  farm-house    to    get  a  drink  o) 

water  and  rest   the  horses      See  Champion    Liar, 

The  — Lewis. 
We  had  such  fun  on  Valentine's  Day.     See  "Prettiest 

Girl,  The."— Brine. 
We  had  taken  the  head  of  King  Capet.     See  Execution 

of  Marie  Antoinette. — Thackeray. 
We  had  to  wait  for  half  an  hour  between  Charleston 

and  Savannah.     See  Rosy  North,  The. — .\non. 
We  had  very  hot  work  once  in  the  van  of  the  army. 

See  Travels  of   Baron  Munchausen   (Adventure  of 

Baron  Munchausen  in  a  Fight  with  the  Turks).— 

Raspe. 
We  hail  our  coming  holiday.     See  Holiday  Speech. — 

Kavafiaugh. 
We  hail  with  joy  the  smiling  May.     See  Arbor  Day 

Greeting. — Harlow. 
We  hate   the   Saxon   and   the   Dane.     See   Celts   and 

Saxons. — Davis. 
We  have  a  place  for  everything.     See  Order. — Anon. 
We  have  a  secret,  just  we  three.     See  Secret,  The. — 

Anon. 
We  have    assembled,    not    to    respond    to    shouts    of 

triumph.   See  Relief  for  Starving  Ireland  (Sending 

Relief  to  Ireland). — Prentiss. 
We  have    bathed,    where    none    have    seen    us.     See 

Death's  Jest  Book   (Amala's  Bridal  Song). — Bed- 
does. 
We  have  been  accustomed  to  regard  a  free-school  sys- 
tem.    See  Free    Schools    and    Free    Governments 

(American   Education). — Winthrop. 
We  have  been  fighting  at  the  edge  of  the  woods.     See 

Supporting  the  Guns. — (Detroit  Free  Press  ) 
We  have  been  frequently  told  that  the  farmer  should 

attend   to  his  plough.     See  Popular  Interest  in 

Elections. — McDuffie. 
We  have  been  friends  together.     See  same. — -Norton. 
We  have  been  told,  gentlemen,  that  the  magistrate  is 

not  bound  to  execute  a  law.     See  Disobedience  of 

Magistrates,  The. — -Mirabeau. 
We  have  been  told  that  it  is  a  war  into  which  we  have 

been  hurried.     See  Fruits  of  the  War  with  France. 

— Canning. 
We  have  been  told  this  night,  in  express  words,  that 

the  man  who  dares  to  do  his  duty.     See  Reply  to 

Threats  of  Violence.— Curran. 
We  have   been   under   the   necessity   of   telling.     See 

Lowell,  Extract  Concerning. — (North  British  Re- 
view.) 
We  have  been  without  a  paptor.     See  Pastor  Wanted, 

A. — Anon. 
We  have  before  maintained  that  the  tramps.     See  In- 
itiated Tramp,  The. — Anon. 
We  have  but  one  more  word  to  say.     See  Good-b.\'e. — 

Anon. 


910 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


We  meet 


We  have  come  to  Plymouth  Rock  to  record  here  our 
homage.  See  First  Settlement  of  New  England 
(Plymouth  Rock). — Webster. 

We  have  come  with  .joyful  greeting.  See  Song  of  Ar- 
bor Day. — Pettinos. 

We  have  companions,  comrade  mine.  See  (Com- 
panions.— Stoddard. 

We  have  congregated  here  to-night  to  make  some 
arrangements  for  our  school  exhibition.  See  Pine 
Valley  Boys,  The. — McBride. 

We  have  determined  to  mass  the  voters  around  the 
principle  of  prohibition.  See  New  Party  Needed, 
A. —  Finch. 

We  have  evidence  before  us.  See  Home  Rule  for  Ire- 
land.— Gladstone. 

We  have  faitl;  in  old  provr-rbs  full  surel.v.  See  Where 
there's  a  Will  there's  a  Way. — Cook. 

We  have  heard  [or  read]  of  a  Pat  so  financially  fiat. 
See  Pat  and  the  Pig. — Anon. 

We  have  heard  of  the  city  so  shining  and  fair.  See 
Nearing  Hom^. — Anon. 

We  have  indulged  in  gratifying  recollections  of  the  past. 
Spb  (Completion  of  the  Bunker  Hill  Monumeni, 
The  (Duties  of  American  Citizens) — Webster. 

We  have  loitered  and  laugh'd  in  the  flowery  croft.  See 
Garden  Lyric,  A. — I>ocker-T.,ampson. 

We  have  met  for  the  freest  di.^cussiorl  of  these  resolu- 
tions. See  Murder  of  I-ovejov,  at  Alton,  Illinois, 
1837,   The.— Phillips. 

We  have  met  here  to-night  for  the  purpose  of  trying  to 
debate.     See  Little  Bo.vs'  Debate,  A.— Anon. 

We  have  never  known  so  quick  and  general  a  transi- 
tion. See  Repea!  of  tne  Stamp  Act,  The.— May- 
hew. 

We  have  nicknamed  it  "Old  Glory."  See  Banner 
Betsey  Made,  The. — Harbaugh 

We  have  paused  to  watch  the  quiver.  See  Cress-pur- 
poses.— Cooper. 

We  have  put  a  dumb-waiter  in  our  house.  See  Dumb- 
waiter, The. — Cozzens. 

We  have  reached  the  end  of  the  Roman  republic.  See 
Monarchy  of  Csesar,  The. — Momm.seri. 

We  have  read,  as  you  know  for  ages  and  ages.  See 
Commonnlace  Woman,  The. — Anon. 

We  have  read  [or  heard]  of  a  Pat  so  financiall.y  flat. 
See  Pat  and  the  Pig. — Anon. 

We  have  sailed  many  months,  we  have  sailed  many 
weeks.  See  Hunting  of  the  Snark,  The. — Car- 
roll. 

We  have  seen  that  when  the  earth  had  to  be 
prepared.  See  Modern  Painters  (Clouds,  The). 
— Ruskin. 

We  have  seen  thee,  O  Love,  thou  art  fair;  thou  art 
goodly,  O  Love.  See  Atalanta  in  Calydon  (Chorus) . 
— Swinburne. 

We  have  sent  him  seeds  of  the  melon's  core.  See  Ku 
Klux. — Cawein. 

We  have  shaken  hands  with  the  world's  business. 
See  That  we  should  Rise  with  the  Lark  (We  Cherish 
Dreams).— Lamb. 

We  have  short  time  to  stay  as  you.  See  Daflfodils. — 
Herrick. 

We  have  the  good  fortune,  under  the  blessing  of  a 
benign  Providence.  See  Sanctity  of  State  (Obliga- 
tions.— Webster. 

We  have  the  subjoined  discourse,  delivered  by  a 
Southern  divine.     See  Brother  Watkins. — CK)ugh. 

We  have  to  glance  over  sixty  .vears.  See  George  the 
Third. — Thackeray. 

We  hear  it  maintained  b.v  people  of  more  gravity  than 
understanding.  See  Genius  and  Common  Sense. — 
Hazlitt. 

We  heard  it  calling,  clear  and  low.  See  Cuckoo,  The. 
Locker-Lampson. 

We  heard  the  music  ringing  from  the  camps  of  long  ago. 
See  Our  Bo.vs  are  Marching  on. — .lewett. 

We  heard  thy  name,  O  Mina !  See  Song  of  Mina's  Sol- 
diers, The. — Hemaus. 

We,  Hermia,  have  with  our  needles  created  both  one 
flower.  See  Midsumm'ir  Night's  Dream  (Helena 
and   Hermia) . — Shakespeare . 

We  hev  riz  up  in  the  world  and  gone  forward  with  great 
swiftness  and  revolvability.  See  Riches  nave 
Wings. — McBride. 

We  hold  each  other  by  the  hand.  See  Evening  Rest, 
The. — (Univerait'i  of  Virqinin  Magazine.) 

We  hold  still  among  us  some  of  those  who  were  active 
agents.  See  Bunker  Hill  Monument,  The  (To  the 
Revolutionary    Veteran.s). — Webster. 

We  hold  that  all  drinking  of  intoxicants  is  perilous  and 
wrong.     See  Our  Warfare  and  Our  Duty. — Cuyler. 

We  honor  Liberty  in  name  and  in  form.  See  Liberty. 
— George. 


We  journeyed  with  a  companv  to  play.  See  Bazaar 
Girl,  The.— Arnold. 

We  ju.st  shake  hands  at  meeting.  See  Old  Friends. — 
Anon. 

We  knew  it  would  rain  for  all  the  morn.  See  Before 
the  Rain. — Aldrich. 

We  know  him  now,  all  narrow  jealousies.  See  Prince 
Consort,  The.— Tennyson. 

We  know  not  what  it  is,  dear,  thiss  sleep  so  deep  and 
still.     See  Two  Mysteries,  The'.— Dodge. 

We  know  our  fathers  and  our  mothers.  See  Opening 
Speech  for  a  Boy. — Anon. 

We  know  what  would  be  the  effect  of  abating  faith. 
See  same. — Anon. 

We  lack  yet  cannot  fix  upon  the  lack.  See  Later  Life. 
— Rossetti. 

We  laid  [or  lay]  in  a  cell,  Mi.ster  Judge,  all  night  long. 
See  Little  Outcast's  Plea,  The. — Anon. 

We  last  night  received  a  piece  of  ill  news.  S«!e  Specta- 
tor, The  (Death  of  Sir  Roger  deCoverley). — Addi- 
son. 

We  lay  [or  laid]  in  a  cell,  Mr.  Judge,  all  night  long.  See 
Little  Outcast's  Plea,  The. — Anon. 

We  lay  us  down  to  sleep.     See  same. — Moulton. 

We  lead  two  lives,  the  outward  seeming  fair.  See 
sam,e. — Anon. 

We  learn  to  climb,  not  by  the  hills.  See  Never  I..ook 
Back. — Kavanaugh. 

We  leave  the  well-beloved  place.  See  In  Memoriam 
(Old  Home,  The). — Tennyson. 

We  left  the  silent  forest,  and,  day  after  day.  See 
Tecumseh  (Buffalo  Herds,  The). — Mair. 

We  lift  our  tuneful  voices  now.  See  We  Lift  Our  Tune- 
ful Voices. — -Anon. 

We  lingered  on  the  farmhouse  steps.  See  Summer 
Idyl.  A. — Morse. 

We  listened,  as  all  boys  in  their  better  moods  will  listen. 
See  Tom  Brown's  School  Days  ("  We  listened," 
etc.). — Hughes. 

We  little  children  gather  the  brightest  flowers  of  May. 
See  Children's  Offering,  The. — Gerome. 

We  live  in  an  age  of  boasted  enlightenment.  See  Two 
Pictures. — Hoss. 

We  live  in  deeds,  not  years;  in  thoughts,  not  breaths. 
See  Festus  (Aim  of  I>ife,  The). — Bailey. 

We  live  in  the  world's  crisis.  Never  were  such  changes. 
See  same. — Anon. 

We  live  not  in  our  moments  or  our  years.  See  Enjoy- 
ment of  the  Present.- — Trench. 

We  look  before  and  after,  and  we  see,  through  the  half- 
drawn  folds.  See  Our  Expanding  Republic 
(Columbian  Oration). — Watterson. 

We  love  our  plea.sant  school.  See  School  Cantata. — 
Hopkins. 

We  love  the  flowers,  the  little  flowers.  See  For  Dec- 
oration Day. — Phillips. 

We  love  the  venerable  house.  See  House  of  God,  The. 
— Emerson. 

We  love  thee,  Ann  Maria  Smith.  See  Editor's  Wooing, 
The.— Newell. 

We  loved  the  birds  and  babbling  brooks.  See  My 
John. — Ballou. 

We  may  grow  rich  and  build.  See  House  not  Made 
with  Hands,  The. — Gordon. 

We  may  hope  that  the  growing  influence  of  enlight- 
ened sentiments.     See  sam.e. — Webster. 

We  may  live  without  poetry,  music  and  art.  See 
Lucile. — Lytton. 

We  may  not  know.    See  In  the  Time  of  Strife. — Stanton. 

We  may  not  stand  content ;  it  is  our  part.  See  same. — 
Piatt. 

We  may  scatter  our  couch  with  roses.  See  Way  of  the 
Cross,  The. — Howarth. 

We  may  see  the  cunning  and  curious  work  of  nature. 
See  Tongue,  The. — Lyly. 

We  may  shred  the  moss  veil  from  the  rose.  See 
Memories  of  the  Heart. — Anon. 

We  mean  to  do  it.  Some  day,  some  day.  See  Calling 
the  Angels  in.- — Anon. 

We  meandered  in  der  bier-garten.  See  Dot  Sunflower 
— Gooft. 

We  meant  to  be  very  kind.  See  Three  Little  Nest 
Birds. — Anon. 

We  measured  the  riotous  baby.  See  Measuring  the 
Baby. — Brown. 

We  meet  again,  the  children  of  the  Pilgrims,  to  remem- 
ber our  fathers.  See  Age  of  the  Pilgrims  the  He- 
roic Period  of  our  History,  The  (Pilgrims  of 
New  England,  The). — Choate. 

We  meet  and  we  part;  the  world  is  wide.  See  Life. — 
Anon. 

We  meet  in  thought,  or,  better  still,  in-  person.  See 
Thanksgiving. — La  Moille. 


911 


We  meet 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIONS 


We  meet     'neath    the    sounding    rafter.     See    Indian 

Revelry. — Dowling. 
We  meet  upon  the  level,  and  we  part  upon  the  square. 

See  same. — Morris. 
We  men    are    not  ^ragmentw — we    are    wholes.     See 

Narrowness  of  Specialties,  The. — Lytton. 
We     met     at     Narragansett     Pier.     See    Engaged. — 

Curtiss. 
We  met — 'twas  in  a  crowd — and  I  thought  he  would 

shun  me.     See  We  Met.^Bayly. 
We  mind  not  how  the  sun  in  the  mid-sky.    iSee  Pericles 

and  .\spasia  (Cleone  to  Aspasia). — Landor. 
We  mourn,    as    philanthropists    and    Chri.stians.     See 

Prohibition    the    Only    Safeguard    for    Youth. — 

Taylor. 
We  m\jst  be  free  or  die,  who  speak  the  tongue.     See 

Sonnet:  "It  is  not  to  be  thought  of,"  etc.  (Faith 

and  Freedom).— Wordsworth. 
We  must  be  nobler  for  our  dead,  be  sure.  See  Watchers, 

The.— Bates. 
We  must  enter  the  town  of  St.  Ogg's — that  venerable 

town.     See  Mill  on  the  Floss,  The  (Ogg,  the  Son  of 

Beorl).— Eliot. 
We  must  fight  this  temperance  battle  out.     See  same. — 

Gough. 
"We  must  go,"  sighed  little  Ruby.     See  Little  Leaves, 

The. — Cooper. 
We  must  have  an  end  of  all  prosecution  of  ideas.     See 

Freedom  of  Thought. — Castelar. 
We  must  love,  and  unlove,  and,  it  may  be.     See  Wan- 
derer, The  ("We  must  love,"  etc.). — Lytton. 
We  must  not  hope  to  be  mowers.     See  Perseverance. — 

Anon. 
We  must  not  part,  as  others  do.     See  Parting. — Anon. 
We  must  not  stint  our  necessary  actions  in  the  fear. — 

See  King  Henry  VIII.  (Oracle). — Shakespeare. 
We  must  note  carefidly  what  distinction  there  is.     See 

Stones  of  Venice,  The  (Love  of  Change). — Ruskin. 
We  must  pass  like  smoke  or  live  within  the  spirit's 

fire.     See  Immortality. — Russell. 
We  must  trust  the  conductor,  most  surely.     See  Don't 

Stop  at  the  Station  Despair. — Miller. 
We  mustered  at  midnight,  in  darkness  we  formed.     See 

Bethel . — Duganne . 
"We  mustn't  go  near  the  pond,  sissy."     See  Stagnant, 

The.— (S/.  Nicholas.) 
We  need  a  loftier  ideal  to  nerve  us  to  [or  for]  heroic 

lives.     See  Ambition. — Greeley. 
We  need  never  hesitate  to  bring  old  faiths  into  new 

light.     See  Old  Faiths  in  New  Light. — Smyth. 
We  need  that  Charmer,  for  our  hearts  are  sore.     See 

Charmer,  The.— Stowe. 
We  need  the  Puritan  spirit  in  certain  elements  of  our 

society.     See  Independent  Spirit  of  the  Puritans, 

The.— Lodge. 
We  need  the  spirit  of  '75  to  guide  us  safely.     See  Battle 

of  Bunker  Hill   (Dizzy    Activities  of    the    Times, 

The).— Everett. 
We  never  fight,  my  wife  and  I.     See  My  Wife  and  I. — 

Anon. 
We  never  speak  our  deepest  feelings.     See  Books. — 

Hale. 
We  now  are  but  boys.     See  Looking  Ahead. — Rook. 
We  now   mid   hope   vor   better   cheer.     See   Jeiine. — 

Barnes. 
We  often  hear  of  men  being  "moved  by  the  spirit." 

See  Moved  by  a  Crank. — Allen. 
We  often  see,  as  on  we  jog.      See  Less  than  Cost. — 

Kidder. 
We  ought  persistently  to  present  and  emphasize  the 

idea.     .S'fe    Resistance    of    Mal-administration. — 

Cleveland. 
We  ought  to  find  the  fundamental  principles  of  repre- 

.sentation  exemplified.     See  House  of  Representa- 
tives.—-Lodge. 
We  parted  at  last,  the  Death  Angel  had  come.     See 

Parting,  The.— Head. 
We  parted  by    the    gate    in    June.     See  Difficulty  of 

Rhyming,  The. — Anon. 
We  parted  in  sadness,  but  spoke  not  of  parting.     See 

We  Parted  in  Sadness.^Hoffman. 
We  parted  in  silence,  we  parted  by  night.     See  We 

Parted  in  Silence. — Crawford. 
We  passed    the    bridge    with    tramping    steeds.     See 

Bridge  of  Glen  Aray,  The. — Mackay. 
We  passed    upon    the    oaken    stair.     See    Why    They 

Didn't  Bow. — Anon. 
We  played  at  chess  one  wintry  night.     See  Game  of 

Che.ss,  A. — St.  .lohn. 
We  pledged  our  hearts,  my  love  and  I.     See  Exchange, 

The. — ( 'oleridge. 
We. plough  and  sow,  we're  so  very,  very  low.     See  Song 

of  the  "Lower  Cla.sse8." — Jones. 


We  plough  the  fields  and  scatter  the  good  seed  on  the 

land.     See  We  Plough  the  Fields. — Claudius. 
We  put  him  to  bed  in  his  little  night  gown.     See  After 

the  Fourth  of  July. — Dawson. 
We  read   of   kings   and   gods   that   kindly   took.     See 

Cruel  Mistress,  The. — Carew. 
We  represent  the  cardinal  points.     See  We  are  Four. — 

Rook. 
We  said  good-by!     My  lips  to  hers  were  pressed.     See 

Blasted  Hopes. — Anon. 
We  sail   toward   evening's   lonely   star.     See  Song. — 

Thaxter. 
We  sailed  and  sailed  upon  the  desert  sea.     See  Hope.. — 

Howells. 
We  sailed  to  and  fro  in  Erie's  broad  lake.     See  Perry's 

Victory. — Anon. 
We  sat  by  the  fisher's  cottage.     See  Fisher's  Cottage, 

The.— Heine. 
We  sat  by  the  open  window.     See  Are  These  God's 

Children  ?— Chatfield . 
We  sat  in  the  country  parsonage,  on  a  cold  winter  day. 

See  (Jarlo  and  the  Freezer. — Talmage. 
We  sat  in  the  lamplight's  gentle  glow.     See  Memory, 

A. — Carry  1. 
We  sat  in  the  light  of  the  dying  day.     See  Four  Lives. 

— Freeman. 
We  sat  mute  on  our  chargers,  a  handful  of  men.     See 

Death-ride,  The. — Marston. 
We  sat  on  the  old  gray  bridge.     See  Vacation  Frag- 
ment, A. — Hall. 
We  sat  on  the  stair.     See  On  the  Stair. — Burton. 
We  sat  within  the  farm-house  old.     See  Fire  of  Drift- 
wood, The. — Longfellow. 
We  saw  and  wooed  each  other's  eyes.     See  Castara  (To 

Castara:  The  Reward  of  Innocent  Love). — Hab- 

ington. 
We  saw  the  swallows  gathering  in  the  sky.     See  Mod- 
ern Love  (One  Twilight  Hour). — Meredith. 
We    saw    Thee    in  Thy   balmy    nest.     See   Hymn   of 

the    Nativity.    A    (Verses     from     the    Shep.-ierd's 

Hymn ) . — Crashaw. 
We  say  it  for  an  hour  or  for  years.     See  "Good-by."— 

Litchfield. 
We  scatter  seeds  with  careless  hand.     See  Example. — 

Keble. 
We  searched  the  list  from  first  to  last.     See  Naming 

the  Baby. — (Harper's  Bazar.) 
We  see  here  to-day  a  free  and  independent  mingling  of 

men.     See  Our  Banner  Unrent;    its  Stars  Unob- 

scured. — Ross. 
We  see  not  in  this  life  the  end  of  human  actions.     See 

Enduring  Influence. — Anon. 
We  see  not,  know  not;  all  our  way.     See  Thy  Will  be 

Done. — Whittier. 
We  see  them   not — we    cannot    hear.     See  Are    They 

not  All  Ministering  Spirits? — Hawker. 
We  seek  not  strife,  but  when  our  outraged  laws.     See 

Old  Ironsides  (Tattered  Ensign,  The). — Holmes. 
We  seek     remembered     wood-paths,     fragrant     with 

breath    of    pines.     See    Woodland    Hymn,    A. — 

Holder. 
We  seek  to  know,  and  knowing  seek.     See  In  Memor- 

iam. — Bede. 
We  seem   to  see  his  form  and  hear  his  deep,   grave 

speech  everywhere.     See   Eulogy  on   Webster. — 

Choate. 
We  shall   all   meet   again      See  To   a   Lake   Party. — 

Faber. 
We  shall  have  succe.ss.     See  War  for  the  Union,  The.^ 

Holmes. 
We  shall  have  the  nicest  kind  of  a  party.     See  Tempta- 
tion Resisted. — Denison. 
We  shall  lodge  at  the  sign  of  the  Grave.    See  Travel'ers. 

— Addleshaw. 
We  shall  meet  and  rest.     Sec  Meeting  Place,  The  ("We 

shall  meet,"  etc.). — Bonar.  / 

We  shall   now   consider   the-  law.     See   Daniel   versus 

Dishclout. — Stevens. 
We  shall  now  return  to  the  law,  for  our  laws  are  full 

of      returns.     See      Bullum      versus      Boatum. — 

Stevens. 
We  shall  walk  no  more  through  the  sodden  plain.     See 

When  Sparrows  Build. — Ingelow. 
We  shape    ourselves    the    joy    or    fear.     See  Raphael 

("We  shane,"  etc.). — Whittier. 
We  sighing  said,  "Our  Pan  is  dead."     See  Thoreau's 

Flute. — Alcott. 
We  sit  before  the  row  of  evening  lamps.     See  Hamlet 

at  the  Boston. — Howe. 
We  sit  here  in  the  Promised  Land.     See  Ode  Recited 
at  the  Harvard   Commemoration.  July  21,   1865 
(Unreturning  Brave,  The). — Lowell. 


912 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


We  will 


We  sit  in  the  light  of  the  dancing  fire.     See  His  Reverie. 

— Long. 
We  sleep  upon  fir-tree  boughs  at  night.     See  Dreams 

on  the  Hunting-ground. — Brewer. 
We  slight    the    gifts    that    every    season    bears.     See 

Through  Life. — (Chambers'  Journal.) 
We  speak,  we  speak  of  the  loved  and  lost.     See  Beau- 
tiful Gate,  The. — Anon. 
We  stand  amid  the  palaces  of  Shushan.     See  Queen 

Vashti. — Talmage. 
We  stand  among  mysteries,  are  full  of  enquiries.     See 

Truth  of  the  Gospel,  The. — McKenzie. 
We  stand    now    on    the    river's    brink.     See   Concord 

River. — Hawthorne. 
We  stand  the  latest,  and,  if  we  fail,  probably  the  last, 

experiment.     See     Responsibility     of     American 

Citizens. — Story. 
We  stand  to-day  in  the  presence  of  a  stately  column. 

See  Two  Voices. — Brewer. 
We  stand    to-day    the     most    thoroughly     secularized 

government.     See  God  in  Government. — ^Lathrap. 
We  stand    upon    the    Moorish    mountain    side.     See 

Pine  Woods,  The. — Hanmer. 
We  started  away  from  the   parson's  house,   my  fair 

young     wife     and     I.      See     Frontier     Bridal — 

almost  a  Tragedy,  A.— Lynch. 
We  stood   alone   in   the   choir  loft.     See   Lost   Chord 

Found,  A. — Holcomb. 
We  stood  at   the  bars  as  the   sun  went   down.     See 

Lovely  Scene,  A. — Anon. 
We  stood  in   the  moonlight's  tender  glow.     iSee  It's 

Hard  to  be  Good. — Anon. 
We  stood  one  night  on  Beacon  Street.     See  After  the 

Opera. — Davis. 
We  stood  so  steady.     See  Crossing  the  Blackwater. — 

Joyce. 
We  stood  upon  the  ragged  rocks.     See   Cape-cottage 

at  Sunset. — Glazier. 
We  stood  upon  the  sea-girt  sand.     See  Her  Heart  was 

False  and  Mine  was  Broken. — Dallas. 
We  stood  where  the  snake-like  ivy.     See  Shadows. — 

Anon. 
We  summoned  not  the  silent  guest.     See  Skeleton  at 

the  Feast,  The.^Roche. 
We  talk'd  with  open  heart,  and  tongue.     See  Fountain, 

The. — Wordsworth. 
We  talked  of  books,  we  talked  of  songs.     See  Bachelor's 

Hope,  The. — Luzader. 
We  telephoned  to  the  intelligence  office  for  a  cook. 

See  What  's  in  a  Name? — Anon. 
"We  tell  the  truth!    we  tell!    we  tell!"     shouted  the 

Methodistic    bell.     See    Sounds    of    the    Sabbath 

Bells,  The.— Anon. 
We,  that  did  nothing  study  but  the  way.     See  Renun- 
ciation, A.— King. 
We,  the  Class  of  Ninety-seven,  being  about  to  leave 

this  sphere.     See  Will,  The.— Anon. 
We  the  fairies,  blithe  and  antic.     See  Song  of  Fairies. 

— -Randolph. 
We,  the  people  of  the  United  States.     See  Constitution 

of  the  United  States,  The. — Anon. 
We  tiny  tots  must  make  our  speech.     See  When  We 

Grow  Big. — -Rook. 
We  too  may  hear  the  voice  of  Wisdom  as  it  comes 

down  to  us.     See  Better  Way,  The. — McCaskey. 
We  took  it  to  the  woods,  we  two.     See  Emerson. — 

Dodge. 
We  trust  and  fear,  we  question  and  believe.     See  Our 

Limitations. — Holmes. 
We  two  stood  near  the  chandelier.     See  Sub-mistletoe. 

— (Lehigh  Burr.) 
We  two  went  maying  up  the  hill.     See  Farther  On. — 

Larcom. 
We  two  will  stand  in  the  shadow  here.     See  Two. — 

Anon. 
We  used  to  keep  a  cow  when  we  lived  in  the  country. 

See  Experience  with  a  Refractory  Cow. — Anon. 
We  used   to  think  the   negro   didn't   count  for  very 

much.     See  Negro  Soldier,  The. — Channing. 
We  useter  chune  to  de  minor  keys.     See  'Way  d£)wn  in 

Georgy. — .\non. 
We  wait  for  the  bugle,  the  night  dews  are  cold.     See 

Waiting  for  the  Bugle.— Anon. 
We  walk  alone  through  all  life's  various  ways.     See 

same. — Gray. 
We  walked  along  that   slippery  street.     See  Smooth 

Day,  A. — Jot. 
We  walked   along,   while   bright    and   red.     See   Two 

April  Mornings,  The. — Wordsworth. 
We — walking  so  slowly  adown  the  green  lane.     See 

Bull  Run. — Haven. 
We  wander  along  thro'  the  shade  of  the  vale.     See 

Through  the  Lovely  Vale. — -Perkins. 


We  wandered  down  the  quaint  old  lane.  See  Summer 
Idyl,  A. — Waithman. 

We  wandered  to  the  pine-forest.  See  To  Jane — the 
Recollection. — Shelley. 

We  want  a  teacher  that  talks  English.  See  Inter\new 
between  the  School  Directors  and  the  Janitor,  An. 
— Denison. 

We  want  to  sing  a  little.  See  Rainy  Day,  The. — 
Rook. 

We  was  all  boys,  then,  an'  didn't  care  for  nothin'. 
See  Jim  Wolfe  and  the  Cats. — Clemens. 

We  was  more  like  brothers  than  anything  else.  See 
Me  and  Bill.— Overton. 

We  was  out  there  on  the  prairie — wife,  an'  Jimmie  an' 
me.     See  On  the  Prairie. — Meyers. 

We  was  workin'  at  the  tunnel's  mouth.  See  At  the 
Tunnel's  Mouth. — Lyster. 

We  watch'd  her  breathing  thro'  the  night.  See 
Death-bed,  The. — Hood. 

We  watched,  as  she  lingered  all  the  day.  See  Martyr- 
dom of  St.  Lucy,  The. — Neale. 

We  watched  the  eclipse.     See  Eclipse,  The. — Cutler. 

We  were  a  fashionable  and  highly  cultured  party.  See 
Three  Men  in  a  Boat  (Herr  Slossenn  Boschen's 
Song) . — Jerome. 

"We  were  all  preparing,"  said  Mrs.  Jones.  See  Mary 
Ann's  Wedding. — Anon. 

We  were  at  a  railroad  junction  one  night.  See  One 
Touch  of  Nature. — Burdette. 

We  were  at  school  together,  the  little  Jew  and  I.  See 
Little  Jew,  The. — Craik. 

We  were  at  the  foot  of  the  American  fall.  See  Impres- 
sions of  Niagara. — Dickens. 

We  were  both  brought  up  in  a  country  town.  See  Me 
and  Jim.     (Chicago  Times.) 

We  were  boys  together.     See  sam.e. — Morris. 

We  were  crowded  in  the  cabin.  See  Ballad  of  the 
Tempest. — Fields. 

We  were  driving  home  from  the  "Patriarchs."  See 
Frost-bitten. — Baker. 

We  were  driving  the  down  express.  See  Engine 
Driver's  Story,  The. — Wilkins. 

We  were  eight,  including  the  driver.  Suddenly  the 
stage  stopped.     See  Miggles, — Harte. 

We  were  friends  and  comrades  loyal,  tho'  I  was  of  alien 
race.     See  In  a  Theatre. — Werner. 

We  were  going  on  Saturday  ever  so  far.  See  Trouble- 
some Caller,  A. — Anon. 

We  were  hunting  for  wintergreen  berries.  See  Sister 
and  I. — Anon. 

We  were  in  disgrace,  we  boys,  and  the  reason  of  it  was 
this.  See  Sam  Lawson's  Fireside  Stories  (Laugh- 
ing in  Meeting  [or  Laughin'  in  Meetin']). — Stowe. 

We  were  lumbering  along  in  the  twilight.  See  Engi- 
neer's Story,  The. — Anon. 

We  were  not  many,  we  who  stood.  See  Monterey. — 
Hoffman. 

We  were  on  picket,  sir,  he  and  I.  See  Guard's  Story, 
The. — Anon. 

We  were  ordered  to  Samoa  from  the  coa.st  of  Panama. 
See  International  Episode,  An. — Duer. 

We  were  playing  on  the  green  together.  See  Is  It 
Nothing  to  You? — -Probyn. 

We  were  ready  for  the  movin'.  See  Them  Dear  pld 
Garret  Things. — Carpenter. 

We  were  seated  after  dancing.  See  On  the  Stairs. — 
Anon. 

We  were  seated  around  a  big  log  fire.  See  Wonderful 
Dog  Story,  A. — Wheeler. 

We  were  sitting  at  chess  as  the  sun  went  down.  See 
Smoke  and  Chess. — DufBeld. 

We  were  sitting  idly  gazing  on  the  varied  scene  before 
us.     See  September  Violet,  A. — Anon. 

We  were  sitting  round  the  fire,  staring  at  the  logs 
ablaze.     See  Joe,  my  Pard,  the  Parson. — M'Beath. 

We  were  standing  in  the  doorway.  See  Kiss  at  the 
Door,  A.— Anon. 

We  were  ten  maidens  in  the  green  corn.  See  King's 
Daughter,  The. — Swinburne. 

We  were  twin  brothers,  tall  and  hale.  See  Flight 
Shot,  A. — Tennyson. 

We  will  be  satisfied ;  let  us  be  satisfied.  See  Julius 
Caesar  (Mark  Antony  Scene).— Shakespeare. 

We  will  close  the  first  part  of  our  evening's  entertain- 
ment with  exercises  in  natural  history.  See 
Examination  in  Natural  History.— Anon. 

We  will  grieve  not,  rather  find.  See  Ode:  Intima- 
tions of  Immortality  ("We  will  grieve  not"). — 
Wordsworth. 

We  will  listen  to  some  facts  about  a  seed.  See  Lessons 
from  Nature  about  Trees. — Benedict. 

We  will  not  speak  of  years  to-night.  See  .James 
Russell  Lowell's  Birthday  Festival. — Holmes. 


913 


"We  will 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


We  will    not    strike    for    private    wrongs    alone.     See 
Marino  Faliero  (Procreative  Virtue  of  Great   Ex- 
amples).— Byron. 
We  will  obey.     Fo«%ard  we  go,  although  our  feet  must 

tread.     See  Go  Forward. — Murray. 
We  wondered  why  he  always  turned  aside.     See  Inheri- 
tance.— Higginson. 
We  would    speak   first  of   the  Puritans.      See   Milton 

(Puritans,  The). — Macaulay. 
We  wreathe   with   flowers   the    peaceful   graves.     See 

Cherished  Names. — Smith. 
We  wreathed  about  our  darling's  head.     See  Morning- 
glory,  The. — Lowell. 
We  yield    to    none    in    reverence    for   the    past.     <See 

Slavery. — Lowell. 
Weak  and  irresolute  is  man.     <See  Human  Frailty. — 

Cowper. 
Weak  and  sinful  as  I  am.     <See  Outside  the  Fold. — 

Willett. 
Weak-winged  is  song.     See  Ode  Recited  at  the  Harvard 

Commemoration,  July  21,  1865. — Lowell. 
Wealth  is  power,  talent  is  power.     See  Real  Power. — 

Anon. 
Wearied  and  worn  with  earthly  cares,   I  yielded  to 

repose.  See  Starless  Crown,  The. — Anon. 
Wearied  arm  and  broken  sword.     See  Pocahontas. — 

Thackeray. 
Weary  at  heart  with  winter  yesterday.     See  April. — 

Auringer. 
Weary  human  nature  lays  its  head  on  the  bosom  of  the 

divine  Word.     See  Reply  to  Essays  and  Reviews. 

— Anon. 
Weary?     I    am    as   limp    as   that    white    glove.     See 

Debutante's  Bouquets,  A. — Hatch. 
Weary  men,   what  reap  ye? — ^"Golden  com    for  the 

stranger."     See  Famine  Year,  The.- — Wilde. 
Weary  of  all  this  wordy  strife.     See  Catholic  Love. — 

Wesley. 
Weary  of  myself,  and  sick  of  asking.     See  Self-depend- 
ence.— Arnold. 
Weary  one,  tired  of  life  and  its  restlessness.     See  Rest. 

— Blanchard. 
Weary,  weary,  desolate.     See  Yuma. — Phelps. 
Weary,    weary   loves!     See   Bird's   Cradle-song,    A. — 

Worthley. 
Weary  with  toil,  I  haste  me  to  my  bed.     See  Sonnets, 

XXVIL— Shakespeare. 
.  Weave  no  more  silks,  ye  Lyons  looms.     See  Our  Orders. 

— Howe. 
Weave  no  more  the  marriage  chain!     See  Bridal  Dirge, 

A. — Procter. 
Weave   the  warp,   and  weave   the   woof.     See   Bard, 

The  (Curse  upon  Edward,  The'>. — Gray. 
Webster  could  awe  a  senate,  Everett  could  charm  a 

college.     See  Daniel  O'Connell's  Power   over  the 

Irish  People. — Phillips. 
We'd  never  thought  of  takin'  'em — 'twas  Mary  Ann's 

idee.     See  Takin'  Boarders. — Lincoln. 
Wedding  is  great  Juno's  Crown.     See  As  You  Like   It 

(Wedlock  Hymn,  A).— Shakespeare. 
Wee,  modest,  crimson-tipped  flower.     See  To  a  Moun- 
tain Daisy. — Burns. 
Wee  Sandy  in  the  corner.     See  Still  Small  Voice,  The. — 

Smart. 
Wee,  sleekit,  cowrin',  tim'rousbeastie.     See  To  a  Mouse 

on  Turning  up  her  Nest  with  the  Plow. — Burns. 
Wee  Willie  Winkie  rins  through  the  town.     See  Willie 

Winkie. — Miller. 
Weed  of  the  strange  flower,  weed  of  the  earth.     See 

Invocation  to  Tobacco. — Mellen. 
Weehawken!     In    thy    mountain    scenery    yet.     See 

Fanny  fWeehawken  and  the  New  York  Bay). — 

Halleck. 
Weel,  having  thus  wooed  Miss  M'Flimsey  and  gained 

her.     See  Cast-off  Garments. — Butler. 
Weel  [or  well],  Sandy,  man,  and  how  did  ye  like  the 

sermon  the  day?     See  Sandy  Macdonald's  Signal. 

— Ross. 
Weel,  ye  maun  understan',  said  Bob,  that  naething 

in  the  worl'  wid.     See  Bob  Johnston's  Visit  to  the 

Circus. — Stewart. 
Weep  no  more,   nor  sigh,  nor  groan.     See  Queen    of 

Corinth,  The  (Weep  no  More). — Fletcher. 
Weep  not  for  him!     The  Thracians  wisely  gave.     See 

On  the  Death  of  General  Taylor. — Conrad. 
Weep  not  for  me.  See  Knowledge. — Newman. 
Weep  not  for  Scio's  children  slain.     See  Massacre  at 

Scio,  The. — Bryant. 
Weep   not,   my   wanton,   smile   upon   my   knee.     See 

Menaphon    (Sephestia's     Song   to    her    Child).— 

Greene. 
Weep   not  I  tears  must  vainly  fall.     See  Weep    not! 

Sigh  not! — Linton. 


Weep  not  that  we  must  part.     See  Love  Cannot  Die. — 

Anon. 
Weep  with  me,  all  you  that  read.     See  Epitaph  on 

Salathiel    Pavy,   a   Child    of    Queen    Elizabeth's 

Chapel,  An. — Jonson. 
Weep  you  no  more,   sad  fountains.     See  Lullaby. — 

Anon. 
Weeping  Philosophers  there  were  of  old.     See  Intro- 
duction to  Barton's  Comic  Recitations. — J.  B. 
Weird  wife  of  Bein-y-Vreich !  horo !  horo !     See  (iailleach 

Bein-y-Vreich. — Shairp. 
Welcome!   a   right   royal   welcome!     See   Lady-killer, 

The. — Kavanaugh. 
Welcome,    bright    flag!    welcome    to-day!     See    Red, 

White  and  Blue,  The. — Anon. 
Welcome,   dear  Rosencrantz,  and  Guildenstem!     See 

Hamlet.— Shakespeare. 
Welcome,  friend  of  our  fathers,  to  our  shores.     See 

Welcome  to  General  La  Fayettfe. — Everett. 
Welcome  from  Egypt,  sir.     See  Antony  and  Cleopatra 

(Cleopatra's  Barge)  .^Shakespeare. 
Welcome    her,    thunders    of    fort    and    of    fleet.     See 

Welcome  to    Alexandra,  A   (Alexandra). — Tenny- 
son. 
Welcome,  Jack!     Where  hast   thou   been?     See   King 

Henry  IV..  Pt.  I.    (Prince  Henry  and  Falstaff;.— 

Shakespeare. 
Welcome,  maids  of  honour.     See  To  Violets. — Herrick. 
Welcome,  old  friend !     These  many  years.     See  To  Age. 

— Landor. 
Welcome,   pale   primrose!   starting  up  between.     See 

Primrose. — Clare. 
"Welcome,  pretty  sunshine!"     See  April  Fool,  An.— 

Anon. 
Welcome,    pure    thoughts    and    peaceful    hours.     See 

Chosen  Path,  The. — Vaughan. 
Welcome,  pure  thoughts!  welcome,  ye  silent  groves! 

See  Thoughts  on  the  Forest. — Wotton. 
Welcome,  sweet  prince,  to  London,  to  your  chamber. 

See   King  Richard  III.   (Little    Princes,   The). — 

Shakespeare. 
Welcome  them,  cheer  them,  crown  them  with  flowers! 

See  Hail  to  the  Veterans. — Richardson. 
Welcome,  thrice  welcome  is  thy  silvery  gleam.     See 

Stratford  Fountain. — Holmes. 
Welcome,  thou  festal  morn!  never  be  passed  in  scorn. 

See  Birthday  of  Washington  ever  Honored,  The. — 

Howland. 
Welcome  thou  peaceful  dawn!     See  Sabbath,  The. — 

Anon. 
"Welcome  to  Rome!"     The  cry  rang  through  the  city. 

See  Regulus. — Braddock. 
Welcome  to  the  day  returning.     See  Ode  for  Washing- 
ton's Birthday. — Holmes. 
Welcome,     Uncle,     to     our     Centennial     party.     See 

Columbia's  Centennial  Party. — Slade. 
Welcome,  welcome  do  I  sing.  See  Welcome.  A.- — Browne. 
"Welcome,  welcome,  little  stranger,  fear  no  harm,  and 

fear  no  danger.     See  Address  to  a  Robin. — Alcott. 
Welcome!  welcome,  little  stranger!     Welcome  to  my 

lone  retreat !     See  Prisoner  to  a  Robin  who  Came 

to  his  Window. — Montgomery. 
Welcome,   wild   harbinger   of   spring!     See  Crocus. — 

Longfellow. 
Welcome,  wild  Northeaster!     See  Ode  to  the  Northeast 

Wind. — Kingsley. 
Welcome,  ye  pleasant  dales  and  hills.     See  Old  Home- 
stead, The. — Bruce. 
Welcome  ye   shades,  ve    bowery   thickets,  hail.     See 

Seasons,  Tha. — 'Thomson. 
We'll  a'  go  pu'  the  heather.     See  same. — Nicholl. 
We'll  agitate  the  question  against  license,  high  or  low. 

See  Again»:t  Licence. — Annable. 
Well,  Alfred,  you'ra  welcome,  old  fellow!     See  Teeto- 
taler's Story,  A. — Haywood. 
Well,  Anna,  what  are  we  going  to  do?     See  Singing 

Temperance  Songs. — Vinton. 
Well,  as  I  have  got  to  live  all  alone.     See  Sober  Second 

Thought,  A. — Anon. 
We'll 'begin  with  a  box,  and  the  plural  is  boxes.     See 

English  Language,  The. — Anon. 
"Well,  Bessie,  the  right  of  .suffrage  is  finally  given  to 

women."     See    Election     of    the     Future,     The. 

— {Detroit  Free  Press.) 
Well,  Betsey,  this  beats  everything  our  eyes  have  ever 

seen!     See  Old   Man  in   the   Palace  Car,   The. — 

Yates. 
Well  bethouarht;  send  Walter  to  me.     See  Iron  Chest, 

The.— Colman. 
Well,  Bill,  shake  ban's  'n'  say  good-b.v  afore  ye  go  away. 

See  Breaking  Home  Ties. — Frazier. 
Well,  Bones,  how  do  you  find  yourself  this  evening? 

See  How  Bones  Caught  a  Duck. — Anon. 


914 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Well 


Well,  Bones,  how  do  you  find  yourself  this  evening? 

See  Who  am  de  Mudder. — Anon. 
Well,   Bridget,  we've  been  talking.     See  Bridget  and 

the  Matinee. — Coates. 
Well,  Brother  Jonathan.     See  Keep  the  Holidays. — 

Denton. 
Well,  Captain,  whereabouts  in  the  wide  world  are  we? 

See  Gridiron,  The. — Lover. 
Well,  dear,  here  we  are.     See  Sewing  Circle,  The. — 

Anon. 
Well,  Dick,  are  you  ready  to  leave?     Sec   Wanted — a 

Valet.— Griffith. 
Well,  Dinah  might  dispel  the  night.     See  "Well,  Dinah 

Might." — Tenney. 
Well,  dolly,  it's  almost  Christmas  again.    See  Old  Santa 

Has  Struck. — Denton. 
Well,    Dolly,    what   are   you   saying.     See  Talking   to 

Dolly. — Anon. 
Well;  even  then!     Bssides,  what  would  you  do?     See 

Discussion,  The. — Anon. 
"Well,"  exclaimed  a  young  lady  just   returned  from 

school.     See  Contrasted  Soliloquies. — Taylor. 
Wei!  for  him  that  he  has  such  a  heart  to  meet  his  own. 

See  Me.ssage  of  an  ^olian   Harp,  The. — Havergal. 
Well,   friends,    I   think   I   can   not   sing  to-night.     See 

"Where  the  Lilies  Bloom." — Anon. 
Well,  having  thus  wooed  Miss   McFlimsey  and  gained 

hei.     See  Nothing  to  Wear  (Cast-off  Garments). — 

Butler. 
Well,  here  I  am,  all  ready  for  my  second  ball.     See 

Nettie  Dudd  before  her  Second  Ball. — Dallas. 
Well,    here    I    am,    almost    as   ignorant    as   ever.     See 

Student  and  His  Neighbors,  The. — Woodward. 
Well,  here  I  am  at  last.     Tired  nearly  to  death.     See 

Hungry  Traveler,  The. — Anon. 
Well,  here  I  am,  ensconced  in  my  new  boarding-place. 

See  Thanksgiving. — McBride. 
Well,  here  I  am!     Expected,  too,  I  see!     See  Visit  of 

Santa  Claus. — Anon. 
Well,  here  I  am  home  at  last — a  finished  young  lady. 

See  Friend  at  Court,  A. — Anon. 
Well,  here  I  am  left  all  alone,  and  just  as  sick  as  I  can 

be.     See  Curing  an  Invalid. — Anon. 
Well,  here  I  am,  my  girls  and  boys.     See  Mr.  and  Mrs. 

Santa  Claus. — Anon. 
Well,   here  I  am!     No  more  college  studies  for  three 

months.     See  Schoolmaster,  The. — Adams. 
Well,  here  I  am  once  again;  once  more  amid  the  balmy 

atmosphere.       See      Virginia     Mummy,     The. — 

White. 
Well,  here  we  are  so  far,  at  last.     See  Opera  Mad. — 

Anon. 
Well,  here  we  have  him — pray  give  him  a  glance.     See 

How  It  Is. — Anon. 
Well,  honor  is  the  subject  of  my  story.      See  Julius 

Caesar  (Speech  of  Cassius,   Instigating   Brutus  to 

Join    the     Conspiracy    against    Caesar). — Shake- 
speare. 
Well,  how  is  the  young  lady.  Bones?     See  Bones  on 

Money. — Anon . 
Well,  how  provoking;  no  one  here  but  me.     See  Lost 

Opportunity,  The. — Denton. 
Well,    I    am    in    a    fix — a    decided    fix.     See   Opening 

Address,  The.— Rook. 
Well,  I  am  of  the  opinion  that  we  are  in  straightened 

circumstances.     See  Love's  Labor  not  Lost. — Mc- 
Bride. 
Well,  I  am  resolved  I'll  collect  my  bill  of  Col.  Blarney 

this    time.     See    Debtor    and    the    Dun,    The. — 

Moliere. 
Well,    I    am   very  glad,   Thomas.     See    May   Day — a 

Moving  Drama. — Hall. 
Well,  I  confess,  I  did  not  guess.     See  I'm  not  a  Single 

Man. — Hood. 
Well.  I  declare,  here  is  Tim,  with  his  nose  in  a  book  as 

usual.     See  What  is  a  Gentleman? — Denton. 
Well,  I  do  be  kept  busy,  to  be  sure,  now.  Miss  Eliza. 

See  A.stonishing  the  Natives. — Graham. 
Well,  I  don't  see  where  Ma  put  those  stockings.     See 

Christmas  Night. — .Johnson. 
Well,  I  golly!     Dat's  a  nice  lookin'  head  to  go  to  a  ball 

wid.     See  Box  and  Cox. — Morton. 
Well,  I  guess  it's  all  up  wid  me,  as  de  immoral  Shakes- 
poke  said.     See  Come  and  Hug  Me! — McDonough. 
Well,  I  have  a  hard  life  of  it.     And  if  I  continue  on  in 

this  way.     See  Turning  Around. — Anon. 
Well,  I  have  just  come  into  town  to  meet  an  old  friend 

of  mine.     See  Humorous  Irish  Sketch. — Sertrew. 
Well,   I   havn't  got   much  longer  to  live.     See  Uncle 

Zeke's  Opinion.- — Sabean. 
Well  I  know  she  is  not  handsome.     See  Love's  Secret. 

— Bates. 
Well,  I  know  thy  trouble.     See  same. — Neale. 


Well;  I  may  now  receive  and  die.     See  Character  of 

the  Bore,  The. — Donne. 
Well  I  never,  that  tiresome  man  han't  gone  out  yet. 

See  Stray  Parrot,  A. — Paul. 
Well  I  suppose  I  may  give  up  in  despair.     See  Reunion 

of  Peter  and  Jane. — McBride. 
Well,  I  think  I'll  finish  that  story  for  the  editor  of  the 

"Dutchman."     See  Romance  at  Home. — Parton. 
Well!     I  wonder  how  much  longer  we  shall  have  to 

wait?     See   Cinderella;   or.    The   Glass    Slipper. — 

McDonald. 
Well,  if  ever  I  saw  such  another  man  since  my  mother 

bound    my    head!     See    Mary    the    Cook-maid's 

Letter  to  Doctor  Sheridan.— Swift. 
Well!  if  the  Bard  was  weather-wise,  who  made.     See 

Dejection;  An  Ode. — Coleridge. 
Well,  I'll  be  off.     See  Doctor  by  Proxy,  A. — Graham. 
"Well,   I'm  determined!     That's  enough!"     See  Abner 

and  the  Widow  Jones. — Bloomfield. 
Well,    I'm    getting    considerably    in    debt.     See    Mrs. 

Smith's  Boarder. — McBride. 
Well,  I'm  off,  like  a  shot  from  a  gun!     See  Bad  Habit 

Cured,  A. — Anon. 
Well,   I'm  sure  I  don't  know  what  brought  that  old 

country  woman  here.     See  Uncle  Jacob's  Money. 

— McBride. 
Well,  I'm  sure  I  don't  know  what's  keeping  Reuben 

out  so  late.     See  Those  Thompsons. — Anon. 
Well,  I'm  sure  we  have  all  on  us  a  great  deal  to  be 

thankful  for.     See  Oliver  Twist  (Mr.  Bumble  and 

Mrs.  Cornej'). — Dickens. 
Well,  is  the  rack  prepared, — the  pincers  heated?     See 

Wail  of  Jugurtha,  The.— Wolfe. 
Well,  it  is  almost  time  I  was  off  on  my  route.     See 

Turning  the.  Tables. — Smith. 
Well,  it  is  decided,  and  to-day  I  start  for  the  poor 

house.     See  Going  to  a  New  Home. — McBride. 
Well,  it  isn't  the  King,  after  all,  my  dear  creature!     See 

Fudge   Family  in  Paris,  The  (Letters    from   Miss 

Biddy  Fudge). — Moore. 
Well  it's  queer,  it  is,  and  I've  been  thinking  about  it. 

See  Bridget's  Soliloquy. — Dallas. 
Well;  I've  walked  the  jail,  and  the  Courts  I've  seen. 

See  Retrospection. — I^yall. 
Well,    Jack!     Her?    you've    gone    and    done    it.     See 

Similar  Case,  A. — Anon. 
Well,  Jack,  where  have  you  been  this  long,  hot  day? 

See  Two  Kinds  of  Fun. — Denton. 
Well,  Jane,  I  stayed  in  town  last  night.     See  Spelling 

Down. — Gifford. 
"Well,  Jo,  what  is  the  matter?     Don't  be  frightened." 

See  Bleak   House   (Death  of  Little  Jo). — Dickens. 
Well,   John,   how   many  boots  did   you   shine  to-day. 

See  Old  Apple- Woman,  The.— McBride. 
Well,  Katie,  and  is  this  yersilf?     And  where  was  you 

this  while?     See  Larry's  on  the  Force. — Rus.sell. 
Well,  ladies,  what'U  [or  what  will]  it  be?     See  'Twas 

at  Manhattan  Beach. — Anon. 
Well,  little  girl,  you  wish  to  come  to  school,  do  you? 

See  Little  'Teacher,  The. — Anon. 
Well,  Mary  me  darlint,  I'm  landed  at  last.     See  Pat's 

Letter. — Queerquiil. 
Well,    mate,    you've   asked    me   about    a   fellow.     See 

Dukite  Snake,  The.— O'Reilly. 
Well,  Maud,  I'm  twenty-four  to-day.     See  Change  of 

Heart,  A. — Anon. 
Well  met,  gentlemen,  well  met!     See  Excitement  at 

Kettleville,  The. — Sargent. 
Well  might  the  king  wear  sackcloth;  his  were  a  nation's 

woes.     See    Under     the     Purple    and     Motley. — 

Burdette. 
Well,    Mr.    Edward,    how    are    you    getting    on?     See 

Shoemaker's  Cabinet. — Anon. 
Well,  Mrs.  Columbia,  if  you  do  reall.y  think  so.     See 

Columbia  and  Mr.  "They  Say. "-^Denton. 
Well,  mother,  how  about  your  temperance  work.     See 

Signing  the  Pledge. — Anon. 
Well  mother,   I    mustn't    be    skulking    about    here    in 

I.«ipzig  any  longer.     See  Emperor  and   the   De- 
serter. Th"". — Anon. 
Well,  my  dear  Princess,  I  hope  you  have  chosen  wi.sely. 

See  King  Roughbeard  and  the  Princess. — Denton. 
Well,  my  dear  sister,  you  look  almost  tired  to  death. 

See  Father  Time's  Granddaughters. — Hawthorne. 
Well,  neighbor   Wink,  I  obsarved  you  kept  one  eye  on 

the  preacher.     See  New  Preacher,  The. — Silonius. 
Well  [Wall— C.l,  no!  I  can't  tell  whar    he    lives.     See 

Jim  Bludso,  of  the  Prairie  Belle. — Hay. 
Well,  no!  my  wife  ain't  dead,  sir, but  I've  lost  herall  the 

same.     See  Blacksmith's  Story,  The. — Olive. 
"Well,  no,"  the  boy  said,  "the  thing  didn't  go  off  ex- 
actly as  T  expected."     See  Reminiscence  of  Ex- 
hibition Day,  A. — Burdette. 


915 


Well 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


We'll  not  weep  for  summer  over.     See  After  Summer. 

— Marston. 
Well,  now ;  I  can't  see  how  it  is  why  the  boss  makes  me 

work.     See  Coopers,  The. — White. 
Well,  old  fellow,  h<^  does  it  seem.     See  What  is  the 

Use  of  Latin? — Anon. 
Well,   on    condition    that    we're    very    private.     See 

Honeymoon,  The  (Zamora). — Tobin. 
Well,  really,  since  listening  to  that  wonderful  Miss  Big- 

witz.     See  Mrs.  Tubbs  and  Political  Economy. — 

Dallas. 
"Well,"  said  a  straight-backed,  straight-legged  chair. 

See  How  to  Gain  Friends. — Anon. 
"Well,"  said  the  duckling,  "well."     See  Ambition. — 

Anon. 
Well,  Sally,   we   are  getting  along  swimmingly   now, 

aint  we?     See  John  Jones'  Fortune. — McBride. 
Well  [or  Weel],  Sandy,  man,  and  how  did  ye  like  the 

sermon  the  day 7    See  Foxes'  Tails ;  or,  Sandy  Mac- 

donald's  Signal,  The. — Anon. 
"Well,"  Saturday  to  Sunday  said.     See  Sunday  Morn- 
ing.— Hebel. 
Well,  Shamus,  what  brought  ye?     See  Winnie's  Wel- 
come. — Emmett . 
"Well,  Sir" — continued    Mr.    McWilliama.     See    Mrs. 

Mc Williams  and  the  Lightning. — Clemens. 
Well,  sir,  he  had  the  blamedest,  biggest,  cattycorned- 

est  pianner.     See  How  "Ruby"  Played. — Bagby. 
Well,  sir,  you  discover  the  temper  of  the  man  that 

oppresses  me.     See  Vicar  of  Wakefield,  The  (Inno- 
cence Rewarded). — Goldsmith. 
"Well,  sir,  you  must  know  that  there  was  wanst  a  king 

called  King  O'Toole.     See  King  O'Toole  and  Saint 

Kevin. — I^over. 
Well,  spoiled  child,  will  you  never  be  reasonable?     See 

Pursuit,  The. — Anon. 
We'll  stop  here  and  rest  awhile.     See  Not  Quite  a  Bar- 
gain.— Denton. 
Well,  stranger,  you're  from  Texas?     And  you  want. 

See  Soul  that  Passed  in  the  Night,  A. — Anon. 
Well!   that's  a  woman  I  pity!     See  Midshipmite,  The. 

—Scott. 
Well,  the  ways  and  trials  I  had  wid  that  Chineser  I 

couldn't    be    tellin'.     See    Miss   Maloney    on    the 

Chinese  Question. — (Scribner's  Monthly.) 
Well  then!    I  now  do  plainly  see.     See  Mistress,  The 

(Wish,  The).— Cowley. 
Well,   then,  take  my  life.     See  Princess,  The — Tenny- 
son. 
Well  then,  the  promised  hour  is  come  at  last.     See  To 

My  Friend,  Mr.  Congreve. — Dryden. 
Well,  there  is  but  one  thing  to  be  done.     See  Running 

for  Congress.— Crosby. 
Well,  they  don't  give  you  much  room  hin  'ere.     See 

Obstructive  Hat  in  the  Pit,  The. — Anstey. 
Well,  they  say  I'll  be  elected.     See  Victory  Deferred. — 

Scott. 
Well,  thin,  there  was  once't  upon  a  time.     See  Story 

of  the  I>ittle  Rid  Hin. — Whitney. 
Well,  this  has  been  a  red  letter  day  in  my  calendar. 

See  Pussy  Wants  a  Corner. — Stout. 
Well,  this  is  a  mighty  pleasant  room — so  cool  and  nice. 

See  Stage-struck  Blacksmith,  The. — McBride. 
Well,    this  yer  Smiley  had  rat-tarriers.     See  Jumping 

Frog,  The  (Jim  Smiley's  Frog).— Clemens. 
Well;  'tis  as  Bickerstaff  has  guessed.     See  Elegy  on 

Partridge. — Swift. 
Well,  Titus,  speak;  how  is  it  with  thee  now?     See 

Brutus  and  Titus. — ^Lee. 
Well,  to  go  back  to  where  I  was  before  I  digressed. 

See  Membranous  Croup  and  the  McWilliamses. — 

Clemens. 
Well,  Tom,  my  boy,  I  must  say  good-bye.     See  Home 

Concert,  The. — Brine. 
"Well,  Uncle  Sam,"  says  Jefferson  D.     See  Overtures 

from  Richmond. — Child. 
Well,  uncle,  well.     See  Uncle,  The;  or,  Comparisons 

are  Odious. — Pickering. 
Well,  well!  it  is  my  birthday  once  again.     See  Mother 

Goose's  Party. — Anon. 
Well,  well,  sir!  so  you've  come  at  last.     See  Fanny 

Gray. — Kavanaugh. 
Well,  well,  who'd  a  t'ought  ob  seein'  you,  all  drest  in  dat 

way.     See  Rival  Darkies,  The. — Anon. 
Well,    when    I    first    infested    this   retreat.     See    First 

Settler's  Story,  The. — Carleton. 
Well,    who'd    ha'    thought    it!     Miss    Mehitable    has 
walked  off  the  stage.     See  Miss  Higginson's  Will. — 
Bellows. 
Well,  whose  girl  am  I,  anyway?     See  Whose  Girl? — 

Anon. 
Well,  why  don't  you  say  it,  husband?     I  know  what 
you  want  to  say.     See  Selling  the  Farm. — Day. 


Well,   wife,   I've  been   to   church  to-day — -been   to   a 

stylish  one.     See  Old  Man  in  the  Stylish  Church, 

The.— Yates. 
Well,  wife,  I've  been  to  'Frisco,  an'  I  called  to  see  the 

boys.     See  Old  Man  Goes  to  Town,  The. — Swiner- 

ton. 
Well,  wife,  I've  found  the  model  church!     I  worshiped 

there  to-day!     See  Old  Man  in  the  Model  Church, 

The.— Yates. 
Well,   Willie,    I    suppose   you   liked   the   circus?     See 

After  the  Circus. — Denton. 
Well  worthy  to  be  magnified  are  they.     See  Pilgrim 

Fathers,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Well,  ye  see,   I'd  sold  my  papers.     See  Newsboy  in 

Church,  A.— Kelly. 
Well,  yes,  I  calkerlate  it  is  a  little  quiet  here.     See 

When  the  Train  Comes  in.- — Waterman. 
Well,  yes,  it's  sometimes  pretty  lonesome  here.     See 

Sod  House  in  Heaven,  The. — Mills. 
Well,  yes,  I've  lived  in  Texas  since  the  spring  of  '61. 

See  Spool  of  Thread,  A. — Eastman. 
Well,  yes!     On  Tuesday  last  the  knot  was  tied.     See 

Hat,  The. — Anon. 
Well,  yes,  sir,  dat  am  a  comical  name.     See  Ashcake. — 

Page. 
Well?  yes,  sir,  yes,  sir,  thankee!  so-so,  for  my  time  o 

life.     See  What  the  Old  Man  Said. — Robbins. 
"Weil,  you  know,"  she  says  after  the  matinee.     See 

Woman's  Description  of  a  Play,  A. — Dane. 
Well,  you  may  let  him  stand  in  out  of  the  wet.     See 

Shaugraun,  The  (Tailor's  Thimble,  The).— Bouci- 

cault. 
Well,  young  'un,  you're  mighty  smooth   spoken.     See 

Fisherman  Job. — Reed. 
"Well!  you've  got  back,  hev  you?     See  Aunt  Patience's 

Doughnuts. — {Springfield  Republican. ) 
Well-nerved  and  stout  be  the  arm  that  smiteth  wrong. 

See  same. — Murray. 
W'en  Bill  Smith  gits  his  'cordeen  out.      See  W'en  Bill 

Smith  Gits  His  'Cordeen  out. — Anon. 
W'en  de  jewdrops  'gins  to  glisten.     See  W'en  de  Darky 

am  a-Whis'lin  in  de  Co'n. — Lapius. 
W'en   I   was  a  young  boy  on  de  farm,   dat's  twent.v 

year    ago.     See    How    Bateese    Came    Home.— 

Drummond. 
W'en  you  come  to  see  'em  close.     See  Little  Johnnie's 

"Piece"  on  Owls. — Anon. 
W'en  you  see  a  man  in  woe.     See  Hullo. — Foss. 
Wer  reitet  so  spiit  durch  Nacht  und  Wind?  See  Erikonig. 

— (jioethe. 
We're  a  band  of  little  children.     See  Little  Sunbeams. 

— Richards. 
Were  a  being  of  an  understanding  mind  and  a  benevo- 
lent heart.     See  Education. — Mann. 
We're  all  in  the  dumps.     See  In  the  Dumps. — Anon. 
We're   all   of   us   glad   at    the    Easter-time.     See    At 

Easter  Time.— Hewitt. 
Were  all  the  interesting  diversities  of  color  and  form  to 

disappear.     See    Beautiful    in    Creation,    The. — 

D  wight. 
Were  any  of  you  bom  in  New  England.     See  Uncle 

Abel  and  Little  Edward. — Stowe. 
We're  a-studying  of  Literature.     See  Senior  Schedule, 

A. — McLean. 
Were  but  my  spirit  loosed  upon  the  air.     See  same. — 

Moulton. 
We're  faring  with  the  fleet.     See  Song  of  the  Fleet,  A. — 

Stanton. 
We're  gathered  here  with  one  accord.     See  Like  Wash- 
ington.— Denton. 
We're  going  to  have  a  dolly  show.     See  Doll  Show, 

The. — Anon. 
We're  going  to  play  at  keeping  shop.     See  Playing 

Store. — Rook. 
Were  half  the  power  that  fills  the  world  with  terror. 

See  Arsenal  at  Springfield,  The  (Armory,   The). — - 

Ijongfellow. 
Were   I   a  happy  bird.       See  Faith  Trembling. — De 

Vere. 
"Were  I  a  man,"  quoth  Mistress  Jane.     See  In  Maiden 

Meditation. — Nichols. 
Were  I  as  base  as  is  the  lowly  plain.      See  Sonnet. — 

Sylvester. 
Were  I  but  his  own  wife,  to  guard  and  to  guide  him. 

See  Were  I  but  His  Own  Wife. — Downing. 
Were  I  despised  and  desolate  and  poor.     See  From  the 

Persian. — Nichols. 
Were  I  so  tall  to  reach  the  pole.     See  same, — Anon. 
Were  I  thy  bride.     See  same. — Anon. 
Were  I  to  name,  out  of  the  times  gone  by.     See  Sonnet. 

—Hunt. 
Were  I  transported  to  some  distant  star.     See  Plain 

Man's  Dream,  A. — Keppel. 


916 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


What  are 


"Were  it  not  for  me,"  said  a  chickadee.     See  Chickadee, 

The. — Dayre. 
We're   make-believe   maids  of  Japan.     See  Maids  of 

Japan. — Goodfellow. 
Were  men  so  dull  they  could  not  see.     See  On  a  Painted 

Lady  with  111  Teeth.— Waller. 
We're  only  little  children.     See  same. — -Richards. 
We're  plain  old  fashioned  folks,  my  husband  and  me. 

See  Ezra  and  Me  and  the  Boards. — Field. 
We're  playing  we  are  peddlers.     See  Little  Peddlers, 

The.— Moor. 
We're    soldiers    of    an    army.     See    Our    Temperance 

Banner. — Anon . 
We're  the  twins  from  Aunt  Marinn's.     See  Twins,  The. 

—Riley. 
Were  there  no  night  we  could  not  read  the  stars.     See 

same. — -Burton. 
We're  three  little   chaps.     See  Three   Little   Lads. — • 

Sullivan. 
Were  TuUy  now  alive,  he'd  be  to  seek.     See  Language 

of  the  Learned. — Butler. 
Were   you   ever   at    school,    Johnson?     See   Bones   on 

Education. — Anon. 
Were  you  ever  in  sweet  Tipperary,   where  the  fields 

are  so  sunny  and  green.     See  Tipperary. — Kelly. 
Were  you  ever  left  alone  for  an  hour  with  a  child?     See 

Daniel  in  the  Lion's  Den. — Ten  Eyck. 
Were   you   ever   sick,    Johnson?     See   Bones   and   the 

Doctor. — Anon. 
Were  you  serious,  Pnfe.ssor,  in  that  hurried  chat  we 

had  the  other  day.     See  Suffrage  Question,  The. — 

Anon. 
Werther  had  a  love   for  Charlotte.     See  Sorrows  of 

Werther,  The. — Thackeray. 
West  tells  the  world  that   Peter  cannot   rhyme.     See 

Lex  Talionis  upon  Benjamin  West,  The. — Pindar. 
W&st  wind,   blow  from  your  prairie  nest!     See  Song 

My  Paddle  Sings,  "The. — ^Johnson. 
Westminster    is    gray    at    midnight.      See    Christmas 

Thought  about  Dickens,  A. — Scranton. 
Westward   the  course  of   Empire  takes  its  way.     See 

On  the  Prospect  of  planting  Arts  and  Learning  in 

America  (Verse). — Berkeley. 
We've  a  little  speech  to  make.     See  Echo,  The. — Anon. 
We've  come  to  ask  you  children.     See  Way  to  Spend 

Christmas,  The. — Chase. 
We've  come  to  speak  a  verse!     Fred,  you  must  bow. 

See  Our  Verse.- — ^Anon. 
We've  come  with  beating  hearts  to-night.     See  Saluta- 

tory.^Kavanaugh. 
We've  fought  with  many  men  acrost  the  seas.     See 

"Fuzzy- Wuzzy." — -Kipling. 
We've  got  a  baby!     I  should  like  you  to  come.     See 

Baby,  The. — Townsend. 
We've   lived   for   forty   years,    dear   wife.     See   Ideal 

Husband  to  his  Wife,  The. — Foss. 
We've  trod  the  maze  of  error  round.     See  Reflections 

(Late  Wisdom).— Crabbe. 
"Wha'  you  doin'  out  dar,  Sammy?"     See  Picaninny's 

Cyclone,  The. — Anon. 
Wha'll    buy    caller    herrin'?       See    Caller   Herrin'. — 

Nairn. 
Whan  father  Adie  first  pat  spade  in.     See  Caller  Water. 

— -Fergusson. 
Whanne  that  April  with  his  shour^s  soote.     See  Can- 
terbury Tales,  The  (Prologue). — Chaucer. 
"Whar  ye  gawin',  Andy?"  siz  mother.     See  Settin'  up 

with  Elder  McK'ag's  Peggy. — McCook. 
Wharefore  sou'd  ye  talk  o'  love.     See  Willy  and  Helen. 

— Ainslie. 
What  a  beautiful  day!     Had  the  weather  been  wet. 

See  My  Ddjeuner  A  La  Fourchette. — Bayly. 
What  a  beautiful  thing  is  etiquette!     See  Lesson  in 

Etiquette,  A. — Thatcher.     ^ 
What  a  confusion  there  is  in  the  school!     See  May 

Queen,  The. — Anon. 
What  a  dainty  life  the  milkmaid  leads.     See  Milkmaid, 

The.— Nabbes. 
What  a  difficult  thing  it  would  be  to  sit  down  and  try 

to    enumerate.     See    Influence    of    Life,    The. — 

Thackeray. 
"What  a  fool  you  are,  Paley,"  said  a  young  man  in  a 

British  university.     See  same. — Barnes. 
What  a  frail  thing  is  beauty!  says  Baron  Le  Cras.     See 

Forma  Bonum  Fragile. — Prior. 
"What  a  friend  we  have  in  Jesus."     See  Blessing  of 

Song,  The. — Anon. 
What  a  fuss  Delia  makes  about  this  visit.     See  Ex- 
pected Visitors,  The. — Graham. 
What  a  fwagwant  cweachaw  she  ith!     See  Lord  Dun- 
dreary on  Mental  Photographs. — Anon. 
What  a   marvelous  history  is  ours!     See  Decoration 

Day  Address,  A. — -Richardson. 


What  a  moment,  what  a  doubt!  See  Sneezing. — 
Hunt. 

What  a  nice  rose-bush,  Charles.  Where  did  you  get  it? 
See  Rose  Bush,  The. — Anon. 

What  a  noble  gift  to  man  are  the  forests!  See  same. 
— Cooper. 

What  a  pretty  tale  you  told  me.  See  Two  Poets 
of  Croisic,  The  (Tale,  A). — Browning. 

What  a  profcfund  study  is  the  law!  and  how  diflBcult  to 
fathom!  See  Goody  Grim  versus  Lapstone. — 
Matthews. 

What  a  profound  study  is  the  law !  How  shall  I  define 
it?     See  Beauties  of  the  Law. — Anon. 

What  a  queer  title!  a  handful  of  wool!  See  Handful 
of  Wool,  A. — .A.non. 

"What  a  quiet  man  your  husband  is,  Mrs.  Smith." 
See  Quiet  Mr.  Smith,  The. — Fern. 

What  a  rare  treat  it  is  to  meet  with  three  persons  so 
distinguished.  See  Some  "Arabian  Nights"  Peo- 
ple.— Denton. 

What  a  rude,  blustering  fellow  is  March!  See  Who 
Shall  be  Queen  of  May? — Wayland. 

What  a  time  since  I  wrote! — I'm  a  sad  naughty 
girl.  See  Fudge  Family  in  Paris,  The  (Letters 
from  Miss  Biddy  Fudge). — Moore. 

What  a  trying  life  we  lawyers  lead,  to  be  sure.  See 
Pair  of  Lions,  A. — Gushing. 

What  a  wonder  seems  the  fear  of  death.  See  On  the 
Death  of  Chatterton. — Coleridge. 

What  a  work  was  that  to  make  a  weak  man  falter  and 
a  brave  man  think!  See  Storming  of  Mission 
Ridge,  The  (Battle  of  .Mission  Ridge,  The).— 
Taylor. 

What  aggregated  wisdom  must  that  fellow  be  pos- 
sessed of.     See  Curious  Want,  A. — Cook. 

What  agony  was  visible  on  my  mother's  face.  See 
Resisting  a  Mother's  Love. — Anon. 

What  ails  the  black  rooster?  He  seems  very  sick. 
See  Sick  Rooster,  The. — Goodwin. 

What  ails  this  heart  of  mine?     See  same. — Blamire. 

What  ails  you  that  you  look  so  pale.  See  Ballad  of 
Marjorie,  A. — Sigerson. 

What!  alive  and  so  bold,  O  Earth?  See  Lines  on  the 
Death  of  Napoleon. — Shelley. 

What  am  I  afther  radin'  do  you  be  askin'!  See  Tim's 
Downfall. — Smith. 

What  am  I  offered  for  Baby?  See  Auctioning  Off  the 
Baby. — Anon. 

What  am  I  to  do?  Last  week  Augustus  Lofty  pro- 
posed to  me.     See  Awful  Boots. — McBride. 

What  an  awful  long  day!  I  wish  it  was  time  to  go  to 
bed.  See  Idleness  is  the  Mother  of  All  Evil. — 
Anon. 

What  an  enormous  interest  the  drink-traffic  has  built 
up.     See  Put  out  that  Fire! — Taylor. 

What  an  idiot  I  am  to  wait  here  for  a  fellow.  See  Mrs. 
Hardcastle's  Journey. — Goldsmith. 

What  an  image  of  peace  and  rest.  See  Old  St.  David's 
at  Radnor. — Longfellow. 

What  are  another's  faults  to  me?  See  Faults. — 
Anon. 

"What  are  little  girls  good  for?"  See  Little  Helpers. — 
Brown. 

What !  are  my  deeds  forgot?  See  Troilus  and  Cressida. 
— Shakespeare. 

What  are  sufficient  causes  of  war,  let  no  man  say,  let  no 
legislator  say.  See  Responsibilities  of  a  Recom- 
mendation of  War. — Binney. 

"What  are  the  bugles  blowin'  for?"  said  Files-on- 
Parade.     See  Dann.v  Deever. — Kipling. 

What  are  the  flowers  of  Scotland.     See  sam.e. — Hogg. 

What  are  the  long  waves  singing  so  mournfully  ever- 
more?    See  Olivia. — Pollock. 

What  are  the  thoughts  that  are  stirring  his  breast? 
See  Under  the  Shade  of  the  Trees.— Preston. 

What  are  the  Vision  and  the  Cry.  See  Confused  Dawn, 
The.— Lighthall. 

What  are  these  in  bright  array.  See  same. — Mont- 
gomery. 

What  are  these,  so  withered?  See  Macbeth. — Shake- 
speare. 

What  are  we  going  to  do,  dear  friends.  See  Year  That 
is  to  Come,  'The. — Gage. 

What  are  we  looking  at,  guv'nor?  See  Fireman's 
Wedding,  The.— Eaton. 

What  are  we  to  do?  How  are  we  to  bring  this  emer- 
gent and  pressing  question.  See  Compromise 
Measures,  The  (Compromise  Bill  of  1850,  The).— 
Webster. 

What  are  ye  a.skin',  stranger,  about  that  lock  o'  har. 
See  Curly-head. — Brooks. 

What  are  you  able  to  build  with  your  blocks?  See 
Block  City. — Stevenson. 


917 


What  are 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


What  are  you  doin'  now,  Bones?     See  Bones  working 

on  a  Farm. — Anon. 
What  are  you  doing?— Copying!     Got  to  do  something! 

See  Pnotograpn  Gallery,  The. — Graham. 
What  are  you  doing^  little  white  cloud?     See  Cloud, 

The. — Anon. 
What  are  you  doing,  Mary?     See  Force  of  Imagination, 

The. — Anon. 
What  are  you  good  for,  my  brave  little  m*n?     See  My 

Good-for-Nothing. — Miller. 
What,  are  [wr.  bel  you  hurt,  lieutenant?     See  Othello, 

the  Moor  of  Venice  (Cassio's  Ix).st  Reputation). — 

Shakespeare. 
What,  are  you  hurt.  Sweet?     So  am  I.     See  To  a  Hurt 

Child.— Litchfield. 
What  are  you  making,  Lizzie?     See  Church  Raffles. — 

Anon. 
What  are  you  playing.  Miss  Glen, — a  dirge.     See  Holi- 
day.— Case. 
What  ore  you  reading,  Daniel?     See  Bumps.— Anon. 
What  are    you    singing^   for?     See    Mary    Maloney's 

Philosophy. — Anon. 
"What,  are  you   stepping  westward?" — "Yea."     See 

Stepping  Westward. — Wordsworth. 
What  are  you  waiting  for,  George,  I  pray?     See  Tardy 

George. — Anon. 
What  art  thou?     What  dost  thou  look  like?     See  Kiss, 

A. — Anon. 
What  avails  a  confession,  O  father,  when  the  doom  of 

the  morning  is  near.     See  Franceses. — Clark. 
What  awful  debts  are  the.se,  my  son?     See  "As  Ye 

Sow." — Mack. 
What  I    be   you    hurt,  Lieutenai.t?     See   Othello,  the 

Moor    of     Venice    (Regrets    of     Drunkenness). — 

Shakespeare. 
What  became  of  the  kitten  you  had  when  I  was  here 

before?     See  What  Became  of  the  Kitten. — Anon. 
What  beck'ning  ghost,  along  the  moonlight  shade.     See 

Elegy  to  the  Memory  of  an  Unfortunate  Lady. — 

Pope. 
What  bird  is  that,  with  voice  so  sweet.     See  Creole 

Slave-song,  A. — Thompson. 
What  bird  so  sings,  yet  does  so  wail?     See  Alexan- 
der and  Campaspe  (Spring's  Welcome). — Lyly. 
What  boot  is  it  though  I  am  said  to  be.     See  Britan- 
nia's Pastorals  (Complaint  of  Pan,  The). — Browne. 
What  boots  it  that  thine  eye  is  bright.     See  To . 

— Dalling. 
What  bring  ye  me,  O  camels,  across  the  southern  desert. 

See  Caravans. — Peabody. 
What,  brother,  not  gone  yet?     I  thought  you  were  to 

meet.     See  Now  or  Never.— Pickering. 
What  can  a  helpless  female  do?     See  Women  and  Their 

Ways. — Anon. 
What  can  ail  the  Bergen  burghers.     See  Black  Death 

of  Bergen,  The. — Dufferin. 
What  can  be  better  calculated  to  fill  the  mind.     See 

Behind  the  Scenes. — Anon. 
What  can  better  please.     See  Fields  in  May,  The. — 

AUingham. 
What  can  console  for  a  dead  world?    See  God  and  the 

Soul  (Believe  and  Take  Heart). — Spalding. 
What  constitutes  a  state?     See  Ode  in  Imitation  of 

Alcaeus,  An. — Jones. 
What   constitutes  a  state?     See    also  Our  Country's 

Needs.— -Finch. 
What  can  I  give  him.     See  Birthday  Gift,  A. — Ros- 

setti. 
What  can  it  mean?  is  it  aught  to  Him.     See  God  Cares. 

— Anon. 
What  can  lambkins  do.     See  Chill,  A. — Rossetti. 
What,  can  those  dead  bones  live,  whose  sap  is  dried. 

See  New  Ezekiel,  The. — Lazarus. 
What  can  we  do  to  help  mamma.    See  Helping  Mamma. 

— Anon. 
What  can  we  play?     See  Keeping  Store. — Anon. 
"What  canst  thou  do?"  said  the  oak  to  the  flower. 

See  That  Little.— Jay. 
What  care   I  for  the  tempest?      See  Cleopatra's   So- 
liloquy.— Clark. 
"What  care  I,  what  cares  he."     See  Cowboy,  The. — 

Antrobus. 
What  change    has    made    the    pastures    sweet.     See 

Maiden  with  a  Milking-pail,  A. — Ingelow. 
What  charlatans  in  this  later  day.     See  Deathless,  The. 

Hayes. 
What  charms  are  thine,  oh  incense  breathing  mom. 

See  Morning. — Burdette. 
What  cheer  is  there  that  is  half  so  good.     See  Winter 

Apples. — Whitney. 
What  chivalry  did  for  the  few,  the  Olympic  contests 

effected  for  the  many.     See  Athens:  Its  Rise  and 

Fall  (Olympic  Crown,  The). — Bulwer-Lytton. 


What  Cometh  here  from  west  to  east  a-wending?     See 

Death-song,  A.— Morris. 
What,  comrade  of  a  night.     See  Life. — Brown. 
What  conscience,  say,  is  it  in  thee.     See  To  (Enone. — 

Herrick. 
What   cordial    welcomes   greet    the    guests.     See  Oh, 

Mother  of  a  Mighty  Race  ("What  cordial,"  etc.). 

Bryant. 
What  could  I  do  when  I  was  shown  my  task.     See  Re- 
venge, A.— -Meyers. 
What  country  ever  offered  a  nobler  theater  for  the 

display   of   eloquence   than   our  own?     See   Elo- 
quence.— Cass. 
What,  cringe  to   Europe!     Band  it  all   in   one  .     See 

To  America. — Boker. 
What  curled  and  scented  sun-girls,  almond-eyed.     See 

On  a  Lute  Found  in  a  Sarcophagus. — Gosse. 
What  days   await   this   woman.     See   Forecast,   A. — 

Lampman. 
What  delight  to  back  the  flying  steed.     See  Love  Chase. 

The  (Hunt,  The).— Knowles. 
What  did  the  baby  come  for?     See  Why? — Moore. 
What  did  the  baby  go  for?     See  "Only  a  Bit  of  Child- 
hood Thrown  Away." — Moore. 
What  did  the  sparrows  do  yesterday?     See  In  April. — 

Jackson. 
What    did    you    have    for    breakfast,    Johnson?     See 

Tambo  on  Entomology. — Anon. 
What  did    you    mean    yesterday,    dear    mother.     See 

Winning  the  Prize. — Anon. 
What  did  you  say,  dear — breakfast?     See  Left  Alone 

at  Eighty. — Robbins. 
What  did  you  say?     Does  the  ole  place  look  kind  o' 

nat'ral  like?     See  Old  Homestead,  The. — Daven- 
port. 
What  did  you  say,  Mrs.   Smith?     See  Musical  Bore, 

The. — Anon. 
What  dire  offence  from  amorous  causes  springs.     See 

Rape  of  the  Lock,  The. — Pope. 
What  distant  thunders  rend  the  skies.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Captain  Nicholas  Biddle. — Freneau. 
What  do  grown  folks  do,  mamma.     See  Bed-time. — 

Anon. 
What  do    I    see   in   the   burning   coals.     See   Unseen 

Depths,  The. — Langdon. 
What  do  the  birds  say,  I  wonder,  I  wonder.     See  Little 

Girl's  Wonder,  A. — Anon. 
What  do  the  dear  girls  learn  nowadays.     See  Ballade 

of  College  Girls,  A. — Batchelder. 
What  do    the     robins     whisper    about.     See    Three 

o'clock  in  the  Morning. — Palfrey. 
What  do  we  plant  when  we  plant  the  tree?     See  Have 

you  Planted  a  Tree? — Abbey. 
What  do  you  bring,  O  children.     See  Our  Country. — 

Bayley. 
What  do  you  mean  by  saying.     See  Little  Pitcher,  A. 

— Denton. 
What  do  you  say?     What?     See  Use  Plain  Language. 

Anon. 
What  do   you   think   I   saw   to-day.     See   Out   in  the 

Meadow. — Anon. 
What  do  you  think  o'  my  youngster, — he's  a  likely  lad, 

sir,  eh?     See  Little  Fireman.  The. — Nichols. 
What  do  you  want  here?     See  Rival  Speakers,  The. — 

Anon. 
What  do  you  want,  Mattie?     See  Voice,  The. — Anon. 
What  does  it  mean  when  the  blue-bird  flies  [or  comes]. 

See  Signs  of  the  Seasons,  The. — Hathaway. 
What  does  it  take  to  make  a  racket.     See  Receipt  for  a 

Racket,  A.— M.  E.  B. 
What  does  little  birdie  say?     See  same. — Tennyson. 
What  does  the  daisy  see.     See  Day's  Eye,  The. — Anon. 
What  does  youth  with  silvered  crown?     See  Gray  Hair 

in  Youth. — Thomas. 
What  domes  and  pinnacles  of  mist  and  fire.     See  Even- 
ing in  Tyringham  Valley. — Gilder. 
What  dost  thou  here,  thou  dusky  courtier?     See  Moth- 
song. — Cortissoz. 
What  dost  thou  here,  young  wife,  by  the  water  side? 

See  Shadow  of  Doom,  The. — Thaxter. 
What,  dost  thou  pray  that  the  outgone  tide  be  rolled 

back  on  the  strand.     See  Far  Cry  to  Heaven,  A. — 

Thomas. 
What  doth  the  poor  man's  son  inherit?     See  Heritage, 

The  (Our  Heritage). — Lowell. 
What  d'ye  buy?     See  Historical  Butcher,  The.— Anon, 
What  end  the  gods  may  have  ordained  for  me.     See 

To  Leuconoe. — Field. 
What  fairings  will  ye  that  I  bring?   See  Singing.  Leaves 

The.— Lowell. 
What  flower  is  this  that  greets  the  mom.     See  Flower 

of  Liberty,  The. — Holmes. 


918 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


What  is 


"What  for  the  Giver,  giant  tree?"     See  For  the  Giver. 

— Cooper. 
What  fragrant-footed    comer.     See    Little    Knight    in 

Green,  The. — Bates. 
What!   Fred,   you   here?     I   didn't   see.     See  On   the 

Channel  Boat. — Anon. 
What  fury  has  provoked  thy  wit  to  dare.     See  To  One 

who  Wrote  against  a  Fair  Lady. — Waller. 
What  gift    for   passionate   lovers   shall   we   find?     See 
Perfume. — Gosse. 

What  gnarled  stretch,  what  depth  of  shade,  is  his !  See 
Oak,  The.— Lowell. 

What  good  is  a  brother?     See  same. — Richards. 

What  great  yoked  brutes  with  briskets  low.  See 
Crossing  the  Plains. — Miller. 

What  guyle  is  this,  that  tho.se  her  golden  tre.s.se8.  See 
Amoretti  and  Epithalamion  (Sonnet:  "What 
guyle,"  etc.). — Spenser 

What  had  happened  to  Emily  Foote?  See  Grand- 
mother's Stitches. — Caldwell. 

What  has  become  of  the  children  all?  See  Les  En- 
fants  Perdus. — Baker. 

What  has  become  of  the  good  ship  Kite?  See  Of  the 
Lost  Ship.— White. 

What  has  become  of  your  fun  and  frivolity?  See 
Clown's  Lament,  The. — Scott. 

What  has  come  over  you,  my  dear?  See  Small  Pitch- 
ers Have  Large  Ears. — Kavanaugh. 

What  has  given  the  liquor  traffic  the  power  to  get  into 
the  heart.  See  Arrest  Alcohol  and  Liberate  Man. 
— Anon. 

What  has  our  country  done  to  repay  the  world  for  the 
benefits  we  have  received  from  others?  See  Our 
History. — Verplanck. 

What  has  this  bugbear  death  that's  worth  our  care? 
See  Sonnet :  Death. — Walsh. 

What  hast  thou  done  to-day?     Sec  same. — Wichmann. 

What  have  I  done  for  you.  See  England,  My  Eng- 
land.— Henley. 

What  have  I  done  that  was  so  criminal?  See  Address 
to  the  Assembly  of  Noblesse. — Mirabeau. 

What  have  T  found  in  the  fields  of  .June.  See  June 
Fields. — Cooper. 

What  have  I  gained  by  the  toil  of  the  trail?  See  Toil 
of  the  Trail,  The.— Garland. 

What  have  I  in  my  hand?  .Jonas,  you  may  tell  me. 
See  Model  I^e.sson,  The. — Anon. 

What  have  I  to  say,  why  sentence  of  death  should  not 
be  pronounced  on  me.  See  On  Being  Found 
Guilty  of  High  Trea.son. — Emmet. 

"What  have  you  done,  dear  children?"  See  Katie's 
Part. — -Perry. 

What,  have  you  let  the  false  enchanter  'scape?  See 
Comus  (Sabrina). — Milton. 

What  have  you  there?  See  Generous  Little  Ones. — 
Anon. 

What,  he  on  whom  our  voices  unanimously  ran.  See 
Pope  and  the  Net,  The. — Browning. 

"What  he  wants  us  to  do  I  can  define  in  no  other  words 
than  these."     See  Path  of  Duty,  The. — Hoar. 

What !  here  again,  indomitable  pest !  See  To  a  Trouble- 
some Fly. — MacKellar. 

What  heroes  from  the  woodland  sprung.  See  Seventy- 
six. — Bryant. 

What  hidden   strength.     See  Comus. — Milton. 

What  hidst  thou  in  thy  treasure-caves  and  cells.  See 
Treasures  of  the  Deep.  The. — Hemans. 

"What,  ho!  Andromeda!"  See  Modern  Shakespeare, 
The. — -Anon. 

What,  ho,  sir  poet!  Dost  thou  pace.  See  Shake- 
speare's Dream. — Anon. 

What  ho !  Virginius !  Virginius !  See  Virginius. — Knowles. 

What,  ho!  Who  hears?  A  stranger  claims  a  refuge  I 
See  His  Enemy's  Honor. — Anon. 

What  holds  her  fixed  far  eyes  nor  lets  them  range?  See 
On  Diirer's  "Melencolia." — Watson. 

What  hope  is  there  for  modern  rhyme.  See  In  Me- 
moriam  (Poet's  Tribute,  The). — Tennyson. 

What  Horace  says  is.     See  Eheu  Fugaces. — Barham. 

What  house  do  you  say? — the  Ship  at  Stock?  See 
Tramp  and  a  Vagabond,  A. — Anon. 

What!  I  go  on,  and  thank  the  gentlefolks!  See  Char- 
acteristic Address. — MoncriefiF. 

What  I  shall  leave  thee,  none  can  tell.  See  To  Vincent 
Corbet,  My  Son. — Corbet. 

What  I  want  is  my  husband,  sir.  See  After  the  Acci- 
dent.— -Harte. 

"What  I  was  gwine  to  remark,"  said  Bro.  Gardener. 
See  De  Goneness  ob  de  Past. — Anon. 

What  if  God  should  place  in  your  hand  a  diamond. 
See  same. — Pay  son. 

What  if  I  saved  from  trampling  feet.  See  Which  is 
Best. — Redden. 


What  if  little  birds  would  sing  soft  to  you.     See  What 

would  you  Think? — Anon. 
What  if  some  morning,  when  the  stars  were  paling. 

See  Morning  Thought,  A.— Sill. 
What  if  the  little  rain  should  say.     See  I  Have   no  In- 
fluence?— Anon. 
What  if  the  Soul  her  real  life  elsewhere  holds.     See 

Soul  in  the  Body,  The. — Thomas. 
What  in  me  is  dark.     See  Paradise  Lost. — Milton. 
What  is  a  gentleman?     Is  it  a  thing.     See  What  is  a 

Gentleman. — Anon. 
What    is  a  minority?     The  chosen  heroes  of  this  earth. 

See  What  is  a  Minority? — Gough. 
What  is  a  school-master?     Why,  can't  you  tell?     See 

Doctor  and  His  Apples,  The. 
What  is  a  sonnet?     "lis  the  pearlv  shell.     See  Sonnet, 

The.— Gilder. 
"What  is  a  Tunkuntel?"  he  asked.   ^See  Tunkuntel, 

The. — Anon. 
What  is  ambition?     'Tis  a  glorious  cheat!     See  What 

is  Ambition?- Willis. 
What,  is    Antonio    here?     See    Merchant    of   Venice, 
The    (Fourth  Act    of    "Merchant    of    Venice"). — 
Shakespeare. 
What  is  commonly  called  musical  criticism  is  a  mis- 
nomer.    See  same. — Edwards. 
What  is  death?     'Tis  to  be  free.     See  Genius  of  Death, 

The.— Croly. 
What  is  eternity?     Can  aught.     See    Eternity. — Gib- 
bons. 
What  is  fame?     'Tis  the  sun-gleam  on  the  mountain. 

See  Fame,  Wealth.  Life,  Death. — Skeat. 
What  is  flirtation?     Really.     See  What  is  Flirtation? 

— Anon. 
What  is  glory  but  the   blaze  of   fame.     See  Paradise 

Regained. — Milton. 
What  is  gold  worth,   say.     See  Child's  Song. — Swin- 
burne. 
"What  is  good  for  a  bootless  bene?"     See  Force  of 

Prayer,  The. — Wordsworth. 
What  is  he  buzzing  in  my  ears?     See  Confessions. — 

Browning. 
"What  is  heaven?"  I  asked  a  little  child.     See  What 

is  Heaven? — Anon. 
What  is  hell  but  an  expression  of  God's  infinite  ab- 
horrence of  sin.     See  tame. — Beecher. 
What  is  Hope?     A  smiling  rainbow.     See  "Cui  Bono?" 

— Carlyle. 
What  is  it  ails  my  dollie  dear?     See  Very  Bad  Case,  A. 

— StaufTer. 
What  is  it  comes  through  the  deepening  dusk.     See 

Scent  of  a  Good  Cigar,  The. — Carrington. 
What  is  it  fades  and  flickers  in  the  fire.     See  By  the 

Fireside. — Larcom. 
What  is    it,    my    Renzo?     What    is  thy  desire?     See 

Florentine  Juliet,  A. — Coolidge. 
What  is  it  that,  as  taxpayers,  as  parents.     See  Mission 

of  the  Public  Schools,  The.— Hyde. 
What  is  that  gives  to  the  plainest  face.     See  Open 

Secret,  An. — Thaxter. 
What  is  it  that  is  gone  we  fancied  ours?     See   Mo\\a.n 

Harp. — Allingham, 
What  is  it  that  we  children  feel.     See  At  Nightfall. — 

Larcom. 
"What    is  it  to  be  dead?"  O  Life.     See  Child's  Ques- 
tion, A.^Nason. 
What  is  it  to  grow  old?     See  Growing  Old. — Arnold. 
What  is  it  we  are  going  to  do.  Bertha?     See  Parlia- 
mentary Law. — Denton. 
What  is  ministerial  success?     See  same. — Robertson. 
What  is  needed  to  elevate  the  soul  is,  not  that  a  man 

should  know  all.     See  Great  Ideas. — Channing. 
What  is    noble?     To    inherit.     See    True    Nobility.— 

Swain. 
What  is   our   duty   here?     To   tend.     See   Our   Duty 

Here. — Bowring. 
What  is   Patriotism?     Is  it  a  narrow  affection.     See 

What  is  Patrioti.sm? — Ames. 
What  is  so  rare  as  a  day  in  June.     See  Vision  of  Sir 

Launfal,  The  (June). — Lowell. 
"What  is  that  great  bird,  sister,  tell  me."     See  Shag, 

The.— Thaxter. 
What  is  that  long  procession  approaching  .Jerusalem? 

See  "Half  was  not  Told  Me,  The."— Talmage. 
What  is  that?     Look  closer  and  you  will  see  that  it  is 
a  gaunt,   grim  wolf.     See  Wiped   Out. — {Detroit 
Free  Press.) 
What  is  that,  mother? — The  eagle,   boy.     See  What 

is  That,  Mother  ?    (Eagle,  The). — Doane. 
What  is    that,    mother? — The    lark,    my    child.     See 

What  is  That,  Mother?- Doane. 
What  is  the  age  in  which  you  are  called  to  act?     See 
Twentieth  Clentury,  The. — Gates. 


919 


What  is 


A\  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


What  is  the  bigot's  torch,   the  tyrant's  chain?     See 

Pleasures  of  Hope,  Tne  (Hope   of  an  Hereafter, 

The).— Campbell. 

What  is  the  existence  of  man's  life.     See  Life. — King. 

"What  is  the  fog,   mamma?"    See  Fog,  The. — Anon. 

What  is  the  heritage  that  has  come  down  to  us  from 

Lincoln's  administration.     See  Our  Rich  Heritage. 

- — Thurston. 

What  is    the    Iron  Rule?     See  Iron— Silver— Gold. — 

Anon. 
What  is  the  joy  of  living.     See  Gipsy  Song. — (Williams 

Literary  Monthly.) 
What  is  the  kitty  good  for?     See  Benny's  Questions. — 

Anon. 
What   is   the   life  of   man?     See   Life   and   Death. — 

Anon. 
WTiat  is  the  little  one  thinking  about?     See  Bitter- 
sweet (Babyhood). — Holland. 
What   is  the  matter  with  Grandpapa?     See  Poor  Dear 

Grandpapa. — Thompson. 
What  is  the  meaning  of  the  song.     See  I  Love  My  Love. 

— Mackay. 
What  is  the  price  of  human  life.     See  Price  of  High 

License,  The.— Waterhouse. 
"What  is    the    real    good?"     See    What    is    Good?— 

O'ReiUy. 
What  is  the  song  the  swallows  sing.     See  What  is  the 

Song  the  Swallows  Sing. — Smith. 
What    is  the  Sunday  newspaper?     Let  us  be  honest. 

See  Sunday  Newspaper,  The. — Johnson. 
"What  is  the  use  of  thee,  thou  gnarled  sapling?"     See 

Larch  and  the  Oak,  "The. — Carlyle. 
What   is  the  use  of  these  tiny  hands?     See  Little  Girl's 

Questions,  A. — Anon. 
What  is  the  voice  I  hear.     See  Britannia  to  Columbia. 

— Austin. 
"What  is    the    wind,    mamma?"     See    Wind,    The. 

— Anon. 
What  is  the  world,  my  little  one?     See  Days  and  the 

Year,  The.— Blodgett. 
What  is  there  down  so  deep.     See  Mother's  Love. — 

Anon. 
What  is   there   wanting  in  the  Spring?     See   Wistful 

Days,  The. — Johnson. 
What  is  this?     A  letter  from  my  wife?    See  Reason- 
able Man,  A. — Macqueen. 
What  is  this  army  that's  marching  to-day?     See  Tem- 
perance Song  Recital. — Brown. 
What  is  this?     This,  darling,  is  the  opera.     See  Popu- 
lar Science  Cathechism. — Anon. 
What  is  this  thunder  music  from  the  other  side  of  the 

world.     See  Song  of  Dewey's  Guns,  The.^Foss. 
What  is  time,  O  glorious  Giver.     See  Time. — Cary. 
What  is  to  be  the  destiny  of  this  Republic?     See  Future 

of  the  United  States,  The.— Story. 
What  is  to  be  thought  of    her?     See  Joan  of  Arc. — 

De  Quincey. 
"Wliat  is  your  bugle  blowin'  for?"  said  Rudyard  to 

the  maid.     See  "Danny  Deever"  up  to  Date. — 

Anon. 
"What  is    your    name?"     asked     the     teacher.     See 

Tommy  Brown. — (Common  School  Education.) 
What  is    your    opinion    of    matrimony,    Bones?     See 

Bones'  Opinion  of  Matrimony. — Anon. 
"What  is  your  substance,   whereof  are   you   made." 

See  Sonnets,  LIII. — Shakespeare. 
What  is't,  Fine  Grand,  makes  thee  my  friendship  fly. 

See  To  Fine  Grand. — Jonson. 
WTjat,  it  is  asked,  has  this  nation  done  to  repay  the 

world.     See  America's  Contributions  to  the  World. 

— Verplanck. 
What!  keep  a  week   away?     Seven  days  and  nights. 

See  Othello,  the  Moor  of  Venice. — Shakespeare. 
What  lack  the  valleys  and  the  mountains.    See  Shadow, 

A. — Procter. 
What  lesson  shall  those  lips  teach  us?     See  Burial  of 

John  Brown,  The.— Phillips. 
What  lightning  shall  light  be?     What  thunder  shall  tell 

it?     See  Martin  Luther  at  Potsdam. — Pain. 
What  love  do  I  bring  you?     See  Measure  for  Measure. 

— Spoflord. 
What  make    you    from    Wittenburg,     Horatio?     See 

Hamlet. — Shakespeare. 
What  makes    a    hero? — not    success,    not    fame.     See 

What  Makes  a  Hero? — Taylor. 
What  makes  all  doctrines  plain  and  clear.     See  Hudi- 

bras. — Butler. 
What  makes  it  night?     I  want  to  go.     See  Child's  Won- 
der, The. — Johnson. 
What  makes   one   refuse   a   social   glass?     See   Social 

Gla.ss,  A. — Anon. 
"What  makes  the   rain,   mamma?"     See   Rain,   The. 

— Anon. 


What    makes  you  come  here  fer,  mister?     See  Prior  to 

Miss  Belle's  Appearance. — Riley. 
What  makes  your  eyes  so  blue,   laddy?     See  Laddy 

Blue  Eyes. — Smith. 
What  man  can  live  denying  his  own  soul?     See  Im- 
perial Soul,  The.— Mitchell. 
What  man  is  there  so  bold  that  he  should  say.     See 

Liberty. — Hay. 
What,  married!  Evangeline  married?     Great  Heavens, 
it  cannot  be  so!     See  Cruel  Deception,  A. — Anon. 
What  may  we  take  into  the  vast  Forever?     See  Future, 

The.— Sill. 
What  means  this  firing,  mother?     Have  we  succeeded? 
Is  my  father  safe?     See  Hugo  Grotius. — Kotzebue. 
"What  means  this  glory  round  our  feet?"     See  ("hrist- 

mas  Carol,  A. — Lowell. 
What  means    yon    trampling?    what    that    light.     See 

Death  of  the  Duke  d'Enghien,  The.— White. 
What  mechanical  inventions  already  crowd  upon  us! 

See  Age  of  Work,  The. — Kennedy. 
What  might   be  done  if  men  were  wise.     See  What 

might  be  Done. — Mackay. 
What  mighty  ills  have  not  been  done  by  woman?     See 

Orphan,  The. — Otway. 
What  Mr.Bowser  didn't  know  about  dressmaking  up 

to  a  week  ago  wasn't  worth  knowing.     See  Mr. 

Bowser  among  the  Dressmakers. — Anon. 
"What  mockery  or  malice  have  we  here?"  cries  Herv^ 

Riel.     See  Herv^  Riel. — Browning. 
What  more  felicitie  can  fall  to  creature.     See  Fate  of 

the  Butterfly,  The. — Spenser. 
What  mortal,  when  he  saw.     See  Human  Life. — Ar- 
nold. 
What  motley  cares  Gorilla's  mind  perplex.     See  Lit- 
erary Lady,  The. — Sheridan. 
What  must    be   must   be,    little    one.     See   Verses. — 

— Wickes. 
What,  my  young  master?    O  my  gentle  master!     See 

As  you  Like  It  (Adam's  Warning  and  Persuasion 

of  his  Young  Master  Orlando). — Shakespeare. 
What  name  can  I  sign?     I,  who  have  no  right  to  any 

name.     See  Gerald  and  his  Mother. — Wilde. 
What  name    shall    I    say,  please,  sir?     See  Decidedly 

Cool. — Jerrold. 
What  needs  complaints.     See  Comfort  to  a  Youth  that 

had  Lost  his  Love. — Herrick. 
What  needs  my  Shakespeare   for   his  honored   bones. 

See  Epitaph  on  the  Admirable  Dramatic  Poet,  W. 

Shakespeare,  An. — Milton. 
What  news  (sweet  Pool)  look'st  thou  my  lines  should 

tell.     See  Queen  Margaret  to  William  de  la  Pool. — 

Drayton. 
What  note  of  sorrow  wounds  the  joyous  May?     See 

sam,e. — Hobart. 
What  now,  jailor?  did  I  not  beg  to  be  free  from  thy 

babbling  instrusion?     See  False  Accusation,  The. 

- — Swander. 
What  now,  Wiley;  inspecting  stock?     See  Fighting  the 

Rum-fiend. — Thayer. 
What  nymph  should  I  admire  or  trust.     See  Question 

to  Lisetta,  The. — Prior. 
What  of  her  glass  without  her?     The  blank  gray.     See 

Without  Her. — Rossetti. 
What  on  earth  does   that    fellow  want.     See    Double 

Play. — Wayne. 
What  one  does  easily  is  apt  to  be  his  forte.    See  Holmes, 

Extract  Concerning.^Underwood. 
What  patriotic   purpose  is  to  be  accomplished.     See 

Expunging  Resolution,  The. — Clay. 
What  peaceful    hours    I    once    enjoyed.     See    Elder 

Sniffle's  Courtship. — Witcher. 
What  pleasure   have   great   princes.     See   Quiet  Life, 

The— Byrd. 
What  potions  have  I  drunk  of  Siren   tears.     See  Son- 
nets, CXIX. — Shakespeare. 
What  precious   associations   cluster   around   our   flag. 

See  Our  Flag. — Putnam. 
What  reck  we  of  the  creeds  of  men  ?     See  What  Matters 

it? — Cameron. 
What  reflecting  American  does  not  acknowledge   the 

incalculable  advantages.     See  First  Settlement  of 

New  England,  The  (Our  Relations  with  England). 

— Everett. 
What  reputation,  what  honor,  what  profit  can  accrue 

to  you.  See  Weathercock,  The. — Allingham. 
What  rights  the  brave?  See  Sword,  The. — Barry. 
What!     Robbed  the  mail  at  midnight!     See  On  the 

Frontier. — Jones. 
What!     Roses  on  thy  tomb!  and  was  there  then.     See 

Ave!     Nero  Imperator. — Osborne. 
What  ruined  me  and  got  me  into  an  idiot  asylum  was 

this.     See  What  Drove  Me  into  a  I^unatic  Asy- 
lum.— Perkins. 


920 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


What  wak'st 


What  sacred   memories   entwine.     See  Washington. — 

Caldwell. 
What  saw  you  in  your  flight  to-day.     See  Vagabonds, 

The. — Johnson. 
What  sawest  thou, Orion,  thou  hunter  of  the  star-lands. 

See  Singing  Stars. — -Hinkson. 
What  say?     A  song  or  a  story?     Draw  up  a  box  'r  a 

chair.     See  Along  the  Line. — Russell. 
What  say  the  Bells  of  San  Bias.     See  Bells  of  San  Bias, 

The. — Longfellow. 
What  says    the    little    brook?     See    Little    Voices. — 

Anon. 
What    seat    is    that,    my  lord?     See    Mary    Stuart. — 

Schiller. 
What  seek  I  here?     I  know  not;  yet  I  feel  I  have  a 

mission    to   fulfill.      See    Leah,    the    Forsaken. — 

Daly. 
What  seek'st  thou  at  this  madman's  pace?     See  His 

Quest. — Tooker. 
What  seemed  the  great  primeval  curse.     See  Opportu- 
nity to  Labor. — Reed. 
What  seems  to  be  the  most  needed  patriotism.     See 

>few  Patriotism,  The. — Gilder. 
What  shall  be  said  of  this  embattled  day.     See  Parted 

Love. — Rossetti. 
What  shall  be  written  of  the  man.     See  On  a  Birthday. 

— Morris. 
What  shall  become  of  the  ancient  race.     See  Ancient 

Race,  The. — Tormey. 
What  shall  her  silence  keep.     See  Dirge. — Cawein. 
What  shall  I  do  for  my  love.     See  same, — Morris. 
What  shall  I  do?     Here  is  a  letter.     See  Between  the 

Acts.— Griffith. 
What  shall  I  do  lest  life  in  silence  pass?     See  Fame. — 

Schiller. 
"What  shall    I    do?"     My   boy,    don't    stand    asking. 

See  same. — Gage. 
What  shall  I  do  to  be  forever  known?     See  Duty. — 

Schiller. 
What  shall  I  do  with  all  the  days  and  hours.     See  Ab- 
sence.— Kemble. 
What  shall  I  give  you,  sweet,  to-day?     See  Birthday 

Greeting,  A. — Edlin. 
What!  shall  I  ne'er  more  see  those  halcyon  days!     See 

To  Zepheria. — Anon. 
What  shall  I  say  to  thee,  heart  of  my  heart.     See  Love's 

Proving. — Weatherly. 
"What  .shall    I    wear    to    the    ball,    ma    belle?"     See 

Norine. — Anon. 
What  shall   I   wish   thee   for   the   coming  year?     See 

Birthday  Greeting,  A. — M.  E.  F. 
What  shall  little  children  bring.     See  Children's  Offer- 
ing, The. — Alcott. 
What  shall  my  gift  be  to  the    dead  one  lying.     See 

Lilian  Adelaide  Neilson. — Scott. 
What  shall  we  do  now,  Mary  being  dead.     See  Mary 

Booth. — Parsons. 
What  shall    we    do    this    evening?     See    Amusement 

Circle,  The. — Anon. 
"What  shall  we  have  for  dinner  to-day?"     See  What 

Ailed  the  Pudding. — Pollard. 
What  shall  we   mourn?     For  the   prost  ate  tree  that 

sheltered  the  young  green  wood?     See    Wendell 

Phillips.— O'Reilly. 
What  shall  we  wrap  the  baby  in?     See  same. — Lar- 

com. 
What  shall  withstand  her?     Who  shall  gainsay  her? 

See  Parliament  of  Man,  The. — Brown. 
What?     Sho'!     You  don't!     Do  you  mean  it,  though? 

See  Wabash  Violets. — Marble. 
What  should  a  man  desire  to  leave?     See  Pro  Mortuis. 

— Palgrave. 
What  should  I  say  ?     Since  Faith  is  dead.     See  Re- 
vocation, A. — Wyatt. 
What  should  I  say  to  you?     See  Merchant  of  Venice, 

The. — Shakespeare. 
What!  shut  the  Gardens!  lock  the  latticed  gate!     See 

Sunday  Question,  The. — Hood. 
What  sight  so  lured  him  thro'  the  fields  he  knew.     See 

Far — far — away. — Tennyson. 
What  sing  the  sweet  birds  in  each  grove?     See  Inner 

Temple  Masque,  The  (Song    in  the   Wood,    The). 

— Browne. 
What,  sir,  is  the  Supreme  Court  of  the  United  States? 

See  Supreme  Court  of  the  United  States,  The. — 

Binney. 
What!  soared  the  old  eagle  to  die  at  the  sun!     See 

Death  of  Harrison. — Willis. 
What  solace    would    those    books    afford.     See    Our 

Book-shelves.— Hake. 
What  song  is  well  sung  not  of  sorrow.     See  Hope. — 

Miller. 


What  song   sang   the   twelve   with   the    Saviour.     See 

Last  Supper,  The. — Miller. 
What  songs  found  voice  upon  those  lips.     See  Helen 

Hunt  Jackson. — Coolbrith. 
What  sound,  the  world  round.     See  Bobolink's  Song, 

The.— Waterloo. 
What  stands   upon   the   highlands?     See   Moonrise. — 

Jones. 
What  strength!  what   strife!  what  rude  unrest!     See 

Westward  Ho! — Miller. 
What   stronger  breastplate    than   a    heart    untainted. 

See  King  Henry  VL.  Pt.  II. — Shakespeare. 
"What  struck?"  "Half-past  ten  o'clock."     See  Water- 
loo.— Sladen. 
What  sudden   blaze  of  song.     See  Christmas  Day. — 

Keble. 
What  sweet  relief  the  showers  to  thirsty  plants  we  see. 

See  True  Love,  A. — Grimald. 
What!  tear  the  old  church  down,  you  say,  and  build  a 

modern  one.     See  Old  Church,  The. — Johnson. 
What  telegraphed  word.     See  Return  of  the  Hillside 

Legion. — Lynn. 
What  tents  gleam  on  the  green  hill-side,  like  snow  in 

the    sunny    beam?     See    Bernardo's    Revenge. — 

Anon. 
What  the  Greek  wrought,   the  vaunting  Frank  may 

gain.     See  Antique  at  Paris,  The. — Schiller. 
What  then  is  love  but  mourning?     See  Come  Away! — ■ 

Champion. 
What,  then,  remains?     The  liberty  of  the  press,  only. 

See  Liberty  of  the  Press.  The. — Curran. 
"What  then,   what   if    my   lips  do  burn."    See  Ulf   in 

Ireland. — De  Kay. 
What!  then   you   won't    accept   it,    won't   you?     Oh! 

See  On  a  Rejected  Nosegay. — (Punch.) 
What  thing  is  beauty?     "Nature's  dearest   minion!" 

See  Beauty  and  Time. — J.  C. 
What  things  have  we  seen.     See  Ben  Jonson. — Beau- 
mont. 
What  tho'    short    thy    date?     See    Night    Thoughts. 

— Young. 
What  though  I  leave  this  dull  and  earthly  mould.     See 

Bard  Speaks,  The. — Keats. 
What  though    I    sing    no    other    song?     See    Golden 

Silence,  The. — Winter. 
What  though  the  field  be  lost?     See  Paradise  Lost. 

— Milton. 
What  though  the  green  leaf  grow?     See  same. — Flem- 
ing. 
What  though  the  radiant  thoroughfare.     See  Bells  of 

Notre  Dame,  The. — Anon. 
What  though    the    storm-king    growls    in    rage.     See 

Toast,  A. — Lane. 
What  though  thy  Muse  the  singer's  art  essay.     See  To 

America. — Garnett. 
What  though  your  feet  are  often  overweary.     See  Min- 
istering.— Anon. 
What  time  is  it?     Heavens!  we'll  have  half  an  hour  to 

wait.   .  See  Just  as  she  Told  It. — Witheridge. 
What  time  is  it? — Seven  o'clock  you  say?     See  Dying 

Actor,  The. — Fawcett. 
What  time  is  it?     Time  to  do  well.     See  What  Time 

is  it? — Anon. 
What  time  the  earth  takes  on  the  garb  of  spring.     See 

Incipit  Vita  Nova. — Payne. 
What  time   the   glittering    rays   of  morn.     See  Abor- 
iginal Chant. — Anon. 
What  time  the  mighty  moon  was  gathering  light.     See 

Love  and  Death. — Tennyson. 
What  time  the  rose  of  dawn  is  laid  across  the  lips  of 

night.     See  Angler's  Reveille,  The. — Van  Dyke. 
What  time  the  winter  sun  is  low.     See  Finis. — Bur- 

dette. 
What  time  this  world's  great  Workmaster  did  cast. 

See  Hymn  in  Honour  of  Beauty. — Spenser. 
What  time  Ulysses,  in  the  frosty  morn.     See  Odd   I 

See,  The. — Burdette. 
What  tongue    the    melodies    of    morn    can    tell?     See 

Morning. — Beattie. 
What  two  men  were  hidden  in  a  well  by  a  woman.     See 

Questions  about  Women. — Anon. 
What?  up  for  de  Senate!     See  Old  Vote  for  "Young 

Marster,"  An. — De  Jarnette. 
What  voice  did  on  my  spirit  fall.     See  Peschiera. — 

Clough. 
What  voice  is  that?  my  young  lord?  speak  again.     See 

Comus  (Spirit-shepherd,  The). — Milton. 
"What  voice,   what  harp,   are  those  we  hear."      See 

Wilhelm  Meister's  Apprenticeship  (Minstrel,  The). 

— Goethe. 
What  wak'st  thou.  Spring? — sweet  voices  in  the  woods. 

See  Breathings  of  Spring. — Hemans. 


921 


What  was 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


See  Musical 
jSee  Left  on 


See  What  7— 


What  was  David  doing  when  he  was  called  to  be  king? 

.SVe  Search  Questions.— Anon. 
What  was  he  tloing,  the  great  god  Pan. 

Instrument,  A. — Browning. 
What,  was  it  a  dream?     Am  I  all  alone. 

the  Battle  Field:— Bolton. 
What  was  it  that  Charlie  saw,  to-day? 

Osgood. 
What  was  it   you  were   saying,   dear?     See  Laughing 

Family,  The. — Denton. 
What  was   Lincoln's  mysterious  power,  and  whence? 

See  Secret  of  Lincoln's  Power,  The. — Watterson. 
What  was  my  dream?  though  consciousness  be  clear. 

See  What  Was  My  Dream? — O'Connor. 
What  was  that  story  about  Oeorge  Washington.     See 

Short  Conver.'tation,  A. — Anon. 
What  was  that  you  were  saying,  Mr.  Bones,  about  a 

banquet.     See  Bones  at  a  Free-and-easy. — Anon. 
"What  was  the  health  officer  doing  over  to  your  house 

this  morning?"     See  Bad  Boy  and  the  Limburger 

Cheese,  The. — (Peck's  Sun.) 
What  was't  awakened  first  the  untried  ear.    See  First 

Man,  The. — Coleridge. 
What  went  ye  to  the  wilderness  to  see?     See  Marquis 

of     Lome's     Visit     to     the     North-west,     The. — 

Kirby. 
What  went  ye  out  to  see?     See  Third  Sunday  in  Ad- 
vent.—Keble. 
What  were  the  whole  void  world,  if  thou  wert  dead. 

See  Foreboding,  A. — Lowell. 
"What  were  they?"  you  ask.     You  shall  presently  see. 

See  Philo.sopher's  Scales,  The. — Taylor. 
What?     What  is  all  this  you  tell  me?     Columbus  re- 
turned?    See    Return    of    Columbus,    The. — Sar- 
gent. 
What,  what,  what,  what's    the  news  from  Swat?     See 

Threnody,  A. — Lanigan. 
"What!  while  our  arms  can  wield  these  blades."     See 

Lalla   Hookh    (Gheber  to   his  Followers,  The). — 

Moore. 
What  whispers   so   strange  at   the   hour  of  midnight. 

IjCgend  of  the  Aspen,  A. — Ingemann. 
What  wild  desires,  what  restless  torments  sieze.     See 

Bibliomania,  The. — Ferriar. 
What  wildfire  runs  about  the  stooping  sheaves.     See 

Autumn  Sunset,  An. — AnOn. 
What  will  be  the  situation  of  these  States,  organized 

as   they   are   now?     See   On   the   Judiciary   Act, 

1802.— Morris. 
What  will  become  of  the  West  if  her  prosperity  rushes 

up.     See  East  and  the  West  One,  The. — Beecher. 
What  will  it  matter  in  a  little  while.     See  Trifles, — 

Smith. 
What  will  we  do  at  the  May  party?     See  May  Queen, 

The. — Denison. 
What  will  we  do  this  evening,  boys?     See  Secretary, 

The. — Denison. 
What  will   we   do   when   the   good   days   come?     See 

Utopia. — Burdette. 
"What  will  you  be  when  you  are  grown?"     See  Little 

Grace. — Chandler. 
What  will  you  do,  love,  when  I  am  going.     See  What 

Will  You  Do,  Love?— Lover. 
What  will  you  give  to  a  barefoot  lass.     See  Song  of 

Riches,  A. — Bates. 
What  will  you  have,  my  countryman,  liquor  or  liberty? 

See  Liquor  or  Liberty.^ — Crafts. 
What  will  you  sow,  little  children,  what  will  you  sow? 

See  Spring  Planting-time. — Thaxter. 
What  woful  stuff  this  madrigal  would  be.    See  Essay 

on  Criticism.  An  — Pope. 
What  wondrous  life  is  this  I  lead?     See  Garden,  The 

("What  wondrous,"  etc.). — Marvell. 
What  wondrous   sermons   these   seas   preach   to   men! 

See  Along  Shore. — Bashford. 
What  would  I  do  if  I  were  you?     See  If  I  were  You? 

— Anon. 
What  would  I  have  you  do?     I'll  tell  you,  kinsman. 

See  Advice  to  a  Reckless  Youth. — Jonson. 
What  would    they    thought    in    our   day,    John.     See 

V^iews  of  Farmer  Brown. — Terry. 
What!  would  .ye  .swing  your  brother's  form.     See  Capi- 
tal Punishment.- — Townsend. 
What  would  you,  George?     See  Gambler's  Son,  The. — 

Anon. 
What  would   you   see  if  I   took  you  up.     See   What 

Would  You  See. — Macdonald. 
What  you  dot,  Tarlie?     See  Change  of  Toys. — Smith. 
Whate'er   of  woe  the  Dark  may  hide  in  womb.     See 

Breath  of  Avon,  The. — Watts. 
Whatever  any  one  does  or  .says,  I  must  be  good. 

Thoughts   of  Marcus   Aurelius   (Goodness. )- 

toninus. 


See 
-An- 


Whatever  I  do  and  whatever  I  say.     See  Aunt  Tabitha. 

— Holmes. 
Whatever  I  have  tried  to  do  in  my  life,  I  have  tried 

with  all  my  heart  to  do  well.     See  David  Copper 

field  ("Whatever  I   have  tried,"   etc.). — Dickens. 
Whatever  in  the  world  is  the  matter  with, you,  Laura. 

See  "Too  Clever  by  Half. — Anon. 
Whatever  place  the  sense  of  one's  own  insignificance 

may  hold.     See  Ruskin's  "Ethics  of  the  Dust."^ 

Anon. 
Whatever  the  heights  to  which  woman  is  destined  to 

rise.     See  Woman  as  Friend. — Lord. 
Whatever  the  lagging,  dragging  .journey     *     *     *     * 

may  have  been  to  the  rest  of  the  emigrants.     See 

Gilded  Age,  Tne   (Uncle  Daniel's  Introduction  to 

a  Mississippi  Steamer). — Clemens  and  Warner. 
Whatever  you  are,   be  brave,   boys!     See  Brave   and 

True. — Do  wnton . 
Whatever  you  have  to  say,  my  friend.      See  Boil  it 

Down. — Anon. 
Whatever   your   career,    a   knowledge   of   history   will 

always  be  to  you  a  .source  of  profit  and  delight. 

See  Utility  of  History. — S^gur. 
"What'll   you   have,   John?"     See  At   the   Tavern. — 

Cary. 
"What's  a'  the  steer,  Kimmer."     See  game. — Anon. 
What's   all    yo    folks   er   doin'?     See    How  Buck  was 

Brought  to  Time. — Read. 
What's  de  use  ob  keepin'  de  place  so  nice-lookin'.     See 

Darkey  Photographer,  The. — Anon. 
What's  fame? — a  fancied  life  in   others'  breath.     See 

Es.say  on  Man.  An  (Fame). — Pope. 
What's  got  the  matter  in  the  church,  have  Christians 

quit    a    speakin'?     See    Our    Church    Sociable. — 

Eisenbeis. 
What's    hallow'd    ground?     Has    earth    a    clod.     See 

Hallowed  Ground. — Campbell. 
What's  he  that  wishes  [for  more  men  from  England]? 

See  King  Henry  V.  (Henry  V.  to  his  Soldiers). — 

Shakespeare. 
What's  he 'that  wishes  so?  [for  one  man  more].     See 

King    Henry    V.    (Henry   V.   to  his   Soldiers). — 

Shakespeare. 
What's  here?  another  change!     Law  books  and  a  bust 

of  Cicero.     See  Lawyer,  Doctor,  Soldier  and  Actor, 

The. — Anon. 
What's  in  the  brain  that  ink  may  character.     See  Son- 
nets, CVIII. — Shakespeare. 
What's  love,  when  the  most  is  .said.     See  When  the 

Most  is  Said. — De  Vere. 
What's    my    love's    name?     Guess    her    name.     See 

Valentine,  A. — Anon. 
What's  the  best  thing  in  the  world?     See  Best  Thing 

in  the  World,  The. — Browning. 
What's  the  brightness  of  a  brow?     See  Evanescence. — 

Spofford. 
"What's  the  fun?"  said  a  rather  tall  thin  young  man. 

See  Pickwick   Papers,   The   (Pickwickians    Taken 

for  Informers,  but  Rescued  by  the  Stranger,  The). 

— Dickens. 
What's  the  good  o'  shinglin'.     See  What's  the  Good. — 

Webber. 
What's  the  matter,  little  boy?     See  Hard  to  Please. — 

Anon. 
What's  the  song  the  crickets  sing.     See  Cricket  Songs. 

— Whitney. 
What's  the  way  to  Bylo-town?     See  Baby's  Lullaby.— 

Anon. 
What's  them  things  in  yer  pockets,  .Jake,  a-bulging  out 

so?     Hey?      See    Deacon    Adams    to    his    Son. — 

Anon. 
What's  there  beneath,  where  the  flowers  in  a  heap.     See 

Alice  Ayers. — Blake. 
What's  this?     "Alone  with  a  madman!"     See  Wanted 

— a  Nurse. — Kobbe. 
What's  this  dull   town   to   me?     See   Robin   Adair. — 

Koppel. 
What's  this!  the  red  blood  stops!  he's  growing  cold! 

See  C'ain,  Ancient  and  Modern. — Murray. 
What's  this  vain  world  to  me?     See  Rest  is  not  Here. — 

Navin. 
Whatsoe'er  you  find  to  do.     See  Vicar's  Sermon,  The. — 

Mackay. 
Wheel  me  into  the  .sunshine.     See  Home,  Wounded. — 

Dobell. 
Wheer  'asta  beiin  saw  long  and  meii  liggin'  ere  aloiin. 

See  Northern  Farmer  (Old  Style). — Tennyson. 
When  a  boy  I  used  to  be,  like  most  other  kids  you  see. 

See  Down  on  the  Farm. — Thatcher. 
When  a  boy's  born  a  boy.     See  When   a  Feller's  a 

Boy. — Richards. 
When  a  certain  great   King,  who.se  initial  is  G.     See 

Ancient  Prophecy,  An. — Freneau. 


922 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


When  daylight 


When  a  child  breathes  a  pure  and  earnest  prayer.     See 

Lilies  and  Roses. — Anon. 
When  a  daflfodil  I  see.     See  Divination  by  a  Dafifodil. — 

Herrick. 
When  a  deed  is  done  for  freedom,  through  the  broad 

earth's  aching  breast.     <See  Present  Crisis,  The. — 

Lowell. 
When  a'  ither  bairnies  are  hush'd  to  their  hame.     See 

Mitherless  Bairn,  The. — Thorn. 
When  a  lady  is  seen  at  a  party  or  ball.     See  "I  Wouldn't 

— Would  You?" — Anon. 
When  a  little  girl  is  good.     See  Rosebud  or  Thorn? — 

Anon. 
When  a  man  has  been  railroadin'  twenty  long  years. 

See  Conductor's  Story,  The. — M'Loughlin. 
When  a  pair  of  red  lips  are  upturned  to  your  own.     See 

I  Doubt  it. — Anon. 
When   a   pretty  maiden   passes.     See  At   the  Club. — 

Hovey. 
What  a  pretty  tale  you  told  me,  once  upon  a  time.     See 

Two  Poets  of  Croisic,  The  (Bard  and  the  Cricket, 

The). — Browning. 
When  a  thought  comes  to  your  brain.     See  Wait ! — 

Steele. 
When  a  warm  and  scentfed  steam.     See  Cuckoo,  The. — 

Thornbury. 
When  a  woman  has  a  hen  to  drive  into  the  coop.     See 

Driving  a  Hen. — (Mobile  Register.) 
When  a  young  seed  begins  to  grow.     See  How  an  Apple 

Tree  Grows. — Anon. 
When  Advent  dawns  with  lessening  days.     See  Golden 

P'lowers,  The. — Holmes. 
When  age  hath  made  me  what  I  am  not  now.     See  To 

My  Picture. — Randolph. 
When  Alcuin  taught  the  sons  of  Charlemagne.     See 

Emma  and  Eginhard. —  Longfellow. 
When  all  is  done  and  said.     See  On  a  Contented  Mind. 

— Vaux. 
When  all  my  plans  have  come  to  grief.     See  Bachelor's 

Invocation,  A. — (Pall  Mall  Gazette.) 
When  all  the  fiercer  pa.ssions  cease.     See  Reflections. — 

Crabbe. 
When  all  the  ground  with  snow  is  white.     See  Snow- 
bird, The. — Sherman. 
When  all  the  panes  are  hung  with  frost.     See  Latakia. 

— Aldrich. 
When    all    the    world     is     young,    lad.      See     Water 

Babies  ("Old,  Old  Song,  The").— Kingsley. 
When    all    Thy    mercies,    O    my    God.       See    Hymn, 

A:    "When  all  thy."  etc. — Addison. 
When  all  were  dreaming  but   Pastheen   Power.     See 

Song  of  the  Ghost,  The. — Graves. 
When    almond    buds    unclose.     See    When    Almonds 

Bloom. — Shinn. 
When  along  the  light  ripple  the  far  serenade.     See 

Venetian  Serenade,  The. — Houghton. 
When   angel   hosts   sing  glory   to   God   on   high.     See 

December. — Doane. 
When  anger  burns  within  the  breast.    See  Proverbs;  or. 

Rhymes  and  Reasons. — Rook. 
When  another  life  is  added.     See  It  is  Well  We  Cannot 

See  the  End. — Anon. 
When    another's    voice    thou    hearest.     See    Song. — 

Dufferin. 
When  apple-trees  in  blossom  are.     See  May. — Clarke. 
When  April,  one  day,  was  asked  whether.     See  April. — 

McDermott. 
When  April  rains  make  flowers  bloom.     See  Shamrock, 

The.— Egan. 
When  April  steps  aside  for  May.     See  Sister  Months, 

The. — Larcom. 
When  April's  sky  is  blue  above.     See  Vernal  Solace. — 

Hayne. 
When  Arthur  first  in  court  began.     See  Sir  Lancelot 

du  Lake. — Anon. 
When   as   in   faire   Jerusalem.     See   Wandering   .Tew, 

The. — Anon. 
When  as  King  Henry  ruled  [or  rulde]  this  land.     See 

Fair  Rosamund. — Delone. 
When    at    close    of    winter's    night.     See   Paradise    of 

Birds,  The  (Birdcatcher's  Song). — Courthope. 
When  at  home  alone  I  sit.     See  Little  Land,  The. — 

;.     Stevenson. 
When  autumn  shakes  the  rambo-tree.     See  Rambo- 

tree.  The. — Riley. 
When  baby  wakes  of  mornings.     See  Cunnin'   Little 

Thing,  The.— Field. 
When  banners  are  waving.     See  same. — Anon. 
When  Barry  dares  the  President  to  fly  on.     See  Barry's 

Attack  upon  Sir  Joshua  Reynolds. — Pindar. 
When  bashful  single  men  are  "well  to  do."     See  Help- 
mate, A. — Bell. 


When    beasts    could    speak    (the    learned    say).     See 

Beasts'  Confession,  The. — Swift. 
When    beechen    buds    begin    to    swell.     See    Yellow 

Violet,  The. — Bryant. 
When   Bess    gave   her    dollies  a   tea,   said   she.     See 

"Company  Manners." — Riley. 
When  Bess  goes  out-doors.     See  When  Be.ss  Goes  Out. 

— Mclntyre. 
When  Bibo  thought  fit  from  the  world  to  retreat.     See 

Bibo  and  Charon. — Prior. 
When    biting    Boreas,    fell    and    doure.     See    Winter 

Night,  A. — Burns. 
When  breezes  are  soft  and  skies  are  fair.     See  Green 

River. — Bryant. 
When  brighter  suns  and  milder  skies.     See  Spring.^ — 

Peabody. 
When  Britain  first  at  Heaven's  command.     See  Rule, 

Britannia. — Thomson. 
When  Britain's  king,  in  days  long  past.     See  Sirloin. — 

Sabine. 
When  brother  Bill  and  I  were  boys.     See  Bell-flower 

Tree,  The.— Field. 
When  brother  was  a  little  girl.     See  When  Brother  was 

a  Sister. — Richards. 
When  brothers  leave  the  old  hearthstone.     See  Home- 
coming.— Anon. 
When   builders   start   a   house  to   build.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
When   by   a   good   man's   grave   I    muse   alone.     See 

Human  Life. — Rogers. 
When   by   Zeus   relenting  the   mandate   was   revoked. 

See  Phoebus  with  Admetus. — Meredith. 
When  calm  is  the  night,  and  the  .stars  shine  bright. 

See  Sleighing  Song. — Shaw. 
When  cannons  peal  their  booming  sounds.     See  One 

Hundred  Years  from  Now. — Rowland. 
When   captaines    couragious,    whom    death    cold    not 

daunte.     See  Mary  Ambree. — Anon. 
When  cats  run  home  and  light  is  come.     See  Song:  The 

Owl . — Tennyson . 
When    chapman    billies    leave    the    street.     See    Tarn 

O'Shanter. — Burns. 
When    cherries   grow   on   apple   trees.     See   When. — 

Bingham. 
When    cherry    flowers    begin    to    blow.     See   Yuki. — 

FenoUosa. 
When  Chicago  wished  to  impress  her  greatness  and  her 

determination.     See    Why     Woman     Wants    the 

Ballot. — Brehm. 
When  children  are  playing  alone  on  the  green.     See 

Unseen  Playmate,  The. — Stevenson. 
When    chill    November's    surly    blast.     See   Man   was 

Made  to  Mourn. — Burns. 
When   chivalry   was   all   the   taste.     See   Knights;  or, 

Both  Right  and  Both  Wrong,  The. — Anon. 
When  Christ  was  born  in  Bethlehem.     See  Christmas 

Carol. — Anon. 
When  Christ  was  bom  of  Mary  free.     See  "In  Excelsis 

Gloria. " — Anon. 
When    Christmas    dawned    one    plenteous    year.     See 

Clifford's  Way. — Richards. 
When  civil   dudgeon   first   grew   high.     See    Hudibras 

(Character  of  Hudibras,  The). — Butler. 
When  civil  war,  with  horrors  dire.     See  Brothers  Once 

More. — Train. 
When  clouds  are  seen,  wise  men  put  on  their  cloaks. 

See  King  Richard  III.  (Caution). — Shakespeare. 
When,  Ccelia,  must  my  old  day  set.     See  To  Cecelia. — 

Cotton. 
When  coldness  wraps  this  suffering  clay.     See  8am.e. — 

Byron. 
When    Cooper    died,    the    restless    city    paused.     See 

Bryant,  Extract  concerning. — Curtis. 
When  Count  d'Albrt^t  had  passed  away,  he  left  no  son 

as  heir.     See  Rescue  of  Albrc^t,  The. — English. 
When,  cruel  fair  one,  I  am  slain.     See  Tomb,  The.- — 

Stanley. 
When  Cupid  did  his  grandsire  Jove  entreat.     See  To 

Mrs.   Biddy  Floyd;  or.   The   Receipt  to   Form  a 

Beauty. — Swift. 
When   Cupid   open'd   shop,   the   trade   he  chose.     See 

Smoke  is  the  Food  of  Lovers. — Cats. 
When  daffodils  began  to  blow.     See  Love. — Story. 
When  daffodils  begin  to  peer.     See  Winter's  Tale,  The 

(Song  of  Autolycus). — Shakespeare. 
When    daisies    pied    and    violets    blue.     See    Love's 

Labour's    Lost    ("When    daisies    pied,"    etc.). — 

Shakespeare. 
When   Darby  saw  the  setting  sun.     See  Darby  and 

Joan. — Honey  wood. 
When  daylight  dies  the  world  is  hushed  and  still.     See 

When  Daylight  Dies. — Lovell. 


923 


When  de 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


When  de  fiddle  gits  to  singing  out  a  ole  Vahginny  reel. 

See  Angelina. — Anon. 
When   de   worl'    don'   go   to   suit   you.     See   Colored 

Philosophy.— Cochran. 
When,    dearest,    I    t^t    think   of   thee.     See   same. — 

Suckling. 
When  Death  from  some  fair  face.     See  IVo  Robbers. — 

Bourdillon. 
When   death   shall   snatch   us   from   these   kids.     See 

Dialogue    between    Thyrsis    and     Dorinda,    A. — 

Marvell. 
When  Death  to  either  shall  come.     See  same. — Bridges. 
When  Debt  is  dressed  up  in  his  best.     See  Debt  in  Two 

Costumes. — Wilson. 
When  deeply    in    love    with    Miss    Emily    Cline    [wr. 

Prynel.     See  Stammering  Wife,  The. — Saxe. 
When  "Delia   on    the   plain   appears.     See   Composite 

Maiden,  A. — Anon. 
When  Delia  on  the  plain  appears.     See  also  Tell  Me, 

My  Heart,  if  This  be  Love. — Lyttelton. 
When   Demosthenes  boasts  to  you,   O  Athenians,   of 

his  Democratic  zeal.    See  Demosthenes  Denounced. 

— ^ISschines. 
When  Dermot  O'Dowd  coorted  Molly  McCann.     See 

Dermot  O'Dowd. — Lover. 
When    descends    on    the    Atlantic.     See    Seaweed.— 

Longfellow. 
When  dew  is  glittering  in  the  early  mom.     See  Happy 

Farmer,  The. — Haughwout. 
When  Dicky  was  sick.     See  Little  Dick  and  the  Clock. 

—Riley. 
Wlien  do  I  love  you  most,  sweet  books  of  mine?     See 

Confessio  Amantis. — Le  Gallienne. 
When  do  I  mean  to  marry?— Well.     See  When  I  Mean 

to  Marry. — Saxe. 
When  do  I  ^ee  thee  most,  beloved  one?     See  Love- 
sight. — Rossetti. 
When  doomed  to  feel  that  youth  is  o'er.     See  same. — 

Anon. 
When  Dorothy  and  I  took  tea,  we  sat  upon  the  floor. 

See  Small  and  Early. — Jenks. 
When  dreaming  kings,  at  odds  with  swift-paced  time. 

See  Commem  oration  Ode  (Washington). — Mon- 
roe. 
When  Duncan  is  asleep.     See  Macbeth. — Shakespeare. 
When,  during  our  session  yesterday,  those  words  which 

you   have   taught.     See   On   the    Refusal   of   the 

Chamber  of  Vacations   of   Rennes   to   Obey   the 

Decrees  of  the  National  Assembly. — Mirabeau. 
When  early  shades  of  evening's  close.     See  Whip-poor- 
will,  The. — Brownlow. 
When  England,  reeking  from  her  deadly  wound.     See 

Eclogue  the  First. — Chatterton. 
When  Erin  first  rose  from  the  dark  swelling  flood.     See 

Erin. — Drennan. 
When  Europeans  first  visited  the  southern  parts  of 

North  America.     See  King  Cotton. — Mackenzie. 
When  Eve  brought  woe  to  all  mankind.     See  Woman. — 

Anon. 
When   Eve  had  led  her  lord  away  [wr.  astray].     See 

Album  Verses._ — Holmes. 
When  eve  is  purpling  cliff  and  cave.     See  Evening. — 

Croly. 
When    Eve    went    out    from    Paradise.     See    May. — 

Dandridge. 
When    Ezry,    that's    my    sister's     son,    come    home 

from   furrin   parts.     See    Cuckoo   Clock,    The. — 

Lincoln. 
When  fades  the  last  faint  ray.     See  Now  I  Lay  Me 

Down  to  Sleep. — Anon. 
When  falls  the  soldier  brave.     See  Sentinel  Songs. — 

Ryan. 
When    first,    descending    from    the    moorlands.     See 

Extempore   Effusion   upon   the   Death   of   James 

Hogg. — Wordsworth. 
When    first    I    chanced    the    Eagle    to    explore.     See 

Yankee  Landlord,  The. — -(Atlantic  Monthly.) 
When  first  I  looked  into  thy  glorious  eyes.     See  Sonnets 

on  Edgar  Allan  Poe. — Whitman. 
When  first  I  mark  upon  my  child's  clear  brow.     See 

Two  Voyagers. — Higginson. 
When    first    I    met    Louisa    Ann.     See    Romance    in 

Verse,  A. — Anon. 
When   first    I   saw   fair-featured   Grace.     See   Grace's 

Choice. — Loomis. 
When  fir.st  I  saw  her,  at  the  stroke.     See  When  First 

I  Saw  Her. — Woodberry. 
When    first    I    saw    sweet    Peggy   [tw.    saw   Peggy]. 

See  Low-backed  Car,  The.^Lover. 
When  first  my  brave  .Johnnie  lad.     See  Cock  up  Your 

Beaver. — Bums. 
When  first  my  true  love  crown'd  me  with  her  smile. 

See  Epigram. — Massey. 


When  first  the  bride  and  bridegroom  wed.    See  At  Last. 

— Stoddard. 
When  first  the  crocus  thrusts  its  point  of  gold.     See 

Touch  of  Nature,  A. — Aldrich. 
When  first  the  fiery-mantled  Sun.     See  Ode  to  Winter. 

— Campbell. 
When  first  the  unflowering  Fern-forest.     See  Darwin- 
ism.— Darmesteter. 
When  first  thou  camest,   gentle,  shy,  and  fond.     See 

Mother's  Heart,  The. — Norton. 
When  first  Thou  didst  entice  to  Thee  my  heart.     See 

Affliction. — Herbert. 
When  first  thy  eyes  unveil,  give  thy  soul  leave.     See 

Rules  and  Lessons. — Vaughan. 
When  first  we  met  she  was  three  feet  high.     See  Then 

and  Now. — Carryl. 
When  Flora  with  her  fragrant  flowers.     See  Sir  Andrew 

Barton. — Anon. 
When  folks  grow  old   I   wonder  why.     See  Molly. — 

Kellogg. 
When  folks  with  headstrong  passion  blind.     See  Dame 

Fredegonde. — Aytoun. 
When  for  me  the  end  has  come  and  I  am  dead.     See 

Written  on  the  Night  of  his  Suicide  ("When  for 

me,"  etc.). — Realf. 
When  for  me  the  silent  oar.     See  Across  the  River. — 

Larcom. 
When  for  some  little  insult  given.     See  Forgiveness. 

—Taylor. 
When  forty  winters  shall  besiege  thy  brow.     See  .Son- 
nets, II. — Shakespeare. 
When  France  was  but  a  provinc3  of  the  English.     See 

Joan  of  Arc. — Anon. 
When  Freedom,  fair  Freedom,  her  banner  display'd. 

See  Truxton's  Victory. — Anon. 
When  Freedom  from  her  home  was  driven.     See  Hills 

were  Made  for  Freedom,  The. — Brown. 
When    Freedom,    from    her    mountain    height.     See 

American  Flag,  The. — Drake. 
When  Freedom  on  her  natal  day.     See  Moral  Welfare, 

The.— Whittier. 
When  Freedom,  years  ago,  was  born.     See  Two  Armies, 

The.— Hughes. 
When  friends  are  gone  and  the  last  flowers  are  spread. 

See  Last  Wish,  The. — Kirkham. 
When  from  my  couch    I    rise   at    mom,    I    kneel    me 

down   and   pray.      See   Reporter's    Prayer,    A. — 

Eraser. 
When  from  my  lips  the  last  faint  sigh  is  blown.     See 

Epicurean's  Epitaph,  An. — De  Vere. 
When   from   the   ever-blooming  bowers  were   driven. 

See  Woman. — Osborne. 
When  from  the  gloom  of  earth  we  see  the  sky.     See 

God     and     the    Soul    (Void    Between,    The). — 

Spalding. 
When  from  the  sacred  garden  driven.     See  Ode  on  Art. 

— Sprague. 
When  from  the  vaulted  wonder  of  the  sky.     See  Faith's 

Vista. — Abbey. 
When  from  these  shores  the  British  army  first.     See 

At  Coruna. — Southey. 
When  frost's  all  on  our  window,  an'  the  snow's.     See 

Climatic  Sorcery. — Riley. 
When  gathering  clouds  around  I  view.     See  sam^. — 

Grant. 
When  gathering  night.     See  Orpheus  and  Eurydice. — 

Baskett. 
When    gentle    Twilight    sits.     See    Know   Thyself. — 

Sigourney. 
When  George  the  King  would  punish  folk.     See  How 

We  Became  a  Nation. — Spofford. 
When  George  the  Third  was  reigning  a  hundred  years 

ago.     See  Two  Captains,  The. — Cory. 
When    George    was    thinking    one    dark    night.     See 

George's  Letter. — Richards. 
When    girls    are    only    babies.     See    Our    Wrongs. — 

C.  F.  H. 
When    Gladys    plays    in    gladsome    glee.     See    When 

Gladys  Plays. ^Greenslet. 
When   God  at   first   made  man.     See  Pulley,   The.^ 

Herbert. 
When  God  had  created  all  the  flowers.     See  Forget- 
me-not,  The. — Anon. 
When  God  sends  out  His  company  to  travel  through 

the  stars.     See  Wrestler,  The. — Roberts. 
When  God  the  Father  fashioned  with  His  breath.     See 

Legend  of  the  Earth,  The. — Rameau. 
When  Goethe's  death  was  told,  we  said.     See  Memo- 
rial Verses  (Death  of  Goethp). — Arnold. 
When  good  King  Arthur  ruled  the  [or  this]  land.     See 

King  Arthur. — Anon. 
When  gooseberries  grow  on  the  stem  of  a  daisy.     Ses 

To  Moll  idusta.— Planch^. 


924 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


When  I 


When  grandma  puts  her  glasses  on.     See  Grandma. — 

Anon. 
"When  Grandpa  was  a  little  boy  about  your  age,"  said 

he.     See    When    Grandpa    Was    a    Little    Boy. — 

Douglas. 
When  griping  grief  the  heart  doth  wound.     <See  Romeo 

and  Juliet  (Music's  Silver  Sound). — Shakespeare. 
When  Harry  and  Dick  had  been  striving  to  please.     See 

Two  Gardens,  The.— Taylor. 
When  Harry  Prettyman  saw  the  very  superb  funeral 

of  Mrs.  Caudle.      See  Mr.  Caudle  and  his  Second 

Wife. — Jerrold. 
When  Harvard's  crimson  cohorts  came.     See  "When?" 

— Blount. 
When  haughty  Edward  with  his  sword  and  lance.     See 

Siege  of  Calais,  The. — McGuire. 
When   he   first   spoke   at    Faneuil   Hall.     See  Wendell 

Phillips  (Eulogy  on  Wendell  Phillips). — Curtis. 
When  he  heard  the  battle-cry.     See  And  Joe   Went. 

— (Denver  Post.) 
When   he   hied  him   home   from   chase.     See   Rose   of 

Avondale,  The. — Booth. 
When  he  is  old  and  past  all  singing.    See  For  an  Old 

Poet. — Bunner. 
When   he  shall  die.     See  Romeo  and  Juliet. — Shake- 
speare. 
When  he  shall  hear  she  died  upon  his  word.     See  Much 

Ado  about  Nothing  ("When  he  shall  hear,"  etc.). 

— Shakespeare . 
When  he  who  adores  thee  has  left  but  the  name.     See 

When  He  Who  Adores  Thee. — Moore. 
When  head  is  sick  and  brain  doth  swim.     See  Last 

Pipe,  The. — (London  Spectator.) 
When  hearts  are  trumps  and  Dolly  leads.     See  Full 

Suite,  The. — Metcalfe. 
When  Helen  dwelt  in  windy  Troy.     See  Iliad,  The. — 

Newton. 
When,  high  above  the  busy  street.     See  Day-dream,  A. 

— Thomson. 
When  His  salvation  bringing.     See  Hosanna! — King. 
When  home  in  the  evening,  from  work  I  am  going.     See 

My  Boy.— Gilbert. 
When   hope  lies  dead  within  the  heart.     See  Lot   of 

Thousands,  The. — Hunter. 
When  I  a  verse  shall  make.     See  His  Prayer  to  Ben 

Jonson. — Herrick. 
When   I  am  a  man — and  I'm  going  to  be  one  some 

time.     See  When  I  am  a  Man. — Miller. 
When  I  am  a  man,  I  mean  to  be  a  soldier.     See  I  Want 

to  be  a  Soldier. — Anon. 
When  I  am  a  woman  tall  and  grown.     See  When  I 

am  a  Woman. — Denton. 
When  I  am  big  I  mean  to  buy.     See  "When  I  am  Big." 

— -Anon. 
When  I  am  big,  what  do  you  think.     See  When  I  am  a 

Man. — Anon. 
When  I  am  called  to  die.      See  What  is  that  to  Thee? 

— James. 
When  I  am  dead,  and  buried.     See  same. — (Scribner'a.) 
When  I  am  dead  and  I  am  quite  forgot.     See  "Tuscan 

Cypress.' ' — Darmesteter. 
When  I  am  dead,  my  dearest.     See  Song:  "When  lam 

dead."  etc. — Rossetti,. 
When  I  am  dead,  my  spirit.     See  "When  I  am  Dead." 

— Rodd. 
When  I  am  dead,  no  pageant  train.     See  Dirge  of  Alaric 

the  Visigoth. — Everett. 
When    I    am   grown   to   man's   estate.     See   Looking 

Forward. — Stevenson . 
When  I  am  in  a  serious  humour,  I  very  often  walk  by 

myself   in   Westminster   Abbey.       See  Spectator, 

The  ( Reflections  in  Westminster  Abbey) . — Addison . 
When  I  am  in  New  York,  I  like  to  drop  around  at  night. 

See  Stoddards,  The.— Field. 
When  I  am  old — (and  O,  how  soon).     See  When  I  am 

Old. — Briggs. 
When  I  am  sad  it  comes  to  me.     See  My  Mother's  Song. 

— Johnston. 
When  I  am  sleeping  in  my  bed.     See  Dreamer,  The. — 

Anon. 
When  I  am  standing  on  a  mountain  crest.     See  Love 

in  the  Winds. — Hovey. 
When  I  am  very  big  and  old.    See  New  Book,  A. — Anon. 
When  I  arose  to  speak  one  day.     See  That  Giggle. — 

Richards. 
When    I    beheld   the   poet   blind   yet   bold.     See   On 

Milton's  Paradise  Lost. — Marvell. 
When  I  behold  a  forest  spread.      See  Art  above  Nature. 

— Herrick. 
When  I  beneath  the  cold,  red  earth  am  sleeping.     See 

same. — Motherwel  1 . 
When   I   bethink   me   on   that   speech  whyleare.     See 
Faerie  Queene,  The  (Mutability). — Spenser. 


When    I    came    into    Witches'    Town.     See    Witches' 

Town. — (Bowdoin  Quill.) 
When  I  came  to  York  I  hadn't  ever  been  to  a  play.     See 

Slowlys  at  the  Theatre,  The.— Dallas. 
When  I  come  home  the  other  night.     See   She   never 

Was  a  Boy. — Kiser. 
When  I  compare.     See  Loss  and  Gain. — Longfellow. 
When  I  consider  how  my  light  is  spent.     See  On  His 

Blindness. — Milton. 
When  I  consider  Life  and  its  few  years.     See  Tears. — 

Reese. 
When  I  consider  life,   'tis  all  a  cheat.     See  Aureng- 

Zebe;  or,  The  Great  Mogul. — Dryden. 
When  I  did  hear  the  motley  fool.     See  As  You  Like  It 

(Jester,  The). — Shakespeare. 
When  I  do  count  the  clock  that  tells  the  time.     See 

Sonnets,  XII. — Shakespeare. 
When    I    forth   fare   beyond   this   narrow   earth.     See 

After  Death. — Richardson. 
When  I  gave  to  old  Dobbin  his  song  and  his  due.     See 

Old  Pincher. — Cook. 
When  I  go  musing  all  alone.     See  On  Melancholy. — 

Burton. 
When  I  grow  gray  and  men  shall  say  to  me.     See  Life's 

Gifts. — Barlow. 
When  I  have  borne  in  memory  what  has  tamed.     See 

same. — Wordsworth. 
When  I  have  fears  that  I  may  cease  to  be.     See  Sonnet 

Written  in  January,  1818. — Keats. 
When   I  have  seen  b.v  Time's  fell  hand  defaced.     See 

Sonnets,  LXIV. — Shakespeare. 
When  I  have  time,  so  many  things  I'll  do.     See  When 

I  Have  Time. — Anon. 
When  I  knowed  him  at  first  there  was  suthin'.     See 

Bar-tender's  Story,  The. — Proudfit. 
When   I   led  by  zummer  streams.     See  Zummer  an' 

Winter. — Barnes. 
When  I  listed,  folks  all  .said.     See  On  Crutches. — Rose. 
When    I    lived   in    St.    Petersburg — many   years   have 

passed  since  then.     See  Mascha. — TourgeniefT. 
When  I  look  around  me  and  see  how  few  of  the  com- 
panions of  earlier  years.     See  same. — Goethe. 
When  I  love,  as  some  have  told.     See  Hymn  to  the 

Graces. — Herrick. 
When  I  married  a  drunkard,   I  reached  the  acme  of 

misery.     See  Girls,    Don't   Marry  a   Drunkard. — 

Anon. 
When    I    opened    my   eyes   to   the    sun   to-day.     See 

Flowers'  Convention,  The. — Jack. 
When  I  picked  up  her  glove.     See  Fate. — W. 
When  I  puff  my  cigarette.     See  Smoke  Traveller,  The. 

— Browne. 
When  I  questioned  young  Smithson,  a  short  time  ago. 

See  Apparent. — Thomas. 
When  I  remember  all.     See   Oft,    in   the   Stilly   Night 

("When  I  remember"). — Moore. 
When    I    remember    something    which    I    had.     See 

Regret. — Ingelow. 
When  I  remember'd  again  how  my  Philip  was  slain. 

See    Nun's    Lament    for    Philip    Sparrow,    The. — 

Skelton. 
When   I   run  about   all   day.     See  Night   and   Day. — 

Dodge. 
"When  I  sailed  with  Lieutenant-Commander  M'Calla 

.several  years  ago."     See  M'Calla  and  the  Middy. — 

Anon. 
When  I   see  a  man  holding  faster  his  uprightness  in 

proportion  as  it  is  assailed.     See  Unnoticed  and 

Unhonored  Heroes. — Channing. 
When  I  see  about  me  this  gathering  of  business  men 

and  merchants.     See  Ballot   Reform. — Cleveland. 
When  I  see  the  dirtiest  little  towhead.     See  Imitation. 

— Anon. 
When  I  spin  round  without  a  stop.     See  Spinning  Top. 

— Sherman. 
When  I  survey  the  bright  Celestial  sphere.     See  Cas- 

tara  (Nox  Nocti  Indicat  Scientiam). — Habington. 
When  I  survey  the  wondrous  cross.     See  Glorying  in 

the  Cross. — Watts. 
When  I  the  memory  repeat.     See  Spartan  Boy,  The. — 

Mary  Lamb. 
When  I  think  of  William  Lloyd  Garrison.     See  William 

Lloyd  Garrison. — Phillips. 
When   I  think  on  the  happy  days.     See  Absence. — 

Anon. 
When  I  took  my  aunt  and  sister  to  the  Pequot  Hotel. 

See  Trick  vs.  Trick. — Wood. 
When    I    upon    thy    bosom    lean.     See    Matrimonial 

Haopiness. — Lapraik. 
When   I   was  a   baby.     See  same. — Richards. 
When  I  was  a  bachelor  brave.     See  Week's  Work,  The. 

— Anon. 
When  I  was  a  beggarly  boy.     See  Aladdin.^Lowell. 


925 


When  I 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


When  I  was  a  boy,  a  little  after  seventeen.     See  My 

Experience  in  the  Dry  Goods  Business. — Thatcher. 

When  I  was  a  boy  I  read  a  book  which  was  called,  I 

think,  "Asmoden^"     See  Homes  of  the  People. — - 

Godwin. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  a  printing  office  in  Missouri.     See 

Nicodemus  Dodge. — Clemens. 
When  I  was  a  boy  on  the  old  plantation.     See  Grape- 
vine Swing,  The. — Peck. 
When  1  was  a  cnild,  beside  our  door.     See  My  Robin. — 

Bolton. 
When  I   was  a  child  [of  seven  years  old],  [says  Dr. 
Franklin],  my  friends  on  a  holiday.     See  Whistle, 
The. — Franklin. 
When  I  was  a  girl  1  used  to  wear.     See  When  I  Was  a 

Girl. — Richards. 
When  I  was  a  lad  between  two  and  three.     See  First 

Trousers,  The. — Rose. 
When   I  was  a  laddie  lang  syne  at  the  schule.     See 

"Imph-m." — Anon. 
When  I  was  a  little  boy,  I  remembet,  one  cold  winter's 
morning.     See  Turning  the  Grindstone. — -Franklin. 
When   I    was  a   maid   nor  of  lovers  afraid.     See  Old 

Story  over  Again,  The. — Henry. 
When    I    was   a  maiden  eighteen  years  old.     See  Old 

Maid,  The. — Kavanaugh. 
When  I  was  a  school-boy,  aged  ten.     See  Old  Bachelor, 

The. — Kavanaugh. 
When  I  was  at  Grand  Cairo.    See  Spectator,  Thi  (Vision 

of  Mirza,  The). — Addison. 
"When  I  was  at  the  party,"  said  Betty.     See  Reason 

Why,  The.— Bradley. 
When    I    was   bound   apprentice,    in   famous    Lincoln- 
shire.    See  Lincolnshire  Poacher,  The. — Anon. 
When  I  was  but  a  tiny  boy.     See  Stick  to  Your  Bush. — 

Watson. 
When  I  was  camping  on  the  Volga's  banks.     See  Unit, 

A. — Stoddard. 
When  I  was  commissioned  by   you,  young  men.     See 

Address  to  the  Young  Men  of  Italy. — Mazzini. 
When  I  was  dead,  my  spirit  turn'd.     See  At  Home. — 

Rossetti. 
When  I  was  down  beside  the  sea.     See  At  the  Sea-side. 

—Stevenson. 
When  I  was  first  called  to  the  office  .of  historiographer 
to  .John   Bull.     See  John  Bull  and    his  Law-suit. 
— Arbuthnot. 
When  I  was  forced  from  Stella  ever  dear.     See  Astrophel 

and  Stella  (Sonnet  LXXXVIL).— Sidney. 
"When  I  was  in  Londres,   I  go  v^on  day  into  wat  ze 
Anglais  call  ze  caf^."     See  Generous  Frenchman, 
The. — Anon. 
When  I  was  in  the  wood  to-day.     See  Autumn  Voices. 

— F.  W.  B. 
When  I  was  just  a  little  boy.     See  How  I  Saw  Santa 

Claus. — -Denton. 
When  I  was  one  and  twenty.     See  same. — Housman. 
When  I  was  one  I  wore  long  dresses  just  for  fun.     See 

From  One  to  Si.x. — Fleming. 
When  I  was  only  a  little  tot.     See  For  a  Girl  Ten  Years 

Old.— W.  T. 
When  I  was  quite  a  little  chap.     See  Blood  Will  Tell. — 

Kavanaugh. 
When  I  was  quite  a  young  man,  said  the  dominie.     See 

Singing  Joseph. — Preston. 
When   I   was  seventeen   I   heard.     See  To   Critics. — 

Learned. 
When  I  was  sick  and  lay  a-bed.     See  Land  of  Counter- 
pane, The. — Steven.son. 
When    I    was   still   a   boy   and   mother's   pride.     See 

False  Friends-like.— Barnes. 
When  I  was  ten  and  she  fifteen.     See  Time's  Revenge. 

— (The  Century.') 
When  I  was  the  dirtiest  little  towhead — and  I  am  .sure 

that  dirt  is  no  disgrace.     See  Imitation. — Anon. 
When    I    was   very   small   indeed.     See  Chief   Bread- 
baker  to  the  King,  The. — Adams. 
When  1  was  very  young,  indeed.     See  Little  Cavalier, 

A. — Larcom. 
When  I  was  young,  and  long  before.     See  To  the  Little 

Readers. — Sherman. 
When  I  was  young  and  went  to  school.     See  Latches. — 

Sinnett. 
When  I  was  young,  I    said    to    Sorrow.      See   Song: 

"When  I  was  young."  etc. — De  Vere. 
When   I  went  a-courtin'  Marthy.     See  "That  Kiss  of 

Marthy's. — Rexford. 
When  I  went  up  the  minster  tower.     See  At  Lincoln. — 

Adams. 
When  I  would  know  thee,  Good.yere,  my  thought  looks. 

■  See  To  Sir  Henry  Goodyere. — Jonson. 
When  I  wuz  somewhat  younger.     S««  Gettih'  On. — 
Anon.  I 


When  icicles  hang  by   the  wall.     See  I^ove's  Labour's 

Lost  (Winter). — Shakespeare. 
When  icicles  shine  so  bright.     See  Our  Sir  Robin. — 

Anon. 
When  I'm  a  big  man  as  high  as  the  steeple.     See  When 

I  am  a  Man. — Cramer. 
When  I'm  a  little  city  girl.     See  City  or  Country. — 

Anon. 
When   I'm  a  man,  a  man.     See  Choice  of  Trades. — 

Slade. 
When  I'm  growed  up  big.     See  same. — Richards, 
When  I'm  in  health  and  ask  to  choose  between  this  and 
that,  alas!     See  House  of  a  Hundred  Lights,   The 
(Carpe  Diem). — Torrence. 
When    I'm    softly,    sleeping.       See  Sunshine    Song. — 

Anon. 
When  in  di.sgrace  with  fortune  and  men's  eyes.     See 

Sonnets,  XXIX. — Shakespeare. 
When  in  my  walks  I  meet  some  ruddy  lad.     See  Proem, 

A. — Ward. 
When  in  the  chronicle  of  wasted  time.     See  Sonnets, 

C  V I . — Shakespeare. 
When,  in  the  course  of  human  events,  it  becomes  neces- 
sary for  a  half-hungry.     See  Parody  on  the  Declara- 
tion of  Independence. — Anon. 
When,    in    the   cour.se   of   human   events,    it    becomes 
necessary    for    one    people.     See    Declaration    of 
Independence. — .Jefferson. 
When  in  the  first  great  hour  of  sleep  supreme.     See 
Inverted  Torch,  The     (When  in    the    P^irst    Great 
Hour) . — Thomas. 
When  in  the  halcyon  days  of  eld,  I  was  a  little  tyke. 

See  Our  Biggest  Fish. — Field. 
When  in  the  night  we  wake  and  hear  the  rain.     See 

same. — Wilson. 
When  in   the   storm  on   Albion's  coast.     See  Minute- 
gun,  The. — Sharpe. 
When  in  thy  glass  thou  studiest  thy  face.     See  Post- 
meridian.— Garrison. 
When  Irish  hills  were  fair  and  green.     See  Wanted — 

Saint  Patrick. — O'Brien. 
When  is  the  time  for  prayer?     See  Time  for  Prayer, 

The. — Anon. 
When  I'se  a  little  feller.    See  Take  er  Tatah  en  Wait. — 

Anon. 
When    Israel,    of    the    Lord    beloved.       See     Ivanhoe 

(Rebecca's  Hymn). — Scott. 
When  it  drizzles  and  drizzles.     See  Weather  Receipt, 

A. — Anon. 
When    .Jabez    (^how    came    courtin'    Corianna    Dowly, 
Granther   Peeks   was   jest   as   mad   as   hops.     See 
Corianna's  Wedding. — Dallas. 
When  .Jack  Connor  was  promoted  to  the  position  of 
engineer.     See    Engineer    Connor's    Son. — Drom- 
goole. 
When  .Jack  the  king's  commander.     See  Fate  of  John 

Burgoyne,  The. — Anon. 
When  .Jacky  drown'd  our  poor  cat  Tib.     See  Falsehood 

"Corrected." — Turner. 
When  Jacob  courted  Mary  Jane.     See  To   Those  about 

to  Marry. — Anon. 
When  .Jacob  went  out  from  Beersheba.     See  Building 

the  Ladder. — Lloyd. 
When  James  came  up  one  Sunday  night.     See  Conse- 
quences.— Burdette. 
When  January's  cold  appears.     See  Smoker's  Calendar, 

The. — Anon. 
When  .Jefferson  said  he  would  rather  have  newspapers 
without   a   government.     See   Politics   and   Jour- 
nalism.— Smith. 
When  Jessie  comes  with  her  soft  breast.     See  Jessie. — 

Brown. 
When  .Jesus  Christ  was  here  below.     See  Love  of  Jesus. 

—Taylor. 
When  Jesus  trod  by  thy  blue  sea.     See  Lord's  Prayer, 

The.— Hall. 
When  .Jimmy  comes  home  from  school  at  four.     See 

When  Jimmy  Comes  from  School. ^Matthews. 
When  Joe,  and    Kate,  and    Dick,    and    Bell[el.     See 

Six-year-old,  A. — Anon. 
When  .John  Thorp  died.     See  Epitaph,  The. — Meyers. 
When  Johnny  is  all  snugly  curled  in  bed.     See  Young 

Desperado,  A. — Aldrich. 
When  .Josiah  and  me  wuz  at  Saratoga.     See  Samantha 

at  Saratoga  (.Josiah  and  the  Mermaid). — Holley. 
When  .Jupiter,  looking  down  from  Olympus,  .saw  the 
Lusitanian  fleet  sailing.      See    Lusiad,    Story    of 
the. — Rabb. 
When  klingle,  klangle,  klingle.     See  When  the  Cows 

Come  Home. — Mitchell. 
When    last    before    her    peoole's    face   her    own  fair 
face    she   bent.      See     Crowned  and    Wedded. — 
Browning. 


926 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


When  on 


When  late  I  heard  the  trembling  cello  play.     See  Cello, 

The.— Gilder. 
When   late  in   summer  the  streams  run  yellow.     .See 

Song  of  Early  Autumn,  A. — Gilder. 
When  leaves  grow  sear  all  things  take  sombre  hue.     .See 

Indian  Summer. — Anon. 
When  leaves  turn  outward  to  the  light.     .See  Poet  and 

Lark. — De  Vere. 
When  Lssbia  first  I  saw,  so  heavenly  fair.     .See  Lesbia. 

— Congreve. 
When   Letty   had   scarce   pass'd   her  third  glad  year. 

See  Letty's  Globe. — -Turner. 
When  Life  and  Death  clasp  hands  to  part  no  more.     See 

Time  and  Eternity. — Luders. 
When    life    hath    run    its,  largest    round.     See    Daniel 

Webster. — Holmes. 
When  Life  his  lusty  course  began.     See  Goblet,  The. — 

Taylor. 
When     life     proves     disappointing.     See     Panacea. — 

Scribner. 
When  Life  was  all  a  summer  day.     See  My  Three  Loves. 

— Leigh. 
When    life's    troubles    gather    darkly.     See    Near    the 

Dawn. — Anon. 
When  like  a  bud  my  Julia  blows.     See  To  Julia  under 

Look  and  Key. — Seaman. 
When    like    the    early    rose.      See    Eileen    Aroon. — 

Griffin. 
When  little  (laude  was  naughty  wunst.     See  Naughty 

Claude. — Riley. 
When   little   Dickie   Swope's  a  man.     See   Impetuous 

Resolve,  An. — Riley. 
When   little   people   go   abroad,    wherever   they   may 

roam.     See  To   Henrietta,   on   her   Departure  for 

Calais. — Hood. 
When    little    'Pollus    Morton    he's.     See    Penalty    of 

Genius,  The. — Riley. 
When  loss  of  property  and  loss  of  repute  are  come. 

See  same. — Storrs. 
When,   lov'd  by   poet  and   painter.     See  Ivory   Gate, 

The.— Collins. 
When   Love  arose  in  heart  and  deed.     See  Flowers, 

The.— Rands. 
When  Love  came  in,  one  stormy  night.     See  Love's 

Entrance. — Knowles. 
When  Love  comes  knocking  at  thy  gate.     See  When 

Love  Comes  Knocking. — Gardner. 
When  love  grows  cool,  thy  fire  still  warms  me.     See 

My  Pipe. — Anon. 
When  love  in  the  faint  heart  trembles.     See  Song  of 

Eros.  — -Woodberry . 
When  love  on  time  and  measure  makes  his  ground. 
Pil     See  Love's  Realities. — Anon. 
Wheh  Love,  our  great  Immortal.     See  Rose  of  Stars, 

The. — Woodberry. 
When  Love  shall  come.     See  same. — -Anon. 
When   love   with   unconfinod   wings.     See  To   Althea 

from  Prison. — Lovelace. 
When    lovely   woman    stoops    to    folly.     See  Vicar  of 

Wakefield,  The  (Woman).— Goldsmith. 
When   lovers   talk,   they   talk   a   foreign   tongue.     See 

Foreign  Tongue,  A. — Branch. 
When  Lucien  de  Hem  had  seen  his  last  100  franc  note 

raked  in  by  the  banker.     See  Gold  Louis,  The. — 

Anon. 
When  Mabel  smiles  my  heart  beats  high.     See  When 

Mabel  Smiles. — Peck. 
When   maidens   such   as    Hester   die.     See   Hester. — 

Lamb. 
When   mamma   first   proposed   the  idea.     See   Killed 

with  Kindness. — May. 
When  mamma  said,  "Now  children  dear."     See  What 

He  would  Give  Up. — Anon. 
When  mamma  was  a  little  girl.     See  same. — Coolidge. 
When  man  and  maiden  meet,  I  like  to  see  a  drooping 

eye.     See  Modest  Couple,  The.— Gilbert. 
When    man   once   pure,   from   childish   innocence   fell. 

See  Conqueror  Conquered,  The. — Burleigh. 
When  March  has  gone  with  his  cruel  wind.     See  Hives 

and  Homes. — Cary. 
When  Margaret  laughs  the  world  is  gay.     See  When 

Margaret  Laughs. — Kilbourne. 
When  marshall'd  on  the  nightly  plain.     See  Star  of 

Bethlehem,  The.— White. 
When  Mary  Ann  Dollinger  got  the  skule  daown  thar 

on    Injun    Bay.     See    Courting    in    Kentucky. — 

Pratt. 
When  May  is  in  his  prime,  and  youthful  Spring.     See 

May. — Watson. 
When  May,  with  cowslip  braided  locks.     See  Lost  May, 

The.— Taylor. 
When  meeting-bells  began  to  toll.     See  Her  Bonnet. — 

Wilkins. 


When  men  shall  find  thy  flow'r,  thy  glory,  pass.     See 

Sonnets  to  Delia    (Beauty,  Time,  and  Love,  IV.). 

— Daniels. 
When  merry  Christmas-day  is  done.     See  Christmas- 
night  in  the  Quarters. — Russell. 
When  mid  the  budding  elms  the  bluebird  flits.     See 

Blood-root.— E.  S.  F. 
When  midnight  o'er  the  moonless  skies.     See  same. — 

Spencer. 
When  mid'st  the  gay  I  meet.     See  same. — Moore. 
When  Mid-years  come  our  joys  to  rout.     See  Widow, 

The. — Wheelwright. 
When  mighty  roast  beef  was  the  Englishman's  food. 

See  Roast  Beef  of  Old  England,  The.— Fielding 

and  Leveridge. 
When  mirth  is  full  and  free.     See  Reverses. — Newman. 
When   Mr.    Bangs,   the  elder,   returned   from   Europe. 

See  Case  of  Young  Bangs,  The. — Clark. 
When  Mr.  Jenkins  went  to  his  bedroom  at  half-past 

one.     See  One  Thing  He  P^orgot. — Hodge. 
When  Mr.  Johnson  told  his  wife,  that,  owing  to  business 

difficulties.     See  Just  Like  Them. — Phelps. 
When  Mrs.  Mulkittle  announced  her  intention  of  going 

downtown.     See  What  is. a  Hedgehog? — Anon. 
When  Molly  came  home  from  the  party  tonight.     See 

(Consolation. — Learned. 
When    moonlike    are    the    hazure    seas.     See    same. — 

Thackeray. 
When  moonlight's  soft  and  tender  charm.     See  Music 

of  the  Waves,  The. — Anon. 
When    morning    breaks    in    radiance,    overstreaming. 

See      Beloved      Syracuse. — (Syracuse      University 

Herald. ) 
When   morning  breaks,   what  fortune    waits    for  me? 

See  When  Morning  Breaks. — Raleigh. 
When    morning    came,    and    they    could    speak    more 

calmly  on  the  subject.      See    Old  Curiosity  Shop, 

The  (Burial  of  Little  Nell).— Dickens. 
When   mother   held   the   little   chap.     See   Then   and 

Now. — Anon. 
When  mother  just   had   set   the  coffee  on  the  table 

steaming  hot.     See  Fighting  Fire. — Lawless. 
When     mother-love     makes     all    things     bright.     See 

Christmas  Song,  A. — .lenks. 
When  Music,  heavenly  maid,  was  young.    See  Passions, 

The:  An  Ode  for  Music. — Collins. 
When  my  arms  wrap  you  round.     See  Michael  Robartes ' 

Remembers  Forgotten  Beauty. — Yeats. 
When   my  big  dolly  gave  a  ball.     See  Don't  Tell. — 

Best. 
When  my  Clorinda  walks  in  white.     See  Her  Confirma- 
tion.— Image. 
When  my  doUie  went  to  school.     See  same. — Richards. 
When  my  feet  have  wander'd.     .See  Litany. — Monsell. 
When  my  grandpa  was  little.     See  When  Grandpa  was 

Little. — Richards. 
When  my  kitty  was  a  kitten.     See  same. — Richards. 
When  my  lady  plays  golf,  there's  commotion  galore. 

See  My  Lady  on  the  Links. — Gilbert. 
When  my  last  sunset  is  under  a  cloud.     See  When  I  am 

Dead. — Browne. 
When  my  love  was  away.     See  Ab.sence. — Bridges. 
When  my  mother  died  I  was  very  young.     See  Chimney 

Sweeper,  The. — Blake. 
When  my  pipe  bums  bright  and  clear.     See  Pipe  and 

Tobacco. — Anon. 
When  my  room-mate  gets  cross  and  her  brown  eyes 

look  black.     See  My  Room-mate. — S.  L.  B. 
When  Nature  from  her  lavish  urn.     See  Our  Heroes' 

Graves. ^Anon. 
When  Nature  had  made  all  her  birds.     See  Bobolinks, 

The. — Cranch. 
When    Nature    made    the    blue-bird.     See    Blue-bird, 

The. — Burroughs. 
When  Nell  her  evening  prayer  had  said.     See  Dream 

of  Easter,  A. — Richards. 
When   nettles   in   winter   bring  forth   roses   red.     See 

Trust  in  Women. — -Anon. 
When  night  comes  on,  when  morning  breaks,  they  rise. 

See  My  Soldier  Boy. — Anon. 
When  o'er  earth  is  breaking.     See  God  is  There. — Anon . 
When   o'er   proud   Venice'   regal   crest.     See   Singing 

across  the  Water. — Stretch. 
When  o'er  the  mountain  steeps.     See  Reve  du  Midi. — 

Cooke. 
When  of  an  evening  all  the  joy  of  the  day  was  done. 

See  Little  Mistress  Merciless. — Field. 
When  Old  Folks  they  wuz  young  like  us.     See  Best 

Times,  The.— Riley. 
When   Old   Jack   died   we   stayed   from   school.     See 

When  Old  .lack  Died.— Riley. 
When  on  a  [or  the]  fragrant  sandal  tree.     See  Forgive-' 

ness. — Edmondston. 


927 


When  on 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


When  on  my  country  walks  I  go.     See  Amico  Suo. — 

Home. 
When  on  my  day  of  life  the  night  is  falling.     iSee  At 

Last.— Whittier. 
When  on  my  ear  yoi#  loss  was  knell'd.     See  Alpine 

Sheep,  The. — Lowell. 
When  on  my  soul  in  nakedness.     See  Quiet  Pilgrim, 

The.— Thomas. 
When  on  the  altar  of  my  hand.     See  Lady  to    her 

Inconstant  Servant,  The. — Carew. 
When  on  the  breath  of  Autumn's  [or  Autumn]  breeze. 

See  Corn-fields. — Hewitt.  * 

When  on  the  for  a]  fragrant  sandal-tree.     See  Forgive- 
ness.— ^Edmundston. 
When  on  the  height  and  by  the  river.     See  Bread. — 

Wilbor. 
When  on  the  world's  first  harvest  day.     See  Blushing 

Maple  Tree,  The. — Anon. 
When    on   those   lovely    looks    I    gaze.      See    Song: 

"When  on  those,"  etc. — Rochester. 
When  on  thy  bed  of  pain  thou  layest  low.     See  Emma 

Lazarus. — Gilder. 
When    other   friends    are    round    thee.     See    same. — 

Morris. 
When  our  babe  he  goeth  walking  in  his  garden.     See 

Garden  and  Cradle. — Field. 
When  our  eyes  are  weary — weary.     See  same. — Anon. 
When  our  heads    are  bow'd  with  woe.     See  Hymn  for 

the  Sixteenth  Sunday  after  Trinity.— Milman. 
When  our    mother's    ast    some    cumpny.-    See    Some 

Stylish  "Cumpny." — Richards. 
When  our  Saviour,  bending  beneath  the  weight  of  his 

cross.     See  Wandering  Jew,  The. — Anon. 
When  our  two  souls  stand  up  erect  and  strong.     See 

Sonnets  from  the  Portuguese,   XXII. — Browning. 
When  out  of  the  West  long  shadows  creep.     See  Bylo 

Land. — {New  York  Dispatch.) 
When  out-of-doors  is  full  of  rain.     See  Rain-harp,  The. 

— Sherman. 
When  over  the  hill  the  farm-boy  goes.     See  Calling  the 

Cows. — Trowbridge. 
When  Pa  takes  care  of  me.     See  some.— Williams. 
When  papa  puts  his  great  coat  on.     See  same. — Mc- 

Nabb. 
When  Papa's   sick,    my   goodness   sakes!     See   When 

Papa's  Sick. — Lincoln. 
When  Parepa  was  here  she  was  everywhere  the  peo- 

Sle's  idol.  See  Easter  with  Parepa,  An. — 
>elano. 

When,  passing  southward,  I  may  cross  the  line.  See 
Unnoticed  Bound,  The. — Anon. 

When  Patrick  Henry,  who  gave  the  first  impulse  to 
the  ball  of  the  American  Revolution.  See  Trea- 
son.— {Jest  Book,  The.) 

When  people  call  this  beast  to  mind.  See  Elephant, 
The.— Belloc. 

When  Peter  led  the  first  Crusade.  See  Palm  and  the 
Pine,  The.— Taylor. 

When  Philip  Grey,  whose  wild,  adventurous  soul.  See 
Eunice. — Meyers. 

When  Phyllis  trips  out  in  the  rain.  See  Cupid's  Met- 
amorphosis.— M.  S.  W. 

When  plowmen  ridge  the  steamy  brown.  See  Song- 
sparrow,  The. — Thomson. 

When  Psyche's  friend  becomes  her  lover.  See  Friend 
and  Lover. — De  Vere. 

When  public  bodies  are  to  be  addressed  on  momen- 
tous occasions.  See  Adams  and  Jefferson  (True 
Eloquence). — Webster. 

When  Rhodora  Boyd — Rhodora  Pennington  that  was. 
See  Round-up,  A. — Bunner. 

When  Richelieu  learned  that  Wallenstein  was  dead. 
See  Wallenstein's  Death. — Lytton. 

When  rising  from  the  bed  of  death.  See  Spectator, 
The  (Hymn:  "When  ri.sing,"  etc.). — Addison. 

When  Rob  was  left  all  by  himself.  See  Rob's  Tempta- 
tion.— Richards. 

WTien  Robin  Hood  and  Little  John.  See  Robin  Hood's 
Death  and  Burial. — Anon. 

When  round  the  earth  the  Father's  hand.  See  R«st. — 
MacDonald. 

When  Royalty  was  young  and  bold.  See  Church  and 
State. — Moore. 

When  Ruby  sings  the  songs  of  praise.  See  In  the 
Choir. — Greene. 

When  russet  beech-leaves  drift  in  air.  See  Autumn 
Memories. — Savage-Armstrong. 

When  rustling  leaves  in  whispers  tell.  See  Music. — 
Vickers. 

When  Ruth  was  left  half  desolate.  See  Ruth;  or, The 
Influences  of  Nature. — Wordsworth. 

When  Santa  came  one  wintry  night.  See  Santa's 
Queer  Joke. — Richards. 


When  self-esteem,    or   others'    adulation.      See  Grave, 

The  (Pride).— Blair. 
When  shall  we  all  meet  again?     See  same. — Anon. 
When  shall  we  meet  again,  dearest  and  best.     See  same. 

— Clarke. 
When  shall  we  meet  again,  meet  ne'er  to  sever?     See 

Parting  Hymn. — Anon. 
When    shall    we    three    meet     again?       See    same. — 

Anon. 
When  shall  we  three  meet  again.     See  Macbeth  (Witch- 
es' Meeting,  The).— Shakespeare. 
When  shaws  beene  sheene,  and  snradds  full  fayre.     See 

Robin  Hood  and  Guy  of  Gisborne. — Anon. 
When  she  came  to  work  for  the  family  on  Congress 

street.     See     That     Hired     Girl. — (Detroit     Free 

Press.) 
When  she  comes  home  again !     A  thousand  ways.     See 

When  She  Comes  Home. — Riley. 
When  she  looks  sad,  somehow  I  jes'.     See  Mirandy. — 

McClasson. 
When  she   undid  her   hair  at   night.     See   Mother. — 

Anon. 
When  she's  young  she's  tall  and  slender.     See  Who  Is 

She? — Lippmann. 
When  should  a  girl  marry?     See  same. — Parke. 
When  silent  time,  wi'  lightly  foot.     See  Nabob,  The. — 

Blamire. 
When  Silvia  sings  I  seem  to  hear.     See  "When  Silvia 

Sings. ' ' — Duffield . 
When  slim  Sophia  mounts  her  hor.se.     See  Reverie. — 

Ramal. 
When  Sol  did  cast  no  light,  being  darkened  over.     See 

Seaman's  Happy  Return,  The. — Anon. 
When  Solomon  was  reigning  in  his  glory.     See  Solo- 
mon and  the  Bees. — Saxe. 
When  some  beloved  voice  that  was  to  you.     See  Sub- 
stitution.— Browning. 
When  sometimes  our  feet  grow  weary.     See  Beginning 

Again. — Anon. 
When  souls  that  have  put  off  their  mortal  gear.     See 

Recognition. — Chadwick. 
When  sparrows  build  and  the  leaves  break  forth.     See 

When  Sparrows  Build. — Ingelow. 
When  sporgles  spanned  the  floreate  mead.     See  UfBa. 

—White. 
When  Spring    came    into    the    garden.     See    Spring 

Flowers. — Anon. 
When  Spring  casts  all  her  swallows  forth.     See  Day- 
rise  and  Sunset. — Thorn  bury. 
When  spring,  to  woods  and  wastes  around.     See  Mur- 
dered Traveller,  The. — Bryant. 
When  stars  are  in  the  quiet  skies.     See  same. — Bulwer- 

Lytton. 
When  stars  pursue  their  solemn  flight.     See  Music  in 

the  Night.— Spofford. 
When  steps  are  hurrying  homeward.     See  My  Darlings. 

— Cary. 
When  stern   New   England's  tardy  spring.     See  May 

Flower,  The. — Goodwin. 
When  stem  occasion  calls  for  war.     See  Tempered. — 

Woolsey. 
When  streets  are  swaying  to  and  fro.     See  Hindrances 

to  Happiness. — {Merchant  Traveler.) 
When,  stricken    by    the    freezing    blast.     See    Daniel 

Webster. — Holmes. 
When  study  and  school  are  over.     See  Vacation  Song. 

— Sherman. 
When  sudden  cry  shall  rend  the  air.     See  Be  Brave. — 

Cooper. 
When  sudden   temptation   doth   strongly  assail  thee. 

See  Waiting. — Anon. 
When  summer  o'er  her  native  hills.     See  On  a  Picture. 

— Lynch. 
When  summer  sun   oppresses.     See  Welcome   to   the 

Forest . — Anon . 
When  summer's  birds  are  bringing.     See  Peter-bird, 

The.— Stanton. 
When  Sunday  mornin'  comes  around.     See  When  Pa 

Begins  to  Shave. — Robins. 
When  sunset  throws  a  golden  shaft.     See  Hopes  and 

Fears.— T.  H.  G. 
When  sunshine  met  the  wave.     See  In  the  Beginning. 

— Monroe. 
When  Sylvia  sings  I  seem  to  hear.     See  "When  Sylvia 

Sings."— Duffield. 
When  tender  ewes,  brought  home  with  evening  sun. 

See  Menaphon  (Menaphon's  Roundelay). — Greene. 
When  that  bright  spirit,  afterwards  known  as  Satan. 

See  Paradise  Lost,  The  Story  of. — Rabb. 
When  that    great    Kings    return    to    clay.     See    Cecil 

Rhodes. — Kipling. 
When  that  I  was  a  little  tiny  boy.     See  Twelfth  Night ; 

or,  What  You  Will. — Shakespeare. 


928 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


When  the 


When  that  last  pipe  is  smoked  at  last.     See  Happy 

Smoking-ground,  The. — Le  Gallienne. 
When  that  my  mood  is  sad,  and  in  the  noise.     See 

Shaded  Water,  The.— Simms. 
When  that  Seint  George  hadde  sleyne  ye  draggon.     See 

same. — Anon. 
When  that  the  fields  put  out  their  gay  attire.     Sec  Son- 
net: To  the  Redbreast. — -Bampfylde. 
When  the  administration  was  striving,  by  the  opera- 
tion of  peaceful  measures.     See  Mr.  Clay  and  th? 

\yar  of  1812  (For  the  War  of  1813).— Clay. 
When    the    angels    all    are  singing.      S^e    Hymn. — 

Breton. 
When  the  Arts  in  their  infancy  were.     See  Magpie's 

Nest,  The. — Lamb. 
When  the  aster  wakes  in  the  morning.     See  Spirit  of 

the  Sunset,  The. — Anon. 
When  the  Autumn  winds  nip  all  the  hill-grasses  brown. 

See  Holiday  Home. — Bunner. 
When  the  baby  died,  on  every  side.     See  When  the 

Baby  Died. — Jackson. 
When  the  baby  died,  we  said.     See  Loss  and  Gain. — 

Perry. 
When  the  black-lettered  list  to  the  gods  was  presented. 

See  Wife,  Children    and  Friends. — Spencer. 
When  the  bleak  winds  in  winter's  hoary  reign.     See 

New  Occasional  Addre.ss,  A. — Anon. 
When  the  blue-black  waves  are  tipped  with  white.     See 

In  Action. — Anon. 
When  the  breath  of  twilight  blows  to  flame  the  misty 

skies.    See  By  the  Margin  of  the  Great  Deep. — A.  E. 
When  the  breeze  from  the  blue-bottle's  blustering  blim. 

See  To  Marie. — Anon. 
When  the  bright  lamp  is  carried  in.     See  North-west 

Passage  (Good-night). — Stevenson. 
When  the  bright  sun  doth  smiling  rise.     See  Sunshine. 

— Delavigne. 
When  the  bright  sun,  returning.     See  Kneel  and  Pray. 

— Anon. 
When  the    British    warrior   queen.     See    Boadicea. — ■ 

Cowper. 
When  the  busy   day  is  done.     See  Lady  Button-eyes. 

—Field. 
When  the  cares  of  day  are  ended.     See  Child's  Wisdom, 

A. — Cary. 
When  the  clouds  of  war  were  rolling  o'er  the  heavens 

like  a  pall.     See  Our  Heroes. — Pearre. 
When  the  complaints  of  a  brave  and  powerful  people 

are  observed.     See  To  the  King. — .Junius. 
When  the   corn   begins   to   sprout.     See  This   Way. — 

Anon. 
When  the   corn-fields  and  meadows.     See  Little   Boy 

Blue. — Anon. 
When  the  cows  come  home  the  milk  is  coming.     See 

Milking  Time. — Rossetti. 
When  the  crimson  flush  of  morning.     See  Day  too  Late, 

A. — Rock. 
When  the  darkness  drew  away,  at  the  dawning  of  the 

day.     See  Portent. — Thaxter. 
When  the    dash    for    position    began.     See    Ben-Hur 

(Chariot  Race,  The). — Wallace. 
When  the  day  and  the  night  do  meete.     See  Cobbe's 

Prophecies. — Cobbe. 
When  the  day  that  must  come  shall  have  come  sud- 
denly.    See  KorAn,  The  (In  the  Name  of  God,  the 

Comnassionate,  the  Merciful). 
When  the  day  with  all  its  splendor.     See  Tired. — Anon. 
When  the   diplomates   cease   from   their   capers.     See 

Song  of  the  Cannon,  The. — Foss. 
When  the  dishes  all  is  washed  an'  wiped,  an'  the  path 

swep'  to  the  stoop.     See  Playing  Entertainment. — 

Hopper. 
When  the  dumb   Hour,   cloth'd  in  black.     See  Silent 

Voices,  The. — Tennyson. 
When  the  dying  flame  of  day.     See  Pulaski's  Banner. — 

Longfellow. 
When  the  Easter  chimes  are  ringing.     See  Does  Jesus 

Know? — -Richards. 
When  the     eccentric     Rabelais     was     physician.     See 

Doctor  and  the  Lampreys,  The. — Smith. 
When  the  end  comes,  and  we  must  say  good-by.     See 

Love  and  Death. — Anon. 
When  the  eve  is  growing  gray,  and  the  tide  is  rolling 

in. — See  Bells  of  Lynn,  The. — Weatherly. 
When  the   fairies   used    to  live  here.     See   When   the 

Fairies  Lived  Here. — Anon. 
When  the  farm  work's  done,  at  the  set  of  sun.     See  My 

Old  Gray  Nag. — Lincoln. 
When  the  feud  of  hot  and  cold.     See  December. — Ben- 
ton. 
When  the   fields   were   white   with   harvest,    and   the 

laborers   were   few.     See   Neglected   Call,   The. — 

Neale. 


When  the  fierce  North-wind  with  his  airy  forces.   See 

Day  of  Judgment,  The. — Watts. 
When  the  fir.st  faint  stars  come  peeping  out.     See  My 

Bess. — Walker. 
When  the   first   violet   oped    its   mild,    blue   eye.     See 

"Blackbird  Snow,"  A. — Bates. 
When  the  Floridas  were  erected  into  a  territory.     See 

Origin  of  the  White,  the  Red,  and  the  Black  Men. — 

Irving. 
When  the  flush  of  a  new-born  sun  fell  first  on  Eden's 

green   and   gold.     See  Conundrum   of   the   Work- 
shops, The. — Kipling. 
When  the  four  quarters  of  the  world  shall  rise.     See 

Our  Mary  and  the  Child  Mummy. — Turner. 
When  the  frost  is  on  the   punkin  and  the  fodder's  in 

the  shock.     See  When  the  Frost  is  on  the  Punkin. 

—Riley. 
When  the  full  moon  lays  a  radiant  haze.     See  Song  of 

the  Headlight,  The. — Jackson. 
When  the  Giver  made  the  wings.     See  Song  of  Joy, 

The. — Spencer. 
When  the  golden  day  is  done.     See  Night  and  Day. — 

Stevenson. 
When  the  golden  sun  was  sinking  low  behind  the  west- 
ern hill.     See  Love's  Caramels  Lost. — Layne. 
When  the  golden  sunlight  dances  on  the  bosom  of  the 

stream. — See  How  His  Garments  got  Turned. — • 

Anon. 
When  the    grass    shall    cover    me.     See    same. — Cool- 

brith. 
When  the  grass  was  closely  mown.     See  Dumb  Soldier, 

The. — Stevenson. 
When  the  gray  Emperor  at  the  Gates  of  Death.     See 

Wilhelm  I.,  Emperor  of  Germany. — Bunner. 
When  the  Great  Architect  conceived  the  plans.     See 

Resurgam. — Short. 
When  the  great,   gray  fog  comes  in,   and  the   damp 

clouds   cloak   the   shore.     See   Watchers,    The. — 

Lincoln. 
When  the  great  wind  sets  things  whirling.     See  Popu- 
lar Poplar  Tree,  The. — Howard. 
When  the  green  woods  laugh  with  the  voice  of  joy. 

See  Laughing  Song. — Blake. 
When  the  head  of  Bran.     See  Head  of  Bran,  The. — 

Meredith. 
When  the  hot  summer  daylight  is  dyin'.     See  "Even- 
in'  Hymn,  The." — I^incoln. 
When  the  hounds  of  spring  are  on  winter's  traces.     See 

Atalanta    in  Calydon  (Chorus  from  "Atalanta"). 

— Swinburne. 
When  the  hours  of  day  are  numbered.      See  Footsteps 

of  Angels  ("When  the  hours,"  etc.). — Longfellow. 
When  the   house   is   alone   by   itself.     See   When   the 

House  is  Alone  by  It.self. — Dallas. 
When  the  humid  shadows  [or  showers']  gather  [or  hover] 

over  all  the  starry  sphere.     See  Rain  on  the  Roof. 

— Kenney. 
When  the  icy  snow  is  deep.     See  Wait. — Goodale. 
When  the  lamp  is  shatter'd.     See  same. — Shelley. 
When  the  lamps  were  lit  in  the  evening.     See  Bedtime. 

— Anon. 
When  the    last    bitterness    was    past.     See    Actea. — 

Rodd. 
When  the  last  sunshine  of  expiring  day.     See  Monody 

on  the  Death  of  thfe  Right  Hon.  R.  B.  Sheridan. — 

Byron. 
When  the  last  word  is  said.     See  Valedictory,   A. — 

Denton. 
When  the  laughing,  merry  June  maid  shakes  her  clouds 

of  golden  hair.     See  Legend  of  Rose  Sunday,  A. — 

Anon. 
When  the  leaves  are  off  the  bushes  an'  the  quails  begin 

to  pipe.     See  Afler  Frost. — Anon. 
When  the  lessons  and  tasks  are  all  ended.     See  Chil- 
dren, The. — Dickinson. 
When  the  light  of  day  declineth.     See  Lamplighter, 

The.— Ramal. 
When  the  little  boy  ran  away  from  home.     See  When 

the  liittle  Boy  Ran  Away. — Anon. 
When  the   little  stars   are  shining.     See  Her  Eyes. — 

"Viola." 
When  the  long  sounding  curfew  from  afar.     See  Min- 
strel, The. — Beattie. 
When  the  Lord  breathes  his  wrath  above  the  bosom 

of  the  waters.     See  Life-saver,  The. — Lincoln. 
When  the  low  breath  of  the  midnight.     See  Vision,  A. 

— Anon. 
When  the  mariner  has  been  tossed  for  many  days,  in 

thick  weather.     See  Reply  to  Hayne. — Webster. 
When  the  merry  lark  doth  gild.     See  Song  for  the  Sea- 
sons, A. — Procter. 
When  the   merry   springtime   weaves.     See   Christmas 

Tide.— Cook. 


929 


When  the 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


When  the   midnight    hour   is   come.     See    Napoleon's 

Midnight  Review. — Zedlitz. 
When  the  mists  grow  bright    with  the  morning  light. 

See  Morning  and  Evening. — Frost. 
When  the  mists  have  rolled  in  splendor  from  the  beauty 

of  the  hills.     See  When   the  Mists  have   Rolled 

Away. — Herbert. 
When  the    monkey    in    his    madness.     See    Monkey's 

Glue,  The. — Goldsmith. 
When  the  moon    is  on  the  wave.     See  Manfred    (In- 
cantation).— Byron. 
When  the  morning  fair  and  sweet.     See  Gone. — Anon. 
When   the   name   of   the    Presidential   nominee.     See 

Opening  the  Campaign. — Anon. 
When  the  night  is  still  and  far.     See  Highway,  The. — 

Gannett. 
When  the  Norn-mother  saw  the  Whirlwind  Hour.     See 

Lincoln,  the  Great  Commoner. — Markham. 
When  the  North  and  South  had  parted,  and  the  boom 

of  the  signal  gun.     See  Whistling  Regiment,  The. 

— Harvey. 
When  the  old  flaming  Prophet  climb'd  the  sky.     See 

On  a  Virtuous  Young  Gentlewoman    that    Died 

Suddenly. — Cartwright. 
When  the  open  fire  is  lit.     See  Ghost  Fairies. — Sher- 
man. 
When  the  opulence  of  summer  unto  wood  and  meadow 

comes.     See  Smallest  of  the  Drums,  The. — Buck- 
ham. 
When  the  pale  wreath  is  laid  upon  the  tomb.     See 

same. — .\non. 
When  the  poet  in  the  springtime.     See  Plea  for  Spring 

Poetry,  A.— R.  K.  K. 
When  the  radiant  mom  of  creation  broke.     See  Song 

of  the  Stars,  The. — Bryant. 
When  the  reaper's  task  was  ended,  and  the  summer 

wearing  late.     See  Swan  Song  of    Parson  Avery, 

The.— Whittier. 
When  the  regiment  of  the  Halberdiers  is  proudly  march- 
ing  by.     See    Hireling    Swiss    Regiment,    The.— 

Scott. 
When  the    rose  is  brightest.     See  To  Giulia  Grisi.— 

Willis. 
When  the  rough  battle  of  the  day  is  done.     See  same. — 

Garfield. 
When  the   rustling  leaves   lie   deep   and  brown.     See 

Winds,  The.— (Come/i  Widow.) 
When  the  sad  soul,  by  care  and  grief  oppressed.     See 

Library,  The. — Crabbe. 
When  the  sap  begins  to  flow.     See  In  Sugar  Time. — 

Burke. 
When  the  savagery  of  the  lash,  the  barbarism  of  the 

chain.     See  Volunteer  Soldiers  of  the  Union,  The. 

— Anon. 
When  the  scarlet  cardinal  tells.     See  July. — Swett. 
When  the  shadows  veil  [urr.  vail]  the  maadows.       See 

Ranger,  The. — Whittier. 
When  the  sheep  are  in  the  fauld,  and  the  kye  at  hame 

[or  kye's  a'  at  hame,  or  kye's  come  hame].     See 

Auld  Robin  Gray. — Barnard. 
When  the  silence  of  the  midnight.     See  My  Lost  Love. 

— {All  the  Year  Round.) 
When  the  Sleepy  Man  comes  with  dust  in  his  eyes.     See 

Sleepy  Man. — Roberts. 
When  the  snow  begins  to  feather.     See  Winter  Sketch, 

A.— De  Tabley. 
When  the  soul  sought  refuge  in  the  place  of  rest.     See 

Self-discipline. — Russell. 
When  the    spinning-room    was    here.     See    Maids    of 

Elfin-mere,  The. — Allingham. 
When  the  spring  comes  on,  when  the  snow  is  gone.     See 

Blest  Spring  Time.— E.  R.  L. 
When  the  .stage  "went  light"  thftff  ran  out  the  small 

buckboard.     See  Bill. — Anon. 
When  the  Sultan  Shah-Zaman.     See  When  the  Sultan 

Goes  to  Ispahan. — Aldrich. 
When  the  summer  day  makes  the  greenwood  gay.     See 

Little  Fay,  The. — Buchanan. 
When  the  summer  harvest  was  gathered  in.     See  In- 
dian Hunter. — Longfellow. 
When  the   summer-time   is   passed,    and   the   harvest 

housed  at  last.     See  Christmas  Welcome,  The. — 

Anon. 
When  the  sun  has  left  the  hill-top.     See  Blessing  for 

the  Blessed,  A. — Alma-Tadema. 
When  the  sun  has  thawed  the  snow.     See  Spring  Poet, 

The. — Anon. 
When  the  sun  shines,  then  I  see.     See'  Shadow  Chil- 
dren.— Sherman. 
When  the  sunbeams  glint  sae  bonnie.     See  When  the 

Bloom  is  on  the  Heather. — Grant. 
When  the    swallows    homeward    fly.     See    When    the 

Swallows. — Gordon. 


When  the  sweet   day  in  silence  hath  departed.     See 

Bards,  The.— Read. 
When  the  teacher  gets  cross,  and  her  blue  [or  brown] 

eyes  gets  [or  get]  black.     See  When  the  Teacher 

Gets  Cross. — Anon. 
When  the  tide  goes  out,  how  the  foam-flakes  dance. 

See  When  the  Tide  Goes  Out. — Lincoln. 
When  the  toil  of  day  is  over.     See  Bullfrog  Serenade, 

The. — Lincoln. 
When  the  train  came  shrieking  down.     See  What  the 

Train  Ran  Over. — Larcom. 
When  the  trees,  their  branches  bare.     See  Firelight. — 

R.  H. 
When  the  veil  from  the  eyes  is  lifted.     See  Si  Jeunesse 

Savait. — Stedman. 
When  the  vengeance  wakes,  when  the  battle  breaks. 

See  "Remember  the  Maine." — Wilson. 
When  the  voices  of  children  are  heard  on  the  green. 

See  Nurse's  Song. — Blake. 
When  the  warm  sun  that  brings.     See  April  Day,  An. 

— Longfellow. 
When  the   wayside  tangles  blaze.     See  Goldenrod.^ 

Goodale. 
When  the  weather  is  wet.     See  Weather,  The. — Anon. 
When  the  West  is  red,  when  the  sun  is  set.     See  Cigar- 
ette and  Pipe,  A. — {Cornell  Widow.) 
When  the  Wild  Gee.se  were  flying  to  Flanders  away. 

See  Sailor  Girl,  The. — Graves. 
When  the  wind  blows.     See  Song  in  Praise  of  Spring. — 

Cornwall. 
When  the  wind  goes  thro'  the  maples.     See  same. — 

"rruesdell. 
When  the  winds  of  winter  blow.     See  Bird  with  Bo.som 

Red. — Anon. 
When  the  world  is  burning.     See  same. — .lones. 
When  the  world  is  fast  asleep.     See  Dream-ship,  The. — 

Field. 
When  the  year  is  young,  )shAti.^weets  are  flung.     See 

Seasonable  Sweets. — C. 
When  the   yellow   stars  are   weeping  shining  tears  of 

molten  gold.     See  Parent  with   the  Hoof,  The. — - 

Anon. 
When  the  young  hand  of  Darnley  lock'd  in  hers.     See 

Mary  Queen  of  Scots. — Turner. 
When  the  young  ladies  who  were  spending  the  summer 

at    the    Seaside    Hotel.       See    By    Telephone. — 

Anon. 
When  there  was   nought   but   space — before   all   time. 

See  Creation  of  Man,  The. — Hewitt. 
When  they   came   unto   the  river-side.     See  Lio;ht    of 

Asia,  The  (Secret   of  Death,  The). — Arnold. 
When  they  reached  the  depot,  Mr.  Mann  and  his  wife. 

See  Too  Late  for  the  Train. — Anon. 
When  things  don't  go  to  suit  you.     See  Smile   when- 
ever You  Can. — Anon. 
When,  think  you,  comes  the  wind.     See  Rose  and  the 

Wind,  The. — Marston. 
When  this  crystal  shall  present.     See   Looking-glass, 

The.— Shirley. 
When  this,  my  little  sphere,  is  upside  down.     See  To  a 

Laugh. — Terry. 
When  this  young  land  has  reached  its  wrinkled  prime. 

See  Poets,  The. — Aldrich. 
When  thistle-blows  do  lightly  float.     See  November. — 

Cleaveland. 
When  thou  art  kneeling  down  at  night.     See  Forgiving. 

— Alexander. 
When  thou  art  near  me.     See  same. — Scott. 
When  thou  art  near,  the  rose  doth  seem  less  fair.     See 

When  Thou  Art  Near. — Deveton. 
When  thou  art  near  to  me,  it  seems.     See  To  Anne. — 

Marot. 
When  thou  art  nigh,  it  seems.     See  When  Thou  Art 

Nigh. — Moore. 
When  thou  art  weary  of  the  world.  See  Rest. — {Cham- 
bers' Journal.) 
When  thou  dost  eat  from  off  this  plate.     See  Inscrip- 
tion for  My  Little  Son's  Silver  Plate. — Field. 
When  thou   dost   play   and   sweetly   sing.     See   Upon 

Sapho   Sweetly   Playing  and   Sweetly  Singing. — 

Herrick. 
When  thou,    in    all    thy    loveliness.     See    Rosalie. — 

Richards. 
When  thou  must  home  to  shades  of  underground.     See 

When  Thou  Must  Home. — Campion. 
When  Thou,    O   Death,   shalt   wait.     See   Wish,  A. — 

'Eliot. 
When  thou,   poor   Excommunicate.     See  To   His   In- 
constant Mistress. — Carew. 
When  thro'  life  unblessed  we  rove.     See  On  Music. — 

Moore. 
When  through  the  torn  sail  the  wild  tempest  is  stream- 
ing.    See  "Help,  Lord,  or  We  Perish." — Heber. 


930 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


When  your 


When    thy    [or  your]     beauty    appears.     See   Song. — 

Pai-nell. 
When  time  hath  bereft  thee  of  charms  now  divine.     See 

When  Time  Hath  Bereft  Thee.— Anon. 
When  to  any  saint  I  pray.     See  Saint  Peray. — Parsons. 
When  to  her     lute  Corinna  sings.     See  Of  Corinna's 

Singing. — Campion. 
When  to  soft  sleep  we  give  ourselves  away.     See  Sleep. 

— Aldrich. 
When  to   the   flowers — so   beautiful.     See   Forget-me- 
not.-— Anon. 
When  to   the   sessions   of   sweet   silent   thought.     See 

Sonnets,  XXX. — Shakespeare. 
When  Tom  and  Polly  Miller  came  home  from  school. 

See    How   Colonel   Ashton    Signed    the    Pledge. — 

Peters. 
When  Tom  reached  the  frame  school-house,  he  strode 

in  briskly.    See  Tom  Sawyer  (Tom  Sawyer's  Love 

Affair). — -Clemens. 
When  tree    and    bush    are    comfortless.     See    Winter 

Flowers. — Bishop. 
When  troubled    in    spirit,    when    weary    of    life.     See 

Horseback  Ride,  The. — Lippincott. 
When  trouble:*  come  of  God.     See  Brothers  and  a  Ser- 
mon.— Ingelow. 
When  tulips    bloom   in   Union   square.     See  Angler's 

Wish,  An. — Van  Dyke. 
When  twilight  dews  are  falling  soft.     See  When  Twi- 
light Dews. — Moore. 
When  Twilight  her  soft  robe  of  shadow  spreads  down. 

See  Hand-organ  Ball,  The. — Lincoln. 
When  twilight's    sombre    shadows   fall.     See    Evening 

Doze,  An. — Hunt. 
When  two  little  boys — renowned  but  for  noise.     See 

Hik-tee-dik. — Riley. 
When  vain   desire  at   last  and  vain  regret.     See  One 

Hope,  The. — Rossetti. 
When  vanished  in  this  vapor  we  call  life.     See  same. — 

A.  T.  I>. 
When  Venus  roamed   Olympia's   height.     See   Wrath 

of  Cu|)id,  The. — Anon. 
When  verdant   youth   .sees   life   afar.     See   Ballade   of 

Tobacco,  The. — Matthews. 
When  very  young  I  loved  a  lass.     See  Kiss  in  the  Dark. 

A.— Watts. 
When  Virgil  thought   no   shame   the    Doric  red.     See 

Albino. — Philips. 
When  Vronsky  looked  at  his  watch,  it  was  half-past 

five.     See  Race,  The. — Tolstoi. 
When  War's  wild  clamor  filled  the  land.     See  Grand 

Advance,  The. — Gassaway. 
When  was  it?     Why,  the  other  night.     See  Slight  Mis- 
take, A. — Anon. 
When  was  there  contract  better  driven  by  Fate.     See 

On  the  Union. — Jonson. 
When  was  there  ever  an  auspicious  day  for  humanity. 

See  Centennial  Celebration  of  Concord  Fight  (Our 

Worst  Foes). — Curtis. 
When  Washington  was  President,  as  cold  as  any  icicle. 

See  What  Lack  We  Yet  ?— Burdette. 
When  Washington   was  young,   and  not.     See   I^atest 

Version,  The. —  Lanigan. 
When  we  and  our  posterity  shall  see  our  lovely  South 

desolated.     See  Appeal  to  the  Georgia  Convention 

of  1860  against  Secession. — Stephens. 
When  we  are  as  yet  small  children,  there  comes  up  to 

us  a  youthful  angel.     See  Autocrat  of  the  Break- 
fast-table, The   (Cubes  and  Spheres). — Holmes. 
When  we  are  parted  let  me  lie.     See  When  We  are 

Parted. — Ai'd^. 
When  we  are  parted — pray!  but   do  not  weep.     See 

Mizpah. — Scott. 
When  we  come  to  consider  the  features  or  elements  of 

character.     See  Discipline  of  Life  and  Character, 

"The. — Anon. 
When  we  contemplate  man  in  his  relations  to  the  rest 

of    creation.     See    Man's    Material    Triumphs. — 

Fayet. 
When  we  for  age  could  neither  read  nor  write.     See 

On  His  Divine  Poems. — Waller. 
When  we  go  home,  think  you  'tis  true.     See  When  We 

Go  Home. — Scott. 
When  we  have  thrown  off  this  old  suit.     See  Question 

Whither,  The.— Meredith. 
When  we  hear  the  music  ringing.     See  Shall  We  Know 

Each  Other  There? — Anon. 
When  we   hear   Uncle   Sidney   tell.     See   Good,    Old- 
fashioned  People,  The. — Riley. 
When  we  in  our  viciousness  grow  hard.     See  Antony 

and  Cleopatra. — Shakespeare. 
When  we  look  at  the  Democracies  of  the  ancient  world. 

See  Vigor  of  Democratic  Governments. — Fox. 


When  we  plant  a  tree  we  are  doing  what  we  can.     See 

When  We  Plant  a  Tree. — -Holmes. 
When  we  search  for  the  agencies  of  the  great  epochs. 

See  Agencies  in  Our  National  Progress. — McClure. 
When  we   see   our  dream-ships    slipping.     See  Retro- 
spection.— Anon. 
When  we  speak  of  our  country  we  mean  the  United 

States  of  America.     See  Our  Country. — Sargent. 
When  we  speak  of  the  glory  of  our  fathers,  we  mean  not 

that  vulgar  renown.     See  Principles  of  the  Revo- 
lution, The. — Quincy. 
When  we    started    from    the    hut    in    darkness.     See 

Romance  of  the  Matterhorn,  A. — Stuart. 
When  we  turn  over  the  historic  page,  and  trace  the 

rise    and    fall.     See    Constitutional    Liberty    and 

Arbitrary  Power. — Warren. 
When  we  turn  to  the  graceful  structure  at  whose  por- 
tal we  stand.  See  Brooklyn  Bridge,  The. — Hewitt. 
When  we  two  parted.     See  same. — Byron. 
When  we  were  girl  and  boy  together.     See  Ballad  of 

Human  Life. — Beddoes. 
When  we    were    idlers    with    the    loitering    rills.     See 

Friendship. — Coleridge. 
When  we  were  merry  children,  eyes  of  blue  and  hair  of 

gold.     See  Grandma's  Wedding-day. —  Harbaugh. 
When,  while  he  slumbers  on  my  knee,  soft  gleams.     See 

Baby's  Dreams. — Fawcett. 
When  whispering   .strains   do   softly   steal.     See  Song: 

In  Commendation  of  Music. — Strode. 
When  will  He  come?     See  Christmas  Question,  A.] 

Savage. 
When  will    you    marry    me,    my    bonnie    maid?     See 

Needles  and  Pins. — Anon. 
When  winds    are    raging   o'er    the    upper   ocean.     See 

Secret,  The. — Stowe. 
When  winds    go    organing    through    the    pines.     See 

Wind  in  the  Pines,  The. — Cawein. 
When  winter  came  the  land  was  lean  and  sere.     See 

Summer  Drought. — Irvine. 
When  winter  comes  with  all  its  joys.     See  Best  Sea.son, 

The. — Anon. 
When  winter  winds  are  blowing.     See  Snow-birds,  The. 

— Anon. 
When  winter  winds  are  piercing  chill.     See  Woods  in 

Winter. — Longfellow. 
When  winter's  cold  tempests  and  snows  are  no  more. 

See  Bluebird,  The.— Wilson. 
When  wintry  days  are  dark  and  drear.     See  Light 'ood 

Fire,  The. — Boner. 
When  wise   Minerva   still  was   young.     See   Origin   of 

Didactic  Poetry,  The. — Lowell. 
When  with  the  virgin  morning  thou   dost   ri.se.      See 
►  '     Matins. — Herrick. 
When  women's     rights     have     come     to     stay.      See 

Women's  Rights. — Anon. 
When    ye  Crocuss   shews  his  heade.      See    Rambling 

Rhyme  of  Dorothy,  A. — Train. 
When  ye  gang  awa',  Jamie,  far  across  the  sea,  laddie. 

See  Hunting  Tower. — Anon. 
When  you  a  pair  of  bright  eyes  meet.     See  Go  Slow. — 

Madge  Elliot. 
When  you  and  I  desert  the  ranks.     See  Masque  and 

the  Reality,  The. — Alger. 
When  you   and   I   have   play'd   the   little   hour.     See 

Reunited. — Parker. 
When  you  are  dead  some  day,  my  dear.     See  In  Pace. 

— Ropes. 
When  you   are   old  and  gray   and   full   of  sleep.     See 

When  You  are  Old. — Yeats. 
When  you    are    old,    and    I    am    passed    away.     See 

"When  You  are  Old." — Henley. 
When   you  come  to  a  good  book.     See  Sesame  and 

Lilies  (Reading  for  the  Thought). — Ru.skin. 
When  you  go  to  get  the  effect  of  a  new  movement  for 

good    or   evil.     See  Prohibition  in   Atlanta  (Pro- 
hibition a  Blessing  to  the  Poor). — Grady. 
When  you  have  found  a  man,  you  have  not  far  to  go  to 

find  a  gentleman.     See  Gentleman,  The. — Doane. 
When  you   hear   the   fire-gongs   beat   fierce   along   the 

startled  street.     See  Ballad  of  Calnan's  Christmas, 

The.— Cone. 
When  you  meet  a  lady,  take  off  your  hat  and  bow.     See 

Be  Polite.— Rook. 
When  you    meet    with    one    suspected.     See    Guard 

Thine  Action. — Vance. 
When  you  see  a  ragged  urchin.     See  Remember,  Boys 

Make  Men. — Tucker. 
When  you  was  here  some  sixteen  year.     See  Kyarlina 

Jim. — Gordon. 
When  your  beauty  appears.     See  same. — Parnell. 
When  your  lordships  look  at  the  papers.     See  Con- 
ciliation the  Best  Policy. — Chatham. 


931 


When  your 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


When  your  wife  has  gone  to  visit  where  mother  dear 
resides.  See  "When  the  Cork  Goes  Down.  — 
Alcliitvrc 

When  you're  sitting  quite  serenely  on  a  cloudless 
autumn  day.     See  ITials  that  Jar.— L.b.  O. 

When  you're  speaking  of  a  leaflet.  See  Rhymelet,  A. 
— Anon.  ,  •  .     .        » 

When  you'se  got  a  great  big  sister,  an  your  sister  s  got 
a  beau.     See  My  Sister  Has  a  Beau.— Greene. 

When  youth  was  lord  of  my  unchallenged  fate  See 
On  a  Boy's  First  Reading  of  ' '  Kmg  Henry  \ .  — 
Mitchell 

When  youthful  faith  hath  fled.    See  Lines.— Lockhart. 

When  you've  shouted  for  Great  Britain,  when  you  ve 
sung  her  songs  with  might.  See  American  Ab- 
sent-minded Beggars,"  The. — Anon. 

"Whenas  in  silks  my  Julia  goes,"  How  all  must  turn 
and  wonder!  See  "Whenas  in  Silks.  —{Brun- 
onian.)  .u-    i 

Whenas  in  silks  my  Julia  goes,  then,  then,  methinks, 
how  sweetly  flowers.  See  Upon  Julia  s  Clothes. — 
Herrick.  _      -  ,. 

Whenas  to  shoot  my  Julia  goes.  See  lo  Julia  in 
Shooting  Togs.— Seaman. 

"Whence  all  these  verses?"  you  ask  me.     See  same. 

Whence  and    what    art    thou,    execrable    shape.     See 

Paradise  Lost  ("Whence."  etc.).— Milton 
Whence  come    these    feathery    forms    of    light.      See 

Snowflakes. — Anon.  >     u    n       c- 

Whence  come  those  shrieks,   so  wild  and  shrill,     bee 

Polish  Boy,  The.— Stephens. 
Whence  come    ye.    Cherubs?    from    the    moon?     See 

Chanting  Cherubs— a  Group  by  Greenough,  Ihe. 

— ^Dana.  o      t  • 

Whence  comes  my  love?  O  heart,  disclose.     See  Lines 

on  Isabella  Markham.— Haryngton. 
Whence  comes  the  charm  that  broods  along  thy  shore. 

See  Poesie.— Reid.  „,    .     .       ,      .  ,      o 

Whence  comes  this  spectacle  in  Christian  lands?     See 

Arraignment  of  the  Rum  Traffic,  An. — Foster. 
Whence  does  this  love  of  our  country,  this  universal 

passion,  proceed.     See  Love  of  Country. — Sidney 

Smith. 
Whence   is    it   that   the    air    so    sudden   clears.      See 

Vision  of  Delight,  The  (May).— Johnson. 
Whence  is   the   music?     Minstrel,    see   we   none.     See 

Le  Recit  d'une  Scoeur.— De  Vere. 
Whence,  O  fragrant  form  of  light.     See  Water-lily,  The. 

— Tabb. 
Whene'er  a  man  commits  a  sin.     See  Falling  Stars.— 

Dominick. 
Whene'er    [wr.    where'er]    a    noble    deed    is    wrought. 

See  Santa  Filomena. — Longfellow. 
Whene'er  [whenever — C]  a  snowflake  leaves  the   sky. 

See  Snowflakes. — Dodge. 
Whene'er  across  this  sinful  flesh  of  mine.     See  Sign  of 

the  Cross,  The. — Newman. 
Whene'er  I   fragrant   coffee   drink.     See   Coffee   Slips, 

The. — Lamb. 
Whene'er  mine  eyes  do  my  Amelia  greet.     See  Amelia. 

— Patmore. 
Whene'er  there  comes  a  little  child.     See  "That  They 

All  May  be  One."— Noel.  ' 

Whene'er  we  meet  the  friends  once  fondly  cherished. 

See  Decoration  Day. — Butterworth. 
Whene'er  with    haggard    eyes    I  view.     See  Song  by 

Rogero  the  Captive. — Canning. 
Whene'er    with    pitying    eye    I    view.     See    London 

University,  The. — Barham. 
Whene'er  you    speak,     remember    every    cause.     See 

Advice  to  a  Young  Lawyer. — Story. 
Whenever  a  free  and  intelligent  people  asks  any  ques- 
tion.    See  Fair  Play  for  Women. — Curtis. 
Whenever  a  little  child  is  born.     See  same. — Mason. 
Whenever     [wr.    whene'er]    a    snowflake    leaves    the 

sky.     See  Snowflakes. — Dodge. 
Whenever  Auntie  moves  around.     See  Auntie's  Skirts. 

— Stevenson. 
Whenever  in  America  a  girl  is  asked  to  wed.     See  Con- 
tinuity and  Differentiation. — {University  Herald.) 
Whenever  my     heart     is     heavy.     See     Witnesses. — 

Spofford. 
Whenever  one  sect  degrades  another  on  account  of  re- 
ligion.    See  Catholic  Question,  The,  Apr.  23,  1812 

(Sectarian  Tyranny). — Grattan. 
Whene\-er  the  moon  and   stars  are   set.     See  Windy 

Nights. — Stevenson. 
When's  my   birthday   comin'?     See   His    Birthday. — 

Reid. 
Where  a  regiment  is  bivouaced.     See  Vines  of  Memory. 

— Boylan. 


Where  a  river  of  the  Northland.  See  At  the  Rock. — 
Pettit.  .,       „       _,.       ^ 

Where  all  the  winds  were  tranquil.  See  Pine-tree 
Buoy,  A. — Morris.  ,      ,       ,  . 

Where  am  I?  From  what  dungeon's  depths,  what 
voice.     See  Zaire. — Voltaire. 

Where  ancient  forests  round  us  spread.  See  Hymn 
for  the  Dedication  of  a  Church. — Norton. 

Where  are  the  flowers?  where  are  the  leaves?  See  Win- 
ter.— Anon.  . 

Where  are  the  great,  whom  thou  would  st  wish  to 
praise  thee?     See  Dipsychus  (Isolation).— Clough 

Where  ire  the  men  of  my  heart's  desire?  See  Men  of 
My  Heart's  Desire,  The. — Roberts. 

Where  are  the  men  who  went  forth  in  the  morning. 
See  Where  are  the  Men?— Talhaiarn. 

Where  are  the  mighty  ones  of  ages  past.  See  Where 
are  the  Dead? — Anon. 

"Where  are  the  snow-drops?"  said  the  Sun.  See  Into 
the  Light. — Matheson. 

Where  are  the  swallows  fled?  See  Doubting  Heart,  A. 
— Procter.  .  „       ^,j 

Where  are  the  sweet  old-fashioned  posies.  See  Old 
Fashioned  Flowers. — Lynn. 

Where  are  they — the  Afterwhiles.  See  Afterwhiles. — 
Riley. 

"Where  are  you  going,  gay  Robin  Redbreast?"  See 
Robin  Redbreast. — Kavanaugh. 

Where  are  you  going,  my  little  children.  See  Christ- 
mas Carol,  A. — Slosson. 

"Where  are  you  going,  my  pretty  maid?  I  m  going 

a-milking,  sir,"  she  .said.     See  Where  Are  You  Go- 
ing, My  Pretty  Maid? — Anon.  ^ 

' '  Where  are    you    going,    my    pretty    maid?  I  m 

going  a-shopping,  kind  sir,"  she  said.     See  Buying 
and  Shopping. — Anon.  ,,o     •  i     i> 

Where  are  you  going,  my  pretty  maid?    Into     Society^ 
sir,  she  said.     See  Romance  of  To-day.  A. — .\non. 

Where  are  you  going,  my  sweet,  pretty  lass.  See  Milk- 
maid, The. — Kavanaugh. 

Where  are  you  going  to?  May  I  inquire?  See  How 
to   Woo. — "Bob  o' Link." 

"Where  are  you  going.  Uncle  Fred?"  asked  Lucy.  See 
Goosey  Lucy's  New  Year's  Calls.— (Fout/i's  Com- 
panion.') 

Where  art  thou  gone,  light-ankled  youth?  See  To 
Youth. — Landor. 

Where  art  thou.  Muse,  that  thou  forget'st  so  long.  See 
Sonnets,  C. — Shakespeare. 

Where  art  thou,  my  beloved  Son?  See  Affliction  of 
Margaret,   The. — Wordsworth. 

Where  Ausonian  summers  glowing.  See  To  the  Nauti- 
lus.— Coleridge. 

Where  avalanches  wail,  and  green  distress.  See 
Where  Avalanches  Wail. — Anon. 

Where  be  the  sweet  delights  of  learnings  treasure.  See 
Complaint  of  Thalia. — Spencer. 

Where  blood  once  quenched  the  camp-fire's  brand. 
See  Between  the  Graves. — Spofford. 

Where  broods  the  Absolute.     See  Quest.— Stedman. 

Where  bums  the  fireside  brightest.  See  Home. 
— Barton. 

Where  burns  the  loved  hearth  brightest.  See  Home. — 
Barton.  > 

Where  can  Minnie  be!  I  have  not  heard  her.  See 
Kitty's  Bath. — Anon. 

Where  Claribel  low-lieth.     See  Claribel. — Tennyson. 

Where  communities  are  very  large,  the  heavier  evils  of 
war  are  felt  but  by  few.  See  On  Mitford's  His- 
tory of  Greece  (Courtesies  of  War,  The). — 
Macaulay. 

Where  did  yesterday's  sunset  go?  See  Where  Did  it 
Go? — Gannett. 

Where  did  you  come  from,  baby  dear?  See  Baby. — 
Macdonald. 

Where  dips  the  rocky  highland.  See  Stolen  Child, 
The.— Yeats. 

Where  do  the  stars  grow,  little  Garaine?  See  "Little 
Garaine." — Parker. 

Where  do  they  go,  I  wonder.  See  Frowns  or  Smiles. — 
Day  re. 

Where  do  you  come  from,  Mr.  Jay?  See  Strange 
Lands. — Alma-Tadema.- 

"Where  do  you  go.  Bob,  when  you're  fast  asleep?" 
See  In  the  Nursery. — Ingelow. 

Where  do  you  think  the  Fairies  fgo?  See  Fairies' 
Shopping,  The. — Deland. 

Where  does    my    sweetheart    Baby    go.     See    Lullaby 

Song. — McKenzie. 
Where  does     Pinafore     Palace     stand?     See     Lilliput 

Levee. — Rands. 
Where  does  the  water  spring,  gladsome  and  bright? 
Wa        '^  " 


See  Where  Does  the  Water  Spring? — Anon. 


932 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Where 


Where  dost  thou  careless  lie?     See  Ode  to  Himself,  An. 

— Jonson. 
Where  Foyle   his   swelling  waters.     See  Maiden   City, 

The. — "Charlotte  Klizabeth." 
Where,  girt   with   orchard   and   with   olive-yard.     See 

Etruscan  Ring,  An. — Mackail. 
Where  grass  grows  short  and  the  meadows  end.     See 

Bean-blossoms. — (St.  James  Gazette.) 
Where  has  baby  gone  to?     See  Where  do  Babies  Go? 

— Richards. 
Where  has  the  princess  gone?     See  Melik  the  Black. — 

Scollard. 
Where  has  the  summer  gone?     See  Lost:     The  Sum- 
mer.— Alden. 
Where  hast  thou  been  toiling  all  day,  sweetheart.     See 

Child  in  the  Judgment  Seat,  The. — Charles. 
Where  have  I  just  read  of  a  game  played  at  a  country 

house?     See    On    a    Hundred     Years    Hence. — 

Thackeray. 
Where  have  they  gone  to — the  little  boys.     See  Little 

Boy,  A. — Merriam. 
Where  have  thev  gone  to — the  little  girls.     See  Little 

Girl,  A.— Wilcox. 
"Where  have    ye    been,  ye   ill  woman."     See  Queen's 

Wake,  The  (Witch  of  Fife,  The).— Hogg. 
"Where  have  you  been,  Lysander  Pratt?"     See  Quite 

a  History. — Bates. 
"Where  have   you    been,    my   little   daughter?"     See 

Strange  Land,  The. — Meyers. 
Where  have  you  been,  Willy?     I  went  in  all  the  rooms 

to  find  you.     See  Willy's  Walk. — Anon. 
"Where  have  you  come  from,  Mabel  mine?"     See  For 

Christmas  Day. — Butterworth. 
Where  Helen    comes,    as   falls   the   dew.     See   Where 

Helen  Comes. — Rooney. 
Where  Helen  sits,  the  darkness  is  .so  deep.     See  Where 

Helen  Sits. — Richards. 
Where  Hudson's  wave  o'er  silvery  sands.     See  Where 

Hudson's  Wave. — Morris. 
Where  in  its  old  historic  splendor  stands.     See  Hudson, 

The.— Hellman. 
"Where — is — Mary — Alice — Smith?"     See  Mary  Alice 

Smith. — Riley. 
"Where  is    mother?"    lips    a-tremble.     See    Where    is 

Mother? — Denton. 
Where  is    my    Chief,    my    Master,    this    bleak    night, 

mavrone!     See  O'Hussey's  Ode  to  the  Maguire. — 

Mangan. 
Where  is  my  gracious  Lord  of  Canterbury?     See  King 

Henry  V.  (Act  1,  Scene  2). — Shakespeare. 
"Where  is  my  little  basket  gone?"     See  Kitty  in  the 

Basket. — Follen. 
Where  is  now  the  merry  party.  See  Far  Away. — Lindsay. 
Where  is  papa.  Amy?     I  have  been  all  over  the  house. 

See  Cousin  from  the  City,  The. — Anon. 
Where  is   that   baleful   maid.     See   Ballade   of   Biblio- 

clasts. — Tomson. 
"Where  is  the  baby,  grandmamma?"     See  True  Story, 

A. — Kinne. 
Where  is    the    German's    Fatherland?     See   German's 

Fatherland,  The. — Anon. 
Where  is    the    grave    of    Sir    Walter    O'Kellyn?     See 

Knight's  Tomb,  The.— Coleridge. 
Where  is  the  heart  of  a  soldier.     See  Soldier's  Heart, 

A. — (Baltimore  News.) 
Where  is  the  heritage  that  once  was  Spain's.     See  Dies 

Irse. — Anon. 
Where  is  the  king?     The  king  himself  is  rode  to  view. 

See  King  Henry  V.  (Scene  from  "Henry  V."). — 

Shakespeare. 
Where  is  the  land  with  milk  and  honey  flowing.     See 

First  Sunday  after  Trinity. — Keble. 
Where    is  the  liquor  which  God  the  eternal  brews  for 

all   His    children?     See    Apostrophe     to     Water 

(Tribute  to  Water,  A). — Arrington. 
"Where  is  the  little  lark's  nest?"     See  Eggs  and  Birds. 

— Rands. 
"Where  is  the  old  steward?"  inquired  a  traveler.     See 

Trouble  with  the  Steward,  The. — Anon. 
Where  is  the  road  to  fairy-land?     See  Road  to  Fairy- 
land, The. — Anon. 
Where  is  the  true  man's  fatherland?     See  Fatherland, 

The.— Lowell. 
"Where  is    the    unknown    country?"     See    Unknown 

Country,  The. — Craik. 
Where  is  this  patriarch  you  are  kindly  greeting.     See 

Iron  Gate,  The. — Holmes. 
Where  is     thy     favour'd     haunt,    eternal    Voice.     See 

Twentieth  Sunday  after  Trinity. — Keble. 
Where  is    thy    lovely    perilous    abode?     See    To    the 

Leaniin   Sidhe. — Boyd. 
Where  is  Timarchus  gone?     See  Epitaph  from 'Simon- 
ides. — Anon. 


"Where    is  Whisky  Bill,"  who  used  to  drive  that  old 

white  horse.     See  Undressing  Little  Ned. — Anon. 
Where  is  your  friend,  Lizzie?     See  Girl  of  the  Period, 

The. — Graham. 
Where  laps  the  breeze,  the  ever-rustling  tree.     See  My 

Lady. — Anon. 
Where  leap  the  long  Atlantic  swells.     See  Cod-fisher, 

The. — Lincoln. 
Where  lies  the  land  to  which  the  ship  would  go?     See 

Songs   in    Absence    (Where    Lies    the    Land?). — 

Clough. 
Where,  like  a  pillow  on  a  bed.     See  Ecstacy,  The. — • 

Donne. 
Where  may  the  wearied  eye  repose.     See  Washington. 

— Byron. 
Where  may  the  wearied  eye  repose.     See  Washington 

Acrostic. — Anon. 
Where  moss-made  beds  are  brightest  by  the  river.     See 

Satisfied. — Benedict. 
Where  now  these  mingled  ruins  lie.     See  On  the  Ruins 

of  a  Country  Inn. — Freneau. 
Where,  O    where,    are   the   visions   of   morning.     See 

Questions  and  Answers. — Holmes. 
Where  olive  leaves  were  twinkling  in  every  wind  that 

blew.     See  Damsel  of  Peru,  The. — Bryant. 
Where  on  earth  can  those  girls  have  gone.     See  Re- 
buff, A. — Denton. 
Where  or  how  he  had  dug  up  the  name  of  "Shed"  no 

one  ever  knew.     See  How  We  Hung  Red  Shed. — 

Miller. 
Where,  over  heathen  doom-rings  and  gray  stones  of  the 

Horg.     See  King  Volmer  and  Elsie. — Whittier. 
Where  runs    the    river?     Who    can    say.     See    Where 

Runs  the  River? — Bourdillon. 
Where  shall   I   begin  with  the  endless  delights.     See 

Fudge  Family  in  Paris,  The  (Miss  Biddy's  Epistle). 

— Moore. 
Where  shall  I  go?     See  From  the  Iron  Gate. — Meyers. 
Where  shall  the  lover  rest?    See  Marmion  (Where  shall 

the  Lover  Rest?). — Scott. 
Where  shall  they  go?     See  Apples,  The. — Anon. 
Where  shall  we  learn  to  die?     See  Teach  Us  to  Die. — 

Stanley. 
Where  shall  we  make  her  grave?      See  Dirge. — Hemans. 
Where  shall  we  seek  for  a  hero?     See  Boston  Massacre, 

The.— O'Reilly. 
Where  shall  wisdom  be  found?     See  .lob  (True   Wis- 
dom).— Bible. 
Where  she    her    sacred    bower    adorns.     See    same.— 

Campion. 
Where  should    the    scholar    live?     In    solitude    or    in 

society?     See     Hyperion    (Poetry     of     City     and 

Country  Life,  The). — Longfellow. 
Where  Sugarloaf  with  :bare  and  ruinous  wedge.     See 

On  Great  Sugarloaf. — Greene. 
Where  sunless    rivers   weep.     See    Dream-land. — Ros- 

setti. 
Where  sweeps  round  the  mountains.     See  Wagoner  of 

the  AUeghenies,  The  (Song  of  the  Mountaineers). 

— Read. 
Where  swell  the  songs  thou  shouldst  have  sung.     See 

Soldier  Poet,  A. — Johnson. 
Where  the  acorn  tumbles  down.    See  Field-mouse,  The. 

— Anon. 
Where  the  angry  billows  of  the  Baltic.     See  Dagmar 

Cross,  The. — Anon. 
Where  the   bee  sucks,   there    suck    I.     See    Tempest, 

The  ("Where  the  bee,"  etc.). — Shakespeare. 
Where  the  blackcock  sweetest  sips  it.     See  Hie  Away. 

—Scott. 
Where  the  bluebells  and  the  wind  are.     See  Bluebells. 

— Ramal. 
Where  the  dews  and  the  rains  of  heaven  have  their 

fountain.     See    Battle    in    the    Clouds,     The. — 

Howells. 
Where  the   faded   flower  shall   freshen.     See   Meeting 

Place,  The. — Bonar. 
Where  the    far    skies    soared    clear    and    bright.     See 

Armorer's  Errand,  The. — Dorr. 
Where  the  grass  had  been  newly  mown.     See  Blowing 

Bubbles. — Starkey. 
Where  the  graves  were  many,  we  looked  for  one.     See 

In  Clonmel  Parish  Churchyard. — Piatt. 
Where  the  huge  Atlantic  swings  heavy  water  eastward. 

See  Mater  Severa. — Gwynn. 
Where  the  keen  wan  peaks,  in  frigid  pride  unbending. 

See  Iceberg,  The. — -Fawcett. 
Where  the  Moosatockmaguntic.     See  Echo   Club,  The 

(Ballad  of  Hiram  Hover,  The).— Taylor. 
Where  the  mountains  slope  to  the  westward.     See  Our 

Homemaker. — Whitney. 
Where  the  orange-branches  mingle    on  the  sunny  gar- 
den-side.    See  Demon  of  the  Mirror,  "The. — 'Taylor. 


933 


Where 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Where  the  pools  are  bright  and  deep.     See  Boy's  Song, 

A. — Hogg. 
Where  the  quiet -colour'd  end  of  evening  smiles.     See 

Love  among  the  Ruins. — Browning. 
Where  the  red  deer  spe4H  in  the  pines.     See  Carolina. — 

Page. 
Where  the  remote  Bermudas  ride.     See  Song  of  the 

Emigrants  in  Bermuda. — Marvell. 
Where  the  river's  mimic  billows.     See  Siren's  Wedding- 
ring,  The. — .Jessop. 
Where  the  rocks  are  gray  and  the  shore  is  steep.     See 

Old  Canoe.  The.— Pike. 
Where  the  soft  shadow.s  fall.     See  Song. — M9rton. 
Where  the  sun  comes  up  on  cornfields,  where  it  whitens 

new-mown  hay.     See  Westward. — Douglass. 
Where  the  sunset  glory  falls.     See  Story  of  the  Swords, 

The.— Wahlron. 
Where  the   sweet   woodbines  tangled.     See  Butterfly, 

The. — Anon. 
Where  the  thistle  lifts  a  purple  crown.     See  Daisy. — 

Thompson. 
Where  the  warm  spring  sunlight,  streaming.     See  Old 

Sword  on  the  Wall,  The. — Lincoln. 
Where  the  wild  rose  dangles,  o'er  the  half-hid  brook. 

See  Cricket,  The. — Watterson. 
Where  the  windmills  swing  by  the  Zuyder  Zee.  See  My 

Delftware  Maid. — Alton. 
Where  the  woodland  streamlets  flow.     See  Clematis. — 

Goodale. 
Where  the  world  is  gray  and  lone.     See  Ice  King,  The. 

-De  Mille. 
Where  then   shall    Hope  and  Fear  their  objects  find? 

See  Vanity  of  Human  Wishes,  The  (True  Objects 

of  Desire,  The). — .Johnson. 
Where  towers  are  crushed  and  unforbidden  weeds.     See 

Pillar  of  Trajan,  The.^Wordsworth. 
Where  two  ways  meet  the  children  stand.     See  Two 

Roads,  The. — Anon.      ^ 
Where  waitest  thou.     See  A  ma  Future. — Arnold. 
Where  was  I  durin'  th'  las'  war?     See  What  Dooley 

Says. — Dunne. 
Where  we  love  is  home.     See  Poet    at   the    Breakfast- 
table.  The  ("Where  we  love,"  etc  ). — Holmes. 
Where  were  you  going  the  other  evening,  when  I  saw 

you  on   Broadway?     See    Bones    at   a   Soiree. — 

Anon. 
Where  wert  thou.  Soul,  ere  yet  my  body  born.     See 

Soul  and  Body. — Waddington. 
Where,  where  will  be  the  birds  that  sing.     See  Hun- 
dred Years  to  Come,  A. — Spencer. 
Where  will    they    stop   those   breathing   Powers.     See 

Devotional  Incitements.— Wordsworth. 
Where  winds  abound.     See  same. — Field. 
Whereas,  by  .loint  Resolution,  approved  June  20,  1892. 

See  Proclamation,  A. — Harrison. 
Whereas,  it    is    the    duty    of    all    nations.     See    First 

Thanksgiving    Proclamation    Issued    by    George 

Washington,  The. — Washington. 
Whereas,  on   certain   [or  sundry]  boughs  and   sprays. 

See  Lawyer's  Invocation  to  Soring,  The. — Brownell. 
Whereas,  on    the    twenty-second    day    of    September. 

See  Proclamation  of  Emancipation. — Lincoln. 
Where'er    [Whene'er — C]  a  noble    deed    is    wrought. 

See  Santa  Filomena. — Longfellow. 
Where'er  I  roam,  whatever  realms  to  see.     See  Trav- 
eller,  The;    or,    A    Prospect    of    Society. — Gold- 
smith. 
Where'er  we  tread  'tis  haunted,  holy  ground.  See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimaee  (Marathon). — Byron. 
Wherefore  my  love,  and  loss  of  other  view.     See  Divine 

Comedy,    The    (Exquisite    Beautv     of    Beatrice, 

The).— Dante. 
Wherefore  rejoice    [that    Caesar    comes    in    triumph]? 

What  conquest  brings  he  home?  See  .Julius  Caesar 

(Marullus  to  the  Roman  Populace). — Shakespeare. 
Wherefore  shrink,  and  say,  "  'Tis  vain."     See  Gather- 
ing of  the  Church,  The. — Keble. 
"Wherefore  starts  my  bosom's  lord?"     See  Comfort 

in  Affliction. — Aytoun. 
Wherefore  these  revels  that  my  dull  eyes  greet?     See 

l{oyal  Mummy  to  Bohemia,  The. — Stoddard. 
Wherefore  thus  'mid  foeman  lurking,  when  my  place 

is    far   away.     See    Crowned    and    Discrowned. — 

Bright. 
"Where's  he  at?"     See  Messenger  Boy,  The. — Ade. 
Where's  he  that   died  o'   Wednesday.     See  Falstaff's 

Song. — Stedman. 
"Where's  heaven,   mamma?"   said   a   little   girl.     See 

Where  Heaven  Is. — Anon. 
Where's  my  baby?     Where's  my  baby?     See  Where's 

My  Baby? — Anon. 
Where  s  my   little  son,    Nourrice.     See  Tower  of  St. 

Maur,  The. — Robinson. 


Where's  Peace?  I  start,  some  clear-blown  night.  See 
Biglow  Papers,  The  (Mr.  Hosea  Biglow  to  the 
Editor  of  The  Atlantic  Monthly).— Lowell. 

Where's  the  crowd  that  dares  to  go.  See  Session  with 
Uncle  Sidney,  A  (Gathering  of  the  Clans,  The).— 
Riley.' 

Wherever  human  government  has  been  administered 
in  tyranny.  See  People  of  the  United  States,  The. 
— Cleveland. 

Wherever  human  hearts  best  responsive  to  heroic  deeds. 
See  Eulogy  on  U.  S.'  Grant. — Sherman. 

Wherever  I  go,  there's  a  trusty  battalion.  See  Book 
Battalion,  The. — Lathrop. 

Wherever  I  wander,  up  and  about.  See  Hermione. — 
Buchanan. 

Wherever  maidens  may  be  found.  See  Another  Com- 
plaint against  Cupid. — Knowles. 

Wherever,  O  man,  God's  sun  first  beamed  upon  thee. 
See  same. — Arndt. 

Wherever  party  spirit  shall  strain  the  ancient  guaran- 
tees of  freedom.  See  Centennial  Celebration  of 
Concord  Fight  ("Wherever  party,"  etc.). — Curtis. 

Whether  is  it  yourself.  Mister  Hagan?  See  Curfew's 
Call,  A.— Barlow. 

Whether  hanging  ever  did,  or  can,  answer  any  good 
purpose.  See  On  Frequent  Executions. — Mere- 
dith. 

"Whether  is  better,  the  gift  or  the  donor?"  See  Wood- 
notes. — Emerson. 

Whether  it  be  a  favour  or  an  annoyance.  See  Morning. 
— Webster. 

Whether  it  be  to  rear  in  stone.  See  Hands  Drop  off — 
the  Work  Goes  on,  The. — Bradley. 

Whether  my  heart  be  glad  or  no.  See  World  and  I, 
■The. — Hutchinson. 

Whether  of  high  or  low  degree.  See  Our  Ships  at  Sea. 
— Bungay. 

Whether  on  Ida's  shady  brow.  See  To  the  Muses. — 
Blake. 

Whether  the  Turkish  new  moon  minded  be.  See 
Astrophel  and  Stella   (Sonnet  XXX.).— Sidney. 

Whether  the  Union  will  be  restored,  I  know  not,  and  I 
predict  not.  See  Civil  War  in  America,  The. — 
Bright. 

Whether  they  were  his  lady's  marriage  bells.  See 
Lover's  Tale,  Tlfe  (Golden  Supper,  The).— Tenny- 
son. 

Whether  this  measure  shall  prevail.  See  Heroes  of 
the  "Maine  Disaster." — Cousins. 

Whether  with  reason  or  with  instinct  blest.  See  Essay 
on  Man,  An  (Reason  and  Instinct). — Pope. 

Whew!  How  the  drivers  hammer!  See  Fellow  in 
Greasy  Jeans,  The. — Lummis. 

"Which  hab  produce  de  mos'  wonders — de  Ian'  or  de 
water?"  See  Pine  Town  Darkey  Debating 
Society. — (Harper's  Magazine.) 

Which  I  don't  belong  to  the  'Stablished  Church.  See 
Three  Parsons,  The. — Overton. 

Which  I  wish  to  remark.  See  Plain  Language  from 
Truthful    James. — Harte. 

Which  is  more  sweet, — the  slow  mysterious  stream. 
See  Izaak  Walton  to  River  and  Brook.— Lee- 
Hamilton. 

Which  is  the  best  of  all  the  trees?  See  My  Tree. 
— (Youth's  Companion.) 

Which  is  the  wind  that  brings  the  cold?  See  What  the 
Winds  Bring. — Stedman. 

Which  my  name  is  Ah  Sin.  See  "Heathen  Chinee's" 
Reply,  The. — Anon. 

Which  of  my  dollies  do  I  love  best?  See  Best  of  the 
Dollies. — AUyn. 

Which  of  the  Angels  sang  so  well  in  Heaven.  See  On 
the  Death  of  Mrs.  Browning. — Dobell. 

"Which  shall  it  be?  Which  shall  it  be?  "  See  Which 
Shall  it  Be? — Beers. 

Which  way  shall  I  fly.  See  Paradise  Lost  — 
Milton. 

Which  will  you  have,  my  boy  or  girl.  See  Wine  and 
Water. — Mackey. 

Whichever  way  the  wind  doth  blow.  See  ' '  En  Voyage. ' ' 
— Mason. 

While  any  day  was  notable  and  dear.  See  Prospect- 
ive Visit,  A. — Riley. 

While  at  the  helm  of  state  you  ride.  See  Author  and 
the  Statesman,  The. — Fielding. 

While  Butler,  needy  wretch,  was  yet  alive.  See  On 
Butler's  Monument. — -Wesley. 

While  cynic  ('harles  still  trimm'd  the  vane.  See  Book- 
plates' Petition,  The. — Dobson. 

While  England  sees  not  her  old  praise  dim.  See  Bur- 
ton.— -Swinburne. 

While  every  age  is  crowned  with  rhyme.  See  Song  of 
the  Railroad,  The. — Houghton. 


934 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


White 


While  from    the    purpling  east  departs.     See  First  of 

May. — Wordsworth. 
While  George  in  sorrow  bows  his  laurelled  head.     See 

On  General  Wolfe. — Anon. 
While  glory,  thus,  Alonzo's  name  adorn 'd.  See  Lu.siad, 

The  (Inez  de  Castro).— Camoens. 
While  going  the  road  to  sweet  Athy.     See  "Johnny,  I 

Hardly  Knew  Ye." — Anon. 

While  going  the  rounds  of  the  great  exhibition.     See 

Josiah  and  Family  at  the  Centennial. — Johnston. 

While  Governor  Manco,  or  "the  one  armed,"  kept  up 

a  show  of  military  .state.       See    Alhambra,  The 

(Governor  Manco  and  the  Soldier). — Irving. 

While  haughty     Gallia's     dames,     that     spread.     See 

Countess  of  Manchester,  The. — Addison. 
While  I  do  not  believe  that  legal  enactments  are  of 
greatest  value.     See  Need  for  a  Prohibition  Party, 
The.— Gough. 
While  I  recline  at  ease  beneath.     See  Cotton  Boll,  The. 

— Timrod. 
While  I  relate  my  story.     See  Taxation  of  America. — 

St.  John. 
While    I  was  over  at  Pencador,  the  other  day,  I  called 

on  the  Potts.     See  Mr.  Potts'  Story. — Adeler. 
While  I'm  in  the  ones,  I  can  frolic  all  day.     See  Little 

Girl's  Hopes,  A. — Anon. 
While  larks  with  little  wing.     See  Phyllis  the  Fair. — 

Burns. 
While  lawyers  have  more  sober  sense.     See  Hudibras. 

—Butler 
While  Major   Slott   was   sitting   in    the   office   of   the 

Patriot.     See  Major  Slott's  Visitor. — t'lark. 
While  malice.    Pope,   denies  thy   page.     See   Lines   to 

.Alexander  Pope. — Lewis. 
While  May  bedecks  the  naked  trees.     See  Maryland 

Yellow-throat. — Van  Dyke. 
While  memory    holds   a    seat.     See  Hamlet. — Shake- 
speare. 
While  mother    is    tending    baby.     See     Washing-day. 

— (Hearth  and  Home.) 
While  my  guardian  and  I  were  in  London.     See  Bleak 

House  (Visit  to  Belle  Yard,  A). — Dickens. 
While  not  a   leaf  seems  faded,   while  the  fields.     See 

September,  1815. — Word.sworth. 
While  now  the  Pole  Star  sinks  from  sight.     See  Cross- 
ing the  Tropics. — Melville. 
While  o'er  my  life  still  hung  the  morning  star.     See 

Heart's-ease. — Anon. 
While  on  a  visit  to  a  relation.     See  Bumpkin's  Court- 
ship.— Anon. 
While  on  the  cliff  with  calm  delight  she  kneels.     See 
On  the  Picture  of  an  Infant  Playing  near  a  Preci- 
pice.— -Leonidas. 
While  other  boys  have  had   their  say.   ,  See  Walter's 

First  Speech. — Doolittle. 
While  others  are  asking  for  beauty  or  fame.     See  Bal- 
lade of  True  Wisdom. — Lang. 
While  Quaker  folks  were  Quakers  still,  .some  fifty  years 
ago.     See  Incomplete   Revelation,  An. — Jackson. 
While  sauntering   through    the    crowded    street.     See 

Pre-existence. — Hayne. 
While  shepherds  watched  their  flocks  by  night.     See 

same. — Tate. 
While  Sherman   stood  beneath  the  hottest  fire.     See 

Before  Vicksburg. — Boker. 
While  shopping   in    the    town.     See    Gossips,    The. — 

Anon. 
While  slow    on    Miniato's    height    I    roam.     See    San 

Miniato. — Sterling. 
"While  stands  the  Coliseum,  Rome  shall  stand."     See 
Childe  Harold's    Pilgrimage    (Coliseum,    The).— 
Byron. 
While  that  the  sun  with  his  beams  hot.     See  Unfaith- 
ful Shepherdess,  The. — Anon. 
While  the  dawn  on  the  mountain  was  misty  and  gray. 

See  Rokeby  (Cavalier,  The) . — Scott. 
While  the  moon,  with  sudden  gleam.     See  Owl,  The. — 

Anon. 
While  the  new  years  come  and  the  old  years  go.     See 

Little  by  Little.— Clark. 
While  the   pre.sent  century  was  in  its  teens.     See  Van- 
ity  Fair   (Miss   Pinkerton's   Academy   for   Young 
Ladies). — Thackeray. 
While    the  stars  in  silence  .shining,  and  the  world  is 
hushed  in  sleep.     See  Angelic  Song,  The. — English. 
While  the  Union  lasts,  amid  these  fertile,  verdant  fields. 

See  Aspirations  for  America. — Clay. 
While  the  Union  lasts  we  have  high,  exciting,  gratify- 
ing prospects.     See  R»ply  to  Hayne,  The  (Liberty 
and  Union). — Webster. 
While  Thee  I  seek,  protecting  Power.     See  Trust  in 
Providence. — Williams. 


While  they    .sat    before    the    fire.     See    Happy    Love. 

— (Burlington  Hawkey e.) 
While  thou  did.st  keep  thy   candor  undefil'd.     See  To 

His  Booke. — Herrick. 
While  to  his  harp  divine  .\rion  sings.     See  His  Majesty's 

E.scape  at  St.  Andrews. — Waller. 
While  upon  his  mission  va.st.     See  Widow's  Son  Re- 
stored to  Life,  The. — Stretch. 
While  walkin'  up  the  village  street,  a  fightin'  there  I 
see.     See  Farmer  Stebbins  at  Football. — Car  eton. 
While  walking  on  the  street  one  day.     See  I  Think  It's 

Wrong — Don't  You? — Anon. 
While  we  act,  sir,  upon  the  ma.xim,  "In  peace  prepare 
for    war."     See    Twenty-five    Years    of    Peace. — 
Everett. 
While  we  bring  our  offerings.     See  Eulogy  on  Lafay- 
ette.— Sprague. 
While  we  shed  a  tear  of  feeling.     See  While  We  Shed 

a  Tear. — Addison. 
While  we    waited    in    the    depot    at    Nashville.     See 

Wanted  to  See  his  Old  Home. — (New  York  Sun.) 
While  we  were  eating  breakfast.  Grandma  Keeler  ob- 
served  to   Grandpa.     See  Grandma    Keeler   Gets 
Grandpa    Keeler    Ready    for    Sunday    School. — 
McLean. 
While  we  would  by  no  means  neglect  on  such  an  occa- 
sion.    See  Nature  and  Children. — Higbee. 
While  with  labour  assiduous  due  plea.sure  I  mix.     See 

Secretary,  The. — Prior. 
While  yet  I  looked,  what  a  change  there  came.     See 

Passing  Away. — Pierpont. 
While  you,   great    patron   of    mankind!    sustain.     See 

Horace  Imitated. — Pope. 
While  young    John    runs    to    greet.     See    Lines    on    a 
Picture  by  Leonardo  Da  Vinci,  Called  "The  Vir- 
gin of  the  Rocks." — Lamb. 
Whilom  by  silver  Thames's  gentle  stream.     See  Vir- 
tuoso, The. — Akenside. 
Whilome  in  youth,  when  flowrd  my  joyful!  spring.     See 
Shepheardes  Calender,   The    (Complaint   of    Age, 
The). — Spenser. 
Whilst,  around  her  lone  ark  sweeping.     See  Danai'. — 

Simonides. 
Whilst  as  fickle  Fortune  smiled.      See  same.- — Barn- 
field. 
Whilst  I  listen  to  thy  voice.     See  To  Chloris. — Waller. 
Whilst  in  this  cold  and  blustering  clime.     See  Invita- 
tion to  Izaak  Walton. — Cotton. 
Whilst  little    Paul,    convale.scing,    was    staving.     See 

Subtlety.— Riley. 
Whilst  our  commission  from  Rome  is  read.     See  King 
Henry  VIII.  (Scene  from  "King  Henry  VIII."). — 
Shakespeare. 
Whilst  the   authors   of   all   these   evils   were   idly   and 

stupidly  gazing.     See  Hyder  Ali. — Burke. 
Whilst  Thee   I    seek,    protecting   Power.     See   Whilst 

Thee  I  Seek.— Williams. 
Whin  you  was  out  a  lady  called.     See  King's  Daughter, 

The. — Henderson. 
Whipping,  that's  virtue's  governess.     See    Hudibras, 

—Butler. 
"Whip-poor-will!    whip-poor-will!"     See    Whip-poor- 
will. — Ruggles. 
Whipp'will's  singin'  to  the  moon.     See  Go  Sleep,  Ma 

Honey. — Barker. 
Whisht  [or  whist]  there!     Mary  Murphy,  doan  think 
me  insane.     See  Widow  O'Shane's  Rint,  The. — 
Anon. 
Whisper,  thou  tree,  thou  lonely  tree.     See  Last  Tree 

of  the  Forest,  The. — Hemans. 
Whispers  of   heavenly   death   murmur'd    I   hear.     See 

Whispers  of  Heavenly  Death. — Whitman. 
Whist  now!  till  I  relate  to  you    See  Pat's  Correspond- 
ence.— Giffin. 
Whist,  sir!     Would    ye    plaze    to    spake    aisy.     See 

Eleventh  Hour,  The.— Ruth. 
WTiist  [or  whisht]  there!     Mary  Murphy,   doan   think 
me  insane.     See  Widow  O'Shane's  Rint,  The. — 
Anon. 
Whistles  the   quail   from  the  covert.     See  What   the 

Quail  Says. — Sates. 

Whistling  strangely,  whistling  sadly,  whistling  sweet 

and  clear.     See  Seven  Whistlers,  The. — Gillington. 

White  bird  of  the  tempest!     O  beautiful  thing!     See 

Lines    Addressed  to  a  Seagull,  Seen  off  the  Cliffs 

of  Moher,  in  the  County  of  Clare. — Griffin. 

White  bud!  that  in  meek  beauty  so  dost  lean.     See 

Lily  of  the  Valley. — Croly. 
White  England   shouldering   from   the   sea.     See   Fair 

England. — Cone. 
White  little  hands!     See  Prince  Lucifer  (Mother-song). 
— Austin. 


935 


White 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


White  little  housed-up  things.     See  Gipsy  Children's 

Song. — Larcom. 
White  man,  there  is  eternal  war  between  me  and  thee! 

See  Supposed  Speech  of  a  Chief  of  the  Pocomtuc 

Indians. — Everett. 
White  Hose,  talk  to  toe!     See  Child  to  a  Rose,  A. — 

Anon. 
White  sail  upon  the  ocean  verge.   See  Arthur. — Winter. 
White  sand    and    cedars;    cedars,    sand.     See    Sandy 

Hook. — Houghton. 
White  wings  of  commerce  sailing  far.     See  In  Memory 

of  General  Grant. — Abbey. 
White  with  the  whiteness  of  the  snow.     See  Rose. — 

A  no  II. 
Whither  away,  fair  Neat-herdess?     See  April  Pastoral, 

An. — Dobson. 
Whither  away,  robin.     See  Flight  of  the  Birds,  The. — 

Stedman, 
Whither  doth  now  this  fellow  flee.     See  March. — Love- 
man. 
Whither  is  gone  the  wisdom  and  power.     See  Whither. 

— Coleridge. 
Whither  leads  this  pathway,  little  one?     See  Whither. 

— Chenev. 
Whither,  midst  falling  dew.     See  To  a  Waterfowl. — 

Bryant. 
Whither,   O  splendid  ship,   thy  white  sails  crowding. 

See  Passer-by,  A. — Bridges. 
"Whither,  thou    turbid    wave."     See    Wave,    The.— 

Tiedge. 
Whittier  is  in  some  respects  the  most  American.     See 

Whittier,  Extract  Concerning. — Stoddard. 
Whittier's  genius  is  Hebrew.     See  Whittier,   Extract 

Concerning. — -Wasson. 
Whizzing  o'er  the  desert.     See  Trolley  on  the  Nile, 

The. — Anon. 
Who  all  time  dodgin'  en  de  cott'n  en  de  com?     See 

Mammy's  Li'l  Boy. — Edwards. 
Who  am    I?     Why,    I'm   my   papa's   little   girl.     See 

Papa's  Little  Girl. — Anon. 
Who  among  the  citizens  that  throng  our  streets  are  the 

really  honored?     See  Who  Are  Really  Honored. — 

Chapin. 
Who,  and   what,   are  great   men?     "And   now   stand 

forth."     See  Centennial  Oration  (Who,  and  What, 

are  Great  Men?). — Winthrop. 
Who  are  responsible  for  this  war?     See  Who  are  Re- 
sponsible?— Garrison. 
Who  are  the  free?     See  same. — Prince. 
Who  are   the   heroes   we  hail  to-day.     See  Joe   Sieg. 

— (Eclectic  Magazine.) 
Who  are  the  nobles  of  the  earth.     See  True  Aristocrat, 

The. — Stewart. 
Who  are  the  true  noblemen  of  the  earth?     See  True 

Nobility. — Anon. 
Who  are  this  host  of  voters  crowding  to  use  the  free- 
man's  right.     See   Dangers   to   Our   Republic. — 

Mann. 
Who  are  thy  playmates,  boy?     See  Playmates,  The. — 

Tabb. 
Who  are  ye,  spirits,  that  stand.     See  Blazing  Heart, 

The. — Brotherton. 
Who  are  you,  little  boy,  on  your  way  to  the  meadow. 

See  Jack  Frost  and  Tom  Ruddy. — Anon. 
Who  are  you,  my  little  neighbor.     See  Common  Bond, 

The.— Hunt. 
"Who  are   you   winking  at,  bright  little  star?"     See 

Playing  Bo-peep  with  a  Star. — Anon. 
Who  art  thou,  fair  one,  who  usurp'st  the  place.     See 

Lines   on   the    Same   Picture   being  Removed. — 

Lamb. 
Who  art  thou,  shadowy  passer-by?     See  same. — Hugo. 
Who  bad=!  thee  do  and  suffer  bids  thee  rest.     See ' '  Em- 
peror Evermore." — -Hickey. 
Who  best  can  paint  th'  enamelled  robe  of  spring.     See 

Sonnet:  "Who  best  can,"  etc. — TTiurlow. 
Who  bides  his  time,  and  day  by  day.     See  Who  Bides 

His  Time. — Anon. 
Who  brands  me  on  the  forehead,  breaks  my  sword. 

See  Catiline  (Catiline's  Defiance). — Croly. 
Who  builds  a  church  to  God  and  not  to  fame.     See 

Moral  Essays  (Epistle  III.). — Pope. 
Who  builds  de  railroads  and  canals.     See  Echo  from 

the  17th,  An. — Easton. 
Who  calls  me  bold  because  I  won  my  love.     See  Song. 

— Monkhouse. 
Who  can  divine  what  impulses  from  God.     See  Iviberty. 

— Wordsworth. 
Who  can  doubt  that  the  union  of  these  States  shall  last. 

See  Temple  of  Human  Liberty,  The. — Holmes. 
Who  can    live    in    heart    so    glad.      See    Passionate 

Shepherd,    The    (Third    Pastor's    Song,    The).— 

Breton. 


Who  can  love  you,  January?     See  January. — Jones. 
Who  can  paint  like  nature?     Can  imagination  boast. 

See  Seasons,  The  (Nature  in  Spring). — Thomson. 
Who  can  say,  in  spite  of  the  important  respects.     See 

Arbitration  and  Civilization. — Russell. 
Who  can  tell  us  whence  they  come.     See  Dreams. — 

Sherman. 
Who  can  tell  what  a  baby  thinks?     See  Jingles. — (Ex- 
aminer.) 
Who  comes  dancing  over  the  snow.     See  same. — Craik. 
Who  comes  to  England  not  to  learn.     See  England. 

— Stetson. 
Who  comes, — with  rapture  greeted,  and  caress'd.     See 

Charles  the  Second. — -Wordsworth. 
Who  Cometh   over  the   hills?     See  Ode  Read   at   the 

One    Hundredth    Anniversary   of    the    Fight    at 

Concord  Bridge. — Lowell. 
Who  counsels   peace   at    this   momentous   hour.     See 

Ode,  Written  during  the  Negotiations  with  Bona- 
parte.— Southey. 
Who  counts  himself  as  nobly  born.     See  Nobly  Born, 

The.— E.  S.  H. 
Who  cries  that  the  days  of  daring  are  those  that  are 

faded   far.     See   Deeds   of   Valor   at    Santiago. — 

Scollard. 
Who  dares  deny,  that  all  first  fruits  are  due.     See  To 

King  Charles  and  Queen   Mary,   for  the   Loss  of 

Their    First-born.     An    Epigram    Consolatory. — 

Jonson. 
Who  dares  to  say  the  dead  men  were  not  glad.     See 

Dead  Men's  Holiday. — Moulton. 
Who  dares  to   scorn   the   meanest   thing.     See   Small 

Things. — Bennoch. 
Who  dashes  on  in  sleet  and  snow.     See  Kriss  Kringle's 

Visit. — Anon. 
Who  does  not  feel,  what  reflecting  American  does  not 

acknowledge.     See  First  Settlement  of  New  Eng- 
land,   The    (Our    Relations    to    England). — Ev- 
erett. 
Who  doesn't  love  Roses?     When  summer  has  come. 

See  Floral  Rainbow,  The. — Anon. 
Who  doomed   to  go  in  company  with  Pain.     See  Char- 
acter of  the  Happy  Warrior,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Who  doubts  has  met  defeat  ere  blows  can  fall.     See 

Columbus  the  World-giver. — Egan. 
Who  doubts  there  are  classes.     See  Every-day  Botany. 

— Perry. 
Who  dreamed  that  beauty  passes  like  a  dream?      See 

Rose  of  the  World,  The.— Yeats. 
Who  drives    the    horses    of    the    sun?     See    Happiest 

Heart,  The. — Cheney. 
Who  ever  smelt 'the  breath  of  morning  flowers.     See 

Sonnet:  "Who  ever  smelt,"  etc. — Quarles. 
Who  fears  to  speak  of  Ninety-eight.     See  Memory  of 

the  Dead,  The. — Ingram. 
Who  finds   a   woman   good   and   wise.     See   Lemuel's 

Song. — Wither. 
Who  first  beholds  those  everlasting  clouds.     See  Italy. 

— Rogers. 
Who  first  invented  work,   and  bound  the  free.     See 

Work. — -Lamb. 
Who  gave   thee,    O   beauty.     See   Ode   to   Beauty. — 

Emerson. 
Who  gives  and  hides  the  giving  hand.     See  Giver's 

Reward,  The. — Anon. 
Who  had  seen  them,  the  mystic  sprites.     See  Miracle 

Workers,  The. — Allen. 
Who  had   thought,   until   Grant  said  it.     See  Grant's 

Strategy.— Veazey. 
Who  has  been  styled  "Father  of  his  country?"     See 

Father  of  His  Country. — West. 
Who  has  e'er  been  in  London,  that  overgrown  place. 

See  Lodgings  for  Single  Gentlemen. — Coleman. 
Who  has  not  dreamed  a  world  of  bliss.     See  Summer 

Noon,  A. — Howett. 
Who  has   not   heard    of   the   dauntless   Varuna?     See 

Varuna,  The. — Boker. 
Who  has   not   heard   of  the   Vale   of   Cashmere.     See 

Lalla  Rookh     (Vale  of  Cashmere,  The). — Moore. 
Who  has   not    looked    upon    her   brow.     See   same. — 

Rogers. 
Who  has  not  walk'd  upon  the  shore.     See  Upon  the 

Shore. — Bridges. 
Who  has  robbed  the  ocean  cave?    See  Song. — Shaw. 
Who  hath  his  fancy  pleasM.     See  Song:  "Who  hath 

his  fancy,"  etc. — Sidney. 
Who  hath  not  proved  how  feebly  words  essay.     See 

Bride  of  Abydos,  The. — Byron. 
Who  held  the  tempting  cherry  nigh.     See  My  Sister. 

— Anon. 
Who  is  he  that  cometh,  like  an  honour'd  guest.     See 

Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. — 

Tennyson. 


936 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Whoever 


Who  is  it  coos  just  like  a  dove?     See  Baby. — Anon. 
"Who  is  it   knocks    this    stormy    night?"     See    Last 

Visitor,  The.— Blood. 
Who  is  it,   that   hath   warned   us   to   the   walls?     See 

King  John. — Shakespeare. 
Who  is  it  that  I've  christened  May.     See  My  Dolly. — 

Anon. 
Who  is  it  that  mourns  for  the  days  that  are  gone.     See 

Days  that  are  Gone,  The. — Mackay. 
Who  is  it  that,   this   dark  night.     See  Astrophel  and 

Stella  (Eleventh  Song). — Sidney. 
Who  is  Sylvia  [or  Silvia]?  what  is  she.     See  Two  Gen- 
tlemen of  Verona,  The  (Sylvia). — Shakespeare. 
Who  is  that  short,  sturdy,  plainly  dressed  man      See 

Westward  Ho!   (Sir  Francis  Drake). — Kingsley. 
Who    is  the  baby,  that  doth  lie.     See  Bride's  Tragedy, 

The  (Song,  by  Two  Voices). — Beddoes. 
Who  is  the  happy  warrior?      Who  is  he?     See   Char- 
acter of  the  Happy  Warrior,  The. — Wordsworth. 
Who     is     the    honest   man?      See    Constancy. — Her- 
bert. 
Who  is  the  man  that,  in  addition  to  the  disgraces  and 

mischiefs  of  our  army.     See  American  War,  The 

(Against  Employing  Indians  in  War). — Chatham. 
Who  is  the  typical   Dutchman?     See  Typical   Dutch- 
man, The. — Van  Dyke. 
Who  is  there  now  knows  aught  of  his  story?     See  Jac- 
queminot.— Chandler. 
Who  is  there  that  cannot  recall.     See  Santa  Claus. — 

Kavanaugh. 
Who  is    this   comes    knocking.     See   Grandma's    Sur- 
prise.— -Anon. 
Who  is  this  coming  with  sober  pace.     See  Ten  Com- 
mandments, The. — Hadley. 
Who  is  this  little  new  woman.     See  New  Woman,  The. 

— Seabury. 
Who  is  this  with  calm  demeanor.     See  Charlotte  Cor- 

day. — Anon. 
Who  is  to  blame,  oh,  who  is  to  blame?     See  Who  Is  to 

Blame. — Anon. 
Who  is  yonder  poor  maniac,  whose  wildly  fixed  eyes. 

See  Mary,  the  Maid  of  the  Inn. — Southey. 
Who  knoweth  not,  how  often  Venus'  son.      See  Heca- 

tompathia  fPassion  LXV.). — Watson. 
Who   knows  the  most,   Pussy,   you  or  I?     See  Who 

Knows  the  Most? — Bronson. 
Who  knows  the  thoughts  of  a  child.     See  Who  Knows? 

— Perry. 
Who  lags  from  dread  of  daily  work.     See  Daily  Work. 

— Mackay. 
Who  lights  the  star  lamps  in  the  skies.     See  Questions. 

— G.  V.  S. 
Who  liveth  so  merry  in  all  this  land.     See  Who  Liveth 

so  Merry. — Ravenscroft. 
Who  loveth  a  little  mountain  stream.     See  Mountain 

Stream,  A. —  (Smith  College  Monthly.) 
Who  made   the   butterfly's   delicate   wing.     See  Who 

Did  it? — Lawrence. 
Who  made  the  sky  so  bright  and  blue?     See  Creator, 

The. — Kavanaugh. 
Who  man  swim  best,  that  man  most  gettee  dlown.     See 

Chinese  Proverbs. — Anon. 
Who  nearer    Nature's    life    would    truly    come.     See 

Thoreau. — Alcott. 
Who  ne'er  his  bread  in  sorrow  ate.    See  Wilhelm  Meis- 

ter's  Apprenticeship  (Who  ne'er  his  Bread,  etc.). 

— Goethe. 
Who  o'er  the  herd  would  wish  to  reign.     See  Lady  of 

the  Lake,  The.— Scott. 
Who,  or  why,  or  which,  or  what.     See  Ahkond  of  Swat, 

The.— Lear. 
Who  passes  down  the  wintry  street?     See  Daffodil. — 

Hinkson. 
Who  prop,  thou  ask'st,  in  these  bad  days,  my  mind? 

See  To  a  Friend. — Arnold. 
Who  puts  oup  at  der  pest  hotel.     See  Der  Drummer. — 

Adams. 
Who  remains  in  London.     See  Spring  Song  in  the  City. 

— Buchanan. 
Who  rideth  so  late  through  the  night-wind  wild?     See 

Erl-king,  The.— Goethe. 
Who  rideth  thro'  the  driving  rain.     See  King's  Son, 

The.— Boyd. 
Who  rings     New     England's    Angelus?     See    Hermit 

Thrush,  The.— Woodworth. 
Who  ruined  me  ere  I  was  born.     See  Lay  of  Real  Life, 

A.— Hood. 
"Who  rules  these  lands?"  the  pilgrim  said.     See  Staff 

and  Script,  The. — -Rossetti. 
"Who  says  I  dare  not   walk   the   sea-wall   to-night?" 

See  Owen's  Oath. — Holmes. 
Who  sent  you  to  me,  roses  rare?     See  On  Some  Roses 

Sent  Anonymously. — Anon. 


Who  shall  awake  the  Spartan  fife.     See  Ode  to  Liberty. 

Collins. 
Who  shall  estimate  the  cost  of  a  priceless  reputation. 

See  Value  of  Reputation. — Phillips. 
Who  shall  judge  [a]  man  from  nature  [or  manners,  or 

his  manners]?      See  Hdw  a  Man  Should  be  Judged. 

— Anon. 
Who  shall    lament    to    know    thy    aching    head.     See 

Death  of  Queen  Caroline,  The. — Talfourd. 
Who  shall  lead  a  brother  duly.     See  Questions. — Kent. 
Who  shall  sing  to  bleak  November.     See  November. — 

Sherman. 
Who  shall  sweep  away  the  errors.     See  Room  for  You. 

— Howarth. 
Who  spake  of  life?     I  bade  thee  grasp  that  treasure 

as  thine  honor.     See  Richelieu;  or,  The   Conspir- 
acy.— Bulwer-Lytton. 
Who  stands  on  that  cliff,  like  a  figure  of  stone.     See 

Mcgg  Megone  (Ruth  Bonython). — Whittier. 
Who  struggles  with  his  baser  part.     See  same. — Anon. 
"Who  stuffed  that  white  owl?"     No  one  spoke  in  the 

shop.     See  Owl-critic,  The. — Fields. 
Who  tamed  your  lawless  Tartar  blood?     See  To  Rus- 
sia.— Miller. 
Who  taught  you  to  sing.     See  Boy  and  the  Bird,  The. 

— Anon. 
Who  that  has  seen  the  two  as  they  once  were.     See 

Catacombs,  The. — Castelar. 
Who  that  hath  wept  in  secret,  will  not  say.     See  Sym- 
pathy.— Thomson. 
Who  the   dickens   is   knocking,    I   wonder.     See   Fish 

Story,  A. — Brownjohn. 
Who  the   silent   man  can  prize?     See  Gulistan,   The. 

■ — Heber. 
Who  took  me  from  my  mother's  arms.     See  My  Father. 

— Drennan. 
Who  travels  by  the  weary  wandering  way.     See  Faerie 

Queene,    The    (Song    of     Enchantment,    The). — 

Spenser. 
"Who  wants  to  hunt  eggs?"  shouted  Charlie  the  bold. 

See  Hunting  Eggs. — (Zion's  Herald.) 
Who  was  it  saw  his  duty  plain.     See  Mr.  Weyler. — 

Anon. 
Who  was  it,  when  he  formed  this  Temple  of  Creation. 

See  Eternity  of  Music,  The. — Ryan. 
Who  will    away   to   Athens    with    me?     See    Thrasy- 

medes  and  Eunoc  (Overture).— Landor. 
Who  will  greet  me  first  in  heaven.     See  My  Welcome 

Beyond. — Wellington. 
"Who  will  take  care  of  me?" — darling,  vou  say!     See 

Who  Will  Take  Care  of  Me?— Havergal. 
Who  will  watch  thee,  little  mound.     See  Long  Night, 

The.— Smith. 
Who  wins  his  love  shall  lose  her.     See  Lost  Lov6. — 

Lang. 
Who  would  be  a  mermaid  fair.     See  Mermaid,  The. — 

Tennyson. 
Who  would  be  a  merman  bold.     See  Merman,  The. — 

Tennyson. 
Who  would  care  to  pass  his  life  away.     See  Comfort. — 

Collins. 
Who  would    not    be    a    school-boy.     See    School-boy, 

The. — Kavanaugh. 
Who  would  scorn  his  humble  fellow.     See  You  and  I. 

— Mackay. 
Who  would  sever  freedom's  shrine?     See  Our  Whole 

Country. — Anon. 
Who  would   true   valor  see.     See  Pilgrim's   Progress 

(Pilgrim,  The). — Bunyan. 
Who  would  trust  England,  let  him  lift  his  eyes.     See 

England. — Lincoln. 
Whoa,  Betty!     How  do,  sir?     Is  this  here  the  'sylum 

for  folk  as  is  mad?     See  Little  Tin  Cup,  The. — 

Frost. 
Whoe'er  she  be,  that  not  impossible  she.     See  Wishes: 

To  His  Supposed  Mistress.— Cra.shaw. 
Whoever  comes  to  shroud  me,  do  not  harm.     See  Fu- 
neral, The. — Donne. 
Whoever  has  made  a  voyage  up  the  Hudson  must  re- 
member the  Kaatskill  Mountains.     See  Rip  Van 

Winkle. — Irving. 
Whoever  heard  the  like.     To  conceal  the  existence  of 

woman.     See  Youth  who    never  Saw  a  Woman, 

The. — Anon. 
Whoever  lives  true  life,  will  love  true  love.     See  Au- 
rora Leigh  (England). — Browning. 
Whoever  sees  a  hawthorne  or  a  sweetbrier.     See  same. 

- — Anon. 
Whoever  smelt  the  breath   of   morning   flowers.       See 

Sonnet:  "Whoever  smelt,"  etc. — Quarles. 
Whoever  travels  in  a  coach.     See  Infidel  and  Quaker,  . 

The. — Anon. 
Whoever  you  are,  be  noble.     See  Four  W's.— Anon. 


937 


Who'll 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Who'll  buy  tresses,   bonnie  brown   tresses?     See  Me- 

phistopheles,  General  Dealer. — Anon. 
Who  11    have   the   crumpled   pieces   of   a  heart?     See 

Laurana's  Sone. — Hovey. 
Who'll  make   the   brandy-peaches.     See   Little   Girl's 

Declaration,  A. — •.non. 
"Who'll  take  care  of  the  baby?"     See  Who'll  Tend 

Baby?— E.  E. 
Whom  do  we  crown  with  the  laurel  leaf?     See  Bay, 

The.— Cook. 
Whom  do  you  suppo.se  I  have  here  this  evening  to 

meet  you?     See  Visitors  from  Story  Land. — Rook. 
Whom  first  we  love,  you  know,  we  seldom  wed.     See 

Changes. — Lytton. 
Whom  I   crown    with   love   is   royal.     See   Eureka. — 

Holland. 
"Whom  the  gods  love  die  young;" — -if  gods  ye  be. 

See  "Whom  the  Gods  Love." — Howe. 
"Whom  the  gods  love  die  young."     The  thought  is 

old.     See  I  Die,  Being  Young. — Gray 
Whom,  when    they    came    unto    the    river-side.     See 

Light  of  Asia,  The  (Tola  of  Mustard  Seed,  The).— 

Arnold. 
Whom  would  ye  choose?  for,  lo,  the  chief  is  dead.     See 

In  Memoriam. — Belts. 
Whoop!     Here  1  come!     See  Chrysanthemum.  The. — 

Pixley. 
' '  Who's  datf — W'y  dat's  Treadwater  Jim"    See  Tread- 
water  Jim. — Small. 
Who's  getting  married  this  morning — some  o'  the  big 

folks?     No!     See  Ticket  o' Leave. — Sims. 
Who's  heard    of    the    wedding    of    the    Moon?     See 

Wedding  of  the  Moon,  The.— Lathrop. 
Who's  seen  my  day?     See  Lost  Day,  A. — Anon. 
Who's  that  a-coming  up  the  path?     See  Neighbors. — 

Anon. 
"Who's  that,  Sam?"     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Sam 

Weller  and  His  Father). — Dickens. 
Who's  that  snarling  at  Doctor?     Come,  out  wi'  it,  mate, 

let's  hear.     See  Surgeon's  Child,  The.— Weatherly. 
Who's  the  darling  little  girl?     See  Darling  Little  Girl, 

"The. — Anon. 
Whose  are  the  gilded  tents  that  crowd  the  way?     See 

Lalla     Rookh     (Caliph's    Encampment,    The). — 

Moore. 
Whose  furthest   footstep   never   strayed.     See   Envoy 

to  "More  Songs  from  Vagabondia." — Hovey. 
Whose  hands  are  over  your  eyes?     See  Surprise,  The. 

—Fay. 
Whose  humor,  as  gay  as  the  firefly' slight.     See  Lines 

on  the  Death  of  Sheridan. — -Moore. 
Whose  .lenses  in  so  ill  consort  their  step-dame  Nature 

lays.     See  Astrophel  and  Stella  (Seventh  Song). 

— Sidney. 
"Whose  tomb  have  they  builded,  Vittoo!  under  this 

[iw.   the!  tamarind  tree."     See  Rajput  Nurse,  A. 

— Arnold. 
Whose  voice  is  it  that  rings  so  cleaf.     See  Get  Up. — 

Anon. 
Whose  voice  is  that  that  wakes  me  from  sleep.     See 

"Bob  White."— Kirk. 
Whose  was  that  gentle  voice,  that,  whispering  sweet. 

See  Bereavement. — Bowles. 
Whoso  him  bethoft.     See  Inscription  in  Marble  in  the 

Parish  Church  of  Faversham,  in  Agro  Cantiano. — 

Anon. 
Whosoe'er  had  looked  upon  the  glory  of  that  day.     See 

Palermo. — King. 
Whun  th'  down's  awn  th'  thistle.     See  Jest  a-Thinkin' 

o'  You. — Higginson. 
Why  all  the  stars  in  the  sky  are  so  bright.     See  Elfin 

Lamps. — Sherman. 
Why  all  this  toil  for  triumphs  of  an  hour?     See  Life. — 

Deming. 
Why   am    I    thus?    the    maniac    cried.     See    Rum's 

Maniac. — Nott. 
Why  and  wherefore  set  out  one  day.     See  Metaphysics. 

— Hereford. 
Why  are  bees  and  butterflies.     See  May. — Alden. 
Why  are   sentries  like  day  and  night,   Tambo?     See 

Day  and  Night. — Anon. 
Why  are  the  blossoms.     See  Why? — {Good  Words  for 

the  Young.) 
Why  are  we  bereft  of  all  happiness,  dearest?     See  Why. 

— "Viola." 
Why    are    we    so    impatient    of    delay.     See    same. — 

Cary. 
Why  are  you  here,  little  children?     See  Our  Country's 

Flag. — Hadley. 
Why  are  you  sad  when  the  sky  is  so  blue.     See  Resur- 

rexit. — Hadley. 
Why  are  you  so  stubborn,  Barbara?     See  Three  Brave 

Men. — Anon. 


Why  art  thou  silent?  Is  thy  love  a  plant.  See  Son- 
net: "Why  art  thou  silent,  etc."  —  Words- 
worth. 

Why  art  thou  thus  in  thy  beauty  cast.  See  Flower  of 
the  Desert,  The. — Hemans. 

Why  ask  of  others  what  they  cannot  say.  See  Love 
Doth  to  her  Eyes  Repair. — Riickert. 

"Why,  bles.s  my  soul."  cried  Fred,  "who's  that?"  See 
Christmas  Carol,  A. — Dickens. 

Why  blow'.st  thou  not,  thou  wintry  wind.  See  All 
Saints'  Day. — Keble. 

"Why,  Bob,  you  dear  old  fellow."  See  Seaside  Inci- 
dent, A. — Cook. 

Why  came  the  rose?  Because  the  sun,  in  shining. 
See  Why?— Ritter. 

"Why,  Charles,  how  late  you  are."  See  Mrs.  Jones' 
Revenge. — Ingraham. 

Why,  cousin!  why,  Ro.salind!  Cupid  have  mercy,  not 
a  word?     See  As  You  Like  It. — Shakespeare. 

Why,  Damon,  with  the  forward  day.  See  Dying  Man 
in  his  Garden,  The. — Sewell. 

"Why,  dear  me,  if  it  i.sn't  almost  three  o'clock!"  See 
■Teaching  a  Sunday-school  Class. — Lyons. 

Why,  dear  me,  what  has  happened  to  cloud  your  brow, 
my  dear  cousin.  See  Heiress'  Ruse,  The. — 
Kavanaugh. 

Why,  Death,  what  dost  thou  here.  See  On  One  Who 
Died  in  May. — C^ook. 

Why  did  I  bow,  you  ask?  And  why.  See  My  Hero. — 
True. 

"Why  did  you  melt  your  waxen  man.  Sister  Helen?"- 
See  Sister  Helen. — Rossetti. 

Why  did  you  not  defend  that  which  was  once  your 
own?  See  Chorus  of  Good  and  Evil  Spirits. — 
Brooke. 

Why  didst  thou  promise  such  a  beauteous  day.  See 
Sonnets,  XXXIV. — Shakespeare. 

Why  do  bells  of  Christmas  ring.     See  same. — Field. 

Why  do  I  weep?  to  leave  the  vine.  See  Bride's  Fare- 
well, The. — Hemans. 

Why  do  precisely  these  objects  which  we  behold  make 
a  world?     See  Brute  Neighbors. — Thoreau. 

Why  do  the  honey  bees  suck  from  the  clover.  See  Old- 
fashioned  Lesson,  An. — Anon. 

Why  do  they  come?  I  know,  I  know.  See  Apple 
Blossoms.— Anon. 

Why  do  we  greet  thee,  O  blithe  New  Year!  See  New 
Year,  A. — Sangster. 

Why  do  ye  weep,  sweet  babes?  can  tears.  See  To 
Primroses  Filled  with  Morning  Dew. — Herrick. 

Why  do  ye  wonder  at  my  wish?  See  Mirabeau  Dying. 
— Wallace. 

Why  do  you  ask  for  the  story?  My  friend,  it  is  hardly 
fair.     See  Outlaws,  The. — McPhelim. 

"Why  do  you  come  to  my  apple-tree."  See  What  a 
Bird  Taught. — Cary. 

Why  do  you  keep  me  knocking  all  day  at  the  door? 
See  Mr.  Cross  and  Servant  John. — Anon. 

Why  do  you  look  so  sad,  Helen?  See  Reward  of  Ear- 
nest Effort,  The.— Cornell. 

"Why  do  you  sit  in  the  dull  house,  Annie?"  See  Little 
Nurse,  The. — Anon. 

Why  does  your  brand  sae  drop  wi'  blude  [or  blood]? 
See  Edward,  Edward. — Anon. 

Why  don't  I  work?  well,  sir,  will  you.  See  Knocked 
About. — Connolly. 

Why  dost  thou  hail  with  songful  lips  no  more.  See 
Memnon. — ScoUard. 

Why  dost  thou  shade  thy  lovely  face?  O  why.  See 
To  His  Mistress.— Wilmot. 

Why  dost  thou  talk  of  death,  laddie?  See  Work  on 
Earth. — Wilson. 

Why  doth  the  ear  so  tempt  the  voice.  See  Castara 
(To  Castara,  of  True  Delight). — Habington. 

"Why,  Edward,  you  look  so  healthy  now."  See 
Drunkard's  Dream,  The. — Anon. 

Why  fearest  thou  the  outward  foe?  See  That  Each 
Thing  is  Hurt  of  Itself. — Anon. 

Why  flyest  thou  away  with  fear?  See  To  a  Fish. — 
Wolcot. 

Why,  good  after-noon,  Lizzie!  See  Two  Teachers,  The. 
— Herbert. 

Why,  good  morning,  John.  See  Lazy  or  Not. — Den- 
ton. 

Why  groaning  so,  thou  solid  earth.  See  Earth's  Bur- 
dens.— Jones. 

Why  has  not  man  a  collar  and  a  log?  See  Parody  on 
Pope. — Smith. 

Why,  having  won  her,  do  I  woo?  See  Angel  in  the 
Hou.se,  The  (Married  Lover,  The). — Patmore. 

Why  here,  on  this  third  planet  from  the  sun.  See 
Tellus. — Huntington. 


938 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Will 


Why,  howd'y,  Maha'r  Johnny!  is  you  gone  to  keepin' 

store?     See  "Business"  in  Mississippi. — Russell. 
Why,  I  knew  ye  as  well  as  he  that  made  ye.    See  King 

Henry   IV.,  Pt.   I.   (Falstaff's    Instinct).— Shake- 
speare. 
Why  I  tie  about  thy  wrist.     See  The  Bracelet:     To 

Julia. — Herrick. 
Why  is  his  name  unsung,   O  minstrel  host?     See  In- 

felix  Felix. — McGee. 
Why  is  it,  I  wonder,  that  we  never  hear  of  Mrs.  Chris- 
topher Columbus.     See  Mrs.  Christopher  Colum- 
bus.— Cowell. 
Why  is  it,  tell  me,  that  most  girls.     See  Dialogue  for 

a  Boy  and  Girl. — Anon. 
Why  is  it  that  the  names  of  Howard  and  Thornton  and 

Clarkson     and     Wilberforce.     See     Howard     the 

Prisoner's  Friend. — Humphrey. 
Why  is   it    the   children   don't    love   me?     See   Little 

Mamma. — Webb. 
Why  is  Love  like  a  cigarette?     See  Box  of  Cigarettes, 

A. — {Cornell  Widow.) 
Why  is  the  experiment  of  an  extended  Republic  to  be 

rejected.      See   American  Innovations. — Madison. 
"Why  is  the  Forum  crowded?     What  means  this  stir 

in  Rome?"     See  Virginia  (Fate  of  Virginia,  The). 

— Macaulay. 
Why  is  the  house  so  lonely  and  still?     See  Changes. — 

Richards. 
Why,  Laura,  what  ails  you?     See  Aunt  Jeru.sha's  Mis- 
take.— Kavanaugh. 
Why,  let  the  stricken  deer  go  "weep.     See    Hamlet. — 

Shakespeare. 
Why,  let  them  rail!     God's  full  anointed  ones.     See 

Invincible. — Parker. 
Why,  Lilla,  I  did  not  know  you  were  going  out  to-day! 

See  Stitch  in  Time  Saves  Nine,  A. — Anon. 
Why,  Linda  Grey,  as  I'm  alive!     Come  in  an'  take  a 

cheer.     See  Thet  Boy  ov  Ourn. — De  Brown. 
Why  looks  your  grace  so  heavily,  to-day.      See    King 

Richard  III.  (Dream  of  Clarence,  The). — Shake- 
speare. 
Why,  lovely  charmer,  tell  me  why.     See  Why,  Lovely 

Charmer? — -Anon. 
Why,  Mrs.  Malaprop,  in  moderation  now,  what  would 

you  have  a  woman  know?     See  Rivals,  The  (Mrs. 

Malaprop's  Idea  of  Education). — Sheridan. 
Why,  my  dear  fellow,  Gordon  Cummings  must  have  been 

a  mere  baby,  compared  to  you!   See  Nightmare  of 

India,  A. — Graham. 
Why,  Pansy!  little  Pansy!  what  a  merry  face  you  show. 

See  Out  in  the  Cold. — Harrison. 
Why,  Rachel,  how  can  you  wear  that  old  winter  dress 

to  church.     See  Pride  Rebuked. — -Anon. 
Why,  Red  Riding-hood,  is  that  really  you?     See  Four 

Celebrated  Characters. — Denton. 
Why  Sammy  Burdock  should  leave  the  farm  and  go  to 

the  academy.     See  French  by   Lightning. — Bar- 
nard. 
Why  seek  her  heart  to  understand.      See  Seek  not  to 

Understand  Her. — Hoffman. 
Why  seek  ye  for  Jehovah.     See  "With  You  Alway." — 

Allen. 
Why  should  I  blush  to  own  I  love?     See  To  Love. — 

White. 
Why  should  I  learn  to  smoke  and  chew?     See  Little 

Boy's  Reasons,  A. — Anon. 
Why  should   I  live,  when  every  day.     See  Plaint  of 

Jonah,  The. — Burdette. 
Why  should  I  not  look  happy.     See  What  Some  One 

Said. — Anon. 
Why  should  I  stay?     Nor  seed  nor  fruit  have  I.     See 

Bubble,  The.— Tabb. 
Why  should  not  piety  be  made.     See  Piety. — Butler. 
Why  should  the  ingenious  youth,  fresh  from  college, 

dream  of  Pericles.     See  Duty  of  the  Enlightened 

Classes. — Long. 
Why  should  we  ever  weary  of  this  life?     See  Our  Lives 

Should  Widen. — -Lowell. 
Why  should  we  waste  and  weep?     See  Fledglings. — 

Harris. 
Why  shouldst  thou  cease  thy  plaintive  song.     See  To 

an   Obscure   Poet   who   I^ives   on   My   Hearth.— 

Hildreth. 
Why  shouldst  thou  fill  to-day  with  sorrow.     See  same. 

— Fleming. 
Why  sits  she  thus  in  solitude?     Her  heart.     See  Old 

Maid.  The.— Welby. 
"Why  sit 'st  down  by  that   ruined    hall."     See    Anti- 
quary, The  (Omnipotent,  The).— Scott. 
Why  sitt'st  thou  by  the  shore?     See  Emeline. — Mul- 

vany. 
Why  so  pale  and  wan,  fond  lover?     See  Orsames'  Song 

in  "Aglaura." — Suckling. 


Why  stand  you  there.     See  What  the  Little  Maiden 

Saw. — Anon. 
Why  start     at     death?     Where     is     he?      See   Night 

Thoughts  (Death). — Young. 
Why    such    impress   ot    shipwrights,   whose  sore  task. 

See  Hamlet. — Shakespeare. 
Why  the  dog's  no.se  is  always  cold.     See  Dog's  Cold 

Nose,  The. — Eytinge. 
Why  these     chains — why     these     prison     walls?     See 

Rum's  Ruin. — Dunn. 
Why  these  hundreds  hurrying  by?     See  Fire-bells. — 

Johnson. 
"Why,  thin,    I'll    tell    you,"    said    Rory.     See    Rory 

O'More's  Present  to  the  Priest. — Lover. 
"Why,  this  is  Christmas  eve,  mamma!"     See  Where  is 

Papa  To-night? — Eager.  ^ 

Why  thus   longing,   thus   for  ever  sighing.     See  Why 

thus  Longing? — Sewall. 
Why  tremble  so,  broad  aspen-tree?     See  Poplar-tree, 

The. — Anon. 
Why   weep    ye    by    the  tide,  ladie  [ur.   lady]?     See 

Jock  of  flazeldean. — Scott. 
Why,  what  a  long  face,  Mollie  dear!     What  is  the  mat- 
ter?    See  Stolen  Pets,  The. — Anon. 
Why!  what's  the   matter  with   my  sister  Kate?     See 

Mi  schief . — Holcomb. 
"Why,  when  the  world's  great  mind."     See  World  and 

the  Quietist,  The. — Arnold. 
Why,  where's  Fosdick?     I  was  in  hopes  I  would  find 

him  here.     See  Auntie's  Courtship. — Anon. 
Why,  why    repine,    my    pensive    friend.     See   same. — 

Landor. 
Why  will  ye  call  it  "Death's  dark  night?"     See  same. 

—Noel. 
Why  will  you  haunt  me  unawares.     See  Love  in  Exile. 

—Blind. 
Why  will  you  tease  me,  Katie,  dear.     See  Warning,  A. 

— Kavanaugh. 
Why,  William,  on  that  old  gray  stone.     See  Expostu- 
lation and  Reply. — Wordsworth. 
"Why  wilt  thou  cast  the  roses  from  thine  hair?"     See 

Mary  Magdalene. — Rossetti. 
"Why  would'st  thou  leave  me,  O  gentle  child?"     See 

Adopted  Child,  The. — Hemans. 
Why  wouldst  thou  sound?      See  Lady  of  the  Lake,  The 

(Blanche  of  Devan). — Scott. 
Wide  are  the  plains  to  the  north  and  the  westward. 

See  Volunteers  of  '85,  The. — Livingston. 
Wide  open  and  unguarded  stand  our  gates.     See  Un- 
guarded Gates. — Aldrich. 
Widow  Machree,    it's    no    wonder    you    frown.     See 

Widow  Machree. — Lover. 
Wife,  it  will  soon  all  be  over  with  me.     See  Cured. — 

Anon. 
"Wife!  wife!  hither  wife!"  shouted  John  Sherwood  as 

he  strode  in  to  the  long  kitchen.     See  Mistress 

Sherwood's  Victory.- — Ogden. 
Wild  are  the  mountainous  billows.     See  Life  Brigade, 

The. — Mackay. 
Wild  blew  the  gale  in  Gibraltar  one  night.     See  Sol- 
dier's Pardon,  The. — Smith. 
"Wild  huntsmen?"     'Twas    a    flight    of    swans.     See 

Wild  Huntsmen,  The. — Hamerton. 
Wild  is  its  nature,  as  it  were  a  token.     See  Song  of  the 

Palm. — Robinson. 
Wild  raged  the  tempest.     See  same. — Matthews. 
Wild  Ro.se  of  AUoway!  my  thanks.     See  Burns. — Hal- 

leck. 
Wild  rose.    Sweet-brier,     Eglantine.      See    Song    and 

Chorus  of  the  Flowers  (Sweet-brier). — Hunt. 
Wild  stream  the  clouds,  and  the  fresh  wind  is  singing. 

See  Hunt,  The.— Spofford. 
Wild  was  the  day :  the  wintry  sea.     See  Twenty-second 

of  December,  The. — Bryant. 
Wild  was  the  night,   'twas  the  eve  of  Thanksgiving. 

See  Thanksgiving  Dream,  A. — Denton. 
Wild  was  the  night,  yet  a  wilde    night.     See  Death  of 

Napoleon. — MacLellan. 
Wild,  wild  wind,   wilt   thou  never  cease  thy  sighing? 

See  Dead  Church,  The. — Kingsley. 
Wildest  boy  in  all  the  village.     See  Thar  Was  Jim. — 

Crawford. 
Wildly     and      mournfully     the     Indian     drum.      See 

American  Forest  Girl,  The. — Hemans. 
Will  anybody  deny  that  the  Government  at  Washing- 
ton,   as   regards  its  own  people.     See  Strength    of 

the  American   Government,  The  (American  Gov- 
ernment, The). — -Bright. 
"Will  I  comef"     That  is  pleasant!     I  beg  to  inquire. 

See  Once  More. — Holmes. 
Will  my  tiny  spark  of  being  wholly  vanish  in   your 

deeps  and  heights?     See  God  and  the  Universe. — 

Tennyson. 


939 


Will 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Will  Santa  Claus  come  to-night,  mother?"     -See  Light 

in  the  Window,  The. — Oriel. 
"Will  she  come  to  me,  little  Effie?"     <See  Comforter,  A. 

—Procter. 
Will  some  of  the  genttomen  who  have  been  plea.«ed  to 

call.     See  Contentious  Community,  A. — "Eureka". 
Will  some  wise  man  who  has  journeyed.     See  Road  to 

Yesterday,  The. — Anon. 
Will  the  king  come,  that  I  may  breathe  my  last.     Sec 

King  Richard  II. — Shakespeare. 
Will  the    New    Year    come    to-night,    mamma?     I  m 

tired  of  waiting  so.     See  Will  the  New  Year  Come 

To-night? — Winton  [or  Eager]. 
Will  the  reader  please  to  ca.st  his  eye  over  the  following 

verses.     See  Literary  Nightmare,  A. — Clemens. 
Will  there  never  come  a  season.     See  Lapsus  Calami. — 

Stephen. 
Will  there  really  be  a  morning?     See  Morning. — Dick- 
inson. 
Will  winter  never  be  over?     See  February.— Whitney. 
Will  ye  gang  wi'  we  and  fare.     See  Bush  aboon  Tra- 

quair.  The. — Shairp. 
Will  ye  go  to  the  Hielands,  Lizzie  I>indsay?     See  Lizzie 

Lindsay. — Anon.  ,  -,    -r,  n 

Will  you  and  I  grow  like  the  rest?     See  Could  It  Be? — 

Romaine.  . 

Will  you    come,    love,    to    the    Gahden.     See    Pwize 

Spwing  Poem. — (San  Francisco  News  Letter.) 
Will  you  come  where  golden  furze  I  mow.     See  My 

Mauria  ni  Milledn. — Sigerson. 
Will  you  hear  a   Spanish  lady.     See  Spanish   Lady  s 

Love,  The. — Anon. 
"Will  you  my  First?"  the  lover  cried.     See  Fly  Leaf. — 

Sabine. 
Will  you  please  tell  me  what  book  you  are  reading? 

See  Novel  Reading. — Anon. 
"Will  you  take  a  walk  with  me?"     See  Clocking  Hen, 

The.— "Aunt  Effie." 
"Will  you  walk  a  little  faster?"  said  a  whiting  to  a 

snail.     See  Lobster  Quadrille,  A. — Carroll. 
"Will  you  walk  into  my  parlor?"  said  a  spider  to  a  bee. 

See  Spider  and  the  Bee,  The. — Richards. 
"Will  you  walk  into  my  parlor?"  said  the  spider  to  the 

fly.     See  Spider  and  the  Fly,  The.— Howitt. 
William,  I  am  older  than  you,  and  I  have  a  right  to 

look  after  your    welfare.     See    Interrupted    Pro- 
posal,  An. — Anon. 
William  Ladd  was  the  President  of  the  American  Peace 

Society.     See  How  to  Make  up  a  Quarrel. — Anon. 
"WilUiam,  stop  that  noise,  I  say!  won't  you  stop?" 

See  Family  Government. — Beecher. 
William  Tansley,    familiarly    called   Tip.     See    Nancy 

Blynn's  Lovers. — Trowbridge. 
Williarn  was  holding  in  his  hand.     See  Miniature,  The. 

—Anon. 
Willie  and  Bess,  Georgie  and  May.     See  Intry-Mintry. 

—Field. 
Willie  [or  Willy]  and  Charlie,  eight  and  ten.     See  Cob 

House,  The. — Osgood. 
Willie,  fold  your  little  hands.     See  By  the  Alma  River. 

— Craik. 
Willie  stands  in  his  stable.     See  Willie  and  May  Mar  - 

garet;  or,  The  Water  of  Clyde. — Anon. 
Willie  stands  in  his  stable  door.     See  Drowned  I,overs, 

The. — Anon. 
Willis,  in  his  essay  on  "unwritten  music"  has  placed. 

See  Music  of  the  Human  Voice,  The. — Russell. 
Willow  and  cane  is  all  I  am,  with  a  wisp  of  waxen 

thread.     See  Cricket  Bat,  Sings,  The. — Anon. 
Willow!   in    thy   breezy   moan.     See   Willow   Song. — 

Hemans. 
Will't  ne'er    be    morning?     Will    the    promised    light. 

See  "Phosphor,  Bring  the  Day." — Quarles. 
Willy  [or  Willie]  and  Charlie,  eight  and  ten.     See  Cob 

House,  The. — Osgood. 
"Willy's  rare,     and     Willy's    fair.     See    Rare     Willy 

Drowned  in  Yarrow. — Anon. 
Willy's  ta'en  him  o'er  the  faem.     See  Willy's  Lady. — 

Anon. 
Wilt  thou  be  gone?     See  Romeo  and  Juliet  (Dawn). — 

Shakespeare. 
Wilt  thou   be   long?     The    workful   day   is   o'er.     See 

Wilt  Thou  be  Long? — Matheson. 
Wilt  thou  be  mine? dear  love,  reply.     See  Song:  "Wilt 

thou  be  mine?"  etc. — Charles,  Duke  of  Orleans. 
Wilt  thou  forgive  that  sin  where  I  begun.     See  Hymn 

to  God  the  Father,  A. — Donne. 
Wilt  thou  not  visit  me.     See  Prayer,  The. — Very. 
Wilt  thou  take  this  brown  stone  front.     See  Modem 

Wedding  Rites. —  ,\non. 
Wind,  and  the  sound  of  the  sea.     See  Nocturne. — (All 

the  Year  Round.) 


Wind,  be  still,  'tis  spring!     See  same. — Anon. 

Wind  of  the  City  Streets.     See  To  a  June  Breeze. — 

Bunner. 
Wind  of  the  north.     See  Four  Winds,  The.— Liiders. 
Wind  of  the  Sea,  come  fill  my  sail.     See  Wind  of  the 

Sea. — Riley. 
Wind  of    the     Southland,     whispering,     sighing.     See 

Wind  of  the  Southland. — Douglass. 
Wind  of    the    winter    night.     See    Foreshadowings. — 

Dorr. 
Winds  from  the  north  do  blow.     See  Snowstorm,  The. 

— Hartzell. 
Winds  of  the  world,  give  answer!     They  are  whimper- 
ing to  and  fro.     See  Flag  of  England,  The. — Kip- 
ling. 
Winds     to-day    are     large    and    free.       See    same. — 

Field. 
Winds,  whisper   gently   whilst    she   sleeps.     See   Ode: 

Laura  Sleeping.- — Cotton. 
Wine  that  is  beautiful,  wine  that  is  red.     See  Why,  and 

Because. — Anon. 
Wine,  wine,    thy    power    and    praise.     See    Water. — 

Cook. 
Winged  mimic  of  the  woods!  thou  motley  fool!     See 

To  the  Mocking  Bird. — Wilde. 
Winged  wonder  of  motion.     See  Dragon  Fly,  The. — 

Rand. 
Winifred  Waters  sat  and  sighed.    See  Winifred  Waters. 

— Anon. 
Winstanley's  deed,  you  kindly  folk.     See  Winstanley. 

— Ingelow. 
Winter    is    cold-hearted.     See   Summer    Days. — Ros- 

setti. 
Winter  is  over!  summer  is  coming!     See  Dear  Dande- 
lion.— Nichols. 
Winter  without    and     warmth    within.     See    Winter 

Fancies. — Riley. 
Winter-cold    is    the    night.     See  Winter   Night,    A. — 

Cane. 
Winter's  bright  birthnight !     In  the  fretful  East.     See 

Picture,  A. — Holland. 
Wintry  winds    are    blowing    cold.     See    Among    the 

Heather. — Arnold. 
Wipe  your  feet  outside  the  door.     See  Some  Rules. — 

Denton. 
Wirra!  wirra!  ologone!     See  Fan  Fitzgerl. — Graves. 
Wisdom  and  Spirit  of  the  universe!     See  Prelude,  The 

(Influence  of  Natural  Objects,  etc.).— Wordsworth. 
Wisdom,  I  come  to  adorn  thee  with  symbolic  jewels. 

See  Wisdom's  Treasures. — Goodfellow. 
Wisdom  is  the  principal  thing;  therefore  get  wisdom. 

See  Proverbs  of  Solomon  (Solomon,  the  Wise  King). 

—Bible. 
Wisely,  good  Uncle  Toby  said.     See  Poor  Player  at  the 

Gate,  The. — Vandenhoff. 
Wish  I  didn't  have  ter  set  all  day  in  school.     See  James 

Henry  in  School. — Selinger. 
Witching     mistress,      sweet     and     fair.     See     Easter 

Phantasy,  An. — Mclntyre. 
With  a  boom  of  cannon,  and  a  dance  of  plume.     See 

Secret  of  Life,  The. — Baring-Gould. 
With  a  clang!  with  a  clang  and  a  clang.     See  Loco- 
motive, The. — Anon. 
With  a  fly-screen  under  one  arm.     See  Friend  of  the 

Fly,  A. — Anon. 
With  a  glancing  eye  and  curving  mane.     See  To  My 

Horse. — Anon. 
With  a   head   full   of   pleasing    fancier.     See    Helen  s 

Babies  (Evening  with  Helen's  Babies,  An). — Hab- 

bert-on. 
With  a  hearty  laugh.     See  Fra  Moreale. — S.  B.  R. 
With  a  hey!  and  a  hi!  and  a  hey-ho  rhyme!     See  same. 

—Riley. 
With  a  scanty  band  of  followers,  who  still  remained 

true    to    his    desperate    fortunes.     See    Death    of 

King  Philip. — Irving. 
With  a  world  fwhirl— C]  of  thought  oppress'd.     See 

Day  of  Judgment,  The. — Swift. 
With  all  my  powers  of  heart  and  tongue.     See  Hymn 

of  Praise. — Anon. 
With  all  my  will,  but  much  against  my  heart.     See 

Farewell,  A. — Patmore. 
With  an  aching  tooth,  one  morning  bright.     See  Pat's 

Mistake. — Anon. 
With  awful  walls,  far  gloaming,  that  possessed.     See 

Trumpets  of  Doolkarnein,  The. — Hunt. 
With  bevelled    binding,    with    uncut    edge.     See    My 

Shakespeare. — Bunner. 
With  big  tin  trumpet  and  little  red  drum.     See  With 

Trumpet  and  Drum. — Field. 
With  blackest  moss  the  flower-plots.     See  Mariana. — 

Tennyson. 


940 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


With 


With  blue,  cold  hands,  and  stockingless  feet.     See  Out 

in  the  Cold. — Anon. 
With  bray  of  the  trumpet,  and  roll  of  the  drum.     See 

Cavalry  Charge,  The. — Durivage. 
With  breath  of  thyme  and  bees  that  hum.     See  To  a 

Greek  Girl. — -Dobson. 
With  broken   heart   and   contrite   sigh.     iSee   same. — 

Elven. 
With  complexion  like  the  rose.     See  Ballet-girl,  The. 

— {Lippincott's  Magazine.) 
With  conscious  pride  I  view  the  band.     See  On  His 

Friends. — Aldaramy. 
With  coronet  of  fresh  and  fragrant  flowers.     See  Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream. — Shakespeare. 
With  crosses,  relics,  crucifixes.     See  Hudibra.s  —Butler. 
With  daddies  high  upraised,  and  nob  held  back.     See 

Milling-match  between  Entellus  and  Dares,  The. 

Moore. 
With  death    doomed    to    grapple.     See    Epitaph    for 

William  Pitt.— Byron. 
With  deep    affection    and    recollection.     See    Bells    of 

Shandon,  The. — Mahony. 
With  dropping  sail  and  shattered  mast.     See  Sir  Wal- 
ter's Honor. — Preston. 
With  due  condescension,  I'd  call  your  attention.     See 

Birth  of  Ireland,  The. — Anon. 
With  eyes    hand-arched    he    looks    into.     See    Com- 

radery. — Cawein. 
With  eyes  like  stars  he  listened  to  me.     See  Little  Joe. 

—Meyers. 
With  fair  Ceres,  Queen  of  Grain.     See  Praise  of  Ceres. 

— Heywood. 
With  farmer  Allan  at  the  farm  abode.     See  Dora. — 

Tennyson. 
With  fingers  weary  and  worn.     See  Song  of  the  Shirt, 

The.— Hood. 
With  folded    wings    of    dusky    light.     See    Dawn. — 

M'Carroll. 
With  forehead  star  and  silver  tail.     See  Catching  the 

Colt. — Douglas. 
With  fragrance  flown,  as  of  a  long-plucked  bud.     See 

Forgotten  Poet,  The. — Smythe. 
With  free    and    airy    grace    our    youthful    days.     See 

Home. — Anon. 
With  ganial  foire.     See  Crystal  Palace,  The. — Thack- 
eray. 
With  gentle  looks  and  hearts  made  calm  by  sorrow.  See 

same.- Tarbox. 
With  gradual  gleam  the  day  was  dawning.     See  Fifty 

and  Fifteen. — Anon. 
With  grateful    twirl     our    smoke-wreaths    curl.     See 

Smoking  Song. — Anon. 
With  half  a  heart  I  wander  here.     See  In  the  States. — 

Stevenson. 
With  half  the  Western  world  at  stake.     See  Sea  and 

Land  Victories. — Anon. 
With  heaving  breast  the  fair-haired  Eileen  sang.     See 

Fionnuala. — -Armstrong. 
With  heavy   head   bent   on   her   yielding   hand.     See 

"It  Might  Have  Been." — -Anon. 
With  heavy  pack  upon  his  back.     See  Kris  Kringle's 

Surprise. — Davenport. 
With  her  large  dark  eyes,  and  her  soft  brown  hair.     See 

Little  Maud. — Anon. 
With  his  gnarled  old  arms,  and  his  iron  form.     See 

Live  Oak,  The. — Jackson. 
With  his  hand  upon  the  throttle  as  the  train  swept 

round  the  bend.  See  Fireman's  Prize,  The. — Anon. 
With  hiss  and  thunder  and  inner  boom.     See  Ballad  of 

Brave  Women,  A. — -Marston. 
With  hound  and  horn  the  wide  New  Forest  rung.     See 

Red  King's  Warning,  The. — Anon. 
With  how  .sad  steps,  O  Moon,  thou  climb'st  the  skies. 

See    Astrophel    and     Stella   (Sonnet    XXXI.). — 

Sidney. 
With  its  earnest  spirit  searching.     See  Feed  My  Sheep. 

— Anon. 
With  its    heavily    rocking    and    swinging    load.     See 

Tom's  Come  Home. — Trowbridge. 
With  joys  unknown,   with  sadness  unconfessed.     See 

Anathemata. — Sanborn. 
With  klingle,    klangle,    klingle.     See  When   the   Cows 

Come  Home.— Mitchell. 
With  lavish  hand  our  God  hath  spread.     See  Arbor 

Day  Tribute. — Barhite. 
With  leaden  foot  Time  creeps  along.     See  Absence. — 

Jago. 
With  lifted  feet,  hands  still.     See  Bicycling  Song. — 

Beeching. 
With  little  here  to  do  or  see.     See  To  the  Daisy. — 

Wordsworth. 
With  little  white  leaves  in  the  grasses.     See  Daisy, 

The.— Rodd. 


With  lullay,  luUay,   lyke  a  chylde.     See  Lullabye,  A. 

— Skelton. 
With  malice  towards  none,  with  charity  for  all.     See 

Second  Inaugural  Address   ("With  malice,"  etc.). 

— Lincoln. 
With  many  a  curve  my  banks  I  fret.     See  Brook,  The. 

— Tennyson. 
With  margerain  [or  marjoram]  gentle.     See  Garlande 

of  Laurell,  The  (To  Mistress  Margery  Wentworth). 

— -Skelton. 
With  me  along  the  strip  of  herbage  strown.  >See  Ru- 

biliyiit    of    Omar    Khayysim   (Paradise    Enow). — ■ 

Fitzgerald. 
With  measured  pace  he  treads  the  streets.     See  Um- 
brellas to  Mend. — Gill. 
With  merry  chimes  and  merry  times.     See  January. — 

Richards. 
With  mingled    trembling    and    delight.     See    Country 

Child,  The.— Douglas. 
With  more  than  mortal  powers  endowed.    See  Marmion 

(Pitt  and  Fox). — Scott. 
With  my  cigar  I  sit  alone.     See  With  My  Cigar. — Ab- 

thony. 
With  my  first  baby  plays.     See  Charade. — M.  C.  D. 
With  my  [thy — C]  love  this  knowledge  too  was  given. 

See  Sonnet:    "My  love,  I   have  no  fear,"  etc. — 

Lowell. 
With  naked  foot,  and  sackcloth  vest.     See  Lay  of  the 

Last  Minstrel  (Mass,  The). — Scott. 
With  no  disparagement  to  others.     See  Grant. — Mc- 

Kinley. 
With  oaken    staff   and    swinging   lantern   bright.     See 

Andalusian  Sereno,  The. — Saltus. 
With  one  black  shadow  at  its  feet.     See  Mariana  in  the 

South. — Tennyson. 
With  one    common    spirit    Massachusetts    and    New 

Hampshire  unite  to  hail.     See  Webster  Statue  at 

Concord,  N.  H.,  The. — Robinson. 
With  one  consent  let  all  the  earth.     See  Psalm  C. — 

Tate  and  Brady. 
With  peace  at  last  and  silent  of  all  moan.     See  On  the 

Tomb    of    Guidarelle    Guidarelli    at    Ravenna. — 

Greg. 
With  pensive  eyes  the  little  room  I  view.     See  Garret, 

The.— Thackeray. 
With  pipe  and  book,  an  old  armchair.     See  Comfort. — 

Merrill. 
With  pipe  and  book  at  close  of  day.     See  With  Pipe 

and  Book. — Le  Gallienne. 
With  pipe  and  flute  the  rustic   pan.     See  "With  Pipe 

and  Flute." — Dobson. 
With  pleasure,  Mrs.  Grunter;  you  may  depend  upon 

me.     See  Obliging  his  Landlady. — Hickman. 
With  profound  satisfaction  in   behalf  of  the  City  of 

Brooklyn.     See  Brooklyn  Bridge. — I.,ow. 
With  purple    glow    at    even.     See    To    the    Lakes. — 

Campbell. 
With  regard  to  my  poverty,  the  king  has  been  justly 

informed.        See     Fabricius     Refuses     Bribes.- — 

Pliny. 
With  "  Ring-a-round-a-rosy !"     See  Noted  Traveler. — 

Riley. 
With  rosy  hand  a  little  girl  press'd  down.     See  Cow- 
slips.— Landor. 
With  sable-draped  banners,  and  slow  measured  tread. 

See  You  Put  no  Flowers  on  My  Papa's   Grave. — 

Holmes. 
"With  sacrifice,  before  the  rising  morn."     See    I.aod- 

amia. — Wordsworth. 
With  sails  full  set,  the  ship  her  anchor  weighs.     See 

Emigravit. — Jackson. 
With  saintly  grace  and  reverent  tread.     See  Presenti- 
ment.^Bierce. 
With  salt    and    potatoes    and    meal    for    bread.     See 

Margie's  Thanksgiving. — Bumstead. 
With  shot  and  shell,  like  a  loosened  hell.     See  Charge 

at  Santiago,  The. — Hayne. 
With  silence  only  as  their  benediction.     See  Angels  of 

Grief,  The.— Whittier. 
With  silent  awe  I  hail  the  sacred  mom.     See  Sabbath 

Morning.  The. — Leyden. 
With  slender  arms  outstretching  in  the  sun.     See  Hay 

Field,  The.— Wetherald. 
With  slender  rod,  and  line  and  reel.     See  Trouting. — 

Trowbridge. 
With  some   good   ten    of   his   chosen    men.     See    Ber- 
nardo and  King  Alphonso. — Lockhart. 
With  song  of  birds  and  hum  of  bees.     See  Summer 

Morning. — -Boker. 
With  sorrow  and  heart's  distress.     See  Paradise   Lost 

(Eve  to  Adam). — Milton. 
With  sorrow  in  her  eyes  of  blue.     See  Sea-side  Flirta- 
tion, A. — Peck. 


941 


With 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


With  storm-daring  pinion,  and  sun-gazing  eye.  <See 
Gray  Forest  Eagle,  Trie. — Street. 

With  strawberries  we  filled  a  tray.  See  With  Straw- 
herries. — Henley.* 

With  sweet,  flushed  face  upturned  to  mine  she  stood. 
See  In  the  Hall. — Anon. 

With  sweetest  milk  and  sugar  first.  See  Girl  Describes 
her  Fawn,  The. — Marvell. 

With  that,  straight  up  the  hill  there  rode.  See  Mar- 
mion  (Death  of  Marmion). — Scott. 

With  tbat  (such  power  was  given  him  then),  he 
[Satan]  took.  See  Paradise  Regained  (Tempta- 
tion of  the  Visions  of  the  Kingdoms  of  the  Earth, 
The).— Milton. 

With  the  faces  the  dearest  in  sight.  See  Euthanasia. 
— Preston. 

With  the  growth  of  human  brotherhood.  See  Woman 
in  Politics. — Foster. 

With  the  link  boys  running  on  before.  See  My  Lady 
(iocs  to  the  Play. — Ketchum. 

With  the  results  of  (Christianity  before  him  and  in  him. 
See  same. — Holland. 

With  the  United  States  flag  flying  at  all  their  mast- 
heads. See  Great  Naval  Battle  of  Manila,  The.^ 
Anon. 

With  thee  conversing  I  forgot  all  time.  See  Paradise 
Lost  (Book  IV.).— Milton. 

With  thee  my  thoughts  are  calm  and  sweet.  See  With 
Thee.— Clarke. 

With  thee,  sweet  Hope,  resides  the  heavenly  light.  See 
Pleasures  of  Hope,  The  ('"With  thee,  .sweet,"  etc.). 
— t'ampbell. 

With  three  great  snorts  of  strength.  See  Night  Ex- 
press, The. — Monkhouse. 

With  thyl UT.  my]  love  this  knowledge  too  was  given. 
See  Sonnet:  "My  love,  I  have  no  fear,"  etc. — 
Lowell. 

With  trembling  fingers  did  we  weave.  See  In  Me- 
moriam  ('"With  trembling,"  etc.). — Tennyson. 

With  twenty  pounds  but  three  weeks  since.  See  Tit- 
marsh's  Carmen  Lilliense. — Thackeray. 

With  us  ther  was  a  Doctour  of  Phisik.  See  Canter- 
bury Tales,  The  (Prologue). — Chaucer. 

With  what  sharp  checks  I  in  myself  am  shent.  See 
Astrophel  and  Stella  (Sonnet  XVII I.). ^Sidney. 

With  what  sorrow,  with  what  sadness.  See  Kensal 
Green. — Drake. 

With  white  sails  set  the  vessels  glide.  See  Farewell. — 
Vickers. 

With  white  wings  spread  she  bounded  o'er  the  deep. 
See  same. — Livermore. 

With  woman's  form  and  woman's  tricks.  See  To  Miss 
. — Moore. 

With  wrath-flushed  cheeks,  and  eyelids  red.  See 
Ahmed. — Bensel. 

Withdraw  not  yet  those  lips  and  fingers.  See  Song: 
"Withdraw  not  yet,"  etc. — Campbell. 

Withdraw  thee,  soul,  from  strife.  See  Sleep. — 
Brown. 

Wither'd  pansies  faint  and  sweet.  See  Requiem. — 
Paton. 

Within  a  budding  grove.  See  Lover  and  Birds,  The. — 
AUingham. 

Within  a  few  moments  of  their  entry,  all  the  boys.  See 
Tom  Brown's  School  Days  (Tom  Brown  at 
Rugby).— Hughes. 

Within  a  few  years  past  it  has  become  the  fashion. 
See  same. — (The  Nation.) 

Within  a  garden's  quiet  close.  See  Origin  of  the  Red 
Moss  Rose. — Anon. 

Within  a  low-thatch'd  hut,  built  in  a  lane.  See  Net- 
braiders,  The. — Wade. 

Within,  a  panic  stricken  throng.  See  Imprisoned. — - 
Lefevre. 

Within  a  pleasant  shaded  pool.  See  Ballad  of  the 
Overconfident  PoUywog.  The. — Du  Bois. 

Within  a  poor  man's  squalid  home  I  stood.  See 
Vision. — Howell.s. 

Within  a  room,  long  consecrate  to  thought.  See 
Twenty-one  To-day. — Coates. 

Within  a  squirrel's  leap  of  the  wood.  See  Little  Min- 
ister, The  (Scene  from  "The  Little  Mini.ster"). — 
Barrie. 

Within  a  thick  and  spreading  hawthorne  bush.  See 
Thrush's  Nest.  The.— Clare. 

Within  a  town  of  Holland  once.  See  Open  Door,  The. 
— Anon. 

Within  an  antique  chest  it  lies.  See  Eighteenth-cen- 
tury Fan,  An. — Walker. 

Within  an  attic  old  at  Genoa,  full  many  a  year.  See 
Ivory  Crucifix,  The. — Miles. 

Within  an  upper  chamber  lay  the  king.  See  Death  of 
Gfaarles  the  Ninth,  The. — Moore. 


Within  her  rocky  bosom's  secret  keep.  See  To  a 
Poem. — Wade. 

Within  his  for  the]  sober  realm  of  leafless  trees.  See 
Closing  Scene,  The. — Read. 

Within  me  are  two  souls  that  pity  each.  See  Duality. 
— Hardy. 

Within  my  ears  resounds  that  ancient  song.  See  Song 
of  the  Parcae. — Goethe. 

Within  my  heart  I  long  have  kept.  See  Blondel. — 
Urmy.  ■' 

Within  my  home  that  empty  seemed,  I  sat.  See  Un- 
bidden Guest,  The. — Perry. 

Within  Rome's  Forum  suddenly.  See  Leap  of  Cur- 
tius,  The. — Aspinall. 

Within  the  ancient  College-gate  I  passed.  See  Re- 
membrance, A. — Shairp. 

Within  the  box  whose  gilded  sides.  See  With  Roses. — 
Phelps. 

Within  the  calm  Pacific  Seas.     See  Exiled. — McGuire. 

Within  the  church,  the  light  was  dimmed.  See  Singer 
and  the  Child,  The.— Gross. 

Within  the  dim  museum  room.     See  Caesar. — Irwin. 

Within  the  green  heart  of  a  wood.  See  Chestnut-tree, 
The.— Campbell. 

Within  the  isle,  far  from  the  walks  of  men.  See 
Orion  (In  Forest  Depths). — Home. 

Within  the  letter's  ru.stling  fold.  See  Spring  Flowers 
from  Ireland. — McCarthy. 

Within,  the  master's  desk  is  seen.  See  In  School 
Days  ("Within,  the  master's."  etc.). — Whittier. 

Within  the  mind  strong  fancies  work.  See  Pass  of 
Kirkstone,  The. — Wordsworth. 

Within  the  minister's  venerable  pile  .  See  On  the 
Coronation  of  Queen  Victoria. — Huntington. 

Within  the  navel  of  this  hideous  wood.  See  Comus 
CHaunt  of  the  Sorcerer,  The). — Milton. 

Within  the  precincts  of  this  yard.  See  Beasts  in  the 
Tower,  The. — Lamb. 

Within  the  ruined  church  at  Carmel's  bay.  See 
Junipero  Serra. — White. 

Within  the  sitting  room,  the  company.  See  Evening 
Company,  The. — Riley. 

Within  the  [or  his]  sober  realm  of  leafless  trees.  See 
Closing  Scene,  The. — Read. 

Within  the  sombre  gates,  where  dwell  the  dead,  I 
.stroll.     See  Friend  Death. — Bates. 

Within  the  soul  a  faculty  abides.  See  Excursion,  The 
(Imagination). — Wordsworth. 

Within  the  town  of  Weissnichtwo.  See  Dickens'  Gal- 
lery, The. — Farrah. 

Within  the  unchanging  twilight.  See  Norns  Water- 
ing Yggdrasill,  The. — Scott. 

Within  the  window  of  this  white,  low.  See  Window^ 
Song,  A. — Irwin. 

Within  these  solemn,  book-lined  walls.  See  Baby  in 
the  Library,  The. — Anderson. 

Within  these  woods  of  Arcadie.  See  Sir  Philip  Sid- 
ney.— Royden. 

Within  this  lowly  grave  a  conqueror  lies.  See  Con- 
queror's Grave,  The. — Bryant. 

Within  this  silent  palace  of  the  Night.  See  Moonrise. 
— Sherman. 

Within  'twas  brilliant  all  and  light.  See  Lady  of  the 
Lake,  The.— Scott. 

Without  a  hillock  stretched  the  plain.  See  In  Louisi- 
ana.— De  Forest. 

Without  haste!  without  rest!  See  Haste  Not!  Rest 
Not!— Goethe. 

Without  him  still  this  whirling  earth.  See  Egotism. — 
Martin. 

Without  the  door  let  sorrow  lie.  See  Christmas. 
— Wither. 

Without,  the  howling  of  the  hurricane.  See  De  Ole 
Elder's  Mii3take. — Murray. 

Without,  the  snow  fell  softly  on  the  street.  See  Last 
Night,  The.— Woods. 

Without  'twas  cold  and  cheerless,  and  glooming  into 
night.  See  Old  Soldier's  Story,  The.— Dun- 
can. 

Without  Union,  our  independence  and  liberty  would 
never  have  been  achieved.  See  Union  Linked 
with  Liberty. — Jackson. 

Without  your  showers,  I  breed  no  flowers.  See  May 
to  April. — Freneau. 

Wives  of  great  men  all  remind  us.  See  Wives  of  Great 
Men. — Anon. 

Woe  for  my  vine-clad  home.  See  Soldier's  Widow, 
The.— Willis. 

Woe  for  the  old  ship  Orient  1  See  Brave  Old  Ship,  the 
Orient,  The.-pR.  Lowell. 

Woe!  lightly  to  part  with  one's  soul  as  the  .sea  with  his 
foam !     See  Tarpeia. — Guiney. 


942 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Xantippe 


Woe  unto  them  that  call  evil  good  and  good  evil.     See 

Isaiah  (Woe  follows  Wickedness). — Biole. 
Woman,  disturb  me  not  now  at  the  last.     See  Enoch 

Arden. — Tennyson. 
Woman  may    err,    woman   may   give   her   mind.     See 

Praise  of  Woman. — Mackay. 
Woman  with  satchel  enters  car,  sits  down.     See  How 

a  Woman  Does  it. — Anon. 
Wonderful  to  him  that  has  eyes  to  see  it  rightfully. 
See  Biglow  Fapers.Tne  (Newspaper,  The;. — Lowell. 
W^onderful  whispers   now    float    to    my    ear.     See   Be- 
ware ! — Denton. 
Wondering  maiden,    so   puzzled   and   fair.     <See   What 
the  Wolf  Really  Said  to  Little  Red  Riding-Hood. 
— Harte. 
Wondrous  Interlacement!     See  Morning-glory. — Jack- 
son. 
Wondrous    things    have    come    to    pass.     See    Wizard 

Frost. — Sherman. 
Won't  that  be  grand?     But  do  you  think  we  can  do 

it?     iSee  Frightened  at  Nothing. — Anon. 
Woo  thy  lass  while  May  is  here.     See  Second  Madri- 
gal, The.— De  Tabley. 
Woodchucks  is   a   very    curious  animal.     See    Wood- 
chucks. — Anon. 
Woodman,  spare  that  tree!     See  same. — Morris. 
Woodmen,  shepherds,    come    away.     See   Pan's    Holi- 
day.— Shirley. 
Woof  of  the  fen,  ethereal  gauze.     See  Haze. — Thoreau. 
Word   was  brought  to  the  Danish  king.     See  King  of 

Denmark's  Ride,  The. — Norton. 
Words  are  most  effective  when  arranged  in  that  order 
which  is  called  style.     See  Power  of  Words,  The. 
— Whipple. 
Words  are  the  soul's  ambassadors,  who  go.     See  Words. 

— Howell. 
Words  pass  as  wind,  but  where  great  deeds  were  done. 

See  Under  the  Old  Elm.— Lowell. 
Words,  words,  ye  are  like  birds.     See  Prelude. — Pea- 
body. 
Wordsworth     upon    Helvellyn!     Let    the    cloud.     See 

On  a  Portrait  of  Wordsworth. — Browning. 
Work  and  wait !     Do  not  sit  down,  idly  waiting,  but 

work.     See  Work  and  Wait. — White. 
Work  away !     For  the  Master's  eye  is  on  us.     See  Work 

Away. — Anon. 
Work,  for  the  night  is  coming.     See  same. — Dyer. 
Work  while  you  work,  play  while  you  play.     See  Work 

and  Play. — Stodart. 
Work,  work,  my  boy,  be  not  afraid.     See  Work,  Work, 

My  Boy. — Anon. 
Work — work — work !  from  weary  chime  to  chime.     See 

Song  of  the  Shirt,  The.^Hood. 
Work !,^ work!  work!  till  the  brain  begins  to  swim.     See 

Song  of  the  Shirt,  The.— Hood. 
Worn  and  weary  and  hungry-eyed.     See  Beggar's  Gift, 

The.— Smith. 
Worn  is  the  winter  rug  of  white.     See  Footprints  in  the 

Snow. — -Sherman. 
Worn  tokens  that  old  tales  repeat.     See  Ballad  of  Col- 
lege Days,  A. — (Swarthmore  Phoenix.) 
Worn  voyagers,  who  watch  for  land.     See  At  Sea. — 

Bourdillon. 
Worn  with  the  battle,  by  Stamford  town.     See  Saxon 

Grit.— CoUyer. 
Worschippe  ye  that  loveris  bene  this  May.     See  Spring 

Song  of  the  Birds. — King  James  I. 
Worship,  honor,  glory,  blessing.     See  Praise. — Osier. 
Worship  the  Father,  when  the  lovely  morn.     See  When 

to  Worship. — Anon. 
Worshipper  of  the  Sun  and  Moon.       See    Lines    Pre- 
fixed to  "St.  .John  of  Damascus." — Ainslie. 
Worthless,  wicked  boys  I've  seen.     See  Doing  Nothing. 

— Anon. 
"Wot's  the  matter  ailin'  o'  yer,  Pard?     Be  yer  sick? 

See  Pards. — Merriman. 
Wot's  this? — wot   hever  is   this   'ere?     See  Mad   Cab- 
man's Song  of  Sixpence,  The. — (Punch.) 
Would  God  my  heart  were  greater ;  but  God  wot.     See 

Chastelard. — Swinburn^. 
Would  I  were  lying  in  a  field  of  clover.     See  Woman's 

Wish,  A. — Townsend. 
Would  that  the  structure  brave,   the  manifold  music 

I  build.     See  Abt  Vogler. — Browning. 
Would  the  lark  sing  the  sweeter  if  he  knew.     See  Open 

Secret,  An. — Mason. 
Would  Wisdom  for  herself  be  wooed.       See    Angel    in 

th°  House,  The  (Wisdom). — Patmore. 
Would  ye  be  taught,  ye  feathered  throng.     See  Anne 

Hathaway. — ^Anon. 
Would  ye  learn  the  bravest  thing.     See  "No!" — Eliza 
Cook. 


"Would  ye  like  to  hear  about  it?"     See  Little  Stow- 
away, The. — Anon. 
Would  you  be  young  again?     See  same. — Nairne. 
Would  you  believe  it,  John,  Melinda  Smith  has  writ 
me  a   letter.     See  Visit   from   the   Smiths,  A. — 
Anon. 

Would  you  but  know  the  maiden  fair.     See  In  Doubt. 

— B.  A. 
Would    you    hear    of    an  old-time   [urr.  old-fashioned] 
sea-fight?  See  Song  of  Myself  (Old-fashioned  Sea- 
fight,  An). — Whitman. 
Would  you  hear  of  the  river  fight?     See  River  Fight. 
The.— Brownell. 

Would  you  know  the  baby's  skies?  See  Baby's  Skies. 
— Bartlett. 

Would  you  know  what's  soft?  I  dare.  See  Song: 
"Would  you  know,"  etc.). — Carew. 

Would  you  know  why  I  summoned  you  together? 
See  Brutus;  or,  the  Fall  of  Tarquin  (Lucius 
Junius  Brutus'  Oration,  etc.). — Payne. 

Would  you  laugh,  or  would  you  cry?  See  Archie  Dean. 
— Dodge. 

Would  you  learn  how  the  wind  on  the  prairie  blows? 
See  Winds  of  the  Prairie,  The. — Candy. 

Would  you  object  to  my  proposing  to  you?  See  Cau- 
tious Wooer,  A. — Vinton. 

"Would  you  think  it?"  said  A  to  B.  See  Effort  of 
Memory,  An. — Anon. 

Wouldst  know  the  artist?  Then  go  seek.  See  Art. — 
Perry. 

Wouldst  thou  heare  what  man  can  say.  See  Epitaph 
on  Elizabeth  L.  H. — Jonson. 

Wouldst  thou  ken  nature  in  her  better  part?  See 
Eclogue  the  Third. — Chatterton. 

Wouldst  thou  live  long?  the  only  means  are  these. 
See  He  Lives  Long  who  Lives  Well.  —  Ran- 
dolph. 

Wouldst  thou  view  the  lion's  den?  See  Lion  and  the 
Giraffe,  The.— Pringle. 

Wo-weary  and  wetshod  went  I  forth  after.  See  Vision 
of  Piers  the  Plowman,  The. — I./angland. 

Wrapped  in  a  sadly  tattered  gown.  See  Ashes. — 
Sterry. 

Wrapped  in  the  mantle  of  imagination.  See  March 
of  Mind,  The.— Bard. 

Wreathe  no  more  lilies  in  my  hair.  See  Summer  Is 
Ended,  The. — Rossetti. 

Wreathe  the  bowl.     See  same. — Moore. 

Write  a  poem  for  the  "Lit."     See  same. — Yeomans. 

Write  it  on  the  workhouse  gate.  See  "^  Write  It.— - 
Anon. 

"Write  me  an  epic,"  the  warrior  said.  See  One  Word. 
— Bruce. 

Write,  write,  write,  I  must  write  a  poem.  See  Memory 
and  Hope. — Boyd. 

Wrote  a  po°t  long  ago.  See  Tastes  of  Yesterday,  The. 
— R.  K.  K. 

Wud  I  till  yez  'bout  the  toime.  See  Miss  O'MuUigan 
Takes  a  Bicycle  Ride. — Savage. 

Wuffaw  yo'  look  a'  me  laike  dat?  See  Pattin'  Juba. — 
Wadleigh. 

Wunst  I  .sassed  my  Pa,  an'  he.  See  Runaway  Boy,  The. 
— Riley. 

Wunst  upon  a  time  wunst.  See  Impromptu  Fairy- 
tale, An. — Riley. 

Wun.st  'way  West  in  Illinoise.  See  Bear  Family,  A. — 
Riley. 

Wunst  we  went  a-fishin' — me.  See  Fishing  Party, 
The.— Riley. 

Wust  scrape  I  eber  [or  ever]  got  into  wid  ole  Marsa 
John  was  ober  Henny  [or  a  goose].  See  One- 
legged  Goose,  The. — Smith. 

W'y,  one  time  wuz  a  little-weenty  dirl.  See  Maymie's 
Story  of  Red  Riding  Hood. — Riley. 

W'y,  Sammy !— Who's  that,  Sam?  See  Sam  Weller  and 
his  Father. — Dickens. 

W'y,  wunst  they  wuz  a  Little  Boy  went  out  in  the 
woods.     See  Bear  Story,  The. — Riley. 

Wyatt  resteth  here  that  quick  could  never  rest.  See 
On  the  Death  of  Sir  Thomas  Wyatt. — Surrey. 

Wynken,  Blynken,  and  Nod  one  night.  See  Dutch 
Lullaby,  A.— Field. 

Wynter  wakeneth  all  my  care.  See  This  World's  Joy. 
— Anon. 

Wyth  that  came  Ryott,  russhynge  all  at  once.  See 
Picture  of  Riot. — Skelton. 


Xantippe,  I  know,  was  a  terrible  scold.    'See  Defence 
of  Xantippe,  A. — Anon. 


943 


Yah 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Yah,  I  shpeaks  English  a  leetle;  berhaps  you  shpeaks 
petter  der  German.  See  Lookout  Mountain,  1863 
— Beutelsbach,   1880. — Catlin.  . 

Yah  [or  Yaw]  vohl!  yah  vohl!  Dad  man  he  svindle 
me.  See  Dutchman  in  the  Police  Court,  The. — 
Anon.  ,      ,      J- 

Yale  and  Princeton  stand  to-day  as  the  leading  types 
of  sound  conservatism.  See  Yale  and  Princeton. 
— Anon.  ^  ,  .■     i 

Yankee  Doodle  sent  to  town.  See  Last  Appendix  to 
Yankee  Doodle,  The.— (PuncA.)  c,     ,,     t 

Yard  engine  "Louisa"  B.  C-R.  &  N.  See  Spell  of 
Rhyme,  A.— Burdette. 

Yaw  [or  Yah]  vohl,  yah  vohl!  Dad  man  he  svindle 
me.     See  Dutchman  in  the  Police  Court,   Ihe.— 

Anon.  ct      r^  ■     '     n       t 

Yaw!  yust  I  vas  one  happy  mans.     See  tritz  s  uouri- 

ship. — Hall.  p 

Ye  Alps  audacious,  through  the  heavens  that  rise.     Aee 

Hasty  Pudding,  The.— Barlow.  .    j         c 

Ye  ancients  of  the  earth,  beneath  whose  shade.     Aee 

Cedars  of  Lebanon,  The.— Landon. 
Ye  are  young,  ye  are  young.     See  Old  Man  s  bong.  An. 

— Le  Gallienne.  ^,    ■   ». 

Ye  ask  me  why   I'm  mad— again.     See  Mad  Mag.— 

Ye  banks  and  braes  and  streams  around.     See  High- 
land Mary.— Burns.  „      t.     i      „> 
Ye  bank?  and  braes  o'  bonnie  Doon.     bee  BanKs  o 

Doon,  The. — Burns.  .t,    o 

Ye  blushing  virgins  happy  are.     See  Castara  (  lo  Koses 

in  the  Bosom  of  Castara).— Habingtpn. 
Ye  brethren  blest,  ye  holy  maids.     See  Saint  Matthew. 

— ^Keble.  „  ^    ^u 

Ye  call  me  chief;  and  ye  do  weU.     See  Spartacus  to  the 

Gladiators  at  Capua.— Kellogg. 
Ye  children,  be  gay.     See  some.— Ruggles. 
Ye  children  of  man,  whose  life  is  a  span.     See  Biras, 

The. — Aristophanes. 
Ye  children  of  the  mountain,  sing  of  your  craggy  peaks. 

See  Surf  along  the  Shore,  The.— Lincoln. 
Ye  clouds !  that  far  above  me  float  and  pause.      See 

France:  An  Ode. — Coleridge. 
Ye  come,  then,  once  again!     Come  ye  as  slaves  or  tree- 
men?     See  Rienzi's  Last  Appeal  to  the  Romans. — 

Rienzi.  .  „ 

Ye  crags  and  peaks,   I'm  with  you  once  again!     bee 

William     Tell    (William    Tell's    Address    to    his 

Native  Hills). — Knowles. 
Ye    distant    spires,  ye    antique    towers.    ■  See    On    a 

Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College. — Gray. 
"Ye  doubtless  thought— for  ye  judge  of  Roman  virtue 

by  your  own."     See  Regulus  to  the  Carthaginians. 

— Kellogg. 
Ye  elements!  in  which  to  be  resolved.      See    Manno 

Faliero  fCurse  of  Marino  Faliero,  The). — Byron. 
Ye  elves  of  hills,  brooks,  standing  lakes  and  groves. 

See    Tempest,    The    (Speech   of    Prospero,   A). — 

Shakespeare. 
Ye  flowery  banks  o'  bonnie  Doon.     See  Banks  o'  Doon. 

The.— Burns. 
Ye  freemen,  how  long  will  ye  stifle.     See  Oath,  The. — 

Read. 
Ye  friends  of  moderation.     See  Temperance  Rhyme- 

ation. — ^Anon. 
Ye  genii  of  the  nation.     See  Battle  of  Limerick,  The. — 

Thackeray. 
Ye  gentlemen  of  England.     See  same. — Parker. 
Ye  gie  corn  unto  my  horse.     See  Drowned  Lovers,  The. 

— Anon. 
Ye  golden  lamps  of  heaven,  farewell.     See  same. — Dod- 
dridge. 
Ye  good  men  of  the  Commons,  with  loving  hearts  and 

true.     See  Virginia. — Macaulay. 
Ye  have  been  fresh  and  green.     See  To  Meadows. — 

Herrick. 
"Ye  have  robb'd  me,"  said  he,  "ye  have  slaughter'd 

and  made  an  end."     See  He  Fell  among  Thieves. 

— Newbolt. 
Ye  hearts    with    youthful    vigor    warm.  See  Youthful 

Piety. — Doddridge. 
Ye  heavv-hearted  mariners.     See  To  My  Companions. 

— Channing. 
Ye  herds  that  haunt  the  country  ways.     See  Shut  Your 

Cattle  in.— Rude. 
Ye  Highlands  and  ye  Lawlands.     See  Bonny  Earl  of 

Murray,  The. — Anon. 
Ye  human  screech-owls,   who  delight  to  herald  woe. 
.See  Lachrymose  Writers. — Smith. 


Ye  ice-falls!  ye  that  from  the  mountain's  brow.     See 

Hymn  before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. — 

Coleridge.  .  „       t~    ■ 

Ye  learned  sisters,  which  have  oftentimes.     See  Lpi- 

thalamion.— Spenser. 
Ye   little   birds   that   sit   and   sing.      See  Go,   Pretty 

Birds. — Hey  wood. 
Ye  little  elves,  who  haunt   sweet  dells.     See  Cecil. — 

Ramal.  .  ,     .      c     •, 

Ye  little  snails.     See  Remonstrance  with  the  bnails. — 

Anon. 
Ye  living  lamps,  by  whose  dear  light.     See  Lover  to 

the  Glow-worms,  The. — Marvell.  ^ 

Ye  Lords   and   Commons,   men   of  wit.     See   Sandy  s 

Ghost. — Pope. 
Ye  loyal  Macdonalds,  awaken!  awaken!     See  Lament 

for  Glencoe. — Campbell. 
Ye  Mariners  of  England !     See  same. — Campbell. 
Ye  maun  gang  to  your  father,  Janet.     See  Fair  .Janet. 

— Anon. 
Ye  may  drink,  if  ye  list.     See  sam^. — Pease. 
Ye  may    tramp    the    world    over.     See   Ould    Doctor 

Mack. — CJraves. 
Ye  men   of   Gades,   armed   with   brazen   shields.     See 

Gebir  (Prayers). — Landor.  ,       ,     ■      . 

Ye  men  of  Sparta,  listen  to  the  hope  with  which  the 

Gods    inspire    Leonidas!      See    Leonidas    to    his 

Three  Hundred. — Leonidas. 
Ye  men  of  wit  and  social  eloquence.     See  Monody  on 

the  Death  of  Sheridan. — Byron. 
Ye  midnight  shades,  o'er  nature  spread !     See  Funeral 

Hymn,  A.— Mallett. 
Ye  mists  and  exhalations,  that  now  rise.     See  Hymn 

of  Praise. — Milton. 
Ye  muses,  pour  the  pitying  tear.     See  Great  Man,  A. — 

Goldsmith. 
"Ye   must   be   bom   again!"     Will   had   begun.     See 

Will's  Desire. — Thomas. 
Ye  noisie   sleighride   starts  with  merrie  din.     See    le 

Sleighride  Partie. — Stevens. 
Ye  nymphs,  if  e'er  your  eyes  were  red.     See  On  the 

Death  of  Mrs.   Throckmorton's  Bullfinch.— Cow- 

per. 
Ye  nymphs  of  Solyma!  begin  the  song.     See  Messiah. — 

Pope. 
Ye  parliament  of  England.     See  same. — Anon. 
Ye  powers  that  rule  the  tongue,  if  such  there  are.     See 

Conversation  (Contradiction). — Cowper. 
Ye  say  they  all  have  passed  away — that  noble  race  and 

brave.     See  Indian  Names. — Sigourney.  ' 
Ye    scattered  [scatter'd — C]  birds   that   faintly    sing. 

See  Lament  for  James,  Earl  of  Glencairn. — Burns. 
Ye  see,  boys,  Parson  Williams— he's  dead  now.     See 

Sam   Lawson's  Fireside  Stories   (Parson's,  Horse 

Race,  The). — Stowe.  .    , 

"Ye  see  that  item  in  one  of  the  papers  'bout  tamin 

young    alligators."     See    Taming    an    Alligator. 

— Anon. 
Ye  sent  for  me,  and  I  shall  come.     See  Metamora.— 

Stone. 
"Ye  shall  find  the  babe."     See  same. — A.  R.  G. 
Ye  shall  know  that  in  Atli's  feast-hall  on  the  side  that 

joined  the  house.  See  Story  of  Siecurd  the  Volsung. 

The  (Slaying  of  the  Niblung«,  The). — Morris. 
Ye  shepherds  so  cheerful  and  gay.     See  Pastoral,  A. — 

Shenstone. 
Ye  sigh  not  when  the  sun,   his  course  fulfilled.     See 

Old  Man's  Funeral,  The. — Bryant. 
Ye  smooth-faced  sons  of  Jacob,  hug  close  your  ingle- 
side.     See    Song    of    the    Sons    of    Esau,    The. — 

Runkle. 
Ye  sons  of  Columbia,  who  bravely  have  fought.     See 

Columbia  and  Liberty. — Paine. 
Ye  sons  of  Freedom     [or  France],  wake  [or  awake]  to 

glory!     See  Marseillaise,  The. — Ij'Isle. 
Ye  sons  of  Massachusetts,  all  who  love  that  honored 

name.     See  Sudbury  Fight,  The. — Rice. 
Ye  sons  of  this  grand  land  of  Liberty.     See  "Ring! 

Ring!  of  Liberty  and  Peace!" — Carrington. 
Ye  stand  here  now  like  giants,  as  ye  are.     See  Spar- 
tacus to  the  Gladiators. — Kellogg. 
Ye  stars!  which  are  the  poetry  of  heaven.     See  Childe 

Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Stars). — Byron. 
Ye  that   listen   to   stories  told.     See   Wolves,   The. — 

Trowbridge. 
Ye  tradefull  merchants,  that,  with  weary  toyle.     See 

Amoretti  and  Epithalamion  (Herself  all  Treasure) . 

— Spenser. 
Ye  /Valleys   low,   where   the  mild   whispers   use.     See 

Lycidas. — Milton. 
Ye  vigorous  youths,    by   smiling    fortune   blest.     See 

chase.  The. — Somerville. 


944 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Yes 


Ye  virgins,  that  did  late  despair.     See  Imposture,  The. 

— Shirley. 
Ye  wha  are  fain  to  hae  your  name.     See  Braid  Claith. 

— Fergusson. 
Ye  white  Sicilian  Goats,  who  wander  all.     See  Little 

Theocritus. — Paradise. 
Ye  who    have    scorned    each    other.     See    Under   the 

Holly  Bough. — Mackay. 
Ye  who  would  have  [or  save]  your  features  florid.     See 

Moral  Cosmetics. — Smith. 
Ye  whose    utmost    strength    is    weakness.     See    Wait 

upon  the  Lord. — Adams. 
Ye  winds,  ye  unseen  currents  of  the  air.     See  Winds, 

The.— Bryant. 
Ye  Yankee  volunteers!     See  Yankee  Volunteers,  The. 

— Thackeray. 
Yea;  but  no  man  now  is  still.     See  Shepherd's  Hunt- 
ing, The  (Eclogue). — Wither. 
Yea,  fear  not,  fear  not,  little  ones.     See  Fear  Not. — 

Anon. 
Yea,  let  me  praise  my  lady  whom  I  love.     See  Vita 

Nuova  (Her  Helpfulness). — Dante. 
Yea,  Lord! — Yet    some    must    serve.     See    Martha.— 

Dorr. 
Yea,  love,   I  know,   and   I  would  have  it  thus.     See 

Love's  Poor. — Le  Gallienne. 
Yea,  Love  is  strong  as  life.     See  Sonnet,  Suggested  by 

Mr.   Watts'    Picture  of    Love  and   Death.— Lind- 
-Rad- 


say. 


Year  after  year  I  sit  for  them.     See  Model,  A. 

ford. 
Year  after  year  the  leaf  and  the  shoot.     See  Mystery, 

The. — Savage-Armstrong. 
Year  after  year  unto  her  feet.     See    Day-dream,  The 

(Sleeping  Beauty,  The). — Tennyson. 
Years  ago  a  child  held  a  sea  shell  to  his  ear.     See  Child 

and  Sea-shell. — -Anon. 
Years  ago  I  was  not  the  thing  that  I  am  now.     See 

Last  Days  of  Pompeii  (Witch  of  Vesuvius,  The). 

— Bulwer-Lytton. 
Years  ago,  on  a  grim  December  night,  the  city  of  New 

York  was  scourged.     See  Rescue,  The. — Taylor. 
Years  ago   there   dwelt  in   middle   Georgia.     See  Two 

Runaways,   The. — Edwards. 
Years  ago,    there    lived    a    painter.     See    Story    of    a 

Picture. — Anon. 
Years  ago,  when  every  gentleman  in  western  Europe. 

See  Conjugating  Dutchman,  The. — Holmes. 
Years  ago  when  plain  and  forest  stretched  unmarred 

from  sea  to  sea.     See  Legend  of  Kalooka,  The. — 

Jones. 
Years  ago,  while   Christmas    carols  echoed  all  adown 

the  street.     See  Christmas  Blessing,  A. — Anon. 
Years  an'  years  ago,  when  I.     See  Father's  Voice. — 

Anon. 
Years  have  flown  since  I  knew  thee  first.      See  Song: 

"Years  have  flown,"  etc. — Gilder. 
Years,  many  parti-colour'd  years.     See  Tears. — Lan- 

dor. 
Years  since   (but  names  to  me  before).     See  Singer, 

The.— Whittier. 
Years,  years  ago,  ere  yet  my  dreams.     See  Belle  of  the 

Ball,  The.— Praed. 
"Yee-ho,     my     hearties!"     the     skipper     cried.     See 

Traitor  Sea,  The. — Corrie.   ' 
Ye'U  no  fret  ye  mair  the  noo.     See  Jamie's  Word  wi' 

the  Sea. — Cole. 
Yellow  and  white,  vellow  and  white.     See  Yellow  and 

White.— McGaffey. 
Yellow-bird,  where  did  you  learn  that  song.     See  Yel 

low-bird. — Thaxter. 
"Yer  axes  me  what  dis  heah  is,  sah?"     See  "Ole  Mar- 

ster's"  Christmas,  The. — Small. 
Yer  eyes  t'row  out  the  very  tint.     See  Mucker's  Love 

Song,  The. — Dudley. 
Yer  honor,  I  pleads  guilty;  I'm  a  bummer.     See  Sol- 
dier Tramp,  The. — Carlino. 
"Yer  kin  talk  'bout  yer  Salvaytor,  and  yer  Procter 

Knott."     See  Unregistered  Record,  An. — Cherry. 
Yer  kin  talk  erbout  yer  Barnharts,  an'  yer  Rehans, 

an'    yer   Dooses.     See    Uncle    Eben's   Opinion. — 

Anon. 
"Yer  know  me  little  nipper."     See  Little  Nipper  an' 

'is  Ma,  The. — Gouraud. 
Yer  spakin'   of  musther  was   a-moindin'   me   of   Mick 

Murphy  and  Dan  Collins.     See  First  Adventures 

in  England. — Anon. 
Yes,  Aunt  Jennie,  I  was  six  years  old  last  Saturday. 

See  Carrie's  Birthday  Cake. — Anon. 
Yes!  bear  them  to  their  rest.     See  Hymn  to  Night. — 

Bethune. 
Yes,  boy,  that  night  I  remember  well,  though  it  was 

twenty  years  ago.     See  Marco's  Death. — Wood. 


Yes,  bread!  I  want  bread!     You  heard  what  I  said. 

See  Old  Soldier  Tramp,  The.— Miller. 
"Yes,  Bridget  has  gone  to  the  city."     See   Mamma's 

Help ! — Anon. 
Yes,  Cara,    mine,  I    know    that    I    shall    stand.     See 

Island  of  Shadows,  The. — -Garnett. 
Yes,  children,  I  can  see  it  still,  that  rude  old  fortress 

there.     See    Story    of    an    Ambuscade,     The. — 

Hayne. 
Yes,  Christmas  day  has  come  at  last.     See  Little  Girl's 

Christmas,  A. — Anon. 
Yes,  courage,  boy, — courage,  and  press  on  thy  way. 

See  Do  Right. — Anon. 
Yes,  cross  in  rest  the  little,  snow-white  hands.     See 

Not  Lost. — Collier. 
Yes,  dar  he  is;  dar  is  Marse  George.     See  Uncle  Pete. 

— Anon. 
Yes,  darling  one,   I  will  rock  thee  to  sleep!     See  In 

Heaven  I'll  Rock  Thee  to  Sleep. — Anon. 
Yes,  death  is  at  the  bottom  of    the  cup.     See  If. — 

Howells. 
Yes,  Debby,   'twas  a  disapp'intment ;  and  though  of 

course,    I   try.     See   Miss   Minerva's   Disappoint- 
ment.— Corbett. 
Yes,  Dr.  Sprout,   Mrs.  Smith  sent  for  me,  you  know. 

See  His  First  Case.— Griffith. 
Yes!  e'en   in   sleep   the   impressions   all   remain.     See 

Borough,      The      (Convict's      Dream,      The). — 

Crabbe. 
"Yes,  Eliza,"  said  George,  "I  know  all  you  say  is  true." 

See  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin  (Freeman's  Defence,  The). 

— Stowe. 
Yes,  faith  is  a  goodly  anchor.     See  After  the  Burial. — 

Lowell. 
Yes,  Gertrude,  I  remember  well.     See  St.  John's  Eve. 

— Kickham. 
Yes,  God  has  made  me  a  woman.     See  My  Rights. — 

Wooley. 
Yes,  God  is  good,  I'm  told.     See  Faith. — Piatt. 
Yes, — he  was  one  o'  the  best  men.     See  Widow  Bedott 

Papers  (Widow Bedott's  Poetry,  The). — Whitcher. 
Yes,  he  was  that,  or  that,  as  you  prefer.     See  T.  A.  H. 

— Bierde. 
Yes!  hope  may  with  my  strong  desire  keep  pace.     See 

Sonnet:  "  Yes.  hope,"  etc. — Michelangelo. 
Yes !  I  also  am  an  Arcadian.     See  Arcadian  Club,  The. 

— Bradley. 
Yes !  I  am  determined  to  be  a  model  housekeeper.     See 

Little  Women  (Family  Jar,  A). — Alcott. 
"Yes,  I  am  off  to-morrow  morn!"     See  First  Parting, 

The. — Douglass. 
"Yes!"  I  answered  you  last  night.     See  Lady's  Yes, 

The. — Browning. 
Yes,  I  been  to  the  city  onct,  an'  if  I'm  forgiven  for  that 

I'll  never  go  ag'in.     See  Betsy  Hawkins  Goes  to 

the  City. — Anon. 
Yes,  I  declare  Mr.  Smallboy  was  quite  insulting.     See 

Eligible  Situation,  An. — Archer  and  Brough. 
Yes,  I  do  love  thee  well,  my  child.     See  To  George 

M . — Miller. 

Yes,  I  got  another  Johnny -but  he  was  to  Number  One. 

See  My  Other  Chinee  Cook. — Stephens. 
Yes,  I  have  always  found  it  so.     See  Reconstructed 

Man,   A. — Anon. 
Yes,  I   have   heard   the   nightingale.     See  Hast  Thou 

Heard  the  Nightingale? — Gilder. 
Yes,  I  have  served  on  a  jury!  'tis  duty  for  a  man.     See 

Juryman's  Story,  A. — Blake. 
Yes!  I  have  served  that   noble  chief  throughout   his 

proud  career.     See  Spanish  Mother,  The. — Doyle. 
Yes,  I  hev  thought  the  matter  over  fur  some  time.  See 

Running  for  Office. — McBride. 
Yes,  I  know  I'm  only  a  tramp.     See  Tramp's  Story, 

The. — Richmond. 
Yes,  I  know  there  are  stains  on  my  carpet.     See  What 

Mother  Says. — Anon. 
Yes,  I  know  what  you  say.     See  Tempted. — Sill. 
"Yes,  I  liked  you  at  first,  I  must  confess."     See  In- 
ternational Episode,  An. — Hall. 
Yes,     I   once  committed   a   murder.     See   Engineer's 

Murder,  The. — Morford. 
Yes;  I  own  I  start  at  shadows.     See  Shadows. — Anon. 
Yes,  I    shall   sleep!     Some   sunny   day.     See   same. — 

Urquhart. 
Yes,  I   s'pose  it's  real  music — it's  a  mighty  heap  o' 

sound.     See  At  the   Concert. — Gordon. 
Yes,  I  was  wrong  about  the  phoebe-bird.     See  Phoebe- 
bird,  The. — Lathrop. 
Yes;  I  write  verses  now  and  then.     See  Time  to  be 

Wise. — Landor. 
"Yes,  I'm   guilty,"   the  prisoner  said.     See  Yes,  I'm 

Guilty.— Munyon. 


945 


Yes 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


"Yes,  I'm  here,  I  suppose  you're  delighted.     See  Lake 

Mahopac — Saturday  Night. — Baker. 
Yes,  I'm  old  and  rough  and  gaunt.     See  Oak's  Fare- 
well, The. — Slpver. 
Yes!  in  the  sea  of  life  enisled.     See  To  Marguerite. — 

Arnold. 
Yes,  it  is  a  long  way  up  these  two  flights  of  .steep  stairs. 

See  From  the  Window. — Marsh. 
Yes,  it  is  just  one  year  ago  to-night.     See  Shadow  of 

a  Song,  The. — Ilae-Brown. 
Yes,  it  was  the  mountain  echo.     See  Mountain  Echo, 

The. — Wordsworth. 
Yes,  it's  a  quiet  station,  but  it  suits  nie  well  enough. 

See  In  the  Signal  Box:  a  Station  Master's  Story. — 

Sims. 
Yes,  I've   been   [a]   deacon   of  our   church.     See   Old 

Deacon's  Lament,  The. — Corbett. 
"Yes,  I've  had  a  good  many  fights  in  my  time."     See 

Mark  Twain  on  .luvenile  Pugilists. — Clemens. 
Y'es,  I've  worked  here,  inside  this  mine,  twelve  years. 

See  Unknown  Hero,  .\n. — Bogart. 
Yes,  John  Brent,  you  were  right  when  you  called  Lug- 

gernel    .\lley.     See  Gallop  of   Three,   The. — Win- 

throp. 
Yes,  John,  I  was  down  thar  at  Memphis.     See  Them 

Yankee  Blankits. — Small. 
Yes,  June  is  here  an'  now,  by  jing!  it  won't  be  long 

until.     See  When  the  Summer  Boarders  Come. — 

Waterman. 
Yes,  lady,  that  one  strip  of  blue.     See  Crippled  Joe. — 

Thorpe. 
Yes,  law  is  a  great  thing,  mister,  but  justice  comes  in 

ahead.     See  Justice  in  Leadville. — Rich. 
Y'es,  leave  it   with   him.     See   Leave   it   with    Him. — 

Anon. 
Yes.     "Let  the  tent  be  struck."     See  "Gone  Forward." 

—Preston. 
Yes,  let  us  speak,  with  lips  confirming.     See  Consola- 
tion.— Larminie. 
Yes,  Liab  brought  home  from  the  lawyer's  that  paper 

for  me  to  sign.     See  Why  Liab  and  I  Parted. — 

Emerson. 
Yes,  Love  indeed  is  light   from  heaven.     See   Giaour, 

The  (Love).^Byron. 
Yes,  Love,  the  Spring  shall  come  again.  .  See  Love's 

Autumn. — Payne. 
Yes,  Marian,   that  is  where  you  mistake.     See  Matri- 
monial Mix,  A. — Meyers. 
"Yes,  Mary,"  said  the  old  farmer,  as  he  climbed  into 

the  wagon.     See  Making  a  Man  of  the  Boy. — -Anon. 
Ves!  mourn   the  soul,   of  high   and   pure  intent.     See 

Sonnet:     Majuba  Hill. — Ingram. 
Yes,  M'rilly's  bin  house-cleaning  'n  I'm  sleepin'  in  the 

shed.     See  House-cleaning. — Lee. 
Yes,  my  child,  we'll  .send  out  a  great  many  invitations. 

See  Fashionable  Hospitality. — Dallas. 
Yes,  noble    Galileo,    thou     art     right.      See    Uses    of 

Astronomy,  The  (Galileo^ — Everett. 
Yes,  oh,  yes!  I  understand   it  perfectly,  aye,  only  too 

well!     See  Wonderful  Lamp,  The. — .\non. 
Yes,  pard,  I'm  aware  it  looks  odd  like  ter  see  an  old- 
timer  like  me.     See  Sara. — Sutton. 
"Yes,"  remarked  the  St.   Paul  man  to  a  friend  from 

Chicago.     See  Where  They  never  Feel  the  Cold. — 

Anon. 
Yes,  said  the  young  man,  as  he  threw  himself  at  the 

feet  of  the  pretty  school-teacher.     See  Courting 

and  Science. — Anon. 
Yes,  scatter  flowers  above  the  graves.     See  Decora- 
tion Day. — ('ampbell. 
Yes,  seventeen      hundred      thirty-two.     See      George 

Washington. — Anon. 
Yes,  sing  the  song  of  the  orange  tree.     See  same. — 

Hoyt. 
Yes,  sir,  he  is  at  work  in  the  garden.     See  Changing 

Servants. — Wine. 
Yes,  sir,  I  can  truly  .say  the  house  is  in  perfect  order. 

See  Empty  House,  The. — Graham. 
Yes,  sir,  I  do  believe  in  ghosts.     See  Saved  by  a  Ghost. 

—  Kexford. 
Yes,  sir,   I've  been  in  the  company,  well,  thirty  year 

come     June.     See     Signalman's     Story,     The. — 

Wheeler. 
"Yes,  sir;  we  lived  home  till  our  mother  died."     See 

Two  Orphans,  The. — -King. 
Yes-sir-ree!    to    Uncle    Dock's    house!     See   At    Uncle 

Dock's. — McCollum. 
Yes,  social  friend,  I  love  thee  well.     See  To  My  Cigar. 

— Sprague. 
Yes,  still  I  love  thee!     Time,  who  sets.     See  Love  Un- 
changeable.— Dawes. 
Yes,  stone  the  woman,  let  the  man  go  free!     See  Stone 

the  Woman,  Let  the  Man  Go  Free. — .\non. 


Yes,  surely  the  bells  in  the  steeple  were  ringing;  I 
thought  you  knew  why.  See  Deacon's  Confession, 
The. — Emerson. 

Yes,  that  is  her  picture,  standing  there.  See  Girl  that 
I   Didn't  Get,  The. — Anon. 

Y'es,  that's  her  picture!  She  wa.s — say  forty.  See 
Kate.  —{The  i'nited  Irishman.) 

Yes — that's  my  business,  sir — a  clown.  See  Clown's 
Story,  The. — Brown. 

Yes,  the  evening  was  very  pleasant.     See  But. — Hunt. 

Yes,  there  is  holy  pleasure  in  thine  eye!  See  Admoni- 
tion to  a  Traveller. — Wordsworth. 

Yes,  there  is  that  fellow  Jones,  again.  See  Courtship 
under  Difficulties. — Anon. 

Yes,  there  she  is!  See  'Toinette's  Philip  (Selling  the 
Image). — Jami.son. 

Yes,  this  is  Wicklow!  round  our  feet.  See  Wicklow. — 
Savage-Armstrong. 

Yes,  this  will  do;  that  curl  hangs  languishingly  over 
my  left  temple.  See  Fortune  Hunter,  The. — 
Pickering. 

Yes!  thou  art  fair,  and  I  had  lov'd.  See  Too  Late. — 
Linton. 

Yes,  Thou  art  gone!  and  round  me  too  the  night.  See 
Thyrsis. — Arnold. 

Yes;  Tim,  who  sells  papers,  is  hearty.  See  Milly. — 
Smith. 

Yes!  'tis  old  and  faded  now.  See  Velvet  Coat  of  the 
Last  Century,  A. — Anon. 

Yes,  Tom's  the  best  fellow  that  ever  you  knew.  See 
Tom,  the  Hero. — Woolson. 

Yes,  we  marched  in  the  ranks  to  the  station.  See  Voice 
from  the  Old  Boys  Left  Behind,  A. — Jewett. 

Yes,  we  were  warm  friends.  See  Longfellow,  Extract 
Concerning. — Whittier. 

Yes;  well,  I  know  that  summer's  gone.  See  Her  An- 
swer to  his  Verses. — Burnham. 

Yes,  we'll  rally  'round  the  flag,  boys,  we'll  rally  once 
again.     See  Battle-cry  of  Freedom,  The. — Anon. 

Yes;  when  the  ways  oppose.  See  Ars  Victrix. — Dob- 
.son. 

Yes,  yes;  all  is  ready;  not  for  a  minute.  See  Leap  Year 
in  the  Village  with  One  Gentleman. — Anon. 

Yes,  yes,  godfather,  make  your  mind  easy.  See 
"Wanted,  a  Young  Lady." — Suter. 

Yes,  yes,  my  boy,  there's  no  mistake.  See  M'llrath  of 
Malate. — Rooney. 

Yes,  you  despise  the  man  to  books  confin'd.  See 
Moral  Essays. — Pope. 

Yessum,  it's  me'r  whut's  left  of  me.  See  Aunt  Susan's 
Quilt.— Wood. 

Yesterday  contains  all  the  battle-flelds  in  which  free- 
dom was  gradually  wrought  out.  See  Yesterday. 
— Swing. 

Yesterday  I  dragged  wearily  along.  See  same. — 
O.  F. 

Yesterday  I  walked  down  to  that  part  of  the  town. 
See  These  Dreadful  "Hard  Times." — Anon. 

Yesterday  morning  a  tall  young  man  of  twenty.  See 
Overcoat  He  Got,  The. — Anon. 

Yesterday,  out  of  my  window.     See  "No." — Rexford. 

Yesterday,  Rebecca  Mason.  See  Rebecca's  After- 
thought.— 'Turner. 

Yesterday  was  brave  Hallowday.  See  Sir  Hugh ;  or, 
The  .Jew's  Dauglfter. — Anon. 

Yesternight,  as  I  .sat  with  an  old  friend  of  mine.  See 
Shoemaker's  Daughter,  The. — English. 

Yet  a  few  days,  and  thee.     See  Thanatopsis. — Bryant. 

Yet  a  few  years  and  the  shades  and  structures  may 
follow.     See  Holland  House. — Macaulay. 

Yet  a  little  longer.  See  Last  Robin,  The. — Wash- 
burn. 

Yet  ah,  that  Spring  should  vanish  with  the  rose!  See 
Rubiliyftt  ot  Omar  Khayyiim  (And  Yet — and 
Yet!). — Fitzgerald. 

Yet,  ah!  why  should  they  know  their  fate?  See  On  a 
Distant  Prospect  of  Eton  College. — Gray. 

Yet  do  I  fear  thy  nature.  See  Macbeth  (Hesitation). 
— Shakes)>eare. 

Yet  half  mankind  maintain  a  churlish  strife.  See 
Grace  and  the  World. — Cowper. 

Yet  here,  Laertes!  aboard,  aboard,  for  shame.  See 
Hamlet  (Polonius  to  Laertes). — Shakespeare. 

Yet,  here's   a   spot.     See  Macbeth. — Shakespeare. 

Yet  if  His  Majesty,  our  sovereign  lord.  See  Prepara- 
tions.— Anon. 

Yet  if  some  voice  that  man  could  trust,  ."^ee  In 
Memoriam .  — Tenny.son . 

Yet,  like  some  .sweet  beguiling  melody.  See  H.ymn 
before  Sunrise  in  the  Vale  of  Chamouni. — Cole- 
ridge. 

Yet  love  will  dream  and  faith  will  trust.  See  Snow- 
bound.— Whittier. 


946 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


You  cannot 


"Yetmauger   Jove,    and   all    his   gods   besides."     See 
Faerie  Queene,  The  (Claims  of  Mutability  Pleaded 
before   Nature). — Spenser. 
Yet  nerve  thy   spirit  to    the    proof.     See    Battle-field, 

The  ("Yet  nerve,"  etc.). — Bryant. 
Yet,  no — not  words  for  the.v.     See  same. — Moore. 
Yet,  O   my  friend — pale  conjurer,   I   call.     See  Bring 

Them  not  Back. — Kenyon. 
Yet  once  again,   O  man!  come  forth  and   view.     See 

Vision  of  Immortality,  The. — Weston. 
Yet  once  more,   O   ye   Laurels,   and   once   more.     See 

Lycidas. — Milton. 
Yet  one  alone  deserves  our  care.     See  Marmion  (Con- 
vent Scene). — Scott. 
Yet  one    smile    more,     departing,    distant    sun!     See 

November. — Bryant. 
Yet  pure    its    waters — its    shallows    are    bright.     See 

Green  River. — Bryant. 
Yet  the  first  bringer  of  unwelcome   news.       See    King 

Henry  IV.,  Pt.    II. — Shakespeare. 
Yet,  'tis  not  helm  or  feather.     See    Oh,  the  Sight    En- 
trancing.— Moore. 
Yet  with  hands  by  evil    stained.       See   Andrew  .Ryk- 
man's  Prayer  ("Yet  with  hands,"  etc.). — Whittier. 
"  Yeth!  And  Chimo  to  sleep  at  ve  foot  of  ve  bed.     See 

His  Majesty  the  King. — Kipling. 
Ye've  gathered  to  your  place  of  prayer.  ,  See  Burial  of 
the   Champion   of  his  Class,   at   Yale   College. — 
Willis. 
Yield,  madman,  yield!  Thy  horse  is  down.     See  same. 

— Boker. 
Yimmey,  I  hof  been  havin'  lots  of  fun,  so  I  vill  dole 

you  boud  id.     See  Goin'  to  der  Races. — Honnas. 
Yis,  luk  at  me  now,  if  ye  can,  Tim.     See  What  Biddy 

Said  in  the  Police  Court. — Corbett. 
Yo'  did'n   nebber  hear   'bout   Parson  .linglejaw's  sur- 
prise?   See  Parson  Jinglejaw's  Surprise. — Whipple. 
"Yo  Ho!  my  boys,"  said  Fezziwig.     "No  more  work 
to-night."     See  Christmas  Carol,  A  (Christmas  at 
Fezziwig's  Warehouse). — Dickens. 
Yo'  needn't  look  so  'sprized  at  me.     See  Uncle  Peter 

and  the  Trolley  Car. — Neall. 
Yon  clouds   that    roam    the    deserts   of   the   air.     See 

Bedouins  of  the  Skies,  The. — Kenyon. 
Yon  deep  bark  goes.     See  Drifting. — Read. 
Yon  old  house  in  moonlight  sleeping.     See  Long  De- 
serted.— Mulvany. 
Yon  silverv  billows  breaking  on  the  beach.     See  Son- 
net's Voice,  The. — Watts. 
Yon  window  frames  her  like  a  saint.     See  Fair  Copy- 
holder, The.— Crandall. 
Yonder  is   my   lady's   window.     See   Cyrano    de    Ber- 

gerac  (Scene  from  "Cyrano,"  etc.). — Rostand. 
"You  ain't  never  been  hyeerd  'bout  dem  Botts  twins, 

is  yer?"     See  Botts  Twins,  The. — Stansbury. 
You  all  have  .seen  the  picture  of  that  wonderful  sculp- 
ture.    See  Garfield. — Fuller. 
You  all  knew  Tom  Moody,  the  whipper-in,  well.     See 

Tom  Moody. — Anon. 
You  all   know  her.     See  Woman   Next  Door,  The. — 

Anon. 
You  all  know  the  burden  that  hangs  to  my  song.     See 
Trouble  Your  Head  with  Your  Own  Affairs. — Cook. 
You  all  know  the  Place  de  la  Concorde?  See  Chronicle 
of  the  Drum,  The    (Execution  of  Louis  XVI.). — 
Thackeray. 
You  a]l  know  the  story  of  La  Tour  d'Auvergne,  "The 
First  Grenadier  of  France."     See  "Dead  on  the 
Field  of  Honor." — Chamberlain. 
You  all  of  you  know  the  sandman  old.     See  Sandman's 

Daughter,  The,— Anon. 
Yf)u  always  are  making  a  god  of  your  spouse.     See 

To  a  Lady. — Swift. 
You  are  a  good  scholar,  I  believe,  Tambo.     See  Tambo 

on  Ciphering. — Anon. 
You  are  a  tulip  seen  to-day.     See  Meditation   for  his 

Mistress,  A. — Herrick. 
You  are  about  to  go  into  business.     See  Aim  High. — 

Harrison. 
You  are  all  I  have  to  live  for.     See  My  King. — Anon. 
You  are  amazed,   O   Romans!  even  amid  the  general 
horror  at  Lucretia's  death.      See  Brutus  over  the 
Dead  Lucretia. — Anon. 
You  are  among  the  .small  number  of  those  who  know. 
See  Approach  of  the  Pre.sidency,  The. — Wa.shing- 
ton. 
You  are  apt   to  begin   finding  out  the  dissimilarity. 

See  Travel  in  England. — Anon. 
You  are  coming  to  woo  me,  but  not  as  of  yore.     See 
Lins  that  Touch  Liquor  Must  never  Touch   Mine, 
The. — Young. 
You  are  fond  of  liberty  and  equal  rights,  eh,  Johnson!    I 
See  Stand  for  Liberty,  A. — Anon. 


You  are  fond  of  your  pedigree,  Johnson,  are  you  not? 

See  Johnson's  Ancestors. — Anon. 
"You  are   growing   old,"   they   tell   us.     See  Growing 

Old.— Pike. 
"You  are  old.  Father  William,"  the  young  man  cried, 
"the  few  locks  which  are  left  you  are  gray."     See 
Old  Man's  Comforts,  and  how  He  (Sained  Them, 
The. — Southey. 
"You  are  old.  Father  William,"  the  young  man  said, 
"and    your    hair    has   become  very   white."     See 
Father  William. — Carroll. 
"You  are  old,  Father  William,"  the  young  man  said, 
"and    your   nose    has   a    look    of   surprise."     See 
Father  William. — Anon. 
You  are  quite  a  lady's  man,  dey  tell  me,  Johnson.     See 

Completing  de  Spell. — Anon. 
You  are  struggling  with  difficulties,  you  imagine,  you 
are  mistaken.  See  Catholic  Question,  The,  Feb.  22, 
1793    (Disqualification    of    Roman    Catholics). — 
Graft  an. 
"You  are  the  no-countest,  laziest,  meanest  dog  that 

ever  wore  breeches."     See  Bob. — Grady. 
You  are  told  that  the  public  opinion  seems  to  demand 
the  saloon.     See  Widening  Horizon,  The. — Wil- 
lard. 
"You  are  too  big  a  child  to  be  rocked,"  she  said.     See 

Too  Big  to  be  Rocked. — Wilcox. 
You  are  welcome  home.     See  Honeymoon,  The  (Tam- 
ing a  Wife). — Tobin. 
You  are  wrung  with  grief,  but  you  have  courage  and 

faith.     See  Exile's  Hope,  The.— Hugo. 
You  ask  a  ver.se,  to  sing  (ah,  laughing  face!)     See  To 

a  Lady. — Piatt. 
You  ask  for  fame  or  power?     See  Golden  Text.  The. — 

Cameron. 
You  ask  for  my  name!  ah,  dear  madam,   you  palter. 

See  Epigram  to  a  Young  Lady. — H alpine. 
You  a.sk  me  for  a  pledge,  love,  but  gaze  upon  my  cheek. 

See  You  Ask  Me  for  a  Pledge,  Love. — Watts. 
You  ask  me  for  the  sweetest  sound  my  ears  have  ever 

heard?     See  Across  the  Wheat. — Sangster. 
You  ask   me,   my  dear,   in  your  innocent    way.     See 

Love's  Logic. — Anon. 
You  ask   me  to  tell   you   a  story.     See  Switchman's 

Story,   The. — Ottolengui. 
You  ask  me  what — since  we  must  part.     .S'ee  Gifts. — 

Ewing. 
You  ask  me  whether  I'm  high  church.     See  Puzzled. — 

Slosson. 
"You  ask   me  which  is  the  dearest."     See  Boy  Who 

Went  from  Home,  The. — Johnston. 
You  ask  me,  why,  tho'  ill  at  ease.     See  same. — Tenny- 
son. 
You  ask  the  name  of  that  huge  rock  which  juts  out 

overhead.     See  Van  Bibber's  Rock.— Banks. 
You  ask  what  I  have  to  say  in  my  defen.se.     See  De- 
fen.se  of  Hofer,  the  Tyrolese  Patriot,  The. — Anon. 
You  asked  for  a  song  of  the  olden  days.     See  Arcady. 

— Newton. 
You  Athenians  were  never  known   to  live  contented 
in  a  slavish  though  secure  obedience.     See  Public 
Spirit  of  the  Athenians.— Demosthenes. 
You  awkward  flowers,  I'm  tired  of  you.     See  Lesson 

from  the  Sunflowers,  A. — Denton. 
You  ax  about  dat  music  made.     See  Banjo  of  the  Past, 

The. — Weeden. 
You  beauteous    ladies    great    and    small.     See    Lady 

Turned  Serving-man,  The. — Anon. 
You  bells  in  the  steeple,  ring,  ring  out  your  changes. 
See  Songs  of  Seven  (Seven  Times  Two). — Ingelow. 
You  better  not  fool  with  a  Bumblebee.     See  Bumble- 
bee, The. — Riley. 
You  bid  me  tell  you  why  I  rise.     See  Modern  Cymon, 

The. — Procter. 
You  brave  heroic  minds.     See  To  the  Virginian  Voyage. 

— Drayton. 
"You  bring  news  from  my  lord.  Master  Varney."     See 

Amy  Robsart  and  Richard  Varney. — Scott. 
You  call    me    trifler     faineant.     See    Reformer,    A. — 

Baker. 
You  came  to  us  once,  brothers,  in  wrath.     See  Con- 
quered at  Last. — Eve. 
You    can  always  tell  a  boy  whose  mother  cuts  his  hair. 

See  She  Cut  his  Hair. — Bailey. 
You  can  be  a  fishing  shallop  if  you  cannot  be  a  ship. 

See  Find  Your  Level. — .Jones. 
You  can  pass  on  the  worl'  w'erever  you  lak.     See  De 

Nice  Leetle  Canadienne. — Drummond. 
You  can  write  down  sweet  words  in  a  letter.     See  Last 

Words. — Anon. 
You  cannot  conciliate  America  by  your  present  meas- 
ures.    See  Consequences  of  the  American  War. — 
Chatham. 


947 


You  cannot 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


You  cannot,   I   venture  to  say,   you  cannot  conquer 

America.     See   American  war.  The  (On  Conquer- 
ing   America). — Chatham. 
You  cannot  pay  with  money.     See  Laborers,  The. — 

Anon.  ^ 

"  You  can't  do  this/'  and  "you  mustn't  do  that,"  from 

morning  to  night.     See  Turn  about 's  Fair  Play. — 

Herbert. 
"  You  can't   help  the  baby,   parson."     See  Better  in 

the  Morning. — Coan. 
You  charm  when  you  talk,  walk,  or  move.     See  To 

Madame  de  Sevign(5. — Montreuil. 
You  come,  madam,  from  the  Baron?     See  Princess  and 

the  Countess,  The. — Stevenson. 
You  come  to  tell  me  she  is  dying — is  it  so,  indeed? 

See  Even  in  Death. — Bergen. 
You  cry,    whene'er    you    meet   mc   still.     See   Stingy 

Friend,  The.     Martial. 
You  dear  little  birdie,  who  taught  you  to  sing?     See 

Bird  that  Sings,  The. — Anon. 
You  dear  little  charmer,  you  sweet  little  Miss.     See 

Give  and  Take. — "Bob  o'Link." 
You  dear  old  Mother  Nature,  I  am  writing  you  a  let- 
ter.    See  Letter  to  Mother  Nature,  A. — Dayre. 
You,  Dinah!     Come  and  set  me  whar  de  ribber-roads 

does  meet.     See  Power  of  Prayer,  The. — Lanier. 
You  don't  mean  we  must  invite  those  odious  people. 

See  How  it  Really  Was. — Litchfield. 
You  don't   quite  remember?     Ah,  modest  old  fellow  I 

See  Two  Old  Soldiers.  The. — Macy. 
You  don't  wear  a  wig,   do  you,  .lohnson?     See  This 

One  is  Wigged. — Anon. 
You  fellers  hev'  bin  tellin'  some  whappers.     See  Bill 

Wainwright's  Adventure. — Anon. 
You  folks  don't  know  what  I  have.     See  New  Mittens, 

The.— Rook. 
You  gave  me   roses,   love,   last   night.     See  Mystery, 

The. — Whiting. 
"You  gave  me  the  key  of  your  heart,  my  love."     See 

Constancy. — O'Reilly. 
You  had  two  girls,  Baptiste.  See  At  the  Cedars. — Scott. 
You  hadn't  ought  to  blame  a  man  fer  things  he  hasn't 

done.     See  Undertow,  The. — -Morgan. 
"You  hard-hearted,  dunder-headcl,  obstinate,  rusty, 

musty,    crusty,    fusty    old    savage."     See    Three 

Sundays  in  a  Week. — -Poe. 
You  have  beguil'd  me  with  a  counterfeit.     See  King 

John  (Constance's  Denunciation   of    King    Philip 

of     France     and   Lymoges  of   Austria). — Shake- 
speare. 
You  have  birds  in  a  cage,  and  you've  beautiful  flowers. 

See  Naming  the  Baby. — Douglas. 
You  have  called  to  me,  my  brothers,  from  your  far- 
off  eastern  sea.     See  Voice  of  the  Oregon,  The. — 

— Browne. 
You  have  come  then;  how  very  clever!     See  Half-way 

in  Love. — Nichols. 
You  have  come  to  the  end  of  one  short  journey.     See 

.\ddress  to  the  Class  of  1877. — Shoemaker. 
You  have  committed  to  my  conduct,  O  Romans,  the 

war  against  Jugurtha.     See  Jugurthine  War,  The 

(Caius  Marius  to  the  Romans,  on  the  Objections 

to   Making  him  General). — Sallust. 
You  have  found  me  out  at  last.  Will,  sit  down  beside 

me  here.     See  By  the  Alma. — Dawson. 
You  have  heard  from  my  learned  friend,  gentlemen  of 

the  jury.     See  Pickwick  Papers,  The  (Buzfuz  versus 

Pickwick). — Dickens. 
You  have  heard  of  the  ride  of  John  Gilpin.     See  Ride 

on  the  Black  Valley  Railroad,  A. — Tarbox. 
You  have  heard  of  the  Stockett  family.     See  "Uncle 

Todd." — -Mallon. 
"  You  have  heard,"  said  a  youth  to  his  sweetheart,  who 

stood.     See  Whistle,  The.— Story. 
You  have  just  been  told  how.     See  New  South,  The. — 

Grady. 
You  have  never  heard  Harris  sing  a  comic  song.     See 

Three  Men  in  a  Boat  (Mr.  Harris's  Comic  Song). — 

Jerome. 
You  have  now  two  wars  before  you,  of  which  you  must 

choose  one.     See  On  War  with  France  or  America. 

—Fox. 
You  have  often  no  doubt  had  occasion  to  note.     See 

"Allow  for  the  Crawl." — A  Homily. — Saxe. 
You  have  only  one  mother,  my  boy.     See  Only  One 

Mother. — Dodge. 
You  have  read  of  the  Moslem  palace.     See  For  Love's 

Sake. — Preston. 
You  have    read    of    the    ride    of    Paul    Revere.     See 

Bicycle  Ride,  The. — Harvey. 
You  have  successfully  and  honorably  completed  the 

courses.     See  Address  to  the  Graduating  Class  of 

Knox  College,  1877.— Bateman. 


You  have    taken    back    the    promise.     See   Fidelis. — 

Procter. 
You  have  taken  me  prisoner,  with  all  my  warriors.     See 

Speech  of  Black  Hawk    (Address  of  Black  Hawk 

to  General  Street). — Black  Hawk. 
You  haven't  seen  the  Cobb  sisters,   I   suppose?     See 

John  Robb  and  Anna  Cobb. — Anon. 
You  heard   from   my  learned   friend,  gentlemen.     See 

Pickwick  Paper.i,  The  (Speech  of  Sergeant  Buzfuz 

in  the  Case  of  Bardell  against  Pickwick). — Dick- 
ens. 
You  hev  to  hold  it  sidewise.     See  Daguerreotype,  The. 

— McGla.s.son. 
You  kaint  tell  how  it  chirks  me  up.     See  When  Maiidy 

Brings  the  Kids. — Worden. 
You  kin  talk  about  your  anthems.     See  OV  Tunes,  The. 

— Dunbar. 
You  kin   talk  about   y'r  op'ras,   y'r  germans,   an'   all 

sich.     See  De  Candy  Pull. — Luce. 
You  kissed  me!     My  head  had  drooped  low  on   your 

breast.     See  You  Kissed  Me. — Hunt. 
You  knew — who   knew   not   Astrophel?     See  Lament 

for  Sir  Philip  Sidney. — Royden. 
You  know  how  we  are  wont  to  stand.     See  "Bottoms 

Up"  ad  Finem. — Hutchinson. 
You  know  my  darter  Nancy  is  an  uncommon   smart 

gal.     See  Director's  Visit,  The;  or,  A  Warning  to 

School-masters. — Anon. 
"You  know,  my  friends,  with  what  a  brave  carouse." 

See  Bride,  The. — Bierce. 
You     know     of     course    that     I    sympathize     deeply 

with  you.     See   Eugene  Field  to  his   Children. — 

Field. 
You  know  that  day  at  Peach  Tree  Creek.     See  Logan 

at  Peach  Tree  Creek. — Garland. 
You  know  the  plaintiff?     See  Chicago  Lawsuit,  A. — 

Anon. 
You  know  the  story — it's  centuries  old.     See  Ant  and 

the  Grasshopper,  The. — Lincoln. 
You  know,  we  French  stormed  Ratisbon.     See  Inci- 
dent of  the  French  Camp,  An. — Browning. 
Yon  know  what  a  sorrowful  day  for  Tarragona  was  the 

28th  of  June,   1811.     See  In  Terror  of  Death.— 

Alarcon. 
You  lads  that  are  funny,    and  call  maids  your  honey. 

See  Jenny  from    Ballinasloe. — Anon. 
You  laugh  as  you  turn  the  yellow  page.     See  Old  Song, 

An.^Anon. 
You  lay  a  wreath  on  murdfred  [or  murder'fl]  Lincoln's 

bier.     See  .Abraham  Lincoln. — Taylor. 
You  little  hens,  you  naughty  hens.     See  Naughty  Hens, 

The. — Anon. 
You  little  stars  that  live  in  skies.     See  To  Her  Eyes. — 

Brooke. 
You  love   me?     Aye,    I    do   indeed.     See    Brief   Bur- 
lesque, A. — {Munsey's  Magazine.) 
You  loved  me  once,  I  know!     See  Broken  Sonnet,  A. — 

Graves. 
You  may  drink  to  your  leman  in  gold.     See  Wine  and 

Dew. — Stoddard . 
You  may  envy  the  joys  o'  the  farmer.     See  Farmer 

Gray. — Anon. 
You  may  get  through  the  world,  but  't  will    be  very 

slow.     See  same. — {Washington  Capitol.) 
You  may    give    over    plough,    boys.     See    Tommy's 

Dead.— Dobell. 
You  may  lift  me  up  in  your  arms,  lad,  and  turn  my 

face    to    the    sun.     See    Famous    Ballad    of    the 

Jubilee  Cup,  The. — Quiller-Couch. 
You  may  mention  her  name,  but  it  never  conveys.     See 

Miss  Jones. — Romaine. 
You  may  notch  it  on  the  palin's  as  a   mighty  resky 

plan.     See  Rev.  Gabe  'Tucker's   Rem  rks  (Obser- 
vations by  Rev.  Gabe  Tucker). — Macon. 
You  may  reap  your  harvest  of  wheat  and  tares.     See 

Optimism. — {Blackwood's  Magazine.) 
You  may  reason  with  a  fool  till  his  muddled  brain  grows 

clear.     See  Putty  Man,  The. — -Burdette. 
You  may  recognize  Ben  by  description.     See  Donald 

and  the  Stag. — Browning. 
You  may  remember  an  odd  poem  written  by  an  old 

Latin  tutor?     See  Professor  at  the  Breakfast-table, 

The  (Iris). — Holmes. 
You  may  ring  till  the  crack  o'  doom.     See  Pair  of 

Gloves,  A. — MeA^ers. 
You  may  say  that  Lachrymse  Christi.      See  Drinking 

Song.— Anon. 
You  may  take  the  thirteen  inchers.     See  Song  of  the 

Rapid-fires. — {Baltimore  Neivs.) 
You  may  take  the  world  as  it  comes  and  goes.     See 

Chickens  Come  Home  to  Roost. — Anon. 
You  may  talk  about  old  Santa  Claus.     See  Lila's  Con- 
clusion.— Richards. 


948 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


You  taught 


You  may  talk  about  the  music  of  the  thrush.     See 

Farmer's  Song-bird,  The. — Horton. 
You  may  talk  of  horses  of  renown.     See  Bay  Billy. — 

Gassaway. 
You  may  talk  of  your  fairies,  whose  mandates,  of  old. 

See  Bell  and  the  Gong,  The. — Barber. 
You  may  tramp  the  world  over.     See  Ould  Docther 

Mack. — -Anon. 
You  meaner  beauties  of  the  night.     See  On  His  Mis- 
tress, the  Queen  of  Bohemia. — Wotton. 
You  'member  'bout  Phar'oh,  brodering,  I  s'pose?     See 

At  the  Mt.  Holly  Camp-meeting. — Anon. 
You  might  have  thought  a  goose  the  rarest  of  all  birds. 

See  Christmas    Carol,  A  (Christmas  Goose    at  the 

Cratchits',  The). — Dickens. 
You  must  be  sad;  for  though  it  is  to  Heaven.     See  To 

Two  Bereaved. — Ashe. 
You  must  be  troubled,  Asthore.     See  De  Profundis. — 

'  Hinkson. 
"You  must  give  back,"  her  mother  said.     See  Gifts 

Returned. — Landor. 
You  must  go  to  this  party,  Tim.     See  Bashful  Boy, 

The. — Denison. 
You    must  not  mind  my  being  so  small.     See  Prologue 

for  a  Child. — Anon. 
You  must    wake   and   call    me   early,    call   me   early, 

mother  dear.     See  May  Queen,  The. — Tennyson. 
You,  Nebuchadnezzah,    whoa,    sah!     See    Nebuchad- 

nezzah. — Russell. 
You  need  not  be  concerned,  in  writing  to  me,  about 

your    spelling.     See    Good    and    Bad    Spelling. — 

Franklin. 
You  need  not  be  looking  around  at  me  so.     See  Part- 
nership.— Anon. 
You  need  not  tell  your  parents  that  you  are  going  with 

the  steamboat  excursion.     See  Elwood's  Decision. 

— McBride. 
You  needn't  be  trying  to  comfort  me — I  tell  you  my 

dolly   is    dead!     See    Dead    Doll,     The.— Vande- 

grift. 
"You  ne'er  can  object  to  my  arm  round  your  waist." 

Two   Professions. — Throop. 
You  nestled  in  her  hair  to-night.     See  To  a  Rose. — 

W.  C.  B. 
"You  never   can    grow    up,    you    know."     See   What 

Grandma  Foretold.— Denton. 
You  never  observe  a  great  intellectual  movement  in 

Europe.     See  Hebrew  Race,  The. — Beaconsfield. 
You  never  saw  a  gal  surprised.     See  Love's  Stratagem. 

— Ali. 
You  never  saw  such  a  commotion  up  and  down  a  house. 

See  Three  Men  in  a  Boat   (Uncle  Podger  Hangs  a 

Pi  cture) . — Jerome. 
You  never  saw  such  a  fuss  as  there  has  bin  in  our 

house  the  last  few  days.     See  Bad  Boy's  Diary, 

A. — (New  York  Weekly.) 
You,  O  man!  who  with  your  honey  words  and  your 

tender  looks.     See  same. — Craik. 
You  of  the  North  have  had  drawn  for  you  with  a  mas- 
ter's  hand.     See   New   South,    The  (Confederate 

Soldier,  The).— Grady. 
You  ought    to    be    very    rich,    Mr.    Caudle.     See   Mr. 

Caudle  Having  Lent  Five  Pounds  to  a  Friend. — ■ 

Jerrold. 
You  ought  to  go  to  Summerset.     See  Summerset  Folks, 

The. — Hawkins. 
You  ought   to   have   known   worthy   Jonathan    Kent. 

See  Deacon  Kent  in  Politics. — Frisbie. 
You  promise  heavens  free  from  strife.     See  Mimner- 

mus  in  Church. — Cory. 
You  promise  now.  you  goot  man  dare.     See  Marriage 

Ceremony,  The. — Anon. 
"You  queer  little  wonderful  owlet!  you  atom  so  fluffy 

and  small!"     See  Tragedy. — Thaxter. 
You  remember,  girls,  we  promised  to  tell  each  other 

everything.     See  Consensus  of  the  Competent,  A. 

— Lummis. 
You  remember  that  fancy  of  Plato's,  of  a  man  who  had 

grown  to  maturity.  See  On  Heroes  and  Hero  Wor- 
ship (Nature). — Carlyle. 
You  remember    the    nursery    legend.     See    Sleeping 

Beauty. — Baker. 
You  restless,  curious  little  Jo.     See  Feathers. — Cary. 
You  said,    "I    love    you."    Prodigal    of    sighs.     See 

Shadows. — Meetkerke. 
You  sang  me  a  song.     See  Sing  Again. — Van  Vorst. 
You  saucy  south  wind,  setting  all  the  budded  beech 

boughs  swinging.     See  Whisper! — Wynne. 
You  saw  her  last,  the  ball-room's  belle.     See  Rosebud 

in  Lent,  A. — Baker. 
You  say    I    have   asked   for   the   costliest   thing.     See 

Reply  to  "A  Woman's  Question." — Pelham. 


You  say  I  love  not,  'cause  I  do  not  play.     See  To  His 

Mistress,   Objecting    to   Him   neither   Toying   or 

Talking. — Herrick. 
"You  say,"  I  remarked  to  the  old   negro   who  drove 

the   hack.     See   Examination   in    History,   An. — 

Anon. 
You  say,  preach  away;  tell  us  something  more  of  this 

fruitless  fig  tree.     See  same. — Jack. 
You    say   that   you   want    a    meetin '-house     for    the 

boys  in  the  gulch  up  there.     See  "Inasmuch." — 

Bruce. 
You  .say  the  poor-house  is  a  mile  ahead.     See  Come 

Back. — English. 
You  say  there's  a  sameness  in  my  style.     See  Pallas. — 

Carry  1. 
You  say  they  all  have  passed  away.    See  Indian  Names. 

• — Sigourney. 
You  say,   "Where  goest  thou?"     I  cannot  tell.     See 

Poet's  Simple  Faith,  The.— Hugo. 
You  say  yer  afther  wantin',  ma'am.     See  "Flat"  Con- 
tradiction, A. — Smith. 
You  schust  vants  me  to  dells  you  apout  it,  does  you? 

See  Why  Ben  Schneider  Decides  for  Prohibition. 

— Hopkins. 
You  sea!  I   resign  myself  to  you  also.     See  Song  of 

Myself  (You  Sea!). — Whitman. 
You  see  I  am  a  little  boy.     See  Patriotic  Boy,  A. — 

Goodfellow. 
You  see  I  am  but  four  years  old.     See  Four  Years. — 

Kavanaugh. 
You  see  I'm  down  to  York, — Caleb  an'  me.     See  Aunt 

Deborah  Hears  "The  Messiah."- — Anon. 
You  see  it  first  near  the  dusty  road.     See  Trout-brook, 

The. — Waring. 
You  see  me  here,  as  one  of  you  hath  said.     See  Marino 

Faliero  (Marino    Faliero    to  the  Conspirators). — 

Byron. 
You  see  me.  Lord  Bassanio,  where  I  stand.     See  Mer- 
chant of   Venice,    The    (Portia's  Speech  to   Bas- 
sanio) . — Shakespeare. 
You  see  me  stand  with  chalk  in  hand.     See  Alphabet 

Practice.— Anon. 
You  see  now,  sister,  that  I  am  in  no  end  of  a  scrape. 

See  Ze  Moderne  English. — Meyers. 
You  see,  sir,  I'm  only  a  super.     See  Super's  Story,  The. 

— Drew. 
You  see  that  bleak  old  promontory  there.     See  Ga- 
zelle and  Swan. — Anon. 
You  see  the  gentle  water.     See  Wives  of  Brixham,  The. 

— Anon. 
You  see  the  slender  spire   that  peers.     See  Days  of 

Yore,  The. — Thompson. 
You  see  there  were  some  tiny  chicks.     See  "Tit  for 

Tat." — Denton. 
You  see    this    pebble-stone?     It's   a    thing    I    bought. 

See  Cock  and  the  Bull,  The.— Calverley. 
You  see  we're  almost  just  alike.     See  Twins. — Good- 
fellow. 
You  see  where  the  cliffs  frown  yonder  in  a  line  of  dingy 

red?     See  Sir  Rupert's  Wife.- — Sims. 
You  seem  to  be  taking  unusual  care  of  yourself.     See 

Brudder  Bones  in  Clover. — Anon. 
You  seem   to  me,   Romans,   to  have  expressed  more 

joy.     See     Representative     Government     Trust- 
worthy.— Plutarch. 
You  sent  for  me,  and  I've  come.     If  you  have  nothing 

to  say,  I  go  back  again.     See  Metamora  to  the 

Council. — Anon. 
You  shall    not    be    overbold.     See   Titmouse,    The. — 

Emerson. 
You  sleep  upon  your  mother's  brea.st.     See  Rhyme  of 

One,  A. — Locker-Lampson. 
You  smiled,  you  spoke,  and  I  believed.     See  same. — 

Landor. 
You  speak  like  a  boy, — like  a  boy  who  thinks  the  old, 

gnarled    oak    can     be    twisted.     See     Rob    Roy 

(Macgregor's  Defence). — Scott. 
You  speak  of  insurrections;  bear  in  mind.     See  Philip 

van    Artevelde  (Van  Artevelde's    Defence    of    his 

Rebellion). — Taylor. 
You  spotted    snakes   with   double  tongue.     See    Mid- 
summer Night's  Dream  (Lullaby  for  Titania). — 

Shakespeare. 
You     strange,    tistonished-looking,     angle-faced.     See 

Fish,  the  Man  and  the  Spirit,  The. — Hunt. 
You  swore  you  loved  me  all  last  June.     See  Want. — 

Meredith. 
You  take  a  town  you  cannot  keep.     See  Love's  Spite. 

— De  Vere. 
You  talk  to  me  in  parables.     See  Candor. — Otway. 
You  taught  me  all  that  Love  could  be.     See  Interlude, 

An. — Furley. 


949 


You  tell 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Yoa  tell  me,   said  Terence  (when  called  to  the  bar). 

See  Challenging  the  Foreman.— Anon. 
You  tell  me  you're  promised  a  lover.     See  Letter  of 

Advice,  A. — Praid. 
You  tell   us   in    philosophy.     See   To   the   Faculty. — 

Webster. 
You,  that  at  a  blush  can   tell.     See   Fair   Virtue,    the 

Mistre.H.s   of    Philarete    (Shepherd's   Swain,  A). — 

Wither. 
You    that  can    look    through    Heaven,  and   tell    the 

stars.     See  Upon    an    Honest    Man's    Fortune. — 

Fletcher. 
You  that  on  stars 'do  look.     See  Short  Hymn  upon  the 

Birth  of  Prince  Charles,  A. — Wotton. 
You  that  think  love  can  convey.     See  To  Celia  Sing- 
ing.— C^arew. 
You  that  will  a  wonder  know.     See  In  Praise  of    his 

M  ist  ress. — Carew. 
You  that  would  have  my  books  to  fare.     See  His  Book- 
seller's .\ddre8S.^Mart  ial. 
"You  think  I  am  dead."     See  Talking  in  their  Sleep. 

— Thomas. 
You  think  I  am  nervous,  stranger?     Well,  I  am!     See 

Compen.sation. — Anon. 
You  think  I  love  it!  if  this  nerveless  hand.     See  Bond- 
age of  Drink,  The. — Anon. 
You  think  my  heart  is  stern  and  cold.     See  Reformed 

Man's  Lament,  A. — Linden. 
You  think  that   one  hour  buries  another.     See  Soul- 
building  ("  You  think  that,"  etc.). — Beecher. 
You  too,   my  mother,   read  my  rhymes.     See  To  My 

Mother. — Stevenson. 
You  virgins,    that    did    late   despair.     See   Peace    Re- 
stored.— Shirley. 
You  vouldn't  dink  mine  frau.     See  Mine  Katrine. — 

Adams. 
You  want   a   bear   story!     A   grizzly   bear  story!     A 

great    grizzly   bear    story.      See    Bear    Story. — 

Joaquin  Miller. 
You  wear  the  square,  but  do  you  have.     See  Masonic 

Emblems. — Anon. 
You  were  actually  wr5cked,  then,  upon  a  desert  island. 

See  Modern  Robinson  Crusoe,  "The. — Anon. 
You  were  always  a  dreamer,  Rose-red  Rose.     See  Rose 

will  Fade,  A. — Sigerson. 
You  were   eavesdropping  at   that   door.     See   Martin 

Chuzziewit  (Unsuccessful  Attempt  to  Raise  the 

Wind,  An). — Dickens. 
You  who  capture  hearts  in  plenty.     See  Valentine  to 

a  Flirt. — Carmen. 
You  who  dread  the  cares  and  labors.     See  Last  Land- 
lord, The.— Allen. 
You,  who    hold    in    grace    and    honor.     See    Song    of 

Hiawatha,  The.     An  English CriticLsm. — (Punch.) 
You  who  to  the  rounded  prime.     See  some. — Riley. 
You,  who  would  with  wanton  art.     See  To  the  Cat- 
bird.— Anon. 
You  will    come,    my    bird,    Bonita?     See    Juanita. — 

Miller. 
You-will  tell  us  a  story,  won't  you,  auntie?     See  Aunt 

Ellen's  Hatchet. — Anon. 
You  wish  to  apnly  for  the  place  which  I  advertised. 

See  Domestic  Wanted,  A. — Denison. 
You  wish  to  be  a  lawyer,  John — well,  I'd  not  say  a 

word.     See  Sound  Advice. — Anon. 
You  Wi'yam,  come  'ere,  .sah,  dis  instance.     Wut  dat 

you  got  under  dat  box?    See  Kentucky  Philosophy. 

- — Robertson. 
You  would  have  come  last  night  if  vou  had  known. 

See  What  the  Crickets  Said.^-Dallas. 
You  yourself  are  much  condemned  to  have  an   itching 

palm.     See  Julius  Caesar. — Shakespeare. 
You'd  admire    my    city    .sweetheart.     See   Town    and 

Country. — Collins. 
"You'd  better  nut  them  down  on  a  piece  of  paper," 

said  Mrs.  S .     See  Phenomenal  Memory,  A. — 

Anon. 
You'd  scarce  expect  a  boy  like  me.     See  Little  Speaker, 

The. — Anon. 
You'd  scarce  exnect  one  of  my  age  to  plead  for  tem- 
perance on  the  .stage.    See  My  First  Speech. — Anon. 
You'd  scarce  exnect  one  of  my  age  to  speak  in  public 

on  the  stage.     See  Heroic  Medley. — Page. 
You'd  scarce  expect  one  of  my  age  to  speak  in  public 

on    the   stage.     See   Lines  Written   for   a   School 

Declamat  ion. — Everet  t . 
You'd  scarce  expect  one  .of  my  age  to  speak  in  public 

on    the    stage.     See    Young    Critic,    The.— Kav- 

anaugh. 
"You'd  scarce  expect  one  of  m.y  age  to  sneak  upon  a 

public     stage."      See     Johnny's     Advice. — "Bob 

o'Link." 


You'll  bury  me,  my  mother,  just  beneath    the  haw- 

thorne  shade.     See  May  Queen,  The  (New  Year's 

Eve;. — Tennyson. 
You'll  love   me   yet ! — and    I    can   tarry.      See  Pippa 

Pa.sses  (You'll  Love  me  Yet). — Browning. 
Young  Agnes  stood  before  her  judge.     See  Agnes  thn 

Martyr. — Murray. 
Young  America,  indeed!    See  Young  America. — King. 
Young  Augustus  Jones  and  Miss  Clara  Brussels  never 

speak  any  more.     See  Nutting  Expedition,  A. — 

Anon. 
Young  bashful  Johnny  loved  sweet  May.     See  Bash- 
ful Johnny. — Gillette. 
Young  Ben  he  was  a  nice  young  man.     See  Faithless 

Sally  Brown. — Hood. 
Young  Billy  hasn't  any  ma.     See  Orphan  Billy. — Bur- 
dick. 
Young  bride, — a  wreath  for  thee.     See  Wedding  Gifts. 

— Tupper. 
Young  Cupid  strung  his  bow  one  day.     See  Cupid  at 

Court. — Peck. 
Young  Dandelion  on  a  hedge-side.     See  Y'oung  Dan- 
delion.— Craik. 
Young  folks  of  the  convention !     It  has  long  been  the 

custom  for  teachers  to  meet.     See  Scholars'  Con- 
vention, The. — May. 
Young  friends,   to   whom   life's   early   days.     See   Be 

True. — Anon. 
"Young,  gay,  and  fortunate!"     Each  yields  a  theme. 

See  Night  Thoughts  (Narcissa). — Young. 
Young  Hardupp  Vowed  a  mighty  vow.     See  Bagged 

the  Wrong  Bird. — Lyons. 
Young  Harringford;    or,    The    "Goodwood    Plunger." 

See  "There  Were  Ninety  and  Nine." — Davis. 
Young  Henry  was  as  brave  a  youth.     See  I>ove  and 

Glory. — Dibdin. 
Young   Jack    he    was    a    journey-man.     See    Roving 

Journey-man,  The. — Anon. 
Young  Jamie  lo'ed  me  weel.     See  Auld  Robin  Gray. — 

Barnard. 
Young  Jem  at  noon  returned  from  school.     See  James 

and  the  Shoulder  of  Mutton. — Taylor 
Young  Jessica  sat  all  the  day.     See  Young  Jessica. — 

Moore. 
Young  Johnstone  and  the  young  Col'nel.     See  Y'oung 

Johnstone. — Anon. 
Young  Julius  Jones  loved  Susan  Slade.     See  Practical 

Young  Woman,  A. — Rus.sell. 
Young    ladies  and  young  gentlemen:      Some   of   you 

perhaps  have  read  that  weird  and  mournful  story. 

See  character  the  Basis  of  Credit. — Anon. 
Young  ladies,  I  have  a  few  words  to  say  to  you.     See 

Boy's  Address  to  Young  Ladies,  A. — Anon. 
Young  Lady  Margaret  sits  in  her  bower.     See  Etin  the 

Forester. — Anon. 
Young  Love  with  sorry  draggled  wings.     See  Usurper, 

A. — Anon. 
"Young  man  proposed  to  me  last  night."     See  Her 

Answer. — Anon. 
Young  men!      J^et  then  obleness  of  your  mind    impel 

you  to  its  improvement.     See  same. — Howard. 
Young  men   of   America!     You   on   whom   rests   the 

future  of  the  Republic!     See  Devotion  to  Duty. — 

Shelley. 
Young    men,    you    are    the    architects    of   your    own 

fortunes.     See  Advice  to  Young  Men. — Porter. 
Young    Neuha    plunged    into   the    deep.     See    Island, 

The  (Sea-cave,  'The). — Byron. 
Young   Nora   McGuire   in   humble   attire.     See   Nora 

McGuire's  Lovers. — Whitehead. 
Young  people  think,  were   they   wed  they'd    be  free. 

See  Domestic  Tempest,  A. — Anon. 
Young  Radspinner  and   Lilian   Deusenbury  had  long 

been  lovers.     See  Woman's  Love. — Anon. 
Young  Roger  came  tapping  at  Dolly's  window.     See 

Roger  and  Dolly. — (Blackwood.) 
Young  Roger  of  the  mill.     See  Y'oung  Roger  of  the 

Valley. — Anon. 
Young   Rory   O'More   courted    Kathleen    Bawp.     See 

Ror.v  O'More;  or.  Good  Omens. — Lover. 
Young  Sir  Guyon    proudly  said.     See   Riquet    of    the 

"Tuft  (Queen's  Song). — Brooke. 
Young  Sophy  leads  a  life  without  alloy.     See  Little 

Sophy  by  the  Seaside. — Turner. 
Young  Spoonogle  never  knows  when  to  leave  when  he 

calls  on  a  young  lady.  See  Tiresome  Caller,  A. — 

Anon. 
Young  Stirns  as  any  lord  is  proud.     See  True  Nobility. 

— I.«ssing. 
Young  Timothy  crept  to  the  old  meadow  bars.     See 

Young     Timothy     and     the     Forget-me-nots. — 

Thomson. 


950 


FIRST  LINE  INDEX 


Z-z-z-z-z-z 


Young  to  the  end  through  sympathy  with  youth.     See 

James  McCosh.^Bridges. 
Young  Tommie  was  a  laddie.     See  Forgetful  Tommie. 

— Richards. 
Young  Travers,  who  had  been  engaged  to  a  girl.     See 

Mr.  Travers's  First  Hunt. — Davis. 
Young  Turkey  Gobbler,  with  highly  arched  head.     See 

Thanksgiving  Dinner,  A. — Bryant. 
Young  Vincent  was  a  noble  boy.     See  Story  of  Good 

Little  Vincent. — Smiley. 
Young  warbler  of  the  spring!     See  To  a  Robin. — Anon. 
'Young  women!  don't  be  fond  of  killing.     See  Advice  to 

Young  Women;  or.  The  Ro.se  and  Strawberry. — 

Pindar. 
Youngest    descendant    of    a    glorious    line.     See    To 

Admiral  George  Dewey. — Vaughan. 
Your   beauty,    ripe   and    calm    and   fresh.     See   To   a 

Mistress  Dying. — Davenant. 
"Your  charge  against  Mr.  Barker,  the  artist  here,"  said 

the     Magistrate.     See     Mr.     Barker's     Picture. — 

Adeler. 
Your  coming  is  timely,  oh  son  of  Hur.     See  Ben-Hur 

(Ben-Hur  and  Iras). — Wallace. 
Your   eyen   two    wol   slee    me   sodenly.     See   Merciles 

Beaute. — Chaucer. 
Your  eyes  are — but  I  cannot  tell.     See  To  a  Friend.— 

Gowdy. 
Your  favorite  picture  rises  up  before  me.     See  Millais's 

"Huguenots." — {London  Spectator.) 
Your  feather.s  are  ruffled,  your  beak's  rather  long.     See 

Dickie-bird!     Dickie-bird ! — Anon. 
Your  gho.st  will  walk,   you  lover  of  trees.     See  "De 

Gustibus." — Browning. 
Your  grace   shall    pardon   me,   I   will   not   back.     See 

King   .John    (Speech    of    the    Dauphin). — Shake- 
speare. 
Your  hands   lie   open   in   the   long  fresh   grass.     See 

Silent  Noon. — Rossetti. 
Your  hat  is  too  big  for  your  head,  Martin  Lee.     See 

Contentment  Better  than  Riches. — Anon. 
Your  hay  it  is   mowed,  and   your  corn  is  reaped.     See 

Harvest  Home. — Dryden. 
Your    heart    is    a   music-box,    dearest!      See  Song. — 

Osgood. 
Your  highness  of  Castile.     See  Speech  of  the  Grand 

Rabbi,    Mo.ses     Ben    Habib,    to    Ferdinand    and 

Isabella. — 'Hugo. 
Your  highness  sent  for  me?     See  Way  to  Conquer,  The. 

— Procter. 
Your  Honor,  I  ha'n't  got  a  word  to  say  in  my  defense. 

See  "Attempted  Suicide." — Frost. 
Your  honours,  and  you,  gentlemen  of  the  jury ;     Permit 

me  to  remind  you  of  the  importance  of  this  trial. 

See  In  Defence  of  the  British  Soldiers. — Quincy. 
"Your  hor.se  is  faint,  my  King,  my  lord!  your  gallant 

hor.se  is  sick."     See  Lord  of  Butrago,  The. — Lock- 
hart.      I 
Your  house  is  built  on  holy  ground.     See  New  House; 

Old  Home. — Chadwick. 
Your  letter,  lady,  came  too  late.      See  More  Cruel  than 

War.*— Hawkins. 
Your  letter  was   received,   dear  John,   I  write  as  you 

request.     See  Married  Love-letter,  A. — Anon. 
Your  majesty,  Louvois  would  crave  an  interview.     See 

Louis  XIV  and  his  Minister. — Doyle. 
Your  mother  thinks  that   iierhaps  it  would  be  better 

for  you.     See  Eugene  Field  to  his  Children. — Field. 
Your  motions  all  are  sweet  and  full  of  grace.     See  To 

the  Cigarette  Girl.— H.  F.  H. 
Your  name  is  Mister  Reporter?     Eh!     See  Two  Christ- 
mas Eves. — Emerson. 
Your  pardon,  gentle  folks  all — -I  fear  I  am  rather  late. 

See  Trip  to  Blankville,  A. — Anon. 
Your  picture  smiles  as   first   it   smiled.     See  Amulet, 

The. — Emerson. 
Your  pleasures  spring  like  daisies  in  the  grass.     See 

lanthe's  Troubles. — Landor. 
Your  i)roud  eyes  give  me  their  wearied  splendour.     See 

Disillusion. — Wilkins. 
Your  resolution  is  very  sudden,  Mr.  Downright.     See 

Poor  Relation,  The. — Anon. 
Your   threats   how   vain,    Corregidor.     See   Ballad    of 

Manila  Bay,  A. — Roberts. 
Your  tiny  picture   makes   me   yearn.     See  Christie's 

Port  rait . — Massey . 
"Your  train  is  thirty  minutes  late!"     See  That  Whistle 

Saved  My  Life. — Bingham. 
"Your  walk  is  lonely,  blue-eyed  Grace."     See  Grace 

and  her  Friends. — -Larcom. 
Your  wedding-ring  wears  thin,  dear  wife;  ah,  summers 

not    a    few.     See    Worn    Wedding-ring,    The. — 

Bennett. 


See 


See 


You're  a  kind  woman,  Nan!  ay,  kind  and  true! 

Nell. — Buchanan. 
You're  a  mean,   hateful  girl — I   don't   like  you. 

Breakfast . — R  ook. 
You're    a    nice    looking    plum,    Johnson.     See    Awful 

State,  An. — Anon. 
You're  a  rum  'un  to  look  at,  you  are!     See  Pickwick 

Papers,  The  (Job  Trotter's  Secret). — Dickens. 
You're    an    impertinent    fellow!     I     say,     you're    an 

insolent  and  impertinent  fellow.     See  "I  Know  a 

Maiden  Fair  to  See." — Moore. 
You're  fond  of  astronomy,  Johnson,  are  you  not?     See 

Bones  on  Astronomy. — Anon. 
You're  going  out  to  tea  today.     See  Going  to  Aunt 

Ruth's  to  Tea. — Anon. 
You're  going  to  build  a  new  barn.     See  Building  of  the 

Barn,  The. — Bingham. 
You're    going    to    leave    the    homestead,    John.     See 

Leaving  the  Homestead. — Anon. 
You're  my  friend;  I  was  the  man  the   Duke  spoke  to. 

See  Flight  of  the  Duchess,  The. — Browning. 
You're  not  so  big  as  you  were  then.     See  To  a  Little 

Brook.— Field. 
You're  on  the  sea  of  life,  boys.     See  "Don't  Give  up  the 

Ship."— Hunt. 
You're  right,  sir,  I  ain't  much  to  look  at,  but  I  ain't 

a    bad    'un    to    go.       See    Soft-hearted    Bill.  — 

Sapte 
You're    surprised    that    I    ever    should    say    so?     See 

Whistling  in  Heaven. — Anon. 
"You're  the  first  girl  I  ever  kissed,"  he  said  with  beam- 
ing eyes.     See  Before  She  Thought. — Shirley. 
You's  as  stiff  an'  as  cold  as  a  stone.     See  Dead  Pussy 

Cat,  The. — Anon. 
Youth  and  childhood  are  the  seasons.     See  Exhibition 

Day. — Doolittle. 
Youth    that    pursuest,    with    such    eager    pace.     See 

Youth,  that  Pursuest. — Milne.s. 
Youth's      gay      springtime      scarcely      knowing.     See 

Pilgrim,  The.— Schiller. 
You've  all  read  many  a  thrilling  tale.     See  Galesburg 

Fire  Department. — Smiley. 
You've   called   on    me   to   make   a   speech.     See 

Speech . — Anon . 
You've  called  to  see  Jack,  I  suppose,  sir;  sit  down. 

Under  the  Wheels. — Carleton. 
You've  come  to  see  the  dead  face  of  your  king. 

Crusaders,  The. — Murray. 
You've  heard,   kind  friends,   I   have  no  doubt. 

Valedictory. — Kavanaugh. 
You've  heard  o'  Measter  Tupper?  well,  I've  heard  on  un 

too.     See  Proverbeel  Feelossify. — "Agrikler." 
You've    heard    the    fable,    "Mouse    and    Pus.sy."     See 

Fred's  First  Speech. — Doolittle. 
You've  heard  ub  de  early  closing  movement,  Johnson. 

See  Bones  on  Early  Closing. — Anon. 
You've  heerd  about  that  time,  say  havn't  you,  when 

Vix.     See  Bo. — Meyers. 
You've  never  seen  Winning  Cup  [or  Kissing  Cup]  have 

you?     Stroll    around    to    the    paddock,    my   lord. 

See  Winning  Cup's  Race. — Rae-Brown. 
You've  quizzed   me  often  and  puzzled  me  long.     See 

Boy  to  the  School-master,  The. — Wheeler. 
You've  read  of  a  spider,  I  suppose.     See  Flower-spider 

The.— Cary. 
"You've  saved  my  life,"  the  ma.ster  said.     See  Three 

Wishes,  The. — Anon. 
You've  seen  the  snowy  lilies.     See  Chinese  Lilies. — 

Pollard. 
Yusef  Ben  Hassen  slept  and  dreamed  a  dream.     See 

Ben  Hassen 's  Dream. — Messaros. 


Zack  Bumstead  uster  flosserfize.     See  Philosopher,  A. 

— Foss. 
Zekiel  gets  the  "chores"  done.     See  Courtin'  in  the 

Country. — McBride.  , 

Zekle  crep'  up,  quite  unbeknown.     See  Biglow  Papers, 

The  (Courtin',  The).— Lowell. 
Zooks!     I   must   woo   the   Muse   today.     See   Family 

Poetry. — Barham. 
Zounds!        I    believe    the    house    is    deserted!     See 

Between  Two  Stools. — Kavanaugh. 
Zounds!   sir,    I   will   not    hear   a   word   about   it.     See 

Utility  of  Booing,  The. — Macklin. 
Zuleika  is  fled  away.     See  Zuleika. — O'Shaughnessy. 
Z-z-z-z-z-z!     A  monster  of  iron,  steel  and  brass  stand- 
ing on  the  slim  iron  rails.     See  As  the  Pigeon  Flies. 

— Lewis. 


His 
See 


See 
See 


951 


APPENDIX 


APPENDIX. 

The  following  lists  do  not  claim  to  be  complete,  but  as  suggestions  they  will  be  found  useful. 
All  the  titles,  together  with  many  others  equally  appropriate,  are  included  in  the  Title  Index. 
When  ff.  follows  the  title,  one  or  more  of  the  succeeding  titles  will  be  found  suitable. 

I.     SPECIAL  DAYS. 


ARBOR  t>AY. 


Acorn  Lesson,  An. 

Airs  of  Spring,  The. 

All  Mankind  are  Trees. 

Among  the  Redwoods. 

Among  the  Trees. 

Angler's  Tryst ing-tree,  The. 

Answer  of  the  Gardener,  The. 

Apple  Blossom.  The,  ff. 

April,  ff. 

Arab  to  the  Palm,  The. 

Arbor  Day,  ff. 

Arbutus. 

As  You  Like  It  {aels.). 

Aspects  of  the  Pines. 

At  Dame  Nature's  Feet. 

Atheist  and  Acorn,  The. 

Autocrat  of  the  Breakfast-table,  The  (Talks  on  Trees). 

Autumn  Leaves,  The. 

Baby  Seed  Song. 

Bare  Boughs  and  Buds. 

Beautiful  Spring,  ff. 

Beautiful  Trees. 

Beech  Tree's  Petition,  The. 

Bell-flower  Tree,  The. 

Birch  Tree,  The. 

Blackberry-bush,  The. 

Blos.som,  The,  ff. 

Blushing  Maple  Tree.  The. 

Boys  and  the  Apple  Tree.  The. 

Bramble  Flower. 

Brave  Little  Flower,  The. 

Brave  Old  Oak,  The. 

Brier. 

Britannia's  Pastorals  (Scented  Grove,   .,, 

British  Oak,  The. 

Bud,  Thte. 

"Bud  will  soon  become  a  flower.  The." 

Bunch  of  Flowers,  .\. 

Cajlica  (Seed-time  and  Harvest). 

California's  Giant  Trees. 

Cedars  of  Lebanon,  The. 

Celestial  Passion,  The  (Voice  of  the  Pine,  The). 

Chanted  Calendar,  A. 

Charms  of  Rural  Life,  The. 

Charter  Oak,  The. 

Cherries,  ff. 

Chestnut-tree,  The. 

Child  and  the  Flowers,  The.. 

Child  and  the  Lily,  The.       * 

Child  to  a  Ro.se,  A. 

Choosing  a  State  Tree. 

Chosen  Tree,  The. 

Chrysanthemums. 

Cocoa-tree,  The. 

Comfort  of  the  Trees,  The. 

Coming  of  Spring,  The. 

Consider  the  Lilies,^. 

Convention  of  Michigan  Trees. 

Corn,  ff. 

Cotton  Plant,  The.    , 

Counting  the  Seeds. 

Country  Life. 

Crocus,  ff. 

Cynic  of  the  Woods,  The. 

Dedicatory  Exercises. 

Discourse  on  Trees,  A. 

Drooping-willow,  The. 

Earliest  Spring.  , 

Early  Mi.ss  Crocus. 

Early  Primrose,  The. 


Early  Sprinij. 

Edwin  the  tair  (Wind  in  the  Pines,  The). 
Elm,  The,  ff. 

Enoch  Arden  (Tropical  Scene,  A). 
Evangeline  (Primeval  Forest,  The). 
Excursion,  The  (sels.). 
Faerie  Queene,  The  («e/«.). 
Fern  and  the  Moss,  The,  ff. 
Few  Rules  for  Tree  Planters,  A. 
Field  Sweet-brier,  The. 
Fields  of  Corn,  The. 
Fir-tree,  The. 
First  Crocus,  The. 
First  Flowers,  The. 
First  Pus.sy  Willows,  -The. 
Flax  Flower,  The. 
Flower,  The,  ff. 
For  Arbor  Day. 
Forest,  The,  ff. 
Garden,  The.  ff. 

Girt  Woak  Tree  that's  in  the  Dell,  The. 
Gourd  and  the  Palm,  The. 
Green  Things  Growing. 
Greenwood,  The." 
Grove  of  Curious  Trees,  A,  ff. 
Happy  Trees. 
Hidden  Uses  of  Plants. 
Historic  Tree  of  Chicago,  The,  ff. 
Holly-tree,  The. 
House  of  the  Trees,  The. 
How  the  Oak  Grew. 
How  to  Plant  Trees — What  to  Plant. 
In  April. 

In  Green  Old  Gardens. 
In  Memoriam  (sels.). 
In  the  Black  Forest. 
In  the  Golden  Birch. 
In  the  Grass. 
In  the  Meadow. 
In  the  Orchard. 
In   the  Spring. 

In  tlV^o  Woods.  ' 

InscriptAiin  for  the  Entrance  to  a  Wood. 
Institution  oi'  4.rbor  Day,  The. 
Ivy,  The. 

Larch  and  the  Oak,  ThW 
Laurel,  The,  ff. 

"Leafless  are  the  trees,"  etc..  ff. 
Leaves,  The,  ff. 
Legend  of  the  Aspen,  A,  ff. 
Les.sons  from  Nature  about  Trees. 
I.«ssons  from  Scripture  P'lowers. 
Lessons  of  Nature,  The,  ff. 
Lilac,  The,  ff. 
Ijilies  and  Roses. 
Lily,  The,  ff. 

Lines  Written  in  Early  Spring. 
Little  and  Great. 
Little  Brown  Seed,  The.  ff. 
Little  by  Little. 
Little  I>eaf's  Sacrifice,  The,  ff. 
Little  Peach  Blos,«om. 
'  Little  Pine  Tree,  The. 
Little  Plant.  The,  ff. 
Little  Seed-cells,  The.  ff. 
Live  Oak,  The. 
London  Plan»-tree,  .\. 
Lonely  Pine,  The. 
Man  and  Nature. 

"Man  does  not  plant  a  tree  for  himself,  A." 
Maple,  ff. 

Masque  of  Pandora,  The  (Voices  of  the  Forest). 
May's  Apple-tree. 

955 


AX  IXUEX  TO  POETRY  AXU  RECITATIOXS 


Miracle  Workers,  The. 

Miss  Willow. 

Modern  Painters  (aeU.). 

Mountain  to  the  Pi4k.  The. 

Music  of  Nature.  The. 

My  Strawberry. 

My  Window  Ivy. 

Nature,  ff. 

New  York  State  Program  for  Arbor  Day,  1889. 

No  Flowers. 

Noble  Old  Elm.  The. 

Norwood  (Anxious  Leaf,  The). 

Oak.  The,  ff. 

Of  Solitude  ("Hail,  old  patrician  trees,"  etc.) 

Old  .\pple-tree.  The. 

Old  Flower  Beds,  The. 

Olive  Tree,  The. 

Oryhard,  The,  ff. 

Orion  (In  Forest  Depths). 

Our  Ca.suarina  Tree. 

Our  Garden. 

Palm-tree,  The,  ff. 

Parleineht  of  Fowles  (Trees,  Fl<jwer.s,  and  Birds). 

Pine  Tree.  The,  ff. 

Pipe  of  Pan,  The. 

Plant  a  Tree,  ff. 

Plea  of  the  Trees,  The. 

Poplar.  The,  ff. 

Popular  Poplar  Tree,  The. 

Program — At  the  Tree. 

Pussy  Willow. 

Race  of  the  Flowers,  The. 

Raven  and  the  Oak,  The. 

Return  of  Spring. 

"Scatter  in  Spring-time  a  handful  of  seeds." 

Scripture  Etchings  for  Arbor  Day. 

Seasons,  The:  Spring  (sels.). 

Seed,  The,  ff. 

Shepheardes  Calendar,  The  (gels.). 

Snowdrop,  The,  ff. 

Some  Famous  Trees. 

Song:  "For  the  tender  beech." — Peacock. 

Song  for  Tree-planting. 

Song  of  Arbor  Day. 

Song  of  Nature. 

Song  of  Palms. 

Song  of  Spring,  A. 

Song  of  the  Grass  Blades. 

Song  of  the  Maple. 

Song  of  the  Palxn. 

Song  of  the  Pine,  The. 

Sower,  The,  ff. 

Spice-tree,  The. 

Spring,  ff. 

Study  of  Trees  and  Flowers,  The. 

Talkmg  in  their  Sleep. 

Tears  of  the  Poplars.  The. 

Three  Trees,  ff. 

To  a  Maple  Seed. 

To  a  Pine-tree. 

To  an  Elm. 

To  Primroses,  etc 

To  Sprintt. 

To  the  Fir-tree. 

Tottie's  Tree-talk. 

Touch  of  Nature,  A. 

Trailing  .■Vrbutus.  y 

Tree.  The.  ff. 

Under  the  Leaves 

Under  the  Old  F,lm,  ff. 

Under -the  Wil'iows. 

Up'  Up!  Viy  Friend,  and  Quit  Your  Books. 

<'^ome  Buds,  The. 

11  the  Wild  Oak,  The.  , 

.fa  Leaf,  The.  k 

\  oice  of  Spring,  The. 
Voice  of  the  Grass,  The. 
Voice  of  the  Pines,  The. 
Voices  of  the  Trees,  ff. 
Waiting  to  Grow. 
Waking  of  Spring,  The. 
Waking  Y'ear,  The. 
Washington  Sequoia,  The    v 
Wee<rs  Mission.  The. 
What  the  April  Breeze  Said  to  the  Trees. 
W  hat  the  Burdock  was  (Jood  For 
What  the  Daisy  Said. 
When  we  Plant  a  Tree. 
White  Anemone.  The. 
White  Rose  and  the  Popbv.  The 
«.'m\  Y*"  Blossoms  Comet h"before  ye  I^afe. 
V\  lid  .\pi)les. 
Willow.  The.  ff. 
Winged  8ee<is. 


956 


Woodland  Hymn,  A,  ff. 
Woodman,  Spare  that  Tree. 
Worship  in  the  Wild-wood. 
Yew  Tree,  The,  ff. 

Special  Books.     (Containing  additional  selections.) 
AD  -  DFR  —  HSS  1  —  HS  —  LLC  —  PEO 


BIRD   DAY. 

Address  to  a  Robin. 

Address  to  the  Woodlark. 

Albatross  [.The]. 

Alexander  and  Campaspe  (Aniniati;  Natuf^). 

American  Eagle,  The. — Thomp.son. 

Anecrontics  (Swallow,  The). 

Aurora  Leigh  ("But  theti  the  thrushes  sang")'. 

Ballad  of  the  Thrush,  The. 

Bank-swallows,  The. 

Bird,  The,  ff. 

Black  Cock,  The. 

Blackbird,  The,  ff. 

Blind  Bird's  Nest,  The. 

Bluebird,  The,.^  - 

Blue- jay.  The. 

Bob  White. 

Bobolink,  The.  ff. 

Boy  and  the  Bird,  The. 

Boy  and  the  Skylark,  The. 

Breeding  Lark. 

Britannia's  Pastorals  (Description  of  a  Musical  Con.sort 

of  Birds,  A). 
Broken  Wing,  The. 
Brother  Robin. 
Brown  Thrush,  The. 
Burial  of  the  Linnet,  The. 
Butcher-bird,  The. 
Caged  Bird,  A. 
Canary,  The,  ff. 
Captive  Bird,  The. 
Captive  Humming-bird,  The. 
Cardinal  Bird,  The. 
Caw!  Caw!   Caw! 
Chick-a-de-dee. 
Chickadee.  v   ' 

Chickens.  The.  ff. 
Chimney  Nest,  The. 
Chimney  Swallows. 
Cockatoos,  The. 

Complaint  of  the  Bird  in  a  Dark  Room. 
Concert  in  the  Wood,  The. 
Cranes  of  Ibvcus,  The. 
Crow's  Children.  The. 
Cuckoo,  The,  ff. 
Cunning  Old  Crow,  T\  a. 
Curlew's  Call,  A. 

Cynthia  (V  '  ess  to  the  Nightingale) 
Dead  Bitfd,  The. 

w/iiparidre  of  the  Swallow,  The,  ff. 
'  Dickey-bird,  The. 
Dickie-bird!      Dickie-bird! 
Don't  Kill  the  Birds. 
Dove,  The,  ff. 
Doves  of  Mendon,  The,  ff. 
Eagle,  The,  ff. 
Early  Bird,  The,  ff.  | 
Egg  a  Chicken,  An. 
Eggs  and  Birds. 
Emperor's  Bird's-nest,  The. 
Empty  Nest,  The. 
English  Sparrow,  The. 
Envious  Wren,  The. 
Epitaph  on  a  Robin  Redbreast,  An. 
Faithful  Bird.  The. 
Falcon,  The.— Stoddard. 
Farewell  of  the  Birds. 
Farmer's  Song-bird,  The. 
Feathered  Name-speakers. 
Feather's  Message,  A. 
Finished  Nest,  A. 
Fire-hangbird's  Nest,  The. 
First  Blue-bird,  The. 
First  Robin.  The. 
First  Skylark  of  Spring,  The. 
First  Swallow.  The. 
Flicker  on  fho  Fence.  The. 
Flight  of  the  Birds,  The. 
Flight  of  the  Geese,  The. 
Flight  of  the  Wild  Geese. 
Flock  of  Birds.- A.  /f.  f 

Foolish  Little  Robin. 
Fox  and  the  Crow,  The. 
Golden  Crown  Sparrow  of  Ala.ska. 


APPENDIX 


Golden  Orioles,  The. 

Golden  Robin's  Nest,  Ttie. 

Grateful  Swan.  The. 

Gray  Swan,  The. 

Gray  Forest  Eagle,  The. 

Great  Blue  Heron,  The. 

Great  White  Owl,  The. 

Green  Linnet,  The. 

Grey  Linnet,  The. 

Happy  Bird,  The. 

Hast  thou  Heard  the  Nightingale? 

Herald  Crane,  The. 

Hermit  Thrush,  The. 

Hidden  Sonijster,  The. 

How  Two  Birdies  Kept  House  in  a  Shoe. 

Humming-bird,  The,  if. 

"I  had  a  little  yellow  bird."  '^ 

If  I  Were  a  Bird. 

In  the  Lilac-bush. 

It  is  never  too  Late  to  Mend  (Lark  in  the  Gold-fields, 

The). 
Jackdaw,  The. 
Jaybird,  The. 

Jenny  Wren  and  Robin  Redbrea.st. 
Kingfisher,  The. 
Kittiwakes,  The. 
Lament  of  a  Mocking-bird. 
Lark,  The,  ff. 
Last  Robin,  The. 
Lessons  from  Birds  and  Bees. 
Lines  to  the  Stormy  Petrel. 
Little  Bird,  The,  ff. 
Little  Brown  Wren,  The. 
Little  Brown  Bird,  A. 
Little  Mud-sparrows,  The. 
Lfttle  Tomtit,  The. 
Loon,  The,  ff. 

Lost:     Three  Little  Robins. 
Magpie,  The,  ff. 
Maryland  Yellow-throat,  The. 
Master  Sky-lark  (Sky-lark's  Song,  The). 
Meadow  Lark,  The,  ff. 
Midsummer  Night's  Dream  (Birds). 
Mocking-bird,  The. 

Mother  Bird,  The.  . 

Mv  Aviary.  ■ 

My  Catbird. 
My  Owl. 
My  Robin. 
My  Thrush. 
Naughty  Crow,  The. 
Nest  Eggs,  ff. 
Nightingale,  The,  ff. 
Night-swans,  The. 
O  Lark  of  the  Summer  Morning. 
Ode  to  a  Nightingale. 
Of  the  Child  with  the  Bird  at  the  Bush. 
On  a  Thrush  Singing  in  Autumn. 
On  the  Death  of  Mrs.  Throckmorton's  Bullfinch. 
Onljr  a  Sparrow. 
Origin  of  the  Peacock,  The. 
Orioles,  The. 
Our  Oriole  Neighbors. 
Our  Sir  Robin. 
Oven-bird,  The. 
Owl,  The.  ff. 

Pairing  Time  .^nticioated. 
Paradise  of  Birds,  The. 
Parlement  of  Foules,  The. 
Parrot,  The,  ff. 
Pelican  Island  (seZs.). 
Peter-bird,  The. 
Phoebe-bird.  The. 
Phoenix  and  the  Turtle,  The. 
Phyllyp  Sparowe. 
Pigeon  House,  The. 
Pine  Tree  Academy,  The. 
Poet  and  Lark. 
Poor  Robin. 

Pretty  Little  Blue  Bird. 
Raven,  The. — Coleridge. 
Raven's  Tomb,  The. 
Red  Bird,  The. 

Redbreast  Chasing  the  Butterfly,  The. 
Redwing's  Song. 
Return  of  the  Birds,  The. 
Return  of  the  Swallows,  The. 
Rime     of    the     Ancient    Mariner,    The     (Love     and 

Prayer). 
Robert  of  Lincoln. 
Robin,  The,  ff. 
Rook  and  the  Snarrow.  The. 
Rule  for  Bird?'  Nesters,  A. 


Sandpiper,  The,  ff. 

Scarlet  Tanager,  The. 

Sea  Gulls. 

Sea-bjrds,  ff. 

Sea-gull,  The. 

Sea-mews  in  Winter  Time. 

Seassons,  The  {aela.). 

September  Robin,  A. 

Sidera  (Philomela). 

Silver  Bird's  Nest,  The. 

Sing  on.  Blithe  Bird! 

Sing,  Pretty  Birds. 

Sing-away  Bird,  The. 

Sir  Lark  and  King  Sun. 

Sir  Robin. 

Sister  and  Bluebirds. 

Skylark,  The,  ff. 

Snow-bird,  The,  ff. 

Snow-filled  Nest,  The. 

Song  of  Hiawatha,  The  (Hiawatha's  Childhood). 

Song  of  the  Sparrow,  The. 

Song:   The  Dove. 

Song:   The  Lark. 

Song:   The  Owl. 

Song  the  Oriole  Sings,  The. 

Song-bird  of  the  Princess,  The. 

Song-sparrow,  The. 

Sonnet:  To  a  Bird  that  Haunted  the  Waters  of  Laaken 

in  the  Winter. 
Sonnet:  To  the  Redbreast. 
Sorrowful  Sea-gull,  The. 
Sospiri  di  Roma  (White  Peacock,  The). 
Southern  Snow-bird,  The. 
Sparrow,  The,  ff. 
Spring  Lilt,  A. 
Spring  Song  of  the  Birds. 
Starling,  The. 
Story  of  a  Blackbird. 
Swallow,  The,  ff. 
Three  Little  Nest-birds. 
Thru.sh'.s  Nest,  The,  ff. 
Thyrsis  (Departure  of  the  Cuckoo). 
Time  of  the  Singing  of  Birds.  The. 
Titmouse,  The. 
To  a  Crow. 
To  a  Dead  Bird. 
To  a  Humming-bird,  ff: 
To  a  Nightingale. 
To  a  Redbreast. 
To  a  Robin. 
To  a  Sea-bird. 
To  a  Skylark. 

To  a  Swallow  Building  under  our  Eaves. 
To  a  Waterfowl. 
To  an  Oriole. 
To  my  Canary  Bird. 
To  the  Cat-bird. 
To  the  Cuckoo. 
To  the  First  Robin. 
To  the  Humming-bird. 
To  the  Lark. 
To  the  Man-of-war-bird. 
To  the  Mocking-bird. 
To  the  Nightingale. 
To  the  Redbreast. 
Turtle  Dove's  Nest,  The. 
"Two  Little  Magpies  Sat  on  a  W'all. 
Two  Old  Crows. 
Two  Robin  Redbreasts. 
Two  Wise  Owls. 
Veery,  The,  /f. 

Verses  to  a  Robin  Red-breast,  etc. 
Voice  of  the  Dove,  The. 
Voices  of  the  Wildwood. 
Wakeful  Birds,  The. 
Waking  of  the  Lark,  The. 
Warble  for  Lilac-time. 
Warble  Thy  Lays  to  Me. 
Watching  for  (irumlis. 
What  Robin  Told. 
What  the  Birds  Sa'd. 
What  the  Quail  Savs. 
What  the  Robin  Can  Tell. 
What  the  Snow-birds  Said. 
When  the  Swallows. 
Whip-poor-will. 
White  Birds,  Th?. 
White  Gull,  The. 
Whitethroat.  The,  ff. 
Who  Stole  the  Bird's  Nest? 
Whv  the  Robin's  Breast  is  Red. 
Winter  Thrush,  The. 
Widow-bird,  A. 


957 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  HECITATIOXS 


Winged  Worshippers,  The. 
Woodpecker  and  the  Dove,  The. 
Woundetl  Curlew,  The. 
Wren'.s  Nest.  The.    ^ 
Yellow-bird. 

Speciai-  Books:     GN— LLC  -PoR— SN 
CHBISTMAS. 

Adoration  of  the  Wise  Men. 

\h  Y'et's  Christmas. 

Angelic  Song,  The. 

Anii\inciation.  The. 

.VrchbishoiVs  Christmas  Gift,  The. 

•\t  liethlehem.  If-  •  ■     .^ 

At  Christma.s  Time,  /f. 

Baby  Ziilma's  Christmas  Carol. 

Balla«i:   ■Gtxjd  Christmas  Bells,  I  pray.you. 

Ballad  of  Cainan's  Christmas,  The. 

Bell  of  Innisfare,  The. 

Ben-Hur  (Angel  and  the  Shepherds,  Ihe). 

Bessie's  Christmas  Dream. 

Bet  hlehem-to  wn . 

Billy's  Santa  Claus  Experience. 

Birds  of  Bethlehem,  The. 

Carol:  "We  bring  the  holly." 

Ceremonies  for  Christmas. 

Child.  The.— Tabb. 

Christ  Child.  The. 

Chrisfkindlein. 

Christmas,  /f. 

Christ's  Birthday. 

Coming  of  Santa  Clans,  The. 

Darling  of  the  Year,  The. 

Das  Krist  Kindel. 

Day  before  Christmas,  The. 

Day  of  Days,  The. 

December. — Doane. 

Der  Nighd  behind  Grisdmas. 

Dickey's  Christmas. 

Dot's  Christmas;  or.  The  Sober  Hat. 

Dubious  "Old  Kriss,"  A. 

Earl  Sigurd's  Christmas  Eve. 

Early  Christmas  Morning. 

Earthly  Paradise,  The  (Christmas  Carol). 

Echoes  from  Bethlehem. 

Exercise  around  the  Christma.s  Tree. 

Father  Chri-stmas. 

First  Christmas,  The. 

First  Nowell,  The. 

For  Christmas  Day,  /f. 

Friar's  Christmas,  The. 

Friend  at  Court,  A. 

Gabe's  Christmas  Eve. 

Gay  Christmas  Ball,  A. 

Guided  by  a  Star. 

Hang  up  the  Baby's  Stocking. 

Happy  Christmas,  A. 

Holly,  The. 

How  Christmas  Came  to  .Crappy  Shut*. 

How  I  Saw  Santa  Oaiis.    .. 

How  Santa  Claiut'Came  to  Mimpson's  Bar. 

How  the  Celebrated  Miltiades  Peterkin  Paul  Got  the 
Better  of  Santa  Claus. 

Hymn  of  the  Nativity,  A. 

In  Memoriam  («ci«.). 

In  Santa*  Claus  Land. 

Jean  Noel. 

Jest  'fore  Christmas. 

.Toe's  Search  for  Santa  Claus. 

.Folly  Old  Saint  Nicholas. 

Kid  Sixey's  Christmas. 

Kindergarten  Christmas,  A. 

King  Christmas. 

KittyVjoy's  Christmas. 

Kris  Krmgle's  Surprise. 

Kriss  Kringle,  /f. 

Let  Santa  Claus  In. 

Let  the  Angelsj,  Ring  the  Bells. 

Letter  to  Santa  Claus. 

Light  in  the  Window.  The. 

Light  of  tlve  World,  The  (At  Bethlehem). 

Little  Charlie's  Christmas. 
Little  Christinas  Tree,  The. 

•   I.ittle  Feller's  Stockin',  The." 

little  Girl's  Christmas,  A. 

I.ittl»!  Gottlieb. 

I.ittle  Rocket's  Christmas. 

Marniion  (Christmas  in  the  Olden  Time). 

Marriage  of  Santa  Claus.  The. 

Mary  Ihe  Mother  of  .lesus. 


Merry  Christmas,  ^. 

Messiah. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Santa  Claus. 

.Mr.  Kris  Kringle. 

Mi.stletoe  Bough,  The. 

Mrs.  Brownlow's  Christmas  Party. 

Mrs.  Santa  Claus. 

Mt.  Pispah'.s  Christmas  'Possum. 

My  Christmas  Card. 

Nativity,  The,  /f. 

Neighbors  of  the  Christ  Night. 

NelFs  Christmas  Stocking. 

New  Christmas,  The. 

New  Prince,  New  Pomp. 

New  Santa  Claus,  A. 

Night  after  Christmas,  The. 

Night  before  Christmas,  The. 

Noel. 

Note  to  Santa  Claus,  A. 

Novel  Christmas-tree,  A. 

O  Little  Town  of  Bethlehem. 

Ode  on  Christmas. 

Ode  on  the  Birth  of  our  Saviour,  .\n. 

Old  Christmas,  /f. 

Old  Jack  Watt's  Christmas. 

Old  Santa  has  Struck. 

Ole  Bull's  Christmas.  ' 

"Ole  Marster's"  Christmas,  The. 

On  the  Morning  of  Christ's  Nativity. 

On  the  Nativity  of  Christ. 

Orphan's  Dream  of  Christmas,  The. 

Our  Christmas. 

Peace  of  Christma.s-time,  The. 

Peace  on  Earth. 

Real  Santa  C^laus,  A. 

Russian  Christmas,  A. 

Sailor  Santa  Claus,  K. 

St.  Nicholas,  #. 

Santa  and  his  Reindeer. 

Santa  Claus,  /f. 

Seeing  Santa  Claus. 

Short  Christmas  Performance,  A. 

Sing  a  Song  of  Christmas. 

Star  in  the  West,  The. 

Star  of  Bethlehem,  The. 

Story  of  Santa  Claus,  A. 

Strange  Child's  Chri.stnias,  The. 

Swipesy's  Christmas  Dinner. 

Tale  of  Christmas  Eve,  A. 

"Then  let  the  holly  red  be  hung." 

There's  a  Tree  that  Blossoms. 

Three  Kings,  The. — Longfellow. 

Till  Christmas. 

To  a  Christmas  Pudding. 

To  Kriss. 

Two  Christmas  Eves. 

Under  the  Holly  Bough. 

Under  the  Snow. — Collyer. 

Virgin  most  Pure,  A. 

Vi.sit  of  Santa  Claus,  The. 

Watching  for  Santa  Claus. 

Way  to  Spend  Chri.>»tinae,  The. 

What  a  Christmas  Carol  Did. 

What  is  Christmas? 

When  Nelly  Hangs  her  Stocking  Up. 

When  Santa  Claus  Comes. 

Where  is  Papa  To-night? 

While  Shepherds  Watched,  /f. 

Who  Santy-Claus  Wuz. 

Why  Do  Bells  of  Christmas  Ring? 

Widow  Brown's  Christmas. 

Ye  Ballad  of  Christmas. 

Yule  I^g,  The.  

Speciai.  Books:  DFR— HS— L1^— LLC  -  PEO 


DECORATION  DAY. 

Abstract  of  a  Grand  Army  Speech. 

Address  at  the  Dedication  of  a  Memorial  Tablet. 

Address  at  the  Dedication  of  the  Cemetery  at  Gettys 

burg. 
Address  to  Northern  and  Southern  Veterans. 
Address  to  the  Soldiers. 
After  the  Battle,  /f. 
Aged  .Stranger,  The. 
Au  Quiet  along  the  Potomac. 
Answering  to  Roll-call. 
Are  we  a  Nation? 
Army  of  the  Potomac. 
.\rmy  on  the  Potomac,  The. 
.\rim-  Overcoat,  The. 
At  Fredericksburg. 


958 


APPENDIX 

At  Gettysburg. 
At  the  Camp-fire. 

Old  Sergeant,  The. 

Old  Soldier  Tramp,  The. 

Back  from  the  War. 

Old  Soldier's  Story,  The. 

Back  in  War  Days. 

Old  Surgeon's  Story,  The. 

Band  in  the  Pines,  The. 

On  Board  the  Cumberland.     ^ 

Barbara  Frietchie. 

On  the  Rappahannock. 

Battle  Flag  at  Shenandoah. 

On  the  Shores  of  Tennessee. 

Battle  Hymn  of  the  Republic. 

On  the  Slain  at  Chickamauga. 

Battle  of  Gettysburg. 

Our  Army  and  Navy. 

Between  the  Graves. 

Our  Colors  at  Fort  Sumter. 

Bivouac  by  the  Rappahannock. 

Our  Country,  ff.                                                    , 

Bivouac  of  the  Dead,  The. 

Our  Country's  Call. 
Our  Dead  Heroes. 

Blue  and  the  Gray,  The. 

Brave.st  of  the  Brave. 

Our  Dead  Soldiers. 

Breathe  Balmy  Airs. 

Our  Fallen  Heroes. 

Cov'er  Them  Over. 

Our  Flag,  ff. 

Day's  Oration  is  in  Flowers,  The. 

Our  Heroes,  ff. 

Dead  Comrade,  The. 

Our  Heroes'  Graves. 

Dead  Drummer-boy,  The. 

Our  Martyred  Dead. 

Dead  on  the  Field  of  Honor. 

Our  Ranks  are  Getting  Thin. 

Dead  Soldier,  A. 

Over  their  Graves. 

Dead  Soldier-boy,  The. 

Palmetto  and  the  Pine,  The. 

Dead  Trumpeter,  The. 

Pathetic  Incident  of  the  Rebellion,  A. 

Dead  Volunteer,  The. 

Patriotic  Recitations,  ff. 

Decoration  Day,  ff. 

Patriotism,  ff. 

Dirge  for  a  Soldier. 

'  'Peace  to  the  brave  who  nobly  fell." 

Dirge  for  One  who  Fell  in  Battle. 

Picket  before  Bull  Run,  The. 

Dirge  for  Two  Veterans. 

Pickett's  Charge  at  Gettysburg. 

Dreaming  in  the  Trenches. 

Poem  Read  at  the  Founding  of  the  Gettysburg  Monu- 

Drummer Boy  of  Mission  Ridge,  The. 

ment. 

Drummer  Boy's  Burial. 

Psalm  of  the  Union,  A. 

Drummer  of  Company  C,  The. 

Regiment's  Return,  The. 

Enlisting  as  Army  Nurse. 

Review  of  the  Dead. 

Ev'e  of  l5ecoration  Day,  The. 

Review  of  the  Grand  Army. 

Flowers  for  the  Brave. 

Roll-call,  The. 

Foes  United  in  Death. 

Rusty  Sword,  The. 

For  Decoration  Day. 

Salute  the  Flag. 

For  Our  Dead. 

Second  Review  of  the  Grand  Army. 

General  George  H.  Thomas. 

Settin'  the  Flags. 

Gettysburg,  ff. 

Sheridan's  Ride. 

Grave  in  Hollywood  Cemetery. 
Great  Remembrance,  The.               * 

Sherman  on  the  Veterans. 

eherman's  March. 

Heart  of  the  War,  The. 

Silent  Army  of  Memorial  Day,  The. 

Hero  of  the  Gun,  The. 

Silent  Grand  Army,  The. 

Hero  of  the  Rank  and  File,  The. 

Society  of  the  Army  of  the  Potomac. 

Heroes. 

Soldier  Boy,  The. 

Heroe.S  and  the  Flowers,  The. 

Soldier's  Grave,  A. 

Heroes'  Day,  The. 

Song  of  Sherman's  Army. 
Song  of  the  Chattahoochee. 

Heroic  Deed,  The. 

High  Tide  at  Gettysburg,  The. 

Sons  of  the  Nation. 

Honored  Dead,  The. 

Speech  at  Indianapolis. 

"How  many  went  from  happy  homes." 

Stand  by  the  Flag. 

How  Sleep  the  Brave. 

Starry  Flag.  The. 

Hymn  of  Our  Armies. 

Stars  and  Stripes,  The. 

Immortal  Memories. 

Star-spangled  Banner. 

Incident  of  '64,  An. 

Stormmg  of  Mission  Ridge,  The. 

Incident  of  the  War,  An. 

Strewing  Flowers  on  the  Graves  of  Union  Soldiers. 

Ingersoll's  Dream  of  the  War. 

Such  is  the  Death  the  Soldier  Dies. 

.lohn  Brown,  ff. 

Sumter. 

.Tohn  Burns  of  Gettysburg. 

Them  Yankee  Blankits. 

Johnston  at  Shiloh. 

Thomas  at  Chickamauga. 

Last  Roll-call,  The. 

Those  Rebel  Flags. 

Lee  to  the  Rear. 

To  the  Grand  Army  of  the  Republic. 

Left  on  the  Battle-field. 

Tramp,  Tramp,  Tramp. 

Legacy  of  Grant,  The. 

Tri-colors.  The. 

Logan  at  Peach  Tree  Creek. 

True  Incident  of  the  War,  A. 

Lookout  Mountain. 

Uncover  to  the  Flag. 

Maine  at  Gettysburg. 

Uninscribed  Monument  on  One  of  the  Battlefields  of 

Major-General  John  Sedgwick. 

the  Wilderness,  An. 

Manassas. 

Union  of  Blue  and  Gray: 

Man  who  Wears  the  Button,  The. 

Unknown  Hero,  An. 

Man  with  the  Musket,  The. 

Veterans,  The. 

Marching  through  Georgia. 

Vicksburg. 

Marguerite. — Schroeder. 

Voice  of  the  Flag,  The. 

Maryland  Battalion,  The. 

Volunteer  Soldiers  of  the  Union,  The. 

May  30,  1893. 

Wagoner  of  the  Alleghanies,  The. 

Memorial  Day,  ff. 

War's  Sacrifice. 

Men  behind   the   Guns.    The. 

What  Saved  the  Union. 

Men  of  the  Merrimac.  The. 

Whistling  Regiment,  The. 

Men  of  the  North  and  West. 

Wounded. 

Miisic  in  Camp. 

.  Wounded  Soldier,  The. 

National  Flag,  The. 

You  Put  no  Flowers  on  my  Papa's  Grave. 

Nation's  Dead.  The. 

Nation's  Defenders,  The. 

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New  Memorial  Day,  The. 

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Ode  for  Decoration  Day. 

-  "  MR 

Ode  Recited  at  the  Harvard  Commemoration,  July  21, 

1865. 

EASTEB.. 

Odf  Sung  on  the  Occasion  of  Decorating  the  Graves  of 

the  Confederate  Dead. 

.\moretti  and  Epithalamion  (Easter). 

Ode  Written  in  1746. 

At  Easter  Time,  ff. 

Old  Canteen.  The. 

Better  Resurrection,  A. 

Old  Flag.  The. 

Child's  Ea.ster,  .A.. 

Old  Glory. 

Christ  Crucified. 

959 


AN  INDEX  TO  POEl'RY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Christ  Risen. 

Consider  the  Lilies,  ff. 

Crucifixion,  The. 

Cupid's  Easter  CotnMsition. 

Dream  of  Ea.st^r,  A.^ 

Ea-ster,  ff. 

Fair  Easter  Lilies. 

Finst  Te  Deum,  The. 

Flower's  Easter  Message,  The. 

Glorying  in  the  Cross. 

Grave,  The  (Resurrection,  The). 

"I  know  that  my  Redeemer  liveth." 

Immortality,  ff. 

In  the  Cross  of  Christ  I  Glory.      . 

Legend  of  Easter  Eggs.  The. 

Legend  of  the  Lily,  "The. 

Life  from  Death. 

Light  of  the  World,  The  (Resurrection,  The). 

Mother's  Easter  Scarf,  The. 

Nellie's  Easter  Eggs. 

O  Christ  our  King. 

"O  glorious  Easter  morning." 

One  Easter  Day. 

Resurrection,  ff. 

Rjng.  Happy  Bells. 

Risen  with  Christ. 

Sepuicher  in-  the  Garden.  The. 

Song  for  the  Night  of  Christ's  Resurrection. 

Song  of  Easter,  A. 

To  Keep  a  True  Lent. 

Waiting  for  Easter. 

Wednesday  before  Easter. 

Yearly  Miracle  of  Spring,  The. 


Special  Books:     DFR— HS— LL 
FLAG  DAY. 

American  Flag.  The. 

Are  we  a  Nation? 

Banner  Betsy  Made,  The. 

Banner  of  the  Stars.  The. 

Banner  that  Welcomes  the  World,  The. 

Barbara  Frietchie. 

Beneath  the  Flag. 

Betsey's  Battle  Flag. 

Birthday  of  the  Stars  and  Stripes. 

But  One  Flag  for  our,Country. 

Call  to  the  Colors,  The. 

Columbia's  Banner 

Comrades!     Join  the  Flag  of  Glory. 

Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner  (American  Battle-flags). 

Festal  Day  has  Come,  The. 

Flag.  The,  ff. 

Glory  mit  der  Stars  and  Stripes. 

God  save  the  Flag. 

History  of  Our  Flag. 

My  Country's  Flag. 

Name  of  Old  Glory,  The. 

National  Ensign,  The. 

National  Flag,  The. 

Nothing  but  Flags. 

Old  Flag  The. 

Old  Glory. 

One  beneath  Old  Glory. 

Our  Banner,  ff. 

Our  Country's  Flag. 

Our  Flag. 

Reverence  for  the  Flag. 

Song  of  the  L^nion. 

Stand  by  the  Flag. 

Starry  flag,  The. 

Star-spangled  Banner,  The. 

Story  of  the  "Star  Spangled  Banner." 

Stripes  and  the  Stars,  The. 

That  Starry  Flag  of  Ours. 

Triple  Flag  Drill. 

Two  Banners  of  America,  The. 

Uncover  to  the  Flag. 

Under  the  Stars  and  Stripes. 

Viva  I'America. 

Voice  of  the  Flag,  The. 

What  the  Flag  Means. 


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FOURTH   OF  JULY. 

About  Fire-crackers. 

Adam-i  and  .Jefferson  (selg.). 

Add  Hynian's  Celebrated  Fourth  of  July  Oration. 

Addition  to  the  Capitol,  The. 


Advice  to  my  Country. 

After  the  Fourth  of  July. 

America,  ff. 

Appeal  for  Liberty,  .\jn. 

Articles  of  Confederation,  The. 

Aspirations  for  America. 

Battle  Hymn  of  the  Republic. 

Battle  of  Bennington,  The. 

Battle  of  Bunker  Hill,  The. 

Battle  of  Germantown,  The. 

Battle  of  I^exington,  The. 

Battle  of  Trenton. 

Battle  Song  for  Freedom,  A. 

Bell  of  Liberty,  The. 

Bell-ringer  of  '76.  The. 

Biglow  Papers,  The  (Revolutionary  Hero,  A). 

Birthday  of  the  Republic,  The. 

Blessings  of  Liberty,  The. 

Brave  Boston  Boys. 

Brother  Jonathan's  Birthday. 

Brother  Jonathan's  Lament  for  Sister  Caroline. 

Building  of  the  Ship.  The. 

Bunker  Hill,  ff. 

Burgoyne's  Surrender. 

Captain  Molly  at  Monmouth. 

Cause  of  Bunker  Hill.  The. 

Centennial,  /f. 

Character  of  Washington,  The. 

Columbia,  ff. 

Concord  Hymn. 

Cost  of  Liberty,  The. 

Dawn  of  the  Centennial,  The.  ^ 

Day  after  the  Fourth.  The. 

Day  of  our  Country,  'The. 

Declaration  of  Independence,  The. 

Dignity  of  our  Nation's  Founders. 

Dome  of  the  Republic,  The. 

E  Pluribus  Unum. 

Eloquence  of  Revolutionary  Periods,  The. 

Emancipation  from  British  Dependence. 

Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Eutaw  Springs.  * 

First  Battle  of  the  Revolution,  The,  ff. 

For  Indeoeiidence,  1776. 

For  the  Fourth. 

Fourth  of  July,  The,  ff. 

Free  America. 

Freedom,  ff. 

General  Warren  to  his  Troops  at  the  Battle  of  Bunker 

Hill. 
Greneral  Warren's  Death. 
Ghost  of  an  Old  Continental,  The. 
Glorious  Fourth,  The. 
God  Save  our  Native  Land. 
God  Save  the  Nation. 
Goddess  of  Liberty,  The. 
God's  Country. 
Good  Country.  A. 

Grandfather  Watts'  Private  Fourth. 
Grandmother's  Story  of  Bunker  Hill  Battle. 
Greatest  Fruit  of  the  Declaration. 
Growth  of  the  American  Republic. 
Hail,  America. 
Hail,  Columbia. 

Hans  von  Spiegel's  Fourth  of  .July  Oration. 
Hero  Woman,  The. 

Hezekiah  Stubbins'  Oration,  .July  Fourth. 
Hills  were  Made  for  Freedom,  Th". 
History  of  the  United  States  (seh.). 
How  we  Became  a  Nation. 
Howe's  Masquerade. 
Hurrah  for  the  Fourth  av  .luly. 
Hymn  for  America,  A. 
IndeDen<lence.  ff. 
Influence  of  American  Freedom. 
International  Ode. 
.lohnny's  Fourth  of  July, 
.lonathan  to  John. 
.Joshua  of  1776.  The. 
Keen  the  Holidays. 
Keller's  •■Vmerican  Hymn. 
Last  Apnendix  to  "Yankee  Doodle,"  The. 
Law  and  Faith  and  Freedom. 

Lay  of  the  Last  Minstrel  (Breathes  there  the  Man) 
Les.son  of  the  Revolution,  The. 
Liberty,  ff. 
Little  Patriot,  The. 
Love  of  Country,  The 
Love  thou  thy  Land. 
Mad  Anthony's  Charge. 
Major  Jones'  Fourth  of  July  Oration. 
Merchants  of  the  Revolution. 
Mine  Own  Country. 
Minute  Men  of  NorthtiMm    Ti">. 


960 


APPENDi:^ 


Molly  Pitcher. 

My  Country,  ff. 

My  Opinions  and  Betsey  Bobbet's  (Fourth  of  July  in 

Jonesv'ille). 
National,  ff. 

Nation's  Birthday,  The. 
New  Liberty  Bell,  The. 
New  National  Hymn,  A. 
Nineteenth  of  April,  1775,  The.  , 

Oath  of  Freedom,  The. 

Ode  on  the  Celebration  of  the  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill. 
Ode  Read  at  the  One  Hundredth  Anniversary  of  the 

Fight  at  Concord  Bridge. 
Ode  Sung  in  the  Town  Hall,  Concord,  July  4,  1857. 
Ode  to  Independence  Hall,  An. 
Old-fashioned  Fourth.  An. 
On  the  Declaration  of  Independence. 
One  Country,  ff. 
Our  Centennial  Celebration. 

Our  Country,  ff.  < 

Our  Land. 

Our  National  Anniversary. 
Our  Nationality. 
Our  Navy. 

Our  Own  Dear  Land. 
Our  Responsibility  as  a  Nation. 
Our  Whole  Country. 
Patriot  Sons  of  Patriot  Sires. 
Patriotic,  ff. 
Paul  Revere's  Ride. 
Playing  Fourth  of  July. 
Prayer  for  the  Nation. 

Predictions  Concerning  the  Fourth  of  July. 
Principle  of  the  American  Con.stitution,  The. 
Principles  of  the  Revolution,  The. 
Psalm  of  the  Union,  A. 
Psalm  of  the  West 
"Rally  round  the  Flag." 
Red,  the  White,  the  Blue.  The. 
Red.  White  and  Blue,  The. 
Republic's  Duty,  The. 
Re.sponsibility  of  American  Citizens. 
Responsibility  of  our  Country,  The. 
"Ring!  Ring!  of  liberty  and  peace." 
Romance  of  the  Revolution,  A. 
Seventy-six. 
Song  of  1876,  The. 
Song  of  the  American  Eagle. 
Song  of  the  Centennial. 
Song  of  the  Union. 
Sons  of  the  Nation. 
Speech  at  Hamburg,  July  4. 
Speech  on  American  Taxation. 
Speech  on    Moving    his    Resolutions    for    Conciliation 

with  America. 
Spirit  of  '76,  The. 
Stanzas  on  Freedom. 
Sword  of  Bunker  Hill,  The. 
Task,  The  (Love  of  I-iberty). 
Temple  of  Human  Liberty,  The. 
That  other  Fourth. 
This  Old  Country. 
Ticonderoga. 
To  America,  ff. 

To  the  Stars  and  the  Stripes  from  Abroad. 
To  Thee,  O  Country. 
Tri-colors,  The. 
True  Americanism. 
True  Patriotism. 

Two  Ways  of  Spending  the  Fourth. 
L^ncle  Sam's  Birthday. 
Union,  The,  ff. 

Wagoner  of  the  Alleghanies  (sels.). 
Women  of  the  Revolution. 

(For   other   suitable  selections,  see  Flag  Day  and 
Noted  Personages.) 

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— LL— LLC— PEO— PTS— TMD— TMR 

HALLOWE'EN. 


All  Soulss'  Night. 

Hallowe'en. 

St.  '-within's  Chair. 

T.ifii  O'Shanter. 

LABOR   DAY. 

.American  Laborers. 

Aurora  Leigh  ("Get  leave  to  work"). 

Bell-founder,  The. 

Choice  of  Occupations. 

Choice  of  Trades. 


Choosing  a  Trade,  ff. 

Critical  Conditions  of  Labor,  The. 

Culture  the  Result  of  Labor. 

Curse  to  Labor,  The. 

Daily  Task,  The. 

Daily  Work. 

David  Copperfield  ("Whatever  I  have  tried  to  do  in 

my  life,"  etc.). 
Dignity  in  Labor,  ff. 
Do  all  that  you  Can. 

Do  the  Duty  that  Lieth  nearest  thy  Hand. 
Duty  of  Labor,  The. 
Early  Work. 
Employment. 
Energy,  ff. 

Fruits  of  Labor,  The. 

"Give  us.  O  give  us,  the  man  who  sings  at  his  work." 
Harvest,  The,  ff. 
Idleness,  ff. 
Industry. 

Italian's  View  on  the  Labor  Question,  An. 
.loy  to  the  Toiler. 
Knights  of  Labor,  The. 
Knitting. — Cutter. 
Labor,  /f. 

Law  of  Labor,  The. 
Lay  of  the  Laborer.  The. 
"Learn  to  labor  and  to  wait." 
Love  and  Labor. 
Love  Lightens  Labor. 
Man  with  the  Hoe,  The. 
Man's  a  Man  for  a'  That,  A. 
Music  of  Labor.  The. 
No  Work  the  Hardest  Work. 
Nobility  9f  Labor. 
On  American  Industry. 
Opportunity  for  Worlt. 
Opportunity  to  Labor. 
Our  Work. 

Past  and  Present  (sels.). 
Ploughman,  The. 

Song  of  the  Spinning-wheel,  The. 
Song  of  the  Type. 
"Sow,  and  look  upward." 
Sower,  The,  ff. 
Spinning,  ff. 
Ten  Hours  Bill. 
There's  Work  Enough  to  Do. 
Three  W's— Work,  Watch,  Wait,  The. 
Toil. 

United  Workmen,  The. 
Wa.sherwoman's  Song,  The. 
We  Plough  the  Fields. 
Wealth  and  Work. 
Weaver.  The. 
Week  of  Work,  A. 
What  a  Little  Girl  Can  Do. 
What  a  Small  Boy  Can  Do. 
What  I  Can  Do. 
What  is  my  Work  To-day? 
What  Little  Folks  Can  Do. 
Who  Works  the  Hardest? 
Work,  ff.  

Special  Book:     PEO 

LINCOLN'S   BIRTHDAY. 

Abraham  Lincoln,  ff. 

Commemoration  Ode,  World's  Columbian  Exposition. 

Death  of  Lincoln,  ff. 

Grave  of  Lincoln,  The. 

Hand  of  Lincoln,  The. 

How  June  Found  Massa  Linkum. 

In  Memoriam — A.  I>incoln. 

In  Memory  of  Lincoln. 

Lincoln,  ff. 

Memory  of  Abraham  Lincoln,  The. 

New  South,  The  (Lincoln  as  Cavalier  and  Puritan). 

O  Caotain!     My  Captain. 

Ode  Recited  at  the  Harvard  Commemoration,  July  21, 

1865. 
On  the  Life-mask  of  Abraham  Lincoln. 
Palmerston  and  Lincoln. 

Religious  Character  of  President  Lincoln,  The. 
Three  Hundred  Thousand  More. 
To  Abraham  Lincoln. 
To  the  Spirit  of  Abraham  Lincoln. 
Tribute  of  Goldwin  Smith  [to  Abraham  Lincoln]. 
True  Story  of  Abraham  Lincoln. 
Young  Patriot,  Abraham  Lincoln,  The. 

(See  also  Lincoln's  Works,  in  Author  Index.) 


Special  Books:     LLC— PEO 


961 


AX  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AXD  RECITATIONS 


MAY  DAY. 

Sermon  in  Flowers,  A. 

Shepheardes  Calender,  The  (Description  of  Maying). 
.  Shoemaker's  Holiday,  The  (Merry  Month  of  May,  'rhe 

Alexander  and  Campaspe  (Animate  Nature). 

) 

All  Happy  in  Spring. 

"Should  I  not  love  my  flowers?" 

A-Maymg.                ^ 
Ambitious  Margueme,  The. 

Song  for  May,  A. 
Song  of  the  Daisy. 

Among  Green  Pleasant  Meadows. 

Song  on  May  Morning. 

Songs  and  Chorus  of  the  Flowers. 

.Vnenione. 

.\|)ril  and  May. 

Songs  of  Seven  (Seven  Times  Four). 

Ba.sket  of  Flowers,  A. 

Spring,  ff. 

Beauteous  Flower,  The. 

Sun  and  the  Violet,  The. 

Beautie.s  of  Nature,  The. 

Sylvia;  or.  The  May  Queen  (eels). 

Beautiful  La<ly  of  the  May.  The. 

There's  a  Wedding  in  the  Orchard. 

Beautiful  May. 

'Tis  the  White  Anemone. 

Beauty  of  Nature. 

To  a  Wind-flower. 

Bluebird.  The,  ff. 

'To  Blos.soms. 

Bouquet  of  Flowers,  A. 

To  the  Daisy. 

Breathings  of  Spring. 
Broom  Flower,  The. 

Ti ailing  Arbutus. 
UsS  of  Flowers,  The. 

Bunch  of  Cowslip.s,  A,  /f . 

Violet,  ff. 

Buttercup,  A,  ff. 

Vi.sion  of  Delight,  The  (May). 

Calling  the  Violet. 

Voices  of  the  Flowerr. 

Canterbury -Tales  (Morning  in  May). 

Wabash  Violets. 

Child's  Song  in  Spring. 

Waiting  for  the  May. 

Composed  in  Sprwig. 

Wake  up.  Little  Daisy.- 

Contemplation  upon  Flowers,  A. 

Walden  (Spring). 

Cowslips. 

Crownmg  the  May  Queen. 

Warble  for  Lilac-time. 

We  Greet  Thee,  Merry  Spring  Time. 

Daffodil,  ff. 

Welcome  Spring,  The. 

Daintv  Lady  Daffodil. 

Welcome  to  May. 

Daisies,  ff. 

Who  Shall  be  Queen  of  May? 

Description  of  Spring. 

Why  it  was  Cold  in  May. 

Dream  of  Flowers,  A. 

Wild  Flowers. 

Effects  of  Spring. 

Wild  Thorn  Blossoms. 

Faerie  Queene,  The  (May). 

Wild  Violet,  The. 

Far  in  the  Woods  in  May. 

Windflower,  A. 

Fashions  at  the  Court  of  Queen  Flora. 

Wreath  of  Flowers,  A. 

Fields  in  May,  The. 

Yellow  Violet,  The. 

First  Flowers,  The. 

(For  other  selections  see  Akbok  Day.) 

First  of  May,  The. 

First  Spring  Day,  The. 

Speci.\l  Books:      DFR— PEO 

First  Spring  Flowers,  The. 

First  Violet,  The. 

NEW  YEAR'S. 

Floral  Rainbow,  The. 

Flower,  The.  ff. 

Address  to  the  New  Year. 

Gathering  Flowers. 

Another  Year. 

(Jod's  Miracle  of  May. 

As  Dies  the  Year. 

Harebells. 

Awakening  Year,  The. 

Heart' s-ea.se. 

Book  of  the  New  Year  The. 

Child's  Good-bye  to  the  Old  Year,  A. 

Closing  Year,  The. 

Hepatica,  The. 

How  the  Flowers  Came. 

Hymn  to  the  Flowers. 

Coasting  New  Year's  Eve. 

Hynmes  of  Astrsea  (To  the  Spring). 

Dawn  of  the  Century. 

In  Blossom  Time. 

Dawning  o'  the  Year,  The. 
Death  ot  the  Old  Year,  The. 

In  May. 

In  the  Early  Spring  Time. 

Dirge  for  the  Year. 

Jack  in  the  Pulpit. 

Farewell  to  the  Old  Year. 

.Toy  of  Spring. 

Festival  of  the  Year,  The. 

Jubilee  of  the  Flowers,  The. 

For  New- Year's  Day. 

Language 'of  Flowers,  The. 

Grandpa  and  Bess. 

Lark,  Flower,  Sun  and  Shower. 

In  Membriam  (New  Year,  The). 

Legend  of  the  Fleur-de-lis,  The. 

In  Time's  Swing. 

Life  in  its  Spring-time. 

Last  of  the  New  Year's  Callers,  The. 

Lines  Composed   a   Few  Miles  above  Tintem   Abbey 

Little  Match-girl,  The. 

(Varying  Impressions  from  Nature). 

Making  New  Year's  Calls. 

Lines  Written  in  Earlv  Spring.      ' 

Masque  of  the  New  Year,  The. 

Lost  May,  The. 

Merry  Christmas  and  a  (jlad  New  Year,  A. 

Ix)ve  and  May. 

Message  of  the  New  Year,  The. 

Ixjve-letters  Made  in  Flowers. 

Months  and  Holidays,  The.                            , 

Lovely  May. 

Mrs.  Partington's  Reflections  on  New  Year's  Day. 
New  Year,  ff. 

Love's  I>abour's  Lost  ("When  daisies  pied  and  violets 

blue"). 

Old  and  New  Year. 

Lusty  May. 
Maicfen  Spring,  The. 

Old  and  the  New  Year. 

Old  Year.  ff. 

Marriage  of  the  Flowers,  The. 

One  More  Year. 

May.  ff. 

Pipoa  Passes  (New  Year's  Day  at  Asolo). 

Merry  Spring. 

Message  of  the  Flowers,  The. 

P.salni   for  New    Year's  Eve,   A. 

Reckoning  with  the  Old  Year. 

Mogg  Megone  (Spring). 

Rejoicing  upon  the  New  Year's  Coming  of  Age. 

Month  of  ,\ni)le  Blossoms. 

Ring  out  the  Old. 

Month  of  May.  ff. 

Sambo's  New  Year  Sermon. 

Ode  Composed  on  May  Morning. 

Song  for  the  New  Year. 

Ode  in  May. 

Suggestion  for  a  Happy  New  Year,  A. 

Ode  to  Spring. 

Thikhed's  New  Year's  CaU. 

Old  May  Day. 

Thought  Suggested  by  the  New  Year,  A. 
Thoughts  for  a  New  Year,  ff. 

Origin  of  Violets. 

Oxfordshire  Children's  May  Song. 

Threshold  of  the  New  Year. 

Polish  May  Song. 

To  the  Old  and  the  New  Year. 

Haoe  of  the  Flowers.  The. 

Will  the  New  Year  Come  To-night? 

Return  of  May,  The. 

Saint's  Tragedy,  The  (Oh,  that  we  Two  were  Maying). 

Seasons.  The:  Spring. 

Year,  The. 

Year  that  is  to  Come,  The. 

Year's  Twelve  Children,  The. 

Seed.  The.  ff. 

Seeking  the  May-flower. 

Special  Books:      HS- -PEO 

962 


APPENDIX 


THANKSGIVING    AND   HARVEST 
HOME. 

Age  of  the  Pilgrims  the  Heroic  Period  of  our  History. 
The. 

Autumn,  ff. 

Bitter  Sweet  (Thanksgiving  Ode,  A). 

Country  Thanksgiving,  A. 

Daisy's  Thanksgiving. 

Day  before  Thanksgiving,  Tlie. 

Dressed  Turkey.  The. 

Ecclesiastical  Sonnets  (Pilgrim  Fathers,  The). 

Family    as    an    American    Institution,    The    (fhanks- 
giving  Day). 

Farmer's  Kitchen  before  Thanksgiving. 

First  English  Thank.sgiving  in  New  York,  The. 

First  National  Thank.sgiving.  The. 

First  Settlement  of  New  Erigland,  The. 

First  Thanksgiving,  The.     ' 

First  Thanksgiving    Proclamation    Issued    by    George 
Washington,  The. 

For  an  Autumn  Festival. 

Give  Thanks,  ff. 

Giving  Thanks. 

Glad  Autumn  Days. 

Golden  Pippins. 

Grand  Old  Day,  The. 

Grumble  Corner  and  Thanksgiving  Street. 

Harvest,  ff. 

Hints  for  Thanksgiving. 

Ho,  the  Harvest  Home. 

Hock-cart:  or.  Harvest  Home,  The. 

How  the  Pilgrims  Gave  Thanks. 

Hymn  for  Thanksgiving. 

Indian  Summer,  ff. 

Irish  Reaper's  Harvest  Hymn,  The. 

.loe  Fleming's  Thanksgiving. 

John  White's  Thanksgiving. 

Landing  of  the  Pilgrim  Fathers  in  New  England,  The. 

"Lily's'"  Thanksgiving,  The. 

Little  Nut  People,  The. 

Little  Paul's  Thanksgiving. 

Loma  Doone  (Harvest  Song). 

Maize,  The. 

Major-General  John  Sedgwick   (Spirit  of  Puritanism, 
The) . 

Margie's  Thanksgiving. 

Mayflower.  The. 

Nation's  Day  of  Praise,  The. 
New  England,  ff. 
Old  P'olks'  Thanksgiving. 
Old  Thanksgiving  Days^  The. 

Old  Wives'  Tale  (Harvester's  Song,  The). 

One  Thanksgiving  Day,  ff. 

Our  First  Thanksgiving  Day. 

Our  Thanksgiving  Accept. 

Pat.sy's  and  Tom's  Thanksgiving. 

Pilgrim,  ff. 

Polly's  Thanksgiving. 

Pumpkin-pie. 

Puritan,  ff. 

Something  to  be  Thankful  for. 

Song  of  the  Harvest. 

Story  of  Thanksgiving,  The. 

Thankful  Children. 

Thankful  Hearts. 

Thanksgivin'  Pumpkin  Pies. 

Thanksgiving,  ff. 

To  the  Harvest  Moon. 

To  "iVhom  Shall  We  Give  Thanks? 

Tom's  Thank.sgiving. 

"Turk-"ey  Drill. 

Twilight  of  Thank.sgiving,  The. 

Two  Thank.sgiving  Dances.  ^ 

When  the  Frost  is  on  the  Punkin. 


Spkcial  Books  :    HS— LL— PEO 

VALENTINE'S   DAY. 

Aurelia's  Valentine. 

Clarabel's  Valentine. 

Diana's  Valentine. 

First  Sensible  Valentine,  The. 

First  Valentine.  The. 

Four  Valentines. 

Grandmother's  Valentine. 


"I  meant  to  write  a  valentine." 

Legepd  of  St.  Valentine.  A. 

Little  Boy's  Valentine,  A.  . 

Little  Maid's, Prayer  at  the  Shrine  of  St.   Valentine. 

The. 
Meg  May's  Valentine. 
My  Valentine. 
Old  Valentine,  An. 

Pick*ick  Papers,  The  (Sam  Weller's  Valentine). 
Pierrot's  Valentine. 
Prettiest  Girl,  The. 
Roman  Valentine,  A. 
Rondeau  for  St.  Valentine's  Day. 
St.  Val*itine's,  ff. 
To  St.  Valentine. 
Two  Valentines. 
Valentine,  ff. 

Speci.\l  Book:     HS 

WASHINGTON'S   BIRTHDAY. 

Birthday  of  Wa.shington,   The. 

Birthday  of  Washington  ever  Hgnored,  The. 

Boy's  Compo.sition  on  Washingtdn,  A. 

Boy's  Poem  on  Washington,  A 

Breaking  the  Colt. 

Character  of  Washington,  The. 

Commemoration  Ode,  World's  Columbian  Exposition. 

(jjomparison   of  George   Washington   with   George   the 
Fourth,  called  the  Pirst  Gentleman  of  Europe. 

Comparison  of  Washington  and  Napoleon. 

Completion  of  the  National  Monument  to  Wa.shington. 

Crown  our  Washington. 

Defeat  of  General  Braddock,  The. 

Epitaph  on  Washington,  An. 

Eul(jgy  on  Washington. 
■^Example  of  Washington .  The. 

Exercise  for  Washington's  Birthday. 

Faith  of  Washington,  The.  , 

Father  of  his  Country,  The. 

February  Twenty-second. 

Flag  of  Washington. 

Foreign  Policy  of  Washington .  The. 

Funeral  Oration  on  the  Death  of  General  Washington. 

Georga  Washingdone. 

George  Birthi.igton's  Wa.shday. 

George  Washington,  ff. 

Glory  of  Washington,  The. 

Imaginary  Conversations  (Washington  and  Franklin). 

Immortal  Washington. 

Italian's  Account  of  George  Wa.shington,  An. 

Keeping  the  Birthday. 

Latest  Version,  The, 

Laurel  Wreath,  The. 

Lessons  from  the  Washington  Centennial. 

Like  Washington. 

Little  Hatchet  Story,  The. 

Mount  Vernon,  the  Home  of  Wa.shington. 

National  Monument  to  Wa.shington. 

New  Version  of  a  Certain  Historical  Dialogue,  A. 

Not  George  Washington. 

Ode  for  Wa.shington's  Birthday. 

Ode  to  Napoleon  Bonaparte  (Washington) 

On  the  Death  of  Wa.shington. 

On  Washington's  P^rewell  Address. 

One  Little  Hatchet. 

Oration  on  Washington. 

Our  Washington. 

Panegyrics  on  Washington. 

President  Washington's  Receptions. 

Schools  and  Colleges  of  our  Country,  The. 

Short  Conversation,  A.  4 

Some  Years  in  Wa.shington's  Life. 

Something  Better. 

Tomb  of  Washington,  The. 

Tribute  to  Washington/^. 

Twenty-second  of  February,  The. 

Under  the  Old  Elm. 

Under  the  Washington  Elm. 

Unselfishness  of  Washington,  The. 

Vow  of  Washington,  The. 

War  and  Washington. 

Washington,  ff. 

What  Lack  we  Yet. 

(See  also  Washington's  works,  in  Author  Index.) 

Special  Books  :     BLP— DFR— HS— LL— PEO 


9&3 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


II.     CHARADES    DIALOGUES,   DRILLS,   ETC. 


^ 


OHABADES. 


Actinn  Proverbs. 

Ascutiiey  Charades,  The. 

Charade,  ff. 

Grateful. 

Holiday. 

Illinoii». 

Investigate. 

Mischief. 

flayful. 

Scandinavia. 

Schoolday. 

Stockade. 


Special  Books:     EuE- TCP— YFE 

DIALOGUES,  PLAYS,  CONCERT  RECI- 
TATIONS, ETC. 

Apples,  The. 

Aunt  Kitty's  Shopping. 

Becket. 

Bill  Jepson's  Wife. 

Boys  and  Girls. 

Christmas  Tree,  The. 

Cold-water  Cross. 

Competing  Railroads,  The. 

Corporal  Punishment. 

Country  Cousins,  The. 

Cyrano  de  Bergerac. 

Dad  Says  so.  Anyhow. 

Daisy  and  Snowdrop. 

Damon  and  Pythias. 

Dandelion  and  Clover-top. 

David  Copperfield  (sels.). 

Day  and  Night. 

Dead  Bird,  The. 

Dialogue.  A,  ff. 

Dr.  Brown. 

Doctor  Cure-all. 

Doctor's  Visit. 

Doll's  Hospital,  The. 

Douglas. 

Dreamers,  The. 

Electric  Epi.sode,  An. 

E.Kcitement  at  Kettleville,  The. 

Fairy  Joke,  A. 

Farewell.  A. 

Four  Judges,  The. 

Four  Photographs,  The. 

Fox  and  Geese. 

Fox  and  the  Ranger,  The.  . 

From  Captivity  to  Power. 

Generosity. 

Gipsy  Fortune-teller,  The. 

Girl  of  the  Period,  The. 

Going  to  School. 

Good  for  Evil. 

Good  Manners. 

Gossips,  The. 

Guess  Again. 

Guido  Ferranti. 

Haunted  Chamber.  The. 

How  Mrs.  Gaskell  did  not  Hire  a  Cook. 

How  she  Cured  him. 

How  the  Quarrel  Began. 

Hunchback,  The. 

Illu.«trate<l  Story,  An. 

Interview  between  the  School  Director  and  the  Janitor, 

An. 
Invitation,  The. 
Ion. 

Italian  from  Cork,  The. 
Just  Retribution,  The. 
Kate's  French  Lesson. 
Keep  the  Holidays. 
Kindness  and  Cruelty. 
Knowing  the  Circumstances. 
Lady  Jane  Gray. 
Lady  of  Lyons,  The. 
Lat«  at  Breakfast. 
Laurel  Wreath.  The. 
lawyers  and  Donkeys. 
I^ah,  the  Forsnkpn. 
Little  A 
Littip  1 
Little  M  .'■. 


Little  Prudy. 

Little  Red  Riding  Hood. 

Little  Women. 

Ixicomotive,  The. 

London  Assurance. 

Love  Chase,  The. 

Lucius  Junius  Brutus. 

Mary  Maloney's  Philosophy. 

Masquerading. 

Memory-tricks. 

Merely  Players. 

Mind  your  own  Business. 

Model  Lesson,  The. 

Munchausen  Outdone. 

"My  New  Pittayatees." 

Naaman  the  Leper.  ■ 

Nautical  Conversation,  A.  ■ 

Naval  Service. 

New  Christmas.  The. 

New  Year  Calls. 

Not  Ashamed  of  his  Occupation. 

Notoriety. 

Old  Ballad,  An. 

Old  Folks. 

Old-fashioned  Fourth,  An. 

Opening  Recitation. 

Opening  Speech,  The. 

O' Quirk's  Sinecure. 

Orders  not  to  Go. 

Our  Flag. 

Parthenia. 

Pat  Answers  the  Advertisement. 

Pets  of  Society. 

Playing  School. 

Playing  Store. 

Poetry,  Prose  and  P^act. 

Poor  Work  don't  Pay. 

Portrait,  The. 

Premature  Proposal,  The. 

Pro  Tem. 

Professor  Puzzled,  The. 

Proverb:     All  that  Glitters  is  not  Gold,  A. 

Puritan's  Dilemma,  The. 

Pygmalion  and  Galatea. 

Queen  Mary. 

Queer  Fit,  A. 

Reading  the  Will. 

Real  Elocution. 

Recitations  in  Concert. 

Richelieu. 

Rival  Speakers,  The. 

Rivals,  The. 

Road  to  Ruin,  The. 

Saratoga  Waiter,  The. 

Saved. 

School  for  Scandal,  The. 

Seasons,  The. 

Seeing  Santa  Claus. 

Seer  and  Dreamers,  The. 

She  Stoops  to  Conquer. 

Signing  of  the  Pledge,  ff. 

Slight  Misunderstanding,  A. 

Soldier's  Return,  The. 

Something  to  he  Thankful  for. 

Spanish  Gypsy,  The. 

Stage-struck. 

Stage-struck  Darkey,  The. 

Story  of  the  Days,  The. 

Stmfent  and  his  Neighbors,"  The. 

Sun-dial,  The. 

Surprise,  The. 

Taking  the  Census. 

Temperance  Dialogue. 

Temperance  Song  Recital. 

Ten  Commandments,  The 

Terrible  Threat,  A. 

They  Say. 

This  one  is  Wig-ged. 

Tom's  Practical  Joke. 

Top  Landing,  The. 

Traf?edy  of  the  Ten  Little  Boys,  The. 

Tram  to  Mauro.  The. 

Trial  of  Fing  Wing. 

Trusty  and  True. 

Trying  to  be  Literary. 

Tu  Quoque. 

Turning  the  Tables. 

Two  Lives. 

Two  Runawavs,  The. 

UncomfortaV)le  Call,  .\n,  ff. 


964 


APPENDIX 


Under  the  Holy  Bough. 

Unjust  Suspicion. 

Vanity  Vanquished. 

Veiled  Priestess,  The. 

Very  Bashful. 

Very  Much  Astonished. 

Vice  Versa. 

Visitors  from  Story  Land. 

Waiter's  Trials,  A. 

Way  to  Freedom,  The. 

Welcome. 

What  Girls  Love  to  Do. 

What  is  a  Gentleman? 

Which  is  Best? 

Which  would  you  Rather? 

Wizard  of  Valley  Forge,  The. 

Wizard's  Warning,  The. 

Wonderful  Dream. 

Worried  about  Catherine. 

Writing  a  Booii,  ff. 

Young  America. 

(See  also  Shakespeare's  works,  in  Author  Index.) 


Sprcial  Books:     ASD  ~=-CDD  —  CDs  —  COS— DCD 
— DDD  -DDM— DDR-  DLD— DT— ED  —  EE 

—  FAD— FDY— FND— FTT-  HD— KC  —  KH 

—  KNS  -  LPD—  LPS— MAD-  MC— MCD— MD 
— MDD— MFD— MHD— MND— MPD— MTD— 
NDP  -PD  — PTS  — SD~SDD— SED— SPC— 
StD— WRD— YFD- YFE 

DRILLS. 

Daisy  Drill.' 

Daughters  of  the  Regiment  Drill. 

Delsartian  Phy.sical  Drill. 

Doll  Drill. 

Handkerchief  Drill. 

Harvest  Drill. 

Hat  Drill,  The. 

.Japanese  Fan  Drill. 

Japanese  Parasol  and  Fan  Drill. 

Nursery  Rhymes  Drill. 

Parasol  Drill.  The. 

Play  of  Fancy,  A. 

Rainbow  Drill. 

Sword  Drill,  The. 

Tambourine  Drills. 

Tennis  Drill. 

"Tark"-ey  Drill. 

Spkcial  Books:     DM— ID— WDM— YFE 


PANTOMIMES. 


Bandage. 
Christmas  Eve. 
Christmas  Pantomime. 
Japanese  Wedding,  A. 
Oak  in  a  Storm,  An. 
Pantomime,  A,  ff. 
Rainbow. 
Shadow  Pantomime. 


Special  Books:     TCP — YFE 


PARODIES. 

{The  selection  parodied  is  named  in  parenthesis.) 

AH  the  World's  a  Fraud.    (All  the  World's  a  Stage— 

in  As  You  Like  It.) 
Bachelor's    Soliloquy,    The.      (Hamlet's    Soliloquy — 

in  Hamlet.) 
Baitsy  and  I  are  Oudt.     (Betsey  and  I  are  Out.) 
Betsey  und  I  hafe  Bust  ub.      (Betsey  and  I  are  Out.) 
Bicycle  Girl,  The.     (Maud  Muller.) 
Bitter  Cry  of  the  Outcast  Choir  Boy,  The.      (Break, 

Break,   Break.) 
Charge  of  the  Lightning  Judge,  The.    (Sheridan's  Ride.) 
Chinese  Excelsior.      (Excelsior.) 
Chinese  Version  of  Maud  Muller,  A. 
Class-day  Hamlet,  A.  (Hamlet's  Soliloquy — in  Hamlet.) 
Darius  Green  Parodied.      (Darius  Green  and  his  Flying 

Machine.) 
Der  Good  Ix)okin'  Shnow.     (Beautiful  Snow.) 
Der  Mule  Shtood   on   der  Steamboad   Deck.     (Casa- 

bianca.) 
Der   Nighd   behind   Grisdmas.      (Night   before   Christ- 
mas, The.) 
Der  Wreck  of  der  Hezberus.     (Wreck  of  the  Hesperus, 

The.) 


Domicile  Erected  by  John,  The.     (House  that  Jack 

Built,  The.) 
Dot  Lambs  vot  Mary  haf  Got.      (Mary's  Little  Lamb.) 
Dot  Long-handled  Dipper.     (Old  Oaken  Bucket.) 
Dutchman  and  the  Raven,  The.     (Raven,  The. —  Foe.) 
Ein  Deutsches  Lied.     (Excelsior.) 

Father  William. — Anon,  and  Carroll.    (Old  Man's  Com- 
forts and  how  he  Gained  them.  The.) 
Girl's   a   Girl   for   a'  That,  A.     (Man's   a    Man  for  a' 

That,  A.) 
He  Came  too  Late.     (He  Came  too  Late.) 
Higher.     (Excelsior.) 
Home  they  Brought  her  Lap-dog  Dead.      (Home  they 

Brought  her  Warrior  Dead.) 
Hoop  Skirt,  The.  (1  Remember,  I  Remember.) 
I  Want  to  be  a  Soldier      (I  Want  to  be  an  Angel.) 
Improved  "Enoch  Arden."      (Enoch  Arden.) 
Joe  Jones.      (Ben  Bolt.) 
John  Chinaman's  "Comin'  through  the  Rye."     (Comin' 

through  the  Rye.) 
Kate  Ketchem.     (Maud  Muller.) 
Life.— L.  F.  M.     (Psalm  of  Life,  A.) 
Marc    Antony's    Original    Oration.     (Marc    Antony's 

Fimeral  Oration.) 
Mary's  Diminutive  Sheep.      (Mary's  Little  Lamb.) 
Maud  Muller. — A  New  Version. 
Maud  Muller  [in  Dutch]. 

Modern  Versionof  the  Merchant  of  Venice,  A. 
Motlie's  Little  Ram.      (Mary's  Little  Lamb.) 
Moss-cbvered  Onion,  The.     (Old  Oaken  Bucket,  The.) 
New  "Old  Mother  Hubbard."      (Old  Mother  Hubbard.) 
Oh,  Promise  Me.     (Oh,  Promise  Me. — DeKoven.) 
Old  Hat,  The.      (Darkness.— Byron.) 
O'Reilly's  Billy-goat.      (Ca.sey  at  the  Bat.) 
Original  Parody,  An.     (Cato's  Soililoquy  on  the  Im- 
mortality of  the  Soul.) 
Paddy  Dunbar.     (Lochinvar.) 
Paddy's  E.xcelsior.      (Excelsior.) 
Parody,  A.      (Casabianca.) 
Parody    for    a    Reformed    Parliament,    A.      (Portia's 

Plea  for  Mercy  in  The  Merchant  of  Venice.) 
Parody  on  "Barbara  Frietchie." 
Parody  on  Pope. 

Parody  on  the  Declaration  of  Independence. 
Parody.— The  Old  Oaken  Bucket. 
Poster-girl,  The.     (Ble.s.<<od  Damozel,  The.) 
Proclivior.      (Excelsior.) 
Psalm  of  Marriage.    (Psalm  of  Life,  A.) 
Putting  his  Armor  On.     (May  Queen,  The.) 
Raven,  The.      (Parody.)      (Raven,  The.— Poe.) 
Ride  from  Ghent  to  Aix,  The.      (How  they   Brought 

the  Good  News  from  Ghent  to  Aix.) 
Rime  of  the  Ancient  Miller.     (Rime  oi   the  Ancient 

Mariner,  The.) 
Romeo  and  Juliet.      (Altered.) 
Romeo   and   Juliet.     (Latest   Correct    Version   of   the 

Balcony  Scene.) 
Romeo  and  Juliet. — The  Way  it  Should  be  Read  in 

1880. 
Schlosser's  Ride.     (Sheridan's  Ride.) 
Schneider's  Ride.      (Sheridan's  Ride.) 
Shakespeare  Improved.      (Hamlet,  Act  I,  8c.  .3.) 
Shakespearian     Perversion,     A.      ("Romeo,      Romeo, 

wherefor     art  thou,    Romeo?" — in    Romeo    and 

Juliet.) 
"Speak  gently  to  the  herring."    (Speak  CJently  to  the 

Erring.) 
That  Amateur  Flute.    (Bells.  The.— Poe.) 
To  the  Memory  of  the  late  Brigham  Young.     (Charge 

of  the  Light  Brigade,  The.) 
True  Story  of  Young  Lochinvar  in  Blank  Verse,  The. 

(Lochinvar.) 
'Twas  off  the  Blue  Canaries.     (My  Loved  Guitar.) 
With    a   Golfer's    Apologies    to     Tennyson.      (Break. 

Break,  Break.) 

Special  Book:     HPE. 


TABLEAUX. 


After  the  Explosion. 

Doily's  Doctor. 

Doom  of  King  .\lcohol.  The. 

Dressed  for  the  Party. 

Evening  Prayer. 

Floral  Guide,  The. 

Four  Queens,  The. 

Free  Smoke,  A. 

Going  to  the  Train. 

Grandma's  Schooldays. 

Harv,psters,  The. 

Heln  for  my  Sisters. 

I  Wonder  whom  it  is  from. 


965 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Life's  Day. 

Match-boy,  The. 

Maud  Midler. 

Monk  in  his  Cell,  A. 

Mother  Goose. 

Mother  of  the  Graflbhi,  The. 

Naomi  and  her  Daughters-in-law. 

Old  Time  Ix)ver8. 

Opening  Song. 

Ophelia. 

Parson's  Fee,  The;  or,  The  Bag  of  Beans. 

Playing  Doctor. 

Playing  Grandma,  ff. 

Pleasant  Acquaintance.  A. 

Putting  the  Children  to  Bed. 

Rai.se  the  Gates. 

Reveries  of  a  Bachelor. 

Saved. 

Sleeping  Boy,  The. 

Snow-birds. 

Song   of    Hiawatha,   The  (Tableaux  from  Hiawatha). 

Song  of  the  States,  A. 


Spirit  of  '70. 

Statuary,  fi. 

Stolen  Bird's  Nest,  The. 

Sun  and  his  Satellites,  The. 

Sunshine  or  Shower. 

Tableaux  of  '  'The  Ten  Virgins." 

Tableaux  Vivants.      i 

There's  no  Rose  without  a  Thorn. 

Three  Graces,  The. 

Tired  Out. 

Too  Hot. 

Two  Blind  Beggars. 

Undine. 

Union  Forever,  The. 

Village  Choir,  The. 

Village  Po-st -office,  The. 

Washington. 

Winter  in  the  Lap  of  Spring. 

You  Can't  Find  Me. 

Young  Artist,  The. 

Special  Books:     COS— DDD  -EE-  TCP     YFE 


III.    NOTED  PERSONAGES. 


(When  a  *  follows  a  name,  nee  AUTHOR    INDEX   for  works  by  that  person.) 


Adams,  J:  * 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Centennial  Oration  (Thomas  Jefferson  and  John 
Adams). 

Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jefferson. 
Adams,  John  Quincy."" 

Death  of  John  Quincy  Adams. 

John  Quincy  Adams. 
Addison,  Jos.* 

Epistle  to  Dr.  Arbuthnot  (Addison).  • 

On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Addison. 
Aga.ssiz,  L: 

Agassiz. 

Fiftieth  Birthday  of  Agas.siz.  The. 

Prayer  of  Agassiz,  The. 
Alexander  the  Great. 

Alexander,  ff. 
Alfred  the  Great. 

Alfred,  if. 
Arnold,  Benedict. 

Arnold  at  Stillwater. 

Benedict  Arnold. 

Old  Benedict  Arnold. 
Bacon,  Fs.* 

Bacon's  Philosophy. 

Lord  Bacon's  Birthday. 
Beecher,  H:  Ward.'* 

Eulogy  on  Henry  Ward  Beecher. 

Henry  Ward  Beecher. 
Beethoven,  Ludwig  von. 

Beethoven's  Moonlight  Sonata. 

Beethoven's  Third  Symphony. 
Blaine,  Jas.  G."* 

Blaine  of  Maine. 

Nominating  James  G.  Blaine  for  President. 
Brown,  J: 

Brown  of  Ossawatomie. 

Burial  of  Jtjhn  Brown,  The. 

John  Brown,  ff. 
Browning,  Eliz.  Barrett."" 

On  the  Death  of  Mrs.  Browning. 

One  Word  More. 

To  E.  B.  B. 
Browning,  Rob't."* 

Browning,  fl. 

Burial  of  Robert  Browning,  The. 

How  to  Make  an  Imitation  of  Browning. 

Robert  Browning,  ff. 
Bryant,  W:  Cullen."* 

Bryant  Alphabet,  ff. 

To  Bryant  on  his  Birthday. 

To  William  CuUen  Bryant. 
Burke,  Edmund.* 

Edmund  Burke,  ff. 
Burns,  Rob't.* 

At  the  Grave  of  Burns. 

Bums. 

Ode  to  Burns. 

On  the  Death  of  Burns. 

Robert  Bums. 

Robin  Burns. 


Byron,  Lord.* 

Byron,  ff. 

Course  of  Time,  The  (Byron). 

Lord  Byron  to  the  Greeks. 

Nightmare  Abbey  (M,r.  Cypress's  Song,  etc). 

On  the  Proposal  to  Erect  a  Monumeiit  in  England 
to  Lord  Byron. 
Csesar,  Julius. 

CsEsar,  ff. 

History  of  Rome,  The  (Monarchy  of  Cajsar,  The). 

Julius  Ca?sar,  ff. 
Carlyle,  T:* 

Carlyle,  ff. 

On  the  Deaths  of  Thomas  Carlyle  and  George  Eliot . 

Thomas  'Carlyle. 
Charles  I.* 

Charles  the  First. 

Covenanters  and  Charles  Stuart,  The. 

Horatian  Ode  upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ire- 
land, A  (sels.). 

Milton  (Charles  the  First). 

On  His  Majesty's  Recovery  from  the  Small-pox. 

On  the  Funeral  of  Charles  [the]  First. 

On  the  Statue  of  King  Charles  I.,  etc. 

To  King  Charles  and  Queen  Henrietta. 

To  King  Charles  and  Queen  Mary,  for  the  Loss  of 
their  First-born. 

To  the  King  on  his  Birthday. 
Charles  II. 

Charles  the  Second. 

Epitaph  on  Charles  II. 

Knighting  of  the  Sirloin  of  Beef,  etc. 
Chatham,  Lord.* 

Table  Talk  (Lord  Chatham). 

William  Pitt,  Earl  of  Chatham. 
Chatterton,  T:* 

Chatterton,  ff. 

Monody  on  the  Death  of  Chatterton. 
Clay,  H:-* 

Character  of  Henry  Cla^y. 

Constitution  and  the  Union,  The  (On  Mr.  Clay's 
Resolution). 

Death  of  Henry  Clay. 

Eulogium  on  Henry  Clay. 
Cleopatra. 

Antony  and  Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra,  ff. 

Death  of  Cleopatra,  The. 
Coleridge,  S:  Taylor.* 

Coleridge. 

On  the  Death  of  Coleridge. 

On  the  Late  S.  T.  Coleridge. 
Columbtis,  Christopher. 

Christopher  Columbus 

Columbus,  ff. 

Discovery  Day. 

Entrance  of  (lolumbus  into  Barcelona. 

From  the  Old  World  to  the  New. 

How  Columbus  Found  America. 

I-egend  of  Christopher  C!olumbus,  The. 

I-ife  and  Voyages  of  Christopher  Columbus. 


966 


APPENDIX 


Mrs.  Christopher  Columbus. 

Garrison.  W:  Lloyd.* 

On  a  Portrait  of  Columbus.           ,     - 

Garrison. 

Our  Columbus. 

William  Lloyd  Garrison. 

Prayer  of  Columbus,  The. 

George,  H:* 

Henry  George. 

Return  of  Columbus,  The 

Three  Days  in  the  Life  of  Columbus. 

Of    Henry    George    (Who    Died    Fighting   against 

Cooper,  Peter.* 

Political  Corruption). 

Flag  at  Half-mast,  The. 

Grant,  Ulysses  S.* 

Peter  Cooper. 

Death  of  Grant,  The. 

Corday,  Charlotte. 

Eulogy  on  General  Grant. 

Charlotte  Corday. 

Eulogy  on  U.  S.  Grant. 

French  Revolution,  The  (Charlotte  Corday) 

General  Grant,  ff. 

Cromwell,  Oliver. 

Grant,  ff. 

Cromwell  and  Henrietta  Maria,  ff. 

Great  and  Noble  Man,  A. 

Horatian  Ode  upon  Cromwell's  Return  from  Ire- 

Hero President,  The. 

land.  A. 

In  Memory  of  General  Grant. 

"It  is  said  that  when  Gen.  Grant  first 

On  the  Death  of  Oliver  Cromwell. 

took  com- 

Dante  Alighieri.* 

mand." 

Balder  (Dante,  etc.). 

legacy  of  Grant,  The. 

Dante,  ff. 

Memorial  Services  in  Honor  of  General  Grant. 

On  a  Bust  of  Dante. 

Nominating  General  Grant. 

Sasso  di  Dante,  The. 

Tribute  to  Grant,  A. 

Davis,  Jefferson 

Ulysses  S.  Grant. 

Amnesty  of  Jefferson  Davis,  The. 

Hamilton,  Alex.* 

Jefferson  Davis. 

Discourse  Delivered  in  the  North  Dutch  Church, 

Dewey.  G: 

1804,  A. 

Admiral  Dewey: 

Funeral    Oration    by    the    Dead    Body 

of    Ham- 

Dewey  at  Manila,  ff. 

ilton. 

Great  Naval  Battle  of  Manila,  The. 

Hawthorne,  Nathaniel.* 

Song  of  Dewey's  Guns,  The. 

Hawthorne,  ff. 

To  Admiral  George  Dewey. 

Nathaniel  Hawthorne. 

Dickens,  C:* 

Holmes,  Oliver  Wendell.* 

Catalogue  of  Dickens'  Works. 

Holmes. 

Charles  Dickens  and  the  Reader. 

Oliver  Wendell  Holmes. 

Christmas  Thought  about  Dickens,  A. 

To  O.  W.  Holmes. 

Dickens  Gallery,  The,  ff. 

Hugo,  Victor.* 

Grave  of  Charles  Dickens,  The. 

Master  Character  of  Victor  Hugo,  The. 

In  Memory  of  Charles  Dickens. 

Statue  of  Victor  Hugo,  The. 

Pathos  of  Thackeray  and  Dickens,  The 

To  Victor  Hugo. 

Realism  of  Dickens,  The. 

Jackson,  Andrew.* 

To  Charles  Dickens. 

Andrew  Jackson. 

Two  of  Dickens'  Villains. 

Jackson  at  New  Orleans. 

Welcome  to  "Boz,"  A. 

To  Andrew  Jackson. 

Drake,  Sir  Fs. 

Jackson,  T:  Jonathan  ("Stonewall"). 
Death  of  Stonewall  Jackson. 

Drake's  Drum. 

Epigram  on  Francis  Drake. 

Dying  Word*  of  Stonewall  Jackson,  The. 

Westward  Ho  (Sir  Francis  Drake). 

Unconscious    Greatness     of    Stonewall 

Jackson, 

Dry  den,  J:* 

The. 

Dry  den. 

Jefferson,  T:* 

Parallel  between  Pope  and  Dryden. 

Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Eliot,  G:* 

Centennial  Oration  (Thomas  Jefferson 

and  John 

George  Eliot. 

Adams). 

On  the  Deaths  of  Thomas  Carlyle  and  George  Eliot. 

Death  of  Jeffer.son,  The. 

Elizabeth,  Queen.* 

Defence  of  Jefferson. 

Cselica  (E)izabetha  Regina). 

Eulogy  on  Adams  and  Jefferson. 

Death  of  Elizabeth,  The. 

Johnson,  Dr.  S:* 

Elizabeth  at  Tilbury. 

Lines  on  Doctor  Johnson. 

Faerie  Queene,  The  (Gloriana)- 

On  the  Death  of  Dr.  Johnson. 

Queen  Elizabeth. 

Jones,  J:  Paul. 

Sir  Walter  Raleigh  and  Queen  Elizabeth. 
Emerson,  Ralph  Waldo.*' 

Paul  Jones'  Victory. 

Yankee  Man -of- War,  The. 

Carlyle  and  Emerson. 
Dr.  Hale  on  Emerson. 

Jonson,  Ben.* 

Ben  Jonson,  ff. 

Emerson,  ff. 

His  Prayer  to  Ben  Jonson. 

Emmet,  Rob't.* 

Invective    Written    by     Mr.     George 

Chapman 

Eulogy  on  Emmet. 

against  Mr.  Ben  Jonson,  An. 

Oh!   Breathe  not  his  Name. 

To  Ben  Jonson. 

She  is  Far  from  the  Land. 

To  the  Memory  of  Ben  Jonson. 

Written  Immediately  after  Reading  the  Speech  of 

Keats,  J:* 

Robert  Emmet. 

Adonais.— Shelley. 

Fox,  C:  Jas.* 

After  a  Lecture  on  Keats. 

Fox. 

At  the  Grave  of  Keats. 

lyines  Written  at  Grasmere,  etc. 

Moonlight  Song  of  the  Mocking-bird. 

Marmion  (Pitt  and  Fox). 

Ode  to  England,  An  (Keats). 

On  the  Death  of  Mr.  Fox. 

With  a  Copy  of  Keats. 

Franklin,  Benjamin.* 

Kossuth,  Louis.* 

Colloquial  Powers  of  Dr.  Franklin. 

To  Louis  Kossuth. 

Eulogium  on  Franklin. 

Welcome  to  Louis  Kossuth. 

Franklin  and  the  Gout. 

Lafayette,  Gen. 

Inauguration  of  the  Statue  of  Franklin. 

Address  to  Lafayette. 

On  the  Death  of  Benjamin  Franklin. 

Eulogy  on  Lafayette. 
Lafayette,  the  Faithful  One. 

Washington's  Sword  and  Franklin's  Staff. 

Garfield,  Jas.  A.* 

Sonnet:   '  'As  when  far  off,"  etc. — Coler 

dge. 

At  the  President's  Grave. 

Welcome  to  Gen.  LaFayette. 

'  'Death  has  crowned  him  as  a  Martyr." 

Lamb,  C:* 

Garfield,  ff. 

Charles  Lamb. 

Man  for  the  Crisis,  The. 

Elia. 

Memorial  Address  on   the  Life  and  Character  of 

To  Charles  Lamb. 

James  A.  Garfield. 

Landor,  Walter  Savage.* 

Memorial  Hymn — J.  A.  Garfield. 

In  Memory  of  Walter  Savage  Landor. 

Ode  on  the  Assassination  of  President  Garfield. 

Landor. 

Pic.'  '-nt  Garfield. 

Lincoln,  Abraham.* 

"Was  James  A.  Garfield  great?" 

See  Special  Days. 

967 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECITATIONS 


Longfellow,  H:  Wadsworth.* 

Great  grandmamma  and  I. 

H.  W.  L. 

Henry  Wadsworth  Longfellow. 

Longfellow,  ff^ 

Poet's  FuneralT  The. 

To  H.  W.  L. 
Ix)well,  Jas.  Russell.* 

Fable  for  Critics,  A  (On  Himself). 

James  Russell  Lowell,  ff. 

Lowell,  ff. 

To    John    Greenleaf    Whittier   on    the    Death    of 
Ijowell. 
Luther,  Martin.* 

At  Luther's  Grave,  Wittenberg. 

Martin  Luther,  ff. 
Marie  Antoinette. 

Chronicle  of  the  Drum,  The  (Execution  of  Marie 
Antoinette). 

French  Revolution,  The  (Marie  Antoinette). 

Marie  Antoinette,  ff. 
Mary  Queen  of  Scots.* 

History  of  England  (Death  of  Mary  Stuart). 

Lament  of  Mary  Queen  of  Scots  on  the  Approach 
of  Spring. 

Mary  Queen  of  Scots,  ff. 

Mary  Stuart,  ff.  ' 

Murder  ot  Darnley,  The. 

Murder  of  Riccio,  The. 
Michelangelo.* 

Angelo. 

Michael  Angelo,  ff. 
Milton,  J: 

Balder  (Dante,  Shakespeare,  Milton). 

John  Milton. 

Lines   Printed   under   the   Engraved   Portrait   of 
Milton. 

Milton,  ff.  „ 

On  Milton's  Paradise  Lost. 
Moore,  T:*  i 

Thomas  Moore. 

To  Thomas  Moore. 
Napoleon  Bonaparte.* 

American  and  the  Corsican,  The. 

At  the  Toinb  of  Napoleon. 

Character  of  Napoleon,  The. 

Childe  Harold's  Pilgrimage  (Napoleon). 

Chronicle    of    the    Drum    (Abdication    of   Napo- 
leon). 

Comparison  of  Washington  and  Napoleon. 

Crowned  and  Buried. 

Death  of  Napoleon. 

Defence  of  M.  Peltier  for  a  Libel  on  Napoleon. 

Grave  of  Bonaparte,  The. 

Les  Mis^rables  (Napoleon's  Overthrow). 

Lines  on  the  Death  of  Napoleon. 

March  to  Moscow,  The. 

Napoleon,  ff. 

Ode,  Written  during  the  Negociations  with  Bona- 
parte, in  January,  1814. 

On  Overtures  of  Peace  from  Napoleon. 

Popular  Recollections  of  Bonaparte. 

Reign  of  Napoleon.  The. 

Return  of  Napoleon  from  St.  Helena,  The. 

Toussaint  L'Ouverture  (Napoleon  Bonaparte  and 
Toussaint  L'Ouverture). 

Two  Napoleons,  The. 

Victor  of  Marengo,  The. 
Napoleon  IIL  (Ix>uis  Napoleon). 

Louis  Napoleon,  ff. 

N.ipoleon  the  Little. 

To  Louis  Napoleon. 
Nel.son,  Horatio. 

Heroism  of  Horatio  Nelson,  The. 

Marmion  (Nelson,  Pitt,  Fox). 

Nelson. 
0'Ck)nnell.  Daniel.* 

Daniel  O'Connell,  ff. 

O'Connell. 
Penn.  W:* 

Monument  of  William  Penn,  The. 

Tribute  to  William  Penn. 
Phillips.  Wendell.* 

Incident  in  the  Life  of  Wendell  Phillips,  An. 

Wendell  Phillips,  ff. 
Pitt,  W:.  the  younger.* 

Defence  of  Pitt. 

Epitaph  for  William  Pitt. 

Pift.^. 
Poe,  Edgar  Allan.* 

Death  of  Poe's  Wife,  The. 

Poe's  Cottage  at  Fordhum. 

To  Edgar  Allan  Po»- 


Pope,  Alex.* 

Lines  to  Alexander  Pope. 

Pope,  ff. 
Raleigh,  Sir  Walter.* 

Call  on  Sir  Walter  Raleigh,  A. 

Death  of  Sir  Walter  Raleigh 
.   Kenilworth  (Raleigh). 

Raleigh's  Cell  in  the  Tower. 

Sir  Walter  Raleigh  and  Queen  Elizabeth,  ff. 
Robespierre.* 

Death  of  Robespierre,  The. 

Fourth  of  July,  1776,  The  (Death  of  Robespierre, 
.  The). 
Rofwetti,  Dante  Gabriel.* 

At  the  Grave  of  Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti. 

Dante  Gabriel  Rossetti. 

Voice  of  D.  G.  R..  The. 
Savonarola,  Girolamo.* 

Casa  Guidi  Windows  (Death  of  Savonarola) 

Romola  (Romola  and  Savonarola). 

Savonarola. 
Schiller,  Friedrich.* 

Death  of  Schiller,  The. 

Schiller's  Dying  Vision. 
Scott,  Sir  Walter* 

English  Bards  and  Scotch  Reviewers  (Sir  Walter 
Scott).. 

On  the  Departure  of  Sir  Walter  Scott  from  Abbots- 
ford  for  Naples. 

Sir  Walter  Scott,  ff. 

Tribute  to  Sir  Walter  Scott. 
Shakespeare,  W:* 

Anne  Hathaway. 

At  Shakespeare's  Grave. 

At  Strafford-on-Avon. 

Balder  (Dante,  Shakespeare,  Milton). 

Breath  of  Avon,  The. 

Epitaph  on   the  Admirable   Dramatic  Poet,   W. 
Snakespeare,  An. 

On  the  Portrait  of  Shakespeare. 

Poem  for  the  Dedication  of  the  Fountain  at  Strat- 
ford-on-Avon. 

Prologue  Spoken  by  Mr.  Garrick  at  the  Opening  of 
the  Theatre  Royal,  Drury  Lane. 

Shakespeare,  ff. 

Spirit  of  Shakespeare,  The. 

To    the    Memory   of    My    Beloved,    Mr.    William 
Shakespeare. 

Toast    to    the    Lovers    and    Hu.sbands     of     the 
Shakespeare  Club. 

William  Shakespeare. 
Sheridan,  Philip. 

How  Congress  Fought  for  Sheridan. 

Sheridan. 

Sheridan's  Ride. 
Sheridan,  R:  Brinsley.* 

Lines  on  the  Death  of  Sheridan. 

Monody  on  the  Death  of. the  Right  Hon.  R.  B. 
Sheridan. 

Richard  Brinsley  Sheridan. 
Sherman,  W:  T.* 

Review  of  the  Grand  Army,  The. 

Sherman,  ff. 

Tribute  to  Gen.  Sherman,  A. 
Sidney,  Sir  Philip.* 

Britannra's  Pa.storals  (Praise  of  Sydney,  The). 

Elegy  on  a   Friend's  Passion   for  his  Astrophill, 
An. 

Elegy  on  Sir  Philip  Sidney,  An. 

Epitat)h   upon    the   Right   Honorable   Sir   Philip 
Sidney. 

On  the  Death  of  Sir  Philip  Sidney. 

Sidney.  Sir  Philip. 
Southey,   Rob't^"* 

Engli.sh    Bards    and    Scotch    Reviewers    (Robert 
Southey). 

Epitaph  on  a  Well-known  Poet. 

On  Southey's  Death. 

On  the  Death  of  Southey. 
Spenser,  Edmund.* 

Britannia's  Pastorals  (Praise  of  Spenser,  The) 

Edmund  Spenser. 

Spenser,  ff. 
Stevenson.  Rob't  L.* 

Stevenson's  Birthday. 

To  Rol>ert  Louis  Stevenson. 
Sumner,  C:* 

Charles  Suniner,  ff. 

Eulogy  on  Charles  Sumner. 
Taylor,  Bayard.* 

Bayard  Taylor,  ff. 

To  Bayard  Taylor  beyond  Us. 


9U8 


APPENDIX 


Tennyson,  Alfred.* 

In  Memoriam — Alfred,  Lord  Tentayson. 

Tennyson.  /' 

To  Alfred  Tennyson.  / 

Thackeray,  W:*  -         , 

Pathos  of  Thackeray  and  Thickens,  The. 

Thackeray's  Birthday.       ,' 
Victoria,  Queen. 

Onithe  Coronation  of  Queen  Victoria. 

Queen's  Year,  The. 

To  the  Queen. 

Victoria. 

Young  Queen,  The. 
Washington,  G:* 

See  Special  Day.>s. 
Webster,  Daniel.*  i 

Character  of  Webste  r. 

Daniel  Webster,  ff. 

Death  of  Daniel  We-b.ster,  The.. 

Description    of    Webster's    Speech    in'  Reply    to 
Hayne. 

Discourse  Commetnorative  of  Daniel  Webster. 

Ichabod. 

Statue  of  Webst<?r,  The. 

Voice  of  Webster,  The. 

Webster,/?. 


Wellington,  Duke  of. 

Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. 

WeDington,  if. 
West,  Benjamin. 

Lex  Talionis  Upon  Benjamin  West.  The. 

On  George  the  Third's  Patronage  of  Benjamin  West. 
Whitman,  Walt.* 

Eulogy  of  Walt  Whitman. 

Walt  Whitman. 
Whit  tier,  J:  Greenleaf.* 

Hour  with  Whittier.  An. 

To  John  Greenleaf  Whittier,  /f. 

Whittier,  fj. 
Wolfe,  Jas.* 

Death  of  Wolfe,  The. 

Montcalm  and  Wolfe. 

On  General  Wolfe. 

Wolfe  at  Quebec 
Wordsworth,  W:* 

English  Bards  and  Scotch  Reviewers  (Wordsworth) . 

Ode  to  England,  Aji  (Wordsworth). 

On  a  Portrait  of  Wordsworth  by  B.  R.  Haydon. 

To  Wordsworth. 

William  Wordsworth. 

With  Wordsworth  at  Rydal. 

Wordsworth,  ff. 


IV.     TEMPERANCE  SELECTIONS. 


Address  befonj  the  Springfield  Washingtonian  Temper- 
ance Society  (Two  Revolutions). 

Address  Delivered  at  the  Prohibition  Party  Con- 
vention. 

Address  on  Temperance. 

Against  License. 

Alcoholic  and  Tobacco  Habit,  The. 

Apostrophe  to  Water. 

Appeal  for  Prohibition,  An. 

Appeal  for  Temperance. 

Arraignment  of  Rum,  The,  ff. 

Arrest  Alcohol  and  Liberate  Man. 

Arresting  the  March  of  Intemperance. 

A-3oak  in  ' ' Wum  Barrels." 

Astonished  Tippler,  The. 

Away  from  the  Wine-cup,  away! 

Bar-tender's  Story,  The. 

Bible  and  the  Liquor  Traffic,  The. 

Bible  in  Harmony  with  Temperance,  The. 

Billy's  First  and  Last  Drink  of  Lager. 

Bondage  of  Drink.  The. 

Bottle — Beggary,  The,  ff. 

Boy's  Temperance  Speech,  A. 

Break  the  Bottle. 

Bridal  Feast,  The. 

Cause  of  Temperance. 

Churches  and  Saloons. 

Citizen  and  the  Saloon  System,  The. 

Cold  Water,  ff- 

Come,  Sign  tihe  Pledge. 

Confessions  of  a  Drunkard.        ■> 

Constitutional  Prohibition  the  Great  Remedy 

Cup  of  Water,  A. 

Curse  of  Drink,  The.  i    v 

Deacon  Giles's  Distillery. 

Dead  March,  The. 

Deadly  Cup,  The. 

leath  and  the  Drunkard. 

Death  of  an  Inebriate. 

Demerits  of  High  License,  The. 

Demons  of  the  Glass,  The. 

Dirge  of  the  Drinker,  The. 

Don't  Marry  a  Drunkard  to  Reform  Him. 

Doom  of  Kmg  Alcohol. 

Down  with  the  Traffic. 

Dragon  Drink,  The. 

Drink!   Drink!   Drink! 

Drinking  a  Farm. 

Drinking  a  Tear. 

Drinking-house  over  the  Way,  The. 

Drunkard,  The,  ff. 

Drunken  Engineer,  The.  ff. 

Effect  of  Intemperance,  The. 

Epigram  on  a  Club  of  Sots. 

Fallacy  of  High  License,  The 

Fatal  Glass,  The. 

Fighting  the  Rum-fiend. 

Frances  E.  Willard,  ff. 

Gift  of  Water,  The. 

Girls,  don't  Marry  a  DniftkftoiJUt 

Go  Feel  what  I  have  Felt. 


Go  Forward  to  Victory. 
God's  Beverage. 

Grandma  Bobbins'  Temperance  Mission. 
Great  National  Scourge,  The. 
Greatest  Party,  The. 
Harvest  of  Rum,  The.  •» 
Heroes. — Gough. 
High  License. 
His  First  and  Last  Drink. 
Home  Protection. 

Honest  Rum-seller's  Advertisement,  An. 
How  Col.  Ashton  Signed  the  Pledge. 
How  Dennis  took  the  Pledge. 

How  Old  Erasmus  Doctored  his  Temperance  Pledge. 
How  to  Curtail  the  Liquor  Traffic. 
I  have  Drank  my  Last  Glass. 
I  Kin  nod  Trink  To-nighd. 
"I  Will  not  Drink." 
If  it  was  not  for  the  Drink. 
I'll  Take  what  Father  Takes. 
Indemberance. 

"Intemperance  wipes  out  God's  image." 
John  Alcohol. 

Judge's  Temperance  Lecture,  A. 
^ing  Alcohol's  Soliloquy. 
Lament  of  the  Widowed  Inebriate,  A. 
Last  Drunkard,  The. 
Leave  the  Liquor  Alone. 
Legitimate  "Strike,"  A. 
Licensed  to  Sell. 

Lips  that  Touch  Liquor  must  never  Touch  Mine,  The| 
Liquor  or  Liberty?  ff. 
Look  not  upon  the  Wine. 
Maddening  Bowl,  The. 
"Men  try  to  drown  the  floating  dead  of  their  own  souls 

in  the  wine-cup." 
Moral  Effect  of  Intemperance,  The. 
Narae  your  Poison. 

National  Constitution  and  Rum,  The. 
National  Prohibition,  ff. 
Need  for  a  Prohibition  Party,  The. 
j^  New  Declaration  of  Independence,  A. 

Newest  Promises  and  Perils  6f  'Temperance  Reform, 

The. 
"No  Saloons  up  There." 
Noble  Answer,  A. 
Ode  to  Rum,  An. 
Old  Erasmus'  Temperance  Pledge. 
Old  Rye's  Speech. 
On  which  Side  are  You? 
One  Glass  More, /f. 
One  Night  with  Gin.,  ^ 
Only  a  Drunkard. 
Original  Liquor  League,  The. 
Othello  (Regrets  of  Drunkenness). 
Our  Temperance  Banner. 
Out  of  the  Bottle. 
Playing  Drimkard. 
Price  of  a  Drink,  The. 
Price  of  High  License.  The. 
Prohibition  in  Atlant  a,  ff. 


969, 


AN  INDEX  TO  POETRY  AND  RECn;ATI(JNS 


Public  Op   linn. 

Reform  will  Go  on,  The. 

Iteformeil  .Man's  Lament,  A. 

Reformed  Mormon  Tippler.  The. 

Rum  Everywhere,  ff. 

Rum's  Devastating  and  Destiny,  ff. 

Saloon  and  the  Home,  The,  ff. 

Sample  Kooms. 

Satan  and  the  Grog-seller. 

Serpent  of  the  Still,  The. 

Shall  America  be  Ruled  forever  by  the  Liquor  Power? 

Short  Temperance  Speech,  A. 

Shun  the  Bowl. 

Sign-board,  The. 

Signing  of  the  Pledge,  ff. 

Singing  Temperance  Songs. 

Scjcial  Glas.-i.  A. 

Some  Delusions  of  High  License. 

Song  of  the  Decanter. 

Song  of  the  Drunkard. 

Speech  on  Temperance,  .\. 

Strike  for  Prohibition. 

Strong  Drink. 

Strong  Temptation,  A. 

"Swore  Off." 

Ta.ste  it  Not. 

Teetotaler's  Stopy,  A. 

Temperance,  ff. 

There  Once. was*  Toper. 

Three  Topers. 

Touch  it  Never. 

Traffic  in  Ardent  Spirits. 


Two  Gla.sses,  The. 

Unaccountable  M  y.stery,  An. 

Union  of  North  ai>d  South,  The. 

Upas-tree,  The. 

Vote  the  Traffic  Do\yn. 

Voter's  Responsibility,   The. 

War  with  Alcohol. 

Warning  again.st  Wine,  A. 

Water,  ff. 

Way  to  Freedom,  The. 

Waybjick  Temperance  Lecture. 

"We  must  fight  this  temperance  battle  out." 

What  Intemperance  Does. 

What  is  Temperance? 

What  the  Temperance  Cause  h.as  Done  for  John  and  Me, 

What  to  Drink. 

What  Whiskey  Did  for  Meid, 

White  Ribbon,  The. 

Who'll  be  the  i)runkards  then  ? 

Why  Ben  Schneider  Decides  ff  >r  Prohibition. 

Why  Drink  Wine? 

Why  I  Object  to  High  License. 

Why  Should  I  Sign  the  Pledge? 

Why  Woman  Wants  the  Ballot. 

Wine  and  Water. 

Wine  Cup. 

Woman  in  Temperance. 

Year  that  is  to  Come,  The. 

(See  alao  works  of  J;  B.  Gough  and  FVances  E.  Wil- 
lard,  in  Author  Indkx.) 


Special  Books:     MTD— PEO— TS— W'R  18 


970 


UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFORNIA  LIBRARY 
BERKELEY 


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